HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1916-11-10, Page 6so often r.t.r-
toSi
-.fret -lid/ i
7. Tablets
att lefo1k
i Cheir 00.
t:•.lrli and
tomaett
aloe in seer of rim Dorn.
;eine eoledtor, Conveyancer end
lastare P- Office ire-eteire mei
Ion foetao
g01 MEST7-11
Notery Pea Solicitor for the Cana
4.1.41t. fiessomeree ',dorms to mar
Porno fet 3,, Office. te Poott'a block
COOKE
aolleitota Notaries Patine
ate Weft. lend in St Atwell on gflel
Colley; and honorary member oe
Medical Association of the Ontario,
timeneetie Animals by the -me* mod-
ems erhiciples. litlestry and Milk Fay -
specialty, Offiee opposite Dick***
Mate streela Seaforth. Ali or.
t at the hotel will receive prompt
Ntght calls received at -the
GRIEVEt tr. S.
Moue graduate of Ontario Vetortn-
brinsale treated. Calls promptly attend.
od t6' cbarg moderate. 'Veterinary
poistlittra a specialty. Office and reel -
draw Cloderieb street. one door emit
at Dr. Stettin office, 3ftaianals.
ysician, Ete. Honor Graduate
uiversity of Toronto, six years'
hreond street, London, Ont.
Surgery and Crenitoatirin"
of men and women,
Tait. GEORGE' BE/LEI:LINN—
pathic Physician of Goderieh.
t womente and- children,*
rheumatism acute, °bionic
ores disorders, eye, etar, nor
throat. Csinsultation free. Milos at'
Ilkismaercial Hotel, Seaforth Tuesday
OW Prided* if &M. till Wit
F.
DR. ALEXANDER MOIR
Office and Residenee Main .Stree
Phone /0. IFfenetael.
Gradustent Faculty of Medicine, W-
alt dlitiveraity, Montreal; :Member of
Ontario: Licentiate bf Medical Colwell
110 Canadae Post -Graduate member of
Beisident ktelteal Staff of General Hos-
e Montreal, 1914-11; Office two -
east of Post Office, Phone 56,
Itemasik. Ontario.
ea* of -the Methodist church, Seaforth.
Phone No. 44. Coroner for the Coanty
ist Hawk
J. G. esott, gradunto of Victoria and
Dollege Physicians! and aurge,ons.
Us Arbor, and member of tke Ontatio
ctroncir for the County of litteen.
Kay, Lessor graAtiste of Trinity,
ersity, and gold medallist of Trin-
tar Medical college; member 'of the Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario.
Graduate of University of Toronto
eracuity of Medielne, member of Col-
lege of PhyAelaris and Surgeans of On-
tario; pees graduate courses in Chicago
Meal School of Chicago; Royal OPh-
thalestic Hospital, London, England,
tlniveraity College Hospital, London,
nneand, Office --Back of Dominion
Bank, ilaeforth. Phone No. 5. Night
tient answered from residence, Victoria
AUCTIONEERS
THOMAS ,BROWN
* Huron and Perth. Correspondence
arrazgements for sale date; ean be
nude by calling up Phone 97, Seaforth,
Or Tim Expositor office. Charges! mod-
erate stud 3atisfactIcin guaranteed.
asmerai
licensed op or for the Con,
* Hum. f les Attended to la t
earls of t/te imm. Eleven years' es
say ressoneale Phone ale- 384, R
Exeter dientralia P. O. B
toe
6. PHILLIPa,
id Blum sad Perth. Being a practical
ssu 111411034- AIM tan Nowt
Mile goo* prices. Chaise/ Ziederata
intattaatira gustassiod- or so pay. Ail
grime set is Munn will Se orownel
WAKE UP.
Joh A. Sleicher in Leslie's.
What would happen if the eaetains
of industry .some day should strike,
nvehaie vati. dinner pail?
• -1 fre:2.11. and passenger transporta-
• ilew Lees would the euffering public.
kirri of imposition? How
• ton; r.o1.1. 1 this tyranny last? Let us
al et eeree thinking before it is too
ers talli 3.C'aiten and the price of milk
be hie -efficient. We are not pass-
ints, upen th"is question. We are for
eettree and big business -they go
We are refering to the fact that
:ineatse is more easily setured by arbi-
caadea than by violence and that the
elich always pays' the bill and
lifers the most, has a right to deolare
in fever of arbita.ation and against
Tent -t it tirae that we appreciated our
lence of one upon another- and
• re cannot have one interest or
on_ person suffer without having other
interests and other people suffer?
