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Flesherton Advance, 19 Aug 1915, p. 3

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OBSTINATE INDIGESTION CA^ BE CUED Dr. WiUiams' Pink Pills Go Right to the Root of the Trouble. No trouble causes more widespread suffering and discomfort than indi- gestion. The ailment takes various forms. Some victims are ravenous for food; others turn sick at the sight of meals; but as a rule every meal is followed by intense pains in the chest, heartburn, sick headache and often nausea. Indigestion assumes an ob- stinate form because ordinary medi- cines only subdue its symptoms â€" but do not cure. So-called pre-digested foods only make the digestion more sluggish, and ultimately make the trouble take a chronic form. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure indi- gestion because they go right to the root of the trouble. They make new, rich blood, which so strengthens the system that the stomach does its own work and digests the food in a natural Way. Many a terrible sufferer from indigestion has found a permanent cure through a fair use of Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. Among them is Mrs. H. Carmern, Locke Street North, Hamilton, Ont., who says: â€" "Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills not only gave me new health, but new life. For five years I was a great sufferer, was al- most constantly doctoring, and spent a great deal of money with absolutely no result. My stomach was in such a dreadful condition that frequently it would not retain nourishment of any kind. When I ate I suffered terrible pains, a ffuttering of the heart, and sften a feeling of nausea. In addi- tion to this I was in a very anaemic :ondition, and felt as if I was linger- ing between life and death. One day while sitting in the park a lady got Into conversation with me, and I told her my trouble. She asked me if I kad tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, saying that they had been a great benefit to her daughter. When I went home I decided to try this medi- cine. I soon found the pills were helping me, and continued taking them for several months, when I was restored to better health than I had •njoyed for years, and I have since l>een the picture of health. I hope my sxperience may be the. means of pointing to others the way to health." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents I box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- rille, Ont. ABOUT CRUISERS. They Are Termed the Policemen of the Fleet. The crufiser has to perform, perhaps, BUMPER CROP ASSURED. Report Just Issued Indicates Record Yield. Given normal weather until harv- est, the yield of grain per acre along "^ ^^rled functions tjan any other the 5,000 miles of the Canadian t^„^.'^^ }^ '" ^^ «Z^- ^ *^ L^' XT ,1. D -I J n* -i 1 o bueiji«s8 to stop aad flght when the Northern Railway in Mamtoba Sa- clrcumataaces are. from her point of skatchewan and Alberta is almost view, favorable, imd aI«o to posisess certain to average high according to a Mgh speed to enable her to run a consolidated report from its agents away when the position Is unfavor- which has just been received. This able. The cruiser Is admirably termed gives an estimated average for wheat the poUcemaa of tihe fleet, for her of 24 bushels; oats 54; and barley 37 ; capaoiUea of mobiUty and long- to the aeie " i P*'*^''*** making wltJioait replendBhing In each ckse where the airenta «ve '^ bunJtere are her chief attributes. in eacn case, wnere tne agents give ahJiou^ the introduction of wireless a range, such as 25 to 30 m their telegraphy ha« somewhat lessened the estimates, the Canadian Northern responsibility placed upon the cruiser adopt the lower figure, so that the for scouting work, she la still regarded average may be regarded as con- ' as the "eyes of ftho fleet." For the servative. Officers of the company j object of scouting work there is a said that had a middle course been special type of scouting cruiser in ex- followed, the result in all probability Istance. The armored cruiser's advent would have been 27 or 28 bushels of has almost extended that cla.sa of ship wheat to the acre. When comparison to be conaldered tx) come within the scope of the battlesihip. Indeed^ in DODD'S ' ? KIDNEY 4 PIUS TWELVE-INCH SHELLS. Big Projectiles Carry a Thirty-poutid Explosive Charge. High power projectiles are con- is made vrith the figures of the Morth oomTcTsea'Thev amTo nerfft^'nv^'ul^ s^ructed with cavities in their centre ' West Grain Dealpr'q A<»aociation for T ^ ^ , Pf "«="y equlp- v^fhidi contain the explosive charge, ! West Gram Dealers Association for ped In aggressive policy ae to be o^^ explosive varying with the size of | the projectile. A 12-Inch shell, weigh-' Ing 870 potmde, carries at>out 30 j pounds of explosives The cavity of such a projectile Is about seven inches , In diameter at the base and gradually I tapers In siize toward the point. After the charge is placed in the projectile a plug is screwed Into the base, thus sealing up the explosave, and a fuse la NEW POLYVATENT SERUM. Wonderful Cures of Mutilated Sol- diers Effected By It. What are described as remarkable cures of wounded French soldiers have been effected by the new poly- vatent serum, discovery of which was announced last March. Complete re- covery is announced of men who were terribly mutilated, and for whom all hope had been griven up before use of the Berum, so badly infected were their wounds. Doctors Leclainche and Vallee, the discoverers of the serum, have been unable up to the present to make more than 2,000 flasks of it daily, most of which goes to the base hospi- tals, where the worst cases are to be found. * the average wheat yields in Western deemed competent enough to Uve In Canada for the last five years, the the battle-line with tlie "capital ships." remarkable character of the prospec- 4, tive showing along C. N. R. lines this «innnnnTi jti c -j. 3 year is apparent. The figures refer- $1,000.01] fieWarU FOrleitefl red to are: 1910, 12.9; 1911, 18.2; 1912, 18.6; 1913, 17.0; and last year 12.7 bushels to the acre. The Canadian Northern average „„„„ . . „,„ _„ . ..,„j „h»>, 1 â-  • ^ for wheat i<i comniled from renorta ' ^^^ P' people who are troubled with inserted in the centre of the plug ex ror wneat is compuea irom reports constipation and bowel trouble. Dr. »^„^i.„„ i^*^ .i,^ „^,>i„„i„-. „rf.v,i ° .v., from 171 stations between Port , HamUbon's PiUs have been guaranteed Arthur and the Rocky Mountains, the | to cure any case within three days, International Boundary line and the and the above reward will be paid for if Remedy Fails We hope tJiis notice will reach the No ore Corns Cure tending into the explosive within the cavity. The fuse, without which the ex- plosive Is harmlese, depends upon the most northerly areas now served by any case reelsting this greatest of all 1 Jjjgij rotary motion of the shell to be- lts lines. In the Emmerson District remedies. in Manitoba the estimates run as high I No prescripUon ever written could as 80 bushels to the acre, and in ! ^'fass Dr^ Hamilton's Pills of Man- T>n„j.i nn-,, r>i-».i t i,;„u „„ 00 i drake and Butternut. For years they Rapid City District as high as 32.^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ most obstinate Dauphin reports 25; Portage la,,^^ ^, coneUpation. biUousness, Prau-ie 26;- Rossburn 30;and the Swan ' headaches and sour s.tonuich. Here is River District up to 35. Along the your chance to test Dr. Hamilton's main line in Saskatchewan the re- ' Pills. If they fail-^your money back ports from the Humbolt District run ' for the asking. Be sure you get the up to 33 bushels to the acre, and I yellow box, and insist on being sup- plied with only Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut, 25c. at all dealers. BOTHA IS A HERO IN LONDON. There are in Britain over six mil- lion men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five. MEDICINES IN VEGETABLES. They Are Not Only Food But Excel- lent Medicine. Onions are excellent blood-purifiers. They are Nature's remedy for sleep- lessness, too. An onion poultice is of great relief in rheumatic pains. In many cases bad indigestion can be cured by an onion diet. Carrots are excellent for sufferers .*rom gout, and those whose faces are without color can get it by eating plenty of carrots. Spinach is full of iron, and is one of the finest blood tonics known. It is also extremely beneficial in kidney disease. Cabbages of all sorts banish skin troubles, prevent salluwness, constip- ation, etc. Tomatoes are exceedingly good for the liver. Beetroot, eaten with rice, is a gnreat blood-maker, and all anaemic persons should eat one beet every day. Parsley is not only a garnish, but it will cure painful nettlerash if rub- bed on the spot. Celery is a great nerve tonic, and very good for rheumatism. It is a slight sedative, too. Parsnips are full of excellent quali- ties, and help the whole system. 'Those who are martyrs to lumbago should eat this vegetable. It might be noted that peeling vege- tables which should not be peeled, and boiling them when they should be steamed, mean.s the loss of the "medi- cine" and the disappearance of nearly ly all their food value. estimates up to 30 bushels comes from the North Battleford section. Nortlmest of that city, Meota, reports 28 to 30 bushels. East of Prince Albert in Saskatchewan on the north- ern line, Melford estimates are up to ' „ ^.^ ~ „. , 30 bushels. The Saskatoon section ] T. P. O Connor Gives His Impressions estimates go as high as 35, while the ' of the Boer Leader. Kindersley division, southwesterly to- 1 Premier Louis Botha is the latest wards the Alberta boundary, are es- example of the extraordinary trans- timated at 35 bushels to the acre. ! formation of feeling that is possible The De Lisle division in approximate- 1 to the British crowd. He came to ly the same area reports up to 40 London immediately after the Boer St. Jerome mentions a widow who bushels to the acre. In Alberta, the ' \^^^ with a few of his generals. He ' had had twenty-two husbands, the Hanna section, in the south and the j and they were in a state of the deep- Athabasca in the north, estimate the est depression, for their country had yield up to 40 bushels per acre. The been so desolated that they had grave Edmonton Disctrict forecast runs as fp,rs as to its future. They were not high as 35, and Vermilion to 30. In' popular then; indeed, some hotels Central Alberta and Battle River ; ,yere doubtful about admitting them District prospects are given as high within their doors, and the visitors as 35- In only a few instances does come active. This rotary motion is Imparted by the rifling of the gun. In the smooth surface of the tube are cut the rifling grooves of a width of about one-eighth inch. Round the shell, near tho base, in a groove cut for tihe purpose, is com- pressed what Is known as the rotating band. This band projects above the surface of the shell and corresponds with the rifling grooves, so that upon its discharge la Is forced Into the rifling, where it acts as a s'.-al to pre- vent the escape of the gas formed by the exploding powder and gives the shell the required rotary motion, which keeps it on its true course with its point always La a direct line ahead. Gnaninteed ^^ Never known to lyiAI^A fail; acta without P*"^" V pain la 24 hours. la soothing, healing; takes tbe sting right otlt No remedy 90 quick, safe and sure as Putnam'i Pain- less Corn Extractor. Sold evory- Wher* â€" 2Sc. oer bottle. . ♦ The Smiling Com. Observe the sturdy stalks of com, Watch them awhile. They catch the spirit of the morn And seem to sniile. The cornstalks seem to smile all day. Diffusing cheer. In fact, they smile, as one might say. From ear to ear. ^w" MAKE3 PERFECT BREAD Her Advice. "I've a good mind to go and jump in the river," said Mr. Joe Peck at the head of a little domestic quarrel, as he picked up his hat and started out. "You come back here," said his wife, "an' if you Intend any such trick as that jest march upstairs and put yer old clothes on." Mlnard'B ZJnlment Coraa Coldi, Bta FARM FOR RENT. I' LOOKINQ FO?. A FARM. C0N80LT me. I have over Two Hundred on mw list, located In thn bml sectione of ()•• ta.rlo. All glipa. n W Daw»on. Brimpum. NEWSPAPERS FOR SALS. PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale In good Ontario towns. Tho most useful and Interestlnc of all businesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publlshlns Com- pany. 73 West Adelaide St. Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. CANCER. TUMORa. LUMPS. KTO. Internal ant. extemal. cured wttb* out pain b7 our noms treatment Writ* D* before too late. Dr. Bellmau Medical Co., Limited. Colllncwood. Odl IQaaTd'a liniment Corca StDhtberla. Getting Asquainted. "It is very interesting to know the birds," said the country lassie. "It must be," responded the city damsel politely. "Could you intro- duce me to a few?" Fall Term Opena Seytember lat. •LJLIOTT Mlnard'a Iiialment Ctirea Olatemper. 