Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
The Clinton News Record, 1918-10-24, Page 7
�; � .�.. Lit-...=,rw .� t 10E A S TORTURE ! 1.00,, mit,,,,„,, ) ` A N W CAPTIVES' $,;�',9 T MACHINE GUNS Victory • `y FOTO Lit yTY' CANAPAS -Vne i'Ql't1' I CAN 1918, •, Subscribe for O pildl's fo1-t1'l<ca111i1)$. 5 IAN° JO YEAR. `5 ! i `"0 [WINDS $6CL00— $100.00 Wit/iota the Victory ltaxlt ' our soldierrl enuhd not he maintuhidtl in • Nrence, ` Our f'uringre maid out ntancct thele' Pre, Junta, 7 'Our factories 11-0111,'11.:1`0 1:9 .00:40 clown, Our geemal trade 8(1(1 e;nnnitlree would suffer the most serious d€pre11sien. It is a,cluiy, and every person •Should buy a B0114 Use our "Partial Payment Plan" It makes it easier: l-l..M. onnolI � _ y & Co. (Members Montreal Stock E'xchange) 105-106 Transportation Building - Montreal STORY OF FRENCH HEROISM M AT SEA ENCOUNTER !x0'1'11 A U-BOAT OFF COAST 01? BRI'J"TANY Fhtelcy Fight Against Tremendous Odds For Which All the Sur. vivors Received Decoration. There is the story of a sailing ship's colribat with a U-boat which is a stir- ring example of french heroism and shows the value of efficient anti-sub- marine training . having left a Bri- tish.- pont with a cargo of coal for La Rochelle, the sailing ship Kleber (227 tone), carrying a crow of twelve, was making way before the wind, and oh", afternoon, when off the coast of Brittany, a big U-bo(Tt appeared in the distance and openedie fire. The skipper of the Kicker, "Maitre - au -Cabotage" Maitrenu Cabotage Le i`anvre, proceeded t1 n4, landward 1 and 1 - the U-boat uiiuioetiv,'ed to get the 1 ach tkeep- ing lei- the sun,ace 6 P ing up •n running fire, lvhich was answered by the 1'renc11 boat. Several big shells struck the Kleber, one of which killed the captain and stunned for a few minutes the head gunner, a" Iad of nineteen named lain. The mate, Pleeeis, retaining sufficient men. to man the gun, ordered the rest of the crew, six in all, to take to the boats, end then fell mnortally:wound- ed. Deeds of Plucky Sailors. Monnier, the boatswain, speceeded tothsi e Command.a c Of the SIN men who leftli vessel; t e V 5,e1; 80011•, ane of them wounded, were in he lifeboat, and two in the dory. The submarine steered for the lifeboat, and: ordered the four °caupants to get on her deck, took the lifeboat in tow and proceed- ed toward. the Kleber, assured pre--, sumahly that only dead or dying were on board. But there were three plucky Frenchmen---Monnier,.ihe boatswain, Jain, the gunner and Brazile; a clerk' hand, and woinided, who had taken the place oi: Jain when temporarily stunned. Nearing,•the Kleber, the U- boat opened fire and was promptly answered by the Kleber. Brasil was gait and his place t, as taken iy"Mourner, who continued firing. The commander of the U-boat was eri- dently nonpulased by the defence, for suddenly he.gave orders to submerge, end his„hoat went eerier so rapidly that; not only were the four men of the Kleber on her deck thrown into the Water, but also one of the crew of the submarine. All lie managed ti" scramble into the lifeboat. Night closed and the Kleber van- ished into the dank, making for the ;Isle of Croix, from which the•ntoving l une of the lighthouse were seen, `hi ai.'cly entered port at 1 ,.all. The lifeboat picked up the dory, and both crews pulled toward the Isle of Croix. Dui ing the night the U-boat again eppe.a•ed. The commander ordered the lifeboat alongside and took off she member of his crew. Ile then erdered the lireboat..away and clisap- �Np'�ul�°I`� I r RR,nl,a ,sit 11 wamC 81117 kb bit e, -[ bile [iraNt • A FOOD Spying Sugar and Wheat is comfortably done when one uses 6tapeNuts This Cereral food its Colmpoied part- ly art and Co tains ibarlets own made d from its bran sprains: AAy wonder, ready d r, rood,ful h. d1 � 'e Cinbde rood (Baan [kettle IV 2-0210 peered,' Later the lifeboat and the dory arrrived in port. • The Minister of Marine cited in an order