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Flesherton Advance, 25 Mar 1915, p. 3

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\t> >:-t V \ < SPRING IMPURITIES mm BLOOD i Tonic Medicine is a Neces- sity at This Season Dr. Williaims' Pink Pills for Pale PeopI* are an all year round tonic, blood-builder and nerve-restorer. But they are especially valuable in the spring when the system is load- ed with impurities as a result of t've indoor life of tiie winter months. There is no other season when the blood is so much in need of purifying and enriching, and every dose of these PiUs helps to make new, rich, red blood. In the spring one feels weak and tired â€" Dr. Williams' Pink Pills develop the appetite, tone the stomach and aid weak ddgestion. It is in the spring that poisons in the blood find an outlet in disfiguring pim- ples, eruptions and boils â€" Dr. Wil- liams Pink Pills speedily clear the skin because they go to the root of the trouble in the blood. Iij the spring anaemia, rheumatism, indi- gestion, neuralgia, erysipelas and many other troubles are most per- sistent because of poor, weak I blood, and it is at this time when all nature takes on new life that the blood must seriously needs at- tention. Som^s people dose them- selves with purgatives at this sea- son, but these only further weaken themse!ve<>. A purgative merely gallops through the system, empty- ing the bowels, but it does not cure anything. On the other hand Dr. Williams" Pink Pills actually make new blood, which reaches every nerve afttl organ in the body, bringing new strength, new health and vigor to weak, easily tired men, women and children. Try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills this springâ€" they ikill not disappoint yx)u. You can get these health-renew- .ing Pills through any medicine dealer or by mail post paid at 50 cents a box or si» boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams" Medicine C'«., Brockville. Ont. KUIHENERS WAY. Secretary of War Will Not Staad fur rnreasonable Aet». A certain well-known English firm recently obtained a large con- tract from the War Office. To en- sure it being carried out on time, it was necessary for the workpeople to work overtime. This they were perfectly willing to do, being paid •t union rates. After a few days the secretary of the trade union called upon the head of the firm concerned, and ad- vised him that unless the overtime was stopped all the "hands"' would be called out. As there seemed no way out of it the employer concern- ed went to the War Office and suc- ceeded in seeing Lord Kitchener, and placed all the particulars be- lore him. Lord Kitchener asked for the name and address of the trade union man. and said: "Be here to- morrow at 11 o'clock."' At that time tie next day Mr. was ad- aaitted into Lord Kitchener's pre- sence, the trade union man being also there. I^e following e^wrersation then took place : Lord Kitchenerâ€" "Now, Mr. . kindly repeat what you told me ^-esterday as briefly as you can.' Mr. did so. Turning to the trade union ma.i Lord K. said: "Mr. . are these fact* as stated!"' "Yes. my lord; but it is strictly t^aJnst our rules to " Lord Kitchener: "Are the facts right!"' "Yes. my lord: but " Lord Kitchener: "If you call those people out on strike I will get you seven years under the Treason Act for preventing the supplying of His Majesty"s forces. Good morn- ing, gentlemen.-"' THE BEST MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES Baby's Own Tablets are the bes.t medicine in the world for little tines. The.v are absi^lutely safe and never fail to regulate the sto- mach and bowels, break up colds and simple fevers. c.\pel worms .and make teething easy. Concern- ing them Mrs. l3. S. Bernhardt. Port Dalhousie, Ont.. writes: "I have been using Baby"s Own Tab- lets for niV baby and would not be without them. " Tli© Ta'olets are >*old by medicine <lealers or by mail at 25 cents a bo.\ front The Dr. Williams" Medicine Co.. Brock- ville, Ont. PABIS OF E.