Ine't it time for general concurrence
Ili -ration that shall set -
tie the struggle over wages and hours
censtantly occurring in every part of
the country?
The public, which is the greatest
rofferer. holds the power in its own
hands if it would only wield it. Yet it
yields this power to denaagogues, dis-
turbers and self-seekers of all types
and etriees. Out with them alit
•
RARE HORSES.
The steamship Bovie, whici:a eluded
the submarine U-53, brought in two
rare additions to the great collection
of wild and domesticated horses in the
New York Zoological Park, The first
is 'the silver grey Celtic pony, which
comes from Iceland, and was selected
for the Zoological Park collection out
of, a herd of 500,
This anima' is a dwarfed and very
hardy variety of the Arabian horse
which fdund its way to the north
through Western Europe 'and was
bunted for food by the men of the
Old Stone Age 100,000 years ago. This
me of horse was drawn, painted and
cuiptured by the cave -men of that
time. Some of the cave drawings are
Iiirecisely- similar to the Celtic when
in its short stinimer coat. In its winter
coat, which will nowl3e.gin to develop
rapidly in the animals just arrived at
the Zoological Park, it ehows a broad
spade' lock of hair which protects the
top of the tail from the storms of the
northern winter. Under the heavy
Winter coat there is a small head and
fine, delicately formed limbs.
This breed ss now extremely rare in
Europe. It was discovered - about
twelve years ago by Professor J. Cos-
Mirgh, from whom the Park has re-
ceived this spheitnen. Like the Arab, it
is rxtremely intelligent, and never re-
quires breaking; it passes under the
smite and into. harness without any
e other horse is the true Scandi-
navian breed of the time of the great
Swedish naturalist, Linaeus, who in
art66„ founded' uporiethis -animal-the
name Evils eaballus, whiehthas since
been applied to all the dainesticated
horses of the world, although, as Cos-
sar Zwart has shown, all our dornesti-
sevetal kinds of wild horses. • '
This animal is a 3rellow dunt thirteen
hands two; with a brown stripe down
its back and brown steipe:s on its legs,
the remnants of the ancient type of
horse-11,41ton- was •stripecl all over like
the zebras.
The sire of this horse has stripes
across the back,while the dam resem-
bles the fjord horses of Norway, from
which he is descended.
These two animals give the Zoologi-
cal Park of New York the most com-
plete collection in the world. The
only animal now lacking to make the
collection complete is the `semi -wild
Tarpan of Northern Asia, which has
recently been distinguished as an an-
ceient -wild breed.
JUST THE THING •
FOR LITTLE ONES.
'Baby's Own Tablets are the best
medicine a inother-can give her little
ones. They regulate the boweli,
sweeten the stomach; banish consti-
pation and indigestion; relieve colds
and simple fevers .and make teething
easy. Concerning them Mrs. Herbert -
Johnston, Mayrnont, Sask., writes; -
"I have used Baby's Own Tablets fOr
the past four years and find them just
the thing for babies and young chil-
dren." Thek are sold by medicine
dealers or mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Willieme' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ontario.
-There passed peacefully away at
the home of his son-in-law, Ernest
Duff, an old and highly respected cit-
izen of Wingham, in the person of Mr.
Robert Sturdy,. on October 23rd. De-
ceased waaeborn ins, the year ISO,
moving shortly to Goderich township,
where he grew to -manhood. In the
ear -1855,he wars marled to. ,Miss
deltas Rerrdgitan, who- ptedeceas7
;ad him somw21 -years, Oftl'his lath*
five children are.-livine:t, Walter, Of
Luclmow, Robert of Winghatse Hugh
of Pennsylvania, Mrs. Liettl of Wing -
ham, and Kra-. Duff of .,Dunginion.
servative. The funeral, which was
held to Dungannon on Wednesday,was
very largely attended.
monowskaagim
1.0 CENT "CASCARETS"
FOR LIVER AND BOWELS
Cure Sick Headache, Constipation,
Biliousness, Sour Stomech, Bad
Breath -Candy Cathartic.
No odds how bad your. liver, stom-
ach or.- bowels; ,how much sour mesa
aches, hoar miaerable you are trom
and sluggish bowele-you ale ays get
relief with s Cascaretm They imme-
diately cleanse and regula.te the stem-
aeh, remove the Bond, fermenting food
and foul gasee; take the excess bile
frora the liver and carry off the con -
'from the intestines and bowels. A
.10 -cent box from your druggist will
keep your liver and bowea- cleen;
raonths. "'They work whilt deep.'
•
r. J. McEwen of Dundas,
a could get no permanent
cu until I tried Zam-Bulo.,.
Pe everance with thie herbal
ba resulted in! a complete
cu , and I have not been
bied with the palling ail-
te ly with Piles and uid find
not g to give roe relief u til I tried
he above are specimens of the
ma letters we are constlinV7 receiv-
in rot:it men and women ho have
en their suffering hy using Zam-
bio poisoning, ulcers, sores, cuts,
hr es, and all skin injtaries and
d is ses. 50c. box, all 'druggists
an stores, or post tree frOrn Zam-
1_ Bu Co., Toronto, Send this ad-.
ver ment with name of giver and
On ent stamp for free trial box.
FIE FOP FREE SAMPLE
gerous
agai
time
quires
The
to bo
part,
The
leasin
a. cert
ly be
and r
rushin
later.
necess
hand
allow t
its •obj
requir
It is
the w
which
from t
rile a
-the oni
Sudde
British
move
toward
The
a hun
fore h
by ri
claim
Iy the
Men fa
were e
the 0
eetus
The
ey' Carry Pves
Their Hailds
lives in their heeds. T
Mills bomb, with its pi e -
apple -like exterior, is a da
weapon. To use it Suceessf I-
t an enemy, and at the sarlie
ard. against miahaps, re -
Bede' knowledge ;and trail!".
inge-thit is, the offensiVe
attaeking and hurling e
er
altay
serge
Ev
gaxrioo
niAnS
hand
vente
open
that
and
dash
ewbieh
with
ensues
ills bomb is fusejd ,by -
number of, secoinds to -
eless to release he sprieg
foe if ft bursts so e sewn s
o get the best r sults it is
to retain the' bcimb in t e
r as taany seconds as w 11
to explode. just as .it reach s
cool judgment, practi e
nerves.
awn. The air Is
e enemy's lines 1
British trench.
to from either p
orths creep out
arapet anti down
hen with bent
ently in an une
the Hun trenches.
tacking force get
yards of its o
e shouts, quick)
and macbine-gun
s discovered. Si
aki 'line dash
on all sides; with
t it appears as t
ting some specie
instant, rolls
amp will
ora haz'im
Oceasio al
earran
over t
he slopi
dies th
ding li
II 1
11
of Boche
the trelech.
ore the resist ce of t o
their support trench a
yards away op n. a hea
machine -jun fire .To d-
er at present across t• e
be impossible, It is row'
baiting bomb foi bomb.
from, the enemy lolls in t e
The ower'' swings round a d
"then upports. Ali!"
front 11 eta he snakes a sudd n
leave on the helpless men,
barite aatd hurls it away. 'It
iimmediately in the
moments later he is alotie.
Eton nuiu.g his d el. Gut-
tural from tho ght cause
Mtn t
be over the
es the Germaw3 are cou
allows fornamf a crawl
Manse istol in handeetoilvards hi
There 0 time to bomb him in t e
ordine way, yt he pie one OP
`and s it. As the un's head
shOws o et the parapet e hurls
as! he uld ball.at,the wicket
stop a ort maim
But th bomber is not Gat of
110111113 hes. stew
Pvit'lr'fi-;h down the tr ch,
41- tele another bontb,, tracts
0C," nd the sounds f his aP-
oit el!. enemy rapidly raw n '
to with
jectave
ultaneo
s forwa
such reg
ough th
drill. E
ering
relentle
e fire
in
e-
d.
1 -
ti
of a specialist.
T e bomb, bursting on -the inetant,
is flowed by groans.
thati not only has the counter-attaek
of t e Huns been defeated, but thot
they are 'bein.g hunted back to their
Prqmier Tisza Admits
That Food Situation in
Hungary Is,Preq,.i:11
HE food. problem in Hungary
is represented in unotriciial
despatches as pressing.
infoemed the Hungarian Chamber
that the Government's caleulatioin
regarding crops had been upset ha
contlinuous bad weather, and that n
condequence the situation was di
cult, as the quantity of grain was not
sulli lent to meet the normal cope
stun tion. The Premier assured the
Cha ber, however, that the amouot
of f od available would be aufacient
to save the population from want, as
during the last twe years the people
tomed themselves to consume less
than before the war.
The Premier 'accepted the respora
alba ty for seeing to it that the
shor age of -foodstuffs did not• inter-
fere with the fighting capebilttlin Of
the onarchy. He anachanced the
ergo ization or a department 'to
son' ol the distritastion of food. The
Cha ber adjourned until December
"King Sold to Htins."
"Ving Ferdinand has sold himself
Pi is was the judgment pronouncea
(met o :enter of Bulgaria by one !ea
his mibjects captured an the region.
of: D Iran by the French and now e
W informed that the allied.
eons tiffeneiye had begun on the
Salm iaa, front, that the Russians and
Rata ns had joined the British ana
Fran „It forces andewere all mooching
;tea': st the Germans and Bulgarians!,
the. ad garian prisoner said:
his war is being conducted bg'
lerreanophile . at, home. All
thee. mills good e ucation have beea
give posts of one kind and air-
otae , and have not been sent to the
iron -lest they should organize op: -
posit en to Ferdinand's political
"I e lost a lot of men in Serbia,.
Our chiefs told us that if we sure
rend red to them the Serbians would.
mass :ere us.
v p believed tb„ero.. That is 3034 -
we f tight them.
agai sf lighting the Russians. If' we
do e will be cursed for ever whee
we g back.
" hat has added enormously t*
the esertions, and made surrender
thl
Pawned Orlmey Islands.
T e Orkoey Islands do not, really
belo g to Great Britain, in the sense
. that they ware ever ceded by treatg
or a quired by conquest, They were(
simp y- transferred by Denmark -t;
Scotl nd in, 1a68,-- in pledge for t
pay ent of the dowry of the P nes
miss 1. Denmarkewho was married tb
Sam s King of Scotland. ,In t
deed of transferewhich is still in ne
isten it is specially mentioned t
Den ark shall -have the right to 1-
deen; them at any future time it
dowry otitis interest Us date. -
There ds no likelihood; howevers
that IDeoma.rk will ever attempt te
ea tiStS,000 ilefrins, the original
amo t of the dowry, Plus eomPolited
in st2ftto 448 years, would. amount
to perhaps a trillion. pounda, and
that :is a bit ,more than- the Islands
IF pm CEILD CROIX,
P,EVELISN., CONSTIPATED
Mother! if tongue is soatici,
cleanse iittie bowels with 'Tall-
fornia Syrup of Roan
M ern can rest easy after giving
"California Syrup- of Figs," because in
a feW !hours all the clogged -up waste,
sour bile and fermenting food gentli
moves out of the bowels, and you hate
a well, playful 'child again.
Sick children needn't be conned to
cans they knoW• its *Mat -on Ste
stadia, :liver .and bowels 48 Drumixt
As your dragglat for a 515 -cont
ile o "California Syrup of Figs," whi
CCM directions for babies, chi'
of ages and for grown-upa.
•
•
,MERELY FLIRTING.
ConVersatiOn Is Entirely Emotion
Says the Late Raymond Asquith.
A very interesting. article by the
late Raymond Aequith, the Prenaieras
eldest son, appears in The London
Chronicle, ftr Iff Mal it was written
firunt.before tie! writer went to the
"What is 'be •object of Conversa-
tion?" lie asksi "What is its essenee?
What human purpose does it serve?
I assert in the" broadest and 'vulgar -
est way that -all good modern con-
versation is diptieg. Neither more
nor less.
"It ie o pro ound niistake to sup-
pose that the bject of conversation
is merely or evee mainly the com-
munication of ideas. The essential.
function of conversation is to be the
medium not Irian intelleetual, but of
an elm:Atonal nteechange. ,In the
mere exchange of ideas emotion has
no say._ 'It is a business more eatelly
and effectively! transacted between
persons of ths *erne sex than between
persons of different sexes. In the
discussion of any given subject two
men (or, for all I know, two Women)
can get to the' root of the matter
ii
more nearly an more quickly than a
"A clear heed, a quiet pulse, a
comm,cm dialecto-these are the con-
ditions most favorable to a purely
cold, impereonal lucidity, at once
unheated and unclouded by emotion,
which distinguishes ideal. discussion
from ideal ,coneersation.
. "On the other hand, an excess of
emotion is not imis fatal to cooversa-
tion than a deSect. As in tae sex-
less interchange of ideas loatween,
man and man emotion h.as Mtge Part
in that warm transfusion of 1 spirits
which occurs between a man and a
woman who are actually in love with
one another.
"But midway between the inter-
chi,nge of ideas and the transfusion
of spirits stands that subtle and am-
biguous form of communion, at once
intimate andt superficial, which for
fiwiaritsitngo.f a better name I have called'
"Mach of the two parties to this
delicate relation must be conscioue
of the other's charm, must be at-
tracted and desirous of attracting,
yet not in love. Love is clamant and
invasive. • It strives to possess or
even to become that which is its ob-
jeet. 'The emotion whieh underlies
flirting ts appreciative rather than
appetitive, and would enjoy the treas.:
urea ..of another's nature not by ap-
propriating, but by appraising them.
It aims at achieving a real but trans
Blent intimacy, an illinninate4
glimpse into some gracious aspect of
.another's being,
"Intimacy of this sort is a thimg
more likely to spring from the ticker
of an eyelash or the curl of a lip than.
from a mouth cif the most sacred,
confidences; it is something both
brief and sudden; an intuition, not a
habit; a. gulp of champagne agabsat l
the palate, never a millstone round
the neck; the wing of the kingilsher
dipping in the pool of the soul and
flashing on again, not the neb of the
duck nuzzlin.g in the slirae for worms.
BRITONS ARE LEANER.
Hard Work and Plain Living Reduce
trohn Bull's Girth.
The medical experts are telling
us that the Ernie's, since the war
began, have become leaner, says- the
London News. Generally speaking,
John Buli, owing to hard work amid
plain living, is now able to take in
his belt three holes.
The well-known 'Vendor of a "fig-
ure reductor" for self-conscious per-
sons, questioned' 0/1 this by a Daily
News intez-viewet, admitted a decline
in sales.
A tent case was obviously "TwentY
Stun Bill," who used to loiter, fair-
ly actively, at a corner where bus
horses assembled In South London,
and. still thaunts the place. "Old
Bill?"equeried a motor -bus driver.
"Not so staht? Not 'art No treat-
ing ash. Not so mtich beer." Food
tor thought there.
business, . confirraed the general
statement of a jeaner Britain. "I
don't think there's either loss or
gain in it. Many people are thinner
because they are in poor condition,
owing to worry, or high food prices,
or both. Nothing knocks the tissues
about like worry. And then a large
number ot well-nourished people are
working so much harder than usual
that they've lost a good stone in. the
past year. But they're the better
for it, like the sound man who gets
lean in his army training -if that
isn't' overdone or hurried, as I fear
It is, however, in not a few in -
This Woman. is Anxiona to Fight.
A remarkable letter' from a mar-
ried woman who desires to become a
soldier wait read tO the Blackpool,
England, tribunal !the other
The letter bore the name and
-dress of a 'weal weman, and, refer-
ring to the large nutraber of appeals,
suggested that the! shirkers should
stay at home to do !civilian weak,.
"Why can't we Women," it asked.
"go to the war when we are wine
ions to? We can tote a ride as wee
as any man, and I should be delighl-'
ed to go into the litfany, artillern
or any service, having wanted to go
oince the war began. I hove very
strong nerves, and have been in sev-
eral aeroplanes. Why can't we •be -
soldiers .like RU3/31en women? I
have been in the Womsn's 'Training
Corps, but walking about in khaki
'with nothing to do is no use to me.
1 have ever done household drudgery,
which is hateful and a curse."
Auto Dealers "Do you know how
naany cars I have sold this week?"
New Clerk: "SeVenteen."
Auto Dealer: "tie here, bave yoa
ueen looking into the books?"
Auto Dealer: "Then how did you
guess it exactly?"
New Clerk: "Because there have
been just that many fellows looking
for you this afternoon_ with blood LU
Lorto Memorial to Kitchener.
Fun le ere being raised in England
by puolie sub: tription to erect a
tam:melee: to the late Loyd Kitcht
say, Oriel ay, toe * the place where
the cruie, r Ha -.ap.,hire wont down
with the giert War'itlinIstei• aboard.'
The /monument will be at such an
tetee -71, ten
manse disteeee
A WALL OF SOAP
One e ear s sales of Comfort
deep nitans enough soap
uild a wall 15 feet high art
ay mile s long. Th•olt of
Eno.igh to completely
ITIVEY THE 4:141t IN CPAVA
BRITAIN ABLE TO
BEAR WAR SHAN
Mckenna Defends High Rate of
I interest on Bonds.
TO BE HELD ABROAD
eavir Sums Are Paid Every Day to
baited &ease, and itesitiy
Money is Urgently Needed for
that Purpose - Empire is
Able to Carry Load Im-
posed by the 'War.
cellor of the Exchequer, re-
plying in the British House
is-sties:1 raised that this would leael
to their being lasgely held abroad,
said:
"That is the very thing we desire.
It twist be remembered that we had
to pay a very, considerable amouet
day bY day in the United States. At
present we have to Ind 22,000,000
a day for eveily working day. That
: leans a prodigious amount to find -
every six days;"
Mr. McKen a prefaced his state-
ment, regardi
being spent in
of hiS action
of interest up
"It is Rot
apply pre-war
that five per cent. is enough or that
we could get it more cheaply. Very
g the large amounts
America, by a defence
n paying a high race
ossible," he said, "to
standards ard to say
likely it could be eeile
want cl a. little ,oe even tee ,
e
whet er we are sucesaeehil in kite,. a
meet all exernscs and to assay ees
to m ke sure /of getting money,"
Mr. McKen.na proceeded to etefeen
that nless Great Britain. was tiiJle
to rai the needed monay in the
Unite States she would have to go
short of supplies from those vvii•eri
were absolutely eesential to the pur-
poses of the Allies.
De nding U. issue of the six per
cent. bonds, the Chancellor men-
tioned the fact ihat within a fort -
ii
sold e the extent of /36,000,000.
He a ded that the present moment
of co petition for money was un-
favorable to the issue of a long-term
loan, but the Government intended
to retiort to such a loan when the
Treasimy coosidered it advisable,
and the Government would not
shrink from the fulfilment of its
promise in regard to the conversion
of previous loans.
The Chancellor declared he did
not doobt the ability of the Empire
to bear the strain of the war. Its
expenditure was not diminishing, he
HAD WEAK HEART
COULD NOT WORK
COULD NOT SLEEP.
Many women are kept in a state ef
fear of death, become weak, vvorn and
miserable and are unable to attend to
their household, social or business dudes,
on account of the unnatural 'action of
the heart.
To all such offerers Milburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills ehre prompt and per-
manent relief
Mrs. a. Day, 2ae. John Street South,
Hamilton, Ont., writes: "I was so ma
down with as weak heart I could not even
sweep the iloon nor could I deep at
night. I was so awfully sick sometimes
I had tO. stay in bed all day al 'crow
weak. I used three and a half boxes of
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and I
am a cured woman to -day, and, as strong
as anyone could be. I am doing my own
housework, 'even my own washing.
I doctored for over two vear but got
no help until I used your pills.d
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are
50c. per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all
dealers or Mailed direct on teceipt of
oronto, Ont.
in both of these, directions isti WaiS
'confident the country would not
grudge the, needful supplieS.
Heroic Self -Sacrifice,
No more beautiful act ofi heroic
celf-saerifiee can be vie/worked than -
that of Private Camille Shonle of a.
Nova Scotia battalion. During the
great advance on Cobacelette of Sep -
and while binding the wounded after
the capture of the positions i-ae tee,
self severely wounded in the shout -
der. His wounds were dreased, but
he refused to be bivonatkad„ and
continued his work of administeritig
help to the wounded for the remain-
!' der of the day and during the night.
i In the morning he was again
wounded, thio time through Ilse
but he still refused to
Finally, about noom while tie was
actually dressing the wounde of an -
a other 'man, thiti gallant; gentle sole
t • tiler was shot through: the heart and
killed. His general has said!oe him:
"Greater devotion to dutY I hove
Shakesperian Relic.!
Shakespeare premetred in 'ensaVv°fif
Of the few genuine
town, the most interesting ate his-
tign.et ring, with the initials fiW. S."
en it, and the desk at whiett he sat
in the grammar Behooi at Stratford.
aver 2 3,0 OD people 'visit the poet's
nonie every year, numbers 'of them,
ior this express purpote.
profit -the other means loss. Whf.,
-develops a Spavin, Curb, Splint
risk losing lam through neolret-t
risk by experimenting with unknov
reliable standby-
KENDALL'S SC
British 'tire -tams.
