The rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant unto. the lender. The sluggard will not plow by reason of the cold; therefore shall he beg harvest and have nothing. A slothful man hideth his hand to his bosom, and will not so much as bring it to his mouth again. He that tilleth the land shall have plenty of bread; but he that followeth after vain persons shall have poverty enough. s Love not sleep lest thou come to poverty; open thine eyes and thou shalt be satisfied with bread. There is treasure to be desired and oil in the dwelling of the wise; but a foolish man spendeth it up. about this food formulae. It‘s Dr. Jackson‘s Roman Meal. 30% whole berries of wheat. 35% whole berries of rye; both granulated, not crushed. 25% deodorized and tasteless flaxâ€" seed and 10% wheat bran. It makes delightful nutâ€"brown porridge, panâ€" cakes, bread, and all bakedâ€"products. It rourishes better than meat, preâ€" vents indigestion and positively reâ€" lieves constipation or "money back." A3 all grocers, 10 cents and 25 cents. It is no small commendation to manage a little well. He is a good wagoner who can turn in a little room. To live well in abundance is the praise of the estate, not of the â€"persomn. I will study more how to give a good account of my little than to make it more.â€"Bishop Hall. ‘_ _A child‘s health depends upon the state of his stomach and bowels. If they are kept regular and sweet the little one is sure _ to be healthy. Baby‘s Own Tablets are the mother‘s best friend in keeping her little ones well. They act as a gentle laxative; are absolutely safe and are pleasant to take. Concerning them Mrs. David Lakel, Ste. Perpetue, Que., writes:â€" "My baby was so troubled with constiâ€" pation that he could not sleep day or night. I gave him Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets and now he is a big healthy boy." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealâ€" ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Be not thou one of them that strike hands, or of them that are sureties for debts. He who is taught to live upon a little owes more to his father‘s wisâ€" dom than he who has a great deal left him does to his father‘s care.â€" William Penn. s To the contented even poverty is joy; to the discontented even wealth is vexation.â€"Chinese Proverb. Run not into debt either for wares bought or money borrowed; be conâ€" tent to wait for things that are not an absolute necessity, rather than to run up the score.â€"Matthew Hale. He that destroys a shilling destroys all that it might have produced, even seores of pounds.â€"Franklin. You can get these pills from any dealer in medicines or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Girls upon the threshold of womanâ€" hood often drift into a decline in spite of all care and attention. How often one sees girls who have been strong and lively become suddenly weak, deâ€" pressed, irritable and. listless.. It is the dawn of womanhoodâ€"a crisis in the life of every ‘girlâ€"and prompt measures should be taken to keep the blood pure and rich with the red tint of health. If the blood is not healthy at this critical stage the body is weakâ€" ened and grave disorders follow. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have saved thouâ€" sands of young girls from what might have been lifeâ€"long invalidism or an early death. They are a bloodâ€"builder of unequaled richness, strengthening weak nerves and producing a liberal supply of red, healthy blood which every girl needs to sustain her strength. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have proved their great value over and over again to young women whose health was failing. Miss Minâ€" nie Duffield, Eramosa, Ont., says:â€" "It gives me great pleasure to tell you what Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have done for me. When I was apâ€" proaching the age of womanhood I‘ suffered greatly from bloodlessness, or anaemia. My work was a drag to me, I had no appetite and never felt rested in the mornings. I could scarcely walk for five minutes at a time without taking a rest. I was troubled with severe headaches, and things looked gloomy indeed. I docâ€" tored for a long time and got but little, if any, benefit. I was advised{ to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and did so, and after taking them for a time, felt better. I continued taking the Pills until I had