Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-04-26, Page 6, IF YOUR CHILD IS CROSS, FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED ° Look, Mother! If tongue le -doateta cleanse little bowels with "Calle fertile Syrup Figs."' liotbers cane rest easy altar. giving “Oalifornia. ti• p of lags," because in. a. few„ Amara all the clogged -up waste, sour bile and fermenting food gently_ moves ont.of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. Sick children needn't be coaxed to take this harmless "fruit laxative." ardlions of mothers keep it handy bet cause :tams, know its actiemon the 140211' MIX, liver and bowels is prompt and sure. .Ask your druggist for a bottle of 'Califon& Byre of Figs," which cone tains' diteetions or babies, child -yea et all ages and for growa-ups. FARMERS' WIVES NEED HELP With all their planning, for great- er production this year, thosetin con- trol seem to .have thought;of every- thing and everybody but the one who really •cotints---the farmer's wife. When ,the forly thousand odd men and boys go out en. the land -.to lend, their tffo-rts totivards greater prodae- tion, whose Ede/Alders will hear the burden of the exodus from the cety to country? It will be -up to 'the far- mer's wife, and, it seems to me that it is too bad she is going to get %the heavy end cif it The farraer% wife had been getting it unasually hard for the past few years. Home girls have beim almost out of the question. Help from other sources has 'been scaree, and the -wages asked out of all proportion to the ability to help with farm work in any manner approaching ef- ficiency. Fewer and still fewer wor men have been willing to go out on. farms. ,Tho stay of such as did go was proverbially short. Take a farmer's wife who has in fkagitirs SOD STOMACH addition.' to the usual duties *falling NI to her lot, a family of little child- FLOATI G SPECKS ren. During the past year, several farmers' wires, of my acquaintance "eft BEFORE ETES SOTH CURED SY MILIWIWS UXA-LIVER PILLS. They stimulate the sluggish liver, dean the coated tongue, sweeten the breath, clean away all waste and poison- ous matter from the systenms.nd prevent as well as cure all sickness arising from a disordered condition of the stomach, liver and bowels. Mrs. Joseph H. Therleau, Saulner- ville, N.S., writes:—"I was troubled with a Boer stomach,. and took five vials of Milburn's 'Asia -laver Pills, and they cured me_ try mother also used them for floating special hefere the eyes. They cured her. also after hl.ving taken four vials. We both Weida recommend them to all sufferers froximliver troubles." Milbunits axiallYer Pills are 25c. per vial fi all defilers •or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. END STOMACH TROUBLE, GASES OR DYSPEPSIA "Pape's Diapepsin" makes sick, sour, gassy, stomachs surely feel fine in five minutes. If what you just ate. is *louring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, . or you belea gee and exudate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of aiSeinees, heartaurn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach -head- ache, you can get relief in five minutes by neutralizing acidity. Put an end to such, Eltomacti distress now by getting a large fifty -cent ease of Pape'S Diapepsin from any -drug store.- You realize in five minutes hciW needles i it is to suffer from indigestion; dyspepsia meany storm ach dieorder canoed by food fermentation due to exeessive'acid, in 'stomach. ,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1•01. • $2,00.0Q.0. to- oud Seetild Mintgsges, Call or write me at onee aid get your loan arranged' by return mail. No advance charges. . 7d, :Pe ''RETNOindii, • 77 Victoria St., Toronto. 444..•• • Had Heart Trouble For Years. WOULD GO INTO FITS. Through one came or another a large raajority of the people are troubled, more or lees with some form of heart trouble. Little attention is ,paid to the slight we,akness until the heart' starts to beat irregularly, and they suddenly feel faint and dizzy, anci feetas if they were smother- ing. On the first sign of any weakness of the heart Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills should be taken, and thus secure prompt wed permanent relief. Mrs. W. if. Ferrier,' Kilbride, Ont., writes:—" I was troubled with my heart for five years, and was so bad it would send me into fits and smothering. I could not do any work while I was af- fected:but after taking three boxes of Milburn's Hea,rt and Nerve Pint, I have regained my health." lMilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 500. per box at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of prim by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ona. RAKES OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS FALLING Save your Hair! Get a small bottle Of Danclerine right now—Also stops itching scalp, e Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy hair es mute evidence of a neglected scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. There is nothing so destruetive to the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life; eventually producing a feverish- nes,s and itehing of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots to ehrink, loosen and die—then, the lair falls out fast. A little Danderine to- night—now—any time—will surely save your hair. Get a small bottle of Knowlton's Danderjne from any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots , of it if you will just try a little Dam ' derine. Save our bair! Try, it! CASTOR IA Far Infants and Children. Ik lihd You Ilan Always Boleti Beene the SWAIM cg 9 Viii0-' should have had nothing ie the shapeofrceasrpon, siiibaivlietybeberelyonAntglimiar inan'h place in the barn, feeding, milking anr, "uchoring" in quite the manner of any ,Inred man. Each hus- band said that his wife kid any Idred man who had ever been about the place b aten for efficiency. But much as ih wives enjoyed the com- pliments they would much rather have been in the house along with the little ones who needed them. badly. ic . .The work of the heusehold stood still while the women were in. he barn, the little folk got along ag well as , could be expected. This summer these same -women will, I expect, be in the fields as they were last summer, raking, binding and driving in the loads, and taking, an ocacsional run to the house to see whether- any of the home flock are missing. • . • In addition, they will have to cook and work for the. men and boys from/ the city who .are going out to assistf in prodtiction and who look upon such an outing as a great adventure. Well, it seems to me that there should be something thought of for the farmers wife, My plan would be to start the girls from Offices- and department stored- and factories t'AD taking their holidays in April, Ledo not believe there is a girl in Canada Who cannot Nash dishes, wash , up . floors, set the table, mind children, and take a tshare an the many edd chores . that keep a household run - nig. I should have these girls bound to ito out. into the country for their holidays. There would be no malint . erhig, I should also have them ouiiii to do any and every kind of Ork -that came te hand. Georgette Waists would be taboo, `fancy hair- dressing ditto. It would be no pink tea, believe me, that the young ladies of our towns and cities would' enter upon, if I had the Ordering of the affair. - ; By starting the girls and women toff to the farms in April it Would give thefarmers' , ives a chance with nut of poulteh sh uld be trebled this. f the poultry. pro ' very farm the out - year. As things have been, poultry - raising was neglected for the pasi. two seasons. Women'had too much to do in the house and in the barn t�- get out often enough to look after the little alas. On aMount of the mild, wet w-ither hundreds of chicks died that might have been weed with a little attention. Mark. I am. not advocating that the town and city girls do this work. My idea is that they undertake the house work and give the woman with the experience the opportunity outside. The farmer ,will have his hands full ligth the grain production. But what the country is crying out for is greater flesh produetion. The ag- ricultural representatives have been telling the farmers to get their wives and their daughters to give two hours a day more to feeding and raising hogs. That is all right for the repre- sentatives, sitting tight at their desks, planning out all these/pretty patriotic devices. If the representa- tives were farmers' wives who rose at 5.30 a.m. in order to - get out to the barn and milk and assist. with the chores in the absence of the hired man who cannot be hired, in order that they may get in to get the bareakfast for the men and the child- dren, I do not believe that even the representatives would be patriotic enough to add two hours to a day that often extends_ until 10.30 p.m. The strong* and ablest retired farmers should be sought out. and placed on the abandoned farms. These would be of little use in' all probability, except for grazing. Cattle and hbgs might be raised on them, with a limited number of sheep. The Government should sup- ply the stock and the feed that is necessary. The farmers could be put On a salary basis, if they desired, or they could go on commission. Each farmer could take with him a contingent of boys as assistants, with the idea that he was to train them and that they were to be re- sponsible to him and obey him, as if he were an officer in the army. The Government should supplythe necessary articles compatible with the simplest kind of life for the house and food for a start. Is there any connection between all this detail and easing up matters for the farmer's wife? I think so. The broader the • area over which flesh production, which is primarily the work of the farmer's wife is carried on the lighter is going to be. the share of eaeh woman who is anxious to do her part, and who is willing. to undertake it while facing heavy odds. 9 ()N EXPOSITOB• 1 ally a valuable source of iota' supply too often overlooked. . Conclusion. , Any person who is desirous of grow- in- his crop and failing, to obtain ; seed this season shield& platt to secure it early in the autimut for another year. As long as the price -Of torn, mill feeds and live stock remain as they now' are, corn for grain will be One.-itf the no pepfitable crops that can be grown on es, Aril?. Ally. far- mer,. so situated that - he can mature flint corn will find it profitable to plant a few acres even though he has to cut, down correspondingtY dile acreage of 4614- FLINT CORN FOR GRAIN Flint Corn as a grain crop in East- ern Canada, has not received the at- tention that it merits. At the present crisis of food supply it is the crop that can be increased without dis- turbing the system of rotation or cut- ting down the acreage of any other cereal. We do not increase produc- tion if we cut down the acreage of one. kind of grain to grow another. By growing flint corn we can increase the • Zam-Baki soothing and healing power. "liam-Bule has been our , household balm for fourteen years, and we could not do without it," says Mr_ George A.-Killturn' of Swan Lake, Man, For eczema and skin troubles of' all . kinds I Zam-Suk b.p•S ne equal; also for otd awes, uleees, abscesses, bo1ls,p1mpiles, blood-polsonieg, piles, cuts, bur s, bruises reel soalde. All dea ere or •Zata.Buki Co., To- ronto. 5 C. box, 2 for .;1.25. • total outpat of cereals without alter,- ation to determine to ouri system of farming. Utshzatiota value lies in its fe ability. • As meal in a fattening without an equal, for ea poultry. ; In the angroUnd or crac is valuable in a ration for On the hob if used judic be profitably gi The im t fed 'Without we' fattening hogs. - It can foe "hogged" do t. An acre or n the hogs on is method caif t by the Easte s of labor sca 'with pro will fatt farm. with pre these da ing adapt- ation it is e, hogs or ed state it ying hens. asly it can g horses. ra can be uturcin to in the field' o of corn an average e adopted farmer in c ty. The dry stalks make ex el ent rough- age for dry cows or yo g cattle. Last, but not least, co tan become in Canada important factorinthe human diet. Many bushels of wheat could realsed for Ai preent if ,we would mile the various appetizing, foods into whieh corn meal canIbe converted. Range of Profitable Production. The crop should only be grown . . where i season. can • be older. p Townsh of the many districts in the Maritime Pro- vinces. ;the District Representatives Il of Ontario, with the exception Of those in the ortherly,countie , state that maturi Is not al:factor that prohibits the growing of Corn, the Secretary of Agrietd e for Quebec making a sim- ilar report for that province. , . Varieties will mature an average sing the proper variety, corn grown, in , practically all the i-rts . of Ontario; .the Eastern: ps and Many counties. north t. Lawrence in Quebec, also Quelece Yellow No. 28, is the variety that wil ,succeed best over the greater Raft of e area indicated. It is ° a short stalked variety. lying a high yield of grain, and maturing in the average ,season on well drained soils in a hundred and fifteen airs. Where. the season is suificientl long, Long- fellow -a d Salzer's Nor Dakota will give an equally large yield of grain with a large tonnage of stalker These varieties; should be grodm, prmeipally in southern Ontario, although they ma- ture phfectly in certainportions of Eastern Ontario and Quebec. Earlier varieties : than Quebec Yellow No. 28 do not return a commensurate yield for labor,expended. Labor. . The riCinvolved in growing corn for grai is but little greater th n that of growing for silage, huski g is the ft ditional time but this t sk t; can- be one at the most conveni nt time in he autumn and made an v - ening of festivity. 1.110 Should Gr w It. The d iryrnan who di poses of his milk to the local creamery is the man who can most profitably row and use 'grain km. If he is using silage, at the present price of shelled corn he can afford to tclecrease his acreage Of silo corn in order that he may groern. flint for grinding. 17 The farmer who wishes to increase the outptit of grain -yet does net wish to break ,his system oferotation. By growing flint corn he is producing grain from bis hoed cro . 1 The nmin who is witho t a silo, and wishes te increase his hod crop. He I can growttOrn for grain purposes with ' profit lilceiwise improving the filth and cleanlinets of his fieldal . . 1 I i 1 Owing to the disastrous'failure of 1 the seed ' , corn crop in the United States an Canada, seed s extremely scarce. eh farmer sh uld consult ' with bis Guilty represen tive as to . a possible source of supply. I Whereirer flint corn has been grown there cap ,generally be fund a few' men who:liave developed early produc- tive stream out of old varieties. Not having made a practice cif disposing' ' of it for seed, these men are occasion- Apormalememsommgage .01•103••=031.14 1 It Works! Try It I . • 1 4 Tells hew to loosen a sore, f e I t tender corn so it lifts + 1 t 4 out without pain.1 1' .......t.t................ ..............: i. Good news spreads rapidly, and dr4 - gists here Aire kept busy dispensitig freezone, theether discovery of a ()M- cinna.ti man, which is said to loosen any corn,f0- t lifts out with the fingers. Ask at any pharmacy for ;a quarter ounce of freezone, which wilt cost very little, but is 'said to be sufficient to rid one's- feet of every hard or soft corn or callus. 1 , You apply,' Just a few drops on the tender, achiejg corn and instantly the soreness is relieved, and soon the oorn out pain. I is a sticky substance is so sieriveT that It lifts out with - which &lee 1 hert applied end never inflames or even Irritates the adjoin- ing tissue. I . sib This discotifery will preveat thou- sands of deethe anntigliy from locklaw end infectiOn jeretofore resulting from thO ouiddig I bit Cif cutttu cora& , 4 silo ;cern: lover The Top By Arthur Guy Empey - (Continued from Page Seven) target. "Ready! Aim! Fire!" The dark form sank into a huddled heep. My bullet speclson- its way, and hit therwhitish spot on, the wall; I could' tee the splintats fly. Someone else had, received the rifle contain - mg the blank cartridge, but my mind was at ease, there was no blood of a Tommy on my halide - e "Order—Arnie! About -- Turn! Pile—Arms! Shancl-eClear" The stacks wee* re-formed. ' "QniCk — March! Right—Wheel!" and - we left the scene of execution behiod Us. # - It Was now daylight. After march- ing; about five niMutes,we were dia. missed, with • the following instruct- ions from the officer in. -commend: "Return, alone, to your reSpeetive comiianies,and remember, no talldng tibouttthis affair, or else it will go hard With the guilty ones." We needed 410 urging to get away. I did not recognize any of trig' ,men on the firing squad, even the officer was a stranger to me. The victim's relations and friends in Blighty' will never know that he was executed; they will be under the ;im- pression that 'he -died doing. his bit for King and. Coutdry. In ;the public casualty list his name will appear under the caption "Ac- cidentally Killed," or The day after the hxecution I re- ceived orders to report back to the line and to keep a still t- ague in my head.' Exectuions are a part of the day's work- but the part we hated most of all -1 think, --certainly the sadaest. The Beitith Weir .Department is ittliatornanyariatiPle to .fie coin - pm • of rigid regulations all wound avowed with red tape. But it has a itearti, and one of the evidences of this is the considerate way in which an execution. is concealed and reported to the relative of the unfortunate man. They !never know the ruth. He is listed M the bulletins s among the "aecitlentgilly Allred." In the last ten years I have several thnes.1 read stories in magazines of cowards changing, in a chaige, to heroes. .I used to laugh at it. It seemeSaid, r`ttlen reit% made that Way." d easy for, story -writers but I But over in Frazee, I learned, once that the streak of yellow can turn all white. I picked, up the story, bit by bit from the Captain of the Com- pany, 1 the sentries who guarded the poor fellow, as . well as from my own observations. At first I did not re- alize the whole of his sfrary, but after a week of investigation it stood out as clear in my mind as the mountains of my' native west in the spring sun- shine. It impressed me so much that I wrote it all down! in rest billets on odd seraps of paper. The incidents are, 114 I. say,. every bit true; the feel- ings Of the -man are true,—I know front ell I underwent in the fighting over io France. We will call him Albert Llbyd. That wasn't bis name., but it will do: Albert Lloyd was what the world terms a coward,. In Londoa they tended hirn a slacker. His country had been at war nearly eighteen months, and still he was not in khaki. Ite had no goodreason for not en- listinv being. alone in the world,hav- ing been educated in an Orphan Asy- lum, and there being no one dependant upon him for support. He had no good position. to loose.and there was no sweetheart to tell him with lit/. lips -ad go, white her eyes pleaded for luni to stay. Every thee he saw a recruiting' sergeant, he'd skit around the corner out of sightwich a terrible fear gnaw- ing at his neart. When passing the big recruiEng posters, :led his way to nusiness and beet. he passed many, he would pull down his cap and look the other wan to get away from that awful finger painting at hamunden the caption, "Your King and Country Need. You or the boring eyes of Kitchener, which burned .into his very soul, 'causing him to shudder. Then the Zeppelin . raids—during them, he used to crouch in a comer of his boarding-house cellar, whimper- ing like a whipped puppy and calling upon the -Lord to protect him. Even his landlady despised him, al- though she had to admit that he was "good pay." He very seldom read the papers, but one momentous morning,the landlady put the morning paper at his place before he came down. to breakfast. Taking his seat, he read the flaring headline "Conscription Bill Passed," and nearly fainted. Excusing himself he stumbled upstairs to his bedroom, with the .hortor of it gnawing into his vitals. Having saved up a few pounds, he decided not to leave the house, and to sham sickness, so he stayed in his room. and had the landlady serve his meals there. Every time there was a knock at the door, he trembled all over, imag- inging it was a policeman who had come to take him a,way to the army. One morning his fears were realized. Sure enough there stood a policeman. with the fatal paper. Taking it in his hand, he read *tit he, Albert Lloyd, was ordered to report -himself to the nearest recruiting station for physiCal examination. He reported Children Cry FOR nxichprs CASTQRIA ate API?, L 26 munediately, because he was afraid diaabatt The doctor looked with approval ups on 'Lloyd's six feet of physical perfec- tion, and thought what a fine guards - Man he would make, but examined his beart twice before he passed hie/ as "physically fie; it Was beating sb feet. From the recruiting depot Lloyd was taken,with many others, iit charge of a sergeant, to the training depot at dilderstiot, where he was given an outfit of khaki, and drew his other equipinent. He made a fine-looking soldier, except for the slight shrink- ing in has shotilders and the hunted look in his eyes. At the training. depot it does net take long to find out a man's char- acter, and Lloyd was promptly dub- ibeeedie‘e‘WyeinindyeL; • I:owtharedir. glish array, , The smallest recruit in the,barracks I looked ini hiln with contempt, and was not slow to show it M. many ways. Lloyd*as a good soldier, learned qUickly,hibeyed every order promptly, never groused at the hardest fatigues: He was afraid to. He lived in deadly fear of the officers; and `Won -Come over him. They also despised him. One morning about three months after his enlistment, Lloyd's company was paraded, and the namepicked for the next draft to France were read. When his name was called, he did not step out smartly, two paces to the front, . and answer cheerfully, "Here, Sir? 10 thp others did. He just feint- : ed ni ranks'and was carried to bar- racks amid the sneers of the rest.. That night was an agony of misery to him. He could not sleep. Just I cried and whimpered in his bunk, be- , cause on the morrow the draft wag tri sail for France, where herwould see death on all sides, and p&haps be ,killed himself. On the steamer, cross- ing: the Channel, he would have jump- I ed overbottecl to escape, but was a- • fraid of drowning., i Arriving in. Frame, he and the resth were huddled into cattle cars. On the! side of each appeared in white letters, .1 "Chevaux 8, Hoinmes 411" After' hours of bumping over the uneven i ; French road beds they arrive(i at the i training base of Rouen. 1 At this place they were pueilmough ; a week's rigid training in trench war- fare. On the -morning of the eighth day, they paraded at ten o'clock, and were inspected and passed by General H—, then were Marched to the Quartermaster's, to draw their gas helmets and tie nch equipment. v At four in the afternoon, they were again hustled into cattle cars. This time, the journey lasted two days. They disembarked at the town of 1 Frevent, and could hear a•sdistant dull I boorhing. With. knees- .sbaltieige lanYde ' 'asked the Sergeaht what' the noise l 5 was, and nearly pped when t fezegr :rant replied in a somewhat bo�d " les , "Oh, them's' the guns -up the line. We'll, be, up there. in a couple o' days , or so. Don't worry, my laddie, you'll see more of 'ern than you want before you get 'ome to ,Blighty again, that is, if you're lucky enough to get back. , Now lend a hand there unloadin" them 4 cars, and quit that everlastin' Amid'''. I believe yer scared." The