HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-02-24, Page 7THE ACUTE PAIN
FROM NEURALGIA
Permanently Cured Through the
Use of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills
A' clever medical writer has said
• that "Neuralgia is a cry from /he
• nerves .for better blood." In °the
words, neuralgia is not a disease --it
is only a symptom, but n very painful
one. Neuralgia is the surest sign
that your blood, is weak, water* arid
impure, and that your nerves are lit-
erally starving. Bad bleed is the
one cause -rich, red blood the only
cure. This gives you the real reason
why Dr. -Williams' Pink Pills cure
• neuralgia. They ard the only ,mecli-
eine that contains in correct propor-
tions the elements needd to make
rieh, red blood. This new, rich blood
reecho the root of the trouble,
soothes , the jangled nerves, drives
' away the nagging,- stabbing pain, and
braces up your health in other ways
as well.. In proof of these statement
Mrs. A. T. Oulton, Little Shemogue,
N.13., says: --"A few years ago my
mothee- was an intense sufferer from
neuralgia, which was located in her
'face; bead and shoulders. The pain,
especially in her head, was intense.
She chietored for some time without
getting:relief and there seemed to be
no ceasing of the pain whatever. In-
stead it seemed to be extending and
her whole nervous system became af-
fected. Finally she decided to try
Dr. Williams' Pink_Pills, Aftee taking
them for a while the pain in her head
became less severe,- and of course this
was a great relief to her. Under the
continued use of the Pills she felt
• herself growingbetter and stronger
• each day until she was no longer a
sufferer and was Completely cured, and
has felt no symptoms of the trouble
since."
You can get Dr. Williams Pink Pills
from any medicine dealer, or by mail,
post paid, at 50 cents a box Or. six
boxes for $2.50, frone The Dr. Wil-
liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
• *d.
PRISONER§ ARE CONTENT.
Those at Bisehofswerda Have Plenty
' of Amusement.
Reporting a visit to the Bischof -
weeds (Germany) prisoners' • camp,
where several Canadian officers are
interned, the American representative
says that two Canadian ordeliee
haVe'beerihrought to the camfe,,bring-
ing the- total number of British'eft-
cers'sservants to seven, a fair propor-
tion in view of the fact that there are
only thirty-nine British officers, in-
cluding Canadians, .prisoners. There
was some dissatisfaction on the.Part
of the officers as to the amount of
fatigue work which their servants
were called upon to perform, but we
ten more non -British orderlies had
. just come, the commandant -thought
this would soon be rectified. d•
The senior British and Canadian
officers, majors, share a goodesized
room, and generally the British and
Canadian officers rooin by themselves,
with one or two officers of other na-
tionalities where there are accommo-
dations for ten to a dozen persons.
About a month ago, owing to the
unsuccessful attempt to escape, con-
cealed in a box, which hae been made
by an officer prisoner, certain privie
leges, such as football, a daily bath,
the use of wine and beer mid the In -
restricted receipt of letters and par-
cels, had been suspended for a few
clays, but all had now been restored.
Some time ago the praetice was intro-
duced of permitting officer prisoners
to take.. walks in the neighboring
country in company with German offi-
ces, and on their parole on each
occasion.
Scots Wha Rae.
Scots, Wha has Wi' Wallace bled,
Scots wham Bruce has often led;
Welcome to your gory bed,
Or to victory!'
NOW's the day, and now's the hour;
See the front 0' battle lour;
See approach moud Edward's power -
Chains and slavery!
Wha will be a traitor knave?
Wha can fill a coward's grave?
Wha sae ',base as be a slave?
Let him turn and flee!
Wha for Scotlandat King and law,
Freedom's sword will strongly draw,
Freeman stand, Os Freeman fa',
Let him follow mel
By eppreseion's woes and pains,
By your sons in servile chains!
We will drain -our dearest veins,
•But they shall be free!
Lay the proud usurpas low!
Tyrants fall in evey fool
• Liberty's in every Mewl -
Let us do or die!
-^
KEEP LITTLE ONES
WELL IN WINTER
• Winter is' e dangerous season feta
the little ones. 'The days are so
changeable -64 beight;,the next cold
find sternly, that the mother IS afraid
to lake the Chilean out for the freeh
air and exemee they mewl so much.
In consequence they are often cooped
_tan id overheated, badly ventilated
rooms and are Soon seized with colds
Or grippe. What is needed to keep
the little ones well is Baby's Own
Tablets. They will regulate the
stomach and bowels and chive out
eolds and by their use the baby will '
be able to get over the Winter season
in perfect safety, The ,Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers cir'hy mail
at 26 cents a box from The ' Dr.
Medicine Co., Beockville,
Ont,
•
Casting 'Their SheidoWs Before.
'Wring Mothere-What business will
baby take -Ea, do you suppose?
Young IratherL,The :reed line ap-
parently,
Two heads are better than ane --
especially 1.1 the OthCr
guessing thils,
' agniarass Zdennent °sees taarreet In newts
AUSTRALIA RULES
GERMAN ISLANDS
NATIVES LIKE THE CHANGE TO
' BRITISH SWAY.
Proclamation in Pidgin English Ans
pounced New MaSter-Big,
Strong Fellow.
Whatever the ultimate destiny of
the black, ugly, berbarous,, and yet
pathetically childlike people 1)f what
wasaintil the war German NA 'Gui-
nea -that is to say, whether, When the.
grand settlement takes place, they
tvill remain under the Union Jack or
bereturnel to their erstwhile masters
-it is certain that they are, hap-
pier under the Australian military
ladministration than they would have
been .had Germany been victorious in'
the Pacific. Notwithstanding the
Commonwealth insists on keeping it-
self "white,"it must be said for it that
a just and kindly spirit has animated
it in its relations' with and its at-
titude towards the natives in Papua
whfch is Austealia's one dependency
and, for a. year or more; the abor
igines of Kaiser Wilhelm's Land and
the Bismarck Archipelago. • These las
have, by reason of . the war, bee=
Australia's charge's.
In a .hash Of pidgin English words
for the better understanding of the
colored populace Col. -Holmes eignal-
!earl the. seizare of those eelonies of
the Kaiser something more than a
twelvemonth ago in a proclamation
beginning like this.:
'All boys belongina all place you
savvy big fellow master...lie strong
feller to much. You like him all
ship stop place; he small feller ship
belongina him; plenty more big- fel-
ler he stop place belongina him; now
he come here to take him all place.
He look out good you'feller, now he
like you feller, look out good along
him. Supposing other feller master
he been speak you. • 'You no work
along. new feller master,' he gammon.
Supposing you work good with -this
new feller master he look out good
along with you; be look out you get
plenty good feller Kaikaid (food); he
no fighting .black feller boy along
nothing ...."
The purport of this proelamation
was that the "new feller master,'
King George, personified in the Aus-
tralian military, would' see to ias, t'fs
the "bleak Wirers" /sliVyed The law
and did not .fight VrAh each other,
steal each other's wives, or practice
cannibalism, they would be well treat-
ed; and this promise has ben lived
up to,
Floggings Abolished.'
_
Lazy Livers Come from
Lazy Living -sometimes
froin food follies that tax the
overworked digestive organs.
Get back to Nature by eating
Shredded Wheat. It puts
you on your feet when every=
thing else fails. It supplies
the muscular energy and
mental alertness that put you
in line fettle for the day's
work. Delicious for breakfast
with milk- or cream, or for
luncheon with fruits. Made
in Canada.
than progress; but still doing plenty
g Paw:
, for the few shillings a month paid
- for the Wens Around the ship and
-out on the bay are the catmarans
t of visiting enslaves marketin
One of the best executives in the
Commonwealth, Col. S. A. Pethebridge
wee sent from Melbourne to Rabaul
in New Pemerania to act as admits-
iseeeee when Go!. Holmes and his
troops had been withdrawn, and one
of the first acts. which marked the
Australian regime was the abolition
of flogging of natives on plantations,
except inteinous cases. Planters and
the Germans remaining . in Rabaul
say that -the Australians have in this
made a mistake, because unless 'a
planter has power to 'whip a "bay"
plantation discipline suffers; but, how-
ever this may be, there is no doubt
that under Gellman rule flogging was
far too often and Much too severely
resorted to, so much se that in at
least one case a native plantation
hand committed suicide rather than
undergo punishment by his 'brutal
German employer. Nor were lashes
the only thing ,under the forme
Govermnent, for it is en record that
some German planters cut off the
toes of, refractory "boys," and other-
wise mutilated them. s
Of course it will be offered in ex-
tenuation of this that the average
Papatm or New Pomeranian is lazy,
treacherous, greedy, brutish, and, at
heart, anthropophagous; and that the
only principle to be followed in deal-
ing with him is to keep him in a
state of fear; yet the Australians
have done much for and with the na-
tives in Papua, and they are manag-
ing thee wards in the former German
possessions with neither the rigor
nor the exploitation, one or both of
which Germany displayed toward
subject races. Indeed, the Papuan is
not the hopeless savage that he is
credited with being, as Christian mis-
sionaries and equable and promotive
government have proved. So there is
a like good prospect for the NOV
Pomeranians and all the rest of the
peoples in the Bismarck Archipelago,
A Scene at Rabaul.
A. pletteant pen picture is afforded
:by Lieut. W. H. Phipps, of the Aus-
stralian garrison. Rabaul, in a re-
cent issue of .the Sydney Sun. Writ-
ing uncle the date of October 81 the
lieutenant says:
"Temulttious cries from the natives
signal to the whole population of
Rabaul the incoming of a steamer
lisom Australia. A: merry lot they
are, these laughing 'boys' hurrying to
the wined 136 assist in unloading care
go and wheeling it along the truck -
way to the garrison and private
stores.
"Hero they come, in gayly-eolored
lava -lavas from waist to knee, frisk-
ing up their wooly hair with wooden
combs, setting in place blossoms of
ecarlet hibiscus, variegated poinciana,
or the fuchsia, like poinsettia. Nose
ahd ear ornaments, necklaces of
teeth of dogs or 'flying foxes, erri
and leg_Jsancis, , which do , duty as
pookets, and perhaps. ,some brass
jeweley are worn by these merry
wharf laborers, who 'turn working
into pleas Hee is some era -VOW -fel-
low with white hair which to -morrow
will be carroty, for it ie in process of
bleaching, with lime as the agent.
All have teeth blackened by Muell
chewing of betel nut. They joke and
slap one another playfully as they ran
along under the flame trees, and then
to the wharf bridging the bright
green shallows id the opaline hay.
, "At the shin's Side they aro foained,
into gangs in control of gelumbet.• One
boys'and all day long they week and
ghoul; Val play, making more noise
•
Paws, soursops, innes, cocoanuts,
yams, sweet potatoes, pigs, and fowls.
Further off tire igading schooners
and the .motor boats of the genera
Fringingthe harbor are cocoanut
palms, bending graceful beads to the
sea breese. Ana under the trees are
'Marys! .(veornen) cutting grass with
king ..knives, stopping frequently to
point at the Alp unloading, and to
shout welcome -be acquaintances.'
'Life in the garrison town of .Ra-
baul would be dull tvithout these
duskja- full-grown children. Not all
are of New Britain, Many have
come front New Guinea and .smaller
islands. Some have made paper
(signed indentures), some are free,
and some are 'calaboose,' boys ser-
ving • sentences for crimes ranging
front petty theft bo murder. 'Paper'
and free 'boys' mostly desire to be
policemen, for Police 'boys' wear belts,
carry rifles, and have military drill.
"White men in the garrison are
kind to the natives; sometimes they
spoil them, especially the house ser-
vants. As desired, though some
make attentive waiters. and passable
cooks, they are careful nurses. White
staiessioisaty vglscisn. brom 'boys' LE
carry the children whdn out Wain:.
Ottawa Girl's
Message of Hope
TELLS 'MED WOMEN OF DODD'S
KIDNEY PILLS.
Miss Logan Tells How They Relieved
Her of Pains and Aches So Many
Run -dealt Women ICeow.
' Ottawa, Ont, Feb. 21st. (Special).
-"I am glad to any I have found
Dedd's Kidney Pills have done Inc a
wonderful lot •df good." So says
Miss Gladys E. M. Logan, of 264
Queen Stree, this city.
