The Huron Expositor, 1918-07-12, Page 2I i
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Kee.p out
Pests
This can be done now easier than drivingi them out later on. Good wide
screens and close fitting wire doors are the flies worst enemies and the
initiates greatest comfort. We have on hand a number of new seoMent
Doors of special construction Oaten teed not,
to sag, complete wih hinges
ihat any woman can put on. These cost no more than the ordinary screen
door and will outlast two of them. In either -fancy or plain 400rs we
/lave a complete range' at
Hardwood screens, Well oiled, easy working 2c to 75c
Wire screen eloth in various widths from 18 inches to 30 inches.
Fly Swats
10c
Crenoid drives the flies off the cows,' the Cows, stays on all day, makes it
easier to milk them and leaves the cow with untroubled enind to "graze.
Per can
• • •
- 15c .to $1.25
Sprayers • ..50c to 60c
.
,
Suggestions for the June Bride
Sheffield Cutlery is now off the mar-
ket and dearer than silver yet we have
some fine carving sets, eased, to go at
the old prices $3.00 to $10
Dessert Rnives, per do. ..$3,-50 to $8
CARPET SWEEPERS .
are sensible articles for any b7ride to
receiveand an article she will use
daily • $4.00 to $5.00
Silverware that lasts carries a
constant memory of the giver. Com-
meinity and Old. Glory are two
brands' that give service.
Spoons per dozen ... 45.50 te $12.00
Knives and forks per set I $15.OO'
Rtnuagnitl
PArintso
A SET OF IRONS
are in constant use in the household.
We have them' beautifully niekelled
and'durable, pet set ' $2.00
1
Pr, farm E$Itioattar
SEAFORTII, Friday, July 1241, 1918.
44444444'*$.44-44. ve+.7t. •
Whitlock Gives Gli pee
Of Two Tragic Princes,
Sons of Bplgian King
Klasentiitt44444444.44+ nonstetitetn:414
N Brand Whitlock'
gium, n Everybe
can Minister give
Mate glimpses of
family. The list dm
together before the ar
on the Belgian nation
twenty-first, whena
-sung at the -cathedralot Ste. Gudule
In •honor of the fo nding a the
dynasty.
The royal finally made an inter-
esting picture; the king, in the lieu-
rm he always
ldered, tanned
Ling by the sea
from Ostend -
behind the thick lenser of his priacee
Story of Bele
yts, th:e *Ameri-
- us some tali -
King Albert'll
he saw them
r was in 1914
holiday, July
Te Deum woe
tenant -general s unif
wears, tall, broad-sho
somewhat from his ou
-they had jUst come
1
limited 1 took Lydia E. Pink-
Itinn'itVeg4,a1;le Compouh.d
and Was Cured.
Italtlitiore,lftl.--4'Nearly four years
I suffered front organic trotibles,ner-
vousness and betide
etches and ever it
monthwouidhaveto
stay in bed most of
the time. Treat-,
ments would relieve
me for a time hut
ray doctor Was a-'
ways urging me .to
ave an operation.
My sister asked me• '
try Lydia E. Pink-
, h a m/s Vegetable'
Compound befer4
consenting t alet
simple Life In Siberia.
"Going to bed in'a Siberian peas-
ant's hut, is a, sina p16 matter, You
•-•take a blanket or t 0, cocoon your-
self in them, Ile dewu on the floor,
. and go to sleep ther
are no bedrooms,
net diirobe. Men,
dren, eats and dogs
and turkeys lie do,
The last person to t rn in stacks pine
logs into the stove :to its fullest ca -
Then, svrIte "Mr. Bassett Dib-
gy, ira '".through Si
guishes the lamp, a
over. Sometimes
bench, a pair of ch
the wall to serye?
sometimes the gr,0
and then. There
o beds. You do
omen and chit.
chickens, (Was
side by side.
'erts.," "he extlis-
d another day i
here will be
sts or a niche in
as a dwell; and
dfather or grand -
Mother of • the honsehold exercises
the prertigative of : sleeping on the
fiat whiteewashed top of the briek
stove, hazardous ae that may seem.
I3ut in the great. majerity of cases
every oae, with an fine democracy,
Shares the; floor.
