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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 24 Dec 1914, p. 7

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■ . pjgfp3p y'-'bï--'- V"-': y-ia --i PALE AM SICKLY Fashion Hints Fads and Fancies Fur Waistcoats.--Fur- waistcoats are^o be seen in some "of the win- tei »^ at suits ' an<1 they are, decid- edl^attraetive. Sometimes they are found in long coats, with flaring flaring sections set on at the hips. Sometimes they are put into short jackets, of which, by the way, there are a rather surprisingly large number, number, in. view of earlier predictions that all coats would be short. Brown and Xavy.--Seldom before has there -been such a long reign of one color as there has bèen of navy slue: For several seasons it has Need AH the Strength That Good Red Blood Can Give Youth is the time -to lay the foundation foundation for health. Every boy and girl should have plenty of pure, red blood and strong nerves. With thin, impure blood they start- life with a handicap too great to win success and Sappiness. Pure, red blood means healthful growth, strong nerves, a clear brain and a good digestion. In a word, pure blood is the foundation of health. The signs of thin, impure blood are many and unmistakable. The pale, irritable boy or girl, who has no appetite or ambition, is always tired out, melancholy, short of >een increasingly worn. And it breath, and who does not grow still stands supreme among colors strong, is the victim of anaemia, or moves tbat may. be necessary undercover undercover of darkness. Ammunition, food and drinking water are brought in by night ; the wounded are sent awav to the hospital. We do not wash, we do not change our clothes; we sleep at odd intervals whenever we can get the chance, and daily we get more accustomed to our lot/ Little holes are dug beneath beneath the parapet just big enough to sit in are our homes, with straw and perhans a sack or two for warmth. The cold is intense at night, and those good ladies who have made us woollen caps and comforters comforters have earned our thanks. The coldest moments are those when there is an alarm ' of a night attack, and we spring from our "the parapet, peering over the wall to see our enemies, and firing at the flashes of their rifles -- * KHAKI LINE OF HEROES. RELIEVES EVERY EXTERNAL PAIN. / for street wear. Brown, as everyone everyone knows, is another favored color this year. In an effort to tally up these two facts, the dressmakers have combined the two colors. An odd combination it seems at first. But a frock of blue satin, with a brown velvet bodice, is decidedly interesting. Full Tucked Net.--Among the full skirts', those of tucked net are perhaps perhaps the most attractive. They are positively "pretty/' a quality lacking lacking tÇü many of the season's, frocks. Sometimes tucks of chiffon are applied applied to a- full net skirt, mounted over a satin foundation. Sometimes Sometimes tucks of chiffon are applied to a full net skirt, mounted over a satin foundation. Sometimes the net or tulle itself is tucked, in even tucks or in graduated ones, the wider ones at the bottom, the smaller smaller unes at the top. Buttons.--Buttons are in great demand. Dressmakers use them for trimming in a thousand different ways. There are fur buttons on cloth coats. There are self-colored buttons on suits and coats. There are jet and steel and enamel buttons. buttons. There are fancy silk and velvet velvet buttons. Belts.--In spite of the fact that the waistline has dropped many inches belts are still used to emphasize emphasize the waistline. The belt at the bips is usually wiihr than L he belt at the waist used to be, but it is still a regulation belt. On many Trucks and coats the belt-s are of the material, stitched, trimmed with self-covered buttons, and buttoned shut. Sometimes these wide belts are held in place by straps of the material, sometimes they are stit-ch- into position. Braid Bindings--Some very effective effective suits are worn from . time to time with bindings of wide silk braid. When these braid-bound suits first appeared they gave one the impression that they would « uiickiy become popular. They are rut widely worn, however, and are s-tiii very distinctive. Perhaps this is because they have not- been much developed in inexpensive suits. One that is especially good in style is made of brown cloth, with a flaring tunic, crossed in front, bound with darker brown braid, a narrow foundation skirt bound with the braid and a long coat with flaring cutaway skirts also bound on all edges with the braid. Velvet and Kid Belts.