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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-11-01, Page 9i orth 'Protecting A goodarticle is worthy of a good package. A ricks, strong, delicious tea like Red Rose is worth putting into a sealed package to keep it fresh and good. A Cheap, conlneort r •', M'- e_es tea is hardly wort taking care of and is usually sold in bulk.. Red Rose is•always sold in the sealed package which keeps it good. r For the Housewife atoceee VOCATIONAL TRAIN- ING FOR TOMMY WORK OF MILITARY HOSPITAL COMMISSION. Returned Men Grasp Opportunity To Improve Their Positions Dur- ing Convalescence. Tommy, like most of us,looks upon his job in the light of dollars and cents. His objective is a pay envelope on the crest of Saturday night, and the bigger the better. He sees in the vocational training of the Military Hospital Commission -a. chance to,.increase his earning• power, and he is making the days of his con- valescence count, according to the re- cords and reports of the vocational of- ficvers who direct the classes. The returned man's industry is solv- ing not only his own problem and pro- viding for his future, but for Can- ada's.. Every artisan turned out by the•Commission from the ranks of dis- abled men, means one less in the army of unskilled workers. Careful watch is kept of the labor market, and every man under training in the schools has been placed, so to speak, before he started his course. The vocational training department of the Commission is not reaching out These days even the house dress to only the trained workers who have takes unto itself smartness. This one acquired a certain amount of skill in has several unusual features, the some line, to give them an opportunity pocket arrangement and the collar to improve themselves -for better po- and cuffs are true followers of the sitions, but to the man who never had mode. McCall Pattern No. 8041, a trade or the advantages of even the Ladies' House Dress. In 7 sizes; 34 to 46 bust. .Price, 20 cents. • This pattern may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St:, Toronto, Dept. W. . WEEK'S WASH FOR FRITZ. How 'Our Canadian Troops Dispose of -k-----..-- German Trench Mortars. Puttings. dynamite out on a clothes- line over No Man's Land does not mean that'the explosive is camouflag- ed. It is merely one way our Cana- dian soldiers have o£ disposing of most elementary education. Some Specific Cases. Illiterate men, who drove dump carts before they enlisted, have been given good trades in which they can make a .permanent place for themselves, and earn a much better wage. Scores of men with a fair education have been enabled to take courses to place themselyes in good clerical positions; and many more have advanced from workmen to foremen in the machine and' -carpenter shops. One young man, a blacksmith's help- er, was given a few months' course in blacksmithing and .. Oxy -acetylene German trench mortars and machine wblding during his convalescence, and aune. - is now employed by the Winnipeg School Board in those trades at a sal- ary of $90 a month. In the same school at this tins a young veteran who had been a polish- er before the war took a -five months' course in commercial wont during his convalescence and is now earning $87.50 a month as a book-keeper. The best salary he had ever earned before amounted to $60 a month. A milk peddler, who bad always wanted to draw, returned disabled, and during his time in hospital took a course in mechanical drafting and went back to civil life to earn $76 a To carry out the operation the Can- adian engineers and bombers wait for a foggy evening when the flare of star shells is less dangerous than on clear nights. Perhaps five men go over. One man carries a wooden post some six feet in length. Two more , have insulated shears to cut the barbed wire and make a path ahead. The other men carry a wooden pulley and a coil -of rope, one end of which is kept in the trench. The men go forward on all fours, across the rough ground. They are all very careful. When within twenty: month as a mechanical draftsman. five feet of the German cement 001- These men, and hundreds like them placement they set the pole in the now in training in the M.H.C. voca- tional classes,will be listed as assets, not liabilities, when Canada's war debt is figured. ground and attach the pulley and rope to it. Then they go back to their trench. • . Now a box containing some twenty pounds of dynamite is attached to the rope; By means of the pulley , the - dylianiite is slowly hauled out until it reaches just the right