Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 4 May 1916, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

^-r A GOOD MEDICINE FOR THE SPRING Do Not Use Harsh Purgatives â€" A Tonic Is All You Need. Not exactly sick â€" but not feeling quit's well. That is the way most peo- ple feel in the spring. Easily tired, appetite fickk', sometimes heailaches, and a feeling of depression. Pimples or eruptions may appear on the skin, or there may be twinges of rheuma- tism or neuralgia. Any of these in- dicate that the blood is out of order â€" that the indoor life of winter has left its mark upon you and may easily develop into more serious trouble. Do not dose yourself with purga- tives, as so many people do, in the hope that you can put your blood right. Purgatives gallop through the system and weaken instead of giving strength. Any doctor will tell you this is true. What you need in spring is a tonic that will make new blood and build up the nerves. Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills is the only medicine 'that can do this speedily, safely and surely. Every dose of this medicine makes new blood, which clears the skin, strengthens the appetite and makes tired, depressed, men, women and children bright, active and strong. L. R. Whitman, Harmony Mills, N.S., says: "As a tonic and strength build- er I consider Dr. Williams' Pink Pills wonderful. My whole system was badly run down, and although I faith- fully took a tonic given me by my doctor I could note no improvement. Then I began Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and was soon restored to my old time health. I can most heartily endorse this medicine." Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for %2M from The Dr. Williams' Medi- sine Co., Brockville, Ont. LONDON PRICES SOARLXG. Vecessities Show Rise During War of 15 to 50 Per cent. While a very great deal has been heard of the enormous rise in the price of food and other necessaries that has taken place in Germany and other enemy countries little attention has been paid to the very great in- crease in the cost of living in Lon- don. England. The following list of prices has been specially compiled in a locality where the population is thick and the com- petition especially keen. Even a cur- sory glance at them shows that every- day necessities like bread, onions, fire- wood, coal, chee.se, milk, soda, soap, and matches all show an increase of from 15 to 50 per cent. : Pre- Pre- war sent Article price price Firewood, 6 bundles $ .06 $ .09 Onions, 4 pounds 06 *.08 Ale, quart 08 .14 Whiskey, bottle 84 1.20 Flour, 2 pounds 05 .09 Bread, loaf 05 .09 Coal, cwt 28 .44 NGas, 1,000 cubic feet 60 .72 Gas mantles, each 04 .08 Bacon, pound 16 .28 Meat (flank), pound 11 .17 Cheese, pound 16 .24 Butter, pound 26 .38 Milk, quart 07 .10 Tea, pound 36 .5(5 Sugar ?moist), pound .... .04 .09 Jam, 2 pounds 20 .20 Currants, pound 08 .12 Prunes, pound 08 .12 Minerals, bottle 02 03 Cotton, reel 05 .06 Soda (washing), 4 pounds .04 .08 Soap, pound 06 .09 Matches, dozen boxes 03 .07 *Per pound. + EXPERIMENTS. Teach Things of Value. Where one has never made the ex- periment of leaving ofT tea or coffee and drinking Postum, it is still easy to learn something about it by reading the experiences of others. Drinking Postum is a pleasant way out of tea or coffee troubles. A man writes: "My wife was a victim of nervous- ness, weak stomach and loss of appe- tite for years, and although we re- sorted to numerous methods for re- lief, one of which was a change from coffee to tea, it was all to no pur- pose." (Both tea and coffee are in- jurious to many persons, because they contain the subtle, poisonous drug, caffeine.) "We kr.ew coiTeu was causing the trouble, but could not find anything to take its place until we tried Pos- tum. Within two weeks after she quit coffee and began using Postum almost all of her troubles had disap- peared as if by magic. It was truly wonderful. Her nervousness was gone, stomach trouble relieved, appetite im- proved, and, above all, a night's rest was complete and refreshing. "This sounds like an exaggeration, ad it all happened so quickly. Each day there was improvement, for the Postum was undoubtedly strengthen- ing her. Every pardcle of this good work was due to drinking Postum in place of coffee." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Postum comes in two forms: Postum (Cereal â€" the original form â€" must be well boiled, loc. and 25c. pkgs. Instant Postum â€" a soluble powder â€" dissolves (iviickly in a cup of hot wa- ter, and. with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c. and .">0c. tins. Both forms are ecjually delicicus and tost about the same per cup. "There's a Ueason" fr)r Postum. â€"sold by Grocjr.<!. VERDUN FIREMEN ARE REAL HEROES REMAINED IN TOWN TO SAVE IT FROM FLAMES. They Worked Daily. Under Fire and Hid in Cellar During Bombardment. This is the story of the heroes of Verdun. It will not abound in detail. Little is known as yet. But France knows that some old men lived there â€" and died â€" as bravely as any men in all the history of France. I Senator Humbert told the story when he returned to Paris from Ver- dun the other day. Because he is a i Senator he had been enabled to visit | the beleaguered city. What he told has j been dovetailed in with what others have heard. Little news has leaked . through the military lines in the many ' weeks of the battle. In the intense Incerest felt by all in the major event the old men who merely lived on^ there, doing their duty, were forgot- ten. : I The heroes â€" the real heroes â€" of Verdun are the town firemen. Two civilians have figured in previous ' stories. It is not positively known how this pair managed to remain be- ; hind when every other man and wo- , man and child was forced by the sol- diers to flee from the rain of Ger- man shells. One of them has some I ill-defined occupation which has been recognized by the soldiers. The other once owned a home in Verdun. When j visitors come to the city now he 1 waits, smiling, as though in propitia- , ; tion, until he can gain their attention. "Come with me," he begs. | So the visitors go with him. By- and-bye they come to the shattered wall, which is all that remains of | what was once a handsome house. The man who once owned it stands i on the pile of stone which mark what I was once a doorway, and beckons to ' the visitors. I "Come in," he says. "I bid you welcome. This is my home." But the civilians, homehow, have not the appeal to me that the old firemen have. When the war began I the younger men of the Fire Depart- ' ment were mobilized. Some were not needed then, but as months pass- ed by .they found their way into the army. Manifestly the town could not be left without protection from fire. So men who had served in for- mer years in the Fire Department I and had been superannuated volun- I teered their services. Little by little ' old men joined, until at last there were enough for a full company. : Then the Germans attacked Verdun. I Old Firemen Remained. I The civilians â€" man, woman and 1 child â€" were ordered out. The old fire- j men would not go. They were in the service of the State just as much as | any man who festers in a trench or runs forward cheering against the white flashes of the mitrailleuse. Most of them had sons at the front. Some had lost sons in the war. Life ! was as sweet to these old men as it j is to any man in the security of Paris, i But they stayed. Their duty lay plain before them. It was to guard the town. j There are gendarmes there, it is i true. They see to it that no one ' touches property in Verdun that be- ! longs to another. Every window is I closed and shuttered, and every door is locked. Now and then a 380 shell comes hurtling through the air with that gurgling