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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 5 Nov 1914, p. 7

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WOMEN CAN HELP IN WAR Against Drunkenness Mothers, wives and sisters owe it to those dear to them to help them stop chinking. Drunkenness is a disease, and the' inflamed membranes of. the stomach mnst be healed and the craving removed--the trembling nerves soothed and restored--before the victim can stop drinking. Alcura is guaranteed to give satisfaction satisfaction or money is refunded. It builds up the systv maud renders drink distasteful distasteful Get it- to day at onr store, SI.00 *ber box. Alcura No. 1 is tasteless and odorless and can be given secretly in tea coffee or food. Alcura No. 2 is the voluntary treatment. Ask for free Alcura Alcura booklet. Jury and Lovell, Druggists, Bowmanville. 7 DOMINION LINE I he Largest Steamers from Montreal MONTREAL - QUEBEC - LIVERPOOL S.S. Megantic TwifljScrew, 15,000 Tens N»V. 7 S.S. Zeeland Twin .Screw, 12,017 Tons " 14 PORTLAND - HALIFAX - LIVERPOOL From : • From Hi Portland S.S. Arabic,, 15.800 Tens Dec. 1 S.S. Yaderland, 12,018 Tons " 5 S.S. Zeeland, 12,000 Tens " 12 Apply Local Agents for,full particulars or Company's Office, 118 Notre Dame Street West Montreal, Qie alifmx Dec. 3 - 6 " 13 The Princess and the Bird. Once there was a princess • who had, as a pet,- the smallest 'bird in all the worlds - She tied one end of a -golden cord round the bird's leg, and fastened the other end to her wrist. At night she put the bird into a jeweled cage, the bars of which were pure. gold. But the little little 'bird was not happy, for it wished wished to go free among the garden flowers. "Oh, let me go 1" it pleaded. pleaded. But the princess shook her head. 'I love you," she said. "If you did love me," replied the bird, "you would wish me to be happy. I can never be happy till I'm free." Still the princess shook her head. "You are the smallest bird in all the wide world," she said. £< If I were to let you go, you would have no golden cage. Where would yoü find shelter and food 1 ?" "I should find the open sunlight better than a golden cage, and my ; food should be the sweetness of the flowers," the bird pleaded. "Oh, little bird, you would never Children CryTor - Fletcher*s The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 yeais, has borne the signature of and has been made under his personal personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment. Artists Form Brigades l'or Home Defence in England. The first general parade of the United Arts force at Earl Court, London The ranks include painters sculptors, actors, and journalists, who have banded together for the home defence of England, lhe photo shows a general view of the parade with Major-General Sir Afred Turner addressing the men. Included in the ranks are Mr. John Livery, A.R.A., F. R. Benson, the actor and manager, and other prominent men of arts and letters. What is CASTORIA Cas tor in is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it , has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. GRAND TRUNK sYSTEMf , . return to me M "No," said DOUBLE TRACK ALL THE WAY TORONTO - CHICAGO TORONTO-MONTREAL The International Limited Canada's Train of Superior Service Leaves Toronto 4.10 p.m. daily, arrives Detroit V.55 p.m. and Chicago S.00 a.m. MORNING SERVICE Leaves Toronto S a.m.. arrives Detroit 1.45 p.m. oiid Chicago 8.40 p m. daily. LAST TRAIN OUT OF TORONTO AT NIGHT Leaves 11.35 p.m., arrives Detroit S.00 a.m. and Chicago 3.00 p.m. daily, assuring important connections connections with principal trains for WestemStates and Cana la. FOR MONTREAL Leave Toronto 9 a.m., 8.30 p.m. and 11 p.m. daily. Berth reservations, etc., at G.T.R. ticket ■'trice ». J H. H. JURY, Phone 78. Local Agent. the little bird, "I should never come back, for I do not love you. You bound me with a. golden cord." Then the princess thought, ££ If the bird does not love me, I will not kee.p it against- its will. I love it so much that I wish it to be hap- Perhaps, if I let it go, it will FEES OF FAR» PRODUCTS I SkEPOKTS rBOM CHS jXiEADlH'O JCUA.BE CENTRES OP AMEEICA. i>y. BOWMANVILLE TIME TABLE (Effective Oct. 19th) TRAINS LEAVE Tc i T oronto and Intermediate Station 9.02 a.m. • 7.3/p.m. 1 < r Trenton, Belleville, Yarker, Kingston, Brockville, Smith's Falls, Ottawa and intermediate stations." 9.53 a.m. FcrCoe Kill and Intermediate Stations . , 9.53a. m. j Yarker, Tweed, llarrowsmith, Sydenham n.d intermediate Stations on Bay of Quinte Ry. 9.53 a. m. TRAINS ARRIVE I rom Toronto and Intermediate Stations 9.53 a.m. 7.19p.m. From Napanee, Belleville, Trenton and Intar- li ediat e Points: also Picton and C.O.il. Poinci) 6.C2 a. m. 7.37 p. m. From Maynooth(C. O. R.) 7.37 p. in. From Sydenham, Tweed, Yarker, etc. 7.37 p. m. 1 ] aies run daily except Sunday unless other - wise marked. Te l further particulars see other advertisement ^ appearing in this paper, or apply XV. G-. GIFFLER, Depot Ageut. love me a little in return." So she cut the cord and let the bird out into the wide world where the trees and flowers grow. Then its happiness was a-s wide a.s the wind. It flitted hither and thither in the sunlight a-11 day. I-ts little feathers that had been brown turned into emerald, and ruby, and amethyst, and sapphire, and topaz, for those were the colors of the flowers that it visited. But one day, as it went from flower to flower, flower, it came upon a rose. In the heart of the rose there lay a tear that was like crystal. "The princess princess passed this way," said the. ffose. "She mourns because she is "lonely without you. I have kept dier tear to give to you." "Poor princess," said the little bird, "I do love her ! She gave me the sunlight and the flowers. I will go back, and I will see if I can. comfort comfort lier. I shall miss my freedom, but I shall have her love." So the little bird flew back to the "It was vour love that Sreadstuffs. .Toronto, Nov. 3--Flour--Manitoba) first patents, $6.60 in jute bags; second Pat- ents, $6.10; strong bakera", $5.90; Ontario wheat flour, 90 per cent, patents, quoted at $4.45 to $4.60, seaboard. Wheat--Manitoba No. 1 Northern, new, $1.20 1-2; No. 2 at $1.16 1-2. Ontario wheat. No. 2, at $1.08 to $1.10, at outsid points. . , -, a*. Oats--Ontario, 48 to 49c. outside, and. 51 to 52c on brack, Toronto. Western u - ada, No. 2. quoted at 60c, and No. 5 at o&c. Barley--63 to 66c, outside. Rye--85 to 87c, outside. Peas--$1."20 to $1.25. . . Corn--No. 2 American, 82 l-2c, Toronto, and. 78c, c.i.f.. Bay ports. . Buckwheat--66 to 68c, outside, nomm • . Bran and shorts--Bran, $23 to ton, and. shorts at $26 to $27. Rolled oats--Car lots, per bag lbs., $2.90 to $3.10. $1.12 1-8; No. 2 Northern. $1.06 7-8 to $1.10 1-8; December. $1.09 3-4. Corn--No. 3 yellow, 66 to 68c. Oats--No. 3 white. 44 1-2 to 43.3-4e. Flour and bran unchanged. Duluth, Nov. 3.--Linseed, $1.29 1-2; December. December. $1.29. Wheat--No. ! 1 hard, $1.14 3-4; No. 1 Northern, $1.13 3-4; No. 2 Northern, *$1.S 1-4; December. $1.11 3-4; May, $1.16 3-4. ot 90 Country Produce, Butter--Choice dairy, 23 to 25c ; ior, 20 to 21c ; creamery prints, 28 1-2 w 29c; do., solids, 27 to 27 l-2c. „ . Eggs--New-laid, selects, dozen, 31 to ox, storage, 25 to 26c. ' . . Honey--12 to 12 3-4c per lb. for strained. No. 1 honeycomb, $2.75 per dozen; No. 2, $2 to $2.25. Poultry--Chickens, dressed, 16 to iig, ducks, dressed, lb., 14 to 16c; fowl, 15 14c; turkeys, dressed, 19 to 22c. Ql^petse--New, large, 16 to 16 l-4e; twine, Beaus--Prime, bushel, $2.85 to $2.90; hand-picked, $3 to $3:10. Potatoes--Ontarios, 65 to 70c per bag ; out of store, 50 to 55c, in car lots. New Brunswicks. car lobs, 60 to 65c per bag. Live Stock Markets. Toronto, Nov. 3.--Odd lots" of steers brought $7.75. Plenty of fair to medium brought $5.50 to $6.50. Good cows ranged from $5.75 to $6.75, with, commonish at $5 to $5.75. Fairly good bulls brought $6 to $6.50. Medium to light feeders with come breed sold mostly between $5.50 and $6. while weightier stuff -between 800 and 900 pounds brought .$6 to $6.75. Select mftkers were wanted and from $90 to $115 wai given, with one beâ-st at $125. Good to choice sold well at $70 to $90, with medium medium at $50 to $70. Canner and cutter classes were a feature of strength. Packers Packers bought freely, paying $4 to $4.65 for the former and $4.50 to $5.25 for the latter latter Heavy receipts are keeping prices of lambs between $7.50 and $7.65 for the hulk. Sheep ewes went at $5.25 to $5.75, with heavier and bucks at $4 to $5.25 and cul-le at $3. to $4. Hogs held at $7.50 fed and watered. ■ . . „ Montreal, Nov. 3.--Prime beeves, 7c to 7 l-2o ; medium, 5 1-4 to 7c ; common, 3 3-4 to 5c; small bulls, 4 to 4 l-2c; lean can- nere, 3 to 3 3-4c; jpilch cows, $40 to $80 each; calves, 4 to 8 l-2c. Sheep, 4 1-2 to 5 l-4o; lambs, 7 to 7 l-2c. Hogs, 8 1-4 8 l-2o. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS to princess brought me," said the bird. Provisions. Wholesalers are selling to the trade on , 1 V . - ,, t i wnoieeaiere are eeiiiug uu have been happy in the .sunlight anci the following price basis:-- have Smoked ' and Dry Salted Meats--Rolls Smoked, 14 1-2 to 15c; hams, medium. Darlington Township Clérk's Notice ôf First Posting ôf VOTERS' LIST. (Section 13) Voters' List, 1914, Municipality of the Township of Darlington, County of the flowers. See Î Where I dipped into the flowers, all the feathers about my throat have become become emerald, and ruby, and amethyst, amethyst, and sapphire, and topaz, for the flowers are the jewels of the wide, wide world, and I have found their, magic." The princess did not bind it-he bird with golden cord. It was ever after as free to come and go as the wind, and both the princess and the bird were happy. Some day when you go into the garden, you may see the little bird. It is the smallest bird that there is in the wide, wide world, and the feathers about its throat are like jewels. As the bird goes from flower flower to flower, it hums a song about the princess and her love, and-that, perhaps, is why it is called the humming bird. -- Youth's Companion. Companion. 18 1-2 to 19c; heavy, 16 "to 17c; breakfast bacon; 18 1-2 to 19c; long clear bacon, tone, 14 l-2o; cas<-e, 15 to 15 l-4c; backs, plain, 22c; special, 23c; boneless backs, 25c. Green Meats--Out of pickle, lo less than smoked. Lard.--Pure, tierces, 12 1-2 to 13c ; compound, compound, 9 5-4 to 10c. TERRIBLE SCENES OF WAR EACH GERMAN SOLDIER CARRIES CARRIES FIRST AID. Winnipeg Crain. Winnipeg. Nov. 3.--Cash:--No. 1 Northern, Northern, $1.14 5-8; No. 2 Northern, $1.11 1-4; No. 3 Northern, $1.06 1-4; No. 4, $1.00 1-4; No. 5, 96 l-4c ; No. 6, 91 l-2c; feed, 87 l-2p. Oats--No. 2 O.W., 54 7-8c; No. 3 C.W.. 51 7-8c; extra No. 1 feed, 61 7-8c; No. 1 feed, 51 l-2c; No. 2 feed, 50 l-2c. Bao-ley, No. 3, 69c; No. 4, 64c; rejected, 60 l-2c; feed, 60c. Hospitals Crowded and Red Cross Trains Run Daily From the Front. Montreal Markets. Montreal, Nov. 3.--Corn--American Durham. A CHANGE OF TONE. Notice is hereby given, that I have transmitted or delivered to the persons mentioned in Section 9 of The Ontario -""Voters' List Act, the copies required by said sections to be transmitted or delivered delivered of the List,, made pursuant to said Act, of all persons appearing by the last revised Assessment Roll of the said Municipality Municipality to be entitled to vote in the said Municipality at elections for members of the Legislative Assembly and at Municipal Municipal Elections; and that the said List was first posted up at my office at Hampton on the Seventeenth day of October, 1914, and remains there for inspection. And I hereby call" upon all voters to take immediate proceedings to have any errors or omissions corrected • according to lav/. Dated this 24U1 day of October, 1914. W. R. ALLIN, Clerk of Tp. of Darlington. The Germans Are Not So Sure of Victory Victory New. The truth regarding the war is not "being told to the German people now, any more than it has been, hitherto. Nevertheless, incertain indirect forma, the truth is leaking out. For instance, in the more reputable German newspapers, newspapers, there is a growing absence of the complete and .boastful assurance of victory which marked the earlier stages of the war. Confidence in the might of the German army is still pro- „/i v.n+ if Io nnw Vipinor nfimlttp.rl No. 2 yeftloiv, 82 to 83c. Gate--Canadian Western, Western, No. 2. 