\/ " ----+ ' BLEEPLESS BABIES RHEUHATISH- / INTHE BLOOD Linimants and Butt Rubbing Will Not Gure It--The Disease Must be Treated Through the pas a # Yat.nth in the affected part, which Semporarily relieves the pain, but ina pegs the aches and pains are bad as ever. All the pabbiug, na all the liniments and outward applications in the world won't cure rheumatism, because it is rooted in the blood. Rubbing won't remove the poisonous pas = the blood that causes the p But Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Ail, because they are a blood medicine acting on the blood. That is why the aches and pains and stiff swol- len points of rheumatism disappear' when these pills are used: 'Inat's sey sensible peopie waste no time g, but take Dr. Williams' Pink' ills when the first twinges of rheumatism come on, and these merece drive the trouble out of elr system. Mr. John Evans, 12 Kempt Road, Halifax, N. 8., says - "About three years ago I had an attack of rheumatism which settled in my right leg and ankle, which became very much swollen and was exceedingly painful, I wasted a good deal of time trying to get rid Ft the trouble by rubbing with lini- ments, but it did not do me a bit of good, My daughter was using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills at the time and finally persuaded me to try them. Inside of a week the pills began to help me, and after tak- ing then a few wecks longer the trouble completely disappeared a 'a has-not bothered me since. daughter was also caking the pills at the time for weakness and anae- mia, was' also cured by them, and J am now a firm friend of this medi cine."' Most of the troubles that afflict mankind are due to poor, watery blood. Dr. Williams' mak Pills ac- tually make new red | blood. That is why they cure anaemia with its headaches and backaches, and diz siness and fainting spells ; the pangs of rheumatism, and the sharp stabbing pains of neuralgia ; also indigestion, St. Vitus' dance, para- lysis. and the ailments of young girls dnd women of mature age. oe blood is the secret of health the secret of good blood is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Sold by me- dicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Willi- ams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 95: wcnramishesiMlacsniainnaadl A NEW SWORD. Recent wars have proved, so pco ple have been told, that the cavalry sword has ceased to be an effective weapon on the field of battle, but; evidently those in authority at the! British War ans do not share that view. The Army green il has just approved a new alry swore which has been subsniited by a Bir- Mingham firm, The new weapon iv made entirely for thrusting. It bas a perfectly siraight tapering blade instead of a curved and broader blade which has been in ure in the British army, with little modification, for over half a cen- tury. In the new grip there is an ingeniously made recess whereby the user obtains power for thrust- ing. The grip is checkered, pro- viding an excellent hold. he manufacture is to be begun at once. AKE SICKLY BABIES When babies ara. restless and sleepless it is the surest possiblo sign of '!Iness. Well babies sleep soundly and wake up brightly. Sleeplessness is generally due to some derangement of the stomach or bowels or to_ teething troublez few doses of Baby's Own Tabicts will put the little one right, und make it sleep naturally and soun)- Mothers need not be afraid of this medicine as it is guararteed by a government analyst to coa tain no opiate or narcotic. Louis Reville, Gawas, Ont., --T am never without Baby's Own Tablets in the house. I have used this medicine for mw childrei ax occasion required, for the last five years, and have found it superior to all other medicines in curing the ills of childhood."" Sold by medi- e:ne dealers or by mail at 25 cents a hox from The, Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont.® Brushes made of anah thin glass Gbre that they are like spun silk &re used by artists when decorating china. The Jape Old it. They son plied the Monthol ~ fount in "The D&L" Ment Plaster, whic oa welisres instantl porte ache; headacho, neuraly ation an atic Merchant--'He was an excellent book-keeper. - Ho kept our books for many years in an exemplary way. I should have kept him at it." Friend--"What did you dot" Merchant--"T made him cashier. Friend---"How did he do in his new sition 7"' ' He kept the cash." Black Watch Chewing Tobacco t A Merchant--*Excellent- | % JEROM BONNIE SCOTLAND NOTES OF INTEREST FROM HES: BANKS AND BRAES. What is Going on in the Highlands and Lowlunds of Auld 'Scotia, There arc 20,535 houses in Go- van, of which 1,819 are empty. At present the populauan ot Pat- Govan at 92,171 Lord Riowsicd, at the Lord's Day Congress, deprecated the spread of Sunday golf, The annual hiring market -- one of the largest in Perthshire -- was held in Crieff revently. A stag weighing 224 Pounds was shot recently in the Monachyle onaldson, editor of the Fraserburgh Herald, has obtained a journalistic appointment in Ca. cutta, Heriot parish i is s0 sparsely popu- lated that it is difficult for the par- = peecaaa to get elders for his Ta cing the six months ending Tebruary over 3,000 articles were left by ie ids in the tramcars of Glasgow. The extended buildings of the Students' Union at Glasgow vty versity were opened recently | oa Newlands, g August 4,340 passengers left the 'Clyde for places out of Eu- rope, making 20,304 since the be- ginning of this year. The city water engineer of Glas- gow recommends an expenditure of $11,426,250 on additional pumping machinery, mains, etc. The Right Hon. John lesa ye Secretary for Rontland opened o the 8th .inst. the .new scho at gas ell, erected print cost of $1 a pike of 22 pounds was caught with the fly on the Delvine water cl the Tay recently. A sea trout 14 inches long was in the pike's throat ajor-General Boswell, C.B., died retently at Darnlec, Melrose. Deceased, who had_seen consider- able service in, the Indian army, came to live at Melrose about 20 years ago. Mrs. Annie Soutar Hardie, For- res, has just died in Ker 100tn year. e leaves a numerous body of sur- viving descendants, viz.: 3 sons 3 daughters, 26 grandchildren, 40 great- an med and 1 great great-grandchi A runaway Highland heifer caus- ed-a-sensation in the central and western parts of Dundee on the €th inst. A young lad was knock- ed down and a chimney- "sweep was tossed by the infuriated animal, | ¢ which was ultimately shot. Lochmaben has a claim to dis- tinction which is' probably not known outside its boundaries, for there still lingers in "'the four towns"--Smalholm, Hitae, Heck and Grenhiell--a unique system of land tenure which, prior to the Re- formation obtained largely theonmtontt Scotland. HUNGARIAN JUDGE TRAPPED, Convicted of Accepting Bribe and Fied. M. Lateoczy, vice-president of the Supreme Administrative ourt, Budapest, Hungary, is accused of having received $12,500 as a bribe to use his influence to obtain a li- cense to practise' as a chomist for a chemist's assistant named Kor buly. The go-between is alleged to have been the wife of M. Ae pes hretz, herself a cousin of M. koczy, and a niece of the once- ion. cus Minister of pic Charles age de atkoczy under- ook to secure the license by next February at latess. He was trapped by 4 trick. The money was given him in the form wf marked notes. Detectives, who were in waiting at his home, seiz- ed the money and confronted him with the marks on the notes. M. Latkoczy has been obliged to resign his position, his pension as an ex-Secretary of State, his title af Privy Councillor, and his mem- bership of various clubs. Police officials ailege that M. Lat- .|koezy was.in the habit of under- .| taking similar manipulations. Ithe was successful ho kept the money, tut.in the event of the failure of his intervention, returned the bribes. A letter purporting to be signed by Count Julius Andrassy led to the belief that eeveral prominent persons were implicated in the Latkoezy affair. The letter, how- ever, proves to be a forgery, com- gy it is alleged, by M. Lat- koezy bas fled to Ar America. y | rick is estimated at 67,695 and of |. at HOW MRS, CLARK - ROUND RELIEF s APTER YEARS OF SUFFERING DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS CURED HER. -- Pleasant Point Matron Tells Her|i"S.orname Suffering Sisters How to be Free! From the Terrible Pains that Make Life a Burden. Pleasant Pojnt, Ont., Nov. 16-- (Special).--That most of the ills that the suffering women of Canada bave to bear are due to disordered Kidneys, and that the natural cure for them is Dodd's Kidney Pills, is once more shown in the case of Mrs. Merril C. Clarke, a well- known re- sident of this place and a pr inent member of the Salvation rmy. Mrs. Clarke is-always ready = to give her experience for the be- nofit of her suffering sisters. '"'My sickness commenced twenty years ago with the change of life," says Mrs. Clarke, "My health was in a bad state. Water would run om my head which would make me aint. When I came out of the tintee spells I took fits. I was bloated till I was ropes The pain I suffered was awful. It soul go tc my feet and then to my head. Many doctors attended me, and I tried many medicines, but nothing "ee me relief till I used Dodd's Kidney Pills. The first box stopped the fits -- seven boxes cured me completely." Every gilettog woman should use Dodd's Kidney Pills. They make rong, healthy ph and the man who has d Kidneys is safeguarded squint: aicas terrible pains that make miserable the lives cf so many women. ---- TRAGEDY ON AN ISLAND. An Evicted Tenant's Last Terrible in Rey venge An SE aRanary affair is report- |}, ed from Whiddy Island, off the coast of here Ireland. 'A young mae named John Groggin, who, with "his family, was evicted from his farm on the island a year ago, waylaid the present occupiers of the farm, who are paternal cousins of his, as they were returning from a neighbor's. He fired several shots from a revolver, but only. one took effect, shattering the arm of Chris- ° topher He then went to the farm, and fired a number of shots through the doors and windows, killing a horse in.a stable, after which he set fire to the house oe hamse 'were noticed on board the battleship Britannia, and an of- ficer and twenty men landed,, and succeeded in extinguishing them af- a great damage had been done. n the darkness one of the sailors Mr ee his footing, and fell into moat running round an cdjacent battery, being killed instantly. Meanwhile Christopher Goggin and his brother had notified the po- lice on the mainland, whereupon a strong party, under Head Con- stable Looney, obtained a boat and . ent out to the islund. They reach- ed the old pier at midnight. Almost immediately afterwards one of the officers heard a man ap- proaching him. He went towards him, but as he did so: the man who proved to be John Goggin, put 4. revolver to his mouth and fired, falling dead into the constable's| arms. Goggin lost his wife and baby a week ago, and the fact that the cou- sin whom he wounded was to have been married, and to have lived on the farm, from 'which he had been evicted, is said to have preyed on his mind. : eee Not a Nauscating Pill.--The ex- cipient of a pill is the substance which enfolds the ingredients and makes up the pill mass. That of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills is so compounded as_ to preserve their moisture, and they can be carried into any latitude without impairing their strength. Many pills, in or- der to keep them from adhering, are rolled in powders, which prove nauseating to the taste. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills aré so prepare't that they are agreeable to the most delicate. Wife--'Do come over to Mrs. BKarker's with me, John. She 'il make you fee] just as if you were al home.' Her Hushand--"'Then at's the use of going 7' "A Littio Caled, You Know; will hecome a creat dancer if ithe all: rwed to reach down the throat the lungs. Nip the peril in the bud with lens *s lung Balsam, a sure remedy containing Al It is : stated that the accused judge | 8 upister wlice-Sergeant was hoasting of The cheapest tea to use is sald honesty that prevailed in his ne lowest priced. You can buy tea} division. "Why," he said, "vou ow cents pod cheaper "that | might hang your gold watch on a wil make a drink, but if vou want lamp post in the evening and find | an absolutely pi he alth ful, | it still there in the morning.' "'You} slosaly prepared tea use "Salada."'/ don't acon to say nobody would is infinitely mivire delicious and, take the watch?" exclaimed the lis- dee aceay mere economical thaa! tener Xo 2; [mean to say nobody other teas, because it goes faither, would ! take the lan ':p-post," said Sa hes reeans.. COSTLY PARLIAMENT HOt Hour °, be i nent Me iN 'a thas heen r Sinlorat" of the. Cituitonwealth capital, is the costlicat legislative palace in Greater Britain. million dollars have been expended ch it, and it is not yet eompleted. It belongs to the Parliament of Victoria, but since Federation it 'has .been the meeting place of the Parliament of phe Commonwealth, its owners mo to a wing of the exhibition building close by. sy would be willing to work,"' said. Tyre Pout, "if I could get the sart of job T want. " What would tiat job bet'? 