The Exeter Times, 1921-5-19, Page 9You d Be,Ualy p Japan.
has b.aPPened More than once that
'Japanese baby has howled and
earicked in terror itt the eight of a
beautifni, fairamired, blue-eyed Eng-
lish
This may „strike you as comic Or
tragic, but it ia a fact- JD -Panes()
standards of feminine beauty are dif-
ferent from ours. .
A. Japareso beauty must have
straight black hair with, the slightest,
tendency to wave, she will take 'end-
less trouble to straigatea it out—as
much trouble, in fact; as an English
girl would take to produce the, oppo-
eite effect, ' • tt
liertfeceshould be narrow andelang;
het' forehead WO and naivety at the
midale, 'but wider and lower at the
aides, eo that it corresponae as nearly
as possible to the outline of Fuji, thte
mountain beloved by Japanese artists,
Her eyes, of course, must be lotig
end narrow, slanting upwards at the
earners; the eyebrows mere shad-
ows, and high above the eyes; her
complexion ivory white with little or
ao celor,
The Japanese girl carries her head
and slioujclers slightly forward, and in-
clines her body forward fro' -the
waist. She walks with short, quick
steps, her toes turned in and her feet'
hardly lifted from the ground. To
Walk otherwise would lie immodest! '--
•
-1-Hardest Worked Part of
the Body.
The pulse- of the great Napoleon is
said to have made only fifty beats a
minute. Eighty -le not an unusual num-
ber. •
But, supposing the casa-lif a heart
that beats seveuty-tie times' aaninute,
expelling ten cubic inches of blood at.
each "stroke," it is apparent that the
little pump delivers 15,00 cubic inches
In one hour, over 1,000,000 cubic inch-
es in a day, or (as mareasily be reck-
oned) about '7,000 tons of vital fluid in
a twelvemonth.
In figuring this out, the Scientific
American calls attention to theefaet
that a human heart has four compart-
ments—two auricles and two ventric-
les. • The auricles are merely reser-
voirs. The energy developed by the
pnnap Is furnished by the right and
left ventricles—the right one sending
impure blood to the lungs, and the
left one forcing the purified blood into
circulation,
The left ventricle alone uses in a
day enough energy to raise one ton
ninety feet.
All the blood pumped by ohe heart
engine in one year would suffice to fill
a tank sixty-one feet long,' sixty-one
feet wide and sixty-one feet high. Or,
If the tank were cyliudrical and fifty
, feet in diameter, it Would have to be
ala -feet high in order to hoed the
t,00,0e gallons pumped by a single
heart im the course of a twelvemonh.
HUrnan Targts for Shells;
The most dangerous job in the
world, it is claimed, is that. of a group
of United States airmen who go up to
be sniped with shrapnel shells in order
that the guners may have genuine
anti-aircraft practice.
The airman, with nerves not merely
of iron, but as you might say, of chill-
ed steel, goes up till he reviles 10,000'
ft. or 15,000 ft. Then' he eirelesses
to the gunners, giving them his exact
height,
Adjusting .the fuses of their shells
accordingly the gunners blaze away.
They are obliging enough not to aim
exactly at his machine, but In order
that he cam tell them the precise
height at which the shells are burst -
leg, ills necessary for the shells to be
as near the aeroplane as possible, and
—well, shrapnel is net at all pleasant
stuff to have bursting and,flying about
Of course, the miners are reasonably
careful. Besides, putting the matter
M the crudestpossibleway, it Is -not
to their interest to bring the bird
down.
So long as the machine is- intact,
they get their messages saying whethe
er their fusing is accurate.
Are You a Misfit?
You are in the wrong job if your
work is drudgery td you; if you don't
awe it, if your heart is not in it. t
If you hate to think you must go to
work in the morning, and watch the
clock all day and long for the time to
leave off.
1? you don't regard your job as your
at friend, and see the possibilities,
't„for bigger things. '
if you are ashamed of your job, and
don't want- people to know how you
get your living. ,
if you find the best part of your
salary ia your pay envelope, and not
outside of it—in 'your chance to make
good, in your opportunity to learn the
secrets of your employer's success.
If you are always thinking of what
you might havaeaccomplished if you
had tried something else.
