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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1918-3-14, Page 7THE CULTIVATION OF VACANT LOTS GROWTII 01P MOVEMENT IN GREAT BRITAIN. 260,000 Allotment-IIolders and Three Tines as :Many Waiting For Available Land. A wave of land -hunger is sweeping Greet Britain its a result of the as- tonishing growth of the garden - planting movement begun there when Joseph Fels of America organized the Vacant Lot Cultivation Society. To -day this Society is the nucleus of an orgnnized movement of 260,000 al- lotment -holders,- -men and women who are "doing their bit" by growing food on small plots of ground in and near cities and towns. And three times as many more are only waiting for the land to be made available for them. In the Southern District, centering in London, the allotment -holders have organized a federation with a mem- bership of 31,000. The garden -plant- ing movement has become more than a fad or an emergency war measure, It has become a nation-wide demand that opportunity be opened to all who are willing and able to cultivate the soil, and public men are beginning to see in the army of allotment -holders a rising force of the first importance, Sass the editor of the London herald: "A new and living force has come into the life of the nation. Wo refer to the allotment movement. It is one that will compel the prectieal atten- tion and response of municipal au- thorities and the Government. Allot- ment enthusiasts have become an array, which during the war has, with ;made and hoe, drilled and trained; have got the land hunger, and as a re- sult are here to stay. A Ir'orce to he Reckoned With. "Having fallen in love with Mother Earth in time of war, they will uot, if we rightly estimate their quality, prove false to her when peace shall dawn,' They are out to capture the entrenchments of the land monopolist and food profiteer, and woe betide any barrier which privilege shall attempt to place in the way of the army's ad- vance. "An evidence of the spirit of this movement was provided by the Con- ference of Allotment Holders, held in Essex Hall, London. There were pre- sent more than 300 delegates from some 100 societies, with an aggregate membership of over 31,000. In his opening address, the chairman refer- red to 'the work of the founder of the movement for the cultivation of va- cant and idle land—the late Joseph Fels'; and when, at hie suggestion, the Conference rose in a body 'to pay tri- bute to his memory, and place on re- cord the determination of those pre- sent to realize the ideal,' it was clear that here was a force that will have to he reckoned with in the future." in the allotment movement, land re - farm has secured the backing of Hien and women interested not ae theorists, but as actual tillers of the soil. John Galsworthy, the English writer, said: "Thisq uestion of the land is the question of the future, no matter what happens in the war. To put men on the lana we must have the land ready in terms of earth, not of paper; and have it in the right places, within easy reach of town or village. We know,' for instance, that in the last 'five months half a million allotment -gar- ; dens have been created in urban areas, and far more progress made with small holdings than in previous years, We have the chance of our life to scotch the food danger, and to restore a healthier balance between town and cottetry stocks. Of First Importance• "Only Ave generations have brought rs to the parasitic, town -ridden condi- tion we are in. The rate of deteriorn- lion will increase rapidly with each coming generation. We have, ael it were, turned seven-einl'hs of our pop- ulation into poor paddocks, to breed promiecuously among themselves. "The great impedimenta is the force of things as they are, tho huge vested enterprises frightened of losing pro- fits. If we pass this moment, when leen of every class and occupation, even those who thrive must on our town•ridden state, are a little fright- ened; if we let slip this thence for a Veal change ---can we hope that any- thing considerable will be (lone, with the dice loaded as they are, the scales weighted so hopelessly in 'favor of the towns? "Dare tory say that this whole vast question of the land with its throbbing importance, yea,- seeing that demnbil- izations do not coma every year ---its desperately immediate importance, is not fit nutter for instant debate and action; dare any say that we ought to relegate it to that limbo, after the war? In grim reality It taltes prece- dence of every ether question," Cleated milk will take the place of el cum in coffee. A tablespoonful of melted butter is measured after melting, It's faith in seihothiug and enthusi- asm for nomething that mattes life