the er, ‘nere was a terrible dynamite exâ€" plosion near a small town. An old lady, hearing it, turned toward the door of her sitting room and said: "Come in, Bella." When her servant entered the room she said: . "Do you know, Bella, my hearing is evidently improving. I heard you knock at the door for the first time in twenty years,"* & There was a : plosion near a lady, hearing it door of har eiÂ¥+i, "‘vpnecy of Fiying of 200 Years Ago. Inasmuch as the words were uttered more than two centuries ago, t*ere was a truly prophetic anticipation of the experience of the present war in a sermon on "physioâ€"theology," deliverâ€" ed in 1711, by Dr. William Delham, of St. John‘s College, Oxford, which has just come to light again. "As in all probability the art of fAying would particularly be," he said, "by putting it in man‘s power to discover the seâ€" cret of nations and families more than is consistent with the peace of the world to know; by giving ill men greater opportunities to do mischief which it would not lie in the power of others to prevent; and, as one obâ€" serves, by making men less sociable." Prophecy of Flying of 200 Years "Thank God, you were the poor fello Wilson. day Even that did not satisfy him, and’ he must needs go to bring back the On ammunition. _ Having accomplished | wP that, he remembered the comrade who In : had started off with him, and without | a word to anyone he faced the shrapâ€" nel yet again. He found his "pat"! _ C still living, although riddled with seyâ€"| T entcen bullets, and dragged him to wom the trench, where he died the next! §¥ "There‘s the throwing it dow saluting. The Seottish lion reached the Britâ€" ish lines unscathed notwithstanding the shells that continually burst round him. Then he fainted. When he recovered he asked if the gun had been brought in. Being told that it had not been fetched, he ltlmedll" and went again to face the shells, He soun returned, carrying the gun on f his shoulders. rear. _ _ 35 _ __OOUff wias uncanny in its deadly accuracy. Had he missed once the operator at the Maxim would have speedily riddled him with bullets. A Dauntless Scottish Lion. ‘ Wilson waited for a few minutes after the sixth man fell. Then, havâ€"| ing come to the conclusion that tho] entire gun‘s crew had been killed, he crept forward to take his prize. A‘ German officer rose in his path and‘ fired pointâ€"blank, but missed his aim;| Wilson quickly bayoneted him. That, was the narrowest of Wilson‘s my, escapes, for the officer‘s bullet had f grazed his head. ’ Wilson had gained the prize for| which he Rhad risked his life, but he’ was not permitted to retain it undisâ€" puted. He observed a large company' * of Germans approaching. Instead of | ; beating a retreat, the brave Scot slued |( the gun round and opened fire. He" worked the gun as skilfully | as hol had handled his rifle, and mowed down | ¢ scores of the enemy. He was fired at C by the German artillery as well as by | ( the infantrymen, and, as the place beâ€" came unpleasantly warm, Wilson deâ€" cided it was time to advance to the‘ c a fifth and a sixth ( son‘s shooting was deadly accuracy. H: the operator at the M speedily riddled him m naitem &A# Fuay ... 3 ____ _‘Z ~Cetnneâ€"POtsgh, hay ad man to whom he h? spoken followed, Yanced greatly and farmers â€" should but he very soon fell, badly wounded.) take every precaution to conserve the Wilson went on alone, and managed Supplies produced on the farm, to dodge the bullets by dashing from‘ Wood ashes have a high value on haystack to haystack across the field. account of the potash they contain. All the time he was raging in'.,-d}y,‘i Ashes from hardwood contain, when He was determined to reach the gun 4ry, from five to seven per cent. of and put it out of action, to avenge the Potash and are worth from $25 to $35 poor rifleman. Ihaw® tm iave Buslegy I 0. 90 on Having said that, he began to crawl toward the wood among a perâ€" fect hurricane of bullets. The rifieâ€" But that feat only whetted his apâ€" petite for glory, we read in Heroes of the Great War. A Maxim gun conâ€" cealed in the wood began to play upon the British position, and men began to fall on every hand. As his companions dashed to cover, Wilson turned to a private of the lhc’s‘ Royal Rifles who was nearest him, and coolly remarked: I "Mon, I‘m angry wi‘ I‘m gaun to stop it!" tance shots, and then, I’n.llill;-. alone into a German position, â€" captured eight of the enemy by a clever ruse and freed two of his comrades, Heroic Highlander ~Faced German Guns Four Times