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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-04-12, Page 6014 EXPOSITOR 10 CENT "CASCARETS FOR LIVER AND BOWELS cure sick Olesciache, Constipation, Siliousnese, Sour Sto ash,„Bad 1514sitiet-Candy Cathie:tics ••,11••,•.•••••••••••• Ne did& how bad. • your liver, stornaeb or bowels; how muck your head athes, how miserable' you are efrom tonstipse .- tient indigestion, biliouseessiand slum gishi bowels --you alvrays get relief WI Casa:meta They firtmediatety aeanse oad gu1ato the stomaole remove the sour, fenneutirLg food and. foul gases; I take ,the excess bile from the liver and ' carry off the constipate& waste matter and remison frota the intestines; and bowels. A le -cent •box from year drug- i dewy; stolttehli sweet anhead clear ford, I gist will keep your liver and, bowelc inoriths. They work while you sleep. .. i CREAM WANTED. — • We have our Crearnery.now in full operation, and we Want your patron- age. We are prepared to pay. yov the highest prices for .your cream, pay you every two weeks, 3,, c'gh, sam le and test each can of cream caret and give you stetement of the same We also supply cans free • of charge and give you an honest business deal Call in and see us or drop us a card fat parecula,rs. THE SEAFORTII CREAMERY Seaforth Ontario - Dizzy and Faint Sp -ens, Are Warnings of Heart Trouble That Should Be Heeded. Those feelings of Weakness, those dizZ; tpells and "all gone" &Irking seneatiote which come over some people from tint t`;; time are warnings that must not unheeded. They indicate, an extremelj weakened condition, of the heart and : disordered state of the nerves. . Thee who are wise will start takite Milburn's Heart and NervePills bef(pt their case 'names lemeless. They ham no eget,' foe strengthening the heart: and invigorating the nerves. Mrs. Emil Brooks, Upper Gagetown. N.B., writes:—"Ail last summer end.: winter I had dizzy and weak spells, -headaches and tainting and blind soelle A friend recotnmended Milburn's Heart and Nerve ,Pills to me. I had only taken two boxes when 1 found greet re- lief. 1 h;ghly recommend them to all who Buffer from heart tremble." Milburn' s Heart and Nerve Pillseare 50eper box at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T: Mil- burn co., Limited, Torontp. Ont. ••••••••IIIMIN• Jail -nes] W at s on "1".1011.1111.0.1 Genet...4 Ins ranee Agent Real Esta tand L )1r1 Ager Dealer in ewnM achines Four liond ho sea for sale,' conyeniently situated in the Town of Seaforth. Terme reasonable andi possession given promptly Apply at my office for particulars. ...•••••• END STOMACH TROUBLE, GASES OR 'DYSPEPSIA "Papal). Diapepsin" makes sick, sour,/ gassy stomachs surely feel fine in five minutes. If what you just ate is souring en your stomach or lies' like a lump of lead, or you belch gat an,d eructate. sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, „ had taste in mouth and storaach-head- ache, you can get relief in five minutes by neutralizing acidity. Put an end to - such stomach distress now by getting a large fifty -cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store You realize in 'five minutes how needlers it is to suffer from indigettice, dyspepeia or any atom. ach disorder' caused by food fermentation due to exeessive acid in stomach. • • to lend on Farms, First, Second Mortgages. Call or writo.ras at once andget your loan arranged r by return mail. No advent. charges. B. R. REYNOLDS, 77 Victoria. St., Toronto. deAdittaldvta ••••••••••••••..•••111 WAS TROUBLED WITH INDIGESTION COULD KEEP NOTHING ON STOMACH. Indigestion is orte of the worst forms of stomach trouble. The stomaelt beeumee upset and you have a raw debilitated feeling in it. It is- not necessary for you !0 troubled with indigettion if you will only tee that old and 'well-known remedy Berdoek Blood Bitters, which will regu- late- the stomach° so that you may at what. you w:sh without any ill after effects. Mrs. Wee C. Smith, Maishirille, Oat?, writes :—"I cannot. speak too; highly of Burdock Blood Bitters: it is worth its weight in gold. I was troubled with in- digestion, and was so bad I could not keep andthing on me sthemeh. A friend advised me to