The Brussels Post, 1918-11-21, Page 3THE IRON MINES - BRITISH AIRMEN
OF K ! WELL
SCHOOLED 1•tihile at thi., seined the etadet pass -
1 ing t'1 Um ground or mieses him. The
lesson La elementary in its simplicity
but wonderfully ceffeetive.
THEIR, 1�Ilt(/It'1`ANCel IN 'ClIL A1lceii' k't'nDY GUNNERY AND
eimple feeding pleee is mule of en �.... .- _ -m•� "
open froneed box, Pae.e: it o'7 top of
a poll., t'faiest :1 building of an a
tree. le
Stoll a box eh uid edgers s be
es through a gun -tenting section. placed with he bel: to the Prevailing
;livery nratitint, gun wed for a it• ',elude. A chces.w-bex lid ori top of
fighting lel eeanihied minutely aid p, a ettrects bird,, kind •:u will be
1, Peverely trle.l before it is sent over- :-:l' fa v; trh the birds feeding. j
PRESENT WAR • l*li;i.LPSel TI:LI:GItaPRY Beau. Ilona, zle dnvutod to the ncrut- Whitlow Luxes are excellent. At -1
my of eat i i t :=pun. Guns 86 they aper themto pier wind+, v and volt
come i'yorel the rna1 era a.re finite good
aiumielt fnr Teemed use, but for use
Aspirants for Royal Squ d'.'crl .Are l,n the Cri t tee:, meet 1,0 tuned up so
Inter: ivcly Trained from the that the risk of failure is reduced to
Ore -Bearing 4hcet Made Lip, of Sur-
erimposed' Layers Seperated by the nuntutunt.
Crotntel lip. , !
Strata of Sande and CRaye. It ja a ;neat day for the flight ca-- The ismer part should be fee. and i
One of the most important arra- IV1!.n tint young oadot of ;.he Ito •al. dots, as the boy is nevi called, when be ort -,riff dquare felt. Upper fettling!
tegik objects of .General Fochie to i+i! R'rirp ham Idarne,l to laarch, to - rePorts to the training squadron table, two feet square and placed four 1
• where lie is to learn his flying. Hu fground, six inches from round, This is
us
a good type of huusc to e, as shy'
birds can be fed by scattering food
on the floor, Many birds will feed
only from the ground. On this Mame !
suet should be fastened to one of the!
supports. It is no- uncommon thing
win liege the dcelightful experience: of 1
rear •11i ( the Meet one with skin 0 i
h e1: glees r,t •.'e•rt you a:, i theist. I
A good general height fur a fried
Lr.t e is five feet to bottom of vorf.
gam possession of the great iron 1111c1 a fnr; hes tines with the Jtflue88 itp mind is packedwith the theory, but
that lies to the west of Metz, or at all teemed by his insLruetors, to salute •
before him lies adventure.
events Lo interfere as far as possible air iLt wale- ime ii,ib eceY considered The pupil taken uby an in -
with its utilization by the Germane,car:iet by u flying ufhcer, to reed I structor and is•oee "dual" before he
whose main dependence it is for sup- the utter .e}iow from - nutting tlnm is allowed to Kandla a al" bee anent.
plies of an indispensable 'Wile mater- when he }las the
gime; ml, uhe' , i "In the old days," I ryas told at the
ial. fact, he leas learned discipline, and i,In n days,' '
The first silo of the original (>er» his body has been hardened by Ph3'si Son were count- to find birds nesting u'- .the upper
geel a dub if you r:ould not get along i y
man invasion wets to obtain; control cal training and games, he leafy— the I after three }burs' dual, If you took parts of these houses, and theanon
oes—to school. come to them for protection inuring
of •this field of ore, the loss of.which
was a deadly blow to7the French.,It
is of great 'area, stretching all the
way from Longwy on the north to a
point not far from the Moselle River
on 'the south, a distance of nearly
forty miles,
The vast ore body fortes a confine
nous sheet that lies at n slant with'
the surface o the earth, To the east,, =tics, but engines and aerial nam -
in German Lorraine, its edge appears *tion, signalling and wireless tele -
at the surface; but, a$ it is followed g
westward, le dips stead}ly,dotvtt, so
that in order to reach it mitre shafts
must go cleep'er and deeper.