to Accomplish His Objects. One of the most remarkable exâ€" ploits of the war is that which won the Victoria Cross for Private Wilson of the Highland Light Infantry. . On September 14, 1914, he killed two â€"of the enemy by remarkable longâ€"dis. REMARKABLE EXPLOIT OoF GREAT WAR. Hearing at Last. Lod, you got the gun!" poor fellow‘s last words to s the gun, sir‘" he said.l it down before his officer and | _oflicer rose in his path and intâ€"blank, but missed his aim; quickly bayoneted him. That narrowest of Wilson‘s many | qonoec °0 5 o C1 Cef CUMpany t \We st close of day, O Father, approaching. Instead of / For our Empire plead, f treat, the brave Scot slued Guard our soldiers, God of Armies, ind and opened fire. He ; In their need. gun as skilfully as he‘ & of his aim; his rifle elick-f * second operator fell. _A had started to fire the xun," t the fate that had befallen | ‘ssors. Then a fourth and. a sixth German fell. Wil-i ing was uncanny in iss VICTORIA CROSS angry w remarkable longâ€"disâ€" "s »ack the: On us pour Thy®*richest blessings, accomplished | When all wars shall cease: > was fired at‘ B;Wfl‘; as well as by | Guide the place beâ€" gun had On their beds of pain | D | Ee , Grant our In the brightness of Thy presence We find peace. â€"H. D. F. Canadian Chaplain Services. Tune, "Holy Father in Thy Mercy." Whilst they plans devise, May their schemes find fullest favor In Thine eyes. Grant our leaders strength and courâ€" Heavenly comfort'; and Thy mercy On the slain. Grant our airmen as they upwards Climb through haze and cloud, Grace to hear Thy promise ringing Clear and loud. On the mighty deep, FOOD you have missed one of the gdood things in life Shield our sailors in their perils you never tasted M Nadnicduduaisteais dksicclld Coal ashes contain only traces of potash and they possess very little if any value from the fertilizer standâ€" point. Ashes from corn cobs contain more than thirty per cent. of potash and where any quantity of cobs can be obâ€" tained they should be burned and the ashes utilized as a source of potash, Leached ashes seldom contain more than one per cent. of potash and if used at all they should be considered as a source of lime rather that potash, and be purchased on that basis. o m y and fifty to sixty per cent. of lime L P uhishaBbrcdibsmni td Ts :s supplies produced on the farm. Wood ashes have a high value on Though Wood Ashes Are Valuable, Coal Residue is Not Worth Prourvlng. During the past two years the price of all fertilizer materials, and particuâ€" larly those containing potash, has adâ€" vanced greatly and farmers should take every precaution to conserve the ammnitem aecy s /2 ‘ biscuits with milk or cream and some fresh fruits make a nourishing, satisfying meal at a cost of only a few cents. FERTILIZER VALUE or _ % me â€" e ** HTdLt Meal a Day"â€"that‘s the slogan for those who want to conserve food and also conâ€" serve strength and health. But be sure it is the whole wheat prepared in a digesâ€" tiblc form. C L .ws l s tible form. â€"Shredde d Whesat Biscuit is 100 per them, bless them, loving Pilot, Safely keep. "One Whole Wheat If wounded as they languish VESPER HYMN. wheatâ€"nothing Two or three [X DPr€ ASHES Germany expoct; every flesï¬an fly and bug in every wheatâ€"field in North America to be true to the Fatherland and are able to make complete reâ€" ports on everything that has occurred lup to the minute they were forced to descend. â€" Practically all the larger balloons now are equipped with wireless or telephone plants that keep the observâ€" ers constantly in touch with the ground. The United States is developâ€" ing a great fieet of the "sausages,‘ as they are generally termed. chors. sWarine this uol o ujA t "t[ CTheâ€"formalin. treitment is cheap, ,chors, swaying this way and that at / easily applied and entirely effective, the touch of every breeze, but from!if properly done. ~ This year, in thouâ€" ‘the basket suspended far_below keen| sands of fields, the losses from smut eyed" observers spot every shot their will actually exceed the amount of seed artillery sends over int? the Boche’sown. The cost of treating the seed positions. While the balloons are freâ€"| amounts to only a few cents a bushel quently destroyed by hostile aeroâ€" | and no one can afford to lose even two lplanes the casualties among the obâ€"|or three bushels per _ actre when the Servers are surprisingly small. Each cost of treatment is so small, | observation basket is equipped with | ooo lfpr zns | parachutes and all the observers need Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. | to do when the bag" above them is s | damaged or is the centre of attack is , _ Whose Baby? throw out their parachute, climb over| A schoolmseter had just finished an‘ the basket and sail slowly and graceâ€" | instructive lesgon on food, when little fully to the ground. They carry with, Basil raised his hand. a l them all their instruments and charts "Well, Basil, what is it?" anauit.