HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-12-7, Page 3BORING THE
"Faulty, Nutrition and
Elimznati0n --these are
LONGEST TUNNEL the cause of the most of life
ailments that afflict human
AT A COST OF TWO MILLION beings.Too "much indigesa-
DOLLARS A MILE, . tible food and lack of power
to throw off the poisons
Selkirk Ranges C.P,R.Bore 1'Yi11 Be t at come rom ge . o
Competed at End of
This Year,;
—these lead to a long line
of distressing disorders.
Avoid them by eating
It will not be long before the lam' Shredded Wheat Biscuit --
was
Hoosac Tunnel, four and three-.
quarter miles long, will have to sur- a simple, elemental food that
render its premier place, bold for " contains all the body-build-
the
es as n t. The Rogers
ing material ' in the whole
the American continent. Rogers ,
Pass, five -mile tunnel under the Sel- ` wheat grain, including the
kirk Range, on the Canadian Pacific t bran coat which keeps the
Railway, will be completed by the end
of 1916 ( intestinal tract healthy and
d d thelongest bore on
This gigantic hole through.the liv- clean. Delicious for any
ing rock will Bost $10,000,000 and only meal in combination with
shortens the route by four miles. sliced peaches or other fruits.
However, it will materially reduce the
grade, which is a difficult one at that Made in Canada
lofty point on the backbone of the ---
continent, and obviate many delays
hitherto due to snow falls and ava-
lanches,
Is at Rogers Pass.
The Canadian Pacific. Railway
engineers spent two years seeking
a location for a tunnel through the
Selkirks, finally deciding upon Rogers
Pass, which crosses the range in the
midst of a vast amphitheatre between
the ` rugged, snow-capped mountains.
Of the many peaks which form a
seemingly impassable barrier between.
the prairie country to ,the east and
the Pacific roast, Mount Sir Donald
forms the culminating pinnacle, its
altitude being 10,808 feet, Mount
Macdonald* which is 9,860 feet in
height, also looms out prominently
with rugged and precipitous slopes..
The Beaver Valley lies east of
the Selkirk Range, and the Illecilli-
waet Valley to the west. On the trip
westward through the pass trains
start the ascent of the Selkirks at
Beavermouth, 28 miles west of Gold-
en, at an altitude of 2,435 feet, and
the most northerly station on the
route.
Ainid World Wonders.
Before reaching Beavermouth the
road crosses the Columbia River at tural. The atmosphere of enmity, Rheumatism. conies from . poisonous Is the Hospital for Sick Children to
the base of the Selkirks; which in con- and we may say, suspicion, hangs too acid in the blood. This is a medical ttdeath elt°dollarsotake baout of bies outkoft their
trast to the Rockies, are covered with heavily over Europe to permit of un- truth that every rheumatic sufferer cradlos? That Is the question
forests. The line enters the Selkirks
tinue until one or the ,ether is eon,
cruered.
It is extremely important that the
Ipowers on both sides have beers
brought to recognize the justice of
1 the .neutral proposals, and have re -
1 linquished the ambition of• extending
their borders.
HOUSES FOR SOLAIERS,
What the C.P.R. is Doing for
SHALL WE HAVE PEACE SOON?
By Chas M. Bice, Denver, Colo.
We have in the United States what
is called a "peace league," which has
turned Heroes.
Re -
The houses which the C.P,R, is
building in the west for the returned
soldiers will cost thein about $1,900
each, with out -offices. They will 'con-
sist of four rooms each—two bed-
rooms, dining room and kitchen. Each
farm will consist of 160 acres and
there will be 80 additipnal acres which
may be availeed of in the course of
time, and as the settler concludes that
he can work it, The C.P.R. has sev-
eral designs for homes which will be
submitted to the intending settlers.
