West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 30 Nov 1916, p. 7

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WeA 5t March EEL IN BRITAIN [write FBLAc AINS NO A+ upplie® reet® W tS K# 10 "Americans in _ particular," the| Journal says, "seem most deeply imâ€"‘ pressed with the changed conditions in Russia and are most sanguine as | to the future of that country. 'I'hey‘ say that there is something akin to the old call of the West in the fastâ€" opening opportunities and the wide-; reaching resources of Russia which ; sends an anxious tinge through the | veins of every American business | man or prospector who has delved | into Russian conditions as they exist toâ€"day and is farâ€"sighted enough to | see the prosperity that is in store for the Russian people. A Remarkable New Shell Is Being Manufactured. Under the caption, "The Spirit of the New _ Russia," the Russianâ€" American Journal of Commerce calls attention editorially to what it terms "the feverish activity to be observed throughout the length and breadth of the Russian Empire." All travellers coming out of Russia, it is stated, bear testimony to the wonderful reawakâ€" ening everywhere noticeable in the empire. "Factories in Russia are running day and night, turning out munitions of war, clothing, and the varied neâ€" cessities of the empire‘s multimillions. Americans have said they were surâ€" prised at the large number of facâ€" tories, especially between Petrograd and Moscow. Other factories are goâ€" Ing up with feverish haste, and everyâ€" where, it seems to the traveller, railâ€" roads are under construction. Many of the lines are new, while others are *®cing doubleâ€"tracked. Men and woâ€" men are working side by side on the railroads, the women handling picks and shovels with even _ greater strength and effect than many of the "The returning Russian travellers bring many and varied stories of the military resources of the empire. One of these is to the effect that not less than 8,000,000 men have been recently sent to the front and that another 9,â€" 000,000 are in training. All are imâ€" bued with the absolute assurance that the weight of Russian men and maâ€" terial must be the deciding factor in the war. There has been told, too, the story of a new explosive shell beâ€" This article is for the man or woâ€"| TIVE POTENTATES. man who suffers from flmmth-i who wants to be cured, not merely *-‘ o lievodâ€"but actually cured. The most Aid Has Included Soldiers, Mounts, the rhoumatic sufferer can hope for in rubbin« something on the tender, achâ€"| Hospitals, Motors, Aircraft ing loint, is a little relief. No Mionl and Fortunes. or lniment ever did or can make a| is of the" teany reâ€" cure. The rheumatic poison is rooted contradiction in the blood. Therefore rheumatism Ports of the disloyalty of India to the can only be cured when this poisonous Bfifi"‘ Government, the Government acid is driven out of the blood. Any Of India at Delhi has issued a sumâ€" doctor will tell you this is true. If mary °f.th° work done for the emâ€" you want something that will go right DPire during the war by the princes to the root of the trouble in the blood ‘ndugotentam of t:at oe:\mtry- 3 take Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. They on ins an enumeration of many make new, rich blood which drives out the gifts and services of these rulers, the poisonous acid and cures rheuâ€" :::’I“d:;:: tl:tBe(nm'o:mB‘:Ogl, P V matism to stay cured. The truth of haPs most no! ted Indh. * these statements has been proved in P “IP'PiYi“S in its loyalty and ttl;r!:lc]; thousands of cases throughout Canâ€" iN& in its magnitude is the ;““ (ng ada, and the following cure is a strik. rendered by the pfl:ces oire Jn i the ing instance. Mr. Henry Smith, St. ch:e:: ;:rlgd&et:e;:n taade "They Jerome, Que., says: "For upwards of ::ve i eor thew best Trealy, enthuâ€" a year I was a victim of rheumatism sinstif:ll The ave ;uppli ed in a Im'mt 'p:._\mful form. The trouble thouslndz. of figh{ing en to march was located in my legs and for a long with British soldiers against Britain‘s time I was so bad that I could not its. " Werâ€"lik hi‘e; ave taken walk. â€" The suffering which I endured :::mfi‘:l’:i wit.hr-t‘he.irc troosps ant _‘ the «an onl hc~ ny'nglned t{y klose . who treasures of the east have been pourâ€" have been similarly afflicted. Doctors C i th ire‘s war chest." ‘The treatment did not help me and