HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-8-25, Page 7t
1{rt
OUR FISHERIES
PRODUCTION 1920
REPORT OF BUREAU OF
STATISTICS
Shows Steady and Maintained
Development of Canada's
Wonderful Waters,.
The total value of the fisheries pro-
duction of Canada In 1920 was $49,-
021,217, according to a preliminary re-
port prepared by the Dominion Bureau
at Statistics. This shows a decrease
from the previous year of $7,187,262,
which is, however, to be accounted
for by the general decline in prloes
experienced during this period. In
every.oateh there was an increase in
quantity, amounting to substantial
prorortions In cases, and the Dominion
teas reason to be satisfied with the re.
cord of the year as recording -a steady
and maintained development of her
wonderful waters,
Salmon continued to bold the pre-
mier place among Canadian fish in
point of value accounting for a sum
of $15,595,970, ornearly ono third of
the total value. Lobsters cane next
with $7,152,456; cod, $6,270,171; hali-
but, 4,530,188; Herring, $3,337,738;
evhitcflsh, $1,992,107; haddock, $1,552,-
680; and mackerel, $1,126,703. Trout,
sardines, smite, pickerel and pil-
chards came in the order maned be-
tween a million and a half million dol-
lars in value.
British Columbia to the Fore.
Her gigantic salmon catch keeps
British Columbia to the fore among
the provinces of Canada, and in 1920
oho continued In the supremacy with
a fisheries' value of 922,329,161, Nova
Scotia, with her fertile sea. fisheries,
assumes Remand place with 912,742,-
659. Following In order are New
Brunswick, $4,423,743; Ontario, $3,-
410,750;
3;410,750; Quebec, 52,591,982; Prince
Edward Miami, 91,714,663: Manitoba,
$1,24e,607: Alberta, $529,078; Sas-
katchewan, $290,472; and the Yukon,
$33,100.
The amount pf capital represented
in tie vessels, boats, nets, traps, piers,
end wharves, etc., engaged In the
printery operations of catching and
heeling the fish during the year 1920
was 529,063,359. The number of en1-
iloyeos engaged in these operations
was e7,660. In fish canning and cur.
Mg establishments h is there was a suer
of $40,-2,265 it,ve::tee, and those
p!a!,is gave employment to a total of
t,,199 a urh people,
Happenings in Canada.
11: 11(c:l lulu. -tries Crrpnredion
tit
ele et e•'snon moo c tit. tructior, et
:<t. 1.1 toff. f.•tt:r.r.g plata en Indus-
1..1r.el, tiers ri2tile'e
l 2 i1•,'t ', honeso111be
mel ;e: fer ail staneard grain
1ti,:1 i ,..!:•,y :nat'ltinee.
it t a t 1tcly ar ueunred that
the i'r 1 Rupert Pulp dud Paper
(',•mt'i,,,y will It" .:plead at once with
t.;1 ai:•eetien et the Met unit of its
tai Lunercd tun per d:,y sull:hitC 01111,
hav`u* an initial output of forty tous
per day. Tills cantpauy- recently par-
ch: -eel tbo BrItish C'olmnhitt holdings
of the North Empire Timber Company,
apprr-ximetely 1,000,000,000 feet, of
which fully ninety per cent. is spruce
and hemlock,
A large shipment of threshing ma-
chines to Palestine is being made by
Sawyer -.Massey Company of Toronto.
An order amounting to about $40,000
has also been received from Kingston,
Jamaica, for road machinery. Thea
order 1s the result of a shipment of
890,000 of road machinery which was
to the same destination in the spring.
Work is being rushed on the plans
for the erection of a model town at
Kapuskasing, Ont., by the Spruce'9'a11s
Pulp end Paper Company, During the
past year the Spruce Falls Company
exm,ruded $4,000,000 in development
three, while only 92,500,000 is required
f0 (:'ulplele the work. The plant when.
completed will be able to handle 20,-
000 beard feet of lumber per year. The
compo tv is 1100 censidering the erec-
tion of . i pulp mill and power plant.
It M reported that gold hunters are
&wationee over the country drained by
the el ap.ho River, New Brunswick,
duel panning the sands of the stream
In search of the yellow metal. The
preseeetere are looking for the Gil-
bertson Inde, The story is told how
Gfleertsca made n canoe trip up the
river some sixty years ago, and while
making camp for the night, came
across a large body of gold -beating
ore. Not knowing `what it was he took
ltonie a large piece to use as a door
weight. Sometime later a geologist
visiting Odlborlson identified the ore,
and a mad rush to stake claims along
the Wapslho River ensued. Gilbertson
refused to tell where he found the are,
Later he became insane and died with-
out revealing the secret. This season
a systematic search is being spade,
The new Furness -Bermuda line sum-
mer cruises from Now York to Quebec
limy been lnhugurated with the arrival
at Quebec of the Fort St, George with
150 passengers. This is the first time
that a summer service has been run-
ning between the American and Cana-
dian ports since pre-war days. The
round trip takes twelve days,
The ooast lino of England is 2,200
miles long.
Chalk is formed almost entirely
from the shells of creatures which
once lived in the water. Wherever we
see chalk in a $tato of nature the
know that a 500 or lake once occupied
µhe site.
LISTLESS, I0EE ISII - tA,Atie1J
When .a girl lit bar teens bccomei
peovialt, hatless and dull, when edit.
Ing seems to Internet her and dalntloe
do not tenlpt her appetite, you utay
bo certain that ells. needs more good
bleed than her system is provided
with. Before long her pallid cheekier
frequent hendaehee, and breathless -
mete and heart palpitation will conn
hl'm Wet o a is anaemic. Many moth-
ers as the result of their own girlhood
experience can promptly detect the
early Signs of anaemia, and the wise
mother does not wait for the trouble.
to develop further, but at onoo gives
her daughter a course with Dr, Wtl.
Ilnms'
Pink Pills, which renew tete
blood supply and banish auaeala be-
fore it has obtalued a hold upon the
system.
Out of their experience thousands
of mothers know that anaenla is the
sure road to worse ills, They know
the differeaco that good red blood
makes in the development of womanly
health. Every headache, every gasp
for breath that follows the slightest.
exertion by the anaemic girl, every
pain sho suffers- in icer back and limbs
are reproaches if you have not taken
the best steps to give your weak girl
new blood, 000 the only sure way to
do so is through the use of Dr. Wile
Items' Pink Pills.
New, rich red blood Is infused into
the system by every dose of these
pills. From this new rich blood
springs good health, an increased ap-
petite, new energy, high spirits and
perfect womanly development. Give
your daugbter Dr, Williams' Pink Pills,
and take them yourself and note how
promptly their Influence is felt in bet-
ter health.
You can get Giese pills through any
dealer in medicine or by mail post-
paid at 50 Dents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The ler. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Oat.
--C
Depressing Conditions.
Doctor ---"Your trouble is dyspepsla.
You should laugh heartily before and
after meals."
Patient — "Impossible, doctor. I
cook them mysolt and then I wash the
(Belies."
Mlnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia
FLAGMAGGING
AND SIGNALLING
PLAYS IVIG FART IN LIFE
OF BRITISH NAVY.
During Battle of Jutland More
Than 3,500 Signals Were Ex-
changed by Our Ships.
Seaside holiday-makers, particularly
those who are near a naval port, Faust
often wonder what the various nage
mean which they aoe hoisted in ;Mips
that pees to and fro. To -day the redis-
tribution of the world has brought into
existence 'suelt a number of new na-
tional flags that even the experienced
signal officer dads it difficult to .re-
member them all,
Czeoho-Slovakia, Danzig, Memel and
Russiahave all got national flags, with
variations for the ensign, the mercau.
tllo flag, and the President's standard;.
and some countries like Finland go so
far as to have a special flag for so un-
important a person asthe commander
of a half.flotilla of torpedo -boats,
It would be fnhpoasible to memorize
ail those nage. The Admiralty pro-
duces a heavy volume for the use of
the signal staffs which is called the
"Admiralty Flag Book," in which they
are all set out In their sizes', and guar -
Wrings, and forkings, and other dis-
tinguishing marks.
