PAGE TWELVE. You Look Good when you feel "well. Be good looking. Take Abbey' and feel well. A morning glass puts you .right for the day. AT DRUCGISTS, 25c¢. and 60c. { from choice and the stranger seeking | 1 | tecting home | had | doubted | citizenship. LADIES' FINE KID OXFORDS Our Ladies' Oxfords, ease, comfort, with ; fimish, made of Patent Kid, Tan and Chocolate. combining style and Colt Fine] Everything that can be desired | in a Shoe is found in those Shoes. Quality tells the tale. $2.50, $3.00 & 3.50. H. Jennings King St STERILIZED BARBER SHOP A Famous Shop in the Carrollton | Hotel, Baltimore, Maryland. The hotel, uses | shop in the Carrollton | Baltimore, sterilizes | in the shop. The s | heat. The towels, the razor '| the the combs and | all sterilized before heing ( | | | { | barber everythin it terilizing i done by the strops, brushes soap, are a eustomer. Where thore | the barber It kills used on no sterilization, havo Newbro's Hoerpicide dandruff germ, and it a for the scalp, and for the shaving. All leadin where. appreciate these about Herpicide and thay use it remove ns tu an antiseptic face alttor barber ever potent 1) stroy the cause, you the feet." k Sold by leading druggists. Semd 10c. in stamps for sample to the Herpicide Co., Detroit,: Mich: One dollar bot tles guaranteed G. W. Mahood spe ial agent. LOT OF BRIGHT 660D THINGS | THE YOUNG WOMAN'S CHRISTIAN AS- | | | girls and also the friendless. SOCIATIONS ARE WORKING GOOD. A Chain of Branches Now Span the Con- | tinent--A Delightful Dance of the Dead and Burial Club--Alarming Death Rate From | Tuberculosis. Breathing exercises have been practised in In- dia for thousands of years as an infallible cure for influenza » *Australia is the only country where native | pipes and native smokers have not been found. When Andrew Carnegie offered to build seventy-eight libraries for New York if the city would provide the sites and books it was estimated that the municipality would require to expend $2,000,000. It has so far secured fifty-five sites and nearly doubled this amount A correspondent suggests a way of dealing with the big hat problem: Let the women sit on one side of the church, the men on the other, The men will not be troubled with the millinery spread and if the women "are not satisfied they can fight it out among them- selves 3ut when this division was a custom the men generally went regularly to services; now-a-days their side might be sparsely filled The Young Women's Christian Association is "making good" throughout Canada. It began | | life on a narrow platform long years since, but has broadened in spirit and outlook and meeting wider support in each constituency A chain of branches now spans the continent, from Halifax to Vancouver, lead in many in- stances by trained and experienced workers | Their line of service includes activities among college girls as well as business and factory Classes paying fees and free classes are conducted for teach ing cooking, sewing, gardening, visiting and | best national service just now | Calgary, | Anglican 1st i- | generously met that $120,000 will be spen { should | dred children relieving, and other sisterly cares [he ser- vices towards two widely separated classes of do not .clash, and even two 1 of rs are successfully cared for, the boarder pro life classes boarde Association has ever the wisdom Then the its moral side, influenced by and protecting instincts of mothers, with un upon municipal duty and The growth of work has enforced building, enlargement and better equipmegt, in which the Hamilton branch has lately dis tinguished itself by raising $33,000 But the is being done at Moose Jaw, Regina and and safe- ating, a land an associa- Miss her influence Edmonton, other Western centres in caring for guarding the very many girls imm work that late entieed from E sisterhood. The Canadian tion has its owng missionary in Tol Macdonald, wi have c: to the secretary 1 ly S¢ capacities hip of all the Japanesc branch es An alarming death rate from tuberculosis among the 5000 Indians on the va servations in New. York state. has ported by Dr. Porter, state commissioner ol health. Unsanitary conditions are everywhere ipparent, to the report. Small ous re been re according | blame to Canada, then, in comparison with the old settled Empire State, that it has not been able to protect all of its Indian wards, whose number is legion. A prisoner in Greece sentenced to death has to wait two years before the sentence is car- ried out. Horse sense is often developed by the spur of the moment The Y. M. C/ As. are also growing fast in Canada. fulfilling their mission of brotherhood and service well that they are winning supporters steadily. The Montreal association y spend $200,000 in extension of building n asked 5) SO is t The Ottawa associat building and equipment $100,000 fo ra and 1s being lor "I could venture for twenty minutes," said Bishop of London at the meeting of the Home and Colonial School Society at Wood hundred adults; but 1 ad "to fool two veygture, to I'hey would find me out in five Green, never 0 1t | minutes." and ws, ostrich. plume gloves, draperies, curtains, gent lomen's clothes, ote., can all be cleaned to look like pew, by our faultless French Process. The most. delicate costume can safely be entrusted to our skill and Sxperience. Our Dry Cleaning is done without rip- ping any part of the garment Our book tells about our work and yrices.