Just a Little More Rich, ' Red Blood Cures Most -Âilménts. The lack of sufficient rich, red blood • does not end, merely in a pale complexion. It is-mu'ch more serious. serious. Bloodless people are tired, languid, languid, run-down folk who -do not enjoy enjoy life. Food "does not nourish; there's indigestion, heart palpitation, headach.e, backache and nearly . always always nervousness. If this bloodlessness bloodlessness is neglected too long, a decline decline is sure to follow. Just a little more rich, red blood cures all these troubles. Then you have new health, new vitality and pleasure in life. To get more rich, - red blood the remedy is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. No other medicine ' increases and enriches the blood so quickly or so surely. This is not a mere claim. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done this over and over again and that is why thousands^ of people always have a good word to say for this medicine. Miss Gertrude Haffner, Kingston, Ont., says :--"About two years ago I was suffering greatly with anaemia, anaemia, so much so that I had to give up my situation. I became so weak that I could scarcely walk without help. . I had no ambition, no color, no appetite and was constantly troubled with headaches and dizzy spells. I was taking medicine from the doctor, but it did not do me a particle of good. One day a friend asked me if I had tried-Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." Though "as the result of my condition I was greatly discouraged, discouraged, I began the use of the Pills, and thanks to. that good friend's advice advice after using a few boxes I began to feel much better. Under the continued continued use of the pills I -gained in weight, my color came back, and I grew gradually stronger. I looked so much better that people would ask me what I- was taking and I had no hesitation in giving thé credit to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I am so grateful for what this mediciné has done for me that I will do all I can to extend its use." You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. CAN 60 APPALLING FORCE OF Great rollers. the Seme Wonderful Examples of the Strength of the Mighty Deep. / If war were not filling every page of every newspaper, we should have been thrilled by descriptions of the awful storm which recently swept across the West Indies and the Gulf of Mexico, says London Answers. Galveston, the great cotton port, was turned into an island, and the McClellan, a large army transport steamer of some six thousand tons, was lifted by one gigantic wave and set down half a mile inland, where she now lies high and dry. Unless you have been.in a storm at sea--or, rather, out in the ocean---it is impossible to imagine the strength of the enormous rollers. These green hills of water, crested with snowy foam, are sometimes forty feet high, and the distance between one crest and the next as much as a quarter of a mile. Such waves travel at a. speed of " between thirty and forty miles an hour. 350 Feet Above Sea-Level. FOOD PRICES IN GERMANY. Table Shows War Increase--Butter Over 66 Cents a Pound. Food stuffs are getting more and more costly in Germany! According to the statistical office prices of some foods have trebled. No figures are given on the price of different kinds of meat, cheese, farinaceous farinaceous foods and so on. There are other products also of which no report report has been given for more than a year. The variation of prices of different articles since the war began is shown in the table below. The prices are given in so many pfennig per pound; 100 pfennig is equivalent to about 24 cnts. The table: 1914. 1916. Potatoes (10 lbs.) -, 30 95 Landleberwurst 110 240 Herrings (single) 7^ 28 Table buttgr 144 280 Margarine 80 200 Salad oil 100 260 Rye flour 14 22 Wheat flour 18 .24 Beans (pr'd. 21 lbs.) .... 33 . 7 58 Carrots (pr'd. 21 lbs.) ... 32 " 42 Cocoa . . 120 550 Chocolate powder 100 339 Sugar 21 30 S^lt • •••••••••••••»••«• 11 12 It's an easy matter to fool anyone, including yourself. Grape-Nuts (Made In Canada) embodies the full, rich nutriment of whole wheat combined with malted barley. barley. This combination gives it a distinctive, delicious delicious flavour unknown to foods made from wheat alone. Only selected grain is used in making Grape* Nuts and ^through skillful processing it comes from the package fresh, crisp; untouched by ' hand, and ready to eat. Through long - baking, the energy producing starches of the grain are made wonderfuly easy of digestion. A daily ration of tins splendid food yields a marvelous return of health and opmfort. These huge ocean waves, disporting themselves on top of water two or three miles deep, are not dangerous unless a ship be driven into them. It is when they come crashing into shoal water that they pile themselves up into real mountains and achieve such extraordinary feats of power. Near the Eddystone Lighthouse the sea is 200 fathoms, or 1,200 feet, deep. Within