scream it favors â€" sounds somehow like a locomotive j being strangled to death in a tunnel â€" I and falls upon a house. Then that | house ceases to be. The gendarmes j walk to the scene in their theatric blue capes and caps, or bicycle to it j if the street approach is sufficiently free of massscs of stone and brick, i They solemnly write out their re- j j port, that in some future time the ; city archives shall bear witness to the fact that on a day of February, 1916, Alphonse Picot's home was de- , ' stroyed by a German shall. j j Always they find the old firemen there. The gendarmes are not press- [ ed for time, you comprehend. If they do not make their report to-day, then it may well be made to-morrow. But the old firemen must hurry. Fire is fire to them, an enemy to be fought whether it has its origin in a stuffed flue or is carried over fifteen kilo- metres by a German gun. The prop- erty of their townsmen must be saved. They fight the flames wher- ever they spring up and save what property they can, and in their turn make their report. Then they go back to the cellar that serves them j for headquarters and wait for the next alarm. : Few Fires in Verdun. j Oddly enough, there have been very few fires in Verdun. A French town is solidly built, for one thing. The rooiS are tile and the walls are stone and the floors are hardwood that I wou'id hardly burn until it had been I split with an axe. -Mso a descend- ing shell produces such a havoc of mortar that any incipient flame may I be quenched in the stifling dust. But : the old firemen do their duty a.s they ' sec it. Sometimes they trundle ifn old hand apparatus through the choked streets. More oftrn a bucket and a ' wet eloth will serve the moment's need. I Humhert found the old men crouch- ing i:i their cellar. Peifcelly composed ed Ihey were, us tliojgh they were used to cities collapsing over them, and a crash came, and a cloud of mor- tar dust arose. They plodded out methodically to look at the damage â€" these old ones, as one says in the; ten- der French way â€" and cautioned Hum- bert to keep under cover until they returned. By-and-bye they came back and threw ofT the shrapnel helmets that they wear in going about where the air may aX a moment fill with cutting slivers of white-hot metal, and told Humbert what had happen- ed, and settled down to wait for the next shell. They need not Jiave served, these men. Some of them, I am told, have been killed. One expects courage of a soldier and of young men. , These men were old. ^ BIRDS AND GLASS. Sometimes Fly Through Windows of Country Houses. It has been frequently noticed that no wild bird can understand the pro- perties of glass, and g^i'eat numbers, ranging in size from a pheasant to a titmouse, are killed by flying against the windows of country houses. If a room possesses a large mirror reflecting the view seen through an open window birds are paeticularly liable to be deceived, and especially if frightened, into thinking that they can fly through it. Sparrow hawks will sometimes chase their intended victims into strange places. Some years ago a member of this species pursuec' a Lmall bird through the open window of a railway carriage in motion. In its blinded determination to secure the panting fugitive it entangled its claws in the meshes of the hat rack and was ignominiously slain by an as- tonished passenger with an umbrella. I What Does Your Food Cost? You could easily spend two dollars for a meal and not get as much real, body-building nutriment as you get in two Shredded Wheat Biscuits, the food that contains all the muscle- making material in the whole | wheat grain prepared in a ' digestible form. Two Shredded Wheat Biscuits with milk or cream will make \ J a complete, perfect meal i at a cost of not over five : cents. A food for j'-oung- ! sters and grown-ups. Eat it for breakfast with milk or cream; eat it for luncheon with fresh berries or other , fruits; a perfect meal for j ; the Spring days. Made in Canada. NEWS FROM ENGLAND •NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN BULL AND HIS PEOPLE. She Did Not Heed the Danger Sipals BUT DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS CUR- ED HER DIABETES. Mrs. McDonald Might Have Saved Herself Months of Pain, Sleepless- ness and Anxiety by Using Dodd's Kidney Pills Earlier. Grand Narrows, Victoria Co., N.S., May Ist.