. _r.§`_1 1 1 /ef l s @ af.. ‘M . i\n\\vlllnullIIi_\\\\ vu Q *_ - 1 r ‘OCTOBER-26' 1914 . ' 'rr-is crnrnnorrarowu .GUARDIAN ~~ PAGE THREE -- K -'Bir’tl”;a.ys” ..l‘.’i.':.§:.‘;.l..r.‘;‘.‘:.:.+°°" fr: 0 "ll this store. B" ° K \\\\\\'&\\\E\`§\\\\\\\\ ` Don’t “lose sight” our large line of hot wat bottles. _ You’re 'not blind ualiy and value. These $1.75, 2.00 5.00 bottles are far abo he average in quality- d every one lguaran eed. Your money back hey’re not as we`say. Just look- E. A. Foster 9 Central Drugstore E Sunnyside lllllv/0a§\\\\\\\l|lll|l\§ i-1-1-____ ____ --l____ . (DO *ill-h .Q S 5:1-S \\\\\\\\'0IIIIII/ I-0' 0-P ,... r-+- l _ri- . ...__ l Poultry Notice Iam ready to buy all kinds of poultry, and to pay the usual high prices. Only good stock wanted. J. D. JENKINS Hlllll llill|VllS Prof. Iiolniilcli, ()t.tawa; A A. J. McLeod, Kinross; l“. Kelly. P0145' lnoutll, N. I-I.; A. Arcllihald. St. John; W. Callaghan. St. Louis; K. Golding. Victoria, P. E. I. A. H. Dixon, Montreal; M. li. Scully wife anti child, Souris; \‘V. L. Brad- shaw, Summcrside; Theo. McLeod. Charles McLeod. Arwett; J. W. Mc- Lean, New Glasgow; L. N. Mclfiniloii; Montague; H. 0. Uhlmali and wife. Pluto, Pa. .~ VICTORIA. _ John Mc1\'llllan. Samuel Sllvcr, A. P. Bally. J. T. Wilson, l\1oi\trcal; G. I, Stevens, D. tlolgiiii, Ii. S. Drillali, St. John; A. F. Kcirstcad, F‘.F. Smith. G. Rowell, V. l.. Pope. Torollw; T- Carr. 0tt.ll\va; Sain. D. Neill. Detroit.; G. Room, G. W. Wood, lllililax; A. R. Ivey, D. L. Cliryster, Briintfqrd; N. M. McAuley, Sydney- , (lclolicr 23rd. 1 I ll. w. oninnnr, if. l~‘. lwiniey. A. c.. Jamieson, Iliilil'ax; W. l’. liodl!“S. G- R. Llvernlorc, N. J. liloolliilcld, Mollt- reel; w. _J_ Miielieii. J. A. M<;l}a@» E- '1)_ |{,,|~pnr, A, S. Martin, V. l. Dart- mm' G, p,,w,.||_ '|‘oroiito; G. ll. lluers .1 'l`errv St lohn; ‘. l',t‘. . .i M\V. _f.. Mullai , k CH ; G_ J. lt. (‘.. Mllnro, Now lor y IldcQuarrlc, New Glasgow. 1. _ _ ,__..-__._. \` *'47 _ ` Ravens. ~ ` J R.. (Iurran. Syflll“.V3 ’\' A' Per' i'g\“.f0n, 1', J. Siiilpsoil, Mplilrcal: R. _..I. Maitursoii. 'l‘oro1\lo: l- W- iwllg Iamson p(,,.|h'()n|; /\..l. l\lcN0vll, . M li/lcNcvill llolisliiiw; .l, llorile, Will- slée; _]_ _]_ lift-Doilgiill. (ilacc Bay; MS- B. Small, New Glusl<0W~‘ Nmsgagé si' Arthur. Cornwall; Jl1“"ff__ V2, 0 ;,.ayj Jphn; W. Avard, Sliediiu . mi W-W R lor, Montreal; J. Adams. aheéwr' J' stanley and iilmiiiinollrnftiiss' A' ~ . ‘ on o . . ~ _lflagiixlng A, I), McKinnon. »_st. Patel-ei; 1;. vy3.0g:nl;edFM;i£;%v;- 'art‘, ease .. . -_-_ .' vmfnon; A, Nicholson._ l'lN=1ll7§sl 3"°§::'_ W- - 'l`“Yl°f» G'““"'me.‘ Strunk Neill, New tiemlnien; Furry; W Gm; ' New Dominion; A- M“l“"" 8 York. N 3,- J, f‘_. McDonald. » govill/ l"ov/or Halifax; GW- B"°°k' ' ' , ' ,Toronto Montreal. P- l'~ H°”'{ k (my. Wm H M Ame' New orlyialcott TOT: __ _,A _ ;l.::.~.'~».i‘...l:»."".._ -» I? f~Chs¢go.- .in --_Channel St PERSONALS MTB- Henry Easton. North Wiltshire, and Mrs C. D. McLean, Clyde River, are visiting friends and relatives in Vernon River and Lot 49, Miss Winnifred McLean, Clyde River. has returned home after spend- ing a week in Bonshaw, the guest of Mrs. Spurson Hlckox. Mr. lvlilien ivlcnaugnlin, ciyae River, I has returned home after spending the week-end visiting at Mr. Donald Mc- Lean's, Cornwall. Mr. DeWitt C-iiirxiarrives in Char- lottetown to-night from Sydney, and opens an engagement at the' Prince Edward Theatre the first of next week. Mr. J. lioy Hughes, Manager 0( the llank of Nova. Scotia, Glace Bay ' has arrived in the city to Spend 5 two weeks' vacation with -his parents Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hughes, Mrs. W. T. I-lerridge, of Ottawa, is making a short stay in town with her brother and sister-in-law, the Rev. Dr, and Mrs. G. Duncan at St. Andrew's » Church Manse, says a Montreal ex- change. Mr. George Buntain, who has been spending a week’s furlough with his parents Mr. and