West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 31 May 1917, p. 7

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WHERE HEROES _ | ARE BURIED LAST HONORS FOR EVERY MAN FROM CANADA. How the Remains of the Fallen are Being Cared for and Plans for Future Memorials. m: mayhap in the very p@ selves, or roughly sepul« Man‘s Land, not even â€" graves are deep dugouts from this careful chron out on almost surveyed 1i ches, one s« brownâ€"stain plied by th the name, 1 Toâ€"day, right in among the trenâ€" ches, one sees the little, temporary brownâ€"stained wooden crosses SUpâ€" plied by the Government. Each bears the name, rank and battalion and the day of the death of the man who sleeps beneath it. These are the foremost graves. Farther back, but still quite close to the lines, up in the desolate Ypres salient and at other places, I have seen the little graveyards with their rows of white head boards. Regimential Designs. To these cemeteries, wherever hu-‘ manly possible, the dead are borne back from the trenches, wrapped in‘ the soldier‘s blanket, and laid to rest. Though, be the graves in the trenches and under fire, the padre comes, nevertheless, to read the service over them, while their comrades stand by with bowed heads. Even in those God‘s Acres which cling so close to the firing line is displayed the little touch of human sympathy. Here, for the most part, regimental crosses of distinct pattern adorn the â€" burial ground. 8,000 Canadian Graves. Farther back of the lines the coemeâ€" teries are more carefully tended than those within the shell area. Deputed by the British Red Cross, the chief gardener from Kew Gardens has been superintending the laying out and planting with flowers and shrubbery of these places. Of the thousands of Canadians who have cJied in France and Flanders some eight thousand graves have already been registered. & o o uk Many of these are in grOUPS, P0* some in isolated villages. I Deaths in United Kingdom. ; But, if Canadians who have died in France have been so carefully reâ€" membered, their comrades who sucâ€" eumbed in these islands in nowise have been overlooked. Those nine hundred and fifty graves of Canadian soldiers scattered over Britain and Ireland, be they on the edge of a great city or in some peaceful country churchyard, whose gnarled yews and ancient Norman church â€"recall the beautiful lines of Gray‘s Elegy, and where our soidiers lie near to crusadâ€" EERoee en t C e I ancient Norman church recall the | beautiful lines of Gray‘s Elegy, and | where our soiiers lie near to erusadâ€"| ing knight and cavalier, each resting-l place is faithfully set down. Hearing that Canada was about to purchase ground in cemeteries at her own expense, the War Office protest-‘ ed that all graves of overseas men who laid down their lives for the Emâ€" pire should be the especial care of the Mother Country. ~It was the least she eould do, and she would be glad and proud to do it. So, wherever Canaâ€" dians lie beneath the soil of Britain, whether in groups or singly, their kinsmen of the Ola Land will plant flowers and keep their memory fresh and green. Allies Must Compete With German EMiciency in Production. | According to statements made to high officials, for two years following the outbreak of the war Germany kept her factories running at full capacity, turning out great quantities of products not required by the war,| which were stored away to be dumpâ€"| ed upon the world‘s markets after; peace is declared. ‘ A remarkable statement made in this connection is that one German is worth two Americans as a unit of proâ€" duction. For cheapness of manufacâ€" ture, it is said, the Germans will comâ€" pete even with the Chinese. Conseâ€" quently, it is believed the Germans, defeated on land and sea, will turn to manufacture and trade as never beâ€" fore, and thus take revenge on their present enemies. ' PE Cns is Seaans im cmiote s oc ) C 4. omnmabaiibetemnniinit The Allies also are warned by : members of the French mission that| the "virtues" of the Germans must | not be overlooked. "Virtues" in this connection mean coâ€"operation, co-or-. dination, discipline, tenacity, ul{-! sacrifice. These qualities displayed by the Germans have won the generous admiration of their enemies. Bat American officials are given warning that their #ople must compete activeâ€" bviththo(‘nr-au‘mchonlimt AFTER THE WAR? groups, but Hard to Drop Meat? All depends on what you eat as a substitute. It is a good time to study "food value." You may be eating the wrong foods, the foods that cost most and give the least nutriment. Shredded