â€" H. & J. Dow 81 Main St. West Telephone 771. _ HAMILTON All other Contractors® Supplies Contractor‘s Supplies Lime for Spraying hM DDNDWDTA DL ADGDD DN DNL T YA Phonesâ€"313 r 2; 313 I 3 Going fast at Popular Prices. It will pay every thrifty man or & women to give me a call. Pumps, Oxfords, Sandels, Lacrosse Shoes and Polish of all kinds n‘ ob D Tb D To D i DLA L 4 DT T h M MR For Men, Women and Children MOST PROBABLY EYESTRAIN SsYMPTIOMS OF EYESTRAINR Headache . lt Smarting, burning, watering eyes Dizziness Type blurs when reading Squinting in bright light Nervousness when doing close Any or all of these disagreeable symptoms may be corrected by use of glasses, scientifically â€"made and fitted. Little defects grow into big defects. Neglect is sure to cause regret later. > 5 s We have the experience to disâ€" cover the extent of eyestrain and the ability to make glasses to corâ€" rect it. I. B. ROUSE work 8 Frowning, seeing double DON‘T RUB YOUR EYES DR. THOS. E. PATTERSON Chiropractor MOUNTAIN ST. â€" > JCA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1915 Estimates given on all kinds of concrete and cement work. Conâ€" tracts taken for large and small jobs. Satisfaction guaranteed. Frank E. Russ, R.R. No. 1, â€" Gr M . B U L L Contractor for Cement and Concrete Work _ 34 King St. w., HAMILT O N Weddings, Receptions, At Nomes and Entertainments Supplied The Season‘s Best Jas. Crawford Manufacturer otf Wedding Cakes, Ice Cream and Fine Candy Chronic Nervous and Female Troubles a Specialty Stylish Shoes Next door to new Post office 111 King E. Hamilton There‘s Something Needed Besides a Rub Lime, Portland Cement Plaster Paris, etc. Plastering Hair Mortar Color Lath 2:30 to 5 6 to 8 Other Hours by Appointment Consultation Free BOOT REPAIRING A Specialty. 39 Steps from Terminal De pot FRANK E. RUSS Lunch Counters Caterers â€"â€" Confectioner Office Hours: Phone 288 6 to 8 GRIMSBY Grimsby I got my khaki slacks from you last night and swanking around in them to day doing nothing. I also had a letter from Mrs. D. and a card from Mrs. Winter, who is sailâ€" > Aug. 23, 1915. Dear People:â€"Last night my two working parties tied into their jobs and worked like nailers and so we got back home about 10.30, because there were quite considerable bullets whizâ€" zing around and the boys didn‘t have any desire to stick around. And this morning when I went over to H. Q., the adjutant said "Say, Livy, your two jobs last night sure were done well and very nice too." One or two of the boys had holes put in their kilts and one went through the skirt of my Burberry, just above my ankle. x § It has been good weather since we came into this line but nobody will be sorry to go out tomorrow, when we fie back to our rest billets for â€" four days, as the front line is awful with mud and water. Things are very quiet and the fighting is not at allâ€"I wish somebody would start something, so we could work off some of our surplus energy. ART. ; This afternoon the adjutant crept up on me and captured me for two small working parties tonight and I spent most of the time going over the ground: with my corporal, mapping out the wqrk. _ > : _ This morning I sat on a Court of En quiry, into the wounding of one of our chaps in his. own dugout by his chumâ€"the chap who did the shootâ€" ing is bugs and I guess he thought he was cleaning up on the fellows whom he imagines are out for his life. I didn‘t get any letters written yes terday, and today have had six letters to polish off. â€" I think I forgot to tell you of Alex. Read being in hospital with an injured eye: He was splitting stakes for his bivouac about a week or two ago and a piece flew up and biffed him right in the pupil. I haven‘t heard from him but he is getting along fine from what the Transport Sergeant tells me. Dearest People:â€"Nothing new or startling to report at all, so I reckon, this won‘t be a very long epistle. I am due for another tour now, so will cease fire now. ART. SOME FINE NOW READY! Larsest EAT ON Catalogue (Continued from page 1) There are sound reasons for these lower prices. For instance we buy in imâ€" mense quantities for cash. We sell many products direct from our own g;,ctories , to youâ€"and we could mention many other good reasons why your dollar will buy more here than elsewhere. â€" O N Rest assured of this factâ€"this new Fall and Winter EATON Catalogue offers you genuine, substantial, moneyâ€"inâ€"yourâ€"pocket savings. There are nearly 400 pages crowded full of marvel values and every item on every page at a saving price, ... ;>:> . n o2 3 7A ham ons & > if not a better quality of products at a lower price than is obtainable anywhere else in Canada. | u',,v' both fink . MA Thousands of Amazing Moneyâ€"Saving Opportunities! And the right quality is there, too. â€" EATON good values mean just as good CONVESAÂ¥TIONS EVER PUBLISHED Aug. 22,15 e LarticSucar A @ J * Aug. 25,‘15 Dearest People:â€"Nothing to report from the seat of war at all, except that it is one of the most beautiful days we have had since I came to France. I was going into Ballieul this afterâ€" noon, but as there. is a parade at 4.30 I‘m for staying in camp and am going into town tomorrow. I got a parcel of.cigarettes and toâ€" bacco last night for my men from Mrs. Winter and a parcel from â€"Mrs. Morris (Ken‘s mother), of lots and a few other little thingsâ€"and very nice too. The leave has started again and the C. 0. says he is going to put us through as quickly as he can so I guess I will be getting mine in about six weeks, according to the dope sheet. ART. However, we are quite comfortable and I have had a nice cold bath and change of clothes and feel fine. It is very hot and as I set a fairly good pace with my platoon, which had the company, we ‘sure did do some perspiring and as a consequence, got a "call" from my 0. C. Aug. 24,‘15. Dearest People:â€"Moved out of our trenches at 9 o‘clock this a.m. and after a good fast march for four or five miles landed in a different line of rest huts than the ones we have been using, in time for lunch. 4 Things are pretty quiect although the shells keep dropping in one by one and the game is getting pretty monoâ€" tonous. ART. ‘ The other night the boys in the Front line were hollering across at the Huns and one of the men said "Is it true the Kaiser has been assassinatâ€" ed? "Never mind the Kaiser," replied one of the Fritz boys, "How is Sam Hughes ? There are scores can speak right good English and there are sure some fine conversations carried on across ‘"No Man‘s Land." _ I am enclosing a photo of "Springâ€" field"â€"where I stayed with the Deâ€" enishes in Weymouth. The cross is my room. . We aren‘t moving today as doped out but are going out about nine in the morning, for five days, I believe, but it will probably be cut to four. ing for the States on Sept. 4. She is going to look you up if she happens in to~â€" Canada and has promised that I will not be forgotten while she is away, as her granddaughter is . to "keep up the good work." Not too hot but lovely and â€" sunny, THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO =â€" V ®@)Y @ A pure Cane Sugar finely granulated, in 10 and 20 pound bags as well as in the â€"â€"~â€", 2 and 5 pound cartonsâ€"and W either fine or coarse granulation â€" 10b 7# in 100 pound bags. ~~ PureCane ~ z> < cR 7| FRUIT JAR LABELS FREE PBRESERVING Miss Olive Brand, who has been the guest of Miss Norma Williams of this place, for several weeks, has returned to her home in St. Catharines. Mrs. Wm. Norton of this place is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Fred Laidâ€" man of Binbrook. Mrs. S. D. Biggar and sons Ralph and Sanford, accompanied by Mrs. (Dr.) Rose of James St. south, Hamilâ€" ton, and Mrs. Thompson of Philadelâ€" phia, were guests of Mrs. Jamieson on Friday last. : : l THE TELEPHONE Say. Hello there! Beamsvilie Schsel Board! Hello â€"there! Where is Trustee Fairfield? Answer, Can you telt me, I‘m in a hurry? Oh hello! He just went out after Buck. Hello! Oh yes, where did he fing him? Oh well, yes, he was behind a Basswood tree. Was he, yes â€" hanging on ~Bennett‘s coat tail. Hello! Is that so! Yes it was, Hello! Hold the line, who is on that line? All the Woodland‘l1 get Russgâ€"ty waiting. I say yhat‘s on that line, Hello! Saymone don‘t wait for, that last, Clause, he‘s in the Manitoâ€" ba straw stack. I say, hello; are you on this line? I want long distance. Where is the Chairman. . He is napâ€" ping, don‘t‘ bother him, fou‘ll â€"find him under the table. Hang up the re Wm. and Mrs. Graham of Hamilton, and Mr. Stanley Graham of Montreal, are spending the Labor Day holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrsg. John Graham of this place. M Mr. and Mrs. Murray Neil and daugh ter, Miss Aleda of 65 E. Ave. N., Hamâ€" ilton, motored to the home of _ Mrs. Jamieson on Wednesday last. The next meeting of the Tapleytown Branch of the Women‘s Institute, will be held at the home of Miss S. Armâ€" strong on Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 15, A full attendance of members is requested to be present. . Had an hour‘s parade this morning and since then have been wandering around doing nothing but rustle some needles for our gramaphone, until I get some new ones in town this p.m. It‘s nearly time for our company pay parade, so I must beat it and then I beat it for town. ART. with a nice cool breeze â€" floating aroundâ€"and I am going to make the most of it by climbing aboard our company horse and riding into Bailâ€" lence (spelt properly for once) to be measured for my tartan slacks and breeches and to buy some other clothes. Send your address and small Red Ball Trade Mark from t:.‘g or top end of carton and we will mail you book of 50 assorted fruit jar labels â€"printed and gummed ready to put on the jars. The Atlantic Sugar Refineries Limited : MONTREAL > 85 TAPLEYTOWN for l Ring upâ€"Hello Tuff! How is your i Forda? Hello! Hello! I got more |Fords than you can jack up. You can | bet your socks. Say did _ you hear | Beamsville was going to have a new school house, Tuff? Helio! Yes, but I lhear they are bucking â€" it, but give them a Fairfield and they‘ll get there. What! Where! When! Hold the line. Who is on that lineâ€"I sayâ€"Long Dis lta.nce? Hello! Wheére is the site? Oh never mind your head is full of [wheels. ts on the tWolley line, didn‘t you know that?> Benâ€"has his Nett andâ€"where is the site? Ask Jim and he‘ll Hewitt. Oh I mean the school board, No. 5. Hello Central! Péter has Crossâ€"cent for next year. Did you!‘ see him? Hello Mr. look up. Where is the Town Hall? Out on the street. Anyone allowed in. Not if I know it. The children can â€" go to school inâ€" In where? Why, don‘t ask meâ€"In the â€"Where does the people go to hear the School Board? You got crickets. Why they hang around the candy |store and drop a cent in the slot for (chewing gum.) Hello Chairman! IWake up. They‘re going to pass the Ihat for the best speaker on the floor. {$500 please, Where is the next site? | (The Lime Kiln Club) | â€"A. B. Tufford. an old teapot for feeding, with the thumb of an old kid glgove, having a few holes in it, fastened over ‘the spout. For a very young foal, feed not more than a cupful of milk five times a day. A dessert spoon of sugar to a pint of milk is about the rigght proportion. Three tablespoonâ€" fuls of lime water added to this raâ€" tion will correct acidity in the stoâ€" mach. The milk should be perfectly sweet, the utensils should be kept clean and the milk should be fed at normal body temperature.‘ It should be fed at normal body temperature. It should be obtained from a somewhat FEEDING AN ORPHAN FOAL Occasionally one has the misforâ€" tune to lose a mare that has a young foal and has to bring the foal up by hand on cow‘s milk. It should be remembered in a case of this kind that mare‘s milk is normally sweeter than cow‘s milk, but has only about half the amount of fat and other _ solids that is found in the average cow‘s milk consequently it is usual to add sugar to diluted cow‘s milk for feedâ€" ing orphan foals. A method of feeding is suggested by J. H. S. Johnson, of "Breeders‘ Gaâ€" zette," which is about as follows: Use ceiver please. Fall Term Opens Monday, ‘August 30th College Central Business Evgs.8.(5,Matâ€"â€"Wed., Thurs.,.Sats. 2.15 T EMPLE WEEK OF SEPT. 6 Evgs. 15, 25,35, 50c Phoune 1975 Terms: Day Classes, $8 a Month Night Classes, $4 a Month We are in automobile dray building business. Bring in your car and let us estimate on turnâ€" ing it into a fruit lorry. Repairing of all kinds done If you want good work, give us a call. SCOTT & SANGSTER Our horse shocing and blackâ€" smithing department was never in better shape to handle your work, than right now. > James Osborne & Son THE LEADIG GROCERS 12 and 14 James St. South HAMILTON Telephones 186 and 830 REPAIRING _ SCHEPPS Desiccated 1â€"4 lb. Packages 10¢ 1â€"2 lb. Packages 20c 1 lb. Packages 40c TEMPLE STOCK CO. â€"INâ€" "Her Own Money" Phone 71 Mountaln St. GRIMSBY, ONT SHOEING HAMILTON AND Cocoanut Royal Templar Building Main East and Walnut Streets P. Gibbon, Principal Mats. 15, 25¢ xd