HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1919-3-27, Page 3THE WAR LABORS
OF KM C ORGE V.
ARDUOUS WORK DURING FOUR
AND A HALF YEARS OF WAR,
Has Reviewed Over 2,000,000 Troops,
Visited f Over 300 Hospitnls,
l°• :orated 12,000.
To an nrtiele on the Ring, au EngM It
writer says:
"Rood old Genn;(•!" 'Pilin Inly not
nt first blush appear to be n very re-
spectful way of heilinff 0ne•0 so00r-
regn. but 11. is the shoae that rang out
in Hyclo Park when Itis Majesty re-
viewed the Legion that marches un-
der the Sliver Badge. Among Eng-
lishmen the adjective "old" when ap-
plied to 0 1110111 indicates not age. but
affee„tion. That he is loved. It was
in this sense that it WO'+ fmplletl to
the King in Iiyde Park, and none
i,ncw better than our sovereign how
to take it. It told hint, indeed, the
depth and homely affection in which
he is held And it is betraying, no
royal confidence to say that it Went
straight to the heart.
To parody a famous line, "AU the
world loves 0 worker," And how King
George has 'worked for the nation
I'rstq past four years and three
months! During that period he has
been a stranger to holidays. It is
doubtful if he hue had more than ten
consecutive days in his beloved Nor-
folk home, if as much.
Messages to Seven Fronts.
The barest recital of a fraction of
what 11e has accomplished, accom-
panied often by her Majesty, makes
one marvel at the endurance and high
sense of duty which could accomplish
this aur! 111)10 h more. His Majesty has
carried out well over 200 inspections,
reviewing in doing so over 2,000,000
troops; 110 division has left these
shores for any of our seven fronts—
for we were fighting on seven fronts
at ono time --without either being in.
specte(1 by the King, or, if circumstan-
ces rendered that impossible, hearing
a farewell message from hint: he has
visited with his sympathetic smile and
kindly word the wounded in more
than 300 hospitals; he has gone
through 150 munition factories, charm-
ing all, mein, women and girls, with
his bonhomie, and has presented with
his own hand more than 12,000 de-
corations won on the field of battle.
Foul' separate visite have been paid'
to the Grand Fleet --the last of which
Was on the eve of the surrender of the
German navy. On shore, naval bases
and depots have been visited thirteen
tines,
There has not been an air-raid on a
London district but his Majesty, ac-
companied by the Queen, has 1,e'
driven to the devastated district ilo
express his sympathy with the suf-
ferers.
A Hard -Working King.
The King is probably one of the
busiest men in the Empire, his work
being in many untlought-of and un-
heard-of labors, b'or this Mr, Lloyd
George vouched when he said: "There
is ono man who is working as hard as
the hardest worked man in this coun-
try, and he is the sovereign of the
realm." The writer then proceeds
to tell how he does it:
To get through the enormous
amount of work which comes to his
Majesty's table, a private secretary
and two assistant secretaries are ne-
cessary. For there are many State
matters which the Ring and the King
alone can pass. Half -past nine in the
morning sees his Majesty at work,
and he would be a rash man who
names the ]Hour when all was clone.
For there is ono thing which tho ruler
of this vast Empire insists on --no
work that can otherwise be dealt with
must be left over to the next day. He
is "a clean -desk mai."
The writer then proceeds to tell of
the domestic side of his life, showing
bow ovary regulation issued by the
food or coal controller was obeyed
to the very letter in his houseJhold,
fireplaces being reduced in size,iight-
ing cut down, a.ncl heavy reductions
made in all laundry accounts, No
stored -up food was ever found at
Buckingham or Windsor such as Pots -
dant revealed. Flower -beds grew vege-
tables for the nation;; in short, he
and his family did their best to share
the people's cares and sacrifices.
A 'THOUGHTFUL PRISONER.
Kept Record of Comrades' Death in
Captivity.
The thottsands of missing. British
prisoners in Germany constitute one
of the most pathetic tragedies of tete
war. The number unaccounted for
would doubtless be greater still had
it not been for the thoughtfulness of
some who also suffered In German.
prisons but survived.
011e recently returnedprisoner, who
sexed as orderly in a German hospi-
tal, kept a record of all the British
patients who died there, and since his
home -coaling has written to their
kinsfolk enclosing a copy of a photo-
graph, which ho had spec!l1yylly taken
for the purpose, of the English corner
of the hospital cemetery.
The lean who gets up in the ?horn-
ing with his work planned for the
day has got it partly done,
Harness, to suspend a basket from
a fruit picker's shoulders and leave
both hands free hag been invented.
Those who bring sunshine to the
!Nes of others cannot keep lit from
Plemeelveit.•-+417Y1' dst.
Off.'
11:
eerIeitireeliel.' Ste l„
Over 'I there
Over l ere
" 1TAGChewingTobacco
is appreciated by both.
of Canada's war units
—those who fought in
Flanders and those who
served at home.
It is also enjoyed by
civilians of all classes
throughout Canada and
is recognized as being
etla'dtinz� :.IY✓"
pt {a!le
NT
kap 4
FROM HERE &THERE
A Conclusive Test.
"Has the war made much difference
to you?" asked the new servant who
had been engaged in an English
household.
"The misses said we'd got to econo-
mize, so we've 'ad margarine with
meals In the kitchen," replied the old
cook.
"Doesn't she have it, then?"
"Not 'er" She says as 'ow It doesn't
suit 'er digestion. But there ain't
nothing wrong with 'er digestion, We
know that, for we often sends 'er up
margarine, and 'ave butter ourselves."
A Nice Surprise.
Mr. Jones rang the hell at the new
doctor's house. Usually he went to
his okl family doctor, but this new
man happened to live nearer and it
was an urgent call.
The (lector's wife answered the ring.
"You wish to see the doctor?" she
said./ "Couldn't you come to -morrow
morning?"
"Why?" said Jones. "Isn't the doc-
tor in?"
"Olt, yes, he's in," said the lady
wistfully, "but you're his first patient,
and I'd like you to cone as a surprise
for him to -morrow. You see, it's his
birthday!"
"As You Were."
A certain Irish sergeant was exceed-
ingly wroth when he discovered that
one of his men had paid a visit to the
regimental barber and had come back
without his moustache.
"Private Jones," he roared, "who on
earth gave yez permission to have that
moustache out off?"
"No one," answered Jones, uncon-
cernedly; "I thought it would improve
my appearance."
"Improve your appearance wid a
face like yours!" bawled the enraged
sergeant. "If yez don't have it on
again at the afternoon parade to -day,
there'll be trouble!"
A Philosophical Lover.
So many romantic and pathetic
anecdotes are related of precious love
letters, cherished in trench and battle
by gallant lovers in war -scarred
France, that the reflections of a pen-
sive Frenchman h1 L'Horizou, the
journal of the poilus, make a refresh-
ing change. He, too, had borne about
with him a letter from his ladylove,
Tea e. e and
Coffee Hurt
Mend People
Theta rnal.J be hurt
ing Sou. Nervous-
ness , headache,
heart or stomach
trouble are prettg
sure indications .
Why no tr'
INSTANT
PO5TUM
•--- a table drink
wholl free from
'Caffe ne : the drug
in tea and coffee.
Postum has. a rich,
delicious flavor.
At Grocers lverywhere.
"There sa1evson"
asaverereeersernearesess
;issuB No. 11—'19
a person, evidently, more tart than
tender.
"Nature is kind," philosophized the
sorrowful poilu. "She places the
remedy near the ill and often cures,
as everyone has seen, evil by evil. A
woman, too much loved, Bent ole a let-
ter so cruel that I didn't even have
the strength to tear It up, but carried
it around in my pocket for weeks. One
night, when I was quartered in a
stable, I took my coat off and hung it
up.
The next day, 110 letter. A cow
had eaten it. Nature is kind."
AIRMEN HELPED GEN. ALLENBY
Capt. Alan Bott of R. A. F. Tells of
Palestine Campaign.
Captain Alan Bott of the Royal
Air Forces recently arrived in New
York from Palestine and Syria, where
ho served with Gen. Allenby's army
in its march through the Holy Land
and its fight against the Turkish
army led by German officers.
IIe was shot down and captured
in Palestine, imprisoned in Damas-
cus, sent to Asia Minor, and finally
to Constantinople. He escaped in dis-
gaise and reached a port in Russia
which Tie found in control of the Ger-
mans and the Bolsheviki, and finally
got away to Bulgaria. Previous to
his adventures in the near East,
Captain Bott, who is twenty-six
years of age, flew for two years along
the Western front and was shot down
during one of the battles of the
Somme, but escaped capture.
Speaking of the Palestine cam-
paign, Capt. Bott said:—
"The
aid:"The Turks are good at fighting on
the ground, bait they could not fly,
and their airplanes were all manned
by Germans or Austrians. Our job
was to make flights across to Naz-
areth, Na'blous—which was ancient
Sechem--and other points held by
the enemy, and to do low strafing,
which scared the Mohammedan sol-
diers to death, as they were convinc;
ed We were in league with the evil
one. Other machines were used for
bombing the forts held by the enemy,
but -great care was taken to spare
the holy places, like Nazareth, etc.
"The British aviators did a great
deal toward making the success of
General Allenby's, army in Palestine
and Syria. They turned the Turkish
retreat into an absolute rout by
bombing all the signal stations so
that the enemy could not ascertain
the movements of its own armies and
they sat on the airdromes and didnot
let a slingle German plane go up to
snake signals."
The Peace Call.
"I am the voice of the uplands ringing
from hill to hill,
Calling you back to action; hearken
and do my will.
Put tip your spear and saber, smother
the torch and brand,
Lay down your weapons of warfare;
come back, for peace Is at ]land.
Bach to your reeking workshops, turn.
lug again to toil:
Lift up the horn of plenty out of the
teeming soil.
Shoulder the pink and shovel, kindle
again the hearth,
Scatter the wheat and barley over the
wasted earth.
"For the cannon is hushed in the low-
land, the order has been with-
drawn,
And the sound of disbanding armies
echoes from dark to dawn.
Up from the reeking by -ways 001110 the
sons and daughters of men,
Beating their swords and shrapnel
back into plows again,
Over the waste of the valley the sound
of an anvil rings,
And np from the fields of carnage a
blood -red poppy springs.
And the shepherd is out on tho hill-
side, calling again to his sheen:
And the song of the busy sickle awak-
ens the earth from sleep, , ,
"Hark to the voice of the uplands,
ringing from deep to deep,
Calling to peaceful battle ere I again
burn to sleep,"
The earliest steam vessels also ear.
lied sails, the idea being to relieve
the stress on the engines.
"The rays of happiness, like those
of light, are colorless when unbrok-
en." ---Longfellow.
Never put away cotton or linen
clothes with etaroh in them; they
will not last nearly go long.
1,
The Latest
Designs
The growing girl always enjoys a
three-piece suit, and they are usual-
ly very difficult to get the exact
style and fit. This model is youthful
and smart and fulfills all the require-
ments for a suit for flappers. McCall
Pattern No. 8778, Girl's Three -Piece
Suit. Pattern in 5 sizes, 0 to 14
years. Price, 20 cents. Transfer
Design No. '737. Price, 10 cents.
i'
j
!tl.
1,
This attractive negligee is simple
in cons.t117CtMn and easy to slip on
and orf. The dainty boudoir cap that
accompanies it is developed in ribbon
and lace. McCall Pattern No, 8771,
Ladies' One -Piece Negligee. In one
size, suitable. for 84 to 40 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.
The great cry which rinses from all
our manufacturing cities, louder than
the furnace blast, is all in very deed
for this, that we manufacture there
everything except linen. We blench
cotton, and strengthen steel, atnd re-
fine sugar, and shape pottery; but to
brighten, to strengthen, to refine, er
to form a single living spirit, never
eaters into our estimate of advent-
ages. And all tileveil to which that
cry is urging our my'ritids can be
met only in one way . , by a
right understanding on the part of
all classes of what kinds of labor are
good for men, raising them and mak-
ing them happy; by , a determined
sacrifice of such convenience, or
beauty, or cheapness, 010 is to be got
only by the degradation of the work-
man; atilt' by en equally determined
demand for the products and results
of healthy and ennobling labor.—
R,uskin.
PHOTOS OF
EVERY BATTALION
Th.2 Left Canada for Salo by
ALEXANDRA STUDIOS
0011 OU1oilioe ST. WEST, TOEORTO
Write for further information.
NEW NOSES, EYELIDS, BROWS.
Work of CanadianArmy Dental Cerpt
Does Not Confine itself to Teeth.
No department 111 the army hes been
1111)01 1)0010o,1 snit 1,101 rrt'lliciza,1 than
1110 Canteli to Amey Denial (-orp . The
work itevoinpiishud by this turps has
not only !wen u htrg" factor iii main-
taining' tile 110.11(11 add comfort of the
army, but has pt •vented and eelleved
untold r.1li ,int+: Itpe.0 Om part of the
( 1,t,odntit boy
l h1 1,1111100M rf c.rinn4ictn don-
tr1:; it) army '.plc 11 far beyond
the 1'an Ibion f,r' o.,, mid 11upe1•iul s,I'
fliers frequently sought the services
1)i' Canadian denial i (1rgeon0 rt
1100 ow1 !neonvenienre to 1159r1selves.
A 1)11w and remarks deve!'2r.
1100,011 has, however, 2111ea place in the
Mental Corp-, 11101 2) 1 is the replace-
ment, by artfll,ial eubst;hlt0, of lost
facial tissue, including eye or nose
and the surrounding parts. in the
ease of the nose, the part is repro.
duped aluminum, and is then tinted
the exact color of the face, by an artist
especially retailed for this purpose.
Possibly even more remarkable are
the substitutes for a lost eye. In these
cases a great deal of the orbit has
also been shot away, and it is neces-
sary to restore these parts before the
artificial eye is set in place. This work
includes the lashes, eyelids and all
the surrounding parts. When com-
pleted the specially trained artist is
again called into requisition, and the
whole piece is cleverly attached to a
specially constructed pair of spec-
tacles, and the "camouflage" is so per-
fect that the casual observer is entire-
ly deceived.
Tha centre of this work for Canada
is the Royal College o8 Dental Sur-
geons of Ontario, Toronto. This col-
lege, without public grant of any kind,
has carried on during the war, and at
the same time has placed certain sec-
tions of its building et the disposal of
the Militia Department for the work
of the Dental Corps. This has been
done absolutely without emerge, either
for rent or any of the accessories,
such as light or heat. This generous
treatment is still being accorded so
long as the Dental Corps requires
special facilities which the Ontario'
College is able to supply.
1)--o--o 0 0 0. 8
YES! MAGICALLY!
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
11 0 0 0 0 e— 0 —0-1) e 0 0 0
You simply say to the drug store
man, "Give me a quarter of an ounce
of freezone." This will .cost very little
but is sufficient to remove every hard
or soft corn from one's feet.
A few drops of this new ether com-
pound applied directly upon a tender,
aching cora should relieve the sore-
ness instantly, and soon the' entire
corn, root and all. dries up and can be
lifted out with the fingers.
This new way to rid one's feet of
come was introduced by a Cincinnati
man, who says that, while freezone is
sticky, it dries in a moment, and sim-
ply shrivels up the corn without in-
flaming or even irritating the sur-
rounding tissue or shin.
Don't let fatber die of infection or
lockjaw from whittling at his corns,
but clip this out and make him try it.
He Stared, Too.
"The biggest fire I've ever seen 1005
at New York, said tile American, "It
was a very high building, and the lad-
ders were not tall enough to reach
the window at which a lady was stand-
ing.
"Wal," he went on, "we were just
beginning to despair, when a lucky
thought seemed to strike one of the
firemen. Catching 11oid of a hose, he
took it alongside of the house, and
turned the nozzle upwards so that a
stream of water shot continuously
past the window. Summoning up her
courage the lady stopped from the
ledge, and, putting her arms and legs
about the jot of water, slid to the hot -
to, td was saved."
"011an, that's nothing!" said the Eng-
tom,
"I saw an even more excit-
ing rescue than that. A large hotel
was burning furiously, when, at the
top storey of the building, a girl ap-
peared. I stared, the firemen stared,
the policeman stared—in fact, we all
stared so hard that at last the girl
walked down the stares."
0^--1111
=nerve Liniment Relieves Nenralguw
Massage is to the scalp what phy-
sical culture is to the body, It pro-
motes the growth of the hair by ex-
citing to new activity the tiny glands
which contribute to the sta'ueture,
and also tones up the scalp layers,
which with neglect relax unhealth-
ily. The circulation of the scalp is
also increased, thus preventing atro-
phy of the hair roots and the gray-
ness which results from 12, "So valu-
able., in fact, is massage for young
and old, " says an authority on the
subject, "that when properly under-
stood and appreciated we shall see
fewer bald heads and a vastly higher
average of beautifully abundant
tresses that Nye do 0111."
Minard'e Lialmont Cores Dandruff,
It as a good plan to have a cheap
watch to carry on the farm. So many
things May happen to a watch. It
may be jerked ont of the pocket when
you are bending over and strike on
a ane,
Inttothe community ciltb---the small
neighborhood group -.where people
know each other well, and trust each
other, and are unselfish enough to
Work for a common cause, real pro-
gress eau be mitclt. ,.
Two Caldwell Water Tube
Boilers, 225 H.P. each. Infor-
mation on request, or may be
seen in operation at F irstbrook
Bros., I,td., 283 King St. E.,
Toronto.
Do Yoe Ito These 'Things?
The variety of "1:1ee:l t ingue" cal•
led '•Sponnerisul" oligieetu1, probab-
ly, with the earliest attempts at hu -
men speech, but though so well
kn'aw1) it is not yet defined in the die-
tionarios. The nesoeleti"n of it; with
Pr'1fes• or Spocnner is recalled by a
bee "paper paragraph which Faye
dolt in a sermon to Oxford under-
graduates Ito is reported to have said:
"11'•rtllren, have you never felt within
your heart a half -wormed fish to be
good?" His' little son came by the;
failing honestly, fur he is credited!
with saying at breakfast: "Mamma,
please pass the parlor maid." An-
other ease mentioned is that of the
young curate who, basing his first
sermon on the tent, 11The cock crew
and Peter went out and wept bitter-
ly," remarked solemnly, "The crock
wept and Peter went out and Crew
bitterly—no, I mean Peter crew and
the cock went out and wept bitterly."
92'»»rd's Liniment Co Limited
Have used MINARD'S LINIMENTg�• Arr1ns WANTED TO 1x1 PLAIN
for Croup; found nothing equal to it; R./ and light sewing at home, whole or
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CIIAS. E. SHARP. ( particulars. National Manufacturing
Hawkshaw, N.B., Sept. 1st, 1905. Company. Montreal.
ri'EAaIoEXe# WANTED/
.,,-.-•--�
rg.111„ rr le A (.11 le its li'ANTI)I),
if female, for Intermediate mediate and Milder.
gluten, Primary 1 r 0.,ut::. state outdid-
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Rev. A U \-unshed, her'., Morse S. P.
No. 0121 Morse. Sasit,
LrVE P01TL3Ry WANTED,
IVle 11110 AOI 701NU8 111'10 I'OUL-
try, pay highest 501100 prompt
returns Write for i»•ices, I. lvelnraueh
k sem 10.1s St Joan lISitlst,' Market.
Montreal, 4,110,
AGEN 'RS WANTED.
0 rt l I I I T A f:h I ',N:rtkro
JI- R' 1 runny imi.: iic,g a I�perinitY;
(Intel.; "111 ;til thtng 1t 1 tt to prlce0f
'"'111•.1. Ave.,Tere Art rtarmpanY,
rnew h9, ., 1',n'rrnfn,
Pon BALE
011 P.',:(;!1 1 71x.1. 121-'1,
1.1 • , 1" .') .13. A'1'
'a'2 �.'1 4r, 28 41's,, o,rvl Ey H1(;11
tired" 11010einw. 1'rrsh,"dol^ in goad aea-
ROr1, from 11,1,•, to ei01rt ;r:arx old, right
}res• ten. y. (1,1,11 0•111, order. Oteference,
:Uel'"hantn--' 1111 nk, lini)is. J. (1. ]tyre,
Untat'],a, Leeds Ca.
'EV ELL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER
1(0(501, d Insurancecarriedpriming
Eastern
r1) for 111.200 011 sulck Sale 13ox 61,
11'ns in Pubilshing Cn 1.td Tnrnntn.
'VTNEKLY NEWSPAPER holt 00.00
F `Y in New Ontario. Owner going to
France 1111 ae11 112.000. Worth d
Publishouble
that amouningCo.. Limited.
Aopl , 7. H.. 010 Wilson
ited. Ternntn
MISCELLANEOTS
CI ANCER, TUMORS. LUMPS, ETC..
VV internal and external. cured with-
out pain by our home treatment write
se before too late. Dr. Hellman Medical
Co., Limited. Colitngwood, Ont
UTO TIRES, 20 x 51 AUTO TIRES
$15.25. Tubes $1.06. All sizes cut
rate prices. Riverdale Garage & Rubber
Co„ Gerrard and Hamilton Sts.. Toronto.
and 1128 Dorchester St. West, Montreal.
Just the Same
The Creep train rumbles in along the
rails,
The Welooning Committee talk de-
talls---
A woman wonders will she laugh or
cry.
And watches other women waiting by.
The whistle blows" the drums beat
full and fast,
She holds him to her heart --at last!
at last!
The soil who's left of three—dis-
figured, lame,
But in his mither's (:yes he's just the
same!
MONEY ORDERS.
When ordering goods by mail send
a Dominion Express Money Order.
Nearly 3,000,000 pounds of hams,
valued at 570,000 taels (about $550,-
000 United States currency) were ex-
ported from China during 1017. Great
Britain was the principal importer,
The Chinese consume vast quantities
of hams and pork. Pigs are raised
everywhere in China.
guard's Liniment Oures Burns. Eta
"No affection, save friendship, has
any eternity in it. Friendship ought,
therefore, always to be cultivated in
love itself,"—W. R. Alger.
YOU CAN'T FEND ANY
DANDRUFF, AND HAIR
STOPS MN] OUT
Save your hair! Make it thick,
wavy, glossy and beautiful
at once.
Try as you will, after an application
of Danderine, you can not find a single
trace of dandruff or falling hair and
your setup will not itch, but what will
please you most will be after a few
weeks' use, when you see new hair,
fine and downy at first—yes—but real.
lx new hair—growing all over the
scalp.
A little Danderine immediately
doubles the beauty of your hair. No
difference how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking ono small
strand at a time. The effect is im-
mediate' and amazing—your hair will
be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an
appearance of abundance; an incom-
parable lustre, softness and hlxuri-
ahec, the beauty and shimmer of true
hair health.
Get a smell bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine from any drug store or
toilet counter, and prove that your
hair is as pretty and soft as any—that
it has been neglected or injured by
careless treatment. A small trial bot-
tle will double the beauty of your lair.
sc acssk� k ,s ar0.0,kk 0.1515.1L4.4kol,d
Hai/ to Cure
Biliousness
Doctors warn against remedies
containing powerful drugs and
alcohol. "The Extract of Rooto,
long known as Mother Seigel's
Cerativt Syrnp, has no dope or
Strong ingredients; it cures
indigestion, biliousness and
consklpation. Can bo had at any
drug store." Get the genuine.
$Oc. and $1.00 Bottles. s
PARDONABLE PRIDE.
"I want you to publish these poems
in book forms," said a seedy looking
man to the London publisher.
Publisher —"I'll look them over, but
I cannot promise to bring them out un-
less you have a well-known name."
Poet—"That's all right. ItIy name
is known wherever the English lang-
uage is spoken.'
"Ah, indeed! What is your name?"
"John Smith."
2Minera's Liniment for sale everywhere.
Of the fifteen lines comprising the
system of Chinese Government rail-
ways, only one was built by the Chin-
ese themselves.
With a new type of tube an X-ray
powerful enough to show up the min-
utest flaw in a four -inch thickness of
steel can be produced.
WHEN YOU SUFFER
FROM RHEUMATISM
Almost any man will tell you
that Sloan's Liniment
means relief
For practically every man has used
it who has suffered frotn rheumatic
aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness
of joints, the results of weather ex-
posure.
Women, too, by the hundreds of
thousands, use it for relieving neur-
itis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick head-
ache. Clean, refreshing, soothing;
economical, quickly effective. Say
"510011'0 Liniment" to your druggist
Made in Canada. Get it today.
INSTANTLY RELIEVED WITH
OR KOIREY REFilliDE0.ASK ANY CRUMMY
or write Lyman -Knox Co„ Montreal, P.Q. Price 60e
Remember the name e, h mirhr nen be teen Kato
3 Cakes Cuticura Seep
and 4 Boxes Ointment
Heal Melling !Pimples On
Shoulders and Back,
"For two years 1 was troubled with
itching pimples on my shoulders and
back. They were bard, red
,fir" ' 'r and eery painful, and were
(= ^1 scattered. I could not rest
. ' at night on accountofthe
Itching.
"I tried eeveml remedies
but they failed. Then 1,
used Cuticura Soap and Ointment,
and I used three cakes of Cuticura
Soap and four boxes of Cuticura
Ointment and I was completely healed
in six weeks." (Signed) Mise IKate
Young, Melrose, Man., Match 30,1417. '
Raving obtained a clear healthy
skin by the use of Cuticura, keep it
clear by using the Soap for all toilet
purposes,sssisted by touches of Oint-
ment as needed. Cuticura Soap is
ideal for the complexion.
For Free Sample Each by Mall ad-
dress poet -card: "Cuticura, Dept, A,
Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere.
SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT OF HORSES DICTATES
oMrysv S ohs s Distemper Compound
0 aCnotir all r0n05114e1t 51h"I,r11,11)li1,11 INLUfoOmN.7„\ 8P0011I0EYed
J according to the laws or medical science, IL has been tested
for a gnerter or a. erhtnry by the ablest horsemen, No mat..
ter in What isolated district diseased horses are -Pound,
Sl'O111V'S 11118 made scientitin treatment possible.
Potts driro'gtst eau tell yon.
EROHIU MEDICAL COMPANY, Goshen, Indian*,
iq .0'