HOW 10 CURE The Common Cause is Lack of Blood-- Therefore You Must Build up the Blood Trere is the most intimate rela- tiea between the condition of the food and the activity of the sto- mach. The blood depends upon the stomach for a large part of its noyrishment, while every act of digestion, from the time the food enters the stomach and is: assimi- lated by the blood needs plenty of pure well-oxidized blood, The muscles, glands and nerves of the stomach work only according to the quality of the blood, The most common cause of indi- gestion is lack of rich, red blood. Not only does impure 'blood weaken. the muscles of the stomach, but it lessens the product of the glands of the intestines and stomach, which furnish the digestive fluids. Noth- ing will more promptly cure indi- gestion than plenty of pure blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are ithe safesb and most certain blood- builder. A thorough trial of these pills gives a hearty appetite, per- fect digestion, strength and health. Here is proof of the value of these Pills in cases of indigestion. Mrs. Alfred Austin, Varna, Ont., says: "My System became run-down and my stomach very weak. I had no desire for food and what I did take caused me great distress, and did not afford me nourishment, and I was gradually growing weaker, and could scarcely do any work at all. I did net sleep soundly at night, and would wake up not at all re- freshed and with a feeling of dread Some years previously I" had used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills with much benefit, and this decided me to again try them. + My confidence was not misplaced, as by the time I had used six boxes I was again feeling quite well."' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or will be sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by sending to The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. ye WHEN MAKING COMBS. Materials Used and How These Articles Are Manufactured. *The essential materials of the regular combmaker are horn and hoofs, while tortoiseshell is often used. Horn and hoofs can now be so excellenly made in imitation of tortoiseshell that the Jatter quite naturally is not in such demand as it used to be. The first step in comb-making is the cutting of the horny material into segments of a fit size. After being cut in lengthsa horn possessing a large diameter has to be divided again transversely. The hoofs are boiled before cutting, which renders them softer and therefore easier to cut in two. They are next conveyed to the pressing- floor, an apartment fixed up with furnaces. Rendered pliable by the action of the heat they are flattened out in the hands of the workmen and cut to shape with knives. After being inserted -in -- stout blocks while still hot they cool in sthe form of a. flat plate. These plates are next taken to the stock- room, which is kept at a high tem- perature by means of steam or hot- air flues, with the object of drying or hardening, and here they are trimmed to shape, while the portion that is to be toothed is cut to a straight-edge. The teeth are cut by circular saws moving with inconceivable rapidity. When the teeth are tapered to a point and rounded, the finishers smooth the whole article to prevent it from catching in the hair. ie Asx for Minard's and take no other. Spoiled the Job. _ Howell--When you want a thing done right, do it yourself. Powell--I guess that's good ad- vice; I never got a fellow to lie for me when he didn't make a mess of it. BABY COVERED. WAT RASH From Head to Foot. Itched and Burned, Disfiguring. Face and Arms Worst. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment Cured, ---------- Legere Corner, Moncton, N. B.-- " When my baby was five months old he had a rash which used to trouble him very much, The rash was very bad and ho was covered from head to foot. I got no rest day or night with him. It would itch and burn so much that he used to scratch till ho used to bring the blood and then it would turn to a mattery Tho worst was hie face and arms. "1 tried a good many different salves and soaps but to no uso; he got no better. But after a while I thought I would try Cuticura Soap and Ointment and had only used them two or three times when Isaw agreatchange. "Tho sores dried up and camo off and he was cured." (Signed) Mrs. George French, May 26, 1913. ¥For pimples and blackheads tho following 49.0, most effective and economical treatment: Gently smear the affected parts with Cuti- cura Ointment, on the end of the finger, but do net rub. Wash off the Cuticura Oint- mont in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water and continue bathing forsome min- ntes. This treatment is best on