If your work dOeS eot call eito play
your highest faculties, yotie -Creative
sleety, your resoureethinesa, your in-
genuity—the bem; that lain you.
-rdrtie
Uncle' Sam's possessions in the tar
'western Pacific are very near, ',gee -
graphically; to British territory,
Thee it comes about, Oddly enough,
that the southernmost of the Philip-
pi/to Islands is the prePerty of Great
Britain, It Is called ileeitle Island, and
Its sole inisabitant is a Chinamen who
makes a bueiness of catching the huge
sea turtlee which frequent that small
Piece of terra firma.
Ueited States proaticeci $667,-
20000 Werth -eaf rubber precincts in
1919,
BABY'S OWN TABLE
Once' a mother has used Baba's Own
Tablets for her little• .eues she is al,
ways pleased to speak highly of them
to other mothers. ' Shp anows-e the,
good they have done her 'children and
realizee that her experience should be
.of benefit to others. Conoerning the
Tablets Mrs. Fred Murphe, Charlotte-
town, P.E.1,, writes': "I have 'used
.13aby's Own Tablets for the past eight
months for my -baby. I cannot speak
'tho highly otahein for they have beepr
of great aseistande to me in 'my nest
expeeienee of "inetheelmed." Baby's
'Own Tablets are a mild but thorough
laxative which are Asolutely harne
less and may be given to even the
fleWborn babe with perfect safety.
They are -sold by medicine dealeror
direct at 25 eta'. a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Oat.,
Automobilists, • attentio,n! Before
you drive on, 'after-- lunching beside
the road, gather up everkescrap of
eubbiali and either -carry it, hotne.to be
burned, or ,find 'a place to deposit it,
where it will surely remain hidden.
•
Minard's .itetrilment for' Dandruff.
The Man Who
dts.
e man who quits lume- a brain and
hand
Ae good as •the neat; but lie laces
sand
That would snake him 6t.10.% with a
courage stout "
To whatever he tackles au -fl fights it
out.. •
ale starts with a ru.sh end. a -solemn
vow
That he'll soon be showing the atitees
how;
'Isben something new strikes his roy-
lag eye,
,And his ta'sk is left for the by and by.
No man is beaten till he gives in;
Herd' luck can't stand 'gainst a Cheer-
ful grin;
The man who falls needs a better ex -
Than the quitter's -whining, "What's
the use?"
For the man wlad quits lets his
chances slip,.
Just because he's toa lazy to keep his
grip.
The man who sticks goes ahead with,a.
. shout,
While the man who quits joins the
"down and out."
Warships to the number of 638 have
been scrapped since the Armistice.
t'(1"2"5"1"8"12012"11eValltiklailla-InIta/SAULTEIVIMS
HEALTH EDUCATION
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
, Provincial Eloard of Health. Ontario
m Or. aliddieton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mato 0
ter, through this column. Jaddress him at the Parliament Blaze. ,0
0 Toronto,
„TA valt '72e Nallt 'MAIL Ifle V& VI& Will& Mk VII II
A fly may not he a very interesting coars will give less 'milk, and the
object, but it has a Tema-Tit:able his- horses will lase some of their vitality,
tory. Its life story makes entertain- having to fight us off all the time.
big reading, and at the same time We. make it a Tot harder for the horses
givesesome idea of what harm it can every summer.
de, and why it stheuld be destroyed. "If you want to get rid of us, the
Here is a story told by the fly itself: only way is to prevent us from hay -
"Once I was only a tiny, white, oval bag any breeding places, by keeping
egg. My mother laid me with a him- all 'stable refuse screened, or treating
tired others in stable dirt. After a it thoroughly every little while with
few days I hatched out, a little white lime to kill our eggs.
worm. I fed for a week or two on the "Some day people will become en -
filth where I was, -then I changed into lightened enough be they -will-clean
a brown puma. Several days later I everything up thoroughly early in the
burst forth a full-grown fly, with two spring, brushing off'everyone of us
gauzy wings. that is clinging to the electric light
"Since then I have travelled about a cord's and scale cords' in the markets
good deal, My feet have a' fine little
fuzz on them; you cannot see it with-
.
out a magnifying glass, but it is just
'splendid for catching germs of all
.„
kinds. They also cling to my wings.
