HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1918-7-4, Page 7PEERLESS STARTER GERMAN CRUELTY.
A Guar Starting S t f
f.
need S art ng , ys em or
Fe
d Oars,, Sells for
$22.$Q.
N
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IOR. S
_
,
AGENTS WANTED �' TO PRISONERS
THE MORGAN SALES VO -
415
Q 415 longe $trout, Toronto CAREFUL RECORD BEING KEPT
HELLISH WARFARE.. •
Latest "Wrinkles" in German Fright-
fulness in the Use of Gas.
One of the newest Hun tricks in-
volves the use of shells that are
charged with a poison gas that is ex-
ceptionally heavy, Choosing a wind-
less day, they throw large numbers of
them at parts of the enemy line, pre-
ferring those situated in a low-lying
land. The shells, when they strike
the earth, do not explode; the shock
merely punctures a carefully proper-
, ed weak spot in. the projectile, whence
the deadly gas slowly issues, lying
like a heavy mist on the ground over
which it spreads.
Sometimes an abandoned dugout
contains deadly gases for enemy
troops that enter it. A retreat from
any inclosure, or .from a wood, may be
merely a German ruse to induce the
enemy to take possession and undergo
exposure to gases planted there in ad-
vance.
Another idea is to place in small
cane glass vessels filled with liquid
icgas poison and surrounded by saw-
dust to prevent premature breakage.
German soldiers at nightcrawl with
these toward the opposing lines, and.
deposit them on the ground as near as
possible to the Allied trenches—us-
ually ust outside the wire entangle-
ments and visible from their own
trenches by daylight. The tins are
left with their lids unfastened. In the
daytime, when the wind happens to
blow toward the Allies, the Huns fire
at the tine with rifles. A hit breaks
the bottle within and relegses the gas,
which floats over the enemy,
. All of the poison gases now used in
warfare are put up in shells or other
containers in the form of liquids. They
depend for their effectiveness upon
their weight, being much heavier than
air, so that they cling to the ground.
They pour into trenches and dugouts
as so much water `night and stay
there.. It is necessary to sweep them
out—a task accomplished by means of
chemical sprayers that dissipate the
fumes.
Animals suffer the most—horses,
mules, cattle, dogs, cats and rats. The
horses and mules, near the fighting
line ,are usually provided with gas
masks, but it is not practicable to fur-
nish such proaection for the pet dogs
and cats in the trenches. As for the
rats, they get no sympathy from the
soldiers.
BY GOVERNMENT`.
Cases of Gross Inhumanity and In.,
credible Brutality Being Noted
For pay of Reckoning. ,
It is a great satisfaction to know
that the British Government, and,
we presume, all the Entente Powers
as well, iskeeping a careful record of
cases of inhumanity and brutality of
which its nationals in German prison
camps aro the victims. There will be
an accounting some 'day, and we can
only hope that those made to suffer
for the outrages will be theruffians
who inflicted them and not German
autocracy or some other abstraction
without a body to be flogged or a
soul to be damned.
Some of these prison adze, horrors
are published in the London Times,
the particulars having been collected
by a special correspondent in Amster-
dam. He relates at least one case of
cold-blooded, deliberate murder which
occurred on February 27 at Komman-
do No. 168, Witten 2, which is based
on Minden. The murdered soldier
was -Private J. Desborough, of the
Second Battalion of the Suffolk Regi-
ment. This kommarido is considered
perhaps the worst in Germany; and
sends a continual stream of its pris-
oners into hospital at Minden.
Murdered in Cold Blood.
On the date mentioned Desborough
took the part of a French prisoner of
war who was being bullied by a Ger-
man civilian. The German sentry or-
dered him to go away. He obeyed the
order immediately, and as he walked
away the sentry shot him in the back,
death being instantaneous. A fort-
night later he was officially reported
to have died in ashospital.