not enly•tho captain, but the vessel itself, .and all the .stu'vivors were decorated. "The crow of the Kleber, by thein,- gallant behavior, fighting against tremendotiaodds, 11ave saved their ship and given an example of which the whole Trench navy can well be proud7—"so 1:110s the. special order, .. -THE BREAD TUNNEL One of the Moat Ingenious Devices' Ever Made by War P'rison`ers. There is, certainly more 'tragedy than comedy in the cruel dispppoint- merit of unhappy prisoners thwarted in a promising and almost successful effort to -escape; nevertheless, the gallant gayety that has marked so )nany.of the allied fighting filen does not fail them wholly even in such cir- cumstances. aces. • Lance Corp. CI 571 La 1'<'• Bake z whoe r ceiltly 1 econntcid his Prison experiences wastes no pathos on himself or on his fellow sufferers when they failed to get sale away through their ingenious tunnel, (old can even see a funny side to the af- fair. Some of the other prisoners had be- gun the tunnel and had worked upon it daily for a, month before they tet him into the secret, which finally be- came known to several hundred of the captives. It opened.fr00) the last hat at the end of the back row and was headed for the only clump of. bushes Rny- where near the cflmp, The soil was se sandy that it was impossible to make a tunnel in the ordinary way; a loll time passed before g ole the boys hit on a -plan. After our own packages had begun to come and WO 118(1 white bread to eat, says the corporal, some genius bad a happy' thought of using war bredd for bricks. TheWarbread is as' tough and as .hard as rubber and of about the size and shape of a small stone bier]: that you use i;or paving streets. We kept the bread buried until night. Then we piled it up in a kind of crate, and when theQ sentries were out of sight we rushed' it over to the tunnel,. It was the most beautiful tunnel, you .ever saw. The sides were built-up like brick walls, and the roof was a perfect arch. 'J`he sand that we teak out was -the Same color as the sand of -the chump, and as • the ground was almoet always wet you couldn't tell- the difference. We would. take it out in small. -Lintels and scatter it all over 1;810 place, and with several thousand men walking `000(1 there 1155 110 way of detecting it. Of course it was slow -Bork making the tunnel, for 110 had to accumulate. war bread, and se, to an7use.0nr- eelves, •we fixed it all up. We stick pictures fromnewspapers on the. wall and we . Oren lana wire down from the cookhonse and lighted it up -with electricity. We tool: some of the lamps, and when the guard wanted to know where they were we slid they had got broken. • A. hundred and twenty yards had been built out of the hundred and fif- ty that the tunnel had to go when a miserable Frenchman, to curry favor lvitli hie captors, betrayed the secret. The other French prisoners concerns ed were wild with -sage and Shame; and when the whole camp was lined up for investigation -and pun.•is11nient the French noeonlnissieued officers stepped forward end begged "for the honor of the French'army" to be al- lowed to take snot only their own share of punishment bu that of `ill the others. But, of course, says'" Corp. Baker, the 'British wouldn't -have that, and the noncommissioned,. British officers: gave themselves up. 't was a regular bowing and scraping, "Yon-first-niy- dear -Alphonse" sort of preceedingA fewof the 111e11 were given five months in solitary, but most ofthem got off pretty easy, because the Ger- man officers were leech amused, They thought, they had taken away every conceivable tiling that could nil+ used for: tunnel building, but they "never thought of the war bread. German. officers came for miles round to see the tunnel. They wouldn't let 01 destroy it ,but kept it ea 11 curiosity. Even the general of a, division near by cane in to see it. Tie acid it eves the finest piece of sapping he had ever sten. )Vumon !!Take 'tanks. British women are now making 181110 for the army. f 1n one faetol;v every operation in the whole pt'otess of construction is ('01)1ed 022 by wo- men and in many others they a re employed 01) They else making good in many varieties of shipyard work and in blest •fnrnac80, lnrickyards and apolter works. A. fere 1111111 In charge of a blast furnace is quoted as s4, iiif ■ that he weuld be y willing to undertake eny form of ferroconcrete woirk with only wohten as his 8851stantsr •'t T'JiiSO'iiEJif. LABORING IN SALT MINAS 1)11 1. x: % 't'iii:Sllt ARMS 1 D 41 OW CROSS AND RAO IOW C 11(, BANDS ON ((0,000 Teuton Soldierai, Itoftering To Go to the F ront, Are held In Cantle Uear Berlin. Ten British aflieers, including five stleteher cases, and 1°20 0oneommis- xiened officers and man, including thirty-nine stretcher came, have ar- rived fromGermany i1) Rotterdam, where I visited them, writes a British war correspondent front the Ilagye, These prisoners all are Beverly woun- ded. I1) conversation with many of. thein I learned they did not know until they arrived at the Dutch fron- tier of the Bulgarian collapse or of the latest brilliant. succeesos by the Entente' armies, they being, es far as possible, kept from the public. of Ger- many. They gis°e unanimous testi- mony of Germany's War weetineae. Several men told us that at Aix-la- Chepelle•they were begged by a guard .from Guben to give biro some of their food derived from English parcels. Ile said he had eight days', leave to go to Berlin to visit/his parents, hitt !ie- mained .only two days, as, they were unable to provide him with food and he did 'not wish to rob them of what they needed themselves. They saiNal- most all the Germans with whom they came in contact ekprossed the firm resolve to' go to England immediately after the war, as they considered England would be the country par excellence for destitute Germans when Germany was unable to support liar 0111) population owing to the heavy burden of taxation and econ- omic difficulties. Some of our men told mo that Bri- tish prisoners who had been in Ber- lin for court-martial appeals recently stated on their return to camp that the German civilians of Berlin had assured theni there were 60,000 Ger- man soldiers in camp near Berlin owing to their =refusal to go to the front, while there were three other camps filled ,with men under arrest for 11 similar. reason. 1 1me Otho` British prisoners told that wlieu they were coming away children came to them, begging bis- -euits front ±101P atrols . Wounded Prisoner Tortured. 1 heard many stories of brutality to our prieeneIS. One was from a British officer with a paralyzed hand, who said a German dotter who dres- sed his arm told iris assistant when -he touched a certain part of the arm: "That is a nerve." This British oil e, ser, 11'110 speaks German, said: "Yes, that fs a nerve." Whereupon the Ger- man doctor said to the assistant: "Here is an Englishman who under- stands German. NOW shall we see how. t13o . Englishmen can scr0am" to had the prisoner's Thereupon 1 ] a n s P. n mi'inP ut over tile assistant's shoulder and bound,•to his back, and gave it six excruciating jabs with an instru- ment. A third officer from Skalmersehutz, province of Posen, fully confirmed a story of the shocking conditions pre- vailing" `•!,long 0)11 111011 who reached there from behind the German lines. Other returning prisoners told nee of harrowing stories of. cases within their personal knowledge; Havoc worked among our fellow country- men, but they were forced to labor in coal and salt mines and stone quar- ries. They declare these. cruelties cannot be known to our authorities or steps would bo taken to prevent their recurrence. One man from Aix-la-Chapelle said he personally knew of .six cases of British prisoners who we're' sent to work he the coal mines near there who rammed to camp mere shadows, their bones sticking through their skin. The men died. Prison