HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-11-8, Page 3VOCATIONAL. TRAIN-
ING FOR TOMMY
`,`DRI{ OF MILITARY HOSPITAL
COMMISSION.
Returned Men Grasp Opportunity To
Improve Their Positions Dur-
ing Convalescence.
Tommy, like, most of us, looks upon
his job in the light of dollars and
cents. His objective is a pay envelope
on the creel:of Saturday night, and
the bigger the better. p'
`He sees in the vocational training •of
the Military Hospital Commission
a
chance to increase his earning power
and he is making the clays of his con-
valescence count, according to the re-
cords and reports of the vocational of-
ficvers who direct the classes..
The returned man's industry is soly-
ing not only his own problem and pro-
viding for his future, but for Can-
ada's, Every artisan turned out by
the Commission from the ranks of dis-
abled men, means one less in the army
of unskilled workers. Careful watch
is kept of the labor market, and every
man under training in the schools has
been placed, so to speak, before he
started his course.
The vocational training department.
of the Commission is not reaching out
to only the trained workers who have
acquired a certain amount of skill in
some line, to give them an opportunity
to improve themselves for better po-
sitions, but to the man who never had
a trade or the advantages of even the
most elementary education.
Some Specific Cases.
Illiterate men, whodrove dump carts
before they enlisted, have been given
good trades in which they can make
a permanent place for themselves,
and earn, a much better wage. Scores
of men with a fair education have
been enabled to talcs courses to place
themselves in good clerical positions;
and many more have advanced from
workmen to foremen in the machine
and carpenter shops.
One young man, a blacksmith's help-
er, was given a few months' course in
blacksmithing and Oxy -acetylene
welding during his convalescence, and
is no'w employed by the Winnipeg
School Board in those trades at a sal-
ary of $90 a month.
In the same school at this time a
young veteran who had been a polish-
er before the war took a five months'
course in commercial work during his
convalescence and is now earning
$87.50 a month as a book-keeper, The
best salary he had ever earned before
amounted to $60 a month.
A milk peddler, who had always
wanted to draw, returned disabled,
and during his time in' hospital took
a course in mechanical drafting and
went back to civil life to earn $75 a
month as a mechanical draftsman.
These men, and hundreds like them
now in training in the M.H.C. voca-
tional classes, will be listed as assets,
not liabilities, when Canada's war
debt is figured,
BRUSH AND GRASS LAND.
Discussion Regarding Sheep and Goats
As Tree. Destroyers.
Some Canadian planters of forest
tree stock have had experiences with
depredations of goats, both amusing
and tragic. There is under way in
the Unite4 States at the present time
a discussion between the breeders of
sheep and goats with regard totheir
availability as an agency to convert
brush -land into grass land. The "An-
gora Journal" has the following to
say:
"Sheep are a grass -feeding stock;,
they will not eat brush unless forced
to do so by the absence of other pas-
turage. They will browse on scant
pasture, leaving the hazel, willow, or
other bushes to grow unmolested if
any grass it to be had. On the other
hand, goats will leave grass to sheep
and cattle if any green tree or shrub
growth is available. They prefer it.
Sheep never stand upright on the
hind legs to browse; goats will browse
off the foliage and tender bark to a
height of six feet and even higher.
Fores‘offlcials have adopted goats
es a means of keeping fire -breaks
clear of underbrush. Goats are used
to do the pioneering ahead of other
live stock on new lands hi many
Western States.
"The prejudice against goats is
questionable. It has "been' created
by the inhabitant of the vacant city
lot -a neglected creature- that was
fbrced to get subsistence by any
means it could. It gnawed the labels
from tin cans to get the taste of the
paste beneath -and acquired a repu-
tation for eating tin cans. The goat
of the open fields and prosperous
farms is as different from the vacant -
tot or common type as Is the Hereford
thoroughbred front the raw-boned
cow of the city suburbs, The goat is
the cleanest feeder of the live -stock
world. It will not eat straw or hay
that has been under foot. It nibbles,
;the choicest bits of foliage, and rejects
�f�ll uncleanness. ,
Love must be intelligent and in-
telligence must be loving before eith-
er lean reach its fullest exorcise,
Full ploughing Is a good way to
clear the soil of white grubs. Chickens
and turkeys will clear them from the
land if it is turned up and they are
allowed to run in the fields, and crowd
also help in this work, Pigs will grup
them out. 'Fall ploughing ldlls wire
worms end,othee worms.