rising and retiring. At other times uso Cuticura Soap freely for tho tollet and bath, to assist in pre- -¥enting inflammation, irritation and clog- ging of the pores. Outicura Soap and Oint- _/ ment are sold everywhere. Fora liberal free sample of each, with 32-p. book, send post- ecard to Potter Drug & Chein. Corp., Depts D, Boston, U. 8. Ae STOMACH TROUBLE|$ sore which disfigured him. } foueeeeaeeasesesese ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN: England has several female foot- ball teams. _Mme. Petrova, the actress, de- signs her own gowns. a /The Japanese factories employ over 500,000 girls. ; Nearly 5,000: trained nurses are now earolled in the American Red Cross. Ane PWngland has a school where wo- men wre taught to run a farm by themselves. Queen Elena of Italy could earn $400 a week-as°'a champion swim- mer and prize shooter in vaudeville. England has over 22,000 barmaids of whom one half are between the ages of eighteen and 25. According to statistics the death rate amiong females is in every case lower than that of males. Boston has a woman whois ac- cumulating a fortune from buying and selling amtiques. Great Britain has over 38,000,000 women between the ages of twenty and fifty years who are unmarried. In Turkey every man except the Sultan is allowed to have threo wives, and the first wife rules over the others. In Cuba the National Congress of Mothers is working for baby-saving and providing school breakfasts for needy children. Over 1,200 servanits in France have been awarded a medal of honor for having served continuously for 30 years in one establishment. The town of Weedsport, N.Y., has. 65 widows who own property and are anxious to marry, but there is a shortage of bachelors in the town. Mrs. Mazzuchelli of Cormarthen, England, left a bequest in her will of $5 a year with which to pay for the cleaning of the marble on ber grave with soap and waiter. As far as known, Miss Ruth Buck, who has just taken ther place in the choir of a Philadelphia church, is the first blind singer in any vested choir in the world. In Islam a husband who desires a divorce has only to tell his wife to go three times, when she must get out without a protest, but the hus- band must give her a dowry. Denmark is going tio raise the age limit of female voters from. 21 to 30 years, and for those who desire to vote for members of the upper house of parliament to 35 years. The British Royal Commission, appointed to investigate the condi- tions in the civil.service, has, with regand to women, rejected the idea of their being treated on an equal- ity with men. In Poland schoolgirls are com- pelled by law to wear their hair away back from their faces and tied in the back with a brown hair rib- bon. They are alse forbidden to wear jewellery or corsets until they have been graduated. 4 TEETHING BABIES Teething time is usually a time of worry to mothers, It is usually accompanied by nervousness, stom- ach trouble and extreme fretful- ness. The mother can avoid all this; she can have her baby pass through the dangerous teething time without pain or crossness. Baby's Own Tablets are the moth- er's greatest friend at this time. They sweeten the stomach, regulate the bowels, allay feverishness which usually accompanies the coming of new teeth, and in this way make teething easy. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ra + _--____ ENGLISH BUTLER PASSES. National Type Vanishing From Bri- tish Empire. The English butler is rapidly dis- appearing into the shadowy past which is so closely peopled with ghosts of personalities. The rea- sons of his extinction are not far to seek. In fact, they were fully ex- plained in the daily press last week. People are limiting their extrava- gances in the old way in order to have more for the new. , The butler was no ordinary servant. He did not work by himself. An autocrat with a retinue of servants to minis- ter to his wamts, he was a luxury, and now, in an age when even the least decorative luxuries have be- come necessities, he is going. The comparatively cheaply paid parlor maid is taking his place. She can 'carve and she can valet, and she requires no retinue. The butler is going out. 'All this is. a sign of the times, and like most signs of the times, very sad. The present generation just knows tthe butler because he was a great figure in the pageant of its youth, and we remember the people who dominated us in our childhood. But the generation of to-morrow will have no greater knowledge of the butler than of those romantic courtiers who rode ahout through the pages of Fielding and Smollett and Richardson and whoi aré to-day as dead as a doornail or any other article of domestic utility which ne- ver possessed a spark of life. Da Food In Mexico. Refugees in Mexico will be reduced by this time to subsisting on tortillas and frijolis, the staple food of the country. A tortilla is a flat cake of unleavened bread. The corn is soaked in lye to destroy the husk, and the grains are crushed into meal on a stone table with a stone rolling pin by hand. Mixed with water and bak- ed, there results a thin flat cake, which tears like blotting paper, and tastes about as pleasantly. These, with the frijolas or baked beans (either black or white) constitute the daily food, while meat, being cooked directly it is killed, is very tough, and is smother- éd in grease. - Ba Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. Found the Cause The Rest Was Easy DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS QUICK- LY CURED HIS KIDNEY > DISEASE. How Hudson Marchbank, After Suffering for Five Years, Found Quick Relief and Permanent Cure in the Greatest of Canadian « Remedies, ghee é "Marchbank, King's County, N.B., June Ist (Special).--After suffering for five years from kidney disease, brought on by a strain, Hudsoa Marchbank, Esq., the well-known farmer of this place, is again a strong, healthy man, and another grand cure for Dodd's Kidney Pills has been put on record. In an 'in- terview, Mr. Marchbank says: "About five years ago I hurt my back from lifting, and it developed into kidney disease. My back pain- ed me all the time, and I was very much troubled with headaches. My appetite was fitful: I had a bitter taste in my mouth in the mornings ; I perspired freely and my perspira- tion had a disagreeable odor. "T used liniments and plasters, but they did not do me any good, and as there were other symptoms that my kidneys were affected, I de- cided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. After using two boxes, my back was completely cured, and my kidneys have not troubled me since." When Mr. Marchbank decided that his kidneys were the cause of his troubles, the rest was easy. Almost any of his neighbors could tell him that Dodd's Kidizey Pills always cure diseased kidneys, WEIRD EXPERIENCES. ~ Famous Fifty-Thousand-Mile Tour In a Motor-Car. There are many ways of seeing the world, but perhaps the most thorough--certainly the most novel --way is by motor-car. Mr. Glid- den, in the article which appears in Pearson's Magazine, tells us of many weird experiences, and of some records made during his fam- ous 50,000-mile tour, one of which we quote :--"For 1,000 miles north of Stockholm we were the first mo- torists over the road, The entire drive from the southerly end of Sweden to the Arctic Circle--1,540 miles--was over roads which would compare favorably with a farmer's track from his barn to his hayfield. And everywhere we were greeted by unmanageable horses and cattle. Often occupants of carts abandoned them entirely at our approach and ran for shelter to the woods. North of the capital our route lay for 900 miles through the woods skirting the Gulf of Bothnia. Here loneli- ness reigned supreme, broken only by flocks of birds and small game crossing our path. In a distance of 125 miles we passed only three mail earts driven by small boys, and in another stretch of fifty miles we saw but one human being. But in every settlement crowds gathered to wit- ness the arrival of the first motor. The telephone is universal in Swe- den, and told our movements all along the route. Most children ran away in mortal terror as we came up; others stopped to ask such questions about the car as 'What do you call it?'--'Is it the machine which kills the people in France? It was on the morning of August 16th, 1903, with the thermometer at 45, when we left Hiaparanda for our last day's drive towards our objec- tive, the Arctic Circle--a drive of 75 miles over reindeer tracks. At the few settlements the Finns gath- ered to cheer us on the way. Fif- teen miles from the Circle, at Mar- ta-ren-gi, where is Sweden's most northerly church, we took on board Mr. Martinell, the postmas- ter of the district, who certified that our car was 'the first aubomo- bile to pass the Arctic Circle.' "' we HER MOTHER-IN-LAW Proved a Wise, Good Friend. A young woman found a wise, good friend in her mother-in-law, jokes notwithstanding. She writes: "T was greatly troubled with my stomach, complexion was blotchy and yellow. After meals I often suffered sharp pains and would have to lie down. My mother often told me it was the coffee I drank at meals. .But when I'd quit coffee I'd have a severe headache." (Tea con- tains the same poisonous drug, caf- feine, as coffee). "While visiting my mother-in-law I remarked that she always madie such good coffee, and asked her to tell me how. She laughed and told me it was easy tio make good 'coffee' when you use Postum. "T began to use Postum as soon as I got home, and now we have the same good 'coffee' (Postum) every day, and I have no more trouble. Indigestion is a thing of the past, and my complexion has cleared up beautifully. "My grandmother suffered a great deal with her stomach. Her doctor told her to leave off coffee. She then took tea, but that was just as bad. "She finally was induced to try Postum, which she has used for over a year. She travelled during.the winter visiting, something she had not been able to do for years. She says she owes her present good health to Postum." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read 'The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Postum now comes in two forms: | Regular Postum -- must be well boiled. 15¢ and 25¢ packages. Instant Postum--is a soluble pow- der. A teaspoonful dissolves quick- ly in & cup of hot water and, with eream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 50c tins. The cost per cup of both kinds is abiout the same. "There's a Reason'? for Postum. \ --Sold by Grocers. | ALYAREDO WAS SUSPICIOUS. A Fortune Wes Hidden in His Wife's Old Quiit. Many and varied are the methods women have worked out to save money, although it is only within the last 50 years that the average woman has had to consider the problem individually. With the coming of the pay envelope, espe- cially with its coming to young wo- men workers, questions of finance 'Jand investment have come to them. Some amusing variations of the broken nosed teapot as a savings | bank have come to light. There is the story of Pedro Alvaredo, the "peon millionaire' of Parral, Mex- tco, whose: mines yielded silver 50 fast that he could not spend it, though he bought pianos and Shet- land 'ponies by the carload, and all the metal work in the palace that stocd where his old adobe hut had once been built was of silver. -- Alvaredo had no faith in banks and kept great, quantities of cash in his house. Naturally much of this came into the hands of Senora Alvaredo. The senora had a special bed quilt which always covered her at night, and was never far away in the daytime. When the senora died her maid went to Alvaredo and asked for the quilt. But Alvaredo was supersti- tious and disliked to give anything away to which his wife had been so much attached. He offered the wo- man money instead, and though dollars were no longer flowing in at the rate of $30,000 a day he was generous in the matter. But the girl insisted that she would have no memorial of her mistress but the quilt. Finally, Alvaredo's suspicions were aroused and he ripped the quilt to pieces. It contained $30,- 000 in $1,000 notes. Among them was a letter from the senora saying that she had saved the money for her two sons, and directing that it be put in the bank to their credit. And now the young men are being educated in an American college upon the interest of their mother's savings. wie When a Woman Suffers With Chronic Backache There Is Trouble Ahead. Constantly on their feet, attending to the wants of a large and exacting family, women often break down with nervous exhaustion. In the stores, factories, and on a farm are weak, ailing women, dragged down with torturing backache and bearing down pains. Such suffering isn't natural, but it's dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys. The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptons of kidney complaint can't cure themselves, they require the assistance of Dr. Hamil- ton's Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble. To give vitality and power to the kidneys; to lend aid to the bladder and liver; to free the blood of poisons, probably there is no remedy so suc- cessful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For all womanly irregularities their merit is well known. Because of their mild, soothing, and healing effect, Dr. Hamilton's Pills are safe, and are recommended for girls and women of all ages. 25 cents per pox at ali dealers. Refuse any sub- stitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Man- drake and Butternut. ak ae Nees WOMEN WHO HUNT BIG GAME. Lady Hunter in London Tells of Jungle Thrills. Long hours of "stalking," wearisome nights spent sitting over a "kill" await- ing the return of a panther and endless miles on the back of an elephant through thick jungle in quest.of a tiger are amongst the incidents experienced by Mrs. Holmes, Tarn, who has just returned from India, whither she ac- companied her husband on a shooting expedition, says the London Standard. The pursuit of big game is a sport which is attracting numbers of women. The sportsman in