HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-03-16, Page 7RHEUMATISM
A MYSTERY
Unless Rooted Otit of the
System it Grows Worse
and Worse.
Some dieeases give immunity ,frorri
another attack, but rheumatism work
just the other way. Every attack, of
rheumatism invites another. Work
than that it red'ucesthe body' e power
so that each attack 'is worse than the
One before. If any disease needs,cur
ing early it is eheurnatism, but ther
are few diseases physicians find mor
difficult to treat successfully. We
weather does not cause rheumatism a
was once thought, though weather con
ditions may start the aches and pains
Rheumatism is now known to be de
pendent anon the blood condition and
medical authorities , agree that the
blood becomes thin With alarming rapi
dity as rheumatism develops. Main-
taining ,the quality of the blood is,
therefore, a reasonable way of pre-
venting and curing rheumatism. That
it works out in fact is shown by the
beneficial results which follow a fair
'-'ese of Dr. Williams Pink Pills. These
pills actually make new, rich blood
'which drives out the 'rheumatic poison,
and while the blood is kept in ,this
condition there is no danger of the
trouble returning. Mr. W. T. Pell
Palermo, Ont„ says -"I was attacked
With .a trouble which Was ultimately
pronounced rheumatism. Often I was
barely. able to crawl into bed, and sel-
dom able to do a full day's work. In
this condition I doctored for a Year,
absolutely getting no better. Then I
consulted another doctor whose chief
consolation was that unless I could
get rid of the trouble I would be a
cripple for life. He preseelbed diet-
ing, and 1 doctored with him for at
least six months, but instead of get-
ting relief I became weaken and less
able to get around. Then I decided
to try a doctor in Toronto, and was
under his treatment for about four
months with no better results. I gave
up the doctors and tried other reme-
dies which were equally futile. Then
one day on store keeper sent me a
box of Dr. Williams Pink Pills, saying,
that if they did not help me I need
not pay for them. I took them and
then got some more and found they
were helping me. I probably used
$10.00 worth before I felt fully cured,
but they did euro me and were cheap
as compared with the other treatments
which did not help me, The eure was
made several years ago, and I have
riot had a twinge of rheumatism since.
To -day I am well and strong and I be-
lieve I owe it all to Dr. Williams Pink
Pills."
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail, postpaid,
at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medieine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
SOLDIERSISLEPT
AS THEY MARCHED
SOMNAMBULISTS MAKE
TREAT
DEIVIA.NDS ON RAILWAYS.
What the Railway Train Employes
Are Asking.
The domande being made by or-
ganizations of railway train service
RE. employes on western railways for a
25 per cent. increase in wages, a de-
mand which affects Canadian as well
as United States railwaye, would
mean the disbursement of no less than
Not a Groan, Not a Motion, Not a $100,000,000 a year. In order to 94-
quaint the publie with some of the
facts of the case the executive com-
mittee of the Association of Western
Railways has issued the follmeieg in-
teresting statement:
Mr. Farmer, once upon a time -like
the railways -you paid your employes
a fixed monthly wage. They worked
till their work was done, no matter
how many hours.
• Complaint, Only
• Sleep.
A wonderful new sidelight is thrown
on the glorious retreat of the British
e and the French from Mons to the
e Marne by De'. Gis.orge W. Crile, a dis-
t tinguished American doetor, saes
s Pearson's Weekly.
- In a recently -published book he
Your farm hand followed a plow be-
. tells how the French and our. original hind k f
- lexpeditionary force marched 180 a Yo e o 'oxen, perhaps from sun
•and was contented. '•
fast asleep, continually fighting des -
till sun down, then did his "chore".
•
miles in nine days and nights often uP
e ,perate rear -guard actions against Suppose that when you invested
174
ABOU'T MACHINE GUNS,
The different Hinds Used by the
Armiee at War. .
•
Every day in the newspapers there
erop up incideuth dealing with the
effect of machine -gen fire, and art
enoemous member of these weapons
are cloing their deadly work to -day.
In the British Army the machine-
gun is the Maxim; the French use
the Hotchkiss, or Puteaux, Austrians
employ the Schwarzlose, and Germans
the Maxim. In all cases machine-gun
are. attached to the infantry force
usually at the propossion of two gun
per battalion, or 1,000 nien.
