HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-1-2, Page 1'
„„.
G R N SPIES•
IN UNITED STATES
•
GAVE -NAMING. OV TAE w
ON JULY 10, 191.4
• Widespread Campaign to S elire In-
formation and Transmit it to
German Consule Evetywhere.
Opeeations of the German prop• a-
ganda system in the United States,
through whieh ,valuable information
titie for transmission to 13erbil 'VMS
• erect at the same time thet G
doctrines vrere spread over the
•. try, have been laid bare by 0
G. B. Lester, of the army listen
. eervice, in testimony before -the Sens
ate committee investigating beer and
German propaganda, says a despatch
4 from Washington. Most of the evia
delve related to activity of Teuton
" agents before the United States en-
tered the star.
Captain Lester declared an Unnamed
informant, now interned, told him the
Berlin Government on July 10, 1914,
nearly a month Isefore the war started,
called into conference about 131.. train-
• ed and educated German tiropagands
ists and sent them to all part sof the
world with instructions to prepaae for
the world wj
ar whiCh they were told
was about iebeprecipitated"
Thirty-one of thee landed;in the
United States two weeks after hostil-
ities started and became the nenclus
for an organization of between 200,-
: 000, and 300,000' volunteers, mainly'
German -Americans, who gathered in-
• formation of all kinds 'and eeportecl it
to German consuls and agents in hun-
dreds of communities.
Hale Head of Organittation.
William Bayard Hale, arwriter for
thes Hearst newspapers and formerly
confidential representative of Presi-
dent Wilson in Mexido, eventuaily..be-
came head of the pUblicity branch of
the organiaation thus built up, Cap-
tain Lester said. -
The office's also testified that" fietve-
papers and writers were influenced to
promote. German propaganda, film
•'plays were produced promotineclis-
- IF -trust of Japan and Mexico, a Washe
ington newspaperman was hired to re-
. .
port Government secrets to the Ger-
man headquartersd) writers were sent
• to Germany to send back dispatches
praielag the German • cause and a.
"golden book" was circulated theough-
out the United States to get signa-
tures of American citizens leaning'
• toward pro -German sympathies.
.7. J. Dickinson, a newspaper man
and former major an the army, was
hired at 840 a week to report on colitis
dential interview's with officials, to
, German headquarters in New York,
said Captain Lester. Dielcinson claim-
ed he had confidential relations tvith
cabinet members, that he could "ket
in the back door of the White House,"
and boasted he siras responsible for
tbe notorious leak on the peace note,:
Captain Lester declared. The witness
admitted the records, showing Dickin-
• son did have considerable accurate
officiarinfoemation of a confidential
ur
natea and gave it to the German
representatives• e
.'
•
- Captain Lester also told how the
• German agents tried to stir up revolt
among A erican negroes to serve
German purposes.
BRUTALITY TO
CAPTIVE CRIPPLE
SI, MONTHS Or TOIATURS
• 1-IANJOS Or
ouncisti British Soldier Relet,eath
Grueity,of Neglect lAreetisetiIy
War -Crazed 'MlerrlY•
Mr. II, Denim, a member of the stair
of the London Times, who belonged to
lc wenty-elgieth London riegaineut,
gatl'ed sods gundea in the eetreat from the
erman • cambrai sector la the I4tA an?, s of last
eosin- March, He waa picked up by the ad-
aptain vancina Geri:late and eent beak to
igence Cerebral and thence to Cern a r;
where he remained in hospital until
September 12, when he was repatria,
teL The following is Zr, Banks' own
story of these six months: •
"When the Germans' big offensive
opened on the morning of 1114Th 21,
1918, I was'en the bambral seeter, and
had the previous alight left the front
lihe tor our clays' rest. My battalion
(Use Twenty-eighth London) was im-
mediately •rushed up to treechos in
front of Trescault to make one Of
many others to stiffen the resistaace.
This we did by fighting rearguard ac•
:tient, and by the night of the 23rd
24th we had fallen back to the village
of Ypree, where we had a rest of About
two hours.
