HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-4-14, Page 3at,
WCiNbEitsrIOF THE-
.DEEPEST SEAS
Coughs ''and colds
sneeies and sniffles
quickly yield to
k short time ago the members of a
deep-sea stoundiag expedition were "aS
tonished to find that 'their trawl was
bringing up fish from some. of the
ocean's greatest depths.
IJatil 'then it had been taken, fat
granted that no 'plant or aniinal life
could exist in those dark abysses owe
ing to the appalling pressure of the
water. '
'Human divers have never been able
,go• farther down than about two
hundred feet, and here the pressure
was sO great that no one could endure
it for more ,than 'a very short time.
What, then, of thos,e parte Of the sea
whose depth is•measured, not in feet,
but in miles? a
We know that pressure increases at,
the rate of rather more than four
pounds to the square inch for every
foot that we destiend, and we know
that the light of day can penetrate
only a few feet deneath the surface.
"Life cannot exist there," said men
of science. "Any living creature
,would be crushed flat long before it
reached these depths."
Yet here was the trawl bringing up
the fish that actually lived in the
applacee where life was thought to be
Smposaible! I-Iow could it be ex-
plained? „
It you Place a tube, open at both
• ends, in a steam boiler, and then "fire
• up" until a high pressure is reached,
nothing will happen to the tube, for
It will have inside it water whose
pressure is the same as that outside
the tube. The two pre,ssures -will bal-
ance one another. But if, before put-
ting it into the boiler, you seal up both
ends of your tube, the pressure will
crush and mangle it, since there is
nothing inside the -tube to balance it.
These deep-sea fish fe,e1 nothing of
the weight of the water, for, as is the
case with the open-ended tube, the
pressure inside them exactly balances
that outside. The greatest misfortune
that can happen to them is to get into
•shallow water, for if they do so they
•burst.
This same balance of pressures
makes it possible for us to exist, on
the earth. We' leave to bear the
rseight of the air, which is actually
about fifteen pounds to every square
Inch.
The top of your hat contains about
thirty square inches, ori every one of
which is a weight of more than a
stone. Fanhy thirty stone pressing on
the top of your hat! It is enough to
drive it down over your ears and force
Your head through the crown. And
this -would happen if it were not for
-tne fact that, if there is a dawnevard
prets-u-res there is also an upward one
of the same amount to balance it.
Deep-sea fish feel the weight of the
water no more than we feel the weight
of the air; they must necessarily, how-
ever, be slow movers, owing to the
great density of the water in which
they swim.
Strange, misshapen creatures they
are, mostly with long, tube-like bodies.
- Some have huge swim -bladders;
others have only the most rudimen-
tary eyes, for eyes are of little use
where absolute darkness reigns.
A few of them have evolved their
own lighting systems, which take the
form of luminous spots on the body, or
long "feelers" at the ends• of which
are little lamps like thoso passessed
by the_ firefly or the glow-worm. .
Such are the fish that live in these
awful depths, feeding, net upon plants
(for there c -an be no plant life with-
out light), but upon the con.tinued rain
of food that descends upon them from
the upper waters. These waters are
filled With tiny creatures, millions of
which die every seeond and drift tp
the bottom to feed the weird groping
inhabitants of,the depths below.
The rebv-fls Pest afatifYing and
'so refreshini.
BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES
,f1„00 a tuba.
TitElEEMING 5111.ES CO., LTD.
monT nEat.
ageute tor Dr. Juleg
•RELIEVES PAIN
• April is a Baby.
April is a baby—
She langlis, and cries and plays,
And has a thousand different =reds
Throughout her thirty daetS,
Goldentufired and blue-eyed,
• What has she to do
Ihri'laugh and cry and bloom and grow
Herlihole life through?
April is a baby,
Growing with '''‘the flowers,
Laughing, crying, laughing,
So she spends the hours!
Brake for Planes.
The newest idea for airplane wheels
is to mount upon the periphery of
each wheel a number of little wheels.
This arrangement, says the Popular
Science Monthly, helps •to retard the
forward motion of the flying machine
on making a landing. The little
wheels, • brought successively into
position by the farce of impact, tend
to ch,eelt the plane and bring it to a
quick and smooth stop.
