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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-5-5, Page 3' FROM ElliN'S OREEN ISIE BT MAIL FROMIns LAND'S SHORES. Happenings In. the Einerahl of Interest to Irish. Jaen. The wre flee persons to each horse eu an average in ireland The death has oecurred of Pat- riek 0' Connor, farmer, of Bally - Mahon, at the -age of 109 ye•are. Sir J'alut Lentargne, the distin- guished sturgeon? died •suddenly at his residence, Mission.Square, Dub - lig. Me. Patrick Murray, Poynty- pass, loranerly a national school tech, has been appointed a Ma.- gistrate for County Armagh, Maggie Topley, ,a,ged 17, was found dead in a bog -hole .near Por todown, her coat anti hat being found near by on the road side. Mr, Robert Orateey, Bactargh, Portadown,` is the owner of a Young cow which has given birth to. foua calves within ten months. A latl named Harold Clarke, five Y'oal's of see, of; Belfast, was in- stantly killed by a motor car in the Holyroad Road, Belfast. Major- jasper J. Howley, Lin- o* iheginient, son 'cif the late Colo- nel John Howley D.L., Limerick, bee been killed in 'action. Reports front all parts ,of Irelaral show that the number of recruits for the new army is, steadily grow- ing from week to week. Mr. John G. Fottrell, Crown Solicitor for, County IkIcath, has been notified that his eon, Lieut. Fottrell, 'has been kiSeed in ac- tion, Samuel Heron, sr., of Fush Haill, Newtownends, has been remanded at Belfast, eharged with the Mur- der of hi,s stepson, William Quinn. The Attorney-Genetal has ap- pointed. Mr. Serj.eant MeSweeny, K.C.post offihe proSecuter for the IVIurts'tea• circuit, in plaoe of Lord it:stied Roan. Deep regret was e.ocasioned in Belfe,st. when the newts was received that Lieutenant Walker McCurry, Royal Arm,y Medical Corps, .was killed in action. A Serious fire oecurrecl at Kelin- acurity, when the dwelling house of Mr. James MeAdister was acme pletely destroyed together with a quantity of hay ricks. TWO ehildren. dented Reilly were burned to death in Dublin through setting fire to a, bed whea pla.yang near a fire in a .gy.p.sy's tent at Dolphin's Barra The reoruiti:ng in Cork and Mayo is .deseribed as being exceptionally good, over fomr thousand men hay - mg .joined the army since the out- break of,athe war: A boy Isamed. T. Nolan had two fingers blown off in Dublin by the explosion of a blank cartridge which be found on. the road and bee Iticcat.o pick with a pin. Sir Eclivaad Carson has stated that up to the end of February the Proyinee of Ulster has esta,blished •32,0a0 reoruits to the militia out of a population of 1,580,000. Owing tp the high picas charged for coal to the Dublin poor, the Looal Gavernment Board. Iha,ve pre- pared a, cheap scale for .certain peo- • ple earning less than $5 pea week. pie Dublin Cosporation decided to remove the name of Dr. Kano Meyer from the roil of freemen of the eity. The motion gave rise to a ' prolonged and at times angry dis- cussion. The deatlh has occurred at Bel- fast of Mir. W. T. Wright, 'live stock rep,resernta,tive in Belfast of the Lancashire and Yorkshire L. & N. IV. and Midland Railway Com- panies. A man named Beland was fined $500 at Belfast for hawing in his possession over 82 lbs, of :tobacco and ,ailmost 2 lbs. of cigars:, which he offe-red to sell to a Custonus, oft - Charles Lawler was fined $150 at Dublin i0' having in his possession revolvers for sale. Thirty-one re- volvere, -ben automatio pistols and many .other weapons were oanfis- °abed. • The diminishing hand of axiti- recruiting agents in Ireland wee added to a,t Dundalk when Thos. WalSh, of E.nnisoortly • was sen- tenced to three months hard labor fosa-obstructing, reeruiting. The a:tea:Imes. Awoet 'and Le,etric of the Cork Stearns,hip 0o. were pursued by German submarines, which on,13r suspended the chaise e when the vessel rea,clied, :Dutch ter- ritorial waters. At a, public meeting held in, Dro- gleclit the Mayor made a presentee tioh to Lanee-Corporal Kenney, V. C., in recognition of thedas,tisi- guished bravery shown by hien at Ypres when he won the Victoria Cross, ,,,; • A