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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-18, Page 3•410. PAIN 111 THE BACK lioOtair VOmes from NitiOrair itite.lanatisto, I/o not war* about a pain in the 'back. The worry will do you more harm than the pains. The canoe of . Most backaches is muscular rheum*, tism, which is painful enough, but not fatal.Lumbago is a fenn of mueeu. lar rheumatism, An IS n stiff neck. Sufferers from uni term of rheum- tism should keep their general health UP to the highest standard by the use of a blood -building tonic like Dr. Wil. limns' Pink Pills, while taking. good, nourishing food, without •ttiO 1711101 meat. Proper nutrition and pure blood are ft-- hest; means. of fighting' rheumatism. Rheumatism comes from an acid in the blood, build it uP, strengthen the afiteni, and drive out the,,Poieenene acid that causes rheu- matism. In this way sufferers-. have fond 'complete recovery as is shown .by the following case: Samuel• ' "About three years .ego I- was greatly afflicted with a, severe pain in the Awl; which 1 thought at first, was •-11fte to liidnek trenble. I tried a num- ber of remedies, but they did not, help • me ay, in fact, the Pain WAS growing • worse, and got so lied that I wad quite • unable to do my housevsorit. I couldhot Oren 'sweep a 'door. Was ad- vised to try ,Dr.'WilliaMS' Pink and -1 am gind, 1 neta4. upon the ad4 • .Vice,. for 'befoie.,1 had been taking the • Pillt.long the pain began to eubside, and under the, 'continued • use disap- peared entirely, and 1 have' not since been bothered with it in any way. My husband WAS also cured of •a se- vere attack of indigestion by this same medicine, so' that we both have much reason -to be grateful for it," YO;11 an get Dr. Williams' Pink , Pillfrom any medicine dealer or by mail at .50 cents a box or six boxes for. $2.50 from The Dr. •Williams' . :Medicine Co., Brockville,'Ont "JACK". AND "TOMMY." How the 'British Sailo* and •SiSlatiei Came By Their Nicknames. The TonnLar: intrrie given to a nailer -by the man in. the street originates from' the tarpaulin waterproof .worn •by Jack in storiny weather. :Curious- ly* enough, although the 'sobriquet is in common Use, the boys in navy-blue usually resent it .. The soldierickname arises frem- . an official source, 1Viany- years ago,- when very few of. the 'men in -the ranks were able to write ; -,each was supplied with a OMbook,i whieh- him s nae, age, date of -enlistment,: arid full partieulars' as to his wou'rids, me- • • dals, etc. Were-entere,d. 1f'a soldier• ' was miable to -'write his name'in the niece allotted for that •purpose, the colonel of the regiment -would -do. so • for him, the man himself making his in • In the official.instructions as 'to the, , filling up of this Space, in order to signify that• the name was to be -writ- ten in full, it gave as an :example: • "Name.(Thomas Atkins)" vary: much in the same way as .the "X or M" in the Catechism. • Thus the British.soldier same to be 7--Tdubbe'cl- "Thomas Atkins."' WO1VIAN'S PARTIN TE WAR. picreasing Ded,inanfor Their' Work In 'Great Britain. , Employment son took n turn for • the better, and women began to be _ re -absorbed, thringli-M Many cases . they had to turn their energies irito • • Iiew channels. •The' enlistment of mil- lions of. men in the new Dritish army :treated many gape .in- the ordinary milks of industry, and the. _pressure. - of Gs-wrnkl-iert3..-'svoik-gliii-more in- tense as tinig'`'Went on. There were •large armies to be fed .and Outbid • and equipped, and fewer. Workers to undertake this enormous task. Hende here• ere was increasing demand for the • work of woinen, and women hav.e sho.wmthemselves-willing-to-shoulder a. large part of the national burden; Women are at work in the parks, on: . the land, on the tramways and rail- ways.: In increasing numbers they .• can -be found in the .tailoring trade, in the leather trade; in thm e anufacture of munitions, antl food, • _ ' •TURN . OVER -0 TIME •• 'When' Nature Hintsi .AhOut the Food: • _ . • When there's -no -relish to food a-ittli •'all • that •one eats doesn't seem to --do any good is the time to make a turn- , over 111 the -for-that's-Nature's; way of droPpirig a hitit that thrfered ,1_,isn't-tia kind. required-. • For a nuMber of years I followed. • irAilreaverlor-shuela-ef•-it-Lbeing-O-ffiee work of a trying nature. Meal times , were our busiest; and eating too much • and too quickly .of food such as is. commonly -served' in hotels and is taurents,Aegether with the sedentary • habits, were not ;long, giving me' dyspepsia and stomach trouble, which redueed- Mt weight from...205 to 160 pounds. • , "There Was little relish'in any food and none . of it semned to do Me ,any • .good.' it ieemid_the More I ate- the podrer got nild Wait always herigrY before another meal, no matter how -Much I: had:eaten- "Then 1 commended a trial of Grape -Nuts food, and was surprised' how Small saucer ,fit would. tarry, me along, strong. and with satisfied • uPPetitUntil the next meal, with no • , sensations of hungef., weakness or dis- tress as before. . "1 have been folloWitig . this diet now 'for several months and my im- • , provernent has been so great•all the _others , my family have taken' up the use of Grape.Nuts With complete setisfaction and mach improvement, in health. • , "Most people-. eat- luirriedly; 'have" • lots of worry, %its' hindering diges- tion, andth'erefore need a toed Abet is • predigested and concentrated in neut. • islutent," •: •"Tharo"s ReaS011," • ' Name given bY Canadian Posttim Co., 'Windsor, Ont. . , s-.)'ene animate from time to times.. They nver read -the abeviii letter t A lui* aro reouttiae, true, luta run of -AMMO Pt/Great -• • LONG.LOST SON FROM CANADA. Recognized inTreneht4 * Missing Roo at C* ooin England. One of the etrahgest romincee of -gnat in Leecle, England. Ten, . yearb ago Leeds yeutb. • George .Ernest Oldroyd, disappeared from his home, and when his parents next bad news of hins he. Wea acting aS a Cook to a Party of Canadian rail- way engineers on the prairies of Can. oda. After a Month or two his Par- ents ceased to have letters from him, and after the lapse of several Ye'are and despite maw Vain -endeavors t4; trace. him they reluctantly carne to ' the coriclineon that he was dead, and have mourned ijm tis_.-suck.for a least eYen Years:, l'rolikr41 40 the result •et a change Meeting, in the trenches in -France it seems likely. that Mr. and Mrs. Old. royd are tolave their Son restored to them. • A Leeds soldie___r at the front recently met there a InTinher efs•the ; Ce42,344' contillK9at.,Yrkeln,Joill stantly recognized as George Oldroyd of Leeds, and • hailed him as an old triad. The Canadian replied that h wie__Inaking--a--MiStalte:AS-bis•-nant was Thorne and he had never in his knowledge been to . Conversation ‘between., tbe twoelicited the .,story from Niue ^,yeare ago ,he'had been in a -b-10 train smash. in "Canada, frorn-wbieh he", had emerged with ,his :Memory Ife Completely goneAat he geoid j'erriem.; clier. nothing .ofpreVieus..gifs, not even hie name.' He trild the Leeds comrade that following the accident a letter .bearing the 'name of 'Thape was found in his possession, and he had been h.nown by that name ever sincheem . Leeds'a• n Tassured him that he had not the slightest doubt.as.te his identity, and as he had known the whole Oldroyd • family, he ' gave "Thorpe" their address and advised him to write. Mr. •find Mrs, Oldroyd, who still live m Leeds have now .re- ceived a letter giving iurther RarticnJars- The man, "Thorpe" wrote that he joined the Canadian •contingent .111 Vancouver nine months ago. He was in Toronto: nine years-igo„- and was in "a train Wreck somewhere that left him in - i" Winnipeg hospital.' From that period his „Mind, he says, is a • blink. All his effortato discover his parents have been futile, and he .af- intst'looked at this last as a hopeless clue‘ , Mr. and Mrs..' Oldroyot are Trite convinced that "Thorpe" is none ether than their long -lost son. The- hand- writing of the letter is identical With that of their seri -George's hist, letter home, and -an additional proof is that when he emigrated to Canada be went • accbmpanied by '.a friend nained • Thorpe, • • - •• „Trlr'7mm,1191111,FirTr7W.....1r.... RUSSIAN BLOUSE COAT POPULAR. For ladies an -Misses- not mere popular coat. -cell be found than the RUSSiall .Rlouse Coat. TI4es we. nni4e u-431111die: ilouble.breatited' model, the latterhaving stn aPPre-' Prieto sonneivhat milit.arietic appear. h • awe T egie Coat are partiot arly ' • ..7•• ••,••••1••-•• • •• ••• •`", ^ e • • • ,.• • A GENTLE LAXATIVE . • FR ,LITTLE ONES • Baby's Own Tablets are' a_gentle laxative. They . are absolutely safe and are so- pleasant in action that once th p mother has Used the& for her little ones she will neveragain resort to that harsh,111-snielling, had - tasting castor oil, which baby alVvays fought againSt taking. Biby wilI take' the Tablets with a smile, and thousands of mothers telt us their little Ones will coax- for them. They are sold by medicine dealers, or. by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr: Williams' Medicine Co., • Brockville, • Ont. ' - •• "_ JOHN BULL AT THE TABLE: • . Why the Britisher Has the Best PhY- ; „....•sique in Europe. • The 'Britisher -is notoriously.atteri- • • .• No, 9177. . , attractive when fur -trimmed, a lea, ture so popular at present.. The illus- tration shows -Ladies' Home Journal Pattern No. .91!77 --one af thee coats. It can be Made in any one pf ...three lengths; high, turn down Or crushed• • military collar; full-lengtk, sleettes • and turn -back cuffs. Lengths.- of coat at centre. back,. 40, 39 gr 25 inches.. It cuts in five sizes -34 to 42 -size 38 requiring 4% jtards. of 36 -inch Mater- • ial and % yards of 36-ineti contrast- ing- material for colltu,-. cuffs and pocket' laps, or 814 yards fur banding and a leather helt• , _ --• . 'Patterns, 15 cents each, can be pur- cheied at your Inca/ Ladies' Home • Journal dealer, or from the Home Pattern Compa0,183 George Street,: Toronto, Ontario. •• • TEACH INVALIDS.TO WALK:: Vehicle to 'Aid Victims Of Paralysis te Get Around, • • , • ,In the treatinerit ,of- niaay invalids it is necessary to retea.ch them to walk. This is 'notably true in Cases of broken limbs, paralysis,' lodometor ataxia and other similar inaladfea. A device to aid the patient in learn- ing to walk, again has -been devised and is in successful 'use in a Michi- •ganminitarium. It is called the walk- ing chair, and by making -dee, of the, vehicle the patient May first leakil to use his...feet while. in a sitting pos-, tare. _ Later,",when his, strength is equal to ,the task, he can stand, sup- porting himself On the bars of the -carriage. The ;wheels ,are rubber - tired and the Whole carriage ib very - light, though strong, -offering praeti- cally .1 resistance to the motive power urnished by the invalid: The walking ,chair is esfiecially, valuable in the treatment of improv- ing cases of locomotor ataxia, in which disease it is Very difficidt • for the 'patient tei receyerthe•use:of his imbs without an 'artifigial support Of some kind. This machine is used so frequently in cased, of .this kind :that is soirietinies -referred to as, -the "locomotor ataxmcab." , ' •,. tive to the wants of the "inner man," , PROPHECY FULFILLED. which may be one reason for his phy-. • • sical and mental superiority over M. laller Said England 'Could others: •- • ' Never be Conquered. . . Culinary' inefficiency is responsible for mere domestic unhappiness -than The following extract from the life one who has_xiot_studiecL:the-subjeet-of-that-distinguished-'-German,the would imagine. This is on the au- thority of one who has pahtsense tendon to: the weakness for tasty things which John Bull h,as ever man- ifested.• . . . But there has now heen gathered by a statistician -hard, -solid facts which - _ shave that, the average Britisher eats almost twice as much as the German, • while an Italian ,is satisfied with leis than. half the food a Britisher con - seines: .; A"--11ritiah- workingman spend 14s. on food, a Frenchman Ms., a Belgian . a e an . : 6s: "The *grislier consumed more meat than itay, other European," and the meat Considered to be best of all. foods for making muscle and ram. • . • morrow every man is a soldier. there This is why the Britisher has the may be jealo'usies between her cola - better physique than the 'men of any nies, but if it Came to extremities, the other ..nationality,. why he best IcOlonies would. alio* no -'hair Of Eng. athlete• the, hardeit wOrkeriinit'• the, land to, be touched. Even India,which • • --was formerly a -dangerr has , ,shOwly • that England s enemies are her late Prof.. Max Muller,' written' during 1884 and 1885, is of special interest at the present dine: • ".`When one reads the discussion in -Parliament one might easily fear for England; but they are mere fireworks. The nation is of good old stock; and wee to him WhO forgets •this. •Eng - _land will never he conquered, never before the last -Englishman, the last Scotsman,' the last , Irishman -aye, the last Australian, the:Jest Cana- dian, the :last Newfoundlander, the, last Sikh -aye, the last Yankee, has !anew — ,"Flvery-mari =Europe- (1S—.nsirti a - soldier; England is the only land that hai. not taken kb arming the people. Drive England into corner, and to - quickest thinke-r. .• • • 'L'OIVIMY'S NAVAL' HONORS. •' 414 Exeepiional to Find British Soldier . Fig tine lit ea. The bluejacket, of course,' often takes part in land. fighting, as witness the -doughty 'deed§ arthe.Naval gade ih the Crimea, and, in more re - •cent times, in Egypt and South Af- rica. • The amphibious Marine excepted, however, it exceptional' to find 'rein,. tny Atkins fighting at sea. Neverthe- less, at least three British regiments bear •naval .battle hollers. .One id the 2nd Baqatiort° the Welsh Reginient, who seived under Sir .1Ohn .Tervis at -the naval battle oft Cape St; Vincent; 1797. Lord Nelson christened them the "Old Agarneranons" after his own ship the ,Aganteinnon, and the 'ftiekt nairtehns studk, ' They are also, known as the "Cps and Down" from the fact that their reghnental ;limber "69" tan he rid either way up. ' The other naval ho- nor bearing corps are.Princeas Char - lotto of • Waletes ,Royal 'Berkshire Itegintent and the Rida Brigade. Both Were elltharked at. YarinOtith on the Fleet tinder 8ir' Hyde , Parker tug , 211inardfs, ifinhnent Cares Diphtheria. , Russia's annual drinle-bill in the past was abollt £150,000,000, pet •SO enormons is the population that the consumptien per head was the 'small- est in .Europe, with the ekeeption, of Norway. The drink bill of Great Brit- ain represents , . expenditure per head of 88s.; that of Russia, 18s tio$ Noloott. „ED. de. ISStit • . -s • A A GOOD, POULTRY FOUNDATIO a • T4he agall!iva4tiortniklaglresatillo'ruwli. One Plans to yet started With poult Wilat is the best way to get start that will lay tin3 foundation the best ultimate return?. A gre • many ways offer themselves to ma the start, and it very often means the inexperiene.ed Mat question to which will be the' best' to fell° Of one thing WO feel very certain,. an that is that two essentials -require t biggest, cOriffideration, and they ar To See, that the start IS 'made wi "Pat! and vitality. One is not,co 'Pieta without the other, and this the'ense.ze,:,,matter_whethex-thp, 7are needed.for shois-nr practical use • These two essentials hold. good n matter Whether the peoduet used young or .chicks, • eggs ,for hatching. The big cniesti9 is,' 4;What is field/id them'?" Beefin of the possibility for to some exte Observing' whether these qualities p ist or not is most satisfactory t buy stock, and\ if' a year old or be ter' the quality and 'vitality hav had more -time 40 phew. . When.• .. -it cen'siderek that 'qUalitir of the original birds' ma make the difference throughout th following generations and perhaps ef feet hundreds of birds, it is plain t See that if a few dollars more will ge very much better quality and result it. Is more than well worth the differ ence for the future • results it. wil bring. Take the matter3 Of eg production, it is possible to hear good and bad producing flocks in th same breed, indicating that the dif ference is in the strain, the one hay ing very much better quality Oen these lines than the other,' Quite of ten breeds get booms in localities du to the good results developed in strain in the community, and just a soon as the quality -la -last -those -hay ing the breed begin to get peer re sults. . • On --the other heed, it -is hardly pos- sible to keep up the quality without vitality. Just as soon as this begins to wane,' then produetieh. must de- crease. To be Sure, breedifig may develop certain value§ to ,the,,general shrinkage in general. values, giving, might.seem far a time, increased values along the line desired, but vitality is allowed to be impaired, the advantage gained will only be for a time, and in the end the whole pro- duct lost beyond bringing back to something that can produce it a pro- fit. • By this we do not mean that line -breeding is in any way a faulty one. ....Quite the contrary, for we have not seen anything to teach us that it N. en ry a or at ke to aa W, he e: th is ds P- o. is se 0 • e; •••• 1 g, 1 e• a is other than the only way to make real •progress. . But to breed for cer- tain. things without. giving the closest attention to vitality means. disaster, and no matter what quality may be obtained in any direction it cannot -Be held -to- reproduce 'itself.- without vitality, an, therefore, unless vitality is also line -bred, is a failure.. - • The 'very last consideration is that of price. A good buyer of course will always make ,comparison and 'be in clined to give preference where • he. feels -a saving can fie made, but the :hest buyer selects just what will fill the. hill• for: him. and pays the fair. price, rather • than buy because of cheapness. When a fair price is paid. a great deal is at stake for the -seller as well as the buyer, he must give greater pains than the -.man: who is -selling- without any profit -just -tog' .the sale regardless of giving the -he* service. • Something that will not do what is desired is dear at any price, and usually :the only way to depend getting serviceable stock Is to buy from a -dependable source, Where re-is-the--best--possibilit$ for s euring quality and vitality. - " .14 • . . Don't Stir It.. 'Please Don't Stir It; , For Goodness' Sake Don't Stir •Dr. Jackson's roman Meal Porridge. If you do it's spoiled. Read • and •follow directions on -package. For early, 'breakfast, make while getting evening meal, in a double boiler • or set' boiler in basin • of boiling water. When you get up, light gas under boiler, allow inner boiler to set in boiling water without stirring while dressing. Your breakfast is, ready. It2s-clelicious, very' -riutittls,:-Iire-..: -vents.mdigestion-and •relinVereen stipation or `'`InOney - 44." Al), grocers, 10 and 25 cents. TRIUMPH OF -SURGERY. Fragment Of' Hand, 'Greeade Taken ' Praire Soldier's Heart. A remarkable opaildtion, the•nitreer tion of a fragment of hand -grenade from the heart,. was described iit, the French Academy of Medicine by Pro- fessor Armaingaud, of terdeaux. The patient, a young Parisian Set. geant, of rather delicate,,conititution, who vas present at the • session, was wounded at St. -Hubert, in 'the ,Ar- gonne, on -October let. A .splinter 3,4 inch square and a tenth of an inch thick, penetrating the diaphragin, the pericardium, and the cardiac muscle, lodged in the right' 1481Cle of the heart, where it remained four and a* half months. On February 17th ,. Maurice' • Beauasenat, 'thief of the Ambulance in the Rue jaacities Dulud, NeuillY, un- dertook to extract it. ' Once the heart, Was laid open the dafileulties began. The fragment was Very awkward to catch,. and slipped froin the foitcdps several times before it could be -got nut, 'but the' ,heart -emitintied to -beat lit the tinie. • . a Althotigh .coniplieations were fear- ed, everything went well, and the ser- geant could be eonsidered cured a month after. • .1Vieriabers of the. Acad- emy, were able to See for thenlselveS that the heart 'was no* acting nor- Mally, and 'that it aura had been es-. 'tahlished beyond' all ..douht. ' • tuutrottmintent mike*, qeottet.th Cows 'Morel Why PRESIDENT SUSPENDER NONE 'SO - EA S Y MAD CAN,ADA - -"FAINLESS- EDUCATION." - Row Modern Children are Taught to • Learn+Wlule at Play• ,Attention a 'teachers now is be- ing called to "painless education" A mother, writing in one of th,current US LfTTLE DAUGHTER. root Card $ent:111ster, fon? at the ' pathetic incident is • told in a letter 'written /rem • Flanders by• , P.rivate a. Pelfereof the a' friend in England. Ile says: • "We were taking two wounded men in an Onlbalatlee from the tiring.line when one of them (lied in our handa. We were preparing to bury him when a. post 'card with the verse given be- low sdropPed from his pocket: • 1)404f4Yd'eclaarr' 4fzIalrtubwrinalcYlu;g Ant that you be free fkimit danger Night and Morn for you I pray.. - Thong's from ear 'Orliti You're par1o4, ; still k, pray where'er ,you be, ThatGdoadn•gwetl.l. keep you from all o • " And bring you safely hack to me. - i 4 "When W re41' the card Dsv°eReou'lci have oriefl:.!-WriteLP-alfer:- nhe-man: - had ieceivedthe card that ;Tinning , from his little girl at home, telling him' to be 'quick and 2cOme." back to • her -1-'imve -seen inaPY 'burials but never felt'. as upset as when, we put that peer AO .doWn in. the grave." . . • magazines_ tells.: how her daughter.; ":".cer.14ta-in"6"naagtoe'rafr erAellataisentieTvhede little girl Speaks a number of lan ignagos,she.ia'well along in mathe- matics, having InaStered both alge- bra. and geometry', , and had .never taken them OS .8tUdiOS , in .' the sense' that they are •-a-0-aie47 in -,the high. schools:. The little girl.,learned with out knowing that she Was learning, iiiPa(41e4xtleariM:Pinje'thinester1904'Or'siheglilvine: nlany peas,peas. The ganie thr4' was erc to twfinocl'pods. ,The ;two pods had to be added. Dice were added to the game and the little 'girl soon became an expert in adding the number of spots on them. In the matter ,Of siihtraction, tin soldiers and marbles were Used, and whenever a cahnon shot toppled over a number of soldiers, the child soon Was able to 'tell how many were left standing. There were no quizzes and the child was taught to get results. without the use of rulesk The funny doings' of "Mi. X" interested her in algebra: Cardboard and scissors started her in geornetry. • She was able to .demonstrate that the square On the hypothenuse of a right-angled ..triangle is equal to, the Soini-ef- the squares on • the other sides before she ever had heard, of the rule. In other words; she learned things by doing them. at play: Instead of having to Memorize rules, she did the problem and learned the rule afterward, if -- she ever learned it.' Many a rule has been glibly recited by a • child withno idea of what it was about. , Certain 'verbs "take the dative after the ; analogy ',of their primitives." The rule 'might as well have been in the original Latin, s�., as ability of th.kaverage studentl to comprehend it. 44 Foint 0011,10010 Pains 0,40shNervdnc ..i,.011:: b., 3r. . IT CURES RHEUMATISM. Thousands of people, chuck full of the joy of living -happy, glad,- bright people, that Nerviline has cured of their pains, all tell the same wonder- ful story of itS power to drive out the aches and tortures of rheumatism and kindred • ills. . "My goodness, het Nerviline is a miracle -worker," writes. Mrs: Char- lotte Chipman, -mother Of a well- known family residing at Mount Pleasant. "Last mooth I was so crip- pled up with sciatica and muscular rheumatism as to be almost Unable to do a bit of , housework. MY joints were -a0" -Stift: and the rankles so fright•fully Isere that I even cried 'at times with the pain. - For years -we lave*liseff Nerviline in our family and I just got busy with 0'ljg 'wonder- 'ful, good old liniment. Lotsof rub- bing with Nerviline soon .relieved my misery and -I was in a' real short time about My workas usual," No matter where the ache is, no matter how distressing the pain You can rub -it away With Nerviline. For forty years it.has been Curing luml bago, .sciatica, backache, colds, chest trouble and 'all sorts of winter ills. Keep a large. 50c:, family size bottle handy and you'll be •sweed lots of trouble and have smallerclector 'bills; Small trial size 25e. at dealers where • LadY -Banit Clerkri.'• ' Lady clerks. are • now , a familiar , 'BE .CORED TOTAY sight in most' English banks, and', •• . speititing broadly,: they. are, seccess- frizolu•%nepedriuojenis.inginthit nip;ogorcg•ileosfs : OF TRACK/1,01E Your persistent back -ache can hav• e . ; .•tells epd1)-rt8!....hoxs 7. .4, ladies ZILbZgi_V et o_n • but one cause --Diseased- Kidneys-'-- --T- and they must:he• strengthened b- say, they. have been engaged' on the fore the back -ache can- be-eured. - ' ., uliflorStanding that when the•regialar . staff, whom . 'they. have: released :for. the army,: return,- their Services ! will no longer he required. It is, however; 2.• question as to- Whetherhanks will ever return to theft old method. of ern- ..ploying a purely "Male staff, for ft appears probable that after the war manyfactorswill:operate, to cause a. deirtli in bank clerks coincident. With ,dpiu.arsetlre.yegaeettahale 2t5hzybo:tatrlee paThildj_iDnort.. an eXtra.deinand for their Service's. Hamilton's Pills to -day: - . - • .; . Minard's Liniment Co' . Limited 0 .. . • . . _•Gentlenieh,--In Sept was . .1905- I DISCOVERED -CHLORINE throWn from a- road machine, injer- • , . ing my hip 4n back badly and was ripsii-Scientist-Wati--Pinder of Poi- . pligeedtt, ii,i9s0e6:i -crnif7 colutircionthobi , Sonoes Element. '• •' • Lnachue: limed .ine to try MINAVD'S ,. • . . • LINIMENT, which I did with -the Your best remedy, and the quicRest to act, is liainilton's Pills; they cure kidney back -ache in, a hurry.. Simnly wonderful is the action of this, grand old medicine which' _for liver, kidney • and, standich disorders has no equal... Dr. Hamilton's •Pills will surely cure yew. back weariness, they .will bring • you • appetite,' color, strength and good spirits. Being Chlorine, which in its liqind, form the Germans are said to be using in dm as well as ever in my life. - most satisfactory results end to -day their pdison bombs, owes its discov- , Yours sincerely?. Lack of Men in ,Germany. ery. as ,element, as well tie „.its. There are further details to hand . his • We rzitli hitkeeiest t .0444,4040.4,10.0.06- r. uJy miciauk-14.4",•wi ,t1p4914G44.6...gios:“.2sPet‘41,57144414rotomtflarior": 1.310%°1441Pocetiliterite7f141)4:012nOt4V91 DAM KAMM ikla0, Wagat5ragoist,mailorn4ow 113 W. 27;114427Newr42.1";#. 1: T. • APPLEWAXITgD. . J.414At Q1'i:4. VOA' 13Ari15i,..1a.mr; .4cr- ples.in Carloto. Quote micas, nanting Varieties and grades.* Can also use few ears of appiee in bilila, X W. Dawson, ISraninten. . X"Awalk*PE** VOU *Ariz, rilinosIT-litmoNG NEMO- AND- ,TOV Offices or sale in good Ontario towns; The most ubeful and„interestinif Of all buoineSses. Vail information en O.PPlication to wijson publishjam, porn, P4r*Yi 73 West -Adelaide St.. morontn. : '.. Misexttstusnui. es ,.01cER. tuistons, 7..;1„1,41Va.•.113:C. • l..) Interns'. and osternat. :eared with. °tit Palo byour hoMe t.reatreent. Wilts VS .before too late. Dr: Beliman,Wedieal Co., X•eimited, ,POInnalvCO4t. Ont.. • V' TRAF .„ • Fans ii/nW0 iad.V,sneed ••• F.,4 ShiPtoltdgers. Weaivelibtrolgrades. fah value in casligndcadokreturna. have best market in Americo for req. No commiasion. Write today Pyr free Trappers, flopplies at PoptorsePrIza ROGERS Fun compaav. Dot. :.4 , ti.111 k • Vi Bides, etc, price pt. • 81-1.catia, 04 ' ' .. Hiram. Johnsen , Lirarrse The old No. 494 St. Pala ;...t., MONITEAL, -, ' Established over 88 years as • • ROW Fur Dozers -NoinfIatedpijce list -from us, Send us your Furs and get the highest rnerIcel; priqe. RAW Pe, All Quantiticc WhY not make •trapping proli*able shipPing • to the consuming Market. 'We can afford to pay you better prices than our out4of-town.competitors. as we •Iia e • :direct-'---cennectiontr nianufacturers In the woz1,i.• • .A. trial_ ahlPment 'Prove this itet- • . for F;rice.,Liat, Tags, Market.Reports . MAX WULFSOHN 1227124 W. '28th St, New York: City 2_ azak• ..rntrw; Tonto ,y.d4Iir, Ma* bnirket.• - We will give this beautiful,prize ' free Of all charge to any girl ,or „youilallady Who will sell 10:sets .- • it' .our handsome Xmas cards and Xmas tags and seals at 10 'Cents a package. • The Extension Bragelet • 1,s Of • rolletl,gold plate, aud arry arm. •'Send us your name and w,e win • send you the cards.. • Wh`eir sold' send' the money and we _NsTilL__ send you the bracelet,. Address • HOMER-WADDEN CO. . Dent, 208,• Toronto, Ont. _narae,--to a ritisk-scientist-Ifu h the. -alteration in-Gerfnan 's rey Davy. It was in 1610 that he found the mysterious gas to he 'Linde- Composable into other. elements. Should we decide to flatter the Ger- Mans by imitating them, there would he no difficulty in finding the chlorine. The earth and • the sea are full of it, in the form of Salt. • It 'would in- deed be difficelt- not; to find chlorine-_ in one or other of its combinations -- wherever ene tried, In earth, air or Water.; e Woe e impossible to fled anywhere-----exeeptin alliance with another element %Monde 'who split emommon saIt=.-iehlorine of sociiiim-.4W-order to get the -:chlorine, grew/ fat in, the process, but as a setr. off,•their. teeth decay. • • • • • - • 3: mark. • Wind' to Animals. • "Was Noah kind •to animals:7." "Oh; yes, my boy." "How do you•k-noW, pap?" -• • . "Because there is 'no. record ,-that hecarried ,a phonograph. ora pianola in the Ark." • • ' • • atinardIs Liniment Cures DiatemPtir, SEARCHLIGHTS BAFFLE ZEPP. Aviation-Esqiert- Tells; 'How- to 'Foil- ••,.„ • ---4-----4------....., London's Whole systein Of protective , ,'darkening ;against Zeppelin, attacks • Cure ' - ,••• is wrong' and should be replaced -by • a lavish systein of searehlights mak. 101fer knawit t:ng the. eity one vast, carpet of light; ' ore ' fall;- acts' without ..according to C. G.. 0.rey„a yv.91J:Lk*y,i1 - . pain In 24 hours. IS -aviation expert, ivriting in the London ' Smothing. healing; ..-I-Expreas. The -beat way -•to nieventr--r. ° , Guarantee4 conscription law, by .which -these men. who were Originally .refused will now be &died pp. Lately men refused be- tween the years 1887-95 met, those• . refused in the period 1878436 were balled, and , next_ day 'those 'refused during the years from 1870 te 1877. In `other words men rejected as far •baek ,.as 45 years ago are tiew =being • called. upon. • This -is proving the source of considerable nervousness in Germany, indieating that the ./.4.rnty' Is lacking' in'Alen. • COMS takes -the sting Matt ' - out, No remedy so euick, safe, and sure as Putnam's Pala,: leas Corn Extractor. • Sald every. Where -45a Der bottle. - • A *Oman sniffs every time she thinks of -daughter-in-law's raethod of _rearing babies, "- - 41.4.4.1.44444•••••• ntinardli Liniment enrol Colds. 'Am • ' • • Chieamen take the oath in court by 'kneeling down and breakinga saucer, The officer of the 'court then says:. "You shall tell the irtIth and the • Whore truth; the saUetr is cracked, and it you do not tell truth; your soul will lie cracked like the saucer." You will teiief In 4m -ink I It eases the, burning, stinging pain, stops bleeding and brings .fifttle. Perseverance, witblam: link, means cure; 'My not prove tms 2 An hraoigatmtct,^gtorta.- • an air raider from doing, serious work, , - Mr. Grey saye, is•to blind him with a - glare of light. - • this redsoli,9,' deelared 'the -Writer; "the PropOseci Wan or sending pp aeroplanes at night to attaelaap-J7• 'nelini is ridiculous 'because, until the gbppelin IS - lit up by _searchlight, the. 'aeroplane •cannot find 'it and then, as soon as :the aerolitane rises abate the Zeppelin to 'drop 'bombs it ge,ts into the beam of the searchlight and the pilot is 'made helpless. by the glare. . "One hears ulna about .night dero plane path& wier Paris, bet • they are •there •ehiefly to compese • the Minds of tlie people and the .real protection of Paris is• a. ring of searchlights completely enclosing the: city. t submit tbe .following seheme. for the protection Of •Londont-=- • ' ."Divide the titY hit° half. mile squares and in the owners of each squar-e plate-searehlightS -throwing wide beams.• vertically • upward, the beam of &tell searchlight overlapping that of its neighbor, Thus London \valid be covered with, it carpet of light se, blinding that pasSing air: eraft could so nothing below while land gans \wield, have 'a clear target in the 1101ted area ,above." adrblittlY takes a tenses every Ave years; England; every ten years. Iv 40 4, . . • V-- • ,,te • FOR " HEADACHES.-B1410VSNESS. ' CONSTIPATION: • Nearlyallourminorailments,andinany: of the serious ones, too, are traceable to- - sonic disorder of the stomach,: liver, and • bowcls. 11 you wish 'to- avoid the reis‘" ' .cries of indigestion, acidity. heartburn, • flattilence,, headaches, constipation, and a hilst of. ether distressing ailments, you amst see to it that your stotridch, liver • . -• And botvels are equal to TRY•.the work they haW . . do. his a simple matter to take 30 dropof Mother Seigers Syrup daily, after meals, yet thousands of former. • .suffercrs•lave banithi ed ndigegion, bit- Ioutnc's, conStipstion, and all their di . tressing consequences m.just this Situ*. • Way. Profit by their experience. As a dige§tive Mille and stomachic 'Mother Seigers Syrupis unsurpassed: '1V161THER' •2°11 • v SI/r111UP. strnvi.es Snit efOrAti.t Weir • M tits TOM. Sint ATSOcrait tOrnr, .51