HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1919-2-20, Page 7UNIQUE EXPLOITS
OF MR PILOTS
BARGING A MOUNTAIN AND
OTHER EXPE'RI }' N (Tete
Such As a Flight With an Eagle and
Raving One's elnchine Inter-
locked With a Dina Plane.
To barge into a mountain is not
altogether a common experience of
the air, but this is what happened to
Flight -Commander A. W. Waietell
when he was returning from a bomb-
ing raid.
The gallant airman had set out ;o
bomb Chanak, and ho reached his ob-
jective in safety. Having . dropped
his "eggs," and evaded the attention
of the anti-aircraft gunners below, he
turned for home. The night had
grown intensely dark, however, so
that it was impossible to roe very
far ahead, As cautiously as existing
circumstances would permit, Flight -
Commander Waistell continued the
flight. Then of a sadden a huge mass
darker even than the night itself
loomed up before him. To avoid the
impact eves impossible, and as the
machine crashed it caught fire, throw-
ing a lurid glow over the side of the
mountain into which the unfortunate
pilot had barged. Although badly in-
jured about the face and knees, the
flight -commander managed to get
clear of the burning wreckage, and
with wonderful endurance and ten-
acity made his way hack to the aero-
drome front which he had set out, to
report the result of the raid.
Objected to Trespassers.
For his bravely he was awarded
the Distinguished Service Cross, and
it is doubtful if a war honor has ever
before been awarded as the outcome
of such a strange incident.
It was not very long before the war
that a French aviator, M. Gilbert,
during the air race from Pari: to
Madrid, was challenged by an eagle
to a desperate struggle for suprem-
acy near San Sebastian.
Gilbert did not lose his nerve. Ile
managed to get at his revolver, awl
was thus enabled to frighten t: e
eagle away,
A unique incident, which ended in
the capture of a Ca man air prisoner,
befell a French aviator in the course
of an aerial combat with the enemy.
The two atagonists manoeuvred this
fay and that for battle arh'antege.
Sudrienly the Frenchman, believing
himself to he in an excellent position,
dived on the tail of the black -crossed
machine. The German attempted to
.void the onslaught, with the result
that the French machine spun vio-
lently, and the tail got stuck between
the wings of the Him 'plaice,
In quite a neat spiral the inter-
locked machines canto crashing into
some trees. Neither pilot happened
to be hurt. and so ludicrous was the
situation that each burst into fits of
hearty laughter before the Bache was
marched off as a prisoner.
Trouble With the Clouds.
Clouds have been the cause of many
a thrilling experience to a pilot. On
one occasion the late Major "Jimmy"
McCudden, V.C., on returning from
a reconnaissance, ran into a huge
bank of cloud that had come up sud-
denly and taken hint unawares.
Ile commenced to make an effort to
climb above it, but it seemed without
limitations. There was nothing for
it but to plunge right into the cloud.
The rain beat in his face, and the
wind tossed and buffeted the machine
like some frail boat on a howling,
angry sea. To add to the confusion,
the compass -needle swung round and
round, so that all idea of direction
was lust,
When he believed he had continued
his flight sufficiently long, he put the
nose of the machine down, and des-
cended to stn altitude of about 1,500
feet, Whistling, shrieking bullets
went racing past him, and he heard
the racket of hammers from the ma-
chino guns below. So into the howl-
ing tumult of cloud he turned again,
When next he emerged it was be-
hind the British lines; but he cone
fossetl that ho would have much pre-
ferred meeting any number of the
enemy to undergoing that battle with
the elcinents.
Mysteries of the Air,
The air also holds its mysteries.
Y
rNet yet has It given up the secret of
Cecil Grace or Gustav Hamel. To the
list of such secrets of the air must
be added the case of Capt• Platen
Warlow.
It was towards the close of 1914
that the Bleriot two-seater monoplane
was discarded lag the military author-
ities as being too slow in climbing
with the full military and 'tar load,
Such
'buses of! thistype as
could bo sparedare
d
from service at the Front, and were
serviceable for school purposes, were
allowed to be flown back by officers
coining on leave.