. "Orders having been received to
evacuate the villagd at 1 a.m. (about)
4.we moved off, our battalion being the
last in, column. eat the' end of the vil-
lage there-vvas a railhead, and along-
side an aminualtion dump which had
been, fired by our troops. It was on
approaching this burning chimp that I
was hit --presumably by somethieg
from it, but possibly by a stray bullet.
I 'tell by the roadside with a thigh
wound • and the bone broken in two
places. Our men could do nothing for
me, as they were out ot touch by that
time with ),all dressingStations and
ambulances. They therefore had to"
lea -re me. I was apparently M a, vil-
lage absolutely deeekted; on one side
of- me the retreating British, and on
the other the. advancing Germans,
•From 'this time it seemed' that oue
continuous stream of troops, ...trans-
ports and guns passed me by. Night
came (Sunday), arid I remained unat-
tended in spite of my many requests.
Fortunately' one kincadisposed Ger-
man gave me a- sleeping bag, -which
undoubtedly saved me- from the irost.
During the day I had been green a
drink of wine and half a loaf of bread
-black, and rny first taste of many
more to tallow.
• A 'Hospital, at Gambrel.
SUNK TIIIIVY U-BOATS
• British Channel Barrage Consisted of
,Two Lines of Anchored Ships.
• Vice -Admiral Keyes, who was pre-
sented with tge freedom of Dover re-
cently, said that the Dover patrol had
accounted for 30 submarines between
• January .1.st and the 30th of Sep-
tember. •-
A thirty thousand Pounds sterling
fund has been started, to _which
Lord Northcliffe donated .S10000; to
• *commemorate the patrol by tlae erec-
tion of two monuments on the cliffs
' of Dover and Cap Grisnez'and to
make provision for a home for Dover
natrolment.
41IPMCe-Adrairal KeYes, commanding
the Dover- patrol, • in a speeck at
Dover, revealed a number of secrets
by which the greatest successes of the
anti -submarines were achieved.
explained the channel barraia con-
eieted of two lines of specially built
• ships abIe to ride at steelier through.
out the stiffest gale. They -were pro-
• vided with the most powerful search-
• lights. ,One line ran frben Folkestone
- to Grisnez. A seeond extendetracrosS*
the channel seven miles westwards.
SeoreS of drifters and stoat. craft
tvhich patrolled the intervening inter-
val of darkness 'Were so thick that it
was intpossible for 'anything to pass
them on the surface. Underneath -were
• masses of tsubmarine devices. The
duty of the patrol eraft was to pre-
vent submarines passing on the sur -
•face and to drive them down to the
perils ridden below and the drop
depth charges, These Measures were
so successful that by SepteMber of
• this year submarines abandoned the
thannei passage, There was definite
'enemy proof to this effect, Between
•;tannery 018, and September, 1018,
tile Flanders eulemarine &Ulla lost
(SO If -boats, of which 17 were identi• .
fled. 'Under the lighted barrage wer
many others trot yet definitely located,
• One -halt cuPful tot Alger to one
quart of liqUid 'is quite tis geod
propertion ,S4 the eld-tirrio one (Saps
ttri,
"Th.e following morning I was told
I should be attended to later on. The
day passed on, and -I began to think
that I should have to spend another
night in the open. But the promise
was kept, At 3 pant (Mooday) I was
-picked up ,bY a motor lorry and con-
veyed to Gambrel And so I left Ypres
after a stay of thirty-eight hours by
the eide of that -death-givinganununi-
tion dun*.
"Arriving at Cambral, I was put into
a clearing station with. hundreds more,
betkEnglish and Germans. Ware Was
brought to my notice the absolute'in-
difference of the enemy to the wound -
41: 'We were laid side by dide in
wood.en boxes 'raised off the "floor -a
straw bed and two °blankets our only
comfort. We were not undressed or
washed or made comfortable' in any
way, Tim food -wee ledigerent and
sufficient for moil in our eoaajtiou.
