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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-08-10, Page 7t GOOD DIGESTION A SOURCE OF HEALTH When the Stomach is Out of Or- der the Whole System Suffers. \ Indigestion is one of the most dis- tressing maladies afflicting mankind. When the etomach is enable to per- form the work nature calls for, the re- sult is severe pains after eating, nau- sea, heartburn, fluttering of the heart, sick headache, and often a loathing for food, though the sufferer is really half starved. People with poor digestion, too, frequently try all sorts of experi- ments to aid the process of digestion, but there is only one way in which the trouble can actually be cured, that is through the blood. ' That is why the tonic treatment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cures even the meet obstin- ate cases of indigestion. They make rich, red blood that strengthens the stomach and the nerves, thus enabling It to do its work. The process is sim- ple, but the result means good appetite and increased health and pleasure in life. In proof of these statements, Mrs. Albert Hall, Sonya, Ont., says: "I have used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills with wonder:fill results. For two yeard I was a groat sufferer from indiges- tion, which almost made me a physical wreck. At times my sufferings were so great that I was enable to attend to my household duties. I had smoth.... ering spells at times and was afraid to lie down to rest. After every meal, no matter how sparingly I ate, I suf- 'eer-e--;`-' fered great distress. I tried several doctors but their medicine -was of no avail, I saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised to cure this trouble and de- cided to try them. I had not been taking them long when I felt some- what improved. This improvement continued and after taking ten boxes I• could eat and digest all kinds of food and felt better than I had done for yeaes. You may be sure I am very grateful for the wonderful relief these pills have given me. 1 know they are also a cure for anaemic sufferers, as • an intimate friend of mine was badly affected with this trouble and after taking several boxes she was entirely cured." You can get these phis through any dealer in medicine or by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont. ENEMY IS ON THE DEFENSIVE VERDUN MAY BE THE LAST GREAT OEFENSIVE. — Outstanding Facts at the End of Two Years' War on Land. Germany is on the defensive. The initiative has passed to the Entente Allies. This is the one great out- standing fact—of the second year of the war. Before, she aimed a blow where she Pleased. She seized most of Belgium and a seventh of France. Twice she overwhelmed the Russians, who had penetrated East Prussia. She smashed her way far into the Czar's dominions and crushed Serbia and Montenegro. She directed a fearful battering ram of shells and human bodies on Verdun. But with the present summer a sweeping change came over the as- pect of military affairs. Co-operating through the Allies War Council, the Italians beat back the Austrian columns M the Trentino, the Russians drove the Teutons be- fore them ih, the east with horrible destruction, and the British and French began a slow and methodical bending of the long established lines in the west. The Third Year. These are the movements which are still going on as the war enters its third, and according to Lord Kitchener's Delphic prediction, final year. One thing is certain, the two largest empires of the earth, Russia and Great Britain, are at last fully organized for war against him. On the first anniversary of the war, August 1, 1915, the Austro -Ger- man sweep of Poland was in full swing. Lublin fell that day; Chohn, Aug. 2; Warsaw, Aug. 6; Ivangorod, Aug. 7; Serock, Aug. 9; Lomza, Aug. 11; Siedlic and Sokolow, Aug. 14; Kovno, Aug. 19; Novo Georgievsk, Aug. 21; Ossowiec, Aug.- 24; Kovel, Aug. 25; Brest-Litocsk, Aug. 27; Olita, Aug. 28; Lutsk, Sept. 2; Brody, Sept. 3; Gredno, Sept. 4; Dubno, Sept. 10; Pinsk, Sept. 17, and Vilna, Sept.20. It stemed to neutral observers nothing could stop the Teutons in the east, and it was generally believ- A PIGEON -POST YARN. • ed the invaders had themselves chos- -- en the line extending from just west Amusing Story About an Indian Post- of Riga nearly straight south to Rou- master. \ ter. mania, on which they spent the win - Like most men whose lives have Even when on Sept. 8, the Czar been spent in India, General Bird- took command of all his armies in wood has many amusing stories to person, won a victory near Tarnopol tell of native Manners and customs. Sept. 10, and recaptured Lutsk, Sept. One of the hest of these concerns 26, and Czartorysk, Oct. 