Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Aug 1915, p. 6

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PAGE SIX , THE SOLDIERS' CLUB POSTERS SALE BILLS' DODGERS CLOSEST PRICES me BRITISH WHIG PAA Wood's Phosphodins, | The Great Pnglish Remed Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, Oures Nevoous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Despon. ey, Yo of Energy, Palpitation of the Hear, Failing Memory. Pride $1 pee box, six for$5. One will please, riz with aure, yu it mailed. in plain pkg. on (eeipt o denRgints Or alel mniled Tres: THE WOOD Mepicing CO., TORONTO, ONT. (For ory Winder) A ce At Attra | To-Let Seven-roomed house, King St.; in good condi- tion, yard, shed. im- provements, Rent $8.00, including water. W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Estate and Insurance. Phone 424 - . 89 Broc® St, A ll KINGSTON CEMENT PRODUCT tles, brick Flower Vases, Tile, Cap per Blocks. We also make Cement Grave Vaults. Estimates ;iven for all kinds of Cement Work, Office and Factory Cor. of CHARLES AND PATRICK. Phone 730, MGR. H. ¥. NORMAN, Get Your Awning Made in Kingston { | Patronize Home Indusary. { If you want an up-to-date Awns=! ing, Porch Curtain, Boat Wag- gon or Automobile Cover, Cork | Fenders, Life Preservers for! yorr Boat, etc., drop a card to) CAPTAIN JOSEPH DIX, i Awning Maker = = 211 Nelson St. | unconventional sort, and was usually Cooked Meats was a report'r on a Toronto news- We have the very best in Oooked Hams, Jellied Tongue, Jellied Hocks, Pressed Ham and Veal, Bologna and Head Cheese. P.S.--All our ments are kept ice cold in our modern refrigerator coun- ter away from flies and dust. No mussing -- no handling. Orders sent to any part of city. J.R. B. GAGE, Phone 54. Montreal Street. CHOICE GROCERIES, TEAS & COFFEES. Cooked and Smoked Meats. JOS. AHEARN, JR, 279 1.2 Montreal St, Phone 866. ~~ Automobile For Hire (1915 REGAL) Special Rates for all Kinds of Drives. WeppiNGs a SeeciaLty. Prompt Attention to Beat and Train Calls, Service and Efficiency Guaranteed, R. J. Allen, Phone 300. 340 Johnson >i -eet. LONDON DIRECTORY (Published Annually) enables traders throughout the World - to communicate direct with English MANUFACTURERS & DEALERS in each class of goods. Besides being complete commercial guide to Lon- aon and its suburbs the Directory con= tains lists of « EXPORT MERCHANTS with the goods they 'ship, and the Colonial and Foreign Markets they supply; STEAMSHIP LINES arranged under the Ports they all. and indicating the ate Sailiugs: PROVINCIAL TRADE NOTICES leading Manufacturers of ete, a current Orwa freight paid, tal 1 ; lors seeking "tise their trade ca for advertisements from $i. Bold by al) | | exploits, $4! Athabasca. to which approxim-~ Merchants, in the principal provincial towns gusts a} Cintres of the United om. copy of th edition will be on feceipt of nels can adver. or larger THE OPENED IN ST. ANDREW'S HALL! MONDAY EVENING And Was Well Patronized---Mrs. 8S. 4. M. Compton Elected President and Mrs. Campbell Strange Sec- retary Treasurer, The Soldiers' Club opened Mon- day evening in St, Andrew's Church Hall and was well patronized by the soldiers. Mrs. 85, J. NM. Compton -was 1 elected president .and Mrs. Campbell {Strange was elected secretary-treas- urer Among the ladies who were present to help make the opening such a ess were Miss Mildred Jones, 5 Strange, Mrs, C1 Strange, Mrs. 3. J. M. Compton, Mrs. H. R. Duff, Mrs. W. Morgan, Miss L. Mowat, Mrs. E. Torrance, and the Misses Sanderson. The soldiers were served with refreshments and sang » musi¢ furnished by Mrs. Sander- son and Mrs. Torrance. Corpl. Hood sang several solos. "Games of. dif- ferent kinds have been furnished for the entertainment of the soldiers. Refreshments will be served at less than cost. Ice-cream and cake were furnished for five cents. Capts. S. J. M. Compton and W. F. FitzGerald | were present during tke evening. It is planned to have the club op- len every evening from 6.30 to 9 p.m. and possibly Sunday afternoon also. Other churches and the 1.O.D.E. will be asked to co-operate witli the St. Andrew's ladies in the distribution of refreshments. { The public will be asked for con-} | contributions of games, magazines {and money for the entertainment of the soldiers. , nite | FRENCH USE DEADLY GAS, Germans Are Sorry They Started "This Warfare, Aug. 17.