Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Oct 1915, p. 7

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ABSOLUTELY FORE TOTALLY T FROM THE HWIGHLY ADULTâ€" €S NOW SOLD. LETT S YE o DISINFECTS 14 FOUGHT Â¥S OF OLD W A RI T4. Als at hom not on that road." If we are to exert our full national strength in the war, we must decide to act much more as if we were an army than as if we were free and inâ€" dependent citizens obedient as in peace only to a law of our own choosâ€" ing. Both Government and people must learn something of the spirit of the Army itself, where the leaders reâ€" "eognize that they, and they awlone, are responsible for policy, and issue or-{ ders knowing that they will be obeyâ€" ed, and the rank and file realize that they cannot stop to discuss the wisâ€" dom or otherwise of particular inâ€" structions, but that they must obey them promntiv Innusatdin ow eetnncots "War is like a fever, a deadly feâ€" ver in your veins, and the rules which are avplicable in health are utterly unsuited to a fever. Restraints which would be irksome, stupid and unnecesâ€" sary when a man is healthy are essenâ€" ial to save his life in a fever. What s the use of the patient saying: ‘I must have meat as usual, drink as asual, in fact more than usual, beâ€" cause I am thirstier than usual. I nave a high temperature, so I am. more parched than usual; there is a greater strain on my strength, so II really ought to have more than nsual.l If 1 want to go out, why should I be | confined to that little bed ? Freedom | above all.‘ ‘But you will die.‘ ‘Ah?‘ | he says, ‘it is more glorious to die a | free man than to live in bondage.‘ Let Britain be beaten and diuredited] and dishonored, but let no man say that any Priton during the war was ever forced to do anything for his country except that which was pleasâ€" ing in his own sight. Ah! Victory is not on that road." If we are to exert our full mfional, strength in the war. we must decide ‘"We have [he said]} but one quesâ€" tion to ask ourselvesâ€"we of all ranks, of all grades, and all trades. Are we doing enough to secure victory, beâ€" cause victory means life for our counâ€" try? It means the fate of freedom for ages to come. There is no price which is too great for us to pay that is within cur power. There is too much disposition to cling to the amenâ€" ities of peace. Business as usual, enâ€" Joyment as usual, fashions, lockouts, strikes, ca‘ canny, sprees â€" all as usual. Wages must go up, profit must also improve, but prices must at all costs be kent down. You will forâ€" give me, I ars sure, for speaking quite plainly. No man must be called upon to serve the State unless he wants to; even then he has only to be called upon to do exactly what he would like to doâ€"not what he is fit for, not what he is chosen for, but what he himself would like to do. A man who could sender more service by turning out munitions must be allowed to go to the front if he prefers to, and the man who would be better at the front must be allowed to stay at home if he feels more comfortable there. Freedom, afâ€" ter all, implies the right to shirk. Freedom implies the right for you to | »njoy and for others to defend. Is ‘hat freedom ? tive committee and give it the power to allot the work between all accordâ€" ing to a single plan of action and acâ€" cording to their several capacities. Each must then do his anpointed task faithfully and punctually. Only so can a machine be made to work, wheâ€" ther it be human or of steel. Only so can an army manoeuvre so as to deâ€" feat its enemy. And only so can a nation make war to the utmost of its «apacity. If it means businriess in the war it must freely and of its own accord, submit itself to the irksome restraints of national discipline. Mr. Lloyd George, speaking on July 29th, enunciated this principle with great ‘learness :â€" I London, Eng., Sept. 22.â€"The first and most obvious step is to introduce a new spirit into the conduct of pubâ€" lic affairs. In ordinary times the real ruler of the country is public opinion, slowly evolved under the ceaseless hammer of political controversy, and slowly passed into law through the ponderous machinery of Parliament. The Government of the day is comâ€" posed of party leaders primarily conâ€" cerned to carry into effect a certain programme of reform, and the people obey them because they are part of the constitutional machinery rather than because they command any auâ€" thority in themselves. War introâ€" duces us to a new world. Speed and efficiency, secrecy and the withholding of information useful to the enemy, ere essenual to success. Public opinâ€"| ion is, therefore, dethroned, for it has ‘ neither time nor material with which | to formulate sound judgments. Thig; imposes unon both Government and people a totally new set of relponsi-l‘ bilities. It reqanires of thae fxeac National Duty in he national effort is to as a whole, it will be aders are resolute and cause every section of 1at they will be obeyâ€" k and file realize that p to discuss the wisâ€" vise of particular inâ€" that they must obey Service For All "AL. I-‘ro-'l'ltenomd'rabk‘ witp Wy; 3 j "TV service of this kind. On the one with which | hand it has been treated as though it ents. This | involved the permanent introduction nment and of Continental conscription. The meaâ€" f responsiâ€" | sure which may be necessary in order he Governâ€" ’ to complete the mobilization of a naâ€" ership, and | tional army, by far the greater part of loyalty | of which is already voluntarily enâ€" ‘listed, ought not, and indeed cannot, time being | have anything to do with military r. It dlone | organization after the war. That is freed from | an entirely separate question, and it ntaapdans use d Lt s 0 VY u> i War to him must be carried on in the same way as his ledgers were | filled up, and his lawn mown in civilâ€" ian life. In the former state he freâ€" ‘ quently paused to light a pipe and ‘ contemplate the universe, in his new | state he continues the habit. In one | of the fights a private smoked steadily | as he fired at the advancing Germans. | He puffed at his cigarette between his ’shots. put the cigarette on a stone, ‘fired, and took the cigarette again. When he came back from a bayonet charge his chief concern was not the success his battalion had attained, but the fact that the cigarette had smoked itself out. The charge was a minor success of many successes. The cigaâ€" rette was the last. In the Francoâ€"German War the CGermans fired off 30 million musket cartridges and 363,000 rounds of arâ€" tillery, with which they killed or mortally wounded 77,000 French, beâ€" ing 400 shots to kill, as compared with 740 shots to kill in the Crimean War. 1 | Incident at the Front Which Showed | CVCrY cause but the true and unsus # Great Coolness pected one, i * But the doctor knows. His wide % The British is born with an equable |experience has proven to him that, tc . | and composed temperament, writes W.) some systems, tea and coffee are inâ€" :!Douglas Newton in the Royal Maga-i sidious poisons that undermine the | zine. His emotions are forced into health. Ask him if tea or coffee is a | the channel of that temperament by|cause of constipation, stomach and _ his own distaste of outward show,[nervous troubles. _ and more, by his life‘s companions‘ "I have been a coffee drinker all | distaste for outward show. Whateverlmy life, and when taken sick two ‘his emotions they are forced to flow | years ago with nervous prostration, in the same groove, and therefore, he | the doctor said that my nervous sysâ€" | does not change. He is always the| tem was broken down and that I | same, whether he is going at a steady | would have to give up coffee. | jogâ€"trot through business life, or wheâ€"| "I got so weak and shaky I could | ther he is fighting Germany. And beâ€" not work, and reading an advertiseâ€" ing always the same, you can neither! ment of Postum I asked my grocer if make him excitedâ€"that is in the hysâ€" | he had any of it. He said, ‘Yes,‘ and | terical German or the emotional Galâ€" | that he used it in his family and it | lie waysâ€"on the battlefield, or afraid. f was all it claimed to be. | He is always himself, and himself has ‘ "So I quit coffee and commenced | not altered for a century. to use Postum steadily. and in about a national crisis it may be necessary for a whole people to do the same. The state itself is not organized on the voluntary principle. People are not given any option about obeying the ordinary law. The State, liberty, civilization itself, would cease to exist unless the law, representing the comâ€" mon judgment about social relations and social rights and duties, were binding on all. And the State cannot fight a war in which its honor and its very existence are at stake unless its citizens are willing to make military service of the State no longer a matâ€" ter of individual judgment, but a duty binding by law onâ€"any whom the Govâ€" ernment may select, directly the Govâ€" ernment considers it necessary. Such a measure, however, though voluntarily accepted by the nation, and imposed by popular consent, does involve two things. It ends temporâ€" arily the voluntary system, so far as. military service is concerned, and with it the fundamental merit of the sys-J tem, that it places the responsibilityg for judging where his duty lies, and | for doing it, squarely on the individual | â€"a responsibility usually only exer-f cised in national affairs at the ballot | box. It also involves a temporary inâ€"| terference with the normal liberty of! action of the citizen. But there are times when it is necessary to sacrifice liberty temporarily in order that it | may be preserved in the long run.) Every soldier who has enlisted in this | war has sacrificed his personal liberty, | and subjected himself bo a most irk-f some discipline, in order that a great . cause may be served thereby; and in } THE CIGARETTE IN BATTLE " SE nen s APCWSMITMY TDE TV is one which will be determined not , by any Acts we may pass now, but |by our success or failure in the war litsefl. The one thing which would ;make conscription certain would be | the triumph of the Prussian ideals of | force and war. ‘ On the other hand, compulsory serâ€" | vice has been objected to on the | ground that it is inconsistent with the , free principles of the British Constiâ€" | tution won in long centuries of strugâ€" | gle. This objection is based on a misâ€" lapprehension. It implies that what is{ | proposed is that an arbitrary Governâ€" !ment should begin to coerce an unâ€" willing people by force. That is imâ€" possible in a democratic country. No Government could survive, even in war, which proposed to undo in any| way the constitutional work of the last two hundred years and put power back permanently into autoc:ratici hands. National military service inâ€"| volves an act of a totally difl'erenti kind. It is one which only the people‘ themselves can ~enact. It can be , brought into force only if the people declare by a deliberate Act of Par]ia-’ ment that, as a nation, they authorizei the Government to take the necessary‘ steps. to win the war. There has, in t p Inisundergtanding 20 0_ ,2 000 " Câ€"CCosary, Lnen we have no option but to give it the powers it asks. The function of the community in the matter is not to force the hand of the Government one way or the other, but to make it unâ€" derstand that it is willing to accept any method of enlistment for military service which it considers necessary to win #Ka ___ l 2t ene CHds _ This raises at once the contentious subject of military service. In order to mobilize the whole available manâ€" hood of the country for military purâ€" poses, should we resort to compulsory methods of enlistment ? To this quesâ€" tion there can only be one answer. Whether or not it is required the Govâ€" ernment, which knows the facts and the need, alone can decide. But if it judges such a measure necessary, then wa haus t usc be ui t ' MR (einsttih c sprlidl h anl fl;fl;sffi;t that fraction of service which fal toitslotwithloyaltyand detme“rml?afion to the end. m # e M_lf: :Ll‘lu‘l;e or in the field, » .i,“ the past, been much about national miliâ€" War Both kinds are equally delicious and cost about the same per cup. "There‘s a Reason" for Postum. h i â€"sold by Grocers. Instant Postumâ€"as soluble powder â€"dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water, and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 50c tins. 1a] | _ They were about to proceed against er.| him as a sorcerer when the dervise, lot | with great calmness, thus addressed in. | the Court:â€""I have been much amusâ€" of | ed at your surprise, and own that re | there has been some ground for your ice ] suspicions; but I have lived long and it alone, and I can find ample scope for in. | observation even in a desert. I knew ris | that I had crossed the track of a y, | cemel that had strayed from its own-‘ kâ€" ‘ er, because I saw no mark of any huâ€" at man footstep on the same route. I in ; knew that the animal was blind of one ry' eye, because it had cropped the herbâ€" e.| age only on the one side of its path; n . and that it was lame in one leg, from re | the faint impression which that parâ€" lgrticulnr foot had produced upon the y)| sand. I concluded that the animal had st | lost one tooth because wherever I fl-'gazed a small tuft of herbage had ‘S | been left uninjured in the centre of e ‘ its bite. As to that which formed the t | burthen of the beast the busy ants inâ€" S | formed me that it was corn on the one | 8| side, and the clustering flies that itl Y | was honey on the other." C?dian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. ostum comes in two forms: , Postum Cerealâ€"the original form â€"must be well boiled. 15¢ and 25¢ packages. "I am working every day and sleep well at night. My two children were coffee drinkers, but thoy have not drank any sirce Postum came into the house, and are far more healthy than they were before." Name given by "So I quit coffee and commenced to use Postum steadily, and in about two weeks I could sleep better and get up in the morning feeling fresh. In about two months I began to gain flesh. I weighed only 146 pounds when I commenced on Postum and now I weigh 167 and feel better than I did at 20 years of age. "I have been a coffee drinker all my life, and when taken sick two years ago with nervous prostration, the doctor said that my nervous sysâ€" tem was broken down and that I But the doctor knows. His wide experience has proven to him that, to some systems, tea and coffee are inâ€" sidious poisons that undermine the health. Ask him if tea or coffee is a cause of constipation, stomach and nervous troubles. It is hard to convince some people that tea or coffee does them an injury! They lay their bad feelings to almost every cause but the true and unsusâ€" pected one. Medicine Not Needed In This Case. On this they seized his person, and forthwith hurried him before the cadi; but on the strictest search nothing could be found upon him, nor could any evidence whatever be adduced to convict him either of falsehood or of theft. * "I have seen neither your â€" camel nor your jewels," repeated the derâ€" vise. "My friends," said the dervise, "I have never seen your camel, nor even heard of him, but from you!" "A pretty story, truly," said the merchant; "but where are the jewels which formed a part of his burden?" "Most certainly he was," they reâ€" plied; "and, as you have seen him so lately, and marked him so particularâ€" ly, you can in all probability conduct us to him." "You have lost a camel," said he to the merchants. "Indeed we have," they replied. "Was he not blind in the right eye, and lame in the left leg?" said the dervise. "He was," replied the merchants. "And was he not loaded with honey on one side and wheat on the other ?" A Dervise was journeying alo a desert, when two merchants denly met him. How a Dervise Described a Lost Camel. THE FRUITS OF OBSERVATION. Prince Albert. Not an ache or pain in the muscles or joints that Nerviline won‘t cure. It‘s wonderful for tumbago _ and sciatica; for neuralgia, stiff neck, earache and toothacne. Nerviline is simply a wonder. Best familfy liniâ€" ment known and larp;el! used for the past forty years. Sold by dealers everywhere, large family size bottle 50c., small trial size 25c. Refuse a substitute, take only "Nerviline." A DOCTOR‘S EXPERIENCE "Rheumatism kept my joints swolâ€" len and sore for ten years. My right knee joint was often too painful to alâ€" low me to walk. In this crippled torâ€" tured condition P found Nerviline a blessing. Its warm, soothing action brought relief I had given up hoping for. I rubbed on quantities of Nerviâ€" line and improved steadily. I also took Ferrozone at mealtime in order to purify and enrich my blood. I am toâ€" day well end â€"can recommend my treatme'q]:. most conscientiously. l i OR SIDE OR LIMBS! Wonderful "Nerviline" is the Remedy. A marvelous pain reliever. Not _ an ordinary linimentâ€"just about five times more powerful, more penetrating, more painâ€"subduing than any thick, oily or ammonia liniment. Nerviline fairly eats up the pain and stiffness in chronic rheumatic joints, gives quick relief to those throbbing pains, and never burns or even ltams‘ the skin. NO MORE STIFFNESS, PAIN OR MISERY IN YOUR BACK Soreness Goes Away i2 2608l conscientiously. (Signed) _ C. PARKS, whiy journeying alone in Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. _ The special feature of these trains is the separate ward for infectious cases fitted to the brake van. The arrangement of the berths in the wards set aside for lying down cases is also new. The berths, which can be raised like those in an ordinary sleeping car, are arranged in tiers of three, with the advantage that 36 men can be comfortably settled in each ward. As in all the speciallyâ€"built trains, these cars are loaded through doors at the side instead of through the open windows, which was the old style. The two trains just finished are part â€"of a fleet of 24 which carry ‘ British wounded from the front to the: base hospitais and the ports in France. I sudâ€" There are linen rooms, a pharmacy, and a kit room for the officers, who have a very comfortable messâ€"room, matched by a second messâ€"room for the four army nurses assigned to each train. The staff consists of 42, inâ€" cluding the cooksâ€"who have their own quartersâ€"and the orderlies, who lodge four in a compartment and have a long, cheerful dining car. Tanks in the roof supply the wards and kitchen with hundreds of gallons of water. i _ The train, whose carriages all conâ€" ’ nect so that on a straight line one can look along 800 feet of corridor, is steam heated and electric lighted throughcut, while every car is proâ€" vided with electric ventilating fans. The two kitchens, marvels of compact equipment, aroused much enthusiasm., They will supply the wounded men as soon as they are brought on board with hot drinks and soup, to be folâ€" lowed later with delicious stews and more substantial fare. ‘The treatment room has medical stores, a long table, and all fequisites for operations. | New One Built in England a Rolling Hospital and Hotel. The latest thing in train ambuâ€" lances, built by the London & Northâ€" Western Railway at a cost of some $35,000 for service in France, is quite the most perfect of the kird ever seen. Dr. Jackson‘s Roman Meal is sold with this guarantee. It is simply a most delicious food. It makes porâ€" ridge, pancakes, and all baked proâ€" ducts. All may be eaten hot without distress and nourish better than meat. Be sensible, at least try it. Costs little, only 10 cents and 25 cents. At all grocers. Constipation Relieved or a ‘"Money Back." No Drugs. It seems fairly obvious that . the German authorities paid more attenâ€" tion to the opinions of those in ‘Briâ€" tain who were best qualified to judge of the development of military aeroâ€" planes than did the British authoriâ€" ties. Gen. Henderson‘s opinion was backâ€" ed up by various other officers of the Flying Corps, yet in spite of this we have the extraordinary position that after the appearance of the first of these big German aeroplanes, Mr. Tennant, the Under Secretary â€" for War, announces that we have multiâ€" pleâ€"engined aeroplanes in course of construction. He was particularly insistent on the need for more than one engine, so that if one engine broke down the other one, or others, would be able to keep the machine in the air. _ In connection with this sudden apâ€" pearance of German aeroplanes with multiple engines and of large size, it is worth while noting that fully two years ago Gen. Henderson, then and now commanding the Royal Fiying Corps, stated on more than one occaâ€" sion at the semiâ€"public meetings of the Aeronautical Society that one type of aeroplane necessary for the full equipment of the Flying Corps was a big machine with more than one enâ€" gine. * Incidentally triplanes were built and flown successfully in England by A. V. Roe in 1910 or earlier. ! Recently I have heard from officers who have returned from France that the Germans have of late put in the air several large biplanes which, alâ€" though they have only one body apiece, like an ordinary tractor biâ€" plane, are driven by two engines, each driving a separate propeller. British Negligent. Those who have seen them and who are qualified to judge, assume from the speed and climb of the machine that these engines are the ordinary 100 horsepower engines used in most of the German machines. FINE TRAIN AMBULANCE. When the official eye witness was permitted to make known to the peoâ€" ple of England the existence of a big German biplane with two fuselages or bodies and two engines the exisâ€" tence of such a machine aroused a considerable amount of interest in this country. Now a report comes from Switzerland that the Germans have actually put in the air a "triplane," which is a machine with three pairs of wings, one above the other, driven by four propellers, each driven by an enâ€" gine of 200â€"horsepower, so that, the whole machine hss 800 horsepower in ‘ it. This shows that the Germans are | going one better tiian the Russian | Sikorsky, which has about 400 horseâ€"| power in it, consisting of four engines ‘ of 100 horsepower each driving a sinâ€" ‘ gle propeller. C. G. Grey, editor of The Aeroplane, London, discusses the German and British aeroplane situatior as follows: IMPROVED AEROPLANE URGED TWO YEARS AGo. h ans Took Up Idea, and Have Triplane With Four â€" _ Big Engines. BRITISH AIR DEA Tramp ogitating a moment)â€" would, mufi, but they have‘ all beer destroyed Ladyâ€"Are" you? Mention a town in Belgium.‘ In fiar Times. Trampâ€"Plegse, mum, I‘m a Belâ€" gian refugee." In yachtâ€"racing! every yacht is bound by rules to abandon the race and go to the assigtance of any yacht or person in peril} ‘ The Canadian demand for Indian and Ceylon teas increase yearly. and if one adds to this the many other contingencies brought about by the war, it can readily be understood why the cost of tea is increasing. Russia is taking enormous quantities, and their buyers pay the very highâ€" st prices. The â€"abnormal buying g‘;s forced quotations up over 10c a pound higher than- nine months ago. Russia Buys Large Quantities of Tea. Nedâ€"Send her a diplomatic reply that will keep the question open, and perhaps she‘ll change her mind. â€" Tedâ€"She wrote asking to break the engagement, and 1 don‘t know what to do. "From that day Jellicoe and Ingram became bosom friends, and though this trivial incident occurred more than forty years ago, it has always remained in my memory. I do not inâ€" deed remember, either at this or at any other of the schools where I was educated, any instance of equally sucâ€" cessful, and original boyish diploâ€" macy." a neat dropâ€"kick, so that the ball bounded against him with some force. There was a shout of laughter and applause, and away ran Jellicoe, purâ€" sued by Ingram, to a corner of the field, where they indulged for some moments in‘ a friendly tussle before resuming the game. "A game of football was being played in the afternoon on the small playing field which lay within the school precinets. On one occasion the bell went out of bounds, and Jellicoe went to fetch it. Instead of throwing it back in the ordinary manner, he ran back with the ball in his hand, and, on coming close to Ingram, made Minard‘s mump'nt Cures Dandruf. "There was a senior boy in the school," continues _ the professor, "whose name, I think, was Ingram. Now, those who know anything about school life will know that it is hedged about with all sorts of rules and points of etiquette, and that it is exâ€" tremely difficult for a new boy, espeâ€" cially at his first coming, to gain the friendship or confidence of one who has already an established place in the school. But John Jeillicoe had evidently determined that it was worth while to cultivate the friendship of this senior boy; and he set about it in the following very original way: | _ Professor MacNaughton, who was at school with Jellicoe, says that the admiral possessed a large capacity for fun, "and he was certainly distinâ€" guished beyond any of my contemâ€" poraries at school with a fund of oriâ€" ginality of which I remember one parâ€" ticularly striking instance. Young Jellicoe had just entered the school, and being a new boy, he had to make his way in the world of schoolâ€"life. He proceeded in an eminently original way. The Diplomatic Way He Made a Bosom Friend. As a boy Sir John Jellicoe, Admiral of the Grand Fleet, attended a school at Rottingdean, the little Sussex vilâ€" lage, four miles from Brighton. Apart from the fact that he was a hard worker, Jellicoe was undistinguished from other boys. He was known, however, as a boy of exceptionally high character, and successfully passâ€" ed the very difficult examination which was necessary in those days to secure admission to the Britannia. ‘be given than to use regularly Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills which have become Tfamous in restoring the sick to good health. A general toning up of the system at once takes place. The whole body is vitalized by richer and purer blood. ‘The appetite is increasâ€" ed, food is digested and naturally strength rapidly increases. Headaches go because the bowels are regulated and all wastes are carried off. There is no experiment about using Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills because they cerâ€" tainly restore the sick as a trial will quickly prove. Just as good for the old as the young, and suitable to the needs of men, women and children. This grand family medicine should be in every home. This condition is full of peril. It is the stepping stone to invalidism, the beginning of a shattered constitution. We advise everyone in this condition to take a good medicine at once and try to get well while yet there is Eime. k Probu_bly no better advice can CE ERCICT 2008 pPere An depressing headaches : This annditian is .1 . 2707 i"S0pPy, Jack ambition, have poor appetite, look pale and suffer from . The wear and strain of life has tended in recent years to produce nervous debility in a large percentage of our population. Thousands are afâ€" fected with a feeling they can‘t exâ€" actly describe. They are always tired and d_roop_y, lack ambition, have poor If Thin, Nervous Run Down, JELLICOE AT SCHOOL. Evasive. ISSUE 41â€"‘15. and insomnia. By rising two hours earlier every morning than you are accustomed to you would, in forty years, add ten years of eightâ€"hour days to your life. [ Lord Kitchener is the silent man of war, and he is making ready for the ]knock-out blow. We have not yet reâ€" ‘taliated upon the Germans with a weapon like the poison gas, but that does not mean that we cannot. Kitchener is not only building up armies, he is creating weapons and preparing surprises. The scientist and the inventor have been called up by Britain‘s strong man. When the hour comes to employ the new weapâ€" ons and the new armies Germany will do more than talk of peace, then Kitchener will take his true position as leader of the British Army in the west. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves NMeuralgia. ' That task is not yet finished, for Lord Kitchener will make one more tappealâ€"-and it will be the last. Mark that. The register will be his guide as to the number of men he will ask for, and he knows that the call will be ‘answered. He is in no great hurry to make that call, for rightly we are now dealing with arms before the man, and certain events may even happen that will enable the Allies to win victory at present strength; but it is well known in military circles that Lord Kitchener will not consider his work at the War Office done until Britain has a reserve superior to any of the Great Powers> I believe that the nation would be almost unanimous in transferring Kitchener to the field, but we must first of all be sure that his work at home is finished. He set out to perâ€" form what seemed an impossible task, namely, the raising of an army numâ€" bered not by thousands but by milâ€" lions. There was only one man in Britain capable of even tackling that jobâ€"Kitchener. ‘ jHe Is Making Ready for the Knockâ€" ‘ out Blow. It is puzzling many what we are doing with the armies we have raisâ€" ed. Everyone expected certain activiâ€" ties when we had reached a certain strength, and in more than one influâ€" ential quarter the feeling has been expressed that Lord Kitchener should now take his true position as Britâ€" ain‘s foremost soldier, writes an Engâ€"| lish correspondent. | +â€" t aves. P ArtineWhisisstada ts i W L s s S soon made him a fat, healthy child." Thousands of other mothers give Baby‘s Own Tablets the same prais‘s The Tablets regulate the stomach and bowels, break up colds and simple feâ€" vers, expel worms, cure colic, and make teething easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Mrs. Jos. Gaudreau, Notre Dame des Bois, Que., writes: "Last autumn our baby was very sick and we were greatly discouraged. The doctor did not seem able to help him, and we beâ€" gan using Baby‘s Own Tablets, which GREATLY DISCOURAGED OVER BABY‘S ILLNESS i Preantst n Proc (he hy Mn ced it, would have made him his own masâ€" ter instead of the slave of publishers and moneyâ€"lenders. Writing to a broâ€" ther about the training of his son, poor Goldsmith said: "Teach, my dear sir, to your son thrift and economy. Let his poor wandering uncle‘s examâ€" ple be placed before his eyes. I had contracted the habits and notions of a philosopher while I was exposing myâ€" self to the insidious approaches of cunning; and often by being, even with my narrow finances, charitable to excess, I forgot the rules of justice, and placed myself in the very situaâ€" tion of the wretch who thanked me for my bounty." § fi 12’; (tad Q_ 1 City Dairy Co., Ltd. Though a Spendthrift Realized Advanâ€" tages of Thrift. works prove him to have been a SPADINA CRESCENT TORONTO, ONT. Perhaps you have been sending your supply of Milk to a local factory,â€"then you do not know the advantages of sending to the Largest and Most Upâ€"toâ€"Date Dairy in Canada. LET US TELL YOU. WRITE NOW for information and copy of contract. Give your shipping station and railway. LORD KITCHENER‘S TAsSK V | L K TORONTO GOLDSMITH‘S ADVICE. WE â€"BUY IT R U mc any what we are ies we have raisâ€" ted certain activiâ€" reached a certain re than one influâ€" Henry VIII. was the first English Sovereign to be styled "His Majesty," In India the lowest classes wear, as shoes, a flat block with a large knob, which slips between the first and second toes. They are so skilled in wearing these that they are able to keep them on and walk or run with great speed. Dear Sirsâ€"I can recommend MITâ€" NARD‘S LINIMENT for Rheumaâ€" tism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. Yours trul{, T. B. LAVERS, St. John. Mi'l\lll‘d’l_ Liniment Co., Limited Mrs. Snooperâ€"My husband saw Mrs. Keedick yesterday and I asked him what she had on, and he replied, "Oh, clothes." his Mrs. Snooperâ€"Men make me tired. Mrs. Swaybackâ€"What‘s the matter now ? Paint on Putnam‘s Drop Corn Extractor to night, and corns feel better in the mornâ€" Out ing. _ Magical the way _"P ut n a m‘ s" eases the pain, destroys the roots, kills a corn for all time. No pain. Cure guaranteed. Get a 25¢c. bottle of ®Putnam‘s" Extractor toâ€"day. Corns Drop Out Ecksteinâ€"Clap de cover on, Ikey, while I run for de cop! If we don‘t arrest him for stealin‘ coal he‘ll sue us for damages! Klein (to partner)â€"Quick, Eck sbe_in! a man fell trou de cole hole! The preacher smiled gently, > "Yes, I have," he replied in cool sarcastic tones. "You see when I want to shut out anything disagreeâ€" able from my sight. I can always draw down my eyelids, like this; but unfortunately I haven‘t any flaps to my ears "But, surely," protested the scofâ€" fer, "you must admit that man is a bungle job? Why, even you, in your work, must have noted many deâ€" fects in the human organism, and have thought of better physical conâ€" trivances." The subject of the discussion was the imperfection of man. The scepâ€" tical man held that human beings aren‘t so very wonderful, after all, and the preacher didn‘t agree with him. : DOOm TCWm RMREREE Tee W. F. YOUNG, P. D. F., 516 Lymans Bidg , Montreal, Can. Absorbine and Ahorblni.!r.. are made 4n Canada, | The demand for our gradu: August and September was our supply, _ Commence now free. W. L Bhuynae |s2 DAY ALsO COMMISSION FOR Lcocal Representative. Either SeX. | Experience un a lrn time acâ€" | cepted. _ Nichols, Llnl{od. padina Ave., | Toronto. * internal and out pain by our h us before too late. Co.. Limited â€" Man 1. 0CY PVOT Ontario. _ All Brampton. 2. fTURING FOR A P co l sult me. I have over t.&% "\n): H‘!t. located in the best sections T RH OPEON i emrmmmmmemmemmenmmemmmmmemsad NANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. ./t p:?tel!"nll un: external, curtod v‘cv"r‘t.t‘. u n our home treatment. * s before tyoo late. Dr. Beliman Medical 0., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Youge WNEWSPAPERS FOR SALE. LOOKING FOR Presence of Mind !â€"MARING NEWS AND JOB s for sale in good Ontario ‘he most nseful and interesting sinesses. Full information on n to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" West ‘Adelaide Bt., ‘Toronto. Indefinite. MISCELLANZEOUs. Pointed. SCHOOL TO ATTEND | Instant graduates during was four times Calendar 24

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