lwow-3N - NEED ï¬nd There Is' thhing Better Than ‘ Dr. William’ Pink Pills for « Toning Up the Blood. is said that. wxqman’a work is Never done, and if is a, fact that :iyh'ethgrin' Hoaiety or in the home he “life vighï¬lleti 'with more cares I'h'oreï¬'worries than £3115 to the lot Of man." For this rea.so'n women tire compelled regretfully to Watch the growing pallor of their cheeks, the coming of wrinkles and the thinness that becomes more dis- tressing every: day. Every woman knows that ill-health and aworry is b. fatal enemy to beauty, and that, health gives Jcheplailmast face p1; anduring attractiveness. , What women fail to recognize is the fact that: if the blood supply is kept rich and pure, flhe day of the ‘oo‘ming of wrinkles and pellet, dull byes and sharp headaches is im- measurably postponed. Dr. Wil- iems’ Pink Pills are literally worth heir; weight in_ gold to " growing 'rls and women of mature years. I ey ï¬ll the veins with the rich, {ed blood that brings brightness to he eye, the glow of health to selâ€" ._owl'cheeks, audpherrms away the ‘ ‘eidac'hes‘ and ,baekabhes that ran- er the lives of so many women bonstantly’ miserable. < . Mrs. William Jones, Crow Lake, km, says: “I feel that Dr. Wilâ€" iams’ Pink Pills saved my life. I lwas so badly run down that I could lherdly drag myself around. I was so bloodless that I wes as pale as abheet, and you could almost see > ough my hands. ‘ In fact the doc~ tor told me my blood had all turned 60 water. I was taking medicine oonstantly,_but without beneï¬t. My mother had so much faith in Dr. NVilliams’ Pin-k Pill-s that she bought me two boxers and urged me ltotake‘them. How thankful I am rthet I followed her advice. Before these were gone I began to feel fbetter, and I continued using the Pills umtil I had taken ï¬ve more boxes, when I was again enjoying the blessing of perfect health, with a. good color in my face, a. good "appetite, and I feel sure a. new lease of life. I will always, you may be sure, be a warm friend '0! Dr. __Williems' Pink Pills.†5 -If you are weak or ailing, begin. Hm cum yourself {goâ€"day with the rich red blood Dr. William’ Pink Pills actually make. » If you do not‘flnd bhe Pills at your dealer's, sendw cents fer a box or $2.50 tor six boxas to the Dr. Williams’ Medi- cine 00., Brockville, 01145., and they (will be sent you by mail, post paid. When men get tight, they talk 4103038; . The Japanese tax beards. . . I A cold reception wileake any- Young crow is white and tender, .‘with a delicate flavor that epicures readily mistake, for plover. So they say. 'b "The adoption of the Knight Motor by the F. B. Stearns Company of Cleveland seems to have been merely the beginning of the taking :up of this motor by several promi- nent ï¬rms thmughout the United States. . Chinese coats have‘ï¬ve buttons, Lgig-nifflng, the ï¬ve Confucian vir- rtui‘esâ€"humanity, justice, order, jprudence Handcrectitudet The achievement of the Knight iMotor, both in this country and abroad, have induced the Moline €Automobile Company of Molina, $111., to adopt it. This company Will have. cars equipped with the power- ful Knight Motor on the market by Vthe ï¬rst- of the year. Scan:er second in importance to their annmnwement in regard to *the Knight Motor, is the recent surchase of‘u license by J. M. i iilys of the Willys Overland Com- :pany. The Overland people are, by ithe way, one of the largest poppet "éngine builders of the United States. In the old Garford plimt at {Elyriaw Ohio, which was formerly employed in the construction of strford Trucks, they have started to build the Knight. Motor. This is most signiï¬cant, for possibly no one ‘ motor car company has been' more strikingly successful .than that directed by Mr. Willys. body hot. 7 » - ' Men grow grey a decade earlier than women._ --.~ .0...’ ‘ 16’s a wise youth who owes his own ï¬lthâ€. ' . What can’t, be cured buys the doc- tor’s autos. '~“'ANOTIIER KNIGHT MOTOR SUCCESS.