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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-2-17, Page 3EMPTY SCHOOLS TON C TREATMENT IN ENGLAND FOR THE STOMACH ERE IS SHOWN THE TRAGEDY OF WAIL. The Modern Method is Most Sue- cessfui in. Treating %ritdi- ge;tian The Students ,Have Gone Forth to The old-fashioned method of treat - in indigestion and stomach troubles. Fight the Battles of are being discarded, The trouble Liberty. with the .old-fashioned method was • that when the treatment was stopped The actual battle line in this great the trouble returned i to n an agga a` at - struggle is scarcely 100 miles away, ed form. The modern method of cur'.. but in London one gets little touch ing°indigestion andother stomach: ' tli real tragedy of •t writes Phili ra a o g y 3 1 p ; troubles is to'tone up the stolriaciz to IH. Patchin, in the Chicago Herald.. `' do nature's work. Every step toward In the streets there are anany sol recovery is a step gained, not to be Biers, often one sees wounded men -lost again. The recovery of the ap- strolling ' about ,in the loose blue petite, the disappearance of pain; the hospital uniforms • eiith flaming red absence of gas,•.• -are ail steps on the cravats or beingdriven about in p marl. to health that :.those who have motor cars or carriages by kind wo- tried the • tonic treatment remember me, but these men of battle are a distinctly, . Dr. • Williams' Pink Pills jolly lot and they do not bring home are a blood -builder, tonic medicine the tragedy of it all. every constituent of which is helpful . England suffers, but her wounds in buildingup the digestive orggans , and is therefore the .very best remedy for chronic cases of stomach trouble. Thousands of cases like the following prove how successful this treatment is:—Miss Amy Browning, Cornith, Ont., says:—"I have found such great benefit from Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that I would be ungrateful if I did not publicaly say a good word in their favor. I was badly run down: and my stomach was in a very bad condition. All food distressed rhe, and*. left me .disinclined to. eat• I suffered from nausea and dizziness and frequent sick headache, and this was further aggravated by pains in the back and sides. I was in this condition for several years, and although I had in England's numerous wars—in got medicine from several doctors it Flanders, in the near east, Africa,i did not help me. Then I heard of Dr. Mesopotamia. !Williams' Pink. Pills and began taking • It is like an American Universitythem. I am glad to say that they soon in summer—deserted; bttt with a helped me, and now I am as well as difference. There are enough stu- ever; can eat all kinds of food with dents and instructors left to make relish, and have not an ache or pain." the thing mare poignant, to suggest You can get these Pills through any Hate's house, he had to wait hungrily You think you know something /professions listed are: Men of letters, ' what was and what ought to be,and dealer in medicine ormail,post hour after hour for his morning meal. about animals, eh? Well, let us pub g2; artists, 53; Catholic clergy, 28; gd e r m by When Cecil Rhodes eventually got up, your'knowledge to a few simple tests. Protestants 3, architects 20• actors what really is. paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes' ' The presence of the few, the ab- for $2.50 from The Dr. 'Williams Medi it was to find every tree in the garden Frogs, to begin with. Can they and singers, 18; doctors, 13; Diplo- are not open ones, like those of Bel- gium. But there tire evidences of what it all means and bow vital it is. A few days ago I was taken to Cambridge University by a don of one of the colleges there. There the truth came home. There was the evidence --the proof of what England was doing. Town is Deserted. Beautiful Cambridge! The ancient cradle of British learning is deserted. Streets, courts, and buildings that should be echoing the glad ring of college life are empty. The thou- sands of young Britons who should be there are gone, departed to the four quarters of the Globe, to fight POLITE PERSONALITIES. Genial Gossip About Some Well- Known :People. A POWERFUL LAMP. Will Likely Be Used on the Battle- field of Europe. General ,Smith'Dorian is called ( Edison's latest lamp, is perhaps a bit «Smithy" by his Soldiers. too bulky for use in the ordinary Prance Arthur of Connaught is home, but it is calculated to be very named after the Duke of Wellington. popular on the battlefield of Europe, How many Cabinet Ministers have for it confesses to harboring 8,000,090 been down a coal -mine? At least, candle power. one, Mr, McKenna, when he was Every known means has been em- Horne Secretary, descended one of the pioyed by the warring nations to turn pits at the Atherton Collieries in order night into day. Skyrockets, floating