iseeimiting party of the val. )3attalion Royal Iri.sdi Fusiliers re- cently visited Portadown ander the command of Lieutenant D. B. Ta.rleenoch, Otimine, and Second lieutenant Kingbolt, and were aid - corded a hearty weloome. Ex -Sergeant H. McKee) Who re- tired from the Belfast R.I.O. in Novels:their float has now b.een ap- pointed quartermaster sergeant and chief elerk of the regiment, 166 Batt, 11,IdE1., now stationed at Brewnton Hand Lurgan. • NEW STRENGTH IN THE SPRING ,••••••• Nature Needs Aki in -Maki New Dload Lk the ,spring the system needs teak. To he healthy you mast ha new' blood, just as the' treea rn home new ,mp 0‘ renew their vib ity. Nature demands it, and wi out this new blood you will f weak and languid, You may :hat twinges of rheumatism or the shit stabbing pains of asetilralgia. there alre, disfiguring • pimples eruptions on the :skin. in oth • eases, there is merely a feeling tiredness ,and a. variable appetit Any of theee are signs that t blood is out of oadera-that the door life. of winter has lessen, your vitality. What you need spring is ,a tonic medicine to p you right, and in all the world medicine there is no tonic ea equal 'Dr. Williams' Pialc Pili These pills actually make new rie red blood' -.your greatest need spring. TlIsio new blood drives ot the seeds of disease and make easily ti,r4,61 MOD, women and chi dren hrigtht, active and stron Miss Edith Broome:au, Savona, sualsil—"I was ao pale lae ghost, :suffered front heada.ehee,, vere palpitation of the heart at th slightest exertion. I had little o no appetite and seemed to he drift ing into a decline. I was atten ing School in Vanoouver a the tints, and the doctor advised m to stop. I did so and took hi treatment for some time, but did not 'help mte'in the least. Ifpo, the aciyiee of a friend I began tak ing Dr. Williams' Pink Palo, and i a very 'short time they gave rit, hack complete health-, and enable me to resume my studies. I hav enjoyed the best of health since and owe it all to Dr. William's Pink These Pills are sold by all medi eine dealers or can be had by mai at 50 cents a box or six boxes fo $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi eine Co., Brookville, Ont. VOYAGE IN AN AIR SHIP. How It Feels to be in a Zeppelin Raid. ng , let the eel ve rp an ca. er of e. he, cd in. ut of 9, in it B A correspondent of. the Da,gnee Ryheder reoeived permission front the Geema,n military authorities to go aboard a Zeppelin during et re- cent raid, and he has sent a graphic description to his paper. He does not mention names of towns or cities which were bombarded by the Zeppelin, as he was sworn to se- crecy in. this regard. "A voyage in a Zeppelin while on a raid over the enemy's country is never to he forgotten , " he. writes in the Da,gnee Rvhecler. "Aside from the nerve destroying excite- ment of the occasion, •the most proneunoed expeidenee Of the voy- age is the intense hold that envel- ops the airship like a cake of ice in its flight through the 'black night: No one ,can realize who has not ex- perienced it just what this means. We have ne, lights and are not even periaitted to smoke in order to re- lieve the monotony or the uncanny night. The roaring of the North Sea be- low us reaches ,our ears while above us the 'star decked, .sky, We get the impression that the airship is like some extinguished star roaming &rough black, cold space. We do not talk; somehow :no, one cares to talk. We remain silent. The air breaks over the bow of •the ship like the waves "seem to penetrate our very marrow. All is dark below us. Presently the faint:lights of a village are dis- cernible, and then :the brighter il- lumination of a city conies in sight. We feel like a bird of prey that is about to pollee& down upon dts enemy. • • •, We get ready to drop out- boarib.s as the city lights are almost anclee us. The 'order is given. We Gee here and there a, sharp white flame as the ib.ornibs. strike, and from. the depth below us presently is heard the faint rear • of the explosion sounding to me like the cry of so -me damned ,soul. - For .a, short time the Zeppelin rises, then it falls