• An Egyptian Railway.
An American engineer ` tells of a
train that will conveniently stop when-
ever freight or passengers appear by
the side of the railway line. This
railway is to be found in Egypt.
Tbe train at starting, as seeraby the
.American, consisted only of the en-
gine and coach, which might have
been a baggage car withloUr windows
cut in it, and a bench placed alletound,
but before the American had „ gene
very far the train came upon a couple
of trucks filled with cane standing on
the line in the middle of a cane field.
There were attached to the front of
the engine, which moved showly along
till they came to another batch. These
were almost efiffaty; but the cane was
piled on each tide of the line,: and
Arabs rapidly loaded them, while the
employees took advantage of the de-
lay to water the engine.
This task was performed in the.
most primitive .fa,ehion by two water
carriers, who, having placed a notchdd
section of a date tree between the en-
gine and the ground, to seeve as a lad-
der, laboriously filled the goatskins,
which are swung on their backs, at
ditch by the side of the track, climbed
up the tree ladder to •the engine and
emptied' their goatskins into the boil-
er. By the time it was full the trucks
Were loaded and the train Preeeeclecl
.rnehing abelit 4 duce trucks before
'flits operation was performed sever-
al times, until at last there_were at
least thirty loaded trueks ahead of the
engine. As may , be imagined, the
train did not attain a high rate of
spee(1.
Th s enteide layer of our skin con-
noblood-Vese,els, although there
ate fine nerVes Where it is thicker,
Develop 'Unsettled 'P- c
The British Coverumenk has decided
to hold a. eauference, with represeeta-
lives of the l3ritisli del-pin/013 10 Or-
der to formulete a poliomental-
Q
ing, the settlement of British colonist-;
in •new -and undeveloped parts. cf Ibe
British Empire, sk:kys a 'London.. des-
patch,
This splan is intended to serve the
double purposeof distributing, the
pepulation of the Unitethaillgiaolli-so
as to populate the empty spaces of the
Gluon.° and insure that the additional
population of, these undeveloped terri-
tories will be British both in birth and
spirit. By these means it is hoped to
provde for thehlefenceTas well as the
development of the empire and to re -
dude the surplus .of women over men
in the population of the 'United King -
(loan.
BABY'S IIEALTH
• IN THE'SPRING
--The Spring is a, time of anxiety to
mothers who have little ones ,in the
home. Conditione, make it necessary
to Ireepthe baby indoors. He is often
confined to overheated, badly venti-
lated rooms and catches colds -which
rack his whole system. • To guard
against this.a box pt Baby's Own Tab-
lets should be kept in the house and
'an occasional (lase given the baby to
keep his stomach and bowels working
regularly. This will prevent Colds,
constipation or colic and keep baby
well. The Tablets are sold by medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co,, Brockville, Ont.
va, Nam vm
IMIZEINTAXECUIVVISEINSANEVOIMMIATILIKIIII
HEALTH EDUCATION
••••1•1•••
Provincial Bof Health. Ontario
0 Or. Middleton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat-
ters through this column. Address him at the Perlis:merit Bldg, 0
0 -Toronto„:: '
•
VAL ‘121l.„Nr& NE3-‘12. Mek V&A& 'VOL ViL 'Mk MIX VA la, V4k
One of the best ways of maintain -1 and nature of the soil have to be
ply is to be kept pure. It is par-
ticularly necessary to have the side
of the well thoroughly waterstight so
that no leakage oan work its way
from a privy or cess -pool through the
soil into the well. This he a too fre-
quent source a contamination, and
one that is someitianes overlooked.
veyed by water, but the me•sb oommen, The pres'ence of typhoid, cholera or
and the most dangerous are typhoid, dyse-ntery germs is not always looked
dysentery, cholera. and, to a somewhat fer—mor is the finding of them nee -
lesser degree, septic sore throat. Sore essary to know that the water has
throat also restfits sometimes from been contaminated. Bacteriologists
the fumes of sewer gas or defective always look for the .colon laa.cillus
drains, but inve,stigation will soon re-
veal the source of the trouble. The
d,anger in not keeping the water sup-
ply pure is that the presence of hat-
puritie,s—eparticularly of germs caus-
ing the serious diseases already men-
tioned—is often not revealed by the
taste or appearance of the water.
Indeed, a clear, sparkling water may
be seriously contaminated, yet its
good appearance and taste anay put
people off their guard. Here one sees
the absolute 'necessity of frequent
bacteriological,. as well sue chemical
examination- of the, water. Some mun-
icipalities are very careful -about their
water supply, beeause they may have
previously learned a costly lesson by
a serious outbreak of a water -borne
disease—oth,ers are careful because
they have p-rogressive men on the
local Board of Health who re,alize the
impertance of keeping the water pure,
and who do -not. believ,e in ,the old
adage of waitin,g to lock the stable
door after the horse has been stolen.
In addition, there may be particular
eircumistances • calling for a regular
and frequent exarnination of water.
One, is the presence of earrierst—,peo-
• pie who harbor the germs of typhoid,
• dysentery or cholera. in their systems,
and who, though showing no symp-
toms of the diseaselare a source of
danger to the entire •neighborhood,
and may pollute the water supply by
infective discharges from the bowels
firniig ti-ee'ir way through the• ground
Tilos is especially true in country
districts Whore there is no water-
borne sytem of sewa.ge disposal and
where the people have to rely on
privies, cess -pools, etc. The closeness
of the -s to inhabited houses, or
to,.wells, arid the slope of the ground.,
0
0.
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
r TW
71:11.e .Convention.
Crack on 0 One iaApril )y
Tlier'fmest trees ;net .a11, together;
Oak and ash and elni kon,
And ethers I'll ;nor here thane,.
Drank etkoh to 'each ..ef .springtime'
vi 110,
d then in friendly 0010)00they .
Told Pf their plans for futore (,41Y.
ing the public health of a communit-y carefully gone into, if the -water sup -
is in proviclin•g, a pure, whol,esonee
water supply. If this is neglectexl,
there 'is always danger of spe,srnoclic
•attacks of illness breaking out, which
at times may develop into a. serious
epidemic of some form of COMMUTIde-
able disease. Many diseases are con-
First spalte the oak ihdeep rich voice,
Of all lay aims thiS one tay,choice:
Yoader wayside bide,
And throw my shadolvs coca and wide,
AcroSs the road where horses go
With heavy load's that they must Ow;
Perchance some driver, kind, humane,
Will them halt and slark the rein
That they a grateful reet may know
'Ere toiling through miry slough.
The hiclery then took up the cue,
And,told what best she'd like to do;
My nuts encased in firm tough. shell,
The merry sqeirrels Ibee so well,
I hope Lmay in autumn title .
A bounteous feast for them provide.
And now the pineinewhisp'ring tone
n
sort as distant ocea's moan,
Sid, my friends, in shadows deep,
Some weary one sing to sleep;
When in my branches breezes die,
Ie dreams, perchanCe, their tender
sigh
Will seem his mother's lullaby.
The graceful 'elm whose pencius high
Tra,ce arabesques on eurnmei- sky, - '
Declared' the most delightful thing
To furnish bough where blackbirds
And oisdin
olges their 'nests might swing.
And so they told in varied ways
Of cherished plans for coining days;
And sure I art' that you'll take note
Dear lad and lass, that all had tho't
For others in the plans they wro't.
oard
--•es•
•
which is a common habitat of the m-
testine, and if the .colon bacillus is
found to any appreciable extent in
water, it indicates that the well is
probably contaminated by pollution
of animal origin.
This necessitates the immediate
closing of the well as a source of
drinking water,- and if the contamina-
tion cannot be remOved or -the leakage
prevented, the well must be kept clos-
ed permanently.
