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Durham Review (1897), 16 Aug 1917, p. 7

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est Told PEOPLB AST urel Before frying bacon put the rashers into boiling water for two or three minutes. _ They plump out to twice their original thickness, and all chance is removed of their being too salt. A good corn harvest is indicated in the United States. This should be enâ€" covuraging news for the live stock men. Not a Single Soldier On Guard Outâ€" side British War Office. Probably there is no other War Ofâ€" fice like the Imperial one in the world, at least, in one respectâ€"there is not a soldier on guard either outside or inside the whole building. The task of keeping order is left enâ€" tirely in the hands of the Metropolitan policemen. _ Every stranger who enâ€" ters is asked his business by a conâ€" stable, fills in an inquiry form under the guidance of a constable, and, when he leaves, delivers that form, which serves him as a pass up to another constable. If he requires direction inside the building he is put in charge of a little girl apparently fresh from school, who takes him to the room he requires. _ Her only mark of officialâ€" dom is a brown overall with a small crown on each point of the collar. W1 abetted the cause of Uncle Sam‘s foes by exporting their domestic produce and their imported goods to Germany, will very rightly and justly be disâ€" criminated against by the board at Washingion entrusted with the adâ€" ministration of the embargo. Few seem to realize the full extent ol the importance of this sensational proclamation of an embargo by Presiâ€" lent Wilson. It is not merely an ecoâ€" momic measure, as might appear at Arst sight. It is something far more han that. It is in fact a demand made ipon Holland and the Scandinavian cingdoms that they should finally de ‘lare themselves in the present wvatr ind should decide to throw in their ot either with the Central Powers of vith those of the Entente. °C GIRL GUIDES, NOT TROOPS Great Britain a long ago have put breaches of faith a the part of the Dutch kingdoms an down on their seah vame as a factor in t which has been un thereby. _ For if the concerned had lived : gagements and to the strict neutrality Germ: ago have been brough through economic stre n V 0 °S COntrol, by means of ® ing fleets, access to the y _of Holland, Denmark, Sweâ€" n and Norway, and have only perâ€" mitted seaborne produce and goods from the United States, from the Britâ€" ish Empire, and from other countries, allied and neutral, to reach Dutch and Scandinavian ports in return for & solemn pledge by the Scandlnnhn‘ and Dutch Governments that the: freight in question was destined for exclusively home consumption, and , that none of l? would under any cir-; cumstances be resold to Germany. These promises and agreements have been violated with much the same efâ€" frontery that Germany displayed in treating as a worthless scrap of paper the guarantee of Belglum‘s neutrality to which she had subscribed. Neutral Pledges Violated. Thanks to this, the blockade off the, German coast has lost much of its value as a factor in the present war,' which has been unduly prolonged“ thereby. _ For if the neutral powers." concerned had lived up to their enâ€"| Al Holland WHAr "ng ports at all, will be allowed to the neutrals until first of all the rements of the , people of the d States and th‘n those of her have been adequately supplied. means that there will be very left for the neutrals And in & with them a preference will be i for those neutrals, especially in | America, who have shown a dis-' m to refrain from trading with emy of the United States, that say, Germany, while neutrals | is Holland, Denmark, and above | The @20 nave put an end to these ches of faith and of nevitrality on part of the Scandanivian and h kingdoms and would have shut 1 on their seaborne trade, closing «s to their ports, had it not been heir consideration for the United s and their desire to refrain from oppressive interference with the time commerce of America. But : President Wilgon took up as in mal honor bound, the gauntlet so essly and insanely thrown at his by the Kaiser, the situation has‘ and has exchanged the role of a al for that of a belligerent. That _ Great Britain and France reâ€" d from doing out of consideraâ€" or the United States while she till neutral President Wilson has with the full approval of the can nation, undertaken to acâ€" ish by means of his proclamaâ€" f embargo. Neutrals Must Choose. ording to the terms of the latter )f the necessaries of life, in fact, ‘land and the Three Scandinay m Are Now in a Grave e Dilemma: United States has become one Powers of the Entente that are x for the emancipation of the d world from the military and iic terrorism of the Hohenzolâ€" u nad lived up to their enâ€" ts and to the obligations of utrality Germany would long : been brought to her knees Allies control, by means sulls __ who have aided and and France would i For years he was assistant to the | | president of the Canadian Pacific Railâ€"! | way, Lord Shaughnessy. He has |fought Indians, is a veteran with | ihonors of the South African expedi-’ tion, has engineered road building | where Indians had to be killed as reâ€" | gularly as ties had to be laid in tho‘ ,iprogress; but he is moreâ€"he is .I | dilettante journalist, a devotee of art, | | A thrillingly interesting man is | Colonel Dennis. He is the most verâ€" satile individual I have ever met. If 'one were suddenly to inquire in Otâ€" tawa, ‘"Who is Dennis ?" one might get back the typically British answer, "Who is he not ?" , Colonel Dennis says that there are 157,000 Canadians in Chicago. _ Calâ€" | gary, with a total population of 60,000, ;sent 16,000 soldiers to the front. ; What then might Chicago yield ? There are about 350,000 British subâ€" 'jects here, and some sixtyâ€"five St. 'Georxe and Maple Leaf societies. | There is no shortage of material hereâ€" labout for the British recruiting misâ€" sion. t I Captain Kenney is credited with bo-j ing a bit of a bearcat on the science | of recruiting. But he was lmmensely‘ impressed with the policies and ideas | expressed by the distinguished Cana-l dapn man of war. Suuylll 9 ; When two belligerent parties shake hands there are only two things which the referee or third party can sayâ€" either "Take your corners" or "Bless you, my children." I said neither. But I held my breath, for it was an impressive moâ€" ment, the formal enactment in Chiâ€" cago of immortal history; the physiâ€" cal union of the fighting strength of two great nations. And the spirit of patriotic coâ€"operation in the common cause of justice sanctified the alliâ€" "*There‘s a Reason" Civision of the Britist Mission, recently clasped Captain F. R. Kenney, _ manding~" the recruiting Northern Iilinois for States army. . You wouldn‘t exactly call it hands across the sea, because Canada is only across a lake; but Canada is part of England, which is a long way from South State Street, says a Chicago writer. Anyway, what I‘m driving at is this : 7 Lieutenant Colonel J. S. Dennig, ofâ€" Acer commanding the _ western division of the British Recruiting W hn alits c d ts NE d L 1 Every tablé should have its daily ration of Grapeâ€"Nuta vital mineral elements, so richly provided by Nature in '.ceoe grains. A crisp, delicious food, containing :the entire nutriment of whole wheat and barley, including the The Physical Union of the Fighting Strength of Two Nations. You wouldn‘t exactly call it hands should endâ€"as well as beginâ€"with a perfect food, say â€" +« Grapeâ€"Nuts Wheat Biscuit is all food and in a form that is easily digested. Jt is 100 per cent. whole wheat. For breakâ€" fast, dinner or supper it takes the place of meat, eggs and potatoes. You don‘t know how easily you can do without meat or potatoes until you try it. Delicious with sliced bananas, berries, or other fruits, and milk. Made in Canada. st: HANDS acRoss TtH€E BORDER A Perfect Day with cream. «_ Shredded o ’ Up to the 1st of June Great Britain 8 |had lost approximately 9 per cent. of e‘iher oceanâ€"going tonnage of ships of © ) 1600 tons and over. _ On May 1, acâ€" * | cording to Lord Curzon, she had more ",‘than 15,000,000 tons of shipping in ~| vessels of this unit and over. She could afford to lose 1,000,000 tons per: month for the next six months and still have 9,000,000 tons left if she did: not build a single new ship in the meantime. Paper clubs for policemen, practicalâ€" ly indestructible, have been invented by an Englishman. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper,. . main open. +.i1s program, it must be rememberâ€" ed, does not take into consideration the huge merchant marine project, of the United States, which will eventâ€" vually add 3,000,000 tons of new steel shipping and 2,000,000 tons of wooden. Thus, if the U. S. vessels are ravaged by submarines at the same rate as the British, there will still be immunity against any permanent impairment. The food lanes of the world will reâ€" But England can easily buildâ€"and is buildingâ€"500,000 tons a year. She can gain a million additional tons by altering the soâ€"called loadline of her ships. Likewise, she can further supplement this tonnage by convertâ€" ing her passenger liners into cargo vessels. Looking at it from another angle, if Germany persists in her ruthless subâ€" marine warfare at the highest rate of destruction that has been registered since February 1, it would take 166 weeks, or more than three years, to wipe out British shipping, again on the assumption that her shipyards[ would be idle all that time. | ’ At the outset of the ruthless submaâ€" rine campaign, Viceâ€"Admiral Capelle announced that 1,000,000 tons _ a month would bring England to her knees. _ It is generally coneded that, in the last ten weeks, the submarine has done its worst because the subâ€" mersible fleet has been increased by the addition of the supersubmarine. Yet the average loss per month has never exceeded 450,000 tons of Briâ€" tish shipping, and it was John Bull‘s boats the Germans have set out to eliâ€" minate. | on the answer to which }linjg”eâ€"s“t-lvz.e. very fate of world freedom. _ Let us look at the facts. One of the Most Vital Questions in the World Toâ€"Day. How long can Allied shipping withâ€" stand the hideous submarine sap at its tonnage? This is the question THE GREAT TONNAGE PROBLEM You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail post paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. I MAKE YOURSELF STRONG In that region various volcanic fisâ€" sures exist, hot with escaping steam. From using this to operate a small horizontal engine came the idea of usâ€" ’ing it on a larger scale. Borings 'were therefore made in the vicinity and a plentiful supply of steam with fgood pressure tapped. Because of its impregnation with boracic acid it is }not used directly, but employed to vaporize pure water. This is used to; run a plant which furnishes power tol five nearâ€"by towns. | Now that volcanic heat has actually | been made commercially profitable wei may look to see efforts made to utilize | this power source elsewhere, Aetna | and Vesuvius may yet be yoked to a, municipal lighting plant. Italy‘s lack of coal renders experiments in"‘ this direction unusually valuable. ‘ Natural Supply of Steam Tapped to Run Small Engine. Voleanic heat is actually being used to run an electric power plant furnishâ€" ing electricity to a number of towns near Volterra, in southâ€"western Tuseâ€" any, according to an interesting arti-’ cle in‘ the Annalist. e Bm css d 3 €20 C casional enthusiastic Broadwayite, a fraconteur of modest but fascinating personality. _ Robust and mighty of stature, he rings with military melody all over. snappy afterâ€"dinner talker, an HARNESSING YOLCANOES registeredj Cultivate corn as soon after rains take 166| as the soil has dried sufficiently. Keep years, to ’| the soil surface well stirred and light. again on This lets rain soak in quickly, thus shipyards| preventing waste, and it keeps the :soil warm. Keep all weeds down, as uildâ€"and | they rob the corn plants of moisture rar. She| needed to make corn kernels instead 1 tons hy | of weed seed. % ‘ Montreal, May 29, ‘09 Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited, Yarmouth, N. 8. Gentlemen,â€"I beg to let you know that I have used MINARD‘S LINTâ€" MENT for some time, and I find it the best I have ever used for the joints and muscles. Yours very truly, THOMAS J. HOGAN. The Champion Clog and Pedesâ€" tal Dancer of Canada. Paper shirts have been ‘issued to Japanese soldiers as a protection against cold. . ¢ Regularity in milking time is one of the most important elements in keeping up the flow. MONEY ORDERS Send a Dominion Express Money Order. They are payable everyâ€" where. A little flour spread over the top of cakes before they are iced will prevent the icing from running off. l The C.N.R. has made exceptional arrangements for handling the Farm | Laborers traffic, and is introducing llunch counter cars, which will permit | Excursionists to be comfortably fed in | transitâ€"a welcome relief from the |jostling and vexatious delays of staâ€" | tionâ€"lunch counter service. _ Special | through trains will be run from Montâ€" | real, Ottawa and Toronto to Winnipeg on excursion dates, to be announced shortly. The equipment will consist of electricâ€"lighted colonist cars and [lunch-counter cars, together with special accommodation for women. \ Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. Spraying with Bordeaux mixture and destroying diseased parts will check the spread of celery blight. All particulars from nearest C.N.R. Agent, or General Passenger Depts., Toronto, Ont., and Montreal, Que. Nana 4.., api___o 3 ___ RCCS N0 same regularity. Care for Them. You Cannot Buy New Eyes! Bold at Drug and Optical Stores or by Mail. Ask Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, ior Free Boog TT and smart. G! ur Chre &3 »our Teoth and _ The best way to the Harvest Fields of Western Canada is by the Canadian Northern Railway, whose lines serve the newest and most productive disâ€" tricts of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. These run for the most part to the northward, where experiâ€" ence has shown that crops are least variable, which means a consequently steady demand for labor and corresâ€" pondingly high average wages. After the Movies "No doubt. Thanks for the suggesâ€" tion: I‘ll send for them." you Too polite to openly remonstrate, they both threw out many hints, but all in vain. _ "Don‘t you think," reâ€" marked the husband one day, "that your wife and children must miss A countryman journeyed to London to visit some relatives and to see the sights. Fascinated by the. metroâ€" polis, he remained until patience on the part of his hosts, a married couple, had ceased to be a virtue. : | More little ones die during the hot weather than at any other time of the _ year. . Diarrhoea, dysentery, cholera infantum and stomach troubâ€" ‘les come without warning, and when ’a medicine is not at hand to give promptly the short delay too freâ€" quently means that the child has passed beyond aid. Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets should always be kept in homes where there are young children. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if the trouble comes suddenly the prompt use of the Tablets will cure the baby. ‘The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ‘BABY‘S GREAT DANGER | DURING HOT WEATHER ISSUE No. 32â€"‘17, 9n HARVESTERS READ THIS ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO Mistaken Hint. raa o D CCR E120C PCR Red Wyes â€" Sore Eyosâ€" Granulated Eyelids, fiuu â€"Rotreshes â€" R e storos. Murine!s a ruorlm’l‘sut- mont for eyes that feel dry %yu &s much of your iovln. d with the same regularity. Two Eyes for a Lifetime Murine is for Tired Wyes. im t C ETE LLL NOC ZR AOPRAMTURECM, HRU Wbdcad | who wear glasses, will be glad to ‘now | that Doctors and F{le Specialists now | mgree there is rea ope and help for them. Many whose eyes were talllns say they have had their eyes restore and many who once wore glussos say they have thrown them away. One | man a:&ys, after laplng it: "I was alâ€" | most blind. Could not see t? read :t | all, Now I can read everything wit -‘ | out my glasses, ahd mx eyes do. not | hurt any r‘nore. At n!{ t }he{ would | fsln dreadfully. Now.t e{ ecl fine all | the time. It was like a miracle to me." | A lady who used it says: "The atmosâ€" | phere seemed hazy with or without | flaues, but after using this prescripâ€" ’ ion for fifteen days everything seems | clear. I can read even fine print withâ€" out glasses." Another who usod it _ says: ‘"I was bothered with eye strain " caused by overworked, tlreg eyes which induced ferce heafacheu. have worn \ flnuel or several years, both for disâ€" ance and work, and without them I could not read my own name on an envelope or the tyfewrmnioon the . machine before me. 1 can do both now, and have discarded my long distance filmu altogether. I can count the uttering leaves on the trees across the gt‘reet now, which for several years ve looked like a dim green blur to ru. I cannot express my joy at what t _has done for me." It is believed that thousands who wear glasses can now dtsinrd them in a reuoublr time, and mu m-«‘- more will be able to strengthen their eyes so as to be spared the trouble and exâ€" pense of ever getting glasses. Dr. Beck, an eye specialist of nearly twenty years practice, says: "A patient ame to me who was suffering from Blephal:i‘fil:, l(u'tlgull with all the concomitant symptoms, as mornili agiglutination of the lids, chronig gonâ€" Boston, Mass.â€"Victims of oye strain &nd other eye weaknesses, and those Doctors and Eye Sp;cialist;â€"jgree § That Bonâ€"Opto Strengthens Eyesight 50% _ In a Week‘s Time In Many Instances A friend who is a nurse asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound. I began taking it that very day for I was suffering a great deal. It has already done me more good than the hospital. To anyone who is suffering as I was my advice is to stop in the first drugâ€"store and get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound before you %) home."‘â€"Mrs. W. C. Brown, 2844 W. 12th St., Cleveland, Ohio, and stayed four weeks but when I came home I would faint just the same and had the same pains. esn d a ‘*k= ,'u.