ren may. Ki Eli " know Postum has benetited my- lull and the other members of the family, especially my mother, as she was a victim of long standing." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Wind, ‘uor, Ont. l, Poatum comes in two forms: Poem-t Cereal-the origirwl form- must be well boiled. 1se and 25421 Indians. i Instant Pttetor.--a soluble 'rew.det'--) idissoln-s quickiy in a cup of hot wa- iter, and with cream and sugar. makesI i. delicious bevonge instantly. Me Pt! 50c tins. Both kinds we mil-Sly delicious a [con about the same per my. “I had been very anxious com-orn- Jntr my mother's condition, but We noticed that after using Postum for a short time she felt much better. had little trouble with her heart, and no sick stomach; that the headaches Were not so frequent, and her general con- dition much improved. This continued until she was well and hearty. ' I “I was so pleased with it that I bought s package to carry home with he, and had wife prepare some for the next meal. The whole family liked it so well that we discontinued eoftee and used Postum entirely. “Some time ago I was making a Mini! to a distant part of the country Ind took dinner with one of the mer- "hnnts of the place. I noticed a "Iomewhat unusual ftavour of the 'coC 109' and asked him concerning it. He implied that it was Postum. When people realize the injurious effects of tea and eoffee and the bet- ter health that a change to Postum can bring, they are usually glad to lend their testimony for the benefit of others. "My mother, since her early child- hood, was an inveterate coffee drinker, ‘had been troubled with her heart for a number of years and complained of, that 'weak-all-over' feeling and sick Vetomach." (The elects of ten on the) pystem are very similar to those of: 'eoffee, became they each contain the; drug, calcium) l There's A R of times in the past few years in or- der to make the newest lamps. Not only have entire floors of complicated and expensive machines for making carbon lamps been thrown out and new machinery for making metal ma.. ment lamps installed, but before pack- F ine cases containing new machines could be opened and unpacked in the factory they have been thrown out as useless, as the advance from squirted- 1 metal filament, to drawn-wire fila- ments proved the better way. Before I factories could reach the limit of ef-' ticiency in manufacturing vacuum lamps the introduction of nitrogen into the lamps brought another! change; and now, when the nitrose.l, tungsten lamps have been in use only) a short time, the manufacture of ar-i tton and its introduction into the it»: candescent lamp becomes a reality. It I the research laboratories that dis-, _ "red the means for bringing about . these changes, with their aeeompany- " ing economies, could receive a cent for 3 every dollar that they save the public, l they would receive over a million (101- _ hrs a year to spend for further re- I search. The people are the ones who 1 are most interested in research, al- l though they may not know it." l" tic). ‘H me insurance for the future of the industries. Many factories, will later be manufacturing things not 'c", en conceivable to-day. The incan- xlosvent lamp business will serve for Illustration. I have seen whole fae- curios entirely overhauled a number of times in the past few Vonn- G, A“ wring industries, Dr. W. R. Whitney shows that purely academical re- -sear(-h has led to some of our greatest industrial achievements. “Search for new knowledge," says Doctor Whit- ney. "is the insurance for the future of the industries. Many factories will later be tttanufnrt"ri.o. on...“ we New Inventions Are Constantly Plunging Conditions. In an article on the relation of re- search to the progress of manufac- 's...'