--Some smart new belts are made of velvet and kid. The belts are about- four inches wide, with a strip of velvet edged with a half-inch band of white kid. The velvet is deep gold- tn yellow, king's blue or crimson. The buckle is covered with white kid and is a ; big. oblong one. Cheeks and Stripes. -- Checked and striped velvets are striking. One smart little frock shows a full, gathered skirt of black and white Bt'ined velvet with a short, fitted litti-e jacked of black velvet. Another Another frock shows a skirt of checks and a jacket of plain velvet brown. Still another frock of velvet lias collar collar and enffs of checks. bloodlessness--the greatest enemy of youth. There is just one thing to do for these boys and girls--build up the blood with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills .for Pale People. You can't afford to experiment with other remedies for there must be no guess-work in the treatment of anaemia. Through neglect or wrong treatment anaemia anaemia gradually develops into the pernicious pernicious form which is practically incurable. incurable. Dr. Williams'. Pink Pilk work directly on the blood, giving it just the elements which it lacks. In this way these Pills build up every organ and nerve in the body, thus developing strong, rugged boys and girls. Miss Anna Loseke, Grand Forks,- B.C., says : "I think that before taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I was one of the most miserable girls alive. I was hardly ever free from awful headaches, was as pale as a ghost, and could not go upstairs without stopping to vest. Tlieir Achievement Has Never Been Equalled. _ An c^cer in the Army Service Corps writes :-- Yon know, reading the home papers--I papers--I could almost wish that a horde of these^gentry could descend on old England's shores. V don't think anything but that will ever arouse them to the awfulness of the thing that the thin (very, very thin in some places) khaki line in the trenches out here is fighting hard to keep from them ; and that very thin line is doing each day something" that has never been equalled even by the thin red line of bygone days. I am not patting myself on the back, for my work lies behind the trenches, and I take off my hat to every mother's son that is there. I should have thought that tihe recruits to the new Army would have exceeded the second million by now, and yet they don't seem to hâve got the first com ae he s have gone, my appetite is good and I am equal to almost any exertion, and you may be sure I will always recommend Dr. Williams' Williams' Pink Pills." Sold by all medicine dealers or sent by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing direct to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock ville, Ont. LIFE IN THE TRENCHES. N-ow since taking the Pills the head- i pie ted yet. If they could only take the youth of England on a personally-conducted personally-conducted tour along our lines here so that they could realize what we are up against, I think they'd join in a body ; but, failing that, the best way to buck them up would be a hundred thousand Germans landing*in England. I don't suppose suppose they'd get very far, still they would bring home to the smug armchair armchair brigade as nothing else ever will something at least of the awful way in which Belgium and part of France has suffered. Those who are out here are doing miracles. . In the meantime, however however confident one may be of the result, we are still a long way off that salvation, and the present battle battle is still raging backwards and forwards as fiercely as ever. As you said in your other letter, the old Scottish have done splendidly, and I am afraid, have lost rather heavily, but there isn't one regiment regiment in the firing line that is doing better than one another ; they are all doing their best, and a splendid best, too. . Suffered Over Two Years. GrewThFn àifd Lost Appetite. Itching, Burning,Sore Burning,Sore Eruption. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Completely Healed. 233 George St., Sarnia, Ont. --"I suffered for over two years with eczema which first appeared "in small pimples and broke into red inflamed sores. They wëre very itching and when my clothing rubbèd against them I was in great distress.