try B.B.B. whieh I did, and I never felt better in Inv life." Burdock Blood Bitters has been manu- factured by The T. Milburn Co... Limited, Toronto, Ont., for over 40 years. You lo not experiment When you buy it. • WOMEN rDIVER POLITICS IN ABERTA wuniot 'in Eritieb paper Stays: "In Alberta, Manifest- ly, *when have established their claim to share the -bum end- restionstblitties Of *Mea - 1 , and men do not regard this claim as unreasonable or as the as- - sertioe of a novel !right which has to be limited and safeguarded Tim alt eorte ot checks and balanced. "To those whq have watchedthe slow progress of the women's cease tni.this eountry, this straightforWard and. very matter-of-fact recognition (id woman's citizenship is refreshitng. By otintra.st, our timid and half- hearted 'concession' of a truncated f„rciachitie for women looks ridiculous. --444.n.4 the bitter struggle that the ' women of this country have had to wage to get even -this small measeire of justice can he seen in its true light as a tragic waste of energy." "The whole proceeding," says An- other British journal, "strikes otie as a splendid example of democracy In salon." "Soldiers aod 'sisters' working <to- gether overseas *elected Miss Roberta Catherine MicAdams as thelr reprea sentative to the Provincial Perna-) MISS ROBERTA C. MACADAM. merit of Alberta," says The Woman' Citizen of Boston, which devotes a large space in Its 'latest issue to what it calls "A Curiously Democratise tIlection." "The fighting men, and nursing'. .sister i of Alberta did -not elect me be- cause I was a woman, but because I was a human being whom they could trust to look after their interests • in Parliament," said Miss MacAdams aerself to the British peees . the time of her election which made no inconsiderable stir in England:as she was the first woman elected an 1SEP. on Biltiph soil. "I am not a politician, and no ques- tion of party polities arose in the election. In -Met,- I think that every one of The twenty-one candidates in this soldiers' election was, nominally, at least, independent of political par- ties," she oontinuedi "'The soldiers allyiknoWP. are given:neeesstary to be " 'The upper bettit ha a nuinber tif within react o supply advantages over the lower, In the ef labor /Or tipple Means, Otherwise first platea saving of td per hent. itob tette* tfeceitsary,tO build dwell - in the cost is offered; ventilation , Inge for taett tind"their famines so generelly, is better, teraPe,ratere thadet supply Of labor may be always more even:'' #DAIC the noite arfsitig available: t • from, the motion of', the cars is less- The:difficulties of the labor situa- noticeable. The spring mattresses _tion at picking time can be lessened On iderably, by the planting of varie- • • t instead of ties which titer. In succession, and pliable, and aie one se tiO as n o cupants of upper berths are less Portion of Gaeta, A arse area of one likely to be distnrbed by people variety ripening at tee time is ex - Passing through the Clm othei ; treely difficult to handle. — Prof. hangers, mirrors, and electric ligh.t J. W. Crew, Ontario Agricutlurat, facilities • are provided in upper College, Guelph. berths, as well as lower berths. Ira- I . berth The oc- by taking eare to g t -the right pro- Iproved laddets are now* beteg .usetl, ' . . and an of the new cars b.eve individ- WHEN THE BABY GETS EARACHE ual curtains !for both upper and lilter Infants and young children are very -berths, instead of the long ones. susceptible to attacks^ of earac.hai They usually occur in children whoiare suf- fering sfrenie some inflammatory Is Sugar Shortage a BlessiAg? • dition of the threat or nose. Such, Prom the 'standpoint of hygiene however, is not iiecessarili the case. In the young the only symptoms of the trouble may he. restlessness, fever, which is ustially present, and pain, which is manifested by crying'. One repeatedly sees an attack so severe S to cause, an infant to shriek with pain, without any sign to locate the trouble. An older child, in addition. to the above, will usually raise the hand to the side affected or point to the painful ear. The child.' usually is much distirbed if the ear is touch- ed or manipulated in any way. While seVere pain is the rule, it matt be ab- sent; there- may be loss of appetite, 'or four , da.ys *with no other sign of illness and no evidence whatever of pain, when suddenjy one discovers a A HANDY STOCK RACK yellowish discharge .