The Seaforth News, 1917-11-15, Page 3eta
MANY MILLIONS
W 1
WAST
APT
SALVAGE PROM THE BA'rTL
FIELDS AND CAMPS.
The Real "WarI
Bread" must contain the
E entire wheat grain—not the
white flour center but
every article of gluten
1,, particle g and
mineral salts—also the outer
bran coat that is so useful in
keeping the bowels healthy
al and active. Shredded
Wheat Biscuit is the real
"war bread" because it is
100 per cent. whole wheat
uyms
prepared in a digestible for.
er Contains no yeast, baking
he powder, seasoning, or cherni-
8 cats of any kind. Food con-
servation begins with Shred-
ded Wheat Biscuit for break
•
Three Hundred \Yoinen Sorters De
With the Discarded Garments
Of the 'Proops,
A big enterprise has been built
at Dewsbury by the War Office, bne
which discarded unifots amid otlt
articles of clothing collected on t
battlefields and in home camps ai
dealt within such a way as to sav
•the nation hundreds of thousands o
pounds, says the London )ail
Chronicle,
Since the work has been in pro(res
about 45,000,000 soparate article
have been dealt with, including 4,100
000 jackets, 4,500,000 pairs of tro
sex's, 620,000 "great' coats, 903,00
a l -fast and ends with Shredded
s'
Wheat Biscuit for supper.
uI Delicious with sliced bananas,
o berries, or other fruits.
pail's of riding breeches, 2,700,000 put-
tees, 3,500,000 shirts, 856,000 caps,
1,800,000 cardigan jackets 18,000,000
soaks, 2,700,000 pair@ of drawers, 6,-
000,000 other articles.
Skilled "Pickers."
This part -worn clothing conies t
Dewsbury in bags, and is run f
trucks straight into the huge sheds a
the three railway stations. Here th
bags are ripped open, and the content
spread out amongst the "pickers"
whose nimble fingers and trained eyes
quickly discover which garments
should be set 'aside for renovation end
which are only fit for disposal to' rag
merchants and others, who put them
through their special machinery pre-
-, paratory to their being made up again
into Army cloth in the local factories.
As many as ninety truck loads have
• been received in n clay.
There are about 300 women sorters,
who clo their work so thoroughly that
nothing is wasted. Garments which
aro beyond repair are carefully seru-
tin.izod, and sorted into woollens, lin-
se:ys, Angeles, etc. Articles capable
of being restored are sent to a local
firm of dyers and cleaners, by whom
they are cleaned. Then they are re-
paired and re -issued to the troops or
for' the use of German prisoners of
war.
In ten month`' thee
s value of nodus
received and disposed of at Dewsbury
has been $3,293,250, while the two-
thirds value of garments recovered
for re -issue at all depots has been
$1,702,510, making a total of $4,995,-
660.
4,996;
660. Against this expenditure, includ-
ing enlisted men's pay, civilian wages,
cleaning and repair, etc., has amount-
ed to $336,540, showing a net credit
balance of $4,659,220.
Valuable Refuse. .
Made in Canada._
THE MAGNETIC NORTH POLE.
Why the . Needle of the Compass
Poirlt8 North.
° Why does the compass needle point
' north? Because the earth is a mag-
i net, not differing essentially in its
e magnetic properties from a bar of
s magnetized steel.
It has two poles of greatest inten-
sity, and, like most large steel mag-
nets, there are' several supplemental
poles of lesser intensity. Just as the
pole of one bar magnet attracts the
end of another, so the n1 gnet poles
of the earth behave toward poles of
the compass needle, unlike poles at-
tracting, and like poles repelling each
other,
But it is not correct to say that the
needle always points north; there are
few localities where it does so, and
these are constantly changing.
An irregular line drawn from the
mouth of the Oronoco River through
the east coast of Hayti, Charleston,
S.C„ and Detroit, Mich., represents
very nearly the line in which there is
no variation to -day.
Articles which are marked for rags
are re -converted into their original
raw state by special machinery in the
district, and used again ia the manu-
facture of new clothing' for the Army.
Up to the present, sales of rags to
merchants and manufacturers in the
heavy woollen district have amounted
to $5,000,000.
As showing the completeness of the
arrangements to save it may be ex-
'pla'ined that cotton rags are sent to
Woolwich Arsenal to be used as wip-
ers and cleaning rags.
Amongst valuable things recovered
may be mentioned leather patches
from riding breeches, $2,000 worth of
gold lace, and thousands of shirts for
use by German prisoners of war; and
web equipment—belts, pouches, etc.—
is sent back to Ordnance depots for
use, and thousands of towels are wash-
ed and' issued again.
Anthrax.
The disease of anthrax occurs
among sheep, horses, cattle and other'
herbivore or grain eating animals. No
animal of any of these classes is cap-
able of resisting anthrax infection
providing suitable conditions obtain,
The disease is also liable to attack hu-
man beings although it does not ap-
pear epidemically in man. Many
canes have been reported where men
have died as a result 'of contracting
anthrax from the skinning of an in-
lected animal or from handling the
wool or skins of animals that have
died from the disease. This informa-
tion is brought out in Bulletin No. 23
of The Health of A.nimals Branch of
the Dominion Department of Agricul-
ture entitled "Anthrai ." The bulletin
is written by Dr. Chas. FI. Higgins,
pathologist, and deals with the sub-
jects of occurrence, methods of infec-
tion, soil infection, diagnosis, etc. 'It
is pointed out that the carcass of the
animal that has had the disease should
be destroyed by fire, care being taken
that all discharges and litter about
the animal be burned with it,
even to the halter that it has been
wearing. Under no circumstances
should the animal be shinned, as this
is a most "dangerous procedure.
Neither should it be dragged over
the farm, Deep burial is sometimes
resorted to, but it is not nearly so
satisfactory as burning. Veterinarians,
farmer's` and others who have -.reason
to suspect the existence of anthrax
1 a
E'
are compelled, under the,alndmal Coyl-
tagious Diseases Act, to promptly nos
tify the Minister of Agriculture, the
Veterinary Director -General or the
keenest Veterinary. Inspector,
South American ants sometimes
con 5ta7Ct tunnels three miles in
•na'1'lt,
11 ugh s1),auld be kept covered while
to prevent' it crust from form-
s:. ;t interferers', with expansion.
An. A.utul'.ifIii
Delsigt?
.5
Youthful in every lino is this smart
frock of navy wool jersey. The large
pointed collar is of `white flannel. The
pocket arrangement is quite novel.
McCall Pattern No. 8026, Misses'
Tunic Dress, In 3 sizes; 1•. to 20
years. Price, 20 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer or from
the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto.
Dept, W. ,
FIFTEEN YEARS USE
OF BABY'S OWN TABLETS
Thousands of mothers keep a box of
Baby's Own Tablets -In the house as
king as there are little ones about.
Among them is Mrs. Marcel D. Le-
Blanc, Memramcook West, N.B„ who
In all places east of this line the says :—"Por the past fifteen years I
north end of the needle swings slight- have never been without Baby's Own
ly to the westward; in all places west Tablets, 'whenever any of my ehil-
o todren
fit the eastward. At the moutharo ailing the Tablets promptly
Ideal mulching materials—Clete
straw and marsh hay.
The eight time to mulch th• e straw
berry bed is immediately after th
ground freezes, ,,,
Fall plowing is all right 00 some
soils, and in some pieties, but hillsides
or sloping, washy fields should be kept
in grass or in cover crops through the
winter.
1' iliE S 'UOhre` I G
On 0Ietieee DreB$ea Table Linen, de.
t 1 wtdlon nett hnlfr 7 1' ntln'
1.14,V2.1.04 al'°d 141tn71'r lead;• fr•ota your own
STUDY AND EXERCISE
Overst.utly anal hest of exerelsemake
thin bloodless children, Study does not
usually hurt a child at school unless
the studies encroach on tine (bat
should be spent in cul-nf-doors exer-
clse, 111E lank of exercise and over -
study is a combination that brings on
St. Vitus Dance, If your bay or girl
at Reboot Is 111in and pale, listless and
inattentive, haft a fickle appetite, is
tenable to stand still or sit still, you
must remember that health is teach
more important than education, and
more time should be given to exercise
and reerealion,
See to it at once that the child does
not overstudy, gets plenty of out-of-
door exercise, sleeps ten out of every
twenty-four hours, and takes a safe,
reliable tonic like Dr. Williams Pink
P111s until the color returns to the I
cheeks andLllps and the appetite be-
comes norma]. Iron growing children'
who become pale and thin Dr. Wil-
liains Pink Pills aro not only safe but
in most cases are the very best tonic]
that can be taken. These pills build
up the blood, :strengthen the nerves
and assist nature in keeping pace with
rapid growth.
You can get Dr. Williams Pink Pills
through any dealer le medicine, or by
mail pos't'paid at 50 cents a box or six'
boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
The Origin of Passports;
Passports, which are so much in eve,
dense at present, began as sea -letters,
guaranteeing a sdfe passage for ships.
A form of sea -letter was appended to
the Treaty of the 'Pyrenees in 1659.
The more familiar passport is simply
a permit authorizing a person to pass
into or out of a country. As such it
would seem well -within the province
of any Government to refuse it to any
ndividual who proposes to undertake
a journey for an object that Govern-
ment does not approve. In fact, "per-
mission
to circulate," as our Gaelic
friends express it, is a favor and not
a right.
SSinard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
of the Columbia River the variation relieve them. I haver such faith in
of the compass is about 22 degrees them that I never hesitate in recom-
east; . in Alaska it is from 40 to 60 mending them to any of my friends
degrees east; midway between New •K'h'o have -little ones in the home "
York and Liverpool it is about 35 de-
grees west. ---
The magnetic north pole is at pre-
sent on or near the northwestern
shore of Boothia-Peninsula, in the
northern part of North America, Its
position is constantly changing, and
in 600 years it has moved half way''
round the geographical pole.
Prose Verse. •
It was a pitiful mistake, an error
sad and grim. I waited for the rail-
way train; the light was lowand dim.
It came at last, and from a car there
stepped a dainty dame, and, looking- mY hip and back badly and • was tib -
c
unto meame, hged to use a crutch for 14 months,
"Oh, cam she cried, "oh, dear odd In September, 1916, Mr, Wm. Outridge
of Lac/flute urged me to try MIN -
The Tablets' are sold by medicine
dealers or by .mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co„
Br:Oakville, Ont, '
The African, a gray goose with a
distinct brown shade, about the size
of the Embden, is a good layer and
makes a good market goose, although
it has the objectionable dark pin-
feathers.' It is a rapid grower and
matures early.
Minaret's Liniment Co„ Limited,
Gentlemen,—In July, 19154 I was
thrown froep a road machine, injuring
u and down the he place, she straight •
Jack!" and kissed me as she spake, ARD'S LINIMENT, which T did with
then looked again and, frightened, the most satisfactory results and to-
uted:— y
day I am as well as ever in my life,
"011, what a bad mistake!"
I said, "Forgive me, madam fair, Yours sincerely,
for I am not your Jack, and as re- his
gards the kiss you gave, and
straight- MATTHEW x BAINES•
way give it back."' mark
And since that night I've often
stood upon that platform dint, but
only once in a man's whole life do
such things come to him.
Don't have an empty preserving jar
in your neighborhood this fall.
6Tea and Col
fee Interfere
With D ges-
tione �—'-
says a well known,
authority.
Many who use tea
or coffee, not know-
ing that it aggra-
vates stomach trou-
bles, could still enjoy
a delicious hot table
beverage and es-
cape harmful effects
by a change to the
wholesome, pure
cereal drink--
POS ,
TU
"There's a Reason"
e.
A critter's a critter and you can't
beat human sense into its head with a
club.
Minara's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows
IN ORCHARD AND FIELD.
We'd all be healthier if, instead of
so many pork barrels down in the cel-
lar, we had more apple barrels.
The wrapper you use does not sell
your apples, It is the apple inside
the wrapper.
A clean barrel- or box makes apples
look batter to the buyer and may lead
to a better sale.
In cold climates the ideal time to
prune fruit trees it not in the fall or
winter; wait till the severe weather is
over.
An apple that has been well
Cared
in. an open outhouse will last 1lege:
than one put down cellar as soon as
gathered.
It's all right to label young trees,
but be careful not to have the wire so
tight that it will girdle the wood and
hill the tree.
Newly planted trees in exposed
windy locations may need staking;
but watch out that the ties do not
chafe the bark and thus ruin - the
tr
The. fall orchard work will not be
done until you have picked up all the
decayed apples and put them out of
the way. No man who loves his or-
chard will leave them to multiply
Worm pests.
A rat in the fruit cellar is fully as
bad as a bull in a China shop, Make
it aus ne
b i tier
o capture lie
p the pest and
stop up the hole where he came in.
It may be that some suckers have
started around the base of your trees
since the last trimming, Cut every
one of these out before snow comes. -
Late in the fall plow a furrow down
through the orchard 1'
8 a d between
every
two rows
w of trees if -the ro
enc
sisal
to be wet. The trees will do a great
deal btter' for this surface drainage,
Also, perhaps some tile `drains are
needed underground,
When new soil is broken up for
gardening purposes cut the sod in
squares a foot wide and about two
feet long. Pile the sods up, upside
down, in a square pile. Layers of
Leaves can be placed between th
layers of sod. This will make fin
potting soil when it has rotted.
GIRLS 1 WHITEN SKIN
WITH LEMON JUICE
Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to
remove tan, freckles, sallowness.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will supply
you with throe ounces 'of orchard
white for a few cents. Squeeze the
Juice of two fresh lemons Into a bot-
tle, then put in the orchard white and
shake well. This makes a quarter
pint of the very best lemon skin
whitener and complexion beautifier
known. Massage this fragrant, creamy
lotion daily into the face, neck, arms
and bands and just see how freckles,
tan, sallowness, redness and rough-
ness disappear and how smooth, soft
and clear the shin becomes. Yes?
It Is harmless, and the beautiful re-
sults will surprise you. •
rnaterlo 1
Url.idinrr uu IIucbi• )t 3 r t
Our Nen 1Ihis (rat eti red>lltur a is
jtltt tri aryl wr) went a e:•y 11(11, to
Ontm•h. to have
Write For It ---It Is f'l'ee
TORONTO PLEATING GO.
14 Bre )delbane St., Dept W. Toronto
"Illi time to light the evening fire,
To read good inose-, to sing
The low and lovely songs that breathe
Of the eternal spying, •
The crops are in; the wood all crit;
I don't eaare how the wind may roar
Its winter throat. By cozy fire
I'll laugh or doze, nor atilt for more
Than just -to hear the good wife say,
• The table s set, come all you folk."
i e3b' ii✓' " ifrif; Gr€.B711Mod Eyelids,
[OG,1C"l4' j /.
pi" ;`Y. -s 1C re 1Je Eyes Inflmed 11Y
jS m /Jaw aui 13�tndqulrkly
rrus 8 1 l - Murine. Try it is
your Lyes Mid In Baby's
r1 1t idoamarting,3ustJlyeComfort
Marine Eye Remedy ,Au4Yo°i
o pnnitio'r,7n:lnu
Eye Salve, in Tubed 21s. Fur good, of the F.'a6•- Froo.
Asst Musin° Eye 1Renvter&9 Ca., Chicago a
The skin of a whale is from two
inches to two feet thick, that of a 1
largo specimen often weighing 30'
tons,
MONEY ORDERS
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order, Five dollars costs three cents.
Practise pacing so that you can step
as nearly, three feet at a pace as pos-
sible. You will be in places many
times where the best and perhaps the
only measure you have is your stride.
The Royal house,
A very common error is to assume.
that i; is the house -of Guelph which)
rules over th¢ British Empire, The
royal family were Gull .h t from the
ae(c .a.1n of (,eorge 1, to ills aeeesslonl
of Edward VII., who we'. the first i
King n1' the house. of fbrse Coburg
(nth 1. Ill informed d jersons are
sell alit to d,vcil on the German'
01)1111, 111442(4 o" th loyal kinase of,
rit n.,.to the 55(5)111 nn of all cone
slde•1'tttions oi' tta liritich oicmntt1.1
The King, for instance, is a descend -1
f 1
1 re( the (:real, of Lugar
and of RRobert William'
e, tomentionthe nbutar a I The Tarnier eau plow and sow the
few of his illustrious ancestors.
seed, but tilers his efforts cease. Un
—•• less Providence sends the early and
latter rains, the husbandman's toil
Messes: .r set -nest Cu+'es Colds, 820. -. gees for naught.
ATO( 5�
ii7It{C:F„LL6XdE0 t)'a7
tui 1 sti110UUIi;"
.nilliliiiiI 1
Materd's Liuirnent Clunes Diphtheria..
FORMD
iJ In nesse and ibztarna Ulutred with..
ti.
ou cin erre
h u h m t
EUPTIONS p Y e krcatm°n . Wrlln
before Ora ec, lull. Dr, f3, Oman SieAleai
Co., hlmlted, Coliingwood, Oat
On Hands, Caused Disfigure:'1 cine light WArmso To Do PI.A.IN
seventg at home, whole or
spare time, good pay. work sent any dis-
-ment, Itching atad Burning, _ tones, rharges Paid. Send slump For
Cuticura Healed, startle:darts National :Manufacturing
Company, Montreal.
"The trouble which I had affected my
hands only. It first came in watery
blisters under the skin,
and if theywere scratched
they broke, causinga mass
of sore eruptions that
caused disfigurement,
itching, burning and loss
of sleep. The trouble
` rh lasted about one year and
k n, after using the Cuticura
Soap and Ointment for
about three months I was completely
healed." (Signed) Miss Aileen Sweet,
Main St., Eastman, Que.
Keep your skin clear by daily use of
Cuticura Soap and Ointment.
For Free Sample Each by Mail ad-
dress„post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere.
TBDRp SWOLLEN GLANDS
that make a horse Wheeze,
Roar, have Thick Wind
or Choke -down, can be
reduced with
15,* -01151,
e ?o
e also other Bunches or Swellings. No blister,
no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco.
nomical—only a few drops required at an ap-
plication. $2 per bottle delivered. Book 3 M free.
ABSORRiNE, 3R„ the antiseptic liniment for
1 mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful,
Swollen Veins and Ulcers.$1 and $2 a bottle at
dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence" free.
-W, F. YOUNG, P, 0, F., 516 Lymans Bldg,, Montreal, Can
ibsorblue and Absorblaa Yr.. are wade to Caaan,.
y4 4E °t l4 ;tenseadgY R9ri
A
Constip t i®n Cure
A druggist says : "Por nearly
thirty years I have commended
the Extract of Roots, known as
Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, for
the radical cure of constipation
and indigestion. It is an old
reliable remedy that never faila
to do the work." 30 drops
thrice daily. Get the Genuine,
at druggists. a
INBI'4h'M,11SaSIVE.h' n,°m A
A
Railroad Men
These men know from experience
that Sloan's Liniment will take the
stiffness out of joints and the sore-
ness out of muscles—And it's so
convenient) No rubbing required.
It quicicly penetrates and brings re-
lief. Easy to apply and cleaner than
mussy plasters or ointments.
Always have a bottle in the house
for rheumatic aches, lame back,
sprains and strains.
Generous sized bottles at all drug-
gists, 25c., 50c., $1.00.
r
When buying your Piano
��
insist on haying an
fiOTTO ireiG{. i! "
PIANO ACTION
liJi(EN BONN
ifEAL II N
Woman Tells How $5 Worth
of Pinkham's Compound
Made Her Well.
Lima Ohio.—"I was all broken down
in health from a displacement.One of my
lady friends came to
see me and she ad-
tz vised me to com-
mence taking Lydia
om-
mencetakingLydia
E Pinkham's Veg-
etable
egetable Compound
y, and to use Lydia E.
Pinkham's Sanative
Wash. I began ��. tak-
in
g your remedies
and took$5.00worth
vt a and in two months
was a well woman
after three docto'rs'said I' never would
stand up straight again. I was a mid-
wife for seven years and I recommended
the Vegetable Compound to every wo-
man to take before birth and after-
wards, and they all got along so nicely
that it surely is a godsend to suffering
women. If women wish to write to
me I will be delighted to answer them."
—Mrs.JENru a MOYER, 342 E.North, St.,
Lima, Ohio.
Women who suffer from displace-
ments, weakness, irregularities, ner-
vousness, backache, or bearing -down
pains, need the tonic properties of the
roots and herbs contained in Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compote -id.
odors Tell Why They Prescribe '• on -Opt,,,
t,,,
Explain '- ow It Strengthens Eyesight
ern.r' rkably In a leek's Time
In Many Instance.
. e
o—o—o—o—o—o--o—o—o—o—n—o—o
LIFT YOUR CORNS I,
OFF WITH FINGERS
How to loosen a tender corn
or callus so !t Lifts out
without pale,
0--0-0--0--0-0—o---0-0-0-0-0-0
Let folks step on your feet here-
after; wear shoes a size smaller if
you like, for corns will never again
send electric spanks of pain through
you, according to this Cincinnati
authority.
He says that a few drops of a drug
called freezone¢, applied directly npan
a tender, aching corn, instantly re.
lieves soreness, and soon the entire
corn, root and all, lifts right out,
This drug dales at once and simply
shrivels up the corn or callus without
even irritating the surrounding tissue.
A small bottle of freezone obtained
at any drug store will cost very little
but will positively remeee every hard
or soft .corn or callus froma tt
o s foot.
If your druggist hasn't stocked this
drug et tell hint' t
g y o get a email
bottle of freezone for you from Itis
wholesale drug bourse.
ISSUE No. 46—'17.
Has Seen Eyesight Improve from 75
to 100% in a Iterntu'lcably Short Time,
noston, Mass,—Victims of eye strain and
other eye weaknesses, and those who wear
•end Ilse Specialists 1108 00888 there is real
hope and help for theta. Shiny whose elms
were Wittig say they have had their eyes
restored and many 1V110 once wore glasses
say they have thrown them away,. One men
Srtvs, after using Bon-Opto: "I was s1lunst
blind. Couldnet see to rend at all. Now I
. can vend everytiillig without my glasses, and
my eyes do net hurt any mere At night
they would pain dreadfully. Now they feel
fine all the time, It was like a miracle to
me." A Indy who used it says, 'The at-
mosphere seemed hazy with or tvlthout
gienses,`but aftert)sing this prescription for
fifteen deka everything seems clear, I can
rent] even lino print without- glrssos." An-
other who used 1t. says; "0 was `bothered
With eyestrain mused by everw"vked, tired
oyes which induced fierce head:whea, I
have worn glasses for several Sears, botlt
for distanco and work, and without thorn I
could not rend my ower name on an en-
velope tie the typewriting on the machine
before me, I can do bene now, and have
ritscerded my' long distance glasses alto-
gother. I can count the iletterl)ig leaves of
the trees across the shoot now, which for
several y8nrs have looked like a dim green
8
blur 1 to me.
I ennnot me,"
express myjoy at
iy
81105 it has nota f.Or me."
It is believed that thousands who weer
glasses can new discord them in a reaeon-
nhle lime, unit multitudes more will be able
to otsongtlen their eyes so as to be aimed
the trouble and expense of ever getting
glasses,
Dr. Beek, an eye specialist of nearly
twenty years practice. segs: Two pronl-
):ent eye spceittllsts, after n thorough esant-
inatlon of a young girl aged twelve, de-
cided that to save the sight of her right eye
the left must be xemoved. A friend ad-
vised her father to try Boa-Opto before per-
mitting tbo operation. Within. three. days
a decided improvement was noticeable,
within a week the lnilammation had almost
disappeared, anti at the end of nix weeks
all danger was past and the eye saved. I
saw the case ngaln to•dny. The eye ball
has perfect motion. When she began to
use Boa -Open 1t was in a fixed position.
The eonjnnetival inflammation has disap-
peared. Iter• 'vision is now 20/10 (00/10 10
nortual as you know). as against 20/1000
when she began the use of non-Opto. An-
other patient came to hie suffering from
Blepharitts Marginalia with all the flaunt
symptoms such as mornin agglutination
of the lids chronic conjunctivitis and
ephiphora. ]'ler eyes had the dull, suffused
expression common to such cases. She used
Bon-Opto and not only overcame her dis-
tressing condition but so strengthened her
eyesight that eba was able to dispense with
herdistance glasses and her headache and
neuralgia left her. In this instance I should
say her eyesightwas improved 100 per cent"
Dr. Tudkins says: "While house surgeon
at a New Anglaud Eye and Aar Infirmary
and duringmany years in general dispen-
saryracte, X found oculists too prone to
operateand optleiaus too willing to pre-
scribe glasses, and both inclined to neglect
the strengthening and developing of the
eyesight. The success of Bon-Opto in
strengthening the eyesight will soon 1111(0
eyeglasses old-fashioned. The Tarmacs of
Medical Insppection of Boston Schools in a
report published February 10, 1017, states
that only 1.1,010 pupils out of 80,175 exam -
hied need to wear glasses now, a marked.
decrease over the 180810na report, Bon-
Opto is hastening elle eyeglaeslesa age in
bespectacled Roston.
Dr, 5011511, an oculist of wide experience,
50581 'I have treatedin private practice a
number of serious o )titainslo diseases 'with
Bon-Opto anti am nable to report ultimate
recovery in both atilt° and chronic eases,
Mr. 11, came to my ofnce suffering with an
infected ey0, Tho condition was so serious
that an operation for °nucleation seemed.
imperative. hefore resorting to the oper-
ative method I prescribed Bou-Opto and in
twenty-four y nfa hours the mpsecretion began
les-
sened, zoned, Su daimval:ory symptoms torts b
y e nn to
subside, and In seven days the eye wag
mired andretained its normal vdslop. An-
other case of extreme convergent strabismus
(cross eyes) escaped the surgeon's knife by
the timely use of your teeatzhent. Tho
tightened external muscles. yielded to the
soothing and anodyne SReets•of Bon -Opts,
By cleansing rho lids of secretions and act-
ing as a tonle for the eyeball itself the
vision is rendered. more :tenth, hence the
number of erases of disenrded glasses,"
Dr, Connor sa . '\I
4.
Y y eyes were in bag
condition owing to the severe strain arising
from protracted microscopical research
work. Ron-Opto used according to direa-
tione rendered n surprising service. Ifnund
my eyes remarkably strengthened, so nuch
ae I have put aside my glasses without
discomfort. Several 08 ruy colleagues have
"Bon-Opto Is Hastening the Eyeglass.
less Age in Bespectacled Boston;"
also used itand we are ogreed as to its re-
sults. In a few days under my observe',
tion, the eyes 08 an astigmatic ease were So
Slinproved that g.lasses have been discarded
by the patient.'
ldye troubles of tunny descriptions'mas9 be
WonderfUlly benefited by the Use of 1300-
Opto and if you want to strengthen your
eyes, go to ally drug store and get a bottle
of .Bon-Opto tablets, Drop one Bon-Opto
tablet In a fourth of a gleSS of water and
lot it dissolve. With this liquid bathe the
eyes two to fou' times daily. You should
notice your eyes clear up perceptibly right.
from the start and lnflnmmatlon and red-
ness will quickly llsnppeer, It your eyes
bother you even a little it is your duty to
take steps to S05,13 them now before it 1s too
late.. many hopelessly blind might have
savedh
t dr sight llt if they had cared for their
eyes In time.
NOVO--A city physician to whom the above
article wassubmitted, sold; "Yoe, 23On-Opto 1s
a remarkale eye remedy.. Its eonetitnent in✓ '
aredlents are well known to emhten0 050 050.
Mallets and widely reeerlhod b9 them. I hate .
needd It very 0558006 11y n niv' own practice On
patients whose a 61�1.�r
YO 5. 5 sail 14 through strained t fOnl,lt OrOr•
work or Se of weak,
I San Ill h1Y recommend
it 1n seas burning eyes Watery,11 luaching, e a isio, 0
itC1111f
o, bdrla eyes, rad Ulla, to s ke,oa 0,
u sorb inflame f1•pin exposure very
9low
py e bili
dub g
t wind,
Tt Is o»0 or the o very feiv prepal
rationsf
X ost6 tlUh 1
dhOlnt) 11
It ll ford for regular
a r
pan in almost every family.. " remedy, oto not n
Denim med{icate , secret la 118115 printed
is an
ethical moderation, the f5(Ineo boring patio 40 a0
strengthen
ngt•hene .sigh I8Atpervelt'Sa ono 51 *
11 04015' t0 eons filet 80 per osnr en o11e . I s this
in many tnstane09, Or refund the mosey. Ir at6+
penned tuv all good druggists,' including
general stores; also by G, Tamblyn and
x. Baton a. co,. Toronto,.