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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1919-03-20, Page 71 Just the Same The troop train rumbles in along the rails,. P110 'Welcoming Committee talk de- tails - 4. woman wonders will she laugh or cry, And watches other women waiting by,. The whistle ,blows" the drums beat full and fast, holds hint to her heart—at last! at last! son who's left eif three—dis- figured, lame, But in his mither's eyes he's just the same! MONEY ORDERS. When ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order. Nearly 3,000,000 pounds of hams, valued at 570,000 taels (about $650,- 000 United States currency) were ex- ported from China during 1917. Great Britain was the principal importer. The Chinese consume vast quantities of 'hams and pork. Pigs are raised everywhere in China. Minard's Liniment Cares Stuns, Eta. "No affection, save friendship, has any eternity in it. Friendship ought, therefore, always to be cultivated in love itself."—W. R. Alger. YOU CAN'T FIND ANY DANDRUFF, AND HAIR STOPS COMIU OUT Save your hair! Make it thick, wavy, glossy and beautiful at once. Try as you will, afteran application of Danderine, you can not find a single trace of dandruff er falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but`real- ly new hair—growing all over the scalp. A little .Danderine' immediately doubles the beauty of your hair. No difference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking' one small strand at a time. The effect is im- mediate and amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incom- parable lustre, softness and luxuri- ance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a small bottle, of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and prove that your. hair is as pretty and soft as any—that it has been neglected or injured 'by careless treatment. A small trial bot- tle will double the beauty of your hair. ow to Cure Biliousness Doctors warn against remedies containing powerful drugs and alcohol. "The Extract of Roots, long known as Brother 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 • $asoma :s s•-aigliDvrssarra rrard 4" THE W AB OF KING GEORGE V. ARDUOUS WORK DURING FOUR AND A HALF YEARS OF WAR. Hee Reviewed Over 2,000,000 Troops, Visited, Over 000 Hospitals, Decorated 12,000. In au article on the King, au Englisll writer snye: • Good nlcl George! This may not at feel lath .appear to be a very re- spectful way of hailing one's sever - ,!en. let it is the about that raug out in I.1yde lark when His Majesty re- viewed the Legion that marches un- der the Silver Badge, Among 'Eng-. lishi en the adjective "old" when ap- plied to a man indicates not age, but' al0 •hien. That. he is loved: It was In this sense that it was applied to the King in Hyde Park, and none knew better than our sovereign how to take it. it told hint, indeed. the. dppt.h and homely affection in which lie is hold. And: it is betraying no royal confidence ;'o say that it went straight to the hety't. To parody a famous line, "AU the world loves a worker.'' And how King George has worked for the nation 'these past four years and throe menthe! During that period he has been a stranger to holidays. It is donbtfnl if he has hall more than ten consecutive days in his beloved Nor- folk home, if as much. Messages to Seven Fronts. The barest recital of a fraction of what he Inas accomplished, accom- panied often by her IYlajesty, makes one marvel at the endurance and high sense of duty which could accomplish this and much more, His Majesty 11as carried' out well over 200 inspections, reviewing in doing so over 2,000,000 troops; no division has left these 81101'ee for any of our seven fronts— for we were fighting on seven fronts at one time ---without either being in - 'enacted by the King, or, if circumstan- ces rendered that impossible, hearing a farewell message from him: Ile has visited with 1111 sympathetic smile and kindly word the wounded in more then 000 hospitals; lie has gone through 150 munition factories, charm- ing all, men, women and girls, with his bonhomie, and has presented with his own hand more than 12,000 de- corations W011 011 the field of battle. Four separate visits have green paid to the Grand Meet—the last of which was on the eve of the surrender of the Garden navy. On shore, naval bases and depots have been visited thirteen times. There has not been an air -r on a Elution district but his Majesty, ac- companied by the Queen, has tint driven to the devastated district to express his sympathy with the suf- ferers. A Hard -Working King. The Bing is :probably olio of the busiest amen in the Empire, hie work being in many unthought-of and MI - heard -of Ethers. For this kit'. Lloyd George vouched when 110 said: "There is one 1111111 who is working as hard as the hardest worked n1a11 in this coun- try, and he is the sovereign of the realm." The writer then proceeds to tell how he does it: To get through the enormous amount of work wheel). comes to his Majesty's table, a 'private secretary , end two assistant secretaries are ne- cessary. For there are many State malters which the King;and the Ding alone can pass. Half -past nine in the morning sees his Majesty at work, and he would be a rash nian who names the hour when all was done. For there is one thing which the ruler of this vast Empire insists '011—n0 work that can otherwise bo dealt with must be left over to the next day. He is "a clean -desk man." The writer then proceeds to tell of the domestic side of his life, showing how every regulation issued by the food or coal controller was obeyed to the very letter in his household, fireplaces being reduced in size, light- ing out down, and heavy reductions made in all laundry aocounts. - No stored -up food was ever found at Buckingham or Windsor such as Pots- dam revealed. Flower -beds grew vege- tables for the nation; in short, 11e and his family diel their best to share the people's cares and sacrifices. — A THOUGHTFUL.PRISONER. Kept Record of Comrades' Death in Captivity. The thousands of missing British prieon.el's in Germany constitute one of the most pathetic tragedies of the war. The number unaccounted for would doubtless be greater still had it not been for the thoughtfulness of same who also suffered in German prisons but survived. One recently returned prisoner, who served as orderly in a German hospi- tal, kept -a record : of all the British patients who' died there; and since Ills home -coining has written to their kinsfolk enclosing a copy -of a -photo- graph, which 11e had specially taken for the purpose, of the English corner of the hospital cemetery., Theman who .gets, up in, the morn- ing with .his ,work planned for the day has gat fit .partly done. - Harness to suspend a 'basket from a fruit picker'sf.shoulders and •leave both hands free that been invented. Those who bring sunshine to the live3 of others cannot beep it from, themselves,—Barrie. '• WYr! el ver here-- ver Y : ere TAG Chewing Tobacco IL" is appreciated by both of Canada's war units --tilo,o who fought hi Flandersand those who served at home. It is also enjoyed by civilians of all classes throughout Canada and is recognized as being ,8-m41( ,lF.. a -°-;IOWA levelee. ?z Yr'eiseee",:„SneterKN.7 BETS Eg FROM HERE &HERE A Conclusive Test. "Has the war made much difference to you?" asked the new servant who had been engaged in an English household. "The mime...laid we'd got to econo- mize, so we've 'ad margarine with meals in the kitchen," replied the old cook. "Doesn't she have it, then?" "Not 'er" She says as 'ow it doesn't suii: 'er digestion. But there ain't nothing wrong with 'er digestion. We know that, for we often sends 'er up )margarine, and 'ave butter ourselves." A Nice Surprise. Mr. 7ouos rang the bell at the new doctor's house. Usually he went to his old family doctor, but this new man happened to live nearer and It was an urgent call. The doctor's wife answered the ring, "You wish to see the doctor?" she said. "Couldn't you come to -morrow morning?" "Why?" said Jones. "Isn't the doc- tor in?" "0h, yes, he's in," said the lady wistfully, "but you're his first patient, and I'd like you to 001110 as a surprise for him to -morrow. You see, it's his birthday!" "As You Were." A certain Irish sergeant was exceed- ingly wroth when he discovered that one of his men had paid a visit to the regimental barber and had come back without his moustache. "Private Jones," he roared, "who on earth gave yez permission to have that moustache cut off?" "No one,' answered Jones, uncon- cernedly; "I thought it would improve my appearance." "Improve your appearance wid a face like yours!" bawled'the enraged sergeant. "If yez don't have it on again at the afternoon parade to -day, there'll be trouble!" A Philosophical Lover. So many romantic and pathetic anecdotes are related of precious love letters, cherished in trench and battle by gallant lovers in war-scaerod France, that the reflections of a pen- sive Frenchman in L'Horizon, the journal of the pcilus, make a refresh- ing change. He, too, had borne about with him a letter from his ladylove, Tea , and. Coffee Hurt Mantj People They may be hurt' ing you. Nervous- - nese, headache, heart or stomach troble are pretty sure indications Wh'y'not try - .. a�;'able drirink 41ol1. free -froi caffein , he drug in Tei. and -coffee. Postunn has a rich delicious flavor. . At Grocers verywhere 'There:5 a Season " ISSUE No. 11--'19 a person, evidently, more tart than tender. "Nature 1s kind," philosophized the sorrowful pollm, "She places the remedy near the ill and often cures, ' l as everyone has seen ail yevil A 111 ,. V by �r woman, too much loved, sent me a let- ter so cruel that I, didn't even have E the strength, to tear it up, but carried: it around in my pocket for weeks. Onequartered when I was ' hi a stable, I took my coat off and hung it The Latest Design - �z1r✓,o,cL,caFtuueuitfiL�'4:a• s up. , "The next day, no letter. A cow had eaten it. Nature is kind." AIRMEN HE GEN. ALLENBY Capt. Alan Bott of R. A. F. Tells of Palestine Campaign. Captain. Alan ,Bott• of the Royal Air Forces recently arrived in New York from Palestine and Syria, where he served. with Gen. Allenby's arniy in its march through the Holy Land. and its fight against the Turkish; army led by German officers. He was shot down and captured in Palestine, imprisoned in Damas- cus, sent to Asia Minor, and finally to Constantinople. He escaped in dis- gulise and reached a port in Russia which he Sound in control of the Ger- mans and the Boisheviki, and finally got away to Bulgaria. Previous to Ins adventures in the near East Captain Bott, 'who is twenty-six years of age, flew for two years along the Western front and was shot down during one of ,the battles of the Somme, but escaped capture. ,Speaking of the Palestine cam- paign, Capt. Bott said:— "The Turks are good at fighting on the ground, but they could' not fly, and their airplanes were all manned by Gel -mans or Austrians. Our job was to snake flights across to Naz-: areth, Nablouswhich was ancient Sechesm—and other points +held by the enemy, and to do low strafing, which seared the Mohammedan sol- diers to death, as they were convinc- ed we were in league with the evil one. Other machines were used for bombing the forts held by the enemy, but great care was taken to spare the holy places, like Nazareth, etc. "The British aviators did a great deal toward making' the success of General Allenby's army in Palestine and Syria. They turned the Turkish. retreat into an absolute rout by bombing all the signal stations so that the enemy could not ascertain the movements of its own armies and they sat on the airdromes and did not let a dingle German plane go up to make signals," r - The Peace Call. teMOC6LL NEW NOSES, EYELIDS, BROWS. Work of Canadlan Army Dental Corps Does Not 'Confine Roe If to Teeth. No department in tee n, t has bsen more praised and Pile '-rrti 1 od the Canadian Arin Iient,,i.1 1 Lt work accomplished be this owe,' lies not only been a large ltlttu1 in mem- tattling cfr111 tailing the health, and comfort of the army, but has prevented ,aid eellevee , untold suffer . W; rr, the Bart or tee Canadian boys overseas. The reputat..;:, 1 1 , ,tn dr r 1r tilts in the army o,t..rr.'1 the Canadian forces,,t, o imperial sol Biers frequently roi,ght the sc.tvi:,es of Canadian dental rurgeons at rues 2 personal Inconvenience to then s(lt es A new and remarkable develop- ment has, however, taken place in the Del,tal Corps, and that is the replace- ment, by artificial substitute, of lost facial tissue, including 0' e . or nose and the surrounding part,. In the case 0f the Psoas, the part le repro- dueed aluminum, and is then tinted the exact color of the face, by an artist especially retained for, this purpose. Possibly even more remarkable are the substitutes for a lost eye. In these cases a great deal of the orbit has also been shot away, and it is neces- saay'to restore these parts before the artificial eye is set in place. This work includes the lashes, eyelids and all the surrounding parts. When com- pleted the specially trained artist 18 again called into requisition, and the whole piece is Waverly attached to a specially constructed pair of spec- tacles, and the "camouflage" is so per- fect that the casual observer is entire- ly deceived. The centre of this work for Canada is the Royal College of Dental Sur- geons of Ontario, Toronto, This col- lege, without public grant of any kind, has carried on during the war, and at the same time has placed certain; sec- tions of its building at the disposal of the Militia Department for the work of the Dental Corps. This has been done absolutely without cnarge, either for rent or any of the accessories, such as light or heat. This generous treatment is still being accorded so long as the Dental Corps requires special facilities which the Ontario College is able to supply. '1 �'o Csiidweil Witter Tlltle _Boilers 'A 222 midi for- 1at 1;,5513 1111 25equO1'lt, Cr may• ,_ .tn 211 opera 41 Fii'6tbl'OO° -duel 2S3 itis', ;' St. E., jeuca*t-�. Jr, , NU Le, 11P -ie i`ir.• ,,r ; ca 4,w. 1'.. ..r.,e"„1-. ti 11 + .,•r tle-t, at Pie- r 1.. 1 } air 1' l . , 1 , ,t,rt ,,.1 ;r r ;;c 1 In the di 1 kee..lir Tb•.- : , .1,.77, f i.t v1lir e• .• 4r,- t ..• !n.l h 9:r aearpsts W.c.41T^» ' 1T+r7 7 l,,�.t it ;75112 W 1b/1500, R. 2ent01 t1' 1tttertnvdia to and 1'rinder Fath', Primary l oonr', 4tate ,l ualli ❑(1, 1 • and 1,1„x1 expecte t Apply to 1, . A. TO 1l ren Iuill, wee,. Morse 5, D. No. 1921. ?1R.^r•,.. b fisc. f 5'1132 X'41' 0r,T1tsr VST 177 0)), rt�1”. Al Ivry ALL FG1N:F1$ 1.lYCil 'T'O'ES L:.: my hi1he+t pri4'es, prompt: r •, urn Tri i e tar 1, gets s. 1`. 11rr11r1'nuohl h �rrxl J512) idaptistP market. u air 1 r r„ r ':wTs WANT:Ell). ff j! r 1 r 1 2' i; '0 S WANTING.' It 1 r rs firr)eiiing. a • sperr;rltS,: �•' r er vthing at 10wast prices; leo. 1'nited Apt Company, 4 i, •t ,. r3!( Aye., Tnr•mltn. 1 i 7 a n, ' a i h lav; tart SALF. 'r 1 - d nr t I i7'c r d irn t �'i: y. , (13. L'.1051 WII,L zauy, 1 m .B1. AT irua'c. 1 c i..:s r r ,. li e .;'rd £..1 LThlta, 36 -Cows, mostly high le• ' I,,lateina freehenmg in gopd sea- 1 r tJ•1 en h^,ve v. r felt ivitlulr sr o f t1 u,.,r, 4h.- lie, Leeds Go, fa :ing' honestly �o }1e :5 aredite(1 �1 -filar 1. b l,l Ui 1'I'Ell NE11 1'-11'1�:it v,h raying at; bre tl :'"v t Mamrnl. v and lob. rrinhrrg pram to i':sstera pleltos pass the p rr,•r maid," 11 111-1 i or'u ranee carrlyd 11,600. WI}t Other case mentioned i, bit of the ; w1° sr ta, nn aut7,:::::,' r,Ilex,c9,'n r + h17 -,hind 1 n.YTnrnnlnyoung curate whc b-, ;rig his -first; ,h 1 t,a'\1eWi2I'P+rrts,t52.rasermon on the text, "The COcli:-crew'ir !`tea• f/ntnrie eodng,.to. 1nm rtes to eifr. "(ars o1d, right > ,..'r ht in -: ho l w • f1 <1i to be grad?" Ii s litt At rr+ r t�' n n J O L' rr'2'Y. Cash with ardor, Reference, u r. ,"re l' r the , air c. elle : yrel and Peter Went out anti went bitter- i rannY, Will sell $2.000, worth double 1.v," remarked solemnly, "The cock rt hic,,a ng Co. Ltmltea. Toronto wept ,and Peter went oat and c bitterly—no, I mean Peter crew and the cock went out and wept bitterly." Minard's Liniment Co„ Limited. Have used MINARD'S LINIMENT $$ 101218 1WANTt11, TO uU 1'L.31N for Croup; found nothing equal to it; 11:1 and light sewing at home, whole or sure cure. Opera time. good psi', work sent any dis- tance, charges paid. Send stamp for CHAS. E. SHARP. particulars. National Manufacturing Hawkshaw, N.i3., Sept. 1st, 1905. Company. Montreal, that amount Apply 3, Ti._ c!a, WIIsoa Misc'ELLAIPEoua , BB'1 i tiCEr4 'TU134 ORS. LUMP'S, ETC.. V rniernal and external aired with - ,'t pain by ourhome treatment, Write ue before too late. Dr. Liellman Medical Co. Limited, Collingwood. Prat. A I'TO TIRES. Se x 31 AUTO TIitES, Tabes $1,65. All alzes cut rate pt5rice% Riverdale Garage 51 Rubber Ca. Gerrard. and Flamiltnn Sts.. Toronto. and 020 Dorchester 5t. 