- from the ear, A portable floorless rack, or crate, with tentorary or permanent relief from the symptoms. In a ease of an attack of 'earache dry heat is cif much.service. Rest the ear on a hot water bag ,or apply a salt bag,. made by Sewing together two pieces of muslin about three by five inches in size and filling it one- half full with salt. The bag and con- tents are then pressed flat, heated, •and applied to the ear, the salt -re- taining the heat for a long time/ An- other device is to fill the finger of an old glove with salt, heat and place the tip in the ear. As precaution the mother should always test it first, b it in her own ear. A done deg. F. May also be of considerable eervice in these cases. The child 'should be pinned in a sheet and lie on its back, with, its head On a level With or a little lower than the body. 'A basin proteeted with a towel . ab- sorbent cotton is placed under t, the ear. One assistant is required to estead the head, as the child drill ebe sure to struggle. The_dotiche bag— an ordinary fountain' syringe -d -should be hsid not more :than two feet above the head. From one to two Pints of water may. be needed. The tip of • the. syringe lei placed about one-quarter of an ilia front the orifica of the canaltand the water is allowed to flow into the ear untiI the child is relievecl- br .until bag is empty. Such atdindOhe may be ree peated every hoar until medical aid arrives. - • • anti economy, changes In diet repre- -vet epositive gain, seys the Popular Science Monthle, For instance, take algae -sea food, which yields more itat tortes per unit of cog then any other tood, but which, on tlee other hand, give$ us nothing but energy. It con- tains no protein and no mineral value, elements which are essentiel. So the present sugar shoetage .is[ a bleeeing in disguiee, for -we ere oblig- ed to substitute in its piece vege- tables apMfrults whicia are real body bailddig foods. Had wo made this eimple eubstflute- Many years ago we might have been. a sturdier race to. day. .high fever, and restlessness for titre 10 feet wide and 30 feet long is the novel aad very serviceable device em- ployed on an up to date farm in trans- porting small herds of live stock oh the public highway, The outfit is about six feet high and is supported a: few inches above the ground by running gear, a pair of wheels 'being located at each end. It is 'especially useful in handling calves or cattle that are Wild, the animals being driven into the framework,. which is then closed. and drawn along by a team. The outfit eliminates ell danger of the herd be- ing scattered or etampeded. A running board is provided an either tide; on c which helpers stand and oversee the animals. With as many as 20 head of cattle in the device, it can be drawn, along as easily as an empty 'wagon. WHERE ORCHARDS PAY * ttn lite QUO'STION will be dis-. i? .cussed under four bends:. 'Climate, Soil, ' Labor o'aud; Transportation.' The Factor of Climate. . So „, -far as climate . is concerned apples can be grown commercially in any patt of old Ontario south ot a tine drawn from _Parry Sound, to Ot- tawa; hi fact, there are Commercial . orchares producingg fruit ate profit 1 coneiderablwfurther north than this. Many peepletthink of commercial ap- ple mot arde as being necessarily con- fined to the milder parte of the Pto- ' vamp, and to the take' dittricts, but the Mei: bi worth omphcsizing, that wo eitee meteettes -d1 apples suitable fer menmcreial eultere in ew‘ry come 1:e of r)1(1 Ontario, The winter hare.'" trete et i he mr.ny varieties , groivn „1.4r,--ixttortt (31-.tario 1.s now very well estohed. and it is possible to w•- ic A f.r.e.: Whin Will L',.. hardy rot :i.e.• tr. -, - Tiln most fier:o”-. (dim:tile difficulty and the sisters chose me as them re- te. elei• pray nee (f Outwit) Is the ec.. presentative exactly as they selected-,:1:14,,,pee of late frost in spring, and Capt. Pearson, wile headed the pollees e *remit -di in rqu. other difficulties They did not think May were doing m anything very startling in voting for a.iworcian. Why should they think sot eat If, they thought 'about it at all,.theY wit tirobably thought it was quite as nat- efe rat for tt. woman to be a raember of ite ornament as a member of a nursing :Inn clorpsv ' I regard the -result of the elec- lien -chiefly as a tribute to my uni- form and to the cerps to which I am attached." This curiously democratic electioo knockedpolitical theories all -about, and nearly buriee out of sight:,_ the - notion that -a political campaign has to be an elaborate affair of election- eering. There could be no canvaesing prior to the election, as the efeetorrs were. spread all along the eghtifig- frout. There were no meetings; no potitical edvertieing; of speeches.. net to none. Miss MacAdams did make a simple pre-election address, conveying to the men her assurance that if she were returned she would look -after the interests not only •0 f t he soldiers, but of their mothers, wives and Isweethearts. . Miss MacAdams is the daughter et a Canadian newspaper edito`r, and sister-in-law of Hon, W. J. Hanna, tile late Toed Controller. She is a . trained nurse, a dietitian, and has held a position as supervisor of house- hold arts in the public and high schools of Edam -Mon. She was also at one time superineendent,of Wo- men's Iustitute in Alberta under the Provincial Department of Agri- 'cultare t i . At the same time with Miss Mac - Adams, there will take her seat in the Alberta Legislature another wo- man, Mrs. Louise C. MacKinney; of Claresholm, who, is 'already Well known in Eastern Canada for her modest view of her own achievements and the sanity of her outlook upon national affairs. "I have no wise or brilliant diew on politics," she says. "1feet fleet there are things to be done for wo- men and childpen 'by other wolunn; for when -we reach the woman we teach the fountainhead." On Behelf of Upper .13711. because of the gnneral disinceea tion on the part of thfe public to upper berths in sheeting cars. tenet cars often travel without a full com- plement of passengers. Because in these times, with intense pret;totr- upon railroad facilities, especially locomotives, it is essential to have passenger trains 'utilized to full cap- acity as well as freight cars, the Baltimore & Ohio R.ailron.d has ted sued a circular entitled oAdeatereees of the tipper 'Berth," in welch the foltowine !mint% in favor not gen- 1•10•••••■••■•••••3•1 1.111112A••••••••••••••. Children CrY Fall FLETCHER'S 0 A T10 1 A 0111z:tic neibrd can be largely were bO. the selection or suitable Prez, or by careful discrimination' meted to soil, elevation; aspect, It inlythe pointed out, however. . &teed are more common- and sevett over large areas of flat moo. Man wbere the topogrepby oiling and hilly. 'Large areas 91 30.11Sof the c,..outbern counties of On- ta are, therefore, more or lees lin- tel; el to commercial apple 61.chard- in because of their flat character. A . ore rolling country is much to be pr forted, so that orchards can be ni• do safer from frost by the better al drainage- afforded. thetchotee of varieties for various dietricts will be made the subject of later notes. MitabIe Soil III Every County. o femme soils are concerned, it m y be stated that there is an abun- da ce of land in every county suitable foi apple growing. Well drained lane Is sserrtial for successful orcharding, art there is plenty of soil of this ty le to be had in almost every dis- trid. umrning up Soli and Climate, tt m, y be said th.at n� province or state in, North America has so large an ar a so favorable In Soil and climate to» apple growing as has the Province of ntario. If this statement is true it L ecotnes obvious that the present di ribution of apple orchards in °ri- te o is dependent on other factots. tri ar co ed,„ fac ha ti€ of bee orc city soti a M is tra. Most Profitable -tte.ar Cities. rensportation is the most iinportd factor having to' do with the die-. ution of commercial apple orch- s in, Ontario. In other words, the merctal apple orchards are locat- witten reach of transportation lities, and the better facilities e been with relation to large eie and to the'. developing markets he prairies, the more rapid has the ,developraent of commercial arding, A location near a large ure of war effieiency. • mai, be desirable, , but if better Miss Esther Cleveland, daughter of and climate are to be found at the late President, was married ill stance, the more‘ distant location Westminister Abbey to Capt. W. S.B. ikely to be pre erred, provided Bosanquet, an officer of the famous . sportatien facilities are good. Colds ream Guards. , S, me districts in Ontario possess TheI American God -mothers' league exc llent conditions of soil and di_ has ben organized by Mrs., William in , but are lacking in fransporta- Leonetti Davis to supple, the American tioe facilitiesi and nein facilities are troop in France with luxuries, such av • able little development can take as tobacco and newspapers. ' plea in commercial orchtieding. i Offieers to lead the woman's land bor Situation Very Acute, I ant& in raising crops this summer will the present time the labor sit- ' be trained at the school of horticulture n is ante, anti is rendered more for women at Ambler, Pa. om the standPoint of the apple bliss Emma LeClair, Lowell, Mess,. er by virtue of the ertiplia.sis ha.s organized a veritable battalion of h, very correctly, is being placed death known as company A., first wo- the production of exportatile man's regiment. of Maesechusetts. stuffs. Tile labor shortage will Steel helmets have been furnished t, ini the Majority of small_orch- to women drivers in London to preitect :being more or less neglectedtheir heads from exploding German the large commerciel grower of bombs -dropp61 from aroplanes. e has been in difficulty for years A girl cannot live on less than V.1.70 the matter of labor supply. For a week in New York, according to ercial orchard Operatitme on a figures furnished by4he state factory an extra r nurse putting e at 110 Earacheds usually due to the pres- ence of pus or other fluid behind the drmn . Membrane. .; This causes pres- . sure within. etbeeteer which May re- quire a tligh-teii4ation for its relief %toe t 1 • ACTIVITIES' OF WOMEN 1 - .;k APRIL:1Z 18i9 investig4ing conunission. _ Wbenlack of funds prevented the erection Of a new hotrndal at Pain Beach four t women stilted in and raised nearly $200,000 in a; few days. Miss IVIary C. O'Neill, .an Atlantic City girl, claims the honor of -being ono of the youngest suceessful real estate operators in the entire United States. if not in the world. --ver •••••••, By Arthur Guy Empey (Continued from Page Seven) asked Me how ralleh. In.911.57 1 wanted to draw. I glibly a.nsWered, "Three hundred filmes, sir"- Ire jixtt ae handed meone hui;dred. . I Reporting at Brigade Headquarters with my 'pack 'weighing a ton, I wait- ed, with forty.others, fort)1 Adjutant to inspect us. After an hour's twaite he came out; =it have been sore be - calve he wasn't going with us. 1 • The -Quattermaster-Sergeant issued : us two dogs' rattons, in a little white 1 urcoenvbaeltss rationb. ; bay) w.ich we tied to 1 ,Then, two motor lorries came along and we piled in, laughing, jolting, and in the lbest Of spirits. We even loved the ,Germans, we were feeling so hap- py. Our journey to seven.days' blies in' Blighty had commenced... The ride in the lorry lasted about two h urs; by this time we were cov- ered i. ith fine, white dust front the -road, but didn't mind, even if we were nearlyechokmg. At the railroad- station at F— we re ceded to an officer who had a white tand around .his a= which read "R.T. ." (Roy.ttl Tramportation Of- ficer). To us this officer was Panto. Claus. ' The Sergeant in charge showed him our orders; he glanced -through them and said. "Make yourselves comfort; able on the platform and don't leave the train is liabe to be along in five minute -- or five hours." It came in five hours, a string of eleven i match boxes on big, high wheels,idrawn by dinky little engines edith the "con." These match boxes Were cattle cars oh the sides of which was painted the old familiar sign, "Hoimnes 4Q, Chevaux 8." ' The R. T. 0. stuck us all into one . cat. We didnt care, it was as good as a' pullman to us. Two -days we spent on that. train, bumping, stopping, jerking