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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-08-09, Page 3AT 8,000 i I Breakfast iteady? 'The Emswer is easy in the s IN THE Afiu home where Shreddod 1•'Wheat Biscuit lathe regular every day breakfast cereal. EXPERIENCE OF A CAMA.DIAN Being ready . 030ke4 and AIRMAN IN FIUNE! 1 ready -to- eat, Shredded Wheat Biscuit la the joy of e housekeeper hrSurnmer, Served with sliced bananas, berries, or other fruit, they make a nourishing, satisfying meal at a cost of a few cents. f4,=4.1rnt Engine tRefueed to Weil( arid Fit& Lieut. Munday Narrowly Paitnned. Imprisonment, An exciting trip was that talten by Flight Lieut. niunday, of Taranto, Whe OnlY a few Months ago received* his commission, ane shortly afterward was sent to Praire°. B described the experience as followea • '"" • "I landed in France on a Ilfursday, as. and Friday •moral)* I Was over the • line or the first tithe* On this ilast 4:trIp I very .nearly beeeMe pFiSener a of war, • • • , "I crossed at eight ,theusand feet above the cloudar arid widing to see what 'Hualand' looked like from, the air, I shut off ina engine and eanie through the clouds to five thousand feet. Then I hadeavored to 'switch ort,'. but ray engine had 'given Up the ghost,' to use a eervice term. Yon ••• can Imagine My ,feelings--nty iirst trip over the line and a prisouer of War, ,r • Engine Refused to Work. -• t "I Duelled the nose of my machine down and almost got into a, nose-diye. bat still my engind refused tintiitart At one thoileandfeet 1 was on the * Point, Of giving up and selecting a • landing' place, when theengine showed signs of activity and with a little coaxing I managed to get he re- vOlutions. to half the number required • for flight. headed for France, or • rather Belgium, and sagged over the trenches and. 'No Man's Land' at 500 feet. Rifles and inachige guns Were turned on my machine, and wog land - Ing Just behind the 13e1g1an lines 1 did; covered that my machine had been hit four thnes, but not Mud damaged.So that was my initiation to the war zone and I often wonder what I would be slouched up. . Irithose, hands she car - doing now11my engine bad 'given" up ried a bunch of lilies. She looked the ghost' for good on that trip4 about her furtively to see if any one 'ate ofPilots. -was 'watching, then placed the lilies at In the equadroe to whid 1 vas at the shine. • Tears werein her eyes as • tachee ' there Were eighteen pilots, she turned away. "Good old'Billi" I To -day six are still intact for serviceheard her mutter. "t'e always did like Of the six, one only Is at front, the flOwers!" • ' r.enutiader are redoveriag •ftOn*eitesda. and injuries received hi action, I • lave been informed that I will be un-. fit for..service .for approximately two months, but I am eager to get baelt to the front to get even with Fritz for many sleepless' nights and interrupted ineale. a They seemed to know our . • meal time to the minute and would pf- • tin favor us with a few reminders of the War a in the 'shape of shells and bombe Oda on one tiecasien We bad - 'gas' as an appetizer for breakfast". •Plight Lieut., Murray • was !suite badly hurt In the shoulder'at the time ..ef, his .flight,, and has been In aes Eng- • lish heephal• since. :•• • 11/facle in Canada. A SCENE IN LONDON'S SLUMS. Inflaence of a Little War 'Shithle, on , the Rough Inhabitants. walked the other day through one of Londoles meanest streets. The bar- rows of :costermongers lined the pave- ments. Rough women jostled _eaeli other and shouted in forelgri tongues. Odds and ends of unsavory -looking washing fluttered fromi the windows of slums overhead; writes an English- woman. , • And in the midst of all this dirt and disorder I came upon a very beauti- ful little war shrine. In letters of gold against a background of white marble names teere •inscribed -the "Roll of Honor.'' Before the shrine Jay great bundles of roses and pink carnations, ,As I looked at this tiny °aide in Lent dontaIowest Slum a woman M a rag- ged, shawl, and with veryedirty hands MR; it:toprs. REiORT ON RUSSIA • Country's Most Serious.La,ck is Money - • ,aand__Adequate,,Transpertation. The Hon, Elihu /Wet, as leader of the mission to This& from the United States, has sent forward a briefastate- inent of the situation there that is "• quite reassuring. • .1/e does not , imiae either the -dangers . or the diffia males, but he dees., insist that the out- look is hopeful, and that he and the: members. of his party are greatly en- couraged. 