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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-8-11, Page 3, • - Keeping FR. 'Soceltos or lateen there ,13 'i,raPrqs.W,c1'.' OMAN'S 1 THE :NEW: 'EYES' eon eaelx of uz the need of taking 'care -to keep the 'Linen. nieciline 'in ertm-' ' TO, GOD EALT11 OF MEDICAL SC/ENCrl 'nine. 'oreer. • ' 1 Childhood• giees little heed to the , Most Trou'oles Afflicting Vioni n Are Due to Poor Iflobt.i. 'matter. One of "the bleet immuniti of youth is freedbm from oere -te-rnoimow, the 'absence of anielety lo -day. A 'child is hurts, and Dal Nature has indulgently repaired t es ut Or UO:le every woman belonge theright • damage ahnoet as seen as the tears •ai'm dried. ' Afte'eante injure or illneas thh ehild corhee back quicetly, Youth isesilient, The system promptly re: turns to' what it was evithee.t register- ing an ill effect. As we grow 'older we learn the 'heed ocaret We do not so soon r 2— vert to the ()anginal condition efter fatigue and stress. We learn to avoid 'a diet or a deed that is not for Our good. We do not always ad tip° the knowledge that we have, But we over -run the danger signals we'a eure to rue it. Some rnen train for an event; eon •men traill for a life. An athletic rigorous in abstinence and self-deni till the race is eoeved, the game - played, the meet or the bout is over. Then he thinks he has a license to cut loose again. But a man bound to leeep fit for the lensiness of living 'cannot afford to "break training.'' He may relax, he may rest; but his va- cations are periods • for the restore.: tion and not the destructiOn of his 'energy. Fel-his amusement he fields that which builds him up; that he may do his work better when comes back to it. A vacation never was intended for a dissipation. The •purpose of it is an improVernent in the general physi- cal condition. Those who are idle always, whose rife Is one long play.. time, do not know the recuperative meaning, of a respite. Never having toiled, they cannot enjoyably rest. The fun is his who has worked hard to deserve ,the recreation. And when the recess comes in his 'business he does not find it pleasure to sit idle in stagflation and vegetation. He finds sothething to do—some interest mental or rrianual'i=to keep him oc- cupied. The man who would be fit takes care"that neither mind nor muscle is atrophied by disuse. You cannot wish any man, at any age, a crueler fate than that of having nothing to 0. if re ae is is Medal Muddlers. There -IS ciligayS- a good deal of grumbling.'about the -delay in the dis- eibution. of war medals; some of which do not reach- teeir owners for many yea,es,,says an ,English paper. T.e record medal in tin' respec was that' given for the Duke of Wel- lington's Peninsular War. The eam- paign ended in 1312, but it was not antit. 1347 that was decided to award a general seen -lee inceal. The last of ehetia readied their recipients more Jan etia.:ff', years after they teed been earned! Thdugh medals to commemorate wars • or single, haCtles have been atruck in this calm:try ever since the time of Queen 'Elizabeth the - not at first distributed to all wholad taken' part in the fighting: they were given rather as rewards to those who had shown special- bravery or per- formed meritorious services. Those struck by Oliver Cromweil at - ter his Dutch wars were large gold plates of cousiderable value.. The first distribution that was 'anything like general was that made by Charles I. during the Civil -War, -when he pre- sented a silver medal to every Royal- ist soldier. - - The Chinese issued the first known general service medal nearly two thousand years ago. The World Has Need pf Every Tree: The world has need' of all the things Of beauty that the summer brings= Peteas and perfumes, gauze and wings. The planet has so anuch,of snows The world has need of every rose Wherever any traveller goes. There are such stone's', the weary mass' 01 men in daily journey pass, The world has 'need of all its grass. There is such -gray in every -scene, Such Shad -MS; sunny hills between, The world'has need of all its green. So much of drab there is to see, , Drab hills and drab humanity, The world has need of every tree. Tile Lightest