last with; a contemptuous emote They marched ten kilos, full pack, to a little dilapidated village'and the sound , of the giMs grew louder, con- stantly louder. The village was full of soldiers wile turned out to inspect the new draft, the men who were shortly to be their mates in the trenches, for they were going "up the line" ore the morrow, to "take over" their certain tector of trenches. The draft was paraded in Trent of Battalion Headquarters and the men were assigned to companies. Lloyd was the only man assigned to "D" Company. Perhaps the officer in charge of the draft may have had something to do with it, for he called Lloyd aside, and said: • "Lloyd, you are going to a new com- pany. No one knows you.- Your bed will be as you make it, so for God's sake, brace up and be a man. I think you have the stuff in you, my boy, so goodbye, and the best of luck to you." Next day the battalion took over their part of the trenches. It hap- pened to be a very quiet day. The artillery behind the lines was still, except for, an occasional shell sent over tee let the' Germans know the gunners were not asleep. In the darkness, in single file, the "Give it to me. !please. Grand- daddy." **Why Bobby.if You wait a bit for it you'll have it to en- joy (Wed" "Poo -pool Thar, no argument with. - WRIGLEY'S 'cause -the flavour jpia, anywavr .14ade - In Canada -After every meal- GIRL WHITEN YOUR SKIN WITH MO JUICE Make.a beauty lotion for a few cente to remoke :tan, freckles, salioWness. Yotu. grocer has the lemons and any drug 13 re or toilet counter will supply you wi11i three ounces of orchard white for a fhw cents. Squeeze the juice of two 1 reh lemons into a bottle, then put in the lorebard white and shake well. This NI kes a quarter pint of the very best lez4on skin. whitener and complexion beautifier known. Massage this fra- grant, qreaniy lotion daily mtoethe face„ neck, arnis and hands and just sec how .freckles tan sallowness, redness and roughn disappear and: how smooth, soft an clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is h less, and the beautiful results will su rise you. Company slowly wended their way down th communication trench to the front 1ite. No one -noticed 'Lloyds's - white a d drawn face. After they had relieved the Com- pany in the trenches, LIoird, with two of the o d company men, Wail put on guard ii one of the traverses. Not a shot wa fired froin the German lines, and on 4ne paid any attention to him crouchedl on the firing step. On th first time in, a new recruit uired to stand with his head it not re Orr ,FOR litagaurs 4h.STORIA "over the top." He only "sits it 9 while the older men keep watch. At about ten o'clock, all of a den, he thought:hell had broken and crouched and shivered up aga the parapet. Shells started lie e e - at she imagined, right in 61d -A i when in fact theydevere landing _ a hundred yards in rear of them, tbe second lines. (Continued Next Week.) CIRO Todd Si Cars MIR C to the Roar The interi:n is somewhatmore modest in appointment than the standard ;Or first-class sleeping car,. Of solid steel- underfraute. and with highly polished ' . dark greenfinish, the CanadianIfotth- era's tourisfcars present a 'very lim- ing appearance. TheinterlOkbilnlaed - in mahogany. with Risk 'arwa:t'° r match and cork composition to deaden amid and lessen Tikes' int • Commodious smoking room and. lets; kitchenette with appliances. light waking, running water, greatly appr.eciated. RoomN accosamotang two persons if are just one -hall the lirst-class-rsta. , Second-class ticket holders =yids* occupy these cars, and then/au:Car „! is always available at meal time. Trains ImVe Toronto UnkEl litatiaa 10p.m. Monday", Wednesdays And gi Fr,ulaye for Wianspegandpobstsitmit, 1 I,.. , 1 For Tickets. Reservationn. 4-40,i,„r-t---I ature and Infornoution, a.pply ta i C. A. Aberirart, Druggist, forthor write R. L. Fair 4 G.P.A., 68 ,lcing St. E., Toronto. CANADIAN NORT, - , go *UN Vieter silt* edin & - Hotel clers Preln • ad at 10 Cure le bow trish Casol • our, teke elms end bowe gist- elean =mit . Be and , over atm! PE Baf ne, e 4 - aimarromissaisomtemamasocanexiiimittiar The successful grocer vtouldn't think of doing business without the new, bigger Comfort Soap bar. It's the economical Soap that people want in waritime. Bigger bar ---without premiums • You can do without premiums in war time but you certainly want all the good soap you can get for your money. That's what we thought when we discontinued premiums during the war and gave you a bigger Comfort bar instead. We're glad we did, It's what you wanted. PUGSLEY, DINGM4 & CO., LIMITED, TORONTO d;eiTrielitin S II a-1 it 1 k .111111111,0 1 141.,11111tiqiiti 4 .11.4 • Lie of H arran enade or I% erate of parts perie wait 17Srl No. I posit tende