my; ; t-_'"5-l'RRt- TI Fever i'syr"a3, 'tl MPANY UNITED NADA‘ L ALIVE The best yeast In the world. 'od Brill Makes "the?! UV The lat-M: estimates of the dead and pn-rmanontly incapacitated from the w.†are 2.000.000 for the Entente coun- trirs and 1.98o,000 for the Teutonic allivs. says tho New York World. The proportion, to total population are 0.7 per cent. for the Entente countries and IA for their "nemy. The great- x-ut sufferers are Austria-Hungary, stumbling forward, waving their rifles. Our machine guns were sput- tering bullets at the rate of four hun- dred a minute. Before he had got twenty yards from his trench the last German was down. "All at once one became aware of a dark mass of men surging along. On they came in loose order at a lum- hering trot, probably three or four hundred, wearing gas masks and look- ing like giant toads. "Then, just before our eyes. the leading Germans stopped, twisted and fell. and we were too hoarse to cheer as the terrible machine guns wiped away the whole line as a child’s wrt hand wipes away a row of futures on a slate." mun: umngeu. lne o. U. came rag- ing along and shouting something in- coherently about goggles. The next moment the whole regiment got it, nnd every man was fumbling frenzied- ly for his goggles. When the goggles were adjusted relief came gradually but surely. Then the order came to put on gas helmets, and a few min- Mia‘s later a white mist came towards us. It was about twelve inches high, but gathering volume from the Ger- man trenches. When it reached us it l was a wall of grey-green vapor. But ( the fateful moments sped by, and now I we were breathing gaspingly. l “Peering through our eye-pieces, We , desericd perhaps I hundred Germans l elimbine their parapet and coming l stumbling forward. waving their i "Peering thr deseried perha climbing their stumbling fox rittes. Our m: tering bullets I and a minute “There’s a Reason†To build right, but Grape-Nuts. made ofwhole wheat and malted barley. supplies all the rich nutrimont of the grains, including their vital mineral salts, those all-necessary build- an of active brains and vigorous bodies. Deli: h Grape-Nuts These necessary fact- ors are abundantly sup- plied by the field grains. but are lacking in many foods-especially white ttour, from which they are thrown out in the milling process to make- the ilourgvhite. â€gut. mueea, more are few people who do not need a tonic " this see- mn. Bad blood does not merely show itwlf in disfururine eruptions. To this sumo condition is due attacks of rheu- matism and lumbago; the sharp sub- Mag pains of sciatic: and neuralgin; {mar appetite and a desire to avoid exr-I‘i'ion. You clnnot cure these trou- l'vgs by the use of purgative medicines 77 you need a tonic, and e tonic only, and among all medicines there is none wan "Hual Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for their tonic, life-giving, nerve-restor- 1: / pom-rs. Every dose of this medi- '.".'. makes new, rich blood which ...v in ,", out impurities, stimulates every m‘z’tm and brings a feelimr " mm- but in building brain and body. often the daily diet lacks certain essential mineral elements. Well Built Ono of the surest sign: that the Mud is out of order is the pimples, ur<ightly eruptions and eczema that Come frequently with the change from winter to spring. These prove that the long indoor life of winter has had In Mfect upon the blood, and that a 1â€â€.- medicine is needed to put it mm. Indeed, an} who do not need a m In the Spring Most WN PIMPLIES -- AND murmns LOSS OF LIVES IN WAR Im'rers are Austria-Hu I' per cent.; Germany, _ and France, 1.3 per cent ls Built To Win W Perfume Dim: \l)LY FRAGRA NCE rtt Jr. Williams' Pink Pills for , life-giving, nerve-restor- . Every dose of this medi- § new, rich blood which mpurities, stimulate: - brings a feeling of new energy to weak, tired, ail- nmen and children. If you sorts give this medicine a me how quickly it will re- :tprwtirv, revive drooping till your veins with new, g blood. Tonic Medicine. The o, th tt .'e Pills from any y mail at 50 cents nr $2.50 from The no Co., Brockville. dc correspondent lescription of an sck made under People Need . uished Poison Ig along " a lum. or four and look.. R. 1 To the militarist, then, who regards :warfare as the highest expression of and and 'life, I say it is the worst expression om the of physical evil; and to the pacifist te coun- who contends that nothing can justify Teutonic war, I reply that there are occasions 1d. The when you must make use of the worst are 0.7 physical evil-warfare-in order to suntries support some great moral cause. In great- other words, a just war means mak- ingary, ing use of physical forces to secure 1.5 per some great moral end. _. 