. PAGE TEN. rr BOVRIL | THE BODY-BUILDER. . Its virtues are that it comprises all the valuable elements of beef-- That it is in such & form that it is very easily digested and assimilated 2 That it assists the digestion and absorption of ordinary food. a1. KING GEORGE NAVY PLUG CHEWING TOBACCO IS IN A CLALS BY ITSELF! It all others i in quality and flavou } because the process by which it is made differs from others. It is deli- ciously sweet and non-irritati: g. SOLD EVERYWHERE: 10c A PLUG ROCK CITY TOBACCO C>., Manufaciurers, QUEBEC ° »@™ NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Confined to His Home for Weeks. levy work, severe straining apd evil habits in youth brought on valear Veins Whea § worked hard the aclunz would become severe and 1 wad often laid up for a week at a Hime, My famuy ysiclan told me an operation was my caly hope--iut I dreaded if pe several special. i, but soon found out ail they wanted wis my money. 1 commenced 10 look wu; on all doctors as little beiter than rogues, Ove day my boss asked ie why was off work so much and told him my condition, Head vis d 130 to copsult Drs, Kennedy & J e had 2k an treatment from them himself and kuew fey, were square and ski.l'cL 1 wrote them and got Tin New Mrrnop TararuENr. }y prooress was some hat slows and Juring first mouth's treatmant I was somewhat ¢ lseourazed, Pe treatment 'or three mouths hmeerand was Hrd with a complete eure. I could only earn £1 a week in a machine hop before thmatmet. now | am earning $2 JL and Lod loose a day. all sufterers Ww of your valuable trea ¥ HONEY C. LOCUST. - HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED? ISONS most lent and most serious diseases. They sap the oer th visti an ubless entirely eracioatod from the system will Souse plicati ure of Mercury. It may suppress the sympioms---our NE i compli Sli Blood en YOUNG OR MIDDLE ACED MEN. ~Imprudent-acts or later Mi I pave i oa nd down Mond, ¥ ¥ ut feel the yin stom : gle live over vou, Mentally, physically a Say you Are not 0 man you you Used to be or Should be. ie youleed thé danger sigoais? you a vietl n 6 yom Jost ho ? Are w Intending to marry Has READER 37s 2 . Iiive oe ary Te nes Sug New Merion 'wii cure fiat it te a a hers it wil do for ranted pou, wile for an ho~est cpinio SFreani C Bots Froeoy hood, ried ood." (Hlustrated) on Jiseases of [ty N. WITHOUT WRITTEN WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. = James on Confidential, Question List and Cost of T' Drs KENNEDY & KENNEDY Cor, Michigan Ave. and Griswold SL, Detroit, Mich. v NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Corresponderive SESE cntin Windsor, Ont. "If you desire to mally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat ts in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and nit business only, Address all letters as follows: Efficient. - Will heat a good sized room even in the coldest weather. Economical. Burns nine hours on one gallon of oil. Ornamental. Nickel trimmings; plain steel or enameled tur- quoise-blue drums. Portable. Easily car- ried from room to room ; weighs Joly dle doesn't get "hot THE DAILY BRITISH WHIA, § THAT MYSTERIOUS BAG. & The ram was son, clinging like precious bag, form, mhere the crowd was gathering thickly slong the track. He backed up against a handy express truck and smoked thoughtfully. He felt Jman feels to whom life has well worth the living. He was first ervand of responsibility bank; had just been married onky girl; had a comfortable. [little home, and knew that it was oaly a question of time when better positions would be open for him. To- days errand was but one proof of the confidence the bank was beginning to show in him. Suddenly word had coms from the Scude factory, some i miles our of the city, that they must {b ave ¥25,000 in cash that afternoon, end the bank had decided to send hing lout that morning with the cash and the necessary papers and instruetions Has grip held the cash and the pa pers. They would not get away from | him, A sharp whistle indicated (he ap proach of the express. Just as it swept up Nelson's heart jumped with a shock that seemed to lift him from his feet. In front of him a yellow: haired tot suddenly darted forward with stumbling steps across the teacks, tripped on the rough boards-- : It was over 50 quickly that Nelson did not know what had happened un- til he found himself on the other sidy of a conch that was being stopped with brakes that threw fire every where about him; in his arms he was Ialutching a tender . bit of humanity that was crying in a straggling was with fright and