Mrs. I-I. V. Buntain, has left on return to Sydney Mines; uirhere he is stationed with the mili- ta. - - Premier and Mrs. Matllieson re- turned Saturday night from Ottawa, whither the Premier had gone oil busi- ness connected with the shipment of oats for the Army Field Service Fund. The trip was continued to Western Canada, where a few days were spent. Messrs. Dalliel McLeall and Allanl McLeali, of the 4th Regiment, now at Sydney Mines. arrived home oil Sat- urday evening on a week's leave of absence. They are greatly pleased with their canlp and speak highly of the treatment they are receiving at the liallds of botll officers and citi- ZCIIS. Parkmaii, Montague; J. II. (‘.. Cras- wcll, St. Elcailor’s; J. Molylieau, New York tiity; li. liuglies, Scotclifort; B. Aiillrcivs, St. John; Il. S. McQual'rie, ;`.rapaud; Jaliles lVlcGuirc, Sydilcy; W. ,‘. Fliliii, Molitreal; J. Adams, Ottawa; ll. R. Wilson, \Villds_Qij,,Qnt_; J, WM. soil Fyfe, Stanley; J. F. Penducki Ot- tawa; Sam J. Itichcy, St. Jollns; Ed. Maling, Providence, R. I.-; I’. C. Guest, Toronto; F. M. Hawes, Halifax. Cl'lllRLOTTET0l’ili IMBKETS 1-a~_ -'~~'>---~-------------~f- i n- .iw ‘I Oats (white) Oats (black) Straw (per ton) Hay, loose (per ton) Eggs (per doz,) ` Print Butter (por lb) Fowl and Chicken (per lb) Tub Butter (per lb) Potatoes (per bush.) Turnips (per busll.) Hides Calfskins 14e_ Beef (Ib) 16 to 20c. Young pigs (Per pair) $7.00 to $8.00. Sausages (lb.) 15c, Beets (bunch) ‘ se, Onions (bunch) 5c, Carrots and Persnlps tdoz.) 12c. Pork (lin) loc. il lllilli $ll]PS Sl[lMlEH M|Sllil lNil |ll|]|ElSlll|ll “Papehl Dlanepiiln" makes sick, sour, gassy Stomachs feel fins. Do sonle foods you cat hit back - taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape‘s Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sollr and upset you. There ncver was anything so safelv quick, so certainly effective. No differollco how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy rclief in five min- utes, but what pleases you niost is- tliat is strengthens and regulates your stomach so you ~ can eat favorite foods without fear. Most remedies give you relief somo- times-they are slow, but not sure. “l’apc's Diapepsin" is quick, positive and puts your stomach In a healthy condition so the misery won't come back. Yoil feel different as soon as “Pape's Dlapepsin" comes in contact with tho stomach-distress just vanishes - your stomach gots swoet, no gases, no bleaching, no erucatlons of undigest- ed food, your head clears and you _feel fine. . ` ` Go now, make _the best investment you ever made. by getlng a large fifty- cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realise in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia. or any stomach disorder. 45c. 47c. $8.00 $15.00 24c. 25c. 10c.-12c. 23c. 25c.-30c. 15c. 12}c. _Notice To ` Peters’ Harbour NOTICE is hereby given that in con- the point of the Shoal on tho East, overlaps of only tended Westwardly and the line of the Range at low water there il s about four feet in line Vessels and boats hour aint keep as close the ll rboard hand buoys foro West of tholino of Range crossing the Bar to get the Water. - ,Mariners I I sequence of heavy North-East gales* Bond Hill and Breallwotar has ex-‘ lllll Mllllllllll lMlliiG Wlllllilllll One Death Out of 800 Cases in Base Hospital at Oxford. GERM8 WORSE THAN GUNS Sir Wm. Ollsr Wonders Whether More Soldiers Will Die Honorabiy . _ Than Mlosribly From Sanitary Neglect. (William Maxwell, in London Daily Telegraph) In France, Oct. 18.-I am permitted to give some interesting extracts from a story of the war, so far asit has gone, taken from the diary of a Brit- ish infantry ofllcer who received his baptism of fire at Mons.. He wrote: “I lisve often been told that shell fire is not so dangerous as it sounds, but axioms of this kind do not console one under a hall of shrapnel bullets and steel shrads. I had a sickening sensation in the stomach. We hung on until the enemy’s infantry came in sight-gray masses of men, advancing rapidly and firing rifles from their hips, like so many machine guns pumping out lead. “We let them enter one ot' the main avenues alld then opened fire, with what effect we were too busy to no- tice. This was my first time under fire and any one who tells me he has no strange emotions at such a. mom- ent lnust be a liar. My heart beat fast and my sensations were those of intense alarm mingled with intense curiosity, I had to resist a strong Im- pulse to drop my field glass, seize a rifle and kill-kill--kill! “Thrice the German masses flung themselves against us. Thrice we hurled them back with heavy losses. We held on for an hour,, till they got their guns on our flank and we were ordered to retire, bllt they had got such a sllock that they let us get clear." ` Fighting at Maubeugs ' Latcr the officer, writing of opera- peratc efforts to work a ulld drive us into Maubeugc but aficr Nalnllr wc were shy ol' fortified towns and determined that Mall- beuge should not be our Sedan. 'l‘o avoid the turnlilg movement and escape being bottled up within use- les stone walls wc retreated-always on thc right flank. “Between Caudry and Le Cateau wo had it frlglltful time. The enemy swept down on us, like a tenipestuous sea, wave after wave. They were at least ten to one, and tile more we killed the more they seemed to grow. Oh, for the machine guns and ill- treucliing tools abandoned at Mons.! “Our artilltry did splendid work. Ncvcr shall I admire men more than I did those silent gullners wllo kept pounding away under a murderous calm valor was a revelation and an example. “That wllole day was like a long nightmare. The terrible storm broke over us alld the roar of thunder and lighting added to the horrors of a ,retreat along a raod where lead spat- tcrcd the earth like raindrops. Saved By Smltl\-Dorrien artillery. ‘ made. ‘ ' Retreat to Ragtime _ I the ' ‘or unleavened cakes made of Ztiourl and water. _ Here we began to recover' and re- alized that we had done a wonderful thing. We had marched one hundred miles in four days and fought three actions, to say nothing of skirmishes with the enemy at least thrice our number. The ofllclal report told us we were heroes.. but we were not proud. Retreat under the most heroic conditions must be demoralizing. "We-consoled ourselves by pretend- ing to believe the wild rumors when the absence of news breeds like mag- gots in cheese-that the Japanese lfliid' destroyed Kiel harbor, that the Ger- man navy had been sunk, that the Kaiser had been shot and that Aus- tria had declared war oil Germany." Another entry tells of the rigor and e re t - horrors of r t a : “South of Meaux we halted and marched in the night through the Forest of Crecy east of Paris.. We were utterly weary. 'l‘he men slept walking and officers dared not ride because they tumbled off the saddle. die. But we also slept as we walked. and had horrible visions, and woke with a start to apologize for the awful crimes we dreamed we had committed Such are the efforts of complete ex- haustion, fatigue and hunger. ‘Our long ordeal canle to a sudden end for reasons we could not under- stand. The Germans were retreating on our left and forsaklng the tempt- ing bait of Paris. Orders to Advance "Oli September 5 we got the ordcr to advalice, alld instantly, new life flowed in our veins. lt was amazing how speedily we forgot fatigue and the mental and pllyslcal horrors we had gone through. “There can be no doubt whatever about the moral effect of artillery fire. To be shot with a ville seems a mere trifle. You have, at ally rate, a chance of beillg only wounded or of having a. cleall death, but to be smashed into pulp by a shell! The very thought of it is terrible! "The young soldiers came out of it spleiididly and speedily recovered their appetites. They complained oi' gaps tllat had to lic constantly filled with bacon and biscuit, for ollr arms service corps, which had worked mir- acles duriiig the retreat, was now completely rested. tions around Maubcllgc, states: “Tho Germans wcrc making dos- ro and , ill lNlLllil] WlS illllll llill But it Woke Up Country, Minus Army or Organised Navy. MUCH H`AS`HAPPENED SINCE. Little Known Papers of Henry VlIl.'s Time Recall Stirrlng History. Every schoolboy knows"-all about the Spanish Armada, how it came, how it saw. and how it did not conquer. hail of shell and bullets, often with- Th i H 1 I out infantry in front of them. Their pagegeofs Exgliga ilystlggi, l§,sl?i(§: rgolég not occupy equal prominence in the schoolroom, This oversight is per- haps partly dlle to our popular his- torians. -Green’s “Short History of the English People," for example, is not long enough to contain a para- graph about the second ami last ill- vaslon of England. The story is told ill picturesque detail in the many- volulned bilt little-read “Letters and ,, ~ Papers pf the Reign of Henry VIII." up Ii':l[a;H`(ll" g2§f&;?;?P°§§oYver§n‘;“§§2 Mr.' James Williamson, making closc came through it alive is a miracle. and sympathetic Study of this prl°e` ..Genem1Snmh_Don.`en and ms less compilation, skilfully condcnses army corps saved “_ .Throwing the narrative lu thc pages of the new themselves across the path of the number °f "BlackW°0d-" Al 9' lime Germans they pinned them to the when the invasion of England is the ground_ 'We could not see_ but we desire nearest the heart of the moll- coum hem. and feel me moody ba,._ arch who, through a long course of rier they raised between us and Years' was ll`e‘l“9“l_ll' "5 h0ll0l'*T-d- death’ and a ,mm nm through om. trusted guest, the episode is illterest- ragged “nel . ing, and for those on the continent “At last they got to cover and made Wlwm ll may C0009?" lS 110'- €llC0“1" B stand' We caught some of me aging. These "Letters and Papers," enemy coming out of a wood and we Demlefl 370 >'@l1l'S B-E0. ll`ll”0W 11 l'l00d piled up their dead with ellfilading Ol’ Vlvld liglll Oll the klllll Of Dll1'~'€ llllll me and even stopped to take little island is, regarded as a suitable some p,.isD,,em_ landing for the iilvader, and what re- “Theii we moved on again, always Cellllvll he may €fXD€Cl» if he IHIHDOP- te the rear. How illffei-ent were our arily obtains a footius on its shores. feelings a. few days before when we A FOFMUP lrlvaslbn- had marched singing over these roads, In U18 61081118 years Ol Henry Vlll`S welcomed and smiling, hospitable reign lll€l'0 WHS 110 Slalllllllg army ll'l peasants and towniplk, who now England nor anything _nearly un- wntclied ue with blanclied faces and preaching the form of an organized with fear iii their eyes! They be- navy. On land and sea thc defence liavcll like llcrocs, tllese nien, wo- of the coulltry was committed to the illeil and children, who are"`now flee- charge Ol U10 i»‘G0Dl9- Sllcll Filllllli HH ing before thc Germans. - » the King could muster to boat off the ~"Lcavilig their homes with wagons larger, better-organized tloct tlic laden with bedding and. food, they French King had nlitlincd, armed and went stolidly' bn, whitliei 'Sud to victuallcli for thc invasion ol' all ali- what suffering none co ld"foresce. cient enemy, who still dcsccratcd Yet there was_no_wel>.prliig or-wailing, French soil by holding Calais and even among the children. They arc Bolllognc, were nianncli by tllc illi- of the right stuff, those Froncll pea- pressnlent of lilcrcllant scariicii alid sants. , ` ,‘_ _ fishermen, gulltless of naval training. "During the night some ‘ French They were bedded, boarded. ami cavalry lnoved over to our‘left and paid wages at the rate of 6s. Sd. per relieved thc pl'0BB\1l'0 f0l' »€l llille. but month. Wllcrein they were quite a in the morning thc,wholo of oilr line pampered crew compared with thc lot WSIB Ilflaili attacked'wii.h fury and 011|' of the land forces. Thesc not only front was a muse of b\|\'Blll\Z Shells. did not rcccivc any money payment, The onslaught was irresistible. 0\ll' but were required to find thclr own /lines collapsed under the ~ terrlblv weapons and keep themselves in food hall 0! Steel Rnd _Bl\l`HDll@l. 0l0B0 and drink. Ill those good old days the £0 lllli l-OWU 0\\P`_-l'¢l-l'9l\l. W B Slilell- principle of universal inilltary train- dllll! °0V€l'9d by "¢ll~Vlll'y Bhd l\0l'S0 lllg service, llalikered after to-day by certain high authorities, was in vogue “A division of Fl"en¢l'l,°°V“ll'y rode as it originated under the Heptarcliy. forward to t{|he¢>k-!h6`8ll9l11y.:l1d U6- Every man was liable to serve with- hllld 019111 i 6 Kiln! llislilile like out reward in defence of his country. llllllsl Of llle- ll l00l¢9 like ll l0l" Not only was he expected to possess l0l'l\ |1090- The °lll°°" 5ll°;l‘F llallfls suitable weapons but to have learned with each other. Ieolllls the ' WSW how to use them. The peasants and mins 10 certain death. :wt they said eimene who answered the t-all in ei-ine not a word and never faltered a mo- were led “einer me enemy not by 'm.9l\l- l W0\lld hive SWB" W°l`ld! l° professional captains, but by their have been in the 8l0l'l0\l8 °l\\l`89 ¢ll0Y own landlords and neighbors among the territorial peerage. "While the cavalry and guns Kal- porgigying gh, ¢;°“¢,_ loved out 1° me fearful °fld=~ We nngienire plight in 1545 wee peril- continued our retreat to Malincourt. out ir,-,mc|,,_]_ and (fha,-ies v_ having southwest of Le Catesn, shells burst- ,uddemy “shed a Healy. of peacevme ins all the Why. 300 “fd” °“ °“" former was left to concentrate his at- rlsbf and thenw 1° B°°“\‘°"°l\‘- “°"l‘ tendon en the lined English. Ae fei- Of St- .Q\\¢\\llll- as numerical force was concerned, hp . ‘ill 'Ill In "mil m“°h 7°' We held n position of superiority on land -'ISYS f°\'l'llllY °lhl“9¢°‘l- Mm d°'°d and sea. Nor was this all. Scotland. Wllll° l»ll°Y Wllkm md °m°°" “el” not yet conquered, was a menace ln lll l-U9 Biddle- the North, ready to take advantage of any embarrassment that might befall her neighbour south of the Tweed. Then, as now, the first conviction on ‘lil "We left Besurevolr at 4 in the 'thepart of Englishmen was that, at few hours sleep had whatsoever cost of life or liicre, the for. though their integrity of their coast. their personal nd they were still and, national liberty must be maln- snnl rag- lli\led.,,,.lt being evident that the deetl At St. might not be depended upon to bar the Channel against the Invader, steps were taken to look to filo lands de- ' Try The llaberdashcry For ---- -Qomlortabic --Underwear fr lg; .3-,’ r illllrlr l-2 1.l.»lna.fett.l'n's» ~.‘»<;'- ~l ‘iunnsawsan UA -v.-.>,=..'|=< p -_-34,.. 6201-10-26Mtf l 1 ra ,_ ._ I ' / . ,.¢, _,#4 ' crotch start now and Join that YA happy army of well underclothed men who wear STANFlELD’S UNSHRlNKABLE i il. ,¢-___ .. ll* f;-f "-".’1_- _i 2,'-. ' '. »-_ in ,_»‘ _ _ , ,§, A ni in na - 1/ ' 1 (dw every taste. Stlinileld s two piece suits W IF you have never known the pleasure and comfort of STANFIELD’S Combina- tions with perfect closed ‘ UNDERWEAR gsriiiggioglsen olllt Derfictditting sizes. Stanf`1ell1d’s W U Sag. ln or creep up on you w en washed--they’re Unshrmkable. _ We have -_ chosen our stock so_ as to_offer a large Vaflely Of weights and fabrics which will appeal to ° ' - ° ' in Natural Wool, Silk and Wool li¢¢l_aml_ Blue Label. alio Penmans,St. George and Wol- sey in different weights both combination and two piece. W . . -It is time to buy now so as to be ready when the 'thermometer drops. ._ vs. ,L __,_-;_.