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Flesherton Advance, 10 May 1917, p. 3

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â- ^.^ BAfilSH PIMPLES '^ AND ERLPTIONS In the Spring Most People Need a Tonic Medicine. One of die sureat signs that the blood Is cut of order Is the pimples, uneightly eruptions and eczema that come frequently with the change from winter to spring. These prove that the long indoor life of winter has had its effect upon the blood, and tttat a tonic •Jiediclne is needed to put it right. Inr leed there are few people who do not need a tonic at this season. Bad blood does not merely show Itself In disfigur- ing eruptions. To this same condition Is due attaclts of rheumatism and lum- bago; the sharp stabbing pains of sciatica and neuralg^ia, poor appetite and a dpsire to avoid exertion. You cannot cure these troubles by the use of purgative medicines â€" you need a tonic, and a Ionic only, and among all medicines there is none can equal Dr. WUIlams' Pink Pills for their tonic, life-giving, nerve-restoring powers. Every dose of this medicine makes new, rich blood which drives out im- purities, stimulates every organ and brings a feeling of new health and energy to weak, tired, ailing men, women and children. If you are out of sorts give this medicine a trial and see how quickly it will restore the ap- petite, revive drooping spirits, and fill your veins with new, healtbgiviug blood. You can get these Pllte from any medicine dealer or by mall at 60 cents a box or six boxes for 12.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. . 4 =^ The New Modes The barrel or bowling-pin silhouette appears to be meeting with success not only in skirts of the tailored type, but in afternoon frocks. The effect ob- tained by soft draperies and pleats at the upper part of the skirt makes very graceful lines and is especially pretty in afternoon silk frocks. The sketch shows one of these models^developed >in dotted foulard. The waist of this design is particularly interesting, as it features the new kimono sleeve cut so as to form a part of the body of the waist. The curved line starting from the collar and going under the arm is seen in many designs and allows for the use of two materials, that most Your Wife's "Allow- ance** may not expand to meet the increasing cost of foods, but it will buy a suffi- cient quantity of Shredded Wheat to nourish every member of the family. Two Shredded Wheat Biscuits with nulk make a good, nourishing breakfast at a cost of a few cents. All the body-building material in the whole wheat grain. For breakfast or dinner with berries or other fruits. RENTING NEWSF'APER. Old-time Method Revived of News- paper Reading. The London Times, which has re- turned to the reading circle idea as a means of saving paper, says that there are still people living in Lon- don who remember the days when the Times was sent around to var- ous circles for perusal at set hours in the morning, afternoon and even- ing. A resident of Fulham has sup- plied some interesting facts with re- gard to this system of distribution, facts which are the more interesting now that the scheme has come into operation again. In 1859 the Times was 4d a copy, and consequently many people could not afford to buy the paper regularly. Accordingly the newsagents started a .'icheme for lending the Times out on hire, they themselves taking every risk, for in those days there was no "sale or return" plan by which the newsvendors could forward their un- sold copies to the office. Mr. Henry Fletcher was one of the newsboys who was engaged in tak- ing the Times round in 1859, and he relates the methods employed. There were three boys for his district, and their first round was at 8 a.m. Cer- tain customers who paid their shilling a week received the paper at 8 o'clock. They kept it for two hours, when the boys called again and took it to the next subscriber. .\fter thit the tariff was lid a week for an hour a Jay, or 9d for two hours. None of the London newspapers had country agencies in those days, and, ronscquently, after the last per,son had read the paper it was posted to the country or abroad. Before this happened, however, the paper was passed on to subscribers who paid txl H week for the privilege of having the Times from (! in the evening until the next morning. Sometimes in the evening or the next morning the boys had to search for additional copies tor casual buyers. In those days all the papers were taken round the city on carts. M^de in C*nad» ® McCali. 7681â€"7680 I .\fternoon Frock of Dotted 'foulard in Barrel Effect popular effect. CoMar and cuffs of this dress are of sheer white organdy. Short sleeves reaching just above or below the elbow, as in this model, are likely to be popular when the warm weather comes, for every indication points that way just now. The long sleeves will continue to be worn, how- ever. ! These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer or from The .McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto,! Dept. W. I spy has been collecting for the enemy." Mr. .\. examined closely all the lit- ter on the grass, but found not a thing even to warrant a hint of sus- picion that the soldier was a German spy. "There's nothing at all incriminat- ing here," he exclaimed, turning to the General. "There are some letters from home, quite harmless, a few pic- ture postcards, his pay book and an envelope with two five franc notes." "Oh, is that it?" The General scowled blackly at the soldier until the latter hung his head. Then he clear- ed his throat: "Well, my man, I want you to un- derstand this â€" a British soldier who does not salute a British officer is eith- er a spay or a fool. You, apparently, are just a plain fool." Thereupon, turning on hi.s heel, the General jumped into the saddle and started to ride off. But the General reined in for a moment and turned in his saddle, grinning down upon the soldier who stood at attention, half dressed, his belongings scattered about. ".\11 right, you can dress now!" said the General, and this time he gal- loped off. The story spread and there are few- er complaints now of inattention to the rules of the service in the British army. 50 YE.\rk.S OF WOOD PULP. Great Benefit of Utilization of Wood For Paper Making. It is just 50 years since the first wood pulp paper in the United States was manufactured, and it would be difficult to estimate the benefit this has conferred upon the world, for it was a step in the dissemination of knowledge, particularly current news, just as was the invention of movable types and the printing press, says the Portland Oregonian. It will be remembered by many still living with what care every rajf was saved to be converted into paper, and how the paper, after it had served its purpose at the printer's, was care- fully put aside for wrapping parcels. Those were days of automatically im- â-  posed thrift, which were followed by disregard of economics so widespread that already after only half a century we are confronted by a prospect of serious shortage of supply of the new raw material. Just as the supply of rags in the sixties would not have sufficed for ! growing needs, so it appears that soon there will not be enough wood pulp to go around. But we have grown so accustomed to finding substitutes when we had to have them that the eWorld is not alarmed. Expensive Neutrality The war has cost Holland $885,- 480,000, according to the latest of- ficial announcement, this sum having been spent on the upkeep of the mobilized army and navy, together with the supply of cheap food, the care of refugees, and the like. More- over, the rate of expenditure is rising. The last half-year the cost was |67,- 080,000, as against |46,000 for the preceding six months. With the ever- mounting cost of the provision of cheap food, the figures are expected to continue their upward course In the current year. > ,When Your Eyes Need Care Ui»eHurlne£)«Me<liclDe. No amartlo^â€" Feels Fine â€" Act» Quickly. Try It for Red, Weak, Sore Eyes and UraniiltiMd E.ralM*. Kurloets compoiindeU by oi:r OeullHta â€" not a "Patent Medicine"â€" but used In succesafLtl PbyelclaDe' Practice for mau.r rears. Now dedicated to the Public and tR>:(l by DrugglHts at QOc per Bottle. Uurine Eie Salre In Aseptic Tuliei 35c and 50c. Write for book of tiic Eve Fr^r. Murine Eye RemedY Co'npany, Chicaso. AdT. Have .\biding Faith. There are also those who, when they believe anything, don't carf whether they know anything about it or not. ^ 1 MONEY ORDERS A Dominion Express Money Ordef for Five Dollars Coats Three Cent*. THE BEST MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES Baby's Own Tablets are the best tiiodiclne a mother can give her little Olios. They are a gentle laxative â€" mild but thcrough in action and are guaranteed by a government analyst to be absclutely free from opiale.s and other injurious drugs. Concerning them Mrs. .Vuguste. St. Brteux, Sask.. writes: "Enclc.-'ed find tweiity-tlve cents for another box of Baby's Own Tablet-*. I liiid ihem the very best medicine a mother can give her little ones." The Tablets are sold by medi- cine dealers cr by mail at 'Ih cents a box from The Or WUliains' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The perfection of personality is ac- tion . Supper OUR CITIZEN ARMY. .Vn Odd Way of Enforcing Discipline Employed By British General. They are laughing in the British trenches in France and. in the London duhs over a story of how an English General taught discipline painlessly to one of the millions of new soldiers England has made. The name of the General varies in the telling. Some say he is Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig. Others say the Irish General Gough only could have done it. Whoever he may bo, he cannot let the day pass without taking his rid*^-horseback. Though this General is known to most British soldiers, and though his uniform shows his rank, he passed one day while on his daily canter a private soldier walking in the opposite direc- tion. The soldier did not salute. The General stared a moment, puzzled whether or not to reprimand the man. Then a slow grin passed over his face. He turned to his aid. "We'll dismount, Mr. X.," he said, ' and then turning to his orderly and pointing to the soldier, "Trooper B, i arrest that man and bring him her«. He's a spy." 1 The General gave every appearance of being in deadly earnest. In a mo- ment Trooper B. had brought back the suspected man in a state of bewilder- ment and no little trepidation. The General then proceeded to order and supervise a search of the man. ! "Take off hl» coat! Empty his pockets! Take off his cap! Look In- ' side the lining! Never know where' these spies hide their papers," he ordered. "Make him take off his put- j tees, too . " Still in speechlens wonderment the' soldier helped Trooper B. execute \ these orders. In a moment he was standing with^almost all his kit on the grass. I "Now, Mr. A.," said the General I with great soverity," "y-ou know Ger- man. Kxumino those papers, please, I lutd see what sort at information thla CROWNED .\T DAYBREAK. Interesting Coronation Ceremonies for New Queen of .\byssinia. The ceremonies of crowning the new Empress of Abyssinia, Zeoditu. took place the latter part of Febru- ary and lasted a week, which was ob- servetl as a holitlay throughout the country. The new Empress remitted all arrears of taxes and proclaimed general amnesty for criminals still at large. The Empress was crowned in the Cathedral of .\ddis .\beba at 4 o'clock in the morning. No foreigner was permitted to witness this ceremony, but at 8 o'clock the Empress look her seat upon a throne and received the diplomatic corps, most of the foreign residents and the principal .Abyssin- ian chief.<, who paid homage. The Re- gent. Ras Tafari, stood on the steps of the throne. .\n address was delivered by the Bishop of .\byssinia, after which the Empress read a proclamation to her subjects. The day's ceremonies concluded with a gorgeous procession to the palace and a banquet. . There is a Message In This Lady's Story She Tells What Dodd's Kidney Pills Do For Women \ She Was Troubled With Weaknese and Her Daughter Had Nervoue Trouble. Oodd's Kidney Pilii Proved the Remedy They Both Needed. Hamilton, Oat.. May 7th 1 Specdali â€" The story told by .Mrs. H. Dickens, of 70 Tom Street, this city, carries a mes- sage of hope to every suffering woman In Canada. â- â- .\fter my baby was born," Mrs. Dickens states, "T used to suffer vAxh. my back and had no heart to do my work aruuifd the home. But I read about Dodd's Kidney HIUs and what they have done for others, so I thought I would get a bo.x and see what they would do for m<^. "1 am pleased to say that after tak- Mt% two Loxcs I found such great relief I would not be without tiiem in the house. ' 'â-  My daughter, too, had been very sick ou and off for a long time. Her nerves got so bad we were afraid »e would see her in the hospital. But I am pleased to .*ay »lie is better through taking IKdd s Kiduey Pills. "1 never thought IKdd's Kidney Pills could have dene such gi ;. 1 work and 1 am telling all my friends about them." Women's troubles, or nearly all of them, come from sick kidneys The cure for ihem is the tld established remedy for s<!ck kidmys, Omid s Kid- ney Pills. What the Potato Said. I used to be looked down upon, But times change, I declare; Why since the war broke out you'll see My patches everywhere! These fancy fellows do get by In times of pease; but say. Wartimes the good old staples. They â€" step in and save the day! Cause and E^ect. "Your brother has the earache." "It serves him right," answered th« small boy's sister. "Teacher has told him time and again he ought not to play the piano by ear." Mlaard'i laalaiant iu*4 by rnyBlclsiui. War's Changes. Not the least among the changes and upheavals of the war is the use of some of the stateliest houses of the old land as hospitals or convalescent I homes. Even Dublin Castle has been I pressed into service, and wounded soldiers are now lying in the Throne room, one resting as comfortably as he may under the canopy of the very throne itself. Aak for Mlaard'a aad take no othar. yswaPAJEaa roK sam PROFIT-M.-UvI-NO .\-EW3 .\ND JOB ufflcfs for sale In (ood Ontario towns. The most useful and InteresUnff of all businesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publlshlnt Com- pany 73 AJ-l.u le St . T^riJit) m»o»i.i.ajraop» BICYCLES. NEW AND SECOND Hand. Ill 00 up. Send for special §nc« :1st Ysrslty Cycle Worka, 411 padlna Ave.. Toronto^ CANCER. TUMURd, LUMPS, ETC., Internal aiid external, cured wlUi- cut pain by our boms treatment. Writ* us before too l&te. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited. CoUingwood. Ont. Ke«i> maard's IilalmeBt la th* aoiue. Waste ground and spare time may be jointly used for the increased pro- duction of food . Every one says mean things about people he does not wish them to hear, and so it is a very mean trick to tell a man what people say about him Ci^NADAIN .FLANDERS Volume 2 THIS contemporary biatory of the Canadian Expeditionary forca laaaad by tbe Canadian Oovvnunent, is oSioUl. Human civilisation was founded on the altruistic and moral inventions of mankind, and was directed not so much to the "survival of the fittest" as to the fitting of as many as pos- sible to survive. â€" 0. K. Munro, Use more time and lower heat in cooking to develop flavors and to secure all the value in the food. The Soul of a Piano is the .Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIGcL;' PIANO ACTION s:^ SloiTflHTCH "*"" Lord BEA'irtRBFOOK »^ !*>â-  *V*» ArHE* THE LIFTUP KI\S FILLED CORSETS The Support You Need and Just Where You Need It. If v.njr 'IvHler ^-Mnnot supply \ ou \vr!:f ur* .Jirtct for <*iLta.U*KUt> arid Sex>rdSon^atl'7«B Wan'fld HL\.< (OKSETS .LIMITED 37 BKITAUr ST TOROVTO. OaTUP*...! I «ia. Boottstuxva Minard's l.iuiment Co.. Limited. Dear Sirs. Yctir .Vtl.V.XRDS I.I.M ME.NT is our remedy for sore throat. colds and all ordinary ailments. It never fails to relieve and cure promptly rllAS. WHOOTEN Port .Mulgrave. KEROSE.NE, THE LIGHT OF .\Sl.\. Opportunity For Canadian Firms 'Fo Extend Their Trade. ' To educate the Chinese »•- into a knowledge of kerosene, the Standard Oil Company made presents of small oil lamps In the Celestial Empire, •ays the New York Mail. That was twelve or fourteen years ago. In 1908 the sales of kerosene In China aggregated 18,000,000 yillons. ; In 1916 they aggregated 108,000,- 000 gallons. Kerosene has become the light of Asia, ^^'h»t an object lesson there is for Canadian enterprise In this achieve- ment of the great American oil com- pany! What Standard Oil did with kerosene It l» possible for hundreds of other branches of Industry to do to some degree in their lines, ngt only In ChloA, but elsewhere throughout the world. Amarln's Plonnr Do( Reisidns BOOK ox DOG DISEASES And How to Feed \ii\\-i r-w Aiirtior H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 1 1 8 West 31 It Sfreel, New York biuan Mil compouNp Tot All Boiler Feed Water* Cyolone aiukkln«r aad SmnDlaf arat* Ban for all raqtUveoieata Csnadlan Steam Boiler Equipment Co.. Llmltoil Tat. Oerrard 3««0 ae KoOse at. Toronto 0â€"0 -<y WITH THE FINGERS I SAYS CORNS LIFT OUT WITHOUT ANY PAIN lUnard'a Iilalntent &«ittbenuan'i rrisnd. It Is estimated that about two- thirds of aU the letters carried by the postal service of the world are writ- ten, sent to and read by English- speaking people. Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or any kind of a oorn c«n slK-rtly be lift- ed right out, with the fingers if you will apply on tho corn a tew drops of free- tone, iin.y« a (,'iucltiiiatl authority. At liitie cost cue can net a sinall bottle of freezone at any drug store, wUlch wUl poelllvoly rid one's feet of ev»ry eorii or oallus without pain or soraness or the danger of Infection. This new drug t« an other ccnipou:u!. and drle« the nioine-' it Is appiird iiiid does not Inflame or eveii liTltaie the »urp»ujidlng tissue. Just think ! Vi.u can lift off your corns and calliu^es va.w without a bit of paJii or screiies.-;. If yoitr druggist hasn't freezone he cati easily koi a small boltla for you ftc^m ED. T, ISSl'E 19 '17. '''* wl>olOi-«ltj dtug housx). Shaving Single Handed in a Military Hospital Only those who have been there can realize what the Gillette Safety Razor is doing for the wounded ! Clean shaving on the firing line, poscible on?/ with a Gillette, has saved endless trouble in dres.''':.;^ face wounds. In the hands of orderly Oi nun \ it shortens by precious minutes the prepavaticns fcr operating. Later, in the hands of ' ; j" nt . ^ »3 a blessing indeed ! As soon as their strength begins to return, t'.iey get the Gillette into action, and fairly revel in the finishing touch which it gives to the welcome clean- liness of hospital life. For though he can use but one hand â€" and that o .3 shd:y â€" a man can shave h." -nsclf safely and cor.ifortably v/ith a Gillette Sa'cty Riizor. It muif seem a little thing io you to send a Qlleile io thai hi? liou k"o»i Ov9rat4ti, hut to him d nlll mean so much I ll ti:U hrl'-ig a touch of home comfort to hlf life on aett\)e mvl^ aiid U tuen more afgeti^mLUMs HTJt "QiiKH\)\ £St

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