HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1918-2-28, Page 3CLOCKWORK IN THE AFTER EFFECTS
THE BATTERY
'I RN(NG THE HOSE Ol'' DEA'1'II
ON THE ENEMY.
When Our Artillery Makes It Un-
pleasant for the German Side
of No !Van's Land.
"Piro Number One!" staid the officer,
•
urndng away for a minute from th'r
jagged ohservation elfto e tumbledown wall to address his telephonist,
sitting on the floor in the corner.
"Fire Number One!" repeated the
parrot -like voice into the mouth of
the instruthent.
There was a moment's pante as the
order was transmitted to the waiting
guns, a couple of thousand yards in
the rear. The second floor room of the
dilapidated house, all shored up with
great timbers, was in deep gloom, sat
where a patch of -sunlight• cam
through the narrow chink command
ing the enemy's lines, Outside
bird whistled, an aeroplane drone
overhead; now and again came th
muffled crack of a field gun. Then
suddenly:
Number One fired, sir," said the
telephonist, as the thin, metallic voice
of the battery operator reached his
ear.
"Right!" said the officer, glancing
at the second hand of the watch that
ticked away on a little ledge beside
his compass and neap. He waited,
perhaps, fifteen seconds --premature
staring at the target only strains the
eyes -and then leisurely picking up
his eight -power binoculars, stared
steadily through them at a little pilo
of bricks and mortar, some three miles
away in Hunland, that merited the site
of a once proeperous French farm.•On
this tiny target the guns were to be
registered so that the error of the day
-due to wind, temperature, and baro-
meter -could be calculated and allow-
ed for accordingly in any shooting the
battery might be called upon to do.
Plus or Minus?
As the second hand of the watch
touched twenty a great cloud of duet
and smoke arose up in a pillar, and
drifted slowly away in the wind, to
the left of, and a couple of yards
away from, the target, The observer
watched ;steadily to see whether the
smoke obecnrrel the view of the farm-
house or whether it passed behind it
-often the only way to tell whether
a shot lass fallen .lug" or "mints"
the objective, Having made up hie
mind he sent the necessary correction
to the gun:
'(Inc degree more right, drop
eighty."
"One degree more right, drop
eighty'," repeated the toneless voice
of the tele;•raphiet. "Then "Correct!"
as to battery checked bade the or-
der.
Another short pause, during which
the officer puffed lazily at his cigar-
ette. Then:
"Member two.focal, sir."
Again the twenty seconds' wait, as
the shell travelled to the target; this
time only a tiny puff of dust hanging
in the hot air showed where the shot
-a "dud" -had fallen. But the train-
ed eye of the observer had picked it
up, and again a brief order ran down
the wire.
So the work went on, and, mean-
while, back in the battery, all was go-
iug smoothly. In the battery com-
mander's post -always known as the
B.C. post -sat the major, who was
"taking" the shoot. By his side the
telephonist, repeating the corrections
from the 0.1'. At the door of the dug-
out stands the B.C.A.---or battery com-
mander's assistant ----megaphone in
hand, shouting out the major's orders
to the section commander's, subaltern
officers, who are in direct charge of
the guns. They in turn pass on the
orders to the "Numbers One" of the
respective guns --always a sergeant or
a corporal.
The Gun Team.
In the gun pits, grouped round the
great iron monsters, that overt' two
or three minutes spit forth a great
metal weighing, perhaps, 2001bs,, are
grouped the gun -numbers. There is,
most important of all, the layer -the
gunner responsible for the handling
of the dial sight, by which the ' great
howitzer, weighing many tons, is di-
rected on to the target. There are
the loading and ramming numbers
who bustle up, carrying between them
a shell on a tray, and ram it home in
the breech by means of a long, wood- 1
en rammer, tipped with brass. There I
Is the NAA. in charge, who sees to
the elevation of the gun with a wheel, a
by a few turns of which --such is the
delicate balance of the piece --he can,
single-handed, elevate or depress the t
muzzle to tiro required range, Final-
ly, there is the lanyard number, who s
actually fires the howitzer. f
The cord lanyard, a great steel hook b
at the end, is fitted into the tube at a
the breech, and the lanyard number,
standing to the right and only a couple a
of feet away from the gun, gives a 1n
OF LACRIPPE
Often Worse Than the JD): cane
llttelf--Yietims Left Weals,
Nervoim and Warn Out.