â€" (Special.)â€" That Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure kidney disease in its worst form is evidenced by the case of Mrs. Roderick McDonald, an e.-timable resident of this place. Mrs. McDonald suffered from diabetes for two years, and found her first relief in Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I am sure I would be in my grave to-day but for Dodd's Kidney Pills," Mrs. McDonald states. "The doctor attended me for five months for dia- betes, but I was worse when I stopped taking his medicine than when I start- ed. I could not get a wink of sleep. "As soon as I started taking Dodd's Kidney Pills I fell in a solid sleep for one houi-, and soon I got so that I could sleep fine. "Dodd's Kidney Pills have done so much for me that I feel like recom- mending them to everybody." Mrs. McDonald states that her ear- lier symptoms were shortness of breath, dizziness, backache and a bit- ter taste in her mouth in the morn- ing. All these are symptoms of kid- ney trouble â€" danger signals that no one can afford to neglect. Had she heeded them and taken Dodd's Kidney Pills she would have saved herself months of pain and anxiety. PERMANENT BAN ON RUM. Bill Has Been Introduced Into the Russian Duma. A bill has been introduced into the Russian Duma to put into effect the government's promise that the war prohibition of alcoholic drink.s shall continue in force after the war- The bill, as summarized by the Novoe Vremya, provides: â€" "It is' forbidden to produce alcohol for the purposes of manufacture of vodka. Equally prohibited is the import of alcohol from foreign coun- tries and from the Grand Duchy of Finland. The production of alcohol by private institutions and persons, either for sale or for their own con- sumption or for household purposes, is also prohibited. "The production of alcohol for tech- nical or medical purposes is to be carried on by the government directly or through contractors. The govern- ment has the sole right to sell spirits for these purposes. "The sale of light wines is only al- lowed in towns. In provinces and di-stricts which grow grapes the sale of wine â€" not on draught â€" is allowed. The limit of alcohol for different kinds of wines is to be fixed by the government. "The sale of beer is allowed only in towns. The government is also to fix for beer the limit of alcohol. Town councils have the right to issue regu- lations limiting or prohibiting alto- gether the sale of beer or light wines." The government's positidn in the matter was thus outlined by Mr. Hark, Minister of Finance, in his budget speech: --".\mong the factors which have helped to keep our budget bal- ance it is impossible to overestimate the new factor in the economic life of our countryâ€" the total abstinence from alcoholic drinks. The success of this nieasure. which cannot be com- tilctely realized, is such that 1 am bountl to state tno.'-.t emphatically that the pioliibilion is not to be abolished after the war." Ocenrroncoi In the Land That Reigni Supreme in the Commer- cial World. A film version of "Tom Brown's Schooldays" has been prepared and will shortly be presented in London. | "Potato bread" is to be introduced in the local workhouse by the Croy- don Board of Guardians as a war economy. A motion in favor of disallowing Sunday cinematograph entertain- ments has been defeated by the Lon- ' don County Council. Work on London's new reservoir ' near Staines, has been stopped by the Ministry of Munitions which wants the plant and labor. At the Parkhurst Convict Prison, Isle of Wight, convalescent convicts ; in the infirmary are knitting woolen' scarves for soldiers. ' The Northumberland coal owners have renewed their offer to give miners an advance in wages in lieu of free hou.ses and coal. The British Board of Agriculture has announced that 12,000 to 14,000 women have gone to work on the land since the outbreak of the war. The ladies' committee of the Nor- 1 folk War Agriculture Committee have j secured promise from over .'5,000 wo- 1 men to work on the land when called on. I The War Office has asked the ' Metropolitan Asylum Board to pro-! vide another hospital with 800 orl more beds for wounded soldiers. | The death has taken place at New-i ton .\bbot, Devon, of Lady Baker, \ widow of Sir Samuel White Baker, | the Central African explorer who died i in 1893. I During February the supplies ofi fish at Billingsgate market amounted , to 0,516 tons. In the corresponding month last year 12,473 tons were re- . ceived. j Oflficial intimation has been receiv- ed that Warwick Prison will shortly be closed owing to the large decrea.se of prisoners and the pre.ssing need of economy. Mrs. Pleasant Lowman, who has died at Eversley, Hants, aged 82, de- livered letters daily in the scattered districts of Bramshill and Eversley for 42 years. Hundreds of shopkeepers in Man-: Chester and suburbs, owing to the lighting restrictions, are to close be- fore it is necessary to light up, except- ' ing on Fridays and Saturdays. Erected at a cost of nearly $250,000. delay is being experienced in starting a new spinning mill and a new weav- ing mill at Walkden, near Manches- ter, owing to the scarcity of labor. ' 'The death has occurred of the Rev. T. Rustin, 50 years Congregational minister of I.ong Buckly. Rugby, who had been congratulated by the King on having six soldier sons, one of whom was recently awarded a com- mission. ' Mr. William E. Cain, chairman of the Mersey Brewery. Liverpool, has olfered to the Government his resi- i dence. Wilton Grange, West Kirby, Cheshire, as a home for totally and permanently disabled soldiers It wa.'J built only a few vears ago at a cost of $12.").000. THOUGHTS FOR THE DAT. We live merely on the crust or rind of things. â€" Froude. Fellows who have no tongues are often all eyes and ears. â€" Haliburton. All philosophy lies in two words â€" : "sustain" and "abstain." â€" Epictetus. Many delight more in giving of pre- 1 .sents than in paying off debts. â€" Sir Philip Sydney. ' Moderation is the silken string run- j ning through the pearl chain of all 1 virtues.â€" Fuller. * I People do not talk for the sake of expressing opinions, but to maintain ' an opinion for the sake of talking. â€" j Hazlit. I Good intentions do not pave the ' road to hell; they are the stepping- stones that lift men every now and : then out of the mire of common life, \ and there is hope for evei'yone save [ he who climbs on them no more. â€" J. j E. Buckrose. There are few of us that are not rather ashamed of our sins and follies ] as we look out on the blessed morning ! sunlight, which comes to us like a' bright-winged angel beckoning us to quit the old path of vanity that stretches its dreary length behind us. â€" George Eliot. | NOTHING TO EQUAL BABY'S OWN TABLETS Mrs. Lawrence M. Brown, Walton, N.S., writes: "I have used Baby's Own Tablets for the past ten years, and believe there is nothing to equal ' them for little ones. They instantly I banish constipation and teething trou- ! bles, and, unlike any other medicine ' 1 have used, they are pleasant to take and do not gripe the baby." The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. ROVAL YEASTCAKES The best yeas^ in the world. Matkes l^> perfect \V bread. MADE E.W.GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED TORONTO, ONT. WINNIPEG Visible and Strong. "Coodness!" exclaimed a gentle- man coming into a restaurant, and even then holding on to his hat from habit because of the gale blowing out- side. "I never saw such a wind in my life." "Never saw such a wind?" said an- other. "What a stupid remark 1 Wlis ever saw a wind? Pray what is it Uke?' "Like." replied the first .'peaker; "like to have blown my h.it off." One or the Other. Pat â€" Vis, sorr, work is scarce, but Oi got a job last Sunday that brought^ me five dollars. 