The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-05-10, Page 37
e
VI'
"IJA cuss Spring Days are Joy
Day? for the man or woman
10 NAVAL HERO wig, is wise enough to jump
i frog the heavy foods of
NV ter to the cereals, fruits
wi 017 GIVEN THIS SUPREME' and. green vegetables. of
AWARD OF HIS 'VALOR. Spring, Two or three
Shredded Wheat Biscuit*
Boatel storat captain's Drava with bees and ilk and
.yettea to Duty in jutland Fight so.nle green lu
enri vegetablesPlaice
y De..
, Last loy. ga. delicious, nourishing Meal.
Puts the body in top-notch
'To Coraniander Leftus William , condition, for,. the day's work.
Jones, R.N., has been awarded the
- Victoria Cross, the auprenie award of
' valorOr wlitch Britona hare Waliced
'up to the mouthasp flue -spitting
Cannon. , 4.eat the honor is posthumous*
la rendered to Ma lueranrYt ars 'GPM"'
*ander Jones, after displaying the
highest gallantry and fortitude,. sue-
, climbed tie the wounds he suffered
When Ms ship,' the terpedo-boat dat
ntroyer Shark, WO sonk itt the tints
• land fight in the North Sea oti
• 41, .1916. As a 'proud" solace to his
Wiciotv,asau loheritanineito hie dee.-
--„cendahte, the, V 0 ii:Oonferred on
Commander Jones "for Most. coiropicu--
ous bravery and devotion to duty."
Some of his last utterances must be-
, vote historician inspiration to British
• eiaffornien. As he lay ,dying on the
deck he noticed that the Shertes en:
sign had disappeared; ' •
"What's wrongwith the ensign?"
he asked.
. "It's shot down, sir," answired
• pharles C. Hope, able seaman.
"Hoist another," the commander
ordered.
•Midellipirian Sinith cleared the vtaYr
Hope hoisted another epsign—there
were always spare flags'fier an emerg-
• ericy:' •
`1That's goad," calmly said the
* Shark's captain, lOoking at the: en-,
, Andthe Sherri eank with the
colors flying.
' ,:A Great End.
Nor do dope who were under the
captains command and who survived
• the Pa etion go Unrewarded for their
• hearel% says the Londoncorrespond:-
OA of the New To* World.`" The Dia:
• thiguished Service Medal has been
, given to Coxswain William C. R.
• Griffin, ' Petty .--Officer'• "-Charles-Filled
•• and Able Seaman ,Hope, Charles 11,
Smith, and Joseph, O. G. Howell and
Stoker Thomas W. Swan. The Distill-
. .guished• Service Medal is coveted. only
•,less than the V.C. Many an officer' Of
ldestklineagennd highest rank in the
• British army and navy is proudest of
• the.D.AO.: after hisname; no* the
•• 'Medal; Willeadorn the breasts of these
humble seamen. Only now have the
details of the Shark's glorkankend and
het ecaptain's death become known.
• In effect; the Shark fought an .entire
squadron of •Gerinan battle-cregets
andtheir tiecompaniiihg, destroyers
boldly entered a hail of ptojec-'
tiles. delivered at 'short _range': Re-
ceiving the ordee to attack • about
5:30 in •• the afternoon, Commander
,73'eneis, the senior: officer of in division
uf of destroyers, led 'the divilion into
Action' against the German battle-
cruiserat the morespoieerful British'
Ships hinfrnet yet•cOme up. Ten Ger-
man light cruisers and • destroyers
came opt of the mist mid. immediately
• When the Shark tuenedto attach, fir-
ed at her *Om not more than 600
yards . s .. •
A Shell hit the Shark's engines and
another the bridge, „wrenched the
.steering wheel out of the coxswain's
handsand; wounded him in the right
'hand The•destrayfir AcaSta Nome'
nianclee J. Barron), seeing. that ,' the
• Shark wessititdly ,hitt caMt. "between
the eneirry'S fire an the • .Shark and
signalled, "Catil give you any helix?".
The Captain of the Shark Signalled,
-back; • "No; t'leoh after yourself"
Aeastionnd her destroyers obeyed or-
- dern;'.,At the same -"•tinte • Cotcsivain
Griffin '.xicticl, "The Wheel has gone,
• sir." The captain replied, "Man Ae
other wheel" The •coxswain qbeyecl
• and left the bridge, followed • by the
„. captain, who helped to connect and
man the wheels, s: se' e • e
All oir Deck.