...nese guns filv rifle eartridgee"
.ientrienee speed by mechanical mean
1" -end 'useally the kick, or reeoil, of th
gun is Used for the purpoee of reload
g. g note that 1
o teet forty-two British first -des
shots etgeged against a -machine
gun, each firing at the same tarp
for one mink, the gun discharged 22
eounds and made sixty-nine hits; th
forty-two merksmen discharged 40
rounds end made sixty-two bits.
;
• 'The Neighbors Say.
11' he is regular in attendin
shurch, he is too pioue. •
If he doesn't attend church, he is on
the Toad to perdition.
It he sends his family away for th
eummee; it is mei e than he San Of
Fora,
1.2 he doesn't he is sidogY'
If he happens to be success:1M ii
mesinees, he achieved seecessby mind
:big.
If he gives freely ti, eherity, i
Ion e Tor shOW.
11 he doesn't; he is elaseed as Et skin
!I in t.
le his:wife does hes own work, eh
is "killing herself" for the {may,
' 12 she has eervants, she ought to ;la
more (mono nu ea 1.
seemingly overwhelming hordes of
Germans. ,
"Only rarely were sufficiently long
halts made for the men to snatch a
few moments of rest," writes Dr.
Crile. "Food and water were scarce
and were irregularly supplied.
The point of paramount' interest
in that retreat is in the sleep pheno-
mena experienced by these men.
"It has been shown that animals
subjected to the most favorable con-
ditions kept from exertion or worry,
supplied with plenty of food, and in
good hygienic surroundings, do not
survive longer than from five to eight
'days without sleep.
The Men Slept as They Marched.
"In this retreat from Mons to the
1VIarne we have an extraordinary hu-
man experiment, in which several
Mulched thousand men obtained little
sleep during nine days, and in addi-
tion, made forded marches and fought
one of the greatest battles in history.
How did these men survive nine
days apparently without opportunity
to sleep? they did an extraordinary
thing -they slept while they march-
ed, Sheer fatigue slowed down their
pace to a rate that would permit them
to sleep while walking.
unvaried testimony of the
soldiers was that everyone at times
slept on the march. They passed
, through villages asleep. When sleep
deepened and they began to reel they
were wakened by their Comrades.
"They sleep in water, on stones, in
brush, or in the middle of the road
snore of your capital in a good team of
horses, tie replace the oxen; your em-
ploye had said: "These horses turn
more furrows in a day than the oxen
and hereafter I want to be paid bY
the furrow, or the diseance the plow
travels, but in case anything stdps the
plow you must pay me for a full day
if I work 10 hours or less -if that plan
would give more mohey than the plow
mileage amounts to.
Suppose that when you invested
more money in a wheel plow on
which your employe could ride at
ease instead of being required to
walk in a heavy furrow and wrestle
with a heavy plow, he said: "Here-
aftea I want you to pay me for a full
day if I work 8 hours or less, with
time -and -a -half pay for over time,
either on a time or distance basis,
which ever will give me the most
money,"
Suppose, further, Mr. Farmer, that
from 1904 to 1914 you had increased
the wages of your farm hand from
$90e.09 a year to $1,263.37 a year,
would you feel like granting his last
demand for more wages for doing ex-
actly the same work in the same
hours ?
That is precisely the question that
the railway managers of this country
are now called on to answer. The nien
employed in railway train service are
asking a 26 per cent. increase in pay
Lor exactly the work they have been
doing, and under the same conditions,
except as to pay. As with the farm
hand, the working conditions of rail-
way train service men have been con -
;in stantly improved at the expense of
as if they had suddenly fallen
the employers. Government statistics
death. No man was safe who fell out
prove that the hazard of their oecue
pation has steadily decreased. This
is ' the result of millions spent by the
railroads for better roadbeds, heavier
rails, double tracks, block signals,
automatic couplers, air brakes, Mech-
anical stokers, oil burning engines
and many other safety and labor-sav-
ing devices, for which the employes
made no investment and assumed 710
financial risk.
of the ranks, for no matter on what
pretext he fell out, sleep conquered
him, and asleep many were captured.
-emu v mole ano ;JAsneueteeire
S,aHVNIN case semi ess
That the artillery men slept on horse-
back was *evidenced by the fact that
every man lost his cap.
"The complete exhaustion of the
men is vividly told 15y Dr, Gros, of the
American Ambulance who, with
i other t tl 1 't The men wh • 11
Marne to collect the wounded. When per cent. higher pay are and abways
I midnight they found the town in ut-
ee I have been the best paid of all railway
employes. Their wages range from
i the ambulances arrived at Meaux
ter darkness. At last they succeeded; $800 a )rear for inexperienced brake-
' in awaking the Mayor.
, I men 16 nearly $4,000 a year for en -
I Packed With Sleeping Wounded. age wage i of the 300,000 employes
i " 'Cali you tell in what village we tylio are demanding an increase are:
I
shall flnd Che wounded? We were 0,253.87 a year, an increase of 40
; told there were many here.' per cent. since 1904. The 1A00,000
, s, Wento nit le field of the
o now as c ng for 25
. gineers on the best runs. 'The aver-
" 'My village is full of wounded, other railway employes average
will show the Mayor replied, 3684.78, an increase of 26.2 per cent.
e ;you,'.
4 They threaded ;their way thyough since 1904.
e , clerk streets to a dilapidated school ' .
s,
These ate the facts, Mr. Farmer.
Ibuilding. Not a sound! There was the Will you think then': over and then
t stillnees of death. They rapped loud- say if you think the railtvay train
s, er; there was no response. service employes are justified in
0; "'Pushing open the door they foiled threatening the prosperity of every in-
s. the building packed with wounded -
more than 500. Some were dying:
.s. eyery ondwas in a deep sleep, Bleed -
t ing, yet asleep; legs shattered, yet
8 asleep. Not a groan, not a motion,
e not a complaint -only sleep.
e "Surgicel aid, the prospect of being
taken to a good hospital, the thought
of food and drink, of being removed
from the range of the enemy's guns,
awakened no interest. They had
g
dustry in this country, of even the
very existence of individuals depend -
mit for food supply on uninterrupted
railroad service?
POSTAL EMPLOYEES ENLIST.
Over 50,000 at the Front With British
Emcee.
Over 50,000 post office emloyees are
reached the stage of unconditional ex-; have.
; with the colors. At present 1,620
lost' their lives, and there are
baustion, and desired only to be leftl on the books of the relief fund 1,800
alone. They slept an while their
wounds were being dressed orphans. In the majority of eases the
"After deep sleep for two or three piem
Government pension is or will be sup-
ented by the fund; the maximum
days, during which they wanted neith-
ei feed nor drink, they began to be
conscious of their surroundings; they
1 asked question, the experienced pain,
they had discomforts and wants -
they had returned Vont the abysmal
s, oblivion of deep." '
'A wonderful story -and a true oriel
THE PRINCE Ole WALES.
e An incident Which Shows His Kind-
ST01111.U.) SHORT
Tithing. Tonics, and Built up on
Right „Food.
'A -The mietake is frequently Made Of
teying to.boild up a worn-out nervous
sys ten: on so-ealled tonics.
New material 'Trent whieh to re-
build used eth tissue cells is what
sheuld be supplied,. and this can be
obtained only from propen
1:Satind Myself on the verge of a
nervous eollapee, due te oYeawork
and study, and to illnese in the. fam-
ily," writee 0 young Mother.
"'MY friends ;became alerrned
lrc-
eauro geew Pale end thin and contd.
not sleep nights. tool,: various
tellies, hut thele effects worn off
Shortly .aftee I Stopped taking them.
• My food did mot eeem to nourish me.
'Reading of Grape -Nuts, I deter -
Mined to. stop the. tonics ancl see what
ebange of' diet would do. I ate
&ape -Nuts four times a day with
enciain,sand (hank alem.weet to
bed early aftee a.dieli of Grape -Nuts.
"In about tWo weeks wee Sleep-
• ing soundly. In a shoat, than gained
weight end felt like a different mi-
nion, Grape-Nuts,and freeh air were
hhe oalY agente (mod to accomplish
the ilaPPY resulle." "Therd'e 1Seas-
en." Mime given by Canadian
Posters; Co„ Nivel:sole Onf.
fever read the above letter:2 A new
one appoars from time to time.
Rre 9,enutue, :93,41 2.011. of Mutual
interest,
Doss of Heart.
The Prince 01 Wales is making .him-
self Lelovecleas well as reipected at
assistance of five shillings a week be-
ing given to widows under 36 years
of age, with four or more children.
Parcels of food are sent weekly to
poet office prisoners of wat, of whom
there are IlOW over 570.
CROSS, FRETFUL RAMS
The cross fretful baby is a sickly
baby -the well child is always NIPPY
and mailing. kothere if your baby is
eross and cries a greet deal something
is wrong. His little" stomach and
bowels may be,out on order; his teeth
troebling hiin, or he may be bothered
the front. Endless stories of his kind- With WOrMS, The mother ShOUld im-
liness are told. The latest was re- mediately give him Baby's Own Tab-
lated to me by a very old friend who lets. They never fail to relieve the
hes lost four sons oe the battlefield, baby. Concerning them Mrs. Ronald Don't Held Clothes Pine hi Your
The only surviving one is an army Hurley, Gilks, N.B. writes ;-"I know Mouth,
chathaip, and he was chatting to a of nothing so good' for eross fretful
From the Middle West
NOTES OF INTEREST FROM HER
BANKS AND BRAES.
What Is Going On in the Highland
and Lowlands of Auld
Scotia.
Medicine Hat's school tax rate this
year is 7 mills.
Edmonton schools enrolled 10,350
scholars last year.
It is said that 5,000, men are need-
ed one,Saskatchewan farms.
Arm River Rural municipality is to
spend $600 on gopher poison.
The minimum temperature at
Pakau for January was 60 below
zero.
The Institute of Technology and
Art will be started in Edmonton this
coming Autumn.
Arm River rural municipality will
donate $50 monthly during 1916, to
the Patriotic Fund.
It is predicted that there will be
no shortage of faem labor in Sas-
katchewan this coming spring. ,
In night raids in Edmonton recent-
ly 41 were arrested on the charge of
selling liquor without a license.
About $200,000 is being distributed
now on the eeml-monthly pay days
among the Saskatchewan soldiers.
In the second week of May 600
merchants will gather in Regina to
attend the annual Provincial Retail
Merchants' Association,
A young half-breed locally known
as Samson, died in the Cottage Hos-
pital at Peace River last week, after
suffering for ten days with the hic-
coughs.
Chinese laundries in Manitoba will
be brought under the Factories act
wider n anrendment to the act
adopted by the law amendments
committee.
Both women and men voted in the
recent municipal elections in Edmon-
ton for the, first time in the eity's
history. The women's vote was 28
per e,eiet, of the 7,431 polled.
J. W. Cowley, postmaster of Pick-
ardville, had his house burned down
last week. Very little Was saved of
clothing or furniture, and the post
oface fixtures were e total loss.
Sizes bearing the inscription, "No
Austrians or Germans Employed
Here," have sprung up all over Cal-
gary, since the raids on the White
Lunch cafes and the Riverside hotel.
Are Worth Their
Weight in Gold
WHAT MRS. BROWN SAYS OF
DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS.
New Brunswick Lady Feels ft Her
Duty to Tell Women That Dodd's
Kidney Pills Are the Best Remedy
She Ever Used.
Miscou Harbor, Gloucester Co,
N.I3„ Mar. ath (Special.) -"I think
Dodd'e Kidney Pills are worth their
weight in gold." Thls is the state-
ment of Mrs. 'Tames Brown, well
known and highly respected here.
• •"I think it would be 'inigiettefel en
my part if I did not tell what a bless-
ing Dodd's Kidney Pills have been to
me," Mrs, Brown continued. "I was
in bed three weeks with headache and
sore back. Then I began to use
Dodd's Kidney Pills and I found them
the best remedy I have ever used."
• Mrs. Brown is just one of the many
women in New Brunswick who are
telling of pains relieved and health
restored by the great Canadian kid-
ney remedy. Dodd's Kidney Pills ate
suffering women's best faience because
they act directly on the kidneys. They
tone up the kidneys and put them in
condition to do their fell work of
straining all the impurities out of
the blood. Nine -tenths of women's
troubles come from diseased or disor-
dered kidneys. There is abundant
evidence on every hand that Dodd's
Kidney Pills cure all Kidney troubles.
----er.
group 01 ascii, "somewhere in France,"
about the loss of Inc last surviving
brother and the loneliness -and sadness
of -his pla-mother.
Suddenly 'a young offieee stepped
foeweed With outstretched hand and
wet:winked: "I heard what yen said,
alt, about your broeheee and; I ani . Great Systoth
babies as Baby's Own Tablets and I
am pleased to reeommend then to
ether mothers." The Tablets are sold
by medicine dealers or by mail at 25
emits a box froth The Dr. Williams
1Viedicine Co„ Brockville, O61.
extremely sorry to hear it. I hope metsener_"en whet year was the
you will accept this expression of InY Battle of Waterloo fooght?"
profound sympathy, but," he said, "I
do Wish you WOuld give this card to
your colonel, and ask him to give you
leave of ahsenee for ten days, so that
you may go ancl see your mother in
London and console her on her loss."
Ho took out his card and wrote a
few words on it and handed it over.
It was the Prince of Wales.
Foe Have Leatherkss Shoe.
A new type of "leatherless shoe" is
being widely advertised in the German
newspapers. The uppers are made of
grey or black evaterptoof linen sail-
cloth, while the soles are built of thin
layers of wood glued together with
evaternr o of g I ue.
WillartVet Liniment BelieVea NeUralgia,
1 apil-"I don't know," Teacher -
"It's einiple enough if you only would
learn how to eultiVate artificial :la-
mely. Remember the twelve apostles,
Add half that number to them, That's
eighteen. Multiply that by 100. That's
1800. Take the twelve apostles again.
Add a quarter of their number to
them. That:e fifteen. Add what
you've got. That's 1815. That's the
date. Quite simple, you see to re-
member (lathe 11 you will ody adopt
my system."
-
He that has never known adver-
sity is but half acquainted with him-
self or with others. ;Constarit triumph
Shows un but one side of life; the re-
verse side is necessary to full knowl-
edge. /
So many accidents have been re-
ported lately due to the carelessness
of the houseevde that a series a
"Don'ts" have been proposed. A com-
mon habit and a very bad one is il-
lustrated bete?. Holding clothespins
or any othei. smell household article
in tile mouth spoils its shape and
ruins the tenth Some of the other
don'ts are as follows:
Don't tisk your life cleaning win-
dows from the outside.
Don't pyramid the furniture to
make a perch from which to hang
pictures. Get a stepladder and pre-
vent ' a; household calamity. ;
Don't trip in the house. Be care-
ful in placing rugs on the floor.
Don't burrip your head on open
closet doors.
Don't grope in dark elosets. G'et.
little eleetrie torch and save your-
self many unpleasant experiences.
Don't leave domestic implements on
the stairs. A dustpan turns the
stairWay itrbo a toboggan slide for
unyvavy feet.
ISon'ttry to negotiate the stairway
with mins encumbered.
%outwits Liniment C1111011 D114113/11.10
The Bread Problem is
rot a problem in the home
where Shredded Wheat is
known. The whole wheat
grain is the real staff of life,
and you have it in Shredded
Wheat Biscuit prepared in
a digestible form. It con-
tains more real body-build-
ing material than meat or
eggs, is more easily digested,
and costs much less. The
food for the up-and-coming
man who does things with
hand or brain -for the kid-
dies that need a well-bal-
anced food for study or play
-for the housewife who must
save herself, from kitchen
drudgery. Delicious for
breakfast or any meal, with
milk or cream.
Made in Canada.
From Erin's Green Isle
NEWS BY MAIL FROM IRELAND'S.
GREEN SHORES.
Happenings .In the Emerald Isle of
4nterest to All True Irish-
men. .
At the last meeting. of the Beffas
Board of Guardians it was reported
a me were 127 eases of scar-
letina in the hospital.
At Leinetee Assizes, Dublin, Geo,
Bell was found guilty, but insane, on
a charge of the murder of his father
in Comity Meath, and was committed
to an asylum.
News has reached Stewartstown
that a . feigner named Geo. Rankin,
iesi ing in the town land of New-
langoes, aged 35 years, dropped dead
outside his home.
At a meeting of the governors of
the Royal Irish Academy of Music, a
letter was read from the secretary,
stating that the treasury grant of
$1,600 is to be discontinued.
The Dublin Port and Docks Board
is taking steps to have the provisions
of the Emergency Act suspending
elections in connection with local
government bodies applied to itself.
Speaking at a recruiting meeting
in Waterford, Mr. Redmond made a
.epecial eppeal to farmers to assist
in securing recruits for reserve bat-
talions to make good the wastage in
the ranks.
The death took place recently of
Mr. William Tully, J. P., proprietor
and editor of the Roscommon Jour-
nal. He tvas a Justice of the Peace
for the Co. Roscommon for the past
twenty-five years.
At a meeting of the Clonmel Cor-
poration it was proposed that owing
te the very depressed state the pole
tion of Mayor of Clonmel during Hie
war by one of honor,' without mole-
ments. The proposals was defeated.
At Cork Wietet Assizes John Stet'.
ford Dunne, manager of the Macroom
branch of the National Batik pleaded
guilty to embezzling $1,500; the
monies of the bank, mid war, sen-
Itneen,c1ted to twelve months imprison -
Chief Inspector Murphy, Inspector
Love, Sergeant Halley and oiler
members of the Detective Division
of the Dublin eMtronolitan Police,
raided the shop of Messrs. Lawler,
111 F0110111 street, and took possession
of a large quantity of firearms, am-
munition; etc.
While presiding at a public meet-
ing in Kilkenny, Mr. John A. ThiViS,
agent for the Marquis of Ormoride
and secretary of the Killtenny GUS
Company, suddenly collapsed and
died before medica, aid could be
summoned.
• A Local Government Board inquiry
was held in the board room of the
South Dublin Union, into an appetite -
tion of the South Dublin Rural Coun-
cil for a loan of $60,000 to eomplete
a scheme of laborers' cottages, There
was no objection.
Further meetings are being held
in Belfast dealing with the goestions
of house rent inceeases aucl advanc-
ing coal prices, and resolutions have
been passed calling upon the Gov-
ernment to take steps to curtail the
extorticeiate pries for coal.
The Dublin police zecently raided
a member of homes imam the De -
'fence of the Realm Act, amonget
which W1.18 that of the Countess Mar-
kevie, Ruthmines, where a printing
press was seized, which was being
used for printing pro -German litera-
ture.
Millard's Liniment Go., Limiead.
Have used MlNARD'S LINIMENT
for•Croup; found nothing, equal to it;
sure Cure, -
CUA S E. SHARP.
HaWkehaw, N.B., Sept. lst, 1905.
"Is it anything serious, doctor?"
asked a youth of a doctor after the
latter had examined him. "No, no;
not at all,c replied the medical man.
'Nothing serious -just a little stiff-
ness in the back of your ilea' MY led.
Rut you must keep an eye 011
ffieRiNE., Granulated Eyelids;
' Byes inflamed by exposure
to Cold Winds and Dust
Oua ESt:
fm, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggists'
50c per Bottle. eturine Eye Salve inTu bes 25e,
For Book of the Eye Free write
Marino Eye Remedy Company, Chicago
The best of friends we often tind
are those we have taken good care
never to offend.
rifintual,s Liniment Ceres 13urne,
The Furnace.
"Shakespeare, I believe uses the
term 'sighing for a furnace.'"
"I believe so. Why?"
"Mine has a sort of wheeze."
Eno.
ED. 6. ISSUE 12-'16.
e
A II:maven HEROINE, • •••
,
Midemolselle- Moreau Has Been De-
- 'mated With the Military Medal,
It is well known that sham the be-
ginning of the war, worsen have. been
fighting in theletiropean eriniee. The
latest aed perhaps, the meet Odin.-
eateate heroine is Mile. Emilienne Mo-
reau, a young French girl only seven-
teen years old, who receiveil the Mili-
tary Medal from Gemmel do Sailly at
Veniaillee in recognition of bee great
gallantry undo? five.
Mademoiselle Moreau, says the
London Sphere, formerly teeicled in
Loos, the town that, wee captured by
, the British under Gen. Douglao
Haig toward the ,end of last Septern-
ben During the Gerrnan occupation
' of the town Mademoiselle Moreau
lived there with her aged father mid
mother and her brother. Au she WAS
ro echool-teacher, the elnldren of Loos
who remained in the town were in her
charge. Her old father died not long
ago after the Germans occupied the
town,
When the great attack was begun
Mademoiselle Moreau waited in eager
suspense fox. the result. Hidden
away in the cellar e and in other
plates of comparative safety were
several, families, including old men,
women and children. She herself re-
fused to remain under shelter when it
became evident that the Germans
were being driven back. As soon as
the British eneered, Mademoieelle
Moreau sallied out into.the streets and
clueing the ensuing struggle assisted
this weeded to placers of safety. Al-
though not physically strong, her de-
termination increased her strength
tenfold. To those who needed them
she gave drink and stimulants, and
she dressed as best she could the
wounds of others. When the British
surgeons entered the town they
found her bending tenderly over her
charges.
As the Brieish reinforcements move
ed up, she heard them singing "God
Save the Xing" with true British vi-
gor. When they had finished, Made-
Moiselle Moreau dashed forward and
began to sing the ."Marseillaise." The
soldiers surrounded her and joined in
with a Rouget de Lisle's
undying lines with the greatest en-
thusiasm.
A few days later this French army
order 1,VitS issued:,
"Mlle. Emilienne Moreau, aged 171a
years, living at Loos (North e'rance).
On September 25, at the taking of the
village of Loos by the Briteh troops
she organized a first-aid station in
her house and was mph/Yeti the vchole
day and night in caring for the wound-
ed. With no regard for herself she
placed all hex, resources nt their dis-
posal without the slighteet reward.
She went forth amongst them maned
only with revolvers, and, with the aid
of a few British soldiers, disabled and
captured two of the emny, who, hid-
den in a neighboring house, were fir-
ing on the first-aid. station."
Following the presentation of the
Military Medal, Mademoiselle Moreau
was presented to efonsieer Poincare
by Senator Jean Dupuy.
Good for .0bildron.
Al others! Physicians agree that
flavor nod the body building ele-
ments of grains 11c in the dark parts
usually thrown uway. So oleo do the
lime salts' which your child minds to
harden bones anti teeth. Children fed
upon coarse dark cereals develop greater
resistance. Witness thn Rutgers anti
borbs, Boman soldiers who conquered
th0 world fed upon two bonds entire
gram rood ,lackson's Boman
Afoul is scientifically baltuiced ration
made from soveral entire getarei. It'11
delicious, easily prepared in a Variety or
ways and nourishes hotter than meat.
It's 0 natural laxative, :11otit grocm's
sell 11.
by Roman Meal Co., 'Toronto,
Canada. '
The habits of old age are goner-
ully the habits of youth matured and
confirmed.
tginard,s Liniment for sale everywhere
Men are like tea, says Estelle Klan -
der; it takes hot water to draw out
their strength.
repitt...6...20911116,113reg
CANADA'S
-GREATEST
Muskrat Handler
Is the old firm of
HIRAIVI JOHNSON
Limited, 410 St. Paul
St. W., Montreal.
Ship all your furs
there and obtain tull
ues.g.g.m.ggragggsagegmare
rirmr, po.r.n,reorm, '
Qom).'POTATOES, Cori,
Wore: Delewitre. Carman, Oi•
der at onee. supply limited Write foe
quota:loon. IL W. Dawson tbssrmiton,
YOU (SALO
P ni?ic-atio?7,JM NEWV0t7h/lair A.2,1 p
sten pupples LIZ tl''bilid.tIssnote,f°1.bhi:,Vi:
ford, Quebsc. °
VOS Ziktinfatell •
SILVIDIt BLACK: CROSS BrtIllT)
fogete troth! for aural ear. 1111l3
Bros., Bothweil Cita
eluissiereir al,00g
eger eale-CreAHS )71I11.51,2401( fITCleft
Ail. buy and save middleman's prPgifl,f
write lov euttilogue Dominion 217:grairt1eg:
Reed & Col St, Catharines, Ont.
AGMWTO W.R.UTOD
1 A1JY 012. YOLIITG MAN TO 001,•
leet in their locality. Dominion
Works, Toronto.
trEviisra.rmas VOA RAZZ '•
DIRQVIT.MAKINL+ NEWd AND JUR
Oftioet: for sale In good ontarte
towns. The most usof.Ut and interestitill
ef all businesses. Full Informialog od
simIleatIon to Wilson Publishing Cons
teeny. 73 West Adelaide St, Toronto,,
Milscettane0111.
CANCER. 'melons, LUMPS. ETO.
Internal and external. cured watt -
Out pain by our aome treattnent. vsnate
ses before too late. Dr. Reitman Medical
Co., Limited, eollIngwood. Oat
Amities
Pioneer
Dog Homedlos
BOOK ON
DOG DISEASES
And How to Feed
Mailed trio to etw address by
the Author
H. CLAY GLOVER, V. S.
118 West 31st Skeet, New York
•WANTED
We fUrntstt cans, pay express charges.,
bed guarantee highest prices
CREAM
SWEET OR SOUR
Write for particulars.
TORONTO CREAMERY CD., LIMITED!
References TORONTO!
Our Wankel' ONT.
(Coot ar)
BERMUDA
The Ideal Winter Resort
Beautiful .35rIvets, Saddle Blaine, ,
Golf, Tennis, Yachting, Fishing!
and Sea Bathing. Present Gar.
rison of the Ottawa, (2851) Bea. l
merit.
Princess Hotel
11 open from DECIIIMBER to MAY
Situated on the Harbor of
/100111400. Acerimmodktes 400.
Rateo : 225 per week and ilowsird,
HOWE 6. TWOROGER,
Vane:fors
HAMILTON, • BERMUDA
Bermuda Jo Pencilled by the etertm•
ore 02 the Lhiehee 15.15. CO.,
32 rtroadwu,Y. 34eW York,
es.
Ileum plat -
lug your order far
seeds, sec our 1016 Gold-
en Tribileo Cataloging it Is free
Gov't. Sten. Pus,
No, 1 Red (lloven. 11pitney)316.10
No. 1 Aleylte 13.00
No.1 Timothy 5.65
Allow as, for each cotton hag
We pay railway freight in On-
tario and Quebec over $55.00
setoN
41TCM4
rd '
A
m,monsTerimare
Y ur
Horse
Could
Talk
He Would tell you that he
can do lots more work
when the wagon wheels
are greased .wich
Mier Axle Grease fills the
pores of the axle, IVlakes
perfect bearing surface, Re-
duces friction to a iniairouna.
Dealers E verywhere
The Imperial Oil Company
Limited
51R/11.1011/16 11C ALT., 01T/1.13
n
---, 0 OD DIG E$TIO N other Sulkers Syrup gurreets end gamuts:us
Whoa your digestion is ian
d"1 weskuess d or
the digestive °ang. caul banishes the man),
poln'sre curtaiand' disense ig invited,
-1 Milne:Its which arise from indigestiom
FOR
40YEARS
THE STANDARD
REMEDY
11112.0:211100.10912...SZEMIL WilaWrieVoal,
sek
F Ft
STOMACH
AND LIVER
TROUBLE
At
11 00155701,, or direct on receipt of mice,. SOc.. and 31,00, The lame hou le con gitts throe 6m00-0
much As Me smaller. A. J, W111111 ac CO. LairenD. Crsis Srreel TrInch-,1
manntwaamt.
SELL YOUR MILT&
1 it ATANY a fanner who
.041. svotild like to raise
his calves is preveuted by
the amottut of milk macs,
safy to feed them. By
raising them he conld
select the best of the stoek end Improve
the gteutiard of milk or beef product:ten
of his herd.
INTERNATIONAL
GROFAST CALF -MEAL
solves the VrobIeni f,r 111111. It isa m1011-
(50, eronrclion ruhted with Weill'.
milk, takes the nace of milk end Amalie:3
to the calf every food element:heti neectg.
133/ itS11Se the farmer le enabled to raise ids
calves rind sell his menu or butter, and its
CoSt Is 5 Wile compered to the value of the
whete milk that tit,: cuff would otherwise
teed.
Intornational Grofnet Culfaltal is for eate
by deniers everywhete.
Write for our hook of valuable hints on ‘N,
catSing,Calven-tree. t / 122
INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD COMPANY, LIMITED, TO ONTO. CAN.
MieEieeeeeIeeEeegeee.Ve=ees.e.eaeeeeeieYrireeweeoae-emee.
CV" g1.1:11.S