again, and we re -bun on our journey, the intense cold again enveloping us. CROSS SICKLY' BABIES Mrs. Chas, E. White, Waterford, N.S., writes :—"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for both, my babies and find thern-excellent. My baby girl was erase and sickly, but after giving her the Tablet'sshe beeame strong, healthy and happy." Baby's Own Tablets never fad to make sickly ohildrest weli .a,nal the mother can give them to her children with absolute safety. May aure guanine. teed by at, government analyst to he free from injurious drugs. The Tab- lets are ,sold by medicine dealers tar by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brock - Out, . • "I don't know how to take this thicken apart," declared the bride. coming down here, we tack- led a 'motor saccessfully," said the young husband. "We ought to be able to handle a small job like this. Where's gle book of inatruetionis?" • A Brave Engiishwontan• Miss Muriell.• Thompson, of th .e First Aid Nursing Yecana.nry Corps, has been personally :deco- rated by King Albert with the Order of Leopold IL for bravery in the field in rescuing wounded from trenches under heavy 'shell fire. • SOME HISTORIC 'SWIMS. Byron's Feat in the Dardanelles— Other. Bard Swintmers. The forcing of the Dardanelles has elicited many refere.nces to By - rode famous swim from the Euro- pean shore to the Asiatic. This was the route taken not only by his own .Don Juan, but by all ,others known up to the first decade of the nineteerth century to, have per- formed the feat. Chief among these in Byron's day was .a, Neapolitan and a yosing Jew. Each of these, like Byron hireself, with his com.panion Eken • head,- were watche.d. the whole time by hundreds of spectators; whose interest in the matter had beea stimulated bY a controvers:v ,a.bout the strength and the exact direc- tion of the. tides. As it was, the force the stream m,ade st.raiglit- forward progress impo,ssible, and exten-ded a passage of one mile to something between three and four, Capt. Bathurst, of a frigate then 13ring in the G-oklen Horn, with a companion named Turner, had both tried to follow Le ab ex- act tpurse from Abydos ,Sestos, only to meet with repeated failures. No doubt, therefore, :says the West- minster Gazette, they oo nvinced themselves that they would ha,' done be-tter to. steer ;the poet's course.; this, however, if somewhat the easier, :was ,shown by' H011hause to be beset by. many ,serious risks. bo One would hardly believe it pos- sible that the thermometer used fear the regulating of the heat of a sick roam could be the very cause of the poisoning and .alamost the death of the persona sleeping in it; but a case has recently some light \vhicli should sound a tote if warn- ing. It is vouched for on the high- est medical authoaity. BY accident •& thermometer • had been left lyingup Do. the heatingap- Paratiis of a night nursery, and the mercury rose to snef i. degfee' that it ,burst the glass of the thermo- meter, and the fumes were breath- edh'y a boaple of children who were. si eeping in he ' roo in , Happily, , thy we discovered in time, al- though Severe symptoms had set in. The doctor WU able to trace the cause.• It Was a ease of rifercurial poisoning, and prompt1/ applied remedies juat eaved the lives of the children. Of these Byron made light, saying that he had been fully trained to overtone them by the far more ex- hausting and perilous swimming of the Tagus. Byron, of cause, is not alone among British bards in his natatory prowess. The tradi- tion of Shakespeare's doings in the Avon should perhaps be rejected. His contemporary, Spenser, it is circumstantially attested, showed himself perfectly •at home on and under the river Lee when, in 1580, secretary to the Lord Deputy de Wilton. •Shelly, as a boy, in the ,south of England, circuannavigate,d in his morning dip the pond covering •a hundred acres in the park of Field Palace; he .surpassed this perform- ance, however, in salt water be- tweeu Bournemouth and Swanage. But his literary •champion of the art during- this period was the gi- gantic john Wilson ("Christopher North"). To