., . t _ . - "'I l usual work. I tried several kinds of: Medicine, but it did not help me. As a matter of Get I felt steadily growing weaker, and in this condition, when! reading a paper, I saw Dr. Willinmsx'i Pink Pills advertised and decided to) try them. I got a supply and by the; time the second box was finished I; felt considerably better, and after} continuing the pills for some time" long†I felt better than I had donef for months. This was my first experi- i: Fnce with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills," but you may depend upon it that if I I tind mmlix-inp nor-mum." n....:_ I wt" - too weak to walk about, working on a farm in tario, I was quite unabr usual work. I tried " Medicine, but it did not I matter of Get I felt ste Heavy Weight on Old Age It have: the Sula" a Victi- of Many For†of Weak-em Ask those who have had la ttrippe regarding the present condition of their health and most of them will answer “Since I had the grip l have never been welt." ' There is a persis- tent weakness of the limbs, bad diges- tion, shorti'ess of breath and palpita- tio: if the heart caused by the thin- blooded condition in which grip al- most always leaves its victims after, the f, var and influenza have sub-l sided. They are at the mercy of re-l lapses, and complications. often very; serious. This condition will continue until the blood is built up again, and; for this purpose nothing can equal a; fair treatment with Dr. Williams’: Pink Pills, which quickly maln- the; blood rich and red, drive the lihL'H'ml-t, gems from the system and transform , despondent grip victims into cheerful,‘ healthy, happy men and women. Mr.l, John Buttersby, London, Ont., "trs:---} "Just before Christmas) 1914, I was' taken down with an attack of la’ ttrippe, and the trouble left me in all deplorable condition I “'1“ “"‘““ R ES E , I. A CO' mm BREAKDOWN AFTER LA camps I’RESSED HA RD. eaten†fyr Postum. hold ivy Grocers. t those who have had la grippe ding the present condition of health and most of them will " “Since I had the grip l have been welt." . There is a penis- veakness of the limbs, bad diges- short-cess of breath and pulpit.- f the heart caused by the thin- rd condition in which strip al- always leaves, its victims after Iver and influenza have sub- They are at the mercy of re-i and complications. often very; . '11:, .. . medicine or by a 50 cents a box or t from The Dr. l Co., Brockviue, Ont 1'CH the trouble left me in a condition. I was almost walk about, as I was then a farm in Western On- quite unable to follow my I A"! . - ' ' AND PROGRESS "av... - ...._ a "la, pend upon it that if I tressary again I will Ute." these pills from any ine or by mail, post a a box or six boxes The Dr. Williams', ett me in a was almost ' "So yuu wan write with either hand, Tat?" asked the officer. _ "Sis, sore," replied Pat. “Whin I wa a boy me father-rest his soul,' Aways told me: Wat, learn to cut yer dairer nails wid yer left hand, for some day ye might lose yer right!†Tery few people are ambidextrous, that is, able to use the left hand as readily and skilfully as the right. But there is an amusing story of one Irish- man who was careful to cultivate that art. When he was, signing articles on board a ship he began to sign his name with his right hand, and then changed the pen to his left hand and: finished it. "So you can write with either hand, “Rev" ...I..._I AL- -g.t, A V. black frock coat, and the mission fail- -;ed. He seemed to lack either the " knowledge or the physical force to . combat the shrewd politicians around ' him and he became merely a figure- lhead for the dominant party of the Committee of Union and Progress. f Many things may happen with the {missing of this sick man, He may be I the last of the Osmanli to rule in Eu- rope; he may be the last to bear the‘ [honors and title of the Caliphate. But I fhe has been a part of the almost tor-l lorn hope to restore the glories of the; ; empire, and has lived to see a Turkish i 'army with munitions of war and sup- : plies making a desperate and so far; succesdul attempt to hold the almost; sacred Itaru'anelles against a treat enemy. ' " When he went to appeal to the lay- ‘alty of the Albanians on the field of "Gssovo, Macedonia. he was the first Jlttotnan sovereign to visit his pro- , vinees on a mission of peace. But the i Albanians, who had imagined the Sul- ' tan had wings and few of humanity's ifrailties, were disappointed at the (sight of the heavy feeble man in a When the Young Turks lifted Ras- chid Effendi upon the throne from 'whieh they had shoved his brother, Abdul Hamid, they dragged a man of 65 from a palace where he had been fall his life scarcely more than a pris- ioner. In years of inactivity his body Ihad grown big, big with width, :breadth and length, a burden for his ‘short legs. He was a sick man then. On the semlik Fridays the chalky) paleness of his heavy face and thel dullness of his eyes were accentuated by the troops of young guardsmen in! brilliant uniforms and the officers in', glittering gold braid who surrounded! him. The picture had in it more of"? pathos than imperialism. l Death of Mahommed Y. Would Make ' Ditterenee in Turkey. I The Sultan of Turkey, Mahommed V., the head of Islam and the 36th 'ruler. of the house of Osman, is sick. Once sucha report would bring up visions of royal relatives mysterious- ly poisoned, bowstrung or dropped, bound and sacked, into the dark wa- ters of the Bosphorus, and of fortune tellers, wizards and exercisers crowd- ing around the ailing sovereign’s bed- side. Now the people talk of pro- spective heirs and of regents, while the Sultan's Christian ally commends him to Allah and sends his ablest physician. Yours truly, M. MUSGRAVE WATSON, Secretary. Sent by Mrs. Becker. Phone, June, 1415. 361 Perth Ave. i The main needs of the people at (present are warm underclothing for ‘men. women and children; shawls, boots, and, above all, blankets. As regards food stuffs, which we are asked to send out in large quantities, cereals, biscuits, jam, condensed milk and bovril are specially desirable. I am enclosing a copy of our latest appeal, and we shall be most grateful: for any help which your Society can kindly send us. I ,' Our fund has equipped and main- tained five large hospitals as well as ,six or seven dispensaries in Serbia iduring the past year, besides distri- buting relief among civilians. Most of these hospitals are now in the rhands of the Bulgarians, and the 'staffs are either prisoners or on the way to the coast with the retreating. armies. We have been able, however, _ to organize medical relief work among (the refugees on the Greek frontier, and English representatives of the fund are already at work on our be-: half both in Montenegro and in the) Salonika district. In the last men-' tinned area the work is carried on un-) der the supervision of our late trea- surer, Sir Edward Boyle. l ihitrl. Hamilton, lst Vice Chairman, , The Sutrraitists' War Auxiliary, j 32 St. Joseph St,, Toronto. , Dear Madam,--We are very grate- ,ful for your kind letter of lst inst.,' ‘aizd are very pleased to give you all the information we can as regards the administration of our fund and the) needs thereof. l ureat interest has been aroused in e the terrible conditions prevailing in f Serbia owing to the ravages of the ll typhus epidemic and by the invasion of the Austrians. Both adults and " e children are in dire need of all the ne- - eessitien of life, particularly blankets, l - warm clothing for men, women and l - l children. Goods or money sent to the l 'lScrLian Relief Depot, Room 17, Mail ' , 3.12:4 Empire Building, Toronto, will be I ‘gimlly received and forwarded. , _ Dr. Sharpe of Brampton, Miss Lo- _ :is-anmitrh. daughter of the Serbian , lilinistcr to Great Britain, and Miss I b Ewrurd, an American nurse in Bel- l rtctile, all recently returned from [I i, Surllia, are both publicly and private- ly urging everyone to contribute to rthe fund., for without generous out, «we help the adult refugees and the 23.000 orphan children must die, as ithe countries of Albania and Monte- ,'_ negro into which they have retreated ! have not sufficient food for themselves [and no adequate protection from the (bitter weather. The following letter a. 1Espeaks for itself: SERBIAN RELIEF. Without Outside Help Thmma tth, Those Irish'. Great interest has TH E SICK s'ULTAN December 20th, 1915. ’romwell Road, London, S.W., England Thousands Will I There is a general scaifcity of col- iliery Workers, farm hands and nav- tvies. and the demand for work peo- (ple is still greatly in excess of the ‘supply in engineering and shipbuild- ing trades. Shortages are reported in the glass, chemical, building and metal trades, and with regard to wo-1 men, the demand for textile Workers 1 u still ttruatigi1ed. Hand'- Idnlmut Guru Golan, tttt Iâ€. t. l Compared with October. 