West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Mar 1916, p. 3

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aST CA AKE3 lip\, Makes 1 COMPANY LHIMITED ONTO.ONT. () MADE IN CANADA IHE WAR The best yeast in the world MONTRE Ar Doilars of England r which he 1can an anâ€" ©200,000,000 koning . & per cent ship 000) an N Debt â€" of the war 0 â€"(apâ€" he bur. cording n finanâ€" 0,000 y n estlâ€" 00,000 00,000 )0, 000 )0 .000 10N early nualâ€" ol 4 disâ€" e of ocâ€" to t M but of Wat at of MHO) Ar Ni at & mal Arr ‘sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. (Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Minard‘s "Liniment @»res Garget in Cows up in overheated, badly ventilated rooms and are soon seized with colds or grippe. What is needed to keep the little ones well is Baby‘s Own Tablets. _ They will regulate the stomach and bowels and drive out colds and by their use the baby will ‘be able to get over the winter season in perfect safety. The Tablets are Two heads are Wetter than °n°""1‘ especially if the other â€" fellow ig‘ ‘u-e“ipgr tails. Young Motherâ€"What business will baby take to, do you sqppgsg? _ Young Fatherâ€"The feed line apâ€" parently. ‘ Winter is a dangerous season for the little ones. The days are so .changeableâ€"one bright; the next cold and stormy, that the mother is afraid .bo take the‘chilren out for the fresh air and exercise they need so much. In consequence they are often cooped Let him follow me! By oppression‘s woes and pains, By your sons in servile chains! We will drain our dearest veins, But they shall be free! Lay the proud usurpers low! Tyrants fall in every foe! Liberty‘s in every blow!â€" Let us do or die‘! KEEP LITTLE ONES WELL IN WINTER P , |planter has power to whip a "boy" datxg:s toe Aen :: a dozen ‘persto Mt.h l plantation discipline suffers; but, howâ€" About a month ago, owing to e;ever this may be, there is no doubt unsuccgssful attem.pt to esape, co‘;x-i that under Gerfman rule flogging was cealed in is box, w.h'Ch has wigho arnd far too often and much too severely by an officer prisoner, certain priviâ€", resorted to, so much so that in at leges, such e football, a daily bath,: least one ct:se a native plantation the use of wine and beer and the ‘i_| hand committed suicide rather than restricted receipt of letters and ))ar-lun dergo punishment by his â€" brutal cels, had been suspended for a fewl‘(}ermm employer. Nor were lashes days, b.ut all had now lf”" res?ored.lthe only thing under the former Bome time ago _th.e pract.lce Wks mtro-l Government, for it is on record that duced of permitting officer o onfi ~* | some German planters cut off the to take -walks * t}_xe nelghborm_g | toes of refractory "boys," and otherâ€" country in company with German offiâ€" wise mutilated them. cers, and on their parole on each Of course it will be offered in exâ€" sccasion,. f Itenuation of this that the average smmfi smcs lPapaun or New Pomeranian is lazy,l Scots Wha Hae. [ treacherous, greedy, brutish, and, l:tj 3» heart, anthropophagous; and that t e | g:::, :vvhh:mh‘Bem Vzle }?;:ltfct::lre(zl" !only ;arinciple to be I(;:lowe: in deal-i a < ing with him is to keep him in a Welc(t;:‘net to ’.’:tm; g!ory bed, st:te of fear; yet the pAust.raliansf ® ho d“ $ r{d now‘s the hour; | have done much for and with the naâ€". Now‘s the ay,oa' battle lour: ‘ _ ltives in Papua, and they are managâ€" | fee the front daEde ot(xl,, owerâ€" ' ing their wards in the former German;l Bee nppx:oach pfl;‘; v;rar s9P possessions with neither the rigor | Chgms and gver{ 5 nor the exploitation, one or both of | wha will be a tr:ntord'nave f e? which Germany displayed toward wha can fill a (,0\{):1' i lg:.:"; 7 subject races. Indeed, the Papuan is | Wha sae .b'“ e d‘;l s.‘ s not the hopeless savage that he is | ce Seotients Ling ang tew. . â€"|eredited with heime me Curignan ns Wha for Scotland C T apramn d d sionaries and equable and promotive | Freedom‘s sword will stronglyf .r Ss government have proved. So there is | Freentan a tand, or Fr'ee se d a like good prospect for the New . B Le:,::':'o:?.