†' Fact and Fancy. A SAFE TONIC Prinoe Bernhard von Bulow. formerly German imperial chunoellor the other day abandoned the silence winch he once declared he would maintain until death. He does this in order to warn hla country- men. he lays. that inveterate hostility to Garmany is the soul of French policy. This, he declares. will contin e to. be Io long an Frenchmen have t ullghbeet hope of r alnlnr Alsace-Lorraine by their own 9 orbs or yvith outsida unlab- 51106. " “It 13‘ idle to hope for a. reconciliation with France.†he ee-yl‘. “without reefer-in: the provinces of Alamo and Lorraine The French determination to attack Germany whenever there is a prospect of succeei must continue to be a. jam/or in the eel- cuiatione of statesmen. Germany should try to maintain com-Nous and‘oorreot. ra- lations with France, with Whom-she can cooperate in minor questions, but she should not. chase fantasies nor aspire to overcome France's ingrained ranoor by oopplimente."_ Prince von Bulow does not criticize the French, declaring that he fully compre- hend-s their attitude. 0n the other hand, he criticizes indirectly the emperor's oc- casional holding out of the olive branch. Legion 0! Honor Lose: Value. Members of the French Legion of Honor are so numerous in France that the once highly prized little strip of red ribbon has almost ceased to be a mark of particular distinction. During recent years a num- ber of prominent Frenchmen have even refused it. saying that they preferred not to have a decoration rather than accept one which had become so common. Al- most all the other French orders have shared a similar fate. The only decoration which appears to have kept its place and original value is the Labor Order. con- ferred on employee who have worked for the semesflrmlor thirty years or more. - .-Pepe Plus a Teetetailer. Pius X; has. introduced some rather drastic reforms into the domestic arrange- ments of the Vatican, notably in diapere- 1m:r the world famed cellars of priceless vintages, the presents of kings and em- perors. It is well known that the Po e is a man of great austerity of life, an al- though wine to an Italian is as innocent and natural a beverage as water, he in himself a teetotaller. and wishes to en- courage the _practice of waterdrinkinz. _ Prince Von Bulow 'expr‘imsel this con-- ï¬ction in a. review of German politics. He points out. the folly of ignoring this inbred hostility of the French and 0! try- ing .to ,arrange German relaunch? with Eryn): o_n__a.n‘y o_ther 11mg. - The immediate cause of thin move of Pius X. is said to be the pbetmpemus be- havior of some of the members of the Papal guard. Whethervthie is true or not. seems a. moot. point. for; Italians are very seldom guilty of exceesxve drinking. A House For Three cents a Day. An attractive scheme for the betterment of the French wax-kin classes has just been proposed by M. heron, Minister of Labor, and eupported by. the Mmmter of Finance. It. is not intended to be compo]; sory. ‘ V A workman by setting apart three cents a day can assure for himself the owner- ship of a. house. a. certain capital sum and a pension for his old age. Thus a man taking out a deposit book in the name of his son and havin inecrrbed therein a mom.th sum equa to t 6 rate of three cents a. day is sure that. the beneï¬ciary on reaching the use of 26 euro: will re- ceive a sum of over 3250. 1th this the young man can ant/er into possessbn of a $1,500 house. paying the remainder of the DIE-chi}; _mon_qy b_y justalmenth ~Should he die before completion hi: heirs by virtue of an insurance combina- tion become the absolute oivnera of the house without having to pay another com. If the young man continues the payments of three oeutr-n day'his-old, e neualou at 60 will be not under $95, wills in cm 0‘ :50 death 1- helra will recmvo a sum 0 . . The President of France has had hit horoscope drawn up for him by no less important a. Romanian than the president. of the Astro onion] A Society of France. Capricorn is in the ucendant, which de- notes energy. domination and good taste und'unnounoes brilliant cum in public mam. These predictions are backed up by the planet Mare. ‘ Unfortunately an momen- ed planetary conjunction autum a. travel- ling accident. But so many beneï¬cial m- fluencee are also at work that no serious conse uenoes are to be anticipated. 