1914. there, was a general improvement, especial- ly marked in industries engaged in supplying the requirements of the forces. War bonuses and increases in wages, taking effect in October and af- fecting 180,000 work people, amounted to about $115',000 a week, l 'I'VL-AV_ . _ - . . . ' glued to t ' Owinv: to active recruntmg, the i for the lad, ,shurtage of men in the British labor; - jmarket. has become more acute and mum'- , has greatly increased the demand for Home" and young girls as substitutes. , l .‘Viitually every one capable of work-) "Did you (ine, says the Board of Trade Laboriyours that Gazette, has an opportunity of beingilight. switch employed, and it is evident that still; "Yes, dad larger numbers of women and girls] "Well?" not previously employed in trade' “He's com and industry are required in many oc- i =r"-----""-'".-..a cupations. l l Try Roman Mon] Nuggets. the 1tyadreoeti form of Roman Meal. Sprve with hot milk or soften with ’boiling water. Pour off and add milk iservo hr. Jackson's Roman Meal. I You'll find this dark, nut-brown. course- ily granulated food very delicious. " inas- a taste different from any other ‘oereal. it is exceedingly nutritious. It {'prevents indigestion. it is guaranteed I to relieve constipation or "money back." 3 Ask your doctor about Dr. Jackson's _ Roman Meal. ' 10c and 250 at grocers, Hollow di. grvctlons closely and do NOT stir i while cooking porridge. l British Women and sugar. Mad" by Roman Meal One Spoken by the Educated. Uther by the Masses. " There exists now in Greece tl lin- ‘guistic condition of affairs around iwhieh centres a controversy at once icomie or tragic; for there are in ’Grcece two languages, or rather. the one language in two forms-one writ- ten by the newspapers, spoken by the educated classes, and used in parlia-‘ mentary debates and in public docu-l ments, including the Scriptures, the' circulation of which is regulated lr/ law; and the other a vernacular used iby the masses of the people, contain-1‘ ing many words of foreign origin, es- pecially Turkish and Italian arisingi from those periods of foreign occupa- tion, with a much simplified grammar,’ and rarely reduced to writing, except , for private communications. The f/il 'mcr is the cultured tongue; the latter H the popular idiom; and between thell two there rages a merciless warfare," in which fanatical students of the uni-) d versity have lost their lives, ministers 1" their portfolios, a Metropolitan of f Athens his mitre. and the sweet-faced t queen-mother much of her former) popularity. i F. ; What home is complete without a ‘chwk? What house is a home with- [out a wife? Tick or nag, who would I choose to be clockless and wifeless? [Time passes unheeded without the lar., time is wasted with or without I the other, . A clock can hé pawned not. Clocks are apt to get slow in warm weather, but it is summer-time that wives Pre usually friskiest. When your 1i.ife Létrilzés, too, it is too late to do anything except reach for her wrists. _ Wives-unlike elooks--eannot be expected to sit quietly on the mantel- piece day after day and night after night without getting out of order. This privileged position, which adds dignity to the handsomest clock, would make the loveliest woman look a trifle ridiculous. When the clock strikes one, it is not too late to get six or seven hours' sleep if you stop arguing. _ Wm-.- mam"... J Some eloektr-iike some wives-ttet! (wound up every night, and nothing jwill stop them but a good shaking. ‘This, however, is a drastic remedy; 'and, after all, the business of bothi 1clocks and wives is to keep goingf cheerfully-and nut make too much noise about it. I _ Shaking doesn't improve the works of either timepieces or women, and if you persist in it they will inevitably get "run down." Watchmakers and doctors ft?urish through men's fool- ishness in this respect. Which Would be the Easier to Move .-and to Keep in Order. A good eloek--like a good wife-- should not need cpnstant watching. TWO GREEK LANG UAG For Breakfast To-Morrow. SHUR'I'AGIC "F' MEN ' pared in a digestible form. f Its crisp goodness is adelight _ to the palate and a life-giver to tired brain and iaded stomach. Made or brain when the body is poorly nourished. Get warmth and strength for the day's work by eating for breakfast Shredded Wheat with hot milk. Contains all the body-building material in the whole wheat grain pre- Troy C_an't Work with hand on Workers Increasingly in Demand. CLOCK 'h's-AN'D WIVES. 