Milverton Sun, 9 Aug 1917, p. 3

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RSA \GENTS WANTED| in each town, to sell a new Sores mittols ORDERS mak- OF THE MASSES © = MEN IN WHOSE HANDS RESTS FATE OF DEMOCRACY. Outcome of Struggle is Governed m: Largely by Statesmen Now in Public Gaze. new diplomacy has been brought | Into existence.as a result of the world war. It is the diplomacy of democ- racy—straightforward, definite, un- concealing. And its appearance in the conferences of dealings tia their people and wi pees ere are es four men in whose a re the result of the present con- flict may be said to lodge. That is to gay, that the the Allies rests upon t! shoulders. id Minister of War and Marine, influence shall prevail if the Land of the Bear remains in the trenches ue refuses all offers of a separate pea The rest of the quartet are Eovten: ant General Count Terauchi, the Pre- mier of Japan; Alexandre Felix Ribot, Premier of France; and Dayid Lloyd George, Premier of Great Bran fble to assert that the confl vealed Uae in their true stature and importance cieiodes Kerensky. Kerensky is not only remarkable men in Russia, but he the foremost personality of the war. of ee people himself, a man and a public fe faa contacts water de the most dar- {ng speech ever heard in a Russian legislative assembly. His daring, how- ever, is not assumed; it is not the flourish of an ambitious office-seeker. Kerensky was born in Tashkent, in the heart of Siberia, about thirty-seven yegrs ago. He has been counsel workmen and labor associations, and finally was sent to the Duma, where he immediately made his mark. ater, but a sincere, level-headed lover of freedom. His honesty never has been questioned, and his whole course in the Russian Duma and in his public life has strengthened ne: con- fidence his followers have in He was the one man who could ef. fect a compromise with the possible disturbing elements and prevent the country from falling into a state of anarchy, Count Terauchi. General Terauchi, although a mon- her place wherever it shall be foun for her, In many ways Terauchi is the strongest man in Japan to-day. He is monarchist who knows his people and who believes in a constitutional practiced Baie ae it brought victory to Japan’s ban- wi ner: His administration of Korea after it and its people in a marked manner. mall wonder that his people are back of him and that the Entente Allies haye confidence in his power to keep Japan with them until the world’s peace has been obtained. Alexandre Ribot. Alexandre Ribot, lo into the family of republics the new ja. M. Ribot ts the man who a quarter of a century ago signed the treaty of alliance with, Russia the first time in an generation that France had her hope Pahed of oe ae back the Jost a Se Alsa It was re) asa aniter stroke and totally tinexpegted by the chancelleries of Europe. Ribot Ne known to be one of the big- gest ae in the French Parliament, is also known to be the most 0, he carries with him the con- fi ce of the people. oe oe David Lloyd Merce ‘When England | fwas suddenly 2 1d w: ito the pore oe the er best nee ‘ fais . ‘That Belton at the Hoe ae one or ee seats with , creaking mi machinery, with pon- ‘of the inefficient past, S: s victory for the Mon, and he did it Githont Jos- |he has the confidence of every ged ry from common coal felont Givi Heat atid Tight Co. 800 Street, Toronto. ing his pleasant smile, All England \breathed more easily when he took | ued helm, for che? still youthful Welsh- him that was needed in the time of stress. He now speaks for the nation, a man ii the empire. Zeppelins do not disturb the Allies is to be | him. U-boats do not cause him to lose see three years, the man who could ideal and keep the tablish a reign of universal peace. EE ARMENIA OF TO-DAY. es! Nation Has Preserved Its Traditions and Religion for Centuries. In spite of the efforts of barbar masters, and notwithstanding the Tiel og fright persecutions the Armenians |have been able for centuries and cen se ries, to preserve their traditions, their language and the Sis of | het eee hs ersiciatioe of e Armenian vitality a fact almost unique of its kind; is 'the Arabs and Turks, very few |been able to preserve the three prin- of nationality—cus- last remnants of ancient Ne i ‘orm has little by'little disappeared to give place to dialects of modern Persia mixed with archaical forms. Chaldeans, for the most part Chris-| tians, have in general abandoned thet language, while a great number hav changed their religion a eielesces with the m: jess numerous saint John (Madeens), living in er Chaldea, are still attached by reli gious beliefs, but their ancient speech is dea Copts, in I ing Christians, witnes: xtine- tion of their TRA EueKe scarcely a cen- Syri it the language ne the alicia and Taal inheritance of their ancestors. Blasting With Lime. ‘Then water is added to calcium ox- ide, or quicklime, the lime expands slowly with almost irresistible force. Rock Products describes how that pro- a lar piers that suppo constant operation and ou had to be removed without injury to machinery. It was impossible to blast the piers, id Wan otting ee “too slow and expensive. The work was ac- complished by drilling tears ver- tical holes, three feet deep and three feet apart in both dizections, over the ng known as the | *™ every direction, and the entire top of the foundation was broken into three- cubes. | foot ESIGN Preparing for To-morrow Many people seem able to drink tea and coffee for a While Without apparent harm, but when health disturbance follows, even ee ue it is wise to toys iga ee of setae eK _Trowsands ere, ten A One-Piece mething sbaatnealy 3 new is the slip-on frock shown above which re- quires no fastening of nay kind—nei- ther buttons, hooks eyes, nor snaps. The two- pee skirt is attach- ed to the blouse, and the waistline ad- justed i h may be plicity Dress; in 7 sizes; 84 to 46 bust. one of the most ioe stall the. people. subjugated by Price, 20 cents. pattern can be obtained from ‘your Toa McCall dealer, or from the nae mee 70 Bond ’st., Toronto, THE STORY ( OF THE: THESTAIRS se Every time you go up stairs you can esti vous Biate, of beside cindy ¢ tion of your b you te at the top of the breathless and distressed ? sate heart palpitate violently ? your side ? n have to stop half trembling and Do stairs | Does your blood becomes impoverished or mpure the staircase becomes an in- strument of torture. When this is so ber of its traditions; Copts and Syri- of raed down and decline, Litto D ay, one thing generation this favorite medicine has use throug! has made many thousands of weak, despondent men and women bright, active and strong You can get Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills chveat any dealer infmedicine, or by i at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ation SS rena eeS A SCENE IN LONDON’S SLUMS. Influence of a Little War Shrine on he Rough Inhabitants. I walked the other day through one of London’s meanest streets. The bar- rows of costermongers lined the pave- ments. Rough women jostled each other and shouted in foreign tongues. Odds and ends ‘of unsavory-looking washing fluttered from the windows of slums overhead, writes an English- woman. ‘And in op saat of at ae dirt and disorder I came upon y beau i. fl little war se aha git “tet 3 of old gh a background ae ighuita ble ee Mere inscribed—the "Roll of Hon Before the shrine lay great bunches of roses and pin! As Llooked ee me tiny oasis in es don’s slemeens woman it ged sh: rel and. with very dirty aitial Faaciisdt up.’ In those hands she car- lried a bunch of ie ee pee: | about it her furtively ‘was watching iver placed “tte ies "aE ane a were in her ey: “Good old Bil” I “’e always did cally heal Herat ees flowers!” thes tae “that among the dozen ribed on the shrine under the title “Roll of Honor” was that of Epvaie Bill, Tohnaeany of snes “Die wens Killed while BEE, a ae ed c ate iceman—a_ typical London ind they have to be big and |don’s slums—s || “That there little oe alan does more to uplift the men and women of ‘the neighborhood than the sermons of ‘oll « re a to example it does. in. just ‘morrow. “Aer: a nace gon of thee rors ese toughest c London, she used to Id Ww ag et oc eee "One| Is: Breakfast Ready? The answer is ¢ in the an! is easy in /home where Shredded | Wheat Biscuit is the regular breakfast cereal. Being ready-cooked and ready-to-eat, Shredded Wheat Biscuit is the joy of the housekeeper in Summer. Served with sliced bananas, berries, or other fruit, they make a nourishing, satisfying meal at a cost of a few cents. Made in Canada. AT 8,000 FEET. EXPERIENCE OF A CANADIAN AIRMAN IN FRANCE. Lieut. Munday Narrowly Escaped Imprisonment. n exciting trip was that taken by Flight Lieut. Munday, of Toronto, who only a few months ago received his commission, and shortly afterward was sent to France. He described the experience as follows and Friday morning line for the first time. a - Tony maeely. Neca prisoner vee Taal at eight thousand feet above the cloud: what ‘Hunland’ looke trip over the line and a prisoner of war, Engine Refused to Work. “{ pushed the nose of my ma‘ down and almost got into a nose-dive. At one thousand feet I was on out the world and Fai the ghost’ for good on that trip. Fate of Pilots. eighteen pilots. tached there were the front to get even with Frit Flight Lieut. lish hospital since. —_— Influence Needed. Be new, and he was a second lieutenant. Bunting.’ > “Certainly, the old eeionett “J will, with pleasure price is most ae nt in use. He good tea, many more. sae Puente it's economy, ‘ real ’ acute hearing which they. e animals to catch soun: IN THE AIR Engine Refused to Work and Flight tng | Medicine Co» Brockyille, Ont. 2 aa Ul broken leg in the ho: chine but still my engine refused to start. the point of giving up = selecting a th ing just behind the Belgian lines I dis- een hit In the squadron to which I was at- To-day six are still intact for service. Of the six, one only is at the front, the asi sleepless nights and interrupted | padly hurt in the shoulder at the time of his flight, and has been in an pe ‘was very young and fresh and , my lad—certainly!” said ean eae Post tea that can be sold at a low jalada, makes ears are at the “back ct d by c ne that birds should possess the very do while lacking the fleshy cee ail enables arsons would,” he observ. | the ds. SAVING wOOnsT AT LONDON ZOO. Horseflesh is only M Meat Used—Bread Made From Condensed Flour. How the Zoological Gardens in Lon- don are helping to conserve the Bri- tish food supply was told by the Duke of Bedford at a recent meeting of the Zoological Society in London. He sat they had not replaced the animals that had died since the war began and had killed off all of those that were easily replaced. The only meat they gave to the car- /nivora was horse flesh purchased from the army. potatoes. monkeys an was se from flour reject Board of Trad: Sal 's biscuits that th outlived their usefulness 1d They were replacing oats with ith park grass and foliage. Only Chinese pickled were employed and the fish was that unsuitable for human uw: mas, formerly many small mammals and birds, had toa great ex- tent been replaced by boiled mangold- sold for human consumption, KEEP CHILDREN WELL Every mother knows how fatal the aysenty and stomach troubles are rife at this time and often a preciou: little tite is lost after only a few fate The mother who keeps-Baby’s “T landed in France on a Thursday, | 7” 5 The Dr, Williams’ Told the Truth. “Jimmy,” said the gentle old lady sadly to the young imp who lay with a spital, “the nurses tell me that you have been a very naughty boy. “Yes, missus,” acknowledged Jim- my, his sun-burnt face and tousled head hale. hidden in the pil illo “But, why?” came the mesaueey “Can't ’elp it, vine shame-fac- edly vihlapered 3 “Now, ie here,” said the old lady as she oe shall be at the hospital again next week, and I want y . | promise me to be a good boy till “hen and, if so, you shall have a whol shilling Jimmy fervently promised; but, alas, all his mischief reasserted itself, and he was sadly in disgrace when the old lady again visited the “Well, little man,” iitivaaldcmiiaty, “I'm not going to ask the ares if you have been a good boy. ll me your- 5 Now, do yo “serve that shill- ing I promised y Slowly Jim ae his big brown eyes to her face, and then lowered em. again. “Gimme a penny,” he said in a low voice. \ paisa ae ny fy WOMEN ! IT IS MAGIC! LIFT OUT ANY CORN Apply a few drops then lift _ corns or calluses off with fingers—no pain, Just pe lift off ai lus without pain or sore. tong can A Cincinnati man dis- or callus so pee ‘en it | SO you can lift it ri Freezot ron ful... It ere iamantipe It doesn’t “aie be the corn or shrivels it without even irritating the ieee skin, Hard, 5 tell him to order a small bot- trgezoe i yu. from phe wholesale drug 1 cake — SOLDIERS USE NEW SLA NG. New Words pavained by Coats Nee Experiences at se war some one Wi but pgtatnehe hoyelists—a littl earl ot ne ee ew ei 7 done now tor it cor deal or hat Phrases like“ isin a state of fh ara up”. (i. e., fright ME. RooT's REPORT oN RussIA| & Country's Most Serious Lack is Money minty) of saenends Pale horse | cannot. fi DURING HOT WEATHER| $s onion, a and eee Transportation. a cya to Russia from the members of his party are couraged. He tells us that he found no organic @ | ously, ze Russia is passin; ig th no darker days that se own saan a8 |has gone sgh “Wi ees he says, “that a ae in whom all constructive ef- fort has Fac je aap for so long for necessarily one of debate. admirable traits in the Russian char- nd ardent Ea ity fox 108el eats government have been ‘oe | Worshipped as n, Elthu Root, as lender of | fy a ec . A eee ol sbars hasta teeter erence, If thera no local t in bane Wen ca ode of Ch Dr.J.W. Edwards, M.P._ W. F. Montague, J. ¥, Campbell, J. Hi, Boll, M.D., je: cael Ogaaine Grand Médical Ex "HAMILTON. + ONTARIO Fexee, ci The “Queen a anvan (Jeremiah vii., 18; xivi; 17, 18, 19, 25) is the moon Astareth 0 yr As 3 pela 2h Re Raden eo NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE ROFIT-MAKING NEWS AN Sbplication. to Wilson. Publishing ome pany, 78 Adelaide Street. Toronto. every day since the revolution. shall do what we can to help Russia in both.” To help Russia in both will be one. e of the great services that the United States will render. ——+ When Your Eyes Need Care Ose Murine Eye Medicine. NoSm: Feels eee rately. rssnred Bae it, for) Rede Weak, Granovlat erellse ae a years. st 2 aunt ‘Aneptic Tubes, Murine Bye Balve In Aneptle cok obths SOR Marine Ey ye Re Sat pace Chicago. 7 When boiling corned beat you wil improve the flavor b; terol wee hay leaves to the water in which it is Minard’s Iiniment Cures Distemper. If winter flowéring plants have not | been repotted do not longer delay. Get ‘om the neat:| ae plants at! e the plants in ny, ee den nd keep Uren well reneed MONEY ORDERS. REMIT by Dominion Express Money, Order. lost or stolen, you get! your he badl Every merchant * pelt Lae ale freight carey mptly. Fr are suffering for fears that ere sot sony for days waiting to be un- loaded. During the month a May at te praca okay Hear after ere plac am tracks for ialoading the eeige ‘tention of cars for enue: s four days. Help | the whole country by. He RY with Hs Uieleoieing aacpoadilp, / T bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'S: LINIMENT and sold’ him for $85.00. Profit on Liniment, $54. ISH DHROSCR, Hotel Keeper, St. Phillippe, Que. \ | (YANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, “BTC, internal and external, cu out. p: Souk hunks Mansons» Wirite at us Aria ae Jate. Dr. Bellman Medical Go. Limited, Collingwood. Ome _—————S=S The Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the “OTTO HIGEL! PIANO ACTI ON | Bo DOG DISEASES| H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York NUXATED ON arifclo soon to al appear 1 in this pap = your doctor or ‘aramelit Rak ' Suffered Three Weeks) ; With Chapped Hands. Sore and Unsighily. -Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed. | pgeeceisees aeee ceived from Miss Gladys Hambleton, Roxton Falls, ue., Noy. 29, How .much better to ‘Sefank such suffering by using Cuticura eat Seca toilet: Laake ; the: to and” r the pores, with sie Ai pice yw and then as need ahtiad and heal the first signs of. rashes, dandruffand pimples. You use no other once you try these super-creamy emollients, _, For Free Sample Each by Mail ad- dress post-card: MeCuticura, Boston, U.S. A.” Sold Beno - nn the toes, |’ Ped garden needs a compost heap. | od way to start the heap is to cut | soil and good compost to spread over it | the garden. ne It is doubtful if any of us realize thd, need that there will be for meat an Oa ( ‘a breeding stock and Canadian meat pro-| | . duets will be in demand. Tt behooves the Canadian breeder and fe ‘of live stock Riheh ‘prospects are se for cont se high prices. No aretiat outlet mum December 7th and 8th next. The solution of the food problem es in the hands of the women of the nid. eon Minard’s Ziniment Ouro at Ones Diphtheria, | It is estimated sd that “there ae 600 countries the opportunity and pt fine a maxi: || NERVOUSNESS AND BLUES oe Se of More Riuds - Sickness. Specie asco teh Washington P: th. the mothier of four hilteen and have suf- —weammrsata) fered with female ~ n to me at times, Vegetable | stored me to health and I teal ia ie, Roet, Sroriet, | Washington Fite Hlinsis. aay Sony which age sae professional ‘okio, 0 wander from Han to uaine re- new set of stories when he finds that the old ones are too well known, wi Jating tales. The story-teller learns a| Lydia -sympt you would its to know writ ie E. Pinkham Medicine Co, Lie Ras Mass., for helpful advice given free of roe to ranted the benefit of rela |

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