Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Apr 1918, p. 17

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RUFETO ALES' UNE "FRUT-A-THES" | The Wonderful Medicine, Mads From Fruit Juices and Valuable Tonics. 7 grr MADAME ROSINA FOISIZ _ 29 8%. Rose St., Montreal, "I am writing you to tell you that 1 owe my life to 'Fruit-a-tives', This medicine relieved me when I lad . Elven up lope of ever being well! 1 was a terrible sufferer from Dyspepsia--had suffered for years; and nothing I took did me any good. "I read about 'Fruit-a-tives'; and tried them, After taking a few boxes, I am now entively well. You have my permission to publish this letter, asl hope-it will persuade other sufferers from Dyspepsia to take 'Fruit-a-tives' and get well", Mavane ROSINA FOISIZ, "Fruit-a-tives" id the only medicine in the world made from fruit. 80¢. a box, 6 for $2.50. trial size 250. At all déplers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit-g-tiveg Limited, Ottawa, COTICURA HEALS. SHIN TROUBLE On Face that ltched & Burned. The Soap and Ointment Acted Like Magic. ------ A ---- 'My skin had always been clear une til last January when a pimple appeared on my chin. If burned and ffm itched and of course | fool ishly scratched it. Thena scab' formed that looked like a cold sore and my face , became nearly covered. "It was Ktowing worse : so fast that | sent for Cuti- NSA cura Soap and Ointment. WI washed my face with Cu. ticura Soup and applied the Ointment and they acted like magic. 1 have not been troubled since.' (Signed) Otto C. Brock, Glen Sutton, ou, : Cuticura Soap is ideal for the skin and complexion. ' For Free Sample Each by Mail ad- ress post-card : "*Cuticura, Dept. A, , U.S. A" S6ld everywhere, WOMEN! IT'S CHEAP! USE LEMON JUICE TO MAKE BEAUTY LOTION ive lemon lotion which Beatle of whole be taken to stridin t fine cloth #0 knows to bleach and remove es as freckles, sallow- and is the ideal skin ener and beautifier, Get three ounces of ?|made their bivou HORE SECURE And Enemy May at Least be Held in. Hig +. Present Positions. PRISONERS. DISILLUSIONED WILL REACH CALIAS, Northern Front Welcomed by the British Who Were Tired Out. London, April 19.--Phillp Gibbs writes from Flanders as follows: On the whole our line of battle (a more secure than it has been for sev- eral days past, and with the French co-operating we may be justified in belleving that the enemy may at any rate be held fn his present positions, Though he may yet concentrate fur- ther masses of men and guns on this northern sector, even (German reser- whatever the enemy gains the price he is paying in blood and mortality is so high that the wake of his ad- | vance is one long graveyard, and hin} hopes must be dying with his lost men. That, at least, 13 the belief of | our troops, amd they mean to make) it so, however great thelr own saeri- fice, During our withdrawal from the height of Passchendaele the enemy troops hesitated very much in fol- lowing up, and it was many hours before their forward patrols drew anywhere near. Meanwhile our guns were | waiting for them and. swept this ground with fire, killing their outposts and breaking up their as- semblies in the Polygon Weed and at| other places on the old Flanders bat-| tlefields of last year's fighting, All| that ground is still as horrible as when | described it in the early au tumn of last year, with its innumer- able shell eraters filled to the brim with water, and liquid bogs among its dead trees and wreckage of bat- tle, so it is not good for advance troops, and the enemy is wretched there. Prisoners taken here and far- ther south are disconsolate and show) no enthusiasm for continuance of this offensive; They Have heen told by thelr officers that they are golng ta" hreak throhigh to Calals and the Channel ports, but they do not bes lieve they will ever get there, and ad- a that their lossés have beén ghast- y. Allies Join Hands. Meanwhile ' an army of different color is being revealed to them along side ours, and they know that on this road to Calas they must not only break through the British divisions againat whom they have been fight- ing themselved, but also through the French troops, whe are now coming to our ald, after our men have been sustaining such terrific onslaughts for nearly two months from masses of German divi#ons passing through each other If endless sequence, ih order to destroy our armies before we could get relief, The arrival of French troops on our northern front fs the most im- portant act tHat bas happened dur ing the past three or four days, and it was with deep satisfaction that we met these troops on the roads and knew that at last gur poor, tired men would 'get support and help {against their overwhelming odds. -------- Great Fighting Men, Béside our khall arty bas grown very qufokly any army in blue, the gorutiower blue of the French poflus. They are' spléndid men, hard and k18olld fellows 'who have been Wwar- Jworn and weathersworn during these! {three and a t years past, and look Hke great fighting men who have gone many es into battle and know all that war can teach them in endurance and cdnning and quick attacks, 'As they came marching up a streaming river of blue, blue hel- mets and coats, blue carts and blue lorries, all blendihg Into one tone through these' Apfil mists as they went winding' over the countryside PL er a fy The juide of two fred 8 ket towns, d into a bottle containing three BE, area nar ue people waved to em, and then through villages on @ edge of thé Flanders battlefinlds, where tliey waited to go into action under shell-bréken = walls or under elds where they fics, and fragrant Stéams arose to ond's nostrils us cuis- tots lifted the'lids! of stew pans and hungry. men Sachéred around after the long march, « travelled, or in * [hedges above hi our shellfire S------ Cool Under Fire, I saw some of these irench sol- diers under & yesterday, harass- ing fire, whiclé the enemy was fling- skin. Those Rit to gent) CR Once or ing about the s and fields, and dy were ve a a webut al i ny 3 vi bre accustomed to this ing me i 2% ¢ir officers were stroll- Some of ing abou viet ud arnich was g : dnd beastly things which oz i : shill DO NOT NOW BELIEVE GRRMANS | Bh smssriranssinnsiil ¥* Found New HEALTH = ? greater elue them gold ana & O giver ju healt sesiored. Up i ho tu ths minipg district of Larder Lake, Ost, Mra Shatienen, dis: avered gomeibing -- e hig edn of praise oy to Gia 'Pills are true, Herels story, io part, 1 had heard of your ® * = Kiowevs 8 = » g a : = 9 d decided to give them & trial at : once, EN ms a 4 x HH time with my kidoeys gpd utine, = 1 sent my chum out to get them go about 60 miles) and I am pleased to 5 inform yow that in less than 6 hours 3 feit retief, In two days the pain § bad left me altogether. . Today ng 3 | feel gs well as ever I did sud my m kidoeys are acting quite suturally." x (Full testimonial sent on requelt g ther with FREE SAMPLE of og Gin*rills.) = All dealers sell Gin Pills on our Money Back Guarantee. soc's box, © buses for Sao. ® National Drug & Chemical Co. 2 of Canada Limited « Toroute = - L n , S, Address: Na-DruCe. . U- S02 Mata St. Burra, RY: x ves are wht inexhaustible, ang-ster | the roads tothe front they were like THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987 wantisg anything done In the carpen. tery line, Eatimates given on all Kinde of repnirs und new work; aise hard. wood floors of all kinds. All orders will receive prompt stiention. Shop 60 Queen street. NAA AA ALALA A, SANA AAAI FRECKLES Don't Hide Them With a Veil; Re. move Them With Othine--Double Strength. This preparation for the removal of freckles is usually so successful in removing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that ii is sold by. any druggist under guarantee to refund the money if it fails. Don't hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of Othine and re- move them. Even the first few appli- cations should show a wonderful im- rovement, some of the lighter freck- lés® vanishing entirely. Be sure tg ask the druggist for the double #trengih Othine; it is this that Is sold gm the money-back guar- antes, LIFT-OFF-€ORNS FREEZONE IS MAGIC Costs few cents! Sore, touchy corns lift right off with fingers, No pain! Drop a little Freezone on a aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurt- ing, {hen you lft it: right out. It doesn't hurt one bit. Yes, magic! Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corm, or corn between the toes, and talluses, with- out soreness or irritation. Freezone is the much talked of ether discovery of a Cincinnati genius. d niake no account of} if 1 [it taxes x man skilled in several Same of the Work Being Done For thé Soldiers. The system of vocational training for returped soldiers which is enabl. Ing men to learn new occupations and in many instances to' go back into eivil life prepared 6 earn more thun they did before they enlisted was the subject of 'an address by W. F. Seg:- worth, adwiblstrator of vocations! training for the returned soldiers un- der the Military Hospitals Commis gion, before the Canadian Credit dien's Asesoclation In Toronto. Mr, Segaworth stated definitely that learning & new trade would hava no effect on a soldier's pension, and that whether pensioners or not re- turned soldiers' were. eligible for ihe re-educational courses. : The idea kept (0 the fore in tha vocational training was to follow. the lines of the man's old occupation ko he would go back to his old environ. ment. For éxample a bricklayer, pre vented through injuries from rollow- ing. the same occupation might be trained to be &n srohitect or dradghts- IBRD, a Carpenter way become 8 cab!- net maker, & lineman become an armature winder, or a moulder a pat- tern maker, As many occupations are taught as possible among the returned men, otherwise there 'would arise competi- tion difficulties. ! An investigation by the hospitals commission had shown that there bad been thirty-four soldigrs blinded by wounds snd it was pointed out that this ws a much smaller number than Wis generally supposed, one doctor In "guessing" -- before the inquiry=- '| baving made an "estimate'" of 1,000. Au Important point brought out was that, glthough warned that sol- dlers would be exploited, the com- mission now bad the men receive pait of the training right in the factories of the coGntry, with very successful results. Before this was done, how- ever, an industrial survey was made. The Instructing of the returned soldiers was divided by the commis- sion into two broad classes, vocation- al trajning and vocational re-educa- tion. Vocatienal re-education was for the men who were so setiously Injured or affected in health that they could not go back to their old occu- pations. It meant practically. the teaching of a mew trade. In quite a percentage of cases, the returned men after concluding thelr courses earn- ed larger wages than before going to the war. .Some of the 'bed patients" ating of special hand looms. Textiles they had woven had been sold in Montreal for as high as $8 a yard. The goods were sold without being marked in any way B udicate thelr being the output of soldrers. : At the present time investigations are being made to ascertain just what disability a man can suffér and sti) continue in a given trade. When in- vestigation into this question has been conciuded there will be no pos- sibility of mistakes being made. To avoid error, the speaker sald, the greatest care must be exercised. Not only must the man bs consulted and big Inelinations ascertained, but his with minute care, so that his physi- cal and mental qualifications may be ascertained. Mr. Sedgsworth prefaced his ad- dress by pointing out that the suc- cess of the endeavors being made to restore the returned soldler to civil life will bave a big effect upon the Industrial We of Canada. If the {n- eapacitated wen were merely thrown back into civil life to live on their peasions the country would lose their industry. This would have far-reach- ing effects. Their families would be brought up in an atmdsphere of char- ity and idleness, What the Boss Wasts. Up in Western Canada: there is a successful business concern that ex- pects, as most successful concerns do, that every employe shall do his full duty, says the Houston Post. To asgist him in the task that concera plages conspifusuily before him th "Ten Commundoents' : 1. Don't lie. It wastes my time and yours, I am sure to catch you in the end, and that Is the wrong end. 2. Watch your work, not the clock. A long day's work makes & long day short; and & short day's work makes my face long. 3. Give me more than I expect, and I. will give you more than you éwm t. 1 can afford to increase your pay if you increase my profits, 4. You owe 80 much (0 yourself you cannot afford"ts owe anybody else. Keep out of debt, or keep out of my shop. +5. Dishonesty is never ab accident. Gooll men, like good wodien, never see temptation when they eet It. §. Mind your own busi , and in time you'll have a business of your own to mind, 7. Don't do anything here which who ing tq stéal from me, 8; It is none of my business what you'do at nfght. But if dissipation af- fects w you do she next day, and you de balf as much as I demand, you'll last half as long as you hoped. 9. Don't tell me what I'd like fo hear, but what I ought to bear. I don't want a valet to my vanity, but oue for my dollars. 10. Don't kick if I kick. If you're worth while correcting, you're worth while keeping. I don't waste time cutting specks out of rotten apples. sien - Schools for Farmers. In ths eourad of un addvers before the Arts and Letters Club of Ottawa, the Hon. Sidney Fisher, who was a Cabinet Minister during the last Lau- rier regime, said, speaking as a farm- er, that "we must see to it that a "|goodly number of catiphed 1 Ese in the dil bad_sehoste sections 'of the country, in order t meu equipped for the farm shail people suppose that anyoue can work ® the farm. but the piain fact is to. be & goud (Rrmer," Mrs. E. J. Kelly, Brockville, die on Tuesd: Deceased were taught such things as the oper- ||| medical history must be gone futo |: 20, 1918. A ---- The New Drink with the Old ; Quality HE. tonic qualities of Labatt's Old London Brew--on sale at Easter ftime--are pre- cisely the same as those of the Labatt brews you have used and liked so well all your life. : . The only difference is that Old London Brew is less stimulating, contains less alcohiol--it is a temperance drink which former drinkers of alcoholic brews will enjoy, and one which temper- ance drinkers will equally appreciate. [0 London Brew JOHN LABATT, Limited, LONDON, Ont., and No. 4 St, Helen St., MONTREAL + Brewing Since 1832 KINGSTON =~ Jas. McParland, . Large Stock to Choose From. $15 to $28 JOHN TWEDDELL Civil & Military Tallor, 131 Princess Sty Ome Door Below Randolph. MATHIEU'S SYRUP OF TAR & COD- LIVER OIL Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis hooping_ Cough, Asthma, Etcy MATHIEU'S SYRUP is a sovereign tonic combining the curative properties of TAR and the strengthening ' | virtues of COD LIVER OIL. --- ~t af Colds, when neglected or badly treated give rise to consequences of sucha grave character that you should not risk using inferior preparations. --t MATHIEU'S SYRUP is the only genuine remedy whose tee putation has caused to crop up manyimitations of doubtful value. ON SALE EVERYWHERE Eh Talking Machines 't Dominion Fish Co. bur{s your self-respect. An employe 1 willing to steal for me is will- The SAFEST MATCHES in the WORLD Also the Cheapest! -- are EDDY'S "SILENT 500°S" Safest becuuse they are impregnated with a chemical solu- tion which renders the stick "dead" immediately the match is extinguished ; Cheapest, because: there are more perfect matches to the sized box than In any other box on the market. ! Wir time economy and your own good sense, will urge the necessity of buying none but EPDY'S MATCHES. he ble. and Wot ha e farm- I} a an Toba Most {f To 83 per cent. of all the world's greatest artists who to select THE WILLIAMS NEW SCALE PIANO. to last a lifetime and stay in tune. You are invited to at our store and see these beautiful models. | . JM. Greene Princess JLo, Lid ; IMPERIAL LIFE EE a The Imperial Life provides security of over $140 for every $100 of Habillty to its policy. holders, " rrsTe-- J. B. COOKE 882 King Street. Phiine 508 Residence 849 ao cr a a i Fa NN Wood's Phosphodine. The Great English Remedy. Tones and invigorates the whole pervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, gs Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Les dency, Loss of wv, Palpitation the Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, six for 85. Ouswill bioase, Si will gure. Sold by i} ruggists or mailed § ain pkg. on receipt of drug New iphlet mailed free. THE WOOD MEBICING CO, TORONTO, ONT, (Foran Winder.) Save Your Coal THE SOWARDS COAL €O. Phone 155. am. pt TTT TTT TTT YY. LOT FOR SALE 40 ft. x 120 ft. Enough stone on'it to build a house. Snap for $150 t W. H. Godwin & Son Insurance and Real Estate, 39 Brock St. Phone 424 J dada hah a a a a a aa Adhere didi NNN mt All makes of talking machines cleaned, repaired, adjusted. Parte for all machines supplied. Expert workmanship. Prices reasonable. JOHN M. PATRICK 149 Sydenham Street. 'Phone 22885, YY YT YY YY YY Fresh - Haddock and Cod, Whiting, Tom Cods, Smelts, Oysters. dud adh ddd a A A adhd dh de dh A AA ha 4 MI DREN ETERS DCAL BRANCH TIME TABLE IN EFFEOT MARCH SRD 2 Traing will leave and arrive at CHy Station, Foot of Johuson Street, Going West, . Lve, City Arr. City No. 19 Mail .. .. ..12.80am. 1267am No, 13 Express , .. 3.10 am. i] No. 27 Loead '.," .. 9.45 am. ig i hl ta. HH p.m, 0. oes en Be po G Lve. City No.1 Mat} . ,, .. 1.40a.m. No. 16 Express . .. 3.10 am, No. ¢ Ja co vs ++12.80 pom. No. 1§ Interiy ira. 1.20 p.m. No. 28 Loeal , .. .. 6.43 pm. A Nos. 1, 13, 14, 16, 18, 18 run dai Other 'trains dally ex Sunday. Direct route to Toronto, Peterbo Hamilton, Buffalo, Lendon, Det Chicago, Bay City, Saginaw, Mon Ottawa, Quebec, Portiand, © Halifax, Boston and New Yor or Pullman accommodation, tickets sll other information, apply to J, P. Hanley, Agent. Agence een steamshio lines. Goon ans and . BREE ON PEED voEe = - > iy Soa ~ Sess ers BHO TVON wa NO "reps Fagse TRE [IT ER Passenger : gainlifax and Bristol a te CLL Think-- Agents, 50 King St. East, ra Don't That because in the yon could nol get a p Sng job done on your old hat, that you - cannot now. We are here for your benefit. In order to make over ag oid hat, one must know to make a new one from to finish. We don't experiment; we know how, Seventeen years at the bench Is-why we know, Why not get yours done right? _ It costs no more. Our reference --=your milliner or hatter. Get the nomber right Street Hat '. . Phone 1488. Man'f'rs olf. Panea-lacit wa { EE aad ai a

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