___ 1._ _ HENDERSON & CUDMORE Sunnyside Gates Old Stand I l the (Sl-iiliolic Powers, sliockcd by King lleliry's dissolution of the inoliitstcr- ies, tllrcaicllcd armed iiltervclltioli, a system ol’ fortification of the South and East coasts was _established Wherever a landillg place seemed in- vltilig, there was built a battery, a castle or a blockllouse. One relic of this historic time exists iii Caiilber Castle, whirli lzuartls the entrance ot' Rye llavcn, all undertaking inllcli more effectually accoliiplislied ulidcr tliedl- rection of friendly Ncptuiie who, withdrawing thc sca, long ago left Rye high alld dry alld safe. military districts. Tile nine liortheri S 5 to keep :ln eye oil Scotland. East i\Iid- lands and East Anglia formed a sec- ond district undcr the command of the Duke of Norfolk, whose counties raised an army exceeding 30,000 men. The Duke of Suffolk, Warden of Kent, Sussex and Hants, inarshalled 32,000. The south-western counties provided a force of 27,476. The armed inali- llood of the country mustered for its defence slightly exceeded 117,000, roll- siderahly loss than that which a fcw weeks ago was secretly, at dcad of night., ferricd across the Clialiliel to Belgian battle fields. Raising War Taxes. Mr. Lloyd George will lcitrli with envy that the estimated expeildiliirc upon a campaign that illlght last li year did, not exceed £184,000. Com- pared with ollr Vote of (‘r<=dit for .£1.000.000, supplemented by a blank cheque placed at the disposal ol' thc Governnlent, this is what Mr. Lowe, if he were still Iivlllg, might call li fleabite. It was, however, too much for” the financial resources of Henry VIII. Ili a straightforward business- like fashion earlier brought to bear upon rich abbeys alid monasteries, llc proceeded to levy what was knowil.as a Bcllcvoleiice. Oli tlio priiiclplc illi- derlying modcrii death illltics, the King arrailgcd that thc burdcli should fall chiefly oil thc slloulders ol' the ex- trclncly rich. it was borne with patriotic acquies- cellcc. Olic exception to liic rlllc rc- vealcll li. grim llulliur in thc llliyal Widower, Allierlilali liicliartl Ilvcll, of the City of I.ondoli, refused to liivcl thc dclnailtl illadc upon him. \'cl'_v well. Majesty was not liouiid to ii particular method. lf' llc could ilot get what lic walltcd in liiclll hc would take it out ill nlall. 'l`llc liliplcss ill- llcrlliall was stl'lligiitwny tlisplitvllcil to tho Scottish Iiordcr with a lctlcr ill the i(ing`s own liailtl. lulrircssccl tu thc Wartlcll. “As for thc tlcl'cii<'c ol' tlicl realm and llinisclf," wrote his Maj-1 caty, "lie would iiit disburse a little of his substance, the King thotlgllt flint lin should do sonic scrvico with his body, aild for that pllrposc semis lilin to your scliool to st-rvc as u sol- dier. both lic mill his men at his own cliargc. . . . . . Use liinl after thc Crippled Wilh llheumatism ANI) SKEPTICAL AFTER TRYING MANY- MEDICINES-I)it. Cl~lASE’l~l KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS CUREI) HIM. When the kidneys fall to purify the blood the poisons left in the system cause pain and suffering, such as back-ache, lumibago and rheumatism. Read how this skeptic was cured hy Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. Mr. F. W. Brown, Kingsbury. Que., writes:-“I have been, completely cured of backnche and lame back ny using Dr. Chase‘a Kidney-Liver Pills I also recommended the pills to a man who was 3 cripple from rheuma- tlsm. I-Ie was skeptical, as he said that he had tried nearly everything on earth. Finally he consented to try them, and to his surprise was great- ly benefited in the first week, and the pains left. his logs until he was so aiippls he could walk without pain or dilliculty. Dr. f`.hasc's Kidney Liver Pills have worked wonders in this place, and we think there is no medicine like them." _ Dr. t‘.hl\se's Kidney-Live-r Pills one pill a dose, 25 cents n box, 5 for (ences $100 all dealers, ni- Etlmnnscn, The country was divided into t`olir i counties were thou lit not too lilall ' ‘sharp ills-ciplliic iiiilitar of the north- , crll wars." |‘ossihl_v knowledge of this useful cl'l`ci-I in hurrying up donations. File l