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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-11-02, Page 7„ . . , THE SHADOW, OF BROKEN HEALTH Can Be Quickly Dispelled, Through ,-the Ilse or Dr. Williams Pink Pills. When the shadow of poor health follows your life;when hope begins to fa0e and friends look serious, then ie the time you 5hou1d remember that thousands just as hdPeless have been cueed and restored to the sunshine of health by the use of Dr. Williams _ Pink Pills. These pills actually make hew, rich ,blood Which brings a glow of jeath to anaemie cheeks; cures in- digestion, headaches and backaches, drives out the Stinging pains of rheu- matism and neuralgia, strengthens the nerves and. relieves as no other Malkin° Can do the aches and pains from which womenfolk alone suffer. In any emergency of poor health give 'Dr. Williams Pink Pills a fair trial and they wilL not disappoint you. Here is a base that will bring hope to milka weary sufferer. Mrs. E. C. Taylor, Ascot .Ave., Toronto, says: "A. few days agoT was so run down with Ye anaemia that 1 could scarcely walk about the house, and wasnot able to. leave it. I had no color; my appetite was poor and I was constantly troub- led with headaches, dizzy spells and general disinclination to move about or do anything. I tried many medi- -eines, but none of them helped me, and my friends thought I was in a de- cline. One day a friend who was in to see me asked i? I had tried Dr. Wil- liams Pink Pills. I had heard.of this medicine often, but had not used it, so I determined to give it a trial, I cer- tainly got a pleasant surprise, for after using two boxes I could feel an improvement in rny condition. Con- tinuing the use of these pills I began t� regain my health, the headaches and dizzy spells were disappearing, and I began to gain in weight. Peo- ple began enquiring what I was tak- ing and I was not slow to give Dr. Williams Pink Pills the credit. Itook the pills for less than two moeths, and "--ebrepletely regained "'my old time health and strength. I hope my ex- perience may convince some doubting person as to the great merit of Dr. Williams Pink 1911s, as I certainly have cause to be a firm champion of them.” You can get these pills through any dealer -in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr, Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. SOUNDING FOR SHELLS. Ingenious Instrument Now Being Used in France. Where the tide of battle has ebb- ed and flowed, the soil of France is so full of projectiles that a French in- ventor has devised an electrical ap- paratus to find them. As soon as the thrifty French recover any portion of land from the invader, they return it at once to agricultural use, but before the soil is ploughed it is rieeessary to find any sources of potential danger •-in the 'form of unexploded shells — that may lie beneath. According to the Edison Monthly, the instrument that they use is an adaptation of the Hughes induction balance. As des- cribed in the proceedings of the French Academy of Sciences, the aee. paratus is so sensitive that thc oper- ator can detect by sound, through the telephone, the presence of a fragment of shell, or even of a tin can. It is also possible from the nature of the sound to distinguish between consider- able masses of metal and small frag- ments. The instrument has two eons • of large diameter, the windings of which are on wooden frames. As is usual in the induction balance, no metal of any kind is used in that part of the instrument. The two coils, at- e• tached to a handle, form an instru- ment with which the surface of the soil is explored and tested. As long as there is no metale present the mu- tual induction of the primary and the secondary circuits is in a neutral state, with the result that the tele- phone remains silent. When frag- ments of shell are encountered, even if they lie at considerable depth, their presence speaks, as it were, through the telephone. It takes two persons about an hour to test -thor- oughly an acre of ground, but when the work has been completed the farmer can be sure that there is noth- ing left there to endanger his life or hlunt his ploughshare. No, Cordelia, policemen aren't al- ways hunting trouble. When The Doctor Says "Quit" —many tea or coffee drink- ers find themselves in the grip of a "habit" and think they can't. Belt they can— easily—lay changing to the delicious, Pure food -drink, POSTU This fine cereal beverage containS true nourishment, but DO caffeine, as dO tea and Coffee. PoSttina Makes for COM - fort, health, and efficiency. "There's a Reason" Canadian Pop turn Cereal Co.. X-rtdIrr Windsor, Oat, MAKING BREAD FOR The Bread Problem is not a problem in the home BR IISR ARMIES where Shredded Wheat is known. The vvhole wheat grain is the real staff of.life, r, and you have it in Shredded Wheat Biscuit prepared in a digestible form. It con- tains more real body-build- ing material than meat Ot Field. eggs, is more easily digested, and costs much less. The food for the up-and-coming 1. man who doaeS 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 the billowy dough and the work o kneading begine again. A man tea in a sleeveless shirt, wearing a cook' cap, passes by men, bearing a heav load of fresh dough, which he fling down a "shoot" to the floor below I , MILITARY BAKESHOP "SOM WHERE IN FRANCE." Wonderful Organization That Peed the Armies in the "Bakers, attention!" The words o 'eery:mend ring out in the great hal From their.positions, bent double ove the long troughs, 200 men straighte bolt upright, head erect, eyes steade hands rigid at their sides. "Carry on!" • Immediately 400 hands plunge int f save herself from kitchen d drudgery. Delicious for a breakfast or any meal, with Y milk or cream. writes W. Kay Wallace from the Brit- ish headquarters in France. We are inspecting briefly the pro- cess of providing bread for an arrnY. Here, in the former factory, the bread of the British artnies in the field is being made. One hundred and twenty thousand two -pound loaves of bread are each day baked in the ovens of this bakery. I was given a slice of the bread. It was crisp, appetizing andeexcellent. Day and night work is carried on 'Isy- enlisted men of the army—men who wear their khaki as proudly as any of the troops in the front-line trenches. The division of labor As admirable. Every device which tends to increase the efficiency of the men, has been installed. Yet it is "hand-macle," one might almost say "home-made," bread that is delivered to the men at the front. Flour Brought From Canada. Here, in the long sheds, the flour that has just come in from Canada is stacked, and, passing through the hands of skilled workmen, is turned into bread as if by magic. A steady stream of kneaded dough, freshly leavened, is being carried to the "shoots"; below it is gathered up and slung on flour -sprinkled tables, cut into round lumps about eight inches in diameter, each lump forming a loaf; each is carefully weighed to make all the loaves of identical size. Then the loaves are shoveled into the ovens, baked to a turn, drawn out, carried into the adjoining storeroom, where they are left to Cool. When cooled_ the fresh bread is packed into sacks, loaded into goods vans, which wait right at the door of the building, and twelve hours from the time that it has left this bakery .the bread is in the hands of the quartermasters ready for distribution to the men. Industrialism in its highest state of perfection never produced a more effi- cient organization. The men vvork at high speed. Military discipline pre- vails. There is no talking or chaffing. Here there is none of that atmosphere of personal irresponsibility so preva- lent in industrial enterprises. I watch-. ed for a long time these men at their work, straining every nerve and mus- cle to do their best as efficiently as possible, and as we passed from hall to hall the command, "Bakers, atten- tion!" brought the men instantly to the rigid position demanded by the drill regulations. Looking over the long rows of faces I was not a little estonished to find such a variety of ages.• Gray-haired men work side by' side with what seemed -to be mere boys. On inquir- ing, 'I learned that fathers and sons often enlisted together for this special service; skilled men of the trade who before the war had carried on their work for the most part in individual shops. Army the Finest Union. Those of vs who have been taught to believe that the Englishman is a confirmed individualist, that he is in- capable of organization in the Ger- man sense, must revise our notions. Those who have been led to believe that the British workman is opposed to compulsory military service and that trade union rnen are submitting recalcitrantly to army regulations must change their point of view. As a soldier here, a trade union man, said to rne, "The finest union in the world is the army," This great bakery is only a model of many other such establishments which I visited. Nearby are ware- houses filled with stores for the troops in the field. The amount of goods handled in one consignment is stupendous; 50,000 tins of jam, 20,- 000 boxes of meat, cases of onions by the thousands, bags of sugar by the 10,000, boxes of tea by the ton, and the like. Brought in from all parts lof the world direct by transport, the tgoods are stored in the warehouses, stacked in piles so arranged that though hundreds of thousands of cases and sacks are here stored, yet almost at a glance the exact amount of the geode on hand can be counted, -The supplies are so vast that no matter how great the requisition may be it can be instantly filled. I walk - ea through long rows or goods stack- ed up in blocics as high as city houses, The different types of wares aye ar- ranged in stplares resembling a city street. Here is a square all of sugar; close by, one of jam; beyond, another of marmalade, and so on. All the goods berie British trade marks with the exception of tinned Meat—We walked for half a mile through this strange and anent city of foodsbuffs. "Le pays de Cocagne" (the land of plenty), as a Russien companion ree marked to me, staring up at a leigh edifice made of bags of sugar. It ie a fact admitted by every one that no eamy in the field is better ear- ed for or fed than the British troops in France, but at the same time it is a current belief that no army is as extravagant, This latter opinion, which is widely' held not merely in neutral countries but even in Eng- land, Would not seem to be borne out by facto. On the contrary, as t ar as r". • -1 SNAP JUDGMENT. An Incident 11Vhich, Shows Dow 8 Person May be Mistaken. In the British Isles during this war a great many women have been "help- ing recruiting" by walking the streets and putting a white feather into the buttonhole of every man they Inet who was not wearing the khaki. r was standing just outside the cen- tral station in Glasgow; writes an American, when a woman walked up to a man who was standing near me, and without a word pulled a white feather through his buttonhole. He 3 Was a great big fellow and she had to do some reaching to get at him. - He smiled when he saw what she had done and said, "Thank you, ma- dam," very politely. / That was like waving a red rag bee fore a bull, and she grew crimson and started to tell him 'what she thought of him. He listened until she had fin- ished, and then he asked, "Have you another of these feathers, by ady chance?" I "Yes, I have, you coward!" she snapped, and she put another feather on him. As she did so, he pulled a , Victoria Cross from his pocket and ' Ipinned it right under the feathers. I That woman gaspedeand stuttered 'CURE FOR LOCKJAW and stammered, trying to make an , the feathers back, but he stopped -her. FOUND BY ITALIAN apology, and she reached out to take "No, madam," he said, "I'll keep — these as souvenirs, if you don't mind; INVENTS PORTABLE BATH FOR but I'd like to say a few words to you about what you are doing. HOT IMMERSIONS. "The fact that I am in civilian —.. clothes does not necessarily mean that I are a coward. For all you knew, I Says Amputation Should Only Be Re - might have been physically unfit for service. I might have been a married sorted t9 in Extreme Cases. chil- dren depending on me. There are any . man with ten or a dozen small number of things that might have pre- Surgeon -Major Professor Ingianni vented me from joining the army, but of the Italian Medical Corps, in you didn't even wait to inquire. charge of a field hospital, has applied on a large scale a special treatment "You thought that because I was for lockjaw which is giving most sat - not in khaki I was a coward. As a matter of fact, I have been at home isfactory results. recovering from wounds .1 receivedTheantitoxin treatment of lockjaw when I won this little cross, and I shall shortly be on my way back to join my regiment. "If you will accept a suggestion from a man who knows men, you will Vaseline camplu;krate4 Cream For chapped hands and lips and all irritations of the skin. All the virtues of "Vaseline", Camphor Ice, in the forneof