HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-11-18, Page 6HE TOWN 0
PEMBROKE
In 1923, the town of Pembroke—ti
industrial and shipping centre of East
ern Ontario and Western Qeebec—
will cerebrate the centenary of th
first clearing of the virgin 'fares
which, in 1825, stood where the tow
of Pembroke now flourishes.
Beginniug as' a lumber town, i
which industry it still holds a pre
minent place, Pembroke has to -clay
Population of approximately 10,000
and by .the establishment :of one of ti
largest match reeking plants fn th
World, shook. mills, 'factories for .th
Manufacture of steel office and star
equipment, eleotricai appliances, stov
foundry, machine shops, eta., has be
come the i'dustirial centre of the Ot
taws Valley, while sites are still avail-
able, with unlimited water supply,
cheap electrical power and transporta-
tion facilities that ensures to it rising
and greaten importance in the years :to
came.
Picturesquely Located.
Located on gently rising ground on
the Upper Ottawa •lower, where is ex
pandsinto a, beautiful lake, math
two miles in width and about fifteen
mikes in length, it is the natural centre
of one of the most beautiful tracts o
cisuntry on the coutinent. The west
ern end of the lake is studded with
verdure -clad islands, on many of which
are handsome summer camps. At its
eastern end is .Morrison's Island, on
which Samueld.eCharnplain spent•some
weeks,about 1613, the guest of the
Algonquin Indians, On the opposite
side of the lake is Allumette Island,
with an area of about•180 square miles-
of
ilesof prosperous farming country; while
about twenty miles distant, rise the
forest -clad Laureutians, the oldest
geological .formation •known to science.
Pembroke has special .interest to
the tourist, scamper, artist, hunter,
angler and . explorer, as the gateway
to that vast unexplored Northlaud ly
Fng in its primeval form between the
town and James Bay, the southern end
of Hudson Bay. In Pembroke wan-
werers into the open spaces ofnature
owl fit . themselves out and secure
guides. It is also the outfitting point
for calipers and tourists going into
Ontario's playground, the famous Al-
gonquin Park, one of the largest and
most perfect reservations of virgin`
forest and wild game on the continent
of America, and a veritable fisher-
man's aradise. Pembroke is the gate-
way to the big game country, moose,
smallerdeer, bear, wolf, as well as all smaller
wild animals offering almost'unlimited
choice to hunter and trapper.
Splendid Tourist Accommodation.
For the tourist, Pembroke has. splen
accom-
modation,
did hotel and boarding house ccom-
modation, while its beautiful tree -
Seeded residential streets and avenues
with ^epacio'zs Iawns, splendid trees,
shrubs and gorgeous tinted flower
beds, provide quiet walks and drives
unurpassed for interest. Excellent
summer cottages, located on sandy
bathing beaches which assure safety
as well ss pleasure, are available quite
lose to the town. Motor boating and
•anoeing are popular sports, while an
eseellert ferry service to Allumette
Island, and a daily up -river service (a
round trip of nearly one hundred miles
through the beauty -clay shores of the
rimer Ottawa provide opportunities
for delightful trips. -
For the athletic lover of out-of-doors
bennbreke offers unrivalled opportuni-
ties for summer and winter sports. It
possee:ses one of the best nine -hole
i;orf courses and club houses in the
province. In the winter. hockey .and
curling are popular, while there are
unequal!e:l opportunities for such
sports as snawshoeing, skiing, etc.,
under -areal and untrammelleded con -
di ions.
on-d lions.
RUEUMATI PAIN -
AND THIN BIPOD
• Uindm--- eu is of NO Avail The
Trouble Must be Treated
e Through the Blond,
The most a rheumatic sliffero3 ' can
hope for in rubbing something on the
n swollen, aching joints is a little relieir
and all the while the trouble is become
a;.
ing snore newly rooted. It is now
, known that rheumatism is rooted in
e- the blood, and that as the trouble goes
o on the blood becomes still further thin
e and watery.To get rid of rheumatism,.
e therefore, yeti, must go to the root of
o: the trouble in the blood. That is why*..
- Ir, Williams' Pink Pills have proved
so beneficial when taken for this trou-
ble, They make new, rich blood
whin. expels , the poisonous acid and
the rheumatism disappears. There
are thousands of former rheumatic
suffeferr- h Canada,' now well and
strong, who. thank Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills that they are now free from the
aches and pains: of this dreaded trou-
ble. One of these is Mr, Robt. A.
