ny rd You wake up in the night with a pain and grope in the medicirie closet for the jamaicaâ€"ginger bottle. Ah! ves, that it is; you recognize it by the shape. You go to pull the cork and your fingers are severely pricked. Yes, it is painful. But by that token you know that the bottle you have got hold of is a bottle of poison. Betâ€" ter a pricked finger than a coffinâ€"eh, what t : It is simple enoughâ€"a cork, to fit the bottle, with a metal arrangement in the shape of a cross that is stuck through it and projects above it. It is sharpâ€"pointed at the top and the two arms are sharpâ€"pointed. Why indulge in such foolishness? A New Jersey woman, Mary Beers, has invented a bottle stopper that is more efficient, for precautionary purposes, than all the poison labels ever thought of. Every now and then somebody helps himself to a dose of poison out of what he imagines to be a medicine bottle. Nearly always, of course, it is in theâ€" dark. Next on the job (unâ€" less the doctor happens, by good luck, to arrive in time) is the undertaker. New Invention Will Prevent Making Science, having conquered the earth with the locomotive and the motorâ€" car, the air with the airplane and the deep waters of the oceans with the Uâ€" boat, sighs now for new worlds to conquer . What new and horrible weapons for the future may we conâ€" template? And yet, those marvels that toâ€"day make warfare a succession of scientific miracles may be just as antiquated in another century as are the instruâ€" ments of warfare in 1917â€"and probâ€" ably will. Modern guns like the Germans used at Liege and Namur would have made short work (_)_f Lucknow and Mafeking. BEWARE THE POISON BOTTLE. The French might have escaped the Prussian trap at Sedan had they had scouting airplanes to "eye" the enclosâ€" ing wall of steel and flesh. This continent might not have reâ€" mained the heritage of the Angloâ€" Saxon race if Montcalm, on "the Heights of Abraham," had had the "flares" that illuminate the European battlefields at night to reveal the apâ€" proach of Wolfe at Quebec. }{ Wellington won at Waterloo with the timely arrival of Blucher, but Napoleon might have conquered Eurâ€" ope had Grouchey been able to comâ€" mandeer such a flieet of taxicabs as Joffre used at the Marne to save Paris! ‘ Marvels of Toâ€"Day Napoleon might never have had to retreat from Moscow had he" had motor lorries to bring him food afid munitions! Nelson could have had a thousand ships at Trafalgar, and yet the French and Spanish might have laughed at him through the periscope of a sinzlol submarine! The galley of Ben Hur has turned into the dreadnought bristling with sixteenâ€"inch guns. The cavalry that charged "into the valley of death" at Balaklava has become the winged air cavalry of the twentieth century flyâ€" ing corps. The battleaxe of the French revolution has been transformâ€" ed into the "white arm"â€"the deadly bayonet of the Tommies and the J Poilus. the giant Goliath, and then the evoluâ€" tion through the centuries to the Gerâ€" man 45 centimeter and the French .15 guns that carry a missile weighâ€" ing tons for many miles through space! DraciOs, Dinks". that crawl upon the| . Political events are moving so rapâ€" battlefields, freighted wwith men and‘ idly in the Central Empires that an munitions, not at all unlike the zi{timldf on the flt? of Austriaâ€"Hunâ€" horse of the ancients! ng'? l:; 'f;«i World‘s Work is particuâ€" Consider the leather sling and the lar y topical. brook pebble with which David slew| _ Will Austriaâ€"Ihngary â€" leave Gerâ€" the giant Goliath, and then the evoluâ€" many before the end of the fight? Afuse Alrurcll d y c o n . us 18 T Remember the wooden horse in which Ulysses hoisted his Greeks over the walls of Troy, and now the huge tractor "tanks" that crawl upon the battlefields, freighted wwith men and munitions, not at all unlike the gift horse of the ancients! Then and Now Think of the huge stones hurled down upon Leonidas and his brave Spartar band in the mountain passes at Thermopylae; and then ponder on the highâ€"explosive bombs propelled from modern trenches. \ br MWGaPrne® dn sns â€" the nations that have advanced to the highest _ pirinacle _ of civilization through the continual extension of scientific research, have brought out gigantic weapons of warfareâ€"unâ€" dreamedâ€"of things that a decade or two ago would have been laughed out of the world court as the contraptions of fools and the follies of lunaties, We may the layman ask, "Where will it all end?" War breeds invention. Plunged into the maelstrom of international conâ€" flictâ€"mMien and nations intent on the annihilation of men and nationsâ€"the human brain responds to the evolution of massive deathâ€"dealing machinery on a scale hardly commensurate with the scientific emdeavors of peace perâ€" jods . Three years of terrific fighting bo-‘ tween the leading nations of the earth, M teu thec c sns L Having Conquered W'ltet, m : IN THE EVOLUTION OoF DEATHâ€" DEALING MACHINERY, wHEN WILL LMI _ BE REACHED? a Fatal Mistake. Worlds to Conquer. Sky Unless there is a tremendous s.ump in condition between now and : harâ€" vest the supply of beans will be, proâ€" portionately, greater than the supply of potatoes. The bean crop of the United States was estimated on July 1 at 22,000,000 bushels, against 8,846,â€" l That became very evident during | the five years preceding the war, when \Hungary vainly attempted to place | various loans for internal improveâ€" \ ments in Paris. There was a financial boycott declared against Hungary by France. Thus Hungary, too, was foreed to turn to Germany as a finanâ€" cial backer. | The whole banking system of Ausâ€" tria, her financial status, rests and leans on Germany. The cornection is very intimate and strong. Most of | the Austrian and Hungarian indus-l trial papers, shares, and values are quoted and dealt in outside of Viennu, â€"only in Berlin. _ sia, as well as to the fact that Hunâ€", gary formed part of the Dreibund.f that market was closed to her. | Hungary especially, though a counâ€" try abounding in natural resources, urgently requires capital. Formerly Paris was the money market to which Hungary applied by preference. But owing in part to the heavy drain on French liquid resources made by Rusâ€" How far behind she is in intellectuâ€" al dqe)opment is best seen, for inâ€" stanct, by studying her latest statisâ€" tics. From them it is seen that there are whole large provinces where illiâ€" teracy predominates. | Austria‘s Plight. ’ Consider the facts. Look at Ausâ€" triaâ€"Hungary‘s present plight. Ausâ€" triaâ€"Hungary is economically undevelâ€" oped, or at least not sufficiently deâ€" veloped. Her turbulent history, plus another more recent element, i.e., the race strife within her borders, acâ€" counts for that. Of that one bocomesj aware as soon as one crosses her fron-’ tiers. But needs must. Austria is firmly convinced that without Germany‘s strong arm to support her she is doomed as a political entity. We all grasp the hand that is held out to us to save us from drowning, no matter whose it be. _ The wounds of 1866 are still smartâ€" ing. Her fall from power, the loss of her supremacy in the Germany of that time, are keenly realized. Prusâ€" sia is regarded as an upstart with the unamiable qualities of an upstart. The departed glory of the Austria of old is deeply regretted. The Slavs of ' Austria bear their powerful western neighbor undisguised hatred. | Briefly, Austriaâ€"Hungary â€" cannot help herself in the matter. Her deâ€" pendence is not voluntary. So far as sentiment is concerned, indeed, there is very little love lost between the two countries. For Prussia and the Prusâ€" sians a distinct dislike is even felt. | Will Austria be subservient to Gerâ€" many after the war? And to what extent is she so now? she cannot, unless her p;;p-l; fe.e-l"t.h‘; depression of hunger so desperately that they become reckless of their fuâ€" ture. To this the answer seems plain: It would be certain political and econoâ€" mis suicide for her to do so. Hence Dependence on Germany is Entire and to Desert Would Mean Economic Suicide. PRESENT PLIGHT OF THE DUAL MONARCHY. FATE OF AUSTRIAâ€" strength for the nation. ,Bntbesu_reand get the right substitute for meat in a digestible form. Shredded Wheat Biscuit is the ideal substitute for meat. It is 100 per cent. whole wheat prepared in a digestible form. Two or three of these little loaves of baked whole wheat make a nourishing, satisfying meal at a cost of only a few cents. Delicious with milk or cream or fruits of any kind. slogan for war time, or "One Meatless Meal a good food gulations, have made an order, : came into operation on Saturday, 21, prohibiting the exportatio horses from Ireland, save â€" special license. The Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction for Ireland, in exercise of the powers conferred on them by thedgfenc_oofthor«lmreâ€" But without question, Brusiloff‘s gift of statesmanship is best demonâ€" strated by the fact that," while it was he who led the Czar‘s armies in the great_Galician drive which began‘ on June 4, 1916, it is still Brusilof who leads the armies of Free Russia °. We can see already, through the early and magnificent result, what statesmanlike wisdom inspired that swift, courageous and decisive action. l