the hard grip of hix arms. Then he realized he had jump ed in front of the looming black thing that had borne down upon hime and swept the child to dnd also had left in the seething crowd the bag containing the 25.000 He thought of nothing else He hurriedly Nel to the on the plat about dug, and a bie went out yther become on hi for the the Cosy to safety then. thrust the child into th; arms of wu. .uagken mother, brushed asicle tne hands that were stretched to congratulate him, paid no. attention ta the cheers of the men, the sobbing voices of the women,' and straight to the place where he he must have dropped the bag. He saw something hall hidden be- hind a woman's skirt; the bag still there! He hwried on to the train, thinking as he went that had « been known what the innocent hay of tontained how soon it would have thisappeared. He wettled himself comfortably tha coach and began to control jumping nerves. lle realized as he wiped the moistare from his face and wrists what the strain had, been. Res uiog the child had heen a mat ter of seconds, and death had brush ed them both; but on that bag bad | hung work, home, happiness, every thing. He glanced down at the bag at his side with a smile--~safe and real Then his eye caught a slight abra- sion near the handie whith he not remembered. An idea occurred to him to open the bag and look fn, but it refused to open. Won dering, he tried again, The lock must have caught. He pressed the catch and it opened a hit. Hie throat tightened with a sudden fear. He ripped the opening apart. The bag contained three frayed and worn magazines----nothing else. The first thought that cawe to him was that the bag was another's and that he had made a mistake. The next thought was that he had been robbed: A swift, sudden sense of stupor and sickness went over him, but his mind flashed to the consequences the anger of the bank's officials, es pecially the president, to whom the bank was more sacred than life; the loss of his job and all that might follow; the giving up of hig home: the blow to hér! He hid i his Tace behind his hands and groaned in agony of spirit and mind. The express stopped twice, but he paid no. attention. © Slowly, however, he obtained con- trol of himself. At the next sta- tion" he jammed his way through the crowds, seized a blank at the talograph office window, . scribbled the truth, threw down a dollar and plunged back. He sagged in his seat. 'coward; We ought and face the music. But he knew what the uproar would be in the small ¢ity bank, and, more, he knew at the end would be for him. The train sped on. The brake- man's harsh voicé grated out the name of the station next to his own home. There he could brace up a bit--the strain of the incident at the depot and this discovery had been too much for him. "Auburn!" came the call for the last local stop and he piled out with the bag. "Dumbly and stumblingly he started along the strect. When he threw open the door of his home his wife came to greet him with the joyous, tender wel tome that had made his homecoming spmething to be looked. forward to; but she' wavered back from him with a Jow ery of alarm, her face| showing the questioning and fear in her heart. "Why--dear--dear--what is wrong?" Then she came to him. lie dropped the bag as she press. ed him: into an easy chair, and, with the quick instinct of a woman (to comfort, drew her arms aromnd his neck, and told him to tell her He did-everything--glad to talk out the of his fevered thought. He minimized the' affair at the station, but her arms tight- ened with understanding. When he had finished she sought to cheer him; "But you did a brave thing, dear, and they'll" "Bess, yon don't know. business is business, and they gave me the responsibility. There was nothing brave about it: 'I was over that track before I knew what 1 was do- ing. You don't know old Grew forged koew was in He was to go Pack burn: he'll go wild: The bafkyi "OB" never lost a cent in any way. He didn't want to. send cash out to Sondo, but they | they'd got to have it. Then they me. An ESoiroty to. hurve this. think of $ ! courage to fate them; they'll send a messen- here-then--"' brated his | had, Tomato SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ips and bent down and picked ug he fatal Bag. It =napped open un ler her toych, aid she peepad in fe 'watched her v dull eyes to see her start, gasp a little, and gpring up. dump Biz on the door, and out bou the tight, 1 solid bundles ef-hill He stared | at sprang forward aud pinched. them, demented man. 'Besa, have | manded She was laughing a bit strangely. | 'tf you have, 1 have That money." He drew back fr it. I wre were magazines in that bag it was burned into my brains. Ho in the world that happened is mor than | can see." "Well, it's happened, way: row, what wrong?" "Phat telegram--it's ahout 3be saw 4 new light in his face driving the heavy shadow away. "By the gods! little girl! 1 know why chat feliow velled at me as 1 beat it into the train. | forgot to ad dress that telegram, and the bank doesn't know." "And you've got out to the factory," she added joy- Jusly, with a swift glance at. the Jock. "But you must clean up and brush up before you 2 As he obgyed her ne pondered over the mystery, and all the rest of the day it was on the mind. When ae returned, howevem he found her waiting with a special delivery let ter. The note was written in a scrawl ing, nasty hand, and much had to be inferred: but it was plain enough 0 make things clea': "Dear Sir: I'm sending this from Brateon. [| saw you sticking close by that bag in the depot. I'm an old hand, 1 figured there was some- thing in it, 1 had a bag like it, iy { thought I'd take a chance if it came and swap. 1 kept my eyes peeled. 1 was behind you. The crowd was thick. 1 was going to give up, you stuck so. Then you dove away and"! shifted the bags. was going on that train, and my wile and kid had come down to see me ff, and the he-- of it was the next thing | found you saved my kid. 1 hadn't seem what you dove for; | was back in the erowd watching you I was #0 fussed with my wife bawl-| ing and the erowd and the noise 1 couldn't think, and when I come (0 you had the bag. 1 got on the train and was wondering haw I could fix it when I saw you piléd off. 1 shift- ad the cakes then. I'm good at shifting things in a moving crowd; it's my business, I hate to lose the mon+~it looked good to me, but 1 couldn't do a man dirt who saved that kid of mine. If I did I ought to roast in he-- for a million years. She's one little beaut. It was a narvy stunt. Pd like to give yon my - Hama, but it ain't good busi- pues | ther | then like al reai de them, ahd He soired muttering They were gone crazy? he know! i Si 4 dear, any- ume," gO time yet to "A THANKFUL DAD." An Old Joke, But a Good One. {A Seottish lad had his leg injured | | nt a factory, and was treated for some | time by the dootor without much fav: | orable result. His mother had great | said 10 a local bonesetier, and wanted | her son to go to him, but the Woy | ofjected, preferring, as he said, the | "reg'lar faculty. i Fmally, however, he vielded mother persuasions and was tuken tto the town whera the famous bone | setter resided. The leg was duly ex- amined, and it was found necessary to pull it very severely in order ol get the bone in," as the quack ex- pressed it. The vauent howled in! agony, but at last the bone was "got in,' and he was mddem to go home. In a few days he would be ah} right and could resume work, "ihdn't he do it well? joyous old lady, as they homeward, ! "Yes, he did, mother,' said the lad,' "he pulled it well, bus | wus nae sic | wu fool as to gre him the sairleg!"' | | | to his | said the started ---- ANY HUSBAND TO ANY WIFE. My dear, the time has come when vou Must sally forth to buy That retched winter hat that makes "Wy summer savings fly. I ean but hold my breath and wait, And trust you'll have to smile lefore the aberrations that They say ave this year's style. And mwardly | pray that you Consider as a joke A fevered feather rising from | A wad they tarm a togue, ! A bunch of plumage on a stem, | A sunset lining to } A four-foot brim of "purple plugh i Adorned with maribou. | A fervid plume that crawls along And bangs above your ear, ! Or darts aloit and wobbles there I pray you'lf see it's queer. But 1 ean ouly sit and whit, My only hope is that t You'll keep your sense of humor | You buy your winter hat. ! i } 3 nen | Worth Knowing. Daraing thi places in Iiunkets You would stockings. Rubbing out grease on a carpet with | cora uneal. Whiting and henzine, er, to clean marble. Wiping eolored matting water, Chl winated soda for ink stains. ning brass with hot water, rub- bing, then, with a soft cloth and lem- on juice, rinsing in hot water and pol ishing with a chamois. | Cleaning willow with salt water, Weak iye, or salevatus water, clenning paint. For inflammatory rheumatism, dis solve into a pint of sweet oil, one ounce of pulverized salipeter, and theroughly rub the parts affected. Clean bronzes with sweet oil, care fully 2ubbad on, then polish with as | mixed togeth- with dalt for i ahled with creaking shoes, rub the sides of the soles with a little pSweil oil. Their Losses. Two survivors in a raiiway wreck were bemoaning their losses to each other in the hospital iter it was over. groaned one, my arm." "Think of me," cried the other, "I have lost my husband.' "Yes, yes," moaned the first, "but you can get another husband. 4d i have fost pS pou oun Tt means same thin, more polite a than 8 Har. ' BR t RE is reali' 3 9, 1912 Never D with you--always ALIONS French Drip Coffee will always agpee with you because it is pure coffee of the highest grade and Sunpine no chicory or coffee chaff. Coffee Chaff is the biter indigestable skin of the Coffee bean which is taken out in Dalton's Special grinding process; and which is ground in with your Coffee when you buy it at your Grocer's, or grind it yourself. Daltoris French Drip Coffee AVE you never seen Coffee chaff? See the little envelope of it that we put on top of every tin. This little envelope contains the chaff taken from that particular tin and is put in so that you may test it if you will to see what has some- thing to do with the harsh, weedy flavor and indi- yeston of ordinary coffees, ALTON if your Grocer cannot supply you, write us direct. ADE in the Dalton French Drip Coffee Pir? pounds of Daltons go further than 3 pounds of any other kind. Buy it at your Grocer's Mild or Strong, 13¢. 25¢. and 50c. tins. BROS,, Toronto | E---------------------------------------------- a ------ ""CEET PURE WOOL UNSHRINKABLE JJNIDER 8) 9232292230 iy ol ir QE i You can oo all sorts of weather WITH IMMUNITY IF YOU ARE PROPERLY CLOTHED. The basis of all clothing is, of course, the underwear. The only material that will protect you against the sudden changes from heat to coid or from cold to heat, without harm, is pure, clean wool. All medical men advise woellen material to be worn next the skin. It absorbs the perspiration rapidly and evenly and does not get clammy and damp as does any material which is made from vegetable products. "CEETEE" wos. UNDERWEAR is manufactured from only the finest of the finest Australian Merino Wool. This wool is contbed and scoured snd combed until ¢ WORN is:taken aut wid every struod of wool is ws clean us it, is possible to be SOLD ; put throtgh Process siter process om ex pens sive and exclusive tanchinéry BY THE Rliiuet cach garment is is Yate BY THE BEST i unequalled the world over BEST PEOPLE of foreign matter wade It is and when curved the very particle ¢ such a ol perfection that it has reputation of Leis ach garment is full fashioned and made to fit the human farm. Ev carefully KNITTED together, not sewn. as with ordinary underwear Made in all sizes hts for Men, 1 THE C. TURNBULL CO. OF GALT, Limited Manufacturers, Galt, Ontario Ris la Kibl 4 Und ery join is ind wer ymen and Chaldren vwear for Ladies and Children, Shaker Nit Siegler Coals urnbull" Bands for ® ne AEERERERERRERR Manu fac turer. of 7 Al farnhull's ©" MM B NN | £ More Facts About McClary's "Sunshine" Furnace ~The Understudy of the Sun-- ! There's no dust nuisance about the "Sunshine"--when you rock down the ashes the du t is drawn up dust-flue then directly across to smoke-pipe where it, bes long Look at the illustration and remember to open both "Dust" and "Direct Draft" dampers--these simple devices make the "Sunshine" the cleanest furnace for the home. of the and the joint" See the famous "cup joints" here--the frime ash -pit--the two sections of the fire-pot dome all jointed together by' our "cup There's a layer of asbestos cement in each joint---this unites all sections in a permanent way, yet leaves room for the expansion and contraction of the metal. No wonder that this "Understudy of the Sun" is called the "Sunshine" furnace Since it diffuses pure warm June air throughout the house. You don't have to wear overalls when attending to the "Sunshine" furnace--It has a big roomy ash-pan. All the ashes areguided directly into the pan by ash- " chutes. A minute or two performs the job. Yes, the "'anshine" is the clean , furnace. The "Sunshine" Furnace burns either wood or coal too, if you, prefer it. The "Sunshine" ributes a greats percentage of heat units--the Baffle plates (a new McClary decidedly increase the heating efficietey of the furnace. But--see the McClary agent of your locali Ask him to show you all the SOT features and exclusive which make the "Sunshine" Furnace worthy of the name The Understudy of the Sun. 1f you do not know the McClary Agent, write us at our nearest address and forwary you a letter of introduction by retum. "ie. MSClary's MONTREAL "WINNIPEG 304 HAMILTON 34 CALGARY VANCOUVER ST. JOHN, N, B.