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The Clinton New Era, 1913-05-01, Page 8ffiliRSHiY, Freed From Bearing Down Pains, Backache and Pain in Side by Lydia E. Pink- bom's Compound. TORONTO OMAN ELL AGAIN Toronto, Ont. `La s October, I wrote to yeti for advice as I was completely run . . . down, had bearing down sensation in the lower part of bow- ls, backache, and pain in the side. also suffered terribly from gas. I took }_eelia E. Pinkham's VegetableCompound and am now entirely free from pain in back and bowels and am stronger in every way. I recommend LydiaE. Pinkham's Compound highly to all expectant moth- ers." -Mrs. E. VirANDBY, 92 Logan Ave- nue, Toronto, Ontario. ConSider Well This ...43Alvice. No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham s Veg- etable Compound asfair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal in- gredients of which are derived from na- tive roots and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women residing in almost every city and town in the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia 12. Pink:liana's Vegeta- ble Compound -will help you!, write to Lydia JO,Pinkhani Medicine Co. (conlidentiel) Lynn, MasS., for ad- vice. Your letter will be opened, , read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. Whiskey in the Cradle The eight -months -old child of Jos. Peloni, Cobalt, cost his parents a $100 fine. Provincial Constable Jerry Lefebvre was pretty sure that Peloni had whiskey on the premises, so when he searched the house he did not leave many plates without scrutiny. Still he did not suspect that the firewater was in the cradle till lie heard the frolicsome youngster crow and kick, and he heard the familiar cliffs under the blankets. Then he inserted his hand in spite of the woman's screams, and found three bottles snugly con- cealed under Baby's legs. Tws) Whopper° A pedigree greyhound, which at- tempted to keep pace with a fast train in 'which its master was travelling frain South Norwalk, Connecticut, is reported to hare run a:ongside the coach for a Mile, but fallen dead from exhaustion attar co-sar:ras- els miles. , This, 'however, isn't nearly such a good story as that about the man who, falling from a steamer as it left Glas- gow for New. York, boldly swam after St and, dripping wet, managed to land at New York along with the other passengers. swit madaehe and relieve all the trenideo !nal. dent to a Odious state of the system, anal. as DialleSS,...NalIMA, Drowsiness, :Distress after eating, Pain In the Siile, to. .While their meet Wratirkablo success has b'etaShow4 ixtCUYIng ri22427 fleadaehe, yet. Carter's Little Liver alas ate equally valuable in (lonatipation, curing andpre. venting this anneyi ng complain t. while they also correct all disordvs or the a tcautish, stimillatethe liver and regulate the bawds. 1.ren theyonli cued Aehethey woulcihe alMost s.s to tbM0Whe Buffer front is distraval eetriplA t; butfortu, 'lately the r goodness flues notend here,nad those who once try thein willitud thew IiU le pills veld. able in eo ninny revs that they win rotire ling to do withoatthem, But after all sick head % 'ME tAlifM 8:2 le the liana 02 50 runny liceS that hero is where we malts our great honst. trw pith, sure it walla others do lief. Carter's Little Liver Pills nee very small MA very easy to take. One or tiea eillaoithe a (Yogi. They are strlatly vertalile ttlirl (1,1 net gripe es purge, hut by tacit gentle nation piasheali wto vise teem. G Attit9e214EDIC11;n1 V.. Ulf YOU:, hail N. aa01ii5 mallbot 001,0110•000)••••00•09•8••••• tXCLISC Me ouiesesessimeeeeseessee simultaneous dash along the corridor, :shOulder wrestling with ehoulder They reached the door marked "'Wonien" at the same instant, and ae neither would have dreamed ot °fifer- ing the other a courtesy, they sneezed through together in a Kil- kenny jumble. CHAPTER XIV. The Dormitory on Wheels. 02 all the :Mocking ili2titutieus lo human hietory, the sleeping car is thn most shocking -or would be, it wa .weioe not So used to it. There can te no doubt that we are the most mori,1 'nation on earth, tor we admit it o,..r• ,selves. .Perhans we ,prove itt tee, hi', the Arcadian prosperity of theeo 'story hotels on wheels when n_lv- FelikInecilis travelers dwell In emu- iplete promiscuity, and sleep altneat side 1)y side, in apartments, or eme- lPartments, sepaeated,only by a plena- iand a curtain, and guarded only by Ione sleepy negro. ; After the fashion of the famous !country whoee inhabitants earned a manger sustenance by taking it eaeli tother's waFhing, se in Sleeping Car- ,‘Patilia -we ettain a meager rlwTta- bility everybody's chaperoning everybody Moe. So tansy -till -vied, indeed, are our ,notione, once we are aboard a train, 'that tho,stataromns alone are :reg.:rd. ed with EU: picitm; We question the motives of these who nnist havft a ;room, to thmeselvesl-a room with a real door!' that locks! ! ' And, now; en this sleeping car,pret- tily named "e,!nowdron," scenes Were enacting that woald have thrown our great-grandmothers into fitz-seenes which, if we foundthein in France, or Japan, we should view With alarm, as ;almost unmentionable•evidence of the moral obliquity of those nations, But this was our own country -the part of it which admits that it is the best part -the moralest put, the staunch middle west. This was MI - :nets. Yet -dozens of cars were beholc17 dug sim11a immodesties in chasteet ;Illinois, and all over the map, thou. ,sands of people, in hundreds of cars, 'were permitting total strangers to !view preparations which have always, :hitherto, been reserved for the moet. ;intimate and Jegalized relations. The porter was deftly transforming the day -coach into a narrow lane en- tirely surrounded by draperies. Behind most of the portieres, fluttering in the lightest breeze, and perilously iollow- ling the hasty passer-by, _homely of- fices were being enacted. The popu- lation of this little town was going to ;bed. The porter was putting them to ;sleep as if they were children in a ;nursery, and he a black mammy. The frail walls of little sanctums were bulging with the bodies of Deo - 'pie disrobing in the aisle, with notti- qng 'between them and the beholder's eye but a clinging curtain that cx- ;plained what it did not reveal. From ;apertures here and there disembodied :feet were protruding and mysterious 'hands were removing shoes and othor 'things. Women in risky attire were scoot- ing to one end of the car, and men ist 'shirt slAves, or loss, were hastening 'to the other. ' When Mallory returned to ill° "Snowdrop," his ear was greeted by the tland of dropping shoos. 1 -le fonnd 'Marjorie being rapidly immured, 11'.:0 iPoe's prisoner, in a jail of closing walls. She was unspeakably 111 at ease, !and by the Irony of custom, the one ;person on whom she depended for pro- itection was the one person Whose ,contiguity was most alarming -and all for lack of a brief trialoguo, :with la clergyman, as the tertium quid. When. Mallory's careSvorn face ap- ;peareci round the edge of the partition now erected between her and the ;abode of Dr. and Mrs. Temple, Mar- jorie shivered anew, and asked es 1th 'all anxiety: "Did you find a minister?" Perhaps the Recording Angel over" looked Mallory's answer; "Not a ,danm minister." When he dropped at Marjorie's stde 'she edged away Itora him, pleading: ,"Oh, what shall we do?" , He answered dismally and inef- ;fectively: "We'll have to go on pre - ;tending to be -just iriends." , "But everybody thinks we're niar- ried." "That's so!" he aduaitted, with the ,imbecility of fatigued hope. 