1 'o, ierdiramniar,) Another language of the same sort ritink, except'is Chinook. This consists of about ns. The f/i-Iii,::,-)?.?.',;.',', Chinook, two-fifths Red In.. ie; the latter ', dian tongues, and the rest English and between thelCanadian-French. It is the tongue less waihdii,lot barter. on the Paeitie Coast of ts of the uniJAlaska and the Dominion. At least es, ministotiis0,000 Indians speak it, and lately opulitan of St. John's Gospel has been issued in [ sweet-faced this jargon for their special benefit. her former-5 There is also a version of the JlScriptures translated into the primi- l - jtive language of the head-hunters of] Iorrow. I Borneo. I ; a wife can Toronto, inCahada. Hi . “rub no me trout. It appears now that ' he joined the Eighteenth battalion of "iid First Austrian infantry and was 'ifor four months on the frontier of jBessarabia. He participated in two lbattles, was wounded in the chest by ishrapnel, but recovered quickly. The 1general in Command wits very much 'surprised when he learned he had lsuch a youthful soldier in the ranks fund at once sent him home, as he re- ( â€used to take further. rP.Rnnnuihiiit,r' It Studied Him. "Did you tell that young man of yours that I am going to have the light switched off at ten?" "Yes, dad." Vienna newspapers tell of the re- turn to school in that city of Hans Kiesel, a thirteen-year-old boy, who disappeared some months ago and went to the front. It appears now that mnud'n 2rtrstnsrnt Clix-u It was made by German mission- aries, printed in South Africa, paid for with British money. and circulated in Papua. “He‘s coming at ten in l Parts of the New Testament have actually been translated into Pidgin l English, that strange lingo, half baby- ltalk and half slang, which is the chief 'means of communication through all ithe East. The difficulties presented in trans- lating the New Testament into this barbarous hoteh-potch must have been tremendous, but they have been sur- mounted. A'he New Testament ls Translated ( Into Many Languakes. [ On the continent of Africa alone the New Testament, or parts of it, have been translated into 148 lan- guages and dialects. The two latest additions are Dabida--a language of British East Africa-and Limba-the language of a tribe in the hinterland of Sierra Leone. l Before retiring, bathe the face and neck with hot water, then dry and rub ;“USlT†into the skin with the finger ‘tips. By persistent treatment you ovill soon restore to your complexion the wonderful freshness and beauty of youth. Make this treatment a nightly habit and "USiT" will beau- tify you while you sleep. "UNT" is a skin food and wrinkle chaser. It builds up firm elastic. tis- sues, removes wrinkles, fills out de-l pressions and gives the skin a won-" derful smoothness and finenoss or, texture which alone indicates perfect,: skin health. I "USIT" is put up in handsome opal! bottles, and until the Drug Stores int Canada are completely stocked we are i filling mail orders. Accept no substi- l lute. Send 50 Cents to-day for trial bottle, sufficient. for six weeks' use. We pay postage to any address in Canada. Troy "Ar"rraemrnnro 00.. LTD. 476 Ioncuvnuu Av... Tonoteto rived from the giving of free serum in Toronto and the benefits found at the Isolation Hospital following the use of antitoxin persuaded the Hon. Mr. Hanna to encourage Dr. McCul- lough in his campaign. In the past the department has given anti-typhoid serum free, and it has resulted in a great reduction in cases of typhoid in the province. At the Isolation Hospital, where} the worst cases of diphtheria are, taken and treated with the anti-, diphtheretic serum, the death rate) from the disease has been reduced to l 6 per cent., while formerly the rate) was 16 per cent. It is hoped that) the free distribution of the serums will result in a wonderful decrease in the spread of the dread diseases. Plans for the distribution of the lt serums have not yet been completed, . but it is understood that supplies will be placed in every municipality and