- La Grippe ---the Rema by which in-
fluenza is most generally known --in a
dieenee prevalent throughout Canada
during the winter and sprint, mouths.
Anyone who has felt its plums is not
likely to forget tete trouble, I.a grippe
starts with a slight cold -and ends
with a complication of troublem. It
lays tt strong man on hie back; it
tortures him with fevers and chills,
heartaches and backaches. It leaves
him a prey to pneumonia, Itronchitls,
consumption and other deadly dis-
eases. In fact its after eller t e aro mora
serious than the trouble it.(clf. You
can avoid la grippe and winter colds
by keeping your blood rich and red
by the occasional use of Dr. Williams'
e Pink Pills. If you have not done this
o and the disease lay4et you low, you
can banish all its evil after effects by
althis same great blood -building, nerve
!,restoring medicine. This has been
e proved in thousands of cases through-
out Canada by In grippe victims who
have been matte well and strong
through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink
1 Pills. Among the cured is Miss Irene
' Bootes, Portsmouth, Ont., who writes:
j ---"I take much pleasure in recom-
mending Dr. Williams' Pink Piles, be-
cause I have proved their worth in
!my own ease, Last winter I had a
'severe nttaelc of la gu'ippe and it left
nue weak and all run down. I had
rsevere pains in the 'chest and under
I the arms, palpitation of the heart and
attacks of netu•algia which Left me
• with the feeling that life was scarcely
worth living, I was taking doctor's
I medicine, but it dill not help me and I
was much discouraged. I was advised
to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and be-
gan their use only on the principle
that I would try anything that alight
better my condition. I had only been
using the pills a couple of weeks when
the pains began to leave me. Gradual-
ly my strength returned, -my appetite
improver!,. and in a little more titan a
month I felt all my old time vigor had
returned, I am sincerely glad I was
persuaded to try Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, and I shall always have a good
word to say for them."
Dr• Williams' Pink Pills not only
cure the disastrous after effects of la
' grippe, but are also a specific for all
these troubles due to poor blood, such
as anaemia, rheumatisin, indigestion,
women's ailments, and the generally
worn out'feeling•that affects' so many
people. You eat get these pills
through 11
g any !antler in medicine or b
mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
82.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont,
A LIVELY ADVENTURE.
At Railroad Speed On An Elephant's
Back.
Meghmala was a big elephant. She
stood nearly eleven feet high and had
a tail that touched the ground, with a
tuft of black hair at the end, She was
the central figure in a lively adven-
ture that a lady who writes in the
Field had during a shooting expedition
in India,
We were once allowed to take Megh-
mala out for a whole day, says the
writer. Our little party consisted of
the elephant and her driver; E---,
myself and a forest guard. We went
into the densest part of the jungle,
and had to go very steadily as the
trees were so thick. On the way,
While crossing a sandy place, we saw
some large tracks that the mahout
told us were made by a wild elephant.
After an hour of trekking we saw a
beautiful seminar,- and E----- took aim
and got him with his first shot; down
he •came, and tis we dashed up, eaegh-
mala trumpeted loudly, The beast
was not quite dead, and E— jumped
down, also the forest guard and the
mahout, in spite of. protests from me,
to hallal the beast --a religious cere-
mony that must be performed before
the animal dies, else the natives aro
not allowed to eat the meat.
And now occurred an awful thing.