India may shoot in two ways. There is the one which requires much preparation beforehand, when jungles are plentifully baited in advance with young buffalo to attract tigers to that spot ready for the guns, and there is the other when the sports- man chances his luck in a scratch beat, or a long stalk through the jungles, with a buffalo tied up at random on the chance of "drawing" a tiger. The latter method, more sporting, if also more arduous, was adopted by Mrs. Holmes- Tarn and her husband. Mrs. Holmes-Tarn's experiences of shooting are not, however, confined to India. She has probably had more all- round shooting experience than other women. "My first trip was to the Rocky Mountains,- in Wyoming State," she said. "It was a rough trip; sometimes we slept on the ground in the snow. We were after deer, wapiti and bears." Later the speaker went to Canada, where, amongst other animals, a moose and caribou fell to her rifle. Bast Africa is, however, her favorite hunting ground. A rhinoceros, shot with a .303 rifle, and an elephant and rhinoceros with a .400, are amongst her most prized African trophies. "I was trapping small animals for the British Museum that trip," remark- ed Mrs. Holmes-Tarn, "and managed to capture two new genera and ten rare species. Once when Mr. R. 5, Cuninghame and I were out after ele- phant we were lost for 24 hours, dined off a zebra's liver roasted on sticks and only reached camp thanks to the help of a friendly herdsman. Another time it was touch and go whether we were charged by a herd of elephants, put, fortunately, they stampeded in the opposite direction. To my mind there is no country like Hast Africa for shooting. Snap-shooting and stalking through the jungles in India may please people who have not shot arry- where else, but Hast Africa spoils you for other countries." Se Se ees. See A man went to a Judge and ask- ed whether he could bring suit for slander against a man who had called 'him a ¥hinoceros. "Why, eertainly," said the Judge. "When did he calY you that?' 'About three years ago.' '""Three years ago! And you only. start suit to- day!' 'But, your Honor, yester- day I saw a rhinoceros for the first tim Ce ? Tortures of Rheumatism 'Yield to This Remedy A Marvel of Speed, An Unfailing Cure For Old Chronic Cases. GET A TRIAL BOTTLE TO-DAY. With reliable old Nerviline you can rub out the pain of rheumatism, Scia- tica, Lumbago, or Neuralgia--rub it away so completely that you feel like new all over. : It matters not how deeply seated the pain is, or how long you have had it --rubbing with the king of all lini- ments "Nerviline" will cure you. Nerviline is highly _concentrated-- about five times stronger than the or- dinary white ammonia liniment-- therefore it penetrates quickly--sinks in deeply---and gets right at the core of the pain at once--draws out the lameness, takes away the stiffness-- eases the joints that Lave hurt you so much, : Out comes the pain every time you rub on Nerviline, which contains some of the most valuable pain-subduing remedies known to science. Worth its weight in gold to every family in,the land, and sure to cure the emergent and minor ills of a hundred kinds that constantly arise. Get the large 50c. family size bottle; small trial size 26c. Nerviline is sold by every dealer, ev- erywhere. ; ™s MODERN MONEY-BOXES. How the Safe-Maker Prepares for the Safe-Breaker. _Most people remember a sensa- tional attempt at safe burglary in London some months ago, when several men, with an equipment weighing over half a ton, spent a whole night trying to rob a safe that contained £80,000 worth of pearls, says London Answers. at big pear] merchant now an- nounces that he has procured a new safe guaranteed to baffle the world's most skilful safe-breakers. If so the news marks another step in the jong and Roe toesht duel _be- ween the safe-maker and ti 2- seats id the safe Till a few years ago a drill was good enough for safe-breaking. A hole was bored, and the powerful explosive nitro-glycerine inserted. The safe-makers retaliated by building their safes of "five-ply steel," i.e., of five layers of hard and soft steel sandwiched together. The hard layers will baffle the finest drill ever made, while the soft ones give the whole a springiness that makes the safe resist the shattering effect of a powerful explosive. 