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Durham Review (1897), 22 Oct 1914, p. 6

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ada of € @n D It pe Can COny Be Cused Throuch the Blooklâ€"Lipim*nt; of No Use In no disease does the blood beâ€" oone thin so rapidly as in rheumaâ€" tien. . Not only does it become thin hut it is lpaded with impuritiesâ€" rheumatie poisons. Without the proper trectment these poisons inâ€" crease, the inflamed joints swell and the patient becomes a cripple. There are a number of methods of treating rheumatiem, Ancst of them aiming to keep down the rheumatic poisons until nature can build up the blood sufficiertly to overcome them. But unfavorable conditions of cold or dampness may. give the discass the advantage. and a reâ€" lapse or renewed attack follows. Dr. Willars‘ Pink Pil‘s for Pale People build up the blood and enaâ€" ble it to cast out the rheumatic noisons with the natural secretions Clami _ reswine. . E7 who does not try Pills is noglectin means of recove! tollowin@ stntem« Smith, Rt. Jerot wae attacked wit a‘d was infamn IThe joints of n limbs were ba« suffered the mos Notwithetandin« the trowble bee: could not ao at of the body. Thousands have tried this treatment with the most boeneâ€" cial results. That every «nfferer who does not try Dr. Wiliams‘ Pink Pills is noglecting the mo«t belp‘ul means of recovery is shown by the tollowin« stntement: Mrs. Emeline Imith, St. Jerome, Que.. says: "I wase attacked with what the doetors m‘d was infammatory rheumatism. Th joints of my hands, feet and limbs were badly swollen, and I suffered the most excruciating pain. Notwitvtandin# medical treatment the trowble bâ€"eame so bad that I could not an about. My appetite »w@an to fail me, and I was growing physicaily weak. A neighbor who had been bercfitted by Dr. Wilâ€" lams‘ Pink Pills advised me to try them, and I doc‘d»d to do o. In the course of a forx weeks 1 noted some imnrovement. and my appeâ€" tite began to return. Then the swelling in my joints began to ds appear, ard it was not long until I was perf~ct!v cured, and I have had no return ~f the trouble." l J°@on o Ial me, uWl 3 VA physicaily weak. A ncig bad been bercfitted by lams‘ Pink Pills advised them, and I dJdoc‘ded to d the course of a ferx week some imnrovement. and : rEEUMATIC MISERY ‘‘wyat gas gegmaAxY DONE? n Would Stretch Out 750 Miles Four Abreast. o! men and anmals i The full day‘s ration forâ€"a man in the fhield weighs 4.4 pounds and costs about thirty cents, including everyâ€" thing. Itemâ€"$300,000 a day for food for one maillion soldiers. This is just a little matter of $9,000,000 a month! â€" This food would weigh 4,â€" 400,000 poundsâ€"just the food for one dayâ€"or 2,200 tons. (me box car‘s capacity is 1,800 cuble feet. This will carry 9,172 rationsâ€"food for one day for 9,172 men. 8o, for one million men, all waiting impatiently for their grub, it would take 100 freight cars every day to bring along their rationsâ€" five trains of twentyâ€"one cars each. And this, mind, only for twentyâ€" four howrs ! W Ii the play is a frost the audience«e o«om melts WWAV . W Th Breakfasts Today‘s and Tomorraw‘s Breakfasts ran something like this:â€" riam, Dbacon or sausage; fae. ngseprepmed ‘by and â€"coffeeâ€"pre y overworked mothers. run about like this: â€"with cream or fruits; a tvoast; and a cup of Poi â€"a royal shrrer for Quick, easy to serve, apâ€" petizing, andâ€" "Mother" has it easier! «â€"â€"Sold by Grocers. U P Post Toasties Ln W n M ONxE MILLION MEN. LPr h LP of "Other Days" D Al n 1 men : â€"s that mean 1 How : on men t grasp what an army nâ€"and there are se ow in the fieldâ€"act fifty ifantry with all its ns needs nineteen egiment must have artillery regiment or 1 division nee;!s are mile, for all rv. and other n lion men, then' juare miles. his vast array four abreast, lâ€"up column that â€"would Winnipeg as r from Chi zed. They â€"how much everal tres e nan CLAIMS SUPERIORITY INX THE ARTS @ANDB sCIEXNXCES. Bchind England and France in Arts and Behind United States in Invention. e Professor Brandar Matthews, of Columbia University, New York, one of the most eminent scholars and writers in America, contributes a letter to the New York Times on "Germans As Exponents of Culâ€" ture." He says : In the appeals of various distinâ€" guished Germans, Prof. Eucken, Prof. Haeckel, and the several auâ€" thors of ‘"The Truth About Gerâ€" many,‘‘ we find frequent references to "German culture‘‘ as though it was of a superior quality to the culture of every other nationality. To an American, who feels himâ€" self a sharer of the noble heritage of English literature, and who has sat for more than forty years at the feet of the masters of French literâ€" ature, this claim cannot but come as a startling surprise. >Â¥ The most obvious characteristic of a highly civilized man is his willâ€" ingness to keep his word, at whatâ€" ever cost to himself. For reasons satisfactory to itself, Germany broke its pledge to respect the neuâ€" trality of Luxemburg and of Belâ€" gium. It is another characteristic of civilization to cherish the works of art which have been bequeathed to us by the past. For reason satisâ€" factory to itself, Germany destroyâ€" ed Louvain, more or less completeâ€" Ivy. It is a final characteristic of civilized man to be humane and to refrain from illâ€"treating the blameâ€" less. For reasons satisfactory to itself Germany dropped bombs in the umbesieged city of Antwerp and caused the death of innocent woâ€" men and children. Here are three instances where German culture has been tested and found wanting. The claim asserted explicitly or or implicitly in behalf of German culture seems to be based on the belief that the Germans are leaders tain a Darbari while the rest has adopted t} more graceful it is not unim German prose and uncouth. these things s« culture is a lit in the arts and in the sciences. So far as the art of war is concerned there is no need to dispute the German claim. It is to the preparâ€" ation for war that Prussia has deâ€" voted its utmost energy for half a centuryâ€"in fact, ever since Bisâ€" marck began to make ready for the seizing of unwilling Schleswigâ€"Holâ€" stein. And so far as the art of muâ€" sic is concerned, there is also no need to cavil. many are the contemporary paintâ€" ers and sculptors and architects of Germany who have succeeded in winning the cosmopolitan reputaâ€" tion which has been the reward of a score of the artists of France and of half a dozen of the artists of America 1 But what awbout the other and more purely intellectual arts! How When we consider the art of letâ€" ters we find a similar condition. Germany has had philosophers and historians of high rank; but in pure literature, from the death of Goethe in 1832 to the advent of the younger generation of dramatists, Sudermann and Hauptmann and the rest, in the final decade of the nineteenth centuryâ€"that is to say, for a period of nearly sixty yearsâ€" only one German author succeeded in winning a worldâ€"wide celebrityâ€" and Heine was a Hebrew, who died in Paris, out of favor with his countrymen, perhaps because he had been unceasing in calling atâ€" tention to the deficiences of Gerâ€" man culture. And it was during these three score years of literary aridity in Germany that there was a . superb literary fecundity in Great Britain and in France, and that each of these countries proâ€" duced at least a score of authors whose names are known throughout the world. Even sparsely settled Scandinavia brought forth a triumâ€" virate, â€" Bjorsen, Ibsen, _ and Brandes, without compeers in Gerâ€" many. And from Russia the fame of Turgenef and of Tolstoy o{rend abroad a knowledge of the heart and mind of a great people who are denounced by Germans as barbarâ€" ous. 4 It is -proba.bl} in the field of science, pure and applied, that the defenders of the supremacy of German culture would take their last stand. That the German conâ€" Deficient in Diplomaecy. Lacking in Literature. I ONTA u«04 Vatucii Yon Seaoen, Of the German Embassy, at_W_a.g);-‘ ington, who has got "in Dutch" with the American Government by predicting a war_ between the United Etates and Japan. ‘ surprised that we are now astonishâ€" ed to find them asserting their naâ€" \tural selfâ€"appreciation, with the apparent expectation . that it will lpass unchallenged. The world owes a debt to England and to France. ;It would be interesting if® some (GGierman, speaking with authority, should now be moved to explain to us Americans the reasons which underlie the insistent assertion of the superiority of German civilizaâ€" tion. dominating scientific leaders of the second half of the nigeteemh cenâ€" tury are Darwin and Pasteur. It is in chemistry that the Germans have been .pioneers ; yet the greatest of modern chemists is Mendeleef. Not Inventive. It was Hertz who made the disâ€" covery which is the foundation . of Marconi‘s invention ; but although not a few valuable discoveries are to be credited to the Germans, perâ€" haps almost as many as to either the French or the British, the Gerâ€" man contribution in the field of inâ€" vention, in the practical applicaâ€" tion of scientific discovery, has been less than that of France, less than that of Great Britain, and less than that of the United States. The Germans contributed little or noâ€" thing to the development of the: railroad, the steamboat, the autoâ€" mobile, the aeroplane, the teleâ€" graph, the telephone, the phonoâ€" graph, the photograph, the moving picture, the electric light, the sewâ€" ing machine, and the reaper and binder. Even those dread instruâ€" ments of war, the revolver and the machine gun, the turreted ship, the torpedo, and the submarines, are not due to the military ardor of the Germans. Few nations would be so bold as to deny the superior achievement of the French in the fine arts and of the English in pure science. Nations are never accepted by other nations at their own valuaâ€" tion: and the Germans need not be Did Not Think British Infantry Would Display Prowess. Moltke, the great German genâ€" eral, made this statement and put it in writing: "I do not think the British infantry will be able to maintain their traditional supremâ€" acy over Continental troops now that all armies are armed with longâ€" range rifles. There will no longer be the opportunity for them to disâ€" play their wellâ€"known prowess in handâ€"toâ€"hand fighting.‘" Commenting on this The London Telegraph says: Every good Gerâ€" man trusted Moltke‘s words, and yet, as far as we can judge from the meagre reports of battles, the great Moltke was for once wrong in his calculations. His statement seems to have been based on a false preâ€" mise of what caused the British inâ€" fantryman‘s superiority 100 years ago. It was not the actual bayonet charges, but the decisive effect of his superior rifle fire before those charges were delivered ‘_v_bwh made them so successful. The Brigsish soldiers were far better shots than the French, and could deliver three volleys to the French soldiers‘ two. Our army toâ€"day is merely carryâ€" ing on these traditions. Our men are far better shots than the Gerâ€" mans. Every single wounded solâ€" dier mentions the rottenness of the German shooting, and our men have a far bigger target to aim at, as the Germans come on in close formation, heedless of loss of life."‘ Little Jackieâ€""How soon are you and my sister going to be marâ€" ried"‘ Ecstatic Loverâ€"‘"She has not named the happy day yet, but I hope she does not believe in long engagements.‘"‘ _ Little Jackie â€" ‘‘She doesn‘t, I know, ‘cause all her engagements have been short !"‘ YONx MOLTKE WAS WRONG. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhers. TORONTO Death Nearly Claimed . ~~ KRew Branswick Lady Was Restored to Her Anxious Family f When Hope Had Gone. St. John, N.B., Dec. 15th.â€"At one time it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, of 3 White St., would jucc\ln}b Lo‘ the of 3 White St., woulid suC to cne deadly ravages of a&m Kidney trouble. "My first attacks of backâ€" ache anrd kidney trouble began years ago." For six years that dull gnawing pain has been present. When I exâ€" erted myself it was terribly intensified. If I caught cold the pain was unenâ€" durable. 