West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Apr 1918, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

oF aAx IMEXT ‘*t‘;"ins of the nt Farre. "They ing night raids. J ms. arfare now ed at the e hard, commanding F"’Perauov"m ly the idea came t was not possible y he would try it superior officer, e that one could comparative safeâ€" these experiments is chief commandâ€" 'Gl'ld wa are never nstances volunta numanity, nri Farre, o wa;fn. for it, who has since the war been & m Digognes, chanced to occasion when one lrfare !ll)' q‘"u us~ nth of Fe days the : so that we ts, however ‘*Ovide a light spot place. He placed gasolene in differâ€" d. These he lightâ€" in succession. He ithout having conâ€" pt at venture 0st Two necessary to rovide a light place. He pl gasolene in di ho hau seen e had gotâ€" emove the the debris and above ly is wastâ€" me? h Lives Mouchard, k. The night lay. _ Mouchard with me." The s gave the call we were all aughed and ntureâ€"night war mmandant, toâ€"morrow ary to light k duk spot rd _ made his, Capâ€" Mouchard Bombardment » Brave AY ‘ar m“ er l'm _ men h'. rd into~ the Y sacrifices D, W e weather we â€" could were orâ€" rted for xpense of He after 1. ‘It INITIAL lant idy. official 1N were the â€"that is, the very bestâ€"but finally the doctors gave him up. They thought he would die slowly, and that it might take several weeks. "But there was a nurse there who took special interest in his case, and she stayed up day and night for some time, and finally brought him through. The case was very well known, and everybody said she had performed a miracle. He got better slowly. "Then a few weeks later, when he vas out of danger and was able to walk, and it was only a question of time before he would be released from the hospital, this nurse was transâ€" ferred to another hospital, Everybody knew her and liked her, and when she went around to say goodâ€"by all the men were sorry and gave her little presents, and wanted her to write to them. She was going to get a nurse she knew in the other hospital to turn her letters into English, so that she could write to me. I gave her a ring I had made from a piece of shell case, but I guess she had hundreds of them at that. elt in bed. I need not tell you what we did to‘ it German. They did not need to shoot him after we got through with’ . They did shoot what was left of m to make sure, however. A Story From Belgium. While visiting at Lyons I met a ! there who was staying with some people I knew, and she told me, a litâ€" «e bit at a time, what she had been through. I do not know whether she was a Belgian or not, but she was in Relgium at the outbreak of the war. When the Germans took the town she vas in they put up signs on the doors notifying the inhabitants that all the' wirls must report in the square the {ollowing morning. ‘ "This girl and her sister reported with the rest. They were divided into two classes, and the class in which the two sisters were was told to reâ€" port at the station the next morning. They went home and broke the news to their mother, who was quite old and who took it very hard. They had no idea what they were being sent away for. The mother begged permisâ€" sion to keep one of the girls, and the Germans placed the other sister in the class that was to stay. Kill Three Who Refuse. "Three girls who refused to go were dragged to the streets and killed in eold blood, and the mother of one girl who refused to let her go, was shot. The girls were drilled to the courtâ€" yard of a big hotel, mustered with a roll call and loaded into cars. After a nineâ€"hour journey they were taken from the trains to a large» building partly in ruins, and there the German soldiers were waiting for them. The wirls were not givem food or fire. "Late that night, after the Germans were through with them, they were made to go outside and dig potatoes ‘vom the hard ground, but they were t allowed to eat any of the potatoes. They also had to make beds, chop vood, haul timber and do all the dirty ~ that has to be done wherever Typical A ry HOW "But this German doctor would not iy goodâ€"by to her. That would not aive made me sore, but it made this rench girl feel very bad, and she beâ€" an to cry. One of the French officers iw her and found