HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1919-04-10, Page 7C011tiON NOUSE CAT I
USEFUL IN WAR
DETECTED FIRST TRACE OF GAS
BY ACUTE /SENSE OF SMELL.
In Last Two Years of Warfare About
500,000 Cats Were' Supplied ,to
British Army.
There is one thing a cat hates more
than she hates dogs, and that is gas.
One whiff of poison gas, scented from
the other sides of No Man's Land be-
fore mere man has got an inkling that
it is coming, and hp goes her back, her
fur stands on end and she begins to
whine her displeasure.
Who it was who first discovered this
aversion remains a mystery, but ru-
mer has it that it was some one in the
War Office, , The Kaiser probably'
knew it all along, and that may have
been the reason for his announced de-
cision to mobilize every cat and dog in
the -German empire. But, however
that may be, our war lords discovered
it, too. and determined to put the dis-
covery to the best use. So they ex-
tended the military service acts to the
eats.
The stray cats of England—and
there are many of them, as is shown
by the fact that the R. S, P. C, A. pain-
lessly destroys snore than 30,000 every
Fear—received their first calling -up
notice a couple of years ago. It ap-
peared In the form of an advertise-
meat, "Common cats wanted; any
number," which was published in the
newspapers. Thereafter there was a
search for cats of all descriptions.
The Contractor's Story.
The contract for the supply of pussy
to the army was secured icy Charles
Harris, a bird dealer, of Bethnal-grecu-
road, and cats of all sorts soon began
to pour into his establishment. ,
Mr. Harris told a Daily Chronicle
representative that he had no idea
what the cats were wanted for. He
was only ordered to supply them.
Every now and then a big "W.D.' lorry
would draw ep outside his establish-
ment and drive away with a cargo of
cats fol the front. In the last two
years, he Bahl. he had supplied about
500,000 cats to the army.
From other sources the Daily Chron-
icle learned of the cats' value as a
gas detector; but that was not pussy's
only sphere of usefulness in the
trenches. Equally important was
work as a destroyer of rats and ver-
min—a work in which she excelled
and took a lively interest.
She has also done her bit in the
navy. She proved very useful in con-
nection with submarine expo •'rents,
and frequently went under C, ..ter in
various contrivances in or:ler to test
the life-sustaining qualities of the air
chambers.
So puesy, at least, has done her. bit
in the great war.
WON THE VICTORIA CROSS.
Machine Gun Officer Lost His Life In
Great Exploit at Passchendaele.
Lieut. Hugh Mackenzie, V.C., D.C,M.,
who was awarded the 'Victoria Cross
for a brilliant feat of arms at Pass-
chendaele, was a member of the 7th
Machine GUIs. Company which became
part of the 3rd Ain . Pine Gun Battalion
when the reorganization took place.
The daring exploit in which the gal-
lant soldier earned the coveted de-
coration and lost his life is told in the
official records as follows: "For most
conspicuous bravery and leading when
in charge of a section of four machine
guns accompanying the infantry in an
attack,
"Seeing that all the officers and
most of the non-commissioned officers
of an infantry company had become
casualties, and that the men were
hesitating before a nest of enemy ma-
chine gulls, which were on command-
ing ground and causing them severe
casualties, he handed over the com-
mend of his guns to an N.C.O., rallied
the infantry, organized the attack,
and captured the strong,point.
"Finding that the position was
swept by machine gun fire from a pill-
box which dominated all the ground
over which the troops were advancing,
Lieut. Mackenzie made a recon-
naissance and detailed flanking and
frontal attacking parties which cap-
tured the pill -box, he himself being
stilled while leading the frontal attack,
"By his valor and leadership this
gallant officer ensured the capture of
these strong points and so saved the
lives of many men and enabled the
objectives to be attained."