5 Let us get to grips with this ques- tion about the rights and wrongs of a awarfare. and let me again remind you that there is a far greater evil than war, and that is sin. War in ‘its most repellant aspect can never get away from its character, as a phy- - sieal evil only, whereas sin is the brand called moral evil. The founder ad of Christianity warns us not so much " to fear him who can kill the body ,only as to fear him who can destroy a! .the soul also. In the eighteen mil- (lions of casualties recorded in the .present seientifie slaughter of the t- :human race not a single soul has p- been necessarily hurt, though that g ', number of bodies have been hit. 5 to put it test people a were night a were g over ' Just wtrr um. I Two or three times a week Lord} lRosebery is to be found lunching at; I Buckingham Palace, which merely em- ; phasizes that King George, like his' father, has the ilrmest faith in Lord! Rosebery's judgment, and like to getI his views on important questions.' Lord Rosebery has, of course. known ', King George since he was a child, and was a constant visitor at Sandring- tt He was always a favorite with I . young Princes and Princesses, and t used to love to romp with them in tbo uhuolroom to their hearts' (rm-H l I believe that this war, a terribly physical evil though it is, has sent heavenward souls innumerable who might otherwise have lost their way thither. Meanwhile I am satisfied that God in His good time will give to the Allies a great and lasting vic- tory against a foe who, having start- ml out to Kai<erize Prussia and Prussiauize Germany, meant to Gets manize the world. l .W‘E’jw'r‘fl' _ So that the conclusion to be drawn from the premises depends altogether upon which side you are in the flght. As it is as clear as noonday to me that, we have entered into this devas- tating war with a clear conscience and clean hands, I am satisfied that Irve must go on killing Germans un- til we have reached the number that will entitle us to dictate to the enemy our terms of peace and to save Europe from the tyranny, the kultur of the superman with his super- State. We have drawn the sword to protect the neutrality, independence, and autonomy of the smaller Euro- pean kingdoms, and it is our rooted determination never to slip that sword into its scabbard again till Europe is rid of its menace to liberty, justice, and civilization. I But the troops fighting against us I are German. ‘ Therefore, the war for us means killing Germans. About the major premise Mr, Shaw and myself are in complete agree- ment. It is with the minor premise that we seem to be quarrelling. It in not quite clear whether he puts Eng- lishmen where I put Germans. No doubt the pro-German puts English- men where I put England's enemy.1 Warfare means kiiling the troops "l1tinsryurainst you. Must Go On Killing Germans. I suppose I am expected by this school of thought to exhort our troops not to kill them. Mr. Bernard Shaw has reminded me that there is another way of ending the war be- sides that of killing Germans, and that is to end it by killing English- men. My attitude toward the war may be summed up in a very simple syllogism. It is this: - _-,.~.... nun-awn, with the betting on our side, and with the hope that none of the play- ers in the rough game will be badly hurt. They and their followers, in their solicitude for my welfare, keep on reminding me how ill beseeming ecclesiastical lips it is to give the advice to kill Germans. 