used six boxes, when I felt like a new person, and was again enjoying splendid health. I would strongly advise any girl who is weak .or run down to try Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills." Ask Your Doctor Weakness Generally Comes as Womanhood Approaches. PALE, FEEBLE GRLS PROVERBS OF SOLOMON. HEALTHY CHILDREN WORDS OF THE WISE. In another instance an explosion made one victim almost comatose. Violent headaches and deafness in the left ear were observed. M. Ravaut observed a case in Noâ€" vember, 1914, where, after a shell exâ€" plosion, a man was carried to the amâ€" bulance station suffering from paraâ€" plegia, which is a paralysis of the lower half of the body. In March, 1915, the explosion of a bomb a trifle over a yard away left a man paralyzâ€" ed on his left side and unable to speak. In both these cases all feeling had been destroyed in the paralyzed parts and there was nowhere any external wound. The second case got well in twelve days, except for some stiffness in the left leg. "Pa," said Tommy, "my Sunday School teacher said if I‘m good I‘ll go to heaven." "Well, you said if I was good I‘d go to the cireus. Now, I want to know who‘s fibbing, you or her." The explosion of a mine near a trench sent another man staggering for help and talking incoherently. He recovered in ten days. Such cases, thinks M. Revaut, are due to the swift change in atmosâ€" pheric pressure caused by the exploâ€" sion. This causes hemorrhages in the nervous system. They are more common â€" on the firing line than hysteria. 7 If there is any particular thing you are really fond of doing, you may be quite sure that, sooner or later, a society will be started to suppress it. Fountainâ€"pens are tested by an inâ€" strument called a micrometer. If one piece of the mechanism is out even a sixâ€"hundredth part of an inch, the micrometer rejects it as faulty. "‘Teacher has been telling us a lot about improper nouns," said the little girl. ‘"I don‘t know what things are coming to," replied the grandmother; "nothing improper was everâ€" taught when I was at school." Changes in Atmospheric Pressure by Explosions Are Odd. Not hysteria, but the most profound nervous demoralization may result merely from the blasts of wind proâ€" duced by shell explosions, according to the London Lancet, which gives some of the observations of Paul Raâ€" vaut, as related by him to.. the Academie de Medicine de Paris. * es et> w‘“um can be cured a by _ Putnam‘s Exâ€" QUE@k tractor in 24 hours. "Putnam‘s" . soothes ?wa.y that drawing pain, eases instantâ€" ty, makes the foet feol good at once. Get a 25¢. bottle of "Putnam‘s today. Corns CGured Quick What becomes of the rest? Where is the gold that set Jason wandering into the Black Sea, that filled the treasures of Croesus, that paid the terrific tribute which Persian kings assessed against the Punjab? What has happened to the yellow dust and "electrum"â€"an alloy of gold and silverâ€"which negro traders brought down the Nile to Egypt for four or five thousand years? Ancient gold, like that of modern times, was used for money and for ornaments, but both have disappeared. â€" Where? The most enduring of metals, and yet the most evanescent; perpetually sought and yet constantly escaping the hands of even the successful seekâ€" erâ€"that is gold. What is the reason for its curious elusiveness ? Many a Treasure of Ancient Days Has Vanished Completely. What becomes of gold? queries The Chicago Journal. It is one of the oldest metals in human useâ€"there are gold beads dating back to the stone age. It is an object of almost universal desire. It is proof against almost all the influences which deâ€" stroy other metals, and it has been mined in enormous quantities, yet toâ€" day more than twoâ€"thirds of the gold in use has been dug since 1849. Meat is another tremendous item we could curtail. Cheese has an equal food value. And peas, beans, and lentils will eke out whatever meat we have wonderfully. Ten years ago we drank 10 oz. of tea less per head that we drink now. We could easily revert to the old quantity. If we did we should be 20,â€" 000,000 Ib. of tea a year better off. One pound of tea ought of make 150 cups. How many cups does this mean a year? Three thousand million! Every male over sixteen years of age in the country smokes an averâ€" age of 3% oz. cigars and tobacco a week. Half an ounce a day each is too much.