Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Nov 1915, p. 7

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m mn 4 4 *4‘> S# ;â€" ALL MOTHERS NEED COASTANT STREXGTH Their Strength is Taxed a They are Victims of Weakâ€" ness and Suffering. When there is a growing family to care for and the mother falls ill it is a serious matter. Many mothers who are on the go from morning to night, whose work, apparent‘ly, is never done, try to disguise their suffering and keep up an appearance of cheerâ€" fulness before their family; Only themselves know how they are disâ€" tressed by backaches and headaches, dragging down pains and nervous weakness; how their nights are often sleepless, and they arise to a new day‘s work tired, depressed and quite unrefreshed. _ Such women should know that their sufferings are usually due to lack of good nourishing blood. They should know that the one thing they need above all others to give them new health and strength is rich, red blood, and that among all mediâ€" cines there is none can equal Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills for their bloodâ€"makâ€" ing, healthâ€"restoring qualities. Every suffering woman, every woman with a home and family to care for should give these pills a fair trial, for they will keep her in health and strength and make her work easy. Mrs. G. Strasser, Acton West, Ont., says: "I am the mother of three children, and after each birth I became terribly run down; I had weak, thin blood, always felt tired, and unable to do my houseâ€" hold work. After the birth of my third child I seemed to be worse, and was very badly run down. I was adâ€" vised to take Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. I found the greatest benefit from the Pills and soon gained my oldâ€"time strength. Indeed, after taking them 1 felt as well as in my girlhood, and could take pleasure in my work. I also used Baby‘s Own Tablets for my little ones and have found them a splendid medicine for childhood ailâ€" ments." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $256 'l;t)'m-”Tâ€"};; Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. British Officer Stole Over a Ton of Germans‘ Explosives. News reached Blackburn, England, recently, that Lieut. W. Cooper, an old Blackburn amateur footballer, has been decorated at the front with the Military Cross for an act of remarkâ€" «ble coolness and resource. He was driving a mine 192 yards long under the German position, and had got within a few yards of his obâ€" jective, when he broke into a German mine crammed with high explosives. For a moment he thought his party were doomed, but he quickly cut the wires leading to the German trenches, and sending back for help procceeded to carry away the enemy‘s explosives piccemeal. As the tunnel was very low, he and his men lay head to feet and passed the stuff back from hand to hand. The task occupied twelve hours, there being one ton and a half of exploâ€" sives. No mishap occurre d of Licut. Cooper‘s men wers lered unconscious by fumes, and iwar of them received the D.C.M. for their share in this remarkable feat. 206 Women Clerks in the Bank of England. The very sanctum of British conâ€" servatism, the Bank of England, has been invaded by women clerks. More than 200 of them are now employed in the bank in various forms of cleriâ€" cal work. While it is the war that pave women the opportunity of reâ€" placing men of military age, it is also war that created additional work at the bank through the war loan busiâ€" ness. Women have been employed in the bank of England in the numble noteâ€" sorting capacity since 1895, but they had never before done clerical work. They often put in as much as 12 hours a day. (On Properly Selected Food. It Pays Big Dividends. If parents will give just a little inâ€" telligent thought to the feeding of their children the difference in the health of the little folks will pay, many times over, for the small trouâ€" lrl(‘. Other Englisn banks, it is stated, now contemplate following the lead 'pf the Bank of England, which, despite its former prejudice against women, has been historically known as the "Old Lady of Threadneedle Street." A mother writes: "Our children are all so much better and stronger than they ever were before we made a change in the character of the food. We have quit using potatoes three times a day with coffee and so much meat. "Now we give the little folks some fruit, cither fresh, stewed, or canned, some Grapeâ€"Nuts with cream, occaâ€" sionally some softâ€"boiled eggs, and some Postum for breakfast and supâ€" per. Ther. for dinner they have some meat and vegetables. "It would be hard to fully describe the chanee in the children, they