“?“':e;nd pains, Pomeranians and all the rest of the; '; ;5":‘_ sons in servile chains! peoples in the Bismarck Archnpelago.i We will drain our dearest veins, A Scene at Rabaul. [ But they shall be free! 1 A pleasant pen picture is afforded Fay the proud usurpers low! |by Lieut. W. H. Phipps, of the Ausâ€"| Tyrants fall in every foe! | stralian garrison. Rabaul, in a reâ€"| Liberty‘s in every blow!â€" icent issue of the Sydney Sun. Writâ€" | Let us do or die! |ing under the date of October 31 the § emnmmnmenanatlt was mm on + ,lieutemnt says: « [ oc w wrewewr we rvrunce 24 Or to victory! Now‘s the day, and now‘s the hour; See the front O‘ battle lour; BSee approach proud Edward‘s powerâ€" Chains and slavery! Wha will be a traitor knave? Wha can fill a coward‘s grave? Wha sae base as be a slave? Let him turn and flee! Casting Their Shadows Before 0 k qo c o _ _ 36t TACVDUINE PRID, AIG braces up your health in other ways as well. In proof of these statements Mrs. A. T. Oulton, Little Shemogue, N.B., says:â€""A few years ago my mother was an intense sufferer from neuralgia, which was located in hor face, head and shoulders. The pain, especially in her head, was intense. She doctored for some time without getting relief and there seemed to be no ceasing of the pain whatever. Inâ€" stead it seemed to be extending and her whole nervous system became afâ€" fected. Finally she decided to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. After taking them for a while the pain in her head became less severe, and of course this was a great relief to her. Under the continued use of the Pills she felt: herself growing bettor and stronger . each day until she was no longer a sufferer and was completely cured, and | has felt no symptoms of the trouble | since." | You can get Dr. Williams Pink Pills | from any medicine dealer, or by mail, | post paid, at 50 cents a box or six : boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Wil-’ liams Medicine Co.. Brockville Ont uxe __ ) rCwel WE that "Nevuralgiz is a or nerves for better blood," words, neuralgia is not ; is only a symptom, but a one. Neuralgia is the tha% your blood is weak, Iimpure, and that your ne erally starving. Bad bl one causeâ€"rich, red blo cure. This gives you the why Dr. Williams‘ Pink neuralyia, They are the cine that contains in cor tions the clements need rich, red blood. This new reaches the root of ~t} soothes Sate Aunendacy o Pcrmanently Cured Through the Use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink THE ACUTE PAN PRISONERS ARE CONTENT at Bischofswerda Have of Amusement. se oroy t ‘s the root of the s the jangled nerve the nagging, stabbing â€" clever clever medical writer uNeur_algia itâ€"» ‘Cry ~~~ Jangied nerves, drives nagging, stabbing pain, and ) your health in other ways In proof of these statements T. Oulton, Little Shemogue, 8:â€""A few years ago my as an intense sufferer from & which was located in her 1 and shoulders. The pain, in her head, was intense. red for some time without 3+ 0 TT ~,. .. " you the real reason Williams‘ Pink Pills cure They are the only mediâ€" contains in correct proporâ€" clements needd to . mala » Brockville, Ont. °", ""UV & GIscaseyâ€"it | n, but a very painful [ is the surest sign s weak, watery and your nerves are litâ€" Bad blood is the not a disease blood the ‘iter has said cry from the " _ In~ other dd to make ‘w, rich blood the trouble, Plenty _ "At the ship‘s side they are formed into gangs in control of ‘Number One boys‘ and all day long they work and shout and play, making more noise ' "Here they come, in gayly colored . lavaâ€"lavas from waist to knee, friskâ€"| ing up their wooly hair with wooden combs, setting in place blossoms of . scarlet hibiscus, variegated poincixma,: or the fuchsia, like poinsettia. Nose | and ear ornaments, necklaces of ; teeth of, dogs or flying foxes, arm | and leg bands which do duty as pockets, and perhaps some brass jewelry are worn by these merry whairf laborers, who turn working into play. Here is some strapping felâ€" low with white hair which toâ€"morrow will be carroty, for it is in tfiroceu of bleaching, wit‘x lime as the agent. All have teeth blackened by much chewing of betel nut. They jike and slap one another Aalayfully as they run along under the flame trees, and then | to 5'1& wharf bridging the bright‘| green shallows of the opaline bay. j "Tumultuous cries from the natives signal to the whole population of Rabaul the incoming of a stcamer from Australia. A merry lot they are, these laughing ‘boys‘ hurrying to the wharf to assist in unloading carâ€" go and wheeling it along the truckâ€" way to the garrison and private stores. | _ One of the best executives in the | Commonwealth, Col. S. A. Pethebridge | was sent from Melbourne to Rabaul \in New Pomerania to act as adminâ€" ‘istator when Col. Holmes and his [ troops had been withdrawn, and one | of the first acts which marked the ’Austnlian regime was the abolition | of flogging of natives on plantations, except inheinous cases. Planters and | the Germans remaining in Rabaul say that the Australians have in this! made a mistake, because unless a planter has power to whip a "boy" | plantation discipline suffers; but, howâ€" | up to. The purport of this proclamation was that the "new feller master," King George, personified in the Ausâ€" tralian military, would see to it, if the "black fellers" obeyed the law and did not fight with each other, steal each other‘s wives, or practice cannibalism, they would be well treatâ€" ed; and this promise has ben lived | _"All boys belongina all place you savvy big fellow master. He strong feller to much. You like him all ship stop place; he small feller ship belongina him; plenty more bigâ€" felâ€" ler he stop place belongina him; now he come here to take him all place. He look out good you feller, now he like you feller look out good along him. Supposing other feller master he been speak you. ‘You no work along new feller master,‘ he gammon. Supposing you work good with this new feller master he look out good along with you; he look out you get] plenty good feller Kaikaid (food) ; he] no fighting black feller boy along| nothing ...." ‘ |\ _ In a hash of ;f(iéin English words !for the better understanding of the colored populace Col. Holmes signalâ€" ized the seizure of those colonies of the Kaiser something more than a twelvemonth ago in a proclamation beginning like this: be returned to their erstwhile masters j â€"it is certain that they are hapâ€" pier under the Australian military administration than they would have been had Germany been victorious in the Pacific. Notwithstanding â€"the Commonwealth insists on keeping itâ€" sell "white,"it must be said for it that a just and kindly spirit has animated it in its relations with and its atâ€" titude towards the natives in Papua, which is Australia‘s one dependency, and, for a year or more, the aborâ€". igines of Kaiser Wilhelm‘s Land and the Bismarck Archipelago. These last | have, by reason of the war, become Australia‘s charges. ' Proclamation in Pidgin English Anâ€" nouneed New Masterâ€"Big, Strong Fellow. Whatever the ultimate destiny of tie black, ugly, barbarous, and yet pathetically childlike people of what was until the war German New Guiâ€" ncaâ€"that is to say, whether, when the grand settlement takes place, they will remain under the Union Jack or NATIVES LIKE THE CHANGE TO BRITISH SWAY. Floggings Abolished. Wifeâ€""Mrs. Blank is very extravaâ€" gant in dress. Her husband told her she was carrying too much sail, whatâ€" ever that means,."‘ Hubâ€""He probâ€" ably put it that way because he has to raise the wind." | In a false quarrel there is no truge valor.