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Flesherton Advance, 1 Jan 1914, p. 7

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I"' A HUMAN DEVIL. Central Villa Delights to Kill Men Who Are Helpless Before Him. General Villa, the successful leader of the revolutionist forces in Mexico, is a murderer and thief, according to a wealthy mine owner who hag just returned from that troublous country, "Villa," said he, "is half devil And half cur. He is the most un- speakable wretch that ever strad- dled a horse, but he doesn't expose him.se:? to danger if he can keep out of it. I suppose he has killed as many m-en wiCh his own hands as any other man in Mexico. I doubt if half a dozen were given the chance to shoot back." He told of one occasion in the early days of the present insurrec- tion in Mexico when Villa captured twenty men of a band that had been badgering him. He- condemned them to death in his usual way, ne- ver bothering with court-martials j or other flub-dubbery. Then h j designated himself as the execu- i tione-r of his own decree. -He had ; the men bound, hands behind backs, but with eyes unbanda-ged. "This will seem impossible to you," said the mine owner, "but' Villa walked down that line of men. revolver in hand. From time to time he shot a man through the heart, and stood by him until the victim had kicked his last kick. He taunted the bound men. Prolonged Torture. "I want you to enjoy this, as I do," he told them. "Those- who gave way to terror he put aside, to be shot last of all. In that way thev savored to the last twinge the full agony of their position. Some of them he half encouraged to believe he took thfi women. He led hi? men in the excesses that followed. Twenty Years a Bandit. "For twenty years Villa lias been a bandit. In that time he has ne- ver exposed himself willingly to bullet or knife. I do not say that L..C man is a coward. I merely de- clare that fair play, a-> Anglo- Saxons understand it, is folly to Mexicans. They hate and fe-ar Villa, but it ha* never occurred to them that he was anything but superlatively sane in lying behind a rock when ne shot down his man, 1 \o\a Smiiii Case of Interest to 111 Women Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help to Many People. Halifax, N.S., Dec. 15. Wnen Inter- viewed at her home at 194 Argvle St., Mrs. Havel-stock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case. "I was always 'blue' and deoresed. felt weak, languid and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick head- or in approaching a man with smile, only to thrust a knife j ache and feared a nervous breakdown. through him when his back was Upon my druggist's recommendation ALL FELL OUT safely turned. They do things dif- ferently in these Latinized coun- tries. "Villa is an able man," said the speaker. "He kept at liberty for I used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. "1 felt better at once. Every day I ' Improved. In six weeks I was a well , woman, cured completely after differ- i ent physitians had failed to help me. i It is for this reason that I strongly . Also on Neck, Big Bare Spot on Crown of Head. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured, 103 Chapleau St., :.!om.-ial. Wh-n my brother and I went to Rhoot we goc ringworms frcA tiie oiher children and our hair ail (ell out. We fjtd them on our beads and on our nerJu. Fur month* I bad a big bare spot on tho crown of my head the sUa of a fifty-cent place. Mother tried everything. >' kind* of otntmeou, to euro as but everything teemed no good until on* day she aw an idvertiaemenc for Cutlt-ura Soap and Ointment. It wa Cuticura Soap and Ointment that ured us. ' Mra-M. Blake. May 31. 