From a long-range station on the
west coast of England wirelOs mes-
sages are sent out by the ,Govern-
ment every day. Sometimes three
or four messages are eleoulated
twenty-four hours. They ate tient
westward - the control of direction
being possible under one of ,the lat-
est inventions It counectien with
wireless telegra.phy-so tbat they
reach practically all parts Of North
and South Amertee
This German movernramk paid
special attention to title bus;lness
influencing neutral opinion from the
British Government eareace As nave
coping effectively wi'4 the !letter -114;41
publicity ca.mpaign.
The headquarters of the
Wireless" are at Marconi
London, and the message is Sem t
every evening from aae long-diatance
station at Poldhu, Cornwall.
It consists of a etiounary of. the
official communieute and ofa reports
arrangement by whieh, the !Govern-
ment adds whatovar news it ' may
words, and is retransmitted from
(French Africa), and ottier place.s,
so that it may reach the Tar corners
of the 'world.
aildzen
eo VI ET PqR
•
t
of her argument. and Otey
fast In sueh intimacy and en
tttat the night's discomforbt
uWe have to camp here
sdght." she explained derintre
"Worse things could hap!
that," be gene" ntly answe
wouldn't mind a month of
shouldn't want it to rain or
Poor boy! You did suff
you? I was afraid you wor
pou sleep at allr she asked t
"Oh, yen, after I came ine
of worse. I was wore or teas
salEpeCting your father to able
way. I slept like a log after
yon were comfortable. You m
* better bed sum! more Wank
always cold up here"
The sunlight W33 short
clouds settled ova. the emeaks
ged wisp of gray vapor divots
the timbered slopes of the pt
amphitheater le which the i
Again Berrie made everythb
while her young W00119Entli
rbringing logs for the Are.
eontentediy slide by aide sta
;awning and watched the fan
.as it splashed and sizzled th
fiim. "It's a little like bait
wrecked on a desert leland,
be said. As if our boats bad
la she agalm prepatard
orate meal. She served poW.b
.grenee, het blaenit with saga
and canned ,peahhea and teatfo
to just the right ewer and stroll
with repeated wishes that the
visor might turn up let time t
their Amt., but, he did not.
FOR
'UVERISHNES
tAXA-L1VER Pita
114EY NEVER. FAIL TO Do 1
-writes: "I take pleasure in writ4,
concerning the great valt.e I in
eeived by using your Milburn's,
Liver Pills for a sluggish liver, 'WI
'liver got bad woeld have severl
aehess but after using a couple
-of your pills I have not been
with the headaches any mere,"
,Tviiiburn's Laxa-Liver Pills Or
become inective,
11i/burn's taxa -laver Pins are
vial, oe vials fOr 41.00, at all dea
mailed dirtet on receipt of arl
Tits T. Mianuati Co, 1.,liartizi,
Ont.
HAIR STOPS FAT,'
Save your Halri Get a 25 cent
of Danderine right now -AI
stops itching soolp.
TTleihenre' bit: tUneoth, eolorling soeeedestriluttad :
hair is mute evidence of a neg
ocalp; of dandruff -that awful
the hair as dandruff. It roba Cal
ife V II pr
oh a ititamsvnre:aftyaarlantruk'luredsmedieouti bt c hia: s eti ic:1:r 0 af Aletiliet4 lit t - th:).-443:8 4.11.:
Get a, 25 cent bottie of
randerine from any drug stOre..
turely can have beautiful haft -- .
of it if you will just try a liatl:
airemeans
goes lame
g: eve -don't
Mr. David Yerez, Sonya, Ont., writes used your Spavitt Cur. tale
Nee= years. end Ignolvit to be a good eu ". -rratly _for emergencies,
bottle of Kt-I.:Ian's in the barn. Ttut,. if s Lorse goes lam
remedy on band to-eure thetmuble quick y. st-a bottle, --6 for $5.
your dealer for free copy of hook-"Tresiziefr On The llorse"-or vrri
Dr. ILL 10ENDAIL Co., . LOW FALLS; ViltaiONT,
REW ARD
sesesmosoomemeamieramanossami
Ziaa information that w;i1
the discovery or Whertai,Q111
person or persons suliesir,ig
Nervous Debility, Disease 0
Special Ailments, and Chrinv
Complicated Complaints
not he cured at The Ontario 1.
cal institote, •211)3-2C5 Vor,i,,;
Torontoftcorrespondence