â€"Shakespeare, 3 "Certainly! I could do lots of things I have no intention of doing. Nice day, isn‘t it?" man?" Regarding the state of mind of wounded soldiers now in the hospitals after sixteen months of war, Mme. Perouse, president of the Union des Femmes de France, says: "They are much more anxious to return to the front than were the wounded in the hospitals last year at this time." } Mortality Among French Red Cross | Workers is Heavy. | __More than 66,000 women in the French Red Cross volunteer are now equipping 1,500 hospitals with an agâ€" gregate of 118,000 beds. The Red \Cross flag flies over 288 buildings in | Paris alone. | _ Mortality among the Red Cross |nurses has been remarkably heavy. | Twentyâ€"two members of the Society ‘for Aid to the Wounded Soldiers ‘have given their lives, some of them ‘killed under shell fire, others carried off by contagious diseases. The nurâ€". ses of this society have received sixâ€" tyâ€"three epidemic medals, sixty war crosses and one cross of the Legion of Honor. | Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheris, Many women of the Red Cross give attention to men at the front who have no one to remember them at home. One member, Mme. Richelot, the wife of Dr. L. G. Richelot, is godâ€" mother to 900 soldiers. Miss Logan‘s statement is a mesâ€" sage of hope to thousands of women in Canada. They are suffering just as she suffered. She wants them to know they can find relief in Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. "For two years I was in this wornâ€" out condition, often having to lay off for a day or two. I was attended by doctors and wasted money on useless medicines, but I only found relief when I used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills." Changed the Subject. “Cg}}ld you lend me a dollar, old "I was always tired and nervous and very sensitive and there was holâ€" lows under my eyes. "I suffered from drowsiness and sharp pains across my back. My sleep was broken and unrefreshing. I had headaches and was subject to neuralâ€" gia and rheumatism. I was depressâ€" ed and lowâ€"spirited and troubled with palpitation of the heart. Ottawa, Ont., Feb. 21st. (Special). â€""I am glad to say I have found Dodd‘s Kidney Pills have done me a wonderful lot of good.," So says Miss Gladys E. M. Logan, of 264 Queen Stree, this city. Miss Logan Tells How They Relieved Her of Pains and Aches So Many Runâ€"down Women Know. TELLS TIRED WOMEN OF DODD‘s KIDNEY PILLS. Oitawa Girl‘s Message of Hope "White men in the garrison are| kind to the natives; sometimes they | spoil them, especially the house serâ€" | vants. _ As desired, though somei make attentive waiters and passable | cooks, they are careful nurses. White | missionary women have ‘boys‘ to carry the children when out walking." ; T esnt (Retaiadith.s .. _ "Life in the garrison town of Raâ€" |ed pot baul would be dull without these | moulie, dusky, fullâ€"grown children. Not all at time are of New Britain. _ Many have becaus come from New Guinea and smaller e this islands. _ Some have made PAPS® | jly aljâ€" (signed indentures), some are free; | lowed 1 and some are ‘calaboose,‘ boys 8°"â€" | this he; ving sentences for crimes ranging | become from petty theft to murder. ‘Paper'l In th and free ‘boys‘ mostly desire to bel(m the policemen, for police ‘boys‘ wear belts, pan in carry rifles, and have military drill /ips m,. NURSES GIVE THEIR LIVESs than progress, but still doing plenty for the few shillings a month paid for the labor. Around the ship and _out on the bay are the catmarans of visiting natives, marketing pawâ€" paws, soursops, limes, cocoanuts, yams, sweet potatoes, pigs, and fowls. Further off are trading schooners and the motor boats of the garrison. Fringing the harbor are cocoanut palms, bending graceful beads to the sea breeze. And under the trees are ‘Marys‘ (women) cutting grass with long knives, stopping frequently to point at the ship unloading, and to shout welcome to acquaintances. | Lazy