The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-01, Page 34
THIN BLOODED PEOPLE
Nv•••••,•••
_Often Become Seriously III,
fOre They Itealt4eIt
'Sellie people have a tendency to be
come thin -blooded duet •as Others leave
„ an inherited tendency to••theuniatism
er nereeiel dieorderte The gotelition
• in which the blood becerues .so thin
., that the whole body eutrers comes on
- 00 . gradtiall$c ell -tat -anyone with eite nee
'6441 dispositien In that direction
shoeld wateh the symptoms carefully.
Bloodlessness can be corkeeted more
easily in the earlier stage o than later.
It begins with a tired feelineerthaterest
des aetrOvereoine, the coniPleiton
,
becemes pale, slight exertion produees
' . breathleeeness and headaches and.
' backache:3 frequently follow. In the
treatment of troubles • due -to :thin
i;
him' no other edieine has had such
a great success s• Dr; Williatnh' Pink
•Pills. They g right to the toot of
• tp
he trouble, eke rich, -ied blood, thus
• reetoring be weakened systeni to
heelth awlstrength. Mr. R. F. Ash-
ford, PeterhOro, Ont,,' say: 'Four
•,years age my condition became so
serioes that it seemed to me. I pos.;
seSsed every -pain and ache and every,
morbid feeling Pessible. For months
.I'llad been, overworked, and bereave -
tient added the last straw necessary
.. ta break down my eonstitetioe. X lied
a iever e ever-present , headache • and
pains in the baelt of the eyeseand at
* the sone time I was.eeldoin free from
'^
sere neuralgic pains. I was rarely..
• hungry,' and when I Was it seemed to exigencees have outgrewe even this
' -ereete re morbidness Which made my i huge building and many outside halide
othele ills harder to bear. Of coterse iegs, business blocks and otherpre-
• 1 consulted a deetor, and he told me Mises have been taken in as War Of -
a rest and a change of air, just the fiee branches. Tile sudden extension
thing I was unable. in the eircUrri-. of censoring as a precaution of refit-
• stances to take. I had a particularly tary defence has called 'into service
bad spell on the day My *daughter. re- a.large'ateny of censors, and a number
turned front college., and she insisted of large business prerinees in various
that l' should take D. Williams'. Pink. ,quarters • have leen. acqUired for the
Pills. r was decidedly skeptical, but military censors' branch. Three or
she gOt settle and, to please her I took four other branches are At other points
• them: • The result -After the erst and practically the whole .ordnance
• box I was corripelled to admit that, I branch has gown into a separate goer-
,. •'really: did feel hotter. After the sec- ernment department, with a Cabinet
. and bete I ungrudgingly admitted that Minisber, Lloyd George, at its head.
•, they were doing me good, and after•
• • ' •
the sixth bbic I felt free from every Difficult To Get In.
ache and pain and in gratitude I be- Yet the War Office still 'remains
• gan t� praise the pills to others. I am
feeling as fit as I did twenty yeare
• ago and I we it to Dr. Williams! Pink
Pills:" . •
• . You can' get these pills from any
medicine dealer er by mail at 5Q cents
a box. or six boxes for $2.00 film The
•, Dr. ,Wiliianie' Medicine ' Co., 'Brock.
vine, ()Me
vqr TO BMTISII
WAR OFFICE
INSTEMTION TiaAT DIRECTS TIM
•eonDucT ov WAR.
More Than000, Persona Engaged in
130 Departmenteeef Me.
',Establishment.
Sir Reginald Erode, Secretary •of
the RritiA War Office, received a re-
preeentative of the 4.ssoeiated Prese
anii-gaTe-faeilitievrthrough tem of
,staff as .escort, to see something of
this huge war machine in lull awing
ander the pressure of , one of the
greatest ware with whieh it has ever
had to cope. It Was an experience of
several hours, eiplering the • laby-
rinths. of the vast institution,. fairly
vibrating with energy at ,eyery point
and yet preceeding With precision and
effncy in meeting the big part it
•ie,taking in the conduct of the war.
Some idea of the imm'ensity of this
war establishment' may be had eroM
the feet that •its corridorsare tw.o,
metes long-,a'goed, brisk Walk ,of an
hour, And along thesq two Miles is
good-sized city of people, oyer 4,000,
engaged in the infinite details of this
war work, great and smell, all the way
from Lord Kitchener,Seeretery ,
tate.f.or Ware down'te bot. scouts and
glee meseengers...* And this is only the
tentrel egtablishraent, for the •war
••RUSSIAN TRIBUTE.
••• Editor Of Retch Lauds British Military
Power. • •.
'Reuter's representative has had an
interview' with •M. V. Nabokoff, • the
editor of the Retch, a member of the
' Russian deputation visiting Britain.