1913. ClarK's - Porks, Beans twenty years, during most of which vr-ge sufferers with stomach or diges- time a price was on his head. He j tlva troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's knows the desert and mountain | PM*-* i_ i xi_ j ^_L. Dr Fi&m'lton s Plils strencxlien tne country better than you oo cne I . . . lines in your hand, and he has a! en ^ nerves and rest ore debilitated certain quality of loyalty not com- systems to health. By cleansing the mon among Mexican leaders. His > blood of long-standing impurities, by men knew that if they were cap- ! bringing the system to a high point trtad tured by the police or soldiers i of **<* ^^ effectually qbase away TT--I it *i i_ i j weariness, dopression and disease. Vi.la would rescue them if he could, j Good for yonn g or o i,j f or men f or If he could not he would have re- i women . for children. All dealers' sell venge for them. His revenges were . Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and so bloody and cruel that towards j Butternut, the last he was little interfered ITCHY RASH ON HANDS Tergu*. Onf . " Cntlcnra Soap and Oint- ment completely cured me of a rub on my band*. The rank waa rail like wairr bli*iu. very Itchy and sore. Scratchloc made ttwm The Irrltatioa waa bad at nicht, I any remedies v' ich did not do any I lued Cjti..:ra Soap a a wasn In warm water night aad morning wiUi Cuti- cura Ointment and In laea tbao a week It waa (Slcoeu) M.T. UaU-ila GiOeoo. with by the regular forces. One of I Madero's mistakes waa in recogniz- j ing this man. And yet he remained true to Madero aa better men d:d not. H is a fairly good general, and has not imposed too onerous THE AIR WE BREATHE. English Professor Says Bad Air Is Not So Tery Bad. Fresh air fiends will get little restrictions upon his men, who are i support * for their propaganda in the for the most part mere land | ew * Professor Leonard Hill, an He _ part mere , pirates. It is not likely that Chi- j tngbsh physiologist. hiMhua or any other large torn * that bad air is not eo very will b looted bv him, because all"** after . " He sa * 8 rt ls an T bo regular me of Catlcur* Soap for tofle* and bath net only tends to preeerve. purify and beautify the k!a. acalp. hair and Hmt but aiatiu In pr*rentin Inflammation. In*. tat! on aad flagging o/t tie po-?s. the common caiue of pimples. MackOeadi and other uo- wholeaocie condltiona of the akin. Cntl- eura Soap and Ointment are old by d.- .* j*j: aad dealers everywhere. For a Ubn-el free cample of each, with 32-y. book. end post-card to Potter Druj & Ctutna, Corp . Dept. D. BoaCoo, C. 8. A. AMBASSADOR'S PRIVILEGES. Only Pert-en That Can Turn Back oa a Rinz. Ambassadors to foreign courts are hedged with formalities, but they also enjoy numerous privileges unbeknown to the average layman. Ambassadors and their households are safe from arrest. The embassy is considered a geographical part of the Ambassador's own country. The Ambassador is the only per- son about court who has the ri?ht to turn his back upon a sovereign when concluding an interview. it turns and bows ifter walking three paces, a prerogative he always ex- ercises. This refers, however, only to state occasions. A peculiar sit- uation arose from his privilege in Queen Victoria's time. Of course, it was considered rude to turn i one's back to a woman, therefore an Ambassador never did. He mere- ly edged his way, sideways, to the door. Ambassadors are accorded the. privilege of entering tno presence I of a sovereign through wide-open i doors. Lesser dignitaries and ! court attaches enter through on leaf of a folding door. An Ambas- sador can demand and get an inter- view with a ruler at any time, a privilege many , sovereigns, no doubt, abhor. The sword is the Ambassador's ! i for i'e at . iorin- No > emblem of honor. It is a long, ^* blunt-pointed rapier, and the late "" Lord Dufferin declared the only == practical use he ever found for it waa to stir fires and file bills on. ED'JCATIOH. E' r T"TT8 BCSISESS COLLRf.K. ronto. Caniida* Popn!r Tom Catalnvne TO. elal PffMl !!. M. OAWSON. Ninety Col barn. StrMh I> Yi->r W4VT TO BfT r>H SK'L A Pmit. 3'ork. O-sin. fir D-i* Farm. wr-t* H- W *Vwn. BmBpton. or tt N. W. QAWSON Colbor-* ft Tjrarta FOR SLE N r offl- AND JOB . Propr:**tor being it nnnhle to C : .T* tbe pr:-' attention n*"*aT. "* for a pi-< H.Vi... .,. WANTEO. the effect 'upon his standing with| erro1 the United States. But later you ' crowded will hear that he has carried fire and sword to the lonely country- sde. Every man who had monev before the war began ha beet made to give it up if Villa found him." VOYAGING ON THE CONGO. Description of a Trip on the Big African River. A trip bv steamboat on the- Con- r erroneous idea that we air of close. roomi is contaminated by : The the exhalations of human beings and is impoverished of oxygen. It i* the het in a close room TERBA COTTA LONG-LIVED. Ago that makes us feel uncomfortable. Product of 1.000 Trars Found in India. Terra cotta, which enters promi- nently into the construction of sky- UiiaV-l. ILi^iJW^TS \Aa BWM i* i*-v S/ *A*M*.-V^ i t^rf . % i 11 I *1 V* not the lack of o^-ge-n or the sur- [scraper., tall iikhngs, apartme: You Can't Beat It f>r Sore J-ij;sis. fil vc; pn-rxs. "FVK A VT > JIART!f. Reid P~w.. Bo-hwo!'.. Out. FIVE 4 and Fisher. Ont. MHTK. D. Bat<?, Bidgetown. om. Bro.. BtB- A Professional Dancer Proved It. MItCfLlAMfOU* plus wding to the professor. The only effect of an excess of carbonic acid supposed to be very poisonous is to make us breath* deeply and ven- tilate our lungs more fully. As for the loss of oxygen in a close room, '"it is never diminished by more ?U VI IUT? Ol*l- I , in the air ac- ' noU8es an< * other structure* i,nat| p ew men j u n j 8 profession are bet- c Geueral Villa. that he might spare them'. Then he killed them, fairly licking his lips M he did so." There was another story, of Vila's garroting half a dozen me_n one day. For some reason he did not want to shoot. He slipped a short loop over the- head of each man. thrust a stick through it, and twisted. As the victim gasped for breath h let up on th pressure-, to that the death agonis might be s sweetly prolonged as possible. An eye-witnc*s told the mine owner of this series. "When they were all dead, 1 ' said the witness, "Villa was so tired, he le-pt like a babe." "For years," said th* man from Mexico. "Villa has made a prac- . tiee of robbing isolated ranches or little towns. First he killed every man he could find, both because he- liked to kill and because he carries caution to an almird excess. Then go River has its lazily amusing at- : than one per cent., for the cracks, tractions, as you descend from ; crannies and pores of the walls^ al- Stanleyville to the railway at Leo- w v " to let fre&h air in. poldville. a voyaze of twelve days. However that may be-and a lay- The boats, small, stern-wheel af- i man should hesitate to dispute are classed ss fireproof buildings, j ter known than Mr. Thomas Hogan. r* is probably th moat lasting ma- of 27 Fortification Lane. Montreal. TUMORS puln bv onr how* -* terial that goes into these build- ings. Terra cotta used more than years has been who writes: "To limber up a stiff Joint, to remove every sense of sore- ness from tired muscles I can tell you nothing compares with Nervlline. Jt ' G frr ALL "TONES. Aft Htones. Hiff" nd k with ?b or'rr KIDNKT ASP >'. a thousand found to be in as g-oed eond'tion as ^ ig ^^ - wonderful liniment, and I when it left the primitive kiln. i U8e )t continually, simply because I ' 'tZ'<SZr'"*"yZ' W. H. Martin, who represented | fl n d it keeps the muscles and Joints tnrin rv.-anT of the United States Government in jauople and entirely frve from pain aud "" '"** Calcutta in 1907, is authority this. Mr. Martin's statement and r Canada r -r, '.. '"<< .re. If for ! stiffness. I earnestly recommend NVr was ivHine to every person that requires to *., ..v~. =.u-.., <.^. u ~~ _ . pagoda of terra cotta reliefs fairs, carry from twenty to thirty ! scientist tt can hardly be denied p oli i n$cr ; p tion dating back to the cabin passengers each. On the j that pure outdoor air tastes and Seventh century A. IX The pieces lower deck: are the black travellers, j '^ells much better than the air in a ventilated room. One may sometimes in a stifling crowd. sprawling over the cargo. Most of ! b * as ""f ** th< oth * r> the captains are Swedes. Russians. . " * constituent are concern- or Germans, and the engineers are ed, but most folks will prefer air picked up in Sierra Leone-. Two I that ha* not been breathed m and companies run boats, and several ?t too often. In the popular mind. if not in scientific fact, headaches and drowsiness are- ctosely associ- ated with impure air. u Ing liniment." For Rheumatism Nervillne is a won- der: for Sciatica it cures where others fail: for Lumbago, stiffness and cold. illustrated the life of Buddha and nothing surpasses h. Keep Nervtline the figures were as sharply outlined \ haudy it's good to take Inwardly, de- then asthedav thev wre modeled, j stroys internal pains gulckly. and Is *- An :dea of the age of the,, pieces ' {., 'J^S Sgf^S may be had from the fact that th-y gjze 25c mf store keeper9 ^4 drug were ki!ue<l about the time Engiard PRODUCEHS By thippingyour NEW LAID EGGS to GCNN, LANQLOIS & CO.. LIMITED, MONTREAL, you secure t>e BEST RESULTS. One trial shipment reooioun nd d being conquered bv the Xor-:f a i , N.Y. or x ne Catarrhozono Co., Buf mans. It is said that the terra cot- ta has been buried in India's mud for many centuries. This ought_ to b* reassuring to those who think that skyscrapers will crump. HOW THE SCRAP STARTED. Jonea -.eppf>l on $milh'j favorit* com of the mission stations have steam- boats of their own beside. Some of the boats have small din- ing-rooms ; others set tables on deck, protected from the sun by awnings. The food is not luxuri- ous, and very little fresh meat is to be had. The fuel is wood, and every five or six hours the boat must stop to replenish the supply from a heap of cut sticks on the bank. These piles of wood are ., ^_- r , made by natives, or by scattered seems to have a sneeze and stuffed Putnam, ta the only .tandby. Try it. traders, often where no habitation ( feeling in the forehead and nostrils. To . H_ is near; and in such cases the cap- 1 ^ e ^"otWn^worth ^sln^eic^t A Source of Clory. tain pays for the wood by putting Catarrnoxone . You luhale its balsamic All Scotsmen take pride in their money m a box that the trusting woodsman has provided for the purpose. Every boat drum, and as it approach Drawing (!< Lino. Officer What's the matter that soup you're turning up nose at ? Private It'* full of sand grit. ir. with your and DO TOrB STOTKIXG* SHBIMC from wa&tilnc :t hurt vou? Do the odUdren v-onplain.' Tb IDEAL. irOCidNC STRETCHERS *< iU atock-jjfi '.rv'. acd w*ar Uk oew. rv'iiaTe -.-.r.4 feat. oon aad UT aarn- IDC. Two !. aJuh a:i<l cb.ld- reu 60r. a ua:r br mail I YORK A CO.. Watarlard, Ont Officer Now, look here, mv man, come to camp to grumble but tollars. Vt I.ca.st. Mebecca I d<.w't believe you lofa me. You never think of anything Most Pleasant furekn<wn For Co!d In the Head Glvts Rllf In Ten Minutes. i Lilian. yfcu.i-jj i ^-iT-n j ivi hisB .!>* w - Every second person that you meet ! - e " ln twntr-tou hoar.-! serve mv count ^changing his mmdt ! _ *^ , i., . ..,.'_. (.- "*,*. ,.,-.. _ - i M , ', P- v- M. Jkflkv ! -that painlr- remedy for COTTM and your ou.ntrv rivate Well Silverstein . . . to vou vant a man dot vas all de tim eac it. Mlnartfs Llnim*nl Curts Culm, Etc. a an vapnr. and fel as if you were among na tive land, but none more than the Norway pines. This Is because oW gardener of Dudd : ngton. >i>t Very Promising. Mrs. Newly wed (to cook, whomj she has just engaged') You see. my j husband is so very particular about beauties of the loch and his food, bronchial tubes. Away goes the cold; of the little village. It was even- ] Cook (sympa^eti< t l' v >-Tn e y''' e ^^ _. -~ ,_ . -^ i - TAKE NOTICE. breathed straight into the lungs and tourist inont from oronca . gneexlng and catarrhal cough cease. in>t. and as he expatiated on th all alike, mum. My old man was habited district, the drum is beaten to tell the natives that goats, fruit. or vegetables are wanted. Some of bronchial irritation stops; "in short lovely scene and on the glories of jest ..he same; I never cooked any- the stop ping- place* are bomas, with you are cured of tatarrh by a pleas- n j g eountry. the moon rose over a thing to please 'im in me life. white people, where rubber and | ant, simple remedy, free from seda- yjj ivory are- taken on board ; but most tives a^dJrrU^nts.^ ^ ^ ^^ j Tne old man 8topped gh ort in the CO.. LIMITED. Happy New Year! Are you acquainted with the sweet, toasty flavor of Post Toasties crisp krinkles of choice Indian Corn toasted to a delicate golden brown ready to eat direct from package ? Wholesome, convenient and Immensely appetizing. Ask the grocer-man anywhere. Oaaallan Poi a Or.l Oe.. Ltd. Wlkdaor. Ontario. of the>m are native villages or wood- yards, with little variety or pic- turesqueness. Every night the steamer ties up against the bank, and all the black passengers go to sleep on shore. But they devote most of the night to merrymaking, and keep those on the boat as wide awake as themselves. ^_ _ __ The Medicine That Helped. An ideal pruiwuuu lui IUT \.ui=oi. -jji * lungs, nose, and throat Is the frequent mi<to:.e use of Catarrhozone. Tw o months' the moon in treatment (the large size) costs $1.00. After a moment he turned to the medium sizes 50c.; at all dealers or the tourist, and said, "There's a moon Catarrhoione Co.. Buffalo, N.Y., Kingston, Canada. LIQUID SULPriCR cures RHEUMATISM by removinn the cause. Impurities in the blood and fui . ve , j teU ye. mon, we're <rrand nation :" I<ird Palmorston once inspected "Summer in the Lowlands," a pic- ture by Sir John Watson Gordon. "Look here," said Lord Palmer- Mlnanf'i Llnlmant Curt* Oiohthri>. 3T . i.il I J.' % tav a* viav v nv"*.--* . f RHKL'M VTISM LIOl'ID 1 V\<?men 111 Switzerland who grad- I'mt to direc- ! uate ' u theoiogj' will hereafter be [^^j Trv it. ' entitled to the status, of t'uo cli-m\. SULPHU1 tions will purify the bl One bottle. Price 50 Cents, will con- vince you of its wonderful merits. On sale at a.ll druggists, or send direct to LIQUID SULPHUR. 138 Earliest Newspapers. The earliest English iwwspsper, Bay Street, Toronto. 1 llr .fllMIUlUt IH.ll tll-ILMU. . . _ .. , T . . ). tston to the artist, 'why should tn Xathaniel Butter's "Weekeler Imagmawn mu.t always be_ reck- ; ^ . Q ^ fie , d fee K long w h,n;^ ewcs ^^ ^^ of which are * to be seen at the Advertising Exhi oned with in medicine sometimes certain doctor treated an old wo -ig.] man for typhoid fever. On each visit he took her temperature by . are. so many sheep in ' "My Lord." replied the sheep were only putting a thermometer under her tongue. The doctor returned. As he came into the sick-room the old woman d {nto th(? flel<J Ust night! ^^ p aln , Tr3ton bought the pic- ture at a high price. bitiou, abroad. Making Measles Pay. Parent- -Sow, what are you go- ing to charge me to cure this boy The first of these in point of th* measles ? of time was the ''Ordinrij A visa," Physician- Nothing at all. my of time was the uixnnnj Avisa. 