Wood. The unfamiliar balsa wood, growing in. Gaeta. Rica and Ecuador, is the lightest wood known, weighing only 7,8 pounds to the cubic foot. Cork weighs 13.7 pounds. •Growing much more rapidly than almost any other known tree; it is said that within four years a balsa tree will attain the heigbt of thirty feet, -with a diameter ot ten inches. It is as durable as codar, The wood te white, extremely straight -grained and easy to work, It is soft when green,but seems to harj. en later. It is used extensively ,for malting life-raits' • and life -preservers, and Jt is though -I, that it will eventual- ly constitute a valuable seruce of pulp, wood. It is believed that the tree would ilourieh in Florida' and because of its rapid growth would spread rapid- ly over the southern part of the state, to enjoy a liealtny, active lite; yet nine out of ten suffer ox some form of bloodlessness. That is why oae , sees on every side pale, thin, of..eolcs, ' dell, eyes ebel drooping flgetres—sure signs ef Leadacheie weak hacks, ach- ing limbs and uncertain health. A4 , w,ealt wornen should win the right to be' well by ,refreshing their weary bodies •with the new, rich, red blood that, promptly transforms them into healthy attractive women- This eteeve red blood is supplied by Dr. Williams' Plait Pills, which reaches over organ and every nerve in the body,. Through the use of thee pills thousands of WO" men have found benefit when suffering erom •anaemia, 'indigestion, general weakness and thos,o ailments from which women alone suffer. Amone- the many women who tell of the good. Dr. 'Williams' .leink" Pills have done them is Mrs... L. Elicits, Round Hill, N.S., who says: "I became very much run (Iowa in health; my - blood 'eeemed weak and' watery, my strength failed, and I aeis so easily tired that my work was a burden, • I had often read about Dr. Williarns..Pink Pills and decided to try them, and 1 can truly sag that after using three boxes I found my- self oining, and my old-time -energy and vitality was restored. Out of my own experience I can strongly recom- mend this medicine." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any clealer.in medieitte or by trial' at 50 cents a' box or six boxes for $2,50 from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Breckville, Ont. Mik IS so constituted as to'correct the deficiencies of other foods when usedein cOriebination with them. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia liNVENTION OF A BRITISH SCIENTIST. Woxtderfull We,apon Whjth - , Play .ain the Fght.AF4ttia'sil.DiSe4se. • , • •: • Anieeapen. 'of immense 'value In the ' grealeeftglateagainat disease has just been 'forged. et it a' now kind Of mic- rosCisPiiWalter le 'as 'much' stronger , , , then'tlie eld'kuid.asrthe big ,telescop,e 111 the ' obeervatory is stronger than a pair of opera 'glesees, Writhe a noted Landoe'physidan, , The eters, of the new microscope fe a rental -Ice, strange and fascinating. Thee -things which it may aecomplish for all of us can as yet only be guessed at. ' But we knew that they will be great thing's, amazing things, 'ree ,clocter's most poveerful weapon against diseaae is his eye, Once he can see where the danger larks, what it is, What it locike ilke, he be half -way to \verde preYenitilig' it. lVficireecopes are the new eyes of eneiclicine, with which our healere are able to keep a coXetarit and a splendid watch on our deadliest enemies. Fighting Deadly Germs. Imagine an army to-alay without aeeeplanes, or an- army of the past without septets"! They would be on the same footing as would medicine without microscopee. All our knowledge of the germs of disease, of 'diphtheria germs, of ty- {Mold fever germs, of supPuration germs, we owe to the microscope. Once' upon a tinfe diphtheria killed about ninety out of every ...hundred children it attacked. Then, by the aid of this great, all-eeeing eye, a doctor found the germ of diphtheria. He studied its shape, its war of living. It it lea Nal 1121 tet 'ett ItTi Vt- virellatt la 16A Takv.VQ" 1%"4 'HEALTH EDUCAtiON t5R. J. J. MIDDLETON ProvInOialieoara ot Health, Ontario Middleton will be giaa to answer questions on Public Health ma.), f; ties thro-ulit: this column. Address him at tint Parliament Bidza, Toronto. enta %e- en, era, esii siliEa "NZ 'ea TrA1221 101 -II When' anyone is overcome with the revive much quicker, and if an electric • heat, it is impolite/at to ie'new whether fan is available so much the ,better. the condition is one of sunstroke or effort should 'be made to have the pa- t of heat exhaustion. Immediate steps tient sent there on account of the have to be taken to restore the nor- special facilitiei tor treatment, as mal heat of the body and promote complete ecepee ee,e death some - normal circulation of the blood, so times follows attacks of heat exhsoaus- a AUTO flEPAlet PANTS .ror rooet, sad layotUs',or (arl). 'Your old, LU'4',/e,r; 0 worp-out pulls 55' (5 \A'ire us desortb- lng what ou w,urd„ Larry the 1111,151 Alt most eomoieLo 1J1oc.q5 10 (15100(111 011 slightly 010d or new part!, (ma 'autoreobee ecol)prz,-nt, V/5 iship 0000001e jn L' 11111, .ro,otcsry or refund tali can' raottO. :511:1,Aohi fxruto Selvage pert enialeay, eaetat :reetterta Ct. revoute, put:. Great DeedS..- Who ecu stay the wleds of winter .with a gestuee? Who can hold the .raine 01 sprbug in h two hands? She can hide the gueiy tear af her bele ‘Aelien her eleye conimandee laecumeerie it wore, a "inarltett Mall," ' the elm.•1 1 aerc.se the rae9 f eo that its aPpearence was known to Lest be be toe bold when he shines at all cloctove In tee Scotleed 'Yard of noon? medicine---elie laboretory----they had its cleSerintion e.eillillete, After that it He can keep guard upon his lips day was not very difecult to prepare an end night 'anti:tots to tide poisonous feliow, BO Lest they speett too 80021, that whenevere, he appeaeed steps 1 --1\farquerite Willeineon (mulct im ,talten to deetroY liiin. Teat antidote is known to everyorie ee, as "Antidiplitherie Serum." And since IA rl 111:21t 7 , sye found it, few --very few. --children haec died ol: the dreadful white growth .-IARD OAT 11A thatcoulee et the laaelt f otilQ t11 - and is called diphtheria. Once serum has been given, the' gro peels off ancl,comes away, , Toe Small to See. That is what the microecope done ice ono disease, ITnlaapi there are other diseases which rem to bh conquered, One of them measles, No mall has ever yet s the germ of measles, and yet t 'germ certainly does exiet. Meas kills'far More children now than di theria. Measles" is, therefere, a m deadly disease -now than diphtheria, Why, has the germ ef measles ne beeii• seen? ,The answer is that it too small to be seen, The microse the will No seaeon of the year 13 so danger - cats to the life of little ones ae is the sunime.r. The' meceSsive heat threws has the little stomach mit of order so tny, quickly that unless Prompt aid is at aeh hand the baby may bo beyond all le, human help before the mother realizee Gen he is ill. n Summer is the season. when hat diarrheea, cholera infantum, dyeentry les and colic are moet prevalent, Any one pit, of these troubles ma.), prove deadly if ere not ProPerie treated, During the sum- mer the mothers' best friend is Baby's Own Tablets. ,They regulate the ver bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep is ope is net able to magnify it, to enlarge it sufficiently to,allow the 'milieu eye to detect it. In the Words of science the germ of reesesleS lies beyouil the microacope. It is "ultra -microscopic." e Ansi' here we come to the new micate scope. , The -old microscope was thought to be absolutely perfect. Manufacturers of- the exquisite glass lenses with which it es fitted said th baby healthy. The Tablets are -sold by medicine dealers, or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. 'Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Boy Scouts at the Toronto . F ir. For many years now the Toronto Fair, or to use its more euphonious Mame, the "Canadian National Exlaihj- tion," leas been the mecca of Boy at Scouts from all parts of Ontario', one the very limit ot its posSible powers had been reaChed. Lenses could not be made" to give a greater enlarge- ment. -That idea has lasted for ten years. Doctors thought that no further im- provement was possible in their wo dertul "eye," and so had given up 'hope of seeing the very minute ger which probably cause measles a other familiar diseases, such as whoo ing cough, scarlet fever, chicken-po and so on; for no one has yet foh the germ of these commonplace ail- ments. New Light on the Subject. But the new microscope beings new lopes with it. It is no less than slay always being set apart by the management as Boy Scouts' Day. This year Boy Scouts' Day will be Satur- day, September 3rd, right in the mid- dle of the Exhibition season when everything will be at its bast. Local ',Committees at -Toronto are now work- ing hard getting evarlithing in shape all for this big day and also for other tea- ms tthees prior to it and following it, all led of which have to do with the Scouts. P- One of the:41)0de' featitres this year ; will be a Model Camp for about 600 nd welve and a half times stronger than he old one. That is to say, that an bject,avbich looked no larger than a ma under the old. microscope looks as aa•ge as a penny -piece under the new , ne. Thenew miceO4cope, like most great 1 deas, makes use ore a new princip ehich is yet beautifielly simple. I liscoverer, Mr. Barnard, whose nan s known all over the world for h tnowledge of this stibject, thougl that equally as important as the glass lens in a microscoPe • was the light which enabled the eYe of the person using the lens to see ,through it. - Suppose that, instead of trying to make better lenses, one tried to use a better kind of light? He began to work on that simple idea, and employed colored lights in- stead of the ordinary daylight. The daylight, ae most People know, Is made up of seven different colors. Sometimes it gets split up into these seven colors again. This happens when it passes through-rain—the ram- bow—and when it passes through cut- Elass of a special shape—for example, e blue and red lights seen- at the evelled edge of mirrors. The colors, when daylight is split , always come in exact order, violet ing at one end of the row, and red the other end. The ore1er is: violet, digo, blue, green, yellow, orange, d. Mr. Barnard used. quartz glass, so t as to split up the ,daylight and lid only one color at a time into his croscope. He 'found, by making als, that violet light gave him the sults he was looking for. So he ar- iged his quartz glass in inch fas- n that only violet light should fall the speciment he had under exami- tion. one must .notice whether the striken tiop ff proper treatment is not rert- peeson's tempeeature is 'high or low. . ed to :without delay. If there is fever and the skin dry and . People should take warning of the , da:ngers of having the head uncovered t for any length of time in the sun's rays. If this precaution was heeded, 11 hot, the ease is evidently •suneteolte. 'rhe patient fleet complains of a tired feeling acconipanied by a sense of dullness or 'oppression in the head. Dizziness. may ensue, leading to un - 'and suitable headgear used in the heat of summer there Would be much The face, is flushed ancl the breathing labored; the pulse is irregular and conscionsness if the attack is severe. less risk of sunstroke resulting. Summary of treatment: Sunstroke— (1) Remove patient to shady spot - and loosen clothing. (2) Sponge with ice ,water. (3) Rub skin with dry towel. (4) If patient is conscious, cold drinks may be given. (5) Keep -patient in a quiet and cool room. Heat Exhaustion— (1) Cover patient with blarikets. (2) Apply hot water bottles to feet. At the outset the symptoms of sun- stroke and heat exhaustion are very similar. The skin is cold and clammy, end the body temperature below nor- mal. If energetic and proper measures are not taken to revive the patient, he or she may quickly succumb. The very first thing to do for a heat victim is to remove him to a shady spot arid loosen his clothing. Next examine Whether the surface of the skin is hot or cold.- If it is hot sponge immediately with ice water, and' when -the patient has been re- moved to a favorable place indoors, a cold bath' should be given, and the skin rubbed with a dry towel to en- courage circulation. .As soon as con- sciousness returns, cold drinks may be given freely and, the patient shonld be kept in a quiet arid shady room. In case of heat exhaustion, rapid stimulation is necessary. If the sltin- f eels cold, clammy and moist the pa- tient should be immediately covered with blankets and hat water bottles applied to the feet. Hot drinks such as tea, milk or lemonade should be given it the patient is conscious, med aromatic spirits of ammonion placed on a bit of cotton or on a handker- chief should be held near his nostrils. In a cooling breeze the patient will (3) Give hot drinks such as tea or lemonade, if patient is con- scious. (4) Hold aromatic spirits of am- monia near patient's nostrils. W. D. asks if ther is any cure for Answer: Yes, soda water and other alkalies are 'Of service in giving re- lief. H. W. P. writes: My little girl three years `and six months suffers from earache and is nervous and sometimes • feverish. Might these troubles, be due to 'adenoids? Answer: Yes, they probably are. You should have your child's nose and 'throat examined by a physician, and adenoids removed if they are present. Enlarged -tonsils should also be at- tended to by a physician. If co ee, which is known tt c ntain caffeine, dist its your health and coinfort- drink At a d,iseionsary In the Afilo .End ROad, London, free medical treatment "Titere's a Reaso " is oxen to pet and othec .nnunals on eartaist n"nRIAP. Inizarmaszzcartazermarnmutes: .0==izez,:=am=, T-4 in His ellnd. "Thought you eaid you hod •Plough - cel that teneacie fiele?" said the first farmer'. Eetabr‘o'neter;.plotugelhilinYg6liati,d" saIidwatshetheienckeline.gi "Oh, I bee; you've merely turned It over tit your mind." He Explained, • An Irielimen had a eplendid-lookin cow, but she ItIcked eo much that it was imposeible te niillc lima kie sent the cow to is fele to be sold, oraerieer the herdsmen not to dispose et the animal without letting the buyer Imow her "strong wealtaese," The lieedsmaii, however, brought back a large price. Iee,e master Was .tt'1"Allrriese:o.0 sure you told Lae buyer all ab?" 1idleiel,aaellie-,11". said the herd - mak. "He asked me whether he Wa9 a good milker. 'I3egor, sire says 'IL's you that would be tired Junkie). her,' " TANLAC $TikAIGI-ITENED HIM RIGINT He.g1101.-.,-TA ie Now eFe1 Asi Well As He Eve Thd bottle of TeelaelllHbeit:anlit'f::tmtght,n "Beeceee'l esas half through my lira right up," declared Robert Davis, McCauley St., elamlitort, Orit., a valued g empires eie of the Wood -Alexander hard. \Vara ator43. 'Tor about six montes boiler° taking Tanlac r had been In is beetly runsclowAl conditiou. At tbnsso 1 liad no appetite at nil and tlien sometimes I could eat whattarratiiilly,i,oibnutitcletikiffocsat-eicria, terribly "I was nervous and restlees, never slept, weld, and many a night I roilea and toesect nearly .a.11 night long aral In the morning felt so stiff i11 my joints, it was eeme time before 1 felt lIbni ino-viag at all. 1 suffered a great , deal from conetipetion and was etibe ject to eplitting headaches, "But Tanlac helped Inc right from the start and now 1 have simply a rayoniot s appetite alai everything agrees with inc perfect, I never have a headache or a pain of any kind, sleep like a healthy boy and feel as well ELS I ever diti.,th my life. Tonle° will always get a good word fronime." Tan:lac is sold by leading druggieas everywhere. Adv.. The Brute. The young m'arried Woandia went home to her mother and sobbingly de- clared she just couldn't be happy with her husband again. "I wouldn't have minded it so mach, mother," she sobbed, "it Charlie had answered me back when I scolded bu-bu-but he did something worse." - 'ler mother was duly shocked at this. "Mercy, my dear child!" she ex- claimed. "He struck you then?" "No; worse than that, mother!" -- and the young wife sobbed afresh. "Tell me at once!" imelfgnantly de- manded her mother. "He—he just yawned." Berlin's Best Jokes. Is the ex -Kaiser as popular in Ger- many as he was before the war? It would appear that he is not the wor- shipful idol he was. At one time his very name inspired fearful admiration among the German people --their great ruler who could do no wrong. Nowa- aye he is the subject of nausic-hall ITcelisfollowing patter was given by two cross -talk c.oniedians (Germans both by nationality) in one of Berlin's leading vaudeville theatres recently' Scouts. Troops from eutside Toronto I d will be accommodated in this camp ja without charge except for food, and that they may arrange for to suit their own deeires. Tents, blankets, ground sheets, cooking flies, cooking utensils, stoves, etc., will be there their disposal, and special arran ments are being made for the sup of the ingredients of their meals the lowest _possible price. The boys attending the model ca will. have a special -programme of., ! tivities for them every day, includ t, both recreational and educational le tures. Bach afternoon there will b is s 3- )etitions of various kinds on a para ground which is being set aside for their own use. And each evening the campers will farm up and parade through a portion of the Exhibition Grounds and ,adjacent sections of the city. On the rally day itself, Toronto Scouts will turn out over two thous- and strong to greet their brother Scouts from out-41ying sections of the province, and it is assured that. they will all have one great big, happy day of it. Luncheon' on rally day, will be provided for both visiting and Toronto troops by the Provincial Council. Another special concession this year is that every registered Boy Scout pre- senting himself at the Exhibition gates in:Uniform and wearing the Boy Scout "Ontario Official'Bedge," will be permitted to pass through the turn- stiles without payment of fee or other formality. Those Exhibition folk sure do think a great deal of the Scouts. And, if you could hear :Managing Di- rector John G. Kent, they leave every reason. to be. For haven't the Scouts in former years proven absolutely in- valuable to the Fair officials by locat- ing lost children, acting as guides for visitors, staffing the big grand stands with ushers, attending to emergency cases often long before calls could be ipieultp.through to the regular ambulance Very- seldom that Mr. Seout has had. to companies? "When in Doubt Ask a disappoint those who would ilive• his of visitors to the big Fair, and it is Scout" has become ono of the slogans The Sunday following Rally Day will be marked by a monster "Scouts' Own" service of Toronto Scouts and of visiting Scouts who remain over the week -end. It will probably take place On the University Campus or in Convocation Hall, in Queen's Park, at "Good -evening, Hans!" said the first go- I comedian. "So you're hack from the Ply war?" at "Good -evening, Fritzt" replied the hseaecek, second. "1" m es, I'm back frothe war, nip but it took' me a long time to get ac. Ing -:7ppose, Hans," continued Fritz, ea- "you must have been the last' one to ealeae. na "No, Fritz; there is one who isn't de home yet." ' :rile "one" referred to was the ox - Kaiser, and the house . roared. with laughter. eries of Boy Scout and athletic co th up ,be at in re 00 ESe 1111 tri re rai hio on na, Studying Living Specimens. And by this means and other techni- cal changes he forged his great new weapon- Fps neve microscope, with its violet light, can enlarge any object it look at ho less than -flee enormous amount of twelve and a, half million times its natural size. "That would make an ordinary house -fly, bigger than the dome of St. Paul's. It is easy to see what this must mean to doctors arid to the science of medicine. A great new future opens out, full of all sorts of astonishing • hopes. Moreover, the use of this violet light allows uS to see germs alive. Up till now we couid only see thern after they had been stained with ,yarious bright dyes—that Is to say, after they were dead. This is very impOrta,nt, as the natur- al living germ muSt afford far more real information than the dried, stain- ed, dead one. Mr, Barna,rd believes his discovery is only the beginning of a new ad- vance in knowledge, for there semi tci be reason to think that other rays, )ricluding the mysterious X-rays, May be able to give even greeter PoSulLs than tho violet light rays, That, how. ever, is is matter still hidden In the future. Tommy's Howler. In a sniall village school a teacher asked the scholars in her class to write a sentenCe-finiahing with the two words, "bitter mid." One boy 'w'rote, "The enemy folight to the bitter end," • Another easid, "The afterrioon's day mune too soon"to a biter end," But the sentence that capped them all was written