'Well, L wouldn't mind calling sts the stations ou an Atlantic liner,'" | {the liquid will boy up in a smal! _-- demanded ail his jorna- os mas- ith a 4 the knife was too all: the ri and the boy also sufferi 4 seneed to it and the @ mas- ste hed. nae lifted ad the, stone when a black serpent zoee, uP and coiled itaelt roun he half dead "Bey, seeing that his master did fiot come back shout- ed and some passersby came there. Beeing the boy in this state, they informed the aes who reached there immediate e¢ unfortu- rete master was Mn in that condi- - Seeing the police, the ser- cant left his peemnee and the mas- €r was arres STUDENT AS' 7c ie Many hardships endured by stu- dents "setonidin university or col- lege in Scotland have been brought t+. light from-time to time, says the Glasgow News. A student of An- derson's On one occasion his appli ied for an increase of wages and was cele before the commit- tee. One of the bailies remarked 'that an able bodied, healthy look- ing young man like the applicant might find some other employment instead of wasting his time as he was doing. The ppeeeton for an increase was refus ne may conceive the bailie's 8 surprise at a eubsequent mecting when the town clerk read a letter from tho lamp- lighter tendering his resignation, as he had passed his final examina- tion as a fully qualified doctor. A Wide Sphere! Yor Deatahacse=2 The consumption of Dr. Thomas' Kelectric Oil has grown to great: proportions. Notwithstanding the | j fact that it has now been on the market for over thirty-one years, its prosperity is as great as ever, and the demand for it in that peri- od has very greatly increased. It is beneficial in all countries, and wherever introduced fresh supplies are constantly asked for. ted A POOR MEDICO. oy sont believe in that doctor." He didn' t tell me everything I wanted to eat was bad for me!" ----__* By New Absorption Method. If suff. from bleed- Ing, itching, 'blind or peoerading | Piles, send me your address, an I will tell you how to cure your- self at home by the absorption treatment; and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with references from your own 'locality if requested. Immedi- ate relief and permanent cure as- sured. Send ne ---s but tell others. of this ffer.. rite to-day Mrs tan Siar Box 103 Windsor, oa ----g- About 30,000 eartlquakes occur every year, but of tacse not more than sixty are hese mange to do any serious s damag After a Ocia Brive don't tant er ae a tea bag ie ful of Painkiller rained witha vot hot pod sugar, It surely prevents Sine Avo ca Hinton a bags one " Painkille ry Medical Man--"Jobson has done the meanest thing I ever heard of ; he came to my house the other night, ate a big diuner, got indiges- tion, and ened went to another doc- tor to be cur A cough 1s often the forerunner of serious pulmonary afflictions, yet there is a simple cure within the reach of all in Bickle's Anti- Consumptive Syrnp,- an old-time and widely recognized --romedy, which, if resorted to at the incep- tion of a cold, will invariably: give relief, and by overcoming the trou- ble, guard the system from any seri- ous consequences, [Price 25 cents, at all dealers. - ----_*_ - HOME-MADE BAROMETER. Those who love experimentation may try the following method of making a cheap barometer, practis- ed in France. Take 8 grams of pul- verized camphor, 4 grams of palv er- ized. nitrate of potassium, 2 grams cf pulverized nitrate ammonia, and dissolve in 60 grams of alcohol. Put the whole ina long, slender. bottle closed at the top with a piece of bladder containing a pin-hole to ad- mit the afr. When rain is coming, the solid particles will tend gradu- ally to mount, little star crystals forming in the liquid, which other- wise remains clear; if high winds era aP roaching, the liquid_will be. ick, as if fermenting, while a a film of oltd particles forms on the surface; tM lind fair weather in clear and 200 VARIETIES OF CHEESE. ef Hi = Bese uit ray i ; 1 fe) 20) Scott's :||Emulsion probably saved this child's F thing 'needed by thousands sure to get Scort's EMuLs'oNn, there are-so many worthless and harmful imitations, * ALI, DRUGGISTS A full copy of Mra. Smith's letter and with some of our valuable Iitcrature re- Idren, wil, be sent noon re- esipt of your address, montiotang this paper, SCOTT & BOWNE 126 Wellington St., W. Toronte PILES CURED AT HOME | remai solid particles will rest at the bot- tom, - ; ESKI10 GAMES. s | Pastimes of Children. on the Shores of Bering Sea. Although. the Eskimos have no national game, they lack neither ip number nor in variety the diver- sions suited to their life. In the pages of Mr. Herbert L. Aldrich' 8] "Arctic Alaska and Siberia' is an! account of games which he found played by oluldren along the shores of Bering e remarks that "Tt is not all. a ee struggle for existence," and i leasant to think that where the. conditions of ife are so hard, children can still nd pastimes that put them.on an equal pte with those of more favored races, Football %s played - with a bag stuffed with hair. of sitting dewn. Another amucc- ment, which requires skill, is the being tossed up in a blanket. A walrus hide is used, and the: trial of skill is to see who can stand on his feet and be tossed into the air the highest. Smail children have ~ miniature sleds which they ioad with mice skins and all sorts of trinkets, so as to play trader. Boys practise archery. Of .course they slide down-hill, but the sled is the seat of a stout pair of dcerskin trousers. Athletics are also much indulged One difficult feat is to_walk on the hands, the legs being outside cf the arms and held straight out in front, parallel with the ground. Lifting- matches are frequeat, but very few 'natives arc as strong as ies average white man. Hurling the spear is also practised; and small darts guided by goose fea- thers ue" --_ with great accur- acy, 6 t they often hit a mark at thirty an The faculty to throw & stone is innate in every boy. In fact, the small boy is the same the wor. over. Girls play with dolls carved out of ivory, which they dress up, after thers own fashion, in clothing ermine, mice or other skins. their games is to kick a ball of ice or snow about the size of a baseball, the object being to. keep it in the - all the~time without touching t with their hands, they also toss pebbles very skil- fully, some being able to keep six cr seven in the air at a time with ne hand. They frequently wear peneulete of sinew, on which are strung bits of iron, brass, or any- thing that will jingle. Stones are tossed in the air, the hands cross- ing each other between the tosses, jingling the bracelets, keeping time and accompanying the play with a sort of. chant. ~ rs ent Kinds. Experts at the United States De- partment of Agriculture have been at work again and the result is an dissertation on cheeses, are made, what they are peal of, and all the details connected 'wi the pee says The Om Sg announce, in an qh ductory apres that there are known varieties of cheese and that nc two of these are at all alike ex- dation of all cheese, -but the super- structure may be made of aoledine from sage to soapstone, dependin upon the whim of the cheese buile der and the taste of the consumer. Cheese making is one of the old- est arts, or trades or habits, un- der whichever classification. It was an article of diet back in the hazy . '| times of history, and has never lost out with changing fashions. It is sounds in the plains of South Africa, n the shores of the Mediterran- : cane in the passes of the Alps, on the banks of 'the Rhine and the Rhone, on the ap es of Siberia, and in the aottnos of the pea- sants; in the palaces of princes, and on lunch counters of the civil- ized and semi-civilezed world. Age does not wither nor custom tals the infinite variety of cheese. There are cheeses in existence and grow- ing stronger every day that-are older than any existing Govern- ment. One articular cheese is mentiorned_ as Going over two hun- dred years old, and reflecting great credit.on the family that possesses it. Over in Switzerland they. have a pleasant cus of making a cheese atthe birth of a child and eating it at his funeral feast or. at the funeral of his son or grandson. OH --a Stella--'Why did' ne eet Jack ?" Bella--"Becagse h n't support her in the style she wee to. unaccustome Parents buy I Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator because they. know it is a safe medicine for their children and an efiectual expeller of worms. Switzerland heads the list of Eu-, opean countries in divorce, the! rate being 40 divorces for every 1,- 000 marriages, France, with 21 per 1,000 coming second, and Germany