0n thew 010 the horoloope shows an un- usually favorable'mture. “Diplomatic Dram" Popullr. Iceland is extremely “dry†in the sense that. all importation or 58.10 of alcoholic hquor is forbidden by law. It is some little time now that this law hu been in operation. and .no one has complained about it except the foreign consuls, who do not see why they should be prevented from indulging at meal timee and on fes- tive occasions in a. moderate amount of stimulant. They therefore recently appealed in a body to the Icelandic Government for an exception to be made in their favor. The Althlng, or Chamber. has Just acceded to their request and adopted a clause known popularly as the "diplomatic dram clause" by which foreign consuls are henceforth permittedï¬â€˜to import once every wear a, “not. excessive†quantity of assort- ed alcoholic drinks, which must, be 00}!- suimta’d within the {our 'walls of tl/Le‘oon- su a e. v ' w 'Thts proved satisfactory to the oonsnls until the question of interpretation arose. it now seems that only two members of, the consular body beneï¬t by the exemp- tion clause. Theynre those of France and Norway, who alone have been sent out, from their respective countries. The other consuls are local men and to them the exemption does not apply. The French and. Norwegian consuls are enjoying a striking and increasing popularity among their colleagues. A Woman Aged 120 Years. Hedwig Shawna. "goose girl†of the vil- lage of Dormowo, Prussian Poland, has produced for ofï¬cial inspection a birth record showing that she was 120 years old Oct. 15. It is admitted by the registraa Lion authorities that so far as they can discover she is the only woman alive in Germany who saw Napoleon’s "grand ï¬rmy" march through Poland to invade ussxa. she did when ahe was a. chlld. Her eye- sight. is excellent. She knits mopt of her own woollen clothing and stockmgs, and for ‘others. Her memory is c1e_a,r. The aged woman does her own market: ing. When the Weather is reasonably ï¬ne she looks after the village 33866, the wan†_, n. V.v..- V nu vuun a. .- In all her 120 years the most evenfual incident was the passing of a part of King Jerome’-s wing of the grand army through Plischen, where she was born, and later of a few stragglem and outriders oi the Russian Coï¬saqke. V ‘ “moons-nu u unuvuv. Her childhood recollections are of lonely and secret, tramps into the forests sur- round her birthplace to take had to her father. who had fled into the forest, with his cattle to escape the plundering Cos- sacks. Jerome’s troops were welldbehaved, according to Hedwig. The only _difliculty' was that thev would not eat black bread and had to have geese and chickens. Paris.»Dec. 1. 1915._ Angel Food. Mrs. NickeneDo you have egg-s for breakfast? "MIG. Bocker~No; but. we have a phonograph record of a cackl’e. Gormany Warn-d 0! French Peril. Doings' In Europe. Luck In Stern For Minoan. France Was More Liberal '- Than ' England. ' ' James Berry was not so well paid for his services as his French con- frene, M. Anboihe Diebler, who draws £560 a, year, while his four assistants have a. similar ‘amotin‘b to divide between, them. Samson, 'the ï¬rst executioner to wield the guil- lotine, was originally paid £1,520; year; but when executio-ners we'fe appointed in ‘each department this was reduced to £800. Before the Revolution ‘ the legal tariff in France was 253. for a, beheading, 16s. 8d. for a. burning at the stake, 1and the same amoundrfor a. hangâ€" ing, with allowances for the erec- tion of a. soaflold or‘ the provision of fuel. One of James Berry’s pre- decessons for a brief period donned a, uniform when at work. In 1785, according to a contemporary chron~ icler, the Sheriffs of London were “so pleased with the excellent mode EXEC UTIONER’S PAY. The Royal Bank 01’ Canada Blllo Payabl'e . . . . . ..... Acceptance. under Letters of Credit .. Capital Stock Paid-up a. Renews Fund . . . . . . . . . . . Balance of Proï¬ts curried Current Gold and Silver Coin Dominion Government Notes Note. of the Bank In clroulatlon Deppaltq _boarlng Interest, Including 'to date . . . . . . Depoelto not hearing Interact Dopoajtn by other Ban In Canada' .... . . . . . . .. Dopoaï¬to byJBavnkp up Bgnklng porn-panama '1“, 1913 . . . . . Dividends Unclaimed trlcte . . . . . . . . . . . . ‘Other Current Loans and Discounts (lee: inter-est) . . . . . . . . Overdue Debts (estimated loss provided for) - and Stocks . . . . . . . . Call and Short Loans elsewhere than In Canada Loans to Provincial Governments .. . . . . . . . . . . ......, Loans to Cities, Towns, Municipalities and School Dis- Bank Premises, at not mdre than cost, less amounts Liabilities of Customers under Letters of Credit, as Balance, of Profit and Loss Account, 30th November, 1912 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Proï¬ts for the year, aftea deducting charges of manage- ment and all other expenses, accrued interest on deposlts, full provision for all bad and doubtful debts and rebate of Interest on unmatured bills ._ :per annum . . . . . . . . . . . . ‘. . . . . . . . . .. Transferred to Officere’ Pension Fund Written Off Bank Premises Account . . . . . Balance of Profit and' Loss carried forward Dividend No. 105 (at 12% Deposit In the Central'Gold Rqaer‘ves Deposit rwith Dominion Government v of the Circulation Fund .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Notes of other Banks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cheque: on other Banks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Due by other Banks in Canada . . . . . . . Due by Banks and. Banking Correspondents than in Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dominion and Provincial Government Securities, not exceeding market value . . . . . . . . . canadian;gMunleipal~‘Securitiee and tarnish, Foreign 1 andOolo‘hieiPublie Securities other than Canadian, not exceeding rhérket.1 Value . . . . . RailWay and other Bonde, Debentures and Stocks, not ,- exoeeding market value . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . Ca" and Short Loans In Canada, .on Bonds, Debenturee _ APPROF‘RIATED As FOLLOWS: Dividends Nos. 102, 103, 104 and 105, at 12 TO THE PUBLIC: TO, THE SHAREHOLDERS: where 'than In Canada FORTYiFOURT-H' ANNUAL STATEMENT PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNT and Discounts (lean rebato in which Edward Dennis, their hangmam, performed his duties that they presented him with a. very eleâ€" gant ofï¬cial rob&~a khilaut, in fact, as Eastern potentates term a‘ similar garb of honor. .Dennis found forward LIABILITIES annum), ASSETS for Interest accrued the piyablo elsewhare per cent. purpose. .IAOC clu- Dec. Iatau00!0I'I!'O written off per contra EDSON L. PEASE, $101,900,790 "87 86,276,871 60 y . 406,669 so 1,649,466 ‘73 3 346,800 00 3,426 11 $12,560,000 00 1,015,119 58 $ 7.802.067 72 11,664,142. 00 $ 247,435 89 $19,465,209 72 2,000,000 00 98,606,925 14 176,673 57 $ 610,219 36 $1,387,200 00 100,000 00 250,000 00 1,015,119 58 14,565,306 32 9,002.1 93 01 10,817,496 66 3,686,624 08 2,142,100 22 578,000 00 2,576,878 07 6,566,249 32 3,603,452 05 2,081,533 53 1,f27,312 91 this inconvenient when at work . . . and sold it to a. well-known charm her, Old Cain, who, having set up as a, fortune-teller, minted a. robe to ,oomplete the costume in which he received dupes.†1,160 12 General Manager. $154,761,440 04 $102,716,658 68 4,788,228 68 ' 361,106 66 $180,246,785 73 $180,246,785 73 $13,176,634 69 138,177,662 4? $2.762.319 58 $2,752,319 58 11,560,000 00 13,575,119 58 72,385,791 71 2,055,136 63 990,890 59 381,106 58 350,226 1 1