,
.. •
• At the toot of the bridgs the- 'dm-
. swain was wounded jingle face ,and
felled. He picked himself up and"
---7-treztioshattarissoingeaftellesineasttiesseetto
'Pedro inetrnetelit-Wklehaid.h.Chtedlilred
, ese• eeteeteolesondoeseandelionglittelie4i-aztr
mail at•60 cents a box or ON boxes.for
Made in Canada.
DEMOCRALi.Y EVOLVING.
This hi Not n Wu of Nation., Race*
or Peeples, But of Principles.
. None of us who watched, over in
Europe, the risse of the world war,
drearnedl for one moment that it WaS
merely clash between racial amb1.
thine and greeds. Itewsie plain enough
to any one who had etudied, his Eu.
leoPe that it waseeiornething •darker
and deepere.going to theeroot of ore
genized •life, writes V. Thomnsen.
- GOMM apologists' hept ineisting it
was a trade war; that Germany '44,8
fighting for her life because she was
fighting for her commerce and her
•
trade routes. • .
Germany was indeed fighting for
her -life, hut for lier life ae an auto-
cratic, militaristic power, bent upon
bolding down her own people anol upon
nunitering more than hereshare :Of the
world. ,
What she fought -for was IttliPP
rule -eat home and ahroed. And what
rose against her, world. over, was tile
tide of dienocracy. " •
cchtild ewer understand why: this
fact* Was not telear from the begin-
ning. TO ,oneswito knew the 'nations
of EuroPe it was Clear as the eMl.
there 'till the end With , Mideldpinen This,wee not a war of nations, raSes,
Smith, -Griffin, Hope and Heevell. peoples It was a War of princiPles.
First Lieutenant Donnell, Smith, It was fought not to decide questions
Swan . and Filleul were passing alnr of territory, •trade, spheres of influ-
munition, of which there was plentY, meet It Was fought to decide whether
Hope was at :the, midship gun from the future is to belong to the weapon
the beginning till the end of the ac- or the mans -to Krupp or to ;humaintY.
tion, and distinguleihed himself by What is being proelaimed On the
his coolness and efficiency. 'Vlore battlefields of Europe and Asia is
than one hundred rounds of ammthli- this:
tion were tired from this gun. 'The The future belongs to the book and,
captain was so pleased with Hope not to the etvord. •
that he patted' him on the back, and. • It belong& to life and not to death.
said: Go on, iloPe, you are doing It belongs to the common Man and
Splendidly," Finally the Shark sue- not to any arrogant gang of1/4 war
climbed to a . torpedo'but. she went _lords and parasitic kings
down flying her flag'and there were Here is the meaning of it all:
survivors to :tell of the heroism of Man has determined to be the mas-
her ceminandeir, ter of his own civicelestiny
This.is democracy's war.
• PULVERIZED FUEL: The thrones Are tumbling. . down.
The age-old royalties bUttress d up
s e
by . tt+ranny •
A Means of 'Utilizing Western Coil on,
crumbling like and bad incorruption ereertia.
Railway Locomotived. . And the end of.this: war ,will be only
The Prairie Province & have -large the beginning of mightier revolue
•relierves - of -coal, but much ofj tionsnehanges, __upheavals : •• -
unsuitable for railwayfuel on ac-
count •of ite liability to cause fires by
sparks from locomotives.. During re-;
cent years experinients have been
made respecting the use of pulverized
fuel for locoincitives. It has been used
for several years in connection with
certains metallurgical Work and found
• to .be of great economic 'importance.
The tests made On locomotives show
that -the use of toulverizenoal is more
efficient than the ordinarymethod of
hurtling 'Coal:* and, In_addition s does
net Cause.'emoke, cinders or aparks.
Its use would not antsebe.an economy,
but wenld add -largely to the tomfert
of the passengers -
• The following shows the, increased
use of ,this kind of•luel on locomotive
•service during 1916: -
-The- -Chicago- sand- Northwestern
Railway has adapted, t� the use of
pulverized coal, an Atlantic-tepe, ias-
senger locoznotitre and • is now, operat-
ing it in itsregular passenger -train
service between Chicago and Milwau-
kee_ The Delaware and Hudson Com-
pany has just pit into freight service
a netv:Condolidation loconiotive (prob-
ably the largest of this type in the
world), equipped to hurl' powdered
coal. ,The Delaware and Hudson Com.
She is Always Ready
To Tell Reason Why
She is Recommending Dodds
Kidney Pills.
A
MN* S. Demers States They Cured
Her of Sick Heacieche and Rheum*.
tiern From Which She Suffered for
Six Months. '
Que.; April •80th (Special)*
Cured of •chronle. indigestion, Melt
headache and rbefunatistn, from which
slie bad suffered for six months, Miss
Deniers, Of 190 hiaisolinenve Ste
nerorgivea all the credit Or her cure -
'to Dtteltits Kidney Pills, She is recom-
Mending them to all her •triads who
suffer- from kidney *tootles ef .any
kind: •
-
aea alwitath 'ready to tel what
'botid's „Marley Pills did or nie says
Xis» Demers. an never ePvithout
them In the lionse. ease Was one.,
of the wand,. . "
"I had tried several medicines. from
the cloetois and- was getting ne better
when / .decided to try Doild's Kidney
Pills. tOOk'seven hoses intern my,
rhouroatlinn, sick headache e,nd
indt-
gestion was gone. •••
•"Wheri, my father saw liow much.
good Dedil's• Kidney. Pills third done me
.he- began to take tliem for kidney
trouble. He is better now."
• Dodd's Kidney Pills Wake 'hesithY
kidneys. • Healthy kidneys strain all
the impurities, all the poison, out ,of
the 'blood. They are the greatest of
• all tonics ,• ,
For geed or ill humanity is taking
its desttny into its own hands, sweep-
ing theadd -props 'and esubte:r-
fugee of king rule and Krupp rule,
and advancing toward the inost tre-
mendous adventure In democrecy the
world has ever known:
The great war—the tumblingdown
of czars and kaisers and aristocra-
cies—is merely part of the ,dark
strategy of democratic evolution.
'The common ^man hi proclaiming his
,kingsliili• • .
NERVOUS -D15EASES
THE SPRING
Cured -by -Toning the Blood and
Strengthening the Menieg:
•
reelsosnr..1
•
The New Modes •
11
domeesemmeemoomonmeinmems9
• New Fancy Collars •
• While tollarless styles are fashion-
able, dainty collars have by,no•meane
•been discarded; on the contrary, this
Is en, accessory . made very much •of,.
Some of the new shapes fall insrathei
long_ points. over. thashonlders, other
are pointed in front and square at the
back, and the familiar sailor cellar
ever. present. Fine. voile, marquisette
'ar:d handkerchief linen in white and
•colors • are . used ' for the • new
collars. Some are hefaistitched • by
hand, others by machine, and on al• -
moat every one there is some touch of
hand embroidery. 'Double collars are
usually made with the upper. one of
TOURING AtiAlikt*
04.11•11414
• The C. P. It. Is Making Preparation.
for Record Treas.
The Canadian Pacific Railway is
prepering for a record tourist traffic
to Alaska this summer, it has been
announced.
The "Charlotte," one of the largest
• of the Pacific boats now operating be-
tween Vancouver and Seattle will be
requisitioned ,for two extra trips,
The first real effort to attract tour-
ists to Alaska was made by the Cow.
pany last year. So successful was the
Initial effort that with the additional
facilities completed hz the railway, the
touriet business to Mosta is expeeted
to increase each season.
On account of tho war, which has
•curtailed tourist traffic to Europe, Am-
• erican tourists welcome theopportun-
ity "tour 'Alaska," the passenger
Officials assert. 1VIany points of inter'
est are in •pleasing eontraet to Euro-
pean tourist centres.
Inquiries for information regarding
the route te Alaska centre on Alert
lay, B.0., where American tourists
desire to see the Aetivities .(4 the ,In-
dtans are many Of the most
•elaborately carved totems In America:
The Indian village of Bella Bella, also
Is prominently mentioned in inquiries
ifrom. toialsts.
Alaska, during the tourist season,
•which extends from June 15 to Aug.
• 15, is not, as is generally believed, e
bit of sea ice' here, gt !snowy *moun-
tain there, a studded pine or a polar
bear to relive, the monotony, but a,
combination of the fjords of Norway
• and the Alps' of Switzertatid..
Skagway, Alaska, is 1,000 miles
from • Vancouver. In addition t� its
novel and interesting attractions, At -
lin, •one of the places of call on the
trio, the alimate is such that it is be
Bored it will becoMe pne of the world's
• greatest summer health restate.