'The method of the scientific Mr. Sikes was to get a grip for his ex- plosive simply by scratching lines in the paint, and rubbing the nitro- glycerine--or, ashe calls it "soup" --in by the aid of a ball of clay or putty. Sometimes it was rubbed in- to the crack between the safe door and the jamb it is attached to. The safe-maker has replied by using as thin paint on his safes as possible, the thick edges where the door meets the jamb being left quite unpainted, The close fit that the newest safes have--a, fit that makes the insertion of '"'soup" absolutely impossible--is obtained by having the door and the lock ground actually into their seats. But the safe-breaker has refused to admit himself beaten. He hass discovered the uses of the oxy-ace- tylene blow-pipe, and regards the "soup"? operator as old-fashioned. The oxy-acetylene blow-pipe is a very simple, but tremendously pow- erful weapon. A tube from a cylin- der of oxygen and another from a cylinder of acetylene meet in a pipe. When the nozzle of this pipe is di- rected against a piece of metal, that metal promptly begins to run like candle-grease, even if it be the toughest steel. Every metal made must yield to the blow-pipe. All the safe-maker can do is to make the yielding as slow as possible. The newest safes are built.of manganese steel, the toughest as well as the hardest of all steels. Krupp's, it is said, are experi- menting with a steel still tougher than manganese--so tough, indeed, that some 4,000 gallons of oxygen, and 3,000 of acetylene will be neces- sary, as well as at least twelve hours' work, before the burglar can work through it. So the last word is emphatiaclly with the safe-maker. It is an interesting fact that now- adays all big safe-making firms carefully examine into the past his- tory of the men they engage, and keep them under close surveillance for years after they have left, as well as dividing the work up in such a way that no one man knows enough of their cherished secrets to be a valuable recruit to the safe- breaking brigade. "i EARNED $200,000 TO WIN HER. But President Poincaire Felt His Wife Was Worth It. Mme. Poincaire, wife of the Presi- dent of France, is at present a notable figure in the eyes of the people of that country, who. are recalling the romantic circumstances of her mar- riage to M. Poincaire. The latter, while.a young and by no means distinguished lawyer, met and fell in love with the charming daughter of a rich family. Alas for the young man's hopes, however, the stern parents of the girl demanded a settlement, of $200,000. Instead of weakly giving up and allowing some richer man to win her the plucky young man asked only for time--five years. Applying himself assiduously to his profession he succeeded in ac- cumulating the required amount and so winning the girl of his choice. Mme. Poincaire has the charm, the tact and the taste in dress that are ¢ommon to the women of France and she has been the guiding star of her husband's career. 'In. addition to her othét acconiplishments she is an ad- mirable housekeeper and looks after the Blysee home--the Presidential mansion--much the same as she did her own home. : Bes eee Keep Minard's Liniment in the house. FROM MERRY OLD ENGLAND NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOH BULL AND HIS PEOPLE. the - Reigns Supreme tn the Com: Occurrenees {n Land That merelal World. King George and Queen Mary opened the new wing of the British Museum on tthe 7th inst. A statue of Abraham Linecolo will be erected opposite Westminster Abbey in Lencon this year. 5 Tha British House of Lords re- jected the woman's franchise Bill last week by a vote of 104 to 60. The death is announced of Bro- ther James Bracegirdle, of Cheadle, Cheshire, who was the oldest Odd- fellow in England. Shadwell Fish Market, which proved a commercial failure, is now being laid out as riverside open space for East London. Some 6,000 school children, each carrying a Union Jack, will greet the King when he visits Leys School, Cambridge, to inaugurate a new wing. The Duke of Sutherland has pur- chased No. 39 Portman Square, London. The mansion was former- ly the residence of the late Viscount Tredegar. Mr. Matthew T. Fleming, of Fremnell's Billericay, Essex, and late of Glasgow, East India mer- chant, left, in addition to real es- tate, personal estate valued at £307,900. Dr. John Abercrombie died on the 30th ult. at Augill Castle, West- \moreland, after ceven months' ill- ness. He practised for many years in London, and retired to West- moreland some eight years ago. Mr. David McGill, the sculptor, is to be invited to execute the bronze medallion of Sydney Smith in the Parish Church att Foston-le Clay, Yorkshire, where the cele- brated wit minidtered for many years. The British coast is so well pro- tected with lighthouses that if ship sailed right round England, Scotland and Ireland by night only six occasions would be where it could not see the flash of a light- house lamtern. The charge for tobacco license amounts only to 5s. 2d. a year. The extent to which the trade has grown is shown by the