If there is any suspicion of impur-
ities in. the drinking water it should be
boiled and cooled again rapidly before
using, but this cannot be done except
in small amounts and with some in-
convenience to the householder. A
simple method of water' purification
is as ,
A level teaspoonful of chlorideof
lime should be rubbed into a teacupful
of water. This solution should be
dilurted with three cupfuls of water
and a -teaspoonful of the whole quan-
tity added to each two -gallon pailful
of drinking water. This will give four
or five parts of free chlorine to a mil-
lion parts of water, sufficient to de-
stroy in ten minutes all typhoid, and
colon bacilli or other dysentery pro-
ducing organisms in the wateF. More-
over, all traces of the Chlorine will
rapidly .disappear. .
This method of pupil -cation, haabeen
tested with Toronto Bay water inocu-
lated with millions of bacteria. Every
germ --has been destroyed 'and it has
been unnecessary to boil the water.
This simple plan of water purification
sho-uld be very valuable for miners,
prospectors, ca.ropers, soldiers and
those living in summer rests where
the conditions of thewaterMight not
be above suspicion. ,
T m CE EAL
Is IN FAVOR
with thousands whb can not drink,
tea or coffee.
'They are charnpions of PosTum,
because it helped them out, of trou:
comfort,
isoskrum is a cerea beverage of at-
tractive flavOtfree,from any harm-
ful elemen.bi
conoracal--.-Satisfyin
'There s ita,On"forPoitum
4100f4AVAVAWAVACVAVAMOMWOVAM.W;AVAV/0 AV:4'4
EXTREME MISERY
DAY AND NIGHT
T
MV•riC.rtil..0.23023'
he Toronto Iloapital 'for Inour-'
awes, in affiliakioo with liellevIte 1..nd
.Allied liospitala New Vork
• ers a three yew,T" Course of Tr:if fl
1 to YOung women, InivInK the re -
1)1)1)011 education, and arstrods or be -
„coming imrses, TD
ins ospitai has
adopted the eightehotm ay$iceta.
pupil rectO 1.1311.NrD18 of , the Schoot,
;t monthly aligwon0C and travelling
expeoisea to .1„,1141 froln'Now.Torlc. 1.,"or
InforMation apply to the
kluPerintendent,
Follows a Breakdown of the
Nenfous System.
Misery day and night is the lot of
hosts of men and women who are to-
day the victims of weak nerves. Thin,
pale, draWn _faces and dejected atti-
tude tell- a sad tale, for nervous weak-
ness means being tortured by morbid
thoughts aped unaccountable fits of de-
pression. These sufferers are pain-
fully sensitive antl easily agitated by
some chance remark. Sleeplessuese
robs them of energy and strength;
their eyes are sunken and their limbs
tremble; appetite is poor and memory
often fails. This nervous exhaustion
is one of the most serious evils af-
fecting men and women of to -day.
The only -way ,to;-,briug 'back sound,
vigorous health-,isto feed the starved
nerves, which are clamoring for better
blood. This new blood can be had
through the use of Dr. 'Williams,' Pink
Pills, which have a direct action on
the blood, and through the blood on
the nervous system. That a fair use
of this medicine will bring satisfae-
tory results is shown. by the experi-
ence of Mrs. Marsh, Bass River, N.S.,
who says: "Followin,ga run dawn con-
dition, I became practically a nervaus
wreck. , The doctor who . was called
in said the trouble was, inflammation
of the nerves: It grew so bad that
practically I had no control of my
lower limba, and had to go about with
crutches. Quite aside from my suf-
fering I had a small family and a baby
in arms to care for and L became
anuch discouraged, as I did not appear
to be growing better.' One evening my
husband met an aged doctor on. the
• etreet'and told him of my condition.
He asked my husband who was at-
tending me, and when told said: "I
don't want to interfere, but why not
try Ore. Williams' Pink Pills!. My
husband got me a supply of these pills
and after taking a few boxes _I was
able to go about with the uSe (if one
crutch. Continuing the use of the pills
I was able to discard the ether crutch
as well, and was as active as ever I
had been. There are many in this
neighborhood who know what my con-
dition was when I began. the use of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and Who
know what this medicine did for me,
and, I hope my experience may help
some other sufferer."
Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all dealers in medictne, or may be had
by mail at 50 cents a, box or six boxes
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
What He Forgot.
An absent-minded ma,n, returned
home one evening and sat down in a
chair to think, He had decided to do
something, and could not for the life
of himremember what it was. He sat
an,d sat. Time pa.saed. Still the elu-
sive thing -evaded him, but he deter-'
mined that this time he would not be
beaten, and that he would sit there
till he remembered it. • The clock
struck 11. It struck 12, but evea at
midnight he was as determined as
ever that he Would not give up. One
o'clock chimed. At 2 o'elock he sud-
denly gave an oxclarnmation of
light. "API" he cried. "I remember
at last. ' I had decided to go te bed
early!"
Coins as Large as Dinner
Plates.
While books of reference will say
that the first actual coining of money
was by Pheidon. King of Argos, in
895 13,C., it must not be supposed that
there had not existed a keen apprecia-
tion of the, value' and uses of money
for centuries previous to the iatro-
ductiore of coinage.
The ancient Egyptians had a gait].
and silver standard of currency, and
their money was in the form, of gold
and silver ornaments, rings, and nug-
gets, the value of which depended up-
on weight.
Tirno),Y,
The Fisherman ----"I suppose thiS
rain will do a lot of good, Pat?”
Pat ---"Ye may -well say that, SOrr•
An hour of ut nOW Will du more good
in five minutes than a Month of ut
*mild do in a week at anny ether
time." •
,
Mother Forgot •
Johnny jones came into ,schoel, two
houns late, The first le4on, was over,
and the Second one nearly so., •
Yet he did not seem to hurry, but
,
'walked very slowly from the door to
his seat in the class.
"How is it that you are so late?"
.asked the teacher.
. Johnny looked at him sheepishly.
Classified Advertisements.
OOL SPUN' INTO ),'ARN OR
milts bianlletli. Georgetown 'Woollen
Out
limr.v`wANTrn.
DQ
.4 and light eowing at home; whote or
:-.pare time; 000d pay; work sent leny
distance charges prepaid, Send *stamp
for Partculars. National Manufacter-
ing Co. Montreal.
• The Unlucky Doctor,
The Chinese have a strong sons gt.
Irian or,'
l'his joke, told by a writer in the
Open -Court, will bring a smile to al-
most any face:
There was 0 doctor who understood
so litile of his profession that every
now and then he killed one of his
patients. He had a, son and a daugh-
ter. •One day he had sent the eon of
a family to the other world, and since
the family was much dissatisfied he
gave them his own on in compensa-
tion. Subsequently he had the mis-
fortune to dispatch the daughter of
another couple arid was obliged to give
The Greeks improved upon this by „If you please, sir," he said, with them his own daughter to make good
marking the weight upon the gold and the slightest suspicion of a break hi. the hiss. He was now alone with his
the silver nuggets, so that it would -his voice. "I have got new boots on, wife. They were feeling lonely ansi
not be necessary to Weigh' them at
every` Ifiace. Next came the gOld, 'sil-
ver and copper nuggets of gradeiruni-
form sizes and value. After that there
Was the moulding and stamping of
disks made from the previous metals.
• Some of the first coins were enor-
mous, the idea apparently being to dis-
courage the greedy from attempting
to accumulate and carry around top
many of them. There were copper
coins as large as dinner plates. This
inconvenient style had to give way to
the demand for smaller and more con-
venient forms of currency, and the
giant pennies soon dwindled in size
to meet the popular dernand.
The earliest trace of the use of gold
as money is to be- found in the pic-
tures of the ancient Egyptians weigh-
ing,. in scales heaps of rings of the
precioife metals. But there is no act-
ual record that these rings were
known as coins with a fixed value.
Iron was once extensively employed
as currency. Lead has also servdd'aa
money --in fact, it still does in Burma.
Copper has been more Widely. draploY-
ed as money than either of:the two
last-mentioned metals. The Hebrew
coins were composed chiefly of it,
while down to 269 B.C. the sole Roman
cainage was an alloy af copper.
Tin money was once Used in Eng-
land, probably on account oa the rich
tin mines in Coenwall. Early English
coinages contained much of this _tin
money, principally in the form of
farthings and half -pence.
• Silver formed the.basis for the early
Greek coins, and was used in Rome:
first in 269 B.C. Mediaeval -money
was first, composed of silver. '
The Swiss were the first to date
their coinage.- They introduced the
dated coin four hundred years..., ago,
and the style was,aelopted in all coun-
tries in a very short time.
•‘e -
There aro 235 ;members of the Can-
adian House Of COM-nloals and 96 a
the Senate.
'I'ACniittalla 1708 4,000' elevators, with
aci1y o,
f 225 000, 000 bushels, The
imbiber being built, donot keep pace
With the need as the ),1,nanial props
increase.
and muvver forgot to cut the string!
Identified.
Lucy was gazing through the win-
dow of the local photographer, her eyes
glued on a certain picture, It was the
'annual procession af school children
through the village.
"Mary!" she shrieked excitedly to
her friend. "Come 'ere!"
"What's the niatter, Lucy?" asked
the other.
, "You see the photo of Annie Smith
on the third row there?"
"Yes," replied Mary.
"And you see the pair o' boots be-
hind Annie?"
.. eyes:,
"Well, that's me."
A Temperamental Bird.
The raven is a bird arnbag birds,
self-reliant and formidable. Natural-
ists, says a writer.in the New York
Sun, call him the most wary, the most
amusing, the ele-verest of birds. He
is also described as grave, dignified
and sedate.
The bill of the raven is a formidable
weapon, strong, stout, sharp at the
edges and curved toward the tip. It is
his one weapon of offense, but it ans-
wers the purpose of two or three. Like
the dirk of the old-time plainsman; it
Is available as a dagger or as a carv-
ing knife; and it can also be used as
a pair of pincers. With one blow it
can kill a rat, and the raven can easily
drive it through the spines of a hedge-
hog. If it is true that the raven will
never attack a man, probably it iS not
so much from lack of courage as from
the bird's keen intellectual perception
of what is unwise.
Like most of his tribe the raven is
omnivorous; his dietaryeranges from
"a worm to a whale." When his nest
Is built beneath some overhanging
rock you can often discover ite posi-
tion by the remains of rabbit neatly
laid in the short grass at the top of
the cliff. In districts where fried is
scarce the raven will attack without
scruple a newly born lamb.
The raven has a passion- for soli-
tude. He will tolerate in the neigh,
borhood of his nest not e'Ven his own
offspring. He drives them ruthlessly
away as soon as they are able to shift
for themselves.
April Song.
April! the robe of 'Winter .gone
From off the trees and wistful lawn;
The budding leaves, ana 'waters flow
Speak happiness in whispers low.
April! the scented breath of pine;
And floweateyes, where tranquil
shine
Fair dreams of hope, and inamy ear
Winds breathing joy to find you
near.
Charlie's Present.
Charlie had been to school that
morning for the first time in his life.
Whem he came home for luncla his
mother said to him:
"Well, Charlie, how do you like go-
ing to echool?"
"I like it well enough, ma," replied
Oharlie. "But I haven't got my pre-
sent yet,"
• "What present?" (fuelled mother.
"What do you mean?"
"Why, teacher said, when she saw
me, 'You may Sit here for the present,
little boy.' But I Sat the,re all the
morning, and didn't get it. Perhaps
I'll get it this afternoon."
•
Minarci's tntnicnt fielleves Dittomper
A Fleal Smash!
A Scotsman, anxious, as usual to
"make a bit," hit upon the idea of col -
miserable one evening, when again
some one knocked at the door and
asked for the doctor. He went out
himself and inquired of the man who
it was that needed hini. The man said
that it,was his wife. ,
The poor doctor went, back into his a
room and, shedding tears, said to his
wife, "I see it coming. There must
be somebody who has cast an eye on
you."
•:•
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion. IP,xpress Money
Order. They are 'Payable everywhere.
Raising the Goat.
In some of the towns of Queensland
goats are used for drawing water
carts, in teams of tour or sometimes
eight.
Goats are also bred and trained for
racing in that Australian province,
an.c1 a race meet here speedy billies
lecting old tins and pieces of scram -
iron. and nannies are entered may always
Having accumulated a good collec-
tion, he sent thein to a local marine
store.