3 In a late issue of Reynolds’ News- paper Father Vaughan returns to the charge with the following: There are two extreme schools of thought respecting this life and death struggle called warlare. The militar- ists and paeit1eists are poles apart in their teaching about war. On the one hand, while Prussian war lords make out war to be not only a "bio- logical necessity," but also the "reli.. gion o tvalor," the Society of Friends, one the other hand, declared that no- thing can justify "the repelling of; force. The German Bernhardt would‘ turn ploughshares into swords, and the Russian Tolstoy would, on the: contrary, crush swords into plough- 1;harr:s,. A plague on both your houses, ray I. Between these optimistic and pessimistic views about the right tol, tight there is a third class made up, of people like the Rev. Dr. Meyer and l, thr. Rev. Newsham Taylor, who leadI one under the impression that they) regard the present European war as some international football mutt-h- RUSEBERY 'tl J UDGMENT. 'Kill Germans if you would win the war," continues to be the slogan of the Rev. Bernard Vaughan, priest militant, of London, England. Father Vaughan recently answered another clergyman who thought it was a pity to kill so many Germans by saying: "In my blundering stupidity I had thought it a pity to miss so many of them." FATHER VAUGHAN SAYS TO KILL MORE GERMANS. Famous Priest Renews His Atta Those Who Would Spare the Enemy. HOW To mfiiiii' (mum (lf WARS l’russinnism Must Go, ewsham Taylor, who lead the impression that they present European war as national football match, to be not only a "bio- ty," but also the "reli- , the Society of Friends, hand, declared that no- Attacks on ; Madame Patti has told a good story about a little girl who was learning music. The famous singer had ex- -plained to her the meaning of the musical signs P and FF. "Now," said Madame Patti, "if F means forte, what does F mean y' The little girl thought seriously foe a moment. and then her face bright- med. tains its reetaryiibie poweA, " is difficult to realise that that wonderful woman Madame Patti will celebrate her seventy-third birthday this month, but such is the fact, and in spite of her age, her voice still re- The improvement of the road through the Inonaklin canyon at Edgewood, on which the interned aliens are employed ,is rapidly ap- proaehintt completion. This is a most valuable improvement, as it abolishes the only heavy grade on the Edge- wool-Vm-non road. During the season of 1915 the Ok- anagan United Growers, the central organization which markets the pro- duct af the nine fruit unions from Salmon Arm to Penticton, did a volume of business reaching the splendid total of $802,186. At Patricia Immigration Officer A. A. Westlake is kept very busy pre- venting undesiralles from crossing the boundary at this point from the American side into Canada, and hardly a day passses that he does not turn some back. "I know," she said at last, “eighty." The sawmill at Cascade, employing eighty men, will resume operations at once. It has a good supply of logs, and will run all summer. It is re- ported that work will soon be re- sumed upon .the big gold mine at Carmel. $ 1 O,000, It is reported that better returns from plaeer-eold mining in various streams in the Fort Steele division were obtained in 1915 than for several years previous. The value of the gold recovered has been estimated at $10,- reeovered has been estimated at Canada Irrigation Association; which is to _be held there July 23-25. Kamloops peéple are taking hold of the preliminary arrangements for the next convention of the Western To fall a distance of seventy feet and still live is the expn'ience of Ed- ward Tolfson, who was employed on the Government grain elevator at the foot of Salisbury Drive. There has been received at the Court House, for the Government ex- hibit there, a pure white cock phea- sant, from the Kelowna district. A new braffie by-law in Victoria ls to the effect that pedestrians must not cross the streets at intersections, bu only at designated crossings. The announcement is made by the C. P. R. that during the coming sum- mer no liquor will be sold at the com- pany's hotels at Banff and Lake Louise. Fishermen from the Vedder River and Stave River report that steelhead salmon are plentiful and have been caught in large numbers in the last two weeks. l In South Vancouver eleven China- man, gardeners, are asking $2,500 damages they allege to have been done to their gardens by the floods. Work will be begun immediately on the construction of a plant for the treatment of complex ores in Nelson. During the past winter over 4,000,- ooo feet of logs were taken out at the Crow's Nest Pass Lumber Company's camp. There were 288 irrti/s,"i/s' deaths, and 94 marriages in the city of Van- vouver during the month of March. A motion to establish a dog tax at Langley was lost in the council by a vote of 3 to 4. Bridge Foreman Johnson has a crew of 28 men at work now on the new Goat River bridge at Creston. Lee Sing was fined $75 in the Vic- toria Police Court for keeping on opium joint. The Fraser Hotel at New West- minster was recent-1y sold out by the sheriff. L Progress of FROM SUNSET CGAST THEN PATTI LA UG HEâ€. WHAT THE WESTERN PEOPLE ARE DOING. ent" is TRISCUIT, the Shredded Whole Wheat toast. Heat it in the oven to restore its crispness, then serve with butter, soft cheese or marmalades As a toast for chafing dish cookery it is a rare delight. It is full of real nutriment. after-the-theatre, or any old time when the appetite craves Made in Canada I of the Great Weat Told in a Few Pointed Paragraphs. iii-gpipeli‘cious "rar, the boss said he was losing money on the things I was making." "And what were you making?" "Mistakes." Beauty may be only skin deep, but - woman knows that that is deep 'tttmeh. When " China possess a Itaruture that will be intelligible to the whole Chinese race? The man passed on to the second muletecr after a long silence, but the latter was equally unable to under- stand him. Nothing (hunted, the man took refuge in song, and kept on sing- ing nearly the whole of the day. a.» lunar- mum“: In the hang. The mulcteer thereupon said to him- self. "This is very funny. I under- stand all my foreign employer says, but I do not understand what this man, a countryman of my own. says to me, nor does he understand me." The man replied in some unintel- ligible jargon, and the muleteer tried him again: "What is the name of the place at which we stop to-night?" The man appeared not to under- stand the question, and I replied for him, "Ning-yuan Hsien." you When we left Fu-ch’iang Hsien, he says, one of the local escort, evident- ly a man of the streets, began to make up to the muleteer in charge of the litter. He hoverd round the front mule, and the mulcu-er addressed him: The People of China Do Not Under. stand One Another. An incident, trifling in itself, that shows the difficulties with which a traveller in China has oeeasionally to contend. is told by Sir Alexander IIosie in his interesting account of a trip through the interior provinces en- titled, "On the Trail of the Opium Poppy." 1’ "I must sa-y I was a complete wreck 'when I started to take Dodd's Kidney I Pills. They made a new man of me. Dodd's Kidney Pills have a record of over a quarter of a century in Can- ada, during which time they have earned undying praise in all parts of the Dominion. Ask your neighbors about them. "My wife got, the same good re- sults from them. It was after trying several doctors and a specialist from Sault Ste. Marie, who advised her to stay in bed a month, that she decided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. She took a dozen boxes in all with splendid re- sults. We both praise Dodd's Kidney Pills. No one can speak too highly of them." "Yes, I suffered for ten years," Mr. Sawyer said in speaking of his cure. "The doctors, of whom I tried five al.. together, eouldn't give me any per- manent relief. Some said I had rheu- matism, others called it lumbago, but I got steadily worse. "You are one of our escort, aren't _ He and His Wife, After Years of Doc- _ wring, Found Quick Relief and Per- manent Cure in Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Caporal Junction, Ont,, April 24th.-. (special,)-9orderine on the miracu- ious is the cure of Mr. A. Sawyer, of this place. For ten years he was an invalid. Five doctors failed to help him. When he was a complete wreck, and unable Do walk across his room, he decided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. Six boxes of them made him like a new man. Cure Bordérsjm the Miraculous o)" who has hm‘n appointed commandant of the Royal Military College at Kingston, with the rank otcoloncl. Hitherto he has been only acting THE CHINESE LANGUAGE, . SAWYER TELLS OF' WONDER. FUL WORK OH DODD'S KID- NEY PILLS. LIEIT.