West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 12 Jun 1913, p. 7

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erest RITTIRS XTTED sration 0N T 1t H m r ruRE BLOOD If people } wru.nce of i and pur® the ness. The b through whi g;uned from different p_art indige r€ The Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or can be had by mail at â€"4Q cents a box or six {oxes for $2.30 from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co., Brockville, Ont. mardly â€" drag myself along. This] veling at first only lasted for a ‘~w minutes, but as time went on he duration of the spells seemed o increase. Whilst during the day | would be suddenly attacked with lizziness compelling me to hold on o â€" something until the feeling passed. I had in the meantime been taking various blood tonies, as I was convinced my condition was due to my blood being out of order. None of these, however, seemed to have any permanent effect. For a little while I would be fairly well, but as soon as I quit using them the attacks used to come back with renewed vigor. One day I came across an advertisement of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and deâ€" cided to try them. I soon noticed | a more decided improvement than I had felt before. The dizzy -palh‘ vore becoming less frequent and !~ss violent, and by the time I had taken six boxes I was well again. From former experience I had some fears that the trowble might reâ€" turn, but now, four months after discontinuing the use of the pills, I have had no return of the trouwble. In fact I never felt better than I do now, and I think nothing can ecual the Pillsâ€"as a blood mediâ€" Cns« A drunken man will tell you everything he knowsâ€"but what‘s the use ! And some men talk to themselves because they like an appreciative audience. In accord with the eternal fitness of things, a man who stole a watch wound up in jail. 5 The world admires any man who attends to his own businessâ€"no matter how humble it may be. _ _ plexions never think of the oldâ€" fashioned method of steaming it over a washtub. Women who spend most of their time trying to improve their comâ€" A SAFE MEDICINE «4 Baby‘s Own Tablets are a safe medicine for little ones. In fact they are guaranteed by a governâ€" ment analyst to be absolutely free from opiates or any of the drugs so harmful to the lives of little ones. The Tablets never do harmâ€"always good and may be given to the newâ€" People never pay to a cheerful liar. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Carget in Cowa born babe or grzwing child with equal safety. They never fail to cure _ constipation, _ indigestion, eolic, break up colds and fevers and make teething easy. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 2% cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. Heâ€"I have saved up ten thouâ€" sand dollars. Will you be my wife! _ Bheâ€"Oh, Mr. Jones, this is too sudden! Save up another ten thouâ€" e P PR C O PCR TCO vevek in each Package. MUEINE is com E’e’ ;()HIM by our Uculistsâ€"not a "E‘ntend edictne" but used in successful Ph'I" ' d clans‘ Practice for many years. Now c e dedicated to the Public and sold by Droggistsat 2%câ€"50c per bottle. Murine care Eye Saive in Aseptic Tubes, 250â€"500, emommmmemmee Musing Eyq Remed; Co., Chicago "‘Father, what is an empty title ?"‘ "Well, an empty title is your mother‘s way of calling me the head o# the house." bJ Yo ur Hinard‘s Politics is a good game, but a ighty poor business. Many a successful man makes a ise like a big wind. It‘s better to deliver the goods an to be caught with them on Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale le build up the blood. They ase the wbility of the body to + disease. They strengthen nerves, increase the appotite cure every discaso caused by and impure blood, and that aces such diseases as anaemia, estion, â€" neuralgia, nerve exâ€" tion, â€" rheumatism, and many rs. Every claim made for this cine is amply proved by the ful testimony of those who : been cured. Here is one inâ€" ce. Mr. Jas. Sauger, Peterâ€" , Ont., eays: ""I began to be bled with dizzy spells. These : especially noticeable in the ming on rising and were accomâ€" ed by a feeling as if my body taken on two or three times its ht during the night. When I : out of doors everything would leuly seem to get topsyâ€"turvyy a feow muments, and I would irently see specks floating in t of me. and for a while I could ly drag myself ng at first only minutes, but as duration of the ters of ths Blood aro Cured Pr. Williams‘ Pink Pills The blood is the medium sh which the nourishment i from the food reaches the mt parts of the body. If the is impure the nourishment eaches nerves, bene and musâ€" tainted with poison and diâ€" follows. The blood is also medium by which the body »if disease. If the blood is ind watery this power of reâ€" ce to discase is weakened. Pointed Paragraphs. e would realize the imâ€" f keeping the blood rich there would be less sickâ€" MAKES HEALTB No Smartingâ€"Feols Fineâ€"Aots Quickly, Try it for Red, Weak, Watery zes and Granulated Eyolids, Minstrat=© Book Try Murine Eye Remedy Ten More. FOR THE BABY any attention Diphtherie, ARE READY FOR SHIPWRECKS FOOD PLACED ON LONXELY ISâ€" LANDS OF THE SEA. Supplies Left by a British Warship Found Intact After Eight Years, That all expeditions, whether Arctic or ctherwise, place food deâ€" pots within reach in case of need is of course well known, but few pecple aro aware that there are certain rarely visited islands and desolate coasts where depots of provisions and necessities have been placed for the use of shipâ€" wrecked crews. The most extensive supplies of this sort are those exâ€" isting on some of the lonely islands in the South Indian Ocean. South of the liner track to Australia via the Cape lise Croze and Kerguelen Islands. The beef boxes were coated with tar, as were the iron hooped barâ€" rels, containing the biscuits and clothes, and thoe matches were in boxes painted over with red lead. Fourteen years afterward Capt. !du Baty, who spent many months | sealing on the island, examined the | depot. Even though the goods had |becu buried beneath a cairn of stones the casks had rotted away | and the clothing fell to pieces when ‘opcned out. In the jubilee year of Queen Vicâ€" toria a French warship placed in a hut on one of the Crozets a good stock of food amd necessities, inâ€" cluding two spears and two hatchâ€" ets. It is highly probable, says Pearson‘s Weekly, that the bulk if not all of these stores are still thore, for the warship in question found the provisions left by a Briâ€" tish warship eight years before abâ€" S‘AJlUlbely intact. Guide Books Supplied. The handbooks furnished to all Britisch shipmasters indicato exactâ€" ly the whereabouts of these cached stores,. A seal hunter, who sought to find the depot on Kerguelen Isâ€" land, wrote: "It was as easy as if we had a signpost.‘"‘ pek® The Kerguelen depot was fitted out by the French ship Eure which in 1893 left ©"2,250 pounds of preâ€" served beef in boxes of 9 pounds; 1,125 pounds of biscuits, 20 swanâ€" skin shirts, 20 pairs of woollen drawers, 20 woollen blankets and packets of matches.‘""‘ _ Furtherâ€" more, great trouble was taken to protect the stores from the weaâ€" ther. The biscuits had been turned to sour pulp and long green strands of moss were growing on the barrels. The tinned beef was perfectly good and was agreeable to the taste. He failed to find the matches, but left some of his own, together with needles and twine. Cabbage and Celery. On Amsterdam Island, further north, the Board of Trade‘s handâ€" book notifies the fact that the French supplies are in a cavern where also have been Jleft a cookâ€" ing pot, cots and dry wood. On this island the stranded Crusoe will find, too, abundance of wild cabbage and celory growing, and lobsters and fish are plentiful. On the cqast of Tasmania there. aro some very lonely districts. At Rocky Point shipwrecked mariners may find relief stores, and in order to aid them to regain civilization tracks have been made for their benefit, with ‘"iron index fingers every quarter mile pointing in the direction of the relief station.‘"‘ And ness Telephone Communication. . Similar provision exists on some of the outlying islands of New Zeaâ€" land, and these are visited by a (Government steamer once or twice on a river where fording is necesâ€" sary a raft has been left in readiâ€" a year in case castaways are needâ€" ing rescue. In Vancouver shelter sheds are erected on some lonely shores and thence a shipwrecked sailor can ring up a central station on the telephone. Refugees in Tierra del Fuego learn from the same source above quoted that "they can trust the Yaghams to conduct them to misâ€" sion stations or settlements,"‘ but the ‘"Alacaluis are aggressive and treacherous, though, however great their number, they will not attack a combination of three or four perâ€" sons, especially if they are aware that these persons possess firearms or implemonts resembling them.‘"‘ One day a woman sent her little boy out in the yard to play with the baby. as she was busy. The boy had a new shovel his mother had given him. After they had played awhile she heard the baby crying. She went out to see what was the matter with the baby. She asked Johnny what the trouble was. He said proudly : "A dirty fly bit him on the head, and I killed it with Gente,â€"1 have used your Minard‘s Liniâ€" ment in my family and also in my stables for years and consider it the best mediâ€" cine obtainable. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited my shovel." Proprietor Roxton Pond Hotel and Livery "It was simply a question of verâ€" acity between us,"‘ said the oldest inhabitant. "He said I was a liar, and I said he was one."‘ "Humph !‘ rejoined the village postmaster. "‘That‘s the &rst time I ever heard eit‘a; of you telling the truth,." Yours truly, ALFRED ROCHAYV, From Great Lakes To the Rockies wWoMEN SINXG THE PRAISES OF DOoDD‘s KIDNEY PILLS. Saskatchewan Lady Adds Her Testâ€" imony To What Has Already Been Said of the Great Work Bodd‘s Kidney Pills Are Doing. Caesarville, Sask., June 2â€"(Epeâ€" cial.â€"The scarcity of female help in a new country subjects the woâ€" men of the prairies to unusual strain, and careful observation has established the fact that this strain first makes itself felt in the kidâ€" neys. For this reason Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills are making an enviable reputation from the Great Lakes to the foothills of the Rockies. Everywhere you will find women singing the praises of the great Canadian kidney remedy that has banished their pains and weariness, and brought them back to health. Among the many is Mrs. Edgar Cowen, an estimable lady of this place. "I have found Dodd‘s Kidney Pills very beneficial,‘"‘ Mrs. Cowen states. "‘If anything I can say will holp any sufferer I am glad to add my testimonial to what has already been said." The kidneys strain all the refuse material out of the blood. If they are out of order this refuse remains in the blood, and becomes poison. That‘s why sound kidneys mean pure blood and good â€"health, Dodd‘s Kidney Pills make sound ESKIMO‘S BRAINS IN STOMACH Bay Dogs Can be Satisfied, But People Can Always Eat. According to Knud Rasmussen, the explorer and authority on polar lands, the Eskimo does not think as other races do. He does not count the hours, days or years and keeps no record on time. All his thoughts are centred on hunting and beyond the need of sufficient food and clothing for himself and family, he has no care. Mr. Rasmussen relates a number of interesting conversations which he has had with various Eskimos, all of which go toward pointing out conclusively their indifference and inability for any thoughtful reflecâ€" tion. kidneys ‘"Once,""‘ he is quoted in an exâ€" change as saying, "I asked an Esâ€" kimo who seemed to be plunged in reflection, ‘‘What are you thinking about ?" "He laughed at my question and said: ‘"Oh, it is only you white men who go in for thinking. Up here we think ouly of our flesh pits and whether we have enough for the long, dark winter. If we have meat enough why should be think ?"‘ Eating seems to be the all imporâ€" tant thing beyond the task of proâ€" viding it. Once when ‘Mr. Rasâ€" mussen excused himself, after payâ€" ing a visit, with the plea that he had already eaten enough, he was laughed at and the answer he reâ€" ceived was : â€"‘"Dogs can be stuffed till they are satisfied and can eat no more; but â€" peopleâ€"people can â€" always eat." MEMORY IMPROYVED. Many persons suffer from poor memory who never suspect tea and coffee have anything to do with it. The drugâ€"caffeineâ€"in tea and coffee, acts injuriously on the nerves and heart, causing imperâ€" fect circulation, too much blood in the brain at one time, too little in another part. This often causes a dullness which makes a good memâ€" ory nearly impossible. o Since Leaving Off Tea and Coffee. "I am nearly 70 years old and did not know that coffee was the cause of the stomach and heart trouble I suffered from for many years, until about four years ago,"‘ writes a Western woman. "A kind neighbor induced me to quit coffee and try Postum. I had been suffering severely and was greatly reduced in flesh. After usâ€" ing Postum a little while I found myseli? improving. My heart beats became regular and now I seldom ever notice any symptoms of my old stomach trowble at all. My nerves are steady and my memory decidedly better than while I was using coffee. "I like the taste of Postum fully as well as coffee." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Write for bookâ€" let, ‘‘The Road to Wellville." Postum comes in two forms. Regular (must be boiled). boiling but is prepared instantly by stirring a level teaspoonful in an ordinary cup of hot water, which makes it right for most persons. _ A big cup requires more and some people who like strong things put in a heaping spoon}ui and temâ€" per it with a large supply of cream. Experiment until you know the amount that pleases your palate and have it served that way in the future. A wealthy landowner in England, affected with the craze for Japanâ€" ese gar_denin._g, ix_:vit‘ed t‘he Japanâ€" ese ambassador to luncheon, says the Bristol Times and Mirror, and afterward showed him round the gardens and greenhouses, keeping the Japanese garden till the last as a delight{ul surprise. _ _ When, after admiring the beauty of all the other gardens, the amâ€" bassador was at last taken to the imitation of the gardens of his own flowery land, he held up his hands in enthusiastic delight. ‘"Ah," he exclaimed "this is wonderful! We have nothing like this in Japan!‘"‘ "‘There‘s a Reason‘‘ for Postum stant Postum doesn‘t require The Surpriser Surprised. veag ors ECHO IS LOUDER THAN sOUND Experiments Were Made From a Balloon. To most persons it would seem impossible for an echo to be louder than the sound that produced the echo, but under certain rather peâ€" culiar conditions this is really true. PMPLES ON FAGE ARMS AND LEGS Scratched So Made Red Scre. Trouble Grew Worse All the Time. A Cake of Cuticura Soap and a Box of Cuticura Ointment Comâ€" pletely Cured. When a revolver is fired from a balloon the report is sharp, but not so loud, explains a writer in Harâ€" per‘s Weekly, as it would be if the gun were fired on the surface of the carth. If the balloon is up something like 2,000 feet or higher thero will be a few seconds‘ silence after the revolver shot and then a roar or deep rumble will rise up from the earth. Ville Jolictte, Que.â€"*"My little girl, aged four years, had so many pimples on her face, arms and legs that I did not know what to do. They lasted fi\ for & year. She comâ€" If an explosive is lowered from the basket of the balloon until it is discharged with an electric spark *rom a battery in the hands of one ‘of the aeronauts, there will come to the ears of those above a report like a revolver shot and then a few seconds of silence, followed by a peal of the loudest thunder ever heard. 7 There is no solid background about or above the balloonists to produce a rebound of the atmosâ€" pheric soundâ€"wave and the air is more denge _below. Thus, when the soundâ€"waves penetrate the denâ€" ser lower strata of air and then the solid earth the echo produced seems to the ears of the occupants of the balloon far louder than the original sound. / Irmrwxiâ€"|\ Vi4e sores were worse on / ‘9” i‘ her arms and legs and on her face, and they were ugly looking with the blood. I was told what to do to stop her suffering, and I used the treatment but other pimples came OUt all the time. I tried all sorts of remedi¢s but the trouble grew worse all the time. 1t was always the same story, until I used Outicura Soap and Ointâ€" ment. I began to apply the Cuticura Ointâ€" ment on ber, also bot water and Cuticura Boap. Immediately I began to see that they were curing ber, and after having used a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment she was completely cured. Sho has just as fine a skin as before, *"My husband also used Cuticura Oint» mont for cracks in his hands, After three applications of the Cuticura Ointment ho was completely cured." (Signed) Mrs. Alfred Corrier, Jan. 16, 1912. "I have taken a job,"‘ said the plain young woman, ‘"as a schoolâ€" teacher.‘‘ At this her chum cried : ‘"What! Teach school! Why, I‘d rather marry a soft, fat, baldheadâ€" ed widower with eight children than teach school!‘"‘ The plain young woman sighed, ‘"Ah!‘‘ she said, "so would I." Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, For a liberal free sample of each, with 32â€"p. book, send post card to Potter Drug & Chem, Corp., Dept. 83D, Boston, U. 8. A. Winard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Eta Before next month this number are wanted to etep up and have their corns removed with Putnam‘s Corn Extractorâ€" it‘s painlessâ€"eafeâ€"sure. Use only "Putâ€" nam‘s," it‘s the best, 2c¢. at all dealers. It is easy to preach virtue,. but far more dificult to teach it by practice and example. Miss Gibson was very rich and Mr. Hanna was very poor. She liked him, but that was all, and he was well aware of the fact. One evening he grew somewhat tender and at last he said: ‘"You are very rich, aren‘t you, Helen?" "‘Yes, Tom,‘"‘ replied the girl frankâ€" ly ; "I am worth about two million dollars.‘"‘ "Will you marry me, Helen ? ‘"Obh;. ho,. Tom, â€" I couldn‘t."" "I knew you wouldn‘t." ‘"‘Then why did you ask me?"‘ "Oh, I just wanted to see how a man feecls when he loses two millions.‘"‘ Good management contributes more to our comfort than great possessions. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. Was Broad Enough. ‘"‘Why has your wife decided to give up the European trip she was contemplating ?"‘ ‘‘She happened to hear someâ€" body say that travel broadened one." ED. 7. 50,000 MEN WANTED The Sensation. Unanimous. TORONTO IS8SUE 23â€"‘13. Primitive Cooking Apparatus in Cornwall, England. Incredible as it may seem to us who have at our command every sort of labor saving machine and device that it is possible to conâ€" ceive, there are some parts of the worldâ€"and not the most remote, eitherâ€"where many of the ordinâ€" avg tasks of life are accomplished in almost identically the same way that they were centuries ago, says a writer in Gas Logic. Travellers in foreign countries have frequentâ€" ly» told of surprising instances of this kind which they have met with in their wanderings in outâ€"oiâ€"theâ€" way localities. A striking illustration of the way in which people who come little into contact with modern methods oftentimes cling to ancient and cumbersome ways of doing things is afforded by the case of a farmer in Cornwall, England, whose primâ€" itive and picturesque cooking apâ€" paratus has attracted attention. When the farmer‘s family have any cooking to do, the embers are first raked flat, and an iron plate is placed over them. The dough is then put into a tin, which is placed upon the iron plate, the tin then being covered over with a big iron pot. The whole is covered with embers and in eighty minutes‘ time, it is said, the bread is perfectly baked. The fuel used in this "stove‘‘ is neither coal nor wood, but peat. No other fuel has ever been burned in it. The Cornish farmer declares that to his own knowledge the fire in it has not been out in seventy years. 9 * Weary Tiredness Changed to Vigor That â€" Playedâ€"Out _ Fecling Was Quickly Remedied and Health Restored. Story of a Merchant Who Almost Lost His Business and His Health Through Neglecting Early Symptoms of Disease. "My life for years has been of sedentary character," writes T. B. Titchfeld, head] of a well known firm in Buckingham | Nine hours every day I spent at office ; work and took exercise only on Rnnday.l I disregarded the symptomse of illâ€"health, which were all too apparent to my hm-‘ ily. I grew thin, then pale, and before | long I was jaundicodâ€"eyes and skin were | yellow, my strength and nerve were lowâ€"| ered, and I was quite unfitted for bm1-Â¥ ness. In the morning a lightness in the head, particularly when I bent over, made “ me very worried about my health. Moat} of the laxative medicines I found weakâ€" ening, and knowing that I had to be at businees every day I neglected myself rather than risk further weakness. Of course I grew woree, but by a happy chance I began to uee Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. I was forcibly struck by the fact that they neither caused griping . nor nausea, and it seemed incredible that pille could tone, cleanse and regulate the eysâ€" tem without causing any unpleasant after effecte. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills acted with me just as gentle as natuswthey gave new life to my liver, strengthened my stomach, and won me back to perfect good health. My skin is clear, dizziness has dieappeared, and my â€" appetite, strength, epirits dre perfect." Refuse anything offered you instead of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, which are sure to eure. old in 2%c. boxes, five for $1.0), at all druggists and storekeepers, or postâ€" paid from the Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada . The Chinese doctor possesses many ideas peculiarly his own. There is much mystery and impresâ€" siveness in his manner of treatâ€" ment. _ According to Mongolian medicine the Chinaman believes that the human heart is more likely to become inflamed at noon during the suminer season than at any other time. Likewise they regard the human ear as suggesting the condition of the kidneys, while the mouth and lips indicate the condiâ€" tion of the spleen and the stomach. Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills F]FT?»?YTI'EE};. wITH OR WITHOUT Railway _ trackage, in Toronto. Brampton and other towns and cities. FIRE INX STOVE 70 YEARS. H. W. DAWSON. Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. Bome snaps Cleanse the $ystem H. W. DAWSON, Colborne $t., Toronto are made according to a formula in use nearly a century ago among the Indians, and learned from them by Dr. Morse. Though repeated atâ€" tempts have been made, by physiâ€" cians and chemists, it has been found impossible to improve the formula or the pills Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills are a houschold remedy throughâ€" out the world for Constipation and all Kidney and Liver ttoulecs. They act promptly and effectively, and is RUIT, S8TOCK, GRAIN AND DAIRY Farms in all sections ot Ontario. ESIDENTIAL _ PROPERTIES _ IN Brampton and a dozen cther towns. Chinese Doctor‘s Ideas. FARMS FOR SALE uP EmME* NC late. Dr. Beliman M ARE you suffering with RHEUMARTISM, N&Ihlmll. SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, INFLAMMATORY l!li!xl'l'lsn, PNEUMORIA, SOUT, or the worst kind otf MEARPRCNE or TOOTHACKE? Write for FREE testimonial of cured pef;fle. We positively guarantee to refund your money not cured. TEMPLETON‘S RHEVMATIC CAPSULE DISTRIBUTINC CO. ESKIMO CHILD NOT WHIPPED. Does as He Pleases, but is Generâ€" ally Obedient. The Eskimo child is the idol of the home and is allowed to do as he pleases. He is never punished, says a writer in the Wide World Magazine, and his whims and wishes are consulted with all the concern ‘given an adult. In spite of this "ndulgence the children are remarkâ€" Whly obedient. Poerhaps the patâ€" riarchal manner of livingâ€"father ‘and mother, aunts and uncles and grandmotherâ€"tends to make them HEAVY CREAM The word of the elders is law and is never questioned. They have lived a long time, the Eskimos reaâ€" son, and therefore speak with the @wuthority of experience. _ . All of this is very nice in the orâ€" Udinary walks of life, but rather emâ€" barrassing sometimes in school work. When a child of four or five TEMPLETON‘S RHEUMATIC CAPSULES Mr. J. W. McGhee, of Conover, Ont., says: "I find that the Standard cream separator will deliver any density of cream with either warm or cold milk, and still fush out easily." So if you want heavy cream, simply turn a screw on the top disc of the Q "DISCO PRIMER and get any thickness desired. This creamâ€"regulating screw is placed on the top dise for your convenience, so that you do not need to take the bowl apart to reach it. This point may not seem very important to you,. We mention it merely as an example of how carefully and thoroughly the Standard is built down to the smallest det,gdl. A booklet, explaining the entire construction of the Standard cream separator, and telling why it has earned the name of "The World‘s Greatest Separator," will be mailed free as soon as we get your name and address. Drop us a pust card toâ€"day. Use the Coupon. Enclose $7 and the "Disco" is on the way to you The Renfrew Machinery Co., Limited There are no parts to oil and take care of. It cannot get out of order or wear out. Put a "DISCO" PRIMER on your Engine and End , Starting Troubles SPECIAL PRICE $7 Complete with I0â€"Foot Gas Tank, $21 o BRANCHES: SUSSEX 315. COLLEGE STREET, TORONTO. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS. $1.00 A BOX OR 6 BOXES FOR $5.00, newnemmmmonmmmonm mmemmmmmmmmmm / RUSSELL RUSSELL MOTOR CAR C0., Limited / motorRr CaR Branches:â€"TORONTO, MONTREAL, HAMILTON, WINNIPEG, CALGARY, VANCOUVER, MELBOURNE, AUST. / L-‘__“,_,_r_‘ ces eâ€"maenerg e ~Cx"" V JB $7 .. ® 3 \"\ ‘ a * wA Phe . s ‘ * N esd _ THE "DISCO‘"‘ puts a charge of gas into each cylinder. This gas when ignited gives a perfect explosion in each cylinder. Ten or twelve complete revolutions of the engine result, which is sufficient te etart any engine under normal copditions. It is guaranteed for 60 days against defect in material and workmanship. SIX years of effort have produced a Primer that will start your Car or Motor Boat Engine at once, without trouble or confusion. The "DISCO" is simple of operation and easy to install. Head Office and Works, RENFREW, CANADA,. BOO8T YOUR TOWN BY ORQANIZINQ aA Information on this :&hfl with m instructions for am»â€" teur bands and a prinied form of tution and Byâ€"Laws for bands, togcther with our big catalogue, will be malled FREE on request. Address Degyy,$ D." _ | 18 WILLIAMS Accessories Department, WEST TORONTO WILL START YOUR ENGINE SUSSEX, N.B.; SASKATOON, SAESK.; CALGARY, ALTA Agencies Everywhere in Canada. Special Price BRASS BAND THEY REALLY CURE THEN USCE THE ‘plays truant from school, and the \visiting teacher, complainimng to the parents, is gravely told to ask the small despot if it is his royal pleasure to come to school or not, the situation becomes ludicrous. The only resource is to become a hatred truant officer, or, better, to make your work so interesting that the whildren cannot stay away. Because He Took GIN PILLS Mr. H. A. Jukes of Wiani wiltes : * fhlveb&namfiemflmpe,nmh#o for some yurlgxut. I met m r. Hill and he advised me to GIN PILLS. Shlve !flecn uiking tb: at intervals during the early part of the present winter, and np-bsste have had no returna of my old trouwbleâ€"in fact I fcel better than I have for years, and thick that my old enemy has vanished for good and all."‘ _ h o en _ 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, Sample free if you write National Drug and Chemie«l Co, of Can>da, Limite}, Toronto, 140 FREE OF LUMBAGO & SONS CO., } TORONTO LIMITED ONTARIO Enclose $7 for One "DISCO" in CO., Limited wEST TORONTOG

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