fact thiat the num- ber of tobacco licenses has in- creased from 301,242 in 1890 to con- siderably over 400,000. The death took place at North- ampton on the 28th ult. of Mr. James Birt, who an 1884 won the safety bicycle championship of the world at the Royal Aquarium. The race Jasted six days, amd in one period of 48 hours Birt covered 630 miles, A Parliamentary paper states that at the end of 1913 the total num- ber of insured persons was 10,846,: 700 in England, 720,000 in Wales, 1,492,000 in Scotland and 700,700 in Jreland--making an aggregate for the United Kingdiom of 13,759,400. "Caecar,'? the favorite dog of the late King Edward, died on the 19th ult, It was an Irish terrier, and used to accompany King Edward on his railway journeys to different parts of the country. The dog wore, attached to its collar, a sil- ver medal inscribed, "I am 'Cac- sar,' the King's dog."' The Death Warrant Delivered No defence can be offered when you apply Putnam's to a sore corn--the of- fender has to die. to quickly eure corns as Putnam's Corn and Wart.Extractor; try Putnam's, it's free from acids, and painless. 25c. bot- tles sold by all dealers. ----_----_.._--_--- The man who gets the most of it seldom gets the best of it. Minaré's Liniment Lumberman's Friend Nothing so certain Highest grade beans kept whole and mealy by perfect baking, retaining their full strength. Flavored with delicious sauces. They have no equal. FARMS FOR SAL®. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Siraok Toranto. . ua. 7 YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A Frult, Stock, Grain, or Dairy Farm. write H. W. Daweon, Brampton, oF Colborne &t., Toronto. W. DAWSON, Colborne St. Toronta. AGENTS WANTED. j GENTS WANTHD, $6 TO $10 A day. Write Peerless Cooker & -- ms Specialty Co,, Berlin, NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. COD WEEKLY IN LIVE TOWN IN York County. Stationery and Book in connection. Ice only Wilson Publish- Business $4,000. Terms liberal. 78 West Adelaide Street ing Company, Toronto, MIGCELLANZOUS " ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETO. internal and external, cured with out pain by our home treatment. Write ue hefore too late. Dr. Bellman Mediaas Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Wanted q who understands horses ) In every district we want such a man Will pay VY $50 week Canadian Distributors, ce lLimired vancouver 6 C Sufficient Proof. She--"No, George, I am afraid I cannot marry you. I want a man who possesses a noble 'ambition ; whose heart is set on attaining some high and worthy object." He--'Well, don't I want you?" She--"Oh, George! I am yours!' YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Byes and Granulated Hyelids; No Smarting---- eae Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the Eye ymailFree. Murine Hye Remedy Co., Chicago. His Ailment. Mistress--What did the doctor say was the matter with you, Eras- tus ? Rastus--He say I got a torpedo libbal, ma'am. f Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gents,---I have used your Minard's Liniment in my family and also in my stables for years consider it the best medicine obtaimable. yout truly, ALFRED ROCHAY. Proprietor Roxton Pond Hotel and Livery Stables. She Understood Then. Applicant--No, ma'am, I couldn't work where there's children. Madam--But we advertised for a girl who understood children. Applicant--Oh, I understand 'em, ma'am. That's why I wouldn't work where they are. age are infected or * DISTEMPER Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any acts on the Blood and Glands, expels the poi Pink Hye. Epizootio, Shippin Fever and Catarrhal Porer. ™ "exposed." Liquid, given on the tongue. nous germs front the body. Cures Distemper in Dogs and Sheep, and Cholera ig Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy. Cures La Grippe , among human beings and is a fine kidney remedy. Cut this out.. Keep it, Show it to your druggist, who will get it for you. Free Booklet, "Distemper, Causes and Cures." DISTRIBUTORS--ALL WHOLESALE DRUCGISTS Spohn Moedicai Co... Chemists and Bactcristogts s,G $n61,1.d.U.$.8 Rebs at) ATE ee Cooking Oven, Toronto Quebec St. John HD. 4. ISSUE 23--14. YOU CAN SLEEP LATER i - And still breakfast on time by using a New Perfection si fo WA CIS TES LU BE ELAR Oil Cook-stove No fires to kindle--no wood or coal to muss with. Just . touch a match to the wick--then you haye all the heat you want, when you want it, Lessens the labor in the kitchen. 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes, and a new stove with Fireless All hardware and general stores. Use Royalite Oil for Best Results THE IMPERIAL OIL CO., Limited Winnipeg Helifax Montreal Vancouver