58 l-2c; extra No. 1 feed, 67 to 58c; No. 2 locaJ white, 54 to 65c; No. 3 local local white, 63 to 54c; No. 4 local white, 52 to 53c. Barley--Man. feed. 64c; malting, 78 to 80c. Flour--Man. Spring wheat patente, patente, flxete, $6.70; seconde, $6.20; strong bakers', $6; Winter patente, choice, $6; straight rollers, $5.50 to $5.60; straight rollers, bags. $2.65 to $2.75. Rolled oat3, barrels. $6.35; do., bags. 90 1 be., $3.05. Bran, $25. Shorts. $27. Middlings, $30. Mouillie, $30 to $34. Hay. No. 2, per. ton car lots. $17.50 to $18.50. Cheese--Finest Westerns, 15 1-2 to 15 3-8c : do., Easterns. 15 1-4 to 15 3-8c. Butter--Choicest creamery, creamery, 27 1-2 to 28c; seconds, 26 1-4 to 26 3-4c. Eggs--Freeh, 55c; selected," 29c ; No. 1 stock, 27o; No. 2 stock, 24c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots 65c. United States Markets. Minneapolis, Nov. 3.--Wheat No. 1 hard, $1.13 1-8; No.' 1 Northern. $1.09 7-8 to 44-5 w V Cook's Cotton Root Compound: A safe, reliable regulating medicine. Sold" in^three degrees degrees of strength--No. 1, 51; No. 2, $3; No. 3, $5 per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of "price. Free pamphlet. Address ; THE COOfiCMEDICINE CÔ TORONTO. ONT. (Firmcrly Windsor.) claimed, but it is now "being admitted as a posibility that the fortune of war may be adverse to Germany for a time. Now, that is a big admission, because it has always been declared, and by Germans themselves most emphatically, emphatically, that they had no time to give away; that the campaign in France at least must be finished victoriously victoriously without any delay. Bight weeks at the very outside was the term allotted for the campaign in in France, and the possibility of any serious check to the German armies, in the western theatre of war was never never contemplated. . Any admision to the contrary, therefore, is an admission admission of failure, notwithstanding all attempts attempts at disguise. * - Genuine Nearly everyone -has ripping, tearing Headaches at'nmei disordered bDiti- ach--sluggish liver: dqé 6- it: Cheer up 1 hefé'g thô feal relief --Oh-am b"erlain 6 Stomach and Liver Tablets. They put the «tomach '4nd' BôwMs right. All druggists, 2qA § to rnalLfrom. 9 ciné Co.', Toronto RL: On a Clear Footing. An Irishman who occupied a small, cottage in the North of Ireland Ireland jvas in arrears of_ 30s. of rent with his landlord. His landlord, 'seeing no possible chance of getting his money, went to Pat one aây. and offered to throw off one half the amount so as to encourage him *tb pay "the,, -either half." "Well," sai^ Pat", "since yoù are so good a-s to throw off the half I never saw the day I would take anything off any man. tor nothing, and to let you see that I'm as good- a man as you I'll throw off the other half, 'and that will leave us on a- clear footing. ' ' Must Bear Signature of See Fec-Slmlle Wrapper Below. YémesUHL •W felakeaseefaft [FOR,HEADACHE* m DIZZINESS, rtifeitiousRitt. FOOMPID LIVE*. FOOOHSTIPAIIOR FOBSALLdW SKID, F9RTHEC0MftSX|ON nw*a must may É u£liATVlft7 CUBE SICK HEADACHEs The methods of handling the wounded in the German army are described by a correspondent of the Chicago News who is with the right wing of the Germany army in France. He ©ays : Every soldier in the German army has sewn under a corner of his coat a strip of rubber cloth. Under this strip is a piece of antiseptic gauze, a strip of bandage, and plaster plaster and cloth for the outer hand- age. This cloth bears in simple pictures pictures directions for dressing every sort of wound. ' When a soldier is wounded either lie or some comrade rips open this package and applies at once the life-saving dressing, which will last at any rate until the solclier brought to a- station,.where the first scientific attention is given. Through this simple and inexpensive inexpensive device many German soldiers who have ibeen slightly wounded m ■battle have returned to their comrades comrades within a few days completely well, and have taken their place? in the ranks once more. Sanitary Corps Gather Wounded. The ordinary procedure of caring for the wounded in the German army is for the sanitary corps, which is well provided with stretchers stretchers and bandages, to gather up the wounded on or near the firing lines and bring them to a gathering point a little way behind the lines. Here the army surgeons are ready to begin work at once upon the "most urgent cases. They are assisted by members of -the corps who remove the temporary bandages bandages and- put on dressings which will last until the soldier reaches a hospital. Then from this gathering gathering paint the wounded soldiers are put on stretchers in Red Cross wagons and carried to the field hospitals hospitals a few miles farther .back, where doctors and nurses are at work. , These hospitals are usually established established in village churches or town halls. One room is cleared and ar u ranged for an operating room, where bullets and pieces .of shell are removed and amputations are m.ade if necessary. * Village Church as Hospital. I visited- such a field hospital. It was a little whitewashed village church heated by a stove. Everywhere Everywhere were white beds made of straw and covered with _ sheets. Perhaps twenty wounded were here including two captured Irishmen. They, lay quite still when the army doctor ushered us in, for they, were too seriously wounded to pay much attention to anything. Near this hospital was another m a town hall. While we were there a consulting surgeon arrived to investigate the condition of a seriously wounded lieutenant, whose leg might need amputation. Two orderlies put the patient on a stretcher, and he was taken into the next room for examination. examination. Later in the day. the amputation was performed. From these little field hospitals, as soon as the men can be moved, they are taken to some general hospital hospital in -the nearest large "city, where several thousands can be cared for. Such a hospital exists in this neighborhood in the building building of a normal college where every corner is used in housing wounded men. Heartrending Pictures. I made a quick trip through this building, and the memory of it is of the most heartrending pictures. I have of the war. Room after room was filled with the victims of the conflict. Every man was seriously wounded. Some had suffered amputations amputations and the heads, of others were so bandaged that no features could be seen, only a tube to the nose permitting breathing. In one room a surgeon had a soldier soldier on the operating table and was pulling pieces of shell from a huge hole in the inner side of one of his legs. Oh a, stretcher on the floor, waiting for his turn to come under the surgeon's care, was an officer. His face was covered with blood, he was waving his arms wildly and gasping for air. This -scene left an impression of the utmosL horror upon upon me. Slightly wounded soldiers, whom it is not necessary to leave for a while in the field hospitals, are sent directly to these larger hospitals and thence after a short convalescence, convalescence, are loaded info Red Cross trains and sent home for recovery. Later they return to ■ take their places in the regiments. Trains Seen Daily. Such trains can = be seen daily along any main line of railroad. In some cases freight cars with straw bedding are Used. Near the large hospital I visited was a graveyard where there were scores of neatly marked fresh graves, each bearing a cross or tablet tablet with the name of the soldier and his regiment, division, and corps marked on it. The identity of each soldier is easily determined from the name plate which he wears in a little leather purse suspended from around the neck. After a battle these plates are gathered from the dead and from these the death lists are made out. After a .battle where the deaths mount into the thousands some field will be shut off for a cemetery, and there the bodies are buried, each grave receiving some kind of a cross wherever it is possible, but here no names can be attached. -There will be many homes in which there will not even be known where the absent ones are buried. I Bears the Signature of The Kind Yob Have Always Bought In Use Fob* Over 30 Y e; ell «3 THE: OH 1/ COM PÂNY. NEW VO R K C I TV. --mainMiiiiMW 'll I WnBiV il /r-TiYirTWIBr MMY THE S0ÜM5 §E6 HITS OF NEWS FROM THE MARITIME PROVINCES. Items of Interest From Places Lapped by Waves of the Atlantic. F and 15 Fall Suits & O v ercoats .$15 UP It's time x 7 ou xvere order ing 57 our Fall Clothes. The St. John Patriotie appreaching $40,000. New Brunswick is forming a I ox Breeders' Association. _ The Salvation Army is building a new Métropole in St. John, N.B. Mrs. Sarah MeNeil of ^ Sydney. 112 years of age, and the. oldest woman woman in Nova Scotia, is ill. "William Duplissea, . Fan r ville, N- B., was badly injured when he teri from an electric light pole. John A. Scott, an engineer at- St. John, N.B., was seriously injured when a load of coal fell on him. James W. Loveys was drowned in the Western Bay, - Newfoundland, while trying to salvage wreckage, Ernest M. Pit*. Belleview Avenue, Avenue, St. John, wa-s drowned when a stone scow, upon which he was riding, riding, capsized. Although Earl Long, a young boy, living at Sussex, N.B., was terribly injured in an I.C.R, turntable, he will recover. * ■ Head Constable George Winslow of St, John's 1 , Newfoundland, a veteran veteran of Crimea and Balaclava, died in his 85th year We have some splendid materials at prices ranging from $15.00 to $30.00. REMEMBER, ' xve guarantee guarantee every suit that xve make. Ladies' and Gents'Tailoring. H0È5ÉŸ BLOCK. Seaman Curran of St. Jot f St, John's, N ewfoundland, returned to his fam- In all countries. Ask for our INVENTOR'S INVENTOR'S ADVISE 11.which will be sent free. MARION & MARION, 364 University St., Montréal, llim ! ily after they had consiom dead for several months. The steamer Cachalot, operating, from Hawke's Harbor. Labrador, brought in the loot of fifty whales bodies in one trip. , Samuel Taylor of Moncton dmo as the result of injuries received înthe wreck of the C.P.R. express at Belmont, Belmont, N'.S.t some years ago. Nineteen dairv farms ill Lings County, N.B., were blacklisted by ■Dairy Inspector Dr. T. Fred Johnston. Johnston. for not being up to the st-and- The New Brunswick Fruit Growers' Growers' Association will send every available apple to England, instead of letting any rot in the orchards. A tremendous storm on the shores of Newfoundland swept away flakes, fishing stages and wharves, and destroyed destroyed twelve boats at- Blackhead alone'. &£*?*** t , * Pi.Ti w: 1 ^Wood's ïhospaodicD. rhe Greet*. English® Remedy. v.v.s and invigorates the whole XX rev vous system, makes new Blwd in old Veins, Cures Nervous /./:// y. Menial ami Brain Worry. Hesj'.rM- i vy,' t Loss of Energy, Palpitation of tjut r-':. Trailing Memory. Price SI '-"i- box, six f." jq 0r.<. v'dl plet-.kc, six will nin Cy ;o.d_ry_ail or mailed in plain yltg. o.-iv-rWy" Xrwpamphl-1 mailed free WH WC-.nA IC1KE CC.,T050$iTO, OUT. (Lrrx-ri» Vw -,\) t'rr'frxN RSafiks :gns Copyrights Auront) !tcn?intr r. Welch ami description may ivlit"" Heard on the Train. £ ' What have, you got in the packaged" packaged" "Drawing' materials." ££ I didn't know you were an artist." artist." "Artist nothing! It contains a couple of pairs of forcepts the dentist dentist asked me to get for him." The Clean-Up- "Did you find anything in that house " asked the footpad. "Nothing worth while," answered answered the burglar. ££ B.ut it's, bad luck to -come away empty-handed, so I "brought along the watchdog and a lot of burglar alarm apparatus." More than a quarter of the working working people in the United States are women. rmlciilv fiscertciri oiir opinion fiee whether an Invention Is pvovi.hly pntontnblo. Communie.-,, t.ionsstrictly conûV.cuMitl. HANDBOOK on Patents cent free. Oldest turonev for securing patents. Fatems taken through Mann & Co. receive epeejal notice, without charge, lntho_ rn A *P' A handsomely it..,-Lrnted weekly. largerk circulation circulation of pvv r-e'r-ntlrlc journal. Terms for Ottuado, S3.Î-» a year, pobtago prepaid. Sold, toy ali netvsde.Hers. roadway, \\ SSV1Ï Wnshlngtoe, D. C. Lv. Toronto 8.20 a.m. Lv. Bowmanville f9-53 a.m. Ar. Ottawa 5- 20 P- m - Lv. Ottawa 12.15 noon Lv. Bowmanville 7*37 P* m * Ar. Toronto 9.15 P- m - (Daily except Sunday.) GENERAL CHANGE t)F TIME ONTARIO LINES Effective Monday,"October 19, 1914 For full particulars see latest Time Table Folder. Husband--Dr, B, said an alcohol sponge would do me good. Wife To which of your cronies did he refer refer ? For Rail and Steamship Tickets, Parlor and Sleeping Car reservations, and all information apply to XX r . G. GIFFLER, Station Agent. z 4 \

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