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The Clinton News Record, 1918-10-17, Page 7attra 'sy Peace Stooks iVow 'Virlrite for list of selected in- vestments which yield from CEtto.1091 with absolute security. "Booklet on Partial PAY'- Wren'* Plall mailed .on re- 'quest.", e-'guest" I;C. M. CONNOLLY 4 CO. 4embers Montreal Ntock Wachs ace 106.106 Transdortatlon punding MONTREAL, QUE. HAT CANADA HAS DONE FOR THE WAR HAS PRODUCED SIXTY MILLIONS OF SHELLS ,Dominion Has Given "52,000 Men and Maintained This'Strength Despite 160,000 Casualties. • Canada's contribution of 552,000 men, and her ability to maintain her strength on the front line, despite. 160,000 casualties, are her chief sourceof pride. Yet, at the same time, she has provided.her allies .with large quantities of munitions during the four years of the war and is serving them to -day with steadily increasing effectiveness. What has been ac- complished is summarized by the Di- rector of Public Information as fol- lows: Total number of shells produced, 60,000. Approximate number of compen- ents represented by above, for which Imperial Munitions Board has let separate contracts, 670,000,000. In the production of war material steel has been used to the amount bf 1,800,000 tons. „(About 76 per cent.. of this steel is Canadian product.) Quantity of high-grade explosives and propellants produced, 100,000,000 lbs. Value of ordu's placed by the Bri- tish Government through the Imper- ial Munitions Board, $1,200,000,000. Amount of orders already executed, $1,000,000,000. (This figure repre- sents the actual amount of cash dis- bureemelits.) ,Amount furnished by Imperial Gov- ernment for above purposes from sources outside of Canada, $400,000,- 000. Amount loaned to the Imperial Government by the Government of ..a Canada and by the banks in Canada for the purposes of the Imperial Mun- itions Board, $600,000,000.. Approximate number of contrac- tors in Canada amongst whom con- tracts for munitions have been dis- tributed, 1,000. First :Shipment in Three Months. honer.111 i n11'1111 Days y1s Suitable for :afternoon or evening wear and quote che'rming when de- veloped in Satin or any soft material. McCaig Pattern No. 8545, Ladles' Dress. In 6 .sizes, 94 to 44 bust, Price, 25 rant: . a' 115 IICC.tc, A simple dress to be slipped on over the head, with the s'traigh't silhouette .,and touch of braiding. "Immediately after the outbreak of the war," says the Canadian Bank of Commerce, "the British Government enquired of the Canadian'•authoritiea as to the possibility of obtaining • shells from Canada. Some of the leading manufacturers were inter- ested in the matter and 'initial ex- periments were made, with the result that the, first shipment took place in - December, 1914—or three months after the inception of the undertaking. Before the close of 1915 orders to the extent of $800,00Q,000 were placed -- in Canada and represented such a volume of business as to necessitate the formation of a board in Canada directly responsible to the Imperial Ministry of Munitions. Under the direction of this board the work in- volved has been organized and to its thoroughness is due the ability of Canadian industries to assist the Un- ited' States Government' substantially in providing for their overseas forces." Keep •rhe garden clean from end. In using corn syrup es a substitute for sugar in je'E'y-making use three- quarters of a cupful of :fruit juice. In preserving use equal weight of syrup and fruit. 11.111,111i d Tll l Affi Whenthe morninA cup is unsatisfactory supe you make a change from thea cid-time beverae to the snappIT cereal drink you'll be surprioed at its yl q, aetissfqualities aid d®i4 )±fur favor.ft y health no try & lin, tIli 'tV. of -'i, McCall] Pat- tern''No. 8497, Ladies' Slip -On Dreisis: Al 6 sizes, 84 to 44 bust, Price, 20 cents, and No. 8459, Ladies' and Misses' Peasant Blouse. In 0 sizes, 32 to 42 bonen. Price, 20 cents. Transfer Design No 912. Plaice, 15 cents. • IllaMO JPAI<ACU Sib' KAISER N � R.E ER Austrrllian .Seidler Tells of Life in the Holy Dural, Detteriptiou of rl;'alestine, and paf- titularly Ol Jerrtanlern, is contained In SAYS A WRITER IN TIIE LONDON a letter seat by IY, A. Walter, of the Australlen Light Bailee, to a relative DADA MAIL in'ti'orouto, 'Trooper Walker has been • in Palestine for the past 12 months, having previously ;Nue through the Bat 'We Must .13e Careful Not To *Gallipoli cainpargn. )le says: All<Ily '! ltttir, Capacity for weep- ",lerusalern is wOl Siem r elty.. It is aboutin theIto dirarytiestae ,,lase ing to Excite Our Sympathy, I have ever been in,. Its streets are narrow,especia1lV in the old city, WHEN CORNERED A one-sided effect of satin and a oont+ra's'ting matterial. The tunic is au't circular and is not silua.ight at the lower edge. McCall Pattern N. 8806, Misses' Dress. In 4 sizes, "14 to 20 years. Price, 20 <Orbs. • Under the heading;, t"1'11e Run es a which ss built vrithain the walls, You llhlbborel'," E, 10, Il, writes in the know Jerusalem is divided into two London Daily Mail: parts, That wilitth is outside the"771, influence which, in the end, walls is built more or less on the praises a nation great or small is its European style, but with very narrow temperament. Either it can bear it- streets, Sonne of the )streets in the self proudly—its spirit taco qu I old art are not more than six feet in a period of adversity or it cannot, wide and 'there are thousands of Ta "How will the German to ne- ml steps, as the ground is so rugged, and ment disclose itself when the pinch I tell you that by the tirxie you have comes? Never yet has it been seri- climbed these stoles for a while+you orally tested. In previous wars it has known only success in trade it has been flattered by constant prosperity, and in the present war it has had the 'map' to soothe it. "So far, then, the inwardnessof the German temperament is an unknown quantity. But I have come into son- tact with a good deal, of it as a result of having tocall upon, and put some pertinent questions to, an interesting variety of unlnterned aluns in our midst, and this much I am prepared to say: Just as the Hun is the worst tyrant, bully and ravisher in the world when ha-has the power to -ex- ercise his o-exercise„itis instinct, so is he the most cringing coward known to humanity when he is cornered. Some Specific Examples. "My experience with our Huns is that they always begin to peep when the inquiries become searching. At first it is rather embarrassing to see a big, fat, healthy German blubbering like a baby. "There was the rich German whom I visited at his luxurious house in the South of London to ask how he came to get petrol every month for his motor carat a time of acute shortage. When he was pressed for an answer tears of extraordinary size and num- ber—like great raindrops—coursed down his cheeks. Somehow they cre- ated the impression that he could pro- duce them to order. When he could cry no more he said that he 'only got two gallons a month to give the car a run and keep it In order.' With a sob, he added the justification: 'It's a very beautiful car.' "After a while you realize that this capacity to cry is part of the nature of the German. There was a Hun manufacturer who had contracts with the War Office early in the war and fine stuff and acts like a charm every who, when I asked him v. few points time. want to rest, "Tho population of the city is com- posed mostly of Jews, but there are Greeks, Armenians, Bedouins, Arabs, French, Russians, Assyrians and Turks, of which -last there' is a -good number, "I do not know how many gates there are in the wall, but they are all very narrow, so narrow, indeed, that the Kaiser, when he visited Jerusalem, had 22 feet tint away near the Jaffa gate so that he could get his proces- sion through. The castle the Kaiser had built for himself is at present being used by one of the units here for quarters.” 0 o e o v' YES, LiFT A CG11N OFF WITHOUT PAIN Cincinnati man tells how to' dry up a corn or callus so it lifts off with fingers: e--ort.