Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Times & Guide (1909), 22 Oct 1915, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

TORTURING SCIATICA @15 WWierce darting painsâ€"pains like red ‘hot needles being driven through the fleshâ€"in the thigh; perhaps down the jlegs to the ankles â€" that‘s sciatica. None but the victim can realize the torture. But the sufferer need not grow discouraged for there is a cure inWr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, These pills make new, rich, red blood, which soothes and strengthens the feeble nerves, and thus frees them from pain and restores the sufferer to cheerful activity. In proof we give the stateâ€" ment of Mr. Thos. D. Leinster, Waâ€" pella, Sask., who says: "I was attackâ€" eq with sciatica which gradually grew worse until I was confined to my bed; Tor three months I had to be shifted and turned in my bed as I was utterly unable to help myself. I suffered the greatest torture from the fierce, stabâ€" bing pains that accompanied every movement. I consulted several doeâ€" @ors and took drugs and medicines unâ€" El I was nauseated, but without getâ€" ling any benefit, and I began to beâ€" lieve I would be a continuous sufferer. Finally I was prevailed upon, to use Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and after iking them for about six weeks I was e to get out of bed. From that on kept steadily improving until I was free from this terrible and painful malady." Whe Germans Admit They Are a Disâ€" e apnointment. The British Admiralty gives out the following summary of the results of e German attempt to blockade the . ipire: Total sailings and arrivals ... 31,385 British merchant ships sunk .. 98 Percentage of loss .......... â€" 0.31 Officers and men wounded .... 505 Neutral ships sunk .......... 95 muthotnessaen The most stubborn cases of sciatica will yield to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills If the treatment is persisted in. These pills are sold by all medicine dealers pr will be sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by addressâ€" ifig The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. «â€"The British shipping has been doing a thriving business in the meanwhlle, making large profxts. The Berliner Tageblatt admits the substantial accuracy of the above figâ€" ures, and the Germans have been much disappointed at the failure of their submarine blockade to be an answer to the British blockade. The newspapers are blamed for raising extravagant expectations. It is pointâ€" ed out that it has been a long time since a warship was destroyed. The submarines have been seeking easier prey. Germany Would Like to Realize Old Blucher‘s Wish. The British newspapers are inculâ€" cating the belief in the minds ‘of the people that the ultimate object of the aiser is to secure an indemnity from England. In the minds of the Gerâ€" ans the wealth of England is fabuâ€" lous. It is not expected that any inâ€" demnity can be secured from Russia, Italy or France, and in case the Gerâ€" mans win all three of these nations will be bankrupt at the close of the war. England alone will have money and property, and can be looked to to recoup Germany for her immense exâ€" penditures. To do this it will be neâ€" cessary to take Calais, sweep the English Channel with the German guns, drive off the fleet and land the German army in England. The rest is thought to be easy and London will realize old Blucher‘s wish when he looked out over the city and said: "Mein Gott, what a rich place to loot." Finally Found a Food that Helped Her. "When I first read of the remarkâ€" able effects of Grapeâ€"Nuts food, I deâ€" termined to secure some," says a western woman. "At that time there was none kept in this town, but my husband ordered some from a comâ€" mercial traveller. "I had been greatly afflicted with sudden attacks of cramps, nausea, and vomiting. Tried all sorts of remedies and physicians, but obtained only temâ€" porary relief. As soon as I began to use Grapeâ€"Nuts the cramps disapâ€" peared entirely. I am toâ€"day perfectâ€" ly well, can eat anything and everyâ€" thing I wish, without paying the penâ€" alty that I used to. We would not keep house without Grapeâ€"Nuts. "My husband was so delighted with the benefits I réecived that he has been recommending Grapeâ€"Nuts to his customers and has built up a very large trade on the food.. He sells it to many of the leading physicians of the county, who recommend Grapeâ€" Nuts very generally. There is some satisfaction in using a really scientiâ€" fically prepared food." "There‘s a Reason." § Severe â€" Sufferer â€" Cured Through the Use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pis. _ Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Ever read the above letter ? A new ene appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human ENGLAND FOR INDEMNITY. â€" DO SUBMARINES PAY? terest. A DETERMINED WOMAN se 31,385 98 0.31 505 The semiâ€"fitted dress has become and will remain for some time a fayâ€" ofite. This is not odd, for it is not alone easier to make and smarter in appearance, but it is a pleasant relief from the tighter tailored garments of the preceding season. _A good examâ€" ple is shown herewith, Ladies Home Journal Pattern No. 9122. This dress has a semiâ€"fitted lining with yoke seeâ€" | tion front and back, and full length or shorter sleeves. The dress opens on the left shoulder and under arm seam and the lining opens at the cenâ€" tre backâ€"the dress at this point is 56 inches long. Sash and hem facing ribbon. The dress cuts in 6 sizes, 34 to 44, size 36 requiring 5%4 yards of 36â€"inch material, 2% yards of 3â€"inch banding for hem facing, % yards of 30â€"inch contrasting material, % yards 36â€"inch lining, and 3 yards ribbon for sash. Patterns, 15 cents each, can be obtained at your local Ladies‘ Home Journal dealer or from the Home ‘Pattern Company, 183â€"A George Street, Toronto, Ontario. Call of Young Men to War Will Cripple Profession in England. The dearth of medical men in the United Kingdom is not only serious at present on account of the war, but it will continue for: years afterward,. in the opinion of the Lancet, the orâ€" gan of the British medical profession. ‘In a recent issue the Lancet says: "That our medical schools will go very short of students is certain, and this will mean a dangerously small list of medical practitioners to miniâ€" ster to the needs of the country in the near future. The position is inevitâ€" able. The spirit which will lead young men of the military age and the educated class to join the army must have this effect, but it is the _duty of the medical profession to face }the difficulty and to make the best of it. $ "The great work which the medical contingent with the navy and army has accomplished in the present war will act later as a stimulus to enthuâ€" siasm for our calling, and the shortâ€" age which must occur in our ranks for the three or four years following, say, 1917, will speedily remedy itself when our social work resumes, as far as altered cireumstances will perâ€" mit, the scheme which we had, with considerable lack of prevision, come to regard as the normal one. "The war found the number of the medical profession in this country alâ€" ready disquietingly low, and with inâ€" dications of further sagging in those numbers. The figures indicate a seriâ€" ous shortage of medical men for the years following the war. Not only has a large number of young men otherwise would be beginning or purâ€" suing their medical studies been abâ€" sorbed, but, unfortunately, a serious toll was taken last autumn of those who, being already nearly qualified, would have been able to practice their profession as qualified men in a few months. f "The future will see an increased demand for medical men, and their prospects of success will be so great that the aspirants will assuredly be numerous. And there will be an imâ€" provement in the conditions which have prevailed in the past, not only because the profession of medicine will share in sociological progress, but because the record of the work of medicine throughout the war has been such that it must lead to a closer relationship between the medical proâ€" fession and the public. "Thke British public are taking a more intelligent interest in these things, and the energy with which lay bodies are working in operation with the medical profession in carrying out various schemes for the wellâ€"beâ€" ing of the people may be taken as an indication that the health of the nation will be a first consideration of the immediate future, which means that there will be a great demand for medical men at the close of the war. And this is the essential message to the students now in the schools. The silver lining to a great many clouds is nothing but moonshine. Semiâ€"Fitted Dresses Smart. sCARCITY OF PHYSICIANS. No. 9122. I Angloâ€" French PROVINCIAL TRUST COMPANY, Trust & Loan Bldg., Montreal. Colony Has Raised 117,000 Men and. Sent 76,566. A comparison of the manner in which Australian and Canadian trade have been affected by the war and an \ official statement as to the number of : soldiers Britain‘s Antipodean . colony has contributed to the allied cause is | contained in a report to the Governâ€" ment by Trade Commissioner Ross in Melbourne. Australian trade during 1913â€"14 totalled $812,812,658, _ as compared with a Canadian total of $1,113,562,â€" 107, but in 1914 her trade <was but $608,652,014, as compared with Canâ€" ada‘s showing of $1,078,173,240. Since the declaration of war on August 4, 1914, the Commonwealth had organized, equipped _ and deâ€" spatched 76,566 troops for active serâ€" vice abroad. At the present time 40,400 troops are in camps in Ausâ€" tralia for despatch to the front. To date the grand total of the Australian expeditionary > forces _ raised has reached, 117,000 men, excluding 8,000 troops of the citizen forces mobilized for home defence. Reinforeements are going forward at the rate of 5,300 ;A ;n;nthj and this number will be inâ€" creased to 10,600 in October and 10,â€" 600 in November. Vital Healing Power Fills the System And Health Returns A crowing curative triumph in mediâ€"| cine is now given to the world, and all who have been sufferers from stomach ailments, indigestion and headache can be cured quickly by a purely vegetable remedy. Calomel, salts and such like are no longer neâ€" cessary. They are harsh and disâ€" agreeable. Science has devised someâ€" thing far superior, and you can go toâ€"day with 25¢. to any druggist and buy a box of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills which are considered the very quickâ€" est and safest cure for the stomach, bowels, liver and kidneys. Half sick men and women who scarcely know what ails them will be given a new lease of life with Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. @Depressedâ€" spirits â€" disappear, headaghes are forgotten, appetite inâ€" creasey, blood is purified and enrichâ€" ed, palins at the base of the spine are cured the nerves are toned up, ambiâ€" tion t§ work is increased, and day by day tlie oldâ€"time health and vigor reâ€" turn. § A trial only is necessary to provellhow beneficial Dr. I-Ia1milton’s Llé“ilvlvsv re to all who are weak, nervâ€" ous, thin, depressed or in failing health. = AUSTRALIA‘S PART IN WAR. Pdper Pulp Impregnated With Cleanâ€" sing Powder. nstead of going to the store and buying a toothbrush as you have déne heretofore you may now buy a bix of toothbrushes and as you use e you will throw it away. The others remain in dustâ€"proof box until wanted. f The newly patented scheme disâ€" penses entirely with the use of aniâ€" mal bristles and makes use of points made of paper pulp impregnated with a cleansing powder and a sanitary agent. This composition is formed under pressure and the substitute bristles and the points form an inâ€" tegral part of the back on which they are mounted. Have you ever watched a surgeon cleaning a wound ? Everything which he uses is disinfected or sterilized. The cottonâ€"wool is not left exposed to the air, but is kept carefully coverâ€" ed. All scissors, forceps, etc., are washed in hot water, to which has been added some strong disinfectant. There is almost as great a difference between our idea of cleanliness and surgical cleanliness as there is beâ€" tween the former and our idea of dirt. Knocked Out. Professorâ€"Klumsy is about the stupidest man I ever ran across. Autoistâ€"Well, he didn‘t know anyâ€" thing when I ran across him! 5%â€"5 yrs. yvield about 5%% convertible at your: option for from 10 to 20 yrs. as per public announcement. S WIRE your orders for all the Angloâ€"French Bonds you need while you can get them at 98. in the $100. > & _ We had a large Syndicate alâ€" lotment but fear it will be all taken before the 20th. WIRE commitments at once to be sure of a share in this good thing. ED. 6. GERMâ€"PROOF TOOTHBRUSH. m=a A. 8 &* K3 Co 3 . hok o ts a 3 BL__B) A C aâ€"£) igx$ 8 Te S ISSUE 42â€"‘15. ‘Every Stif Joint Limbered, ' Rheamatism Cured! ! "I can speak confidently of the Nerâ€" ’vih':ne treatment, for the simple reason that it cured me," writes Albert B. Cornelius, from Kingston. ‘"You can‘t imagine how stiff and lame and sore I was.. Nights at â€"a time I couldn‘t sleep well. I followed the Nerviline direcâ€" \ tions carefullyâ€"had it rubbed into the 1s-ore regions four or five times every day. Every rubbing helped to reduce the pain. The swelling went down. T [g‘ot a fair measure of relief in a week. I also took two Ferrozons Tablets with my meals.s, They increased my appetite and spirits, purified my blood and toned up my system generally. That Old Family Remedy "Nerâ€" viline" is Guaranteed for the Worst Cases. Rheumatism toâ€"day is unnecessary. It is so well understood and so readâ€" ily curable that every day we have reâ€" ports of old chronics being freed of their tormenter. "I am as well toâ€"day as a man could beâ€"in perfect good health. I give Nerviline all the credit." y A large family size bottle of Nerviâ€" line costs only 50c¢., or the trial size 25c., and is useful in a hundred ills in the family.. Whether it‘s toothache, earache, headache, neuralgia, lame back or a cold, Nerviline will cure just as readily as it will cure rheumaâ€" tisim. For family use nothing equals Nerviline. Hours for Sales Fewer Than Beforeâ€" Prohibition Gaining. The prohibition wave which is passâ€" ing over England is gaining rapid headway, and drastic measures are being adopted throughout England, and the order just issued by the Cenâ€" tral Control Board in charge of the liquor traffic in Liverpool and. the Mersey district is typical of what is bei:g done. This order prohibits the sale of any‘ intoxicating liquor in hotels or any. licensed premises or clubs for comnâ€" sumption on the premises during all hours of the day and night which are not included in the special meal hours designated. These hours are between 12 noon and 2.30 in the afternoon and between 6.30 and 9.30 in the evening. Except between the hours just menâ€" tioned no person will hereafter be permitted, either by himself or any servants or agents, to sell or supply to any person any intoxicating liquor to be consumed on the premises. The order also prohibits the actual conâ€" sumption of any liquor, even if it has not been obtained or purchased on the ENGLISH LIQUOR LAW EXACT. premises. The only hours during which liquor may be sold for consumption off the premises are between 12 noon and 2.30 p.m. and 6.30 p.m. and 8.30 p.m. Tofiqmy (keeping on)â€""I â€" ain‘t afraid.. Women get sceared at things "fore men do." Of the Braver Sex. Motherâ€""I‘m afraid you are overâ€" eating." aya% 7 \ So Considerate. It had been their first separation and during one week the young husâ€" band had sent his dear little wife ten letters, fifteen picture post cards and four telegrams. & EOME UNEACE e Rino sns \ Why, then, this touch of coldness in her welcome on his return? "Dearest," he whispered, as he drew her to his manly bosom, "what is wrong? . What have I done to upset my little ducksyâ€"wopsy ?" m“dh, George,"’ sheiréplied in broken tones, "you didn‘t send me a kiss in your seventh letter!" your seventh letter!" George thought like lightning for a moment before he replied: . "I know I didn‘t, petsy, but I had steak and onions that night for supâ€" per, and you wouldn‘t like me to kiss you after eating onions, would you?" CURES NEURALGIA, BACKâ€" ACHE, LUMBAGO. Invariably use double boiler, or set boiler in basin of boiling water. Have water boiling in both vessels, that in inner one salted to taste. Slowly stir in one cup Roman Meal to each two cups water. Cover, set in outer vesâ€" sel, and never stir again even while serving. For early breakfast cook at evening meal and warm in mornâ€" ing, using a little less Roman Meal. It‘s a dark nutâ€"brown, granular, rich porridge. It Nourishes better than meat, prevents indigestion and posiâ€" tively relieves constipation or "money pack." Ask your doctor. All grocers, 10 cents and 25 cents. How to Cook Roman Meal Porridge. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. An old Scotswoman, who had reâ€" sisted all the entreaties of her friends to have her photograph taken, and who was at last induced to consent in order that she might send her likEness to her son in America, is the heroine of the following aneedote: On receiving the first proof she failed to recognizethe figure thereon represented as herself, so, card in hand, she set out for the artist‘s studio to ask if there was no mistake. "Is that me?" she queried. "YÂ¥es. madam," replied the artist. "And is it like mei~ she again asked. "Yes, madam; it‘s a speaking likeâ€" ness." "Aweele," she said, resignedly, "it‘s a humblin‘ sight." Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia $ A Blow to Her Pride. like me?" she again Modern Store With Its "Ads" An Allâ€" Yearâ€"Round Fair. In the days before our era scientific and mechanical improvement began, a great deatl of the work of distributing goods was done through the means of the fair. Merchants of all kinds would set up their booths at the fair, and the people from all the countryâ€" side would come looking for bargains. Wants that arose after the fair was over had to remain unsupplied until the opening of the next fair, unless the customer could make the toilsome journey to the nearest large town or could prevail upon some neighbor who was undertaking such a journey to execute his commission. The fair still survives for special lines of goods or for special occasions, but for general trade it has been supplanted by the established store with its advertiseâ€" ments in the daily newspapers. "A day too late for the fair" is a preverâ€" bial expression of costly and wasteful tardiness. The person to whom it was. applied in the old days had lost the chance of doing profitable business. Anyone who fails to read and heed the advertisements in his newspaper wastes his money just as did the poor l wight of old who was "a day too late ‘for the fair," and had to supply his lwants at great cost. The modern store and the modern advertisement ~ constitute, in effect, a fair that is open READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS. all the year round and that affords such bargains as the hagglers and ch%fl"erers of old days never even dreamed of. NG @a"e CGorns More $y aoe mment iWB ail; acts ou. az pain in 24 hours. Is soothing, healing; ©OFPMS lakes the stine rient ovut. No remedy so guick, safe and sure as Putnam‘s Painâ€" less Corn Extractor. Sold everyâ€" whereâ€"25c. per bottle. Mark Twain told how, when travelâ€" ling through India several years ago, he greatly enjoyed the humiliation of a very pompous member of the judiciary. He was strutting back and forth on the platform of a wayside station when a perspiring Englishman rushed up, touched the judge on the shoulder, and asked: "Tell me, is this the Bombay train?" The judge drew himself up, brushed the stranger‘s arm aside, and cuttingly remarked: "I‘m not the stationmaster, sir!" "Oh! you‘re not?" said the Englishman, evidently surprised. Then with an air of extreme exasperation, he demandâ€" ed: "Well, what the dickens do you mean by swaggering about as though you were?" Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirsâ€"I can recommend MIâ€" NARD‘S LINIMENT for Rheumaâ€" tism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. Yours truly, T. B. LAVERS, Imputation Scorned. â€" "I believe you‘re afraid of work!" "«Afaid of it!" replied Plodding Pete. "I ain‘t even acquainted with 1t." Harsh Cure. Hubby (at breakfast)â€"I‘ve got a bad head this morning. S ~“V~Vifeâ€"1’m sorry, dear. I do hope you‘ll be able to shake it off. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. Motherâ€"Why don‘t you yawn when he stays too long? He‘ll take the hint and go. Daughterâ€"I did, and he told me what beautiful teeth I had. Mark Twain Story. Perhaps you have been sending your supply of Milk to a local factory,â€"then you do not know the advantages of sending to the Largest and Most Upâ€"toâ€"Date Dairy in Canada. LET US TELL YOU. WRITE NOW for information and copy of contract. Give your shipping station and railway. mexse y y e C Recrs es z: > y "~a se a beo fyss 435 §‘ Lo s 1 Ey BJ hesa Eue nto) Cuds 8. B hss y it aAg 2B . L Bs ha 4 33 ts E& &3 in 45 5o a 49 5 o hes : es e ts Peew! d Ksd bed Aume 5 6 & & aos 6 esn C * ta 4 h $ hss y CD S To a% hoh Bs #g e \ io oo a > 7 P Esal o &J â€" Cld ts t keay &z ie #2 B es 3: & 3 s > oo tss ty We No hssy Res es n emammnsm Prro ce 3 s s es oparrage s e 5 J w s3 x Ex2 beels SPADINA CRESCENT City Dairy Go., Ltd. Cure Guaranteed St. John. BUY IT _ When the Light Came. Their long acquaintance had ripenâ€" ‘ed into love and he had proposed. “Dé;a.lzie,” he asked, confidentially, "when did you first learn that you loved me?" x loved me?" "When I found out that I became very angry whenever I heard anyâ€" body refer to you as a brainless boob," she answered. Never Missed a Chance. The saying that a woman doesn‘t like to tell her age may be a cruel slander on the sex; but it was trua of Mrs. Thomson. She never missed a chance of letting her friends know she was years yonger than her. husâ€" band. "Yes, George is 50 years old," she remarked to a visitor one day, @"and there are ten years between us." But the visitor was an elderly spinâ€" ster, with a sour disposition. "Is that so," she exclaimed, in wellâ€"assumed surprise. "Now, really, you look quite as young as he does!" s It is almost as difficult to be good neighbor as to have one. lF LOOKING FOR A FARM, CONâ€" sult me. I have over two hundred on my list, located in the best sections of Ontario. All sizes H. W. Dawson, Brampton. $g) DAY ALSO COMMISSION, FOR / . Local Representative. Either Sex. Experience unnecessary. Spare time acâ€" cepted. Nichols, Limited, Spadina Ave., SLEANS anp DISINFECTS Toronto PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontaric towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 13 West Adelaide St., Toronto. U liounonneccmenn ns 5 THE RIGHT SCHOOL TO ATTEND ! CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. internal and external, cured withâ€" out paih by our home treatment.. Writa us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Yonge and Charles Sts., Toronto. The demand for our graduates during August and September was four times our supply. Commence now. Calendar free. wW. J. ELLIOTT, Principal 34 pages, illustrated, of beautiful fur sets and fur garments for men, women and children. IT IS FREE. Address: JOHN HALLAM, LIMITED FUR STYLE BOO0K Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. Room 152, THIS LYE IS ABSOLUTELY PURE THEREFORE TOTALLY DIFFERENT FROM THE IMPURE AND HIGHLY ADULTâ€" ERATED LYES NOW SOLD. Send for the 1915â€"16 Edition of our NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. FARMS FOR SALE. AGENTS WANTED. ELLIOTT MISCELLANEOUS. TORONTO, ONT. Hallam Bullding, Toronto

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy