West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Sep 1916, p. 7

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M | 4 ronkt Imâ€" <tle its i at te ©u 18 rd 1e3 Some men shake hands with as little enthusiasm as some women kiss each other. *4 When at anchor in an open roadâ€" stead during heavy weather, a vessel uses oil in a bag that is hauled out ahead of the ship by means of an endâ€" less rope that is secured to the anchor chain. The oil is washed back, thus creating a placid patch around the vessel amidst all the turmoil of the surrounding waves. An endless rope is used so that the bag can be readily hauled on board for refilling if neâ€" When towing another vessel in a heavy sea there is a great risk of the breaking of the hawser, which is the commonest catastrophe of towing. Here oil is of the utmost service and is frequently employed. The oil is distributed from the towing vessel, forward on both sides, and it thus protects both vessels. For enabling small boats to pass from one ship to another amidst angry waves oil is inâ€" valuable, and an interesting cireumâ€" stance is that, failing to provide a complete smooth lane for such boats the oil affords calm places of refuge in which the boats can remain until the waves subside cessary. In scudding before a gale, cil is distributed by means of an oil bag at the bow, the oil thus spreading aft, and so giving protection all round the vessel. The thin film of oil disperses over the surface and prevents the water from breaking or beginning to break. Displayed in a heavy sea, this calming effect of oil is truly wonderâ€" ful. A ship running ten knots, and slowly distributing oil, will have a perfectly smooth wake, ten knots long by forty feet wide. _ Forty years back ten pounds‘ worth of oil an hour was on one occasion employed for stilling the rollers at the bar at Folkestone (England) Harâ€" bor. Now there is a consensus of opinion that the dripping of one pint of oil is enough to still deep water waves, which are those upon which the effect is greatest. The best methâ€" od of application is by means of small canvas bags. In a ship at sea these bags, holding one or two gallons of oil, are hung over the side in such a manner as to be in the water. The bags are pricked with a sail needle to facilitate leakage of the oil. Light vils are of little use; the heaviest and thickest oils are most effectual, All animal and vegetable oils serve well, and a very fortunate fact is that waste oill from a ship‘s engine has great effect upon the waves. * Seafarers. During the war the firitish Fleet at sea has made extensive use of oil for modifying the effect of breaking waves. Mineswecpers, too, regularly employ the device, which is by no means a new one. Two thousand years ago this value of oil was known, and from that day to the present time pearlâ€"divers and â€" spongeâ€"fishers have poured oil upon the waters to make the sea smooth for their peering into its depths. The practice, indeed, is worldâ€"wide, being adopted alike by South Sea Islanders and Eskimo. But only quite recently, and after numâ€" berless experiments, has the proper method of so using oil become estabâ€" lished. Practice of Its Use is Known to all same price, the same high quality, supplying all the nutriment a man needs for a halfâ€"day‘s work. Two shredded wheat biscuits with peaches and cream or other fruits make a complete, nourishing meal at a cost of pot over five cents. "Meat Prices Will Not Come Down" is the cheerful news from the Department of Agriculture, Meat prices will not worry the man or woman who knows that a Shredded Wheat Biscuit will supply more real bodyâ€"building nutriment than beefsteak or eggs and at much less cost. Shredded Wheat remains the Ni OIL ON THE WAVES. Made i Coffee don‘t Postum Cereal Co., ustt Reason‘ L.L Debility is a word that fairly exâ€" presses many ailments under one name. Poor blood, weak nerves, imâ€" paired digestion, loss of flesh, no enâ€" ergy, no ambition, listless and indifâ€" ferent. This condition is perhaps the penalty of overwork or the result of neglected health. You must regain your health or succumb entirely. There is just one absolutely sure way to new health â€" take Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. These pills will bring you new life, fill every vein with new, rich blood, restore elasticity to your step, the glow of health to wan cheeks. They will supply you with new energy and supply the vital forces of mind and body. f There is not a corner in Canada where Dr. WilMams‘ Pink Pills have not brought health and hope and hapâ€" piness to some weak debilitated perâ€" son. If you have not used this mediâ€" cine yourself ask your neighbors and they will tell you of some sufferer who has been restored to health and strength through using Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. One who has always a good word to say for Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills is Mrs. Luther Smith, of West Hill, Ont., who writes: "I feel it a duty as well as a pleasure to tell you what Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have done for me. Ihad an operation for tumors. The operation in itself was quite successful, but I was so badly run down and anaemic that I did not gain strength, and the incision did not heal, and kept discharging for nearly a year, until I weighed only eightyâ€"six pounds and could scarcely walk across the floor. I had got so sick of doctors‘ medicine that I would vomit when I tried to take it. A good friend urged me to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, so I bought a box. Before they were gone I thought I could feel a difference, and I got a further supâ€" ply. By the time I had taken five boxes the wound ceased discharging and commenced to heal. I took in all thirteen boxes and am toâ€"day enjoyâ€" ing the best health of my life and weigh 140 pounds. I sincerely hope anyone suffering as I did will give Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills a fair trial, and I feel sure they will not be disâ€" appointed." THE ROAD TO HEALTH The incapacity of men to underâ€" stand each other is one of the princiâ€" pal causes of their illâ€"temper towards -each other. Lies Through Rich Blood _and Strong Nerves. a weird and variegated lot is finding its way into Professor Archenhold‘s hands. A particularly popular object advertised as possessing occult proâ€" tective power is a ‘"Letter from Heaven," which is being sold in huge quantities at 5 and 6 cents a copy. lt| is described as "an unfailing shield against all hateful persons, witchcraft and works of the devil." Bearing the: mystic initials | "S.J.F.K.H.B.K.N.K.," / it declares that "at the command of, the Ange!l Michael all guns must cease | firling at him who carries this letter; with him." | On June 22, 1774, Day‘s "submarine" was ready and a spot in Plymouth Sound was chosen for the test. The foolhardy inventor entered his tomb and the cover was fastened on. The vessel to which the box was attached was then sunk. At the end of 24 hours a vast crowd gathered to see Day‘s emergence from the depths, but, of course, they were disappointed. Hayâ€" ing overlooked the little item of air, the country millwright was destined never to rise from his selfâ€"built coffin. You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Professor Archenhold says, accordâ€" ing to the Berlin Vossische Zeitung, that the amulet craze among German soldiers is assuming serious proporâ€" tlons, both from an economic and miliâ€" tary point of view. Thousands of marks of hardâ€"earned money are being invested by wives and sweethearts in "charms" for men in the trenches, while the men themselves, ‘once in possession of them, "are induced to conduct themselves with recklessness wihch may often have grave conseâ€" quences for their own safety and that of many others." f Veondstatlsâ€" Bs 4.de .. 120 _ Day was a wheelwright of an inâ€" ventive turn of mind, and he early turned his attention to the problem of inventing a submarine in which human beings could remain under water for a considerable length of time. After a long thought he contrived what he called a "diving machine," which conâ€" sisted simply of a large airâ€"tight box, sufficiently large and strong to withâ€" stand the pressure of the water at a considerable depth. Day‘s plan was to attach his waterâ€" tight box to an old vessel by means of screws. After Day entered the box it was to be carefully closed and the vesâ€" sel was to be sunk to a depth of 100 feet and at the end of 24 hours he was to disengage his box from the vessel by withdrawing the screws, thus risâ€" ing to the surface. The very newest thing in German war exhibitions now is being organized by Professor Archenhold, the Prussian astronomer royal. It is called an "Exâ€" hibition of War Superstitions." It will be made up of amulets and charms of all sorts carried by soldiers in the beâ€" lief that their possession is proof against harm or death. Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. In response to a public appeal to people to send in amulets and charms, Many Members of the Kaiser‘s Army Believe in Them. es cac c o0 CC REn +4R Cns â€" WWe comparatively easy, Every schoolboy now knows that air is necessary to sustain life, but what is now a matter of common knowledge was a secret to savants not so very long ago. It was the lack of this simâ€" ple information which cost the lMife of the inventor of the first submarine, John Day, an Englishman, who went to his death 142 years ago. Phaws . stt t & ‘ 5 SOLDIERS CARRY "CHARMS." Dr. Patterson‘s Method of Curing Lead Poisoning by Electric Battery. The subject is interesting and imâ€" portant as well as full of surprise. Housemaid‘s knee, for instance, which for many years has served as a subject for humorous comment, proves to be a frequent malady of miners. The statistician is abroad and he brings the information that trades carried on in the presence of much dust show a high death rate from diseases of the lungs. Then comes the biologist, who explains that dust is not only minute particles, but that the particles are usually surâ€" rounded by a watery envelop and that clinging to this filament there may be microâ€"organisms. Soot Is An Irritant. The medical authorities abroad deâ€" clare that soot is a serious irritant, and that chimney sweeps are especiâ€" ally subject to cancer because of it. Sawing certain kinds of wood has been found to produce irritation of the mucous membrane of the rose, throat and eyes. The makers of white lead have looked lead poisoning square in the face and have found means to avoid it. Dr. Patterson deâ€" vised an entirely reasonable but someâ€" what unexpected treatment for it. He immerses the patient‘s hand in one tub of salt water and his feet in anâ€" other, and then a pole of an electric battery is put into each of the tubs. The current is turned on, using Mr. Patient as a conductor, and it carries the lead that it finds on the way out of him, through the salt solution deâ€" positing it upon one of the electrodes. It has proved successful. Apparatus Makes a Life Preserver Doubly Useful, A novel life preserver has been deâ€" vised to supplement the ordinary cork jacket in rough water. By its use person in distress is able to brettfi evon when the waves sweep over his head. The appliance adds to the cork jacket a light metal chamber which floats high, a spout leading from it rising two or three feet above the water level. A tube leads from this chamber to & face mask, through which the wearer of the jacket breathes. Even if the water sw over his head the spout for theex chamber is still clear and the air supâ€" ply unimpaired. _ ; DISEASES INCIDENT TO OCCUPATIONS Fatigue is another subject that has been studied and reported on. Strain is declared to be more exhausting than work, and monotony of employment aggravates exhaustion. Fatigue seems to be a condition of the body in which the waste products of work are not carried off fast enough. In physiological laboratories _ animals have been fatigued by overdriving and then some of their blood has been injected into the veins of healthy aniâ€" mals. The healthy animals straightâ€" way showed the same symptoms of fatigue as those that had been overâ€" The question is likely to be asked why boards of health do not use chlorâ€" inated water for flushing the streets, especially in hot, dry weather. This was first proposed by Dr. Baskerville six or seven years ago, and there is no question but that its effect upon disease germs in the street dust would be beneficial to the public health. Since the New York water supply has been treated with chlorine not a single case of typhoid fever has been traced to it as the cause. It is doubtful if any other satisfactory anâ€" swer will be forthcoming than that the boards of health haven‘t got around to it yet. _ HOUSEMAID‘S KNEE A MALADY OF MINERS worked. In rubber factories and elsewhere, when bisulphate of carbon is used, great care must be taken to avoid contamination of the air by its offenâ€" sive fumes. _ Otherwise _ nervous troubles are likely to follow. There is a bakers‘ itch, grocers‘ itch and sugarâ€"refiners‘ itch, all maniâ€" festations of eczema, according to the materials handled. SOLVE THIS To make better known our Sumâ€" E:r resort in the heart of tb! urentian Mountu‘nl. North 0 Montroeal. e will * 99 give a buflXlnc lot FRBE to unyon7 solving this puszle. Pu’ & flsun no two a@like) in each o the lfi\l?l'el %bovo so as to make &A &oul of 15 by adding them up and down and crossways, Bend solution with §¢, in postage for copy of Frospectus to 202 Hallam Buillding, Toronto. BREATHE UNDER WATER. Chlorinated Water. WIN A LOT Puzzle AND Np) CAE _ The main reason for this growing popularity is simply that electric drive is more economical and convenient than steam ; provided, of course, elecâ€" tric current is available, as it usually is in the neighborhood of builtâ€"up comâ€" munities. One man only is required to handle a motorâ€"driven machine, and he need not be an experienced enâ€" gineer, as many workmen can learn to handle a motor in a short time. A single handle controls all operationsâ€" starting, stopping, reversing and changing the speed. There are no standâ€"by losses, either. The motor uses power only when actually runâ€" ‘ning, and when at rest involves no