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The Huron Expositor, 1930-02-14, Page 2Ir 1j! rc 4- 4'1 nersin T 11i i k'l1 ice v ane nrvnsm hl; FEBR R; ip0t14 ix 1st ;1. y 111 eve stop to think that Tunes the inexpensive remedies t?. any...a'°"man has lost a week's A. With a slow -acting remedy enone or two good rubbings with tiin.ttly penetrating JOINT-EAS'E Ipl;al:ld have kept him on his job. Now just hear in mind, that a gen- ",'erou!s tube of JOINT -EASE made right here in Canada cost but 60 cents and when JOINT -EASE gets in joint agony and other aches and pains get out! Give your ailing, pain - tortured joint a joyful treat to -night — give it a good rubbing with JOINT - II ASE OINTEASE and to -morrow morning if you don't say that the 60 cents you pa: d isn't the greatest, investment you ever made, get your money back frcm any druggist in Canada. , .SUNDAY AFTERNOON (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) 0 Love Divine! that stoop'st to share Our sharpest pang, our bitterest tear, 'On Thee we cast each earth -born care, We smile at pain while Tho'.: art near. When drooping pleasure turns to grief, Ard trembling faith is changed to fear, The murmuring wind, the quivering leaf, Shall softly tell us Thou art near. 0. W. Holmes. PRAYER Q Lord, we pray that Thou, by Thy Spirit, wouldst direct and control all we think, or sap or do that all our powers may be united in Thy ser- vice. Amen. S. S. LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 16th Lesson Topic—Jesus Healing and Helping. Lesson Passage—Matthew 9:1-13. Golden Text—Matthew 8:17. We need to read the last verse of the preceding chapter to learn the cause of the following—"And Ile en- tered into a ship and passed over and came into His own city." The reason was this: "Behold the whole city came out to meet Jesus and when they saw Him they besought Hine that He would depart out of their coasts, and He entered into a ship and passed over." He was driven out. It is ever thus in the experience of a soul that is out of Christ. He never leaves of his own free will but is driven out by divided interests. On His arrival in His own city a needy one was brought to Him for healing. Jesus saw the nature of the disease but He saw deeper than that. He sane their faith in Him. They had heard of His power to heal and came believing He could help them too. Jesus always startled His hearers by seeing something greater in them than they had ever seen in them- selves, and always seemed to credit His patientswith their own cure. He said, "Daughter, thy faith hath made thee whole." wally?' So Jesus proved the first by the second. 'God says to us every day, "That ye May kno* how to care for your souls, I will show you how to care for your bodies." • Having disposed of the Scribes, Jesus turned to the sick man and healed him. Immediately theron the man arose aed departed bo his home. But see the effect upon those round about. Their attitude is en- tirely different to that of the scribes. "And when the, multitudes saw it they marvelled and glorified God." Hum- an instinct ;is the next best thing; for our guidance to• divine inspiration. They saw the power which God had given to Jesus and unlike the scribes they did not doubt. Verses9s13..—Catling to Discipleship. In these verses we have a man's description of himself and what hap- pened at a feast in his own house. "And as Jesus passed from thence, He saw a man, named Matthew sit- ting at the receipt of cushion." This man was following a despised oecu- 'sath'on. The Pharisees called Mat- thew a Publican, a tax -gatherer, a sinner, an alien. So was Zaccheus called, but when the turn came for Jesus Christ to speak about Zaccheus He said, "He is a son of Abraham." Jesus always sees the real man, the ideal, the possible man. "And he said unto him, Follow Me." The very imperativeness of the tone used hides a gracious intent. The Bible is full of commandments, but they are not Er'ievous, they are not the utter- ances of an arbitrary will, but the subtle pleadings of a heart that lives for us, and that would seem to be unable to live without us. ;`And he arose and followed Him." Hlow easy it is for some to rise and follow Christ, as compared with others! It is so easy for some to pray, to give, to attend church, but God is able to bring the reluctant to His throne to pay loyal homage. Matthew's next act was one of public recognition of his new Master. There were many of Matthew's old companions at that feastand when the Pharisees saw that they spoke to the disciples, "Why doth your Master eat with Publicans and sinners?" Jesus Jesus heard their criticism and in reply pointed out to them what His riiisson in life was, and in the per- formance of it He lived above public opinion. "They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. But go ye and learn what that meaneth, I will have mercy and not secr;!ivc• for I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repent- ance." "And Jesus, seeing their faith, said unto the sick of the palsy, Son, be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee." Those who brought the para- lytic did not do so in order to be talked to about sin but Jesus let them know He knew the root of his condi- tion. "This is the accursed work of sin," said Jesus and then added, "Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiv- en thee." Upon hearing this, certain of the Scribes present said within themselves: "This man •blasphemeth." Jesus not only cured the palsy but He read thoughts. Any Scribe can double; it is no great thing to doubt. The doubter never did anything for the world. The world is indebted to its faith for its life and, for its pro- gress. These Scribes in their mind were saying that it was easy enough to say: "Thy sins be forgiven thee," but the thing to do was• to cure the man of the palsy.. It was an easy way to talk blasphemies, but what about performing the cure ? So Jesus reading their thoughts says: "Whe- ther is easier to say, `Thy sins be for- given thee, or to say, rise and Every Bell Telephone its a Long Distance Station CaUiii NUM L` 'E saves time keep a list handy Telling the operator the NUM- BER you want in a long distance call, whether you ask for a speci- fic person or for "anyone there" gives you a quicker connection. If you do not know the NUM- BER, ask "Information" and she will look it up for you. Then make a note of the NUMBER and you will avoid delay •next time. It will pay you — both in time and money—to keep a list handy of the long distance NUMBERS you frequently call. We are ready to help you prepare such a list — in a special directory if you wish and "Information" will find your new NUMBERS as you need them. Xi 4 Ya ntN �I�vli.:v ;; yb Y t .1 1F . ,u.,:,U n �r : A t.. ,, a t Vi',�, 't'j., a { ryt•, nr Perseus suffering from .catarrhal deafness, or who are growing hard of hearing and have head noises will be glad to knew that this distressing af- fliction can usually be successfully treated at home by an internal medi- cine that in many instances has of • fected complete relief after other treatments have failed. Sufferers who could scarcely hear have had their hearing restored to such an ex- tent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven or eight inches away from either ear. Therefore, if you know of someone who is troubled with head noises or catarrhal deaf- ness, cut out this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor suf- ferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be prepared at home and is made as follows: Secure from your druggist 1 oz. Parmint (Double Strength). Take this home and add to it Y/4 pint of hot water and .a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one table- spoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the in- flammation and swelling in t h e Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equa- lize the air pressure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, and the results it gives are nearly always quick and ef- fective. Every person who has catarrh in any form, or distressing rumbling, hissing sounds in their ears, should give this recipe a trial. WORLD MISSIONS An Inter -racial Tea. The Federal Council Bulletin tells of a tea held at the International House, New York City, by the Wom- an's Committee on Race Relations, which is part of the Federal Coun- cil's Commission, where over two hundred white and colored women met for a social hour. "It was a new and surprising experience to many of those who attended, and, in the charming surroundings of that building where gracious hostesses of both race's exerted a friendly influence many prejudices melted away." It has been demonstrated that chil- dren acquire racial prejudice early in life which they find almost impossible to eradicate later; so the Commission is striving to foster friendly atti- tudes by introducing children of var- ied races to one another in a genial environment. MOST IMPORTANT FORGERIES IN HISTORY OF THE WORLD Any Christian art dealer and espec- ially any devout Roman Catholic whom anybody sought to deceive in the matter of ancient documents can take satisfaction in the thought that if he is duped he is in the very best of company. The Christian church for some centuries was the victim of the famous "False Decretals" and the "Donation of Constantine," which shaped the history of millions of peo- ple. So vast indeed was their influ- ence, which has not irfdeed wholly vanished to this day, that J. H. Farrar who some years ago made a special study of kindred frauds and wrote a book about them, was impelled to ob- serve "one is disposed to wonder whe- ther falsehood rather than truth has not bad the more permanent effect upon the destinies of mankind." Des- pite the fact that the "False De- cretals" and especially the "Donation of Constantine" have been thoroughly exposed some consequences, of their original acceptance continue with us, and may indeed for hundreds of years have their part in shaping interna- tional relations and religious .beliefs. The trouble between England and Ire- land is traced to them, andi that trou-• ble, as all will agree, has not wholly disappeared. In the early years of the church forgeries were perhaps as numerous as authentic writings. They were of course, the product of heretics, which is to say the minority, and were pro- duced to support whatever theologi- cal views seemed