HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1918-8-8, Page 3FONCK, FRENCH
ACE, NERVELESS
GREAT rLlfR IS YOUTH e,r F.U•
PERS POISE.
Unlike Ovynet etl, He Seldom Works,
and Then Only When He
Feels Fit.
Roue Feed, the 1'I,nng ifs,• of :ne,•'i
who reeler. sen leis forty -Muth ol'.
flcinlh reclrled victory, may heal 1•e
deset led ,e rite man with Imre,'
nerve, but uo tree., of mole ito,:
who have had the opportunity to
study II1n1 l -.,ly belicve this superb
poise le the eeeret el' hlr• eueeese.
To chow hew free he ie from foibles:
most Needle aviator: become at
Bodied to 11 favorite machine. When
they have wort a few victories In it
they re•gntd it with affection, ',von
with euperstilion; it is Welty.
By contrast, Fetich has a habil of
evil r his machine to any youngster
who has just won his pilot's commis-
sion mid who has caught the great
ace's fancy.
"Try this one, lads" he will say. "it
seems to be, alright," and thus pusses
e title to a plane in which he has down.
ed two or three Germans.
'then he hikes the next, machine
sent to the camp from tl e. factory.
Built Like a Boxer,
1'`nnek Is of medium height and
weight and has the walk and carriage
of tt skillful hexer men of teientinc
heat etty his relieve.. aro perfect--in-
eredlhiy swift and accurate. Besides
this- he bas extraordinary vision. It has
happened more than once when he has
led a squadron that he has signalled
to the other pilots the approach of a
German plane, its exact, Mention, the
angle from which it should be attacked
and its speed, all this before any of the
others hall seen it at all.
It need hardly be added that he is
a remarkably accurate shot, another
proof of his superb vision and perfect
nerve. control.
Like all the great fliers, he is a fan-
atic on the subject. When he talks
it Is of nothing but motors, new
models of planes, aerial tactics and
machine guns. But more often he sits
through dinner with his friends with-
out uttering n syllable.
Speaking of tactics, he has none, or
at least no set method, tic improvises
es he goes along. Like the other
pupils of that great instructor of
Mere, C'ommandent Broeard, he Is fttll
nt Ingenious surprises. Incidentally,
Brocnrd believed in him from the first.
A year ;ego Georges Prade, a journalist
of note, was talking to the master, ex-
pressing his fears for the future of the
emnbat squadrons with Berme, Na•,
varre, Lenoir gone, and Guyenemer
and Nungesser fighting on by sheer
will power and determination despite
wounds which would have crippled the
ordinary nem, Broeard replied simp-
ly.
"Ilut we have Foncit, Do you know
Foncit? ile is unique."
Ponck was all but unknown then.
Never Been Wounded,
But be could not remain long in ob-
scurity --not a young man who kept
putting down plane after plane (his
score now is over sixty, eleven having
fallen out of sight of onicial obser-
vers) and always without a scratch
to himself or his machine, Po• Follett
never has been wounded. Many of his
victories were won before the German
advereary bad a ehance to fire a shot.
Incidentally he is said to know more
about German aviation than any other
pian among the Alines,
Rroca•cl taught bim to fly anything
end everywhere, including the first
artillery observation machine with two
motors. Fonck himself says he liked
every mechlne he ever tried except
the one he attempted to matte out of
his mother's buffet when he was 10
years old Ile spoiled the buffet, lie
says, and the results were painfully
unsatisfactory.
Finally, he is modest, he keeps say-
ing be is lazy, and very likely he really
means it, because he keeps comparing
himself to Guynemer• Guynemer was
always in the air; he was untiring, at
world .tour after hour, neck by com-
parison flies seldom, Ido never goes
up unless he feels just like it. He
cannot conquer this reluctance to
systematic, daily 'world, he saye.
Which seems to allow that, after all,
he is htnnai and has a failing.
Kipling Made Tommy Atkins.
