See ¥ Sos "ee FING OSCAR SARDINES are much more than a delicacy. Their FOOD VALUE is unsurpassed. They furnish just the nourishment needed when a heavy meal is neither acceptable nor desirable. Cet Them From Your Grooer Trade supplied by John W. Blokle & Greening, Hamilton . THE SLEEPER OF OKUO. Swedish Woman Who Spent Thirty- two Years in a Trance. There have been several cases of long sleep quite apart from the cel- -ebrated persons of Ephesus and Rip Van Winkle. One of the most remarkable was the long sleep of a - German Government official named Arnheim, who had an accident in which his head was injured in 1904, and falling asleep was still uncon- ecious four years afterward and may be sleeping still, says the Hamburger Nachrichten. But the most interesting example was that of a woman, Caroline Lls- gon, living in the little island of Okuo, off the coast of Sweden, who fell asleep in 1875 and did not wake up till 1907. Dr. Froderstrom of the Saltpetriere Asylum in Paris has made a detailed examination of her experience and now publishes the result of his inquiries in the asylum journal. Tt seems that "the sleeper of Okuo" was born in 1861, The first fourteen years of her life was pass- ed in perfect health, although ex- traneous difficulties prevented her from attending school. It was not till just before her fourteenth birthday that she received any schooling. At the following Christ- mas she fell ill. On the all eventful day she came home from the school, which was three miles off, and complained of toothache and indisposition, and was put to bed. A very few hours later she fell into a trance, uttered no word, seemed to hear nothing, and showed no trace of feeling any- thing when needles and such like things were run into her arms. For thirty years and more, according to her mother's evidence, Caroline re- mained in this condition without a sign of change. Only once in reply to the despairing ery of her mother for a prayer did she move her lips and say, "Jesus have mercy on me !"' Some three or four times did the invalid leave for a moment her bed, on which all the rest of the time she lay in a crouching posture with the bedclothes drawn up over her head. It is said that her whole nourishment consisted of two cups of milk a day. When her mother died Caroline must have been con- scious to some extent of the fact, for she burst into tears, though otherwise no change was noticeable in her condition. After the mother's death a brother undertook the charge of the sleeping girl and her food, but after two years he was drowned, and this sad event occa- ibe a second violent fit of weep- ng. The care of her then devolved upon a housekeeper, and Caroline seems to have shown more intelli- gence and sharpness in noticing her presence. It began to be noticed that her hair was always kept tidy and that her nails did not exceed the usual length. As the result of an experiment in leaving her alone for some hours of the day a suspi- cion arose that her trance could not have been so complete and unbro- ken as formerly. At last there was no doubt about it. Food disap- peared mysteriously. A few months later Caroline sud- denly asked for her mother, and when her brothers hurried to her side, she waved them away, saying, "You aren't my brothers; they were quite small." From that mo- ment she was a different being. The trance had ceased and left her quite well and hearty. The most careful examination failed to reveal to the doctor the slightest trace of weak- ness or of mental defect. She re- membered every detail of her early life, but showed a great reluctance to speak about her illness. The Food Tells {ts Own Story It's one dish that a good many thousand people rel- ish greatly for breakfast, lunch or supper. Post Toasties Crisped wafers of toast- ed Indian Corn--a dainty and most delightful dish. Try with cream and sugar. "The Memory Lingers" --_ Oanadian Postum Cer3al Oo., Ltd. Windsor, Ontario, LODGINGS FOR LONDON POOR on Victoria Embankment. Most visitors to London, England, Have taken a look and wondered at the: human wreckage which spends its nights upon the Thames Em- bankment. Every night throughout the year, but particularly during the winter, a hopeless and homeless army takes its rest on the seats and pavements of one of London's prin- cipal boulevards. No great city in the world has a sadder sight to show to its visitors. 