The Clinton News Record, 1916-12-07, Page 7'THE ONLY WAY TO
CURE RHEUMATISM
Minot Be Treated Through the Blood
and the Poisonous Acid
Driven Out.
The twinges and tortures of rheu-
matism are not due to cold, damp
weather as so many people suppose.
Rheumatism comes from poisonous
add in the blood. This is a medical
truth that every rheumatic sufferer
should realize. There is only one way
to cure rheumatism—it must be treat-
ed through the blood. All the lini-
ments and rubbing and so-called elec-
tric treatment lathe world will not
cure rheumatism, and •the sufferer
who tries them is not• only wasting
money, but is allowing the trouble to
become more firmly rooted in the sys-
tem and harder to cure when the pro-
per remedy is tried. Dr. Williams Pink
Pills have had remarkable success in
curing rheumatism because they go
right to the root of the trouble in the
blood, driving out the poisonous acid,
releasing the stiffened joints, clearing
away the torturing pains, and giving
the victim renewed health and ease.
Os, Mr. Vincent Brow, Havre Boucher, N.
S., says: "For two years I was an al -
„most constant sufferer from rheuma-
tism, the trouble being so bad at
times that I could scarcely get about.
The trouble seemed to bring with it
anaemia, and altogether 't was in a
very bad condition. I used doctor's
medicine for almost a year without re-
lief. Then on the advice of a friend
decided to try Dr. Williams Pink
Pills. I think I took altogether about
a dozen boxes, with the result that I
ern again enjoying perfect health.”
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail, post paid,
at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medi-
cine Co, Brockville, Out.
FOOD'TO THE TRENCHES.
All About the Risky Work of the
Transport -Wagon Driver.
An inky black night in a rather
wild, open country. Lines of wagons
stand in readiness to start. To each
wagon there are attached a couple of
horses—Dublin cab -horses some of
'em, says London Answers.
There is a bugle call; a number Of
men in the raggiest khaki you could
imagine come from out of the dark-
ness at the double. They line up be -
s\ --fore the wagons;ln order is shouted
hoarsely, and the men spring to the
seats on the wagons and away they
go, jolting and rattling across the
sodden ground that three months ago
was a yellow cornfield.
The wagons contain bully beef, bis-
cuits, apples, and cold tea in bottles,
and the drivers have got to deliver it
all somehow to the soldiers in the
trenches eleven miles away. The men
fight, sleep, eat, live, and die in the
'trenches, until the moment comes for
an -advance or retreat.
And getting these food wagons to
the trenches is perilous work, for the
Germans do all they can to prevent
food wagons reaching our soldiers.
The danger of what is called food -
transport work is, of course, far
greater in some places than others. In
some places there may be shelter to
be obtained right up to the trenches,
and the wagons are never seen by the
enemy, but in others the wagons may
have to reach the trenches by way of
open and difficult ground, over which
headway can be mode but slowly.
Many a driver has perished, many a
baggage wagon been destroyed, in
sueli places.
When the wagons are within about
four miles of the trenches the Ger-
mans try to locate them with search-
lights or fireballs, and then begin
shelling them.
They use fireballs now altogether
for this purpose. The fireball is a
s sort of immense firework. When it
bursts it turns into a glaring ball of
blue fire which hangs in the air
throwing a brilliant light about the
ground beneath it, and enabling the
German gunners to get the exact
:range of the food -wagons.
A comrade of -mine Saw a shell burst
within a foot of a wagon. It simply
wiped the wagon and driver and
horses out of existence. The wagons,
of course, spread out as far as pos-
sible from each other, and if one eV
two meet with disaster, some always
reach the trenches in safety, •
Often the food has to be distributed
under shell -five, but in the trenches
one is fairly safe; at any rate, the
danger never affects the Tommies' ap-
petites, any more than do his ragged
garments, the mud with which he is
caked, or the other hundred and one
discomforts of living in the trenches.