\STEBN EIROPE. Warsaw Has Many Interesting and Souie Beautiful Buildingt^. Warsa-v-, the chief city of Russian Poland, which the Germans have made no less than three brave but unsuccessful attempts to capture, was origrinally nut a Polish city at all. When we first hear of it in the ninth century, it was the residence of the Dukes of Mazovia, and Ma- zovia did not belong to Poland un- til 1526, although the inhabitants of both regions were probably of the same stock. Not long after 1526, however, Lithuania, which is the region that lies to the eastward of Prussia, was also united to Poland ; and Warsaw, because it was more i centrally situated than Cracow, the capital of old Poland, or Vilno, the chief city of Lithuania, became the capital of the enlarged kingdom. Such it remained through the cen- tury when Poland was at the height oJ its power, and through the years of slow humiliation that led to its downfall. When Poland was divided among | the nations? flussia got possession i of Warsaw ; but singularly enoug'n. | in 1795, the city was handed over to , Prussia, which is now fighting so [ hard to get hold of it again. Na- poleon delivered Warsaw from the hands of the Germaos, and made it the capital city of an independent duchy. But the duchy did not last long. After the failure of Napole- on's Moscow campaign, Russia again overran the country, and re- asserted a sovereignty that has : never been successfully challenged | â€"although the Pules have never ac- quiesced in it. The riots and uprisings that have disturbed the city during the last century have been many. The moet tragic was that of 1863, which not only failed to restore the independ- ence uf Poland, but which brought down on the unhappy Poles the most terrible punishment and the loss of whatever shred^ of national- ity had been left to them. Only ten years ago. too, there were fresh disorders and a good deal of blood- shed, the only result of which was the further repression of Polish spirit by Russian authority. Warsaw, in spite of its vicissi- tudes and misfortunes, has always been prosperous. It is the natural centre of a large and productive re- gion. It stands on a great navig- able river â€" the Vistula â€" and busi- ness has inevitably flowed in upon it. It has increased in popula- tion during the last century from 125.000 to 900.000. One-third of that number a.>e Jfws. It is a great centre for niinufajtures in iron and steel, leather clothing, tobac- co, sugar, anj abjeete of art. As the chief city of a numerous, culti- vated, and entjrpi'ing people, it is well built, with many handsome public squares and gardens; and the animation and charm oif its so- cial life have led its admirers to si)e8k of it as "The Paris of East- ern Europe.' No Jther Russian city has the attractiveness and ' modishness" uf Warsaw. Peti".>- grad is gloomy : Moscow is odd and half Oriental ; Warsaw is 'i busy yet beautiful modern city- It has a university, but the natur- al growth of that institution has been much interfered with by the Russians. They suppressed it en- tirely from 1833 t-o 186U. and then refused to permit it« professors to teach in Polish. By insistir^ 'ii making it wholly a Russian univer- sity, they have alien.it »d the sup- port of tbe Poles withviut gaining for it the attendance if many de- sirable Russians. It is, ho*ev;':-. much resorted to by the Jews. Among the interesting acd b.'au- tiful buildings are the old royal palace, begun several centuries ago by the Mazovian dukes ; th? Church of the Holy Ghost, in which lies buried the heart of Chopin, tj-o mu sician ; the C*upch of the Transfig- uration, which John Sobieski built in commemoration of his victory over the Turks in 1683. and in which his heart lies buried; the ancient Cathedral of Saint John ; the town hall, and the national Polish Thea- tre. In the old part of the town, the narrow, crooked streets and quaint old buildings, not unlike those in some of the more interest- ing German towns, are fascinating. "The most interesting thing ab».>ut the city, however, is the Lazienki Gardens, which were laid out by Kiug Stanislas Poniatowski in an old river bed of the "Vistula. The gardens stand at the end of a tree- lined avenueâ€" the chief promenade and "show street" of the city. They contain numerous villas, an open- air theatre, and an elegant little palace, which is the summer resi dence of the governor-general of Poland. They're Popular In Nova Scotia WHY DODD'^i KIDNEY PILLS ABE A UOISEHOLD REMEDY. People Have Learned From Long Entire Body. Spry Harbor, Halifax Co., N.S., March 22 (Special).â€" "I have taken a couple of boxes of Dodds Kidtiey Pills and have received great bene Eiery Stiff Joint Liiubered, Riieuinatisiii Cored ! That Old Family Remedy "Nervlline" is guaranteed for the Worst Cases. W.4TCH BRITISH SIBMARINES t^ive Them a Chance and They'll Show What riliey Can Do. The British submarines, if they I get the chance, will ^ve as good an account of themselves a.s have the German.s. says a writer in Every- body's Magazine. They are in the hands of the "young ones, who are full of gimp and enthusiasm, a brotherhood of daredevils, cousins uf thoee in the destroyers. The British aubmarine B-U, pass- ed under five rows of mines in the Dardanelles an<i sinking the old CURES NEURALGIA. BACKACHE,! LUMBAGO. I Rheumatism to-day is unnecessary. | „ . ^t . .^ ... , It is so well understood and so read- i Experience that b> t uring the Uy curable that every day we have re- j Kidney Ills They Benefit the ports of old chronics being freed of i their tormenter | "I can spealc confidently of the Ner- ; viline treatment, for the simple reason i budtet Messoudiyeh did on'v a that it cu-sd me," writes .Mbert B. \ pare of a dav"s work. \Z^XH\ TJ*°*h ?°" â- â- '^'? '*°'I Looking for game, the Britiiih imagine how stiff and lame and sore I .. v, â- â-  ^ \. 1 iT â-  "' ' '" fi, , . . T,, -,..â- , was. .Nights at a time I couldn't sleep | '"''" .^**'? V"^^^^ tl»eir .snouts fit from them. They are certainly ; ^g,, , foUowed the XerviUne dlrec | *'*>" "P '° ^he BalUc, even to the a finepiU for anyone suffering from i tlons carefuUyâ€" had it rubbed into the ^ Russian coast. And one from the Kidney trouble.' So says Mrs. sore regions four or five times every, Harwich flotillas cajne plum up to Alex. E. Nilchey. and she speaks day. Every rubbing helped to reduce ! the chain-slung gates of the Kiel the sentiments of a large number of the pain. The swelling went down. I , Canal. the women of Nova Scotia. | got a fair measure of relief in a week. | Dodd's Kidney Pills have so long i ' , also took two Ferrozone Tablets i j j • ,; re«ardine the ac- with my meals. They Increased my P'^J^^ to us ..m.t rega ruing tne ac appetite and spirits, purified mv blood , ^'"° "^f submarines. At the beg:n- and toned up my system generally. nmgof the war, when the first Bn-:- "I am as well to-day as a man could ' 'sh submarine came into its ba.se at l>e â€" in perfect good health. I give ' Harwich flying the skull and cross- Nerviline all the credit." ! bones flag." indicating that an en- •f ,. »u • â-  - IT- . M â-  „ •'^ '^""^^ family size bottle of -Vervi- emvs ship had been sunk, the crew ii t^n,'I[^ ^A ""p^'n ^h"*^' A^^^ '°h' °^y/f^- °'-,^'^!. '^f!„^^f 'â-  and som^ ,of the officers described with Dodd s Kidney Pills they need 23C.. and is useful ia a hundred ills in â-  , ^ -. i .i, • . j r, i not fear those more terrible de- \ the family. Whether ifs toothache, '° ^^^^' ^'"'t^'''^ torpedoes had velopmcnts such as Bright's Dis- ! earache, headache, neuralgia, lame > ^'^"^ '^"â- Â»^- ^jie admiralty discour- ease, Diabetes, Dmpsv and Rheu- ' back or a cold, .Verviline will cure i aged that kind of conversation by matism They have also learned •'"^'^ *•'' ""eadiiy as it will cure rheuma- threatening no shore liberty if any that when the Kidneys are cured j ^.^"•.,.'''"" '^^^'^ "^^ nothing equals; member .