Livingâ€"sometimes from food follies that tax the overworked digestive organs. Get back to Nature by eating Shredded Wheat. It puts you on your feet when everyâ€" thing else fails. It supplies the muscular energy and mental alertness that put you in fine fettle for the day‘s work. Delicious for breakfast with milk or cream, or for luncheon with fruits. Made "Do you believe that there is really something which can invariably teil when a man is lying." "I know it." "Ah, perhaps you have seen one of the instruments?" |__At a function of noted and learned ‘men the umbrellas of the guests got mixed. The darky porter was havâ€" ing considerable trouble in finding the ;umbrella belonging to the professor in mathematics in a leading univerâ€" sity. Selecting one umbrella out of the armful that the porter had subâ€" mitted to him, the professor saidâ€" "Now, that is like my umbrella, though the cross section of the hanâ€" dle of my umbrella is more of an elâ€" lipse than a parabola; its extreme end points towards the perpendicular, and forms a section of the major axis." "Yaâ€"as, sir," replied the portâ€"| ed. "An‘ll see ef Ah can find it fo‘ yo‘, sah." | I always keep my hen house whiteâ€" washed inside and out, and I think this is also a preventative of lice. It is not good to have too many hens in the one house. I have a scratchâ€"house in connection with my hen house, in which the hens are alâ€" lowed to scratch. Inâ€" this scratchâ€" house the hens have dust and gravel to roll in, also a selfâ€"feeder grit box on the wall. Made in Canada nece; for vigor and acâ€" tivlty?f brain and body. _ The can of water in the house %hangs from the ceiling by a chain. I also hang a cabbage or some other vegetable from the ceiling for the hens to peck at. A piece of meat boiled and hung on a cord in this way is excellent food for the hens. My hens get a piece of meat every other day during the winter. I find that a picce of cow‘s liver or lights boiled and hung up makes excelient food. I always feed my hens and chickens sulphur once a week. I find that the: sulphur is a preventative of lice. 1 Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, Ont. made of whole wheat and malted barley, supplies in splendid proportion all the rich nourishment of the grains, including the valuâ€" able mineral elements, lackâ€" ing in man,{ foods, but most necessagry for vigor and ac.â€" To bring out the ‘best mental and physical forces sound nourishment is imâ€" perative. Grapeâ€"Nuts "Seen one? I married one." In the winter I feed my hens corn on the cob,â€"this corn is warmed in a pan in the oven, which they get in the morning. At noon they â€"get a mash of boiled potato skins, crumbs and bran, and at night they get mixed grain. often come from simplest means. For instanceâ€"one‘s daily food plays a big part in deâ€" ciding for success or failâ€" ed this way in the fall they lay steadâ€" ily all winter. If the pullets were alâ€" lowed to run with the old hens during this heavy feeding the old hens would become too fat. ‘"‘There‘s a Reason" for CQRAPEâ€"NUTS In the spring we set our hens in _ a house separate from the henhouse, | where they have plenty of food and (fresh water, also lime and dust to | roll in. These hens do not get outâ€" side until the chicks are out. When the chickens come out they are reâ€" moved to a long coop which has slats on the front. This coop is divided up and will hold several hens. The chicks are able to run about outside, but the mothers cannot get out. When they are about a week old the hens are also let out. To my very young chickens I feed a mash made of bran and moulie, but as they get older 1 give them wheat. I always soak the wheat in water so it will not kill the chickens by swelling in their crops. | The chickens are allowed to run about all summer. I feed them only twice a day after they get a good size. | ___ Management of a Farm Flock Last year I kept about 50 Rhode Island Red hens and found them very satisfactory. I have tried raising difâ€" ferent breeds of hens, but find I like the R. I. Reds the best. They are profitable laying hens, and are also suitable for table use, writes Andrew Gaddes in Farm and Dairy. potat Greatest Results A Full Description He Knew It. Sold by Grocers, â€"A FCOD Penmans Limited, Paris, Ont. Female Help Wanted... Many a man would starve if he had nothing to live on but his repuâ€" tation. "Father thought the effect was pretty good. He said he honestly beâ€" lieved it kept us from having so much company." 