WHITE AS A GHOST. Pale or Sallow Cheeks One of the First Signs of Anaemia Pale and sallow cheeks, with blanched lips and gums, and dark | circles under the eyes, are the first | Signs that anaemia has begun its deadly progress. .Phis first avarning |: is iglbowed.by- greatwwearinéss and | breathlessness after -any exertion. melancholy, haye fre-| quent headaches, awake in the morning feeling tired. -You become | morbid and nervous, starting at the | slightest noise, and your heart pal- | pitates violently even on going up- stairs. twenty suffer from anaemia, Neg- | lect to supply new blood to the | languishing, bloodless body, meats | - a.life of misery--indeed it is an open invitation to that most hope- less of all diseases, consumption. | he new, rich blood that cures an- | aemia and gives new health and strength is'readily created by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. hat is why these .pille have red more cases of bloodlessness and" blood. disor-. ders than any other medicine. They have 'made thousands' of girls and women strong,. well and, rosy, with bright eyes and hew energy, just be- cause they nourish the "body with new, rich, red blood of health. Here is a typical instance. Miss Laura Dempsey, Auburn, N. Y., says: "For several months I was in avery bad state of health, with many of the symptoms that accom- pany anaemia. Iwas pale and bloodless, had terrible hoadackies; | ela' would be breathless at the least | exertion. Having tried a. number | of medicines without relief I natur- | ally became discouraged and began | to fear that I was doomed to, con: | tinued illness. At. this stage a) friend who had-herself been. bene- fitted by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills} urged me to try them. I did so and al thanks to the pills I 4m now enjoy- | ing the best of health, and feel that I cannot recommend . this splendid ! medicine to highly.' Other weak and ailing girls Sail also obtain new health and strength through the use of Dr.' Williams' Pink Pilts. You can, get these Lapa through 'any medicine dealer, or! they will be sent by mail post mel at 50 cents a box or six boxes for | "$2.50 by writing The Dr. Williams, | Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.' Snecma BELGIAN SOLDIER LIONIZED. | |' Emile Sapin Has a Great sia of | Heroic Acts, | ' No Belgian soldier is receiving more acclaim in the French press than 'Emile Sapin, who, atthe age of 22, has received the decoration' 'of the Order of Leopold and 'the cross of the Legion of Honor. Le Matin, of Paris, confesses it could "not be- lieve all the. brilliant exploits at- tributed to this young man, i was a private when war was clared, and who was made a Hor poral only a month ago, but that it has investigated through inquiries aot only of Sapin himself, who is now in Cherbourg hospital, but also me of many others, and it cheerfully recognizes" the" following ashieys- ments: First, during the siege of Liege" Sapin was in the fort of Loncin. c lithbing a thee, and. concealed by its leaves, he. killed an entire bat- tery of heavy artillery, said to num ber 42 men. It is claimed that the commanding officer of this battery reached the foot of the. tree, revol- ver in hand, only-te fall;-as the rest had fallen, from a bullet sent out f Sapin's rifle. Second, two weeks later he, /per- sonally captured the flag of a regi* ment of Hussars, whose Colonel he also shot. eT Third, near Louvain, sent out in} a company of six men, Sapin suc- eeded in capturing' 40 #0 soldiers, in- cluding one officer. Just how it has proof of achievements; Lé Matin does ray, but it adds that General Leo, of the Belgian army, and 'two Cab- | inet Ministers, have' personally | gone to Cherbourg to congratulate Bapin, who is not dangerously | wounde such- a ee CRYING CHILDREN When Baby cries it is because, he is unwell---not. because-he is bad- | natured as so.many imagine. Cry- | Ing is the way the little one has of | telling of his pains andthe wise | mother can instantly tell what ails | her little one simply by his ery When baby cries a great deal give | him Baby's Own Tablets and he will soon be happy again. Concerning the Tablets Mrs. Jas, Gaudreau, : Qiie., says: "My baby cried day and night and | I was greatly discouraged. I began | iving the Tablets and he was soon} PPY, healthy and fat.' iDr. "Willinme' Medicine Co., Brock ville, nt. a: Lady-~Is this a pedigreed dog? Dealer--Pedigreed | Why, if that og could talk he wouldn't speak to 'either of us! fe - Easymark--I've loaned so * much jmoney to my friends that I am al-, st broke. Owens--Let me maké finishing touch. | liar. BRITAIN' 