HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-2-3, Page 7:HSQUTURN:FARMITS DURING THE WINTER
FIRST PRIZE AT TEXAS Many Troubles May be Avoided
STATE FAIR
if s P
the Blood ' t
-
Pure.
Do not let your bleed get thin title
wing is Successful winter' For Pe°321° who have a ten -
Corn Gro
L,
Feature of Canadian Prairie
Agriculture.
,
Corn grown at Kelwood, Manitoba,
by. John Hamilton, exhibited recently
in open. -competition at the Texas
tate Fair, carried. off the first chain-
Pionship honors,. winning out against
the premier exhibits of one of the ,first
--corn growing sections of the globe.
Texas previously lacked •interest in
Canada, their astonishment has
changed the situation and Tekan farm-
ers have their eyes on the wonderful
things she is capable of hi the agricul-
tural line.
• In addition to running of with the
'first prize for , a product ' which is
generapy believed to belong 'o belts
_much farther south, Canada, produced
o'ffier apparent anomalies hi the way
of prairie -grown crab apples, white
Cherries, and giant strawberries.
Again, there was honey prodnced an
prairie farms which brings back to
memory the fact that in the honey con-
test at the convention of beekeepers
from' all over the world; held in Swit-
zerland in 1913, the first prize^-tvent to
the product -of the Province of Mani-
toba.
Exhibit Arouses Muth Interest.
These Canadian products, including
the corn, which was of similar kind
to that which secured the world chfian-
pionship at the international Soil, Pro-
ducts Exhibition at Kansas City a few
years ago, were part of a Canadian ex-
hibit which also contained grains for
the growing of which the Western
Provinces have achieved world -re-
nown and secured many international
honors. ,
The exhibit aroused considerable in-
terest and caused genuine astonish-
ment at the fine displays of agricul-
tural p,roducts, many of which' the be-
holders had previously associated
solely with climatic conditions to be
experienced much farther south. The
exhibition demonstrated concisely the
extent and diversity of Canadian, na-
tural wealth along agricultural and
mineral lines..
The Corn Belt's Northward Trend.
'Mien Canada successively secured
worldchampionship for wheat
g gin, liniversal interest was re-
vived at the steady northward trend
of the wheat belt. Now it would ap-
pear that the corn belt is undergoing p
the same process if we are to judge, la
by the international successes of the
corn product of Canadian prairie 0
farms, and the general enthusiasm
with which the growing of this grain
is being taken up. In fact, the prairie
refuses to remain in the -position as-
signed to it by tradition and opinion
unsupported by experience, and has
proved its adaptability to many lines '
of agriculture previouely conceived to
be entirely 'outside its scope.
dencY towards anaemia; or bloodless-
ness, winter is a trying season. Leek
of oxercfo, lack of flesh air, tend a
more restricted diet are among the
things that combine to lower the tone
of the body and weaken the blood.
As soon as you netice ,the tired
feeling, lack of appetite and shortness
of breath that are warning symptoms
ot thin blood, take a short course of
reatnient with Dr, Williams Pink
Pills. Do not wait until the color has
entirely left year cheeks, until your
lips are white and your eyes are dall.
It is -se much easier to correctethin-
ning of the blood in the earlier etages
dian later' 'This is well illustrated in
the case of Mr, 13, M Day, Newcastle
Bridge, . who says."From my
own experience with Dr, Williams'
Pink :Pills I can most heartily recom-
mend them. Soine time ago I was
badly rim down,and my blood seemed
thin and watery, accompanied by the
nsuaL symptoms of INS condition, A
frien;c1 recommenedecl Dr. :Williams'
Pink, •Pills, and after taking several
boxes I felt like a new man."
You can procureDr. Williams' Pink
Pills though any dealer in medicine
or they will be sent you by mail at
boxes for
by writing direct to The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Reading Aloud Helpful.
