Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 13 Sep 1916, p. 7

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ler. Stomach troubles, cholera infans: tum and diarrhoea carry: off thous« Pe ands' of little ones every summer, in at the capital. 'Dr. Shutt intensely practical note of £ when he argues that we have ly. wasteful of plant food th in ae Rothe ining d en aki 2" SE 'Eastern Can "change is called to. intensive Iaoning: the les- that it is sought to convey being e is more profit in high til- conservation in cultivation methods of mere routine gone minutely into the pro- necessary treatment. and ap- 'plication of farmyard manures, the doctor supplies a table giving the ap- proximate composition . of = manure (fresh) from various animals, de- a the manurial value of clover, : component elements and bene- ficial pes ers, and ref exercised by fertiliz- to the places occupied "by wood ashes and seaweed as potas- fertilizer. ' He goes into the vir- tues of gypsum and nitrate of soda 'as indirect potash fertilizer, conclud- ing in an instructive review of the chief means by which the productive- ness of the soil may be increased and preserved, by urging farmers to make greater use of the various means and 'agencies provided by the governments Federal and - Provincial--"for the assistance of the man on the land by information, advice and demonstra- "tion." "There is mo country," he ws, "better provided than Canada this respect." Regarding manure, 'facts to be remember- is not at once utiliz- put into the oil, or on to of its initial value at the loss is least where Sir ga 'ero the world most. cages because the mother does not have a safe cine at hand to give promptly. Baby's! Own Tablets, cure these troubles, or if given occa! sionally to the well shild weil prevent their coming on. le blets are' guaranteed by a government analyst good in summer because they regu- late the Dowel "and keep the stomach sweet and. pure. They are' sold 'by. medicine dealers or-by mail at 25 cents a box from 'The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. > eee A FAVORITE WITH THE aRbexed Sir Francis Elliott Has Won Many Bloodless Victories. - Although one hears little about him, there is no' doubt that Sir Francis: Elliot, who has been Minis- ter at Athens since 1908, has won many bloodless victories for the al-. lies during the troublous times: in Greece. A quarter of a century's ex- perience in the Balkans--for Sir Francis was at Sofia before he be- came Minister at Athens--has enabl- ed 'this clever diplomatist to render inestimable = service to - the country. He has had the advantage of being a great favorite with the Greeks, for he lived among them during the last two Balkan wars, and helped them to become a far more powerful nation than they were when he was first tal. born in the old Legaton House atthe vice when he was twenty-three, as at- | tache at Constantinople. At Eton' and Oxford he earned a big reputa~ tion. as an athlete and oarsman. He rowed in the Eton eight for four years, while at Oxford, his boat be- came head of the river. 2 n, he ays of the ry, although 80 reserved. Indeed, ; en he can put his ties behind him for the owing an American | © d the tombs in St. " said the guide, "his the Europe or ever knew<Lord Nelson's. sarcophagus weighs that appointed Minister at the Greek capi-, Sir Francis, who, by the way, was. They glossed Hague, entered the Diplomatic Ser-: ~English tennis flannels, "But She Gorman. propapenilists were plotting, for something Tore hes moral sympathy." frst assumed the rol Ie a tone 'whose 'feelin, in wantonly hatt By the exvinées of 4 very deny' friend, but when they found that this did not work, they resumed their na- tural Prussian roughness and 'became defiant. * + They sneeringly informed us we | were not a nation, only a mob con- "rolled by British interests Ee Ey sven They warfied us that when the through with his little job of 8%. to be absolutely harmless even to the! ing France and Britai | new-born babe. They are especially ne wr i he was gos ing to make it exceedingly sultry for 'Uncle Sam. Of course this did not aid their object, but drove many who would otherwise: have. sympathized with them, into defiant enemies, 1 They made unsupported assertions, and flat denials, but argued very lit- tle. They resorted to their character- istic method of attributing to others the baseness they themselves practis- led. The hirelings of their reptile press, for instance, the great | American newspapers with being con- trolled by "British gold," and they insinuated that our public men were tunder.-a like influence. This was Judicrous in the extreme, and wholly ' unsupported by the facts; and doubt- 'less repelled, rather than drew, any | support to their unholy cause. They denied the charge that the German people did not possess free- | dom, or that he was a mere cog in the | ' great military machine with the Kaiser at the throttle, and claimed of P- proofs that Gott und mich were still con- | tle different line, and are known to 8t {many when they were pounding at cu ith no such conclusions as suited. pur- pose. And when his ruse was io 3 ed, he still continued fo sepast, as though those who listened io flair for the truth. He ote Gladstone, and spun specious argu- ments_ al British navalism as though this could justify German vio- lations of international law and the sanctity of humanity. To his highly Kultur-ed moral sense, the Lusitania massacre only brought reassuring in partnership and blessed Teutonic enterprise. Bernstorfi's exploits were on a lit- all. He had the war won for Ger-| the gates of Paris, though they never got further, Seeing that all this failed they than | tried to form an alliance with the | Irish-Americans, but the idea of the Irish uniting with the straight-jacket regime of autocratic Germany was too much, and he must be hopelessly dense to imagine such a thing. But the kaiser's agents did not stop at preaching sedition, they spread se- cretly a network of violence, and this they are still practicing to the ab- horrence of everybody. ree t| ICE CREAM PARLOR CARS ON THE C.P.R. The Ice Cream Parlor plays such an important. part in the life of peo- ple that Dr. W. A. Cooper, of the Canadian Pacific Dining Car Service, has decided to incorporate it into rail- way travel and has initiated what to secure his 500,000 diers, 100,000 women must tempor- arily step into the shoes of men so that the latter may be r for service, as the Yimit. of available men seems almost to he reached. Women are already working along- side of men in sacking and hauling of grain at the Great Lakes eleva. tors, in the Canadian Pacific and shops where they are cleaning cars, in the telegraph services and in many clerical positions hither- to held by men. They are acting in some places as Station Agents with satisfaction to their employers. But Canadians who visit' England are sur- prised to find women ticket inspect- ors and guards, women as elevator attendants, women as chauffeurs, and train conductors, womén as red caps, porters and ticket clerks, women as locomotive cleaners and track greas- ers. a S ore™ Granslated ir sure oto oy post and Wigd Eyes y relieved by Murine nie urine Lye ve No 8marting, Souk fort. Fone Druguists Bo PabokoheeE rey Druggists or Marine Eye Remedy Co. , Chicago . BREEN amnion AS OLD AS THE WORLD. Long Known in Europe in Form of Sporadic Epidemics. may be called the Ice Cream Parlor Car on the chief trains between Mont- real and Ottawa, that is to say on! the trains which carry a Buffet- Library-Observation-Parlor-Car, It is now possible on such cars to ob- tain soft drinks, ice-creams and sun-| daes, and though the service has been in existence only a few days, itsspop- | ularity has been so pronounced that it will no doubt be extended to other services in the near future. irs i: The Flora of the Section. | "Have you noticed our flora about here ?" asked the professor of botany | to the new student. "If you mean the one with the white that the Germans exericsed a much spats, 1 have," replied the student, who ampler elective right than~did either had an eye. the' British or American citizen. | an autocrat than the King of Eng- land, or the President of the U.S, and the charge that militarism dominated | over the Kaiser's belli | cose speeches, and interpreted his | fondness for rattling the scabbard as | innocent playfulness. Did he hate England? Why, bless you, no; he; was a cousin of its king, and he wore d like. the English, was fond of racing and Germany, was a base falsehood, etc. | ma, | The Kaiser, they asserted, was less | Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. Invoking the Powers. Elsie (saying her prayers)--Mam- may I pray that we have rain to- morrow ? Mother--Why do you want rain, my child ? Blsie--'Cause Susie Stuckup didn't invite me to her garden party. St. Joseph, Levis, July 14, 1903. I yachting. A very "goodie" kaiser,|Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. | indeed; but during this recital, some- Gentlemen,--I was badly kicked by { how, we could not shut out the glare my horse last May, and after using ! of "his military uniform, and boar's tusk mustache, though he | was pictured to us in a gray suit, broad-brimmed hat, the reincarnation of 'William Penn, with the conven- Penal 'smile playing around his lips. ch propaganda could originate minds 'which 'took it for | granted 'that = American intelligence was at a very low' ebb; and that Americans were totally ignorant of German history, politics, and condi- tions rally. © © Warr 58,850 that their miethods, which worked n home, were ineffectual here.' ' Dr. Dernburg, whose Shoal quali fications commended him to the kais- porta} envoy to cajole the Americans, bassador Bern- er, was sent over as the special im-| pologists soon perceiv-|. for many months the competition | glistening Helmet, and bizarre several preparations on my leg noth- his shining sword, ! ing would do. My leg was black as jet. T was laid up in bed for a fort- night and could not walk. After us- ing three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT 1 was perfectly cured, so that I eould start on the road. JOS. DUBES, Commercial Traveller. Can Anybody Blame Him ? "Ma -husban's very po'ly, ma'am. He got dat exclamatory rheumatism." "You, mean inflammatory, Martha. Exclamatory is from exclaim, which means to cry out." "Yes, ma'am, dat's what it is. hollers i anyone goes near him." He Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Eto. i X * Turning Sunshine Loose. "It's a dark day," someone sald to Brother 'Williams, "a very dark, hope- less day." And then the old negro said : "Hit's ez you look at it. But why don't you u 'de sunshine ? Ain't you got ome hid 'round de house some'rs-- some ol' co'ner w at you clean for: r 'roun', and tu'n ocl It's dar--in yo'| "Hore" the dark day mourner d, "here's a dollar for you, old ! God 1" the flying corps went over Boer , Wiliams : "Infantile paralysis, the appearance ,0f which in France seems to be feared," says Professor Arnold Net- ter, a member of the Academy of Medicine, and an authority on the disease, "Is a malady as old as the world and which has long been known lin the form of Sporadic epidemics, | aftecting adults as well as children. | "It exists now in England and France. Thousands of persons were affected by the disease in Sweden in 1905, and France suffered in its turn in 1909 and 1910, and even as late as 1914." As to the treatment of the disease, Professor Netter says : "Beginning in 1910, we employed injections -of a serum derived from subjects who had been previously af- fected with the disease, and the re sults were excellent wherever the subject could be treated at the outset of the attack. The use of serum may be considered as capable of arresting the progress and even of causing a disappearance of paralysis already developed." re pen Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. ee petra AWARD FOR CLEVER FEAT. Bounty to Crew of Submarine That Sank Turk Battleship. The exploits of the British sub- marine B-11, commanded by Lieut. Holbrook, V.G., in the Dardanelles, were recalled in the British prize court recently when. Sir Samuel || Evans was asked to award prize bounty to the commander of the Brit- ish submarine and her ship's com- pany, for sinking the Turkish battle- ship Mesudieh off Chanak, after the submarine had dived under five lines yards | YW 'A rattlesnake "never shrinks : danger, It simply recoils. hog SEED POTATONS B TE FE : 150 *Flieriors (pon. 35 b 0 B00, Chiles situation and Shoern bi Dud " Graham, R.R. 4, Peter HELP WANTED. 5 ATCHUARS R A WANTED, MU a Mus e. ca an : Port Arthur, Ont. re ie, Ronny ACHINISTS--SIX GOOD--BITH machines or vise hands ; gene work ; good es for good men. The Iron Wonka: Lim ted, Owen Bound. : LACKSMITH WANTED, -- Gf Bhoer 'and general smith ; po shop ; Steady J ob ; ner day ; a every . t Manitouim sland, Ont, " ore NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE PROT MAKING NEWS A AND SE for sale in a eam towns The town e most ussturle Biking Co application ro Wason pubis pany, 78 West Adelaide Beret, T MISCELLANEOUS ANCER, TUMORS. LUMPS, ETC internal and external, cured withs out pain by our Dome treatment. ey us before too late. Dr, Dcllman M Co.. Limited. Collingwood, Ont oron ona Become a Rogiatored Nurse and receive pay while learning The Beth Israe of New Ror Grey wounded 1660 ted by se oi showings wd bal ones 8 Uy fiend 3 ma for Lo BOOK ON DOG DISEASES + And How to Feed Mailed free to any address by e Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc, 118 West 31st Street, New York The Soul of a Plano isthe Action, Insist on the "OTTO HIGEL"" Piano Action A Gold Mine On Your Farm You can double your profits by storing up good green feed ina BISSELL SILO « "Summer Feed all Winter Lon: Scientifically bu Tt to keep silage fresh sweet and good to the last. Built of select- ed timber treated with wood Rreservatlves that prevent deca. The BISSELL Silo has strong, rigid wells, air-tight doors, hoops of heavy steel. Sold by dealers address us direct, | free folder. Bissell C of enemy mines. Lieut. Holbrook, giving = evidence, | said he applied : to the senior. sub- marine officer for permission to make the attempt. 'The was torpedoed at 80 yards. He came battleship's deck awash. , She was going down stern first. 'The sub- marine was fired at by the forts all round, but he managed to get: away and. to return uninjured. The crew of the submarine comprised 14 men and two officers. Later, officers of e Scene 'and saw the. Mesudied lying on the 'bottom. On the question of the number on board the battleship Sir Samuel said he did not think jt was a case where he ought fo encourage the splitting of straws. He, fe, therelore eelaved the number on board to be 700 an awarded £8,500 bounty. *: : Mesudieh ' up after three minutes and found the B_--r re will give this beautiful bracelet Iron, oh Sarge | to any girl or young lad ho itl sell 30 of our lovely 13x18 inc I} rolozed Silograph pictures at 10c. each, raceet is Of rolled gold plate, richly engraved. end us your name and we will ou the Pictures, When sold Hie he money and we will send Ad you the Machinary | For Sal Sale Wheelock Engine, 150 H.P,, 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins, wide, and Dynamo 30K. W. belt driven, ™ All in first class condition. Would be sold together or scp ratc- ly ; also a lot of shafiing ata very great bargaih as 100m. Is. required immed Held : {}

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