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The Clinton News Record, 1912-11-14, Page 6GEO'WIN a QIIItLS AND ALL WOMEN. Should Keep Their Blood Supply Rit h, Red and Pure. On every hand you see` women and growing girls in the deadly' clutches of anaemia. Slowly but surely a polka as of death's, > settles on their cheeks; their eyes grow dull;' their appetite fickle; their steps languid. Daily they are be- ing robbed of all vitality and brightness. The trouble, if neg- lected, becomes more acute until the signs of early consumption be- come apparent. What women and young girls in this condition need is new, rich, red blood, and there is no other medicine can do the work. of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, in mak- ing this new, good blood. These Pills make girls and women well, and bring back the; charm and ,and of perfect, regular health. Here is abit of proof. Miss Lillie O'Carroll, Norwood, Ont., :says :—"About .two years ago my healthbegan to fail; I was weak, run down and had no ambition for anything. I had frequent head- aches, would be completely tired out after the least exertion, and had little or no appetite. A doc- tor who was giving me medicine finally told me he feared I was go- ing into consumption, which, of course, made me very much down- hearted As the 'medicine I was taking was not doing me any good I decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink' Pills, and hehall ever feel grateflil that I did so. My story may be summed up in .the words "nine boxes of the Pills fully restored my health—perhaps saved my life, and I am now as strong and healthy as any girl.'' • Every anaemic 'sufferer can ob- tain equally good results through a fair use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. ', Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at $0 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine _Co., Brockville, Ont. —'I "It was simply a question of vera- city between us," said the oldest inhabitant. "He said I was a liar, and I said he was one." "Humph.!" rejoined the village postmaster. "That's: the first time I ever heard either of you telling the truth." MICROBES IN `GAEL ?Ara POROSITY IN ROOMS SAID TO BE UNHEALTHY. , Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,—I have used MINARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, and for the every day 1110 and aroidenta of life.' I consider it has no. eeual. 1 would not start on a voyage wiyhout it, if it cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN, Behr. "Storko, ' Bt. Andre, Kemouraska. Blank Spots Not Soot But Cre- mated Microbes, Says Scientist. ' There are two reasons why the modern fashion of papering ceilings is accounted unhealthy by the scien- tist. The first is, that paper of any kind is objectionable as the lining of a room, whether on the wall or; the top or the floor; the aeoond is, that the ceiling" should be left as porous as possible, .and should have an alkaline coating • of lime- waah or whitewash ready to absorb alI the acids that are always given to the air when ehuman beings live. In our so-called temperate zone of the world it is very necessary to keep rooms, warm, especially, in tho autumn evenings. We can do it in many ways: by fires, by gas, by electricity, or merely by huddling together in large companies and let- ting the internal combustion of our bodies keep up the temperature. There are two 'sohools'of thought. withregard to the porosity of the lining of a room. One thinks that a rough paper or a carpet; or a porous ceiling is a ' Place to Harbor Microbes. SANG TWO DAYS STEADILY. AYx `shire Man Gave Other PrIon- ors Unwoted "Nerves." A prisoner in an Ayrshire (Soot - land) prison bas been giving to the sphysioians and prison officials an anxious and worrying time. For two days and nights he kept singing song after song, . without any inter- vals for food, and ceased only when sheer exhaustion caused "him to faint. He eame from theP rison farm and entered This cell singing the '-'Glory" song. He was threatened with punishment if ho did not give up, but.he seemed not to hear the warnings. He sat in his cell appar- ently quite happy till the never ceasing "Glory" song,; got on the nerves:. of the other prisoners, and he was removed to a cell which was as nearly sound proof as possible. All through the night, all next day and next night he kept on singing until at the end of forty-eighthour he suddenly ceased, and he wa found lying on.the floor of his cell in a swoon., • Whomwellve hours later, he re (levered in the prison infirmary h• had no recollection of having •been singing,at 'a11, .All he said.;he coul remember was that he seemed sud deniy to lose his memory when sit ling in the prison van and -though he had fainted. That he had been winging for two clays was a gra surprise to him, a a d. t at All. sorts of evil little things may live. in . the tiny dust -harboring space on walls clad in this way. The other schools of thought thinks that porosity is an aid to ventilation. Of course, both so- oalled .schools think much alike. They merely disagree as to whether the good or evil is the greater : whe- ther microbe harboring does more harm than ventilation does good. We remember an of<l experiment' by which a sudden puff of air pass- ing through a' perfectly dry brick was made to blow out a candle flame. All brick -built houses must partake of the nature of this ex- lierimental ,brick, ' all plaster ceil- ings must let air through more or less easily. . According' to the laws of .diffusion, hot air; should pass through very, quickly indeed, whilst cold air: should pass quite sbowly. In a hot room 'with the air moving steadily upwards, all the products of combustion from fire or burner or breathing human being »cumu- late near the top. A heavily sized paper does not allow a ready pas- sage; plaster with a coat of lime - wash over it lets the hot tenuous gases pass through easily, and as they pass through the whitewash acts as' a filter, taking into itself all the evil matters' that have come from the lungs or bodies of the peo- ple living in the room. Thin Bits of Corn Toasted 'to A delicate Light gW ht Bron- Poet Toasties To be eaten with cream and sugar. or served with canned fruit poured over —either way insures a most delicious dish. "The flemory Lingers" Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Windsor: Ontario. Lonemastamtmoomor esp. we expected to be buried in sand, the whole scene changed. The storm •seized the great dark cloud as if with a, mighty hand, and twist- ed it round into a whirling column, twenty yards in diameter, that stood for a moment perfectly up- right. :Then, little by little, it lean ed forward, and like a great spec - tee, -it swept by us, passing GO near that grains of sand flying off at a tangent struck tie with incredible force. When a mile away it un- wrapped its shroud, and collapsed directly across our road. The don- key boy bent over, scooped up a handful of sand, and tossed it to the dying wind. All was 0111.1. It as some time before we could speak. Then I asked' the boy why he threw the sand.; He replied, in little more than: a whisper, that the sandspout was. the most voracious of all the devils,; and that unless it was appeased it might arise directly under us, hurling us into the air as a hound does a rabbit'. I. believe, had T been alone, I should have cast a `little sand myself. Later, when we beheld the hundreds and hun- dreds of tons of sand piled up where the "spout" had fallen, I realized wherein our real danger had been. Had the great mass 'fallen on us, we should have been buried twenty feet deep. Black Spots Roasted Germs. In a lecture given at Manchester, England, recently Professor Vivian Lewes threw two curious sidelights on both points of view, and one can only 'gather that 'a whitewashed ogling is better than a papered one on all counts. Bo was explaining the peculiar effects of incandescent gasburners. Naturally, they heat the air and press a thin, hot, readi- ly diffused atmosphere against the ceiling; but they do something much'more subtle. We have been accustomed to see black markings on the white tops of