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Flesherton Advance, 10 Aug 1916, p. 7

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GOOD DIGESTION A SOURCE OF HEALTH When the Stomach is Out of Or- der the Whole System Suffers. Indigestion is one of the most dis- tressing maladies afflicting mankind. When the stomach is unable to per- form the work nature calls for, the re- sult is severe pains after eating, nau- sea, heartburn, fluttering of the heart, tick headache, and often a loathing for food, though the sufferer is really half starved. People with poor digestion, too, frequently try all sorts of experi- ments to aid the process of digestion, but there is only one way in which the trouble can actually be cured, that is i through the blood. That is why the \ topic treatment with Dr. Williams' 1 Pfci: Pills cures even the most obstin- ! ate cases of indigestion. They make i rich, red blood that strengthens the ! stomaeh and the nerves, thus enabling it to do its work. The process is sim- 1 pie, but the result mean.s good appetite and increased health and pleasure in life. In proof of these statements, Mrs. Albert Hall, Sonya, Ont., says: "I have used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills with wonderful results. For two years I was a great sufferer from indiges- tion, which almost made me a physical ' wreck. At times my sufferings were ' so great that I was unable to attend to my household duties. I had smoth- ' ering spells at times and was afraid I to lie down to rest. After every meal, no matter how sparingly I ate, I suf- fered great distress. I tried several I doctors but their medicine was of no ' avail. I saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised to cure this trouble and de- cided to try them. I had not been ; taking them long when I felt some- what improved. This improvement continued and after taking ten bo.xes I could eat and digest all kinds of food and felt better than I had done ; for years. You may be sure I am very grateful for the wonderful relief these pills have given me. I know they are also a cure for anaemic sufferers, as : an intimate friend of mine was badly affected with this trouble and after, taking several boxes she was entirely . cured." I You can get these pills through any | dealer in medicine or by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. j .MAX HARDEN TELLS THE TRUTH j : Germans Driven Like Flock of Sheep j by a Merciless Shepherd. ; Underground runiblings in Germany ' have grown in intensity, like the Brit- ish artillery fire, within the past few weeks. The real import is conveyed j by the only man in Germany still out of gaol who has the courage and the ^ opportunity to speak the truth. | In a late number of his Govern- ment-defying weekly review. Zukunft, Herr Maximilian Harden has a re- . markable article entitled "Those Un- derground." It is a straight-from-the- shoulder attack on the Government and the War Party's fear to unmuzzle public opinion. Written on the eve of the Socialist Liebknecht's sentence and the suppression of th° Liberal- Radical Berliner Tageblatt for merely demanding afreeh the right to discuss "our war aims," Harden's ar'^icle is proof that the crusade to face the pre- sent facts about the war â€" Germany's hopeless fight for peace on her terms â-  â€" is a strong and growing movement. I Without at all exaggerating its im- 1 portance it is undoubtedly a manifest- ation of no little promise and encour- agpment. The significance of the crusade for the truth lies in the identity of the Come Out of the Kitchen. It is the closed season for the bake-oven. Banish kitchen worry and work. Forget cooks, ser- vants and gas bills. Solve your Summer problem by serving Shredded Wheat Biscuit, the ready-cooked whole wheat food. A food that restores the digestive organs to their natural vigor, supplies all the nutriment needed for a half-day's work, and keeps the bowels healthy and active. We have done the baking for you. Eat it for breakfast with milk or cream; serve it for luncheon with berries or other fresh fruits. Made in Canada THE "BIG DRIVE." By Charles M. Bice. Denver, Colo. Delusion, if not disappointment, I lurks in the phrase "big drive," as ap- I ! plied to the offensive movement of , j thi! allies on the western front. The I over-enthusiastic have visions of a I vast army of millions sweeping north and east and driving the Germans be- fore them, rhe thing, unfortunately, is impossible. It was as nearly realized as it prob- ably ever will be in this war at the BAKINGPOWDEa Old-Fashioned. "They're old-fashioned people." "In what way 7" "They still have fried potatoes and battle of' the Marne." but "that "was