'alley sat ;a while listening to the porter slip- ping sheets into place and thumping !pillows into cases, a few doors down ;the street. Be would be ready ler :them at any moment. Sometlaing must 'be done, but what? what? • CHAPTER XV. A Premature Divorce. Suddenly Marjorie's heart gave a leap of joy. She was having another idea. "I'll tell you, Harry. We'll pre- tend to quarrel, and then-" ; "And then you can leave me in hige 'dudgeon." ; The ruse struck him as a trifle un - 'convincing. "Don't you think it looks kind of improbable on -,on -such an. `occasion?" Marjorie blushed, and • lowered' her eyes and her voice; "Can you sus - ,gest anything better?" DON'T NEGLECT YOUR WATCH A WATCH is a 'delicate piece /IL of' machinery. It calls for kss attention than most machinery, but must be ',cleaned and oiled occasionalbt to keep perfect time. P With proper care a Waltham Watch will keep perfect tirae for a lifetime. It will pay you well to Id us clean your watch every 2205 58 months. W. R. COUNTER jeweler and Optician. Issuer of rtlarriage Licenses. PLEASE PUBLISH R1Y TESTI °NIA!. So Other Sufferers Will Tako "Fruit-a-tives" And Be Cured Gratitude --- heartfelt gratitude - prompted thi4 letter. Madame Lan- glois was so thankful to ' Truit-a-tives" for restoring her to health and strength, that she gladly allowed her letter to be published. 5522555 VALEFte LANOLOIS ST. ROMUAZD, QI14, a•PT. 23r2l. 1912. "I have pleasure in statkig that I have been ured of severe Dyspepsia and Chronic Constipatiou by using " Fruit -a - Lives. ' I was a terrible ufferer from severe Constipation for many years, and I tried every reinedy heard of, and also was treated by physicians without any perinanelit benefits. • Then 1 tried "Bruit-a-tives", and this fruit medicine has completely cured both the Constipation and.Indigestion. I cannot praise "Fruit-a-tives" enough". MADAVIR v.ATAR LANGLoiS. soc. a box, 6 for $2.5a -trial size eec. At dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit -a -lives 'Limited, Ottawa. "Never!" be seconded. So that resolution passed the house unan1- inous1y , They held hands in luxury a while. than she began again: "Still, we must retend. You start it, love." "No, you start it," he pleaded. "You ought to," she beamed. "You got me into this mess." The word slipped out. Mallory started: "Mess! How is it my fault? Good Lord, are you going to begin chucking it up?" "Well, you must admit, darling," Marjorie urged, "that you've bungled everything pretty badly." It was so undeniable that he could only groan: "And I suppose I'll hear of this till my dying day, dearest." ."No, but-" ! "Then, we'll have, to quarrel, He yielded, for lack of a better ;idea; "All right, beloved. How sine lwe begin?" ' I On close approach, the idea dicl !Seem rather impossible to her. "1-iow 'could 2 ever quarrel with you, my love?" she cooed. He gazed at her with a rush or lovely tenderness: "And how could I ever speak crossly to you?" "We never shall have a harsh v shall we?" she resolved. SUNDAY SBH1:1011 Lesson V.—Second Quarter, For May4,.1913. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Gen. xl, 9-23. Memory Verses, 14, 15 -Golden Text, Job xxxii, 8--Corrt manta ry Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns, Today's chapter suggests the &emits of Scripture and shows how God uses even a dream as a link in His chain of providenees. Be warned Abimelech and Laban In a dream:, revealed Him- self to Jacob in dreams: also spoke to Pharaoh a nd Nebncluichiezzar in dreams (Gee. :ex, 3, 0; xxvili, 12; xxri, 10, 11. 24: all, 1, 7; Dan. 11, 11. Gideon also and S'oloinoa heard God in a dream (Judg. vii, 13; 1 22Igs ili, 0, 151, In ' connection. with the birth arid lurancy, of Jesue there were: several COL1211111111- MMUS by dreams, and Pilate's wife' suffered In a dream incense of 'Him at the end of His ministry. We cannot but think of Job xxxiii, 14-17, where we read of God speaking in a dream. In a vision of the eight when deep sleep falleth neon inen, siumberings upon the bed tbat He may withdraw man from his purpose and hide pride from man. . , We think also of Nem. eii, 0-8, where Ile said that while Fie might talk to others in a vision and in a dream, He would speak to Moses, /31s servant, mouth to month; therefore it is Writ- ten of Moses, "There arose not' a prophet since 113 Israel like ante Moses, 'whom the Lord knew face to face" (Dent. xxxiv, 101., While tbere are no degrees in salva- tion and all who are truly redeemed are equally safe by virtue of the great atonement, there