Lieut. Mackenzie originally enlisted
with the Princess Pats in August, 1914,
as a private. He was awarded the
D.C.M. and received his commission
in 1917, His mother lives in Quebec,
and ho was born in Inverness, Scot-
land Through all the early fighting
with the famous P,P,C.L,I., he later
entered the machine gun service with
a commission. Me was in the 7th Com-'
pany attached to the 8rd Division and
at Passchendaele his heroic conduct
saved a situationwhich was menacing
until ho turned the tide. Officers and
men of the 8rd Machine Gun Battalion
speak with pride and love for the
brave officer.
Not Good on Canadian Pacific.
It is told that a Salina couple, just
Married,, bearded a train and were so
absorbed ineach other that, the groom
handed ,the conductor the marriage
certificate when he called for the
tickets. "This is good for' a. long,
weary journey," said the conductor,
"but, not on the Canadian Pacific."
Do yoti shave
with a saw
FOOLISH question
No. 11991 Maybe.
But compare for a
moment the illustrations
above. They show pretty
well what we're driving at;
that is, uniczs a blade is
stropped regularly it develops
an edge very him a saw, and
causes that "pulling" and
after -smarting of which you
complain.
Not so with the AutoStrop
Razor. For the self -strop-
ping feature, you see, reforms
the saw -like edge that results
from shaving, and provides
you with a sharp blade for
every shave. The beauty of
it is you don't have to re-
move the blade from the
razor to sharpen it, nor do
you, have to take the
AutoStrop Razor apart to
clean it, From first to last—
stropping, shaving, and clean-
ing—the blade remains in the
razor,
Razor — Strop — 12 blades — $5
of
tOSYiCXOp
hsAFETYR
nAz
AUTOSTPROP SAFETY RAZOR CO„ Limited
AutoStrop Building, Toronto, Canada
7
PUTTING TYE SUN-
BEAMS TO WORK
SOLAR MOTOR IS NEW INVENTION
OF VAST IMPORTANCE.
After Many Years of Scientific Investi-
gation Device is Discovered For
Utilizing Sun's Rays.
When Jules Verne wrote his great
book "Twenty Thousand Leagues Un-
der tho Sea" it was deemed to be the
greatest piece of imaginary fiction
ever produced, but now all that was
contained in that hook, and more, lute
come to pass and is being taken as a
matter of course. So much is it a
matter of course that the next genera-
tion will not remember the time when
men knew not the floor of the sea.
When Hans Anderson wrote his
tale of a fairy riding a sunbeam he
little thought that the time would
come when the Dower of sunbeams
would heat our homes, do our cooking,
run our factories and drive horseless
carriages to and fro over the face of
the earth; and yet the time is com-
ing, and that soon, when all these
wonders and many snore shall be ac'
complished, and the next generation
will be as familiar with the power of
concentrated sunbeams as we of the &
present generation are with the power n
of steam, gasoline and water, th
However, there is nothing new un-
der the sun, Coal from which we pro-
duce heat and steam is just the stored -
up, concentrated energy of sunbeams.
It the power of the sun that evapo-
rates the water of low level and car-
ries it back to the highlands so that
it may furnish us with power as it
again seeks the low levels. It has
long been recognized that the sun is
the source of- all energy, and it la by
the proper harnessing of this known
power that the problem of the world's
supply of fuel and mechanical energy
is to be solved.
vod.
•
and studied and striven to construct
ye '1 he iVee'd. I i
an 7
lci18i11UII4
us
a ,llarneaa thatwould fit the elusi
sunbeam and compel it to serve in
directly instead of. indirectly.
In 1893; John Ericsson, a Swedi
scientist, constructed an apparat
which demonstrated the possibiliti
of the use et the newer of sunbeun
for mechanical purposes. He secur
the power In the area of his apparatus,
but failed to concentrate it.
In 1913, the Shuman Brothers es-
tablished a "Sun Plant" in Egypt, by
which they succeeded in developing
mechanical power at the ratio of sixty
throe horsepower per acre of reflector
exposed: that ratio, however, was not
Sufficient for practical •purposes, and,
like Ericsson, the Shuman Brothers
had failed to e¢ncontrate the power
suf9cfehtly to make their scheme prac
ticable.