About 50 British prisoners work in
this kommando, and it is said that
civilian workmen often try •to make
the prisoners do their work for them,
striking them with iron bars when
they refu"se. The more cultured civil-
ian foremen do not use iron bars, but
have provided themselves with rubber
piping filled with lead, with which
they caress the heads and arms of the
British prisoners. These weapons do
not leave cuts and gashes as do iron
bars, they are lighter, more conveni-
ent to carry, and in every respect
more suitable to the foremen's station
in life. .
ORIGIN OF THE RED CROSS.
t Novelist Gives London Tinnes Credit
' s- for Inspiring the Movement.
Amelia E. Barr, the novelist, who
is over 87 years old and is still writ-
ing romances in which the fire of
youth burns vigorously, is out with
a new book, "An Orkney Maid," in
which she tells how the Red Cross So-
ciety originated. According to Mrs.
Barr, the motive for the Red Cross
was inspired by the London Times, in
which appeared the following:
"The commonest accessories of a
hospital are wanting; . there is not
the least attention paid to decency
or cleanliness; the stench is appal-
ling; the fetid air can barely str'ug-
gle.out through the chinks in the
walls and roofs, and for all I can ob-
serve the men die without the least
effort being made to save them. They
lie just as they were let down by the
poor fellows, their comrades, who
brought them on their backs from the
camp with the greatest -tenderness,
but who are not allowed to remain
with them. The sick appeared to be
tended by the sick, and the dying by
the dying. There are no nurses, and
the Hien are literally dying hourly be-
cause 1 toff of the British
h
the medico s
army has forgotten that old rags of
linen are necessary for the dressing of
wounds."
In "An Orinney Maid" we read
that a "trumpet call" in the Times
asked who among the women of
fr., ' England were ready to go to Scutari
hospital to comfort and help the men
dying for England. "The Son of God
goes forth to war! Who follows in
His train?" In six days Florence
Nightingale and her group of trained
nurses, most of whbm were from the
Roman Catholic Sisters of Mercy and
St. John's Protestant Home; had left
England for Scutari. "The prudery
of the English middle class was shock-
ed at the idea of young women nurs-
ing in military hospitals. They con-
sidered it `highly improper.'"
i
After a Cup of
POSTUM
tb.ere's no uncomfortable
reaction, but rather a
refreshing feeling of
health and satisfaction.
It's gratifying, these
days, to know that JPos-
trim saves sugar and
fll'ol. .
Coi venieut
Economical
Delightful
Try
instant PoStill
"There's a Reason"
No Medical Attention.
Another horrible German prison
camp is at Langensalza. To this
camp last April were brought some
4,000 wounded British officers and
men. They were put on the bare
floor without anything to cover them.
For the first three days - they still
wore their first field dressings, and
naturally there were many cases of
septic poisoning. The wounded re-
ceived no hospital diet, and on the
third day were put into a wire -fenced
compound at one end of the camp. No-
body was allowed to visit them except
one British soldier who was expect-
ed to attend to the 4,000 cases need-
ing urgent surgical care. The fish
given to the prisoners was putrid,
and though the men were ravenous,
they could not eat it. For three con-
secutive days they had no bredd.
About the same time, 200 wounded
British arrived at Gardelegen. Most
of them had broken limbs. Not one
of thein had been set. Special medi-
cinal chests sent out to the prisoners
by Mrs. Bromley Davenport were con-
fiscated by the German Government.
One wounded man got hold of one of
the bandages for a head wound, but
it was immediately taken away from
him, and be was given a pad of ordin-
ary newspaper with a paper bandage.
Camps.
Punishment C
p
There are certain of these camps
which are known as punishment
camps. Here are sent not only pris-
oners of war, but German soldiers
undergoing punishment, and presum-
ably German civilian criminals, The
German soldiers are in charge of the
prisoners, and the more work they
get out of them the sooner they ex-
piate their own sentences and are per-
mitted to resume their rank in the
army. The brutalities they inflict
upon their helpless charges in these
circumstances can well be imagined.
The Hameln Kornniando is one of
these, and is in charge of the notori-
ous Gen. von Haniseh, IIere it is said
that in June, 1917, a British soldier
was stripped to the waist and held by
two sentries before an open furnace
until his body and face were. covered
with blisters. It appears from what
the Times correspondent writes, that
all the camps under the jurisdiction of
Gen. von Hanisch, who commands the
Tenth Army Corps, famed for its bru-
tality, are simply fields and pens of
torture for the allied prisoners who
are committed to then,
Parcels Withheld.
ream Wanted'
�+ Per the Sp11Ci mer
SWEET OR CHURNING CREAM
n*W0 ePetnQnii nna, pay express charges Wardrobe
Our pr►ce now Is fortyslx cents
Mutual Dairy and Creamery Co.
743-0 Xing et. Weill - • Toronto
known as No. 403, and believed to be
situated near Antwerp. All the bread
in the parcels had naturally gone bad,
HUNS PITT BOMBS IN BODIES.
To Kill the Allies While Burying
Their Dead.
The following letttr was written by
a member of the United States Tank
Forces in France:
"I have been working from a guar -
ter past six a.m. to eleven p.m., and
have had little opportunity to write.
Well, I've been through it—a little
over two weeks of it at the hottest
part of the line, where the Hun is put-
ting on his big show, I was on de-
tached service with the French—hs a
combatant, not as an observer. Tanks,
of course.
"It's like nothing one can describe.
Some one , said that the most difficult
thing he could think of would be to
describe an orange to an Eskimo. I
can no more describe the front to you.
For four nights in one week S did not
go to bed. For one week I did not
have my clothes off, and at no time
could I remove anything but my coat,
since the Hun was always shelling us
with high explosive or gas—and one
has to be ready to move instanter.
During my stay I was never out of
shell fire and often being shot at with
machine guns and rifles. I liyed ten
years during that fortnight, but be-
yond my control, so there was no use
worrying.
"I ran the gamut of all sensations
from fear to hatred, and the latter
was what I carried away. Any nation
that fills the bodies of the dead with
bombs in order to kill the chaps that
come out to bury them, has no con-
sideration for me, and that is what
the Huns do, among other things.
"I got a rap on my steel hat with a
bit of shrapnel, but it was a high
burst and did not penetrate.
"Summed up, this show over here is
'kill or be killed.' If a few pacifists
could get under fire, live like a hunted
rat for weeks, wear gas masks for
fourteen hours and have all sorts of
fiendish cruelties practised on them
they'd stop palavering for peace with
a crowd of murderers that understand
nothing else. But the Hun is cour-
ageous, just the same. I don't see how
he stands it. He probably thinks the
same about us.
"Now I am back for a long time—
and I am not saying it to keep you
from worrying—it happens to be
true. I lost all my equipment at the
front and came back with what I had
on—and was lucky to keep that. This
is a very expensive war."
7,000,000 TONS EACH MONTH.
This Amount of Shipping Enters or
Leaves the British Ports.
The necessity of keeping an eye
upon the importance of sea power in
the present conflict, despite the close
attention claimed by the land battles,
is emphasized by Archibald Hurd, the
naval expert, writing in the London
Daily Telegraph,
"We have been apt, during the re-
cent offensives on -the Western front,"
Mr. Hurd writes, "to overlook other
aspects of the war—notably the
fundamental factor, which is sea pow-
er. After a period of fifteen months,
during which our strength in ships
steadily declined, the downward ten-
dency has now been definitely arrest-
ed, Not only is our sea power in-
creasing, but our grip -on the enemy
is firmer than at any previous period
of the war. -
"Seven million tons of shipping en-
ter or leave our ports monthly. Each
ship is the target for enemy subma-
rines, yet therehave been days in the
present week when the enemy has not
secured a single ship.
"Twelve months ago we were with
difficulty maintaining one stream of
traffic, namely, that which brought
us food and raw material. To -day
supplies are flowing through this
main artery ingreater volume than
a year ago. At the same time an-
other stream of traffic has started,
and merchant shipping has been made
available for the greatest transport
movement which has ever been carried
out.
'For three months past American
troops have been coming across the
Atlantic by tens of thousands, far
faster than at one time was thought
possible. That means that the balance
between the allies and the central
powers is being adjusted in favor of
the former"
A MESSAGE IN VERSE.
Tunics are very popular and this
one of figured material, the same a.s
the waist section, is exceptionally
smart. McCall Pattern No. 8046,
Misses' Dress. In 3 sizes, 16 to 20
years. Price, 20 cents.
'British Prisoner Conveys the Informa-
tion That Huts are Starving.
A British soldier, at present a pris-
oner of war in Germany, has cleverly
'orJir
c n 1h0pG lis ltK A t i ,
The Of'iaiaal :Rauber Fatty ---it rppaire
a
1 0,
Y r Bottles; 1 "cit •e 7i l_
Rot l rte. d ►as, e u Guaranteed ay9
Aske fires, :tlWber hoots. 1otpd.
to satiety, 4 and 00 cents Postpaid.
Mail your older to day. hr. ecbodeide
Cao Dominion Hank Sid$., Toroato,
Vacation pays.
Oh, I'm glad as a kid, as a very small
hid,
When school lets out in June,
I could dance a jig if I over did
I could almost sing a tune.
For it's good to be sure of my boys
again -
And my girls for the whole day
through;
There's such a lot we can plan for
then
And so much that it's good'to do.
Oh, I'ni glad as a kid, as a very small
kid,
When the school house door is
barred;
I'm glad to think that the key is hid
And I find it isn't hard.
My boys, what a jolly bunch they are
And my girls, how worthy praise;
The hours that I like the best by far
Are in these 'vacation days,
kid,
And you ought'to feel that way,
For now is your chance to make your
bid
For their love and their trust to-
day.
And there's nothing under the heav-
ens high
That can make the agnels glad,
As a boy and a girl, while the years
go by, •
Who are loving "chums" with Dad.
HISTORY AT FIRST-HAND.
Visions of the Past in Light That Has
'Left the Earth.
Light travels at the rate of 186,000
miles per second. As everyone
knows, we are now looking at some
stars with lights that left them cen-
turies ago.
Suppose that you could be shot
into space at a velocity greater than
that of light. And suppose that you
were armed with a telescope so
powerful that you could see every-
thing that happened on this earth.
A time would come when history
would unfold itself before your as-
tonished eyes. You would see Na-
poleon losing the Battle of Water-
loo; you would see King John signing
the Magna Charta; you would see the
death of Julius Caesar, and then Mark
Antony making love to Cleopatra on
the Nile. If you like, you could jug-
gle yourself back and forth so that
you could see the same event over
and over again and make a special
study 21 it.
This simple dress has the unique
feature of having no fastenings and
can be slipped on over the head. It is
worn over a dainty waist as illustrat-
ed. McCall Pattern No. 8361, Ladies'
Waist. In 7 sizes, 84 to 46 bust. No.
8343, Ladies' Jumper Dress. In. 6
sizes, 34 to 44 bust. Price, 20 cents
each.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Go., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
FOOLING THE OBSERVER.
Make Believe With Paint and Brush
at the Front.
The observer in the airplane tries
in vain to locate the enemy gun; his
eye, looking through a telescope, fails
to detect its muzzle through the foli-
age. So he Mei away and the gun is
not attacked. .
This is an example of camouflage
as it is practised in the European
war. And the camoufieur is so ex-
pert that his business of fooling the
easehas become an art.
Y
An early use of camouflage by the
French was the application of paint to
big guns in order to make them re-
semble the foliage in which they
were partly concealed. However,
when the guns had to be placed in the
open, disguise only accentuated their
visibility. The protective coloration
of birds and animals gave a hint to
the camoufleurs who saw that it dis-
guised the outlines of these creatures
and counteracted to a considerable de-
gree their undershadows. So the high
lights along the gun barrels were
darkened and their under surfaces
lightened, The colors of the paint, of
course, harmonized with the surround-
ing objects. The finishing touches to
'this work consisted in irregular
O,tireakings and blotches which broke
the outlines and at least confused the
observer if they did not serve to pro-
duce invisibility.
A pasture or rape run for hogs will
greatly reduce the cost of making
pork.
There is now no powerful neutral defeated the censor by sending home Minard's Co., Limited.
Gents,—I cured a valuable hunting
left to see fair •play between the pis- his parents a ]etre' containing the flog of mange with MINARD'S LINT-
tooners_ and th captors. Dutch, Swiss, information that the people in Ger-
andMENThad Spanish, inspectors of. prison .mmny lire in dire straits with regard I treated him without doing him any
camps un n e tryt food The youngsoldier wrote his
rrcrinaner
Yours c., 'n
WILFRID Gxj.GNE.
Prop, of Grand Central Hetet,
Drummondville, Aug. 8, '04.
Liniment
p doubt dry to do then e t
duty, but they have no authority to latter rn blank verse, a fact v7,hlch at ] good.
enforce their demands, and if they first caused surprise to the parents,
became too urgent in their demands and it was some time before his rea-
for reform they would simply be es-
corted out of the country, and the lot
of the prisoner would be worse than
ever.
One fortn of cruelty which the men
find particularly hard to endure Is
mentioned by the correspondent. Ile
writes that at the end of April, 191,3,
thega had accu nulated at Friedrich-
felzl allot TN,b01b parcels, the majority
being -for British prisoners worlcing
behind the German lines, Repeated
`applications had been made for names
of Lho koniniandos in wli'ieh these melt.
; worked, but they could not be asoor-
taitted, Many parcels arrived in Oct,
Leber, 1917, for unknown men, and
not until March, 101.8, did it list final-
' ly arrive /rein Berlin which rontalited a ripe toinato, and when washed they
350 names; 85 of The men were stated will disappear entirely,
to have died. About 10,000 parcels ISSUE No, -
have acbunrulated, for one kommando,
son for doing so became apparent.
• A sharp young cousin obae'rved that
by reading in a downward direction
the initial letters to the lines the sol-
dier had succeeded in conveying the
reassuring information that "Ger- In gathering early cabbage from
many is starving," rho garden cut off the heads instead
The eomtntinical;ton, which in itself of palling up the roots. Nen leaves
"God bless yet, my mother, be balled for table use end they oan
Every day 1 am thhilting of you. I also be used for great feed for hens.
Recollections of home sustain me, 410ri;Y ORDERS.Momor]as being so sweet. Pay your, out-of-town•act:omite by
Always my thoughts arc of, yon•--- Dermalon Express Money Orders.
Nothing else Wound console 'ale.
rive Dollars costs three ranks.
ltiiaard'a T,inmelrt dares Distetauer. the Talmudasks the glutton,
Rub itik spots on linen with half "Whiz is the wise rneul" and answers,
"1 -Ie *he is not asilalned to receive in-
formation from anyone,"
Pis and,
Colonel W, 0, Goreas, Surgeon -Gen-
still of the U.S, army, tells this story
about a
National Guard Encampment
last summer.
"Jim Wheeler, a new volunteer who
had not quite learned his business was
on sentry duty one night when a
f' d] hd f I
tion cnowing is ' f
on ness or p e,
brought him one from tete canteen,
While he sat quietly on the grass (�ANW7JR, 'TOMOIth, LUM7pa,
devouring the pie, the major saunter- d•/ internal and external, cured with•
ed up in undress uniform, Not issue- out pa.1n by our home treatment. Wrue
nixing him, the sentry did not salute, Co. I ! nitet, ColUnRwa id font " Medlcai
so the major stopped and asked,
'What's that you have there?'
"'Pio," answered Jim,' good-natur-
edly. `Squash pie. Have a bite?'
"The major frowned. 'Do you
know who I am?' fie asked haughtily.
" 'No; the sentry answered, 'unless
you're the major's groom, '
"The major shook his head.
"'The barber from the village?'
"Nol' thundered the other.
"Maybe'—and the sentry laughed
—`maybe you're the major himself.'
"'I am the major!' came the stern
reply.
"'Good Heavens!' exclaimed the
sentry. 'Hold the pie, will you, until.
I present arms?"
o--o—o--o—o—o— 0 —0-0-0-0-0--o
TOR S4TM
WBUICLlf N]tWSPAI'loll FOR SAX,.10
1 tin New Ontario. Owner sauing to
Prance, W111 well $12,000, Wortkt double
al amaunl. App Y x, II„ ole WHaon
Publishing On., Ja2mlted, 'Toronto,
h
Wand Job printinga plant tin Eastern
iOhL IIQC!I1'P'OA NJiWSI'Ar.ER
Ontar10, Inauranoe caroler. $1,600, 17119
gn for 31,200 on quick sale, Liox 60,
Wilson publishing Co., Ltd„ Toronto.
raasoELLeixmovH
LEMONS WHITEN AND
BEAUTIFY THE SKIN
Make this beauty lotion cheaply 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
Juin 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 and remove such blemishes as
freckles, sallowness and tan and is
the ideal shin 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 fra-
grant lemon lotion and masede it
daily into the face, neck, arms and
hands. It is marvelous to smoothen
rough, red hands.
Now that the breeding season is, or
should be, over, get rid of the useless
rooster.
Miaard's Liniment Cures Colds, £tc.
"When a strong brain •is weighed
against a true heart, it seems to mo
like balancing a bobble against a
wedge of pure gold•" -0. W. Holmes.
Mfreasd'd xdktlnelft aures Oar in Coop
Cabbage Pi nts
Of all leading early and late'
Varieties, 45c, per hundred, mala pre-
paid,
repaid, 02,00 per thousand, express
collect.
Also Cauliflower, Brussels Sprouts
and Onion Plante,
Plants are being ehipped sucoese-
fully to all parts of Canada, Ask for
price flat.
3rerold'i ramie, Fruitland, Ontario
Dept. "Y" Niagara District
YES! MAGICALLY!
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
p—o—o—o—o—o-0-=b—o—o—o-0—o
You say to the drug store man,
"Give me a small bottle of freezone."
This will cost very little but will posi-
tively remove every hard or soft corn
or callus from one's feet.
A few drops of this new ether com-
pound applied directly upon a tender,
aching corn relieves the soreness in-
stantly, and soon the entire corn or
callus, root and all, dries up and can
be lifted off with the fingers.
This new way to rid one's feet of
corns was introduced by a Cincinnati
man, who says that freezone dries in
a moment, and simply shrivels up the
corn or callus without irritating the
surrounding skin.
Don't let father die of infection or
lockjaw from whittling at his corns,
but clip this out and•make him try it.
. If your druggist hasn't any freezone
tell him to order a small bottle from
his wholesale drug house for you.
Keep the weeds out. They rob the
growing crops of moisture, sunlight,
air and soil fertility.
Minatd's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
When silage costs $3, per ton to
raise and store and other feeds are
valued at present wholesale market
prices 100 pounds total digestible nu-
trients in corn silage has a net cost of
54 cents, in bran $2.31, corn $4.02,
oats $4.29.
FEMALB HELP WANTED
WANTED
100 GIRLS
to work in knitting mills. All
kinds of operations on Underwear
and Hosiery. Good wages paid
while learning. Write or 'phone
Limited
PARIS, ONTARIO
In England seed potatoes are sold
by the pound, not by measure.
In England it is proposed to make
the travelling ofunsound stallions
illegal.
FSE MODEL
YOUR,f inter teal
Our Mall Order Department will assist
YOU. Toronto's Best Designers an
Tailors do our work. The small charge
will both please and pay. We remodel
any women's coat of any material. Thta
offer is good for July and August only,
Send us your coat by mail or express.
We will reply at once with suitable sug-
gestions and price. No charge !s made
Yor this advice. You can then instruct
us to do the work or return your• coat.
.Che summer slack season makes our low
charge possible. You get New 'P0 5
Style F8ffects. Indh•ldual Attention and
Premstt Service ata big saving. $6.00
Will remodel a coat -that $20.00 will not
buy Otte I'a11. 1�re do this• work for
Merchants or Private Homes.
ROSE -HERD 00„ 74 Bay lit., Toroato
PAIN
e ator
Pain? .thirst's ,will. stop it!
Used for 40 years to relieve rheu-
matism, lumbago, neuralgia,
sprains, lame back, toothache,
and other painful complaints.
,Tuve a bottle in the house., All
dealers, or write us..
HIRST REMEDY COMPANY. namiltoo.Can.
HIRST'S. Pamily salve. (50e). tD' 4
HIRST'S Pectoral Syrup et
dr
Horehound and Elccampanc, (35c) BOTTLE
,ar c filAl 'elsees el 3 IAINIREa
v Fiimt. Mu ell Cue"
��`•' '4 q'�, 'i,whol Ma4et lied,
Ilya 41? , wholesome breed,
!' y,i rolls,•. eta, without
;trouble.
"troubualec. S
anv-et-.s flour
end holes coeserve4—rle Pletlon,tood
(N-7deCnotpndlPvoypdahadhaauuadhi,c,irtl •'Dehvned
ell chaises
paid te your home. or
through your dealer—
low loaf ,Ro. 32.15
eight loaf dto $7.25.
E.T.RIQ TOO.,
ai
HAMILTON
CANADA on"�n..,art'
For Hair and Skin Health
Cuticura is Supreme
If you use Cuticura Soap for every-
day toilet purposes, with touches of
Cuticura Ointment now and then as
needed to soothe and heal the first
pimples, redness, roughness or scalp
irritation you will have as clear a
complexion and as good hair as it is
possible to have.
Sample Each Free by Mnii. Address posh
Card: Cuticurn, Dept. N. Boston, U. S. A."
Sold by dealers throughout the world.
"EST
FO
What Lydia E. fl Fnkhalll's
Vegetable Compound Did
For Ohio Woinan,
Portsmouth, Ohio.—" I suffered from
irregularities, pains in my side and was
so weak at times I
could. hardly g e t
around to do my
work, and as I had
four in my famil
and three boarder
it made it very hat
for me. Lydia E,
Pinkham's Veged
table Compound
was recommended
to me. I took it
and it has restored
my health. It is
certainly the best
med'cino for woman's ailments I ever
saw "—Mrs. SARA Sl1AW, R. No. 1,
Portsmouth, Ohio.
Mrs. Shaw proved the merit of this
medicine and wrote this letter in order
that other suffering women may find
relief as she did.
WOmeli Who are suffering as slio wee
should not drag along from day to day
without giving this famous root and
erpndlltalk
tab Comou,ariFor special
advice in regard to such ailments write
to Lydia ll. Pinkhatn Medfeine Co.,Lynn,,
Mass. The result of It. forty year$
experience is at your service.
Farmers who ship their wool
direct to . us get better prices
than farmers who sell to the
general store.
ASK ANY FARMER!
who has sold his wool both
ways, and note what be says—
or, better still, write us for our
prices ; they will show you how
much you lose by selling to the
General Store,
We pay the highest prices of any firm
in the cottatryat d are the largest wool
deniers in Cnnndn. Payment is re-
mitted the Same day wool is received.
Mantle yonrwoolto-dny-' ouwillbe
more lheu pleased if you do, and are
assured eta square deal frost us. 2
11. V. ANDREWS
13 CHURCH ST., TORONTO
KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT
, COSHES
LO i( UlIDSom/PASki'ES
.ArDLACI(, W HITE,TAN, DARK BROWN.
OR OX -BLOOD SHOES
PRESIERVE/heLEATHER
THE F.FAALLLY Oproohrl0N5t, iIAMInOtlM0A
.a...se. .,,atccoacs ..m memio,,.�..