® Write for free copy } xpress charges pald onc way oo out-of-town orders "My VALET", FOUNTAIN THE CLEANER: 30 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, PALMER BROS. Marine &. Staiionary Gasoline Engines and break and jump and four cycle Make two one to spark four simple and reliable Cornwall Dock, Alexandria N.Y. WILFRED L. General Agent. Our engine « Branch Office Bay cylinders Sales Bea our and | KINGSTON Cor of Granite arrived. stock Just new farble Princess and Clergy Sts. ¢ FLOWER BROE Fence, from Field Fences per by hd - ented 2 It. from 2054. Manufactured cent Wire Works. PARTRIDGE & SONS St. West, 380. King Phone, | until | longer, never give up then, for that i GRANITE & MARBLE WORKS :- When you get into ag.mnst you Harriet Beecher Stowe a tight place and everything goes it seems you cannot hold on ihinute just the place and time that the tide will turn. Ac ce -of representatives cieties w be held in Te eieti do grand v preventive than the I The treatment of animal nie Ol hun rea ameliorated; but it tl ( 1 Ver h-improved appe mb tory well old idea, which nless another trg animals in e were plan 1S revi lazy man is no worse than-a 1c takes up more room. Youth Has Its Precedence. le are punctilicus in On Sundays a vill women on one sid he 1g to age h ne { a et ranged accor the back, in « silk cloths Ihe old men at and petticoats, with blac thats' haad nel 1c i colors, with bright yellow or bli in front of these the unma jothing on their heads; girls made into a small knob at the back | forehead, | Beyond | general d dragged away from th 1 Chinese type of counten: close to the chancel rails, kneel the younger ) the | Mexico, in th the little ones have to find room in iancel and the tiny ones behind the altar. in the same or« of > men, the -other | Si Personal Influence. of 'one of the best n room going on It was said generation, "Whenever he entere any kind the conversation that wa d the discussion, immediately higher level tl it «dded, "Men tho pr before." t their was spoke their best in ence." thier commendation could a only goodnes which which is of | man always makes does make itself felt. g y lived ir for "influence which makes for casts out evil. "He hal ere in which e | thoug It is clai | Age Pension has killed H lome Rule in Ireland. | bec | | with two, hun- | their hair is tight- of And here is the -other side of the same noble influence, ood always | ge nature, | k bodices | dom, th ed round | spect a in gayer | Divine Son of the 'Blessed Virgin Mary. bordered cloths; These ler, according to age, | church, also the | sprang up to! Act migh THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, K JUNE 19, 1909. THE CALVIN ANNIVERSARY. A Notable Event That Can Be Commemor- ated This Year of Grace. The year 1909 is notable as the four huan- dredth sinee the birth of John Calvin. The man who gave his name to a powerful school of theology was born at Noyon, in Picardy, on July 10th, 1509. Though appointed in boy- hood to a Roman Catholic chaplaincy, he early began to imbibe the new opinions, at that time spreading everywhere, dnd cspecially in insti- of learning. @ distinguished by activity and f manners, he vity of ame a marked yout tutions arly mental , and in 1533 had to flee from Paris, where he 1 gone for theological hree years later appeared his Chris- tianz Religionis Institutio, the famous preface to which, addressed to the King of France, bg- came one of the most important and influen- tial documents of the Reformation. The identification of his memory with Ge- neva came about in a curious way. On his road to Strasbourg, to continue his studies, he was appealed to by an old friend, Louis du Tillet, to remain in the Swiss town, and assist the struggling Genevan church in its battle for Reformation. A Protestant confession of Faith was drawn up and proclaimed; the magi- strates and the people joined in the movement, and social and municipal corruption gave place to an atmosphere qf! strict moral severity throughout the comrfunity. Later, a reaction occurring, he was driven out of the city. But the Genevans could not get along without the reformer, and he was recalled. Theteupon he established a virtual theoeracy, to control the affairs of the city, including the individual lives of the citizens. His instrument of government was a College of Pastors and Doctors, together with his Consistorial Court of Discipline. At length Calvin succeeded in expelling all his chief opponents, and his absolute domination of the city was undisputed. . Secure in this stronghold, he vigorously advanced the Pro- testant cause throughout Europe. The doctrine which bears Calvin's name, and a main