Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Apr 1915, p. 2

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" a) a SPRING REMINDERS OF RHEUMATISM Spring weak! " bed for thou- wic talents. he eha-s from mild to cold, the rev. damp winds aitilseadtuoodti'm-, orin the more ensue can, the tor ttggi od the mum. going. But itl iailVilorooioriuduntitjs not the weather that canoe thei- mstiem. The trouble is rooted in the blood-tho change-Ne nether merely mm the paint. The only wey to tend: the trouble and to cure it in through the blood. The poisonous rheumatic acids must be driven out. Ultimate end rubbing my give temponry relief, but can- not possibly cure tho troublo. The sufferer is only wasting time and money with this kind of trerstment, and all the time the trouble is be- coming me? deeply. meter-litre. mug ”III-v ‘vv " -_""e' to euro. There lo jute one med! cure for rheurnstimrt- Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills. They let direct- ly on the impure, aeid-tainted blood. My purify and strong. than it and thus root out the cause of the rheumatism. Here is strong proof of the above statements. Mr. _ J. Routiley. Sydney, Mun, says: " was no badly crippled with rheumat'mn in my hips and knees that I could hardly so about. I be- gan the use of Dr. William’ Pink Pills, which I took steadily for a couple of months, by whim time all traces of the trouble had disap- peared. I can most strongly recoun- mend the Pills to all rheumatic suf- ferers.” l Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $9.50 from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, out. Miliury Experts Think Too Much Is . Mistake. The Frenchman's fondness for ramp is proverbial. It is strongly in H idence among the soldiers now at the front, who subsist largely on soup or on stews, which amount to pracucnlly the same clung. . English military experts Are in-l dim-d to think that this is a eeri- nus mistake. They believe that such sameness of diet leads to stale- ne-es among even the healthiest of men. and that the French would fight better if they ate more aub- stantitsl food, such as the rout beef and mutton chops of which tho English are so fond. But although the English believe then. soldiers are better fed than Iln- French, they have to admit that they owe the present excel- lo-m-e of their military cuisine to a Frenchman. While England was fighting in Crimea sixty yup ftp 1w. Damp Weather Starts the Pain. But the Trouble Lies In the Blood A.lesis Bu)". the celebrated chef, “rm there and, with nothing but tho regular rations to work upon. mun revolutionized the army's Int'tlnxh of cooking. - He found the camp cooks at Scutnri and in other places tying the joints intended tor boiling so tightly that the exterior was cooked while the inside remained raw. m found cooking going on in huge cop- per gnklrons so disrk.that.it [no pot possible to see whether the tinning “as intact-whether the water was not contaminated by verdigris. He found them marking their ra- tions, "lest they should be con- founded in the kettle," by attach. ing to them pieces of red cloth. 3 string of buttons, knives, forks, scissors. pairs of snuffers. He found them throwing away the fat Irorn the Coppers, three inches thick. for they did not know that they were thus destroying " little sea" of excellent soup. He found them sometimes cooking with smoke. dust end steam intermixed instead of fire, and yet consumed I‘uwfalhulous quantiti of an fuel." than“ cl Food Brought Success and Happiness. An ambitious but delicate girl, .nn failing to go through school 4til account of "frvout"1ess and hys- teria. found in Grape-Nuts the only thing that seemed to build her up and furnish her the peace of "From. infancy," she says. “I ham nut been strong. Being .m- lmiuus to learn at any coat I final- ly gut to the High School but soon had to abandon my studieg on no: -liv hm] did not gym with me, and I [new thin and dmondenr. I mm not enjoy the simplest to- rial affair for I suffered comatly from nervousness in spite of Ul tsorts of medicines. _ -1 had little man. but pmmed . pkg. and that the hrat dish I experienced u peculiar Mod feeling that I had - gained trout any ordinary food. I ttt and rested better that night and . leor guys began by W "per. "This wretched condition ooatin- uni until I became interacted in the 1viters of those who had can. like m'nc and who were being helped by eating Grtpe‘ngbsl . I few days bog-n to grow “may”. "I had 0 new ttttg" pom and rosttulnoe.. 