I found that the ithin blanket with
' 'ith I was pilovided did not do
oh toward softening the hard brick
A
.iin
7 rertotittione.. °If ittoaino kas ' tutincgt,ntvitrlitga aeoupie of decks
pile of hay in
i
/
/11) '''"'' it has completely resting on it, I asked if I might take
' mired me and my some to make I:USW A, couch. The
work is a pleasure. I tell all my friends fan34ly put the matter up for debate.
who have any trouble of this kind what There was a noisy , discussion. The
Lydia E. Pinleham's Vegetable Com- ducks woke, snuggled more comfort:
pound has done for me."-Nat,Lia B. ably into the hay, and surveyed me
' BRITTINGRAaa, 609 Calverton ltd., Battle with frigid unblinking hostility. For
more, Md.
I he .111ciliiicp 1141i/two
Fire Insurance Co
Ifectdonice: Seaforth, Ont.,
DIRECTORY,
OFFICERS.
4: Connolly, Goderich, President
Isla Evans, Beechwood, ViceeTresiderk
E. Hays, Seaforth, Seese-Treas.
AGENTS
Alex. Leitch, RR. No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John- Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
3. W. Yee, Goderich; R. G. Jar -
moth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
Wilhiam Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans,
Iloechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
!Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
X R. No. 8, Seaforth; G. Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
csoorge McCartney, No. 8, Seaforth.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
10.55 a. ra. - For Clinton, Goderick,
Wingham and Kincardine.
$.58 p. 211. -- For Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine.
11.03 p. an. - For Clinton, Goderich.
6.36 a. nn, -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
`points west, Belleville and Peter-°
boro and points east.
L16 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and points east.
ItONDON, au-RoN AND
Going South
BRUCE
3.20
3.36
3.48
3.56
4.15
4.33
4.41
4.48
5.01
5.13
6.15
a.m. -
fiVingham, depart .... 6.35
Belgrave 6.50
Myth ...... 7.04
Londesboro 7.13
Clhiton, 7.33
Brucefield 8.08
PPP= 8.16
Hensali .. • ... .. . .. . • 8.25
Exeter 8.40
Centralia 8.57
London, arrive 10.05
see- Going North a.m.
Teontion, depart 8.30
!Centralia 9.35
Exeter .. ... . .. 0 .... • 9.47
Hensall • • • .e • .. a ... a* . 9.59
Kippen 10.06
Brncelled 10.14
Olinton , 10.80
teandesbor.o 11.28
Blyth 11.37 7.05
Belgrave 11.50 7.18
Wingham, arrive 12.05 7.40
pan..
4.40
5.45
5.5s
6.09
6.16
4.24
6.40
6.57
C P. R. TIME TABLE
OUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
TO TORONTO
Goderich, leave ........6.40 1.35
/111th 718 2.14
Walton ..... ..... 1.82 2.20
Guelph 938 420
FRO e TORONTO
Toronto Leave ....... -7:40 5.10
Guelph, arrive ..... 988 7.00
Walton 11.48 9.04
Blyth ........ ..012.0) 9.18
Auburn......... .
Godieleh . • MAO 935
tummedeas st Guelph Amadeu with
KO& Lim tee Oake Woodstock, Lew
disk Detroit, mud Mao and all hie
feerinediate potable: .
NEVER PIEGLE
BlIONCH
IT MAY TURN T
PNEUMONIA,
Bronchitis come, from a neglect cold,
and starts with a short, painf ,
cough, accompanied with rapid wh ezing,
and a feeling of Oppression or ti bless
through; the chest.
You have, no doubt, wakened up in.
the morning and have had to cough
several times to raise the phlegm from
the brorrohial tubes, and have foiand it
of a yellowish or gray, greenish color,
and you 'have received relief right away.
This is a form of bronchitis, 4ich if
not cured immediately may turh into
pneumonia or some more serious tiouble.
Cure the cold with Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup and thereby prevent bron-
chitis and eneumonia taking hold on
your sy:
Mr. E. Jarvi, New Finlind, Sask.,
writes: --"I was taoubkd, for years, with
becoehitia and could not find any relief.
I was especially bad on a • • e • day.
I went to a druggist, and asked for
abing to step the cough and con-
fess* tiekth3g in throat. He gave
me a bottle of Dr. "ood's Norway Pine
which I found gave me instant
• . I think it is the best medicine
for broreshitis I know of. Now I take
care I always have a bottle of it on hand."
Do not accept a substitute for "Dr.
Wood/a." • It is put up in a yellow
weapper; 3 pine trees the trade mark;
price 25c. and 50c.; manufactured only -
by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Ont.
CARRIAGE FOR SALE.,
Two seated Gladstone, natural wod, as
good as new and easy running, com-
fortable family rig. Apply at The
Expositor Office, Seaforth. 25784f
Had Heart Trouble
For 5 Years.
WOULD GO INTO FITS.
Through one cause or another a are
majority of the people are troubled, more
or less with some form of heart trouble.
Little attention is paid to the alight
weakness until the heart starts to, beat
irregularly, and they suddenly feel 'faint
and dizzy, and feel 8.3. if they were smother-
ing..
On the first sign of any weaknes of
the heart Milleurn's Heart and Nerve
Pills shoukl be taken, and thus Bemire
prompt and pezanartent relief.
lqre. W. H. Ferrier, Kilbride, Ont,
writes I was troubled with nay heart
for five years, and was so ball it Would
send me into Ms and smothering.. _I
could not do any -work while I setis af-
feeted, but after taking three boxes of
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Ms, I
have regained my health."
*Milburn's Heart and Ne'rve
50c. per box at all dealers or mailed
on receipt of price by The T. bribery
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
LEOPOLD, MILE eF BRABANT. 1
I
lee .the king': intelligent eyes were 1
i
taking in the cene, noting who were
there: the..queen, frail, delicate, withth
.1
e .unconicious appe 1 of -sweet girl-
ish eyes, and the de scate, sensitive
mouth, had the three royal children.
-best& her: the two princes, Leopold,
the Duke -'of Brabant, and. Charles,
the Count of Flanders, grave, tall,
'slender boys, la broad batiste collars
and gray satin', suits, and the Prim
cols:Marie Jose, with i her ,pretty mis-
chievous° little face a d elfish banglei
, . .
of envy, curling, g Id hair -- the
child that all the, p nters ,and, all
the sculptors of Bel um have Por-
trayed over and OVe
"I stood there _an watched that
most interesting family, a very model
of all the domestic virtites, in. its af-
fection, the sober good sense of the
young Overeats. I looked at that
peeve, slender lad, Priam Leopold of
h11
Belgium, Duke ..4 B bant, etc., graz-
ing out of these wi e, boyish eyes
at that scene of splen or; what were
the thoughts just the* in that child's
mind; were there an emiceptions of
the tragie mutations of Belgian his-
tory? Would he on day, in other
scenes like this, whe others should
have taken, our plac a Stand there
where zts father stoo , while priests
sang Te Deneita in h s honor?"
t0C+00,4“).:44•404.4,0*
X
Aid:44w
The Po ers 4
anci P
netlettateteeteeenenetoanot
ERSIA, the coe
ever since the
ft en the spec
tending their
sia
o:÷tototnot*Xot
pit of the East
Turks entered
ous plea of dee •
ank against the
Russians, .is coming once more into
the liraelight. For years a. be of
contention among the powers, sihas
been converted into a warring ter-
ritory against her will, but when the
Central Powers and Russia entered
upon their farcical arrangements for
a German peace, she was ofticially
declared to be a neutral and was
struck out of the reciprocal agree-
ments. Mr. Trotzky, with. the avow-
ed object of redressing a crying
wrong of the Russia of the Tsars,
undertook to disband the Itissian
army of occupation, and notiii the
Persian Government that the Anglo -
Russian agreement of 1907 was null
and void. This treaty _divided Persia
into a northern or 'Russian sphere
of influence and 'a southern or British
sphere of influence, lavIn.g a central
neutral zone in whi h both nations
were free to pursue their mutual
economic and commercial interests.
