Uam Kers gar I PPCOC per cent €S, LIMITE gar THE DAWN OF YOUNG WOMANHOOD Girls upon the threshold of '“J hood often drift into a decline in spite of all care and attention. Even strong and lively girls become weak, depressed, x;nhble 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 blsod pure and rich with the red tint of health. If the body is not in a hcalthy condition at this eritical stage, grave disorders may result, and future life become a burden. Deadly conâ€" sumptio+ ‘ften follows this crisis in the li\s of young women. Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills have saved thousands of young girls from what might have been lifeâ€"long invalidism or carly death. They are a bloodâ€"builder of unequalled merit, strengthening weak nerves and producing a liberal supply of rich, red blood, which every girl needs to sustain her strength. Over and over again Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have proved their value to women and girls whose health was failing. Miss Jennie Gereau, St. Jerâ€" ome, Que., says: "At the age of eightecen my health was completely shattered; I was suffering from anaemia with all its attendant evils. The trouble forced me to leave school. I suffered from headaches, was tired and breathless at the least exertion. I had no appetite, and my face and lips were literally bloodless. A good friend advised the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and thanks to this great medicine I am again enjoying good health, with a good appetite, good color and a spirit of energy." Every anaemic girl can be made well and strong through the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘" Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Commander Carlyon Bellairs, the great British naval expert, replied to the recent criticism of the British navy appearing in American newsâ€" papers suggesting that the navy might try a little initiative occasionâ€" ally, sending submarines to Cuxâ€" haven, Kiel and Heligoland. Comâ€" mander Bellairs said:â€" "The man who wrote that ought to procure a scale chart and study it for a few minutes with an American naval officer at his elbow. Then he might learn quite a lot. Cuxhaven and Kiel are hidden away behind miles of heavily mined sand banks, as well as breakwaters. At Heligoâ€" land there are only a few German torpedo boats and submarines. In naval warfare one goes by probabiliâ€" tics, not possibilities. The British submarine wouldn‘t have one chance in a million of getting behind the stone walls where the Germans hide their fleet. British Naval Expert Replies to Criticism of Fleet. "It is not a question of initiative. What our submarines have done scouting around _ Heligoland _ and arround the Dardanelles proves this. It is just a question of commonâ€"sense tactics. "The German fleet only needs just to come out to sea and leave its stonelocked fortresses for a few hours in order to get all the trouble t ever will be able to seek." The trouble with some men is that hey‘re satisfied with merely wantâ€" ng to do the right thing. LET GERMANS COME OUT. ICE CREAM A VALUABLE food if it‘s pure. City Dairy Ice Cream is made of the purest ingredients, in a new sanitary building. We ship thousands of gallons to all parts of Ontario. The size of our business emables us to employ experts and the most upâ€"toâ€"date methods and equipment. Keen business men reduce their meat diet durâ€" ing the summer and consume more foods such as lee Cream. Everybody can do so with benefit to their health. For sale by discriminating shopkeepers every where. IS A FOOD ThE CARRISoNINS 0f EeyP1 DOMINION ‘OF CANADA ARE THERE * orces From Australia, New Zeaâ€" land, Their Life, Pay and Bearing. Writing regarding the life of the British troops in Egypt, the London Times‘ correspondent at Cairo, furâ€" nishes an interesting sketch of war time, recreation and organization of ‘the‘ Trominiam 314 11 _ es * aaee oo says: To soldiers and to civilians interâ€" ested in the question of national deâ€" fence the organization of the Austraâ€" lasian expeditionary forces now staâ€" tloned im EKavnk is uall anacghk . NR ay _ _"O_!" £+8yp& is well worth study. The great war caught the A\utuliayn Commonwealth and the Dominion of New Zealand, not, indeed, unpreâ€" pared, but in a period of military traglsmon from a system under which the adult citizen troops were raised by vountary enlistment on a paid militia basis to one of universal compulwr! service on militia lines. During this period the "Trainees," ;:’l::.h. !l.l:;nben uc:f the adult citizen te rai on the new compulsory buu.who have passed through their recruits‘ course, have to be suppleâ€" mented by the existing militia force. Thus in Australia, where service in the citizen army begins at the age of 1, no recruits under the universal compulsory service scheme, which came into force on January 1, 1911, could enter the citizen army before July 1, 1912, and when Great Britain declared war on Germany there were only two "Trainee" classes, those of ‘ 1912â€"1913 and 1913â€"1914, the second of which had only just completed its recruit training in the ranks. The balance of the Australasian forces was composed of the small profesâ€" sional permanent forces, the militia, to be sradually succeeded by the new compulsory trained troops and cerâ€" tain volunteer units. Antipodean Problems. The problem set to the military authorities of the Dominion and of the Commonwealth was, theérefore, to form a volunteer expeditionary force as far as possible on the basis of the existing organization. In New Zealand the Government has not been able to apply the new compulsory system as strictly as did the Austraâ€" lian military authorities, but when it was stoppédtl it retained a relatively larger number of men beforce in the new Territorial or adult citizen army. It was thus able to form an exâ€" peditionary force containing a someâ€" what larger proportion of trained men than did the Australian contingâ€" ent. ‘The staff of the New Zealand force also contained a _ relatively larger number of Imperial officers. The organization of the force preâ€" serves its connection with the existâ€" ing citizen army with remarkable }thoroughness. It has not been posâ€" sible for the Australian military auâ€" thorities to form so close a connecâ€" tion between the adult citizen force ’and the expeditionary troops. The Territorial principle has been followâ€" ed so far as recruiting is concerned, whenever this has been possible. Officers and Men. Of the officers now in Egypt a very large majority have been preâ€" viously trained in the militia. The remainder consist of Imperial offiâ€" cers attached to the Colonial forces, officers of the permanent forces who ,\__â€"Cation and organization of Dominion contingent here. He ‘TORONTO. ad s' 2 ';ï¬.«;l\';jr very town. for the Sign. Look are as essentially "professional" as are those of the British or Indian armies, and finally, a of m! officers from the “J;?';’oint" of. the Dominion and the Commonâ€" wealth, the Royal Military College of Australia at Duntroon. | All sorts and conditions of men are to be found in the ranks of the conâ€" tingents. There are shepherds and cattle men, owners of large estates, professional and business men, workâ€" men and shopkeepers. The majority of the Australian infantry of the first contingent are urban, though a new contingent is largely composed of countryfolk. The mounted troops are mostly country men, and include a large number of "bushmen," many of whom have come from the "back of beyond" to offer their services to the Empire. The rural element is more numerous among the New Zealanders, Most of the men are of British and Irish origin. There are a small number who claim German descent, the sons or grandsons of German settlers, in whom their Britâ€" Australian chiefs and comrades have full confidence. Pay is highâ€"from a minimum of} one dollar a day in the case of the New Zealander to one and a quarter‘ among the Australians. At present, however, the rank and file do not receive more than 50 cents a day, and the balance will be received by them in a lump sum when the camâ€" paign is over. A large number of the men have considerable private means. Twenty years is the miniâ€" mum age dimit of the New Zealandâ€" ers, 19 among the Australians. Their physique is admirable. The miniâ€" mum height accepted is 5 ft. 4 in., but the average of many battalions is at least 5 ft. 7 in., and men of 6 ft. and over abound in every corps. Longâ€"legged, broadâ€"shouldered, and deepâ€"chested, they carry no superâ€" fluous flesh, and move lithely and rapidly. To their physical advantages they join exceptional quickness and intelligence. The relations between the contingâ€" ents are very