"I suffered from drowsiness and
sharp pains across iny back. My sleep
was broken and unrefreshing. I had
headaches and was subject to neural-
gia and rheumatism. I was depress-
ed and low-spirited and troubled with
palpitation of the heart,
• "I was always tired and nervous
and very sensitive and there was hol-
lows under ink eyes.
"For two years I was in this worn-
out condition, often having to lay off
for a day or two. I was attended by
dodoes and sva,sted money oe useless
medicines, but I only found relief
when. I used Dodd's ICiclney Pills,"
Miss Logan's statement is a mes-
sage of hope to thousands of women
in Canada. They are suffering just
as she suffered. She wants them to
know they can fled relief in Dodd's
Kidney Pills. .
NURSES GIVE THEIR LIVES.
Mortality Among French Red Croeis
Workers is Heavy.
More than 66,000 women in the
'french Red Cross volunteer are now
equipping 1,500 hospitals with an ag-
gregate of 118,000 beds, The Red
Cross flag flies over 288 buildings in
Paris alone. •
Mortality among the Red , Cress
nurses has been remarkably heavy.
Twenty -tree member§ of the Society'
for Aid to the Wounded -Soldiers
have given their lives, some of -them
killed under shell fire, others carried
off by ebntagious diseases. The nur-
ses of this society have received six-
ty-three epidemic medals, sixty 'War
crosses and one cross of the Legion
of Honor.'
Many women of the Red Cross give
attention to men at the front who
have no one to remembsi. them at
home. One Memb.er, • Richelot,
the wife of Dv. L. G. lachelet, is god,
mother to 900 soldiers, •
Regarding the state of mind of
wounded soldiers now in the hospitals
after _sixteen months of war, Mine.
Patentee, president of. the Union des
Femmes de France, says: "They are
'much more anxious to return to' the
front than were the .wounded in the
hospitals last year at this time,"
Changed the._ Subject.
"Could yen- lend me a dollar, old
man?"
"OW tainlyl 1 Could do lots of
things I have no intention .of doing,
1•Lice day, isn't it?"
Wife-"Mre. Blank is very extrava-
gant ill chess. IT.er husband tolcl her
she was carrying too mach sail, what-
ever that means." Hub -"He prob-
ably put it that way because he has
to raise' the wind."
In a false (marvel there is no trne
valor-Shake:Vora .
teensave triniuteUt Garen Diphtheria,
Managetuent, Of ti• Ira" nt. Flock.
Last year Tiltept ;lima 50 Rhode
Island Red henit and -Pound thertgvery
satisfactory. Fhave tried raisiog dif
ferent breeds nihens, but find 1 like
the R. L Reds the best. They are
profitable laying hens, and are also
suitable for table use, writes Andrew
Geddes in Farm and Dairy: .
In the spring we set our hens in a
house separate from the henhouse
where they lia've plenty of food and
fresh water, ale° lime and Mist, to
iron in. These hens do not get out-
side until the chicks axe out. 'When
the chielcens come out they are re-
moved to a long coop which has slats
on the front. This coot) is divided up
and will hold seberal hens.: The
chicks are abbe 10 run about outside,
but the mothers cannot get out. 'When
they are about a week old ,the hens
are also let out. To my very young
chickens 1 feed a mash made, of bran
and ismulie, but es they get older I
give them wheat. I ahvays soak the
wheat in water so it will not kill the
chickens by swelling in their crests.
The chickens are allowed to run about
al! summer. I teed them only twice
a day after they get a good size.
I sell and kill off all my male chick-
. In Septembec 1 select the best
pullets, -the ones I hitend keeping,
and then have these shut up in a box
still by themselves. I feed these pula
letS very heavily, giving them all they
can oat. Their food consists of boil-
ed potatoes; mashed and mixecewith
moulie. I also give them mixed grain
at times. The reason why I do this is
because 1 find when pullets are treat-
ed this way in the fall they lay stead-
ily all winter. If the pullets were al-
lowed to run with the old hens during
this heavy feeding the old hens would
becomeloo fat.
In the winter I feed my hens corn
on the cob, -this cern is warrned in_ a
pan in the oven, which they get in
the morning. At noon they get a
mash of boiled potato skins, crumbs
and bran, and at night they get mixed
grain.
The can of water in the house
hangs from the ceiling by a chain.
also hongge or some other
vegetable. from the ceiling fos the
hens to peek at. A. piece of meat
boiled and hung on a cord in this way
e. excellent food for the hens. My
hens get rilrasede- blansgataeaseetay other
day during the winter. I find ti -i -at a
piece of cow's liver or lights boiled
and hung up makes excellent food. I
ahvays feed my hens and chickens
su p ur once a week. I find that the
sulphur is a preventative of lice.
-It is not good to have too many
bens in the one house. I have a
scratch -house in connection with my
hen house, in which the hens are al-
lowed to scratch. In this scratch -
house the hens have dust and gravel
to roll in, also a self -feeder grit .box
on the wall.
I always keep my hen house white-
washed inaide and out, and I think
this is also a preventative of lice.
ae---
• A Full Description.
At a function of noted and learned
men the umbrellas of the guests got
mixed. The deity porter was hav-
ing considerable trouble in finding the
umbrella belonging to the professor
in mathematics in a leading univer-
sity. Selecting one umbrellti out of
the armful that the porter had sub-
mitted to him, the professor said -
"Now, that is like my umbrella,
though the cross section of the han-
dle of my umbrella is more of an el-
lipse than a parabola; its extreme
end points towards the perpendicular,
and Tams a section of • the major
axis:" "Ya -as, sir," replied the port-
ed. "Ah'll see ef Ah, can find it fo'
yo', sah."
HeeKnew It. °
."'Do you believe that there is really
something- which can invariably tell
when a limn is• lying."
"I know it."
."Ah; perhaps you have seen oni of
the instruments?"
"Seen one? I rnarridcl one." -
Greatest
Results
often come • from simplest
means.
For instance -one's daily
food plays a big part in de-
ciding for success • or fail-
ure,
To bring out the best
' mental and physical forces
sound nourishment is im-
perative.
Grape=N ts
A FOOL)
made of whole wheat and
malted barley, supplies in
splendid proportion all the
rich nourishment of the
grains, including the vett-
, able mineral elements,' lack-
ing in many foods, but most
necess,20 for vigor and ac-
tivity,pfd brain and body.
"There's a Reason"
for
GRAPE -NUTS
Made in Canada
Sold by Grocers.
,Oismadian Postum Cereal Co.;
Ltd., Windsor, Ont.
Keep Little Cuts and
Scratches Clean with
aselin
arbolated
fetrottara ,a.tne
A mild and effective antiseptic.:
Keeps the sore spots . dews
Heals quickly:
Sold in handy glassbottles and
in tin tubes at chemists and
genetal stores everywhere.
Refuse:substitutes. Illustrated
booklet free on request.
CHESEBRO.UGH MFG.CO.
(Consaildate,i)
1880,Chabot Ave. Montreal
FEAR PEACE MORE THAN WAR.
Geradans Expect to be "Victorious"'
I But Not to "Conquer."
IThe following statement has been
communicated to the London Daily
Express by a metal. Its importance
lies in the fact that the writer has
been in the position during the en-
tire duration of the war to visit ell
parts of Germany, and has been in
constant personal contact with the
heads of the military, political, and
commercial parties of the country:
The great erisis for Gerxnanywill
come after the war. The working
men will return home from the
trenches, and will find the country de-
nuded of raw mategials. The Gov-
ernment will have to send out into
the world to get new supplies, and no-
body knows how the stuff is to be
paid for, or what will happen. The
test will be far severer than anything
that has occurred during the war.
The German people believe they are
going to have a victorious peace, but
WEALTHY IN TRENCHES
. — .
French Soldiers, Official Figuree Show
'Aec Escapinle, Disdeaea '
' Life in the trenches is healthier for
the French .soldier's now than in bar-
racks in Peace, an shown by figures
iseued by, thearmy.. medical depaet-
Cases of measles searletina raumpe
diphtheria and eerebo-spinal menin-
gitis were more' ninnerorts in the array
itt 1911 than in 1915. These diseases,
togthe with typhoid and dysentery,
averaged 7.11 per thousand men in
1911, ne 'compared with 6.02 per
thousand men last year. s
Typhoid eases hist year numbered
4,4 per thousand men, as compared
with LH in 1911. Dysente'y tet.t
taekedgmly 18 out of 100,000 men as
eompered with ,11 in 1.00;000 before
the we. The narthlity was 12 foe
each 100 eases of typhoid ins1911; in
the field the mortality was 2.55 per
cent, owing to improved methods of
truant e n t.
,
OITICERS AND MEN
RusSians of All Ranks Are Sociable
and Not Reserved •
Ruselan officers of all ranks axe
far more sociable and leas reserved
than those of other nations. -
The „soldiers have even nicknames
for their favorite . officers whom they
regard as friends, advisers and in
loco parentis. Officers frequently
laugh and joke with their men and
call them molodzie (bucks) and to-
voratza (comrade");
The simple Russian private would
never dream of taking a liberty or
being unduly fandiliar in yeturn foe
this friendliness; for an officel, is al-
ways an oMeer in the eyes of the
soldier; also a berin (gentleman),
whether familiar, intoxicated or ,sober.
The officer 10 obrazovanne (edu-
cated), is man of culture, while the
private himself is negramotne (not
educated, ignorant of the art of read-
ily; and writing).
The Best Break T
' tCERD._,POTISTOES
inED TT/TATO:RH, 7 .121.M11 CO H-
iders, Deleware, Oarrrui». - Qr."
„der fit once, , Pi uppi tittll ted. , te for
cue la 51 ons. 11, SV, Dawson, Dritintdon.
„_..
AGENTS WA.NTZE ,
-0 a) .3.011. ISA)", .SAT.,AltY AND ro51-
elP mission or Mclo reuresitotelite itt
bar home district, work pleasant, situ-.
cativo, experience itnnecessai.y. Niclii-
ols Limited, ritibilslicre, Toronto,
nAw vons WAISVED
li.liN1C„svicccons, muskrats, till Itiotin
fancy pl'1008. Adel refg1 lii1}1a.j)
show, Deep `nroolc, Annapolis. VC., N. 8;
"
nEweritonas pos. ,
,
113MtilriT151.11CING NOlVill AND JOE
AL Offices for sole itt good Ontorlo
towns The tnos( useful and interesting
of 81) 'businesses. Full nf ormatin r on
application to Wiht.on PoWitsnIng Coul-
son?, 73 "West A.delettle "
tartEl.L.MagOUS.
ANCED, TI.Vrioats, Lt.Lat me.
, internal enci-externel, cured with.
%ten'. bro:IL bsme '''11:PZ;;`•
betore e t . r. 1 M
Co., Limited, Collingu,od, tint
;(:1-)
514 Oh:
'Do You Consider
Wear' and Tear
' Oil your harness Ivilen you
figure your ptofite for the
year? your
that's a
big item bet you can male
it negligible by using
EUREKA
HARNESS OIL
Keeps the leather soft and
prevents cracking. Adds
years to hare ess life.
Dealers Everywhere
The Imperial Oil Company
Limited
DRA.Necnce 'IN ALL CrrIne
- HICK, SWOLLEN OL NOS
not a conqueror's peace -the differ- fast Possible that make a horse Wheeze,
Roar, hem Thick 'Wind
ence being left to the imagination.
Germany is feeling the economic
crisis very much, but the people are
fatalistic, and are saying it is God's
will. There certainly is no present
evidence of an impending collapse, and
She war can be continued by the Kais-
er for a year longer. .After 1916, no-
body knows.
T people are not thinking about
the fistaf-rrei-ageetatation after the war.
It has not yet struser-eleffeir inlagins-
tion.
Concerning terms of peace, I do
not think the Government has made
up its rnintl that it mut have an in-
demnity. There is a willingness to
evacuate Belgium, except Liege. Po-
land must be separated from Russia.
The Germans are now, in reality,
governing Austria and Hungary, but
are doing so very tactfully, and are
not disturbing Austrian pride.
Nobody among the higher German
offictals expects a quick end to the
war.
TO SAVE EVES
Is the Object of This Free Pre-
scription -Try It If Your
Eyes Give You Trouble.
Thousands of people suffer from eye
troubles because they do not know What
to do. 'They Icnow some good home rem-
edy for every other minor ailment, hut'
none for their eye troubles. They neglecti
their eyes, because the trouble is not
sufficient to drive them to an eye
specialist, Who .would, anyway. charge
them a. heavy fee. As a lest resort they
SO to ttn optician or to the five and ten --
cent store, and oftentimes gat glasses
that they do not need, or Which, after
boles' used a few months, do their eyes
More injury than good.
Here Is a simple prescription that
every one should use: 5 grains Bon-
Opto. 2 ounces water. Use three or four
times it any to bathe the eyes, This Pre-
scription and the simple Bon-opto sys-
tem keeps the eyes clean. sharpens the
vision and quickly overcomes Indent -
illation and irritation; Weak, watery,
ovoworked, tired eyes end other similar
troubles arc greatly benefited and often-
times cured by its Use Many reports
show that wearers a glasses have Ms -
carded them after a few weeks' Ilse.
It Is goad for the eyes, and contains
no Ingredient whIch would injure the
most sensitive eyes of an infant or the
aged. Try it, and know for once whet
real eye comfort is. If your own drag -
gist cannot fill title PreSeriPtion, Send
$1 to Gm Volume Drug Co,. Toronto, for
o crimplete Bon-Opto Homo Treatutent
outfit -tablets end
Effective.
"What is your favorite poem?"
asked the literey young womap.
," 'The Boy Stood on the Burning
Deck,'" answered the' commonplace
young man. "1 used -to eecite 11 e5e17
time father arid mottle had com-
a
pany."
"And did you reeite it with ef-
fect?"
Weller thought the effect was
pretty good. He said he honestly be-
lieved it kept us free having so
much company."
eamitters-rautmeet Cures Colds, Eto.
Many a man would starve if he
had nothing to live on but hia repu-
tation.
rareErsearasesmvser=stftres=?Easastnatneleggnetisis
Female Velp
Wanted.
In large liesierY, under wear and
sweater factories. -Vacancies to
departments, with oncuings
for experienced or Inexperienced
help, Xlighest wages and mod,
crate priced -board, . Apply, int -
mediately, • '
Peam4ris Lhaile a, Pa eis, Oat.
MasIMMCmaczainemanica=siits=mr.n.abs1
BOOK ON
1),OG ISEASES
- And How to Feed •
mmim free to any addrons
America's- tho Author
Pioneer 11, CLAY GLOVER, V. S.
11 'nog Remedies 118 West bit) Street, New Tech
ED. ISSUE 9--'16.
or Choke -down, can be
Dr. Jackson's Roman Meal porridge reduced with
properly made in a double boiler, and
not stirred atter first making it. Read
directions on package. Better make
night before for early breakfast, la
double boiler, and Warm in the 'nerv-
ing While dressing, by arlowing to sit
in boiling water. Thus it's delicious
and very nutritious. It prevents cons
atipation, however cooked. Ask your
doctor, At grocers', 10 and 25 cents.
He Did.
eapd'ali
also other Bunches or Swellings. No blister,
1 no hair gone, 'tad horse kept at work. Be°.
nornical-only a few droll required Man ap.
plicetion. $2 per bottle delivered. Bask 3M free.
ARSORISINE, JR., the antiseptre liniment for
! mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful;
. Swollen Veins and Ificers.$1 and n a bottle at
dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence" free.
15, F. MAO, P. 5 F., 516 Lyman Bldg., Montreal, Den.
abaurblne and Absorbine, Jr., arc made 0 funda„.
Pat had returned OS". "^"R
leave from the firing line, and wa-s-',,'f--
1ating his experierices round the 'fire
one night. "The enemy was creeping
up in their thouS'ands, and 01 was
simply, itching to get at them." "And
what did you. do ?" asked his father.
re-
plied
p
h, Oal tjijRJNES Granulated Eyelids.
uSt scratched myself," re -
Eyes inflatned by exposure
.„, to Cold Winds and Dust
co_ gestuyieckkernreley7d4 1).1%m!
ing, jUtuslEye Comfort. Ate -Your I'Drurgients.
600 per Bottle. Murin eEye Salve inTubes 25e.
For Book of the Eye Free write
Marine Eye Remedy Company, Chieage
An Interesting Character.
"There goes Professor Debeins,
the famous ethnologist."
"An interesting character, no
doubt."
"Yes, indeed. Why, he knows more
about the races than any other man
in this country."
"Fancy that! Amnia doesn't look
as if he had been on g track in hie
Masonville, June 27,13.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited,
Yarmouth, N. S. g
Gentlemen, - It affords me great
pleasure and must be gratifying to you
to know that after using 35 bottles of
your Liniment on a case of paralysis
,,vhich my father was afflicted with,
was able to restore him to normal con.
(Edon. Hoping other sufferers may be
benefittetl by the use of your Liniment,
I am,
Sincerely yours,
CEO. 11. 1-10LMDS.
GROWS LIKE FISH NET.
Remarkable Tree Which Is to Be
Found in Cuba.
A singular tree in Cuba is called
the yaguey tree. It begins to grow
at the top of another tree. Tho s seed
is carried by a bird ar wafted by the
wind, Cirld; falling into some moist,
branching part, takes.root and speed-
ily begins to grow.
It sends a kind of thin stringlike
root down the body of the tree, which
is soon followed by others. In cotwee
of time these rootings strike the
ground, and growth immediately com-
mences upward.
New rootings continue to be formed,
and get strength until the one tree
grows as a net round the other. The
outside one surrounds and presses the
inner, strangling its lifo and aug-
menting its own power. At length
the tree within is killed, and the para-
site that has taken possession becomes
itself a tree,
A Careful Witness.
"13e careful, sit' -be v -e -r -y care -
fall -and gernenther that you are on
.oath!" ominously sald the pin-
feathey young attorneye whose beetv
bulged like the back of. a :ensuing
turtle, addressing a wit:I.:Asa. "Now
tell us, sir, was every pane of glass
in the west window- broken when yon
passed the house."
"They were, on the outside," was
the cautious reply. "I didn't enter
the libuse to see whether they- were
also broken on the inside," ,
There's something in this world he -
side money." "Yes," says the cynic,
"there's the poorhouse."
Zi411.12102.111 Cures DIrsteniser,
The Ideal Winter liZerk,,..tik,
Beautiful Privets, Saddle Riding.
Golf, Tennis, Yachting, Fishing
and Sea Bathing, Present Gar.
rison of the Ottawa (Mb) Regi-
ment.
-rem-
FeR
Princes3 hotel
le open from vont:Mavens to MAY
Situated Oil the Natter of
Hamilton. Accommodates 400.
Rates 525 per week and upward.
HOWE & TWOROGER,
Managers
HAMILTON, • BERMUDA
T3ermuda is reached by the steam-
ers of the Quebec S. S. Co.,
82 Broadway, New York,
301:01-10 plac-
selneg, s'oetotrouot:ille,rtv
1t1or.3.4.
oa Sobilee Catalogue it is free.
Gov. Stand, No, 1 R. Clover 17.0e
eociovv.. sSititkit,idtis NNoo 11T eiknlisnytley,, 1.35:0050
Allow See for each cotton bag
required.
'We pay railway freight 171 015-
55520 and Quebec over 055,00
TkiatWa",i1
Making a man tell you that he
Ioves you is something like...teach-
ing a cat to sump through a hoop;
you don't 'expect him to do it grace-
fully,, but the aetonishing thing is
thet he does it at all,
ganesamwswaseitasetemseessiteratee
'
IndlPeSt n
and
.01110 sill SS
Indigestion, 'biliousness, head-
aches, flatulence, pains af ter
eating, constipation, are all com-
mon symptoms of Stomach and
liver tioubles. And the more
you neglect them the more you
suffer. Take Mother Seigel's
Syrup if your stomach, liver, or
bowels are slightly deranged or
MOTHER.
, SYRUP
have lost tone, Mother Seigel's
Syrup 15 made from the curative
extracts of certain roots, barks,
end leaves, which have a re-
markable tonic and strengthen-
ing effect On all the organs of
digestion. The distressing symp-
toms of,,, indigestion or liver
troubles 8001.1 disappear under
its beneficial action. Buy a
'bottle to -clay, but be sure you
get the genuine 1,10ther Seigel's
Syrup. There ate many 'mita.
tions, but not one that gives the
same health benefits. 1016
is the
Best Remedy
NOW SOLD 15 TWO sass max,
MA size, Price 1,81) .1111111. 5100, Prieesoo
iiiers=enicogreann.