'â-  Mr. Smith â€" What; You broke the Sabbath 7 Pat (apologetically) â€" Well, sorr. 'twas wan av us had t' be broke! Ask for Minard'B and talie no otber Simple. "Those twin boys of yours are so much alike that I don't see how you can tell them apart." "That's easy enough. When they're on their good behavior they an-wer to their own names, and when they've been in mischief each one answers to the name of the other." SESS FOTATOTia SEED roTATOK.-i. IRISH COU. ble;s. Delaware Carman Or- der at oijij. Supply limited. Wiin for quotatli.riM. H. W Dawnnn. nnimntnn rP» SATE. Minard'B tlnlment l^omlienaan's Friend ^/\ ACHK.'*. NICK HOMIO. BRh^K t}\f ii.iusf, ;; liarnH, ull ruItlMiti-U. just utsldc Cliy Uijver Town.f liip. JdIiii Idle Tears. "No, my 'usband ain't killed, Mrs. Marks. No sooner did I put all the kids in moumin', even to Biby in the pham, when I gets a telegram a say- in' 'e's alive and well. Yes, an' all this expense for nothin'." "Wot a crool shame!" Minard's Liniment Co., Limited: | Dear Sirs.â€" Your MINARD'S LINI- ' MENT is our remedy for sore throat, colds and all ordinary ailments. I It never fails to relieve and cure ' promptly. j CHAS. WHOOTEN. i Port Mulgrave. imus*'. :: hariiH, all (.â- ultlMileU, id.- riiy, Uijver T<] Uai li«ldii)-. ( '111111111111. Ont. SEWI.N'i; .M.M'HINK SfPPLIKSâ€" Ifl .Suppilor .N"<-<.(llfM 25o. Shutllf« 7Jc. Uolililiis 5c. Hclt..) Jill', for uny Muchiiie. SuiMTiMi .*Jiip|iiics I'll.. Hiiiiiiliiin. lint. aSl^F WAHTBS. So Silly of Them! j As a train was getting up i-team to leave a certain station, it sudden- ly parted in the middle. Of course, the communication cord broke and one end of it struck an old lady, who was standing on the platform, in the face. "Goodness me!" she grasped in astonishment. "What was that?" "The train has broken in two, ma- dam.' ;:aid a gentfeman who stood near by. "And I should just think so!" said the old lady indignantly, as she eyed the broken cord. "Did they really think that a piece of string like that could hold a train together?" t;*! H .--: T â-  <• I. .\ .-^ .< i'il,\T.M.\KKR â€" .Steady jdlj til i;ijii(l man. \Vun«rii and Hiiilill. Pum liiiili.-. i)nt. BO.\ R11>PEU.S WA.NTICD l.M^ME- dlately, gootl \vaj<**H fur »;<'od men. Flrstbriiiik Hrox., Perntiinif. Out. MACHINISTS, FITTERS. TnOL- iiiakers. handy men. iiJbo optriitors experienced on ahellH. Phone, wire, or write. U. Bell & .Sun Company. Ltd.. iU (leorcp. Ont. ^^ â- rBWBFAPSBa FOR SAI.B, PROFIT-.M.AKl.NG ."XliWS A.\D JOB Ortlcps for sulo In (food Ontario towns. The most useful and Interestlnc of all busliiosses. Full Information oo application to Wilson I'ubllshimt Com- pany. 73 \V..»t Ailelalile .«treet. Toronia MISCELt-ANBOUS. LAUlliS \V.V.Nrt.I.i TO I>0 I'L.IIN mid llKht ."i-wliiK at home, whole or spam lime. Kood pay work sent an"' ils- lanie. I'hHrBi'H iiaid. Hend wtaniii for partii'ulni'B, .National -ManufacturliiB Ci 1 1 II p aii.'\ -Miinirmil. CANCER. TUMORS. LUMPS. ETC.. internal and external, cured with- out pain bv our ln.mo treatment. \Vrlt« us before too late. Dr. Bellman MWlcal Co., Limited. CoUinBWOod. Ont. rf^fcv BOOK ON jI.jBKb^'J DOG DISEASES ^© And How to Feed America's Pioneer Dof Remedies Mailed free to any r^drvbs by the Aiiitmr H. CUY GLOVER. V. S. 118 West aUtSirect, New York O ^^ M.*^ Oranulafed Eyelids, iJ^J^^ J^^jEyes inHamed by expo- ^_^ turetoSun.Dusland Wind [p.^ y ^V ^> quickly relieved by Murine IL^y^JJj Eye Remedy. No Smarting. 4^ just Eye Comfort. At Your Drtiggint's 50c per Bottle. Murine E)* SalveihTubea2Sc.ForOookolfheEyeFree:isk Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co. , Chicago SELDOiVl SEE a big knee like tliis, but your horee inav lu\c a bwiuli or bruise on hii ankle, luick, siilie, knee or throat. Putting Him Wise. Traveller -How's your train .ser- vice here ? Stnall Town Nativeâ€" Wal, they ad- vei'M.-'e one train a day, but you and nic know them advertisements exag- gerate! H&VE YOU A BAD SORE? U so, remember these facts â€" Zam- link is by far the moat widely used balm in Cauada! Why has it become so popular'^ Because It heals sores, cures skin disoasuM, and does whiit is claimed for it. Why not let It heal i/our sore? Ilenieniber that Zam-Huk Is alto- mother different to the ordinary oint- ments. Most of these consist ot animal fats. Zara-Buk contains no trace of any animal fat, or any mineral matter. It Is aiiaolutely liorbal. Koniembcr that Zam-Buk Is at the samo time healing, soothing, and antiseptic, i^llls poison Instantly, and all harmful germs. It Is suitable alike for recent iiijuries and diseases, and for chronic sores, ulcers, etc. Test liow different and superior Zam-Buk really is. All druggists and stores at fiOe. box. Uso also Zaui-Buk Soap. Relieves sunburn and prevents freckles, UcHt for baby's batbu 2&c tablet. What .\ngered the Barber. A man entered a barber shop fur the purpose of being shaved. .-\s he was somewhat, hollow-cheeked, the barber, as is the custom in some country di. tricts put his thumb in the customer's mouth, in order to press out th( cheek. Suddenly the razor slipped, mak- ing a great gash in the man's face, and he sprang to his feet with a yell of pain and anger. "Shut up, manl" said the barber, holding up his haaid. "I've cut my thumb!" Keep Minard'B Iiinlment iu tba lioiue will clean it of? iviiluiut laying up the liorfc. No blister, no hafr gone. Concentrated â€" only a few drops required .it an application. 52 per bottle ilelivcrrd. Orncribp vmir ca«e fnt .pccitl inltructiont •nit Book 8 .M free. AUSUKBINIi, Jit., ihe ind- lertic linirarnl tor ininkiti.l. reduces Painful Swclllnfi, Enlaigeii Glandi. Wens. Bruises, Varicnsr Veins: allty* Pain anil intiammatitin. Pnre £1 anil £J a buttle at ilnisgist* or delivefeit. Maiie in tlie i;. S. A, by W. F, VOUNG. p. 0, F.. 51fi Lymans Bliic . Miii^iial. Can. Usorbinc and AbsorMnc, Jt.. itc midc la Ciuill. His Verdict. "How did you come out with your! lawsuit ?" "I won it." "Get ilamages?" "Sure! I got almost enough to pay my lawyer." How Changed. "Before we were married he bought me a box of candy every time he call- 1 ed." ] ".â- Vnd now?" ^ "He gives me a call every time 1 ^ buy a box of candy." SUnnTd'a Unlmant v,.ea bv Fhvsicians. Money is a man's best frienii. yet it is always trying to get away from him. SPECIALLY MADE FARM FOOTNA/EAR ._„.^^~ DiLIVSF.EO ^^ TO YOU Mere in a llKhl wclRht. durable and I'oiiifurtahle working .ilioe spfcially .suitable for fiirimirs. woodf^iiuMi. inill- meu. tra<:kiiicii. laborers- till who re- (lUlre cxlra stroiiR. '.'a.uy foolwi-iir for worklnK In. Wu nialio tliom ot the spUMulid riil-liiiiii<>d SUowhi'Kan water- prool'oil li-:itlii'r tlKit tia.s made Palmer's "Moose Head Brand" riiiiiinis fur ••ilnto.nt forty years. No n.-ci; to suffor with tired sore, aeti- Ing. burnhiK feet, (let a pair of tlioso iiiiii Ilnil ea.so and comfort If .\<itir dealer doesn't carry them, send us his naiiK- em-losliiK tn.25, and we will Hliip villi ti pair, all eharges paid, to nny address In Canada or V. S. Ileniit isiiitiiift size) by postal or exp'-ea» ,.r-,.,.i- Siinv lutvlc ;is shown. S eye- lets high. $3.7B. Write for ciur i.-atalog Uii;. .iiustriitlnB our Summer and W inii'v I'notiv- V JOHH PAIiIUIIB CO., UmlMd, Ivnrtertctou, N. B . '"^nnda. EU. 1 ISSUE 19.â€" '16.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy