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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-03-22, Page 7f NERVOUS CHILDREN ' 'pile Trouble is Often Really $t, Vitai Dance--Oo Not Neglect Melly a child has been called awls- ward, leas been punished in school for not keeping 'still or for dropping things when the trouble was really St. Vitus Dance. This disease may appear at Any age, but is most come moll between the ages of six and fourteen years,. It is caused by thin blood which fails to carry sufficient fourishment to the wives, and the child' becomes restless and twitching of the muscles and jerking of the limbs and body :follow, In severe eases the child is unable to hold any thing or feed itself. St. Vitus Dance is cured by building- an. the blood. The most successful treatment isto remove the child from all mental ex- citement, stop school workand give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills renew the blood supply, strengthen the nerves, and restore the,child to per- fect h ealth. sere is proof of their eir power to cure. Is, 3. Sharpe, , Oakville, Ont., says;—"When my daughter was nine years old she was attacked with St, Vitus Dance. . She was sent to a sanatorium where she remained for nine weeks, without any I benefit. Indeed when we brought her home she was as helpless as a baby. I got a supply of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and continued giving lief half a pill after each meal for several' months, when she had fully recovered and has never had a symptom of the trouble since." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $.2.50 from -The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. TEN MILLION MEN LOST Estimate. of Total Casualties to Murch, 1917, Appalling. , The first complete tabulation of of- ficial and authenticated semi-official reports of the various belligerents re- ceived at Washington, gives more than ten million men as killed, wounded, captured or missing in the war. Among the military men proper 4,441,200 are reported dead, 2,598,500 wounded and 2,564,500 captured and missing. Among civilians, especially on the Russian and Balkan fronts and in Armenia, another 400,000 are figured as either dead or wounded.' The Entente's losses are given as 6,318,400, as against 3,884,000 for the Central Empires. One reason for the great discrepancy between the. is believed to be the relative . unpreparedness of the Entente, the disastrous retreats in France at the beginning of the war, in Russia from the Mazurian Lakes and the Carpath ians and in Rumania. The Entente's dead total 2,890,400, against 1,550,800 for the Central Em- pires.'* The Entente's wounded total 1,676,500, against 922,000 for their enemies, and their captured and missing, 1,652,600, against 912,000 for the Central Empires. These loss- es are based upon the assumption that in Germany ninety per rent. of .the total wounded return to the front and eighty per. cent, in all the other. coun- tries. Russia is infinitely the heaviest loser so far, with a grand total' of 3,034,200 men, France has suffered the second highest casualties with a total of 1,810,800, largely because of the early retreat to -the Marne and the terrific losses in the defence of Verdun. Her dead ,total 870,000, her wounded 540,- 800, and her missing and captured 400,000, although the last figure is believed here to be improbably high. England's total falls far below, be- ing about one-third France's and one- sixth Russia's, owing, of course, • to her late sending of a continental army. England's total comes to 515,- 00, with 205,400 dead, 102,500 wounded and 107,500 captured and missing. Germany, among the Central Em - A""'" ---,PIS-fres, is 'given as by far the largest loser. Her total casualties are 1,585,- 200, or 225,000 less 'than France's. Her dead come bs�893,200, while her wounded are set at 450,000 and her captured and missing at 245,,000. Austria is only slightly less heavy It loser than Germany, with a total of 1,469,100. Her dead, however, only number 523,100 and her wounded 355,000, Have Your Ever Suspected that thecauuse. of various annoying itis might lie in the ' daily cup of tea or coffee ? A sure and easy way out of tea and coffee troubles is to shift to Instant Pods uni There's no caffeine nor anything' harinfill 111 this delightful, pure food•-clink 'just the nourishing good- ness of wheat. Post= has put thou- sands of former tea and eoifee drinkers on ' the Hoag to Weliviilc. cY There's a keasoi , TIIY FATIMA'S rRIEND, True Friendship is Most Valuable, Of All Earthly Possessions. Irl the will of a late emminent Judge there was one very •unusual legacy. IIe bequeathed his friendships to his family. • "To my family," the will runs, "I bequeath friendships many and num- erous in the hope that they will be cherished and continue(. True friend- ships are the most valuable of our earthly possessions, more precious than gold, more enduring than marble palaces, more important than fame. • As Henry Drummond has well said, 'Friendship is the nearest thing we know to what religion isl'" The family that inherits such wealth is truly rich. But it is a legacy that must be used if it would be preserved. Friendships cannot be locked away in safes or loaned to historical exhibits and museums. Like love and faith and courage, they belong to that in- tangible treasure of the soul that must be kept from destruction by constant 'service. It is not alone material things that "rust doth corrupt." How many of us have let slip through busy o1 careless ess fin ers the beautiful and glowing friendships of our youth? We did not mean to do it; indeed we have often regretted the loss until, as the years pass, the re- gret gradually fades away. And if that is true of our own friends, how far more true of our fathers' friends. Yet there have been families where friendships have passed down from father;to son for several generations. There is food for thought here, Ilow many fathers are building up fine and loyal and serviceable friendships that they can with pride and gratitude be- queath to their sons? How many mothers are storing up like treasures for their daughters? The question does not end there. How many young people of tatday are fitting themselves to receive such legacies? How manrih-all the varied and urg- ent calls of life are heeding the chal- lenge to make themselves worthy of friendships by being loyal and fine - tempered and generous friends them- selves? "A man that hath friends," the old Book of Wisdom declares, "must show himself friendly"; and again, "Thine own friend and thy father's friend 4oi'sake not." CONSTIPATED CHILDREN Constipation is one of the most com- mon ailments of childhood and the child suffering from it cannot thrive. To keep the little one well the bowels must be kept regular and the stomach sweet. To do this nothing can equal Baby's Own Tablets, Concerning them Mrs, Romain Poirier, Mizonette, N. B., says:—"My baby suffered from constipation but thanks to Baby's Own Tablets he is perfectly • well again." The Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a beg from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. • THE DOGS OF WAR. Dogs Catch Real Martial Spirit And - Are Indispensable to Sentinels. From facts put forward on behalf of the employment of dogs in war the conclusion isforced' upon one that, after aeroplanes, dogs are of the greatest use and assistance town army in the field. As eclaireurs and for liaison work they are unsurpassed, Dogs pass easily where no man could hope to get through alive, and the way they can be trained to take out a message and bring back an answer is little short of marvellous. They seem to catch the real martial spirit, and cases are num- erous where dogs have struggled home though grievously wounded and died after completing their task. In the Vosges -and the Argonne a dog is .indispensable to the sentinels. To show what a difference they make, an instance is given of two regiments relieving each other alternately in a dangerous seotor. The one which made liberal use of dogs never lost a sentry, and time after time were able, owing to their dogs, to surprise enemy Patrols and to snipe sentinels. The other, who had no dogs, lost seven sentries in three clays. Some of the smartest surprises in the war were possible only owing to the assistance lent by dogs. Sheepdogs of fifteen months to two years of age are the best, and they undergo a training according to the capacities they develop. Patrol and scouting dogs work indiscriminately with any detachment, but liaison dogs must always be kept with the man who taught them their work. Nearly' all the dogs used were pre- sented to the army, and weekly reports are made to their old masters as to the prowess they have displayed,'and how they are faring. INDUSTRIAL TRAINING. Technical Schools are Urgently Need- ed in 'Canada. • Every year, more than 2,000,000 children and youths are recruited in the United States and Canada to in- dustrial and commercial enterprises. School statistics show that 75 per cent. of thetchildren who enter school leave between 14 and 16 years of age to work in mills, factories and stores, The percentage going to work at this age With definite training is negligible. These young recruits to industry tire" cm3loyed in highly spee- ialized tasks Drifting from job to job. in later rears, many settle down to become handy men and un- skilled laborers, hardly one in a hundred ever obtains a chance to be - tone a skilled worller or master of a trade, What wonder that employers bewail the shortage ai; skilled work- era and that the labor market is over- stocked with thousands of unskilled workers. To