Water( from rains) enters the iron
bed along the exposed edge, in Ger-
man Lorraine, and is carried by
gravity along the pervious stratum as
it dips down. This renders mining
difficult, and powerful pumps have to
be used to keep the. underground
workings dry. The French before
evacuating the territory, destroyed
the pumping plants, making it a huge
job for the Huns to render the field
again productive.
How Iron Bed Was Formed.
The ore -bearing sheet consists of
number of superposed layers, sep-
arated from one another by strata of
sands and clays. The explanation of
how the ifon came to be deposited in
this way is by no. means devoid of
interest and even picturesqueness.
The iron was originally derived
from sea water. The ore sheet long
ago was the bottom of the sea. Par-
tildes„ of the metal (combined with
silica) were deposited on the bottom
as minute grains, forming sands.
Afterward the layer thus formed was
covered over with quartz sand and
clay. Suppose this process to be re-
peated half a dozen times, and it will
be understood how the sheet assumed
its layer -cake make-up. -
To form such a bed exceptional
conditions wore required. There must
have been a great embayment along
an ancient shore line, shutting in a
shallow area of sea. Rains washed
the iron out of the. hills and brought
it down to the sea in minute particles.
Because of the embayment they were ally in his cans. If he is not familiar
not borne out into the open oceanbut-in the Vickers and Lewis guns as
but were dropped upon the shut-in'
amp UY the sea enol.
g rein hours you were heaved out. To
E fl but h trust be' cold and blustery weather,
Ea as eagerlo y, a note t this recollection the officer with whom
taught him before be can leave must
In feeding the winter birde, see
I talked added another: "When the that it is dorso regnilar�y in all tvea-
g
Soitis that the boy, by now very instructors had learned their flying," thers. The best foods are, suet, pork
much a soldier, goes to the lecture d.
he said, ' It ryas considered an insult rinds, bones with shreds of moat,
room, and for period '`swots" as if n pilot who had once gone solo vans eoolced meats, meal -worms, cut -un ap-
hard ae military necessity and his
told that he was to be given more Ales, birdseed, buckwheat, crackers,
own keenness dictate. He does not dual. This simply meant that men crumbs, cocoanut local, cracked corn,
hemp -
study languages or history or =the -
Marvelous
upr way gotd oflying to had habits and seeckle2m flet, dog nlnt itsneF}xreats �nsPecially
Marvicelous Gunnery peanuts), whole or rolled oats, pep-
graphy, aeroplane rigging and map
reading. His professors and lectur-
ers, like himself, are in khaki. Highly
capable N,C.O: s teach hint the why
and the wherefore of cranks and rods
and cylinders; he palls engines to
pieced and sets them up again.
Studies Mechanism of Planes.
He sits in a seat with a "joy -stick"
manoeuvring a quarter -sized airplane
in front of him, and roes the effect on
the machine of different movements crashes, by comparison, are insignift- strained into a bottle containing titres
!of (he control By ingenious devices cant, and an accident on the occasion ounces of orchard white mentos a
he learns the .art of observation from of a first solo flight is almost un- whole quarter pint of the most re.
the air and how to report what his known. markable lemon skin beautifier at
eyes have beheld. He comes to know When the instructors are satisfied about the cost one must pay for a
why, to correct the deflection of the that a pupil can fly a service machine small jar of the ordinary cold creams.
properly, the boy—he has still to Care should be taken to strain the
lemon juice through a fine cloth so no
lesion pulp gets in, then this lotion
will keep fresh for months. Every
es and instruments. All that is shown woman knows that lemon juice is used
him he must absorb and remember, so —is transferred from the elementary to bleach and remove such blemishes
that, at the end of the course, he can side of the depot to what is known as as frecirles, sallowness and tan and is
the "special flight" side and is taught the ideal skin softener, whitener and
beautifier.