These offer a variety of design to suit
different tastes and different pockets,
it may be said. The settler can choosee
a house which will cost him $2,000
but the payments will be made ex-
ceedingly easy. In all there are prob-
ably 8,000,000 acres of land held ,by
speculators in the West; but, apart
from that, there are literally hun-
dreds of millions of acres of cultivable
been putting forth every possible ef- I land lying idle over the West—not
fort to stop the great war which is close to the tracks, of course, but good
RAWFURS
tGJOHM HALLAM
and csoak. highest cash. prices. We sand.
mono. Nae 1112W 4a7; Obit tuff "reraootto&
Charge no ooinoloions--aa4 py.y an charged,
Wa hard pall out Wilton* of dpilan to thou,
sends of trgppsre hi cease. who send the
Neste pe l,eoaas• dhoy know ihay get+saguaro.
deal, and roost we more ,ionp; to thein fere
Yr it'wlii also. Ws bur ,Dote furs team trappers
tow cob the sny-other ere 11rmein Oanit.
FREESallanek BaW Fuu QuottatttJOO '
Se latn'a Fut Atyla Boole (82 pages)
Bent fres an requestAdtlross as taiiovtst
JOHN HALLAM Limited
202 Hailam Building, Toronto:
_.e
A Home Billiard
Table
Will provide .you and
your family with the finest
form of indoor recreation
during the long winter even-
ings,
Our Famous Maisonette Table'
Is made specially for
the home at a reasonable
price.
Cash or on .terms.
BURROUGHES & WATTS, Ltd.
Makers to B. M. the King,
34 Church St., Toronto
not only beggaring Europe, but is fast I land which many have longed for so
draining the world's resources into its i ardently that they have sat on the
insatiable Maw.steps of the land office all night to be CH R I S T MAS MESSAGE
Recently the German Chancellor, the first in the morning to 'get their
von B. Iilollweg, made a speech in the application in. The C.P.R. is going
Reichstag, cautiously, but encourag- 1 on on its own account with the colony
ingly, approving the general principle homes; but it expects that the Gov -
of the league to enforce peace. It had ernment will shortly outline a plan
ahead been roved with caution, of a comprehensive nature which can
y approved ' be generally applied to the' situation.
by Sir Edward Grey, but more thor-
oughly, by Lord Bryce.
The Hospital for Sick Children
COLLEGE ST.. TORONTO.
Dear Mr. Editor:—
Thanks for the privilege of appeal-
ing through your columns on iiehalf
r (t�r' 7 of the Hospital for Sick Children, the
We have reason, therefore, to ,con- THE .T 'NAY TO great Provincial Charity.
Our need of money is
gratulate ourselves upon the recep- measured by
ro p
tion accorded to the proposal b the CURE RHEUM ATISM the children's need of help, and you
p i y can judge how great that need must
two chief combatants in the present be when last year 3,045 sick little ones.
struggle. " - were treated as in -patients, and as will
We need not inquire into the mo -Must Be Treated Through the Blood be seen from the 1916 figures, 592
tives that may have actuated this fa- patients were admitted from 242
vocable consideration. It is sufficient - • and the Poisonous Acid places outside Toronto.
st to know they have done so and have Driven Out, ed for deformities,ear 2ps duch to clubweretreatfeet,
gone on record to that effect. bow-legs, knock-knees, Pott's disease of
That these great diplomatists see The twinges and tortures of rheu- the spine, lateral curvature of the
in each other grounds fox distrust for matism are not due to cold, damp spine, dislocations, infantile paralysis,
the motives of the other, is only na- weather as so ninny people suppose. tubercular disease of knee, hip, ankle.
-through the Gate of the Beaver River,
a picturesque spotwherea natural
bridge spans a torrent, which at that
point makes its filial •plunge down to
-the level of the Columbia.
The tunnel, which is 29 feet wide
and 23 feet high, follows a straight
line under Mount Macdonald, emerg-
ing in the Beaver Valley at a point
about 1,000 feet below the present
line. The eastern entrance is direct-
ly below Hermit, a station just east
of Rogers Pass. The highest point
reached in the tunnel is 3,795 feet
above sea level and 4,066 feet below
the summit of Macdonald Peak. The
passage through the mountains will
have a grade of one per cent. up to
the interior summit.