Illegbmala turned round and started
off` with me on her back! The mahout
railed, commanded and did all in his
power to stop her, but it was of no
use, and I realizes! that she intended
to run away, You can imagine my
feelings! I hail everything on the
pad with me -E -'s gun, rifle,
glasses, , camera, -and our coats -rand I
mew I must try to keep them safe,
lay full length on the pad and grasp-
ed the side ropes, and kept my bead
s low as I could, It was an awful
tide, I would not have believed that
in elephant could go at such a pace
hrongh thick jungle; but we flew, and
what trees came. in Meghmala's way h
he merely pushed down with no of- a
ort whatever. I was sick with terror, .
ut I managed to keep hold of the gun
nd tho Aria,
At last T saw to low bough coming,
nd I felt that all was up, Iffy toped
ad been swept oft' somo time before, g
a
f.
h
as 'I might not be vo lnrlry anoih
time; so I got ready the guns, an
wimp we mime to air open bit of john
pas I. r,t as 1 dropped Omni :u+A h t In,
self t411d' air behind by bit tail. 1 it
With u bump, and - got tip -in dine t
sen 1\1e d:hrdala vtutbdt id the jungle be
vend, I rane(! arod called, and res ,ie
when I hcarel ten nn a'tu•ine dill it ulf-
ly did for me, The niehotit. found to
j first, and wh''n we found hl- --- an
the forest gimlet 1'- --- tree shal:in
all over end meth! not sheat:, taut tit.,
men were nearly ne had. .How we got
, homo I de not know, but.we did, and 1
was put to bed. AL l ---, IS--., tt
friend, and thirty coshes with another
- elephant, Rarel illi, then started off to
tun for M g 1
hunt t e iron a.
At eight o'clock tient evening they
came Monte, with both elephants. Ram-
kaili had caught up with Meghmata,
and the mahout had ,jumped from one
to the other, Everything except
E ----'s coat and my tepee was on the
pad, loose. Anil my topee and R ----'s
coat were found; also the comb out of
my hair. My ilea is that Meghmala
scented the wild elephant, and that
when she made of with me site was
going in search of it. Had she met
the other elephant I should have been
killed instantly.
cr
' She ft Um! to
Lay 'NE For Day
11
)r'l. 'tinn,le3'1'(:nn Why She reef]
Jkddd't; Jiitunry
e
In Memoriam.
fl,,;,nl a ,l Join, 111"frac sutlt,
!u 1elunder. Feeble.")
1 ,t ht r ri a a 111 the '.ams COW
of
1t„ -r.. thio man t Otte”
I« t•'l:enti:•re" 1ie! le Where poppies
'fire Iiet& ii '1•ore'h llghte we the }say
to Victory.
d • Eagerly no gfttsp it.
g
The Hero.
It is not the deed but the danger
That tests the hero's soul;
And the songs of strength are not so
rare
As the sign of self-control,
A torch, a cheer and a niche of fame
For the man who met the foe.
But here's to the men who fail or win
In a stress we do not know.
Some are cheered by a nation's honor
And some by a steadfast friend;
And some by the light of a woman's
love
Till the strain and strife have end.
And after the story is writ and read
The heart of the world is stirred,
But here's to the man who toiled alone
And whose tale was never heard,
There is ,toy in a fateful struggle -
If the watchers understand.
There is jay in the lift of another's
load
By a loyal heart or hand.
But some things fall to the lot of
life, -
And ever it must be so, --
Some no others can understand,
And some no one can know.
In the long, long rat we reckon
Each man at his social worth;
With a partial glance at his circum-
stance
And the stars above his birth,
But under the breast that stands the,
test
The heart tides ebb and flow,
Then here's to the one whose duty's
done
In a stress we do not know,
--Charles Poole Cleaves,
GUARD THE BABY
Itesnite, :'die Stntee, Were So (Inct
That ;the Itereentund,s Thema to All
;i.afferers Freon Kidney Disease.
1 H'e'll bre•nlc no faith;
Sleep on, and 1.:e+ cotdeet
No need to fear.
St. Jnlu,. N.iI., I'eh y 1`ith (Special.)
Mrs. Motille, an estimable nelv liv-
ing at 117 King Si. La r, thin city,
alit i s ready to -e x
v dv tell of the benefit elm
him rer'cit'ed from using„ Goad's Kid-
ney P111.;,
"Yes, bo'ld's I(idney Pills have done
me a wonderful lot of good," 1Mro.
Mantle told an interviewer. "For
three years I was in a worn-out renell.
tion, often having to lay oft' for a day
or two.
"I suffered from drowsiness and
sharp pains across my hack, I had
headaches, and wee subject to neural-
gia and rheumatism.
"Dodd's Kidney Pille helped me so
much that I can highly recommend
them to anyone suffering from kidney
disease."
Dodd's I(idney Pills are purely a
kidney remedy. lilaking the kidneys
healthy enables them to strain ail the
impurities out of the blood. That
means pure blood and good health.
Dodd's Kidney Piles are recommended i
by thousands of women who were once
run down and worn out.
ENEMY HAS 2,500 PLANES.
Rest with the dead,
Thy work bra= bran v.ell done,
The ponnu > Maori upon thy freee,
Are! long ti-' reel - Iy lasts
Wo ehall not leee the place
'fetal marks thy bier.
-A non,
tylinnrees Ltnlrteent Ceres Dlsteatner,
"W!tat:e your mine, little girl?"
"Peggy," "But what's your last
name?" "I don't knew what it will
be; D',n not married yet"
,
Mansouville, June 27, '13.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited,
Yarmouth, N. S.
O
entlemen, It affords me great
pleasure and must be gratifying to
you to know that after using 86
bottles of your Liniment on a case of
, paralysis which my father was afflict-
ed with, I was able to restore him to
normal condition. Hoping other suf-
ferers may be benefited by the use of
your Liniment, I stn,
Sincerely yours,
GEO. H. IIOLMES.
Hoeppner has now brought th
strength of the German aviation ser
vices up to rather more than 200
squadrillas, representing a total
about 2,500 machines. They are di-
vided as follows:
Bombarding squadrillas, 28; chasers
.10; protection squadrillas, 30; patrol
equadrillas, 80; artillery squadrillas
100; total, 270.
To these groups must be added the
aeroplanes and hydroplanes of the
navy, a dozen or more garrison squad -
rifles, and ,about a dozen training
groups.
I have before me a detailed account
of the fate of rather more than 50
Zeppelins, which explains in the most
satisfactory manner why these prodi-
gious vessels no longer frighten the
world, and so fur as land operations
crono 1
aconcerned can Queer be seri-
ously counted in the air services.
Apart from two destroyed before the
war, the list why be summed up as
follows:
Destroyed in Germany, 10; destroy-
ed in neutral countries or near the
Canada s li heat Crop.
It is estimated that Canada's wheat
crop last year, including the yield in
the West and Ontario wheat, was
about 215,000,000 bushels. A care-
ful survey has shown that, on Dee.
1st, ire addition to seed requirements,
the
amount
of Canadian wheat on
this side of the Atlantic was about
e 112,500,000 bushels, of which 8,600,-
- 000 bushels were in the United States
en route to the Allies. This estimate
But .Airships Have Proved a.Fiasco-
Thirty-two Destroyed.
Writing from the french front, G
11. Perris, the London Chronicle's spe
cial correspondent, says:
Bythe efforts
of the past year
which I recently reported, General vest
, r
of included a considerable amount of
wheat still in the farmers' hands,
AGAINST
COLDA front, 5; destroyed in their way
by the
British Navy, 01 on home
from England, 15; others destroyed at
- - sea, 2; out of use, 5; in use as train-
ing schools, 4; in use chiefly in the
North Sea, 9; total, 50.
