Monkton Times, 31 Jan 1918, p. 3

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_tuckl? et ey ar a capeigen The del eemed to. cease ab- |ruptly. The hand started groping lagain. It got over to the right side ne ast her _.- i all right, and then. am "sea same , ee Tearapengeann fi he t tempt her sete ) sib | AN old uti 4 : i a han om 7 i es ae Soe . ar SNe } . my tt 2 rie tee ¥ 3 ee mie gts = sane ee ee ~ | blood. 'than hér system is peeeidsd see point is that they -- ate co 'aid paneaeeeem G1; plcwance as a ethos, ant wnt very limo. he nurse ent frit ofr Tong Bor onions, | Yow may, lee in ates M98 nigga 18; golatieh,pheaane| MORE RPE ANE Hitt near ti. com feaimnthedaaes, nad, Pronto fem anai, unlee of coun he fa™a Daag ech 26 lek 18 ahs) Md aaeeticae $e # Gomnls: it imnaspand than. Ae ICE frm that' she 1a anaemic, Many Oars be covered by & discreet arrange aes ma each 12; thrush and wad ns sg beneath the sheets was very casiara TAs die Pons eo 'their own ment of the coiffure, such 2s is now common fowl, each 10; wren, 3. quie : t 30 College 8 » Toronto, On 4 : : : . 5a f ' i t , rather fortunately fashionable. ; ; "Gone West," said the man. who girlhood experience can' promptly de), "1's only in first. youth that the ' be «Po i ; ( tect the early signs of anaemia, and the ona y. : t stood beside. "Poor devil never knew r ' cit: tat taikingr halle melon (ok his lamp , " ¥ : wise mother does not wait for the [Uman § : : ; gl shy Sites : trouble to develop further, but at once ® ructure thinly covered with flesh, it Wanted To Go Home, aoe 5 soon begins to undergo a sort of with- : gives her daughter a course with Dr. : ; F I was glad that the tall, angular Williams Pink Pills, which renew the °TiM& Process that exposes its carti- cowpuncher had gone West. Other blood supply and banish anaemia be- laginous skelton more and more as men with eyes and arm gone could fore it has obtained a hold upon the Ye@?s pass. 2 ' ' learn trades and derive a vast interest system. ee a os As . -- ne Sea a 1 st . from existence, but a chap who's Out of their own experience thou- ; 0% t loses its " sped ; ace be hg rent ave ate se sands of mothers know that anaemia °"¥ other feature suffers impairmen urned his skin a sheer saddle color is the sure road to worse ills. They from loping his brone' long miles over in point of pulchritude./ know the difference that good red | OS oer - Ao ell guage the sunglare of the winter prairies blood makes in the development of are ass ' er o Mota -- o could hardly be expected to do that. womanly health. Every headache; | n fron er set sgh ore The confinement, no doubt, would kill It is a mark of shrinkag wrinkle for th it follows | : him off quickly. Syery pee te we ide Cee just-a minor symptom of the tendency "Gone West!" I don't know how the slightest exertion by the anaemic | ? ks the girl, every pain she suffers in her back 'to shrinkage of tissue that marks th much theology it upsets, but I hoped the spirit of that broncho-busting Can- GS BES Ate Sp spachns if A outa OTL bk sh otie span that old age : r ' 3 not taken the best steps to give your og : a is uck was galloping again over the weak girl new blood, and the only Sas oe ee ee ae i Aaa wind-swept prairies of the true sure way to do so is through the use : d "blighty." For "blighty" is Tommy's characteristic corruption of the melli- h, an ny whe L = 2 chess ling seems to interest her and dainties | You can ne you may be 00%; ; » & = oes 100, years; heron, 69; parrot, 60; 'Perhaps you may not want to. But goose and pelican, each 50; sparrow-|~ hawk, 40; skylark, 80; canary, crane ' a China, seribed by Private Harold Peat, 3rd Battalion, First Canadian -- Contingent. =~ ¢ He was a tall, angular chap, with the ruddy skin and network of eye wrinkles that one gets from many long hours of riding through the sun glare of the winter prairies, T knew that much because I had seen him be- fore in a billet behind the lines after that first baptismal carnage at Ypres. Over his head and eyes was a band- age that persisted in getting sodden as rapidly as new snowy dressings were put on. His right arm was gone. - When they brought him in he . was very quiet and I thought that he was still under the influence of the anes- thetic, but after a few minutes I saw that his teeth were clenched