'Kest. Montreal. is --a--•3-0 She l' YES! MAGICALLY! a The CORNS LIFT OUT • Xaa WITH FINGERS ° The growing girl always enjoys ' three-piece suit, and they are usual- 0 0--o—o—o-o--o— 0-0-0 0 e 0 IP You simply say to the drug store man, "Give me a quarter of an ounce of freezono." This will cost very little but is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn from one's feet. •A few drops of this new ether com- pound applied directly upon a tender, aching corn should relieve the sore- ness instantly, and soon the entire corn, root and all, dries up and can be lifted out with the fingers. This new way to rid one's feet of "I am the voice of the uplands ringing front 11i11 to hill, Calling you. back to action; hearkijn and do my will. Put up your spear and saber, smother the torch and brand, Lay down your weapons of warfare; come back, for peace is at hand. Back to your reeking workshops, turn - in again g g to toil: Lift up ,the horn of plenty out of the teeming soil. Shoulder the pick and"§hovel, kindle again the hearth, Scatter the wheat and barley over the wasted earth. "For the cannon is hushed in the low• land,�the order has been with- drawn, And the sound of disbanding armies echoes from dark to dawn. Up from the reeking by -ways come the sons and daughters of men, Beating their swords and shrapnel back into plows again. Over the waste of the valley the sound of an anvil rings, And up from the fields of carnage a blood -red pop springs. pY And the shepherd is out on the •hill. side, calling again to his sheep: And the song of the busy article awak- ens the earth from sleep. , , "Hark to the voice of the uplands, ringing from deep to deep, Calling to peaceful battle ore I again' turn to sleep." The earliest steam vessels also car- e ied sails, the idea being to relieve the stress on the engines. "The rays of happiness, hie those of light, are colorless when unbrok- en." --Longfellow. Never put away, cotton or linen clothes with starch in thein they will not last nearly es long. ly very difficult to get the e style and fit. This model is youthful and smart and fulfills all the require- ments for a suit for flappers. McCall Pattern No. 8778, Girl's Three -Piece Suit. Pattern in 5 sizes, 6 to 14 years. Price, 20 cents. Transfer Design No. 737. Price, 10 cents. This attractive negligee is simple in construction and easy to slip on and off. The dainty boudoir cap that accompanies it is developed in ribbon and 'lace. McCall Pattern No. 8771, Ladies' One -Piece Negligee. Iii one size, suitable for 34 to 40 bust. Price, 20 cents. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall -Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. to The great ory which rises from all Dur manufacturing cities) louder than the furnace blast, is all in very deed for this, that we Manufacture there everything except men. We blanch cotton, and strengthen ,steel, and re- fine sugar, and shape pottery; but to brighten, to strengthen, to refute, or to form a single living spirit, never enters into our estimate of advant- ages, And all the evil to which that cry is urging our tmyaiads oan be meet only in one way . , by a right understanding on the part of all classes of what kinds of labor are good for mien, raising them and mak- ing them happy; by a detertiiined sacrifice of such convenience, or beauty, or cheapness, as is to be got only by the degradation of the wont - man; and by an equally determined demand for the products and results of healthy and ennobling labor.— Ruskin. - PHOTOS OF EVERY [BATTALION That Left Canada for Bale °133. ALEXANDRA STUDIOS 338 QIIaEN 012. WEST, TO80NTO Write for further information. corns was introduced by a Cincinnati man, who says that, while fr'eezono is sticky, it drips in a moment, and sim- ply shrivels up the corn without in- flaming or even irritating the sur- rounding tissue or skin. Don't let father die of infection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, but clip this out and make him try it, He Stared, Too, "The biggest fire I've ever seen was at New Yorlc, said the American, "It was a very high building, and the lad- ders were not tall enough to reach the window at which a lady was stand- ing. "Wal," he went on, "we were just beginning to despair, when a lucky thought seemed to strike one of the firemen. Catching hold of a hose, he took it alongside of the house, and turned the nozzle upwards so that a stream of water shot continuously past the window. Summoning up her courage the lady