satisfactory. The frequent boxing contests in aid of sick and wounded soldiers are largeâ€" ly attended, â€" fairly and pluckily fought, and unmarked by "scenes." City and provincial champions and runnersâ€"up of all weights, amateur and professional, abound among them, and Cairo is consequently beâ€" coming quite a pugilistic centre. There is plenty of friendly rivalry, and amusing chaff is sometimes exâ€" changed between troops from the cattleâ€"raising districts and those from the sheep country, who, from time to time, when other argument fails, "moo" or bleat at one another to express their conviction that their own occupation is infinitely superior to that of their rivals, The races held two or three times a month at the Khedival Sporting Club attract the majority of those who have leave from camp, while their gymkhanas are well worth watching by all who admire good horsemanship. Steps have been taken to supply the troops with wholesome recreation, reading rooms, a cafe, cinema shows and the like, and the New Zealandâ€" ers have been conceded a "wet" canteen. The troops are frankly imâ€" pressed with Cairo as a city, and are agreeably surprised with the climate of Egypt. They "expected a crematorium," as one of them recentâ€" ly wrote, and found a sanatorium inâ€" stead. As far as material goes no Colonial force has been better equipped. The New Zealanders are well supplied, but the equipment of the Australians is perfection and surpasses that of most regular armies. Their medical equipment is superlatively good and a large corps of nursing sisters, smartly uniformed in dove grey with red shawl, has reached Cairo and will probably be reinforced in the near future. The horses are exâ€" cellent and the veterinary service is extremely efficient. The Ceylon Contingent. The Ceylon contingent which has been in Cairo since October, is a very well trained and smart body of infantry, composed mainly of young planters, men of some fortune in most cases, and in all of good education and extraction. A number of its memâ€" bers have been given commissions in the Indian Army Reserve of Officers, while the remainder are at present attached to the New Zealand conâ€" tingent. GUARD BABY‘S HEALTH i IN THE SUMMER The summer months are the most dangerous to children. The complaints of that season, which are cholera inâ€" fantum, colic, diarrhcea and dysentry, come on so quickly that often a little one is beyond aid before the mother realizes he is ill. The mother must be on her guard to prevent these troubles, or if they do come on sudâ€" denly, to cure them. No other mediâ€" cine is of such aid to mothers during hot weather as is Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets. They regulate the stomach and bowels and are absolutely safe. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Defoe‘s Great Book for Readers All Over the World. Every nation has found delight in the story of Robinson Crusoe. An article in the Strand Magazine tells that W. S. Lloyd of Philadelphia has spent years in hunting for rare and curious editions of the immox_'tal work. His agents, it appears, have had standing orders to buy up all editions that may be found, and he even posâ€" sesses examples of the story in Latin and Greek,. Thirtyâ€"three languages are represented in Mr. Lloyd‘s collecâ€" tion, and these include Arabic, Perâ€" sian, Turkish and Hebrew.â€" _ .. L S en Rilhrcininenshecoliinatianaliniala mt tdnl The variety and curious illustraâ€" tions in these manifold editions are & striking feature. There is a first folio of Defoe‘s great book, however, which has not found its way into Mr. Lloyd‘s collection, and that is a valued exhibit in Sir John‘ Soane‘s very interesting museum in Lincoln‘s Inn Fields, with which every Londoner is not familiar. CRUSOE IN 33 LANGUAGES. Their Life Off Duty. French Machine Defeats a German Among the many stories ef aerial adventure growing out of the war, one of the best is told by Frederick A. Talbot, in The World‘s Work for June, in a tomprehensive survey of the advance in aviation. The hero is an American aviator, Frederick C. Hild, a volunteer serving in the French Aviation Corp?.