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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1917-06-28, Page 7FA Military Model (Jy 1 I With soldiers clotted all over the landscape goading bridges and aque- ducts, it is not surprising if the style of their clothes invades the realm of women's clothes. The military model with its long cape is developed in khaki -colored homespun and is just as prapticai as it is stylish. McCall Pat- tern No. 7859, Ladies' and Misses' Three -in -ono Coat; trench -coat, sweat- er -coat, and cape -coat. Pattern in 3 sizes; small, 32 to 34; medium, 85 to 38; large, 40 to 42, bust. Price, 20 cents. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto. Dept W. FIGHTING THE PINE BLISTER. Co-operation Between Government De- partments to Eradicate Disease Arrangements have been completed for thorough co-operation between the Dominion Department of Agriculture and the provinces of Ontario and Que- bec, in the investigation, location and eradication of the white pine blister disease in those provinces. The De- partment of Agriculture will also con- duct investigations in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and British Columbia, where the disease is not yet known to exist. Should it bo found in those provinces, co-operativ.: arrangements will no doubt be made, and vigorous action will be .aken to combat its spread. The pine blister disease has gain- ed a strong foothold in the northeast. ern United States, and has been dis- covered also in Ontario and in Quebec. In the former province, the situation is most serious in the Niagara penin- sula. The white pine forests of Can- ada are valued at $200,000,000, so that the most thorough measures are justi- fied for the protection of this great as- set. The young forest growth suf- fers most severely from this disease, and it is of the greatest importance that the large area of white pine re- production in eastern Canada receive protection, in order that they may reach maturity and add their quota to the wealth of the country. Work is now under way, in connec- tion with clearing currants and goose- berries, both wild and cultivated, from a strip one mile wide, along the bank of the Niagara river from Niagara -on - the -Lake to Fort Erie, to form a. safe- ty belt which will prevent the disease from passing over the river into New York state. On the Now York side of the river, similar work will be done by the state, for the protection of On- tario. Pines in this strip on both sides of the river will be dealt with later if necessary. In connection with the Location of the disease on currants, it is proposed to utilize the services of public school pupils. The currant stage of the dis- ease is readily recognized and the pupils will be able to render a valu- able service by reporting any out- breaks found. Literature and colored Illustrations will be furnished, and instructions given through the teach- ers. "CHILDREN OF THE SUN." South American Indians' Who Are Timid and Cringing. Timid, cringing, taking cif his hat respectfully to every white man he meets, the Indian .of the west coast of South America is a pitiable ob- ject, says the World Outlook, In the cities he shares with the burro the honor of being everybody's burden bearer. No one but an In- dian will be seen with even the smal- lest package, and you can engage a descendant of the "children of the sun" to carry home anything from half a pound of tea to a two -hundred pound trunk. You pay him what you will, he dares not chaffer about prices with a ;White man. On the great plantations and in the mines the Indian is a ,virtual Slave. There is no free agricultural labor on the west coast. Four days week the peon must work for the great landowners at the munificent wage of ten cents a day. The rest of the time ho may devote to his own acre or two, which must feed and Bothe his family. Appetite Finicky and Fussy? Tempt it with a light, nutritious food that collected And wages paid—vary in SATISFIED tlTlll.kb IJ I+p I each division of the !eland continent, In New South Wales in 1914-15 the b'tato received 1,90 cents or fiearly 20 No other medicine gives as great helps you to shake off the mills for each ton or freight moved satisfaction to mothers as dons Baby's shackles Of a Winter diet, ,ono mild (and in addition there are Own Tablets. Those Tablets aro terminal receipts per ton of 23 1-3 equally good for the newborn babe or Eat Shredded Wheat His. eents? and paid each employes on the growing child. They are absolute- euit with berries and cream the average of $741, ly free from injurious drugs and can - or milk, Two or three T3is- In South Australia in 1914-15 the not passably do harm—always good. , employees were paid an average of Concerning them Mz•s, Jos. Morneau, CuitS with fruits and green $412.95 per year, 2.12 cents or more St. Pampbile, Quo„ writes: 'lI have vegetables make a nourish than 20 mills were charged for moving used Baby's Own Tablots and am well satisfied with them and would use no other medicine for my little ones." Tho Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The lDr, Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont. ing, satisfying meal .at a I each ton oi° freight one mile. In Western Australia in 1914.15 the cost of a few cents. Ready- average wages paid were $790,30 per to-eat—no cookery, no Year, in Queensland $050, but no fig - kitchen worry.ures are available showing the aver- age amount collected per ton of freight per mile, The wages paid on the Australasian systems vary, as will be noted. The average for the six divisions as $654,70 compared with the 3727, the average paid in wages in Canada in 1915. In Canada the enterprise of the railways has broken up the country into farms, In Australia thorn are ranches many thousands of square miles in extent, and the exports of wheat tell the story of the failure of the Australian railways to stimulate general farming activities. Made in Canada. COVERNME T CON- TROL OF RAILWAYS INTERESTING STATISTICS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES. Comparing Freight Rates and Wages Paid on Government Owned and Private Owned Roads. W. M. Acworth, the British repre- sentative on the International Board of Inquiry, into the Canadian railway situation, in speaking of the English railways said recently: "Now, I am no foe of government railways. On the contrary, I believe that in countries with a population less self-reliant than our own, such a policy is necessary. In a country with a bureaucracy as well-trained and as well -organized as that of Prus- sia, it may even be desirable. But a careful study of the evidence has con- vinced mo that in the long run state control ends in keeping down the best to the level of the worst, and that appetite and a sense of freedom from taking them all for all, the private weariness. Among the many thou - railway companies of England and sands of Canadian women who have the United States have served the found new health and strength through these pills is Mrs. G. Strasser; Acton, West, Ont., who says:—"I am the mother of three children and after In birth I h LITTLE WORRIES ▪ IN THE HOME These Bring the Wrinkles and Pallid Faces That Make Women Look Prematurely Old. Almost every woman at the Bead of a home meets daily many little worries in her household affairs. The. care of her little ones, the work about the house all contribute to these worries. Most of them may be too small to notice an hour after- wards, but they constitute a constant strain that affects the blood and the nerves and make women look prema- turely old. The effect of these little worries may be noticed in sick or ner- vous headaches, fickle appetite, tired- ness after slight exertion, and the coming of wrinkles which every wo- man dreads. To those -thus afflicted Dr. Williams' Pink Pills offer a speedy cure; a restoration of color to the cheeks, brightness to the eye, a hearty public better than the government railways of the continent, or of our Australian colonies, end are likely to serve it better in the future." A COUNTRY GARDEN, Hollyhocks and larkspur, - Color everywhere, Warm and still and fragrant Breathes the sunny air. Pinks and tiger -lilies, Yellow marigold, Candituft and coxcomb, Roses manifold, Ilollyhoelrs and larkspur';' Scarlet, crimson, blue, Sunshine all around, dear, Butterflies—and your Anna B, Stewart. After A the, Two Eyee forSota Lifetime Marino to Tired IDpoa yyi1it; r enaes -nacre nyeOranrttodispellde, Bests®VISS Rofroshce--na stores Merinole Bthaltrooldr- andemarciGiveyourl2y7es ae much oryourloy ng� caro as poor Tooth and with Monroe regularity. Care for Them. You Cannot Buy New Eyes! Sold at Drug and Optical Stores or Iiy 1naOL Ilea Marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, for Free Buell Were Big Talkers. In a railway carriage in England re- cently two men were talking rather loudly. "Lord French is very sick," one of them observed. "Yes," said the other, "so is the Marchioness of Powys, but the Dutch- ess of Cleveland is getting on fam- ously. The Earl of Rosebery seems to be dwindling away, I can't make it out." When they left the carriage a pas- senger remarked to a friend that these two fellows seemed anxious to impress the company with the fact that'they were acquainted with every one in Burke's "Peerage." "Peerage be Mowed," he said rude- ly, "they were talking about dahlias." Minard's Liniment Cures Gargot in Cows A good share of the nutriment in al- falfa is in the leaves. Cut and har- The employees' in 1918 on the rail- Ibad weak, thin blood, always felt vest your crop before the leaves drop off and are wasted. ways of Germany numbered 785,466 tired, and unable to do my household and were paid on the average work. After the birth of my third 3408.97 per year, thirty-eight per child I seemed to be worse, and was very badly run down. I found the greatest benefit from the Pills and soon gained my old time strength. Indeed after taking them I felt as well as in my girlhood, and could take pleasure in my work. I also used Baby's Own Tablets for nay little ones and have found them a splendid medi- cine for childhood ailments." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine, or you can procure them by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for 32.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. cent. of the gross earnings. In Ger- man, all classes of freight considered, one and a third cents, or 13 mills, were collected for each ton of goods moved one mile, In Canada during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1915—the figure are used, because they were -those compil- ed from official records by the Bureau of Railway News and Statistics, Chi- cago—the employees numbered 124,- 142 who received on the avorage $727 per year, more than forty-five per cent of the gross earnings. Yet in Canada the railways collected only 7,51 mills, or about three-quarters of a cent for each ton of freight moved one mile. The rate charged in the United States for similar service in 1915 was 7.380 mills, or about 1-8 of a mill less per ton than in Canada. Conditions in Australia. In Australasia, where are estab- MODERN ARMOR. Style of Body Armor for Protection of Soldiers at the Front. A writer in La Nature urges that soldiers at the front be supplied with body armor, in addition to the steel MONEY ORDER SEND a Dominion Express Money Order. Five dollars costs three cents, A�1 QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY !'' KINGSTON ONTARIO !4 ARTS MEDICINE EDUCATION APPLIED SCIENCE Mining, Chemical Civil, Mechanical and Zlcctrictti l;ngiaeering. HOME STUDY Art. Course by correspondence, Degree with one year's nttcadnuce. Summer School Navigation School July and August December to April 16 GEO. Y. CHOWN, Registrar One reason why alfalfa is such a failure with some folks is because their lands are not well drained. Start out with the drainage and then conte on with the alfalfa, Mi>3aid'a Liniment Curers Diphtheria. Greatest of all feats of strength is holding one's tongue. SALESMAN WANTED Lubricating 011, Grease, Speefalties, Paint, Peet or whole time, Commission basis until ablllty is established, Per manent position and wide flald wirer qualified if desired. Marc. with rig pre- ferred. Deliveries from Ontario ware- houses. GENERAL REPINXXOGCClovelaO. Ol11o. When buying your Piano insist on having an "OTTO HIG L17 PI NO ACTION 6a® —°ter EOOK oN DOG DISEASES And How to Feed :uhtlod free to soy address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York it Amo rlta's Plinser Bog Remedies WITH THE FINGERS! SAYS CORNS LIFT OUT WITHOUT ANY PAIN Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or any kind of a corn can shortly be lift- ed right out with the fingers if you will apply on the corn a few drops of freezone, says a Cincinnati authority, At little cost one can get a small bottle of freezone at any drug store, which will positively rid one's feet of every corn or callus without pain or soreness or the danger of infection. This new drug is an ether com- pound, and dries the moment it is ap- plied and does not inflame or even ir- Higher Education. ritate the surrounding tissue. Just "Trude," cried Auntie Alice, "have think! You can lift oft' your corns you practiced Chopin's Ball in A? and calluses now without a bit of pain "Yes, auntie," replied the dutiful or soreness. If your druggist hasn't Trude. freezone he can easily get a small bot-' "Have you translated your page of tle for you from his wholesale drug Homer ?" h "Yes, auntie." "Have you learned your five prob- lems in Euclid?" "Yes, auntie," "And have you worked out the bi- nominal theorem?" "Yes, auntie, perfectly," "Then go and dust the dining room." Mallard's Liniment Co., Limited, Dear Sirs,—This fall I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest very lished the only democracies constitu- helmet that has proved so useful in bad, so I could not work and it hurt tionally comparable with Canada, the Preventing head wounds. The writer. me to breathe. I tried all kinds of railwaysituation is exceedingly com- says that nearly seventy-five per Liniments and they did me no good. plicated and the conditions—revenues Cent of the wounds received in trench One bottle of MINARD'S LINI- warfare are caused by missiles of low MENT, warmed on flannels and appli- velocity such as would be stopped by ed on my breast, cured me completely, comparatively thin armor. Further- C. H. COStSAB00M, more, missiles that have a velocity so Rossway, Digby Co., N. S. low that it allows them to lodge in the body are more dangerous than swift projectiles that pass through the body, Electric smeltingat Welsh tin mines because every bullet or bit of shell causes a loss of metal of about one is likely to be infected. The form of body armor that the writer proposes, Per cent, as compared with 9 or 10 per cent, by older methods. Nineteen liniment Cures Colds, Eto, For Bi.ildhliag lip Quickly probably the very best food you can select is Grape -Nuts. It contains the mineral salts an energy v alues—al the nutriment o whole wheat and barley—digests easily and quickly and the flavor is delicious. consists of a steel cuirass to cover the thorax and upper abdomen, `and so to protect the most vital organs; a gor- get of chain mail to protect the neck, and a girdle or kilt of the same ma- terial for the loins and groin; a mask An Irish Trooper. Passing through a military hospital, for the face, and protective pieces for a distinguished visitor noticed a pri- the shoulders; the elbows and the vete in one of the Irish regiments who had been terribly injured. knees. How far such armor would interfere with the free movements of the soldier is a matter yet to be deter- mined, but it would certainly furnish protection. A soldier of a average height, as he faces the enemy in open field, presents a target that has an area of twenty-seven hundred and forty square centimetres. Of that target the head and nock make up nine per cent., the thorax and abdomen twenty-eight per cent., and the less vital p'arts—the arms and legs—make up sixty-three per cent. Even if only the more vital parts could be protect- ed there would be a great saving of life. From a Dugout at the Front. Once to every man and nation Comes the moment to decide, In the strife twixt right and false- hood, For the good or evil side. Then it is the brave man chooses, While tho coward stands aside Doubting in his craven spirit, rpl — Till his Lord be crucified. Y 0[4aus::�rc:x+naz5�3 Lieut. Donald MacLean, To the orderly the visitor said: "That's a bad case. What are you going`to do with him?" "He's going back, sir," replied the orderly. "Going back," said the visitor in surprised tones. "Yes," said the orderly: "He thinks he knows who done it" ISSUE No. 26—'17. FIRST c'QTr.ON TRIIEAD, Material Was First Tried as a tSubeti- Lute for Silir. For almost a hundred years no one thought of malting thread other than from linen and silk, Cotton was not so much as thought of. Then Napo- leon, who had been devastating Nu - rope, thought he would strike a blow ' et the silk industry of Hamburg, and caused the stocks of silk to be burned. The thrccedmakers of Paisley thus found their supplies of raw material cut off, and they had to look about to find a substitute. Cotton was tried, and was found to answer the purpose so well that the basis of an entirely new industry was laid—the manufac- ture of "cotton" thread. From this time on the progress of the new In 1 dustry was steady. Minaret's Liniment Ceres Uiatomper. Will reduce Inflamed, Strained Swollen Tendons, Ligaments or Muscles. Stops thelamenessanc pain from a Splint, Side Bone o Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horse can be used. 32 a bottle at druggists or delivered- De. scribe your case for special instruc. tions and interesting horse Book 2 M Free. 8I3i1, I'Rq the liniirnentfor manASSORlkind, reduces Strainedantiseptic, Torn Liga- ments, Swollen Glands, Voles er Muscles' Heals Cute, Sores, Ulcers. Allays pain, Price 6L00 a bottle al dealers or Jelin erea, Book "Evidence" Free. W. 1, 10080, 2. 3.2„ 616 Lymans Edg , Montreal, Can, ebsorblse and Absorblse, It.. are made is Canada CRISIS OF NO AL-CiM c3NE Pr.A5OeW7i' PR0NTER ON 'rye �lll ra LL le5IilliW IBB WHITEST, 1:16NYE41 tl MADE IN CANAD,AJ English cooks think that a sprig of mint boiled with neer potatoes ime proves their flavor., FOR SALE 11-1 ,t11M dss ACRES, 320 TINDER CUL- tivation. good buildings. -$22,00 per sere, John Scott. Whitewood, Sas- lns LcheWan. NEWSPAPERO POR BALE •i.)RolfiT-hiAiciNG NEWS AND JOS .+t Offices for sale In gond Ontario towns. The mast useful and Interesting of al) businesses. full lnfot•matlon 00 Pally. mien to Wlt Street, Com- pany, 73 Adelaide Street, Toronto. aaIsCELLANEow9 riANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC., vV Internal and external, cured with- out pain b3' our home treattnent Write ' us before too late. Dr. Rehman Medical Co., Limited; CollIngwood, Ont. AUTOMOEXLES Pon SALE. AN HEE orde FDR mix i ar has boon painted and Change Safely Passed by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Wagoner, Okla.—"1 never get tired of praising Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound because during Change of Life I was in bed two years and had two operations, but all the doctors and op- erations did me no good, and I would have been in my grave today had it not been for Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound wnich brought me out of it all right, so I am now well and do all my housework, besides working in my garden. Several of my neighbors have got web by tak- ing Lydia .E, Pinkham'sVegetable Com- pound."— Mrs. VIOLA FINICAL, Wagon- er, 011a. Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hottflashes; headaches,back- aches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu- larities, constipation, variable appetite weakness and dizziness should be heeded by middle-aged women. Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound has carried ouse. many women safely through the crisis. varnished this season. Price $300. I gfUDSON, 1916 MODEL.. 6 CYL1N- 4- dor, 7 Passenger Touring Car. Mee- , Lilo lights and starter. Recently over- hauled and newly painted. Tires in good shape, Price $1,300, _ E ITDSON, 1916 MODEL, 6 CYLIN- 3 der, 7 Passenger Touring Car, with electric lights and starter. Thoroughly overhauled in our shop and newly paint- ed. Seat covers on all seats and doors. Oversize tires. Price $1,200. AJfL*)SON, 100DEL 37, 6 PASSENGER, 11 4 cylinder Touring Car, Eleotrla lights and starter, in good running order and newly painted. lloolts like a new . ar, Price $660. 3)1103I SEDAN. A VERY FINE. :electric ▪ looking closed and starrteseating inside domen, „'.4.01; . Nearly alt the windows opegives ample ventilation for summer driving, - Price $700: • A L .12 E R S, 7 -PASSENGER, 4 - Cylinder Touring Car. Electric, tarler, titres practically now, demount- able rims, .one Spare tire, Price $300. F junsoN 1913 MODEL "54." A HXGH A Powered, air cylinder, 6 passenger Touring Car. In good running order and looks like new, X'r•fee $760. 6 TUDEBACICER, SEVEN PASSEN- �. ger, 4 cylinder Touring Car, 1n good running order. Tires in good shape. This car was painted this year and reeks vers' nice. Price $360. _11ACICSON, 6 PASSENGER. 4 CYLIN- �e3i'' der Touring Car, Has electric lights and starter, good tires, and is a bargain at the price, $800. We only sell used cars after the pur- rhaser has had a demonstration and satisfied himself of the running quali- ties of the car he is buying. Call at aur showroom next time you are 1n Toronto and let our salesmen show you any of our used cars and give you a demonstra- tion. THE DOMINION AUTOMOEILE 00., Li=Ned 14e -1a0 Bay Street. Toronto. Ont. Doct rs Tell Why They Prescribe Bon- pto Explain How It Str n t r.- acs Eyesight , t Remarkably ly I o a • `se 's Time In a y Inst. ces0 Has Seen ]lyesight Improve C'om 75 to i00% in a Remarkably Short Time. Boston, Mesa,—Vietims of eye atrnin and other eye Weaknesses, and those Who wear glnsses, will he Old to know that Doctors and Eye Specialists now agree there is real hope and hole for them. Many whose eyes were foiling soy they have hod their eyes restored and many who onto tole glasses say they have thrown them ne•ay. One man says, after using Bou-Opto: "I was almost blind. Could not see to rend et all. Now I can rend everythitlg without ley glasses, mad my eyes do not hurt any more At night they wonlcl pain dreadfully, Now they feel fine ell the time. It was like a miracle to Hie,•' A lady who used it says: "The at- mosphere seemed hazy with or without glasses, batt after using this proserlptic 1 for fifteen days everything seems clear. I can rend even fine print without glasses,". An- other who used it env]: I was bothered with eyestrain caused by overworked, tired eyes which induced fierce heednohes. I have worn glnsses for several years, both for distance and work, and wit$otit them I ecu10 not readn r y Own Hama on all en- velope or the typewriting on tbo machine' before ma, I can do byte now, and have discarded my long distance glasses alto- gether, I eau count the fluttering loaves on the trees ncrese the street now, which for several .years Cave looked like a dim green blur to me. I .cannot express my joy at what it has dens for me." It is believed that thohsands who wear glasses eon now (litigant them in a r0asgh- able time nntt mnhtltudes more will be elite le strengthen their eyes ]o 08 to be spared the trouble and expense of ever getting 'ghaeees, lar. Beck, an eye specialist o8 nearly twenty years practice, says: Two promi- nent eye special10ts, after a thorough exam- ination of a young girl aged twelve, de- cided that to save the eight of her right eye the left must be removed, A friend ad- vised her father to try Bon-Opto before per- mitting the operation. Within three days a decided improvement was noticeable, within a week the inflammation had almost disappeared, and at the end of six weeks all danger was past and the eye saved. I saw the case again to -day. The eye ball has perfect motion. When she began to use Iron-Oeto It was in a fixed position. The conjunctival inflammation has dieap- peered. IIer vision is now 20/30. (20/20 is normal as you know) as against. 20/2000 When she began the use of Bon -0 to. An- other patient came to me suffering from Blepharitis illarglnalis with all the usual symptoms such as meriting agglutination of the lids chronic conjunctivitis and ephiphorn. lids, eyes had the dull, suffused expression common to such cases. She used Bou-Opto and not only overcame her dis- tressing condition but so strengthened hot eyesight that she was able to dispense with her distance glasses and her headache and neuralgia left her. In this instnuao I should say her eyesight was improv, CI 100 per cent." Dr. Sudldns says: "While house surgeon at a Now 10ttglaud Eye and Ear Infirmary andduringmany years in general dispen- sary preatice, I found oculists too prone t0 operate end opticians too trilling to pre- scribe glasses, and both inclined to neglect the strengthening and developing of the eyesight. The success of developing in strengthening the eyesight will goon make ovcglaeoes old-fashioned. The Director of 'Medical Inspection of Beaton Schools i'n a report published February 20, 1917 states that only 14,010 remits eat of -89,176' exam - Med need to weer glasses now, a marked decrease over the previous report. iton- Opto is hastening the eyeglassloss age in btspectaeled-Beaton," Dr, Smith,,an ocullet of wideexperience, says:- I have treated in private prnettee a number of serious q thahnic•diseases with Bon-Opto and ate able to report ultimate recovery in Both 'acute and chronic cases. Mr. B. came to my office suffering with an infected eye. The condition wasso serious Hint an operation for emtelention seemed imperative, Before resorting to the oper- ative method I prescribed Bon-Opto and in twenty-four hours the secretion had les- sened, inflammatory symptoms began to subside, and inseven days the eye was cured and retained its normal vision. An- other mem of extreme convergent strabismus (cross 6706) escaped. the surgeeh's knife by the timely use of sour treatmept. The tig:atoned external muscles yielded to the seethhing and anodyne effects of on-Optp. By cleansing the lids of seeretiont and act- ing as a tome for the eyeball itself the vision le rendered more aoute, hence the number of cages Of discarded glasses" Dr. Connor gave: ,Sly eyes were in bad oondltion owing to the aevsre strain arising work, Be pto used encircling to trea-fom molted miaroseopfaal 00eenreh Mons renderer 4 surprising b r 1Ce, 11Venni 50 eyhs reinarltably strengthened, glasses s0 much so I have put aside my glasses without di90emfort. Several Of my 0011eagu08 have es "Bon-Opto Is ilastening the Eyeglass. less Age In Bespectacled Boston." also used it al1d we are agreed as to its re- sults. 50 a few days, uuder my obeerva- tion, the eyes of nu astigmatic ease were so improved that glasses have been discarded by the patient.' Eye troubles of many descriptions may be.. Wonderfully benefited by ,the use of Bon- Opto andi5 ,von leant to strengthen your eyes, go to any drug store and get a bottle of Bou-Opto tablets. Drop one Bon -Onto tablet in a fourth of a glass of water and let 1t dissolve. With this liquid bathethe eyes two to four times daily. You should notice your eyes clear up perceptibly right from the start and iuilnmmation and red - 01,00 win Qulcltly disappear, If your eyes taker you even a hlttle itis your duty to take steps to 51110 them 11011 before ICAs too late. Many hopelessly blind. might have saved their sight if they had caredfor their ey00 iu time, NO'CD—A dty physician to whom the above artists as sttbndtted, said: "Yes, non-0pto Is. a rem0iiratdo Dye 1emedy. Ito eau0"I 1Hent grllists • s tiro are1s known to by the t ere ape eloUsts 0100 widely prescribed by them. 0 have patucwit :yak 11tory sitrcas9Lt111y11.1,1.0:1 y oneo mnetlee 00 nte 00(1008 0000 warn strained through over.': work or nliaat wessne. hlehly r0noigmeu, it 5n 01100 Of peak, wiper' aching, vlsl ting, ' iltrhtna, bnrnnma eyes, rod 1io1o, blurred pltalon or dor 4700 htaaatod lefrom creosote to 0810154,. 511x. dust or wind, it 1 one et the very row. propn- Use in I fool ehemt1 be kap" on hand forIs sotta use in 11(00051 every Madly." n0n-Opto 15 a patent medlnfnnpu or 004q00t remedy, It 15 an ettucal age. r05lon, the fonm,10 1,0100 pasted en tho 010100ae, 11,0 mOp r cent ro one we Leo It 00 00000 t la eyesight a0 per cent' Ie enc week's time Sn many lnetanaes, Or retatnd ;rhe honey. 11i10 015. Permed by all good drugglste, including general stores; also by O'. Talnbiyn and T. Eaton & Co., Toronto.