The "pioneer bore" is .a new meth -
or of tunnel boring being employed
on the Rogers Pass project. A small
preliminary shaft 7 by 9 feet, paral-
leling the course of the main tunnel
60 feet distant, furnishes ventilation
for the main shaft and by means of
cross sections affords a means of dis-
posing of the excavations during the,
progress of the work.
WOUNDED HUNS ENGLAND..
Somme Soldiers Surprised at Their
Kindly Treatment.
A number of German prisoners,
wounded in the Somme drive, are
being cared for in London military
hospitals, many of them suffering
from very grave injuries, but those
able and willing to talk speak with
horror of their experiences in the bat-
tles of. the Somme. The German
prisoners express great admiration
for the British soldier's prowess in
bombing attacks, but qualify this with
the statement that the British band
grenades are much superior to their
own. They declare quite frankly that
the military valor of the British Tom-
my was a great surprise to the Ger-
mans.
They declare without exception
that they are glad to be "out of that
hell," meaning the Somme battle-
field. Still they are confident that
Germany will win the war, which, in
their opinion, will last many months
longer. the kind treatment they re-
ceive from doctors wild nurses is a
great surprise to them, as they had
been led to believe that the reverse
would be the case should they hap-
pen to.be wounded and captured,
Generally speaking, the wounded Ger-
mans are noticeable for a seriousness
of manner; and a settled air of gloom,
in striking contrast to the manner of
`fire wounded British Tonally who
maintains a high average of cheerful
nese no natter how badly he is
wounded.
Lists of Gerinan wounded in Eng-
land and their conditions are regular-
ly transmitted to Germany through
the American Ambassador,
Surprised Iiia,
"I'm a true friend of labor," shout
ed the soap -box orator,
"By gosh, Bi11," came a voice from
the crowd, "that's the first time I
aver knowed'you two was acquainted,"
prejudiced approach to the ultimate
issue of peace; but there is this to
hearten all who hope for a happier so- ed through the blood. All the Iini-
lution of the problem, that in both meets and rubbing and so-called elec-
London and Berlin the outcome of the tris treatment in the world will not
war is now being discussed in world cure rheumatism, and the sufferer
terms instead of terms of purely na who tries them is not only wasting
tional or racial interest. money, but is allowing the trouble to
This of itself is a notable mark of become more firmly rooted in the sys-
progress towards a more rational tem and harder to cure when the pro -
point of view, for it implies the relin- per remedy is tried. Dr. Williams Pink
quishment of Germany's "world
power" foolishness. When peace is
considered in the light of the world's
welfare, rather than as an opportun-
ity for extending frontiers, there is
ground for hope that sanity is begin-
ning to assert itself.
Germany, we all know, has • been
exasperatingly slow in coming to
this, nor does she now assume it with
such indications of whole -heartedness
as might be wished; but that she has
come to it at all is certainly 'very en-
couraging, as it shows that neutral
opinion is having its effect.
Chastened and "cuffed" for her
high ambitious with which she boast- I°decided to try Dr. Williams Pink
ingly threw down the gauntlet to Pills.. I think I took altogether about
Europe in the start, she is now ready a dozen boxes, with the result that I
should realize. There is only one way One gift more in the Hospital's tree -
to cure rheumatism—it must be treat- sury means one coffin less in the
LITTLE' WHITE HEARSE.
The. Hospital must be digging up
help for little children from. the soil of
human kindness, or sextons will be
digging graves for little children in
the soil of many a cemetery.
The Hospital for Sick Children can
only volunteer its mercy in so far as
you friends of little children volunteer
your money for service in the Hos-
Pills have had remarkable success in pital's never ending battle for the lives
curing rheumatism because theygo of the little ones.
g Let'your money fight in the trenches
right to the root of the trouble in the of some mother's trouble and rescue
blood, driving out the poisonous acid, some little .child from the dugout of
releasing the stiffened joints, clearing pain, disease and death.
away the torturing pains, and giving Can the Hospital leave children to
the victim renewed health and ease. die because the fathers of those chil-
dren have left home to fight for lib -
Mr. Vincent Brow, Havre Boucher, N.