ahead, and sometimes sliding back. At three stations we stbpped long enough to, make settee tea, but were unable to 'wash, so when we arrived at B where we were to embark for Blighty we were as black as Turco& and, with our urithaven faces, we looked like a lot of tramps.. Though tired out, - we -were happy. , We had packed ale preparatory to: detraining:when a R. T. 0. held up his band for us to stop where we were and eatrie over. This what he said * Boys, I'm sory, but orders have just beentreceived cen elling ell leave. If you had been. thre hews earlier you weuld have gotte stway. Just stay in that train, as it is going- back. .1114- tiens will be issued to yoii. for your return journey to your respective gad •1 tions, . Beastly rotten, I ,Itretw," Then he 1 ft. deif , de lence resulted, e.Then- men ed t cur -Se, threw theij: rifles on oor of the ear, others said noth- seemed to be stupified, while some the tears running down their cheeks. It was • V. bitter disappoint- ment to all. How we blinded at the engineer' of • 1 Miss Margaret Wilson, daughter of the President, ie going to France. Oregon has a law which prevents women from serving as messengers. The American' Red Cross dvante 30,000 women nurses for France. The National Woman's peaty lats become a .suffrage coporations Camps for women farm workers are to •be established in various. parts' of Pennsylvania: . • A woman Unmet', who climbs poles to repair telephone wires the same as men, is employed in Washington,.D. Of the 90,000 registered. nurses in this county only 16600 are enrolled in the Red Cross. Women are to he trained and ed- ucated in this country to become as- sistant pastors of Presbyterian and reformed churches. - Ohio hes at least twenty successful - women barbers while in Pennsylvania there are nearly twice as many. • - Girls now have an equal vote with the men in the athletic affairs �f the Philadelphia Vrankford high school. That Women make highly successful fannersi is shown by the fact that nearly 2,000,000 of them are in charge of faemt in, this country. Miss' „Anna 0 Garrett. superintend- ent of the Frankford hospital of Phil- adelphia, has gone to Italy to instruct volunteee Red 'Cross workers in nurs- ing. Marriages in.Getrnany are on the increase for the first time since the beginning of the war, but the number is far below that or normal times. Mary Pickford, the moving picture Star, has been made a colonel of the 143rd re,gintent, field artillery (!)f the sunshine diviston. Forty-five Women deputy sheriffe-are now doing scouting and patrol duty in the vicinity of the various governinent •training camps. . The govertunent has appointed 56 women deputy sheriffs, to look after' the welfare of girls in the vicinity of training eamps- and cantondaents. Senators favorable to worna.n suf- frage are planning -do make a fight to have it granted throughout the coun- try on the grounds that it is a meas - A, mit" S0, gro' upo, food resu ardS But a ppl, over ••••• sta." the Mg, had that train, it was all his fault (so we reasoned), whe- hadn't he speeded up a little or been on tirdeethen we would have gotten off before teh' order arriv- ed? Now it was no- Blighty for us: That return journey was misery te us; I just can't describe it When we got back to our rest bili- ets, we found that our Brigade was in -the trenches (another agreeable sur- prise), and that an attack was eon- Itemplated. Seventeen of the fortytone will nev-. er get another chapee togo on leave; they ware killed in the attack. 'Just think if thad train had been olt time, those seventeenwould still be 'alive. I hate to tell you how I was k,idded by the boys when I got back, but it was good and plenty. . Our Machine Gun Company took over their part of the line at seven o'clock, the night after I returned from my near leave. • 4 At 3.30 the following morning three wives went over and captured the first and second German trenches. The machine gunners. went over with .the fourth wave to consolidete the captur- ed line or "dig in" as Tommy calls at. Crossing .No Man's Land without dlicking any casualties, we came to the German trench anti enounted our guns on the .parades of same. • I never saw such a me'ss in my life —bunches of twistedebarbe.d wire ly- ing about, shell holes everywhere, trench all bashed in; parapets gone, and dead bodies; why, that 'ditch was full of them, theire and ours. It was a regular morgme. Seine were mangled horribly fram our shell fire, while oth- ers were Wholly or partly buried in the mud, the result of shell explo- sions caving in the walls' of the trench. One dead German was lying oh his back, with a rifle sticking straight. up' in the ail-, the bayonet of which was buried to the hilt hi his chest Across hie feet lay a dead English soldier with a bullet hole ih ids forehead. This. Tommy must have been killed just as he ran his bayonet through the Ger- man. Rifles and equipment were scatter- ed about, and occasionally a steel hel- met could be seen sticking out of the mud. At one poiht, just in the entrance to a communication trench, wa,e a MIIIIIIIII11111111111111111111 •••••••••••••••••••••••...* 111111111111111111111111 .Teleplione Economia Do you practice It? Can He Hear You? WHEN you talk into race, and not -directly into the mouthpiece of your telephone, you are not giving the instru. ment a 'chance to do its best -Work. q The mouthpiece was ciesigned to speak into, and best results are obtained when your lips are about half an inch from its riin. JI Econom4e time and temper by speaking. dis. tinctly, directly into The .mouthpkce, and avoiding needless repetition and delay. The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada Olt 1111111111111011111111111101111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111E111111111111 hole in his temple. The three*enust. have been killed by the same shell - burst. ,• The dugouts Were all smashed in and 'mocked about( big spare -cut timbers splintered info bite; walls cav- ed in, and entrancesdchoked. Tommy, after taking a trench learns to his sorrow, that *the hardest part of the work is to hold it. . In our case this proved to be em. - The German artillery and machine guns hadustaped (ranged) ,for fair; it was worth your life to expose your- self an instant. pont think for a minute that the Germans were the only sufferers, we were clicking easualties _so fast that you needed an adding machine to keep track of them. • . Did you ever see onemf -the steaxn shovels at work on the.Panarea Canal, well, it would look like a hen scratch- ing alongside of a Tommy "digging in" wIdle under fire you couldn't see daylight through the clouds of dirt streteher On this stretcher a Ger- -man wee lying with a white bandage around his knee, near to him lay one of the stretcher-bearers, the red trees ond his arm covered with mud and his hel- met filled with blood and brains. Close • by, sitting up against the wall of the trench. with head resting on his chest, was the other stretcher bearer. He seemed to be alive, the posture was. so' natural and easy, but when I got closer, I could see a large, jagged - Pink Pills." praise of Art Williams' Pink Pills, Child fT� IR- CASTOO fr`omthis shovel. After loking three out. of six of our crew,, we manage to set iip our enachine.,gun. 'One of the legs of the tripod was restingmmtlie cheet a half -buried body. When the gun. wa firing, it gave the impression that -the body Was breathing, this was `caused by th-' excessive vibration. Thrle or four feet down the trench about three feet front the ground, foot s protruding from, the eart we kit w - was a German by the black leather oot. One of our *crew used - that loot to hang extra bandoliers of ammunition on: This man always -was a handy fellow; made use of littl pomts that the ordinary person would overlook. The Germans made three counter- attacks, which we repulsed, but not witkpitt *heavy loss on our side. Th also 'suffered severely from our sh and lamelun.e gun fire. The ground wa spotted with their dead and dying. ,(To be Continued Next Week) ••• he $pring Tonic for Pale, Thin IF YOU WANT TO GAIN IN WEIGHT. ANIi' RECOVER YOUR All*- TITE, ENERGY, AND AMBITION, TRY THIS WELL KNOWN REMEDY' t With the piesing of winthr, many people feel weak, depressed and eat tired. The body lacks that vital forge and energy which pure blood- alone.. .can give. In. a word,twhile not exactly sickthe indoor life of winter has left its mark upon them, and a blood -building, nerve -restoring tonic is needed to give renewed health and energy. . Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are am an kear round blood builder and nertte tonic, but tb.ey are especially useful in the spring. Every dose helps to •make new, riela red blood, eand witli this new blood returning strength, cheerfulnese and good health ,quickl .... . follows. . . , if you are pale and sallow, easily tired, or breathless at the least .ex ertion; if your complexion - is poor, or if - yoa are troubled with pimp or eruptions, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are just whet you need to put yot right ' If you have twinges of rheumatism, are subject to headaches 0 backaches, if you ate irritable or nervous, if Your steep does not refre you, or your appetite is poor; you need the treatment which Dr. Williams. Pink' Pills alone can give—you. need the new blood, \new health and new energy this medicine, always btings: A COMPLETE WRECK. , GAINED IN WEIGHT Mrs: C'. FoTsythe, R. R. No 2, Fish- Mrs. M. B. Rickert Kitchener, OJlt ervillee Ont, says: "At the age Of • ' "k says: I was wea fourteen my daughter Viola was feel- - . , run .own, and mg weight when I began using ing very rnuch run down in the spring. Then she was attacked with whoop- W ing cough which left her. a completastell-aldidnysifePrinak mPoilnist.h, Ientdootkhethdie -1 wreck. She bed no appetite, "hid once they made in. my condition not sleep well eights and was subject '. . ' * to chills which sometimes kept her in most gratifyingI gained both bsLad dfictiry,t. hbeutdanyo.t, aSphoearweanstiydegertrthillig!usreedngettht aptlildisweliigkhetlaannedwfeneelr:ollee the, least benefit, and I naturally grew also r - - . eeminnended the use of the p very. anxious, One of my neighbors 1.to my. daughter-in-law, who was pa euggested •giving her Dr. Williams' thin and Weak When she began us* Pink Pills, and I get a box. When she obneglyannuspionugndst.he 113.470exi gh wase dtahne.plivIlsenshse we elf:lee:IL only 103 e; Beforeilisshe d h ' li tr f ned, th • all gone I sent and gotsix more boxes, ' ' ' she Weighed 137 pounds For a and under their use she constantly - ' . - grew stronger. Her appetite improv - people I thing there ie no mcdacm ed the color 'came- back to her theeks, can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills7 she could sleep well, altd feels • and__ • looks like a different person,- and with. A, , , all this while using the pills she gain- SPRING COLD ed 20 pounds in weight"' Mrs. Chas. Winegarden, Delhi, Ont -....- ' says: "Last spring my daughter It A SALLOW COMPLEXION . was taken with a bad cold.. She seem Miss Gladys • Marshall, Chatham, ed weak, had a -constant_ pain in her „ Ont, says: tti suffered from nervous- side, grew pale, and as the remcdle Ass and my blood was in a very poor usualli, used in eases- of this kind di ennOition. My face broke out in pirn- • pies and my complexion was very noti help her we feared she was gout . ... sallow, I ',took doctors' -medicine but into a declinef deckled to give without beneficial results. I was feel- d Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and gut Mg much discouraged when a friend boxes. Before she had used the recommended Dr. Williams Pink Pills. I used in all *six boxes, and was over- she -was again well and strong. joyel totfin& that 1T4'eomplexion had cough had left her, she hada become quite clear, pimples had dis- appetitethe i i h id , e pa n n her s e appeared, my nerves were strengthen- Deared ' ed and old time health and ambi- t '-'-- ° i - and a nice rosy color had m tion returned. I shall always have a turned to her cheeks, I have the good everk' to say for Dr. Williams' . much reason., to speak warmly Notwithstanding the increased cost of all- drugs, there has been change in the price of our Dr. Willi ams' Pink Pills. They MI be li through any medicine dealer at 50 eents a box, or*six boxes for $ er they will be sent on receipt of price by The Dr. .Winiants' eine Co., Brockville, Ontario.; . . 011 Eten Ley Otil' the Me Vaterie dom pril or a bre 11 proiript ed et fi Co_ tended sad °nose Trial time° • lie thrtit OM&