16 Mailed free to any address by America‘s the Author Plonser H. CLAY GLOVER, V. S. Dog Remedies | 118 West 31st Street, New York _ "And did you recite it with efâ€" feet ?" "‘The Boy Stood on the Burning Deck,‘" answered the commonplace young man. "I used to recite it every time father and mother * had comâ€" pany." ' "What is your favorite poem?" asked the literary young woman. It is good for the eyes, and contains| no ingredient which would Injure the‘ most sensitive eyes of an in{fant or the| aged. Try it, and know for once whlt' real eye comfort is, If your own drugâ€"| gist cannot fill this prescription, send | $1 to the Valmas Drug Co., Toronto, for‘ a complete Bonâ€"Opto Home Treatment| ontfitâ€"â€"tablets and all. l _ Thousands of people suffer from vya' troubles because they do not know what | to do,. They know some good home remâ€"| edy for every other minor ailment, but none for their cye troubles. They neglect | their eyes, because the trouble is not! sufficlent to drive them to an eye: specialist, who would, anyway charge | them a heavy fee. As a last resort they | go to an optician or to the five and tenâ€"‘ cent store, and oftentimes get glasses ; that they do not need, or which, after| being used a few months, do their e.\es! more injury than good. | HMere is a simple prescription that every one should use: 5 grains Bonâ€"| Opto, 2 ounces water. Use three or four | times a day to bathe the evyes. This preâ€" | scription and the simple Bonâ€"Opto sysâ€" tem keeps the eves clean, sharpens tho‘ vision and quickly overcomes inflamâ€" | mation and irritation; weak, w.nlar,\'.i overworked, tired eyes and other »lmilurl troubles are greatly benefited and oftenâ€"| times cured by its use . Many rermrtnlj show that wearers of glasszes have Aisâ€"| carded them after a few woeeks‘ use | ; The Germans are now, in reality, \governing Austria and Hungary, but |are doing so very tactfully, sand are ?not disturbing Austrian pride. Is the Object of This Free Pre scriptionâ€"Try It If Your Eyes Give You Trouble. Nobody among the higher German officials expects a quick end to the war. Concerning terms of peace, I do not think the Government has made up its mind that it must have an inâ€" demnity. There is a willingness to evacuate Belgium, except Liege. Poâ€" land must be separated from Russia. The people are not thinking about the financial situation after the war. It has not yet struck their imaginaâ€" tion. Germany is feeling the economic‘ crisis very much, but the people are| fatalistic, and are saying it is God‘s will. There certainly is no present evidence of an impending collapse, and the war can be continued by the Kaisâ€"| er for a year longer. After 1916, noâ€". body knows. I The German people believe they are going to have a victorious peace, but not a conqueror‘s peaceâ€"the differâ€" ence being. left to the imagination. in large hosiery, underwear and sweater factories. Vacancies in all departments, with openings for experienced or incxperienced help. Highest wages and modâ€" érate priced board. Apply, imâ€" mediately, Germans Expect to be "Victorious" ‘ But Not to "Conquer." _ The following statement has been communicated to the London Daily Express by a neutral. Its importance lies in the fact that the writer has been in the position during the enâ€" tire duration of the war to visit all parts of Germany, and has been in constant personal contact with the heads of the military, political, and commercial parties of the country: The great crisis for Germany will come after the war. The working TO SAVE EYVES "EAR PEACE MORE THAN WAR. e0° ‘sH@._ . aus Vaseline Carbolated CHESEBROUCH MFG.CO. (Consolidated) 1880 Chabot Ave. in tin tubes at chemists and general stores everywhere. Refuse substitutes. Mustrated booklet free on request. Fiealoquickly, .:. _‘ _ c_.