The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-07-06, Page 3r• •
.MISERYTJ
.That 1;.; What.MakeiaPeOPle
•. Weak .and.. languid, '
The 0110 ource o Moat a the. vato•••
• ery that ahildrenffecte. Men and wernen and .esi.eloi.e.,4,47.410.404m.
.greWing' cpov.erty . of the -
• Into
binett If you coneult . a fleeter he ' lotred. by Rear ..0.(Hundred's
saya 'Eyou 'are anacraie,' 'whieb eUycif opms. •
• means bitsnileee. That iswhat makes
• people drag aloilg, always tired, never You will have read in, the corn -
Teal lianralt, .ofteri Unable to . digesh• mimic* bow .yesterdaywe exploded.
their food, breathless .aftnr the .slight; 'three mines inthk enemy's trenches
• eSt. e*ertnni,, lila• too often on. Om
verge 14 complete brealtdOwn. ,
. . -More weak; anaemic people have
been niede- 'strong, energetic and
cheerftil by. taking Dr.' Williams Pink
Pille than by any other raearia. These. .111' Frenee'' . .
• pille actually Make new, rich bleed- ' You must inianine yourself .to be
Which reaches every pert of the body,. vvith ,me 'en a Piece of rising .ground,
strengthens the nerves and brings new
health seed strength, ' The folloWing is
PrOof of -D.4 Williams Pink Pills tote.
store health.' M. Gee. Turner, New
44-44744.
pRINGING MINES
UNDER GERMANS
INCIDENT IN' THE 'DAY! EIGHT.
;NG AT THE FRONT.
.-near Sonches and followed it up with
, beiltbardment„ i'h.appened to See
'the operation thiesdescribed under nn-
•ustially favorable conditions, writes a
cerresPondent at British Headquarters
looking through a peephole in a ruin-
ed and broken wall, i3e1Ow „lies an
tilmost leVel' country, with. the ruins
of. two villages in the • near distanee
Reven, NS., sitys—"No doubt due to .and a-tatch of woodland; appareittly
constant hard werlt• I gob in a badlY some •200or 300 yards in length, Two
. run down condition. It took Very lit= or three high roads CO diagonally
tle.'exertien to tire'me, and my appacregs the country in straightlines,
Ute was far froru being good. Often I their courses marked by what .were
• had headaches, and when gn
oing Up 'oce fine avenues eof trees but. are
stairs, Or after any slight exertionmy. now Mere skeleton" lines of battered
heerb Would palpitate violently, and and leafless trunks. The aearer of
I grew conSidei•ably alarmed. aboub the ruined villagesand the patch of
my":cendition, I decided to take Drwoodlandare in our linee; the fur -
Williams 'Pink Pills and after using ther village is occupied by the en-
'avfew boxes I felt muck:bettere I con- erhy, In the -further distance, where
tinned using the pillslor Some Weeks the, lines ere so close together , that
longer,•and they Completely cured Methis section has' seen, •pdrhape, as
I can warmly recommend this medi- much hand grenade fighting as • any
dna to men Who are . weak or run pert of the front, it is impossible to
down." •tell which lines •arc - German • and
You can get theseliills through any which Bribleh.
es
medicine destler or by mail, post paid, There is not a movement to be seen.
• at 50 cents a box or siX boxes for Somewhere behind us a large British
• $2.50 from The Dr, Williams Medicine howitzer, Which we have come to
Co.,- Broekville, 'Ont. speak a as "Peter." bursts • into a
periodic roar, and a great shell goes
WOODSMEN IN CONTEST..
htirtling invisibly over us to explode
• '
far ar it the enoy''S ceuntrY On Our
left Now and again other guns
Mnoris Win. in Tree Felling and '
• make remarks, but in a perfunctory
, Canadians in SOS'ing. way, while • somewhere. overhead •an
Despatches from British headquar- aeroplane is droning, in the sky. It.
ters in France tell of alriendly eon_ is towards the end of a hot, drowsy
• test, in tree felling, weed chopping afternoon, and, it it was not for "pe -
and sewing among the finest woods- tee's punctual disturbancees one feels
• then in the British Eniiiire, Canadians,
• 'Australians and New Zealanders. •
• The Contest arose from a ,friendly
• argument among the soldiers concern-
ing the prowess of the woodsmen •of
•their,sectien of, the 'woe& •• •
'. A date was set for the. Contest and•
the teams assembled beeches and
elms of about two feet in diameter
were . selected.' Each team of three
menewaS to'fell three trees. The Cana-
• dian team, to the ragthne music of 'an
, Anzac band, was started off first, aand
the brawny Soldiers Swung their aXes
•with leisurely but powerful • strokes
that bit deeply. into the living wood.