With a sufficient supply of petrol to
last him for twice the distance of
his intended flight, Captain WarloW,
after testing the aeroplane with a
short 'lith)," set out for England. The
weather war kine at the time, with a
certain amount of low-igieg cloud,
Never :time has he been heard a,
We unmet wait until the sea gives up
10! dead.
in hanging clothes see that they
leeo pulled !eiirtiAt on the aims,
i The Latent
DesIgns
A brand-new idea for a schoolfrock
for the sprightly little miss, featuring
the vestee effect with belt slipping
•through sl'arhes at each side of front
and fastening under the vest, Mc-
Call Pattern No. 873(5, Girl's Dress.
In 5 sizes, 0 to 14 years, Price, 20
cents•
p uccmra,
This new side-c.loang dress may be
converted into quite a dressy affair by
adding • the overdress, which consists
of back and front panels with broad
belt cut in one. McCall Pattern No.
8745, Ladies' Convertible Dress. In
6 sizes, 34 to 44 bust. Price, 25
cents. Transfer Design No. 944.
Price, 20 cents.
These patterns may be obtained'
from your local' McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,:
Toronto, Dept. W.
London's Net Defences.
One eof the great secrets of Lon-
don's defences against air raids is
now revealed. That was the great
screen of nets which were suspended
in certain directions to keep off the
raiders. These were not nets in the
ordinary sense. At first they were
really strings suspended at a certain
height_ from 'balloons, so that if a
raider happened to come against them
his machine became entangled and
disabled and brought to earth.
A man who stands on slippery
ground menet play his stroke.—Lloyd
George.
hcldren Love
rape -Mies
The natural con-
stituents of
barley and
wheat, sweet .
ened by su6at"
uP.,
de v el ed from
a
the brains them-
selves in the
making, of this
famous food,
provide a true
buildin6 nour-
ishment not
found so corn
pletely in other
cereals
e aIs S
it thgrel d Reason"
tori da Feel Board License Na21126
PUTTING THE MOON
TO WORK
MAKING Tie A'I' IDLE SATELLITE
JUSTIFY ITS' ESISTENUE
Plea to et Iliac the Power of the Tides
For tin t'rodiraon of Mech-
anical Energy.
It scrums a fall' guess that the neat
great epoch-making lime ot,ion--alr-
t omparaTfly attire important to the
future of mankind than the •flying
machine—•toile furni h means for
haraetcsing - the noon, whereby that
long idle satelito may be compelled to
justify its existence by working for
the benefit of of the earth's inhabitants.
As the earth revolves, the moon, by
the attraction of its enormous mass
(73,000,000,000,000 tons), raises that
part of the ocean nearest it to a
height of about three feet, films form-
ing a wave that travels around the
globe once in twenty-four hours, We
call this wave the tide.
To utilize the power of the titles
for the production of mechanical en-
ergy is et problem that has been much
discussed, and which, in a small way,
may he said to have been measurably
solved. Such being the case, it seems
very odd that the method employed,
undeniably succeseful on a minor
settle, should not have been developed
on a large and comprehensive plan.
Already Used on Atlantic Coast.
One might say, indeed, that the
invention in question was long ago
an accomplished fact. For during
many years past there have been in
operation along the New England
coast, at points where tidal inlets
offered opportunity, flour mills and
sawmills run literally by moon power.
Where inch local condition exist
it is an easy matter to dam the in-
let, thus providing the reservoir into
which the sea flows as the tide rises.
On the ebb of the tide the water is
allowed to flow out through a gated
opening, causing a wheel to revolve
and driving the machinery that grinds
the grain or saws the lumber. In
some cases the tides are made to do
work both going and coming.
To nmeke this method efficient on a
large scale, it is necessary merely to
construct reservoirs of great size,I
with the requisite machinery, in places
where huge bodies of water can be
handled. Why has not this been un-
dertaken? Nobody knows. But at
the present time (so news despatches;
say) capital is being enlisted for the
purpose in England—one scheme con-
templated being that of damming the
waters of the River Dee and equip-
ping an immense power plant with
turbine and electric generators to
furnish energy and distribute it for;
long distances over wires.