I
' stay- in this hospital bested trout
i
Thureilay morning, During this pert
fly- injres aditio not attenaed tc
• (igen looieed at. On ono occasion
• attempt-azething Mere---Wae pinkie
•attend to the badly wouuded, but
Woke oat( theta wird- could watic •
crawl to the dreselogrroom :Kilo we
fortiniate eneuell to At a arasein
• Tho euffe,rInge of the woended we
i
terrible to witneee, and many died
great pain who might bevve beeu sate
Is,v: a little' attentioa,
tlo
suI
ay even ng tal tire following
%lads. Lie en b Ogee' r' eve r s au",
paper la Strenietheeibeleg esed
for al/ purposes, It wee tleite
eeual° teing neo Germaliedeeter-
s eee;
dress-
anta-
them-
.rdro f
of ill
er-
Pris-
)nxid-
I
od,' and 411 tbs.: wok ile,warde
wa
er Pirrned by an ore, *It' wee poly in ceaeaa4
am
to tion that the Gerneme exeited
selvez;
or, "Daring. My Waal° stay at. oe
re X 'have' no cemplaint to, make ,
k,• treatment:0f 'the pritioners by the
Mane.--thet is, where 11 wolaided
in .oner Is far'better off nom univ
d ed one. -It is not what they d
• "To add to the horrors, the Britielt
air fore e bombed tho tosvn. on Tues-
day and Wednesday nights, ana in our
lielplessnoss this eeeined . more ter-
•fibie thananythinr, else. On the
Thursday rtibrning about 150 of us left
the clearing statim and we thought
that at last we were oing to see bet-
ter anies--visions of a Red Crosa tral
and an eyentual arrival at soine. host)
tal In Ge-rmanY where our wound
woo a be cleaned, dressed and attend-
ed to generally. ‘. '
To Germany in Cattle Trucks, ,
s.
•
"Arriving at a siding in Cambria
station we were dumped elougaide the
railway line to await the conveyance
•which was to take., as to 'OerniatiY.
About 3 p.mon the same afternoon
(Thursday, March 28) our train Was
thuoted alongside, and - it was then
that we realized that our, h,arglehips
were to* continue:. The train was made
U) of goods or cattle truelts and into
these we Were loaded, about •twentY
per "truck, as if we were the goods
which the trucks were originally built
to carry. The floor of the tracks liras
covered with wood shavings end our
covering consisted ef to blankets.
"And so commenced a jburney which
was one long, horrible torturer A
• journey Which took us through. Mons
and Brussels; in fact, all through Bel -
in the vain endeavor to find a
hospital where We cOule. obtain that
ret and Attention which we, so. badly
needed, aud then into Gormanya„ It
lasted from 4 pan: Thursday- March
28, till .7 a.m. the following Monday
morning.. We -were locked dn. and in
total darkness for twenty-three' hours
out cif every twenty-four; and it seem -
-
ed that we were only stopped t� re-
mavis the dead, and maay died on that
terrible journey; In my truck not one
man could help Iiimsela And for nearly
four days we were left in this condi-
tion without any attention whatever'
.
no sanitary arraugesnents were made,
and in this misery we had to tare for
wounded- and. maimed. conditien, that '
• 1
four days in a closed truck! •In our
journey seemed as if we were 'being
dragged over uneven ground -all the
time aud on one occasiea we ran into
some obstacle which brought the train i
all! • • •-
to a standstill. That was hell for tie t
Attention to the Wound'e'ri. - ...1.
which complaint can be made./ the
grieyance le rather ol; what they did
not do, _kat hey° already salcie had It
not been for the kiwi soryicet rendes,-
ed br the British„ French and Italian.
Orderlies, our life would have been a
verY'sorry Cate indeed, •On August 13
/ was marked for Englana on account
of the shortage in. ray. riglit (due
n to inattention by the ' Germans, and
i_ I not haviog had the leg set), and on&
s September 12-1 left Onrclitif for -Aa
hen, eu -route for England. •
•
THE USES OF SPHAGNUM MOSS
A Canadian Product of Great Value in
-Red Cross Work.