"You wollicl not think so (Ram no'
small), but I really can earry'6,000,000
beeteria on my body at once!
"What kinds of bacteria.? All kinds,
but especially typhoid fever and sum-
mer complaint-, which kill so many
young' children and adults. You do
net hear of summer corn -plaint in
winter; I am not flying around then,
leaving the germs on thebaby's bottle,
or lighting on its lips, or falling into
the milk, or feasting in the sugar
bowl, or crawling,over the dish towels
hie -Deng in the kitchen, or on the food
there and in the pantry. .
"I also carry tuberculosis germs;
in fact, I pick up a good man Y kinds
of germs, for I love to flit about,
lighting on filth, of any kind I can
find. Of course, having hatched out
in it and lived on it the first part of
my life, you could not expect me to
do otherwise. But I also love to f east
on candy, cake, sweets, meat, cheese
and eveny kind of food,
"I am really quite ancient, being
one of the very few flies that lived
over last winter. I hid myself in
somebody's kitchen.
"I cannot tell yeu anything about
my descend -ante; hut a very learned
scientist said I might have 195,312,-
500,006,000,000 in one summer. So
there is no danger of the fly crop
failing, even though only a very few
Of as live through the winter.
"If people cleaned us out of their
houses, stores markets and stables,
while it is eta; cold, -when we are stiff
and inactive, and burned us up and
then kept everything clean, so there
was no filth, stable litter or decaying
garbage for us to ley our eggs in,
we Would he starved out and dis-
appear.
"If stable refuse and street sweep-
ings that we have laid oureggsin is
carted away and piled up to decom-
pose, we will hatch out there, and
torment, the farmer's cattle, so the
and groceries, and from the walls.
They vill 'swat' us without mercy
until we disappear.
"I suppose people would not like to
have us leave flyspecks 011 their candy,
rake and bread, if they Imew the
specks were our,excre.ta, and also that
,they might 'contain disease germs, but
they do not seem to know it. They
shy, 'Oh, it is just a flyepeck!! They
do not seem to care if' their 'bread
and cake is flyspecked. They buy it
ceries and have access to ` many a
highly respectable kitelen.
"I came near losing my life this
morning bathing in somebody's milk
pitcher. I was afraid I was going to
drown, but a kindhearted lady lifted
me out and poured the cream, with all
those 'hundred's of bacteria'I had left
there, on her Tittle girlie, -oatmeal. Isf
she has typhoid fever I suppose her
mother will wonder where she could
have gotten it!
"It was a sad day for us when it
was established that we were carriers
of typhoid. How 'we crawled over
excreta. -hi the open ciloset (privy)
vault, and then started for, the kitchen
table to wipe our "feet laden with filth
and btief5ria on the beefsteak, or to
take a' mending bath in the milk pit-
cher, leaving hundreds of 'bacteria
there in the milk, in Which they grow
and multiply more rapidly than any-
where else.
"We CdnITIOat live in a perfectly clean
locality, where there is no filth or
rubbish of any kind for us to breed
in, iso we ehall disappear from the
scrupulously clean places." .
in the market just the same .when
they see us crawling over it,
"They think wrapped bread looks
a little smeller, but by actual weight
one baker's loaves were just the same;
another's, had ,,about four mouthfuls
less in the wrapped loaf. So people
continue to buy the unwrapped bread.
If they had watched us coining from
human excreta and stable filth per-
haps they would not be so -vvilling to
have us make a door -mat of their food.
But they never notice, so we swarm
over the food in the market and gee -
makes helpfitl., breakcast and a
profitable lum.ch Eb..t the workerwho
must be awake and alert durin the day.
Grape=Nutt3 is the perFected:
. 1),00dness aewheat and malted barley,
and is exceptionalty rich in nourishment..
It: feeds body and brain without
x upon the di estion.
5 a
pip
Why He voted.
"i voted for you," said a working man
tae da st after a iratuicipal election.
"Thank you, any mail!" and the sue-
Qqssfal candidate beamed. `
t"Twas he did it,',said tae man,
Pointing to a goat grazing nearby, ,"I
did not intend to at fire but the ether
afternoon you were 'passing, and you
patted my geaelailly and gave am an
apple, and, says I, -if the gentleman's
So seeialable as all that, ha must have
rriy , vote."' '
The Sperting instinat.
Johnny liked ice-cream, but he drew
the line at Pullingthe freezer. One
clay when his mother returned home
she was -agreeably surprised to find
him working away at the crank as
though his life depended on if. "I
don't see how yeti get him to turn the
freezer," she said to ber husband; "I
Offered him a dime to do it.'
"You didn't go at it in the right way,
my dear,' 'replied' the busbend, "I bet
him a nickel he couldn't turn it for
half an hour."
Locomotive Cookery.
A young weman, says an exchange,
was visiting some, locomotive works
sand was mu.ch interested in what she
saw and apparently, got some extraor-
dinary information'."
"What la that thing over there?"
she asked of the young man from the
office who was showing her about.
"That's a locomotive boiler," he re-
plied. -
"And what do they boll locomotives
•
for?"
"To make the locomotive tender,"
said the young than from the office.
Making Sure ?hat He Still Lived.
A certain professor of rhetoric in a
Western college hest the reputation of
having' a rather sharp tongue. One
of his pupils, a star at football but not
at rhetoric, once spent most of the
hour looking at his, watch, yawning
and sighing noisily.
At the close of the lecture the pro-
fessor spoke. "Mr. Smith, why have
you looked at year, watch every few
minutes during the. last hour?"
Smith managed to steamier out that
he had wanted to make sure that it
wets still running.
suppose,".retorted the professor,
"that you have been sighing every few
minutes to make sere that you are
still breathing."
p.
'FOR WEAK 'PEOPLE
,ef
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Act On
the Blood and Nerves.
Food is as important to the sick per -
sen as medicine, more so in many
cases. A badly chosen diee-may re-
tard recovery. In health the natural
appetite is the beet guide to follow;
in sickness the appetite is often fickle
and depraved.
.Proper food and a good tonic will
keep most people in good health. Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills are a, fine tonic
medicine, harmless and certain in
'their action, which is to build up the
blood and restore vitality to the run-
down system. For growing girls who
are thin and pale, for pale, tired wo-
men, and for ale people who fail in
strength, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are
an ideal tonic. Thousands have testi-
fied to the benefit derived from the
use of- this medicine. Among them is
Mrs. William Gallic, Hantspert,
who says: "Before I began the use
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I was so
weak and run down that I could hardly
do my own work. I often -'euffered
from. headaches. and was very neri-
ous. I then began 'the use of Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills and I can truthfully
say I have found thesn the best medi-
cine I have ever taken. You may de-
pend upon it I will advise other suf-
ferers to take these pills." -
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
through auy dealer in medicine pr by
mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$150 from The Dr, Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Out
Why. Ship is "She."
-Here are seine answers to the ques-
tion: "Why do they call a ship' she?"
If you ever tried to steer One ydu
wouldn't ask.
Because it takes so long, to get them
ready to go anywhere. ,
• They need almost as much dolling
up and painting as any woman you
ever saw.'
•
A ship's got to have its. own way or
It won't go.'
Shape alWays come off' the is' aye
backwards like. the members Or a cer-
tain sex alighting from street cars.
one
It °pets se much to keep in
,
operation.
eminesplaoe Or another. •, ' . ‘
. Why, they are always calling atei
IBecause ehipbUilders can't live with-
out them, . ' '.
Who eifer aeal all argument train
them? ' • .
There's plenty of scandal connactecl
with their at:a-team, '---". '
BeePaaea they We're .hela, kegetlter.
7,:ftra Steel, ,
. BeCtutse they were forever blowing
1 off steam.
Because they frequently tossed their
nosee in the ate.
AUTO REPAIR,. PARTS
for meet inal;es and Modelo or oar*
Your Old, broken or were -out .part
replaced. Write or wire tie deecrib-
inir what TOL,I. want. We carry the
largest and most complete stock in
Canada, of 014,Thtly usecl or new partm!,
arid automobile equipment.' We 'ship
C.O.D. anywhere in Canada, Satis-
factory or rotundinfoil our motto.
54gLW's Auto seicss'v P4rt '84Pl1Yt
,san,931. loutterm Toroato, Ont.
,
f(ING St)11) N S
PAINE IJNCOVEllE1)
DISCLOSING SPLENDORS
OF AN AGE LONG PAST.
British Archaelogists Explor-
ing This Most Interesting of
All Relics of Antiquity.
Explorers backed by British money
are digging up the 'ruins of King Solo -
man's ancient citadel in South Africa,
the centre of the mining district from
which his huge, steres of 'gold were de-
rived.. They are the most mysterious,.
as well as the most lute -resting of all
memorials of antinquity, and are
known to -day, in the native language,
as the Great Zimbabwe --meaning
"Here Is the Great Kraal."
„The Great Zimbabwe "was in Solo-
mon's time a large and populous city,
as may be judged by the fact that its
recognilable ruins cover an area of
more than three square miles. Doubt-
less its extent was -mach greater, inas-
much as outside of this area are scat-
tered remains of ninny iniportant
structures, and mounds hundreds of
yards in circumference which have
been found to contain conical towers,
traces of walls, etc:
The city was formidably fortified,
and must have been garrisoned by re-
giments of troops. In the' middle of
It rose an isolated granite l'Itopje" two
hundred and fifty feet high, which was
crowned by a fortress, The latter was
'proaably, in its day the mightiest
stronghold in the world, an unassail-
able citadel, its south side being de-
fended by ninety feet of sheer preci-
pice, while massive labyrinthine walls
rendered approach to the summit pos-
sible only through narrow passages
easily blocked.
The mines of King Solomon were
worked by a multitude of captive
Negro slaves, and all of the gold out-
put was brought to the Great Zimbab-
we to be aonaerted into' ing-ats for
shipment. It was thence that cara-
vans departed eastward, for the sea-
port _now called, Sofala, a journey of
two hundred miles, carrying, under
armed guard, gold, ivory, ' and other
precious merchandise destined for
Palestine and Arabia.
Jewellery of' Olden Days.
In the Great Zimbabwe are found ex-
tensive workshops. for the handling of
gOld, in which objects of that metal
(as discovered by exedva.tion) were
strewn over the cement floors "as
thiolt as nails in a carpenter's shop."
There were also furnaces for melting
the gold, soapstone molds into which
it was poured to make ingots, burnish-
ing tools, etc. , The manufacture of
gold jewellery seems to have been pur-
sued an a considerable scale, judging
from the number of bangles and other
ornaments' recovered from the ruins.
•
The region here described is now
believed to be the Havilah of Scrip-
ture, which speaks of "the whole land
of I-Iavilah, where there is gold." The
seaport of Sofala (on the East Afri-
can coast, close to the twentieth paral-
lel of -south latitude) is almost Un-
doubte'dly the Tarshish of the -Bible.
When the latter mentions' Solomon's
"ships of Tarshis-h," it refers to his
fleet of sailing vessels which voyaged
southward through the Red Sea and -
down the African shore to Sofala.
Mining engineers, as a result of care-
ful study of the ancient workings,
have estimated that at least $100,000, -
worth of gold must have been taken
out of them before ---rather suddenly,
it would appear— they' were abandon-
ed Solomon's share was doubtless
large, judging from the plentifulness'
of the precious metal in Jerusalem, as
described in the Bible, where, as we
are told, "silver was nothing account-
ed of in the days of Solomon," and
was "made to be as stones." Very
likely he obtained much additional
gold through trade with the Ilimyari-
tes and Sabaens'.
It is thought entirely possible that
some of the workings date back to 'a
period before. the birth of Moses, and
It may be that the Great Zimbabwe it-
self is as much as 1,000 years old.
Trading Forty Centuries Ago.
• One may , easily picture to himself
the sceie when a crowd was assemb-
led on the, hilltop, or on the lower
slopes of the kapje, to watch the de-
parture' of a caravan eastward for the
sea coast -aa long train of Negroes
carrying geld, ivory, and other export
products of the region. The Bible tells
its that Solomon obtained from Tar-
ehish apes, parrots andequantities of
spices'. Thence also Came slaves in
-large numbers. Doubtless ostrich
feathets and the plumes of Other birds
were included in. the conaigninents
boend for Palestine.
The people in the'. ceased Weee, dress-
ed In .short ermiess ,eahles, ana Wore
ola' theirarms', lee -ea -wrists and ankles
massive .,ratel-a" banglee,". eXtmisitely
made- 6na ehana Zimbabwe de-
, ,
signselvith eluting of heavy gola beads
around their' necks. Some of the men
bore M. their heeds. rods of Mime, with
beaten old sua images at the tops,
\Valle others held battle-axes of gild -cd
r 1)c loalPttpeledYrawsand iollQ7,drae7eY en: g oa lel :0141 it tli
story is always of gold, It tae temples
of the Great Zimbabwe have beea
found caneelerable_ctuantlties of gold
dust, just as it came from the mines,
Also crueeales, in which the. precious
stuff was melte!, gold cake arid bar
gold. Among the most curious objects
reeayeeed from the ruins are large
numbers of tiny gold tacks, which
were used for fastening a thin gold
sheathing upon sheets of copper.
The glories Or the Great Zimbabwe
—the wonderfel city of Salotnon and
the Arabian kings—have long massed
away. Its ruins are literally' the haunt
of the snake and the owl. The litioile-
sian ii4iveS Of to -day believe them to
be Infested by geese% But enough of
them reraain to furnish for many years
to come an invitation to further ex-
ploration by archeologists.'- About
them lingers an atmosphererel mys-
tery, and of them it may be seri ,that
pone- other of the important relics of
antiquiy, not even the Great Pyramid,
possesses for us moderns an Interest
so romantic and Pictueesque.
ed Advertfsc
see APP1tiARTN0 no ACT
as our reiMerieni4tlye introducing'
useful line of feet sidling arttolos.
Write, Anderson Manufiictutlotr Qom'
pa,ny, Yiondon, Ontario,
11110T-011 (.11"CE,740.
rSeier-etisoilitNQf tri•3011"aPCYCI.911i-10a:CT;t11:11IDIIVat'NlYarsi.08714-1741"tria;
amount you expect to in -vest and We
will triail list, 11, N. Kipp Co„
447 Yours St., Toronto,
Musicians Live Long.
Usually. the clergy are supposed to
live banger, on an average, than the
members of any other profession.
Certainly doctors do not take a fore-
niQet place. The dangers of their work
loatei their average life. Men in the
higher -reeks of the law, judges par,
ticulariy, are proverbially long-lived*
but many fall by the way in the law-
yer's busy calling, -
A claim is now being made fel' those
who obtain a comfortable position in
the world of music, and instances are
given. Sir Walter Parrett, the organ- '
I ist of at. George's Chapel, Windsor,
has been at Ins work for sixty-nine
years, beginning as a boy of eleven,
and he varies music with the most try-
ing of all games, chess,
Sir ,George Elves', the organist at
Windsor before Sir Walter, held the
post for forty-seven years. Sir Freder-
ick Bridge', late organist at .Westmin-
ster Abbey, retired when he had held
his pest forty-four'- years, and he fol-
lowed an organist, James Mile, who
had served the AbbeY fifty-six years.
-Weight of a Crowd.
Interesting eaperiments were made
some time ago at Harvard University
'which seem to demonstrate that ens
gincter-s usually undeeestimate the
maximum loading caused by dense
crowds 'on bridges, floors and plat.-
forms. Forty men averaging 188
Pounds in weight placed in a box SU
feet square caused an aeerage pres-
sure of 181 pounds to the square foot
on the floor:
An engineer has estimated the
weight per spuare foot of the densest
crowds on the New York elevated
railways .at only 45 pounds, but since
the I-Iarvard experiment's the opinion
has been expressed that the maximum
loading on the elevated cars had plat-
forms may be nearer 181 than 45
pounds. This applies to other close
packed crowds.
Boy Scout Notes.
It has just been announced frem Pro-
vincial Boy Scout headquarters in
Toronto that September Srd, will be
the date of this year's big Ontario Boy
Scout Rally. It will be held in con-
nection with the Canadian National
Exhibition in Toronto and it is expect-
ed thartifousands Of Scouts from all
parts of the province will attend. A
special feature of this year's rally will
be a "Boy Scout Achievement Exhibi-
tion" devoted to a display of the many.
things made and collected by Boy
Scouts in connection with their pro-
ficiency badge work. These will in -
elude model bridges, bird houses,
Model aeroplanes, collections of
leaves', weeds and other nature speci-1
mans, pathfinder and surveyor maps, '
fireianaking outfits, knot boards, etc.
The Toronto Boy Scouts Association
will conduct a model camp during the -
first ten days of the exhibition and
will also operate a camp for the con-
venience of visiting reroops which de-
sire to remain in Toronto for a longer
period than the Saturaay of the rally.
Aside, from the conveniences pro-
vided, however, visiting scouts will be
entirely at their own expense.
* * a
Three new appointments of provin-
cial interest were sanctioned at the
May meeting of the Provincial execu-
tive committee, They were the ap-
pointment of Mr. John G. Kent, Gen-
eral Manager of Toronto Exhibition
and formerly President of the Toronto
Boy Scouts Asseciation, as Scout Com-
missioner for Torento,, and the ap-
pointment of Mr. Geo. M. Pool of Wel-
land and of Mr. Harold Motton of
Brampton as Honorary Field Secre-
,ta.ries attached to provincial head-
quarters. e -
Foxboro and Canningten Scouts
have planned big field days for the
24th of May. Toronto Scouts are
holding their spring .celebration four
days later on the 28th, with a city-wide;
rally and ''Jamboree."
* *
, At the end of April Boy Scent
Troops were organized in 174 nitres,
tONV/15 and villages in Ontarie.
His Hearing Restored.
The invisible ear drum invented by
A. 0. -Leonard, which is a miniature
mag•aphoneafating inside the ear en-
tirely. out of sight, is restoring the
hearing of hundreds 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-effeaf man. It is effective when
clearness is caueed by catarrh or by
perforated, or wholly deStrayecl natur-
al drums.- A request far information
to A. 0. Leonard, Shite 137, 70 Fifth
Avenue, New York City, will be given
a exempt reply. advt
Sickroom Clock.
A. sickroom clock invented in Swit-
zerland has an electric lamp beside a
translucent dial, so that when an in-
valid in bed presses a button the dial
throws the shadow of the hour and
hands magnified upon. the ceiling.
MONEY ORDERS.
When ordering goods by mail send
a Dominion Express Money Order.
The forests of British Columbia in
1920 yielded products to the value of
$92,628,807, an increase of $22,000,000
over 1919.
littnard's Liniment Relieves Distemper
A howling success—the first baby.
Out of 6,445 schools destroyed in
the devastated area, 5,345 have now
been re-eetablished.
T1i6 marn who exclusively Minds hie
own business le netter in, an over-
crowded prefeesion,
,e.easesedeeee.e.areaseateei%riateee,
FREEZON_
torn§ Lift.Off
With Fingers
"dwo
Drop a male "Preesoue" on an ach.
ng -corn, instantly that core stops'
hurting, thee shortly You lift it right
off with lingers. It doesn't hurt a lilt
Your druggist eons a tiny battle of
"Frcezone" for e few cents, eneleient
to reteove every bard core, soft core,
or tortS. "between the toes, and the cal.
lases, Without a peetiole of pain.
KEEP YOUR HEALTH
USE
THE OLD RELIABLE. TRY
Minard's Liniment. elo., Ltd
Yarmouth, N.S.
T
Pioneer Do' Remedies
Cook on
Dee DISEASES
and How to Peed
Mailed Free, to any A --
'dress by the Author.
21. Clay .1,over Co., la%
312 West Slit Street
New York. U.S.A.
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 -directions
for Colds-, Headache, Neuralgia,
matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago
and for' Pain. . Handy tin boxes of -
twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug-
gists also dell,larger packages. Made
in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark
(registered in Canada), of Bayer
Manufacture of Mormaceticacidester .
of Salicylicacid,
Beauty of Skin
Enhancedby Ciaticura
When ueed for every -day toilet pur-
poses Cinticura keeps the complex-
ion fresh and clam', hands eoft and
white and hair live mid glossy, The
Soap to cleanse and terrify, theOint-
Meet to soothe and heal and the
Talcum to powder and periume.
Sesp2flt. Cirganiirik aS See leaseesse Said
tirroukhouttheneitinion, Cnnz,li3nPapciU
Lietayik, eleata I'll Cs, Se --i It,, VI, Setesesl.
WW"Cutlettre Sesta eltese,, tvithekst:e•nart,,
h,uSJk see -tetete-