Smith, Mersey Point, N.S„ who says:
~•-•"Some Years ago I was attacked
with rheumatism, which grew so bad
that I could not walk and had to go to
bed under the doctor's care. It is,
needless to say. that I underwent a
great deal of suffering. The doctor's
medicine did not seem to reach the
trouble, eo when I was advised to try
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I did so, and
after taking them for sone 'a teks I
was able to get. out of bed. I •con-
tinued using the pillsand was soon
able to work, and I have not been
troubled with rheumatism since. In'
other respects also I derived a great
deal of benefit from these pills and T
think them a wonderful remedy:." .
Dr, Williams'' Pink Pills are sold by
all.nzedioilie dealers or by nail at 50
cents a box from . The Dr. Williams'.
Medieine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Singing Bees.
According to Maeterlinck, whose
"Life of the Bees" is not only a liter-
ary masterpiece, hat an authoritative -
treatise „e rn its subject, the he he •es have
a completescale of, tones, that can be
distinguished by the human ear at
least so far as it expresses happiness,
anger, threats, sorrow, •etc. They have
an
Ude to
the Queen, songs of the har-
vest, psalms• of sadness, and, lastly,
the long-drawn-out and mysterious
war cries and war songs of the prin-
aesses which precede the nuptials, of
the Queen. They do not seem to be
conscious of many of the sounds made
round the hives, but this. is probably
because they do not think such sounds
element. therm. Very probably they
have: ante sounds •n Bich iee do not
hetet r, e•nd they make a large amount
et mask:. as well as speaking to each
ether in order to convey ordinary res-
i ,-:.s. What. stnnz.T.s to uslike a Con-
i iSf-el luta alas. well he to theta a per-
fectly exprceeivo and beautiful musi-
cal a;liorus or, at another t:inhe, the con-
: er ation of laindreds, all or whom
hear distinetly hhat clads other says_
No Watches Want ce
leo c , le.. the Brinell *Hearses of
Pat'•:lati.elt need carry a wat,cilt to
know the time as• there aro clocks in i
eteb ;rf the 500 •coxes, lt5 well :a in
wax et thk,1 ee ridees.
Al 'They 'Krioty,
The mile part of sgr}tesel,tilrt 'some
seem toF
T7•
t+, .. 5 .... ri .i Lo in empathy with
fa corat ort ills, ,.,,is eft taen?xttimes,
lThe t:eh is thee he people:,et'
)11 >1)4.. lrtclta tt� the British people,'
rend to ,tet; Written-, work together,
and beep ecbeter:,-- ickhaeeSteed.
Rains neo) oriMines.
Heavy rains in British Guiana hays
supplied water -for the working of:
many diamond mines that had been
idle -for some time.
—en-- ---
Th•
e Scriptures.
There are no songs comparable to
the` songs of Zion,' no orations equal
to those of the Phophets, no policies
like those the Scriptures taach,—Mil-
ton.
There is no empty vessel that makes .
so much noise as a ishan who is fu=11
of himself.
Old hearts will beat more quick-
ly; old eyes will shine with
happiness Dien. YOU go home,
And what a joy it will be for
you, too, visiting the scenes of
childhood days and meeting
friends of other years!
Make arrangements now to go
home this Christmas on a liner
of the Cunard or Anchor -
Donaldson. Canadian Service.
'The voyage will be an unfor-
gettable pleasure. The ship's
comfortable appointments and
the courteous, intelligent inter
est taken by every rnember of '
the staff in your well-being
make your journey a real joy.
• Christmas Sailings from Haiifat
ANTONIA—Dec. 13 to Plymouth,
Cherbourg and: London. .
*LETITIA — Dec. 12 to Belfast, • ' p
Liverpool and Glasgow.
5Dcc.1l fratn St. John N.)3.
Ask your Steamship Agent for information
or write—
The R
ob_P
rt i?eford Co„ Limited
Montreal, Toronto, Quebec,
St. John, N.B., Halifax.
Mopping a Flithertoi U ap-
ped Aroa Northwest of and
Adjoining Red Lake,
A tew weeks ago it was anrtouaiced
iu, the press'that the federal authori-
ties were etig aged upon a •' nlepettig
programme covering the region in the
vieinity of Red Lake. in aeeordaner
tis-itli this Mappine programme a pro-
visioal map of tb.e Red Lake'disriot it -
sett` bel. been iss •,d to sheet the u
gout need for tlhe piresrntation of a
theistic topographic information;• an
the subsequent publication -of iia
sheets lying on all sides of the rte
Lake region was provided for. Ter
of these projected sheets were issue
during the past ,few weeks, namely, th
Lae Seal sheet and the Poiets. du 13ai
sheet, lying respectively to the sout
eest and the southwest of Iced La.
and north from the main Iine of th
Cauadian National railways. The m..
ping programme has been earned on
by the Topographical Survey, Depart-
ment of tie Interior, in cooperation
with the Surveys Branch of the De-
partment of Lauds and. Forests, On-
tario, land the Royal Canadian Air
Force.
A third sheet is now. ready for issue
to the public. This is keown as the
Carroll Lake sheet and coznprises an
area lying northwest of and adjoining
Red Lake, included within latitudes
510 and 520 and longitudes 940 and
960.
These sheets are published on the
scale of four miles to the inch. Thee-
are
hey
are issued in folder form for. conveni-
ence in carrying in the pocket and
may be olbtaiued for the i:anneal fee
of fifty, cents by.writing the, Topo-
graphical Survey, Department of the
Interior, Ottawa.. They are also issued
in plain form;�unfoided, ler which the
feels twenty-five cents.
Up to the time that this mapping
programme was undertaken, there was
very little authentic informatioli avail-
able regarding the topography of this
region•, and most of -the previous maps
showed practically blank spaces .here..
This is, far more a true representation
of the ease, for the topography actual-
ly consists of a maze of lakes, rivers,
and connecting waterwae s of all sizes
and shapes scatteeed throughout an
entirely forested territory. The value
of d good ma. � '
r
1 Iii such -country is at
cane apparent.
But He Knew the Dog.
?innok
lMt UWT' • LENU4AK
au�r
A (iOZ 7+.t71•14'447:
�y �.l�
a ,, IA:
The moa who dashed into the police -
station at half -past two in the morning
looked as if he had been having a
nightmare. '
"My wife!" he gasped. "I wane you
to, find my wife! Been missing since
eight this evening! Oh, find her for
m$!"
"What's her description?" •asked a
sergeant. "Height?"
"I—I don't leeow!"
"Weight?" .
"The husband shook his bead vague-
ly.
"Color of eyes?"
"Er—average, I expect."
ledT
"Do you know how she was dress -
"I expect she wore her coat and hat.
She took the dog with her."
"What kind of a dog?"
"Brindle bull -terrier, weight four-
teen and a half pounds, four dark
blotches on his body, shading from
grey into white. Round, blackish spot
over the left eye, white stub of a tail,
three white legs, and right front leg
brindled, all but the toes. A small
nick in his left ear, a silver link col-
lar, with—"
"That'll do!" gasped the sergeant.
"We'll find the dog!"
•
The Beginr,rings of Music.
It is a curious and' interesting feet
that although EEa•stern music and West
ern. music are so different from each
other they have developed on very
much parallel lines. Pythagorasewlio
was the man who first discovered the
rineiples by which different notes
1 may be fixed, the fact that a string
divided into two gives a note an oc-
tave higher, than its full length, and
similar facts, was born. about thirty
before •
y Confucius who, besides
giving China, its standard Philosophy
which has lasted to the present time,
established its musical principles, com-
paring the motion or rhythm of music
to that of the stars and giving the
scales the names which fix their order
of importance. Within a hundred
years of that time Indian music was
first placed on a scientific theoretical
basis which enebled it to be taught
by other means than merely by ear.:
F
A
ANC110R-DONALDSON
CANADIAN SSEfVlCE �e
Nteete«;'+nteb_i:f:..'4'_'•Mt''«•V�''1.,=:'.'F7:18:.c:, ''`.Sy". c6nGry?x!v;•ner,:
Sanateneateseatene
SKIP
OS Chi a
troirt9 as Steel
Wold in rpt stomas eviplywheir.
,`+vV7* Y ti$ltTA. PooeuCrs to, .^,.;ria 213
tse 1n ♦D,wN,$ ,di 0441.•t+,A
SCENE OF ARMENIAN, SHOCKS
Abovo itee own a map ofArmlenria reported badlyrazed 7e1c1 ^by the succession,
of quakes. 1liountAlagoz, Mount Ararat the legendary restingrplace of Noah
and Leahakan, are eaid to be the shock centres.
Street Beauty. /
1 never- leave Loudon without a
pang. I neves• t:ome back to it with-
out realizing sifresh its beauty and its
glamor. In fog or sunshine, in rain
or snow, with its turmoil and its rush,
I love the Town_ . • "
Nott • long ago I happened to be in
We+stminster on a • D•ecember" after -
nom. It had been raining heavily all
day, end the 'sky, which had just clear
ed, was flooded with a golden light
The towers of the Abbey stood up
against it ,in misty blue A string o
hansom cabs cawing along, reflected
in the wet streets, looked like a pro-•
t:ession of black gondolas. It Was a
striking effect: I gazed at it• en-
tranced, and then walked home feeling
as if I had had a glimpse of fairyland.
Men tall; rapturously about "moun-
tain "aisfanoes" and , ::air, perspec--'
tives"; but what can be more strlking
than the blue -grey fcg that turns the
end of a• London street; as you look
down' it, into mystery and beauty, the
gives teethe present a tinge of uncer-
tainty of the future, and throws a halo
of poetry over the most common -place
homes'? Rose Barton in "Unfafnilfar
London:"
BABY'S
OWN TABLETS
S
AREOF
GREAT
VALUE
To All Mothers lh rs I�[avin
g.Young
Children in the Home.
No other :medicine. is of such aid to.
mothers of young cyhildren as "is Baby's
• Own Tablets. T'h.. Tablets are the very
hest rnedicine a mother can give her
little ones' during the dreaded teething
time because they regulate the stomach
and blieveis and thus drive out consti-
pation and indigestion; prevent colic
and diarrhoea and break up colds and
simple fevers..
Concerning B<aby's Own . Tablets,
files. John A. Patterson, Scotch- Vil-
lage, N.S., says: -"I have six children
and ail the medicine they, ever get is
Baby's Own Tablets. I would use noth
1 in:g else for thein and can strongly re-
t commend the Tablets to all other
mothers;.
Baby's Own Tablets aro sold by
e• nhedicine dealers or by mail at 25
Cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine' Co., Brockville, Ont.
Iiabetes.
Once upon a time we saw a poster
which read: "Why is food important?
Because we are food on legs!" We
hope weare more than just that, but
the subject of food must give us pause,
although it is rather too much to say
"Tell me what you eat and I will tell
you what you are," yet any one in any
part of the country to -day will tell you
that If you eat too much sugar and
starchy foods it will doubtless bring
on diabetes. "That is exactly what
happens when the body is not able to
properly take' care of the sugar and
starch contained in the food we eat.
What are we eating? "We are eat-
ing more cereal products than any of
our ancestors ever ate in the past, ex-
cept perhaps the ancient Egyptians,
who were the grain -eaters of antiquity.
"We are eating much more sugar
than any one in the world ever ate
before. One hundred years ago the
average consumption of sugar per per-
son was about eleven (11) pounds in
a year; to -day it is .one hundred (100)
pounds" ! During the war we ate less
sugar—diabetes was reduced; after
the war we increased our sugar and
diabetes increased.
The main cause oe diabetes is wrong
food too inane sweets and starchy
foods. No sugar in tea and coffee, no
candy, no pastry, ne iced cakes, none
but milk puddings, no cereals—are
some .of the "don'ts" for those who
have a tendency to diabetes use
simple foods: milk, eggs, lean meat
and fish, fruits; and vegetables, bran
`muffins or brown bread. This is the,
best preventive—proper diet.
Charged Water.
"Ife carries a mighty big bill at the
drug :store, I hear-"
"Yes; even the water h•egets there
is charged." - -
Artists' Need of Fitness.
It is not neoe:ssarily higher moral
qualities. that make the nnisi•cians of•
to -day more sober than those of a few
generations ago, but stere necessity,
because the music of to -day is so.
mush more .•diflculi; to play and sine.
humorous. description •of the effete
of Indulgence on erche•strnl players
was given niany'y•ears ago by the late
Sir August Manns, the fa.motie con.
doctor of the Crystal Palace, Orches-
tra. He said that, the players "were,
aiway;sqn batt order on Monday morn-
ing" "' because r
a eon .Stmetayse they sznoke;t
tiro much and ,kissed their wives] and •
sweethearts so much that the lips of
the wind player;3, were all out of order.
Mbdern Music, aS• ,well as the •condi=
trans of professional lite, clemancts no
reach from the eetist that any lack of
fltrt 0 ,
-S5
r
esu
1t.
s 3
n an imperfect .jest p
n 13r-
formance, while' the criticism of inan-
agers, conductors; press and public
alike is so keen that the artist cannot
afford to be len perfect than the high-
ert ho can give,
C'
•'
11
P y i10Ed13' Usc ii.fnafae m Lit#il:ient'. ,
13ugvlile Athletic Note.