â€" | Observation Balloons Note â€" Every Shot Sent Into Enemy Positiong. From the North Sea to the Swiss frontier one may almost trace the fighting front on clear days by the obâ€" servation balloons. Great, awkward, ungainly bags, they tug at their an-[ chors, swaying this way and that at: the touch of every breeze, but from! the basket suspended farâ€"below keen | eyed" observers spot every shot their artillery sends over int® the Boche positions. While the balloons are fre-f quently destroyed by hostile aeroâ€" planes the casualties among the obâ€" | servers are surpriginolv emall .1 } THE WORK OF THE "SAUSAGES." | . Mrs. Eugene Vaillancourt, St. Maâ€" thieu, Que., writes: "My baby suffered greatly from constipation so I began using Baby‘s Own Tablets. I was surâ€" prised with the prompt relief they gave him and now I always keep them in lthe house." Once a mother has used Baby‘s Own Tablets for her little ones she always keeps a supply on hand for the first trial convinces her there is nothing to equal them in keeping her little ones well. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25‘ cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ | Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ' CC â€" Coead For the small boy this design is very smart and attractive. The coat of the little suit is most unusual and the trousers are knee length, McCall Pattern No. 7924, Boy‘s Eton Suit. In 3 sizes; 2 to 6 years. Price, 15 cents. These patterns may be obtained‘ from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. BABV‘S OWN TABLETS ALWAYS IN THE Home bust, and No. 7947, Ladies‘ Tw Skirt in 5 sizes ; 22 to 30 waist. 20 cents each. ~ Especially smart for early fall is this black satin gown with its high collar, long tight sleeves and hip drapery. _ McCall Pattern No. 7971, Ladies‘ Waist, cut in 4 sizes; 34 to 40 Tow wl on on Te 9 um on m s opeut , Ladies‘ Twoâ€"Piece If the end of the war finds the Canadian people & bit less extravagant that will be no small gain, Price, , "Well, Basil, what is it?" questionâ€" ! ed the teacher. |_ "Please, sir, Billy Jenkins said he ,knew a baby that. was brought up on | elephant‘s «milk, andâ€" it gained ten pounds in weight every day. ~ "Billy ought rHot to_tell such rubâ€" bish," replied the master. Then: "Tell me, Billy, whose baby was brought up on elephant‘s milk ?" l "The elephant‘s baby, sir!" hositat-‘ ingly replied the boy. En A schoolmseter had just finished an instructive lesson on food, when little Basil raised his hand. C | Formalin Treatment is Cheap and k Very Effective. â€" | _ Some fields of oats recently examâ€" |ined in Dundas county by the Comâ€" mission of Conservation were found to be badly smutted. _ On one man‘s farm diligent search was made and not one smutted head was found. He has thoroughly treated his seed oats for the last three years. On another ‘farm where untreated oatsâ€"were sown, | smut was very prevalent. This farmâ€" ‘ er estimated that he had from 5 to 10| per cent. of Jloss from smut, but actual and careful count of certain areas de-‘ monstrated tha\(i 87 per cent. of his grain crop was lost from smut. This! may seem startling, but the loss from this cause is generally greater than it seems. The straw which bears smutâ€" ted heads is stunted and they are low down in the crop and not easily seeny P so that there is a loss both in grain | and in straw. | 4 Formalin solutions and traps (the conical trap 18 effective) should be used outside the house to reduce the 'number of files near by. If flies enter the house, the "swatter‘" should be used immediately, or fly poisons may be employed (an effective fly poison is one part commercial formalin diâ€" luted with nineteen parts of water placed in saucers with a teaspoontull of syrup. Special attention ought to be given to excluding flles from contact with dried fruits and fruits in the process of drying, in particular such fruits as are likely to be eaten without being thoroughly cooked. Thisâ€"may be done by building a wooden framework about the trays and stretching over the top of this metal or cloth screenâ€" ing, in such a way that the screen will be a few inches above the fruit. It is high time that universal efforts ’were made to eliminate houseflys by permanent methods, such as controlâ€" ling their breeding places. _ For the present season it is imperative that emergency measures * be adopted for protection. Efficient screening is the best emergency protection. \ | The housefly has long been conâ€" demned as a spreader of disease, beâ€" ing incriminated both by circumstanâ€" tial and by experimental evidence. The structure of its feet and mouth partsâ€"in particular the presence of small hairy pads on the feet which are covered with a sticky fluid, enabling“ the fly to walk upon walls and ceiling â€"makes it possible for any sort off filth to cling to the fly. Drying and Canning Season Is Time # of Special Danger. _ The menace of the housefly. is at present greatly increasged, because of home drying, preserving and canning of fruits and vegetables. _ You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. It should be added that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have a beneficial effect upâ€" on the general health. They increase the appetite and energy and cure disâ€" eases that arise from impure blood. condition actually becomes worse, When there are pimples or erupâ€" tions, or an irritating or itching rash, a soothing boracic solution may help to allay the irritation, but of course that does not cure the trouble. Skin complaints come from an impure conâ€" dition of the blood and will persist unâ€" til the blood is thoroughly purified. It is well known that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have effected the best reâ€" sults in many forms of skin disorders and.blemishes. . This is due to the fact that these pills make new, rich blood, and that this new blood attacks the impurities, that give rise to skin troubles and disperses them; so that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure skin disâ€" orders from within the systemâ€"the only sure way. HOUSEFLY AGAIN INDicTeEDp LOSSES FROM SMUT: CURING SKIN TROUBLES Se many people._both men and woâ€" en, suffer from sklp troubles, such as t questionâ€" fatal pujjap ... "4 )3 â€" _ ubf Where the |__ He says that a Iew drops of a drug fatal bullet went through." !called freezone, applied directly upon | _ _"There, children," said their aunt.‘a tender, mching corn, instantly reâ€" â€""You remethber what I said about a|lieves soreness, and soon the entire stitch in time saving nine. _ If that corn, root and.all; lifts right out. ;h°]e had been _ mended the, bullet: This drug dries at once and simply 'wouldn t have gone through." Then shrivels up the corn or callus without 'ahe capped it by adding. "And Nelson |even irritating the surrounding tissue. Imight.have been living yet." §54. "Aa A Bit Ancient Now! , She was an admirable person and never lost an opportunity of pointing a moral to her small nephews and nieces. She took them to the museum for a treat. "This," said the guide, "is Nelson‘s waistcoat, worn at..the battle of Traâ€" falgar, and this is the hole where the fatal bullet went through,." ‘ L FRDWT ECCC BEEUVT j . areas. _ They have adaptability and ,| beauty superior to most roofings, and | ; entail the least first cost. Since the || temporary | nature of many of our | ,’ buildings, the migratory tendencies of | | our people and the rapid development | | of our cities and towns are tuctors] |making the use of wooden construeâ€" | ‘tlon advisable, to attempt to legislntel’ 'the shingle or the frame dwelling out |â€" of existence is both uneconomical and ’ ]lmpractlcable in Canada at the preâ€" | ‘sent time. e | Discovery of a Satisfactory Method of Treatment is Presentâ€"Day Need. ‘| _A field for investigation of tremenâ€" ‘| dous importance to the industries atâ€" l‘fected lies in an attempt to discover : a satisfactory treatment for wood 'Jshln;lu that will render them meéeaâ€". | sureably fireâ€"retardent. No process: |can ever make wood "fireâ€"proof," for | no class of material will resist fire unâ€" | der all conditions. Innumerable exâ€" | periments have been made to demonâ€"‘ strate â€" the efficacy of various com-{ pounds, but conclusions of practical ) value have never been reached. While I tests have proved certain treatments | | to be suitable for one particular con-,’ | dition, such as retarding fire, the | substances used have failed to emâ€" body equally valuable qualities of perâ€" |. manence and weather resistance. A | good shingle fireâ€"retardent must also : L:w,ve endurance, insolubility, attracâ€" || ‘ iveness and cheapness., T With the discovery of a satisfactory | method of treatment, there does not | appear,.to ‘be any sufficient reason why | 1 shingles should not become a most deâ€" | t sirable roof covering for dwellings and ; t other buildings . outside congested ; h areas, hoi ns itc dt son bae ho n im n ds Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. , Gents,â€"A customer of ours cured a very bad case of distemper in a valuâ€" | able horse by the use of MINARD‘s | LINIMENT, & I The manurial value of clover need not be dwelt upon at any length,. Our lwork in this connection is fairly well known throughout the Dominion. It ihas been of an exhaustive nature and has yielded most satisfactory results; indeed, it would be difficult to overestiâ€" mate its value to Canadian agriculâ€" ture. Chemically, physically and bioâ€" logically, the growth and turning unâ€", der of clover fr:lproves the soil, and we have been enabled to demonstrate overâ€"and over again that a crop of clover in the rotation has a manurial . effect equal to an application of farm manure of ten to fifteen tons per acre. â€"| _ Perhaps one of the most remarkâ€" . | able results obtained in our experiâ€" , | ments .;m. fertilizers has been the »pdiscovery that, as far as ordinary ) farm crops are concerned, fresh and ) |rotted manure, applied at the same ‘ |rate, have given practically â€" equal | yields. ‘The explanation for this is not easy to find, since rotted manure, | weight for weight, is very considerâ€" ablyâ€"richer in plant food than fresh manure. It probably lies in‘ the betâ€" ter inoculation of the soil with desirâ€" able microâ€"organisms for the converâ€" sion of soil plant food into ulimilable, forms by the fresh manure and the‘ greater warmth set up by its fermentâ€"‘ ation in the soil affecting beneficially , the crop: in its early stages. But, be ] this as it may, we have the practical ) , deduction that there is no concomitant | gain from the use of rotted manure, | j in the ordinary farm rotation, for the ‘ , labor involved in rotting it and tho’ large losses in organic matter and', plant food that inevitably sccomplny, C the operation. The quicker the farmâ€"| 1 er can get the manure into the land or 4' t onto the land the better, for it is never | & worth more than when first produced.‘ The manurial value of clover need | s Liniment for sale everywhere. *~ ~MANURE As FERTILIZER. The Quicker it is Put on the Land the FIREâ€"PROOF SHINGLES ? Yours truly, .__ VILANDIE FRERES a satisfactory | Efforts are being made by the govâ€" ere does not | ernment to double the output of honey it reason why | mainly through a campaign of educaâ€" me a most deâ€" | tion directed at the bee owners. More dwellings and , than 125,000 circulars of instruction © congested ; have been issued to them, as well as a Stability and | large number of individual letters. ‘ sduldgn Lonn EC s emenâ€" es af-’ A D cover | for five wood | meéea. | _ Who ocess | knows. " for | compar e unâ€" fancient e exâ€" J:;ining mon. | Fabrics Inbcninnere hy l 0 W S Aor or druggist about it. R All good dsuggists zlways carry in stock _ If your druggist hasn‘t stocked this new drug yet, tell him to get a small bottle of freezone for you from his wholesale drug house. A small bottle of freezone obtained at any drug store will cost very little but will positively remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one‘s foot. KUXATED IRON 3# ter; wear shoes a size smaller if you flke, for corns will never again send electric sparks of pain through you, according to this Cincinnati authority. well| _ Lt.â€"Col. George McLaren Brown, the _ It European manager of the CPRK., and writes to the "Tariff Reformer and ilts; Empire Monthly," in England, urging estiâ€"‘ a comprehensive scheme by which the culâ€" returned soldiérs could be placed on bioâ€" the land in so far as they desired itâ€" unâ€", a scheme by which lands closed to the and public would be fully opened upâ€"not rate a few parcels of land, such as were: of noticed in the press, and which would . rial not give a square foot to all who | irm might seek this means of settlement, cre, but a plan by which large numbers _ | could be uconmoduted on the lands in the Mother® Country. _ Mr. Brown lrefere to the plan of the C.P.R., which ] offers improved farms, in selected colâ€" onies, with distinctive military names, improved by the company; and asâ€"| | a | Sisted colonization farms of 320 acres | 11. | Cach, selected by the intending settler, yg and then improved by him with asâ€" | |sistance from the company. _ Easy . terms of payment are offered, carried : 'over twenty years; but the point that C Mr. Brown insists on is that it is not [ l people out of the workhouse that Canâ€"‘ ada wants, because such are not deâ€" ‘ !slred in the Dominion, but people who m ~~lare likely to succeed. He urges that C Ithe, whole question of reconstruction * be tackled with vigor on the other ï¬ of { side. ECR°0°4 °° H2ZSOIDS UNC juice, | signs of ski Oel:’ly a ;mall iper cent. of the money" F}‘ B‘g{efl saved up for rainy days is inv i » on, umbrellas . ested m' throughout Never allow fresh meat to remain in paper: it absorbs the juice. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. || _ Who invented the door no one | knows. It is, however, an invention of | comparatively modern{imes. _ All the fnncient houses, even the houses conâ€" \taining doorways, had no doors. | l;abrics or skins of animals were hung | across the doorways to keep out the / elements. Eye Saive, in Tubes 25¢. For Book of the Hyeâ€" Free. Ask Murine Eyc Memedy Co., Chicago‘s y a} Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by l l S-:l.. &l':tanyd“u"i‘n::‘:uckl; relieved by Murine. Try it in e@ your Eyes and in Baby‘s Eyes. UR No Smarting, Just Eye Comfort At . Murine Eye Remedy At, Your Druggist‘s or by Let mMonEey OoRrpErs A Dominion Express Money â€" for five dollars costs three cents | â€" It is an everyday occurrence to soe’ young men in the prime of life turn| quite gray, while others go mad and| ‘leap out of the trenches and lose | ]themnlves among â€" the exploding ; challs +| were in a train going at 100 miles an ~| hour, â€"with thousands of other © locoâ€" ‘| motives all racing through an endless * | tunnel, Thelirhtmadebyfln exâ€" ‘| plosion of the shells appears as if the "heavena were rent asunder, with all ! the clouds running into one nnothc.] Streams of machine gun _ bullets j whistle overhead and try to get as| near one as possible without actually hitting one. The air is &ll of whirâ€" |ring fragments, with the smoke awnâ€" | ing over the whole district as if a | heavy thick fog had fallen upon the | earth. folks step on your shells. Brief Description of Some of War‘s Horrors by a Returned Soldier. A great general has truly said that "War is hell." Had he seen some of the things we in France have seen he would have said "War is hell with the lid off;"" the escaping flames bringing death and torture to all who cross their path. FARMS FoR . bombardment seems increases strength of delicate, nervous, runâ€" down people 100 ag cent. in ten days many Anstances. $100 forfeit if it fails as per full explanation in large article soon t0 appear in this paper, Ask your docâ€" TORONTO "WAR IS HELL.* OouRr soLpiers feet hereatâ€" Order | â€" Mrsé. MARGARET QUNT ‘Ee;‘jj. | Worthen St., Lowell, Mass, wagearp 2. .78 12 """ Clls MASB, '0'“du ""““t'fllflmm.m g::h-. dread of hp.E“",;t timidity, sounds in the Ipitation . k c l m y c Oe > Reeepra of the heart spaerky n | lnwollhllm.â€"“lflor the last three | years I have been troubled with the hoat nay, . 3. _ ©__~","~ VOmpounG is the be:'tm:dyl:ygikaomnnqnuke." WOMEN OF ' N’ Mml Uo S- An" | throughout the world. For cleansing, purifying and beautiâ€" fying the compï¬exion, hands and hair, auticura Soap is supreme, ezp«;ially when anisteg by touches of Cuticura Ointment to soothe and hast .ls w W aiis D30 007 TCP Et * internal and external, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. of BUY FrURS _ AT WHOLESALE PRICES, Persian Lamb, Mink, Alâ€" aska Sable‘ Also Men‘s Furs: Satisfac» tion by mail guaranteed. Send for ilâ€" lustrated catalog. MeComber‘s Limited, Manufacturers, 420 D St. Paul West, Montreal. 5 Even if there were no embargo on apple shipments to Great Britain this season the market there would probâ€" ably be a limited one, as the United Kingdom itself is promised an unâ€" usually heavy fruit crop. Ih-u'-unmo-:u.-n..m ’a railway rightâ€"ofâ€"way, don‘t underâ€" estimate what it means. Inform the nearest fire patrolman or station agent. . Lend a hand yourself. Throw away neither burning matches, pipe ashes, cigarette nor cigar ends. NANCER, TUMORS, LUMPSs The Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIGEL® PIANO ACcTION IUUSE No. 39â€"‘117, If you see a t to soothe and heal the first skin troubles. For free sam» ess Gm-card: *Cuticura, Dept, n, U. 8. é“" Sold by dealers MIDDLE AGCE before the eyes, cign of fire on or near e of Life and 2+Â¥ W bi4 o