'w^ , . r? the publication of which begun at dear sir. as it .ngini .1 case; _ _ _ Strassburg in 1609--14 years before | "^ you get your ten per cent com- .- You are n6t going He - . Mlnard'i Liniment Curas OUtemper. >*0 Go. Jenny'* uncle, who was a ach<>ol teacher, met her on the streei and asked her if she was going t-o the dance. "No. I ain't going." "Oh, my little do.ir," said lu-r uncle, "you must not say I ain't going," and he proceeded to &'>\s her a little lesson in grammar.,-' . ^"appearance of Nathaniel But- j "* ** '.'? child thst CAtchei looked" up at him with angry uu! Try Murfnc Eye Remedy ter's venture. In 1620 Abrali&mi 1 1U J U yon have Red, Weak, Watery Eyw Verlioeven founded the M KaV] MM|Mr| Lin imtnt Cur Carg.t In Cow*. ~ _ C ''._. ^ 1 .. *^. 1 L* . ,_1 J.I I"\,*_ , ' CBA AA '''.'.., -. . n'* * * 'l > t (i . i-> i ' *. 1 t ' i i ; reproachedful eyes. One dav, when she was nearly r Granulated Byvlida. Doesn't Smart Tliiklinsten" at Antwerp, and this well the "doctor did not bother to Soots Eye Pain. Druggists Sfl ^. nt inued to appear weekly for take her temperature. He h.id J[ u ri n By. R*dy. Liqoid 25c. Sta. years The oWest ex i st ing hardly got one hundred yards from ^ "^ y * Ev ^ a BOO^ f^ % y MaS VP er is apparently the Swedish tlie house when her son called !< ; m .'i>TMt 9~* t~ am>~ MM* MM* CM official gazette, which dat tvu-k to back. Murlm* Ere *\*me4r C.. Cblaaa* 1644. London Chronicle. "Doctor," she said, "why didn't | you give mo the jigger under me Two Scots met the othe r day af- tongue to-day? That always did ter many years. First Scot Ah, me more good than all the rest of! weel noo. Sandy, an' hoo hae ye your trash " been >ttin' alang this lang timet Second Scot Fine. man. fine ; an" A Scottish farmer recently paid a 'visit to a South of England cattle show, and while walking round got hoo are a' the auld folk ,' First weel ; but ye Wwl, the big Weel, mftu, mind Jock McKav ! steam-hammer at the foundry cam' talking with a native farmer. Neither could well understand *W his chest an killed him. what the other said. The Beota- 1 Second Scot-Eh, puir auld Jock- little nettled at this and M* ve ken Jock aye had a weak man got a put it down to the Englishman's stupidity. "Man," he enid at last, stup "yer cows moo a craw quite richt, and yer plain, but I'm I can mak' y-u oot.' cheut. Jealousy will not listen to rea-s- on, because it doesn't believt there is such n thing. Robbers Over-Slwklngs hur to put on i Comfort In Adversity. The way in which a person meets trouble is the surest test of charac- ter. Trouble is the fire which purges us of dross and toughens the virtues like the tempering of steel. Medk-iue is nasty at the moment of taking; but afterwa-rds we shall be given to feel the bene- fits of it. As the best so'diers are put in the forefront of the hat-tie 90 often are the most worthy souls apportioned suffering, and yet gain .greater greatness at the last. "A j stitch in time saves nine." Who ! knows but that one trouble now I may save us from nino troubles later on. A bit of suffering: is ften all that is needed to turn a "cub" into a man, or to make a true wo man of some tl ing. We arc not no\:i. You -ir not going. They are not going. Now, can you s.v '.! th.it ? Jenny r ''Sure I can.'' she replied, mak- ing a curtsey. 'There ain't nobody going." -"DODDS KIDNE^ nP^A^S . ' Kl). 7. E I- '14. /

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