._ ; HOW TO TREAT ALL SKIN TROUBLE . Greasy Ointments No Use Must Be Cured Through the Blood. It is not a good thing for people with a tendency to have pimples , and a blotchy complexion to smear themselves with greasy ointments. 1 In fact they couldn't do anything * w.orse, because the grease clogs the pore* of the s-kin, making the dis- , ease worse. When there is an irri- tating rash a soothing boracic wash may help allay the pain or itching, v.^ but of course it doesn't cure the trouble. Skin complaints arise from an impure condition of the blood, and will persist until the blood is purified. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cured many cases of eczema and skin diseases because they make new, rich blood that ,drives>oiit the impurities, clears Che skin and imparts a glow of health. The following proof is of- fered. Mrs. Fred Tremble, Gunter, Ont., says: "For more than a year was steadily afflicted with salt eum or eczema. My hands were sore that I could not put them in water without the skin cracking open. I tried all sorts of ointments recommended for the trouble, but they did not do me a particle of jfocd. I was told Dr. Williams' Pink Pills would cure the trouble, and began taking them. I took the Pills steadily for six or eight weeks and they completely cured the trouble. This was several years ago a"d T have never been bothered with it since." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 . from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Popular Picture. Sir Luke Fildes is one of the best- known of modern painters, and his State portraits of King Edward VII. and Queen Alexandra will carry his name down to posterity. But by far his most popular picture is "The Doctor," which now re- poses in the Tate Gallery. The pathos of this picture has appealed to millions, but few are aware of ' the manner in which it was painted, ! and the trouble to which the artist ' went in order to get the desired j effect. An entire cottage was fitted up in the artist's studio, and the dying Sir Luke Fiitlea. PBACTICAL USE OF SHARKS. They and Bloodhounds Acted As Convict Prison Guards. Shark skin, shark teeth, shark o : l, shark meat and several other by-products c-f the dead shark art articles of greater or lesser utility, but I have never heard of but one instance where the living ehark was put to a practical use. This, says Lewis R. Freeman in the Wide World Magazine, was when they used him as a prison guard in the old days when British convicts were transported to Australia, the monsters serving this purpose for many years at the Port Arthur settlement, ten miles south of Ho- -feart;-the present capital of Tas- mania. The prisons at this point, some of which may still be seen, were situated upon a peninsula whose only connection with the mainland was by a long, narrow strip of sand called, from its con- figuration, the Eaglehawk's ixeck. The convicts were allowed con- siderable liberty on the -oen'nsula, but to prevent their escap- to the mainland half-starved bloodhounds were chained all the way across th narrowest portion of the neck. Several prisoners having avoided the bloodhound zone, the authori- ties adopted the effective but grue- some expedient of feeding the sharks at that point several times a day. In a few weeks the place became literally alive with the voracious maneaters, and from that time on the only convict who ever escaped accomplished his purpose by rolling himself u.\> in kelp and working along, inch by inch, tim- ing his movements to correspond with those of the other heaps of seaweed that were being rolled by the surf. child was represented by his own ! child. To obtain the figure of the | medical man, one model sat for the I hair, another for the eyes, and a third for the clothes, while the late Mr. Vol. Prinsep sat for the beard. After arranging all these details, Sir Luke Fildes states that he "practically lived with and for the picture for six months." But such a painstaking method met with a fitting reward, for the picture is ad- mitted to be one of the most suc- cessful ever painted. SCALES, DUFF I'.ead so Itchy Could Hardly Stand It. Dandruff Showed on Coat Col- lar, Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured in One Month. 223 Elizabeth St.. Montreal. Que. "CutJ- eura Soap and Ointment cured me penna- nently from dandruff and scalp Itch that I was suffering with since over a year. I had an Inflammation of the lungs and a very E-rong fever. When I recovered, my head was covered with scales and dandruff, and it was so Itchy I could hardly stand It. The dandruff showed on my coat collar. I had tued various medicines without relief, t beard of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and decided to try them, and I am very glad of It. because I am perfectly cured. I used two boxes of Cuticura Ointment with the Cuticura Soap. Ic took one month to cura me. I take pleasure In recommending Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment to anyone who la suffering with scalp or skin disease*. 'T (Signed) Hector Perns. Dec. 3O, 1911. Batofc Own Soap VICTORY FOR St FFRAGETTES. es the skin no matter ho-ar tender soft wli.te arou.at- Perfect far nursery a..J to let. a ,,.,, Albert Soap* r.'mifeJ. . Montreal Are You Droopy, Tired, Worn Out? Here Is Good Advice to All >Vho Feel as if Their Vigor and Life , Had All Oozed Away. This Condition Can b Quickly Curtd by a Good Cltanslng Mtdlclns. . Yoar experience is probably eomewhat similar to that, described by Mr. J. T. Fleming In the following letter from bis hom In Lebanon : "I think I moet ha-ve the moet sluggish sort of a liTer. In the morning my mouth waa bitter, and that foul, soft feeling that tells you, 'No breakfast needed here this morning.' A cup of coffee imuld sort of brace m ' up, but In two hour* I waa disposed to quit work, all energy having ooied oat uf me. Sapper WM my only good meal, but I gueos I didn't dtgeet very well, for I I dreamt to beat the band. A frind of ; mine put me irio to Dr. Hamilton'* P111. ', I think they must bur.- tatfii hold of my I liver, perhaps my stomach, too, becauee : at the very start they made lhing go right. Look at m now not sleepy In tn day-time, bat hustling for the mighty | dollar and getting fun out of life every minute. That's what Dr. H.tniiltoi!'e Pills hare done for me- they hare re-built and rejuvenated wy entire eyetcm." To kep free from headaches, to feel young and bright, to enjoy your mealn>, to sleep sound and look your beet, no- thing can help like Or. Hamilton's PilV. 2Sc. per box. five for 11.00 at all druggists and storekeepers or postpaid from The Cutarrhoxone Co., Buffalo. VY . and Kingeton. Canada. TO REMOVE DANDRUFF Prevent foiling hair, remove cruits and scales, and allay itching and Irritation of the scalp, frequent shampoos with Cuticun Eoap, assisted by occasional dressings with Cuticura Ointment, afford the speediest and most economical treatment. They assist la promoting the growth and beauty of the hair by removing those condi lions which tend to make it dry. thin, and lifeless, often leading to premature grayness and loss of hair. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed tree, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address port card Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dent 46D. Bosuui. U. 3. A. Jlhe Canadian Breakfast Post Toasties and Cream Thin bits of choicest Indian Corn, so skilfully cooked and toasted that they are deliciously crisp and appetizing. Wholesome Nourishing Easy to Serve Sold by Grocers everywhuv. Post Toastics CanJIn Postutn Ciu-o.il CX>.. Windsor. Ontario. PROHIBITION FOR SWEDEN. Royal Family. Favors a Law Against Liquor. There is a prospect that. Sweden may soon be placed under national prohibition. Laws malting it an offence to drink spirituous liquors anywhere in the country are con- templated, and there is a reason- able chance that they wiU be adopt- ed. Prime Minister Sta-af, in a recent address before- a congress of tee- totalers in Stockholm, declared that prohibition, was the only effec- tive means of preventing drunken- ness. All other attempted methods of reform, he said, had proved. in- effective aud insufficient to stop the evil. The- Prime Minister's speech is considered an indication of the Government's policy, aJid is be- lieved to foreshadow the introduc- tion into Parliament of a bill for the prohibition of all spirituous drinks in Sweden. Such a- law- would command the support of the lloyal family. The King is a strong temperance advocate. A prohibitive law would be likely to meet with opposition from France. Sweden has a big trade in wines and spirits with France, and slu- depends upon the French mon- ey market to finance many Swedish emerpUM-s. There are fears that the exclusion of French wines would encounter retaliation in the ; form of exclusion of Swedish securi ist-x from tin 1 I'.-ivis bourse. A pro- posal to increase; the duty on wines i in 11)11 liMtl to be dropped Ivc.iuse tlio Fivioh (!ov. rnment pi'otesnxl :iml threatened to bar S\\ed:-!\ oon- -i.ts fi-oin the Paris Stock Kx- i king*?. tuff WAR E>(il>E. "Soldier-Automaton" Said to Be Substitute for SkirmUhers. Yet another terrible engine of war is likely to b added to the equipment of modern armies, if the invention of an engineer named Aassen of Copenhagen fulfills ex- pectations. This engineer has per- fected an invention which he calls a soldier-automaton, an automatic machine for replacing the line of skirmishers for defense purposes. Briefly, it consists of a cylinder which is buried in the ground and which, like submarine mines, may stay there for years without being damaged. A signal station at a distance of four or five miles away is connected with the cylinder. By pressing a button an electric cur- rent is transmitted and the cylinder shoots up until it is about two feet from the level of the ground, firing at the same moment 400 shots in a horizontal direction. The value of such an invention in repelling invaders is obvious. It means that one of these cylinders can take the p!a*v, at any point-, of 100 soldiers, and if a number are buried in proper systematic order over a certain stretch of country, a continuous hail of bullets can be fired at an invading army, without the latter seeing a single enemy. A number of these cylinders, in fact, makes a line of skirmishers whose operations may inflict terri- ble damage on the enemy. The shots take effect at a distance of 300 yards, and the inventor calcu- lates that only 10 per cent, of the enemy would be saved after an at- tack of these automatic troops. The skirmishers would be placed in rows behind other, to be used successively for resisting various attacks and as the cylinders are hidden in the ground, no enemy can know where the line is before the firing starts. SCOTCH M'RSES. Are Popular at Nearly All The Courts of Europe. The birth of another son to the Kiner of Spain recalls the fact that at Madrid the royal nurseries are in charge of three Scotch nurses, and that Scotch nurses are popular at nearly all the Courts of Europe. If Scotswomen enjoy so remarkable a preference in the royal nurseries of Europe, it is by reason of sturdv independence o character, which helps to keep them clear of the petty intrigues of every monarchi- cal household, and that ratio pre- vents them from spoiling their young charges by undue servility. But what is most highly prized in these Scottish nurses is their par ticularly nKlncal voices, a quality which they impart to the youngsters confided to their care, and in this connection nu-rses from the Scottish Highlands are more sought after for their voices than those from the ; Lowland districts. These nurses, while their pay i not exaggerated, nevertheless are treated by their royal and imperial employers with marked considera- tion and regard. Queen Victoria, who was so austere and so authori- tative and distant in her relations wifh her ministers and with the great dignitaries of the State and of the Court, would unbend alto- gether towards the nurses of her children and grandchildren, en- couraging them to talk freely. Old Moore in Advance Prophecy for l'i: i Telia Tote is Assured. Old Moore, who is listened to in Lor don (England) as Madame de Thebes is at Paris, predicts for each year the political happenings. Usually his prophecies are made in I November or December. This year | he hss advanced th* date. His pre- ! d : ctions are none the happier. He announces for the first third of the year 1914 a jreat sorrow in the royal family and in the last third the death of a great persoaase, whose disappearance will convulse 1 the whole country. After this an errinent member of the English Cabinet will also be ''the victim of an attemp'ed assassination." Other rations will be no less troubled. He predicts earthquakes in the United States, violent windstorms. I inundations, exp'osions of mine : damp and epidemics. France and Germany, says Old Moore, will be Jon the point cf coming to blows. 1 and will only stop on the threshold - cf war. As for China, she will be inundated with blood. A single ray j of light brightens this black hori- zon. O'd Moore promises v'ctory to the suffragettes, who will besiege the British i arliament, he, says, in March or April. ClarR's A nourishing, tasty, economical mel. A time and money saver. , A strength producer. No Fun In It. "Why don't you want to go ri ai- ming. Willie I' ' "Mother didn't tell nx I mustn't." Minard'i Liniment Relieve* Nur; .1. Some 160 millions of people ai>ak the English language ; German i> spoken by 130 millions ; French by TO millions. Tiht Money Pinchin? Many. Th.iueardii more are being squeezed by soiling corre which can be cured qjick.'y with Putnam 3 Corn Extractor. Zf.rg free from caustics. Putnam's is painless. Used eoccestifully for fifty years. Use no other, 25e. at all dealers. 1*11 Self-Confldent-e. "I will not give you up," he de- ! elared. "I will win you yet. I will , make vou love me in spite of your- self.''" - "You talk like a man who expect- ed to get a raise of pay/' she sweet- ly replied. H. W OAV.SO*. Ninety Coioom. St.-sct. Toronto FBI* IT STOCK GRAIN AND o.uur Farm* ... all sections of Ontario. *'"* flnnni FA'TORV -11TK-" WITH OR WIHIOft Ruilwar rrk?. In Toroota. r- _ ,-j .-v. ,. . .. _. ,_< i>|tlM \L PROPKRTIK* i 1 a rfo ,!>* IS H W rornl ^ TAMP COLLECTORS HUNDRED DIP- .^ ferent Foreign Stamps. CaUlrru*. Albara. onlr Seven Cent*. M>rks> Stamp MALE HELP WANTED Low Colonist Rates to Paclfto Coast. Via Chicago and North Western Rail- way. On alo daily Sept. 25th to Oct. 10th invluBivr, frm all points in Canada to Los Angeles. San Praurwco. Portland, Salt Lake City. Senttl*. Victoria. Van- couver. Nelaon. Rowland, and many other point*. Through tourist sleepers and fr-e rwlining chair cars from .Chicago. Variable route*. Liberal mop overs. For full information ae to rate*. route and literature, write or call on B H. Bcnuett. General Agent. 4o Yonge Street. Toronto. Branding for crimes was not abolished by law in Britain till 1S22. No More Neuralgia; Headache Cured A Journalist Tell* of The Advan- tage* of Keepinjj Nerrilinc Handy On the Shelf. Fifty roan ago Xemlin* wa used from coast to euaet. and in thoiwanti.i of houses this truety liniment lerred the entire family, cured all their minor ills and kept the doctor's bill email. T.'-d.iy Nerviline gull holds flret rank in Can- ada among pain-rvUving remedies scarcely a home run can find that tioeo- n't use It. From Port Hope. Ont.. Mr. W. T. Green- away, of t-h Guide newspaper staff. write*: "For twenty years we hare U!-ed Nerviline in our home, and not (or :!> world would we be without it. An a re- medy for all pain, earache, toothache, cramps, headache, anil disordered utom- ach I know of no preparation go uiK-ful and quick to relieve ae Nerviline. " Let every mother give Nerviline a trial; it's good for children, good for old folk* you can rub it on as a liniment or take it internally. Wherever there l pain. Serviline wiU cure it. Refuse anything but Serviline. Large family bottle*. 50c. ; trial sie. lie., at all dealers, or The Catarrhoson* Co.. Buffalo. X.Y.. and Kingston, Out. St. Joseph. Leris. Jnly 14, 1503. Minard's L.n.men: Co., Limited. Ontlemen. I wan badly kicked by my horse lat ilay and after using several S reparations on my ls nothing wou!d o. My leg wa* black aa jet. I wau laid up in bed for a fortnight and could "--t waik. After uoing throe bottles t yuur MISAHD:? LINIMENT I was perf.-ily cured, so that I could start on the ruad. JOS. DCBKS. Commercial Traveller, j MEN WANTED TOCTCO MAN BB A BARBKB. i TEACH vou quickly, cheaply, thoroughly and furniah tools free. W> give you sctnsJ hop experlon>. Writ* for tr cats* iloler College. 119 Queen It BaW Toronto. MEN WANTED Love. Love's pictured as a little chap, A litle chap h may be, At any rate his troubles seem The troubles of a baby. He must be fed so tenderly, This winsome, wee gossoon. And often he spends hours and hours, A-crvinir for the moon. F'lVH DOLLARS A DAY CAN BE MA11H by smart man with $:0 to invest. * r.-.L- Drury. ! Houtray St.. Toronv CAN. KB. TL'MOHi. LL'MP9. ETC.." internal and eiternal. cnr*d with- oat pin by our boms treatment. Wr : nc before too Lite Dr Bet'man Medical Co.. Limited. Coli.ngwood. Ont __ *"> ALL STONES. KIDNET A!D BLAD- " "* dT Stones. Kidney trouble. Gravel. Lumbago and kindred ailments positively cured with the new German im*dT. "Sanol." price H.50 Another nw remt-dr for D!abete-Mellituu and sur core. ! Sanol't AnM-DlabU. ' Pr<r ttOO fr^tm drucguts or direct- The Sanol Manufao- tnr:ng Company of Cand. LimiKd. Winnipeg. Man Minard'i Lincmsnt Curtj Burn'5, Eto. Maker of Fact. "Darling! Sweetheart! Can't I throw rny'burning heart at your feet?" "Aw. what's the use? [ haven't cold feet." - Minard's Liniment for sal* v*rywh<r*. Sonif Men Are That Hind. ''Ho spends most of his time thinking of himself." "But his habits would indicate that he thinks mighty little of him self." Try M urine Eye Remedy II you have Red, Weak, Watery Eye*) or Granulated Evelids. Doesn't Smart Soothes Eye Fuin. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c. Marine Eye Salve In Aseptic Tubes, 25c, SOc. Eye Books Free by Mail. > T.- 1 c Qo.d tar All I > . UM* *.~t CM* Murla* Er Amdy Co.. Chlcag* One Regular Job. There- was a rn.in in our town A lazy sort of chap. He got a job one summer day And thought he'd found a. snap. He lingered and he loitered. He loafed and chattered then ; He found he had to go about To hunt a job again. There was a man in our town He found a place once more ; He took his stand with other men A-clerking in a store. He shirked and dodged and sol- diered All in the boss's ken. And so he shortly went his way To hunt a job again. There was a man in our town You'll find him there to-dn- ; No matter where the town may be. He's settled down to stay. This chap when you've discovered You've found one fellow then Whose steady job is just to go To hunt a job again. You'll never have good neighbors unloss you are cne. The Heart of SL Piano > the Action. Insist on thu OTTO HIGEL" Piano Action A.ILROAD and Teletrarhy Conne* of !) most compete and modern kind taught rifht at mar nwn home by Shaw s Tilsgrirh and Railroad School, 1 <; r. rsrd St EI*T. Toronto. Wr'.t for particulars and sample lr*sons. W 11. ?ha>w. Pro* tad Deaths due to traffic accidents in the metropolitan area of London , have increased in number from 155 I in ItHM to 537 iu 1912. KIDNEY KU. 7. ISSIK JJS-'IS. Luck. ''Brown seems to have all the luck." ''What's the iiu-tter now?" ''He's been urdered to take a trip to the west for his health. No- thing like that ever happened to me."" Mlnard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. Uettine; on a Sure Thing. ''Do you see that sad-iooking ir.au across the room 1 He used to be able to light his cigar with a five dollar bill." "Well, you know the old *ay.ny: about the fooh aud his money.' 1 "Thanks. I just made a bet with him that you would make that re- mark withiu five minutes." London's Zoological Gardens, in Regent's Park, was founded in In Sir Walter Scott's diary for 1S27 there is this passage. Amid i his terrible misfortunes, when he | actually contemplated taking re- ' fuge in the Isle of Man or in the I sanctuary of Holy rood tc escape relentless creditors, he wrote: "But I will not let this unman me. Our hope, heavenly and earthly, is poorly anchored if the cable parts! 1 upon the stream. I believe in Uod. ! 1 who can change evil into good, and t am content that what befalls us, I is ultimately for the best." is tie Washer lor a Human In th first piace. Maxwell's "Champion" Is the only washet that can be worked with * crtnk I handle at tho .ide as well as wtlh the top lever. Just suit your own j convenience. ADotW MUW.H f-.Mr ; - Balance WbMi an aoaccuratalr that tn* wash AT rurs aionc fn when >ca hav stopped worUrc th lYer. Thacs'a no doubt about bring lha ast*sl running washtr on ih market. Writs for IMW Illust- rated booklst Uyouni*a.M do>s not h a n d 1 H ; JUWEU sans It. *u,tta. 92 ^v. sivasfc " FOR SALE Pulleys & Shafting Sultab'* for Mills, HUnu'aaUrlflf Plants. Printing Hg_ . s. Etc. Sir Arthur T. Quiller-Onioh. who now hoULs the chair of English literature at Cambridge, illustrates the careless nrul foolish use of fancy phrases by the story of a tele- gram a I'.il'U ^'';u fr- in lirmb.iy t" :ir.nounce the death of ids mother. Tlie balm's telegram r:ui : ''Res rot to announce tluu hand which rock etl the crjul'e li;is kicked th bucket." You will find relief in Zam Buk ! It eases the burning, stinging pain, stops b'ceding and brings ease. Perseverance, with Zam- Buk, means cure. Why not prove this ? ^ a Vrugg'*'* "'"* Store*. BUK Wood Split Pulleys, iaJ-4 z 48 in. for 3 13'IU in. shaft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 1S,S x in. for * 1616 in. shaft. 1 Wood Spht Pulley, 12J4 x 88 in. for 3 7 16 in. haft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 10,^ 3C in. for 3 T id ia. shaft. Pulley* of smaller izs and Shafting of variou* lengths a.-'d to be sx>!d at very low figure*. Box 28, Publi.-hiiij Co., Toronto.