From Scotland f Mrs +rd has the ou nt clay‘s Bank, Tasde Commussion. > _ w___ _ 4 "As a nation we can only consume to the value of what we produce, and it production falls away there will be less to go around, and each will have to pay more for the things he‘ The music at lri‘l.l.l»_wgyg was originally for the Burpose of driving away the evil spirits. s It will be known as the "British Imâ€" perial Antarciic Expedition," its leadâ€" er being Mr. John L. Cope, FR.G.S. Mr. Cope accompanied the Imperial Transâ€"Antaretic Expedition, 191417, as surgeon and biologist to the Ross Soa Party. Arrangements are so far advanced that the expedition will be able to leave Britain in June, 1920, and return in 1926. During the six years‘ interval continuous communiâ€" eation will be maintained with the contres of civization by means of wireiless equipment ihlgh would be earried by the e:pednTon. A South Pole Expedition. Details are published concerning anâ€" other expeditioin to the South Pole. Many more similar instances might be cited, but the foregoing are suffiâ€" cient to show that some dumb aniâ€" mals have this one advantage over man. The giraffe, which is a very timid animal, is approached with the utâ€" most difficulty, on account of its eyes being so placed that it can see as welt behind as in front. the driver ever attempt to take the whip in kand, and if the horse is used to the work he will at once increase his pace. The hare possesses this power in a marked degree. Its eyes are large, prominent, and placed laterally. Its power of secing things in the rear is very noticeable in coursing, for, though the greybound is mute while running, the hare is able to judge to a nicety the exact moment which will be best for it to exert itself to the| utmost in order to avoid capture. liorses are another instance. It is only necessary to watch a horse drivâ€" gn without blinkers to notice this. Let Some Dumb Animals Have This Adâ€"| is a deliberate sacrifice of their. money vantage Over Man. ’value. Many of them act as if blind e P | to the necessity of upâ€"keep. They apâ€" For obvious *Casontss Nature h-as parently do not realize that property "'."'"w.ed son)e ummgls with the gift painted as often as is necessary proves of seeing objects behind them, as well not only an attraction but actually enâ€" as in front, without turning t}"m'lhances its selling value. It is the exâ€" M.a ."S' & s perience of banks and other instituâ€" The hare possesses this power in a tions that lend money, that in fully marked degree. Its eyes are large, 50% of the applications received, the prominent, and placed laterally. Its property has so deteriorated by reaâ€" power of secing things in the rear son of the neglect to keep the wood is very noticeable in â€"coursing, for+| ing metal work protected from decay though the greyhound is mute while by the necessary application of paint, running, the hare is able to judge 19| imay tme borrower is unable to realize a nicety the exact moment which will anything near his own estimate of be best for it to exert itself to the'their value. The average farmer utmost in order to avojd capture. shows an utter disregard for keeping liorses are another instance. lt‘ is up the cash value of his property, perâ€" only necessary to watch a horse drivâ€" mitting decay and disintegration . of n without blinkers to notice this. Let what is most perishable on his buildâ€" the driver ever attempt to take the ings, namely, the wood and metal whip in kand, and if the horse is used work, whereas, if paint had been used o the work he will at once increase when found necessary, which means his pace. _ ,| on the average every three or four The giraffe, which is a very timid|years, it would have protected â€" and inimal, is approached with the Utâ€"| maintained their value as a valuable mnost difficulty, on account of its €yeS| asset and substantial collateral should i eing so placed ‘hj‘t it can see Mlnecemity ever present itself. | cce " Ks iuc" «. Kex IPPVI It was made in the Great Exhibition year, 1851, by the master tailor of the Carbineer regiment, for an officer who was the present owner‘s master, and to whom it was bequeathed after ten years‘ . wear. It was taken to Mr. Poole, the weliâ€"known tailor, to be copied, but, alas! no such cloth, even in 1866, was to be found to equal that remarkable coat. In fact, it was the last of the Mohicans in coats. And the present wearer is proudest when he dons it, with feet shod in a pair of shooting boots given to him fifty years ag 0. There is another man who possessâ€" es an overcoat which he has worn in all weathers for the past forty or more years, and "it still looks newer and fresher than other coats made many years later." And An Overcoat of Over Forty Which is Worn With 50â€"Â¥zarâ€"Old Boots. A straw hat that lives to the age of twentyâ€"seven years may be conâ€" gidered a veteran, but it is quite Juvenile compared with one that has seon sixtyâ€"eight years‘ service, â€" and which is worn daily by an elderly man who works in a Government ofâ€" flce not a great distance from Parliaâ€" ment Square. This hat is of the beaver type, and ‘ was handed down to the present proud wearer by his grandfather. The hat is said to look all its sixtyâ€"eight years, but has stood the test of time’ as no modernâ€"hat could do. ket be seen to dilate, and in a very few seconds the animal will be wide awake â€"probably looking for the bit of meat which it has eaten! € The Russians, we are told, likewise aver at the time of the Creation, pusâ€" sy‘s furry coat was designed for the dog. The latter noble animal, howâ€" ever, forfeited such a coat by becomâ€" Ing very impatient whilst the slow process of gifts took place, and going over to the Evil One in the hope of acâ€" quiring a better covering for its body. 5 . emeinners en C sary Household Pet. The Arabs are said to have an old legend concerning the cat, to the efâ€" feet that this animal was created to destroy the mice which bred in Noah‘s Ark. L:tyends About the "Harmiess, Necesâ€" SIXTYâ€"EIGHTâ€"YEARâ€"OLD HaAT SEEJING BOTH WAYS not appear to be on the marâ€" omp Cake and pie, or beans and potaâ€" toes should not appear at the same mealâ€"â€"they are duplicate foods. Farmers who neglect to protect their properties by paint are adverâ€" tising to the countryside their lack of real thrift. What more charming picture can 'we find anywhere than the farmer‘s home with its vegetable and oldâ€" |fashioned flower garden, his barns ’and outâ€"buildings all well painted in | color, tuned in harmony with the ’green of his meadow land, his fields | of waving grain, the orchard" and | woods nearby, the azure blue overâ€" ; head. And yet how rare it is to see such homes in this fair land of ours. Do our farmers not realize that the "run down" condition into which they allow their homes and barns to get, is a deliberate sacrifice of their money value. Many of them act as if blind to the necessity of upâ€"keep. They apâ€" Hurts the Purse as Well as -the Property. You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ’ ter your work and enjoy leisure hours. For women there is a prompt relief of, [ or prevention of ailments which make life a burden. Mrs. Thos. Kaake, l'trenton. Ont., tells how she obtained | new health and strength through the | use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. She says: ‘Mhe weakness came on me so gradually that at first it was hardly noticeable. But after a time it got so that 1 could not go up stairs without 'stopping to rest. Every particle of color left my hands and face. and the ’ least exertion would tire me and leave my heart palpitating violently. I con-‘ suited a doctor who told me the trouble was anzemia and prescribed a tonic. I took this medicine for some time, but itâ€"did not seem to help me a bit. Then I read of a cure in a similar case through Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and decided to try them. The result was these pills made me feel like a new woman. I have gained all my former health and strength, and feel that I owe my present condtâ€" tion entirely to Dr. Williams‘ !’inkl Pilis. Ine patient soor got well. ' All the blood in the body is nourâ€" ished and kept rich ang red by the food taken daily, but when, for any reason, a person is run down and canâ€" not make sufficient blood from the food to keep the body in health, then & bloodâ€"making medicine is required. The simplest and very best of bloodâ€" makers suitable for home use by anyâ€" one is Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. When a course of these pills is taken their good effect is soon shown in an imâ€" proved appetite, stronger nerves, n‘ sound digestion and an ability to masâ€" It took centuries for medical science to discover that the blood is the life. Now, it is known that if the blood were always abundant, rich and pure, very few people would ever be ill. It was not until the end of the 19th cenâ€" tury than an instrument was invented for measuring the red part of the blood. _ ‘Then doctors could tell just how anaemic a patient had become, and with medicine to make new blood the patient soor: got well. RIGH, RED BLOOD MEANS REALTH Grapeâ€"Nuts k, Pale People, Require a Bloodâ€"making Medicine. LACK