Wheat Biscuit contains more real, bodyâ€"building nutriment, pound for pound, than meat, eggs or potatoes and costs much less. Two of these Biscuits with milk and a little fruit make a nourishing meal at a cost of a few cents. Make Shredded Wheat your "meat." Asatisâ€" fying breakfast on which to start the day‘s work. It is readyâ€"cooked and readyâ€"toâ€" eat. â€"Made in Canada. Foulard figures among the smart silks for summer this year, and the polkaâ€"dot pattern is especially favorâ€" ed. _ The bolero dress illustrated is developed in this silk, _ Highly up to date is this model with the short bolero and straight skirt attached to a yoke belt. McCall Pattern No. 7815, Ladies‘ Bolero Dress; round of instep length. In 6 sizes; 34 to 44 bust. Price, 20 cents, These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer or from The MeCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept, W. An Upâ€"toâ€"date Costumé Codfish for Bindings. l A bookbinder at Bremen is using codfish â€" skin as a substitute fori leather in bookbindings. The new material is said to give excellent re-% sults, and it has many advantages over sharkâ€"skin, which has frequentâ€" ly been used for .de luxe bindings. The strength and durability of the new material have been tested and approved by the Imperial Testing Ofâ€" fice. It is easy to work, literally untearable, and has the beautiful markings of snakeâ€"skin. Experimenting. It is surprising how ignorant girls can be at times. _ They should all know what a kiss means, but they often insist on having it repeated. Salt should never remain in anyâ€" tking rubber. _ It causes the rubber to rot. The Support You Need and Just Where You Need It. All the latest styles of corsets to suit any fAgure. 1t y§ur dealer cannot supply you. write us direct for catalogue and measuring form. Representatives Wanted BIAS CORSETS BIAS FILLED CORSETS THE LIFTVUP (Patented) They â€" Will Prove a Buiwark of . Strength To Our Empire. | Thrift is the handmaid of producâ€"| tion. Of what avail would lavish proâ€" duction be without the strong reâ€" straining power of thrift? A fightâ€" ing force in action, unsupported by reâ€" serves, is like a runner who exhausts himself by an illâ€"judged spurt, and when he most needs it finds his reâ€" serve strength gone. What a reserve force is to an army and reserved strength is to a runner the product of thrift is to the individual and the naâ€" tion in time of dire need. ml"‘-r-t;;'n“;fie end of Canada to the other our people, old and young, men, women, and even children, have begun Q -cémfiaign of production which is exâ€" hibiting to the world another phase of our invincible National Spirit. Now, with équal ardor, energy and determination, let us learn Vthg lgsson â€"and put it in practiceâ€"of individual, family, social and national thrift. Thrift in each of the varied and comâ€" plex ways in which we live and move and have our being; thrift in what we eat or drink; thrift in what we buy or sell; thrift in the things we use â€" the very clothes we wear. Thrift in the sunshine of prosperity, that we may be prepared and seasoned for the trying times that are bound to come when we will feel the pinch of adverâ€" sity EMV 7 Let the rich manâ€"as well as the poor manâ€"study and practice thrift. No selfish, miserly thrift however, but wise, timely and patriotic thrift, worthy of the Canadian nameâ€"that will prove a bulwark of strength to our Empire, our allies, and a staunch support to the fighting cause of jusâ€" tice and freedom. Even the Most Severe Cases Can be Cured by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Is your child fidgety, restless or irâ€" ritable ? Are the hands shaky or the arms jerky ? Does the face twitch ?. Do the legs tremble or drag ? These are signs of St. Vitus Dance, a nervous disease which is confined chiefly to young children, but which often affects highlyâ€"strung women, and sometimes men. _ St. Vitus Dance is caused by disordered nerves, due to poor blood, and is always cured by the use of Dr. Williams Pink Pills, which fill the veins ‘with new, rich, red blood, stengthenâ€" }mg the nerves, and thus drawing out \the disease. â€" Here is proof:â€"Mrs. lJohn A. Cumming, Lower Caledonia, N.S., says:â€""When my . daughter THRIFT AND PRODUCTION. Myrtle was about nine years of age she became afflicted with St. Vitus Dance. The trouble ultimately beâ€" came so bad that she could not hold anything in her hands, and had to be provement. One day a neigNnDor SaI0G she had read of a case of St. Vitus Dance cured by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and