HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-10-14, Page 3‘1,7
• or --
r- r -e• -•
leeeeeeee,
National Duty in
, • •,.
Jroin
.The Amid Tables
a
iz
Service For
tonden, Eng., Sept 22. ---The first
enderiost- obvious step is to introduce-
•
the people, at home or in the field,
cornea out that fraction of ACrviee
whichafl to its lot with leyelty and
deterMination to the end. •
' Tide raie s at once the 'eententioree
Subject of Militant eervIn order
. .
oillts Quit Ac
Soreness Goes Away
NO MORE STIFFNESS, PAIN:
OR /VINERY IN. TOUR RAPE
OR SU% -OR LIMBS!
•
ERMANY• 'SEIZE4,
BRITISH AIR IDEA
IMPROVED AEROPLANE URGED
, TWO YEARS AGO. -
to mobilize ,the vehOle. ;weldable man, WeaderfairngerViline" le the ReMetly. ounnaus T04 xep idea and eeaw.
a new, sPirit intothe condOct Of enah, heed of the country for military pur- A marvelous pain reliever.
I
he affair.% In erdinary times the real pcisee, should we resort to eompulsory a".bil'eat.foraeneu"asd!innanria 101wUrdeunit""‘"4/48t . Have l'4elafte With •V;ia '
ruler of the eenntry le Public, opinieee meth d f 1
eloWly evolved under the ceaselees tion there can only be one aniever. eny thiei
penetrating,. more pam,subdfilng thane
0 0 en istmenti To this (lege- .1) More
. vonderous nvehinery e rartiOn*nt• the need, alone can detida. Tint If it aivesquielc relief to totrbing
1
hammer .of political•controversY. and Whether or not it is reeiiired the Gov- NervilineValry"eatnirlitIll: Plilrimielli4 . O., 0, OreY:, editor of The Aeroplane,
Plewb! Paesed into , leev through. :the • , eminent, eyeeeb knewe„ the „ewer nue etieekteese in_ chre -nee_ neenninace jointer ti,ointdrsehinaedri:petsnseesiittitio,Gnearzferoillo, wan:: 7,,, roVutoefornogte.4_tetean:tir, ourAlnid.siesimtilett.toline.
Inc ,Geverninent of the day is coin- jiidges such. e eeeasure iaecessary, then P140E4'044, ----------------. . ere .. .
:
the skin . When the official °Ye Wtitntehss was, r tattlevi:rzaeovrgenaleinnetnbtisocnre4itIn
. .
1.7 Cr7-911r11111111,rmill."-'7'
in, Nervous
Depre
$ lielp!
Thi
The wear and etrain of life has
tended in recent years to produce
coLosmmrs ApvicE.
Though.a 'Spendthrift: tteelized Adven-
tem -of SI:mitts - -
The, poet Goklemithe theOgie
1 works cove him to have been a Men 4.0043r1411 _ .xxxi-
Qf alnioet:ninereeedented POMO' in-
Pied, could net manage his oWn of- 8 tica.1414Gr'esTrgtigISSIPINT
'LOOKING FOR 4 Fmtif, ,
slat mo, have over tv.?., bandred on
ray itat, ,St
tall% .ViQnj
44 sizes. IM.mhzu,
arnatoa;,
aIrS. Re Was Always in•deht arid the 074:7 meracca,,ftailyn:
0:4E. • •
nervous debility ;4 a large percentage More he received for his writingof s,
eur poptilation. Thousende are f- eviiieh wore even Plage popular in hie
fectecl with. feeling they can't 4ler- life. time thenetheY Are to -day, -the
actly describe. They are. always tired more lie Inent end the more debt he lpitOPPt-Ill'AtINC4. PITAISYS- ./ST,41), JOU
appetite, iook pale And Suger frene
and droopy, leek ambition, have poor incuirred, At hie death he peered 41- otacoo tor este 1 •
lees than two tholi-s. and pounds, which,
'PtasalWQwerill:f mfgornetyltaintheaatte.dax' yPit:roillInici.,'sitf:
equarit. least tolwenty. thoutiand dol.. misreetAnvolte.„ g '
Jars now. The great Samuel eJohnson, TIZANC,Bil' `itld019.9,,'*'1‘trAiii.6... ISTC.:. •
Goldseelthza friend and iieueeractee. /Le internavnne external. eared with -
Might well exclaim, as he did, "Wee. Ntialellil!ebto:ttletai'nffrnttginee3,4Ig.1
ever poet 00 trusted before?" But, • Co:. Limited, coninesvone. tent • ,
he realized the advantageS of that:' -
•
c
towns. The meet Ameba and Interesting
of all businesses. Von intormssion UXi
41:n11c:won to iviison Publishing Com-
pany. 7,3 West Adelaide St.._ qtronto•-- - - - -
dePresehig headaches and insomnia.
This condition is fulieof peril', is
posed of party.leaders ;Primarily con-, we haVe .uu option, but to give, it the mown 0- e Pee' -try. to get well while • yet :there )4
1
Periled to carry into .effect a gertein power S it aSic4. The fimetiOn of the 11 ‘1,1 . • . Joints -' i ple of England the existence of a. b* tiiiie ' Probably no better advice .can
0 thnedti 81110%1%3r IgteerAlLfiys Irgilt" oqtRially , 'biplane with two fuselage 1 he elven than to 'use regularly Pr.
obey them .beeause theY_, Are liart ef4 force the hand •ef.the Governinent-onel ene me to *eve r .44.i : o ..1 4-
progrAnune' of reform, and the people cOreailinity ,,iir the matter is not' to . knee )-01ert was °eon too painful pa.jnial t,...ei., 0roydeee and two engines the exie- 1 IT raments .pins which have become
, the constitutionel .methinerY rather en eees cr.pinee eole bulge a such' a machine aroused afa Ons in restoring theMac to. good.
lAra3r 131 the ether,:lnit,te Inake it un- I timed ,Conditiell I fennel Nervilhie . a considerable amount .0einterest in thiseb glth' A general toning up of the
1
permitted to mak I
th
than because they 0014'111nd any au-', derstand filet it is. willing to accept blessing. Its warm, •soothing • -actien
Y emse vete War • nitre, anyolethed enlietment for military
duces to a OW 'world. Speed ined service wifieb. it eensiders necessary
efficiency, seerecy .pildthe withholding. to win the war. • • "
of information useful to the eneniy, There has, in: the paste been mu&
ore ehlential eficeeeS. Public eine, miSuralersfiihding about national
therefere, dethroned,' for it hes tarY service of this kind. ,Ori :the one
neither time nor material with 'which: hand it lia'S beeh. treated its though it
-o formulate sound judginei4se -This involved .the permanent- introduction
imposes upon both •Cievernine# aid of,Coritioentia eonscription,', The mea-
' .people totallY new eat 'of i*OPROT10-.- stir° which rney he neeeseanY in order
I
roug t relief I had given np henliV
for. rubbed on q,uantitie$ of Nerve,
hnc and-iniproeecrsteadily. I also took
Peeroetme at mealtime order to
verify and winch My blood. am to-
day well find Can * recommend my
treatnie# most conscientiously:
(Signed) C. PARKS,
Not an ach or pain in the :muscles
r emu s that Nerviling wen't cure.
. . , q e Oyern- , to COMPlete the, Mobilizatien of ane- It's • wonderful for hirebegoe and
Manz ner leadership, OW4 tionAl.greiy, by-far*.the gredier 'pait Seieticae.for -neuralgia, Stift neele,
Of the People a.'.new kind of loyalty ',Of. • Witielf is already eri; e)e_,.4,6,119t Mut •,,,t-5,0thache, ','Nerviline.
.4nd.,oboigncp. . • • - ustea,.. ougia• and ,indeed bamhzt; ..0;4114•T's% "Wonder. Best feriiitye
, The'OoVerilment. for :the thine being. heve anything to do With - Military 14kn6V-11 largelY 'used. ia.r: the
la in the position of dietetore It alone organisation after the War. That is everywhere,
feivity- yeare. Sold by deeilers
'hat; fall knowledge. It in freed from an entirely separate Auestion, and. it 60e. size
, plait trial size 25e. , Refuse, a
upon itself to act on Ito 'own ' by our success or failure in the war THE FRUITS OF OBSERVATION
bottle
criticism of the usual destructive and ' is one which will be determined not substitute, take only "Nerviline."
•ernbarrassing kind. :Unless it takes , by any Acts we may pass now, but
Unless it proposes, regardless of nova- fitself. The one thing; which would • •
-
Hew --PerVies Described a -host
Camel,
•
ty
outcry, or any and every mea, , make donscription certain would
• i.Oure..whielz it .may consider -necessary 1 --the triumph'of the -Prussian ideal
to win the war, unless it insists on I force and war:
prompt .and c'oraplete obedience to the . •On the other hand, compulsory
I .
nude/1AI law, it is failing to clischatge vice ha e been -objected to 6p
tite functions:'of a-Mational executive. ground it is ineonsident with
• La iiine of - .war the prireary ,ibity of ' free principles of the British Con
the Government is to govern, and this ; tution won' in. long centuries of str
isa retporisibilitY which. it can neither ,gle. Thi e objection is based on a
1,
, escape nor -share. . :. - • - - . appreherision. It implies thsit Wha
. But if the Governmeht is to act as proposed is that an arlaitrary Gove
. , it should, the people On their side must, I !pent eliouid begin to coerce an
give it loyalty and obedience, and that : willing People by force. ' That is
• means that they must 'voluntarily put- po,ssible.in a democratic countrY..%
themselVei under orders tin the end Of Government could survive, even
. the . war. No body of men can co, war, which. proposed to, undo in,
•operate for a' acaririzon'Purpose if each Way the constitutio-nal work of
. one is free ...to work or not .as he lest two hundredyears and put po
chooses and to'choose what work he back jiermanently .. into autocra
- should de; They must Wet' CM eXecti- hands. ' National military service
tive Committee and give it the power vetoes an act of • a ' totally differ
to -allot the.work between all kind. It is,.ene which onfy- the peo
• ing to a single plan of action and ac.;• themselves can enact 1:t can
cording to their . sever eapacitiest brought into force • only if the peO
Each Mist then do his appointed tailt declare by e: deliberate Act of Pari
. faithfully and .panctually... Ohly so. merit that, as a nation, they author
; calve Machine be ,Made to work, whe- the Government to take the necessary
ther it be humentr of steeL Only•so stefis. . . - • .
Can an army manoeuvre so as to de- .Stieli a. measure, :however, though.
feat -its eneniY, .And only So can a' -voluntarily accepted by the nation,
.
nationmakeWar to the utmost Of its and imposed by popular consent,. does
• eapadity. . If # means business ih the involve two thiege. , It ends tenipor-
War it must .freely and •of its own arily the voluntary system, so far as
accord, submit itself to .the irksome military service is concerned, and with
restraints of national- dischiline. Mr. it the fundamental -.merit of the sysl
Lloyd Gorge speaking on July- 29th, .tem, that it places the responsibility
• .enunciated th'ia., principle .With great for judging where his duty lies, and
clearnessz- -•
. foreeloinget,_squerely on -tile ledividnal-
, "Weliave-(he eseid) htit.-one _ ques, -ta responspiIiey usually only, exer,
- Lion to ask purselves•-•4e of all ranka,• deed in national affairs at the •banot
of all grades, and all trades: Are we box.. It also involves. a teniporary in.
doing enough e to vsecure victory; be- lerferenee with the normal liberty of
,
cause victory means life for our coup, action of the .citizen. But there are
• try.? It Means the fate .ot freedom tittles when it is‘neceasary to sacrifice
for ages, to come. There is no price liberty temporarily in order that it
'Which is too great for us to pay that mai*. be preserved in the . long ren.
is within our power, - There. is toe Every soldier who has enlisted in this
•much disposition to cling. to the amen-, war has sacrificed his perholial libert
ides of peace. Business as panel, en, • and subjected hizimeif to a most Irk
, ..joyment as•usuall:_fashiont;'-lookotitt,',-tOthe diiiiiilifie;4iihrder that a grea
'strikes, ea', canny, sprees -- ill as cause may be. servecithereby; and i
usual. Wages mutt go up, profits a natiohil•icrisis it May be necessar
, must also impreve; but prices must at for a whole' people to do the' sam
- all costs be kept. down. Yob Will for', The. state' itself is not organized o
give me,..I an sure, for -speaking -quite- the voluntarY , principle. - People ar
plainlY. NO maalatist be ealled-upon -net-given any option about abeyliz
.. 4:. to setve the State unless he wtints the ordinary Jaw. The State, liberty
. •
to, even then he has Only to be called civilization itself, would cease to exis
upon to do exactly what he would like unless the law, representing the co*
to do -not what he ii fit for, net What Mon judgment about social relations
he 'is chosen for, but Mita he himself and social rights and duties,- 'Were
would like to do., A man who could binding on all. • And the State cannot
' ,render more service by • turning out fight a war in which its honor and its
munitions must be allowed to go to very existence are at stake unless its
the-frontiftite prefers -td, and-th -reitizerisi-Willirig to 'mike hillItary
, . .
be
s of
ser -
the
the
sti-
ug-
mis-
t is
rn-
un-
im-
• No'
in.
any
the
waer
tic
•
A Dervise was journeying alone in
a desert, when two merchants sud-
denly met him. . . •
• "You have lost" a carnet" said he to
the merchants. • ••
4Indeed we have,!! they replied. -
"Waa he. not blind in the right eye,
and lame in the left leg?" said the
dervise;
"Ile Was;" replied .the merchants.
'.'And was heit rend -eel -With honey.
on' one side and wheat -on, the other?".
. "Most certainly he was," they re-
plied; "and, as you have seen him so•
lately, and marked him so particular-
ly, -you can all probability conduct
ent
us to WV:" . • • '
'
ple friends," said the clervise, "I
have never seen your eamel, nor even
,be '
ple
ia-
ize
heard of hrin, 'but from your' •
"A pretty xlstory, truly," said the
inerehant•mbiit where are the jeviels
which formed a part of his burden?"
"I have seen -neither yew camel
vniesre.you, r jewels," repeated the ' der-
.
'On. this they seized his person, and•
forthwith hurried him before. the cadi;
but on the strictest search nothing
could be, found imon him, nor could
any evidence whatever be adduced to
Convict him either of falsehood or of
theft. • .
They_were-aboutto proceed -against -
him as a sorcererlehen the dervise,
with- great- calmness, . thus addressed.
the Courte--"I•have .been•much amus-
ed at your surprise, and: own , that
there has been some ground for your
suspicions; but I 'have lived long and
alone, and, I Can ' find ample scope for
observation' even in a desert. I knew
that I had crossed the track of a
y,ieemel that had strayed from its own-
- er,.becaute Lsaiiir nninal.k.of any-hui
t1 man foetstep on the same route. I
!
n knew that the arihnal was blind of one.
y eye, because it had cropped the herb -
e. age only on the one side, of its path;
n and that it was' lame in one_leg,_fro
e the folet impression which that .par -
g ticular foot had produced 'upon the
, sand. I concluded that the animal had
t lest one tooth' because wherever I
-. gazed a small taft of herbage had
been left uninjured in the centre of
its bite. As to that which formed the
• burthen of thebeastthe busy antt in-
foraned me that it was corn en the one
country. Now a renort comes from
Switzerland that the Germans have.
actually put in, the air a "triplane,"
Which' is a machine With three Pairs P
wings, one above the other. driven
four propeller, each driven by an
gine, of 20,0 -horsepower; so that t
etenl at once takes place. The
hole body is vitalized, by riebereand
rer blood. The appetite i' increase
ed, feed, is digested and natdrally
strength rapidly increases. Headacheg.
go bectabe the bowels are regulated
and all wastes are carried off. There
.no experiment Omit Oleg , Dr.
whole lintehine has 800 horsepower Fills becaliSe they cer-
it.
, This shows that the Geeeneee tainlY ,restore the. pick as a trial will,
ping, ohe better Allan the 'Russian quicicly prove, , Just as .gliod for. the
_Sikorsky", which has •abrint 406tThorse-' old Ili' Y°Yng' and suitable* to tha
needs, of men, Women' 'and children.
'Cower in it, ednsietirig ef.four engines Tiiin grand tennis, medicine. eiemidbe
-
Of 1:00;ersepower each driving' a lin.- inkevery home, • • .
. ,
gle . " *. • '
Incidentally triPlenes were built and " JELI:ACtiE-AT SCHOOL.
flown suceessfilly in England by. A.
V. Roe in 1910 or earlier. • . The Diplomatic Way He Made a
ReeenilY1 have heard from ,officers Bosom priend.
who .have returned from Franee that . ,
the Germans have of late put in the of,
a boy Bir John Sellicoe, Admiral
air several large biPlanes which, al- oe tne Grand Fleet, attended a school
though they heve . enly one eforlY •,.- , - -. ' __
t Rottingdean the little Sussex vil-
•afilete like. an ordinary tractor *.bi- I
t . , age, four mites from Brighton. Apart
plane, are driven by two engines, from the fact that he was -a ‘hard
each driviBlirgitiashseNpeagFlaitgeenptr.opeller. .
from other boys. He was known,
worker., , Jellicoe was undistinguished
• however,,asa boy of exceptionally
• Those who have seen them and whe high character, and successfully pass -
are qualified to judge, 'assume from ed the very difficult' examination
the speed and climb of the machine yhieli was neeessary ih those. days to
that, these. engines are, the Ordinary secure:admission to the Britannia. '
.100 hortepower engines `used in most . Professor MacNaughtorf, wha was
of the German machines: • at school with. Jellicoe, says that the,
In connection with this sudden an"'. admiral possessed a lare capacity
pearance of German aerp_planes...with for fun, "and he was Certainly &sari: -
multiple eig4nes and of large- size, ft guished beydnd any of my contem-
i worth while noting that fully two poraries at school with a fund of ori -
years ago Gen. Henderson, then and ginality of which I remember one par -
now commanding the IlOyal Flying ticularly striking instance. Young
Corps,'"stated on more than' one occa- Jellicoe had. just- eriterea"tha sebool,
sion at the seini-peblic meetings of the and being a new boy, he had to make
Aeronautical Societty that one type of his way in the world of school -life,
aeroplane:- -necessary ler the full Xle proceeded in an eminently original
equipment O
1
f the Flying„Corps Was --a -way.,
•
big machine with more than one en- "There Was senior boy in die
gine.• - school," continues- • the professor,
He , was particularly insistent on "whose name. I think. was Ingram.
the, need for more than one engine, Now, those 'wile know anything about,
so that if one engine broke down the school life will know that it is hedged
other one, or others, would be able to abont with all sorti• of, rules and
keep the machine in the air. • `, .points of etiquette, and that it is. ex -
Gen. Henderson's opinion was back- trenzely difficult for a new boy, e
spe-
ed up by various other officers of the cially at his first coming, to -gain the
Flying Corps, yet in spite of this we friendship or confidence of one who
have the extraordinary position that has already an established place in
after the apPearknee of ,the first of the sehoOl. But John Jellicoe had
these 'big GerMan aeroplanes, Mr. evidently determined that it was
'Tennant, the tinder Secretary _for worth while to cultivate the friendship
_ar,, announces that we lave -multi:- of this senior boy; and he set about it
..14'....angined_aeroplanns_ln-eaurse of -inthelollowing vetk original waye
construction. \‘ • , "A game of football was being
It, seems fairly obvious that the played in the afternoon On the small-
German- authorities paid more atten- playing 'field which lay within the
tion to the opinions of those in BrI4 •Se.hool precineta. On one occasion the
tain who Were best qualified to judge bell went out of bounds. and Jellicoe
of the' development of ,military aero- wept to fetch it. Instead of throwing
planes than. did the British autheri- it back in the ordinary manner. he•
ties. ran back with the ball in his hand,.
and, on coming close to Ingram, made
• a -neat-arop-kiek, !so- Abe. bait
Constipation ,'Relieved or
. bounded against him with some force.
There was a shout of laughter and
Money Back." • NobDrugs: applause, and away ran .Iellicee; pur-'
• '' • - sued by Ingram, to a corner of the
• _±_ifieldy-Where-threindniged-for sOnile.
who would be better at the front inSat
be allowed to stay at home if he feels
more comfortable there. Freedom, af-
ter all, implies the ' right to shirk.
Freedoin implies the right for yea to
enjoy and .for others' la defend: Is
amt freedom?. ,
• "War is like a fever, a deadly fe-
ver in your -veins, and the rales -which
• are applicable in health are
utterly -
unsuited to afever.- 4lecatraintseethiell
would be irksome, stupideand
uuneres-
zary 'when a man is healthy are essen-
- • tial to save his life in „a fever. What
IS the use of- the patient saying:
must have meat as usual, drink as
• usual, in -fact mere -than usu I •
service of the State no longefa mat-
ter of individual lodgment, but a duty
binding by law on any whom" the.Gov-
ernment may select, directly the Gov-
ernment. eansidars it :necessary:
THE CIGARETTE IN BATTLE:-
. •
Incident at the Front Which Showed
- Great Coolness.
The 'British! is. born with an. equable
and composed temperament, writes W.
Douglas -Newton in the Royal Maga-
zin&' His einotions are forced into
the;, channel of that temperament by
is own distaste , of: outward sheye
iereera"-.7e liffeinbirerlirbirlitec -companions'
have a high temperature, so I .ami distaste for Outward, show. Whatever
more parched than...usual; there le a his emotions ilieY are • forced to flow
_ greater Strain on my strength) So I in, the panie groove, and therefore, he
• • 4: • really Might to here more than us'ual. does , not change. He is -always the
. 1,•Ntent.. to go out, why shOuld I be earn% whether he is goingata steady
•
confined to that little bed? Freedom jattot through business life, or wile-
• above all.' 'Bak you will cu.' ther he Is fighting Germany. And be.
he says, 'it is_nioe,gloriouS'Ito die a ing alwayS•theeeme, yOueeen.neither
irlak*Iiiiireicited-Lthat is in the hy-se
Let tritainebe beaten and discredited terical• German or the emotional Gal-
ata dishonored, but let no Man .say lic ways -on the:battlefield, .or Afraid,
that any Briton during the war was is always himself, and 'himself has
'ever forced to do -anything for hi a not'aliered for a century. ' •
eouritry ,except that which was pleas- War to him Myst be eairied on' in
ing his. 011% sight, Victdry,is-the mune Way_ as_his ledger.% WO
110t--eir that Wad:" "firer up, his Inivn mown in Civil -
If we are. to exert Our full national lan life. In the former state be fre-
strength in •the war, we mitt decide oueetly .paesed to light a, pipe and
to act much more as if we were an eontemplete the, imiveree; in his new
army than as if we were free and in- state he continues the habit. In one
dependent citizens Obedient as • in df the fights a private smoked Steadily
petite only to a laW of Our, own ehoos- as he fired At the advancing Germans..
.• to: Both GoVernment. and pcaple .He puffed at his -cigarette between his
' mutt learn sonletlibig.of the Spirit Of ShotS, put the eigtieette on a stone,
the Arrny **here the leaden re- 'tired,' and tee& the eigarette again.
' cognize that they, ahd they alone, are When, he carne. back frpin a bayonet
. , .. e.reenensible for policy, .and leaue Or. ebekrge,Ins_eblet ,edrieernwes hat -the
• . ders kficieving that they•will be obey- success bis battalion had attained, hut
• ed., And the eafik und file realize that • the feet that the cigarette bad sinoked
• they eannot stop to 'discuss the wis- itself out. • 'The eharge wee. a minor
dere .dt otherWiSe *partienlar in- success Of niallY abccesees. The-•
' Stritetiont, but that they . Mast obey' eette was the last,
'them promptly, however 'dangerous or
they may he. In this war In the Pettneo-Gereuin War- the
• the ;term linlf of the army, le in the GeeMane fired off 30 millien musket
Mines, the workshope, and the fields Cartridges and 363,000, mantle of •ar-
' et home.' If the nationaleeffort 10 to tilletee. With 'Svilleh they killed ni
sueeeseful as a Whale; it Will be 'mei-telly wounded 714005 PrOlith,
'; heettdce +Stir 'leaders are resolute and ing 400 shots. to.killi totripared with
atone mid ,betense • evtrid. section of, 140 Shote'' to kill intlie- erlinean War.
.. •
,n1
•
side, arrd-the clustering -flies-that--it
was honey on the other."
)
- A DOCTOR'S EXPERIENCE •
Medicihe Not Needed ,In This Case
. .
It is hard to convince some peopl
that tea ortoffee does them an injury
They lay their bad feelings to ahnos
every. 'cause but the true and unsus
peeled one, .
• But the doctor knows, His wide
eiperience proven to him' that; to
soine systems, tea and..coffee_are.
sidious poisons that .undermine the
health. -Ask him -if tea or coffee is a
cause of censtiPation, stolinach and
_nervous -troubles. •
"I have been /a Coffee drinker a
my life, and when 'taken sick , two
years ago with nervous prostration,
the dotter saldthat my nervous sys....
temAwas -broken down -and that
'whtild 'have to give up- eoffea.
• "I got so Weak and shaky I 'could.
not work., and reading an advertise-
nientenfePosteineleetkedeney'zedeeHt
he had any of„it. Ile said, !Yes,' ind
that he used it in his family and -it
was.all-it elitinad to be. .
"So I quit 'eoffee arid commenced
to use Postunt steadily and in about
two weeks I toula Sleep. better and
et up .inetheerneening feeling -fresh
n about two months-- I began to gain
ash., / • weighed ' only 146 pounds
vhen I cominented Postuni arid
ow I weigh •167 and feel better, than
did'at 20 years of age. :
"I am working every day and • sl eep
ell at night. • My two childrep. were
offee drinkers, but they have not
rank any since.Posturn came into the
(nage, and are far More healthy than
hey were before," Name given by
coznadiati Posturn, Co., Windsor, Ont.
FoSture COMOS in two forms
Postum Ceeeal-the. Original form
Must be Well hoiled. 150 and Ze
ackages.
Insteht PoStmn-L:a soluble %Oder,
ditleolv'ee quickly in a duo of hot
ater, and, with erten) and sugar,
ekes a (tendons beverage insiffintly.
✓ and • 60e time
Both kinds ere equally delirious
id (lost ubont the senile per cup. '
"There's, a Beesen" for Poetturi.
• ,4-se1d Grocers.
, • ,
riacksen'st Roman-Meel sold merrients en a rieeidIy tussle before
with this guarantee. It is simply a resuming the game
most delicious food. It makes por- "Prem that day .Tellicoe and Ingram
ridge, pdncakes, and -all baked pro- 'became bosom friends,' and -though
ducts. All may be eaten hot without this trivial incident occurred more
distress and nourish better than meat. rean, inferdtYinYmetrras ago,
it hrads always
Be sensible, at least try it. Costs deed reinember, eitmlier5.r.at ith?
all grocers:-
, ,
is or at
little,,,anly 10 cents and 26 cents. At any other of the schools w wars
. ....
___ _ ..e... ----- - .--e. - ---e-eauctited;-anieinstantee-Of etTriallitie- NAB, S LINIMENT for Rheurna-
' -cessful, and original boyish diplo-
macy." ftiosrratiAnhd wSipthraiexnse,e ilaesni rheasvuel4u.sed it
4 • , . Yoqrs truly,
•FINE 'TRAIN AM13ULANCE. • ' Eva. stye,• . t B. ',AVERS,
•
• •
. New One •Built in ,England a R011in
. .
e , , . Hospital and Ifhtel. . • . •
tileUgh Goldsmith,"-vves a spendthrift, ;4i -e.71 et-517.5-3.71;R;R7iti7.---**17-97T.i
I- 'OTT.
thrift which, 'eould be have preetised
it, would. have,rnade, him his- MU mas-
ter instead of the slave of publishers
and money -lenders, Writing to a brd-
ther about the training of hie son,
poor Goldernith said: "Teach, my dear
sir, ee, your son thrift and edonoroy.
Letbia poor- Wandering Uncle's exam-
ple be Pieced befere his eyes.. I had
contracted,-thehabits and notions Of e
philosopher while I was exposing my.
Self to the .insidious' encroaches • off
cunning; and often -by being, even
WW1 neXmarroer.hnaneesieletritable to
. qeeeep, 'fdrgot' the,. rules -.of. justice,
and. placed `‘knyee,11 in the very situa-
tion ,ef' the • wretch who thanked me
for my bounty.,"
GREATIAY I4SCOVRAGED
ovgR BABY'S ILLNESS
Mz -Jos--Gaudreau, "-Notre Dame'
des Bois, Que., writes: "Last autumn
our baby- was very sick and we were
greatly discouraged. The -doctor did
not seem able to help -him, and we be-
gan Using Baby's Own Tablets, which
seen Made him, a fat, healthy Child."
Thousands of other mothers give
Baby's Own •Tablets the same praise
The Tablete *regulate the stomach and
bowels, break up colds and simple fe-
vers, expel worms, cure colic, and
Make teething easy. They -are sold by
medicine dealers, or by Mail- at ,25
cents.a, box from The ..Dr. WMiapie
Medicine Co., Brockville.
•
LORD KITCHENER'S _TASK., ,
He Xs Making Ready for -the Knock-
,
out Blow, .
It is puzzling Many what we are
doing with the armies we have rais-
ed. Everyone (Ixpected certain activi-
ties when we .had reached a certain
strength, and in more than one influ-
ential' quarter the feeling has been
thrpressea 'that Lord Kitchener should
now' take his true position as .Brit-
ain:s foremost soldier, writes an Eng
-
fish correspondent,
believe" that the 'nation would be
almost.unanimous in transferring us for damages!
Kitchener to the field, but we must I
first of all be sure that his work at
onifo and Oneriere 4.p#4
, .
The demand for oar graahates (luring-
Auguot incl SeatelnttOr. .tour times
our sunply, Commence now. CalendEir
, free, W. g- ZZAZArr...Prigot.Vsil:
att(
reduoo 141.402Pat 7$#4,10ed"
Swollen Tendons, Ligamenta..
orMyselezio. StoPs.thelameneSSand:"
fratia Splint, Side Bone of. •
• E.coue .bliszer,e. /lair.7,
horse can be 11$c•ft'-' $2 a
bottle at druggists or -deli:versa, pe -
,cop your case for sacciSt instruC.'
tions. and interesting horse Book 2M Free; .
AssoRBINEdils,the.Potisepticlinimeutfor
niarikiad; reduces :Strained, Torn Liga-
megts, Swollen clouds:, Veins or. Muscles;
Heal& Cuts, Soms, Allay s pet n. Price
p.ta; bonlvag d-s!ess ere, !erred. Iinok.",EvIiience" tree.
Osn.
Pelee* Al4Prblat. pcZala •43414i I
Tainted.
The subjeet of the discussion. 'ar.144 .
the iMperfection of 'Man. The. seep- .
tical znan held that human • beings
.areret ..sa very wonderful,. after all,
and the preaeher didn't agree with
hint. •
"But, surely," protested the sof.;
fer, "you. must admit that man is
bungle, job? Why, • even-- yetr, in-- -
your work, mutt have noted manyA-...
haat, in the -human organism, And
have thought of better physical con- .
trivancee '
The -preaher ernima toady.
"Yes, z have," he replied Ili 'coca
sarcastic tones. "You -see when '
w t t
An o s t out enything disagree-
able from my :sight. I can always
'draw down 'my eyelids, like this; but -
Unfortunately I haven't any • flaps. to
my ears" e •
•
• Presence •of Mind.
Klein (to partnes.)-Quick, Eck-
stein, a man fell trou de cole bolel '
. Eckstein -4 -Clap de cover op, Ikey,
while I run for -de cop! If we &Reit
arrest him for stealin' cdal -he'll sue'
home is finishecL-,41eLeetz-eutlta=per--
forin- what seemed an impossible task,
namely, the raising' of an army ,
bered not. by thousands. ,but by. mil-
_liens.--There-was-onlY orte--man--
Britain capable of even tackling that
job -Kitchener.
That task is not yet finished; for
Lord Kitchener will make \,one more
appeal -and„ it will be the last. Mark
that The register will be his guide
as to the nuniber of Men he will ask
for, and he knows that the call will be
anaWered. He is in no great hurry to Mr&I'Sn—loopein_demtlitelf;ake
e tired.
Make that call, for rightly we are _Mrs. Sweyback:--,What's the matter •
now dealing With arms before the now?
man and certain event! :Indy even •Mr.1.__SnOoper--4Vly _husband • sew ,
,
hirpPen' that Will enable thc Allie Keedick yesterdaY and I asked
et is well known :in military circles "Gh, clothes."
•
Corts-
rop
Out
eases the -pain,
kills a corn for
"Putnam'," Extra
•
Ilisthn -_
-Reflef.
Paint bit Putnam's
Corn Extractor -A°. • -
night, and coins Tfael----
hatter 'in' the morn-
ing. Magical the
way "P n't n a m. s"
destrbya the roots,
all time.: No pain.
Get a 25c.. bottle -of.-;
eter today.
• win victory at. present Strength. but him what she had on, and he replied.
that Lord Kitchener, will not con -Sider
his work at the War Office done until
Britain has a reserve superior to any
of the 'Great Powers. : •
Lord Kitchener is the silent nian of . ••
•
.waro_anol_he is_making ready- far *the bee rsee-..1- e_ean--recommend MIe
el.finard's_Liniment Co. Limited. ;=---
kneck-out _blow We have-riot-yet-1-
taTiated upon the Germans with a
weapon like the poison gas, but that
doe ft not. mean that We ',cannot
Kitchener is not only building up'
armies,. he is creating weapons -and
preparing suipilies., the icientist
and the inventor have been called up
by Britain's strong. mem-When the
hour comes to employ .themew
weap-
ons and the new armies Germany -will
Io more -than talk of peace, then
Kitchener will take his true position
as leader' of the British, Artily in the
•
g Ted -Labe wrote asking .tef break
the engagement, and I .don't know
I -The latest thing in train ambu
t lances, built by the London & North
- Western Railway at a cost' of som
$35,000 for service -in Franca; is 'quite
the most perfeet of the kind ever seee
The train, whose carriages all on
Sleet so that oira straight-line One ean
look along 800 feet• of corridor; is
steam heated and ,elettrie. lighted
throughout, While every_car-is pre
vided with eieetric ventilating' fans.
If -*be' tWo-kitehens, marvels of coinpaet
equipment, ardused much antinfSiesm:
They Will supply the wounded men as
soon ae they are brought on, board
with hot drinks• and soUp, te be fol-
lowed later With delicious stews -and
more substantial fare." The. treatment
ro941,11A§
There are linen rooms, a pharmacy,
and a bit room for the officers, who
have a very cernfortable mess-roOrn,
matched by a seeand. lifeas-room for
the four army`nurses assigneeto each
train, The staff consistS,Aff 42, int--
-iTuding ffie cooks -who- have their
own quarters -and the orderlies, who
lodge fem. in a eceepartment end have
a long, cheerful dinitig car. Tanks in
the Toof supply the wards and kitchen -
with hundreds of gallon8 of water.
The special feature of these trains
is 'the separate ward for infectious
cases fitted to the brake Iran. The
arrangement ef the berths in the
wards set aside for eying* down cases
ale°. new. The berths, which can
be retied like those le ordieary
Sleeping ear, Are arranged in tiers of
three; with the advantage that 130 leen
•ean be coinfortably settled in each
ward. As in all the srieciallY-built
trains, these ears. are loaded thrdugh
doors at the side instead el' through
the open windo:Ws,. tirhielf waS
style.' The two trains Net finiehe I
are part of a fleet' of 24- earry
British Wounded frone,the frnnt to th
base hospitals and the Nett, in Freeee.
what to do •
Ned -Send her. a diplomatic reply
that will keep the question open; and
e perhaps she'll change: her mind. -
, • - ,
Russia Buys. Large' Quantities of Tea.
" The Canadian etemarid -for ledian
and Ceylon teas increase, yearly.
• and ff one adds to this -,the--Triany
other contingencies brought about by
the war,_it zan-readily-bo-anderitood
:why the cost of tea is increasing.
Russia is taking enormousquantities,
andtheir buyers Pay the very high.;
est prices. ' The abnormal . buying
has forced quotations up .over 10c ' a
pound higherthan nines -months age,
In yacht -racing every. • yaelit is
bound • by :rules to Abandon the reee
.and go to theeeseistancercht-e-
or person in peril. .
, Ininardta Liniment °urea Danilrutt.
atinaratu Linlinent Rellevits aforiralgla.
By riiing tako hours. earlier every
/miming than you are eccuetomedeto
.you in, forty years, add ten
year's ,eight-hour days' to your Tire.
ee • •
St .Tohn.
• .
In India the lowest elasies- -wee-Le-
as shoes; flat block with a large
-knob, -which slips between the first
and second toes: They are so skilled
in Wearing thesa_that they are able, •-
to 'keep them on and walk or run
with great speed. , •
• naluardPs Liniment Burns. Etc.
•
Ilezny Vtrilwas the first English , _
SoVereign to be'styled "Ris Majeaty."
In War 'Times. •
• Trainp-Please, mum, I'm. a Bel-
stan_reingee.-
Lady -Arts you? . Mention' a town`
in Belgium. ,
Tramp (cogitating a nambeet)-I
would, Mum, but theY have all been
-destroyed. . .
anserefo 'minima* tor cal° everywucro. •El); a.
• .
"7-fgallir 5
BUY IT
Perhaps . you have been sending your supply o
Milk to a local factory,—then you do not know the
."ailvantages of sending. to the Largest and Most
Vp-to.Date Dairy in Canada. LET US. Tnua YOU'.
WRITE NOW for information and cOpy off imittracts
Give your shipping station and railway.
•
, " •
TORONTO. ONT.
•
'