HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-08-16, Page 7?1GHTIN6 FOR HAPPINESS
When you get into a frame of mind
that lnelto8 life seem one i110$en18
duty after another, With lie pleasure
ie it; when 111-11oaltla seems to take
all the joy out of We and you worry
O'er tilinge that are t'eelly not worth
worrying allout, then ,0111' nervone eye,
tem 18 becoming exhausted, anti, you
are 0n the way to a general break-
down o itealtll. In this condition your
health and happiness is worth 'fighting
' for and good, 11011, red bleed is what
your system needs. It is a hopeless
task to try to restore your health
while your blood is deficient either 111
quantity or quality. And remember
that no fnediaine can be of any use to
you that does not build up your weak,
watery blood,
To build tip; the blood and strength
en the nerves there is one remedy that
has been a household word for more
' than a generation -Dr, Williams' Pints
Pills for Palo People, It is the actual
mission of these pills to mance new,
rich, red blood, which strengthens the
nerves and tones the entire system.
They give you a new appetite, slake
sleep refreshing, put color in the lips
and cheeks, add drive. away that un-
natural tired feeling that oppresses so
many people, If you want to experi-
ence new health and happiness give
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair trial.
You can get these pills ,through any
medicine dealer or by !ail at 50 cents
a box or six boxes Por $2.50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
NEW MERCHANTMEN.
ARD TO SINK
TAKE SEVERAL TORPEDOES TO
SINK U. S. SHIPS.
New Ideas rti
Clothes
i
Moser$
"Trench coat." The very name is
during to the small boy, and made
in khaki -colored cloth it is very much
like the kind the soldiers wear. It is
a style which also looks well develop-
ed in tweed or some of the knitted
weaves so fashionable this year for
small boys' and men's coats. McCall
Pattern No, 7882, Boy's Trench Coat,
in two lengths.. -In 7 sires; 2 to 14
years. Price, 15 cents.
American Merchant Marine Will Be
Built Along the Lines of New
OH Tankers.
That 1t will take two or three tor-
pedoes to sink one of the steel ships
to be built under the direction of
General Goethals for the new Ameri-
can merchant marine is the statement
made in The Popular Science Month-
ly. The writer says that the ships
will be .built on the principle evolved
in the oil tanker, which is built in
many sections and therefore hard to
sink,
"Of course, no vessel afloat or to bo
launched in the near future will he un-
sinkable if a sufficient numberk of tor-
pedoes are exploded against her
sides," he says. "Even the latest
battleship is not immune.' But Uncle
San's new boats will have no unpro-
tected portion of the hulls and it will
take at least LIN and perhaps three
well -aimed torpedoes to sink one of
them.
• Modelled on Tanker.
"The new type will be Pully armed.
It will be of steel construction and
patterned after, the present-day oil
tanker, which is practically immune
against single torpedo attacks, except
' In the way of the engine' and boiler
rooms.. If struck there she is•done for
and settles by the stern, with no pow-
-• sr to I~rraceed. The new boats will have
fuel oil tanks extending clear around
the ship, from main deck to main deck
from the .front of the boiler space to
the rear of the engine room. If a tor-
pedo strikes her there and blows a
hole in her outer skin, the inside of
the tank will act as a new hull to
keep her afloat until the submarine
rises to view its prey. None of the oil
tankers have been sunk so far in the
war by one torpedo, upless bit in the
engine or boiler space.
Series of Compartments.
_ "The bullaoil in the tankers is car-
ried in a dozen or more separate tanks
er compartments, into which the hull
of the tanker is divided by bulkheads.
This is why one torpedo will not sink
her. A torpedo exploding against the
hull of the ship and crushing one or
two of these compartments does not
sink the ship because of the relatively
small size of the few compartments
punctured, compared with the dozen
or so that are left intact. -
In high explosives the British pro-
duction is now sixty-six times what
it was in January, 1915.
One gallon of clean salt, one pint of
brown sugar, and not more than one-
half cupful of pepper, make a sensible How They Compare With Present
sugar cure for the side meat, hams,
and shoulders. Keep out of the salt- Gigantic Expenditure.
peter. That is what discourages so Compared with other wars of the
many farmers about using the sugar last century and a half the world war
cure for meat. No brine ne5ded if towers financially like a mighty
treated with this mixture. cathedral over a humble 'log cabin.
The war o'f the American Revolu-
tion coat $845,000,000. The war of
1812 cost $107,000,000. The American
Civil War cost $3,700,000,000. e
The Boer War was supposed to have
been a costly affair for Great Britain.
John 'Bull paid out a Cool billion dol-
lars to quell the South African insur-
rection. The British exchequer is
now drawn on for the amount of the
Boer War every month excluding
If simplicity gives way to the opul-
ence of soft draperies it must appear
in some other way in the frocks this
season. In the model illustrated
the sidedraperies dra eries on the skirt
and gracefully draped surplice bodice,
the simplicity appears in the fasten-
ing of the blouse without hooks or
snaps, but with the fronts which cross
each other and tie in the back. An
innovation, surely! 'McCall Patterns
No. 7921, Ladies' Tie -On or Button -
On Waist, in 5 sizes, 34 to 42 bust;
and No. 7925, Ladies' Three or Four -
Piece Skirt, 39 -inch length, in 5 sizes,.
22 to 30 waist. Price, 20 cents each.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
SUMMER COMPLAINTS
KILL LITTLE ONES
In These War , Times 'BRITANNIA'S
you want real food that
contains the greatest
amount of body - building
material at lowest cost. The
whole wheat grain is all food.
Shredded Wheat Biscuit
is the whole wheat in a
digestible form. Two or
three of these little loaves/of
baked whole wheat with milk
and a little fruit make a nour-
ishing,
our-
ishinig, strengthening meal.
Made in Canada.
WESTERN FARMERS.
CALL FOR LABOR
GRAIN RIPENING --RAPIDLY BUT
MEN ARE SCARCE.
Cutting Will Commence About August
20—Patriotism Demands Con-
servation of Crop
The gravity of the situation in re-
gard to the harvesting of Ontario's
crops serves but to illustrate more
clearly the seriousness of the call of
the farmers of the western prairies
for some 30,000 men from the eastern
provinces to help garner the grain in
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
this season. ,
The Canadian Northern Railway
whose 6,000 miles of line in the three
prairie provinces serve the most pro-
ductive areas, have already announced
that the help' of 25,000 men would be
required to assist the farmers along
its lines this year. • Since then repre-
sentatives of the Federal government,
the three provincial governments and
the leading eailways,,have conferred
at Winnipeg, and announced that
31,000 harvesters from Ontario and
the other eastern provinces would be
welcomed in :the west this year.
As everyone knows, agriculture is at
the base of our Canadian Prosperity,
and if only for this domestic reason,
the harvest should be assured. But
this year the wheatless millions
throughout the world look to the North
American continent and especially
Canada, for their. supply. The North
American wheat crop this year be-
longs to all the world with'the excep-
tion of the Teutons and their allies,
and because of this it is imperative
that the grain yield be conserved.
At the first sign of illness during the
hot weather give the little ones Baby's
Own Tablets, or in a few hours he may
be beyond cure. These Tables will
prevent summer complaints if given
occasionally to the well child and -will
promptly cure these troubles if they
conte on suddenly. Baby's Own Tab -
lots should always be kept in every
home where there are young children.
There is no other medicine as good
and the mother has the guarantee of
a government aualyst that they aro
absolutely safe. The Tablets are sold
by medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams"
Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont.
COST OF FORMER WARS-,
instead of tea
and coffee
on the family
table make
for better
health and.
more comfort.
Preferred by
'Thousans
:i
"There's a Reason
Sundays.
Japan and Russia had to pay $2,-
000,000,000 for their set -to -2 per
cent- of the cost of the wori'd war to
date.
Germany's war bill every month
equals the whole cost to both belliger-1 turning out'rugs as grandmother did
ents of the Franco-Prussian War. I a hundred ,years ago. There will be
The Central Powers have lost more shown also the blowingof delicate
than $10,000,000,000 in foreign com-1 glass surgical and medical instru-
merce since the war began. The En -1 menu and other equally interesting
tente Allies' loss in eommerce with
the Central Powers foots up more
than .$7,000,000,000.
The British daily war expense is
$88,760,000,
Germany -spends $25,000,000 every
twenty-four hours to keep Mars on
the job.
It is estimated that the Entente Al-
lion spent $50,000,000,000 and the Cen-
tral Powers $30,000,000,000 up to
DEFENCES
HER GALLANT TRO
SHI'S ANP SWIFT
41)
Speirs IKCA 1(1,1106,"
Vuloanizser .Qtrlokly Wl8hept Heat
401r0r your '»!res, 'rubes, Panetures,
Hot Water Bottles. 200,000 users al-
rgQy 111(01" it.• 9'ol
tago 001(1 till 0001'
OPS, S'1'Ui1PY Pilarpalsod1TOfiatisfr, ,mguslel oh N by-
lrtltil Vies. i0. SohQliold, ,43 Vietorla St„
AIRCRAFT rl?mronto, ••
Some Statistics Regarding Strength
of the British Empire at the
Beginning of War,
It was in December of 19x5, a few
days before Christmas, that the Brit-
ish Parliament increased the strength'
of the army to 4,000,000 In01a. lfer
standing army figures before the war
were 129,000, not including` the array
In India of 77,000 and in the colonies
of 45,000, ' in the fust reserve were
206,000; in the second, 463,000, the
total number qP &rained men leaving.
been 798,000,
The population of the llritish .191n.
pine is approximately 500,000,000, and
from every part of het' vast domain,
hhave
upon which the sun, never sots, e
come men to aid the mother country
in her fight against German autocracy.
Canada'. has been especially generou0
in responding and hon warriors have
borne the brunt of some of the hard-
est fighting. Australia, New Zealand,
India and South Africa have sent hun-
dreds of thousands, much to the chag-
rin and disappointment of Germany,
who vainly imagined that certain por-
tions of British possessions would not
be loyal to that extent to the mother
country. But from every land over
which the Union .1aek flies men are
now found on the Tar -flung battle line,
in France, Flanders, Egypt, ,Macedo-
nia,
Macedo•nia, Palestine and Mesopotamia.
Sea and Air Ships
Not That Kind.
The wife„of Gots, Sir Horace Smith
Dorrien, who is engaged in adding to
the comfort of wounded British sol-
diers in English hospitals, tells an
amusing -,-and affecting --story of • a
soldier who had just recovered from a
severe wound,
Feeling ill and very homesick, he
went to headquarters to obtain leave
of absence, "I haven't seen my wife
for more than a year,” .he said in a
most dejected manner.
"Why," said the colonel to whom he
had- applied,."I haven't seen my wife
for nearly two years!"
"Well," said the soldier, earnestly
and respectfully, "that may be, 'sir,
but me and my wife aren't that kind!"
The furlough I was immediately
granted.
STOMACH MEDICINES
ARE DANGEROUS
DOOTOlOS 100W ADVISE MAGNESIA
Just how clangorous it Is to indlsa'im-
lnalely dose the stomach with drugs and
medicines 1s often not realized until too
:late.. it seems so simple to swallow a
dose of some. special mixture or take
tablets of soda, pepsin, bismuth, eta, af-
ter meals, and the golly of this drug-
ging is not apparent until, perhaps years
afterward, when It lo found that gastrin
ulcers. have almost eaten their way
through the stomach walls. Regrets are
then unavailing;it is in the early stages
When Indigestin, dyspepsia, heartburn,
flatulence, etc., indicate excessive acidi-
Ly o'f the stomach and fermentation of
Britannia still rules the waves. The 9'ood contents that precaution should he
British navyis the country's great taken. Drugs and meeiiclneis are unsuit-
able a,nd often dangerous—tltoy haus
pride since an empire of which the little or no lnduenec apo tl 1 Y 1
n to tle u
main•thorou hfares are the oceans of
acid, .and that is why doctors are din-
g carding them and advising sufferers
the world demands, in the first in- i0;roC •id o ttioodatnsee, otosnaen trOilbke to
stance, the strongest Possible tlePenSe. the food contents bland and sweet by
at sea. Of late years it has been aa- taking n tittle pure blsuratecl magnesia
cepted as a fundamental axiom of
British policy that the navy should ex,
coed in strength any reasonable Baan•
bination of foreign navies which could
be brought against it, the accepted
formula being the "two -power stand-
ard"—that is, a 10 per cent. margin
over the joint strength of the two
next Powers, Until. the decade of
1890 and 1900 the cost of maintaining
this colossal floating armament was
borne entirely by the taxpayers of the
United Kingdom, but space then the
who had been traveling due west from
self-governing colonies ha've eontri- !Boston for five days. The traveler
buted toward the formation of a truly
imperial navy. -
. Although it is obviously impossible
to glee any exact ngures•regarding its
present size, reliable before -the -war
statistics sbowed there were 68 battle-
ships, with fourteen building; 110
cruisers and 218• destroyers, with
many others of both these olassee
well under way. Great Britain's naval
budget for 1913.1014 was nearly twice
that for the' army. Her air fleet in
1914 consisted of 1,300 airplanes and
21 dirigibles, but of course the num-
ber of planes now in use. on the
various fronts is enormous.
instead. Bisurated Magnesia is an ab-
readilly Purr, anti -acid which can be
readily obtained from any drug store:
It is absolutely harmless, is practically
tasteless and a teaspoonful taken.. In a
Little warm, or oeid water after meals,
will usually be found quite sufficient to
instantly neutralize excessive acidity of
the stomach and prevent all possibility
ofthe food fermenting.
Could Not Mies It.
The average foreigner's difficulty in
comprehending the huge area of
America is well illustrated by a story
about an Englishman and his valet
, '1'1971 NFri1D OF T1?!D IIOUR,
"Tall; ITappilless. The world is sad
oneugh
Without your woes:
wholly rough;
Look for, the places that are smooth
and Blear,
And speak of those to rest the weary
• ear
Of earth, so' hurt by ono eontinuous
strain
Of human cliseolatent and grief and
pain.
Talk Faith. The world is better off
Without
Y
utter ignorance and niorbld
• doubt'
If you have faith in God, or man ,or
self,
Say so; if not, push back upon the,
shelf
Of silence your thoughts till faith
shall come."
MONEY ORDERS
13uy your out-of-town suppiles with
Daminlola Express Money Orders,
rive dollars costs three cents.
Great Britain's pelt capita coal con-
sumption is about te11 times as 'great
as that of France-
Minard's Liniment Cures Garret 911 Cows
Isere Is a• way to make ham gravy
or bacon fat blend into 'soups or
gravies instead of floating 08 a greasy
layer on top: Stir into each two
tablespoons of melted grease, one-
half tablespoon of flour. The mix-
ture will blend easily into milk soups,
stock soups, sauces or gravies and
give an appetizing flavor.
tumdll'jar to
licrL''tllilaiofl Eysali19,
Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun, Dud and Wind
quickly relieved by Aiarine
,1 yeLIemcdy.NoSmarting,
just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. fiurine Eye
Salve inTubes25c. Per Book elilie Eye freeask
Druggists or Merin Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Jack Canuck—Do you peaple realize
that the food you throw away each
year is estimated at $56,000,000?
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
WE PAY CASE POE
Old False Teeth
Gold and Platinum mauled to Canadian
fitefining Co„ Imperial BankBldg.,
Yonge end Queen Sts,, Toronto.
A. good table that provides proper,
nourishment is the principal oonstltu-
011t of good health.Every house-
koepei' 'shodld have a practical and
positive, knowledge or scientific- Trio-
thods that will enable her to produce
attractive and appetizing and aloes
nutritious food.
14ISCELLA10' 0II0
�1 PI'V)NC7 MA OH SID1 )ti:PA1RDD;
Gramophone Snrings made, llal))y
Carriage and 'Lawn Mower Parts. JaolC-
son Co., Louden,.
Since the outbreak of war South
African nines have yielded £100,000,s.
000 worth of gold.
PRAYER BEFORE THE BATTLE.
The Stirring Petition Used on British
Warships For Many Years.
This is the tremendous prayer which
the 'men on British warships hear as
they thunder into battle:—
"0, most powerful and glorious
Lord God, the Lord of Hosts, that
ruleth and commandest all things:
Thou sittest in the throne judging
right, and therefore we makeour ad-
dress to Thy Divine Majesty in this
our necessity, that Thou wouldst take
the cause into Thine own hand and
judge between us and our enemies.
Stir up Thy strength, and come and
help us; for Thou givest not always
the battle to the strong, but canst
save by many or by few. 0, let not
our sins now cry against us for ven-
geance; but hear us. Thy poor ser-
vants, begging mercy, and imploring
Thy help, and that Thou wouldst be
a defence unto us in the face of the
enemy. Make it appear - that Thou
art our Saviour and mighty Deliverer,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen."
That was the moving prayer our
heroes heard at Trafalgar; it was the
prayer used at the battle of Jutland.
It must have been a stirring thought
to our seamen that this very prayer
was that which had come from the
hearts of those who fought with Nel-
son. .
CANADIAN MACHINERY.
Now Produces in a Few" hours Rugs
Like Years' ;York of Orientals.
found his servant gazing thoughtful-
ly out of the window. -He said to
him:
"William, what are you thinking
of?"
I was ,just thinking, sir, about the
discovery of ITamerica," replied the
valet. "Columbus didn't do such a
wonderful thing, hafter hall, when he
found this country, did he, now, sir?
Hatter hall's said and done, 'ow could
'e 'elp it?"
HARVESTERS WANTED 1
Canadian Northern Ry. Runs Excur-
sion Trains To The
West.
The earliest arrivals in Winnipeg
will have the first and best choice of
employment in the harvest fields be-
yond. The Canadian Northern Rail-
way will run the first Excursion
Trains to the West in this connection,
leaving Ottawa 9.30 a.ni. Aug. 16th;
and 10.30 p.m. Aug. 16th and 28th;
'also leaving Toronto 9.00 a.m. Aug.
21st; and 10.00 p.m. Aug. 21st, 23rd
and 30th. Through cars will be
operated from Montreal and Joliette,
affording direct connection at Ottawa
from principal Quebec points.
The equipmept will' consist of elect=
tric lighted colonist cars and lunch
counter cars with special accommoda-
tion for women.
While the hest chances are along
the Lines of the Canadian Northern)
in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al-
berta, where the demand for labor is
heavy and the wages high, no matter
what final destination you may select,
the C.N.R. offers the best route to
Winnipeg.
For leaflet showing special train
service, excursion dates and the num-
ber of laborers required at various
points, together with all other parti-
culars, apply to nearest C.N.R. Agent
or General Passeng'ni' Department,
Montreal, Que., and Toronto, Ont.
NICHOLAS R MANOFF.
•
Son of "Peasant Emperor" Now Ad -
,dressed es Common Citizen.
It sometimes requires years of work
on the part of an entire family in the
Far East to produce one of the beau-
tiful Oriental Rugs sb much prized
throughout the world. It has rema'rilo
ed for Canadian inventors to perfect
machinery to produce hi a few hours a
rug that would defy an expert to dis-
tinguish .11 from the genuine hand-
made article. The first of these ma-
chines has just been completed, and
will be shown in full operation in the
Process Building at the Canadian Na-
tional Exhibition.
Other process operations to be car-
ried on there will be the manufacture
of blankets and khaki cloth for the
Canadian Army, while in contrast
will be shown an old spinning wheel
branches of manufacture.
Minard'6 Liniment Ourea Colds, lite,
Not what we get, but what we gilt,
Is the right measure of how we live,
Not what we say, but What we do,
Is the test that tells if life's coin
rings true.-
T11118
rue.-
TIM S 1IiEMADEI
Scrap 0100 enn be nutde into 02U111an-
January, 1 1917. If tho same propor teed tread double servieo llreS, 0,11511100 thought that the world Was s0 Hear
f Ill am v n
w 7 a
pi•OOf, blptV-Oat nOO , (Vol, Y
tion was maintained for the first ]tali ltety tire; "results: will astonisu you; the time when his son would rim the
The late Czar of Russia is now
known as Nicholas Romanoff in the
great sland over which he held auto-
cratic sway. It is not the title by
which he expected to go down to pos-
terity.
M. de Biowitz, the famous corre-
spondent of the London Tinges at
Paris, was responsible for putting on
record a .story regarding Alexander
III., the father of Nicholas, which is
worth recalling in this connection.
The Czar and his courtiers had 'been
discussing by what added title he
should be known in history. His fa-
ther had been called Alexander the
Liberator and Alexander the Martyr,
What should the son be called?
"Alexander the Just," suggested 0110.
"Oh, no," replied the Czar, "I am and
shall remain the peasant .Emperor. So
some of my nobility have styled me in
derision, scoffing at nay affection for
the moujik, But I accept the title as
an honor, I have tried to procure for
the humble the 11100105 of livelihood,
and this, I think, i5 the best and only
moans of keeping the world going,
My greatest ambition is to deserve to
boar to the last the title of the peas-
ant emperor."
Little could Alexander III. have
of 1911 then the Entente Allies have r,sird foI. cirau1er; wo tray 0 052108 a
POnnd 10,' old dreg; wo buy, soli and ox-
expended more than $58,000,000,000 peengo tow and seecnd-hand tiros olid
and the Central. Powers $35,000,000,- I{His 5ttit'o '1011toli0xn ndgo''6171vurigo
000, Street, Toronto,'
:chance of becoming the "last of the
Emperors of Russia," °
7lSlaard'H I.Satutent curets Io0etonidse,
•
--o—o—c—o—o—o—a—o—o—o—o—o—
•
° WLTH THE FINGERS !
° SAYS CORNS LIFT OUT I
s
a • WITHOUT ANY PAIN
�o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o--o—o—o—o—
Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or
any/ kind of a commit shortly' be lift-
ed right out with the fingers if you
will apply on the corn a Pew drops of
freezone, says a Cincinnati authority.
At little cost one can get a small
battle of freezone at any drug store,
which will positively rid one's feet of
every corn or callus without pain or
soreness or the danger of infection.
This new drug is an ether com-
pound, and dries the moment it is ap-
plied and does not inflame or even ir-
ritate the surrounding tissue. Just
think! You can lift off your corns and
calluses now without a bit of pain or
soreness. If your druggist hasn't
freezone he can easily get a small bot-
tle for you from hie whalesalc drug
house.
Skim Milk's Food Value.
Skim milk contains all the food
elements of whole milk except the
fat. It contains a little more pro-
tein than whole milk, but because of
the deficiency in fat does not supply,
so much energy. It is a value
food, which has been,. very much. ne-
glected.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen—I have used MINARD'S
LINIMENT an my vessel and in my
family far years, and for the every -day
ills and accidents of life I consider it
has no equal. I would not start on a
voyage without it, if it cost a dollar a
bottle,
CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN,
Sohr. Stotke, St. Andre, I(amouraska.
To Check Tomato Worms.
Arsenate of lead spray kills to-
mato worms and is a more econ-
omical control mutative in large
patches than hand picking of the
insects. Three pounds of arsenate
of lead paste (or at pound and a half
of the powdered form) in Sb gallons
of water is sufficient strength.
1
The Soul of a Piano is the
Action. Insist on the
"OTTO /H l G EL19
PIANO AO 8 ION
to
d-lANCIeR, 2'l)MORS, LUMPS, 19TO.,
out -pain by ol ur home external,
Write
us before too late, Dr, Bellman Alodloal
Co., Limited, Coltingwood, Ont.
ITCUN3 BLENG
MMftES GN BABY
Head and Face Covered. Came Off
.,In Scales. Would Cry Most All
Night. Cuticura Healed.
'When my baby was two weeks •rid
her head and .ace became covered
with little water pimples.
They 1..ter broke and
dried, and •came •ori: in
scales. They itched and
burned terribly and she
could not sleep but would
ory most all night. She
was so cross and fretful
I could not leave her to
do my work.
"Then I got Cuticura Soap and Oint-
�ment. In throe weeks there was not a
trace of the trouble left. She was
healed." (Signed) Mrs. Alex. Foster,
R. R. 2, Proton Sta., Ont., June 9, 1916.
Prevent further trouble by using Cu-
ticura Soap for the toilet. •
For Free Sample Each by Mail`1d-
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere.
WO ,EN!
HERS!
DAUGHTER
You who
•t I r e. easily;
are pale, hag-
gard and
MID; nervous
or Irritable:
wlto are sub-
lect to fits of
melancholy or
the blues;'
-- ., *met your blood
-r exntmrrs.; f o r
��---,�,r Iron de"trci-
010
xi Ut-rWW1 T,,,.:�i IV ri'id AT E10
XLOIP taken ,�=
itree times a ' "-- Tl
Y after
•''••,Is wan increase your etreng rr•
lo' •once 100 per cent In -hv w, 01
g'"`• n many cases.—Ferdin 71, • Nln8y
R�..Y
Bao n be obtained IRON en, •r • 00 above '
l
f7
(Yr. � "^ n be obamined from �; cod drugtie)'
on an a guarantee of r money rtten
funded. -
usually 910.11,.1 t.' , evo•grain lain
Pete to be
throe llm Y odor .11.11.0.:
ea a •,y
SIC WOMAN 11A0
4 0 RV NG SPE..13
r
,tI
r
ARE. you really
saving money
b neglecting to re -shingle
thatbarnroof? You know
that each additional patch
lessens the value of your
building You know each
widening leak means rotting
loosening� shingles and early
decay. You know that only
by Fndlarisin your roof can
you got enduring freedom
from repoir and rot. Pedlar's
"George" Shingles bringyou the
durability and w_ering qualities
of steel at a price, when laid,
about that of a good wooden
shingle roof. A Pedlnrized roof
will last for generations, pro-
tecting you at all times From
tho danger of Lightning_ and
fire- The "Right fionS" Book-
let 1x,11'., telling you all about
steel ahmelca und how to lay
them. is free. Write to -day.
THE PEDLAR PEOPLE Limited
peeeslie-na1 18011
Executive Offices and
Factories:
OSHAWA. ONTO
Branches 1
This' Montreal Ottawa
se�Te\' Toronto Loudon
1 , tnen.,tt, Winnipeg
Restored to Health by Lydia
E. Pirakham's Vegetable
Compound.
Enhaut, Pa.—"I was ail run down ana
weals inwardly. I had female troubles
and Nervous feelings
and my head both-
ered me. I would
often have crying
spells and feel as if
I was not safe. If
I heard anyone com-
ing I would run and
lock the door so they
would not see me.'
I tried several doc-
tors and they did not
help Ise so 1 said to
my mother 'f. guess
I will have to die as there is no help for
me.' She got me one . of your little
books and my husband said I should try
one bottle. I stoped the doctwer's
m��gdirane x,11 toelt stopped 1). Pinkham's
yeee'tabl'e Compound. It soon made a
change in me and now I am strong and
do all my work."—Mrs. Auats'rU8
BAUGIIMANt Box 86, Enhaut, Pa.
Why will women continue to suffer
day in and day out and drag out a sickly,
half-hearted existence, messing three-
fourths of the joy of living, when they
can find health in Lydia E. Tinkham's
Vegetable Compound?
If you would like free confidential ad-
vice address Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass.
IF THE TONGUES OF YOURSH'OES
COULD SPI AK, THEY WOULD SAY
USE
ISSTUI No. 33—'17.
It gives the same nourishment to the leather that the
skin gets when on the (animal's back.
Black, 'Tan, Touev Red and Dar1kBrown. 10c. per tin.
Y
"'TAKE CARE Ole YOUR SHOES,"