3. SUBMARINE. HERO. | it had never been done before, Lieut. Horton Would Sooner Hug a | did, as stated, hoist a little yellow | Torpedo Than Marry. | "The qualities demanded of a in September, first-rate captain of sub-marine are | she aga extraordinary to the pojnt "of | genius,"' says Admiral' Bacon. It | must be obvious to anybody who} I realizes something of the means and ie pri of other colors stored ends of the most obscure branch f naval-service that the qualities required @re extensive and pecu- In aviation the range of con- trol and change .of. conditions are wide enough; in submarine work they are even wider. he nearest point of resemblance is reached by 'aircraft travelling in cloud or fog; ;and ev ere the. comparison 158 Most girls from fourteen to}? 1 even there the. comp incomplete, for air-craft face none of the problems of torpedo latinch- ing. Bomb- -throwing fronran aero- plane ig the most elementary form conceivable of-getting at (or miéss- ing) your objective ; you leave it all to the law of gravitation. The | launching of a torpedo, on the other hand, is the most elaborate and delicate -job that comes the way of a marksman, Lieuterint - Commander Horton oves his. torpedees ; they are. per- verse, erratic, ahd devious in their ways, and need- the delicate* hand- ling that those who are wedded to the seryice ¢ani-give them: "'Im marry!' éxclaimed 'a seaman who was being teased about his pet com- mander, ."'Im marry! He'd soon- er huga torpedo Any day !"2- The Double-Toothed Pirate. The affection that Lieutenant- Lepunsater Horton gives to this toy .af,a torpedo he wis igi te his submarine. .A few ears agogwhen it first attracted hin m, it was in. reality hardly' more ea a plaything.: That was before Sir Percy Scott declared~that the: 'introduction, of vessels. that. swim under water has, in my opinion, entirely don away withthe utility 'of vessels tie, Swit onthe top of i the water." Tatil then. nobody had ents "will always be done in future. ee flag, decorated with the grim in- signia after the sinking of the Hela} and on Octobar 8 in hoisted it along with a | little white flag of the same design, in token of wher second rage | IN ORY CRUST Hair Came fa Aa Scalp Itched and Burned. 'Scales Like Sawdust, | Cuticura Soap and Ointment | Healed-In Six Weeks, The Pas, Manitoba --" Four years ago I began to lose thy hair. It used to come out any time that I combed it. aboard his boat. pis 'A Nova Scotia Case of Interest to All Women was use my head was full of dandruff. Whenever I brushed: {it the scales-flew off | oe like saw-dust. My scalp also itched and Halifax Sends Out a Message of "Help! turned and my head was lke a dry crust. to Many People. The dandruff showed very r vials Halifax, N. Dec. 15.--When Inter-| Of viewed at Mpeg home at 194 Argyle St.,: Mrs. Haverstock was quite willing to! talk of her peculiarly unfortunate! case, "I was always 'blue' and de-} pressed, felt weak, languid and utterly; unfit for any work. My stomach was | 5 so disordered that I had no. appetite. | What I did eat disagreed. I su ffered | greatly from dizziness and sick head-| ache and feared: a nervous breakdown. | his Upon my driaggist's recommendation I) used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. "I felt better at oncé. Every day I} improved. In six weeks I was a well! woman, cured completely after differ- | ent physicians had failed to help me.| It is for this reason that ! strongly | urge sufferers with stomach or diges-| tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's} le Pills, | 23, 1914. Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengther the | « stomach, improve digestion, strength- | Samples Free by Mail en the nerves and restote debilitated | onl Cuticura Soap and Cuticura systems to health, i opus, the | Olstment are sold throughout the world, a After using Cuticura Soap and Ointment a few days I found a great dirs | 80 I continued with them six weeks and they ey healed me." (Signed) | L, D, Lockwood, Juno 4, 1914. _ Basi OVER BABY'S CHEST Follis 7 a Niassa of tiny red pimples on his chest ° arms. Was t.