â€" Sold in handy glass bottles and Keep Little Cuts and Scratches Clean with A mild and effective nhti:qxic. Keeps the sore s clean. Hear quickly. spot And How to Feed Effective. CareolateD CARPOLATED ISSUE 9â€"‘16. tell us, sir, was every pane of glass in the west window broken when you passed the house." â€" *"They were, on the outside," was the cautious reply. "I didn‘t enter the house to see whether they were also broken on the inside." There‘s something in this world beâ€" side money." "Yes," says the cynic, "there‘s the poorhouse." "Be careful, sirâ€"be vâ€"eâ€"râ€"y careâ€" fullâ€"and remember that you are on oath!" ominously said the pinâ€" feathery young attorney, whose brow bulged like the back of a snapping turtle, addressing a witness. "Now Remarkable Tree Which Is to Be of time these rootings strike the ground, and growth immediately comâ€" mences upward. New rootings continue to be formed, and get strength until the one tree grows as a net round the other. The outside one surrounds and presses the inner, strangling its life and augâ€" menting its own power. At length the tree within is killed, and the paraâ€" site that has taken possession becomes itselt a tree. It sends a kind of thin stringlike root down the body of the tree, which h. soon followed by others. In course Found in Cuba. A singular tree in Cuba is called the yaguey tree. It begins to grow at the top of another tree. The seed is carried by a bird or wafted by the wind, and, falling into some moist, branching part, takes root and speedâ€" ily begins to grow. Masonville, June 27,13. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Yarmouth, N. 8. Gentlemen, â€" It affords me great pleasure and must be gratifying to you to know that after using 36 bottles of your Iiniment on a case of paralysis which my father was afflicted with, I was able to restore him to normal conâ€" dition. Hoping other sufferers may be benefitted by the use of your Liniment, "Fancy that! And he doesn‘t look as if he had been on a track in his "There goes Professor mtmmu, the famous ethnologist." "An interesting character, _ no doubt." ""Yes, indeed. Why, he knows more about the races than any other man in this country." life! Pat had returned on seven days‘ leave from the firing line, and was reâ€" lating his experiences round the fire one night. "The enemy was creeping up in their thousands, and Oi was simply itching to get at them." "And what did you do?" asked his father. "Oh, Oi just scratched myself," reâ€" plied Pat. _ _Dr. Jackson‘s Roman Meal porridge properly made in a double boiler, and not stirred after first making it. Read directions on package. Better make night before for early breakfast, in double boiler, and warm in the mornâ€" ing while dressing, by alowing to sft in boiling water. Thus it‘s delicious and very nutritious. It prevents conâ€" stipation, however cooked. Ask your doctor. At grocers‘, 10 and 25 cents. The Best Breakâ€" fast Possible being unduly familiar in return for this friendliness; for an officer is alâ€" ways an oflicer in the eyes of the soldier; also a barin (gentleman), whether familiar, intoxicated or sober. The soldiers have even nicknames for their favorite officers whom they regard as friends, advisers and in loco parentis. _ Officers frequently laugh and joke with their men and call them molodzie (bucks) and toâ€" voratza (comrades). Russians of All Ranks Are Sociable and Not Reserved Russian officers of all ranks are far more sociable and less reserved thg!