Theee plants (for 'there are many
. , , .
species ex sphagnum) grow Deal; le a
climate that le moist and only moder-
ately -warm M summer. They are one
of the chief forms of vegetatioa to be
found growiag in the santropy regions.,
known ae "Muskegs." Sphagnum bogs
occair principally in Newfoundland, the
Maritime Provinces, , .Northeatern
Quebec, Labrador,- and .the western
patts ctf Itritish Columbia.
The sphagnum. plant consists of a
stern arid branches tvhich are clothed
iWith small, numerous, overlapping
leaves. They differ from most other
mosses in being entirety devoid of
reotleta, , Another peculiarity of
sphagnum is that the leg' never has'
a central vein or midrib. The outer
part of the stem as well as a con-
siderable part on the leaf is composed
of a large .numbea of special "ab-
sorbent cells". which Are able to take
up and hold water like a sponge. The
amount of water absorbed varies ac-
cording' to the species 'but ranges
frotn ten to twenty times the weight
of The dry-, sphagnum. Owing to. tlie
ability of these cells. to absorb the
water required by the plant for its
development tha presence of rootlets
it unnecessary. Sphagoum usually
grows in a situation where the soil
underneath is permanently damp:
Sphagnum or bog moss has been
used for a considerable period as a
packing mate,rial for plants. Owing
tb its power of retaining moisture,
t helps to keep rooted plants in a
fresh condition until, they arrive at
heir, deetination. It is also extreme -
y Useful, when dried, as bedding mat -
"On the Monday neornitig we arrived
at our destinatiOa--Langensalzae Sax- b
hsorbent pads for dressing "Waand
rial ler horsds.
But it- i oiving-tosdes use since th
eghming of the war form o
eny-and here We were put into hos- a
pital; it was here that I received 'the t
first "attentimi" to my injuries. 1VIY sa,
leg was placed lit a soliat, but it was
not set or Any attempt.made to set it. in
So from the time I was wounded eight r
days had elapsed before I received h
this splint. On th,e following Weds:.'
day morning I was egain put into ger;
train (third class this time) 'and sent
to Ohedruf Lazaret, which is under the
control of Langensalza and M the
same State, and a journey of about
thirty miles. From Ohrdruf statin
we *ere carted -to theThoepital in a
pantechnicon. The attention here was
no better than before -one dressing in
SIX days, and with -sobstitutes ef all
ae •
1,1
• Pint) 8i.reekly
OS1'110113
Service and simplicity are obviously
the features of thie school' frock of
serge, relieved by the softawhite eel -
tars McCall Pattern No. 8644, Girl's
Dress. In 6 sizes, 4 to 14 years,
Price, 20 &eras.
This ,charmingeafternoon dress hag
the waist in basque effect; closing' at
the centre -back. McCall. Pattern No.
.8559, Ladies' Serni-Fitted Dress
6 size's, 34 to 44 bust "E'
e cents. -Transfer Desig-
f If Price, go cents.
s These petterne
2n -'in your 1'oe
e Toronto, Dept. W.
o
hat sphagnum has recently gaine
n importance hitherto unknown. Cot
on is so largely in demand for th
anufacture of expliisives that, som
SEA WOOL
ubstitute had to -be found and in an
ase cotton wool has an aasorptiv
ewer of only four to five tittles it
WIl -*eight. • Of the species of sphag
men found growing on this continent
foor are used for the purpose. When
collecting the moss great care should
be taken to have -it free from any-
adiniature of leays, twigs or 'roots
of other plants which /nay be growing
inithe immediate vicinity-. Each hand -
handful should be squeezed gently to
remove excessive moisture, but care
should be taken not to, break the main
ern. The moss should- be. spread in
in layers to dry; before the drying
oiecess is complete it should be 'gone
er eerefully and sorted, after whieh
3 dated moss rimy be packecl into
'6E1 or- light boxes for -despatch to
depot where it is gequired. The
al making up into pads of the sizes
'airs.) should be left to be done by
pelts of the War Department:
4.t the present time Scotland is
ning out thse pada at the rate of
r millions per month, while Canada
sing the year 1918 was asked to
ply twenty millions of sueh pads.
Real Giving.
'7
Under Allied Flags
Immediate Help Needed to Relieve Starvation ind
• Suffering --Cannot Hold Germany Responsible NOW!
There is pressing need for °or help xn 13eigium
today,and there will be formanymonth s to come.
As our troops occupy the evacuated
,
territory, untold misery stares them in
the face, Rinaciated children, hollow'.
• oheelsed women, rOofless homes,
• ' clothing so worn it offers no Protection
from whiter's terrors- miseries that
cannot wait but, MUST be relieved +at
once to avert DEATH!
,
bleed you be reminded how Be/ghat
tps the first to lump into the breath
and- so make our Victorious, Peace
possible?
Don't let k be said WE let
Belgium starve, Let us cable
easer your offering tothe mothere
arid ciiildren of /3rave Little
Belgium AT bNCE i '
Make cheqUetpayable end send contributions:to
1.!,
1
I) CI
itarto u
(negistered antler the Was eaernies Act)
to your Lotal Commitiet, or to
petgian Relief Fund, 95 King St. VV:., Toronto
.
th
tr
ov
, t
ha
fin
reel
the
tu:!,
chat
sup
Itt these days, when millions of
•
people' are making supreine ,sacrifices
inethe name ot a noble &asters, generous
. seeing to have beeeme a Uni-
••siersal habit-semething that We cOn-
• sid,er as tie paoreethan to ebe expected.'
It; iebnly when the giving Is 'Surreal:n(1-
Ad by unusual circanistancee, that it
attracts , attention. One euoh case,
'Which lireolyed il „very small amount
of inoeey, will: touch the fbelings' of,
everyone, •
During the 'Campaign of the Aineri,
can Wornen's Hospitals Organization
to 'raise naoaey or 10:r service, one et
the workers ` in, Los Angeles called at
the home of an elderly coldeed woman,
whin he found to be suffering e,ritle
teveree- cold. "I",he negrese listened
with'great laterest, hewever, to a dos.'
,cription et 1116- work 'that .Americau
woMen physicians are clohig in Prance,
and then she said:.
"Well, honey, I :has sixty Cente, .1
was goin' to Pay ten cents fer car faie
to go in town 00 dat I could bey me
.tifty.eents' worth of medicine, but 111
les' give inn the ten cerits foethe boys
and welk downtown,"
Then after a moment elle adelech.",011,
dat Seeing so little! I hu 501110 elliOMI"
I ean fix up fOr goy cOld, wed
Yon, the fifty cents„too,"
'hie Grand Fleet bud- the eS 00 ri;
„
Servitee eonstime sortie, million tene
Of eoal a year,
Obtained Prom Denosi'ts Along the'
• South Coast of Australia':
Material- for cloth -making is now
being obtained, from the sea bott-Ora
along the south coast of Australia. It
is fibre derived from a plant that
groWs in shallow water.
One would naturally infer that the
plant was a seaweed of some kind.
But it i.sn't. It is a flowering- plant,
a perennial, that produces. seed every
year.,
When the plants die the soft tissue
is "retted out" of them and the leaf
fibres sink to the bottom, where they
are covered by simile,' detritus, the
mixture forming a bed in which, the
seeds of a fresh crop sprout.
This has been going on for many
'centuries and, as a result, there exist
vas-depOsits of fibre that in some
localities are More than Seven' feet
Afterthici
'
stripping off the top or grow-
ing layer, the underlying material is
dredged up, sifted and washed far re-
covery of the fibre. The average re-
turn of air-dried fibre is about six
pounds per cubic yard. Workable de-
posits cover 240 square miles.
Thehfibre ie color brown to ,buff
and white. Sdme of it is delicate and
silky, some Is More like horsehair.
Tweeds have been 'woven out of it;
but it seeins to be het er suited(mixed
with wool or alone) for Carpets and
upholstery, for baeking oileloars and
linoletuns and for n1attrese
minaret's rdaturent cures Coma. 8re,
Ontario Mineral Output.
The report of the Departmeet of
Mines for the produalon of minerali
during the first hine months of this
year Shows that thehvalue 'of or pro-
duced is far exeeeding tha't „of last
year, despite adverse conditlims due
to the War, except in the ease of
molibtlenite, lead and copper ore.
• Gold prodoced the first nine inpiiths
of 1918 amounted to $6,875,766, Coln -
pared with .$6,754,535 in the same
period for 1917. Silver productieti has
kept well tip to 00 meek, arid though
the quantity iVaa slightly less, the
armee was eOnio half a militon dollara
Of the iron Ore, et 154,243 tone'ellIP-
ped, sothe 84,846 tons wore ehipped to
Ontario points, end thereat outeicie
the province,
Oren cloth are
double ticking, -
FR' 7,,
excellent made o
issur; 52.
A st.aEpp:n !NI PRANOlt
an Memoriam)
Moriotte Franco
Near the unrooting bees
t They laid iny, boy ta ree't,
Par, tar from mo.
1(11111 Were the stranger7har1le
That bore 'rnysoldier-son
To his last bivouac,
To rust well, won.
They placed the lowly cress,
Blest taiga to all who weer?,
And thea, witarother boys,
Left him asleep.
Wild birds sweet requiems sing,
Wild poppies' radiance strew
Above those boys who died
For, me and you.
They fougizt. their inward .4114
Tb.ey conquered mortal fear,
Thou hung a*a3r sweet youth,
To them So dear.
0, boymy boys my boy, '
The heart ache's , ever new
But•Ol I aro as proud. *
So proud of you!
4'1\l'oneieni.;
, For 15, days month of Sanitary I
bwas suffering with pain of rheumatism
nutti'zaff',)i;:g ailipmity_1"Anii;(1.c.10! remedies
son 'told me about riAltas
LINI-
aS soon ts 1 tried 114 the Satur-
day night, the next ruorning I was feel-
ing very goo; r tell you this remedy Is
very...good; I could give you a good cer-
tificate any time that you would like to
have one. re any time I come to hear
about any perstm nick of rhe'Lisitatiarn,
could tell them about this rernedY.
• Yours truly, •
ErexEsT
2'16,Bue Ontario East,
• Feb, IA, 1908.
The Hunger Stone of the Elbe.
few weeks ago the newspapers
reported that there was great depres-
sion in Saxdny and Bohemia because
the famous "hunger stone" of the
Elbe, near the town of Tetsehen, had
come into view. This rock is usually
covered by the river; it appears only
when in time of drought the water has,
fallen fax below its usual level, and it
is a tradition in that parkof Germany'.
that its appearance means that a time
.of famine And suffering is at hand.
Carved en theestone is the sentence,
"Wenn du midi siehst, claim weine"
(When you see' tne,.you shall weep);
and there -are; as the picture shows, a
number of raarketo show the point to
which the river fell in various years
of drought. The earliest and one of
the lowest records is that of 1616.
Other years are 1746, 1790, 1800, 1842,
1868 and 1900_
lff.inard,a Liniment Cures 115
Thought,
• On.p
a 1
, no, officer," the bet; replied
quickly. "I think toe highly of my
King." •
Thc.German scowled and returned:
"I hope you don't dare to call him
'10h, no, officer; I think too highly
of nay jackass."
MbNEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order. Five Dollars mists three cents.
• Thought Too licgaly of Both.
* On a road in Belgitim a Gernaan of-
ficer met a boy leadlog a jackass and
addressed him in a, heavy jovial fa-
shion as follows: • ,
"That's a. fine jackass you have, my
son. What do you call it? Albert, I
bet" •
• "Oh, no, officer," the boy replied
quickly. "d think too highly of nlY
King."
The ,German scowled and returned'.
"I hope you -don't dare call him Wil-
liam,"
'oh,„ no, officer;, Irthink too highly
of my jackass."
—a- •
iliinard,st Mita:neat Cures Zokolitheria.
Reduces Strained, Puffy Ankles:
Lymphangitis, Poll Evil, Fistullal
Boils, Swellings; Stops Lameness
and allays pain. Heals Sotes,Cuts;
Bruises, Boot Chafes. It is
'SAFE ANTISEPTIC HD GERMICIDE
• Does not blister or remove the
hair and bore can he worked. Pleasant ta use.'