Considering the millions of pounds
spent and the unlimited hopes built
upon these monsters, we may regard
the rsult as one of the most con-
spicuous fiascos in the history of in-
dustrial and military science.
To guard the baby against colds
nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab-
lets. Tho Tablets are a mild laxative
that will keep the little one's stom-
ach and bowels working regularly.
It is a recognized fact that 'where the
stomach and bowels tire in good order
that colds will not exist; that the
health of the little one will be good
and that he will thrive and be happy
and good-natured. The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers or by mail
at 26 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
C'
IIe Guessed IIe Hadn't.
There is an amusing story going
round the British Graad Fleet, just
the kind of joke which Jack Tar likes
to give and take with his friends. It
is quite seriously affirmed that when
nn American squadron consisting of
the U;S,S. Delware, New York, and
Wyoming, with destroyers and other
craft, came up the Firth, the British
flagship signaled to then: "You are
to anchor west of the Forth Brldge."
But the Americans passed under thin
bridge and sailed on. Shortly the
British admiral made another signal:
"We eignaled just now that you were
to anchor west of the Forth Bridge;
why don't you stop?" And the
American flagship immediately
signaled the reply: "Weil, I guess wo
have only passed one bridge as yeti"I
THERE IS A DIFFERENCE ----1
Can anyone who has not seen them
imagine what it is like to be a prison-
er in this present war? Someone,
who saw the first French, English,
Russian and Canadian prisoners
either returned or escaped, writes of
them: "They have an expression of
their own, a concentrated, unuttered
suffering in their eyes, an unending
; patience in their voices, There is all
i the difference in the world between
PAIN ? NOT A BIT i s
o LIFT YOUR CORNS •
OR
°CALLUSES OFF !
° No humbug 1 Apply few drops •
than Just 11ft them away 0
with lingers.
. p e
This new drug Is an ether com-
pound discovered by a Cincinnati
chemist It is called
freezone, and can now
be obtained In tiny bet•
Iles as here Shawn at
very
little cost ost from any
drug store, Inst ask
for freezane. Apply a
drop or two directly
upon a tender corn or
callus and instantly the
soreness disapp ears.
Shortly you will find
the corn or callus so
loose that you can lift It
off, root and all, with
the fingers.
Not a twinge of gain,
soreness or irritation;
not even the slightest
smarting, either when
applying freezone ar
afterwards.
This drug doesn't eat
2 I:l up the corn or callus,
but shrivels them so
they loosen and come right out. It is
no humbug I It works like a charm.
Por a few cents you can got rid of
every hard corn, soft corn or morn be-
tween the toes, as well as painful
calluses on bottom of your Leet, It
never disappoints and never burns,
bites or inflames. If your druggist
hasn't any freezone yet, tell him to
get a little bottle for you from his
wholesale house.
.them and the soldiers retuin.d from: I
the Front. The latter, even when se-
I
verely wounded, have a proud, almost
satisfied look, as if in making their;
supreme effort, something of the glory
and exaltation of those fearful mo-(
ments still clung y are
to them. The
I
• warriors hurt in the great game,
I brought gladly and triumphantly;
home, where they know well what
welcome awaits thein.
"How different is the lot of the
allied prisoners? The sight of them,
jof any nation, is an unforgettable re-
curring nightmare. A voice, weak,
hitt insistent, rings in your ears:
'Won't you help us?'
"Theyknow what
it is to do valiant-
ly, without praise, to suffer silently
without sympathy, to ache with home.
sickness, surrounded by the enemy,
They are the unseen•aheroes and we
cannot guess at half their pain."
There aro al present more than a
million and a half Allied prisoners of
war in German hands. The Prisouors
of War Society, of which Principal
Mutton of University College, Toronto,
is president, is appealing through the
churches of Ontario for money to help
provide thio bare necessaries of life to
these unfortunate heroes. Congrega-
tions who have not yet contributed
may send their donations to the treas.
ttrer of the society, Hugh Fletcher,
Esq„ 1132 Huron St., 'Toronto,
LEMON JUICE IS
FRECKLE REMOVER,
Girls! Make this cheap beauty lotion
to clear and whiten your skin.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, shake well, and you
ave a quarter pint of the best freckle
nil tan lotion, and complexion bonutl-
fier, at very, very email cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will supply
)tree ounces of orchard white for a
ew cents. Massage this sweetly feet -
rant lotion into the face, neck, arras,
nd hands each clay and see how
realties and blemishes disappear and
ow clear, soft and white the shin be-
00100, Yes! It is harmless.
jerking pull, There is a sharp crack,
followed by an ear-splitting roar, a
puff of flame, and in the gun pit there
is a moment of frenzied hues. One
Man pulls open the breech, letting out
tt Belt of fire and a belch of melte,
two others rush up with a fresh shell,
the layer pool`s through his sight, the
I.1o. 1 shouts orders, and in less than
to minute the monster stands there,
knout upraised, ready again to spit
forth dts lead of destl'netion,
and my hair was combed straight by
branches. The bough caught my bead
with an awful blow, but I passed un-
deileath, and on we swept. I . now
realized that i must somehow get off,
Get the manure, on tine !aittl_L•c.ioi'a
tow goes, .,_....
1 t,oroitiettns prefer white pearls, but
in China bright yellow pearls ire the
meet valued.
Tire easiest way to ri • •,•dttioCsl
is. by drpwadg' it `elothA41'1"aleohol and
rubbing slightly.
Pickles are never good unless -they
are put ftp tvittt the best. eidee 'vine-
gar.
stibuseet'ia .nitilnne11t Carta Catds, Inc.
Magic Baking Powder costa
no more than the ordinary
kinds. For economy, buy
the one pound tins.
e1 E.w,GILLET a o0 oPANY LIMITED
Clover mord Pr
ices
ere going
IT;
p,
farmers intending to do full justice
to their lend in so dtctg down with
Sprint, mown grain should make sure
of a simply of alsilte and red clover
as soon as poseible,
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order, !Five dollars coats three cents.
A bean pot is a very good substi-
tute for the expensive casserole.
Cheap cuts of meat browned, season-
ed attd cooked in a bean pot, in the
oven with a little hot water added are
tender and deliciou,
i!RFItJE Granulated. Eyeliais;
s`a .orf Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by
Sun, Duet and Wind quickly
ORti .rtt',�J- P,y relieved by Murine. Try It In
YOUR
p,yourE•yesandinBaby'sEyes.
No Smartiae, Jed Eye Comfort
hlsrineEysiiemedy,^,giYsa.rp°ruor'tiia ivajg
cr. Salva, 1e Tn5,, 21,. For Awe of the 6U,— Free.
Ask r,iurltae Eye iteimedy Co., Chicago a
Use the spare automobile tire oc-
casionally to keep it soft and pliable.
And remember that an additional ex-
tra tube is wise preparedness for long
trips.
Mineve's Liniment Duxes Diphtheria.
If your stockings wear first at the
heel, put a piece of chamois inside of
the heel of your shoe. This will pre-
vent friction on the stocking and
greatly prolong its wear.
There are 270 active volcanoes in
the world.
When bnyilig your Piano
Insist on having an
eaOTTO HIGE8."
PIANO ACTION
EAGLE
serer
ii:,
\(..,4,113
Writs tee -day for war Arig
FlikEE CATALOGUE
showing our full lines of Bicycles for lieu
and Women, Bays and Girls.
It6OTOR CYOLES
IV1OTOR ATTACHMENTS
TIres, Coaster Brakes, wheels, Inner Tubes,
Latups, Bells, Cyclumeters, Saddles, cqutp-
mcm and Parts of Bicycles. You can buy
your supplies from us st whofeeale prices.
T. W. BOYD & SON,
27 Notre Demo Street West, Montreal.
Reduces Bursal Enlargements,
Thickened, Swollen Tissues,
Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore-
ness from Bruises or Strains;
stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain.
Docs not blister, remove the hair or
lay up the horse, 82.00 a bottle
at druggists or delivered. Book 1 M free.
ABSORBINE, JR,, for mankind—an
antiseptic liniment for bruises, cuts, wounds,
strains, painful swollen veins or glands. It
heals and soothes. 81.00 a bottle at drug-
gists or postpaid, Will,tetl you more if you
write,
W, F. 10050, 5, 0. F.. 510 lymaes stag„ Montreal, Can.
sham -blue and Absorbing. ere are made la Caner%
Dangerous Gas .and Acids That
fieri The Sbrn -- on-: The Food
Cause Dyspepsia, Indigestion
Recommends a Safe Way to Treat Stomach Trouble At Home
Irany 51011ar10 sufferers tvhe Lura sour, fermenting muss into the in -
always furl of gas and whose stem- 1 testinee and so reltevo the stomach
netts burn with acid after nearly , pain but the acid stilt remains In 'the
every meal think these things are the stomach to generate more gas ;tad
Itl:tirLT of indtgestict1 when In I produce moretrouble at the nest
reality they are the CAUSE. ,nest,
It 1s just as foolish to give area- I If you are using digestive aids M-
obil digestants such as pepsin, etc. I ter meals drop them for a white and
stomach n
to ti Cull of gas and acid as '•i
it would he fur a. man who had step- instead get a fear gne iln Labiate 1of
7
druge drubitggist
and
magnesia from each Pert 0u tt tuck to rah the Lit on his druggist and ttttca two with ascot
foot without Stomhso ging the Limit, meal, food
hafted ll ng trail times not
Some apid.a(1, generate toe mach ee;est food but will n nhana, tier e.O
gas and amid. Gas distends the 010111- r.ssive acid in gout. stenite•lt, keep•
soh walls, causing a full, bloated up- rhe fend sweet and trill drive the gas
pressivo feeling while the acid err(- and bloat eight out of ymnr body. As
tater and inflames tete lining of the I Muano/ an is prepared ,n various
stomach, Naturally the fend ferments firms he sure to get Bisurated :51ag-
eund sours, digestion is often delayed ,nesia for this purpose as it 10 not
and stomach misery is the result. laxative and in this refined form twill
Artiflrial dlgesteuts w111 Push this not injure the stomach in any way,
m
ivto hear
1 WHEELOCK ENGINE, 18%42.
or
e
New Automatic Valve Type, Completes with supply and exhaust piping,
flywheel, etc, WI1t accept $1,200 earth for immediate safe,
, ELECTRIC GENERATOR, 30 KV., 110-120 Volts ID:C,
Will accept 5425 cash for immediate sale.
PULLEYS, Large size.
26x60 -43e ; 12x00+••-$20 ; 12 4rc43---$12 ; 12x36--$5.
1 BLOWER OR FAN, Buffalo Make.
14 Incit discharge• ---$30.
REAL ,ESTATES CORPORATION, I.Ji
GO Pront St, West, Tot: leo I
Tactful.
"She gave me te tie for my birth-
day!"
• "Iiow did you accept it?"
"1 told her that its beauty s',hetnd
be far my eyes alone."
Mnaara'a Liniment Cures Garc'et la Como
The English Channel has an aver-
age depth of 110 feet,
BELP WA2sTxD
ADII. S w•ANTI l, TO Du PLAIN
J and light sewing at Imam, whole or
spam tittle, good pat, work sent ally
distance, .: hurgas paird. Send at.'itlte for
Particulars, National Manufacturing
Company, 3te,nt real,
70It BALE
, yEl'Ii1.Y Ni \it1-' .t I I IN
-00'' Pn daunts-. Doing a tin l
aesa IPea ih er owner tfire.it nit fire
market. A. gen tt ,lit, Mallen, for 0 :t.:.1. Pith
each 2Ptdy 1 , x 12. S1'13bo•1 1'011i:�:trr,/r
en.. Limited, Turnnto.