3 A scheme is now about to be put into practice which, it is hoped, will remove these wanderers from the Embankment. The experiment is to come into force in October, the month in which, every year, the number of homeless poor begins to increase in London. In the first instance it is proposed that the scheme shall only be applied in the area between the Thames and Oxford Street, and be- tween Vauxhall Bridge Road and the city boundary. Within that dis- trict police constables on night duty will carry tickets to be handed to homeless persons in need. The tickets will contain directions to apply at an office which will be situated near the Strand. The office will be in telephonic communi- cation with a number of voluntary agencies which have consented to further the scheme, as well as with the casual wards of the metropolis. The officer in charge will keep him- self informed as to the amount of accommodation at the various wards and agencies and also decide to which class of institution the ap- plicant ought to be sent. Methods will be adopted to guard against the transfer of the ticket. Possibly the signatures of those who can write will be required to be made on the cards. ~ The experiment with the ticket system will be watched with close interest, for should it be a success, its extension to other places would follow as a matter of course. It is another development of the Metro- politan Casual Paupers Order of last year, the objects of which were to secure uniformity of administra- tion, to prevent the scandal of des- titute persons sleeping out and wandering at night, and to secure some classification of the casual paupers so as to differentiate the occasional from the habitual vag- rant. Mh IT'S THE FOOD. The True Way to Correct Nervous Troubles. Nervous troubles are more often caused by improper food and indi- gestion than most people imagine. Even doctors sometimes overlook | this fact. A man says: | 'Until two years ago waffles and butter with meat and gravy were the main features of my breakfast. Finally dyspepsia came on and I found myself in a_ bad condition, worse in the morning than any other time. I would have a full, sick feeling in my stomach, with pains in my heart, sides and head, 'At times I would have no appe- tite for days, then I would feel rav- enous, never satisfied when I did eat and so nervous I felt hke shrieking at the top of my voice. I lost flesh badly and hardly knew which way to turn until one day I bought a box of Grape-Nuts food to see if I could eat that. I tried it without telling the doctor, and liked it fine; made me feel as if I had something to eat that was sat- isfying and still I didn't-have that heaviness that I had felt after eat- ing any other food. "J hadn't drank any coffee then in five weeks. I kept on with the Grape-Nuts and in a month and a half [ had gained 15 pounds, could eat almost anything I wanted, didn't feel badly after eating and my nervousness was all gone. It's a pleasure to be well again."' Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read the book, "The Road to Wellville,'"' in pkgs. "There's a reason." Ever read the above fetter? 4 now one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. --$--4.--_----_ SCOTTISH JEWELS FOR QUEEN Royal Family Wear Special Orna- ments at Balmoral. | The jewellery used by the royal family while they are at Balmoral Castle is quite distinct from that worn while they are at Windsor or | Buckingham Palace. While in the Scottish Highlands they always use the splendid collection of Scotch ornaments collected by Queen Vic- toria and the Prince Consort. These are never removed from Balmoral, but are taken out of the safes and a selection is made from the stock when the court arrives there every fall, and are locked away again when the royal family returns to London. | Both the King and Queen always | show a pleasing recognition of na- | tional] characteristics when they are | visiting in various parts of their | domains. In Scotland they wear | | the Stuart tartan. A special silk of this pattern is manufactured for the Queen's shirtwaists and the sashes which Princess Mary wears over her white frock in the even- ings. : . Queen Mary's passion for simpli- city is finding most pronounced ex- pression during her holiday at Bal- moral where she is practically liv- ing in coats and skirts till the even- ing dinner hour, when she changes into a demi-evening gown, cut high in the néck and with transparent yoke and long sleeves. Lady Eva Dugdale, who accom- panied the Queen on her visit to Neu Strelitz, shares her royal mis- tress' taste in this as well as in other directions. Between them they have been doing much needle- work during the rainy wether which has been prevailing in ©cot- Metropolis Hopes to Aid Homeless i land. -- SIX YEARS USE OF =: BABY'S OWN TABLETS Opoe a mother has al Baby's Own Tablets she will always use them as long as there are little ones in the house. They are abso-) lutely safe and never fail to cure constipation, colic, indigestion or the many other babyhood and child- hood ailments. Concerning them Mrs. E. Simmons, Hamilton, Ont., says: 'I haye not been without Baby's Own Tablets for six years. J have given them to my three little ones and find them excellent during teething and at other times." The Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Cy PLANTS DIE OF OLD AGE. Reason Why Old Varieties Are Re- placed By New. According to A. Schiller-Tietz, who has recently completed some interesting studies, the same gen- eral biological law governs the longevity of animals and of plants. Some low animal organisms repro- duce themselves by simply falling apart, and the different parts thus formed are individual, life-sustain- ing