out about the docâ€" r, and the officer went up and spoke ) the German. Then the French offiâ€" r left, and the German called to the irse and she went over to him and opped crying. § yIVD TALES OF HUN BRUTALITY sA W m. We heard the snap. Didn‘t Need to Shoot Him. There were men in that ward who | not been on foot since the day y came to the hospital, and one of m was supposed to be dying, but en he heard her scream it is an abâ€" ute fact that there was not a man They talked for a little while, and n she put out her hands as if she : going to leave. He put out his ids, too, and took hold of hers. And n he twisted her wrists and broke M al Instances Which Go to Prove the Utter Bestiality of the Teuton Character. an n swine are penned. y were not allowed to write to cople, nor did they receive any rom outside. Fresh batches of rrived from time to time, but cre not allowed to mix with o had been there before them. en the jirls reached such a conâ€" that they were no longer of use (iermans they were sent back xium. This girl had killed her . indeed, all of the girls had. c wot home she found her moâ€" ad been killed, but she never ter again or knew what had i GERMAN DOCTOR REâ€" w 1RDED HIS NURSE. of the patients in the French " _ says Gunner Depew, an n serving in the Foreign "was a German doctor, who : picked up in No Man‘s Land, iously wounded. He was givâ€" ame treatment as any of us irteen thousand British men, women, and been murdered by the hould not be given to The Modern Rifle Has Effectually Subâ€" dued the King of Beasts. * It is small wonder that the lion and the tiger, largest and most powerful of the cats and except for the leopard the most savage of all the larger carâ€" nivora, have made a vast impression, sometimes erroneously, on not only the native men of the regions that they inhabit, but also on visiting sportsâ€" men, observers and writers of large intelligence. The lion, for instance, though better known than the tiger, has been picâ€" tured as devoid of fear, as stronger than an ox, as swifter than a horse, as the king of beasts, when in reality it possesses not one of these characterâ€" istics. Yet its great size and trength and its killing, often manâ€"eating, proâ€" pensities have made it truly a creature to be feared and seriously reckoned with by those who live within its habitat. In the old days of clubs, spears, batâ€" tleâ€"axes, crossbows, etc., one wondérs how the lion that once inhabited the south of Europe, all of Africa and southâ€"western Asia was. successfully combated by man and eventually drivâ€" en out or exterminated. Undoubtedâ€" ly this was accomplished by taking advantage of the fact that lions rareâ€" ly go in large numbers and that small armies, fitted out with various devices and contraptions for taking the big True Shaving Comfort AutoStrop ?g:‘ty RazorCo. 83 â€"$7 Dake St., « _ Teronto, Out. The man who uses the Autoâ€" Strop enjoys a clean, comfortâ€" able shaveâ€"his face does not unpleasantly remind him of his morning shave by smarting for hours afterwards. mnalie Autogtrop is the only rasor ut the razor that lhml‘fi? o:m_)hd_a autoâ€" tion. Guaranteed to Satisfy. Complete Outfit $5.00 aticallv thus always keeping them es from rust and _& n:(:;?_‘ condiâ€" ‘The reason is apparentâ€"a freshly RAZOR INSTANT eA cheering drink for DQO}I;Y: drink for peopl! of every age." m the cu boiling. elcious tlever. & Tea or Coffee Miaiee , as ?t’lu\em.you will fm a delightful & ecoâ€" If Youre Fond AT ALL STORES LION HUNTING. to cats at a disadvantage, were sent to kill and to capture them, just as the native spearmen now do in Central Africa. And undoubtedly also the hunted creature took human toll in those encounters, for such is mentionâ€" ed in history. The modern sportsman, with his highâ€"powered repeating rifle, runs little risk unless, as some have done, he gfows careless, especially at night. When the gun was still a primitivel thing, uncertain of discharge and un-| sure of aim, being little more deadly | than the brown spear. or the powerfull crossbow, the lion had generally the better of an encounter with a single! huntsman; therefore, it was then also‘ the custom to go in numbers after, orl against him. Arabs, with their longâ€"; barreled, muzzleâ€"loading