Camp Secrets Revealed. The Amsterdam 'lelogranf publish. es 'additional details of the secret of. the German camp at Lichtenhorst. The paper says it 'received a letter from two Dutchmen who passed some time in the notorious leichtenhorst camp. In. this letter also is described the secret of the camp and the picture given of the beastly treatment to which Hollanders there were subject- ed completely corroborates -what al' - ready has been published. Tile papee says its fellow country- men 11110 fortunately escaped write that their night quarters consisted of a cellcontaining nothing but a hoods en couch and two tablecloths given to them to sleep under. "The first night ewe attempted'to do 'our best to sleep, but we hoard sup- pressed weeping in the cell next to 711," the letter rends, "We learned a Dutchman lay: there 111110, having !leen caught while attempting to escape was panelled in the cruelest way WW1 a bayonet, so lie lost consciot3sness. He was put on bread and avater, and had to try- to sleep oil the hard ground without blankets. The Dutch- men arc by far the worst treated. "What- we saw ±11010 was almost incredible. We saw wrecks of Men, clad in rags, "with the upper parts of tlteil' bodies naked; Some were bine with.welts oe the hack i11'eonsequenee of ill treatment. "We saw great boles in the Peet of those obliged to work in the salt 0111101 barefooted. When they 1vere unable to work longer because of inis- ors, 11nd; exhaustion they were driven 80.(115)1 11'it11 the 1131±15 (1f, rifles, At first we emir Linable to believe the terrible stories, but Camp No, 3,'As the, churchyard is e1711ed, was shown 10 `lis. Theft forty er00508 81)111d as dumb witiles5e$ to German rruelty, A plentiful supply of green food 18 necessary for hens and should be givenwhile -dt is fresh, At the evening meal Willie was,dts' posing of his, soup with speed and noise "Wilkie!" saki his /nether, 111 a reprimanding' done ,,r°`Willio knew irenne(1itintelw what hierno1her meant, ant), '418017ning 122 injured 1i1, rep li edt: nT 11517't „oft 815!8 as ratt is coed"il" . $111 1'11 Madigant t7nr0. teethe oto Developed in serge this one-piece dress is just the last kv0rd in en><:lrt- nlese. McCall Pattern ' No. 8080, Ladies' Dress. In 6 sizes, 34 to 44 bust. Price, 25 cents. A' suit is an essential with the well- dressed woman, and here is an ex- ceptionally unusual adaptation of one. McCall Pattern No.. 8547, Ladies' 'Double -Breasted Coat. In 7 sizes, 34 to 46 bust. Price, 25 "cents. Mc- Call No. Pattern 83 Ladies' 1 88, ad as' Skirt. In b' sizes, 22 to 3d waist, Price, 20 cents. This is a :swagger little design fol: the 'young girl. This semi tai•1o,red suit has peplums -which may be 'horn either doable or single. McCall Pat- tern No. 8568, Misese:; Cont Snit. In 4 sizes,• 14 to 20 years. Price, 26 cent:, 171181 could lie snarler than braid and buttons? Then, an uneven tunic to add to The dio5tincti0n 0± IlIis 0011- Model. McCall Pattern No. 8578, Ladies' Coat, InU si7 4, 84 0 1 1 bust, Price, 25 'cents No, 8556, Laches' Three'Pieco Skirt, t, In 7 sizes, 22 to 84 w.u't; Trice, 20 cents, Thole petterns may bo obtainedn t from your local McCall dealer, or front i.ite M5Cn1I Co,, 70BondSt., Toronto, Dept, W. American Trooper Describes, Selu0 of 1101 Expolienees lin the French Battlefields. "17e have been so busy chasing the e1erny that 1. have had no time to write,. NOW 11i'ill be out of it for awhile 111 reserve, and, if the rumor is true, we shiall go to Italy before long," says 5.41.8, artilleryman in a letter to his 'mother in New York, "We have had a hard time of it, but Pulled out O.K. The Hun is a great running fighter. Ile is what we call a master in real guard action. Ile hoe been driven back for miles; and is still going, 1 ut not so fast .as formerly. He is in a good position now and will endeavor to hold it. I do not think be will sovery long, We have oracked his morale very badly, arid another'revorse Bice this one will break it, I am sure, .If it does the war will be over and the inhuman Hun crushed,. "To get here we rode in trains for About two hlundred miles. We had our generalservicewaggon on top of a Hat ear. Another officer and myself put. On Orn' raincoats and sat up on the seat. The drain averaged about twenty inile3 an hour, aiind,:,at that rate we had a chance to see some- thing ' f. France. It was one great lido and sightseeing trip. I was lilce a colored man when I got off the train, but the trip was well worth the experience. Got the Surprise of His Life. "Heine got an awful' deal this 'time, He had an idea that the Americans would run at the sight of a Hun. He got the surprise of his life when he found we would entertain him as we did. The Huns are yellow clean through. When ane old German cap- tain was told that ho was facing the Americans •'he would not believe it. When we told him there were a mil- lion and a half in France and showed i him. 501110 papers o of our a ors tl xeo weeks ks old he began to cry. "He said the German army and people understood that only one hun- dred thousand of our boys were here and that •we were all second rate troops. -Most of the prisoners we got were mere bays from sixteen to twenty years of age. They certainly co he.te us. They will have cause to do so. For instance, of one place on our right a large Red Cross flag was hung out of a church, and as the Hun fell back and we advanced the com- pany in front of the church paid no attention to it but continued to acl- vance. When they arrived at about a hundred yards from the church the Iitins opened fire from the church with two machine guns. Woll, they' took the church, but not prisoners, Just beyond the church was a small river with a wood with a river behind it. The place was dotted with about two hundred machine gun nests. One company took this wood. One Hun came out with his hands over his )lead yelling 'Kanlerad,' They took Trim tt prisoner. Ile was the only one. We captured boys working machine guile, They were chained to their guns, and they all had Red Cross' bands on their arms" • The Menace of the Hun. • Four years we have been fighting The Hun in all his plight, But now the clay is dawning For the triumph of the right. The enemy is fleeing, We must keep him on the run. Ti11 eve rid the world forager From the m0nace of the Hun. The world is steeped in sorrow, Our best blood has flowed in streams To stay a vain usurper And dispel his world -power dreams. But the day of retribution Is at hand, and sure to come, When God's oevn sword of justice Will descend upon the Hun, 1 To those whose dearly loved ones Will no more returh again, 'Tis a glorious consolation That they havo not died in vain. - They on the field ,of battlo Faced the foeman's blade and gun, To save their homes and' country Froin the- Mennee of the Hun, The dark clouds nolo Ore rifted And soon the strife will cease, Soon ours will be the victory And ours the terms of peace. So still he'll bravely "Carry 011" Till we the war have won, And the world is ,safe forever From the menace of the rime. --'g LEMON JUICE IS • FRECKLE REMOVER G1rIs1 Make this cheap beauty lotion to clear and whiten your skin. Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle contenting three 0nneee of 01611ard white, shake well, and you havo a quarter pint of the best freckle au/1 tan lotion, and complexion beauti- fier, at very, very entail cost. Tour grocer has the 1e1150ne incl ally drug store or toilet teenier will sup- ply three minces of orchard white for 1t ±011 cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion -.,:into the fact', neck, arms end hands eeeh day anal see bow freckles and blemishes -disappear and 11o11 clear, sett and white the skin be. c011100, 1.eet it is lutainles5. Mr, Ill, McCaw, who purehs'ed the Spencer 7111511, r a7 et n to , 922 Prime 'Edward county, last epriees, thrat.Y'Iled 970 bullets of oats from 1 i ,ones, a yield of over 88 bushels to the acre. 'I ieteiit'ii tiattueilt Stettaveri z(auraltelat The Falkland 'Wanda nr0 believed to l the ri lu! iplace in 'lfi � world end be 1 n a < st.p e impossible i tied gnronith ns plalttl(:all,y n 1 oss b1e t17e1•e. . ISSUE NO, 43. '1ti PrGIIIQNS IN WAR ZONE Much Rescue Work is Effeetod 12y 'Sturdy »'lying 11)1'115 Wonderful 4tori011 are told %1f the life -caving work of the British Army earrler pigeon 177 the well' zone. 11(1- (101111y a pigeon wee liberated from, rano 0f txv0 1',ritiab senplanes in the 01Ih 'Sen. ' • 1'lynilr through an oerial battle, the pigeon was Hounded in the leg by a bullet, but it arrived at ifs (10511na- ti(l11 i11 an exhausted condition, its feathers stained with blond. Tho mes- sage it marled was the one word "at tacked," According to the aviator'es report, received enhsequently, two -British machines were opposed by six Ger- man plume. The Germans, however, made -off before there was any chance of a more equal light. The sturdy Pigeon, 1011ic11 )tag recovered from its w0nn1, is now the pet of the Hying station and has been "pensioned off." Another pigeon, at the cost of its life, saved the lives of six Bri- tish airmen- who were adrift in the North Sea, After delivering their message, an appeal for help, the-pig- eon he"pig-eon .dropped dead from exhaustion. The wrecked airmen, when succored from their perilous position, were 011 the point of meeting a similar fate for they had no food and very little water. Germany's Lost Volcano. Soon after the war broke out Ger- many lost her only active volcano, which is situated on the .island of Savaii iI1 Samoa.. Samoa is a considerable archipel- ago, but only four of the islands are big enough to bo of any importance. Two of them (Tutuila and Manua) belong to the United States,.. The other two, which are much larger (Savail and Upolu, were German pro- perty until four years ago the British took then] over. It is safe to say the Germans will never get those islands back. But Savaii is not of much account, being mostly desert. The volcano, how- ever, is a fine specimen. What a jolly idea it would be to drop the Kaiser into it! 0•-•O--0 5 4-0— 0--O—O•^0-0-^07-0. PAIN? NOT A arm LIFT YOUR CORNS OR CALLUSES OFF No humbug! Apply few drops thenJ ust lift them away with fingers. o-ro—o—o—o—o-- 0 —o—o-ro—o--o—o This new drug 'Is an ether 00111 - pound discovered by a Cincinnati chemist. It is called • freesone, and can iiOw be obtained iu tiny bot- tles as here shown at very little oust from any drug..store. Just ask for froezone. Apply a drop or two directly upon a tender corn or callus and iustantly the soreness disappears.i Shortly you 1w111 find the corn or callus so loose that you can lift it oft, root and a11, with the lingers. Not a twinge of pain, soleness or irritation; not even the slightest smarting, either when applying freesone or afterwards. ' This drug doesn't oat up the cora or callus, but shrivels therm so they loosen and come right out. It is no hunlbtig! It works like a charm. For a few cents you can get rid of every hard corn, soft corn 01' Coro be- tween the toes, es well as painful calluses on bottom of your feet. It never disappoints and never burns, Ilites or inlianles. If your druggist hasn't -any freez0n0 yot, tell !nim to get a little bottle for you from his wholesale house. "1 grovel here before you in the dust!" observed ±11e impassioned youth, as he sank en the parlor floor. "I don't know what you mean by dust!" replied, she coolly. "I look niter th1's 1100311 carefully myself every morning!" 11'0 believe AIINAItll'S L1N11II17NT is the best: Mathias Foley, 011 City, Out. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. Charles Who0ten, 1lulgrave, N.S. Rev, It, 0. Arn a:trollg, Mulgrave, N.S. Pierre Landers, Sen., Poke,nouelle, N. 13. Headers were used :this season in southern Alberta to nave the :short wheat crop, will1 the result :that. -Ibe grain 11:n+fl cut on many fields where otherwise Nothing 100)11d have been secured. MONEY ORDERS A Dominion 1.xprnn Money Order for 1)10 dollars mists three cent,. Savo scraped robs of corn for use es fuel. Mant'e's 0da3mea3 Cures faattfinll. Don't 11331ng your herlt up to dry. This onuses then! 1,0 lose a Paige per- centage of their virtue. Instead, spread 'th1eln out t.11in)y, shaded hem the sun, en •n dry shelf. When dry, put them 31115 paper bag's. el 864 N 1.411 A 1, WWlt.aIi 1C,Y.1t.tTll, 64015119 NA 1{105., 0lotiewell, Ural. Jo, p4Ln �lY1r 1n1� 1L t l414U(3'3')5D Nl:Wgi,.o.o 11L , vrinting plant In Baetern <remo1, In1urance eurrled 87,,540. W'ul ire ter 81400 on quick acme, )3ox 4V, wlison Pabliahlnlr Co, Pae., Toronto, "k.�'])151CLY rate '13PA7 1713 70014 BALM ii in New ;motrlo 06116` gotna to Preece, 11'111 sell ;5.446. worth doubly !bat nnlount, AMA J. 1't,. No M']lsou 1''ublisbing Om, Ideated. 7brnnto, ZI58OFrZLANzauS ,fVN)' V1'it 1' 31(`15 1.11C0 KIR/117'1N° �7f c,nat of 0 n,rloivs g1 u, i 00171Plea, naw also, nal MIS y Contpw,,:, 11o, 1347, 6tu,n1lton. p' 571)2114. 1 AA I'1+1G 10 1)c) l'LA,tr4 l.g ant) nghr n5n111g nt 810015, 114015 00 times, 1(2210, gond pU)', Work sant ae9• 115. 11171043 68(1176011 int Id. Sand 812517)0 601 par, 11ae71.1fa,'.' Nntlanul 1lanuea:i'ar4pg Qom. es111 15 0111'1'0i. (!r ±0(121ltr, 7rt1100rtb, i.UM/'S, MC" 'l,1 lbterna( 4,71(1- exi0rnat. (lured with, 0314 pnhl by our bomq trsatmeut, write us berore too late, 1)r, 1•lenman Medical L'0„ 1-tmlt c1a1U,lSwood, Ant, If boiling meat fe inclined to he tough, add a teaspoonful of balcing sod's. Lttssrd's Mutinous rev hale nverywberm Boiled rice with cheese sauce is ao substitute for meat. n1ARtS'DaEA9 111 0 n 1)8100'. hdloo!Daan ,5 g�uDea ,00rk.• Mote, f1aht rois,,owhola,,, ,ih0000ne tt _: `i1 .trouble. Saves flour �.. is and helps conserve the Nation's food supply. C n nkat d, quick j and dean -815015 not touch dough. •i ° ' Delivered a5 charge. paid your home, or through h our dealer-- four nler— four loaf size $2.75; eight loaf size $3.25. E,T.W••RIOp1T00. HAMILTONLimx• CANADA How to Purify the Blood A b" o1 'Fifteen to thirty drops of rEz:tra ct of it0ota commonly y called Mother 5e18c1's Curative 1 Syrup, may he taken in water with meals and at bedtime, for the cure of on indi estic - g o nsti1 4) potion and bad blood. Persist. pt �j moo in this treatment will effect © a cure in nearly every case." QGet the genuine at druggists. eepyaurshoes meii SHOE POLISHES f�otQidudiS TnAdN0APAp1SR0ES be OX -R7000 SHOES PRESERVE the LEATHER ntr.ro,urr CUM1PoA.0IGW ACHES ASI) PAINS QUICKLY ELIEVED You'll find Sloan`s Liniment softens the severe rheumatic ache Pelt it 011 ircel;•, Don't rub it tai, just let it pencfralc naturally. 7s'hat a 10)150 of soothing relief 50071 follows 1 -External aches, stiffness, soreness, cramped muscles, strained sinews, back "critics"—those ailments can't fight off the ' relieving qualities of 'Moan's Liniment. t. -lean, convenient, economical. Made f(1 C;auada. -AsIc any druggist for it. Let Cuticura Care For Baby's Skin It's really wonderful how quickly a hot bath with Cuticura Soap followed by a gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment relieves akin irritations which keep baby wakeful and rest- less, permits sleep for infant and rest formother, and points tohcahnent in most ca803 %then it $CCIn8 nothing would help. • Smola* sods Vico tlir Mall. Addres0 post. 'loblddealehauitislied� et.." ydealers ' 7 / r ! 3 '1 STOPS THE PAd ANI► ACTS QUICKLY a s:q 1est..wA > 0.785' 0 ac ltnl {n s ahs, fame brick, One h r a ens' 1117 1 , r i, 311(1 Rhcu]un i 4,,! s I u5ha, Wore t )18rs 'sl1'015 8loin sla alt e514a 0141 0 18 ere 010OkW s. t' _ IfeuaJ by'Prai e 1 e1n 7a ernanntor. It ha e5en 0018101'40 year, n ut elcr r d sold n how �rC ' 4:l1� 810 db01s v 1 5 red ?, ff a r swim r•,..^.•'6-Yi. L /t' �' . ¢rrr 11tt5rTl" t Lr .itlJrten r i s o, u r r , . 1 4,,1 sY CO.,i1CIftnntfit0li Cnnnci^,