- I lost my rest at night and was much disfigured by the eruption. eruption. The eczema was so bad that I grew thin and lost my appetite. My hands, arms, face and various parts of my body were covered with an itching, burning eruption eruption of sores and though I took many common common and much recommended remedies they failed to do any good. " I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after about three weeks I was completely As a family safeguard, as some- healed; I take pleasure in recommending Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, . Tight Chest" and Hoarseness. j It's when sickness comes àt night, 1 when you are far fiom the druggist : or the doctor, that's when you need Nerviline most. Experienced mothers are never without it. One of the children children may have- toothache. Without Nerviline--a sleepless night for the entire household. With Nerviline the pain is relieved quickly. It may be earache, perhaps a stiff neck, or one of the kiddies coughing with a bad chest cold. Nothing can give quicker . results than vigorous rubbing with this old-time family remedy. Î Nerviline is too useful, too valuable l to be without. For lumbago, lame ; back, sciatica or neuralgia there is no liniment with half of Nervikne's power power to penetrate and ease the pain thing to ward off sickness and to cure the miner ills that will occur in every family, to cure pain anywhère, you can find nothing to compare with old- time Nerviline,; which for forty years has been the most widely used family remedy in the Domi; ion. The most economical size is the large 50c. family family size bottle, small trial size 25c. All dealers sell Nerviline. ANECDOTES OF LORD FISHER. them to any other needy sufferers from eczema or other eruptions of the skin." (Signed) Miss Bertha Allan, May 23, 1914. Samples Free by Mail A generation of mothers has found no. soap so well suited for cleansing and purifying the skin and hair of infants and children as Cuticura Soap. Its absolute purity and refreshing refreshing fragrance alone are enough to recommend recommend it above ordinary skin soaps, but there are added to these qualities delicate yet effective emollient properties, derived from Cuticura Ointment, which render it A Man Who Succeeds in Gcttlllg j most valuable in overcoming a tendency to il» A .vu xy*i v i distressing eruptions and prompting skin ' " ' j and hair health. Cuticura Soap and Oint- Here are s-ome good stories of j ment sold by druggists and dealers through- Lo-rd Fisher recently appointed out the world. Liberal sample of each First Lord of the^British Admiralty. I ■*!**£? A commander whose reputation for discipline has made him almost as much feared as he is admired, Lord Fisher's devotion to duty is such tha.it he will brook no shirking from any man under him, and wee betide the unfortunate officer or handy man who dares to question his authority. A certain captain once sent word that it was impossible impossible to get his ship to such-and- such a place on a given day. "Umph !" replied Lord Fisher ; "tell Captain that if he is not card "Cuticura, Dept. D, Boston, U. S. A." With a Grain of Salt. The war has given rise to all sorts of sensational statements and predictions. One writer, whose book has had a large sale in England England and America, has said, for example. example. that the German general staff plans to launch Zeppelin airships airships filled with a gas fifteen times lighter than hydrogen, and made of a metal that, although as rigid as steel, is three times lighter than aluminum. In a letter to the Times, TéÊb William Ramsay points out the absurdity of this statement. Filling an airship with a- gas of no weight at al], i? such a gas existed, would not help much. A balloon owes its buoyancy to hydrogen, a gas 14% rimes as light as air. If the gas had >to weight at- all, the buoyant power would be increased very little. As for a metal only one-third as heavy aluminum, chemists would agree ihîJ^^bhe existing of any such metal is in-the highest degree improbable. T'-pvp rre excellent' reasons for ^e- Kevirig that no light metai remains to be discovered. Again, when. Turley Turley dec Jared, w^r on Russia and England, the writer referred to predicted predicted in the New York press that tiie first move of Turkey would be to blow up the locks in the Suez Canal. As a mattfer ôf fact, the Suez Canal has no locks; The man who butte \ in takes much headway.; / never Shells Fly Overhead by Day, and Alarms and Rifle Fire by Night. The so-called Battle of the Aisne was a siege rather than a battle. For weeks the soldiers of both armies lived in the cleverly constructed constructed trenches they had dug among the hills and stone quarries. Here is a graphic picture of the life they led there, taken from an English English officer's letter in the London Times : Ten days' ago we had arrived within sound of the firing, and were about to" take our places in the trenches. That night- we marched seven miles through the mud over roads that- had been soaked by four days' rain and torn by ceaseless traffic. The sound of guns and rifles grew louder as we approached approached the front, and dead horses marked marked the passage of the armies. We crossed the. river Aisne, and halted halted near the village beneath the heights. . . . The brigade split into regiments, and ours went off up the hill, slippery with mud, to the trenches. We relieved a company of Irishman almost incoherent in their speech from their long ordeal, who had begun with the retreat from Mens, and had been fighting without ceasing ever since. Many, had been killed, but with their weakened numbers they had taken these heights, and clung to them until until our arrival. We posted sentries, and the company company took up its allotted line, finding finding cover behind the embankment of a quarry. The next- day food arrived arrived ; we cooked our tinned beef and boiled tea, cleaned our rifles, and began to feel more at home. Then we started to dig. No one knew how long we should stay, but the cover was bad, and gave no protection from the enemy's guns. And this we learned to our cost, for soon we had our first lesson about shrapnel. Our own artillery opened opened fire, and the shells passed over our heads into the enemy's lines. Then they replied, first at our guns and then at our trenches. Bang ! Smash ! and a shower of -pellets and earth, that was all. A horrid, unpleasant unpleasant sound, typical of destruc tion. Yet, if men will remain under cover, no harm can befall. But they won't. Nothing on earth will prevent prevent the British soldier from lighting lighting a fire to cook his tea, or from going round to borrow a light for his cigarette. Then the shrapnel catches him. It is not 'bravery or any other virtue. It is just his cheerful habit. Some men must go out, of course, on duty, and so there have been the casualties that you see in the'papers. But with care, these losses should, J?e slight w&ile ye remain in the trenches. And ye begin to think we shall be there forever. . . . Ten 'days ! Aeroplanes watching us, anti sh e 11 s fly in g ove rhead by day. alarms and rifle fire by night. We live the-life of a rabbit--digging dursêlvés deejper and deeper iutp the earth, until we are completely sheltered from above, coming ,-out now and then, when, things are quiet, to oook- and ejtt, mh|^ng any DOMINION ATLANTIC R. R. Starry Try Lorff Minto. A capital story which Lord Minto used to delight in telling was of ah experience he had while he was Viceroy of India. One morning in Simla he wanted to speak to the Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army before the latter started work for the day, so he set off unattended unattended to pay an early call. When he arrived at the Com'mànder-in- Chief' s official residence" he . found his wav barred by a sentry, who apparently did not recognize the visitor. Lord Minto explained that he wanted to see the Commander- in-Chief. but the sentry dè dined t-o allow him to pass. "But I am the Viceroy," protested his Lordship. Tlhe sentry looked at him with a pitying smile. "Ah," he said, thoughtfully, "we -.gets all . sorts 'ere. Last week we 'ad a cove what kidded ■'isself 'e was Queen .Victoria's .Victoria's grandfather. We 'ad to put 'im in a strait-waistcoat, so you'd better push on." 25 German Shells to Kill a Man. One of ' the things frequently noted by soldiers at the front in writing to relatives and friends is the extraordinary expenditure of I bullets required to kill -a man. A German report states that many German soldiers fired 4,000 cartridges cartridges apiece during the first month of the war. An English observer estimated that 25 German shells are wasted for every man killed by them. In 1870 it was calculated that the Germans fired 150 bullets and six shrapnel shells for every wounded wounded Frenchman. In the Russo-Japanese Russo-Japanese War it is said 3,000 bullets were fired for every life lost. l ^T> ans Highest grade beans kept whole and mealy by perfect baking, retaining their full strength. Flavored with delicious LO MUll. sauces. They ku f a- Easy to Please. New Girl--""What does your ther like for breakfast ?" Little Mabel--"He always likes most anything'we hasn't got/' Minarfi's Liniment Cures Distemper. A Technical Error. Husban<^--It- seems to me that shrapnel has been the cause of most of the casualties. Wife--But, George, isn't he a war correspondent, not a general. FARMS FOR SALE. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety •Toronto. Cclborne Street, Great Improvements Have Been Made on It by the C.P.R. The record of improvements effected effected on the Dominion Atlantic Railway, which the- Canadian Pacific Pacific Railway leased in 1911 for 99 years shows that new wharves have been built ; 45 miles of new track have been ballasted ; 30 miles of new* 85-pound rails have been- laid down ; 120 cattle-guards have been filled and replaced by surface guards, while dozens of bridges have been either improved or rebuilt. rebuilt. In round figures, 6,000 feet of wooden bridges have been replaced, replaced, or . will be replaced very shortly, by steel bridges, concrete arches, and rail top culverts. New brick .stations have been built; a general renovation has taken place, costing many thousands of dollars. The new stations include those at Wolf ville and Annapolis Royal, Mosher Mosher ville, Patterson and Iberville. During the past two years 35 stations stations have been repaired and painted, painted, and platforms havo been erected. erected. A new line from Centreville to Weston, 14 miles in extent, has been built in the most substantial manner. manner. Both permanent work and the lighter things which needed attention attention have been carried out ; and today today the old Dominion Atlantic looks spick and span--looks as if it had taken on â new lease of life. Sea Dogs of Many Years. Lord Fisher, who is only seventy- three, (breaks no age records in returning returning to active service. In the earlier half of last century, when there was no regular system of retirement retirement in the British navy, many captains welll over that age were still anxiously waiting for promotion. promotion. In 1840 every captain on the list had held post rank since Trafalgar. Trafalgar. Admiral Bowles took up. his De von port command in hi® eightieth year. Lord Dundomald--who just a century ago was stripped of hi® Honors Honors and put in the pillory oq a false charge--was seventy-nine when he became 'VAdjmdral of £he United Kingdom.'" In those days" naval commande rs were often accused of being too feeble to walk to their quarter-decks. Dunddnald. was a brilliant exception. In 1856, in. his eightieth year, this "last of the old sea kings" offered to blow up the ready to leave X. on the day named, I will have him towed there." -■ Another story illustrative of Lord Fisher's determination to get what he wants refers to an occasion when he conceived the idea of putting up a wireless installation on the cupola cupola of the Admiralty at- W(r ! eba-11. For some reason, however, the Post Office refused permission. One day, therefore, half, a dozen seamen seamen swarmed up the cupola and ran lip the "wireless" in the- face of outraged authority. "How is this?" asked the Post, Office ; "by whose authority ?' "Oh," said Lord Fish er, "it is only run up tentatively to see how. it will work in case permission permission is given." And there it remained. remained. A typical sea-dog, bluff and .hearty, Lord Fisher has practically reorganized our navy. He is a self- made man in the sense that he owes nothing to birth, social influence, or wealth, in a service in which all three counted for much when he first entered, the navy, and the story of that entry is typical of the man. At the age of thirteen he scrambled aboard the admiral's ship at Plymouth, marched up to a splendid figure in blue and gold, and, handing him a letter, said, "Here, my man, give this to the admiral." The man in blue and gold smiled, took the letter, and opened -it. "Are you the admiral ?" said the boy. "Yes, I'm the admiral." He read the letter and, patting the boy on the head, said, "You must stop and take dinner with me." "I think," said the boy, "I should like to be getting on to my ship," speaking as though the. British navy had fallen to his charge. The admiral laughed and took him down to dinner. Like Kitchener, Lord Fisher's motto has • always been. "Deeds, Not Words," and it is a remarkable fact that for many years the ships he commanded always had the