be- ! ''°'"'' '='*°P" '""^ breakfast." fore the era of trench warfare. North- ; , ern France and Belgium behind the ' -" '"*=»"»â- â€¢ ^^"°''" »» «»" >«"»»• German lines is now a vast area of prepared defenses and military trenches. -A. comparatively few men can hold Dublin Castle. Dublin Castle has a history of over The London Chronicle. It was King John who, in 1204, ordered it to be built, "well for- tified, with good fosses and thick walls, strong enough to defend or con- trol the city." Henry III., when about to visit Ireland in 1243, ordered the Sir Rider Haggard, the British novelist, photographed just before his departure from New York for London on the steamship St. Louis the other day. The English WTiter said: "Even be- fore the war there were superfluous women in England to the number of over one and one-half millions. Now there are millions more, and these, at the Government's request, have gone into industry to take the places of the men at the front. These women are there to stay, for there will not be sufficient men to marry them." , crusaders. They include: 1. The working classes, who realize seven centuries, says the utter impoverishment which pro- i longation of the war means for indus- trial Germany. ; 2. The moneyed, commercial and fi- nancial classes, shippers, merchants, m.anufacturers, and hankers, for whom the Berliner Tageblatt and Harden aiidition of a hall "with sufficient have always ben recognized as spokes, windows and glass casements," and nien. other improvements were made in suc- j The latter â€" the Ballins, Gwinners, ceeding reigns,' particularly by the { Rathenaus, Riessers, Thyssens, Kir- Duke of Clarence, son of Edward III., dorfs, Furstenbergs, Stinnes's and the who as viceroy spent much money other captains of industry and finance on the eastle to make it convenient â€" know perfectly well that time is (as his father complained when call- fighting on the allies' side. Their own ed upon to pay) "for his sports and interlocking associations with the other pleasures." ' Government make it impossible for them to speak out. So they use Hard- en for their purpose. When Harden declares that if the German people's real sentiments could be expressed the KlBard't Zilslaient ued tr Ftiyalctaaa. BAGD.^D OF THE CALIPHS. Sore! A WONDERFUL CLOCK. Now a City of Crumbling .Mosques and Dilapidated Palaces. One of the picturesque contrasts of- fered by the war, writes Mr. H. M. Allen, is that of the khaki-clad Brit- Timepiece Tells .Movable Feast Davs '***, s°''^i«" contending with Germans of the Catholic Church. ' I ^^t \^ amid the ruins of Mesopo- tamia. Across the very plains where The clock in Strassburg Cathedral ' once swept the war chariots of the is one of the most wonderful of its j Chaldeans are now moving the armed kind. It was first made in 1574, and motors of Germany and England. In went through various phases till it the rivers where the Babylonian and was remade in 1842, and since that Persian barges once plied, the shal- Jate has been in perfect working or- low-draft gunboats that fly the Union der. This clock not only tells the Jack now manoeuvre. British aero- time of day, but the month and day planes have already been seen fly- of the month, and all the movable ing across the skies that looked down feast days of the Catholic Church, upon Harun-al-Rashid, and a German says London Tit-Bits. A statue of Zeppelin may be reported to-morrow Apollo points out the day of the hovering over the bazaars where the month and the name of the saint cor- j Commander of tho Faithful delighted ' responding to that day. The clock to wander. i shows the rising and setting of the | The visitor to Bagdad recalls that it moon round the earth, its passages was the capital of a domain reaching over the meridian, the phases of the from Spain into Africa and from moon, and the eclipses of both sun Africa to India, and he knows that and moon. Allegorical figures in Harun-al-Rashid was once its ruler, chariots representing the days of the These facts have been inscribed on the week drive into view, appearing each tablets of memory through the me- day in proper order: On Sunday, dium of "Amine," ".â- Vli Baba," "Sind- ApoUo; Monday, Diana; Tuesday, bad the Sailor," and other delightful Mars; Wednesday, Jupiter, armed ^ "Arabian Nights'" tales. But the with a thunderbolt; Thursday, Thor; Bagdad of to-day, although the Turk- Friday, Venus; and Saturday, Saturn, ish documents still call it "the glori- At a quarter past the hour a child ous city," has naught but crumbling comes forward and strikes a bell mosques, dilapidated palaces and neg- once; at half past a youth strikes the lected tombs to bear testimony to the ' bell twice; at a quarter to the hour splendor of the past, a middle-aged man strikes it three ' It was .\I-Man3ur, the second caliph times; and just before the hour a tot- of the .\bba3side dynasty, who remov- tering old man strikes the bell four ed the capital of Islam hither from times. Then a figure of death steps : Damascus. When he first saw the forward and solemnly strikes the spot he was enchanted with it, al- 1 hour. ! though there was then only a single \ On the stroke of twelve the twelve habitation upon it â€" the cell of tho Apostles appear, each one bowing as venerable hermit Dad. The latter, he passes the figure of Christ, who ignorant who his distinguished visitor stands with hands uplifted in bless- , was, not only entered into conversa- ing; and as the procession passes, a tion with him, but predicted that one cock which stands on tho top of the Moslos was destined to found a city clock at the left side crows three j where they were standing, times in a very life-like manner aand "I am that man!" exclaimed the Germanti Eat Crows. Crows anil crows' eggs are recom- end of the war would be in sight he is mended by the German Ministry of talking not for himself but for Ger- the Interior as articles of food. many's gagged and muzzled men of Crows' eggs are described as having , affairs. The Government's attitude the taste of plovers' eggs. j toward the demands of these classes is that public discussion of the war I would "injure us abroad" and "under- mine domestic unity." This is the crusaders' reply, made in their name by Harden: "It is not what Schmidt or Schultz thinks about the conduct and object of the war which damages us abroad. What hurts our prestige is the figure , we have cut for nearly two years now I of a flock of docile sheep driven be- ! fore a merciless shepherd. Our ene- I mies are listening to the right and the left, but can nowhere hear what the will of the German people is. If they could, we would be near to the peace which is to-<lay possible, and which only . niracle can improve." 6ranolBfe4 Eyelids. , Eyes inri;ttncd by expo- (ure 10 Sua, Oust and KIsi , quicidy relieved by Marine >e?«Benndy. No Smarting. *>' Ju«t Eve Comfort. .At ToarDniggift'i 50c per Sortie. MurtneEy* ••iwinTube«:5r. ForBBokoliheEyefrttask Dniggitu or Nurlae CyeRcmcdy Co. , Ckicag* PRAISE FOB CANADI.\NS. British Staff Officer Says They Have Done Wonderful Work. Lord Tennyson, writing in the Lon- don Times, encloses a letter of an English staff officer in France: "The Canadians have done won- derfully well, and we are proud of flghting with them,' he says. "The way they fought to recover the lost trenches was a lesson to everyone. Ve shall never forget it. They are the most hospitable and .self -denying lot, and they will share the last crust or drop of water with any of us who need it. We have the greatest ad- miration for them after the recent fighting." « Otto of roses is proiluccd by 'Hstill- ing rose-petals in water, and then col- lecting the oil from the surface by means of a feather. flaps its wings. Visitor that? At the Aquarium. "What kind of flsh caliph, and ho went on to inform the hermit that in his boyhood he had stolen a bracelet, and his nurse had ever after called him "Molos," the '•iname of a thief then well known. The old recluse must have made a consider- Attendantâ€" That's half dogfish and ' g^le impression on the mind of Al- half catfish- ho Just eat a catfish as Mansur, for the town was eventually big as himself 1 named for him. "Bag" signifies a garden in the Persian tongue, and the whole word means "The garden of Dad." This caliph, by the way, was per- haps the richest man of his time, for he possessed some $150,000,000. He Even the youth who claims to have did not, however, invest his wealth in It is estimated that there are 10,000 permanent residents of Canadian Na- tional Exhibition City during the two weeks of the Fair. a llnlshed learn. education has a lot to REPAIRS storage Batteries Generators lyiagnetos Starters. CANADIAIT S T S A a E BATTESY CO.. LnUTES l\7 Sla«o* St.. Toronto. Wlllard Afrenti. iBHMff'*'iHlSMiflBBi5P^ Bagdad real estate, for he and his sons left it a small town, confined to the western bank of the Tigris. More- 1 over, they economized in building ma- : terlals, for they used fragments plun- ! dered from the ancient Persian eity Ctesiphon, its near neighbor Seleucia, and from ancient Babylon. I It remained for Harun, ally and 1 friend of Charlemagne, who came | after Al-Mansur and his 8ons,_ to ex- , tend the capital to the eastern bank. | With him, too, began the era of cul- j ture, science, literature, and that dls- , tinctly Persian luxury that at last 1 wrought the downfall of Saracen