Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-11-22, Page 7��a'.��a���z.s•��rkss�s 44wc� 2 A It is' hard to break the chains of 1xabit. 'It 'Weir one man six months t� stop :saying Gee . Whiz." Perhaps Habit has kept you ordering "the same tea as before" when you had intended 'to buy Red Rose, This will be a reminder. So next time you will order Red Rose. You will,bd pleased, we are sure. Kept Good- by the Sealed Package COMMUNICATION DURING ATTACK •AN INCIDENT OF THE ,BATTLE OF THE SOMME. How Miscalculation on the Part of Range Finders Meant Loss to . Attacking Troops. Communication during an attack is• maintained by signalliares, runners, aviators and the telephone, says Cap- tain David Fallon, M.O.1 Each officer before he goes into action is provided with a Very pistol and colored lights. If the attack is successful and an en- trance has been made into the oppos- ing trenches the officer in' charge of that particular sector will fire two green lights in quick. succession. This. signal, seen by the artillery observ- ing officer, tells him that the attack has been successful and that he has now to lift his barrage fire ahead of the advancing troops and so cut off any reinforcements which the . Boche commander might contemplate send- ing up. The•gunneit then raise their sights a few hundred yards and con- centrate their fire on the Boche re- serve lines. ' Signals of Distress. Should the attack fail, as -often was the •case in the early part of the war, when we were ,outnumbered in arms, men and guns, the officer in command would send up two red lights in quick succession and try to get in touch with the observing officer through runs; vers and the signallers operating the telephone. During the attack on Moquot Farm in theres g t Somme battle our artil- lery was sending over a hurricane of fire and was supposed to be playing Its•hymn of hate on the Boche lines. But when we reached the opposing front lines we were met with a terrific �--- hail of bullets from machine guns and rifles. Our barrage had failed to reach the Boche trenches through faulty. observation and we found the (duns standing in the trenches 'with their rifles pointed at us. I sent up my two ledli lights, which were then the distress signal, or S.O.S., and sent back two runners to tell the fo nvard observing officer -what had happened,. Since the signallers carrying the tele- phone wires had been killed, A shell ' had fallen among them. An Unsuccessful Attaels. • Most of my men in this attack were killed or dangerously wounded, and , how I escaped• is still a marvel to me. Seeing the hopelessness of my posi-' • tion' I gave orders- for my men to change direction half left and man by manto fall back into a disused trench . not far away. Of the sixty men I had • taken into that action only two and myself es- caped unscathed. • Eight had slight bullet wounds, fourteen.<vere danger- ously wounded and the . remainder were either killed outright or taken prisoners. At night• time those that could be moved were sent back to the Held dressing station. With a couple of mon who had escaped hurt I 'crawled over the battlefield and ren- dered first aid to those needing, as- sistance and removed the, identifica- tion discs and letters from those who • hacl'paid the great price for the cause. Scientists have counted 276 speken languages and dialects in Africa. TWO 4E000 GRAINS are combined in the perfected ready -cooked' cereal —• iS This appetizin-. blend of Wheat andlaarley is over 98% Food. IECONgi'"' CAL HEALTHFUL, DELiGt1T UL :t':9, 0'S 1 ?iar'1,$f' THE CRUISER'S BEAR. Government Surveyors Encounter a Full -Grown Bruin. In The Log of a Timber Cruiser Mr. W.•P. Lawson gives a striking il- lustration of the clangers that the hardy government surveyors not in- frequently face. The crew was run- ning the line down a narrow ravine at one side• of the forest boundary. It was late afternoon, says Mr. Lawson —nearly time to knock off work, Con- way walked fifty yards or more In ad- vance of . the' others. Wetherby, at the moment, was helping Wallaee•with the plane table. At a sudden, unusual sound.,in •the brush to the left, Wallace turned aside to investigate. The next in- stant he .came back at full speed, with his eyes popping and his legs working wildly. Ten yards behind him, snarl- ing and fighting the brush, aumbere a full-grown' cinnamon bear. Th beast was in a.towering rage, cause by a steel trap and eight feet of hes chain that trailed from -his 'lrrisone hind foot. Had it not been for the' drag he would doubtless have caugh Wallace before he had run twent feet. As it was, Wallace reached a oak tree a few strides ahead of th bear and "shinned" up the trunk. When