^f the crew dared to open by Dodd's Kidney Pills the whole ' -^""'°*" ClarK's Parks Beanj The naval game of secrecy is been in general use that they are : recognized as the standard remedy for Kidney troubles. They havcj become a family medicine in thou- i sands of homes. People have learned from long experience that â-  X. W. OAWSOS, ariacty CollKirn* Str««t. Toronto. IF TOf WA.NT TO BUY UR .SEU. A Fruit. .Stmlt. Urain or Dairy Farm. write H. W. Colborne rit.. Dawson. Brampton, Toronto. or 9') H. W. OAW80S. Colbomo St.. Torosto. NURSERY STOCK. SraAWBEBBiES. RASPBEEKIE.-' PO- TATOES Ci;alo«u6 free. MtCoooeil A Sen. Port Bnrweli Ont body benefit-s. For cured Kidneys mean pure blood, ajid pure blood is the foundation of all healtii. That's why Dodds Kidney Pills are universally jxjpular. + TOE UEALTHUL OK.INGE. "An apple a day keeps the docto* away," is an old adage, and the same may be said of the orange, as it has an equally fine effect on the entire system. If one is inclined to acidity of the stomach, the juice of an orange is a counter irritant. If the stomach is weak the juice of an orange be- fore breakfast is an excellent tonic for the entire day. If one is diet- ing to reduce, one or two oranges eaten at noon will nourish, fill the aching void in the stomach, and re- duce rather than add to the weight. An orange always quenches the thirst, and in travelling it is much safer to eat an orange than to drink stale water. A hot urange- ade before going to bed on a cold night warms the entire body and soothes the nervous system. The peel of an orange thrown into a hot tub softens the water to the extent that the whole body bene- fits by it. For cleansing the face soak a bit of orange peel in a basin o* warm water, then go carefully over the face with the peel ; after- wards rinse in t'ne water in which the peel wa>s soaked. It is far more cleansing than cold cream, and never promotes the growth of hair. Orange peel if soaked over night tinges the water with yellow, mak- ing it excellent for washing cham- ois or doeskin gloves, as in uncol- | ored water they soon become too white. By the way. doeskin gloves »re a great economy, as they wear wonderfully well and wash better than they clean. When washing them Uise a great deal of soap on the soiled parts, rubbing until the dirt disappears, but do not rinse in fresh water, as the »o«p keeps doe- skin soft. ilioo.-^ing Her Husband. .\ well-known LA.>ndon magistrate, who has just retired from the bench, has a great repertoire of good stories. His favorite one re- lates to a case in which he appears ae, counsel. In the course of this case he had to cross-examine the wife of a notorious burglar. "You are the wife of this man?" he ask- ed. "I am." she replied. "You his face. Now officers dont declare that a ship is hollow. Death .^earlv Claimed i\ew Bruuswid La<lv MiaCKT.T.AWBOPg. Was Restored to Her Anxious Fam- ily When Hope Had i^one. , St. John. N.B., Dec. loth.â€" At one ; time it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, ; , of 3 White St. would succumb to the I knew he was a burglar when you â-  deadly ravages of advanced kidney i married him!"' he proceeded. "I I trouble. "My first attacks of back- did, ' she admitted. "How could ache and kidney trouble began years you possibly marry such a man .'"" ; ago- for six years that dull gnawing the magistrate demanded. Well it was like this, " the witness ex- plained confidentially. "I was get- ting old. and two chap<$ wanted to marry me. It wasnt" easy to choose between ra. but in the end I mar- ried that man there. The other chap was a lawyer, same as you. sir ;â-  Clever. 'Darling." whispered the ardent suitor, "I lay my fortune at your feet." "Your fortune!" she replied in surprise: "I didnt knew you had one."' "Weil, it isn't much of a fortune. but it will look large beside those tinv feet.'' Corns Drop Out FOOD QlESnON Settled with Perfeet Satistactioa. It's not an easy miatter to satisfy all the me«ibers of the family at Uieal time, as every housewife kaiows. Instant Relkf Pkiiu on Putnam's Corn Extractor to- night, and corna f««l l>etter la the morn- ing. Magical t h • way "Putnam'*" eases the pain, destroys the rjots, kills a corn for all time. No pain. Cur* guaranteed. Get a 25c. bottVe o( "Putnam's" Extractor to-day. * BnttKli >eed». Great Britain in 1913 iniportetl 2,393.363 busbels of wheat and flour from Germany. .\ustri» and Tur- key; 6,663.300 bushele of barley fr«m the same countries, and 11.- 273.459 bushels of c«ts from Ger- manv alone. Great Britain » to I pain has been present. When I ex- I erted myself it was terribly Intensified. I If I caught cold the pain was unen- : durable. I used most everything, but j nothing gave that certain grateful re- . lief that came from Dr. Hamilton's ' Pills of Mandrake and Butt*rnut. lu- ; stead of being bowed down with pain. tOKiay I am strong, enjoy splendid I appetite, sleep soundly. Lost proper- ties have been iastilled into my blocd â€" cheeks are rosy with color, and I thank that day that t heard of so grand a medicine as Dr. Hamilton's Pills." Every woman should u.se these pills regularly because good health pays, and it's good, vigorous health that comes to all who use Dr Hamilton's Mandrake and Butternut Pills. « ^••Id Not Be ^Mi Irael. Now that you've broken your en- gagement with Jack, you will of course return the diamond ring he I gave you f Betty â€" ^Certainly not : it- would be a constant reminder of the happi- ness he had missed. CI.VNCER. TlMi'K.S I.LMPS. ETC.. / Internal and external, cured with- out pain b.v our hom« treatment. Write us before too late. Dr Bellman Medical Co.. Limited. 1'. lUngwood. Ont. TORONTO tv II I .^^, FOR ALC9M01IC4 DRUG ADDICTIONS HAWK BICYCLES An up-io-dale Hi^b Gr«^e BicYcle n t '.cd wttJi .^**i«»^ t'*«», and h=»ds, Dita,.ktibis TirA, bi^gra<je cqulyment, iaclti4-> Pnmp. andTooU ^**-*»V ^fFREE1»13(Jatalopr. 70 pB«?9 of Sirrcin. Su•idr^^^'^ it'll It rf air MdJenaL \jaaut huv vour auppl'c^ frooi u» «t Wholcscle Ft tec*. T. W. BOYD * SON. gwt>fi»it3i.wt«>.«i i»iy. LOW FARES TO TMt CALIFORNIA CXFOSITIOMS. I Via i;h least * Nwtli Wnlwn Ry. ! Four cplendid da'ly traina fram -h* >»w Piaaenfer TenaloaJ. Cbica«o to Sao rr»nc:»co. Lo« Anf«le« and San Dieco. Wide cbo!c» o( Ken!c ^nd duvot routa*. I>oubl» trv^k. >utoaia;;o electric s&fety litis all the way. >I»n Toor trip and (ttmith fold- eif iial plian _ and fnU pari;cu'.ar«. B. H BannMt. Uco. Act., 46 Vaas* ToToato, Out, FACTORY CLEARANCE SALE ROOFING FOR REPAIRS or NEW ROOFS 85 Pur Roll 10* Sq. Feet Complot* with nails and cement Freight paid. Asphalt Felt Roofing 100 p«r cant. Saturation Contain* no tar or pap«r Lowest price for Pure .\sphait Roofing ever offered in Canada. Sand for Fr«e Sample. The HallMay CemMny.^*"'*** Factory Diatributore. HAMILTON, CANADA. St.. has been 216,843.300 bushels, of which Canada supplied less than a , fourth. Of barley in 1913 Canada , , . u u u J â- â€¢ ^.rsupplied about oue7»inth of oi. .\nd when the hu^and can t eat | ^â- ^^. ^u^hels. and of oats an ordinary fx.iod without oaustng , . . j^ ^j .^^^g j,^ j,,^^^,^ ^vill trouble, the fotnl question becomes! _J»_ ., , v_^^„, ,k;„ ...o-i dioubly annoying. .\ well-known Bishop who has a wife of pronounced temperament one day oaught a small t>oy steaUog graipes from his vine. He reprov tal import of wheat on the average j ed the offender sternly, and con- each year during the past decade eluded: Do vou know, my boy. .\ lady w rites : "My husband's health was poor, he haid no appetite for anything 1 eould get for him, it seemed. "He suffered severely with sto- mach trouble, was hardlv able to she do better this year ( MInard't Lmiment Cures lurnt, Etc Very LavOtiag. our wife an economical •Is cook i ' "I should say so. why 1 tell you this ! There is One before Whom even I am a crawling worm. Do you know Who it is!'' "Sure, " said the boy unhesitating Iv. the missus." KroQi Krjins Pan Into Kire. She â€" 1 bought a cvokbook foP our new cook. He â€" Go^vdness. doesn't »he cook bad'v enousrh as it is ' wiu nu Totr ^ weak, W»ui3r â- oek of iba in o»,r Minard'* LinimMt far tale •nerywhara. Soaethiag Easier. .