power. .A.gainst such effeminate de- generacy Omar, conqueror of Syria, Persia and Egypt, sedulously warned his people, but in vain. i As the acorn grows to be the mighty oak, so children, when rightly nourished, grow to be sturdy men and women. (iood flavor and the es- sential nourishing elements for mental and physical de- velopment of cnildi'en are found in the famous food â€" Qrape-Nut5 Made of whole wheat and malted barley, this pure food supplies all the nutri- ment of the grains in a most easily digested form. It does the heart good to see little folks enjoy Grape- Nuts and cream. **Tlicrc's a Reason*' Sold by Grocers. Canadian Poetum Cereal Co.. Ltd., Windsor. Out Curious Thing. The captain â€" Dashed curious thing, Petersâ€" women living longer than men. The Chemist â€" Speaking from ex- perience, sir. I should say that women are dyeing much younger than thev did, Aak (or ICla«rd'» aad tak* ao ovua Impatient Parent. [ Lawyerâ€" You say you want this damage suit pressed through with the utmost speed ? Clientâ€" Exactly, I have a child six weeks old. and I want the money to pay his college expenses, ' Montreal, May 29th, '09. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited, Yarmouth, N'.S. Gentlemen, â€" I beg to let you know that I have used MIN.\RD'S LINI- MENT for some time, and I find it the best I have ever used for the joints and muscles. Yours very truly THOS, J. HOGAN. The Champion Clog and Pedestal Dancer of Canada. Courteous Princes. Prince Albert was seen recently coming out of a Regent Street (Lon- don) shop, and as ihc girl commis- sionaire swung open the door for him he saluted and thanked her. Our royal sons have been brought up to the highest notions of chivalry towards all women. When Prince John was a tiny boy he always raised his cap to a flower-woman who had her basket in Buckingham Palace road. It is record- ed that the Queen said: "I'm very pleased; I like my boys to respect all women." entrenched positions against vastly superior numbers of infantry. No army in modern warfare can advance much beyond the range of its heavy guns, nor any faster than they can be brought up to prepare the way. Those who conceive of the so-called "big push" as one great continuous movement along the whoie front cher- ish an uninformed conception of the true situation. The big drive now tak- ing place is the composite result of many smaller drives. The main sig- nificance of this movement lies in the fact that these small pushes are a part of a co-ordinated plan, including the Italian, Russian and Balkan fronts with the western. The British drive between Arras and the Somrae is not the hurling of an army of over 2,- 000,000 men again.st the German lines as interpreted by some of the headline writers in the paper.s. This vast army will not be hurled en masse. So far as developed, it is primarily a powerful, localized attack intended to relieve pressure at Verdun. At least, that appears to be its object, but also to realize such strategic gains as will lead to further successful offen.sive movements after adequate preparation ' for them. ; In choosing the sector south of Ar- ras for the attack, the British greatly j surprised their foe. The sector north of .Arras has been the favorite fighting ground because the positions held by the British are within close reach of important strate- gic points in the German front, Vimy- Ridge commands the plains that sur- round Douai and Lens, The capture of these cities would seriously menace Lille, and the fall of Lille would de- moralize the military organization of the Germans along the -Artois front. But by striking south of Arras the strongly defended region north of it may be weakened, and the way pre- pared for a second blow that will prove more effective than those hither- to dealt on the sector from .\rra3 to La Bassee. The significant thing is that the in- itiative on all the fronts is now with the .Allies â€" and this for the first time since the war began. It looks as though the first .sen- tence in the first paragraph of the last chapter is being written, and the doom of the Hun is sealed. Let us hope that the end is near. THE SELKIRK TUNNEL. Will Cost the C. P. R. $12,000,000 at the Least. The Selkirk tunnel will be through in the fall, according to the CP.R. of- ficials. This is another of the notable things to which the company has put its hand â€" a tunnel six miles through a mountain whose peaks pierce the clouds â€" a tunnel which presented en- gineering difficulties almost unique. This work will give the public an alternative route through the moun- tains; it will save six miles of snow sheds; it will eliminate danger, and it will minister to the comfort and convenience