BABY'S OWN TABLETS—
•• CURE CQNSTIPATION
Childhood constipation can be
promptly „cured by Baby's Own Tab-
lets. These Tablets never fall to regu-
late the howela and -adzes:et, thus cur-
ing constipatien, ineigeethen and
the many other minor ills of little
•
'ones:- --concerning - them -..-iwts.'--Louir
•
Nicole, St. Paul du Buton, Que., Writes:
•--"My • baby suffered' from constipatiari
but thanis to Baby's Own Tabletrhe
Is a fine healthy boy to -day. It gives
me mach pleasure in recomMending
the Tablets to other mothers." 'The'.
l'ablets are Sold by medicine deidergi
some color and a .white �n, a little
larger% Under, it • ' •
• The high deck Collar is being. worn
• by sin t woman as much for sports
• as r use with • tailored costumes.
Usually it is made .of pongee -or -some
,heavy Silk withe:ends-that •ctoss- in
• front of striped or figured silk.
For sports' wear a white silk blouse
With' one of those pollees and a skirt
matching .the, figured_ or_ striped silk in
the collar, mike a very attractive cos -
It is the Opinhin cif the best 'Medical .
ailthorities, after ..long sOirservatiOni .
that -nervous diseases are :more :coni-.
mon_and...inere. Serlons in the spring
than at any Other time . of the year.,
•Vitarchanges in -the system, afteriMeg
winter months, may mule much more
trotible than the familiar spring weak-
• •ness and. weariness from which most.
pany also • installing ' a omnplete people suffer as, the result of indoor
pulverizing, storage and- life, in . poorly ventilated • and 'often
Overheated. huildings. 'Official records
prove that in Aptiland May neuralgia,
St Vitus dance; epilepsy and other
ring of nerve trouble are at their
Worsteand that then,. moile than any
Other time, a blood-inakingnerve re
storing tonic Is needed. • :_
•
• The antiquatedescuatom,, of • taking,
pnriati'Ves in the sprieg tauselees„ for
the system, really needs strengthening,
While ,purgatiVee only stellop through'
the towels, leaning you woken ••Dr..
Williains! Pink Pills are the best Medi-
cine, ,for they actually make the near,
rich, rod blood feeds the starved
nerves, and thua cure the "many. forms
of nervous disorders: • They. cure also
.foriYiS or spring .trotioNs -as
heeditehes; poor. appOtitce Weakness in
•the limbs., as well as remove unsightly
pies -and eruptions; - In s'tactethey
-disbursing 'plant, and...equip/nog, ite,
stationaxy boilers at Olyphant, Pa.,
for burning the waste' tailings from
anthracite onlm banks
The Missouri, Kanatil and • Texas
railway is installing a complete pul-
verized -fuel preparing plant at Par-
sons, Kari; end applying equipment
for, hurtling pulverized coal and lig-
nite in its stationery boilers and loco-
motives.• •' . • '
e Various other 'steam "railways;' in-
cluding the • Atcliesoin. Topeka and
Santa Fe, Grand Trunk, Southern Pa-
eilic, Kansas City Southern, Chicago
Junction, and Central Railway of Bra-
zil, are new considering the use of
.pulverized fuel. for locomotive service,
The last named railway has already
decided•to adopt it, after an exhaust-
ive tlited. months investigation made
in. the United States.
• , ' unfailingly bring - new health and
The_railway luel,_prcr•litein _in cen.
trid aild'welfterfiCan-affrieitininiiia-
SIW-Pdx4ealisitlerin,reethe-raTidel
Iroduction itieren- rail-
teengthete-wea.%4Itednat47flelit•gs
men, women and children. •
• a German cruiser; and Rainmell, the •
ways in the United States and the .,. '
' • chief etbicer, who said the engines.and
u-, economy to be effected 1?y its use$250 from The DrWilliamsMedicine
,' • le
ethering gear were out of aetion.sTneco., Broekvillet OM: . ,' •ri,‘ • '
will be only a, short titne before such • . 4. , v
• pied which connected up steam was iesanotivee Willbe usedin Canade. • • ,FRItOICH WAR BADGES:.
blowo aways Thci captain, on hearing •• . -• •
. •
this gave orders for all to come dn '. "Of .01 forms of roductive cepa- e 0 *t ;Whole • Military
se • • • •
deck, go to their stations and put out •
Delay mail at 25 cents a box' from The
Dr. Williams! Medicine Co„ Brookville
' Ont-; ' •
WARS F'DIIGHT :BY ROTS,L,„,_
. -
More Efficient and Suffer Less' From
• Hardships Than Eldere. • •
• Warssare fought by boys. • It 'has
• been the, case sincestife earliestfightt •
ing. In Europe; where the demand for
men has been so great, older men have
been forced into the armies, but the
'fact .reme.ins that wars, for the most
• part, are' fotight by boys. •
One of the most pathetic things in• :
connection. with a war is the tender
age of those engaged in it. It loaves'
the heart of the hardest men to re -
View a line- of troops'. and to take
note of their boyish appearance. And
yet • the boys are more efficient than
the older men. they make better side
diers; they do not •suffer from the
hardships to the extent that do the
older .men; they have more endurance.
So the only way te prevent thee- em-
ployment of -boys in an army is to
do away with war—which hasn't been
done away with up te this time and
which can't be done away with un- ,
til Europe comes . to the conclusiod •
that War is useless and stop fighting. ,
WIT YOUlt WRNS
OPP WITH PINGERII
Hove to loosen tender corn
or cello* ea it lifts eut
without pain,
' Let folks, step on your feet hereaf-
ter; wear shoes a size Smaller if you
like, for terns, will never again send
electric Sparks et pain through you,
aeePrainIS-te eil4e/UPItti itUtheriti-
Ire says that P. few drops of a drug
called fresZODA aPelied directly upon
it tender; -aching 'cern, instantly re.
lleveS 501'0neSS*. and Pon the entire
corn, root and all, lifts right out.
• Tide drug firle:5.' at once and sirenlY
sluivele up the corn or calls without'
•even irritating the sUrrounding tlsOuo..
A small bottle• of freezone °Wiped'
at any drug store will cost very little
but Win, positively remove 'every hard
or soft Corn or callus from one's foot. ,
• If your struggiet hasn't steelted tbis
Ivneuvrvidezge yareuLgtbelolusheiml G�. get..a
ernafl
bOttle of 'freezone ' for .you• from his
•
. -
„
• "X gear No If: oer •
•"We've come'," said the• chairman of
the local committee, "to ask you to
take this nomination. The city neede
huM like you—stronge brave, self-
reliant, owning no 'master, fearing no
man." •
The great man was visibly touched,
•"I'll not deny," he said,. "that your
kind words. have shaken my resolu-
tion, I trest that, if elected, r may
justify. your confidence and prove that
• I am indeed strong, brave, self-reliant.;
that I own no master and fear no man.
Suppose you wait a minute till I see #
my wife will let me accept." •
Minattles ilninient do., lAmited,', '
was very siolt with Quinsy and
thought wiould 'strangle. used
MINARD'S LINIIVIENT and it cured
Me at once. 1 ani never without it
now.
• •. • • YoUrs gratefully,
.0; D. PRINCE.'
Nalltlfittiktittuila O.et. ;Pik_ •
-
4
"The three •W's- is • my maxim:
plenty of work, plenty orwittles, and
plenty of wages-Thackeray.
•
MONEY ORDERS
• When ordering goods by mall, lend a
Dominion Express Money Oreerat. ,
- • •
•
G• enerally speaking, the depth' to
'plant' should . be: -fotit'Ailner-the
diameter of the seed:
adinard,s TA:trim:int .1:timbeintan,s Friend.
• Belgium's King..
• A 'British. army•chaplain back from
the fronton leave brought with . him
the following -tale: In a small town in•
western Belgium a handful of chil- 'e
clren, pinched and half-starved, were
kneeling before a shrine in the • cross- .
• roads, saying 'Our Father." • Back of
• them stood, tall blond Belgian officer'
'without" any insignia of rank. When
the children came to .."And forgivans
Zir=trzkspasseslalieir-voicea-trairedzbft"-
• into silence* whereupon the voice. of
• • _
• Officere-Waneaw.. Most_ ef the ob-
jects of. interest in Egypt, including
the Pyramids.• They're covered with
hieroglyphics. • GardenereL-Well,'
I hope you Used the insecticide sent
you. That 'ucl. do for tem. ',
irsirairprants woo tazx
PROBTX-MAKIN41 MAW$' AND Alit
• a (AMOS for $al• in good ontnrin
tows& The most tmful and interesting
, of telt businesses,_ ruit. intuits-wt.:ft ,•rt
'111)Plietithitt :et Wilson Publisiona Com -
NOW° 73 .Adelaide Street Tont'.
**ZIP WANTS
---
414K1• -WANTErk--Tri 1,19, vir.osaN
part . hue: good, pay: wmi: vent ony
tzti light sewing at 1tno. terle or
taueow'itarges Sena star%) for
Particulars, .National Manufw!tnr:ir.-...,g
31entreal.
SAISCIEX4TaillIX01711
2.7W AitiP -SECONli
• Hand, •f1,2,vo top. Soni for speLia1
Price list IrarsitY 413
Spading: Are. Toronto.
1ANCR, TUMORS, ETC„
• internal and ,enternal• curea tvira.
out p4.111 by r home treatment, Write
us before too at:'. Dr. Dell:non 'Medical
Co„ Limited. 'oilingwood. ont,
• ABT RADE li-44.0.51.i,AT. oftt.t1
will reduce inflaaed, Swollen
Joints Sprains,
£) LV Soft
Bunebies; lioala ' Boils, roil
• if• ,Evn,olottor,Fistebiliaa •
ix . /Steeled° sores quickly '
1. i.,doe
)ili 44
;I ,4, as it is a pbsitive antiseptic
and fpnraieldr. Ple;4nt to
wet doe/taut blister evermore .
the hair* end meta work tbe bcte4
AFIlir eita. $2.00ger bottle, delivered,
. . Poole 7 fil free.
.413SORBINE.JR..ttanuatanlinigillt fersainklatf. ' •
Wino* valnint. Swollen Veins. Went, Arsine ibuisets
goys gain and Intenenation. Price S1.03 per bolds et
deniers or delivered. Will tell Ton more, If rott Write*
14bertl Teel Bottle for tee in mem, ,
W. F. YOUNS, P.D.F.,..510.1.ymans 014, Montreal, Can.
., .
When bnyhig your, Plano
-insist-on having an
" OTTO HI
PIANO AOTIPN
MAKCS a
HARNESil t '
I
ONG &TOUCH!
gunnia tunmani. CtIL '
:_aiikee. hereeie oreegseted,„,„, ,
,gh
This mineral' oil not Only i
I tikes dirt off but keeps'
itoget.lenItthefirlis the pores of 11`
1 Tedbewtiitshwl_r Eureka
harttesaltpat-
, _nie tough
1 ,pliable,shi yaminevelooking: . I:
t .
,DIP.S._14,3ttit .011Elli COMPANY . 1
. ' nranchoi Throughaite —
flamosteow's welti.
' -
•
Write" to/a-day :for our big
FREE 'CATALOGUE
showing our full line of Bicycles fa-
• llen• and Women -.Bop and Girls—
Tires, Coaster Braes, Wheels, Inner •'
. Tubes. Lamp?, Bella, Cyniometers,.;
Saddles, Ecimpinent' and Parts for
' Bicycles. You can burritir supplies'
REMEMBE• R! The ointment from us at wholesale .
• you put Cul your child'sskin gets I.• • wjtoyE)& SON,..
rito the-systern just. as surely eta *1
otid the child eats. Don't let I:
impure and mineral coloring
-
matter (such as many of the
cheap ointments contain) get
into your child's blOodl -Zane
Buk is purely herbal.. No pois-
onous cohering. Use it aliVaye.
•50e. Box at All Druggist* andStores.
I
Amorka's
_Mosso
BOOKON
DOG -DISEASES
And How to Feed
tnied tree to any address bY
nrweinthrife Author ork
•CLAY'GLOVER CO..,1ne,„
27Notre Dame Strews. likrest,Montrenk
ending and 'Absorbing!' A. us mac coga_t_
ral A N ORneb
't.y41
CHOSCN FRICNDS
A triteseat soul Insurance enelety ritat
ratettsItirintinber* In accordance with the
• ntariq Government Standard; •Siek and
unoraibenefiteinitienal.
• Authorized to *Main members and charter
lodges in *moot Province latCassadtt.
Purely Canadian. oily sena and=itcoacr
mcnL
datAlUthslirietilisilpirthlidiereefa'Chelo sairlienniortkeda
following bWerai
i..1.W.Easseids.144y! • W. F. '
• trehidneiliallott _ Grand Mice'. rigor
P. 0.antpbsil, 3. H. WI, MD.,
,GranslOreannti mixed
-7,11ValLtUtt -
•-• . ,
1. --GOOD DIGESTION—. 1 'Mother Seittere'Synap corrects end' stionlates
., When sour digestion is faulty, weakn•ess and .the digestive organs. and banishes the mans .
-lode are certain and disease is invited. ailments which arise trod indigestion. •
•
those who trespass--:" The
in linens and the new figures! Cotton
temet: This idea k also.carried out f°rgiv°
ericnowe officer was none'',0the'r than
mg °Albett. - • • •,
Materials .which are so smart for r, • .•
snort eltirt%,• Instead of the high!, • ,, , • ..,
She IN as Shopplhg,
stock collars.sorrie openf-neek blouse s i '
are worn with :graceful ,fonteiii-handl A lady had been sitting. in -a' furhi-
tee* Made. ef the; t ma. a al. -. . _ . __ _en
The ' vogue of the one-piece dress: SPeeting the stock of linoletims. Roll
-it eana the-v-ogue•
- th • • one --------t 1 d' o ler arras Itis
y ere n ore eti a , in jest
"•the boats 'The boats • were blown Record *Upon -Ili&
• pensable and. Steadying than the Ape!' • •• • •
away Its they tried to pil,t them out. plieation:"ofehumane industry, to :the Aseorrespondent . who• hai just -been
• TheShark all the time lay heleleSe be-
tweenethe British ilea and that, of the
et enemy's. and so -•=got the •Britisheiheliss
Which fell short k few Minutes after
the .a,etion started. the • feetsli •and
••fo'esle gun, with •gun's crew, includ.
Ing'the officer, Sub-Iiieut. • IrVing.
Vance, were alt blown aWaY except
One man, who was badly woundetleThe
eantain ordered the rafts and the l.
lieitinntriats Mitt assisting in every-,
thing _as he. gave the AVaerat Iteeritg
his men constantly. • •••4
• Cheered -by. Captain.
Foreeeeing , the idevitablen ,Coin -
mender Jones weighted and dropped,
,overboai.d the private Code book and
other confidential papers • Be had
•.• been wounded badly in' the leg as he
• left the tvreck of the bridge, and
Rommel and ,bound up his
• leg. Still untnindfni of hillfselte the
•eaptain • noticed . that Griffin waS
badly wounded •• '
0,0o:tot your eye dressed ' he or-
-doted.— •.
'"There is no doetor sir " &Ain
•,
r,
•Whorl kult seen the Mark's' lair-
• goon was binding • up the arm of• a
• seaman .torpedO man who bad been
, badly hurt by the eXplosion of the
third torpedo which the Shark. at-
• Unlisted to discharge. All the men At
this torpedo inbe, except one, had • .•
boon killed or wounded by this •, ex-
• plosion. The captain Ono went to ;1
the• rakishly on, the other guns and
eVerethieg else on the (leek having;
been blown •away, and ho remained
s '
•
sicir t ture.;shoP fey Pea rilte, two...holara in
cultivation of the soil'. • And if there ••in Paris giVes , some interesting .gos-•
is one .peintat "which*.order seems be sip about the .114lIll'Yedkcs WOlO
ginning to emerge front the present the*, Vrench soldiers. - In the British •
confusion of onr political and , Arnty there. is only otet the thie gold
ainis it is preeisely•With 'regard to thisl strip denotiug that' the wearer 'has
fundamental neeessity of making a been weunded. The French have Many,
b,etter a *the givatest of* all nit tont a 'man carries his whole military
tural raourCes.".--Viscount Milner. recoi'd Oren to the view of all. Indeed,
Na •
..s.,nrinnerse
• saiii my Mende a uniform unadorned„
tretelleas
. •
e
sorer
to the
Health'
Question
• often lies
•in a
.chan‘fe of_
table think h.
and too spotlessly cleent often • calls!
forth urrillleoheettled :gesture-of1aa,'
,
an inverted "V" hilt
on the right sleeve Means "wounded,"
andit new One is added for each.
wound. A "V" right side up oo the
same 'sleeve merely means 'sent
oti accotint of sickness." On the left
sleeve the "V" indicates length of ser -i
vie, one for the 'fast year and one
for eVery.stieeeeding six titoriths. Re-
cently there has' been created a hew;
distinctien,, which Ps very highly priz.!
ed. This„is a narrow horizontal band,'
• aid means "six months at Verdun." f
• In addition to these individual synt.:.!
• bols and distinctions there is. a kind
m
-�fseollective embles4 which every
Pont* is very proud. This is the'
twisted teasels of•ted and greens/the
colors •of the War Crosss--whieli alt'
members of 'regiments • "melitioned",
for gallant, service have the right to:
carry from the left shoulder, In addi.
tion to all these, of course, there
the individual tuedals and.decoratrmil,
like those in ourArmy. Rut the
Prowl* carry the badge idea infteh fur-
ther than the British.do.
The stunning model designed on the , brought out, bet stilts she seemed (115 -
lines ef the howliee niiretto cotresponcyatiseede •eltroin her dress' he judged '
With the present silhoirette. is pirtr.:;het to be ' a peribn bf 'wealth - . - and
cularly good style. Developed in I thought itiikely that she ' would have
lightweight Simd-colored, velour it et good oraer-tto .give...' When at last
be practical tor mountainside Dr sea- he had shown her thc. last roll, he
shore, while indust -proof satin it, will ...paused in despair. •, • ._
prose a splendid motor coat. . 'McCall . "I'm • very sorry, madam," he said
Pattern No, 775, Ladies' and Misses' ,apologeecally. hut if you could wait
coal, in 3 sizes; trnalL 34 to 36; .I could get some inore pieces from
-mediums:WO:to 40, and_ large* 42 to 44._ th_t• tett-Wrenn, catstrote ea...again?"
bust. ,_ Price. 20 .efeateee .: ... . The prospe'Clive eustemee gathered,
These patterns may he obtained hei.• belongings together and /else from,
from your -local McCall dealer �r from, the chair. ' • .
"sni"itg,i4t(ai ';1,hcetilislidttewistelnIdaYgrouti:oiomdell
'tolieepthticw•CaIl.to., 70, Bond St., 'Toronto,
.s•—...- en _____. • • with .very small designs, suitable for
• Fish as a Farm •prup. , •• putting in the bottom • of a canary's
e
.'Among the' nnewthings in farming cage. , . '
es -
fish vulture •. promises to Prove 'a .• .
'throe eery farm home should have its 111'811 1'6417 Tawg,;;;;;;SII;A:?dit;fteetlalile
source cif profit and to provide an-
other food retionice foe the nation. In Ku.e. "I og- Marino is tort 'Brod eye&
own Ash pond ,etocked with bass, ovies -Itetresbes--Itestdroa.
Morino isravotit.Tre=t,
petal. sunfish Olt other of the warm • and smart din/t
yo rirmeri=alrottilgilgtar
water fishes'and where cold running 41.retteroar ...maabu e. e tit the same rept f.t.•• Ity.
wittet' is aVtillable, there May he pools Coe for Them. You Catiol Buy NOW EyeSi
hi Whietreetitiluniscirebrook •trout Will ritigtvgilteigtztzgaitizzUli 44
FO R
40 YEA RS
THE STANDARD
REMEDY
_
:At all Druittists, 'or direct on receipt of p
numb ni thestnaller. A. J. W
FOR
STOMACH
ARO:LOEB'.-
.TROUBLE
•
70I "
riee,150a. and S1,00, 'riteliarge bottle coOsins thee times se
• MT& Co. lantrap. cr.44 Str4t Weitt:Iviontreel, ,
I
.• bishop of London, the- dean of St
Alt fer Atinaralt Wed take ao,ptiele, ' ?IMPS, Or the lord mayor.
thrive. PIA fainting is a 'practical
means d increasing the farmer's in-
come and of adding' variety and lower
coets to the eentumer's Meals.
Kean *unwed,. Tatabnent In the house.
—
•
- Graaf Tarn, the chief bell of St.
Paul'eathedrod, London, Rug., is
onIy,.tolled on/the ,death 'the fun-
eral of any of thevoyal family, of the
Cato recOrernended that the soil of
farm be good.,and fertile; also that
•near it there be plenty of laborers arid
that.it be net far from a large town,
Moreover tlutt. It have 'auffielent Means
ot transporting its produce,. either by
'water or land. This advice, although
2,000 years old, still holds good.
iitinartios Lituntotn*. tiiiod iiihsritelana;
is$1314
-Worritir," that's whatto the matter nt 'eat, Stomitch and—
intestinal worms. Nearly as bad as distemper. Cost You • •
tem much to feed 'cm. Look bad—are bad. Don't physic
'San to death. npolutio Compound will remove the worms.
IMProve tha aPretit*, and tone 'etn up all round, and don't
-physic." Acts on gland!! And blood, Full directions with
_
each bottleand seld h% ell druggists.
Po1ztirox.ke. Chonlittio. eositeta, tud.: tr. S.
TABLISHED 1042
•THE RIGHT "
IN
TO PAINT RIGHT
tj And now for a grand clean- ,
up, Ranisai'a Paint the arnarteat, hrikliteat
and Most econninicai helperyou ever employed.
0114110 M POMO• 8
-A. RANISKI? dit SON COMPANV-Atikera el County %intik
MONTREAL 'TORONTO VMitANCO
a.