CS k8 SPRING BLOOD IS$ WATERY BLOOD How to Get New Health and New Strength at This Season Spring ailments are not 1maÂ¥Ag!â€" nary. Even the most robust find the winter months most trying to their health. Confinement indoors, citen in overheated and nearly alâ€" ways badly ventilated roomsâ€"in the home, the office, the shop an({ the schoolâ€"taxes the vitality of even the strongest. The blood beâ€" comes thin and watery and is clogâ€" ged with impurities. Some people have headaches and a feeling of languor. Others are lowâ€"spirited and nervous. Still others are trouâ€" have headaches and a ICC languor. Others are lowâ€"s and nervous. Still others ar bled with disfiguring pimpl! skin eruptions; while some in the morning feeling just & as when they went to bed. are all blood : EEEY C700 M Coed k blood is out of order and that a medicine is needed. Many people take purgative medicines in the spring. This is a serious mistake. You cannot cure yourself with a medicine that gallops t,hrm_lgh your nerves. + And One UHS UE cof liable tonic and blood builder is Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pils. These Pills not only banish spring weakâ€" ness but guard you against the more serious ailments that follow, such as anaemia, nervous debility , indigestion, rheumatism and other diseases due to bad blood. _ In proof of this Mrs. D. E. Hughes, Hazenmore, Sask., says : "About a year ago I was badly run down, my rervos were all unstrung, and I aAmnld uot #o up <tairs without stopâ€" m rest t« at PERJWEEIT. Whooping cough is a particularly hard disease to check because the patient is usually up and about for w poriod of many weeks and has n‘ much greater chance of spreading germs than if he were isolated in bed. Often whooping cough ‘s eaught from a child in the early stages before the whoop develops and when people think it has only ian ordinary cough. The only safe rule is to keep chilâ€" dren away from other children who thave any cough at all. A lady doctor writes: "Though busy hourly with my own affairs, I will not deny myselt the pleasure of taking a few minâ€" utes to tell of the enjoyment obâ€" tained daily from my morning cup of Postum. _ It is a food beverage, mot a stimulant like coffee. "I began to use Postum 8 years ago ; not because I wanted to, but because coffee, which I dearly loved. made my nights long, weary periods to be dreaded and unfitting me for business during. the day.". (Tea is just as injurious as coffee, because it, too, contains the healthâ€" destroying drug, caffeine.) im advice of a friend, I first tried Postum, making it carefully as suggested on the package. As I had always used ‘cream and no sugar,‘ I mixed my Postum so. It looked good, was clear and fragâ€" rant, and it was a pleasure to see the cream color it & light goldenâ€" the pleasur utes to tell tained daily of Postum. rot a stimu "I1 began ago ; not be because CC loved, made periods to b me for Dusiness . (Tea is just as it because it, too, c0 destroying drug, "im advice of tried Postum, m as suggested on t had always use sugar,‘ I mixed : looked good, wa rant, and it was the cream color brown. "Then I taste« Which Brings Daily Enjoyment. "I gontinually assure my frien@l‘ and acquaintances that they will like Postum and receive benefit from its use. I have gained wewht, ean sleep and am not n@:vo;ny Name givon by Canadian Postum id this m pring symptor W it W hooping n \ FOOD DRINK I tasted it critically and sed, yes, satisfied with my n taste and effect, and am a a constant user of it all F n ith and the present in great spray thrown out articularly during of the disease, and > get smeared over : patient while he his breath during usm. So the disâ€" rv rapidly by more ) ouch. spring yoUu wn interest, a medicine Pill« Sold h to hand and or exchanged ups and other m mouth to » get up as tired .. These that the he germs by mail xes for Medi 6. . K6 iding h. A ughs pasm the opâ€" ays ake ugh lenâ€" linâ€" hem {| 1| U sMALL POULTRY FARMS sHOW GooDp PRoOFITS. Powltry farming can be success~ ful only when there are proper faâ€" cilities and when there is constant attention given. Poultry farmers are hard workers. They are at their post from early to late, and enjoy no vacations. But the work is not heavy ; it is tiresome to some beâ€" cause of the sameness, but to one who is interested and really loves the work it becomes & labor â€" of pleasure. # Taking the standpoint of the man 2A wegls Muie en pACCATUUCEY Taking the standpoint of the man who is about giving up city life in order that he may engag® in ad outdoor line of work, and at the Came time with good prospects of outdoor line of same time with making a fair 1 culture, fo than there puick3. There is no disputing the â€" fact that there is more profit in poultry culture, for the capital invested, than there is in any other outdoor work, but the business must be conducted on strict business prinâ€" ciples. Some working capital is requirâ€" ed. Money will be needed to buy the property to put up the building, to purchase the foundation stock, to pay the feed bills, and to meet oo o o Pn ts is i ie The average CcoSb PFFOWCTCCO CC keeping a fowl is $1.80, or 15 cents per month. Some men devote their plants enâ€" tirely to egg production, using the White Leghorns for that purpose, its owner, but it is affording him a congenial occupation, and, above all things, has restored a once nervâ€" ous body to a strong, healthy man. Besides, there is true independ ence. Living out in pure air and hbeing one‘s own boss is &n inde Some working capitai is req""*" d. Money will be needed to buy he property to put up the building, o purchase the foundation stock, o pay the feed bills, and to meet »ther expenses that will in the course of the year bob up. Conservative estimates of profit 7 pHap L ence. being pende pendence wortn < To sum up: Po occupation that able to those wh selves to it. It business that requires and attention. 1t is hard work only _ _4 | glven £1em q 24| management > Pour Im.ta‘qrgm1 P lence. ‘ \Xfl e noo, Tam, l weel gang & m Tï¬m &ffxaa um. | p oï¬ "‘Gan s. _| tae | I‘m stay and attention. It is hard work only to those who tire quickly, »~who lack â€" sticking qualities, who grow weary of the constant sameness. But to those who take a pleasure in the work it is a pleasant occupation. The beginning should be made in a small way. There should be suftâ€" ficient canital to ‘‘pay as you go."‘ There must be working capital. 2 § CBPLEIC _ P SNERC ECPRRt Cmm ict Poultry keeping can be made proâ€" fitable from both a financial and a health standpoint. The extent of that profit, or the amount of inâ€" come, can be gauged only by the man‘s adaptability for the work and the manner in which he performs his duties. The beginner should be MS AUUCC* . ‘ «tudent. e ‘Should a constant student. He shou:d read books and papers on the subâ€" ject, for therein he will find the rudiments. The usual method emp burn sulphur in a closed and this is perhaps as e any other method. Fill vessel, such as an old bu bowl, half full of earth, nd In a cinematograph show bwo Scotsmen were aqmeabl surprised to find a cup of tea gné a biscuit given them free by an up{oâ€"date management ab 4 gicieck. Hall’feep hour lates one of ggun broke the siâ€" lence, ‘‘Wa‘ve seen the pigtures noo, Tam,‘" he ;Sfdi ‘}’:"@ &% &8 wee\l gang aw@ oot." which Tpm d&gflg moment‘s thought, FS: plied : " ng ye awa‘ gin Ye want tae ! I‘m stayin‘ tae dinner |" To l)ls'inh-ct a Room. isual method employed is living, not necessarâ€" 1 would suggest that, the average beginnet »f the "mysteries‘‘ of m,. that he make & mall way, beginning, PC PS