Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 12 Aug 1915, p. 7

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' ' '""V ~~ r " " i -' ' - Young Fo/ks keep children well during hot weather Every mother knows how fatal the hot summer months are to small- children. children. Cholera infantum, diarrhoea, dysentry and" stomach troubles are j rife at this time and often a precious On Guard. There was a border of mignonette little life is lost after only a few.- The mother who keeps - He Is, Air Right. 1 | : was - riotr drily a lack of male help in* "Dear Teacher," wrote the anxious, this work, but it was seriously corn- mother, "I am afraid Johnny is not promised by lack of horses. To trying enough!" , facilitate the work the Government "Dear Madame," replied the nervous advanced the sums necessary for the teacher, "I assure you Johnny is the see d and agricultural implements on most trying boy in his class!" *. Comforting News. Professor of Chemistry- -If round the pansy bed, and the young hours illness , x ._, v mignonettes were just getting their Baby's Own Tablets irt the house feels | thing should go wrong in this experi- eÿes open. - j safe. The occasional use of the Tab- j ment, we, and the laboratory with S (Ï^Mrs.^ Pansy!" said one to her kts prevents stomach and bo Wei troii- nearest neighbor. "What is that aw- hies, or if troubles come suddenly-- ful. thing coming through the grass ?" . as it generally does---the Tablets will Mrs. Pansy laughed. "You [/little ; bring the baby safely through. They darling!" (Mignonette means little are s °id by medicine dealers or by darling, you know.) "That's Mr. mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Toad, our policeman. He's our best Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, friend. There are three of them in 0nt - this garden, and I wish that there were a dozen. He saved my life once. COTTON AND WARFARE. "O Mrs. Pansy," shuddered young A T . . / Mignonette, "tell me about it!" -Not a Shot Fired Which Cotton Has Not Propelled. W. S. Hopkins, Secretary of open, and I was like you. The world F^ÎL confe re nce of Chemists and seemed very strange, and I was afraid ' st g „ v*' advances the following us, might be blown sky high. Come closer, gentlemen,. so that you may be better able to follow me. anticipated indemnities. The creaking, lumbering, two- wheeleck carts loaded with. carrots turnips, cabbages, onions and other any- vegetables, driven by men in capes resembling resembling thé Alpine Chasseur's "beret," that were to be encountered in the streets pf Paris before the war are now driven by women. It is 'due almost entirely to them that Paris is not deprived of the famous cauliflower cauliflower from Chambourcy, the cele- went brated white turnips of Croissy-sur 'It was long, long ago, quite early in the spring, while I was still young and tender. My first eye was lust vt >•" -u ±1 °P klns » Secretary of the . T 'lit. ™,? y -rTr Jffi ? rltlsh conference of Chemists and Took Nor Chances. Old Waiter--So, after the job I th^^.u v UU ucucvcn ■ ,, . .. . that the office should seek the man? ! * ae delicious green peas of Ciamart, Old Patron--I do, but this is a fat the lu xunous asparagus of job ând I thought it might get winded before it reached me! * • I thought you believed ? ?* ine ^* h ?_ caTTots __ of M °ntesson and Argenteuil. of everything. 'It was a lovely moonlight The orchards'were in'bTooXand^the 1 SI! °L Shr ! ipnel ' J is manufactured, ; strong views: When a shell, whether high explo- Corns Drop Out Instant Relief on Putnam's Extractor to-j two air was full of sweet odors. I was' charges are just thinking what a beautiful and g d separate and entirely different One is the charge 1 kills a Faint Corn night, and corn® feel- better in the morning. morning. Magical t h e 1 way "Putnam' a" Chronic Shin Disorders Now Overcome Quickly AFTER WATERLOO. When Waterloo and Wellington are °. ne the chief topics of conversation conversation it is interesting to read the following following letter by Wellington the day after the battle of Waterloo :-- Poor Canning had my small des There is no hope of getting rid of • P^ch-box in our battle yesterday, disfiguring skin blemishes until the and when he was killed it was lost. I shall be very much obliged if you will send me another of the same size peaceful world it wvriu. ,u was whan x-l. 0 , necessar y t° send the shell from the ground near my roots began to heave 1 fnd +£? ? °7 er the trenches » and out crawled a queer creature. You ter the shotVnd t( \ b lf st lt and scat ' think Mr. Toad is ugly but vou IZ •+ ? * ands hell over " our men ought to have seen that Cutworm." : Now'take'^ ^ ch ° se ^ "0 Mrs Pansv w Ko+ /M/i o : f/ ow take a way or capture the propel- Were you terribly.frightenedf" ' to araw^is^sheU 16 gunner have ' "What cnnld T dn ?" ocVoj -m-^c . tn ^ ow his shell or use hand-gren- Pansy solemnly. "We plants are so ' dfsten^* impracticable for lon 8 helpless! I couldn't rün; I couldn't* This connfrv line -Pa'i d • a call for help. Then I saw a huge dark ' by allowtog 1 Lw»a«L ! creature hopping toward me. 1 freelv tn tL -p ^ g didn't know what it was. I thought tu^ofUtoeTsu^s " that all was over. Soon Mr. Toad r rv»îc? ,, _ _ was hopping away down the path and ; f ew materials which the ° n Germans the worm was gone. It was a long cannot do without Not a shell is time before I knew what, had become fired that is not propelled by cotton, R ' ^tone da y J heard Patty and and not a machine-gun or rifle bullet etty talking about toads and cut- ; which has killed and wounded our andTwhaTl hadYe kn6W ^ Wa ®,' ' brave men that has not been sent on how. Mr Tood JTAw'if™"', ^.™y. b y. cotton. Mr. Lloyd George blood is purged of every trace of un clean matter. Wonderful results follow the use of as the last, with Tame lock* and kev . "'"v r u n n a m s - , Dr. Hamilton's Pills which provide i and Ipatlipr ^ n 6 10CK and key ease® the pain, destroys the roots,- ; the blood with the elements it nJeds ! 5 d th T . T' &C " as soon as " com for all time. No pain.! ' to become rich and red. dS P.? sslble - Let it have in it a stilall Get a 25c. bottle of I - Quickly indeed the blood is brought to normal strength, is filled with nutrition, nutrition, is given power to drive out of Cure guaranteed. "Putnam's" Extractor to-day. * Along The Main Line. "Our new cook is a great improvement improvement over the old one." "In what way?" "She only requires a week's notice when we are going to have company for dinner." Mr. Toad ate that worm, little darling." "Ate it!" gasped Mignonette. Mrs. Pansy nodded solemnly. "And saved my life. I had only three branches then, and that worm would stated in the House, recently, that one of the surprises of this war has been the extraordinary amount of ammunition used, and that "during the fortnight of fighting in and around Neuve Chapelle almost have cat them all off before mining. j mu7h ammutition Tarspen^T our Handsome is that handsome does, , artillery as during the -whole of the say I, I love my friends for what they are." "Oh, so do I!" whispered Mignonette, Mignonette, as Mr. Toad hopped by again. "Really, he has beautiful eyes, and he looks so strong. I hope that he will stay close by." "He will," replied Mrs. Pansy cheerfully. cheerfully. "This is his regular beat, and he'll keep it clear of bugs and, worms, never fear."--Youth's Companion. British forces waste food Montreal, May 29th, '09. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Yarmouth, N.S. Gentlemen,--I beg to let you know that I have used MINARD'S LINIMENT LINIMENT for some time, and I find it the best I have ever used for the joints and muscles. Yours very truly, THOMAS J. HOGAN. The Champion Clog and Pedestal Dancer of Canada. When He Remembers. "What, fighting again? How many times must I tell you not to fight?" "I don't know, ma. You see I forget forget all about your instructions except except whei^ the other hoy is bigger than I am." possible. silver or thick glass inkstand with ohe of Bramah's patent penholders and one of his pens. What do you the system the humors that • cause ! think of the total defeat of Buonaparte Buonaparte by the British Army? Never was there in the annals of the world so desperate or so hard-fought an action action or such a defeat. It was really the battle of the giants.^ My heart is broken by the terrible loss I have sustained sustained of my old friends and companions companions and my poor -soldiers. I shall not be satisfied with the battle, how-' ever glorious, if it doest not of itself put an end to Buonaparte. "Poor Canning" was Lieut.-Colonel Charles Fox Canning, the duke's aide-de-camp throughout the Peninsular Peninsular War and at Waterloo, and brother of Lord Stratford de Redcliffe. rashes, pimples, pasty complexion and kindred ills. Don't delay. Get Hamilton's Hamilton's Pills to-day; they go to work at once and give prompt results. Mild, efficient, safe Tor- men and women or children. Get a 25c. box to-day from any dealer.; VANISHING GOLD. -*- V Report That Soldiers Clean With Bread. Boots Boer War." A moderate computation of 300,000 shots fired by the Germans, Austrians, Austrians, and Turks from their ordinary 3-inch field guns every twenty-four hours necessitates a consumption of 500 tons of cotton. If one-tenth of the 300,000 shots is fired by, say 6-in. guns the expenditure of cotton is 900 tons every twenty-four hours. Add to this 100 tons a day for thé enormous expenditure of ammunition ■■ L>i egro. Choice of Scenic and Direct for machine guns and for the millions «T 4 !! through the best of the West. LOW I* ABES TO THE CALIFORNIA EXPOSITION'S VIA CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN BY. Four splendid daily trains from the New Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Francisco. Los Angeles and San Diego. Choice of The report that the British soldier usés bread to clean his boots has caused an officer attached to the Quartermaster General's staff to make a statement in the London Times, regarding regarding the wastage of food in the army, which he thinks is no more to blame in this respect than the civil population. "There is no doubt," the officer says, "that where a very large number of men are assembled together under blane parish have taken the matter military conditions the appearance of ! up, and, under the direction of the of rifles in use, we. get a total of 1,000 tons of cotton consumed a day. Yet, although these facts must have been known a few weeks after the outbreak of war, our enemies have been allowed to import freely. A Substitute for Cotton Wool. The Red Cross authorities in Britain Britain having pointed out the scarcity and dearness of cotton wool for dressing dressing purposes, and explained that the moss on the hills is an excellent substitute, substitute, the school children in Strath- Something to see all the way. Double track, Automatic electric safety signals all the way. Let us plan your trip and furnish folders and full particulars. B. H. Bennett G.A 46 Yonge St., Toronto, Toronto, Ontario. *- THE GERMAN BELIEF. waste will be more striking than family waste in a civil community." He then admits that the wastage of food, particularly of bread, is characteristic characteristic of the army, since it is the vice of a large section of the British populace. Some waste is inevitable, but it can be reduced to a minimum if the officers of a regiment give the food problem the same attention they give to the training of the men in the field. ; Avoidable waste is usually coupled with complaints of deficiency, of food. But no small cause is the fastidious I taste of the men of the new armies, who come in large part from nice homes and are not used to the coarse fare of the camp. The serving of food also often involves waste, ' 'as when all the meat is cooked and served served at once, and the scrap ends and bone that might have been cut out .And made into soups and stews are sent to the table and thrown away. The modified home ration of the army gives a soldier a pound of meat, a pound of bread, two ounces of bacon and seasonings, with cash allowance of 11 cents a day to buy extras. In the extraordinary forces the allowance allowance of food is greater, including a quarter of. ja. pound . of bread . extra and, jam and cheese; but lately these .additional items have been eliminated ! shepherds, have been gathering moss and bringing it to the school. In school the moss is picked clean and sewn up in cheap little bags. Already 600 to 700 of these bags have been made up, and over 500 are-in use in hospitals in Romec * NO IDEA What Caused the Trouble. "I always drank coffee with the rest of the family, for it seemed as if there was nothing for brçakfast if we did not have it on the table. "I had been troubled for some time with my heart, which . did not-feel right. This trouble grew worse steadily. "Sometimes it would beat fast, and at other times very slowly, so that I would hardly be able to do work for an hour ' or two after breakfast, and if I walked up a hill, it gave me a severe pain. (The effects of tea are very similar to those of cdffee because because they each contain the drug, caffeine.) _ "I had no idea of what the trouble was until a friehd suggested that perhaps perhaps it might be coffee drinking. I tried leaving off the coffee and began Acts on the Idea That Might Makes Right. So far as the Germans defend their attack upon the Lusitania and the other misdeeds of their submarine warfare on merchant ships, it is as reprisal or retaliation, says the Outlook. Outlook. England, they say, has in her blockade and mine-laying exceeded former limitations of international law; therefore Germany may kill noncombatants as she chooses. This can hardly be called argument; it is that vicious misuse and expansion of technical rules that Germany has shown from -the first; Antwerp has fortifications miles away from the city; therefore, it is right and honorable honorable purposely to drop bombs on houses in the centre and kill women and children; some Belgians may have fired on German soldiers, therefore therefore it -is right to kill and burn indiscriminately indiscriminately in Louvain. And so on through the series of savage acts which have made Germany's conduct in this war horrible and repulsive. The old cry that England's blockade is starving German people has been overexploited and its falsity is known. Germany" is not carrying on her submarine submarine war to get food into Germany, but to keep munitions of war out of What Is the. Reason for Its Curious Elusiveness What becomes of gold? It is one of the oldest - metals in human human use--there are gold beads dating back to the stone age. It is an object object of almost universal, desire. It is proof against almost all the influences influences which destroy other metals, and it has been mined in enormous quantities. Yet to-day more than two-thirds of the gold in use has been dug since 1849. ; What becomes of the rest ? Where is the gold that set Jason wandering into the Black Sea, that filled the treasures of Croesus, that paid the terrible tribute which Persian kings assessed against the Punjab ? What has happened to the yellow dust and "electrum"--an alloy of gold and silver--which silver--which negro traders , brought down the Nile to Egypt for four or five thousand years ? Ancient gold, like that of modern times, was used for money and for ornaments, but both have disappeared. Where ? Ithe most enduring of metals, and yet the most evanescent; perpetually sought and yet • --constantly escaping the hands of even the successful seek- --that is gold. What is the reason reason for its curious elusiveness ? ' --: Tea in the Trenches. It is said that tea is the favored beverage of the soldiers in the trenches. It is certain that tea is the most refreshing and sustaining drink under the circumstances, and it has good warmth-giving qualities. It is the first experience of tea for many of the soldiers, and the taste will undoubtedly undoubtedly spread when they return to their homes after the war. In fact, everything points to a greatly increased increased consumption of tea all over the world, and as the supply is insuffiy cient to cope with it, the high prices now obtaining may continue for some years. HAVE YOU A BAD SORE ? If so, remember these facts--Zam- Buk is by far the most widely used balm in Canada! Why has it become so popular ? Because it heals Isores, cures skin diseases, and does what is claimed for it.. Why not let it heal your sore? Remember that Zam-Buk is altogether altogether different to the ordinary ointments. ointments. Most of these consist of animal fats. Zam-Buk contains no trace of any animal fat, or any mineral matter. It is absolutely herbal. Remember that Zam-Buk Is at the same time healing, soothing, and antiseptic. Kills poison instantly, and all harmful germs. It is suitable alike for recent Injuries and diseases, and for chronic sores, ulcers, etc. Test how different and superior Zam-Buk really is. All druggists and stores at 50c. box. Use aTso Zam-Buk Soap. Relieves sunburn and prevents freckles. Best for baby's bath. 25c. tablet. FARM FOR. RENT. I F LOOKING FOU A fAKM, CONSULT 111 I ihave over Two Hundred on my Ji6t, located in the beet sections of On- tano. AH eizeg. H. W. Da-wson, Brampton. NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. T) ROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB A Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and Interesting or all businesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publishing Company, Company, 73 West Adelaide St.. Toronto. FOR SALE. An Industrious Constable. In a small town the constable received received by post six "Rogues' Gallery" photos of an old offender taken in different different positions. A fortnight later the constable sent this message to the city chief of police: "I have arrested arrested five of the men and am going after the sixth to-night." *-- . Minard's Liniment Cures Colds,. Etc. * PAPER LIFEBOATS. R egistered Yorkshire swine - ' Both sexes; choice quality and ^reeding, four months old. Prices moderate. moderate. Wm. C. Wilson & Son. Hawke- stone, Ont. A LEADING .VARIETIES of POUL- TRY, geese, ducks, turkeys, guineas, guineas, pheasants, pigeons, rabbits, fox ter-' Hers, rat dogs, pea-fowls, at a very low price. Must make room for winter. Write for prices. G. B. Damann, North- field, Minn. MISCELLANEOUS. C ancer, tumors, lumps, etc, internal and external, cured without without pain by our home treatment. Write OB before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood. Ont. Life-Saving Craft Almost Immune to Wreck. on drinking Postum. The change came most parts of the line and the"cash ! - T a 51£ la £ The boat is constructed from the Japanese paper called hashikirazu, sum of 11 cents substituted, as in the , heart trouble (with that, aggressive purpose exercis V home ration. As some 80,000 army cooks are required required and the facilities for training cooks were at first" limited, the ^mess was badly handled for à time in the new regiments. But this drawback has been overcome. The officer tells of seeing a score of large loaves floating " down a river and attribute the relief to leaving off ed against themselves. * coffee and the use of Postum. "A number of my friends have abandoned abandoned coffee and have taken up Postum, Postum, which they are using steadily. There are some people that make Postum Postum very weak and tasteless, but if made according to directions, it is a , very delicious beverage." Name ffiven by Canadian ~ near a camp in e Salisbury Plain and J ^ >os ^ um Co., Windsor, found the men had thrown the bread 1 âway because of the food brought them by friends and relatives. -- * A dollar in your pocket is worth two that you owe. Spain's national emblem is the pomegranate. The mean height of land above sea level fe 2,250 ft. - The word "Whig" means a pack- saddle thief; the word '*Tory" a band tif robbers. Postum comes in two forms : Postum Cereal*--the original form- must be well boiled. 15c and 25c package. Instant Postum---a soluble powder --dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water, A paper lifeboat that can be packed g and a perfectly proper object, foot, but that, when inflated, is sea- but not one to excuse atrocities. The ■ worthy and durable, is the invention fact is that from the beginning Ger- of a retired admiral of the Japanese many has acted on the belief that navy, says London Tit-Bits, might makes right; proof gathers that her purpose was aggressive from the start, and so far as she is now on ' which is treated chemically to make it the defensive it is from necessity ' waterproof. The paper comes from alnnp " Tf nmit-ral , / * i the mulberry tree. It is Unusually dur- ^ ^ i • •f. cce J pt her , able, and possesses great strength plea or necessity for uncivilized war- when the stresses are In the direction fare, they may later have to deal, of the fibre. A thin sheet -of paper that is strong ! when stressed in any direction is made j by pasting together two sheets with I the fibres crossing at right angles. The i first boat that the admiral made was ! merely a. kind of large pillow with a Are Now Supplying the Paris Market depression in the centre, the whole be- j /'Ameriem'f Standard 4 Cycle Marine Motor" , irv C 12 l0 J° H p - Highest qua]- ,ty illc?ihf fin.cïu . n- £° vlb ™Uon. Controls iiKc the finest Motor Car online Extremal» 1 : «°"»™!'*' on fuel. Used T.'°.?aidîïd eq™# , b y °vcr 60 per cent, of the world's I leading boat builders. Catalog on reoueat I Vre'iiiTu'Jtn î't >endln S on equipment I KCRMATN MF0. CO. Oeil. I " ». troll. Mich, f Pall Term Opens September 1st. •LLIOTT 734 Yong-e St., TORONTO. High. Grade School. None Better in Canada. Write for New College Announcement. WOMAN FARMERS. Highest Cash Prices Paid for With Vegetables. The success with women have con ing inflated with air. Because of the 1 ease with which paper can be punc- ! tured, it was necessary to change the ; tended with the difficulties of farm- \ method of construction, so several ing is indicated by a report from ! pipe^ike bags were made and placed the dëpârbnent of Meurthe and Mo- 1 Bldl ® by side in the form of à raft,- and selle, France. Of the 600* communes 1 bhat raft finally modified to a craft 8oftif>rIsmg this* department, 316 were j ^othing like a boat in shape. Kir +Ko ftkytTviofee. mi .e The result is a life-saving craft al- by the Qermahs and 171 of most lmrimn e to wreck, for even if one them are still occupied or are so close Q, r two of the pipes are punctured or to the fighting line that the inhabitant inhabitant have been unable to return. In the balance of the dçjJartment women replacing then have succeeded in seed is buoyant broken, the boat still enough to be seaworthy. Owing to its strength and lightness, and its waterproof qualities, the has bl and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 60c tins. ^ } ih^^e!fûU àc^age .of oât and wheat ktrazu paper is evidently adapted to a Both kinds are equally delicious ] in the that were not affect-1 wide range of uses, among which are and cost about the same per çup. j éd abd- W per cent, of the acreage of, th . e making of coverings for aeroplane * "There's a Reason" for Posthm. j the conifimnes that were devastated i wmgs and for dirigjbio balloons. . , -.old t,, Grocers, and have rined been'liberated. .There cârJT^et in Cow, We ' are the largest buyers of Ginseng in America and have the greatest demand for it. We can therefore pay you the highest cash prices. If you have any wild of cultivated Ginseng,, write for our latest price Ifet, or ship what you have and we will submit you our highest offer. David Blustein &Bro. 162 W. 27th St., NewYork, U.S.A. ED. 6. ISSUE 33--'15. hrFFer Mhnt Mrs. Smythe called on a friend, expecting expecting to be asked to stay for luncheon. luncheon. But the friend didn't ask her, and so Mrs. Smythe, secretly much disappointed, rose to go. She- didn't intend in the least : to show her regret, but involuntarily as she put out her hand, she said: "Well, good-by, dear Mrs. Luncheon." Luncheon." Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Garlic, salt, bread, and steak are put into the cradle of a new-born in some parts of Holland, in order to keep harm away. Defined. "Pop, what is 'leisure?' " asked lit-, tie Rallo. "Son," replied senior, "it's the odd five minutes I get when mother doesn't remember what she has for me to do." Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. Overetern" V Bottom Motor Boat Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station In Ontario. Length 16 Ft., Beam 8 Ft. a In 1 Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. AnV MOTOR FITS. * Specification No, 2B giving engine prices on request Get our quotation» on-- The Penet&ng Line Commercial and Pleasure Launches Row boats and Canoes. ' | THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAN. DONT LET LICE EAT UP YOUR EGGS ! C A few vagrant lice will multiply so rapidly that they will soon have the chickens and chicken-house alive with them.. Lice suck all the nourishment out of a lien's body--thus, prevent hens from laying--destroy the little little chicks--breed disease and ruii^fhe flocks. Even If you see no signs of lice, be on the safe side--dust fowls and pens with International Louse Killer sheep*; 8 tod Is absoiuteP/h^mTess to^owis Md to?ma°l£ ^ MIS t,Ck3 0n ta-maUprice-Bc f'*] handy si,t = n 8-top box, with tin cover. Big nom uïa^wh^h lnTud d e C s a poBtoge C . ryWhCr ° " Canada ' ° r by mail " Sold on a positive guarantee to refund your money in any case of dissatisfaction. Keep your chickens "dheaithy with INTERNATIONAL LOUSE MELER. Get a box from your dealer to-day. INTERNATIONAL POULTRY GUIDE FREE The International Poultry Guide will bo mailed free tn _ . . ... try who reads this advertisement and in writing tous mentions thtopanc^ 4 POtÜ ' Our Poultry Guide is a neat, handy little book tcllinc Vou'-mnnv nf n,. „ you want to know about feeding poultry. It gives vàluahfn tho th 'P gs is required in foods to Make Chickens Grow and t. vîv n I0 " , on w hat information on TURKEYS and DUCKS Tells ab^ut^nm^fr, 11 n" S L ^ y " A' BO glvea of poultry and how to euro them. "° 4 common aliments and diseases whRe'y ou" anT thinkins about°i? WRITE DEPT. A International Stock Food Co., Limited, Toronto . .. . fVS HOME GUARD & X 4ND cO v vr* Protect Our Homes Cut out this Coupon and Exchange It for a Home Guard Button, Free. I will lend my moral support to the Home Guard. I will do all I can to assist our Government to Protect the Home. As a pledge of which I will wear a Home Guard Button. Name- Address. Present coupon for Exchange at the nearest Agent of Peabodys Overalls. Our Boys are in the trenches. But we Canadians have a man's work to do,--right here at Home. We are threatened by cowardly enemies. From these we must protect ourselves. The Peabodys Overall Factory (Walkerville, Ontario) was bombed on the night of June 20th, because of its activity in making uniforms for Lord Kitchener's Army. The Windsor Armoury's destruction was attempted the same night because soldiers were sleeping there. The same enemy agency attempted to blqw the C. P. R. Bridge at Port Arthur, also the Welland Canal. Attempts Attempts to kill and destroy in this cowardly manner have been made all over the Dominion. So--Rally to the Home Guard. This Patriotic. Movement for the protection of our homes and public institutions is sweeping across Canada. Your King and Canada Need You. Every man, woman and child of you. To support the Home Guard is merely a pledge of the loyalty and the patriotism of those who cannot go to the front. So--Support the Home Guard.' Clip the attached Coupon. Sign it and get a handsome Home Guard Button Free from the nearest" store which is Agent for PEABODYS "Bomb-Proof" Overalls. Every PEABODYS dealer is official distributors distributors of Home Guard Buttons and Uniforms. See the news columns of this newspaper newspaper for the official representative of the Home Guard in your town, he will give you your Home Guard Button. Yours for Loyalty and Home Protection, THE PEABODYS COMPANY, Limited, Walkerville, Ontario. V V»/ r. ; -/• . y r .v ,y.. * - -

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