stepped from the ledge, and, putting her arms and legs about the jet of water, slid to the bot- tom, and was saved." "Oh, that's nothing!" said the Eng- lishman, "I saw an evert more excit- ing rescue than that. A large hotel was burning furiously, when, at the top storey of the building, a girl ap- peared. I stared, the firemen stared, the policeman stared—in fact, we all stared so hard that at last the girl wanted down the stares." Minard's Linn/tent SLeneves zeettralgia. Massage is to the scalp what phy- sical culture is to the body. It pro- motes the growth of the hair by ex- citing to new activity the ,tiny glands which contribute to the structure, and also tones up the scalp layers, which with neglect relax unhealth- ily. The circulation 'of the scalp is also increased, thus preventing atro- phy of the hair roots and the gray- ness which results frond ,it. "So valu- able, in fact, is massage for young and old," says an authority on tale subject, "that 1v11en,,,properly tinder - stood and appreciated we shall see fewer bald heads and a vastly higher average of beautifully abundant tresses than we do now." nafnard'e Liniment Cares Dandruff, It 18 a good plan to have a cheap watch to carryon the 'farm. So many things may happen to a watch. It may be jerked out of the pocket when you are bending over and strike .on a.stone. In the community cluh—the small' neighborhood group—where people know each other well, and trust each other, and are unselfish enough to work for a common cause, real pro- gress can be made. PARDONABLE PRIDE. • "I want you to publish these poems in book form," said a seedy looking man to the London publisher. Publisher—"I'll look them over, but I cannot promise to bring them out un- less you have a well-known name." Poet-"That'o all right. My name is known wherever the English'lang- uage is spoken." "Ah, indeed! What is your ,name?" "John Smith." re rdinard's Linirceat for sale everywhere. Of the fifteen lines comprising the system of Chinese Government rail- ways, only one was built by the Chin- ese themselves. With a new type of tube an X-ray powerful enough to show up the min- utest flaw in a four -inch -thickness of steel can be produced. - WHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM Almost any man"will tell you that Sloan's Liniment means relief For practically every man has used it who has suffered irom rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of joints, the results of weather ex- posure. Women, too, by the hundreds of thousands, use it for relieving neut.- - itis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick head- ache. Clean, refreshing, soothing, economical, quickly effective, .. Say "'Sloan's Liniment" to year druggist. Made in Canada. Get it today. E:LIEVCi3 01111010 REFUNDED, ASK ANY !AUGUST or writs Lyman -Knox Co., Montreal, P Q Piles COs. Rememberthe acme e. ,t tnitht no, be teen 15,18 3 Cakes C t 'S ap ,� d and 4 Boxes Ointment Heal Itching Iles din Shoulders and 3acic= "For two years I was troubled with itching pimples op my shoulders and back. They were hard, red and very painful, and were scattered. I could not rest 01 night on account of the - itchingtri. "I ed several remedies but they failed. Then I Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and used three b cakes of Cuticura Soap and four boxes of Cuticura Ointment and I was completely healed in six weeks." (Signed) Miss gate Young, Melrose, Man., March 30,1917. Having obtained' a clear healthy skin by the use of Cuticula, keep it clear by using the Soap for all toilet purposes, assisted by touches of Oint- ment as needed. Cuticula Soap is ideal for the complexion. For Free Sample Each byMailad- dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere. SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT OF HORSES DICTATES pd;:hi0s e'i:iper 0 '`Ipound For all cases of DISTEMPER, INFLUENZA, P35210 1713. and' for Coteca28 or COLDS in any form. Manufactured according to- the laws of medical science, it has been tested for a quarter of a century 27 the ablest 'horsemen. 1Yo mat- ter in whatisolagted district diseased horses are found,. SPORN'S has matte scientific treatment possible, Yottr druggist can ten you. SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY, Goshen, Indiana, U.S.A.,