1M2?! 30 my new ipr the nervouooeu In}. _tPft a,“ lidt be mum of nervous prostrastion and huwria. - yiorp IND SOLDIERS. T II II W l Y 0 VT TEE unnecetr nun-am WK: -g-urttttdt Wu Dose 3 like“ In then-III. PM!!! th. bottom to “minke Inn-I‘d 4..“ a! a” nun! Bu: Wilinm Robert median, new thief ot M of the British An; In menu-ion to Eliot-General Sir June. Wolfe Emmy. For men who in the last century hare done ylut Injor-Genenl Mormon bu Lug: aeoomplihd could be num- ered on the 'uttp'rts of one handy Usually n',',',',",',,',',,",", in the - hove been ound for “union” in India. and the ooloninl notions. Although Sir William Robertson ha served in the em as private und non-oommiseioned ofheer, how- ;ever. he is quite well 1,,r,trd for the high social position, new command confer: upon him, for he is a gentleman by birth, had the advantage of private tuition in his youth, and probaudy enlisted in the army, as quite a tow young gentle: men hnve been doing for several years now, with the deliberate pur- pose of "earning a commission.” . r.“ -- ---%. _ --" Lady Robertson is a daughter of the late Lieutenanthneral li, C. Palin, of the Bombay Butt Corps. Sir William, who is M years old, was born at Welbourne, Lincoln- sthire, his father kreing a well- known landed proprietor, The general was only 28 years old when he received, after seeing service in Egypt and the Soudan, his tirat commission as lieutenant in the Third Dragoon Guards. He did not serve many years in the ranks, and upon attaining his commission he set himself deliberatey to work to study for staff duties in the highly technical intelligence and trans- port branches. After he had pass- ; ed through the staff college his first staff employment was as railway transport officer during the Miran- zai and Black Mountain expedi- tions. His success in keeping the troops at the front fed with rein- forcements and supplies attracted official attention, and he was pro- muted staff captain and appointed deputy assistant quarterrpaster- general of the intelligence branch at headquarters, Sigma. . During the Chitral campaign General Robertson took the Beld as intelligence officer with the headquarters of the relief force. During the campaign he was severely wounded, was men- tioned in despatches, and received, in addition to the campaign medal with two clasps, the coveted Distinguished Service Order. Be was attached to the intelligence department at the War Office when he went. out to South Africa as deputy assistant adjut- ant-general of intelligence at army headquarters, being specially se- lected for the post by Lord Rob- erts. For his services in South Africa he was promoted hrevet lieutenant-colonel, mentioned in despatches. and awarded the ser- vice medal with four olasps. m was assistant director of military Oper- ations at tho War Office for six years, assistant quartermaster-gen- eral at Aldershot, brigadier-gener- al on the general staff at Alderdhot, and commandant of the Staff Col- lege. In his capacity of command- ant of the Staff College, General Robertson came into contact with a number of the officers of the Canadian permanent forces who went to Camberley to pass the statt course, and they all speak tel-y highly of his technical knowledge and active energetic personality. He was at the front during the first part of the present war, and his military genius in organizing the retreat from Mons won for him the highest praise from General French. Censure is the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent.-- Swift. L/this world it is not what we take up, but what we give up, that makes us rich.--H. W. Beecher, Don't flatter yourselves that friendship authorizes you to any disagreeable things to your intim- tstes.--O. W. Holmes. ' The normal school turns out pro- fessors of philosophy. only the school of life produces philosophers. --Guatavo Yfperep11. It many times falls out that we seem ourselves much deceived be- cause we first deceived ourselvha. --4dir Philip Sidney. . True courage is not incompat- ible witlrnervottsness, and heroism does not mean the absence of fen, but the conquest of it.-H. VI!) Dyke. If you have built castlea in the air your work need not be lost; that is where they should be built; now put foundations under them.-- Thoruu. u _ - - I do not call the nod under my feet my country, but lwguage, re- ligion, luvs. government, blood - identity in these makes men of one couotri.-itridtrer. . For those who do not take to do- ing good u tsprtrfmssion, there is a great deal of social good to be done in putting gown gossip, in prawn?- ar" GiiGiiamtartdiriri, End in keeping friends with everrbodr-- Jowett. ' Commissioner Clark, writing in tho Agricultural. War Book on "T, mom hr Smut Prevention," Lay- in Enchant 2tt't thops 'iiiii'iii'i, ("in ttrom no 1tp,1Wuht.'tl'; 'riutVGRT'ts' FOR THE DAY. Treat-cut of Hunt. Gm Thomson would have 990-1 rend nothing to the greet .Brmdm public. Todey it itutrtmts to, everybody the macho and well- merited rise to reputation of a. mu ,rhohaadooethe Summoner vice during hi! months ot suture. The hour produce- the men, end at the Admiralty, as well u at the WarotBeoandinthe field, the right_ person he mud in get a In insane“. It in in aooordnoors with the genera” aad outqzoken nature of the First Lord that when he no: outstanding merit in tb col- league he units no omit! pednn; 'ffATh'f,d him silent. And so, Mtl, his manor-Me “Moment of Feb- ruary 16, Mr. Churchill let the TMV tion know to whom it is indebted tor the unparalleled feats of sea- trmsport by which our navy has been kept in abundant tre: and our vast armies carrie overseas Without the loss of a. single life or mishap to a single ship. That man is Mr. Graeme Thomson, who four months ago was smperintending clerk in tho Admimlty transport under Rear-Admiral H. W. Bavqry, and who is now director of that department. During November Mr. Thomson we.» made assistant di- rector, and on December 1, when Admiral Savory retired, he became director. Mr. Churchill has al- luded to him as "one af the dis- coveries of the war." That dis- covery began when Mr. Thomson, as 'ruperintending clerk, first came into contact with the First Lord, who marked him as A”a very likely, AIG."" Very soon he was'placeii in full control of a section of the transport, where he allowed such A 5°w__vo&| ago the nastlrt mastery of detail and administra- tive ability that he was promoted to the second step already noted. It was not long before the First Lord, now assured of his man by daily consultations, put him in his pre- sent position of huge responsibility. His rise has been extraordinarily rapid-it probably creates a “re- cord" ; but Mr. Thomson has earn- ed it all. And long years of pre- paration, 14 in the Admiralty ser- vice, have gone to fit him for his task. He is a native of Cheshire; but, as his name implies, he is of Scottish lineage, a son in matters academic of William of Wykeham, for he is a member of both Wil- liam's foundations, Winchester Col- lege and New College, Oxford. From New College he passed to the Admiralty as a higher division clerk. His record is now before the world in Mr. Uhurchill’s eulogy: "h man who stepped into) the place when the emergency ‘came, who has organized and pre- sided over performances and tran- sactions the like of which were ne- ver contemplated by any State in history." Mr. Thomson is not yet 40; to be precise, he is 39, and he is the youngest director of naval transport the British Admiralty has ever known. m takes his blushing honors modestly. "There is really nothing in, it," he said to the inevitable interviewer; but the public is inclined to think that there is a good deal in it. Over one million men, to say nothing of colossal stores, carried without mis hap in the face of the enemy, is a considerable performance. At the Admiralty they are said to parody Sir George White's cpigram on Sir Edward Ward and to call Mr. Thomson “the greatest transport BABY'S OWN TABLETS USED ELEVEN YEARS officer since Noah. " Mrs. McEachern, Glencoe, Ont., writes: " have used Baby’s Own Tablets for the past eleven years for my children and have every ree- Ion to praise them as they always do good." Once a mother use: the Tablets for her lime ones she will we no other medicine. They are absolutely sate, pleasant to take and never fail to regulate the hoyr- oh and otomwh. They no sold by medicine dealers or t mail at 25 cent- ' box from The r. Wllliama’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. INFORMATION FOR [NYE-KNEE amnion”. Mr. Graeme Thomson. aloe Noah." Doing Waders mainland, Gaps ¥°£.ku;£ April " (Spam J--" ve i (inched the third box of Dodd's whey Pills, And bad they no dqmg me wonky; of good for the Kidneys and Rheumatism," so says Mr. Peter F. Patterson, a. well- known resident of this place _ Gun County In Gives Advice to .All Who Want to be Cured of Kidney halides. “My troubles can: through a cold and atraim" Mr. Patterson continues, "and I suffered for mgny yeays. _ I bad headache, black- who and rheumatism. My sleep was broken and unrefreehing. I had a bitter taste in my mouth in the morning and I perrapired freely with the slightest exertion. I was often dizzy; I was troubled with heart flutterinirs; I was nervous and my skin itched and burned at night.' “WAR" using Dodd’s Kidney Pills I recommend them to every- one who wants to be cured." . Everyone of Mr. Patterson": ailments was tb symptom of Kidney disease. That’s why he found such prompt relief in Dodd's Kidney Pills. They only cure Kidney dis- ease Elephants sleep standing up. When in a herd a. certain number will always stand watch while the others sleep, for the big, powerful beasts are timid and clutious at night and will not go to sleep un- guarded. . _ DBata Bicep head downward, hang- inirby their, hind out. , Birds, with few exceptions, sleep with their heads turned tailward over the back and the beak thrust bernesulh the _wing. _ . . q "€651:st "iuiiL'Gd other long-leg- ged birds sleep standing on one Te; Ducks sleep on open water. To avoid drifting ashore, they keep paddling with one foot, thus mak- ing them mayo inys cire.le. . . Foxes and wolves sleep curled up, their noses and the soles of their feet close together and blan- ketted brtheir bushy tail. . _ Lions, tigers and cat animals stretch themselves out Bat upon the side. Their muscles twitch and throb, indicating that they are light and restless sleepers. _ . Cure Ihildrth't Colds By External Treatment Owls, in addition to their eye- lids, have a. screen that they draw sideways across their eyes to shut out the light, for the sleep in day- time Mothers Will Flnd Nothing to Speed- ily and Rellable " Old. Time "Nervillne." It's really: shame to upset a young child's stomach by internal dosing, when external treatment will so promptly break up a cold. When your boy comes in after play with his feet soaking wet, his throat hoarse and sore, his little chest tight and congested. just apply Nerviline. give him a vigorous rubbing over his throat, and put lots ot Nerviline on his chest and rub it right in. To make Nerviline penetrate more quickly cover his chest and throat with a. hot funnel bandaige. This treatment WON'T tail. Your boy will be feeling better in half an hour, and you will have the satisfaction ot knowing you have warded " perhaps I. cold, or grippe. or illness that might have laid him up. - , Nervlline is mighty good for pre- venting colds and for breaking up a bad one, too. For general family use it cures all sorts of external aches and pains-you simply can't beat it. Try it for earache, toothache, neural- gia, sciatica, lame back, rheumatism, or lumbago. Wherever there is con- gestion. intttunmattott or pain in the Joints or muscles. Nervliine will cure mighty quick. The large 60c. family size bottle is so economical. so use- tal, it should be in every home. There is also a small Mc. size. .Deslers any- where sell Nerviline. Expenditure I'p to Thatfriute Will be $16,990,000,000. Edgar Crammond. a prominent financial writer of London, read a paper before the Itorsl.8tuistital Society recently deslintr;with the cost of the war. Inlhis opinion the war must end in July through the exhaustion of some of the belliger- ents. T Mr. Crammond estimates the total coat of the war to the end of July as 818,990,000,000, and the total economic loss, through damage to property and other direct and indir- ect losses at 845,740,000,000. Ho mrtimates that Great Britain alone will spend up to the end of July 379,090,009 __ . The London Times, commenting on Mr. Cremmond's hgures, thinks he takes a somewhat exaggerated View, although ho is in poueeoion of facts which entitle his opinion to reepect. The Times points out that Premier Asquithu estimete of Greet Britain's expenditure during the mesa-id we: only £600,000,- 000, but I: "This oerteinlsrm were too low, even it Mr. am, _mond’e eetimete is too huh." The 1 of tho one in - runaway to tie new 111% lAn' -h.§.'l Huh uni-mu!” " f'An' what/- this, minus!" ' the [It], indicatiw . metal bottle, “Eu is I bottle It,tl wilt hop th trseiturttoCoroo' ' 1th _ w, duke," replied the mitts". "Fell, {oh an had cake,” cinn- Mod the girl. “How in it t,'2tt know whether you want thing: ot or cold?" -. " rm. P. urinals“ SAYS or hours KID- NEY nus. LACK " MONEY END WAR. m. mer.m m. When Animals Sleep. Eiie,2'ir, p, 5r2FAP, M'ittrrrWitii For Rheumatism TORONTO Count Paul Van“ in III 000-. "Behind the Veil " the Bun-it}! Court,", tshared with wept of in family the detect of bung tuber oare1Us'in his dun sud general appearance. Lord tHo nun“. who long represented- Easy-ad gt Berlin, told Count Tei!!! this amusing little anecdote in Illustra- tion of that ($1anqu l "One evening," "y! the ooupu, "Lord Odo and I were .chbttms about Lord Salinbury’a attitude to- wud his persoyal Git-tm-rye,' ill-nat-diy, tor. it is (logbgful we“: we perm "ee""'"-."' ill-naturedly, for it is aoiyrttul which of us had the ”other admire tion tor the remarkable "atemnH1 in kuuittiort.---ed.r Lord 9110 laugh- ingly mentioned to me his surpnse when one or, after thedinner bell of the embsssy had been rung, he found Lord Salisbury, who may lit- ing there, still busy at work in his study. tt ‘He rushed out,' said the un- bassador, Und before I had time to put aside the papers on the table, literally in three minutes, was bask again ready for dinner. Now 1n that time he could not even have washed his hands, yet there he was in evening clowns! I could not help asking him how he named to dress'so quickly. "Oh, my dear Russell," he said, “anyone can change his coat at once, and I had black trousers on already." ' " When a Woman Sum-s With Chronic Rachelle There In Trouble Ahead. Constantly on their feet, attending to the wants of a. large and enctlng family, women often broth down with nervous exhaustion. A . In the stores, factories. and on . farm are weak. slung women, dragged down with torturing blchche md bearing down pains. - - Mm .,,,,A- I.-.A "N. iiiGl' iiiiGiGGih natunl, but It's dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys, _ . a Muucya. The dizziness, insomnia, cleansed menses and other symptoms ot kidney complaint can't cure themselves. they require the assistance of Dr. Htunil. ton's Pills which so direct to the sent ot the trouble. The 'i1;"iivTTiaitr and power to the kidneys, to lend add to the bladder and liver, to tree the blood of poisons. probably there is no remedy so suc- cessful as Dr. Hamilton'l Pills. For all womanly 1rretrultrriti" their merit is well known. , Beceuse ot their mild, soothing. and healing effect, Dr. Htunilton'tt Pills are safe, and are recommended tor girls and women of all ages. " cents per box at all dealers. Refuse any Butt. stitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills ot Man- drake and Butternut. Observing farmers have seen that either clover or alfalfa do consid- erably better when sown with bar- ley as a nurse crop than with oats. King says, in his book on soils, “that oats exhaust the soil mois- ture a great deal faster and more than barley. Probably this ia the reason rt especially in rather dry seasons, e new seeding does bet- ter with the barley." But a great many farmers greatly ttrt the growth of their young c er, as well-as alfalfa, by seeding too much grain as a nurse crop. It is a spe- cies of greediness that, as Shakes- peare says, "o'er leaps itself." It should require but a moment's thought to see that the coming chr ver or alfalfa is worth double in value what the grain crop is. Why, then, should the farmer endanger his hay crop next year? We have seen hundreds of young clover and alfalfa crops practically spoiled in this way. It takes 500 pounds of yater to mature one pound of the grain of oats. Reckon it up and see what that means to the young clo- ver or alfalfa in a crop, say, of so bushels, of oats to the acre. . -iiiitrici"t. I should my they In. Why, they won't even let their children eat animal crackers." “I understand the Blanks strict Iregettritymc.'l _. Eyes inBamed by ex aura 'drr,e,'to"l'lf."a'l,'2'ai uickly relieved» I.“ yes an“). No Stunning. thut ht firttt, A' Your . " 50e per tt e. yo 8.!"st ForMOIIhlycfmuk Dwain or$terh"_ree"tlhd- Sore E Eyent An old bachelor is I. man whom no widow bu made a. “tenuous ef- fort to marry, Woman-Does this parrot oreart Deaier---Yery prettily, mum, for so young . bird. Ila-urn LInlmm Roll-nu Ion-nun. um. Llnlml In an macro. aoose,rhkhthaiin In: but ”new” g'SttP.th.T',',tt. VI t -FI tttthh', , Strict, All Right. Nurse Crops. Wrong Tip. “are“ 1iramAMedfireiids, Eyes ittbnLed 51 21 15w: iiDiE no nitrate u s :9ng ii- -- gro . on o . any neodl it. SPAM. of ro-le' and oodium, ouaGrrttoarhftt nod " phm of ammonium, Goauaro1 " sprinkled on the mounts in the fur- row, but au'there mixed with tho coil before the mum. is W. or sown hm deer woman is plowed in nod before harrowing. If top duo-incl of coluble manure: no mod on open coil. they should be applied we. . ""rririiGt in "to. on whit one we", Sore Corns Go l 'presn't it res“! gets more and mor make {living l" G ' Putnam's Eur-cur o . mukel the corn to without pain. Tau out the sting over-night. Never hill ---lepve, no scar. Get a Me. bottle oe Putnam's Corn Extractor to.dtrr. Jams peeling on . not 9nd a, very pleasant odor , imparted to the whole room Rt, 10: me." Low EARES To TN! GALIFDIIIA un- pttttTtttt" VIA cmcneo A NORTH WEI‘I'EII RY. Four splendid dlll' twin! from the New Pusencer Tannin“. Ptr' to Ben French-co. [a Angela en San Diego. Choice of Scenic and direct route- throuch the but ot the We“. Something to see all the way. Double track. Auto- matic electric utety attun- ell the 71.1. [at “I flan your trip Ind {uni-h Ioldm and tut perticuluu. B. H. Bennett, CA.. 16 You“ Bt.. Toronto, Ontario. A Bit of n Epicure. Lady of the tlouse-You can eern your dinner if you’ll chop that pile of firewood, _ -.. _ Tramp-- art, lady BEST Linlment in use. I got my toot badly jammed Intel . I tanned it well with XINAID'S LIN b XENT. Ind it In " well a over not! any. For many months in the yen the four or five thousand inhabitants of the isolated Magdalen Islands re- ceive no mail or newspapers, for u the islands lie in the widest pert of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. about fifty miles northeast of Prince iii/ ward Island, it is diaieult, it not impossible, to run boats to them during the winter. The Canadian Government has consequently Br- ranged to send weekly to the clergymen of the islands 9. wireless despsteh of eight hundred words that gives the latest news of the we: and other events. These des- patches the ministers read aloud to the islanders st church, every Sun- Ila-rt: Llnlml Out» Inn“. To freshen gym day. Aunt Lin’s former mistress we: talking to her one morning, when suddenly she discovered a little picksninny standing shyly behind his mother's skirts. “Is this your little boy, Aunt 'Liza 1" she asked. "Yea, miss, dst'a Prescription." "Goodness, what a funny neme, auntie, for a child! How in the world did you hnppen to call him tint?” "hh simply calls him dat becuz Ah lush, lech hahd wuk get tin' him filled." "I can read my wife like a book." “Tint sot" "Yea. Whenever she'l cold to a I know she's going to nuke it eortsidfr ImAnP'B LIN!!!" tho Canoes, Skiffs, Motor Boats THE PETERDOROUGH LINE. nlgl Cost of Living. tt any - can the you amt-won. It to a "PETERBORotjC" “WI and our tho an. or tgervttse, model, strength and [f, “IL Oter m = “I II“. “a tor anionic. The Intr'st (an in the hurboro mm coma. Mk tor mum-um folder mark for the DW WM um PM hunches. all sizes and p. , on. Got folders an!" nu about the... A Wireless News-Letter. gm: my MAT at. m0. FINANCE, CAN. lid like to know de men“ Knew the Sign. "I! MICRO“! (I80! (Oll'llw. LIMITED. PITIIMROUGH. ONT. Your: In; ter, ally gum tut it more dittieult to ‘m: cunning}!!- Absolutelz No cum“; no Nu“ m or Pods to - the lore. tspot. it does to live Burn ' piece . hot stove. odor will be ii - Extractor "Ovorafgg" V Bottom 1 I book." EM! - (”limit pm'ATori8. "O“! q.6atrtqd “pd (ivn'urnllmn “M toe - Only litmtod f|l|Ull|!,_ m. OI. Don-1' pet bin-ha! Lu]; "lump wu. Also Cannot-nun Pride and x... m. two mud!“ new mum“ Prom Two Doll-u not bushel. WNW w c- [at I. ollutltg Caah llllhl 114103.. my Irol'l'll'l'. . W. DSWNHL “mun”. TREE; Jih pail I,“ bet": m Haw-I wish youd w everlasting caching about tt pef.iturtt. - ' ' Wite--No, I slum and the capital of It going to see if I can upital that way. IIAIIIIIIII. luPBERmm " _ {Atoll Cuties-o “a Newman 3..., Ian. lune". " “can. TUIORB. LUMI‘S ETC lawn! and oxternnl. "urv" with: L pun tN homo "mum-m mm. ”on late. Dr. Bellman. Mum-u _ ”mud. Collinlwood, ("-1 Elia-Jul Win-I kept whole all and! by W baking, "mint" ttreir full mengm “I” deeieiot" “aces. - waste time on Inferi- or “he. because they're a M can“ chcnpcy. -- __ . I hve proved lam-Huh “Mikael“. Piles. Skin 'N-ts, and Injuries. “A. a ttg; ro" "we." r all: y to use He infant's lam-Bunk! “Md”; A Double-noting Retort. 81,!” bihay swan In Us It. Bum ah. 91m. n. iiik new: rm. OI “It. Get our quoitrrrrtur 'llhrd'a2 launches. nus: ATENTS “hon-ad. t {IDIOVED HALF m “rum Iota Coon, Whitewnml and; “I. POTATOES nun!“ Ftttitit F0. BALE L I... Bt.. . " u Murmur: " INVENTION 8 Phikvxi .Bean: "(IGOR a DAVII shan't $5533 Int Mon!“ It Wiser. ot Prince Conspicm MAJOR (ik A deqsatch from Lon The 0.03.! Gazette who “or A. 'rGauit. of p, teaTia'a Canadia- Light has been decorated with I skilled eruce Order Lieu. w. G. (‘olquhouu Pupineau. of the sum- Uve bert, draw“ .stl PM“, oi have been (It my Cm“. tor oonupicm Linn. Papi the first p" H by Linn! Which nylon “I ZEPPELINS Dropped Many Counties, SI mid, ll AIBMEN Slllll GERMAN huh lumpy-d " and region a tested tut when A g made. In “V1001 90mm 1 tir pomt I hunt drive taken ne towns “It budquuu new“ at: owed. Bl tom" on t. mom of A will lk RECORD Over “000.00 Ships Have rem d pm all“? men h: the to of the A despatch from Th. Turbmddy in an Gallipoli P id], at Eilid Baht any - wh" orotrtid Gees . null hu 1‘" = H? Turks Ma Iowb‘edl ll dc tot. d fr d " 'ra " " Looo,ooo n " the l rm H ff The mm the ttittrr tie we G t'ttt'r w " tie “All. hi two, (and when: ar n doc: we " fr um ad: M H

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