Not merely inlets but large estu-!
aries can, it is claimed, be used in'
this way for tide storage and time
production of transmissible energy on
an enormous scale. The little flour
mill or saw mill of the New England
coast that derives its power from the
moon is properly to be regarded as,
a mere suggestion of the vast things ir
practicable in the seine line.
Consider the Gulf of California—a
great arum of the sea with a twelve-,
foot rise and fall of tide. If a darn
were built across it, say competent
engineers, it could be made to drive
every mill, locomotive and street car
on the Pacific slope.
Possibilities of Bay of Fundy,
Separating Nova Scotia from the
mainland is an arm of the sea called
the Bay of Fundy. There the moon'
gets in some very picturesque work,
Its attraction piles up the water in
the bay to such an extent that the'
later rises and falls twenty feet twice
in twenty-four hours.
Why not provide extensive reser-
voirs for the reception of some of
this water, and allow it (in flowing
out) to operate 'turbines? A small
fraction of the power that thus goes
to wmeste would suffice to run the ma-
chinery of all time factories on the
Atlantic coast, operate all the rail-
roads and trolleys, light all the cities
and heat all the houses and business
buildings,
Mary years ago a United States
i lying in a Chinese river
arab lost
tv
p
one of its big guns overboard. How
time accident happened is not a mat-
ter of record, but this has nothing to
do with the story.
The gun lay half buried in the mud
of the river bottom anti all attempts
to fish it up proved fruitless. Then
a Chinaman came along and offered
to undertake the job.
The terms were no pay unless lie
delivered the goods. "Go ahead," said
the
command --in e
officer in cm defies
r
c for how could a Chinaman
course,
of e
accomplish what Americans had found
to be impracticable?
The Chinaman brought half a dozen
helpers and some tall "sheerlegs,"
which he planted deep in the Hurd, The
sheerlegs were provided with a sub-
stantial wooden float, which was at-
tached by ropes to the gun—the water
being of no great depth.
The next tide raised the float six
feet and With it the gun, Mitde fast at
that height, timbers wore plated be-
neath the float again and yet again,
so that each subsequent tide lifted It,
and the gun along with it, an addi-
tional six feet. The process was con-
tinued lmt:il the gun was raised clear
iomit of the tater and placed on the
leek of tem t ).•bhp.
'l iv i,
P. S. ,,t al ofiirtr> were aston-
..
].Iced, }, it 'vele a very old idea •
from ihe i ,mia.h ,menee viewpoint, For
mime •' rt•t iitria:m they had been accus-
ttm.u•di to me tide li''1led me lifting
bate etome ri•rltu f I hu the ,.e,utstrmle-
tion of 'I . ac,,l for .,t.In., heirporee,
(liven m-h,rrlegs long elle t'gh and
plenty iii timbers, 'iny .ad ai,,rg, d ob-
i. t ,' mutter ho,; liic• or how heavy,
could be raia''I by • rmieli rv:ane, not
only nut of ,eater bet hundred:. of feet
into the air,
What, after all, was the secret?
Whence the. power?
Why, nothing could bo inure simple.
The Chinamen mho recovered the
warship's gun nail pliteed it egain on
but deet were r.vailiee 1c"meelves of
no earthly energy. They were em-
ploying the pull of the moon.
n,.
THE GERMAN NAVAL MIND
Conduct of Crews of Scapa Flow Fleet
is a Mystey to British,
"It is all very well to talk about
psychology and understanding the
German mind," said a naval officer,
"hut I'm hanged if I know where to
start."
Certainly if one studies the officers
and crews of the seventy odd ships in
the German Scapa Flow fleet one does
not know where to' start. They are
so un -British, in fact, they are so un-
like the rest of the world in their
behavior, that there seems no logical
bridge by which one can cross to ap-
preciate their mental workings.
Their lack of discipline, says a
writer in the London Daily Mail, has
already been much commented on and
may be broadly attributed to theier
degeneration as a fighting force; but
to what mental process can one at-
tribute the fact that the German sea-
man slavishly obeys a direction given
him by a British officer and yet pre-
serves an attitude of neutrality to-
ward his own?
For that is the general experience
of our officers who have on duty
visited the German ships, The German
seaman will run about at once at a
hint from a British officer. Perhaps
that is the spirit that made the Ger-
man waiter the success he was In pre-
war days, but the British naval man
finds it difficult to understand, for he
cannot by any stretch of the imagina-
tion picture himself acting likewise
in similar circumstances. Yet an-
other puzzle is that the German sea-
men have been seen to salute their
representative on the Sailors' and
Workmen's Council when they have
disregarded their own officers.
The mental processes of the Ger-
man officer, too, are iso less difficult.
The German officer occasionally sal-
utes a British officer. It seems to de-
pend on the nature of the German
himself whether he does or not. Bet
contrast with this is the fact that
when some American mine -sweepers
passed through the German lines all
the officers on the deck of one of the
German ships stood to the salute as
the leading American vessel passed.
Wihy? One hazards the guess that
too iia_...-..-- ------------- ---- - --•- cans more friendly than the British,
but one cannot understand the reason-
ing,
Yet another point which astonishes
the naval officer. At the very time
that the German High Seas Fleet was
abandoning its proud title by refus-
ing to fight, a gallant submarine offi-
cer—for there is no other adjective
to most men's minds—made an at-
tempt to get into Scapa Flow and
work havoc among the units of the
British Fleet then assembled there.
He failed, and his submarine was
blown up owing to our adequate do -
fences, but it was a bold attempt and
in accord with the best traditions of
naval warfare.
Truly, one is "hanged if one knows
where to start" to understand the
German naval mind.
f LISTEN TO THIS !
SAYS ROBS LIFT
You reckless men and women who
are pestered with corns and who have
at least once a week Invited an awful
death from lockjaw or blood poison are
now told by a Cincinnati authority to
use adrug called fh ezo
no, which the
moment a few drops are applied to
any corn, the soreness is relieved and
entire corn root an
soon the c d all, lifts
out with the fingers.
It is a sticky ether compound which
dries the moment it is applied and
simply shrivels the corn without in-
flaming or even irritating the surround-
ing tissue or skin. It is claimed that
a 'quarter of an ounce of freezono will
cost very little at any of the thug
stores, but is sufficient to rid one's feet
of every hard or soft corn or callus.
aro further wskumed that t uutttn
6`
at a Peru is a suicidal habit.
RIGHT OUT NOW
The British authorities in ehergo
of the ocupation in the German zone
assigned to the British army have
ordered all the German men to raise
their hats to British officers. They
must do similarly when the British
National Anthem is sunng•
Mlnsrd's Liniment °urea Colds. dao
God is served as 'truly by a just
judge its by a minister of the Gospel'.
—The Bishop of London.
"'My felenl has a fr•ieed, end thy
friend's friend has a 'friend; be dis
croseale'L--Tailttud, Ell 7.
tr tic„ TO Cil l RLS
ere ;1,5'+`x ;",', ,TPA bet T. arozmr,.enin
The, Me: 0.41 le if t: -
•hes ONO, baa k'Intcie bits
' i'l i, rs ori r- t r: I
head ht ren and Lel. 'l' :
i 1 ,
tram, 1 .'I wheet p::11
the Peet, /en", e..tri
be. t •,c , i •ie
t •+ tee it 51 !e' N
NO, L.• gu , o 1 is
Jeri. ,he r ,t lz.t
Pr tar big tool.
Jost ...lel us sour
ne.uce ere trh'i:,i
0".q''° endern will Fond
a 41
, u sr 3 -N '4� it ler i -d 's,.rl
' r•r file, r..., t.. t soli
•l to r tact a. n'1.:Yge.
When th'•v are cued •+ 1
Lie our pm••n's' Wet we 1V1j1
end vert the nig Loll,
;'P with all .'barges pre.
r.at you tk Doll nine ns w±ll sic',
,e Carling,. without any
•1 rpe It you' will
Show noun• I)0(1 to
n•:,or friends end get
Just three of them to
,1 a^r goods and
earl, ta•lse.t: tau, Send
tie 1'1:11,' natty. and ad.
ores. s to-rlab' So you
t"en gut your Loll Lind
will Oar/lege
qulchly address
Trohrr'oe pan,r,E:V
co'Cox
.. ,, . 4.,, Perone
NEWS FROM ENGLAND
NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOIIN
BULL AND ISIS PEOPLE,
; Occurrences In the Land That
Reigns Supreme in the Cont-
i mercial World.
IBritain has already sent a vessel
of six thusaond tone, containing grain,
to be sown fn Serbia.
Premier Lloyd George has ordered
a pair of boots made by disabled sol-
diers under the Y.M.C.A.
A shrine has been comsecratee at
Dover in memory of ?Liu officers and
men of the trawler and nine sweep-
, ens' section of the Dover patrol.
Admiral Sturdee unveiled a moru-
ment to the memory of 130 naval
ratings who were killed in an enemy
air raid on Chatham Naval Barracks
in September,
Lady Lincolnshire hiss given one
thousand guineas towards the War
Hospital, which is being built at
High Wyecombe.
From 1915 to 1915, the felts of
Thanet underwent one hundred and
nineteen air raids and bombardments
by Lite Germans.
A giant aeroplane, named the Go-
liath, of 1000 horse power to carry
twenty people, will be used as an
aerobus between London and Paris.
The Leeds Chamber of Commerce
have taken in hand the establishment ' reutee'e LtaSmnent Carex Islet:aer:1.
of en international air station at
Leeds.
The Royal South Ducks Agricul-
tural Association will resume their
annual ploughing matches after a
lapse of five years.
Princess Patricia of Connaugh
opened the annual sale of the Police
Court Mission held at Kensington
Town Hall.
H. Playford, steward of the North-
wood Golf Club, has one brother, a
sailor, and eight brothers soldiers,
seven of whom have been wounded,
It is no longer necessary to have a
license to purchase farm horses for
town work in Britain.
The Cunard Steamship Company
have placed orders with Vickers'
Limited, at Barrow, for the construc-
tion of new liners.
One thousand five hundred tons of
potatoes is the normal supply requir-
ed for one day in London.
Two airmen fired at and killed a
hare while flying over Ramsay IIoI-
low, Iluntingdon,
The London Society of Compositors
have granted Lt300 to the Labor War'
Memorial of Freedom and Peace.
The weather has been very cold in
North • Yorkshire, all the pools and
ponds being frozen over.
, Teta King has received an among-.
mons contribution of £10,000 for the
King's Fund for Disabled Soldiers
and Sailors,
For cutting the uppers of women's
boots more then seven inches high
a Bethnal Green shoemaker was fined
£20,
A consignment of bananas which
arrived recently in London is being
retailed to the public at fourpence
a banana.
--
The world's census of sheep runs to
well over 450,000,000.
Humus added to a soil makes the
color. of the soil dark, hence improves
the power of the soil to absorb heat
from sunlight.
NOW "QUItifeel OF WALES"
Patti at Seventy -Siff Rules Now in
Her Welsh Castle.
According to a magazine writer
"Patti livee, not only in our hearts,
but really la the Nell, at the age of
76, in her magnificent castle of
Craig -y -tion, 1.0 miles north of •Swami
sea, in South Wales, on whiell she
has spent quite half to niillioar. She
live, there with her third husband,
Berm Cerlerstrom, end sometimes,
when they feel ineli,erd, they throw
open their theatre, it replica of the
Beir•euth Theatre, to the countryside
ami give one of the operas in which
Patti once thrilled the world. Until
recently Patti was even sometimes
prevailed upon to eppeer et Albert
Hall in L ondml f,,• the benefit of
some charity. but her beauty is quite
gone --it vanished far curlier than
her voice_ --and so, for the most part,
she is hapelest in her Welsh fast-
nesres, among the neighbors, who
will always call her the "Queen of
Wales.' "
•
Kees Your Health
To -NIGHT TIIy
Mind's
LC raegY
for that Cold and Tired Feeling.
Get Weil, Keep Well,
Kill Spanish Flu
by using the OLD RELIABLE.
D311.!.1;SYS LINIMENT CO.. Ltd.
Yarmouth. N.S.
Haig'; Narrow Escapes.
Sir Douglas Haig has shared so far
as possible the discomeerts and dan-
gers of his efli ere and' men; indeed, -
more than once in France and Flan-
ders he hue hu'i narrow escapes from
death,
He hail .,,,lv loop "out there" son r
two :meths then he made a tour of -
the lines on the Mania coal while i
they were being heavily shelled. "Dug-
giti" displayed the coolness which ;
characterize: all hie movements, and ;
the effect was notable, for the troops,!
falling back under en overwhelming
attack, rallied at once and drove the
enemy back.
Not fon afterwards Si,' Douglas
was actually stunned by a shell which
killed some of his staff,. but he "cm'.r-
ried on" despite hint shaking.
I These instances are not thw only
rases in which the ('orpe er Aemy
C'oretnander was in ,latgel• f roar the
enemy's shells.
Free to Boys
MODEL STEAM ENGINE
nuns like sixty,
spurting steam and
making as much
fuss as though it
were running the
electric light plant
orv our town. Iles
brass lacquered
e ueretl
taller, with Battey
twice b1u01 steel
firebox, ix with spirit
burners, and blued
stool alilrnner. All
running parts of
Trost ouatlty metal.
fend,us your namr
send we will send
N.01). do packages of
.mfr los ev eniboss-
d 9t. Po end
Mester I oslnards
tie sell at IS'enty
1 na,'in,ge, When
sold, end Its the
mellei and v i will
..
end von thv team
tontine, ttitm u:il
r Ima.„ •s Or,t'.i.!,
hIOMl R.WAI.REtd CO.
'nztoltso
ISSUE 7--'19.
When the floor ('r^cica.
The thin h ;rths'on i fl 41
eornmcu ficnr!ng et -e;' a tar fre-
fluently cubs e, opt x ;
That is due t•, i..e m . i.. rl,e at.
in the cellar. T p., d.):, cot- .
the entire i;n1...flour v act :t heavy
building paper hefcr ea. t n,hca
• flooring is applied. Th n ill
t ccluca
the possibility of the ,r,t, tt e .s..c.t a'.
to a minimum.
Thele is often a* t ly ' lief.•
ing in a beautiful het:enacted float•,
You do not know the cuuee of the
crack, Sometimes it will dose tih<.
in the summer and open wide in the
• winter. Thaw: is caused by the wood's
swelling in the wenn eseason and dry-
' ing nn the winter Mien the room will
have uniform het,(. In most cases:
if the common fleeeleg had been coy- i
erecd with heavy building paper, the,
crack would not have occurred,
Minare'rf Liivaueut eros Lama Sit Casts,
We are like people who mace been
struggling up some steep and difficult
mountain range --ranges unexplored
nail without guides—who suddenly,
before they themselves expected, find
themselves on the crest of the ridge,
and who Took upon all the difficulties
they have overcome, and see before
them, spread out under the knight
sunshine of hope, a great anti fertile
plain of human pregrsss.--Mx, Bal-
four.
The Cause of
11 Heart Trouble
&faulty digestion causes the
;generation of gases in the
stomach which inflate and press
down on limo heart and interfere
with rto regular Inr action,causing
faintness and pain. 1
to $0
drops of Mother Seigel'$ Curative
Syrup after meals sets digestion
riglot,which allows the heart to
heat full and regular. 9
Zotyx
U' r'A.T 5ID a3T,Agit PDX. rota 41717-
P able reward, kneld urea., Hgtbwtll,
Ont.
WP11,I,r TIQIYIT'I',L NIIIW .R
and job printing plant In ileastprq
eo ( for . 61,250rencspu , k m al;e1,50BoxwU..
iVidson 7'ubllshing Co., 1. A., 'Toronto.
1LT71:int:7,X IVIDWSL'APl.lt vane BALta
9 YY In New rmntsylo, Owner going to
krunto. tiv11I Self se,0oo. LFortlt double
that amount. Apply J, 7i., ob Wilson.
Publishing en.. Limited. Toronto,
PITSCELLANEEoVS
C1N,.I It, 1'I'atiiitkt, I [ 1 ess, I'.'Til,. i
RA "internal and asternal. r ccc l wlt5- ;
our pain by our home trr,+tn,cnt. W tin
tmn before toe Isle Dr. I3„1Lnun Medlaai
C.o.. Lrialtsd, OAbr,csaood, i)nt,
The King Charles Statue.
Ring (•haries I. may now breathe
freely once more. Workmen era et -
gaged in taking away the eandbags
and scaffolding of the statue of Ring
Charles I in 'Trafalgar Square, Lon-
don this is the first time the head
of the Stuarts has been permitted to
breathe freely for many months. All
sorts of sr--culatiuns have been rife
as to es reason for the extensive
proteet.on that has been accorded this
statue, one of them being that there
was a Jacobite at- the Office of Works.
The probable reason, Fou eve,•, is the
undeniable 1.,, amity of the statue.
MONEY ORDERS
Send a Uominion Express Monty
Order. They elle payable etiel'bnlmere.
When popeora refuse.: to pep as it
shoul:l, if it is covered with water
for about five minutes or till thor-
oughly wet, then drained and dried,
it will be found very mach improved,
It is nest to It it dry about 24 hours
after soaking-.
axr's Llni.^tal Cruxes a1soeasvea
Friendeeip that flows from the
heart cannot be frozen by adversity,
is the water that flows from the
nt. taa-:cA; congeal in winter.--Je
tame, a
INSTANTLY IIELIEVED
OR HONEY RESIN DED. ASK ANY DRUGGIST
[e
e.t.a : 0,,, Glantreal, P.Q. Psiss One,
ii en b Le it u,i' t b...
ACHES AND PAINS
QUICKLY RELIEVED
You'll find loan's Linjmcnti
softens the severe
rheumatic ache
Pet : iteeee Dan't t t' tri
Jas: l.t . mem naturally. What a
Ices r seethine relief soon ir:ll,t'-'si
1 ste .,l adh,,fflde , r^.c,r,
sti.,t.xd
hack "c•m i --th'i: Of -lents .r.n't
light : t th• retie +pt»lith'
Sloan'.‘', rind I5k''an cent h.. it,
ea:m m nt. It aecint C,..ia.i_. - :-k:
n ,lru;;;ist :.rt ie.
P0,, Gaff, O11ip,
1
Teach Children to
Use Cu tura Soap
Because it is best for their tender
skins, help it now and then with'
touches of Cthti.rura Ointment applied
to first signs of redacts, roughness, I
pimples or dandruff. If motherm' •
would only use these super-creamyI
emollients for every -day toilet ppure'
poses how much suffering might be
avoided by preventing little shun and,
scalp troubles becoming serious.
Semple End, Pr a by Mail. Address. past'
card: Cetieurn Dent. N. Baotou, U.S.A.'.
Sold by dealers throughout the world.
OHNry Compound
It S Spain'sDistemper
The. riger and rliang,,!m oe
10,31,1 weather
ler redeoe your
horse's qu h ho is susceptible to eon -
is lonN ming sus Ii chi
g i a withstand o lelien is 1 nese. i s
d !f h s ystem 1n
trot ¢bra to esoI,, e.am r, o t' isenra SIOaIe..S will
C '
keen t -n hoe Lie ill r 't r d Sr,tram disease. TMs.
E JZ �, ,,,:"0 vent:' end reh'+tea lla. 1't.,;,t1't;R. INFLUENZA,i'INTf morn.
OnitoilItt
FOR GREA''CR HORSE f Gr1CllENOY SIVE
,r
r
Pain ? first's will atop it!
Used foe 40yam torelieve rheumatism, lumbago, nourtilgia,s rains,lame
back, toothache, earache, swollen joints, sere throat and other peon
lot complaints. Bare a bottle in the house. Ail cicnhersorwriteus,
Ti leIRST I1LMN,UIC EOMPAtIY, memon, Canada
e'> t 1.ct:rdTtt51]iaiTYX'�' L:.5G '`L"s:YL:.FGNRZ/}i¢iESSE . k�eii!!Cill�..y