-COL. C. N. PEBREAU. commandant. R.M.C. Commandant Too Willing Worker, Dillydally (a. chronic procrastinat- or)---" dreamt last n'ght that I-er- th-proposed to you. I wonder what that is a sign oft" Miss Lingerlong (dewevately'r-"lt is a sign that you have not more sense when you are asleep than when you are awake." In the British army a battalion ot 1,016 men requires for its daily ra- tion 635 twopauud loaves, 127 pounds of bacon, more than 31 pounds of salt and nearly 13 pounds of pepper, to menllon only a few ot the items. , T_--"'-- I- will I Rough on Dad. I a"l'cE"" inflamed i,') up: 1 [ our: to 5-.Duhnd mu g Frank's mother took him to a con- E 81.39“, relieved bymmnc juring performance one afternoon and yes "My. No Smarting. ‘the small boy was much impressed by Yawn“, . . st,e Eye Comfort. At the wonders he saw. That evening, ii'aG'l1r,'e'hq, ti/r't;fata',t'taiii after tea, he said: Dru ists or . Ihateg a I "Father, I wish I was a mag'cian." " "ninety: "e.Ahicar. "Do you, sonny?" said the father, -- with asmile. "If you were one what Futhers and sons would you do?" . "The old»fushinned boy u u! 1 1 "Well," said the boy thousrhtfully,'mid every word his father sum " "Pd turn you into a rat and call the} "Yes," replied the mun-r cynical cat, and wouldn't I have It lark!" ‘yuuth; "but you must remember that i, The instrument has been used with Isueces in a number of cases, but it :is still upon its trial; later on it will l no doubt be possible to state whether ‘or not this beautiful theory will stand the test of actual service conditions. i It spears to have given good results iin experimental work, but the real [test will be when the instrument Homes to be used by others than I those who have carried out the investi- "rations. are being opened to grasp the bullet. and if the bell continues to ring when the bullet is seized, nothing else ca. have been picked up beside the bullet, and there is no danger in pulling it out, The surgeon using this instrument can therefore not only see what he is do- ing, but, by means of the bell, he hae 8 very aeeurate sense of touch for any piece of metal that he is watching the points of his forceps attempting to pick up from among the structure deep down below the skin. Ask for Hand'- Ind tak- no other A very powerful pair of forceps is necesssary to grip and extract a hul- let, and a great deal of damage might be done if something that was not seen, perhaps an artery or a nerve, was picked up along with the bullet. Accordingly, the blades of the forceps are attached to an electric bell, which only rings when both the blades are touching the bullet. Therefore, if the bell is made to ring while the blades The first object has been secured by tittintr a fluorescent screen to the ap- paratus in such a manner that, if an X-ray tube be placed under the table and the room darkened, the shadow of the bullet and of the points of the forceps will be visible continuously. But the solution of one difficulty in this case raises another-that of the darkened room. Cutting instruments cannot be used unless the surgeon can see what he is doing, and as this in- strument has to work in the dark it is constructed with a blunt point that will work its way down between structures, separating without doing appreciable damage pressing struc- tures aside rather than through them. Among these is the telephone probe, of which n good deal has already been heard, and now a bullet extractor has been introduced with the object of facilitating what is often a tedious and dittieult operation. This bullet extractor has necessarily been con~ structed to meet definite requirements. In the first place, the operation is per- formed in the dark, the bullet being visible by the shadow thrown by X- rays. In the second place, the bullet must be removed with the least pos- sible danger of injury to important structures. In the third place. the op- eration of removal must be made as easy as practicable. The war hats brought into being many ingenious piecen of apparatus designed to aid the British surgeon in his difficult work. Some of these instruments m much too complicated to be described in the pages of a lay journal, but there are others the value of which can be tsppreeiatmi readily by anyone. Electric Bell Ring-kn... an Rubbed by Instrument, NEW YAW TO EXTRACT' BULLETS What Dreams are Made of, Makes a perfect hearing surface. Prevents blocked wheels. Lets your horse pull bigger loads. The Mice does it. Dealer: Everywhere Fills the grnm’u of worn axle. BRANCH“ m ALL The ue.it! 91 0-H" FOOD FOR BATTALION. AXLE - GREASE MICA €le the Inns: " L Sir Chnr"s Wyndham, "urirrtr li'. American tour, ttsid at a dinmr in New York r--"Too many of us res- iemble I boy " the wheel. The boy stood on the bridge of a schooner be» ide the captain on a starry night. It suddenly became necessary for the captain to go below, and he uid to the boy-'Here take the wheel, I'll he hark in a few minutes. Steer by that star and you will he all right.' The boy began to sfeer the boat. and rum] he got her out of her ('nurse. The star now uppenred a-tern 'nstcad of ahead. He shouted down to the ennui†'tri. skipper. Ccme U) :n'l llntl w: ' v,th-r star. I've paused "hut arm." (Their Emp' ymcnt to Instruct Sol- diers Urged in England. Dr. Sloan Chesser, speaking recently at a meeting " the Institute of Hy- ;giene, London, urged the employment of women cooks to instruct mldiers. [Those in charge of cups and hospital kitchens, she said, were in many cases (ignorant of cooking and dietvties, and [the Governent had only begun, in a ismall way, to utilize trained women ,cooks to teach the soldiers. Most women, Dr. Chasser insisted, made the mistake of being boo Inxious to save in food. Girls might be train- ed for "home service" in the kitchen, the garden, the farm, the counting house or the hospital. It should be impossible for any healthy woman to be idle ut the present time. If England could, on u large scale, use good women cooks, with soldiers working under them, the country would save in a '1mm where a divi- sion is billetod sum-ml thousand pounds each week. thought I Would strangle; f used MINARD’S LINIMENT, and it cured me at once. I am never without it now. the old-fashioned boy had one of those thoughtful, old-fashioned fath- era." M inard'a I wu WOMAN COOKS ARMY Tl'TORS - - -. - ' y _ Eyes infiatucd by expo- “. cnun: to Sun. â€Island Wind quickly relieved by Murine yes In Remedy. No Summing. inst Eye Comfort, At Your Dmggl'lt'u SOr per Bottle. Murine he 'prlreinru"ii"eiaVc'. f,ym.tourrrrr/iGU/ie" Drurrpist,,r,rIi"i.=rk"t' " - Kross--After settling thing lawyer blew me to a good dir loaned me $5. Soreggg' Eyesiiii, Krissr---What did you get your aunt's estate? MRS. C. D. PRINCE Nauwigewauk, Oct. 21tst, " dress expensivcly. Do y you could do as well for me respect as father docs?" "Perhaps so." said the you "tPill, I shouldn't like to in looking as shabby as he does lunar- Lumen: Lumboman'u rrlond may give with perfect assurun it is absolutely safv. Such I cine is Baby's Own Tablets. T the only medicine absolutely 1 teed entirly free from injurious and what is more they never free the baby from those minor babyhood and childhood. C mother has used them she Wo- no other medicine. They " the stomach and howds; dr constipation; expel worms anc teething easy. They are sold by cine dealers or by mail at 25 , box from The Dr. Williams M Co. Brockville. Ont. it i cine the teed The best medi the one that new which, at the sat loan. E1 have tea will have tro-Hung; THE BEST MEDICINE FOR THE After the sitting possible for Dr. L municate with any was a demand for Government was a step, fearing the working classes. I been commandeered Persons in Germany do not know. or know only imperfectly, what Dr. Liebknecht said. bat great fear pro- vails in Germany that to cover the loan the Government emptied the savings banks and kindred institu- tions. The ten milliard loan in I colossal mystifieation, and Liebknecht would sum to have disclosed this in the Reiuhsing in two or three un- tem-es heard in the tumult. Government "Eptied the The London Telgmph's Bone