HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1919-5-1, Page 3f'�: m.� :: �` •1 Field Marshal Haig then refers to11CA1 }RS Ole THE BA'PTLEFIi.I"I)
S� pS �
`�➢tE, T Weekly tette eeamplee of a t •houlmaster, aI
talk" •-'( ' I lawyer, a taxi -cab driver. and a: Philip Min, Femme; : C'orrespondent,
i1
N t
l - Rit
ashio4
sergeant -major who u>mn:oersted bri-
1 Fade , and an editor v..110 commanded
4
a division,
to important retain:m.1s in the, lin•
penal army in 1'rnnr'. They are.
Malot G tercel Sir 1 )u/avid Watson,'
Quelete, eenimanding the Fourth Can-
•ediuti I,Ivi e, and Major-General
E. W. Mersi,ent, Ottawa, command-
ing the Cenaditm artillery. Both
started in the war as colonels 1n the
Canadian ntiltia.
FAMOUS BLUE 1300[( OF ROY-
Y e UHT (OFF'' TUE PRESS
61S
Innnmeralle iltfficeiliee Menet the
Editors at. )lawn of New I:ra
Among European Nations,
The French edition of the Alman-
ach de Gotha for 1919 hos been.
brought to Ririe fre.•h from the
Justus Perthes printing press at
Gotha, The preface 'manilla a con
fessinn of the innumerable -difficulties
which have he -:et the editors at the
dawn of the raw era. "The die-
memherment of Auetr:a," they ob-
serve, "and the trans•.ornation of
twenty-two Gormiin stales into as
many republics interrupted our lab -
ars as we were going to press."
One's first impulse is to -learn the
future status, according to the Al-
manitrh de Gotha, of the ex -Kaiser
and the ex -Crown Prince. For the
ci-devent--•-in this register of fallen
royalties—German Emperor, King of
Prussia, Margrave of Bradenburg
Burgrave of Nuemberg, Count Ho-
henzollern, sovereign of Silesia and
Glatt, etc., we find the following:
"Succeeded his father and renoun-
ced the throne November 8, 1918, doe
ter in law of the University of Ber-
lin, doctor in law of the University
of Penne; doctor in science of th
University of Klausenberg, engineer-
ing director of the Politechnic
Sehnois of Gcrm:lny, formerly gran
admiral and field Marshal, general
etc. •
Regarding the Crown Prince.
The Kaiser appears, therefore, with
his many arromplishments chiefly it
the character of doctor. As for his
eldest son, he appears before the
world as a veterinary surgeon. The
Almnnach says:
"Fre' 1eriek William Victor August
Ernest of Prussia et-det•ant Imperial
Prinre of -the German Empire, Prince
Royal of Prussia, Imperial Royal
Sickness, born at the Marble Palace,
near Potsdam, on May 0, 1882. Re-
nnunced his rights and succession to
the throne November 8 (December
1), 1918, doctor of law, University
of Berlin; doctor in engineering, Poli -
technic Schools, Berlin and. Char-
lottenhurg; doctor in Veterinary
medicine, Higher Veterinary School,
Berlin; formerly general of infantry,
etc."
Turning to the Hapsburgs, we
find:
"Charles (Karl) L, Francis Joseph
Louis Herbert George Marie, ci-
devant Emperor of Austria, Apostolic
King of Hungary (the fourth of that
name), King of Bohemia, Dalmatia,
Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia, etc."
The Ahnanach sums up the tre-
mendous events which caused the
"brilliant second" to crumble to dust
thus:
"The former Austro-Hungarian
Monarchy * * * split up as a result
of revolutionary events in the months
of October and November, 1918, into
several independent national states,
In this way were formed the Repub-
lic of German -Austria, the Czecho-
Slovak Republic, the South Slav state
and the Republic of Hungary. The
Kingdom of Serbia claims Bosnia
and Herzegovina; Roumania claims
the Bukovina and Poland claims Gal-
icia."
German Governments Temporary.
The lesser constellations have all
similarly paled. Frederick II (Wil-
liam Louts Leopold Augustus) mere-
lymere-
lydescribed as ci-devant Grand Duke
of Baden; Louis III. (Leopold Joseph,
Marie Aloysius Alfred) as ci-devanti
Ring of Bavaria, and so on. The.
Almanach is careful to note the "pro -1
visional'' .state of affairs in Germany.'
(
ernments are temporary. But Ilin-
It declares that all the German Gov-
denburg vide Army, page 478 ---still
figures as directing the general staff l
of the armies in the field, and Groner -
is still First Quartermaster General.)
All the high imperial funetionaries
figure at their posts. Interesting and 1
enlightening is this paragraph de-
voted to Alec. -Lorraine:
"The for•nlee province governed di-
rectly by the organs of the German
Empire end united to the latter sine()
June 0, 1871, On November 2, 1918,
the Sc'cend�Chatubcr constituted it-
self the Nntion:t Council of. Alsace -1 i
Lorraine and named from antnrig its1
members. an administrative rot+)mit
ice, By decree el' the French Repub-1
lie on November 15, 1018,. the civil
administration of Alsace-Lorraine is
assured during the armistice and un-
til the signing of peace preliminaries
by three commissaries of the Repub-
Y
e
d
1
q..
Two editors, both (+tnndiane, MAO
,0
Tells ltunu3• War hurries.
,.1111, 1, war I ri cpundent, who rein ince un t
western ftnht fr„nl the .,king of 111
Philip ('ibis, the °• ru
hq
e: to the wee, :soya•,a Ili tt „, telly the •
1rio'Jo
t HERE &' r.
EI
uut:l our t•i'lntiu'!s tro•,p., crus
th,. Rhine, lrlli it,- a1n'7`-ins; stn
ie., u, leis pee ere, 'the 11,•tt 1,, i
Have Wen Os, War":
1n their lig l--hrurte,I way the m
invented al. r eta of gamete, hettii
on which eh, li�= might he duds or e
ploolves, betting even on the me
who might be the fire!. to get kbit,
I remember. one dugout in wink
a sergeant -major beet pmp:ng in
inquire for Private Smith.
"IIe's all right," came the an we
Two minutes later the ;;eegean
major again appeared with the san
inquiry.
Yes; he's all right,"
Again end again the sergcan
major poppet) in, till Private Smit
looked up,
"That sergeant -major seems t
love me," h:' said. "1-le's treatin
ins like a father,"
"You blinking fool," someone cried
"he's drawn you in a lottery, II
would have won 17s. Gd. if you ha
been hit."
A platoon commander in the fret
line discovered one of his men ha
returned from leave rather in drinl
The corps commander was clue on
visit of inspection, The man was a
excellent soldier.
The platoon commander, to ge
hint out of the way, had him place
on a stretcher, covered with a blank
et, and taken to the dressing station
But the stretcher-bearers were stop- soldier, was Inn uric(' Nye said "Take I at— In
s the soldiers but do not take the Pub- a soldier"
GERMANY'S PEACE TERMS.
Would Have Annexed English Towns
and Established Colonial Empire,
Mathias 1•:rsl>crger, chairman of the
German Armistice Commission and ti
member of the German Government,
was stemmed of being the author of n
document written in 1e14, showing
that Germany's peace terms, if she
won, would include largo annexation)
and indemnities, Herr Landauer, a
representative of the Manich Soldiers'
and Workmen's Council, declared in a
speech at Augsburg, Bavaria, Accord-
ing to a despatch to the Frankfurt
Zeitung, Lautlinter, who was speaking
at a meeting in memory of Kurt Els-
ner, the late Bavarian Premier, said
ho had a copy of the document.
Dainty flowered organdie is used Landauer at first refused to give
for the development of this naive the name of the author except that he
Cloven -
tittle frock for misses, McCall Pat-' was still a member of the fiovern-
tern No, 5856 Misses' Empire Dress. beeFinally, however, al said waset
In 4 sires, 14 to 20 years. Price, 25 the person towham he alluded
cents.
Herr Erzbmger.
Among the peace terms mentioned
in the document, Landauer said were:
Annexation of Belgium, a renoh Nor-
mandy and several towns on the eouth-
eastoru coast of England.
Annexation of the territories on the
eaetorn frontier of Germany which
have since become separate status,
Establisluuent of :1 largo Carman
Colonial Empire.
Payment of a -war indemnity calcu-
lated to cover Geriminy's expenses
during the first ten mouths of the war
as well as the entire German debt be.
fore the war.
Herr Landauer asserted that these
vis were approved
to 1 n w c u hr principle
e
1 by
n
General von 1•'alitenhayn, General von
'Moltke and Admiral von Tirpitz.
COURSES IN FOREIGN TRADE,
Advocated by the Canadian Trade
Commission to Extend Dominion
Markets
The absence of preparatory work in
Canadian schools and colleges for the
study of foreign trade service has
been brought prominently before the
Canadian Trade Commission in its
investigations into possibilities for in-
creased Dominion export trade. It is
felt that permanent expansion of our
trade abroad must be undertaken if
manufacturers are adequately to
share in meeting the burden which
the great additions to the national
debt will impose for many years 'to
come, Extension of home markets
will not meet the needs in tate same
way.
As a first step to bringing before the
public the importance of means for
British -Empire Produces Men of the training of younger men to take
Outstanding Ability.
,Q tioc•aLt,
The Russian blouse lines are fav-
ored in this suit, which is developed
1 in navy blue tricotine. McCall Pat-
tern No. 8910, Ladies' Coat Suit. In
6 sizes, 34 to 44 bust. Price, 25 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
HAIG PRAISES CIVILIANS
Field Marshal Haig, in his -final
despatch as Commander -in -Chief of
the British forces in France, cites a
number of instances of mien who from
civil or comparatively humble occu-
pations had risen during the war to
important commands. The Field
up foreign trade work, the Trade Com-
mission has written to all the Cana-
dian universities asking if they can
give their immediate support by es-
tablishing, this summer, short courses
for business men and students featur-
ing especially aspects of foreign trade,
It 1s believed this matter will be
enthusiastically taken up by younger
Marshal says that at the beginning')) men and women anxious to secure an
of the war the lack of instinctive dis-I opening in life which will apparently
cipline among the new British troops not be overcrowded and which will
placed them at a disadvantage, but develop in'insportanoe as trade of the
during the last two years the discip- Dominion increases. There appears
line of all ranks in the new armies, to be a decided quickening of opinion
from whatever part of the Empire in Canada as in Great Britain and all
they came, was excellent. The uni- the British overseas dominions 111 the
rersities and public schools of the study of modern languages for the se -
Empire again and again proved that curing not merely of the trade which
they are unrivalled in the formation formerly fell to German and Austrian
of character, which is the root of merehauts, but in the wider fields of
discipline. Not that the universities China, the East Indies and South
and public schools enjoyed a monop_ America.
oly of the qualities malting good offt-
The ono thing which the Commis -
core, The life of the British Empire sunt insists upon is that the present
generally proved sound under the reconstructive work In Eulppe must
severest tests, and while giving men be regarded as only showing tate way
whom it was en honor for any officer to what Gnuada eau do abroad in ex-
whom
command, it furnished nfiicer's of port trade, and it. emphasises the fact
the highest standard from all ranks that expansion ou absolutely pernlan-
of society and nil quarters of the ant lines in the whole of the world's
world. Promotion had been entirely
markets const be undertaken by utuu-
b,Y merit, and the highest appoint -
to
if our rational resources aro
Monts had been open to the humblest, to be ulili:ed t0 the full.
provided they had the necessary qual- •
firat,iens of character, skill and
The Philippine Islands were nam -
(no vledge. ed after Ring Philip II., of Spain.
Germans Seek to Save Treasures.
Owners of important art collootlons
In Germany are seeking means to
guard themselves against confiscatory
measures --whether in connection with
German taxation or In commotion with
the indemnity. It is stated In the Ber-
lin papers tlret Jams Simon le find-
ing means to break tip his very vain -
able collection of pletures, whioh 1u•
elides nle.sterpieces by Franz hale and
Vermeer. ITo scents to have given
Iso;:9u int vire pictures to the I{aleor
Friedrieh Menem In Iserl(p, hilt to
have transferred most of them to a
syudicato of international dealers,
The optimist aces a better world
through all the smoke' the poinhnist
ably notee the destirtietion of liable&
All Food—No
>.,' - e
tt.Jf 1 '� '�Y �. .l`•' � t�
If you want an appetiz-
ing ready -to -eat cereal
,that you can serve with
no fuss and with fullest
ti sfaefiern, try —
i'
Cantle., FoOd1 C1c irel t.icttrrde iia 2-026
WAR'S EFFECT ON SUNDAY.
Lord's Day Alliance Draws Conchs -
stens
stens In Annual Report.
The Lord's Lay 11iiowe. 11' its tut
r- moil rey,orl ju et p! frit heel i•cte>rrlyd -
OF
5
wn'h!ly rest. day sone(•,) , rut thea the
fens,', a,1• 101'- e e a8) iil,•asuru to
r 1i Her in ^eduction,
AVE I3Jr1 ttu i 11N LUMBER.
4.. 4b i11' to -day 1 r , - ..Min-t.>iroet,40.
Iawe• price, L!Y,r, v ming eiSerenc'o,
Rotisia t n gw rnhd , 1 , r money book.
Sii11.1 a uu . >,^1, •re Da, les i , , etrue Lion
1..01),,is tan:",i'er. 11.'.
LZVII POULTRY WANTED.
5()(' PAIR (11e 1'IOI:ONS AND U1'.
16Ylte (.,r I'riees.i,•yL. Wolinnaucho& Son.
err nin1 all >e 11 1) rllttu plied. every 1K-10 St. Jean Baptiste Market, Mont•
uY patriotic 1)01 philanthropic IA) i, .,1. Ott "0.Ii' l raid you fleet become r.equoin• real, Que.
' the 14 her hand, tiro ph) ' i al and ted with tour hu ln'l>n?"
tar , plrllual advani; tge of the ret day "The lust time 1 ,iel:wl hint for soon.
NURSES.
lg tern -.e hemi?ht Into etsesses. r,qi, 1 by cy id'tc,' We we're nut'ried," ' 108114 20.tttN 016 TO 126 A.R'IOT+aTC..
x' tle vele thn":1. It Was ,lea:unu•atr•, - ,1• earn without Jesting home. Send
1 -- for free booklet. Lrn•ni CnileOe of
n that more and better vent ronbl br, I How He Felt. Erten,,.. Dept. 90Trrnr>to. Canaria.
dune on 111unitlons by ie011118 ono clay i "If pa did order you from the house,
h' 171 soltou. A Royal Counal:-oioa in Nrl• !'Jerold, don't let it make you lure
to tate lied repotted in fever of the rest your temper."
t clay. "Jt won't, vicar; but T can't holy
r.' 'l'!u> war had etrengtilened the ren feeling noaiowhat. put out."
t-' vletion that we needed the :sabbath I
10. for the development of character.. In Love.
i The report says: ''To Have ulet the i "Your either is ztnreasonable."
Inv, -lona of our Sunday (luring this "Why?" as.herl the dear girl.
t-, period by uneompromii.Ing oppu Witton "Tolle 1)1 not to lose sight of my
It and by frontal attacks would have in- object in life, aril then !deka because
vile(' disaster. Instead we yielded I call .:even nights a week,"
o wherever the reasonable plea, of ueees-
g- city confreuted us and invariably What He Feared.
—
1 gained both In esteem and accomnplish- Billy, aged five, lia) finished his psi-
;• meat by our' eoneiecjuns. In dealing rate lesson. His mother was anxious
e' with the Sunday newspaper we took to speak to the tutor, and Billy xvas re-
d the ground that the law would permit guested to leave the room and work
1 elle publication on Sunday of emergent elsewhere.
it steles in war time, hut would not per- Ile objected, and when asked the
d snit the. publication of anything else, reason wily, he answered:
tel such as general news and advertise- "If I go out you'll mance an opinion
a meats. Thus we at once conceded all about me!"
11 that the promoters and advocates of
Ithe Sunday newspapers demanded and
t deprived them of what they wanted
d and therefore wholly of the induce-
- meat to embark upon this venture. In
like manner when Sunday trips for
one way, sir, I'd rather be
Not in the Manual.
Fanner (to one of his laborers, re-
cently demobilized) — "Well, Pat,
which du you prefer, being a farmer
or a soldier?"
ped with their burden by the corp
commander.
"What is the matter with till
man?"
"Dead, sir," replied the plata()
commander, who was at )land.
POLE aa.LL
WELT. EQUIPPED NEWSPAPERand lob prinking nlant to Eastern
Ontario. Insurance carried 21,600. Will
Po for 11.200 00 bulck sols. nos ea
%neon Publlehina• Co. Ltd.. Toronto
�V F.EHT.Y NEWSPAPER le'OR SALE
v
in New Ontario. Owner gains to
rill nen Will gen 62,000. Worth double
that amount Apple J. E.. oto Wilson
Publishlne Co, Lirnited, Toronto.
M1s0ELLAME0C9
CANCER. TURMOILS, LUMPS. PTO..
internal and externaL cured with -
rut pain by our home treatment Write
he before too late. Dr. Bellows Medical
T.tinited, Coilincwood• Ont.
Are You Co-operating?
Co-operactive threshing, silt) f>ll'lag,
hushing and shredding is becoming
popular in many communities. How
is your neighborhood meeting these
problems?
Lilnard'e Liniment Ou ea Sarna. Era.
"Set fruit trees, if neglected last
fall," said an old almanac for April,
118 year ago, The advice is just as
sound to -day.
1 —o—o—
lie." In manufacturing we studiously Farmer --"And how's that?" the avoided the appealaiec of restralet Pat --"Well, you see, you'd be a long I With Fingers,
upon any Sunday work (bat e, ld time w"rkin' for a farmer befure he'd
n reasonably be related to roar necessity. tell you to stand at ease."
The corps ensmnander stood at at
tention and saluted. "The corps com
minder salutes the honored dead,'
he said.
At this the occupant of t..e stretch
er called out in the loudest thick
confused tones:
"What's this ole: geezer talking
about?"
Our men destroyed instantly no
Dees put up by the enemy saying
"The English are fools," and "The
French are fools," But a notice put
out by the Huns before their trench-
es, "We are all fools," was left un-
touched, even when our men stormed
and captured the trenches.
In the first tank attack, when a
tank had broken down before a Ger-
man infantry battalion headquarters,
the crew saw the German colonel
emerge, salute the tank, and say,
"Rameradl"
Getting no answer, ho walked
around, repeating the performance
at various points of the machine. The
crew finally invited him inside, and
travelled all day with him.
One of the worst effects of the Ger-
mans having the high ground was
that they managed to make the
drainage of their trenches flow into
ours, and our men very often had to
wade waist high in water. I myself
have been in waterlogged trenches
as deep as that, on a hot clay In
August, and I remember a sergeant -
major saying to me, "Our Grand
Fleet don't seem to be doing much.
these 'ere trenches and do a bit of
these 'ere tenches and do a bit of
honest work."
What She Wanted.
It was the custom in the village Inc
well-to-do inhabitants to make good
any loss which the villagers might
sustain through the death of any live-
stock, The retired manufacturer, who
had - only recently settled in the vil-
lage, was ignorant of the laudable
Practice and was considerably` puzzled
by the visit of a laborer's wife, who
explained that she had lost a pig..
"Well, I haven't got it," exclaimed
the bewildered newcomer,
"What I mean, sir, is, of course, the
pig ('ted," nervously explained the
woman, "It died suddenly yesterday,"
"Well, what do you wait Ins to do??"
Med the thoroughly exasperated man.
"Send a wroath?"
'Phe sugar beet industry has be -1
come very profitel�le in Kent county,
Ont. There will likely be a largely
after putting in the toed is this: If
the earth is very dry, firm well; if:
only fairly so, firm moderately; if;
damp and heavy, do not firm at all,
for that will make a crus{. that is
hard for the planta to break tit of .11.
" 'We are, or ought to be, obscure;
to ourselves, turned outward and
working upon the world which sur-
rounds us: Outward radiation con -I
stittttes ]lealth; a too continuous eon-
centration upon what is within brings;
us back to vacuity and blank." -1
Arnie!.
Apart from the mercenary and of
the business, there is more satisfac,I
tion in working with animals which.
you know you need not bo ashamedl
of in the show -ring than with those'
whose ancestors are not renowned,
and whose progeny are not a credit
to the farm,
If purchasing an incubator get the
best, A cheap machine is usually
the moat expensive. The difference
between a good and poor hatch will
often make up for the difference in
initial cost. Follow the manufacture
ar's directions. They should know the
best way to operate that particular
typo of machine, lintrh early and
00(tire winter egge,
lett insisted upon the elimination of
- all Sunday lyric not so justified, The uounte exposure.
-- action of the I''uel Controller 1n put-
ting the ben
The first barrage was too much for
lino supplied proof that such sale was to his heels. Seine distance back of
- unnecessary and the imperial Oil Com- the lines he was intercepted by an of-
, patty has now adopted the Sunday flcer, who inquired wily he was run.
closing In consequence, and other
niut .
firms
are following,"
_ rdlnard's Liniment to sale opc•yrhara
00 Sunday gale 01 gaso- Rastas, colored doughboy, and he took
increased acreage this year,
Our rule about fct•n1•
"I saw de shells a-comin' at me,
Cunnel, and I jes' had to run."
„Yon saw the shells?"
Ypres, 1916. "Yes, Bah; I saw one big shell twice
To 1111 the gap, to bear the brunt —first wlsen it passed just over my
With bayonet and with specie, head and second when I passed just
Four hundred to a four -mile front under it"
Unbacked and undismayed—
He Loved His Donkey.
One day on a road in Belgium a
Bache officer met a youngster leading
a donkey. He accosted him with the
fatnlliarity of his rico which tries to
be agreeable and succeeds only in be-
ing rough,
little one, you have a fine don-
key there, What do you call it? Al-
bert, I wager."
"Oh, no, sir," answered the child, "I
love my king too much."
The officer raised his eyebrows; an
annoying thought could bo read on his
wrinkled red face, and he said: "I
hope at least that you do not call him
William."
The boy answered quickly with iron•
is candor, "Oh, no, sir, I love my don-
key too much."
What men are these, of what great
race,
From what old shire or town,
That run with such good will to face
Death on a Flemish down?
Let bel They bind a broken line;
As men die, so die they.
Land of the free! their life was thine,
It is St. George's Day!
Yet any whose artier bide them stand
At bay by yonder bank,
Where a boy's voice and a boy's hand
Close up the quivering rank.
Who under those all -shattering skies
Plays out his captain's pint,
With the last darkness In his eyes
And Donnum In his heart?
Let be, let be" In yonder lino
All names are burned away.
Land of his love! the fame be thine, -
It is St. George's Day,
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,—I had my leg badly
hurt, the pain was very severe and a
large swelling came above tho knee.
I expected it would be serious—I
rubbed It with MINARD'S LINIMENT,
which stopped the pain and reduced
the swelling very quickly. I cannot
speak too highly of MINARD'S LINI-
MENT,
AMOS. T. SMITH.
Pott Hood lsland.
IT 18 SPRING!
The Brooding Spirit That Is In Al
Things is Moving and Creating,
They tell me that Spring is purely
a matter of matter -materially--of
the earth earthy and of the air airy
I know better and so does every man g
and woman and child know better Y�--
irinard's Llaiment Cures Dandruff.
Seest thou a man diligent in mak-
ing his garden? lie shall stand be-
fore the queen of his own household
with a glad heart, bringing with him
things that will make glad the hearts
of all.
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order. They are payable everywhere.
A cockerel from a bred -to -lay
strain will make a wonderful im-
provement in the laying ability of
the form flock if mated to a few of
the best late moulting hens which
are known to be healthy and vigorous
, producers. Some poultrymen can
pick out the good layers by noting
their actions in the laying -house,
Late moulting is one of the well
known signs of a good layer
i 3.. LY1. t)A.
when they ubseste and prink.
I have n (1,11.), tvarmisli comer where 09it is fi , f 2 - - ',i >
1 keep a basket of onions. They have MANES pp �p I 30c. 6S
P61591 � E� �>' .o ��,, , c., $1.20
no way otkrlotviug by sight of sun or
Says Corns Lift Out
Without Any Pain
•
Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or
any kind of a corn can shortly be
lifted right out with the fingers if you
will apply directly upon the corn a few
drops of freezone, says a Cincinnati
authority.
It is claimed that at small cost one
[can get a quarter of an ounce of free -
zone at any drug store, which is suffi-
cient to rid one's feet of every corn
or callus without pain or soreness or
the danger of infection.
This new drug is an ether compound,
and while sticky, dries the moment it
Is applied and does not inflame or even
irritate the surrounding tissue.
This announcement will interest
many women here, for it is said that
the present high -heel footwear is put-
ting corns on practically every
woman's feet.
A Quick Rene
for Headache
A Headache is frequently caused
by badly digested food; the gases
and acids renulting therefrom are
absorbed by the blood which in
turn irritates the nerves and
causes painful symptoms called
headache, neuralgia, rheuma-
tism, etc. IS to 30 drops of
Mother Seigel's Syrup will correct
faultydigestion and afford relief.
2.4
SATISFYING RELIEF
FROM LUMBAGO
Sloan's Liniment has the
punch that relieves
rheumatic twinges
This warmth -giving, congestion -
scattering circulation -stimulating rem-
edy pr'irfrafas telt/mat leibbin;I right
to the aching spot and bring, quick
relief, surely-, clearly, J. wonderful
Help fan est,rnal pairs, sprains,
strains, stiffness, headache, lumbago,
bruises
Get s.oar bottle today --costs little,
means leech, Ask your druggist for
it bync .'. Keep it handy for the
whole loyally. • Male in Canada. The:
big bottle i.; ectnio .1y,
eeeee
feel of frost that "the time of the
singing of birds" incl sprouting of
bulbs 1s at hand. Yet they sprout!
Once I plant,'l ,eine fall -sprouting
i 'il e in early snrlog and they were
w•i.cr then I and. -sleet snuply in their
earth -beat till their hour struck.
Yon (tanttot make the sap runt till it
Is sap time end birds will not nest
when the time of naked boughs is full.
"There is a spirit in man" and there
is a spirit in every atom that builds
man's earthly hone --a spirit in onions
and 5, sph•it in crocuses, a spirit in
waren white eggs and a spirit In
glistening icicles, a spirit in the frond
of a fern or the Verne ,of fire,
That is why Spring touches us all
so deeply: the brooding spirit that is
in all things is moving, wonting, ris-
ing, Creating. The "spirit 1n man"
greets the spirit of waking grass and
grain and tree, and front that greeting
arises a shoat of joy that the deafest
dare must (tear, the blindest eyes see
and the dullest heart feel,
It is Sprfngl---Ashless
As a rule properly fertilized crops
mature from a week to ten days
ahead of unfortltlzed trope. -
si`flWL6t 1 i
x'ry this! 4,I1 eloldrt,fr ciSm.ppear.•s
and ,tet .a,!
:, CAi1fi1g
out.
Surely try a"Dandorino Bair
Cleanse" if you wish to immediately
double the beauty of your hair. just
moisten a cloth with Danderine and
draw it carefully through your hair,
taking one small strand at a time;
this will cleanse the hail' of dust, dirt
or any excessive oil ---in at fele minutes
you will be amazed. Your ball will be
wavy, fluffy and abundant and possess
an incomparable softness, lustre and
luxuriance.
Besides beautifying the hair, ono ap-
plieatlon of Dandorine dissolveb every
particle of danth'gµll: invigorates the
scalp, stopping itelling and falling hair,
Danderine is to the hair what fresh
showers of rain and eumshhne are to
vegetation. It goes right to the mote,
invigorates and strengthens tlbbm. Its
exhilarating, etlmulating and life -pre -
clueing properties cause the hair to
grow long, strong and beautiful.
You can surely have pretty, soft,
lustrous hair, and lots of It, le you 11,111
spend a tow cents for a small bottle of
Knewiton's Dandarino at any drug
store or toilet Manor and tory It as
*Tigard% Lbsitaesst Italisess Vieurallraw dtre010d,
C T P
L, 411 .iy J kt
1I
p
r
On Bodya!rd Face, Rad and Itchy,
Cried Forlipurs, Lasted aYear,
"A rash started atI over onyx little
girl's beiy, and she had some on her
faro. It started in a pimple
that cases full of wator, and
it got rod and itchy. She
criedforhours. Thie trouble
lasted a year.
"Then! atarted with a free
sample of Cutletna Soap
and Ointment. 1 bought mone,,nnd
1 toad our cakes of Boap and three
boxes of 0lntmmntwhleishealed'her."
(Signed) Mee. Dora .0-artgiy, 1098
Gertrude St, Verdun, One., August
11, 1918. •
The Cuticur's. Toilet Trio
Concleting of Soap, Ointment and
relearn is an indispensable acliunct
of the daily toilet in maintaining
akin npurity and akin health..
77tn c�'se
O 0,nd 1Qa'1r�ea.; n atgqitlos
!metes, 11, ea evairstairo,
188058 17--'10.