feature »f which is the tenet of predestination, to some extent still dominates the Church of Scotland. The blot on Calvin's career was his connec- tion with the burning of Michael Servetus, a Protestant, who differed from him doctrinally. Viewed in the light of to-day the great reform- er was a religious bigot. * Stern and severe in character, he was yet noble in purpose. He devotéd his powerful mind to the cause of the Reformation, and to what he deemed the service of God. He gave Protestantism a sys- tematized doctrine, and an ecclesiastical dis- cipline. He founded a new church polity, and consolidated the forces of the Reformation. He was an able social legislator, a writer of tudy. 1 WH 1THE CHURCH CAI WORLD 1S NOT WRONG BECAUSE THERE HAVE BEEN SCANDALS. The Newspap "Are Not All Evil--The Clergyman Often Shricks When There Is No Occasion For It--Common Sense Is Very Much Needed. : Bishop Greer, at the conference of Church Clubs in New York, protested against the in- tlination to believe the whole world wrong because of the scandals in the newspapers, whose fashion is to picture not the common place but the unusual. The Bishop should have included the pulpit, since many preachers are sensational also and treat society and business in the light of a few defalcations or corrupt actions, ignoring acknowledgement of the great forces working for righteousness, and the great mass of people living straight and headed right. The Bowery, the Chinese quarter, and the Waldorf with widely differ- ing licenses of conduct; are not the real New York. The advice is timely, on the threshold of Canadian synods. The lay forward move- ment is promising and. cheering and some of the clergy can help it on by dropping the car- eer of a "knocker." A recent church session has recalled the dispiriting effects of the dis- loyal, sélfish and unChristian habit. laymen are patient and forbearing because it is the church's work, but even devoted members will absent themselves from synods and committees if the spirit of suspicion and depreciation be tolerated. There is a repulsive lack of common honesty in treating proposed parish sales of lots as reckless when, aided by the oversight of bi- shops and chancellors, no safer transactions are made in all the land; in creating a panic because ten per cent. of a year's collections re in arrear and thereby undermining the con- fidence of the young clergy in their future interests; or in insinuating graft because some tradesman's account is large, orders having been numerous from force of circumstances. The slightest ground to build up a grievance-- a literal sensation--is seized upon by a certain few, that they may gain notice and perhaps applause. But the glory is ephemeral. No one yet rose in the church--rarely does even in the fighting arena of public life--by pulling others down. Rather is the gain reached through kindness. If if's in the man he will rise without hot air--perhaps not so quickly but more solidly and the.church and its mem- bers w'll not be discredited in the performance. The ,Montreal Gazette has challenged the purity and power, and one of the outstanding figures of his century. THE SORROW OF THE EAST. Two Dominant Impressions of Life as Re- vealed by Visit Into East. Robert Speer speaks of two dominant im- pressions of life in the East, (1) of mujitudes so great that the individual was, as it were, swallowed up and lost; (2), of the tone of melancholy which lies across all the life of the East and find& expression in the songs of the peoples of Asia and Africa. This sadness per- vades even the wedding music; it is like "living in the atmosphere of the dead," so intense and yverpowering is the sorrow of the non-Chris- tian world. Why is this? One of the chief 'reasons is the smalluess of the life which hems in the people, esPecially the women. They have not the contact with new intellectual interests which makes life for western peoples. "I have lived 30 years within sight of my own front r," said an old Chinese woman whose home was in a street so narrow and winding that she zo more than a few yards without lost sight of her door-step. This 1s why Christianity is to them the unsealing of a new world; it is the first authentication of a wo- ight to think. ; the supreme blessing of Chris- doo could not man' "Wh 1s nity?" was the question once put to a class | men, and their answer A similar ques- of women, most of . aged or old, and they answered that to them the chief blessing was intellectual stimulus in Christian t of heart n f Japanesc was, "the moral re put to a class Chri edom lantty "I ama come that they might have life," he Son of Man . 