Just try it! Get three ounces of
orchard white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra-
grant lemon lotion and massage it
daily into the face, neck, arms and
hands.
Memory.
I know a Ione spot on the Arras road
Where I shall hardly bear to walk
again
For fear of waking those great souls
I loved
Who struggled to a death of piteous
pain.
AhI.I should hear their laughter on
the way,
And round my heart their boyish
sighs would creep;
Till I roust long to leave the rushing
world
And steal away to join them in
their sleep.
For only'ethey who tread the tortured
path
Of those torn roads where swaying
poplars sigh
Can drealn of how God could give no
greater bliss
Than the hushed peace beneath the
sad French sky.
Before, a pilot goes solo at n11 now
he is taught to loop and spin and hal/-
roll, and to land in any field which
the instructor directs him to get into.
Even so, his progress is still closely
watched after he is given single con-
trol, and at intervals the instructor
goes up with the pupil to correct any
fault he may have developed. The
number of machines crashed at one
time was enormous; to -day the
r.Ltie Weekly
The round poke of thie design holds
the fulness of the bad: and front
bevel.ped in plaid materia} it is suit -
pees, pop -corn, pumpkin or squash able for school. McCall Pattern No.
seeds, raw or boiled rice, sunflower- 8518, Girl's Coct. In 7 sizes, ° to 14
seeds and wheat.
GIRLS! LEMON JUiCE
IS SKIN WHITENER
How to make a cream- y beauty lotion
for a few cents.
The juice of two - fresh lemons
wind, he must steer a machine at an
angle which apparently contradicts
the direction in which he wishes to
fly. He becomes wise about compass -
graduate for his wings, but if he fs
of the right stuff he is by now only
a boy in years, and his fresh, virile
manhood is an inspiring thing to see
pass the test of a strict examination.
It is hard work. IIo cannot "cut"
lectures. He must not sleek. When
he leaves the school a little more of
boyhood has gone; the man is emerg-
aerial fighting and the use of his gun
in the air. Some of the instructors
under whom he is trained are mar-
velous gunners.
ing. But he has kept fit, Every day I watched one of them swoop down
after work he goes from the desk to from the air, firing bursts into a tiny
pond as he dropped, and there was an
upward leap of glistening water for
every cartridge used. One could im-
1 the playing fields. Games count for
so much that at each stage of his
training, the narks which are to de-
termine his suitability -for an air agine the hank such firing might
force commission include an award create among marching -infantry.
• for the degree of proficiency he shows
at^ play. How I Select Seed Potatoes.
Testing the Guns.
Much hasbeon said on the question
From the school of aeronautics the of seed selection of all the farm crops
cadet passes to the school of armee which we produce, this is most parti-
ment, and for a time has the "tock- cularly true of potatoes and corn; but
tock -tock" of machine guns continu- in the interest •of better farming it is
well to keep the pot boiling.
After a five-year test of seed selets•-
tion I ant convinced that no man who
raises potatoes for market can afford
to follow any other plan. Breeding
holds good with crops just as it does
with live stock and can be carried-ou
with a fraction of the expense.