4 ° • He tells us that he found no organie or incurable mulaclY in. thea,Ressian • democracy; democracies are always in trouble, he remarks somewhat faceti- ously, and Russia Is paaSing.through -•noldarker days. that his own republic has gone through safelY. • "We must remember," he 'says, "that World- - a people in .whom all constructive ef- fort has been sur,pressed fir so long ann,a immediately develop a genius .for quick action:. The first stage is '-necessarily one of debate, _ The solid, admirable traits in thg Russian char- acter -will pull the nation through the - - present crisis. -- Natural love of la* roa ,----a-giuttgaleratitianaptuaiterforinatilanelf- ,• , Then_ I sawthat runopg the ciciten names tirScribed Millie shrine finder the. title "Roll �f Honor" was that of Private ;Bill Johnston, • of the "Die Herds," and after his name were -the words, "Killed while rescuing a wound- ed comrade," • •A big policemaria typical London "liebby"-and they have to be big and very strong to cope with certain forms of livelinestrevinced frequently in Lon- don'S slutnia-strollednp: • ." aa' ' •-"That there little war slibarie does more to uplift the men and waren of the neighborhood than the sermons of • a thousand parsons woUld," he observ- ed, "there ain't near so much drinkin' -and cursin!-and,-fightin, -Around- 'here siace sgt up/the roll of honor. - It kind of sets 'em an example, it dois. Take the case of that old woman just gone byathatleft her lilies here. One • of the worst and toughest cases in Leaden, she used to be. But .since her grandson was killed-agivie his tife for a friend -and the War Office • sent the old lady 'is decoration that he woe :for gallantry -well, she's a dif- ferent being, and that's sayin' a lot, for she wastind of the Ifardeardiri and the most quarrelsome in the nefigh- borluiod. Now she stiencli her money - on flowers instead of drink, and through I don't Much hold with wastin' money, on flowers,, it's better than the drink." • • The solution of the food problem•lies in the bands of the women of the Warm for To -morrow • - treitithiStratW-' every -day sutra the Tavola-Torr. The country!s_ most serious lack is money 'and adequate transportation. We • shall do what we cask to. help Russia ia both." • ' To help Russia in both Will be one of the street services, -that the United •ittateewlit•rendert- • _LaSOLD=S 1-14E.NOW_SliANG: Na• w Words. Developed by Contact •.With Experienees at Frent. After the War some one Will have to eompilea-tor the benefit of realistic . but ine,xperienced novelists -a • little • code of the slang of tile New Arrnies. • - IuouldhardIy be done now for a good .• deal of that Clang hi in a ,state of flux, Phrases like "wind up" (1. e., frighten- ;• ed), or to "put the wind up" any one (1. e., make him frightened), have r&' •'attained pretty tonstant during the last • two years, But words like "wash- • out" (noun and Verb), hued developed ell sorts of varying Applications, •Itiimply and originally a "wash-otit" mint have been the state of a camp Whose °deux:lento had, been almost eraily washed out by torrents of rain. • tiy an easy extension It became a de. scription of any particularly unplea- sant situatierr-a water-logged trench VerY naturnIlY ifieleed-but afterWard anything at all, from a heavy •lery strafe by the Germans to a poor, be an. unpopular officer. - ARMENIA or TO -DAY. i INVENTIONS NEEDED. Nation Ras Preserved Its Tradition* Chance to Promote Industry and Incl. anditeliglou tor Centuries. ' dentally Make a -Fortune. In spite of the efforts of barbarous "Anybody who wants to make arszrete'tolZ2 y23,9 ATMs& .- 1t and notwithstanding the MoSt ftutuno can get Mae qulek by invent- &lent ot ail fuels. Write ouicalY, frightful persecutions the Armenians hag' a machine that will pick cotton Eflal Ygnana u"t c°.° n' T"git to. .. have been able for centuries and centli eatisfaetorily," says Prof, W., J. Spin. turies, to preserve their 'traditions, 'luau, chief of the United Statea Gov. their ' language and the religion of ernment. Office of Farm Management. their ancestors. This persistence of "1t. will ba a siniple enough contra - the Armenian vitality is one of the , vance when it arrive:, and the every - most remarkable fade' of Oriental his-' day citizen Will marvel that the idea 1 tory, a fact almost unique Of its kind; did not Urea occur to for, of all the people subjugated by "Such a machine would euorniously the Arabs and Turks, Yery few have augment our alma' cotton, output. been able to preserve the three prin.. For, mark you, it is smell trouble to ciple elements of nationality-74ms, Plant wide areas -that is, to put the toms seed in the ground -but the gathering Th and religion, e Gliders, The last Mazdalan Of the crop le a slow and laborious remnante of ancient Persia, still form, Orocese. It is, then, not the Planting, commuaitiesthat are preserved sole- ly, by religion; for the old language has little by little disappeared to 'give place to dialects of modern Persia - - — _ AGENTS WANTEDBABY SLEEP. ! .gencil home article . Ox0Glis, inait, ne tsent m each town,_to sell a new 'The baby wept; t .,,,...-.. in4r "Of '11'4 neat, frem e°14ram e"liThe mother took it from the nurse's on. in any home, as needed, No dirt, ernes, And hushed its fears, and soothed its vain alarm, . And baby slept. but the labor required' for picking the cotton, that Balite the output and 'raises the cost of the product. ' "Already there are cOtton-picking mixed with arelmical ' forms. The machines. The essential feature .of • Chaldeans, for the most part Chrie- tians, have in general abandoned their language, while a great number have changed their religion and become coalesced with the mass of the. Arabs. The less numerous Christians of Saint John (Madeens), living hi Low- er Chaldea, are still attached.by reli- gious beliefs, but their ancient speech dead. The Contain Egypt, remain- • ing Christians, witnessed the extinc- tion of their language scarcely a cen- turyand the cotton files up them and into a ago, and Syria bee experienced a similar vanishing of a great am: receptacle providedfor the purpose: ber of its traditions; Copts and Syri- "These devices are ingenious, but ans now speak but the langtiage ea by no meens wholly satisfactory. The steel bristles miss a good deal of the cotton. The • vacuum contrivance •costo money and le expensfve to oper- ate, Besides; it collects a lot Of dirt and waste vegetable material with the cotton. . J • "Before lens, however, the problem, Is bound to'bo solved. Arid by that time we may have another much -nee& ed farm invention -a machine that will not only dig potatoes, but will pie& -them up, kp.00k the dirt off them and sort them in sizes ready for mara ket." • • , AMBER GROWING IN CANADA.. One of them jaa relrolving belt carry- ing teel bristles that Operated by a man on a horsesdrawn vehicle) catch up the cetton, :which is raked off the belt by a row of teeth into a sack, "Another contrivarice, carried on a wagon, has several long rubber tubes attached tot it. In the wagon hi a -gaso- line engine that operates in much the game fashion as a vacuum houseclean- ing machine. Men walk behind, Point- ing the ends; of the tubes at the bells, their masters. . Little by little the Moslem religion has succeeded, not only in unifying the language, but also in reducing creeds. In the Turkish empire to-dity WI"meet fragments only of the Chris- tian races. The .Armenians only have the Moral force/to cope with the cal- amity; they alone have preservedatll the intellectual and moral Inheritance of their ancestors. '• THE STORY OF THE STAIRS • Every time yang° up stairs yoncan test your state cif health-sahe conda lion of your blood.'