him the water formed as mach his element as the land. Windermere and Loch Lomond he seldom etook a header in without inaking th complete oompas,s of them andin his Magdalen days, without on.ee touchiag the shore, he did about a third of the distance from Oxford to Westminster. In his Balliol clays A. C. Swinburne never attempted to rival add, but, in company with his contemporaries, John Nichol and G. R. Lake, both Snell exhibitioners, •acquitted him- self withglistinetion on the reaches between Iffley end Nuneham. Beware the Thermometer! They Helped Him and gi$ Mend THAT 15 WHY 11. A. CLARK REC 0 M MEN DS DODO '5 KIONET PILLS. Western Man TellS Why Doild's MidneY Pills Are So Popular on the. Prairies, Homeglen, Alberta., May ard (Special).—Just why Dodd'e Kid- ney Pille tare so popular on the praiaiea is shown. :the 'statement of Mr. H. A. •Clark, a well-known resident of tide plaee... "Since I came West," Mr, Clark states, "I was often troubled with my est/mach aed back. Maelly. I 'decided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills and before I Thad taken mere than half a box I was eo, much be:matted that I rec,oramended them to a friend. Ho also found them a. benefit. I am still taking Dodd'o Kiduey Pills, I would not be without them." In new oountries bad water is one of the difficulties settlers have to fight and bad- makes its fills!) attack ,on -the Iddasegre To resist this attack the Kidneys must be stimulated and ,strengthened. In other words the Kidneys need Dodd's Kicin•ey Pills. By giving the Kidneys the help they need people get new health, and DockPe, Kidney Pills add to their popularity. 14 • KNITTING NEURITIS. Aihnent Which Slightly Resembles Writer's Cramp, Many women since the war have taken to knitting with a vigor that knows no bounds. Unfortunately -their zeal has produced a, definite malady whicib may be cornp,ared with tennis elbow or writer's Irn one single c,ountry village where the knitting fever ran very high thr-ee women 'are suffering in -.various degrees from what is known as "knitting neuritis." It affects the upper anni and sh,oultler rather than the fingers, and Deems -to affect only those. who knit with difficulty, having not practiced the art in their youth. It is said that the English method of knitting, which is equally popu- la,r in Engla,nd as the Geranan method, has a greater tenclemcy to produce this ,a,ffeetion. "When any untrained set of mus- cles is suddenly oalled upon to re- peat in,definitely a. complex and uu- a,ccustonied sequence of move- ments," a London physician said recently, "a spasmodic paralysis is very likely to develop. In knitting neutitis the trouble begins with the worker feeling that the usual writ and finger movements can- not be followed out with tlheir .cus- ternary ease. Later the muscles get stiff, and finally, in the later stage, develop a spasmodic orarap as soon as the knitting needles are taken into the fingers. A peculiar cha,racteristk of the ailment is that while the fingers are thus affected when any attempt is made to knit, there is no'interferenoe with other t varieties of finger Movement. 1 "Ilhe only treatment is to give up 1 knitting indefinitely. Sometimes 1 after a .couple of months complete I rest one can begin again. In other cases a year or more of abstention is neee,ssary, otherwise the trouble recurs immediately.'' a n. THOUGHTS ON MISTAKES. We 'may make mistake iD trying to help other's, bat what pardonable mistakes they aro! The man who .does things makes mistakes, but he /sever makes the greatest mistake .of all, &lug no- thing, Mistakes are often the first let- ters in the lessons of life, We ea.n make strong words out of them, if we will, When you make a mistake do not loOk back at it long. Take the reas- on of the thing- into your mind; then look forward.' It. is foolish to try to awe our mistake; in the first place, it can- not be done very long; and if it could it would only :add •a second mistake to the first. It is a mistake to pay no attention to the raistakes of others, nor try to help them out of thean. Aiding others to be etrong is the best way