--The Paris, French are jgaw using gas bombs more deadly) than any that have been employed by the Germans, according to a state- ment by Prof. Daniel Berthelot, the famous chemist, published , to-day. ! Prof. Berthelot says: | "The Germans have good reason to regret that they began the use of | asphyxiating gas in warfare. They have forced us to retort in kind and in this sort of offensive we have | quickly attained a manifest superior- | ity. None of the means to which | they have resorted to protect them- selves against the effects of our as-| phyxiating bombs is successful, Cyan- | hydric gas, the most terrible of pois- ons, inflicting instant death, was dis- | covered by me." bein oe Douglas Hallam, wounded in action against the. Turks a few days ago, is remembered her. almost as much for his amateur interest in the stage as for any of his other random, restless Hallam took part in one of the Press Club productions some years ago, wrote parts of the per- formance, had usually up his sleeve some scenario for a new play of an looking round for some chance to show his peculiar ability. When he paper, which he became just for the experience, he always had some novel way of wanting to do an assignment. | When he took up with camera work he blew one of his hands nearly to smithereens with flashlight powder. At the Universit, he was always seething with some protest. When he went into business he always seemed to hate it. When he took up | with flying it was because he was | weary of routine and wanted a new sensation. His enlistment in the Navy was as ©. flying-man. Before he gets through with the war Lt. Hallam will have accumulated enough new experiences to last him a while, and may settle down in Toronto to do |, something that won't leave him eter- nally dissatisfied. . Gold in Saskatchewan. | A promising and alluring gold | strike in the Canadian North-West is reported to the south-east of Lake The excitement dates | back to a yezr aso, when a good deal | was heard about the Beaver Lake de- | posits of rich, free gold. Beaver | Lake is something over a hundred | miles beyond Le Pas, from which | point it 1s reached by steamer and | portage. For a time men went in at | the rate of a hundred a week, but the | excitement woré down, partly be- | cause of the difficulty in getting the | ore out to where it could be mailed. | Assays of the Beaver Lake ore ran | high, however, and there seems to | be little doubt that in that district | there is as genuine golden wealth as | there is silver wealth around Lake Athabasca, Development is going on this summer on come of the claims staked out 1~st year, - ---- Why Steam Casts a Shadow. Why does water cast ho shadow, while steam, which is invisible, does cast a shadow? Pure water in a state of rest is of uniform density, and the light en- tering it are not uniformly refracted and therefore interfere with and neu tralize each other to a considerable de- gree, as counter or cross waves strike each other down and tend to create a | Crawford. | Jewellery valued at $22,000 | $100 cash. | hibitive, i tic festival Sunday. {a magnificent and THE WHIG'S JUMBLE. | A General Review of Country District | and Local News. . { Colonel Septimus Denison is back in Toronto from England. | 28c¢ Dairy Butter, Dairy Butter 28ec. | H. Cunningham, piano tuner, 21 King street Leave orders at McAul<| ¢y's Book Store Dr. H. F. Mackendrick, Galt, has| been appointed a surgeon in the Brit-| ish Army Medical Corps. ""Hudnut's Toilet Water" at Gib- son's. Charlés Guerin," the eight-year-old | Mrs. Noel Guerin, Peterboro, } was killed by the discharge of a rifle | with which he was playing. "Violet Cream" at Gibson's: Mficials of the Grand Trunk Rail-| way have formed a Patriotic Associa- | tion to systematize contributions! from the employes { "Mary Garden son's. Butter ford The campaign at Brantford for $20,000 for the purchase of machine guns has been successful. "Mary Garden Talcum" son's. George H. Gooderham, M.P.P., has donated a field kitchen, made in Toronto, to each of the 75th and the 84rd Battalions, "Mary Garden Perfumes" at Gib- son's. Major E. F. Mackie, of the Strath- cona Horse, was gazetted as staff- captain attached to British Head- quarters units. "Mary Garden Perfumes" at Gib. son's, Farmer's Butter prints, 28¢. Jas. on of Talcum"" at Gib-| Prints, 28c. J. Craw- at Gib- Miss Beatrice Allen, who occupied a fashionable South Side apartment, Chicago, was robbed in daylight of | and "Mary Garden Perfumes" at Gib- son's. The exchange situation is giving Ottawa a good deal of concern. Can- ada can borrow money in London, but the cost is becoming almost pro- "Mary Garden Perfumes" at Gib- son's, There is a movement on foot among the Turks to declare a Re- gency, but Crown Prince Yussof is lukewarm about the war. and is dif- ficult to nianage. "Hudnut"s Toilet Water" at Gib- son's. Dairy Butter while it lasts, only | 28¢, J. Crawford. Mme. Sarah Bernhardt made her first public appearance in Paris since the amputation of her leg at a patrio- She was given touching recep- | tion. "Hudnut's Toilet Water" at Gib-| son's, { Mrs. Nicholas Flood Davin, widow | of the Regina pioneer, was married | in Victoria recently to Captain Cun- | ningham, of the new 104th Regi- | ment. The bridegroom is a North- West Rebellion veteran. "Hudnut"s Toilet Water" at Gib- son's, The Russian Government has just placed an order in Canada for $60, 000,000 worth of munitions of war, the contract going to a big powder and arms company. This order is to be augmented by a bonus of 20 per cent. if it is filled before Novem- ber 1st. IS STILL IN HOSPITAL. Pte. Frank Smith, Kingston, Suffers With Gas Poisoning. Mrs. M. Smith, 38 Johnson street, on Tuesday received the following telegram from the Adjutant-General at Ottawa. "Sincerely regret to inform you that 8058 Privgte Frank Smith, 2nd Battalion, oficially reported admitted to No. 2 Canadian Stationary Hos- pital, April 28th, suffering from gas poisoning. Will send further par- ticulars when received." The family had not heard from Pte. Smith for a month and won- dered what was the matter. Evi- dently he had a relapse, as he is still in hospital from the effects of the| poisonous gas the Germans used at! Langmarcke. He went to the front! with the 14th Regiment Contingent under Capt. George Richardson. Pte. Smith's brother, George, had joined the 21st Battalion for overseas | service, but was taken ill before that | unit left Kingston last May and died shortly afterwards in the Station Hospital, Queen street. | UNIVERSITY AVENUE PEOPLE Want Their Roadway Fixed Without Further Delay. A University avenue resident called up the Whig to-day to know why the Board of Works had not put stone on the roadway up there as or- dered by the City Council at a meet- ing held a month ago. "The Couneil, on motion of Ald. Hughes, instructed the City Engineer to fill the large holes in University avenue with stone. That was a di- rect instruction to the engineer, but Ald. Graham, chairman of the Board' 'of Works, made the remark that the! patching would not be done. 'Now is one alderman going to override what the Council has ordered?" asked an angry resident of that scho- lastic roadway, who further informed |. the Whig that the roadway was so full of pools of water after the big rains that frogs had begum to ap- pear in them. THE DISTRICT NEWS. Ansindals." Jo Major C.F. ne, R. C. A, son of the late rE YY TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1915. Je? Comes areE ---------- Ee toss \ MANITOBA'S NEW LEADER, | Sir "Jam" Aikins Is a Knight With a Record. Sir James Albert Manning Aikins, | M.A. K.C.M.G., the new leader of the Conservative party in Manitoba, is more familiarly known to the people of the Western Provinces as "Jam" Aikins, because of the sequence of is initials, than he. is by his more high sounding title. This is only natural, for he has only been a knight since June of last year, while he has been Jam" since boyhood.. He is expect- ed to do great things by the Mani- toba Conservatives. Like so many others of the West's public men, Sir Jimes was Ontario- born and educated. He first saw daylight at Grahamsville, in the County of Peel, Upper Canada, 64 Years ago, and is the son of the late Senator James C. Aikins, who was from 1882 to 1886 \Lieutenant-Gov- ernor of Manitoba. e received his education at Upper Canada College and the University of Toronto. He was graduated in arts in 1875, and | Na called to the Bar of Ontario in 1878, Manitoba, being called to the Bar there in that year. He was appoint- ed counsel for the Department of Justice after taking up residence in Winnipeg, and in 1880 was appointed by the Dominion Government as one ofithe Royal Commissioners to in- vestigate the administration of jus- tice in the North-West Territories, In 1884 the honor of Queen's Counsel was conferred upon him. From 1881 to 1911 he was counsel for the C. P. R., which position he re- linquished on his decision to retire from public and business life. In the same year, however, he responded to the call from the Conservatives of Brandon to represent them in the Dominion election, and was success- ful in the contest. At present he re- presents that constituency 'in the Dominion House, but will have to re- sign his seat at Ottawa to lead the Provincial organization. Sir James took a great part in the drafting of the Macdonald liquor bill of 1900, which bill will be included in the Conservatives' platform to be brought down 'at the forthcoming election. He has also taken a live and active interest in education mat- ters, and represented Canada at the International Congress on Moral Education held at The Hague in 1912. He was also a member of the Royal Commission concerning agri- cultural education in 1902, and chair- man of the Royal Commission con- cerning Manitoba University in 1907. The new leader has been a mem- ber of the Manitoba Law Society since 1880, and has served as its se- cretary-treasurer and president. To- day- Sir James is president of the Capadian Bar Association. Sir James took a deep interest in the militia, and holds the ranks of Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel of the 90th Rifles and Honorary Colonel 'of the 99th Manitoba Rangers. Sir James has figured largely in the business life of the community, being the senior member of the legal firm of Aikins, Fullerton, Foley & Newcombe, and of Aikins, Loftus & Aikins, Winnipeg. He is also presi- dent of the General Assets and Ageney Corporation, and is on the di- reetorate of the following companies: Northern Trusts, Canadian Fire In- surance, and Canadian ' Indemnity, while he is Canadian director of the Gresham Life Assurance Society. MONUMENT TO VICTIMS. Salvationists to Erect Memorial to Those Lost on Empress, The Salvation Army is to erect a very fing monument in Mount Pleas- ant Cemetery, Toronto, io the Army wictims in the Empress of Ireland dis- aster. It is to be cut out of red gran- ite, and will stand 13 feet high. The base of it, which will be embadded in granite rock, will be-five feet square. The clay model shows the design chosen as most suitable, considering the manner in which so many of the followers 'met their death. On the base of the monument, which will be about three feet in height, will be the names of the officers who were drowned, and also the total number | belonging to the Army who were lost. The stone above the base will'be cut like the waves of the sea, with a sea- guit-above them, to give the effect of the disaster. J The upper part of the monument contains the cross and crown, the Army emblem mourning badge, and on the back of it will be cut the Army crest. The only text inscribed on it will be the one used by Colonel Maidment, tho Chief Secretary, when he preached the farewell sermon in the Salvation Army Temple beéfore they all left Toronto. The text is: "God is our refuge and strength, and & very presemt help in trouble." It is expected that the unveiling the disaster occurred. in the neighborhood of $1,500. When erected, a picture of it will be taken, One year later he went to | AN INTERMENT CAMP, How Canada's Atiens Are Cared for in the North. At a certain point in New Ontario the party of newspapermen and rail- way officials who made the trip on the National Express to Win- nipeg passed the most flourishing set- tlement that crossed their vision since the train pulled out of Coch- rane on its first run over Canada's | new railway. It is not the usual sort of a settlement one meets in the | wilderness. | | tivity the sale | strangers, of corner Its form of municipal | government is unusual, being organ- ' | ized on the principie of the absolute 'monarchy, with a ruling class and compulsory labor and all that. goés with it. It is an internment camp. 1t8 name | is spelled Kapuskasing, but it is not | usually pronounced. Most people | prefer to know it by the name of the _ | station, Macpherson. A football game was in progress | when the National drew up. A crowd of Austrians ard a scattering of red- fez-ed Turks were the spectators. In- terest in the game was replaced by the phenomenon of a tran formed solely cf passenger and express coaches. But none of them offered | to approach the tracks, and the pas- | sengers who alighted remained close to the trai~.. One of the train party forgot about war regulations and climbed a pile of brick to "snap" the encampment. Before be had his camera focussed a sergeant and sev- eral privates in various stages of shocked excitement closed in on him and prevented him from unwittingly committing what is now a serious of- tence. The camp consists. of a row of tar-papered one-storey shacks, set in the middle of a large clearing. "Here approximately . thousand Austrians and Turks are gathered. There are only about a hundred and fifty of the latter, but they cause more trouble than all tbe rest put to- gether. Their pet foible is to refuse to work. When that bappens they | are made to work. This system of | compulsion, we were told, is a deep, | dark secret in which not even the offi- | cers of the camp share. Suffice it to | say that invariably the Turks do | work, sooner or later. | At one time or another a few of | the prisoners have escaped from the | camp, but -noné of them enjoyed | more than a few hours of freedom. | Without exception they have been | rounded up and returned to camp | Kapuskasing. Their labor consists of clearing | the land. One of the soldiers on | duty at the right-of-way outskirts of | the camp informed u< that nearly [two hundred acres had already been !cleared. If the war lasts long | enough, Macpherson station will | ind itself the centre of a farming district, potentially one of the rich- | est in Ontario. After "hours the prisoners given a wide range of freedom to | enjoy themselves. They play foot- | ball, or watch the soldiers play; im- | provise sports of their own, or go a boating on the river in large punts | which ha. been provided for their { amusement, Their diet includes a form of sau- |sages popular among Austrians, | sometimes beef, bread, jam and the | like. Their rations are as good as | those served the soldiers, healthful | and satisfying. They are. living an | out-of-door life and are" gaining in | knowledge of the wild. When the | war is over they will be given first | chance to claim Por settlement the {land they have cleared. Altogether | there are worse things than being an | alien enemy in a Canadian military | internment camp. are Holes in His Overcoat. Major Byng Hall, D.S.0., First British Columbia Regiment, now a prisoner at Bischofswerda, had an exciting experience in the second battle of Ypres when he and his men were surrounded by the Germans. He forgot to put up his hands with the result that a German only a {few yards distant fired two shots at {him in quick succession. Fortun- {ately the bullets went through his outer coat. The German was about to sée what a third shot would do when Private Hills caught hold of Major Byng Hall and rushed him into a group of men and the major had no more holes made in his over- coal. In a letter in which Major Byng Hall refers to the battle, he says: "All our officers were cool and the men simply splendid; their dis- cipline was the best I ever saw." Major Byng Hall adds: "This prison here is an infantry barracks, quite new and beautifully clean; we are well treated and have nothing to complain of. The food is naturally not English, but we can buy what we want at a canteen, My Knowledge of German is very use- Major Hall has seen conciderable service. As a young officer he was { with the 34th Sikh Pioneers in the China-Boxer campaign. Whilst there he .was ordered to raise a body of Chinese police for the district and for eighteen months was engaged fn chasing brigands. Whilst doing this he won the D.8.0. Lieut. Theodore Douglas Hallam, of Toronto, who has been serving at Dard with the initial | It is not a Hudson Bay | trading post now, nor is its chief ac- | lots to We are now offering the following high grade Provincial and Municipal Debentures at and change of price: due May 12235. yielding 1st, $100,000 ing over $150,000 City of Toronto 41 9 1945. $ 10,000 City of Fort William, February 1st, 1930. yielding $ 5,000 City of Port Arthur 5¢ 1935. $ 10,000 x vember 1st, 1941. $100,000 City- of Maisonneuve, Price 100 and interest, - $100,000 $100,000 City of Verdun, Que., 1st, 1955. Price par City of Victoria, B. C., 1st, 1918. $ 50,000 $ 5,000 1st, 1934. $ 4,000 Ist, 1944, Price 86.3 $ 7,000 City of Medicine Hat, $ 50,000 Howard No. 44 Clarence Street ctiractive yields, $200,000 Province of Ontario 10 City of Belleville, Ont., City of Hull, Que., 5% % due May 1st, 1922; $50,000 due May 1st, 1945. Price par and interest, yielding Price 98.63 and interest to yield City of Saskatoon, Sask., 5% Debentures, due July Price 88.75 and interest, yielding City of Moose Jaw, Sask., 5% Debentures, dup July July 1st, 1934. Price 88.75 and interest, yielding 6% City of Prince Albert, due January 1st, 1939. Prive 86.08 and interest, yielding Full particulars on request. BROKER. Subject to prior sale year 415% Price 96.10 Debentures, and interest, Provinee of Alberta in year 59. Debentures, due May 1st, 1925, at price 97.50 and interest, yvield- Debentures, due July 1st, Price 91.55 and interest, yielding Ont., 5% Debentures, due Price 93.86 and interest, © Debentures, due June 1st, Price 91,15 and interest, yielding 41% % Debentures, due No- Price at rate to yield Que., due to yield May Debentures. $50,000 5% % Debentures, due May and interest, yielding 5% Debentures, due March --B¥%% or 6% 3 and interest, yielding + 0% Alta., 69% Debentures, due S. Folger, Phone 905 CARING FOR FOXES, How Breeders Rear Valuable Fur- Bearing Animale, Since the early summer of 1913 over a million dollars has been with- drawn from the. Charlottetown branch of the Dominion Government saving banks for use in the fox in- dustry. The methods of caring for foxes are now generally known, but no person who has not lifelong fam- fliarity with animals should attempt to put them into practice. There have been instances where highly intelli- gent town bred men have failed after earnest efforts to handle foxes. The females are in the highest degree capricious and sensitive, especially during the mating and rearing sea- son. If they have the slightest sus- picion that their young are in danger they carry the little ones ceaselessly from place to place or even bury them alive in thé snow or earth with the insane idea of protecting them. foxes which become quite tame and "make fairly tractable pets. The young ordinarily mature suf- ficiently to propagate during their first year. During the early summer all foxes except the spring pups shed the long "guard hair" which projects out beyond the soft body fur. In the automn this bair appears once more against the approach of cold weather, restoring the beauty of the fox's coat. The fur is usually taken late in De- cember; the animal is killéd with chloroform and the skin is removed with solicitous care, incisions being jconfined if possible to the backs of the hind legs. The ranch fs usually located In a piece of underwood on sloping ground near the owner's dwelling and is surrounded by an outer stock- ade or a fence of fourteen gauge gal- vanized fox wire (similar to chicken wire). manufactured especially for the purpose in England, Camada, and "the States." The fence is ten feet high and an overhang of two feet at the top prevents the fox from climb- ing out, while a deep foundation or an extension of the wire underground precludes escape by burrowing. The inner enclosures or paddocks, each devoted to ome pai-, are also fenced as just described and are ordinarily about thirty-five feet square. Each contains a wopden kennel or fox- house, divided into a nesting com- partment bedded with seaweed or straw and an outer cleaning compart- ment, Sometimes quarters for four pairs of foxes are built, though sep- arate, In one central house, with spouts debouching from each corner into corresponding paddocks. The foxes are fed very sparingly with scrap meat, clean offal, fish, spe- cial bannock cakes prepared with tal- low, or with. manufactured dog bis- suits. They will consume berries and small fruit to a M-nited extent; and they seem to relish green grass or other herbage-----this appetite appar- ently being nature' provision for the regulation of their alimentary sys- tems. To females. during the winter and spring are fed eggs, milk, gruel, and other nutritious and easily as- similable foods. To foxes about to be killed for their pelts are fed mo- lasses, y and various patent stock aivods with the purpose of en- hanc! the brilliancy of the fur, The most elaborate and extraord}- nary precaiitions are taken to prevent the loss or theft of the high grade blacks. Man trap" and uninsulated wires of high voltage are In several ranches; although the fox pens are not an Integral "wf the owner's dwelling On the other hand there are captive | A Message To Thin, Weak, Scrawny Fdlks An Easy Way to Gain 10 to 30 ths, of Sold; Healthy, Permanent Flesh. Thin, nervous, undeveloped men and women everywhere are heard to say, ["1 can't understand why I do not get fat. I eat plenty of good, nourishing food." The reason is just this: You cannot get fat, no matter how much you eat unless your digestive organs assimilate the fat-making elements of |Your food instead of passing them {through the body as waste. What is needed is a means of gently jurging the "assimilative functions of the stomach and intestines to absorb ithe olls and fats and hand them over {to the blood, where they may reach {the starved, shrunken, run-down tis {sues and build thém up. The thin per- son's body is like a dry sponge jeager and hungry for the fatty ma- [terials of which it is being deprived by | the failure of the alimentary canal to {take them from the food The best way to overcome this sinful waste of flesh building elements and to stop the {leakage of fats is to use Bargel, the {recently discovered regenerative fores [that is recommended so highly by | physicians here and abroad. Take a | Hittle argol tablet with every meal |and notice how quickly your checks {fill out and rolls of firm, healthy flesh {are deposited over your body, cover. Ing each beny angle and projecting | point. Your druggist has Sar |BOl, or can get it from their whole. | saler, and will refund your money if | You are not satisfied with the gain in | weight it. produces as stated on the guarantee In each package. Yt ix in- expensive, easy to take and highly emi. cient. CastlonsWhile Sargol has produc- ed remarkable results in overcoming nervous dyspepsia and general stomach troubles, it should not be taken unless You are willing to gain ten pounds or more, for It is a wonderful flesh- builder. CEO ON) * TD ooo Sa 5250 PC EE RN Ee KS ---- i A. AM ei I I --------------

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