The Exeter Times, 1921-3-10, Page 3aiseate
!mew enotieh about tiatiroania to
NAMING OF SIIIPS
Used Autos avoid beh.i "I""a• My Kingdom.
'NOW A LOST ART,
NAIVIES OF SHIPS OF BY-
GONE DAYS.
-Witt Vessels Have
Dwindledfroin "Wei Spear!!!
to "War Fig."
seems neivas
'41aya ten be something of cc' los
•arlSolig,Us+,, writes C. Fox Smith in the
London Daily Chronicle. Take, for in-.
etance, those masterpieces of Inept ne-
menolature, the "war" ships, which. be -
'gal quite: rearienahly esith, the, War
Spear, War Sworde and the like,' then
'degenerated 'into meaninglese cora-
binationa.such es Inter Beryl and.War
Peridot, and have now -reached the
anadir ctf futility in the War Fl.
Wee Fig! Could anything be c,011"
calved more inane, mare meaninelees,
or more 'inappropriate? It suggeets a
dozen questierne—as, why flg at all?
' What -connection is there between
ships and figs, and if Jig be conceded,
then why an earth war fig? What is
'a war fig, and why le a, war fig,differ-
ient from a peace fig, or "for the matter
_
;ofhat a pre-war fig?
.e.Then there are the American etand-
ard ships, which are ia little better
;ease: the Lake Gravity, for example,
and the ,Lake Frugality, which may I
;quite possibly be followed by the Lake '
Prohibition ot the Lake Sobriety! Ande
there is the+ new liner, Panhandle
State, just now in the public eye,
which will no doubt possess' equally
•euphonione sisters. -
And yet .there, can be a very charm.
in incongruity. 'There is a kind of
megielfleent insolence About- a stately
;C)riental or classical polysyllable
flaunted -over the seven seas from the
counter of an ugly, m,attec of fact;
grimy cargo carrier. '
True, our big liners are well enough
named—our Olympics .and Battles (by
the way, why has the Waite Star Line
never used the obvions Gaelic?)—our
• equitanicte and Empresees, and the
rest; to"-sa,y nothiner of the Blue 'Fun- ,
nel Line's 1-lomerie titles. But there +
Is, after all, an air of standardizing in
all these names. They lack the human
touch which was present in the oldl
ihip names. -
How "they sing themselves tn. the
memory, these bid names of ships, be-
ginning with the GoldernHind, .Teaus of
Lubeck, and Mayflower. Names of
China clippers, beautiful and brave to
bear as the nemea of beautiful aad gal-
lant things should 'be: Th6i-inapylae,
Lothair, Sir Lancelot; intiela.of
the big slashing Colonial clippers:
Star of Peace, Jerusalem, Thyatira,
with others called after Wellington's
Peninsula victories: Albuera, Vinieira,
aud so on. By the way, there is a-Viire
• eira afloat new, but she is probably,a
later bearer of the same name. The
American clippers were no •less high
• sounding: Champiorf.of the Seas, Ro-
mance of the Seas, Tieing Cloud, Sea
Serpent and Waterwitch.
Fine Modern Names.
The more modern sailing vessels,
too, have some fine names, .though a
shade less ornate. There are the Scot-
tish "Shires," for example, Kinross;
sthire, Elginshire, Clackmannanshire;,
and the "Hills:" Marlborough Hill
(now in Russiau hands), and her tan
sisters.; and a group of good English'
names; Rowena, Harold, Ivanhoe. Bat
perhaps the'best choice of all was that
of the "Sierras": Seirra Nevada, -Seir-
ra Morena, and the rest; and those
tames, of mountains which were borne
with such artistic appropriateness by
some fine Liverpool ships, now no
more—the Matterhorn and Lyderhorn
+The Incenses& of one ,of these till
towers of sail to a :far.' seen peak of
snow makes the idea both an obvious
and a particular happy one.
The name and the figurehead, of
course, generally went together; and
where this was impossible—as In the
case of a purely geographical Mme—
s.
the figurehead was •usually a graoeful
female figure without any special syma
holism. The figureliea.d of the "cele-
- brated Thermopylae was Leonidas the
Spartan; that of the equally famous
Ctity Sark represented Burns's prette-
-witch from "Tam o' Shaerter," while
Sir Lancelot bare the figure of the
Knight of the ',eke in full panoply of
glittering armor.
Needless to say, the betuttifnl names
Of the shipssometimes got rather un-
oe.remontous treatnaent frem their un-
lettered crews. A case in point is that
of ,the old ship Antiope,,which on her
maiden voyage was phophesieda vio-
lent and air early end by more' than
one old salt I-Iow could she be any-
thing but an unlucky ship, was their
• reasoning, with such a eante as "Anti
-
hope?" That was in the sixties, and
• the "Anto-hope" ia, afloat still, and,
• what ie ata're, •still under the British
BREAttere seffees TRANI; USSIS
Caere of all typea; all Ottra sold eels-
ect to delivery up to BOO milee or tree
ofi same eistence.if you wi4h, In to
Ofessl !odor. ,fts nisechtssed. pereliaso
rloe refaneed.
RTNG moo/mate of entre own masers '
JP to leek theta over, or wet es to
Ica any oer to city representatera for
Peeuen- vere- lasg* eteek alaseSs era
,
Eireakers, Ursid Gar liartioat
401 10110 Wrest* e teemession'
flag.
The worId's highest data will be
built across a river gorge in India,
395 feel deep and tnore than 1,000 feet
wide.
Canada has 105,000 Indians found
In every Province. They have nearly
100,000 acreunder cultivation on
their reserves and have a total an
income "of $8,500,000. Twelve
thougiand Indian children and young
people are in 34 Schools. Over 4,000
Indians tent/lied in the war, though
they did not cones within the Con-
scrilit ton
The' C)utdoo' r Life Of
The great increase of the lumber of
SaoutmaStens and other 'Scout °Slicers
during 192Q means a greet etimulus t
the outdoor activities of Canedian.
boys. • It is' probable that throughout'
the past year More boys have spent
days and nights in the open than ever
before in the history of Canada since
pioneer days; and because Boy Scouts
have taken this message .of the out-
doors -Men their homes., have conduct-
ed open -window ,campaigne and fresh -
air cresadea, it is likely' that more
grown-ups have breathed pare air dur-
ing 1920 than hes been the casesince
the' time of our great-grandfathens.
* '
Boys have been taught, to care for
forests and to fight forest fires. They
have gathered information' for numer-
ous departrneets rat forestry; They
have engaged in fights againit insect
pests and have madenotes an differ-
ent varieties of births:
Thousands of Canaellan boys who a
year ago or so Were absolutely help-
less in the open, can /row be depended
upon to find their way about, to cook
their ,own meals, to choose a proper
Camp site and to erect a comfortable
shelter, Thousands of Canadian boys
who formerly knew little or nothing
Of nature can now, recognize different
kinds of trees, and give the name of
dozens of wild flowers; can easily re-
cegnize the more common birds, and
*
As a result of 1.3dy• Scout traMing,
the energy of the Canadian boy has
become a force ef great value to the
.
Domm.
Loa. More and more Etre recog-
nizlne ite value, and are taking ad-
vantage of it to reduce loss by ,fire,
control crowds and to teach the people
the laws of safety and sanitation.
manY liNett are Saved by Seouts Who,
because of their special training be-
cause they carry a firstaid kit Or a
safety -first rope, are prepared to tiet
when no one else is. The goad which is
accomplished by boys Of thisttype, and
the good thine to the boys theraselves
through their activities, ean hardly be
over estiniated. Phe Secretary in
charge of the Ontario office of the Boy
Soren ASSOCtatign at the corner of
Bloor and Sherbourne Streets, Toron-
to, ia alwaysglad to provide full infor-
mation 'about Scouting; and to help
fprmtonsoantsioaftelroescatlTw
edianpseeeurtng the
'WINTER ON,ItALIY
The -winter season is a hard one on
the baby. He is more or less confined
to stuffy, badly ventilated rooms. It
Is often do stormy that the mother
does not get him out in the freeh air
as often as she should. He catches
colds'which rack his tittle stratem; his
stomacli and bowelget out of order
and he becomes Peevish and cross. To
guard against this the mother should
keep a box af Baby's _Own Tablets in
the house. They regulate the stomach
and bowels and break up colds. They
are sold by medicine .dealers or by
mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Go., Brockville,
Oat.
A pair of healthy rats will have at
the end -of two years something like
90,000 descendants. ,
For ties is my ltingd001,—IllY Peaee
soTzuhqe 01 aolsap aPctel:a:1:1a111,11t)isf:Dar at. I: tivri ea:11:11:
of a '
7,sr t my
GladatjelYily01;111rVri-7-11g and WOrkiiig the
, The birdswhli'en;nd flowers anci the blue
k
The 8gii•::n4bet"tehe illet'ldne;vs and the
Minard's Lint:ma for Dandruff.
a%11=1.1p0WiLVILVALViallitilkIlitNifil
/0
0 HEALTH EDUCATION
• BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
• Provincial Board of Health. Ontario
4
Or. Middleton will be glad to answer questions cm Public Health mat- gi
ters through this column. Address him at the Parliament Bldga,
0 Toronto.
MIS 'atom m. yam 1st vsk ma ma nit ma 11
f -:
Overcrowding is the friend of dis copied by twenty-four families and
ten lodgers. From the survey made
by the Health Department during the
past few weeks these conditions have
actually- •been found to be existing,
and it was also determined. to 28 per
cent. of the total inhabitants of New
York City are living in a state of
aver -crowding.
rn spite of -these terrible conditions,
the infant -mortality rate, viz., the
number of deaths of infants under
One year of ' age per" 1,000 births,
no government is safe while large during the past year was only 85, the
numbers , of the people • are living lowest on record. This is an extreme -
under conditions that should not be ly creditable state of affairs, vvlien
allowed even for animals. one realizes that there were 133,004
• I have just returned from New babies -born in New York City during
York, where I learned much about the past twelve months.
housing conditions in that city, and Commissioner Copeland, however,
the reports are very disquieting -The dreads to anticipate what the infant
Health Commissioner, De. Copeland, mortality may be in the near future
states- that there are 100,000 moreif the present lamentable conditions
families living in New York City to- of overcrowding -continue.
da k than there are +houses to accent- Do the majority of these 133,000
modate. In some sections there are new arrivals belong to homes on 5th
half a million people to the square Avenue or Riverside Drive? No, in -
mile, and ten thousand people in one deed. Over 100,000 of them are born
city black! That conditions should be in tenements. Moreover; there are
so serious is hardly believable, and 1,000,000 children attending the
yet this State of affairs exists in schools of New York every year, 750,..
New York to -day.
ease. The whole world at the present
time is suffering from this affliction,
the housing problem being one of the
most -serious problems of the day.
Overcrowding is a menace to the
health and morals of the people and
to the stability of government. No
man can be expected to be a good
citizen if he has no roof Over his
head, or cannot get •space to enjoy
what portion of the roof he has. It
is almost as bad as being hungry and.
000 of whom coin@ from tenement
Dr. Copeland is working energetic- homes.
ally to relieve the situation, but is The whole resources of. ane State
handicapped at every turn by the and Nation should be at the back of
necessities of the moment. As a re.: those who are trying to rectify con-
sult of a recent survey, it was found ditionasuch as these, and yet compare
necessary to reopen for hurrian habi- atively little can be done through lack
tation every old slum in the city. of funds fortPublic,Health purposes.
"There is nothing else .to be done," •Dr. Copeland, who returned recent -
said' Dr. Copeland, "except let people ly from the inter -allied conference on
live on the street.
In Brooklyn, four married couples
and a baby were found to be living
-in three rooms, a four -family house
in Breeklyn was actually occupied by
fourteen - f an-tilies. The Bronx is dit-
tle better, for two houses there that
were built to accommodate six famil-
• ies are housing fifteen families at
the present moment. A larger house,
built to accommodate eight families,
now contains sixteen families and
twenty-four lodgers, while a twelve -
family house ie at presentabeing oc- will communicate with him personally.
housing, held recently in London,
states that the house shortage is a
serious problem all over the World.
There were 29 countries represented
and 600 delegates, all of wham had
the same overcrowding story to tell.
The same conditions prevail in To-
ronto 'and other cities and towns in
this Province. Overcrowding is in-
eleed a World problem.
If "W. D." c/o The EInivale
"Lance," will send me his address I
Its Appeal Grows!
• Many people start to use
INSTANT FOSTM
temporarily in place of,coffee
or tea for health reasons. But
they,soon learn to love its rich
navorr- and its puxe, wholesome
Qualities are w apparent that
they adopt Postum as their
• regular meal -time beverage.
SOLI) BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
A
Th.sunlioiv1:,he evening, a deur heart
to
Arid just enotigh. Pleaeure to balunce
, the pain.
RtD'BLOOD
MEANS HEALTH
Pale Cheeks and Bloodless Lips
Are a Danger Signal.
To be pale is no.longer the fashion;
to be languid is an affliction. To -day
the most winsome.gtrl is the ono with
the pink tinge of health in her cheek%
lips naturalle red, and eyes sparkling
with life. Add to this a quick, active
awthepend
oseveineveryonearefuncoatn thteellputrhee, rick
blood of health: Haw different she ap-
pears -.fromher ening sisters, whose
aching Iimba anciaweak backs make
them pale' and 'dejected. Anaemia is
the cause of sn much suffering among
girls and women that it cannot be too
widely known that Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills have traitaftermed thousands of
delicate, anaemic invalids into happy,
healthy women. These pills 'help to
put rich, red bleed -into. the veins, and
this blood reaches every part of the
bodyegiving strength, rosy cheeks and
brightness in place of weakness, pros-
trating headaches., and a wretched
state of half -health. Miss Edna 131.
Weaver, R.R. No 1, ChIppe.wa, Ont.,
says: "I was very muck run down,
weak, nervous and troubled with pains
In the side. I tried different medicines
but without any benefit until I began
the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
Under the usetof this medicine I gain-
ed strength, had better appetite, slept
better ands the pain in my side disap-
peared. My health has since remain-
ed excellent „and. I advise any one
troubled with anaemia, or weakness,
to give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair
triair.y"
TDr. Williams' Pink Pills for
anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia and
nervousness. Build up your blood and
note .how the purer and richer blood
fights your battles against disease.
Take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a
tonic if you are net in the best physi-
cal condition and cultivate a resist-
ance that with the observance of or-
dinary rules of -health will keep you
well anti strong. Get a box from the
nearest drug •etore and begin the
treatment no,wi,, or send to The' Dr
Williams' Medicine Go., Brockville,
Ont., and the pills Will be sent you
postpaid ,at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2.50.
Wisdoniettes.
A tittle each day is Much in a year,
,If you deske easier travelling, inend
your ways.
For a dead opportunity there is no
resurrection.
Better say nothing than nothing to
the purpose. r.
Te 'knows much who knows how to
hold his tongue.
-Be not the first to 'quarrel, nor the
last to make it up.
Who- would wish to be valued must
make. himself scarce.
It's not so much the early rising, as
the well -spending ot the day.
His Hearing Restored.
The invitilble ear drum invented by
A. 0. Leonard, which' is a miniature
Megaphone, fitting inside the ear en-
tirely out of eight, is restoring the
hearing of huadreds of people in New
York City. Mr. Leonard invented this
drum to relieve himself of deafness
'and head noises, and it does this so
successfully that no one could tell he
is a deaf man. It Is effective when
-deafness is caused by catarrh or by
perforated, or vrholly destroyed natur-
al druma. A request toy information
to A. 0. Leonard, Suite 437, 70 Fifth
Avenue, New Yark City, will be given
a prompt reply. advt.