strengthen ourselves. One of the mistakes 'that poisons home life is the unwillinguese yield ia unimportant trifle's. The deeire alway,,s to have one's owe way is far from the way of life, • LE we do not look ahead and plan our life we shall sorne day realize our great mistake. A life 'without a plan is as erazy an affair as a house without a, plan for its build- ing. It is not our mistakes that cause us to fail, but only a wrong atti- tude toward our mistakes. The Ohiriese say, "Oar greatest ,giory is not in. never failing, but in. rising every time we Magic "Nerviline" • Ends Stiff Neck, Lumbago Any Curable Muscular or Joint Pain is Instantly Relieved by Nerviline. GET TRIAL BOTTLE TO -DAY You don't have to wait all day to get the kink out of a stiff nec1 . if you rub on Nerviline. And you don't need to go around complaining about lum- bago any more. You can rub such things away very quickly with Nervi - line. It's the grandest. liniment, the quickest to penetrate, the speediest to ease muscular pain of any kind. One twenty-five cent trial bottle of Nerviline will cure any attack of lum- bago or lame back. This has been proved a thousand times just as it was in the case of Mrs. D. 3. Grayden, of Caledonia, who writes:— "I wouldn't think of going to bed with- out knowing we had Nerviline in the house. I have used it for twenty odd years and appreciate its value as a family remedy more and more every day. If any of the children. gets a stiff neck, Nerviline, cures quickly. If it is, earache, toothache, cold on the chest, sore throat, Nerviline is always my standby. My husband once cured hinaself of a frightful attack of lum- bago by Nerviline, and for a hundred ailments that turn up in a large fam- ily Nerviline is by far the best thing to have about you." Army Precedence. In a march -past, what British regiraent would march at the head of the traops!? The Household Cav- alry most people would say. No; he Royal Her -se Artillery, that gal - ant regiment whose deeds certain - y entitle it to take the "right of hie,' though for gallantry it is •eally difficult to say which regi- ment tomes first. . After them oome the Life Guards, Horse Guards, and the other oases lry re-giments, &wording to, their umbers. The Royal Artillery take precedence of the Royal Engineers, and even of the Foot Guards, which head the infantry of the line. These come in the order they a,p- pear in the Army List, the only exception being the Rifle Brigade, which eomes after the Argyll and Su the r I and Highlanders. Wonderful. • Mr. Craig was reading. the even- ing paper while his wife sat by knit. ting. "Just listen to this, Debby," he said. ''It says here that more than 5,000 eleplia,ntte a year go to •make our piano keys." 'Gracious," • cried the wife. Ain't it wonderful, Dan, what some animals can be •traine-d to lidinard,s Idnintent Luinberms:n/s rriend Makes a Difference. IN A. SHADOW . --- Tea Drinker Feared Paralysis. Steady use of either tea, or eOffee often produoe,s alarming symptoms', as the poison (caffeine) ,contained in these here -rages acts with more potency in some persons than in others. "I was never a coffe-e. drinker," writes St lady, "but a, tea drinker. I was very nervous bad frequent spelle of sick heaclLhe and heart traable, and was subject at times: to severe attacks ,of "No end of sleepless nights— would have spells, at night when my right ,sicle avotrld get numb ,ancl tin- gle like a thaueancll needles were pricking my flesh. At times I could hardly put my tongue, out of my moutth. and my right eye and ear were .affected. "Me doctors 'telt me to quit using te-a, but I thought I oould not live without. it—that it was my only stay. I had been a tee, drinker for twenty-five years; Was under the do.etor's care for fifteen. • • "About .six months ago, -I finally quit tea, and ,ocimmeadoetleto drink Poston. "I have never hard- 900.69ell of riick-he.a,dachee sin-ce and only o-ne ght attack of bilious *olio. Have quit having biose numb ,apells alt night, .sleep well 'and my heart is getting stronger :all the time." Name given by Canadian P.00tatin C,o' , Windiscass. Ont. 