HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1918-9-26, Page 711 M. Conuo ly fSe. Co.
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QN THE ALL}i 1 crew hangs out in the wey and .bat-
e ter compartment. And they all mese
:, together in the after -battery eom-
partment, where the cook hange out.
The total effect of it is that the
I
(heat and sleep't'hey undergo make the
submarine Wren fatter than other
Navy men, Although they are given.
1v.terp'roofs and "sdbmarine clothes"
for' protection against extreme of
beat and cold, they all wear dungar-
'ees; exespt the captain, who, wears
dungarees and 'dancing pumps. For a
submarine is as cold-blooded as a fish,
and would take the temperature of
Ithe sea except for the heat generated"
by the human bodies, storage batter-
ies, and gas engines in her. '
Cramped Quarters, i
In the torpedo compartment are
four torpedo tubes, the torpedo res-
erve, the torpedo loading .hatch, the
tall locker containing thee torpdo
tools, the anchor stowed overhead,
the submarine's arsenal of six Spring-
field Titles, the officers' lockers, and
under the deck the fuel -tanks and air-
1flasks, of which the latter not only
supply breathable air, but also blow
the water out of the ballast -tanks.
In the forward battery compare.
ment are the crews' lockers and
their, submarine -sized 'gramophone
and the radio apparatus, and the
varying amount of battery -gas.
In the after battery compartment
are the main and auxiliary switch-
boards, the hand pump overhead, with
the safety helmets by which the crew
I can escape if stranded in shallow
water, the after periscope, the wok
bench, the cruising hatch opening on
to the conning tower fairwater, and
more air flasks along with more bat-
tery cells under the deck, Here are
also the electric cooking range, the
ice box, and the mess lockers. They
dine at noon in the submarines oil
cold storage stuff mostly, and they
get along without either bugler or
boatswain. When the cook is ready,
he rigs the mess table from the stan-
chions, serves the officers, and calls
out "Wha' d' yuh say?" to the crew.
And in,the engine room is the pet-
roleumsmell which comes from more
fuel tanks under (the deck, the main
engines, now sound asleep, the -main
pumps, the main air compressors, the
after trimming tank control, and the
main motors.
The Underwater World.
But it is in the central operating
compartment that one flntis the heart
of the ship. This is the bridge -house
and chart -house, and here the log is
kept. Six men crowd to their posi-
tions here when the !captain says
"Stations!" and on any one of them
deepnd the lives of the submarine and
everybody aboard when she's sub-
merged. . They vary in importance
from the man at the main lcingstons
-levers for operating the flood -valves
-up through the mal at the main
motor eontrolleis, thee matt at the
water manifold and gauges, and the
man at the air manifold and gauges,
to -the two men who whirl the wheels
of the stern and bore dieing rudders,
with their eyes continually on the
depth and angle gauges, on whom de-
pends most of all. About them; in a
whitee compartment some ten feet
square and not much higher than a
man's head, are all the wheels, levers,
gauges, bell, and speaking tubes, all
the clocks showing the pressure in
the air flasks, the weight of water
in the ballast tanks, the submarine's
distance below the surface apd the
amount of angle on the diving rud-
ders, all the chronometers, compasses,
revolution counters, engine room tele-
graphs and other bridge gear, Includ-
ing a steering wheel the size of a din-
ner plate, which controls the submar-
k 1 ,.,,,,.�l�s ine's torpedoing, submerging, navi-
gating, and motive power. The for-
ward periscope, ending in two' long
handles by svhich it is turned, comes
down' before its after bulkhead, with
the torpedo firing gearclose by, and
up its forward bulkhead runs the lad-
der into the conning -tower; and
'Above, at the eye -port in the conning -
tower, one, sees quite unexpectedly
the world outside.
It is a greenand silent world, as
if the submarine hovered motionless
by her fins in a solid green wind.
Although outside the !after eye -ports
her colors are flapping busily as if
just outeide tlse'port half a gale were
raging in pale -green silence.
SUBMARINES
THOShi UNIQUE :iAND MOpEnN
ADJUNCTS TO THE NAVY
,Story of Subs Out On Patrol Duty
"To Search For and Destroy
the Enemy." t
The submarine is like nothing else
in tile Navy. She has always had her
own peculiar little worries. When she
makes a quick dive she may leave a
hatch open,- or when she makes a
quick porpoise she may lift a hatch;
and in either case, if the sea gets to
her storage batteries, she gets their
gases; or her diving rudders may jam
or she may leak, and the deeper she
goes the worse it gets; or gas may
accumulate in her crank pits. And
on top of all these little worries she
has to lead the life of an outlaw,
ready to open valves and alter course
at the first sight of .anything bigger
than a rowing boat. And when she
sees a hydroplane, no matter how far
off, take it from her captain, she goes
down to "nine hundred feet, and on
dark night we get away with it—"
Their Little Luxury.
Every little handle in the submar-
ine's central operating compartment
has a meaning all its own. She aims
• her torpedo with her own helm, and
Whenever it pleases her captain at
the forward periscope to touch the
torpedo -key, she sends it away with
ten thousand pounds of compressed
air, a reluctant "whoosh!" and a fare-
well not at the bow.
And the submarine's crew is like
no other crew in the Navy, During
the first four or five days of a patrol
they sleep all the time off watch.
After that, when they're completely
slept out, there's nothing to do but
hang on. They can't sit • down, be-
cause they'll fall off.. They can't play
the gramophone, because they'll wake
up somebody. They can't smoke, be-
cause they may set off an explosion.
If they want to smoke they have to
go up topside, and the more men up
topside, the more time is lost -when
'time is most valuable-iin securing
hatches to submerge. For this reason
only two men beside the officer of the
deck - and a look -out are permitted
up topside at once, and these only
lona enough for one smoke.
Submarines are divided into three I
sections, with sixteen Army cots for
a 'crew of twenty-four, They stand
the usual four hour on and eight off I
at the base, but at sea their watches
are out to three hours.
A Hint to the Thin.
A suzmarine is full of stale air,
fuel -oil, 'and battery -gas. She is so
small that at the base they have to
station a boat watch up topside all
r;ght to keep tall.eurface craft from
stepping on her. She has only five.
rooms, with steel bulkheads between
them, and steel doors that •can be
dogged down so that if one 'room be-;
comes filled with the sea, four rooms
may remain. From bow'to stern'the'
five are the torpedo compartment, the
forward battery compartment, the
central operating compartment, and
the engine room. The officers hang
out in the torpedo compartment. The
:faro
a!wayys sloes with
he&ith,and health
inking is the big
resod for •
II ,,
(1. p
II
delicious food,
rich in the vital
pho zphi teg,
No Waste,You
eat and enjoy it
to the last ehtorn,
Health making,
nourishing,
, economical,
Cenado Food Rote Licenet flat626
'Witted F240 Z ft241 Lloenae
Naming the /Rockies.
fluting the progress of the stirvey
of the boundary between Alberta and
British Columbia, it region containing
same of tite loftiest'lreaks in Canada
wet' encountered not far north of the
United States-boimdnry. A number
ee them peaks have been rr.teed bet
tho Geographical Board after Canadi-
an and Allied soldiers of distinction,
and travellers to
the a,'ot=kiefa,
nunow tryto 011011) such heights
as Mount Currie, Mount Tumor,
Mount 1Mor1•ieon, :'41'ount Mercer,
Mount Watson, anti Mount Bishop.
The genius of Sit Douglas Haig is
commemorated in a peak 11,000 feet
high,_ and thetrasne5;,o.f Generals nett,Jeri, and Potain alio given to peke
or almost equal elevatiols, King Ale
bort; and Queen Elizabeth ef 13e1glum
ttro also vemontber'ed, as is General
Loman, the gallant defendez of Liege,'
The W .o t kl y
a. Pasilk); is
A real soldier suit for the small
boy who envies hie big brother. Mc-
Call Pattern No. 8506, Boy's Suit. In
4 sizes, 2 to 8 years: Price, 15 cents.
A charming' dressy suit
in satin for mid-season wear.
smartness is attained through
simplicity. -McCall Pattern
8495, Ladies' Coat. In 7 sizes,
46 best. No. 8518, Ladies'
Piece Skirt. In 7 sizes, 22 to
waist. Price, 20 cents -.earth.
EA91$ trnUN!ANAL/S . i
RBO T� Pt111 Mite FENCIIE
I Mt!ytutueotrns tae t'r!coe CtoWpii
1 1'rantpi ulprlsN3nn
- .1, POULIN ;I4 CO
ux 90 7e 4°.w,,, u M,,,sxktit - Illekeetrett
VEILING' ` P11100)'' IS 1°OUND
U'.$, C01tEIISPONI)7 N'l'.
{VAItriI, 1 FOR AIRMEN
As lfiesnit Of Electric Clothe0 Now
Ming Pel+feetod, •
The electric clothing lvorll by Bri-
tish alrmen Ilan now been greatly im-
proved, says the Daily 'Express,
Gloves allose and wfi eteeat ere et
4anlsrs WANTED
1y"e.' goon prints Irtnlelling 0 speelelfty.
t.1'It`'V Ilii 11' Adze:J ie eVAN!LlNG
Trenter and everything at lewoet prices,,
nlle d Art 't•a, i lira/umiak Are„•
warvrrr»
• A7.191)3fA) b;Irt)TT )7.MIT7dTe7.11);
Uothwefl, Onlsrio. .11c14 linin.,
Rothwell, Ontario,
ta4llsd by separata wires to the ha • pPn ranee
engreele e, eteeiwrei photogl'aplls ' ,
---'tvero damaged and 1hxoe ren incl te1Y of tho machine, and if rho lrilot s I�7t,f, z,2ltal'+,'lou
Iuspe ,i tt on togrin hs of Nie as t - o qt al ex n„i,
p g falls no 'ti(7�lr7iv r i 11 1
1 9' in Now °Mono owner going t
t, o
Inspects
vp)ssrint'ni'alit
sa l feet are the aniline,
arts 'of has hods <, nae iota y,rintinx J�lruu in ls,tnl,• n
hateaus; on the walls untouched, they were y p nla.,lo. lnewante nirried 11.400. W 11
which ne wire hoot can switch off 1r0 l'0l • 11;400 on gale sale, Ilex
Now Wreaks ae Result or Gerpuans' ' of the American II'alis, one of .tiro n u) sh n,; r;o„ 1,14.. Toronto.
the -other wires,
Bectu! Savagely, Illorseshao Falls and one of the riven ermimy realized tho uses of elbec^
taken from Goat Island, trieally-warmed garments ut the be
-
!taken seemed to be tt suspicion in In another home, which was treated I
ginning of the war, but it. was 'not
the United States, at' laast during .the somewhtit weeee ti until the pttnars the until later that the British seriously
Oner. leantif 1 C
earlier days of the' war, that the Geriiitns . had. fired rifle bullets into adopted the system, f3onie eight hon.
stories of German vandalism were the pictures and, with the salvo clred outfits are now .supplied per
more propaganda thin Lntlth, that weapons, had shot off the necks of Iveelc by the two firms engaged in
they, were circulated to stir tee and t•lleee and fancy glass flower holders: (the lnarittfaetune of these electric
foi'"t (a
wAr t.el'1'?e
s in3 srlf re
of the sta
khat„German . officers had ivasltonly I !)sen realized by the vandsla e. Te Corspany for the use of airmen• The
wrecked and llefiled nagnifi'+ent pri- crunched unlex heels and thrown gloves are of the softest and thinnest
vete residences.
against -walls. Bodciin was rf ]isle material, and do not impede
I have no doubts now. 'I know the ' to. pieces and ' valuable g over'letspand the wearer in the „ most delicate
Huns do things which no one without enrtains torn to'shreds. operations to his machine. They are
wired up the Miele and attached by
THE "BLU ATVI'LS'• a connecting etring to the sleeves of
the waistcoat, The cold at high alti-
Cltausseurs Algins, Frnnce's Great'teides cannot numb the bands when
Fighting Regiment. i they are encased in these scientific-
ally -warmed gloves. Fur gauntlets
Prance has no soldiers of Whom aro worn over them.
consideration whatever, stealing thou
she is more proud than of her Chase ! • The electric clothing was first sup -
food and returning just enough to the
sours Alpine, whom she has dubbed plied to our airrmen in October, 1917,
poor people to keep body and soul het Blue Devils, ijust before the long-distanes raids
together. It is true that now and See them as they march in their into Gerinany bean.. It was not pos-
again an instance is found where one picturesque uniform of black coat, sible to utilize the scientific heating
German in a group of a hundred or blue trousers, andiblack tam-o'-shan- of the clothes by electricity at the
say n a iyAhatred It exlnans, The mutilation ]fere wa p. y ! �i A e Daily Pxpross representative
s.
ponclent wanton, Family tzin)rets and heir-
I had some doubt gay ding looms -old flunil was shown the garments manufae-
y portraits whose
the complete truth tenfolets preciousness to the own r u t h tared by the Radia -Electric Clothing.
WS
ons eahabl
a bestial nature could do. They loot,
they burn, they wreck, they defile.
They commit crimes against property
which cannot be discussed. They leave
death traps in their wake.. They de-
vise most devilish infernal machines.
They treat aged civilians with no
more shows a spirit of kindliness to
sons feeble civilian, but 111 every case
of this kind I have been able to run
down the humanity sprang from the
heart of an Alsatian or a Pole,
Every chateau which the Germans
have occupied in the region between
the Marne anti the Vesle-and the
chateaus are everywhere and,, the
mans always choosy them for their
officers' headquarters -has been mar-
red end mutilated. Every city and
village where the Huns sojourned on
their vandalistih'' march south from
th Chemin des Dames tells a woeful
story of destruction and pillage. I
went through twenty of them. They
are homes of wealthy families."They
presented a sad spectacle when the
American and French troops entered
the city on the heels of the retreat-
.. .ing Germans, who had been resting
in comfort in the beautiful homes
for six weeks.
What They Did.
developed
The
its
No.
84 to
Four -
84
The girl at college always finds it
necessary to have a dressy little serge
frock in her wardrobe. The one il-
lustrated is developed in midnight -
blue serge with a guimpe ofe.black
satin. McCall Pattern No. 8312,
Mdsses'"Dress, In 3 sizes, 16 to 20
years. Price, 20 cents. '
Elaborately simple, with Youthful
lines and a pleasing sf liouette, 1e this
design of serge and satin. McCall
Pattern No, 8492, Miseos' Dress, In
4 sizee, 14 to 20 years, Price, 20
cents.
These patLeens mast be Obtained,
from your local MaC,all dealer, or
from the McCall Co,, 70 Bond Ste Tor.
onto, Dept, W.
Mote than 1;1100 wanton Werk at the
British Adnilralty,
`1'hero Is no more gentle creature
00 aartb thalr the Tat bislr saSlar, w
The 1iis1roP of Soutliwdll,
Here are some of the things the
German officers or .their orderlies did
in one home: -
Threw an ink bottle against a seven
foot mirror, afterward splashing ink
on the walls and ceiling.
Jammed a bayonet through the
works of five handsome marble clocks.
Tore covers and blocks of pages
from costly volumes and strew more
than. 500 books about the floor, prac-
tically ruining a library which was
evidently the pride of a booklover.
Tore a teddy bear in two; pulled
arms and legs from large dolls;
smashed a doll cradle and generally
wrecked a child's nursery.
Smashed all the china in a cabinet
and a cepboard and shattered expen-
sive glassware.
Slit oil paintings and stamped holes
in pictures which had been torn from
the walls and left on the floor..
Broke the keys on a costly piano.
Knocked tops off vases and fancy
urns.
Slit tapestries and curtains to rib-
bons.
Threw bottlees against handsomely
decorated walls and poured various
kinds of sauces and other liquids on
expensive rugs and carpets.
Rifled every drawer in the house;
blew. open a small. safe; threw trink-
ets and feeicy Reticles of wearing ap-
parel all over.
Wrecked beds, dressers and mit'-
ror's in all the sleeping rooms.
And even this does not tell all. It
would be difficult to give an adequate
picture of any of -'the score or more
of fine homes which the Germans oc-
cupied "and wrecked as they were
forced hurriedly to abandon them to
the oncoming Franco -Americans.
There remains in none of the -hones
I visited hardly a thing which is of
any value, and some of the homes, in
furnishings and decorations alone,
represented an expenditure of at least
,$160,000. •
Systematic Destruction.
Chateau Thierry is a very old and
a very wealthy city. It is the centre
of manufacture of musical intru-
merets._ Every shop in the city was
stripped. Not a bottle of. wine re- wore granted special powers to put
r
mained 111 any of the wine shops an end to 'their. own misdoings by the Massie creek,-uors from its
ltillingr largo numbemills to rs
and not a. pair of shoes or,a piecle of governor. A reign of terror followed.
wearing apparel was ,to be found Under the pretence that they wore of fish, The company claimed that
when the allied troops entered the suspects, rich merchants were shot fn ally. Dilution of streams is a seti-
place. ' broad daylight and robbed. "House tom matter,
In Pere-en-Tardenois the homes inspection" and "penal confiscation”
were nsut'ileted in the same way,' brought In a pretty haul. Before long
There, I think, the Germans were a Ino man's life and no man's property
little nrbi•e vicious than in Chateau -were safe,
Thierry. The fact that they -were not! And the government had to sp-
routed so hurriedly out of Fare -en -1 point a second vigilance committee
Tardenois may account for the more to -.get rid of the first one.
petted disfigurement and destruction I
of property there, Fere-en-Tar'denois'GIR LS! WHITEN ,SKIN
is a city ordinarily of about fifteen' WITH LEMON
thousand inhabitants, with - large I —
shops, handsome homes and attractive Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to
streets, Now there is not a house; remove tan, freckles, sallowness.
that is habitable; nota dive:ping'
ter set at a jau ty angle! Short of beginning of the war as the machines
stature, broad of shoulder, with mus - ,then in use did not generate sufficient
cies of iron and nerves of steel, they power to allow part, of the electricity
swing proudly along wtih the air of to be used for warming the airmen.
conquering heroes. _4_
"They are," said a French officer I'
o---o--o-o- o -o -0 -v -o -o -n
to the' writer, "the elite corps of our
army, the most daring, skilful, and
doughty fighters we possess, and
every man of them is a seasoned war-'
rior, hard as nails and bold as a lion.;
They are, in fact, all specially chosen
for their courage and physical
strength."
No troops undergo such a hard °"-O-O--'O-O--e-
training, for in addition to the regu- Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or
lar training for infantry, they are any kind of a corn can shortly he lift -
taken for three months to the morin- ed right out with the fingers if you
tains where they undergo a drilling will apply on the cern a few drops of
that would 4111 or disable any but the freezone, says a Cincinnati authority,
strongest men. They are trained to
march almost incredibly long distanc-
es in the snow, to scale the loftiest
and most difficult peaks, to leap crev-
asses, and to travel swifItly on skis
and on skates.
They have as splendid a record of
fighting as any soldiers in the world.
They performed prodigies of valor
Napoleon. They have covered them-
selves with glory in 'the Crimea and
Algeria, Italy and Morocco, and dur-
ing the present war they have excel-
led,.even themselves.
It was their furious fighting in Al-
sace in the early days of the war that
won for them the title of "Blue Dev-
ils," for no devils could have fought
more fiercely. And at Metzeral,
Lingerkoff, and Hartmannsweiler-
kopf they were like so many infuri-
ated tigers let loose on the enemy.
One .of their most wonderful feats,
indeed, was the capture of Hartmann -
WITH THE FINGERS(
SAYS CORNS LIFT OUT
WITHOUT ANY PAIN
A.t little cost one can get a small
bottle of freezone at any drug store,
which will positively rid one's feet of
every corn or callus without pain or
soreness or the danger of infection.
This uew drug is an ether com-
pound, and dries tlie moment It is ap-
plied and --does not inflame or even ir-
ritate the surrounding tissue. Just
think! You can lift off your corns and
calluses now without a bit of pain or
soreness. If your druggist hasn't
freezone he can easily get a small bot-
tle for you from his wholesale drug
house.
•
Canada's Stake In the World Conflict.
How Canada is becoming, thanks
to- the skill and heroism of her sons,
linked up with the world conflict, says
Prof. Osborne of the University of
Manitoba. The young man who
brought down 'Heron Richthofen, Ger-
sweilerkopf, a steep and rocky peak, many's premier airman, was Brown,
as sheer almost as a precipice, north- a boy born in Carleton Place, and ed -
west of Thann. It was stoutly de- mated, they say, en Alberta schools.
fended by a much superior force of There was a clash for you between
Germai'Is; bu the Chasseuls charged Democracy and Autocracy, between
with such fut'�''in the face of a deluge peace and militarism. I read a few
of bullets, torrents of hand -grenades, weeks ago of a certain young Rego -
and sheets of liquid -fire, that the wear, a Canadian boy, who had crash -
Huns fled in panic before the "moun- ed to the earth and been killed after
lain devils" could come within strik- bringing down 23 German aviators,
Ing distance of thein. Later I learned that he was a son of
"La Belle France" has every reason a college classmate of mine, H. S.
to be proud of hor "Blue Devils." Rosevear of 'Port Hope, now living
--.: --- at Port Arthur, All honor to such
The World's Wickedest City. sons and such fathers. ' I talked the
other night with an honored school
Which is the wickedest city in the inspector at Guelph, William Tytler,
world? Put this question to ten dif- who, as a teacher, had had for a
ferent people and they will probably pupil McCrae, the author of the do -
all answer it differently. But if we servedly famous "In Flander Fields
are to take the verdict of statistics, the Poppies Grow.' And so it was
we must agree hat the wickedest city the air of Guelph, the soil of Guelph,
in the world is Irkutsk, in' Siberia,
which has been figuring so prominent-
ly In the news of late.
Before the war, Irkutsk had a popu-
lation 'of 120,000, and 500 murders
were committed every year there on
an average -the highest known aver-
age in Christendom. In other words, and Protestant, rich and poor, French
one inhabitant in every 240 died a and English -and Brought into vital
violent death. And of the murderers relation with world movements,
the flowers and fruits and fields of
Guelph that had ministered to the
upbuilding of the man who -was to
write lines of such haunting beauty
that the world will not let them die.
How Canada, I !repeat, is being bound
into one -East and West, Catholic
only one in ten was brought to trial,
and only half of them were convicted.
To remedy this state of affairs Irk-
utsk once decided to start a vigilance
committee. It got one. Everybody
wanted to servo on it. Ex -convicts
and thugs joined by the score, and
world causes, world conflicts!
Stream Pollution Serious.
The Hagar Strawboard and Paper
Co., of Xenia, Ohio, was recently fined
$100 and costs for allowing refuse
JUICE
which hale not been mutilated and pit- I Your grocer ]las the leucons and any
t eot lie counter will supply
drugof orU t t
inged; not a shop which ltas :not, been s_lp y
inotcd, Shellfire from the allied you whit three ounces of orchard white
eons in their blasts to drive the Ger- for a;tow cents, Sauceeo tho jtitoo of
mans north dict immeasurable damage two fresh looms into a bottle, then
Lo the exterior's of the buildings, but put In 'the orchard white± incl shako
the Germane did more.
3- went well. Tilts makes a quarter pint of the
through about thirterehomes there and very boat lemon slain whitener' and
found fn all the shine scene of savage coruplexton beautifier known, lttassage for purely formal purposes, for the
despoliation, Floets mune with this fragrant, creamy lotion daily into rights of the first. rumor belong to the
slsattered piecs of furniture, crockery, the face. track, amts 000 hands and United Stoles, -whose Stars rind
glaseweee; pictures torn from wails just see !tow freckles, tan, sallowuose, Stripes were vistaed there by Com- i
and hacked with knives; pianos redness and roughness disappear and tuander Poetry on April Gth„ 1000,
nlcicod and in conte instances smash- how month, soft and clear the skin Naturally, every station which ,tchiev-;
ed; clocks shattered; drawers 0000 1locnures. :Kest It is harnf1ess, attd as e!tllor Polo 10 anxious to leave a
and the eentsnts strewn all about; . the beautiful resulee will sureri5e yeti, visiting card. When Scott reached
the South bole 0II January 17th, 1912,
he planted the Orlon :reek at a spot'
half a mile front the Norwegian flag
Which Amendsc,n had phteed there ,
some menthe curlier',
iltftsltreeetMal:nein toe sale. arer)'•.vl:ere,
This is to oet•tify that I have used
MINA1ID S LINIMENT in my family
for years and consider it the best lint.
meet on the market, I have found it
excellent for horse flesh.
(Signed) i -
W, S. PINED.
"Woi&ldanel,," Middleton, N,S,
"Visiting Curds" at the Pole.
The elik flag which M. Amundsen
is {eking with him to plant at the
North Pole --"if the opportunity pre.
Bents itself" ---will he used, of course,',
private Ichors opened and torn to
bits; wall safes blown no' pried open; M'inard's xlnrmmrt (inre2 nttenie Teta,
bottles overywhere. : Cold water and ; turd will' relnove
Mutiiatiot Was Wanton. ' ;Wheel grease from cloth, if the tied -
In tine Bone snore than thirty tele is afterwards washed in colt!
patintings mill pictures oe other hinds water', . issue; Na. 119-'1S
J,,J,1LJ..'1' )iifwc PANlift 1''U7t 13A1.I0
]Tranc. 'Will soli MOO. Worth double
that 0111 bunt Apply T, 11„ c"0 Wilson
Publishing 0o., Limited, -Toronto.
Y ADI13I WA•YTICI)-,3))0 PO -PLAIN
_!.J usd Ilsht setvluft at homo, whole or
2081'0 time, 3,001! 1'aY, worlc'eent ally dis-
tano0, u11ar4F,es nald, sono atu.mp lig Par-
Oculars. 1Wttional !vla)tufaeturinq Coln•
0x11)', Montr0a7.
tilA.NCA.7Zt, j'2!111;O12F1, LI1MP1, OIIL'u,
lnternu,l and 0)08rna6 cured with-
out nal» by OLP home treatment 'Writs
us before too Isle. Dr. 13e11mau Medical
Co„ Limited, C0111ngwood• Ont,
To B. itaizi From America.
Because we put aside the yoke,
Because the voice of freedom spoke,
Think you, we have forgotten her
Who niede our fathers whit they
Brit sin 7were,
Thiel, you, that pa33i 1t' tyrannies
Ccu'ld rob us of our memories,
V 'ho, in that far unhappy age,
Were faithful to our heritage, .
And kept alive, by word and deed,
The fire you Iit at Runnymede?
Bemuse we flung our gates so wide,
And called all peoples t') our side,
Think you, that we can walk unmoved
Upon the earth our fathers loved;
Or witness with untroubled eyes,
To -day your splendid sacrifice?
0, Britain I With uncovered head,
Here, in the presence of your dead,
We plight the word of faithful men;
The common cup• we drink aga'n.
We wrong you not by flattery;
But offer that you understand,
The true and open heart and hand,
The friendship of a people free,
The honor of another Land,
Her faith in your nobility,
-v-
26inai'd'a Liniment Believes Neuralgia.
The whole cost of the Crimean War
-£70,000,000-would just about pay
the cost of the present war for ten
days.
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money Or-
der, „They are payable everywhere.
An aeroplane recently forced to
land behind the British lines in
France was piloted by a 17 -year-old
German girl,
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
•
In Jamaica there ere trees called
the "whip -trees," and from these the
natives make strong whips with the
lash and handle all in one.
KNOCKS OUT PAIN
THE FIRST ROUND
Comforting relief from pain
makes Sloan's the,
World's Liniment
This famous reliever of rhetmlat:o
aches, soreness, stiffness, painful
sprains, neuralgic pains, and most
other external twinges that humanity
suffers Beene, enjoys its great sales
because it practically never fails to
bring speedy, comforting relief,
Always ready for use, it takes little
to Penetrate without rubbing and pro-
duce results. Clean, refreshing. Made
in Canada. At all drug stores. A
large bottle means economy.
V4I01s1QR, UA1r IPI 41'it[7ITgtl
Mt . Elleitme. etl geen
rwerl:. Malan HAL
(,wholeo,
s ,
"roll wheeet
wu o Sole, AMUdeo Nai'ioa Po
ne0nb. •
Cauogdent gale@
,end dau,•ihand,
do naN6,0,,!, dough.
Delberad oil chalq,
pa1I le Toy: Name, et
tivoe55 Ayer d okr-
four ra.1 4Gy .$1.751
elle lei .lee el.15.
.T,WRIQHT00,_ 1
HAMILTON
cAnn
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LIQUIDS
and
PASTES
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YOUR SHOES KM
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