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The Clinton News Record, 1916-08-24, Page 71 N ANXIOUS TIME FOR ALL PARENTS Fehildren Often Seem to Pine t Away and Ordinary Medicine Does Not Help Them. The health of children between the g.es of twelve and eighteen years, articularly in the case of girls, is a source of serious worry to nearly every mother. The growth and de- velopment takes so much of their 'strength that, in many cases they acteally seem to be going into a de- cline. -The appetite is fickle, bright - 'nese gives way to• depression, there are headaches, fits of dizziness, pal- pitation of the heart at the least ex- ertion, and sometimes fainting. The blood has become thin and watery and the sufferer must have something that will bring back the blood to its normal condition. At this stage no other medi- cine can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Their whole mission is to make new, rich blood, which reaches every part of the body, bringing back 'health, strength and energy. Miss Helena Taylor, West Toronto, says: "Two years ago I was so badly 'run 'dawn with anaemia that some of my friends did not believe I would get better. I could not go upstairs with- out stopping to rest, suffered from headaches, loss of appetite, and for two menthe of the time was confined to the house. I was under the care of a doctor, but the medicine I took 1111111161111.1?— advised did not help Inc in the least. A friend my mother to give me Dr. , e Williams' Pink Pills, and although I did not expect they would help me after the doctor's medicine had fail- ed, I thought they might be worth trying. After taking two boxes there was such a marked change for the better that people asked me if I had changed doctors, and I readily told them the medicine that was help- ing me. I continued taking the pills until•I had used eight boxes, when my health was fully restored, and I have since enjoyed the best of health. I hope my experience may be the means of convincing some sickly person that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can restore them to health." You can get these pills 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., Brockville, Ont. se -- KEEP ON THE SUNNY SIDE. 1 hgessw, Pick Out a Gleam of Light From the • Dark Paths. Since we all have more or less mis- fortune to meet, let us strive to meet it in the right way. Why sit down and bewail the ill luck that is ours? Why turn our ,norrow deer and over in our minds seeing in it ever new V phases emisfortune? No! • Let us stand up beneath its weight, no mat- ter bow heavy the load may seem, and, With mer eyes fixed on the glim- mer of light, let us walk swiftly out of the dark paths into the sunlight. Once we have learned to walk on the sunny side of life, darkness will have no further terrors for us, for we Will carry our sunshine around with us in the depths of our hearts. The sunshine of the ,mind is far warmer and brighter than the sunshine -which we see and feel with our physical senses. Once we have gained the true sense of real mental sunshine we will have the means to pull -ourselves out of every slough of despond without any outside aid. For just as Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress" was mental, so it is with all of our journeys through life. What we really accomplish must - first 'be worked out in mind. earning to pick out the gleam of light' from the dark path, learning how to avoid the sloughs of despond and how to walk in the sunshine is not easy, but even the attempt at learning these lessons brings its re- ward of happiness and peace. Every .little effort in the right direction ibrings such beautiful. returns that Ithe only wonder is that so few of us make the effort. Star of a Feather. "Some stake are so far away that :the light from th.em hasn't, reached us yet. But it will arrive eventual - "Reminds me of my hired man corne ing from the post offree," commented. Farmer Heck. Everybody needs Stored for emergency in a well-developed, well - pre- served, well-nourished body and brain. Grape -Nuts food stands preeminent as a builder of this kind of energy. It is made of the entire nutri- ment of Whole Wheat and barley, two of the richest sources of food strength. Grape -Nuts also includes the vital mineral elements of the grain, so much emphasized in these clays of investigation of real food values. Crisp, ready to eat, easy to digest, wonderfully nourishing and delicious, , "There's a Reason" for 0 rape= Nuts Canadian Postum Cereal Ce,, 7421.,1 Windsor, Ont,' .........ea,mataara*Imenrammsearsatx.p.orxe THE CULTURED ARE THE BRAVEST YEARS OF REFINEMENT BRING COURAGE. Abbe Moreaux Believes War De- veloped' All Latent Fortitude of Race. The disossion of courage as de- veloped by\the war and as manifest- ed by individual soldiers under fire has drawn some interesting contribu- tions from Dr. Charles Richet of the French Institute and the Abbe Mo- reaux, director of the Bourges Ob- servatory. Dr. Richet is of the opinion that fear and courage must be considered separately; that the former exists in certain temperaments alongside the latter.'_that a man may be unable to control the terrifying effect of a dan- gerous situation upon his physical faculties and yet stand his ground in the face of almost certain death through the exercise of his will. These men he considers the bravest of all. Among the soldiers who hold their ground under murderous fire there are always some who are afraid and others -who are not, says Dr. Richet, but all prove their bravery by still being there; the cowards have fled. Considering the whole war, taking -into account the atrocious features 'that have developed here and there with all allowance made for occasion- al weaknesses, Dr. Richet considers that the soldiers have shiiwn heroism that jpstifies a great deal of pride on the part of the present generation, in spite of the belief that seemed to prevail before the great conflict that intellectual development, with, pro- gress in science, letters and arts, while ennobling the mind, had dimin- ished personal courage. Most Relined Are Bravest. The question was frequently dis- cussed as to whether the delicate and subtle culture of later years was not going to produce a tame spirited and effeminate generation, preferring well being to arduous effort and incapable of comprehending the beauty of sacri- fice. It is exactly the contrary that has been demonstrated, according to Dr. Richet; the most cultivated and refined of the young men of France and Great Britain having been those who have shown the greatest brav- ery. Students of the Sorbonne and other French universities, students of Eton, Oxford and Cambridge set the example. These are the men, Dr. Richet says, who have shown most courage in its simplest form; that is to say, by .su- preine contempt for death, 'and that contempt, he concludes, is not the re- sult of philosophical reflection, but is simply the spontaneous manifesta- tions of inherent bravery. Never, even among the heroes of antiquity, in the' times of Leonidas, Spartacus, or Hannibal, according to Dr. Richet, was there shown so much of this kind of abnegation and so rmich tranquil self-sacrifice—supreme courage—as in the present conflict. As to the men who are naturally brave and take supreme risks with- out requiring an effort of the will to overcome fear, Dr. Richet gives dif- ferent reasons, the first of which is that some of them do not believe in danger; they imagine that they are invulnerable—that they have a lucky star; they are surrounded by a ort of optimistic fatality that gives them a feeling, of security. In other cases these naturally brave men, even when they believe in danger, or notnintimi- dated by it because they have in their own minds already made the sacri- fice of their life; once that conclusion reached—to die or to be wounded is something that does not torment them. Other Impelling Influences. Others, and perhaps the great ma- jority, are neither those that are in- different to death nor those who be- lieve in their lucky star; they are men who see before them other more powerful images than that of death, such as the fatherland, sense of duty, of honor; renown of the regiment, am- bition to earn praise or promotion, pride at 'being admired by one's com- rades, and shame at being taken for a coward. In nearly all these cases the idea of death and danger disappear and the soldier is brave without effort. He forgets every risk that he is taking in the presence of the image that he has in his mind. The number of these naturally brave men is notably larger in day- light and in the presence of com- manding officers and comrades than at night on sentry duty, or on solitary mission that no witness will be able to recount. Men who acquit them- selves on such missions without flinching Dr. Richet considers the bravest of all. Habit Overcomes Fear. In the constant habit of it all no- tion of danger finally disappears, as in the case of aviators, most of whom the first time the are up in the air have a seneation of fear in spite of all reasoning. After a certain num- ber of ascensions the physical mani- festations of apprehension disappear; to be supported in the air by the speed of the motor seems to them to be the simplest thing possible, and certain pilots have dbclared that they felt themselves in greater safety seated in their aeroplanee in the air than when riding in an automobile. The hardened warriors of African campaigns, habituated to all the risks of war, Were naturally more stolid under fire than young recruits who had seen nothing of minters,' life but the barracks and the manoeuvres, end yet accoeding to the Abbe Moreaux even those seasoned mon in presence of the new and formidable clangers of scientific warfare showed to more fortitude than the young recruits who had had only a few months of prepar- ation before facing the enemy. Abbe Mona= is of the opinion that :the war itself has developed all Your "Get -Away" Power in Summer is low. Summer brings mental and phySical lassitude. The spirit is languid, the liver is lazy. Nature is trying to unload the toxins that come from heavy foods and lack of outdoor exercise. Help Nature to restore natur vigor and vim. Get an eight- -cylinder stamina by eating Shredded Wheat Biscuit with fresh fruits and green vegetables. Cut out meat and potatoes — eat these delicious, nourishing little loaves of baked whole wheat and be cool, contented and happy. For breakfast with milk or cream; for luncheon with berries or other fruits. Made in Canada the latent fortitude of the race, and he expects that the generation that has suffered this war"will find itself with new resources created by it. The sentiment of enion of common in- terest and patriotism will have been reawakened, he thinks, and many a pusillanimous creature both in the army and out of it will have a new courage born of the virtue that makes heroes. The entire nation, he thinks, will participate in this reawakening of latent forces. BRITAIN'S ENEMY ALIENS. How the Government Handles the Many Cases. Whipping the enemy in the field of battle and sinning his chips on the sea constitute, of course, the main problem of a war ; but there is stoned -1. part about going to war that is almost as intricate and vexatious and as hard in its own way to deal with. It con- cerns spies and aliens—the capture. of the spy and the control of the aliens. For a considerable period thousands had full liberty, except reporting now , and then at police stations. The Bri- tish Government now interns, unless some very good reason for not doing so is shown, all enemy aliens of mili- tary age and some others Every German in Great Britain was considered a spy until proved other- wise. And probably every German was a spy, in the sense -that if he had the opportunity of obtaining and than transmitting information to his Gov- ernment, he would do so. Those who were spies were arrestdd and tried ; a dozen or so have been shot in the 'Tosser of London. Those who have been suspected but not proved to have I been spies have usually been sent into I internment camps out et harm's way, and where their spying propensities have no outlet, The task of combing out the "bad 'uns" has been enormous. There is no telling hole, many inves- tigations the police have had to make runs into the hundreds of thous - adds. Not a rumor goes unheeded by Scot- land Yard. Every report against any person, whether it comes from a news- boy, maid servant or householder, is Investigated. It is astonishing how many people have been accused of es- pionage in this view. Conversations in the privacy of homes have been re- peated by patriotic servants. A Scot- land Yard man furnishes the next chapter. Foreigners have learned to be very careful in what they say and where 'they say it. Every Britisher enjoys the privilege of roasting his own gov- ernment ; but let a foreigner do it and if any one overhears there is like- ly to follow a denouncement at Scot- land Yard, "The Yard" never overlooks a thing. Every report thus received, whither it seems important or not, is investiga- ted. Of the large number of people placed under arrest on suspicion probably one per cent., according to information an expert has given, are found guilty. Many of these have done nothing seri- ous that can be proved against them, and are chucked into intereamitt camps. A very small number corm pared to the total of arrests have been found guilty after trial. 'Under the defense of the realm act the authorities can deport any alien, and are -not obliged to give any reason for it. Take vessels en route from New York to Holland, for instance, They •touch at Falmouth, .and are boarded by British examining officers. They are in British territorial waters, and thus under British Jurisdiction, The ship Is gone over in most thorough fashion. Sometimes it takes several days. levesy passenger 18 in- vestigated. The ship is searched for spies and for Contraband, Little of value goes by, It was one of these investigations that led to the capture of Frans von Rintelin, one of the most famous of German agents. Perfectly Calm. Angler (in deep .water)—"Help I Help! I eanq swim!" Country gentleman (on shore)—"I can't neither, but I ain't hollerin' about it," atmaree; Ztaireent taed Or Pasenciana Height of Heels. e "I'm afraid those Louis XV. heels are much too high nor me. Perhaps you have some lower ones—say about Louis X. would do, I think." ED. 4 - AVIATORS TAKE PHOTOS FROM AIR ENLARGED TO SEVEN TIMES ITS ORIGINAL SIZE. French Can Tell What Goes On Be. hind and In the Enemy's Lines. Philip Kerby, writing in the New York Tribune, On the photographic work of the French air scouts, says : Standing In the centre of a human dovecote, I watched one after another depart. Hardly a breath of air was, stirring. The silence was rudely shattered by a, few staccato orders, followed by a crash and a roar, gradually diminish- ing until it became no louder than the hum of a bluebottle.fly. Then silence again. Another human bird had been dispatched on its dangerous mission. While my officer friend was explain- ing the map, in •#eshed an orderly bearing some wet photographic prints. Ilardly five minutes before I lead heard the •rumble of a machine landing in a, distant field. These prints' were the result o•f that efternoon's reconnalen sance over the enemy's lines. The moment an aviator lands he hands his ease of exposed plates to a waiting messenger, who carries them at ton speed to the "dark room on wheels"— always situated in close proxminity to the field a.erodrome—where they are developed with al possible rapidity. 'What does one see in these pic- tures ? To the uninitiated they appear only as a child's rude seratchings. Across the centre are two zig-zag flume closely -paralleling each other and re- sembling the tortuous windings of a dragon. Prom each side are smaller tendrils, apparently wandering aim- lbssly, until they disappear in the vague distance. At irregular intervals along these tendrils may be seen tiny, wart -like blotches. What Scout Sees. The dragon represents the teeneh lines of the opposing forces, while the gossamer -like tendrils are the com- municating trenches leading from the rear to the front Hee. When either side brings up troops to the trenches • s farlon3ist.he rear they aPperia to the human birdoverhead asmall blotches or , warts in the winding communication ;le My officer friend broke off abruptly while we were both looking at these pictures and turned to the telephone. Calling up the field headquarters of is sector, he said : I have the honor to inform you that the enemy at half - Peet 'nye this afternoon was libing sup- plied lin a train of approximately twenty automobiles coming along Route No. 5, leading from Base'Iftie the distributing point immediately be- hind Hill No. 220. Do you wish me to send you first proofs; or shall I wait and send proofs and enlargements to- gether. The answer evidently came to send the proofsimmediately, as without more ado an orderly was summoned and the proofs despatched by a wain big motorcyclist How did you know that the enemy !nciu,eia, litbringing up niunitioes ?" I in you did not notice the dark worm at the upper right hand of the picture ?" the officer answered. Learning Enemy's Positions. I replied that it had escaped my notice, but when a moment later sever- al enlargements, together with the original photographs, were brought in, I could clearly see e long, winding dis- coloration, which in every successive picture had moved further toward the centre. "Will that train ot automobiles be shelled," I asked, pointing to the map, "as they pass. that gap between these two hills ?" His answer was a sign for silence, and two or three miles away from us we heard the heavy guns break forth. "There's yOur an- swer !" cried the officer. A scant quarter of an hour had clawed be- tween the landing of the aviator and the time the guns opened fire. e "IE you can see the necessary details on the original protogra.phs," I asked, "of what use are the enlargements ?" "Each photograph is enlarged .to six or seven times its original size: These enlargements are then cut into several strips or sections, and the commandos - el the corresponding section of our trenches is given the part which shows the enemy's ground immediately fac- ing him. Before an attack is made the commander is thus enabled to explain to his men all thepeculiarities of the enemy's position, gun emplacements to be avoided, broken ground, traps of all kinds, and the thousand and one hazards which each side is continually Preparing for the destruction of the other. is TOO MUCH FOR "JIM" HILL. How the Section Bose "Got By" the Railway Magnate. The late James like other Men of unusual personality, was the source of unending aneedote. According to a writer in the New York Sun, who describes the interest- ing characteristics of the man, ono of his aversions was a locked desk. He thought that men who worked for him had no right to bring their secrets to his office. One morning he had oc- casion to look for a reporter' the desk of an official of his company; and found the desk locked. When the official am'- -rived he found the top of the desk wrenched off. A sign upon the -wreck- age called the attention of the office force to the rule about looked desks, and that desk remained on exhibition, as a mute object lesson. Be watched. the Great Northern Railway with microscopic care.. Woe to the section hand who allowed any- thing to lie round his right of way, or to the station master who showed care- lessness about his station. Ono, in making an inspection, Mr. Hill found a veiledly good railway spike lying by the side of the track. -He sought out the section -boss with in his eyes and showed him the, spike. The section bass had a quick wit, however, and before the rebuke broke upon him - ha exclaimed "My godness, Mr. RR I'M glad you found that once I I've beau looking for it for nearly three weeks." -- It Is eaid that he "got by" without the expepted "blowieg up," field that even the "old man" had to smile. The man who alwaye doe n his best at lamb has the satisfaction af'know- ing that he doesn't owe his failure to, carelessness, , ISSUE 35—'16, moo,; =Iowa Sdniment in the house SToi?' AGE, BATTERIES Magnetos Starters Generators REPAIRS made promptly Canadian Storage Battery Co., Limited. Willard Agents. 117-119 SIMCOB ST., TORONTO KAMLOOPS A..1s2 IRRIGATION - The Leading Inland City of British Columbia. The Western Canada irrigation As- sociation held Re Tenth Annual Con- vention at the City of Kamloops the last week in July. The picturesque little city takes its name from the Indian equivalent "Meeting of the Waters," where the sun shines every day And good fellowship, health and happiness radiate from all, and opens wide in hospitality its doors to you. Away back over, a hundred years ago the North West Fur Trading Co., with keen appreciation of the advant- ages of the location, established a post on the present Site of Kamloops ,—the junction of the now called North and South Thompson Rivera Its excellent water communications; its central position in a wide open stretch of splendid graahig country and its healthy, growing climate, at- tracted Indians and traders from all parts, and soon the little trading - post grew in importance and popula- tion. Seventy -live years afterevaeds the Canadian Pacific Railway thrust its steel rails through the main street of the aspiring little community, and it was but an endorsement of the opinion of the old trading company, that Kamloops was indeed, "The Place in the Sun." There are irrefutable reasons why Kamloops claims the distinction of being the leading inland city of the Province of Beitish Columbia. Its geographical position marks it as serving a very large area; 250 miles from Vancouver, ,390 miles from Cal- gary and 540 from Edmonton, it sees no possible rival. With a population of some 5,000, it points with pardon- able pride to its splendid streets and pavements, to Its modern electric lights, power, water and telephone systems, and to its uninterrupted steady progress. With abundance of water, continuous bright sunshine and undisputed soil -fertility, it contains mallenttlsie. attributes necessary to future commerciagricultural al and develop - YOUR BLOOD CAN'T RUN COLD. Will Not Do So as Long as You Are Alive :and Well. "My blood runs cold at Abe very thought" is not a novel ,expression. You often either hear seine one else say it or aver it yourself. Your blood cannot "run cold" as long as you are alive and well. It the,blood really becomes cooler than "blood heat" something serious happens to your health. When you feel cold it is a sensation, not necessarily the temperature at the tissues. Often with the blood feverish or way above its normal warmth you feel chilly. So much of the super- heated blood is then at the surface of the skin that an extra normal amount of heat leaves too quickly. On 'the other hand, men and women who drink beer, get, whisky, and similar alcoholic beverages "feel the glow of warmth" and believe they are hot when as a matter of course their blood is a trifle below blood -heat teen perature—at times manifestly a dem gerous thing. , True enough the blood has a lot to do with how you feel. This, however, is not because "it blows hot or blows cold," but because that part of it in the skin where the sensations of heat and cold are located reflects the. out- side surroundings according to the pre- vious experience and habits of each Individual's skin. If a stoker and an employee of a re- frigerator plane are put in a cold draught or before an open grate fire each will feel chilly or hot according to his previous experience and habits. The stoker will "catch cold" in the, "draught" which will have no effect whatsoever upon the man used to cold storage temperatures. atinarive Liniment Luanterman'a Friend Making Sure Of It. Towne -4,1y wife used to get ner- vous every time she heard a noise downstairs, but I aseured her that it couldn't be burglars, because there always careful not to make tiny ndise. Browne -So that calmed her Towne—Not much. Now she gets nervous every time the doesn't hear any noise. AWE CLEAN NO STICKINESS ALP. DEALERS 0.C.Beigge &SOBS HAMILTON laDhlnery For SO Wheelock Engine, ISO H.P., 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins, Wideealid Dynamo 30K, W. belt driven. All in first class condition. WOnld be sold together or separate- ly ; also a lot of shafting at a very,great bargain as wo1n Is required iM111Cel1- ately. Frank Wilson & Sons 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. NEW MODEL SALOON. British Government Opens One at Cariiele, Eng. Carlisle, Eng., is very proud of be log the city selected to pioneer thief movemene and already the Gretna Is drawing a large clientele. elin pub lie hourfee here were closed in come ("once of the war and the necessity arose to find a suitable subetitute. The new saloon is more than a mere bar' wed lounge. The building is a line stone etructure in a 'Moroi nent tborOlighfare,and resembles neither the German 'beer hall 110r the Britieh public house. The invasion of the neighborhood by the creation of a colossal inuntI times factory in the neighborhood of Carlisle was the origin of the Idea of a kind of,vedrkman'e club saloon. The rural beer houses were too, small and too local for the °lase of people who had come into the locality., So the Control Board tools over several of these rural inns, and have made a single building of them, with kitchens, dining -rooms, library and cinema shows, , -WHITE OAK VALUABLE. Used for Many Purposes, and Valu- eble as Mahogany. • Lachete, Que., 25th Sept., 1908. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen, — Ever since coming home from the Boer War I have been bothered with running fever sores on may legs. I tried many salves and liniments; also doctored continuously for the blood, but got no permanent relief, till last winter when my mo- ther got me to try MINARD'S LINI- MENT. The effect of which was al- most magical. Two bottles com- pletely cured me and I have worked every working day since. YOUTS gratefully, JOHN WALSH. .Didn't Have To. "Well, thank Heaven," he said, ap- proaching a sad -looking man who sat back in a corner, "that's over with." "What is?" "I've danced with the hostess. Have you gone through with it yet?" "No; I don't need to. Pm the host," The white oak has served for more useful purposes that perhaps any other tree, and its wood to -day is worth as much as mahogany, Says "Outing." Furniture of "solid oak" is now a rarity, for the wooa nes become so expensive that it is used in the forni of a veneer over baser woods, So used it loses none of its beauty, and even the thin veneer resists wear for an inceedibly long time. This wood was a -60M one to the early agriculturalists as well as to those of the present day. It was durable when exposed to the ele- ments, and was also durable in con- tact with the soil. It was and is Still used in fencing, and much of the sec- ond growth white oak timber in Ameri- ca Is being cut for railroad cross ties. Ties of this timber bring the highest price, and some of the larger roads will accept nothing else. RN Granulated Eyelids', Eyes inflamed by expo- • sure to See, Dust and %Vied quickly relieved bythelne ye eastIt Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. MurineEye SalveinTubea2Sc. Foaled el litayarecasit Druggists or Marine Eye Remedygo.,Chicage Prepared For It. Belle—Marie married a genius. Millie—You don't mean it? --- Belle—Yes, but she has talent and can support him. 0.5k for Tainartra rand tato no °thus It All Depends. "Say, paw, what's a 'captain of in- destry'?" "It is a term that the head of a grinding monopoly applies to himself, my son." "It's a term the dear, public applies to the some man." MElaibaladEME1322411103t71 WEAR 50 YT GOGI) SolosAZialeata , WORN BY tn; rimt.a.a=t TIM Dm= SEED POTATOES Q, NOD POTATOES, IRISH COB - PJ Delaware, Carman. Order at once. Supply Limited. Write for quo- tations. E. W. Dawson, Brampton, A.ETTCEDS POIL SALE. anazantom.a.nmumson......ograrstemax.ammonestwnwrareaw firifTRE'SELIBMEN'S SUCTION ROSE, A. Canvas Covered, 2A" at 45 cents. Endless Stitched Canvas Belting, 7", 4 MY, at 24 cents. N. Smith, 138 York Si,. Toronto. POD SALE, G000 100-ACEID PAR1VI. BURON County,. Morris Township. Must sell. For particulars write F. S. SCoTT, Brussels Ont. nowsrArtres roa SALE ROF1T-MAKING NEWS AND JOB (=lees for sale in goad Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting Of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Pebilshing Cocom - hour, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.4 internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment Write as before too late. Dr. Bellman Meilical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont America's Pioneer H. CLAY CLOVER CO., Inc. Ilse nee:dies 118 West list Street, New York DOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed !alined free to any AdarOSS by the Author 10 15-20 Years from now the Lassen Silo will be giving,' good service. Ti 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 steel. ' Therefore it lasts, simp- ly because it can't very 'well do anything else. Our folder explaine mere fully —Write Dept. U. W. E. BISSELL CC., LTD. Mora, Ontario. s. Optario Votorillary Collego *Under ilia Control of the Depart- ment of Agriculture of Ontario ESTABL/S1173D 1062 Affiliated with the Univer- sity of Toronto. College will re -open on Monday, the Said of October, 1916, 110 University Ave., Tomato, fleat CA.LMNDArs ON Al2PLICATION E. I. I.Gruge, V.S., 113., Prificlual will reduce inflamed, swollen Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Bunches; Heals Boils, Poll' Evil, Quittor,Fistula and infected sores quickly as it is a nositire antiseptic and germicide. Pleasant to nut does not blister or remove the half, anti you= work the berm 52.05 per bottle. delivered. Book 7151 free. ASSORBINE. JR., the antiaentle liniment for mankind. reduces Painful. Swollen Veins. Ven,. &mina, &Waal elope pain and Inflammation. Price SLOO gler bottle at dealers or deliverel 1.1111 tril you more 15 MI write. Liberal Trial Bottle for 11W -in ammo, F. YOUNG, 5,5, F„ 51G Lyman 111dg,, Montreal, Can. 5,5 sor Inc end AbSorblne. Jr.. are made in Canado.I Is pure refined Parowax. It keeps the tumblers absolutely air -tight. Keeps the jellies free from mold and fermentation. PUBE REFINED PAILEPPINE gives the best results with none of the trouble. All you have to do is pour melted Parowax over the tumbler tops and the preserves will keep indefinitely. Parowax is absolpte insurance against fermentation of any sort. FOR THE LAUNDRY—Sec directions on Pnrowax labels for its use in valuable service in washing. At grocery, department and general stores everywhere. THE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY Limited BRANCHES IN ALL CITIES -en ii