The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-12-30, Page 3_
GALLANT DEEDS OF HORSES DIE ON WAR TRIP.
' Aniniels Purchased for French Army
' BRITISH OFFICERS, .
Biefily Trested.
1 'A. grueseme story et the suffering
and 44:of itorees being sent to
ACTS ' OF IIRA.VERY ON THE Frguee for artily work is told iv J.
FIELD OF BATTLE; . ••1/. revel,' a horse trainer and doe,
tor, Ile has just returned to NW
, o ' York after takipg 1.,Q20. • Western
Officer Leads Men Until Ilurt *.horses to Frence.
"AS A leVer a horses I ba'te to pie-
•• Third Time—How a \Trench •tire the horrors of that trip,he de-
• Was Held. , dared. "I was Supposed to be doctor
for all the lhorses. There wee, work
Glorioue deed.s by British officers& for' a dozia 'd"t"B" Ihe lux71C°. lye"
't d
many of /whom- stoV.ally, Imre. the• from ranches .a. over .
pain. of serioue:wounde in), order to • States., Sonata ef them Were imbra,M1-
',remain among their men, are 'related.ea and • unbroken:: The domesticated
M a War Office,'Itst of _honors •core. horses were in terror of the •wild
ferred by the Nina,
. l'horses. ManY ef the domqsticated
Thirty-twq officers are appointed' horses died of fright. Suppose you
to the Distinguished Service Order, had to ride for two weeks between
two savages. •
"The horses Were crowded into liar -
'row ste11%,•• For the entire two' weeks'
sea Voyage they had to stand up. They
could ',suave but a few' inchee. • Their
stalls were net cleaned during the
voyage. The 'men hired to feed them
were picked "up along the New York
Weterfernt. They did not understand
hOrSee. The' men- Were paid $1.5 for
the -round trip, They did as little
• Military Cross. '
Aiming officers who have ..gained
the D:S,O. are. the followingg-e
• .1\faler. C. J. L. Allanktn, lst Bat-'
691 Gvrklia Rifles,
e With twb-co,mimoies. he Teethed the
:ininunit of Chum* 'Bair. Ridge, Pal-
under_*•very_lestractive fire
"• from the ono*, where heme,e waled -
ed by a bayonet threat. When it be-
came obvious that supporta could not, work as possible., • .:
reeeheldm, .he 'skilfully withdrew hisi don't blame themenfor ehirking
Men and;;.notwithStanding the pain of They :Were treated. 'worse than the
his W9Unds, remained horses, For breakfast • they had a
lian throughout thewhole day, being t blaelt ftuid, Supposed to be Coffee
the only British efficer-left., . . I -without Milk or sugar. There were 36
•'Major A. C. GOrdon, 10th COMA?"' men--mbt erietigh•fer thaw:Irk. Ther
' ef London Beitery,'Oth, London 1.3,fel` food Was -bad. and ,their beds Were
• gafle, Royal. Field • Artilleryi • ',1terri-
torial Force. , .,, • . •
' At Maroc he goteleie nptp '-the
• Mansur lines to teeennejtre,
worse. They Were a tough, .creveand
were on the verge Of' Mutiny most of
the time. • s.
"Wiled werealied France, the cap -
although under heavy fire, eaptured tato of the ship ordered the men to
Germans, after shooting one unload the horses. They refused. I
Alan with a revolver. On the after- was npt in their contract, :they said
noon of the same day he again went
up to 'and reconnoitred- the enemy's
second line under very. heavy -fire.
Major F. Lewis, 2nd Battalion, the
Leicestershire Regiment.
During the action ' near Pietre.
'Farm on September 25th,' 1915, as
second in command, he directed the
assault with the utmost 'coolness.
At an early stage he was wounded
'by .shrepnel in the neck, but refused
PE COPES SAVING LIVES.
Ls einepaigu*Started to Supply All Sol-
, dim•at the Frent.
It is a well known fact that peris-
• MO are not only intliepensable in
FRENCH GOVERN$E1S1T AIDS submarine boats, but also on land en
WOUNDED SOLDIERS, the 'trenches, Soldiers back from the
. trout in Enieland ,are Weanineelre in
- • praising. these ,instruments, whieh
Photographs of Wounds 4.ki in Sri- *ttallricYt ssaaVvelrsvceefilr.lilfvecciltalitrinl"irrppit::).erd-
. tematizing Scientifie Treat. likely, when they were at first intro-
duced. i
The rrencle 4overnment receutIr to induce parents, wives and friends
A campaign is now being eonducted
• mot. ;
of soldiers at the front to eupply their
relatives with one of theee instil,.
ments which will go far toward proe
tecting them against attack. Among
men at the frent the Opinion is gell.-,1.
erai that the periscope is of inapor- I'
tame not enlY for use by the officers, ,
hui-elso-hy--the, pew reeruits 'who _are ,
I
hegianingtheir experiences On the Are
ing line, These men are always eager
to see the enemy and. are inclined to
-risk any danger With: that object ini
AL104intdin:_tHhuiondl:eadueneorfi liVes have been
whereds had the,
Soldier need a Oerietepe he would have
obtained a beiteferiew a the eriemPS
lines- While 'keeping -iiimplf -*.tt •;of
.reach. ..