â€" We can easily save in smokes. : Gentlemen used to figures give us the appalling information that the average spent by each household in the country on strong drink per week is 6s. 6d. If this sum were reduced to 3s. 3d., we should save £80,000,000. Only when the items of our exâ€" penditure are examined in detail can we fully realize in how many direcâ€" tions we could save and assist the naâ€" tion to find the £3,000,000 a day neâ€" cessary to carry on the war against Germany, says London Answers. Many Directions in Which the British Could Save. HOW SHELLS DISABLE MEN. WHERE DOES GOLD GO? THE "WASTERS." 5 Seconds Sore, blistering. foet from cornâ€"pinched Applied in "I am a teacher by profession, and when under the influence of coffee had to struggle against crossness when in the school room. "When talking this over with my. physician, he suggested that I try Postum, so I purchased a package andJ made it carefully according to the diâ€" rections; found it excellent of flavour,\ and nourishing. | "In a short time I noticed very gratifying effects. My nervousness disappeared, I was not irritated by my pupils, life seemed full of sunâ€" shine, and my heart troubled me no longer. & Instant Postumâ€"a soluble powder â€"dissolvés quickly in a cup of hot water, and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 50c tins. A compendious statement of the facts is contained in the statistical abstract of the United States. It shows that Canadians have an averâ€" age of $1.77 per head in the old Government savings banks now operâ€" ating mainly in the Maritime Proâ€" vinces, and $5.19 per head in the postâ€"office ‘savings banks. Private savings banks, among them being two specially large institutions operâ€" ating in the Montreal district, account for another $5.20 per head. But. the principal savings deposits of Canaâ€" dians are those in the chartered banks, representing about $88.78 per head. Thus the savings banked by Canaâ€" dians amounted to $100.94 per head. This is a higher figure than is reachâ€" ed by any other country in the world. Next comes Switzerland, with $86.57, closely followed by New Zealand with $84.88, and the Commonwealth of Australia with $83.91, and Denmark with $80.59. In their postal and pubâ€" lic savings banks Frenchmen in the year before the war had only $27.56 per head. "One cup of coffee taken at: breakâ€" fast would cause me to become so nervous that I could scarcely go through with the day‘s duties, and this nervousness was often accomâ€" panied by deep depression of spirits and heart palpitation. "I attribute my change in health and spirits te Postum alone." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Postum comes in two forms: Postum Cerealâ€"the original formâ€" must be well boiled. 15c and 25c packages. Both kinds are equally delicious and cost about the same per cup. "There‘s a Reason" for Postum. & â€"sold by Grocers. A school teacher writes: "I had been a coffee drinker since my childâ€" hood, and the last few years it had injured me seriously." (Tea produces about the same effects as coffee, beâ€" cause they both contain the drugs, caffeine and tannin). When Teacher Has the Habit. "Best is best, and best will ever live."" When a person feels this way about Postum they are glad to give testimony for the benefit of others. It does not do to judge of the savâ€" ings of a country by the sums in the banks alone. The French peasant, for instance, uses the savings bank only as a place for his loose change, and when he has accumulated a few francs he takes the money out and buys "rents" or national debt scrip. In other words, he has been doing for years what British statesmen are urging their people to doâ€"he hands his savings over to the Government to be used for the nation‘s purposes, he receiving interest. The thrifty Dane buys shares in coâ€"operative proâ€" ducing agencies of one kind or anâ€" other, furnishing thus the capital that has made of his country one of ghe marvels of the modern intensive farming. And so with many others. Nevertheless, the deposits in the savâ€" ings banks are some index of the proâ€" gress the people are making in thrift. Have One Hundred Dollars Each in Bank. There are despairing men and woâ€" men by the thousands in this City whose stomachs keep them in conâ€" stant misery that can be quickly reâ€" stored to vigorous health by Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. We know of no other medicine that possesses the power to kindle into new life the exâ€" hausted energies of chronic stomach sufferers. There is an extraordinary power in Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills that searches out the weak spots, that braces up the delicate glands and comâ€" plex workings of the stomach and bowels. There are invigorating, stimulating tonic ingredients in Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills which are. derived from powerful juices taken from rare herbs and roots, and these are scientifically combined with other medicinal products so as to assist in a harmonious and proper working of the entire system. The ingredients of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, coming from the great storehouse of Mother Naâ€" ture herself, can be relied upon to be harmless. Guaranteed results folâ€" low to all who use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills for Stomach Weakness, Gas, Sourness, Headache, Biliousness or. Constipation. Seekers of the better health can not do better than invest 25¢. in this healthâ€"bringing family medicine. ; f Wonderful Miracles Worked On Weak Stomachs By Dr, Hamilton‘s Pills CANADIANS ARE SAVERS. HARD ON CHILDREN i Just think of itâ€"for forty years the largest used family medicine in this ‘ countryâ€"Nerviline must be good, must quickly relieve and cure a hunâ€" . dred ills that befall every family. Try ‘it for earache, toothache, coughs, | colds, sore chest, hoarseness and musâ€" | cular pains in every part of the body. Large family size bottle, 50c.; trial usize 25c. at all dealers. | _ Nerviline is strong and penetrating. |It sinks right into the tissues, takes lout inflammation and soreness, deâ€" | stroys colds in a truly wonderful way. {Rub Nerviline over the chestâ€"rub on |lots of it, and watch that tightness | disappear. â€" Nerviline won‘t blister, it !‘sinks in too fastâ€"doesn‘t simply stay on the surface like a thick, oily liniâ€" ! ment would. If the throat is raspy l and sore, rub it well outside with i Nerviline, and use Nerviline as a garâ€" gle diluted with warm water. Just "one or two treatments like this and |your voice and throat will be quick normal again. j The Egyptians, believing that dead people needed the things they have used when alive, sometimes killed the favorite slave and horse of the dead man. In India, for the same reason, widows were burned with the corpses of their husbands. By That Wise Practice People Help Lower Prices. If a merchant can be sure that the whole purchasing public of his localâ€" ity would buy certain goods from him he could, and would, reduce the prices of those goods. This is the "unattainâ€" able ideal." But we makeâ€"great proâ€" gress in this direction by cultivating the habit of reading advertisements. Not all the public, but a great portion of it, is moved by an advertisement well written and well displayed. By this means the merchant wins the cusâ€" tom of a large portion of his public and can afford toâ€"and doesâ€"lower his prices accordingly. The merâ€" chant‘s advertising does for the sale of: all goods to the public what the grain exchange does for the sale of wheat to dealers, it makes known the. prices at which bargains are offered and, facilitating business, leads to a reduction of prices. The people who. read the advertisements in the daily papers are, in effect, members of a great marketing organization. Yachts have been made wholly of aluminium. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. : We believe MINARD‘S LINIMENT is the best: Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N.S. Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, Pierre Landers, Sen., Pokemouche, An Advantage. "There‘s one advantage in being poor." "What is it?" "«You never have to lie to escape indorsing somebody‘s note." Many German Lawyers Killed. According to the Deutsche Jurisâ€" ten Zeitung, 1,964 German lawyers had been killed up to August 20, among them being 10 professors of law, 414 high administrative officials and judges, 1,176 minor judges, and 365 solicitors. "Nerviline" Gives Speedy Relief and Cures Over Night. Got a cold ? Is your voice raspyâ€"is your chest congested or sore? o Clhest Colds and Hoarseness "One Yorkshire Mill‘s Contribution to War Office Weekly. }’ The chief argument advanced by the enemies of compulsory military service is the danger of crippling the essential trades of Great Britain, and particularly the industries engaged in the manufacture of war material. An idea of the tremendous seale on which war equipment of every description is being manufactured in Great Briâ€" tain is found in statistics relating to the textile industries in Leeds and other Yorkshire towns where mills, big and small, are working night and day to turn out huge quantities of khaki cloth not only for the British troops but for those of the allies as well. The belligerent troops are now taking to wearing khaki and the other allies are evidently doing the same, for French, Russian and Italian offiâ€" cers are often seen wearing khaki uniforms of the regulation type. In one big mill in Yorkshire 2,000 miles of Khaki, about fiftyâ€"six inches wide, is being woven, dyed and turnâ€" ed into 200,000 complete suits for solâ€" diers in a week. When the war startâ€" ed how and where to get khaki and tailors to make it up into garments‘ quickly enough to keep pace with reâ€" cruiting and needs of the forces in the field was almost as serious a problem as that of inducing men to enlist. Both these problems, however, were solved with equal rapidity. | If so, you are the very person that Nerviline will cure in a jiffy. & Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Ete. READ ADVERTISEMENTS. 2,000 MILES OF KHAKI Quickly Rubbed Away also other Bunches or Swellings. No blister, no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Ecoâ€" nomicalâ€"only a few drops required at an apâ€" plication. $2 per bottle delivered. Book 3 M free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, Swollen Veins and Ulcers. $1 and $2 a bottle at dealers or delivered. Book ‘‘Evidence‘‘ free. W. F. YOUNG, P. D. F., 518 Lymans Bldg., Montreal, Can. Absorbine and Absorbine, Jr.. are made in Canada. _ Perfectly Pardonable. "Have women the strength of mind to conduct themselves in politics like men? Could a woman, like Caesar, have refused the crown?" THICK, SWOLLEN GLARDS Royal Economy Not New. The strict economy which the Briâ€" tish King and Queen have exercised in the royal household as an example to the nation since the war began is no new thing in the present dynasty. Strange as it may seem, Queen Vicâ€" toria was more extravagant in the royal menage than either her son, King Edward, or her grandson, King George. f "Now, my son, you are married. Be what a man ought to be." The restriction of the sale of spirits in England has resulted in a greatly increased consumption of tea, and even though the new laws regarding the use of alcohol should be relaxed after the war a large percentage of people will have acquired a permanâ€" ent taste for nature‘s stimulantâ€"tea. Undoubtedly the consumption of tea is increasing throughout the world, and will continue to increase at a greater rate during the next few years, and until the supply can cope with the demand higher prices for tea must be expected. ED. 6. _‘""Wal, I know," responded the witâ€" ness with emphasis, as he lifted one limber leg and laid it across the other; "I know that Clay Grub said that Bill Thompson told him that he heard John Thomas‘ wife tell Sid Shuford‘s gal that her husbhand was there when the fight took place, and that he said that they slung each other around in the bushes right conâ€" siderable." The lawyer glared at the witness and said curtly: "You may stand down, sir." "How do I know just what a man ought to be?" â€" "Your wife will furnish full plans and specifications." * "I think so," said the lady adâ€" dressed. "Of course, she might have tried it on just to see if it was a fAit." The lawyer shook his finger warnâ€" ingly at the witness and said: "Now, we want to hear just what you know, not what some one else knows, or what you think, or anyâ€" thing of that kind, but what you know. Do you understand ?" ter «Yes, the foolish girl. She went out the other afternoon in her sumâ€" mer furs and neglected to keep them hooked about the throat." "So you intend to be a soldier when you grow up. Don‘t you know you‘ll be in danger of getting killed ?" "Who by ?" "Why, the enemy." "Then I‘ll be the enemy." Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Meuralgla. Careless. "What a terrible cold your daughâ€" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Danrdruf. Alcohol Gives Way to Tea. On the Safe Side. What He Knew. Always So. ISSUE 43â€"‘15. _ T 4d 6n <p NADA ,::i..’,ï¬::? Sm ssm B J : 9 A&w H%f:“"‘ MAKE PERFECT BREAD EWGILLETT COMPANY LIMITED $ TORONTO, ONT SA m WINNIPEG _ MONTREAL wyâ€; *4 < Bread made in the home with Royal yeast will keep fresh and moist longer than that made with any other. Food Scientists claim that there is more nourishment in a pound of good home made bread than in apound of meat. Consider the difference incost. My catarrh made me ill. It dulled my mind. It undermined my health and was weakening my will. The hawking and coughing made me obnoxious to all, and my foul breath made even my loved ones avoid me secretly. My delight in life was ‘dulled and my faculties impaired. I knew that in time it would bring me to an untimely grave â€"because every nioâ€" ment of the day and night it was slowly yet surely sapping my vitality. SAM EATZ, Room K2584. 142 Mutual 8k â€" â€" â€" Torent _ But I found a cure, and I am ready to tell you about it FREE. Write me promptly. RISK JUST ONE CENT Send no money. Just your name and address on a postal card. Say: "Dear Sam Katz, Please tell me how you cured your catarrh and how I can cure mine." That‘s all yor nted to say. I will underâ€" stand, and I wWillâ€"write to you with comâ€" plete information, FREE, at once. Do not delay. Send the postal card or write me a letter toâ€"day. Don‘t think of turnâ€" ing this page until you have asked for this wonderful treainient that can do for you what it has done for me. It is a new way. It is something absoâ€" lutely different. No lotions, sprays or sickly smelling salves or creams. No atâ€" omizer, or any apparatus of any kind. Nothing to smoke or inhale. _ No 4# tm steaming, or rubâ€" $ bing or injections. $ z.A No electricity or hi. vibra.ti(i\xrl e mas. 2222000 3 sage. o powder; Cedsuaae o. / no _ plasters; no :«e%% keeping _ in the 3 _ .. ]t110 use, lNé)tm ng ?lf > % hat kind at all. §# . %~ Something. new $AÂ¥ . § and _ differentâ€" [ $R yc e something delightâ€" [ [%% > &2 ful and healthful | $# & & . â€"something in * & & stantly successful. ‘+, You do not have \/ i $sA . to wait, and lin y sw s ger, and pay out :. »%% °y ... a lot of money. gf:.f:;t;??.i:sI:z?::if‘;'f-fii?zi:.5i‘?f555§5§5§£§Ef§5§5§5§555§5§55 You can stop i mss over ni gh_tâ€"an a 1 <>>=>= tenl onoeninrinncocs will gladly tell you howâ€"FREE. I am not a doctor and this is not a soâ€"called doctor‘s prescriptionâ€"but, L am cured, and my friends are cured and you can be cured. : Your suffering will stop at once like magic. I AM FREEâ€"You Can Be Free The demand for our graduates during August and September was four times our supply. Commence now. Calendar free. HEALS BAY & NIGHT K sult me. I have over two hundred on my list, located in the best sections of Ontario. All sizes. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. THE RIGET SCHKOOL TO ATTEND 1 PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of â€"all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelaide St.. Toronto. | STOPPED MY CATARRH LIKE MACIC Suppose education is a good thing. All the same, this world is full of faâ€" thers who have to support sons who know ten times as much as their faâ€" thers do. C:ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. internal and external, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Writ3 us before too late. Dr. Bellman M_uaical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Any woman can manage a man if she can only prevent him from knowâ€" ing it. Life is a hurdle race over "ifs" and "buts." A lot of people go on praising "the good old times," and hoping they will never come back. Why is it that nothing tastes quite as good as the thing that doesn‘t agree with you? F LOOKING FOR A FARM, CON: Yonge and Charles Sts., Toronto. I Will Gladly Tell You Howâ€"FREE. NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. ELLIOT T FARMS FOR SALE, CHAPLINISMS. MISCELLANEOUS. W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal. «ce L AMeR l Al Sn en . ca $R c e es nn l uol s B '-:5:’:5:_:5;;:5:5:1:‘-:'.&'57-’:5:14'$§Eii§:' ce . n & BR oi o ;?.;.:.;h,-:;ï¬., oRA o e o uoo tm ts s 31.3 s n O mesnenes y3 eRes. 3 :;5;;;; ts ce . es BBA Tess ao sn i * vain cA s 32 . l k t g t E:;:g;:;:;:;. x ¢ ao ph e o ton oo . geel o neoa ue snn .;;;ï¬:;:;':;:::ï¬_ g}» en oo sn o on ame 2 ~5.§:/1;§:;:::*;':;:;:‘;: s iwo ... 4s 1. k mas . y aams ... .. .. o t ... ,:::.f:tj*f,5_.::55};*5:{:3-’;:4 ysss n e on s css Nee e io ierecne Toroento, Ont.