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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-09-04, Page 3• • Agony' •of Neuritis Prehistoric Man's Origin Declared to Hai A Story of Intense Suffering and Relief- . Beloit, Wis.-The theory that "'some• ' '"Do I recommend Dr,Williams' Pink .where in Africa will, be found• „the Pills? You may baileye ;I' do;" says eeutre of dispersal of the hr}man ) r. John, H. Jamieson, 'of Wallace- species,'•' :is held to. by Prof•s Alaimo burg, Ont. �' • W. Pond, of Logan M.usem, at, Beloit "For ,five years I suffered .flay and' , . night from neuritis. The agony was ter- College here, as the result of evidence rible. I lost control of my a.rm and collected .during the last. fiive veal's ori .and 'westward until he came to passes ••.shoulder and My hand. became shl•dv- a.rchaeologi'cel expeditions sponsored or openi'egs in this"range which led credit Nirahi,trg helped me till I began t° the high plateau of northern.Africa, taking Dr, Williams'd k til Pills. Evan by Dr, Frank C. Logan of Chicago,.which was a land favor: ble to his 'de- vice president o' fthe Chicago Art In- velppment. `� then the impray ement was slow and I tit t "There .are at. pnese•it certain dry river valleys and chains : of oases. which' undoubtedly were very fertile areas thousands of years ago, These - areas were . •followed- ty prehistoric Man in his migration across the Sa- • 1 , White' S Home pr�lce� _.. Been in Africa eadi somew•�r�e re in Afxica' a centre•of dis- ' . - Commercial Trees persal wTII be discove*ed." ' Professor Pond ilas for iulated the Most Important and Most the°ry that prehistoric man crested Widely • Distributed of the Sahara. thousands of years 'ago and on reaching the Sahara Atlas or. Dominion's "�QTl3IZlercic1I northern, houndarye moved eastward Species • s. u e' and founder of Logah Museum: took ten, Voxes before I was on the Professor Pond. recently returned way to. re'covery.',. After that, .though, •from his 1930. expedition, .on Witieh'he ' relief was rapid. My hand gradually was' accompanied by 14 students of titled out; the pain left me and I coyld I Beloit ;College, University •pf Wiscon- •sl'eep in peace. ,,That was two Yearg,•sin, University of Minnestota .and ago and ii have. not had' . t 'n •the' trouble since:' ',a wi ge of Northwestern University, '• Results •hare for it is near these,present oases • were accomplished Which would have and ,river• valleys.' • that'. prehistor#,c Sufferers • from neuritis; neuralgia taken' 10 years by systems formerly stone tools' are collected. It is • not �r ►•heumatisin should' try the common- '•.used,,and at a cost ort but three times' " "'sense Method'etbanishinee these trots- pure hypothesis to of oases.wese Wire 000 000 b' f f bees:.,b . that of, previous expeditions h'e `saic yaii'eys and chains of oases were more 'd5• y enriching: the'•' blood and !"The most convincing proof • that fertile, In prehistoric times:' per cent of the total softwood .strengthening the 'nerves With Dr Africa .may be• known as the birth: stand: ' T'h'e' estimate of uie*bite spruce; Wi'llfams kink Pills. These P111s:.are .place oama ,'" Professor Pond. said,"is The .fourths this year s decMred is a chi d 20;Q.00,r00.0;000• cybic ,et, or. sold, by all niedieine 'dealereeey by: ,the:unlimited quantitie,s •of `i;rehistorfe 6' be explored .four ir'abitatfon sites tjn ave d: ane -third of 'the total- :spruce 'tuber Mail at 5:0 cents a box .from 'The' Dr.' to' be 25,000 years old, sifting an•aver• seel:ding ' M Williams' medicine, f ' en h Dr tools found, on'the con.titnent. Nowhere age. of 2'440' feet or pre'h stoi c ashes Ont. in the world are such tremendousFor its weight, white spruce is One quantities of Per day. Of 360,000 fragments'of dint of the':Strongest of Canadian woods. It =r, prehistoric atone tools found, 36,000 showed they had been is stronger'.than weeds a and. ; Stone tools • characteristic of used by prehistoric man ee pproximately pine, and it posses ;s nearly the same ;ela- as get °.it ily nd es. ss, lit he =h he. on ed r- t - Whit, spruce is the most. important as well as one of the most widely t ibuted• commercial tree species in •Cnraada.`it is found front the Maritime Provinees to. British Col-u•mbia, -acrd--nc- far north. as the, mouth •ofpthe Mack enzie river within twenty .miles,of the Arctic • ocean. It' is • one 'of the roost norther ly growing Of. Canadian ,trees; Tle while spruce is one .of five•native spruces. I,t; is estimated by the Forest Service -of the Department of the In- terior •that, the total spruce stand, all species, :in ; Crnac ds 'abort MOO,- 00Q,0,00' 0,Og0,- cu is eet o. - timb'er, •or about -Extreme Sunburnf° o mp ements of warlike nature sG Should l3 • to were found This would indicate that rive strength, weight for weight, e,Avoided•' make tools, are found i�n South A,frrca these ancient g g , the ;Chellean and',Acheulian cultures "'N i I its own weight, such as the white oldest evidence of.• m'an's ability • inhabitants of the hr'gh, the Douglas fir, One of the' heavi by the` carload. Later 'cultures, are, plateau .01 North' Africa were peace- and strongest of an '• also found in tremendogs quantitiesne. C ads s woods. and in Northes on' snails and such animals as theyas.._a fine even ai Occupied bymen ' snares. • • this All the t mu' w men u- Ehscum •a g ers and the Logan Mu - seam: Washington -+Extreme' sunburn,ein- Yul nomad hunters, ho by ves'tigators Of the Public Service warn, •Africa habitation sit Rr ed largely, h , grain, works gas should be avoided just as much as, under tools; is not .prone to split, a of the old stone age could catch with hasr,. the benefits of exposure to sunlight are counted by hundreds All material code " exceptional nail -holding, qualiti Should be sought. Prolonged ,or .sifd must indicate a tremendous cted is divided In, color the wood is white, odorle. p'rehi equally between the Gpveun t M and com arativel .no - den exposure may be injurious where- ties Population which taken with t Algiers U p y ir'resinous, qua .as a few simple precatltions'mai make, o er evidence is strong proof, that' ties which make it valuabls fort reasonable 'exposure`highly beneficial. manufactur•.e of food containers, su For cases of excessive sunburn they as butter boxes. : " suggest a remedy which can he made White spruce:: probably ,forms t easily at home, greater part of the spruce lumber Take one-half pint of hot """"' ; the market,,,and its use has increas water and :a',�s/fy stir., into a•. levelp :/.,�"f: in recent years with the owin sca tablee oenful 'of .,m g? g, boric acid powder; -then add tR•en't t th s nervous, city of white pine ,If is used in gree Y i_ 1 — s Bab -Teething? ,Teething time. is •a tim ' e of worry to most mothers. The babyi fretful fe:uerish, swollen and sore' diarrhoea,. tion,. colic and. sometimes. convulsions set In -neither baby nor mother can 'Gazetted Corin bander drops of.,carbolic acid and.'shake well' ° Hfs little gums are est quantities bribe manufacturers of 'The solution• Shoul cans i - build ri' materials: d be dabbed • on the t pa �.. gLarge quantities inflamed . skinwith a 'small piece of 'Cotton or sprayed on with an atomizer. It should not, be 'rubbed.into the. skin. It can •be apptred every half hour, if _T_ nerlessaav: I'f rro-me"tTicirie`is avail- able, cold comptresses will give ,reli'e'f to bidlytti•ned areae." 4 s ' For giving811,0 baths to.' •ehildr a'"iro re2•erve evert greater benefits than "'a f alts from sun,i rx } ti the following i s ^* estions are made: l,xpostIre to the stun must he'grad- nal or else 'the child may ,receive sleep. These• troubles can be quickly 'ha'n-- :.ished,ehoweeer; =-throuphetireesuse i3f" B'aby's Owir Tablets, concerning, which Mrs::��tiis Giribb', ,Teeswater; Ont., says : " i, hav a used. the Tat -lets .for all babies fie'ie eth ing, and have found them a rpen rdnedierne." 13aby's -th'u Tablets are solei by all medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box, from The Dr. Williams' . • 5'inhurn. •• Aledici.ne Co., Erockviile, Ont. Confer - 1t first give the baby• direct sun- . light •for about ten-' minutes; Increase • . • VC.; bath from. three to five, minutes T11�• Peat leek slily until 1 , 1 hr. .r . ce v Th e es ell f i�- ec o.:• (. t t h exposure Phar n P e one t< sets ' tic l oaf - 3 C er are used for -siding, flooring, and .r sheathing, as we Iseei for ,,he ma facture of sash,•door, and house tr mings. It is one of ,the leading"Wo -inmil i ort -of --all kird•s: 13•p--t'o--Y `spruce ranked firs,: iri •tile, amount lumberproduced annually; and.it n rarrks.'second 'on'y •to'Douglas fir. in 1904 and save war ser s• value resulting from forest products.. rice on H.M.S. Victorian and oh tor- i .The wP;ite spruce in our forests' o^_- pedo boats and destroyers, being Wren-� curs in pure stand's, but is often mfx^d tionecl in despatches for his iwork on with red and black ..eruce, tamar;ick, birch and poplar. It makes its . best growth on wellsdrained, moist, grave ly soil, but is net exacting, for we. fin it in the fore t, growing oh' rock slopes, and on borders of lakes an. Streams. It reproduces itself wel' Rainbows ought to contain seven 1nder• favorable. oonditions, partfcu- • colors but it is doubtful, ;say weather under. where the :oil conditions are experts' of the.Taylor Instrument etch that the seed can readily come in Company a of Rochester; New York, contact with it, and where the over- whether anyone ever saw allot there, head shading is .rot. too•intense. It is The• division into 'seven colors; ,red, one of our most valuable trees and orange, yellow,.gr��tten, blue, indigo and well worth any efforts e'e�'•make to violet; is that. prt)posed by Sir Issas maintain it in our forests- by protec- Newton many years ago for the divi- tion from •fire, insects, decay, and sign of colors in the.spectrum p;tl. wasteful'.cutting. ducted when a beam' of white light .is _may broken up by a glass prism, The "It's just'the old problem of distil - falling raindrops .responsible. for the bution.. There's' enough. idlenese for rainbow ought, in theory, to break up' everybody, but the'xi•rong people have white sunlight in ,this . same way,l it. .• • ISIo clown SIAM IONtwartitilE By Force' The caddie' approached the golfer he had. been carrying for the previous, day.. • is "I've ' got the 'ball we , lost rester; day," he 'said, "A small kid found The golfer ,inetantly put his- hand. into his pocket. ' • "I'll give you what you gave for it, he ventured.. The caddie took a step backward and an anxious 'look came over' his face. "No, thanks;"'.he replied. "Ia g vet him a'black 'eye!" -Answers. f sociologist says that the girl of to - on 'day has a great future: But most: of ma• them, Irrefe-•"-a little preen't. • iris- ,• ods �f• ow Tn26- he.I average -annual cut., of spruce lumber is, roxr a matel 11 SO 000.000 f PP get B. M.With a Valise of ,33,000,030 • The long, tough; almost 'eolat'less .fibres of white spruce may' be easily separated because of the comparative - 1y nen-resinous nature of • the wood. Far. this reason and •because •of :its Wide distribution., it"has Ueccnie the 0 1_a iri •r C r -id;an a woti d d. Some f' p P e ti,,. .. _ cls,.' with, a value of 513; at a commander with the Caitaclian 245.062 were used inntaraufacture of „Captain, R 'R'. 11clIut•rav; for: the pact five years marine supet•inte.ndent of Of the Canadian Pacific's British C61; amble; • an•couv er, and Prior to ..c„ informed . ,' iri he afternoon. • This wet ee-• that the face powder of the future w•fll ire uclin ori how the skin reacts..to the be made, from "diatomaceour earth,” .evl1n .urea a peaty deposit which, 'as a .basis for r i1'e' sure that the• exptsitre. is 'car' cosnu'tre peeparations., .wilt be "far I ,ori in some spot sheltered froin superior to trice and starch.", . _ , the rind. . ' --•- " , ere -7.•... •••..e.,...., r Sun •-baths may be' given ori •in- elinda, my 1ear,your eomplexion ~ el„ -ed porches: or in the house, 'pro- Has not been correctly bestowed-- • viai^d the sue .can• shine onthe` child. ,h,canno•t escape"th•e reflection . unobstructed by' glass.. • .e. That somehow, you're not a la mode. ' certain special kinds of, glees have .You'may think my query ungracious, been . devised which. permit the pas- , But really you need some advice- saces,of the majority of the beneficial'. . rays of the sun. Such glass may be .used if.desired' . Adults it was suggested, might pro- 1i•ab!y observe• similar `precautions. , Quality of Apples Essential to Trade. "If you advertise and get people to - - ask for Canadian apples, and then l 0 look upon peat as your passion, Apply it for all you are worth! For cheeks that are truly in fashion - Rely upon kind Mother Earthy Coast Steams.hfp• service', 'sta- tioned • at 4' o • t 34 1 t li 3 » car Pa fi t llantic .fleet has hPen paper' pulp in l d the Royale 'caval Reserve 1s midshipman ci•c. rans e t - Cereedit n mill's in 1925: gazetted in• the Lendon Times of'Jiily. 