to inspect the arrangements for the white lights, flares and immense safety and convenience of miners, ; searchlights have been used to guard Ills mind still directed on war ln- against surprise, In many cases the ventions, Sig Hiram Maxim, in his searchlights used were so bulky that South` London experimental workshop, they had to be transported on heavy is an interesting figure. Like all in- wagons, together with large gener- ventors, he has had a lot to put up ators of electricity, The roads were with. Twenty years ago, when he not built to stand much heavy traffic began experimenting with flying- and often the lights were lost when machines, people declared that his re- they became mired. putation was ruined for life, as he 1 Edison has employed a small .and was essaying the impossible. I simple carriage, for the transporting When Lord Il'aldane was at the of his 'lamp. It is supplied with elec- tricity from his famous unproved storage batteries. These batteries will give the lamp a greater power than that now boasted by any of the searchlights in use in the English and French armies, It is claimed that the new lamp is light enough to be car- ried aloft in an airship. , w Dr. Jackson's Roman Meal Pan. War Office he was "chipped" about the number of recruits for the Regular Army, otherwise qualified, whowere rejected for cause of defective teeth. His answer was that he would be sor- ry to undertake the daily care of the teeth of the Army. In the present war dentists are kept working seven days a week to get intending recruits' teeth right. Vedrines, the amazing' French Avi- ator, is achieving fine things against. the Germans, and small wonder, for no passion is stronger in him than hatred of the Huns. This hatred is nothing new; he felt it long before the war. Once, when the world was at peace, Veldrines dew over German territory. "And," he says, "when I was a few kilometers up I looked cakes a Digestible Delicacy. A Million otbejs behind. the pat, cleanest, most nu- tritious of all cereal foods••-- Shredded W heat They have tested it and found it best for youngsters, best for grown-ups—a food to work on, to play on, to think on. Contains the life of the wheat in a digestible form—puts gimp and ginger into the Jaded body. Delicious for breakfast with milk or cream or for any meal. Made in Canada. 55 FRENCH GENERALS KILLED PLOSIVES KILL Awful Effects of t French Shrapnel Shells. It will be recalled that an the mor row of the battle of the Marne re- turned combatants related strange stories of the aspect of certain Ger- man unwounded corpses, says London Tit -Bits. Death as been so instan- taneous that the bodies remained in a lifelike .posture, some shouldering a rifle, others pipe in mouth. In a communication made to the Academy of Medicine, M, Rene Arnnoux asserts that the phenomena was due to the efficacy of the French explosives.. Within a 15 -yard radius of the point where the shell explodes the displace- meat of the air is so intense as to destroy the equilibrium of pressure on the interior and exterior of the human body. The gas contained in the blood is thus liberated, causes a distension of the blood vessels and arteries, and, ultimately bursting those organs, in- duces sudden death. This argument is confirmed by the state of the bodies, whieh often showed the heart and liver greatly distended and nu- merous internal hemorrhages. �When tieC rave List of Paris Notables on Honor Roll of Professional Men. Tout Paris which is a combined Yawned for Hi French Blue Book and directory, gives —_ in its 1916 edition, just issued, a list -- of Paris notables who have "died for and unlike ordinary pancakes are a their country." In this list are names rosily valuable food. Because of their well known in polatles, literature granular character they will not disorder I science, the arts, the bar and high ly fed to a babe. Roman Meal also roll call, as it is called, totals 3,084 makes most delicious porridge, gemns, • digestion or ferment. They may be safe- officials and officers of the army, The muffins,' steam puddings, bread, eta Ani persons, all of whom.° names are clown upon Germany, and -spat upon may be eaten hot without fear or Bis her—nott All i h b once, but three times!" Fess. Haar s ett - printed in bold -face type Positively .relieve constipation or money The list Mr. Rudyard Ki 1 A er than meat and 4 honori t isbased on informa- p mg, is a greatrefunded. t your grocers 10 and as tion furnished by the families of the Imperialist, and often "talked Empire" cents a package. victims. It includes the names of 55 with his old friends, Cecil Rhodes, 1n BITS ABOUT BEASTS 44— generals, 91 colonels and 155 lieu - former days. He differed from his friend, however, in being an early riser, and one morning when he was They All have Their Own Little Pe - staying at the South African mag- culiarities. tenant -colonels. Among the profes- sions the civil engineers had the larg- est number of dead, totalling 133. The lawyers came next with 110. Other sense- of the many—it strikes one cine Co., Brockville, Ont. with dreadful force. ,s - In all Cambridge University, in DEARTH OF SERVANTS. the various colleges that make up the whole, there should be 4,000 London Girls Forsake Domestic Work undergraduates. There are 600. The For Places Vacated by Men. rest of these boys, many of them barely of military age, are in khaki. ~ Many of them are dead. As these months of war time pass one cannot fail to notice how women in London are steadily giving up the Buildings Are Quaint. domestic side of life, the sphere of, On this day I had visited half a work to which they are particularly 'dozen of the 'fen -lolls colleges of well suited, and in ever increasing Cambridge—Corpus, Trinity, Christ's, ' numbers are seeking employment Jesus', King's -beautiful old world along totally different limes, says a places, entrancing in their antiquity, .along letter, splendid in their architecture, but j The problems of dolnestic service best in their atmosphere of British' become more acute every day. Wages breeding—ofthings clean and fine !axe raised, every inducement is of - And as we walked on from one fered, but the women and -girls de - place to another, in grandeur mixed liberately shun such posts. The with antiquity and quaintness, the dearth of servants is a question place was empty. No punts on the that requires looking into, and one Cam, no undergraduates strolling finds that on all sides girls are leav- about—athletic fields showing dis-ing good homes, where they are well use. We went into the buildings— l paid, well fed and welt housed, to empty. Gate porters let us in here take positions that, though apparent - and there. They were the only people . ly attractive, -really entail far harder we saw. Windows closed everywhere ' work and malty disadvantages. and everywhere silence. -- What classes there are are sparse HOW YOU MAY THROW in numbers. One of the masters of AWAY YOUR GLASSES a leading college said the other day that he has one lecture where, his class consists of a solitary student, thein. If you are one of these unrortun- and he is an Indian. But the lecture ates. then .these glasses may be ruining goes on, this master solemnly de -Your sands who year thesep"windo vs' livering it to his single student. may prove for theniselves that they can r 4.4 dispense with glasses if they will get .'y' WAR MACHINE IS GROWING. the following prescription filled at oace: Go to any active drug store and get a The statement is made that thousands wear eyeglasses who do not really need bottle of Bon -Onto tablets; fill a two- England's war -machine is mount- ounce bottle with warm water and drop i B -C) to tablet ZVith this harm - plastered with the legend: I want breathe with their mouths shut? uratic Corps, 8; sculptors, 10; com- • Il —my—breakfast—Kipling." STORMY WEATHER HARD ON BABY The stormy, blustery weather which we have during February and March can't But they- have a thin mem- Stopped in Time. Certainly they can. As a matter of posers and musicians, 4; the Institute fact, they always do. If they kept of France, 1; judges, 1; inspectors of their mouths open, they would suf- , finance, '7; notaries, 5; and brokers, focate. 2. The. select clubs of all kinds in Next, hares. When do they Close ! Paris lost a total of 336, including a their eyes? Answer, never. You tnulnber of titled persons, see, they havn'b any eyelids, so they i a' is extremely hard on children. Con- bran° which performs the service of "Yes," said the young singer, com- moner to keep them in the house,, plaeently, "I had a great reception p Aregood swimmers? No—` ditions. make it necessary for the eyelids when they. are asleep. They are often confined to over -heat- pigs goo w m s . after my song last night. The au- dlventilated zooms and catch shocking bad! Their forelegs are the ; dience shouted `Fine! Fine!"' ! ed, badly trouble, being xt_ too closely under' , „' colds which racks their whole'usystem. them for aaquatic sports, I "Good thing you didn't sing again. ,Tc, guard against this a box of Baby's p , said the cynic. What is the color of a horses eye- i i.Whyx what do you mean ?" Own Tablets should be kept in the ; 1 house and an occasional dose given ?brows? That's a difficult one. Think "They would have yelled 'Imprison-. hard and then learn that a horse' meat!' the next time." the baby to keep his stomach and hasn't any ey °brows. � 1 Oramilaied Eyelids,1 bowels working regularly. This will You may like to know, in addition, not fail to break up colds and keep the that turtles and tortoises have no health of the baby 1n good condition y Eyes inflamed lay exp, - till the 'brighter days come along. The teeth; that parrots, unlike