our rooms over each burner. Any one who thought about it jumped to the rather super- ficial conclusion that, the gas was not completely ' burned, and that traces of carbon were left that went up, to deposit as a kind of soot. Professor Lewes has found from his experiments that nothing of the kind takes place. Combustion is complete. • But the microbes and other ob- jectionable substances . that are drawn towards any kind of gas flame flutter upwards and are singed like moths. It is their cre- mated bodiee that blacken the ceil- ing, whilst the .products of their cremation pass onwards through the plaster. A SAND SPOUT. Terrifying Illustration of It Wit- nessed in China. Learning by Love Letter. "Love letters between young men and -women are an excellent me- thod of teaching literature," says Dr. Arthur Holmes. But it must be done tactfully. We have known a young lady to break off an en- gagement because her fiance 're- turned her love letters with the spelling errors neatly corrected in red ink. Superficially, desert and ocean are entirely unlike; one is water- less, the other nothing but water. But they have . their similarities, nevertheless. Under 'the oompul- aion of a whirling- wind, particles of I desert sand and particles. of sea- ' water act very 'much alike. A ter- rifying illustration of this fact was afforded to Mr. Warner Van Orden, who was travelling recently across China on missionary business. He relates" his experience . in the New York Times. Alz we drew near a large town in a valley. we left the green wheat- fields behind and found ourselves on a quivering,fiery desert—not a housein sight, not a tree, only the yielding, treacherous, slippery sand. Suddenly there appeared on the horizon a deep yellowish cloud, that extended rapidly from the northwest to the south. " Our pack -train, the donkey boys, everything about lis, became tinged with its fulvous hue. Ottr• glbide, a great, hulking lad, displayed con- siderable nervouaness, at which t was aurprised,z for. one becomes .in- ured to durst-stormssin this part of China. Each "•s tcceeding minute the wind inereaeed in force; great blasts of air drove the .sharp sand against our faces until the tears be- ganpto, wash their way down our cheks. ' . Now the yellow cloud in the west gradually became darker., until it was transformed into the moat omi- nous blackness. It was moving to- ward os with 4reab rapidity. ;In, etinetively we slipped from our beasts and crouched beside them. May animal was shaking like it leaf, too frightened even to whinny: The air was heavily charged with: elrc- tricity. We tingled all over. T.nthe twinkling of an eye, just as NO MEDICINE. But Change of Food Gave Final Relief. Most diseases start in the alimen- tary canal—stomach and bowels. A great deal of our stomach and bowel troubles come from eating too much starchy and greasy food. .The stomach does not digest any of the. starchy food we eat—white bread, pastry, potatoes, oats, etc.. —these things are digested in the small intestines, and if we eat too much`, as most of us do, the organs that should digest this kind of food areovercome by excess of work, so that fermentation, indigestion, and a long train of ails result. Too much fatalso is hard to di- gest igent and this is changed into acid$, sour stomach, .belching gas, and a bloated, heavy feeling. In these conditions a change from indigestible foods to Grape -Nuts will work wonders in not only re- lieving the distress but in building up a strong digestion, clear brain and steady nerves. A woman writes : `About five years ago I suffered with bad st6mach—dyspepsia, indi- gestion, constipation—caused, I know now, from overeating starchy and greasy food. "I doctored for two years with out any .benefit. The doctor told -me there was no cure for me. T could not eat anything without suf- fering severe pain in my back and sides, and I became discouraged. "A friend recommended Grape- Nuts and I began to useait. In less than two weeks I began to feel bet- ter and inside of two months I was been ever a well woman and have since. "1 oan eat anything.I wish with pleasure. We eat Grape -Nuts and cream for breakfast and are very fond of it." Name given by Cana- dian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's'a reason." Ever read the above 'letter, A. new ono appears from • time to time. They aro genuine, true, and full of human Interest. SPORT IN NOVA SCOTIA.. Excellent Shooting;' Fishing ^ and Moose Hunting. , Shin All Covered With Eruption N. Henri Tardus Tried Many Remedies 3 or 4 Years. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. A Quebec man, N. Eenrl Tariff, of St. Casimir, writes in a letter dated Mar. 31,1911:'' "I had a very bad skin, all covered with. eruption, eight, years ago.' I have had all of both my shoulders covered with it, and tho high part of •my arms, and my face, but it was the worst on my shoulders. I tried many different remedies to cure it,but nothing was any. good. At, last I wont to an apothecary. IIe asked me if I bad ever used Cuticura Soap and Ointment... I, told him no, and I, bought a box of Cuticura Ointment and a cake of Cuticura Seep, I' used three boxes of Outloura Ointment, but I am glad of the same, for Cuticura 'Soap and Ointment completely cured me of my akin eruption. I spread the Cutloura :Ointment on all my sore parts, and'I think that In washing my face with the Cuticura. Soap, it hindered my eruption from itching and burning.' I tried many remedies during three or four years but Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured me." (Signed) N. Henri Tardit. - Cuticura Soap, and ,Ointment ;are sold throughout the world, but to those who have suffered much, lost hope and are with- out faith in any treatment, a liberal sample of each with a 32-p. 'booklet on the skin and scalp will be mailed free, on application, Address Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., 50 Columhu9 A..,..; nngnn, Tr, a 0,. CHENILLE CURTAINS and all kinds of heuam banging., Woo IACE CUR,„,so itS.DYE LIAKEV NELW-D Write to ns gamut yours. Gold' Medalist. BRITISH AMERICAN DYEINC CO., Box 233,Montroal The Heart eta Plano is the Action. insist an the OTTO H1,•YGELee Piano Action NO ROYAL ROAD IN FOG. Torches Preceded Edward VII. Tramping Home One Night. Recently the King had the exper- ience of driving home from the thea- tre with torchbearers tramping in front. The incident recalls the most eurious sight in a pretty var- ied London life, wrote a London correspondent. Groping down St. James . Street early one foggy night about the middle of King Edward's reign, I was surprised by a great glare of torches, and there emerged silently from the fog a number of, mon, like footmen, bearing torches and be- hind them a group. of gentlemen in cloaks surrounding some one walk- ing heavily fn the middle, and an- other body of torchbearers brought up the rear. The personage in the middle was revealed by the 'torches as Bing Edward, and the party moved slow- ly and •silently down the street along the Mall to Buckingham Pal- ace. The, King had 'bffien dining with Mrs. George Keppel in Port- man Square. It was a curious sight to see and made one think of the London of OharleaII. . Plain. Speaking. FROM ERIN'S GREEN ISLE Nova Scotia is rapidly becoming one of the most popular tourist re- sorts on the American continent, The healthful summer climate and the great variety of sport available make the province an ideal vacation land. No .part of Nova Scotia is more than thirty miles • from the sea, and the country is full of the charm of •scenery and the magic of hietori- cal association. It offers excellent galue. bird +•shooting, iu;ciuding wild fowl, forest birds, and shore birds. The two great game fish are the At- lantic salmon and the speckled or brook trout. A leaping tuna, weigh- ing 680 lbs., was captured off the Nova Scotian shore by hook and line on August 261110911, and, con- stituted a world's .record. The game gentleman, Mr. J. K. L. Ross, of Montreal,' fishing .with the Duke o£ ' Connaught, wa,s fortunate enough to land another ' tiuna,. weighing 800 :lbs. Nova Scotia af- forcis in generous measure the finest sport in