Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (1912), 7 Dec 1916, p. 7

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HE 01& W AY TOI CU)RE-RHEtWMAITISM Muet Be T'reated Through the Blood and the Poisonous Acid Driven Out. The twinges and tortures of rheu- mnatism are not due to cold, damp weather as so many people suppose.- Rheumatism comes from poisonous -eid in the blood. Tl«is is a medical truth that every rheumatic sufferer should realize. There is only one way to cure rheumatism-it must he treat- ed -through the blood. All the lini- I ments and rubbing and so-called elec- tric treatment in the world will not cure rheumatism, and the sufferer who tries them is not only wasting money, but is allowing the tçouble to become more firmly rooted in the sys- tem and harder to cure when the pro- per remedy is tried. Dr. Williams Pink Pills have had remarkable success in euring rheumatism because they go 1 31 IT A LWAYS BRINGS RELIEF Skm airritations of 0 sort y eld ll d mtoi nt f -n mwes a ndc ti esicesa ndge wounst ores evrwee eu substi t lu med boo let on request. CHESEBROUGH MFQCC lm C16- A.e right to the root of the trouble in the soldiers cared for and only nineteen nlodiigotth osnu cd Made in Canada farms, the forced labor of the Popu- night it has onlyawaeetpgggs.TeJnksMcieC. blod divn ot heposnos cidied is the record of this unit during, lation of the occupied territories and to offer as resistanet h asad t ahrns n releasing t.he stiffened joints, clearing its three months of service at its finally the trap she has baited to catch folts of the daytim.AzT ATm away the torturing pains, and giving semi-base hospital "*somewhere in 'shell shock' has become a potent the Poles, all enable her to maintain' The pocket inwhcyokepou the victim renewed health and ease. France," Dr. Cabot says. ý source of malingering. In the most in the field units of full strength much O HS F 18I watch all day aveaeN amho 0 Mr. Vincent Brow, Havre Bioucher, N. More W ounded Than Sick. isevere cases of 'shell shoek' the men longer than any one would have 77 degrees Fahrenet nawne' re ao re n 97ct B., says: "For two years 1 was an al- The contingent, conisisting of 34aeda n1ubso rs hk- huh osbe night the temperaueo h al yPahls upv e mnost constant sufferer from rheuma- physicians and surgeons and 75 ness and tremors, and in some in- 1I fE T W R your bedside will rbbyb'rm4 Lismn, the trouble' being so bad at nurses, was established last June at stances various grades of paralysis National Discipline. to4.HwcnyupsilrxetNWLI GS time tht Icoul scrcey ge abut.its osptal whihawsopinciallsofarmsor egseAllthesymtom "Thse uccssesaredueto n- ~-~roesesitve macineasgowathetnLitiEve. OaLRY: Thaem an tru l eemdto rnhii ner caa na ae rnva,hugh eealbcoru are easy to counterfeit, and when it tional discipline and complete subor- WENT IN AS BOYS AND EMIERG- stnIludndo o ewe 0N aaa shs rcs,; anem-icandiatog.1ethr wa s agted ion "hs" eresavalae or n became generally known that men dination of the interests of the in- E SMN and 40 degrees? trantnra . ver ,edconiton 1use dctr' th mstsevrecaes Th cntn-with so-called 'shell shock' would be dividual to those of the state. The E SMN Your motor caillntg ihu medicihe for almost a year without re- gent was just in time to share in the sent to the base the strain proved militarization of the entire nation re- _ oil. Nor will yu anmwro ESAESPSSm lief. Then on the advice of a friend work, of caring for the wounded from too much for a considerable number presents a remarkable achievement. your sewing mahn.A wthnrr-AIGNw4AD PIS e1e to try1 Dr. lliams Pinkabo teSomm regon, whsicneceossita of1 Men." By a well organized systemn of substi- The Young Heroes Are Fearleps In though to someexntarigalo rsaengo ILls thienkxe, itoo tge euthaboufo .30tedinrsof bdsinthehoptution Germany is already able to take Fac f Danger on the requires oil. AtIes nei w ralibsnse ulifra o a i o en oe, ithte reut that "Afrom ,30to 2,380. rcntgeofTUMBLING