ar- telpondent an that, according to in. direct information from Berlin, Dr. Liebknccht discloaed n fut of con-id- enble gravity during the sitting of the Reicheltag on April 8 warding the latest German loan. The President, Ministers and Deputies alike made the most determined efforts to prevent Dr. Liebknecht {rum speaking, and the censorship prevented the newspnpen from publishing anything about it. He Was an Nawigator SCANDAL IN MUN WAR MAN. Yours gratefully, ONTART Liniment Co., Limited: very sick with Quinsy and I would strangle. I used est medicine for the baby is _ that never fails to cure and .m it the same time, the mother! e with perfect assurance that l "Did solutely safe. Such a medi- debts'."' inby's Own Tablets. They are I "No. it r medicine absolutely guann- pny them irly ftwe from injurious drugs ======= it is more they never fail to baby from those minor ills of S) man d and childhood. Once a t,,", [4:13:41 has used them she would use Cuntn'innq ' medicine. They vetrulute =TaTaarc.a= nach and bowels; drive out --w _ Lion; expel worms and make hi llf\\‘|N‘ easy. They are sold by medi- luluâ€: lers or by mail at 25 cents . Sum Mn:- F 1 The Dr. Williams Medicine , ="Jl.=".="rae= 1.1r to float any furth es of the scandal mu -d Austria-Hungary, a! prejudicial effect on Au in borrowing. Her Dress neve grqqggaleq Eyelids. Lucky te tumult. 4; it was made im. Liebknecht to com- tnewspaper. Them r his arrest, but the afraid to take this indignation of the whom savings had be drawn from ill be impossible 111- any further tt tr, BABI up the er and ut murt tie If you are losing lime and money HIM siclotesa, write " once ml. Harvey “out co. to: a at of remedies '07 tieurasmema.' Asthma. Canaan-n ol kidneys. Piles. Epilepsy cr Falling Skim“. Nun-u. mum. Calarrh. lien-ma. “uranium. Old Sun. or Ulcers. and tttdigestion. Thee have been pov- focted by ofmedicat Nada. ll not “timed with wile! so can. they can you 'tothrttgt Send no lunacy hut rum “In ad lot would tot More up .-.4 ."mmn... I: u__,, " - V V .. - ,V,__.,r._ . .u-VVry hr I K"- luau A, 5oc1..:nto- w., new You. I]. ,_ h--. -V.- v“ w... thin h'e'u I you. all A'.Tr IIdd. to an) uddn-u In Fun“. or , I. has! mummy III." bv [NI-Ill at 01p â€W's-r Hum- F'cte In: "town. I . lotto high. " " Write for cut on. turi', mutating our Hummer With- "mn'wH-r Palmer's “Moose [Ind Dunc" humans for almost brrty you". td nun) to 'rutrer wut, tired lore. awh- intr, burning feet. "et u [an of "I". am ttnn out. And "omrort. " suur dealer doesn't carry them. and In M. P/ll"' In"""'".' [125. tnd we, tttt Huh-.m- It: {hum-rm MnudHIu-n. l. nl, men Hark-urn. lab-worn- all ttho re- qulrr our. “rung. 'N"iy footwear for working tn. W. nuke than of thet upland] oil-mm)“ [“0va water- prnnrod mum that nu In.“ ll " Imam out t III tn ha an w her " SPECIALLV MADE FARM FOOTWEAR r'-""'"" C DELIVERED .-. _ _ To You " l All) kit!†I" :51" lownlt of all "rpm-u puny. Pi --e r--‘>"" II UM ' I I result: after so days. they cost you 3:03; d no mun hut return this ad to: monk! tn! e gas-"1 "t'.rhordott, F Hoyt, Ro t t 5.. tshrm, tit Il l w ‘1): [a VANCE“, J Inlernn It mun by ' m-roro m J., Limited "Overseas" Liniment Wt JOE. 'tl-iliac-tiii-isis inefficiency xl Proculcmn. I. B.. ovullnu canine“ 00.. no Buhunt IL. Tatonto. oil The O. & W. Tram Yet ily p' Emu still is left un- guarded â€up! in the home where mumn b' have learned that the safe, slur. mm-[mmmom. etiicieut ily catcher and tic. stroyer in E PE A 25, A .l i in In H M recent i During 1915. I can of tty poisoning were waned from " sum; itt3914, one. hum M (at... Fly poison kills "ore chain's (lam all other poison; combined. " them within your home, “yum within baby‘s reach. a slum at arsenic poisoned - Ming In water, or a can with umteued poisoned wick? Fr S)ubttu MU“- ANTED KI'IPLPERS ron BALE! The Jc " " Sk £02511 \VAITZD‘ Cunt! Rari M AKIN H. CLAY CLOVER. V. s. I18 West 'utStmet,New Yd HELP WLHTE D DOG mud he. a my tbe Audi m tf WHr: FLt INKOUI SEED IOTA? Ar/passer-twh rte Into DOG DIS And How f “£07133 r.2te ue " A Distinction , of the hr IFSL‘E ltr.---'" " M ll om " INN EA SES ll any Hui cure you, tt St TI to M a: l on] abr mud; â€Jenn. K with. (o in! W Jr- ta. i ta