So wholesome is the practice of
reading aloud, that medical authori-
tie's agree in pronouncing it a healthy
and invigorating exerese for the rabid
and body. Persons whose chests are
-weak ,should read aloud at stated in-
tervals, and even recite or sing, using
clue caution as to posture, articulation,
and the avoidance of excess. These
regular exercises of the -voice may be
redered as salutary to the organs of
respiration as they are agreeable in
their influence an the ordinary voice.
` •
Dependable "Sig Bdn."
, "Big Ben," the famoes clock in the
tower of the Houses of , Parliament,
London, automatically sends a signal
each day to Greenwich; it rarely
varies so much as a second.
Pelinard's Liniment for Dandruff.
France May be World's
Radio Centre.
If the French. Government carries
out its present plans to develop the
mastery of the world's wireless „tele-
graph service, as Was indloeted in the
commencement of the sixteen tower
station near' Melen, it may be. in a
potsitiou to take all business from the
cable companies in France, as these
companies are now handling only be-
tween 40,000 and 50„,000 words a day,
and even then with greatest difticulty.
The new wireless station near Intel -
um is to be completed in two years and
wilnbe able to eend 1,000,000 words a
dri.Y. The apparatus designed will be
able to send Seven and receive five
separate despatches simultaneously
ead will have a radius of 10,000 miles
and the power to transmit urgent sig-
nets as far as 15,000 miles.
Thus, with Eiffel Tower reserved
for official and scientific despatches
such as noonday signals; the Nantes
station reserved for maritime pur-
poses, and with both Lyons and Bor-
deaux handling hundreds of despatch..
es daily for the United Stsates and
European countries, France will be in
wireless contact with the uttermost
points of the globe.
Handicapped.
This story is told by a certain phil-
anthropist in the West, who is a man
of 'big business as well and who is
noted for his sympathy for the "down-
. and-outers." If poesibie, ne will give
any daserVing applicant for work ,a
chance to make. good."
Ornorre occasion this'gentlernan was
approached by ari individual that -any
but the philanthropist himself would
have had him ejected from the office,
"Can't you find any work at all?"
asked the good man, when he had
heard the man's recital of hie woes.
"I can end work all right," said the
man, "plenty of it, bat' everybody
wants references from my last em-
ployer."
j "And cannot you get those refer-
ences from him?"
"No, sir. You see, he's been'dead
for tweaty-five years."
If a man pan write a lbetter back,
preach a better sermon, or make a
betterthan neighbor,
though he build his house • in the
woods, the world will make a beaten
path to his door.—Ralph Waldo Ena-
erson.
Osborne House, formerly Queen Vic-
toria's residence in the Isle of,Wlight,
was 'built at a cost of £200,000, from
designs of the Prince,Consort.
aNzava'tavammavavaalsamaTalsavaveammtmalavalal
Do You Know That--
The name of the Empire State was
first given to New York by George
Wiashingen, in his reply to an address
from the New York city Common
Council, in 1784.
South America has the greatest un-
broken extent of level surface Of any
region of the globe. The plains close
tonne Orinoco are, so flat that the mo-
tion of the rivers jean' scarcely be de-
tected ,over an area of 200,000 square
miles
• The famous "Blue Danube" waltz
-came to Johann Straus e one day while
he was strollin.g in the park with hie
wife, and having not a scrap of paper
at hand, he wrote it on the white linen
collar worn. by Frau Strauss, .as his
own linen was limp colored calico.
The favorite sport of the Siamese is
fishfig,hting. The fighing 'fish are de-
scribed as being long and slendor, and.•
ferocious. The moment they are
placed together in a vessel of water
they dart at erre another, and the on-
lookers become so excited over the
contest that they will w,agegeanYthing
they,,,have at hand on the success of
their fayorite fish.
The heavieet timbers are oak, teak,
jarrah (an AUstralian woad), ,and
greenheart; the lightest • are, willow,
• paplhr end spruce. The d.ifferenee is
enormoue. A cubic •foot of teak will
weight over eighty pounds, while a
-cubic foot of WiLlOW does not exceed
thirteen pounds. Besides being one of
the heaviest the African teak oak is
else the strongest of all wooda.
' The Japarteee language is) taught in
Australian high schools,
,
"Baby" incendiary beinbs, which our
aircraft used during the war, were so
small that a Handley -Page aeroplane
could carry 4,000 'of them. In six
weeks 85,000 of these bombs were
dropped on German industrial townta
Of British home troops, numbering
158,0o0,. nearly 50,000 are in Ireland.
The taiall strength of the British
Army all over the world is given at
295,000,
The Canadian Chaplain Service had
an authorized strength, of 290 in the
recent War; 426 served overseen; 1(13
gained awards; 6 died, and 21 were
, Wounded in battles whiledieiitAmtrifl
Outlets,
HEALTH is DUCAT1ON
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board of Health. Ontario
Magnesium .Frorn Sea.
New salt works e3tabl14hed at Ber-
gin, n Norway, will turn out as a by-
produot- .about 1,00 tors Of metallic
magnesium per year Sea water (from
which the salt is to be derived) .con-
taine four -tenths ot 1 per cent. of mag-
nesium chloride.
Increased demand for magnesium. in
airplane construction., with cheap elec.'
trio power, makes extraetion a the
metal a paying proposition.
Sea water contains four cents' worth
Of ;gold to the ton, and, in quantity,
twice • as much silver. • Copper and
other neetaie likewise contribute their
salts to the ocean in appreciable
araotinte—as, indeed, might be ex-
pected, inasmuch as -rivers carry down
to the sen all thematerials of which
•
the racks of ,the laud are composed,
including the, =Stale contained in
thein.n
It is fandliarly knowa that certain
marine plants—the ';kelps and other
seaweeds—take up iodine and potash
front tho sea water, concentrating
those minerals in their own structure.
,
Such plants are itaPortant commercial
sources of potash and iodine.,
In Spain a plant 'which secretes soda
was long cultiVated and harvested for
that chemical, the eeh derived from
the burning of it beinecalled "'barna"
Thusit would seem that the notion of
a mineral farm is net altogether an
aburditY.
IVIINtE11,11.AilD ON BABY
! Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer- questians'an Public Health mat- .0
14111 ters through this column: Address him at the Parliament Bldgs., 0
0 Toronto.
'llEk Ms 1M Mk Min. Me., Mk Itge ma VI
From time immemorial the treat- er generation shall grow up as fit!
merit of 'the sick has relied, not un-.
successfully, on theorganizingpower
of human sympathy. Nothing in our
modern civilization is more imPressive
than the splendid groWth and special-
ization of hospitals, convalescent'
homes, sanatoria, dispensaries, clinics,
and other organizations for the ap-
plication of scientific ideas to the cure I
of disease. The impulses of philan-
thropy are no less numerous and
pewerful-to-day than in any past gen-a
eration, but as civilization' advances,
the intensive study of disease de-
mands more and more organization.J
The multitudes of minor ailments re-
vealed in the inspection of children
tend to outrun all our present re-
sources. The children's hospitals are
as busy as ever, but wherever volun-
t,ary- clinics for children are establish-
ed they„rapiclly become crowded, and
there is urgent need for more and
more clinics all over the Province.
Open-air nurseries and nursery schools
are all urgently needed, for immense i
fields of treatment are still unoccupied.;
The recent report of a Medical Officer
of Health for a large city in Ontario
showing that thirty per ceat. of chil-:
dren arrivin at school age are physi-
cally defective, gives much food for
thought. The medical and nursing
• supervision of the child is imperative,
and the purpose of inspection and
treatment is to seeure that the young-
phySically and mentally as the applied
science of -the day makes possible.
But the healthy growth of a child is
a function of many variations. If we
are to make men out of children we
now know that, in the infinitely com-
plex conditions of modern life, we
cannot do so by letting the children
take care of themselves. ,
The school clinic flh1 an import -ant
place in the healthy upbringing of the
young. Medical treatment and sup -
tervision, it is true, cannot solve all
he problems centred in the school
child; yet this it can secure; that he'
shall come to school clean; that hej
shall have his vision tested and cor-
rected if it is defective;' that he shall
have his ears treated' if he cannot
hearathat he shall have his skin dis-
eases cured or kept harmless; that he
shall have his heart, his lungs, his
bones, his ;joints examined before he
is required to undergo any physical
instruction; that he shall have his
hours of work 'adapted to his indi-
vidual capacity; that he shall have
sufficient healthy play to Preserve his
elasticit3r and to promote his growth;
that, in a word, he shall have, at every
Stage of his growth, his maximum
chance of attaining to.fitness of mind
and body.
This is the purpose aimed at in the
medical inspection of schools, and the
importance of the work cannot be
overestimated. -i
• The winter sliasein is a hard one on
the baby. Ile`is more or less confined
to stuffy, badly ventilated rooms. It
is so often stormy that the mother
does not get him out in the fresh air
as often as she should. He catches
colds which rack his little system;
his stomach anct bowels get out of or-
der and he becomes peevish and crass.
To guard against this the mother
should keep a box of Baby's Own Tab-
lets in the house. They regulate the
stomach and bowels and break up
colds. They are sold by raedicin.e
dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,'"
Brockville, Ont.
^
HE ssruRr)y. o DvALuEs'-
of.wheat aml malted.,baliev
are corabin' ed. in
aSiriflQ other
• prepared cereal kod,
Its rich,nqtAike flavor attracts
an& its nourishing cGalities
•are staunch. Unlike rnost pre.
pared cereals, „Or apeoNut
needs no added. sweetenin
SOLD BY GROCERS WERTWHERE
Whit
e.
Early F'ortuguese explorers found
on the west coast af Africa, a number
of "white Negroes," who, by reason
of the peculiarity, were held In vene-
ration by the blacks. They were, of
course; albinos.
• It. was to describe them that the
word -"albino" was first coined, and
since then! it has been applied to hu-
man beings of allnraces whose lack of
pigment deprivestheir skin, eyes and
hair -of normal Coloration.
Albinitai is "assileedly.one of na-
ture's strangest freaks— In former
days -persons so aglicted were regard-
ed with horror and - systematigaely,
shunned.
Because of their !Shrinking from
bright light the approbrious name of
"cockroaches" was bestowed upon
theme -and it was ignorantly supposed
that they were defective mentally. For
the latter notion, needless to say,
there -was never the slightest—basis of
fact.
Albinos of Caucasian race have pe-
auliarly-fine hair, glossy and silklike,
which rather resemebles corn -tassel
silk.
Million Surplus Women in
• England.
"JackIess Jill" are emigrating in
considerable numbers from England
in the hope of finding suitable "Pilless
Jacks" for husbands in the United
States, according to Norah March,
bachelor of science. • Her comments
en England's "marriageable women
who may never marry" before the Na-
tional Birth Rate Commission have
been widely discussed in the 13ritish
press.
Government figures Show there is a
surplus of a million women in England
whose only hope of marrying depends
on their migrating to some part of the
earth where there is a more even dis-
tribution of the sexes. According to
Miss March, they are -doing it. She
says she is receiving letters from
America that are "significant .of the
lOneliness of some men's lives."
"Women are enterprising to -day,"
she added. "Many are emigrating who
a few years ago would have feared to
take the great adventure."
Judging from an official report pre-
pared by the Census ,Bureau in Wash-
ington indicating there are nearly ten
million bachelors in tho United States
above the age of 20, there is consider-
able consolation la store for the Eng -
nob. "Jills."
Queer Storage Place.
• Andre Lefevre, French ,Intinister of
Offer, aisoa distingtliShed chemist, re-
cently startled the Chamber of Depu-
ties with the peepesel to Store the
French stock of guncotton, and nitro-
cellulose explosiveetin one of the lakes'
Of the Pyrenees. ,
Prance has on hand about 90,000
tolls of higt explosives, ' -enough to last
her 300, battle days, (Wen at the enor-
mous !rate at which powder Was con-
sumed during the war,
Explbeives deteriorate with time.
Chemical decompesition begins' sooner
or laterif the mass of explosive IA not
kept at a' safe and constant tempera-
ture. The' temperature of the water
Of Ine-reneten lakes never varlet naere
than four or five degrees,.
hence M. Lefevee weirld sink
Prance's stock of war exploSiVesmn
waterproof tacks in the lakes and
keep them, thua ferdeeades.
will do the sanie Work
without blistering.
BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES
a tube
THE LEEM/NG Mass CO., LTD
MONTREAL'
Agents,ror Dr. Juleo Dengue
RELIEVES PAIN
Boy Scout Notes.
Patrol Leader Frank B. Johnston, of
the 6411i Toronto Troop, Boy Scouts,
has just been awarded the bronze med-
al of the Carnegie Hero Fund' for
sav-
ing Miss Daisy A. Hooper from drown-
ing in' Lake: Scugog. -Scout Johmston:
wae awarded the, highest award The
Boy Scouts Aesociaticm could give him
--ins Bronze Crass for Gallantry—
some time ago.
Le Comite American pOur lee Re-
giones Devastees de la France, which
conducted a large Boy Scout Training j
Camp at Compiegne, France, last sum-
mer, will next • summer conduct five
similar camps for French boys. Last
year The Bey Scouts Association, the
Boy Scouts of America, the two Bel-
gian Scout organizations and the
several Boy Scout' Associate -reef in
France co-operated in this work and
some 275 olderebeys and young men
from the devastated regions of France
graduated from this "Camp-ecole," as
It was called. Mr. Frank C. Irwin, the
Executive Secretary of the Boy Scouts
Association for Ontario, represented
Canada on the staff of the 1920 camp.
Charters permitting organizations to
form Boy Scout troops are granted by
the Provincial Council for Ontario,
Headquarters, Sherbourn.e and Blase -
Sts., Toronto. The conditions upon
which charters are granted are, first,
that the organization—it may be a
church, a school, a community club,
a parents' association or any other
group of eitizens—will guarantee for
one year adequate leadership and
facilities; second, that it will endeav-
or to provide an opportuniti, for the
members of the troop to spend a week
or more in a summer camp; and third,
that it will conduct the troop, through
a Troop Committee appoirited by it,
in accordance with thy rules and re-
gulations of the Association. There
are now nearly 250 registered Boy
Scout Troops in Ontario.
"Pa.pe's Diapepsin7 Corrects
•
Stomach.
"Pape's Diapepsin" is. the - qulckest,
sweet- rellein-feinl indigestion, Gases,
Flatulence, Heartburn, Sourness, Fer-
mentation or Stomach Distress caused
by acidity. A few tablets give almost
immediate stomach relief and shortly
the stomach is corrected so you can
eat favorite foods without fear. Large
case costs only 60 cents at drug store.
Absolutely harmless and pleasant.
Millions helped annually. Largest sell-
ing stomach correcter in world.—Adv.
Algeria Suffers From Drought
"The Drinkers of Sunshine," as the
Arab shepherds call themselves in
their own language, are on the verge
of starvation throughout Algeria, and
unless wheat is imported from Ameri-
ca may have nothing but sunshine as
a steady diet during the winter, The
threatening famine in Algeria Is the
result of a long drought. No ram has
fallen for a year. -
This has proved a calamity for the
Arab hepherds, nomads living praeti-
catty by their flocks. eventy-five per
cent, of the sheep in Algeria have died
as a result of the drought, and the
Arab "Drinkers of Sunshine," dream-
ers and philosophers, incapable: of any
work but that of guarding the flocks,
are in dire straits.
Governor-General Abel of Algeria
has left for Paris to ask the Govern-
ment to arrange for the importation
of wheat from America or Argentina,
to tide the people over the crisis.
• One of the best known guides in Nova
Scotia, gives this testimonial of MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT— "
Have Used. MINARD'S LINIMENT In
my home, hunting and lumber camps for
years and consider it the best white lini-
ment On the market. I find that it gives
quick relief to minor ailments, snob as
Sprains, Bruises and all kinds of
wounds. Also it is a great remedy for
coughs, colds, etc., which one is liable
to catch when log driving and cruising
during tho winter and spring months. I
would not bo witlibut MINARD'S LINI-
MENT and cannot recommend it too
(Signed) Ellison Gray.
East It-emptville, MS.
The Right Spirit.
The cold snap, hardening the pond
near six-year-old Ilarold'e home, gave
him an opportunity to try his firet pair
of skates. Of course he made it poor
job Of it and wad down every'minute
or two.
Observing the hard time he was hav-
ing, a woman on the bank said kindly,
"Why, little Men, I wouldn't stay on
the ice And keep falling down so; I'd
jaet come off and watch the others."
• The tears from the last hard butes)
were still on the rosy cheeks, but the
little fellow looked front his advisor
to the shining steel on his feet and
Said pluckily, "I didn't get some new
skates to give up with; 1 got 'eft to
learn how with."
MONEYORDERS.
Send. a Dominion Express Money
Order., They aro payable everywhere,
A FlubbeiBaby.
Two American worriers, one at whom
'carried an infant 'at surpassing rigid-
ness, entered a I.,ondon bus. A man
whe sat opposite them seemed fete-
en,ated by the ugliness of the baby,
and could not keep Iris eyes, off it. At
length the mother, annoyed by the
prolonged atare, leaned, forward' and
said "Rubber"
The man, unaware that this is the
"Yankee expression for staring, gave a
sigli of relief and replied: "Thank
Heaven; I thatight it vta.s real!"
-Greatly Benefited. ,
"Yen may have beard' of me—I am
Dr, Blagby," the pornpous gentleman
announced In the eraoking compart-
ment. •,
"Ah, then I have the opportunity to
thank you for what you did for me,"
the quiet young fellove responded. "I
have benefited greatly, by your treat-
"Why—ex---were you a patient of
mine? Though, of course, I couldn't
poseibly remember all--"
"Oh no n:ot I. But my uncle was
and I was- his heir."
A Splendid Bull.
The climate 'of India is vigorously, if
not quite logically, defended in Bulls
and • Blunders by a certain -Irish
colonel.
"Bad climate be haregoclin roared
the irate warrior. "There's no better
climate'in the world; but there are a
lot of young fellows wko come out to
India, and they eat and drink, and they
drink and eat, and they die; and then
th,ey write home and say that the ell-
Matebas killed them. Of course, lots
of people die in India. Tell me where
they' don't, and I'll go and end, ray
days. Caere."
The man who car_ whistle or hum
"The End of a Perfect Day" each
night, and really mean it, is pretty
sure to sleep ,soundly.
MOTHER!
"California Syrup of Figs"
Child's Best Laxative
Accept "California" Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California. on
the package, then you are sure your
child i s having the best and most
harmless physic for the little stomach,
liver and bowels. Children love its
fruity taste. ,Full directions on each
bottle. You must say "California."
Classified Advertisemen
r10.1 TOItONTO FltErrt"'ETOSP/
near Weston, Ontario, in ern, 14,on
wtth Jdellevue and Allied Eloselteemsn,sosr
York, Orform to young women detitRuat
of becoming oualifie,d nurses 11. tltres-
year course of general training: 4ttrag.
tive residence; single rooms. For &RIP,'
and other information apply Lady Sup-
erintendent Toronto Free Hospital '
Weston Ontario.
• Perfume Hunters.
There sf.erns to be no good reason
why in this country the gathering of
sweet-smelling herbs and dowers for '
the perfumery trade might not be
• found profitable. It has recently be-
come a considerable industry in rural
parts of Ungifted, a great many women
and children having taken it up.
In April Inc picking 01 cowslips be-
gins, those flowers being in demand as
a cure for sleeplessness, and also
"potpourti" aren. sachets. Broom and
elder flowers. follow. Mullein and mal-
low, bergamot, peony petals, rose
petals and red peppy petals bring good
prices: likewise raspberry leaves,
Mtge, Mint, beim and thyme,
Minard's ninime_nt Relieves Dbteniper
-The effect of any writing, on Cia
nblic mind is mathematically meee-
urable by, its depth of thought. How
much water does it draw? If it
awaken you to think; if it lift you
from your feet with the great voice
of elequance; then the effort is to be
wide, slow, permanent, Over the minds
of men; if the pages instruct you not,
they will die like flits in the hour—
Emerson.
WET; S
REAKUP-A-COLD
ABLETS TRY THEM
PRICE 25'r
Pioneer Dog Remedies
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed. Free to any Ad-
dress by tho _Luther.
35.- Clay Glover Co., /no.
118 'West Slat Street
New York,
A Quick Rell I
,.e
for headache
A headache is frequently caused
by badly digested food; the gasen
and acid& resulting therefrom are 5
abaorbea by the blood which in
turn irrite.tes the nerves and
comma painful symptoms called
headache, neuralgia) rheuma-
tism etc. 15 to 30drops cf
Mother Selgd's Syrup will correct
faultydigesaortomd-affe
''DANDERINE"
Girls! Save Your Hairf
Make It Abundant!
toP thitpd1nJ
QUICic warn:ling, soothing, comforting
relief follows an application of Sloan's
Liniment. Just slap it on the strained,
overworked muscle. Good for rheumatism, -
too. Pone:mks without rubbing. '
ASPIRIN
Only "Bayer" is Genuine
A
IDAYM5
Warning! Unleat yen see the name
"Bayer" on paoltage Or on teblistsJ you
are net getting genuine Aspirin at all.
In ever:tallayer package aro directions
for Calde, Headache, Neuralgia, Inoue
raatiseci, Earache, Toothache, Lumba,g
Wad for Palh. Handy tin boxes' o
tatenee tablets cost taw certte. Drug --
gists also sell.larger packages,. 'Made
In Canada. Aspirin is the trade Mark
(registered In Canada), Of Bayar
Manufacture Of Merioacettoacidester ef
SalleYlicacid‘
Immediately after a "Danderine"
ruassage,Your hair takes on new life,
lustre and wondrous beauty, appearing
twice as heavy and plentiful, because
each hair seems to tuft and thicken.
Don't let your hair stay lifeless, color-
less, plain or scraggly. You, too, want
lots of long, strong, beautiful hair.
A 35 -cent bottle of delightful "Dam-
clerine" freshens your scalp, checks
dandruff and falling hair. This stimu-
lating "beauty -tonic" gives to thin,
dull, fading hair that youthful 'bright-
• ness and abundant thicknese.--All
druggists!
CU11CURA LED
P PIESON FAC
Also Itchy Scalp, Hair Fell
Out race Disfigured.
"My head began to itch and there
were scales on my scalp. MY hair
came out badly when combed and it
became very dry and thin. I also
bad pimples and blackheads all over
ray face. The pimples were hard,
large, and red, and caused me to
scratch arul,drritate them, and my
face was disfigured.
"This trouble lasted about two
tontlas and I began lasing Criticura
Soap and Ointment. After I had
treed two cakes of Soap and two
baxez of Ointment I was complete...
ly healed." (Signed) Miss 'Zona
eackeon, R. 3, Golftendale, 'Wrenn
%Improve your ekin by daily use
of Cuticura Soap, Ointment end
'relearn. They are idcal.
fic;rp 25r. OIr.arcAzs Ana sot.'Talcum Sold
throughouttheDeminien.Can %Alan Depot;
tynuult, Liztetra, 344 St, Paul Si., W., Montroal,
ibhCutinure SOO 91115TCE1 With:MA mug.
tt.rmaearlemeabeftrimrepoo~memwpwrentertarog3r.
No, t1,—