'Spruce • comprises from 65 to e per 14 as a captain •in the Royal Naval cent, of the totai•pulp'vood cut in Cn- Reser•ve, having been promoted from ,radii The total value . of ''he 'cut of tate rank • of • commander 'R,N.R. His..speuee lumber' and pulpwood in 19.28 new rank is' equivalent to 'that off (latest figures available) , • .was. $71, - brigadier -general ,iri 'the army. He; 290.384, This amount$ to approxi -oine Naval s a mately 85 per cent. of the estimated My dear; are .you'iliatomacepus, j the latter: Or merely well 'powdered with rice? ' • I beg you, in point of aesthetics, • - To keep yourrself bang. up-to-date; •Avied the old-fashioned cosmetics Affected hy females of late. le' the'subsbil is.freckled or sandy You need a top -dressing of peat- () do keep a bucketful handy And dive fait daily, My sweet! • when they ask for them they are shown seruiby, inferior fruit,' -that is absolutely detrimental," Words of wl§dom fell from the lips Starch stifles and rice.'overreaches, of T. _Forsyth Smith, Overseas Fruit Their day is now•over and past: rade Commissioner for the Govern- But • Perkins' 'Pink Peat' for Pale lent of Canada, 'When he was .con• . Peaches- •�• rsnited on 'the future of Canada's . ap: Will purchase perfection at dist! Isle trade. Mr. Smith speaks w•hereoi he knows - ;`f Nvben. he- talks of selling apples, for he has watched overs the interests of -Manchester Guardian; giving the full series of -spectrum! cofore. • In actual fact, .however, the colors often overlap ,in rainbows, so Rainbows Do Not Have Seven Colors ON 7i/4The" n Titellone ll Ca ei• y Y ;You Must Do Your Bit the war against the fly, carrier of germs and breeder of disease. Itis ' proven e that AE ROXON is One of theC mos ' convenient and most 'efficient means of.combaiing. this . , fly'eviL Itis convenient, because 'of the push -pin. It is hygienics. j flies never get away when once "caught• Each spiral "gives. three weeks' perfect service. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS' Sold aLd.ug, grocery' and hardware stores A • ta Ge 'G 0. Genesi, & •Fils, l:imitee ,. 511EREROONE QUE , �• SOLI AUNTS' d -. . • t`anarliau apple shippers in .Grew° Anu•nals Grossly that some of them cancel each other) Britain• and the Continent for ilfteen "British to The Core." "hook For H. It may happen that the centeal part; years._ lr'b 11 • d b o I e e y umans f the .arched rainbow strip is almost colorless 'because of this overlapping 4 r The ,Reil Maple Leaf," and the otherTo attribute to animals art the *prat cancelling of the colors- Two ort •r,i`,li•phrases that advertise Canadian.rytialities of human nature has long, lose rainbows may be formed side ' eephe in Great Britain has 'supple- been one of our lrniiti } •ins by side, may overlap, anal thkis dldserov.j . iii• ,i•P•d the hood work of the l M- -ire• "Cross as a bear"' "dere! fell 1s a, •a ill•,• :.ring Beard in popularizing Can- ease. egeeestr.mea -pig;" "stabbai'n as sit 11 '•.rpples 11r. Smith said. At a mule,•"' have long heen comparisons still 'further the theoretical 'perfection of seven ,colors. . _Another cause of rainbow imp, rfection is 'that colors P: - nt 20,000 of tine mot, Pater• near the blue end of the spectrum' en our. lifts: We. might just as neii pri ing retail shops in Great 'Britain r frequently are faint in the hovcs; so ay that a .aithfui wolf mate was as drat the orrlitiareeeye misses therm al - displayed the crimson • Maple Leaf eanfaith8ul' as a man:" that a generous sign tltat meant Canadian' ni p1es i dog had suddenly become as "greedy were for sale. But mare than ad-, as a miser;" that a t}ocd-natured cat were was needed 'to sell apples, had.actied as "spiteful as a jealous wo- the Fruit Coritmissfoner ~ecalled. ('mane or tfiat`aihorse had hecomeas. 1fr. Smith quotethe words of a 'stubborn ase fanatic; that an and - [Scandinavian apple buyer. "We rat I tipples with otic eyes."There was a mal mother had become as ".ruthless r,as a Wild -cat stock salesman-" great truth rn•i't: he said. a truth that " ..'could not be too much itnpressed on Dean rage says on the subject: Why do we persist in likening evil ,shippers oP ovc § and r er. packers k 8 r. a c - and d r ] n' reanadian apples.' • Color and quality g eea b e pe pie to :animals r Were the essentials of a good selling dpi%!e; color to catch the iruyer's eye, and quality to make 'hint coine batik • of more :