Works of Art, Stolen by Ger-
man Army, Reappear.
Numerous works- of art, heirlooms
and jewels stelae during the war ler
the Germans Is occupied territory are
gradually coming to light, and in many
cases finding their way back to their
owners, Gaye a London despatch. The
Rumanian papers publieh the story of
a cache of stolen works of art which
the pollee have found in the Transyl-
vania home of the 'father of a one-time
Hungarian officer.
Ninety-two well known paintings,
eight Vailel and two onyx clocks were
found at the home of a mine engineer,
who salt( they had been givenehim by
hie son on his return, from the war.
'The. son wasp en officer in the Hungari-
an artillery, and had fought on the
0Eu/thrill f rout
The objects d'art wet e teuset to have
been taken front the chattiest of the
Priace de Chimayt near Chambnal, and
were returned to their owner. Some
ef he pictures, including Works of
jaseph Berger, Millet and Van der
Helat had bears hacked out of their
fratnes and badly drunaged.
A grain hospital treate sick wheat,
such as rust, mildew, et& Thousands
of bushels are thus' saved
-
AUTO REPAIR PARTS
, .
fer -meet inakes and., models of ears,
Your old, broltea or wQrmout partS
Fel)laced• Write Qr ),Ors us descrike
Mg' what you 'Want.. 'We carry the
,largest and most complete stock In
'Canada of Blightly used or new parts
and antorpohlle equip/Ilea-4, We ship
C.O.D, anywhere in Canada. Satis'
factory or refund in full our motto,
5bsvir's Auto Salvage Part;
020-931 Duiferin St., Toronto, Oat,
England's Midget Express.
Canadian visitors to Britain, on
landing at Liverpool or Southampton,
aro at onoe struck by the small size of
British locomotives as compared with
the mighty machinee in Cenedien rail-
way operation. Their astonishment,
not unmixed with amusement, is, how-
ever, soon supplemeeted by admira-
tion for the excellent running made
an the English main lines, but if one's
itinerary takes him into the laicelands
and highlands of Cumberland he will
there find an independent little line
which is said to be "the smallest pub-
lic railway in the world."
This line is known as the Eskdale
Railway, and is seven and one-eighth
miles in length. The rail gauge is one
of fifteen inches only. It is leased to
a Loudon company—Narrow Gauge
Railways, remitted. The passenger
working is carried ern -by midget ex-
press engines, built to a scale of one-
quarter the size of ordinary British
locomotives, but in other re-
spects exactly the same in coustrue-
tian and appearance.
„ New Moon Notions.
The new nieen has always 'been re-
garded as a bearer of good fortune,
and from the moon itself this belief
gradually spread until it included ar-
ticles which were creseent-s,haped.
Iron, too, has always been surround-
ed with a similar halo of luck—the
ancients evidently believing that it
was so essential to commerce and
manufacture that it possessed a dis-
tinct Influence for good.
These two beliefs date back to the
early history of the Egyptians and
Phoenicians. Gradually they spread
until they reached the British Isles,
where, M those days, the horse was
regarded as a beast of good omen—
probably for the same reason that iron
was favored, because of its serrice to
mankind.
In the horseshoe we find these three
ancient beliefs combined in one ob-
ject—a piece of iron, a crescent, and
sometimes pertaining to ae horse --
which accounts for the esteem M
which the horseshoe is held.
Why we See "Stars."
Each of the five senses 'has its
special set of nerves through which
sensations are recorded in the brain,
With the exceptiou et the nerves of
touch, which extend to all parts of the
body, these petform spacial tunctions
for certain in.clividu.al organs—the
nerves of sight being connected with
the eye, those of smell with the nese;
those of taste with the mouth, and
those of hearing with the ears.
-Whenever the brain receives a sud-
den .shock, such as would follow- a
blow on the head, the vision nerves
are disturbed in such a way as to pro-
duce the effect of seeing flashes of
light, or "stars,"
The sensitive eye -nerves cannot be
jarred without producing this effect
of light, while a severe blow will ottert
react in a similar manlier upon the
nerves of hearing, thee leading the
person who is struck to imagine that
he is,listening to unusual noises.
Rub hot bran into Your furs, and
you will be surprised to see how much
dirt will be removed in the process. -
The population of Landon to -day is
fifty times greater than it was in the
reign of James I.
Check that
Cold with
BAUME
BENGUE
Highly efficient in colds and Catarrhal
affections of the nose and throat .
BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES
si.so a tube.
• THE LiEMING MILES CO., LTD.
• MONTREAL
Agents for Dr. Jules Deugu6
RELIEVES PAIN
MOTHER!
"California Syrup of Figs".
Child's Best Laxative
t
Accept "California" ..g.r1n5 oc
only—look for the name California on
the package, then yeti are .euro your
child Is having the • best 'and inost
harmless physic for the little atomaeh,
liver ahd botvels. Chit on love 'itS
fruity' taste. Fell directforis on. 'eaeln
bottle. You must say "Califotrila,"+
MOM hkE &THERE
ified Advertsepient
FARM WARTED.
;41 AIAT. 1V,AW,P141.,). elaND
TION and price, JoltJ. .,111aolt,
•..11:Lippews„ Fa'Ps, 1VLS,
46.7elsre WetwrzP•
Gletattes trete:Tern itnnee
ieerea is a remedy for the it 01
Cons epee:on. indigeetioo,
Geometrical.
, "You say you don't sea frlucit or
them'? Why, I thought they u,vca itt
the seine eguare as you.
"They do, but the -jt don't marc itt
the same eirele,"
rcheurnattarn, Kiansv Troubles., • lt is
wen-enown, having- beL??.1 eV.9nsiVel.S"
vertlisef`i, atnce it was first manufaeturOd
in 1881, by distribution' of large nuantl'
Usa of.' • A Imanac‘s Cook 13uol,s STealib,
Docks, etc., iv filch are r 1111:311 ed . to
agents free of eir4f.goTire remedies are
sold. a.t it price that eflows agents' to
tiouhle their money. Write .Alonzo 0,
Bliss Idealcs1 C.o., 121' St.. Paul St. East.
Montre,,alItIenticzn thia. paper,
Room For One.
The jocelar old party was about to
board a trarnoar on a pouring wet day,
coeductor," he replied, "is this
Noah's Ark of yours 'full?"
"No, sir' the conductor retorted,
there's room for one mare donkey.
-Jump on."
Not a Judge,
An Irish policeman was giving evi-
dence in a case Where the prisoner
was alleged to have been drunk.
"You say the prisoner had been
drinking,' said his w'orship, "Drink-
ing what?"
'Whisky, 01 think,' 'replled the con-
stable, '
"You think?" stormed the great
man. "Don't you know the smell of
whisky? Aren't you a judge?"
"Na, sorr," retarte.d the officer„."I'm
only a ,policeman,"
Real Fresh.
The other day, rather early in the
forenoon, a woman entered the village
grocer's abet) and inquired: "Any
really fresh eggs to -day?"
"Yes, ma'am," replied the grocer. -
I've got some that wore only laid this
morning."
A day or ttvo later, raemewbat ear-
lier in the forenoon than before, the
woman called again. "Any more of
those really fresh eggs?" she inquired.
Whereupon the grocer said to his
assistant: "Run to the back room,
boy, and see if this morning's eggs
are cool enough to be. said yet.'
MInard's Liniment Relieves Distemper
Vast Plains in South America,
South America has the greatest un-
broken extent of level surface of any
region of the globe. The plains cloee
to the Orinoco are so flat that the mo-
tion of the rivers' can. .scarcely be de-
tected aver an area of two hundred
thousand square miles.
When butter will not spread easily,
turn a heated 'bowl or pan upside
down over the butter dish fer a few
minutes. This will soften the butter
without melting it.
Ontario has one-third of Canada's
railway mileage.
FREEZONE.
Corns Lift Off
with Fingers
Real Courage.
Heroes, on the battlefield,
Minstrel, faraeci in song and ,rhyme
Might before the woodpile yield;
Or run away at mincing time;
Rage are tenteil fields' of strife,
'Seldom poet 'tete a lay,
But the tittle deeds of life
Call for 11nro*e5.2., every day.
stitcliesea,retS''' To -night
For Constioation
just think! A pleasant, harmless
Case,aret works while you sleep and
hag your liver active, head clear, stom-
ach sweet and bowels moving as re -
miler as a clock by morning. No grip-
ing or inconvenience. 10, 25 or 50
cent boxes. Children love this candy
cathartie too+
• Typical cf the Race.
A Jewish bay was sent to school for
the first time. When asked to state
his age he replied, '"Sixteen."
As he was obviously not more than
eight, the teacher sent him home With
it note to his father requesting that
he should be whipped for telling, a
bare -faced lie.
His bewildered father asked him to
explain why he had lied to the teacher,
and the boy replied, "I' thought he
would try to beat inc down."
MONEY ORDERS.
Wb.ee ordering goads by mail semi
a Dominion Express Money Order.
Wet umbrellas should be stood on
their handles to dry. This allows the
water to run out of them instead cif
into the part where the. silk and ribs
meet, thus causing the metal to rust
end the silk to rot.
YARMOUTH, N.S.
The Original and Only Genuine
Beware of Imitations sold on the
, Merits of
MINARD'S
• America's Pioneer Dog Remedies
Eiciok. on
DOG DISEASES
and How to „Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad --
dross by tile Author. •
H. may Glover Co., no.
118 West 31st Street
New York. U.S.A.
Magic! Drop a little "Freezone" on
an aching corn. Instantly that corn
stops hurting, then shortly you lift it
right off with fingers. Doesn't hurt a
bit. .
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
"Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn between the toes, and calluses.
ASPIRIN
"Bayer" is only Genuine
Warning! Unless you see the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin at all.
In every Bayer package are direc-
tions for Cold, Headache, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and for Pain. FIandy tin
boxes of twelve tablets ccst few cents.
Druggists also sell larger •packages.
Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade
mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester
of Salicylicacid.
OLD STANDBY, FOR
ACIIES AND PAINS
Any man or woman who keeps
Sloan's handy will tell you
that same tiling
ESPECIALLY those frequently
attacked by rheumatic twinges.
A counter -irritant, Sioan's Leda
merit scatters the congestion and fien.c4
grates without rubbing to the afflicted
•part, soon relieving the ache and pain;
Kt handy and used everywhere
for reducing and finally elinalnattag the
pains and aches of lumbago, neuraleal
muscle strain, joint stiffness, sprtunsi
bruises, and the results al exposure.
• Yon just brim from it stunulattna
healthy oder that it will do you good R
Sloan s Liniment is sold by all drug..
gist350, 70c, $1.An
Liniment
DAI\IDEliINE
Stops Hair Coming Out;
Thickens, Beautifies.
A few cents buys "Danderine." Af-
ter a few applications you cattuat find
a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides
every hair shows new life,
brightness, more color and abundance.
C1LJTICURA I
PROMOTES THICK HAIR
1 Oakum Soap shampoos otc.naea
by Outhes of Cuticttra OintMent to
spots of dandruff, itching and irri.
tation are inost.suteeWill. 'rheae
fragrant etnollients save the hair,
,:ler.,tr the "akin and Meet every Want
of tho toilet and bath.
— a ,
6sitatti. bielisecd2gestitile, Tidecite254. Sold
throukhoirt theDominion. CaneldianDepot:
leissie, Limited, 34,4,5e' Nal St., W. itilearaid.
LW'Cutleura Soap idiavos without mtg.
'"*"•""""-r""""""'""'"""n""""'"'""'
ISSUE NO.