the ma - sure to Sun. Dust anti hind medicine deal° , birds, both , Tablets are sold by jority of 1r s, can move o man- u'ckiyrelieved by Murlso dibles of their beaks; and that fishes a yeRemedy.NoSmarting, or by mail at 25 cents a box from never masticate. They simply haven't just Eyc Comfort. At The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. NARROW ESCAPES. Saved From Death in Baltic by a Cigarette Case. "One bullet went clean through my pocket, struck my notebook, and stayed there. I have it still. It was my first hit, and so I have kept it as a souvenir." Thus wrote an officer from Flanders some time ago and the incident is typical of many occasions when men have been saved from death and disablement by some ob- n one on p ing up; every day that passes adds less .liquid solution bathe the eyes two ject they were carrying about their to its size. There you have time .between breaths. But perhaps Y Druggist's 50 B ttI Dierine)Lye you know that the zic-zae is about the only kind -of bird a crocodile does not relish for its supper. Tour c per Bottle. Still It Was Fatal. 5elveinTubes25c. iForpoohofihe€yeFreeask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Rubber Famine in Germany. Rubber is worth more than its "What did your father die of ?" weight ir1 gold to Germany. There the doctor asked an Atchison negro is no other substance more in demand who was being examined for life in- and harder to get. It is necessary surance, in the manufacture of war munitions "Ah don't know, boss " lee replied as well as in the thousand and one r r "but it wasn't nothing serious." articles in everyday life. The fact. that there are practically no rubber - A GOOD CHANGE. tired vehicles no'w sows how great is the rubber famine in Germany. A Change of Food Works Wonders. Wrong food and drink cause a lot the Co four times daily, and you are likely person. of trouble in this world. To change to' he astonished at the results- right. thing that frightens Germany most, from the start, Many who have been Not very long ago, a private in the is first aid when a person is ill, par writes M. Andre Chevrillon in the toga that they have astigmatism, eye- 4th East Yorkshire Regiment was tieulariy from stomach and nervous "Revue de Paris," She is now at conjuiicti�itis andiotheeliQsetaislorders, saved from death by a cigarette case troubles. As an illustration: A lady the height of her effort; she is still ,report wonderful benefits from the as over his heart, The missile lodged in was brought around to health again capable of hurting, but the wear and �i nh1fillecle ndttUSe Gat this h� Y s0 the inner cover of the case, and the by leaving off coffee (Tea is just as 1p tear on her resources is now visible strengthen your eyes that glasses wait!ilcigarettes were badly damaged, but injurious because it contains caffeine, in everything. Her human fuel is not be necessary. Thoussrnds who no other Harm was done. A Lanes- the drug found in coffee) and some blind or nearly so, or who wear glasses g running out at a terrifying rate, and might never have reciuired them if they shire soldier was also saved by a cig-; articles of •food that dict not agree with her. She says: "For a number of years I suffered its quality is going down; it is pos. i had cared for their eyes in time. Save #t is too late? Do not Rrette-ti sible become one o actual shortage will begin. Mean. ; Jeyeglasses are only like crutches aha Bishop Taylor Smith tells how a while,England's strength is only in' every few ever-lnoreteid# u er 1 e chane ri captain in the Coldstreams was with stomach and bowel trouble which proces of being got together—silent- was dition, so better see if you can, like wounded by a shell. When he 'was ;kept getting worse until I was ill most l ly, without vain words; and this .si- 1 many others, a s, get clear, thealthy, St t nn examined the doctors found a Bible in of the time. About four years ago fece, as anyone who knows England het a given. xf your otivn druggist cart- his hip pocket. The piece of the shell I left off coffee and began using can say, is far more disturbing than + not fill this prescription, send $1 to the Valetas Drug Co, Toronto, fora sour- i had struck the Bible and gone through' Postum. My stomach and bowels im all the German tumult of Hate. ' pieta Bon -onto Home Treatment outfit--- i the pages.. Had it not been for the i proved 'right along, but I was se re - The fourth. million of men is being , tablets and all. 4. i Bible the officer's spine would have • duced in flesh and so nervous that prepared. Strange, ridiculous, "aha 1- Nothing Lost. ; been shattered. Curiously enough,' the least thing would overcome ine. teuris professionals such terms may the ! ' the missile had stopped at the ninety- "Then I changed my food and began professionals of Germans have dis- 1 Hobson—My wife never wastes first Psalm, and the officer's father, using Grape -Nuts in addition to Post- missed the Derby scheme. What do anything. who had'. given him the Bible, had um. I lived on these two principally they think to -day of its success? At Dobson—No? written a verse from that Psalm on fax about a month. Day by day the moment, when four-fifths of their Hobson—No. If it's edible, it goes otvn wounded have had to be sent into the hash; and if it isn't, it will the by -leaf. I gained in flesh and strength until back to the front, when the German clo to trim a hat. Shaving -soap, tobacco -pouches, let- the nervous trouble had disappeared. 'i" people is talking of nothing else but peace, and believes that the war is nearing the end; . what must their feelings be at the spectacle of these five hundred. thousand new' volun- teers raised in three.days; of these crowds besieging the recruiting of- flees—in the sixteenth month of the warl—of masses of men still press- ing forward at two and three o'clock in the morning, to raise their hands, and, in batches of ten to a hundred, to take the oath. that makes them sol- diers? The 12,000 or 16,000 factories that, accordingto Lord Kitchener, are turning . ut munitions for six mil- lion soldiers in the spring, the five trillions of pounds sterling that Eng-{ land spends daily without'visible' ef- fort; this is England's farce; hither- to we have felt it as llttent and dif. fused; now it is being transforincd, day by clay, into energy that is actual and real and diseipliltcd for combat. Four eyes before 'n and a penny in his breast bl to calculate the date when the i these victims of neglect. pocket. Minard's Liniment Our: Diphtheria, True. Though misery loves company I notice all the while That company is fonder of The fellow with a smile. Ferrna.le Help Wanted... in large honlery, undoi•Wear alio Aweater faetorteo.' 'Q'aoanoies it! all departments, With opeiiingtj for exptiriolkcod or inexperienoo+j, help. Higheat wages said mod, orate ertobti board. ,Apply, lin" Inedlatell, penrnans Limited, parisr Ons ter -cases and books of all descrip- tions: have saved the lives of many soldiers, but the most extraordinary. I feel that I owe my health to Post - um and Grape -Nuts. "Husband was troubled, for a long lifesaver was a mouth -organ which time, with occasional cramps, and was smashed to pieces by a bullet as slept badly. Finally I prevailed upon it rested in the left breast pocket of him to leave off coffee and take Post - Private Keighley, a Canadian. It was found afterwards that the mouth - organ bote the legend, "Made in Germ,,.r, 'i, Faran Otic-,rS.rined Wax Veterans. For the use of one-armed war vet- erans there has appeared on the mar- ket in London a co111bination knife and fork. The knife is at one end of the handle, so that tho crippled soldier may cut his meat, At the other end of the handle is affixed the • fork. The user merely turns the instrument around when he gets ready to convey the food to his mouth. When you lose money and . ain wis- dam, the las % is your gain. , um. After he tried Postum for a few days he found that he could sleep and that , his cramps disappeared. He never went back to cane." Name given by Canadian Postum Co„ Wind- sor Ont. Postum Conies in two forms Postum Cereal—the original form --- must be well boiled, 15c and 25r. packages. Instant Postum--a soluble powder--- dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water, and, with cream and sugar, snakes a delicious beverage instantly. 30e and 50c tins. Both kinds are equally delicious and cost about the wane per cup. "There's a Reason" for Postum. •.sold by Grocers. Would you like to end that ter- rible itching, that burning pain; to heal those horrid sores? You have tried all sorts of fatty ointments, lotions and powders. Put them aside now and give Nature a chance as represented by Zam-Buk. Zam-Buk is made from herbal es- sences; is a natural healer. Is not something you have to send to the end of the world for, and pay a heavy price! Every druggist will sell you Zam-Buk and for 50c. only. Just give it a fair trial and inci- dently give yourself ease by the quickest route. See name on box: -- 15 fly' M TIM LARGEST FIREPROOF RESORT��;l !!';1', 1i0IELEI1 THE WORLD figla The Spirit of America at Ploy: Magaitnde and Cheerfitlnettre. eMn11x0AN PLAIT MUSOPPAN PLAN' ID, S. White, Pres. x. w. rlott,' Attlifteraffeer MPTAL STOPEt resor s 0o151'- STRAP:MUM' The salesman that works every day and night during the year. Send for catalog "W" lt;G. ,r, WV, nirnsn vo„-r.ta„ 27 Toronto Aroaao, -"Sorouto -MWNMINd41!]f2iYa,[ IEgI Sandy Goulette Took Dodd's Kidney Pills for Bright's Disease. Now He Can De His Days Work As Well As He Could Ten Years Aga-- Offers ga— Offers Proof Of His Statement. Old Fort Bay, Labrador°, Que.— Feb. 14th, ("Special.)—Cured of Bright's Disease when the grave yawned before him, Sandy Goulette, an old settler here, wants all the world to know that he owes his life to Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I was swollen out of shape from head to foot. I was so short of breath I could hardly speak," Mr. Goulette states. "The doctor could do nothing for me. The minisbar gave me the holy sacrament and a good old priest came and told me that I could not live much longer. "I was sick all winter and in the spring. I telegraphed two hundred miles for two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills. I took three pills the night they cane and I got relief before morning. I took Dodd's Kidney Pills and they cured me. "If anyone doubts this statement they can write me and I will give them names of people who know me and who Will vouch for me.,am-able to do my day's wolrlt as well now as I could ten years ago." Dodd's Kidney Pills are no cure-all, They simply cure the Kidneys. Of course, no bachelor likes being roasted, yet it is no more uncom- fortable than being married and kept in hot water. Fairville, Sept. 30, 1902. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,—We wish to inform you that -we consider your MINARD'S LINIMENT a very superior article, and we use it as a sure relief for sore throat and chest. When I bell you I would not be without it if the price was one dollar a bottle, I mean it. Yours truly, CHAS. F. TILTON • Persian Grain. The great arid wastes of Persia would lead one to believe 'that the country does not produce sufficient grain to supply the needs of its pop- ulation. Such, however,, is not the case, and considerable quantities of grain are exported each year. The principal grains grown are wheat, barley and rice. Corn is planted in small quantities, but is only used for roasting ears. Oats and rye are sel- dom sown. Except along the Cas- pian coast Persian agriculture is de- pendent almost entirely on irrigation. The agricultural implements used in Persia are of the most primitive kind. Plows are made from forks of small tres with the addition of a share of iron. It is stated to be doubtful, how- ever, whether the yield of grain would be greatly increased by using modern plows, as there is no sod and this crude imlement seems to stir the soil fairly well. A Dainty Touch. "And her mean husband thinks she's extravagant.” "Why?" "Just because she insists on hav- ing Fido's monogram stamped on his dog biscuits." Sure Proof. Pessimist ---Is he prosperous, 1,, you think? Optimist, --Io he? Why, he owes twice what he owns. SPEND ',earn WI11'.rnE IN manaronNr,A. Round trip lvitiler Tourist .tlukets on sato daily to California, via variable direct and scenic routers. Four fast mod- ern trains leave Chicago daily from the tai,: t tnodorta re11ww.,,' terminal au .the world. Overland i4nnited cl stla Fare leaves 7,00 P.M. Los ,Angeles Limited .—direct to ::inut1a u•n ('aliloruia 1.a.ves 10:00 1 M.. San Francisco L#niited leaves 10:46 P.sl•,'Califarnia Mail Inarfi,s 10:46 1',M. i.et us help yott plan an attractive trip., hooklets giving Tull particiilars mailed . on application to 13 11. Bennett, t,.A., Chicago a% North Western :fly., 40 Yonge St., Toronto, chat. In the race for wealth a man . al- ways finds himself out of breath at the finish. Minard'e Liniment Cures 75istompar. .—A POPULAR CONTEST .. would you like to enter a contest where a small part of your time Is devoted to a s,.,tain of correspond- ence which would add very material- ly atcriai- l ' to yourpresent income. 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Bradford, the famous centre of Bri- tain's woolen ,industry, is quite elated over the discovery that in Bolling i Hall, the famous mans oil on the out- slcirts of the city that was recently turned into a municipal museum of antiquities, it possesses the ancestral home of -Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the President of the 'united States. For Bradford is pretty certain that this will mean a rush of American visitors after the war is over, and trans -atlantic sightseers, as every- body knows, are a highly profitable commodity. et/newel; Zia tient Ou.res C tILls, rem. ANCEIt, TUMORS. LUMPS, ETC. vt.,, internal and external. cured with- , out pain by our home treatment, Write Co.,before imit d, Collirgwood.21Ont.. Medical . C A1netica's Pioneer Deg Remedios BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feat:'' Mailed £rre to any address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER, V. 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Present Gar- rison of the Ottawa (88th) Regi- ment, Pnocess Hote is open trona DECE111173EH to MAT Situated on the Harbor of Hamilton. Accommodates 4-00. Bates : $2,6 per week and upriard. HOWE a,TWOROGER,- iaxanagers HAMILTON, • BERMUDA Bermuda is reached by the steam- ers of the Quebeo S. 9, Co,. 81 Broadway, New York, I ii. 7. ISSUE