a For sale at chemists and general stores everywhere, M clean, handy tin tubes. Refuse Sub. stitutes, Booklet mailed free on request, CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. (eensoileated) 1880 Chabot Ave. Montreal could be observed during a brief so- journ, I found everywhere signs of rigid 'economy. A regimental cook at a base told me that he had saved 8,000 rations during the last month. This does not mean that the men are stint- ed in any wayebut the -allowance of fresh meat, bread, batter, cheese, jam and tea is greater than needed to sat- isfy the appetite. "Muddle" Gone by Board. Efficiency and' economy are the two dominant factors of success in mod- ern warfare, as in modern industry. The old spirit of "muddle" to which many clung so tenaciously during the first and even the second year of the war has been swept by the board. The third and, as many hope and confid- dently believe, the last year of the war is opening auspiciously. The signs of success are not to be read exclusively in the bulletins from the fighting front, nor estimated by the number of prisoners taken or miles of trenches captured; but rather by watching how smoothly, silently, ir- resistibly the great maehine of the army, now perfected in every part, is gearing up the speed of efficiency. BATTLES AND RAINFALL. Meterologists Say Guiteare Will Not Produce RaM. Many persons in Europe -and manY in this country have eoticed the un- usual rainfalls that have occurred in various localities since the beginning of the great war, and have wondered whether those and other anomalies in the weather could be caused by the tremendous gunfire in Europe. Me- teorologists scout the idea. They say that, to cause rain, gun -fire would have to be on a vastly greater scale than it has yet attained, and that all attempts to produce rain by bombard- ing the clouds have failed. In dis- cussing the extremely heavy rainfall in England during the winter of 1914- 15, Dr. H. R. Mill, director of the Brit- ish Rainfall Organization, made the followhig statement: "The vastness of the work done by the quiet processes of nature requires only to be realized in order to show the incalculable im- probability that gun-fite in France can prciduce a wet winter in England. Take the case of three and a halt inches of ram that fell in excess of the average in December over 58,000 square miles of England and Wales. That quantity is 203,000 square -mile inches or more than 13,000,000,000 tons. At winter temperatures, sattir- ated Water vapor would form about one per cent of the mass of the at- mosphere that contained it; hence the minimum quantity of air that must have carried over England and Wales in December, 1914, must have exceed- ed 1,300,000,000,000 tons. The amount of force required even to deviate • the direction of moving masses of • that magnitude is aurely far beyond that which can be exerted even by nations at war." Liniment Cures Colds, &a She Met A Good One. The inspector was hearing a elass of small girls read, wherr they came to the word "pilgrim." "Now who can tell me the meaning of the word 'pil- grim?'" A little hand went up, and a voice said—"Please, sir, a pilgrim is a man that travels about a good deal." "Well, I travel about a good deal, and I'm not a pilgrim." "But, please, sir, I mean good man!" — "It's a good idea to bottle up youe wrath." "A ,corking good idea." RHEUMATISM AFTER HIS DAY'S OUTDIG Hunting Trip OR a Wet Day Brings Painful Results. Once upon a time Charles Munch, of Philadelphia, went gunning. it Wile a dismal rainy cley, and long expostre to Cold and wet brought Oil 0 severe attack of rheumatism. He was con. fined to his home. A friend recommeaded Sloan's Unt- il] era, el Ling his own ease 118 evidence of its effecti \recess; Mullen bought a bottle and applied ;L. to bis aching limbs, Soon improveremat was noticed arid he was able to return to beednees. Mt'. Mullett writes "alma that ex. peelenee 1 have never been without Sloan's Liniment in the medicine chest." You will tind it soothes bruises, sprains, toothaohe and re. 'levee lanie back, netralgia, in fact all eateraal pains. At all drugglete, 25c., 5.0c. and $1.00 a bottle. is extensively used in the Italian army as a preventive and, thanks to it, the cases of tetanus have been greatly diminished. Unfortunately, however, the disease ha e not been stamped out stop this silly business, for you, do and nothing so far had been discover - more harm than anything else. If I ed to check its almost certainly fatal were a civilian, after what you did to course. me then, 1 would have faced a firing Naturally in field hospitals local party before I would have joined the conditions are such that it is impoe- army. I trust you have learned some_ sible to resort to prolonged antiseptic thing. Good afternoon." bathing of the wounded or infected I found out later that he is a ser- part' and the most effective remedy Scottish regiments, and that he won early amputation often proved of no consisted in amputation. But even geant piper in one of the most famous the cross for saving three officers when wounded himself. Minardis Liniment Ourea Distemper Going Both Ways. The Woman—Here's a wonderful thing. I've just been reading of a ma ri who reached the age of 40 with- out learning how to read or write. He met a woman, and for her sake he made a scholar of himself in two years." The Man—That's nothing. I know a man who was a profound scholar at 40. Then he met a woman, and for her sake he made a fool of himself in two moriths.! THE NATION'S FUTURE Depends Upon Healthy Babies Properly reared 'children grow up to be strong, healthy citizens Many diseases to which child- ren aac'susceptible, first indicate their presence in the bowels, The careful mother should watch her child's bowel move- ments and use Mrs. Winslow's Soothxng Syrup it is a corrective for diarrhoea, colic and other ailments to which children are subject especially during the teething period. ft is absolutely non-narcotic and contains neither op lens, morphine nor any of their de- rivatives. • Mrs. Winslow's , Soothing Syrup ticfkee Cheerful, Chubby 'Children rth.flif 010 fl.',olting child during. Of its develop - IRO 4 iu tlYes rest mid telle th both child and mother, ouy.INAtickA.44. aed iseep 11 M414 hid 4. 411 (tra,egio.t is Canada and Mrausrhautth. noorld avail when the germs in the, wound already had set -free a lethal dose of their toxin. Besides, even when am- putation saved a man's life, it left him a cripple. Doctors Amputate Too Freely.. Often for fear of infection surgeons - in the field resort freely to amputa- tion knowing full well that it would be impossible for thein to keep the wound clean uetil it is completely healed. Professor Ingianni instead is con- vinced that amputation should only be resorted to in extreme cases, as a doctor's first duty is to cure, not to cripple a man. Prolonged warm bath of the wound is an almost infallible remedy against lockjaw, and nothing prevents its being administered even in the field' tender ordinary conditions. The professor has invented a special poetable bath which can be folded, as it is made oit rubber and shaped in such a way that any limb can be im- mersed in it. The bath is then tied to the patient by means of bandages and placed in any position either hori- zontal or vertical. Antiseptic Solution Is Used. A warm antiseptic solution can be easily kept in it at the'same temper- ature for five or six hours. As a rule a 3 per cent. solution of hypo- chlorite is used or else corrosive sub- limate in the proportion of one-half per 1,000. But permanganate of po- tassium, iodine 6 lead ivater also can be used to advantage. It has been found better to alternate the employ- ment of these antiseptics. The results of this treatment are wonderful. After a few days the wound begins to heal, suppuration dis- appears, swelling sebsicles and fever ceases. Recovery follows as a mat- ter of course even in cases where am- putation was considered the only rem- edy. The clanger of lockjaw is en- tirely ob4iated. AN:ETERNAL COMBAT., . ---- , If Many Were Not Killed Off Young Animals Would Overran World. There is always a deadly and never- ending right going on among animals and Nature generally. If itwere not for the large amount of animals killed off long before they grew up, however, we would be faced with the difficult problem of having far more itt the world than vae ehould know what to do with. Take, for in, stance, the rabbit. Some ftfty years ago n great land- owner ih Australia, where they had been hitherto unknown, turned a pair loose on his estate. For some little time he was (Mite pleased with his ex- periment, but the eabbits, their ne.. turill enemies now being few, soon commenced to spread over the coun- try at an alarming rate. They did great damage to crops of all descrip- tions, and farmers suffered heavily from their depredations. Special leg- islation was hatrodnced, and sev6a1 millions of pounds fiave been spent in endeavoring to bring about their de- struction, . without any furthbr result, however, than a slight lessening of their nunibers. The rabbit is still a pest in inost parte of Ausbealia. . It has been estimated that, if the progeny of /Me' pair athese small, though destructive, eveik, tures were to reaeh maturity, and in their tern breed, there would be the astounding number of 13,000,000 rabbits at the end of three years. - ' ------4-- Which. Forgetful Waiter ate diner who has ordered) --Seg pardon, sir, bet are you the perk chops or the boiled 6(1? MinatiPs Liniment ,Ourea EdnIttlielile, COLORS YOU CAN'T' SEE. , Many Shades Painted cm a Gun Hati Strange Effect. Pow' years ago there was at Alder - •shot tee ordinary field -gun which look- ed as though AD insane artist had used it for a palette. Every color from a ' paint -14,X had been lavished upon it. Blue, brown yellow, red, and green had been laid on in the most hapbaz- ard blobs and daubs, says London .A.T1- swers. It was not until you begen to wall( away from the gun that you nalized ; there was InethOd in he painter's mad- ' ness. At two hundred yards the vio- I' lent colors had all run together, at three hundred the gun 6emed to be • fading out of sight, at five hundred it was practically invisible. I The armored train, manned by Brit- ish soldiers and British guns is paint- ed in precisely similar fashion. To give our War Office its due, it was the first to realize that the thin red line of Crimean days was quite out of date with -rifles that would tairy aAfTicil' aenWar khalci bhetontree tthhee universal wear, At first our Tamales hated khaki, and in August, "1903, it was announced that it was to be abandoned, mid "Atholl grey" substituted. But it was pointed out that grey WOUld stain terribly, and that it would not be as invisible as khaki, and in the end practical use won the day. The Germans followed our exarenle, but their khaki ha e a greenish tint which is extremely and unnecessarily ugly. The Russians fight in grey, a color well adapted to their vast plains, cov- ered in summer with withered grass and in winter with snow. CHILIMIO9D AILMENTS I Childhood ailmenps in most eases come through some derangement of the' stomach or bowels. Bally's Own Tablets have been proved Sy thou- sands of mothers to be the greatest medicine known for the cure of these ailments, simply because they regu- late the bowels and sweeten the stom- ach. Concerning them Mrs. Napoleon Lambert, St. Ignace, Que„ writes: "Baby's Own Tablets are an excellent medicine for childhood ailments and I am well pleased with their use." The Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a box frone The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Solomonic Judge. The Complainant—"You see, your worship, I was a little too happy, as you might say, when I went home, and me wife was ironiria We had had a word or two in th' mornin,' an' so I! steps up prepared to make peace. I said, 'Let's forget th' quarrel; we were both wrong,' when what does she do! but shove the hot iron against me head:' His Worship—"Trying to smooth it over, of course. You don't blame her for that:. Go home, both of you." .Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,—I have used MIN, ARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, and for the every day ills and accidents of life I' eonsider it has no equal, I would not start on a voyage with- out it if it cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN. Seim "Storke," St. Andre, Kamen- ra ska. Hard Work, All Right. "I want you to understand that I got ray money by hard work." "Why, I thought it was left you by your uncle." "So it was; but I had hard work getting it away from the lawyers." Granulated °fru Eyes inflemed by expo- sure to Buo,Dasf and Wind se., quickly relieved by Merin ye 9, Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort, At Your Druggiat's Sec per Bottle. Merino Eye ahe inTubes2Sc. Forliook of thayeEressak Druggists orfsfurlaelEyollemedyCo.,Chkeya Camels dem smell wateemore than a mile away. MineasPa Liniment Cures Garget in cows A Necessary Weakness. He—The trouble with you women is that you have ttio much imagine - tion. She—I don't know. ri We didn't imagine you men were a lot better than you are, iiene of us would ever marry you. and receive hfahoo4 mob polooa Wo send money the 40036 dew the hum 4111 caoolved. Charge no aoromfoolono—and pay all charge. Web., wad anti wallow. of dollar, to thou. oaade 01 Immo, fn Canada who sood thole faro to pa boosaloo Ow know thor dot maven, dosly and r000lvo more monoy foe tholo f Yon oru1Iasss. Wo Isur rooro f uratrom trePPoo0 tor oaoh QUI /MY othoo 11,0 firms In gonad., FREEIlallaneo 0554.50 85100! Haltom% data toolon'o astaloaao Ilallam'o Raw Von QUedatleao 0*51051..851s Style llook (02 pogoo) dont free o' oormoot . Addeo, an follow o,,N, JOHNIFIALLAIVI Limited 202 Hallam Building, Toronto. 'ae AtheN‘‘‘.V.Ve steeeeaeesea. etemei eta man romuswons iS °Wars. ITZILTZT. enesto 8Rit et once. Supply limited. Write for quo. tenons:. H. W. Dawson, Brampton, AGENTS WANTED. ciao TO $6 DAILY EASILY EARNED third tiy eillier sex on au tiled tatively censored War book containing ICitchener Career, also part Canadians taken, Re- turned eoldier preferred. Sample free, Send postage, ten cents. Nichols. Limited, Publishers, Toronto, NEWSPAPIELS FOE SALE nelin0F1T-elelil NO NEWS AND 3011 je Officem for aisle In good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting CC ell busiziessoa, information on implication to Wilson Pablietting Com- tism'. 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. DITSCIELLANEOES. ANCER, TUMORS, LifilPS, ETC. V internal end external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr, Denman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. 150010 DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Midled fro° to any address by America's tes Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., inc. Dog Remed!es 118 West 31st Street, New York ,wod JI fraternal and insuraoce' 'society that clootecta ire members in orcerdance with tho ntario Government Standard. SI -k and uncralbonoralc,,i1onal. Authorized to obtain members and charier lodges in every Province in Coned,. Purely Canadian, safe. sound nod econo- mical. If there le no loeallod71 of Chosen Friends In your district, apply direct to cny of tho following °facer*: Dr.J.W.Edwards,M.P. W. F. Monteenc, Grand Councillor. Grand Recorder W. F. Campbell, IR. Dell, M.D., Grand 0 [mazer. Grand Mod:col Ca. HAMILTON • oNTArtlo r, Tliose long winter nights you will need indoor nevem tMn. Why not instal a Home Billiard Table? Write for particulars of our famous Maisonette Table, for cash or on easy terms. Burroughes & lAtatts, Ltd. Makers to H. M. the King, 34 Church St., r °runt° d gworissiEFF13331140sairopl When buying your Piano insist on having an "OTTO HIGEL" PIANO ACTION MITE Boys For 1111 Departments Steady Employment Good Wages APPLY Tod000doiltRonor Co ,Ltd. MERRITTON, ONT. N, 23 • THE'? THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS that make a horse Wheeze, Roar, have Thick Wind or Choke -down, can be reduced with also other Bunches or Swellings. No blister no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco- nonlieal—only a few dropS recorired at an ap- plication. $2 per bottle delivered. Bonk 3M free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, Swollen Veins arid Ulcers.$ and 32a bottle at dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence" free. W, F. 00069, P. 0 8., 516 tymanselde„ Montreal, en filisortise and Absorblne, Ji,, arc 1513a 4 Cssula A RARE- XMAS GIFT By sending Irt, °Cr our Price Beautiful Musk Ox OB S You will have nice time to look It over for your Christinam buy- ing. A fortunate purchase en- ables us to offer theae HARE and BrIST STYLE Robes at prices less than half their usual cost. They are it rich brown -black, with beautiful lustre and per- fealy tatmod, unsurpassed for warm th aud appearance. The Yerg thing Car Auto, Oarriage, or Sleigh Makes also a luxurious Floor Eng for the Home Purchasers are advised to make an early selection as the Musk Ox is becoming exceeding- ly smarm 1 the skins therefore Will soon be unobtaimible. Write to -day for price list from the largest dealers In Canada, LAMONTAGNE, LIMITED P.01, ZIOR 1410 ass Notre Dante St. West MONTE)3AL. wranufaeturere of Quality Stemmas, Trunks, Sago, Etc. Itstablialted 11359 ausMilsOOSSBIES ED, 4 ISSUE 45—'16.