most in need of strengthening. Again and again the governors of the church assembled and branded this and that supposed inspired writing as erroneous. By far the most influential and successful of these apocryphal writings were the False Decretals and the Donation of Constantine, which were foisted on the world in the name of Isadore, the scholarly Archbishop of Seville, who died in 636. Their real author is un- known. Half a dozen distinguished churchmen have been mentioned for this dubious honor, among them be- ing Ebo, Archbishop of Rheims; Ot- gar, Archbishop of Mainz; R,othad, Bishop of Soissons, and Benedicus Levita, Deacon of Mainz. The writer, whoever he was, estab- lished the sound principle that most other successful fabricators have worked upon of interspersing genu- ine documents wih his original com- positions. M'ore'over, much of what he wrote was sound and is acceptable enough even to this day, Some of the sayings which he attributed to dead and genie Popes Were such that did thein credit. The 60 dect`etals were supposed to extend from Pope Clement' in the first century to Pope l&lchtades in the fourtth.: Britt ineor. peratat Verielts oetgivinga t'h1eIi rf, monstrous imposition was dealt by David Blondel, the Oalxinist divine, in 1628. won general acceptance were some strange doctrines, such, for instance, as that ascribed to Pope Felix, which claimed divinity for bishops. This doctrine had some good results for it enabled bishops to appeal to Rome and saved them from the tyranny of various metropolitans on different oc- casions. The absolute divorce of church and state was also promulgat- ed in the theory that the church was spiritual, was superior to the carnal state. But of all these new doctrines the most extraordinary was that which purported to have been established by Constantine, which according to Far- rar, has probably had "more influence on the course of humaia history than anything else of human invention." It first described how Constantine, a mass of corruption from leprosy, was healed by Pape Sylvester, then a fug- itirve with his clergy, and in gratitude divested himself and all his imperial successors of nearly all their author- ity and possessions in favor of the church. He was supposed to have or- dered the restoration of all churches throughout the world. The imperial power and dignity of Rome he trans- ferred to the Roman Church which was thereafter to be supreme not only over the churches of Alexander, An- tioch, Jerusalem, Constantinople, but over all other churches in the world. The Pope was in fact to take the place of the emperor, and the priests that of the eivil power. The Roman clergy were to wear the senatorial white sandals and ride on horses with white coverings. The truth is that Constantine was baptized by the Arian Bishop Euse- bius at Nocomedia. Nobody seemed to call attention to the fact that Constan- tin'e's successors had not given up the rule of the west or otherwise carried out the injunctions that he had laid upon them. The fact that was seized upon and which has influenced history to this day is that this "donation" was accepted as having legal force upon all subsequent Roman emperors. But the most staggering contention arising out of the forgery was that the Papacy had been formally grant- ed temporal authority not only over Italy, Lstria, Corsica and Sardinia, but also over France, Spain and Bri- tain. There was a subsequent inser- tion in the original decree which was supposed to justify this construction. In the document itself there was no reference to islands, but it was con- tended that they had been conferred on the Papacy, and this was, the ori- gin of the long struggle between Ire- land and England. Similarly all other islands or continents which might be discovered in the future were suppos- ed to be the property of the church because of Constantine's gift. It was not until the fifteenth century that criticism finally laid bare the real character of the decretals and the Donation of Constantine. The truth was first established by Cardinal Nicholas de Cusa and Laurentius Val- la. Reginard Pococke, for a time Bishop of Chichester, had also an im- portant part to play in letting in the light though eventually he was forc- ed to recant. The final blow to this Men Past 40 Should Read This It is claimed that 7 out of 10 men near or past middle life are subject to Bladder Weakness, which, if neg- lected, may mean years of suffering and daily annoyance. First signs of such condition may come in early life, but they are usu- ally more noticeable 'after 40—pains in back, headaches, nervousness, a feeling of weight iii groins, itching, burning, painful urination, too fre- quent calls and getting -up -eights. While serious, if neglected it is ordinarily a simple matter to relieve these troubles by the pleasant home use of Dr. Southrworth's URATABS, which have been victorious in thou- sands of cases, after other treatments had failed. No matter how serious or of how long standing your condition may be, you can quickly prove the value of URIATAIBS without risk of cost—for any good druggist will supply you on an absolute guarantee of satisfaction or money back. If "URATABS" bring you quick and certain, comfort, you will be greatly pleased. If they do, not fully satisfy, their use 'will cost s you nothing.. Try tJ„11'ATAHS to- e } r9"�St,tn., • � .• � . A i•A, t t h S tf It C eier EIGHT VEHICLES TO EVERY MILE OF HIGHWAY IN U. S. = LAST YEAR The per capita ownership of auto- mobiles in the United States, at the outset of the present year, was ap- proximately one to every 4.6 persons. The net increase in automobile reg- istrations during the last 12 months was 1,358,000 vehicles. During the same period a total of 38,604 miles was added to the network of federal and state highway systems. These figures are among the high- lights of a survey, made by the Am- erican Motorists' Association, showing the trend of m'otoedom in the United States during 1929. •Comparing the number of cars in use to the number of miles of avail- able highways, the survey shows that there are 'approximately' eight auto- mobiles for each mile of road in the United States, compared with 7.8 automobiles for each mile of highway as of January a year ago. Motor vehicle fatalities, according to the !best estimates, last year ap- proximately 27,000 deaths. Of the to- tal killed by automobiles,approxi- mately 9,000 deaths occurred in the 78 largest cities of the country. During the last twelve months 20 states passed laws providing for high- er gasoline taxes. 'Massachusetts on January let, 1930, and New York, on May 1st, were the last two states to enact gasoline tax laws. In Illinois, on August 1st, a new gasoline tax law became effective, the former law being held unconstitutional in 1927. Motorists Last year paid an average gasoline tax of $17' a motor vehicle. "Standardization of traffic codes and signals, city by-passes f o r through motor traffic, gradual elim- ination of railway grade crossings and more highways are the outstand- ing problems of the future which con- fronts m'o!tordlom," declares J. Gorton Weeks, president of the A. M. A. Are you usually tired and out of sorts? If so take Gallagher's Herbal Tonic. I.t will make you feel like new. Sold by— J. E. KEATING, Seaforth. A. W. E. HEMPHILL, Hensall. CHICAGO IS WALLOWING IN kind 'of passive resistance and finally the chairman ek the Illinois Tax Oom.• mission • ordered "the taking of a new assegstlent, 'This was a terrific blow to Phe 'i'arieea political machines which had been thriving on the rake- oil.' but the re-esdessment proceeded and seemed to be on the point of com- pletion *hen Mayor Thompson made a'horrible uproar and insisted that the new assessment in the.Loop district, which is Shieago's downtown, was un- fair. So hideous were his howls that the assessors were ordered to makm a new assessment of the Loop and this is proceeding. Nobody knows when it will be finished. Some hope in May; some fear in November. Chicago has always lived a year a- head on the matter of taxation. The money to be collected in 1930, for instance, would be spent in 1929. But Chicago has collected no taxes since 1927. There is no accepted value to form a basis. The city is unable to tell any individual taxpayer what he owes. (In the past Chicago has dis- counted its tax warrants at the banks paying interest. But nlow, the banks have advanced so much that they will lend no more. They see prospects of litigation which might tie up their funds for years. To add to the con- fusion there are half a dozen or more independent bodies and commissions which have the right to spend the city's money without supervision. The city's budget foesgiven year in fact, is simply made up by adding all the various estimates together. The r.'formers say that between $25,000,- 000 and $50,000,000 annually have been diverted from the taxpayers' pockets to build up political machines. There have already been some suc- cessful private 'suits to foreb the cor- poration to refund unlawful levies When one views the financial muck heap into w'huch Chicago has fallen one can easily understand the neces- sity of Mayor Thompson's making the keynote of his last election campaign opposition to King George. It helped distract attention from the highway robberies which were flourishing on every hand and postponed the evil day when Chicago would have to sit down and painfully examine its bank account. FINANCIAL MUCK HEAP We have received from a reader— in Chicago—a request for information concerning the present financial diffi- culties in which Chicago finds itself; and while an answer might have been had from authorities nearer home, we present our opinions in the 'belief that others besides our correspondent will be interested. First, it is necessary tc say that Chicago is not bankrupt. It is in the position of a millianaire vrho finds himself without any ready money in his pocket and no immedi- ate prospect of resuming relations with his (bank balance. There is mare wealth in Chicago now than ever there was. Even the huge sums of which the public treasury has been looted in the past are probably circulating in that city and is subject to taxation if the assessors can find any trace of it. But so far as looting and graft- ing are concerned, (Chicago probably differs from other Amerriean cities ex- cept New York only in the fact that it is larger and wealthier. A certain amount of graft is taken for granted in most American communities. So far as the rake-off is concerned Chi- cago is prosperous and can afford it. Yet graft, or rather the exposure of graft, is at the bottom of the trouble and those who have done the expos- ing are now sharing with the grafters some of the odium for the present crisis. In Chicago the assessment is done by a board of assessors elected by the people, and ills work is review- ed by another board,• also elected. For many years the 'practice has been far the assessment board to set values un- duly high, and the review board has had the task of reducing them. In other words, the board of review had to offer reasons for its existence. Speaking generally, a citizen who pro- tested against his assessment had it reduced, and the citizen who did not appeal was out of luck. Apparently few citizens knew that simply by go- ing to the board of review they could get a substantial reduction in assess- ment. Here was the opportunity for graft. There grew up in Chicago a body of tax fixers. Some of them were shabby skates who made a few odd dollars. Others were neagntifi- eoes who operated in rich mahogany offices. The latter usually handled the tax appeals for the large corporations. The system extended to such an ex• tent that for years one of the per- quisites of a 'precinct captain—a Chi- cago name for a ward healer --'was 50 re -assessments on property in his division. Under this happy arrange- ment the levying and collecting ' of taxes proceeded for years. It was only interrupted when some Bolshe- vik invoked an ancient law and the city assessors were forced to publish all details of their work. Immediate- ly the glaring inequalities of the sys- tem leaped to light. It was found that assessments varied from one per cent. to 105 per cent. for properties of equal value. For instance, one man lived next doorto. a precinct cap- tain in a house and oe a lot which had cosi precisely the same amount. He discovered that his property was assessed for tax purposes at exactly 241 times that of the politician. A manufacturer carme forward who said that he had received a tax bill for $160,000 but that a fixer had said that if he would contribute $10,000 to a campaign fund his taxes would be re- duced to $61,000. So inflated hacl his assessment been that when am honest review of the case was made it was found thate should pay just $61,000. The pu'blica'tion of the assessments created a sort of uprising. Men 'vlio had never appealed their assessment or paced fitters to alipeal' it found them- selves paying twice or 60 times as ranch aa 'their neighbors. The* deo dared t'he'y vb'ould phyc no longer: Moasatld's of +citizens joined in this ( r !t N I > 4,17 J i• S,r.•J7 I 1 Pr • .. , : �� ..:a4G.•. auu�i �.i r�C vrw�C+2wllertid)tCi� 4 HUNTING ALASKAN BEARS THAT WEIGH A TON We had not su'spe'cted until reading an article in the trustworthy New York Herald -Tribune that a bear ev- er weighed a ton. We had supposed that half this weight would constitute e really tremendous bear, for half this weight is that of a fair-sized horse, r.rrd 2.000 pounds would do .credit to a Cly'lf : t'ale. But the brown bear of Kodiak Island in Alaska is said to sometimes attain this weight. One shot by Robert Frothingham, who made a special trip for the hunt, was estimated to have weighed 1,800 pounds. Of course, there were no scales handy upon which the carcass could have been accurately wsighed and indeed we wonder how it is pos- sible to know the exact weight of ex- tra large specimens of game. T h o' hunters certainly do not pack hay scales with them so far from civiliza- tion. Nor surely do they pack out the whole remeain's of an extra large animal, except in very unusual cir- cumstances. The usual proceeding is to take the skin and whatever other part of the body may be valued as a trophy, cut of what meat is needed, if the game is edible, and leave the rest for the parasites' of the jungle to dispose of. Even cutting up an an- imal in portions that could be separ- ately carried out of the bush is sure- ly not adopted except in those cases where the quarry is valued for its flesh. But estimating the weight of the bear Mr. Frothingham shot at 1,800 pounds, the other dimensions may be accepted as accurate since they could be ascertained 'by a tape measure. They are as follows: Height at shoul- der, 4 fleet; length of pelt, 111/4 feet; circumference of head, 1 font 3•incihe's; length of skull, 1 foot 6 inohe's; size of hind foot, '13% by 9% inches;"cir- cumference of foreleg at elbow, af- ter removing hide, 2 feet 1 inch; length of tushes, 2 inches; length of claws, 6 inches. The photograph of the bear's hide taken with the 'hunter indicates that it would form a comfortable covering for half a dozen grown people or an average family. This particular bear was shot in May last after he had emerged from his winter hiberna- tion, in which these bears spend half the year. These brown bears are found in the Alaska Peninsula, on the western shore of Cook Inlet and on Kodiak Island where conditions make it pos- sible for them to grow to the maxi- mum size. Whether they are a sep- arate