> young to 'scratch but was very cross and frotful. * Fused the samples of both Cuticura Soap sample of cach with 32-p. ae Book will be | pentifree upon request. "Cu blood of long- "standing purities by} ress post-cards ticura, Dept. D, Sctiem U. 8. A" bringing the system to a high' p of vigor, they effectually chase pairs weariness, depression and disease, Good for young or old, for men, for 'women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternu - MORTALITY IN WAR. The Srasent War Will Set a New . Low Record. Since the outbreak of war, Sir William Osler, Regius professor of medicine at Oxford University, has supervised the MY RIVER. By Dr. J. L. Hughes, Toronto. | Lieut. Commander Max Horton of British Submarine **E9."" ventured to draw conclusions, no- body had foreseen the fate of the Aboukir, the Cressy, and the Hogue "nobody. had realized that a dou- ble-toothed pirate of phe Max Ken- nedy 'Horton type 'could, in the course of three weeks, twice plant hig "rooties" in ships protected not only. by their 6wn guns, but by mines and a fortress-base, . To 'Cutts'? Horton--the nick- name is one of the mysteries of the depp--the difficulty of the enter- prise is the crownin stimulus. When -he leaves dock saying "I won't come back till I've done something," he only does what every sportsman has done since the "| beginning. The remark is remem- bered in his case -bécause it was made good. In hundreds of less for- tunate cases it is forgotten because it wasnot made good. There is no | such thing as certainty in the busi- ness of getting home. at the German ' i fleet, and Lieutenant Horton ksovws | i and enjoys the whole gamut of un- certainties, "He will tell you that! not | even in the speedy enterprise of a and 1794. submarine attack there is time for | levery ;sort of sensation, from the | highest élation to the sloomiest | boreddm. To wait submerged until | the right moment is a process that turns minutes into hours; and to | _ refrain from letting go at the enemy (in one instance he had to keep his men in check for the very good rea- son that they were too near their! objective, and - would themselves | have, been sent to the bottom by an { explosion) makes an eternity "of | fifteen minutes. | Ilis **Records." It is jast 'because of 'the strain, both-as Science and sport, of a sub marine attack, that a man | Lieutenant-Commander Horton is known for the-excellence of _ his spirits. :They are his armor-plat- ing He has more whimsies than a | aches boy, and they serve his pur- | |pose well. .His' gramophone and | | card- _games carry his men through | the stress of inaction. If he is | adored by his men it is because he | knows not only how to.achieve >| triumph: bit algo. how to enjoy it. It may bé noted; in regard to his manner of- taking a win, that the legend-of the skull and cross-bones is a legend founded on fact. The papers speak of it as if it were the accustomed ¢ ung for submarines to fly the pirate's flag as a signal of 'success, ahd those who knew that it had never been done before were, in consequence, inclined 'to disbe- lieve the whole iti But bites "| Barefoot and hatless I worked all day, work of the army hospitals in England. Toward the close of October, hesaid to a edrrespondent of the New York Clear was the spring in the pasture fleld Close to the foot of the tall elm tree, Source of my river a half yard wide, Wonderful river it was to me. zi record for low mortality among the wounded. Formerly, with the best | first-aid and hospital work, a mortality | record of five or six per cent. of those wis reached the base hospitals ve considered creditable. Up to there has been only one fatality out | C of more than seven hundred wounded | Changing = aaa with my w ood: who «ig ergei the base hospital at | Building a bridge or a water wheel; Oxford. at death was caused by) Sailing my ships on the lakes 1; tetanus. This result is owing partly ; made. Far to the heart of the woods it ran; Often I followed it there alone, Daring to go with a throbbing heart Into nd ie of the great un- ts the pelt. sterilization of the modern | ne at bullets, and partly to efficient field first aid. I have yet to ave. a wound inflicted by either a dum- um or an explosive bullet. If the -- of the past counts for any- Mine were great visions of power to "Mine were the joys of achievement, | 2 00; Mine wars the glories of earth and more to fear from the hold fever than gon bul-. Mine "was a __ Wonderful world all ne ar, 'bacilli 'accounted 'for fourteen "thota. and of the twenty-two thousand ae lost. Ihave never seen a grou recrul ng to a depot Sinicat mentally asking what percentage will fig 2d and honorable deaths | and what percentage | will yaa miserably of ordinary ee precautions. 'Back té the farm'as a man I went, a --_ spring and tall elm had But all they started to grow in me Vision, and power, and joy, live' on, rs TOWN WITH A HISTORY. About Belgium. Nieuport, which is frequently mentioned in the press despatches from the European battle line, is a Belgian town situated half a \mile from the sea coast and half way~be- tween Ostend and the French bor? der. Ithas recently been the scene of some hard fighting. The town is) on the Yser, a stream which the Germans succeeded in crossing only to be mown down by the guns of the Allies. Although Nieuport is badly situ- ated and unhealthy, it is visited by many tourists in the summer who are attracted there by its bathing facilities. It was destroyed in 1383 by 'thé English, but was rebuilt and | fortified two years later by Philip | eye,' lthe Bold. It was captured three | 'times by the French--in 1745, 1792: The battle of the dunes, in which the Spanish were defeated Something Nieuport, in Not men, but corns that were put out of business last week by Putnam's Extractor. No corn can live if treated by Putnam'. Use only Putnam's, Corn It is safe, painless and sure. 25c. at all dealers. Both Were Sold. - "Gentlemen, I can't lie about the horse; He is blind in one eye," said the auctioneer. The horse was soon knocked down to a citizen, who had been greatly struck by the auction- eer's honesty, and after paying for the horse he said--"You were hon- est enough to tell me'that this ani- mal was blind in one eye. Is there ) any other, defect 1' "Yes, sir; there He is also blind*in the other was the prompt reply. see hi 'The Helpmect. Mr. Newlywed--Did you sew the button on' my coat, darling? Mulligan--He's the shly wan! He / knows nobody can -fight at that g weight. Z Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. is Never gay unkind things about ac- quaintances and friends. This world wants 2 ng so much as sunny people, who see the bright side of things, and find something good in others. Dr SS He--'You' n be sorry you didn't marry me." She--"Wel! I'd eet not be married and be sorry I wasn't married than be married and be sorry I was married.' ISSUE 49--'l4. ED. 7. ont te I think it. | Times, "I think this war will 'set a new | the expeditionary force on the| p GURKHAS PARALYZE ENEMY. Fury of Attack Has Pitiable Effect on the Germans. It is a tradition" of the, Indian anny that Highlanders~and | Gurk- werk together. ere : a de- scriphion of a charge by th landers, which,?in' Seite of ie flinching heroism, might have fail: ed but for the tamely intervention of -the terrible kukris of+ Gurkhas. | The Highland regiment was. sent forward to carry a line of hostile}. | trenches, but 'their "heroic charge was checked by & murderous fire jan barbed wire entanglements on | which they stumbled: . Between the: | gaps in their ranks | Gurkhas. slipped the the | enemy's trend shes, "then trose u ter- , rible medley of cries, the harsh bat- jtle cry of the attackers and the groan or scream of the attacked, as the tefrible knife went home. "In the tumult of. carnage the. com- mands of German officers' who sought to rally their men, were, lost. j the mud and: slime of" the trenches a terrible struggle, hand- to-hand and _ body-to-body, was proceeding. The end came quickly.. In a mad frenzy of fear the Ger- mans broke and ran, throwing their rifles from them and blundering into their own. wire entanglements. Such prisoners as were taken bore in their eyes a nameless terror. For hours after they were brought into the British lines taney trembled con- stantly. The terror of that charge deprived them of the power of voli- tion, and almost*®of the mower of motion, . a Magic "Nerviline" Ends Stiff Neck, Lumbago Any Curable Muscular or Joint Pain is instantly Relieved by Nerviline. GET TRIAL BOTTLE TO-DAY. | You don't have to wait all.day. to | get the kink out of a stiff neck if you | rub on Nerviline. 'And you don't need | ia go around complaining about lum- | 'bago any more. You can rub suc ! things away very quickly with Nervi- | It's the grandest liniment, the} quickest to penetrate, the speediest to ease ee pain of any kin ' One twenty-five cent trial bottle q Nerviline will cure any attack 'of ee | bago or lame back. This has been | proved a thousand times, was in the case of Mrs. E. J.. Grayten,- of Caledonia, who writes:--"I wouldn't think of going to bed without _-- ing we had Nerviline in the house. I have used-it- for twenty odd years and'dp- more and more every day, If anf-of lipé toothache, by. My husband once cured: himself 5,000 OUT. OF WORK | |did you ever of a frightful .attack' of,-lumbago by} | Nerviline, and for a hundred ailmengs ; that turn up in a large family Nervwi- line is By far the best thitig to Me from the neglect | about » = Resisting Temptation. Sunday Schoo] Teacher--" Willie, resist temptation -" Willie--"Yes'm, once. Su ndey School Teacher--"And what no séntimen a ee ag » biel % Willie orithe | was shelf and I couldn' t reach A ¥ Minard'e Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen Lact, wigan T zacsived Beas f MINA : tac: and I have en proved - it very effective a gaaee of Infi ammatjon. 'A. HUTCHINSON. fa Boarding House 'Gossip. '"Billson yonder tells ~ \ me the trusts his wife implicitly and o- don' t believe yorf-love me any more, | | " once you did. | replied the husband in 1 cing, soothing voice. "But why?' ae | doy' t know.".A pause. "Lots of little ways." Another pause. "Why do you always let me getup to light the fire now?". "Nonsense, darling. ing able to come down to a nice warm room always makes me love you more.' 'Nonsense, dear!' Marriage often means exchang- big one. Minard"s Liniment Cures Coids, 4c. ot 2 just as it + Machinery For Sale They insinuated - eee! -| skipper.' Highest grade beans kept 'whole 'and mealy-by,berfect bakizty, retaining the full strength, - Flavored with delicious sauces, They have no equal. ' , HiseHoice: ; "First Laborer (gazing itito jewel- ler's windoW)--How would you like to have your pick ampngeh that lot, Bill? + Second Laborer--I 'd sooner have my shovel. R he ® YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL Eee ele Eye Remedy for Red. 5 FELL aoe ; Smar elids tye Comfort, Write for Book of the Eye mail Free. Murine Bye Remedy Co,, Chicago. A Long Good-By. "'Come.an,. Bill,' old burglar in disgust use wasting time here. 'Don't you think 'those loyers will getoff.the steps soon?" queried the wi hisper x "d the: no I just heard him say that was thé last kiss. They'!! be an hour yet.' . --_---- Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Doctors are not as wise as they think? their patients: think they are, 'I hear the sea "captain isin hard luck. He married a -girl'and she ran-away from- 'hint*--'*Yes ; > he took her for a mate, but she was a FARMS:'FOR SALE. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, hermake. Fr You WANT TO BUY OR SELL A Fruit, ast Grain or. Dairy parm ot write H. aweon, Brampton, or 90 Col- borne 5t., iy' Koen | ; reciate {ts value as a family remedy. throat, Nerviline*is always my stand-|. } iz } | by Philip of Nassau, was fought} Mre. ewlywed--No, love; I tute! but----" there in 1600. It has a lighthouse | goyldn't find the button, and so [\?" "Well, that was erected in 1284. The chief just sewed up the buttonhole, eae Tt notice be carries "thel industries of Nieuport are ship- } nd his fishhooks loose- ral building, rope and net-making and A WARM WINTER. | Sree a ocket ' fishing Its population is about att peter pet ge org = A nt gagionins che! the same Pp 7 4,000. ably and Sonventeniy "by the Chicago) minara's Liniment Cures Carget In bows, | ---- and Norun Western ine dail th | . . raine da y from the new man who is looking for trouble bien xe Ghicago--The bd on Second Year of Married Lite. t nciaco; never loses his way. ee Ee Angeles Limited, nr i27e to! It is, say the phi losoxbers, dur- |- -- a ra i . . ; - Land Photons aod tie-Califorsie Mail |ing the second year of married' life, . 1 think Williem I'll ask those | ie ? : le ext door to tak din- Tieetea Mcpositicns and. Seo ving | | when its glamor of ne is Wear' | | ner ith ' to- ight.' "What f rt Perper full particulare, will be mail | ing off, that nger arises. The, OW with us to-nig a tO promptly on application to B. H. Bennett, | mien then begins to settle down r@but 'Well, the butcher, by mistake, left Genera} Agent, Chic - a North Western ature retrospec- k eat order here, and it seems | BY. 4 Yonge St, Toro he woman is by natu pe their meat o leive: Much tact, therefore, is need- only fair.' Sly. jed to harmonize the presene wt , -- ' . t. Fortunately little Jen NX O*Brien--Clancy's married a wo- | the pas en. = XV\ \ man that weighs three hundred! kins was eminently tactful. 'Jack, pounds. said his wife to him one day, _ lat any rate, nothing like so much a3: a conyvin-: ; ing a lot of little troubles for one}. | Lz et ally ni | " Children ren Ice H. W.. DAWSON, Colberps St. Toronto. , RISCRLLANEONS: ae CA irersat UMORS; © LUMPS, » pain ty our home Limited, Collingwood, Ont Raging shafii ng ng, beltin 'pulleys, ete. re iaeto fy at ae ings, Se ge yall- i on Shafting from one inch - to gira inches, pulleys. thirty inches to fifty inches, belting 'six. inches to twelve inches. Will sell entire 6¢ in- part. - a " NO REASONABLE ° OFFER REFUSED. S. Frank Wilson & Sons, ° 73 Adelaidg, Street West, Toronté. So Chapped Hands. Quickly Healed ~ HAPPED 'hands and lips always come with cold weather, bur . Vaselirie. 'CAMPHOR ice bangs sure and. speedy for their: rough @ and emart- ing hands. in tubes and tins--at. dian i) 1e80 OT AVE. at a ' pana bhb bbb bb bb Db bAADAASS eerwe ve