DOWN A MOUNTAIN., for her armies two batches of half aae gyears you must tk tt h ac- ta nPh em aain njoyng prfec heath. A mot stikin perentae o ---million men each and is in the course Battletield. maker's for cleanigadoln. You can get these pills through any modern )tarfare," says the doctor, 'An Artist's Hair-Raising Experience of taking a third from the munition wh No watch is copeeyds-ro.4smmxos Medicine dealer or by mail. post paid, "is the higil percentage of woundedinCnawok mnerlayadotres Young heroes of the Sommeteenh Particles of dust okite i cR UOs UE. at 50 cents a box or six boxes for as compared with sick. In most for- 'nCia. . .mns riwysadote s have yet to celebrate their nineteh with the oil, andpeetybgntienladetra.erd $2.50 from The Dr. Williaims Medi- mer wars the proportion of sick to An American who lives in China s8ential national industriesbul. u 0 birthday are finding their waWba k atlk mr-atadwa u h borbero r mn :-ine Co., Brockville, Ont, wounded beas been at leastfor r made the ascent of the sacred moun- . .l to England, says Lloyd's Weky working parts. We o osdrc. iie.cunwoot five to one, whereas during the sum- tain, Siao-outai-shan, a year or two field divisions and cannot now 5 000 News. Some of them are in London ta ac ik 3,0 ie a . ..... mrithis w-ar the proportion of since, and made, or at least began tobe credited with less than4,000 to-day. They were so eager to get to youca a comptehiani'aur OKO FOOD TO TH E. TR ENCH FS. sick to wounded is one to five-six, and make, the descent in a much more un- commnincation guards and rserves the war that they gave their age of the task whichi efrsi O IE in the winter one to one and one- premeditated manner. th rs Ger- wrongly. year, and realizehwncsay re •AdH wtF Ail About the Ri4v %Work of the half." He had reached an altitude of over geeal9 gsecnesue o There is a bright, sparkling-eyedreuaclnigadolng-m treoayad Proof of Effective Fire. 9,000 feet and, having lost the many is, aig, hcantenno Canadian in a West London hospital,' The best watcho fo-aar so Ask'** " Transport-w agon lirner- trail, branched off and climbed a low- b ekndtohv esthn200-recovering from a nasty scalp wound, md htte r ro gis r lae .LYIWRC An inky black night in a rather Spealkig the chtoý a:-rct rano er peak te see whether he could dis. 000 men. who enlisted when he was seventeen dinary magnetic nleès u h eggs18et1ttetN wild, open country. Lines of wagons woun'ds, tedc onays. ea cover the right track. He managed Allie% Must ork Hard- and was at the front before he was average watch wl eetrl pe stand in readiness to start. To each machine gun bullets, of to crawl to the top, and since the view .ta h eighteen. He has been through the i ondrn ii oapwrsa wagon there are attached a couple of thuerstelackets land high e ynd' was very fine he opened his paint box Th iutonbod i ast three months' terr71ific fighting, 'tion, and even th1 ant fa r h olo in s 'em, says London Answers. the same is true ofs ape1 As he was sorting over his brushes straining every nerve to place in tences "Makes you think," ils the:woing and tim-kepn There is a bugle cal]; a number of estingly enough, during the earlythsononwih e was sittingfieldi next year every man, gun and way in which h dismisses th meni in the raggiest khaki you could part ofJuyathebgnigo te gave way, and he started sliding1 shell that all the countries can pro-freaduyofteSm . imagine come from out of the dark- 'Somme drive,' we had a large pro- down the almost perpendicular slope.!duce. Whrenasked whythe menlse-oP A O A T ness at the double. They line up be. portion of machine gun bullets, due He tried to clutch the ground with1 "We allies are quite able to makie onghe rarked h a nte sawall 1 was. curedofpiulGtr-b fore the wagons, an order is shoutedt h atta h emntece his hands. He seized every projecting; this effort, and to overmatch Ge-his, Ens on to war, and hie MJNARD'S LIIMET hoarsely, and the men spring to the were at