HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-07-27, Page 711 ,
'GOOD RICH BLOOD
MEANS GOOD HEALTH
'31aSt a Little More Rich, Red
Blood Cures Meet Ailments.
The lack of sufficient rich, red
blood does not end merely in a pale
complexion. It is much more seri-
one. Bloodless' people are tired, lan-
guid, run-down folk who do not en-
joy life. Food does not' -nourish;
there's indigestion, heart pa. Ipitatim
headache, backache and nearly al
ways nervousness. If this blood
lessness is neglected too long, a de
cline is 'sure to follow. Jest a littl
More rich, red blood cures all uses
troubles. Then youheve he
health, new vitality and 'pleasure i
life. To get more rich, red bloo
the _remedy is Dr. Williams' • Pinl
Pills. No other Medicine" increase
and enriches the blood so quickly o
so surely. This is not a mere claim
Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills have done
this over and over again and that is
why thousands of people always have
a gbod. word to say for this medicine.
Miss Gertrude Haffner, Kingston,
Ont., says:—"About two years ago
I , was Suffering greatly with anae-
mia, so much so that I had to give
up my situation. I became so weak
that I could scarcely walk without
help. I had no ambition, no color,
' no appetite and • was constantly
troubled with headache's and dizzy
spells. I was taking medicine from,
the doctor, but it did not do me a
particle ofgood. One day a friend
asked me if I had tried Dr.
jefimelegink Though as the result of
my condition I was greatly discour-
aged, I began the use of the Pills,
and thanks to that good friend's ad-
s/fee after using a few boxes began
to feel much better. Under the con-
tinued use of the pills I gained in
weight, my color came back, and
grew gradually stronger. I looked
so much better that people would
Ask me what I was taking and I had
hoe hesitation in giving the credit to
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I am so
grateful for what this medicine has
done for me that I will do all I can
to extend its use."
You can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box or six boxes for $2•50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine CO„ Brock -
rifle, Ont.
DUBLIN'S PITIFUL RUINSe."."
Fairest and Richest Part of City is he
Condition of Rheims.
The fairest and the richest part of
Dublin, the centre of its life, is in
the condition of Ypres or Rheims.
The stately thoroughfare in which
it justly took pride as one of the
finest in Europe is a desert of
hideous ruins, and acres of the hand-
some business streets surrounding it,
hives of stirring commerce, are
e, simply obliterated. This is the workl
chiefly of bombardment and of con-
flagrations started by bombardment.
,(Had the authorities taken the most
,ordinary routine measures of pro-
tection and placed a guard of even
25 men on the alert at the General
Post Office and other strategic posi-
tions which they knew, or ought to
have known, were to be attacked, no
such bombardment would have been
called for; the rising would have
been nipped in the bud.) Not merely
are the streets destroyed, but so are
the Money -making and employment
giving businesses that were carried
on there. And some of the tokens of
Dublin's claim to be a national metro-
polis,
t e marks of her civilization,
are gone likewise. Her Royal Hibern.
tan Academy, which had just been
holding its annual exhibition of pie -
tures, looks -with its skeleton walls
and its battered friezes' like a building
in Pompeii—or perhaps like the
Library of Louvain.
e
I House Conscripts.
A national convention of Austrian
/women, according to reports publish -
;ed in the latest German papers, unani-
mously adopted a resolution calling
upon the Government to introduce
o"gomplsoity service" for women in the
form of one year's instruction in
fiausekeeping. The "service" should
;be performed, the convention further
resolved, after girls and young wo-
men have concluded their ordinary
schooling and before marriage.
Grap‘,---Nuts
(Made in Canada)
embodies the full, rich
nutriment Of Whole Wheat
Combined with malted bar -
'ley. This combination
giVeS it a distinctive, de-
- licious flavour unkhown to
foods Made from wheat
alone.
Only selected grain is
used in Making Grape -
Nuts and through skillful
processing it comes from
the package fresh, able,
untouched. by hand, and
ready to eat.
•
Through long baking,
the energyproducing
SliareheS of the grain are
made Wenderfuly easy of
digestion.