America=moose hunting. About 800 moose are shot °,every year. Bear and wild cat are numer- ous. The woodland caribou is plen- tiful on the island of Cape i3reton, ED. 4.. ISSUE; 46—'12 NEWS BY MAIII FIIOM 11111 LAND'S SHORES. happenings In tite Emerald Isle; of Interest to Irish- men. A disastrous fire occurred at Messrs, Henderson and Wallace's sawmill, Belfast. Dr. Daly has been appointed as- sistant medical officer of Monaghan and Cavan Asylums. Daniel McBride' and Frank �\Mc- Cue, two Irish harvesters, were drowned in the Dunbar Harbor. The death has occurred of the Right Rev. William Edward Meade, D.D., Bishop of Cork, in his Both year. A fireman named Calgon, of the S.S. Haslie, fell overboard at the North Wall, Dublin, and was drowned. The Athlone Guadiana decided that they' would not ask people to, have their children vaccinated' against their will. , The death has occurred at Private Hospital, Dublin,. of Thomas A. Earle,late of Northumberland Ave- nue, Kingstown. The. Market Committee of the Belfast Corporation has sanctioned the use of St. George's covered market 'as a drill hall. Two men were given acetic acid by aship's captain at Limerick Docks in mistake for rum, and one died in Barrington''s Hospital.' ' A bull attacked Sergeant M. Hea- ly of Gorvagh while on a Revenue, Patrol, and he is now lying in Mo - hill Hospital with a broken leg. A special parade. of Belfast Boy Bluejackets, or Sea Scouts, was held at the residence of the Lord Mavor, Cabin Hill, Knock. 1Vfn.eter McPhillip, son of Mr. Mc - Phillip, N. T.,, Rosbercan, Nelw, Ross. ' has won a National Univer- sity scholarship, valued at $250. The work of widening and recon- structing the Cross Guns bridges; Dublin, undertaken 12 months ago, is now practically completed. "I see you passed a candy store onyour way here this evening" "How in the ,world did you ever. know that R'' ' "Because you didn`t bring any candy with you." She. Had Read Joke Books. Husband—You don't mean to say that you 'have been trying to bake pies Young Wife—Yes, but you have nothing to fear ; I put two dyspep- sia, tablets in each one. —* 1 GOOD' FOR ALL BABIES. Daby's Own Tablets are good for all babies: : They are geed for the newborn babe or the growing child— the babe who suffers from constipation or the one whose teething is difficult or who has indigestion, colic, worms or any of the other babyhood ailments. The Tablets ban- ish all these 'troubles—they are perfectly safe; being guaranteed by a government analyst to contain' no opiates or harmful, drugs. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents it box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.; Brockville, Ont. Flattering' Her. He -I have a compliment for you dear. Sho—What is it?' He --Mrs. Jones says you have the' handsomest husband in town. Minard's: Liniment Cures Colds, &c. When It'll be Most Needed, "Got your furnace going?" - "Yes, unfortunately." - "Why unfortunately 1" "Because every time I go down to take care of the fire I know blamed well that the coal I throw on so recklessly now would come in mighty handy if Z could only hang on to it until next March." Flurried. "John, am I all right for the theatre4" "My dear, I hardly know what you consider all right. You have a dab of powder on each ear, but none on the tip Of your nose," Mlhard'o Liniment Cures Dtphtheela. A WONDERFUL CASE. Three Months in Hospital and Came out Uncured. Zani.-Iluk Cored Sint in Few Weeks Mr. Fred Mason, the well-known upholsterer and mattress manufac- turer of St. Andrew's, N.B., says i "I had eczema on my knee, which caused me terrible pain and incon- venience. The " sore parts would itch and burn.and tingle, and then when rubbed or scratched, would become very painful. -. When the knee got warm, it burned worse, and the itching and burning and smarting were almost unbearable. I tried various remedies,' but got no better, so.I decided to go to Montreal and take special treat- ment, I received • treatment at the Montreal General Hospital for thirteen weeks, but at the end of that time I was not cured, and al- most gave