HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1918-02-28, Page 7THE " KANGAROO"., !TIE .AFTER EFFECTS,
SUBMARINE ITEM(
THE INVENTION OF A SPANISH
GENIUS,
B1€by Submersible, Carried by Mother
Vessel,BeUsed
To Bin
Shallow Waters.
The fret submarine on record, built
by an enterprising subject of Bing
James T. of England, was constructed
of wood awl propelled by oars extend-
ing through holes in the sures of the
craft, These oar holes were 'rondo
tvatei• tight by goat skins, Just what
• finally became of this original sub-
marine is not known. After that the
world hearer nothing of such craft for
about 100 years, and then another int
venter, €a man .named Day, developed
the, next undersea craft. Day claimed
that be could remain submerged in
his submarine for twenty-four hours,
Once he made ready for this testand
apparently was successful, because up
to the present moment no one has
hoard of his corning up.
The next submarine was invented
by Dr. David Bushnell, a New Eng-
lander who lived at Saybrook, during
the Revolutionary war. IIe called his ;
submarine the' "American Turtle," Tie'
built this vessel with the idea of de-
stroying the British fleet which was
anchored off New York. -The Turtle
was provided with a torpedo which
was attached to the bottom of the ship
and manipulated by means of a screw
in the interior of the vessel,
A Pronounced Failure.
One clay he set forth with the idea
of sinking the frigate Eagle, a vessel
of sixty-four guns: The torpedo fail,
ed to
work because ecau
se wh
en theT tu •
he
got beneath the Eagle the screw
'caught in some ome scrap iron. The tor-
pedo fico
ted' away, and Ias
Y, it was oper-
ated ter-
ated 11
a clockwork cl,hvork mechanism it ex-
ploded at the time set. The explosion
threw the harbor into an uproar.
Frightened skippers weighed anchor
anda
S l l e d
away to Sandy Hook for
safety.
For a time nothing was heard of
subm r
a roes until Robert Fulton in-
terested Napoleon Bonaparte in the
subject. Through the emperor's as-
sistance he built his Nautilus. During
the civil war submarines came to the
fore again. At that time they were
called "Davids." The United States
steamer Housatonic was sunk by one
in Charleston harbor in 1864.
The Fernandez Subtnarine.
But the United States was not the
only country to produce submarinein-
ventors. Zede, Goubet and Drzwiezki
bent their energies to produce under-
sea craft in Europe, while Baker and
Holland worked on the same problem
in the United States. Holland's plans
were accepted bythe United States in
1900, In 1004 Simon Lake built a
successful submarine,
Since the world war began the sub-
marine has come into its own in re-
ceiving the attention of inventors.
When Alphonse Fernandez of Spain
undertook to make his improvement on
the submarine he must have had a
kangaroo in mind, Mr. Fernandez
has invented a submarine which
carries another small submarine
in a pouch or compartment, just
as the kangaroo carries its young.
IIis idea was to provide means for
carrying on submarine warfare in
shallow water. For example, a large
submarine cannot navigate a river.
The Fernandez submarine would
anchor a short distance from the river
and proceed about the business of re-
leasing a small submarine, The "baby"
carries torpedoes just as does therno-
ther ship. The torpedoes are loaded
on the miniature craft while it is still
in the compartment. When the ex-
plosives have -been loaded on the baby
ship and the crew is aboard the latge
submarine opens the compartment in
which the small vessel is kept and re-
leases it so that it cam proceed to
wreck"havoe in waters which the big
one could not navigate.
A Remarkable Invention,
Her errand of destruction accom-
plished, the baby submarine returns
to her mother. By a series of signals
the mother ship is notified sof • her
approach and makes preparations to
admit her to the compartment. If
there is a strong current it is not al-
ways an easy matter for the , small
ship to enter, because the rushing wa-
' ter forces it to one side and prevents
it from proceeding in a straight line.
Mr, Fernandez has foreseen this diffi-
culty and has provided the "baby" with
a water -tight opening through which
• one of the crew may pass his arm and
by pushing against the side of the
compartment straighten a path for
her.
As remarkable as is this conception
' of Mr. Fernandez's, it has not ex-
hausted his resources. He has also
designed a submarine which cannot be
injured if it Is hit by shells. In the
event of this submarine being attack-
ed by a merchantman or a man-of-
war and the upper section being hit it
would not bo all up with the Fernan-
dez submarine, as 't would be with
others. The wounded upper section
may be discarded, The submarine is
hardly inconvenienced.
To cli:scai,d the upper section it is
onlymnecessary to turn a shaft, If all
eer Werke . well it aught not to take
more than the proverbial "three
tholes of a Iambs tail" to release the
Wounded tipper suction.
OF LAGR!PPE
Often Worse Than the :Dielen8e
itself.-.-Yietims-Left. Weak,
Nervous and. Worn Out..
La Grippe—the panto by which in-
fluenza is most generally known—is a
disease lroprevalentChrou throughout Canada
during the winter and spring months,
Anyone who has felt its pangs is not
likely to forget the trouble. La grippe
starts with a slight cold—aid ends
with a complication o'1 troubles, It,
lays a strong man on his 'back; It
.tortures him with fevers and chills,
headaches and backaches, 1t Waves
him a prey to pneumonia, bronchitis,
l consumption and other deadly die
eases. In fact its after effects are Inore
'serious than the trouble itself, You
! can avoid la grippe and winter cattle
by keeping your blood veil and red
by the occasional nee of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. If you have not done this
and the disease lays you low, you
pan banish all its evil after effects by
this salve great blood -building, nerve
restoring medicine, This has been
proved in thousanilsr of cases through-
out Canada by la grippe victims who
have been made well and strong
through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. Among the cured is Miss Irene
Bootee, Portsmouth, Ont,, who writes:
—"I take much pleasure in recom-
mending Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, be-
cause T have proved their worth in
my own case. Last winter I had a
severe attack of la grippe and it left
me weak and all run down, I had
severe pains in the chest and under
the arms, palpitation of the heart and
attacks of neuralgia which loft the
with the feeling that life was scarcely
worth living. I was taking doctor's
medidino, but it did not help me and I
much discouraged. I was advised
was g
Pills and illi ualc
to try D .
r. W ams P
be-
gan their use only on the principle
that I would try anything
that might
better my condition. I had only been
using the, pills a couple of weeks when
the pains began to leave me. Gradual-
ly Y strength
returned, my appetite
improved, and in a little more than a
month I felt all my old time vigor had
i l glad returned. I am sincerely I
was
Y g ac
persuaded to try Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, and I shall always have a good
word to say for them,"
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills not only
cure the disastrous after effects of la
grippe, but are also a specific for all
these troubles due to poor brood, such
as anaemia, rheumatism, indigestion,
women's ailments, and the generally
worn out fooling that affects so many
people. You can get these pills
through any dealer in medicine, or by
mail at 50 cents a libx or six boxes for
$4.60 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co,, Brockville, Ont.
BRITISH USE HORSE FLESH.
People Pay'As High A- s Sixty Cents a
Pound For Steaks.
Horse steaks are in demand in Great
Britain. The effect of the meat short-
age is to break down the insular pre-
judice of the Britisher against foods
to which he has -not been accustomed.
In a number of districts horse meat
shops have been established. Quite a
number have sprung up in the Soho
district, but until lately their patrons
have been Belgians or the proprietors
of the cheaper little French restaur-
ants.
During the past few weeks, however,
there has been 'quite a rush of Eng-
lishwomen for horse steak and chops,
and in consequence the prices have
risen enormously, and people have
been paying up to GO cents a pound for
horse steak.
Horseflesh does not come under the
meat price order of the Food Ministry
at present, btft if the English people
contimee to add it to their menu it
will shortly.
In the provinces the prices are far
lower than they are in the London dis-
tricts. A story is told of a woman
who failing to receive from the family
butcher the supply of meat fon her
favorite dog visited a Liverpool
hosemeat butcher and obtained for a
small elm more than one appetizing
meal for her collie, '
One day, so attractive was her pur-
chase—it coeld hardly be distinguish-
ed from a fillet steak that she was
tempted to cook it, but after it was
served her insular prejudice proved
the stronger. Still she remarked,
"One might do worse 4n these hard
times."
Retain All Breeding Sows.