20, few be - a Babu postmaster in a village just lived the Russians could revive. this side of the border, to whom Bird- Lutsk was soon lost again and on wood, who was on duty up stmong-the Oct. 25 the Germans stormed Ulluxt. "1' hills frequently sent letters by pigeon Then things settled down for the win - post, the speediest, and in most in- ter, and almost every neutral critic stances the only method of communi- thought the spring would see a re- cationsumption of the Teuton drive. One day, however, it chanced that a mounted orderly was going that way, and Birdwood entrusted his let- ter to him; and, as he had no proper official foolscap envelope handy, he enelosed it in one of the small flimsy -ones used for the pigeon postal ser- vice, and on the outside of which was printed, "O.H.M.S, per pigeon post." The missive was an important one, and the postmaster should have for- warded it at once by the ordinary mail to its destination. Judge then of Birdwood's disgust when, a few days later, he received it back unopened, and on the back of the envelope, in the Babu's copper- plate,handwriting, the following in- scription: "Method • of delivery ir- regular; please attach pigeon!" Another on the Minister. An army chaplain at the front came upon a sergeant and a small detach- ment who were trying bard to move a wagon which was hopelessly embed- ded in mild. "Can I be of any service to you 7" the benevolent divine in- • mitred, "Yes, sir," the sergeant re- plied. "You can best help us by mak- ing yourself scarce." "Making myself • scarce," the clergyman • repeated in surprise. "Yes, sig You see, the men can't very well say to the horses what they'd understand ethen you're about." As the acorn grows to be the mighty oak, so children, when rightly nourished, grow to be sturdy men and women. Good flavor andthe es- sential nourishing elements for mental and physical le- velopment of children are found in the famous food-- GrapeNuts Made of whole wheat and malted barley, this pure food supplies all the nutri- ment of the grains in a most easily digested form. It does the heart good to see little folks enjoy Grape - Nuts and ereaM, "There's a Iteason" Sold by Grocers, Canadian Postum Cereal co„ Ltd,, WindSor, Ont, ' !great Geernan offensive. Certain y Invasion of Serbia. On Oct. 8, the Teutons crossed the Serbian border at many points and five days later the Bulgarians, new- comers in the war, invaded from the east.Fighting desperately, but hope- lessly, the Serbians were pressed back by torrents of heavy shells to which they could not reply, and on Nov. 29 the German General Staff was able proudly to announce that the operatione against Serbia had ended in complete success, -while Austria at the same time was finish- ing off Montenegro. But unsuccessful as the year 1915 had been to the allies in the field, their will to conquer did not wayer; At the moment, early in December, when the German Imperial Chancel- lor was making a clear offer of peace in a speech in the Reichstag, the re- presentatives of Germany's enemies were meeting in a new War Council a Paris, resolved to redouble their herculean efforts and never compro- mise. On Dec. 21 David Lloyd George the strongest man in England, declar- ed Great Britain faced defeat unless greater efforts were made; and just a week later he demanded general conscription, threatening to resign if this measure were not put into effect. The conscription bill passed its hist reading in the House of Com- mons Jan. 6 and spring SaW it in full force. Premier Asquith was able to announce that England's total effort was five million men. Giant Recovers. Meanwhile in the east a greater giant was nursing his wounds and re- gaining his strength in four -fold de- gree. • A forewarning came to the world on Feb. 17, when Erzerum was taken. On April 19 the great Black Sea port of Trebizond fell, and two days later the first Russian contingent landed in France. Still the, German writers would not believe, and it took the magnificent Russian drive of June, whial won all of Bukovvina and a large slice of Volhynia and Galicia to convince them that Ruesia was again a force to be reckoned with. Seven million young men have come of military age in Russia since the war began, and of these at leaat Rye million are fit for duty. Despite her gigantic losses it ie quite possible there are more soldiers and potential soldiers in Russia to -day than when the war started. Erroneously considering the west- ern front the more dangerous the German General Staff an Feb. 21 be- gan a heavy attack on the fortress of Verdun, with the object of using up French ammunition and men until no allied offensive would be possible this year. REPAIRS Promptly Made to Storage Batteries