HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-16, Page 3_
-"T--""•••7••-•••••"-
• 'N
•
It. 'Can -00)y ie Curqd. by Thor..
.ouhJy Enriching the 110044,
• •
•Not so Ving •ago theumationa • was
lookedupon' as a, pain ta the muscle&
or- joints brought, on fry exposure to'
dampness or bad Weather. -Now doe -
tors know thot t s rooted in the
• blood, and mbile exposure. rrmy start
' the pain, .apthing but the Amoval of
;111.Q Fotoonous• acid from the bleed:
will curethe trouble. It is 'waste
ef.bothtiMe anajnoncy to try to cure
rhenma.tifun math liniments, peultice&
.or anything that Only koes sitin deep.
• Rubbing -lotions, into the . skin - niaY
give temporary ' relief, but. it actually
helpsto. circulate. the poisonous acid.
moye. gfeely. and this in the end in-
creasea .thea troable, and...041W
leOes the' .s.uffeter permanently erin.,
. • Pled- The ane cure, tbeenly ,cure„ for
rheilmatista ia to drive the acid which
.apses the troublc. out of the blood.
To de this no ether remedy can equal
: Dr. Iiirillionts Pin.,k PillsWhichea-.
ually naAhe new blood, sweeps out the
poisenousaeid, loosens the Stiffened,
%Aching Ants, and bring good health
•and comfort, Here is the proof.
. Joseph Crouse, of Nineveh, NS.,
• says; "For several years I was • se-
verely.. afflicteda-with rheuinatism.
. The trouble seemed to locate inall
the joints in my. bpdy, and • my suffer-
• ing at titnes .was • most intenseaand
the disease .greatly • interfered With my
activity. I doctored. steadily for a long
. time, but the trouble was -obstinate-
and did.not.yield in the 'least to tile
. doctors' treatment. One day 'a friend
told no of Some cures of rheumatism
• • by the Use of Dr, Wililains Pink Pilis
. and strongly advised m,e to try' them.
I did • f34 and to anY . great surprise
eight boxes completely cured Me of:
the trouble' And I was as. •supple,
• active and /zee; frona.;paitis as ever_ I
••• had been: in my life. • Better still, I
• have never felt a • symptom • of • the
trouble since," -.
.* You can get these pillsfrom any
• medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents.
a box or..six Nixes for2.5O from The
. Dr. Williams Medicine •Cp.3•13rockville,
Ont. , • . ,
• • .
' .P1.2EMIER LOSES SON IN WAR.,
ThreeBritish Cabinet .Ministers Have-
, .• ' ' Each Log la Son. • .
, , •
It is\ 'typical Of. Mr. Asquith that he
intimated that his son, •; whb Met ; •a
WHO
HUGE SALARIES
Ir.ft.T.Ft
WIIAT THE WAR HA$ ONE WO
ENGLISH !OXEN.
,prr.r•rt
The Great War ilas PrOVed
•
. Writable (4014,1ifino
to SMIle.
TRAPPERS.
c>orad Hour
RAW FURS
LoJOHN HALLAM
Among• the highest-paid • winnen
• werkere to -day • are. fereign •corre-
• spondents in big banks. Theis/ clUtias
•-call ter a knowledge of. several an.
zuages and the possession a an apt .
mathematical brain, says Toendela fetid daring the day free. WaitresSeS
swers. . at, establishments where liberal gra-
.isoalesitlAssi stAltrisis. poi
allialt Swilatairiacreiral.
chum
osostarassoas-aintarkin Otiose&
IN Ws sale nl Waives oi nt to
seals ot trassomia cased" le woad bez
ltustoesbsseassmerituotrtbsy tot avenue
foal, eassessina sage ssala•P! IO 0304tr WO.
yosta).110...1441112abo.ratonateginsagaillospius
;OR aim Isus• OW* AM amsts
• Osseo BAW SOI Quototioa.
FREE M111414:: PPlatallgit=17)'
HAIIIPVINAg erw• vo*(412p.esssia
61anat Ivo ma/toed a Addiaal 5 fOUP,SE-
JOHN HAIXAM tratIrOted •
.202 Hallam Building Ton:nit°
•
There ie one woman forogn corre- at,atiee Ara Oran hate been takrnif as
spondent in a London bank whose mud* at $2.00 a 4.17 in tips,
basiness it is to' keep in toirela with
the fereign exchanges, and who is in girls, who work alternate week& the
receipt of a 0alarY of 05 a •Week—',,'wfrbet.e$15 to 4
tee1.
$11.737s
.56 haveawbeen
niin
ek,inaclidaiktogn
very good money when °Kg considers
that, $10 a week has generally been
regarded as a handsome Wage to pay
a woman engaged in clerical duties. •
Perbapa the highest amount of all
earned by any woman during the pre -
gent war is $6,500 a year received by
the managing, director of a big cigar
ette firm ferraerlY in Gerrnan hands.
Her ability to carry on the business
has pretrented.it from being wound up strain. • •
and throwing a largenember Of peo-
p, mployment.• Site earns"so Capable • and 'trustworthy , women
le out ofe
chauffeurs are earning from $10 to
$12:50 a week, and quite as much .
being earned by women in country
towns driving 'motor cars for public
hire, . ••
One or tato weIl-educated women
At one West End restaurant the
to their feed, but this,,of 'Courae, is
an ,exteptional experience.
Sores Of cases, however, • cati
mentione& where, With tips, the earn-
ings of *art waitresses have been
brought up tp $10 and $12.50 a Week
INV the hours are long and the work
yery exacting, and not every woman
would be able to stand the resultant
much because of her remarkable spe-
cialized knowledge -of the trade.
Mothering the Workers.
The very able women who act as
supervisors of war work at big muni-
OgRIKAYI".$ FUTURE.
Which .Notion Will They $efd.nd
Britain, or llossia?.
Russia, or 'England—with Which of
:these two countries, shall (ilerinitnr
Make ltp. after the war halo'
'become a dividing OlegitiQa eren
two schools of thought • in anro,
and a .good deal of violent poleMic is
being wasted en the matter.. 1-414V44-'
ly the one 'schoelis rOdkal and Pro-
gressives and represented by the
"Frankfort* Zeitung"; the other 'Ira
reactionary, and its characteristic
mouthpiece is the "Thentsche ;rages-
• aeltatig,"
• In A recent issue the "Frankfur-
ter" argued the possibility and de-
sirabiliti, of "an understanding with
RI, !gland" -after the war. England
was warned not to count 409,. much
upon Russia. British democratic ten-
dencies could not .be arrested, and
asked the "Frankfurter" ironically,
"Shall then the Czar become a consti-
futional ritollarch and the /Russian
bureaucracy a mass ef obedient clerks
dePendent upon Ministers chosen from
among the. member of the puma,
simply In order to please England?"
No; intimacy between England and
Ample was impossible and an under-
standing with Qerairaysould better
suit England's interests. As for the
English side to any such bargain, the
"Frankfurter" remarked hopefully
that "a certain last remnant of confi-
dence must surely have remained even
amongst enemies."
Against this article the "Deutsche
Tagesaeitung" rages violently. It de-
nounces the picture of England paint-
ed by the "Frankfurter" as utterly
false. "The longer the war lasts,'the
clearer and less doubtful. it becomes
who understand dogs are rualmfl a to everybody that Great Britain is not
turn factories, and whose duties are,.
to •regulate the work of the women handsome living by looking after the only the organizer and cause of the
munition-workets and see that their lap-dogsand spoilt pets. of wealthy war for the annihilation of Germany,,
otitpat is maintained, are. paid as ladies. . They attend to the toilet of ' but also the soul and driving force of
the dogs each o :hday, the enemy coalition. ,The number of 1
Much as $25 a week, and on all sides iinna„ar,, those
it is agreed that they well earn their been w those *ho hesitate to believe this is
money, for no foreman could hope to mended hate As many . as twenty -dwindlirig every day. Even in the
houses a day to call upon. • •.• very heart of Social Democracy the.
While being, sympathetic and 'en- a ExceptiRal Cases. • recognition has gained ground almost
' without exception that England is the ,
eouragin their attitude towards • the The war has created a demand or
' one enemy—the soul of our adver-
.
women under them, these supervisors women tutors at $500 a year and wo- ,
are firrn enough in, their manner to Men librarians at $600 a year; in
1.•, Consequently series." •!
%.' Women welfare -workers are , coni- &Istria pursuits, are now in receipt
ally speaking, are well liked by the men, who • before the • Wei never
women they control. •
mending salaries of from •• $1,000 to of $10 a Week, with evety' chance. of
duties have to do With the health and , 'Unfortunately, the women who are -
the food conditions of thousands .of earning from $10 to $25 a week only
obtain perfect discipline, and, gener- fact, hundreds .of, well-educated wd.
$1,250 a year. Their work .is regard- still further improving on this re-
ed as increasingly important'for their muneratioti.
thought of engaging themselves in in-
. ' to. Russia. "We entertain • n9 idle '
an understanding between Germany
• we should prefer to. remove the word
Iand Russia might . be :reached on
1
' dreams of Russo -German friendship;
purely military grounds. and on a
basis of relative military strength."
'friendship' from such relations. But
:Getmany. must tern
women ,munition -workers . Their enra represent a Small element in the vast
ployment has given such good results army. of wometi war workers. For !
, A"VAL . .,
• '
• , \
obtalt such successfel result& •
. 6 t $8 7 still
that in almost' every munition factory the rank and file $ o . 501s
•
of size they are being introduced. ' considered a fair wage to pay, the cm- Resume a Past Year's Work by the
soldier's' death, sh.ould have• sol- Woman as Organizer.
ployers forgetting. that what miglit• ,
Commission pi Conservation.
• . ' •
• : ` have been wsatisfactory . wage in' •
Here, again, special qualifications peace -time is .scarcely, adequate 'when , The focussing of public attention ih
are demanded, of which tact is not the the cost of Hiring has gone up at least Canada .apon•the problem of .strength_
1 t , A rule, theh have40 per cent, 'The ' women who are ening • our national organization
,
been appointed to these Positions are earning the handsome amounts
- Coned must therefore Consider them-, merciel efficiency lends special value
• dier's burial—on the battlefield, and
that the body should not be brought
home.• :
A good many Premiers have had
sons who have seen active service, but
• none, one fancies, :have actually'fallen
in action previously. Chatham's old-
- est son became a general, though not
• it very good .one, since he lives in,his-
tory only by the, famous ,rhytne
▪ linking him • with, • Sit • Richard,
Strachan. Canning's second son was I
a captain in the • navy, and was)
drowned, though not in action; the •
• two elder sons of the . Duke of Well-
ington both became generals. •
The second • and seventh sons of
Earl Grey were soldiers, and the third
and fourth were admirals. Sir Robert
• Peens third son. was one of the finest
• fighting Men in Our history. Lord
• Rosebery's two sons have both done
well in this war. Lord Salisbury's
• third ion, Edward, was in action,dur-
Ing his father's Premiership, both, in
• Egypt andin Outh Africa, and the
• present Marquess and Lord HUgh
• Cecil are playing their parts. Glad -
stone's -grandson mai killed last year.
• 'Mr. Asquith is the • third British
• Cabinet Minister to lose a son in the
war. • The other tWo are Lord Lans-
downe and Lord Selluberne; (The lat-
•:•ter is now now in the Cabinet.) Three
• Ministers outside the • Cabinet have
each lost a son—Lord 'Valentin, • Mr.
II. W. Foister, and now • Mr.,: Pike
. Pease. Mr. Pike Pease, who is the as-
-sistant-PostmasteraGeneral,_ Lott- _his
a son only a few days ago. • Lieut. Ron-
• ald :Pike Pease, who was in the Cold-
- stream Guards, was • only nineteen,
and -left Eton to take commission:
He went to the- front in May, '1.915,
and was promoted to first -lieutenant
In May of -this year.
Subtle Impoliteness.
"Bliggins always, agrees with any-
thing I say." . • •
aYes It's his way •of ' intimating
•• that he doesn't Consider your views
sufficiently important to be Worthy of
nit argument". •
A Growl nt
Custom
• The custom a placing
Grape -Nuts on the table
• at an meals
Canadian homes. •'
Bofh children and
wm.ups--heltp them=
selves to this delicious
• food as often as they like.
cOntairts the entiie nutri..
• ment, of wheat and barley,
digs, quiddy, • and is
W'onderfulty energizing:,
... Every :table -should bave
• its daily raticm of '
Grapc-diuts
There's •a Reason.
rneR, through increased industrial and com-
. 0 g . experience in
work, with , particular training in selveS particularly favored, and it is and intere§t to the Seventh Annual Re- 1,000 drrigibles. • '• . '
hygiene. • . not to be supposed that they form port of the, Commission of Consertaa • ' .
Wortieti chemists arebeing employ, More than 5 per cent of the whole , tion, whieh has juSt been issued: The .' -- '
activities Of this, Commission, relat- , % ..
ed in increasing numbers their re- Mtge . community Of .Womeirt ' war
,•
workers. , - ' l mg to the entire field of primary pro- Toronto Fat Stock Sliew. -
•
a
"The White Flour
Pinch"—have you reit
it? With the advancing
price of wheat 'the seveii.
cent loaf is downed?"' say 11.10
bakers, In its place we have
the eight -cent loaf—in many
cities, .only the shrteen,cent
loaf. A. loaf. of white: ilour
bread is not a complete
ration. Thwever wholesorne
-and pure, it does not supply
all the proteids the human
body needs. In Shredded • •
reTent: blueasetcolono.resting like a
Wheat Biscuit you have all two
74-
the body-building nutriment g4Poqrallesi):7band like grim eguard. in the whole wheat grain water, rose abrilptly
prepared in a digestible form. lens of a lovely treasure. Bennet
Et s awieythethe 'lake, the lifted eye's, rested• on a
alwaysatnehighquality.illie A giant curtain eighteen' hundred
t :same price,
terrace ,stretehed acrosi "the valley
l h
Eat' it, for breakfast' AN'th feet .above the lake, down Whose ter-
mpk or cream or with fruits. dant slopes two gleaming Cascades
I traced their foaming coarse and filled
Made. in Canada •
soutii&.44 falling wate1. ph farther
' the , whole 'amphitheatre with • th
too FOBT HIGH. .
4!,ilatte Acee.salble Kootemay Veatral
Brouck arx
, • IWO 'Wenderfal• icelields atul
'thOusand-feetAigh, ,pealta a the
cefl rangc„ w.hich tho construetion
tbo Kootenay-Vetral branch of th.OH
Cnnaclian PAaliflf3 7gailwaY has,
aged accessible ti mountain climbers,
are described and illustrated try Kr,
O. VT: Stone.in' the Canadian Alpine,'
.4reurtnel fofr 1.1,P10. The .appreach to
Alount 4thelbert, A pooh. which arrests.
the ,attention. at gpuultaebeen .Sta-
tiort,, seems: ,altriest..to have .ever,..
wheletted the writer with its beauty.
"Before he saYtip '414y lag a
• VAST ARMYR RUSSIA.
,—,1411
Porty Million Men in Ten Years is
Dream of One General.
- John L. Balderson, war critic , and
correspondent, writes to the Nava
York Sun from London, 'says:
Russia does not intend to be caught
napping again. While the allies in
the west are talking about "the war
that shall end war" and the millenium,
to be ushered in by the peace confer-
ence, the Bear' That Walks' Like a
Men dreams of developing an •ariny
great enough dwarf all the hosts
now contending in Europe put to-
•
ag e Therest hemeaia.
has come under my notice
(fide' tnemprandum" on the
needs of the future Russian army,
prepared in Petrograd by Gen. A. P.
Skugerevski. His figures; soberly.
presented and all backed up by 'rows
of other figures based on population,
national wealth and experiences of
the present war, are such as to stag-
ger the imagination. If Russia fights
again in ten years, Gen. Skugarev-
ski's memorandum indicates that in
his opinion her war. atrength Will be
approximately as follows:
300,000 • Officers.
25,000,000 to 30,000,060 infantry.
• 1,000,000 to 2,000,000 cavalry.
• a 5,000,000 artillery.
• 14300;000 sappers, electriciens, tech-.
nicel expert's' a all kinds.
•
5,000,000 for duties ,in the 'rear,
transport, railviiayi, hospitals, etc,
• 100,000 cannon... • .
1;000,000 maehine guns.'
• About'.100,000 meter cars,' armored
cars for fighgng, , lorries and light
emaranteed for
ailaintates
01111111011
awes
Best for
Quality
'tyleancl
Value
• ASK YOUR DEALER
•"),
- A. o „ma-As/A la A.
ILICIIPOTTOZIS
Sit ' 4.33obils;r11 13i2R4/9iF 113e'd.C.901;'Ilii:l'Xor°11tr• •
uotl°ones. si," W. Ammon; Brzunoton.
"TT—az,. . . . .,
tree sample offer. and 1017 eateloFue.,
0 p es 111%a°, htUegi etsaogliee°sal);unprpi'll:Eye,eC.EDSPSeepInt7d,ILor,S
iaonodkinhxiglide9rwalUuthone uhsa.enkgrauud, great i . r -z. e.' Ont.
snow crests appeared, inscrutably :FP.W1120,-Viit$ 003 PAZ!' • •
. .
Three 'considerable parties Of Alpine. .1:1151"WiftliTeirAfliorIN0Qalll'ElaWkS004'4144:410.4'1446-1114'
elimbets, numbering nearly forty in oisit uitetiln tags. Ater* les
lie a V` iso: •Parilgiagg49149i91:' .
:41wArbttli%.0'!nttalcogl
all, mostly from, the United States;
made ascentsin this region ' during Pahl. 73 West Adelaide Street. TOronto.“
lithe past summer °on . the inyita- . 3,66E4Z/42/EOM&
1 enthusiastie meraber of the Canadian 1,-, mo......i.,..„..s, ,...,.........-- .--.......,---t,=r,a, E;isa,g;
ation of Mr. . A. H. Pdaecartby, an etaNCER, TD
Co.. iArnited. collingwooti.,Otat.
Internal and external. cured. treatment.with-
Write
h
ins before toe.late. 'Dr. direllrnan.g!diCal
A g Inn 'no GIVEH Age ' 215; •
a.nd Feeders.. Seventh Annual
$ .9,- - ,4, I, ••••• 24MMIE NET .
ClaarieS * for Baia, Fanners. -BreederitLe
'TORONTO FAIT STOCIg SHOW
' T.T,nion Stock Yards
' DeCember 8 and 8, 1916.
Enter new arid secure highest possible
price in marketing your stock. Secre.-
tary's address. care .T.Inion Stock Yards,
Toronto. :
•
Alpine Club, who has a flee reach at
Wilmer in the • Windermere district:
Under Mr. MacCarthy's leadership
important explorations llaye been
made up the various creeks, piercing
the eastern slopes 9f the Selkirk and
Purcell ranges, Mr, MacCarthy being
of the opinion that for interest and
variety and spectacular beauty this
mountain region is without rival on
the North American Continent, ,and.
as scion as roads and trails are built
Will attract many tourists who have
hitherto been content with thea more
beaten path of the C.P.R. main line.
• • : , •
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
• ,Ametha'•s,
Pioneer
Deg fondles
• BOOKON
DOG DISEXSES
And How to •kNed
galled free to any address by
• the Author
H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc.
iIS West 31st Stree,t, New York
USED 'TEN YEARS, ,
II The Soul of a Piano is the
Mrs, C. E. Stilwell,. Winthrope, '
AetiOtt. Insist on the
Sask "writes: "I have .used Baby's •
ra11
-Own. Tablets for the past ten years , OTTO• H GE 1.4
• PIANO ACTiON
and have found them so.good f.or niy
little ones that I always keep a box
in the louse;" Mrs.. Stilwelif is one N:
of thonsancia'of mothers wlar always .
keep the Tablets on head, ;Once a
mother has uSed theta for her- little
ones she would use nothing else. They
Table
A Ho•me' 1311liarcl
are absolutely free from opiates and
injurious drugs and caunot pdssibly
• 4. •
win • provide you. an(
de hank to the youngest child. They Yout family with the flneet
are sold I;y medicine dealers or ItY f 'f •
mail at 25 cent% a box ftomaThe Dr. orm o Indoor recreation
cars. • .•
during the long *inter even.
• About 1'00,000 aeroplanes:, •
muneration varying. according to abil-
ity, I• There are Many cases 'of $20 a
week' being _earned. Women doctors
are also in great prominence because
of the shortage of 'doctors, and their
earnings are 'exceedingly high—at
least $2,500. a year.
, The Bank of England, which has
sent such a large proportion Of ,its the gallantry
that reflects email credit on
gallantry of two different Town Planning branch, with respect
.0ver_ entered upon by the newly formed;
male Staff.to the war, has provided •a seas , contingents. The , Canadian to one of our greatest and most urgent'
considerable number of competent troops have recentry..been fighting national problems, viz, the proper use
•
aa
IN' SHELL HOLE NINE DAYS:. •
• • • .. • - I ment and utilization of Canada: s
ency in basic industry—in the detelep-
- • • .
natural ,resoarces. , I
Three •Aitlitralizins • Found and • Ree
• The resume of. the past year's work
cued by Canadians. .;
. . , . .
• dilation aim tra secure•re
IN
ter effic
Willis:les Medicine Co., a Brockville,
• - - Quite a Bit
There's differenae betwe.en- being
• Partneri who have choice, stack, to well informed and knowing it all •
market shortly would do well- to en-
ter in:Toronto Fat Stack Show, Union
Stock Yards, Toronto, Decerriber 8th
and \.pt,b, 1016, and secure some of the
• . 'is notable primarily for the progress'
An incident at the • battlefront is recorded in the constrUctive pregrara
clerical female hands *nth excellent over ground which had formerly and detglopment of land, particular -I
situations. For those who are not been
afraid of work there is ,$15 in the pay- on the Australian front The ly in urban areas Townpla
• f . -iining
-/
Cenadiarie had been there nine days
, •
legislation of an advanced character '
• envelope every week—a wage which,
it must be agreed, is highly satis•fac-
•• A' salary of $1,500 a year is being,
earned by the woman director of • a
newly -established typewriting • de-
partment in one of the Government
offices. Before the war she was man-
ageress of a typewriting bureau, anti,
in view of her capacity; was. appointed
• to control a staff of twenty-five type-
-writing operators.
• The Picture -Palace Girl.
—Inaaawell-knpwn_solieitors'a_dfice
in Louden a Woman has just been ap-
pointed ' heed copying -clerk, • at a
salary of $17.50 a week. •
whea they found in a shello e, farlhas been secured in several piersions
ahead. of where the front line had I and 'thorough investigation of hous- '
' teen, three Australian, two Wounded ing conditions has also been undertelt- !
and one unhurt ' ., • . I en with a view to the drafting of
' The three had pushed out by them- I model housing laws. Rapid progress I
Selvesinto enemy country, when has been achieved in the protnotioni
. :
they were caught by shell fire, and , of independent civic Organization I
:twe 'were wounded. ,The third drag- I throughout the Dominion for the 'per -
big prerniurn' offered in addition to
Market price of their. animals; :This
slum has been coming tp. _the front
very' rapidly. and carries the .best•aitd
largest eithibition oftat butcher stock
•jri,'Canada, and this. year promises to
be better than ever.
: '
. - •
• The ••easieit things in the .ivorld _to
forget are your. other troubles when
you have the tdothache,
tamer/es Liniment Cures' Distemper
After Marriage. •• '
."Many disillasionments • come after
marrioge. • My fiance used to be fond
ged them intci the shell hole and sat pose of securing •more general and of carving my initials on a tee.'
there with theM. To catme out in day- thorough stady 6f public questions. I . "And no ?"
light was -impassible, So all day he sat . A second noteworthy feature is thel "Ile won't even carve e steak."
there endloeked after the other two, ; attention devoted by the C9mniission
aid' at night he sallied forth and got to the reduction of the heavy econoinic
Water bottles And rations 'from the ! handicap imposed upon Canada
German dead which ray around, and through her enormous entitle' fire
t us e a ep his two patients wet.: losses. The-Commissionais-eagaged
himself alive for nine long days One / in a careful study of the Causes, the
of the two wounded is doing well, but ! extant and hest Methods of retnedy;
the ether's wound has, unfortunately, : ing this Avoidable bex epon the coun-
Private, secretaries to the heads of
big eoMmereial firms are being mild become septic. . ' try's resources.
•
• 1
as inueli as $750 a year, and expert •The Section of the report containing
shorthand -typists
-The Downtrodden Race. • ., the results of an agricultural survey
are receiving•$600-
a. year, which is a handsome wage for ' Paddy (after' liOlding forth at con- in. four representative coanties'pres-
women in this class of work - siderents accurate and definite data re -
The shortage of male operators for 1, land); " . - , . Faith, and it's Lib.; garding the deficiencies of Canada's
-
cinema palaces has . compelled the' erty and Freedom we're wantin', sorr;'/Fhief industry and affords a' valuable
.'ition
managers to employ women' instead, . Visitor to Dublin—"But what. seat. ' . along which e
s-,
and these are making anything from of liberty de You Want, my friend, that 'forts to improve rural cond
$8.75 to $15 a week, according to the You, have not already?" lecoaomic and social, should be direct
.
Paddy (after prpfound thought) -a ; el. 0 ,-, -
',Liberty— to --begorrah —liberty to Steady progress, has been made by
a
shpit in the trams!!' , ' the Commission in- the huge task of
• ' 7 , !national stock -taking, the urgent
•' necessity for which beconies daily more
II f
Much, but these whbecome m
o arked- MO II . ;• l apparent. Recerit • experience has
ly competent;, b e to t
a great amount of work, can manage . FoR extent of thDominion's ealth in BRuisEs I curate knowledge of the nature tied
• size of the hall.• ,.,
Theearnin,gs of women '
muMtion-
workrs are dependent on the number
of hours they put in and their out-
put. The beginnets do not earn very
• '
•
and are a 1 itint u t •
seryed to emphasize theneed for ac-
, , 'e ' w '
to make from $15.,to $20 a 'week, al: , . .. - . * : ,
' • I lands, forests, minerals, water -powers,
though -it must not be 'supposed. that ; ' .• • -- .
s, -.
this, is an average s.um earned. • 1 Children's Bumps, Sprain's and •I fisherieand wild lifeas A guidaace
•.
In industrieir where. large eontracti • Minot Hurts Quickly Believed "expansion.
to intelligent. and permanent nati.onal
for home and allied armies are being a . bi Sloan's Liniment. • I A Whe report, whiciiis bound in cloth,
a and Wrists.
execilted, capable WOrtien workers' are • . . ... •
araifigasuuta-which-wauld-be-1-eigavd-. • tit' l's-7th-e-VerY-41a411cf--illitirch--4°Tiiimottant iiiidition- to the literature
ed , as extraordinarily . high when son- ' h rt the.mselves--to come eryllig to I.
1 trasted with peace standei.ds. Wo-, mother with little ringers breiseo on Canadir's resources and the pro-
men working for large boot making
with lioada ' bumped, with sprained 1 bleilis conneeted with theirefficient ad.
'r '.•' / Mihistration and devehmmenta
ale
- firms are takilig 'home every -week $10 ' . u.k They are ..painfid hurta, too. But , . .•
-.a—a- a- _,,,_ : • .
41/IVIIVIER, THROUGH THE WTHTER•r.
, IN 'CALIFORNIA. ' •
, .
Get away from. the cold. disagreeable.
winter, t'aliforMa temperature is from
40 to ,,76 d.grePaa itip .'eal• roundat„,4.
not expensive to spend •the•entire 'winter
there. -Bungalows. rcnt from ,$23.00' per
month rap. •.
.' .1. Wi T • Tr TI •
famous Lois Angeles Limited, a fist, re-
lined' iutd exclusive through train from
CIM'ago to Los Angeles; leaves Chicago
10.00 p.m.:and 'arrives at Les Angeles
430 .p.m. the third clay -•,less tium..titt*e.e'
,day,,, en rpute.. • •
nrite to H. 1-I., • ennett.' Gen. Agt.,
7
'CI -drag° & North W sterh Ity., 46 Yonge
'St., Toronto, Cot; I e -will send,you dis-•
'eslptive literature and 'train •schedilles,
help you plan an attractive trip,. and.
make reservatianslor you clear •throtagh
to the) Pacific Coast. • , '
, . .
• .
. ,
. ,_ •
If your boss is ' dissatisfied, • just
merition the ,faCt. to him, and perhaps
he Will permit you to. resign.
, .
rdirtardIs Liniment unreel Gartret is Cows
,Minard,st Liniment Cures Colds. liso.
, What Wen't They Say?
lugs. . "
Our Famogni Malsonetto Table
Is made specially -for
the home . at a reasonable
.price .. • ,-
' Carib or Any terms.
SOSROUGHES & WATTS,Atct.
Makers to H. ird, the King.
34 church Toronto
"Did he ball you that you are the
only girl he has eterloved?,"
• 'Wes, and he woat farther than
that."
"He did ? What else did he say?"
P "tie said -that I''Was 'also the only
gitlbe, ever intended to love."
7S,,f,ey.,0s, ill.)1*.
"Strange, Mary d'Oean't have any'
offers! She'd make some man a good
• itour Druggist's Sac per Bottle. IllurlisEy11
Salveirgoborlpo..F42ratokolIhstycifseask
DErugg yiswtseohr:t7r1Toh2-seyutslycill:ileeirmledelyiel:y:IdOw.71.0111Criall!linge. •
U Eyes inflamed by expo -
just Eye- •Comfort. ' At
• sure to Sun, Dust and Wind
•
liged to use a crutch foe 14 months,
• : Granulated Eyelitig.
1 the trouble is, ,everyone
knowi, she'd Make 'him a good hes-
antla-too.".-
Minard's Liniment Co., Liinited.
•
Gentlemen,—In July 1915 • I • 'Was
thrown from a road machine, injuring
my hip And -back badly and was • ob,
•
r • roriarr:-••••••......
A Friend in Need.
• "I'm thinking of going into the poul-
try business."
?Then I'm the very man yoa want
to meet. I can supply' yourneeds.
I'm thinking of going out of the poul-
try business." ,
and well illustratedaconstitates an
A Patient Crew. •
-•-laitalearadara whaawasawatehing
Men • working • a • piledriver in the lot
opposite .,said toalier mother; "Pm eo
'retry for those a poor. men, mamma;
they've. beeh 'trying and trying ter lift
out that 'big weight and 'eteryatitne
they 'get it ahnest to the top it.\- falls
tight back again".
over , araharny-rtuiriber-,of't+a4-ea-'11relr.Ouln arra sting mitt eurriVe
: n'ouid he 'cited. where equal. amounts. gentle use of' this liniment. A single '
are heine earned. • .•
- , • •• the little fellew s bravely kept • act* ;• '
The Lady "Com ine'reiiii." *
Women commercial • travellers
working on.a, small ,salary And coal-
missiOn are . making hi special eases
fram r$20- to $25 a Week, Here„-agalif,
Prince's Hard Luck. ,
I applicatioa of aloan'S lainriment and,- - i It Seems likely that Prince Albert's
career as a sailor is to come to an un-
teers oft& waY to snakes- ills hurt is
, • timely end, for he is again invalided.
• relieved. •
' In or.ery home where there 0,)-e home, and May have to undergo an-
elilldren a bottle of Sloan's Liniment other operation. It is very hard luck,.
Is ti necessity. • for he is:extremely keen, but be is
4 . • I",
Aebinga.lauselea, rheumatism, lum- cohsoled a little by the thought. that
their earnings vary with their qtrala et .(1, , .oan -he effOttively relieved. with
chilblain° ),e was able to See something the
hag% stiff neck, backaone,
licatiens. Horne womenaniake excel- !slows tAiiimepti. Cleaner than innsey . utland "scrap" and got "mentioned."
lent qouttnercial travellers, and are ointments or plasters. , It used to be thought .that Prince Al -
able to procure e'en larger Orders . Sloan's Linhneitt &Wire obtained at bort was the more robust of the
than the men ii,lid3P Piade5 they have all drug stores, '25o., 50-e. and. MOO: . &net tsiro eider sons, but this war,
taken., The're are others, litsweveira, M hitt proved that, though slight, the
haps, halt.th remuneration ,of . their S10 a ill:S• his looks belie him. Thera are . au-
wit`o do not take so well to the Work, Prime of Wales has a wonderful
and are content 'with earninm per- amount . of, sthying power, and t that
More sticwsful sisters, . • thentic stories of -the Prince of Wales
and ha good -class hotels And lestaur..• Linitirtetit a• bite. to eat ,at the Call of duty, and
'There Ora (Inland for *Omen theifs,, •eycling land distances, with scarcely
ants they *can depend on :earning as -/r/4-4. ,..4"..,: - PA/1Y 'Mich feats Would be impossible were
much tuil $10 a week, with all. their ,, - hp, not strong and wiry, ,
'Canadltth.rogtrim geresd I4td1.4.
windage. (,., g
a
In Sept., 1906, Mr. Win..Outridge of
Lerhute urged me to try MINARD'S
• LINIMENT, which I did with the
most satisfactory' resulted and' to -day
I am aS.well as 'ever ferny life.
• Yoursincerely, •
!.MATTREW x BA,INES.
•,mark • ,
A T
Men
Value of Publicity.
In i reeent Bulletin from the U. S.
Dept. of Agriculture, Mr.` Geb.'1' M.
Whitaker, in discussing the inspection
of dairies shipping milk to Cities, ad-
vecateswide publicity for the scores.
Progressive, -cleanly milk dealers 'here
in Canada *mid welcortie such ,pnbli-
.•City. ;gr. Whitaker 'says!: •
' "Publicity of scores is 0 Stimulus
to any dairyman„a valuabla advertise.,
m n o •pro essive p mincer, and
often a great assistance to the eon -
semen Publication of gores en-
courages the better dairymen to eon -
:thine to improte and calls public ater..
ven y. e
Y -s-1
For All Departments
Steady 'Employment
'Good 'Wages
• A SPI -Y
hulevelldelit Rubber Co. Ltd
, •
• MERRITTON, ONT9.,
• • Rank -Injustice. •
• ."Pa," inquired a 7. -year-old seeker
after the truth, "is it true that school
teachers get -peid?" •'
' "Certainly it is;" said the father.
• 'Well, then," said the boy indign-
antly, "that aia't right: Why should
the teachers get paid when us kids
06 all ,the work?" -
rithierwe matinees darer Diphtheria.
• Most Pandit!.
Newwedd, why so 'sombre?"
"Say, old Mah, I've - made a ,Very
painful discovery. ' My wife can't
sing.". •
•
"Pendell? Why, man you areto be
:congratulated." •
"Alas, no! You see She thinks She
can." . '
W
H E
.0, send sorne aamBuk to your
Isoldier friend at the trent. With
the -coming Of cold weather, the
i men hi the trenchers suffer, more.
cracks, chilblainrat bcaoaldds'soccireisa, • •
and the • soldier who has some
Zaln43Uk on hand to apply inunedi-
, only any of these, painful allmente
malca their aPpearance:'n11t 130
saved hours gt suffering.• •
• Pt. E. Wegttield of "C" Com.
tinny; ..3rd .Worcester Regiment, '1. •
It is inilendid forsorehands, teld
writes: "We wish our frienda...
would: send •es out more ZattaBuk.
.. crack, cold sores, etc: -
• Nothieg ende, Dein 'and heals so
quickly as. Zam-Buk, and Whig .
er loan, with eha
tion to the careless
latter by -loss of Customers oa -by .act.•
of the autlioritiee Should be forced out
of business. • They ought not ,50
mills in cronipetiti•on with their neigh -
hors who score- high.' .• ; • •
"Sonsumera who' take• an interest in .
their milk SupPly Will note the stand-
ing. of •the different dairies and pat-
ronize the .dairymen who .haiee good
ratingte Thb. qtality.of the Mill( sup-
ply of any city depends in a large mea-
sure on the .consurner, cnn do
tripc,h tb encourage the .Production of
good inil.lc.ri
• Worthy 'of AdmitetiOn.
. .
Her 'Dad ..-8o• you went to .etara y
my daughter. I like your nerv•.el °
Suitoe•-•:Well, sit, you ought te. •
speut a whole lot of tiarte.a-orkina.
• rmicida1, it prevents blopd.neleon-
50e. lox, 3 far $1...231.. ail drug.
gists or Zain-rtuk CO., 'rorOlitC).
up.• , la 4.
,
• Itb'SVP,
"
,
. •
• 'C.*