• • D6 you arrive at the top of the stairs . *breathless • and distressed ? Does your heart palpitate violentiy ? Do you, have ea pain in your side? P rhaps you eyen. have to stop half = AY 0; with llinbs trembling -rand- heaa dizzy, too exhausted to go fur- ther without reiting. • These are un- failing .signs -of anaemia; As 'soon as your blood becomes 4nipoverished or impure the atalitcase becomes an in- trument of torture: When this is so you are unfit for work; your blood is 'watery and your nervest exhausted, you are losing. the Joy of an active lite and Paving the' :way for a further, break down and decliae. In this can- ditlon only one thing can save you. You meet put puf new, rich, red blood into your vein:3..7111unit further delay and so build up your blood anew. To get this new, rich blood..give Hams' Pink Piiii-aTair-trial, and they give you , new vitality, sound health, and the power to resist said throw off cliaease. For ne than a generation this favorite ,medicine has been in Use throughout the world and has nude wally thoneande of Weak, despondent men and women bright, active and strong. You can get Dr, Williams' Pink Pills through any:dealer in niedieine, o by nutif_at 60..dents a_box or slat boxei for $2,60 from, The Dr. Williams Medicine • Co. Brockville Ont, 'SAVING FOOD AT LONDON ZOO.. Horseflesh is. Only Meat Used -Dived :Made From Condensed' Flour. . . • . . How .the Zoological Gardens „in Lon. . . don are •helping to conserve • the 'Bri- tish food supply was tepid by the Duke of Bedford at a retent meeting ofthe Zoological. Society in Louden; He said they had not replaced the aniroals that had .died since .the •war began and had killed.offallaoa those that were easily., -"Oaleta'elpaitamissual", shame-faca p ace . • •. . . eclly whispered Jim. . • o, • The .only meet they gave to the car- '"Now, look here," 'said the Old lady niyoya was horst fleshinifehatedifroni as she rose; "I -sh.all'he'at the hospital .1 4 an , 44k 1.14t Vt i, mu ..4 4 iidtritdel. -Thtteadriiire-11' to 'ire' Proilisiiii-dbilirg'OCid baitillilien;1-6-e'r'r-rel°Ved.vitilellt- Juju** 'ie -r -tile •; :. xt , • . aseo )nnm, .....,, was made from flour rejected by the ninehitiety:, It was impossible to. blast anonkeys-and-other small- mammals nals. and, -- if - so, you . shalla-have- a . Whole Board of Trade ' • and ship's biscuits shilling. . • • he piers,and band • . .. t• 'cutting was too Jimmy fervently pronilsed; but alas . that had outlived their usefulness • as all his inischief reasserted itself, and slow and expensive. The work was ac - that by drillingthree-inch ver - human food. Instead ot. Wheat they he was sadly in disgrace when the old deal holes; three feet deep and • three beans. . They were replacing•eatit with lady again visited the .wardapart in both directions, over the . • , .. feet ' used dark paddy, rite. and locust a amixture-otamitize-anda-split --horse- itIlm-not-geing to asktbe nursesif•yonathernawithin-six„incheil-ofathe top -with beans.. 1 • .. have been a good boy. .a.Tell yak you,r. fresh slaked limo, ira,piecei'one ;half Iliii_Vara ' but.Cieft -ihillit4i:lini, ' self:--a_Newa_do YiLdiiiinati.tliiit.shilhtincliLtoi one and:a half" hitlioa 'irrai,:-Afi _ buyers, supplemented with park grass ing. I promised you?" . : . . soOn, as the lime was thoroughly wet and foliage, oely , Chinese: eaeitiee a Slowly-- Zile. Tallied hl big brown the top8 -Of. the holes, were filled with . ego wore employed` and the fish was eYtis to her face, . and then. lowered brick dust, which Was well tamped. In that wienitable for human use, Ban. them' again.. ' a • .. . about len minutes cracks' started , in ,..: alias, formerly fed to many. :email eGare, a penay,,, he saw hi- a late every direction, and the entire top of maininela and birds, had to a great ex -Voice. the fOrindatiwas on. broken into three - tent been, replaced by boiled mangold• ' wursel and beets, Only five pounds -of • sugar a week were Uandsed, & this was aata:sa..‘. It. n a t A to0i cubes. One pea or -Two . Peas? - . . .._. . , food, -And the "greensitwer.e. liMited-' ' - . '• t 11 " m foot" Sugar unsuttable .for huan . I ' We deftly& '.ourselves 'mubli more ------: DOD : DS - a tett than other, -people deCeive. us, soldfor human commotion* to eleven bushela a week of kinds not because WO whelk' rely neon the tete 1( I El N ET . . • whore winter wheat or rye is to be NOW Is the time te-brettlt bp sod l'i/ ..PI LLS: -.--;-15 • .......: •,.... ......4, .ev.eryday experienees. , We have illu- thnony of our physical eenses. ' slobs of vision and Illusions of hear - Illusions, of.one sense or another nre' sown in the ;autumn, lug. They are always interesting, But ,. , ., 1.0:1‘ '-' -4"),/ illusions of feeling - are spedially Canadians should not eonsider that (* N., All : ' - \ ..\-N.›-C. ,,1,-i I i 1917. will be the only year that rigid econemiee Must be praetised, There ''11' . St.'4F1'-ir-rWA•1" SO 5ftio`C t bn- -; IV rimE3‘7f, ....-,,::,4 curious, -tieing rarer, Here is orai that anybody May try! Telco a port and roll It to and fro on the table•with the Is no knowing at this date When the ' 111111.1 11-'ia Hi.% .p15.,...Ad 0 forefinger and middle linger. It feels, 'War will end? ,and even after it has "`,,,,.141'., b;11‘. HE tatta..P 1 of coursty. like one .p ea, , But repeat ,,. ' .tbe prOcese ,wItli those two ,fIngers ended there Will he 'urgent teed for ii.st Canada's surplee of food for many'• I crossed and the• pea becomes to the months While Europe is being regen- i feeling two peas. Try it. Two-thirds of the Dominion Area a Should be Reserved for Forests. One of the Surprises to thoge 'ing Europe in peace times is the meth- od by which all lands arecarefully ex- • amined, and put' to work accordittg to IlfelFeatTabitY.• 'WO farmer is permit- ted to. locate on nonSagricultural soil, and at the same tune, good farming soil. cannet be retained uridei• such a • crop4.4 timbeA Canada has wily made a beginning at applyingsuch a 'policy of basiness. efficiency ,in the use �f the nation's natural resources. Thousands Of farmers are to day tied Aa.farrns that'prodce only a few dol= tars an acre, their efforts and ambi- tions practically wasted- in a time when man -power is at a high -pre- mium . Taking the whole of Canada's area more than two-thirds Will never produce field crepe, and the balk . of the-tworthirds--willa provel-profitable Under only one crop, naniely titeber• . All efforts for the protection' of.the felests against ere and other forms of needless waste aim to keep in .a pro- ductive condition those millions •cif acres that caai never gni* field crops. Canada holds a .tremendous riatioaal advantage in ber•forests ' but from the beginning of the l'ast century about -.two-thirds of the --original., in- heritance has 'been destroyed .1sy, fires. Nearly all modern countries .have put an end to forest fires by carefully or- ganized protective systems,•. Told the %truth. "Sinuiy," Said the gentle old lady sadly to' the young imp who lay with a broken leg in the hospital, "the nurses tell me that you have been a very. -naughty beta" ' "Yes, missus," ecknowledged' Jim- my) his sun -burnt face and tousled head faill-likiden in -the• pillow. ' • "But, why?'" camethe gentle query. one -Piteci) Dresk, A.nd God-doAtgli4tinakiet•-itweferPOsin' the MO- freight ears promptly. Fruit grower' G1LLETTS: f.-„pc15 LYE u LLEANS-OLSINFECTS t _ acta. -aas Cr -7X1 4.1=-16" N. x > Every merchant should unicad • Fronathepr'resiaenSut sgr' iefs, and future un- standing for days waiting to be tine . }are suffering for oars that are kept knwtiAbnarshaby bleeps, ' the principal Eastern Inarketi. after '." • loaded. Dining the month of May at, -Samuel Ilinde. the care were placed on team tracks •-_,—...4.--,....•for unleading the average detention a iflnears for unloading was four days. Help KEEP E CHILDRN WELL - - the whol6 country by unloading with DURING HOT iiilEATHER - as little delayas 0 syp 0iDblEe • 3Nit.• s . • Brery 'mother knows liow fatal the REMIT by Dominion Express Money I hot summer months are to sinall cilia Order, If lost or stolen, you get ddryesnea. tryel, Cholera st ra, ioumfa:tant, diarrhoea, Your • money back, ' eh treublei are..a _ -, - -----:-• rife at, this time and often a precieus .',,w , aen boiling „coped beef you will • little.life ialost after only a fravi liars onilmporno,vae tlheely flavorclovebs leaves to the wateryainand"tsileharalEir:bgalifil boiled., , Illness. The mother who keeps Baby's Owe. Tablets In the touse feels safe. The occafsional use of the Tablets pre- • vents atomach and bowel troubles, or if trouble comes suddenly -as it gen- • erally does -the Tablets will bring the baba' safely through. They are sold bY medicine dealer ti or,. by mail at 25 cents •a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont. • *. . Every gardereneeds a '00111p0St limp, A good way to start the heap' is to cut sods and pile them up upside doWn. On this