worth looking ate- -Holmes. Hemming iambs are usually caused by ill health, toe much animal fetid or barfly ventilated pens. Generally speaking a retrieve.: of, either or all of the. tondb,ieret will male thing's STRENGTH FOR 1 THE DAY'S WOR • Defends Upon Good Iced Blood to Nourish the I3ody--Weak People Need a Tonic. The tonic treatment through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for tun down condition of the health is based on sound medical principles and ou common sena°. Mere and more men and women are realizing that pare, red blood sonans health, and that efficiency in tho workslinp, the f01ce, the home or in any of the varied walke of life depends entirely upon the quality of the blood. There are, however, thoueands of people who do not realize the truth of these state- ments. They are without ambition or strength to do their day's work; aro always tired out; have but little ap- petite anti a poor digestion; cannot get a refreshing night's sleep and are subject to headaches, backaches and nervousness because their blood is weak, eatery and impure, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills give, quick relief and permanently cure such men and women, because of their diroot action on the blood, which they purify and build up to its normal strength, As through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills the blood becomes rich and red it strengthens the muscles, tones up the nerves, mattes the stomach capable of digesting the food and re- pairs the waste caused by growth or work. The need in every family of e. safe and effective tonic such as Dr, Williams' Pink Pills is shown by the following statement of Mrs. Julius ' Tuck, Mull, Ont, who says: --"Before I began the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Tills I was In a most wretched and run down condition, My blood was thin and watery and my nerves were in suelt a condition that the least noise would make me start and trem- ble, and what a burden my housework seemed. One of my neighbors ad- vised me to tape Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I have great reason to be glad that I followed her advice, for before I had used a half dozen boxes ail symptoms of my trouble had dis- appeared, and I was as well as ever I had been in my life. I have also given the pills to my daughters with the most beneficial results, and I shall ever have a good word to say far them," If you are feeling the least run down, weak or depressed do not delay —take these pills at ones and note hots speedily your old-time health will return, You can get the pine from any dealer in medicine or by mail at 60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60 from The Dr, Williams' Medi- cine Co„ Brockville, Ont. A ROMANCE OF TIIE IIILLS. War Iias Stimulating Effect on Out- put of Chemical Industries. One morning, just after the United States declared war against Ger- many, an alert, aggressive, wealthy Southerner entered the office of the Secretary of the Intecior and annotate cad that he wanted a chance to do his bit .for his country. "I want a mane job, not a place in the spotlight," he explained. "Just something somebody else would shy at." Secretary Lane considered the pro position for a moment, "Why not fnnll pyrite ore?" he suggested. And then he explained that the war had ahnoet • shut America off from the Spanish mines from which the country had • obtained the ore for sulphuric acid. Tie added that py-i•ite was to be found in the Southern hills- near his visitor's home. "I never heard of the stuff'," com- mented the Southerner, "but if it's there as you say and we need it for the. war, I'll get it." He did. The five mince he discovered, according to Sec- retary Lane's annual report, are now yieldlug 400 torts a day, and 1,000 tons daily is promised. Sulphuric acid, known to scientists as the chemical barometer, has more than doubled in production since 1.920. The needs of modern win• have had an equally stim- tenting.effect on the output of other chemical industries, liar is a new grime to the American, but the records of their Interior Department show that he is "sittingein" as though it was in the States. as ie Germany, a nation- al pastime, T r We will whip, Express Prepaid, within 200 miles of Toronbo, FROZEN SEA SALMON (Headless and Dressed) 25 -Pound Boxes, $5.00 SALTED FRESH WATER BILLFISH (Headless and Dressed) 20 -found Pails, $:3.00 SALTED LAKE Ulff:BRING (Headieee and beeaeed) 60 Fish to a Pail, $2.75 Quality and Satisfaction Guaranteed Remit In advance by Postal or Money Order, ,a 9 This 1s quite a sensible little romp- er, as well as being becoming to the youngilter. McCall Pattern No, 7830, Child's Romper, In 4 sizes, 1 to 6 years, Price, 10 cents. r A good design for the sensible nightgown. 2111eCall Pattern No. 7969, Girl's Yoke Nightgown. In 7 sizes, 1 to 13 years. Price, 10 cents. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or front the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Tor- onto, Dept, W. AN EXCELLENT (MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES Baby's Own Tablets are an excel- lent medicine for little ones. They sweeten the stomach; regulate the bowels, break up colds and simple fevers, euro constipation and make teetering easy. Concerning them Mrs. E. Quinn, Parente, Que., writes; "Baby was troubled with constipation and nothing helped bion till I began using Baby's Own Tablets. They are an ex- cellent medicine for little ones." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by until at 26 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. LAZINESS AND INVENTION. Malty Ingenious Devices Planned ley Idle People. Someone once said that laziness was the mainspring of progress, and though that seems to be going too far in praise of the lazy man, yet it cannot be dented that a good many discoveries and inventions have been made by the man with little or noth- ing to do. If the old story is true, did not the discovery of the universal law of gravitation occur eta Newton when he was lolling under an apple tree, waiting, as it were, for the :fruit to 'drop Into his mouth? The invention of the stocking -loom marked an epoch in :British industry, in addition to producing the first pair of sills stocking's for Good Queen Bess, and drawing forth the remark from her horrified Minister that the Queen of England Itad no legs! It was the ingenious device of a Cambridge graduate who had married before he had learned even to earn his living, and it was the sight of his wife's busy fingers knitting, whilst he sat idly watching her, which started him on the track of the stocking -loom, Samuel Crompton, the inventor of the spinning mule, forum his incentive in laziness, Isis mother insisted on a daily task of well -spun wool. The lad detested the slow, monotonous work, and invented the spinning mule so that he might have more time for play, It was a hazy pointsrean wilo hit on the principle used for long-distance signal manipulation on our railways, Havipg to attend to two signals some distance apart, he sought to save him- self it walk by fixing up an Ingenious contrivance of wire and weights whereby both signals could be worked. from his own fireside. v It now requuee $ 30,0e worth of ,sal 'TORONTO FISH CO e to Hoak, 1t ton Of paper in i temee, as Fa compared with ,x:00 worth finer years tight, rS J.ARNIS 51. loRoNIU ago. There is a Message The Supreme Sacrifice. When kk Tranlathe," the chance of }life and death either in protecting his n This Lady's Stor l; I t 1 h Ej' .onto, u:z state, uh rouxll:ry or the 3' freettom and tleanetrnries of the wild& • --- world, he offers his life on the highest altar of human saerifiee. Jehovah of the Jew Christ of the Christians, erected no higher altar, and gentile and pagan have found none higher. Bumble may be the altar whereon fa - ,titer and sot offer themselves in sacri- fice for defence of the family, the home or the city, but higher must be the altar when the sons offer them- selves for sarrifiee on the altar of a world freedom- -a freedom for other homes, other cities, other nations and peoples. She Tells What Dodn's Kidney Pills Do for Woolen. She Was Troubled With Weakness and Her Daughter Had Nervous Trouble, Dodd's Kidney Pills Proved the Remedy They Both Needed, Mitniltnn, Ont., March 4th (Special) -.The at.ory told by Mrs. H. dickens of 70 Tom Street, this city, carries a essage oP hop° to every suffering wmoman in (_anotia „After my babY was horn," airs. Dickens stakes, "I weed to suffer with my back and had no heart to do my work around the home. But I read about Deed's Kidney Pills and what they have done for others, so I thought I would get a box and see what they would do for me. "I am pleased to say that eller tak- ing two boxes I found such great re- lief I would not be without them in the house, "My daughter, too, had been very sick on and off for long time. Her nerves got so bad we were afraid we would see her in the hospital. But I am Pleased to say she is better through tatting Dodd's Rldney Pills. "I never thought Dodd's Kidney Pills could have done such good work and I am telling all my Needs about them." Women's troubles, or nearly all of thew, cnme from sick kidueye, The cure for them is the old established remedy for sick kidneys, Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. v RAILWAYS CO.OPERATE It may be of general interest to the Canadian public to know some ex- amples of the way 1n which their railways, through the Canadian Paci- fic Association for National Defence, are exchanging traffic in the interests of eflioiency. In one case the C.P,It, diverted by way of the Soo Line one thousand cars of freight so as to relieve the main line of the company along the north ehore of Lake Superior. These cars passed south from Winnipeg to Minneapolis and by way of Sault Ste. Marie into Ontario. They consisted chiefly of grain for domestic consump- tion in Canada, One hundred cars of freight per day are being diverted from the O.P.R, at Quebec and travelling by way of the National Transcontinental to Halifax. While there is no saving in mileage, this, In the -interest of the country, relieves the C.P.R. mate line to St. John for classes of export freight more urgently required there. In Toronto an arrangement was suc- cessfully carried out whereby one hundred and twenty ears of freight eastbound far Montreal were turned over from the C.P.R. to the C.N.R. every day. The Grand Trull% during the winter season has been diverting one hundred a ,, .1 fll•4„ !n e.,. . Or COAI per day to the O.P.R. and T.11, &L B. in order to lessen the congestion on the Granit Trunk from the Niagara frontier to Toronto and ot of points, . The Grand Trunk has also diverted fifty cars per day to the C,N R, at To. Tonto. In Western Canada time Canadian Northern has on several occasions transferred surplus traffic to the sister railways in the West, The following is from a letter of Lieut. Wingfield; a British Flying Officer, who escaped in November, 1917: "The camp was a had one, the rooms over -crowded, there was insufficient room for exercise, the sanitation was very indifferent, the food almost im- possible to eat. We were housed in wooden barracks divided into rooms by thin wooden partittaus. There were eeven 1n a ram% so that It was extremely difficult to obtain the neces- sary quiet for worts. There were no reading rooms. Tho food was s eS tremely poor and insufficient and con - slated almost entirely of stewed mau- gel-evurzels, with occasional potatoes ee very poor quality. The bread ration was half R loaf a week oe very bitter black bread. You can imagine, then, that prisoners are entirely dependent on parcels, and are extremely hea- vy during the first two months of captivity before these begin to arrive. The Roumanian officers get nothing, and the Russians very little." e• The Wealth of the Sea, The North Sea has never been so produnive as now (says a Daily Chronicle expert,) The inference is that the restriction of fishing has per- mitted an unchecked multiplication of fish. No matter how we fish the seas the harvest comes bounteous to tine nets, There are great rythmical waves of productivity in the ocean. Early spring aIld early summer heat in the waters increase numbers incredibly. Given such conditions the sea holds such an overflowing; wealth of life that two our three times a century we And herring swarms on the west part of the country. And the Skagerack knows its "winter herring," which ape pears ones in every 111 years In teem. ing millions, and ilas been doing so for the last 1.2 centuries, LEMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion for a few cents and see yourself. What girl or woman hasn't heard et lemon juice to remove complexion I biemishee; to whiten the skin and to bring out the metes, the freshness and i the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritating, and should be mixed with orchard shite this w'ay. Strain through a flue cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle cuntainlnz about three ounces I of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of shin and complexion lotion at about the cost, one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Pe sure a strain the lemon juice ,e, n..l Leer, gets into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months. When applied daily to the face, neck, arme and hands it should help to bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the shin. Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little cost and the grocer has the lesions. Maple Sugar Profitable. valuable asset to a farm this year. ¢ O I Regular commercial sugar is scarce and high. There is money in maple sap, and beyond the work it is practi- cally all profit. You don't have to plough, or harrow, or fertilize the ground for the Inaple harvest. 'You" don't have to do any spring seeding, and you don't have to wait patiently; from spring to fall. The maple sea -i son camas at a time when other Far Sugar maple trees are a specially! HAS NO iiQuAI It not only aoftens the �V water but doubles the cleans+' Ing (lower of ,soap, and makes everything sanitary and wholesome, dS*„ frSFUatl SUBSTITUTEe3e its 5,M4 _Ttl�onra a�,� A Wide -Awake Dream. Some day the world ---that is, you and I ---will always have a sinile and a warm handshake for the other fellow. We shall have time to sit on the fence and talk things over together, and drop a word of chew! as we look at one another's erops. We shall not brag so much, but we shall do a lot more platting on the bath. MONEY ORDERS When ordering goods by mail, seed a Dominion Express Money Order. 'Phe New Maple Law, The New Pure Maple Sugar law gives the public protection against adulterated maple products. The scarcity of cane and beet sugars this year will also make it less profitable, to mit them with maple flavoring ex- treas.Tile markets of Canaria and the United States are eager for pure maple syrup and maple sugar, and the new law has restored pteielic con- fidence. Minare's Liniment Cures Dandruff, Giving a calf an extra good start the firet six months of its life and doing Fe cheaply, is the secret of suc- eeesful and economical st ek raising. 1 No Duty on .Maple Sugar. c Maple sugar makers never haat ; ,rh a demand to Fill as this year. The shortage of carne and beet �teg:er mattes maple products of great use as eubatitutes. Every sugar maple tree available should be tapped this eprieg, Minarets Liniment Believes NettralZa. FOR SALE iEXTW161: Nl: r ,r i'1•.lt IN t-ti- ue_s, Death of owner Ila.•ei St or, the h,a.rket. Agri at •hones for a mon rsitrt +•a::b �pLlyl3ox 8«, \Fils"n k'al!. 'cl,;r t'u.. I lu.;nrd. Tnrnrt". (�g�t PILL nqt. I1 I nr, ea wsi v t sect v r at:d Job pt ti ton pnult Izi t. "rn Ontalu 1.nntuatreearzl-d t,,..++ .�'a11. r el.: t an. I'eS K'ilaon IundlalilnFt r•o•, hid.. 9',u r,q.tn. MISCELLANEOUS / ANCEIt, Tr l AlydtS. LiJIr1I es. imere.44 and external, cured with- out pain by ear teems n•eatmr+nt, vvrire us before tee late. lir. lialltnan A1ectfctJ CO.,. hi netted. Cn111na'w"on{l, Ont. When buying your Piano insist on having q alts "OTTO O H@Rai• a L" PIANO �QrOTiON mcal� toaau^s rn,raaea,manaomazoas«ae� A Kidney Remedy � O--e—O^—e_p—e ...q... —0 —CI LIFT YOUR CORNS work is slack. The trees require no spraying, pruning, fertilizing or: watering. They stand as a rule on un -1 tillable or rocky land. The maple tree was a Godsend to Canada in the! pioneer days. It is no less so now; in the war scarcity of sugar. i Minaret's Liniment for sate everywhere. Food Shortage Getting Worse. � The latest cable received from the; British Ministry of Food regarding conditions in Europe makes it clear' that a drastic reduction in the pro- posed rations for Britain may be ex pec ted early in March. The supply of fats and bacon is low and increased imports are urgently need- ed, The Italian need is the greatest. of all. The people of Italy have been on bread and sugar rations for some time and severe restrictions; have been placed on their consumption of meat. i 11Iinard's idnlmont Co.. Unified. Genticnteu, Sty daughter, 13 yrs. old, was thrown from a sleigh ante in- jured her elbow su badly it remained stiff and very painful for three years. Pour bottles of MINARD'S LINI- MENT completely cured her and aha hes not. been troubled tor two yeare, i Yomvs truly, i J. H. 1,11,1s`SQ1'i:, St.. Joseph, P. O.. 1Rth Ang., Duo, Food Aphorisms. i The bacon you save may save your bacon. The garbage pail le as deadly as the U-boat. High prices are better than a Hun t peace, VRiN Granulated Eyelids, 5 --:, Sure Eyes, Etas Tnamnad b [V ""sSa San, d by and ine. Try it In £o y^L /Sat relieved by Bturine. Try ft to E -L. lloSYouarts andus Daily's nios, TSn5martieg,Juat F.ycCamfort murine a RemedyAe r,ur nrng let's er by or NO 0itfthe y; Murano aro anise, In Tubca ^s,. For rook N the vs— rreo Ask Morino bye Remedy Co., Chicago s The Importance of Pure Seed. Pure seed is en important factor in greater production, It might almost be said that it. is the most important., for weedy seed having once been sown, it is impossible to foretell the damage that may be done to the growing crop, or the disappointment that mny ensue when gathering or reaping' time conies round. Hence, at this season of the year, when sowing is in prospeot, a pamphlet issued by the Seed Brener of the Department of Agr'irniture at Ottawa, entitled "Cleaning Seed" is most timely and valuable. It tells of the implements that are needed and tate methods that should be followed, especially in the cleaning of grain and grass seed. A letter to the Publhca- ons Branch, Ottawa, will bring the pamphlet promptly and without cont, Mitiardte Liniment Citron Eurus, lett°, try tenrket.ing and not telephoning orders, the housekeepers of Canada can tin more to control prices by eem.- petitine than any other necene'y w -o hare. FF WITH FINGERS p Kidney troubles are frequently caused by badly digested food How to loosen a tender corn Y `t which overtakes these organs to 0 eliminate the irritant acids properly digest the food by taking 1Sito30drops ofExtract of Roots, sold as Mother SeIQt1:S Curative Syrup, and your kidney disorder will promptly die. appear. Get the genuine. 