"Bugvllle's champion shot-pettor in
action"
Prelude,
The Iittie bird sits. in the asst and
.sings
A. shy, soft song's to . the morning
light;
And it flutters a little and prunes its
wings,
The song is halting and -poor and
. brief, --
And the fluttering wings scarce stir
a leaf;
But the note is a prelude tce sweeter
And the busy bill and the flutter
slight
Are proving the wings for a bolder
flight!
—Paul Laurence Dunbar.:
After Shaving—M;"nard's Liniment.
The Best Country.
.ma
Such is the patriot's. boast, where'e-r
we roam,
His first, best Country, ever is at home.
And yet, perhaps, if countries We com-
pare,
And estimate the blessings which, they
. share,
Though patriots flatter,. still shal•I wis-
dom find
An equal portion dealt to all mankind•;
As different good, by art or nature.
given,
To different nations
makes. ti
z
bless -
'
tags •exen,
• -Goldsmith.
"is go�dtea"9.ethazu vou ettu lood .7. Minh Yied Rode, ocilit good.
,Health Partnership and the
Individual's Responsibility.
Industrial Hygiene' means promo;
tion of the health of industrial work-
ers,.
ork
er's. This necessitates the nrost.,pr e
tical co-operation n between the two
great groups concerned, the employ-
ers, who •are respoilsibie: for health
conditions in the print, and the em-
ployees, tivho are respans�ible fog'
health .conditions• inethe homes, and,
mors imliortant.stil�, for their own pri-
vate health habits,;The .benefits to
health resulting from good ` working
conditions (such as adequate light,
Ventilation and -temperature and facili-
ties for nourishment tend cleanliness)
are enormously minimized if not entire-
ly counteraeted unless• the individual
employee is a. partner in the health
campaign, is Convinced of the import-
ance of such factors, and tries to ob-
tain them in his home. Hearth can
not be imposed on anyone; to some
extent each man must be a self-
starter.
Broadly speaking the health. factors
which are the individual's private re-
sp�bnsibility are :housing or rooming ar-
rangemente, food, :sleep and personal
hygiene. The importance• of these
things cannot be\over emphasized -if
bad, they can. shatter the strongest
physique; if .good, they can conserve
and strengthen the most delicate. The
problem is similar for men and women
but meet difficult for women who are
apt to he hampered by small means.
It Is. for this reason that the Depart-
ment of Health brought out the well-
known book on the subject -"Health
Confessions of Business Women, a
book by business women themselves
for business' *omen, Coyering all the
personal factors which bear on' health.
It may be had on application to the'
Division of Industrial Hygiene, On-
tario Department of Health,' Spa.dina
House, Toronto. Over 12,000 have al-
ready been requisitioned, but a limit-
ed supply is still available.
b
Our Most Dangero
—Day Is the one on which we cola-
plete our masterpiece.
F- rin-•3 is the ono who tells ug our
ecoon- hest is good enough.
—Enemy may b•e our friend who
knows the most about us.
—Dollar is the on•a we got without
earning it.
M- oment is the "one when our loy-
alty to a friaud conflicts with loyalty •
to dute.
Ambition is theone that ignores
our conls•clenee. .
—Amusement is .the varve that loaves.
us lees fit for work.
tee
leen-
TO Ronro
HAIRDRESSING ACADEMY
%I,OV YOU Naw
CI.., , i,, fer Sp.lne,..,n
Wei.for flacklet
4.an.h S N I i ANIII.TON• ONT.
vs 4.,11., r:a.d, TOROnr° S. ORT.
ctnd ruff.
nub Crlinerd's into tre scalp four
times a Week. It steps failing hair%
w•,..,ateeem
MSG OF Mt
1
Proved safe;by millions a1-ici prescribed by physicians for,
Colds Headache Neuritis Luinba,E o
Pain Neuralgia
Toothache Rheumatism
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
,.Accept only " aycr;„. package
Which contains proven directions.
;Handy "Bayer" b'»ons of 12 'tablets
.Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggieeie.
Aeptrin Is the trade sleek (refile&P,e++.A Sn Oen.+tiu1 or Tfayer TtStiofectore of AfnnnaeetIo.
seteekee' of Saiic~sil acid (Aeetyt t xilerlie Acid, "A, G. A.. ). Whit0 It is wY It knAwa
that Aapittu means BaS,er mansit,:!larc, ttr ne,tvtthe pubito aQalfat t?nttattune., the Tablet.,
of /Sayer Compel 'frill be, ita:aped lith their galena :riot€ merle the °Da t Cott,"
Classified Advertisements.
REMNANTS.
QLBS., '$2. 5 LBS. PATCHES,
$1.50, •. A, McCree•:ry, Chatham,
Ontario.'
BOYS!
OYS OF 12 TO 14 YEARS,
wishing to make $20.00 'before
Christmas write to Robert Horton, 97.
Withrow Ave., Toronto.
STUDENT NURSES WANTED.
MASSAU HOSPXTAL, MINEOL,A
Long g Island. n Registered. Train-
ing School. 40 minutes from New York
City. -2 years, 4 months cottrse. Corn -
'Siete training. Well qualified instruc-
tors. Three weeks' vacation annually.
One year high school or eguivatent re-
quired: After preliminary term an
al,0owance of $25 a month besides uni-
forans'and books .given. 'Class entering
in January. Address Principal of the
School of Nhrsing, Nassau Hospital,
Mineola, Long Island.
Understanding,
A . man does not receive the state-
meats that "tivo and two are four" and
that "the pure in heart shall see God"
on the same term's. The one can be
proved to sum with four grains of corn.' `"far
He can never arrive at a belief in the
other till he realizes it in the intimate
persuasion of his whole being.—James
Russell Lowell.
n .
Greeks Growing hoses.
Greek refugees In Greek llacedonia
have begun • to raise roses for tlie'per-
fum industry.
durstzy.
Pianx 13r
Last word in builders' aid. Practical,
up-to-date suggestions on planning,
building, fiirntshing, decorating and
garderung.' Profusely. illustrated,
'and scores of aetrtal dollar-savingsug-
^gestions. .Send 25 cents for
current issue.
" MacLean Builders' Guido
844 Adelaide St. W..
Toronto, Ont.
PAINS ALL
QUER nor
Two More Cases of Feminine 111.
ness Relieved- by Lydia F. isPink-
ham's Vegetable Compound
ound
Barrington, N. S,—"i had terrible
feelings, headaches, back and side
aches and pains all over my body. I
would have to go to bed everymonth
and nothing would do me good. My
husband and my father did my work e -
for me ae I have two children and ,
we have quite a big dace. I read ie..
the paper about Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, and then got a
little hook about it through the mail,
and my husband sent to Eaton's and
got me a bottle, and then we get
more from the store. I am feeling
fine :now and do all my work and an:
able
b e to %t is Lydia
more. I tell nay
y E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound that makes me feel
Go well. "—hire. VICTOR RICHARDSON,'
Barrington, Nova Scotia.
Dull Pains in lack
St.. Thomas, Ont..'-- "I took four
bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
teble Compound and found great re-
liefrfrom om tI e
1 dull heat
pains in , 9 the
small o•[ my back and the, weakness
from which -l -suffered for five years •
after my boy was born. After taking
the 'Vegetable Compound and usin •
Lydia E. Pinkham's. Sanative Wash I
ate feeling better than I have for the
past seven years, and advise my
friends to take it."—Mrs.F.Joneleort. -1
49 Moore Street, St. Thoma; Ont.'s r
CIJTICURA.
. ITCHY
StartedWitha.R h, H1 n roke
Out in Blisters,- Lost S!eere
1
' My daughter suffered with cc-
zan:s fir about a month. It started
first with ab rash and then b-:rtstt
ottt in blister:. It itched and b'=reed
a great deal, and she lost consider=
abis e panight on eceour:t of It.
"VThsel egot i nslt,g Canons' Scars
and Ointment a mi Afrera few appli-
cations
p ra.+:
-
cations the itching and burning
sensation stopped, 'VV'e contintod
the treatmr:i:t•and in two weeks she
was completely healed;" •(Sleeted)
Wt. Peter MacDonald, R. R. 1,
Proton Sta., Ont., Sept. O, 102: .
Malta Ctiticura .Soap 1.d et-
tient yotir evaty day tCti:5I't p()lrepa-
rotio*as and hatre a clear, swrrt
skin., soft, smooth hands and r
hesithy swiss with good hair. Czni•
otua TeTcurn unexcelled irt penny.
Satupic mots Free hy Atni1 . Ad i F dt:idl>wn
th•pntt {'At ebb, t Ltd., Jlisntto,.1. rloo, Sonr.
ntrtsennt qt unit 6p rnlae gee "
41,Jtkura ;h, 'tet c tate Go,,