erty on the British battle line, and can
S., says: "For two years I was an al- the Hospital help the children of Can -
most constant sufferer from rheuma- aria's soldiers with its care unless you
tism, the trouble being so bad . at help the Hospital with your cash?
times that I could scarcely get about. You have money enough to help
The trouble seemed to bring with it every other war fund without keeping
anaemia, and altogether I was in a back a dollar from the leospital's war
very bad condition. I used doctor's fund—the fund that helps the Hospital
save the lives of little children, includ-
medicine for almost a year without re- ing the soldiers' little children.
lief. Thenon the advice of a friend Do not let the little children pay, in
the loss of the Hospital's care, the con-
tribution that should be given and
must be given to the war funds.
Your money can send a message of
cheer to some father in the trenches—
yes, send that message from the cot
where the Hospital nurses some little
child back to life, the chill of the
father who is fighting your battle in
the trenches.
Every dollar kept from the Hos-
pital's potter to serve the little all.
dren is a weight added to the burdens
and a grief added to the sorrows of
this war.
Yon can bear to have your pocket
emptied of a little riioney easier than
some mother can bear to have her
home emptied of a little child.
Will you send a dollar, or more i1
you cin, to Douglas Davidson, Secre-
tary-Treasurer, or
to listen to wisdom.
But it should not be assumed that
because of the utterances of these two
leading men, that the war is to cease.
Both sides are convinced that the war
must be waged to the bitter end, the
Entente powers expect victory, and
are preparing to join with the neutral
world in preserving peace for the fu-
ture, at all hazards; while the Central
Powers, still professing a hope of vic-
tory, are preparing to join with the
neutral world in preserving peace
against what -they deem British ag-
gressions. Each side regards the
other as a menace that must be sup-
pressed, and, of course, as long as
that feeling exists, the war will con -
am again enjoying perfect health."
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail, post paid,
at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
FORCE KAISER TO ASK PEACE.
Big German Business Interests to
Force Issue, Say Financiers.
That the Kaiser will be forced to
seek peace in 1917 is the opinion ex-
pressed in well -posted French circles,
writes a Paris correspondent. By
next summer the Entente allies will
havereached the summit of their of -
Mr. Isaac Ward, well known at fensive capacity, and Britain will
kept far from the door, have blossomed to her full strength in
Hien, guns, shells, and all the appur-
The cheerful feeling you possess tenances of war. Germany attaches
great importance to the threatened
i k of
after a dr something g hot loss of the Balkans, and is doing her
and flavory should be only the utmost to avert it. Another year of
the war can bring Germany nothing
beginning of your satisfaction. more than a more or less successful
resistance, with nothing ahead but a
For this very reason more and war of patience, with the scales
more .people are turning from heavily weighted against her because
of the sea blockade. The opinion is
tea and coffee to expressed in high financial circles that
the big business interests of Germany
would no longer tolerate such a situ-
ation, and an irresistible movement
would be launched against allowing
the military party to attempt to re-
sist the process of military and
economical exhaustion,
The allied Somme offensive will
continuo through the winter, pinning
to Picardy as many German reserve
divisions as possible, and seeking to.
deprive Hindenburg of the offensive
on any other front, Even should
Cerivany be able to send enough men
to the west, to man efficiently the
whole line from the sea to Switzer-
land she will be forced to a big re-
treat, from the huge Doyon salient
once the allied armies seriously men-
ace St. Quentin and Cambral, and
they' are heading that way .now,
and going strong.
Instant Postum
A lessened tendency to such
annoyances as nervousness and
sleeplessness repays them.
A ten-day trial of this delight-
ful, ilavory hot drink has as-
sisted so many to health' aldol
comfort that your friend, the
Postu.in drinker, will tell you it's
well worth while.
it There' a Reason"
J. ROSS ROBERTSON,
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
KHEUMATISMMAKES
YOU FEDI, OLD
Pains and Aches Yield to Sloan's
Liniment, The Family Friend.
WJien your jointed become Miff, your
circulation poor, , and your rruffering
makes you irritable, ail applicatiou of
Sloan's Liniment gives you quick re-
lief --kills pain, starts up a good cir-
culation, relieves congestit,u. It is
easier and Gleaner to use than mussy
plasters or ointments, acts quickly
and does not clog the pores. It does
not stain the skin.
You don't need to rub — it pene-
trates.
Certainly fine for rheumatisrn, stiff
deck, sciatica, lame back, toothache,
etc.
For sprains, strains, bruises, black
and blue spots, Sloan's Liniment re-
duces the pain and eases the soreness,
Its .use is so universal that yo'u'll
\consider Sioan.'s Liniment a friend of
the whole family. Your druggist sells
it In 25e., 50e. and $1.00 bottles,
The Middle Name.
Little Robert rushed into the kitch-
en one day and asked his mother
what kind of\ pie ,'he was making.
"Lemon meringue pie," she an-
swered.
The little fellow disappeared, but
presently returned "Mother," he said,
"what did you say is the pie's middle
name?"
Follies of youth are drafts on old
age, the payments of which are in-
perative .
ED, 7.
ISSUE 50—'16,
SOAP SCARCE IN RUSSIA.
Poor People Will Get Laundry Done
at Public Places.
Because the price of soaps and
such necessities for washing - as
starch borax, and the like has in-
creased in Russia beyond the reach
of the poor people, it is proposed to
establish in Vilna a number of "com-
mercial laundries" for patronage by
those who cannot afford to pay dearly
for cleanliness. just how much the
local inhabitants have been able to
do for themselves, through the
agency of 25 "Achieser societies" or
institutions of brotherly help, is in-
dicated by the six months' report of
the main organization just issued.
According to this report, the 25
branch societies in all the portions of
Vilna took in during the past half-
year just over $15,000 and expended a
little more than $16,000 in helping a
total of 60,000 persons.
•
Granulated Eyelids.
O.' Eyes inflamed by expo --
sure to Sun, Dust and Wind
quickly relieved by Murillo
yv Eye Remedy. No Smarting,
just Eye Comfort. At
YourDruggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye
SalveinT'ubes25c. ForiieotoifhcfyeFreeask
Druggists orMurIneEyeRem edyto.,Chicago
No Hope.
Doctor—Remember, nurse, you must
keep the patients cheerful, and not Iet
them get downhearted.
Nurse—But what can I do, doctor?
Six of them have proposed to me aI-
ready this morning!
I was cured of painful Goitre by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
BAYARD McMULIN.
Chatham, Ont.
I was cured of Inflammation by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
MRS. W. A. JOHNSON.
Walsh, Ont.
I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Parkdale, Ont. � J. B. BAILEY.
Quite Enough.
"Please, sir," piped the tiny custom-
er, whose head scarcely reached the
counter, "father wants some oak
varnish." Doctor Tells How To Sb en then
How much does your father want,
my little pian?" inquired the smiling
shopman. Eyesight 50 per cent in One
Father says you was to fill this
replied the little fellow, handling over
a pint jar. -
It was duly filled and handed back.
"Father will pay you next Saturday,"
said the recipient, casually. Then
the face of the shopn grew dark.
"We don't give credit here," he said.
"Gimme back the jar."
Meekly the small boy handed back
the jar, which was emptied and re-
turned with a scowl.
"Thank you, sir," he said, "Father
said you'd be sure to leave enough
round the sides for him to finish the
job he wants to do, and you 'ave. sir."
• In the Trenches.
"Do the Germans ever leave any-
thing valuable behind them in the
trenches?"
Veteran ---"Never a drop, mum!"
szinaxd's Liniment Duxes Mids. &o.
FIRST. US 1 OF SIEGE GUNS.
Employed by the Turks in Capturing
Constantinople.
A campaign surpassing in inven- j
tion and resource any that went be-
fore was that waged by the Turks
against Constantinople in 1452-3. 'I s
culmination not only brought the Turk
into Europe, but it brought into war-
fare the use of artillery as a means of
reducing fortified cities. Oddly, then
as in the present great war, it was
German skill in the handling of cane;
non that aided the Turks..
One Urban, a Wallachian reared
in Germany, who had seen service.
in the armies of German, Hungarian,
and Greek before he attached him-
self to the Sultan's forces, devised
the cannon that for fifty clays bat-
tered the walls of the eastern cap-
ital of the Roman Empire. On the
recommendation of Urban, the Sul-
tan, before he began his campaign
against Constantinople, ereeted a
foundry, and in it was cast a gun
with a mouth exceeding two and a
half feet in diameter and capable of
projecting to the distance of about
a mile a missile of six hundred
pounds in weight. Other guns of a
smaller calibre were constructed un-
der the supervision of Urban.
The Folly Of Taking
Digestive Pills
A 'warning to Dyspeptics.
The habit of taking digestive pills
after meals makes chronic dyspeptics
of many thousands of men and women
, because artificial digestents, drugs and
medicines have practically no influence
t upon the excessively acid condition of
the stomach contents which is the cause
of irtost forms of indigestion and dys-
1
i Aepa
The after dinner pill merely lessens
the sensitiveness of the stomach nerves
and thus gives a false sense of freedom
from pain. 1f those who are subiect to
indigestion, gas. flatulence, belching,
bloating. heartburn, etc., after eating
would get about an ounce of pure bis-
urated magnesia from their druggist and
take a teaspoonful In a little water after
meals. there would be no further neces-
sity for drugs er medicines because bi-
surateel magnesia Instantly neutralizes
stomach aeidity, stops food fermenta-
tion and thus insures normal. painless
digestion by enabling the stomach to do
its work without hindrance.
Presence of Minds.
"Oh, John!" shrieked Mrs. Dorkins.
"The baby has swallowed a silver
piece."
What Counts.
It doesn't matter what your freed
Or how you pray,
If only you will square each► deed
To what you say.
Minard's Liniment Curcn Distemper
SIRED li'OTATOL"I3
ES» POTATOES, IRISH COB -
1,7, biers, Delaware. Carman. Order
at once. Supply limited, Write for quo-
tations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton.
IIEI,P WANTED.
wi r x? NTED--T1tON MOULDERS FOR
1t bench and floor work• steady
employment: commodious foundry; good
wages. The Jenckes Machine Co ea. Ltd.,
St. Catharines, Ont.
AGENTS 'WANTED.
Il Ott HOUSEHOLD
lessa.le piiSend NECESSITIES
free sample offer and 1914 catalogue.,
Peoples Whoresale Supply, . Dept. A:
Barrie. Ont.
NEW LAID BOGS.
EW LAID EGGS. POULTRY, PEAS,
Beans; highest prices paid for
small or large civantities. J. D..trsen
quit. fl3 i St. T. rbain, Montreal.
NEWSPAPERS rota SAris
TitiiFiT-MAI-TN( NEW'S :i`l1) JOB
trtfices for sale in' good 0t-a:io
towns. The most eiseer11 and interesting
of all businesses. Wulf information on
appli,niticin to SS-ilson .Publishing Com-
pany.. ,3 Test Adelaide Street, Toronto.
Mr. Dorkins took a handful of WIISCELT:AXEOUi3,
change out of his pocket and looked it (1a,rrCER, TUMORS, LUMPS,—ETc..
over, internal t nd external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment Write
"Calm yourself, Maria," he said. i us before too late. Dr. Beliman Medical
"It was that counterfeit quarter I've' Co.. Limited, Coutngwooa, Ont.
been trying to get rid of ."
=nerd's Liniment Cures .Diphtheria.
History from the Nursery.
Miss Snaith, the teacher, was hearing
the history class. The pupils seem-
ed unusually dull on that particular oc-
casion, and in vain did the teacher try
• to get them to give correst answers.
At last she looked at the child who
was her star pupil.
"Now, Elsie," she said, "Mary fol-
Iowed Edward VI, didn't she?"
"Yes, ma'am," replied the little girl.