--o 0 0 0 -0 -0 -0—a -•0--o 'You corn -pestered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly stilled you beffore, says this Cincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone applied directly on a tender, aching corn or callus, stops soreness at once and soon the corn or hardened callus loosens so it can bo lifted off, root and all, without pain. A small bottle of freezone costs very little at any drug store, but will posi- tively take off every hard or soft corn or callus. ''Phis should be tried, as it is inexpensive and is said not to irri- tate the surrounding skin. If your druggist hasn't any freezone tell hien to get a small bottle for you from - his wholesale drug house. It is about his business, wept so copiously las to suggest that he would never he able to answer. And the German Id h g7 , iven per a to her A Modern Sisyphus. Elneline, who was watching some househer onohaving o , teen working a pile driver, cam emptory notice to a British family to mother with this complaint. clear out of a house, cried like a child on being asked about it. "The German women,cry less than the men. "A woman I sa: w a Highbury rep- again.,, "I'm so sorry for those men, mamma. They've been trying and trying to lift out that big welgbt, and every time they get it most to thetop it falls back resented her cult. -'o What right has anybody in Engh.nd to say 'a word against our own dear Kaiser?' she demanded fiercely. "But when the Huns have been conquered we shall have to be careful of'theircapacity to weep. They will use it for all they are worth to excite sympathy.” Distillation of Wood. The destructive distillation of hard- woods is the only important distilla- tion industry in Canada where wood is used as raw material. There are now 13. plants in Ontario and Quebec, and the industry is well organized. It is gratifying to note that manufae- tnro is curried beyond the stage of the crude products, where so many of Canada's industrial activities cease, and that the specially refined and der- ived products are produced in Canada for local and export trade. In the It might bother the OMB who piles barnyard manure a foot deep cl'o'se tip to the trunk of his apple trees, to tell just why he floe's at. Batt ilf he tva11 .spread it around as far out as the roots grow, he well soon have a rea- (3on for the faith that is in him. Miaard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs; •-I can recommend DII- NARD'S• LINIWENT for Rheumatism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. Youlls truly, T. B. LAVERS, St. Jolts. United list of chemicals which are regularly exported from Canada there are only three' of much importance; namely, calcium carbide, acetate of lime and methyl alcohol, the last two of which are entirely produced by I hardwood distillation. It is import- ant to remember that practically all the 'wood. 'alcohol and acetic acid whieh' are se essential to modern civilization are produced by the des- tructive distillation of hardwoods. The plants in Canada consume, in the aggregate, over 500 cords of wood per day. Maple, I beech and birch are the principal species used, although oak, hickory and other hard- woods are' suitable if obtainable. LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKI : Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands. At the cost of a small jar ot ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint ot the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by equcezing the jtflce of two fresh lemons Into a bottle contain- ing three ounces of orchard w111te. Care should be taken to strain the juice through' a. floe cloth so no lemon lfnlp.,gets 01, then this lotion will keep fresh for months, Every woman knows that lemon juice Is used to 'bleach and Lemm . such blemishes es freckles, snlir.wnesi:-and tan Rail is the ideal 11 in :enamels whitener and bee.ntt fl er. Just try i11 Oct. throe ounces of orchard white at any drug stere and two lemons•. from I ho gpocer and mho up a quarter pint of this sweetly frag- rant lemon lotion and massage it daily Onto the face, neck, arms and hands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red Maude. Pansies covered with straw or Featuring the strGt vest wub11 the 1143"°5213)11 go tbrouigll 'Nle wihrber' in e e dd•ests ;Nilranin,g 'good shape and bloom early in i'lie bosom. 11�%Ca�l9. I'•fubtern 85'T2, sew' Dl'oss, In 6 sizes, 84 i<) 'l4 MAMMA'S 1.111.1111011t Urea Stirlen. lite trtihs oven panels f vpring Walt- PI!,0rf 26 cents, Ikanssifc'r i)e." 0)rr13o, 922. Pirko, 15 a ante. hese patterns may he ebtanned fa+omi'youa' local McCisil da'atex or from d1te Metall Co,, 70 Bond St, Tor, onkda Dept. W. Rhubarb ,beds Should have a heavy coat of ,m,anuie 'through the. w:inler, Asparagus, too, after the float -killed 1top,s have been mowed off and batty ed, Gaither squashes before killing frost. Brach the dirt from the un- derside and turn them bottom side up to dry thoroughly. Store in a clay, frost -proof piece. Miaard'a Lininteat for sale everywhere. The war gardens of Canada this year have •produced anywhere from $40,000,000 to $90,000,000 worth of fruit and vegetables. This produc- tion shcuid be 'ovai'til about $50,000,- 000. • T3rltui'n's. J'owsr'Qatiiuia The coal tried in Great I3rUil11. mid be made to do three WTlnee its present work if converted into Oleos Welty at large central power plants, according to the report of the 13'rl- fish Cont Conservation Sub -committee to the Ministry .of Reconatruction, `there are now about six hundred power stations, generating an aver- age of 5,000 lap. ene11, scattered throughout Great Britain, and it is recommended that these he replaeed by sixteen "super -power" $1;010110 from which transmission lines would radiate to all parts of the country.. The generators til these Weald pro- duce from 30,000 to 50,000 llm'e, power Idlagrri'a Liniment Corea Uaadenlf, Co'eicin,gerhool Teacher: "Dill your husband hike the doughnuts you made • "Yes, !.„ Mrs, Nm•tved: ho was delip,k'ted, Ile said that if 1 could only 'make them large enough Ire could serve on his motto -'lire biU)<s•„' NURSI N G Earn hem 510 tapas week. .Acorn without loavl,, h0'me. IIookkt cent Ireo. ROYAL COLLIICE OA 5SCIENCE, 700 ea Ip.a!onn,Ye., Tcroato, Can. STOPS &YILZ•NESS i best tjou cati gat =man,. enreorsommist l -if? IMS 0/00' 9ASIES from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bone; Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar troubles and gets Some going sound., It acts mildly but quickly and good re--- sults e-sults are lasting. Does not blister or remove the hair and horse can be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet with each bottle tells bow. $2.50 a bottle delivered. 'Horse Book 9 It free. ABSORIIINh, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, En - forged Glands,Wens,Bruises,VarieoseVeins; n-forgedGlands,Wens,Bruises,VaricoseVeins; heals Soren. Allays Pain. Will tell you more if you write. $1.25 a bottle at dealers or delivered. Liberal trial bottle for 10c stamp,. W. F.YOUNO. P. D. F..5161rma1s 51do. Idontreat. Cant .rosurwut sue sesoroffi6 .10.. ars made 10. Dnada,. 'MONEY. Ofiflf'5$, sena a Dominion Eapr'lt0s :Borley Wider. ']!'ire Dollars moat three Wants, tritest+ Soho bring 8.1111E+1l)lle t0 the lye's of etlite s 60011004 lteep it retail theinselvees. d. lel, )33u'13'e, a satztoie+g Tnlalrnerlt R0U'vss Neuralgia, Serbia consists of horl- aoaltltl ,tripes of rely ,bl'ua and white. SHOE POLISHES ilL eIl4Yiil5 tili7,DAN BROINM 3R Ox 01.000 SHOES E1R SERVEitieL1ATHCR 'tet` a atrtoedn,O100MTIOOI 1O �r'CJIjtt,l51iern t0N1a tllhaflag ol' a.rvArFe�.,as+.aer.lun•a#a.s.me .10.100.A o 'Biliousness Doetore avayu againei remedies containing powcrfnl drnxa sand ti alcohol. "The Extract of floats, 7 long known as Molter litigcl'a Curative Syrup, ban no elope or strong itOSeerliontaq 1t'-eureg indigestion, biliouenese and ,.constipation. Can be had at any drug store.” Get the genuine. SOc. and $1,00 Bottles. 3 to itaireaaRo Di s ell011133 E1bo1,, m all gura, tworls. Malec fight, wholnoo.o bread, .;.e roe++n oro., wtthow reeuSle. Savo dour pad Lee coo r,,, the Notion i food ewplt, 0 - Conveokni, qu:ei rood dean-'h.nd, r.00 c do not<ouch dough. Delivered all chary psid to your home, or t.,.: through your <leaier— ,11 four loaf ,:to $2.711 eight loaf sae 52.25, E.'r. WR rQHTOO., HAMILTON CANADA 44014041 Ws,17,`t'I2» 1"p ai 1t'A' R A t T AC#1917!1`p w,Ai1Tt tit J, good prlata, 'traiiinilnit a spool 1Y.. ),'carnes 011U everything at lowest pr 9sirh Ignited Birt Oa, 4 Itranawieic Ya.. Toronto. WA Ift:Bla J ) ALIIP NIAX,... DUCTS 1)IALIV35R 31D, Mita wail, Onto io, field Pros,* id Stilwell Un,tfleiO '03% 04747 ]fi] 101+1e 10QUt1'1'ii)6 til:W8PA'PPR 1 s anUob printtner plant In 1Uµa_t_ern Ontario, Insurance carried $1.500. YF'll 60 far 51,200 on nulck sale. Box 09, 'Wilson Publishing Co. Ltd., Toronto, '% 7'y1/11:3C1:r W)0W i>APxcli 1 )1 sALS 5 In New Ontario. Uwnnr eointl to ;Prance, will sell 02,000, worth double thut amount. Apply d, 14„' ern \t'Usen Publishing Co„ Limited, Toronto; ragimm Ar