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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-07-13, Page 3Arcir "."0.111•1101pliPIEWIRM04.111WW4,11111.11RMWRIPIPPIIIINF34. A A WOMAN'S IlEALTU NEEDS CONSTANT GAO • • • When the Mood BOOMS Poor Disease Speedily Pollows •Every wonsan's health is peculiarly dependent upon the condition of her . bleed, How manY women suffer with beadaeho$ ,pain in the back poor tite,, weak digestlen, a constant feelihg ,of vrearinesa, palpitatiOn of the heart, !Alertness of breath, pallor and /ler. vousnes, Of course all these syrap- toms may not be •present -the more there are the worse the conditien a the Weed, and the More neceseitY that You ehould begin ,to eerich it withou• t delay., D. Wjfliains Pink Pills are be - raid doubtthe greatest blopd-beilding tonic offered • to the • public today. Every dose helps to make new, rich red bloed, which goes te every pert of • thebody; and briegs new health and strength to weak, despondent people. Dr. Williame Pin1 Pills are valuable to all women, but they' aye partieularly useful to girls sf school age who' be- come pale, languid and arms. Thie blood during,the growing years 'of a girl's life uscually means ti flat -chested hollow-cheeked womanhood. There can be neither. health nor b,eauty With- • out 'red blood, which gives: brightness to the eyes and color to the cheeks and 'lips, Dr.Williams' Pink Pills. 40 all this;, as 18 preired in thousands of • cases. • Mrs. Wnr; Rowe, Carlaw Ave., Toronto, says :--" I have received so much benefit from. Dr. Willianis' Pink Pills that I feel it my, duty to recom- niend them to others. 1 was ,about eempletely piatrated with anaemia. I had no appetite; was terribly. weak and subject to fainting simile. I eat- fered greatlyfrom dizziness' and the various other epriptoms thataccomp- any a bloodless condition. Remedy af- ter remedy was tried, but. to noAavail until a friend advised me to try Dr. :Williams' Pink Pills. ,Before emir- pleting the second 'box, I was again • enjoring splendid health, and ,have time -remained in that happy condi- tion." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any medigine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a -box or si; boxes 'for $2.60 from The Dr. Williams Medi- • cine Co., Brockville, Ont. • k GRATITUDE OF A HUN. :Prisoner's Testimony of Hie Splendid Treatment in England. • No greater contrast, to the letters which come from Germany from our heroes imprisoned there can • be imagined than the following letter •eddreseed by a German prisoner in England to his "Dear my dear • children and my dear mother" in Ger- • many, soya the London Sketch: , "I- have hitherto not been treated' as A ',prisoner," he° serites,' "but, have received nothing bet love and cafe' ter my wounds. "Everything is done for me to re- lieve my pains; in fact, everything that can be done for a wounded man. "Therefore, my dear ones, respect our enemies. , • "I always had .a great dread of falling into English hands, but now that fate has overcome me I have learned better, and I see no trece of but tender love on the part ' of my former enemies. "I have a splendid -dinner every - day, plentY of meet and potatoes, ' beautifulry-c--oriked: • "They give me almost 'too much, , but for the eake ,of good manners • I , eat till, ib is ell finished. ' "Tea does not suit me; so coffee is • specially •prepiteed for me. .Could a -wounded prisoner ask for Anything better? " , . "Do you, therefore show nothing • but kindness towardsour wounded enemies, particularly Englishmen," • . • Deceiving Then!: A submarine commander 'has but one means of judging the speed of • the vessel to be attacked -by noting • 'the' site a the boar wave thrown up - by the intended victim. The correct:- . 'less of the estimate means either a . hit or a Miss. To deceive the pub- - • , marine in this manner Britishe ship owners have devised the clever ruse of • painting a huge how wave on the aides of a.- ship, rendering it extreme- ly diffictilt foe the underwater craft to judge the speed accurately. For' - , • Pure Goodness and delicious, snappy flav- • our no. other food -drink equals POST U Made of *heat and' a bit of wholesome molasses, it has -rich colm.-,----aroma turd taste yet contains' no harmful elements. • This hot table drink ',Is ideal for children .and parti- Culatly satisfying to all with whom *tea or.. coffee disagrees. • • Postum comes in two forms: The • original Postuit Cereal • requires, boiling; Instant 'Postom • is made in the cup, instant - by, adding boning: -water. • For a ••good time at table and. , better• heilth 'round, Postum tells its own, stoi.y. oneres a Reason" Seld by Giatere. tiVerlr'whei*CZ Canadian Postern Cereal d., 'Ltd* • Windsor, Ont. 4 • BRITONS WING BETTER THAN EVER TH•ERE IS NO .811011,TAOE Qi IT001)OR CLOTIIINO, 0.1,1•1,0, Econoiniat Contends Wage Increases • Mere Than Equal Maher Costs; • • The• working population. of Great -Britain has not, auffered from the high prices of food, clothing And other lie- ceisities, beeauee in almost all cases their wages, have been increased pro- portionately, and eine more than Pro- portionately', to the rise in commodi- ties, according to Prof. W. J. Ashley, dean of the faculty of commerce in the University- of Birmingham,.in. an article in the London Times. Prof. Ashley, who is a prominent English economist, Says that with the exception of pertain persons with fix- ed incomes such as annuities, pen - alone, or 'soldiers' Wiliete, with, large families to care for, on Government allavances, the people, of, Great Brit - 'air), are now able to save ;money and to live far more comfortably than in the daykebefoee, the war. For Summer Camp From the Middle orBurigalow—,othe ready. 'Naked, ready -to -@at food— that keeps in any climate; that supplies the greatest nutriment in smallest bu1ic' is Shredded Wheat Biecuitip the ideal Summer fo9ci. ,because it supplies every, thing the human body needs in a form that is:easily and quickly digested. Combines deliciQusly with fresh fruits. Always clean, always pure, always the same price. , • Prof. Ashley's article follows; The cost , of living in this country, has gone.up by rather more than one- third Since the war began. yet ,the great mass of. the'people, far:froth • suffering from *deprivation, has never been so prosperous, never , 'so well fed. The rise in living expenses has not been due to restriebion of supply; it has been due chiefly to the fact that the people have been able and willing to pay high prices. , An important immediate *cease has been the rise of freights, but, these freights_actuld not hace•gone on_being paid had there not coetieued to be an effective demand. ,The proof of all this is net difficult. • 'Food Goes Up One-half. • As to cost of living, the increase in the retail cost of food of the working classes is reckoned by the Board of Trade as about 50 „per cent. This is on the supposition that theymade no change in their marketing, - • Asa fact they have to some extent lessened the ,pressure by resorting to cheaper but equally wholesome sub- stitutes: And food is net the, only item to be considered. There is cloth- ing, which has not advanced in price to anything like the, same extente there is rent, and here an incipient rise , was checked by, legislation, and there' is fuel. Combining all • these. elements in their proper proportion, we reach semen Per eentas a reas- onable estimate of the total inerease in living 'expenses. ••.• • There Is superabundant -eCidenee that the money incomes of the people, speaking broadly, have risen so Minh more than the cost ot living that they are nciti Merely ablee, to meet the ad- ditional charges; they have a sub- stantial margin wherewith„.to add to their comfort, to save for 'the future or to multiply theie pleasures, whe- ther wise or unwise. It cannot be ne- cessary to labor the 'Wet statistical- ly and to adduce the easily accessible figures as to re tes of pay, output and overtime, or to die more than make passing' reference bo the thpusands of women who were not Wage earliers before and to the allowances to sl diers' wives. -‘ •- • The patent results are enough for our purpose. Here in Birmingham, for fer instancei there is less illness, be- cause people are better :fed; homes are being made comfortable; and the second hand furniture shops, are al- most empty; thepawnbrokers' shelves are •getting bare; the children are bet- ter cared for; underclothing shbps' do a brisk trade.' and people are Opening savings bank'accounts Who never dreamed of doing so before. • Fifty per Cent. Business Growth: • Significant is the' experience of the Birmingham Industrial Co-opera- tive, Society, with its well nigh 40,000. members, representing almost) as many separate families. As it does a ready money business, a rapid ex- pansion of membership must mean a Widening circle of improved condi- tions. Its membership, in fact, has grown. 50per cent. during, the war. Meanwhile'the figures of sales per • member have been mounting up, high- er considerably than, can be accounted for by prices. And notice particularly that bhe weight of bread purchased per itreiliber, in spite of its abnormal priee, has remained practically Inv altered, • • Perhaps -Birmingham is Irather more flourishing than.some places; but it is common knowledge that material well being is pretty generally diffused over I the' country. .If confirmation be sought, it is easy to refer to. the gat- f istics of flit 'sales of the Cooperative' Wholesale, or to these of Onemploy- merit or pauperism. 1 • This is not to say that nobody is I distressed by the prevailing high .1 Ttriees:--Puttilig on one side enidclint class people with fixed incomes, those mhci find -it hard to menage are such ; old age pensioners as have Mrrela tivas to help them and soldiers' wives ; with large familieit of small childrenet There are also certain small classeal of day laborers whose wages are' said not yet to have been adjuseed to the ehanged concirtioes Oil whose ;cased will doubtless be carefully. considered by the Ministry of Munition's. But all these instances of hardship put to- gether are relatively so few:that :blie attempts of a Atop the war 'agitator here and there to Make capital out of the.* have altogether failed to catch 016 ear of the working Population. • Supplies Well -Maintained. Ability to pay high prices, will' not enable a nation to, be fed if food it not • Made in Canada ,. ugust 1915, was not wife 1¼ per cent. below that in the preceding Sea- son, During the rrent cereal year that deficiency will probably be more than made up for. •Already' in ite first thirty - 'weeks the supply that has reached the market. has been More than J per cent. greater than at the corresponding point of last year, 'and the -experts estimate the quantity now "on pristine," to be subsbantially- larger than it was then. • • As to meat the information is hard- ly so recent; but it is encouraging to be told that the supply readhing Smithfield •for civil purposes in 1915. was only 12 per' cent. less than the. total supply in 1914. This looks as. if the civiI,population Was quite as well provided for as, in the previous year. it 'is stated that "throughout the year the demand was readily met aed, there Was frequently a. surplus at the end of, the week." • " EXHIBIT OF WOOL. Canadian National Exhibition Will • • Feature It. • Through the wool display of the Dominion Live Stock Branch, Ottawa, which will be presented at the Can- adian National Exhibition, farmers will be given a splendid opportunity for obtaining a thorough knowledge of the sheep and .tIrool industry of Can- ada. The•exhibit has been prepared by T.,Reg, Arkell, chief of the Sheep and Gest Dieisiori a the Branch, who will be in charge with' Mr. James A. Telfer as demonstrator. The, ob)ect of the exhibit will be to explain the. various classifications and grades, and to show how wool may he handled in such a way as to secure the best ad- vantagee to both the -producer and Brandon, hasebeen found in the. As - buyer. In 'order to eeenmand the siniboine river, two miles from the - highest market prices, wools should be spat where her father's body was presented in s carefully folded, and found 24 hours- previously, , packed condition and should 6pribain as little foreign matter as passible. Actual demonstrations in grading and sorting will be given -daily by wool ex- perts. • Qne of the most interesting and instructive features will be sem- pies of wool in both the greasy and scoured condition, showing the injuri- ous effects of using insoluble Paints, son was subjected to unneeeseary pain which are difficult to -remove, rather through ineffective methods._ than, the standard 'dipping fluids for Dr. A. 0. MacRae, when speaking marking Purppses. , Samples of wool to the ,Women's Canadian Club of --that-have-been-tied with binder twin Calgary- recently,- said that -Calgary will show how the gisal fibre becomes women were indifferent to the ware. incorporated into the wool with the their extravagant clothing being but consequent defect in"the'finiehed Pro- one evidence. est B•ETWEEN ONTARIO AND Ea 0014/MBIA* Item* 'Prom ,Previnees Where. Mow Ontarlo Boys and Glirle Are Intirsy rates and tnoro• merai torMe • then an other policy; you earl Prooure. IWO a posy• yroteeta your now. Teltring Var from. Imo by fire to the ozteat ot 1000, .ineiudd mg lee/ from explosiou aira sotto Covert; fire loom while ear le an bundina-..er on the road-.. Regina observed "Care fordtho male Day in 411 the acheele. The entire village a Steelman. Seek., w,as wiped out by fits, The Saskatchewan Legislature has made it lawful to kill cow imoose. Two women were appointed ti'') sib witlfthe Manitoba Uriptersity Council. A Bantam Battalion for, Alberta's ahort Men is now recruiting in Cal- gary. be Citizens of unity, Stisla; pre- sented a field kitchen to the 05th pit - teflon.• , , Property amounting to $306,000' will be sold for taxes in the city of Winnipeg, Calgary was oee of the first eities to adopt the weekly helf-holiday dur- • ing "simper months. Joe Berdie and ret,... lvieDermid, of _Moose Jew, were dreamed while out, • canoeing on the river. George W. Young, .grocer cat- gary; was,finp$,1 $190 for giving veuee to seclitioug sentiments. . Wheat acreage in Manitoba is, much smaller..:!The high winds have illaYed havoc 11. theeseeding. Gussek, of ,tdnionton, a Russiaa Soldier, committed suicide ,13'y hanging himself in a police cell. Fire destroyed the North Ster Ele- vator Co.'s elevator at Kelsey, on the C.N.R.,- 17 miles east of Camrote. •J. C. Williams, Edmonton, who stabbed a conductor 'on a C.N.R..train, was sentenced to 5 years in the peni- tentiary. , ,• • Mayor Weaver. and- Lienta Drabble, both' a Edmouton, are in a London hospital, after being wounded in the. trenches, , The wives of Winnipeg soldiers are indignant over the action of Dominion Government in retaining part of pay allpwance. • ' Sir Rider Haggard, the famous no- • velist, liaid a visit to Regina. Ile is on a tour of the Dominion on behalf of the British Government. Terry Carroll, of Lethbridge; istdead as the result Of -striking his head on the pavement *hen thrown, from the Dallas Hotel, by ap Austrian porter. 'Nevilina St. , Laurent, Winnipeg; was accidentally shob hy her .sweet- heart, Herbert Manning. He as showing her a revolver at the time., Calgary is proud of a talented son, R. H. MacLachlan, who .made a cleap sweep of all the prizes in the third - year medicine class of McGill Uni- versity. The body of • Miss Mabel Booth, George L. Roberts, of Winnipeg, claims to have discovered thatcreo- sote oil' can be used in an ordinary automobile with 50 per cent, greater efficiency than gasoline. ' Hervey. M. Elliott, physician,' at Swalwell, Alta., is being sued by Wal- ter Parge for $9,000, alleging that his , . duct. The -injurious effects of shear- . Hudson's Bay Co, refuted to close - Ing wool veJiile damp: or permitting it liquor store in Manitoba. The • Gov - to become damp while in storage, will ernment has accepted, the challenge. be shown, together with the damage The company will set up test case in - caused by the incorpopation of stray. voicing the question of • their privi- and chaff into the fleece. • leges to, trade witheut interference • wrncn. we nave by a huge piece of steel falling on his trnng ,- n , since the year ' 1870., . •,. , whether in power or Mee& e or en. head, • .. joyment, is the, chief sotirce, of burner' Mrs; Julia Angers, Qiiebec, dropped i ,.„ dead just after church, service. This Write for rates en Ford yens up to three Years old. Similar rates and conditiomi are granted to owners. of Choy. rolet care, RANerE.," IELOM?ANY:, • cD.WitILIAMS, epailaeo,is Downes • Rao terriCt -33 Sccrri $7 libreON70. ='• 1 THE LATEST PHONOGRAPH. (Stewart's) • $7.50 • ,Thli• is the most ..wonderful Phonograph value In Canada. It %is neat, compact, ;and finished in beautiful' black and nickel . will harmonize .• with the furnishings -of' the best homes. 'Inexpensive, durable and attractive. Just the phonograph for the rural home. Will .play discs 12 inch or smaller. Dent in neat wooden box with 100 need:es on, receipt of price. •Weirg.ht 15 lbs. peeked. HENDERSON & RICHARDSON, Distributors, Tient. 4 Board of Trade Banding, Montreal, Que. Iporasas. ia•MliGa•••••• From the Ocean Shore . • BITS OF NEWS FROM THE • MARITIME PROVINCES. Items of ' Interest • From Places Lapped BY Waves of the Atlantic: ": • , • A census of school children is plan- ned for Fredericton; N.B. •" The next convention of -fire Chiefs' is to be 'held at Truro 14..S. FreilerictOn soldiers 'have been quar- antined on aceount of Measles. ..Mrs. Hayes, widow of Jemee Hayes, - Dorchester, Was found dead in bed. - A dog paved the life ef little St. John' girl when. she fell off a small Henry Whittle, a • yotieg English- man, of Sydney Mines, 'committed Suieide; cause unknown, • After twenty years' service as yard - 'master of the I.C.R. at St. John, N.B., T. L. Irvine retired. - COnducbot Janata, M. Lewis, of the -QP.R., died at Mdericten;- N.B., as a, result of blood poisoning. • Fred Woodard, a South African veteran, fell and broke his leg. in th6 Saint Andrew's, N.B., soap factory. Joseph 0. Gallant, editor... of, the Acadian Evangeline, died in Moncton, N.B., Iasi Neeek after a long illness. IMO NURSER HT SWIM, VIVA: *la :Gonave,' ArialMern VA; •Neatol, Gretm4, . -"Thar .work brtiairing. tto ieoltb and activity tba .14andrada .of Bialc gad: wonatiad war prieeriers. who'are not $0., Impotently woundegt As rePatriation deseribed in 4e Patel*, .front Switzerland.; Itt is. in 0141 healthy •country, *Meng I the kindly people the iar,ioushealth. resorts,'that ntanY of these priaoners who hrve been transferred from he. .crowded prisons. of Germany,- ancl•• rrance Ara. nursed back to,. health. They are 411 prisoners, oir-course, and will remain. so until the end of the war, but their chances for recovery in Switzerland are far ,greater than ifl the necessarily uncomfortable quart- ers in France and Germany.. " The arrangements for the sending. zoef drland weedrepriolsio; enrasi emwohdre tboe:eSwWie between Germany end France and Gerniany and Belgium; but negotiations for a similar egreement between England and Germany have been nearly Cotil-' • *BAP viaamnp.' pleted. About i.,400 4icic and wound- ed Prisoners have already been sent tGheermlitarislth arendsort9a0oof Spwrietnzeil.erland, Tph01; French contingent, which includes Toa, officers, ha been euarterad at Mon- tana, Montreux, friterlakeri, Wilcters- will, Meiringen and •Rrienz, and the - Germans are -neer Lucerne -and Davos: The guarding of the. prisoners hi sire:Wiled 'ari agreement with the Governments of the soldiers that all wile manage 'to reach hotrie will' be re, turned to Switzerland. The camps are under the superyibion of sanitary officers of the $1,yiss army medical department. Non-commisaioned of- ficers .chosen from awing the prison-. 'ers are entrusted with the mainten- ance of discipline among the men. -It is probable_ithat, ,so successful has been the experiment, the number of prisoners in Switzerland will be great- ly incrased. ' • The sick and wounded men are se- lected at the various prison camps in Germany and Prance as cases suffi- ciently serious for transportation to Switzerland by medical commissions competed of two Swiss medical of- ficers and a physician of the country in which the soldier it held. These commissions, of which t ere are DEAFNESS IS .MistRy • twenty, move from camp to camp se • - lecting the worst cases. Supervision over their work is exercised' by a sup- erier" commissioe of three French anl twe Swiss physicians at Lyme, or three German and two'Swiss at `Con- stance. The judgmerit af the inferior 'commissions is very rarely challenged, however. 5110ES ARE IDEAL TOR aid 1P0Ip'S 4;,;:•Vi 40'm' ,r44 AWNS RESTgfil. AND COQ!. Mitt filf 142140ER OF TOE WIMP SOLD WY ALI- Aw•il LigALZRA'•• 01.111111.10.F:11101teM* FEW* POTATO:ea: • iraxatx coa., . Werth PereWare: Carman. „ derfat 24p.oly limitedk Write i'og 400tatiOns. a W. Dawson. Braropton BOX IsTAILE4S, •,sAwynst LAB9RERS, geed wages.' Apr.* ,or write Pirstbrooli Bros. Limit- ed, Toronto, • • WANTED ron ALT. .a.a. branches of Finishing trade. 11,1 eluding !tubbing arid Pellphing.- also =Cabinet lifakers and, Trimmers. tea.130, work and. • good wages for„carimetent .nizen. When applying state e*Perienco and whether married or single. The •Geo..IsicLagen Furniture' Co.. ed, Stratford. Ont. ' • , „ • OrytworRaryri,a. ' - norIT-M,AKINO NEwO. AND • iCat Offices for soe good ,Ootarlo tow.a Tge, moat tiseful and letere.silnal of all huelnessee.-- information application to Wilson Publishing . t:Op24 panYi. 73 Weet .A.delaide Street, Toronto.: segsrei.l.ASIII01111, CANCElt. TVAIORS. LUMPS, B7096 internal and external, cured wztltai • out pain by our home treatnient. Vt'site VB before too late. tor. Iselin:au medical Co., Limited, Collingwood.,Ont, ...................., [ For Freezinsr Ice Cream . dRUSHD ROCK SALT • A. more even freeze. Smoothei Ice • Cream. Takes one-third leSecSalt and keeps Cream hard twice as long. write 27011QT4TO 4344.1•T WOBItS, 50-62 Jarvis St., Toronto. Oat. • YOU get best resizlts with • ..• . . • Sometimes a man does a sensible thing by mistake. • Minard's Liniment Co.,. Limited. • Gents, ---I cured valuable hunting' dog of mange with MINARD'S LINI- MENT, after several .veterinaries •had treated him without doing biro any permanent good. - Yours, -&c., W ILFRID "GAGNE. Pr'op: of Grand Central Hotel ' •-• Drummondville, Aug: 8, !04 • • Hie Daughter -"Papa, you know mamma long before you married her 4-11er Father -"Just ' between you and me, my dear, I, don't know her' yet." •' 'keep Llnintent, In the honae Frank La Montague, Watchmen 9f I The hope bf somehow getting some - the• Quebec Bridge Works', was killed . RECORD WORK IN SHIPYARDS: e ' . • , 7 e.,..... Month Since War Began. • - SLEEP, WELL ..,1,.T NIGHT • . ALTHY BABiES - ' is the fourth tragic deeth in , the- Angere faniily: One Has Launched • a N,Vae Cillft. a HE, • In the shipyards' of Great Britain; A Well ,Child. SI-reeps well and daring, The schooner Nellie Dickson, under .. where fleets are born, there has been its Waking hotire ie never cress; but Capt. Cook._ arrived at BeaVer Harbor, tremeeclous activity since , the, com-..alway's happy and laughing, It is v from the Magdalen Islands with 1,000 °n1-.• barrels of hefting. the, sickly child that is cress and pee'. Timothy Sullivan, sr., 'of Oroinoeto 'ish. Mothers if your children do net N.B., died last week at the age of 103. sleep well ; if they are cross and cry He Was 1.>orn in Cork, Ireland; and a great deal, ' give them Baby's - Own ,ne, to N.B. in 1845: •. . . Tablets and they will, soon be well and A. L. Kerr, manager of the • Bank . happy again. Concerning the Tablets .of Nova Scotia' at Sydney Mince', was Mre. Chas. Diotte; North Terniscain- . iireseeted With a chest of silver last meecereent of •the. war, .and the ef- fort to provirle the navy with all it requires has been stnpendque. James Bone gives a picturesque ac- count of the wonderful work thathas been accomplialied. . • . "When we speak cif German's indus- trial InVentiveness and, rest:mice." • says, "we are apt to i forget• that she he ing,• Pee., writes- My bebv w ---- • as- week, •as be has been transferred, to nefther -discovered, the ePplicetion . of greatlY troubled With constipation and Newcastle, N.13, steani as a' motive . fore nor cried night and daY. I began giVing . . dici. she her Baby's Own Tahlets Arid new she • ,., , . -7-•--.,-o-,--e--I- invent any . of „the great devices .1iy it fat and healthy ina eleeps well at', • . , Ater ror minarets ana taus no ethos night." The Tablets are sold by medi-, ....... • - • eine dealers or by mail at 25 'cents a ,• Preserve! the 'Equilibrium. bexe from The Dr. Williams Medicine 'Native -There .are the Oldboy : . •, Co., Brockville; Ont.. • • • twins. They are 98 .yeirs old." all'otir shipbuilding resources' of peace e.••,,, •,, . Stranger-" To What de they credit have been tremendously expanded. for .', CANCER DUE TO MEAT. their long lives ? ..• , war ' One yard alone has leunchel, a - . . -- Netivee-e-" One. 'cauSe he ' used •ter - battleship, cruiser, torpedo boat des-. London .'Physician Advises Print Diet Wicker, and one :Jcauto he never used troyer, or 'submarine every month' i -to' Kilt Meese. • .- i*L" since the war began. One famous . . marine - en g„ine.,„ - shop ' has . produced I "Every. death ' from cancer it a ' 1,000 'horsepower , of machinery every dePtil fr'sf-i sulAile, lls'emi" caVeSi is. . Grenalstod !Eyelid's: - day 'since the beginning of last year. • self-imposed aisreitse-iiite, to if,i: P eill'LL Eyes:infOtned hy,expo , -"Wonderful engine shops up to 4 sistent defiance of, dietetic and hy- . • sure td Sue, DUSI and Wind • quickie relieved by IViutine houtand-aarrds in -length, 'Of --cathe-.4 Villa --laWs." is the opinion - _of Dr.Eyelleritedy-. No Smarting, drat height and 'spaciousness; splen• Robert, .:p 'd h Bt. ' h just Eye Comfort. At I didly lit, with railways linking, en Medical Assoeiation for the Reduction Your Druggiset 50c per Bottle. , Menne E)e \. I c.ree eeety part of the organization, have and Prevention of Cancer. • EsiveinTubeelSForflookoitheEyefrei sprung up in many patts" Aftek a close study .of th'ettdisease I. Druggists or Muriner.ic Remedy ite., Chits ,;111 .....re•*.r.,.....4. ...77.••••••.a.,...1 , --fer, nearly -forty 'years, ...140. ---Bell. •-4-.. , It's easier -for 'trouble to find your ,convinced that cancer is eurable Witii. The: Laciy--"WhY, that doe§ix".. look . , i. * ;". addrese 'than it is for good luck. , out operation. • - like myhush:171(1lie never smilee I 9 have not operated' upon a ran- • Artiat---"Thoidet this ft() liS 1.1:, plettiria !- dor patient , since ,1894," he stated; of •hirn before he reat'ried.".,..... "and:since that One have hal some . s ,remarkable euies,", ranartra Liniatent t. rod ..b7 1'111i21041:13: Dr: Ddil maintains that the alarm- ................e. , ing growth 0 the disease has ter -a' .7- -,-.. - .No. Drill' Needed. ' responded , with the, greatincrease"Dentist---Excuse me, a metrient in -the coestimption of 'Meat, 'and ,,,..1,„,‘„, ' that a friritarian diet _will niaintain -'-`-"rt;Zient,L_Wherti 'are yei'l eiaing;: • .Dentist.if-tiefere beginning work on yea. I_ must hat 2 .rny drilI. , - •. • . Patient -Great Scott,, mrin, can't you Pull a. teeth Without a rehearsal? which eations have been: brought clos-! .er and time and spate have,been fetes - _coped. • The German navy exists only as the reault of British invention's. • "Now, in the great, world -struggle available.ilut though-, at partietiltir periods, during the war, there have beeri.dillieulties with shipping and at the port, •on the whole aftinalies have boo maintained reinarkably, well. . 1 T 0 totaizquattity of wheat deliver. ed • y farmers and itnimrted during thO, pereal ,year September, 1914, to irr.."."&a0e...t • !know because / was Deaf and had ffaad Noises for over 30 years. Nlysnyttuble Anti -septic Ear Drums restored ray hear.- ing and atdpped Head Noises. and willdo ' it for you. They are Tiny Megaphones. Cannot bdseen when worn. Easy to put easy to take out. Are "Unseen ;Cons- forts."Inexpensive. Wn tef orEoradet and my sworn statement of howr recovered raY bearing, . lt.EONAItto 8u1te228 issethAve. - - N r'irp Machinery or 4aie Wheelock ,Engine, 150 0.11-.,18 x42, with donble main.driving belt 24 ins. wide, and bynamo 301t.W. bzlt driven All in first •\. class condition. Would be sold togetlier or separate- ly also a lot of shafting -at-a-v-cry great bargain -as room, is icquirel immedi- ately. S. Frank Wilson & Sons 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. - Bombay averages more than , sev- enty-tWo inchei of rain A year, and gets Most Of it within four \‘or . five months. • is but a iother word for "insured" when it refers to jams and preserves. Molding and ferrnentat on are impossible when the jars are •Securely ,sealed with • " ISSUE 29-10, the purity of the, Wood and Mord' cells and 'make it ' finpossible for „ _ . cancer to develop. - • , Ideal 'Combination • Mite Gotrox--"One can be verf happy in*this World with health and Money," 40, • , • Dedbro'ke.-`‘ Then iritli be made one. t have the health tied you hri'vo.the tancY." tithe:Wee redlnunif tubmimen'e. ARE CLEAN RIO plegiINES,S , ALL. OtALtilS G.C.Briggs &Sops HAMILTON •t: -L4 .PURE REFINED PAR FINE 'Parowax keeps the container air -tight. ° 'When. you 'have the jars securely parowaxed your preserves will be the srime ,when you open them • as they were the day youput them ,up: • • kiest of all, Parckvax is Most convenient to use. Pour melted Parowai over the tops of jelly tumblers and they are made air -tight, d'ust,end germ proof. • • FOR THE LAUNDRY -'-See -directions int• Parovirazt labels for ital.= in valuable service in washing. •. At grocerydepartment and geheral.steres everywhere., THE ' rmPERIAL . OIL COMPANY Limited .BRANC14.$ 4 -LL CITIES . • 0 • _