tightly ~and I knew that he was battling back that. terrible inclination to scream, It comes to a chap when his wounds throb and burn as if full of vitriol and 28 and anal Srervarce Sy ies Cabbage will have a more delicate! flavor and will make no odor while cooking if boiling water is poured over it and allowed to stand until you can set the cabbage out with the hands.' | Then put it on in boiling water to, | cook as usual, hs ee I wish ther € was a aoe House little town| I wish there was a WALKER HOUSE In every little town; : Then I could travel merrily, And always sit me down At night in peace and comfort, Happier than king with crown, If there was just one Walker House In every little town. I wish there was a WALKER HOUSE * In each place where I go. | The comforts of my dear old home While on the road I'd know. MONEY ORDERS | Remit by Dominion Hxpress Money Order. If lost or stolen, you get your money: back, 'Russia is said to have the greatest timber resources of any country in the world, ; Minard's Liniment Cues Colds, Etc. The man who will not get out and help, to shovel the drifts out of the! road so the mail-carrier or the school! wagons can get through, ought to be| taken by the nape-of the neck and set! © MoCarn ' 'T8b2 Dress Middy Dresses are very comfortable ; : and its progress thenceforward is con- and practical for school or play. Me- af, ee We Fae eS tinuous. and inexorable. -as he had solemnly promised, for a dle any more 'sunfishers' either." (A "ing them seemed to cheer him up. : Seth used to close quarters, somehow. fect all right, but a fellow's eyes --! \large a part smell plays in the food) "Blighty," he said, contem : Oa. like. -won't need me now with--with----" tem, do you?" 4 ¥ was a dream, The 1 a little and shouted a good deal, Most was lying, but the new "shirtSleeve" his sickened stomach adds its qualms to his misery. Shock of Returning Consciousness, I glanced at the little English nurse, a mere slip of a girl, who never tend- ed a new case without losing, tempor- arily, that splendid rose tint in her cheeks. 1 think she was constantly terrified by it all, but with her spirit "bucked up" to the exigency by sheer will power, she ministered quietly and efficiently to the needs of her charges. Her face was pale with sympathetic agony for the last chap they had brought in. -- I didn't go up and tell him that he'd "done his bit" nobly; | didn't proclaim cheerfully that Canada and the empire were proud of him. It just isn't done, fiction writers to the contrary notwith- standing. That first fight with the shock of returning consciousness after an amputation is best waged alone. After the wild fantastic dreams of the ether it is a terrible thing to stare into a void that gradually resolves it- self into the proportions of a hospital ward, wondering what the surgeon's knife may have accomplished in alter- ing one's whole attitude toward life. When even that privilege is barred by a bandage, the sense of one's utter impotence against circumstances must beggar all description, fluous Hindustani word, "billatee," which signifies "home." And that chap who had fought at Ypres and in many a subsequent hell of whistling steel, who had conquered the agony of his his arm was gone, that chap who had cursed in the hour of death, wanted to go home! , WIRELESS AND THE WAR. Indispensable in Maintaining Com- munication on Battlefields. In an article in the Wireless Age Mr. William Marconi gives*some in- teresting' information about the pro- gress of wireless communication since the beginning of the war. He says in part: No longer are wire telephones and telegraphs used in the trenches bordering no man's land. We found it impossible to maintain the lines with the constant shelling with high ex- plosives. When you go into a first- line trench to-day you will find few who are not wireless men. . Unless an engagement. is in progress, there will be only a handful of fighting men with machine guns distributed,in small de- tachments about every four hundred yards, and supported by the ever-pre- sent wireless man with his portable Streugth and Courage. The wounded man's left arm lay out- side the sheet. It was long and mus- cular and hairy, the kind of left arm you'd expect on a man who had brok- en bad horses and climbed mountain ckags for a shot ata grizzly bear or a mountain sheep. It bespoke strength, just as the tense jaw bespoke courage. I don't know just where that chap went down, but I know that he was fighting lke a catamount when they got him. After a while that left arm stirred | a little. The fingers groped aimlessly, as an infant's does, and then slowly that hand started to move across his body. It moved with many pauses, as if reluctant to discover what it might find on the other side. Over the lean torso it erept and then stopped. The fingers clutched again at space and then the man lay very quiet. After a while the bloodless lips puckered a lit- tle and he began to whistle in a faint, wabbly way. I thought I recognized the strains as "Don't bury me on the lone prairie," but of that I am not certain. I was thinking of the gameness_ with which that lean chap from Calgary had discovered what he thought was the worst. I didn't stick around after that. But out in the long corridor, al- ways crowded with bandaged men and limping cripples, I spoke to his nurse. Beyond Human Skill, "He won't get well," she said. "His face is a terrible sight, half blown away with a grenade or shrapnel, And his lungs are pierced. He doesn't know | that, of course. I don't think he sus- | pects that he is blind. But he knows that his arm is gone." I lit a cigarette for him the next day. He smoked it without inhaling, smoke's a smoke for a' that. And he talked of home. "They call it 'blighty' here, don't they?" he ask- "Well, they can call it what they I wish I was back. Guess they it seemed hard to say, but he strug- gled over it bravely--"with my right fin gone. And I 'guess I won't strad- "sunfisher" is a type of "outlaw" bron- cho, notable for propensity to rear straight up and fall over backward.) We talked of the trails and woods and the prairies of{.home, for he knew all these things. Just mention- "My eyes feel sort of queer," he re- marked. "You don't suppose now that | that smash in the mug would blink "Not at all,? I said. 1 kriew that I | ter, just as it does through air. set. With the first observation of an 'infantry attack, the-wireless man gets | into action and sends back his call for troops from the supporting trenches. 'They pour up to him through a trans- verse trench, and the hand-to-hand engagement begins. . . . The general supposition seems to be that spotting artillery fire has been accomplished visual signalling, such as flags and smoke bombs dropped from a plane. The truth is that our entire heavy ar- tillery fire control is conducted by wireless from aircraft. Observers |note the results of artillery fire, and 'send back by wireless such messages ) as "Too short," "Three to right," "Two ; to left," and so on. Many of the aero- | planes now in use carry as many as | six or eight men, armed with: machine | guns, The wireless operator who makes the observations for fire trol is provided with a map of the terrain, blocked off into small squares. As he spots the fajl of the shells he sends back by wireless the number of directions for greater accuracy. While he is spotting he is continually sub- jected to tremendous shelling, Al- though puffs of smoke break round the reconnaissance planes all day long, they are hit surprisingly seldom. a ee ny, THE ONLY MEDIGINE THE BABY NEEDS Baby's Own 'Tablets is. the only medicine a mother needs for her lit- tle ones. They are a gentle but thorough laxative which instantly relieve all stomach and bowel disor- ders thus banishing all the minor ills of little ones. Concerning them Mrs. Jos. Levesque, St. Simon, Que., says: --"Baby's Own Tablets are a marvel- ous medicine for little ones, They never fail to cure stomach and bowel troubles and neither my sister-in-law or myself would use any other medi- cine for our little ones." are sold by medicine dealers or by mail af 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. : ok : oS - NOSELESS, BUT CAN SMELL, ixperiments Prove Fish Are Suscept- ible--Odor Travels Through Water. A fish hasn't a nose, but it can smell. Recent experiments have proved this. What is more, these experiments have Ang- lers have laid so much stress on the need of exciting a fish's interest by the look of food that the effect of scent has been overlooked. A. shark. will religion of the trenches considers the occasional lie all right. S Did Not Realize His Blindness. | "Tm glad of that," he said. "TI ain't IT ean get around with a side wheel ef- 'well, that's different." _ He was weaker the next day and for long periods lay in a state of coma. "Whenever he came out of it that left arm groped slowly over again to feel 'the empty place at the right. He seemed to hope each tinfe with return- jing consciousness that the whole thing day he sang of it was unintelligible, but much of it was the talk of the trails, the vernacu- jar of the vanishing cowpuncher. ed his flipper and wondered audibly what he'd do with only one mitt. lighty.? "Who wants to go to * food that, Most of it was not very select ex-) -- <r pression. He cursed the luck that lift-. bite at a hook containing a piéce of | pork, although the pork does not took, to @ b like any kind of fish that swims. the sea. : It may be heresy in angling to sug- gest that a fly should smell like a fly. Those scientific experiments show how | pursuit of fish. Bait, such as small crabs, was found and eaten by the / fishes two or three times as rapidly' when the shells were broken. _ Bait placed inside a gauze bag was smelled within three minutes of being lowered in the water, and almost at the same time all the fishes began nib- bling at the bag. When cotton was stuffed into its so-called "nostrils" the dog-fish would seldom observe the came near them. -- ' og aS workshop and a harness-room are farmstead requirements, especially in the winter. Don't do blacksmi work, nor ofl harness round" the kitchen stove, SRE es = ae ¥ wounds to whistle when he found that} through the use of various forms of | con- | the square, and records a hit or gives! The Tablets .' proved that odor travels through wa-, Call Pattern No. 7892, Girl's Middy Dress. In 6 sizes, 4 to 14 years. Price, 15 cents. © McCaLn Quite a good-looking top-coat is this for early spring wear. The raglan sleeves are considered very smart this season. McCall Pattern No. 8175, and large. Price, 20 cents. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from 'the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. : ihe oS Rear as POLITE WARNINGS. Cool Courtesy of These Messengers Not in Keeping With the Occasion. "Submarines, please, sir!" So, a correspondent reports, the very young midshipman on a big At- lantic liner, who had had a long train- ing in politeness but a brief one in the 'perils of naval warfare, recently an- nounced their danger to the passen- gers he was sent to warn. He was cool, if needlessly apologetic for giv- ing trouble. The gentlemen he dis- /turbed were not all of them either so calm or so courteous. Even more painfully polite, a Lon- don journalist declares, was the re- | tired sailor who was serving as mes- isenger in one of the government of- 'fices in London at the time of a recent { He knocked loudly on the i air raid. door of the nearest office, walked in unhurriedly when summoned to enter, and announced without haste and with punctilious deference to the offi- cial in charge: "Mr. Jones, I have to ask you to be good enough to stand by, as we have had warnings of an air raid." He added, bobbing a sailorly salute in the direction of the stenographer, "And the same to you, miss." Neither of these little incidents equals the historic instance of a Brit- ish midshipman, sent to.inform his captain that a small blaze on the ves- sel, supposed to have been entirely suppressed some time before, had / broken out in a new place. On reach- ing the captain's cabin he found that officer engaged in earnest conference with the admiral of the fleet. The two officers did not observe the midship- man's entrance; he waited some mo- ments, hoping for a pause, but in the end had to bring himself reluctantly to interrupt. "Beg pardon, sir," he observed apo- logetically, "but really the fire is so near the powder magazine--" They abruptly ended the conference before he had-ended his sentence. anes ey. ees NEO LEMON JUICE IS | FRECKLE REMOVER ' Girls! Make this cheap beauty lotion to clear and whiten your skin. -- } Squeeze the juice of two lemons in- ottle containing three ounces. of jorchard white, shake well, and you 'have a quarter pint'of the best freckle Ladies' Coat. In 8 sizes, small, medium' New, rich, red blodd\is infused in- to the system by every dose of these pills. From this new, rich blood springs good health, an in¢reased ap- petite, new energy, high spirits and perfect womanly development. Give your daughter Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and take them yourself and note how promptly their influence is felt in better health, : You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail post- paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. --e- WHAT COLOR ARE: YOU? There Are Eight Shades of Light Eyes, and Four Shades of Dark Eyes. "Tt is we who. are people," said Mark Twain. groes are discolored." : We call ourselves white folks, but are we? Far from it. Our actual color is a very Hght yellow, tinged with pink by the redness of the blood. Compare your hand with your cuff. Of course, the hue of our complex- ions is due to a pigment. The skin and eyes of a "dark" person have more of this pigment than those of a blond individual; also the hair. That is all the difference. But, as most people do not realize, it is all the difference, so far as com- plexion and eye-color and hair-color go, between a white person and a neg- ro. The pigment is the same pigment, but the negro has more of it. In examining recruits, the War De- partment makes special note of the color of the eyes. According to its classification, there are eight shades of light eyes and four shades of dark eyes. These shades are printed in their proper tints on strips of card- 'poard, and the eyes of each recruit the colored "The ne- lare matched with the tint that corres- 'ponds to them. "Gray" eyes are merely a very light shade of blue--having, in other words, a minimum of pigment. A little more is real blue. Just a little more is green--an unusual, but plainly dis- tinguishable, shade. There is more than one shade of blue in eyes. But beyond the green there is brown, of which (as already said) there are four shades recognized by the War Department. There is no such thing as a black eye (save, per- haps, in a pugilistic sense); so-called black eyes are merely a very dark brown. On his examination schedule, the recruit's eyes are put down as "Blue No. 6," or "Brown No, 2," thus exactly determining, as a matter of record, this item of his physical make-up. ee k o---o---_0----_o----0--0---0 00 0-0 ----0--9 LIFT YOUR CORNS OFF WITH FINGERS How to loosen a tender corn or callus so it lifts out | without pain. ; o---o----0----0 ---0 --0---__0-_- 90-0 --o0---0---0----0 Let folks step on your feet here- after; wear shoes a size smaller if you like, for corns will never again send electric sparks of pain through you, according to this Cincinnati authority. He says that a few drops of a drug called freezone, applied directly upon a tender, aching corn, instantly re- lieves soreness, and soon the entire eorn, root and all, lifts right out. This drug dries at once and simply | Shrivels up the corn or callus: without , even irritating the surrounding tissue. | A small' bottle of freezone obtained iat any | but will positively remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one's foot. if your druggist hasn't stocked this 'new drug yet, tell him to get a small bottle of freezone for you from his 'wholesale drug house. ----, ee >. Who First Camouflaged A word that has quite a vogue at the moment, but was probably never "heard of until the outbreak of war, is '"camouflage"--the art of making a 'thing look what it is not. The word 'and tan lotion, and complexion beauti-¢ and, to a great extent, the idea, is fier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will sup- a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and. blemishes disappear and comes, Yes! It¥s harmless, ho An automobile radiator has been placed within a flywheel by a Ruma- nian inventor, the water being cooled as it is whirled around. PERE Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows by a new rotary cutting machine and how clear, soft and white the skin be- itive and positive. Stumps are converted into shavings, | the shavings are drawn into bags for] 2 Ieevdice < S VaCuaS | French in origin. Early in the wara /group of young painters in France} 'formed what they called the Battalion ply three ounces of orchard white for ' de la Comoufie, and their duty was to "make up" guns, cars, shelters, and gun emplacements, and whole stretches of landscape, to deceive Ger- man aviators. The art of camouflage is both nega- den by merging it into the background and it rejoices in ingenious - fake batteries, fake trenches, fake am- pulances--to make the enemy waste a little ammunition. -- ed neatly for further use. jhag reached middle age. drug store will cost very little | it aims at making > practically invisible what is to be hid- fakes-- | "A new can opener melts the solder | on their tops so that cans can be open-} Another-odd thing about ears is that throughout one's lifetime they con- tinue to grow bigger. The ears of.a girl, admired perhaps for their small size, are fairly large by the time she In old age they may be larger. In any company of people one may notice that it is the elders that have the big ears. In the very old they are overgrown. h? pai esi "Quoth the Roven." In all times and countries people have regarded the raven with super- stitious awe. Poe's bird said "Never more!" in a sepulchral voice, and the croak of a raven is considered a sort of presage of defeat, calamity, and death. The Royal house of Austria, the Hapsburgs, is perhaps the most un- fortunate in the world. Calamity dogs their steps, and it is always associat- ed with the raven. When the Archduke Maximilian and his wife were taking their last walk at Miramar, prior to leaving for Mexico, a raven continually followed them, and at last hopped on the archduchess' out in the biggest drift of all and made to stay there till he gets up spunk en- ough to dig himself out. MURINE Granulated Eyelids, | Hii PL; Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by Ry wg) San, Dust and Wind quickly RIAA ® relieved by Murine. Try itin el your Byes and in Baby's Eyes, OUR c' : NoSmarting, Just Eye Comfort Marine Eye Remedy A550)" peptic. Marine 'Ryo Salve, in Tubes 25c, For Book of the ye ~ Free. Ask Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago a In nearly every street of the cities of Japan there is a public oven, where for a small fee people may have their dinners cooked. Minarda's Liniment Cures Distemper. Anyone ean carry his burden, how- ever heavy, till nightfall. Anyone can do his work, however hard, for one day. Anyone can live sweetly, goes down. ever really means.--Robert Stevenson. Louis train. Three years later the Archduke | was shot at Queretaro. | When the Archduchess Maria Chris- | tina left for her unhappy life in Spain, | a raven is said to have hovered over | her carriage, and another dashed a/ peach from the hand of the Empress Elizabeth, wife of the late Emperor Francis Joseph, the day before she was assassinated at Geneva. Most famous of all was the flight of yavens said to have been seen over Ol- mutz at the moment when Francis Jo- seph the Unlucky was becoming Em- peror of Austria. a If Stomach urts Drink Hot Water A Physician's Advice. "Tf dyspeptics, sufferers from gas, wind or flatulence, stomach acidity or sour- ness, gastric catarrh, heartburn, etc., would take a teaspoon rated magnesia in half a glass of hot water immediately after eating, they would soon forget they were ever af- flicted with stomach trouble, and doc- tors would have to look elsewhere for patients." In explanation of these words a well known New York physician stated that most forms of stomach trouble are due to stomach acidity and fermentation of the food contents of the stomach com- bined with an insufficient blood supply to the stomach. Hot water increases the blood supply and bisurated magnesia in- stantly neutralizes the excessive stom- ach acid and stops food fermentation, the combination. of the two, therefore, being marvelously successful and. de- cidedly preferable to the use of artifi- cial digestents, stimulants or medicines for indigestion. ------ A lot of flats will be found useful in the spring. They are excellent for carrying pots, potted plants, fertilizer, weeds and for starting seeds or cut- tings in. Now is the time to make them. Soap boxes sawed: so the bot- tom will have sides about three inches high make good flats. Nail on the cover firmly and by sawing in the same manner each soap box will make two flats and leave pieces for kindl- ing wood besides. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. : Gentlemen,--Last winter I received great benefit from the use of MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT in a severe attack of Lag Grippe, and I have frequently proved it to be very effective in cases of Inflammation. Yours, HUTCHINSON. W. A. White grubs are difficult pests to fight. Spraying the trees with paris green or london purple will kill many of the parent June bugs if this is done at the season when they are moving. Boys following the plough can collect many of the grubs, and turkeys and| chickens will scratch out many behind the plough. Swine also root them out pretty well. turns the grubs up on top of the soil where many perish from the cold. 1g. ful of pure bisu-}_ Late autumn ploughing | & The Soul of a Plano fs the Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIGEL,' PIANO ACTION J Get the Most Out of Your Maple Grove @ This you can do by installing our "Champion" Evaporator, made in 22 different sizes. undreds of farmers make money every year by using our famous machine. They know. it stands for no waste, fullest returns and best syrup and sugar. Write At Once for Free Booklet THE GRIMM M"N'P'G. CO., Limited 58 Wellington St., Montreal, Que, Bruises and Sprains Have Sloan's Liniment handy for bruises and sprains and all pains and aches. Quick relief follows its prompt application. No need to tub. It quickly penetrates to the trouble and drives out the pain. Cleaner than mussy plasters or oint- ments. Sloan's Liniment does not stain the skin nor clog the pores. For rheumatic aches, neuralgia, stiff muscles, lame back, lumbago, gout, strains, and sprains, it gives quick relief. Generous sized bottles at all druggists, Sloan's liniment | | { patiently, lovingly, purely till the sun | And that is all that life | The meals--the Cheerful Service, too, Would leave no cause to frown, If there was just one Walker House In every little town. The Walker House f Geo. Wright La Ler a Toronto E. M. Carroll On retiying touch spots of dandruff and itching with Cuticura Ointment. Next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. This treatment does much to keep the scalp clean and healthy and to promote hair growth. Sample Each Free by Mail. Address Deca sf "Cuticura, Dept. N, Boston, U. 8. A."' Sold by dealers throughout the world, GLIMBED STAIRS ON HER HANDS Too Ellto Walk Upright. Operation Advised. Saved by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. This woman now raises chickens and does manual Jabor. Read her story: Richmond, Ind.--"For two years I was so sick and weak with troubles from my age that when going up stairs [ had to go very slowly with my hands on the steps, thensitdown at the top to rest. The doctor said he thought I should - have an operation, and my friends live to move into ournew house. My daughter asked me - to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable | Compound | results. as she had taken it with good I did so, my weakness dis- appeared, I gained in strength, move' into our new home, did all kinds 0 -- work, shoveled dirt, did build- ng and cement work, and raised hun- ' dreds of chickens and ducks, I can- not say enough in praise of Lydia EB. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and if these facts are useful you may pub- lish them for the benefit of other women."--Mrs. M. 0. JOHNSTON, Route KILLS PAIN Ng 4 Sprinkler System. D, Box 190, Richmond, Ind, Hotel Del Coronado Coronado Beach, California : Near San Diego MOTORING, TENNIS, : ' BAY AND SURF BATHING, FISHING AND BOATING. 18-Hole Golf Course Hotel is equipped throughout with Automatic AMERICAN PLAN JOHN J. HERNAN, Manager NMachiner flywheel, etc. PULLEYS, Large size. 26x66---$30 ; 12x60--$20 H ISSUE No. 3~ Perens aenn-t a ; y Fo 1 WHEELOCK ENGINE, 18x42. _ : BN New Automatic Valve Type. Complete with supply and exhaust Will accept $1,200 cash for immediate sale, 1 ELECTRIC GENERATOR, 30 K.W., 110-120 Volts D.C, Will accept $425 cash for immediate sale. 1 LARGE LEATHER BELT. Double, Endless. 24 inch x 70 ft, Will accept $3800 for immediate sale, although belt is in 4 dition and new one would cost about $600. -- me 12Vox48-- $12; 1236-88, |) 2 BLOWERS OR FANS, Buffalo make. ; One 10 inch, other 14 inch discharge--$30 each. REAL ESTATES CORPORATION, LTD. r Sale pipin exceller jes 60 Front St. West, T * thoughtI wouldnot @ --

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