ETT is g out in pure air and own boss is an indeâ€" »rth considering. : Poultry raising is an that will prove profitâ€" e who can adapt themâ€" _ It is a business that od judgment. It is A it requires close study cost per year of is $1.80, or 15 cents se his next year head af fow‘ls, The British Navy and Canadian Railway Expansion. The present conflict in Europe| _ has demonstrated beyond the possiâ€" B bility of doubt that the maintenâ€" ance of Britain‘s superiority at sea, and the expansion ‘of the wheat areas in British Dominions, have been linked together as basic facâ€" N tors in the consideration of plans for Imperial offense and defence. The lawmakers in London, as & matter of policy, have allowed noâ€" thing to interfere with the building up of an allâ€"powerful navy, and | S they have steadfastly ignored the f protests of Englishmen who have contended that Great Britain would | C be in an impossible position if k war should develop with a powerâ€" t fui maritime power. There were b numerous men in England who beâ€" 1 lieved that in the event of an imâ€" portant European struggle involyâ€" < ing Great Britain, ‘the hunger of ': London would dictate terms of| , peace.‘" But the Admiralty were | , convinced that the sea power of | j | Britain would keep all the routes | 4 | open for foodstuffs. The lands in | the British Isles which might have |. | been devoted to the growth of more | ; | wheat were left as before, and the l investors of Britain by placing ‘| their funds in the bonds of rail ways t in Canada, in South Africa, in Ausâ€" °| tralia, and in New Zealand, where | vast stretches of fertile country reâ€" ‘| mained to be opened up encouragâ€" " | ed the production of a steady supâ€" * | ply of foodstuffs which might be ~| called upon in case of emergency. . |The underâ€"water craft of Germany * | have failed to throttle the shipping Y | of Great Britain. Her ships come f' and go almost as they please. And > | the resources of wheat lands, in *\ themselves many times the Aarea ® | of the British Isles are available for _â€"| the need of the people of Britain. 't. In facilitating the expansion of S | the various companies in the Doâ€" °* | minion during the last thirty years, Y~ | the successive governments, federal and px'oVim}i;ll, have enabled Canâ€" ada to take up the burden of & ; | greater production in this year of ts | the Empire‘s peril. Canada is measâ€" uring up to her advertised destiny nâ€"| 48 the "(jmnar.\"of the Empire,"‘ ye | or,. more emphatie still, "Bread c Basket of the World.‘"" The propheâ€" l cies of leaders of thought for three VE decades are on the verge of fulfillâ€" y | ment. The large exportable surâ€" d plus of the wheat fields in Canada ‘* | will go to feed a fair proportion of Basket of the World."" The propheâ€" cies of leaders of thought for three decades are on the verge of fulfillâ€" ment. The large exportable surâ€" plus of the wheat fields in Canada will go to feed a fair proportion of the dependent millions of England, and probably the warâ€"harassed Belâ€" gians as well. The railway â€" lines which have been constructed east and west and north and south throughout the country have made her present position possible. Withâ€" out these essential traffic arteries the Dominion would have been merely a helpless spectator while the greatest war in history rumbâ€" led through to a conclusion. Canâ€" ada‘s most important contribution to the cause of Empire is in wheat and flour and bread. Eoo on ies The bulk of supplies of Canadian wheat for export are drawn each year from the wheat fields of the prairie provinces. The total supâ€" ply may be computed by a study of the carryings of the railways. Dur: ing the crop year 1913â€"4, q;e'] Efan- e_Cro] _ 1Â¥10â€"4, WO . MNMT BIG AID TO BRITAIN. ind ~Bihunaasite it 26 Antoitst" Cl } adian Northern alone handled from the territory served by its western lines, 47,295,000 bushels. Estimatâ€" ing the increase this year at ?0 per i s ces Mein‘ ced C aock llla i i4 fls 1124 4 cccanltlh s ind 7 , cent., this road should haul out approximately 56,750,000 bushels of wheat from the provinces lying beâ€" tween the Great Lakes and the Rocky Mountains. That quantity of wheat, converted successively into Hour, and into standard loaves of bread, would feed Greater London, with its estimated population of 7,â€" 252,063, for more than four and a half years. So long as Britain holds command of the seas, the available supply of foodstuffs from _ Canada alone should suffice to overcome the handicap her critics maintain . she imposed upon herself by producing but a quarter of the wheat she anâ€" nually consumes. A minister who guarded his mornâ€"| ing study very carefully told his new maid that in no circumstances were callers to be admittedâ€"except of course, he added, ‘n case of life and death. Haif an hour later the maid knocked at the door. ‘‘A genâ€" tleman to see you, sir.‘‘ ‘"Why, I thought I toldâ€"‘*‘** "Yes, I told him,‘" she replied, ‘"but he says it it a question of life and death.‘‘ So he went downstairsâ€"and found an insurance agent. * AN EXCELLENT REMEDY FOR LITTLE ONES Mrs. Sidney Dalby, Audley, Ont.,‘ writes: ‘"I have used Baby‘s Own: Tablets for the past twelve months and have found them an excellent medicine for my little girl.‘‘ Thouâ€" sands of other mothers say the «ame thingâ€"once a mother has used the Tablets she would use nothing else. They are pleasant to take j the reâ€" sult is sure, and above all they are uaranteed by a government anaâ€" ?yst to be absolutely free from inâ€" jurions drugs, z\he Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at ?5 cents a box from The Dr. Wil iams‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont, t‘Don‘t fQY think some men loo# etter with long whiskers!" aakeg e critical girl. "‘YÂ¥es,"" replie iss Cayenne. ""I do think every an who insists gn having a large ï¬amond in his shirt front ought to compelled to wear long whisâ€" Exceqpkt i@{ their vanity, it would E impossiblé to please some peoâ€" €. k ers."‘ Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhore A Case of Life and Death. It All Came From Strain and Cold BUT G. K. MACDONALD FOUND RELIEF IN DODD‘S KID. NEY PILLS. Nova Scotia Man After Fifteen Years‘ Suffering Found a Cure Through Reading an Advertiseâ€" ment. Harrigan Cove, Halifax Co., N. S., April 18th (Special). â€"After sufâ€" fering for fifteen years from lame »back and â€" kidney trouble Mr. George K. MacDonald, & wellâ€" known resident of this place, is telling. his neighbors of the great benefit he has received from using Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. _ ‘‘My broub.ie started from & strain and a cold," Mr. MacDonald states. "I was troubled with stiffâ€" ness of the joints and cramps in the muscles. My sleep was broken and unrefreshing, my limbs were heary and I had a dragging sensaâ€" tion across the loins. ‘"‘My back ached and I suffered from rheumatism, when reading an advertisement led me to try Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. *"‘I am only too pleased to sa that the treatment was snocessfuf'. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills have done me a great deal of good."‘ Mr. MacDonald‘s symptoms show that he was broubled with Kidney ldisease. That‘s why Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills cured him. t BE ECelc ol‘ cce IC for Secondee, West Africa, when he met his death. ‘L mt S eP i l Gnneeti on Andies ooo is CIf we ever go to war with a country that is within striking disâ€" tance of submarines, I am of the opinion that that country will at once lock up its dreadnaughts in some safe harbor."‘ But the facts will not support his _ It has happened, as Scott prophesied, that deduction "Now that submarines have come in, battleships are of no use either for defensive or offensive purposes, and â€"consequently building any more in 1914 will be a misuse of money subscribed by the citizens for the defense of the Empire." If the British battle fleet did not exist the German battle fleet would come forth as its raiding squadrons have come forth. _ It would not have to turn back as they have. Germany would control the seas. Submarines might make it an uneasy control as they now worry the English in their sea dominance. Nevertheless the battleship fleet is the supreme and deciding factor in the struggle for sea power. I & e ie ol 34 11 BRA 4 B is ~ 1 dnï¬ ranicachncis, 49b Nor does the experiment of a subâ€" 1 marine blockade seem destined to affect vitally British commerce, In| the first two weeks of the blockade the submarines sank less than a dozen British ships, most of them small. Between January 218t, and March 3rd, 8,734 vessels of more than 300 tons each entered op clearâ€" ed British ports. Of these the subâ€" marines destroyed fifteen,. In the meanwhile, since the opening of hostilities six CGerman submarines have been reported lost. The London Board of Trade‘s summary of shipping casyalties roâ€" rted niun};g F!:x)rli'a.ry XOWS thal ?}(\)e ordinary risks of navigatiqn ;;vrev;;;-;;;;i'ï¬lé}?r iderahly larger nunltlger %g?i Exips than were victims of rman torâ€" pedoes, mines, or guns. ES Bs s es 88 2w P t The number of steamers lost was thirtyâ€"three . of an aggregate %et: fonnage of 34,947, with ninetyâ€" seven lives, of which nine stgamers, aggregating 12,389 tons, were m by German submarines, with a loss of six lives, and one of 2,605 tons was sunk by a German mine. _ _ Buch are the results from what is probably the best submarine Leon Chester Thrasher, Lessons of the War. TORONTO Sir Percy most favorable field. The tNTO", of submarine operations has added tremendously to strategic and E&- trol problems in naval warfare, but it has not taken from the dreadâ€" naught its place of primary imâ€" portance. Nor has the meroplane become 4 deciding factor in war. It has fasâ€". tened that honor .more securely \tha.n before upon the guns. It has given eyes to the artillery so that supremacy in the air means chiefily better service of the guns and betâ€" ter intelligence of the enemies‘ movements, Attacks by aeroplanes and Zeppelins have had little or no direct military effect. The airship, | like the submarine, has complicated lwarfare and added to its destruc tive powers. Neither has developed | into a decisive method of attack in itself. The automobile also h ed the speed of troops creased the com_miga%aria rorpeou®ds Mess io d T ; has not taken from the dreadâ€" ids «o9Â¥ oxtitanti d aught its place of prmary imâ€"| "How thankful we are to get hold ortance. of such a wonderful household remedy Nor has the aeroplane become a |as Nerviline," writes Mrs. E. P. 14 ; le:g‘ns fact;:r in war. It has fu-|monu:iue from her home n:o,r Wr! e that honor .more securely | taskawin, Alberta. "In this faraway han before wpon the guns. It hâ€!uection. far away from A doctor Of riven eyes to the fl" i h | druggist, every family needs 4A good yes _ artillery so that | ces o uen t wl td se ol i inenrn,e o ts etter service of the guns and betâ€" ‘ cS e a j er intelligence of . the nethics‘ !but never burns. We use Nerviline i ovements, _A s b in a score of ways. If it‘s rheumaâ€" uind Z nts, vtt,ac s by @'T‘)P‘Mï¬;usm, aching back, pain in the side, dp es&e_lms have had little or no | sciatica or stiff neck,â€"you can laugh lig:cbti)e lï¬ary .eï¬ec;. The a,lxnrs&n[:i |at them if you have 10ts of Nerviline submarine, has comp icated | bandy. _ For earache, toothache . OF | warfare and added to its destruc. \eramps I don‘t think anything could tive powers. Neither has developed | a¢t more quickly. For & general allâ€" into a decisive method of attack in | round pain remedy I can think of noâ€" iteelf. ithing more valuable and speedy. to The automobile also has incroasâ€" cure than Nerviline." ed the speed of troops ard in-' The above lotter is convincingâ€"it | creased the commissarint Incilities | tells how reliable as\d trusty this oldâ€" e e | time remedy is. Nerviline for forty so Lh“‘?‘ 1“}'891' bodies of men CAM | years has hbeen & household word in be 'l'(’l"“nm““‘.i at the front than | Canada. Scarcely A home in Canada ?"Ou C otherwise be possible. In a iyou can find without Nerviline. Every ew instances an.no‘r-ed motor-car;s‘communhy has it living examples of h}ive served in direct attack. But ;the wonderful curative properties of like the @weroplane, the motorâ€"car | Nerviline which will cure pains and !hmlx.is chieflly been useful in its auxâ€" | aches anywhere in the joints or musâ€" iary services to the men & . | cles. It‘s â€" penetrating, soothing, at the front. and guns ‘ warming and safe for young and old ain l1 the inc f E to use. Get the large 50¢c. family size .;_,‘}5‘,,,’:, :;}.r ti?“k.ll?!â€ea's’â€d ?ffef ‘pottle; it‘s the _most economical. lling. one siDg!® |Small trial size 25¢. at any dealer‘s few instances armored motorâ€"cars have served in direct attack. But like the @eroplane, the motorâ€"Ca&t has chieflly been useful in its auxâ€" iliary services to the men and guns U 1ZO PERUINC. Against all the increased effecâ€"| tiveness of war in killing, one single 1 expedient has made de?ensi.ve warâ€" fare more effective than ever beâ€" foreâ€"the trench. _ It had its origin in the American Civil War. It was generally _ used in the Japaneseâ€" Russian War. With the advent of heavier and more accurate artillery it has become deeper, better proâ€" tected, and better screened. Backâ€" ed by the fire of modern guns$ the odds in favor of Qefenders ¢ in trenches are greater fore. . f .. Corns * Out &A Nova Scotia Case Of Interest to All Women Halifax Sends Halifax, N.S., Dec. 10.â€"When MIU!* viewed at her home at 194 Argyl> St., Mrs. Haverstock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case. "I was always ‘blue‘ and depressed, felt weak, languld and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was 80 disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick headâ€" ache and feared a nervous breakdown. iUpon my druggists recommendation I used Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. » w lc in d esn j filP 101000 100 10 e deictcrnardaintadints, aien Wl "I felt better at once. Every day I Improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differâ€" ent physicians had falled to help me. It is for this reason that I strongly urge sufferers with stomach or digesâ€" tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills." W Loo reves s ooycm ces > dua £LNS. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills strengthen the stomach, improve digestion, strengthâ€" en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. 1y cleansing the blood of longâ€"standing impurities, by bringing the system fo a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell ooes e ie d t in existence operating in p id og cce ul T 1 2 B nnma iesd a 0Ve Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. t Rough on Tommy. The mails from home had just been received by a certain â€" regiâ€" ment. Not only were there letters, but many parcels from relatives and friends at home for lucky solâ€" diers. One of the Tommies receivâ€" ed a large box addressed to himâ€" self, and with a triumphant yell he rushed off to his company‘s lines and gathered them around him to share in the eagerly anticipated share in the eage contents of his box "Smokes, lads!‘‘ he cried as he undid the wrapping. ‘"From the old man ; I knows it. An‘ there‘s sure to be a bottle or two of Beotch." wflv; ’;pened the box, gave one look at the contents and collapsed in a heap. oo 36. on se pressing round. "It‘s from ole Auntle Mary," groaned the disappointed warrior. ""Bandages an‘ ointment an‘ embroâ€" cation an‘ splints an‘ a book on ‘‘*Ow to be yer own Burgin‘ !"‘ Doctorâ€"You have nervous dysâ€" pepsia, same as Brown had. . His was caused by worrying over his| butcher‘s bill. I directed him to stop worrying. Strangerâ€"Yes, and now he‘s cured, and I‘ve got it. I‘m| his butcher. 7 l The goldenp sule is all right, byt the one ung hy a lob of pe'o'p{e ?e only plated. Paint on Putnam‘s D Co Extractor toâ€" rop gigfl?t, s.lnd orns feel hetter ip tj)e morgâ€" Out i‘gg gas cal ting‘ Y "P y n.mo 1 rases the pain, destroys % !'OOF gifla a ccmwt;? agflumgb _bouxlm ué. aranteod, ipC, Do 0; ï¬Ã©â€™ï¬uf:"m'.n Extractor ?o-day. Farming With Powder. ED. i. Minard‘s Liniment Gures Dandruf hat is it?" cried his comrades nds Out a Message of Help to Many People. 78 in t Lï¬â€˜ z_..il 15.â€"When interâ€" Instant ever be ISSUE 17â€"15. of E;&rl.ihimo nt of Ell‘ Relief any where The various committees in charg* of supplies report satisfactory proâ€" gress. A sheet shower was held on Wedâ€" nesday last in the Physios Building, which resulsted in an addition to our store, amounting to about sevenâ€" teen hundred sheets. In addition to this, the necessary quota of the | following articles has been reachâ€" edâ€"SBurgeons‘ gowns and masks, nurses‘ caps, covers for hot water bottles and pneumonia jackets. In spite of efforts, however, t(he| number of articles required is still great. In the first place, ten | thousand sheets are still needed, and this is an urgent necessity not to be denied. Next to sheets the most pressing needs are pajamas, of which nearly two thousand suits are required, and surgical nightâ€" shirts. Also let us not forget the need for socks. Each letter from the front emphasizes the urgency l of the demand for them. I Soa qo in nale Seinnieie A sheet shower was nesday last in the Phy which resulted in an &A store, amounting to teen hundred sheets. to this, the necessary following articles has edâ€"Surgeons‘ gowns$ nurses‘ caps, covers bottles and pn-egmoni: Destroys Every Pain But Never Burns UNIVERSITY QL ©A00 PR RAUERRANE NN q s The writer will be glad of contriâ€" butions to the wool fund, of offers from women who are willing to knit if wool is sent to them, as well as of contributions of socks. (Mrs. A.) JEAN MePHEDRAN, Convenor of the Ontario Red Cross Sock Fund. wUR& F NX G. SDARR, Who Can Do It! A Boston school teacher tells this story : ‘Children,‘"‘ said a secondâ€" grade teacher, "you should be able to do everything equally well with e / d @ «2THcL m o o Ee m C se your left and right hands. With a little practice you will find it #o easy to use one hand as the other." From the rear of the room came the piping inquiry : o C rapig: oi 6 APOC Sn en es 0; o a nc PPB CC OOCZ 1 "How about putting your left hand in the rightâ€"hand pocket of your trousers t‘ Minard‘s Liniment Co., LAmited F T P ced asrta We Abar it SA Iniversity Hospital ciation. NEM&PO® AA0CUICN . 200. ue Insal Gentliemen,â€"1 had my leg badly hurt, the Faln was very severe and a large swelling came above the knee. I eXxâ€" pected it would be seriousâ€"I rubbed it with MINARD‘S LINIMENT, which stopped the pain and reduced the #swelâ€" ling very qutcklfi I cannot speak too highly of MINA D‘S LINIMENT. AMOS T. SMITH, Port Hood Island. Gentiemen,â€"1 the pain was 1 swelling came pected it would VE arvara h "‘Nature,"" observed the philosoâ€" pher, ‘"always tries to make comâ€" pensation. For instance, it one‘s eyesight is lost the sense of hearing grows more acute.‘" "Faith,"‘ reâ€" c Abv cay is C ns vaninp. 4 W B‘U“- EPC MMESVW i plied Pat, "I believe you‘re right, for I‘ve noticed that when a man has one leg shorter, the other is alâ€" ways longer.‘‘ Minard‘s Liniment Rellaves Nouralgla. Canoes, If any canoe can give you satisfaction, it is a "PETERS A}:nys and ever the acme of gervice, model, streng!! ish. Over fifty atyles and sizes, Write for catalogue. The is the Peterborough ooav“ covered. Ask for illustrated 1 for the popular Outboa h(oton. Power Launches, all siz ers. Get folders telling all about these. B tion No. 2B giving engine prices on request. C gg:.-.“ Penetang Line" Commercial and Pleasure and Canoes. MRS. F. N THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PEXETANG Y HOSPITAL SUPâ€" PLIES. (PeveRPm cA 09 think anything could y. For a general allâ€" dy 1 can think of noâ€" aable and speedy, t* THE PETERBOROUGH CANOE comPany PETERBOROUGH, ONT. C. r is convincingâ€"it and trusty this oldâ€" Nerviline for forty household word in a home in Canada a+ Narviline. Every pes, Skiffs, Motor Boats THE PETERBOROUGH LINE. this faraway a doctor Of needs a £g004 rviline is the s every pain use Nerviline f it‘s rheumaâ€" i in the side, you can lau‘h s of Nerviline toothache Of Treasurer Supply Asso Freight Prepaid to any R Ontario. Jkngbh 16 Ft., 1 Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. A NÂ¥ ARLY IRISH COBBLER POTAToRG, E specially selected and uo‘-â€nmE:: spected for seed. Only limited quantity g'ho. One Do‘llar per bushe! {.0.b. Bramyp. ton. Also Connoieseur‘s Pride and Nay Bnow, two excellent now polators. Pricn Two Dollare per uchel,. Spocial pros for ls:o quantity. Cash must nccom pany 1 ordere. :. A Dawson, hmm,. ton. QTBAWBE“" 1 guaranteed, thousand, $2.00 : Bloomï¬eldï¬ Led Leavene, Bloomf PBOP!‘T-MAK.INO NEWS fices for gale in good The moet useful and inte businessee. _ Full informat tion to Wilson Publishin Wost Adelaide &t., Toront "Oh, yes, my husD thusiastic _ archaeolc Mrs. Moles. '_‘And I it until yesterday ! I (o desk some queerâ€"look with the inseription, ‘F] 1.‘ And when I asked they were he said thes of a lost race. Isn‘t t! ing !"‘ LOW FARES TO THE CAL POsITIONS YVIA_CHICACO wWESTERN RY. Four eplendid dally trai New â€" Passenger Termindl, ( Han Francisoo, Los Anke‘© Diego. Choice of Seenio and . through the best of the W est to see all the way. Double matic electric eafety aignals Let us plan your trip nlm;ll fu you‘ i7 T and full ; 46 Yonge It doesa‘t pay to 4o halves, such, for instan ing the right thing at YOU: own P Try Murine Eye 212 ERTCDOROT Eyes and Granulated {:l.; ‘{e Comfork . YÂ¥ y mail Free. Murine In spite of the {a tallos, it doesn‘t see garrulous with some ‘"Poor Jim was a . WA considerate husband, m siderate! Why, the br beat you.‘"‘ "True, mu never hit me where the . NEWSPAPERS FOR BERRY PLANTS, GOOD 1 anteed, Renator Dunlap i , $2.00 for 500, $1.25 for 2 %m†Leavens _ Orchards, 14, Ont. Minard‘s sEED POTATOES NURSERY STOCK owN DRUGGIST WIl! | is a "PETERBORC model, strength @ eatalogue. The late: &t., Toron Lintment Cures HAWK BICVCLES An u£~lo-dfll¢ H Ricycleiitted with A New Depariwe Coi and â€.ï¬{;_ Detach me where t" vy the neigh! To TWE CALIFORNiA CX VIiA CHICACO & NORTH wWESTERN RY. TT AC ts Hbad rmned‘mr Red, W nulated Eyelids; No fort . Write for Bo: Murine Kye Remedy ( highgrade equip: ing gdudï¬u:rdf_x Pump, an Tools sens FREE 1915 Cataiogus, dn Hepae Aateriad, " V ou can ENe .. *hz le Prices. T. W. BOYD & SON, 27 Notre Dame St. West, Nontreak my husband Ft., Beam 3 A NÂ¥ MoroRr t meem J some of 1 , LIMITEP B. H. Be . Ontars SAL n a Burns, E19 $22.50 TELL YOU au k . W atery TA rd XP of at mat h4 Ive hd ~ J NAVAL A Traffic Tempora GERMAN AVIA MAY BE EXP H Quantity Farm GEN. IAN 1DC ng THE WHI te w Submarine Start N itish