*2.0 a bottle; delivered. DeScribe your case
for sectalinstructions and Book 5 R. free,
•
lAnsatmili NE. IR.. autireotie tioitrient for mankind. ou,
41ueet ttreine, Painrut. Knotted; swam vette. Cotten.
Aiated—only afele drops required at on application. krIce
14.011:140tUbncltal:Pat.actcsoF1410:15:1.6TiathreesdrBe'ldite.dMeerceaeola,ril
The Trust.
"These all died in faith, not having
received the promises, but having seen
them afar off"-Heb.'itt. 13. ,
And as they trusted: we the task in-
herit,
The „unfinished task for which their
lives were spent;
But leaving us a portion of their`spirit
They gave their witness and they died
content.
Full well they knew they could not
build without as
That laetter country,'faint and far des-
cried,• ,
God's own true England; but they did
• not doubt us -
And in that faith they died.
estiaarais atniment Cures GKrget in Cow•s
The Germans have their own
• philosophy -they have their super-
men, their super -State their su r
battles; and they have now their
super -collapse.
ITT.Ear.
OVnIrtIor.14 ilarPartitrgirgrgeatri11,160ira.sall
re for 81,200 on quick sale.
WfTqnn Pub/tang C'o Lld Toronto.
WEEKLY NEWSPAPElf. FOlt SALE
Itt New Z.Valrh OPckr` g°thg tc'
Prare 00. or,th door*
that amount. Apply J. 'Ff.. c'o
Publishing Co.. Limited. Toronto,
STORNI wnenown rola SALLE.
eiBT OUR. PRICE LIST MOWING -
kit -cost of windows glazed coinplete. any
Ezael, Tralliday COIlwany., Box B. 51,
nilton
sersomer.aterona
CANCER. TUMORS.
internal and external. cured
LUMPS. RTC,
cut paln by our home treatment. *1.irrite
es bofpre too tato. Dr. Bentham Medical
24.1.:2...im ted. Coiling wood: Out.
DARTING, PIERCING
SCIA P
14`, 4k
So, do. those rheumatic twinges and
the loin -ache -a of lumbago, the nerve -
inflammation of neuritis, the wry neck,
the joint wrench, the Iigainent sprehee
the muscle strain,„ and the throbbing,.
leruise.
The ease of applying, the quickness
of -relief, the positive results, the
, cleanliness, and the economy. of
SIcian's Liniment make it uhiversally,
preferred. Made in Canada.
- Kept Awake at Night
Itching So I p tense
Healed by Ciaticiara
"A nasty patch appeared. on the
rigliteide of my face, caused by shav-
ing with a dull razor. I drew blood
with my fingers, the itching was so in-
tense. The patch was red and irritated
causing,me to keep awake at night.
"Seeing Cuticura 'Soap and'- Ointe
went advertised I sent for a free sm..
ple„ After using I noticed quite (gt
Change so I bought a box of Cuticura
Ointment and two cakes of Cuticura
Soap, and 1 did not finish the whole
box of,Cuticurre Ointment when I was
healed permanently." (Signed) Ewen
MacDonald, Marlon Bridge, N. Se
September 30, 1917,
Cuticura Soap and Ointment are net
only most valuable for the treatment of
pimples, dandruff and irritated scalps,
but their reat mission is to prevent
such conditions. Cuticura Soap used
exclusively for the toilet, and Cadmus
Ointment, as needed, keepe„the skin
and scalp clean, clear and healthy• .
For Free Sample Each by Mail Ad-
' dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Beaten, IL S. everyWhere.
10-1=tinteerSSEXIMIntatX=Zil
flo cl ikcl Coronad
• Coronado each; California
Where the, balmy 'yet invigorating climate makes
possible the ,enjoyment of outdoor sRortS through.
out the Winter Moiths: „ ,
• .:POLO, GOLF, TENNIS, MOTORING,
.FISIIING, BAY 'AND SURP BATHING
1
Wrif* for WthteT Ii,tolder and Golf PrOgrall%
JOHN J, HliR'tiAu$, fannagee
(;.