Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 4 Mar 1915, p. 7

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White Leather Belts. One of tihe new white serge suits made for southern wear shows an uisual belt. It is of dull white lurcher, about two inches wide, perhaps narrower. Ifc is fastened in front by means of a le ather-eover ather-eover ed buckle, and on the left- side a few inches from the buckle, i-s a libel libel e .pocket, just- about the width of the belt. It clasps shut with a snap fastener. White Satin Hat. One of the very effective hats of the season is made of white .satin handed with narrow black soutache braid arranged to ohedk the white FIRST AID FOR WEAK DIGESTION -.n 1 Jo-inch squares. Ifc is trimmed with nothing but- a stiff 'little ri'b- l ; an ornament- of black a-nd white ..-jvded ribbon, perched smartly up on one side of the crown. Combination Gloves. White and black .gloves are the gloves of the moment and the two i-.iûes are combined.in dozens ofdif- ferent ways. One combination that striking" is ibis : A white dressed sc Loi glove, with black -stitching :iround the. edge of the fingers, heavy black embroidery on the back ind wide black straps across the inside inside of the wrises Wired Lace Sleeves. The silhouette of the crinoline is repeated again and again i-n the v- -turn?, and one of its latest phases is the wired iaee sleeve. This y a tiny wired lace ruffle; perhaps [hvee inches, wide and very full, stiff ' spreading around the lower which is gathered into the [ oo. WLC 1 *- rmhoivs above a tiny puff of chif- o r tulle. Corsage Flowers. There corsage •vers. ■f? in ver are many pretty and among them are roses made of pieoi-edged ribbon. A harming evening frock of blue fa die and white tulle and '-blue chif- f i?i has a- big bunch of roses made ,-,f rose-colored ribbon of different - hades, edged .with a narrow picot, the belt, and two strands of the a- smaller size are arrang- the shoulders. Voluminous Veils. One of the new veils, of -tlie volu- nrious sort, has a small emforoid- red flower in bright- color placed .. L ha: it will come over one cheek. \ nocher big veil is unusually volu- is a big, irregular cir- vcumterence of almost It is thrown over the the centre of the veil and the centre of the hat. crown coincide coincide and the wide edges hang undown undown over the arms and k and chest. This sort of veil edard with two narrow, bias f a contrasting shade Like Hearty Every Trouble Afflicting Afflicting MankM Indigestion is Due to Poor Blood Almost everybody experiences times when the organs of digestion show painful sign's of weakness. Some slight disturbance of the health starts the trouble ; then the patient takes a dislike to food, and dull heavy 7 pains .in the abdomen give warning that the stomach is unable unable to do its proper work. Sometimes Sometimes a false craving for food arises ; if this is satisfied the result is additional additional torture--flatulence, a drowsy depression, sick headache arid nausea nausea are common signs of indigestion. indigestion. The foolish practice of taking drastic, weakening purgatives at- such times should be avoided. Indigestion Indigestion arises from stomach weakness, weakness, and the only effectual method of curing the trouble is to-strengthen to-strengthen the feeble organs of digestion by supplying them with richer, purer blood. This is the true tonic treatment, treatment, by which natural method Dr. Williams' Pink Pills achieve great results. These pills make the rich, red blood needed to strengthen the stomach, thus imparting a healthy appetite and curing indigestion and other stomach disorders. Mr. T-hos. Johnson, Hemford, N. S., say-s :• "For five years I was a great sufferer sufferer from indigestion, which wrecked wrecked me physically. I suffei v ed so much that for days at- a time I could not attend to.my business. I had smothering spells so bad at times that I was afraid to lie down. I doctored and tried many medicines but with no benefit. I saw Dr. Williams' Williams' Pink Pills advertised to cure the trouble and decided to try them.' I had not been taking them long before I found that I had at- last- hit upon the right medicine. The improvement in my health was constant, and after I had used ten or twelve boxes I could e"afc and digest digest all kinds of food, and I felt physically' better than I had done for years. I shall never cease to praise Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for they proved a real blessing to me/' You can get these pills from any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. * ABOLISHING TARTAN -KILT. Protests Against Using Skimpy/ Kilts of Kliaki. Anyone acquainted with the sentimental sentimental re gaud which Scottish people people have for centuries had for 1 the tartan kilt--who realizes that it has been the distinctive dress of some of the most famous regiments in the British Army, and who has noticed the strong feeling which exists throughout the Scottish race thau the national co-stume should always be worn by anybody who is proud of the tradition^ of his country, will understand the feeling of indignation indignation which has been aroused by the statement that in future Highland regiments are to wear a khaki kilt instead of the familiar t-artan. What is worse still, the khaki kilt, according according to the latest order, is to be composed, of two yards less material material than is at present- used. "This will make our soldiers look ridiculous," says one authority- "The army 7 kilt, as we have hitherto known it, has offended all true lovers lovers of the Scottish national dress, for it consisted of but five yards of cloth, badly pleated, whereas it is Says lie ToM His neighbors AND THEY DODD'S TOLD HIM TO TRY KIDNEY PELLS. impossible to make a proper seven or kilt eight UNDER GERMAN TERRORISM. ZXi • MOI and •ve : i ; eU'V aras.- ihat ' LV f, -V \ hil< silk v n i ack. black on brown. Fa -a MAKING OVER BELGlVM. 'i-imiting Task for the Engineer and Architect. vn uppoi [unity- for city building in the annals of modern c-ivi- ; will be offered by Belgium he war. A large number of i-owns- and villages m that - have been partly or com- U V. it 'ÜL ! I v? i V ïi l ] 9. y a st a i K . I Ù i destroyed 1 If trie Allif : Belgium ■ there will he a ion of but' W ) i e n f. e a c e e o m < Belgium v. il I have . V tidings and iire and explo- . fight their way to the German, . ^ til! greater] »*?; publi tarse io be re-1 O W hai task, 'from an engineering 1 a: f-hltecttiral standpoint, will a mos: fascinating one. Here I ir- a chance to build model to avoid cue crooked streets. highways, congestion of and numerous other annoy- luves wire'll towns of natural, usualIv possess. The re-; •ig possibilities offered by the | waiting to be made oyer ruck certain r.-n.gli simien. ■ ummarize as follows then* i :i the matter:--"Among t-ne j v. h o xv e r e w e î co m ed j are about two j . Our idea is to| and to place at ; experience fori towns | mi WW -, M.r>00 - How Britishers Suffer in Belgium anti Are Tricked Into Jail. The correspondent of the London Express writes as follows from the Hague. Holland : Despite all the glowing accounts emanating from Berlin with regard to the * 'restoration of normal conditions'" conditions'" i-n Belgiums, I am able to state on the positive testimony of prominent men who have made perilous journeys to this town from Brussels and Liege that German terrorism is still rampant. One of these men. who since the end of August has made three journeys journeys from Brussels to London to visit his wife and children, was summarily summarily arested on his last return to i he Belgian capital and accused of being a.spy. The half of a return ticket from Flushing to Folkstone was found in his pocket, and on this evidence he was c-ast into prison and kept oh a diet of thin soup and black bread. When he asked the .mature of the against him he was t-old that he was a "dog of an Englishman in the employ of the Intelligence Service." Service." He furnished his accusers with the means of proving tin at he was a Belgian, but lie was kept in prison for 26 -day s. Fast week he was told he was free but before the Germans released him they confiscated all his money and papers. t a solitary experience, The whole- of Brussels of Genua/ terrorism, full of spies, who try because they are for every with less than yards." No wonder the "heather is on fire," and protests are being made by influential people to the Wav Office Office against the introduction of the three yards' "hobble kiltV This is not the first occasion, however, however, that an attempt has been made t-o interfere with the Scot-fcisu national dress. From 1746 t-o 1782 the wearing of the tartan was prohibited'by prohibited'by law, and a series of oppressive oppressive measures were introduced providing heavy penalties for all who either carried arms or wore the kilt. But in 1782 the harsh measures measures were repealed, and the wearing wearing of the tartan became general all over Scotland. That the interference with the tartan kilt will.be strongly resented by Highland regiments is very evident evident from the remarks made ! by & number of influential Scotsmen. Ifc is pointed out to those who argue that- the brilliant- tartan makes our Highland soldiers a conspicuous target for the enemy, that the khaki apron or covering which they wear when going to the front is sufficient protection. The Highlanders are very proud of their distinctive dress and its historical a-s-sociations. They are as proud of the kilt as they are o-f their feather bonnet, which, by the way. the War Office endeavored to abolish thirty years».ago. But the proposal aroused such a storm of indignation that the military authorities authorities ultimately decided t-o leave the Highland bonnet alone. The origin of the white gaiters vvorn by the Highland regiment also provides an interesting story, for they were worn in memory of some of the trials which they underwent in the Peninsular war. It- was during during the retreat of the forces under Sir John Moore at Corunna that the soldiers suffered great hardships, hardships, their boots becoming worn owing to the rocky nature of the ground on the Portuguese coast- The Highlanders, therefore, "took the shirts from their backs, tore them into strips, and bound them round their feet for protection, and this did not fail t-o attract considerable considerable notice afc home, as the white or gaiters were instituted in of these t-rving-times. Mike Rudy, Young Manitoba Farmer, Farmer, Sick Tor Two Years, Tells How He Got a New Lease of Life. Camper ville, Mah., Feby. 22nd.-- (Special).--Cured of Kidney and Heart Disease of two years standing, standing, Mr. Mike Rudy, a well-known young farmer living near here, is telling his -neighbors that he owes his new lease of life.to Dodd's Kidney Kidney Pills. "For two years," Mr. Rudy states, "I suffered with a, terrible pain in the small of my back and shoulders. I took many different medicines, and was under the doctor's doctor's care, but nothing seemed to do me any lasting good. Finally heart disease was added to my troubles. "Hearing Dodd's Kidney "Pills well spoken of by my neighbors, I decided to try them. To my surprise surprise and relief one box cured me completely 7 ." Dodd's Kidney Pills, cured Mr. Rudy because his troubles all came from sick kidneys. Dodd s Kidney Pills are a kidney remedy, pure and simple. If you have pain in the back, rheumatism, lumbago, gravel or diabetes, your kidneys are wrong. You need Dodd's Kidney Pills. flemjiae Eads Nenralgre Brings Relief Instantly No Remedy Like Old "Nerviline" Cure Pain .or Soreness. to That terrible ache--how you fairly reel with it--that stabbing, burning neuralgia--what misery it causes. Never mind, you don't have to suffer --use Nerviline, it's a sure cure. Not an experiment, becàuse nearly forty years of .wonderful success has made a name for Nerviline among the people people of many different nations. "There ii\nofching speedier to end Neuralgic headache than old-time 'Nerviline/ *' writes Mr. G. Ç. Dalgleish, from Evanston. Evanston. "It is so powerful and penetrating penetrating that it seems to eat up any pain inra minute. My family couldn't get along without Nervilimx Wo always always keep the 50c family size bottle handy on the shelf, and use it to end chest colds, sore threat, coughs, earache, earache, toothache and pain in the back. My wife wwears by Nerviline. For cramps its effect is astonishing and we believe it is better and speedier than any other household family remedy." remedy." * BRITAIN IS NOT AVAR MAD. Oeh, Sure and Ye Won't. A-famous hospital surgeon was imparting some clinical instruction to half a dozen students who accompanied accompanied him on his rounds. Pausing'beside the bed of an Irishman Irishman who was a doubtful case, he said, "Now, gentlemen, do you think this is or is it not a case for operation ?" One by one tihe students students made th^r diagnosis, and all of them came -to the conclusion it was- not "Well, gentlemen, you are all wrong," said tihe surgeon, "and I will operate to-morrow." "Oeh, sure and ye won't," exclaimed exclaimed Paddy as he rose from bis bed. "Six ter wan is a good majority. Nurse, give me my clothes, I'm going going home." The Retort Courteous. "Ha, ha," sneered the lawyer : n court, "you doctors are all alike. Your operations are always successful, successful, bub your patients die." "Sometimes that happens," said the doctor calmly, "but we doctors hax r e nothing on you lawyers."/ You win great victories foi* your clients, but you get- all the money." WASTE OF WAR. Prominent Banker Predicts Dark Days After Present Conflict. The Hon. Rupert Beckett, an eminent Yorkshire banker, gi\ 7 es warning that the war will put back the wealth of the world something like a hundred years. The cost of tfie South .African War was £250,- 000,000, of which it was calculated £150,000.000 had gone for the purpose purpose of destruction. Money so expended expended was not reproductive, a-nd for eight or nine years after the South African Wav there was depreciation depreciation in all securities. If that was the case jin Britain after such a, comparatively.small war, how much more must they anticipa te a serious serious condition of affairs after tilie general conflagration in which we are at p r e sen t e n gaged. At the downfall of Napoleon the National Debt was something like £150,000,000., higher than it was today. today. But the population then was not nearly as great as noxv. There were fewer mouths to feed, and money money went much further. Within a comparatively short time of Waterloo Waterloo the industrial inventions of the early Victorian era--steam engines and the like--created wealth at a rate the world had not previously known*. Moreover, the population did not show a big increase until after the wealth was made. To-day Britain had an enormous popula Lion, which had to be fed. housed and clothed. Altogether one could not look forward to anything but dark days for some time even after the conclusion of peace. jj spab 'memory The BARGE HOSPITALS. French Are Using Flat-Bottomed Flat-Bottomed River Graft. MAY BE TEA or COFFEE ! I he rings? s ig and ili e r m : ' ii< | \ ?xi 1 « n D' { ] j I i r* ; v / i ; 7».- -V"-ÏÎ2." li; the: : -i.\ \ so-; î = •-•m a- »*kah: ** v • i 1 ; v n - 7 ■ ■ ; I area cm snosai -:cpm; edern 12 p! n l 2CL" togetner Mine is tv: told me. is a scene : The city is ! entrap the unwary I nafd for every arrest they effect. I" a. common trick is to get one of j their paid accomplices in the guise ! of a newspaper seller to offer for 1 'e <vne of the papers authorized by German G o\ernor. sa the 0: a r n i of lines. I no" de it is English paper hklden a and the French or ! unsuspect- d. Belgian ans are carried out w? B ? ; 2 i il m t r a n s fo r m ed of. re- nictur- inio a modern "spotless country physically 2 shun; ici tv and cine: ineval C : t ies c-nc.x villag will i o a s ». ?s w be laid out on ! n and old. lazy, j ill become bust-1 P ham jets eo. u i r-ne-d with " : i in n : o r emeu is. h 11 e •ed Bel i rhmcn yy any: tradition, that country • •• from a materialistic view- :■ 1 • i :. have '"advanced with un- vecented rapiditv. And log purchaser is promptly arrested, and eüher taken to prison or made to pav an exorbitant fine. ! Infamous tricks of this character Î occur" about every day. but the-| slightest pretext m sufficient to! jvslifv the arrest of any' one, innocent and harmless. how- e \ e-r all mod- the res- gium will have lost heavily and manners dear to his- is a:so '•vr-a n t the i rm possibi are settled then that there- BABY'S OWN TABLETS THE HOME DOCTOR Nv ones Baby* the minor th e j r prompt- will save • : U a iarg?r Ee'gi 1 tm. Mist c: a coll eg2 ma n " s iducat in l ■t CC; ii :rsd aft? '? he g r ad nates ! iv? v were ta iking < the w ar. ^ha; an age we are iiv lug in, to S U ^ sai-J o n e ' • V r - 1 " • . es. the l-ome wlière there are little should be without a box of - Own Tablets. They cure all ills of babyhood and use when baby is ail- the mother many anx- and baby much-sçain. rônAPug iliem Mrs. Paul Nemo,.. L Bask.*, writes : "AVe can- Own Tablets ai good the house, and every little one is ailing they him right agam. . r n - ?pijed is the German I ,n s ious monieiivs Concern! Tugaske. vider Baby s as a doctor in time our ' ïabhrareh'oîd-by mcd&ite dealeti V-'bv mail at 25 cents 'jhe Dr. "Williams a box from' Medicine Co. vivtLiOCXVl'if. Ont. The casualties of the great European European war have been staggering, not only because the armies are -so much larger than armies ever were 'before. 'before. but because, the fighting has been continuous on both lines for nearly six months. Complete official official figures are lacking, but it is safe to say that more than six times that number have been wounded or put. in need of hospital treatment. The various countries have been hard pressed to supply the facilities for taking care Of so maViy patients. Germany in this as in other ways was better prepared for war than any of the other nations. ,and ifc is said that there are hospitals of considerable considerable size in many of the small towns near, tbs frontier, the existence existence of which in time of peace was inexplicable. Now that war is going going cvi. however, there is plenty of use for all of them, and for many improvised hospitals, too. The French have had recourse to all kinds of expedients: great hotels. hotels. magnificent chateaux, and handsome city 7 residences have all been offered by their owners and accepted by the government for use. as hospitals. One of 'the most curious curious and ingenious arrangements is the use of the great flat-bottomed river barges, in which so much of the freight traffic of the Seise between between Paris and Havre usually goes. Most of these craft would have to x be idle during the war; so the government has taken possession possession of them, tied them up in ranks- to the quays along the river front of Paris, and turned them into hospitals. hospitals. Twenty or thirty 'beds can be put in each barge, and they have jprove'd very comfortable and useful places for the treatment of -?" 1 j '4£»pt the most serious surgical casesv: That Causes all the Trouble. When the house is afire, it's about the same as xvhen disease begins to show, it's no time to talk but time to act--delay is dangerous--remove the cause of the trouble at once. "For a number of years," wrote a Western lady, "I felt sure that j coffee was hurting me. and yet I was so fond of it. I could not give ifc up. At last I got so bad that I made up my mind 1 must either quit the use of coffee or die. (Tea is just as injurious as coffee because it, too, contains the health- destroying drug, caffeine.) "Everything 1 ate distressed me, and I suffered severely most of the time with palpitation of the heart. I frequently woke up -in the night with the feeling that- I was almost gone--my -heart seemed so smothered smothered and weak in its action. My breath grew short and the least exertion exertion set me-pan ting. I slept but little and suffered from rheumatism rheumatism . "Two years ago I stopped using the coffee and began to use Postüm and from the very first I began jbo improve. It worked a miracle ! Now I can eat anything and digest it without trouble. I sleep like a baby, and ray heart beats strong and regularly. My breathing has become steady and normal, and my rheumatism ,has left me. "I féeldike another person, and it is all due to quitting coffee and using Postum. for I haven't used any medicine and none would have done any good âs long as I kept drugging with coffee. " Name given by Canadian Postum Co.. Windsor, Ont. Read "The Road to Well- ville," in pkgs. Postum come-s in two forms : Regular Postum -- must be well boiled. 15c and 25c packages. Instant Postum--is a soluble powder. powder. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a cup of hot .water and. with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 50e tins. Both kinds "are equally delicious, and cost per cup about -the same. "There's a Reason" for Postum. ---sold by Grocer* 7 - 1 A Representative Englishman's Point of View. Benjamin Harris, recording clerk i in the New York County Clerk's office, received from his uncle, Professor Professor I. H. Hirsch, lecturer on physics physics and mathematics in Kings College, College, London, a letter giving the representative representative Englishman's point of view and attitude toward the Germans Germans after six months of war. The letter, dated afc Hillel House, Cambridge, Cambridge, England, says in part: You ask me to give my impression of present conditions. To my mind the most striking feature of the situation is still the general absence absence of vindictiveness or even contempt- contempt- for the German people. Englishmen Englishmen are joining the colors by the hundred thousand*," but not in the "jingo" spirit. You will perhaps perhaps remember the type of man one meets so .frequently in Lancashire and Yorkshire--the old Puritan type--the man who goes to his work with the sense of duty dominant, doing his work thoroughly, not necessarily necessarily because he likes it, but'be- cause the job is to be done. But few or none like the job, but the job is there to be done. Ifc appears to be beyond the mental mental powers of a German to understand understand this. To him, apparently, war is a part of his religion or it is notlimg. He çannofc understand that a nation should go to war because because it is part of its religion to destroy the worshippers of Mars, the war god. It is fortunate for Germany that England is not war mad, for if ever the fighting blood of the country were re-ally roused, if Englishmen were ever really stricken stricken with the lust for German blood, then God help the Germans. Personally, Personally, I am praying that the Germans Germans will have sense enough not to repeat such escapades as the attack attack on Scarborough. Behind all this grim struggle Englishmen have not lost the feeling feeling that German flesh and blood are still human, and, therefore, they do not wish to inflict more suffering on German women and children than is necessary. For years the Germans Germans have been mistaking English patience for v/eakness and decadence. decadence. Now they must he compelled compelled to listen, and we believe that they will see their proper place is by our side and not in opposition to us. If you hear that England is determined determined to crush Germany beyond redemption treat the report with contempt. We cannot crush seventy seventy millions of people except at an enormous cost, and ifc would not pay nor would it pay us to divide Germany Germany into weak and small States. The enemy is not Germany, but autocracy. , Professor Hirsch says that the greatest crime Germany has committed committed is. that of wilfully throwing away the fruits, of its own toil for fit tv years. FARMS FOR SALE. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Terente. Celbdrne Street. I F YOU WANT TO BUY OB SBLL A Fruit, Stoek, Grain or Dairy Far®» write H. W. Dawson. Brampton, or IS OOi- borne Bt... Toronto.. H. W. DAWSON, Celberne St.. Terente. NURSERY STOCK. Death Nearly Claimed New Brunswick Lady Was Restored to Her Anxious Family Family When Hope had Gone. St. John, N.B., Dec. 15th.--At one time it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, of 3 White St., would succumb to the deadly ravages of advanced kidney trouble. "My first attacks of backache backache and kidney trouble began years ago. For six years tnat dull gnawing pain has been, present. When I exerted exerted myself it was terribly intensified. If I caught cold the pain was unendurable. unendurable. I used most everything, hut nothing gave that certain grateful, relief relief that came from Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. Instead Instead of being bowed down with pain, -to-day I am strong, enjoy splendid appetite, sleep sounoiy. Lost properties properties have been instilled into my blood --cheeks are rosy with color, and J thank that day that I heard of so grand a medicine as Dr. Hamilton's Pills." Every woman should use these pills regularly because good health pays, and it's good, vigorous health that comes to all who use Dr. Hamilton's Mandrake and Butternut Pills. Bess--"Jack seems perfectly devoted devoted -to you. Why don't you marry -him V " Betty--"Oh, 1 like to have him devoted to me." RASPBERfHtiB. PO ogue A Son, Port Burwell. Oat. Ci TRAWBEREJES. . So TATOE8. Catalogue tree. MoOounell MISCELLANEOUS. C AN GBR. TUMORS. LUMPS. iBteraal and external, cured eat lain by ear home treatment ee before to» late. Dr. Bellmaa Med Ce„ Limited. Colllngwood. Ont. ATENTS OF INVENTIONS PIGEON, PIGEON A DAVI* tie St. Jam*» St., - Montreal Write 1er ielermatlee 40Hours from Frost to Flowers' Minard's Liniment Curas Burns, Etc. Rich and Poor. '.■"You must remember Miss Banks --just think a. moment." "Oh. the rich girl " "Yes : she's engaged to Jack Cad- ley." ' "Oh, .the poor girl !" ' "RESTFUL ISLES OF SUMMER LOVELINESS." Offering all outdoor Sports, nodal activities and a climate and scenery uneaualed In tlie Tropics. S.S. "BKKM.IJ O I AN," fastest, mos; luxurious and only Sieamsliiv» landing landing passengers without transfer. Sails from New York every Wednesday, Wednesday, 11 a. ni. Fare $25.00 for .Round Trip, including: berth and meals. WEST INDIES Delightful 2$-day Cruisas tooths Antilles; sailings from N.Y. Mar. 2nd. 12th, 28th. 2.0» p.m. Apply for tickets and ills, booklet. Canada Steamship T.ines, Limited. 4 g yonge St., Toronto, or any Ticket Agent. Too Plain Spoken. He--I wish you'd drop the "Mister" "Mister" and call me plain George. She- Ooh; but it would lie unkind to twit you on your personal ap- IM 0RM AVION I OR "INVENTORS j Messrs. Pigeon. Pigeon <k Davis, \ patent solicitors, Montreal, report that- 217 Canadian patents were issued for the week ending Febru-j ary 9th. 1915, 162 of which were ! granted to Americans. 33 to (Jana- j dians. 15 to residents of Great Bvi- ; tain and colonies and 7 to residents! of foreign countries. j Of the Canadians who received ! patents. 21 were residents of On- ; tario, 6 oi" Quebec. 2 -of British j Col u mb i a. 2 pf A1 h e r t a a nd 2 of j Manitoba. j pearance that way LOW FARES TO THE CHICAGO EXPOSITIONS. Via Chicago A North Western Ry. Four splendid daily traîne from 'he Ny.-r Paseenger Terminal, Chicago : o San Francisco, Lob Angeles t. nd San D'eg> Choice of scenic and direct routes. Doubla track. Automatic electric safety Bigual-i all the way. Let us .plan your trip and furnish feeders feeders and full particulars. B. H. Bennett, tien. Age. , 45 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont. "Isn't miser f " he s too M u r to n son i e r h ; 11 g " J shou id say so. tight to.risk a suggestion. o î a Whv, Anxious Lady---I say. my good man. is this boat going up or down 1 Deckhand -Well, she's a leaky old tub. mum. So I shouldn't wonder if .she was going, down. But- then, again, her h-iiers ain v too good, so she might go up. Mlnartl's Liniment Cures Dandruff. arr The Teacher "If there were fuiir flies on a table and l killed <>ne. how many would he left 'The 1.title Bov---"One--the dead one. "I hope," said one wife to an- other, ' ; that you never nag '"your husband.' ' 1 'Only, when fie is• beafc- ing the rugs," said the second one. "When he is thoroughly' irritated he makes a much better j oh of it-."' Alinard's Liniment Co... Limited. ! Gentlemen,--My daughter, 13 yrs. old. ; was thrown from a sleigh and injured her! elbow go badly it remained stiff and i verv nainful for three year.,. Four bo,-I ties cÿ MIN ARB'S LINIMENT completely | cured her-a-nd she has not -been troubled j [or two years. Y ours St., .loseph. P.O.. 18th trulv. J. B. Aug.. LI VESQ Ci 1900. Absolutely Painless No cutting, no plasters plasters or pads to press the sore "spot. Putnam's Extractor makes the corn go without pain. Takes out the sting over-nighfc. Never fails --leaves no scar. Get a 25c. bottle of Putnam's Corn Extractor to-day. or Go! Promptly Directed. William Dean Howells said modern American letters : "In a New England village 1 entered entered the Main- street department, store one afternoon and said to the clerk at the book counter : "Let me have. ple-as a . the 'Letters 'Letters of Charles Lamb.' " "Post office right across the street. Mr. Lamb,' said the clerk polite, brisk smile." wifcn Britain's Great Fleet. After all, what is Britain's fleet ? Without it where would the United States be t-o-d-ay 1 Ninety per cent, of the sea-carrying trade of thé" world is done in British bottoms. Thanks to tihe British - Fleet, these "common carriers" arc. free to «ail the seas. Restricted they may . be by stringent or even unfair rules, | but the fact remains that they are ' k busy at-the world task of carrying goods to and from neutral ports or British ports. . . . Shomd that fleet be put out of act on the world's fabric of sea commerce would fail utterly. GreaulaicdEyeiids, Eyes inflamed by e$P l> - sure to Sm«,"Dust and Rini quickly relieved by Marine t)cRc*edy. NoSuiaiting[, just Eye "Comfort. At Your Druggist*s 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye Salve in Tubes 25 c. ForBedfcelfMeEycFrceask Druggists or MerieeEyeRe*c4y Ce., CMicai# The Fatalist. "No. darling, you mustn't anv more pudding--you ill." Little Gertie (after due •--"Well give -me anuzzer and send for tihe doctor." have -would be thought) piece -- Minard's Liniment for sale every*jer*. Minard'c -Liniment Hellenes 'Haeraigia. Chapped Hands Quickly Healed Chapped hands and lips always come with cold weather, but Tr*dcma:k CAMPHOR Made ir* CrtnmJm ICE brings sure and speedy relief. Children especiallv nr'-d Vaseline Camphor Ice tor their rough unci smarting hands. Our new illustrated booklet describes describes all th"c "Vaseline" preparations. preparations. A postcard brings it. AVOID SUBSTITUTES. Imht on "Vaseline'* in original pack ages bearing- the name, d'HES]"- broug h m an u fa ( : r u k - ING CO., Consolidated. For sa - at all Chemists.:uxd General Store-. CHESEBROUGH MF*G CO. CCoBMHd tt o4) 1MO, GliAROT Xyty Mswn RK.kl. ED. ISSlilMfl- l>

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