7 g or callus so it lifts out ? without pain. Jj Let folks step on your feet here- after; wear ahoes a size smaller if you like, for corns will never again send electric sparks ,of pain through you, according to this Cincinnati authurity. He says that a few drops of a drtig called freezone, applied directly upon a tender, aching corn, instantly re- lieves soreness, and soon the entire corn, root and all, lifts right out. This drug dries at once and simply shrivels up the corn ur callus without even irritating the surrounding tissue. A small bottle of freemmo obtained at any drug store will cost very little curicibrat will positively remove every hard or soft coni or e:alln- from un..' , Peat. If your druggist leas 't. twit( the . new drug yet. tell !tint to get a small nEdy bottle of fre&zeite for you front lits wholesale drug unwise, formed. Help your stomach to l�sammacn��meannum meama®eenaneomnsi Doctors Recommend � on -Opt° for Clue Eyes 1'hyaG_lans and eye specialists Pre- scribe Bon-OPte ae a ye safe home remedy !n the treatment of etroubles and to among:gthen eyesight, Sold under monrelr refund emarantl• by all druggists. IFA N�1!S �AGeLE morel' STYLE s Waite to. day roe. mux' lata¢ razz CATALOGUE showing our fun Iltle9 or Bkycl,, i..r lien and women, Boys end Girla, MOTOR CYCLES MOTOR ATTACHMENTS Tires, Courter Iiraken, secede, Inner Tubes, Lampe, 11iis, Cycinmeters, Saddles, Itgnii.- meet and Parts of ttioyelta. T.w V:111 hay your supplies front es at wholesale prices. T. W. BOYD & SON, 27NotreDante Street •Wen, blunt:val. Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen 'Tendons, Ligaments, or Muscles. Stops thelatnenessmtd pain from a Splint, Side Bone oe Qone Spavin. No ti;.ter, no halt gone and horse ran he used. $e a bottle at druggists or elelive;ed. De. scribe your rase for special instme- lAions end interesting horse Book 2 M Free. isgop1t11�tgi141G j g,t the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Strained, "tarn Liget- ents, Swollen Glands, Veins or Muscles/ Ieas� Guts. Sores, Ulcers. Allayls pain, Nes .nn s bonze at&ail, or dellretvi Fool:'Ildriencd• free �1 1I.� ?90id, B. LF. Ei10 tye,tnY Bldg ,Montreal .Can , Essar@las El Absorbs& E.. sr. made Is t'se.aa. �x < ' Nr` "Ft's"" u On face. Badly Disfigured, Used 2 Boxes Ointment and 3 Cakes Soap, °`I hate a had itchy Int r ll rm lets nn m}• f r +. w•hiolr made it hadlx Tt, sir^rr^d. They were inflamed and came to a tread, and 1 could tear my skin as sofa as a • little heat came near them. 1 conid hardly sleep. "When 1 saw C'uti,ua:t Soap and Ointment advertised I sent for a free sample which did se emelt ere d that I nought mare, and I used two boss of Cuticura Ointment and three cakes et Cuticura Soap when 1 w•as ztcale;l." I (Signed) Miss Bertha Nilsson, Steck- helm, seek. it you have r t e d c mplexieln keep ite,t+y te,litr,; Ctt a tea Snow doily a:,d ',tut t)uitt, nt of rat lastly, - For Free Sample Each by .Mail a 7- dre s post -card: Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U. S. A." Swirl everywhere. NERVOUS BREAKDOWN Diss Kelly Tells How Lydia( E. Piialzham'i* Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health. Newark. N. J.—"For about three years I suffered from nervous break- down and got so weak I could hardly Amid, and ht lhead- a it s ev y dee'. I .r.trieel everything rythi:ng could GILA of •tlu Wats rimier a phy- Aden's carr f.••• two yours. A I e; Pt iced had used le el a el. lePirnkleam'e tave• - table Compound and : she told me shout' it. From the first' day I took it began to feel better ant . r,- now I am well aino. •, • �1 gg \`',, kbilte f vnuo st .an h 1�a have been re n - ri mending the Come pewit' ever since and give you any Dere tnission to pdhlieh this let ter."°-• Mimi no KELLY, 476 So. lith fit,, Newark, N. J. The reason thisfamous root and herb remedy, Lydia L. Pinkham's Vegetable. Compound, was so successful in Mist Kelly's ease was because it went to the root of her trouble restored ber to normal healthy condition and as ar.stilii her nervousness disappeared, ......0 ..... .-..._.�.�.- -..w D3StE No. 10--.411, Mein II7l Training i Fighting isn't the only duty of a soldier, and exposure to bullate is not as serious as exposure to all kinds of weather end &imm ese. Rheumatic aches; sore and atilt musette; online and a rains; chil- blalna and neuralgia, ell are enemies of tho soldier; and the relief for all those paint and =boa is Sloan's Liniment, Clean and oonveldent tes carry or use• does not stein, and, penetrates wt out rubbing, 25 ontere see bongo, et all druggists,