hang damp towels on. The will not. Lear no;- rust. the hung upon it. . If your kitchen is compact ventilated. and equipped wi moderato amount of the best your work will be done wit effort, with less time. and effort, with less t less headachos. _ T he 0b,)ecnonabloj gives almost. attacks of neuralgia. It meat. (war “II There IS more speedy relief from hot wet. cloths than the dry heat from a hot. water bottle, but it is :z tedious task to keep the cloths hot. If you wring a soft. cloth out nf warm water and place it. ever a hut water bag ï¬lled with hot. water. it. will cause a steaming cloth. whim gives almost instant â€relief to severe attacks of earache. toothache 0r neuralgia. It. is quite an improveâ€" ment. over the dry heat. Drive a nail through an empty spool. It. will make a handy peg tn hang damp towels on. The. Rpflfll yvill nut. tear nor rust the article better some: HANDY THINGS TO KNOW Wyn-1;: .n' 3039: 9.909096 9.6096 OOOOOOOOOQOQOOgOOOOLVOOzo IOT’D 1373 Phones: We have a stock of good heavy mixed Feed on hand which we are selling at special prices in ton lots. If you need Feed get our prices. The Price of Lifebuoy Soap is not Altered It still retails at 5c. per cake the varnisli The old proverb “prevention is better than cure†is another way of saying use Lifebuoy Soap. Start using it toâ€"day and see that the children use it. The mild antiseptic odor vanishes quickly after use. Lifebuoy Soap is always on guard against dirt and disease. In the home, at your work, for hands and face, for shampoo and bath it will be found always on the watch against gem and microbe. Withal, the rich, creamy Lifebuoy lather makes it a real pleasure to use this “super soap.†It Cleans and Safeguards nipped with :1 3f the best, tools. 3 done with less time, and with PAGE 2. facturers, farmers and merchants. ' SAVINGS DEPARTMENT at every Branch. 235 STANDARD IANK W: .Itterin OE 11 1‘11 Oatmeal Millers. lOt HEAD OFFICE .- TORONTO we] 1 U OF CANADA Taxns at Clinton are in0future hp cullectm’l halfâ€"yearly Instead rungs. Hr slnnder back supports that that splatter the varnish when it is :umliod with a brush, use a soft, limlvss cloth, not too large. Pour Hm varnish into a small vessel, add- in}: turpentine to make it rather thin. Hills mqthod i_s quicker than stu and a tnaspnonful hf ammonia. Tins will (llSSOlVP 11].] greasy mattm- 111 both smk and _p1pe. To apply varnish t0 dining-room nr hNII'HOm chairs that have mam’ rungs. HI" slender back supports that that splatter the varnish when it is :1;,»pliod with a brush, use a soft, lilILHvss glpth, not too large. Pour ‘U‘A DOC“: (ll _, w--_o wovubllb LLULU. GULUGU UU UUU Ldn dmppwl intnrit may be preventr-ufsmve 115- But all must 11911)- You if :1 Mile Hum' is sifted into thmhave your rations; keep to them.†{at Just Imt'm’é'. Hwy are added. { I’HI' u disinf'm'trml for a sink pmn' ,1 BEER AND MARRIAGE (iHWH :: :Jullnn Hf boiling Willem" . , mixml with twn mmc).~‘1’)()()11.<f111 ol'; N¢W__R°9â€_'at'°"3 for Canadian 3°" 8‘ lel and US!†early. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED T O R O N T O THE At All Grocersâ€" brush. hut fat and the effect is? a I“ of The Berlin Vossische Zeitung an- nounces the death of Vice-Admiral Kane: veg Kaltenfels, Chief o! a. A press correspondent in a deepatch from British headquarters, describes the bravery of Newfoundfland troops, who left 1,500 Germans dead in one trench alone. Austrian Navy Department. Submarine Menace Grave Herbert L. Samuel, former home secretary, speaking in London last Saturday on the gravity of the sub- marine menace, said that the ï¬gures he had seen on the sinking of vessels show that the situation is worse than ofï¬cial reports have indicated. Gen. Petain, Chief of Staff Paris reported on Sundayzâ€"Gener- a1 Petain, who commanded the French army defending Verdun during the critical stages of the battle in Febru- ary and March, 1916, is to be appoint- Ed Chief of Staï¬ at the Ministry of A despatch from London, Eng, on Monday, said:â€"-â€"No bottled beer is to be sold in Canadian regimental insti- tutions. Also with a. view to econo- mizing in food, the hours for the sale of food are being curtailed. Separa- tion allowance Will only be paid to Canadians marrying more than twenty days after enlistment, if the engage- ment to marry prior to enlistment is established to the satisfaction of the commanding ofï¬cers. an addition of 2,000,000 tons of food. He continued: “We are taking steps now for the harvest of 1918, and not a minute too soon. Three million fresh acres of land are being put into’ culti- starve us. But all must help. You per cent. more land than before the war. The farmer had been given a guarantee and so had his laborers and after the feverish activity of the last few months we had a million acres of fresh land under cultivation, meaning an addition of 2000000 1'an nf Pnnfl Friday, said: .‘Our victory is becom- ing increasingly assured. The sub- marine is the worst problem we have to meet, and we mean to do it. Ger- many means to make the seas abso- lutely impassable for any craft. That is essential to victory for them. It is essential for victory to us. that they should fail. Do not let us minimize the gravity of the situation." He said the farmers were now cultivating 10 per cent. more land than before Hm _ wâ€"‘vv the war. The exDerience of a genera- tfon has been crowded into just a few winters, and we should be unworthy of the great destiny to which Provi- dence has called this generation 1! we threw away all that for the sakeof formulas framed before the flood.†Submarine is Worst i In his Guild hall speech last week the Premier also saidzâ€"“Before the war there were ï¬ve absolutely inde- ‘ pendent parties is this country. Peo- 'ple are now discovering that none of these had a monopoly of wisdom, or was the sole repository of political. sagacityâ€"no. even if the ï¬ve were put together. The people are realizing that there are more things in heaven and earth than the political philoso- phy of any of these parties. That is one illusion that we have seen disap- pear in the lurid ï¬res of war. When, after the war, reconstruction begins, I hope, trust and pray that we are not going to dive into the pigeonholes of party for dust-laden precedents and programs. Let us think out the best methods for ourselves in the face of searching facts of which we knew nothing before the war. We are a. thousand years older and wiser since 1 NEW PARTY LINES COMING Continuing he said: “We have de- cided that in future it is the business of Britain and dominion statesman- ship to knit the empire in closer bonds of interest of trade, of commerce, of business and general intercourse in affairs. We have considered this prob- lem and decided that in order to de- velop these enormous territories in fu- ture it is necessary that exceptional encouragement should be given to the products of each part of the empire. The empire has inï¬nite resources of wealth, minerals, food products and every commodity needful for man; and it is obviously advantageous, not mere- ly to the particular country producing these products, but to every other part, including the United Kingdom, that these commodities should be de- veloped to the utmost. This would enrich, strengthen and bind together the empire as a whole.†Lloyd George as Prophetâ€"War is Swift Teacher Lloyd George speaking at the Guild hall said: “There is no sphere of statesmanship in which there is more need for revised ideas than our atti- tude towards that great common- wealth of nations of the British Em- pire. In the past we have treated it as an abstraction, a glorious abstrac- tion, but still an abstraction. The war has shown us all that the empire is a fact, may, a factor; the most potent factor today is the struggle for human liberty.†Bonar Law said in the house of com- mons last week that the imperial war cabinet had unanimously accepted. the principle: that each part of the empire, having due regard to the interests of aur allies, shall give special favorable treatment and facilities to products manufactured in other parts of the empire. He said: “I need not tell the house there is no intention whatever of making any change during the war. The resolution I have read leaves the question open, and does not involve the taxation of food.†Lloyd George speaking at the Guild Lloyd George CAN PREVENT 11d fail. gravity « farmers cent. In The I IMPERIAL PREFERENCE a farmer and so 11 feverish is Worst Problem; but Can be Faced e and Bonar Law on Em- pire Produce mlem we have to do it. Ger- :he seas abso- .y craft. That >r them. It is us. that they t us minimize ion." He said cultivating 10 an before the been given a THE DETRHAM CHRONICLE. 5330. 'i‘hm'v {aim at Hw | â€hum iii) inmnivs at {.1 fury. and they are all in mm section. Zam-B‘ak it: ï¬q‘217713' 933311 fr»:- eczema. ringworm, ‘nhmmknnhnnhg‘v'g. bad legs. piled. burns. swim: :‘md cuts. All drugggism and stem-3t, I‘ Zam-Buk 00., Toronto. 500. box, 3 for $1.25. , I . . . s l‘ - 151'.- ‘3- ("'51 ' . . ., '\' ‘ ‘ . _ ~‘ . w; . . ‘. " r a I . ' , . .l I. ‘- . . .. . ‘ ' ’ ' "n. ' ‘ ’ g. . a. . .“ a. t I 3 I ‘ .‘ . ‘ . ‘n _ . . I '. ‘ t C \. I, \VHI'M. Hmv 1H Hm inm 1114::me Plowtl‘i!’ \V’hvn i! 1 (win-M m “ Even after the ï¬rst few anili- cations of this W<2Iz:.lerfnl balm be felt great relief. Gradually the pa’n was ended. the inflmmnaiion ‘..".l'.:'. all drawn oilt. the swelling dim»- peared and the sore was soon healed.†Miss Nellie Lucas of Silver Lake, Oregon, writes: “ My father developed a sore on his face which became very swollen and painful. We tried numerous remedies, and several doctors attended him, but the sore got no better, and the doctor said the only hope of curing: it was an operation. Father deter- mined, however, that he wouid ï¬rst try Zam-Buk. .111".1111I1 M“. \V. 11. “3118011 Visit- ml 1111.†“1101111134: 11151 \11I1Ik with 311'. 111111 311's. \\'..111(:q110.<. 111', \\'111. \‘1 11511' _, 11'.1111.< 111.'11- 011115111 11 111I\\ 11111111912 111011 buggy MP. BtIn 1.81101100 111 1‘01‘011111. 11 111'1Is'111.1'11,'.: 1111I “1111111111111 \111'11111'II. r1'1'1\1;_I \1I1'y 1111'1'1I1111 11111.11'1â€"Iss1Is 111,, 1.110 ditTIII'I'Int 1111111111111‘111I11ts 111 [he Pricm V1110 1'1'1"1‘11it 1111 S11111111V. P1112 111\'\"11'11 1"11111 \\ 1s \1S11111f’ 111 this 111'111 1111 $11111111V 11111.1 1111011111311 that old sore from which you are suffering is incurable? Zam-Buk has cured thousands of cases of chronic sores. M] 1m.†M'vmn and Mrs. \\'. fair. Wm. \\ Chasm} :l 114%“ MP. Ron F. V Miss Edna M. Dixon is spondm: 3 00111310 “1' wmzxks in 'I‘nrnnto. Miss Susin Halpmmy, uf Torontn. is ham‘m at m'esent. 311'. any] Hnrl'imn nurchased n nvw Fuz‘d vzu' t’z-nm Smith BPHS., and is nmv vnjnying' it. MP. and MI‘S. \V. H. “hisnn visit- ml rm.“ M'vning last. \x'm-‘k with Mr. and Mrs. W. Jacques. 'I‘ho “0211110? m-dzn‘ is quite \\ and swim -lik+1 “1(1) prunï¬so 111mm in 1110 air. PIT! (f v 111 MCWILLIAMS 1:11 P111†“:19 Waiting in 11 Summv 111111 1111011110.! l’nmnm‘r chum l1. ‘IIIK k0 {ll‘ï¬l 0f 111 oumwoom 0.9099090900.79090.990§999.§§¢§§§§§§§§§§9§§§9§§$ b. . r051» Hc mo sookers‘ Excursinm tern “anuda at attract. ' v f; 302123333333 EXCURsmzz-g, CANADIAN PACIFIC CHANCE FOR THOSE GOING WEST 901990‘04¢§O$6¢§§§¢§§§¢§¢§O§§OOO§O§9¢¢§¢§§99§§0095$‘ Special Reduction on Flour and Feed in Quantities The People’s Mills The (mum WIND 5mm Mike and pump wwm on hand. Farmers and Stock Owners should lay in a quan- tity of this Exrellent Conditioner for Spring and Summer Feeding. Nothing equals it for Young Pigs, Calves, Etc. Makes Milcn Cows Milk and puts Horses in prime condition for seeding: in fact it; makes everything go that it’s fed to: also Caldwell’s Celebrated Calf Meal. Everything in our line at lowest prices for Cash. All kinds of Gram hough" and sold. Sovereign Flour Eclipse Fluur Pastry Flour Low Grade Flour Rolled Oats Breakfast Cerea} TELEPHONE No. 8 (Night or Day) The Above’are All Made from Soundfand Whole Grains “79 have a quantity of the oelehx-ated louse Paintâ€. A real wood for years. Spreads easy- Molassine Meal .Q {U \Yr ‘- fares mu'h Durhanl Manufactu re ti“? *2 Cheapest an: 11? Best" Pumping Outfit 0n the Market. W. D. Connor l l1“°‘( .(‘Altill {Kw ‘ u \‘s'USi. Part L nadiun Pacitiv «\‘22 I'd. histrivt. 'I‘UIHH. ()IHM‘EH. 501d h UH H {11“ ‘,i()11 rt Iculurs Ontario Dm’ (It‘s fx'u gum, or :ssongm 3. 1917 fl" om l'uutc to any 22‘ devise meal Armour urg food shorta is cut in hal Canada and 0t Armc food pH walk 'deiibc country, un “official re (which is 1917, to 244,000, ‘ was poor the Unit: years, no torpedoed sin German Britain throu Canada compels the 1 The Ilan we make the David D International Governmenm grains of the of 150,000,01 the world uni question that there will be harvested. which is an emba 2' rams Bread 11; land, for the i Forty active servic Twenty them by SC!) - In thei. ratlons: mea making of cal restrictions at France, depend upon Bulgaria for I sources close< see that our 3 Wags. Thu: World- The fail; Will VW UUC ‘Ve I'VOW ONTARJ