meet this situation Canada must provide sone fo•nl of technical train- ing whereby all who enter agricultural or industrial occultations shall be pro- vided with at toast the preliniinuy ele- ments of vocational training, The Biggest Prob- lems in most homes are fuel and service,, When the servant leaves and the fuel is low, happy is the housewife who knows Shredded Wheat Biscuit the whole wheat food that is ready -cooked and ready to eat. With these crisp littl9 loaves of baked 'whole wheat the housewife may prepare in a few moments a delicious, nourishing meal at lowest cost. Made in Canada. MINK FARMING. These Valuable Fur -hearers Can be Succesilfully Bred. While fox ranching is the most im- portant and best known branch of domestic fur production, the rearing of various' other valuable fur bearers will probably occupy.; -a prominent place in future fur -farming develop- ment. The experience of Ms. E. L. MacDonald, of Halifax, demonstrates that mink can be successfully bred in captivity. "In the spring of 1914, I decided to try if some success could .not be ate tained with this highly nervous and delicate animal, and bought two pairs from a rancher. As one of these had been injured when caught it died shortly afterwards, but after some dif- ficulty I was able to purchase anoth- er female. In the spring of 1915, I had fourteen live minks, but unfortun- ately on account of not separating the young of one of the families from the mother soon enough, I' lost the mother. In the spring of 1916 I had forty-six to take care of, and, profiting by my experience of the year before, was able to save all of them and this year, with no bad luck, I will probably have one hundred animals, "If their surroundings are at all natural, with the.proper care in feed- ing and a little judgment in the mat- ing season, I can see no reason why anyone so inclined, cannot raise mink both profitably and as a pastime. "I find the ranch -bred mink are more contented and much larger than the wild ones, and believe the regular feeding is conductive to bettor fur; be- ing larger, of course, the animal is more valuable from every standpoint. "The dens should be large enough for them to play in, and as natural as is possible, although they are animals that do not require any luxuries if their house is dry and. clean." IF FOOD DISAGREES DRINK HOT ' WATER Whenfood' lies like lead in the stomach and you have that Uncomfortable, dis- tended feeling, it is because of insuf- ficient blood supplY to the stotnaoh, combined with acid and fond fermenta- tion. In such cases try the plan now fol- lowed in many hospitals and advised by `many eminent physicians of taking a teaspoonful of pure bisurated magnesia In half a glass of water, as hot as you can comfortably ih'Ink it. The hot wa- ter 'draws the blood to the stomach and the bisurated magnesia, as any physician can tell you, instantly neutralizes the acid and stops the food fermentation. Try this simple plan and you will be as- tonished at the immediate feelingof re- lief and comfort that always follows the restoration of the normal process of di- gestion. People who find it Inconvenient at times to secure hot water and travel- ers who aro frequently obliged to take hasty meals poorly prepared, should al- ways take two or three live-graln tablets of Blsurated Magnesia after meals to prevent fermentation and neutralize the acid in their stomach. Mills ht England have succeeded in making twine dlRi" yarn from flax straw, generally regarded as a waste product. Minard's Liniment for 5x15 everywhere. Ironmould,—Hooks and eyes should be boiled in strong soda -water before use. This prevents any likelihood of rust during washing operations. Try the experiinent, too, on curtain pins, etc. I'fllta m.5 Indigestion and ih®us ess Indigestion, biliousness, head- aches, flatulence, pains after eating, constipation, are all cone- nton symptoms of stomach and liver troubles. And the more you neglect them the more you suffer. Take Mother Seigel', Syrup if your stotnaoh, liver, or bowels are„ slightly deranged or MOTHER 19, SYRUP have 1091 tone. Mother Seigel's Syrup is made from the curative extracts of certain roots, barks, and leaves, which have a re- markable tonic and strengthen- ing effect on all the organs of digestion. The distresaing symp- tom of indigestion or liver troubles soon disappear under its beneficial action. Buy a bottle to -day, but be sure, you get the genuine Mothet'Selgel's Syrup. Ifrere aro many imltd- tions, but not one that gives the same health benefits, 1013 ie the, Best Remedy flow 501,0 01 1150 0050 017.5,. "• k'OLL ells, Prio'e 1.BC TRIAL 01211, PritaSea ISSUE No, 12‘—'17 BARN FIags. Lack ot>Wlndowa an Incentive to Dangerous Practices• In any statement of buildings de stroyed by lire, barns and stables oc- cupy a prominent place. One of the Chief reasons for this is the neves: nary use of lanterns and other lights. In many barns artificial light must be used at almost all hours, with the re- aultant element of danger. We have in mind a splendid farm building, well built and kept in go?d condition, with the surroundings neat and tidy. It is, however, lacking in one essential—sufficient window to provcle light for the interior, With closed doors this bawl would be al- most completely dark, and hence the incentive to light a match. There is nothing more dangerous than a light- ed match in a barn, with, probably, loose straw or hay on the floor, and everything as dry as tinder. Daylight 1s one of the cheapest of our natural resources, and it is easily transmitted. While making use of daylight, farmers will at the same time remove a very serious element of fire dapg er-a cause of fires in barns and stables which can only be charg- ed toure carelessness. ss. Teacher Has Not Lost One Day In A Year Mrs. Roger Gives Credit to Dodd's Kidney Pills. Before that She Suffered from Sciatica, Neuralgia, Nervousness and Other Troubles Coming from Sick Kidneys, Which ;Dodd's Kidney Pills Cured. Elm Tree, Gloucester Co., N. B., Mar. loth (Special),—Mrs. Jos. R6get•, the popular teacher here, is fully re- covered from a long siege of sciatica, neuralgia, and other troubles resulting from diseased kidneys and has made a statement in which she gives Dodd's Kidney Pills all the credit for her cure. "My trouble came from a strain," Mrs. Roger states, "and.I suffered for thirteen months. Backache, heart flutterings, sciatica, neuralgia, dizzi- ness and failing memory were among my symptoms. When the doctor I consulted failed to do me any lasting good I decided that my kidneys were the root of my troubles and decided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I took twelve boxes in all and you may judge of the results when I tell you that I have not lost a day's work as teacher in the last year. "I can say that Dodd's Kidney Pills have done all for me that was claimed for them." Others of Mrs. Roger's symptoms were nervousness, that tired feeling, I irritability and a dry harsh skin that itched and burned at night. They all came from diseased kidneys and all vanished when she used Dodd's Kidney Pills. Odd Facts. A mission settlement at Mount Hope, in Alaska, is contemplating the installation" of an electric lighting plant to be driven by large windmills. Invisible ink appears to have been known since the early days of writing, for' both Ovid and Pliny give recipes for the preparation of such a fluid, the one from milk, the other from various vegetable juices. In the middle ages many writers mention magnetic and "magic inks." The starfish has no nose, but the whole of its underside, scientists as- sert, is endowned with a sense of smell. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. have used MINARD'S LINIMENT for Croup; found nothing equal to it; sure cure. CHAS. E. SHARP. Ilawkshaw, N. B., Sept. 1st, 1905. LESSON OF TIIE GREAT WAR. National Control of Natural Resources a Prime Essential. The experience of the Great War teaches as its clearest lesson that national efficiency in peace, no less than in war, depends directly on the wise common control of the natural re- sources, which are the basis upon which all human welfare necessarily rests. The nations of Europe are turning with one cons, t to the con- trol of their supplies 4f coal, iron, copper, timber, o11, and 'water -power by all the people through their gov- ernment for the common defense and for the common good. Our natural resources must be retained in national control. We see, now, more clearly than ever, that natural resources are the foundations of national efficiency and defence. The Great War has proved definitely that coal, oil, timber, and other resources are as important in modern warfare as mon and arms. Water power in particular ought to be kept in the public hands, because it is a vital necessity in the plpduetion of nitrates and without nitrates high ex plosives cannot be made. In addition, we know that if there is "an economic war after the wax', the national control of natural re- sources will be a fundamental es- ,sential to Canada, Government con- trol of the natural seurces of wealth is necessary if Canada is to be industrial. ly efficient, if it is to be prepared eith- gi' for way or for' peaces. There is a broad patriotic task just aimed of us. littinard's finiaaent Relieves Neuralgia, The liappy-go-lucky are Usually neither lucky nor happy, SAWYER BOB MAKERS & LABORERS WANTED FIRSTBROOK EROS„ Limited 283 King Street East, Toronto TOPICS IN SEASON, We haven't any more good land than we need, so let's not plow it before it is dry. How are the outlets to the farm drains? In the spring it le a very com- mon occurrence to find these stopped up, and that makes the drains just about as good as clothing, Open them tip early. Doesn't it malts you fuel bad to see a fine clump of grass fighting for life, its roots 'way up out of the ground?. Save that graas plant's life by press- ing it down with a good laird -roller just as soon as the ground will do to go on. Tons of good wire fencing rust. out to no purpose in this country, be- cause, after putting up the needed stretch of fencing, the roll is left to s nems or lying at the owl of the line. Cut it off, put it away in a dry place, and save the wire and your money, too. One of the spring jobs we do not so very well like is cleaning the har- nesses: Ought to be done, though, be- fore the hard work comes on. One of the best ways to keep from having sore breasts and shoulders on horses is to clean up the Places where the heavy strain comes. A good way to treat an old moss- back of a pasture is to run a stout harrow over it, scatter some seed, and go over it once more with a light spike -tooth smoothing harrow. If not too rough, the job may be nicely fin- ished by putting the roller over the land after the last harrowing has been given. _. , Smut in oats may be prevented by soaking them in a solution of for- maldehyde. Spread the grain around thinly on the barn floor. Take a pint of the formaldehyde and mix it with fifty gallons of water. With a sprink- ling pot moisten the oats well and leave them a couple of hours. This will not 'injure the germ of the seed at all, but will kill the smut germs. Little potatoes will not be despis- able property next month, so when us- ing tubers in the home cull out all the small ones for planting. They are not to be recommended for continual planting every year, but can be safely resorted to in time of need and scar- city of tubers, as is the case on my farm now. Weltorefer small potatoes for very early `planting. We always plant a garden patch to potatoes just as soon as the frost is properly out of the soil and it can bo furrowed out, and have found that these small po- tatoes planted whole will stand cold wet spring weather which would re- sult in quartered potatoes decaying before they could sprout. Try a few rows thusly and you will be weeks ahead of the usual crop. MONEY ORDERS BUY your out of town supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders. Five dollars costs three cents Impedimenta. Floorwalker—Good morning. You wish to do some shopping, I presume. Bride (with hubby)—Yes. Floorwalker—Step up to the smok- ing -room, and the boy there will give you a check for your husband. n wfor Atter � 1,Ifo�B� MnTaemeifyea Is for TsiledLiletlme ares. Red Ne — aero Byes - O,unnlatCtod Ie1Nlda. poets Movies —iterros/me —It este re s. Mn rine is a l'avori toTroat- went for eyes that fuel dry and smart. Give your Ryes 00 much of yourioving care as your Tooth and with the ceme regularity. Care for Thom. You Cannot Buy New Eyes! Sold at Drug and Optical Stores or by Mali. Ass Morino Eye Remedy Ca„ Chicago, for Free Roc* Bolivia. has an extensive deposit of coal at an altitude of 13,000 feet above sea level. Minard's Liniment Oures Eurus, Eto. In Spain there has been invented a steel automobile wheel with steel tires which is said to have most of the ad- vantages and nggnne of the disadvant- ages of the rubber -tired wheel. Get Careless. "A. man who never made a eciatjko never made anything," said the Wise one, "Yes," agreed the lReeb. "But .a lot of chaps who believe in that got careless and never make anything but mistakes," ZA'inard'ls Liniment Cures Dnutlxatt. }Nome is the sweetest word in all the world ,to a-goodman, JI'on SALE, 4?t s.l,I1oitleAP -.t OOD noArtn latR gklou oodnn !n llonuwe. Nean Sound. Zn good,and r pair, 1pcor De• Pactorles. All_ply R. MOCralh, 'ixofoouter. .eraSecna, Men, MRaWwr/y*1.s4E0 PO Ora J71ROP'I'P-M,AICXNG NAWS AND J0:1s .. Olnees for sale 1n good Ontario towns. Tlye most useful and interesting of all businesses, bull information op application to Wilson Publishing .Com. pant'.. as West moose Street, 'Toronto. Wire 011LZANk1ODS 'I3ICyorjsS, NEW ANO) Sl7CONi) Ja.J Band, $12.00 up. Send for epaulet' 11'$' price list Varsity OYale S'1'ua'lcs, 413 Spadlna Avo., Toronto. ,/'YANG.^n, TUMORS,. LUMPS, 11170.,internal end external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Writs us before too late.Dr Bauman Medieaj 00_Limtted eolingwoodOnt , !, When buying your Piano tissist on having an ,yq " TO HCei�,A..ff PIA; -4O ACTION Don't Rub It On ruises or Sore Muscles loan's Liniment quickly pene- trates and soothes without rubbing. Cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments, does not stain the skin. Have a bottle heady for emergency, rheumatic aches and pains, neuralgia, A•"•tl, lum- �,tBook,Cy"�Paetent Protection" Free bags, gout, strains, eprains and lama back, I JlSrV,aeh CK , .: SOrtl yield to Sloan's Liniment. Formerly Patent Onice Examiner. Estab. 1877 At all draggles, 25c. 50c. and $1.00. 99 ST. JAMES 5T., MONTREAL Branches: Ottawa and Washington ll `d America's Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. :lag Remedies 118 West 31st Street, New York DOOIC ON e, . DOG DISEASES And Iiow to Feed htn l t ed lees no peeress U to h Y .fret Author Write for Free copy of Furni- ture and HouseholdFurnish- ing Catalogue now ready. EASY TERMS FOR ALL. 645-647 Queen 51. W., Toronto, Ont. ROU CAN'T COT OCT R Bog Spavin or Thoroughpim but you can clean them off promptly with GUARANTEED The guarantee of a Dominion - wide in- dustry backs , EUREKA HARNESS OIL Itmakes all black lea- ther blacker, softer, wear longer. Dealers everywhere. TILE IMPERIAi, 011, COMPANY, Limited Branches Throughout Canada and you work the horse same time. Does not blister or remove the hair. $2.00 per bottle, delivered. Will tell you more if you rite. Book 4M free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured MuOIes or ligaments, anlarecd Claude, Wens. Cyan. Allays pain quickly. Price 51 aid 52 .bottle a1 drusglae or delivered. Made 1n the u. 5. A. by W F. YOUNG, P. 0. F., 616 Lymans Bldg.; Montreal, Gan. absorblot. sod Absorbing. Jr., arc made l5 ,Caoads., Take a bit of tallow along to the woods when you are using a cross -cut saw on big logs. Make it run lots easier: ,Do%t ,r Tells How Tagil Strengthen Eyesight 50 per cent In One Week a8 Time In Many In t rncea A Free Prescription You Can Have Filled and Use at Home. London; Do you wear glasses? Aro you a glotim of 5y0 strain or other eye weaknesses? If so you will be glad to know that accenting to Dr. 'Lewis there is real hope far you. Many whose eyes were failing say they have had their ayes restored through the principle of this won- derful fee9 preseription. One man says, after tryfug it: "i ums almost blind; could not see t.o rend at,,1I. Now I esu read sender ingwithoetany glgasea sod my eyes do not ender any more. At night they would pair dreadfully; now they ted See p11 the time. Ie was !flee a miracle to me." A lady who used it says) 'Tho atmaepherc eeern d hazy with or without glosso,, but attar using this proaoriptlon for fifteen days everything seems clear. I can von read fine print without t gglasses."It ,ie believed that thousands who Haar glasses oan now discardthem in a Cooeonnblo eand multitudes motee will able to strengthen their 5755 so 00 to be spared the trouble and expense of ever getting .glosses. Eye troubles of roan,( descriptions may be wonderfully benefited by following the simple rules. Hero is the proscrip- tion: Go to nny active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Drop one Don -Opts tablet in a fourth of n glass of water and allow to dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyes two to four times daily, You should nodes your eyes clear up perceptibly right from rho start and inflammation will quickly dleal3Ymar. If your eyes are bother;dg you, even a little, take atone to [ave them now before it is too late. Mew hopelessly blind might have been saved if they had eared for their eyes in time. Note: Another prominent Physician to whom the above article was submitted, [Mel now -Opts le a very remarkable convey, Its can,Wtnent to mo'c'ha m'o well known to eminent eye spermllsla ami widely prescribed by then1. Thu manufacturers guarantee It to strengthen eyesight Alt p,:r cent In one week's time olahtmlndy Itnraemtanaan,sy o1r00r0otue0dm1sr0'Wndalahsdp0 ke 0 i0 0o010 rhhao nr17re1warprucprnnomoIt fovert' eP04u4 Dour co., stern 9, Toronto. Will fit your 0180,, 17 y0er d•'agist Clmn01. VOR PINK Er DISTEMPER, CATARIIUAL PE4E11 AND A1aL NOSE ANn TMTR,OAT rus2Asne Cares ti a sick and acts as a nr'eventattvo for others. Liquid gives on the tongue. Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy. 80111 by all druggists. Pock.. let, • Distem ,er, Cause and Cure" 'Wren. sk°OIHN MEDICAL 00., Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., t1'. S. .5. For immediate overseas service, join 1' I• The Royal Naval Canadian Volunteer Reserve Overseas Division. The Navy must be kept supreme—more men are needed to man the fleets which are sweeping the seas of commerce -raiders and sub- marines. Canadians joining. the R. N. C. V. R., Overseas Division, are sent at once to England for training. PA1.10 a day and upwards—Free kbit•'-- Separation allowance as in C. E. F. No experience necessary—Candidates must be sons of natural born British subjects -Ages 18 to 38. Experienced men from 18 to 45 may. enlist for service in the Canadian .!Naval Patrols to guard Canadian Coasts. Pay from $1.05 a day and separation allowance For particulars apply to COMMODORE IEMILIUS JARVIS, Naval Recruiting Officer, Ontario Area, 103 Bay Street, TORONTO, or to the Naval Recruiting Secretary, Ottawa. 0 .8.1 7