Mr. Isaac Ward; well known at
'keptefar from the door. -
The cheerful feeling you possess
after a drink of something hot
and ffavory should be only the
beginning of your satisfaction.
For this very reason more and
more people are turning from
tea and coffee to
Instant Posturn
A lessened tendency to such
annoyances as nervousness and
aleeplessness repays them.
A ten-day trial of this delight-
flavory hot drink has as-
sisted so many to health and
comfort that your frienii, the
Postum drinker, will tell you it's'
Well worth while.
There's a Reason"
WAR BRINGS
NEW DISEASES
ARE NOW BEING INVESTIGATED
BY COMMISSIONS.
Dr. Hugo Cabot Tells of "Trench .
"Faulty Nutrition and
Elimination"—these are
the cause of the most of the
ailments that afflict human
beings. Too much indiges-
tible food and lack of power
to throw off the poisons
that come from indigestion
—these lead to a long line
Fever" and "Trench of distressing disorders.
Nephritis.' Avoid them by eating
The horrors of war have been aug-
mented by two new diseases --"trench
fever" and "trench nephritis," the
latter somewhat similar to Bright's
diseate—according to a report re-
ceived at Harvard University from
Dr. Hugo Cabot, who is in charge
of the Fourth Harvard Surgical Unit
at the front.
Both diseases are subject to investi-
gation by commissions appointed by
the British Government,
Eight thousand wounded and sick
soldiers cared for and only nineteen
died is the record of this unit during
its three months of service at its
semi -base hospital "somewhere in
France," Dr. Cabot says.
More Wounded. Than Sick.
The contingent, consisting- of $4
physicians and surgeons and 75
nurses, was established last June at
its hospital, which was principally
under canvas, though several corru-
gated iron "huts" were available for
the most severe cases. The contin-
gent was just in time to share in the
work of caring for the wounded from
the Somme region, which necessitat-
ed an increase of beds in the hospital
from 1,340 to 2,380.
"A most striking percentage of
modern e warfare," says the doctor,
"is the high percentage of wounded
as compared with sick. In most for-
mer wars the proportion of sick to
wounded has been at least four or
five to one, whereas during the suni-
mer in this war the proportion of
sick to wounded is one to five -six, and
in the winter one to one and one-
half."
Proof of Effective Fire.
Speaking of the character of
wounds, the doctor says: "Rifle and
machine gun bullets, on account of
their steel jackets and high velocity,
cause relatively clean wounds, and
the same is true of shrapnel. Inter-
estingly enough, during the early
part of July, at the beginning of the
'Somme drive,' we had a large pro-
portion of machine gun bullets, due
to the fact that the German trenches
were at least Partially intact; were
still in three well developed lines so
arranged that one regiment would en-
filade the other. Thus a section of
a regiment having entered a second
line German trench on the 5th of
July was literally wiped out by an
enfilading machine gun fire from both
sides. Later, after the throe lines
of permanent trenches had been blot-
ted out by the extraordinary accurate
fire of the British heavy artillery,
most of the wounds were produced by
fragments of high explosive shells
and bombs, and were therefore rag-
ged, tearing injuries, removing two or
three inehek of the great bones of the
thigh or lower leg and producing most
hideous wounds.
Steel Helmets Same Many.
"The universal use of steel hel-
mets has much reduced the import-
ance of wounds in the head. Though
not an absolute protection, they either
deflect the course of the projectile so
as to produce only a stunning .injery,
or break the force of the blow with
the production of a badly bruised or
devitalized. wound, but often without
penetrating the skull.
"Of abdominal wounds we saw
nothing in their early stages, since,
if these injuries are to be success-
fully dealt with they must be operated
Upon within SiX hours. Special hos-
pitals for the purpose have been es-
tablished immediately behind the fir-
ing line. During the first year of
the war these injuries were almost
universally fatal. To -day between 40
and 50 per cent, of the eases operated
upon recover.