mot, 1 N rnlal T dye xflernal L cured with- out fh- otut nein by Our home treatment. Writs us before late, 11ngwood,t1Onta Medical GET SLOAN'S FOR rdAtSagOA YOUR PAIN 3EL1EF You don't have to rub it in to get quick, comfort- ing relief Once you've tried it on that stiff joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheu- matic twinge, lame back, you'll find a warm, soothing relief you never thought a liniment could produce-. Won't stain the skin, leaves no muss, wastes no time in applying sure to give quick results. A large bottle means economy. Your own or any other druggist has it, ' Made in Cait- ada. Get it today. ISSUE No, '! "1 CUT C A ALS RITMO ECZEMA So Bad Could Not Sleep. Red With Water Blisters and Burning. SoI had eczema so had I could not sleep It first started on nay arm, then I had it on my body so that I could hardly wear my clothes, and I had to stay in bed. My flesh was dark red with water blisters, and burning and itching. "Everything I tried seemed to make me worse, and I bad the trouble for nearly two years. I read about Cuti- curs Soap and Ointment, and I got them. They did me good right away, and now I am entirely healed." (Signed) Mrs. Peter McIntosh, French River, Ont., April 10, 1917. Row often such distressing, disfig. uring skin troubles might be prevented by every -day use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment for all toilet purposes. For Free Sample Each by Mail ad- dress poet -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U.S. A." Sold everywhere. Pain? Hirst's will stop it! Used for 40 years to relieve rheumatism, lumbago, neuralgia, sprains, lame back, toothache, earache, swollen Joints, sore throat and other pain. ful complaints. Have a bottle in the house. All dealers or write us. f3IRST REMEDY COMPANY. Hamilton, Canada taR -?"67-79-1 incweed . the .� Two Sizes -50c and $1 ,For 32 yearn Canadine women have found Ingram's Milkweed Cream the most efficient toilet preparation on the market for keeping the complexion clear end colorful, prevent- ing windburn and pimples, keeping the hands soft and white even when In dish- water doily, and warding off hong naffs from the lingers. It has therapeutic quali- ties no Other emollient possesses. Always have a box of Ingram's Velveota Souveraine Face Powder (50c) In the house. A meretouch and oiliness and perspiration disappear, It covers up blemishes and gives you a clear, flawless complexion. It eters on. At your druggist's there le a complete line of Ingram's toilet products Including Sodenta for the teeth (25e). A Picture with Each Purchase Each time you buy a package of Ingram's Toilet aids or Perfume your druggist will give you,without eharge,o large portrait of a world -famed motion picture actress. Each time you get a di fferent portrait oo you make a collection foryoarhome.Aekyourdruggist. F. F. Ingram Co. Windsor, Ontario Iea-,rese. saara C o recd style worn by wel dressed yo mpg wen in all localities Lace boot—madam narrow made doe, loco keeb-snad5 in blab, daft or jleknl half; Mee, $g.oe la $ro.0O. Good Value and How to Get it 1. OUR. interest, ft}j, a member of the consuming public, and ours as Canada°a largest manufacturers of shoes, are really identical. They may be summed up its a single phrase: "Quality Shoes at Fair Prices.” A fair price today is a higher price than usual, because the cost of every item of material and labor which goes into a pair of shoes has increased greatly and is still increasing. In order that you may continue to get quality alt fair prices, We shall feature in advertisements certain specific shoes which ' we know will give you good value. From our knowledge and experience, -we wilt suggest 10 ao1i the best Inethoda of buying, whether you select: shoes of our manufacture or not. We ask you to buy for service rather than merely for style; to go 10 11 rt'liallc dealer, and 1'o look for the manufacturer's tirade -mark ell tale shoes. By so,doing you may be assured ref good vallate or you, I1lOrt$yr. AMES HOLDEN McCREA Y L 1(911) '°s$hoemakers to the Nation" "I 9'r.101117 MoNT itAL , 'i`OnONT(1 When you buy Shoos lock/or" WINNLP6G BO 0141'014 VANc:olo::0 - Pi7ts xS acte•niark on every sols -9- s,,,,...- x+trr•" �''�yap.�'6.�az',�.a"i.":w..,ini i x e- sti . afro'' uMTw ns° a r�sl�,r