A small potato from a hill of large
ones will be pretty sure to produce
fair sized tubers, while a fair sized
one from a hill of "bullets" is apt to
produce bullets. Ilence, if we plant
small potatoes we are planting a doz-
en representatives of scrubby hills to
each representative of good hills. On
the other hand, when we go to the
bin and select the largest potatoes for
seed we aro devitalizing our stock;
my readers will have often noticed
hills containing but two or three pota-
toes and they are usually very large
because the whole strength of the
plant went to feeding these two or
three tubers as against six to eight
in the average hill; this means that
when the largest potatoes are taken Liniment Co.,imited.
for -seed each of these above mention- Minard's., Land o the Beyond.
ed hills will be represented by its Gentlemen; —In July, 1905, I was There is a country into which there
thrown from a road machine, injuring is to -day a yearlyimmigration with
total number while a large per cent of
average hills will not have tubers large my hip and back badly and was obliged which no other country iu any age
to use a crotch for 14 months. In
enough to be selected. After a farehas had anything to coplee. Every
Sept, 1006, Mr. Win. Ontridgo of La -years of planting the largest we are chute. urged me to try MINARD'S year 36,000,000 of people. enter its
raising large hill;oes but they tart LINIMENT, which I dict with the most ports and crowd its territory as new -
very few to the hili; our stock bas pe-) satthfaetory results and to -day I am comers and colonists.
conte devitalized until we aren't mach
better off than the fellow who has
been planting haphazard.
By the process of elimination we
have arrived at the only successful so-
lution hill selection. The time
for hill eeioction is now, when the po-
tatoes are being dug; a part of the
Patch should he dug by hand and the
perfect hills selected Por seed until
enough has been secured. In this sten. The man proving, aparently, meeting with a growing demand. 1t
manner the fanner is enabled to breed unable to make response to the most is estimated that 2110,000 cages will
just the typo of potato he wants, leo simple questions, the examiner final- be packed this year, an increase of
is not in danger of running down the
vitalityof his stock and to is also
to e very Barge extent breeding away
feign various diseases. -•••H. F. l)e La
Mater.
area of the bottom, their accumula-
tion in the course of ages making a
sheet that eventually became part of
the dry land.
When, in very modern days, mining
was begun along the exposed edge of
the sheet, the workings necessarily
followed the latter as it dipped under -
he is with a knife and fork at the end
of his lessons, it is not the fault of
his instructors. In the beginning the
fact is' impressed upon him that -an
airplane is merely a means of taking
guns into the air, and that if a pilot
takes up a gun without being able to
use, it he is asking for trouble.
ouble in such a case means death.
ground. Its slant downward and west- Diagrams, cinema demonstrations,
ward being fairly regular, engineers, sectional models and guns, complete
in sinking a mine shaft anywhere
within the ore -bearing area, know in
advance. at just• about what depth
they will strike the igon bed.
ENGLAND'S COAL CELLAR
Millions of Years Ago Britain Wes
Connected With the Continent.
It is o:Cten said that Britain owes
her commercial supremacy to her coal
measures. For her size she has more
and better coal than any other -coun-
try in the world, and for steam pur-
poses -South Wales practically sup-
plies the world, Where did the coal
coma from?
The coal seams, lying one below
another to an unknown depth, and not
infrequently cropping out at the sur-
face, are sure •proof: that tropical con-
ditions once prevailed in the lattitude
of the British Isles.
In primeval times, a period whose
remoteness is measured by millions
of years, the strict which is now
Britain was connected with the Con-
tinent, diol, the coal of England doubt-
less runs under the Channel and the
eouthe'ru part of rho North Sea, and
continued in the coal fields of Nor-
thern France, Belgium and Flanders.
All this region was covered thick with
.l treat tree -ferns, growing to a gig-
antic height, of exceeclingiy raped
growth, in the clamp, steaming heat
of a tropical climate which exceeds-
the ;teat, of the equatorial regions of
Africa to -day. Growth succeeded
growth, slid in the course of ages
probably, scar flowed over it and de-
e posited elle sated which is now rock.
Then came another period of
growth, and the pressure carbonized
the fallen vegetation and formed lay -
ears of cr aleppleces of which still bear
imprinted upon their fiat aurfaao tiro
beautiful ta'acary of the original
fronds of rho tree -ferns,
Diego ,e of 1111 etcept the strong,
healthy bra, for nowadays it does
not pay .to keep weaklings.
It i well that God answers our
needs rather than ottr wishes, else
intent of us would eecime the hard-
ship:; which have most- to do with
ltrnultthening and beautifying trei
91 1''-, tree."
and in part, are brought into use to
make instruction easy. Fon one in-
genious lecture the pupil takes a seat
in a cineilla hall, and his position in
relation to the pictures which pass
over the screen is that of the pilot of
the photographed airplane. Here is
shown how to aim his gun. He sees
the approach of an enemy machine
and the burst of fire which, according
to its accuracy, sends the Hun crash -
BMW
.fit' � «ii t;ytr jll.'.r WI
A Combination
ata
Good Qualities
invites your
eittent ion to
y
Gra
pp
.. t1
. po+
0
e�
v
Vat' VI ae
Na sweetening
rr uired,
No cooking.
Needs but little
milk or, cream.
Fine with evapo-
rated i=nilk.
Keeps indefinitely
Not a particle of
waste.
A wonderf=ully
attractive flavor.'
'Mores' Reason"
for
Grape -Nuts.
Cs -da food Board Lie e fatyyW�2 02}11�
9u'ti.4Q9:Vr3.
A Dost-"ltalncdl I carioca King,
Albert, •,!lung of 'Belgium, le the hero
of (he boor;
Hu'o the greatest Ring iu £:nosey,
lle'fl a rural 08011 and tower;
Ile 11 bigger in the t r m:herr than the
Raiser c'1 hie threat!,
Axel trot v bete v el le] 10 OIS hint fur'
the ,I•orrewe he hue known.
Beet -ewe teas; lie mower to the Tem,
tetts at baro gate;
Then he loe•kiod to Me twiner and
p t di ern his son:! to fate.
Ii tnu i between ween his people ami the
1,,legeet Essen gun,
Fee he feared not -hot nor tihrtipnrfl
a3 Ids little army won.
Ring of Belgium, Dense of Brabant,
Gotta of Plunders 1111 in one;
Little Itingdcm of the lirlgae .reearr'd
with honor in the sun.
1 ou have won n pine8 to history, of
year ucede, the world will eine',
13 +,t glory of your oativrt i; your
,L .teined, fearless Ring.
MONEY ORDERS.
IncieR by Dominion Express Monsey
Order. If lost or ct',ien you get your
moue" back.
A chill is prey to many forma wheh
boyo lit: le to do with physical cow-
elice. rite sensitive dile! is past-'
t,:ely afraid of rrany things without
realizing he is afraid. What he needs
is to be logon a greater confidence
• in life a8°} in himself.
New winter model of velvet trim-
med with fur, Simple in line and
smart in effect. McCall Pattern No.
8053, Ladies' Coat. In 3 sizes; email,
34 to 36; medium, 88 to 40; large, 42
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St,,
Toronto, Dept. W.
114Saaed's &Jntmant Orman Diphtheria.
to 44 bust. -Price, 25 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
Had No Respect.
One artillery unit worked hard dur-
ing the afternoon of the second 'May
of the attack to get its pieces into po-
sition. It had moved up for the second
time, and had not fired a shot. It was
four o'clock when the lieutenant in
command gave orders for every one
to stand by. The gunners were to
fire their first volley into the German
I know a lone spot on the Arras road lines. Everyone stood waiting for the
That murmurs with the moan of final word when the telephone rang
• Memory's pain. and word came that the infantry had
And I should grieve my heart with advanced so far that it would be nec-
stifled sobs essary to move up again before going
If I could boar to walk that road
again.
—Lieut. A, N. Choyce.
into action. "Oh, hell!" said a gun-
ner; "those infantry guys ain't got no
respect for us at alt!"
=navd'a &Mirient Cures Diateinncr.
as well as over in my life.
Yours sincereiy,
his
;MATTHEW x 33AINES.
mark
What He'd Do.
An army examiner bad before him
a very dull candidate for commie -
Every month 3,000,000 are Dutulxer-
ed as fresh arrivals. Every twenty -
our hours there etre 100,000.
And this has been going on and
will continue century after century.
For the country in question is the
Land of the Beyond, that is on the
other side of the grave.
British Columbia cranial herring is
First Aid for the Winter Birds.
Naw is the time when the birds
especially need your care. Thousands
of birds die every winter from lack of
food and from severe storms. It is
up to tib 10 feed these birds and. to
provide shelter. The more birds we
have, the greater out crops; so, you livery time you fill the tank of
sec, it's a patriotic duty to save the your auto or tractor by lamp or other
birds. Feeding the birds will not open light, you are inviting an or-
1teee 1t 1110111 teat doing their work plosion.
ly grew inpatient and quite snrcastic-
ally put this question:
"Let it be supposed you are a cap -
twin in command of infantry. In your
rear is an impassable abyss. On both
sides of you there rise perpendicular
rocks of tremendous height. In -front
of you lies the enemy, outnumbering
you ten to one. What, sit', in such an
mummies emergency would you do?"
"I thick, sir," said the aspirant for
military rli$tiatotton, "I would resign."
as nature intended. As 9e011 err • `
spring arrives th!i wily ]cava your
food stations for their natural food.
Remember that food must he pureed
*hero .the birds con eat in safety. See .than dwellings nn small is},tn,ie and
that no eat con leach it. A. very pike drivels into the water,
•
Vencauela arenas "Little Veniet."
Early ey-plorcrs_ so named the South
American country because of its in -
15? per cent, over 101.7.•
LIMBS
evre
PASTES
zraatat
KEEP YOUR StIOES NEAT
Fin _
SHOE PUISHES
ern.
SLICKAURffE,I•AN Salieffilel i=l
Ole OX-81.0C4l SlifitS 1 '
PfE Eli"JEih0EEA' HE
,?, '( 1 .oca 0n„�
11. 7. Ii3lil:B 1
'Iv,
Se'leare'u Liniment. Oozes Galget in Cors
"Thy yesterday la thy Past; thy
to -clay is thy Future. thy to -morrow
is a Secret." --Talmud.
41
A bee, unladen, will fly 40 miles an
hour, but one enuring home laden with
honey does not travel faster than 12
Arctic Curio.
In the midst of the, Arctic swarms
are often found- curiuns formations
which travelers ir, these inhospitable
regions call "ice mushrooms.”
When the summer sun banishes for
a brief while the frozen crust of the
landscape, squat pillars of ice (some-
time as much as ten feet high) re-
main here and there, covered with
/noes that has actually grown on top
of them and by which they are kept
from melting. It is nature's oven idea
of an icehouse.
Minaret's Liniment Cases Colds, eco.
WANTED
�1 i S 1. .'1 BLAcscg.tIITIL REID
71- :;ins.. 8ot1%.-eIl. Ont,
%i1
e t tiTF.I': - AT USntC!•i, Bi.' 1'HO-
Fr.nive r' -ern !n the Na
x nmwlathe j rd n Spot of ("anode.
RollermaRers. Iff.lners and Handy Men.
Steady employment. Engineering and
Machine Works of Canada, Limited. St.
(101.
roil BALL
UT ELL k;t1i8IPPED NEWSPAPER
miles an hr,ur, end Job printing plant in Easter*
} Ontario. Insurance carried 51,600. Will
ern for 61.200 art quick sale. Box 69,
®®sAa,ez. o,nmm661WaM®mmmbgW1),cn Publishing Co.. I:td.. Toronto.
i A Kidney Itemedy I
e Kidney troubles are frequently g
1 caused by badly digested food
which overtakes these organs to
eliminate the irritant acids
formed. Help your stomach to 1
properly digest the food by
taking 1S:to 30 drops of Extract
of Roots, sold as Mother Seipel's 6
Curative Syrup, and your kidney -
disorder will promptly dis-
ty appear. Got the genuine. 7
9L1 e. MI1aa m e c r.m ems er a,ee:. e, s z
V71:EIcLY NEWSPAPER FOR SAL82
111 New Ontario. Owner going to
Ftarce. Will sell 32:000. Worth double
!tat emennt. Body J. 28,. elo Stinson
Publishing Co.. t.lmited, Toronto.
0810204 WINDOWS POE SALE
'T Q E. PRICE LIST SHOWING
Ulf -cost of windows glazed complete.
any size. IlaIliday Omni:MAY, Box B61,
Remilton.
MXSOELLAREO110
LACER. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC..
iJ internal and external• cured with.
cut pain by our home treatment. Write
un before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical
Co,. Limited, Co111Ntwood, Ont
Will reduce Ynflamed, Strained,
Swollen Tendons, Ligaments,
or Muscles. Stops the lameness and
pain from a Splint, Side Bone or
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair
gone and horse can be used. $2.50 a
bottle at druggists or delivered. De-
scribe your case for special insirue•
tions and interesting horse Book 2 R Free.
ABSDRBINE,JR,, the antiseptic linimenttot
mankind, reduces Strained, Torn Liga-
ments Swollen Glands Veins oe tI.__les•
EHt.2ta!stole,, dnie,rordervered, ennk"Evidence"tree.
VAS (0098,1'. D. f„ 515 Lyman 011 „tlontreal, Cas,
.eau, n.ai ala nosucuam JO are L102 to Casal.
Will
not
Euro
eels Cuts. Sores, Ulcers. Arrays psis. Prcc
av
Easy
+O
use
DON'T NEGLECT A
. E MATIC. AI
Go after it with Sloan's
Liniment before it gets
dangerous
Apply a tift7e, don't tett, let it pew,-
irate., anon—good-by twinge! Same for
external aches, pains, strains, stiffness
of joints or muscles, lameness, bruists.
lnrtant relief without mussiness or
'oiled clotting. Reliable—the biggest
selliltg 11111) tent year after year. Eco-
nomical by reason of enormous sales.
Keep a hug bottle ready at alt times.
Made in Canada. Ask your druggist
for Sloan's Liniment,
eine., 60c,, $1.2fl,
SUFFERED MOYERS
WITH PIMPLES
Child Could Not Sleep Till
Cuticura Healed.
"My title brother suffered for about
two years from tiny red pimples.
They appeared constantly
ii V l on his body but he had the
greatest trouble under his
ears. The skin was red
and very sore and at the
• least ve
a howl touch Afteld r a
few seconds he would have to scratch,
Sind he was not able to sleep.
"A friend advised me to send for
Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I no.
ticeda change, and I used three cakes of
Cuticura Soap and four boxes of Oint-
ment when he was healed." (Signed)
Louis Frantz, 746 City Hall Ave.,
Montreal, Que., February 2, 1918.
Keep your skin clear by using Cut!.
curs Soap and Ointment for every..
day toilet purposes.
For Free Sample Each by Mail ad.
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere.
R,
Pain? rate at'o, will atop it!
Used care to relieve rheumatism, lumbago, neuralgia, sprains, lama \
back, toothache, macho, swollen joints, sore throat and other pain. Ott
�4 fu! complaints. Have a bottle is the house. All dealers or Write as e fi
sew.
EtInST IlEM1;DY COMPANY, ElntuOton, Canada
eraseMenemettesemeareaseesasneemaemegsweerstememeeragemerseremesee
Hotcl !ci Cor
Coronado Beach, California
Near San Diego
POLO, MOTORING, TENNIS, `
, RAY ANID SURF ,T3ATFIING,
FISHING AND BOATING
18-1 101,9 Go,IP Court
unto is equipped throughout with Auto! le, '
i ptriltiCit 1
AMERICAN PLAN
JOHN J. HERMAN, Mcenatler
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