of the public. The cost will be $12,000,000 or more. That is about the only big work the CP.R. has been engaged in lately, but it is in- teresting to recall that in the years before the war the company used to spend between $25,000,000 and $35,- 000,000 per annum in the development of the West. If, as a high official of the CP.R, remarke<i, the CP.R, took a dollar out of the West, it put that dollar back again in some form or other. It would hardly be believed, hut the CP.R,, since its inception, has spent over $200,000,000 in the develop- ment of the West, ; Precautionary. "Can you accouimcdate myself and family tor summer board ?" "What's your politics " inquired Farmer Comtossel. "Does that make any difference ?" "Yep. I'm nut having to take an- other chance on having the whole place stirred up with arguments day and night .\11 the folks that board here this summer has got to have tha same politics." No man is ever so Important or ua- Impor'ant as he thinks. For CvcriY SPORT AND RECfSEATICN Sold by an good Shoe re<:ier3 "Wo«t\ 1^ ewr --- ♦nember of the tciiily SEES POTATOES ^ EED r'OT.^TuES. IKISH COB- kC biers. Dt-lewMre. Carman. Order at ^nee. tations. Supnlv h;nit»(l H W Iiaw«on \Vr!t(^ Tor quo- Hr:impton. FOB SALS POL.AND CHI.NA HOGS, S.MOOTH. "^ bigboned. quick growing, half-ton kind, and every one registered. The ideal farmers' bog sold at farmers' prices. MAJOR EIX;.\H, North Hatley. Que. WEWaPAPERS rOB SALB IJRUKIT-MAKI.VG NEWS AXD JOB Olllies lor sule In good Ontario towns. The most useful and Interestlnc of all bu.sinesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publlshine Com- pany. T3 W gst AJ.'lal.ie .Street. Toronto. XISCEXJiAVBOTTS ETC, wltlk- fiut pain by our homa treatra«nL Writ* na before too lata. Dr, T-llmaa Madlcal Oo„ Limited, Collinswood, Unt. C^ A,NCER. TUMORS, LtJMPS. / Internal and oztcrnal. cumd Anisrlca's Plantef Sot Rsimdlu BOOK 0.\ DOG DISEASES And How to Feed free to rdt addr^^sa br H. CUY CLOVER CO., Inc. Hi Weit 3Ut Street, New York It is estimated that the Canadian National Exhibition attracts 400,000 people to Toronto annually, a large percentage from across the line. Bdaard'a Llalmant Iiombennan's TrlsaS ' What Goes In the Missionary Box. I "Whati'ver are you doing, Molly 7" I asked mother, a« she entered the nur- I sery. For her flve-yearold daughter [ was busily stuffing broken toys, head- 1 less dolls, ragged clothes, and other odds and ends in an old leather bag. "Oh, mother, can't you see ?" cried ,MoUy. "I'm packing a missionary-box, Just like the ladies do. .\nd It's all right," she add«d proudly, '"l haven't put In a single thing that's any good." A Young Financier. "Auntie, can you change a dime for me ?" "How do you want It changed, dear t" "Into a quarter, please." EFFORT. The things you cannot do to-day This is an old, old story, .\re things reserved along tho way To bring to-morrow's glory. So keep on trying anyhow. Don't sulk or wail In sorrow. The things that are your master now, You'll master some to-morrow. Described. "Papa, what Is luouoy-manla ?" "An incurable disease, iny boy. and vour mother has It." The hospital ship Salta recently ar- rived in the Liffey with about 400 wounded soldiers on board, and was greeted by a great crowd of people. jMbNEY 10 â€" 15 â€" 20 Tears from now the Blssell Silo will bp KiviiiK f^ood eer\ice. It Is built of sel- •oied timber, treated with wood pre»er\atlve8, that present decay. It haa atrons rl»lJ walls, alr- tlaht doors, and hootis of ^eevy steel. Therefore it lasts, simp- ly because It can't very woll Jo an,vthin>r else. Our folder explains more fuUv â€" Write r.'pt r. y, B. BISSBI.Ii CO,, IiTD. Klor«. Ontario, DON'T CUT OUT grv^rStl AShoeBGU,Capped^, Hock or Bursitis^ FOR yVBSORBM^ will reduce them ind leave no blemishes. Stopt lameness prompilv. Does not blis- ter or remove the nair, and horse can b« worked. $.: a bottle delivered. Book 6 M free. .\BSORBINE. JR.. tor muidnd. Ui< uiiiMr<i< Bntmetil lor Boll*. BruiKl. Jorei. Sw«lllni«, Vjrtrot* Vcinfc AllAT* r*la uiJ Inflammatioa. Pr*ce $1 knd tZ » boctie It initlio or ilcUiernl, W M irll tou aion U roa wriia> W. F rOUNB, P, D. F . 516 Lymtns BIdg., Montreal, Cia. 'ttMibiu ud AbKibine. Jt,, uc oijc in Cuxttx Mectiifiery For Sale Wheelock Engine, 150 H.P., 18x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. wiac,aBd Dynamo 30K.W. bdt driven. All in first class conlition. Would be sold together or scp.:rate- ly ; also a lot of shafiing at a very great bargain as room is required immedi- ately. S. Frank Vi/iison & Sons 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. ED. 7. ISSUE M- •19, i;llSiiA:!;fe»iiiK -nitimi^,

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