motto motto "Silence--Deeds, not Words,", displayed in a prominent position for the edification, of the officers.. It was at an Academy banquet some yeans ago that Lord Fisher told how he found another motto. When commander-in-chief in the Mediterranean, he one day went to inspect a small destroyer, only 260 tons, "but such was her pride and swagger," said Sir John, "that she might have been 16,000. The lieutenant lieutenant in command look me around. She was beautifully in order, and I came aft to the wheel and saw. there 'Ut Ve niant Omnès/ 'Here,' I said, 'what the deuce is that V Saluting me, the lieutenant replied, "Let 'em all come !' " It was at this banquet also that Lord Fisher used a phrase which is particularly appropriate at the moment. moment. "No soldier of ours can go anywhere," he said, "unless a sailor sailor carries him on his back." It was a phrase which brought down the house, but the cheers were partially due to the fact that Lord Fisher, in the whirl of his excitement, i emptied a decanter of claret over the shirt front of Lord Midieton, who was then Secretary for War, and who was sitting next to him. RUSSIA'S AIRSHIPS. Death Nearly Claimed New Brunswick lady I F YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farm, write H. W. Dawson, Brampton, or 90 Col- borne St.. Toronto. H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. TUMORS. LUMPS. C ancer. internal and external, cured ETO.. without without pain b.v our home treatment. Write tie" before too late Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited. Collinewood. Ont. Sikorsky Biplanes Arc Able to Car ry Twenty Passengers. A good deal has been heard concerning concerning the British and German aeroplanes, but the great Sikorsky biplanes used by the troops of the Czar have been overlooked. These machines, invented by a famous Russian named Sikorsky, are by far the biggest aeroplanes being flown in the war--in fact, they are the largest in the world. They stand 16 feet high and are about 100 feet wide. . The Sikorsky can carry almost as many passengers as a Zeppelin airship. airship. Twenty men can be accommodated accommodated in the large passenger cabin, cabin, which is constructed of metal and contains numerous windows. In this machine three engines are fitted, which give a total of nearly 1,000 horsepower, for, owing to the Sikorsky biplane weighing in itself one .and a half tons, and having so large a crew to carry, it demands high power to pull it off the ground and keep it in the air. The weight of the machine has necessitated an elaborate landing chassis composed of numerous springs and pneumatic tubes, so that the huge biplane can alight safely on rough ground at a speed of sixty miles an hour. Was Restored to Her Anxious Family When Hope Had Gone. St. John, N.B., Dec. 15th.--At one time it was feared that Mrs. J. Gra'nt, of 3 White St., would succumb to the ; deadly ravages of advanced kidney 1 trouble. "My first attacks of backache backache and kidney trouble began years ago. For six years that 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, but 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, appetite, sleep soundly. Lost properties have teen instilled into my blood-- cheeks are resy with color, and I thank that day that I heard of so grand a medicine as Dr. Hamilton's Pills." Every woman should use these 1 pills regularly, becafuse good health pays, and it's good, vigorous health that comes to all who use Dr. Hamilton's Mandrake and Butternut Pills. And Food at War Prices. He--Be mine, I cannot live without without you. She--Oh, go 'long ; you've said that to many girls before. He--Yes, but not when eggs were fifty cents a dozen. ATENTS OF INVENTIONS PIGEON, PIGEON & DAVIS , 7 la St. James St., - Montreal Write 1er information BOILERS New and Second-hand, for heating and power purposes. Water Flumes. TANKS AND SMOKE STACKS. P0LS0N ,R limÎted KS TORONTO Engineers and Shipbuilders. Machinery For Baie _ Engine, shafting, belting, pulleys, etc. from large factory for sale. Wheelock engine, 18 by 42, complete with cylinder frame, flywheel, bearings, bearings, etc., all in good condition. Shafting from one inch to three inches, pulleys thirty inches j fifty inches, belting six inches twelve inches. Will sell entire in part. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. S. Frank Wilson & Sons. 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. to t-o or Sore Granulated Eyelids Eyes inflamed by exposure exposure to Sun, Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c perBottle. Murine Eye SalveinTubes 25c. ForBeoko!lheEyeFrecask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago As hard/ .. - V t-Z v-;--■■ Manslaughter in Second Degree Cutting corns with a razor is dangerous dangerous and useless. The only remedy is Putnam's Putnam's Corn Extractor, which removes corns and warts in one day. Because painless and safe, use only "Putnam's," 25c. per bottle at all dealers. KIDNEY PILLS ■N-, u -, ■, î i - k \ \ \ -- ' K' I M F Ï i It), L v M a- ( I walls • of Chronicle. Sebastopol. --- London - , t , ■' L v M a- ( f A , D1 a n r~r l 5 f \ You may whitewash a man ® character character without 1 washing! it White. The Scene Was Funny. Paddy has a great power of enjoyment enjoyment after all. One day as he was walking he saw a bull! attack a man, and he had to hold his sidés with both hands, the scene was so funny. After a time the animal turned his attention to him, and poor Pat, after exploring the upper upper regions, came down with a bump on the other side of the fence. He rubbed his wounds as he said to himself : "Faith, I'm glad I had my laugh when I did or I wouldn't have had it at all." Reckless Waste. say that that young Spenditt has committed "They rounder suicide." "Yes. The doctor says he swallowed swallowed enough poison to kill fifty men." "Just like him ! Extravagant to the last." I was cured of Rheumatic Gout by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Halifax. ANDREW KING. I was cured of Acute Bronchitis by MIN ARDS LINIMENT. LT.-COL. C. CREWE READ. Sussex I was cured of Acute Rheumatism by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Markham, Ont. - C. S. BILLING. Lakefield, Que., Oct. 9. 1907. as mooEas Velvet That's the way to keep your Muscles--Supple and Strong. British Army Liniment Stands in a cla^s by itself as a remedy for Stiffness, » Rheumatism, Swellings, Wounds, Sprains, Neuralgia, &c., &c. You should Always keep x bottle of British Army Liniment in the house. It your Storekeeper hasn't got it. write to The Turner Co. Limited Toronto INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, patent solicitor», Montreal, report that 105 Canadian patents were issued issued for the week ending Dee. 1st, 1914, 70 of which were granted to Americans, 21 to Canadians, 8 to residents of Great Britain and colonies colonies and 6 to residents of foreign countries. Of the Canadians who received patents 13 were, residents of Ontario, Ontario, 3 of Québec, 1 of Alberta, 1 of Nova, Scotia, 1 of Manitoba, 1 of British Columbia, 1 of New "Brunswick "Brunswick and 1 of Saskatcn îewan. Exploration® .within recent years Have indicated; that China has coal fields containing mp-re fuel tüa^n all the rest of the world combined. iltuarr» Uniment Cures Colds, Ao. Ready For Him Both Ways. Tailor--"This 'bill has been running running for a, long time. I'll have to begin charging you interest." Owen®--"It's against my principle principle to ,pay interest on my bills." Tailor--"Well, pay the principal then." Owens--"No; it's against my interest interest to pay the principal." Illnard's Llnlmsnt Cures Diphtheria. < < < «4 fcb. 4. „ « / " Happiness cannot fee counterfeit; ,, „ the-;real thing is too easily recog- IS8W s^tV nized. Two Irishmen shovelling sand on a hot day stopped to rest and to exchange views, on the laibor question. question. "Pat, this is mighty hard work we are at." "It ifa indeed, Jimmy, but what kind of work is it you'd loike if you could get it?" "Well," said the other, leaning reflectively reflectively upon his shovel, "jor a nice, aisy, clane busine^ss, I think 1 would loike to fefe a Bishop." Don't expect a medal for being a meddler. Marshmallow Filling and Pliable Icing Taking the place of whites of eggs, it works easily and is" very economical. economical. The icing will not crumb!» and )>reak and the Marshmallow its finer and more easily prepared. A. 25c. package makes ten to fifteei* two-layer cakes. Ilinrl's Liniment.Cum Incests. == - ia mm pare si moui-- «» wholesome os == sugar--and ia an addition to your == pastry work that you will welcome. = Your friends will be loud in their = praise. If you take prjde in your 3§ pastry tend 25c. in stamps or coin S=- add- we will -mail a ppc^age, post- s= paid, with complete working direc- Ü 'THE W. . T. OTT QO., INC-- = 32-Si Front St. W„ Ü TORONTO. CAN Sll!l!l!!!!!t!!ilHillt!lt™tltttl1 IIW! m

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