-Th-C-picked Canadian team had been
- called away to duty and was 'enable
' to take parte but its substitute brought
the three trees crashi the round tall 30 seconds we watehed the ugly
iFree Map
ThO :IMPS of the Porcupine
and Cobalt Campo, hashed in •
• •colore, aro now anent ready for
distribution to all war) are in• •
tereeted. These will prove) lay-
Naluelge to those aingious) to
obtain eilc.0000 •tlio mining
,market„
The Issue is Li!nited •
Tile Your Application at
-Once
A Postcard Will Bring It.
Frivate whe'cormecting all markets
HAMILTON wrus
()Keniher'Standard Stock Pxchango,
4 KING 4TREET EAFOT, Wonolno.
WHAT JAPAN IIAS
DONE FOR ALLIES
HAS SENT TO -RUSSIA A GREAT
MANY •GtTh.l.S AND" RIFLES, .
- •
pad • 251),400. Tons • of, War Vessels
• Helping British at One
Time. ••
., •
'• The fallowing article by a member
of the British House of Comniens,
Percy Alden „I)LP., throWe new light
an the attitude of Japan as the 'ally.
of Britain: • ••
Japan has more than 'fulfilled her
treaty obligations to Great 'Britain.
This is recognized on all hands. It is
not always recognized to what an ex-
tent) she has gone beyond her pledges
in the assistance which she has cheer-
fUlly rendered to Russia. .
I called upon a distinguished Jap-
anese statesman in Londoh, with a
life-long experience both of Russia.
and China With'e-Viiv-v-te aseettam-
ing how far Jap"an has met expecta-
tions in respect. of the production of
munitions and the aid rendered to Our
allies.
Not . Bound • by Treaty.
"First let me say," he replied; in
that it would be 'a „scene of perfect, -if- answer to my question about- the pro. -
desolate, peace. ' • •• duction of munitions, "that Japan
not a. great industrial nation. Her
•
•
, A Great .Uplieaval.• only tette Government arsenals are
• ‘• situated at Tokio arid Osaka: • Until
We were looking at the wood when quite. recently—in fact,: Until- this war
the thing happened with a sheek. as --the policy of thee.Government was
sudden as if one' chair had unex-
to' keep the manufaCture Of enuni-
pectedly broken under one. With a tons • in its own hands, but lately the
snetained roar as of a hundred "Pe-
ters,"•:it seemed sie .all the earth
immediately beyond the .wood leaped
into the air. The trees screened the
actutil surface of the giound, so that
pressure from Russia has been ' s0.
great that we • have • been compelled
to enlist the assistance of many small
factories and workshops. • . .
• '41 d net.think be•
any
even leaking down from our height,
• harm in saying that 'before. very long
we saw only what lose above the tree
we shall have sent o Russia, in ad-
SCENE otia VW RECENT GREAT
•Nto.VA114 lama '
• ;
• Geranany Taft Part of the Peninsula
•FaMOIAS SeveneDeYs."
War. •
Jutland, or, as:the Danes call it,
Jylland, which the recent naval battle
has brought into such prominence, is
well described as) the continental por-
tion of the skingdoin of Denmark.
FiftY Years. ago, before the famous
Seven Days' War", which ultimately
resulted in the lose of .Schleswig-TIol-
stein to Germany, the whole peninsula
• belonged to Denmark; but- since lben
the southern portion has liven. Ger-
man territory.. The Cinibric penihsula
of the ancient geographers, Jutland
extends northward froth Lnbeck op
• one shore, and from the mouth of the
Elbe ori' the other, for a *distance of
some 270 miles, ultimately taliering
off to the pte'moritory of the Ska.w,
which reaches out toward Sweden, be-
tween the Skagerrak and the. Catte-
gat• •• .
'Mists •Are Frequent, •, •
StrictIy''speaking, of.. • course, • the
northern portion of the peninsula is an
island, unless ethe bridge thrown
abtoss the Ulm fiord at Aalborg can
beaccounted a true connecting link,
At AaalbOrg the • fiord is narrow
enough, but before it reaches the old
cathedral city of northern Denmark,
with its busy port and inarkets, the
Liim fiord passes ' through many
phases. From the point where the
sweeping line ef sand dunes is broken
through by .the North Sea at Thyborne
the fiord, as it .spreads itself • east,
widens out into great lagoonee...laps
• the shores of many islands, little and
big, and creeps round many peninsu-
las: •.It naire.lvs into a channel at
Glyngore, then Widens out into a
great lake stretching fifty miles north
and eouth,. narrows again 'at, • Leg-
stor, widens once more beyond, and so
ere to Aalborg, and through a narrow
•channel swim thirty Miles to the steel
blue waters of the Cattegat. Thus is
the water-Oay complete -between sea
and sea. It is of little value, however,
as a through passage for shipping. In
many places. it is less than twelve feet
deep, and, on the western side,. • the
seaward banks of the lagoons are
• frequently broken away, and what
channels- there are through them are
constantly shifting: The western coast
of Jutland has but httle thet is hOspit-
able to offer.' • Low and 'sandy and
windswept, shallow waters are the
rule everywhere, and the mists spoken
of in the accounts of .the recent.great'
.44-4S4.