Watch•'.Your Sneeze.!
It may lie the forerunner of
bronchitis or a bad cold. It
is nature's warning that your
body is in a receptive con-
dition for germs. The way
to fortify yourself against
cold is to increase warmth
and vitality by" eatingoo
Shredded Wheat, a food.
that builds healthy muscle
and red blood. For break-
fast with milk or cream, or
any meal with fresh fruits.
Made in Canada.
For the
Housewife
l
These days even the house dress
takes unto itself smartness. This one
has several unusual features, the
pocket arrangement and the collar
and cuffs are true followers of the
mode. McCall Pattern No. 8041,
Ladies' House Dress, In 7 sizes; 34
to 46 bust- • Price, 20 cents.
This pattern may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall 'Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
Too Cold—Or Too Hot?
"The raiders won't come in winter;
it'll be too cold for them."
I have heard several people make
a remark of that kind, says a writer
in London Answers. It is not gener-
ally realized that on the hottest sum-
mer days an aviator can pay a "flying
visit" to the Arctic Regions by mount-
ing his machine to a, height of 10,000
ft.
The temperature is invariably low
at 10,000 ft., whether at the Tropics or
the Poles, and there is very little vari-
ation in the temperature all the year
round, except for the difference which
a high Wind makes.
An airman will encounter forty de-
grees of frost at an altitude of.10,000
ft., and when twice as high will find
the temperature exactly that of the
South Pole.
So cold won't be a stumbling block
to the raiders. The only alternative
is to make it too hot for them.
"Habit is a cable. We weave a
thread of it every day, and at last we
cannot breakit."—Mann,
There's
Superior
Favor
To
POSTUM
as\tale beverage.
b verae. $
Acka fro
Pa 8'e m
the grocer is well
'Wait a trial, inP lace
of tea ---es eelall-
P Y
When ea g
. T
Disagrees!
r—=
ROYAL TITLES CONFUSING,.
War JIes Brought About Many Cein-
plications—Brother Fights Brother.
The changes in royal. titles calla at-
tention, inevitably, to a few of the
complications that the war has
brought with it. There were few
princes more popular than was Prince
Christian Victor, who died as a gal-
lant British officer in South Africa;
but his brother, Prince Albert, is
fighting in the German army. The
Duke of Albany is one of the "enemy
princes" with whom Parliament is
concerned just now, whose banner has
been, removed from St. George'e
Chapel; but his sister is the wife of
,Prince Alexander of Teelt, who is a
British officer, and now becomes an
earl,
We,—or, at least those of us whose
memories are not uncomfortably long
—are inclined to forget that Prince
Christian's German tij'.le may almost
be 'described as German by accident,
He was a German prince when he
married Queen Victoria's daughter,
certainly; but he had only been Ger-
man for three years at that time.
Schleswig-Holstein was the cause of
the Prussian attack.on Denmark more
than half a century ago, and until that
attack succeeded Prince Christian was
a Dane.
BLOOD -MAKING MEDICINE
It took centuries for medical science
to discover that the blood is the life.
Now, it is known that if the blood
were always abundant, rich and pure,
very few people would ever be ill. It
was not until the end of the 19th cen-
tury that an instrument was invented
for measuring the red part of the
blood, Then doctors could tell just
how anaemic a patient had become,
and -with medicine to make new blood
the patient. soon got well.
All the blood in the body is nour
ladled and kept rich and red by the
food taken daily, but when, for any
reason, a person is run down and, can
not 'snake sufficient blood from the
food to keep•the body in health, then a
blood -making medicine is 'required
The simplest and very best of blood
makers suitable for home use by any
one, is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. When
a course of these pills is taken their
good effect is soon shown in an im-
proved appetite, stronger nerves, a
sound digestion and an ability to mas-
ter your work and enjoy leisure hours.
For women there is a prompt relief of,
or prevention of ailments which make
life a burden,.. As an all-round medi-
cine for the cure of ailments due to
weak, watery blood no medicine dis-
covered by medical science can equal
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.550 from
The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
THE WOODLANDS OF FRANCE.
German Newspapers Exult Over the
Havoc Wrought by Hun Armies.
The brutal vindictiveness of the re-
treating German forces on French
soil, when nothing that remotely re-
sembled "property" was left unspoil-
ed'," i, described by the military cor-
respondent of the Berlin "Lokal An-
zeiger" in this manner:
"In the course of these last months
great stretches of French territory
have been turned by us into a dead
country. It varies in width from ten
to twelve kilometers (six and a quar-
ter to seven and a half or eight miles)
and extends along the whole of our
new position, presenting a terrible
barrier of desolation to any enemy
hardy enough to advance against our
new lines. No village or farm was
left standing on this glade, no road
was left passable, no railway -track or
embankment was left in being. Where
once were woods there are gaunt rows
of stumps; the wells have been blown
up; wires, cables, and pipe -lines de-
stroyed. In front of our new posi-
tions runs, like a gigantic ribbon, an.
empire of death."
The Berlin Tageblatt is also found
gloating over this destruction of the
dwellings and property of helpless
peasants in this burst of fine writing.
"And the desert, a pitiful desert,
leagues wide, bare of trees and under-
growth and houses. They sawed and
hacked; trees fell and bushes sank; it
.was days and days before they had
cleared the ground, In this war -zone
there was to be no shelter, no cover.
The enemy's mouth must stay dry, his
eyes turned in vain to the wells—they
are buried in rubble. No four walls for
hint to settle down into—all leveled
and burned out; the villages turned
into dumps of rubbish; churches and.
church' -towers laid out in ruins
athwart the roads." !'
All this was done in the territory
which the French armies had to cross
before reaching their present position
before St. Quentin. But to what aVai1?
It checked them not a bit, Across
the desert waste they built highways
and rebuilt roads. ods. The wells were
poisoned. The armies laid waterpipes
for their supply. Every farmhouse
and peasant's cot was reduced to dust,
They carried their own shelter. The
'terrible barrier of death' was to them
no barrier) only a reason why they
must push forward with renewed
strength. anti determination to hew
down the vandals guilty of the bar-
barous destruction, Now in front of
St. Quentin they see the Bodies en-
gaged in the same work preparatory
to their next 'flight.
Manure never id so good as the day
it is made.
egiaarh'i Disinfest gores Diphtheria,
HEMSTITCHINC,
On Blouses, Dresses, Table Linen, &p,
Accordion end Knife Pleating,
Covered Buttons made from your
own material,
Braiding and embroidery,
Our New Illustrated Catalogue Is
Just in, and we want every lady in
Ontario to have it.
Write For It—It Is Free
TORONTO PLEATING CO.
14 Breadelbane St, Dept. W. Toronto
TEA IN 25 -TON LOTS.
Military Convalescent Hospitals Use
Enormous Quantity.
The Military Hospitals Commission
have ordered 50,000 pounds of tea to
slack the thirst of returned men,
There's nothing drier in prohibition
propaganda than the convalescent
Canadian. He wants tea, good stiff
black tea three times a day, and the
cooks in the convalescent hospitals
under the direction of. the Commission
are going to be ready for him.
The 26 tons just ordered will only
last a few months with 113 institu-
tions, some of whom are requisitioning
tea in ton lots, to supply. There is no
limit put on the tea allowed a man;
he can drink as many cups each meal
as he wants, and after long months df
measured rations in trenches and the
hospitals in England, he drinks as
.though he had been raised on salt fish.
Tommy takes his tea with all "the
trimmin's" especially sugar. War,1
instead of weaning him away from his!
taste for sweet things, has increased
his desire for them.
In one instance where the popula-
tion grew in such proportions that the
kitchen facilities were inadequate for
a few weeks, it was' put up to the
men whether they would have tea or
soup for dinner and the vote went
overwhelmingly for tea.
Minard's Liniment Cures Co1dp., !so.
Make permanent bulb beds now.
There may be no Holland bulbs to be
had next ye:.r.
RINNS Granulated Eyelids;
Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by
Sun, Dust and Wind quickly
FOR ''relieved by Murine. Try it in
®�R Ee- yourEyesandlnSaby'sEyes..
i '( NoSmarling,JustEyeCosilort
Murine Eye Remedy AC Faer Drugafet'e er by
.� yor Bookf ho Boa
Murine
Eye Salva, in Tubae 25e. For soot: of Lha E.rs—Eros.
Ask Dliurine Eye Remedy Co., r'ateago d
•
A Gravel Crusher.
A policeman, with more than usual
avoirdupois and expanse of shoe leath-
er, had just passed a little terrace,
with a bit of garden in front, when a
small boy ran after him.
"Halloa, kiddie!" said the arm of the
law, genially, "what can I do for you ?"
"Mother sent me out," answered the
youngster, "to ask you if you would
mind walking up and down our path
for a minute or two. It's just been
gravelled, and we ain't got a roller."
—o—o—o—p—o—o—o—o--o—o—o—o—
PAIN ? NOT A SIT! o
LIFT YOUR CORNS o
OR CALLUSES OFF o
No humbug I Apply fow drops
then Just lift them away e
with fingers.
—o-o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o-0—o—oma
This new' drug is an ether com-
pound discovered by a Cincinnati
chemist, It is called
freezone, and can now
be obtained in tiny bot-
tles as here shown at
very little cost from any
drug store. Just ask
for freezone. Apply a
drop or two directly
Upon' a tender corn or
callus anti instantly the
soreness disappears,
Shortly you will find
the corn or callus s0
loose that you can lift it
off, root and all, with
the fingers.
Not a twinge of pain,
soreness or irritation;
not even the slightest
smarting, either when
applying freezone or
afterwards.
This drug doesn't tat
up the corn or callus,
but shrivels them so
they loosen and come right out, It Is
no humbug 1 It works like a charm.:
For a few cents you can got rid of
every hard corn, soft corn or corn bo-
tweon the toes, a8 well as painful
calluses on bottom of your feet. It
never disappoints and never burns,
bites or Inflames. If your druggist
hasn't any freezone yet, tell him to
got n little bottlo for yon from.hls
wholesale Menlo.
ISSUE No. 44=17.
Their Desire.
. In a certain mill it was the custom
to pay the wor)cers fortnightly, Find-
ing this
ind-ing'this praetice somewhat incon-
venient, the employes deckled to lay
the matter before the manager of the
firm, An Irishman, well-known for
his persuasive powers, was sthected
as their delegate, and he duly appear-
ed before the manager. "Well, Michael,
what can I do for you to -day?"
"Please, sir," said Mike, "0i've been
sint as a delegate by the workers to
ask a frreor of ye regarding the pay-
ment of wages." "What do they
want?" 'Tor, it's the desire of moself
and of iviry man in the firm that we
receive our fortnightly pay each
week!"
THE FALL WEATHER
WARD ON LITTLE ONES
Canadian fall weather is extremely
hard on little ones. One day 1t is
warm and bright and the next wet and
cold. These sudden changes bring on
colds, cramps and colic, and unless
baby's little stomach is kept right the
result may be serious. There is
nothing to equal Baby's Own Tablete
in keeping the little ones well. They
sweeten the stomach, regulate the
bowels, break up colds and make baby
thrive. The Tablets are sold by medi-
cine dealers or by marl at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Try making a strawberry bed in
rich, deep soil. The bed need not be
large. Make the soil from three to
five feet deep, as rich as it is deep, and
compare the fruit from this plot for
size and flavor with fruit grown on
ordinary soil a foot deep.
A druggist can obtain an imitation
of MINARD'S LINIMENT from a
Toronto house at a very low price,
and have it labeled his own product.
This greasy imitation is the poorest
one we have yet seen of the many that
every Tom, Dick and Harry has tried
to introduce.
Ask for MINARD'S and you will get
it.
There are ants in Mexico which will
settee]: a hive of bees and destroy it in
a night,
The rat is a thief and a disease car -1
rier. Rats kill chickens, steal crops
and damage property. Kill the rats
and remove useless structures that
harbor them. Farmers should have
a rat day several times a year, getting
together on that day for the destruc-;
tion of rats.
1
Ah! That's, the Spot
Sloan s Liniment goes right to it.
Have you a rheumatic ache or a
dull throbbing neuralgic pain? Y ou
can find a quick and effective relief
in Sloan's Liniment. Thousands of
homes have this remedy handy for
all external pains because time and
time again it hes proven the quisieoat relief.
So dean and cony to epply, too. No rub.
bion, o stain, no ,ocotvenionco m fe Ole
anon with plasters or ointment, if rotten.,
use Stoanblitamcat.you will 00500 he with-
out it.
G. sired hordes, at d! druggist,
21..,. 500, 50e„ 51.00.
Magic Baking Powder costs
no more than the ordinary
kinds. For economy, buy
the ane pound tins.
�� E.W,GIUITI COMPANY LIMITED
TORONTO. WIT
IMONTRCAL
1==nYVr=
A large proportion of the American
corn belt will harvest one of the
greatest corn crops in history, Many
fields will make over seventy-five
bushels per acre in regions where the
land is rich and the season long
enough for corn to do its best. This
will compensate for much of the de-
ficiency of frosted areas.
MONEY ORDERS
Dominion Express Money Orders
are on sale in five thousand offices
throughout Canada.
Frozen corn makes good silage,
says Prof. C. Larsen of South Dakota
State College. Corn that has been
frozen will not make quite as good -
colored or palatable silage, but when.
winter comes the cows will not dis-
criminate against it.
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper..
Put farm and garden implements in
proper order before putting them
away for the winter.
LEMONS WHITEN AND
BEAUTIFY THE SKIN
Make this beauty lotion oheaply for
your face, neck, arms and hands,
At the cost of a small jar of ordinary
cold cream one can prepare a full
quarter pint of the most wonderful
lemon skin softener and complexion
beautifier, by squeezing the juice of
two fresh lemons into a bottle con-
taining three ounces of orchard white.
Care should be taken to strain the
juice through a fine cloth so no lemon
pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep
fresh for months. Every woman
knows that lemon juice is used to
bleach add remove such blemishes as
freckles, sallowness and tan and is the
ideal skin softener, whitener and
beautifier.
Just try it ! Get three ounces of
orchard white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter pint of this sweetly frag-
rant lemon lotion and massage it daily
Into the face, neck, arms and hands.
It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red
hands.
CUT1IJA MS
BAD DSHIUEMET
Very Itchy, Burned at Night.
Could Scarcely Sleep.
Healed in One Week.
"My face became very red and
swollen and broke out in watery blisters.
Then it got very itchy and
used to burn so that at
night I could scarcely sl eep.
Later the blisters broke out
forming Bard scales ,and
my face was badly disfig-
ured. Then I used Cuti-
cura Soap and Ointment
and in about aweek's time
I was completely healed."
(Signed) Lloyd Brady, Breckenridge,
Que„ May 25, 1917.
Skin troubles are quickly relieved by
Cnticura. The Soap cleanses and puri-
fies the Ointment soothes and heals.
For Free Sam.pie•Each by Mail ad-
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere.
Though undoubtedly spring is the
safest time to set out trees in Canada,
autumn planting in Eastern Canada
is quite feasible, but trees should not
be moved until growth has ceased.
Minerd's Liniment Cures (*argot in COwe
SOXSCNLLAIOE0019
T ADIPIS WANTED TO DO PLAIN
AJ and light sewing at home, whole or
spare time, good pay, Work sent any dis-
tance, charges paid. Send stamp for
Particulars. National Manufacturing
Company, Montreal,
UTANTED — BLACRSMITIO TO
♦♦ sharpen • tools: also Granite
Polisher. Wtl.to George M. Pau],
Sarnia, Ont.
CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, meg
internal and external, cured with.
out pain by our home .treatment write
us before too late, Dr, Denman Medical
Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
When baying your, Piano
Insist on having an
"OTTO HIGEL"
PIANO ACTION
Win reduce Inflamed, Strained,
Swollen Tendons, Ligaments,
orMuscles. stops thelamenessand
pain from a Splint, Side Bone of
Bone Spavin. No blister, no haft
gone and horse can be used. $2 a
bottle at druggists or delivered. De.
scribe your case for special instme•
tions and interesting horse Book 2 M Free.
QBa&DinY, rNtheantisepticlinimentfor
mankind, reduces Strained, Torn Liga-
ments, Swollen. Glenda, Veins or Muscteat
Heals Cuts. Sores, Ulcers. Allays pain. RIS
81.00 abonloat dealersordeW'ered. Beak • Evidence" fres.
Yd. F, YOUNG, P. 0. F., 516 Lyman Bldg , Montreal, Gan,
amortise sad Absorbine. an. are made la Gmas.0
N SICK
TWO YEARS
Could Do No Work.
Now Strong as a
Man.
Chicago, Ill.—"For about two years
I suffered from a female trouble so I
was unable to walk
or do any of my own
work. I read about
Lydia E. Pinkham'a
Vegetable Com-
pound in the news-
miners and deter-
ed to try 11. It
brought almost im-
mediate relief, My
weakness has en-
tirely disappeared
and I never had bet-
ter health. I weigh
165 pounds and am as strong as a man.
I think money is well spent which pur-
chases Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound."—Mrs. Jos, O'BRIAN,1755
Newport Ave,, Chicago, Ill.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham'a
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer from displacements, inflam-
mation, ulceration, irregularities, peri-
odic pains, backache, bearing -down feel-
ing, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness.
and nervous prostration. Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound is the stan-
dard remedy for female ills.
City Eye Specialists Tell How To
Strengthen Eyesight 50
}ek's Time In
JY
Free Presorlptldn Yon Can Savo
Tilled and Use at Sono.
Boston, Mass.—Victims of eye strain
and other eye weaknesses and those
ivho wear glasses, will be glad to know
that Doctors and 31;11,1,
e Sp,ela.Usts now.
agree there is real hope and help for
thorn, ltlany whose oyes wore failingg
any thay have had the fo• eyos restosay
and many who onto worn glasses say
they have thrown thorn aiway, Ono
man says, attar using It:. I was ttl-
moat blind. Could not see to read at
OaatL Now I flan read everything with-
th my glasses, 'and m byes do .not
hurt any morn, At night they would
Dpale dreadfully, Now they feel line all
the time, It was like a ntiraale to rte,".
A lady who used it says: The atmos-
phere loomed haat' with or without
81005555, but after using this pm-eeorlp
tion for filtoon days overytlring seenla
clear, I pari road oven flno'print with-
out glasses," Another Who used .it
says: I was botlterod with 070 strain
causcd b, ovorworksd, tiros eyos which
induced 00,00 head0oheo. s have worn
ggaaaaesamfodr aevaral yearws both frorodmi8I
could soot read 101
own ronin on an
envelope
b:tor the a, rpooan tywrtting on flue
macbhro e mdo both now,
and have discarded my long distance
glasses altogether„ I cal count the
fluttering leaves on tho trope across the
street now Witton for several yoar5
have looped Illto a. dint green blur to
me. I cannot express my joy at what
ft hasdone for me,"
It' is believed that thousands who
wear glasses can new discard them in
a
reastinahle time, and multitudes more
will be able to strengthen their eyes
so as to be spared the trouble and oat-
Berfee of over getting glasses.
Dr. Beck, an eye specialist of nearly
twenty years praotloe, says: "A patient
carne to mo who was suffering from
111ephafltis Motglnalis With all the
eonootnitant symptoms, as morning
agglutination. g. 14se Ude, ehrapl,C Cana-
Junottvttla itnd ephiphora. Tier eyes
when not congested had the dull, suf-
fused expression common to such cases.
having run out of her medicine a
friend suggested Bon-Opto. She used
this treatment and not only overcame
her distressing condition, but strange
and amazing as it neay seem, so
strengthened her eyesight that she was
able to dispense with her distance
a-iasSes and her headache and neuralgia
loft her. In this Instance I should say
her eyesight 'was improved 10007a. I
have Sines verified the efficacy of this
treatment in a number of cases and
have seen the eyesight improve from
25 to 75 nor cent in a remarkably short
time. I. can say it 'works more quickly
than any other remedy I have pre-
scribed for the eyes." p
once, says: an haveitreatedlIn private
practice a number of serlop4s opthalmio
diseases With Sort-Opto and am able to
report ultimate recover in both Couto
and chronic caselir. 13. came to my
office suffering with an infected nye,
The pwas serious that an
operation f05euueleatfoti seemed
hn-
perative. Before resorting to the
operative treatment I prescribed Bon-
Opto and 1n 25 Itours'tho secretion had
lnssonod, Inflammatory symptoms be-
gan to subside and 1n seven days the
eye was ourbd and retained 1ta nor-
m!. vision, Another case of oxtrome
con voi•Gent strabiemue (cress eyes)
eson0rr5d the surgeon's knife by trio
t111701y use of your collyrium. The
tightened external mullahs yielded to
the soothing and anodyne otfoots of
Bort-Opts. I always lnstll Bon-Opto
after removal of foreign bodlos and
apply it locally to all burns. ulcers
and spots on the eyeball or the lids
for Itstherapeutic effect. By cleans-
ing the lids of secretions and acting
as a tomo for the eyebolt 11101E the
vision 10 rendered ranee acute, ltenoo
the nuber of oases of discarded
glasses.'
Dr. Conner says.: "My.eyns were in
bad ccudition. owing to the severe
y Instances
strain arming from protracted micro,
scoplcal research worst. Bon-Opto used
accordggii'ng to directions rendered a sur-
prising service.
strengthened, so much 80 0
have put aside my glasses without dis-
comfort. Several of my colleagues have
also used it and wo are agreed as to
its results, I0 a fow days, under my
observation, the eyes of an astigmatic
ease were so improved that glasses
have been discarded by the patient."
Eye troubles of many desoriptions
may bo wonderfully boneftted by the
use of Bon-Opto and if you want to
strengthen your oyes go to any drug
store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto
tablets. Drop one iron -Opts tablet In
a fourth of glassa of water and let It
dissolve. Witthis liquid bathe the
eyes two to four times dally. Ton
should notice your eyes clear up per-
ceptibly right from the start, and in-
flammation and redness will quickly.
disappear, If your eyes bother ,oft
even a littlo it 10 your duty to take
stepsto save them now before it 1s
too late. Many hopelessly blind might
haVo saved their sight 12 they had cared
for their .eyes in tune.
Rote: A city pbysielnn to whom the abets
article was submitted, said: "Yes, 0011-0nto In
a remarkable eye remedy. It, constituent las
gradleats aro wort known to ominant nyo ego -
clangs and widely prescribed by nom, 1 Bare
bend It Oa successfully in my own practice on
patteuta whose cyco woreetraloed through ever.
work or milft glasses, ern highly recommend,
1t in ease et weak, watery, aching, amnrtlitg,
Itching, burning eyes, rod brio, blurred vision as
for eyes inflamed from exposure to smoke, sun.
dust or wind, 1t 1s ono of the tory fow prepnm.•
Mos 1 feel should be kept on hand for regales
use no alined ovary family,"-non.Opto le not tre
patent
medicine
on �11secret
, fo maMandy, It
to on
the package, Tito �mtmatetnrern guerantee 1 to
strengthen Weight o0 par emit 1n 000 week's tlmO
In many 55,405ess, or refund tee money. It !alfa.
penned 05 all good druggists, ihelsita4;t
geaneral store,: oleo by to. 'latublyri .Vtld
T', k:attni 4 Co„ Toronto.