OF PAINT as a health builder. .. leas ® T/zeites a RPeasor 6E 1r'etgulam p&l\rt ofdat. st one meal each day. ’,lt?s Bec_:ag.sg of th)e’. ightful flavor, and wonâ€" ful values of Grapeâ€"Nuts why so many people make } An optimistic old Scotchman‘s favorâ€" ite expression was, "It micht have been waur." One day a friend said to him. "Tammas, I had an awful dream about ye last nicht. I dreamt ye were dead." "Aye, man Sandy, that was bad indeed; but it micht have been waur." "But it was waur," went on the other. "I dreamt ye had gone to the bad place." Losh me, Sandy! Me an elder in the kirk dead an‘ gone to. the bad place. That was awfu‘, butâ€" it micht have been waur." "Hoo could it have been waur than that ?" asked Sandy, amazed. "Weel, ye ken; it micht have been true." ' The native inhabiting the jungle of Africa cannot send letters, and he has certainly no telephone wires or teleâ€" graph poles, and yet he can with ease communicate with his neighbors some twenty miles away. His method is exâ€" tremely simple. _ He makes a drum from one to three feet in length, holâ€" lowed out of a solid block of wood, and he taps out his message by means of two wooden sticks. News in this way is regularly transmitted, and no message is too complicated for the drum code. Every native knows the code, and is thus a wireless operator The pointed draped tunic and shawl collar of a sheer material make a charminry trimming for this frock of printed silk. McCall Patternâ€" No. 8939, Ladies‘ Dress. In 7 sizes, 34 to 46 bust; Price, 25 cents. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. | 3 sizes, 16 to 20 years. Price, 25 cents. Transfer Design No. 962. Price, 20 cents. A prettiere frock for warm days would be hard to find. This one is developed in Georgette crepe â€" and trimmed neatly with beads. McCall Pattern No. 8958, Misses‘ Dress. In Africa Has Might Have Been The Weekly â€"> Fashions Nove!l "Wireless." et he can with ease his neighbors some . His method is exâ€" He makes a drum Worse. operator In getting something for nothing we usually pay all it is worth. Excellent kindling may be made of newspapers soaked in water, squeezâ€" ad ant "‘ m \ ) "I can‘t think how it happened," said he. "I had them with me when I jwent into the readingâ€"room of the Athenaeum, ~and‘I only laid them down for a second or two while I searched my pockets to find a letter I wanted. When I looked for them they were gone!" Then the good Bishop was asked who was in the room at the time as well as himself. "That‘s the dreadful part of the story," he said, "for there was only present the Bishop of London, the Bishop of St. David‘s, the Archbhhopl of Rochester, and Mr. Gladstone!" It appears that Bishop Thorold was one day lamenting ito a fellowâ€"churchâ€" man the loss of his goldâ€"rimmed glassâ€" es. They were old friends, and he felt their going keenly. Who Stole the Glasses? e Those who can appreciate the inâ€" tense respectability of the Athanaeum Clyb will relish this story from Frank Boyd‘s "A Pelican‘s Tale." Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend. MOoNEY ORDERs. Pay your outâ€"ofâ€"town accounts Dominion Express Money Orders. 1 Dollars costs three cents. Cut new bread with a knife dipped in boiling water to prevent crumblâ€" ing. + "It doesn‘t matter a bit," he replied, not to be outdone in courtesy. _ "I‘m sure the number ydu gave me was much better than the one I asked for; but it just happened that I wasn‘t able to use it." # wire It was the same old story. He had got the wrong number on the teleâ€" phone. _Only this time he received a shock. "I‘m sorry 1 gave you the wrong llne.\" said a sweet voice over the The general manager in his analysâ€" is of present conditions spoke optimisâ€" tically regarding the bank‘s position and its ability to share in the coming expansion of the country‘s business, The old board was reâ€"elected and at a subsequent meeting of directors Sir H. Montagu Allan was reâ€"elected president and Mr. K. W Blackwell, Viceâ€"President. _ _ An interesting evidence of the bank‘s progressiveness was shown by the statement that since the signing of the armistice the bank has opened 88 branches and subâ€"branches which not only provided employment for the bank‘s ‘ officers returfiing from overâ€" seas, but furnishes that much more adâ€" ditional banking facilities to the pubâ€" lic. Mr. Macarow, the general manaâ€" ger, stated in the course of his adâ€" dress that out of a staff of 1,300 at the beginning of the war enlistments numâ€" bered $23, or nearly 100% of the eligibles. Of the number going overâ€" seas, 73 men made the supreme sacriâ€" fice, while 87 were wounded. on it Eeeoye AmOe The president also spoke feelingly of the death of Mr. Andrew A. Allan, one of the bank‘s directors. His place has been filled by the appointment of Mr. Lorne C. W&bster. In order to provide for future exâ€" pansion the shareholders authorized the directors to increase the capital of the bank from $10,000,000 to $15,â€" 000,000, although it was stated by the President, Sir H. Montagu Allan, that there was no intention of issuing any of this stock in the immediate future. Fe c ue OBR 7 . oi \hmramsiae depietiiBabiniadi Int bulrdetc ind i er than a year ago and bear a high proportion to the bank‘s liabilities to the public. Total a have increased over $25,000,000 ing the year. __ Despitethefact that the bank is doing a continually larger share of the counâ€" try‘s business a further examination of the report shows that careful, conâ€" servative banking methods characterâ€" ized the policy of the management. The bank has kept an unusually large proportion of its assets in liquid or quickly available form. Of its total assets â€"of over $166,725,000 no less than $62,750,000 are in current coin, Dominion notes, Dominion and Pro-‘ vincial Government Securities. These liquid assets are over $5,000,000 great-' @r than a vear nPn and haaw a amnsl for the previous year. Non-lntesrggt beéaring deposits gained from $34,800,â€" 000 to $43,552,000. In other words toâ€" tal deposits in Canada now amount to over $135,000,000, as compared with $110,000,000 in the previous year. It is somewhat significant that despite the large increase in deposits the bank‘s clients subscribed to over $45,000,000 worth of Victory Loans, of which only a little over $4,000,000 were converâ€" sions from previous issues. Another satisfactory feature is the growth in commercial loans; these having inâ€" creased by nearly $20,000,000 and now . stand at $95,874,000. ‘This large inâ€" crease indicates very clearly that the Merchants Bank is doing its tulll share in catering to the business | needs of the community. | deposits now stand at $91,904,000, as compared with less than $76,000,000 383,569, a new high record in the his. YOUDE@st baby, being guarante tory of the bank and $146,000 more & Eovernment analyst to c than was earned in the previous year. Y neither opiates nor narcotics or As a result of the larger earnings the harmful drugs. Concerning gividex;:'i '"l incmnec{ tromm‘l.ou:-o, Mrs. David McRobb, "Divide, 1%. Not only were net earn ® says:â€"* » largest in the history of the baMk, but lets anq have found them s0° every department of the bank‘s activiâ€"‘ fact 1 1 ties showed satisfactory increases; : {2°t°"Y ! would not be without t gains. being registered in curre†The Tablets are sold by me loans, deposits, liquid assets and ;dealers or by mail at 25 cents â€" total assets. One of the most outstandâ€" from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicin ing achievements was the large inâ€"‘ Brockville, Ont. crease in deposits. Interest bearing | e _ Unfortunate; Wasn‘t It? ts by . Five durâ€" Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle And tan lotion, and complexion beautiâ€" fier, at very, very small cost. - and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin beâ€" comes. Yes! It is harmless. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fraâ€" grant lotion into the face, neck, arms Girls! Make this cheap beauty lotion to clear and whiten your skin. LEMON JUICE is _ _After four years‘ negotiations with the Canadian and Imperial authorities the Canadian National Exhibition has finally succeeded in procuring a subâ€" marine for exhibition purposes. _ A German Uâ€"boat over 200 feet in length, of the largest type the St. Lawrence canals can accommodate, will be anâ€" chored off the Exhibition pier during the entire two weeks of the Victory Year Fair in Toronto. Four more cars of trophies have arrived, and more are ‘ to be shipped direct from the seaboard ‘ as they arrive from the battle fronts. HARLIN FULTON: Pleasant Bay, C. B. MINARD‘S LINIMENT is the only Liniment asked for at my store and the only one we keep for sale. All the people use it. 8 , small" range of mountains through |vhlch the Sinclair Pas§ and Canyon ‘n‘_ provide an easy road. When the first it i surveys were made for an automobile ;. | road between Banff and Windermere p.) it was planned to use the Simpson t.| Pass, named after Sir George Simpâ€" °e |son, Governor of the Hudson‘s Bay T ) Company, who made this crossing in 1| 1841. But the route over the Vermilâ€" l’ lion was found to be easier and at the .