For many, many years, scientists
have failed in their efforts to make
the sunbeams do practical work, al-
though they fully succeeded in de-
monstrating that the power is there
In abundance; They have all said
that some day one would accomplish
definite results, and now Dr. W. J.
Harvey, eye specialist and Member of
the Royal College of Science,`Toronto,
has succeeded in doing that which
will carry his name down through the
ages as one of the great benefactors
of the race. Dr. Harveyhas-succeed-'
ed where others had failed. By a
combination of small mirrors he has
succeeded in gathering the sunbeams
and concentrating their heat at one
point. So thoroughly has he done his
work that apparently there is no limit
to the intensity of the heat that may
be obtained at the point of concentra-
tion.
es
pis
ed
Great Benefit th Mankind.
In practice, this new servant will do
wonders for its masters. We have
only to think of the uses that unlimit-
ed heat at a nominal cost can be put
to. It enters into every phase of human
effort, comfort and convenience.
Let us. consider one, the automo-
bile. Think of every garage in the
country with a battery of mirrors on
its roof as part of its regular equip-
ment instead pf a gasoline outfit.
During every hour of sunshine they
would store up free power in storage
batteries. Standard batteries for
standard cars. Think of the cleanli-
ness, the absense of "smell" and the
low cost of transportation,
The automobile is only one item.
The mind cannot grasp the changes
that are coming to the world through
Dr. Harvey's success. Unlimited heat
without fuel! Heat that by boiling
water will makesteam to turn dyna-
mos and store up energy! Heat so
intense thateit will break rocks and
melt metals! Truly science has never
presented humanity with a greater
gift. It is a perpetual gift, for so long
as the sun shines and the earth con-
tinues to revolve on its axis will this
source of heat and power be avail-
able to the generations.
Wonderful are the provisions made
by nature for man's comfort! These
wonders lie dormant until the brain
of man searches them out and fits
them to his use. The primitive man
who invented the bent bow with which
to drive an arrow at his enemy was
drawing on the stores of Nature for
his well-being. It is a long cry from
that weapon to modern gunnery, but
at the time the bow was invented
Nature held in her secret places the
material needed for the manufacture
bf the modern gun and the high ex-
plosive; and so, when man was pro-
ducing fire and heat by rubbing two
ticks together, the_ sun was pouring
nlimited heat on all about him. Truly
ere is nothing new, but all honor
to the man who, by untiring effort and
years of study, has succeeded in har-
nessing the source of all heat and
energy and making of It the untiring
and perpetual servant of man.
es Sir Evelyn Wood.
That grand old warrior, Sir Evelyn
Wood—the last of the later Victorian
soldiers of eminence—who recently
celebrated his 81st birthday, is justly
proud of the war record of his family.
Three of his sons, three of his grand -
ns, and three sons-in-law and three
ephews and a great-nephew, have
1 seen continuous service during the
st four years. Sir Evelyn is by no
eans retired. As Constable of the
Tower of London he faithfully goes
to London twice a week irons his coun-
try house in Essex to attend to the
business of his office.
so
The supply is as free as air and as n
plentiful. It is estimated that on every pa
four square feet of surface between m
the equator and the 46th parallel there
is a wastage of the equivalent of one
horsepower of energy. It is stated
that the power of the sunbeams falling
on the deck of a steamship is greater
than the steam power required to
drive her.
Long a Puzzle to 'Scientists.
Many scientific minds have dreamed
Salt is good for gargling your
throat and cleaning your. teeth. It
preserves and hardens your gums
and teeth.
%/ /,f//f /„/
o/,,,/„ ,/,,,,/,////f //'f/ // ,/,
/AG-sd
Stomachs tire of
the same diet.
When the appetite be-
comes jaded, it's sur-
fih
�. �sh � how quickly the
digestion responds to
a saucer. of
Grope,/:•t
i. 4. !i
,s
” There's a itason "
. - . Canada Food Board License Ne. 2-026
//// /?W/ ///!//fJ/„// // // //// /.