]l, myself, had served for many
years with soldiers, but had never once
heard the words or expressions that
Ruclyard Kipling's soldiers used.
Many a time did I asst: my brother
officers whether they had ever hoard
them, No, never. But sure enough,
a few Years later, the soldiers thought
and talked and expressed themselves
exactly as Rudyard Kipling had
taught them in his ststriest He would
got: a word hero, or a stray expression
there, and weave them into general
soldiers' talk in his priceless stories.
Rudyard Kipling made the modern
soldier, Other writers have gone on
with the good work, and they have be-
tween them manufactured the cheery,
devil-may-care, lovable peraon en-
shrined in our bowie as Tommy At-
kins,--Firom "A Soldier's Memories in
Peace amiWar," by Sir George
Yrolinghmebaed.
•w'-.,W�--cru
When boiling new potatoes place
them in boiling water to which n lit-
tle salt and milit have been added,
Title prevents them from turning
black,
"BELGIAN GADFLY" i
STINGS GERMANS
ATTACKS MADE BY NEWSPAPER
INFURIATE TEUTONS.
•
Se rches For Place of Publication
Futile—Editors Unknown—Paper
Appears Regularly,
The e rte of hiege are em ,hued, but
let to re Beteme , the 'ttelgete gad,
tic;•
re! wine,
11nu,riel rr.letxu,+e, hosier:, of sire.
'Iced cmm.rete, the liermann !evader
could eresh and pater:. But the
• nal, imlalpable oppusitien which how -
1 Ire ..o perf'ec'tly in the tittle secret
new: paper• which the Belgittne love
:and eberish, the Gemmel tided le not
e e:sties ed to overcome. And so long
as La Libre Belgique cominuee to ap-'
pear Belgium can never he a wholly
etiminered mate.
iaAgain and again tho German
uthorities have auuounced the sup-
pression of the paper and the conli,sca-
lieu of the plant. lollies and impelson-
[neer Invariably fallow these an-
neuncemeets. And invariably 1
Libre Belgique appears once more—
perhaps with new• editors and an-
other staff, undoubtedly from a fresh-
ly hidden pleat tucked awe in some
indomitable patriot's clammy cellar lir
duet -heaped garret,
it le still appearing, Today It is the
meet popular newspaper in Belgium.
Compliments of the Editors.
With charm(ng audacity the man-
agers see that the privileges of their
Rained are extended to the governor-
general. Whenever a new number is
printed he always finds two copies,
fresh from press, upon his desk. No
one Ititowe how• they get there—at
least no one with whom the secret is
not sate. And no one in the German
organization has yet found a way to
prevent thorn getting there, A gener-
al who is exposed to such irritations
long enough would rather lose an
army corps.
One famous nutnber, smuggled as
usual to the ofliclal desk, displayed a
halftone portrait of his excellency,
the Baron von Biasing, holding his
"favorite paper:" Tho euption ex-
plained that "the dear Governor Gen-
eral, weary of reading falsehoods is
the censured press, was seeking the
truth in La Libre Belgique."
Ever since the roar of German guns
through Belgium and the tramp of
German armies deafened the world
there has been raging a more silent
battle for the moral subjugation of the
country. The Gertnans organized a
most exlens tve propaganda as well as
u vigorous ceueorship. They issued
such Germanophile papers as the II-
lustrterte Kriegs leurier. They es-
tablished German news agencies,
exemplified in the Courier Beige and
''Holland° Beige. And, finally, they
reached out for edenatured pseudo-
Belgtan press, of which Le Bruxellois
was typical, This latter waa run by
reptile editors willing to betray their
country at a German price and at the
same time submit even what they
wrote in the interest of Germany to a
severe censorship, which not only
suppressed what was not approved but
elaborated and garnished what was.
Publishing Office on Wheels.
All journals from outside the coun-
try which might carry matter detri-
mental to German interests were ban-
ned absolutely, Novertheless these
managed to circulate through secret
channels, sometimes even copied out
on typewritten sheets: By and by the
Attlee learned to drop pamphlets from
airP lanes. Thought tine Germans de-
vised a shrapnel shell which broke
only when near the ground and made
it extremely dangerous for any one
to be in the vicinity, the journals from
the skies were eagerly searched for
and passed from hand to hand.
And it was not long before uncen-
sored papers, printed in Belgium it-
self, began to appear, Of all the clan-
destine journals the most vigorous
and defiant was La Libre Belgique,
No one knows where It is printed,
Tts habitat is fantastically referred to
as "nue cave automobile," which
might perhaps be translated as a mig-
ratory cellar or cellar on wheels, and
its telegraph address is "The Gover-
norship, Brussels," The price is in.
definite, varying "from zero to infini-
ty," and there is no regular time of
issue, but an average of three or four
editions a month has boon main-
tained,
Not even the carriers know whore
the paper is published. le therefore,
the police captures a carrier with
these verboten papers in his hands,
they may visit the direst penalties
on hive, but the printing and distribu-
tion of the paper goes on just the
same,
Germans Offer Rewards,
The German authorities, in their
raga at the defiance of this plucky
little newspaper operating under their
very noses, have made the most sav-
age and elaborate efforts to hunt down
tho offenders, To handle the paper
or oven to have it in possession is
made a serous offense, and a huge re-
ward --originally 25,000 franc but later
raised to 7600 ---has been offered for
information leading to the apprehen•
sloe of the editors and proprietors.
As for killing La Libre Belgique, the
thing le impossible. It is not to be
grasped, for it is nowhere. it is an
toe fnfuus arising from the graves
of Belgian compatriots nmesared at
Louvain, at Tnnhlmet, tel Dinette TIM
it is also the will -'-the vthsp flint is.
sues from the tombs of those German
A BIT OF AMERICA IN FRANCE,
Light railway transporting food to the front. The mule Is the centre of the operate» as well ae• of the
photograph.--TT.S. Oflietal Photograph.
I soldiers who wore slain at Liege., r
lt'uethem and on the user, and who . e
!now see for what miserable project of
ifi��gxUyl 'i
domination they were sacrificed to Decrees
the' Moloch of war under the pretext
of defending their country. it is, y
finally, the voice of all the tnothers,
all the widows and all the orphans,
whose Brine cannot be hushed. As
the days pass this voice wilt ever
I grow in volume tend will reach to the
very fonder°.
The tone of the paper is deltghful.
It always keeps its security of temper,
and its spirit is irrepressible. The
!Belgians enjoy it, and all the copies
are carefully treasured. The usual
i ele:Madan is about 10,000, but the
paper proved so popular that the first
five numbers were reprinted three or
Item, times after their original publi-
cation.
News From the Sky.
One of the most interesting features
of La I.ibre Belgique is its monthly
air supplement, giving in Flemish and
French the news of the war. It is
published abroad and scattered in Bel -
glum by aviators, In suppressing this
sort of journalistic enterprise there
is very little that the authorities can
!do except injure or penalize the rest -
dents of districts in which air visits
I are made; so after a rain of air sup-
plements was poured over the pro-
menaders in some of the Bruesels
boulevards the citizens were forced to
remain indoors within prescribed
hours without lighte.
In Gerznany there is much talk of
iA Prayer for Those il'ho Watch.
i We cannot see beyond the flume, the
Meek smoke's smother;
We only know they strive there, each
heside the other,
Our son and soldier, lo^er, hatband,
. ..` brother.
Por the slender young girl there
national "morale," of "holding out," comes this No.
design. McCall
of a. "will to victory" which, being iA• Fitted
ttef n ss. 84:n Misses' t Semi-
,
terpreted, means a "will to conquest." Flitted Dress, In 4 sizes, 11 to 20
3.,11'.. Price, 20 cents,
In that uatlon every discouraging in -
}fluence is carefully avoided,
Ilow vastly different in Belgium!
Among this people no act Is omitted
that might serve to sap their national
spirit, to blunt the edge of their patri-
otism, or to blast their sense of inde-
pendence. Coarseness daily offends
their sensitive taste; an enslaving
frightfulness attacits their passion for
liberty, and bribery insults their per-
sonal honor.
Yet in the face of it all there is no
letting down, no moral surrender, uo
loostuing of the national determina-
tion. There is a quiet and digefBed
outward submission which seeks to
avoid offense, while always there is
the inner protest of a fine nature
which refuses to be degraded. There
is real heroism in this steadfast firm-
ness of spirit, in this will to die rather
than lose one's soul.
Twenty -One.
When youth is turning twenty-one
And boyhood drops the toys it knew,
When there's sharp drilling to be
To hasten victory o'er the Hun,
Canada will find him true—
Iier manly pride, her loyal son.
Dear are the dreams youth leaves be-
hind—
For life begins at twenty-one.
Out there is honor's Madge to find,
With courage of our father's kind.
But there's a man behind the gun—
And millions more beside him fitted.
If it may be brave France shall keep
Our hope gone forth at twenty-one,
God ]snows, the' first our hearts must
weep
France will walls proudly where they
sleep.
So shall their triumph, nobly won,
Live on, a better worid to (seep,
Yet of some glad, victorious day,
When right has crushed the mighty
Run
They will return—all those who
may—
Love crowned, nuointed of the fray,
Their costly right to manhood won
As we had wished, in honor's way,
No vain regret has twenty -ono,
Its glad, prophetic day is hero,
Life's great adventure has begun,
No clouds obscure ambition's sun,
March on 0 faith, without a fear,
Noiv world's are wrought at twenty-
one,
See thnt Ilene of the "kick" is out
of the hay tedder through the lees of
a prong from one or mote of the
forks. Wading is worth doing well.
"The one snceessful food control.
ITT in the hh•lory of the tvorlcl is
the One Who made ih•e. lonves and
tae Ashes feed a multitude," declared,
the Britidi Prime Minister. So grin'
and don't grumble,
The drapery of the shirt is repeated
on the collar of this charming dress.
McCall Pattern No. 1129, Ladies'
Dress, In G sizes, 34 to 44 bust,
Price, 20 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept, W.
Save Your Cabbage,
It is about this time that the flies of
the 'cabbage -maggot are most active,
large numbers of eggs being deposited
against the stems of young cabbage
ani cauliflower plants. The best pre- •
ventative where these pests are con-
cerned is the felt dish placed around
the plant as soon as it is set. But
for those who did not take this pre-
caution earlier in tett season lure
rather than a preventative le now nes -
eesary. A good remedy is to dust the
infected plants with fresh pyrethrum I
insect powder and air -Slaked lime or,
other dry diluent, one part of the
former in four of the latter. Aft ,r
being thoroughly mixed together the
powder and lime should he kept in a
tight vessel for 24 hours before using.
The mixture should be applied front a
duster, sold by seedamen, or from a
Cheesecloth bag tied on the end of a
short stictc, the olio • •boil!
bag over the plants and tapping the
stick with a caro held ie the other
hand. A mixture of Peri., green and
dry arsenate of lead nely Lc early
used as at spray for eableig• until the,
heads are half formed, but not after-.
wards.
I
k1D. 7e ISSUE lr, 31. 1811 yainart a xttuwettt Cares Diulttaexie, the air pure and Wed.
We. cannot hear the battle clash, the
roaring of the. guns;
We only knew among them are the
well -beloved ones,
Those°who matin the world for us,
lovers, husbands, sons.
"Ours!" the heart within us cries.
Nay, but thee° are more
Even, Wren -at -arms of God who wage!
a holy war
In the cause His soldier -saints foughtl
and conquered for!
Lord, for us the waiting ones, watch-
ers in the night,
Change our selfish fears to pride, tet
us see aright
The honor of the Service, the glory of
the right! +j
Give us faith to know Thy sword was;
never hared in vain,
Given us vision to behold, above the
field: of pain,
The splendor of the sacrifice that
saves the world again!
O 0 0 0 0 o o o e
LIFT YOUR CORNS
OFF WiTH FINGERS
How to loosen a tender corn or
callus so It lifts out
without pain.
o r o o a o---o---o— 0--0-0--0--0
Let folks step on your feet here-
after; wear shoes a size smaller if you
like, for corns will never again send
electric sparks of pain through you,
according to this Cincinuati authority.
He says that a few drops of a drug
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 or callus without
even irritating the surrounding tissue.
A small bottle of freezone obtained
at any drug store will cost very little
but will positively remove every hard
or soft corn or callus from one's foot.
If your druggist hasn't stocked this
new drug yet, tell him to get a small
bottle of freezone for you from his
wholesale drug house.
NOT SO BAD.
This story of an experience that be-
fell a story -writer is attributed by an
illustrated Sunday magazine to a well-
known story -writer:
The author was giving a lecture one
evening an the characteristics and
surroundings of the class of people
with whom he had dealt in one of his
recent books. All old Scotchman, who
sat near the front, watched the man
with a disapproving manner. At the
close of tho lecture the Scotchman
made himself known to the writer.
"Sir," he said slowly, after he had
shalcen the anther's hand solemnly,
"1 have read all your books up to now
and like thein fairly well. Man, you
wouldna gie up writin' and talc to
speakite to got your linin', would yo?"
"No, indeed," replied the young man,
"You think t would be unwise, I lake
it."
"It would be silo great a mistake
that 1 felt I must tell ye ma thought as
an honest man," said the Scot, with
treat earnestness, "I thought to ;ey-
ed',
hy
e 1', 'Ile may need just a word to set
trim right, and I'll not deny it to hint:
There was out, o' your books I found
tt bit dull, but as I listened to ye to-
night l said to myeei', "TWas na sac
dull as it might hit' been, that buck,
after all."
NO EXPERIENCE.
A kindergarten teacher was telling
the children It her department about
seerrows: concerning their ways and
habits. Among other thinge site said:
"'no spatt•rows eat up the worms. Now
children, which would you rather
have, worms or sparr•owe?"
"I've Clever had sparrows," piped up
a tidy' boy near the front.
"I.USITANIAP' 1
_ 1
11:44 1meri,sust e)lerl'r�ll With
itireli i voa t.s at iht Mlle' c,t ilaup?
i txry tui'•, h +± (•ry i u.4taLla!")
,haerc,!. Nn,l 10,0: above Ih,.
1 nnht
1 1',:, heli , „tit,•"r Latch• ,.,•v
:I:.: tl."nH+.r 1111.1 the ,D,.w" 1141•.
'� ,•;Qine� .Ii .'11:11 1.;11. f+Jl idols
t4 rt. 1•rtxncst rr•,t!�. ,lour ,try.
`'lois! , 1;111.r.,'. 1 thm;lfnr :It,•Id
I,: o•n d:u'k Au n,e:1 i',:il.
: I t1+hr•'1,.1hfe ltey rut. t ,c1r path, ep,l
1 1.t tt 1'maSUn wee -mewl/
1 , le, e. tr ler, le telt.
And hie. ,11 le .rd that cry ring ':ut
t n le e {i qct ay,,,,Cm,
"4ni as P , tttx strike til 1 etas
j stele sues, imetiltiphl d, the .
I kers
Of little Ilii •len slam.
' Aye. let it be your battle* mall
To emeeerate the sword
And beteg to many a elem swew field,
slow but inexorably sealed,
I The vengeance of the Lord,
I..--v-,..------
GIRLS! LEMON JUICE
I1S SKIN WHITENER
How to make a creamy beauty lotion
' for a few cents.
The jitter, of two irerh Lemons strain•
eel into a !with! containing three
, ounces of erehard white makes a
whole quarter pint of the meet. re-
markable lemon stein beautifier at
about the c st one mut pay for a
email jar of the erdleary cold creams.
core should be taken to etrath the
lemon juice ihreugh a tine cloth so
no leniOn pulp gilts in, then this lotion
will :mop fresh for wombs. Every
woman knows that lemon juice is used
to bleach anis remove emelt blemishes
as freckles, sallowness anis tan and is
the ideal satin softener, whitener and
beaufitler.
Just try' its Get three ounces of
orchard white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make
ftp a quarter pint of this sweetly frag-
rant. lemon lotion and massage it
daily into the face, neck, arms and
hands.
I
BOOT LINES DRAWN CLOSE.
i
In Germany Birth Certificates Must
Be Produced to Obtain Them.
Protests are being made against the
latest bureaucratic freak in Germany
—persons attempting to secure boots
on permit -cards must henceforth pro-
duce birth -certificates, and (if mar;
idea) their marriage lines. This reg-
ulation is enforced to prevent un-
authorized persons from' obtaining
boots, says a London correspondent,
As an extra inducement to men to
hand in old clothes to the State, Ber-
lin authorities announre that in addi-
tion to the regular price allowed for
suits everybody who surrenders one
will receive a one-half pound jar of
honey.
To raise money for the Ludendorff
Fund for Crippled Soldiers an aircraft
works at Travemade, on the Baltic,
will this summer give seaside visitors
rides in airplanes, either overland or
sea flights, at £2 10s. a trip.
r•Inard's Linment Cures Distemper.
REPLACING THE HORSE.
.tire. Overwate had a deadly gleam
in her eyes as she entered her
butcher's and said in a withering
voice:
"Mr, Aichboan, .naw do you account
for the fact that there was a piece of
rubber tire in the sausage I bought
stere yesterdey?"
"Ah, my dear madam," responded
the butcher•, rising to the occasion,
"that just servers as an illustration of
how the mater car is replacing the
horse everywhere nowadays."
Drying Vegetables In Fireless Cooker.
To dry vegetables in a fireless cook-
er heat the stones, put the wire rack
In position, cover with It sheet of
paper, spread vegetables evenly over
the paper; reheat the stonee at in-
tervals of three hours until the vege-
tables are done dry. Care must be
taken not to have the stones too hot,
Pius, corn, string beans and limas
may be done in this way. I
1
1 ''l Pie iP ht vY ! .,
EAT� DIRT
—USED FOR
!SOFTENING WATERS FOR MAKING
HARD AND SOFT SOAP ----;FULL
iDIRECTIONS WITH EACH CAN,
Earth I• Enough.
We men of earth h eve here the stuff
Of Paradise we have enough!
We need 1711 ot.lner stunts to build
The stairs into the Unfulfilled. -.-
No other ivory fin• the door, --
No other marble for the floors --
No other cedar for the beam
And dome of man'e immortal dream.
Here en the path; of every day—
Here on the common humeri way
Is all the stuff the reds weeld take
To build a .leaven, to mold and make
New Edens, Ours the stun' sublime
To build Eternity in Time!
minard'e Lialment Corea Garet In Cows
Failure to Pfenty.
• One estimate places the :hest. Crop
of the West it all the way from !loth.,
lug to 25 bushels per nern. do West-
ern province has It good crop iu all
sections: in no one is there a com-
m A Int t•
p1F,te fazllur .. . i.an t l .t runs from 4
bue:hels et Setae, tee e2 at Dauphin and
Teuton; AMele:e, Demi practically
none over a radius 1.i Inti miles
around �It;dtciue list to ru^d in the •
north country, and streeatchewan
from two bushels at prelate to 25 at
Foam Lake and tiadi�ua.
MONEY ORDERS.
The safe way to seed mohney' by mail
is by Deminiun Express Muney Order,
Corn starch may always be used for
thickening where wheat flour is
ordinarily called for.
If a. fruit grower wants wood
growth in a young orchard or in young
shade trees he will get it most quick-
ly by doing his pruning in early
spring; whereas if he wants merely
to promote the formation of fruit
buds, he will find that June pruning is
best. There are two "hest times"
to prune trees—depending upon the
object sought, the age of the trees and
convenience in doing the worst. Gen-
erally speaking, only light pruning
should be done in June; all heavy trim-
ming should be in the early spring.
Chrysanthemums growing in the
garden will not thrive in sour soil;
they must be kept free from aphis.
If the plants seem backward scatter a
little hydrated lime over the sullen
of the soil about the plants and mix
it with the top soil with a rake. Spray
the plants once a week with pyrex and
nicotine sulphate and use sheep ma -
nue about the plants, giving the soil
a light sprinkling every two or three
weeks, working it in as with the
lime, and the plants will thrive and
produce good sized flowers abund-
antly.
"Our opinions are always tinged by
our experience, and the more recent
the experience the deeper the tinge."
---Fallen Thorneycruft. Fowler.
PCB SAr.E
EEItL•rNEWSPAPER FOR. SAt.ID
Ten
New Ontario. Owner coins to
France, will sell eater, worth double
that amount. Apply J, FI„ c/o wilsos
Publishing Co_Limited. Toronto.
ELL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER
and lob printing plant in Eastern
Ontario. Insurance carried 51.600, will
gRo for 61,200 on quick sale. Box 09.
R'ilson Pullishing Co.. Ltd.. Toronto.
AGENTS WANTED
t+1,INTS WANTED --Stowe, YOU
se run make it in your ',aunty With ear
fast selling Combination Conker. One
salesman banks Sltss.S5 the first month.
Another agent actio -o in two hours.
�, Others eleuning un Sti, 4bdly. Nb capi-
'MI necessary, er"adx shieeed to reliable
men on time. Territory acing fast.
Write quirt: to secure your Geld, Com-
biuutlon Products t'o., Thomas Bldk.,
Poster, Que.
I bought a horse with a supposedly
incurable ringbone for $30,00. Cured
hien with $1.00 worth of .MYNARD'S
LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00.
Profit an Liniment, $54,
MOhdL hEROSCE.
Hotel 'Keeper, Si. Phillippe, Quo,
Cultivators of the earth are the
most valuable citizens. They are
the most vigorous, the most independ-
ent, the most virtuous, and they are
tied to their country and wedded to
its liberty tend interests by the most
lasting bonds.—Thomas Jefferson.
Mlnard's Liniment Cores Colds, Site.
Shtado for the hens and the chickene.
too, means more summer egg's and a
inure rapid growth of chicks,
If a cellar has a damp smell, and
eannot be thoroughly ventilated, a
few tea sof &avoid set on the floor
1 y ,
•
^- — - shelves and ledgee will help to matte
1t2TSCELLANEOU'S
ILL PURCHASE ALTERNATING
Current Motors for Cash, Milton
and Prentiss, Tradors Bank Building.
Toronto.
CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC..
internal and asternal, cured wlth-
us nutr by aur home treatment, Witte
tit+ uefore ton tats, 'bre I3uliman Medical
Co., Limited, Collingwood Ont.
,g I.EXANDlIA HOSPITAL FOR CON -9
.C�.. taginus IIsouscs, Montreal. Proba-
toners wanted between la and 26 years
of aa., for 0110 tear's training. Lectures
and diplomats Gere, and arrangements
made fur tho trsin,l'er or successful can-
dfdnit: to a general hospital. Strict
refetn<es re tura 1. For forms of up-
pity 111 tt etc apply to Miss tlraCo M.
Polrl-t. Last : nt ot•Intondent.
.Z7a4
'rakes tint the inflammation-•
POra Luta', indatdtd cute, +tAldt. brA err, hdua•n
0nd 010lnnn--pile+. Osd alu s:oy. Works tike
MaaiC any r bas- sst deslert, nt write es.
n IRST RBMSmY COMPAi4Ye lYYmllnon, ce,$a0