are great differences in the intimacy of the redeemed with the Lord and in their fellowship with Min. I suppose that no two righteous men could be farther apart in this mat- ter than Abram and Lot, and not many exceed jos.eph in his intimacy with God, but think of what It cost 111031 And just tbere is our difficulty. Many are glad to rejoire in their personal salvation. but few comparatively are willing to humble themselves to walk with God as lae desires they should. In that sense "many are called, but few are chosen." It means so much to deny self, be alway delivered unto death, but In no other way can the life of Christ be manifest in tbese mortal bodies GI Cor. Iv, 10, 1.1). One would scarcely believe that the offense of Pharaob's chief butler and better could possibly have anythiug to Marjorie had a little temper all her do with the working out of God's plan own. So she defended it: "If you are for Joseph and that the wrath of man so draid ot my temper, love, perhaps could thus be overrnled. but it is a you'd better call it all off before itei weighty saying, "Surely the wrath of too late." man shall praise thee" (Ps, lxxvi, 101. "i didn't say anything about your Why should Joseph cave whether these tetuper, sweetheart," Mallory- insisted.. men were sad or otherwise? Had he "You did, too, honey. You said lel not enougb troubles of his own? But chuck this up till your dying day. As see the compassion of Christ, who if I had such a disposition! You can cofficl take some hours on the reser- stay here." She rose to her feet, He rection afternoon to walk witb and pressed her back with a decisive mo-, c-omfort two sad men. It sounds odd tion, and demanded: "Where are you to hear Joseph say to these men can - going?" [v1111114' their dream: "Do not inter- - "Up in the baggage car 'with pretations belong; to God? Tell me, I Snoozleums," she sniffled. "He's the' pray you" (verses (1-81. only one that doesn't iind fault With' If he had said, "Tell God. who only me." can Interpret," it would seem all right Mallory was stung to action by this' But it was all right, for Joseph knew crisis: "Wait," he said, He leaned God and represeuted God, and God out and motioned down the alley. sans with him. As he vras able to in - "Porter! Walt a moment, darling. terpret the dreams of these men he Porter I" =1st have been able to understand the The porter arrived with a half -fold- ch.eams that God gave to hire and was, ed blanket 113 his hands, and Ms usual ao segg,ested in a previons lesson, no "Yassah i" . doubt sustained by the future which Deckoninee hint closer,Mallory mum- they revealed to hint Yet he felt the bled iit a low tone: "Is there an ex- time long, and the wrong which he tra berth on this car?" was encluring, for bear Ulm as he says The porter's eyes seemed to ea pitifelly: "Indeed, '1 was stolen helm his ears. "Does you want this. a * * Ind here els° have I "No -of course not." ciiirtiotns:btninineotbldieintingwg eetohniat tnbi%eh oo,ou 1 d pri t me upper made up?" "Fx-excese me, thought -7" :lade hen "Don't you dare to think!" MallorYt kindness, 1 pray thee, unto me and thundered, "Isn't there another low, make mention of me unto Pharaob and FAX -4, TO TAKE 12 SCIENTISTS. Stefansson Has Enlisted ,Aid of Es- perts Abroad. NEW 'YORK, April 28.-Stefansson, the Arctic explorer, landed in New, York yesterday from the steamer St. Paul to perfect the plans for his four years' exploration of the lar north un- der the auspices of the'Oanadian Gov- • Succeeps e (Pyads larvely upon G Lip d alth NE_ In your race for success don't loose sight of, the sect that only through good health can you attain allecess. The tension you must necessarily place upen your nerves, and the sacrifice of proper exercise you have to make at times must be balanced in some way. er lament. The steamer eeached, ear - anti ne Saturday night and docked yes- terday =Ming. Of, 1112 last trip to the northland, Mr. Stefansson diseovered the blonde Eskimo, and yesterday he explained that 'one of the objects of the new ex- pedition would be for fa -ether study of these people. "We whncler what they are," Kr: Stefansson said in speaking of this ,me-er rate. "It cannot te that they ate mixed with whalers. They may Dr. Pierce 439 s C.,;caideri Medical Discovezy 012PALM11 .11.11991...21110.6aauszzo.siizavaarcirat tarnurzna,nernmeran AT DP. PIERC'S GRE FAMILY DOC1OR BOOK, ThoPeopit.'s Cowmen Sense Medical Adviser —neW1Y,revised up,to- date edition—of 100$1 pisges, answers hoots oF delicate questions, which every woman,. sineleormerried,ouhtse o know. Sent 552E 11, CiOth blifthrta 50 nnlv arldress on receipt 01- 60 ene•cent stmrnpot tono 'S et wrapping, tow and line 0013. is the balancing power vitalizing poorer. It acts on the stomach arel organs of digestion and nutrition, thus purifying the blood and giving strength to the nerves, indirectly aiding the liver to perform its very important work. Dr-. Pierce's Goklen Medical Discovery has been successful for a generation £1B a tonic and 'body bender. Sold by medicine dealers in liquid or tablet form - trial box of "Tablets" mailed on receipt of 50 On0.. cent stamps. - LI in failing health write Dr. R. V. Pierce's f aculty at invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, New York. be blonde from environment, or they may be related to the Greenland Es- itinao•" er berth?" 1 The porter breathed hard, and gave i 1,4r.ingiromewouhatt of trieT"orduinse'r• e(rviers2e3s. this bridal couple U. as a riddle that' -Yet (lid not the chief butler remem- followed no known rules. He went to her Joseph, but forget him." Some find the steepirig car conductor, and 'Inc has said that such people are not returned with the information thati ell called "baler." the diagram showed nobody assigned, There is a record in Bed. ix, 35, of a ! to number three. • peer wise man, who by his vvisclom "Then I'll take number three," said denverecl n Pity, yet no num remem: 1VIallory, poking money at the porter.: liewd that same poor man. What shrill And still the porter could not under.. asas say of IIiin, wbo, though He W1154 "Now, lemme onderstan' you -all,"; ; rveh. for oar sakes became poor and stand, lintnbled Himself nnto death fpr ns he stammeree. "Does you both move! that we, throngli His poverty. might over to numba three, or does yo' -yo' l ha rich, and yet who of us remenibera lady remain heah, while jest you pre -I elm in any way as we should? "Just 1 preambulate, you black, , !,\ ilss Ha borshon's typical Sagges ambulates?" hound!" Mallory answered, i (ions frous this chapter are in refer: threatening tone. The porter could -11 al enee to Jesus being bound and lad away, His hands and feet pierced, twa understand that, at least, and he! mnlefnetors crucified with Elim. a mes. 1 bristled away with a meek: "Yessah.I seee of life. to the one only (Matt Numba three is yours, sah." , cavil. 2; Ds. xxii, 16; Luke xxill. 32, ,:rhe troubled features of the baf-; stl'I.Toseph said: "Wherefore look ye fled ,porter cleared up as by magic: so sadly? Think' on me, show kind. . there he found his tyrant and tor -I . Scan !into me, make mention of me, when he arrived at number three, for; mentor, the E,nglish invader. nee he served them (Luke sail, 1.).7; He remembered how indignantly e, 221, ' NNIV. 17; I Cor, xi, 24; Matt. xxv, 40, Mr. Wedgewood had refused to show We meet not forget thy being num his ticket, how cocksure he was oft leered with transgressors (lsa. 1131, 12; hip number, how he had leased. the; Luke xxii. 311. It must hive hurt .10. porter's services as a sort of private. eepit Nulty to he licensed of the very . nurse, and bad paid no advance roy-. thing tie soorned to do, and no (Mold alties. the rtspOrt MIS 111'f'elated in Potiphar's And now Ile Was sprawled and SnOr" hotisohold nncl o Ise to hpre and believed , ing majestically among hia many lug -1 in ninny, end the model young teen gages, like a sleeping lion, Revenge ,: . 1 ,teld es to rine:elle. Think of the Lord tasted good to the humble porter; it; ;1„„„,,;00;;;.;;;,01 00 „ glutton; 0 want, tasted like a' candied yam smothered; lino „,,,,, I, „„„111„11„.„ 52 ,I,,,,r, 3 (50, ie 'possum gravy. He smacked his: m‘smoil by t lie devil, erueltitgl as an 011 thidi: liPS over this revenge. With; d oer, soo St's ; 1 a t os Flo su ffered. 1101 all the 11190ienCe of a servant in brief; a; authority, he gloated over his prey, nave nili, glory. ivi mikeil 111111 1111111 the &rid '211it: and prodded him awake. Then mur- mured with hypocritical deference.:l "Exeuse me, but could I see yo' ticket; for yo' seat?" , ' "Certainly not! It's too much; ;trouble," grumbled the half asleeper. "Confound you!" ; The poeter lured him on: "Is you. oho' YOU got One?" , Wedgewood was wide awake now; slii_y_l Ali,f137 ark Ally Englieaman before Continued next week. In the. Stefansson party that will sail in a 247 -ton steam whaler for the north, the first week in lune by the North Pacific and Behring Straits, will be twelve scientists, including James Murray,,the biologist, and Dr. Forbes Mankay, a surgeon, who were members of the last Shackleton expe- dition; Dr. Fri,tz Johansen, the zoolo- gist; Henry Beauchat, a French an. thropoligist, and Dr. Edward Jataness,; an Austrian anthropologist. Dr. R, M. Anderson, of the American Mu- seum of Natural History, will be sec - and in command. In addition to the scietists, there isa a CVCW of 15 under the comraand of Capt. C. T. Pederson. Much time will be spent in investi- gating the direction and speed of cur- rents, and the explorers expect to send the ship back to the land of the blonde Esquimaux every winter and take to the sledges in exploration work. The course will be due north from Herschel Island at the mouth of the Mackenzie River, and after new land has been gained and a base es. tablished, the ship will leave the ex- plorers there if the passage through the ice is not too difRoult. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Ir‹.444 , 01111:1 01,11:11I'll, 111131051 cleaning 01.11 the besiness section, Xing Albert, of tho Belgians, opehneencil the thternational oxpoeition at o on Saturday. Tho king was accom- panied by Queen Elizabeth and theix oldest son, Prince Leimeold. Blontreal is s'welterine etenlni. mjd- enn,enaa' heat conclit:ol18. I. or three. , or four days the thermometer Was elmve summer heet, running 70 ancl 77 in the ehatin. l'.latueday it .elimbecl to es in the shade, . 'rite Pope was permitted by hiF physicians on Sctnrdav to stand at his window and watch the America') pilgrims crossing the square to enter the Vatican for the reception by Cardinal Merry del BRIEFS FROM THE WIRES, The Krupp works at Kiel have cap- tured the contract for four Argentine destroyers. American jurists in convention urg. • ed the submission of the Panama toile , question to arbitration. Beniamin Robinson, the discoverer of fish glue, is dead at his home in Gloucester, Mass., aged 134. Dr. Roberts, medical officer oi health at Hamilton, thinks he and his assistants have isolated the germ caus- ing septic sore throat. The Borden Government is said tc he dmsidering the establishment of drydocks at Halifax, Esquimault and Levis, ultimately to be naval bases. Robert Davidson, for thirty-nine years chief of the Sherbrooke. Quo., police and fire departments, died at neon -yesterday. following, a two nu.PtilS. illness. Ilse auxiliary fishing schooner Re - sine was totally destroyed by an ex- plosion off Dundas Mani, B.C. A r0. port from Prince Rupert says three 01011 were injured, Alarmed at the reappearance of the 'bubonic Mamie the l\lanila Board til Health has employed fifty additional rat catchers to rid the city ct disorise- spreading. rodents, An at:rot-1min, has been reached ho. tween the partisans of Gen. Felix 2)150 and Prcsidekt Humid and his Cabinet matte Sresh efforts to have a etne eleMion veiled, Twenty-ilye thousand dollars dam has li.ott (lulu! to the town 4 • 1.