•.• The Periseone has been..improved
,and simPlified to the highest degree
and tim histrumefit 1;viiicil- %-niivi, be -
in
geWillely used earriee the scope of
the contrivance eta far as itl'ean :be r
-carried. -It is theinventien, a -a Leort-
don jourealist, and is celled ,t,he• Max-.
'fleldscope, It: consists 'toughly in a
teleseepie nietal''Anhe made Uetiewlutt.
on the lines Of the leg:of a Collepsible
eamela,:etend. Plosed, the tube nieae'.
sures ten inches in. length:, fully ex.:
tended it is thirty inchee long. The
tube part of it: Which can scarcely
weigh six ounces, can be hung on to
the'belt.
The •other essentials, the -glasses,
though they are four inches square,
And thus afford A large .field, of vision,
are no longer than an...ordinary_ bilei-
noes envelope, and thus fit easily into
a jacket placket. The arrangement by
which the glasses are attached to the
tube is ingenious and invariably suc-
cessful. The tube being ovalthe mir-
gave facilites to the Asseemted Press
and A party of foreign journalists 'if)
inspect some of the remarkable work
Which is being done for the regenera-
tion of the ranks of stricken,'crippled,
maimed and apparently hopeless
wounded," evho are borne back from
the fighting line at Champagne.
Under the escert French offieers;
,the party was taken trrSt. a
short distance outside . Paris, where
wounded are brought after the 044-
cal cares Of surgery have been given,
.be nursed into cenvalescenCer
• Verted frean thought of the loss of
•lindas..7.- and gradually educated into
smile hew hue which re-creates them
„into upeful member* of society. St'.
,Maurice 114 of vast dimensions, the
buildings •and-grourids. occupying an
area, pretbably, greater Allan .Central
Park in New :York. The buildings
stretch.* far as tke.„4p cari,see;
two-storey stone` structfires, -set that
the cripples are not .climbing long
stairs, and are near the egardeliS•
:•everywhere 'abundant with flowbrp
andshrubbery, letal cheer .to he oa.4.
pupa,nts:;n , 4
In the Receiving Ward:
"Two. hundred More wounded are
• coming,". said an attendant, as the
officer led the way into the first -build-
ing, the receiving wind,
"Here they are," fetid the officer,
pointing to200ler& glees phoiegrite
phie plates 'ranged and numbered in -
a case.
The photographs of the 200 wound-
ed had been 'sent ahead, the plates
showing ,,.with precision ' the exact
wound and its process of healing,
some of them being X-ray plates.
"See this. 'one," said the officer,
,holding up a large glass Atte shim-.
ing the, side proAle-Of a wounded sol-
dierwith a gaping-'hullet-hole back
of the ear, and around the hole- little
sutures or cracks of the skull.
"It is net a fractured skull—that-
would be hi:melees," said the -officer.
"No, that man can be .made over."
But this receiving ward was merely
the first stage in a sort of ascending
scale, which iznprove e., wounded
man's condition at each.stage until he
was finally landed in the cchool where
he with made over into a condition
more iiseful to -himself, and society
than he was before. It was to this
school that chief interest Was directed,
He threatened 6 put • them m a
French prisoa. They still refeeed.
• "They did not have to do the work
Unloading horses -fron a ship is -a job
for an wiped. The Frenchmen who
did the unloading were not experts
-Several horses fell from the sling tha
lifted them from the hold.6 the deck
and their ribs and backs were broken
"When we reached, the Gulf Stream
• to leave his post for three hours, and —the cemetery of horses—condition
then -returned immediately after, .kis on beard the_ship were AS )34E1_484W:0e
:Wound was dreseed. About -0.30 botinrsaes,elaire. ship in the old days Th
sick, wounded • and drive
crazy by-fear--as--the- ship- pitche
.alibut, shrieked and:kicked • and bi
each other. Many of them died. A
school of sharks was soon followin
he took command ef lin battalion,
, settior Officer being wounded.