in. A friend advised me to give Zam-Buk a trial. "Almost as soon as applied Zam. Buk stopped the itching and the ir- ritation; I. persevered with the balm,'and it was soon evident that it would do me good. Each day the pain was reduced, the sore spots began to heal, and bythetime I had used a few boxes of Zam-Buk I was quite cured. "Since then Zara-Buk has cured blood -poison- in my finger. For eczema, ' blood -poisoning, piles, ulcera, sores, abscesses, vari- cose ulcers, bad leg, cold sores; chapped hands, cuts, burns, bruises and all skin injuries and diseases, Zam-Buk is without equal, - 50c. box all druggists' and stores or post free from Zam-Buk Go., Toronto, for price. Refuse imita- tions. '' Breaking the Neibs. Pat—"Mrs. Flannigan, yure mon Moike has just fell off th' scaffeldin' and killed himself, bedad." Mrs. Flannigan (eollapsing) in chair -"Hiving I" Pat -"Airy, aisy 1 'Tis only his leg that's bruk. It's rcjoioed ye'll be to hear it when ye thought he was killed fur -a -t." MInard's Liniment Mures Distemper. It's bad enough not to'have coal these days, but it's ten times worse to be living next door to the man who has a full bin and hasn't been backward about lotting your wife know that hehas it. Cure For Consumption,—For conaump. tion, weak lunge lingering coughs, laryn- pitie and bronchitis. Names and addresses of those only given a row Jaye tolive by specialist .and doctors, after taking this cure are alive and well, will be sent on TOdUCSt. Write Wm. R. Oopeland, 511 Pape Ave., Toronto, Ont. The man who bets more than ho can afford to Lose deserves to lose. Minaret's :Liniment Cures . Carset in Cows. Teacher—Wiy did you put that pin in my chair? Bad Boy—Boo- hoo ! How did you know I put it there? Teacher—Because you were the only boy in the room who was hard at work studying when I sat. on.it, i. birktd ENDORSES O/N MILS, 29 Broadway, New York. "I bought some of your GIN PILLS at Victoria, B.C. last September. Your remedy I' find, at 6o,years of age, to give perfect relief from the Kidney and Bladder Troubles incident to one of my ago. I urgently recommend GIN PILLS to friends as being the one thing that does we good." . G. WOODPORD. 5oc. a box, 6 for $2.5o. Money back if GIN PILLS fail. Sample free if you write National. Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. 131 E'.kl� Famous wherever gloves are worn. Noted for their Fit and Finish. See that the trademark In on every glove.�� Efficient. Will heat a good sized room even in the coldest weather. Economical Burns nine hours on one gallon of oil. Ornamental. Nickel trimmings; plain steel . or enameled tur- quoise -blue drums. Portable. Easily car- ried from room to room ; . weighs ' only eleven pounds; han- dle doesn't get hot. Doesn't Smoke Doesn't Leak Easily' Cleaned ' and Re -wicked Inexpensive Lasts for years At Declars Everywhere THE. IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY, Limited TORONTO ST. .0 -•N IV101VTREAL WINNIPEG HALIFAX, asmulassravoi COMPLE'fCAN DY STORE BOYS AND GIRLS,. OWN A DANDY STORE OF YOUR OWN. Thle elegant store 10 the greatnet lnoneyttuking and pleasure prodding antes oras Oared and yen can steel In td•day selling the Mutat anodico to all yon. Woods. Each of thea, wonderful Merge contolu es completestook bone, Butter Scoffer, gore candy Salla, kleroa,etc., ate., all in lovely gloss lura end metal sandy easel, the Aaron no in any big windy qts W . also drawer. ettool tho liat candy moles 100 s.0 abOv0 aomnlolo with weights and plattorum, aline set of bright metal ,,00,e to serve the ,eaudy with, a stook of Son bon boxes, candy bogs and In feet *very 0,ee0Mly of the candy store b0010, e. Then breldenall thinwon. d*rrui stook of .004101 and More !Minna Yy o o A9 Ard IB)rRARkN7ASH REGISTER TANK$ ASLmNLoDk8 e 12SEtaDc S a, and Flues, `Ya- ter Flumes, Engines and Boilers POLSON IR Ni1TEDK5, TORONTO Engineers and Shiphetldera, Sixty Thousand trappers 11057 send us their Raw Furs. Why not you? We nay highest prices and express charges, ehergo no co,nmleelon and Nod mone name day geode oro received. Midione of 'dollars orop id traupqparn such Sane. Deal with a rehab l home. Wu oro the larg'oot In oar line FREE cut "oIp 9ALLtMS TRtodAtPhrhePERaStte"GdLMlttirnnquoof• GUWE, a book; of 90 pages, mailed FREE. ail Dept sot. TORONT0,111 ohn Front St FREE TO BOYS Toy Steam Engine has blued steel boiler and fire box, fitted with steam, whis^tle, safety valve and single wink spirit burner. Polished brass fit tinge, Almost one foot high. Send us your name 'and addroea and we.. will send you 30 sate of Christman, soenlo and floral post - Garde to sell at 10 cents a set. .