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Port Perry Star, 30 Aug 1916, p. 3

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which needs ss | cidedly indigestible. "Moreover, unable to inging these facts to the | e public, desires: 1. To call the tgention vt all } engaged in the munitions and allied industries to the importance of their service and the great " responsibility resting upon them as individuals to co-operate and' do all in their pow- | er to secure a steady and increased supply of munitions for our forces at the t. those i : sea Ee a who are anxious to voluntarily their best in this great do struggle, {es+} ed «in non- the modities which are Tuxuries | or less,) to consider employment munitions as their next best ser- vice to going overseas; 8. To urge Women's Corps to register women for munition for work which wil release . ns u be. i "ho need to emphasize the importance of the highest possible production' of munitions, The lives, the success of their | 5 upon it. State- nts from tle highest authorities in ' Great Britain and from the front bear no small tribute. to the part that mun- ition workers are pla the war to a succes! conclusion. 'The Officer: Commanding a brigade | sf: Canadian artille _ who returned | from the front last week, said: "The | Germans will never break through now. Before, they had 'munitions, ns, equipment--everything but the All "we had was "nerve". v } Emergency + | | { t0:10 to 15 , now we use 500 | gun, and one week lately we | week night and day. portant that the supply of t up and increased." Efforts to use women in munition plants are meeting with good success. In a number of places women have re- gistered, and are 'waiting to be called to work as soon as Z - instance, 95 women responded last week to the call 'of a factory there 150 to 200 women, Fifty per cent. of those who answered the call had never been in regular employ- ment before. Td bar brings us face "to Germany. | two and three jin bringing | necessary arrange-. * ments can be made. In Welland, for| On the Safe Side. Mother--If 1 give you a d'me, Char" 1ie, will you keep it to put in the plate Sunday or spend it: selfishly on your- self 7' * : Charlie--I will let you know, mam- ma, after you have given it to me. that the virus makes its membrance ose to olfactory which is descends' apinal column, setting up. an in- ¢ ation in the "anterior horns" of spinal cord which is the specific the dish de- cause of the disease. : the = It is not fatal in the majority of independence of Holland during the cases, but except where the patients pre has been an advantage receive the best skilful treatment, it| paurar (as her lover is about to ; saat = two ways. produces most: cruel deformities. in-| tat on a tour around the worl d)-- "into the cluding extreme curvature of the | yo dear Robert, promise that you through spine, and twisted and useless limbs. {will write to me From every town you neutral It Searts yesulias it visit, > "ness an ness quite unna 1 in a g children: This first stage lust us. , dove Vast hat Holland bs to aye and. is accomp ed merely collecting postage stamps ? as she does a perfect protection to' It sometimes passes off doing no Germany's right flank. Neutral na- harm but often it increases and runs tions have their uses, even from the into a mildly stuporous condition, euton standpoint. , with final onset of the acute stage, Germany has invented a curious which is followed in a day or .so by fusion of "sentimental, racial, geo- | paralysis. ; graphic and economic arguments, By this time the child may be for establishment of a European found lying on its back, with the head hegemony of non-Germanic national- | usually to one gide--the eyes entirely ities. ~ This clap-trap has excited, closed, and having on its face a tired but has not imposed upon, European I wilted. expression. From this condi- intell y Holland has gence. tion the child can be aroused sud. paid part of the price of proximity denly, by 8 gentle touch. of an extre- During the first year 1 mity.. If the leg be lifted only a of the war she spent $10,000,000 Nearly = everything makes, mines or grows each year at the Canadian 'National Exhibition. that Canada is exhibited | Suspicious. t war has | to ay in at Supplies have be partially blockaded: empire 8 Ri Tr. dinavia. Minard's Lintment Cures Dandruff. His Patient. The young doctor and his friend, the drug clerk, were sitting at the club window when a richly dressed woman passed. "There goes the only woman I ever loved," the young M. D. sighed. "S01" the other asked. "Then why don't you marry her m «Can't afford it," the doctor repli- ed; "she's my best patient." § past two : | Country" {world has ever known. While Canada lack men to gather greatest asset if the' country is to still continue the good work of the years in helping the Mother in the greatest war the has sent some hundred thousand men to the war there are still hundreds of thousands more left who have not en- listed and who are not assisting in the making of munitions. These 'have now an excellent opportunity of do- ing a little bit at home to help the war abroad. Canada's crop is of vital necessity to Great Britain and her Al-: lies so that everyone who helps in gathering in the harvest will measure be assisting in cartying giver but give excellent remuneration, You