a little distance this decreases to thirty fathoms. Here storm-waves heap up .into real mountains of solid water fully one hundred feet in height. Ih a westerly gale the Atlantic breaks with incredible force on the huge, bare cliffs of the Irish coast. Here Lord Dunraven has actually measured wave-crests which struck the rocks one hundred and fifty feet above sea-level. Yet even this is child's play with what happens in the Mariana Islands. Here is a giant pillar of* rock known as Lot's Wife. It stands three hundred hundred and fifty feet clear above the surface surface of the ocean, yet in storms the spray drenches it to its topmost pinnacle. pinnacle. Drowned by the Thousand. The Bishop's Rotik lies between the Scillies and Land's End, and is exposed exposed to the full force of the winter gales. At the top of the massive tower there used to be a great .-bell, used for warning warning in fogs. In one - storm a wave" washed this bell clean away and. cov-l ered the upper gallery with sand. This gallery is just one hundred feet above ordinary high-tide. The greatest waves--apart from the true earthquake wave--are those caused caused by cyclones or circular storms. In such a storm the barometer may be lower by three Inches in the centre of the storm than at its edge. The consequence consequence of this tremendous reduction of pressure is that the sea in the vortex vortex rises high above the usual level, and in this way are produced waves of appalling size and height. - It was a wave of this type which, in the dreadful cyclone of 1876, swept upon the mouth of the Ganges, and drove in over an area the size of Devonshire. Devonshire. By marks upon the trees it was ascertained that this great wall of salt water rolled in forty-five feet high. The damage done was appalling and more "than one hundred thousand unfortunate natives were drowned. Carried Over the Tree-Tops. One of the worst hurricanes of which we have -any record was that which swept Karatonga, in the Pacific Ocean, in the year 1846. Believe it or not, à vessel from Tohiti was lifted by the great wave, carried over the tops of the palm-trees, and dropped far inland. inland. The captain, who survived, deposed deposed on oath that he felt the tree- tops grating against the schooner's timbers as she was swept along on the crest of this monstrous roller! The greatest of ordinary wind- waves are seen in the so-called "Roaring. "Roaring. Forties," south of Cape Horn. They rise to forty-six feet. The Bay of Biscay deserves its bad name, for there waves thirty-six feet high have been measured. In the North Sea waves do not exceed fourteen feet, but they are steep and very dangerous, while in the Mediterranean fifteen feet seems-to be the limit. such bombardment wojild have been called* fpr; the . rising;; ' would " have been nipped in the bxid.) 'Not merely are the streets destroyed, but so are the" moneÿ-màkkrg and employment giving businesses that were carried on there. And some of the tokens of Dublin's claim to be. a national metropolis, metropolis, the marks of her civilization, are gone likewise. Her Royal Hibernian Hibernian .Academy, which had just been holding its annual exhibition of pictures, pictures, looks with its skeleton walls and its battered friezes like a building in Pompeii--or perhaps like the Library of Louvain. *- - HOW TO CREATE AN ESTATE. The Way a Man May Have'Something When Old Age Creeps Upon Him. As a means of preventing poverty and as a method by which families deprived by death of the providing member may not become objects of charity, there has never in the world been anything devised which equals the power for good as a well-managed well-managed life insurance coxppany. Life insurance as developed to-day is of the greatest economic value. It is the bonding together of many men, and the paying in of certain sums by each, to minimize the financial loss experienced by other members of the company. Life insurance in the beginning was solely for protection, but variations in the different forms which exist today today have been brought forth to meet the demands of the public, as they arose from time to time, but we believe believe thé farther a company varies from the primal idea---namely protection--the protection--the less is its power for good. As an investment we have nothing to say against it, and the vast- accumulations accumulations of surplus which the different different companies have made and which they hold for policyholders speaks for itself, but the principle of making provision Is often lost sight of in the attempt to create an asset, at a future date, for a person's own benefit. It is a curious thing that no matter matter how badly a man may need life insurance, he has a tendency to sidestep sidestep it until he is finally caught, and, as has been aptly said, some men get life insurance to-day much in the same manner as they get religion. His emotions must be appealed to, and he often takes the step in a moment of enthusiasm; generally he is pleased pleased with himself afterwards, and if he is a right-thinking and a proper business man he seldom or never lapses his policy. In going over the daily press week by week and year by year, we see the probates of wills of many people, and we are often astounded by the smallness smallness of the estate, if any, to take care of those left behind, and in many cases we find that the principal asset, when any, is usually.