A daily ration of this
splendid food yields a
marvelmfg return of health
and comfort.
'There'sa Reason"
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
Caneelan Poet -urn Cereal Co, Ltd.,
Windsoke`Ont.
MARCONI'S WIRE-
LESS TELEGRAPHY
HAS DIRECTLY SAVED WELL
OVER 5,000 LIVES.
Stories of the Greatest Life -Saving
Invention of the
Age.
In these days of wee, the greate
brains of the world are vying wit
one another in establishing recorc
for newer and more invincible ways
killing!
The principal Powers of the won]
are in a death -grip; every corner o
Europe vesounds to the clash of arm
—or, to be more up-to-date, the burs
big of shells. What science Can do t
help in the terrible work is being don
by every scientist—save one!
There is one man whose nam
stands out amicittie confliet for wise
he has done to save life. While other
destroy, he preserves.
And this man is Chevalier Marconi
who invented and perfected the won
derful "wireless" telegraphy. To him
belongs the credit of saving life al
over the world, since to his great in
vention thou5ands of people owe thei
rescue from maritime disaster.
St
Is
of
With a Short History.
The history of wireless telegraphy
is still short. As recently, as 1899
messages were first sent from Eng-
land to France, while in .1902 the
"waves" he had maetered carried
greetings between Canada and Eng-
land.
• But the, side of wireless telegraphy
with which this article deals is its
power of saVilig life froth the sea. -
The first case on record of "wire-
less" being employed by a ship in dis-
tress occurred on March 3rd, 1899.
On this date the R. P. Matthews ran
linto the East Goodwin lightship dur-
ing a heavy fog. The weather condi-
tions would, in the old days, have ren-
dered the work of rescue very difficult
if not impossible. But the R. P. Mat-
thews was equipped with what was
then a novelty--Marconi's system of
wireless telegraphy. Messages were
sent ashore, and speedily brought life-
boats to the rescue.
During the next ten years instances
are recorded of wireless aiding ships
in difficulties, but not until 1909 was
public interest really roused in this
matter.
Called to the Rescue:
On January 23rd, 1909, just ten
years after the case of the R. F.
Matthews, the Florida rammed and
sank the great White Star liner the
Republic, off the Nantucket Lightship,
some thirty miles from the American
coast.
The story of the loss of the Repub-
lic is the story of the pluck of Jack
Binns, the wireless operator. Binns
at once began to send out the urgent
call for help, "C Q D." Through the
boundless the magic letters sped, be -
mg recorded by every wireless receiv-
er for hundreds of miles. And in an-
swer ships changed their -courses and
hurried to the scene of the disaster.
Sixty miles away was the Baltic,
separated from the sinking liner, with
its two thousand human souls' by a
dense fog. Aad from half-pastseven'
in 'the morning till half -past six at
night the Baltic scoured the surface
of the ocean on its errand of mercy.
All through the long hours Binns sat
at his instrument sending out mess-
ages and directions to the ship coming
to the aid of the Republic.
After a Day's Search.
And then, in the evening, after a
day of zigzagging 200 miles on the
ocean'the Republic sent the welcome
word to the Baltic that they were
dote together. The look -outs on the
ships could see nothing, but the wire-
less opgitors knew. And so the pass-
ehgers 'on the Republic were saved by
means of wireless telegraphy.
Only a few years ago such a disas-
ter as that of the Republic could not
have load so satisfactory an ending.
Doubtless some of the passengers
would have been rescued by the ship's
boats, but exposure to the January
weather must have levied a heavy toll
even on those. Instead, every man,
woman, and child was safely brought
to land.
This splendid rescue brought the use
of wireless for saving life well before
the world( Shipewriers at once began
to see the necessity for having their
vessels fitted with it Marconi had
fully proved his right to the honor of
saving life.