by a bright bey of ten, Whose, name was. Tommy. It ran tlitta: "Our buI-Pup ran after Murphy's cat yesterday, and as She was runeing through the -wooden fence he bitter end." Cellars 60 the double variety can now 'be ironed by a nlachineWhili gives them a rounded bend, se thet the tee is ineeetett more easilet. Those Having Sick Animals SHOULD USE Comforting. "Officer," asked a nervous old lady on heieefirst trip over, "do you think tae gliip's going cloven?" "lerolfly not, maea.M, prob'ly not, responded the salty mate encouragind. ly, stroking his chin. "Yesee, the boil- ers ain't none too good. She's liable to go up." .4444-4.4-4-4 MONEY ORDERS. Wh. en ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order. Pianos made in Britain, in 1911 numbered 120,000; last year the num- ber made was only .50,000. Minard's Liniment f.or sate everyothere The nails on our fingers do not grow with equal rapidity, that of the thumb being the elowes-t and of the middle finger the fastest. ------- Natives of Algeria bury with the dead the medicines used by them in their last illnesses. 1 bliss oyko 7.6N How Cuticura I• , Healed Ler PAmples .1 "My face was very itchy at first, and after that it Was covered with pireples that disfigured It badly. The pinaplcs were hard and rid and they were small, and enc.:7 'were st- tered all over my face and were so itchy I had to scratch and I could not sleep: "These bothered md nearly a yeas before I used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment ar_d when I had used five cakes of Cuticura Soap and five boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Flora M. )3ylso, Gardenton; Man., Dec. 26,1918. Having obtained a clear healthy akin by the use of Cuticura, keep it clear by using the Soap for all toilet purposes, assisted by touches of Ointment as .needed. Do not fail to ine.lude the eir.quieitely scented Cuti- cum Talcum in your toilet prepara- tions. Splendid after bathing. Seep 25e, Ointment 25 ared SOe. Sold throughout theDominion. CanactiunD.pot Litirtims, Limited, St. Paul St., Montreal. 'Cutieura Soap shaves without raua. tLIIJJ 'j! Good for all' 'throat " and chest diseases, Distemper, Garget. , Sprains, . Bruises, colic, Mange, Spavins, Running sores, etc„ etc. Shtluld always be in the stable —SOLD EvER,Y.WHE,'RE., . COARSE ALT • LAND SALT • ailik CariotS TORONTO SALT WORKS 0. 4 %Jr" TORONTO 4TONMS1a04,041.1.00/4196I. Anuirica's Pioneer Dog Rensedisa • 800k on DOC' DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Ae. dress by the Author. S. -Clay Glover Co., Mee, 119 West 31st Otsego! New York, U.S.A., ASPIRIN Only "Bayer' is Genuine Warning! Take no chances with Substitutes for gentiine "Bayer Tab- lets, of AS,plrin." Unless you see the name "Bayer" onpackage or' on t&b- lots you are, net getting ...aspirin et all. In every Bayer package ere clirectione for Colds; Headache, Nduraigia, Rheu- m:a ttsm1 re era e, Tooth aeh 0, :feu rub ge and far Petra Houdy tin. boxes 01 twelVe tablets cost tote cents, Drug- gists aleo ecu larger packages. Ma,'de In ("amide, Aspirin be the tett-heel-earls evegletered in Ca neda), of Bayer Mashie etteture of 'Monoacetiecinielesiter 1411 SUFFERING OF YOUNG WOMEN This Letter Tells How It May he Overcome—All Mothers Interested. I was a school girl with pain in my left Toronto, Ont. "rgrsItirtihdooawvadein:viasdugw:.iteohrricesrvasedasemiaams; year until waS all r i?abana:thoacpti etn:imsti, un:th awasbtulEtt Vaxibet4 perions vias unfit for work. I tried several doc- tors and patent only relieved for 4! short time. SOM41 f the doctors rny father objected. Finally 1 1e:titer:1 -through my mother of tydiall. Pink. ham's'Vegetabio C°14 )01111(1, and haw, feeellIcvasediffriodmhaspaSinaVand OITinleyrriol), mar Use nay letter to help (Allot women as 1 am glad to recommend tho lam:Opine. --Mats. IT,, A. GoonmAN, 14 leockVale AvonToronto Thoso who aro troubled: as Mrs. Coothilan was should. Immediately seek restoration to health by teldng Lydik E. Pinkbam,e VogetEtble Compound. Thoee who need special advice Yna$ write to Lydia E. Pi/althorn Medicine Co. (eonfidential), Lynn, Mass. Theseletters %vat be opened, rend end anteaverea b watuall ano held in etriet con. ,ee msu'8, No.