Camphor Ice
Soothes. arid .SMO.C4111-
,chap04 hands and hps
ri,eeps. the Skin 10: Wd-
in luct4l boxes. and tin tubes •
. at .aernists and general
stores everywhere.
Refuse s4stitute3.
' Free booklet on request.
7f.qif `1;•1
' .
'cuEsEen.puog MFG. CO.
• (e.000.4;04,gd)
3ssoC.1;41:ot Ave, bleatrktit
EW IVIETFODS
DEYELOPNIENT. 01; • SQUADRON
..SYSTEIII IN FRANC...
- --
FORESTS. AND SliStot EIRE>
em...ty
Moo Damao Done .114 Canada b
• Voreat Eire* Than by War.
"Of the forests of thorn =-
Main but a few mutilated! trunks. It
is a' field of &Matto, _levelled' by
?belle .
This. was Witten Of a Fr000h for-
est following a deluge ofGertnan are
tglIery. • It might as easily lave been
written of thousands of square ignites
in•all parts of Canada follOwing the
deiuge og annual forest lire%
Nothing can save the magniAcent
Erencla foreets but an Eastward re-
adjustment 'ref the trenches. No :such
grim neee'seity, however, feece the
•Citisad Ian Provincial and Federal atm.
ernments in the relatively simPle task
of keeping our ready-made wealth of
timber free from needless confiragra-
liens. No army peed fight•for it; no
WO need be sacrificed.- All ithat is re-
quired is .commop,senso ergenization,
andethat is precisely where most •
of
•'Canada'e forect-guarding, systeres are
weak. In Ontario, for instance, few
of the many. radical' improvements ef
modern exPerience •have yet been in-
coroerated, In 'the prairie provinces,
cIaj the feet .thet the .'nertheirs
parts of Arlenitoba, Stiskatehewan and
• Alberta are destined by nature fon
growing valuable' crops and develop-
ing water powers for future 44187
, tries, forest prOtectien is applied only
in patcites and a huge,tresource turned -
to secondary account
The. fire:satire 'of 'conservation Senti-
ment, however, is neaking itself felt.
British alunitia and Quebec and
Nova Scotia now lead the Pienessien
of provinces in. building up 'forest .pro. '
te,ction laws and organizatiens. Their
annual Savings in timber riches well
$
repay their efforts. Ontario„ New
Brunswick and the Federal Govern-
ment can with relatively small ex-
pense -----in some cases, no extra ex-
pense whatever -7 -piece timber
wealth now under their care on a ba-
sis which would reap 'enormous bene-
fits for present and future. The job
of ridding a country of forest fires
has been proved by experience to be
comparatively simple. •
NO MEDICINE AS GOOD
' FOR LITTLE ONES
earisionsmesiesessisaisomose,000100011
Fort Evam SP6R14
AND nECREAUCCO
Sold Ay gexl 814e Deekgs,
, Wow,: r.„Erzgreksr.
. a tile. kait'algY ••so;
Her Agreement •
"It is a miitake to marry
to rearrn him."• .
"Still, there are fetv men in ilitc",•11
a girl "can't effect some irapnv,a.
ment,9." •
4,444444,44.4,44
• • synp.• r07,47.70:1A
.41A.To - crynr. ,
•
rpwar.e. • • 4,70 /Irmo •p.re
'der et .0e •s- eels: limited, • rat •
quota .te.n.• 14 .sA l•ria•tt•90a. •.
• , , .
• , P. •
.
• te
• .
?.
•
Method of Training, Aerial ;Strategy
• and Typ.es of Machines •
• • Changed. •
, •
France has Completely reorganized
her air service, •her "fifth arm," and
the results are becoming, more appar-
ent every day. • The so-called aviation
crisis which a few months ago
brought about the resignation of the
Under Secretare( of States, who was
in charge of that department, led to
sudden feverish activity, out of which
has come a new air service, with new
metheds of training, new methods of
air fighting, a new class of airmen and
even new types 'a air machines.
France here again has shown to
the world a new examine of her
genius for creation and for organize -
tion in the very midst of the tre-
mendous strain of fighting a war for
the salvation, not merely of France,
but of all the allies; aS Sit Edward
Grey has se handsomely' . acknoWl-
edged.
General Reeves laid down the lines
far the reconstruction of the Service,
and started the reforms. • The signal
success of his work in this connec-
tion Ied to MS appointment ,as Minis-
ter a •War, in so eession to ,Genetal
•
• naval battle fought off its coasts are. Squadron Policy.
tops—a swirling, brown -black, mass, •dition 'to 'a lar•e numb • f f
durerent calibre a great many rifles, familiar enough to the dwellers' on the • •
.
o guns 0
reaching"alinost the full length of the ••
/ "Japan has no' great wealth -of nee hungry land 'Which looks up. on to the One of the meet striking manifest- ENGLAND TO_HONQR .FRANCE.
•
North Sea, as the Romans might have
bit of woodland which wreathed and '
put• •• Of aperating aeroplanes in squadrons July. 14, Gallic National Holiday • to
ations of the new system is the policy
mounted slowly into the air. For a •
uo
• •
Once a mother hasused Baby's Own
Tablets far her little ones she will use
nothing else. The first • few doses
make her realize there is nothing, to
equal them in making baby well and
keeping him well. Concerning tbeitn
Mrs. C. E. Stilwell, Winthrope, Sask.,
writes:—"r have used• Baby's Own
Tablets for the past ten years and
have found them so good for my little
ones that I always keep a box in the
house." The Tablets are sold by
medicine 'dealers or. by ;nail at 25
edits a .• box from The Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
ng g
.. in 45 minutes and g2 seconds. . ' massrisinglazily upwards, while not
' . The Australians then tackled their a gun spoke. The, as suddenly as
• task, and swinging their axes More the first shock had come, pandernon-
• quickly than the Canadians, managed ium broke loose. At first it seemed to
' it in 31 minutes and 8 seconds. A be all our shrabnel. How many guns
great roar from theeinterested spec- we. had trained on the devoted spot of
- tators, soldiers off duty for the most shattered earth where the mines had
part, when the time was announced. been exploded it was iinpossible to
• Then the alaeris - of • New ' Zealand, guess but . the precision of the •fire
• brown sons of the forest, Were start-
- ed on their teak, and a murmur rose
from the watchers as they saw •the
swift, tireless swing of the axes,
• wielded by'. the muscular brawn men.
' Their -efforts did not slacken, indeed then the madnese spread.
they seemed to. quicken, 'Ms the axes .In less than a couple' of miliates
• bit. into the hard wood anethe chips from the first explosion of the mine,
_
flew out. ;.,The Maoris felled the three guns,—more guns than I had dreamed
1.
trees in 22 Minutes and 40 seconds, could be concealed there -,-were in
thus easily Winning- first prize. action along some two • or three miles•
.In the Weed sawing contest, how- of front. They were -not alt eur guns
ever,the Canadiana came to the fore. now; but as thickly • as they had been
.
, • • , . ----0.--• bursting beyond the wood, We saw
sse e „ •, Cab, Sir? Cab, Sir? ' the little tell-tale Puffs of white 'ris- ant People a Mir' sending . a large
was beautiful. The white tufts . of
T- it -to herself, as well as to the cause
the bursting shells were so thick to.. •
fcir which' she • has unsheathed her
gether that almost instantaneously 1
sword." .
"I notice that some people have
wood- had become -pearl -grey. And":
•
•
tufal resources and a good deal of tha .and in • sub -squadrons, or "esqua-
eequisite material has to be imported. ' The Jutlanders. • chilies." This has impliedtheteach-
As
everywhere, and shipping as scarce; The history cif •Jutland is, of course, Mg of ,- squadron commanders, not
As there is a demand for such meter -
this* is no easy matter: Itis hardly the history of Demnark. It, no doubt, merely for. thehandling of their eom-
necessary to remark that Japan is in supplied quota to the • hordes of mends, but, for the co-operation of
no wise .bouad by any treaty oblige- Northmen which, from 800 A.D. on- squadrons in the execution of impOrt-
thin. . . watds, caused the name of the Dane ant military iniasions. -‘ •
"What Japan is doing, she IS
doing ,to be a terror throtighoat .northern . The ,development of the squadron
simply because she considers she oWes Europe for nearly seven. centuries . system has led to the organization of,
There were •Jutlanders no doubt, fOreign - volunteers into ,separate
the dark *all of smoke behind, the
speken . Of Japan as thitigh it were
'possible for her to send a large army
to•Europe if. it were • required, .Is
• there any trtith in this?" •
• - • - Could Noi. Seintl'Army.'.„ -
. •
• • • • '
. "I fear 'oar military power. has. been
over -rated in , • Europe. • There has
been' seine' talk on .the Part of ignor-
array—say, half a million—to assist
•Public carriage for hire or hackney ing mathematically•along the lines of •
our allies in Europe. Such e proceed-
coachee, were introduced hire,
London the enemy's trenches. There were
Was nig is absurd on the face of it An
in 1625, and rapidly grew in .pepu_ Other points where the smoke
army of 500,000 would require 2,060,,
• larity: Notwithstanding the. oPposi-: some almost as dense as ,it Was over
eon • reserves and the transport Of'
tion Of the King •and Court, . who that tefeeno 'behind the tries.
• thought they vvOuld ruin the toads, 'Mere Malevolent Din•.
l'they grew to number over 300 by
• 165. In Paris they were introduced We saw the concentration of fire
• during the minority of Louis XIV. by upon 5 single point, When in a 'score
• Nicholas Sauvage; who lived in . the 91 seconds • as. many shells burst over
. °• Rue St. Martin • at the sign qf st. one parrow half -acre of ground in the
Fiacre, from which .circumstance open, away from any landmark. Be-
fore us the vicious snarling of ma-
• hackneir carriages. in Paris have 'since
been called "fiacres." • , • chine guns told where,- presuniablye
In this rlatter
• of Health
• one is either with the win-
ners or with the losers.
It's largely. a, questiorr.ot,
• right • eating—right food,
:For sound health one Must
' cut odi rich, indigestible
• foods and choose those that;
are knovvn to contain the
elements that build sturdy
bodies and keen brains.
. •
.
rape- lits
is a wonderfully Winced
food, made from -whole
wheat and -barley.. It con.
tlie grain, .1=1w:ling the
taint§ all. the nutriment of
mineral phosphates, indis-
pensable Nature's plan
for body and brain rebuild...,
Grape -Nuts is concen-
trated food, eas3'r to digest.
It is economical, hal) deli-
cious flavor and has lielped
thousands in the •inning
class.
• "There'S' a kasbn"
cati/dIan ilonttim Cereal Co.,ttd:. r
, Windsor, Oitt, '
our men had seen tile enemy try to
bolt from the craters left by the ex-
• plosime. •But, as always; the dorninat-
int impression was that of mere gin,
-Linalevolenb, .but_emintelligible. '•
The British are holding hOW Tlearfir
90 miles of -line to 300 Miles held by
the French. • What We ,have just seen
Nes only an incident at a single' point
in all those, 90 miles. • The same thing
'May happen at tiny Other point, either
'• on' our initiative or the enemy's at
•lany minute on any day. It is taking
, place, or sornething like it, at, on. the
average, half. a dozen places in each
24. hours. '•
• • among* the men who lniilt.the wicker mitts of col -emend. Not only has an
bridge across the Liffey at Dublin,. American squadron been organited,
and who called the place Dublilin, or but the Norweeians who had formed
BlaCkpool,...and_amonget. those ‘1110_4. a ski corps and Who had been in ser -
caused Fingal to be called the emir- vice on the Vosges frqnf diiribg the
try of Fionn Gall or the, White Stran- winter are now said to he organizing
gers. There would be Jutlanders; too, an air squadron.
amongst the Danes around Canute, Training Of Pilots. •
and so on throtigh the greatness and
- .
obscurity of Danish history. ' The •inost remarkable •modification
• with ,regard to the French air eerie
- : is seen in the new method of training.
pilots. .
Until a' few months ago private
training schools were responsible for'
•the preperation of many Of the pilots.
These schools had been closed at the .
beginning of the war and later had to.
be re -opened to render all Possible aid
to the army. At present they are all
under military •government and • the ;
French airmen who are now being I
heard 'from are , praetically alt the
product of • -the • strictly military
schools. • •
Speed, time, accuracy, coolness and
staying power are taken bite censider,
Just One More
Direct Message
500,000.men, or even half of that num-
NEW BRUNSWICK WOMAN SAYS
ber, would be far beyond our power. • •
•
It would be quite impossible We have USE ,DODD'S Kini,rgY, PILLS.
got neither the men nor the ships."
• "I suppose that the war has . al-,
ready cost you e -large sum of money,
even though your military and naval
operations have not been on a large
scale?" ' •
• "Directly, or indirectly, it has cost
usa. good deal. Directly, it has cost
£10,000,000,•. which is a good dearfor
J perhaps fe
apart, and w people
rtare
aware that when the German 'cruise
ets were abroad :we had, some '250;000 headache and Weakness. I found in
tons of war vessels helping thoBritish Dodd's Kidney Pills," •
fleet in the Pacific and elsewhere. .. • Thi e was the message Mxs. Patrick
• "We suffered very much at the Williams of this place sends to suf--
- w - she , dislikes talk.
outset of the evar in our trade, though, fering women all over Canada. Like
this year there has been some immany other omen
provement Needless to pay, we have ing about het troubles, but sheefeela . These schools are daily turning out,
Mrs. Patrick. Williams 'Tells How Her
Headache and Weakness Vanished
When She Used the Great Canadian
Kidney Remedy, Dodd's Kidney rills.
. St: Sosime, Kent • CO., N.B., *lune
26th (Special.)—"I feel it my duty to
tell the Public the great relief from
•
•
be British.
daY, to devote the day throughout the
British Isles to a nab:renal demonstra-
tion �f British cordial feeling toward
her ally and, to allocate -the -proceeds Proceeds •
• For some time past there has been
•widespread • feeling that means
should- be •found • to recogaize in
rtangible -fashion the spirit of -unity
that •now linking 'France 'to Eng
land, • • 4
• It has now been 'decided with the
approval of the French Ambassader,
to set apart July 14 next as France's
rev VtA.74577:M.- • ''
11VANTE1)-- NiAt.'111.19,STS. ,M,)- • . .
V and l'attern Makers
work. state age:. exts--rience and wa,:teit.
Boring. Hydraulic •AZ
Liniited, • fAndeaY•
„ • •
• .I'ianer. -14theAnd'-iiha.per 'lianas; •
also Toolinake'rs; steady work: • best „
Al.)131)* •IlfoWn Boggs CO-,
Hamilton, Ont. • •
. •
rrir,AcuEnS WANTED rou svE.1.0.41-‘9.
1. in SetakutOwwan opening throlgr ;tit
the summer. • Salaries from $720 to $9.4
per Free registration. Apvly
Saskatchewan Tetfehers' Agency, 1 •740
Scarth Street. Regina., Sask.
GIRL WANTED' FOR GENe.,,,•AL
housework. Three in family.
did home. good pay. YN'rite 101 Een-1.1.1
Ave.,• Toronto.
•rezet-sesartne ?en SAVO.
-DRUFIT-MANING• NEWS ANtv JUB
A (gripes tor sale •in eotol ()Marla
towns. The talist userut lutere4ting
of all husitiesses, .Foll information. WI
application to !shim: Com,
rally, 72 West Adelaide tropt. Toronto.
mem:Zen:Kink
ANCEIt. • TUSWitS. LUMPS:
• internal and external. t...u'red with-
out pain by our •hcrne treatinent. Writs
us before too late. Dr. Beilman licedies.1 .
Co.. Limited. Collingwood. Ont.
Lurn.p.
Rock
-I.,- -- San
Beat for
.6te Cattle.
5s.to Virkto for,
TORONTO SALT WORMS,
60-52 Jarvis St.. Toronto, • Oat.
• •
UEEN'S
UNIVERSITY
ler .• KINGSTON
. ONTARIO
ARTS EDUCATION
APPLIED SCIENCE
-aeluding Cheinical,..Civil. Mech-
anical and Urectrical .14aganeering.• '
-.MEDICINE
Durinie the War there will be continuoui
sessions in Medicine.
• HOME 'STUDY
• The Arts Course may be taken by corre-
spondence. but students desiring to gradu-
ate must attend one session.' .
summeR-s CH 0 "
e...—:ysoi4oneN
JULY AtIDAudi.jST fteeiSTRAR
•
of the celebration to the urgeat needs
of the French Red Cross. ,
It- is intended that "France's day"
shall differ in every respect from pre -
terms. celebrations of a similar char-
acter arici that it shall prove to be one
of the most interesting and gratifying
events in the London season. •
. •
Minard's L,iniment Co.; Limited.
• Dear Sirs, --This fall I got thrown'
on a fence- and hurt my chest very
bad, so I _could not work and it hurt
me to breathe. I tried; all kinds
Liniments and they did me no good.,
One bettle • of MINARD'S LINI-
MENT, warined on fannek and ap-
plied on my breast, cured me com-
pletely, , •" •
• ' . C. H. COSSABOOM.
Rossway, Digby Co., ••
ation for the awarding of poiritk,
When the pilot satisfactorily aceom•
-
plishes the tests a diploma is granted
to him and he is sent to one of •the
Another ."Long Way."
• A gentleman had an Irishman in his
• c r s at the front for dervice.e
army o p •
With regard .to the inachines,Used,
the apptentice schools are divided -into
two classes—those which have a
dal Machine and those where all
kinds •of aeroplanes are utilized.
. Numerical Superiority,
not drawn a single penny from our she would not be, doing right to let ten• increasing number , of pilots, and,
eniploy who was noted for having
iiirty boots': • One day the gentleman
asked him why he hadn't cleaned
,thern, sorr," said Pat, "Oi
quite forget. • Yer •see, sorr, evan'el
memory is situated in wari's head an'
We a powerful long way to remember.
froin yer head toyer feet!" '
THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS
that make a horse Wheeze,
Roar, have Thick Wind
or Choke -down,' can be .
reduced with .
also other Bunches or Swellings. NO blister,
no hair.gone, and horse kept ar.work, Eco -s•
homical-eohly 'a few drops required .at an ap-
Plication. $2 per bottle delivered. took 3M free.
ARSORRINE, IR., the andieptic liniment for
yriankind„, reduces Cysts, Wins,' Painful
Svrol,len Veins and Ulcers.$4 and $2a bottleat
• deal•ers or delivered. Book "Evidence" tree. '
W.ebsoF. rbkc 0,
Dsd Abrstii:11511116e.13Yri!nasreBirtadgd.,aSinentcanteitala,a.C.ari.......,
British ally to .defraY the expenses 4t if, when she had learned France's nnmerical,•,sitp*ity in the
' Granulated Eyelids.
of -these operations." • , ' from her own experience how great is air is becoming daily e ent The ore Eyes inflamed• by expo -
the relief and how easy is the cure to
•
be found he Dodd's. Xidney Pills,
Nine -tenths cif' the • weakness and
suffering wonAn-,..beer SD bravely
conies from siek kidneys. -Sick or dis-
• • • mire to Situ. Dug an2511a
It ,not, of •course, the ."great of= • Deaf, Men Drill .for War.. •
.fensive." ' That 3.111.11 'come 'When it • • 7 •-- •
One 'hundred- deaf men. are new
conies..• 'Meanwhile; bit no one under• -
retie What the 13eitish insity is going drilling in.. London in the lope '; the
threugh, for it is doing what, even a, 'ern137 accept '`TrbeY ..can. ordered kickeks. in their duty of by the coincidence that Germany h d I Drieggisti OrShirluelyaRemedyCo..Chleito
year or silt mailiW ago, ;Auld feee obey-eh:anted ordern-Thy. watching straining the iiiiptirftres out of -the then .put into tli&-air.the-Feltker;ihae-
.been wildly impossible: '
multitude of squadrons whieh she now •
has •in gervice marks •a striking con-
teast COnditionS dUring, the period_ Eye Remedy. No Smarting.
quickly relieved by Karina
20. Assorted' '
Patrio•de Buttons 2:50
.nd 'Plass for .
. .
The above illaterailon shows three of
the. twenty different Patriotic But-
tons and Flags of the Alidecl-IsTations
Which Canadians are .proudly wear-
ing •to -day. In order to advertiSc o,ur.
Tag Pay . Supplies we will send you
these .Vivent7. designs.. tiOn the re-
ceipt Of 25. cents. This'is a .collection'
yoU Will vise and keep. . Ask for
price on a large Flag for your home.
• T. P., TANsEY.
Dept; 'TT'," 106450 Veal Bt.. igiOntreaL
Zdanufaciturers of Bafigeb, Buttons,
Plags%ttad Tag Vtly BUTeplies. '
• MCOMPICCIEMISIAZIOXG•ca-V-....,.A.,,,..s,
.o• f relative inactivity of lave or threl , -ink Eye Conlfort. M •
Your Druggist's Sec Per Bottle, lthArinety•
months ego, which were atcentuate
SeiveinTebestSc ForBOokailholyerfeeask
• the lips' of the c.orilnsanders„ but they blood,: This pleaTIS • that these festest and best ,fighting 'craft it had . •
,
also* have a sYstein of finger signs des these seeds of ,disease, are car- yet adopted. ,. -Many a Man after watchirig his
which works perfectly. When the 1;icg to ,all ,parts of the body. The Natural Aviators. . wi•
• . • . fe inoW the lawn is pleasedto refer
commander holds up four fingers eatural cure is Dodd's Kidney Pills. , • „ • to how neat we keep the premises.
They alwaye cure sick kidneye.•France enee more has an assured • •
• The Government of Louden. • they 'form. fours... for ihstanee, and
London is divided 'into • 23 adminis- txte fingerg is the sign for, a two -deep
trative .boroughs, comprising 80, pale fern -cation, • Militttley Ilion who have
them •Say their is ex.
liamentary boroughs, and retarning 58 insPeed
Members. Each borough has its oWn
Mayor, Aldermen and CoMmon Coun-
cil, responsible only to the central
Government except on pertain Mat-
tere Of, common Interest (sewerage,
.parks, fl -ie protection, etc.), which are
wider Hbhe control of the' London
County Coincil. There are also Many'
general boards having vecial tune -
Cons, sueh the Lizondon* School
colter) t. • . ••
•
• Gay Tinies at Banff.'
Sports are now at their height at
Banff. A regatta was held on July
let on.Bow River in which Canoes, row
boats and taunches participated. • An
informal 'dance will be held in the
bali •roorn of the Bhn(r.Springs Hotel
On Wednesday and.qaturday evenings
Board ahd the IVIetropolitan Asylums
dUring the season. A.goIf tournament
Beard. The police of London, is. `not bee just been held for which a silver
• Under the control of the London s presented by the Banff
eountY •Coune11, •but is managed dir. cup•Wa-
Springa Hotel, prizes also included
-octly from the British Homo Office.
gold, silVer and° bronze medals. The
Ely "Zondon" is meant% not the small
' competition WEIS very keen bout
"Ancient City of London " 1' I ' 0 a
, tv ne le
seventy players taking Dart.
the necktie df the modern metropolis,
but tho wholo'mottopolls. itself.
'teep. Zininteitt Om 1.10141.
'1 •• 4
',eat -.• ••
'5-- 2;•,
• • ' supremacy in the air, and this is due, blinartVii Zintment r..ect ey Physicians.
• .'
apart from the .questiop of uuniliers
•Not• i• It' '
is itel.ter to bn e run dowby a
• ,
"No," Said the once musical Maid, to the innate qualities 'of the Vrenel: ;1 ' fr. thi•
Seriou
t
firmly,. "I could net Sing even if you:
should ask me.; I have given it up."
• "I3ut why?* asked the wondering
friend;
.
• -The doctor Ordered. it."
•'Industry and moderation in all af-
fairs. rank among the best of -medial
men.
fOr Minard'ir Ana ni other -
Beating the Carpe
ars. Tim, Bolder' . , of •jturisetosvii;
Wart energetically, beating the carpet,
when her neighbor called. • "Why
den't you ask yowl. Inishand to beat
it?" asked tho visitor. ,
git did," replied Mrs. Bolder sOrtge-
1Y, "and he lid."
s."
• hi:sawn his
Ly L.V
aViators. 'fhese, 'Winters have in a 111n n mthe :
highest degree • the , requisite gifts of •
accusere in an tett :mpt tif Whitewash
himself. •
• the perfect pilot, suppleness, surety
of • the instinctive reflex ,motion,
power of ,intelteetual concentration, 1
'rapidity of decision, forgetfulnees of• ••
danger, and the indefinable quality ‘.
'Which. is Manifetited in the ctiPacity
for •constantly ittProvising neNV ox
pedients_Ittethe prat/dace of the tinfore-
seen,'
lust itquainied,
•
."Do you knew.hor very vi.
"Not vepy, • I've met herenly. 'once
er twice ,find so don't Icnew- ft thing •
that's wrong with' bet:"
•
sannerd'd %liniment Lumberman's Vetoed
••••('
GOOD POSITIONS,
, • for
BRIGHT'GIRLS.
Operators Wanted Ott electric 'pow •0
CI *V Mt:Miles. to, Mftlto
Inseam and N9-ossiehie '
Silk and Serge 'asresads
stiqiny work iho.4•essv around.' T.T.e,ht
tilrY ettnitary'wx)rk ro0 ins. Pair .weeit-,
tt Wagaa .t11 ,,ilegiaat•rn KnN it; •
linnerionooa OuSratero eta ' earn
• 'aniline le Vi -o a. •
•
Also 'positions and .,11,-ody
experiencod. imitti :towel 9 till t....!‘)
iii•osaes.•
Apply ley letter : Itij •
thOurunou Ltarit4Arent Li • c.:•. • ,74.!tl.
174 spa,tho, •t puts,11
0
• WIleclock Engine, I,q)
18 x42, \i'ith cdoubile
main driving belt 24 ins.
w K W.
All in -firSt
class condition, Would be
sold together or sciuratc,s4
ly ; also a. lot of shafting
at a very .grCa. bargain as
rooln is raltV,red immed14.
3. Frank WilsOh &Sons
73 AdolafAlo
Tar
13).
.a,
•