Wetherby+ saw W'hliace wit the bear in his wake he at once follow ed a natural and compelling impuis to climb a tree. Conway, warned b Wetherby, also sought a convenien oak. But the infuriated bear began t climb after Wallace. Wetherby, th only one of the trio who carried a re velvet., immediately lett the limb= on which he sat and called- out to his be- leaguered_chief, "Sit tight, Wally! I'll be over in a minute!" - To go gunning for an angry bear with a- thirty-eight caliber pistol is a 1business. as well as risky WallaceW Conway endeavored to turn Wetherby from the attempt. "Go'back, W,etherbyi" yelled his su- perior, as the axeman approached. "Shoot him from the tree. He'll get you sure now if you wound ]rim!" "I haven't enough cartridges to waste any," was all that Wetherby replied as he ran under the tree and took careful aim at the beast above. • A shot sounded, and the bear's head snapped to one side as if it had been struck sharply with 4, club; his great muscles relaxecl and he slid scramb- lingly down with his heavy claws rip= ping long,deeprooves in the bark of g the tree. Wetherby circled ahout,'excited but alert, waiting• to put five more soft - nosed' bullets .into the wounded animal. •A moment later he saw that they were not needed. • The first ball, entering behind the ear, had penetrated the thin coating of muscle there, broken through the skull and pierced,the brain. It was a perfect Shot. "Good shooting,.old boy!" cried Con- way, as he slapped the delighted marksnian on the back. Wallace's way was different: with a silence more eloquent than a torrent of thanks, he grasped Wetherby's hand and wrung it fervently. WAR AND GARDENS. Horticultural Products Not Always Indicative of Peace and Quiet. The Bible tells us that all • the trouble of the world was hatched in a garden, and certainly more than one war has sprung'from the same peaee- ful retreat. In English history :`.the most famous garden in this connec- tion' is the Temple Garden, between Fleet Street and the Thames. There the first act of the famous- Wars of the Roses took place. This war, -which lasted thirty years, and included twelve pitched battles, was between the rival houses of York and Leicester. One day in the Temple Gardens the •Duke of York plucked a white rose and called on his supporters to do the same. The Duke of Somerset, who stood for the reign- ing, king, Henry VL, of Lancaster, plucked a red rose and commanded Ms supporters to do likewise. ,,Thus did 'these badges become the symbols of contending forces, and when they were combined "in the Tudor hose it became the symbol of unity. The Man of Sarajtvo, whose death is costing millions of lives in the pre- sent world war, was a poseur of the Kaiser type and reckoned to be very'. aesthetic, He was supposed t0 dote on roses, and it was factually in a gor- geous rose garden that, shortly before his .tragical death,he stet the Kaiser, and amid the perfume of ,the roses these two arch -scoundrels potted this War. And we Have it on Mr, Gerard's au- thority that the seed which grew into the entrance of Atinerica ilito the world war was sown in the shapckof a telegram written.by the Kaiser in a little garden, Seated under 'a 'nig umbrella et a sinall table." So from Eden to Potsdam gercictis have not always been fruitful of rest and quietude, ' d e d vi is t Y e e y A PENNY rsoBLEM, Uniferm Currency and Coinage Throughout British Empire. Finan'ciai experts' are concerned about the English 'petjny,,says a Lon- don paper, Experts in currency re- form contemplate an alteration in its value; but the problem is whether the penny is,•to be Worth more or worth a' Tittle less: It is by no means an easy :affair to decide. Railway and 'bus people want a nevi penny which % will be worth more, so that they Will thereby secure additional revenue Without increasing penny faree. If the penny is decrees- edit will upset their arrangements, fbr they will lose money unless they irherease fares, and they can hardly put on a farthing, and an extra half= penny would place much of their traf- fic in peril. = As is known, the Dominions Royal Commission advocates a uniform cur- rency and .coinage in the Empire, based op the decimal system. The gen' eral view is that the sovereign must remain the essential unit, and divided into a• thousand parts or mils.. • This would allow the present half-so/el reign, fibrin, shilling, and sixpence to remain, but the copper money would }lave to be altered. Here coiner the point. The penny must either be a four -mil piece, which is 96d., or a Ove- rall piece, which is 1.2d. It is -a nice problem for financial expert,p. As a matter of fact, not very long ago the British Government was