It would be useless to1 contend that
there was anythingtlethically right
about this treaty, ha, which English
policy was no doubt driven by the
necessity of defending the 'road to
rail against_ an aggressive Russia:
but that it did good by ending a.
political tension of years there is not
the shadow of a doubt. Itt the game
of political eheas which Germany was
then playing with the powers, how-
ever: the raiser co ' ld not fail te•
it
interpret the agree enal as a move
designed to call a to the Ger-
man advance toward the East. Thus
Pan -Germanism, in the shape of the
German -led Turk, entered this Bel-
gium of the Orient, during the war,
just as it entered the Belgium of the
Occident, and though Dr. von Kuehl -
mann recently declared his nation's
desire to. see Persia free to devote
herself to her natioaal "kulturet"
there is not, thus far, the slightest
guarantee that the ,domain of the
Shahs will be cleared of German in-
trigue m nacing B itaires eastern
possession
The immediate roblem before
Persia Is the' attain era of a free
and independent e stence guaren-
teed li-Y- the powers. But there are
some important obs clesto the -res.
s a, while one of. the Women seemed to
It is only natural for any woman to take my part, but eventually she
dread the thought of an operation. So • capitulated, and a, unanirctous deaf -
many women have been Teetered to siert was given against , me. The
health by this famous remedy, Lydia E. ducks turned their heads under their
Pinkham s Vegetable-Compound'after wings and waddled off to the land of
an operation has been advised that it Nod, while I had to resign myself to
will pay any woman who suffers from the bricks."
such ailments to consider trying it be -
fore submitting to such a trying ordeal. Ten Burglars Arre,stett.
Berliner Ta,geblatt, Monday, Feb-
ruary 11, 1918: "The detective fcrce
of Berlin has succeeded in tracing a
gang of ten burglars in. Moabit and
'hae arrested most ef them. The bur-
glars generallytowns of the neig borletod., . They
Woyated in the target
sold in Berlin the i booty, consisting
for the most part el provisions, .such
as coffee, of which several hundred-
weight was found in. their possession.
Equipped with revolvers and. the
moist up-to-date barglar tools, they
perpetrated their latest burglary th
KOttblifg, where they thoroughly ran-
sacked, among others, the apartment
,of the military commander of the
town.
lization bf this ideal. There is the
temporary unchecked, looting by the
disbanded Russian soldiery, the con-
tinued intrigues and molestations by
foreign nations, and the present in-
capacity of the Persian 341inself to
secure sound government without the
co-operation of some outside power.
The country has been in a constant
state of political and economic um:
rest, due principally to a geographi-
cal position giving. her the control of
the overland trade routes from the
Orient to the Occident. RASSian
military Occupation; while intoler-
able, has nevertheless proved itself
a boon by clearing out the Turcoman
budits and by the buildiog of a
railroad , through the Turcoman
steppe. Great Britain, too, has
• brouglet a blessing to Persia in polic-
ing the gull and exterm1nat1ng.pir7
Rey.' There is -no reason to doubt,
moreover, .that the agreement Which
Great Britain made with Ruesia for
a line linking India with Europe by
way of the, oil fields of Baku and
Azerbaijan is just the thing which
will help on the economic salvation
of Persia herself. Even Russia's
projected railroad from the n9rth
to the Isen4an Gulf for the transport,
free of tariffs, of her immense out-
put would prove of inestiraable value,
so longs Persia avoided the tempta-
tion of thinking only at her economic.
ersTell-being eanrselling her politica,
inillhood:.t1Beit the salient feature of.
recent Persian hisory, happily, iv
the distinct trend toward constitu-
tionalism. . •
•t
It is evident - however, that Per -
Wan, self-government can be fostered
only by the policy of the strong hand,
backed,' of course, by sympathy and
understanding. A rare opportunity'
for proffering beneficent help has
thus come to Great Britain. Acting
in the spirit of that good will which
has characterised the sentiments, of
Die British tovratd Persia, she ought
to make eertain that thelatter's neu-
tral rights are no longer disregarded' .
and that the' country is effeetuany
rid of datigerous German propa-
ganda. Financial aid ought to be
extended, pending a collective agree-
ment of international control defin-
ing frontiersand assuring unmolest-
ed independenee. Great Britain
should prove that she is not only ta
great power but a beneficent one, by
turning a muoh-wronged nation into
a friend. Somethingofwhat she her-
self has learned of the new social
and political 'order that bas come to
her out of the revolution. of the war,
she can ' turn into a tatty altruism
for the benefit of Perela. She can.
see to it that in Persia, as in Bel-
gium, self-determination and the na-
tionalist idea shall .A.I.80 be the
'watchword ef democratic
4. Royal Palace.
A royal palace, consisting of what
is now known as the "white tower,"
appears to 'have been the beginning
of the Tower of London. It waitom-
menced by William the Conqueror
and finished by ,Williain's sop, Wil-
liam Rufus, who, in 1098, surround-
ed it wi walls and broad ditch.
a,
Several s cceeding kings made addi-
tions to it, and King Edward III.
erected the church. In 1628 the old
white tower was rebuilt, and in. the
reign of Charles II. a great number
of additions .were made to it. The
new buildings in the tower were com-
pleted in. 1850. -
Munition Factories.
Ten thousand workshops in Great
Britain are engaged th the produc-
tion of raunition.s, of which 5,000 are
controlled and 150 ere national fac-
tories..
easammosemon
DO 'rCILIR
FEET BURN',
Then use Zam-Buk. There
is fleshing so soothing for tender,
aching or blietered feet. It will
end the `burnin' g, draw ent the
soreness, prevent blistering and
make walking a pleasure.
The men at the front are
badly in need of Zan2-Buk for
their feet. Don't forget to keep
your *soldier friends repplied.
All dealers 50c box.
ts sonartsi
,
CAPITAL AND RESERVE -$8,800, 0
. 98 BRANCHES IN CANA
A General Banking Business imps cted.
CIRGUitAilte liETTEESS OF ,
BANK MONEY ORDERS
SAVINGS BANK DEPART
Interest allowed at highest Curren Rate.
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTR CT:
Beucefield St. Marys Kirkto
Exeter Clinton Hensel Zurich
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Over 100 society women, of Alton,
Ill., are working as inspectors' in an
annnunition factory in that city where
they receive fourteen. cents. an hour.
Working' at certain jobs out of
which men formerly made from $3 to
$4 a day, women are now earning from
$8 to $12 at the same rate of pay.- •
- Mrs. G. D. Boyson a Boston woman,
recently edrove an automobile from
Pontiac, Mich., to her home :town, a
distance of 1,000 miles, in 40 hours.,
Under the provisions of a,bill pass-
ed by the United' States Senate and
House, Hawaiian women can vote in
all territorial:and municipal elections.
In Germany, in certain. industries,
the proportion. of 'work done by wo-
men'has risen from slightly under, 18
Per Cent. in 19T4, tteptactically 66 per
cant., at the present time.
Mrs. William G. MaAdoo, ;wife Of
Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo,
and daughter of President ,Wilson, is
one of the most enthusiastic ' Red Cross
workers in Washington.
It is vet -Muted that 30,000 women
voted in the recent primaries held in
Arkansas. It was, the first opportun-
ity women of that state have had to
assert their preference by ballot.
Miss Virginia Alcock, of Baltimore,
Md., has been chosen one of the ten
"Saints" at Wellesley college, an honor
prized by the students and one which
goes only to the exceptional students
there.
Miss Gladys Barnett, just • out of
school and still in her teens, has been
appointed a deputy sheriff in Wash-
ington County, Ind. She is an expert
rifle shot and handles an automobile
with skill.
A report of. the United Stets.% de-
partment of labbr says that the wages
offered Women are less than those paid
men and are not .sufgciently high to
attract women ' except in favorable.
locations.
1
1
Kansas limits the working hours of
' women employed in hotels, restaur-
ants, dining haUs and lunchrooms. The
women are only allowed to work nine
I hours a day and 54 hours a week. For
, night workers seven hours' work in
twelve constitute a day's work and 48
hours a week is the limit.
Hundreds of wOmen of the British
rsithy auxiliary corps are Working in
France, some in the bases and others
country quarters near base towns.
They are paid in addition to their sal-
ary a bonus for time of service.
Higlicliffe Castle, England,owned by
GordonIifrs Selfridge't of Chicago, has
been -converted into a convalescent
hospital and camp for American sold-
iers. It was in this same castle that
theXaiper made his home on his last
visit to England in 1907.
Although Mrs. A. T. Anderson, of
Minneapolis, Minn., is 79 years old,
she is doing war work for the soldiers
of tat -day with the same spiritnir
which she worked for the lioys of '61.
She does active work ,in a Red Cross
unit, even to marching in parades.
The National War Council a the
Y.M.C.A. has offertd to Bryn -Mawr
college a sum of money to meet the
expenses of a training course•to pre-
pare women for industrial positions
through Which they may aid in the
solution of the present industrial prob-
lems affecting womene
• To determine what the women of the
United States can do to help prose-
cute the war, nine women, attired in
military uniforms, recently left Lan -
sling, Mich, each driving an army
truck with government supplies for
Atlanta, Ga. In addition to driving
the entire journey, each of the women
• was expected to make any mechanical
repairs her machine might require
during the trip.
Members of the American army
nurses' corps in France have been
granted the privilege of wearing chev-
rons under the same conditions which
officrs and men of the expeditionary
forces are permitted to wear .thera.
The state committee on wormin in
industry, composed of representatives
of all interests affecting _female em-
ployment in Wisconsin, oppose women
street ear conductors on the ground -
that an emergency -has net been
*Proved -
Doubts moved.
Mother was ent, Sister Sue was
putting on her best blouse, sosix-
year-old Bob had to entertain S-ue's
young man.
not the case the emerald would he,
of greaterl value than the diamope
_A good, &lamella. to -day is worth
from 12.50 to Ts400 a carat, actor&
Ing to its purity and size, while au
As Is the way with his kind, he eraerand varies in value from Me
began to ply the unfortunate caner
with questions,
"Mr. Brown," he began, "what is
a popinjay?"
"Why -eh -a popinjay is a -eh-- four carats is
vain bird." whereas as diam
"Are you a bird, Mr. Brown?" ,1 would bring onl
•"No, of eourse not." It is probable
"Well, that's funnel, %other said of the ancients
you were a popinjay, and lather said called Cleopatra
there was no doubt about you're be- Upper Erelat
ng a jay, and Su.e said there didn't 1650 B.C., abatt
seem much chance of your poppint of during the
and now you say you aren't a bird discovered early.
at all!" centarys
1 Many virtues
'MICH IN AVIAi1014. this stone; when
'• to ;5:00 a earat 'increasing raphlty
with size. Flaw ess emeralds weigh-
ing more than 1 olur carats are among
the rarest' jeweis a perfect stone oft
Virtually pricel „
tee
nd of equal weight
$1,000 to $2,000;
hat all the 'emeralds. ,
came from the so -
emerald Mines In
rked as early as
Oned and lest sight
dle Ages, but re-
in the nineteenth
ere:once aseribed te
worn, it was held to
inst.epilepsyand
was also valuablet
evil spirus.
e simple in for
prisnis att4hed
• with tieually a..
ogles to its axle on -
hey are insIa..
so .that
conte a pro's
nattainable
be a, preservativ
other ailments.
Some Anecdotes Wm the Flying
. as Taheehareumstaaria
Service.
•
Many an aviator among- the fight- merely hexagonal
tag nations owes his lite to mixaeu- one end to the
•
bus good fortune, like the British fiat face at right
airman whose escape is described in the other end;
'Males of the Plying Services/I by flawed, so much
Ur. C. G. Grey: emerald" ha
"An. officer went out on a bombing expression for
4xpedition and met a German ma- tion.
lhine. In order to save weightihe had The largest si
left his small arms behind him, but weigh nine and t
be thought it was a pity to pass by a, i in possessio
kood target, and so he decided to Devonshire, and
e cry'stal, sald to.'
fee -quarter ounces,
-of- the Duke of
the 'National Mu- '
drop a. bomb on him. But dropping a seum at Washi gton has en leeteeI- -
-bomb on a ,swiftlymoving mark is lent speclineit from StonY iPoint
not the same as firing at a fixed ponat 3 N.C, which wei hs eight and 'three --
o he missed the Gemmel. Unfortume quarter Ounces, or more than 1,24O
s.tely for him, he also' exposed him- carats, and is t le largest ever 'punt,
elf to the fire of the enemy, and 1 in.the United ta.tes.
eceired a Title bullet in the thigh.
"To be strielly aceurate, the bullet
Struck his trousers pocket, hit a lee -
franc piece, broke itself and the toin.
'A Unit
An interestin
literatureis br
and distributed the assorted pieces af miss Emily 34n
!metal about the lower pert of his four years old
'body. of Thoma.,s De
"Feeling that he was badly hit, the
:for the ground from a height of about bome. Thoto.
daughter Emily
:pilot shut elf his- engine and dived Ing his last y
Isix thousand feet: When he was al De ettaatea
Ithousalid feet from- the ground hel fatally atotaaen.
',espied Some Ueroplines in a field. t
tie the Past. _ - -
link Wall .Vietorian •
Iten. by the,,deatliter
De Quince, e' '-
the youngest
Quincey. was.
Virho tended -him der
rs at his Villa
etre the AVIS
ould ektbarraSerttfl
bong walks at
in to'
over Germen or Frencla territory, he , his attataiast .0- ni
metals to
:imade up his 3211nd le land among the . „ ipe uit„.00.0
;laeroplanes, :certaine.that oimt,
happen to be German Maelaines he
would be veell treated. by the flying
!corps. - •
"Two; hundred feet above grounti
I he cOniPletely lest doneciousuess, but
lin some curious satbeonscious way he
I made a perfect landing --right along -
'mud, not .owittg whether. he 'cliri a hedg4; 'lid at bad a ham
Q -
arm. e u
dren. Of the
officer' in the 2
oa service
sician, died of
rind Paul, an
served ttiroug
side a British motor ambulance. So tied In New X
Well flid he land that for some min- •metheal
utes no one troubled about him. .
When they did go to look they found
I him-. wounded.
I, "He was promptly put into the
ambulance and tent off to the hospi-
tal, There it was found that the but- 0
ilet haii cut ret large. artery and that
the pilot would have bled to death
ia a few minutes if the bullet had not a land where
!also cut Itt mulatto which had sprung his horn Emee
flcey • had eight
ve aons,-.tio
tti Camero 2 2
hina; Franc*, T
eIlOw fever la 1.
officer of the ,
the mutiny *Di -
elan&
• .
".-.
One intlicati
in China was
National Medi
consisting of
-who have gra
European, Ja
leges.
This a
back and. wrapped itself like a piece help of the
I of elastic round t1aarteri and form- thanks large
!et', as it were, an automate tourni- meat as a-wa,
1 quet."--Pamily Herald.
titude towa
'VERY PRECIOUS GEMS.
!Flawless Emeralds Rank Arnong
Mese Valuable of Stones.
An emerald flee from flaw *would
be the most precious of all stones,
, maintain experts of the Smithsonian
,Institution in a recently published
bulletin. The emerald is unfortunt
!attely seldom flawless, and. were this
•
;
The few plaid
Age tO journ
medical tral
this fine gro
Skians that
Medical
look.
Cards e tling customers
glasses of tr isky a week
by a Glvtatge rte.
In Mint.
it of medical
the felindatiOn
1 Association in
medital
uated from
nese and
citable athiev
the quack doctor
• les has been th,e
' k man. But noire
to American inept.) .
ening to a seientifie ,
health and
nts who had the dells.... -
to far-off America
ng have now dei
p of 400 trained
make up the N
lation.-World
Lifebuoy for the 'Counter-attack"
All day long he's been standing the attacks of
• dirt, dust, grime, germs and inAcrobes. .plow for
the counter-attack. Lifebao to the front! Its
rich, creamy lather for skin„ s ampoo and bath -
or for socks, shirts, handke hiefs, etc., makes
short work of "the enemy."
is more than soap, finest of soaps though it is.
Lifebuoy has splendid antiseptic
and germicidal power as well -its.
mission is toiclean and purify.
Send your soldier a package of
Lifebuoy1 Hell appreciate it
"it all grocers
e• LEVER Bitomutts LIMITED
TORONTO
•, •
Not
Georg
'En=
eerA o
raild,
never
sweet
COP.ee
tures,
tBaber
vellou
eras c
Table
made
load 1
st 25
Items
FON
ket
rte
hofe
that
it in
loofe
of le'
his
tort
two
ous
tro