organisms. Ultimately, how- ever, if such a species is to be per- petuated, two individuals will have to pair off as parents in order to give a new life impulse toward such a perpetuation, and their progeny will be hardier and more' robust, because created in the normal way than the individuals formed by se- gregation from the parental organ- ism. The same rule applies to plants, and because this rule has been dis- regarded in cases, certain varieties of plants are dying of old age. Ochebnius tells that 125 years ago a traveller brought from the Orient a male poplar, which he planted in the park at Woerlitz, Germany. All the poplars to be found throughout Germany are descendants of this one parent plant, and were pro- duced by cuttings. A. Schiller- Tietz therefore regards all the pop- lars tracing their origin -back to this one and the same tree and not as different trees, and this aggre- gate longevity cannot exceed the longevity of any one poplar. This is the reason that all the poplars in Germany are dying out without any apparent reason--without blight, disease, destructive insects, and in good soil. For the same reason the La France roses are gradually dying out. This beautiful and popular | variety of rose is propagated solely by cutting. It is only a little over fifty years ago that the first rose bush of the variety was sold in the market, but its life impetus is al- most exhausted. It cannot survive much longer. Da cS CLEVER AUTOMATON. New Near-Human Figure Can Sing and Make a Speech. One of the most attractive exhi- bits at the show of toys and inven- tions just opened at the Grand Palais, Paris, France, is the "Dis- donc," a speaking automaton. "Pis-done'"' is a handsome, life- sized figure, with black satin breeches, black silk stockings and a scarlet dress coat. When wound up he will sing you a song, make you a speech, or de- scribe to you the quality of any commodity you have to sell, accom- panying his remarks with appropri- ate gestures. "Dis-done'"' can speak or sing all things, and at the wish of his owner will display his talent in the street, in a shop, or in a drawing-room. He has no preference in the mat- ter of clothes, and whether you dress him as a clown and oblige him to talk nonsense, or fit him out in the latest triumph of the tailor's art and ask him to recite a poem by Rostand, it is all one to him. "TDis-done"'? will appear on the platform or leave it as you desire. He will change his costume, so that you would not recognize him, and in a few minutes more, when his phonograph disc and his repertoire of gestures have been modified, he will delight an astonished audience with new, original and amusing pat- ter. i Tis a Marvellous Thing.--When the cures effected by Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil are considered, the speedy and permanent relief it has brought to the suffering wherever it has been used, it must be regard- ed as a marvellous thing that so potent a medicine should result from the six ingredients which en- ter into its composition. A trial will convince the most skeptical of its healing virtues. IT WOULD BE APPRECIATED. "What reform are you interested in now?' "Pm advoeating that people be paid double for the work they do when they don't feel like working." ------ a 'EAS FRZEMA CURED 'Byer since I was 2 little girl, thirty years ego, I had suffered tortures from eczema in one of its worst forms. The disease runs in my family, and mine was of a scaly and most disfiguring kind. The eczema formed im round rings, and then scales all over my face and limbs, I have been smothered from head to foot. Iwas bern Leamington, which is famous for its sulphur baths and pum waters, and one would think that after taking the treatment there reg- ularly as did, the disease would jong. ago bave been cured, but it was not. I attended the Hospital for years and years, so you will see I gave it a fair trial. Everyone in the town knew of my case. My face was disfigured very badly. A doctor told me that I should never get rid of it, I spent poss in doctors' bills, and I attended severa: hospitals but nothing did any good. Then one day an uncle of mine recom- mended the Cuticura Remedies. I took his advice, and commenced to use the Cuticura Soap. To my astonishment an improvement at once set in, and my hair, which had been a complete mass of scales and_scurf, soon began to look in splendid condition, Then I bought a box of Cuticura Ointment, and this cleared my skin wonderfully. In a few weeks' time all traces of the scaly eruptions had completely disappeared. Now my skin is clear and healthy, and thanks to the Cuti- cura Remedies I am completely cured of eczema. All my neighbours were astounded. The Cuticura Remedies are worth their weight in gold, and one tablet of Cuticura Soap goes further than four cakes of cheaper soaps. It has brought happiness into my home.'? (Signed) Mrs. Butler, 17, Francis Rd., The Cotterride, King's 'Norton, Bir- mingham, Eng., July 26, 1910. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold every= where, but those who wish to try them without charge may do so by sending to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., 62 Columbus Aye., Boston, U. 8. A., for a liberal sample rf each. post-free, with 32-p. skin book. DAILY DIET FOR SCHOOLBOYS The Meals Should Be Regular and Unhurried. The subject of school feeding, on which a conference is to be held at the London (England) Guildhall, was discussed recently by a promi- nent London physiologist. "As to the actual amount of food a schoolboy needs, the appetite is the safest guide,'? he stated. "Four meals a day are required. Breakfast is always an important meal with the schoolboy (particu- larly if he has had a light supper the night before), and it should be a full, hearty meal. "Tt may begin with a moderate dish of porridge, with plenty of su- gar and rich milk; after this eggs and bacon, or fish, plenty of bread and butter, weak tea (made with hot milk) and a moderate amount of marmalade. A raw apple makes an excellent ending for breakfast. By 11 o'clock a rusk or dry biscuit and a glass of cold milk will proba- bly be appreciated. "Pinner at 1 o'clock should be the heavy meal of the day and should combine a generous amount of all the three important food ele- ments--proteins (meats and cheese), fats and carbohydrates (starches and sugars). Vegetable soups, roast or boiled butcher's meats, green vegetables and potatoes, and a pudding or cold sweet form a rea- sonable menu, The child should drink water with his dinner, not milk, as the latter when taken with heavy food retards digestion. 'Tea, should be served about four hours after dinner, and should con- sist of very weak tea or cocoa or cold milk, with as much bread and butter as the child will eat, and perhaps a little cake. Supper should be confined to a glass of milk and a biscuit or two and served at about half-past seven, to prevent the child from going to bed with an empty stomach. 'Regularity of meal times, and plenty of time over the meals (to prevent the 'bolting' of food) are also of the utmost importance if the full benefit of the food is to be ob- tained. RA A LITTLE TOO LITTLE. More failures result from adver- tising a little too little than a little too much. ~ Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial is a speedy cure for dysen- tery, diarrhoea, cholera, summer complaint, sea sickness and com- plaints incidental to children teeth- ing. It gives immediate relief to those suffering from the effects of jndiscretion in eating unripe fruit, cucumbers, etc. It acts with won- derful rapidity and never fails to conquer the disease. No one need fear cholera if they have a bottle of this medicine convenient. Capital punishment was abolish- ed in Italy in 1888. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Ete. "My daughter Gladys has become quite an elocutionist."" '"Yes,"' peevishly replied the next-door neighbor, "so I hear!"' Complete in itself, Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator does not require the assistance of any other medicine to make it effective. It does not fail to do its work. y esedbees ce Tar PAST AND DONE WITH. Dark was the night, save for the light of the stars; and the sea ran wild. The skipper stood on his bridge, and beside him was the boy. (Note --not the boy on the burning deck, but another.) : 'Here, my lad," said the skipper, "you take the wheel. I'll be back in a few minutes. Just-you steer by that star up there, and you'll be all right." The boy did so, and for' a few minutes all was well. Then, of course, he muddled thinks, and pre- sently the appointed star was shin- ing at the stern of the boat, instead. of ahead. Then the lad raised his youthful voice, and shouted excitedly : "T say, sir, come and give me an- other star. I've passed that one!" "FUSER | LEAGUE FOR DOMESTIC BLISS English Clergyman 'Would Form Clubs of 'Peacemakers. eS tion of domestic happiness is the 'latest proposal for England. It has for its promoters a few northern clergymen who have been impress- ed by the etraordinary number of couples in their parishes who have obtained separation orders from the magistrates because of domestic strife. The idea of the clerics is that magistrates are too accommodating to applicants chafing under the matrimonial harness, and if ef- forts were made to subdue domestic breezes they would mostly be pre- vented from developing into gales. So this league is to organize minis- ters of all denominations and kind Christians of both sexes to act as peacemakers. They will take their respective parishes under survey and in cases of household strife where the husband is at fault, the member of the league most likely to influence him will be selected to intervene and subsequently keep an eye on the culprit. If the wife is the offender then some sympathetic woman will plead with her. Most prominent workers among the poor, especially in the north, call these separation orders among the working class. equivalent to divorce, the latter being too ex- pensive for them to obtain. The consequence is they have no real freedom, and looseness of morals is the result. In industrial centres, where both husband and wife are wage-earners, this is! especially the case. Lancashire alone has 25,000 people separated by law, but not free to re-marry. i WIRELESS WITHOUT SPARKS. French Engineer's Discovery Will Cheapen Present System. The Paris (France) Matin an- mounces that a system of wireless telegraphy without sparks has been invented by a young French engi- neer, Julien Bethenod, one of the favorite pupils of the late Henri Poincare, and a personal friend of the wireless pioneer, Branly. By Bethenod's invention it is said to be possible to establish wireless stations in close proximity to one another without the messages be- ing confused, and that by an auto- matic system of perforated bands, it is also possible to exchange com- munications at a maximum speed of 200 words a minute, ten times faster than by submarine cables and ten times less expensively. Other advantages are greater simplicity of installation and cheap- ness, each wireless station costing hardly more than $200,000. The dis- covery also makes wireless tele- phony still more possible. With a spark, only 2,000 oscillations per second can be reduced, while the human voice can go to 20,000 vibra- tions. By sparkless wireless tele- phony, 20,000 oscillations per sec- ond can be produced. Da - A Safe Pill for Sufferers.--There are pills that violently purge and fill the stomach and intestines with pain. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are mild and effective. They are purely vegetable, no mineral pur- gative entering into their composi- tion and their effect is soothing and beneficial. Try them and be con vineed. Thousands can attest their great curative qualities because thousands owe their health and strength to timely use of this most excellent medicine. WELL, HE BECAME S80. A national league for the promo-. -NA-DR opium or any ~ stop them in. quick your Druggist's. NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL Co. ~ You cannot afford brain-befogging } ileadache Wafers _ me_and clear your head. They -- do not contain either phenacetin, acetanilid, morphine, other dangerous drug. 25c. a box oF CANADA, LimiTeD, Compare it ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINERIES LIMITED, Take A Handiol @l "St. Lawrence" Sugar -- Out To The Store Door -- --out where the light can fall on it--and see the _ brilliant, diamond-like | sparkle the pure white -- color, of every grain. That's the way to test § any sugar -- that's the way we hope you willtest -- St with any other sugar--compare its pure, white sparkle--its even grain--its matchlesssweetness, Better stilt, get a 20 pound or roo pound bag at your grocer's and test "St. Lawrence Sugar" in your home, MONTREAL. Te Anti-Dust} disinfectant sweeping powder, is a life-pre- server because it kills all disease germs. Floors clean; pets bright; home fresh and sweet. No car- dust while sweeping. Ask your Dealer for it. MacLaren Imperial Cheese Co. - L imited Sole distributors for Ontario THE SAPHO MFC, CO., Limited Montreal and Station Agents' work in all its details are inoluded in the Central Telegraph School, 2 Ger- rard St. E., Toronto, Correspond- ence invited. T. J. Johnston, Prin. | | "ethg* / course of training includedin The §\ { | | W. H. Shaw, President. ql '| | Every Palr Insured 365 days against breakage Cords slide when you move. No pulleys, no harness--just comfort ! Geovise stamped "EZE" on buckles, 50c. at Dealers or postpaid for 50c. (PRONOUNCED EASY) SUSPENDERS THE KING SUSPENDER CO. TORONTO, CAN, NOT TO BE CAUGHT. "Now, gentlemen !"' called the "Children,"? asked the visitor who was addressing the school, 'chow many of you can tell me what it was that Napoleon's soldiers used to call him?' Nobody answered. 'Think a moment, 'Little--' "' Still nobody spoke up. " "Tittle Corp-- " "(A little corpulent !" shouted the children. Baltimore, Md., Nov. 11, 1903. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Sirs,--I came across: a bottle of your MINARD'S LINIMENT in the hands of one of the students at the University of Maryland, and he being so kind as to let me use it for a very bad sprain, which I obtained in training for foot races, and to say that it helped me would be putting it very mildly, and I therefore ask if you would let me know of one of your agents that is closest to Baltimore so that I ma obtain some of it. Thanking you in ad- vance I remain, Yours truly, W. C. McCUEAN. 14 St. Paul street, Care Oliver Typewriter Co. Pp. S8.--Kindly answer at once, Manitoba, which contains nearly thirty million acres of arable land, has only one-sixth of this amount under cultivation. Warts will render the prettiest hands unsightly. Clear the excres- cences away by using Holloway's Gorn Cure, which acts thoroughly and painlessly. Few people really care for the an- swer to any question they ask. Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. 'Women are braver than men," said Mrs. Nagg. "In what way fhe demanded Mr. Nagg. "You never heard of a man marrying a woman to reform her," replied Mrs. Nagg. 'to say about the watch he was sel- Regularity of the bowels is an absolute neces- sity for good health. Unless the waste matter from the food which collects there is got rid of at least once a day, it decays and poisons the whole Sado: causing biliousness, indi- gestion and-sick headaches, Salts and other harsh mineral purgatives irritate the delicate lining of the bowels. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills--entirely vegetable -- regulate the bowels effectively without weak- ening, sickening or griping. Use Dr. Morse's "" Indian Root Pills | quickly. auctioneer hoarsely, as he held up a suspiciously yellow "gold" watch. "What offers for this--this beauti- ful chronometer? Guaranteed sound in wind and li--er--warrant- ed to keep good time--er--and--" Even he couldn't think of things ling. "Please may I bid?' called a modest young man quickly, from the back of the room. "Qertainly, my dear sir--cer- tainly !" replied the auctioneer de- lightedly. All eyes turned quickly to the spot where stood the auctioneer's innocent victim. Well, then,"' said man composedly, 'Tl good-night !" the young bid you-- --_---- Sleeplessness.--Sleep is the great restorer and to be deprived of it is vital loss. . Whatever may be the cause. of it, indigestion, nervous derangement or mental worry, try a course of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. By regulating the action of the stomach, where the trouble lies, they will restore normal ecoh- ditions and healthful sleep will fol- low. They exert a sedative force upon the nerves and where there is unrest they bring rest. Many a little man carries around ELEGRAPHY) FARMS FOR SALE. : H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Strest, _ Toronto. } UNDRED AORES--COUNTY HALTON) : Good House; Buildings; Orchard. Cheap and on easy terms, . NEVENTY-SIX ACRES WITH GOOD buildings and apple orchard; about five miles from Hamilton. H. W. DAWSON, Toronto. MALE HELP WANTED. ¥: OU CAN BASILY EARN $60 TO 875 -- monthly after attending here six. months. We teach railway station work | for Canadian Railways. Free Book 18 ex- plains work and wages. Dominion School Railroading, Toronto, CAS TUMORS, LUMPS, eto. In- ternal and external cured withont -- pain by our home treatment. Write us -- before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co. -- Limited Collingwood. Ont. CLEANING LADIES' WALKING OR OUTING SUITS -- Oan be done perfeotly by our French process, Try it British American Dyeing Co. Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa and Quebeo LAN GDMUIER'S ORBEOSOTE Shin gileStains Protect ------ Preserve -- Beautify Samples and Booklets on Application JAMES LANCMUIR & CO., Limited 1874} Bathurst Street TORONTO ™* =a MISCELLANEOUS. DYES sO EASILY With Maypole ior there is no trouble and no muss in home dyeing. Dyes cotton, isan § silk or mixtures. 24 colors-will give any shade. Colors 10c. Black 15c--at your dealer's or postpaid with booklet "How to Dye" from \__F. L. BENEDICT & CO. Montreal) REGARD OF APPEARANCES. Caller--I understand there are several vacancies in your working | staff, and I should like a job as so- | licitor. President of Life Insurance Com- pany--Begging your pardon for my seeming rudeness, young man, you are too skinny and cadaverous to be a good walking advertisement for an institution like ours, Good morning. { Maypole Soap MOTHERS! That when you put a salve onto your child's skin, it passes through the pores -- and enters the blood, just -- as surely as if you put it into the child's stomach? You would not put a coarse mass of animal fat, colored by various mineral poisons (such as many crude salves are) into your child's blood by way of the stomach? Then why do a big opinion of himself. Animent Relieves Neuralgia, WORSE AND WORSE. "Yes,'? said the prospective mis- Minarc" industry--"yes, I think you'll suit me very well as housemaid, But there's one little point--your name. Daphne strikes me as being ravher too fanciful for a maid. I have sev- eral young men boarding here, and such a name might make them friv- olous. I hope you don't mind being called by your surname?' The applicant bowed her head in assent. { "Qertainly not, .mum," she said "Pact is, Pm used to it from the gentlemen." "Why, what is it?" "Darling, mum," said the appli cant softly. so by way of the pores? Take no ritk, Use always the ure herbal essences provided in am-Buk. Zam-Buk contains tress agreeably after she had asked | § very personal questions as to the | applicant's honesty, sobriety, and | no trace of any antmal eil or fat, and no poisonous mineral color- ing matter. From start to finish it is purely herbal. ' It wiil heal sores, wicers, absces- _ ses, eruptions, varicose olcers, ff cuts, burns and bruises more quickly than any other krown preparation, It antiseptic, quickly stops the of a sore or cut, cures Sy sores and blood-potsoning, It is a combination of is werand scientilic purity. t who All druggists and stores 600 bow or have proved ft. Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price. --