Monkton Times, 4 Sep 1919, p. 7

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RIS a : "| WHERE THE ICEBERGS eee ARE HATCHED. Stan 8 FOR SALE. : E WE wsrarer WEEKLY. IN BRUCB County Splendid opportunity. Write Rex T Wilsen Publishing Co.. Limited '2 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto. y ELL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER and job printing plant in Eastern 'ntario. Insurance carried $1,500. 'Will €o for $1.205 «nm quick sale. Box 62% Wilson Publishing Co.. Ltd... Toronto. 'It Works! Try It Tells how to loosen a sore, 'tender corn so it lifts : out without pain. ' The Oost of Detective Stores. -- A MOTHER'S TRI is - SNAKE KILLERS OF FRANCE, [| e~ rs Me atl ae as ™ | Obtain Five Cents Apiece For the t Reptiles They Destroy. - Tf one looks at an ordinary map; one is surprised to find that Greenland is considerably bigger than South Amert- ca. Which iliustrates the distortion of the Mercator projection, inasmuch It has been pointed out that the de- the Mayor, O-oka addressed the god tective stcry is as old as the hills and in stern terms:-- ys " F . »| "You are a negligent fool, O-Jizo!" ; aioe & Seaiea ae we "prebien Nienig 'he exclaimed in a voice loud enough forecast 'The' Murders Care of Home and Children Of- ten Causes a Breakdown. The woman at home, deep in house- In France there is a profession un- recognized in our own country. it is | that of the snake killer. in the Rue | - Morgue" and "A Study in Scarlet" by ~ thousand years or more. No better | for all to hear, "You are supposed to protect everyone who believes in you and who renders tribute, yet this as South America is actually about six times the size of Greenland. All the same, Greenland is the big- gest island in the world, and once up- hold duties and the cares of mother- ; hood, needs 'occasional' help to keep her in good health. The demands up- on a mother's health are many and /species of dangerous serpents--vipers and adders. It is these that are es- | pecially sought by the snake hunters. i France is much infested by aie | Good news spreads rapidly and drug- es FARMS FOR SALE. gists here are kept busy dispensing i freezone, the ether discovery of a Cin. | VERY INTELLIGENT FARMER <a of the jaunt os . ) trusting porter,here made a prayer to Bre dis ciate bee Ce aes you, then fell asleep at your very feet, fered by feudal Japan, -which pro- 27d he was robbed while he slept. duced the tale of the arrest of the! You stand. accused of being an ac- stone god Jizo. | complice' in this robbery. Have you In this folk story of ancient Yedo. aaty Gaviamnes for yourself vers I the hero detective moves with all the | P&S § : seeming indirection of Lecoq ay Der| Mayor O-oka waited for afew mo- pin and Sherlock Holmes his marvels | ments as if expecting the stony lips to perform. O-oka was he Mayor of of Jizo to open in re ae ite Kg : # : ot : returne the god he . wae 3 ang | ®28wer was returned. by Yedo under the eighth Shogun and! ahad. Welitetine: Miteiedintaty. ¥ hes , ic } ¢ , pa - Over all the menchants of Rekeeeney | "Since. you do hot defend. yourself z capiee 4 seP "11 consider that you are guilty," said One day a servant employed by the | His Honor, "an@I shall imprison you." ae proprietor of a big shop near Japan | At this remarkable spectacle of a Bridge in Yedo was sent with a heavy | Mayor passing sentence upon a stone pack to a dyer in Honjo distict. When , god there was a titter of laughter. the store's mossenger reached Yoko- | O-oka thundered in a voice of brass: -- gZawa street he was ready to seek rest. "Who \are all these people standing What more safe inyention could Rave about here?" he inquired of his court offered than the little grove of trees | os opal be vee sheer Tk id -_ set about the stone statue of the god / uh PAE na mone Pay ss :] st Jizo, the patron saint of travelers and | think this cougt is a Peng 8 poten _ defenceless women and children? they laugh at the court's orders. likes my terms. Why? Because I do not want exclusive sale or anyrad- vantage over any other agent. All I ask is for a correct and truthful deseription of your property; AB Son price -and terms, and I will do the fest. Write for listing form. Andrew Plder, the Farm Seller. 