spot. This done all bands retire until daybreak, Then along comes one of the sharp- shooters. The Germans have had ap- parently.a quiet evening. No one is moving near their cement gun em- placement but a sentry.. All the Canadiansget under cover. There is the sharp staccato bark of the rifle, followed instatltly, as the bullet sets off the explosive, by a deafening roar which causes the ground to rock. The men pop up to see the effect of. the dynamite. They are just in time to see cement blocks, guns, a few ;piked helmets and debris rising to a height of twenty or thirty feet sky- ward. Every on'b is satisfied, and in the vernacular of the trenches "the week's .wash was sent to Fritz this morning, There's Superior Flavor as table beverage, thea. e O .. - • 1� fr m the grocer is well woath a trial, In place if tela'--enspeelally Tea Disagreesl . When T 'ROYAL TIl.'l,,F,S CONFUSING. War lies li'roiaght. Al)oltt Mtiny Cpnt'- plicatjoes---I3rothor I+ights l rother. The ¢ha2lges in royal tidos call, at tention, inevitably, to 0 few of the complications that the war has brought with ,it, `There wore few princes more popular than was Prince Christian Victor, who died -as a gal- lant British officer in South Africa; but his brother, Prince Albert, is' fighting in the German army. The Duke of Albany is ane of the "enemy , princes" With whom Parlienient is coli4erned just now, whose banner his been removed from St. George's Chapel; but his sister isi the wife of Prince Alexander of Took, who is a British• officer, and now becomes an earl. • We,—or, at least those of us ,whose memories are not uueomfortably long —ere inclinedto forget that Prince Christi'an's German title inay almost be described as German by accident. He was a German prince when he married Queen Victoria's daughter, certainly; but ho had only been Ger- man for three years at that time. Schleswig-Holstein was the cause of the Prussian attack on Denmark more than half a century ago, and until that attack succeeded Prince Christian was a Dane. BRUSH AND GRASS LAND. Discussion Regarding Sheep and Goats As Tree Destroyers. Some Canadian planters of forest tree stock have had experiences with depredations of goats, both amusing and tragic. There is under way in the United States at the present time a discussion between the breeders' of sheep. and goats with regard to their availability as an agency to convert brush -land into grass land: The "An - gore Journal" has the following to say: "Sheep are a grass -feeding stock; lihey will nee eat brush unless forced to do so by the absence' of other pas- turage. They will browse on scant pasture, leaving the hazel, willow, or other bushes to grow unmolested if any geese it to -be had. On the other hand, goats will leave grass ,to sheep and .cattle if any green tree or shrub growth is available. They prefer it. Sheep never stand. upright on the hind legs to browse; goats will browse oft the foliage- and tender bark to a height of six feet and even higher. Forest officials have adopted .goats as a means of keeping fire -breaks clear of underbrush. Goats are used to do the pioneering ahead of ether live stock 0n naw lands in enemy Western States. "The prejudice against goats is questionable. It has' been created by the inhabitant 01 the vacant 'city lot—a neglected creature \ that was forced to get subsistence by any means it could. It gnawed the labels from tin cans to get the taste d the past° beneath—and acquired a repu- tation for eating tin cans. The goat et the open llelds and prosperous faults le ae different from the vacant- lot or comrnon type as is the Hereford thoroughbred from the raw-boned cow of tho city suburbs, The goat is tho cleanest feeder of the 11vc-stock world, ft will not eat. straw or hay that has boon undo f ' cot It nnbble s d the cboiceSt bits of foliage and•refects all'tincleanitess, "habit 9s a 'table. We weave A thread of it every day, and at last we cannot heath it," ----gang BLOOD -MAKING MEDICINE It took centuries for medical science_ to. dis'c`over that the blood le the life. Now, it is known, that if the blood were always abundant, rich and pure, very few people would' ever be.ill. It was not until the end of the 19th cen- tury that an instrument was invented for measuring the red part of the blood.' Then doctors could tell just how anaelmic a patient had become, and with medicine to make new blood the patientsoon got well. All the blood in the body is nour- ished and kept rich and red by the food taken daily, but when, for any reason, a person is run down and can- not make sufficient blood from the food to keep the body in health, then a blood -malting medicine 10 required. The simplest and very best of blood - makers suitable for home use by any- one, is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, When a course of these 'pills is taken their good effect is soon shown in an im- proved appetite, stronger nerves, a sound digestion and an ability to mas- ter your work and enjoy leisure hours. For women there is a prompt relief of, or prevention of ailments which make life a burden. As an all-round medic cine for the cure of ailments clue to weak, watery blood no medicine dis- covered by medical selene can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by nail at 5.0 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. WAR OFFICE TAKES OWN FILMS.. British Battle Pictures Will. Be Sent to Allied Countries. To its thousand and one activities the British War Office has now added the ownership and management of a British film business. The entire con- trol of the issue of what is known to the moving picture world as the "Topical Budget" has passed into the hands of the Army Council for the duration of the war. • By, the unwritten law of Whitehall, the" War Office cannot "go into busi- ness," so the difficulty of owning and controlling this film business was ob- viated by the appointment of a coma mittee of practical men, responsible to the War Office, Starting as a, strictly national sur- vey of war's doings, the War Office "Topical Budget" has blossomed quickly into an international concern by a system of interchange with the Allies, so that now it presents to the British public scenes from every front on which the Allies are fighting, ex- cept the Russian. - British pictures will be distributed through the War -Office to France, Italy, Portugal and all over the British Empire as well as to the United States. Neutral countries, too, are to be organized for the distribution= of these same pictures, and in return certain pictures from neutral coun- tries will be sent to London for dis- tribution through the British Isles. The official film photographers will not-aonfine their work to the front. They are also to take pictures of all national events, naval, military or otherwise, happening anywhere in the British Isles. • Make permanent bulb beds now. There may be no holland bulbs to be had next year. 0011 NNE Granulated Eyelids; 17'-'1 Sore );yes, Eyes Inflamed by Sun; Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Murine. Try it in sink your Eyes and in Baby's Eves. tltnuR I.i a No Smarting, Just lye Comfort MurineEye Reined mt YnDsrruhg t ao 500 Salvo. in Tubas 24c, FosZook 4C the Eva -Free. Ask Murine Eye ll0esnedy Co., Chicago a Love must be intelligent and in- telligence must be loving before eith- er can reach its fullest exercise. l4Tinard's Liniment °mea delis, &o. The rat is a thief and a disease car- rier. Rats kill chickens, steal crops and damage property. Kill the rats and remove useless structures' that harbor then. Farmers should have a rat day several times a year, getting together on that day for the destruc- tion of rats. HEMSTITCHING on Blouses, Dreeees, fable Linen, 6,o. Accordion end Kniee Pleating, Covered .Buttons ma'd'e from your own ineeerlal, Braiding and Embroidery. Our New Dittetratod Catalogue Pat 1111 andWO Want every lady in o have ve i . Ontario , t White For It --It Is .Free TORONTO PLEATING CO. t 14 13readdibhfie St. Dept, W, Tofofto I,SSt1L No, 44--'17, Watch Your Sneeze! It inay be the forerunner pf bronchitis or a bad cold. Xt is nature's warning that your body is in, a receptive cope clition for Germs . The way to- fortify yourself against cold is to increase warmth d't lity by eating Slar'eddeel Wh . £ d that builds healthy muscle and red blood. For break- fast with milk or cream, or any meal with fresh fruits. ari vitalit in eat a 00 Made in Canada. NEW USE FOR CELLULOID. In Treatment of Wounds Received on the Battlefield. - ' One of . the latest of the many in- teresting and novel accessories to the growth and houses. .They sawed and treatment of wounds received -upon the hacked; trees fell and bushes sank; it battlefield is the celluloid dressing. In was days„ and days before they had addition to protecting the injured cleared the ground. In this war -zone part, it prevents the bandages from there was to be no shelter, no cover. adhering to the , wounds. Ordinary,The enemy's mouth must stay dry, his bandages are likely to cling, not only eyes turned in vain to the wells—they making it difficult to remove them, but late buried in ruhble.eNo four walls for also inflicting unne• eessary pain, and, him to settle down auto -all leveled if the adhesion is pronounced, ap- and burned out; the villages turned preciably .retarding the process of Into dumps; of rubbish; churches and healing. The celluloid device, however, entirely obviates these disadvantages. The dressing, which is somewhat like the shield used for protecting the arm in vaccination, is perforated with before reaching their ,present position small holes so that it, resembles a before. St. Quentin. But to what avail? finel5, meshed sieve. The surgeon It checked them, not a hit. Across treats it antiseptically, places it over the cleaart waste they built highways the wound, and then applies the ordin- and rebuilt roads. Tho walls were ary bandages in the usual manner: poisoned. The armies laid waterpipes The perforations in the celluloid allow for their supply. Every farmhouse the Pus to escape, and the surrounding and peasant's cot was reduced to dust. cation absorbs it. When the bandage They carri'ej their own shelter. The is removed, the shield falls' clean from terrible bparler of death was to them the injury, which has been subjected no barrier, only a reason why th"ey to no aggravation. must push forward with renewed strength and determination to hew Wounds so protected heal more down the vandals guilty of the bar-' quickly and have a cleaner appear- ance than those treated in the ordin- bayous destruction. Now in front of ary way. The shield also affords a St.. Quentin they see the Boches en- considerable measure of^comfort to gaged in the same work preparatory im Cha sin to their next flight. TI I, WOODLANDS OF FRANCO.. German Newspapers Exult Over the Havoc Wrought by Bun Armies. The brutal vindictiveness of the re- treating German forces .on French snit, when 'nothing that remotely re - seri blpd "propgrty" was left unspoil- ed, is described by the military cor- reoppndept of the Berlin "Lokal An- gel n- ge gger" i'n'this manner: "In the coul•se,of these lastinontha great stretches of French territory have been turned by us into a dead country, It varies in width from ton to twelve kilometers (six and a quar- to). .to seven and a hall or eight miles) and extends along the whole of our new position, presenting a terrible barrier' of desolation to any enemy hardy enough to advance ag'a'inst our new lines. No village or farm was left staraling on this glacis, no road was left passable, no railway -track, or embankment was left in being. Where once were woods there are, gaunt rgws' of stumps; the wells have been blown up; wires, cables, and pipe -lines de- stroyed. In front of our: naw posi- tions runs; like a gigantic ribbon, an empire of death." The Berlin Tageblatt is also found gloating over this destruction of the dwellings and property of helpless peasants in this burst of fine writing. "And the desert, a pitiful desert, leagues wide, bare of trees and under - NrWNPArmit? s'O* $Ar.» 1) itoir7-eterei I+ N11Wp .AND Jo,1t' ornces ter eaig In good Ontario !PC' s, The most upetul aqq-4laterssurli t t s 1 tOelnesesgs"• . j"eU I»porfnatlo,l oq vet') r iipn ta .le sen publishing t,om. Iisr id Adoinlrlu tr�see,'roreutu WIOP sLy,4zrr7P,q'o A1111ES. 'tyANT101)' 6 O DO PLAIN T and light solving at home, whole or Roads time. good pay, work cent any dls- tanee, obarges paid. Nona ,,lamp ntu'ticulars. National bianui'tt01,Pring Company, Montreal, church -towers laid out in ruins athwart the roads." - All this was done in the territory which the French armies had to cross, �,�ANT1J le — ISDADIViNIT13" TO Rharnsn tnais: .also t.I ra:ntte polisher. ,'4Vrlts CJeorito Af.._Paul, Sarnia, Ont, !•' 3,N, QI:It, TU3t O1iS, LUMI>a. ETO,, is) internal and 01 tterNtl• cured with- out pal,i by cur atmos treatment, Write us before too late, Or, tis/loran Medical f,Imlted, Co111n1'wepd, Qat;,,. When buying your Piano insist on having an u OTTO HJ al..." PIANO ACTION ION the paient by saving h p that pressure upon -the wound causes; nxinara's Liniment cures Distemper. the celluloid sheath is sufficiently strong toe act es a guard Another Geo. Wright Co., Props. If You Are Not Already Acquainted lot me introduce you to the Walker House (The House of Plenty), wherein home comfort is made the paramount factor. It is the one; hotel where the management lend every effort to make its patrons feel it is "Just like home." THE WALKER J- OUSE The Mouse of Plenty TORONTO, CANADA A large proportion of the American corn belt will harvest one of the greatest corn crops in history. Many fields will make over seventy-five bushels per acre in regions where the land is rich and the season long enough for corn to do its best. This will compensate for much of the de- ficiency of frosted areas. • MONEY ORDERS• Dominion Express Mane y Orders are on sale in live thousand offices throughout Canada. .. Put farm and garden implements in proper order before putting them away for the winter. There are ants in Medco which will advantage that seems to assure its A druggist can obtain au imitation attach a hive of bees and deatttoy it in extensive use as a surgical dressing Of MINARD'S LINIMENT from a a night. is the fact that it has proved wall Toronto house ata very low price, . adapted to the process of saline irri- and have it labeled his own product gallon in the treatment of wounds. This• -greasy imitation Is the poorest one we have yet seen of the many that every Tom, Dick and Harry has tried to introduce. Ask for MINARD'S and•.you will get it. . THE FALL WEATHER HARD ON LITTLE ONES Canadian fallweather is extremely hard on little ones. One day it is warm and tliright and the next wet and cold. These sudden changes bring on colds, cramps and colla, and unless baby's little stomach is kept right the result may be serious. There is nothing to equal Baby's Own Tablets in keeping the little ones well. They sweeten the stomach, regulate the bowels, break up colds a.nd make baby thrive. The Tablets are sold by, medi- cine dealers or- by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Their Desire. In a certain mill it was the custom to -pay the workers fortnightly. Find- ing this practice somewhat incon- venient, the employes decided to lay the matter before the manager of the firm. An Irishman, well-known for his persuasive powers, was selected as their delegate, and he duly appear- ed before the manager. "Well, Michael, what can I do for you to -day?" "Please, sir," said Mike, "Oi've been slot as a delegate by the workers to ask a favor of ye regarding the pay- ment of wages." "What do they want'?" "Sor, it's the desire of meself and of iviry, man in the firm that we receive our fortnightly pay each week!" LEMONS WHITEN AND ' BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands. At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one ban prepare a full quartos pint of the mast wonderful lemon shin softener and complexion beautifie"r, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle con- taining three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain -the juice through a fine cloth 50 110 lemon pulp gots 9s), -then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowuese and tau and is the ideal skin softener, Whitener and beautifier: • Just try it ! Get three ounces of orchard white et any drug stor0 an two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly frag• rant limon lotion and massage it daily into 'trite face, nook, arms and,., hands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red hende. A Gravel Crusher. A policeman, with more titan usual avoirdupois and expanse of shoe leath- er,e a little terrace, had passed h � p , with a bit of garden le front, when a after him. small bey ran 8ft0 "gallon, kiddie!" said the arm of the t law, genially, "what can I do for you?" "Mother eerie 0ic out," nitswered the youngster, "to ask you if you would Mind walking g up and down our path for a minute oe two. It's just been gravelled, tend we ain't got'a roller," Iltluard'o Zininteart fusee Atalithoila, Frozen corn makes good silage, says Prof. C. Larsen of South Dakota State College. Corn that has been frozen will not make quite as good - colored o* palatable silage, but when winter comes the cows will not dis- criminate against it. AKiaara's Liniment Cues target in Cows Try making a strawberry bed in rich; deep soil, The bed need not be large. Make the soil from three to five feet deep, as rich as it is deep, and compare the fruit from this plot for size and fhtvor with fruit gown on ordinary soil a foot deep. —o—o—o—o—o—o—s—o—o—o—o—o- PAIN 7 NOT A SIT ! q LIFT YOUR CORNS • 14 OR CALLUSES OFF No humbug I Apply few drops then just lift them away b with fingers. This new drug is an ether com- pound discovered by a Cincinnati chemist. It is called freezone, and can now be obtained In tiny bot- tles as here shown at very little cost from any drug store. Just ask for freezone. Apply a drop or two directly upon a tender corn pr callus and instantly the soreness disapp ears. Shortly you will find tho corn or callus so loose that you can lilt it off, root and all, with the fingers. Not a twinge of pain, soreness or irritation; not even the slightest smarting, either when applying freezone or afterwards. This drug doesn't eat up the cora or callus, but shrivels them so they loosen and come right out. It is no hum nig 1 It works like a charm. For a few cents You can got rid of every hard corn, soft corn or cop 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 got a little bottle for you from his wholesale house, /t'91r;i rt IOUlllj' leu' Ah! Tka 'a. t e Spot $loan's) Liniment coes right t4 it, Have you a rhournatic ache or a dull throbbing neuralsic p11:1? YOU cars find a quinic and effective relief in .Sloan's Liniment, 'Phousande of homes have this remedy handy for all external pains because time and time q5 iq ft i,aa proven the quiolrout relief. 5O ;lean and may to apply, too. No rub. hug, no °Cain. no Inconvonlanoo as •e the tang wish,p:anteru or ointments. 11 yin, 0500 ung moo.oLiuisnont,youwill aovor ire with.. out it. Conorouo sized bottles,. at all druggists, 25e., 5O .,;1:00. CUTICURA F1EAS BADDSFUEMET Ve'y Itchy. Burned at Night. Could Scarcely Sleep, Healed in One Week. "My face became very red. and swollen and broke nut in watery blisters. Then it got very itchy and used to bum so that at night Icould scarcely sleep. Later the blisters broke out forming hard scales and my face was badly disfig- ured. Then I used Cute eura Soap and Ointment and in about a week's time 1 was completely heeled." (Signed) Lloyd Brady, Breckenridge, Que., May 25, 1917. Skm troubles are quickly relieved by Cuticura. The Soap cleanses and nuit. ties, the Ointment soothes and heals, For Free SampleoEnch by hlail ad, dress post -card. "Cutieo.ra, Dept. A, Bosten, U. S. A Said everywhere.; tIl-3n Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen T'endone, Ligumentb, orl4ivaclee. Stops the famenessan.1 pain front a Splint, Side Bone el Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horse can be used. $2 a bottle at druggists or delivered. De- scribe your ease for special inctrnc= tions and interc:•ling horse Fuck 2M Tree: Lig SOMME, f „I thr, antiseptic. Ih,4nent for mankind, reduces Struincd,Tca'n liga- ments, Swollen Glands, Veins or Muscles; Heals Cuts, Sores, Uiccrn, Alloys r ra `sloe 81.00a boa'rat dn'••r:,r.:^'rc*;d. W. F. YOUNG, P. D. F., Fig Lyman OM i n c,.l, Can, absarhlue and Absorbic r.. arc ,nod is eel.0l f�y Could Do Ne Work. Now &'oong as a Mail. Chicago, I11.— tr about two years Y sufferer] from a female t c thl., so;Tr tc5 walk I i lil l!' otdon my own Ill work. 1 rcod rhout f Lydia E.1'i::ihham's i Vegetable: Com - .3 pound in the news - pap ' 'a and &ter• rnin.xl to try it. It brought almost iin- meai:.1 relief. My weakness has ee- tirely dieap1'peered and I never had bat- t to health. I weigh 165 pounds and am as strong as n man. I think money is well spent which pur- ehases Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."—Mrs. Jos. O'BsYAN, 1755 Newport Ave., Chicago, I11. ' The success of Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from displacements, inflam- mation, ulceration, trrcaguleriti"s. -peri- odic pains, backache, bearing -down feel - in flatulency, ipdigee:tion, diz:,inessr and nervous prostrati In. Lydia E. Vegetable Compound is the stan- dard remedy for female ills. • 555.5,1 e ® } p qty Eye Sed lists Tell 1 ,low ✓ri Strengthen Eyesight 50% In a eiesf ... o ,'1 li Instances a !A Free '1'rbeertptldnt 'You Can Havo Pilled and Use at Home. • Boston, Mass,—Victims of eyo strain and other eye weaknesses, and those who wear glasses, will be glad to know that Doctors and nye Specialiste now agree there is real hope and help for thein. Many whose eyes were failing say they have had their eyes restored and many who once wore glasses AaY they have thrown ..them away. One man says, after using It: I was al- most blind. Could net .550 to•1•ead at all. Now I can road everything with- out my glasses, and arty eyes do not hurt dreadfully. Now theyY fool fiwould tithe time. It was lino a miracle to mo.' A lady who used it says: The atmos- pito`; seemed hazy with or without• glasses, but after using this proscrip- tion for fifteendays everything seems Clear. I can road even fine print with- out glasses," Another who used it Says; I was bothered with eye strain caused by overworked, tired eyes which i duoed flot'oe headaches. I Have worn glosses for several years)both for dla- tanoo and work, and without them I Could not read my own !tame on an envelope or the typewriting on the machine before me. I can do both now, ah'd have discarded my long distance g�•lasses at cave het', I tqact count tits cluttering ioavos.on,the 12000 aoroaS Cho street ,tow which for green ucaro have looked 111(8 a dltn gr of blur. to 100, I ottilnot expressmy joy at what 3t hits dono for me:" 3t 13 believed that thousands Who Wear glasses eau now cllec I'd them 10 tl reasonable time, and multitudes more twill be able to strengthentheir oyes no as to-healbe spared th1o, tr ti . b le anex+• S asehAb of ;vet oU and getting' glasses. 3)1,. hack, an eye 3p8ola1lst et nearly twonty. veal's practice, says: "A patient cams t:o rn0 who was suffering' from lsleph:With; lid4r•glttalts with all the eonaemltent -. symlltonla, a's meshing aggiutlnation Rf tbg lith, vTi'OAIA otltl? iunctivitis. and ephbpD1ora. -nor eyes when not congested had the dull, suf- fused expression common to such cases. having run out of her medicine a friend suggested Bon -Opts,. She used this treatment and not only overonrn° her distressing condition, but strange and amasing as it may seem, so strengthened her eyesight that she was able to dispense with her distance glasses and her headache and neuralgia loft 000. In this instance 1 should say her eyesight was improved 10070: •3 have since verified thoeiIloacy of this treatment in a number of cases and have aeon the eyesight Improve from 25 to 7s per cant In a remarkably short time. I can say It works more quickly than any other remedy I have pre- scribed for the eyes." Dr. Smith, an oculist of wide ex33neri- once says: I have treated In private practice a number of serious opthalmic practice with Bon-Opto and am able to report ultimate recovery in both seuto anti chronic rases. Mr. 13. canto' to any ofilde suffering with an infected eye. The condition was so serious that an operation for ()nucleation monied Inv. porative: Before- resorting to the Operative treatment I proscribed Bon - Onto and in 24 hours the sooretion had lessened, inflammatory symptoms bo- ganto subside, and in seven days the 03o 1110 Oared and iettr,inad its nor- ;dat vision. Another ease of extreme convergent strabismus- (mon eyed) escaped the surgeon's knife by the timely ude of your collyrium, The tightened external Mimic'sios yielded to the soothing and anodyne affectsof a Oo, L always instilBon-Opto after rr moVal of foreign bodies and apply It locally ter all barna, ulcera and Spots on the eyeball or the lids for its th.orapeutio effOot. By gleans- ing tho r 1111ds Secreti ons and ac ting as la tette fOr to eyeball i se1f Ch renderel more 11,01.11.0. hence tho nrtnber o of oases of disoru•rt.oa glasses," Bonner says: "ate oy'en tvero !n bad. condition, owing to the severe strain arising from protracted Merck scopical research work, Bou-Opto used according to directions rendered a sur- prising service.. I found my eyes re-' markrtl,ly strengthened, so ranch ••o Y have pelt aside my glasses without dis- comfort. Several of any colleague.; Have also used it end tvo are agreed its td its results, in a foto slays, under my. observation, the eyes of an astigmatic case were so improved that glassoj have been discarded by tbo patent." Tye troubles of many deeerlptlnnO may be wonderfully benefited by fawn use of hon-Opto a.na 1f you want tp strengthen your eyes go to any thug store and get n bottle of Bon -Opts, tablets, Drop ono Bot-OpLo tablet 1n a fourth of a glass of water and let 16 dissolve. With tido liquid bathe the oyes two to four times daily. You, should notice your oyes clear up per+', ceptibly right from the etc rt, and tar damnation and redness will quickly disappear. If your eyes bother ye* even a little it is your duty Ito telt* steps to save them now before It Its halo saved their hopelessly t eylhadmight for their eyes in time. Note: A oft, physician to whom the aboard article was submitted, said: "Yes, Bon -Onto ll a remarkable oro romody its constituent Ind gradients aro well known to eminent eye apes clellets and widely prescribed by them, r haval used It vary successfully In my own practice Ont patients whose eyes were strained through over+• work or misfit glasses. I eau highly r000mmondi It in case of weak, warm, aohlug, sm itthr4s lulling, burning eves, rod lids, blurred ' vietoa o for eyes in nmed from exposure f Indto smoke, 0104j5 r fa DMA dost or wend, of is ono of the very w A g Mad o r 1 k onnaafr c ria Boos I feel anoaoi 1 c$iS,gu use in almost every fAmil$," Iton•opt0 is not di patriot medtchte or secrot remedy. it le ate ethical preparation, the formeta being printed Ott no package, Who ntasnfnaturers guarantee it kb In o oak ti ' I5 r cent i n w a m tref y n o lee ,ria e d n many fitatrtnaega, er round the rumen Oka d191 penned b0 nil good druggists, including general sotC. 'ramlyn aua sown stores;., also b