exâ€" pense whatever. Having no boiler, the lmncblne is lighter and more compact than a steamâ€"driven machine, and }hence is more readily moved and placed in position. On account of its jcompactness. a motorâ€"driven hoist may be placed where it will not interfere |w1th traffic. The absence of fire and |sparks makes it safe even though it is crowded under the scaffolding. Cables located overhead out of the |way take the place of awkward, leakâ€" ‘Ing pipes, and there is nothing to freeze in cold weather. Electric power is being used more extensively each year in building operations to drive concrete mixers, air compressors, hoists, etc. x More Economical and Convenient Many New Occupations Are Being Opened Up to Them. Before the war there were five milâ€" lion, five hundred women wage carnâ€" ers in Great Britain; toâ€"day there are said to be over ten million. Five milâ€" lion men have enlisted for active serâ€" vice, and a woman has taken the place of every ableâ€"bodied man who might have been engaged in peaceful ocâ€" cupations. England has never been so busy a manufacturing and indusâ€" trial country as she is in 1916, but this would never have been possible if women had not stepped into the breach. In Canada there is not the same supply of surplus available women, so that in this respect Canada has not experienced so great a revoluâ€" tion in industrial life, but many new occupations are being opened to Canadian women, and the deâ€" mand for women workers in factorâ€" ies and in the great industrial life of the railways is steadily on the increase. If Sir Robert Borden is to secure his 500,000 Canadian solâ€" diers, 100,000 women must temporâ€" arily step into the shoes of men so that the latter may be released for service, as the limit of available men seems almost to be reached. Women are already working alongâ€" side of men in sacking and hauling of grain at the Great Lakes elevaâ€" tors, in the Canadian Pacific yards and shops where they are cleaning cars, in the telegraph services and in many clerical positions hitherâ€" to held by mon. They are acting in some places as Station Agents with satisfaction _ to _ their employers. But Canadians who visit England are surprised to find women ticket inâ€" spectors and guards, women as cleâ€" vator attendants, women as chaufâ€" feurs, and train conductors, women as red caps, porters and ticket clerks, women as locomotive cleaners and track greasers. Sir James is generally given credit for the actual discovery of choloroâ€" form, but it is stated in some works that it was discovered some years previous to his first experiments by an American doctor named Guthrie and by a French physician named Souberian. In any case it was Dr. Simpson who proved its great value as an anaesthetic, and the room in which he made his first experiment still exists in Edinburgh. ‘ Taking it Literally, "Did the doctor give you*much enâ€" couragement?" asked Mrs. Dimson. "Yes, indeed," answered Mr. Dumâ€" son. . "He said I would be able to whip my weight in wild cats before long." ; The story goes that he tried the chloroform on himself and two medical friends. They proved its efficacy by simultaneously falling beneath the table. "Dear me! Where will yo: find the wild cats?" "Sure! A hundred for me and fifty for my wife." "The missus? Was she hurt, too?" "Not in the crash. but Ihad the presence of mind to fetch her one on the head with me foot." Previously all operations were perâ€" formed without anaesthetics, the paâ€" tient being drugged with whiskey and held down by strong men while the operation was performed. "Did you get damages for being in that street car collision?" Edinburgh Doctor First Experimented With it on Himself. The recent death of Sir Alexander Simpson, the famous Edinburgh docâ€" tor, brings to mind the wonderful disâ€" covery of his uncle, Sir James Simpâ€" son, his predecessor as professor of midwifery in the chair of Edinburgh University, says the St. Paul Express. Sir James, if not actually the disâ€" coverer of chloroform, was, at any rate, the first to introduce its employâ€" ment as an anaesthetic into surgical practice. This was in 1848. Minard‘s DISCOVERY OF CHLOROFORM. BUILDING BY ELECTRICITY. â€" 4 ISSUE 39â€"‘16. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. INVASION OF WOMEN. Presence of Mind. Relieves Germans Are Planning to Make Use of Them. Coffee grounds, even if they are the \leavings of "ersatz" coffee, are no |longer to go to waste, but will contriâ€" bute their share toward the nourishâ€" ment of man and beast in Germany, ‘according to a report in the London | Mail, telling of the organization in |\ Berlin of a plan to make use of the icoflee grounds hitherto thrown away in most cases with kitchen refuse. A rectaurant keeper hung out this sign: "Coffee Like Mother Used to Make." â€" One morning a man entered the cafe, apd as the waiter approachâ€" ed him hJ’inquired, pointing to the sign; "Is your coffee really such as mother used to make?" "Then," said the man with a remiâ€" niscent look, "give me a @ap of tea," "Yes," assented Boyd, "they can owe people money and feel easier about it than any others with whom I have had anything to do." "It is, sure!" replied the waiter, convincingly, "The Clarks are in easy circumâ€" stances, I believe," remarked Cobb. It is the result of successful experiâ€" ments to convert dried grounds into nourishing fodder for cattle. Special filtering process has also been devised for winning a certain "extract" from the grounds which has been found suitable for human nourishment. It is now proposed that all public instiâ€" tutions, such as barracks, hospitals and prisons, join with householders in systematically saving up the coffee grounds, which will be collected ofâ€" ficially at regular intervals. This is to certify that I have used MINARD‘S LINIMENT in my family for years, and consider it the best liniment on the market. I have found it excellent for horse fiesh. (Signed) & -'-_D'OEtOPâ€"Ah, and I suppose you‘d like it stuffed with something special, eh? _ Trichmanâ€"Inced, and I would, I‘d like it stuffed with another wan. Twa in One. Doctor (to wounded soldier who is on "low diet")â€"Is there anything you want, my lad ? Iri;hm'anâ€"â€"Och, doctor, if ye‘d be givin‘ me a nice fat goose for me dinâ€" ner, now ? 1 Granulated Eyelids, ore Eyes inflamed by expoâ€" sure to Sun, Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Murine ye s EyeRemedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort, At Your Druggist‘s 50c per Bottle. MurincEye SalveinTubes25c. ForBook oftheEyeFrecask Druggists or MurineEyeRemedy Co., Chicag# 21â€" ts ~W. §. PINEO. "Woodlands," Middleton, N.S. Your Baby‘s Health Weak, puny babies are a constant care to tired mothers and are subject to many diseases that do not a&ect healthy children, It is a corrective for diarrhoea, colic and other infantile ailments. It soothes the fretting baby and permits the child to sleep well and grow healthy. It brings comfort and relief to both child and mother. Keep your children in good health. See that their bowels move regularly â€"especially during the teething period. This is a distressing time in the life of every child and the utmost preâ€" caution should be taken to keep tfiem well and strong. By the consistent use of it is possible to avoid many childish ills now so prevalent. Is absolutely nonâ€"narcotic. It conâ€" tains no opium, morphine nor any of their derivatives. It is soothing, pleasâ€" ant and harmless, For generations mothers in all parts of the world have ___ have it bandy _ Relieve and Protect Your Children Sold by all druggists in Canada and throuchout the world used it and millions of babies have been benefited by it. SAVING COFFEE GROUNDS. Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup Cheerful, Chubby Children Make the Home Happy Makes Cheerful, Chubby Children Grounds for Complaint. Buy a bottle today and Guard So Easy ! tE "Crippen met his equals at the reâ€" formatory. Vicious, sullen horses, horses that looked like villains and acted as such, roamed about the padâ€" dock when Lieutenant Rimington walked, like a Daniel, into the lions‘ den and the animals at once became quiet. 5 % eatabli wicked (?) army horses. "One of these horses was called Crippen, but the Camden Town ownâ€" er of that name was a saint by comâ€" parison with him, according to the soldiers who tried to tame him. "That sentence was commuted to one of detention in a horse reformaâ€" tory. In this reformatory, near Shrewsbury, the horse criminals, unâ€" der the care of Lieutenant Rimington, become in time so docile that they will eat sugar out of a lady‘s hand. "Crippen had killed one soldier who had tried to saddle him, and was sentâ€" enced to be shot. A friend in England sends us this story: "One result of the war is the "The officer carried neither stick nor whip. He understood horses, and, apparently they understood him. They owe their lives to him, and seem to be aware of the fact. "Anyhow he is soon on Crippen‘s back, and Crippen is buckjumping in fine western style. Neither stick, whip, nor spur is used to tame him, but tamed he is, in very short time, like the rest of the savage Simons, who have been condemned for murâ€" derous practices, "The Shrewsbury horse reformaâ€" tory, through which hundreds of vicious horses have passed, has provâ€" ed such a success that the whole proâ€" cess of taming the animals has been filmed, under the title of ‘Reforming Army Outlaws,‘ and will shortly be seen in Wardour Street, where the picture is sure to win the approval of all lovers of horses." While the vast majority of vicious horses are undoubtedly made so by those who have handled them, a horse is occasionally born with a stubborn, perverse, and ugly disposition, Even in such a case we do not question heredity plays a large part, and the bad disposition may be due to a sire or dam spoiled by an owner or trainâ€" er.â€"F.H.R., in Our Dumb Animals. Strangerâ€"I will give you a nickel if you will climb over that fence and get my hat, boy. j Country Boy (climbing over quickâ€" ly).â€"I‘ve gob your hat, mister, all right; now, how much will you give me if I bring it to you? "Colonial" Phon h, Maho finish West y re a 1 cabiner i1 in high 14 in. wide. 124 in ‘deep, West, whore a Hiboral freight allow. 8 in. mrmr:zle. hickelâ€"plated soundâ€"box. ADCe is given. {.ono um.kb E:i speed rfiu}utor '-nd w\‘\"‘fli Our special! list containing all our cran TA werful spring. r t pnl:y any 12 in. rocogg in one vylndl‘ng. ‘,j; wondorful money «aving offers an4 metal is nickelâ€"plated. Uses saphires illustrating our fine premiums or n“df:-' which are given on all purchases of $1.00 or more, is sent free upon request. Sending for it does not obliâ€" gate you in any way. ALLEN MANUFACTURING CO. DEPARTHWENT "W" sR y >Â¥ Think of Cetting this Fine Phonograph ABSOLUTELY FREE 183 St. Paul St. West "OTTO MIGEL" When buying your Piano _ insist on having an ONTARIO A HORSE REFORMATORY.. A. RAMSAY & SON CO. (Established 1842) MONTREAL, Que. REMEMDEA! The ointment you put on your child‘s skin gets into the system just as surely as food the child eats. Don‘t let impure fats and mineral coloring matter (such as many of the cheap ointments contain) get into your child‘s blood! Zamâ€" Buk is purely herbal. No poisâ€" onous coloring. Use it always. 50c. Box at All Druggists and Stores. REMEMBER! The oi To Have and to Hold. combination of approved raw materials. Master painters will tell you no bettor matcrials exist, Your own good judgment will tell you that scientihe machine mixing is superior"to guessâ€"work and "hand paddling." Specify Ramsay for your next birâ€"jobâ€"and for the odd jobs you do yourself get the right Ramsay finish. Splendid service from the local Ramsay dealer or write the manuftacturers Piano Action In RAMSAY PAINT you get the most accurate and thorough of a reformatory for BRANCHKES AT TORONTO AHD VANCOUVER FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar trouble and gets horse going sound. It acts mildly but quickly and good reâ€" sults are lasting. 1)oeo not blister or unovoll:fie hair and horse can be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet with each bottle tells how. _ $2.00 a bottle delivered. _ Horse Book 9 M free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, Enâ€" larged Glands, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins; heals Sores. Allays Pain. Will tell you more if you write. $1 and $2 a bottle at dealers or delivered. Liberal trial bottle for 10c stamps. W. F. YOUNG, P. D. F., 516 Lymans Bidg., Montreal, Can. eat once. . "s-&i'y' limited. Write for quo= tations. H. W. Dawson, Bramnton. § Machinery For Saie Wheclock Engine, 150 H.P., 18 x 42, with double main driving belt 24 ins, wige, and Dynamo 30 K. W. beit driven, _ All in first class condition. Would be sold together or separateâ€" ly ; also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as room is required immediâ€" ately. 8. Frank Wilson & Sons 78 Adelaide Street West, Fools butt their heads against brick walls, while wise men start out hantâ€" ing for a ladder. out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwoo8, Ont ________ BOOK ON DOG DISEASES ‘ o And How to Feed N Muiled free to amy address by ‘.M" the Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER €O., Inc. Dog Remedies | 118 West 31st Street, New York "Mbsorbine and Absorbine, Jr.. are made in Canada. / "Made in Canada" You get the same quantity and ofâ€" ten a higher quality of supplies and besides obtain fine furnishings FREE, as a bonus. _ We prepay freight, except in the extreme West, whore a liberal freight allowâ€" ance is given. You can get this Phonograph enâ€" tirely . without chargeâ€"or your choice of hundreds of other houseâ€" furnishings. All that is necessary for you to do is 4o buy your houseâ€" hold supplies (soaps, toilet @rticles, spices, notlons, etc.) direct irom us, the manufacturers, at less than the regular prices you pay at home., EED POTATOES IRISH COBâ€" DOMINION RAINCOATS ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETCG, Best for quality, style and value. Guaranteed for all cliâ€" SsroPs Llbinabelled uameness from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bone, SEED POTATOES Toronto. Ask Your Dealer *» $ ' H n! \_s, #4 mc 44

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