pile throw ail the cuttings from the lawn, weeds from the gar- den pulled before they go to seed, tops of vegetables, pea vines, gra, old bones and a the pile is away from the house up before too late, Dr. teilman Medical - garbage can also be thrown on it, cov.. Co.. Limited, Collingwood, Ont ering this promptly with a few shovel- ' s ' fuls of earth. Next year when rotted The Soul of a Piano 4s the Something absolutely- new ' is the and sifted this makes excellent potthiga quires no fastening of any kind -AO- Action. Insist on the Slip-on *eels shown aboye which re- soil and good compost to spread over ,ther buttons, hpoks and eyes, ,nor ' ' III OTTO: Hlog1,4' snaps.' The two-piece skirtis attach- - Wis doubtful 1------f any ef tui realize the PIANO • ACTION . _ e . ed to the blouse, and the waistline ad- need that there will be for meat and Aided by' an elastic' which maY be live stock inathe European cormtriee drawn tight or loose' as desired. Me- after peace is declared. Canadian Call Pattern No. 7891, Ladies' plicity Dress; in Sam- breeding stock and Canadian meat pro 7 sizes; 34 to 46 best. Price, 20 cents. • ducts will be in demand. It behooves the This pattern can be obtained from yoUr local McCall dealer, or from the Britiar4,11 Linimint °urea. Ettatinupar. The "Queen of Ileaveres (Jerenatalt " •• vile 18; xivi. 17, 18, 19, 25) is the misen WoreliiPPed as. Attire* or Astarte... 'NEWSPAPERS FOX ISA= • pliorIT-MAxiNG NEWS A141)-•XOn r A Offices for ,sale in good OntarW.• towns. The moat userui and interesting of all builineinies., Full Information . application to 'Wilson Publishing Coln - puny. 73 Adelaide Street. Toronto. ' altIOCELLAWBOInil rta.NcExt, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETc.„ a.../ internal,' and external. Mired with- out pain by our home treatment. Write Canadian breeder and feeder to grasp. thefopportunity and produee a maxi - McCall Co., 70 Bead St., Toronto, .111sourago°41110er 13 te°0enkt 1 Ivnilloeil hihprospectspcaerse, Dept. ' W. . ••- - . No better Outlet Mr the best ot his ...........4.4_ ..... • • -When Yeur Eyes' Need Care sale 'oefatnhel'.6E14:hulith.d Ati2nannuaalt ;tot na 110°1'1 ba 1 it . rbianee_unsreintsocd,uveri.einTer.yzitosfomptiitaindr._. pealci: StOck.. Show, 1.1121011 Stock ' Yards, Sore Eyes and Granulated Eyelids, Murbie is December 7th and 8th rtea - ,• • ' compounded by our Ocoilsts—not a “Patent . . , „Medicine"—but used In successful_Physicians, . . .'2threaePuttliektir sollidYbrionfigiwstdsedalf Me and bee. Write for Book Of the nye Free. Mil .0: hfinsHrcs Liniment Cures ilitilitheiria. . It IS estimated that there are 600 Bottle, gfurine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, Murillo Eye Remedy Company, Chicago, Ada professional story -tellers in Tokio, . • , • A canary's ears Inv at the back, of 'and a little below ins eyes There There is no outettear such as. aninials have, hut •simply a small opening 'which is cov- eredby feathers.' It -is quite surpris-- ing thatbirds shouldpossess the very price is most extravagant in use., A acute hearing rw-breli they do . while litte geed teas „li1e-Sri-11de, -makes. lacking the fleshy,: flap which enables Many more ePs-; hen'ae-. -it's rea the animals to catch sounds. economy._ • , • •%: :•••-• •barb's .Planear_ . DOthenadiss • xiciox oat - DOG DISEAStS And, How to Feed uknolt free to any adfirefa by •••*the Author' • • ° . H. CIAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, Nen York UXATEO I lacreatess strength 'of delicate, nervous, • rundown people los . per cent. in ten •days In ' Many in,stances. -forfeit if it• • res per full.. ex-. new set of stories when' he finds th'at 4t. • ileeterP:rn41:tlitggilsnt. albaorgo. • ',..- whinwander from house to house re-aarticle soon to .appear 'in this paper. latingtalest The story-teller'10-artis a •.A. sk rpui- the old Ones .are•too well known. . Siffered Three Weeks' -Poor teh that. -Cara be seid ata low ith..ChaPped Hand. I bOught"a hove° 'with a dapposedly incuranle ritittbone . for $30,00. • Cured him- with $1.00- vrortll of alVIINARD'S INIM•ENT-encl. sold him .or 885.00. Profit cm Liniment, S54, •BOISE DEROScE, Hotel Keeper, St. Phillippe Que. Ar495661'ile ;seem -tag -41k' drink- tea-- ana, coffee -for a 'while without apparent harm. but when health . distal:Wide follows, even though slight, it 43 wiee to - Thongs:ads of - honies;_ 'where tea or cOffee was found th 'disagree, have ' changed the family table drink to • Instan Postum" With' invroved :health, , .and t usually follows, the change mid() becomes. a perntanent one,. It j'aya to prepare for the health ot bp -morrow. - ',There's a Reason" citnadian ostum etr.ed Oa, Ltd. indoor, Gilt. f pleating With Lime. - - When water is added to calcium ox- ide;or quicklime, the lime expands slowly with almost irresistible force. pelt-Pre:ideate describes how -that -Pro party of quicklime was utilized re- cently to. Weak -up....pters_. twelve, feet Wide;: twenty- tiet long and twelire ee high. The piers steed between simi- lar •piers. that supported engines .in "Well,alittle "Man," she said mildly; entire area of the piers -and filling If winter flowering•plants have not been repotted do not longer delay. Get geed rich potting soil ,from ,the near- est florist and repot the plants, at onge. Plunge the plantain the. gar- den said keep them well watered. • • atinate'e.Pialotnt cares Gavot *Mows • 'Influence Needed.: •• He wasvery. young and fresh and -new, and he Was a second lieutenant. One day he.sought Iris elderly tolonela and poured 'forth a complaint. , 'Sir, ; should be so obliged if you'd use your influence to prevent the men ore and Unsightly. Cutwura Soap and Ointment Healed. Above are extracts from 8 signed statement recently re - eerie& from Miss Gladys HambletoU,. Roxton Arallso Que., Nov. 29, 1916. _ How much better to prevent such suffering by using Cutieur,a for every -day toilet purPoies, the ; Soap to cleanse and purify Ili pores, with touches of Ointment `, now and then as needed to soot e. • and heal the first signs of eczeinas, • . tnainyaplato_o_n_fromacalling me 'Baby - a autakie, • t rashes, dandruff and pimples. V012 • • "Certainly, rey lad -certainly!" said will, use no other once • you try • the old colonel. "1 vvill; with pleasure these super-crearny emollients. ". -4f you'll use your influence to sto For }Yee Saniple Earalaby o w olehaattalhin, calling me 'that dress post card "Cuticura, *Dept. 4, - bow-legged old. duffer with the bald Bolton, AI. S. A." Sold everywhere. • ISSUE No..81 lt Iltiliartioli.tiniintlilt Bari* Cold'', Mtg. „ a — _ g.s•t•-•••-• , -Aare • Apply e few drops then lift corns or calluses off with • fingers -no pain. • • gyiriptoma of More Serlotia- „ , Just think! WU Can ” • Olc•KneSto Iift off any "corn Or cal- lus without pain or'fief& • wasialittat Park, 111. 44' am tbi thOthek of fovii-ciadiovandisnio ear, _ A Cincinnati man dls- fered with female ntreotuvbolusca. sbpacenksaatithred, - - - the bluesi',, Mychil- diicn's lend talking and romping would' make atie BO nervous • X coted just tear • everything to pieces. tind I would ache all over atid feel SO sie,k tliet I would not *ant anyone to talk to me at •thnes. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills re- stored rile to health and I want to that* you for the good they have done nie: have had quite a bit of trouble and Vorry,but it docoanot affect triy yeatht ful looks. Myr friends eay Why do you look Se young and well?' I owe it all to the Ly,clie E. Pinichera remedies." ROST. STorrEt., Sage Menne; Waallington Park, Illinois, If yeti li.ave'allYten‘tem abcratishich you Would like to know writeto the freezene, tell lihu to order a small bet- Lydia. n.Phildiera Medicine ,Co.; Lynn, for you from his wholetale tlit" Matat; foiatielpfuladaite -aivenfreent house 9 • charge. ERVOUSNE covered this' ether c.om- •pound t'and named •• • it *eczema ,Any drug, gist will sell• ri tiny bot- leoffreessona like here . 'shown, for very little • coat, You apply a few 'drops directly Upon a tender corn or callus., Instantly the soreness - disappears, then short- ly you Will lind the Corn or• cello im Mose net' you can•lift it right off. Frecaone is wonder- ful, It dries instantly, 'It doesn't eat aviay the corn or callus, but shrivels it up without even irtitating the surrounding Ain, Hard, soft,or eorns between the toes, as well as painful calluses; lift right off. There is, no pain before or ettcr- Xf youv druggist ' hoar% A 444