who are not helping your coun- try directly are invited to take the trip West for a couple of months and not only earn three dollars a day and board but also feel that you are help- ing the powers to end the war suc-, cessfully for our side. Any railway agent will furnish you with all the in-| formation to enable you to go to Western Canada and do your little "bit" by helping the farmers to har- vest the: great crop ~ on which so much depends, Tonic to That City. Rev. J. H. Molesworth, late incum- bent of All Saints', Cairo, writes as follows on Lord Kitchener's religion: "No one could be long in his com- pany without realizing that he was a man who viewed life seriously. I may illustrate this from the effect he little, the child will show an expres- for "extraordinary requirements." At sion of annoyance, rather than dis- the mresent time more than 850,000 tress, and if the leg be the paralyzed Dutchmen are under arms, and the one, the child ofte tries to free it national- debt: has been: raised nearly from the examiner's hands by twist- one-half by reason of military and ing the shoulders. This procedure, naval expenditure, loss of trade, Bel- we are told by the Drs. is surprising- gian relief and the destruction. of ly common, and is often accompanied shipping. Since the opening of hos- by a bored look and a sortof whine, tilities on Germany's part between ' and when left alone the patient at hundred vessels be- | once lapses into the drowsy state. longing to Holland and the Seandin- | Paralysis comes on unheraled; in avian neutrals have been sunk by the: the morning a child can move its arms Germans in the North Sea. * | freely--a few hours later it is found mmr Aen ts. lying quietly, as betore, Du when it rolls over one arm falls back limp. * BABYS GREAT DANGER | "No one can tell just when the para- DURING HOT WEATHER lysis is going to strike--sometimes it -- | seems to prefer an arm, but often it More little 'ones die during the hot "strikes in one or both of the lower' weather than ot any other time of limbs, or even in the face, if the in-| the year. Diarrhoea, dysentery, chol- jury be in the brain. The eye muscle era infantum and stomach troubles is sometimes attacked, come without warning, and when 2 upon. which part of the brain is in-| total railway mileage of the Domin- medicine is, not at hand to. give jured, jon up to 35,682 miles, The increase promptly the short delay too. fre=| | A sore throat may indicate this | during the last twelve years has quently means that the child has, dreaded diseases, though mistaken. 88 been 87 per cent. In addition to the passed beyond all aid. Baby's | Own the result of 4 cold. " |lines completed there were, on: June Tablets should always be kept in} When death occurs in these cases, it | 30, 1915, 1,161 miles of railway con- homes where there are young chil is generally caused by the failure of | tracted for and 432 miles completed, | but not yet classified as under opera- Granulated Eyelids, Eyes inflamed by expos sure to Sun, Dust and Wind uickly relieved by Murine ye Remedy. No Smarting, Sore Fves y jum Ege Confor, AY Druggist's 50c SalveinTubes25c, ForBook ol theEyeFreeask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Some Dinner. «Was it much of a dinner?" «] should say it was. There were geven different kinds of forks at each plate." Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere, Railway Mileage Increasing. The increase of railway mileage in A Canada for the year ending June 380, depending | 1015, was 4,787 miles, bringing the dren. An occasional dose of the the muscles that control the act of Tablets will prevent stomach and breathing: These muscles are the tion. bowel troubles, or if the trouble diaphragm and the intercostal ar-! comes suddenly the prompt use of tached to the ribs. If only one set is the Tablets will cure the baby. The ' paralyzed the child may live, but if Tablets are sold by medicine dealers both are involved breathing ceases and or by mail at 25 cents a box from death occurs. The average mortality | The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. of this disease varies from 10 to 20 Brockville, Ont. | per cent. Go. TER i wm----p---- So little is known of the disease, I 3 5 that even when paralysis has set in, INFANTILE PARALYSIS {it is impossible to tell whether it By Chas. Mu Bice, Denver, Colo. {oil Jeogtess io She, point of causing The present epidemic of Infantile eath,' or merely of making a Hb: Paralysis in New York, Montreal, and pleas will pass off leaving the child other Eastern Cities, and its liability | ae . + The Drs. admit they have discov- to &pread, for it is very contagious, qo specific form of therapy by gt. Isidore, P.Q., Aug. 18, 1894, Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,--I have frequently used MINARD'S ' LINIMENT and also prescribe it for my patients always with the most gratifying results, and 1 consider it the best all-round Lini- ment extant. - i . Yours truly, DR. JOS. AUG. SIROIS. ber | lost mysterious plagues of " hood 3 and so far, med | rible to face with one of the : x 1d which paralysis can be prevented, as The Period of Adjustment. * produced = society in Cairo, when he went there to take up his position as British Agent and Consul General. Cosmopolitan places like the capital of Egypt, which are largely the haunts. of pleasure, are often given over to a frivolity which is not seen | in cities of commerce and business. | There is frequently a relaxing of | morals beyond what is witnessed | elsewhere, and a general air of un- discipline, and it goes without say- ing that in such places Sunday and Sunday worship are at a discount. | «Tt would be foolish to assert that Cairo was free from these vieos.| But the coming of Lord Kitchener in- stantaneously wrought a change. He was known to be a man of unswerv- ing devotion to duty, of disciplined life, of resolute purpose. Instinctive- ly we all braced ourselves up, and it was as though a tonic had been ad- ministered to the place. So far as his work permitted, Lord Kitchener was regular and punctual in his church attendance, and this at once told beneficially upon the Sunday habits of the community. «He was president of All Saints' Church committee, and I never re- member his omitting to take the] chair, even when hard pressed by State business. «Earl Kitchener was indeed a type of that simple, manly, straightfor- ward Christianity which we associate with the best English laity, which does not trouble itself indeed about subtle questions and controversies, | but rests on the broad facts of re- velation, and in simplicity practises its tenets." | ee lye SHARED UP TALKING SHOES. Unlike Us, the South Sea Islanders Like a Squeaky Shoe. Like the native Africans, the South . > - the inflammatory process may be the world has het it, hastened. Hence, about the only Selence eons pe ey ro. Way is to prevent: the spread of the Clo aly allied bas hy ter disease to other persons, and by giv- oo Cs ao ing such remedies as are known to plague, 'procure relief, and that often restore "Why do they say. that the first year of married life is almost the most difficulv?" . "Because that's the tim she has to get used to the fact that he isn't making all the money in the world and is ie ever-present pest the common fly, chiefly concerned ; i ros! i 3 muscular power in other afflictions, ding the contagion. enting deformities. genral treatment is similar to infections, such as scar- he has to adjust himself to the dis- covery that his little angel has a tem- per and uses it at times." Minard's Diniment Relieves Neuralgia. > Anni |; In. one of a {corndr, He had am such sad eyes, us. tongue, hich she was using hotels where I in with "talking" shoss.. Admiiad to the table|™" "© _g while she had a vitu- | Sea Islanders are very proud if they can get hold of a pair of European shoes. They are especially gratified if they acquire a pair that squeak, or, as the Africans call them, "shoes that talk." A story is told of a South Sea Islanders, who came into church with shoes merrily a-squeak. He walked proudly to the' front of the room, and, removing his shoes, dropped them out of the window, so that his wife might also have the pleasure of ON NRE [lh 4 . & - an ash 8 in some BED on the war to a successful issue. tations. | The effort will not only be a health Ontario Velgrinary College Under the Control Hed epart- ESTABLISHED 1863 Affiliated with the Univer- a) sity of Toronto. Cotlege Will Ee Ch oben 1916: 110 University Ave, Toronto, Can. CALENDAR ON APPLICATION ~ E. A A Gronge, V.S., MS. Prac : sm SEED POTATOES POTATOES: IRISH COB- blers, Deleware, Carman. Order Supsly limited. Write for quo- H. W. Dawson, Brampton. a HELP WANTED. ADIES WANTED TO DO PLAIN and light sewing at home, whole at once. or spare time ; good pay ; work sent ee ann Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Bt. C2 i om ee Wt am stamp Manufacturing Company, Montreal. any distance, for send * National charges paid ; particulars. NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE PETE, NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and Interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Com= pany, 78 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS NCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. internal and external. cured withe | w LORD KITCHENER'S RELIGION, | §3 uElore tao later Bt een Medioal late. 4 Limited. Collingwood. Ont. His Conduct at Cairo Proved a Real f BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Mailed free to any address by America's the Author Pionzer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. \ Jog Remsdiss | 118 West 31st Street, New York Gl emr-------------- Nat a gh: RY The Soul of a Planois the Action, Insist on the «OTTO HIGEL" Piano Action ee -------------- A Gold Mine On Your Farm You can double your profits by storing up good green feed in a BISSELL SILO egummer Feed all Winter Long" Scientifically built to keep silage fresh, gweet and good to the last. Built of select~ ed timber treated with wood preservatives that prevent Qecap The BISSELL SILO hi strong, rigid walls, air-tight doors, hoops of heavy steel. Sold by dealers or address us direct. Get free folder, Write 7. B. Bissell Co, Ltd. Dept. U Elore, Ontario. Mr. Dairyman See our Exhibit of - KING Cream Separators WESTERN FAIR LONDON, ONT. Sept. 8th to 16th King Separator Works of Canada Bridgeburg, Machinery For Sale Wheelock Engine, 150 H.P.,, 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins, wide, and Dynamo 30 K.W. belt driven. All in first class condition. Would b sold together or scpal Ont.

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