then I into the °“‘lp"d" i these prineely began trying other remedies, but with "umber ;"31'," en ‘l” ® io etho:e ho no better results. Finally l.was adâ€" :‘:\tl:dmse:k :: \::ge’;'mine her loyalty vised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, C stander her Honor and nlinonth I had begun to lose faith an“As“a;\ ;; iesrre res'enbed in these in medicine, I finally decided to give ifts of :ml fre anz among the donors fls Ves is hrak . Lame vers grat.e.ful | fre men of . e;t accomplishments and now that I did so, for after taking triki f:onality That â€" splendid eight boxes of the pills the trouble I 'l;‘ ,;gx l:eSir Pert.;b Singh, the maâ€" completely disappeared. I was free g 80 I:e’ent of Jorhpur ’although from pain and could walk as well as har'aja ear? seventy years' of age, is ever I did in my life. I have since f Hicorons Cam paigher, and his pnly taken the pills occasionally as a preâ€"| * . hg'q to die in the s;rvice of the cautionary measure, and I cannot‘;,"“ c:or The young Maharaja, one speak too highly in their favor." ' ‘fm:}" r;nost romantic â€" personalities Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure all the | Of th* the Indiah prinees, is only ‘Sevâ€" troubles due to weak, watery blood or arr;onp: hSt he has seen ,fighting on broken down nerves. You can gEt’::eei,‘r:)'ntinent Thev services of the these pills through any dealer inil"irst Jorhpur' Imperial service lanâ€" medicine, or by mail postpaid, at 50‘ r; toxvether with reinforcements, cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 '::fl"é ofl'gered to and accepted by the from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.,l S overniment; and they are how on s¢â€" Brockville, Ont. 9 mssy ing manufactured in Russia after a French formula, but not yet used on the western frontâ€"a shell which in exploding spreads over a radius of 300 yards a heat of 3,000 degreesâ€"a withering blast calculated to incinerâ€" ate all within its fiery reach." Many British towns have just startâ€" ed the practice of having the church bells ring at a certain hour every day to remind the people to pray for the soldiers fighting at the front. A TALK ON_R!'EUMA“SM‘MM Tclling How to Actually ( This Contmon and Painâ€" ful Mali@y. RUSSIA A HIVE OF ACTIVITY Grapeâ€"Nuts Made in Canada The Flavor Lasts In the making of Grapeâ€"Nuts there is added to the sweet, rich nutriment of whole wheat, the rare flavor of malted barley, a combination creating a most unâ€" usually delicious taste. The palate never tires of it. People every where have found that is the most nutritious and delicious cereal food known. Every table should have its daily ration of Grapeâ€"Nuts. Prayers for Soldiers "There‘s a Reason" â€"By Canad tan Postum Coreal Co,, Ltd., Windsor, O "Her Highness the Begum of Bhoâ€" pal, one of the most remarkable woâ€" men as she is one of the most masâ€" terful rulers in India, gave great asâ€" sistance, monetary, military and perâ€" sonal. Her Highness offered to train Iremounts for the government and the ,Bhopll Imperial service lancers were |placed on garrison duty at Meerut. \Ten tents for hospital use she sent to France. She set out on active service, | but was invalided at Aden. Bhopal is ‘the only state in India where the ruler is a woman, and the present Begum is the only living woman ruler who has \ been in action with her own troops. ‘During a pilgrimage to Mecca she ‘and her bodyguard were attacked by ! Arabs, whom she repulsed after a | bloody encounter. "All India is represented in these gifts of empire, and among the donors | are men of great accomplishments and | striking personality. That splendid | old soldier, Sir Pertab Singh, the maâ€" haraja Regent of Jorhpur, although he is nearly seventy years of age, is !a vigorous campaigner, and his only | wish is to die in the service of the ‘Emperor. The young Maharaja, one of the most romantic personalities ‘among the Indian princes, is only sevâ€" ’enteen. but he has seen fighting on the Continent. The services of the |First Jorhpur Imperial service lanâ€" cers, together with reinforcements, were offered to and accepted by the Government, and they are now on acâ€" tive service. Woman Ruler Offered Own Services. "Her Highness contributed $28,800 for the Prince of Wales relief fund, $8,000 for comforts for Indian troops, and $1,600 for relief for Belgian sufâ€" ferers. "A very fine example of the Rajput nobility is his