1 used most everything, but nothing gave that certain grateful reâ€" lief that came from Dr. Hamiltor®: Pills of Mandrake®and*Butternut. Inâ€" stead of being bowed dbowwn with pain, toâ€"day 1‘ am strong, enjoy splendid appetite, sleep soundly. Lost properâ€" ties have been instilled into my blood â€"cheeks are rosy with color, and 1 thank that day that I heard of so grand a medicine as Dr. Hamilton‘s Pm‘s." " w8 ic l ame eP MAEQUTCUTC: MR NOC M O e rt Every woman should use these pills regularly because good health pays. and it‘s good, vigorous health that comes to all who use Dr. Hamilton‘s Mandrake and Butternut Pills. Allies‘ Victories Due to Army of "the Air. ‘The aviator is king of modern battles,‘"‘ with pardonable pride asâ€" serts an aviator who has taken part in aerial reconnoisances in Alsace, in Belgium, and more recently in the battles of the Marne and the Aisne. He is now enjoying a few days‘ rest in Paris. ‘‘Thanks to the aviator,"‘" he savs, ‘‘we have won our victories, and it will be thanks to him that in a few days we will be able to hunt the Germans out of France. In my opinion, sufficient has not been said of the important part aviation has played in this war. It is true that at first we were a bit taken by surâ€" prise. The Germans had marvelâ€" lously organized their aerial army in silence. They have more aviaâ€" tors than we expected, and have exâ€" cellent craft. Consequently they were able at the start to count on splendid scouting service. . They were over our positions at night, and at dawn their artillery showed by deadly work how careful and accurate had been the reconnaisâ€" sances. ‘"‘Then we put into action our adâ€" mirable army of the air. It was not long before it rendered excepâ€" tional service to the headquarters staff. It played a decisive role in the battle of the Marne. At the present moment it is a precious auxiliaryâ€"one might almost say inâ€" dispensable adjunct to the victorâ€" ious march of our troops. "I have been instructed to make reconnaissances on many occasions, both in the east and the north. In spite of the intense fire of the enemy I have been able to report the situation of the German troops, note their movements, estimate their numbers and importance, and I am convinced that I have ibeen able to be of great service. AYIATOR KINXG OF BATTLES. ‘"‘When the war is over, one of the finest pages in history will tell of the role of the aviator." All of the above applies to the aeroplane. The airman who gives his experiences asserts that the dirigible airship has not proved a success. It is at the mercy of any squadron of aeroplanes, and he does not believe it has any military {future. Lame Back Strengthened Stifness Taken Right Out Was Relieved in an Hour, and Cured Over Night. A lame back? Quite unnecessary. All you have to do is to rub on Nerviâ€" line. It‘s simply a wonder for backâ€" acheâ€"relieves after one rubbing. "Noâ€" thing possibly could cure an aching back faster than Nerviline," writes Mrs. Arthur Kobar, of Lower Cheiâ€" sea, N.S. "I caught cold and was so prostrated with pain I could not bend over. We always have Nerviline at home, and I had the painful region rubbed thoroughly with this grand liniment. At once the pain departed. The lameness was rapidly reduced and in an hour I was able to be about my housework. I was rubbed again just before retiring, and awoke as usual in the morning without a sign of my back trouble." There is no sort of muscular pain that Nerviline won‘t cure quickly. Thousands swear by it for rheumaâ€" tisin, neuralgla, sclatica and lumbago. It sinks to the core of the painâ€"right through muscle, tissue and nerveâ€"it penetrates where no oily, greagy liniâ€" ment can go and invariably cures quickly. If you have an ache or a pain anywhereâ€"use Nervilineâ€"it will cure you. Family size bottle, very large 50¢; trial size 25¢. at all dealers. No b‘long ploper !‘‘ he shouted. ‘‘No can come this side! must come other side. Must go back, come ploper side.‘" xz * When the English first appeared before the island of Hongkong, they found a formidable fortress frownâ€" ing from the rocks and garrisoned by several thousand Chinese solâ€" diers. The English commander beâ€" gan to look round for the best place of attack. While the Chinese were slecping, the English circled the is land, and ‘at dawnâ€" suddenly came upon the Chinese from the rear. The Orientals were thrown into wild consternation, and one officer, who could speak some English, ran out, waving his arms. When foreign war vessels first went into Ghinese waters, it was found that the Chinese had built forts facing the direction in which the attack was expected to come, and had left their rear exposed. Would you say that an architect rises in his profession just because heâ€" plans castles in the air? Kinard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgla. An Unfair Attack. [ atet toan e s BABY RESIS AFTER BATH PUNISHMENT OF COWARDICE. Mcant Death or Everlasting Disâ€" graco in German Army. Punishment for cowardice in the German army at the time of the Thirty Years‘. War was so severe aS to be ferocious. In the year 1642 the Swedish General Torstensson stormed Leipzig. A force under the command of the Grand Duke Lecopold gave him battle before the gates of the city, but during the engagement the Madlonische regiâ€" ment â€" became _ suddenly panicâ€" stricken, and fled. CUTICURA ~_SOAP Punishment immediately followed. When the regiment had again asâ€" sembled, six other regiments surâ€" rounded it, and tried it by courtâ€" martial in the open field. The verâ€" dict was that the colonel and the captains should die by the sword, and that every tenth man among the nonâ€"commissioned officers and men should be hanged. The stern verdict was carried out to the letter, except that at the reâ€" quest of Leopold the men were shot instead of hanged; Col. George Madlonische was beheaded, after he had sought in vain for a pardon. The survivors were consigned to quarters with other commands, and the regiment never regained its name or former prestige. In those days, there was no alternative but to be brave. â€" Cowardice meant either death or everlasting disâ€" grace. Because of its extreme purity, delicate emollient properties and refreshing fragrance. Assisted Very Quarrelsome Neighbors i)‘y"Cutrcurao Ointment it is equally effective in the treatâ€" ment of heat rashes, itchings, irritations and chafings. Samples Free by Mail t Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32â€"p. s s oncmdatwer o * 4 y tbmer o9 d w Names of the parties are Corne and Toesâ€"both very unhappy till the trouble was remedied by Putnam‘s Corn Exâ€" tractor â€" Any corn goes out of business in %4 hours if "Putnam‘s" is appliedâ€"try it, 2c. at all dealers. A seasoned old "salt‘"‘ was a deâ€" voted admirer of a young middy who served on the same warship, says the London Citizen. An acciâ€" dent occurredâ€"a man overboard and a gallant rescue by one of the lieutenants, which brought a handâ€" some letter of commendation from the Admiralty. chance,‘‘ said the middy. $ ‘"‘See here,"‘ said the other, "T‘ll _‘"Never you mind,‘"‘ said the vetâ€" eran. ‘"T‘ll hold you up till the boat comes." young friend. ‘"You ought to have drop from the rigging, and you jump in and rescue me.‘‘ "‘But I can‘t swim,‘‘ was the reâ€" ply "It‘s a nice thing to get a letter like that,""‘ said the old tar to his INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS Messrs, Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, Patent Bolicitors, Montreal, report that 105 Canadian Patents were isâ€" sued for the week ending September 22nd, 1914, 71 of which were granted to Americans, 21 to Canadians, 7 to residents of Great Britain and Colâ€" onies, and 6 to residents of Foreign Countries. ‘Henry, you look very pale. What‘s the trouble?"‘ "I was stung to the quick by an adder this afterâ€" noon.‘‘ ‘‘How did it happent?‘ ‘‘Why. I dropped in at the bank, and the bookkeeper told me my acâ€" count was overdrawn." A man who can dispose of his troubles for a consideration is a genius. Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruf. ‘"‘Well, I‘ll have to wait my are just the right medicine for the The Making of a Hero. "Cuticura," Dept. K, Boston, U.5.A» Used in Old Enn Between England and Scotianed. "Dogs of war‘" is a phrase which once meant a thing os real as the war horse. Dogs have played their part in battles and campaign« and in the old wars_biotweea England and Scotland dogs.vers usod by both combaiants for pursu‘ng and killing fugitives after a defect. 1: is related that Wallass <ad Pruc each had closs es capes from «apture by Eng‘ish bloodhovrrds. Bruce is said :o have thrown th3 En off the soont by thoe >: known expedient of wed! strosin far enough to baffie eners, and Walaco cove bloodvy times of k. ng a folower and leaving the body in the dogs path for them to «ccne rpon. The docs finding a body beliove«d in>~* their task as done azd discontinud the hunt. |, In the bistory of the wars of tw middle azes one finds referonce to the use of big dore against cavalry for the purpose of throwing th* horses into con‘veion ard not «ons for causing panic but cssuelt«s, for theso fierce canine portisons were clothed in cnate of mail sludded wiâ€": spikes and having soythcs fitted to dogs with fire braods [raton their coats of mail hove been s an enemy‘s camp w dn recvlts Henry VLiL. mt found dogs us ful in imflitary because in Eaglich Woatory it is ten that he offered th\o use of aux%iarios and 4,000 war do King Charles V. «i Enosin t that monarch in his war wih cis I. their harness In the reirn of Q when the Earl <f Ew land for the pupâ€"se> insurreciion there W commanied by 100 b\ BABY‘S OWN TABLETS USED FO® *EARS When a mother usos only on medicine as long as thore are lit le ones in the howe it cocia‘sly bears grand testimony to tho value of that particular remedv. Thousands of mothers use notwizg elss but Baby‘s Own Tablsts. Joncorning them Mrs. M. Lelane, Mceocamâ€" cook West, NB., wsites: "I have used Baby‘s Own ‘L=olets for my little ones for the pas ten years and know of nothins to cquel them during teething wme or for collc, constipation and indigestion, AlV my neighbors who hav»e vsod them think as I do." The Tablets ar> sold by medicine Jon‘lers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Eflie (finishing her devotions) â€" . . . And please bless father and mother and all of us, and give us everything good ; and bless all our friends, and give them what‘s good for them. Bear Island, Aug. 2%, 1903 Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,â€"Your traveller is here toâ€"day and we are gt.tinhn large quantity of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT. We find it to get rid of the bost Liniment on the market making no exception. We have been in business 13 years and have handled all kinds, but have dropped them all but yours; that selle itself; the others have to be pushed YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Kye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated ‘yeudn; No Dn.run‘» r Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the Eye y mail Vree. Murine KyeRemedy Co., Chicago. Whoever looks for a friend withâ€" out imperfections will never find what he seeks. We love ourselves with all our faults, be they few or many, small or great, and we ought to love our friends in like manner. An English writer has amused ; himself in figuring on the price of a journey to the nearest star. Asâ€". suming that it would be possible to travel at a speed of five hundred miles an hour, and that the fare would be as low as two cents a hunâ€" | dred miles, he figures that the traâ€"| veller would have to pay $5,500,000 for his ticket, and that he would reach his destination in 5,839,440 years, He says nothing about the: cost of meals and sleeping quarâ€" | ters. If the traveller, however, : could take passage on a ray of light, he could make his journey in four and oneâ€"quarter years. At that raâ€" pid rate, he could reach the moon in a second and a quarter, the «un in eight minutes, and Neptune in four Bome men who claim to be lookâ€" ing for work should have their eyes examined. nds by having r REAL "DOGS OF WAR." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Ete. A Sensible Merchant $200.00 iN COLD C The Nice Distinction, Stellar Distances. W. A. HAGERMAN €nt suppre© ‘my wa rounds s only on* re are lit le a‘s.ly bears value . of Thousands g elss but Uono~rning , Memncamâ€" aso +T hwame ayed their algn« and o Englanrd used by su‘ng and lafest. 151. vast Dhvanak torped to ructive t have v ways. Is d Ire & a'd Franâ€" rit K. W. CAWSOBN, Sineiy Colborns 5i: Taronts. 4 ®ruiu stoce sirain or Dairy w$ite H. MWo Draxson @rampion. omparne €+ . Toraumts pany. 75 a GENT3, UPTOâ€"MIXUTE Wa ond _ Combination _ Christs vre BURE MONEYâ€"MAKE&S 1 Eamnics bree; Best Terms. ORD: Postsge twenty."ve cents. Noch pary Limited. Publishers, Toro l_J sewing at home, who time: good pay; work eont i charges prosaid. Bend stam; are â€" Nalooal Manu.sccuri out pa.n by our home tre. tm« # us befcre too late. D. Belim: lical Lo., Limited, Co lingwood, Ont oF INXYEXTIONsS PIGEON, PI EOX & Davis im St. Jomes St., »~ Monired Wulen Gas dufia â€"matinn h. w LAWEON Colborsm« § T M 4 prepaid _ The Aag, Frevch, Gen. Joffre, Admiral Souven‘r _ of valeartier ( Agents â€" wantod. F. E Merchante Bark Building, M l) HOTO WAR EUTTONS, 10 ( prepaid _ '!‘hp 2 _K 1g, C ANCER, | TUMORS, internal and exter out pa.n by our home t Food Supplies In War Time 1 O80D WEEKLY IN LIVI â€"Consumptionâ€" and | Ercnchitis | ADIES TO DO PLAIN ANI Ceovornment Protection of the Naple Syrup indusiry means botter prises for the Farmer has been steadily fidence by ite enlendi sulte. . Consumptivee of this dread diseast stored to the full v the use of this med If eo Copeland‘s Cure tion and Bronchitie you. For the prst three LAND‘S CURZ POR CO of tastimonia‘ls, on ficee, testify to thi sults obtained evi doctors have given recovery. or m trial bottle will be &u& on recéipt of the reg !::: and Secondâ€"hand, for T~\~' n# power urposes . V wter Flumes. 'I’AIKPO AND . SMOKE STACKS. R pPorson ‘®28, #28*" roronto rea Rumors are in circulation that we are unable to supply orders owing to the war ge. mand. This staten ent is absclutely incorrect. We are filling our orders as usual, Insist on getting what you ask for CLARKԤ REMEMBER! The cintment you put on your child‘s sk in gets into the system just as surcly # food the child eats. Don‘t I¢ impure fats and mineral coloring matter (such as many of tht cheap ointments contain) g¢ into your child‘s blood ! _ Zat Buk is purely herbal. No p** onous coloring. Use it alwal 50c. Box at All Druggists and Six Sold By All Druggists NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE FEMALE HELP WANTED T,f&cfl known fruits. If t 16 mo easy task, But by P k County BOILERS â€" Are You a Sufc COPELAND MEDICINE COMPANY, Limited Engineers and Shipbuilders P AEMS POR aALC W.Clark, Limited MONTREAL. A ANT To uk AtCUTS WANTED Needs Patching Poor Mexico ‘ I have no doubt Your seat of war Is most worn o1 MISCELLANED J$ AWAY FREE Ade®aide Stree FOR SALE Write for info mation e out th Hundred ,, To the per® equally correc Btat t‘on. P1 VRYREBR # ERPA e h onery ay _ wW 1 If you « t ce ber we m imaog m he i: swo Deware. ht Que Ont. $#% IN 6 has 17. °0. entered a fi‘.&m the rom. 1i qu, GRCb @® she had =ai y Pair"â€"she herscif \.« it qs She pressed u’;all'hll' miuet [FuUA away and ; _ [A8 Wwell, it will so haps before‘ you expect In€ mysteriounsly. " â€"; comes! Â¥a, 1..3 xt He bent and kissed \ & &m- in that mo eraving, the ; soul p } n!z::- to the s He nodded, and st ".Omreoccumu.m ::; & little cl« and as her eyes dwo love‘s ford l'i'efl‘hlv-'d;;r'o'al "I am quite makes one feel At any rate, t s iT Pou s Â¥ you w "There is a 1 Said, presen y She nodded, "'\'«ls-. immens eâ€"1 amean Si1 Her eyes fell fc dunce with me ford ?" "As many ti course," he said. meany opportuniti much t afte Sho ';‘.'1.{.'." 4 "That the on ng to y« then, m secor walte," that you weeks," she lously, l 6 te se ."W“:“k. Ma _ "I though wish not ?â€" door had cl closer to S of shyness . un His arm. "How goo she murmur a woman in ‘"Yes," said # the cof =:$!M that the w t, the man in the roo his name?" He heart, and bow (‘enc:'. "And no batde begins""‘ »begins _ When he had "You two said, with a indicates a been absent She sighed, an her h.#h went t ture of a nervou heard Stafford‘s came in and gr Howard _ being her hand "I suppose so," be; for, come to t made a peer sim good beer; and a peers were and : Tactoriiy: as the 1 , ms the â€" S!l.‘l‘lwfll be th & "Baron Mighcli owns so m: some of his there." MHoward Jaughe "I see. Been th over with the Cor College will have a contâ€"ofâ€"arms. S fir and a railway She smiled tole "You always m: Mr. Howard. 1: care m You did not ¢ iind! . Staffor "Mis task is im than mine. He j political club an thousand #undx penses. e oth â€"but I must not Tories even to j it was a very la» done that way, i "No," she said, do not think he c indifferent. All th« I have been work _ Bhe Bushed ar How s hunger in ‘Y_'_'I have no eyes shone a to her cheeks You are glad"" H of sympathy t mockery in it, for is always amused i "Yes, I am glad sake. You think 1 enet? I do not ca: sake that 1 am & She laughed A Foolish @HAPTER XXX1 iddr hat 1 am or him, n« wou think entered dwelt them . bov iffe Sa iC «o there. . And H\ Or, the Bel _ Waterman‘s 14c equalled case and to use and safe to the genuine : with the word *‘ Ideal and Selfâ€"Filling U M cti At Your

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