have "It would be hard to fully desceribe the change in the children, they have grown so sturdy and strong, and we attribute this change to the food eleâ€" ments that, I understand, exist in Grapeâ€"Nuts and Postum. "A short time ago my oaby was teething and had a great deal of stoâ€" mach and bowel trouble. Nothing secmed to agree with him until I tried CGrapeâ€"Nuts softened and mixed with rich milk and he improved rapidly and mwot sturdy and well." "There‘s a Reason." BR Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. p HUve: vesd the above letter ? A new ans supsars "‘ma time to time. '___M‘; on3 #re Intex st. THIS THEFT WON A MEDAL wWOMEN REPLACE MEN. FEED CHILDREN How Dr. Wyeth Learned to Use His Left Hand. It is peculiarly fortunate for a swordsman, or a surgeon to be ambiâ€" dextrous. Dr. John Allan Wyeth was not born to that good fortune, but he achieved it. How he did so, with the assistance of a long, lithe, extra tough hickory,â€"not applied in the manner that has rendered that useful tree so unpopular with boys,â€"he has related in his interesting autobioâ€" graphy, recently published. When he was a boy of twelve, he attended school in a country schoolâ€" house built on the backbone of a high, wooded ridge that overlooked the village. At recess one slope of the ridge was the girls‘ playground, and the other the boys‘; and boys and girls met and played together on the sumâ€" mit. A favorite sport was for the boys to bend the tough young hickory saplings down to the ground and seat themselves and their sweethearts upon them for "rideyâ€"horses." "I had a sweetheart," the doctor acknowledges, "and her name was Mugg. Can you imagine in all the category of names one more sugâ€" gestive of uglinessâ€"I am almost tempted to say of ‘muggliness?‘ But Mugg was only her nickname. It was : short for Margaret, and she was the: prettiest girl in schoolâ€"to me. "There stood in our grove a slenâ€" der, graceful, tightâ€"bark hickory sapâ€" ling, toughest of all tough timber, which bends but never breaks. It towered fully thirty feet to its topâ€" most bifurcation. There was no other like it, as there was no other girl like Mugg. I made up my mind that I would bend it to the ground, and that she should have it; and to the top I climbed, twisted the terminal twigs round my hands and wrists, and swung boldly out into space toâ€" ward the ground. I had struck the wrong hickory. "Instead of swooping to the earth as I had anticipated, in a long, graceâ€" ful curve, amid the plaudits of an adâ€" miring throng, with a glance at Mugg and her approving smile, I bent that obstinate sapling not more than three feet from the top, in fishhook shape; and there I dangled, helpless and hopeless, almost as much so as if I had had a noose about my neck and had been hanging from a gibbet. 1 could not clamber back, for the arc of the cirele described by the bending tree top had a diameter beyond the swing of my wildly gyrating feet." His suggestion that half a dozen boys climb up and add sufficient weight to bend the tree low enough for safety was disregarded in the laughter at his absurd predicament. A rival called up to him to stay where he wasâ€"he looked better at a disâ€" tance; another amid a chorus of gigâ€" gles suggested that if he would only drop, the ground would catch him. Before they realized that his plight was anything more than funny, his hold broke, and he did dropâ€"slashing through the limbs and against them in such a way that when he reached the grourd it was no longer feet foreâ€" most. His outstretched right hand saved his neck, but his right wrist was broken. The fracture was mistaken for a sprain and was not set, and during the prolonged pain and weakness that ensued the boy took to using his left hand and arm. He became fairly ambidextrous; and in after years, apâ€" preciating the value of complete amâ€" bidexterity in his profession, he workâ€" ed almost wholly with his left hand while teaching and studying anatomy. He was finally able, in performing an operation however delicate, to use whichever hand was more convenient or useful, without thinking whether it were right or left. Baby‘s Own Tablets will promptly cure constipation of childhood. They act as a gentle laxative, regulate the bowels and stomach and are absoluteâ€" ly safe. Concerning them Mrs. A. Crowell, Sandy Cove, N.S., writes: "I can strongly recommend Baby‘s Own Tablets to all mothers whose little ones are suffering from constipation." The tablets are sold by medicine dealâ€" ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. CHILDHOOD point of view. If it were only possible to convey in its horrid detail the account of the fires in Canada where thirtyâ€"eight children lost their lives, the exciteâ€" ment and nervous tension, the loss of property, the anguish of parents, the pain of the little child, some measure of reform might soon be effected. Mothers should ever after guard their children against matches, as they would protect them against a terrible and menacing enemy. + One of the most important features in connection with the control of forâ€" est fires is their prompt discovery, thus rendering it possible in most cases to extinguish the fire in an inâ€" cipient stage, at small expense and with slight damage. One of the reâ€" cent developments in this work is the use of a hydroâ€"agroplane for the disâ€" covery of fires in the forest reserves of Northern Wisconsin. This is a lake region, and excellent results have been secured, one fire being accurateâ€" ly located at a distance ofâ€" thirty miles. un aid . .. K * TO THE MOTHERS OF CANADA. TAUGHT BY THE HICKORY. Forest Protection Methods. CoONsTIPATION (CRUELTY OF TURKS | WORST N HISTORY Eight Hundred Strokes With Bastinâ€" ado; Girls Kidnapped, Wholeâ€" sale Deportation. Crimes committed against the Arâ€" menian people by the Turks surpass in cruelty anything that history has recorded, according to the reports reâ€" cently received by a committee which represents _ American interests in the Turkish empire. Deportation of Armenians began early in the summer and still continuâ€" ed at last accounts. Practically all of the men of military age have been dragged off to the army. The aged, the women and the children are beâ€" ing driven into the country and there are reports of indescribable masâ€" sacres. TERRIBLE CRIMES AGAINST THE ARMENIANS. One writer tells of the cruel use of the bastinado in a certain prison where Armenians were held. _ "At the time of the Romans," he writes, "forty strokes were adminisâ€" tered at the very most; in this place, however, 200, 300, 500 and even 800 strokes were administered. A young man was beaten to death within the space of five minutes. Apart from the bastinadoing, other methods were employed, too, such as putting hot irons on the chest." Fears of Extermination. While the treatment of the Armeâ€" nians is particularly brutal, it is said the fate of all Christians and nonâ€" Turkish inhabitants is little better. While the orders of commanders may have been reasonable humane, the exâ€" ecution of them by subordinates is said to have been harsh. "The panic in the city was terrible," says one correspondent, referring _ to the effect of a deportation order. "The people felt the government was deterâ€" mined to exterminate the Armenian race and they were powerless to reâ€" sist. Many of the convicts in the prison had been released, and the mountains all around were full of bands of outlaws. "It was feared the women and chilâ€" dren were taken some distance from the city and left to the mercy of these men. However that may be, there are provable cases of the kidnapping of attractive young girls by the Turkâ€" ish officials of â€"â€". One Moslem reâ€" ported that a gendarme had offered to sell him two girls for a mejidieh. "This deportation continued at inâ€" tervals for about two weeks. It is estimated that out of about 12,000 Arâ€" menians in â€"â€" only a few hundred were left. At the time of writing no definite word has beere heard from any of these groups." "The bestâ€"looking of the older girls, who were retained as caretakers in orphanages, are kept in houses for members of the gang which seems to rule affairs here. I hear on good auâ€" thority that a member of the comâ€" mittee of Union and Progress here has ten of the handsomest girls in a house in the central part of the city." Compelled to Wed Turks. "The Armenian population has been converted to Islamism," says a private letter to the American committee. "It was a means of escaping from |the forced migration. Orthodox Turks are given the wives of absent husbands, or their daughters. In many cases the wives and daughters of Christians have been immediately compelled to marry Turks. ‘At 72 Fights for France the Second l Time. | _ According to the Paris Figaro the oldest volunteer in the French army is Alcide Verd, born in April, 1843, at Rompont (Ardeche). He already has :celebrated his seventyâ€"second birthâ€" day when he became attached to the \recruiting bureau at Troyes. A deâ€" tachment recently was sent from there to fill gaps in the ranks of the Fortyâ€"seventh Territorial regiment, ‘and Verd was so insistent on going to \the front with the younger men that |the commanding officer finally conâ€" sented to enlist him for active serâ€" | vice. \ The aged volunteer now is a solâ€" ‘dier in the Seventh company of the lregiment, which is stationed someâ€" | where in the trenches of the first |line of defence. He is doing his duty as efficiently as any of his !comrades in arms, whose unbounded | admiration the spry septuagenarian | has won through his vivacity and | never failing good humor. | Alcide Verd has seen war before. \ He fought the fathers of his present iadversaries “ring the Francoâ€"Prusâ€" | sian conflict, th which he took part up | to the ominous battle of Sedan, when che was made a prisoner and with thousands of others sent into captivâ€" ity in Silesia. "After we had seen thousands of people start out, and especially after ours had actually gone, we came to the conclusion that if anything could be done to stop this terrible crime, which impresses us as ten times worse than any massacre, it would be done in Constantinople. * _ "In Constantinople we found that the whole plan of deportation is one of the central government, gnd t_ha§ ;\:» ér;ssure from the embassies had been able to do anything. 3 "Stories have been told by travelers arriving from the interior of the killâ€" ing of the males, of a great number of bodies along the roadside and floatâ€" ing in the Euphrates River; of the delivery to the Kurds by the genâ€" darmes of women and children, of unthinkable outrages committed by gendarmes and Kurds and of the killâ€" ing of many of the victims. At first these stories were not given much credence, but no doubt longer remains of their truth." Minard‘s Linimont Cures Distemper. OLDEST FRENCH SOLDIER. _ You‘ll get almost instant relief from muscle soreness, stiffness, aching joints, lameness or rheumatics by rubbing with Nerviline. It‘s a soothâ€" ing liniment, and doesn‘t blister, doesn‘t burn or even stain the skin. Rub Nerviline right into the sore spot, rub lots of it over those tortured muscles, do this and the pain will go. You see Nerviline is thin, not oily. Therefore it sinks in, it penetrates through the tissues, it gets right to those stiff, sore muscles and irritated nerves that make you dance with pain:. s .. :s /.. Not necessary to drug inside! That awful stiffness that makes you yelp worse than a kicked dog will be curedâ€"cured for a certainty, and quickly, too, if you just rub on Nerviline. T9 .s. 0 * It‘s the most harmless cure in the world for Lumbago, Back Strain or Sciatica. It takes away the ache at once and ends your misery quickly. Now quit complainingâ€"don‘t suffer another dayâ€"Nerviline, that good, soothing oldâ€"time liniment will limber you up mighty quick. Get busy toâ€" day, the large 50c. family size bottle is the most economical, of course, the trial size costs but 25¢c. Any dealer anywhere can supply Nerviline. Lumbage‘s Misery Ceases, Every Aching Muscle Cured Uncanny Device to be Employed by the Germans. The fear of overwhelming attacks from the air, which prevailed among the allied nations at the outbreak of the war and until recently, when the comparative ineffectiveness of the Zeppelins seemed demonstrated, is likely to be revived and the terrifying power of these monster airships fully realized if the reports relating to the new aerial torpedo perfected by the Germans prove to be true, says Popular Mechanics. The accounts of the operation of these torpedoes read like the fantastic tales with his tireless striving for the accomplishment which readers were regaled before the great war became a | reality. In many respects the torâ€" pedo resembles a submarine torpedo | and is said to possess all its de-i structive power. It is equipped with a delicate wireless apparatus that controls its propelling and steering mechanism, and through this every | movement of the torpedo is controlled | by the powerful wireless waves sent| out from the Zeppelin. As it speeds toward the target the torpedo can be steered up or down or horizontally at the will of the operator. In pracâ€" tice it is simply propelled to a point | directly above the object to be deâ€"| stroyed and is then turned vertically | downward and dropped like an ordinâ€" | ary bombs | ‘The new torpedo is said to be about seven feet in length and to have a war | head like that of a submarine. In orâ€" der to allow it to penetrate a roof or | other obstruction before exploding the war head is equipped with a time : fuse that delays the explosion for a few seconds after the impact. Carried in the body of the torpedo is from ; one hundred to one hundred and fifty | pounds of high explosive, enough to cause great havoc, especially when exâ€"| ploded within an inclosure such as a | building. The torpedo is driven by two propellors at the stern and is sustained in the air by two propellors| working on vertical axles and placed fore and aft under the body. By | means of an arrangement of fins and | rudders it is kept from capsizing in . the heaviest winds. It is believed that the propellors and other mechanism are operated by compressed air. | While this torpedo can doubtless be made enormously more effective than a bomb that is simply dropped it has one serious limitation whén launched from an airship against fortifications or war ships. To be safe from the fire of antiâ€"aircraft guns the airship must either be at a considerable disâ€" tance from the target or at a great height above the ground. In either case it would be extremely difficult to determine when the torpedo was anywhere near a point directly above the target. In spite of this, however, the Germans have apparently providâ€" ed themselves with an exceedingly effective weapon of offenge in this torpedo. Flaxseed Now a VWonderful Huâ€" man Food. as deodorized and used in Dr. Jackâ€" son‘s Roman Meal. It‘s the most nourishing seed grown. It has alâ€" ways been known as a wonderful food for stock, but since Dr. Jackson‘s discovery of a method of deodorizing it, it has become available as a deliâ€" cious human food, 25% of it being used in Roman Meal. This food is guaranteed to relieve constipation or "money back." It also nourishes betâ€" ter than meat and prevents indigesâ€" tion. Ask your doctor. At all groâ€" cers, 10 cents and 25 cents. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows A popular minister avoids touchâ€" ing the sore spots of his congreâ€" gation. His Specialty. "I‘ve got the best memory of anyâ€" body in the community!" _ triumphâ€" antly cackled old Uncle Totterly. "Why, I can remember things on ‘most everybody ‘round here that they wish I‘d forgotten!" JUST RUB CGN OLDâ€"TIME "NERVILINE." NEW AERIAL TORPEDO. |\ _ It is difficult to distinguish poison sumac from other sumacs. Do not ‘call it dogwood; it does not look like dogwood; true dogwoods have beautiâ€" ful flowers, and are not poisonous. Poison sumac grows like a small, | branching tree; it is the cleanest and _smoothest in leaf and branch of all the sumacs. The leafliets are long ‘and pointed, five to eleven on one |\ petiole. If you see little drooping clusters of greenishâ€"white, or later the greenish little berries, do not | touch anything on that shrub or tree, Many Flowors Have Sap That Is Poisonous If Swallowed. There are no beautiful poisonous flowers native to this country. There are only three plants that are really poisonous to the touch. They all belong to the Rhus family, and reâ€" semble one another in their uninterâ€" esting clusters of dull greenishâ€"gray berries. Two of them, poison ivy and poison sumac, are found in the eastern part of the country, and poison oak grows on the Pacific coast. Poison ivy is a common vine that climbs over rocks, and that in some shady places covers the ground with luxuriant leaves. Occasionally, in fertile spots, it will raise branches like shrubs up over the rocky supâ€" ports; elsewhere it clings to the bark of trees and climbs high. Its flowers and berries are always in dull clusters, but its leaves may become brilliant red and brown in the autumn sun. Do not pick leaves that grow in threes on a vine, but do not be afraid to gather leaves of the woodbine, which grow in clusters of five. \ _ The botanist and lover of flowers |should remember two things: first, it is safe to pick any beautiful flower; second, it is never safe to let its | juices touch the lips or any flesh : wound. Poison oak does not look like any oak. It has clusters of three almost round leaves, which grow on a vine like poison ivy, or more often on a low shrub. If you see the clusters of white flowers, or berries, do not touch the plant. There are many plants with sap that is more or less poisonous if it reaches a cut or abrasion. Do not let a plant drip on a wound. There are many plants with thorns and stings that produce painful irritation if they scratch through the skin. Pick their flowers carefully. Do not ever hold flowers in your mouth. Do, not give flowers to baâ€" bies, for they are sure to put them into their mouths, and some of our familiar flowers have poison enough to affect a baby‘s health. There are other flowers and plants that are harmless to man, but poisonâ€" ous to animals, if eaten. Many who read these lines know the bad effects of the loco weed of the West or the lambkin of the East. In pastures where buttercups abound cattle careâ€" fully graze round them, but will not eat the flowers or leaves, because of the bitter taste of the poison in them. Sore Corns Go! No cutting, no plasâ€" c ters or pads to press Orns the sore spot. Putnam‘s Extractor Go ' makes the corn &9 «s without pain. Takes out the sting overâ€"night. Never falls â€"leaves no scar. Get a 25¢. bottle of Putnamis Corn Extractor toâ€"day. Little Molly had been very trying all day. That evening, when her grownâ€"up sister was putting her to bed, she said she hoped the child would be a better girl toâ€"morrow, and not make everybody unhappy with her naughty temper. Molly listened in silence, thought hard for a few moments, and then said, wisely: C io. "Yes, when it‘s me it‘s temper; when it‘s you it‘s nerves." Germans Wage War on the Russian Language. In all the cities and towns of Poâ€" land now under German occupation active &teps are being taken to Gerâ€" manize them thoroughly. To this end all efforts are at present being directâ€" ed to have the German language supâ€" plant the Russian. In Lodz, Warsaw and other towns all the Russian signs on the streets and in street cars and "buses have been removed and Gerâ€" man signs put in their places. In the restaurants and hotels all the menus are now printed in German, and the German language is spoken where formerly the Russian prevailed. Beginning with the first week in | October with the reopening of the | schools in Lodz and Warsaw the | teaching of the German language' was begun, with the object of bring-' ing up the younger generation to | speak German first and to instil in | them German kultur. In fact, a| widespread propaganda has been o.r-! ganized by German officials for the| elimination of the Russian language | entirely from the conquered sections | of Poland. POISONOUS PLANTS. ‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheric. TEUTON KULTUR. The Difference. Absolutely Painless REMARKABLE CASE. Insane Murderer Helped Edit a Great The late Sir James Murray, the editor of the famous dictionary bearâ€" ing his name, discovered some years ago that one of his most valued conâ€" tributors was an inmate of Broadâ€" moor Asylum, who had stood his trial for murder! An article in the Strand Magazine tells the story of this remarkable inâ€" dividual under the title: "The Strange Case of Dr. Minor." It begins thus: "It was Sir James Murray‘s cusâ€" tom whenever he was ready to start on a new word (and the genesis of a single one mostly takes up several pages in the ‘New English Dictionâ€" ary‘) to send it out to all of his army of volunteer readers, who forthwith supplied the earliest possible quotaâ€" tion which they could discover in question was used. "When this had been going on for a time, Sir James discovered that some of the most valuable quotations that reached him, together with some of the most scholarly commenul thereupon, were forwarded by a cerâ€" tain Dr. W. C. Minor, who wrote from Crowthorne, a small village in Berkâ€" shire. â€" This contributor‘s identity puzzled Sir James more than a little, the more so as he soon came to realâ€" ize that the latter‘s knowledge of the | subject of philology could not be far | behind his own. So much did Sir James esteem the mysterious Dr. Minor, in fact, that whenever he had completely finished his analysis of the history of any one word, he was ! in the habit of sending the full notes | connected therewith to his correâ€" spondent in Crowthorne for his final revision, which, more often than not, was productive of some important adâ€" dition or exceedingly illuminating% criticism or other comment. | "For many months this went on. Eventually, so much did Sir James feel himself and Oxford University in the debt of the mysterious savant {regarding whose social status the distinguished lexicographer could not make even a guess) that he one day approached the university heads and pointed out that it would, so he conâ€" sidered, be a graceful and wellâ€"merâ€" ited act on their part if an invitation were sent to the Berkshire savant asking him to be the guest of the university for a week. If After Eating You Have Pain, Stomach Needs Aid Specialists who have devoted their lives to the treatment of stomach ailâ€" ments, now tell us that many people who complain about their stomachs have no stomach ailment at all, You| may suffer from bloating, gas, sour-‘ ness and other unpleasant sympâ€" toms. If so your best course is to| tone up the bowels with a reliable | vegetable remedy like Dr, Hamilton‘s | Pills. This old time family medicine is a wonderful corrective of all; digestive and stomach disorders. There is no mystery about the quick effect you get from Dr. Hamilton‘s| Pills. They simply supply the addiâ€"‘ tional aid required by the system to enable it to do its work correctly. You‘ll enjoy your meals, digest everyâ€" thing you eat, look better, feel better, be free from headaches, constipation and indigestion,â€"all these benefits come to all that use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. Every man or woman with a stomach ill is advised to spend 25c., "Yes," said the colonel pompously. "I am quite confident that the war will be over by October." "What year?" asked Bildad. "Ah," said the colonel, "that is anâ€" other question." remedy. A druggist can obtain an imitation of MINARD‘S LINIMENT from a Toronto House at a very low price, and have it labeled his own product. This greasy imitation is the poorâ€" est one we have yet seen of the many that every Tom, Dick and Harry has tried to introduce. Ask for MINARD‘S and you will get it. Among a squad of policemen who were being examined on their knowlâ€" edge of ambulance work was a cerâ€" tain Irishman with whom the doctor had the following colloquy: _ Doctorâ€"What would you do to a man who had a cut on theflir'o_rea_rm‘.' -'-wl;;)lib'éinnnâ€"Sure, sorr, I‘d bathe it with warm, soft water. _ Policemanâ€"Och! Just soft water, sorr; wet water. Doctorâ€"And what is hard water? "-Dwoct"oâ€"l:;'“r'hlt do you mean by soft water? t AN IDEAL TONIG Policemanâ€"Ice, sorr. When your head is dull and heavy, your tongue furred, and you fecl doneâ€"up and good for nothing, without knowing what is really the matter with you, probably all that is nceded to restore you to health and vigour is a few doses of a reliable FOR THE digestive tonic and stomachic remâ€" STOMACH anp LIVER edy such as Mother Sceige!‘s Syrup. Take it after each meal for a few h SEIGEL*®S ONTARIO ARCHIVES of this wonderful vegetable Undeniably True. The new 1.00 size cont The Prophet. obtain an imitation e k MoTHER 8 _ g»ELLIOTT, f | BA Fpeoacis(oirre) lF LOOKING FOR A FARM, CONâ€" sult me. 1 have over two hundred a my list, located in the best sections Ontario. All sizes. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting Oof all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelaide 8t. Toronto Positions at $1100 and $1400 Recently THE BRIGHT SCHOOL TO ATTEND i Younge and Charles Sts., Toronto. The demand for our graduates during August and September was four times our supply. Commence now. Calendar free. W. J. ELLIOWT, Principal CANCI-:R, TUMORS, IUMP3, ETC internal and external, cured with» out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Beliman Medical €o., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Yonge and Charles Sts., Toronto, is the Best place in Ontario for Superior Business or Shorthand Education. Enter now. â€" Calendar free With the will to conquer, we are certain of victory.â€"M. Poincare., The women of this country . can help us through to victory.â€"Mr. Lloyd George. Do not let doubt creep into your mind . . . the essential condition of victory is patience.â€"M. Paul Camâ€" The world will not stand being bullied, especially by a graceless Gerâ€" man bullysâ€"Mr. Desmond McCarthy. All the easy talk of peace is but froth upon the water when such a storm as this is raging.â€"Mr. Austen Chamberlain. The Muff is made in the large classy ;;fll:w .-llu.:-"l‘.vlu “.;.:-:t:':a-l-tâ€" No-.lul“ mmhmamownmluuufi TEE to "BATISFY YOU on REFUND YOUR MONEY. Rend for our Pur 3'&'.’-""?.."'.‘.“ o‘w:‘.nlllt FREE on request con pages ustrm U-.d.:_!!ul_d Fur M.‘sua l'::flu--h. Men and women must do all things in proportion. They must be natural as well as national.â€"â€"Bishop of Birmâ€" ingham. The moment has come when, so far as personal expenditure is conâ€" cerned, it has become a virtue to be stingy.â€"Mr. Herbert Samuel, The secret of Germany‘s strength, wealth, and efficiency may be . sumâ€" med up in a single word: discipline, â€"â€"Mr. J. Ellis Barker. A wholesome, good comic song very often helps a great deal in the cure of our wounded | soldiersâ€"quite as much as a hymn.â€"The Bishop of London. For us, high or low, to whatever profession we belong, there must be no holidays till the great task is finâ€" ally accomplishedâ€"Mr. Walter Long. The true victory will not lie so much in the tactical gains on the battlefield toâ€"day as in the quality of the men who have to carry on the work of the nation after the war is over.â€"Genâ€" eral Sir Robert Badenâ€"Powell, with indigo, madder, or vineâ€"leaves, and from these materials shades wore evolved that were impervious to the action of sunlight. Aniline dyes, which have been much used in recent years, give colors which fade more rapidly. Room 227 Hallam Bldg., TORONTO, CANADA. times as much as the trial siz per botile, CHEERY WORDS AND WISE Persian carpets were formerly dyed Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds NEWSPAPERS FPOR SALE. We Pay All Mmy ry â€"cwâ€"â€"_â€" Do NOT WaIT BU7 SEND To pay To FARMS FOR SALE. MISCELLANEOUS, MS a# ¢3

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