Generators Magnetos Starter S. CANADIAN STOB/G11 BATTERY 00., =RIMED 117 Slancee $t., Toronto. Willard Agouti'. • to -day the Teutons have their hande full stemming the Russian advance, which is penetrating Transylvania, and the Anglo-French pounding attack aleng the Somme. The Austrians, who in the latter half of May debouched from the Trentino and almost gained the foot- hills and smiling plains of Italy are also content to stand and ward off the blows of the Italians, after giving up most of their gains. The year saw the Germans lose their Cameroon colony in JanuarYr while columns of Beigians, French, and British close in on the stout defendere of the East African colony, the last of the Kaiser's oversee pos- sessions. In Mesopotamia the British, pene- trating to within seven miles of Bag- dad, were forced to retreat, 'being fin- ally besieged in Kut -el -Amara and on April 30 the garrison capitulated: TO HALT "PAPER" snons. Germany Takes Steps to Cheek Use of the Material. The use of compressed paper for the making of shoes has become so exe tensive in Germany that the authori- ties have taken action to check the manufacture and sale of such shoes. The German papers explain that the trade in shoes with paper soles is bad for the public and for the manufac- tureers, because the hoes wear out very quickly and the leather which forms part of them is wasted. Manufacturers are now to be allow- ed to use paper in shoes to only a very limited extent and will be compelled to mark their products in such a way as to show exactly what parts of them are not made of leather. THE SELKIRK TUNNEL. Will Cost the C. P. It. $12,000,000 at the Least. The Selkirk tunnel will be through in the fall, according to the C.P.R. of- ficials. This is another of the -notable things to which the company has put its hand—a tunnel six miles through a mountain whose peaks pierce the clouds --a tunnel which presented en- gineering difficulties almost unique. This work will give the public an alternative route through the moun- tains; it will save six miles of snow sheds; it will eliminate danger, and it will minister to the comfort and convenience of the public. The cost will be $12,000,000 or more. That is about the only big work the C.P.R. has been engaged in lately, but it is in- teresting to recall that in the years before the war the company used to spend between $25,000,000 and 05,- 000,000 per annum in the development of the West. If, as a high official of the C.P.R. remarked, the C.P.R. took a dollar out of the West, it put that dollar back again in some form or other. It would hardly be believed, but the C.P.R., since its inception, has spent over $200,000,000 in the develop- ment of the West. Whether their gains were victories el: defeats will °Illy be known after the war, when we learn the number of killed and wounded they paid for each point. Enemy's Last Effort. Ierhaps Verdun will be the last THEY -ARE A GREEDY, GRABBIN LOT MOTIVES OE THE ENEMY ARE so sonimoi German Foreign Office Sees Bent on -Destruction of Germany. Reviewing the political events of the second year of the war, the Ger- man Foreign Office has given to the Associated Press the following state- ment: "Unlilce the military situation, it is not easy to review briefly the de- velopments in the confused paths of political events, but an attempt will be made to trace the leading ideas connected with the political problems of the second year of the war. "The world war was caused by Russia's aggressive policy, supported by France's policy of revenge. But it was rendered possible solely by the fact that England subordinated to her economic antagonism to Germany all her other interests. AIlies If our neighbore whuld mind their own business we would be more apt to mind ours. The Canadian National Exhibition has several times been visited by fire., The last occasion was in 1906, when 5350,000 worth of buildings were de- stroyed, including the Grand Stand. And Will Get Them. "Whereas Germaey's enemies re- gard it quite in order that they dee mead territorial aggrandizements, and otheik—like Russia, who wants Con- stantinople and. Galieia; like France, who desires Alsace-Lorraine and the left bank of the Rhine, and like Italy, who seelcs Austrian territory—they grudge Germany even that she strive to develop herself ecoemenically in peaceable competition, and they pro- nounce this an unpardonable sin against the world's order of things. "They are unwilling that Germany should become great and strong be- cause the other powers want to be the economic masters of the world. Territorial and economic aggrandize- ment has united Germany's! foes in a war of destrustion against us. "The second war year, whose end is now approaching, has brought