HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-03-29, Page 8MARCH WEATHER
RHEUMATIC WEATHERER
Victims Can Cure Tlleipseives
With Dr. Williams'
Pink pills.
With the coming .of March people
who ire afflicted with rheumatism
begin to have unpleasant renainders
of their trouble. The weather is
ohangeable—balmy and apringlike
one day, raw cold and piercing the
next, ais sueh sudden oh;ng'es of
weather • th . at Sots the pangs and tor -
times of r•heuniatism, luinbago and
soiatica going, But it must be borne
in mind that although weather condi-
tions start the pains, the trouble is.
deeply rooted in the blood, and can
only be cured through the blood, All
the lotions and liniments in the
world can't cure rheumatism. Rub-
bing may seem to ease the pain while
you are rubbing', but there its value
ends. Only through the blood can
you cure rheumatism, That's why
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have so
many thousands of cures of this
trouble to their credit. The new,
rich• blood which they actually make
drives out the poisonous acid end
rheumatism is vanquished. Among
many sufferers from rheumatism who
have been cured by. this medicine is
Mr. C. H.\ McGee, freight shed fore-
man for the • G. T. R. at Peterboro,
who says:—"In the course of my work
I am naturally exposed to all kinds
of weather, with the result that about
two years ago I contracted rheumat-
ism -which settled in my legs. At
times I could scarcely walk, and often
had to quit my day's work owing to
the stiffness and the pain. I tried
different remedies without getting any
help until I began the use of Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills. I used six boxes
of these and can say that I am about
as well as ever I was. I still take the
.pills occasionally, and I hope that my
experience may be of benefit to some
other rhemnatic sufferer."
If you suffer from rheumatism, or
any other disease of the blood, begin
to cure yourself to -day with Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills. Sold by all medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a
box or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont. •
THE BRITISH NAVY
Factors Which Have Revolutionized
Naval Warfare in These Later Days.
In a recent address at a gathering
in London, Sir John Jellicoe, First
Sea Lord of the British Admiralty,
called attention to the extent of Bri-
tish naval activities. The number of
:vessels of all classes that comprise
ithe British navy is about 4,000. This
;includes battleships, battle cruisers,
light mine sweepers, destroyers, sub-
marines, mine sweepers and other
miscellaneous craft. Activities of the
fioet range from the White Sea, where
;the British are assisting the Russian
!fleet, past the North and South Atlan-
'tie, where cruiser squadrons are at
;work, to the far Pacific, where co-
opera'tdon is given to the Japanese:
.The navy took a considerable part in
the fighting on the west coast of
Africa, in the Dardanelles campaign
in the Mediterranean, in the Adriatic,
off the east toast of Africa; in the Per-
sian Gulf and up the Tigris River.
Every part of the seas is touched by
the fleet, "Without our mercantile
rnar!ne, the navy—and, indeed, the na-
tion—could not exist," said Sir John,
Upon it we have been dependent for
movement of our troops overseas —
over 7,000;000 of men having been
transported—together with all the
guns, munitions and stores required
by the army." Sailors of the mer•
chant marine have also been drawn
in groan numbers for services on war
vessels. Differences between the
navy of today and that of a htmdre4
years ago were pointed out, The
greater speed of ships, longer range
of guns, the menace of the torpedo,
destroyers and submarines, the use
of aircraft as the "eyes" of the
fleet, and wireleab telegraphy have
revolutionized naval warfare. In the
Napoleonic period the ships opened
fire at a range of about 800 yards,
those of to -day open fire at 22,000
yards (about eleven nautical miles),.
and gunfire at 18,000 yards is very ef-
fective. The torpedo fired from a
surface vessel is effective up to at
least 10,000 yards'. Weather condi-
tions. frequently make fighting difficult
beyond a range of 10,000 yards and
on hazy days the destroyers with dan-
gerous torpedoes are a grave menace
to the heaviest ships of the navy. The
submarine 1s another factor that has
helped to change the attuatioii, When
used in combination with mines the
close blockade of former days is 1m
possible. The undersea vessel also
adds greatly to the anxiety of the op-
posing fleet. "Nelson watching Ville-
neuve off Cadiz had his in shore squad.
r+oxt close into the enemy's port," said
Admiral Jellicoe, "and could see what
wee actually going on inside that porta
The British fleet of to -day, watching
the German. high seas :fleet, is not in
the sante ]nappy position,"
Advance Spring
Fashions
J
A great deal o% voile and muslins
will bo used this spring, The counters
of the stores are already overflowing
with voiles of all descriptions; plain,
sprigged, figured, striped and checked.
Bordered materials, too, will have a
place among the fashionable fabrics,
whether printed or embroidered and
whether air cotton or silk.
Plain voile cembined with linen in
a matching color has been used in the
fashioning of some: ' . the advance
spring 'dresses, and tough unusual,
the combination is entirely pleasing.
6.to
Voile and Linen Dress
•
Indian embroideries eh sports coats
of heavy cream -colored silk make very
attractive trimmings, and they are
also effective on coats of day blue
serge. These embroideries are work-
ed in silks or heavy mercerized cottons
in very bright colorings with a num-
ber of colors mixed together. As this
is to be a spring and summer of high
colors, these embroideries will, in all
probability, take very well. Parsols
and bags to match the costumes show-
ing\such embroideries are also to be
had to complete the finishing touches.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer or from
The McCall Co. 70 Bond St. Toronto.
Dept. W.
SICKLY BABIES
1
Sickly babies—little ones who are
troubledd with their stomach andbow-
els; whose teething is painful{ diges-
tion bad and who cannot sleep well
—
can be made healthy and happy with
Baby's Own Tablets. Concerning
the Tablets Mrs. Wilfrid Damons, Val
Brilliant, Que., writes :"Ple'itse send
me a box of Baby's Own Tablets ,as I
would not care to be without them.
I have used them for constipation and
vomiting. and am well pleased with the
result." The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont.
THE PEACE COMET.
Startling Phenomenon Due to Arrive
Next Summer.
Peace is coming; and with peace
comes a comet—one of the largest on
record—which is due to make its bow
to this sphere during the early sum-
mer.
"The peace comet," as it is appro-
priately termed, is travelling at the
rate of 131 miles a second, or over
1,134,000 miles per day, and this is its
first appearance for 60,000 years. A
vivid imagination would be needed to
conjure up the happenings of our
world when another 60,000 years have
passed, and when the 1917 comet
makes its reappearance.
A German, by name Professor Wolf,
of Heidelberg, is responsible for the
1917 comet, and he first discovered it
on April 27th, 1916. Now the Ameri-
can observatories have sighted the
spectacle, and have cabled the news to
Greenwich Observatory, says 'London
Answers.
We are told that the coming comet
will be one of the most astonishing
and wonderful of all phenomena, It
is exceptionally large, and the near-
est point reaiRied by it to the earth
will be 104,000,000 miles. Yet in
July of this year it will be visible to
the naked eye, though astronomers
are dubious whether it will outshine in
brilliancy the great comet of 1882,
which latter actually brushed the
sun's corona in passing round the
sun, and travelled at the rate of 300
miles a second,
There's a good way
to keep growing boys and girls
healthy and happy and that is
to give them
crap=Nuts
for breakfast.
This wonderfully nourishing
food has a ewes nutty flavor that
makes it popular with children.
One of the few sweet foods
that does not harm digestion, but
builds thein strong and bright.
,,4€ grocers everywhere.
Nature's Best Food
Laxative is the bran
which snakes up the outer
coating of the whole wheat
grain. But why eat coarse
bran cakes when you can
accomplish the same pur-
pose by eating Shredded
Wheat Biscuit and at the
same time get all the ,rich,
body-building material in the
whole wheatg prepared
rain
in a digestible form. A per-
-feet food—just enough pro-
teid
roteid to build healthy muscle,
just enough carbohydrates
to supply -heat and energy,
just enough bran to keep
the bowels, healthy and
active. For breakfast with
milk or cream, or for any
n-oeal with fruits. Made in
Canada.
PALACE A HOME FOR CRIPPLES.
Mutilated Italian Soldiers Housed in
Former Dwelling of Kings.
The war has turned the palace of
the Bourbon Icings of Naples into a
home for mutilated soldiers, says an
Italian writer. Around the exquisite
marble table where the guests of the
"Rol Seleil" of Naples dined in the
garden on hot suminer nights—the
ladies in powdered headdress and pan-
nier skirts, the men with lace at their
sleeves and embroidered coats—to-day
are gathered the pitiable fragments of
humanity that war has left in its
wake. 'There are neither candles nor
massive silver, neither sweetmeats nor
rare wines. The Italian Government
allows 70 cents a day for their lodg-
ing and maintenance, and food is high
in Naples.
Once sumptuous chambers of the
royal palace have been turned into
schoolrooms in the month that the
hospital has been running. In one
those who wish are taught tailoring,
in another shoemaking—the legless
naturally, for one must have two
hands to make shoes or clothes. Those
who have lost an arm are taught tele-
graphy or typewriting. But many of
the latter must begin further back
than that and learn to read and write
first. For reading and writing in
southern Italy are not common accom-
plishments, so there is a schoolroom—
a primary schoolroom—where the al-
phabet and multiplication table figure
on the blackboard in front of these
grown children who have known only
to give an arm or a leg to their coun-
try. And an arm or a leg to these
simple peasants is livelihood—their
own and their families'.
Which is why some do not study.
They are suspicious. Mutilated, they
are entitled to a Government pension,
and they are afraid that when they
have learned a new trade by which
they can live the Givernment will say:
"You no longer need help -make your
own. living." So they sit all day in the
sunlit royal garden, with its faience
flower pots marked with fleur de lys,
and watch the changing lights on the
Bay of. Naples and think of what life
used to hold for them before the war
came to change it utterly.
The sea once came to the very wall
of the garden where they sit., Below
the balustrade was a sea ppol where
the...courtiers of Carlo III. fished from
the terrace. Later, when the people
of Naples voted the Bourbons out and
the house of Savoy in as rulers of
United Italy, Garabaldi gave the pal-
ace to Alexandre Dumas, and the
Government of Italy had no end of
trouble to get it back from the fam-
ous author. -But the soldiers who wan-
der through the spacious rooms of the
palace to -day know none of these
things. They know only what they
have given to their country. They
merely wait the issue of war.
o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o--o—o—o—o
ANY CORN LIFTS OUT,
DOESN'T HURT A BIT!
No foolishness!- Lift your corns
and calluses off with fingers
—It's like magic!
o—o—o—o—o—o--o—o—o—o—o—o—o
Sore corns, hard corns, soft,corns• or
any kind of a corn, can harmlessly be
lifted right out with the lingers if you
apply upon the corn a few drops of
freezone, says a Cincinnati authority.
For little cost one can get a small
bottle of freezone at any lug store,
which will positively rid one's feet of
every corn or callus without pain.
This simple drug dries the moment
it is applied and does not, even irri-
tate the surrounding skin while ap-
plying it or afterwards.
This announcement will interest
many of our readers. If your drug-
gist hasn't any freezone tell him to
surely get a small bottle for you from
his wholesale drug house
A Hint to Swimmers. '
In an address before the leading
ear, nose•and throat specialists of the
United States, Dr. Hill Hastings of
Los Angeles recently called 'attention
to the danger of a person's swimming,
and pertieular.ly diving, when he has a
cold in the head. Comparatively few
persons realize that it is dangerous, a
and many even believe that when they
have recovered from a cold and arc
still annoyed by excessive thick secre-
tions in the nose they can filed relief
by diving or plunging the head under
water. The purulent matter washed
out is not only a danger tto others,
says Dr. Hastings, but the diver hip -
self runs a Melt of forcing some of the a
pus into his middle ear. Most special- t
n
1t
BEING WUUNI)IID,
The Experience of a )lritlah Soldier at
the X7roltt.
The explosion was still ringing in
my ears when 1 awoke, but the situa-
tion had completely changed. The last
thing I remember was the trench, with
two feet of mud and Water about my
ankles, and the words of Private
Smith, lay most particular pal, sound-
ing in my ears:
"Keep your head a bit lower, Billy!
You never know when something's go-
ing to bust!"
And now here I was, to my utter
amazement, lying flat on my back, 'a
pail' of boots on my chest, being
wheeled along a seemingly intermin-
able corridor. I wanted to speak ra-
ther badly at the riloreent—ask what
it meant, and so on—but found some
difficulty in moving my lower jaw.
I raised a hand, heavily bandaged
and weighing at,leest half a ton, about
half an inch from the white shroud
that seemed to envelop me from head
to heel, when a voice—a low, pleasant
voice—spoke.
"Ice perfectly still, please! You'll
be all right presently!"
All right? What it all meant I
hadn't the least idea. Where was old
Smithie? Where was----.
• "Yes, this is the bed." The wheel-
ing movement stopped. A face hover-
ed over me. - The next minute I was
gently lifted and placed in what I
hadn't slept in for weeks—a bell.
It appeared, later, that I was not so
very badly wounded. as at fxrst.imag-
ined.
"A small piece of your skull blown
away, old man," a smiling -faced
medico about my own age, assured me.
"Nothing to worry about. They miss-
ed the important part, the brains,
don't you know."
He grinned while he bound my head
afresh. I hated that Medico. T.o
laugh when one—
Later, when I. came to ]chow him
better, I altered my mind. That laugh
and joke have saved lives as certainly
as have knife and scalpel.
Says She Suffered
For Many Years
Then Dodd's Kidney Pills Cured
Her Kidney Troubles
Mrs, Felix Ascah Found No Relief in
Doctors or Hospital Treatment, but
Dodd's Kidney Pills Brought a
Speedy Cure.
Haldimand, Gaspe Co., Que., Mar.
26th (Special).—Mrs. Felix Ascah is
telling her numerous friends here that
her complete recovery from kidney
disease fx'om which she suffered for
years is due to the splendid work of
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"My trouble atartei1 from a strain,"
Mrs. Ascah says. "I suffered for
years. I was attended by a doctor
and was also treated at a hospital. I
suffered from stiffness in the joints, I
had a bitter taste, especially in the
morning, and at times was subject to
severe headaches. I had a pressure
and often a sharp pain at the top of
my head and my skin itched and burn-
ed at night.
"Neither from the doctor nor at the
hospital did I get any permanent re-
lief. Then I started to use Dodd's
Kidney Pills and two boxes did me so
Much good I feel like recommending
then to everyone who has kidney
trouble."
Dodd's Kidney Pills .cure sick kid-
neys. Cured kidneys strain all the
impurities, all the seeds of disease, out
of the blood. That makes good health
all over the body. That's why those
cured are so enthusiastic in regard to
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
AMATEUR INVENTORS.
Gentleman Invented a Gun to Shoot
Around Corners.
Among the ideas sent in to the Mu-
nitions Inventions Department are
some extraordinary ones from ama-
teurs anidous to assist. the country to-
wards victory. One very helpful one,
says a writer in the Atlantic Monthly,
was from a lady who desired to ex-
terminate Zeppelins. Her argument
was:
"'The clouds float the air, and
the clouds are made of water. Ice
floats in water, so ice will float in the
air. Let us freeze the clouds, therefore
and send up anti-aircraft guns in bal-
leens to fire upon' then!' She ad-
mitted that she did not know exactly
how to freese the clouds, but she left
that to the experts.
"A gentleman invented a circular
gun which shot aroxuxd corners, and
not only provided wonting drawings
of his invention, but also a beautiful
water -color picture of the Huns being
exterminated by its mediation.
"Another man is blessed' with 'per-
spective ideas' and thinks he can find
ranges without a base by the nisi of
perspective. He wandered around
with a certificate signed by an adjut-
ant to the effect that he actually .had
found three ranges correctly. The
number he had found incorrectly was
not stated,"
Waterproof lap robes for automobile
rit'lvers which remain in place should a
Nearer• have• to leave a car and walk
bout have bean invented in England,
Ntinard's Unhand Roiievos Neuralgia,
Fixing the Blame.
A glue factory stands near a cer-
tain railway, Its charms are not for
the nese, and therefore a lady often
carried with her a bottle of lavender
alts. One morning an old man
oolc the seat beside hcl'. As the train
eared the factory, the lady opened
er bottle of salts,
Soon the whole car was filled with
he horrible odor, Tho pian put up
itl it as long as he could, then
houtod, "Madam, would you mind
uttin' the cork•in that 'ere bottle?"
nits have observed that eases of mas-
toid abscess are common every sunt'=
mor during the swimming season. At
the large ear, none and throat hnspt
old it is recognized that the swimming 'w
season invariably brings en "a crop s
of mastoids." The advice to peep out 1:
of the water Until :a "head cold" is en-
tirely cleared tip cannot be ton
Strongly emphasized.
Ml�unrd'a r•3laintsnt tierce nand all'.
ISSUE No. 10—'17
•
SAWYERS, RRX MAKERS
& LARRRERS WANTED
FIRSTaROOK PROs„ Limited
283 King St„ set East, Toronto
• Biblical AutlloritY,
• When Sir 'Walter Scott was ,s: ba
WS teacher .asked him 10 give the part
of speech of the word "with," "It's
a noun," said young Seott. "You'ax'e
very stupid," said the teacher, "How
came yon to say auch a thing?" "I
got it from the Bible„ sir," declared
the future novelist, stoutly, "There's
a yem'se that says 'they bound Samson
with witha,' "
Unique Collection.
When the Prince of Wales came
home on short leave a few weeks ago
he brought with him another interest-
ing lot of battlefield relics to add to
his dyqucollection. Iiia
Royal
alreaITlgllnessunihase put aside a cps -
coal cabinet for the reception of his
trophies, in which he takes a groat
pride. His latest collection is a varied
assortment of things curious and
wonderful, from the great Somme of-
fensives, and these he has now ticket-
ed and put in their places. At the
present rate ofprogress the collection
bids fair to become historic.
STOMACH MEDICINES
ARE DANGEROUS
Ao0 oosca STOW n.Avzea szateISISXA
Just how dangerous it Is to iuliseri,n-
lnatel,v dose the stomach with (Wage and
medicines Is often not realized until too
late, .It seems so simple to swallow a
5053 0,0 some special mixture or take tart-
lets of Soda, pepsin, bismuth etc,; after
meals, and the folly of this drugging is
not appaeent until, perhapsyears after-
ward, when It is found that gastric ul-
cers. have almost eaten - their way
through. the. stomach walls: Regretsare
thenunavalltng; it 1,f In the early
stages when' indigestion, dyspepsia,
lieat•tbur 4, flatulence, etc., Indicates ex-
cesslvo acidity of the stomach' and fer-
mentation or food contents 0101 precau-
tion should be taken, Drugs and mac11-
clime aro unsuitable and often danger-
ous—ahoy have little or no Influence up-
on the harmful acid, and that Is why
doctors are discarding them and advls-
Ing sufferers from Indigestion and stont-
aeh trouble to get rid of the dangerous
acid and Iceep the Food contents bland
and sweet by taking a little pure bisurs,-
ted magnesia instead, Illeurated Mag
nesin, 1s an absolutely pure anti-aeld
which can be readily obtained from' any
drug store, It is absolutely harmless,
is practleally tasteless and a teaspoonful
taken In a little warm or cold water af-
ter meals, lull! usually be found quite
sufficient to Instantly neutralize exces-
eli•e acidity of the stomach and prevent
all possibility of the food fermenting.
WHY NOT SQUARE MONEY?
Some Of the Advantages of Square
Over Round Coints,
A movement is on foot for the in-
troduction of square money into Eng-
land. Whether it will come to any-
thing remains to be seen; buttho idea
certainly has its advantages.
What weld these advantages be?
Well, for one thing, the Mint authori-
ties would save an appreciable
amount of packing, from the well-
known fact that square money will
fit into a square box with less waste
of space than will round, This also
applies to the case of all large traders
and bankers, who have to despatch
large quantities of bullion every
month.
The private individual will probably
be more interested in the matter when
he hears that the gross total of money
lost every year in England through.
coins dropped amounts to many thou-
sands of pounds. This is largely due
to the fact that round coins, when they
fall to the ground, are apt to roll into
unlikely places, from which they are
never recovered. A square coin would
lie dead where it pitched.
In China coins are pierced with a
square hole in the centre. In this way
they can be strung together and car-
ried without fear of. loss. Might we
not learn a lesson from the Orient in
this?
Another argument in favor of
square coins is urged by artists, who
declare that it is almost impossible to
get a really artistic design "in the
round" when so little space is allowed.
A rectangular coin would give the de-
signer a real chance of distinguishing
himself.
Miaard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
Cheers.
The wireless telegraph is fine,
Let all the poets harp 1t;
But' wouldn't it be just divine
To have a beatloss carpet?
MONEY ORDERS
DOMINION Express Orders Inc•on
Sale in five thousand offices through-
out Canada.
The land bolding the Eddystone
lighthouse is the smallest bit of all -
the -year-round inhabited land in the
world.
T,ttnard's Liniment Cures- ,Earns, Zito.
The Grand banks of Newfoundland
supply more fish than any other sec-
tion of the sea,
'Won Your Eyes Need Care
t7so lamina
opaowdpleoluune"d,e-dIyyey EoisoudrlOceu. liNstos-t.lmn'oatrteidg,u^wlFel:Nono c3Ireot
inev
but weal lu oucoaosfui Physielame
h�ectics
fps• many years. NOW dedicated to
Gm Public and sold by Druggists at boo por
Bottle. Marino Bye Salvo In Aneptla Tuboe,
500 and boo. Writs for Book 00 0be'2•ye Viso.
Murine Eps Remedy Company, Ohloago, Adv,
The Lady Spoke Last.
.My tive-year-old' boy and my three-
year-old girl were talking', Glen acid,
"I'm older than you," and was feeling
elated over 'the fact. Ila who al-
ways had a ready reply, said, "Well,
I'm newer than you."
Marion Bridge, C. B., May 80, '02.
1 have handled MINARD'S LIN-
IMENT during the past year. It is
always the first Liniment asked for
here, and unquestionably the best
seller of all the different kinds of
Liniment I handle.
NEIL FERGUSON.
Modern Thrift.
"Are you saving up anything for 0
rainy day?" asked the thrifty citizen.
"Yes," replied Mr. Chuggins. "In
a little while I expect to have enough
to buy a brand new top for niy auto-
mobile."
No Need To Rub! ,
OR stiff sore muscles apply
Sloan's Liniment to the pain
or ache, it quickly penetrates
and soothes without rubbtny.
Rheumatism, gout, lumbago, neuralgia,
sprains and bruises are quickly relieved by
its use. Cleaner and more promptly effec-
tive than mussy plasters or ointments, it
does not stain the skin or clog the pores.
The family medicine cheat in thousands
of homes has a place for Sloan's Liniment.
At all druggists, 25e. 50c. and $1.00.
you 004..X.43. .
10R SAL l CRB4 i'=- QQQD a 9Aan •
ing House In Qwen EQund. 711 gpo
101 :,.)31111,,,g,
tr, 11000 leatlon, Nciai' repot ono
Inaotorted, Apply E. MgGrath, Execute,,.
7h•R.pdeona, Mai,,
+t
_.. torweillixtygegp „au,•ALs
i)'RO1DxyMAeoINt Nlews AND JQH
o Q10lcee Yor pule in goo OnttIrfo
towns, The most useful and IntereatIng
of all buslitessea, Pall Publishing
avplloatlgn to Wilson Publlslting Coot'
Sant', 7a West Adelaide Street, Toronto
antics LLAE7ae000
11P:15:01AS, NTJW AND SinCOND
�1]J
Band, 512,00 up. Send, for Special
price list Varsity Cycle Works, 413
Spadina AVO., Toronto.
CkJANOxJR. '!'UMQRS, LUMPS, ETC.
internal and external, oared with.
out''iuin by our home treatment, Write
us before too late, Dr, Bollman Medical
Co.,Limited, Collingwood, on t.
Beoxc 074
DOG DISEASES
,And How to Feed
?rolled free to any address by
the Author
1-0. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc.
118 West 31st Street, Now York
r
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Action. Insiisst onppthe
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cyclone Shaking and Dumping Grate
Baro for all requirements
Canadian Steam Bolter Equipment
°•c.,
Limited
Tel. Gerrard 3000
20 McGee St, - Toronto
Have You Our New
Furniture Catalogue?
Be sure and write for free
copy, profusely illustrated.
It's full- of great bargains.
EASY TERMS FOR ALL.
URROUhHE
645-647 Queen St, W.,
Toronto, Ont.
MICA
AXLE
GREASE
makes miles shorter,
pulling easier, friction
less.
It's the Mica.
Mica puts Mlle e -a -s -e
kr grease.
THE
IMPERIAL. 011. COMPANY
Limited
BRANCHES THi0Ot1GIIOUT
CANADA
FTEs
SI�I�
GOGOO 00 it .00094,-P0&04s0"D0t+O�
When digestion fails, whether from
loss of tone, climatic changes, overwork,
or errors of diet, nothing so soon restores
tone and healthy activity to the digestive
system as the root and herb extract ---
Mother Seigel's Syrup. It tones and
• regulates the liver and bowels, and clears the system of the decayed
products of indigestion --the fruitful cause of headaches,
'TAKE THE DIGESTIVE TONIC
languor, acidity, heartburn, flatulence, brain fag, and biliousness. It
makes food nourish yoe, and thus builds health on good digestion,
TIIER
Tis ncw1.00siso co,tnins i.ree term as
snarl a the ut.0 sl o sot!
at 60c per bottle.
'S
S j UR
6012
144t004.0.0...4,04.00044.0.014.00.114.40.04.40 e+.004.0.4r 001
COLT DISTEMPER
You San prevent Nile loathsome disease from runt ng
through your stable and cure all the colts suffering with It
when you begin the treatment. No matter how young
SPoUAt'B !s safe tc nee on any dolt- It is wonderful how 1{
prevents all dietempors po� mater how cotta or horaos a
any age are "exposed.' A.A,l�t lit egru.glata and turf gaoa.
houses sell as'oms'H, es'oTitlan0OAL 00., ohemiete
and >Qg't,r
aoterioroia, Gotehoa, Ind., TT. S. A.
nor.Duty off
the Coast of Canada.
Applications for immediate service as officers in
the Canadian Naval Patrols are requested from enc -officers
in the Royal Navy, the Naval Reserve or men holding
Officers' Certificates in the Mercantile /Marine. Seamen,
Stokers and Engine Room Ratings are also wanted at once,
1) A V Officers from $2.50 per day and $30.00 monthly and
upwards to dependents. Men hem $1.05 per day and
separation allowance. Must be sons of British subjects. Ages 18 to 45.
Men from 18 to 38 are wanted also for intmoditf;cwer vice
the Overseas Division of the R.!tl. 0' V. R. Experience not
na:cessarr-accepted recruits proceed at once to England
for training. Pay $1.10 a day end upwa,•d». Saparatr.an 03 in C.E.F.
Apply to COMMODORE AAMRIAM' JAR'VIS,
Naval Recruiting Officer Ontario Aron,
103 Bay Street, TORONTO,
or to The Naval Recruiting Scci•eiary,
` 305 Wellington St, Ottawa,
4.3-17