we decided to‘give this medicine a trial. _ By the time the \\hlrd box was used there was some improvement in her condition, and we I continued giving her the pills for about \a month longer when she was entirely \ cured, and has not since had the least \return of the trouble. fed like a child. She could not even walk across the floor without help. She was treated for some time by a physician, but did not show any im Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills can be obâ€" tained from any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Deliberate Plan of the Germans in Ocâ€" cupied Countries. Mr. J. P. Whitaker, an Englishman, who recently effected his escape from Roubaix, and arriving at Copenhagen, gives an interesting account of his reâ€" markable experiences behind the Gerâ€" man lines. |\ "Not a few of the mill owners were | ordered to weave cloth for the invad-: \ers, and on their refusal were sent | to Germany and held to ransom. Many | of the mill operatives, quite young | girls, were directed to sew sandbags !for the German trenches. They, too,‘l |\refused, but the Germans had theirg lown ways of dealing with what they \ regarded as juvenile obstinacy. They: | dragged the girls to a disused movâ€" | ing picture hall, and kept them there without food dnd water until their \will was broken. |\ "Barbarity reached its climax in the \so-called ‘deportations.‘ They were |\ just slave raids, brutal and undisâ€" "Enslavement is part of the deliberâ€" ate policy of the Germans in France. It began by the taking of hostages at the very outset of their possession of Rorbaix," said Mr. Whitaker. "A number of the leading men in the civic business life of the town were marked out and compelled to attendâ€"by turns at the town hall to be shot on the spot at the least sign of revolt among the townspeople," continued Mr. Whitaker. \ soâ€"calle | just s | guised. sulacu. _ "The procedure was this: The town was divided into districts. At three'i !o’clock in the morning a cordon of| troops would be drawn round a disâ€" , trictâ€"the Prussian Guard and espeâ€" | cially, I believe, the 69th Regiment, | played a great part in this diabolical crimeâ€"and officers and nanâ€"commisâ€" \lioned officers would knock at every door until the household was roused. ! A handbill, about octavo (noteâ€"paper) size, was handed in, and the officer ST. VITUS DANCGE POLICY OF ENSLAYVEMENT. it did not show any imâ€" One day a neighbor said Fly Poisons Attract BothFlies and Babies _ The one safe, surc, eatcher is ol which r‘u-lm-â€"tia’a fiy and embalms it and all the deadt gorms if curries in & thick coating of varnish. . (107 nd AW Made in Canada by THE 0. & W. THUM COM!’ANY._ Wn_ll_urville. Ont. passed on to : the next house. The handbill contained printed orders that every member of the household must rise and dress immediately, pack up a couple of blankets, a change of linen, a pair of stout boots, a spoon and fork, and a few other small articles and be ready for the second visit in half an hour. "When the officer returned the famâ€"| ily were marshalled before him, and he picked out those whom he wanted with a curt, ‘You will come, ‘And you," ‘And you.‘ Without even time for leaveâ€"taking the selected victims were paraded in the street and marched to a mill on the outskirts of the town. There they were imprisoned for three days without any means of communiâ€" cation with friends or relatives, all herded together indiscriminately and given but the barest modicum of food. Then, like so many cattle, they were sent away to an unknown fate. V . The steel helmets adopted by the \ French and British weigh from on ‘and a quarter to one and a half | pounds each. The materials used, says | the Sphere, consist of plates of steel \for the convex helmet and for the \ visor and neck piece, leather and cloth | for the lining, and aluminium for the | waving plaquettes that form the â€" springs between the lining and the inâ€" | terior surface of the steel. Special Sort of Material Needed the Purpose. E ns I_'lel'm ets are coated with a du“i wemsKpnâ€"me«* {mnns into Palestine. 1t 18 SHI0 IMO® | gray similar to that used on the 75â€"} SswAT HIM ! | these birds were prized by the Romans ml]l}metfe gun, which is d!fficult £0 | uesirus ‘both as food and for cockâ€"fighting. | distinguish even at a short distance. In | & he| | painting them, the manufacturers use | The Fly is a Constant M""’“ to the| | ‘a spraying process that has the a4â€"| > Health of the Family. ‘ | | vantage of being very rapid and of | Why, there‘s a fiy! Seems kind o‘ | | lg:l\dmfo “t‘;‘ inequality of 5;“'::“' T‘: good, doesn‘t it, %o hear it buuingl I n e permanence of the pain nd contentedly in that sunny| | |they suspgnd the helmets on bars in ";:vri(r)::lofv‘! It mean:' that spring ha);‘ Had ship‘; :nchor .ffil don m:'m:n;(::, ‘a gas drying oven. \come. You are glad to see it, just as and leg, and knee swelled up \ _ The lining consists of a cloth caP,| you welcome the crocuses and blueâ€" six days Leould not move it or get mm en | {)il’dfl But wait a minute 1)10‘9. I then started to use MINARD‘S h emng o rorns. \ Where did that fly come from? LINIMENT ;R‘:);:;‘é;m;gaé;‘;;g]?” ppwZ c cT2zss22 20 \Not up from Florida with Gentle Sisâ€"! "t%, | PA \ ter South Wind, as did Welcome Robâ€" | | _ N o A ‘in and Winsome Bluebird. No, it: i 4 Q /\‘ hatched out of a muck heap, and it | | / A |came right into the house without| ‘ i N w““, KÂ¥ t t wiping its feet. | ammmmmnmrmmmemmrmmmnmmmmmmmmmmmmmrmmmmenmmemmmeanmmm umm I A l o en it en M cexef ie gg uzh. 100\ ncb rathiadiiar Amantihar The rolledâ€"steel plate has to be supâ€" ple enough to be worked cold, as heatâ€" ing would lessen its resisting qualiâ€" ties. That requirement compels the manufacturers to use a special steel obtained from very pure castings that are free from phosphorus or sulphur. American Address: Grand Rapids, Mich. | karesd MAKING STEEL HELMETS. \\"I’;‘c Ey ’\\â€",///b‘)/_b\\;,:’;"__\\z //\ | N 7 gcoNOoMy: . wWITH ) GOO0D LIVING Grapeâ€"Nuts is excellently atâ€" tained by aci,ding to the daily menu a ration o{ Goodness gy â€"Ease festion â€"â€" ent Flav Goodnessâ€"Enerâ€" gyâ€"Ease of Diâ€" festion-Excel- ent Flavorâ€"are all found in this truly remarkable wheat and barley for the | io which is fixed a segment of black glazed leather cut in a particular form. One sheepskin provides about five linings; for making three million helmets about six hundred thousand skins have been used. The lining proâ€" jects a little below the helmet, so that the metal in no place comes into conâ€" tact with the weaser‘s head. XEW READINGS OF OLD WORLD. Out of Present Turmoil Will Come a Future of Joy and Peace. { Here are a few pertinent questions.' Is it possible that Germany‘s infallible efficiency as crystallized in her army ; is doomed to failure? Will England‘s insuperable navy be conquered by the, ' EsE ts ue This c . @1 PMta i w eitnt Ees on ces t P submarine? â€" Will the France of | "fashion and frivolity" be known hereafter as the land of sobriety and | heroic endurance? Will the United .: States, prodigal son in the family of ; nations, learn to save, that it may feed the exhausted world from its exâ€" uberance? Will Russia, its monstrous autocracy dead, set a luminous ex-' ample of democraey ? Will rival naâ€"| tions join & league of human liberty ? Will you and I forgo luxury and selâ€" fishness to practice the Golden Rule? | These questions are uppermost in | men‘s minds, and events day unto | day will answer them. The only one \we can answer now is the last; the others will be answered when and in the way God sees best. _ There is something noew under the sun every. \time is rises. History is in a fluid state. So are/men‘s opinions. War itself cannot éfface the record and the | promise of#/human life upon this conâ€" \fused apd busy planet. The eye of | faith serenely looks beyond the hideâ€" ioup‘{\qlrmoil to the age that must arâ€" |rive when the law of love shall be ! paramount and the character of an inâ€" | dividual or of a people shall be seen ‘and knc«en for what it is. He Knows Just Why He Admires Them Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Cured Mrs. Mercredi. AYROROLIOCNICE P PP PPRIITT ‘ One heard the other day of a letter sent from Melbourne to Salisbury She Had Been I!I Two Years and Could \Plain to one of our splendid Anzacs, Find No Cure. _ That‘s Why Her | says an English writer. _ The man to Husband Is Enthusiastic Over Dodd‘s ; whom it was addressed had gone to Kidney Pills. .France, and th.e letter followed him. * But, meanwhile, he had been woundâ€" Fort Smith, â€" Alberta, _ May 21st | ed, and it went on to Havre. There it (special)â€"Among all the thousands of | was discovered that he had been disâ€" Canadians who praise Dodd‘s Kidney lchnrged, and had actually gone back Pills for the good they have done there to Australia. â€" Away went the letter is no more fervent admirer of the back to the Antipodes, and the man great kidney remedy than Isidore Merâ€" | and the letter arrived home almost credi, of this place. isimultaneously. That letter had "Yes, it always gives me pleasure to | travelled thirty thousand miles, at \cav a sand word for Dodd‘s Kidney | least. "Yes, it always gives me pleasure to say a good word for Dodd‘s Kidney Pills," Mr. Mercredi says. "My wife was sick for two years. We could not find anything to restore her to health. Then we found a pamphlet telling of several persons who had been cured by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. "My wife used just two boxes of them and she is perfectly well, to the great surprise of all our neighbors. They can tell you the same thing. I cannot recommend Dodd‘s Kidney Pills enough." Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are the greatest of all remedies. for weak, suffering women. They cure the kidneys. The kidneys are the root of nineâ€"tenths of women‘s ills. Mormer, cured kidneys mean pure clear blood all over the body. That means good health everyâ€" where e Had Been I!I Two Years and Could Find No Cure. ‘That‘s Why Her Husband Is Enthusiastic Over Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis. WAE ns COn2 o And its mate will go back to the: muck heap to lay more eg@s, and by the time the hot days come the two will have some millions of descendâ€" ants. And all of them will come into the house without wiping their feet, and they will leave filth and disease germs in your food. Spoils the roâ€" mance, doesn‘t it? The fly is your enemy. Kill it! Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. Editorial Rfysium. ‘ "Fellow dropt in’he office the other day and ordered the paper, and we were pleased. Said it was a good paper, and we were glad. Said it was more than worth the money to any man of intelligence, and we were tickâ€" led, Said it was the mainstay of the town, and we were sgupertickled. Said it was the greatest booster and . the most reliable townâ€"builder and d}velâ€" oper in this whole community, and we | yelled with joy. Paid for his paper, \"053 0 wa elid wently to the floor in oper in this whole community, and we yelled with joy. Paid for his paper, andâ€"we slid gently to the floor in blissful unconsciousness. Nature had reached its limit. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Baking soda gives instant reliel 10| 19a‘t expect to keep your iri a burn or scald, Applied either wet or ;; you give them away. _ dry to the burned part immediutely,‘ eetscicrcates the sense of relief is ml‘lul. Ask for Minard‘s and take no oiher. Baking soda gi_vesjngtgnt relief to ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO Between Britain and Argentine garding Wheat Embargo. ‘The diplomatic quarrel between Arâ€" gentine and Britain over Argentine‘s wheat embargo has been settlgd._ of Argentine‘s wheat embargo was inâ€" stituted because of apprehension of her Government officials that the tempting pwices offered for export trade would drain the republic of grain. The crop just harvested was a disappointment, and it was feared the nation faced a serious situation. Mrs. J. A. Lagace, Ste. Perpetue, |â€" Que., writes:â€""Baby‘s Own Tablets | 7 have been of great value to me and I\l‘ would strongly recommend them to :‘; other mothers." Thousands of other | ag mothers say the same thing. â€" They | * have become convinced through actual (= use of the Tablets that nothing can | _ equal them in regulating the bowels l ‘and stomach; driving out constipation / and indigestion; breaking up colds £E ‘and simple fevers; expelling worms ( ‘and curing colic. The Tablets are sold ./ !by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 u |gents a box from The Dr. Williams®‘ | C Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. | BABY‘S OWN TABLETS OF GREAT VALUE BRITANNIA RULES THE WAVES Post Office System Still Marvellous in Warâ€"Times In these warâ€"times the Post Office is still one of the wonders of the age. The way the mails still go to and fro from the ends of the earth is a wonâ€" derful certificate to Britain‘s command of the oceans. excl Even the mistakes of the Post Office are wonderful. A letter addressed to "The Registrar, County Court, Bromâ€" ley," some months ago did not arrive withia any reasonable time, and was given up for lost. _ It has lately turnâ€" ed up, with various Indian Postmarks on it. â€" It had been delivered to the Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s on it. _ It had been Registrar in Bombay. AMICABLE ADJUSTMENT. In the New Testament the cock is mentioned in reference to the denial of the Lord and indirectly in the "cockâ€" crowing." _ There is no mention in the Old Testament of the cock or hen. These domestic birds were known to £ EWV MPDMIMRTCTC CCC the early Greeks and Romans and probably were introduced by the Roâ€" mans into Palestine. It is said that these birds were prized by the Romans both as food and for cockâ€"fighting. After the Movies Seagulls are undoubtedly weather prophets. Dwellers on the coast have noticed that when certain winds beâ€" gin to blow the gulls collect in large flocks and fly to the fields or circ‘e high over the land, screaming all the while uneasily. _ After such demâ€" onsi;ati;ns it is said that a rainstorm is certain to follow. if an articie NA ironing, wet in c where the bright directly on it.~ mark entirely out. MONEY ORDERS Remit by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or stoien, you get your money back. and smart. Give your 6 and smart. Give your Myes as ©UCRU!Z U omaglty. care as your Teoth and with the same reg ularity. Care for Them. You Cannot Buy New Eyes: Hold at Drog and Optical Stores or by Mail. As« Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago, ior Free Boc» article has been scorched in , wet in cold water and lay the bright sunshine will fall r on it.â€" This will take the Keeping Your to keep your friends Murine is for Tired Wyes. Red Byes â€" Bore l‘u «â€" ATTTCL gccmae ts Two Eyes for â€"ROREORTTOD _0 Ciea‘Tren Muripe is a Favorive Preat~ ment for eyes that feel ty yes as much of your loriDg U un tha came TeguIsFICYâ€" â€"Restores. a Lifetime Certain chemists are endeavoring to adapt the horse chestnut to the human dietary. The nuts are more than half starch and sugar, with some protein and fat, and are nu‘zitions. Their value chiefly depends on the eliminaâ€" tion of the bitter elements and the irâ€" ritating saponinâ€"like glucosides. l)no[-‘l'l‘di.u&l&'u NH Offices for sale in towns. _ The most useful of all businesses. Full application to Wilson P pany, 73 Adelaide Street, BICTCLEB. PWY PERRTE s T t Â¥ Hand. $12.00 up.. Send for special price list â€" Varsity Cycle Works, 413 Enading Ave.. Toronto. smm 00 Cvas CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC., internal and external, cured with» nut pain by our home treatment. _ Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. LAmited. Collingwood. Ont. 1 H ].’u‘usn,\'. 5P 9 der Touring { and starter, good at the price, $30( We only sell used cars after the p! ch@ser bas had a demonstration . a satisfied himself of the runnmfl qua tles of the car he is buying. Call at © showroom next time you are in Toro: and let our salesinen show you any our used cars and give you a demonst tion. THE DOMINION AUTOMOBILE 00..‘ 146â€"150 Bay Street, Toronto, Ont. R PÂ¥ det. _A uitable for You say to the drug store man, "Give me a small bottle of freezone." This will cost very little but will positively remove every hard or soft corn or calâ€" lus from one‘s feet. A few drops of this new ether comâ€" pound applied directly upon a tender, wching corn relieves the sopreness inâ€" stantly, and soon the entire corn or callus, root and all, dries up and can be lifted off with the fingers. | This new way to rid one‘s feet of lcornc was introduced by a Cincinnati man, who says that freezone dries in ‘l moment, and «imply shivels up the eorn b&r callus without irritating the surrounding skin Don‘t let father die of infection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, but clip this out and make him try it. If your druggist hasn‘t any freezone tell him to order a small bottle from his wholesale drug house for you. NEWSPAFPERS FOR AUTOMOBILES FPOR USSELI 2 | BOOK ON DoG DISEASES is And How to Feed NX Mulled free to any nddrcss by M" the Author Planeer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. Der Remedios | 118 West 31st Street, New York cLP »s BOILER "Clean All" compour» Tel. Gorrard 3650 30 McGee Bt. * For r‘-‘)nr FPeed Waters Iyclone Shaking and Pumpiag Câ€"ate Bars fom all requiremonts Canadian Steam Boiler Equipment The Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIGEL:‘ PIANO ACTION 23 PCOR TOTEY EPC TTT P TE OPcG):lnder Touring Car, in good order. â€" Tires in good shape. was painted this year and looks . Price $350, NN.b PASSENGER, 4 .C\'I.IN- (fff ® 1204000124089 ing Car. Has electric Nigh tw ¢.o‘% thes, and is a bargain 10. ING NEWS AND JOB sale in good Ontario st useful and interesting es. Full information on Wilson Publishing Comâ€" Je Street, Toronto. ~% PASSENGER CABRIOâ€" very handsome closed car i doctor. Price $1,009. ISSUE No. 21â€"‘17. _ Price $1,000. cars after the purâ€" demonstration and the running qualiâ€" ving. Call at our m awre in Toronto chow you any of you a demonstraâ€" vipment 0.. Limit »d

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