seriously thinking of minting three -halfpenny pieces. RHEUMATISM CURED, In the days of our fathers and grand- fathers rheumatism was thought to be the unavoidable penalty of middle life and old_, age, Almost every elderly person ` had, rheumatism, as well as many young people. Medical science did not understand the trouble—did not -know that it was rooted, In the blood, It was -thought that rheumatism was the mere 'effect of exposure to cold and damp; and it was treated with llridmemts and hot applications, which sometimes gave temporary re- lief, but did not.eure the trouble. In those days there were thousands of "rheumatic cripples. Now, medical science understands' that 'rheumatism is a disease of the blood, and; that with good, rich, rod blood any man or woman of any age can defy rheu- matism. It cap be cured by killing the poison in the blood which causes it. There are many elderly people who o have never felt a twinge of rlreuma- e tires, and many who have conquered - it by simply keeping their blood ries} and pure. The blood making, blood enriching qualities of • Dr. Williaans Pink Pills is becoming every year more widely known, and it the more general use of these pills that has robbed rheumatism of its terrors. At the first sign of poor blood, which is shown by loss of appetite, palpitations, dull skin and dim eyes, protect your- self :against the further ravages' of disease by tarring Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They have cured thousands of pedpie if you give them a fair trial they will 'not disappoint you, - You can get these.pills through any dealer M. medicine or by nail at 50 cents• a box or six boxes -for ,$2.5'0 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Bi cels 41 e � I,Ont. "SHOUTING TELEPHONES." New Device ForDirection N v 1 i and Control of Field Batteries. The United States War Department has recently trade some interesting experiments with "shouting tele- phones" for the direction and control of batteries of field guns. Sten gunfire, of course, is always directed by a battery commander, who ordinarily phones his orders to subor- dinate officers, for repetition to the gunners. Incidentally to their repeti- tion mistakes are sometimes made. But the•shouting telephone threws out sounds loudly and clearly enough to be heard without holding a.receiver to the ear. Attached -to the receiver is a megaphone horn, and the spoken words issuingfrom f o the latter are clearly audible at a distance of twenty feet or more. An idea under consideration is that of attaching a receiver and horn to each gun of a battery, the object in view being to permit the several can- noneers to set their guns (for range and elevation), directly from the bat- tery commander's orders. It is thought that• such'an arrange- ment would be of special value where the several guns of,the battery were located_ in emplacements at consider- able distances apart, as is .common- ly the case in present-day warfare. A GRAND-, MEDICINE • • FOR LITTLE ONES Pack glass and china in hay that is slightly darnli, This will prevent the ,articles from-elipping about, ss 7+Riittiya,y xiliiffllOaI Owns (gilds, &o. Baby's Own Tablets are a grand medicine for little ones. They are a. mild' bit thorough laxative ; are ab - soli tely safe ; easy to give and. nevor fail to erre any of the minor ills of little ones, Concerning them MM. - Jas. S Hiistey, Gleason Road, N.B., writes .—"I have used ilinhylf Own Tablets and Have found then perfect- ly satisfactory for my little ono." The Tablas ate sold by medicine dealers or' by instil at 2s Conte a box trent The Dr, Williams Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont, The Prince on Leave. . When the Prinoe_ef Wales gains a few clays' leave • from the .Prost he leads a strenuous life in London, Early in the inerning, with one of his brothers or another friend, he walks from Buckingham Palace to o West End club, where a genre of ,isquasli racquets is indulged in. Then comes a rub -down and a swim in a plunge -bath. A , walk back to the Palace finds our soldier -prince ready for ai hearty ".real, to be :followed by a soviet of seelal engagements, a Bond Street tobacco -shop is a lino of cigar -boxes marked "Reserved for HRH. the Prince of Wares,' The smokes 11.0 used try" gifts to fntimete frien cis, Don't say "oreakfeid Food "—say f4 Shredded Wheat"=for while you no doubt mean Shredded Wheat, you may get one of those _mushy porridges that are fa poor - substitute for the crisp, delicious sirireds, of baked whole wheat—"that supply all the nutriment for` ' half day's work. Two Biscuits With milk or cream make a nourishing, meal at a cast Of a few cents. Made in Canada.' PECULIAR IDEAS