least partially intact; were stone, in the hope of stopping his1 many. We in these islands have Stiljol rds eago saybein.BA RDM ULN seats on the wagonsý and away they still in three well developed hines so precipitous descent, but at the speed between three and four million men cudntba osa eid Chatham, Ont.R A R go, jolting and rattling across the arranged htoergmn ol n at which he was going that was no! of military age in civil life, o on-IWsNee.Iwscrdo nlmainb sodden ground that three months ago tilade theohr Tusaecin f easy matter. Ing men over forty-one. We aren A rosy-cheeked youth from a South- MINARD'S LIIMN.nw payetosp was a yelows cortnfiehl. a is lne remnt vigenterednatechond Death stared him in the face, for far better position than Germany to ern regiment, who formerly worked - M RS.W .JHSN.7"E' *m The agos cntan bly befbiglin Geman renh o th 6t ofanother hundred yards would bring!inaintain the war. Our gallant do- lin a chemnical f actory, will be nine- Walsh, Ont. eu.Aafr cuit$, apples, and cold tea in bottles, July was literally wiped out by an him to the edge of a precipice several !minions have still large reserves of teinDcm r.Hkowalthat I was cured o ailNuagab s and the--drivers have got to delivler it eniflading machine gun fire from bot hundred feet high, over which he must man power. Russia has still ample, there is to, know about the war in MINARD'S LIE NT D AR OLK& all somnehow to the soliers in the ,ides. Later, afterthtre lis inevitably go. His hair stood on end reserves and will produce larger ismsttribefrm.ain en Parkdale, Ont J.HBALY trenches eleNeen miles alway. ThRe fpraettece a enbo-as he approached the spot, and he can armies each year the war lasts. Italy -tesmm1dace!i nl x 0 fight, sleep, eat. Jive, and die in the ted out by the extraodaycurt well remember the Sound of his heavy increases and improves the quantity snaain o onn u oyugis trenches, until the moment comnes for fire of the British heavy artillery, paint box clanging fromn rock to rock' and quality of hier armies monthly thaat he heard they nted me on n an advance or retreat. most of the wounds were produced by as it accompanied him in his descent, and France has been most successful tahe e "Id h nteink ,warnwasA seiuCa. And getting these food waàgonls to fragments of high explosive shells A violent shock, which nearly tore in drawing more men from cii em- liewet. I f nd itheschee wrfully the trenches, is per-ilous work, for the and bombs, and were therefore rag- his body in two, madie him think hie ployments. She now excelse in the buat I doun t grt he aslest what ,You c11 yous eatset Germanis do all they can to prevent ged, tearing injuries, removing two or had gone over; but no, he had sud- art of accomplishing great things in;h I bte rm m food wagons reaching our soldiers. three inches of the great bones of the denly stoppe'. the field with relatively slight losses." I1 did. When1 am readrfor aother recovered conscose. g g high r le andproduing mst Hwounds I shall be ray frao r I certainlydoanwrdtepy- The danger of w-hat is called f ood. thg or lower e n rduigms e opened his eyes, but he did not German Compulsion. tuniih tece. IanIoieyu trnpr ork isq, of course, far hideous wounds- dare move, for his position, although A you herng Ausrlingin wo i ,n. o uh oko etryu aB hte greater in some places tha-n others. In Steel Helmets same Mlany. much improved, was far from safe. The Berlin Lokal Anzeiger quotes'uAtYtundghAtein y eenitd thn oueetabl ieti oatn fMo some places there may he shelter to use Hofcatan strong lather trap'a Frankfort telegram to teefc ust after his seventeenth birthday- man in my condto muigteln itr be obtained right up to the trenches, "The universalueofse e- that was slung under his arm had that all German citizens in good H'J ahrddntopoehsgigs and the wagons are never selen by the mets has much reduced the import- caught on a projecting Stone; but a health are to be summoned compul-! is he believt opoe hatevry-ou Fmosarsenee eney, ut n oher th wagons may ance of wounds in the head. Though single false movement on his part sorily to do work of national import- to thet o , a erieveno mater a Eyi$¶i yi aoselly have to reach thec trenche-s by wéay of not an absolute protection, they either would start him sliding down the ance. Berlin newspapers published by f ht to be in kaki. He ysi me ytehmea es open and didfkult groundi ,over w-%%hich deflect the course of the projectile so soeaan nugn fea pelt h oen his age, oug Gallolbina to He creooreWpds headay cn b mad bu sloly. s t prouceonlya stnmn inlry, Slowly, carefully, as hie lay on the> to apply at the war factories for has beento •efran-eivdbMkcahrontr. Manya diverhaspershed may aor break the force of the blow with almost perpendicular slope, he tried work. War brides are accused of Somme, and he is prepar Itisfor.uens aWary, baggae wagon been dest riyed, in t.he production of a badly bruised or to get a footing; when he had suc-ceed- leaving factories on their marriage thg htmabei imhe str E Comfo a K K & such places. 1 devitalized wound, but often without ed in doing that the great diffBculty, and taking separation allowances and Wotwheben mheAY ueas eot Wheni the wagons are w ithm about penetratmng the skull- was to tur n round. After several refusing to continue work. A pro- Arnyl h emrsuxetly Drif ugisorýMmhtsmdC. formlsoftetece.teGr of abdominal wounds we saw anxious moments each of which seem- elamation by the general commanding only for the oppo tnt f oigthe gcig I mans try to locate them with search- not.hing in their early stages, since, ed ages long, he succeeded, and there the Munich district threatens that sel-1 London and seeing them gegh Ter'aloofeageansinA terDg lights or fireballs, and théni begin, if these injuries are ta be succýess' hle was, half-kneeling, half-lyingwith fish idle persons who refuse to take guard at St. ames'aP p- &gtýee'wse a me ee etItoaplih- ov ip shelin thm.fully dealt with they must be operated, his body on the ground, clutching the, work and forego amusements will be 1 am never g. the papers. . above all else. ¯ hey sefrealsnogltgther uon ithin six hours, Special hos- rock that had savéd him. forced to do so in the end. Typical of Br-tih• MstheenI'v n icesh forthi pupos. Te frebll s apithlsforthepurosehav benae- Tenwhe hi agtatontadeas---- Th hereshfaeghten"reeys- anares ,--w©sn coah.ie aagitdatioarnM. SÞP sort of immense firework. When it tablished immediately behind the fir- ed away, he managed to crawl up est- ca fte s iie rthm* burté it turnis into a glaring ball of ing line. Duringr the first year Of fashion, to a position of safety. HousEs FOR SOLDIERS. won ao is driving the Germans ersy blue fire which hangs in the air the war these injuries were ams'4 eïMotfaMidabë trenehen. How Ie1 yyusefrngmn throwing a brilliant light about the universally fatal. to-ay between 4 The Evidence - What the C.P.R.laDoing for Re- out ofhem tatthey join- said the sweelt yugtig I utA MA p grond eneth t, nd nabling the and 50 per cent, of the cases operate "*There goes alnother married man,". turned seroes.Yeu Mas orant of the dan be wonderful iogs ntebode German gunners to get the exact 1upon recover- said the girl at the candy couniter. .ld piomgnPan» fteoenadbeth h Hgoy o"8 rageoft.he food-wagon, •-AMost important part of the work "How do you know'" asked the The houses which the C.P.R gr they would Me pe o ueensltar T ellie.dt&W omrde f inesa a hel brstofthe unit ha* concerned itself with cashier. building in the west for the returned face, but not diamaved or refft m Tohm h å within a foot of a wagon. It aimpty. the management of the dreadful "*He used te, buy a three-pound box sodiers win COUstbtem about $1,000 wheb fct fa ce wit those ng Inveted jolly iedthe wagon and driver and wounds of the face involving mouth fcnytieaweadnwh acwt uoBe.Te icn They hve leftlat inmcae ho seli out of existence. The wagons,'i and jaws. This department il, under buys haLf a pound once a month.- î sist of four rooms ech--two bed- fortable home« namicomfortable way of course, spread out as far as pos- ithe mantagerr ent of Dr. uKh g uaae' Mi=a•ome erettae, i i an ron*6kktchen Mandf avig. sa o as ir " h ote a foø T tr sg l two melet with distaster, some alwayâ a order that ail calles of this kind in ---teeWiln be 80 addtiona Mre which beling kUledW a n rny a great risk1 rah the trenches in aafety- the whole area are placedi under his Bad Some, may be avaleed of In the edura Of 'of beingwounded dogue. PEA. rAfor DJOB ion ono oronto with- 'SES eede irs te wY;k the e and P, fo 00 m- speaking of the wert at fa arimi.osteor immt* es en*#n* in Me they *dan.F«oruisrss thee ak, se t W» 00tut, Io* A~~~~~g M&me edec ose were periods 4frelathe ca,destg et. lm& Iawa. #o.udeto cary en4* diva Y, h ediinse ao mny t helth nd m o me: mari eomir âmmart ethat year frendh» he&mk tmas end TUE FAT MAN'S WATCH. Those Belonging sto Heavy Men lt T 1*- R S Fvariably Gain Time. c d io â A watch is a very delicate piece ci tsmachanism-far more so than the I average watch-owner realizes. For Instance, the balance-wheel vibrates at the rate of ifive beats to the second, or 18,000 to the hour. The wonder is, • " *fl then, not that watches lose or gain, fmum but that so many keep such good ed s« uca" l&atoi time as they do. Consider the jarring which all fSe..hansyote l r n watches have to put up with. Their Fm .".?*c.UJ'U' wearers run, jump, ride, and take all m.n a . P "° S *$"""at.. isorts of violent exercise, and the ac- mrflMeq .Mm$aolws tion of the body of the wearer is 12HaamB dn Tont bound to influence the delicate ma- 12 alrBudigTont dy chinery <>f his timekeeper.---- "~It is notorious that watches belong- "k. ing to big, heavy-footed, weighty men sanPorrPtm invariably gain, while those worn by QEErD POTATOES. liIISl COB- women and light-footed or quietly- blters, Delaware. carman. Order moving men usually keep good time. 1 "t",s*. W". rDamso. rrai)tor uo A watch should always be wound in 1 - the morning. By so doing the spring 1 MELP sUPL.. O.will exert its strongest power during WAINTED-ITION MIO'ILDEltil FORl .. the day. When a watch is wo-ind at W ec n l>rwr:Fed employment;commodius To°un iry oo 14,500,000 UN THEY ARE ABLE TO CONSERVE THEIR STRENGTH. Military Writer says Allies MNust Strain Every Nerve Next Year. The military correspondent of the London Times writes as follows, on the question of the man power of the allies and the Central Powers: "Ger- many's wise economy of her young contingents and her constant re-ex- amination of the medically unfit and the refusal to consider the claims of the 'conscientious objectors' and also of the civil service, her success in restoring to the colora a high propor- Î tion of the German wounded, the use', of prisoners in factories and on, wà "F1w1aukty Nutrition and Elimiatio"-these re UWýISE ESthe cauSe of the moft of the ailments that afiCt humn AIRE NOW BEING INVESTIGATED beings. T00 muCh imd1ges- BY COMISSONS. tible food and laCk of power to throw off the poisons Dr. Hugo Cabot Tells of "Trench th ese leade to aon gslione Fever" and "Trench -hs edtalnUe of distressing disorders. Avoid them by eating Shredded Wheat Biscuit- a simple, elemental food that COntains all the body-build- ing material in the whole wheat grain, inCluding the bran Coat WhiCh keeps the intestinal tract healthy and Clean. DeliCIOUS for any Ineal in Combination W1th SliCed peaCheS Or Other fruits. Nephritis." The horrors of war have -been aug- mented by two new diseases-"ltrench fever" and "trench nephritis," the latter somewhat similar to Bright's disease-according to a report re- ceived at Harvard University from Dr. Hlugo Cabot, who is in eharge of the Fourth Harvard Surgical Unit at the front. Both d.iseases are subject to investi- gation by commissions appointed by the British Government. ' . Eight thousand wounded and sick

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