HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1914-9-24, Page 3FjI1 riESx MEDICINE
FOR LITTLE ONES
Baby',s Own Tablets are the best
d'
c e
ed zn o little �
#t for 1 1 0 Z are
n s They
1guaranteed ,by a>r go'vernmen't ante -
last to be absolutely 'stafe arid never
fail to cure 'a on',stipatioen, colic,
Dolde
sand simple Ise
xnp e f vers by regultaat-
1 flag the bowels. Concerning them
Mrs. S. Shatnnon, Ur'ney, N.S.,
writes: "1 have used Baby's Own
Tablets for my two children and
think they are Jost what little ones
need, I would not be without
thein." The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by moil at 25
cents a box from, The Dr. Williams'
�-' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
•
BUSINESS IN GREAT BRITAIN.
It Is Standing Up Well Under the
War Strain.
Among aimira
1.equalities
that the British people are exhibit-
ing just now, not the least admire
ble is the cool way in which they
ar'
ea
ad ptang themselves to abnor-
mal commercial conditions. Cour-
age and ,swiftness of action on the
part of those in authority, oombdned
with eommon-sense and •coolness on
;the part of the main body of the
general public, are enabling them
to make the best of wholly unprece-
dented e,eonomic -conditions. . And
(as so often happens) they are find-
ing the reality of every -+day com-
mercial life in war -time far less ter-
rible than 'they would have expect-
ed. before they tasted it. •Indays
not long gone 1by, "whenever the
.mere possibility of a vast European
war, with Great Britain for a par-
ticipant in it, was oontemplated,
there were not wanting prophets—
and many of ;them not ill-infdrined
people, either—who forecasted that,
if Great Britain were not brought
within a few weeks to the brink of
starvation, he currency system
would ;eollapae, her seta, -borne trade
would do ditto, and her industries
would stop almost of themselves:
In.. the result, such foi:ebodings•
have been ,proved unjustified. The
reality may turn out to be strin-
gent and'stern enough, but it is not
—nor does it seem likely to be—a
hundredth part as •appalling as the
state of terror which the imagine-
tion conjured up. Th'e nation knows
that it has to fight; economic diffi-
culties of substance. But, at least,
it has shaken itself free from the
fear of shadows.
First of all, Great Britain knows
that she need no longer dread any
1 grave shortage in her food supply.
Secondly, she need fear no ourrency
'crisis. Thirdly, she has her trade
routes open. The Atlantic .and the
Mediterranean alike are, for practi-
k— ' ,. purposes, safe for her shipping.
;With flys great water -ways of the
world clear for their transport), • she
Dan both get her raw material from
f every country, save those with
whom she is at war, or diose so
actually taffeotec by the war that
they can provide none, and -she can
send her manufactures into every
country 'save (hose in which the war
has wiped out her market. Her
European market has, of course,
been 'seriously diminished. But
even that diminution is a matter of
far less concern to her to -day than
it would have been a score of'year's
ago . For to -day her markets in the
United States, in the East, and in
the . British Dominions overseas,
have attained anincreased and
ever-increasing importance. And in,
such markets she finds herself, in
this time of war, practically .without
any European oompetitor at all. 1
At home, Great ritain',s indu•s-
trial position,, while not free from
anxiety, is not such as to cause any
Here's a,
Happy
Hunch--;
Post
Toast ies
and cream-
for
ream-
for breakfast, lunch or sup-
per.
Choice white Indian Corr,
rolled into thin • flakes, and
toasted to a rich golden
brown --delicious!
This food conies in sealed
packages, - always frena,
crfa and sweet and' ready
to serve at a moment's. no-
tice-
Post
otiee-Post . Toasties make a
mighty satisfactory dish at
any time,
»sold by grocers.
Cana•itan lista+'+ Cereal Co., Ltd„
Windsor; ant
violent alarlm, Some factories are
working short time, but very few
have elosed down. There is a rod
deal of unemployment, but not a
larger' percentage of it than has
been known, ere now, in time of
peace—eso far, gat any tate, it is well
within control, particularly in view
of the very remarkable expedition
with which relief arrangements have
been made. Those who make 'and
sell luxuries have, perhaps, most
reasonto fear aela,okk'time. But, on
the other hand, the 'war itself eve -
Wally stimulates producttion . in
many directional. And dockyards,
arsenals, ,and armament • factories
w*ill all be responsible for a vastly
increased demand for labor. Alto-
gether, in comparison with the oom-
mercial outlook of any other bel-
ligerent nation, that of Great Brie
fain is remarkably favorable,
QUEEN OF ITALY.
Lovely In 'Person' and Has Great
Inttuenee ivitli the King.
Helene £ Italy is the one queen
n
of Europe most ideally a true
wife and another, Her husband's
interest rests safely in her
keeping. She will never ,betray
him that . the ,Slays m,ay tri-
umph, Her little son is Italian,
and. the •s•overeignty of Italy will be
hia some day. His another, bending
over his bedside every night as she
tucks in the coverlet with those
busy, kind, practical hands, per-
formeng the sweet service which is
honored by the lowly but often
scorned by the high, is thinking
these days of the future of her son,
not of the future of the Sltay.
One can rest assured that she is
thinking of the .future of the Italian
people 'also, She has lived among
therm for eighteen years land spent
eleven of them after her marriage'
without going back to her old home
•
1•
• Queeai. Helene of Italy.
in Montenegro, a comparatively
short distance away and a land
which she loves. It wasa paced
fice she made in order to prove to
her husband's subjects that she had
come to dwell among them and re-
rnaein as one of them, • land that her
marriage did not mean "t.hat,she was
to be open teo the predominating
dictation of Russia in Montenegro.
The Queen of Italy is lovely in
person, as all the world knows, en-
dowed beyond that with' force of
character.. This is the explanation
of her influence upon the King.
Feminine beauty merely of face and
form never has and never will sway
the minds of mean .anddictate the
foreign policy ,of :a •state. Force of
character, wdth sincerity of• devo-
tion,
-
tion, but without beauty, has done
it dozens of tinier. Allied with
beauty, making its appeal 'oom?eplete,
it has often proved equal to stupen-
dous 'tasks in the high councils of
government.
• Sharp Cat.
Little Paulinecame in, bringing
a scratched finger . for salveand
sympathy,
"1 cut it on the cat," she
pliined,:
Perils of Persistence.
She—You know very well that
you had to ask me three times be-
fore I would consent :to be your
wife.
He --Yes; ` 1 know, and that only
goes to show that it is sometimes
possible to be too persistent;
This Boy Will Bear Watching.
Smedav •School .Teacher .'Once
upon atime there were ewo', rich
men, one .of whom made his fortune
be honest'iedustry. while ,the other
.niede his ;by fraud, Now, which of
these two TO would you prefer to
bee
Tommy (after a moarleteb's hesit-
Ii.,o)---Which made the inost9:'
Sciatica Vanishes Instantly
If Nerviline Is Used'
CAN: YOU SEAT THIS CASE?
No ordlnary liniment wit). even"'i'e-
lleve Sciatica, Nothing but the most
powerful kind
4f
eremedy can pene-
trate 'through the tissces ane finally
reach the Sciatic Nerve. .fou can al-
ways iiepend .onthe old-time "Nervi -
line." Nothing made to -day is as good
for Sciatica as Nerviline was when
first produced, about forty years ago.
A11 this time the same old "Nerviline"
has been. curing Sciatica, Lumbago,
Rheumatism, and is considered to be.
without an equal in • relieving pain or
soreness anyivnere. "'Nerviline'
couldn't be made stronger or better,"
writes James E. Edwards. "The way
it cures Sciatica is to me simply a
miracle. For years 'I suffered fright-
fully. I ruined my stomach with in-
ternal dosing. I rubbed in gallons of
oils and liniments—none; were strong
en
ou h
One good
rubbing n
with Ner-
viline
viline
relieved.- I kept on rubbing and:
shortly was cured. 11y father cured
rheuinatisin was,
his : right arm and
another Mired herself of chronic luau-
bags with Nervefte. • Our family sim-
ply ply swears by Nerviline and we are
never without a 50c. family size bot-
tle in our home; We #lid that for ex-
ternal pain, for coughs; colds, earache,:
such minor ills it is a veritable family
physician."
4.
WORSE TITAN DEFEAT.
German Soeialist 'Points to Danger
of Industrial' Stagnation..
The Berlin Vorwaei'ts, the ,Social-
ist organ, takes a pessimistic view
of the German situation so far as
the economic position is concerned.
"The greatest danger," it says,
"is not that Germany may be de-
feated, but that the war willtake a
long time, Germany's economic
danger is that the English fleet will
prevent the importation ;of cotton,
silk, copper, oil. lead, leather, ru15.
ber, and other raw materials which
ars necessary to the continuance of
Germany's industrial life, and that
therefore she will be compelled to
close her factories.
"Already the number of unem-
•ploped is immense. If It is not pos-
sible t� help this army of starving
people it will become a greater dan-
ger than the danger of the military
army's defeat."
DOUBLE TRA CKIN G O.P.R.
The East Will Be Similarly Treated
As the West.
Whti'le the vast enterprises of
double tracking the eixtire COa,nadian
Pacific system - is one that cannot,
in the nature of the case, be fully
realized for years, yet when it iseat
stated that 'e're will be sliortl
e
y
1,095 miles of double track between
Port Arthur and Galway, leaving
gaps of only something like , 165
miles—ons gets a realizing notion
of the work involved,of greatdist-
tante covered land Of the cour,asge
and persistence involved in this
large and notable undertaking of
.duplicating the whole system,
•which coxnpris'es some 13,000 miles
of track. Of course the ,chief con-
`sideraation is the West, whose ra-
pid d'evelopmen't called foe this 'new
;,policy; but the East will be aema-
larly treated in time, especially
the lines which connect large cen-
tres of population, and promise
bigger business. • The cost will be
so enormous as. to bafiie exact fig-
ures'at the niom'ent; the double
tracking, too, will be built in a v'a'st-
ly different way from the original
railway. which was brut through in
a -tremendous hurry. The present
double tracking will offer a finish-
ed railway, in every respect bath
as regards the weight of rails, the
strength of bridges, and the per-
fection of roadbed. Thus applied,
the new policy 'will work out for
immediate return.
Forest Fires and Fertility.
Experts state that forest soils
have lost and are losing much fer-
tility owing to foretstfires which,
doing apparently little immediate
damage, rob the soil of accumula-
tions "ofhumus,. In many sections
land is being ..cleared for fanning,
and, where suchEoresbland has not
been burned, there is a large per-
centage of vegetable ]natter which
provides oonside'rable fertility and
a good texture. Moreover, as this
soil has .a greater capacity to ab-
sorb and retain moisture, it is leas
likely tie be washed 'ara:d gullied un-
der heavy rains.
If the bride has seven gowns the
honeymoon will last at least a
week,
ED. 7.
IssuE.3i--14.
OR IXZE
AND RS11E5
CUTIC
A\DOINTi3iNT
.SO
The telling, burning, suffering and
loss of sleep caused by eczemas,
rashes .and irritations of the skin.
and scalp are at once relieved and
permanent skin health restored in
most uses by warm baths with
Cuticula Soap followed by gentle
applications of Cuticura Ointment..
Cuticure Soap and Ointment aro sold throughout
the world. A liberal sample ot each, with 32 -page
booklet on the rare and treatment ot the skin wad
scalp, Bent post -tree. Address Potter Drug dr Chyr,
Corp.. Dept, 1.2K,Boston, U. S. A.
INFANTRY W1I S BATTLES.
Puts finishing Touch to Cavalry
and Artillery Action.
Whilethere have been many dip-
cussion's' as to the relative value of
the different branches of an army
there is no doubt but that it is the
infantry that wins battles.
While it is probable the success
of a battle will depend to a. large
extent on the support of the field
artillery, it is certain that the prin-
cipal and most important ':arm is
the infantry, which ,an • practically
every case must decide the final is-
sue. The cavalry may be the fiast'bo
be' drawn into a battle, and the ar-
tillery may destroy the enemy's ar-
tillery, but a battle is never .won
until the infantry has driven back
the enemy's lines.
The preseire mode of eadvancing
for the•lepeantry is to deploy them in
a lane.'w tOx a long :interval 'between
each soldier, This, naturally, is for
the ur s p po e o tf offea:uaag a smaller
target for the enemy. It males it
more 'difficult, however, for +Ghe
leaders to keep as good control over
the menand feethat treason one
of the objects of field artillery is to
make the eneniy's troops deploy
early.
The infantry soldier is armed in
all the countries with arifle and
bayonet. The rifle may the weapon
upon which reliance is placed, the
bayo:ne't being used only as a 1a ,et
means, when in a handetoehand en -
saunter with' the enemy.
4
Are Your Feet Calloused?
Easy to remove lamed by applying Put-
nam's Corn • and Wart Extractor. '.Nils
purely vegetable remedy 'acts painlessly
and is guaranteed. Insist on "autumn's"
25e. per bottle.
.z.
RING ALBERT OF BELGIUM.
Has Most ';Ulf -to -Date ideas Con-
cerning Royalty.
King Albert of .Belgium is tall—
over •six feet—well-knit, broad of
shoulder, and in fact is a little
chubby and pink eheeked. His hair
is light golden, his feaitures straight
and manly, and 'alal Europe oaalls
him its handsomest king. Ile made
a drip around the wholeworld in
his younger, unmarried days.
It is well knoevn that Albert had
no desire to reign. Like his father,
the deaf duke, he had the tastes of
a country • gentleman of moderate
means, and no desire. to live beyond
them. Be has, in fact, a sarong
aversion to ostentation—his life
when heir to the throne was embar-
rassingly 'simple,After leis mar-
riage it was pir,po•sed to lease the
Dulte d'.&renberg's palace at Brus-
eels for him. But he could not re-•
sign himself to dive in this sumptu-
ous but far from hodneli:ke ancestral
abode.: Instead he !chose ttlie Yittle
town house of the Marquis d'Assche,
There he and Princess Elizabeth
lived a quiet sand most uneventful
lie until their ;aCeepsion in 1909.
King Albert .is credited by those;
who know him beest ass having the
inose up-to-date ideas concerning
the functions' of royalty. He is a
steady ea vicar.
The Insepa,rables,
Young Arthur had the study of
anatomy at school and had shown
interest in the eeurs'e. One .after..-
upon as he was hungrily eating a
generous—sized piece of 'bi'e•ad and
molasses, he asked his mother, 'in
grave perplexity : "Mother, I know
where iffy liver' is, but where is my
bacon 1"
Minaeifts Liniment Relieves .Neuralgia.
$EN,S.t.TIONS OF SOLDIER,
Fear is Strongest on the Eve of n'
Battle.
,Some psychological studies as to
the sensations of "the soldier who
Ifaces a shower of tbulletts: which
were written byCoal i l
o
ti
of
the Italian army, are pubblishedas
timely in Bohemia, a newspaper in
Prague.
The question as to how a soldier
feels at the height of 'battle was
put to about 2,000 men who . had
seen service in Tripoli. A.lmo:t to..
a lien, they Agreed. that the sensa-
tion experienced in battle itself
was not as strong .as the fear before
the battle. The most ex -citable mo-
ment was thatin which the first
shots were fired.
The worst experience of ,most of
the ' soldiers was having to stand
still in line of battle it was the
gaestest relief imaginable to be
ordered to run forward. 'Some said
their sensations in battle included
etrembling, tears, hair standing on
end, hoarseness, and even yawn-
ing.
.All of the replies indicated that
the soldiers were largely influenced
by the conduct of their immediate
superiors. Asked whether it was
patriotism, oath of fidelity, or tthe
thoughts of penalties to which they
were liable that led men ,forward to
their •duty,.almost•all' of the men
replied : ` `I went forward because
my lieutenant Went forward." The
officers above lieutenants were
rarely mentioned, for the leen dicl.
not oome much in contact with
them.
It has .been claimed by many his-
terians that such valiant ,soldiers
as Henry IV. and Frederick the
Great were trembling during
battles.
A lllova Scotia Case of
Interest to ill Women
Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help
to Many People.
Halifax, N.B., Dec. 15.—When inter-
viewed at her home at 194 Argyle St.,
Mrs. Haverstock was shite willing' to
talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case.
"I was always 'blue' and depressed,
felt weak, languid and utterly unfit
for any work. My stomach was so
disordered that I bad no appetite.
What I did eat disagreed. I suffered
greatly from dizziness and sick head-
ache and •feared a nervous breakdown.
Upon my druggist's recommendation
I used Dr. Hamilton's Pills..
"I feltbetter at once. Every day I:
improved. In six weeks I was a well
woman, cured completely after differ-
ent physicians had failed to help ane.
It is for this reason that I strongly
urge sufferers with stomach' or diges-
tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's
Pills."
Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the
stomach, improve digestion, strength-
en the nerves and restore debilitated
systems to health. By cleansing the
blood of long-standing impurities, by
bringing the system to a high point
of vigor, they effectually cliase away
weariness, depression and disease.
Good for young or old, for men, for
women, for children. All dealers sell
Dr Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and
Butternut.
4
Sure, ltawruss !
Credit Man—No, we can't sell
you those goods on four months'
time.
Isacs=Vy not 1 1: •gifs • you my
note.
Credit Man—But your notes do
not sell on the street.
Isaacs—Mine g.racious,no; or 'l
would go home and make notes in-
stead of eloding.
ACCEPTED NEILSON'S GIFT.
tI ,600 Chocolate Bars Going to
Valcartier.
Toronto, September 21.—William
Neilson Limited, Toronto, :offered to
supply the Government with 65,003
bars of chocolate, for use in
whatever naa.nne,r the Government
should choose .
ll e
This offer has been gratefully ac-
cepted by the Minister of Militia,
and the 'chocolate is to beshipped
to Valaartier, and `from 'then will
be reshipped with the Canadian
Commissariat to Europe. The sev-
eral hundred tnemebeers; sof the staff
of "William Neilson Limited, have
also donated one full •dray's patty ,to
the Canadian Red Cross Fund. ,
Delicately
flavoured.......
Highly
coceen-
trated.
WHY WORRY !
Choose your variety and
ask your grocer for
"Clark's".
NireeMPREIM
"ARMS FOR SALE.
R. vsr, Dd.W SON, Ninety Colborne Street,,
Toronto.
IF YOU WAN'P TQ BUY O& SpLL A
Fruit Stook, Graiu or Dairy $ arm.
write B W. Dawson, Brampton, or 8A
Colborne St., Toronto.
U. W. DAWsO1 , Colborne St., Toronto.
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE.
GOOA WnInKLY IN Llvlil TOV1'lY 1N
York County, Stationery and Boat
Business in connection. • Price- only,
14,040. Terms liberal. Wilson Publish-
ing Company, 7R.''West Adelaide Street.
Toronto.
SEED POTATOES.
NEW ERUNswICIC SEED POTATOES.-
On account of the war. this fall will
be probably the best time to buy your
Seed .potatoes for next year. Write me
for price list of Varietiee: C. Bred
Fawcett. Miner Sackville, N.B.
iSISCELLANEOUs.
OvAMER.. TUMORS. LUMPS. BTC:.
internal and external, cured with,.
out pain by our home treatment. Writs"
Ca.b finited Co iingwo d. Ont. Medical
With the' lioderu Heel.
"What on •earth' are you doing
with your shoo on the desk!"
"Tin only rubbing out a mistake.
I've lost my eraser::"
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
Changing Tinges.
"Now then; Cousin. Emma, let me
give you a ;bit off the breast."
"Yes, please, I should like to
taste that, for in my young days
they always gave it to the grown-
ups, and now they keep it for the
children, so I've always missed it."
Carterhali, Nfld.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Dear Sirs,—While in the country last
summer I was badly bitten by mosquit-
oes. - so badly that I thought L would be
disfigured for a couple of weeks.: 'I was
advised to try your Liniment to 01147
the irritation, anddid so. The effect was
more than I expected, a fewapplications
completely curing the irritation, and pre.
venting the bites from becoming sore.
MINAA.D'S (LINIMENT is also a good
article to keep off the mosquitoes.
Yours truly.
W. A. V. R..
The Way Out.
Dad—The kind of wedding you
want, my child, would •cost $2,000..
Daughter—Then what is to be
done, papa/
Dad—You will have • to be mare
ried without my consent.
Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, 'Etc.'
A Success.
"She married him to try to make
a man of him."
"Succeed?"
"Perfectly — now he 'washes
dishes, sweeps floors and makes up
beds just like a maid of all work."'
Granulated Eyelids
flu Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sae, Dust and -Moil
Eyes
� �y quickly relieved by actin ei
y� t�yeRemcd'y_NoSmartng,
Just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine iy&?
SalveinTubes25c. ForllookolibetyeFreeask•
Druggists or Marine Eye Remedy Co., Ctttcagwi
Economies.
"Why don't you try to look more
neat!"
"I'm economizing'," replied
Plodding Pete. "1 jes' heard about
de mons a railroad kin•.save bynob
Y
washing de car windows, 3'es' im-
agine, de expense dis nation could
cut out by boycottin' soap !"
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
With a view to increasing the ag,
riottltur:al: production of Tripoli the
Italian ti aver nn•ent will establish
an experiment station,
THOS. BARKER MODEL
12-GUAGE
30 INCH
DOUBLE
DARNEL SNOT GUN,
STORE PRICE 12.°°
OUR PRiCE ONLY •
%low we some to be able to sell this gun .at$.9$, will not interest yon, The pleasant fact is the
main thing; and we are goin„ to use it to got aoauainted. :Tins gust retails at 1::.00 to , i4.00 according
to locality. Bert are th details:
Double barrel take-down model, laminated steel. barrels left barrel 010,e bored, Rebound back.
action leeks, circle Hammer, nitro•Sring pin. Walnut 6nith, piettl-grit Rook, with fntisybutt plates.,
Automatic elector.
Charges prepaid 1f this ad, is sent with order
Money hack if yeti want it.
nit it lust a smote of money-saviPit values in bard wee techs, llo1,,•se , or:,.ls, blacksmiths' and faro'
°tors' supplies to cut' BIG CATALOGUE SENT. 1; tol.t. (*1 REQUEST.
THE HAiL.1L1DAY COMPANY, LIMITED.
S1►edes5t,r5 to Stanley Mills
& Co, bail Order fleet. 'ssiattlisutt't 5t S. 14 ikfAtILIttN, Chula