flintlocks,' could trust hardly less than a dozenl men to defeat a single lion that threatened their flocks and herds andl caravans. In such cases they apâ€"| proached the beast with caution, form-'i ing a line easily within range, though seeking not to force it to charge and| then, upon a signal, all commenced ; firing, hoping that some bullets would | find a vital spot. Frequently the big! cat, wounded only, would charge and ; scatter the line, often knocking a man or two over, when others, reloading as | rapidly as possible, would advance and | at close range give the animal a bulâ€"| let that pierced heart or brain. | But the modern, highâ€"powered rifle has changed all this, and now the soâ€" called king of beasts has learned, as most other creatures have, that manâ€" kind is something to be greatly feared. At more than a hundred yards, with sure aim and terrible force, a soft lead bullet. finds and tears a hole through a vital part and the greatâ€"maned, nobleâ€"looking animal, before so vital with energy and action, is quickly converted into carrion. Make a beauty lotlon for a few cents to remove tan, freckles, sallowness. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply you with three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Squeeze the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle, then put in the orchard white ‘and shake well. This makes a quarter pint of the very best lemon skin whitener and complexion â€" beautifier known. Massage this fragrant, creamy lotion daily into the face, neck, arms and hands and just see how freckles, tan, sallowness, redness and roughness disappear and how smooth, soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless, and the beautiful results will surprise you. In some cases, also, the lion, no doubt filled then with a certain conâ€" tempt for its human enemies, would charge before the firing began, when a number of wildly aimed shots would greet it, the unusual noise thereof often frightening the beast so that, without doing harm, it wo&d veer off and speed away to effect its retreah Or a bolder lion might continue its agâ€" gressiveness until it mauled several men, perhaps killing one or more, all depending, of course, upon the bravâ€" ery, pluck and successful shSoting of the hunters. GIRLS! WHITEN SKIN Escape of French Boy From German Prison Camp. A night escape from the German prison camp at Darmstadt, being shot at repeatedly as he ran; a dangerous trip through a hostile country until he reached the banks of the Rhine, an ley swim for an hour against a strong tide, finally reaching the Swiss shore near Schaffhausen, were some of the exporiences that Maurice Muller had to undergo before he arrived in Paris and applied to the American Red Cross for assistance. Emile Desroches, a friend who was with him when he slipped out of the prison camp and dived into the Rhine, began singing the "Marseillaise" in defiance, as with powerful strokes he made for Switzerland and liberty. A German patrol fired in the direction whence the sound of the singing was coming. Whether struck by the Gerâ€" man bullets or carried away by the treacherous tide, Desroches has not been seen since. 4 In November, 1914, Maurice, who was then fifteen years old, and his broâ€" ther Georges, twelve, were bundled into a train that was leaving Ostend for Germany and taken to Darmstadt, just up the river across from Schaffâ€" hausen, where they were put to work at hard labor. Insufficient nourishâ€" ment soon made the younger boy phyâ€" sically unfit and last October he was in such an emaciated condition that it aroused the pity of even the Germans and he was sent on to France. ther, who time: â€" Last éx;éning as Muller sat in front of a substantial meal supplied by the Red Cross, he said to his younger broâ€" _ "This beats the dog meat, potatoes, and rutabaga they used to serve us at Darmstadt." 2 Lord Rhondda, British Food Conâ€" troller, says the food situation for the Allies will be most difficult during the next two months. i FROM DARMSTADT TO PARIS. has been in Paris for some wWITH LEMON JUICE Black walnut, which has always been the favorite wood for gun stocks on account of its failure to splinter badly when struck by a bullet or bit of shell, is extremely scarce at presâ€" ent. Birch and maple are being tried out by producers of hardwood lumber for this purpose. You cornâ€"pestered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly killed you before, says this Cincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone applied directly on a tender, aching corn or callus, stops soreness at once and soon the corn or hardened callus loosens so it can be lifted off, root and all, without pain. A small bottle of freezone costs very little at any drug store, but will posiâ€" tively take off every hard or soft corn or callus. This should be tried, as it is inexpensive and is said not to irriâ€" tate the surrounding skin. If your druggist hasn‘t any freezone tell him to get a small bottle for you from his wholesale drug house. It is fine stuff and acts like a charm every time. The Foresighted Cook. There is a certain Brooklyn man who takes & great interést in his household. The other day, just before he left his office, he telephoned to his wife to ask whether she wanted him to bring anything home. "Yes," said the wife. "I wish you would stop and get some tea. And you might as well, while you‘re about it, get a set of china, too." "China?" gasped the husband. "Yes. â€" Of course, we‘ve got some, but the cook says there‘s not enough to last the week out." Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. The colts that are already spending some time nearly every day in the harness are the ones which will be able to do the most work this spring. Soldiers crippled in the war are beâ€" ing trained in England to tend electric machines and as assistants in power stations. Turn a barrel over a plant or two of rhubarb and force the stems for early use.~ Experiments are under way in Sweden with the use of paper cans inâ€" stead of tin ones in the sardine and other preserving industries. YOU CAN‘T CUT OUT fiofitsien but you can clean them off promptly with the â€"nfiti;ebti'crlftiirmii{t‘lor mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, Rupturol Muscles or Ligamenté, !nm‘u Glands, Wens Cyste. Allays pain quickly. Prige $1.25 a boulg gat druggists or delivered. W. F. YOUNQ, P. D.F.. 516 Lymans Bldg., Montreat, Can, wbsorbine and Absorbice Jr.. are made in Canada ; Soothes and Heals Quicklyâ€" "inflamed cuts, bruises, burns, scalds, blis, ters; r piles, abscesses, boils and othe; inflammations.‘ At dealers, or write us}t HIRST REMEDY: COMPANY, . Hamilion. Cual* ass\gasewefa@.’-\%m.@sm@ ? Rhenmatic Pains | Are relieved in a few days by | taking 30 drops of Mother Scigel‘s Syrup after meals and on retiring. . It dissolves the lime and acid â€" accumulation in the muscles and joints so theso deposits can be â€" expelled, thus relieving pain and / soreness. Seigel‘s Syrup, also . known as "Extract of &ooh." w containsnodopenor otherstrong â€" drugs to kill or mask the pain of . rheumatism or lumbago, it reâ€" moves the cause. 50c. a bottle â€" at druggists. rr _ ressacadsitktatrrasaess Walnut Scarce for Guns. OR OX BLOOD SHOES ISSUE No. 14â€"‘18â€" ERVEheLEATHER Order Now ONTARIO FERTILIZER®, LIMITED WEBT TORONTO l CANADA Goods may be cleaned with gasoline without leaving a ring around the cleaned portion. Thoroughly moisten salt with the gasoline and rub the soilâ€" ed goods. To whom It may concern: This is to certify that I have used MINARD‘S LINIMENT myself as well as preé soribed it in my practice where a liniment was required and have never failed to get the desired effect. / The colors of flowers are intended to attract the insects necessary to bring about their fertilization. Yelâ€" low and white attract beetles and small fliees. _ The blues and purples attract the bees and butterflies. Night flowers which are fertilized by moths attract by their fragrance. White fragrant flowers open during the day, attract wasps and bluebottles. MOoNEY ‘ORDERS When ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order. Governmentâ€"owned farm tractors that were at work last season are beâ€" ing put in good shape for this year at the Military Hospital at Whitby by returned soldiers. Cut strips of sod and turn the grass side down in shallow boxes or on boards. _ Make furrows across the sod and sow peas, setting the boxes near the window in the cellar or kitâ€" chen. _ Later set the sod with the growing peas in furrows in the garâ€" den. _ An early crop can be produced in this manner. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Ete. VY "ern Ontario. Dolaf a good busiâ€" ness. Death of owner places it on the market. A great chance for a man with cash. Applx' Box $2, Wilson Publishing Co., Limited, Toronto. Â¥VY and job printing plant in Easter Ontario. Insurance carried $1,500. Wi o for ;x.zoo on %ulck sale. Box 6: ghhon ublishing Co., Ltd., Toronto. us before too late. Dr. Belimai Co., Limited, Collingwood. Ont. â€"â€"IF YOU SUFFER FRQMâ€"â€"â€" * Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, Head Noises, Catarrh of the Stomach, (which is often mistaken for Indigestion), Catarrh of the Bowels, Asthma, Bronchitis, Loss of Smell, Phlegm dropping in the back patrt of the Throat, or if you have a Cough _____â€"__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" YOU SHOULD NO T FAIL TO READ EVERY WORD OF THIS ARTICLE â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_â€"â€"_â€"_â€"â€"â€" CATARRH, A LOATHSOME AND INSIDIOUS DISEASE CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, rr& internal and external, cured wi out pain by our home treatment._ Write us before too late. Dr. Beliman Medical Catarrh is a very common name for a very common disease, so common that most people do not realize how rurtuk danmerous and disgusting it is. A col in the head, hawking, spitting, blowing of the nose, phlegm dropping in the 0 ARET . NC RBGL.Ls s# mind had & VeZ OUMUIT OE ChiGL Jraur #souful most people do not realize how rurtuk danmerous and disgusting it is. A col in the head, hawking, spitting, blowing of the nose, phlegm dropping in the throat, bad breath, ullness of mind, bad humourâ€"this 1Js the way it slarr. And where does it end? Frequ ntly in Catarrh of the Stomach, Catarrh of the Bowels, Bronchitis, and often slight or total deafness results. Catarrh usually begins with a cold in the head. The Catarrh germs breathed in through the mouth or nostrils have settled upon the inflamed and delicate mucous memâ€" brane that lines the nose and throat. These germs are harmless to healthy tisâ€" sues; when they lodge upon an irritated surface it means a more and more disâ€" eased condition of the membranes. The thus produce further inflammatory irfl! tation, and in time even ulceration. ‘The sufferer from catarrh often finds his sight and hearing failing. He suffers from an almost constant dull ache over the eyes and across the forehead. The mind becomes dull when the membranes of the nasal cavities are in a discharging condition. 1t is the pus and decaying matter oozâ€" ing from these sores that causes the ofâ€" fensive breath so common to victims of catarrh. _ You ms{ not notice it yourâ€" self, _ You probably do not. But your friends do, though they are too careful of your feelings to tell you so. WELL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER and job printing plant in Easterp This form of Catarrh is, to say the least, sickening and disgusting, besides being most common and highly dangerâ€" ous. The changes of weather render the delicate mucous membranes in the nose and throat very susceptible to inflammaâ€" tion, ‘lnd thus encourage the birth and growth of catarrhal germs. E1 UEdU OR CAEOLIL LOL psd utons CA T ARRH . A c clarPraa ty real‘y is Py © 4 The throat itself is divided into two main passages; one the Oesophagus, or llet, going to the stomach, the other {!‘:le respiratory tract, or Trachea, going to the bronchial tubes and â€" lun; Through the lungs the blood passes wm every heart beat, and there comes i contact with the air. If the air breuthgz in is pure, and If‘no"e.‘_ghrt‘mtl and lungs m CC OTILC CR McenaE ewe The nose and throat are what mi Ne called the highway of life, z. Te PC TCO 30X d IP d, the dark blood is at once :{x.rifl':: ,:md passes out of the lungs in a bright, red stream, cargying life and o fik 24. s Pcail : tu‘: wpes Do 9e . $ wils on P hevam strength to all the body. If, however, ! eollected in the postâ€"nasal epace, where fhrand artadion l im en or it the hoh |R i tgremi ie ow mato ncadidons :’hex&:h:a 2:::5.. t( ;2;:‘0‘1: &rt’:leu!:: yulrlfleJ !g:vo‘bofomeugi:ronlc.fln‘s sIunc cgiuo;'lrll;fh::: e s) is, on e n{'e contrary, still further poisoned and id T::r ;1:;::. carrying _the germs goes on its way carrying the disease to drops into the throat. The glni-llki all parts of ‘he system. iuunaunx mase sticks for a time to EEKLY NEWSPAPER IN WESTâ€" Cleaning ‘With Gasoline. HOW CATARRH STARTS NASAL CATARRH MISCELLAWNBOUS What Parmint, the Wonderful English Formula, Has Done for Others, It Will Do For You C. A. KING, M.D. TORONTO THE ORIGIN AND DANGER soned and| The mucus, carrying the germs. disease to |drops into the throat. The glueâ€"like nauseating mas# sticks for a time to ND , _ That nasal catarrh is a nauseating ‘dieâ€" | {ease any one knows who has had to sit 1 | close to, or talk face to face with a}rl’- | for tlon reeking with purulent catarrh. Have | hat | You ever bad to endure in sickening | ful, | Sllence the hawking and unf[lnx of & ~olk |eatarrh vietim, or had to sit close to | ing |8uch a person and experience a disgustâ€" | the | iDg. appetiteâ€"losing, foul odor, which you | baq |Could not explain, and did not know | what it was? ‘That is catarrh, and there y in are many people who have it and don‘t +ma | know it. 9 Lime is not a plant food or ferâ€" tilizer, but it performs a function that is very important for all crops, indeed a service that is essential for clovers by sweetening sour soils. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandraf. Fowls of the heavier breeds cease to produce a profitable number of eggs at the end of their second layâ€" ing year. This holds true with the lighter breeds at the end of their third laying year. CcaATARRH OF THE sTOMACH l (Often mistaken for Dyspepsia or Inâ€" digestion) Many cases of indigestion and dyspepâ€" sia are simply the result of catarrh of the throat and stomach. At night as vou le asleep, the mucus drops down | from the throat and head and is swalâ€" | lowed into the stomach. in the mornâ€" | ing you awake feeling heavy and tired; | there is a bad taste in your mouth, you are in a bad humour; you wonder what ails you. You have catarrh; catarrh of the stomach, and your whole system is | poisoned and is reeking with the disâ€" , ease. Your stomach has become clogged | and the delicate membrane _ is coated | with a vile sticky substance. The catarrh | mucus refuses to be digested and only | passes out of the stomach with great | difficulity. Little by little, the mucus | with the catarrh germs which it has carâ€" | ried settles permanently on the mueouli membrane which lines the stomach. I Sloan‘s prices not increased 25¢ 50c $1 Real dyspepsia and indigestion are caused by a lack of digestive julces. But here we have a condition where the membrane is able and read{v to do its , work, but it is prevented by foreign matâ€" | ter which has dropped down from the head and coated it How then, can the | usual treatment for indigestion be of | use? .Bince catarrh is the cause of the trouble, it is the catarrh that must be | treated. If you have catarrh of the stomach we believe that if taken faithâ€" fully for & reasonable length of time Parmint will bring you an amount of relief that will fully compensate you for the cost and time expended. | A cause which is responsible for a great many cases of deafness is catarrh. The whole trouble generally begins tg a ulm‘rlo cold in the head. During suc a cold almost ever& person experiences tha,t feeling of stuffiness which tells of inflammation extending into the I;on- nasal space where the openings of the Eustachian Tubes are located, and which is accompanled by catarrhal secretions, collected in the gout-xmsal #pace, where it is difficult to blow it out of the nose "These men know from experience that Sloan‘s Liniment will take the stiffness out of joints and the soreâ€" ness out of musclesâ€"And it‘s so convenient! No rubbing required. It quickly penetrates nflbrin‘l reâ€" lief. Easy to apply and cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments. Always have a bottle in the house for rheumatic aches, lams back, sprains and strains. Little Frult Buds. Close up little fruit buds Don‘t come out.just yet, Or before the springtime YÂ¥ou‘ll a nipping get. Wait a little longer ‘THll the winter‘s gone Then you can, with safety, Put your spring garbs on: But just now there may be Bnow to come along, Then you would be feeling All the world was wrong. Sleep a little later In your cosy bed, Bo the chilling breezes Will not strike your head "Tis not best to hurry Out too soon for spring, Or, perhaps some sorrow It, to you, will bring. Take another nap, then, "Till bright April smiles, And with tears and sunshine, She, your heart beguiles. Generous sized bottles at all drugâ€" CAUSE OF DEAFNESS Railroad Men Lighter types of chickens are gen« erally more profitable than the genâ€" eral purpose breeds when egg proâ€" duction is the sole aim. Eepecially in times when feeds are exceedingly high in price should a breed of fowls be selected that has been developed primarily for producing eggs. Minard‘s Liniment Relicves NMeuraigia. Let it be understood, however, that Parmint is not for ear troubles other than those caused by catarrh If your trouble is caused by scarlet fever or any disease apart from catarrh, or if caused by an injury, Parmint is not for you, and Kou should consult .your own famâ€" ‘ly physician regarding your case. the sides of the throat. The germs are quick to tuke advantage of the opporâ€" tunity. They invade the Eustachian Tubes. ‘Their presence and irritation it causes rroduce more and more mucus. Gradually this fills up the ear tube so that sounds can only pass through with difficulty. ‘The patient finds his hearing slowly .oin’. When the tubes are com» D!etelX flled total deafness mn"‘ result, In deafness from nasal catarrh, which affects the middle ear, it often happens In deafness from nasal catarrh, which affects the middle ear, it often happens that crackling sounds are present which distress and confuse the patient. These are due to the fact that the mucus which fills the upper part and back of the throat is covering the opening of the Eustachian Tubes and the bursting of bubbles or the movement of mucus sum the soungs, which come from the tered resonance of the ear, After & cerackling report â€" the head may seem clearer_ and the hearing better for a time. Later on in the case there may be crackling â€" sounds | when . swallowing, which come from the efforts of a stif= fened muscle to open the tubes which yield with a jerk. _ _ © o The above explanation of a most comâ€" mon cause of deafness should make it clear how absurd and uscless it is to atâ€" tempt to overcome such deafness by earâ€" d@rums or devices of a similar sort If you have a cold and it has left you with m cough, no matter how slightâ€" you ought not to neglect 4t _ _ A cough is generally an indication that there is inflammation in a dangerâ€" ous place, and proper treatment should be secured at once. Delaying treatment may mean that the cough may settle, develop and stay. Even the slightest cough indicates a danger and should reâ€" celve gromm attention. Unless your cou::’ as become extremely deep seated or hung onto you for a long time, we believe that you will find a quk‘:‘, relief from your trouble by the use Parmint. Parmint is an English formula put on the market in England about 10 years ago. 1t is a combination of ingredients havim values in the treatment of caâ€" tarr conditions, bronchial affections, etc., compounded from the best grade of material it is possible to obtain. Parâ€" mint is put ur in oneâ€"ounce bottles in concentrated form which are labeled "Parmintâ€"Double Strength." These oneâ€" ounce bottles can be obuflud t a small cost and the oneâ€"ounce n&lclent to make a full hn-l{;:!“t of Parndut ready to take when as directed in each vackage CUNGURA HEALS BAD CASE FOZEMA "I was very much annoyed by an irritation on my back. 1 lmnd out I Relief Instantaneous. Healed With 3 Cakes of Soap and 2 Boxes of Ointment. had a bad case of eczema. My back was in a very bad \ shape, and my clothing \ $ irritated so that the skin \G J became vergre. 1 sent forCuticura Soap and Oint« ment. . Relief was instans " tancous and with the use of three cakes of Cuticur Soap and two boxes .} Ointment 1 was Kealed." (Signed) B. F. Gros%n, Y, M. C. A., St. Catherines, Ont., July 4, 1917. For hair and skin health Cuticura Soap and Ointment are supreme. _ _ e onctne" "aaiieet‘ Saad. 4. ress postâ€"card: *‘Cuticura, Dept. A, M:.OU. S. A."" Sold everywhere. DON‘T NEGLECT A CoUGH WHAT IS PARMINT?

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy