HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-09-19, Page 3'
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VALOR OF AN
USEOFPOISONGASI MIMI CAPTAIN
THEY STILL TRY TO FASTEN HE HALTED WILD FLIGHT OF
BLAME UPON THE ALUM
.
Rave Discovered. That This Outrage
Was Moral and Political, as
Well as a Military iihniden,
The British Ministry ot Ieforniation
hap homed through ita wirelese service
the following with reference to mite,
statements on the original erualoY-
- Ment of. poison gas sent out by the
official German wireless:
The German press awl proihigandist
ageneies• - still continue to give cur'
Taney to the falsification that the
Alliee anticipated Germeny in the em.,
• ployment Of 'violin gas in this war,
On Jula 17 the Inennian wireleaa agent
circulated a steniment to this, effect
and referred to “hietorical beton to
prove that "the idea of ,using poison
gas originated ' with the British, Ad-
miral DurelOnala." • • '
: • It enay be true that Dundonald, Who
Wait born in 1775 and dienin 1860, and
aan------Wailatirianallern4emnitnatiaitell Sena
great sailor, warned the British Gov-
ernment in the eirly part of the nine°
• teenth century that t was technically
Possible to produce an asphyxiating
- gas which cored he eraolened in milt -
tory operations, In: employment by
the British (lover:merit waft never
seriously consideree, as such a method
of Warfare Was condemned as too ina
human. -
„ Added New Horrors To `Warfare:
•The 'fact that the liaguenConven-
tion of 1899, 'es which Germany was -a
party, expressly -forbade the use of
asphyxiatiiin gas le sufficient, evidence
that the .poseibilities. Of gas as a
'weapon of offence -were known to, all
, the War offices: The point is then the
Allies obeyed the dictates of hunirmitY
and the rules of the Hague Convention
by refraining from its use, whereas
the Germans deliberately added this
• ifew horror to warfare. • '
° The ntermari wireless measage 're=
. .
ferren to says • • •
:nit h. a pont offact that poison
. •
gases Were -flint used in the wee on
March 1, 19157bythe British and
' French, and British otann common-
' icares could not annoence a Getman
attack with .paireni grin ',Mtn April 24,
. 191.5n'
, The first portion of this statement'
is, of course, a deliberate falsehobd,
for which 'there is not the elightest
vestige of justification. If it were an:
,.,cepted, it woinci obviously imply that
between March 1, when we are ex-
pected to • believe that the • Mind of
the netmen Geneeel Staffs was inno-
a • „cent of 'any •Intention to use poisoa
gas, and April 24, when they used itn
on the -battlefield, the -whole elaborate
,preparetion required for the peojecn
• tion of gas :upon, ti large kale was
completed. '• ' .
The gas was :invented and accumn-
lated, the Cylinders mn which it Was.
awed Were nianidectured aadlested,
• andthe large number of men emplan-
ed in projection were trained and
.nestrueted in, the techninalities of the
business ,all Within a period Of -eight
:. *reeks. But on April 24, at the •see-
ond battle of -Ypres, When the yellow=
green clouds of chlorine crept slowly
over from the Germannihes, the Bri-
tish and French were caught absolute-
ly'. unprepared. They,, *staked whom,.
preliendingly and without protection
a at thienatiange phenomenon until they
- fell, chocking and :gasping with black-
ened, agonizing faces, to 'dienwithout
• Inicewledge • of the • plague •which
" brought them death. .• •
•• r'• Greeted
'; • In Gerrnarly,.at the heWs. of this
..alurpristn:with•the atrocioussuferings
,ieflictea by it on the French and Bri-
tish soldiers, was :greeted with Might.
as a new teiuniph of Teutonic 'adroit.
ness .and militery. science. But why,
. it may be asired, does the German
wireless now we the spacine date of
March 1, Iinfi, aS that on which the
gas had already been employed : by
- the •Allies? - The -answer, is best given
in the weeds of laird Frerich. In his
:repert. Of May 8, 1910, ten days after
thengrieeg fit:it:Used bynthe Ger--
mans, he said: —
•ii3/4:*-'eelt"before the Ginn -eine used
thia_tilethod they ..aunthinced, hi theta
commune:lie that we were mak-
ing use of asphyxiating gases. ' At the
time there appeared to be no reason
. for this astonishing falsehood, but
now, of course:4.0.1s obvimie that it
-wag' part of the achpme. It shows
-• • thee recognized its Mentality and were'
anxious to forestall neutral end pos-•
• sibln domestic crithisin." •
• Jr his dispatch .cf • apne 15, 1915,
.lori French said. ."
.• "The brain powet and thought
- - which finite evidently been -tit work
•• Wore this enwonthyanethodof Mak-
ing war reached the pitch of efficiency,
which has been demonstrated in ate
, • practice shOwe that the Germans Mit
nave harbored these &Arne fen a iong
timen' ,
- Shia those early daville Germans
have learned to their sokrow that gas
weapon two can iese. Forded '46
, "employ it in self-ddence, tha Alfllea
•• have done So With SUCh effect that
• 't ie Ger:nails have had r §astin to TS.-
gret ereeedingly their depaaturenfron
•, •• the tileof civilized Wor.fare. •And
. lave diseoVerea that' this- outrage
enainst humanity was it 'Moral and
political as. Well ad a military Wilder.
Tie* expleits why the Gernian wire-
• less still displaysueh anxiety to nig-
clann Getniaily'a guilt laid to fifetee
tlie blailie innin the ALW-00.
. • •
100,11041 SOLDIER&
PPO.P.0
Ftancesco Guardaliessi Gives Graphic
Picture ot Heroic Deed That
Saved an Army Frew
• the Austrians.
Brack Of the meagre Anna den;
patch anmenicing the award by the
Italian government of its silver meral
or valor, virtually the highest mili-
tary reeognitiop that can come to an
Italian. *Wier, is one of the most
thrilling and rommitie episode* of the
entre war: one which, in fact, may
be said to have had a distinct and
net** hearing Upon the emcees of
the Italian arms.
The cable message announcing the
*Ward read: "Awarded to First Lieut
tenant On later received his gain
taincy) Francesco Mario Guandabassi
of Perugia, while on the stair 4 the
commander of division. Energetic
enoneretor thelligle-Commarni-of
the division, First Lieutenant Guard-
abassi gave an admirable proof of
determination, enery and :bravery in
lrea7 difficult. circumstance during
the drive from the Caren to the Piave,
firnilY checking a sudden and, threat-
ening panto iiroused among the troops
Carso-Tagliamentot.,Bridge of Lott-
sante*. 26 October, 1.917."
Captain (then First Lieutenant)
Guardebessi, by hiseaction, prevented
the Italian- =treat from the Carso to
the Piave from becoming a disorderly
rout and tranaformed it into an ord-
erly retirement, which enabled, the
Italian forces to re-form and to make
their positiert On the Piave impreg-
nable, It was Captain Guardabassi
who, standing virtually alone on the
bridgehead of Latham inspired the
troops of the Third Army to hold
their ground when overwhelmed with
fear and panic,•
. . • •
nYeir can imagine the spirit of our
eriny. last October,"n said Captain
Guardianuern "when our • generals of
the third army announced that We
were to 'fall back. We had worked
so hard no establish•our line on the
Tagliamento, end we were se proud.
Now the overs -crone that we were
to; get bank on the Piave.: Thine were
no finer fellows in the „mild than In
the third army; hat a wave of dis-
couragement. ' swept through the
ranks. Were we to be beaten'?
"The Piave line was strnager—at
was our ainereal 'line. There we could
hold off the Austrians coming down
from the Mirth. and prevent ' their
breaking into the Italian plains. It
was :Oily :lefty milea_lnackr yet our
army, none of us, could realize this.
It was e retreat. And it became More
and more difficult to keep 'up the sol-
diers.' Inorele, to. hold them' together.
"The third army numbered 400,000.
It was redueed during the campaign
from •400',000 to 7e,e00, but that was
its; size when theretreat wee ordered.
,Thera Werennomplications in the re-
treat, for down from the northeast
began to came detachments from: the
necoad ermy,,mhiglirig With Our men,
tending, to produce disorder. • .
Minn Makes Retreat ,Difficult.
"I shall. never forget how it rained,
during those days. The Carso-Tag-
liamento region is a marshy courany.
'Where we were was not far fromf the
sea. In the retreat we had to keep
to the roads. This made our falling
back the 'harden '
"I could never* have dine what I
had to do had it not been for my gen-
eral, General Petillo, and the fact that
that besides the hurriedly retreating
has always been
Itnovvn as pur
cl-e
atiwhotesofne7-7-`
but few, people
could et superior
barley our to mix.
with their Wheat.
-
The barley flour.
used in making
isalt milled at our
own factories and
when, you t aste "
*he rich.+4nd of
this drain on
Grape:Nuts -
you have duaran-
teed assurance
ofwholesomeness.
‘rierizys o Reason"
Cana& reseliftlobed
LiceriviN020A8
Canada Food BOatP
cbluetwo
. No. *6•02L
Ithat ,beenties the hurriedly rfetreatingi
soldievs, pouring along the roads
everywhere, disheartened and fearful
the eountry people by thousands, were
retreating. Nobody knew what !nigh
happen. The feeling Wait growing
that the war was lost. That we
weuld soon make a now stand, and *
brilliant one, along the Piave, ond
later retrieve everything nobody real-
ized. You could uot have told them
that. .
"Fortunately My .general aud I
were close to a very important gross -
leg of the Tegliemento, the bridge et
Latham. Marshes were on every
hand. In. reelity there were two
foot bridges, 4 railroad bridge and
one for foot passengers. Soldier% and
people were. pouring over the latter.
It was :seven o'clock in the anorning.
The rain -driven air was filled with a
xenon of the unexpected 'end of gloom.
At, any mornentiour men were likely
to break into paah. .
"Suddenly from outof nowhere,
down the veils, nerne a locomotive, a
locomotive alone,:crowded with son
diem., They were waving and' yelling,
There wee no sign of a train. I never
imagined_ so many ;pea could get o
a locomotive befm:eN,.. • . .
Cry of Austrian Cavalry Raised.
•-•••••••••••
KITCHENS
t PRIDE BRITISH
"The locomotive Allot over the rail-
road bridiren It diennneaned, leaving
, behind a great uneasiness• and added
• depression. Then the Cry arose; "The
Austriap cavalry."
[tookit UP. • It spread through the'
'That cry increased. Everybona
• rankle on hurriedly marching soldiers,
It swept through the •diaordered
• groups of country people crowded in
among them; it was half believed,
then believe, then it. .reiew to be a
certainty, Nobody knew, and the
doubt. made the fear.. The panic be-
gan.
"I did not know whether the Aus-
trian catelry were coming or not,
but I did know that,- this panic mut
be checker and at once, ; I sprang
forward, through the soldiers, and
ion to the front of the bridge,
'You fools,' I yelled out, and
ardo lind again said It, waving my
arms: 'You fools, get into line! The
• Austrian cavalry ,is not, coming. That
Is ellen 1had to be believen: I had
to, make them believe -me.
"It took heirs, two, -three, nearlY
four. I neyer left the bridge. . I sheet-
ed and shouted. It was foreleg in
Idea thronfini the heath of •a hundred
thousand men, • • . •
• "Wby the soldiers and the country
.people did not sweep nie down into
the river, trample me; kill me their
excitement, I- do. not 'knew. • AU
knew was . that the 'panic merit be
stepped. 'And it was. Before the
moining was, rioter the troops were
moving over in an orderly way.
"That was • why the • government
_gave me ' the Aver , medal: I •em
prolin of itn-more proud. thin I have
ever been of an3rthing." •
CeiEWING CORD.I.TE. •
A Habit That Is. Inc'reasing Among
British "Munition *orkerre:
! - -
Not long since. when a boy Of rea-
terie working on munitions was taken
ill,. it was .thought that he had been
dritilthig; ;rays .thi English"' netytpiipaii.-
The suggestion Was dented, however,
and It•wao.proved that the lad never
touched:. alai)* ; but the cause ' of the
mistake lay In' the fact that he had the
hatilt‘of .cheiiing 06144er-the smoke-
lessexplosive •so largely. used In the
manufacture of Mall arms. ' ..
. Cordite -Iit . a 'Very': stimulating ding,
and quickly revives weary nerves, be-
sides being extremely attractlie t� the
taste, but the there fact that it.is
coMPosed ' chiefly :..' 4 . nitro-glycerine
and guncotton makes It 'It most deadly,
and dangerous *drug. • .It Is a drug, too, h
which *speedily. gets . the upper -hand of
those who take it ;.. .
. There was a rather memorable In '
stan,..co. of some. soldiers --discovering
the atiendating effects of cordite dur-
ing the Soutli African. War: but the
drug was _really _unknown in this cowu.
try until the lasttwo 'cir three yeare.