He said: ."The 'scope of.. the efforts
made in Britain for the creation. and
• development of its. military power has
Bled us with intense admiration and
•• strengthened our faith in the final tri-
umph over-eoureeommon enemy=We
saw your powerful and ever-growing
., fleet; we "sa:ye the display of yOier col-
ossal energy in equipping, provision-
ing and drilling the army; and in
• instilling a true ideal into your men.
• Last, but' not least, we came in con-
tact with that Wonderful human mate-
' ofewhith yout et:Andel); meet -welt
be proud. Our present close union
e with -Great Britain rney be considered
as an ,external alliance "serving an eke'
teenal purpose, and unconnected with
• the internal life of. either country. But
there is another- standpoint, and . in
lee • opinion t e, only true one. The
complete independence of each. State
•• in its internal affairs is a truism, but
itmeet be, reeognized' that intimate
repproachment necessarily leads to
• „nintual influence' intellectual, moral,
• even aesthetic, and'political and social
ideals which -form the hasia, of the
greatness and power of Great Brit-
• . sin are to- be more .widely recognized
and adopted in -Russia. All true lov-'
ere of progress, reght and liberty can
but hope and pray that this influence
•-. may grow -and spread' ." •
Courageous Child.
Reee, aged four; wad. gazing intent-.
•„ .1y, at the' visitor's new bonnet. •
•• . , deer;” asked -the lady at last,'
• .14.vhat: do you think ofit?,4' .
e0h,"", replied thee small .observer,
"1 thrnk it' all rights: Aunt'Mary
1
Don't Live in .or
K itch en— Umanopate
yourself from kitchen worry
by learning the food value of
Shredded Wheat aim*,
You can prepare a most
• wholesOrne, nourishing meal
ina few moments by heating -
a few Shredded - Wheat.
'alscultain the oven,torestore
crispness; then cover with
berms and serve with Mill;
or cream.
IVIacte in Canada.
J1LIVENI4, CCITT%
'What tho Probation Officer ..Should Ale
to Eno:enrage Parent and Child.
As there is 4 growing desire
throughout the Province to Secure the
appointment of .4 Children's Aidge
entirely apart from the regular Court
procedure, the following points are
worth keening in mincir
The Judge -of •Court
should ha a man who ‘74P OnCe tl real
,.•enthuslastie,- n atidri o1-
Philanthropy, keeping in elose touch
With social service agencies' and mod: -
ern child -saving methods. •
A Children's Court is educational
child life ;and the general social con-
ditions of the city or district.' Natur-
ally, it Will tend to co-ordinate the
work* of child :welfare organizations
and to build up a system of probation
and friendly guidance.
, While clothed with legal authority
the probation officer in a friendly
capacity advises asSists, encourages
both parent and! child: So that the
'child may remain in his home and he -
come a good :citisen;, - °
Likewise the object In bringing a
• , youthful offender before the Children's
Plies has comc. under the direction oft,Coutt (Which should not beedone beet, I
Quartermaster General COWanS, who. ily) . Is not to convict him. Of guilt,
but to find .out how he can be encour-
aged, inspired and helped in "noble live;
ing. "'The wrong doing of children
usually caused be neglect or improper I
parental training; and it le not , the
children who should be eigetehed het
those responsible for their 'misdeeds.
Parents should he summoned pee -
duce the child offender in Court and
'arrest by the ordinary Ponce officer
discouraged.
Too much emphasis cermet be laid
upon the influence ef true religion en
bringing about reformation. Proper-
ly directed effort may materially as-
sist parents to•realize their oblige -
has. general ehaege Of food, clothing
and supplies, land end Water trans-
portation of troops, sit'pplying • horses,
• A•Visit to the Registry 13rauch
of the War Offiee,gwee an idea ef,the
• imenensity of the work going on, for
,this bran& receives 'everything cem:.
ing in and distributes the business. to'.
all branches. • Over 100,000 letters'
are receivpd,every week, and of these
an average of 40,000 go through the
formality: of•registering. Once regis-
tered, communication is an official
record of the government, eventually.
under the control of the• Master of.
the got's. The mere registering. of. t teens. and may awaken in young and
this vast influx of 40,000 pieces of old a genuine desire for a life of use -
separate war budiness is a prodigious fulness and respectability -J. J. Kelso.
work. •Ten youths were at a Ion
table engaged solely in slitting? open • : •
the envehipes.• Fourteen sucks ef war. p •lee ee
businese hed come in the first morn- leans Them One of Her
11* mail, and this was only the start.
Room afteeroom is filled With •men and women workers registering these Best Friends
' .
communications and getting them
the throbbing centre of the war workstarted to the 120 branches. A war
Here the larger questions of strategy eeneeeication addressed personally to
Lord' Kitchener or any other official
is delivered direct, but unless person-
allyaddressed it is part of the War
Office businesa and goes to the sub-
ject treatred. • There is no time for
high-sceinding titles, and so ,every
branch and evety official is heown by
a grOug of letters and every officer in
the service has a ;lumber.
This registry branch, under the dit-
•
ection of one of the veteran members severe sufferer, Dame Pierre Belan- .Artemis is the name of •the rriost.
•
of Sir Reginald Brade's staff Mr ger, well known and highly respected famous of all the "war dogs in Fiance.
Pedley, isa model of, efficieney.in the here, is tellieg•hee friends\ tilt Dodd's His picture is in heuseholds.through,
handling of the avalanche ' of doen- Kidney Pillhave made her Teel. ,_. out the Countey and his name and
ments which the, war -turns loose on "I consider Dedd's Kidney Veils one history are on thetongue of every
every branch of thi-War—Offiqe. Go- of the best friends I have," Dame Be- French child. So therieves-tha • r-
ing' down in the sub -basement, below langer states. -"I had rheumatism I,temis has just • been ,invalidedback
the level of the Thames, one mild see and the pains in thy limbs caused me from the front is .an item *A national
the bewildering vistas of documents, a great deal' of suffering. . , importante. It is with relief that
stretching fel. long distances .but ar- «I took six boxes of Dodd's Kidney the public: has learned tha•
t. he can
ranged With mathematieal .precisiOn
,and- the campaigns in various theatTes
of war are worked out; here the Army
'Council and the Imperial General Staff
hold their meetings, and here the
many biespches of Military work
ramify from the headquarters of Lord
Kitchener, General Sir W. Robertson,
chief of the Imperial Staff; Lieutenant
General.Ser Sclater, adjutant gen-
eral to the'forces; Lieutenant Generel
Sir I. Cowans, quartermaster genera,
and the two.'member of parliament
who represent tfie, civilian -bean& and
keep. the war breech' .bouch •with
Parliament; •Mr. Tenant, Parliament-
ary Under. •Secretary for War, and
Mr. •Foster, Financial Secretary for
War, with Sir Reginald Beade as Sec-
retary of the War Office arid _of the
War Collodi. -
DAME BELANGER TALKS. 'OF•
DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS.
. .
Tells How. They Cured Her, Rheuma-
tisnt and Made Her.. So. Well She
. Could Work Withoet Fatigue.
." St. *Amateur, •GloPeeeter CO,
May 22nd (SPecial.).-Cured rheti=
mat•isrn,. from which • she has beenli
• mosawmarrasers;santersosm•
-a
for Playful
NOTHING
•FOR
SUMMER
WEAR
Worn ,}EsKtrey Member.
Qt fhe
56.00 a ;leer protects your neW
Ford Touring Oar fro Wes 14
fire to the extent of $ 00, includ-,
• ing loss from ekplosio • and self4
. Carers fire loss Willie ear 'is
,any building -oh on the
lower rates and more -liberal terma
than rink other poliry • you 'can
prooure. ,• •.
, .
k%• Write tor, rates dn•Ford curs up
• to three, years old..
•
" lax and en ndl
are. granted to owners of ,c.ihrev.,
rolet • ogre.
D.WILLIAMS. MANAG,N6 DIMCCIOR
FiCAD OPFICe -33 Seem -7 S -r "roirrei.
ARTEMIS THE •
FAMOUS WAR DOG
HE RECUPERATES IN A FRENCH
.HOSPITAL
Sent Frain the Front
After Year and
a Half of Hard
. Work.
• It is difficult. to get into the.War •
- , Pills, and they made • fne Well. ' My be made fit for further duty
a i • t • • • • Oreiettit--tp get-out-yazziall one and can '. now a t e services . rendered by
-like:the conthientai railway station.-
. work without being fatigued. I will •clinnb aniteals since the beginning of
papers from; authorized soilices; stet -
Guards turn away all those without
Business of the "Searehera." always keep, Dodd's Kidney ' Pills in the war, those of ArtemiS ought to
'.
4." •
ng a definiee purpose for the visit i One of ththe housetake first place No dumb. animal,
e '. curieus requirements .
.Dodd's kidney Pills cuee rheunia- besides, .has been •st, conspicuously
and a fixed time Passing. this bar_ growing out of the eush of war work
tism because :it, is paused by sick, kid- honored in. a military Way and none
rier, one's naine and address is taken is the need of a • siaff' of "searchers",
neys.. Rheumatism is caused by uric conceivably could shoW greater a.p-
and a permit is -sued, and the addresses to look up lost ' documents. The
.. . acid in the blood. If the kidneys are predation of the recognition accorded•
Axe,always available if Scotland -Yard -1" chers" make their rothecis early
seer_ . . e
, . . . , t htheealthy-. and -doing- 'their full' work to MY services
wishes to investigate the antecedents . ng. , y. ,
they strain all the uric acid out ofthe. Artemis, from • the, point of here-
of any one making unauthorized in- preesure .of Many' kinds of work, an •
hlaod, and there can be no :rhetuna- dity, is a rather complex creature'.
quiriea. . ,.. • , imPortant war record will get . laid , . . t
isni. o s Kidney . Pilis always Danish in. his powerful frame,. he 6b-
' Within the building there is an air aside or covered up on some desk, end
make the kidneys well. They . take .viously is related to the Firench
of work under high pressurewith , and with it is tthe business of the "searchers"ers"
away that tired feeling by ensuring mountain Sheep .dog, by his gray
rigid military discipline, many to ferret out every last record and get
. .
officers 'in uniform, old 'soldiers as it back again in the rpure blood and good circulAtion,coat teuehed with brown But he
egular channels.
•
. •h:ing been born,
messengers, also in uniform, the girls , Altogether this glimpse of the War is truly Parisian, av
in brown khaki dress and blouse with Office and the passing exchanges with LACK OF. Ft_...1; IN BERidSt. in the Outskirts of the 'city, and is
brass buttons and a brass deice :o the many officials gave'the iMpression . faMiliar :with its principal thorough,
the collar. . ' ' . of a perfectly regelated machine,with Hatiger Is the Most Powerful of Ger-
. .. fares, ,
The Supreme Head. the steam gauge wide open and work- , many's Enemies. ••. When the war began • Artemis was
film years Old., His .master, Mr. Ades.
in under full pressure, and from end ..
to end of this , vast establishment, ' _"Truth -cannot be • hidden any long- Balaell, Bloch, ir trainer at Auvere,
e!" 'exclaims "Carl Se' in a' message. w.a.§ called to the telors. His faithful
along with the sure and Steady move -
to Stockholm:from Berlin. , ' .
kampanion went- with him. '
merit was the eeiret everyWhere mani-
"The poorer classes in the capital
fest and eipressed among these War - , • . Saved Detachment ,
are actually reduced. to 'StarVation: . ' '. • : '
For them neither, b.utter nor lard can a Many dif- ,
After many:struggle
Ultimately :
ou-hisbant referenee-a-a-governmen
wo$ appointed for scouting and nal,
son duty,
One foggy night in November, 1014,
when the German lines showed a dis-
lambing activity., the French soldiers
resolved to anticipate them by mak-
an attack, A. scetion a the
Ninety-fourth • regiment which, had
gone out OD detiliting work found if.
self saddenly. surrounded by the Ger-
mons and cot oit from the resit of
the regimenLy2,44, Jae:it a susprlae
„attack,-
Tbe lieutenant in iharge of .the
scouts attached to the dog's neck
note announcing the danger and ask-
ing for reinforcements. The brave
dog„eitently-elipped-througen-
cmy troops wbieh were drawn up in
formation behind the French detach
ment.
,Despitelhe treacherous darkness
•dnd the heavy rifle lire, be succeeded
an reaching the main body of the me;
merit. The alarm being given, the
dange.r' was avoided and the patrol
party, was relieved. Artemis came
Varougli the ordeal with only a wound
in the ear: . •1
, •
ArMeked Germane
Artemis remained all winter, in the
frying, region. of Ypres where his ser..'
vices as 'liaison au& patkel *dog proved
very valuable. in the Inianth 'of April
"le was intrusted, to Captain 1). end the
Petit P'arisien describes an 'episode in
which Artemis saved his new Mas•t;
.:t1Lsairliifnegi Uttadk the captain, being;
'threatened by-tWoOermans who•were'
particularly determined, killed. One of
them and :thought he had disposed of
the other. The latter, however, arose
to attack him as the officer passed,
mid Wee abouteto deal a mortal bloee
from behind, when Artemis 'sprang at,
him, seized him iiy the throat • and
strangled him..
• • Too .Risky.
The • Merry Qne-"Cheer up, • old
inan! . WhY don't you drowneyour sor-
row ?" • •
The Sad One -"She's stronger than
I am and besides, it would be mur-
der."
STRONGLY RE=COMMENDS
• BABY'S OWN TABLETS
Mrs. Alonzo Tower, Johnson's Mills,
NB.,writes: "I ean strongly recoin-
mend Baby's On Tablets to all moth-
ers whose little ones are suffering'
from constipation as I, have 'proved
thetn an excellent medicine for this
trouble." , Baby's Own Tablets eot
only -cure censtipabion, but they make
teething e,asii; break colds, expO
Worms and regulate the stomach and
bowels.. They are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at.25 cents a box
fromeThe Pr. VVilliarns' Medicine Co,
• Brockville, Ont. .•
•
MOO*
-.1TRIMV..“...P.A.M.SOMPR000
=Op PeelekTOreile MOO COlet
L elore. Pelewerie Carms,,.., Or-
der at 01,10. Alupplly write tor
eilotatterne W. OrilanOtOK,
WO* SlAr4. •
jai BOK:4'Di.= 16101.411111MS,• Aldr.4
Ale age& some vary airm Quenco ,
Flew!, Gaidocapae, Ablootsforst (uo,
*IA" WA.WM0.
AINTI91), DX11134II)NCND WOOD"
y Y worlitrz..Zinchina...tirando. for
'1,O4-73.14f4-flaivorunalAulOW
Also liench kneacly work. goorl
Wages. Apply 'Bay 4 Company, Limit*
liV'emIstock, Ont.
Vfy ANTMA. VIVADINO '4ATCURIRS
V ancljolOters, 'who undoretand
1•13toek. Write Or wire Trenton Cooper"
•
.111LWSPAPE11,0 ;eau
PDROFIT-111ANING Ngw4 AND Ads
S. Offiees for alas in good tinted('
towns, vas most useful and,interesting
of all bUsinenses. Full information 0101
apnlication to 'Wilson Publishing Core.
pany, ‘,West Adelaide Street, .Toropto. •
a
mierkieenelnolli •
ANCER, Ttl3101-iS, VTC,.
1...) internal and external. ,etured
out pain by our litme tres, „tmeryt.'.Writs
no before toglate. . Pr, Belinian Mettles/
Co,„. I.,imited;. Collingwood. Ont„
Ftor Frocairig 'Crean?
, yen get best. results ‘with.
OR.uss-14.p Vi•OOK
A. More eve'h freeze, firnialther, Tee
eream: 110es. one-third 'salt and
keeps Cream ho.rd twtee as long. Write-
° 1.'0UONTQ, SAZ.T.570:VES,
. 60,60 Jarvis St., Toronto,' Out,
;
iVion4 t,dafitig
Get my prices, direct it ()Min to you.
1 have Roofings for every purpcse
Samples free, Address
Halliday.Co., Na's„"tt.''-
..gannagmailismappa.
SIVE
highest In years.
• Send your old
silver. •jewelry.
etc. IQ irS to re-
fine and get highest' cash .price... •
Canadian Seamless Vitro 'Co, Ltd.
•XLVPIINEILS,
• 168 Clinton St., Toron,tb, Ont. ,
Nothing takes the cOnceit out of a
flirt like encountering •a mO.sctiline
eart that is unbreakable. •-
blinard's Liniment toed by Physician's:
Rind To Him.. •,
• Wife -The dressmaker rays. she
wo make me • ano
• you pay her bilIT•
Hub (with ..relief);---That'a very
good of ,her. ,send liera note Of
• thatiks.
• • .
• . • -
There are .tWO•''ontstanding figures.
of interest at the War Office just now
•.-Lord,Ritchener,. the supreme. 'head
of. the whole establishment; Lord
Derby,' whose scheme Tor increasing . workers,. "Let 'ais do • our 'part to Win
the artily has brought very ninth the.war."..- • ,". : •• •
: • ' •
in the nubile eye;. while aerciss • the.
road, at the Horse Guards,. is Field. -
..Marshal French,' now Lord French of
pled Eyelids.
ore 6r
Eyes enflamed by eepte '
sureto Sea. DAM andeeled_
• ye s ;Elty,eivIcelreedlyield tate.
• . just Eye, Comfort. At
Your Deti,ggist's 50c per Bottle, Maine Eye
SalieinTuees25c.ForBookeltheEyerreeask •
pruggists or eledoeEyelleeiedyee.,Chleage
The Keener' Optic.:
• • "How did you get 'such. abruised
..eYe • • •
.4e11, boas, twas. aut a-loo.kinl for
trouble An' dis yere eye was the futt
to find it. •
ReaSon• Enough.
to the extent of four ounces per per fictet fereed marches, th
were established on the banks' of the
:t be get for hive Or money. Margarine
Everything'rn the dear oid village sop per Week can be got only after Yser. Artemis from the beginning .
.
Ypres,, who as commander of "mime seemed the seine to Jones after his hours of waiting in a .queue. 1Viore"of the campaign .had gained renown
,defence is now airecting home ' de- absence of four years. The old often than not, even thenthe needa for WS exceptional Scent and his ex- ,
fence cr
s in general and the aircraft e- church; the village pump,e
the ducksof only a*few tan be satisfied '
, 1 traordinary .dedsee of hearing, which
fendes in •particalar. Lord Kiechen- the geeen, the old men smoking
, on ed.
while '41) is by no means an uncommon '
I proved of, the. greateSt service in re-
-eiee windows took out on the,busy their e wive e '1 gossip -it was so restful 'thing that in such cases- the dissatis- 1 connaiVaile..e • .
work' in which he fi'e-
traffic Of Whitehall, with Ike' 1-16se after +t... ..i, and hustle of the city. fied crowd breaks shep windows or !quently-teek part. . .
HAWK BICYCLES
An up-tO.;date Sigh Grade
nicycleattedwithRoarramtn,
New DefictaiuTe Herefila
'Coaster Brake and fini5s, Dela.
thabte Tires, high grade equip.
rnent,inclucling Mud- ete: - A
,guards, Putup,s: Tools CZ4.01,1 ,
Slit FREE 1916 Catalogue,
60 pages of Buycles, Sondries
an Refiair llfaterral. You can
buy your supplies front us at
Wholesalepices. , •
• T. W. BOYD & SON.
it Notre Dame St West, Montreal,.
t•.•••
At•-•=,
Why Hajul The
Extra Burcled
The burden Of friction
means a-shinter-- life for
horse, harness and. axles.
AXLE
_ GREAS
kills friction -makes a
perfect hearing surface.
• Dectlet1 Evervuillete
The imperial Oil Company
• Limited
IISANCHES IN ALL CITIES
a
Minarcl,Liniinent Co., Ltd. •
• , have used your Minard's
Liniment in my family and also in itY
stables •for• years and consider it the
best. medicine.obtainable.' • •
• • • 'Yours °
• ALFRED ROCHAV,,
Proprietor •Roxtan Pond • Hotel and
• LiverY,,Stiiibles.•• •
1.
a,
'11CPK ON •.
DOG' DISEASES
• And ow to Feed
Milled free' tb14ress by
the utrr
IL CLAY GLOVER. V. S.
118 West 31alS.i'aet,Newlrork
V;•.,-Frt.srminstate,
fi..kftrta patients
•1.•;,ints,Eoilop-
t
•••• by a
7 unolt of Dr.
imactiy. "No •'.'"
•.'.;/Ki:",,•.0E ea .'•
a:DILE
, , •T On:add
-,:i3 .• ls • -
11911*.
. tr•Vdci-lars,,"
7 I St • /rr
,•eYeris
. .
•• •
Guards neross tlieway, and thebronze Sridderily. niissed something.,' • - • , .1, 'The ;Ninety-fourth'.. regiment, of yle.
. pill'ag'es shops.. " . • ' 7
• •
.,.einaking,: tine demanded' 'hirP .services and he .NICK ieL••V.S. 'PAPER: •
.equestrian etatueof-theDuk-e -of-^Carn.. '','Wherq's 'lodge's ''windmill?". he "Hunger. IS, . .generally
' told mamma it was a perfect.frightI bridge, in sweeping plume and full re- i asked in „ surprise. "I can only see
• the most powerful of ' 'the enemies ' —
!mosamegEsawoRmangsmowiss,
:bee et:doesn't frighten me any." . galia of a ,field niarshal, at the en-1'one mill, and there Used to be two" which,l3erliii Pnd Germany have. '
• trance. The. offices are stately, With! The native': gtried thoughtfully Bitter distress naturally creates • tin - 0 e
portraits of dinguished War Minia- istround as if to verify the statement.
,
.. root amongst the working classes; - Indigesh-011
"Ile who haiTiealth I. taken on an air a the caiup, with :"They 'pulled •one down. There qizarbers of Berlin are, almost daily
map a a on e wa s in -
tars: But 'under .Kitchener they have Then 'he eaid • ' • • and uproars, and revolts • In the poorer.i • and
•
•
has hope,
• And he Who has hope
has everything."'
OArtt.14 an _P,roverb) -
• •
• • -Sound health -is -largely -a
• matter. of proper food--• '
which must include certain
niineraVelementa beas-rile-
rived from the field grains,
• butjacking: in many foods.
a
Grape Nuts
• made Of Whole • Wheat and
malted barley, supplies all
the rich nparishment of
the grains, Including their
vital mineral .salts -phos -
of potaeh, etc., most
•itiSary for shmIchng and• .
rgizing, the mental and
'thysical forms,
"There's a Reason"'
• • . •.... • •
'7•• Sold 1.3y• Grecers.
Bantituan *obtain feeroe.1 Boe.' Xatit.
• • Windahr, '0131.. •
dicating the' campaigns in many:fields
weren enoug win o wo o em.. ,
' , in '. Berlin, • but little enough to • buy
of British. operation --!•in Flanders; .at 4 , - „ , ',..• Ignorance is Bliss. • ' • with it . . • •• .• ..
iSaloniki, in Egypt and . Mesopotamia, ' - ."Do. You think that women ought to "Milk is. only • allowed., for •the 1 .
and Of the Allies' operations on ,the govern?" '....• , • " ° . . .• ''' I feeding of babies, and:every infringe- '
Austro -Italian .-1.r.ent, .in ,Ru. s.sia ..,-and I- . "Oh•o' -yes,-"- _replied • Mig3_1(Tiasremz, ..'inent cif this order. is .punished veier .
other points .-•: .. , , •. .'• .. : "But I,. don't know whether it would severely. The 'Quality of the Nvar-.••
But while these -Main _figures eofetheeetledeesehe _wise to _call -.public' :atm, bread.. ia getting .w.c,rse„ . otI :10iisri.nft .6.1, , ' !cm. netlect thdtri thc more yen, •-•
suffer. TA-12e7-illother -Srciget's--
War Office are 'mot before the pub - s, tion. to the 'fact that thev
. . ene.Aeing 'families have •emigrated to neutral . • Syrup if your, stomach, lire; of '
lit, thel'e is • faiSt• a vast. 'organization so." t ,, .- . . . .
P,I , ' . • .boweis are 'slightly deranged xis. •
. .1 i . 1 :,. ..
-
Wood Vete Is Not •the Sole Paper
Material. • .•
I
4.1-‘t•g,
.qtda of testinnals 9, es Me. b!tt.
Gr. F. HAIIY111100F,t0.firpt
Edison is not.alaieted by the .paPqr
scare; -he-foresees. the - day • when.
nickel will be e 'hilted' for paper 'in
i4ckel, one tWenty-thotisandth of •,
indigestion, biliousness, head- • inch thick is cheaper, more. :flexible,
aches, • flatulence, pains. after•• '-and more duvet*. than an ordinary •
eating, 'constipation, are all coin: . 'sjiet, of notepapee. • •• • • ••
. liver tionhleS. And the niord• - . The ". 2..noi be er
-
mon symptoms of etcanach and j
eitt•a‘r , for a nickel • hot*, containing.:
forty: th ou semi . _Pages, woild'..onry,
• AS 6011 'one' Pound, .and only be two
• :inches thick. •
'The Jimanese are wonderful paper
taenerfeetureeteeptreeteebeing- put to -far
• mni*e., -naps in 'Japan than. in Europe, '•
and they cultivate a certainmulberry
• osier soltly for the use, of it. hark in
paper'. manufacture. .
Fly Poison..
Kills More Children
Than-All-Other-Pois,ons
• Combined
carrying On the Innuingrahlo -day-to- , ' - '• --=.--• - .• ...
,
•
•
day2-4n-auChes-rof-rniIitaiy Workl---htr--13111sta..itto-Itiminient-Ltisisberrnaserr--riiientl
•Unesual. •
-main divieirMs are the 'General Staff,1 ............_....,
. , .
the Adjutant General, the • Quarter- i• ' Whae He Wanted. , , "'Will," said Mrs. Spendthrift,' "I've
Ordnance trranele-noivetieftforreedeeto-41211•31;? Plgareti". '• 741434611.° "(11" .th''''It'ar-R's-mtl'"d
ance. Departments, with most of the quiet boy who doesn't use, bad len- ' you about." . ' ' •. . ,
master General and Civil' and Fin- • M.erchant-What we Want is a nice, , 'got' lots of things I. want to 'tails, to
liet hu
• the Ministry ' of IViuniiiOns. tinder around•434VQ.• . the ()thee .or get •tnt.0.-ini'thief; band; "natality you Want to talk to
'these' in airi heads 'there are sothe 120 Applica.nt (eteeustedly)-Yoe don't me about 'loti of 'things. vou haven't - . ' SYRUP'
divisions, taking in the .weeee, range 1 want -no boy;; you want ,a girl, • , got." • . • . .... ; - • , ,, . , ,,, ,. •
. • •
.. . , ...I have lost tone, Mother f-kiget's
' of military activities.. . The War Con-." • • •• . . ' " - -..-- • , • . Syrup is made from the unitive ..
ell . is, in effect, ,matle. up of the heads I .• It is , as. easy •.for y.au to please
.... • ,. •..
Ice.* tiAntiiitrti tininient in •tile hoes° ' extracts of 'certain root a, barkS,
of. the main. divisions f seven in . all everybody as it is for •cvcrybotly . to.
,With Lord Ititehoner as president• lease you• "Of p • '
the 'Council. and General •Robertson,
chief of stain ; Adjestant General
Sclater.,,Quartermaster General Gow-
• ans, Major General .Vori Denop, Par-
• liarafttary Secretary .Tenant and Fin-
ancial Setretary ostet ea the other .
members of the War Council. The
General.Staff, With General Robertson
at 'its . head; •••nuti;e4. •th . scientifie
Studies of Military defencei„ asspmbles,.
air the available, intelligence on, Mk.. ,
,ferent camPaigns; furnishes •the .ex•• •
ports and has chai'ge o#,the Military
'inter-cornmuniCation bY telegraph and
signaling:The ...extertsive purChase •tif
Anierican horses,. harness .and• :supt,
•
rt.
'You will find relief in 2stm-Ruk1
It eases the burning,* stinging
pain, slops breeding and brings
ease. Perseverance, with Zain.
fink means cure. why not prove
We 7 AU Drizooiesboxand Storm-.
ad .
and )eaves, winch have A re-
• arkable tonic and strengthen- .
if 'He" H '
ad• Wings.•••• mIng .effect on all the organs of
• Algie's mother was on invalid; so digestion. Thedistreesingsyinee
his Aunt Lavinia looked tater hitnend e• toms of indigestion �r liver ,
troubles, soon disappear under
the house. •, • ' -
•
Its benficial Action. Buy a
"Oh, dear," said Algie one day,, • bottle to-dayebut be sure you
mipateseee wieh 1 had wings." ,
' "Whit mye 'pet?'.! . 'asked. mother,
pleased at this ,eilgelie inepirntiote '
co• 'ul,:ditii,,,trd:iy: •1:41itt: iinviotillietna.,,i,r with..Aunt
Lavinia; and "I'd fly and fly till I
ris the little cluni petaled impressike- ' 'Be t Ile
, 1 N . . % n
• "rd drop,Aunt Lavinilat" said Algie, r -,-- •• 1<qt°1011` M. 44.1; o (Ii•tli I o tun 1.; c• tt n
TY.: • "What wouhl sqht An filet'?" FULL: sticei4e0111.001 Tnlill, On, ttricd804
SiVagi4341
any ter maitiare :and take no o,,lice ,
'• . •. ,
. •
after Auntie had lectured him 'for 10 et the genuine Mother Seigel's
• . Syrup. There are many Imita-
tions, bat not one that itIVOS the • • •
Same lictelth.benefits• to15
• is the
Wood • pale is not byearryerneansethe
soh! paper Ma' for at the' Paris
Exhibition of 1889 •sixty'wellS,'Ofrollii,
of paper . were ' displayed, ea, h. roll
• being 'Made trein ' a differt fibre.
• Books, too, hat
dticed 'from A6t•ra1 huidrod 1vave9' of
different "are, • ,• • •" •
The pity is, theligh, that these, thee
'eoyeriee. rird either too costly for pro,
(Indian or' thatthe sahstancys are me-
ohtairieble in Eurepe.
,• Nothing 'Between to, StoP it,
Bess (to' .inefficient , Werloneeeee
Theng it! -Everything tell ,you •goe••
'in at' ear' :tint out it' the efillei•..
• WliTh a 11 8 hUre,. goit, 'ye 'can't
ine haviii?' • ' •
teN o e.ti s. can ye?
i ,... „ . ., . .,
. '
"Yes, dear," • oak' mother, proudly,' e ,S' , • y Itis*t -ler for reine- 'Men . fieM
•
•
or a eys a e, se
Is 'there within •your home,
anywhere Within ,baby's reach,
a saucerofarsenic poisoned
paper -floating inRvater, or a can •
with a•sweetenell poisoned wick?
During 1918; 26 cases of fly
poisoning were reportedfroini.1- •
.states; 1•914-,--46 cas-esfrom 14
states. Fl,v olsiitikills'tnore.•
children than all oTher• poisons'
coothlin•cl. ••
Tt i'riiiititin-011ig-tetrum-
L:koarded e•xec,pt in ,the eeemes
where meehereleave leareeteth et
the safe?, snre, flan -poisonous,
• eMeicat fly .catcher and •de-
streyer is •• .
ehiilleeeeelf
• tbeelournalef..the igen State
,Medical Society comments tiles in a
recent issue: , •
"svmetonis of arson -feel polsonIng'ore
very similar to those of eh niers in tamp ;
ottliteaty a number at eases. af kent -
itifinittitn were really . oases OC,11rqS1C.01
poigonine, but.cleath, if occurringovas
ibu
attrted.to ,eboleca Arlaritum.
r'We repeatafeerdett1 ay destroying de.
rives are dangerous nria slIquti•be, n bat.
• Ilotiati OtIlchtis sit ottht. bee•onto
Aroased to tlrerent 'IttrtIvr lo$q dt 1110
oront ••toe. Our Mb -Moat teg13- •
10,: are. Ibis 10 .1, pattge,i a law reit:
11'..tt tag the 4b2, t:( euperee•
Tho• O. a W. Thai Co.
• Gland amide, Mete *-.0
- •
LA). •
ISSI"
".‘