OF BEAUTY. Opinions Regarding Feminine Lovell- • nes Vary Greatly. It is amazing how ideas of beauty vary with latitude and Longitude. In Japan, the professional beauty loves to appear with golden teeth; in India she prefers them stained red, but in certain parts of Sumatra no lady who respected herself would condescend to have any front teeth at all. They are removed the moment they appear, and strictly suppressed if they should•. try again.i In Persia, anything but an aquiline nose is "eff." Been quite a decent snub -nose is out of it. But in Uganda a lady is chiefly sought on account of her Indiarrubber nose. In Japan it must be "tip -tilted," have a heavenly direction, and in Britain any sort of old nose will pass so long as it is not everlastingly poking itself into other people's business. In eastern countries red hair and warts are in the same category; but coming west as far as Constantinople, where red hair is very uncommon, we find it .just as greatly admired, and henna used to make it red if it isn't. In England "Titian' red," as it is call- ed, alled, is greatly admired now, and any woman novelist who wants to be among the "biggest sellers" must give her heroine Titiau red hair. Yet in Africa a crop of the blackest, curliest, closest hair imaginable makes a girl the belle of the kraal, especial- ly if she be plump, with piggy eyes, thick lips, a nose like an India -rubber shoe, and a skin that shines like a cooking stove. HOW THEY DIG TRENCHES. Steam -Driven Ditching - Machines Will Be Introduced. The trenches on the battle fronts in Europe have been dug almost 'wholly by hand labor. The work, of course, has been of an extremely laborious clescription. In the aggregate it. has doubtless far exceeded the labor that would have been required to dig the Panama Canal with pick and shovel. It is now proposed to use steam - driven ditching machines, and con- serve energy for the business of fight- ing. g LEMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion for a few cents and see for yourself. What girl or woman hasn't heard of lemon juice to remove, complexion blemishes ; to whiten the shin and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the -hidden beauty ? Bat lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritating, and should be mixed with orchard white this way. Strain through a flue cloth the juice of two fresh !omens into a bottlia containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion. at about the cost one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream, Be sure tq strain the lemon juice so no pulp gets into. the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure .and fresh for months. When applied daily to the face, nock, arms and hands it should help to bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin, Any_ druggist will supply three ounces -of orchard White et very little cost and the grocer has the lemons, Clock Hee 52 Dials... On Beauvais Cathedral there is a clock -which is composed of 92,000 separate pieces, having 52 dial plates. This clock gives the time in the big capitals of the world, as well 'as the. local hour, the day of the week and month, the rising and setting of the sun, the phases of the moon and tides, as well as considerable other infertile. - tion, rizinaril's i',iniment 'Cures IDlpltthesils. The largest walnut grove in Eng- land is at Kempston, near Bedford. It contained at first three hundred and sixty-five trees, one for' each day of the year, which were "planted about FUTURE OF SOUTH .44wF1I L Itemerlcrble Speech 1)elivet•'e4 Mgr Geer. Smuts in Sheffield, Lieut. -General SIr .. J'an Smuts, speaking at a luncheon at Hadfield's Works in Sheffield, England, recently, in referring to the chairman's intro- deetion of him as a "modern miracle," modestly said, he was olily one of the millions of mid= miracles of to -day. General Smuts' referred to the close commotion Sheffield bad had with South Af%•ica. IIe told the audience they must expeetmomentous develep- Monts there in the future, gouth Africa had played a very great part since the war began:• It was curious that the country Germany first hoped would break away from the Empire turned^out to be one of the greatest, bulwarks of the British Empire dur- ing the war. (Applause.) . "When this war is over Aid stock is being taken and the question is ask. ed, Who"lcnocked thelargest numbers of corners, off the British Empire?— (loud laughter). -I see you anticipate the answer; modesty forbids me to continue. That is not the whole of the miracle. The best ' of. it isthis tremendously important work has been done by men who fought Great Britain seventeen years ago to the last ditch. Tens of thousands of my own stalwarts of Veldtmen, whom I loved to the bottom of my soul, comrades of old times, were the men who went with General Botha and myself to Southwest Africa and conquered that country. I think they were the only people - capable of doing it. They needed no commissariat, no prepara- tion, but went forward, to the utter astonishment of the Germans, took that country and defeated them. Tens of thousands of these same people, all stalwart heroes of the Veldt,who fought you to the flitter end, went with me to East, Africa and conquered that country, except for a small malarial area. "If you talk of the age of miracles, there's the miracle. Let us give credit where credit is due. The moral of it all is that the people who apo capable 1, of doing these 'things and of rising'to these heights are also capable of a very great future. I say to you peo- ple of Sheffield: Keep your' eye on South Africa." —o 0 0 0 0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0 o WiTH THE FINGERS o SAYS CORNS LIFT OUT o WITHOUT ANY PAIN 0 o 0 0 0 —o— Sore corns, hard Paras, soft corns on any kind of a corn can shortly be lift- ed right out with the fingers if you will apply on .the corn a few drops of freezone, says a Cincinnati authority, At ldttie cost one can get a sunup bottle of freezone at any drug stare, which will positively rid one's feet of every cora 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 orf 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• tlo for you from his wholesale drug house. Feed and eggs will probably he higher this winter than they have ever been known. More than ever then it will be necessary to make every pound of feed tell in eggs or flesh. To do this, it will require vigorous culling of the flock, good housing and care, and business methods in buying the feed and selling the product. Minaad's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,—Last winter I received great benefit from the use of MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT in a severe attack of LaGrippe, and I have frequently proved it to be very effective In eases of Inflammation. Yours, W. A. HUTCHINSON. In many instances . the clearing of trees from a slope has encouraged a washing of soil that not only-rnins the slope, but also buries the produc- tive field ,at ids foot, and greatly in- creases the damage done by- broolcs at flood conditions. MONEY ORDERS , Pay your out of town accounts by Dominion Express Money Orders. Five dotlars'eomts three cents. Soils plowed . in fall become Hirer by the -action of freezing and thaw- ing during the winter. .. Stiaard's Liniment Cures G-arttef'iii Cows Orange juice is a preventive of scurvy among children who use pasteurized mills. -The Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist g offing the8 4i O gtl TO IA A9ti.7J'E:1X PIANO AO1ION a century ago by the then owner of ll. the farm, who remarked that 'wens , would never cease and the timber' 'would always be wanted for gun -stock, 411'141 (fR!1 n Granulated Eyelids; ' A, M'i sire � yes, Cyca Irillnmed by " .sun, "lust and Wb,dquickiy OR as reilst id by Aittrino, Tey It in your LycsandIn Ilaby's Eyss. SaSicsttios,Just EyaComfort IVfftdricoEye SeratetiymosXsnoeset`tiofi a'neunn'u hyo s lvo, in' Taboo enc. Por nook of the Peva -- P. Asic Merino tlye liiiennea0Y (Co., 'Chicago d Calves fnfestod with lice do not thrive, Lice are difficult to get rid of when once the barn is infested, Washing the calf thoroughly with it two to five per cont, coal tar disinfect- ant such as vel olsuln of crcolin is ef- fective, effe irll's r+fninteiit theme PietelhReg, ISSUE No, Apples, cored end filled with chopped dates or figs, then baked, hake an excellent, bree]cfast diali, teaopvo:a 14-44 LA1la,000$. rOttfiJ'flY, PLA9, Deane, Senor. onionswant d, tllsM- eat nriots oven, d, D. Arsenault, 11931 St Catharine „Nast, Montreal, ;• itMAVEN AND'i1U'1.(;,"-. Sweden - A berg's f seat work oti a real world beyond acid the life attar death • 4.00 pages • only 25 cents, postiiaid, lir. R. Laws 4s0I) 17ucllml „venue, l'orvnto. CANQEII, TUMOns, LUMPS, ETC,. Internal anti external, cured with- out .nala by our h0 me treatment. Writs Vs before tot late. Dr, Hellman Medlepl Co., '.naked. Colfingwood, Ont. Th!