.; To -day the habit of chewing cordite
Is quite connhoh, especially among . all
sections of. irtimition-workers whose
work brings them into contad with
theevioeiveto.
.. gooto.mou:iunnipii,
tion areas knew -the prevalence of. th�.
habit, the .hold It has over thn•-work-
ers, and the harm Which 0 is doing list
•vietimennatticeimenameng-womennou
. n
girls.. : . , • , . :. .• . , r .
-infant inniiitleitneorkere slart. chirW,
ing cordite. in cOinplete' ignorance of
the berm which it IS likelyto do them,
while many who • Start the habit so
quickly. become,depeudent. upon It that.
they have nOt auflicieet -strength—Of
will to give it 'att.' • • • - . . ,
,
More than ' -one ninnitiOniere has said
that clewing a• bit of -cordite occasion:
ally enables thein... to earry on at hard
work when otherwilie' they would have
had to %lye ire - •, • •- ,. • .., .
. If. is: only afterWarda; when the habit
noes from bad tO worse, ..that they
realize their foolishness. • ••'
Theme is no .denying. the feet` that
cOrdite recreates. force and. energy lit
a wan equalled by no other stimunuit;
but it 19 onWholly ,hrirmful drug,' which
MS away both the Mental and phyrd-
cal . systems—a drug 'Which siriiiild
hetet be alloWed to gala the mastery.
hi: ma'y cages, too, cordite gives ite
victi , the appearance* of drunken.
atit„
ne , pre than one person had. been
thong t e be•drunk wear
hen :mann th
had heen eheliing• cordite. . ..
•
' Prinuilas for early flowers' should
be in 214 or 8 Inch pots and moved
• into lerget aote as fast as the Pante
are teeny. -
I . -
Ta.mensot
IMPORTANCE OF GOOD 'FOOD IS
• RE,coosizgai
"Ring's Regulations" Call for Rigid
• Inepeetion Daily' by the
Cormaniniders.
The importance of the kitchen de-
partment of th%erray cennot be over-
rated, for if lenn are to work hard
andefficiently they must be fed pro-
pany. For this; r.eaeou the °Iningni
Reguletionin provide that it is the
first duty of every commanding officer
to the that the Soldiene meals are
"properjy and sufficiently PrOVided." Zt
la' further :ordered that an officer mustn,
inspect the Ititeherie and 'COW -Wane!
every Alley, while the sante °Meer meet
, visit the barrack rooms and mess n
tents ..during the. breakfaat, dinner
and supper hours to ilea out if there
ie any cause for complaint
The kitchen•establishmerit of 4 BA,
'ugh army carnp varies widely Miner •
eifferent circumstances. At perisonn,
ie tern, in France the coelnueine la
a arg. building, shared by several
upfts, sand le 'under the chatge of It
sergeant -chef, who has been through'
a special course in militaty cooking.
It is his duty to superintend persin-
aly
ell cooking done in -the regimental
• cookhouse. •Each unit, in its -turn, 1
has a chief cook, who, is responsible
for all the meals of his unit.
Por a Long or nhert Stay.
In the field, however, the cook -
hinge is a thing of mushroom growth. n
When 'a unit to on ,the march • th,e
simplest method of constructing a '
temporary kitchen is to place a num-
ber of kettles on the ground in two
parallel rows, 'block the leeward end
of the passage thus formed with an-
other kettle and light a fire in this
improvised trench. As soon as the
tire has been started one or two rows
of kettles can be placed on- top of
those already In pottier'.
If the • stay at a particular spot is
likely to be for any appreciateelength
of time a good lied kitchen is impro-
vised bydinnizin a narrow trench for -,
the fires and placing the camp kettles
above this. Sometimes a chimney Is
bant of sods. • .
'• '
For . a stay „ofthree Or four. days
regular "field ovents" are 'constructed.
An oirCh of sheet iron is erected and -
on top of •thina layer of .clan as .piled. •
With this oven it is possible to leiVe_ -
the men .roaet Meat for dinner gel
often as thet joints are forthcoming
-
from the supply column. '• Enough
breanno•feed a whole battery canbe
baked in one �f these ovens...
alaneesearect======ar
practical. and
Comforta
The kiddies always Just love Nor-
folk dresses. Perlieps because of their
comfort and, loose -fitting line& nil
ittle nihrlel is easily made awn very
simple in vonstraction, McCall Pat -
ern nno. 8454, Girl's Drees, In 6 sizes,
4 to 14 years. Price, 1.5 cents.
DEVEL�P,THEFISI4ERIES."
- . • "..‘4,:
A Source of,Food Supply In This Tim
of Scarcity..
'Practically aU fish are 'edible and
in -general' theY are equally nutritioue;
the 'chief difference In that respect be-
ing in the fat. Content, which,' varies,
•not only with the soecies but season-
ally" That is thetlictuni of tn.
Mem; Deputy- Coramiaidoner, U.S.
Bureau* of Flatteries. •.
' Surely It is a great misfortune that•
Only a smell perce,ntage.of the several,
hundred • species and sub -species of -
fish to ,be found in the Waters of the
northern hemisphere find any demand
on our markets., especially during.the
present world shortage of raeats.
is a' condition that has resulted from
. • '
. .
he: spciana enatne e. ver
Ing favorite. The one illustrated is
both -practical and enui.rt tied most
appealing to- the mien McCall Pat:
tern No. 8366, Misses' .Deess. . In 4.
• sizes, 14 to 20 years. Price, 20 cents.
These •petterns 'may be obtained
from your local ateCall- dealer, ••
front -the MCa11 Co,' 70 /abed St,
Toronto, Dept. W.. " ' "
0 000 0 0 0 0 00 00
WOMENi IS MAGIC I • '
•
LIFT OUT ANY CORN
.- •
Apfdr a few drops thee lift
• corns- or calluses off with
fingsrs—no •pain
•
the con,servative attitude of fishermen o o .o o '43—o o 0 o 0 o a
f • Just think! Yoh can
lift oft any corn or cal-
. his without pain et
soreness. ,
and fish dealers in, failing to educate
the-tiomia eoncerping- the food 'value.
.hitherto unused npeCies ; and also
in the Proper methods of handling and
Cooking fish . that require special treat.
• Ment to, prepare ' them for tile, table.
Happily,. the action .of food boards in:
Europe and Amerlea Is rapidly chattg-
WS' the. situatfon. Already,' many so -
*called !chew." varieties, of :•fish are find-
thg their way in the fish:markets, and
'many .others will in' duetime meet
with a* similar saccesa. Tho title is
Most auspicious Yor•rti, great expansion.
of the fisheries industry'and Itis de-
voutly to be hoped that, those engaged
-in- it Will- aVail themielves; 6f- the; op-'
portnnity... . • • • • .
• King Alfonso's. Ruined. palace. Was
• Result ef .AnceWhit*
Whi•
. . .
• King .Alionsoit .itiitted' palace Of San
lidefonso, at lea Gran*. is one Of the
• freaks and one of the tortes. of Spain.
• It Was a bourbon. me:larch.. who in-
vented • it—at the beginning • of the
eighteenth century. ' Philip V. was Out
hunting one day and rested it asunny
farm called- the Grange, occupied by
nionlue . The limns. hen 'humored' the
raountain um 'whoseslopes the fantk,
house was built, and had made their
beautiful gardens conform to the ways
of the giant, •.
liut the King conipelled the moun-
tain to obey hire. He bleated 'smeeth.
places. ;en precipitonh • slopes, carry-
ing away thousands Of ton; a of earth
and ifteneS; and from the valley be,
low he brought up miles Of fertile
earth to term new fields and gardens.
aly the time 110 had finished' creatit4
a new landscape and.fillirtg the new
Versailles. With the beat pictures his•
taste*. suggested; Philip was reedit to
die in debt to the tune -of 45 nllliomt
penetas.. nor that Is the sum Which
the monarch spent 'on San Ildefonso:
• ••••••..... •
The helr in the throne. of 'Italy: is
styled "the Prince et Naples."
e'
• A Cincinnati Min dis-
• covered` t,his. ether dOM,-
,. • poundand named • it
: freezone. . Any • drug-
• gist will seu a tiny boa
shown for very little while mepcising .the, tips of theefingers
"Little White Prayers.*
At the load of the day whew ealinlint
dies,
Some little whienprayers go un to tleit
laden
They coma from the beidee In baby
gowile
Who kueel by their eots In the "dims*"
light; •
Erich little white tbought liolds a little
• white plea
For "1yto
adat lead or in air er on
Taose little white longinga alr
sae,
Sueli agUaintlittlIt medley et MOP
love hold,
,
Tben know that the Father of all un-
der4tanuBut methera bend low o'er the little
• clasped hands, • -
•
InEMON5 WHITEN AND.
PEAUTIFII THE SHIN
Make this .liciuty * cheallitn for
Year -face, neck, armu and hand!,
• At the corn oia, email jar of ordinary
cold cream one comPrepare a. full quan
ter pint ot the most weaderful lemon
skin softener 'and complexion beanti-
Ser, by equeesing the juice ot two fruit
lemons into a bottle coOkitilag three
-ouneetroforchannwhiten-Careeshould
be taken to •:drain the juice through a
nue oloth so no leraon rile gets Int
then this lotion will keep treeii for
months. Every woman knows that
lemon nuice is wont to bleach and re,
maire°,11Uph bleraishee as freckies,
ai-
iowneas end taM and is the ides1 sldn
softener, whitener and beautifier• .
Just tr.y 1t Get- three ounces ot
orchard WhIte at any drug Store Mid
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter pint of this iweetly fra-
grant lemon lotion and manage it
daily Into the face, neck, arms and
beads. It is marvelous to .smoothen
rough, red hands.
• Charity Peeling at Hemp.
Deny not help to those across the foam
By Baying, "Charity begins at helms,"
Those very words are proof that aid
• should go
To lands laid- waste by warfare's irin
ful woe: .
whore is home? .For all the Inman
The Architect haih made Cue dwelling
Place: • ' •
The roof of his blue sky la toVerhead,
And one foundation under all is spread; ,
Jn liretherhood we share this home of
All are Gods "children all of equal
But if perchance you. wish to -Mike,
• .. choice .
Which brother or Which 'sister .to
39100 •
The one who sits- within' the banquet
If not at table yet in 'reach .of all,
Or else! the tete whose,:joy' and hoe
. ;are .;
"AO the dark death ,chrimber Weeps
her dead,.
Be' sure of this—wherever you may
• give. • . ' •
Wherever younmay:.help itnOther live;
There ig no piece beneathtbe ihaveres
ainiere,•cluiritieliegine .t..hat is 'uoaonie..
astaera rdiaro.---7":."-77•n_t-Cnrel ,Xtanerrne
Flingers Made HamMer-Proof.
'-"Fingei armor" is the brand-new.
invention ef a Kontos Man. is not
for defense in war; but a protection
against the Much: objurgated taCk
hammer.- For use by persons of the
gentler sex it is specially iecommend-
• A leather • strap buckled about' the
varlet. of the, wearer is connected •by
-
metal bands:' with steel hoop* that
cover the thumb and fingers between
the joints.- • The hoops being connec-
ted together in the same way, there
hi. no interferezice with the monen
Ments of the- joints- oi with the flex-
ibility. of the hand. The terininal
tient •frernonelike here het:Ts extefid a. trifle beyond the naiin
for grasping.- • • •
The "finger armor" is put' on like
o gloye. It is meant to *brit, only ,
on the left, hand. Provided with it,
the moat hammer -shy lady, may drive
nails fearlesey. .
cost. • You apply •e. few
• drops .direetly upon a•
tender 'corn' or oalluts.
• Instantly the soreness.
disaimears, then. ahort
ly yoU wililIndthe corn
or callus so loose that
you mu' lift ft right
GILLETT'S
LYE
'Teleran Ceavelafateace,
'"Hompitel blue" is not the only
color which ideatilles bur woundon
Men, When they have shed their
blue' they have to pegs through three
further color phases before they reticle
the lighting—green,. red, and yellow,
'There colors are stitched on to their
caps, and they mark a maix'a progress
along the road to recovery.
• From yelnow to the fighthig zone is
a itone7f=throww. Helgbol Carry ord
•
114110.4141-Milase*X-OrthairlwirOWberth--r
• •
•%AI' map the blues .has an win!
time He s reauired to do very little,
nnd he is referred t.*a a meraher
•of ntlie Creeping barrage," from the
fact that he spends moat of his time
walking leisurely about, • The `next
atep is indicated by the red ribbon.
'This means harder work, raore strenu-
ous, exercise, anti *mite „marchen If
the inan is not up to these things* he
reverts to the green group; but if he
• stands the strain he is placed among
thetyellows. •
Minard's Liniznent Co, Limited. .
Deer had a Bleeding Tuinet,
on my face for a. Wog timeand tried
4 number of remedies without any
good resulta. an wee ,advised to try .
taINARD'S LINIMENT, and otter
tug several betties it made a complete
cure,. and. it healed all up and dimlp.
peered altegether..