highness Raja of Ratlam, who has been on tive service in France ever since beginning of the war. "The Nizam of Hyderabad, the great Mussulman prince of the Decâ€" can, at the outbreak of hostilities ofâ€" fered $2,000,000 toward the cost of the war, together with many horses for government use. "He offered $1,920,000 for the exâ€" penses of the First Hyderabad lanâ€" cers, which proceeded on active serâ€" vice, and he provided a hospital of fifty beds for the wounded. "His Highness the Maharaja of Kashmir gave $64,000 to the Imperial Indian fund, and $32,000 to the Prince of Wales‘ Relief fund, together with thirty hospital tents for use in France and 7,000 rupees for comforts. "Among other gifts he offered 4,000 horses and contributed $240,000 for motors and motor ambulances. His was the major share in the cost of the hospital ship Loyalty, while his gifts of $90,000 for aeroplanes, his donaâ€" tion of 3,000,000 cigarettes, and his contribution of $228,000 to various war funds add lustre to the proverbâ€" ial munificence of Indian potentates. Camel Corps Are Provided. "The Maharaja of Bikaner provided the Bikaner camel corps and himself proceeded on active service. . Six thousand loading camels, 2,000 each, were provided amohg other gifts by the Khan of Kalat, the Sirdar of Kaâ€" lat, and the Jam of Las Dela, frontier chiefs, while Arab chiefs from the Persian Gulf have contributed large sums for Red Cross work. "The Maharaja Holkar â€"~of Indore placed his personal escort squadron at the «ervice of the Government and contributed $32,000 to the Indian reâ€" lief fund, $16,000 for the purchase of motor cars, $32,000 for comforts and $25,000 to the Prince of Wales‘ fund. "The Maharaja of Kapurthala visitâ€" 2 ASSST BRTAMN old the acâ€" the I This heroic priest, who is loved ‘and admired by every soldier of the legion for his selfâ€"sacrifice and deâ€" | votion, has a strange history. It is :t.o]d among the legionaries that he | was for years in charge of a fashionâ€" ‘?able church in Madrid. Finally he became weary of hearing at the conâ€" ‘fessional only the silly sins and petty l‘intrigues of the men and women of |\the Spanish court, and asked permisâ€" sion of his bishop to go out into the | world and seek a parish where he might come in contact with real sinâ€" ners. His request was granted, and ithe father went to Algeria, where he |became attached to the First Regiâ€" ‘ ment of the legion as priest,. For several years he followed the regiâ€" ‘ment about northern Africa, cheerâ€" ‘ing the lonely, sick and wounded, adâ€" “ministering the last sacrament to the dying on battlefields, and in miliâ€" tary hospitals and reading the last ‘simple service over the dead and unâ€" mourned soldiers of the legion. \_ Went Into Trenches With the Men. \ _ When the legion crossed from Africa to Europe in the autumn of 1914 Father Xâ€"â€" came with the corps. A regimental priest or pastor holds the rank of captain and may enjoy all the possible luxuries of war life, but this priest went into the ‘trenches with his men, talking with ‘them and encouraging them as best |he could. Just before the First Regiâ€" \ ment charged north of Arras on May 9, 1915, he held a short service; then lhe went along with the legionaries in their forward rush, stopping to [comfort and ofttimes bandage the men as they dropped down wounded, | or to close their eyes as they fell in | death. On that day the bullets and shells missed the slight, blackâ€"clad figure with the string of beads and crucifix about his neck and the Red Cross brassard on his arm, but on June 16, 1915, he was struck down by a shrapâ€" nel ball and seriously wounded. In Africa he had been decorated with the cross of Legion of Honor; now, he was awarded the French war cross with palm. for war expenses, $82,000 for the Inâ€" dian relief fund, together with the services of the Imperial Service Transport Corps. The Maharaja of Alwar offered his personal services and the Alwar Imperial Service Inâ€" fantry, while drafts from the Imperâ€" ial Service Lancers have gone as reâ€" inforcements. "The Mysore is second only in size Prayed For All the Dead. When the Champagne offensive started last September, Father Xâ€"â€" was back at the front with the legion. All through that ferocious and weary battle he was with his polyglot flock of warriors. It was he who carried Lieut. Charles Sweeny as that American volunteer officer lay almost dying against the German barbed wire entanglements near the Navarian farm, and watched Sweeny‘s orderly carry him off the field. And when, after the battle, some 600 men of the legion were buried in the temâ€" porary cemetery near the Bois Sabot, this brave priest of the Roman Cathâ€" olic church prayer for them all. to Hyderabad. The Maharaja offered his personal services and those of the Mysore Imperial Service Lancers. His gift of $1,600,000 was mentioned in Parliament. He also offered ambuâ€" lance carts, horses and hospital tents for use in France. SPANISH PRIEST ~~ _ SHOWS BRAVERY "Apart from the munificent:gifts of materials of war, the Princes of India have contributed a total of more than $6,712,000 to the war chest. ‘ The almoner of the Foreign Legion, Father Xâ€"â€", has had a third palm pinned on the ribbon of his war cross, for having carried a wounded legionâ€" ary off the Somme battlefield under a heavy fire, writes a Paris correspondâ€" ent. wWINS HONOR IN THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION. Was Confessor of Spanish Court, Asked for Chance to Meet Real Sinners. Many a priest and pastor has cast aside the frock and cassock, dropped his identity and entered the legion as a plain soldier. These men have made good â€" soldiers, too, according to the testimony of their officers. No questions are asked in the legion about a man‘s antecedents, yet it is hard for him to hide what once he was, and the former servants of the church usually â€" disclos€ â€" themselves in one way or another. Misard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows There was a moment‘s silence. (ieorge stepped back and drew fro his pocket a revolver, which glistena in tgo pale light. "George, George," shrieked the girl. "What 3: you intend to do?" She took hold of his hand. "Not a great deal," replied George calmly. _ "I have been calling on you for the last six months, Evelyn, and I have only exterminated about half the dogs in this neighborhood. I want yoi to take this gun and give it to Updyke. _ He may want to finish the roest of them." 7 "Yes, George, I think it is for the best that we do not see each other again." "Do you love another?" "I do, George. I have promised my heart to Harold Updyke." It was to be his last call. They stood on the porch in the moonlight. "You are determined?" he said, finally The Lover‘s Request. What We Give, We Get | us first without a declaration of war, 4and sent what they could have sent â€" 140 cruisers and armed merchant | shipsâ€"on to our unprotected trade \routes we would have been brought to our knees insa couple of months. They ‘could have put down a thousand ships in the first week. The total represents about one milâ€" lion dollars above the contributions for 1916, and therefore there can be no weariness in wellâ€"doing on the part of Ontario‘s patriotic people so far as the Fund is concerned. GERMANY LOST CHANCE TO WIN In 1915 and 1916 Ontario contributâ€" ed more to the Canadian Patriotic Fund than she drew from it, the surâ€" plus going to assist those western provinces whose contributions, alâ€" though exceedingly liberal, did not equal the heavy demands caused by the large enlistment from these proâ€" vinces. For 1917 the situation will change. The demands from this proâ€" vince on the Fund are estimated to reach six million dollars, and the comâ€" mittee has decided to ask Ontario to raise that amountâ€"in other words, to make provision only for its own peoâ€" ple. Could Have Ravaged British Shipping at Start of War. Admiral Lord Charles Beresford asâ€" serts in a letter to Colonel Robert M. Thompson, president of the Navy League, Washington, that if Germany had taken advantage of her opportunâ€" ity at the outbreak of the European war, they could have entered Paris and reached St. Petersburg in a short time. "We would have been brought to our knees in a couple of months," says the British admiral. "We escaped a most appalling danâ€" ger, for if the Germans had attacked Former is Brave and Fights Fair, Says Australian Soldier. Anzacs who have been "through it" in Gallipoli tell me that they have a great respect for the Turk as a fightâ€" er, says a writer in the London Mornâ€" ing Post. "Johnny Turk," said a young Australian, ‘"in â€" comparison with the Boche is a gentleman. He fights fair and is a brave man. The German is a swine, who shoots at wounded and helpless men. I‘ve seen him do it. The Turk will fight like the very devil at close quarters. Did you ever hear of the Germans risking their skins in a handâ€"toâ€"hand encounâ€" ter with the bayonet? Bet you can‘t prove it. Why the mement they see us coming at them with the bayonet they flop down on their knees and squeal like rats. Johnny Turk will stand up to you with the bayonet and fight like a good old tough. All our chaps know that. And Johnny Turk won‘t give in till you‘ve outed him. If he should prove to be a better or a cleverer man than you at bayonet workâ€"well, you‘re done inâ€"that‘s all "If the Germans had carried out that plan‘they could have gotten into Paris, compelled peace with France,‘ and then been in St. Petersburg in a| ;"ort time, and become the dominant Power of Europe and the world po«â€" sibly for a century." "You look very smiling this mornâ€" ing, Toner," said Bailey. _ "I guess I ought to be. I went to a fortuneâ€" teller last night, and she prophesied immediate financial reverses," chortlâ€" ed Toner. "I fail to see anything very joyous in that," said â€" Bailey. "You would if you knew anything about my fingnces," said Toner. . "I tell you right now that if they don‘t reverse protty quic«s I‘ll be busted." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, &c. Explained. Why is it that truth will rise again when crushed to earth?" "Because of its elastcity, of course. Don‘t you know how easy it is to sbretch the truth?" TURK AND BOCHE COMPARED. \laseline cuts, insect bites and skin tations of all kinds. Sold in handy bowgles and fi_u:u. at de‘:n and genâ€" Free booklet mailed on request. (liood News. chapped | _ "Our consul, you see, was another of that strange species who think ‘that good things can be bought by ‘money only. Then I told him to | state his case to Admiral Seymour at | Wei Hai Wei, forty miles to the eastâ€" ward. He sniffed suspiciously, but finally yielded, and together we conâ€" | cocted the cable to which in an hour | came the joyful news :‘Certainly, help | yourselfâ€"as much as you wish‘â€"or | words to that effect. I wonder if Engâ€" |land has ever been paid for that coal, ’ for I‘m sure that no bill would ever be | sent by John Bull." j "Then it was that our Consul Fowâ€" \ler ran up and down the streets of \Chefoo, wringing his hands and begâ€" ging for a few tons of coalâ€"but not ‘a lump could he buy. He showed me the cable in which he was ordered to \coal his cruiser, expected every moâ€" ment on a hurry call to protect Amâ€" erican lives and property in Tienâ€" |\Tsin. He told me he could not do anythingâ€"money could not buy an ounce of coal. ‘Nonsense,‘ said I, ‘the | British admiral has plenty of coal.‘ This story, says the Times, is here printed for the first timeâ€"not beâ€" cause it is of importance by itself, but because it is typical of hundreds of cases familiar to many Americans. "‘True,‘ said Consul Fowler, ‘but what of that?‘ FELL FROM LOFT; HURT; THEN WELL "Moreover, the British authorities in Hong Kong, although legally neuâ€" tral, interpreted their duties in the manner most favorable to the Ameriâ€" can ships, and Dewey found no diffiâ€" culty in fitting out to the best advaftâ€" age prior to steaming across to the enemy in the Philippines. And as the Yankee fleet steamed past that of England in Hong Kong, the British bluejackets manned the rigging and cheered us heartilyâ€"a most unneutral and yet most generous act. "After the war I found myself in Chefoo, waiting an answer from the Russian commander at Port Arthur, to whom I had applied for permission to cross Siberia. The palace revoluâ€" tion was in full swingâ€"at Pekin and the fleets of the great powers conâ€" trolled every bucket of coal in the treaty ports. AT MANILLA, HONG KONG, AND AT CHEFOO. How a Man Who Landed On Wood Pile and Was Sore From Head to Foot Found Quick Relief. a loft to get some building material just as many another man living in the country must often do. Suddenly he slipped and fell. Ten feet belowâ€"was a pile of wood, knotted and gnarled. It was a nasty tumble, and Mr. Putnam was Injured painfully in the back, he was covered with bruises, and was sore from head to foot. The next day he bought a bottle of Sloan‘s liniment which had been reâ€" commended to him. Within a very few hours the soreners had vanished and the lameness had disappeared. He was an active man once more. ooo aon How the British Admiral P Coal Free for American Pouitney Bigelow, an American traveller and author of wide fame, in a letter addressed to the editor of the New York Times, writes: "It cannot be true that American naval officers assisted Prussian subâ€" marines in their dirty work ontlld.e marines in their dirty work outside of Newport. Meanwhile, pray permit me to add my mite of testimony reâ€" garding the attitude of Great Britain in 1898, when Imperial Germany sided with Spain and sought to bully our gallant Dewey in Manila. _ _ _ "The tale of how the British Capâ€" tain Chichester stood up with our adâ€" miral against the German admiral has been told beforeâ€"and finally by Adâ€" miral Dewey himself. This story I checked step by step in Manila by conversation, not merely with our own admiral and his British colleague, but by other participants in that memorâ€" able fight. Once upon a time Edwin Putnam, who lives in the quiet, pretty hamlet of Wendel Depot, Mas#., climbed up into â€" Nloan‘s Liniment can be obtained at all drug stores, 25¢., 50c. and $1.00. The only rofessor was delivering the last lecture of the term. He told the students with much emphasis that he expected them to devote all their time in preparing for the final examination. "The examination papers are now in the hands of the printer," he conâ€" cluded. â€" "Now, is there any question you would like answered ?" _ Silence prevailed for a moment, then a voice piped up: "Who is the printer?" No great war of our time has ended during the winter months, nor, with the exception of the Russoâ€"Japâ€" anese War, has any begun then. For Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper ;"(:evr'\tury all wars have begun in the spring, summer or early autumn and ended between March and August. Aided Dewey at Hong Kong. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Couldn‘t Buy Coal. The Only Question "Help Yourself." Wars and Seasons STATES REV. WM. BROWN. I was cured of a bad case of earâ€" ache by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. MRS. 8. KAULBACK. I was cured of sensitive lungs by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. "Did you speak to father about me, Arthur?" asked the girl. "Yes, I did, dear, and he agreed with me heartily," replied her wooer. ‘"Then he said I might marry you?" "Whyâ€"erâ€"no, I didn‘t quite get so far as that. I just said you were a fine girl." Ardup (picking up his hat)â€"I will be equally frank with you, Miss Bulâ€" lion. I don‘t like you at all, but I would marry you in a minute. I am more selfâ€"sacrificing than you are. Good evening. "SUMMER THROUGH THE WINTER" IN CALIFORMNIA. The startling discovery has just been made that : Frante‘s famous armies are, almost to the hfin man, in a state of open rebell and breach of discipline. To be more exact, it has just been officially ascertained that there is hardly a "poilu" in the whole 6,000,â€" 000 men whom France has under arms at the present moment who is not smoking a pipe. Pipe smoking is one of the severest breaches of discipline in the French army. They were officially tabooed largely on account of the fact that a soldier smoking a pipe cannot possibly salute an officer whom he may chance to meet with the dignity the occasion reâ€" Portly Woman (pushing her way into a police station)â€"I see you have arrested a man whose mind is a blank. Officerâ€"We have, madam. Portly Womanâ€"Then please bring him out so that I may have a look at him. _ My Henry didn‘t come home last night, and that‘s a fairly good description of him. 1 was cured of terrible lumbago by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. Heiressâ€"I like you very much Ardup, but I cannot marry you. The failure of the French officers to note that their men were smoking pipes until the practice had become practically universal is generally atâ€" tributed to the fact that all have been so busy fighting that the breach of discipline escaped notice. When sick the newborn babe or the growing child will find prompt relief through the use of Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets. They are absolutely safe for all children and never fail to banish any of the minor ills from which little ones suffer. Concerning them Mrs. Arthur _ Sheasly, _ Adanac, Sask., writes: "I have used Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets and think they mre splendid for children of all ages." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. C Get away from the cold, disagreeable winter. _ California temperature is from 60 to 75 degrees the year round. It is not expensive to spend the entire winter there. Bungalows rent from $23.00 per month ur. Special Winter Tour Fares. The famous Los Angeles lLimited, a fast, reâ€" fined and exclusive through train from Chicago to Los Anfelel, leaves Chicago 10,00 p.m. and arrives at Los Angeles 4.30 p.m. the third dayâ€"less than three days en route. Now the practice is so universal and so firmly implanted in the ranks of the "poilus" that the question of rooting it out presents a serious probâ€" lem. The men say they were driven to smoking pipes because the tobacco furnished them by the Government doesn‘t lend itself to cigarette rolling. GHILDREN OF ALL AGES Write to B. H. Bennett. Gen. Agt., Chicago & North Western Ry., 46 Yonge Et., Toronto, Ont. He will send you disâ€" criptive literature and train echedules, help you plan an attractive trip, and m.Ee reservations for you clear through to the Pacific Coast. Your Druggist‘s 50c per Bottle. MurineEye lllninTchZSc. ForBook ol theEyeFreeask Druggists or MurineEyeRemedy Co., Chicag@ Teacherâ€"*"What is meant by divers diseases?" _ Childâ€""Water on the brain, miss." Soref>:s! ECE EC SE PPCOT RNC iDE guickly relieved by Murine yes ye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort, At Your Druggist‘s 50c per Bottle. MurineEye Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. The barberâ€"Your hair is thinning, sir. Ever try our hair preparaâ€" tions ?" The patronâ€"No, I can‘t blame it on that. "Do you ever wake yourself up snoring ?" 8 oh. 4 "It amounts to that. I frequently wake up the baby." ARMY DISOBETING ORDERS. The More Selfâ€"Sacrificing. . q t an _ uw _ A Clean Page. Not Responsible. All Agreed. Indirectly. MRS. 8. MASTERS Eyes inflamed by e#;.o- sure to Sun, Dust and Wind Granulated Fyelids, . Murine Eye Mr glll’) PoTaToEs iiusut com k blere. Deleware C@rman _ Order at once. luwlv limited. Write for quoâ€" tations. _H. W. Dawson, Bramptoa tmmmes e _4 NEWSPAPErs Fro% SALE l)H\IPlT-IAKIN-D NEWs AND JORB Offices for su‘e in good Ontarie towne. The most useful and interesting @f all businesses Fuil informatior om application to Witeon Pablishin@ Comâ€" pany. 78 West Adcinide Street. Toronto. CA.\‘CER. TUMORS, LUMIPS ETC. internal and external, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. 1)r. RBeliman Medical Co.. Amited, Collingwood. Ont. A Home Biiiiard T able tely different, "i&!&ifi(u,";f&}'-‘o‘r sickly e n ande I amoke of Inhale. No !gammg or ruladn. or injocuonfi. No ohem;yhc::e vibration or 0 er; no Ts; no it 1. toe bouke." Rehing or ts 2o d HOW 1 CURED MVY CATARRH ToLD IN A SIMPLE waÂ¥y Heals Day and Night HEug TCO _ LE3C r.2 Aa mat 1 P Instantly successful. You do not have to walit, and linger and pa out a lot of money. Â¥ou can stop it over ni I will glady flmhow I am not & doctor and this is not & soâ€"called doctor‘s prescrip« tionâ€"but I am cured and my friends are 1 ol miop at once Hike magle. 1 Am Free.__You Can Be Free ever heard of it in the home where the housewife knows Amorisa‘s the Author Piazeer H. CLAY GLOVER C€0., Inc. Dog kemodies [ 118 West 31st Sirec:, New York with Shredded Wheat Bisâ€" cuit without kitchen worry or work. For breakfast heat the Biscuit in the oven to restore crispness and serve with hot milk. For lunch minutes you e-_x_paepaifli e acf * ‘=4~, me tiy, | My in life :v oulties impat o that fl time it wonld bring moto an untimely grave, besanse evary moment oi the dny and nigut i\ was slowiy 794 surely sapplug y Viality. But I {:wmd a cure, and I am ready to tell you wbout 14 Jtthi, Weite me promplly. _ L OS RiSst JUST ONE CENT It is a new way. It is something absoâ€" Will provide you and your family with the finest form of indoor recreation during the long winter evenâ€" ings. Our Famous Maisoncite Table Is mado specially for the home at a reasonable price. Caush or on terms. Independent Rabber Co., Ltd. The Soul of a Piaro is the Action. Insist on the WANTED "OTTOo H!igtLy PIANO ACTION Men & Girls BUFROUGHES & WATTS, L a. Mukers to H. M. the King 34 Church St., Toronto Steady Employment Good Wages MmERRITTON, oONnT epitt For All Departments itting made ’..2‘1!-5\ MISCELLANEOUS SEPD r~Tarors DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Mulled free to any address by the Author APPLY BoOK ON ,? y Your suffer» It

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