0$Ils'LL jIul Jl'I'I•:U NF\1':'l aI'k`,R
V and nob prize flu Plitt[ in i•`a�rern
Ontario. Insurance ,•:irried 51.1,M. Wilt
I go for 01,2110 nn quick sale. Hos 80,
'Wilson Publishing Co. 1.td Torun',
vasonx,LANEOVs
or t ANCISIt, 7''l'M+JPS, LUAU'S. ETC.,
'1 internal and external, sauced with-
out pain by our Rollie treatment. Write
us before ton tat-. Itr. bell mein Medical
Cm. Limited. i'nllingccned. Centie.
A Cure for h pies
"You don'tneed mercury, potash
or any other strong mineral to
cure pimples caused by poor
) blood. Take Extract of Roots --
druggist calls it "Mother Selgel's
Curative Syrup -and your skin
will clear up as fresh as a baby's.
illawc
eten your stomach and
regulate your bowels." Get the
genuine. 50e.and$1.00Bottles.
, At drug stores. -
G11r„O1'S tie, 0:IabA ell
O11a0a>30 f(T thae Eyes
Pit 'sletans and ove specialists p re -
scribe Eon -Onto Ss a safe home Ian,-ty
1n the treatment nr rye teenblen to
strengthen eyesight. Soli ureter tremor
ref uttd guaranty by all drugtfs CS.
llu RA LIM
flIdEV 1''; i .I !
On Hands From Salt Rheum
At Very Small Cost for
Soap and Ointment.
"1 was a greatsuflerer from salt
rheum on my hands. It came in small
blisters between my thumb and finger
and it itched terribly and kept spread-
ing, I could not use Pty hands at all
and the skin would crack and bleed so
that I could not bend nay fingers. I can-
not describe what 1 have suffered and
the sleepless nights I had.
';Then Iof the Cutieura Soap -and
Ointment. Igonly used one cake of Cud--
tura
uti-tura Soap and one fox or Ointment
when my hands were healed." (Signed)
firs, M. L. Aiken, Hightvater, Qua.
Keep your Skint clear by daily use of
Cuticura Soap with touches of Oint-
ment now and hien,
For Free Sample Each by Mail ad-
dress post -card: 'Cuticura, Dept. A,
Roston, V. 3. A." Sell everywhere.
MOTHERS
O BE E
Should ez. Sq ti Ri W° Mc rag G5%r. ,'&'3
Letter Published by
Her PerrriOi$SIOII1.
Mitchell, Ind,•---r"L •din E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound helped meso much
during the time 1
was iooI'inforward
to the coming of my
w�sr''� recommending le one it o
Other a is
e acts t
.�n
!� p
mothers. Bafore
taking it,Lsolnrciteys
1
1 51111.ered with ,1 11-
l'iIl 6 1121, is so b d.y dist
'1d1 1 thuu,ght 1 eonld
I not live but. after
taking Hired bottled
, ,of Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vege•taab1e
Compound I was en-
tirely relived of
(! �kII,:dt neuralgia, I had
l Ii `�1• gained 1n strengthI;I r- and was able to go
amound and do all
my housework. My baby when seven
months old wcigfed 111 pounds and I fool
better than I have for a long time. .k
never had any medicine do me so
mueif ,rood. "-•-•bit's. 1'Fut85, Moarmuts'
Mitchell Ind,
Good theatth during maternity is s'
most important factor to both mother
and child, and many letters too been
received by the Lydia E. Pinithant
11leddeduo Co., Lynn, Mass., telling of
health restored duringthis'tryhng period
fly rhotabtoCuseomofpound;
I, dlu E1 Pinkhtotn avege•'
I5t1JI. No. 8.---'I9.