-a life insurance policy taken out" by the breadwinner. The building of an estate at the present time, or even at any time, is a tedious and long-drawn-out matter. matter. It is not generally known that: fully 95 per cent, of the people who enter business fail during some time other. Neither is it generally ? U ife- JOKE WAS ON THE SURGEON. fj are fruit, cereals ^and green: vegetables. Meat in Summer overtaxes the liver and kidneys, potatoes cause intestinal fermentation. fermentation. Get away from the heavy Winter diet; give Nature a chance. One or two Shredded Wheat Biscuits, served with milk or. cream or fresh fruit, make a delici- Declined Pocketbook Which Contained Jlouble His-Fee. Velpeau, the great French surgeon, successfully performed a serious operation on a little child. The mother, mother, over jôy éd, called at the surgeon's surgeon's office# and said : "Monsieur, my child's life "is saved, arid I do not know how to express my gratitude to you. Allow me, however, to present you this pocket-book embroidered embroidered by my own hands." The great surgeon smiled sarcastically. sarcastically. "Madame," he said, "my art ously nourishing, satisfying " n< * m " ely a ma *f er <* ■ " y - _ 07 J ° life has its necessities, like yours. Al- meal. buch a diet means j low good digestion, good health and plenty of strength for the dàÿ's work. All the goodness of the wheat in a digestible form. For breakfast breakfast with milk or cream ; for luncheon with fresh fruits. Made in Canada i iuw mé, therefore, to decline your charming present,, and to request some more substantial remuneration." Drab's Surprise. They were all out under the maples, where the hammock hung--Olivette and her two cousins, June and Jack, who had come from a far-off city to visit her for the summer vacation. "Where is old Drab?" asked June. "I have not seen her this morning." "Neither Have I," said Jack. "I don't-believe she likes to have us here visiting you, Olivette." "Oh, it isn't that," said Olivette. "Drab is the kind of cat that likes to be round where a lot of people are, "But, monsieur," asked the woman, i but somehow she has been acting dif- you desire?" ferent lately." The Right Idea. "Do you think you could serve a seven-course dinner?" "Yes, mum," replied the applicant, "Well, where would you start from ? " "I'd start from the kitchen, mum." SEED POTATOES S EED POTATOES, IRISH COB- blers, Deleware, Carman. Order at once. Supply limited. Write for quotations. quotations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. PUT BAN ON ALL DOCUMENTS^ No Printed Matter Can Be Taken Over German Frontier. Unprecedentedly harsh regulations are now in force regarding the carrying carrying of any written or printed matter over the German frontiers. The following following notice has just been promulgated promulgated by the military authorities: 1. Travellers on principle-may take nothing written or printed across the Imperial frontiers. 2. Letters, post-cards, or other communications communications must be sent through the post. 3. Exceptions to the above are letters letters or documents, written or printed, especially business papers, if (a) the taking of them is absolutely necessary to fulfill the object of the trip; (b) they are confined to the smallest possible possible dimensions; and (c) they have been officially examined and sealed up before arrival at the frontier. 4. Travellers can only reckon with safety on being permitted to take documents documents across the frontier if the envelope envelope or packet containing them bears an undamaged seal. lffinard'z Liniment used by Pliyslolane. or known that fully 97 per cent, of the public, when they attain advanced age, have little or nothing to live upon. If even a small fortune is to be accumulated accumulated it must be wisely and intelligently intelligently managed, and when people are so busy, as they are to-day, endeavoring endeavoring to make ends meet, they have not much time at their disposal to look into investments. By putting aside a small sum yearly, yearly, as one's means permit, the moment moment the first payment is made on a life insurance policy an --estate is created of the face value of the policy, and if a man would only continue to add to this# in the best years of his earning capacity, hè would have something something when old age creeps upon him which would be security against many of the troubles he might have to meet, and if he has this sum at his disposal when he comes to advanced age He will have many people anxious to give him the comforts to which he is entitled. Not the Man. Arduppe--"My love for you, dear Miss Roxley, is like a consuming fire that burns everything in its path." Miss Roxley--"Then I fear it would be unwise to choose such a husband to handle my money." 