(six beautiful oards in each set). 'Whop sold send us the money, and we will sendyou the -en- gine, all chargee prepaid. Write to- day. Address HOMER -WARREN ' CO. nept.. 130;' Throat, Two Views. Mrs. A.—Does your husband be- lieve in corporal punishment iii the, houeehold 2 ,Mus, B.—Only to a certain point. He's always whipping the children but he thinks the dust should be got out of the carpet by molal su- asion.' All They Got. "Burglars broke intoour house last night." "That sol Did tlieY get any- thing?" "Nothing except my dsusband's nerve." n is n» exent model of the big sash register. costing t»aO in each and :logo up every Gale mode. 10la 0000. plate With hulls lock end keys end Ia awoneornapro,onl In `teal!. Wore and glrie, get We Gandy store end Ton 0011 be the envy of rancour Mende. We 1111 giro 11 toyooaoal. pieta with the elegant cosh resister and ell, If you will eel' among your friends, only 8O bottle. of ourdeh,htlat Basal Japoneee Pert era, atonlyl0e. eaeb, They gam in els lovely 1 Ino allot, bottles ad blot wid J5 key Cluti pub up, EMIT, .h dr vraat. lids 10,011 perfume aold0 floral labels, bottle. n ,111110o hol0050., Send and get the perfume ro•d*y. we tract you with It. Whensold return of m ¢ yj»1 l 53 00 smith. aomnloo sandy Otero exactly a lflu.6Aeted above ash Fslater and all, will 1, Benito you'ASSOLUTIXLY REE Th10 lora wonderful oiler to bright boys Slid, girl. Ifs the ere` la your neighborhood to gat this wonderfullture. Address, NATIONAL PRODUCTS, LIMITED' Dept. C. 305 TORONTO, OANABA. • FARMS FOR SALE. W.'DAWSON,. Ninety Colborne Strait, Toronto. IT UNDRED ACRES-OOUNTY iOALTON; good .House; ' Buildings; Orchard.'' Cheap. and on easy'' terms. EVFINTY-SIx AORES : WITII 000D; IJ buildings and apple 'orchard; about. five miles from Hamilton. H. W. DAWSON,Toronto. rill WO CREAMERY AND BUTTER FAO. tortes in - two thriving towns in Western Ontario. Doing. good business. Splendid opportunity for the right man. The Western Real Estate, London, Ont: MALE HELP WANTED. BY NEXT SPRING • s'mo RAILWAYS will require Pive hundred Tele. graphere and' Station Agents. Good wages and advancement rapid. School endorsed by'raliways and has direct tela grant. wire connection, Free Beek 18 ex. plants, Dominion School Railroading, Toronto. - MISCELLANEOUS. !`I Ab10ER, TuRtons, LU6VPS, ate. In- ILI tonna' • and external, cured witbonl pain by oar Lome treatment. Write ua before too late. Dr. Belimnn Medical. Ca. Limited, .Collin owned,.Ont. T EARN. SILVER-PLATING—PARTICU ;ILA--' lars, free. Specialties lgenay. Box 1836, Winnipeg. FEATHER DYEING Cleaning and Curling and Kid Gloves (donned Those can be sent by post, to per at. The host plane is BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING :CQ MONTnisyi. XsGI- MC z eE CREOSOTE) 03ciL *m.iglezl mibas ,fan Proteot — Preserve — Soauttfy Samples and Booklets on Application JAMES LANGMUIR & CO., Limited 18741 .Bathurst Street TORONTO An Alibi. While the talesman were being examined for a murder trial in the West one was asked if be knew what an alibi was. "I think I do ; yes,, sir, "What do you understand by it 4" The talesman reflected for a mo- ment and then, with a hesitancy' indicative of graveness, replied "An alibi is when the fellow who did it wasn't there,, " Because they actd'o gently' (no purging•or griping) yet so thoroughly .ate..,. -.a ' gem U -CO ' LAXA Y Ira� •r1Gn:1 .J➢3V 4 are best for the chlldren,as well as *l the grown-ups, 25o..a box at a your druggist's. kellonal9ing Oa Chemical bo. of Well, Withal • 162 1