"And now, who followed Mary?"
asked the teacher, hoefefully.
All was silence for a moment, and
then Elsie raised her hand.
"Yes, Elsie?" queried the teacher.
"Who followed Mary?"
"Her little lamb, teacher," said Elsie
triumphantly.
{
True.
"My boy, remember this."
"What?" -
"The young man who comes straight
home always comes home straight."
r
The Soul of a Piano is the
Action.. Insist on the
E1OTTO HIGEL'-.
PIANO ACTION
e he -
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Wee
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" r .
''Week's Time In Many Instances
A Frightful Expense.
"My darling," she murmured, "you
were so grand, so noble, when you pro-
posed to me that day in the motors
car, l Shall I ever for •et how touch-
_
ingly you spoke of your future, of the
sacrifices you would make for me? It.
must have cost you something to speak
those words." "It did, Mabel," replied
the young man, a shadow creeping
over his face. "It cost me about two
weeks' salary for that car hire."
A Free. Prescription You Can have
{ Filled and Use at Horne.
London.—Do you wear glasses? Are you a
victim of eve strain or other eye weaknesses?
If so you will be glad to know that according to
Dr. 'Lewis there ie teal bops for you. Many
whose eyes were failing say they have bad their
eyes restored through the pprinciple of this won-
derful free prescription. One man says, after
trying it: "I was almost blind; could not see' to
read at all. Now I can read everything without any
glasses and my eyes do not nater any more. At
night they would pain dreadfully; now they feel
fine all the time. It was like a miracle to me."
A lady who used It says: "Theatmoephere seemed
hazy with or wit.out glasses, but after using this
prescription for fifteen days everything seems
clear. I can even read fine print without glasses."
It is believed. that thousands who wear glasses
can now discard them in a reasonable thee and
multitudes more will be able to strengthen their
eyes so as to be spared the trouble and expense
of ever getting glasses. Eye troubles of many
descriptions may be wonderfully benefited by
following the simple rules. Pere is the prescrip-
tion: Oo to any active drug store and get a
bottle of lion-Opto tablets- Drop one Bon-Opto
tablet, in a fourth of a glass of water and allow
to dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyed
two to four times. daily. You should notice yetir
eyes clear up perceptibly right from the start and
fnllammation will quickly disappear. If your
eyes are bothering you, even a bttlo, take steps
fa save them now efore it is too late. Many
ho elessly blind might have been saved if they
had eared for their eyes in time.
Santer Another prominent Physician to whom the,
above article was submitted, said: "Don -Onto fa e
very remarkable remedy, its constttount ingredients
are well known to eminent ere specialists and widet
preserihed by them. Zhu manufecturere guarantee It
to strengthen eyesight 00 per Cent in one Week's time
in many instances or refund the money. 1t can be
obtatned from any good druggist and is one of too
very tow preparations 1 feel need bix kept on hand
for regular use in almost "every fam113-. ' The Valmar
Drug Cc., Store 4, Toronto, will all your orders It
your d"ttilgst cannot.
Make Your
Ideas )3ring
you a good
Irina natal
Return.
ANTED
Manufac-
turer's pay
big money
for ideas
each year.
Send.for list or inventions wanted and cagyy of Inventors' Reference Guide.
e:AROLX) R. 5RXPM.Ax3 & CO., Rogtetored 1 tent Attorneys, OTTAWA, CAN
Appropriate.
"Chilton is having the interior of
his new house decorated with a rather
ornate frieze,"
"That's appropriate; he made his
money in the ice business, you know,"
Itleat el nielese9St eetree eate'ot iu C0wi1
Make it a Toboii tor Chrstm$!
etiaieehielelehIS
Nothing suits the
young: felks like a,
02340111:0N. We have
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and also Cushions,
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dltoe Moeassins and
harness. t arid, Ski hharneasl to en; ' F r our free 1IAVALOGUXI and
ma lcb i+Qtl ieleat�bii tialz
Canadian Toboggan Manu1aoturing Company
413 01tVARIO teat'{, SA.E1xh MONJ'' 503ALt Qom.