• Fired Pron.), Three Sides. '
Temporary Captain 3. E. Adamson,
, 8th Battalion, the Gordon Highland- the boat It did not go hungry. -
.
ers. , • • • eThese lierses weren't low -grad
After leading his Com , pany across stock ,e oy atneneans. They were 6
% „ , ,
-.. the ellen -under heavy_ shell_aiel cavalry an artillery duty- in th
•rifle fire, and across three lines of I -French army, , They"-WeVe--1 •
. wire, -where he was exposed to ianitnals, but the voyage ruined main
of those it did not kill. - •
• heavsr,machine gun .fire lie pressed
en with great determination into. the • -
:el:tillage of Haisnes, 'far. le ' advance_
' of .any other detachment, and , held WARS- AND WOEg-W-I1AUM. •
• .
...en there from 8 a.M.:to 5 p.m., caus-
ing heavy 'lesseeto. the, attacking
-
Germans. Finally, when completely
' isolated and exposed to bombs and
artillery and rifle fire on three Odes, ancient legend lies ,behmd the porn
..b,e.„4,194-ht back what remained of and wreck of history that. the shore
Conapaiisi in good' order, of Hellespont, or the Dardanelles
Temporary Captain. M., P. Beau -1 have witnessed. •
champ Dennis, -- 7th Battalion,---th -it called the "Hellespont",
• King's Own Scottish Borderers. 1 Because "po,ntus" Means a tea, an
Deeds of...Myth and Fact Done Along
the Dardanelles.
What a wealth of classic myth and
He .was wouaded inthe because the Greeks named this par
immediately before the" Assault .on tiCalu_sge for Belle the goddess wiz
-- Mill 70, -hut-after his • weend- w11.- fell into its waters While she was rid
bandaged, he - ,advanced with his ing through the air above them o
Company,cheering and- encouraging. the ram of the -Golden Fleece, says
his then till' he was again wounded. welter in the.' Tend& -- Companion
• Re wits carried back to the dressing- Through the same Strait at a late
: . Station, from which he dieappeared' tittle sailed laion and the Argonauts
after his woundwas dressed. Later in search' of the Golden Fleece.
he was seen catching up his company why
• and again cheering them on till he "the'.Dardanellet"? In hone
of Dardanume a city that Greek eco
Was wounded a third time. nomiste founded On the. strait not fa
_ " Aiming those whohavewon
ps are:— • ' the ,from ancient Ilium, the Troy or algal
.Military Cro
Temporary Secend-Lieutenant history. Ilium! The *walled ,city o
T. Williams, 2nd Battalion, the 'Buffs
W" Priam, the descendant of Dardanus
that the Greeks cli,ptured by craft af
(East Kent Regiment). . ' t. ter- the ten years siege of which. Ho
_... ''..-Heitteck:shragre2._of_n_f_ mars_e.lirety- t.",o`iilsoog. .-•
- - -
9f -bombers near "Fosse 8.," Bethune, •
and ' during . 17% hours he and ' his The, plains 'where .Aganiennon 16
his ArgiVe .hosts echoed this yeeri, 'N'
bombers threw close -on .2,000 bombs,
while the enemy responded with about the thune of guns on the
a
b ttlesh8,igamemitoe. -iv ethw
Aye, times, that number. - ers Mona Ida,' 1,4''''''ea. ilrakticilte wo
. It was raining te -,giaVgialgtr-tod. prize 9f beaut
. and the elanip fu'
;that led to the wars, and woes •o
, front cigarette Ilium, and Wheira-the gods gettli-er--7e
to watch -the embattled Greeks an
limns, thon '
ere
held .up. Sr ant 'Wil-
ed, 'refused • to
' to "his? and it was iriainly due: Ti:t'iarl'e'' • '
• leave his
aVery and that of his party
.,6 . ',;". Sestes, facing each other on the nide
' ee
- th e trench -Was finally held
,
, fenipotary 'Second -Lieutenant J. B. %vide strafi that. Learider swam onc
te
Wood, 10tii Battens:1a, the Gordotoooften tarried hie'eweetheart Hero
'Highlanders. He took 275 prisonersin who found ,his body' On the .shote
, Lobs; =relied them hack under heavy Thither, in $34- B.C,, 'Alexhnder th
.....:•,fire with ,a small escort: , Great led the Greeks, who weigh
•. : more "worlds 6 conquer and • there,
_.--4ft• JOHNATT4E---Fri474.--- ,-ee' alio and ei. half. before,-kerxes ha
,....t. • ....-,__.... • • etossed on -the famous bridge(ef boats
11;*F'. •
. , is\ , avor1 e Relaxation Is a 4'04 with MS Persian mullions -ea fore
. ' Stroll • that, .a year later, went stragglin
.... --An interesting desertion -iiii Obit
rreteh, at the . front e•o. 0 fi/.61i.:i it also, in 1355, the Turkish terree
.... Member of the general eteff inFlen:' P°Poli.Tehcie. acsto.Z.s.'-ln,ethi)oZ:lisio.(itilt: o' rie'•d- ,th
,• • -dere. -a 'appears- that Sir :X.)4We fay. . ...
lrite relaxiitioa frem the stress "..,of Greek's 'Who, under Xenophon, had .ye
o
the earripaign•is'a quiet' stroll in what treated from Peraia, and who at las
had reached the "Pease 'Euxinue,
'left of the leaf ir larzeS or gthehoSpital gee a
avdens. -'" ,,s the Greeke eu
Farther along sAod.Abytlas and
•
•
a
t"
(if the district' wherein, Ine-headquarr pheinistically called the Black Sea. „
. SlIive of Workihops; -
This enormous school 'at St., Mau:
rice is a hive Of workshops Of • all
kinds-L-shoeinaking shops, machine
shops; auto repair shops, blacksmith
,shops" with blazing forges,, and
• men Were the wounded soldiers from ii.atues, thee thesb glasses into, ruitang---lvcs-,u.'-ated. to the battlefield.
r eyes insteaVof hel ing them Thou -
clothes -making slums, and the -work- them. If You are one of these unfortu-
the firing line; minus an arm, leg or
eye, on which they had before depend-
ed but now launcled on a eneW line
which did not need that arm, leg Or
eye. As. e, whole, it was ,as efficient
a body of worknien es one Would And
in any well -regulated factory. The
• men heft smiling faces. Those work-
ing in groups were chatting and
laughing. ," . • ••
rors are sprung on it by clips, which
hold them absolutely rigid. '
•• Another vital necessity in a peril -
cope is that the splintering of the
glass sherild be preVented case of Coniented to accept, various
. . territories -in part !payment, leavin
a balance of some $250,000,000.
The total cost of the Franco-Prus-
sian War, Which lasted eight months,
ran into more than $1,6K000,000.
France had to pay the -sum of $1,000;-
000;009 in three iestalments, and cede
Alsace and Leiyaine. ",
Most Jinitahne for AlltOP 614
n unUStuillY .fortunat9
purchase enables• 1119 to. ,offer
you. a 'beaUtiful seleeti011 of
MUSIC OX ROBES ,at PriceS
less than half usual. cost..ore
or twee Robes for sleigh or
Patter WellId 1111p4te an -ideal
Cltrietnia, Gift, They • are a
'rich brown -black" with beauti,. '
fig lustre and perfeetile tan-
ned. They Are UnSuroassed.
tee warnith, wear alla •AlaneTer-
anat. • •
• Makei. a- znxtueonsi roor TAW •
• tor the Herne.
_
to -day fey 'Price Ihit
from the largest 4pg.1041; In
coadtv. •
LANIONTAG•15,r, timiTtro
;103F -
630 -Notre. West. „
*gINTEPAZ,
Mauttfaiultreris ' Or :enlaUce
SatirEPoi--
• • 'ata,blisheil ease: •
Juglsiid .11
91
In the lens
land tewn in th,
sPzilpoeavinreFItte4,4:11k1Yrja;r3,ticfne:o :142 ;_r„.....___raplptorleat Viv‘13,,,IrrivijrgellTit'5$Y7WL6eaT.uw°4/91
names *war t1t
Pinch and Nightingale. Aft - 1141114..7.°1N 'SIXTII Com, •
staval)17tchao aUltreteb:Btrdenag4w7,____„„sidceerrirrkeAre,41aut?‘tota°.°:::
atbe g Y1 d retnl°aUtgehl YY. 34f OVr. altutag"1120'.11'1.1Flaidrikycj,q/Silw°?0,3:
Th g small tov,m. in Sussex Afro
age is the leading butcher, Mr. DPI" '-'"` -----
makes the steff of life, Mr. Gray isl$124,0
green grocer, Mr. Delicate le • the 47,4"riii.
001 Oa '
'blacksmith, and the "muscles of 111$
brawny arms are as • strong AS iron
halide" as the poet eings, while the
locat ;haver makes no 'attempt to con-
ceal the fact that you are for
Marks if you go to himl -
On a farm lately two laborers
• vorked in the same field often enough.
`Who Were ilanlea Pill and Petheetirn
neighboring villages were lfiest
With jpeprehents who rejoiced in the
liar* of the. Rev. Pasehal Lamb and
the licv,veirero Rabbits. And the re-
cent-„r.fiturrellee- -of the: ,centedary vf
• ndnaeinithge:17WItatblttiteoat elVM4iantdel;;16:611:117°S:if/tretliall
• -is verrenfortmate.that,
dion'o iieftowed um= him at the
font should .,13 Quintile,' because, al-
though it in contee,eue pante, his sup,
Small: Affairs Run Into HUndteda, of
, Millions. , •
,The present wAr will undoubtedly
be the most expensive of modern
times, and thacost ef the actual fight.,
ing alone must run inte billiOnS of
(Kars. . comparison, the Balkan
War was enite a small affair, ' yet
when the treaty of. peace was signed
between'victors and vanquished over
$200,000,d00 had been spent in fight-
ing.
The Russo-Turkish War of 1877 cost
nearly • $90,000,000 a month.. When
hostilities. had _ce'ased Turkey waS
called.upen to pay $725,000,000, • but
A hit by the enemy., This is met by
making the mirrors of the best glass,
."backing” the glass with good, sound
niaterial,,and binding the -edges round.
Each part is packed in, a separate
Cover and the whole, if enclosed in
'one parcel, would weigh well under a
pounch---,It is a really -marvellous ex-'
ample of much in little, and the whole,
contrivance, including spare cglaeset
(which can be got at twenty-five
cents apiece) can be delivered at the
front for less than $5.
WAR DRILL IN SCHOOLS.
Aerinah Youths' Being. Drilled .Into
• Militarism at Early Age.
Purportingto write from -Berlin, -`6.
correspondent of '.the Paris ',*Temps"
describes hevir every school boy -rioW
has to learn war • drill, and declares
'that, 'started at the outset in. a burst
• Away, your gasses of. patriotism and emulation tbe
Wear *eyeglasses who do not really, need en and fifteen may, yet And them. -
nest as if even lads of thirteen, four -
;The statement is made that thousands
, work. is now gone about -in real eat-
Attention,was. also given tothe fine
arts and the .professions,„ and here•
also -were fsehools for -sculpture, • and
painting and architecture; so that leg-
less.9r armless or eyelees soldiers, who
had a 'taste for the esthetic could be
'led into some new line. -which did not
req ihk.Liost_Ineartier.--
0- pale -faced young ..soldier, his left'
..rm gone. near the "-elbow, wae deli- •
tritely. modelling a, Venus -de Milo with co of Toronto will fill the above prescrip-
his remaining hand. • mail. if .your ArUggist cannot. •
•
The soldier erchiteets 'Were Making „ . ,
designs, with blueprints, of girders, DEDUCTIVE .RANGE FINDING
arches .and columns, and .'ealeillating • . . •
the ..strength of Wells end rode. All .U-fiexploded 1.epirritablitell.
hellTSfilved"-the
of:these men had something missing, .
sands who" wear. these.' "windows" may
prove for .theinselvesthat they can. die,'
pease with . &Rases if they Will get the
fallowing prescription filled at once G
to any active drug store and 'get -a -bottle
of Bon-Opto tablets;. fill a' two -ounce bot-
tle with warm water and drop 10000 Bon-
Opto tablet. With th1s. harmlessliquid
saliftion "bathe- the -eYes- two to Pout .thoes-
dant, matt you are likely' to be astonished'
. at the 'resUlts'-right from' the :inert- Many
who have been told that they have astig-•
matism, eye -strain; cataraet, sore eyelids,
weak eyes, conjUnetivitis and 'other :eye
disorder4, report wonderful .henefits from
tho use of, this prescription. Got this ore-
scription tilled and hse it; yoit• may so
strengthen year eyes that glasses „will not
-Thousavals--whcr 'are' blind;
or :nearly no. or who wear glasses •might
never have required them if they had, cared
for their eyes in nine. Sae Your eyes 1 be-
fore it is teo late Do not become one of
these vietims of neglect, • Eyeglasses' are.
only • like erutches," and every few years
the -y- -must be -eltanged to At_1 ho ever-in..-
-ercasittg-teenbured-comlition,,so better. see -
if you elm, like .nqtny °them get clear,
healthy.sfrong raagnetie eyes through•the
prescription here given, The Valmas,Drug
name haPlhoe tceba Cumber, and he
constantly referred to in the. law re-
ports, being,..a-bettiliter, AS /Wt. Qt.
Cumber. • ,
,
'Still, this ie 'worse than
naineS" as Mk Mineral Waters, Mr,
'Frosty Winters, and. Mt, Alfred Day-
Weeks, which' :are perfectly genuire:p
capes of nomenclature.
• Sometimes marriage plant 'queer
tricks With names, For Instance,
Miss Wild Rose had a sweetly -petty
name till • 'she wedded a hanOsome
young fellow 'named Buil. Then she
_ -
saw it. ,
.1n conclusion it seems. hardly pre),
able that the names of Thien and •
NIAGRAD
White
Fr.eshwater for the partners in- a
W,Yandottes
"None Better."
litIMPO., ETC.
cured with.*
;meet Writs'
4.1e0,041....
Ihtt. •
Yong' gulf. Obarle
• Demand for -our Graduates le
months fully fong times -oh
Calendar free. V7.4. ZLI•XOWT.
. .
•The Orden at PUY' '•'•
Magnitude and •C/teekillness,
jaresiciar. ruair
• EtriaorsaN
D. IS, erektie, rye.. • Z. Mott . mer.
dairy businese could have, been pur-
posely chosen foe trade .purposes. •
• .
Neithek One Noe the Other.
,
'This war that causes such distress
Earns neither' joy nor treasure,
Its mighty, sorry business
And not a_ hit of pleasure.
Winners at .biggest. ahoWs. Geod.
e0aterels-$2, e3; itieh. Catalog ft
VIAFiSHALL & -MARSHALL
Box, W. - Niagara Falls, Canada.
Write -me for special inferniatio,n on
0 .
• Adversity lifts •up 'many a Inan.
vfhom prosperity has krtocked devel.
, ReVi (Ion Freres
134 McGILL STREET, - MONTREAL'
are manufacturers and eauparou best prices for fur& of
all kinds. Send for our pride list
They•ard•taught to dig themselves ,.
In and make.' big trenches in the .1471
-eat fashion,and 'special marks- •dre
given for all ."Who prove themselves'
eepert hand' grenade throwers, 'Bay-
o.tieteeeM•cises- are ,another branch to
which-narticular- -attention-
Eveily s.chool has, in :short, sirriply
become a kind Ofpreparatory bar -
reeks..
•
Monsieur: .
For16_ days 111 the mongt of January-
' was sofferihg with 'pain -of rheurnatiein•
In the foot, 'I tried ell kinds of remedies
but nothing did Me any good. One eerSon
told me about .MINARD'S LINIMENT;
as soon as I tried* it the .Satui'dti.y night,
the• next morning I was' feeling. very
good; 1 tell you this remedyis verygdod;
I eou • mic---•-you-.-a. •gbod .certifictue-sny
tithe that you have, one:
If any time I - come' to hear about ally
person sielc. of rheumatism.
them.ahout this remedy. - ' •
Yours truly,
• ERNEST LEVELLI,E,
216 floe .11nta,rio East, MoOtroOl. •
Feb. 1,1.. -110, , • •.•-•
A big. 68 page household Account Book, Calendar and Recipe Book •
combined, Size 9x12 inches, containing hundreds of the best and latest
recipes. • •
HOW TO GET .YOUR COPY. , ' •
•
Belo* are the names and addresses of twelve firms. Select eleven' of
your best frjende and either have them write,' or write ai,_postcard yourself
to each of these firma asking them to send 4.'Shepards_Housekeeper's
Perfect Account Book" to the address supplied:- . , •
. For instance, supply your name and address to the first firm on the •
Ilka friend's name ,and address,to the second firm, onthe list ancVso on.
Write your postcards • to -day before you forget.
Northrup .& Lyman, Terotito. Abbey's • Eft Salt Co.. Toronto. .•
McClary s Stove Co.,' London, Ont. Law 'Union & Rook Ins. Co:..Mb • real
_Jetl1P4 Hutton 8; CQ Montreal. National Eh
lectric eat! oroate.
Dovercourt Land Building Co.. 82 King St,; Eas
c . •
" • artwrighte•Leith & Roy Co,, 619 King St. We Toronto, •
- MusicSpecialty Co..; 36 Moliington. St., East Toronto.
Mania' Leather Goods Co.. 400 YongeTorontq.
Parker's Dye Works. 716 Yong,. St.. T ronto.
' • seholl Mfg Co., 219 King St, East, • ronto.
Thorription rurniturv Co., , Ont.
but their. Work ,Was sa*.thesen..es. tell The Army and .Navy Journal; tellS "Oh; Mother," foUrel the ange of.
sobbed the young -
make absolutely negligible the lost .
I how ;some' -clever English sOldiers' wife" "John rleesn't trust me!" -
. .
member, and to Make what reniained a .hostilabattery, "Why, .my child, what has • he
- r
of their members •entirely efficient -for I . • . .. . •
r"SomeWhera in France" k detachment done?" ,' , ' ". . - • __
this -particular Work.. Near the sol-•1wes suffering eeyerelY from shrapnel ' Well, Yon knOW, r cooked my fik st.
dier•Architects were rangedtwo long 1 ni efired•-fto• a 'German ,battery sa . in-. flintter for hist to:day; and he invited '
'
lanes Of soldier typewriterso. awn•W'nci-1-genfonsly hidden. that all -their. ' ati-'1-91 itiend fp-dine with him.", The sobs
had lest a' foot or some ,other, meth- teMpts to determine the. position' of' broke afresh. ."And; oh,..mother, the
ber, but whose hands had 110W been I it proVed .futile,... behind the British milli was A •doctor !".'" -..
before -i11 rapid. typewritiner- - l'frorn the German battery went over : , • -
not knoWfl p,oSition was a hillside held. A shelr. '
•the Shoe Shop.
-Col& Winds_and-Dust':
quickly relievedby Muriao'•
• That' gave tj'ie date needed teo solve y
OUR 'iLIRyb Remedy.. No Stnert-
grade of sheee, selling for 23 ''''fiztanacts
I the ' treriehes; stettek the hillside; ' MUNE" . Granulated Eyelids,
0
. •
`• Eyes inflamed by exposure
. plouglied the Surface for a consider, '
thenun Were turnin• g' out • a g ilile tlitjhre" -6"
of kinds; leather-Watele- 50 0:rien oBrEo 001 ecenrl.eLidee IyAeekeivffueri nD'rruilbgegsiit.
chaing.-41114'IttitoirlifleliitSaffiZZatli:soltirtle tettdeiir•j;
poesole, the . problem. The furrow Plenghed i y99 Comfort.
(„abotit $4.60');..slso wallets a • nd
ir Comrpacitir Ctliitiagii'
belts." A latge glass case eXhibited
to the point at which it ----
t struck. The . ; , •
, , .
the diversity of their produrt It was
time fer which the 'unexploded fuse e Only a 'very unusually hungry man
•the 'same in the, machine' shep, the.
blacksmith kilop aed . all the. 'other ,.
1
IS . . litinerti sr mninterif res titoptiterta. •
ItroWned pipe,. the brain: of the brit: •PARIS '"ANTI-ZEP." 'DEVICE. ' .. •• ' •
... z..._ ' One soldier, • wtth . beth han'ds, - .„,,,_,,:......_,...e.:, • ......, ';'. , . ..7----• . • .
Vella
t ' Different Matter. "
. • ',.. - . • promptly sdenced., • . .
1ST). aieny in Northern Fiance looks„ gone, said the "officer"is meklog* 18 . - ,, -1 A
_ , .,,__ • , ,... • ._ - ,I!•1 _I: '117:1'sh Granted: • • ' 1. • .
"tigt9.5,11hg...13W1-'7'-7.:04.bie §(.,.- iiy•ei/..s-. to, f ncc'a day -a,• -a tearpenter." - . 1 -Patiante:ellat,..-doetcit,2yeu-are_riete,,-
rsPirits in Mir Sher° of the. vant•ttrug- .- Elie eXplebied.thet special iti915-htut. -
'anything but one Of the main inatter, They Were dining,'Off:fewi in A r es:•-•:asicing- $5 for' merety-talFingr a' andel.:
Hear Airimals' .140tors. • e • fialatt.hishandless,CerIntliter, I taurent, "Iron _:seeP he 'explained, as [out a my eve' , • •
Where there -is-, a
lainnt
.soeial life.
•
had :been cut 'showed how far off tita',ean..,eat advice _and enjoy it, •
,b.e•tteyy Wag. The- battery' tts1 '
Ing-111-
-qattitely and smoking a -smoke- . •
"27..etcerei,-.7the.re
12Usie ihdpe. 7. 48 -tv'114-fe 2d •
aPP1//ese -4-enteli;
• - ig a•aray •
o neceseallt- t t/h 1/ a2
• •
' °122e. *and
•
ale. Although lie-appearir-to-be Mon , •
• My charge is
• Listening device§ are -4-tittered fitting an to the .steel 11091ts 011 his he -Showed bar Alia Wiihbonic "kiwi Specieliste-Nr--4no
ps The p1 1)IC f)1 11)41 taki held Then' we mast both • for removing a foreign substance .
:stance, automatically pertnittecl the
he is really well guerded—sonietimes
+even ageinst °Nen -Wishezet-2"---fair
„ .
• trusted .."Tonitrilee beiug told to see Nvarpgig.15pven of the approach trf
'that no one, not even hough they up- hositle .th cleft. .
• ,p60 to be limenlees peasants, lip.: • Fedi of these litteeing POite eon-
proaehes within hundreds of Yards of sista of 'tour huge horns—very tangle
the commander. like phonograph " hems to look
People have been .wondering why, only much bigger—which gather lip
• 'Sir dohn Freneh now Signs. himself the slightest sound ajul rinignifit it
on Inc fleapatchee and orders as. "Field by means. of an instrument callerd
.• Marshal Corinianding in Chief British inicrordnine. . A inielliplione only .a
ArretY in the Field,". instead of "Brit, Sileeial kital of telephone receiver.
'fish Expedionary Force:" The explan- By means of these horns, will& eve
ration ' is; quite simple. Considering. Ori. a revolving pillar, and can be turn -
•:that the troops under ;his • command ed •in any direction, leis. impasSible
--heve--egpanded--frene•i50.,000-to eight
or tell titite6 that numbervit was thee
•'that -:the -more imposing; -title wen.
,used,* especially as there are other
• 'expeditionary. feteee in the Mediteite,
anetlo.' •• • : •• • •
O t The things that 'usually happen. are
'•those that,sec-i mtpossible, •
4
• t
carPenter to do hie. Work' with praci- brealtit- the 'tine' 'Who- hag' Ailgteli-
.sion, a bell . ringing; if .pressure Was.' Part. of it have hie. or her ' ;wish !
too great to .the righi, another bell if granted." ' •-• '
preSsure was too great on. the left, ' "But k don't know what . to wish
and other bells of fOesvard and rear ter," she Protested. . " • 1 .
•preesure. SO diet the handless sot- ;4'01), you can think' of something,"
diet carpeetet learned hje ttadFlato., he saa
Inatically; belle Wattling him"rofeerich "No, eareft" she rePlied, can't ;
false ,inove,until haxi,'becoine ek. think of anything 1 want. vety•much."
pert; • wishfor yen," he ex:
1. •4.1. '
•clahned: '
The St,. Miturite ' instittition and •
Scheel, whicli is thus Mitch* -geldlees "Will Stow r6111Y9"'
for. anYf.al.rera...Approach • Paris over' tor a new .'and useful oectipe-
Witt-lout beinelieard. The 'feet of oria. tion, has a eadiait'Si-nr-1.01/
time Of Frenelz and British aircreff,iutv their wounds .dressed FT6 far as.
corning .oter are, of courser knowt.. remains necessary, are housed and
Xn every other ease the warning given fed), and, at the 8111110;,time, carry on
.10
so long that it 'eriteblei the inethines these extenalve shone, 'which turn out
ot the Alneeto mount In the air gild traeful.ineny akflled M the arts,
itehi-
attaelc the enemy long before they tan tecture, ineehanical arts and the Many
*ea& the city,' " ' hrantlie's of mairafaettire,
• .
._...el,V.1614-titen,there!s_210,:us0.._feeltret_e_
WithGie old tvishbone," she interrupt -
ad` hint with a tided •stirile, 75 van
have ree.''';
., • -Victrola IV.
. „,„...,,...e,." ,
: OtherYietrelne $'38-.150-t.01400',: „Write for a. •:-.tpy.
Of OUi, MUsical Encyclopedia listing oiter 6000 •
Victorltecordi, including all standard and popnlOr
rrinsie on 10 -inch, dduble-sided reeprds as .10* as 0 :
06nts fot the twb 'electi<ins. : ' -
, Any of 'lilt Iiiister'g Voie("elettlees will let yen) hear.thein..
Ittlt,ere IS het bile in your v'icillit: notify US aild' we will see .
Abet you are 'hot disapponueil fereho holidays. •
• , , .
'BERYINR GRAmomi)-no-NE �, Linijtej,
• .
'eta tiffoTi Street, Montreal .
gigratilitiver• 1.,•rt.vomulirecon.Aotsvvie breairricocArtvw .
1- 1141C 0 DS -4U th CAll'ADA
ifOXfs "IttS MASTER'S VOICE"
- • - trarar.
• . • • • • • .
ohtdderittliatril We• Aro 'Net Ilroperly Represented.
. •
. You will' never_ be accused of elicat-; / •
ing.at turtle us long an you tone, ' •
innerefe Liniment elnite.Conie..tre, !In 6.
ISSUE 42