| same time more beautiful, and conâ€" e | struction of the Highway of the Great . | Divide was commenced from opposite‘ y | Castle Mountain in this direction. Atl 1| the same time the road from Winderâ€". ‘ | mere through the Sinclair Canyon was | *| also commenced and at the time of the | § outbreagpof war a gap of only th!rtyl || miles separated the two roads. War | | put an end to construction, and a great l â€"| washout destroyed several miles of ) the western end, so that the project | seemed to have been abandoned. Now, | however, the Dominion Government |has made an arrangement with the British â€" Columbia _ Government by | which the route of the road comes unâ€" der the jurisdiction of the Dominion | Parks, and a substantial appropriaâ€"; tion has been allotted to finish thef work. In this way there is every pros-' pect of the early completion of what | will be the most wonderful automobile road in Canada, opening up an Alpine region of entrancing beauty. It will be possible to motor from Calgary to Windermere between sunrise and sunâ€" set through & hundred miles of the most glorious scenery in North Ameriâ€" Cca. A good automobile road runs south to Fort Steele and Cranbrook, and from Cranbrook there are excelâ€" lent roads to Spokane, or eastwards through the Crow‘s Nest Pass, and back to Calgary. The Good Roads Association of Alberta is enthusiastic | j over the prospect as this will mean © the advent of many tourists from all ’ " over America. The new road will also | f be of great benefit to the Upper Col-, umbia Valley, which has many attracâ€"| ® tions for settlers on account of the 9 fertility of the soil and suitability for| mixed farming. This valley is served i © by the Kootenay Central Railway, a 1{ recently constructed branch of the‘h Canadian Pacific. b Between Banff, the popular summer resort in the Canadian Pacific Rockies and Lake Windermere, the head waters of the great Columbia River, lies an Alpine ridge of spectacular beauty, forming part of the Great Divide. This ridge is penetrated by two comparatively easy passes, the Simpson, and the Vermillion which lead into the Valley of the Kootenay River, a region abounding in game on account of its being well south of the main line of the Canadian Paclnc‘ Railway. Between the Kootenay Rlver‘and the Columbia River is nr THROUGH THE CANADIAN ALPS. Mrs. David McRobb, "Divide, Sagk., says:â€""I have used Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets and have found them so satisâ€" factory I would not be without them." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. German Sub. for the "Ex." JIS&SUE 25â€"‘19, FRECKLE REMOVER other; Asperin is the trade mark, registerâ€" ed in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic,acidester of Salicylicâ€" acid. Handy tin boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"also larger sized "Bayer" packages can be had at drug stores During the war, acid imitations were sold as Aspirin in pill boxes and variâ€" ous other containers. . The "Bayer Cross" is your only way of knowing that you are getting genuine Asperin, proved safe by millions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumâ€" bago, Neuritis and for Pain generally. Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Asperin" are now made in Canada by a Canaâ€" dian Companyâ€"â€"No German interest whatever, all rights being purchased from the United States Government. ONLY TABLETS MARKED witTH "BAYER CROSS" ARE ASPERIN, If You Don‘t See the "Bayer Cross" c the Tablets, You Are Not Getting Asporinâ€"Only Acid imitation!t OTHER TABLETS NOT ASPIRIN AT ALL to the fact th a Doctor Cork Minard‘s ILiniment used by Physgicians The soâ€"called cork legs do not owe their name to their composition, but to the fact t_hat their inventor was "Two years and ten dnr.;,"' he an nounced. "What‘s the ten days for?" asked counsel for the defense. ‘"War tax," replied the court. There is nothing like being down to date in judiciology. A prisoner apâ€" peared before Judge Blank the other day for sentence. The judge looked over the prisoner‘s attorney. "No," replied Smith. "and you can‘t wonder at it He married a girl that looked like a magazine cover, and then expected her to work like a cook book." "Griggs and his wife are not getting along very smoothly, 1 hear," said Brown to Smith. "That is true, sir." Brown replied. "For the past six months and upward I have heard my daughter try to kill two or three each evening, but they never, never die." "There are songs." waid the musiâ€" cian, "that have never, never died. They go ringing down the ages." "Mother. I‘m so lonesome, I‘ve no one to play with," complained Albert. "Well, go and play with Dicky." "Oh, I played with him this morning an‘ I don‘t b‘lieve he‘s well enough to come out yet." Saving the Hens Trouble. ‘"Here, Blinks, I wish you‘d take my garden seeds and give them to your hens with my contpliments. It will save them the trouble of coming over CCE EC2CBUAAITARNCICS °O RCL AALCuraNy, thus removing the cause of conâ€" stipation and selfâ€"poisoning. It is absolutely b‘fl;:feu and pleasant. Nujo! belps Nature establish casy, thorough bowel evacuation at regular intervalsâ€"the healthicst habit in the world. Get a bottle from your druggist today. * s Warning: Nwâ€"»s omya Nujol Laboratories 3 OW o sealed bottiet Bear â€" STANDARDOILCO.(NEWJERSEY) E!‘_;.ï¬:.{..‘..jw You May suffer 80 Broad way, New York Couriers on borse back were enough in 61 but they gave to despatch bearers on mmogo:;idu when Pershing flzm St. Mihicl galient in fortyâ€"eight bours. Castor oil, saits, mineral waters, pills and such purgatives were good enough in their day. Today &ey are giving place to Nujol. Nujol is entirely different from drugs as it does not force or irritate the bowels. Nujo! venl.uhtuonb softeni theloodnstclnd.m?h‘ ym':eumm,c 'toa.rt{u!.m:-ll;.‘ï¬g-r_.ovin«thoo-e conâ€" Nujol substitutes. For â€"'Cc*)fléhpation They Played Hard. Not That Kind. Undying Songs. TORONTO Explained. Mr. Henry B. Thomson, of the Canadian Trade Commission, now in London, says there is practically an unlimited market for Canadian farm produce in Great Britain alone. CANCIIR. TUMORS, LUNMPS, ®TC, internal and external, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment Write us before too late. lr. Beliman Medical Co., lAmited, Collingwood, Ont w ANTELâ€"ONE OR TWO FPIRST class . representatives, . preferably men with wide acquaintance who have had experience in insurance, books, stocks or other similar experience. Unâ€" usual opportunity for live men who are hard workers. Chance to become manaâ€" ger of your own office if you deliver the goods. Address, with full information. Glenn Craig Tobias. 556 King BEdward Motel, Toronto. I ul umt eC NT Py HoF son and save carbon repair bills. ‘This is the best device of its kind, and the only one made in Camada under Canadian patent. No chemicals. simply vaporised air applied scientifically. Prominent Toâ€" ronto merchants report actual un\'lnï¬ of 25 to 40% of gasoline. and climbing hills on high gear, which were impossible. beâ€" fore without our appliance. ‘Thousands sold under unconditional money back in 30 days guarantee if returned in good order, but none returned. Send for desâ€" criptive circular. _ Responsible agents wanted. The "Noâ€"Knocks" Carbon Desâ€" troyer Co., 102 Richmond 8St. W., Toronto LCEPTU d ~Care. (Cek Dept. A, Bostor, U. 8. A." ‘Sold everywhere For free eample each of Coticurs Soap, Oint mentend Taleum address posiâ€"card: "Cuticure healed." (Signed) Ciifford Yeomans, East Chezzelcook, N. S. Use Cuticura for everyâ€"day toilet purposes. Bathe with flo?. soothe with Ointment, dust with Teleum. 2 1 . ADUâ€"RAOCK®" GAS SsAVER (,nnd Carbon Remover can be put on any make of automobile, tractor, etc., and will save its cost, $12.50 (Ford size $10.00) many times each and every seaâ€" PE aUmis "I R _I started to use Cuticura Soop and Ointment and I used two cukes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticure Ointment when J was SS O Esc “? ELL _\ EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER and job printing plant in Eastern Ontario. Insurance carried $1,600. wult g for $1,200 on quick sale. BHox 62 llson Publishing Co.. Ltd. Toronto. W _ TT EMn "I had been suffering with a pimâ€" ply face for three years. My face was full of pimples and they were hard and awfully sore. They fesâ€" rered and dried up, and were scaly , and disfigured my face. They caused me to loeenlotd’lleep, and were awfully itchy, making me scratch and irritate my face. BP meppee cesc g&“’fl’APER. WEEKLY, lIN BR'Ukz unty. Splendid opportunity. x . ‘Jlllon Publishing Co., LAmited, 13 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto © "Fifteen to thirty drops of " Extract of Roots, commonly & called Mother Seige!‘s Curative o $yrup, may be taken in water with meals and at bedtime, for o the cure of indigestion, constiâ€" © pation and bad blood. Persistâ€" 0 ence in this treatment will effect © &A cure in nearly every case." ‘ Get the genuine at druggists. g How to Purify ORD04Q2AtmO4 ce For Three Years. Hard and AwfullySore. Disfigured. Cuticura Heals. a °C o o . t on t n . i . Ah .nn »@ REPRESENTATIVES WANTED. FACE WAS FULL OF PIMPLES UR "NOâ€"KNXOCKs® MISCELLANEOUS Cas savEer ina m# the Blood f