Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 18 Apr 1918, p. 7

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BROKERS Canadian Pacific Building, Toronto Direct a Sa | | MN) A HY $3.00 Free Circular STOPGLARE LTD. HAMILTON, ON1 BATTLEFIELD TELEPHONES. Romance, Adventure and Action in In no war in the past have the elec- tric signaling systems covered so many square miles or such a great di- versity of requirements., The com-| - manding general wants to know how a certain division is progressing; an artillery captain wants to' ascertain just where his shells are dropping; these and a million other facts must be transmitted every hour of the day along the hundreds of miles of ttlefront, says the Electrical Ex- perimenter. And it is really marvel- ous how the army signal corps have perfected their _fraillocking wires and instruments so that they will work under the most unfavorable con- ditions, Romance, adventure, action --all of these ¢ome to the signal corps man in the pursuit of his duties more than ever before. To-day hé may in- stall a telephone switchboard in a cheerful little town near grand head- 4 quarters, situated a dozen miles back] ¢ of the battlefront. To-morrow he may be stringing wires through a shell- swept forest. One case will serve to show the lottery-like chance these men take. An English military line- man had been busy for several weeks in a district near the Aisne battle- front. He had completed straighten- ing out a perfect jungle of wires and circuits. His captain came along and ' was pleased to learn that all of the = circuits had been tested out without losing a man. The same captain was frieved to hear the next day that this ve lineman, his work done, had been picked out of a pole top by a stray shell. ---- .. The poultry business comes about near to furnishing an all-the-year income as any branch of farming. + | worst | if the victimizing can be lessened in |8 "Farm to Family" section condensed DN & C0. Private Wires to our Montreal and New York Offices - «This little coat is suitable for the' boy or girl. McCall Pattern No. 8122, Mackinaw Coat. In 8 sizes, 4 to 14 years, Price, 15 cents. A good model for the Spring coat suit. McCall Pattern No, 8177, Ladies' Coat. In 6 sizes, 84 to 44 bust. No. 8149, Ladies' Two or Three. Piece Skirt. In 7 sizes, 22 to 84 waist. Price, 20 cents each. ; These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co,, 70 Bond 8t., Tor- onto, Dept. W. 7 leet FARM TO FAMILY. A Way to Discover Whether Middle- man is a Real Necessity. Two dollars and forty cents was the ao [edition of Sir William nuch attention to the 2 Yliropen and its relation to crop [es Rd ag " 4 aad ion of liam Crookes' mono- graph, "The Wheat Problem," which 26 years ago and was evi- dently read understandingly by no_one except the Germans, In this little book Sir William pointed out that the population of the world was steadily increasing while the area suited to the production of wheat was nearly all developed, There- fore it became a mere mathematical calculation to determine just how long it would be before the human race would begin to be hungry for wheat. But since Sir William Crookes' the- sis was first published a second factor has entered into the problem. Millions of men who used to bé engaged in the cultivation of the soil have gone to war and by the use of explosives have been for the past three years liberat- ing at an almost incredible rate the supplies of nitrogen which in a sane and normal order should have gone to enrich the soil, Thus the human race is hurrying itself on toward starvation by two direct methods. It is not cultivating foodstuffs and it is destroying the chief element of which fertilizers are made. The greatest supply of nitrates in the world is found in the Chilean nitrate-of-soda deposits. 'But these are not inexhaustible and the war has been drawing upon them for explo- sives at the rate of nearly 8,000,000 tons per year. Germany long ago foresaw the dane ger and developed facilities for fixing the free nitrogen of which the at- mosphere is partly composed, The method employed requires enormous mechanical power, such as {is repre- sented by swift-running streams or great waterfalls. So, when the war put an end to Germany's commerce, that country was not. wholly depend- ent upon nitrogen imported from for- eign countries, es Righteous Wrath. There are many kinds of hate, as many kinds of fire; And some are fierce and fatal with murderous desire; And some are mean and craven, re- vengeful, selfish, slow, They hurt the man that holds them more than they hurt his foe. And yet there is a hatred that purifies the heart, The anger of the better against the baser part, \ Against the false and wicked, against the tyrant's sword, Against thé enemies of love, and all that haté the Lord. O cleansing indignation, O flame of righteous wrath, Give me a soul to see thee and follow in thy path! Save me from selfish virtue, arm me for fearless fight, And give me strength to carry on, a soldier of the Right! --Dr. Henry Van Dyke. -- i Back Yards and Vacant Lots. price paid for a bag of potatoes by a Kingston lady, according to a recent press report. One of the potatoes had a card attached signed by the farmer who grew them, which said: "I sold at $1; what did you pay?" Her again we are faced with the ubiquit- ous middleman, concerning whose! elimination much ink has been shed. | Now there are middlemen and middle- men, which is to say that some mid- dlemen are necessary and some are not, and the best way to find out whe- ther a given middleman is necessary or not is to try to get along without The farmer and the city household- er are generally supposed to be -the victims of the middlemen and, this case, there should be some hope in others. Here is a suggestion look- Ing toward the accomplishment of that end. Let the newspapers in the larger centres of population feature r lon in their want ad. page. This would Now is the time for organization. There will be a greater need for pro- duction in cities, towns and villages this summer than ever before, Plan what you will do with the back yard | or vacant lot now, so that when. the season begins in a few weeks hence, you will' know what to do and will lose no precious time about it. the garden season starts it starts with a rush. There is no shortage of vege- table seeds except parsnips. Wholesale dealers have plenty of seeds in stock. Minaga's Lintment for sale everywhere. Penalties for Waste of Food. Proprietors, managers or other' re- sponsible parties; private household- ers and transportation companies, or others convicted of wasting food in- tended for human' consumption, through careless storing or other causes, are subject now to heavy] penalties, The maximum of $1,000; fine or not less than $100 may be im- posed, or imprisonment for a period | city con-| sumer and also advertisements of the | consumer who wanted to buy ~ | well advertisi | of the paper. the farmer. To get the movement started, a half-price rate might be fered and the'new departure should ed in the news columns The advertising a a LoL punts dine would gain ns fame for his paper and would also prove conclu- sively whether the farmer and | cons x TOY 00 Wont a ae not exceeding three months, or both fine and imprisonment, from | = | I [and 150,886 acres were classified as A patriotic roast Is' made wi cup if eat, a small onion || enlistment Hit Lely gE 8 WOMEN! IT Is MAGIC! ; LIFT OUT ANY CORN Apply a few drops then lift corns or calluses off with fingers--no pilin, { OOD Victoria, B.C, Esquimault, B.C. ernor of Manitoba, has charged mem- bers of the Legislature with the duty of carrying the message of produc- tion, home to their constituents. "The tragic cry for bread of the Allied peoples across the water," said Sir James, "has been impressively presented to you at this session. D Statistics Up-to-Date Just think! You can' lift off any corn or cal- lus without pain or sore- ness. A Cincinnati man dis. | covered this ether com- pound and named it freezone. Any drug- gist will sell a tiny bot- tle of freezone, like here shown, for very little cost. You apply a few drops directly upon a tender corn or callus, | Instantly the soreness i disappears, then short- ly you will find the corn if or callus so loose that lf you can lift it right off. | ll Freezone is wonder- | ful. It dries instantly. | It doesn't eat away the' corn or callus, but shrivels it up without even irritating the surrounding skin. | Hard, soft or corne between the toes, | as well as painful calluses, lift right off. There is no pain before or after- wards, If your druggist hasr': i freezone, tell him to order a small bot- tle for you from his wholesale drug house. te fee tn To-morrow May Not Come. To-morrow may not come, What then? To-day would be my last with men; From dawn to dusk, my final chance To wield for truth a shining lance, And these would be my last few hours To prove my worth and use my powers. And with the setting of the sun My work of life would all be done, And I should be remembered here Just as my record should appear. Oh, let me live and toil to-day So that if I am called away I need not pass and leave behind A single deed or word unkind. -- co LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER GIRLS! How to make a creamy beauty lotion for a few cents. ,~ The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most re markable lemon skin beautifier at about the cost ome must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a flne cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter-pint of this sweetly fra- grant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. EE Queen Mary's Silver Wedding Shower , The Queen Mary's Needlework Guild in Ontario earnestly asks the people junder license by the Canada Food A valuable feature of the 48th an- nual report of the Royal Bank of Ca- nada is a compilation of statistics for the 'Dominion brought up to date. These cover population by provinces, public 'debt, revenue and expendi- tures, fleld orops, trade summary, mineral production, insurance, com- mercial failures, food and fuel prices, immigration, etc. The publication also lists the names of those of the staff overseas and brings out the creditable fact that 1,000 employees | rn of this institution are on the Honour Roll. Feeding Grain in Stock Yards. No grain may now be fed to live- stock awaiting slaughter in stock yards eight hours before killing. Bar- ley above grade No. 8 and oats above No. 1 Feed, may not be fed to stock in stock yards. Millable wheat may not be bought or sold as poultry feed. Grain for feeding or decoying migra- tory wild fowl is prohibited except Board. I consider MINARD'S LINIMENT the BEST Liniment in use. I got my foot badly jammed lately. I bathed it well with MINARD'S LINI- MENT, and it was ag well, as ever next day, Yours very truly, T. G. McMULLEN. - Oleomargarine Released. The Canada Food Board has ar- ranged with the United States Food Administration to allow 1,000,000 pounds of oleomargarine to come into Canada per month, MONEY ORDERS Remit by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or stolen you get your money back. The price of a meal in France in a public eating house of .even the cheap- est kind, is no less now than $1.20. Though they have bread tickets in Italy, in many places they have no flour to make bread. Minard's Linimenat Cures Burns, Me Tokio has about 45,000 telephones and 60,000 persons are said to be seek- ing the service. A mediately to help on the farm cereals is an imperative war ti essity. Employers of labor sho low men with farm experience back to the farm. p---- Minard's Lintment Relieves 'APER IN NEWSP. o. Doing a owner Paces TE on' Appl ot on Co. Limited. Toronts. Wis RE py : td. 1 Ontario. Insurance cari o for $1,200 on aqui 8 Wiinon Publishing Co., 0 J ino hailing MISCELLANEOUS ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, C internal and external. cured nt out pain by our home Collingwood. One CUTCURA HEALS Rash On This Little Baby § Over Face and Head, Quite Disfigured. : "When my baby was four months od 5 she had a rash all over her face ead, and was quite dig= figured. Her skin was in. flamed andssore, and itched and burned and the rash later developed into large red eruptions, making her fron ad fretful. The bas y could not get any sleep. "My husband bought 4 box of Cuticura Omtment and a cake Soapand I used two tins of Ointment with twocakes of Soap and she was healed." (Signed) Mrs. A. Dow, St., Verdun, Montreal, Cuticura Soap and ent often prevent pimples or other eruptions, For Free Sample by Mail ad- dress post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U. 8. A." Sold everywhere, ' . Outdoor Workers are subject to exposure to all kinde of weather, and strenuous outdoor work brings the rheumatic aches. You cyn'tafford to belaid up, so heed that first twinge of rheumatism. Use Sloan's Liniment. Clean and con- venient, no need to rub, no stains; no clumsy plasters and your pain disappears. nde Spraine, strains, neuralgia fifi otiff, uscles all relieved the applis cation of Sloan's Liniment. - Genarous bottles at all druggists; 25¢., 50c., oo Sloan' Constipation Cure A druggist says s "For nearly thirty years I have commended the Extract of ts, known as Mother the radical cure of constipation and indigestion. It is an old reliable remedy that never fails to do the work." 30 drops thrice daily. Get the Genuine, | at druggists, 2 | of this Province to dontribute to a shower of Soldiers' Comforts, Supplies for Hospitals and Trenches, or money with which to buy them. Donations may be sent in until the last week in May and should be addressed to Mrs. Arthur VanKoughnet, 80 King St. West, Toronto, during which week a meeting will be held in the Parlia- ment Buildings, when the shower will be on. view and reports made of the contributions received. Immediately after, shipment will be made to Eng- | land, to arrive in time for her | Majesty's Silver Wedding Day, on July 6th, 1918. ---- Fire Losses in B. C. Forests. The fire season of 1917 was an un- usually severe one in British Colum- bia. Reports made to the provincial Forest Branch show that, exclusive of the railway belt, a total of 986 fires occurred. In fighting these fires, the Forest Branch expended $88,246. The al area burned over was 236,186 , of which only 2,825 acres was chantable timber land; 16,226 acres contained valuable reproduction, cut-qver, old burn not restocking, 'or nmoTCaTtable mature timber. The Sort Sumage done is estimated at $291,726.~Th ; Branch has ---- severely through for overseas service, 'of the Forest] A BSORBINE TRADE MARK RIG.U.S. PAT. OFF Strained, Lymphangitis;, Poll Ev Boils, Swellings; Stops ! and allays pain, Heals Sores, Cuts, Bruises, Boot Chafes. It fs g yf. SAFE ANTISEPTIC AND GERMICIOE Does not blister or remove the hafrand horse can be worked. Pleasant to use. 2.502 bottle, delivered: Descfibe your case Jor spect] instiuctions and Book § R free. duces Strains, Palaful, $1.25 per or of delivered. W.F.YOUNG, P.O. F., 518 on SE be Soon (LAA bo e's Curative Syrup, for € | Liniment KILLS PAIN ) Sloan's prices not Increased 25¢ 50c $1 HOW TO AVOID "BACKACHE AND NERVOUSNESS Told by Mrs, Lynch From Own ience, Providence, R. I.--"'I was all run down in health, was nervous, had ! aches, m weight and feel fine, so recommend Lydia %. table Compound to Erica 500 Plain St. Backache and nervousness

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