é»' $s "e p 39 g > & tsX . Cleveland, Ohio.â€"*"For years T suf: : fered so sometimes iIt seezlrcxled as thougl(:‘ I couid not stan """""m" it any longer. It s 6i wes all in my lower . * ~Sam l ay/||forgans. At times I | [ we EB7 !||Pcould hardly walk, | ul ~ 1as for if I stepped on a | ap a * little stone I would | & J almost faint. One | | Iisal) 24 \| dey 1 did faint and | se «t ~,|my husband w as | iÂ¥ wÂ¥ L2 .| sent for and the docâ€" | o. .. ahs ] tor came. Iwas taâ€" | en l 2 id !:et_x to the hospital | No Reliefâ€"Mrs. Brown Finâ€" ally Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable FOUR WEEKS IN HOSPITAL Minard‘s A Californian.has patented a hamâ€" mer to which nails are fed from paper strips, enabling a man to nail laths at many times his usual speed. This pattern may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. yav For summer ou‘t'i;gs, the thing you’ need is a linen frock. It may be pink,. or blue, or green, as you please, but by | ’all means you want it cut on very| smart lines. The pretty model shown | above is in oneâ€"piece style and slips! on over the head like many of the| latest designs. _ McCall Pattern No.| 7884, Misses‘ Oneâ€"piece Dress (suit-[ able for small women)*; in two lengths.| In 4 sizes; 14 to 20 years. Price, 20] cents. & se Préscription You Can Have Filled and Use at Home. Liniment Cures Garget in Cows A Useful Model Compound,. , Dr, Conner says: "My cyes w bad condition qwing 10 ue uP P VVV Paph Potcgih ctesasts Arat c 20 is BB ic as a tonic for the eyeball itself 3 vision is rendered more acute, hen the number of cases of discard glasses." DAnâ€"UOplO, J always instil Bonâ€"Opto after removal of foreign bodies and apply it locally to all burns, ulcers :nd l:”:!': on thtei oy;::lt‘l o‘; the lids or its therapeutic e = ing the lids of ‘l_emtlo,n“:.n'd m hP CA 2 c e td y. se escaped the surgeon‘s knife by the tlme?y use of your oollnlum., The tightened external muscles yielded to the soothlnf and anodyne effects of Bgn-omo. _always instil Bonâ€"Opto Dr, Smith, an oculist of wide oxrefl- ence, says: "I have treated in &r vate puchce a number 8( serious opthalmic diseases with Bonâ€"Opto and am able to report ultimate recovery in both acute and chronic cases. Mr, B. cfme to my oflice suffering with an infected eye. The condition was so serious that an cperation for enucleastion seemed imâ€" perative. Before resorting to the operative treatment I ‘?rucrlbod Bonâ€" Opto and in 24 hours the secretion had lessened, inflammatory lrmptxms beâ€" gan to subside, and in seven days the eye wa, cured and retained its norâ€" mal vision. Another case of extreme couver,er:t‘ strablnmt'u _(cross eyes) C DL ECCC TW TD. en eW BC -g-enxthoned her oyollt:lt (hu she was able to dlsponr wi her dlltqnco lasses and her headacho and neuralgia Eett her. In this instance I should n{ er eyosight was improved 100?. have since verified the efficacy of this treatment in & number of cases and have seen the eÂ¥ell¢ht lmErovo from 25 to 75 per cont in a remarkably Tbo" time. J can say it wo?l ?oro quickly than a.n{ other remedy I have preâ€" scribed for the eyes." this treatment and ¢;wt only overcame her distressing condition, but strange and amazing as it may seem, #o junctivitis and ephlghon.. Her ‘eyes when not congested had the dull, sufâ€" fused expression common to such cases. Having run out of her medicine a friend suggested Bonâ€"Opto. She used this treatment and not only overcame KW Gana.) 2 a20_, 2~" 4 PEcent discourse Dr:â€"E. Sauer, a Boston physician who has | studied widely both in this country and | in great European medical institutions i said: "If you were to make an actual |blood test on all people who are ill you would probably be greatly astonished at fthe exceedingly large number who lack | jron and who are i1 for no other reason ' than the lack of iron. The moment iron | is supplied all their multitude of dangerâ€" | ous symptoms disappear. Without jron |the blood at once loses the power to change food into living tissue and thereâ€" fore nothing you eat does you any good; you don‘t get the strength out of it. Your food merely passes through your system like corn through a mill with the [rollers so wide apart that the mill can‘t | grind. As a result of this continuous !glood and nerve starvation, people beâ€" | come generally weakened, nervous and ‘all run‘ down and frequently develop all sorts of conditions. One is too thin; anâ€" other is burdened with unhealthy fat; some are so weak they can pardly walk; some think they have dyspepsia, kidney or liver trouble; some can‘t sleep at night, others are sleepy and tired all day ; some fussy and irritable; some skinny and bloodless, but all lack physical ower and endurance. In such cases it P- worse than foolishness to take stimuâ€" lating medicines or naracotic drugs, which only whip up your fagging vital powers for the moment, maybe at the exâ€" ‘ pense of your life later on. No matter . what any one tells you, if you are not strong and well you owe it to g':eurself to make the following test. how long you can work or how far you can in many instancesâ€"Persons suffered untold agony for years ¢ ing for nervous weakness, stc liver or kidney disease or some ailment when their real troubl lack of iron in the bland._14... . | Let folks step on |after; wear shoes a s like, for corns will n electric sparks of pé according to this Cin« He says that a few | called freezone, appli This drug dries at once and simply shrivels up the corn or callus without even irritating the surrounding tissue. A smaH bottle of freezone obtained at any drug store will cost very little but will positively remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one‘s foot. If your druggist hasn‘t stocked this new drug yet, tell him to get a small bottle of freezone for you from his wholesale drug house. Doctor Says Nuxated tron Will Increase Strength of Delicate _ _People 100% in Ten Days ‘16 says that a few drops of a drug called freezone, applied directly upon a tender, aching corn, instantly reâ€" lieves soreness, and soon the entire corn, root and all, lifts right out. w 2 ty > TY ne are so weak they canpgurdlylwnrk; e think they have dyspepsia, kidney llverhtrouble; , some can‘t sleep at uPy PAmpoeu‘ PrasoAd i ' 200 New York hrnal| aug c 2lCf . SCCavem . Ein X/ internal and external, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. T z_ St MTIEC, CoH "neu l ." s_ NN NEWS AND JOB K.; Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. ‘The most useful and interesting Of all businesses. Full information on &pplication to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 Adelaide Street, Toronto. rvetindiliindndiselsnnndanasornent Add a few bread crumbs to the scrambled eggs for breakfast; they improve the dish and make the eggs go further. L es PROFIT-MAKING NEWS8 h__qmc__e_. for sale in #« cause is one of the serious â€"];x;‘l;le:; that face the dairy farmer. _ The sustained production of milk is well known to depend largely on the comfort and contentment of the dairy cow. . Flies not only cause direct loss of blood and poisoning from their bites, but also keep stock from feeding properly. The loss of milk from this 1 Cotmarsa s 2 20 enammmmmmmmene YANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC # Antamnal | 5.04 Leutiiall s NEWSPAPERS nervous weakness, stomach, kidney digease or some other AS _ slep on your feet hereâ€" ear shoes a size smaller if you corns will never again send s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. n their real t;z;agle';vn in the bloodâ€"How to tell. NISCELLANBOUS greatly astonished at "fe number who lack 1 for no other reason n. ‘The moment iron of pain thi-ough you? Cincinnati authority md . buyole ersons have years doctorâ€" t out. and simply Y . 4 O THSUt E!ABSe8, I can highy recommenG it in case of weak, watery, aching, smerting, itching, burning eyes, red lide, blurred vision og for eyes infamed from exposure to smoke, sum, ‘dust or wind, !tkoneoft&nqlnrpflpu!-‘ u-uxtoelmmukom-uumm use in almost every family," Bonâ€"Opto is not & the n‘: ‘The ?lllfl-w' guarantee a to gthen eyesight 50 per cent in one week‘s muany lustances, or refund the money, â€" Jt 1§.disâ€" pehi l:\!r all good d;lllgllll. lbn‘uud.la gre Etores; also by G. Tambiyn J. waron & Co.. Toronto. even a lir1, j," i _ _ _ Cyes. bother yoy even o‘omm it is your duty to take \ toph save them now before it is 00 e. lunf hopeleul& blind m(gh& ye saved their sight if ey had care Oor their eyes in time, Note: A city physician to whom the above article was submitted, said: *‘Yes, Bonâ€"Opto is a remarkable eye remedy. Its constituent in« gredients mre well known to eminont eye speâ€" €lalists and widely prescribed by them. I have used it very successfully in my own practice om patients whose eyes were strained through overe work or mis{t glasses, I can high‘y recommeng it in case Of work, watere. ..31._ °C Omment Exwyl hm ama c CC,, 9P AGUNâ€"UDLQ u?lctl. Drop one Bonâ€"Opto tablet im a fourth of a Elun of water and let it diuolv:; With this Hgquid bathe the ogel two to four times daily. You 8 ou!1 notico your o{eo clear up perâ€" ceptibly right from the start, and in« flam ion and redness wili quickly disappear. If vour eves u.. MCY stnluflsinc from tmtmted micrge scopi research work. Bonâ€"Opto used according to directions rendered a sure prht:‘% service. I found my eyes res mar l{ strengthened, so much so % have put aside my glasses without dis= comfort. Beveral of my colleagues have rl.o used it and we are agreed as to ts results. In a few days, under my obnrvatlon, the eyes of an astigmatiq case were so improved that glasseg l.ui\:'o b'é: gilswdtad by the‘ patilf'nl_." ye ubles o many descriptions may %o wonderfully benefited by the use of Bonâ€"Opto and if ytou w:mdt to 'tNWOlI your eyos, go to any dru, -on ui) get a bottre of Bun-flpts u’o t8. rop one Bonâ€"Opto tablet im a urth af a aian.""2°° CPCC TADIC Peop‘es teeth, upset their stomachs nn‘ were not assimilated and â€" for these reasons they frequently did more harm than good. But with the discovery of the newer forms of organic iron all this has been overcome. Nuxated Iron for example, is pleasant to take, does not injure the teeth and 4s aimost Ina» mediately beneficial, NOTE: The manufacturers of Nuxated Iron have such unbounded confidense in ns [i2, , "0 S ‘1ere is nothing like good nls iron to put color in your cheeks and goo sound, healthy flesh on your bones. 1t is also a great nerve and stomach strength» ener and the best blo@d builder in the world. ‘The only trouble was that the old forms of inorganic iron like tincture DP Aram "Hie C esd n ddt va L0 ECAROmE PVE HNee Un of ll;on, iron acetate, etc., often r namvalre i un d UR TD A~VTIE: The manufacturers of Nuxated Iron have such unbounded confidence in its potency that they authorize the announceâ€" ment that they will forfelt $100.00 to any charitable institution if they cannot tale® any man or woman under slixty who lacks iron and increase their #trength 100 per cent. or over in four weeks‘ time, provided they have no serious organic trouble. Also they will refund your money in any case in which Nuxated Jron does not at least double your strength in ten days time. It is dispensed by all good drugrizts. Noa C ROOT OPEMEICS If from ten to fourteen days‘ time simply by taking iron in the proper form, and this, after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. You can talk as you please about all the wonders wrought by new remedies, but when you come down to hard facts there is nothing like good nés iron to put color in your cheeks and go sound, healthy flesh on your bones. 1t is also a great nerve and stomach strength» pmar amd is og l .o ied Iron have such potency that th ment that they . _/ " Wutnout becoming tired. two | fiveâ€"grain â€" tablets of nuxated iron three times per meals for two weeks. Then strength again and see for yot much you have gained. 1 dozens of nervous, runâ€"down q were nulnf all the time double triple their strength and endu entirely get rid of their syn dyspepsia, liver and other t from ten to Fourtmaan Amuc 21 walk without becc two _ fiveâ€"grain nuxated iron thre meals for two w Address postâ€"card: "‘Cuticura, D. s W you o onl ~nsicetn We e o e acnd t Ointment now and then as needed to soothe and heal the first pimples, redâ€" ness, roughness or scalp irritation, you will have as clear a complexion andy'a good hair as it is possible to have. H rou use Cuticura Sâ€"oa;; for everyâ€"day ziz_i C1 purposes, with touches of Cuticura T lc Autitoatiwe c c t lt dh. My‘cs ". PW n .c Treasures of Hair and Skin 3 Preserved by Cuticura 4amP SME MWTISEPTiG AND GErmItIDE 3 Does not blister or remove the hairand horse can be worked. Pleasant to use. $2.00 a bottle, delivered. Describe your case for special instructions and Book 5 M free. ABSORBINE, JR., antiseptic liniment for mankind, ree duces Strains, Painful, Knotted, Swollen Veins. Concen« tratedâ€"only a few drops required at an application. . Prigg $1 per bottle at dealers or delivered. W. F. YOUNG, P. D. F., 516 Lymans Bidg., Montrea!, Cane Sbsorbine and Absorbine, dr.. are made 4p Conata. consume 3,500 plant lice in forty min. utes,. _ Another proof of the industry and value of birds to farmers and gar» deners . Salt scattered over the going into the mow add: bility at feeding time. Sample Each Free by Mail A yellow warbler has been CCH,_ Next lake of _ ordinary per day after then test your r yourself how 1 have seen wn people who muble, and (-\'ez endurance an symptoms of er troubles in 8‘ time simply per form, and me cases been hout obtaining as you please ought by new come down to t like good (u reeks and go ir bones. 1t is nach strength» bullder in tha the hay when adds to palataâ€" Next known to M

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