"A most important part of the work
•of the unit has concerned itself with
the management of the dreadful
wounds of the face involving mouth
and jaws. This department is under
the management of Dr. Kazanjian,
whose work has been of such a high
ordev that all cases of this kind in
the whole area are placed under his
care. In this department, probably
more than any other, the Harvard
unit has contributed to the efficiency
of the Royal Army Medical Corps. ,
Nearly All Wounds Infected.
"Practically all wounds are infect-
ed, but the mostserious and import -
mit of these infections is the so -
Called gas grangene, Sensed by a gas -
producing bacillus. From 80 to 90
per cent, of the wounds are infeeted
with this organism, in which, in rap-
idly developing cases, the tissues
about the wound, crackle Under the
fingers- on account of the minute_eol-
lections of gas under the skin. MOVO
important, however, are the collec-
tions of gas deep in the tissue, where
it spreads rapidly to the soft parts
literally melting away in this neigh-
borhood and thus producing the most
startling and most serious Complica-
tion, secondary hemorrhage."
Speaking of the work at ci semi -
base hospital, Dr. Gebel; continuer:
"Work is light or heavy in very
direct relation to the activity of the
fighting in that sections of the front
they drain. For this reason there
were periods of relative calm during
Which it was possible to carry on
more or less scientific investigations
into the new problems presented by
this War.
•
"Shell Shock."
"One of the most interestieg prob-
lems was the condition known as
`shell shock,' more closely Allied to
the so-called traumatic neuroses seen
in civil practice than to any other
condition with which we are ifamiliar-.
"Jost as- in civil life traumatic
nee roses have been a cloak foe de-
ception, se in Military operations
Shredded Wheat Biscuit—
a simple, elemental food that
contains all the body-build-
ing material in the whole
wheat grain, including the
bran coat which keeps the
intestinal tract healthy and
clean. D,elicious for any
meal in combination with
sliced peaches or other fruits.
Made in Canada
'shell shock' has become a potent
source of malingering. In the most
severe cases of Sihell shock' the men
are deaf and dumb, show gross shaki-
ness and tremors, and in seine in-
stances various grades of paralysis
of arms or legs. All the symptoms
are easy to counterfeit, and when it
became generally known that men
with so-called 'shell shock' would be
sent to the base- the strain proved
too much for a considerable number
of men."
TUMBLING DOWN A MOUNTAIN.
An Artist's Hair -Raising Experience
in China.
An American who lives in China
made the ascent of the sacred moun-
tain, Siao-outai-shan, a year or two
since, and made, or at least began to
make, the descent in a much more un-
premeditated manner.
He had reached an altitude of over
9,000 feet and, having lost the
trail, branched off and climbed a low-
er peak to See whether he could dis-
cover the right track. He managed
to crawl to the top, and since the view
was very fine he opened his paint box
to make a' sketch.
As he was -sorting over his brushes
the stone on which he was sitting
gave way, and he started sliding
down the almost perpendicular slope.
He tried to clutch the ground with
his hands. He seized every projecting
stone, in the hope of stopping his
precipitous descent, but at the speed
at which he was going that was no
easy matter. •
Death stared him in the face, for
another hundred yards would bring
him to the edge of a precipice several
hundred feet high, over which he must
inevitably go. His hair stood on end
as he approached the spot, and he can
well remember the sound of his heavy
paint box clanging from rock to reek
as it accompanied him in his descent.
A violent shock, which nearly tore
-his body in two, made him think he
had gone over; but no, he had sud-
denly stopped.
He opened his eyes, but he did not
dare move, for his position, although
much improved, Was far from safe.
His -coat and a strong leather strap
that was slung under his arm had
caught on a projecting stone. but a
single false movement on his part
would start him sliding down the
slope again.
Slowly, carefully, as he lay on the
almost perpendicular slope, he tried
to get a footing; when he had succeed-
ed in doing that the great difficulty
was to turn round. After several
anxious moments each of which secur-
ed ages long, he succeeded, and there
he was half -kneeling, half -lying, with
his body on the ground, clutching the
rock that had saved him.
Then, when his agitation had pass-
.
e image( to crawl up, Cat -
fashion, to a position of safety.
The Evidence.
"Them goes another married man,"
said the girl at the candy counter.
"How do you know?" asked the
cashier.
"He used to buy a three -pound box
of candy twice a week, and now he
buys half a pound once is month."
est:memo Liniment cures Garret in Cows
__—
Rad Some.
"And have you had any experience
with children?" inquired the woman
who was about to engage a nurse.
• "Shure, Oi hey," returned the ap-
plicant with a broad smile. "Wasn't Oi
wan meself svarist?"
RHEUMATBM MAKES
YOU FEEL OLD
Pains and Aches Yield to Sloan's
Liniment, The -Family Friend.
•
When your joints become still, your
circulation poor, and your suffering
makes you irritable, an application of
Sloan's Liniment gives you quick re-
lief—kills pain, starts up a good c.ir-
mile Oen, relieves congestion, it is
easier and cleaner to use than mussy
plasters 04' ointments, acts quickly
and does net clog the pores. It does
1104: 0taln the skin,
You don't 'need to rub—it gene -
Issues.
Certainly litre for' rheumatism, stiff
neck, sciatica, lame back, toothache,
etc.
Per sprat., arsine, bruises, Week
and blue spots, Sloan's Liniment re -
calm, the pairrand eases the soreness.
use Is so universal that you'll
Consider Sloae's Liniment a friend of
the whole faintly. YoUr druggist sells
it' in 25c., 50e. and $1,00 bottles.
GERMANY HAS
4,500,000 MEN
THEY ARE ABLE TO CONSERVE
THEIR STRENGTH.
Military Writer Says Allies Must
Strain Every Nerve
Next Year..
The military correspondent of the
London Times writes as follows, on
1;6 question of the man power of the
allies and the Central Powers: "Ger-
many's wise economy of her young
contingenti and her constant rd -ex-
amination of the medically unfit and
the refusal to censider the claims of
the 'conscientious objectors' and also
of the civil service, her Jewess in
restoring to the colors a high propor-
tion of the German wounded, the use
of prisoners in factories and on
farms, the forced labor of the popu-
lation of the occupied territories and
finally the trap she has baited to catch
the Poles, all enable her to maintain
in the field units of full strength much
longer than any one would have
thought possible.
National Discipline.
"These successes are due to na-
tional discipline and complete subor-
dination of the interests of the in-
dividual to those of the state. The
militarization of the entire nation re-
presents a • remarkable achievement.
By a well organized system of substi-
tution Germany is already able to take
for her armies two batches of half a
million men each and is in the course
of taking a third from the munition
works, mines, railways and other es-
sential national industries.
"She has been able to build up 200
field divisions and cannot now safely
be credited with less than 4,500,000
men in her field armies. On lines of
communication, guards and resbrves
generally, owing to the measures Ger-
many is taking, she cannot even now
be reckoned to have less than 2,000,-
000 men. •
Allies Must 'Work Hard.
"The situation broadly is that the
allies are faced with the necessity of
straining every nerve to place in the
field next year every man, gun and
shell that all the countries can pro-
duce.
"We allies are quite able to make
this effort, and to overmatch Ger-
many. We in these islands have still
between three and four million men
of military age in civil life, not count-
ing men over forty-one. We are in
far better position. than Germany to
maintain the war. Our gallant do-
minions have still large reserves of
man power. Russia has still ample
reserves and will produce larger
armies each year the war lasts. Italy
increases and improves the quantity
and quality of her armies monthly
and France has been most successful
in drawing more men from civil em-
ployments. She now excels in the
art of accomplishing great things in
the field with relatively slight losses."
German Compulsion.
The Berlin Lok -al Anzeiger quotes
a Frankfort telegram to the effect
that all German citizens in good
health are to be summoned compul-
sorily to do work of national import-
ance. Berlin newspapers published
an urgent official appeal to the women
;1-43 apply at the war factories for
work. War brides are accused of
leaving factories on their marriage
and taking separation allowances and
refusing to continue work. A pro-
clamation by the general commanding
the Munich district threatens that sel-
fish idle persons who refuse to take
work and forego amusements will be
forced to do so in the end.
HOUSES FOR SOLDIERS.
What the C.P.R. Is Doing for Re-
turned Heroes.
The houses which the C.P.R. is
building in the west for the returned
soldiers will 'cost them about $1,000
each, with out -offices. They will con-
sist of four rooms each—two bed-
rooms, dining room and kitchen. Each
farm will consist of 150 acres and
there will be 80 additional acres which
may be availeecl of in the course of
time, and RS the settler concludes that
he can work it. The C.P.R. has sev-
eral designs for homes which will be
submitted to the intending settler's.
These offer a variety of design to suit
different tastes and different pockets,
it may be said. The settler can choose°
a house which will cost him $2,000
but the payments will be made ex-
ceedingly easy. In all there are prob-
ably 8,000,000 acres of land held by
speculators in the West; but, apart
from that, them are literally hun-
dreds of millions of acres of cultivable
lnn lying idle over the West—not
close to the tracks, of course, but good
land which many have longed for so
"dssreitilss 414 they have sat on the
tirefirsttihne e."1:41nornie ;11 nightt 4it. 9to 1..lhe'
applicsition.in. The C.P.R. is going
on on its own account with the colony
homes; but it expects that the Gov-
ernment will shortly outline a plan
of a comprehensive nature which can
be generally applied to the.situation.
A Perfect Sample,
A farmer who was blessed with a
son with an engaging frankness of
speech sent him to the local miller's
'one day. .The lad got hold of the
miller and submitted for his inspec-
tion a handful of wheat. The miller
studied the wheat attentively, and then
said to the boy, "flow much more has
your father got of this "He ain't
got no more like it," the boy answered.
"He's been ail pickite that
out,"
"By their works ye shall know
them," said the watchmaker'.
asinartVe Lialtuent omen Distemper
IT ALWAYS
BRINGS RELIEF
Skin isritationS of all sorts
yield to
selin
Trade Marlc '
hit
,
PernteeM eslIti -
An unexcelled emollient for
wounds, burns, sores and cuts.
&old ill glass bottles and handy
tin tubes at chemists and gen-
eralstores everywhere. Refuse
substitutes. Illustrated book -
'let on request,
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
leo cimiZre".'") Montreal
YOURS OF 18 IN
THE GREAT WAR
WENT IN AS BOYS AND. EMERG-
ED AS MEN.
The Young Heroes Are Fearless In
Face of Danger on the
Battlefield.
Young heroes of the Somme who
have yet to celebrate their nineteenth
birthday are finding their way back
to England, says Lloyd's Weekly
News. Some of them are in London
to -day. They were so eager to get to
the War that they gave their age
wrongly.
There is a bright, sparkling -eyed
Canadian in a West London hospital,
recovering from a nasty scalp wound,
who enlisted when he was seventeen
and was at the front before he was
eighteen. He has been through the
last three months' terrific fighting,
but talks lightly of his trying experi-
ences. "Makes you think," is the
terse way in which he dismisses the
fire and fury of the Somme.
When asked why he enlisted so
young, he remarked that he saw all
his friends going to war, and he
could not bear to stay behind.
I Was Needed.
A rosy -checked youth from a south-
ern regiment, who formerly worked
In a chemical factory, will be nine-
teen in December. He knows all that
there is to know about the war in
its most terrible form, having been
in the Somme advance. His only ex-
planation for joining up so young is
that he heard they wanted men, and
he went. "I didn't think war was
what I found it," he says cheerfully,
"but I don't regret in the least what
did. When I am better from my
wounds I shall be ready for another
turn in the trenches."
A young Australian giant whts is
just turned eighteen says he enlisted
just after his seventeenth birthday.
His father did not oppose his going
to the war'as he believed that every
boy fit to bear a rifle, no matter what
his age, ought to be in khaki. He
has been to Gallipoli and to the
Somme, and he is prepared for any-
thing that may be in store. "It is
worth while being in the Australian
Army," he remarks unexpectedly, if
only for the opportunity of coming to
London and seeing them change the
guard at St. James's Palace—a sight
I am never tired of watching."
Typical of British.
these heroes of eighteen are typi-
cal of the spirited British manhood
whose valor is driving the Germans
out of their most formidable trendies.
You gather from them that they join-
ed up somewhat ignorant of the dan-
gers they weuld be called upon to
face, but not dismayed or regretful
when face to face with those dangers.
They have left in most eases com-
fortable homes and a comfortable way
of living, and of their own choice
taken a fairly considerable chance of
being killed and certainly a great risk i
of being wounded.
The hospital nurses speak of the
young wounded heroes as among the
best patients they have had to treat, I
for they are so merry and have sol
little of the atmosphere of the war ;
about them. Perhaps in civilian life
they were little inclined to reflect
seriously on the grave issues with
which the Empire has ben confronted
for twenty-six months, but while they
have been at the war they have had
both the opportunity and the cause ,
for thinking. They went to the Som-
me _boys; they have emerged men.
He Hadn't Forgotten.
• "George„ bet you've Forgotten
what "No,
day Ihthaivsenis"
t?it
's either wedding
day 0:7 OM' birthday, It always is
one or the 1•1' r when you want to
make a bet like that.'
ED,
ISSUE 50—'16
• THE FAT MAN'S WATCH.
`Ritmo Belonging to Heavy Men in-
variably Gain Time.
A watch is a very delicate piece or
rnachanism—far more so than the
average watch -owner realizes. TOP
instance, the balance -wheel vibrates
tat the rate of five beats to the second,
or 18,000 to the hour. The wonder is,
then, not that watches lose or gain,
bent that so many keep such good
time as they do.
Consider the jarring which all
watches have to put up with. Their
wearers run, jump, ride, and take all
sorts of violent exercise, and the ac-
tion of the body of the wearer is
bound to influence the delicatei ma-
chinery of his timekeeper.
It is notorious that watches belong -
end receive highest cash 'prim. We aend
htte,egy. tt,,,,to sang ie.tlitymt_h tr,, durpeaya
We hare paid out millions of dollars to wow
mantle of trappers In Canada who sena their '
r ere to us because they know they get Amman:.
deal, and recutlie more money for their Mem
Toy will elms, We buy more fursfrom trappers
for meth tUnmi.
a oan.y oggpOva,0, tome In Ca,,adu,
FREEIlallameSportemeite Catalogue
Rename Raw Oar Quotations
Hallam's Yin. Enyle' Book 55 inutoe)
55 olinjomm
sofruteeNanl iaeviregAuoil. A. mArldrLasismnsiftoend
2owat'
Building, Torontoi
ing to big, heavy-footed, weighty men SEED poTAToms
invariably gain, while those worn by '
women and light-footed or quietly- l c`ii`V.;
at iiirce. Supply limited. Write for c.tio..2
moving men usually keep good time. talons, 5. .tV, Dawson, Brampton.
A watch should always be wound in
P
the morning. By so doing the spring t
will exert its strongest power NREL—SUPPL8E13.
during' WATED—EGON MOUT DIMS 10011.
the day. When a watch is wound at
night it has only a weakened spring
to offer as resistance to the jars and
jolts of the daytime.
The pocket in which you keep your
watch all day averages a warmth of
77 degrees Fahrenheit. On a winter's;
night the temperature of the table by
your bedside will probably be from 40
to 45. How can you possibly expect
so sensitive a machine as a watch to
stand a sudden drop of between 30
and 40 degrees?
Your motor car will not go without
oil, Nor will your lawn -mower or
your sewing machine. A watch,
though to some extent air -tight, also
requires oil. At least once in two
years you must take it to the watch -
Maker's for cleaning and oiling.
No watch is completely dust -proof,
Particles of dust work in, they mix
with the oil, and presently begin to
act like emery -paste, and wear out the
working parts. When you consider
that a watch ticks 432,000 tunes a day
you can compute the gigantic nature
of the task which it performs in a
year, and realize how necessary are
regular cleanings and oilings.
The best watches of to -day are so
made that they are proof against or-
dinary magnetic( influences; but the!
average watch will be entirely upset I
if worn during a visit to a power sta I
Hon, and even the magneto of an or-
dinary motor car may affect its
working and time -keeping.
I was cured of painful Goitre by
1VIINARD'S LINIMENT,
BAYARD IffellItILIN,
Chatham, Ont.
I was cured of Inflammation by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
MRS. W. A. 'JOHNSON.
Walsh, Ont.
I was cured of Facial Neuraigiti by
MINABD'S LINIMENT.
Parkdale, Ont. I. H. BAILEY.
A Serious Case.
"You call yourself a heart special-
ist?" said the patient when he had
recovered consciousness.
"I certainly do," answered the physi-;
cian.
"Then you ought to know better
than to present a bill like this to a:
man ill my conditions."
Granulated Eyelid',
Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun, Dust and wind
quickly relieved by Marine
ye Stye Remedy. No Smarting,
just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Melee Eye
SelveinTubes25e.ForDook el IheEyerreeask
Druggists or NurineEye Remedy Co., Chlealyil
---
There's a lot of real greatness in
people whose names never get into
the papers.
MinardUs Limtnient Cures Colds, &c.
Hearsay.
"How I envy yea
said the sweet young
be wonderful to gaze
panse of the ocean
clean salt air."
"Yes, replied the
be."
seafaring men,"
thin. "It must
on the broad ex -
and breathe the
stoker, "it must
AGENTS WANTED.
fa's thl'stsrtiodi sueStiessfonissi
-s-tt ss at wirleso In prices. Send for
free sample oiler owl 1017 catalogue,
Wool to Wholesale Savory, Dept. A.
13amile, ill Cl,
NEW MAID EGGS.
NLA11) ELMS, 'POULTRY, PEAS,
Beams: highest prices paid .
small or large quantities. J. D. Arsen-
ault, t137 St. Montreal.
xrDwiipaDnits TON S/43.11
I 11111.01111T-MAKINt; NEWS AND .11,13
()Moos rot- pale In good Ontario
towns. The most useful anti interesting
Of all businesses. Null Information on
application to Wilson Publishing Com-
et+ n.Y. 78 West Adelaide Street, Toronto,
IMUSCST,Lexamovis.
CTUMORS, -LUMPS. ET0..
internal and external cured with-
out pain by our home treatment, Write
us befora too late. Dr. Bellman Medical
Ce.. Litolled, eallingwood• Ont.
13001i. ON
DOG DISEASES
And How to Feed
Mulled free to any address b
fitimika's Anthee
Menem H. CLAY GLOVER CO., lac:
Dog Remedies 118 West 31st Street, New York
.-•
The Soul of a Piano is the
Action. Insist on the
" OTTO FUG 'ELI'
PIANO ACTION
It will pay you to ship an
your far to a reliable bongo,
where you can Set full market
value., Arad for our price Cat
and shipping instructions.
EDWARD POLLAK &
280 ST, PAUL ST. WEST.
MONTREAL, QUE.
A Home -Billiard
Table
Will provide you and
your family with the finest
form of indoor recreation
during the long winter even-
ings.
Our Fanrous Alalsonotto Table
Is made specially for
the home at a reasonable
pee.,
eash ',tor on terms.
OURROUGHES de WATTS, 1,W.
Makers to II. M. the Ring.
34 Church St., Toronto
Another Dig.
Sapplcigh— I love simple things
above all else,
Miss Keen—l'ye noticed how self-
satisfied you are, Mr. Sappleigh.
Mistarttle Linitnent Cures Diphtheria.
A Great Accomplishment.
"All glory, now," say I
To Nellie.
"To hies who first
invented jelly .
„Doctor Tells How To Strengthen
Eyesight per cent hi One
eek's Time In Many Instances
A Free Prescription You Can Have
Filled and Use at Home.
London—Bo you wear clams? Are you a
'situate of era Strom or other eye weakneases?
11so swim 111r: Vialet.? tiglt larditclig Se
:yheoasereesi.gererggt1IIT'ivtiont
won-
derful free Truseription. One man soy% niter
IC311;1111. 'NO7reftaltht?oln64114V,47g01dArrgoleintstint;
glasses and fly oyeando not water any more. At
night they would pain dreadfully; now they feel
See oll the time, it was like a gamete to ma"
A lady who used it emir "The i.iuiuseriI,are sem cd
hazy vith or without glasses, but after using thin,
presumption for fifteen days everything scene
+dear. I tan even read tine print witlout glasses."
it is hollered that thousands who own, glasses
ean now dimeard them in a reasonable One and
multitudes more will be table to taretigthen their
eyes so se to be epared the trouble and oxponao
Stake Tear
Ideas Tiring
u a good
ncial
orn
Returi".",‘
fm,itst Ort..,_tilValltions wanted art of Inventors' Reference (Nide
ItAU,OV0 knalemala-ri In OO •r Registered Patent Attorneys. OTTAWA, O.'. N.
of,..or or .guittitlil glosses. lie troubles of many
deseriptons may ho won tidally benefited by
renewain the simple rides. Nero ia the !mimic -
don: On to any waive dross store and get a
bottle of Bon-Opto tablet+. Deep ono liou-Ooto
tablet in II, fourth of a. alms ot water and allow
to dissoire.. With Una liquid bathe the eyes
two to four times rlaily, We should notiee your
eyes clear op perceptibly right, from the Siert timl
InfiamniatIOn will quietly disappear, it your
oyes MI) bothering you, even a.latio, take stops
to save them now before it is too late. itiney
hopelessly Cited Might bavo been coved if they
had cored for their nye.$t In Limo,
iilmet Another m01111110% PhYSICIIITI 10 Who'll 111.0
nbbre liettele cone subluitted, Csiiui utieti-opt a Is
Nos, remarkable ronuar. 110 uomultuent ingredients
en ,vril Ilge.'w44:Pturiol'aggsgtl'‘V., Vrrt
10, simurnennyg /Le:m.13,1. raullciniat ilatmlnoitfyla. m,
et°
ubtallIed Num unit good .drnggiSt. and is One ,a 11,6
DT075YrIgiceti,lvialEntri4i ',al °I rill srIot niectteOtt,s will hug =I° l'aillisitt'.n.;,,kulr otoredNini,,Irn tiOtri
your druggst cannel,
Mak o if a Tohoggao for Christmas!
eterss-ssns"els--._
fl Nothing sults lb
)-asuns. foike like0,
IX splendid stook ori
l'osAtiilozG we have
band, also Clushionk
harness. ems, ski harinAs, c.no. Komi tor our frelh3101:71.117e11182147P:1,13
mulct, you r tion y,
tana.dian Tobogg-,9 Mi'nufacturing Company
413 O8TINA141:13 ST, EAST, MINTZ:MAP, QUE.