$ Concerns •Mapie SWIM 111141101.3 , Id Bettor be on the safe, side and place- youl' order now instead of risking disappointment daring the March rush. . Write for flee booklet gtv particulars and prices OP our "Champion,' Evaporator and all up- to-date emirates for which we are headquarters, THE GRIMM MNFG, CO„ LIMITED 58 Wellington St., Montreal, Que. fake Your Ow i Bread ' Save your Money Enjoy good Health ease. Domestic economy Is going to win the war against the Hun, Ss.nitattee home methods of food are• Duration will win the - war against ails - Victory in both instances is assured by using' the r 'Dread Mixer ,;_e. Four loaf size $2.75 Eight loaf size $3.25 The "Can tick" is quick, clean. efficient and eoonomtea!,, Buy from your local dealer, or order from us direct, all charged paid, E. T. WRIGHT CO., LIMITED HANil LTtS'N, CANADA. FIELD CASHIERS ' W,00�w'u+e�mrru�,,m•;va„srcarys� ale AYTAS � ERS ' � i 6t xvsa.'iw'ra�x' IN FRANCE CASI•i DOIVHNIONEXPRESS �_ FOECNCHEQUES THE ASST WAY TO SEND MONEY TO THE BOYS IN THJI TRENCHES Toronto's Famous hbiei Marry People Make a B -Line for the Walker House (The House of Plenty) as soon as they arrive in Toronto. The meals, the service and the home -like appointments constitute the magnet that draws them there. Noon Dinner 60c. Evening Dinner 75c. THE WALKER HOUSE Torwf`r0•e Famous llolet TORONTO, CANADA Rates Reasonable Geo. Wright Br Co„•Props. How to Cure Biliousness Doctors warn against remedieses containing powerful drugs acrd alcohol. "The Extract of Roots, long known as Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, has no dope or strong ingredients; it cures indigestion, biliousness and constipation. Can be had at any drug store.” Get the genuine. 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. 3 sta ssessistst saatasassgarsites;cl The( .Jon's : Yallo IaSautheuternOregon isa'hoautiiul, tettlle 'dlslrtctthatyou ought tefnrattlgats. Many isbrewd farmers era buying theta, because, 'their ken business foresight tolls them that tenement will pay big returns franc the' natural Increase In the valga of this lane. along, to say nothing -of rho big craps that they can pro1uw.t, Prices low; terms easy" Ask Ina feleuthsntln Information, alma; Maly free.. ' - !f. A. Sinus, do'loniraiice aleAwrriel A4i o . Union Paeitia System Booml51e.. U. P. B,dd., Omaha, Usk, SPIN TROUBLES THAT TORTLRE and' Disfigure Quickly Healed by CUTICURA . SOAP and ja.• OINTMENT Such as eczemas, rashes,; pilnples, . dandruff, sore hands and most baby. skin troubles. Sample Each Free ' by Mail With 32-p. Skin. Book. Address post- card: ostcard: "Cuticura, Dept. N, Boston, U. S. A. Sold throughout the world. ran Rheumatic Aches Drive them out with Sloane Liniment, the quick -acting, 000thingliniment that penetrates 'without rubbing and relieves the pain, So much cleaner than mussy piasters or ointments; it does not stain the skin or clog the pores. Always have a bottle in the house for the aches and pains of rheumatism, gout, lum- bago, strains. sprains, stiff joints and all muscle soreness. Gonoroun size bottles at all druggists. 21n,, 500, $1.00. OPE ATM7 ' AVERTED Philadelphia, Pa.—"One year ago 1 was vary sick and/ suffered with pains in my side and back until I nearly went crazy. I went to different doctors and they all said I had female trouble and would not get any relief until I would be operated on. I had suffered forfour years before this time, but I kept get- ting worse the more medicine I'took. Every month since I was a young girl I had suffered with cramps in my sides at periods and was never regular.. I saw your advertise- ment in the newspaper and the picture of a woman who had been saved front an operation and this picture was im- pressed on my mind. The doctor had: given me only two more days to make sip my mind sent sent my husband to the drug store at once fora bottle of Lydis E.Pinkham's VegetableCompound; and . believe me, I soon noticed a change and when I had finished the third bottle I was cured and never felt better. I grant you the privilege to publish my letter and am only too glad to let other worsen know of my cure. "Mrs, THos. McGON- 1GAL, 3432 Hartville Street, Plrila., Pa. . tel Bc'i CorollaE Coronado Beach, California Near San -Diego POLO, MOTORING, TENNIS, BAY AND SURF BATHING, FISHING AND BOATING. 18 -Hole, Go!! Course Ilotel is equipped throughout with Automatic Sprinkler System. AMERICAN PLAN JOHN J. HERMAN, Manager e...nsnrsz r; r , sty - a^ n,r mussy" ••.., hi er- or 1 WHEELOCif ENGINE, 181142. New Automatic Valve Typo, Complete with supply and exhauat pipings flywheel, Pte. WI.II accept $1.,200 cash for immediate sale. 1 ELECTRIC GENEII,ATOR, '0 $.V6?., 1:1.0.120 Volts D.C. Will accept $426 cash for Immediate tale. 1 LARGE LEATRER BELS'. Double, Endless. 24 inch >r 70 ftl Will accept $500,, for immediate eale,. although belt Is In excellent con. ditlon and new o ,e would cost about $600. PULLEYS, Large size, 26x66—$30 ; 12x80—.$20 ; 1g!- ie48—$i2 ; 12x36--$8. 2 BLOWERS OR FANS, Buffalo snake. Ono 10 inch, other 14 Inch discharge --$80 each. IUIiAL ESTATES CORPORATION, LTD. 60 Front St. West, Torontq