42 am a Granulated Eyelids', 9 ■ Eyes inflamed by expo- wire to Sun, Dust and Wlni quickly relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye Salve inTubes 2 5 c. For Bo ok of t be Eye Freeask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicagf "what remuneration do "Five thousand francs." The lady quietly opened the pocket- book, which contained ten notes of one thousand francs each, counted out five of them and, politely handing them to the amazed physician, retired with the remainder. -- * How to Keep Yourself Looking Young. It has been proven that the woman who protects her akin will keep herself free from wrinkles and marks of age far longer than the woman who says " Oh no, I never do anything for my complexion." complexion." If your skin Is not naturally clear and fresh, or If It has suffered from Inattention--worry--sickness--age Inattention--worry--sickness--age or the ravages of wind, sun and weather, the regular and persistent use of USIT will soon restore to your complexion Its natural color and freshness. USIT Is a valuable formula of an old and famous beauty secret. It feeds and nourishes the slcin, wards off wrinkles and makes the complexiori 'clear, smooth and faultless. It is not hecessary to use any other treatment during th% day. Apply USIT at night before retiring, arid it will tone the skin, and give that silky softness and glowing freshness that alone indicates perfect skin health. USIT is put up in handsome opal bottles. . It may be secured through T. Eaton Co., Limited, Robt. Simpson Co., Limited, Toronto, and other high-class Drug Stores, or direct from us. Send 50o. (?c. war tax) to-day for trial bottle sufficient for six weeks' use. See our exhibit at National Exhibition, Exhibition, Toronto USIT MTQ. CO., LTD., TOBOHTO, ONT. * "Let's hhnt her up," urged June. "What fun if we could find her hiding, place!" "I don't believe it would be a hard job," said-Jack hopefully. "There are no other houses near by for her to go to. Probably she ' has just just picked out a quiét place where she can have her nap»-in peace." So the search for Drab begun, and it continued most of the forenoon. The children went first to the big barn, for that seemed, the most likely place for her to hide in. They climbed upon the mows of fragaut hay and peered into every nook an»i comer. "She would get covered with hay if FOB SALE. I T'OR SALE CHEAP, FOR BREEDING. 1 silver cross, and red crocg foxes and fisher, out, Ont. T. Chambers, Sioux Look- NEWSFAFEBS FOB SALE P ROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale In good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Company, Company, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto.' MISCELLANEOUS C ancer, tumors, lumps, etg. Internal and external, cured without without pain by our home treatment Write Be before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Colllngwood. Ont. MECHANICS WANTED We want a few. good mechanics. Have steady work an$ good wages for lathe aba >» . • j t , , , ; hands, fitters, handy men. also a few she went to sleep here, ^.aid Jack at j £v 00 d-worklng machinists and handy men for woocKshop wanted. Apply In [person, only. THE LIFE OF THE GUNS. Depends on They Going to an Extreme. "A little learning is a dangerous thing." "Yes," replied Miss Cayenne, "But that fact doesn't justify some of us in being proud of how little v/e know." Ask for Mlnard's and take no otks* He's Their Size Before Require Relining. . The life of a gun depends upon the progress of erosion, which sooner or later is .certain to impair the accuracy of fire. Erosion is caused by the action action of the explosive gases at high temperature and pressure. According According to the Iron Age, the hot gases cause a thin film of steel to absorb heat. The film expands and becomes set. Upon the release of the pressure, it contracts, which causes minute cracks that grow larger with every discharge. discharge. As they increase in size they form passageways for more hot gas, and that tends to enlarge them still further. The inner surface thus becomes becomes roughened, and the bands begin begin to corrode. Finally, the bore becomes becomes so enlarged that it allows the gases to escape. The shell does not then acquire its proper rotation, and its flight becomes erratic. All guns last. "Uncle Henry is not' through haying yet, you know." "Drab is-not so foolish as that," said Olivette. "Let's try the stable." The searching party went to the stable, but there the result of the eager eager hunt was the same. Next, they climbed the stairs to the attic over the woodshed. What treasures they got a glimpse of in the attic, when their eyes got used to the shadows under the eaves! "We must spend the next rainy day up here," said Olivette. "There are wonderful things in all those boxes and drawers." "Let's stay now! 1 ' cried June. "No," objected Jack, "let's hunt for Drab. The attic can wait." "But we've hunted everywhere," said June. "Well, there is the field," said Jack. "Perhaps Drab spends the time catching catching field mice." en them that morning when they set out to find her hiding place.