Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 20 Aug 1914, p. 7

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HEALTH Measles. There are three i to port-ant warn ings that everyone should ffieed v_uhen measles is in question--do not ^haye the disease if you can help it ; do not regard it as o-f no importance importance if vou catch it; do not think that you can safely be careless during during convalescence. Formerly everyone everyone believed that it was necessary to have measles, and it was slight- in sly referred to as a trifling disease disease of childhood." We have learned learned better nowadays. An attack 3f measles may indeed be" so mild that the- patient hardly feels ill at all, and in that case it is difficult to persuade him that he must stay in bed and submit to a careful routine treatment. In an attack of average severity, the patient patient is; usually willing to go to bed for a few days, and for this length of time he is likely to feel a natural indifference to food. After. th e catarrhal catarrhal symptoms occasion. the greatest distress they are often extremelv violent until the eruption appears," The mucous membranes of the eyes, nose, and throat are al f affected' ; at once, the li<fe are swol- X>n, the sufferer cannot bear the ■^îierht, the nose runs constantly, the throat is sore, and there is more or less cough. At- this stage there is usuallv some rise of temperature, and sometimes vomiting and headache. headache. By the third day there comes a sudden turn for the better, and the patient recovers his spirits as his temperature falls. The apparent improvement may deceive those who are unfamiliar with the disease, but in another day or two the fever returns, returns, and the characteristic eruption eruption appears. In an ordinary attack of measles, the patient is not much weakened by his disease, and it seems hard to be shut up during convalescence and obliged to stay in bed, although he feels perfectly well. But that is the only safe "course to pursue, for measles can cause ear and' eye troubles, as well as internal comph- " cations that are much worse than the original disease.--Youth's Companion. Companion. ' food unfit for its digestion, even the administration to it of alcoholic and narcotic soothing mixtures, all these things weakfen and etunt the child. Almost-equally harmful is the habit-of taking young children out at night,. and into."crowded and noisy streets and. rooms, thus. exciting exciting and stimulating the br&inUto an unhealthy activity. .Proper rest is as essential to the child as pro tol, 4,800 ; Falmouth, '5,250 ; Liverpool, Liverpool, 4,800. - ■ . Sixth Cruiser Squadron^Cruis- ers, Drake, 14.100 . tons ; Good Hope. 14rjl00; King Alfred, 14,100 ; Sutlej, 12,000. v .. " . » Germany's Ships. Germany ^battle fleet is desi^pat- •w rr- v d__ " Tf.« d as bases ed as Vthe High Sea Fleet." Its are at ' Wilhelm shaven and Per no> be healthfu y ^'-1 an d ready for instant action,: are : child can --A Physiciap. -. • Battleship Friedrich der Grosse, (flagship) 24,306 tons. ' First squadron Battleships, Ost- friesland, 22,400 tons ; Thuringen, 22,400 ; Heligoland, 22,440 ; Oldenburg, Oldenburg, 22,440; x Nassau, 18,602 ; M HBKK OF SQUADRONS C0M-| RheMand, - Posen, 18,602; Second squadron -- Battleships, Preussen, 12.997 tons ; Schleswig- Holstein, 13,040; Pommeren, 13,- 040; Hanover, 13,040 ; Hessen, 12,- 997 ; Schlesien, 13,040 ; Lothring, 12,997 ; Deutschland, 13,040. Third squadron -- Battleships, The British fleet « 1 around the •frorld, but the tintisn sea lords have never ^««1 ,t° have Re ^| n erve s P qua à ro ; _ Battleships, the strong right arm of their naval n 611 tons ; Braun- power concentrated in home waters El. Sass, 12,997 ; Zahringen, 11,611 BRITAIN'S BIG HOME FLEET POSING IT. And the Naval Forces of the Other Powers in European Waters. under the denomination' of Home Fleet. The British fleet in the Mediterranean is nothing compared compared to the wonderful aggregation aggregation of stéel now concentrated in the Home Fleet. Great Britain is depending upon France to look af ter her naval interest in conjunc- B at tie Cruiser -squadron--Battle cruisers, Seydlitz, 24,385 tons ; Goe- ben, 23,600 ; Von DerTann, 19,200; Moltke, 22,637. Russian Baltic Fleet. The Russian Baltic fleet as it Persia's Young Shah. France, has two armored cruisers, m the Orient. They are the Montcalm, 9,300 tons, and the Duplex, of 7,500 tons. • * 5 WHY THE CZAR MOBILIZED. And GavO Gcrmàny an Excuse for Bringing on the War. ; Why did Czar Nicholas'of Russia mobilize- his' troops when Austria declared whr von - ^e;fyja- and - thus I giye : Germany the excuse jfor precipitating precipitating the general European war^ Nicholas II. remembered with bitterness bitterness the long" succession of defeats defeats which Russian diplomacy, directed directed chiefly by him, has sustained sustained at the hands of the Austrian Foreign Office. The Czar, in.accordance in.accordance with the traditional tinge of Russian opinion-, was convinced that a struggle for life or death was impending impending between Russia, as representing representing the Slavic race, and Germany, Germany, as representing the Teutonic peoples, Austria-Hungary he regarded regarded as - the advance post of the German invasion of Slavic lands. It is recalled distinctly at the Imperial Imperial palace at Tsarskoe-Seo that in 1909, when Russia sought to intervene intervene in the Austrian annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, it was the appearance of the German Kaiser, Kaiser, "In shining armor," beside the Austrian Kaiser that frustrated the attempt to prevent the consummation consummation of the act of annexation. For the past, century Russian statesmen have regarded Austria rPHE change may be critical and cause" untold A suffering in after-life. ** The modern -young woman is often a"bundleof nerves"-- "high strUngVi Wfainting spells--emotional -- frequently blue, and 1 dissatisfied with .life. Such;girls should be helped over this distressing stage in life---by?a woman's tonic and nervine--that hi over 40 years. ias proven successful for, is a keen enemy .to the physical wh&knesses of woman .' " A medicine prepared by tegular graduated physician of ûnusuakexperiènce in treating woman's diseases-- fully adapted * to ■ work in harmonyNyhh the most delicate feminine constitution. 'it is now obtainable in liquid oXahffar-coated tablet form, at the drug store--or send SO one-cent ' for a trial boa, to Buffalo. Every woman may write fully and confidentially to Dr. Pierce and his staff of physicians and Specialists at the Invalids* Hotel and Surgical Institute; Buffalo, N. Y., and maybe sure that her case will receive careful, careful, conscientious, confidential consideration, and that experienced medical advice will be given to her free. DR. PIERCE'S PLEASANT PELLETS régulât* and invigorate mtomach, liver and bowel». Sugar coated, tiny granule « eaey to take am candy. tion with the British battle cruiser stands to-day consists of only four squadron in the Mediterranean. "battleships and five armored cruis- During the past year four battle- ers. They are : The Common Cold.; The most dangerous of all, and perhaps that most commonly due to pure neglect, is the common cold. This, if not attended to, may prove ihe starting point for bronchitis tuberculosis, pneumonia, and even diarrhoea and choleraic diseases. "With this are classed the infectious diseases, whooping cough, diphtheria, diphtheria, ervsipelas. mumps, measles and chicken-pox. The third head- in g covers all those ills pro*duc€<l by the careless or ignorant nurse or mother, who unknowingly inflict tortures and terrors on the helpless helpless babies left in their charge. The tight wrappings in which the cnild is" first rolled and swathed preventing preventing the proper development of its limbs and organs, the frequency with which it is deprived of its natural natural food and fed on various mixtures mixtures and "preparations, the haste with which" it is often given adult FARMER'S WIFE ALMOST A WRECK Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound -- Her Own Story. V< London, Ont.-- "I am a farmer's wife Bnd a very busy woman. Last summer I was ' taken with severe pains in my back so bad that I could not get up or scarcely move without without pain, and my periods were painful. painful. M y husband called in a good doctor doctor and I was under his care for some time, but he did me little or no good. One day a friend of mine told me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as she had been greatly helped by it. I began taking it and soon got well, and my periods became natural again. Since then I have had perfect health. In fact I have never felt so well in my life. Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound is a medicine rnany women need. If you think this letter will help other women please pub" fish it."--Mrs. K. C. Young, Tambling ■ Corner, London, Ontario, Canada. W omen who suffer from those distressing distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If VOU have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound will help you,write to LydiaE.PinkhamMedloineCo. (confidential) Lynn,Mass.,for advice. advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by-a woman, find held in strict confidence; ships and two battle cruisers have been added to the British Navy, and a fifth battleship has just gone into commission. Three battleships and battle cruisers have been completed during the past year for the German German Navw and three other battleships battleships and two battle cruisers have been launched. For the Austrian Navy one battleship has beep completed completed and one launched, with no new shins laid down, while the Italian Italian Navy has completed two new battleships, a third is nearing completion, completion, and another has been launched. In France two new battleships battleships have just been finished, two others are about, to be commissioned, commissioned, and three have recently been launched. No new battleship has been finished in the Russian Navy during the past year, but four Russian dreadnoughts, launched in 1911," soon will be ready to join the fleet. Britain's Home Fleet. - The British navy has forty-three battleships in commission in the first and second Home fleets, as compared with thirty-nine battleships battleships last year. The German navy now has twenty-five battleships in commission, as compared with twenty-four in commission last year. Of battleships of the most modern type the British navy has twenty-one in commission to thii- fceen for Germany. This is equivalent equivalent to two and one-half squadrons to Germany's one and one-half squadrons. The British third squadron is much more powerful than the German German second squadron. The ships of England's fifth and sixth squadrons, squadrons, all in home waters, are more powerful than most of the ships that Germany has in reserve. Here is the marvelous fleet that England now has in actual readiness in its Home fleet. First Home fleets--Battleship Iron Duke (flagship), 25,000 tons. First squadron--Battleships Collin Collin g wood, 19,250 tons ; Colossuc, 22,500 ; Hercules, 22,500; Neptune, 19'900 ; St. Vincent, 19,250 ; Superb, 18,600 ; Temeraire, 18,600 ; Vanguard, Vanguard, 19,250. Second squadron -- Battleships Ajax, 23,000 tons ; Audacious, 23,- 000 ; Centurion, 23,000 ; Conqueror, 22,400; King George V., 23,000; Monarch, 22,500; Orion, 22,500; Thunderer, 22,500. Third squadron--Battleships Edward Edward II., 16,350 tons ; Africa, 16,- 350; Britannia, 16,350; Commonwealth, Commonwealth, 16,350 ; Dominion, 16,340; Hibernia, 16,350; Hindustan, 16,- 350 ; Zealandia, 16,350. Fourth squadron -- Battleships Dreadnought, 17,900 tons; Bellero- phon, 18,600; Agamemnon, 16,500. First Battle squadron--Cruisers, Shannon, 14,600 tons ; Achilles, 13, 350; Cochrane, 13,550; Natal, 13,- 550.' , ~ V Third battle squadron--Cruisers, Antrim, 10,850 tons ; Argyll, 10,- 850 ; Devonshire, 10,850 ; Rox burghe, 10,850. . Fourth battle squadron--Cruis ers, Suffolk, 9,800 tons ; Berwick,. 9,800; Essex, 9,800; Lancaster 9,- 800. „ ' - . Second Home Fleet. The British Navy also has the following following powerful units in a Second Home Fleet : , Fifth squadron -- Battleships, Queen , 15,000 tons; Prince of Wales ! 15,000, Bulwark, 15,000; Formidable, 18,000; Implacable, 15,000 ; Irresistible, 16,000; London, 15 000; Venerable, 15,000. . Sixth squadron --.Battleships Lôrd Nelson, 10^ 14 000: Cornwallis, 14yOQQ:( ALp marie, 14,000) Duncan, ® Xr mouth', 14,000 ; Vengeance, 12V50. Filth.' Cruiser , 8quadron--Crut«; #re,'-Earnar-von, 10,860 tons j -Bris- Batfcleships Andrei Pervoz Vann- yi, 17,400 tons ; Imperator Pavel, 17,400 ; Csarvitch, 12,912 ; Stavid, .16,000. Cruisers Rurik, 15,170 t-ons ; Gro- moboi, 13,220; Admiral Makaroff, 7,887 ; Bay an, 7,887 ; Pallada, 7,900. In the Mediterranean. Here is the way the fleets of the great powers are massed in the Mediterranean : British--Battle cruisers--Inflexible, cruisers--Inflexible, 17,250 tons; Indefatigable, 18,- 750; Indomitable, 17,250 ; Invincible, Invincible, 17,750. Armored cruisers--Defense, 14,- 600 tons ; Black Prince, 13,550; Duke of Edinburgh, 13,550; Warrior, Warrior, 13,550. Light cruisers--Gloucester, 4,800 tons; Chatham, 5,400; Dublin, 5,- 400 ; Weymouth, 5,250. French--The ships of France now in the Mediterranean are. as follows follows : . . First squadron (eight battleships) --Courbet, 23,100 tons ; Jean Bart, 23,100 ; Condorcet, 18,028; Danton, 18,028 ; Diderot, 18,028 ; Mirabeau, 18,028 ; Verginaud, 18,028 ; Voltaire, 18,028. Second squadron (five battleships)--Patrie; battleships)-- Patrie; 14,635 tons; Democratic, Democratic, 14,635 ; Justice, 14,635; République, République, 14,635; Vérité, 14,635. Reserve squadron (thirteen battleships)--Bouvet, battleships)--Bouvet, 12,007 tons; Gaulois, 11,090; St. Louis, 11,090. Armored cruisers--Waldeck Rousseau, Rousseau, 13,780 tons; Edgard Quinet, 13,780 ; Ernest Renan, 13,427 ; Jules Ferry, 12,351 ; Leon Gambetta, 12, 351 ; Victor Hugo, 12,351. Italian Fleet. Here is Italy's fleet: First squadron (three ships)--Dante Alighieri, tons; Leonardo da Vinci, Giulio Cesare, 22,340. Second 1 squadron (four battleships)--Regina battleships)--Regina Elena, 12,425 tons ; Vittorio Emanuele, 12,425; Romada, 12,425 ; Napoli, 12,425. . Training squadron (three battleships)--Regina battleships)--Regina Margherita, 13,214 tqns; Benedetto Brin, 13,214 ; Emanuele Emanuele Filiberto, 9,645. First cruiser squadron--Garibaldi, squadron--Garibaldi, 7,294 tons ; Varez, 7,294 ; Feruc- cio, 7,294. Second cruiser squadron Pisa, 9,956 tons ; Amalfi, 9,956 ; San Dior- gio, 9,832. Austrian Fleet. The Austrian naval force in the Mediterranean is as follows : Sultan Ahmed Mirza, the., youth- ! Hungary as the chief obstacle to the ful Shah of Persia, was crowned atr success of the Russian design to Teheran j Persia, July 21, on be- obtain an open port on a southern coming 16 years old, his official S€a> suc h a s the port of Salonika or majority. The youngster took the Constantinople. constitutional oath of office in the j n their attempt to reach the goal palace of the National Council, the Russians have been convinced The Imperial crown was so large by expe rience that it is inconceiv- that the little Shah, who placed it able t hat Europe will permit the on his own head, was compelled to j- rect eX tension of Russia to the hold it in position while the Chief Mullah was making a brief address. address. Ahmed Mirza succeeded to the throne in 1905, on the death of his father. battle- 19,400 22,340; First squadron (four battleships) --Viribus Uniti-s, 20,000 tons ; Teg- etthoff, 20,000; Radetzky, 14,226; Serini, 14,226. Reserve squadron (three battleships)--Ersatz battleships)--Ersatz Granz Ferdinand, 14,226 tons ; Arsatz Friedrich, 10,- 433 ; Ersatz Ferdinand Max, 10,433. Many Smaller Vessels. Each of the Mediterranean fleets is provided with destroyer and submarine submarine flotillas. There are sixteen destroyers in the Fifth . destroyer flotilla of thé British navy; stationed stationed in the Mediterranean.* They are the destroyers Basilisk, Beagle, Bulldog, Foxhound, Grampus, Grasshopper, Harpy, • Mosqhito, P i ncher,.. Raccoo py.'JÙBil&le s nake^JRe nard, Savage, Scorpion, Scourge and Wolverine. Their average speed under forced draft is more than thirty knots an hour. Great Gritain, Germany and France have squadrons in the Orient. The British is the strongest. strongest. The principal vessels are in the China squadron, the East Indies Indies squadron and tiie Australian fleet. The British China squadron consists of the armored cruiser Minotaur, which displaces 14,600 tons ; the armored cruiser Hamp-. shire, 10,850 tons ; the light cruisers cruisers Newcastle, 4,800 tons, and Yarmouth, Yarmouth, 5,250 tons, and the older battleship Triumph, 11,800 tons. The British-Australian fleets consist consist of the newly built cruiser Australia, Australia, 18,800 tons ; the light cruisers cruisers Encounter, 5,880 tons ; Melbourne, Melbourne, 4,400 tons ; and Sydney, 5,- 400 tons. The British East Indies squadron consists of the battleship, battleship, Swiftsure, 11,800 tons, and the light cruiser Dartmouth, .5,250 tons. There are also a number of smaller detached ships, destroyers, some submarines and ten river gunboats. gunboats. The German squadron m rar Eastern waters embraces the armored armored cruisers Gneisenaii and Schain- horst, each displacing 11,420 tons, and the three light cruisers, Emb- den, 3,400 tons ; _ Nurdberg, 3,300 tons, and the Leipzig, 3,200 warm waters of the Adriatic or the Aegean. . Therefore, Russian statecraft statecraft has contented) itself with indirect indirect method of apnroach---that is, •by helping some other Slavic nation, such as Servia, to acquire the "ort for which Russia has been hanker- Young Folks The Honey Scales. Queen Mab was riding through a field one day when she heard loud voices coming from a cluster o u tercups. She knew, very well, that the •buttercups were always a well- behaved family and, therefore, tne angry voices must come from someone someone else. .Stepping out of her chariot chariot she softly stole nearer and hid herself behind a bunch of daisies. "Ho ! Ho 1 I'll take your honey as often as I choose," chuckled the loud voice. "That's what you have done until I am much displeased," said the faint voice, which Queen Mab un mediately knew belonged to the but tercup. "Ha ! Ha !" jeeringly laughed the other. "You must make up your mind to be displeased forever then." , , , This time, Queen Mab peeped out who this rude speaker was "Serves him right," they all cried, and nodding a "Good evening" evening" to the buttercups, they went their way. Thus, the beetle was cheated out of his supply of stolen honey, and to- this day you will find the honey scales just as the fairies placed them in the buttercups. If you doubt it, go to the fields and ask the buttercups themselves. : *-- THE BELL AT LLOYD'S. ing. to see ----- - - . , i The desirability of such an ac- a nd found it to be a big, ur y quisition from the Russian point of beetle. , view is based upon the assumption "It's a shame for you to rob tne that in the ripeness of time the hard-working bees and beauti u small Slavic nation, so enriched, butterflies !" cried the-buttercup, will turn over its possession, willv- 1 'Let them look out for tiiem- nilly, to the colossus of the north. | selves," jeered the beetle m . an- Thêrefore, when in the first Balkan swer. war Austria compelled the relin- "Surely, some day you wi 1 quishment of the Adriatic coast of caught and the bees will sting Servia and* Montenegro, the Czar to death, if you continue to stea regarded the act as a blow, not so like this," the yellow flower wain- much at Servia as at Russia. ed him. , ,, l„l When the Archduke Francis Fer- "Bah! sneered the bei etle , dinand, whom Russian statesmen ing with scornful laughtei JN regarded as the author of this re- fear ; no bees will ever stlI JS . puled plot against Russia, was as- Just see my thick c f fc n °f I sassinated recentlv. the comments bee is strong enough to^haim me^i of the Russian press, authorized by do as I please,_ my sweet fne , official sanction, breathed an unmis- never mind, others, takable sense of satisfaction at the With this beetle fl ^ tragic outcome of events. When laughing so loud that itjiüd be Austria demanded an abject apol- heard for a long time The b t ogy from Servia for the crime of cup sighed softly, said notfirng^an Sarajevo Czar Nicholas, who has turned her pretty yellow^ face to the every reason to abhor attempts up- sun which always smiled upon her. on the lives of roval and Imperial Queen Mab personae - S , backed Servia in its un- riage without having been s< r willingness to grant full satisfac- heart was heavy and sad- Som tion to its powerful neighbor. I thing must ib f done to Prevent the The Czar was determined to avoid j burly beetle from the fiasco of 1909, wJ Belonged to the Lutine, Wrecked in October, 1799. One of the most interesting of bells is the one at Lloyd's, the great London marine insurance exchange. Its ringing has more significance than the sound ^of most bells, ^for it is rung only when a vessel is reported reported lost, or when a ship long overdue and considered lost unexpectedly unexpectedly reaches port. It "was not very long ago, says a writer in Tit-Bits, that its clanging announced the safe return of the Snowdon Range, which arrived in a battered condition at Queenstown fifty-two days out_ from Philadelphia, Philadelphia, and long believed lost. Her loss would have cost Lloyd's something something like £100,000, and it is little wonder, therefore, that the underwriters underwriters cheered when they heard the news. , The bell now used at Lloyd s belonged belonged to the Lutine, which was wrecked near the Zuider Zee m October, 1799, while taking specie from English merchants to Hamburg. Hamburg. . There is a room at Lloyd s known as the Chamber of Horrors, and here are posted the telegrams that report" casualties at sea, Unimportant Unimportant accidents are not entered in the loss book, but the mos*. serious serious are not only entered there, but are cried aloud by an official who stands in gorgeous uniform beneath beneath the sounding board. When, after a "week's disappearance it is feared that a vessel has gone down, the owners make an application to the committee at Lloyd's to have the ship posted. That is done by posting up a notice in the Chamber of Horrors, x - , . . , ■thorities would be glad of information information concerning the boat. A week elapses, and then a second second notice is put up, saying that the boat has not since been heard of. When you read that a -ship has ;M'ektohe", caf^i Horrors, which says that the au- hen Austria tercup's honey which she so care ^ seized the Turkish provinces of Bos- fully gathers for the ^ ee , s h ^ nd m ^ U e t n ! been "posted" as missing, you, may nia and Herzegovina without so terfhes. The moment the q i knQW t hat declaration is upon the much as consulting Russia in ad- | reached her palace she called all the ; faoard at . Lloyd s, on that rdered notice vance and the disaster of 1912, fairies she could find and or< W™ \ day the insurance money is pay- when Vienna prevented the placing them to cut thousands o-f tiny >ellow , ^ and a n who were upon her Adriatic norts in escrow for scales. As soon as these were legally considered dead. W hen of the Adriatic ports in o | ghe had tbem gathered up , ^ dlip ë is posted, the old Lutine bell and sent to the fields around, order- j . g tolled once . In the very unusual I s'ppose Jdhn is still takin' life I ing that some should be put mto j event of a vessel arriving jn port F ' - 1 every buttercup. ' . ! after being posted, the bell is The buttercups were surprised to ! struck twice, and the caller makes be aroused from their sleep that • anIKnmc ement from the rostrum Russia by Servian occupation. eaS y 1" said the woman in the tram "Yes," answered the woman who was carrying a bundle of clothes John has only got two regrets in night, but as the messenger^ came . amid a breathless silence. One is that he has to wake up I from the queen they immec y | tons. life. Une is tna-t ne nas xo wane uj/inum ** , p „ p ; v p/j and eat, an' tlhe other is that he has OI ?^ ed little scales, j Landlady--I'll give you just three to give up eatin to sleep. I with great ]oy , •_ , c ! j ; n w hich to pay your rent. "So you want to marry my daugh- which w 7 ould cover up « cad _ 1 g taf ] e All right. I'll take the first ter t What are your expectations i > honey ^oon all thf tutthcups I Christmas and Easter. "We expect to elope if you refuse ed loi it. ûoodta - _ sleeD your consent to our marriage, and I were supplied an we expect forgiveness when we get back. Then we expect you to make -us an allowance. 5 again. ON THE DECK OF A BRITISH DREADNOUGHT The next morning the big, burly beetle .brought a number of his friends along and, of course, straightway made for the buttercups buttercups to steal their honey. "Come, friends !" he called out boldly, "let me show you how I get- the sweets." \ The buttercups said nothing only waited. The beetle climbed up one of the stems, pulled the buttercup buttercup doxvn and looked for the honey. Of course, as the scales covered it, he could not find any and tried another another one. This proved to be just as the first one. "I can't understand these lazy flowers !" he screamed angrily, try ing a third and a . fourth without without finding a drop of honey. _ His friends now began to laugh at him while all the while he grew angrier. angrier. To make matters worse for the furious beetle some bees flew near, helped themselves to the honey, for the buttercups let them have"it, and then flew away, crying : "Oh, what sweet honey we always find here in the buttercup " This also made the friends of the beetle laugh until they shook all over. At last the -big beetle became so ashamed of himself that he ran away as quickly as his legs could carry him. The jeers and laughter of all the beetles he had-brought to teach how to steal honey from the flowers, sounded after him. CARTERS ■ lTTLE WlVER O 8 - Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles torf- Uent to a bilious etato of the system, 3ucb a* 'Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in tho Sulo, lc. While tlie^r most remarkable success lias been shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Ml* **• equally valuable in Constipât ion, outing açd preventing preventing this annoying complaint, while thevalso correct all disorders of tho stomMh.etimrdaletoe liver and regulate tho bo wjls. Even if they only cured Achethey would boalmoetprlceleeato thoeewhO suffer from this distressing complaint; but fort^ natelv their goodness docs notend hero.and those Whoonce try them will find the*» little pills valuable valuable in so many ways that they will not; bo wiV ÿng to do without them. But altorallsick head Is the bane of so many lives tbs t here is where vramake our great boost. Our püls cure I. while others do not. _ «nd Carter's Little Liver PUls are very smril ana very easy to taker On6 i>r two piUe They are strictly vegetable J^Lfjiwho purge, but by their gentle action pl<3*s« - use Awn. * • * castes HSBicttro 00-, ysw ïoax. Snal ML _M Ito

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