HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1920-12-30, Page 2'Fora e Sufferer
Fibre -Flax Indu stry of Canada
From Her Kidneys 'the report of the Canadian Trade
, Commissioner in Ireland with refer-
When tlee kidneya get out of order
the baek J4 m to become affected,
and dull pains, sharp pains, quick
twingee all point to the faot that tlie
kidneye wed. attention.
Plaitere and liniments may relieve
for, e. abort time, but to get rd of these
pante you must get right at the seat of
the trooble. You caa do this by using
Doeree Kidney Pills and thus obtain
permenent
John Stephenson, 115 Stephen
St, Kiageion. Out. writes; ---"I certainly
mina praise your 'Doan's Kidney pills,
t,rriblt, sufferer from my kidneys.
I wottli have eevere liable in my back and
awful heed:echos1 beeante very weak,
and ju.st Me as it I were being dragged
dea-n. .1 tried one box of Doan's Kidney
Pills, alai to my sarpriee I felt better. I
could 1,7 ,rk hard all day, and my back
would not pain me at all. I can't praise
them too ranch."
Doan's Kidney Pills are 500. per box
at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt
of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Chet.
See Person Addressed by
Wireless Phone.
“Trzinsathuitie wireless telephonic
cammunieation is an accomplished
fact, and soon will be used on a large,
practical scale. I also believe an in-
vention will be perfected to the ex-
tent of enabling a person M New York
or Montreal to see the person with
whom he le speaking in London or
Paris," saki Professor Alexander Gra-
ham Bell, inventor of the telephone,
o. recent speech in London.
"An apparatus eeabling telephone
conversationalists" to see each other
is merely a form of wireless trans-
mission of light. Light travels on
waves the same as electricity, and I
believe it will soon be used 'hot only
for transatlantic telephonic coalman-
ication, but for telephone cable work
well,
ee have studied the Marconi wire -
leas telephone apparatus here, and dis-
cussed the- plans of that company for
intereational communication between
United States, Canada and England,
and when I think of the strides my
original !mention has taken within
the laet few aecades I realize that the
marvelous inventions which the world
will utiliee within the next hundred
years will require a mind of vaster
imaginatien than even Jules Verne's
to forecast. Such writers really in-
spire great inventions."
Pecks of Diamonds.
During the year 1919 South Africa
exported 1124 pounds of diamonds.
This quantity represented just about
125 quarts.
This vast quantity of precious stones
reduced to terms of bushels would
equal a trifle leas than four, or what
would be two ordinary grain bags full
of them. Naturally the stones in-
cluded a great number of very large
ones as well as many medium sized
end small onee.
3000 -Pound Beit.
Th t b i tl - •
I
e arges e n world was
recently made by a Philadelphia Birth Rate Plus Immigration.
manufacturer. It v-eighs 3,000 pounds
he ol er .countries of Euro e such
ence to the importation a Canadian
flee:seed wbich feppeared in the weekly
Bulletin of the Trade and Commerce
Department recently, contains eertain
itezns. of great importanee to those in-
terested iu this grewieg Industry.
. Though It leas been proved by ex-
perience and deemed that Canealan
seed is equal to Dutch Blue Flower, it
canaot be too strougly impressed on
the exeorter • that it is only seed
graded Number 1 that should be ex-
ported, The: Iriele Department of Ag-
riculture nee issuec1 e circular to all
importers tied many growers io lee -
land poluting, out the Amportance
the • Canadkui Geyernmeut certificate
and the merits of the 'wed, •
.There haye been a number of Cam
reported in which Cali:Wien seed hag
not given satisfaction. In 2 casee the
seed
was not libreellaX EI,t all, but len-
seed. Other cases have shoWn ger-
mination of only 6 per :lent and other
fettles but "only one case has as yet
erisen Where the Government inspect-
ed and graded seed is claimed to have
given trouble," and in this case the
farmer had bought half a bag and that
unsealed.
• .....
f
Althouga the eeea merelukilt Ire-
land Wider the law is not reepousible
fur germinatio result, he is rerpone-
ibis to whether the Engel will pro-
duce Ilex or libre flex, a resielt of Ms
being that last year, the Irielt Depart-
ment of Agriculture acting as a seller,
had to pay out a sum of .4e3,00 to
44,000 damages in the nee of Feed
melted nearly all by one laaniefilan
shipper. In no ease has our Govern -
meet grading been at fault; Me seed
had uot been inspected or geaded.
Tee Conuniseioner aling so polmit
the importance of the esporter liviug
UJ) to his centring. It was a 'blow to
the trade alma an inniorter eontracted
•
500 bags.
for 1,000 bags and aal-ad only obtain
The need for 'keeping tee Canadem
standard at the top • not eh is emplia-
sizea. by the severer competitioe ex-
pected in fibre geed.from Riga and Ja..
pan, It is also certain that the price
per bag wil be lower, probably a.bout
twcathirds of „the abnormal price In
1919.
As seed caunot, in the Irish elimate,
be stored • without deenioretiou for
any coesiderable time between its ar-
rival and the eowing of the crop, Cana-
dian seed is shitipea during jaeuary
and February.
WHERE CANADA
LEADS THE WORLD
GREATEST INCREASE IN
POPULATION.
Our Fair Dominion Undoubt-
edly Popular in the Eyes
of Emigrants.
Canada has led the world in the past
decade in the preportionel develop-
ment of. leer poteila:ion, and authentic
figures oive her a greater percentage
of increese in her people than any
other --country young or old.
The most recently publisher three-
ory gures, issued ; givethe
da
Dominion of Canaa population of
8,835,102. Return:, of the 1911 cen-
sus recorded a population of 7,206,643
' Canada.T1* , f the nine-
year period, an increase in the peo-
ple of Canada equal to more than
221/2 per tent., which will be found to
be greater than that experienced by
any other country. In the year 1871,
Canada's population was but 3,687,-
257, which gives for the period of
nearly fifty years an increase in popu-
lation of alinost 140 per cent.
Countries increase their population
in two ways -by natural reproduction
through births and by immigration.
The proportions in which these two
• factors enter into., the racial increase
• naturally varies according to the won -
'c t' • diff t tr• ,
the conditions of livelihood offered,
the quantities of available open land,
policies g-overning immigration and
other considerations.
and the toughest parts of the hides T d p ,
as the United Kingdom and France,
of 670 steers were required for ma -
increase the numbers of their citizens
terial. When set to work in a factory
almost wholly through the birth rate,
it will travel day and night at a speed
of a mila minute. for the addition from outeide souries.
e
through immigration is almost negli-
gible. Newer countries like the Am-
erican continent and the Dominions
of the British Empire find that their
multiplication comes to them at an ad-
vanced rate through immigration,
which a healthy birth rate augments.
The birth rate, of course, varies
largely with different countries, as
does the percentage of infant mortal-
ity, both of which are rnatters of con-
sideration in computing population
increases.
The United States Census Bureau
has announced that as a rezult of the
census figures recently concluded, an
increase of 14.9 per cent, is recorded
for the Republic for the decade just
passed, as compared with an -increase
of 21 per cent. for the decade just
1910. The bureau accounts for the
, falling off largely by the decline in
immigration. The United State, as
a country largely built up, whilst still
• attracting and having a yearly immi-
gration of considerable extent, has a
status somewhere between the older
European countries and the newer
British Dominions, and its last census
figures form an equitable basis from
which to delve into the population in -
1 creases of other countries. The -pro-
f
onstipation
Headach s
When your liver gets sluggish and
inactive your whole health suffers
Your bowels become cens;apated, bead
aches tongue coated, breath bad, speclu
fioat 'before your eye, you are bilious
ha,ve hearthuen, water brash, jaundice:
etc.
Use Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills tc
make the liver reeuuee its proper functione
by remov:ng the bile that is circulating
in the blood and poisoning the systera.
Mr. Le Roy Allen, Springfield, N. 8.,
writes.: -"I deeire to express my thanks
for the relief Milburn's Lexa-Livea
Pills have given me. I had been suffering
from coastipation for three years, and
alsathed bad headaches. I tried all sorts
of remedies, but got no relief, until my
grandfather told me about your pills.
I tried them and soon got, rellef, and now
I would not be without them in my
home."
Milburn'! Laxa-Liver Pills are small
and easy to take, do not gripe, weaken or
Sicken like the drastie purgatives do.
Priee 25e. a vial at all dealers, or
mailed direct on receipt of pries by The
Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto„ Ont.
terse!cmccsearck-nmeguracesemelanom5aicassa,-,42astmeanentaanwonsenneuen
-
4.
Do not dwell on your dis-
appointments, your unfor-
tunate surroundings or
harbor black pictures in
your mind. Do not dwell
upon what you call your
peculiarities. Hold to the
belief that the Creator
made you in His own image,
a perfectly normal, healthy
happy and sensible human
being, and that any other
condition is the result of
your abnormal thinking.
amt.. ven,
Ttqw.r.'s4)
socteittm./
lisoml-
.4*0 49
$01 thooSaft.
•
Garteort„ t-onewee tiun Up eno riim uuvvt.,
the multitude of intending. emigrants How They Saved -the
from the -British Isles.: under the
scheme of the Overseas attloment
Committee declared themselves as he -
kg overwhelmingly in favor of Can-
ada as their future bourne. When in
addition to this, the heavy influx of
settler a from tbe United States is
taken into acco ant, this healer devel-
opment is accounted for -7
It Must also be taken into consid-
eration that the period uncier review
included the Neer years when immigra-
tion to Canada from overseas was at
a standstill, and that from the United
States fell off owing to the change
brought about in economic conditions.
Viewing the tremendous resumption
of the flow this year from both sour-
ces, Canada can confidently look for-
ward to a yet greater growth in the
) numbers of her citizens in the com-
ae• ing years, and the review at the end
of the next decade will, in all pro-
cess reveals some interesting figures b blet record figures
hitherto
from a Canadian standpoint. attained in the development of a new
Canada's Increase 221/2 Per Cent. land.
Canada's increase of more than 22% e
per cent. in the past ,decade naturally
TRAINS CAN'T RUN
leaves the older countries, depending
on their birth rate for increase, very TO MOUNT OF OLIVES
far in the lurch, for few European - -
countries achieved a. populatien in- The Governor of Jerusalem
crease in this period equal to five per
cent.
But the fairer comparison is with
the newer countries of the world, the
other Dominione of the British Em-
pire, where conditions making for
growth are similar multiplication
coming largely from the yearly tide luncheon by the Overseas Club and
of inugrants. Here, too, it is found Patriotic League. Among his own acts
that Canada has gained an aseenclan- as Governor, said Storrs, was one to
cy of considerable extent and all these prohibit drink bars, as they seemed
countries
, left wellh' s.
• a) wholly out of itee,ping with the sur -
Australia, for instance, which had raundings, and the High Commission -
a population of 5,140,543 last year, in- er had extended this proposition to
creased over the 1911 census by the whole.of Palestine. His reply to
slightly more than 17 per cent. The a request for a concession to run
adjacent Dominion of New Zealand trams to Bethlehem and the Mount of
with a present population of 1,139,014 Olives was that the first rail section
made an increase of population in the would be laid over the body of the
same period of nearly 13 per cent. In Governor. He bad forbidden the use
the eight year Perikd ending June, of stucco and corrugated iron within
1919, the Union of South Africa in- the walls, and also the destruction of
creased its white population by be- buildings without permission.
tween 9 and 10 per cent. Thus Can-
ada with a decade increase of 22% .e.
per tent. not only surpasses European Monday is Always a Bad Day.
countries but has a substantial sur- He was a very popular cueate, says
plus over those next in order where the London Morning Poet, and when
the .process of settlement is. still going, Ire left the country parish he was
on, and similar attractions and condi- i greatly Missed by everyone. His suc-
tions are le.elcl •out as inducement to (gasser was not much of a countryman.
emigrants. . When he went to call on old Mother
- Tribute eo Dominions Popularity. 1 Brown elm Monday'afternoon, she
These figures constitute a glowingtook his education in hand.
I
tribute to Canada,'s popularity in the "I be main sorry tother curick's
eyes of emigrants. Canada is un-, gone," she said, "for this I will say
doubtedly popular. This is once more for that there curick: he aline did
indicated in the recent statement that know when 'twos washing day."
Guards Holy Places Against
Modernization.
A deepatch from London says en -
Ronald Storrs, Governor of Jerusalem,
who described himself as the successor
of Pontius Pilate, was entertained at
SASKATC H EWA N
Potatoes
1915ithapJLAIle13
19162 9 9
1917a
17
991
MS.C.IESSVON241,==a0111.01P
'I •
e
SASKATCHEWAN'S POTATO 'PRODUCTION
.This chart shows how tbe potato praduetian in the province of Sae-
katchenran has increased and decreased during the last six years. It will
Ainsdale,
The Ales.dale was a threenna,sted
steel sailing shin of 1825 gross- tone.
She weal:me of thud splendid vessels
writes Mr, Ralph E. Cropley he the
NearecoYesotarketlEyTetensiltietd etstc;411,ageVielaincidi
the resourcefulness of nninkindn. On.
the night of February 5, 1917,,, in a
gale and a heavy ,see, she Was fired:
upon by a submarine without Warning,
and her craw Were given five ipinittee-
isa Which to leave the vessel. The
next morning they were picked up by
atpassing ship and taken into port.
But the Ainsd.ale did, net :sink. Six
days later she was •eighted by the
tramp Seamer Baeutd. Thinking she
might be a, decoy, With a submarine
lurking in the neighborhood, the mis-
ter of the ,Basuto approached her
gingerly as she lolled and yawed in
a eel sea. Finally the chief officer,
by mine of MacDonald, persuaded the
master to :let hieneput a lifeboat over
and visit the derelict._ By good sea-
manship the trip was made, and thy
got close in under the lee and boarded
the Ake:dale. A cat, a parrot and a
monkey were the only living things
thnt they found.
A. hurried survey causedalacDonald
The
dig illarketL
Toronto.
•M aril to lwheet-.-No. 1 . Northern,
$1.94%; No. 2 Northern, ?1,9t%; No.
3 Northern, $1,87%; No. 4 wheat,
$1.40%.
• Minitel* cate-No. 2 CW, 521/2c;
No. 3 CW, 49%c; extra No. 1 feed,'
49%c; No. 1 feed, 47%e; No. 2 feed,
44% c.
Manitoba barley -No. 8 CW, 91%e;
No. 4 CW, 83e; rejected, 6814,c; feed,
All of the Above in store at Fort
American corn -$1..15a nominal,
track;' Toronto, prompt ehrpneent,
Ontario oats -No, 2 wh!te, 50 to 53e.
• Ontario wheat -No. 2 Winter, $1.85
to $1,90 per car lot; No, 2 Spring,
$1.80 t $i.$5, shipping points, accord -
big to freight.
Pcae-No, 2, nominal, $1,75 to $1.80.
Barley -85 to pc, acecrding to
freights outside.
Beekwheat-No. 3, $1 to $1,05, nom-
inal.
Rye --.-No. 3, $1.50 to $1.55, nominal,
according to feeighis outside.
Manitoba Mtn. --$11.10, top patents;
$10.60, Goveenment, standard.
Ontario flotre--$7.75'Milk, seaboard,
Millfeed---Car lots, delivered Mont-
real freights, hags included: Bran, per
top, $88 to $210; Shorts, per ton, 342;
good feed flour, 32.75 to $00.
Cheese -New, large, 26 to 27c;
twins, 27' bo 28e; triplets,. 28 to 29e;
old, large, 32 to 35e; do, twins, 32%
t0 83c. 831/2c.
Butter-Freeli deary. choice, 49 to
a0c; creamery, No, 1, 55 to 58e. fresh,
58 to 61c.
Margarine -35 to .37G..
• Eggs -No. 1,09to 72e; selects, 76
• to .78c; new laid, in cartons, 85 to 90c.
Beaus--Canachan hand-picked, bus.,
$3.75 to. $4.20; primes,. $3 .to 33.50;
Japaes, 91/4c; Limes, Madagascar,
10%.ca California, Limas, 12%c.
IvIa.ple products -Syrup, per imp.
gal.'33.40 to $3.50; per 5 imp. gals.,
33.25 to $3.40, Maple sugar, lb.,- 27
to 30e.
Honey -60 -30 -lb. tins, 25 to 26c per
Ib. Ontario comb honey; at 37.50 per
1.5 section case; 5% -2% -lb. tins, 26
to 27c tier lb. a
Smoked meats -Hams, med. 40 to
42e; heavy, 38 to 40c; cooked, 55 to
58e; rolls, 35 to 37c; cottage rolls, 37
to 89c; breakfast bacon, 45 to 49c;,
fancy breakfaet bacon, 53 to 56e;
backs, plain. bone in, 49 to. 54e; bone-
less, 55 to 59e. •
Cued reezus-Long clear bacon, 27
to 28c; clear bellies, 29 to 27e.
Lard -Pure tierces, 25 to 26e; tubs,
26 to 26%c; nails, 26aa to 26%c;
prints, 28 to 20c. Compound tierces,
17 to 18e; tubs, 171/2 to 181/2.c; pails,
18% to 20e; prints, 21 ..to 22e.
Choice heavy steers, $12 to $13,50:
good heavy steers, $10.50to $11; but-
chers' cattle, choice; $9.50 to $10; do,
good, $8 to $9; do, med.. $6 to "$7; de,
coin., $5 to $5,50; butchers' bulls,
choice, $8 to $9.50; do, good, $7 to $8;
do. come $5 to $6;• butchers cows,
choice, $.7.50 to $8.50; do. good, $6.25
to $7; do, corn., $4 to $5; feeders, -best,
$9 to $10; do. 900 lbs., $8.50 to 39.50.
do, 800 lbs.. $7.75 to $8.25; do, coin.,
$5.2e to 36.25; canners and tutters, 33
to 34.50; milkers, good to choice, 3100
to $165; do, corn, arid med., 865 to 375;
lambs. yearlings. $9 to $9.50; do,
Sowing, $11 to 312; ealve.s, good to
choice, $1atOE , 1e. 1 - re
• t S •
hogs, fed and watered, 316 to $16.25;
do, vreighed off tars, $16.25 to 316,50;
do, f.o.b., 315 to 315.25; do, country
points, $14.75 to 315.
Montreal.
Oats -Can.. West.. No. 2, 72%c; No.
3,-691/2c. Flour -Man. Spring wheat
patents, firsts, 311.10. Rolled oats-
D'ags, 90 lbs., 33.80. Bran, $40.25.
Shorts, 342.25.- Hay, No. 2, per ton,
car lots, 331 to 399
Cheese -Finest easterns, 19 to 21e;
Butter, choicest creel-11ml, 53 to 55c;
Eggs, fresh, 72e. Potatoes, per bag,
ear lots, $1.60 to $1.70.
Good veal, $12 to $13; med., $9 to
$12; grass, $4.50 to $5. Hogs, selects,
$17 to $17.50; sows, $13 to 13.50.
to feel that there was a .chance of sav-
ing the derelict, even though German
I shots had carried away her steering
wheel, broken her standard compass
. and punctured her top sides full of
holes. She had.be baclly sweptb
the seas, for rope -ends steeamecl here,
and there and overbeara in every
di-
rertic.s-s; and everything movable above
decks had been carried away' by the
sea.
Eight men volunteered to stand by
and assist MacDonald. A jury steering
wheel was rigged, and the Basuto at-
tempted to take the Ainsdale in tow.
Owing to the wind mid the heavy sea,
alt attempts were unsuccessful; so
eventually the Basuto proceeded on
her voyage, leaving the derelict to the
resourcefulneete of nine men, who had
to do the work of a normal crew of
twenty-five.
MacDonald alone of the nine knew
navigation and had been en a sailing
ship before. And these nine men, dur-
ing twelve and a half days of vile
winter weather, worked a waneelog-
ged and shindy sinking ship whose
rigging had been partly decimated by
German shell fire. Though terrific
squalls..pounded against her, the sod-
den Ainsdale rode the sea; and her
nine inen worked Like mermen, half
of the time submerged.
By the eleVenth day all the provi-
sions that they had left were some
biscuits Althoug,h the standard com-
pass was not dependable and the
chronometer had run down, MacDon-
ald found, on falling in with a coast'
patrol ship, that lie was only five
miles out of his dead reckoning.
- But MeteDonald's troubles were not
over when the tug Flying Buzzard
eeme to tow hirn in. For a head gale
sprang up with a heavy sea, and the
towing had to be stopped while the
tug sought shelter, leaving the
Ans-
dale to drift for over a clay with her
sails in ribbons., Yet the Ainsclale
made port -made port because a man
is "never licked till he's dead." Mn -
Donald might have said, "'Tanis be-
cause she's a blooming Flying Dutch-
man, and there Was no killing the old
beast." An admiralty court thought
.differentay and saw to it that MacDon-
he notieed that in 1919 eleven million bushels were erawn from the 5011, aid and his crew were fitly rewarded: per head.
SETTLERS FROM U.S.
WELL EQUIP,?ED
Immigrants to Canada in 1920
Total 50,000.
A. despatch from Oita wa says: -
United States catizene aoming into
Canada to lake up residence here age
bringing with them considerable
wealth, according to statistics of the
Immigration Department. The amovet
of cash and the velem' ol: settlers' ef-
fects together in the eleven months I
ending November aggregated 317,519,- I
033. December will add anotherniell-
lion. Froni all enurces immigration by
the end of -the rear is expected to
total 50,000. The resourees of the or-
dinary immigrant from overseas are
not as great as of tbose from the
States. The average is about 3372
.......71.M711========sWantsciZ305-41,9t4r4=1.101L415.90M,reanteftsims.VInte.MeeirmirlitlxVollrAGIMICKMMINURVOME<C1.0A8MMAVEMINAKtr....1.1.19161111L71:1110==.11...21.1,11,71.=1Wirliq:
• It's a Great Life If. You Don't Weaken, ,Nirakt;,..,m,;- By JackRabbit
gen
WHOOPING
COUGH
Her 3 Children Ned 11.
• This disease beglite like a, &niple coYa"
in the head that repidly goo to the
elleSt.. The cotte,h is at firet shot and
eherP, but greduallyineetiaees isa severity
and occurs in euddefi epeanis.
Often voeniting, follows a severe attack
of coughing, and sometimes there is nose-
bleed.
Mothers should never neglect the
treatment of whooping cough, for it is
much more serious than most people
thhak, as it may be followed by some
grave lung trouble, steal as bronchitis,
meow:novae or consumption., Since the
sufferers power f resistance are often
geoatlY eveakened by the violent aud
exhausting cough.
On the first sign of a "whoop", Dr.
Wood's Norway Pine Syrup should be .
administered as it helps to clear the
bronchial tubes of the collected mucous
and phlegm.
Mrs. Burton Leopold, New Ross, N.S.,
writes: -"My three children had the
whooping, cough so bad last Winter, I
thee:gilt they would choke. I tried many
different remedies, but none of them
seemed to help. At last 1 got a bottle
of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and
I was greatly surprised to see haw quickly
it helped them.- I shall always recom-
mend ,your wonderftil remedy to others."
• Dr. --Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is
35e. and 60c, a bottle at all druggists
and d,ealers. Put up only by The T.
Milburn. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Don't Dwell.
Don't dwell," said an em-
ployer to one -of his .inen,
He meant don't dilly-dal-
ly. When you finish with
a thing go at once to the
next.
Idling, dwelling on a
thing after you have finish-
ed with it, will spoil your
mind for alertness, effec-
tiveness, dispatch.
Dispatch is everything in
business. It makes the
short day long and enables
you to accomplish in a brief
time what it requires a long
time .for other people -to do
.--people who dwell over
finished jobs.
They Are Not Wearing Them So -Mu
During a visit to our army fill
France. says an English periodical,
Ring George told one of his officers
the following amusing atory:
I wa.s making a round of the fren
when I passed a group, Gr Aro
soldiers. One man observed In
ly and called to' a comrade, "H y, Min •
there' e the King!"
"What d'ye Mean, the King?" his
comrade shouted back.
"Right there," answered the other;
"that chap there!" •
"Get out!" was the Indignant
'-He ain't no king. Where's his
crown?' '
Britain's Christmas box to Canada
new lees at anchor in Halifax in the
shape of the destroyers Patriot and
Patrician, the cruiser ,Aurora, and
submarines H01.4 and 15, They were
fornially welcomed by a distinguished
group of officials headed by the GoVe
errior-General, on behalf al .tlio peo-
ple of Canada.
. If invalids and people in
poor health could only bold
persistently t h e ' perfect
image of themselves, and,
no matter haV,r much it may
howl in pain for recogni-
tion, refuse to see the sick,
discordant, i perf ect
i in g e, the harmony
thought, the tnuth thought
would soon neutralize their
opposites and they would
be well.
......e.m.tessonora.4.0•?3,44t.r.,!..00 •
r
Does it
Pakaitate?
The eomponent parts ol Milburn'
Heart and Nerve Pals are indicated to
do away -with palpitation and other
heart IvealmeSs:4 ;tud thus strengthen
both the hare and nerves.
Mrs. F. tYC. Gauthier, afalbury, One,
evnites: --aDuring 25 years past I was
gregly 'Troubled with palpitatioii of the
netteti, ansi sornetimes so inuch,so that
those arouud me thought I would did
at any moment, being SO rinich Weakened
by the sharpness of the pahaitatlen
which would last somethries up to three
hour, bis
1 i sham,„te
dhi.nincico'cit,or e_rh.rLItilceirneni• me
- r ,
disease, out to ne (meet, nere waa
no chatigeeab all for the better.
Two years ago a friend athririOd inc to
use Milburn's Ifeare end Norvo Pins.
I began to use them at once, aod st the
Rowed box 1 began to fes1 some relief, so
continued to use them a0dOrding to
directions, and now I am perfeetly well.
Before tieing the. pills I nw
ever eighed
100' pounds, now wadi, 117, and feel
as if were young although ), am over
66'years of age,"
Milburb's Heart sad Nerve Pills are
50cre. box Mall dealere, maiioc1 direct
on receipt, of price by The T. Milburn
Co. Limited, Toronto, Oet.
$
1 BELIE\I.
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PRESSED %elder..
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WHOOPING
COUGH
Her 3 Children Ned 11.
• This disease beglite like a, &niple coYa"
in the head that repidly goo to the
elleSt.. The cotte,h is at firet shot and
eherP, but greduallyineetiaees isa severity
and occurs in euddefi epeanis.
Often voeniting, follows a severe attack
of coughing, and sometimes there is nose-
bleed.
Mothers should never neglect the
treatment of whooping cough, for it is
much more serious than most people
thhak, as it may be followed by some
grave lung trouble, steal as bronchitis,
meow:novae or consumption., Since the
sufferers power f resistance are often
geoatlY eveakened by the violent aud
exhausting cough.
On the first sign of a "whoop", Dr.
Wood's Norway Pine Syrup should be .
administered as it helps to clear the
bronchial tubes of the collected mucous
and phlegm.
Mrs. Burton Leopold, New Ross, N.S.,
writes: -"My three children had the
whooping, cough so bad last Winter, I
thee:gilt they would choke. I tried many
different remedies, but none of them
seemed to help. At last 1 got a bottle
of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and
I was greatly surprised to see haw quickly
it helped them.- I shall always recom-
mend ,your wonderftil remedy to others."
• Dr. --Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is
35e. and 60c, a bottle at all druggists
and d,ealers. Put up only by The T.
Milburn. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Don't Dwell.
Don't dwell," said an em-
ployer to one -of his .inen,
He meant don't dilly-dal-
ly. When you finish with
a thing go at once to the
next.
Idling, dwelling on a
thing after you have finish-
ed with it, will spoil your
mind for alertness, effec-
tiveness, dispatch.
Dispatch is everything in
business. It makes the
short day long and enables
you to accomplish in a brief
time what it requires a long
time .for other people -to do
.--people who dwell over
finished jobs.
They Are Not Wearing Them So -Mu
During a visit to our army fill
France. says an English periodical,
Ring George told one of his officers
the following amusing atory:
I wa.s making a round of the fren
when I passed a group, Gr Aro
soldiers. One man observed In
ly and called to' a comrade, "H y, Min •
there' e the King!"
"What d'ye Mean, the King?" his
comrade shouted back.
"Right there," answered the other;
"that chap there!" •
"Get out!" was the Indignant
'-He ain't no king. Where's his
crown?' '
Britain's Christmas box to Canada
new lees at anchor in Halifax in the
shape of the destroyers Patriot and
Patrician, the cruiser ,Aurora, and
submarines H01.4 and 15, They were
fornially welcomed by a distinguished
group of officials headed by the GoVe
errior-General, on behalf al .tlio peo-
ple of Canada.
. If invalids and people in
poor health could only bold
persistently t h e ' perfect
image of themselves, and,
no matter haV,r much it may
howl in pain for recogni-
tion, refuse to see the sick,
discordant, i perf ect
i in g e, the harmony
thought, the tnuth thought
would soon neutralize their
opposites and they would
be well.
......e.m.tessonora.4.0•?3,44t.r.,!..00 •
r
Does it
Pakaitate?
The eomponent parts ol Milburn'
Heart and Nerve Pals are indicated to
do away -with palpitation and other
heart IvealmeSs:4 ;tud thus strengthen
both the hare and nerves.
Mrs. F. tYC. Gauthier, afalbury, One,
evnites: --aDuring 25 years past I was
gregly 'Troubled with palpitatioii of the
netteti, ansi sornetimes so inuch,so that
those arouud me thought I would did
at any moment, being SO rinich Weakened
by the sharpness of the pahaitatlen
which would last somethries up to three
hour, bis
1 i sham,„te
dhi.nincico'cit,or e_rh.rLItilceirneni• me
- r ,
disease, out to ne (meet, nere waa
no chatigeeab all for the better.
Two years ago a friend athririOd inc to
use Milburn's Ifeare end Norvo Pins.
I began to use them at once, aod st the
Rowed box 1 began to fes1 some relief, so
continued to use them a0dOrding to
directions, and now I am perfeetly well.
Before tieing the. pills I nw
ever eighed
100' pounds, now wadi, 117, and feel
as if were young although ), am over
66'years of age,"
Milburb's Heart sad Nerve Pills are
50cre. box Mall dealere, maiioc1 direct
on receipt, of price by The T. Milburn
Co. Limited, Toronto, Oet.
$