--Youth's Companion. When they came down from the attic attic and were crossing the yard, Jack stopped and looked hard up into the branches of a big elm. "No use to look up there," said Olivette. Olivette. "I know my old Drab would not be mean enough to catch birds." "Of course not,' 'agreed Jack, "but she might climb up there for a nap on a limb. Wildcats do, anyway." Hardly^fiad he spoken when the voices of the two girls rose together. "Oh, look! Look!" they cried. What do you suppose the children saw ? Only a few yards away, coming from the garden and going toward the Dodge Manufacturing Co. West Toronto. Become e Rsglsterod Nurse and receive pay while learning The Beth * Israel Hospital of New York City rounded 1890 Accredited by the Sow York State K 'ucation Dept. Offer* a two-aud-one-baU year cour.-c i ■ tralnii'g lor nurses with allowance and nisintenance. Applicant,f mutt hire one year bleb achonl ihr.iroctl- n -r Hk educational equivalent. For particuliu n address Brtli Israel Hoapltal, 66 Ji-fferson St.. New Yui k Seventh Annual Toronto Fat Stock Show will be held at Union Stock Yards, Toronto DECEMBER 8th and 9th, 1916 For further particulars write C. F. TOPPING, Secretary, Union Stock Yards, Toronto Lump Rock Sait i Beat for i Cattle. 'Write for IPriceB. TORONTO SALT WORKS, 60-62 Jarvis St., Toronto, Ont. Utterly Worthless. "No, you can't marry him. too no-account." "You ought not to say, that, dad. | He may have some good points that j you have overlooked." "No chance. I mopped up the floor with" him just now and he didn't even make a good map/' \ except small ones are now construct- j house, marched Drab, slowly and ed with linings in the tube which, when j proudly, with her tail high in the air, the bore is worn out, are removed and | and close behind her toddled four replaced by new ones. The cost of i fl n flV littlp .kittens *11 in s mw» relining a gun is approximately 30 per cent, of the cost of the gun. There Bessie's Smile. One evening :the mother of a 3-year old miss said: "Bessie, I see you yawning. It is time you were in bed." "I wasn't yawning, mother," replied Bessie; "that was a new kind of a smile." k DUBLIN'S PITIFUL RUINS. "Thpre's a Reason Sold J?y Grocers everywhere. Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd Windsor. Ont . " Fairest arid Richest Part of City is. in Condition of Rheims, Thé fairest and the richest part of Dublin, the centre of its life, is in the condition of " Ypres or Rheims, The stately 1 thoroughfare in which it .justjy took pride as one of the finest in " Europe is a desert of hideous ruins, and acres of the handsome handsome business streets surrounding it, hives of stirring commerce, are simply obliterated/ This is the work chiefly of bombardment and of conflagrations conflagrations started by/ bombardment. (Had the authorities taken the most ordinary routine measures of protection protection and placed a guard of even 1 25 men on the alert at the General Post Office and other strategic positions positions -which they knew, nor; <R|gibtTb^ have known, were to be attacked, no Keep HClnard'w Llnlmeat in the honie mar- Time Will Alter This. "How long have tl>ey been ried?" "Only a few months, I think. Anyhow Anyhow his wife gets up in the morning to have breakfast with him." House Conscripts. A national convention of Austrian women, according to reports published published in thé latest German papers, unanimously unanimously adopted a résolution calling upon the Government to introduce "complsory service" for women in the form of one : year's: instruction in housekeeping. The "service" should be performed, the convention further resolved, after girls and young women women have ' concluded their ordinary schooling arid before marriage. I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. Profit on Liniment, $54. MOÏSE DEROSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. Philippe, Que. ! fluffy little kittens all in a rowi "Why! why!" grasped the girls. "She stole her nest,"' exclaimed appears to be no limit to the number ; Jack> « just as that old black hen did ,„ of times that a gun can be relined. The , Then they all rushed to ther small arms are considered to be worn the kiWens in their ar ^ while Drab out after 5,000 to 7,500 rounds have .... ,, , uuu u,uvv uv i,uw a. ! acted just as any other proud mother been fired. Small naval guns can be: ^ - , Memories of Sermons. -Parson Prosy--We need anight watchman for the church. If I give you the job, do: you think you can keep awalce? Aplioant--Do you preach at night ? fired about 1,000 times before they are regarded as worn out. " Large twelve- inch and fourteen-inch naval guns are considered to have a life, on one lining, lining, of from 150 to 200 rounds. Low- velocity guns, such as howitzers and j EHab blinking mortars, have correspondingly longer ! grass near by. lives than high-velocity guns of the same calibre, because the pressures they develop, and hence the temperatures, temperatures, are lower. Mrs. Glen--"There are times when I wish I was a man." Glen--"Well, when, for instance?" Mrs. Glen-- "When I pass a milliner's shop win- would act in such a case. In a few minutes they were all back under the maples again--the children and tihe kittens in the hammock hammock or on the ground beside it, ami contentedly on the 15 -- 20 Years from now the Bissell Silo will be giving good service. It Is built of selected selected timber, treated with wood preservatives, that prevent decay. It has strong, rigid walls, airtight airtight doors, and hoops of heavy steel. Therefore It lasts, simply simply because It can't ver#'* well do anything else. Our folder explains more fully --Write Dept. U. T. E. BISSELL CO., LTD. Elora, Ontario. "I wonder if Aunt Juliau will us keep all of them?" said June let at dow arid think how hc.ppy I could, make my wife by buying her a summer hat." Klnud'i Liniment Lumberman's Friend BRîGIifS ARE CIEÀN vALL DEALERS £i.C.Briggs&Sont HAMILTON „ A Moving Target. A Highlander with bagpipes enter ed the street and commenced his plaintive plaintive lay, at the same tiirie marching up and down in time-honored fashion. "Why does he: move ; about all the time he plays?" asked Johnny of his .father. ' - "I don't know," answered the lad's father, wearily, "unless it is to prevent prevent me getting the range with the inkpot." Got Him. Two men were cycling past a prison prison wall. "I wonder where you would be if the prison hajd its- due?" remarked one. . f . "Riding alone," replied the other. Jones--"Can you tell what ails my wife?" Doctor--"She does not take enough outdoor exercise." "She says she does not feel equal to it." "True. She needs toning up/' "What have you prescribed?" "A new bonnet." "My brOdkiers," said a waggish colored colored man to a crowd, "in all inflictions ob your troubles dar is one place you can always find money and sympathy.?" sympathy.?" "Wh$r? Whar?" shouted several. "In de dictionary," he replies; replies; foiling his eyes skyward. When a man J goes into a restaurant restaurant .and is given a tough fowl, he' is very apt to lose his respect for old age. . last, after she had hugged each kitten kitten half a dozen times. "Of course she will," said Olivette. "There are just enough to go round --one for each of us and one for Drab herself!" "I like the yellow one best. I'll name it Buffie." said June. "The black one is mine," said Jack, "and I'll name it 'Rastus." So it went until dinner time, and then they filled a saucer of milk for the kittens an>i another one for the proud mother cat. And through all the happy weeks that June and Jack spent on the farm there was nothing that gave them so much to talk about as the surprise that old Drab had giv- * Miss Green--"How do- you manage to keep a cook so long? Do you treat her as one of the family?" Mrs. Rrown: "I should say not! We treat her as a guest." To represent well known Fertilizer Manufacturer. Attractive Attractive proposition to energetic Sind responsible parties. Apply with full particulars to FERTILIZER, o/o Wilson Publishing Co., Ltd., 73 Adelaide St., Weat, Toronto Miss Summergirl: "The men all wanted, me to return their rings, but I refused to do it." 'Miss Yonge: if Aren't you afraid you will be rested for robbing the males?" ar- Giles--"So you've got a post in the bank, eh? I suppose it was partly partly because you knew the manager?" Harrie: "Partly that, and partly because because he didn't know me." Patient--"Doctor, I don't think I can use the battery lany more. Will it be necessary to shock me again?" Doctor: f r 0nly once more. lia to send in my bill to-morrow." going Reduces Strained, Puffy Ankles# Lymphangitis, Poll Evil, Fistukv Boils, Swellings; Stops Lameness and allays pain. Heals Sores, Cuts» Bruises, Boot Chafes. It is a SAFE ANTISEPTIC AND GERMICIDE Does not blister or remove the hair and horse can be worked. Pleasant to use. $2.00 a bottle, delivered. Describe your case for special instructions and Book 5 M free. ABSORBINE; JR., antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces reduces Strains, Painful, Knotted, Swollen Veins. Concentrated--only Concentrated--only a few drop» required at an application. Price 81 per bottle at dealer» or delivered. W. F. YOUNG, P, 0. F., 516 Lymans Bldg., Montreal, Can. : itoorblnc and Àbsorblnc. Jr., are made In Canada., Macltinary For Sale Wbeelock Engine, 150 H.P., 18x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. wideband Dynamo 30K.W. belt driven. All in first class condition. Would be sold together or separately separately ; also a lot of shafting at a vcry.f reat bargain as room Is required immediately. immediately. 8. Frank Wilson & Sons 78 Adelalffo Street Weet, ED. 4. ISSUE 31--'1C