\nd win your husband g<j back and fi(tht for his country f" N'o. ma'am He'll stay here »b' let me suoport him. â- liNirtf'* Liniment Cures Dandru*. Bronze is an alloy of capper and She makes t'u r-**. Startliuj; .Vnswors. Mr. Brown has just had a tele- phone put in connecting his office \jvnd hijuse. apd was very much '|rleased with it. '1 tell you the telephone ie ^ a wonderful thing. 1 want \xni to dine wi'th me this evening, and I â- will notify Mrs. Brown to e.vpect .you.' Speaking througch the tele- jphone: "My friend, Smith, will idine with us this evening.' Then t listen and hear how plain her reply 'comes back with startling distinct- ness" : • ' ".\»k your friend. Smith, if he thinks we keivp a hotel. ' His Occupation. "My friend.' said the solamn man, "have you ever done aught to make the ci.»mmunity in whivh you like the better for vour living in it!" "I have done much, sir, " replied the other humbly, "to purify the homes of my fellow-ibeings. " "Ah,'' continued the solemn man, with a pleased air, "you distribute tracts!' "No; I clean oarv>et«." Marlon Bridge. C. B.. May 30. 02. • I have handled Ml.N'.ARKS I.INIMB.NT dining the past year. It Is always the first llnltnent asked for here, aiiid un- qufStionablv the best seller of all the different kinds of l.lniinent I handle. When a man comes to count his riches he usually discovers that most of those he prize* best are iMt convertihle iuilo cash. work, was taking medicine contin- , , , , , 11 J u ij t „i mo«t duraibie caKe \uu ever saw ually. and as soon as he would feel : '"'--'• better would go to work again. only to give up in a few weeks. "C"hie day. seeing an advertise- ment about Grape-Xuts, 1 got some and ho tried it for breakfast the next morning. "We all thought it was pretty gootl although we had no idea of usi,ng it regularly. But when my husband came home at night he asked' for Grapa-Xuts. "It was the same ne.xt <lay and I had t-o get it right eiloiig, because wthen we would get to the table the question. 'Have yxni ari^y Grape- nuts' was a regular t'hing. So 1 be- gan to buy it by the dozen vkgs. "My husband's health began to improve right along. I sometimes felt offended when I'd nVake s*.>me- thing 1 thought he would like for a change, and still he-ar the same old questii.111. Have vou anv Grape - Nuts i' "He got so well that for the last two years* he 'has hardly lost a day from his work, and we are stilT using Grape-Nuts." Name gtven by Canadian Po-otuiu Co.. Witxl'ior, Ont. Read, TJit Kt>ad to Wellville," in pkgs. '"There's a Rt^ason." Overstern" V Bottom Motor §oat $55= Freight Prep*;d to any Kaa'.way Station in Ontario. Length 15 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In., Depth I Ft. 6 In, .\NY MOTOR FITS. Specification No. 2B clving engine prices ott request Get our quotations pa â- Ttie Peuetang IJne" Commercial and Pleasure [.aun«hea, Row boats and Canoes. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED. PENETANG. CAI Svar raad tlia akovo latter? A new oaa appa*rs fxom ttva to tlaia. Tkay are raanisa. tina, and full ot bwnwi iataieat. H.ird OH Theui. .-Vustrians are beiii.g urged to send newspapers to the front to serve as chest protectors for the troops'. If possible the papers should be best. German, as these Mlnar4's Liniment Relieves N«(iralgl<i. A Bit Mixed. Bobfcyâ€" My uncle Sam keep.s squabs. Do you know what stiuabs are .' Tommyâ€" Yes, I do. It's what tin- Injuns call their wivee. KU. 7. ISSI E 15 •!.-). 1» ft. and JO ft pnwef launshM," We butt^ m 8 h-v- up- Staunch, •moptji njnnln*. ajii* ujBKo-uâ€" 's v'»*». »».-,r.e« â€" r-elly "P to ten parsohe. PUt«d for Jart Diodlate u»« The lJse»t, launclTfor the mouey offered, and with tho ruarmnteW ef the 1juUaex» behmi It, ^, ... â„¢,.,»J petaUs of couetructlou. fltilojr, power, ate. promptly aupplla^ wrlt« for Dookleta of Launcnea &n<l Cenuaa. THE P(TER»OROU0H CANOE CO,, UTD. raterbereugh. Ontarle. The llluatratloa iJio*» our both aiaea of thU Ufli Pftwlfed tTo;

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