A frock of simple lines for the
miss. The side -gores are in two sec-
tions and the tunic is banded with
soutache braid in an attractive de-
sign. McCall Pattern No. 8842,
Misses' Dress. In 3 sizes, 16 to 20
years. Price, 25 cents. Transfer Be-'
sign No. 819. Price, 10 cents.
To go walking on a 'fine Spring
day, what could be more attractive
than this frock with the overdress in
the unusual one=sided effect? McCall
Pattern No. 8815, Ladies' Dress. In
7 sizes, 84 to 46 bust. Price, 25 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
LISTEN TO THIS I
i
•
SAYS CORNS LIFT
RICHT OUT NOIW
-o—o— o— o --o-- o--o--o—a—o—o=•
You reckless menand women who
are pestered with corns and who have
at least once a week invited an awful
death from lockjaw or blood poison are
now told by a Cincinnati authority to
use a drug called freezone, which the
moment few drops are applied to
any corn, the soreness is relieved and
soon the entire corn, root and all, lifts
out with the fingers.
It is a sticky ether compound which
dries the moment it Is applied and
simply shrivels the corn without in-
flaming or even irritating the surround-
ing tissue or skin. It. is claimed that
a quarter of an ounce of freezone will
cost very little at any et the drug
stores, but is sufficient to rid one's feet
of every hard or soft corn or callus.
You are further warned that cutting
at a corn is a suicidal habit.
—+9
"Thou That Hast Looked on Death.”
(To any soldier returning)
"Thou that hast looked on death" ran
through my thought.
Repeating Inwardly an age-old
prayer
Whereby, in peril'a hour. men have be-
sought
An understanding Love—a softer
Care"
And yet, it was a look in human eyes—
Young, brooding eyes evoked these
words in me,
A look of having seen—that still
denies
To say what sight it was those eyes
did see—
Thou that hast looked on death in
closest range—
War death, in sickening confusion
packed,
With Multiple, deviceful tortures
strange!
'Tis done; so let not Memory be
racked.
Thou that hast looked on death—thou
wilt not speak;
Nor I, young soldier, will thy story
seek.
The population of Rheims has been
reduced by the war from about 115,-
000 to about 8,000.
r•,.
y, •-ire-.e. uree''l
c went to Become a Hursc�?
Most women think, that
a long and expensive
P,a; -training Is required to
queiify as.. a puree.
In reality, Hound practi-
cal knowledge of,anursing
methods can ho acquired
Ili a short time' by home
turfy. •
Nurser; are In great de-
mand. They earn from
$16 to $30 a week
The Royal College sys-
tem enables you to ,ivali-
ry as a. nurse without
leaving your, own home,
'write us for particulars.
1 Royal College or L'oiencs
Dept- 4C 7roronto, Oaneda
COLONIALS IN BRITISH WARS.
First Occasion When Britain's Daugh-
ters Sent Aid Was In 1653.
•
In a lecture by the Hon. J. W. For
toseue at the Royal Institution, Lon-
don, the speaker began by referring,
to thepride with which the news, that
the dominions, each of them of their
own free will, had offered a contingent
of troops for the assistance of the
Mother Country, had been received.
Many people thought that this was a
unique event in the history of the Em-
pire; but this was not so.
The first occasion on which the
colonies contributed military aid for
an Imperial enterprise was in Crom-
well's Expedition to Jamiea in 1663-4,
On that occasion the Barbados fur-
nished 4,000 men. The lecturer ex-
plained how it was that, through the
system of white apprentices, tropical
Wands were in those days able to
furnish a white militia, The next in-
stance came in the Carthagena Ex-
pedition of 1740, when the American
colonies suppllied a force of 4,000 men.