these true aims of our opponents into clearer light. "In England, too, the mask has been dropped. It is openly admitted that Belgium was only a pretext to justify England's participation in the war which was undertaken only from self-interest. Punished is the Word. "Germany must be destroyed. Ger- many shall never more raise her head economically nor militarily. In this way is the goal of our enemy more clearly enunciated during the second year of the war. "It is equally clear that the talk of a struggle of democracy against militarism is only a catch -word used by our enemies to create sentiment and to cloak outwardly their real purpose of destruction. Assuredly there can be no talk of a struggle for the maintenance of democratic principles when one side sets out to destroy the enemy completely, in- cluding the civilian population. "Chancellor Von Bethmann-Holl- weg's remarks made in the course of the year outlined German aims with sufficient clearness. EnglanE wants a war of destruction, a war to the knife, which, according to the plans of our enemies, shall continue even after the cannon is silenced. Their former talk about the permanent peace that they wished to establish has been drowned under the shout that Germany's en- emies are raising over the Paris Economic Conference. There Is Yet Time. "Building upon what she already has achieved Germany treads the threshold of the third year of the war wit unshaken confidence, 13nt the goal has not yet been reached, for the enemy has not yet come to see the impossibility of subjugating Gettnany." POULTRY FARMING FOR BLIND. Come Out eS the Kitchen. It is the closed season for the bake -oven. Banish kitchen worry and work. Forget cooks, ser- vants and gas bills. Solve your Summer problem by serving Shredded 1Nheat Biscuit, the ready -cooked whole wheat food. A food that restores the digestive organs to their natural vigor, supplies all the nutriment needed for a half -day's work, and keeps the bowels, healthy and active. We have done the baking for you. Eat it for breakfast with milk or cream; serve it for luncheon with berries or other fresh fruits. Made in Canada FROM OLD SCOTLAND ,NOTES OF INTEREST ynom BEA BANKS AND BRAES. Not to be Fooled Twice, Judge (interrupting long-winded lawyer)—Can't you take it for granted that I understand an ordinary point of law? I Lawyer (coolly)—Your honor, that's the mistake I made in the lower court, where I lost my case, Montreal, May 29th, '09. 1V1inarci's Liniment Co., Limited, Yarmouth, N.S. .Gentlemen, -1 beg Ni let you know that I have used 1VIINARD'S LINI- MENT for some time, and I find it the best I have ever used for the joints and muscles. Yours very truly THOS. J. HOGAN. The Champion Clog and Pedestal Dancer of Canada. True. "Don't be afraid of a great name, my boy." "Why not 7" , "Because in this life you! will find that the unknown, quiet chap, who is doing his best every .minute to suc- ceed is a harder man to beat than the famous, over confident fellow, who is only half trying" • What is Going On in the Highlands and Lowlands of *Auld Scotia. _ Admiral J. E, Bearcroft was knock- ed down and injured by a motor car in Great Western Road, Glasgow. Women Volunteer Reserves col- lecting waste -paper for. Glasgow 00r- poration are now a familiar sight in the city. . The Clyde members of the Amal- gamated Society of Engineers have applied for a wages advance of four cents per hour. Mr. D. C. Dundas, for thirty years headmaster of Inverallochy Public school, Aberdeenshire, has been ap- pointed registrar of old Kilpatrick. At a meeting of Stranraer Town Council ex -Bailie R. B. Dyer was unanimously elected Provost of the Burgh, in place of the late Mr. Fox. The Marchioness of Bute has re- ceived from H. M. the 'Queen a gift of tobaceo and cigarettes for the pa- tients in Mount Stuart Naval Hospital at Bute. The death has occurred at Bore - land, 1Vlinnigaff, of John Alexander McGill, one of the best known and moet highly respected farmers in the district. The Dumbarton Tramways Com- pany have commenced to train lady car drivers, and have been running their first car with lady driver and lady conductor. Miss Speot, an assistant teacher in the elementary department of Ar - broth High School, is retiring from the teaching profession after a service extending over forty years. As the result of a disastrous fire the works of Messrs. Neill & Co., Edinburgh, the oldest printing -house in Scotland, having been founded in 1749, was completely destroyed. - An anonymous Glasgow citizen has presented Erskine House, on the Clyde'together with 350 acres of land, to the Princess Louise Scottish Hospital for limbless sailors and sol- diers. The Scottish Miners' Executive at Glasgow decided with reference to the postponed holidays, that two days should be observed, and that each -district should select a conveni- ent date. At a meeting of the Kirrietnuir Town Council, R. A. Smith was ap- pointed to the town clerkship, ren- dered vacant through the death of his father, Arch. Smith, who filled the position for forty years. At a meeting of Falkirk Town Council, presided over by Provost Boyle, a resolution was adopted that tlfo- Council petition the Government to at once take the neeessary steps to have isterned all enemy aliens. The death occurred at Kirkwall re- cently of Capt. George Robertson, in his 86t year. In 1860 Capt. Robert- son introduced steam communication between Kirkwall and the North Isles of Orkney, which had been previously carried on by sailing craft. Sir Arthur Pearson Tells of Aid for Soldiers. Two of the occupations 'Which those in charge of teaching Medea to those blinded in the war have found most suitable for their charges are massag- ing and poultry farming. Sir Arthur Pearson,in charge of the work at St. Dunstan's, Regent's Park, London, said recently in an in- terview: "Massage as an occupation is about the best thing a blind man can take up. He, has to go through a strenuous courseof training and acquire a knowledge of anatomy and Physiology in addition to the actual manipulative work. "Those who take up market garden- ing and poultry farming are quite cap- able of doing the necessary work themselves. The great difficulty is to find es man a cottage arid a bit of land within reasonable distance of a market. "In other industries our men have acquired a skill that they can turn to ,good account. The instance of a boot- \snaker occurs to me. Twelve months ago his, parents were distreseed over his condition, and wondered what would become of him. He learned the trade here, established himeelf in a riveraide town some miles away, and from January 1 to May 31 earned an average of 21 95. 96. a week." Suspicion. "What makes you think Stiggins is a mollycoddle 7 He's always talking about wanting to fight 7"! "That's the reason. He Emends to mo as if he were so scared that he thought et necessary to bluff." selnarele Liniment Lumbermen's Friend some people can t stand prosperity, hut tho majority don't get a chalice to try. There eve 262 sections for the horse classes at the Canadian National ET - Moat complete in the world• 401IGA1t TROUI3LE$ tiT GERMANt Itnpossible to Get It at Time of the Preserving Season. Sugar hal apparently taken the place of butter as the supreme woe of the German housewives. In numerous towns and cities (auch as Frankfort - on -the -Main) no sugar at all ie serv- ed to customers in coffee-hoeses, re- staurants, and hotels. The Frankfur- ter Zeitung in a recent issue publistf- ecl a prominent notice advising people to take either their own sugar or sac- charine with them when going to pub- . eating -places. The notice statee that little bottles of eaccharine can now be bought at the chemists' for 6 cents. The Food Dictator at Berlin hopes soon to arrange for cafes and restaurants to pans "saccharine bowls" round. This is the height of the fruit pre- serving season in Germany and wo- men are frantic over the difficulty of securing preserving sugar. The Vos- sische Zeitung stated that preserving sugar was no longer obtainable in Ber- lin, while the big residential suburbs like Wilmeesdorf and Charlottenburg had thus far not been allowed any at all by the Food Dictator. No artieles offensive in odor or appearance, or of a combustible or explosive character are accepted for exhibition at the Canadian National Exhibition. paying hie bine. So many people wait in vain for their phips to come in because they were never launcleed. . Ask for Minardle and take no ethaS No Need for the Other Tommy had returned from a birth- day party, his round face wreathed in smiles. "I hope, Tommy," said his mother, "that you were polite and remember- ed your 'Yes, please,' and No, thank you,' when things' were passed to you." 'I remembered 'Yes, please,' replied the boy cheerfully, "but I didn't have to say 'No, thank you,' mother, be- cause I took everything -every time it was passed. or Granulated Eyelids; Eyes inflamed by expo- sure to Sun, Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Marine Eye Remedy. No Smarting. Jest Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's Sec per Bottle. Nurine Eye SalveinTubes2Sc. Forilaok el iheEyerteeask Druggists or Muslim Eye Remedy Co. , Chime Few women who dive into the sea of matrimony manage to bring up pearls. koala Minardle Liniment in the home -- . Can't Keep Ahead. "There's no pleasure in driving a motor car any more." "No 7" "No. It doesn't make any difference how fast you drive there's always someone with a faster car coming a. long to give you the horn and make you get over to let him go by." The upstart who says trade is vul- K1. 