- _ COPra COPIA LEFT A NASTY, DRY COUGH. Doctors Could Be Ecd. Mrs. A. Mainwright, St. Mary's, Ont., writes; -"I feel it my duty to write tmd tell you the good your Dr. 'Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrup did for my little bey. He had whooping couglb which left him with a nasty, dry hard cough. I took him to several doctors, but they did Idea no good, and I could see my little lad failing day by day. I was :IChlted in lttito 'hilX1 to another doctor, which l 51151. tied he told me he was goine into a &ell: • . I was telling a neighbour about it, at ;1 she told me to get a bottle of Dr. Wootre Norway Pine Syrup, and give 12 to him regularly. She then got Intel! ract how much good it did het children, so I get a I bottle, and gave it to my little 1)e..y, 5,11 was so pleased with the result tnct, ; bought another one, and by Lim ti -rte ha ! had finished it' he had no cough. now fat ancl strong, and I would not be without a bottle m the house on any account." Whooping cough generally begins as a common cold, am/Twat:tied with cough- ing and a slight discharge from the nos... It is, as a rule'more of a child's trouble but aLso affects adults. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is a sure preventative if taken in time, and is also a positive cure for any of the after effects. "Dr. Wood's" is put up in a yellrw wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark; price 25 and 50 cents. Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. WAB SCARE TRUST Dr. Liebknecht Says It is am International Affair, REVELATIONS ARE CONTINUED German Socialist Leader Declares ler, Reichstag That Sig Sums of Money Are Invested by Capitalists of Alt the European Countries to Pro- voke War -- Kaiser Indirectly a Party to Traffic, He Says, BERLIN, April 28. -Dr, Karl Liar>. knecht, the German Socialist leader, continued in the Reichstag Saturday his revelations in connection with the - methods of armament concerna„ which, be said, though living on in- ternational hostility, were run on in- ternationalized capital. He cited a, contract existing ba- tsmen tertain leading small arms sta ammunition factories - two in Ger- many, one in Austria, ansi one in Belgium -- principally backed by French money, by the terms of which,, the deputy alleged, an agreement hall been reached to eliminate eompetiticen and to guarantee mutual profits. Dr. Liebknecht pointed out that German companies were selling arrm: to Russia and: that another concern largely capitalized with French Inouye: was furnishing armor plate to Ger- many, and, lie asserted, all these cam- panies wero enaineering war Beasts, in order to insure contracts. The Socialist loader introduced tits namos of Emperor William awl thrs Geraian Crown Prince, menti,;nifv., that although The Vorwaerts priatc42 in 1910 a letter showing that an stls- tempt had been made by a Gartnar, arms s.ynclioale to ssiciire the pnI•rast- timi in Frota;11 newspapers o; 1111.3s news regarding the stronatlam;;; ; ! the arms, with the °bleat <4 cattsis Th reflex action af German the Emperor later did not, tiositais appoint Herr yen Centex t of the syndicate. a life rnoni4, 1 II% the Prussian House of Lords. Hors von Contard is a snn-in-law of Ads.1- phut; Baeoli of St. Louis. , Referring to the Crown Prine,-.. Liebknecht recalled that the heir tlie thrnue had been demonstralieefee applauded in the Reichstag in during the campaign of a ever cliiiaa against the German War Minister. 003seaccoomeockloomee9emose)eceirecmceeepieleceranannoreefeefee:300000000o00000800000•001/40000 000030000*060000560000z000 000000000*O*0000000000000000000000000000000000000004t 0 Id e e Il 06,01,...,,,,rff:7----7.7 0 a 6 iri 0 0 A "-g...E._.....,-. ..01,............2amanaxa % e el D 0 a 63 r`k,,,,----------______,,, 07::,......--,:ne:71,5•-, a rale 11 0 a qrass.s.!....."' ra 113,,,3 0 se o e o a 0 a ssas-ss, ,ratIts'afol#1,-,7. t;;;;TalOgr& 40%, tra V. a Itl. a ;g3 sa Sis 0 0 tis,,- 4347 0 e t .0 a e • to e • o • - t, 6, e to o • o r.:4411 ate s e 6 • 6.A'''' re 6, 0 • • 0 6,6 •,.,.., • • • • ill 'cr, 0 .E. • • . q , v., . r __!!..„ ...,„,-,. •e•• ••0• oov:i.2,7e 0 172,41:.:4,:.7::q:.7:ra...4.,0.1*:r,11;,:11,1,111,111001010.a4% 0 •• 00E. 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