88 King Street East, Toronto. --_--_--- ae cinnati man, which is said to loosen | any corn so it lifts out with the fingers. : Ask at any pharmacy fora quarter ounce of freezone, which will cost very little, but is said to be suffitient to rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn or,callus. } i : You apply just a few drops on the tender, aching corn and instantly the soreness is relieved. and soon the corn is so shriveled that it lifts ont with- out pain. It is a" sticky substance which dries when applied and never inflames or even irritates the adjoin. |. ing tissue. i LASSY RABBIT MAGAZINE, Pt This discovery will prevent thou- | Mohenis. seeienea eB cat sands of deaths annually from lock: | z jaw and infection heretofore resulting | from the suicidal habit of cutting | corns. ; * He wears leather leggings for pro-, tection against bites, and the instru- ments of his craft are of the simplest. The' latter consist. most importantly of two sticks, one of which is forked. Rocks warmed up hy the sun, sandy places in wooded areas, muddy banks .of ponds----such are the places most ! likely to be haunted by the reptilian" game. ; Descrying his prey, the hunter ap- proaches noiselessly. When within | range, he strikes the snake with the | stick he holds in his right hand. In- stantly thereupon he pins it down with the other stick, which is forked. Quickness is the prime essential to success in this kind of chase, Vipers and adders are swift of movement and ready to take alarm. But once pinned to the ground the creature is readily decapitated with a sharp knife. The snake hunters are called "vi- percides.' They get five cents apiece for the snakes they kill, delivering the cn a time it must have been a pleasant | Severe. Her own health trials and ' ils fe | 'hi ; lfare exact heavy ace fve in. Plant fossils found | her children's we ti aig ice pene it had a / toils, while hurried meals, broken rest tropical climate ; : and much indoor living tend to weak- Butt nies trae Bode ak very long | € her constitution. No wonder that tite 'ago, for to-day nearly the whole | the woman at home is often indisposed of Greenland is covered by an tee through weakness, headaches, back- sheet with an average thicknéss of un tee See sine ec tain range | Women e ae ee eee ee =! visitations as a part of the lot of two miles high most of the great is- : : 1 as rd and westward motherhood. But many and varied : eee her health troubles are, the cause is a Davis Strait, : gs dig dae! Saag cas : simple and the cure at hand. When x is continuall : wee a ieee ee . well, it is the woman's good blood: that moving in that direction. : phe 2 merous is-| Keeps her well; when ill she must be ¥ 2.8 Resale pete make her blood rich to renew her lands and, as the ice sheet forces its Z hae a way between them, it is, ripped to| health. The nursing mother more pieces Huge fragments drop off than any other woman in the world : 5 i lenty of it. - call icebergs, and needs rich blood and ple eee ee : There is one always unfailing way to me set. a or cal nag get this good blood so necessary to é ividual ice- | 8© sesh thain 776 sed pean can eae toee perfect health, and that is through the 4 " accident- i a leaked mae os , use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, These al circumstances. It may run ashore | US pe on Baffin Island (the west side of! Pills make new blood abundantly, and through, their use thousands of weak, POULTRY WANTED Vy nat HAVE YOU FOR SALB IN Live Poultry. Fancy Hens. Pigeons. Ege ete.? Write I. Weinrauch & Son, 10-18 St. Jean Haptiste Market, Mont- real, Que. 'MISCELLANEOUS. NANCE TUMORS. LUMPS. ETC. internal and ectecneh. cured wee out pain by our home treatmen { ts before too late. Dr. Bellman Medicas ee »| Co. Limited, Collingwood, Ont =, Entirely Free. All grades. Write for prices. "You sign this deed of your own free will, do you, madam?" asked the law- f yer. "What do you mean by that?" de-! The somnolent porter awoke from Shut all the gates 'at 'once. a°nap to find that his employer's cot- ton had disappeared: In great dis- tress he went to the storeWeeper and onfessed that he had slept and that a robber had made off with the goods during his slumber. The master would not believe his story, saving that it would have been impossible for a robber to make off with go large & bundle in broad daylight. Unless the porter should pay for the lost | goods he would have to go to prison, | said the master. In despair the por- ter took counsel of Mayor O-oka. "You are certainly to blame for hav- . ing fallen asleep," gaid the Mayor, "but Jizo is equally to blame, for he is a god bound to protect everyone who trusts him and this time he has betrayed you. Even though Jizo is a _ Buddha, I cannot pardon him for his neglect of duty. I will have him ar- rested and brought before me for trial." $0 O-oka gave immediate orders to his court officers to go and arrest Jizo. | of Yokogawa Stxeet, and bring him | before the Mayor's geat for trial. Three of the officers departed on their ' mission. They first bound the arms of the stone god with coils of rope; then they tried to lift him from his firm pedestal into a cart. A great | - crowd assémbied before the Jizo, at-! tracted by the unusual behavior of the court officers. When they were told that Jizd must go before the F May for trial, the citizens of Yoko- sawa Street and the neighborhood of Honjo marveled. The task of unseating the god was ee much for the three officers, and Y sought aid of those standing | about. They promised that in return | for assistance they would admit all volunteer workers into the courtroom to witness the extraordinary trial. Hundreds were spurred by curiosity to lend a hand, and when the stone god went through the streets strapped to a cart like any offender the crowd grew. It filled the great hall of justice when Jizo was lifted.in and propped up before the platform upon which sat | | | { | | ' { { | } The frightened attendants hastened to shut the gates of the court-room. Then Mayor O-oka adjudged every man in the great crowd in contempt of court_and fined each of them one tan (a kimono length) of cotton cloth. The hundre thus suddenly found in | contempt were happy that their pun- ishment had been so light at least, and under bonds they hurried to their homes to bring back the cloth fine. Before the day was done 700 pieces of cotton cloth had been presented be- fore the Mayor's court, the name of each culprit being set down upon the tan of cotton cloth which he present- ed. Before he would allow the 700 to go, however, O-oka retired with the por- 'ter who had been robbed to an inner chamber and he asked the porter to look over the 700 pieces of cloth and see if he could identify any of them as having been once mn the pack he had carried. Since every manufac- turer of cotton cloth in Yedo always marked thé selvage of each strip with , & little red trade-mark stamp the por- ter searched the edges of many stripes of cloth for a stamp similar to that borne upon the cloth of which he had been robbed. He found that two of | the pieces of cloth brought to pay the Mayor's fine bore the stamp of his plundered pack. Instantly, Mayor O-oka ordered the arrest of the two | men who had brought this cloth; they confessed to the robbery, and all the cloth they had taken from the sleep- ing porter's pack was restored to him. All the other pieces of cloth, taken in toll by the Mayor, were restored to their owners, and all but the two guilty members of the crowd which had attended the trial of Jizo were re- leased. Then Jizo, the stone god, was put on a cart, wreathed with the ever- green pine and the bamboo, symbols of long life and prosperity, and he was carried back to his pedestal in Yoko- gawa Street at the head of a triumph- al procession. Jizo had vindicated himself, and Mayor Q-oka the wise sat more firmly than ever in his seat of power, Se Fighting a Food Shortage 4) : Cold weather came before my beay- er neighbors had laid in their food supplies for the winter, says a na- turalist. A forest fire drove them out of their old home, and they selected a new site on a stream not far from my cabin. Along the stream was a ragged growth of quaking aspens. The beavers built a house of sticks, sod and mud, and were working on a dam when a trapper came into the region. He broke the dam three or four times. When he finally left, autumn was half - gone, the dam that was to make the pond .deep enough to prevent the water from freezing to.the bottom was unfinished, and no food had been --gtored. : Late in October I visited the new wilderness home. One crew of log- _ gers were cutting aspens. They had cleared a trailway to drag the wood through to the pond. The beavers had not finished their harvesting ame a heavy fall of snow came, and y were compelled to turn their at- tention to a patch of aspens that was only about sixty feet from the pond but was separated from it by a thick elt of pines and a confusion of fallen spruce logs, -- ; Tracks' in the snow showed that uring one night five beavers had wallowed out to the aspens and had felled and dragged several trees to _ the pond; but wolves had pounced on one of them while he was at work, and had overtaken and killed another the deep snow. The wolves seemed to realize the distress of the beavers, and lurked about to seize the hunger- driven animals, At that point in the struggle the beavers decided to build a tunnel. Beginning at the bottom of the pond near the shore, they dug outward toward the aspen grove. For fifteen feet that subway ran about two feet under the surface, then it in- clined upward, and came out wnder a pine tree close to the aspens. They built a dragway from the end of the tunnel to the aspens and felled a nuw- ber and worked them through the tunnel to the pond. At last cold, ice,-snow and fear of enemies completely stopped the beavers' harvest. Their food supply, as seen through the clear ice, was less than one half the normal quantity and they began to burrow in the pond for roots and bulbs. Again the cold prevented their work, for the low water froze to the bottom and shut them off. They were not beaten, how- ever. They dug a canal from their house to the hearf of the root area, and kept it open. When the roots gave out, they had to leave the pond or starve. They tried to gnaw up through the ice, and nearly succeed- ed; but they discovered unfrozen earth under the dam and tunneled out. to the channel of the stream. _ Tracks of six muddy-footed beavers 'on the snow at the outer end of the completed tunnel told the number that survived that cold winter. They lived in holes along the bank of the stream. until warm weather, when they ~ drifted away. Late the next autumn six beavers came back to the' pond and put it in shape for winter, ----a--_ A new crutch has a spring concealed in the lower end to take up the shock as it strikes the ground. : If some folks would use their threshing machines earlier, the boys would not have so many wild oats to harvest later on. Z | Instead of | * ue Colas ' a te buy a tin of the healthful table beverage or Fer. i 'ANT aan The quality is constant and the er Tieh, even flavor pleases. Raise in Price s, Rees POSTUM. ate at ge K ks te ia | by Ceirog Hughes. -{anthem is by Brinley Richards. Davis Strait) or on the coast of Lab- rador, further south. If it escapes this fate, its passage southward through the strait will be/very slow, because it must plow its way through field ice many feet thick. The lueky iceberg is one that man- ages to keep in the main channel and is carried southward by the Labrador current into the north Atlantie. Once arrived in that region of open sea it may drift about for many months be- fore going to: pieces, Large bergs have on occasions got as far as the Azores. A sizeable berg may have nearly vertical walls 100 feet high, with pin- nacles towering. to twice that eleva- tion. Often these floating mountains of ice have very fantastic shapes. It is not all safe for a ship to go near one, for huge fragments sometimes fall off, and it is no uncommon thing for an iceberg suddenly to turn up- side down. The period of danger from icebergs is April, May and June. a EO ee WE ARE IN LUCK r THAT AIR IS FREE. When the Steel Trust was organized Andrew Carnegie remarked that the common stock was not even water; it was. "just air." . This same "air" has become worth something since then. If you want any of it, you must pay for it at the rate of $113. a share. Ordinary air, thank goodness! has not gone up in price. It is about the only thing that has not done so. Even the automobile garages advertise "free-air." This is really very fortunate, be- cause we need air not only to breathe, but also for fuel. We keep the house warm in winter, and the range going, by burning air. You thought it was coal? Well, that is necessary alsu, but the coal would be of no use as fuel unless you had air to burn with it. You can't burn one thing. Burning, in kitchen-range or furnace, means the' coming together of the oxygen of the air and the carbon of the coal. They effect a chemical combination. The air is just as necessary to the process of combustion as the coal. Our attenton is fixed upon