'Bead "The Ro.ed Wellville," in pkgs. Peet= cohles in two forms: Poston Cereal—the original form --rang he well .boiled. lac and 25c psokagesi.;'• '" 'hats nk'Restunia soluble pow- der—dis,salves quickly in at .cup of hot waiter and, with 'cream and ski- gart., Makes a deliciotts beverage instantly. SOc .and 50c tins. Roth kiatio are equally deacietis and oost :about the iseane.pe.r cep, "There's a Reason," for Postum. -dld by Or.o.eers, (1 "There is no Sadder sighit axle,' said the ,Socialist erator, "than the lab-orer's .empty dinner pail." e "Shure!" said a man in tale crowd, "thot all dcpinds on whe- ther it's irapty before th' nein hour or Xeep lifinard's Liniment in the house. "I've been reading an article on electricity, John," said a :woman to her husband, aS she laid down a eopy of a technical newspaper she had been persuing, end looked over her glasses at her better half. "And it appears that before long we'll be able to get, pretty :well everything 'we w.ant just by towelling a. ba- ton." "It wiui Deer pay ;here," growled the husband, "You would never the able to get anything in that 'way." "Why not, johnd" ask- ed 'his 'wife, the Ilght of battle'flah ing in her eyes. "Beettuse nothing' en earth would ever :make You toneh a baton, Look at my shirt." ED. 7. ISSUE 10-15. , . • • flow a Sick Woman Can Regain 1100,111 READ TI -11S VERY CAREF141.1..Y, "For years I was thin aud delicate, 1 lost celor and was easily tired; yellow pallor, pimples and blotches o my face were net Only mortifying My feelings, but because 1 thought m skin Would never look nice again grew deepoedent, Then, zny appoti failed. I grew very weak. Variou remedies, pills, tonics and tablets tried without perrrumeat benefit, visit to my sister put into My hand a box of Dr, Ilatailion's Pills. Sis Placed reliance upon them and not that they nave made inc a well woma would not be without them whateve they might cost. 1 found Dr, liami ton's Pills by their mild yet searchin action very suitable to the cielicat character of a woman's nature. The never once griped me, yet they estab lished regularity. My appetite gre keen—ray blood red and pure--heav rings under my eyes disappeared an to -day MT Skirl is as clear and un wrinkled as when I was a girl. Di Hamilton's Pills did it all," The above straightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of a well- known miller in Etogersvulie, is proof sufficient that Dr Hamilton's. Pills, are a. wonderful woman's medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Harailtaa's, 25c. per box. All. dealers or The Catarrh - ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. World's Wa.ste. seen POTATOES, •ARfty xitaot potineett PolearoNS. saseialir aelected gi,na Gamortompn4 AU0POnteci for seed. Only •limitod riutortaty, Vriee, one Donee per bushel f.o,b„ BraMp. ton. Also iloimoiSsetir's Pride and N4NIA' iSnow, two Qxcellout new potntoes, Two Dollars per- 414.1411.21. Special far large quantity, Cash Must aoeom' party il1 order,. 1 W, Dawoon. lizarr19* 508. 51 NEWSPAFfilS FOR SALE. . to I --- '„ DRQPIT-WIAJCI,NC4 NEWF AND ,T013 ,JL n 41,1 nose ter -80 in good Ontario towns. .1) The most useful and interesting AC te! bueineesee Full information on. applies,. S q'941stloadlerliiirr $rubli511111 CQD1Pli'llY 73 • e Toronto. A g PON! BT,T103? OR,P1'N4TONS.--11q1974111101 , • Vitoria's inget shows, 3Gunrantoe4 zero • V weather lgwere,Baby S2.00. Bot, • n tins, halPprice, oattloy, r lire,ston, Ont, 1- „. ZalESCItlia,a.TTEDITS. e CANCER, Tomo:as, Luxes, wad., , Y ang. extenal, cutreured with-. us bl:iforil.e roa%ta°rIV!112.1.1,Int,',IvrZill Co,, Limited, Collingwood, Ont. • araggliagerd6faBgEllika2EMEisaiscstim BUFF ORPINOTOlia. We. are the ixiost wasteful people inthe world, an American once said of the English, The Americans are very keen on waste, for they Ina,ke money from it. The humble "junk” business, as they eall it, has prospered in America as in no other place, and this snapping up of unconsidered trifles has made many an American fortune. In Boston lives a dealer who has accumulated more than a million dollars, while several of his competitors couid sign big cheques. On.e Philadelphian deal. er has half a. million invested in buildings alone. Scattered over the State of New Jersey are a good dozen wealthy men who have made their money out of what others have thrown away. One of those New • Jersey dealers recently bought the greatest "lot" of junk ever purchased in that State—namely, the olc.1 iron anti refuse which the Frenoh aban- doned at Panama.. The origiaal cost of that material was about a million dollars. What sum the junk dealer paid for it is, of course, not known, and what lie made out ,of the deal no one dared to estimate. Lady Not Thrown In. Clueltomer (looking at auto). -- What I The lamps not included in the advertised price eS the ma- chine? But the Tamps are shown in tlhe illustration. Salesman—My dear sir, so is a very beautiful woman, but we're not giving the lady with eaeli car. Corns APPli°d 5 Seconds Cured f.r.re, blistering feet corts-plisched toes can be cured Quick byPutnarna Ex- tractor in 24 hours. "Putnam's" soothes away that drawing pain, eases hamm- y, makes the feet feel good at once. Get a 25e. bottle of "Putaam'a to -day. Two. neighbors had a long litiga- tion about a srmalI spring, which they both. elaimed. The judge. wearied out with the case, at last said. "What is the use of making so nturh fuss ab -out a little water V "Your honer will see the serious nature of the case," replied: one of the lawyers, "when I irdorm you that both are milkmen." "MY 140 ROBE OANORUFF, DANDRUCURE Will stop your falling hair, cure the itching, and malts your hair glossy and emootki. Sample enough for 3 days, nostim14, 15 cents* 604 Tradsrs Bank Bldg., Toronto, Ont. 111111/4Ciai TO NDA' ZORON, ECRALOOkt T1916 Thoughtful of Pam: Mr. Manley—Well, my dear, I've had any lite insured for five thous- and dollars. Mrs. Manley—How very sensible of you! New I shan't have to keep telling you to be so careful every place you go. Ask for TitInard's Ana take no other. EsrciudingI warships, 462 vessels of 1,627,316 tons -gross were under • co-nstruction in the United King- dom at the end of the year 1914. Minard's Liniment Co., Lim1t4d. Dear Sirs,—Your MINARD'S LIN- IMENT is our remedy for sore throat, colds and all ordinary ailments. It never fails to relieve and cure promptly. CHAS. WHOOTEN. Port Mulgrave 4:cording to Father. Little Charlie had been naughty, and was now 'doing penance in the c o re e r. "1 .cain't help being- rionglity," he , said, in a, thoughtfully and voke. "I never heard of any b•uy • being p erf cot—exc.ept on e . " "Who was that?" asked mother, trying to hide her smiles. "Farver—when he was little," cone the crushiag retort. YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try bInrine Rye Remedy tor Red. weak, Watery Byea and Granulated Byalids; No Smarting.-- jUat Bye Oonaforc.../Writo for Rook of the Eye bymatlEree. /aurino Eye Remedy Co., Chieago. --- Potatoes to the value of two and . a half millione sterling are import.: eel into the United Kingdom every year. 23dinard's Liniment used- by Physicians. EFIE ▪ •▪ •• ^ ir• Canoes5 Stiffev otoi; 30,,tat, 1 THE PETERBOROUGH LINE, If any canoe can give you satisfaction, it is a "PETERBOROUGH." Always and ever the acme of service, model, strength and fin- ish. Over fifty styles and sizes. Write for catalogue. The latest canoe is the Peterborough canvas covered. Ask for illustrated folder. Skiffs for the popular Outboard Motors. Power Launches, all sizes and pow- ers. •, Get folders telling all about these, THE PETERBOROUGH CANDE compAnv, LIMITEP, PETERBOROUGH, ONT. BPSIEMSMEBBIeeteuttaeleersogen4MIX.Mlenata===%W ..anommvre..262.4/1.erm..remmtexpetraitvalr•rttr.er.,,..cr..s. . assavasasseeeee. ft•••. ,P1; • • SSIPS •-•0.0.asseesasseese.... '112 ‘‘Overstern" V Bottom $55 .0 .Motor. Boat, . . Freight trepaid to any Railway Station in Ontario." Lealgth, Is 'Beam a Ft. 9 In., Depth -1 Pt, 6 'In, '.A.3ir MOTOR FITS. , • SPeoldeation No, SD giving engine PrICOS OD PeclUOEttv Get our quotations Peneteag Line CAMMreiftl and Pleasure LattneheaIow 6raTt al la; d C. G aDnL° eEs 140AT COE, LIMITED PENETANG),CAN, '1. • ' :rah, • • es 4-••