third with 17 per 1,000 Only those who suffer from piles can know. the ngotys the barning, throbbing, shooting, stabbing alnawhichthinettient a and t ife Yam-Bule ia blessed by thousands who uged to suffer from piles, ae hom it has cared, Une auch grateful } erson is Mrs, E.izabeth Tas lor of Greenwood Avenue, a eronis She says: "For four long years I snffered acute'y from blyeding es During that time Ispent n imme ame nerd of money on 1c, Lan Brat eful for the enre, nilas I have never hw see co since, I know tho cure is perm ot." inthes thankful cena is Mra. A. KE. Guilert, of Sateling, Trinity Bay. She ny case Zam: Buk effec- ted s 5 vosdectal had been t iound great relief. Zam-Buk is a purely herbal balm abd pwd be in every homo cuts, a ietacieee apes tect . CO A-sores, ¢ s poi Sireaece and f idurles « ii Mas ekhy, ete a d. ts and s! At 60c o ce si bertieck Onn toranee teeter In London there is an average of ae "= oF ALL DRUGEISTS: 50250 Balm that benefits Mi ) Experts Make a List of the Differs}: interesting, if somewhat = | ljsia money i ts selling our toilet soaps. hogar making $5.0) aday. Write at once for full particulars to the SOAP SUPPLY C0., Box 332, Toronto Ask for SAC r ARE YOU SICK? 4 about my nate Sure cure in every cane. years' ex. gaan En, land and Camaien The lidor Chemical "Wo: th 195 Benton sgrragt . ell PIANOS Sane CANADA'S BEST AND EVERYEODY KNOWS IT PAYS TO BUY THE SEST Seni for our Free Catalogus No. 75, The Bell pe 3 sylaky rane Ut. i. Gui, Os . "Oh, I've Seat succeeded in kissing her last night, after she had assured me never could until you had given your approval." How to Cleanse the ys vavmolec' 8 Vegetable Pills ace "the result of scientific study of the ef- fects of extracts of certain roots and herbs upon the digestive or- gans. Their use has demonstarted in many instances that they regu- late the action of the liver and the ani bs purify the blood, and car- ll _-morbid accumulations fr ie the svatath: They Bre easy = take, and eile action is mild and benefici The term "millinery" comes rom the Italian town ilan which was formerly the centre of fashion for ladies' chats. Down Signiue Boia paetay. storma, Opium-iaden ce ciines " may check eoughin but the cold ata: sta Do pa pie when you bent to cough take Kiton's La < Balsam," free opium, full of healing powers 1,000,000 000,000 AAW FURS WANTED Higtest prices paid. write for price list. Aid: Stiiman Hinshaw, Deep P Brook, Annapolis Oo, W.8, w Tony MEN sasteo seg WM. B. WARNER MED. CO., Leades, Ont., Canada. CARPET 1 DYEING 'Cieaning. This ts with the BRITISH AMERIOAN D DYEING ca Macks et, Box 16% Montreal, Tae nes FREE -- only Blackagesofour igu grade rs a ards Colonial Art 7a Dept. 53, Toronto Large Manufacturing FLAT TO LEASE 67-71 Adelaide St. West About 40x200, lighted by thirty-five windows, the en- tire length of three sides, also from ten large skylights, most up-to-date manufacturing flat in central part of Toronto; rental includes power, steam heat, water, electric sig ot 10 per cent. less than | rates; lowest insurance tae, : immediate possession; low rental to ee tenant. 5, FRANK 1 WILSON 3 kaeiaide "Street West _ TORONTO, ONT. pte clergyman to every 2,000 sa Where can fen ak some of Hollo- way's Corn Cure? I was entirely. cured of my corns by this remecy ' and I wish some more of it for my friends. So ies Maat a W. Brown, Chicago First Youth--"Scientists say that trees contribute to the heat in the atmosphere."' Second Youth -- "That's so; a birch has warmed me many a time.' SAMPLE COPY FREE Would you. like.to-have-a-sam-.- pie copy of The Farmer's Ad- vocate and Home Magazine? THE BEST AGRICULTURAL AND. H@ME PAPER on the American Continent. No progressive farmer can af- ford to be without it. Publish- ed weekly. Only $1.50 per year. Drop post-card for free sample copy. Agents Wanted. Address: ° "THE FARMER'S ADVOCATE " Mention this paper. London Ont. im 1A. J. PATTISON & CO. 33-35, SCOTT ST., TORONTO, Stock Brokers and Financial Agents 1 COBAL: and other stocks bought and sold on commission. Correspondence invit- ed. Orders may be wired at our expense. PRINTERS» A CAMPBELL PRESS rwOo REVOLUTION 43x56 inch bed, cost $a,500, Will be Sold for $400 Cash ke room for larger and faster machines, It is in good ess err as it has i just been thoroughly overhauled by a competent imachinist. The Wilson Publishing Co.,. Limited 73 Adelaide St, West, Toronto,