Committee of Workmen‘s and Solâ€" diers‘ Delegates, and actually supâ€" ' ported by a few of the extremists in | that illâ€"balanced body; its effect was practically to smash the mainspring , of discipline in the Russian army, | Kerensky hastened at once to the !Executive Committee and ‘procured | the publication of a modifying “Or-‘ | der No. 2," in an effort to neutralize; \the : damage done. But Gutchkoff, ‘then War Minister in the Provisiona]' |Government, seemingly â€" daunted by | ,’the extremists, gave the official sancâ€" | "'tion.of the War Ministry to some of | the subversive provisions of the Gerâ€" ‘ man proclamation. ! Soldier and Statesman. _ Immediately afterward two events were chronicled by the cables, each in a space of three or four lines. The first of these was a hurried visit of certain famous generals to Petrograd and the Provisional Government. Brusiloff was one of them. The secâ€"| ond event was the resignation of: Gutchkoff, whose place was taken by Kerensky. These two comparatively unnoted events are not unconnected, we may surmise; they were not withâ€" ; out their bearing on the swift convaâ€" | lescence of the Russian army. 4 i Brusilof intervened in another | way, which has been indicated in the |press cables, but which has not, in | all likelihood, been clearly understood. |It will be remembered that German agents, just about the time when ;Nieholns descended from the throne, scattered broadcast through Petroâ€" grad the famous "Order No. 1," ap-l parently signed by the Executive,! the Brusiloff armies on the southwest front was almost wholly unimpaired, their fine discipline was almost wholly unshaken. was, at times, seemingly triumphant, Brusiloff had given orders that not one of these "Socialist" propagandaâ€" ists should be tolerated within speakâ€" ing distance of any of his troopsâ€" and had seen that his orders were carâ€" ried out. Therefore, it happened that, while the German agents were drugâ€" ging the Kronstadt sailors and sowing , discord at Petrograd, the morale of this: During the three perilous months immediately following the abdication of Nicholas II., when the work of German agents in Russia of armies was luprélhgigr }Z."dy"iii effective. The answer, I believe, is The drive began on Brusiloff terriâ€" tory, between Zlochoff (Zloczow) and Brzezany, along the Stripa River; it was begun with the armies which Brusiloff had held firmly in his own hands while he was commander of the â€"southâ€"western front before his appointment as Commanderâ€"inâ€"Chief. It is pertinent to ask why the Brusâ€" iloff group of armies was chosen to bfzin the new drive; why this group Less dramatic for the moment, but immensely effective, has been the work of General Brusiloff, the Rusâ€" sian Commanderâ€"inâ€"Chief. War Minister, Alexander Kerensky, who has played such a splendid part in firing the fighting blood of the Russian soldiers, chilled by the work of German agents in the first days of the revolution. ‘ War General Alexander Brusiloff. LEPT HIS OWN COMMAND IN CONTROL DURING REVOLUTION. All honor is due to the heroic young an of Statesmanlike Wisdom With the Swift and Courageous Action an order, which PATRIOT , July Minard‘s Liniment Oures Dandraff. ted now, and the pots buried, may be had in bloom for Christmas. $ Maidenhair fern should not ~be watered over the foliage. Keep the pots standing on damp ashes and apâ€" ply the water to the pot. ~In the garden apply the water at the base of the plants. Bye Rewer in Teves 255. FPor Book of the Eveâ€"Free. | _ "I tried a new way," said Betsy Ask Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago a 'beaming. "I put a few goosebesries : e s it 1» ‘ Women Can Help in Harvest. _/ lm“tl‘}’eg::r?!"n'cried Patrick. "If a Women should help Karvest the bush few gooseberries give so good a flavor and small tree fruit crops this year.;to an appleâ€"pie, what a darlint of an A mobilization of available women for | appleâ€"pie it would be made o‘ gooseâ€" this work would be of great assistâ€" berries entoirely!" ance. The women of Europe are now‘ eemmmmemmencome es working regularly in the fields. They e aparame have planted and harvested crops ever ds oi M , since the war started. Are the women flron l Nepy. 1 of Canada willing to do as much? If|~â€" l) ( , ') I’ 5 l"« ‘ we wait until the fields are yellow we (> L will be too late. The various women‘s 7 K ' D N E Y 7 organizations could do much if they 6 2 | would organize immediately. U# e P + in (@eg .t Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by PE i n t Bast and Wind quickly v (Akm‘! relieved by Murine. ‘Try it in s your Eyes and in Baby‘s Eyes. DUR No Smarting, Just Eye Comfort Murine Eye Remedy At,Yspr Druggint‘s or, by wus alill io mer sae ues en U car express service from both Pacific and Atlantic points to supply Central Canada with sea food cheaply. Fish For Central Canada. & Fish is to become more plentiful in the Canadian market. Hon. W. J. Hanna, Food Controller, has inauguâ€" rated a special refrigerator express car service direct from the Nova Scotia coast to Toronto. This is the first step in a plan to put on a fish Tulips, narcissus and hyacinths, potâ€" booth. A cordial invitation "is exâ€" tended to each and everyone interested to examine and hear this wonderful Player. National Piano Co., Limited, City Warerooms, 266â€"268 Yonge St. A Playerâ€"Piano that transposes in thirteen tones, manufactured excluâ€" sively by the National Piano Co., Limited, will be on exhibit at the Toâ€" ronto Industrial Exposition at their IEA. D. MacTier, general manager of ,,eaatern lines of the Canadian Pacific |Railway. Capt. MacTier went to the ‘!front with the flrs& Canadian Continâ€" _ gent and has been twice wounded, the first time at YÂ¥pres, and lately at Vimy Ridge. At the outbreak of the war, Capt. MacTier was on the ocean reâ€" turning from Europe, and immediately on landing joined the Thirteenth Batâ€" talion, under Lieut.â€"Col. (now Brigaâ€" dierâ€"General) Loofnis, D.S.0. He went to the front with that unit and fought with it when it covered itself with glory at Ypres and Festubert. He | was then wounded by shrapnel and reâ€" turned to Montreal to convalesce. On' returning to the front he was attached to Brigadierâ€"General Loomis‘ staff, he | having taken over the command of a brigade in the meantime. After | serving in this capacity for a short time one of his feet gave out and nn‘ operation was necessary. On his reâ€" | turn to the front on this occasion he was transferred to a Montreal Highâ€" : land Battalion and promoted to his q captaincy. Capt. William Stewart MacTier, who was reported recently to have been awarded the Military Cross for galâ€" lantry in the firing line, is a son of Mr. My quiv‘ring soul knows but o prayerâ€" "Oh, keep my soldier in Thy careâ€" God, stand beside him there!" â€"Maude Gordonâ€"Roby. And stand beside you, ;l;ere Amid the noise, the flying shell Amid the smoke; amid the Hell; I stand beside you there! Dear Love, I wanted you to know That ever h} my _lgeart I go Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine, or may be had by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co., Brockville, Ont. _| "No heart for nnythur' is the cry _| of thousands of wen and women who might be made well by the new, red ; blood Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills actually | make. ,|_Misery day and night is the lot of hosts of men and women who are toâ€" day the victims of weak nerves. Their , pale, drawn faces and dejected attiâ€" tude tell a sad tale, for nervous wea.k-: ness means being tortured by morbid thoughts and unaccountable fits of deâ€"| pression. These sufferers are pnlnful-, ly sensitive and ceasily agitated by some chance remark. Sleeplessness | robs them of energy and strength ; their eyes are sunken, their limbs tremble, appetite is poor and memory often fails. This nervous exhaustion is one of the most serious evils affectâ€" ing men and women of toâ€"day. The only way to bring back sound, vlgor-,\ ous health is to feed the starved 6 nerves which are clamoring for new, | rich, red blood. This new, good blood || can be had through the use of Dr. Wilâ€" |, liams‘ Pink Pills, which fact accounts C for the thousands of cures of nervous f diseases brought about by this powerâ€" | ] ful blood builder and nerve restorer. 1 Through the fair use of this medicine & thousands of despondent people have I been made bright, active and strong. !v Most Wonderful Invention. AN AGE OF WEAK NERVES IRINES Granulated Eyelids, MILITARY CcROss HERO TO MY SOLDIER. TORONTO | to an appleâ€"pie, what a darlint of an | appleâ€"pie it would be made o‘ gooseâ€" | berries entoirély!" one "I tried a new way," said Betsy beaming. _ "I put a few gooseberries in to flavor it!" Apple Pie: Patrick had called on his Betsy, and she gave him a handsome helping of her special make of appleâ€"pie. Patrick was loud in its praise. Gentlemen,â€"I have frequently used MINARD‘S LINIMENT and also preâ€" scribe it for my patients, always with the most gratifying results, and I conâ€" sider it the best allâ€"round Liniment exâ€" tant. St. Isidore, P. Q., Aug. 18, 1894 Minard‘s Liniment Co., imited. In hot, dry weather do not allow the flower beds to dry out, or the vegetable beds, for that matter. Beds of lily of the valley and other plants that have flowered for the season are likely to be forgotten. To obtain best results for the next season the plants must be cared for the remainder of this season. Turn on the hose, at leuti during dry weather. ’ We unconditionally guarantee Hamâ€" Lax and Hamâ€"Ray to give relief for Rheumatism, Paralysis, Stomach, Kidâ€" ’ney and Liver Disorders. Write us at once. Explain what you think about yourself, and whether you have Elecâ€" tric Current available or not and leave the rest to us. Address the Hamâ€"Lax Co., 16 King West. Will You Visit the Exposition ? Remember you are cordially invited to call and have your case treated free of charge, and a full explanation of what Hamâ€"Lax and Hamâ€"Ray will and will not do. It is well worth the vlsitl to find out the true facts of your case. testimonial $5,000 Guarantee If We FÂ¥il. There has been a standing offer of $5,000 Reward for any case Hamâ€"Lax and Ham-mwnfl to relieve if direcâ€" tions are followed for three years, and more than 50,000 people have tried it successfully without a single failure. That is why the offer still holds good. «Mr. Manuel Varquez, of 142 Hastings Street, Toronto, was going to have an operation for Kidney Stones two. weeks ago. He tried Hamâ€"Lax and Hamâ€"Ray the day before the operation was to be performed and received such benefits that he purchased a Hamâ€"Ray Machine and one bottle Hamâ€"Lax, with ’ the results that toâ€"day he is cured. _ _Mr. Thomas Jones, of 113 Sheridan | Ave., Toronto, suffered with Rheumaâ€" tism in his heart and other parts of his body for 9 years. After trying everyâ€" thing he failed to get resuits until he took one treatment of the Hamâ€"Ray Machine and used one bottle of Hm-‘ Lax. Unsolicited he has given his POSITIVE PROOF, This method can be undertaken in Canada by many organizations. Hitherto, owing to our wasteful habâ€" its, the saving and collecting of rags has not appealed to us, but the war has brought about many changes, and, it is incumbent upon all Canadians to do their bit toward averting the seriâ€" ous shortages that otherwise are suro“ to result. war charities. An especial appeal is made to the tailors and dressmakers to keep their cuttings for this purâ€" pose. â€" Discarded clothing is separated into three classesâ€"all wool, all cotton, and cotton and wool." age, and when enough rags are on hand for shipment they are forwarded to the district centre, where they are sorted and sold to mill owners, the profits going to the Red Cross or other "On account of the large stocks of clothing needed for the British and allied armies, efforts are being made to save the maximum quantity of rags for use in shoddy mills. The aid of women‘s societies has been invoked in conjunction with urban and rural ofâ€" ficials. ‘The collection is largely deâ€" pendent upon the patriotic spirit of the people, but large supplies of old clothes and rags will be called for. Central depots are provided for storâ€" , By Saving Rags Canadians Can Help ’ to Avert Serious Shortage. In all the warring countries the deâ€" ! mand for rags, to supply the world‘s | shortage of wool, is insistent. Canada ~!s no exception, and appeals are beâ€" ‘ing made throughout the country for the savings of rags and old clothes that they may be again used in the manufacture of shoddy, to relieve the strain.upon the wool supply. In Great Britain, the Local Government Board has called attention to the varied means by which this material may be saved, as follows: Yours truly, DR. JOS. AUG. SIROTIS SHORTAGE OF WOOL. AMAZING REsSsuULTsS I88UE 35â€"‘17. flavor Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York cwmhu and Medicai Author says ; "There can be no strong, vigorous, men nor beautiful, healithy, reay» checked women without ironâ€"Nuxated lron taken three times por day after meals will increase the strength and endurafice of weak, nervous, rundown folke 100 per cent. in two weeks‘ time in many instances. Avold the old Sorma of metailic iron which T#ay injure the teeth, corrode the stomact and thereby do mars harm than good. Take only organic ironâ€"Nuxated «rot." it is dio pensed by gil good diugg.sis. y If your druggist hasn‘t nï¬nyï¬f-reezoâ€"' n; tell him to order a small bottle from his wholesale drug house for you. Don‘t let father die of infection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, but clip this out and make him try it. mgn, who says that freezone dries in a moment, and simply shrivels up the corn or callus without irritating the surrounding skin, This new way to rid one‘s feet of corns was introduced by a Cincinnati 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 callus from one‘s feet. ~ A few drops of this new ether comâ€" pound applied directly upon a tender, aching corn relieves the sorenefs inâ€" stantly, and soon the entire corn or callus, root and all, dries up and can be lifted off with the fingers. Old pastures should be ploughed early if they are to be seeded to winâ€" ter wheat or rye. After beans or potatoes the grain may follow with only one disking. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, _ In 1915 and 1916, Manitoba lakes produced 48,000,000 pounds of fish, 75 per cent. of which was exported to the United States. For 9,000,000 pounds of whitefish,, the fishermen reâ€" ceived on the average 5 cents a pound. In some Canadian cities Manitoba whitcfish sells at 15 cents a poundâ€" or more. The Food Controller for Canâ€" ada is arranging to reduce the wide margin between fishermen and conâ€" sumers. The use of water in attempting to extinguish grease fires is extremely dangerous. The Lumber Underwriter reports a case where a fire started in the oil box of an engine. An employe dashed a pail of water on it, scatterâ€" ing the burning grease, which was taken up by a revolving flywheel, throwing it in all directions, causing the plant to burst into flames in many places simultaneously~ 6 * nenin® nb cr cmvatsicrierets Weesntvratts ces her Plh.ca.csi h â€" Own Tablets are the best medicine for ,lmlé ones who are suffering from a weak stomach. They cured my baby when ~suffering from stomach comâ€" plaint and have made her a fine healthy child." ‘The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. infantum and stomach disorders come without warning and when a medicine is not at hand to give promptly the short delay too frequently means that the child has passed beyond aid. Baby‘s Own Tablets should always be kept in the home where there are young children. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent stomach and bowe! troubles, or if the trouble comes suddenly the prompt use of the Tabâ€" lets will cure the baby. Mrs. Chas. Anderson, Minda, Alta., says: "Baby‘s P ies S we (orerin ces /9 _ 1 2 More little ones die during the sumâ€" mer than at any other time of the year. Dhrrhou. dysentery, cholera BABYV‘S GREAT DANGER DURING HOT WEATHER Where Water Spreads Fire. First Felicia took to knitting, 1_Everywhere she went, On a wristlet, sock or sweater Constantly intent. Next she took to Red Cross nursing, Making countless slings, Bandages and shirts and towels, Lint and other things., Then‘ Felicia took to canning, ‘ Every afternoon Cooking messes in the kitchen, Brandishing a spoon. When of beans, tomatoes, peaches, Corn and carrots she Wearies, I, behold! am hoping She will take to me. FELICIA‘S TAKINGS. Cheap Fish. â€"Minna Irving. mm« jomumâ€"â€"«â€"=s0, my houlth imâ€" grovedn.nd! am now the mother of a nebnbyï¬irlmddo all my own house X?rk. "'l-é nI., AlumABIEit TIIIIONB, 216 mond St., Pop , Mo. In many other homes, once childless, there are now children because of the fact that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound _ makes women normal, T rike t ts Ipliin‘®t Fiokthan Mol ri e cine Co., Lynn, Mass., for adviceâ€"it will be confidential and helpful. Among the virtues of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable (b:lgound is the ability to correct sterility in the cases of many women. 1{.. fact is well established as evidenced by the following letter and hundreds of others we have published in these colums. Poplar Bluff, Mo.â€"*"I want other women to know what a bleuin’ Lydia Auun it E. Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" Suggestions to Childless MOTHERKOOD WOMAN‘S JOY Tor Free Sample Each by Mail ad~ dress postâ€"card: "Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U, B. A."" Sold everywhere, t xh i: ‘5’/ {‘b slee me .x and Omrvncrart 80. alka. Many Nights Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Healed. Cinerarias must be kept moist and cool with plenty of air. In spraying potatoes the job may as well not be done at all unless the under side of the foliage and also stems are covered. HowlSuffered WithPimples money orpers It is safe to send a Dominion Exâ€" press Money Order. Five dollars costs three cents. Something New in Frightfuiness. A curious war invention is a proâ€" jectile which, on leaving the gunâ€"muzâ€" zle, releases an enormous pair of shears that are guaranteed, with good aim, to cut a whole company of enemy troops in two. Action. Insist on the _ "OTTO Higew PIANO Action Women. I‘-lu-tncnbm L. Finkhnam‘s V. hblo()ompoundï¬ been to me. We had always wanted lbubly in our home but I was in poor health and not able to do my work. My mother and husâ€" 4 a¢ A 38