Somehow or other, however, they
went astray, and were delivered to the
wrong place.
Imagine his surprise the next morn-
ing when he received the following let-
ter from a garage:
"Dear Sir,—Your motor -car to hand.
We have never seen a aeorse smash,
but we will' do our besOsht put it to-
gether again. Ay.e,send you herewith
an estimate for the coat of repair and
approximate date of d,elivery."
•
, Under the 'last eensus of India, there
was stated to be 100,451 children of
Anglo-Indian marriages in that coun-
try.
, With the going good, an Eskimo
d,cyg will draw an average of 300 lbs.
weight for thirty-five miles inone day.
ASPIRIN
-Bayer" is only Genuine
be counted on to draw a large crowd.
• etinard's Liniment for Dandruff.
Britairis police fore.e is practically
the only, ene in the evorld that is not
armed.
Warning! 'Unless you set the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin at all.,
In every Bayer package are directions'
for Colds,, Headache, Neuralgia, Rhea-
matigna, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago
and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug-
gists also sell larger packagee. Made
in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark
(registered in Canada) of Bayer Manu-
facture of Monoaceticacideeter of Sall-
eylicacid.
BRINGS HAPPY EASE.
Don't Endure Pain. Apply
Diaanoncis,Were first fennel in India.
There are 110000 Freemasons in
Canada in 800 lodges.
casr 5j'5 •
DON'T
DO
THIS!
tete
LEONARD
E R
• REI1EVES DEAFNESS and
STOPS HEAD NOISES. Simply
Rub it Back of the Ears and
Insert in Nostrils. Proof of suc-
cess will be given by the druggist.
MADE IN CANADA
ARTHUR SALES CO., Sales Agents, Taranto
R. D. Leonsid, Inc. Mfra, 70 51h ive, P. Y. r.lty
ltzezi
--'•-•e"-t,eet..•,Stikeese
66
diits
-171 saft
-
VTITEN you want clack com-
forting relief 5roi7i anY
•eicternal" pain, use Slonn's
Liniment. 'It does tla ejob with-
out staining, rubbing, bandag-
Useficenzforrheurnatistn,
neutalgia, aches and pains,
npreiris and strains. backache,
sore muscles.
96
•1
•I•
The Remedy your Grandmother Used to
Get Sure Relief. On Sale Everywhere.
A GOOD THING. RUB IT IN.
Americata Pioneer Dog Remediee
Book on •
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad -
'dress by the Author.
IL Clay Glover Co.; Inc.
118 West Gist Street
New York, U,S.A.
..........,...........,...1
A Kidney 'Remedy I
Kidney troubles are frequently I
caused by badly digerited food
which overtakes these organs to
. eliminate the irritant acids 2
I formed. Help your stomach to i
II properly digest the food by
/taking 15ito 30 drops of Extract
• of Roots, sold as Mother Seigel's
Curative Syrup, and your kidney
disorder will promptly dist.
appear, Get the genuine.
67 gemectfosomourettCt et
3.54
701.
At ii
drsaasts
-
PiMPLES
AND URNED.
FaceVVas Badly Disfigured „
Cutioura Soap and
Ointment gleoled
"email red pimples end hlsc'ir.-
heads began on my face apcl ray
faceveasp 'badly disfigured.'
Some of the pimpleo (Cs.
tcrad wbile others scaled
over area thorewerOpl0000
where the pimples w"erc.,-
in blotches. They treed
to itch and barn terribly.
"I saw an advertise-
tnent for Cut'icura anal tried there.
They stopped the iteleing ancl'barn-
-ing and I need four calreS of-Cc:ay
and three boxes of Ointment which
healed rne." (Sle,ned) Miss v. A.
Rayne, Storrnoet133„ ea,Dtse, 26,118.
Seale 25c, Ointment 25 .a SOg, Sold
throughout theDerninion, Opeedienloceet:
L roans, Limited, St, P0113.
Cutieura Soap shezrom without mug.
,e‘sae
ISSUE No.