The demand from overseas for bacon
and other pork products is such as
to assure a profitable market for
many months and farmers aro urged
to retain all breeding sows. The
keep -a -pig campaign is meeting with
a largo measure of success, The ros-
ponso'indicates not only that the
farmers are preparing to keep more
pigs but that many people living in
suburban areas are also planning to
buy ono or more and feed thorn on
household garbage. it is certain,
therefore, that young pigs will be in
strong demand in the spring. To
kill sows ander present conditions, is,
therefore, not only unpatriotic bat la
likely to prove distinctly unprofitable,
TENNYSON'S KNOWLEDGE,
The Gifted Poet Possessed, a Store of
Scientific Learning,
Of the pout Tennysen's wide knowl-
edge in seientiflc matters Sir Norman
Lockyer spenlcs entertainingly le Ten-
nyson and His Friends.
About the goer 1800, he says, we
used to devote Monday evenings to
our friends who came informally to
talk and to smoke. One night it hap-
pened that many travellers Bates,
Baur'
es and Winwood Reade among
them—were present, and the question
of a certain kind of dust storm came
up, Tomyeon listened for some time,
and then remarked how difiioult time;
was for a student to gain certain
knowledge on such subjects, and as-
tonished the company by giving the
names of eight authors, four of whom
bad declared that they had seen such
duet storms, although the other four
insisted that they simply could'not be
produced under any known meteoro-
logical conditions,
hi many of our talks I came upon
similar evidences of minute knowl-
edge in various fields; nothing in the
natural world was trivial to him, or to
be neglected. This groat grasp was
associated with a minute aceuraey,
and it was his double habit of mind
that made Tennyson such a splendid
observer, and therefore such a poet;
for the whole field of nature from
which to cull the most appropriate epi-
thets was always present to his mind.
WORTHLESS DOGS,
A Menace to the Shcep-Growing Hn-
dustry of Canada.
Everyone loves a useful, , gontleman-
ly dog. Such a dog is invaluable. But,
one dog eats as much as a man and
mere ethan a sheep. Two dogs will eat
as much as a hog on alfalfa and more
than a dozen chickens. And there
are thousands of dogs in the country,
one for eight sheep. Sheep furnish
wool and mutton, hogs snake pork, and
chickensr
p educe meat and eggs.
More than 5,000,000 bogs are need -
el
c to relieve the present meat short-
age, and many sheep furnish wool and
mutton. Hill farms are ideal for
''sheep raising, and almost every prai-
rie farm is d • ,for keeping P I p ng a
small farm flock without much extra
expense for buildings or added use of
grain.
No single thing has done more to
throttle the sheep industry in this
eountry than the curs which are al-
lowed to run at large. Besides killing
and worrying sheep, they kill poultry,
attapk cattle and carry hog cholera.
Fences will not solve the problem,.
for that added expense will keep many
farmers ,who already Have hog -tight
fences from starting a farm flock,
Keeping the dogs chained at night will
not do, for clogs often attack sheep in
daylight. Paying for the animals.
killed helps some, but it does not 'en-
courage_ those whose flocks have been
destroyed to start again.
GUARD THE BABY
AGAINST COLDS
To guard the baby against colds
nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab-
lets. The Tablets are a mild laxative
that will keep the little one's stom-
ach and bowels working regularly.
It is 0 recognized fact that where the
stomach and bowels are in good order
that. colds will not exist; that the
health of the little one will be good
and that he will thrive and be happy
and good-natured. The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers or by mail
at 26 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
-----
The Home. Letters.
Write a sunny, funny letter
To the boy somewhere in France,
Happier it is the better,
Make it cheer him at first glance.
Tell him of the latest winning
Of the team from Homeville High,
All the little home jokes spinning
Leave out every doleful sigh.
We must keep the home fires burning,
Bright within each khaki breast,
If we drown our fears and yearnings
Iles courage will do the rest.
His to fight the nation's battle
Ours to work and wait and pray
Then when guns have ceased to rattle
Freedom shall have comp to stay.
LEMON JUICE IS
FRECKLE REMOVER
Girls! Make this cheap beauty lotion
to clear and whiten your. stein.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle
and tanlotion, and complexion beauti-
fier, at very, very small coat,
Your grocer has the leptons and auY
drug store or toilet counter will supply
three ounces of orchard white for a
few cents, Massage this sweetly fra-
grant lotion into the face, nook, arms,
and hands each day and see how
freckles and blemishes disappear and
how clear, soft and white the shin be-
comes. Yes! It is harmless.
8
A good cooking fat may be made
by tatting two pounds of kidney suet,
running it through the oat grinder
and. rendering out the fat. This is
strained, and just before et hardere
ones cup of vegetable oil is added,
This Beeps the suet from llaa'dening
and gives it a delightful ' favor eo
thacookt t mau
y he se4 in ani' hind of
ery.,
She Often Had to
Lay Off For a Day
.February Gardens,
The days of catalogues have come,
the best of all the year,
When every mail its quota bringe of
books from far and near,
With gorgeous blossoms on their
d fronts and cabbage on their backs,
Their insides filled with fillies and
flowers all tabled neat as wax.
Wo reckless grow, extravagant—no
cost too high we find
For this February garden we are
planting in our mind. .
But, mercyc
Y mel while
we have dream-
ed, there is no sign of doubt,
That miserable coal stove has gone
completely outs
Mrs. Mantle dells Why She Use.
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Results, She States Were So Goo
That She Recommends 'i'hem to Al
Su a ere From Kidney Disease
.
St. John, N.B., Feb'y 1.8th (Spoeiad,)
---Mrs. Mantle, an estimable lady liv-
ing at 117 Ring St. East, this city, is
always ready to tell of the benefit Sh
has received from using Dodd's Kid
ney Pille..
"Yes, Dodd's Kidney Pills have don
me a wonderful lot of good," Mrs
Mantle told an interviewer, "Fo
three years I was in a worn-out conch
tion, often hai'.ing to lay off for a day
or two;
"I suffered from drowsiness an
sharp pains across my back. I lead
headaches, and was subjeot to neural-
gia and rheumatism.
"Dodd's Kidney Pills helped me so
much that I can highly recommend
them to anyone suffering from kidney
disease."
Dodd's Kidney Pills are purely a
kidney remedy. Making the kidneys
healthy enables them to strain all the
impurities out of the blood. Tha
means pure blood and good health
Dodd's Kidney Pills are recommended
by thousands of. Women who were once
run down and worn out.
GENERAL PETAIN.
9
tiflnard's Liniment Oures Diphtheria,
e
Weight For Gold,
• The weight used by goldsmiths in
r gauging the quality of gold apart from
- the alloy, La, carat, Is derived from
that of the seed of an Abyssinian
! carat 'flower, which, being exceedingly
c1 uniform in 8100, was employed fn
weighing gold and precious stones.
Some Characteristics of the Noted
French Contlnander,
A war correspondent recently saw
Gen. Petain, the French generalissimo,
bestowing war crosses upon some of
his soldiers.
My first impression, he says, was
tinged with a little disappointment,
Ile might be e n business man, an, a lawyer
or a village doctor.
I could name half
a dozen men who could look -the part
more acceptablyee,He has a good,
wholesome face. I think it must have
been there that I suffered the disap-
pointment. I had pictures- him as
thin -visaged and frowning, with a
downward look. The prominent nose
seemed not ' unlike Gen. Pershing's,
but there the resemblance ended. Gen.
Petair's chin gave no indication -of his
character, as chins are supposed to do,
and his head seemed of average size
and shape. His cheeks have color and
his eyes are kindly and brownish.
He means well to you, but no liber-
ties must be taken—a glance tells you
that. He wore brown chamois gloves
on his hands, which were frequently
in action, but there was neither extra-
vagance nor affectation in his ges-
tures.
Gen. Petain does not play to the gal-
leries. You are sure that he is not
thinking of himself, even glimmering-
ly; he gives the impression of being
sincere in what he is doing. He is
"on his job" every minute. If he is
pinning on a medal, he is looking at it
and thinking of that particular thing.
Gen. Petain has not a certain mys-
tery and magnetism that characterize
Gen. Joffro, nor has he the stature.
No one else can speak in that soft mo-
notone of Gen. Joffre's—a tone in
which one might read a psalm. But
Gen. Petain has fixed his place es a
soldier. Ile took over the command
under most extraordinary circum-
stances of difficulty, and has met the
test splendidly.
THERE IS,A DIF FERENCE—i
Can anyone who has not seen them
imagine what it is like to be a prison-
er in this present war ? Someone,
who saw the first French, English,
Russian and Canadian prisoners
either returned or escaped, writes of
them: "They have an expression of.
their own, a concentrated, unuttered
suffering in their eyes, an unending
patience in their voices. There is all
the difference in the world between
them and the soldiers returned from
the Front. The latter, even when se-
verely wounded, have a proud, almost
satisfied look, as ]f in making their
supreme effort, something of the glory
and exaltation of those fearful mo-
ments still clung to them. • They are
warriors hurt in the great game,
brought gladly And triumphantly
home, where they know well what
welcome awaits them,
"How different is the lot of '-the
allied prisoners? The sight of them,
of any nation, is an unforgettable re-
curring nightmare. A voice, weak,
but insistent, rings nit your ears,
'Won't you help us?'
"They know what it is to do valiant-
ly, without praise, to suffer silently
without sympathy, to ache with home-
sickness, surrounded by the enemy.
They are the unseen heroes and we
cannot guess at half their pain."
There are at present more than a
million and a half Allied prisoners of
war in German hands. The Prisoners
of War Society, of which Principal
Mutton of University College, Toronto,
is president, is appealing through the
churches of Ontario for looney to help
provide the bare necessaries of life to
these unfortunate leroeL Congrega-
tions who have not yet oontributed
may sent, their donations to the treas-
urer of Eli 0oot t9', lei n Fletcher,
Beg., 6$2 Oa
8t„ Toronto,
"Might is tight, so it la -trio right
to teat the tnirdens of the weal,' to
the 1' tine faffht, to Uplift the fallen .0
eteneefee xslnlaltont omen eeletunieer.
Mensonvllle, Jane 27, '13.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Yarmouth, N. S.
Gentlemen,—It affords me great
pleasure and must be gratifying to
you to know that after using 36
bottles of your Liniment on a case of
paralysis which my father was afflict. -
ed with, I was able to restore him to
normal condition. Hoping other suf-
ferers may be benefited by the use of
your Liniment, I am,
Sincerely yours,
GEO. H. HOLMES.
Sugar Situauon in Europe.
Before the war England received
approximately 1,400,000 long tons of
sugar, per annum from Germany and
neighboring sources. France pro-
' duced about 760,000 long tons of beet
sugar and exported orted 60
000 tons. s. Tho
French production in 1917 fell to
210,000on o
1 g tons. Before the war
Italy produced about 210,000 000 non
Minard's Liniment at Ouxee
'O
olds. Etc
tons and importedalmost none.
rnJ
MADE 114
CANADA
Magic Baking Powder costs
no more than the ordinary 1 P
kinds, For economy, buy
the one pound tine. hXIG
1'l il�
"✓ E W GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED
P' Retire.
WI , 5 e:• MPNr.Fµ a 11•r eVs9T,TNTti
Cleaning Wringer.
When rubber rolls on your wringer
become dirty so that they streak the
clothes try cleaning them with a cloth
moistened with kerosene. Rub
briskly and rinse with clean water
seyeral times, Dry with a clean
cloth.
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order. Five dollars costs three cents.
"A Nasty Thing Called Famine."
"The food wanted by mankind does
not exist. The word 'shortage' is not
strong enough for the situation, To
put the natter bluntly, the whole
world is up against a nasty thing,
familiar to the people of India, call.
ed 'famine.' "—Lord Rhondda.
ffflfN Granulated Eyelids,
;.) / ftt 5,1 Sore T,yes, Eyes Inflamed by
�.��.y; a.el5l �: Suo, .Duct and Windoulekly
Fors ries �,, `'1„_ ., ” relieved by Murtha T It In
U R L„ fwc your Eyes
itJ
Smarten, JnetlyeComEort
Martnerye Remedy.t.t Yet,:nrnl,ne io caiman
Ey. salvo, In Tubers 2lle0 'rGa. For ra a Ivo -Brae.
Ask marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago a
"S.0.5." Has New Meaning 'ono -day.
There is a new meaning for the
familiar "S.O.S." signal. The let-
tersnow
stand s d fox another impera-
tive
ropeTa-tive command, "Save or Starve.
--o—o—o—o—o—o—o--o--n—.o--o—y..,
PAIN ? NOT A BIT!
LIFT
YOUR CORNS
OR CALLUSES orr
No humbug 1 Apply few drops
then Juet lift them away
with fingers, a
• 0 0 a.._o—
This new drug is an ether earn',
pound discovered by a CincJnnatij
chemist, It le called•
freezone, and can now!
be obtalned in tiny bot'
Rea as here shown at
very little cost from any
drag store. Just ask
for freezone. Apply a,
drop or two directly
upon a tender corn or.
callus and instantly the
soreness disappears.
Shortly you will fiad;
the corn or callus so'
loose that you can lift it,
MT, root and all, with+
the lingers.
Not a twinge of pain,.
soreness or irritation;,
not even the slightest
smarting, either when
applying freezone or
afterwards.
This drug doesn't eats
up the corn or callus,
but shrivels them so
they loosen and come right out. It is
no humbug ! It works like a charm.,
For a few cents you can get rid of.
every hard corn; soft corn or corn be-:
tween the toes, as well as painful,
calluses on bottom of your feet. It
never disappoints and never burns,
,bites or inflames. If your druggist]
hasn't any freezone yet, tell him to
get a little bottle for you from hie
wholesale house.
o'
Grated cheese and chili sauce make
a good sandwich filling..
I. When buying your Piano
insist on having an
"OT T O HIG,EL"
PIANO ACTION
EAGLE
M0r09
STYLE
Write So -day for our 9aiEt
FREE CATALOGUE
showing our f,,11 lines of Bicycles for Mea
and Women, Boys and Girls.
IlfIOTOR OVOLES
MOTOR ATTA01IISENTS
Tires, Coaster Brakes, Wheels, Inner Tubes,
I,a,ups, Bells, Cyctometers, Saddles, Equip-
ment nod Parts of Bicycles. Tou eon buy
your supplies front us at wholesale prices.
T. W. BOYD & SON,
27 Notre Dame Street West, Montreal.
aw ea `l,e h iJ wt P+•+•
Reduces Bursa! Enlargements
Thickened, Swollen Tissues
Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore-
ness from Bruises or Strains
stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain
Does not blister, remove the hair or
lay up the horse. 82.00 a bottle
at druggists or delivered. Book 1 1'v1 free.
ABSORBINE, IR., for mankind—an
antiseptic liniment for bruises, cuts, wounds,
strains, painful swollen veins or glands. It
heals'nnd soothes. $1.00 a bottle at drug-
gists or postpaid, Will tell you more if you
write.
W. F.00058, P. IL F,, 510 Lymnea Blag,, Montreal, Gan.
,danrbhro sad ltbsorbine. Jr.. are made le Canada,
Dangerous Gas and Acids That
Hirt The Stomach ---Sour The Food
Cause Dyspepsia, Indigestion
Recommends a Safe Way to Treat Stomach Trouble At Home
Arany atomaeh sufferers who are sour, fermenting masa into the in -
always full of gas and whose atom- testlnes and so relieve tho stomaob
aohs burn with add after nearly pain but the acid still remains in the
every meal think these things are the stomach to generate morn goo and
RESULT of Indigestion when In produce more trouble at the next
reality they are the -CAUSE. meal,
1t Is Just as foolish to give artln- IP you are using digestive aids ea -
teat digestente such as pepsin, ete.. ter meals drop them for a while and
o a atemaoh Pull of gasand acid as instead get a few 8 -grain tablets of
it would be for a man who had step- pure Nonrated Magnesia from an
ped on a tack to rub liniment on his- drugglat and take two with each
Peet without removing tite tacit. meal, Bisurated Magnesia does not
Some stomachs generate too much digest rood but will neutralize the ex -
gas and acid. Gas distends the stom- cesslve acid in your stomach, ]teen
aoh walls, causing a full, bloated op- .the food sweet and Will drive the gas
preaaivo feeling while the acid irri- and bloat right out of your body. As
totes and inflames the lining of the Magnesia is piiepared in various
stomach, Naturally the food ferments forma be sure to get Blourated Meg -
and sours, digestion is often delayed neala for thispurpose as It is not a
and stomach misery Is the result, laxative and in this refined form will •
Artificial digestants will 011011 this not injure the stualuo10 in any way. -
se
1
1
a,chinery For Sale
WHE1i1LOCK ENGINE, 18x42.
Now Aufomatlo Valve Type. bdmplete with supply and exhaust piping,
flywheel, eta. Will accept $1,200 each for Immediate sale,
ELECTRIC GENERATOR, 30 K.V., 110.120 Volts D Cy
Will acoopt Sea cash for Immodlate sale.
PULLEYS d,, e size,
lexfie.^$00; 1SXeQF� i 12409-41a ; 12x88-•-$9,
BLOWER OR FAQ', Buffalo Mahe.
a �A loon discharge -00.
'y1,,4), 44,4 ESTAyo. CORPORATION, LTD.
$0 ]wont Sit.. West,
Oilcloth on Shelves.
To lighten the work in the pantry,
use shelf oilcloth instead of paper.,
The oilcloth is easier to clean.
Roaches will keep out of the pantry,
for there is something about the oil.
cloth they dislike.. .
If teas leaves are ground they will
make twice the amount of tea,
Sldneatee Liniment Cures Garget in Oowa
RFLP WANTED
p' ADZES WANTED TO. Dr) PLAIN
.1-J and light sewing at home, whole or
spare time, gond pity,work snot any
distance, charges paid. Sendstamp for
nerd ewers. National Manufacturing
Company, Montreal.
2Olt GALE
qEan CrNow$iPER dgNeeWET
•
nese.
Death of owner places it en tion
market. A great nailer. for a roan with -.
mtali Apply, Ilex 82, WHson Pubilahing
Co., Lim tern, Toronto.
1:17 ELL NO NEWSi'AP ER
Y and job printing plant in Eastern
Ontario. Insurance carried 51,500. Will
g.o for 51,200 On quick sale. Box 89,
Wilson Publishing Co., Ltd., Toronto.
-
MISCELLANEOUS
I�yy ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC„
9,J� internal and external. cured with-
out pain by our home treatment, Write
us before too late. Dr, Bollman Medical
Co. Limited, Colltngwnod, Ont.
R n 'i' i'yy
1I
a
li t t: t .
I
•�v
"You dun to@ed mecca ntaal2 {(('
ry,P (1
or any other strong mineral to
c re pimples caused bynor
u
P
P P
a
—
blood. Take Extract of Roots
druggist calls it "Mother. SciLlcl's
Curetive Syrup—and your ekia
will clear up as fresh eo a baby's.
i its Bete ourstomr.:c.rnd
Itvrlw ny
J
r® nate our b0 els' Coot tlh@
gu y w
genu'oo. SOe, end $1,OOEottles.
At drug stores. s
Doctors Recommend
Bon -Opt -o f4ir He Eyos, s.
Physicians and eye specialists, pre-.
scribe Bon-Opto as a safe home remedy
in the treatment of eye troubles and to
strengthen eyesight.. Sold under money'
refund guaranty by all druggists.
TERIfl3L[
ITCHING
On Hands, From Salt Rheum
At Very Small Cost for
Soap and Ointment.
"I was a great sufferer:. from salt
rheum on my hands. It cfine in small
blisters between my thumb and finger
and it itched terribly and kept spread.
Ing. I could not use my hands at all
and the skin would crack and bleed so
that I could not bend my fingers. I can-
not describe what 1 have suffered and
the sleepless nights I had.
"Then I got the Guticura Soap and
Ointment. I only used one cake of Cuti-
tura Soap and one box of Ointment
when my hands were healed." (Signed)
Mrs. M. L. Aiken, Highwater, gee.
Keep your slain clear by daily use of
Guticura Soap, with touches of Oint-
ment now and then,
For Free Sample Bach by Mail ad-
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, U. S. Sold everywhere.
OTHERS
TO
Should Read Mrs, Monyhan'a
Letter Published by
Her Permission.
Mitchell, Ind.—"Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compoundhelpedme so much
during the time 1
waslookingforwartl
to the coming of any
little one that I am
recommending it to
other expectant
mothers. Before
taking it someday
I suffered with nano
ralgia so badly that)
I thought I eouidj
not live but after
taking three bottiea
tjof Lydia E. Pink..
ham's Vegetable
Compound I was eh
tirely relieved o
neuralgia, 1 h
gained in strengtle
and was able to lete
around end do all
my housework. My baby when seven
months old we ghed 19 pounds and I feel
better than I have for a long time.
never- had any medicine do Inc Si
much good. "--•Mrs. PEARL Moxa. i
Mitchell Inds
Good health during maternity is
most important factor to both mother
and child, and many letters have heed
received by the Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., tolling of
healthrestoredduringthis trying period
by the use of Lydia P>.. Pini ham's Vege.
table Compoun.. ,
TOu'oilto 'HD, 7.
ISSUE C,- 'ltla