734 Ton^e St., TOBOKTO. Hlg-h O-rade School. Vone Better la Canada. W^rlto for New Colleffe Annonnoement. the estimate fall below 20 bushels, and those statements are widely separated. The estimates for oats is derived from the statements of 159 stations and that for barley from 126. The highest forecast. for oats comes from the Elrose District in Saskat- chewan. There the expectation is for 100 bushels to the acre. Next is the report from the Hanna District at 90 bushels. The lowest of all is 20 to 30 bushels. In Barley the highest esti- mate comes from Ardate in the De Lisle District and Dinsmore in Elrose District, each estimating CO bushclj to the acre. The lowest is 15 bushels. Strangely enough in each case where low averages are given, the next sta- tion reports an expectation for yields of excellent quantity. Telegraphic advices received yes- terday by the Canadian Northern from the Departments of Agriculture of Saskatchewan and Alberta indicate that warm weather is the rule throughout both, provinces. That from Saskatchewan reads: "The special weekly report on crop conditions based on telegrams re- ceived from all parts of the Province is issued to-day by the Department of Agriculture. In the summary of dis- trict by mail for convenience of those seeking harvest work will be found the average dates on which cutting will â- f^^ h L^^d p rP^^w| mSk |r ' ^^iet - JBH fmflr^gf m '^(Sl^^^i^tKH f^M i^K^^H ^L ^HidHHnl Hb ^^^/KB S9|| .-^^^ ^p .|jill ..jstfjft-' f l m&^^. i^s^t*! last one having already had twenty wives. ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE Under the control of the Department of Agriculture of Ontario. Established 1862. Affiliated with the University of Toronto. 110 University Ave.. TORONTO, ONT., CAN. College Reopens Friday, October 1st, 1916. Write Dept. D. for Calendar. E. A. A. Grange, VS., M.S., Principal. Mlnard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,â€" I have used MINARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, and for the ever>'-day Ills and accidents of life I consider it has no e<iual. I would not start on a voyage without It, if It cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN | Schr. Storke, St. Andre, Kamouraska. ' Spoiled by a Shower. Amateur Gardener â€" Just my con- founded luck! I came home early especially to water the garden, and now it is pouring rain. "Overstern" V Bottom Motor Boat $55^ Frei.prht Prepaid to any Railway Station in Ontario. Len^ 16 Ft., Beam 8 Ft. 9 In., Depth 1 Ft. 8 In. ANT XdTOS FITS. Spectflcatlon No. 2B giving engine prices on request. Oet our quotations on^"Tha Penetang Line" Commercial and Pleasure Launches, Row boats and Canoes. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO, UMITED, PENETANG, CAN. Oeneral Louis Botha who came to see and encourage them were mainly Irish politicians who had supported their cause during the war. I.O'W FABE3 TO TKE CAX.IFOBinA BZPOSITIOKS VIA CKICAQO ft BOBTK-WESTBBIT BY. Four spliMnIld dally trains from the New I'BSSfMger Ternilnul. ChiouBO to San Francitjoo. Los Angeles and San UleBO. Choice of Scenic and Plrect Routes through tho best of the West. Siimethlnft tu see kII the way. Double track. Automatic eUctrlc safety signals all the way. Let us plan your trip and furnish folders iuid full purtlculars. B. H. Bennett G.A 46 Yonge St.. To- ronto. Ontario. J In order to ascertain the engine- power required to supersede the work of horses, James Watt employed a ! strong horse to wind up weights, and j thus found 22,000 lb. could be raised | But soon the tide turned. When , â-  . -c e e â-  1 K . .V, ow f A . poor old Campbell-Bannerman rose to ' one foot per minute. For fear of giv be general but the 21st of August; J-^^ Premiership he carried home rule ,'"« ^i.s customers^ under-value, he al should see the binders busy through out the Province. From the South- west exceptionally good reports have come in and the wheat heads are stat- ed to be larger than usual. No furth- for the Boers without even permit- i lowed overweight half as heavy again, j ting a discussion within 'th7 Cabinet. I whi<:h made a horse-power 33,000 Botha became, as everybody knows. | foot-pounds per minute. A UNIVERSAL FOOD Following Nature's Footsteps. "I have a boy, two years old, weigh- ing forty pounds and in perfect health who has been raised on Grape-Nuts and milk. "This is an ideal food and evidently furnishes the elements necessary for A baby as well as for adults. We have used Grape-Nuts In large quantities and greatly to our advantage." One advantage about Grape-Nuts food is that it is partially pre-digest- ed in the process of manufacture. The starch contained in the wheat and barley is transformed into a form of sugar by the same method as this process is carried out in the human body, that is, by the use of moisture and long exposure to moderate warmth, which grows the diastase in the grains, and with long baking makes the remarkable change from starch to sugar. Therefore, the most delicate stom- ach can handle Grape-Nuts and the food is quickly absorbed into the blood and tissue, certain parts of it going directly to building and nour- ishing both body and brain. "There's a Reason." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont Ever read the abeva latterf A new en* appears frsm time te time. They sre senuln?. tru:. and full al human Intirea*. Prime Minister, and, like the prac- tised Dutchman he was, immediately BClnard'e ILlnlment Cnrea Qarffet In Cowa er damage by hail is reported and ini^gg^i^g^j ^hat the best future for his those districts where hay can be ob tained a satisfactory supply of good hay is being saved. Hot weather is now general throughout the Prov- ince." From Alberta the information is: "Southern District weather clear Good Lung Powers. country and for his race was to thrmv , ^^^ ^^^^^ .^^^,^ L".*l!^'°V?^^„."±^^.^^efI":^essed of extraordinary lung powers, pire; and to that policy he has since T' r .u . A-y H1\Z nnHI One day baby's brother, little Johnny, adhered with splendid loyalty and ^^.^ ^^ ^^.^ ^^^^^^^^ ,.^^^ ^^ ,.^^,^ ^^^_ judgment. t .„^«„ nfw't^er came from Heaven, didn't he?" When he returned to London after ..^^^^ ^^^^„ „„^^„^^^ ,^„ „„,^„^ days. Northern District weather very warm, slight damage by hail, all crops maturing fast, barley will be ready early next week." Highest Cash Prices Paid for ,, . . .„ , this, all the past was forgotten, and , \f ' -i i. r â-  * j and warm, all gram growing rapidly A^ ; ^ „ot "appear in the streets , Johnny was silent for a "^'nute and harvest opera ions commenced and y^^^^ ^-.^^ being followed by ^^«"/«, T"* ^^r . ^^^-rhL Jth« will be general next week. Central / admiring crowd. And he was , '« â- *; Johnny? I don t blame the District warm weather, all ?ram ^^^^^^ ^^J^^^ i^^, ^^^^mly because «"««'« ^""^ «l'"K'"e »»™ «"'-<l° ripening fast, barley ready m some »^ ^^^ ^^^„ ^^ formidable and solvo"' L°?_''*'^\^."J..!?!J''''^^:i!:T''l..!-"i!"! brave an enemy in the not -very re- mote past. But, of course, by nobody was he welcomed with such heartiness as by the Irish, and the Irish party invited him to a banquet along with the other When Helogoland was ceded by Ministers of the Dominions who hap- Britain to Germany in 1890, the sea pened to be in London at the time. had made such inroads on the soft Botha did not look very well at that cliflfs that its complete disappearance time. The change from the open-air at no very distant date was freely pre- life of the veldt, whether as a soldier dieted. or as a farmer, to the sedentary hab- its of a Prime Minister, did not suit his temperament. Probably after .this arduous cam- paign, which he has just finished so About the middle of the last cen- tury one of the most familiar figures in the Kilkenny (Ireland) hunting ^"^^^gsfuH^fB^thrrs'ln'WtterTealth country was Mr. Hewetson Nixon, a ^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^een since he exchanged, bold and skilful rider, who was stone ^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^^e rifle for the desk! blind. and the pen. Every man over twenty-one years Mustard, judiciously given, has a of age in Italy is entitled to a vote, wonderful effect in inducing hens to except those under thirty years of lay. | age who have neither performed mill- In Scotland a jury's verdict goes by tary service nor learned to read and the majority. It need not, as in Eng- write. - land, be unanimous. GINSENG We aie the largest buyers o( Ginieng in America and have the greatest demand for it. We can therefore pay you the highest cash prices. If you have any wild or cultivated Ginseng, write (or our latest price list, or ship wrhat you have and we will submit you our highest offer. David Blustein & Bro. 162 W. 27th St., NewYork, U.SA. Pure Ice Cream in the Home THE BRICK has greatly popularized City Dairy Ice Cream with the housewife. There is no other dessert that can compete with City Dairy Ice Cream in the summer. ' Our Service makes it possible for your dealer to supply you with City Dairy Ice Cream in brick form so that you can serve it in your own home at Dinner, Afternoon Tea or Evening Party, just the same as your City Sister. Por (a/a by Dlaorlmlnatln^ ahottk»90orr ED. «. ISSUE 34â€" '15. Look for tho Sign. TORONTO.

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