The following year after the saving
of the Republic, wireless telegraphy
was put to still another use. In the
autumn of that year an American in -
venter named Wellman set out in his
dirigible balloon, patriotically called
the America, to cross the Atlantic. In
theory the idea was good; in practice
it went wrong. Presently Wellmann
and his band of &vete(' helpers found
themselves drifting aimlessly about
over the wide Atlantic, with apparent-
ly little hope of rescue. But the wire-
less operator with the balloon suc-
ceeded in calling aid to the stricken
airship.
Wreck of the Delhi.
This was one of the first cages
where two of the marvels of -the age
—wireless telegraphy and airallips—
carne iftto contact. Since than wire.,
less telegraphy has been adapted to
all sorts and sizes of aircraft.
Perhaps the next notable case of
wireless saving the passengers and
crew of a 'vessel was,that of the Delhi
in 1911. This Vessel stranded off the
coast of Morocco, and became a total
wreck. The fact that among the pas-
sengers were the Princess Royal, with
her husband, the bulce of File, and
their two daughters, drew great pub-
lic attention to this wreck.
While the Republic was the instance
which first drew attention to the pow-
ers of wireless, the story of the Titanic
excels it in drama. On her maiden
voyage across the Atlantic this gi-
gantic liner struck an iceberg in mid -
ocean on the night of April 14th, 1912,
On board were 2,201 passengerand
The Summer "Life -
Savers" are fruit, cereals
and green vegetables. Meat
in Summer overtaxes the
liver and kidneys, potatoes
cause intestinal fermenta-
tion. Get away from the
heavy Winter, diet; give
Nature a chance. One or two
Shredded Wheat Biscuits,
servdcl with milk or cream
or fresh fruit, 'Make a delici-
ously nourishing, satisfying
meal. Such a diet rneael8
good digestion, good health
and plenty of strength for
the day's work. All the
goodness of the wheat in a
digestible form. Por break-
fast with milk or cream; for
luncheon with fresh fruits.
Made in Canada
crew, while the vessel itself had cost
well over one million pounds to build.
Yet in a moment sloe became a help-
less wreck.
•
The Titanic Disaster.
The wireless operator sent his call
Tor help broadcast into the air, and
it was answered by the Carpatbia,
which vessel steamed as quickly as
possible to the rescue. But before she
had reached the scene of the disaster
the Titanic load sunk. Out of the two
thousand odd human beings 712 were
saved from the lifeboats of the ill-
fated vessel. And it is quite accurate
to say that, but for the wireless call,
most, if not all, of these must have
perished from exposure.
But it is not possible to anention
even all the most remarkable rescues
effected by wireless. There was the
Volturno, which caught fire one
thousand miles west of the Irish coast
and in answer to the wireless appeal
ttm less than eleven ships went to the
rescue, saving altogether 521 lives.
Then, again, when the Empress of
Ireland was struck by the Storstacl a
wireless call ended in the saving of
452 lives.
But the instances are endless. And
the modern usages of war have mul-
tiplied them. Of this period nothing
as yet can be written; we must wait
till the coming day of peace. But
brief mention may be made of the
Lusitania, when '764 lives were saved.
A Fine Record.
It is no idle boast of the Marconi
Company that wireless telegraphy has
directly saved well over 5,000 lives.
A word here as to the call used—
S 0 S—is not out of place. "C Q D,"
the original call for danger, was
adapted from the old "all stations,"
or general, call of line telegraphjr.
But at the first International Wireless
Congress it was suggested and ap-
proved that a better call was "S 0 S,"
which, by its arrangement of dots and
'dashes, is different from any other
call.
"S 0 S" has no special meaning. It
is not intended to express "Save our
souls!" or anything else equally dra-
matic. This call is an international
one, and has the same meaning in all
languages.
Another aid in saving life'allied to
wireless telegraphy, is the direction -
finder. By switching on this simple
apparatus, the operator can indicate
on a compass the angle from which
a call comes so accurately that the
vessel can be steered by it. As he
turns his indicator round the points
of the compass the sounds wax strong-
er and stronger the nearer he gets to
the correct degree.
Nowadays the Atlantic is peppered
with vessels carrying wireless, over
two thousands ships being equipped.
And as the number of these increases
so the peril of the sea grows less.
Marconi has robbed the ocean of much
of its terror; Old Neptune is slowly
being muzzled.
„YOKE WAS ON THE SURGEON.
Declined Pocketbook Which Contained
Double His Fee.
Velpeau, the great French surgeon,
successfully performed a serious
operation on a little child. The mo-
ther, overjoyed, called at the sur-
geon's office, and said:
"Monsieur, my child's life is saved,
and I do not know how to expeess my
gratitude to you. Allow me, however,
to present you this pocket -book em-
broidered by my own hands." I
The great surgeon smiled sarcasti-
cally. "Madame," he said, "my art
is not merely a mattec of feeling. My
life has its necessities, like yours. Al-
low me, therefore, to decline your
charming present, and to request
some more substantial remuneration."
"But, monsieur," asked the woman.
"what remuneration do you desire?"
"Five thousand francs."
The lady quietly opened the pocket-
book, which contained ten notes of one
thousand francs each, 'counted out
five of them and, politely handing
them to the amazed physician, retired
with the remainder.
Lininzent gambermanta Triend
Bessie'S Smile. te
One evening the mother of a 3 -year-
old miss said: "Bessie, I see you
yawning. It is time you were in
Ii
ed:"
"I wasn't yawning, mother," replied
Bessie; "that was anew kind of a
mile."
When a man goes into crestaar-a "
at and is given a tough fowl, he is eti
cry apt to lose his yes set fo old
a
WHAT THE OCEAN
WAVES CAN DO
APPALLING FORCE O1c THE
GREAT ROLLERS.
Some Wonderful Examnles of the
, Strength of the Mighty •
•
If war were not filling every page
every newspaper, we ehould have bee
thrilled by descriptions of the awf
storm which recently swept acres
the West Indies and the Gulf o
Mexico, says London Answers.
Galveston, thg great cotton pot
was 'turned. into an island, and th
McClellan, a large army ttanspoi
steamer of some six thousand ton
was lifted by one gigantic wave an
set down half a mile inland, where' she
now lies high and dry.
Unless you have been in a storm a
sea—or, rather, out oceson—i
is impossible to imagine the strengt
of the enormous rollers.
The g green hills of water, crest°
with snowy 'Loans, are Sometimes fort
feet high, and the distance betwee
one crest arid the next as much as
quarter of a mile. Such waves trave
at a speed of between thirty and fort
miles an hour.
350 Feet Above Sea -Level.
These huge ocean waves, disporting
themselves on top of water two or
three miles deep, are not dangerous
unless a ship be driven into them. It
is when they come crashing into shoal
water that they pile themselves up
into real inountains and achieve such
extraordinary feats of power.
Near the Eddystone Lighthouse the
sea is 200 fathoms, or 1,200 feet, deep.
Within a little distance thie decreases
to thirty fathoms. Here storm -waves
heap up into real mountains of solid
water futty one hundred feet in height.
In a westerly gale the Atlantic
breaks with incredible force on , the
huge, bare cliffs of the Irish coast.
Here Lord Dunraven has actually
measured wave -crests-- which struck
the rocks one hundred and fifty feet
above sea -level.
Yet even this is child's play with
what happens in theeMariana Islands.
Here is a giant pillar of rock known
as Lot's Wife. It stands three hun-
dred and fifty feet clear above the sur-
face of the ocean, yet in storms the
spray drenches it to its topmost pin-
nacle.
of
ul
t,
sd
cia
1
Drowned by the Thousand.
The Bishops Rock lies between the
Scillies and Land's End, and is expos-
ed to the full force of the winter gales.
At the top of the massive tower there
used to be a great bell, used for warn-
ing in fogs. In one storm a wave
washed this bell clean away and cov-
ered the upper gallery with sand. This
gallery is just one hundred feet above
ordinary high -tide.
The greatest waves—apart from the
true earthquake wave—are those caus-
ed by cyclones or circular storms. In
such a storm the barometer may be
lower by three inches in the centre of
the storm than at its edge. The con-
sequence of this tremendous reduction
of pressure is that the sea in the vor-
tex rises high above the usual level,
and in this way are produced waves of
appalling size and height,
It was a wave of this type which,
in the dreadful cyclone of 1876, swept
upon the mouth of the Ganges, and
drove in over an area the size of De-
vonshire. By marks upon the trees
it was ascertained that this great wall
of salt water rolled in forty-fivNfeet
high. The damage done was appalling
and more than one hundred thousand
unfoutunate natives were drowned.
Carried Over the Tree -Tops.
One of the worst hurricanes of which
we have any record was that which
swept Karatonga, in the Pacific Ocean,
in the year 1846. Believe it or not, a
vessel from Tohiti was lifted by the
great wave, carried over the tops of
the palm -trees, and dropped far in-
land. The captain, who survived, de-
posed on oath that he felt the tree-
tops grating against the schooner's
timbers as she was swept along on the
crest of this monstrous roller!
The greatest of ordinary wind -
waves are seen in the so-called "Roar-
ing Forties," south of Cape Horn.
They rise to forty-six feet,: The Bay
of Biscay deserves its bad name, for
there waves thirty-six feet high have
been measured. In the North Sea
wives do not exceed fourteen feet, but
they are steep and very dangerous,
while in the Mediterranean fifteen feet
seems to be the limit,
PUT BAN ON ALL DOCUMENTS.
No Printed Matter Can Be Taken Over
German Frontier.
Unprecedentedly harsh regulations
are now in force -regarding the carry-
ing of any written or printed matter
over the German frontiers. The fol-
lowing notice has jest been promul-
gated by the military authorities:
1. Travellers on principle may take
nothing written or printed across the
Imperial frontiers.
2. Letters, post -cards, or other com-
munications must be eent through the
post.
3. Exceptions to the above are let-
ers or documents, written or printed,
specially business papers if (a) the
eking of them is absolutelY necessary
o fulfill the object of the trip; (b)
ey are confined to the, smallest pes-
tle dirriensions; and (a) they have
eon officially examined and sealed up
dere arrival at the feentier.
4. Travellers can only reckon with
afety on being permitted to take de-
ments actoss the frontier if the en -
elope or packet containing them
bears an undamaged seal.
th
SI
he
Ask for Ildtuard,s and take no ethos
Not the Man.
Arcluppe.—"My love for you, dear
Miss Roxleye le like a consuming fire
that burns everything in its path."
Miss Roxley—"Then I fear it would
be unwise to choose math a husband
ta handle My money."
„set
STORAGE BATTERIES
Magnetos ,
Starters GS Giratore
REPAIRS
made promptly
Canadian Storage Battery
Co., Linuted.
Willard Agents.
117-119 SIMCOS ST., TORONTO
.-o=e=egeoaseaseeeee
ACROSS THE' BORDER
WHAT IS GOING ON OVER IN
THE STATES.
Latest Happenings in Big Republic
Condensed for Busy .
Readers. '
Beavordale, Pa,, has a hen 36 years
old, still laying. • •
The Hector, naval collier, sank
nine miles off Charleston lightship.
President Wilson appointed Judge
John H. Clarke to the Supeenne Court
Bench.
One man was killed and damage of
$500,000 caused by fire in the New
York State Arsenal, New York.
The Lorain Crystal Ice Company
is furnishing ice free to Poor families
needing it for sick children.
An automatic telephone bell scared
burglars from the home of Profeseor
A. E. Greenhalgh at Hazleton, Pa.
T. B. Thompson, of Huntingdon,
Penn., has a stalk of rhubarb with a
leaf 35 inches long and 36 inches wide.
Get rid' of the English sparrows by
oiling the street—the birds don't like
to get oil on their feet, a Pennsyl-
vania scientist says.
Girl deposited $3,000 in bank as
guarantee she Would marry him, de-
clares man who has sued for money
because she wouldn't.
Mrs. George W. Phelan, of Berlin,
N.H., claims to be the first woman
in New Hampshire to shoot a big
black bear from an automobile.
Read Nichols ef Bath, Me., aged
94, had green peas for his dinner a
few days ago, picked from his garden
which he has cared for himself.
At twenty-two, Mrs. Mary Wool -
PST, of Omaha, is the mother of
seven children, six of whom are liv-
ing, and the stepmother of seven chil-
dren.
William Allen, Cleveland, Ohio,
gardener, was lined $10 Mid costs for
tieing a robin to a cherry tree to
frighten away other birds who sought
the fruit. --
The anhual economic loss suffered
by the United States from typhoid fe-
ver and malaria aggregates $966,837,-
639, according to estimates given the
Senate.
Six hours after she finished a sing-
ing and dancing act at a Tipton, Ind.,
theatre, Mrs. C. W. Davis, a vaude-
ville actress, gave birth to a baby boy.
Robert Bacon, former Secretary of
State and former Ambassador to
France, has been commissioned a
second lieutenant in the Twelfth New
York Infantry.
Patrolmen Purtell and Mahoney and
Building Inspector Corcoran me An-
sonia Com., claim to have seen a par-
rot Aich manicured its nails with a
pennknife.
August Renquist is still a harvester
at 60 years. Although he owns a 160 -
acre Missouri farm, be is working in
the wheat fields at Salina, Kan., for
$4 a day.
And man who is reminded of a
drink will want one, Secretary
Daniels believes. That's why there
are to be no more cut glass wine ser-
vices in the United States Navy.
The American Field Ambulance,
which now has 150 cars in service,
has been made an independent unit
and separated from the ambulance -
organization at Neuilly, France.
Hay fever report estimates there
are 25,000 sneezers in New York who
sneeze seventy-three times a day for
lorty-two days each year—a grand
total of 76,650,000 sneezes a yeara,
FOOD PRICES IN GERMANY.
Table Shows • War Increase—Butier
Over 66 Ceuta a Pound.
Food stuffs are getting more and
more costly in Germany!
According to the statistical office
prices of some foods have trebled.
No figures aim given on the price of
different kit -oils of meat, cheese, far-
inaceous foods and so on. There are
other products also of which no re-
port has been given for more than a
year.
The variation of prices of different
articles since the war began is shown
in the table below.
The prices are given in so many
pfennig per pound; 100 pfennig is
equivalent to about 24 cuts.
The table:
Potatoes (10 lbs.)
Landlebcrwurst
Herrings (sit -ogle)
Table butter.,
Margarine
Salad oil
Rye flour
Wheat flour
Beans (pr'd. 21 lbs.)
Carrots (pr'd. 21 lbs.)
Cocoa
Chocolate powder t
Sugar
'Salt:N.
Utterly Worthless.
o, you can't marry him. ltle's
too no -account." .,
"You ought riot to say, that, dad.
He may have some good paints that
you have overlooked."
"No chance. I mopped up the floor
with him just now and he didn't even
make a good map."
1914. 1916.
30 95
110 240
, • 71a 28
144 280
80 200
100 260
'14 22
18 24
.... as 58
32 42
120
. ... 100
21
11
550
339
30
12
Time Will'Alter Thie.
"How tong have they been mar-
ried?"
"Only a few months, I think. Any-
how his wife gets up in the morning
to have beeakfast with him."
'THE tni,H. OF THE -GUNS.
Depends on Their Size Before They
Require Relining.
The life of a gun depends upon the
progress of erosion, which sooner or
later is certain to impair the accuracy
te
toife nfi reef. er O xi °pill oissiveeallgsaesde eb ye h iagch-
temperature and pressure. Accord-
ing to the Iron Age, the hot gases
cause a thin film of steel to absorb
heat. The film expands and becomes
set Upon the release of the pressure,
it contracts, which causes minute
cracks that grow larger with every dis-
charge. As they increase in.size they
form passageways for more hot gas,
and that tends to enlarge them still
further. The inner surface thus be-
comes roughened, and the bands be-
gin to corrode. Finally, the bore be-
comes so enlarged that it allows the
gases to escape. The shell does not
then acquire its proper rotation and
its flight becomes erratic. All! guns
except small ones are now construct-
ed with linings in the tube which, when
the bore is worn out, are removed and
replaced by new ones. The cost of
relining a gun is approximately 30
per cent, of the cost of the gun. There
appears to be no limit to the number
of times that a gun can be relined. The
small mins are considered to be worn
out after 5,000 to 7,603) rounds have
been fired. Small naval guns can be
fired about 1,000 times before they are
regarded as worn out. Large twelve -
inch and fourteen -inch naval guns are
considered to have a life, on one lin-
ing, of from 150 to 200 rounds. 'It -low-
velocity guns, such as howitzers and
mortars, have correspondingly longer
'lives than high -velocity guns of the
same calibre, because the pressures
they develop, and hence the tempera-
tures, are lower.
HOU/ to Keep Yourself
Looking Young.
*It has beet -s proven that the woman
who protects her skin will keep herself
free from wrinkles and marks of age. Tar
longer them the woman who says " Oh
X never ;do anytiring for my com-
plexion.
If your skin is not naturally clear and
fresh, or If It Mtn suffered from that-
tendon—worry—sickness—age or the
ravages of Wind, sun and weather, the
regular and persistent use of MIT will
soon restore to your complexion its
natural color and freshness.
T1SIT is a valuable formula of an old
and famous beauty secret.
It feeds and nourishes the akin, wards
off wrinkles and makes the eomplexiori
clear, snorsoth and faultless. It is no
hecessary'jlo use any other treatment -
during Mb day. Apply USIT night
before retiring, and it will tore the skin
a-nd give that silky softness: and glowing
freshness that alone indleates perfect
skin health,
-UM is Out up in handsome opal
bottles. It may be secured throtegh T.
Eaton Co., Limited, Robt, Simpson Co.,
Limited, Toronto, and other high-class
Drug 'stores, or direct from us.
Sand 500. (25, war tax) to -day for
trial bottle sufficient for sir weeks' use.
. See our exhibit at National Exhibi-
tion, Toronto
MUT PM*. 00., LTD., TORONTO, ONT,
Vindictive.
"Did you ever see a woman that
was tonguestied?"
"No, but I've seen lots of theon
that ought to be."
Neap rdinartrs Liniment In the SOW,
Going to an Extreme.
"A little learning is a dangerous
thing."
"Yes," replied Miss Cayenne,
"But that fact, doesn't justify some
of us' in being proud of how little 'we
know."
S.
Grasulated Eyends;
OreEyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun, MI and Wind
EYeta quicklyrelievedtaeirtitrninge.
lust Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Durine Eea
Salve inTubea25c. ForSook of Mayo rrseask
Druggists or Medea Eye Remedy Go., Clause
Memories of Sermons.
Parson Prosy—We need night
watchman for the church, If I give
you the job, do you think you can
keep awake?
Aplicant—Do pm' preach at night?
Lbought a hoes° with a supposedly
incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured
him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'S
LINIMENT and sold him for 685.00.
Profit on Liniment, $54.
MOISE DEROSCE.
Hotel Keeper, St. Philippe, Que. .
The Right Idea.
"Do you think you could serve a
seven -course dinner?"
"Yes,mum," !replied the applicant,
"Well, where would you start
from?'
"I'd start from the kitchen, mum."
adinertrs LInbnent ascii by Physicians.
• A Moving Target.
A Highlander with bagpipes enter
ed the street and commenced his plain-
tive lay, at the same time marching
up and clown in time-honored fashion.
"Why'does he move about all the
time he plays?" asked Johnny of
mismair.goomoweszrzomaronav
WEAR
aierr *016
4* Es
for every SPORT
and RIEr REATiON
Worn lily every member
of th-Framily
amaze:
FOLD BY ALL stun SHOE DEALERS
etermeeseelewn'
SEED POTATOES
DEO POTATOES, IRISIX OOD,
I:7J biers, peleWare, Carman, Orden
mmee• Supply lilt -oiled led. Write for quo.
temente or. w, Dawson, Brampton. ,
Pon SALE.
1544LIgiaL'iniid FOR Bell'oliTpf=
emr1 fisher. T. Chambers, Sioux Look-
out, Ont.
NEWSPAPERS von SALE
Pnogor-eteetergo NEWS AND JOB
Offices for sale in good Ontarki
towns. The Most useful and interesting
of all businesses, Eull information on
application to Wilson Publishing Com -
Pans'', 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto.
menceironnemotta
CANGER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC,:
Internal anti external. uttrea NVItb.
out pain by our home treatment Write
us before too late. Or, _Heilman Mediu,:
Co., Limited, Collingwond. Oct
KC HAMM MATEO
We went a few good tneehanies. Have
steady work' and good wagon for laths
hands, litters, handy men, also a few
vood-working machinists and handy
men for Wood shop wanted. Amoy in
Person only.
podge Manufacturing Co.
West Toronto,
Lump
Rock
lest for
,•'l• Prices.
.Writo for
TOIttiNTO SALT 1,ver.ms,
60 -Cs Janie St., 'reroute, Ont.
atscorrie a, mut-gie'la-'cd Nurse
and receive pay While learning
The Beth Israel Net:vital of New
York City rounded 15513
Accredited by the New Writ tilato liteatioti Dept.
Offers a two.and.one-i.tOf your rearm I., mini,qt for
noses with alharnires and malettouutro, Apple:ea.
mut lows one year Liolt etbnol lantrucolen ew it.
edutiational ego valent. Pot pertienture addreea 13etb
Tenet ftegidal. tid Jefferson Sc., Now Voris.
Seventh Annual
Toronto Fat Stook Show
will be held at -
'Onion Stock Yards, Toronto
DECEMBER 8th and 9th, 1916
ror further particulars write
a r. TOPPING. Seeretary,
Union Stock Yards, Toronto
LAI 111 TI5
Rock
Salt
Seat for
S ;• cattle.
Write few
Prices.
vonomvo SALT WORICS,
00-02 Sates, lit., Toronto. Ont.
10 15— 201)
Years front now the AiSsell
Silo will be giving good
service, It Is built of sel-
ected timber, treated with
wood preservatives, the,6
prevent decay. It has
strong, rigid walls, air;•
tight doors, and hoops of
heavy steel,
Therefore it lasts, slirmi•
ly because it oan't very
tven do anything' else. Our
folder explains more fully
—Write Dept. U.
T. M. BISSELL 00., ZT2).,
Elora, Ontario,
Azont's Wanted
To represent well known
Fertiliser Manufaetures. At-
traetive proposition to energetio
and responsible Parties.
Apply with. full uartioniara to
FERTILIZER,
0/0 wu000.r•abusieng no„ zed.,
791 Adelaide St„ West, Toronto
sommuitinumv
Reduces Strained, Puffrg Ankles;
Lympliangitis, Poll Evil, Fistula{
Boils, Swellings; Stops Lameness'
and allays pain. Heals Sures, Cuts,
Bruises, Boot Chafes. It is a
SAFE ANTISEPTIC AIM CERMICIRE
.. Does not blister or remove the
hair and horse can be worked. Pleasant to use.
$2.00 a bottle, delivered. Describe your case
for special instructions atul Book 6 61 free.
ABSORBINS, JR., antiseptic liniment for mankind. re-
duces Strains, Painful, Knotted. Swollen Veins. Cotten-
troted—orllY a few dross required eon mikados, Nee
Slip,. bottle a dealers or dellyercd,
Is F VW, P. D. F., 516 tycoon Bldg, Montreal, CAN
IpErna In emu an -or %urgently pee sot-qieut-t-
iflry Fr Sale
Wheelock Engine, 150
H.P„ 18x42, with double
main driving. belt 24 ins.
wide,and Dynamo•30 K. W.
belt driven. All in first
class condition, Would- be
sold together or separate.'
ly also a lot of shafting
at a very,great barga1n,0
room is required immedi:4
ately:
8. Frank Wilson 8/- Sons
73 Adelaide Street West,
Toronto.
ED. 4.
ISBBB 31—'16,