1 cause-for this prevailing sadness lessness of non-Christian life, or at nt of sanction for love in the non- Our faith leads us and is al- anything that we can pur- ¢ natural kind- 1 of their re- n contains any f y and woman, or ght of woman to live as a free being. jtten; it is an allrround ian faith in advance of hieve. But to them t nan nature g non-Chris indations are 1 \tanglement of social and moral evil and is able \eir treatment of women," i Rudyard Kipling. In the relig ystems of the East, woman not her protection, but her peril; she behind them and appeal to the human ften more merciful than their votaries. This is the call of the women to those who owe everything in life, their free- eir happiness, their protectioh, the re- i love which surround them, to the trace 1S +1 e ver lie | finds | must go World's Smallest Church. The Roman church at Penon, a subur co City, is the smallest in the world. | appearance this tiny structure some- the oldest Roman church in b of In Mexi resembles » capital city, a large one. { Penon church can comfortably accommodate as I'manv as ten worshippers. It contains a little ar beforé which the marriage ceremonies of what ; 'that a man of ordinary er without stooping. The by two small steeples in rung as regularly as at cathedrals. m e than one-half that of the cathedral. The Penon church ce of worship for e little, village. When the in- crowded the parishioners pa-| til some of the worshipers leave | ; room for them to enter. A Bracer For The Hour. speak of defending the Bible. They as well speak of 'defending a lion. Only lion-loose, and it will take care of itself. 1 | + let the ict tae to think, in other words, to be them- | The | e young people of the village dre performed. | | 'here is | Ih ym for the bride and groom | S by side. The door into | The to-| church, including the] the entire pessimistic habit ' in vigorous terms: "The | general assembly of the Presbyterian church {of the United States, meeting in Denver, seems to have suffered from an attack by Giant Des- pair. Its declarations have been largely la- mentations. It has mourned the corruption of wealth and the power of the attractions of pleasure over the people, the dearth of candi- dates for the ministry, the decline of family worship, and the decay of religious faith. Good people get into this mood sometimes. There was a great prophet in Israel who raised his vo'ce to mourn that he alone was left of his people to worship the true God; but he was only one of ten thousand. There are also modern prophets who pay too much tribute to the strength of those who enter the temple of Baal" A graphic correspondent of the Living Church wrote to its last issue an essay on manners and a few lines are not inappropriate here: "There are people who overflow with courtesy, in the very sense of the kindergarten definition: . "Politeness is to do and say The kindest things in the kindest way." And one can't help liking such people; they perfume the air with the fragrance of good feeling and exquisite consideration. Then there are others who seem to have only thorny sides; they can't do anything graciously. They have a host of "rugged virtues'; but who credits a bear with amiability, merely because he is not venomous? I know profess onal men who ought to be treated like naughty children, spanked, and sent supperless to bed | until they learn not to be brusque. Over | against such I set others with whom the | smallest transaction is a privilege. "And is there any. greater idiot from every point of than the wilfully discourteous, ill-man- I believe there is none." | View | nered person? Concerning The Beard. Whether you wear a beard or not, you will be interested in following the -rather curious fags about this hirsute adornment. In Biblical | times the beard was a necessity, as its absence | was considered a sign of leprosy. Because { Philip V of Spain was unable to grow a beard | the gentlemen of his court sacrificed their own | in order to save their sovereign embarrass- ment. When Cicero was exiled the young men | of Rome let their beards grow as a sign of | mourning. An attempt was made to place a | tax on beards by Henry VIII and Queen | Elizabeth of England, but public sentiment | was so strongly against it that the attempt | was dropped. During the reign of James I. | it was quite the proper thing to trim the beard | in fantastic shapes; even animals were so re- | presented. While the priests of the Roman | Catholic Church do not wear beards, those of | the Greek Church consider the beard a priestly | necessity. The troublesome custom of shav- ling came originally from Egypt. The Greeks shaved after they had been conquered by the Romans. And'the Romans shaved during the | decline of the empire. In the present day | some medical authorities claim that the beard | is unhealthy, since it catches germs which are kept alive by the warmth of the beard, while | others contend it is a protection to the throat | from the diseases of the larynx. vestry and the organ loft. { i { | | | | The First American Book. The first book published in North America was John Eliot's translation of the Bible into {one of the Ingdian dialects of New England, the New Testament being published in 1661 and the Old Testament two years later. Copies of this Bible are now extremely rare, bringing from £200 to £400 each. The lang- gage in which it was printed has'become ex- tinct, like the people for whom it was trans- lated, and it is said that there is no one who can read and undcrstand it. ¥ The Laymen's Missionary Movement is gor ing forward systematically in the United States to organize its campaign of fifty conventions in as many cities, to bé followed by a National Missionary Congress next April. Itis tobea | campaign of education, and each of the fifty | convention cities is to be a centre from which deputations will carry the lessons and the ! message. - smn. THE GADARENE SWINE. From Canon Scott-Holland's Striking Sermon at St. Paul's, London. "They besought Him that he would depart out of their coasts." Does it still sound very incredible, this polite. request? Well, let us consider. Take some deep social sin--drunk- enness, for instance. Here is our horror, terrifying 'even as the sight of that madman of old. Here are our devil-possessed. We shrink in fear from the evil group round the public-house door, from the bloodshot eyes, from the gross leer. We shudder as we pass some gross, shapeless woman; reeking, scream- ing, foul-tongued. We sce the patient, worn, wan, down-beaten wife steering home the drunken lout, who reels, and staggers, and swears, while she waits until each bad bout slackens, and lets the shame and scorn of the street flood her in her dreadful service, con- tent if she can get him along the next few steps nearer home. Home! what will that home be when she has reached it, and has got him in among the trembling, frightened chil- dren, and prepares for the night in which, by her side, he will sleep the horrible fit off? Oh! the curse of it! we cry. If only we could do 'something to restrain it! Yet try as we will, it breaks all our fetters and will not be bound. And what, if at last there does seem to be a way which does open out an escape! What if there is an effort made to cope with the evil seriously? Well! at first we fancy that every soul of us who cares for public honor and social welfare and man's life will be eager to accept the deliverance. And so we are--to begin with. Only as the thing opens out, it is seen that the remedy goes too far. The measures to be taken are serious. They are ¥rastic. They are alarming. They in- volve a good deal. They cut deep. And, in so cutting, they tend to hurt unexpectedly more or less innocent people. They affect or even damage much that has done no particular harm, only it has got itself involved in our, drinking habits. It will suffer for this now. How far will that suffering go? No one can exactly tell; for we are embarking on a novel adventure. There is no experience to guide us. There are no certain calculations by which we can anticipate all that will result from our great reform if it ever becomes vital and large. Who knows what price we may have to pay before we have done? The cost grows and grows as we contemplate it. Soon there) are frightened souls rushing up and down the country spreading the alarm, just as those keepers fled to the city and country, telling of the dreadful loss of two thousand swine. And just as all those alarmed populations came out to see what it all meant, so we gather in larger and larger groups and talk it over, and get more and more perplexed and troubled about the future. Every morning a "leader" in our newspapers works up to that picture of what may befall us. We fall back in a panic. After all, it is better to endure "the ills we have, than to fly to others that we know not of'--that wonderful phrase! How strongly it appeals to us! "The ills we have we know how to bear. We have adapted bur- selves to them. We have learned their limits. These doors of public-houses offer a ghastly shock, it is true. But we can hurry past and forget. It has always been like that. Every- body is used to it, and that means so much. Better remain as we are! Better not make rash experiments in a matter so serious and far-reaching. We have considered all that the promised | reform might 'do for us to free us from our shame but we are afraid of it. It makes us uncomfortable, On the whole we will drop it. We wish to hear no more of it. "When they saw Him they besought Him that He would depart out of their coasts." OUR CHRISTIAN PRIVILEGES. Hindu Estimate Of Missionaries.--A Theme For Gratitude. _ The Vedic Magazine, an East Indian period- ical, published in Benares, the centre of Mrs. Annie Besant's propaganda for the revival of Hinduism, has a notable appreciation: "One of the foremost causes of success of the Christion Missionary is| his burning zeal for his religion. He believes in his message. He has left parents,+his friends, and his native land to spread his gospel. He has crossed the sea to attack us. He belongs to a cold country, but he chooses to live under the scorching Indian sun to save us from going to a hotter place after. death. Young men, belonging to the richest families, have sacrificed their all to fight our civilization. I know persons of brilliant parts at Oxford--first-class scholars who have won any number of prizes and de- grees--who threw up their worldly career to come out as missionaries. The young men can have no idea of the sacrifices' they undergo. They accept exile for the sake of their religion; they work day and night like coolies in a country thousands of miles from their homes. Many of them are quite young; they have not tasted any of the sweetest things of life. They 'live solely for Christianity. They are determined, earnest men devoid of avarice, who know no rest in the pursuit of their aim, who never lose heart amid difficulties, and who realize that life is given to man to be spent for some great and good cause. Such trem- endous enthusiasm can overcome many ob- stacles. Endowed with such enormous moral cdpital, a movement can go a long way, even against heavy odds. Give me such workers and I will Hinduise the world in a decade. If the truth of Hindu nationality and ethics can find such doughty champions, I can show the world the spectacle of Rambella being ' celebrated in the streets of Buenos Ayres and can erect statues to Siva in the squares of Vancouver. Give mie such zeal, such-stead- fastness of purpose, and I shall have the Rishis honored by the banks-of thé Mississippi. as they are revered in the basin of the Ganges." Cotild testimony more striking be given to the motive power which Christ exercises wei inspiring His servants to speed far over sea and land? . The Canadian Methodist book room earned $15,000 last year for the superannuation fund of the conference. But the Christian Guardian, the paper of the denomination, went behind $4,600; compared with $1,700 deficit in the pre- ceding year. It is not a glory of religion that it starves its intelligence department. This is not felt by conferences and synods with large funds, but is hard upon individual proprietors. English breakfast did not become an insti- tution until the eighteenth century. Before that only royalty breakfasted of meat, bread, and cheese and ale. The commoner, such as Pepys, took merely a morning draught of buttered ale, . J yr HEH YR. AN INVALID Then She Took "Fruit-a-tives" And Is Now Well, Arnprior, Ont, Nov, 27, 1908 I was an invalid for sevem Years from fearful Womb Trouble. 1 had falling womb, with constant pain in the back and front of my body and all down my legs. There was a heavy discharge and this made me weak, sleepless, restless afl miserable. Often I was obliged to be in bed for a month at a time. I was treated by several doctors, but their treatment did me no permanent good. Pout A few months ago, I was ded to try "Fruit-a-ttves" 1 took several boxes, and from the outset of this treatment I was better, the Constipa~ tion was cured, and the discharge lessened. 1 took, far the paleness, sev- eral bottles of the Iron Mixture as recommended in the "Fruit-a-tives" book, but I feel that it 'was * ia tives" alone that cured me. (Mrs) Elisa Levesque. Take Mrs. Levesque's advice. Take "Fruit-a-tives" and eure yourself. 0c a box, 6 for $2.50;" trial box 206e. At dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. TO HISTMAJESTY.THE KING . SirJohn Power & Son Ltd: ESTABLISHED AD. 1791. "THREE SWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor, Of highest standard of Purity. It is especially recommended bythe: Medical Profession on account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" > ® Palpitatio of the Heart. One of the first danger signals that an sounce something wrong with the heart is the irregular beat or violent throb, Often there is only a fluttering sensation, or as "all gone™ sinking feeling; or again, there may be & most violent beating, with flush- ings of the skin and visable pulsstions of the arteries. { The person may experience a smothering sensation, gasp for breath and feel as though about te dis. In such cases {he ection of Milbura's Hears and Nerve Pills in quisting the heart, restoring its normal best and imparting tone to the nerve centres, is, beyond all question, mer vellous. They give such gyeompé relief that no one need suffer. Me. Bylvester Smith, Bampton, N.B., #itess--*1 was trovbled with palpitation 4 the heart and tried doctor's medicines, Jut they only gave me temporary relief. I beard of your Heart and Nerve Pills and bought two boxss and before I had wsed them [-was completely cured and wesld pecommend them to all similarly affected." Price, 50 cents per bux, or; 3 bomss for $1.25 at all dealers or mailed direct om receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co. Limited, Taronto, Ont. " With Maypole Soap With Ease at Home With Sure Results 0c. for colors, 13c. for black. Prank L. Benotict & Co, Montreal, C. been offered vital weakness which sap the should take C. N. One box will show wonder ful results. Sent by mail in plain package only on receipt of this advertisement and one dollar. Address, The Nervine Co., Windsor, Ont. REE $1 Box. To quickly introduce and make known, will with'first order mail two boxes for one dollar and live 2 cent stamps. Order at once as this offer is for a short time only. A new discovery. Bas mo - rejuvenating. vitalizing ® fotce than has ever before Sufferers from lack of vigor and leasures of life | ¥