coal as the fuel for the sole reason that we have to pay for it. If coal were free and air cost money, we should look at the matter from an opposite point of view. Everything else is taxed nowadays, Suppose the government were to take a notion to put a tax on air, placing an air-meter in each dwelling. Would not that be horrible? There has long been a tax on fresh air in Germany. It is called a '"win- dow tax," being assessed according to the number of windows with which a house is provided. The result is that people economize on windows, reduc- ing the number to a minimum, and their allowance of fresh air is there- by cut down, Air is much heavier stuff than is commonly imagined. Thirteen cubic feet of it weigh a pound. But it is lucky we are not obliged to store it, like coal, for it would take up a lot of room. One ton (2,000 pounds) of air will fill a bin thirty feet long, thirty feet wide and thirty feet high. np cc God Bless the Prince of Wales. Among our ancient mountains And from our lovely vales O let the prayer re-echo, "God bless the Prince of Wales!" With heartened voice awaken - Those minstrel strains of yore Till Britain's name and glory Resound from shore to shore. Aniong our ancient mountains And from our lovely vales, O let the prayer re-echo, "God bless the Prince of Wales!" Should hostile bands or danger E'er threaten our fair isle, May God's strong arm protect us, May Heaven still on us smile. Above the throne of England May Fortune's star long shine, - And round its ancient bulwarks The olive branches twine. Among our ancient, ete. A Welsh translation of the words ; of the Prince's Anthem, which were written by George Linley, were made The music of the Sanne one 'A Pagan Fashion. The fashion of keeping little dogs as objects of fuxury is not at all modern. Both Greek and Roman wo- men used to have small pet dogs, over which they made as much to do as does a fashionable lady of to-day over her poodle, fiver men, usually foreigners, were not ashamed to stroll about the Ro- man streets carrying dogs in their arms, It is said that Julius Caesar, once seeing some men thus oceupied, sarcasticalsy inquired of them if the women of their country had no child- Ten, a z : ailing wives and mothers have been! made bright, cheerful and strong. If you are ailing, easily tired, or depress- ed, it is a duty you owe yourself and your family to give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair trial. What this medicine has done for others it. will surely do for you. -- An Ode to Health. Health in. itself petual joy. Nothing daunts, nothing over-awes, nothing discourages, and nothing over- powers the man and woman possessed of health. , Health means not only vigor and energy of the body, but also clarity and strength of mind, purity of body and of soul. ae The healthy person. domipates life, instead of allowing life to dominate him. He scarcely thinks of his body as consisting of parts, or as performing separate functions. To him the body is but one. harmonious whole, He is a unit, a being, a man; plete, vigorous, perfect. To such a man work is joy. He re- gards obstacles as but opportunities for testing his strength. He hardly knows what weakness is. He never experiences exhaustion. Merely to grasp his hand is a pleasure. To gaze into his eyes is a joy. To hear his voice is to feel a thril pass over one. To peer into his mind serves as a stimulus to higher achievements. Health supplies the courage, the aggressiveness in life. Without health one is bankrupt, regardiess of what his financial capacity may be. He becomes a cipher in the world of real men and women. If you have health, then, friends, cherish it, guard it and treasure it as you treasure life, for out of it are the issues of life. makes life a per- com- Never Needs Winding. Long before watches were invented, people found ways of telling the time, and one was by means of flowers. You can grow a flower clock quite easily in your own garden, and you will find it both useful and ornament- al. Make a circle, marking out the edge with small stones. At equal distances round the edge mark the figures of the clock, from one to twelve. Draw lines from the centre of the circle to the | edge, dissecting the whole surface in- to twelve equal parts, and arranging matters so that one of the numbers on the outside edge falls opposite'to each