• DAVID HENDERSON. -
noillehle Station, Kumar Co, N,33,0;
Sept
Spraying is of..ne avail indese it
:cliches the under aides rie well as the
tops of the 'leaves. 'Burn all dijseased
and'Infest,ed tops aud roots of intuits; ' • • •
to Out them on the Compost heap, is to
supply 'a comfortable breeding around
for more trouble. Water your planti
onln 'when they require it mut then do
It thoroughly. Mete surface, wetting '
does more.harm than ghod.
son sizit
fLL *QUIPPED NRWsPericit •
.0ntario. I ant in ra.14fra
and Sob printin I
neurones carried $140 ' 1
vtigr, vtitigiat14 2.111(to!L.
louretexim NRWSPAPRR PDX SALIN
• V V la Me* Ontario. ' Owner 'mina te
Trance, Will eell EMS. Worth double
that alnonnk Apo eve Wilson
-Pablaildna Oa. IA tea. Toronto.
1 •
4
• • MIRCNRRAMMOU'll • .
•
ir aping '7'W`AliTEn--TO -DO PLAIN-
JLA
and 110t.sewing at homewhole
spare tinie, good pay, work gent any dis-
tance, charges paid. Send stamp for par --
Oculars. National ManUfacturIng Com-
pany, Montreal:
• riA.NCIER. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC..
Na• l terms and external. Cured with.,
Out pain by our home treatment: Writs' "
es
1:234403? leacal • Rriwiltelcolta.n Medical .
7
••
WANTED
HEALTHY
WHITE *RAT
. . .
: Must.: be between'. alio. and 5
,ounOs. , 25eeach given Ex..
press collect to
..E. • N.. MACALLUM; .
043 College 'St. TOronte:,
a •
, • .
• • . moNey ORDERS.
bo.niinion Express Money Orders. pivo
Dollars . corns three Cents. • ' • "
. .
Preezone is 'wonder-
ful. It dries instantly..It
doesn't eat away the
corn or oahIns, . but
• shrivels it up without
• even irritating the. surrounding skin.
Fiord, soft or Ceps. between the toes,'
as well 4u painful 'Calluses, lift right
off. 'There is on.pain before or alter.
;wards. If your • druggist hasn't
freezone, tell him to Order a small bot-
tle for you from his Wholesale drug
house., •— . •
In planting atraWberries -see that
the plants are set- firroln in the ground
Loose planting means . poor stands.
Place the crown of the . plants level
with theisutface, letting the roots hang
at a slight angle, so the soil may be
packed doWn up632 th0111. Keep the
rows straightthe a garden line in
setting. •
•Imoki•••,••••••11•11.1.
'Kinard,' Liniment ntlievee Neurolais.
ilard4O0ed egge•,, eamllined With
finely Chopped sweet peepers, season-
ed and moistened with • mayonnaise,
niakes an exeellent salad.
. Tine to beghs 'thinking about cold
feanies and hot beds with which to pro-
long the gardening season, • This is
just a *mating notice.
.Tour Third Eye
• New Zealand as full of remarkable
Minis', and one of the Oddest of them
Is a species of lizards that has a third
ene Uri the top of its head.. .
• .
It is interesting, in thia connection
to -considee the fact that every human
being possesses a eudiasentara third
eye—a reninant of what must have
been ii seeing eye iri .eemeexcediagly
remote ancestors. •
•If you pdace the tip of your anger
• just above the tip of your note you
may reckon that direetly behind that.
about five inches at the base of the
brain, is this tided eye. .Anatonibits
call it the "pineal gland," arid . tut-
• cleatly it was inragined to be the Oat
of the soul. • •
.•••••••••=.6.
Distaid'ding• Opetation Pena
formed to theUrtelargat sized fewer,
front the bride allotted to reniain On
the plants. Pxhib1tlon chrysanths•
taunts, roses, -dahlias and Sereet peas
are rib:rest tilwaya the ieetilt Of dhs.
budding coupldn with earefut clam*.
Larger fivitti flee -Obtained in the earrie
Mariner, hitt this Is tilled thinning..
Z4nrfissegislid-it
ch'4
,11144Mniatialf
InlitSTJUOUI
*Yid%
-
Zazionsal Ourss *auk. MtO. ED. T.
•
r2 •
a
AMIE 87