4. ISSUE 33-416. gar is usually slow when it COMOS to 00- TAB CROWN PRINCE /5 NASTY. He Is Dissipated, Erotic, and Im- moral, and Looks the Part. When one comes to study the dissi- pated life of Germany's Crown Prince one is forced to the conclusion that had he not been born to the purple his lack of brains, his vitiated tastes, his drinking orgies, his erotic nature, his readiness to shed blood, sacrifice fife, would, long before the present war, have oetracised him front the society of decent men. His upbringing was snobbish. At Bonn University, his orgies were the wonder of the students, already skill- ed in every form of dissipation. As a subaltern his escapades became tho talk of two continents. Little Willie's face begins to show signs of evil living. His eyes are sometimes dull and glassy, and some- times weak and watery. The mouth dro9pe at the corners, and shows that he is easily led along the paths of evil. To shake hands with him gives one the fq/ling of touching a snake. Th if Prince's nature is cruel and callous to a degree. Ile once made a cruel remaelt while big -game hunting to a Maharajah whose guest he was. A heater etaeted to enter a dense elemp of Jungle grass M which a vVouncled panther had taken refuge. A native officer shouted a warning to the man from • the howdah of the next elephant, whereapon the Prince turned to the Maharajah in impatient protest: "Tell him to let the chap go ors, your Highness," he cried. "It is not every clay that one can see 0 man mailled by a leopard." Liniment uaed isto. 21antinanas ARE CLEAN STICRINESS ALL DIAI.EMS G.C.BriggS1Sons MA alt LTO tk.-.4AYN-ike.16 10 i 5-20 Years from now the DisSell Silo will be giving good service. Xt is built of sel- ected timber, treated with wood preservatives, that prevent decay. It has strong, rigid walls, air- tight doors, and hoops of heavy eteel. Therefore it lasts, slain. ly becauee :it -can't very well do anythino else. Our folder explains more fully —Write 10ept. T. E. BISSELL CO., LTD. Illord, Ontario. 01119.11001011.0.11111071911EMITFAX$ Oataat la FOR E yaw/ SPORT Am RECREATION Sold by all goi131koe Dealers Wow ire b y v,•L• gnenoiner of he ftifunillY SEED POTATOES EDD POTATOES, IRISH COD - biers, Deleware, Carman. Order at once, Supply Ihnitea, Write Tor quo- tations, H. W: Dawson, Brampton. von SALE . DOLAN)) CH,JNA HOGS. BIVIOOTH, I big -boned, quick grOWIng, hair -ton kind, and every one registered. The ideal farmers' hog sold at farmers' Prices. MAJOR EDGAR, North leatley, Que. NEWSPAPEES PON SALE OVIT-IPSANING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in geed Ontario towna The niost useful and interesting of all bueinesses. Pull information on application+ to "Wilson Publishing Corn- panyr4A_West Adelaide Street, Toronto. MI SC E ADM GUS CiANCER, TUMORS, LIMPS. Nr0.4 V Internal and external, cured with., out pain by OUr home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr, Denman Medical Co., Limited, CoOnt.ingwood, Oo V, :Maori free to any address by A America's the uthor Pioneer 1-1. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. Deg Remedies 118 West 31st Street, New York laccers.,,Micpazat. Xi 001( Ord DOG DISEASES And How to Feed N DO'T CUT o Err A Shoe Bon, Capped Hock or Bursitis FOR will reduce them and leave no blemishes. Stops lameness promptly. Does not blis- ter or remove the hair, and horse nn be worked. $2 a bottle delivered. Book6 AI free. AnsonniNg JR., for mankind the eetlptt liniment for Boils, Bruises. San,. Swellings, Varicose Ve no. Allays Wu and Inflammation. Price Si and S2 a bottle at druggists or dollvereaNIII MI yen more If you write. W, YOUNG, P. 0. F., 516 Lyme 13Idg., Montreal, Can. aboorbino and Absortloo, Jr.. ars made la Canal, hi ilacneu SMo Wheelock Engine, 150 11.P., 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. wide,ahd 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 bargain as room is required immedi- ately. S. Frank Wilson & Sons 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. THE ',REA' ofe IL Ell: Is the best way, and the best way is the Parowax way. Jellies and preserves that are sealed with PURI] REFINED PARAFFINIC keep their luscious flavor. They never mold or ferment. They are as good when you want to eat them as they were the day you sealed the jars.. ;hist pour melted Parowax over the tolis of jelly tumblers, It keeps out all dust and germs. It keeps the preserves air -tight. FOR THE LAUNDRY—Sec; directions on Parowax labels for its use in valuable service in washing. AT DEALERS EVERY-WI:MBE THE IMPERIAL. OIL COMPANY Limited BRANCHES IN ALL CITIES"