Atter that the American colonies help.
ed consistently in the conquest of Ca-
nada, until the final victory of Am-
herst in 1760, During that period the
first two American regiments were
placed in the British Establishment,
and in 1758 were created the "Royal
Americans," which were still with us
as the King's Royal Ride Corps.
Then the American colonies were
lost, and everyone thought that the
British.Empire had come to an end.
Immediately afterwards followed the
war in which our losses in the West
Indies compelled us to raise a regi-
ment of African negroes, still with us
as the West Indian Regiment.
During the 19th century the Empire
was consolidated. Canadians helped
gallantly to defend their country from
American invasion from 1812 to 1814.
The Cape Cololnists joined in the
fights against the Kaffirs, and the New
Zealand Colonists in tile wars against
the Maoris.
Then came the war in Egypt, and
for the first time Australia offered a
battalion for that service. Then came
the South African war, when practical-
ly all the colonies sent contingents.
And finally, in the present war, not
only every part of the Empire has
given us freely of its men, but the des-
cendants of Peninsula veterans in
South America sent us their sons,
whose native tongue was Spanish, and
who knew not a word of English, to
fight for the Old Country.
I was cured of Acute Bronchitis by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Bay of Islands. J. M. CAMPBELL.
I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Springhill, N.S. WM. DANIELS.
I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism
by MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Albert Co., N.B. GEO, TINGLEY,
FRENCH ORIENT TRAIN.
New Service to be Inaugurated Mid-
dle of April.
The operation of through trains be-
tween Paris and the Orient will begin
over part of the line on April 16, and
the whole system will be inaugurated
by May 1, accordingto an official
statement issued by the commission
on the international regime of ports,
waterways and railways.
A train de luxe, to be called the
"Simplon -Orient Express," will be run
between Paris and the Orient via
Lausanne, Simplon, Milan, Venice,
Trieste, Laibach, Agram and Vin-
kovice. At Vinkovice the road will di-
vide, one branch connecting with
Bucharest, Constance and Odessa and
the other with Belgrade,- Constanti-
nople and Athens. The train will con-
nect at Paris with the London -Calais.
Paris train, and at Milan with a fast
train for Rome.
Idinard'a Linilaeat Believes Neurslehe
The Man He Was Looking For.
The Sydney Bulletin tells a new
story of the shirker caught at his own
game. It was a soldier, who said:
"Please, sergeant -major, may I be
excused from church parade? I am
an agnostic."
"Don't you, believe in the Ten' Com-
mandments, then?"
"No, I don't,"
"Not even the one about keeping the
Sabbath?"
"No."
"Well, you're the very man I've
been looking for to scrub, out the can-
teens,"
The Commonwealth Government is
giving half a million sterling to local
governing bodies throughout Aus-
tralia to 'be expended on work which
will provide immediate employment
for returned soldiers. •
=nerd's Liniment Cures Dandruff,
tint Sr0'�"
rl
FROM 11ERE ogre
Little Girl's Logic. -..
"My "mamma is a twin."
"Ooo! You got two mammas thenl"
Would 'lake Two.
Mother had her little daughter at
a':bootshop to be fitted. The assistant
put one shoe on and asked her to
walk around and see how it felt. She
did' so, then said:,
"It feels all Wight. I'll take two
of 'em."
A Bit Creased.
Billie had been studying his grand-
father's face, which was very
wrinkled.
"Well, Billilkin," said the old
gentleman jocularlyypinching the lit'=
the boy's rosy cheek, "do you like my
fac"
`Ye?es, grandpa," said Billie. "It's
an awfully nice face; but why don't
you have it ironed?"
A Suggestive Simile.
The opinion of generations that
have hated written sermons is reflect-
ed in a story told of a Scotchwoman
who sat under a minister who al-
ways read his Sunday morning dis-
course.
"How's the new meenister gettin'
on?" a neighbor asked the woman.
"How's -he gettin' on?" said she.
"Like a crow in a tater field—two
dabs and a look -tip."
Cause for Thankfulness.
Among the many good Irish stories
one of the best concerns a certain
old Connemara farmer, who, upon
waiting up in the night, saw an ap-
parition at the foot of the bed.
Reaching for Ns gun,ire promptly
perforated the ghost with a bullet.
To his surprise the following morn-
ing he discovered that it 'was his own
shirt of .which he: had made a target.
He was relating the experience to
a friend, who asked him: 'What did
you do when you discovered what it
was?"
"Oh," replied the farmer, "I just
knelt down and thanked God that I
hadn't been inside it."
MONEY ORDERS.
Pay your out-of-town accounts by
Dominion Express Money Orders. Five
Dollars costs three cents.
His Nearest Relative.
A recruit in one of the camps when
called up for examination was asked:
"Who is your nearest living rela-
tive7"
"What do you mean, 'relative,' mis-
ter?" returned the recruit.
"Oh, I mean your nearest living
kinsfolk." •
"Wal, that's my aunt you're talking
'bouts"
Several other questions were ans-
wered satisfactorily, when there
came:
"In case of death or accident, who
shall be notified?"
"My mother," immediately from
the selective.
"But you told she just a few nt,in-
utes ago that your aunt was the near-
est living relative that you have,",ob-
jected the officer.
"You asked me who my nearest
livin' kin ryas, didn't you? Wad, Aunt
Liz -elle lives just two miles from
where I been Bush'; mother lives five."
lrinard'a Liniment Curia Earns. Eta
Royal Love Letters.
Blue ribbon will no longer be-fash_
tenable for encircling batches of old
lye letters. A ,personal friend of
Commander Ramsay, who is a clever
amateur bookbinder, has put togeth-
er all the lettere the gallant sailor
received from his Princess. As they
wrote to each other every day over
a long period of courtship the volume
will be no small one. Of course, the
friend who bound the letters gave his
word of honor not to read the sacred
missives.
Ell GIRLS! TRY It!
1 DANDRUFF .OP A ARD
_ BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Hair stops falling out and gets
thick, wavy, strong and
beautiful.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf-
fy, abundant and appears as soft,
lustrous and beautiful as a young
girl's after a "Danderine hair cleanse."
Just try this—moisten a cloth with a
little Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time, This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig-
orates the scalp, forever stopping itch-
ing and falling hair,
But what will please you most will
be after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair growing all over the scalp. If
you, care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it, surely get a small bottle of
Knowlton's Danderine from any rirug-
L)7!.:, asolya BY. 11Sanfrie3t,
Its PAIR 0,W:''PIGEONS ANG U .
• Any fancy poultry •+tot aellY
1 rite for Prices. .I Welnraucit
10.135 at; Jean"Baptiste Market: Mont
7-FLI. ' $QUIZ
PM
cs Fig, '■luts'filt
sad foo printing plant fn Eastern
Ontario, Insurance ccaarnried �i1,seo. will
►o for 51,200 on eutok anis.` Hoe SI.
a'lle n PuDllnhfn4 Gn:. Ltd TOeonto.
F`T
ra, N w NaOnlilo5,o0. 5
.OWlWFrrtoaIdn 5,m
that amount Apply, J. 1Roe Wilson Co., Limited. Toronto.
TEAORE$,s 'We2TEID
.'7McLeaANTED—A CIUALIFI.HD TEAbiI-
v r En:R tt forocomSmchool:
ence dutS6 tiiesgn
May 6th-,
Salary 0600: duties, light . Address.
1. D. Smith, Sec.-Treas., Baysyille,
` T tNTE711 PR•OT17•STA., TrlACii-..
V V ER—with third-class aertif rytp;
for S,S, No, 2, Bethune and Proudfeo't...
at an annual. salary, of $600,00r; duties
tto commence after Eater holidays, Ap-
ply
lrney, Grit . Rammer, - Seo.-Treas.,
ffirairkh A7AEOt i
CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC..
internal and external. cured with-
cut oath by our home treatment Write
me before ttoo. late. Dr. Reitman Medical,'
Co,, L1m11ed Collingwood• Oct..
8UBE FOUR EBo$cUITIS, COUGBS,CND s�waDROARSEzsECVE
OURS. We have hundreds oftesti-
monials from every part of Canada tes-
tifying to the wonderful healing power
Of WRITE EHORORITIS • 31ZIRTUBE.
Mr. Clarke, 776 Indian Road, Toronto,
coughed for 25 years with Bronchitis: it
cured him, Mrs. Clarke, No. 1 YorkVllle
Ave., Toronto, coughed for 16 years;
one bottle cured her. John E. Bibb%
Fenella suffered fifteen years with
Bronchial Asthma, says there Is nothing.
like it. W. MoBrayne, New Liskeard,
It is the greatestMixture L ever took.
Send me three more bottles." The above-
are only a few names of the many thous-
ands that,have-benefited bythis great
mixture. Write any of the above. They '
will be only too pleased to tell ynu more
about it. The above mixture Is sold 'un-
der an iron bound money back guarantee
to cure any of the,above ailments. Ten
tines more powerfulthan any known
preparation, acts like magic: One dose
gives instant reliefand a good night's
rest without a cough. Price 50 cents.
15 cents. extra for mailing. Three bot-
tles mailed free Tor $1.60. Sold only by
Buckley, The Druggist, 07- Dundas St.
East, Toronto.
Don't Forget the Mothers.
Don't forget the mothers
Who gave their all for others,
Their sons so true,
Who died for you,
Our noble, gallant brothers.
S'he'll not forget the mothers
Whose hearts are sad to -day;
We'll ne'er forget our brothers
Who lie 'neath Flanders' clay.
Hissed',, Liniment tor sale everywhere.
The Commonwealth of Australia
has issued a proclamation prohibiting,
the importation d all goods other
than those of British origin.
ACHES AND PAINS
QUICKLY RELIEVED
You'll find Moan's Liniment
softens the severe
rheumatic ache
P'utit on freely. Dont rob it in.
Just let it penetrate naturally,, What a'
sense of soothing relief soon follows!
External aches, stiffness, soreness,
cramped muscles, strained sinews,
back "cricks" thse ailments can't
fight off the relieving qualities of
Sloan's Liniment.' Clean, convenient,
economical. Made in Canada. .Ask
any druggist for it,
30e,, G0c., $1,20.
sessensesetsgrenseatissose
A Cure for
Bad Breath
"Bad breath is a sign e,f decayed
teeth, foul stomach or unclean
bowel." if your teeth aro,ggod,
look to your digestive organs at
once. Get Seigel's Curative Syrup
at druggists. 15 ` to 30 chops
after meals, clean up your food
passage and stop the bad breath
odor. 50es and $1.00 Bottles.
Do not. buy substitutes. Got
the genuine. 6
SIBT268CM3COMaiii3EW=A343108
PIMPLES ITCHED
AND BURNED
FaceWas Badly Disfigured,
Cuticura Soap. and
Ointment Healed.
"Small red pimples and black-
heads began on my face, and my
a, Ieee wan badly dleilgnied.
'l\ Sots of the pimples fee-
.. --111 tared while others scaled
/ over and there were places
where the pimples . were
in blotches. They used
to itch and burn terribly.
"I saw an advertise-
ment for Cuticura and I tried them.
They stopped the itching and burn-
ing and I used four cakes' of Soap
and three boxes of Ointment which
healed me." (Signed) Miss V. A.
Rayne, Stormont, N. S:, Dec. 26,'18.
The Corkers Talks Trio, consisting of
Soap, Ointment andTalcum,promotese n
purity, comfort and health when used fir
every -day toilet purposes. F-or:Sample
Each Free by Men, address: Cuiies,,e
Dept.A,Boston,U.S.A." Sold everywhere.
4l
ISSUE .15—'19..
gist or toilet counter for a few cents, - BD.
7. ISSUE .15—'18t