a physician's prescription will be ' all that is necessary in order to ob- I, tain the serums free. The results de- I Thirteen-rear-old Soldier, A ColOMrPtyLITA N Beautifies While You Sleep Govern-ext Wlll Place Supply in Every Municipality. Acting on instructions from the Hon. W. J. Hanna, Provinciul Secre- tary, Dr. McCullough, chief otfieer of health for Ontario, has announced that starting about February l the, department will supply free of i charge antitoxin for diphtheria, anti- toxin for smallpox, anti-meningitis! serum, anti-tetanic serum, 'l'5'tn-, tive rabies serum, and other serumsl used in the fight against contagious’ diseases. The serums will be sup-) plied physicians, lr- .rds of health,) hospitals, insti'...cions and all people,) who require them for treatment. 3 take further. re.irGuiihiT.v _ "(Wynn UP BATTLE RANGES. mu. GIVE SERUMS FREE. ISSUE 4--'16. future." nllummr Vt 'LU M E. l A scheme for filling the gaps left by the men who have joined the ‘my has just been started by Thos Tllllng, Limited, the London Johnna. ters. They are teaching women to drive horses in tradesmen'a “no, tabs, commercial trtwellers' brough" ams and other vehicles. Beginning with Meaux, most of the ravages of battle have disappeared. All blown-up bridges have been rebuilt or repaired, and excepting an isolat- ed structure most of the bombarded buildings have been repaired or re- placed. - “but?! _,Fretteh Repair Buildings and Bridges I on Line to Nancy. The traveller by rail from Nancy to Paris now finds little to be seen from the car window to indicate that the country on both sides of the line was twice covered in retreat and ad- vance by the two great armies that are Mill fighting just beyond the ridges of Champagne and the forest hills of the Argonne that are visible to the north. . l rel ,V7. __...- 'IllllԠlI-VU {occupied and drive them into the enemy's lines; if necessary, we must kill the hundreds of thousands of pri- soners who are now consuming our supplies. That would be frightful, but would be inevitable it there were no other way of holding out." I HOW 11ty. _MAY THROW Germany seems to be getting des- perate. In a series of articles in 'The People or the State." the tenth of the series of the war essays written by the Germans and published by A. Marws and E. Weber, of Bonn, there is an article by Dr. Heinz Pothofr, who was for nine years a member of the Reichstag. The London Standard quotes the following from the article; by Dr. Pothoff, , "Can anyone doubt, Dr. Pothoit I writes, "that the German general stuff 3 will hesitate to employ extreme men-I sures if Germany is ever on the verge l of real starvation? If necessary, tri' must expel all the inhabitants from'; the territories which our armies hnvo' What Germany Would Do In Case of Starvation. promises to rise further. This dearth of necessities is ren- tiered heavier to bear by the almost impossibility of getting goods from 'other countries and from the high most of living. The cars for the trans- port of goods are all used for mili- tary purposes and Rome even is threatened by a sugar famine al- though the manufacturers have suf- flcient for the needs of the whole country. The cost of living has alto- gether increased about four times and _ Many Articles of Common Use Scarce I Because of War. 1 I The scarcity of common-place 1 articles of everyday use such as I needles, toilet supplies and drugs is Iprobably more accentuated in Italy] !than in any of the other belligerent 'countries, because these things have been supplied to Italy almost entire-l ly by Germany. One of the branches of a sewing machine company, for in- I stance, reports it is no longer able " to supply medium-sized needles, be- .1 cause these are made in Germany. It II also appears an impossibility to buy it a fever thermometer in Rome, as this ‘I is another article of German make. " The supply of aspirin and a number of i other remedies is exhausted at most l, of the pharmacies, and doctors are d iindine it increasingly difficult to get " their prescriptions filled because of l the lack of drugs. l Women *1; "irri7e' Cabs, WOULD KILL PRISON HRS. - ‘ -- It is rather interesting to find, from YOU MAY THROW l,, copy of the London Courier, dnted AWAY YOUR GLASSES‘March 9, 1814, that at that time the J'"" lpeople of Great Britain were buying $212113:all]???.13?‘.~§.','.‘i§3“§‘,233;themse1ves raising funds to relieve f you luv MW of these um‘orlun- distress in Germany. At the head of m Inlet-u: magma-n may be tminine) - I, . - r Vaseline rr MAKES ROUGH HANDS SMOOTH There in no better remedy for chapped had: and lips -L__ armies have TORONTO "Is she a woman of "Yes; everybody's neighborhood gossip." luau-4's Statment dun. aunt in Cows _ -_._.‘.v.n, unit “I: "ew Oschatz law applies alike to male and female. Only Catholic priests are ex- empt. Other unmarried persons above 21 must pay above their regular municipal tax: On incomes from 1800 to 2400 marks yearly, 5 per cent; 2400 to 4000 marks, 10 per cent; 4000 to 6300 marks, 15 per cent; 6300 to 10,000 marks, 20 per cent., and above 10,000 marks 25 per cent. The city of Oschatz in Saxony is the first German municipality to im- pose an extra tax upon the unmarried. Two or three other German towns have a tux on bachelors, but the new nub“ B-, .. ,,,,,_..-.., that in anticipation of British support they have remitted to ditferent parts of Germany to the amount of nearly £40,000. By the generosity of the British public the sum of nearly £50,000 Wu remitted, which rescued multitudes from the extremity of want; but at no period since the existence of this com- mittee, has the mass of every kind of misery been so great in the country to which their attention was first direct- ed; where the many sanguinury bat- tles fought in Si' sia, Luantia, Bohe- min, Saxony, Brandenburg, and other parts, have entailed upon the peace- able inhabitants sufferings almost un- . exampied in the annals of history. , The Committee are anxious, to impress f on the minds of their countrymen,‘ that in anticipation " 'ar.irt..g. -..--w--- WT " " 0 D Pdf..','.:.', N -- 1 Huger Cohort Syrup maniacal int act-um" dhgmti ' . Wu " , h T JllhuteL"l', Tih't2n'ra'dt, Bad ' ttglt 'l'hV2d'l'ig,',', L'rd'l'.'lt,1, .' e “In†.-t--rtg---r----'.-.L-=i', a long suueriptioriirt in of the newspaper before u: this introduction:-. . ran mums Imam»: l neusnvl Mow the I Can best he fought with Baby's h 3 Own Tablets-the little pleasant tast- '" _ ing Tablet that never fails to regulate ', the stomach and bowels and drive out all minor ills of little ones. Concern- ':intr them Mrs. H. Hower, Elstburg. :Alta" "ytc--"l have four healthy jhildren thanks to the use of Baby's [ I0wn Tablets. I have been using the' anblets for the past eight years and I ithink them the best medicine in the' Iworld for little ones." The Tablets; ‘are sold by medicine dealers, or by! ‘mail .at 25 cents a box from The Dru} IWillinms’ Medicine Co., Brockville,‘ Ont. BABY‘S BArriark-- AGAINST SICKNESS l One of the effects of the war has sheen to decrease in an important pro- iportion the number of inmates in the {prisons of Entrhutdauui Wales. The {fact is brought out in the annual re- ‘port of the Prison Commissioners. 'which has just been issued. Penal Servitude . . . . Imprisonment . . . . 1 Borstal......, Debtors or civil pro- cess . Suretios wnicn has just been issued. Prisoners sentenced by the ordinary courts, with persons imprisoned as debtors or on civil process. were as follows in 1914-15, compared with the corresponding period: Brinks Decrease , The writer goes on to methods of warfare that used against the new em: lnrly some of the inge traps devised by the catching the rats on a wh, "DISTRESS IN GERMANY." City Tax : "They are beginning to Iw tortured (by hungnr, and thr manage of food "ttakes th -m cuptlle of anything. The Jothcr morning: I sun v. cyclist whorc tires had Loon half devoured by n Pla- lee, of rats. The othcr night somo of our men had their surgical first-aid [packs-ts. which they keep in a mat pocket, attacked and carried on. Woe to the mun who goes to sleep with I moral of chocolate in his trousers! He will wake up to find himself with- out his trousers" Total "Nsnehes, comtnt'nieations, fields, lwoods, celiars and burns are choked “with them. We haw them bowing {magnum at night in the busiest road: and giving concerts by day in the most. crowded viliazvs, We liter, nlly march on tep of thon. They breed and breed and launch them. selves into assaults on the canton- ments, like the Germans on the Yser, by battalions en meme. ( There is a plague of rates along the British and French lines in Funders atttd PMICG. A soldier describes the invasion as "worse than the Utr- mnm," in a letter which adds: "Wenehes, commvnieatior.s, tivlds, woods, Conan and barns un- choked The Busy Woman Devon" Thea and Overru- Gallen In Battalion. EFFECTS OF THE WAR, mum of affairs Britilll Public Helped in 1814. RATS IN 'waxcum on Unmarried. use in Crime in England and Wales. mt “fare that are being (- new enemy, particu- the ingenious giant tall devoured by a pla- Ihe other night some tlteir surgial first-aid by the soldier; for ot? a wholesale scale. 1 13,539 She's the on to describe the 191445 591 102,971 438 8,913 in the copy Us there is 9n U25 37,790 Du 206 32, l 69 " _ Pat use; in I museum looking at ' copy cf the “Winged Victnry." "And phat may yet call that?" he 'tsilica" an attendant. "That is. tho 'Statue of Victory.' " was the 0711mm. Past sur- veyed the headless end armless statue with renewed interest. "Vietory in it t" he said. um"; 75;;ng see the other fellow." Gentlemen - Lam winter - beuetit from the u ARD'S LINIMENT in a su of Iararippe, and I hau- proved it In be \‘vry "trecti of "ttuttntnuttou. 141 Mi1umt's Hnimr-m Co Hub-icon without letting! see the damage the children ham to the rest of the house. Wife-Henry, you real!) , have the landlord come and M1- him-elf the damage the rain did our ceiling. -- - ,.. _..... - “w mum. Bom- hrondminded I'hysiri-ns “so and rumm- W luring while other, Perhtspr jvalum “I n , Sum. talk and rulh mm prim in “mum-uh: than when Even â€and one an [no-o..- why, an than“ noPre-rripxiun resin Murine Jun hand w, Drum 60e AM you have I Cortwlete Pkg. 0 Book ~Ilurine- Dropper~nnd Cork Saw. -- my for use. “y it in Four Lyn and In "-1th EYE! for Ew- Troubles No thrturtrmr J AM In). 00!.qu Write. for. Book of thr, For Fo.v. I.“ It. I..." Coup-av. “be... "My doctor sized my pile up pr Accurately.†“How's that l'" “He said I was as wand as a In, and that was all I had." - v v - -. _efrer"r"tvIterr-tah. MOM Ember: Eyes alter upmurv in CO†Oittine Wind. and Dust and to N'slnrv mama [one to l-Iyn Mom and Hildt'SUYV ham-york!“ EV" Stain. to t4outhorn 1'ttitt'trruia I: Par., Run Franvlum- Limited MIL. (‘ullfurnlu Mull lrNsvem he! an help gnu plan Mt trip. liooklvts, giving full mulled on Ippllmulnn to " G.A., (‘hlc n I North \“n-ul Yong» FHA-gamut... In". lair ditw , "Mrs. Buwash†writes to the Lon.. don Star: "tiir,--Uust a line to veliore tlt lot of people of their troubles. You an take it from me do present war will be over in u fortnight, My old man Joined the Army to-day. W" have been married twenty years. and he has never stuck to a job more than a fortnight." WALLEIK'S 700 Sundial Ate. . CHIN-fed. wing tips. each or ot' & FOR CHICKENS ,__.__‘_ CANCER. Tl'MuRs. LUMP! ETC. Intern†and ulna-l. cured clu- out "In by our home arutmem. Wrttt u tutor. too Into Hr mum-n Home“ Co. Limited ('nllflu“ ad. um. W"3'rtT"MAtit.No Nllud AND JO. 1 Okla-I tor ule In good Urn-.110 trgrmt. The most new! and Intern-(Inc or all ttutrlnr- Pull Inlm'mltlol on application to W'nrtot, Putnam“; co.- “HY. " West Addaâ€. IL "Mfume ---- - Pg'tizye,riri:i' At'ttgg one" (or “I. to an -ee» WMF w, Brlmnlnn um R" Grain. Dairy-var ii iiii gum to buy. write u IOU w. A. mminssos. Pa IW s n. â€In: or at-tca u may mum. and Ghanaianâ€. mum“ It“ RUDD?!“ rm In“ I"! '1'". CALIPOIIIA “hen the War wm End Pat'. 'Repl.t Mar. um, n'lfgftl'.‘ to! BALE "ve Mir, Pause M‘mzzs, " wins?" (Elsi-m Franklin $tl.o bled You rs HIM [LLANEOUI‘ r. from a. V. Mott, In In the use of MIN r In a severe Huck l l haw {mum-ml) ry ettective In mun» ed, and picked c :c for fat hens. am K. my CLOVER. v. s. I" West Mstslree:, New Yd I.“ hee to any Md - the Author DOG DISEASES And How to Foul ALI F O R STONE“ AND LIVER "el'" h- tim Gnu: tutu†mum. MW drdituit- rd to the Public and tttl byYaur "rumrint. '.,Voeinetorw7rGc , Murine in I)". â€M by our 'hy. “In. " mm: for leer, "an up um.- Sue-mm er. Put sur- unless statue ctory is it t" O'd hike to Limited letting him Book on 7. KN nt reg "lull. wtsen You " w I). In); “Hybrid rm " guns. n ’l'oromo M ll.