_l those of other nations. f Ousofneuh-.mrhdm,num’t. diphtheria and cereboâ€"spinal meninâ€" gitis were more numerous in the army in 1911 than in 1915. These diseases, togther with typhoid and dysentery, averaged> 7.11 per thousand men in 1911, as compared with 6.02 per thousand men last year. Typhoid cases last year numbered 4.4 per thoncaond mon, as comnared with 1.88 in 011. Dysertary â€" at. tacked only 18 out of 100,000 men, as compared with 11 in 100.000 before the war. The mortality was 12 for each 100 cases of typhoild in 1° 11; in the field the mortality was 2.55 per cent. owing to improved mcthods of treatment. 99 French Soldiers, Official Figures Show, Are Escaping Disease. Life in the trenches is healthier for the French soldiers now than in barâ€" racks in peace, as shown by figures issued by the army medical departâ€" GROWS LIkE FISH NET. An Interesting Character A Careful Witness. HEALTHY IN TRENCHES â€" |â€" orFICERS AND MEX Sincerely yours, GEO. H. HOLMES What He Did. SEIGELS NO° soLD TX Two .flwu. FULL $12%, Prige1.00 TRIML Prics 50c Making a man tell you that he loves you is something like teachâ€" ing a cat to jump through a hoop; you don‘t expect him to do it graceâ€" fully, but the astonishing thing is that he does it at all. Best Remedy ang eflect % all the orgaus of digestion. The distressing sympâ€" toms of indigestion or liver troubles soon disappear under its beneficial aection. Buy a bottle toâ€"day, but be sure you et the genuine Mother Scige!‘s g up. There are many imitaâ€" tlfy.):u. but not one that gives the digestion. The distressing sympâ€" toms of indigestion or liver troubles soon disappear under its beneficial aection. Buy a bottle toâ€"day, but be sure you et the genuine Mother Scige!‘s g up. There are many imitaâ€" tz:u, but not one that gives the same hcalth benefits. 1018 have lost ton«. . Mother Scigel‘s Syrup is made from the curative extracts of certain roots, barks, and kl:lev.u':crchfnhd have a reâ€" marka strengihenâ€" ing effect on all the orgaus of also other Bunches or Swellings. Noblister, no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Ecoâ€" nomicalâ€"only a few drops required at an apâ€" plication. $2 per bottle delivered. Book 3 M tree. ABSORBINE, JR., the uni-eu,ic liniment for mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, $wollen Veins and Ulcers.$1 and $2 a bottle at dealers or delivered. Book **Evidence"* free. W. F. YOUNG, P. D. F., 516 Lymans Bidg., Montreal, Can. _ Absorbine and Absorbine, Jr.. are made in Canada _ Indigestion, biliousness, headâ€" eaches, fatuience, pains after cating, Mpu:‘ou. are all c::‘- mon ptoms of stomach liver .t’I:uble.. Aa'd the smore you neglect them the more you sufter. " Take Mother Seigel‘s Byrup if your stomach, liver, or h& are slightly denuo‘ or THICK, SWOLLEK cianos Biliousness Indigestion ®) PER Day, sacramny axp» corn. ‘- mission for lad» represcatative An her home district Work pleasant. eduâ€" cative experience unnscossa‘y, . Nichâ€" oh_l;_lm'ted,_l:uhllahor& Toronto I IP F [S-o PoOTATORR, nush _ con» blers, _ Deleware. _ Carman. Opâ€" Ger mt once. Bupply Hmisaa "W.... 2t HOWE & TWOROGER, HAMIL TON, y m.gau‘ Bermuda is reached by-t;t; lt;:u; ons of the Quebec 8. 8. Co., 82 Broadway, New York. is open from DECEMBER to MAY Situated on the Harbor of Mamiiton. Accommodates 400. Rates : $26 per week and upward. BERMUOA The Ideal Winter Resort The Imperial Oil Company EUREK A Do You Consider Wear snd Tear HABRNESS OIL Keeps the leather soft and prevents cracking. _ Adds years to harness life. Dealers Everywhere figure your nrofits for the gur? Ordinarily thai‘s a ig item but you can make it negligible by using ERANCHES IN ALL CITIE® HAW PURS Waurzo AGBNTS WwaÂ¥rTBp FoR mmz zome WISCELLANTOUE ness when you nrofits for the y Umited. Write fop Dawson, Brampton. (gn A® & BERMUDA ol C3 Om » JG i# anld ting V

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