species like the polar bear or the grizzly or merely a brown bear that has found an environment which permits it to reach a perfect develop- ment is not said. In some respects the brownie resembles the grizzly. For instance, it cannot climb a tree and its claws seem to have been de- veloped more for offensive and de- fensive purposes than for getting it out of harm's way. Notwithstanding its tremendous bulk the Kodiak bear moves with extraordinary speer. It crashes through small timber and un- derbrush like an elephant and . forces a path without slowing down. It dif- fers from the grizely in that it has not been known, deliberately to attaek a human being. It is well known that in this respect the grizzly is about the most dangerous of wild animals. It would as soon kill a man as a mountain goat and has beenknlown deliberately to seek combat. The Kodiak will fight when it is cornered. Men have been killed by these bears and many more have been mauled. !But in nearly all cases the trouble. was caused by bear and human coming so suddenly upon each other that in the nervousness of the encounter the bear thought first of striking and later of running astray. Many people have been. ma+u- gled by the bears after wounding them. It takes several large bullets to put an and to these magnificent beasts and even when they seem in their death throes• they have enough stlrengbh and feirealty to' di+ge!mbo!well a Mored or cruslf the head Of a hunter With a stroke of their paw. The s r + a• ppf •. A vd�'1 d`�kY;�4, it rr r! (SS 4 441 " For three years I have been troubled with. kidney trouble, and could scarcely walk for paha Last Christmas a friend of mine came to stay with us for a few days, and brought with her as bottle of Kruschen Salts, and gave me a good • dose. After about a week taking a little evert morning, walkfwell. t1 have taken vJ,ruschenaedgu- larly until a month ago. and then I thought I could Manage without them, but last week tha • old trouble came back again. 1 immediately gob a bottle of Kruschen Salts then and there, and. 1 feel quite a new woman again. I am so grate– ful that 1 thought 1 would write and let you.. know what I think of your wonderful Salts." Odglnal letter oa8la for lnoBeoUoa—Wlra•) X.H Kruschen Salts is obtainable at drug and. department stores in Canada at 75c. a bottle.. A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or 5. months—good health for half -a -cent a day.. Kodiak bear is protected by law• though the ranchers have the right. to kill one that is found near their property. It is not often that they avail themselves of the privilege for one of these bears after it has beem attacked and knows that its life is. at stake is perhaps the most formid- able of all wild animals. Yearly a few hunters from all parts of the world take out licenses to sh'oot a bear, but more of them go away dis- appointed than with the hide as a. trophy. Like other bears the keenest sense of the Kodiak is that of " scent, his sight and hearing being comparative- ly dull. He associates the smell of hu- mans with danger and once he gets wind of them there is an end to the• hunt for that day, for the (bib bear can travel over the mountains and' gulliere of his habitat much swifter than a man, and it is impracticable to hunt him except on foot. The. method adopted by Mr. Frothinghane to get his bear was to follow tracks made soon after dawn when the bear had arisen from his long winter sleep,. and trail the beast at long range`' until it had entered a small bush for a nap. When it emerged to make its:. way back to its winter den two rifles opened a burst on it and the, bear was killed. .But mortally wounded: though it was it dragged itself for a distance of a mile through the under- brush before it finally laid down to die. These bears are never hunted by one man alone. I't is too dangerous. There are always two or more, a. guide usually forming one of the party and having in his hand an ex- tra rifle to meet the bear's charge if,. as is sometimes the case, the con- tents of one rifle fail to kill or dis- able it sufficiently to render it help- less. TF he would accept the ad. vice of thousand. of rep and women, he would find relief by taking Dr. Wil. home Pink Pills. R ausswe time is not a mrfaci ailment that can be banished by rob - bins with liniments or oils. Watery, poison -laden blood must be built up and puri- fied before there can be any progress toward permanent r cevety Time and again; su lfa:reins have proved the valva of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in that treatment of rheumatism. "For some years," writes Thoma. Martin, of Name, Ontario, "•I was .o badly troubled with rheumatism I could hardly walk and suf- fered great pain. I had medi- cal treatment but did not get much relief. After tak- ing aleing Dr. Williams' Pink PM for some time the trouble &appeared and has not since shown the least sign of returning." Start today to relieve roar rheumatism. Buy a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills atr your nearest druggi,t's ors postpaid, by mail at 50 cents a boat from The De, WilGanii Medlci.te Co•, Brockiilh, Oniieiio, aaa nit ,rralcutrifwwr * - 4 d' A• 8, ti r •1 4 • i