‘ _ _One day he was aloft upon a reâ€" connaissance. The weather was cloudy, so that glimpses of what was transpiring on the hostile territory beâ€" neath could only be obtained through rifts in the banks of vapor. While careering through one of these open spaces he caught sight of a Taube, and, his machine being fieet, he inâ€" stantly gave chase. The Taube turnâ€" ed, and made for the cover of a bank of clouds, with Hild in hot pursuit. The latter worked his machine up to ninety miles an hour, and was just about to dive into the cover when a German biplane was seen emerging from the cloud. The latter showed no disposition to run. It was armed with a machine gun, while the pilot and observer were well equipped with Mauser rifles and pistols. A hot fire was concentrated upon Hild and his machine. The American aviator was caught at a disadvantage, because the attack was unexpected and for the reason that the German machine had the commanding position manoeuvring immediately over the French aeroâ€" ‘plane. This diversion precipitated another denouement. The Taube which had dived into the bank of cloud, ascerâ€" taining that it was reinforced, now turned round and showed fight. Hild was caught between two fires. The Taube was intent upon ramming him, while Hild was exposed to a hot fire. He returned the latter spiritedly, but was threatened by the Taube. There was only one possible means of esâ€" capeâ€"to dive vertically towards the ground. Without a moment‘s hesitaâ€" tion he jammed his elevating lever hard over. The aeroplane quivered and then answered her helm so comâ€" pletely that an involuntary looping of the loop appeared imminent. It was a thrilling "noseâ€"ending" dive, the machine being so vertical in its descent that Hild and his observer had to stand, leaning backwards, from which precarious position he let drive a final series of quick shots. The dive was so precipitate and vertical that the German aviators ceased firing, thinking that they had sent the French monoplane to its last account and that it would give a final exhibiâ€" tion of ploughing. But after a vertiâ€" cal dive of a thousand feet, Hild reâ€" gained control of the aeroplane, eased the descent, regained the horizontal plane and immediately started to climb with all the speed he could musâ€" ter. The German machines, realizing that they had been tricked, resumed the pursuit, but Hild now held the adâ€" vantage. The speed of his machine proved invaluable. The Taube startâ€" ed a hot chase, but gave it up directly it saw that Hild had regained his oriâ€" ginal altitude and was quite prepared to resume fighting uperations. The Taube turned and flew for its life, but Hild had his report to give to his commander, so he abandoned attemptâ€" ing pursuit and returned to his own lines. Wanted capital to develop one of the most valuable natural resources in the Dominion, unlimited quantity of raw material to be manufactured into a commodity for which there is an alâ€" most unlimited demand. If you have one hundred to five hundred dollars or more to invest where your investment will be well secured, then write for particulars and prospectus which will convince you ofp the absolutely sure and large returns. Address P.O. Box 102, Hamilton, Ont. A THRILLING AERIAL DUEL. INVESTMENT The Chinese anticipated what we might think to be an essentially modâ€" ern â€" convenience â€" banknotes and "paper money"â€"so long ago as 2697 B.C.â€"4,600 years ago! One such banknote, issued nearly 3,300 years ago, is still preserved in the museum at Petrograd. The Chinese called their notes "flying money," or "conâ€" venient money." They bore the name of the bank,. date of issue, a number, an official signature, its value in words and figures, and, as an addiâ€" tional precaution against forgery and as a help to the ignorant, a pictorial representation in coins of an amount equal to the face value of the note. _ Holders of the notes were, by an inscription, exhorted to "Produce all you can; spend with economy. It is stated that the notes were printed in blue ink, and made of paâ€" per woven from the fibre of the mulâ€" berry tree. A _ These notes bore also a warning inscription â€"of the penalties _ of counterfeiting. Cep An Expert. First Trooper Imperial Yeomanry (discussing a new officer)â€""Swears a bit, don‘t ‘e, sometimes?" Second Trooperâ€""‘E‘s a masterâ€" piece, ‘e is; just opens ‘"is mouth and lets it say wot it likes."â€"Punch. ED. 6. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. Paper Money. OPPORTUNITY ISSUE 272â€"‘15. 5 s a ts ce Jigte Rete mt A Nova Scotia Case of Interest to All Women Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help ‘to Many People. _ â€"= _ Halifax, N.S., December 15.â€"When interviewed at her home at 194 Argyle St., Mrs. Haverstock was quite wï¬rï¬g to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate pressed, felt weak, lu}' i\.ud and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was case. "I was always ‘blue‘ and deâ€" so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick headâ€" ache and feared a nerous ‘breakdown. Upon my druggist‘s recommendation I used Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. "I felt better at once. Every day I improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differâ€" ent physicians hadpfailed to help me. It is for this reason that I strongly urge sufferers with stomach or digesâ€" g\{le ’groubles to use Dr. Hamilton‘s 3. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills strengthen the stomach, improve digestion, strengthâ€" en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood of longâ€"standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, th? effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. Youngest Man in British Coalition Government. * Hardly any barrister in Great Briâ€" tain has attained such a high distincâ€" tion at so early an age as Sir John Simon, who had represented the Crown in most of the sensational cases tried at the Old Bailey, and who at the age of fortyâ€"one is Home Secâ€" retary in the British Coalition Govâ€" ernment. When he was appointed Solicitorâ€" General, in 1910, Sir John was only thirtyâ€"seven years of age, and such was his reputation in the legal world that at that time he held retainers from almost every railway company in the countryâ€"a unique record. Three years later he stepped into the place of Attorneyâ€"General, and thus became head of the English Bar, a proud position won, in the way Englishmen like to see honors won, by sheer ability and hard work; for Sir John Simon is the son of a Conâ€" gregational minister, and owes nothâ€" ing to birth and influence. Sir John, however, holds a someâ€" what humorous view of his profession, judging by the remarks he made when entertained a few months ago by the Manchester Law Students‘ Society. Although, on account of his taciturnâ€" ity, Sir John has often been referred to by his friends as "Silent Simon," the description only partly fits, for when the use of the tongue is necesâ€" sary, Sir John can use it with wonâ€" derful effect. o He was induced, too, on one occaâ€" sion, to recall some reminiscenses of his youthful days. "My first political recollection," he remarked, "is of something that occurredâ€"I think it was in 1878â€"when I was a very small boy going to a dame‘s school at Moss Side, Manchester. I remember well going out of the gate of the little house where my father lived then, and as I went out, carrying my satâ€" chel to school, one of his friends came running down the street waving a newspaper and shouting something to my father. I think it was about one of the first speeches Mr. Gladstone made in the early days of his Midâ€" lothian campaign, and I heard my mother calling me back because I was wearing a blue tie. I can see her little figure running upstairs and runâ€" ning down again with a red ribbon which she tied around my neck." In the House there is no more popuâ€" lar man than Sir John Simon. He enâ€" joys the liking of both sides®in poliâ€" tics, which is not always possible to a politician of such keen intellect and high debating powers as himself. He has never been known to lose his temâ€" per, and the fact that in one great trial in which he appeared the jury after five days were as closely interâ€" ested in the details of the case as they were in the opening day was striking testimony to his power of holding atâ€" tention. One of the Effects of the War In England. So rapid were the judicial methods of Sir George Jessel that he someâ€" times did not sit in court because there were no cases left for him to try. A goodly judge was he. He said unto the Registrar, "Now call a cause for me." "There is no cause," said Registrar, And laughed aloud with glee; "A Jessel‘s wit has despatched them all; I can call no cause for thee." The King‘s Bench judges are rapidâ€" ly getting into the same position, says the London Globe. They started their sittings this week with only thirtyâ€" five jury actions in their lists, and they have disposed of them all. If that nation is happy which has no litiâ€" gation the war promises to secure for us at least this measure of bliss. They were about the roughest, rawâ€" est lot of recruits the sergeant ever had to tackle. He worked hard at them for three hours, and at last thought they were getting into some sort of shape, so he decided to test them. "Right turn!" he barked. Then beâ€" fore they had ceased to move came another order: "Left turn!" One yokel slowly left the ranks and made off toward the barrack room. "Here, you!" yelled the sergeant, angrily, "where are you off to?" . "Ah‘ve had enough," replied the reâ€" cruit, in disgusted tone. "Tha doesâ€" n‘t know tha own mind for two minâ€" utes runnin‘! A judge sat on the judgment seat, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. DECLINE IN LITIGATION. SIR JOHN SIMON. He Was Disgusted. ULd No Possibility of Tracing the Origin of Vegetables. So popular has the grapefruit beâ€" come on our tables that it is difficult to remember that thirty years ago it was almost unknown. With improved methods of trarsportation and cultiâ€" vation, how. many other delicious fruits, as yet exotic or rare, may have bananas by the time the young folk of toâ€"day are middleâ€"aged! Not many of us are yet acquainted with the plumcot, that interesting fruit, half apricot, half plum; nor have we yet tasted the guava, the durian, or a dozen other tropical delicacies that a few years hence may accompany our morning cereal quite as a matter of course. Only a few of our common fruits are native, and even fewerâ€"none, inâ€" deed, except certain varieties of berâ€" riesâ€"are useful unimproved. The peach, or malum Persicum, Persian apple, came originally from Persia; the quince from Cydonia in Crete; the chestnut (castanea) from Castana, a town of Pontus; the plum from Syria and Damascus, an origin still indicated in the name, of the damson, or damascene, variety. The filbert, an old chronicler records, was "so named of Philibert, a king of France, who caused by arte sundry kinds to be brought forth." Pliny testifies that cherry trees were first planted in Britain twentyâ€" six years after their introduction into Italy by Lucullus, who, after the war with Mithridates, brought them from the king of Pontus‘s city of Cerasus. Their French nameâ€"ceriesâ€"and their botanical oneâ€"cerasusâ€"show _ this origin more obviously than the Engâ€" lish cherry, although the derivation is the same. During the Saxon period the cherry in England was allowed to run out, and it was not reintroduced until the gardener of Henry VIIL brought it from Flanders, and planted the first of the famous Kentish cherry orchards. "The great captains, and even conâ€" sular men," Sir William Temple has recorded, "those who first brought them over, took pride in giving them their own names, as in memory of some great service or pleasure they had done their country; so that not only laws and battles, but several sorts of apples and pears were called Manlian and Claudian, Pompeyan and Tiberian." The Romans lightly valued the inâ€" troduction of new fruits and flowers. These services of the Roman capâ€" tains were, however, merely incidenâ€" tal; none of them rival in horticulâ€" tural devotion the act of the elder Tradescant, gardener to Charles I., who enlisted on board a privateer armed against Morocco solely with a view to finding an opportunity to steal apricots into Britain. He sucâ€" ceeded; at what cost of battle, bloodâ€" shed, diplomacy, or exchange under a flag of truce, we do not know. x There is often no possibility of tracing the origin or introduction of vegetablesâ€"less esteemed and thereâ€" fore less noted than fruits. We do know, however, that Sir Walter Raâ€" leigh introduced the potato into Engâ€" land, and that Sir Anthony Ashley, of Wimborne St. Giles, Dorsetshire, first planted cabbages, which he got from Holland. It was a useful innovation, and he deserved the large and neatly sculptured cabbage that is placed at his feet upon his tomb. Corns Cured Quick Sheâ€"But if I can‘t live on my inâ€" come and you can‘t live on yours, where would be the advantage of our marrying." 6 He (thoughtfully)â€"Well, by putâ€" ting our incomes together, one of us would be able to live, at any rate. &A by Putnam‘s Exâ€" ulck tractor in 24 hours. "Putnam‘s" soothes : way that drawing pain, eases instantâ€" y, makes the feet feel good at once. Get a 25¢. bottle of "Putnam‘s today. AEINIAPU S IQIMIIIOCRID NZMLy PA UETTY Dear Sirs,â€"This fafl I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest very bad, so I could not wori and it hurt me to breathe. I tried all kinds of Liniments and they did me no good. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited One bottle of. MINARD‘S LINIâ€" MENT, warmed on flannels and apâ€" plied on my breast, cured me comâ€" pletely. C. H. COSSABOOM. Rossway, Digby Co., N.S. "My dear," said Mrs. Henpeck, "I‘m positive that our boy is thinking seriously of matrin}pny." "Well, I hope so," returned Henâ€" peck with unusual spirit. "I would not want any boy of mine to be so unfortunate as to regard it as a joke. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows England lost only one ship in the rout of the Spanish Armada; Spain lost thirtyâ€"two. &â€"‘"TM wenewK_dy L200 APEEEIIRNeLMeRRWE . PERERE . OC EME Vc e t ts and Canoes. ‘ _ THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAY. NEW FRUITS AND OLD. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ,.}_5: | i. #2 A V . *. +k a Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in x Ontario. Length 15 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In., . Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. AxY MoTOoR FITS. @pecification No. 2B g@iving engine prices on request. Get our quotations onâ€""The Penetang Line" Commercial and Pleasure Launches, Row Economy. Solicitous. Bore, bMstering feet from cornâ€"pinched Applied in "Overstern‘" V Bo!tom Motor Boat PROFIT-HAKING NEWB AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontu:z towns. ‘The most useful and interest! of all businesses,. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelaide Bt., Toronto. YÂ¥ and get the top prices. 35 cents for tub 'lualws° ;?t;ol. % cents unwashed. Large or small lots bought. COCheck sent same ‘l‘ shipment received. Tarchis & Bons, 92 Wellington, Montreal. IF LOOKING FOR A FARM, CON8ULT me. I have over Two Hundred on my list, located in the beet sections of Onâ€" tario. All sizes. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. WOOL. wWOOL, WOOL. SELL DIRECT 4 and get the top prices. 3 cents for Alala BRITMISH GRAMOPHONE REâ€" CORD3. 10â€"in. double side, 600. eaoh, Send $1 for spec‘al introductory offer of two records (four selections), including H.M. Irish Guards Band. Catalogue free. Guardsman Record Agency, 210 Board of Trade, Montreal. CANC!R. TUMORS, LUMPS, ETO, internal anG external, cured with« out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Belliman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Mrs. Williams, who had recently returned from abroad, was attending an afternoon tea which was given in her honor. _ "And did you really go to Rome asked the hostess. f “:l;le;:eï¬.rmiss, my little brother has a hole in the seat of his trousers, and it‘s notwithstanding." “‘-“rr;il; _don‘t know, my dear," replied Mrs. Williams. "You see, my husband always bought the tickâ€" ets." SoLp BY Au SHOE LER: worX By Fyik Muorm w A teacher had been at great trouble to explain to her class the meaning of the word "notwithstanding," and, on asking for a sentence in which the word occurred, was somewhat nonplussed to receive the following effort from a blushing maiden of some eight summers and winters: YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Kye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery The man who said all‘s fair in war was wrong; nothing in war is fair. Paddles, Cushions, Oars, Try Murine Kye Remedy for Ked, Weak, Watery ly'el and Ounulsu(_l_ Eyelsd-;;Nubbm‘n.r‘uu‘â€"- The "Paradise," by Tintoretto, is the largest painting in the world. It is 84ft. wide, 33%ft. high, and is now in the Doge‘s Palace, Venice. Peterborough Canoe Co. Limited. PETERBOROUCH, ONT. [J.TE;: Comfori. . Write for Book of the Eye y mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. AUTO AND BOAT TOPS CUTTEN & FOSTER Ford owners write for our catalogue. SEARSâ€"CROSS Speedometer Station. 179 Queen Street West, TORONTO, â€" ONT. NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. Seats, Rugs, and all Canoe and Skiff FARM FOR RENT. MISCELLANEOUS. Furnishings. Left It To Him. Wore ‘Em Out. RECORDS. woOoL. $55%â€" ak o0 99