HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-7-28, Page 3VkaY,IiMed Germ' i.f TEE PERll - I*
HAS TEE PEST OWE
The world is still trying to make up
'Sts mind about the actual conditions
in Germany. There have 'been two.
'circumstantial titmice.
One, German=inspired, hag run to
the general etreot that Germans fire
evithQut hope or ambition, that the bur-
den of reparatiolls is crushing and
that Germany is a mere shell, waiting^
for the Red touch to Oruml le.
'Pito ether story, inspired by ler
lata, enemies, holds that Germany is
prosperous, is hard at work and that
elle ismaking ready to conquer world)
markets : with her exports and start'
back to "a place in the sun" as soon
as she can wheedle the Allies or trick)
them out of the reparations, in whorl
or in part.
deter-
mine
exacttruth isashardto 0
to
The
mine as the line that divides light ands
shadow. It lies somewhere about mid-
Way between the two extreme repro-
eentations, according to a careful
analysis by Colonel Edwarddl2, House.
Germany is neither all black nor all
white—she is gray.
Colonel House shows that Germany
is in about the same situation as other
nations of the world—only more so.
Theblighting aftermath of war is
world wide. It is a deep 'blight in
Germany, and deepening it are the
troubles that carie with losing the gi-
gantic gamble the Germane made on
tho war. '
Germany did not escape from war -
hurts; she was deeply hurt, Her dead
are dead and 'her substance was was-
ted. The reparations are a burden,
and an outraged world intended they
should be.
Colonel House believes that Ger-
many can pay the indemnity, but the
yoke of debt will be heavy. He be-
lieves that she needs, first, courage
and then a little help from the En-
tente. Her need for courage is as
great as, if not greater than, her need
for help. Germany can pay, but she
cannot afford the luxury of strikes
and labor upheavals while she is about
it.
Germany has been pat in bondage
for her sins, but she has certain items
on the credit side that are worth much,
There is productive labor and plenty
of it. She has overcome bolshevism,
but still shudders about it. She has
less unemployment to -day than any
other considerable nation; food is
plenty and getting cheaper, and labor
is productive and there are few strikes.
On the other hand, rehabilitation
has been exaggerated. True, she has
no more than 400,000 unemployed
where England and America have ten
times that number. But she is carry-
ing tens of thousands on rail and
other Government payrolls where they
are not needed, lest some worse thing
happen.
Germany bas come a long way hack
since 1919, but has a longer way to go
before she reaches her status of 1914.
Her financial condition is desperate,
well-nigh as bad as that of Russia.
Her great foreign trade has dwindled
to a quarter of its 1913 figures. Her
Russian trade is gone; that with
France and Poland and Austro-Hun-
gary is hardly more than a shadow.
Germany, however, is by no means
a total loss. It is possible, even prob-
able, that she must have help. It may
be that the day will come when the
Entente will see and understand this.
But Germany must first show that she
has as much of a will to work and to
pay ns she once had in her will to war.
Famous Emeralds Recovered
by India.
Gem collectors are still regretting
the fact that by au act of the Govern-
ment of India two famous emeralds
rich in history were not included in
the recent Bade by Christie's of the
jewel collection of the late Herbert
Maxwell Stuart, says a London des-
patch. The emeralds originally were
in the royal treasure at Lahore, to-
gether with the great Koh-i-noor
mond, now in the British Imperial re-
galia, when the Punjab was annexed
in 1S49.
These emeralds, each carved from a
single stone, represented a bow ring
and a cup, and were made for the Em-
peror Shah Jehan, The Governor-Gen-
eral at the period of annexation was
permitted to purchase these curious
stones.
They were carried off by Nadir Shalt
after the sack of Delhi in 1739. In
1813 they were restored to India by
the fugitive Shah, Sujab, surrendering
them to Raijit Sing at Lahore. They
were found there with the Koh-t-noor
on the termination of the second Sikh
war in 1849 and purchased by Lord
Dalhousie, then Governor-General. The
bow ring was used by the Great Mo-
gul to protect the joint and ball of his
left thumb when the drawn bow string
was used as a patch box by one of his
fair ladles.
The emeralds were on loan exhibi-
tion at the Victoria and Albert Mu-
seuih when the war broke out and
with other treasures were buried as
l safeguard against unlocked for
eventualities, After the war the fami-
ly to which they belonged found it
necessary to deign of thoao jewels
and arrangements were made for their
sale, at Christie's, but the Indian Gov-
ernment heard about it and decided
that the jewels rightly l
y belonged to
that country and began to negotiate
for their purchase.
The offer which was made was ac-
ceptable `to Christie's, client and be-
fore long the hletorio jewels will be
Back in their old home, tnucih to the
regret of wealthy collectdrs who had
lied their oyes on them for some time
oast,_ —..
Linen fabrics have been found in
Loofas 6014% 116 of years old.
Is Always Full of Life and,
Energy—Failures Are Weak
and 131oodless.
Some men seem to have all .the luck.;
It there are any good things going.
those iron seem to gat them. It they,
are busineas men they are successful;
it they are workmen they get the fore,
man's job, They have the power ot
influencing people.
The same lit true of women. Some
have the charm that mares. man seek
themout; others are neglected But
this to not luck, It is due to a person.
al gift --vitality. Men and women 09
this sort are never weak, puny airs,
valids, They may not be big, but they
are full of life and energy. Tho whole
thing is a mattes' of 'good blood, good,
nerves and good health, Everyone
would wish to be like this and the
qualities that make for vitality and
energy are purely a matter of health,
By building up the blood and nerves,
sleepleasness, want of energy, weak;
nese of the back, headaches and the
Ineffectual sort of presenee which reall
ly comes from weakness can be got
rid of. Dr, Williams' Pink Pills have
made many weak, tired men, vigorous,
and many pale dejocted gide and wo-
men, rosy and attractive, by improv-
ing their blood and toning up their
nerves. If you are weak, low-spirited
or unhealthy, try Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills and note their beneficial effect,
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 60 cents
a box or six boxes for $2.60 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont,
Here and There With the
Boy Scouts.
A Toronto boy, now resident in Buf-
falo, N.Y., where he is a member of a
troop of the Boy Scouts of America,
recently, won the championship for
bugling in a Scout meet in Buffalo. He
is Bertram G. Harris, aged 12, and a
grandson of Mn and Mrs. S. L. Taube,
of Parkdale Mansions, well-known
citizens of Toronto.
On Dominion Day Oshawa, Whitby
and Tltornton's Corners Troops and a
few boys from the 1st Newcastle
Troop "rallied" at Oshawa for inapec
tion ane field day sports. They were
inspected by Mr. R. S. 14Ictaughlln,
who, with Col. Grierson and Major
Alfred Hinds, the latter president of
the Oshawa Boy Scouts Association,
Ialso addressed them on their_appear-
anee and their work.
Exeter recently had a real Boy Scout
church service. The members of the
est Exeter Troop occupied the choir
I loft of Caven Presbyterian Church—
land sang too. Patrol Leader Stuart
} Stanbury presided at the organ and
played all the hymn's and accompanied
I the soloists% Three other Scouts, Bob
Gambrill, Tom ICay and Kenneth Stan -
bury added the stratus of ylolins to
the singing, while Bob Gambrill played
the offertory solo. Mr. J. G. Stanbury,
President of the Troop Committee, had
charge ot the service, Field Secretary
Davison of Provincial Headquarters
I Staff giving the address on. "Citizen-
ship as Built Up by Scouting." Scout-
master Thomas Pryde was also as-
sociated with Messrs. Stanbury and
Davison on the platform.
A garden party recently arranged by
member's of the troop and its friends
netted the 3rd St. Catharines Troop
trensury a nice amount for its camp
funds. There was an excellent attend-
ance in spite of many counter ethnic -
lions in the city on the night the party
was put on.
An interesting ceremony took place
on the steps of St. Paul's Anglican
Church, Stratford, a few evenings ago,
when the troop charter was presented
to the lat Stratford Troop.- Mayor
Gregory and Lt. -Col. J. L. Youngs,
M.C., officiated at the ceremony. Prizeo
were also presented to the Scouts who
meds' an excellent record In the Do.
minion rifle competition. The troop
is also very, proficient along many
other lines:
Ontario's ; two .largest Boy Scout
camps aro now in full swing. They are
the Selkirk Camp of lee Hamilton As- ,
sedation down on Lake. Erie And the
Black Rapids Camp of the Ottawa tee
aoclatiou, Approximately 10S -boys a
week will be taken care of in the form-
er, while the attendance at the Ot-
tawa camp is renting about 75 Scants
per week: Botli catops will continue
until the end of'August and will bdtve
taken care of many hundreds of boys
before they finaily close down. Ile -r
lades recreational work, both comps
are carrying full prograutmee et edu-
eational features,
A training eourso for Rouanl Calix
0110 Men intendeug to take up the work
of Scoutmasters le being conducted at
tile St. John industrial 0c0Qo1, Toron-
to, The first Giese cansistee ot a dozen
yonag members of We Citrietian
.Brotherhood,
Tanned Truth.'
A tanned complexion makes the
plain portion good-looking, Peel the
good-looking bettor ioOking. We all
like to be sun -burned, but not all of us
know )low the tan comes; •
The truth is that thousands of the
tiny bioodvoesels beneath the skin
Wive to be ruptured before we can tang
The heat rays of the sun first inflame
and then rupture them. The skin can-
not then resist the beat. The :cooling
algid beneath the skin baa gone, and
Drowning talres place.
Those unfortunate folk whose cane,
plaxione change to a vivid red instead
of an attractive brown have, contrary
to the popular notion, tough, thick
skins. The latter resist the rays, and
there la surface inflammation instead
of browning.
Those whose noses peel have skirls
in which the perspiration ducts are
clogged. Thus there is nothing to
"oI1" the skin, and it peels because it
is dry,
Finally—this will he news to many
—only the white races tan, scorch, peel,
or blister from the action of the sun.
A black man will get much hotter than
a white man, bechuse black skins ab-
sorb the heat and pass It beneath the
skin, It has no external effect.
Freckles are but tan In patches, due
to a varying thickness of the skin.
CHOLERA INFANTUY
Cholera infantile is one of the fatal:
ailments of childhood. It is a trouble
that Comes On suddenly, especially
during the summer months, and un-
less prompt action is taken the little
one may soon be beyond aid, Baby's
Own Tableta are an Ideal medicine in
warding off this trouble. They regu-
late the bowels and sweeten the stom-
ach and thus: prevent all the dreaded
summer complaints. Concerneng them
Mrs. Fred Rose, of South Bay, Ont.,
says: "I feel Baby's Own Tablets
saved the life of our baby when she
had cholera infaatum and I would not
be without them," •The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers or by mall
at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Personal Effort.
"The best thing to give to your ene-
my is forgiveness; to an opponent,
tolerance; to a friend, your heart; to
yam child, a good example; to a fath-
er, deference; to your mother, con-
duct that will make her proud of you;
to yourself, respect; to all men,
charity."—Balfour.
We often hear the remark: "This
or that person has a wonderful brain."
It is assumed that it is comparatively
easy for them to do big things in the
business world, to create marvelous
inventions for the benefit of mankind,
to make wonderful scientific discover-
ies, and to produce works of art that
endure through many generations.
The masses conclude that these ac-
complishments aro easy for these
people because they naturally are so
gifted and talented. Knowledge and
wisdom never come to any man or
woman as a free gift. Sometime,
somewhere, they have given personal
effort, and in accordance with immut-
able and ever operative laws, of nature
they have received their reward in per-
manent soul acquisition, and, incident-
ally, temporary, material benefits for
themselves.
No achievement is possible, no un
foldment of the soul is possible with-
out labor, without effort, indeed there
would be more justice anti equity in
economics If labor could be establish-
ed se the measure of all values.
He who has acquired knowledge,
and wisdom, and )tower, is under a
Personal obligation rightly to use and
disseminate them. These acquisitions.
cannot be used for the highest good,
and to attain couid unfoldment.
Thus we see we cannot deplete our
stock of knowledge and wisdom, for
the more we give the more we receive.
The man who is always striving to
take advantage of hie neighbor is
never a benefactor to the race, ]sow.
ever much ho may advertise his chart.
ties,
profit by the
experience oc tilers
—which has taught thousands
that Instant Postum is better
for health than tea or coffee.
Pos"rum. ]h:a.s a flavor
sit k hIr to coffee, brat con.
tains nothing that rapt disturb
health and, corn ''jt. '
to,.,i. P.' .
e.dt 0.r h .
1.10 M
i7 -'tang Xt ya 4: ,
Sold
AUTO RRPAIR PARTt}.
fgr most malleo and models or oars,
Your old, broken or went -out parts
velem:ea, write or wire us dessrib-
ing what you tont. We carry tee
lergest anal meet complete stook in
eanada et Nightly twee o • now parte
anti automobile equipment. We ship
0.0.7,1. anywhere In Canada. Sails-
factory or refend in tun our motto,
flhaw's Auto Salvage. Port Supply,
553.e01 Daftrrin St., Toronto, .Ont..
FROM PERE VIRE
Foxy Talk.
"Am 1 the only girl You have ever
loved?"
"Oh, no. But my teeth has been im
proving Agee taw."
Which?
First Dinar—"That waiter Is either
a fool or a very subtle humorist."
Second Dauer—"What's the matter?"
First Diner—"I ordered extract of
beef and he brought me mills."
A Subtle Compliment.
He—"I ant rather in favor of the
English than the American mode of
spelling."
She "Yee?"
He—"Yee, indeed. Take 'parlour,'
for instance. Having 'u' in it makes
all the difference In the world."
When It Pours.
There are profiteers among other
ranks than capitalists, and during a
certain boom a particular grade of
workman was receiving very high
wages indeed%
5111 Hodges returned from work one
Saturaday night, and drove a big
bundle of notes out of his pocket.
"How much do you want this week,
Jane?" he asked his wife genially.
"Good gracious, Bill, give us a
chance," the wife remonstrated; "I
ain't hardly got started on iast,week's
yeti"
P 1v,k !era e v ,Ula ut111► vav ' isos
o TH EDUCATION
' / BY ,DR. J. J. MJDD.lTON 0
81
Truly Great.
At a certain military academy a new -
1y appointed commandant liked young
men, but not when they were "fresh."
One day he chanced to overhear a
young officer refer to himself (the
commandant) by name without any
title.
"Hall?" the offender had said to a
group of fellow cadets. "Hall? He's
a mighty splendid fellow."
The commandant joined the group,
amidst profound silence,
Turning to the second lieutenant, he
said sternly:
I think, sir, when you referred to
ime you night have said 'General
Hall: "
"I'm sorry, sir," stammered the de-
linquent, then brightened a little as he
added: "But, sir, did you ever hear
people -refer to General Achilles or
General Julius Ceesar?"
ti
The Will to Work.
It is strange to find the belief sur-
viving
urviving anywhere that those who sit in
the shade, twiddling their thumbs and
twaddling with their tongues, deserve
pay for It, as though they worked and
produced.
The rule of labor fa the underpin-
ning of the universe. The Creator
himself set the example. He toiled
and He rested. He Is the "Master of
every trade." Man, mode in His
image, can hardly expect divine favor
to rest upon sloth.
On every hand, however, we see
people trying to crawl under or over
or around that uncomfortable prescrip-
Lien about earning one's bread In the
sweat of one's brow. On the dance-
iloor the two-step and the one-step
may come and go; but to the work-
shop the sidestep and the sidestepper
are always with us.
Young men are hunting for short
cuts: to wealth, The shortest cut is
the straight lino cf responsibility and
duty and good faith with one's employ.
er.
If your employer happens to be your
own seat, there are certain things you
owe yourself just as much as though
somebody else hired you. You owe 1t
to yourself to report for the day's
work fit to do it. You owe it to your-
self to heap your appointments at the
time set for thaw. You owe it to your-
self
ourself to be steadily Industrious. You
cannot In -self-respect take money that
you have not ear'ne'd nor demand a
fabulcus income for a fictitious effort,
Creation's cry pea tip on high
From age to cheated age;
Send us the men who do the work
For which they draw the wage!
There are men out of employment
this morning who are the victims of
0oonolitio mal -ease and readjustment.
They leave been caught betwixt grind-
ing mlilstanes of cireumetnnoe, They
deserve sympathy and a hearing and
an opportunity. That opportunity is
likely to come, soon and suddenly, it
they hold on,
But there are others who deserve no
sympathy. They deliberately elected
to be idle, They defied Clod's law—
they coneemued likewise all oOncllia•
ileo and consideration that were not
of their own selfish and greedy dim-
tatorsillp,
Carta nl the chance to earna
o Il
� 1Y
.Y
tog --which is sato grottiest single bins -
lug tijat is yoncbsated mankiml—ought
to go to those who have tho will to
Work and not the desire to stir up itt-
surrectiOunry .discontent and make
trouble in the peace -loving, law -abed-
ing snits Of the industt'loua, who
"know of loll and the end sf ten; they
know Gnd's law is plain."
Provincial itoerd of Health. Ontario
�a 3r olon will be glad to answer flue -steno ooa Pubilo 81001115 sae
® tare terouglt Ulla column, £ddrese bins at the psalm/neinBldgs* 0
1'orouto.
tom. 1g% 1024. %LI= ® .. 'rum sale Irk la W w Na1I4`✓1
Growing children need 'plenty of Not only does a loot meal at school
good .nourishing food. To 'have this improve the health and physical con-
foodassimilated properly the child
should be taught regular hours for
eating, and its stomach given a rust
between meals. Continuous eating of.
candies, onto; fruit, etc., interfere
with rho digestive processes in the
young, and yet 'the average child, if
not trained, will eat almost anything
he can get bold of in the way of
sweetmeats.
When the child is at school there is
less likelihood of It getting too much
to eat. In fact, through the school
day the tendency is in the other direc-
tion. Sometimes breakfast is rather
hastily eaten in the mornings, espe-
cially if the child lives in the country
and has some distance to go to sc'hool,.
There is not enough time at the noon
nines to let the child go home for
dinner, so its lunch is sent with it,
and eaten at the school building. This
is not a good plan, for several reasons.
In the first place there is seldom a
suitable place provided in country
dation 0f the chlidron, but a chance
le thereiby given to teach them to eat
properly, not to bolt their food down
but to chew it well and so put no over-
work on the stomach in trying to pre-
pare the food for digestion,stio
t, There
will
also be an opportunity for the teacher
to demonstrate to the pupils' the ad-
vantage of cleanliness. in the cooking,
preparing and eervine of food, and
general hygienic surroundings. Food
should be shown protected from flies,
and why it should be so protected;
children should also be told the most
important food products, and why ones
kind of food is more valuable than
another from a standpoint of nour-
ishment. Little facts can be brought
home to children much more easily
and readily than to adults—for the
young brain is receptive, and has root;
yet developed any of those prejudices)
that often are unreasonably formed,
late in life.
At the mid-day school meal also, a
word or two could be told the childreni
schools for the children to eat their about vitamines, those essential but
lunches, and the surroundings are very small elements IlatI991 fon :
often not hygienic, I have just read that creep people of all ages well.
a recommendation from the Medical These vitamines are contained in fresh
Officer of Health of a rural district foods such as fresh milk, fruits, etc.
It is easy to see what good results
could be expected from such a 'mid-
day meal and little talks to the chil-
dren at the finish: This feature should
for hand -basins, soap, towels, etc., for
the use of the pupils during the mid-
day recess. The M.O.H. states that as
nearly every one of the pupils bring
their lunch to school, these facilities .be as much a necessity in rural schools
for washing are bodily needed. It is as the blackboard and chalk and no
not entirely, however, because there is
a lack of facilities for eating that the
mid-day cold lunch is objectionable.
A warm meal freshly cooked is much
more nourishing and sustaining to a
little schoolboy or girl than a cold
lunch could be. Children need a hot not only has to attend to the children
meal at mid-day, because they assimi- and the housework but she also cooks
late food quicker than grown-ups, and food for the live stock, feeds and
must be fed oftener. It is too long a tends the chickens and many of the
time between breakfast and the after- other small but necessary jobs that
noon meal when the school children have bo be done at a farm,
get home. The children must obviously be neg-
In some schools in the province hot )acted when such a state of affairs ;ex -
mid -day meals are prepared for the ists, and it often exists because the
children, but to make the scheme a work has to be done and there fs 00-
taken a course in dietetics. Assise
decided success the teachers who body but the mother to do it. Every
undertake the cooking should have a father of a family in the country
certificate showing that they have should be urged to provide leisure f or
hie wife to attend to the proper cook-
ing and choice of meals for the chil-
dren. These meals are often prepared
hurriedly, and with no thought as to
their nutritional value; it is purely a
question of expediency, so much either.
drudgery has to 'be done. -Phis con-
dition of things shou'Id not be. Every
attention should be given to the chil-
dren's feeding up till they are fico
years of age, and ready to start school.
A mother should regard the feeding
of her children as one of, if not the
most important tasks in her daily
round of work, and nothing else should
she allow to interfere with it.
Tho way a child is fed in the first
five years of life has a large bearing
on its physical condition in years to
come.
school however •far leac'k in the coun-
try should be without it.
Too often the question of what to
eat, and how to eat, is neglected in
the home circle. Many a family there
is in the country where the mother
tance could be given,' by some of the
senior pupils. This arrangement is
excellent, for it not only provides ad-
ditional help in attending to the serv-
ing of the food, but also teaches the
bigger girls how to cook and prepare
many kinds of dishes. Thus they are
fortified with actual first-hand exper-
ience in one of the most important
features of housekeeping, before they
leave school at all.
In many rural sections, however,
there are no such mid-day meals pro-
vided by the school staff for the chil-
dren, and it is to encourage the school
trustees and people in every rural
district to urge the necessity for this
much-needed feature in school life,'
that this article is written.
Some Best Things.
The Best Law—
The Golden Rule.
The Beat Education—
Self-Knowledge.
The Best Philosophy—
A contended mind.
The Best Medicine—
Cheerfulness and temperance.
The Best War—
The fight against one's own weak-
ness,
The Best Music—
The laughter of a child.
The Best Art—
Painting a smile upon the brow of a
child,
The Bost Science—
Extracting sunshine from a cloudy
day.
The Beat Telegraphy—
Melling a ray of sunshine Into a
gloomy heart.
Tho Best Biography—
The life that writes charity in the
largest letters,
The Best Mathematics--
Multiplying
athematlos—Multiplying the joys and dividing
the sorrows of others,
Little W• isdom.
Anger ages and worry wears,
Fret over the past and you'll tall in
the future.
13e slow enough, and quick enough,
to be sure.
He who swells in prosperity will
shrink in adverslty.
Strong language is often the prop
for a weak cauae.
The only way to keep a secret is to
say nothing,
Don't let the only spur to your work
be your employer's eyes,
Beware of too puffed up a sense ot
your own worth end consequence,
MONEY ol1DERS
A Dcminion i;xpress lice.ey Order
for five dollars costs three cents.
More)tan 100 000 r und.a
t , p of snails
are eaten every day by the residents
of Paris.
There are a million ttn:l a half .L.sys
in New York, re many as is alt the
rest of the Hafted Status, and a tante
cf a,i the Jewe Jewin the world.
M'nard's Liniment Believes Neu lot
Absence from church was a punish-
able offence in the seventeenth cen-
tury.
Doles used to display styles in dress
600 years ago.
•••••••••••••ea=_aa.r
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlgts
TORONTO SALT WORKS
Q. 4. CLIFF • TORONTO
DID WORK TWICE
FORIIM; HE SAYS
.
LETRIS E N'THUSIASTIC IN
PRAISE OF TANLA+.
Feels Pull of Energy Alt tint
Time Now, Gaya Hamilton
Man.
"well, 1 don't know what ft le, but
there's something about Tanlac that
certaluly acme the work," said A. Let•
ria, 184 Queen St, North, Iitamliton, One
Mr, Lotris is a well-known printer and
has been with the Grimes Printing Co.
for tape -years,
"Ye.; Betel can re smmend Tanis;
w
for it has straightened me out twice
and I believe it will help anyone else
who tries ft.. Two years ago 1 took
the medicine and it fixed me up In fine
Shape and I felt good until a little
while back when I commenced to teal
rundown. i got to where I just lad
to drive myself at my work and, as
my appetite was gone, It deemed to Ilr
down hill all the time instead of Sete
ting better.
"Well, I get me same Tanlac and it
wasn't long until my appetite had *
new start. I have just finished my
second bottle now and I can ear aEy.
thing at any time without its hurting
ma. That tired feeling le gone and
I feel full of energy all the time, Tan -
lac la all that Is claimed for it and
It certainly 1.3 the medicine for me,"
Tauten, 1,1 ;;cid by loading drugg lata
everywhere. Advt.,
Appearances beceitful.
Soon after leaving port one passen-
ger approached another on board Ike
liner, saying:
"We are getting up a tug-ot-war be-
tween. a team of married men and a
team of single men. You are mauled,
aren't you?"
"No," the other answereid. "I'm
seasick, that's what makes me look
like this."
Minaret's Liniment for sale everywhere
London has adopted Verdun, as well
as several villagss in the Meuse Vale
ley.
One-quarter of the income tax of
the United Kingdom is collected in
London.
♦mericn's pioneer Dog Remedies
Book on
1 / DOG DISEASES
and How to Food
Mailed Freetoany Ad-
dress by tbs Author.
8. Clay [flower Oa., Sty
115 \Toot dist Stroot
New York. U.B.A.
Let Cuticnra Heal You Sia
In the treatment of all skin
troubles bathe freely with Cuti-
cura Soap and -hot water, dry
gently, and apply Cuticura
Ointment to the affected parts.
Do not fail to include the
Cuticura Talcum in your toilet
preparations.
Soap25e. Oint,nent:S nod Sea f kna2Sc. Sold
throughoutthefominion. Canadionfiepot:
rglr1 15,0,4, 144 at. Pna St., w. S.airnt.
Cuticura Soapabavoa witbent.nos.
LETTER FROM
MRS. WAKE
t ` r" "''•`"
Tho Originaland Only Genuine "Teles Remarkable Story of
YARMOUTH, N, S,
' Sickness and Recovery.
Beware of mltetions sold on the
merits of
MINARD'S LINIMENT
ASPIRIN
"Bayer" only is Genuine
Toronto, Ont, — "I suffered greatly
from weakness seemed to be tired sit
the time, and had no
ambition to do any-
thing'orgoanyplaCe.
My nerves were i
bad shape, I could
not sleep at nigh
and then cants
breakde I
of 44Iaa
ham's Vegeta p
00111ounggl tee
t tits 5rtY9 lk1alrFl
c5' Q PnI i�9
:• . , r=, adv a �
s r' y gu' ' w li to ono,
quite' b o to o 1P ownnSf0V
n I
would m�ar
e» vs 0nt8Y se. 07_
rs, 1x11
BmtYe Mmpot%
St., Toren
't r
Th makers o P'i
The 1 e f lr ilia �7, lakh
Vegetable Crimp av0�Iores._
soca le. t er M tphet ova -Lha to
p e e
ill Q �le not cc�vlsl r! v
ained for loco op 1otlO', recta
tt
is no stranger -it boss atoo tlso Les;
more than forty gears,
If there are any complies ono
not understand write to fydl4
ham Medicine Co. (cot
Mass.
Warning) Take no chanoes with
substitutes for genuine "Bayer ¶l b-
lotdE#„Aspirin," Unless Yen see the
mime I3ayerlr on packageor on tab-
lets yen ere not getting Aspirin at all.
In ovorl !layer packaa ariltit
ons
for Credo, TIeadacho, Nomale a,
ltheu-
mat.snti learucho, Toothache, Lunn
bego and for Pain. Handy tin boxers
or. ilyre ve tablets cost tow cants.
17ruggrs s also sntl larger packages.
Made is Canada. Aspirin is the trade
Imare( (registered in Cnr t la), of Bayer
Manufaelm 0 rf biouonretteacidosier
of Saheylic.,.;d.