section. Then put in the following plants: In section No. 1 plant Single Carna- tions; No. 2, White Pyrethrum; No. 3, Hawksbeard; No. 4, Lady of the Night; No. 5, Catchfly; No. 6, Hawk- weed; No. 7, Marigold; No. 8, Venus' Looking-glass; No. 9, Corn Marigold; No. 10, Clovewort; No. 11, Mountain Dandelion; No. 12, Fig Marigold. Starting at 6 a.m. the Hawkweed will open. At 7 a.m.,, the Marigold will follow suit. And so on right round the clock. ; Of course, the clock will only "go" during the summer months, and for only twelve hours out of the twenty- four. But it proves wonderfully accurate, and never needs winding! SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL LITTLE ONES At the first sign of illness during the hot weather give the little ones Baby's Own Tablets or in a few hours he may be beyond aid. These Tablets will prevent summer complaints if given occasionally to the well child and will promptly relieve these trou- bles if they come on suddenly. Baby's Own Tablets should always be kept in every home where there are Young children. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guar- antee of a government analyist that they are perfectly safe. The Tablets are ,sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. : reesei a ansacioenrel A university scholarship is awarded to the most successful student at the Battleford, Saskatchewan, High School by the ladies of the I. 0. D. E., in memory of Battlefords fallen sol- diers. x MONEY ORDERS. : Send a Dominion Express Money Order. They are payable everywhere. L "He only is advancng in life whose heart is getting softer, whose blood warmer, whose brain quicker, whose spirit is entering into living peace," --John Ruskin, Minard's Liniment Relieves Noukalgia.. ISSUE No, 35--'19, heads. The most famous Frenchman engaged professionally in this pursuit is known as Jean Serpent, though his real name is Michael Vergne. Up to daté he has slain 35,000 adders. Doctor Calmette, of France, has pro- duced a serum called "antiviperine,," which is 4 sure remedy for viper bites and adder bites, It has already saved many lives. The method of its utiliza- tion is by hypodermic injection near the wound made by the snake's tooth. HOW YOU CAN TELL GENUINE ASPIRIN ONLY TABLETS MARKED WITH "BAYER CROSS" ARE ASPIRIN. eRe. {f You Don't See the "Bayer Cross" on the Tablets, Refuse Them--They Are Not Aspirin At All. manded the large, florid-faced woman, | looking threateningly upon the law- yer. "I-mean there has been no compul- 'TORONTO SALT WORKS G, J. CLIFF TORONTO sion on the part of your husband. Has there?" "Him?" she ejaculated, turning to look at the little, meek man sitting be- hind her. "Frederick? I'd like to see him compulse me," ; Senses oond nit Minard's Liniment for sale every where. Friend of the Family--"Where's everybody, Bennet?" The Butler-- | The HALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited HAMILTON FACTORY DISTRIBUTORS IZES to suit your openings. Fitted with glass, Safe de- livery guaranteed, Write for Price List 1), ut down fuel Insure winter comfort, ills. CANADA "Well, sir, the missus and the young ladies is up in the sky learning to fly, | and the master's in his submariné in | the hornaméntal lake. It's very seldom you catches them on terry firmy these days." Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. Australia's new daylight saving jaw ! provides that all clocks be put forward an hour at the end of September and back again at the end of March in each year. There is only one,Aspirin, that marked with the "Bayer Cross"--all other tab- || lets are only acid imitations. Look for the "Bayer Cross'! Then it is real Aspirin, for which there is no substitute. Aspirin is not German but is made in Canada by Canadians, and is owned by a Canadian Company. Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" have been proved safe by millions for To ronto Office IN TEN YEARS 500 Doliars [f invested at 3% will amount to $697.75 If invested at 4%, interest ¢om- pounded quarterly, will amount to But if invested in our 514% Debentures will amount to.. $860.20, Write for Booktet. Fhe Great West Permanent Loan Company. 20 King St. West $744.26 [ Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, | ¢ Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets,--also larger "Bayer" packages,--can be had at any drug store. Aspirin is the trade mark, register- ed in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylic. acid. oe A Chance. SINCE § 1870 HILO 30 stores COUGHS "Boss, the weather's pretty hot. I'd like a couple of weeks off. A change | would do me good," said the depart- ment store salesman. "We're short-handed," complained the boss. "What are you in now?" "Blankets." "Well, I can give you a seasonable change. Ill put you among the bath- ing suits." St. Isidore, P.Q., Aug. 18, 1894. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. 'Gentlemen,--I have frequently used MINARD'S LINIMENT and also pre- scribe it for my patients, always with the most gratifying results, and I con- sider it the best all-round Liniment extant. Yours truly, DR. JOS. AUG. SIROIS. Doing Her Best. "Yes, grandma," said the fair young thing, "I am to be married during the bright and gladsome month of July." ° "But, my dear," said the old lady, earnestly, "you are very young. Do you feel that you are fitted. for mar- ried life?" "Tam being fitted now, grandma," explained the prospective bride, sweetly. "Seventeen gowns and three costumes." SseteesSMReter see 5 GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN WITH LEMON JUICE Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to remove tan, freckles, sallowness, Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply you *with three ounces of orchard white for a few cénts. Squeeze the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle, then put in the orchard white~ and shake well. This makes a quarter pint of the very best lemon skin whitener and complexion beautifier known. Massage this fragrant creamy lotion daily into the face, neck, arms and hands and just see how freckles, tan, sallowness, redness and roughness disappear and) how. smooth, soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless, and the beautiful. results will surprise you. : -- Yes this is one thing I learn to know, Each day more surely as I go, That doors are open, ways are made, Burdens are lifted or are laid By some great law unseen and still, -"Not as I will." --Helen Hunt Jackson. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, cic. War Savings Stamps not only save money but earn it. The same jealousies, rivalries, un- kindnesses, imputations -of motives me Ladies aa A Word With You About Your Skin HY not make Cuti- Bcura Soap your every - day toilet soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Tal- cum, now and then as needed,and have in most cases a clear fresh complexion, a clean scalp free from dandruff and irritation, good hair, soft white hands and a wholesome skin free from blemish, without resort- ing to tiresome, expensive "beauty" fads? Cuticura costs little and does much. Sample each free by mail of "Cuticura, Dept. N, Boston, U.S. A." Sold by dealers throughout the world. wes Cuticura Talcum Powder "ae Do not fail to test the fascinating fra- grance of this exquisitely scented face, baby, dusting and skin perfuming pow- der, delicate, delightful, distingué, it imparts to the person a charm incom: parable and peculiar to itself. McCRIMMON'S MOUTH WASH A Universal Mouth Antiseptic for Pyorchea and Sore Gums, McCRIMMON'S TOILET WATER A Stainless Antiseptic that Assures Perfect Daintiness, NMcCRIMMON'S BARBERS' ANTISEPTIC | (non-perfumed) A Valuable Face Lotion for Tender Skins, ; McCRIMMON'S DISINFECTANT and DEODORANT A Powerful Odorless Germ- icide that Instantly Absorbs All Other Odors. McCrimmon's Chemicals, Limited Phone M. 5877 29 RICHMOND ST. EAST TORONTO, ONT. MADE IN CANADA Compourffled Solely by WNGOY Myst Ae | --I] Stove Pipe Renovates and preserves stove pipes--easy to apply Enamnal Vow AAA A AEN " ete OP te a For Sale by All Dealers. satisfactory work. : 791 Yonge St, LJ vers SEND IT TO experts "PARKER'S Parker's can clean or dye carpets, curtains, laces, draperies, gowns, etc., and make them look like new. Send your faded or spotted clothing or household goods, and PARKER'S ; will renew them. We pay carriage charges éne way and guarantee Our booklet on household helps that save will be sent free on request v ee eer PARKER'S DYE WORKS. » Limited Cleaners and Dy: Z ® between nations--all these are ab work again. The war has not killed |} them--Viscount Grey, ; = Toronto "eg ake WA Se NON A LA AE se, # mA WI NX OW

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