With Different Meanings.
Every ship is expected, by interna-
tional law, to show her national colors,
and all the principal merchant ships,
passenger and cargo, fly a haw flag
as well, to show who the owners are.
Some of these flags are as well-known
as the Teuton Zack, or the Tricolor—
flags like thoseof the Cunard Line,
the Compagnie Gerenale Trans-Atian-
aqua, and the Navigazlone Generale
Italiana, for example, But there are
hundreds of others as well, and all of
them convey a meaning to the sea-
farer.
The really chatty Raga are the little
oddly -patterned squares and triangles
that are hoisted at the yardarm in
grout's, The Navy has fifty-nine of
HEALTH EDUCATION
..� EV DR. J. J. MIDDLE T OIS
Provincial Board of Health, Ontario
Dr, Middleton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat-
, ters through this column. Address him at the Parliament Bldgs,
Tomato.
•
Heat stroke and heat exhaustion
often occur in het weather, with seri-
, our. results. Not infrequently we hear
' of middle-aged men and women col-
' lapsing and dying on account of the
heat, especially if there is much hum-
idity with the high temperature.
These cases nearly always occurring
on the street, show the need of pre-
cautions on the part of the individual
in guarding himself or herself from
excessive and prolonged exposure to
the sun's rays. A somewhat common
praeticc and a bad practice is for men
on holiday to go through the heat of
the day without any head covering
in order to encourage the growth of
the hair. Sun stroke sometimes oc-
curs as a result, and in some cases has
proved fatal. Living in apartment
houses during the hot weather where
-no great amount of through draft is
available, is a frequent cause of heat
exhaustion, especially among those of
middle life and old age. Arrange-
ments should be made if possible to
avoid stuffy apartments during the
summer months, but the present hous-
ing shortage stakes it difficult for
some city dwellers to change their
abode during the hot weather and the
results are particularly debilitating.
In case of children, it is a practical
impossibility to keep thole well in
summer if cooped up in acpartmehts or
tenements. Babies must be given
special attention, and mothers living
in crowded or closely built up quar-
ters shculd keep (heir infants in
rooms cm the ground floor, that are
shaded and ventilnte:I. The upper
stories of houses are usually very
warm, especially during the afternoon
and evening when the sun's rays have
been beating on the roof for some
hours. Babies should, when possible,
be kept out-of-doors on the shady
side of the street, or in spots not ex-
posed
p to the sun's rays. . 1
ys The clothing
of the baby should consist only of a
loose cotton wrap, the alms and legs
being left bare. It is especially im-
portant that the baby should be bath-
ed daily, so that proper evaporation
may take place front the body.
During the Beat of the day, persons
advanced in years should avoid tlhe
crowded streets and thoroughfares
and confine themselves to the parks,
public squares and other shady spots,
which will afford then comfort and
relief.
People should wear light-colored,
light -weight clothing during the sum-
mer, and dark clothes should be avoid-
ed as they absorb the heat rays and
make the wearer uncomfortably hot.
Indoor workers should have win-
dows and doors open to create a draft,
and the light should be suppressed, so
as not to let in the full glare of the
sun. The clothing worn indoors must
be loosely woven., and of either cotton
or silk. Everybody should try to
avoid henry and excitement as these
only intensify the heat, but healthful
exercise is beneficial even in hot wea-
ther. It is officially noted that men
in the tropics who do strenuous work
and play, enjoy better health than the
ladies resident there who take prac-
tically no exercise. Bathe daily anti
take a sponge bath at night before
retiring, so as to induce sleep. Dur-
ing (tot weather keep occupied and do
not discuss the weather constantly.
It only aggravates the discomfort and
tends to make others irritable as well
as oneself. Eat sparingly, and avoid
moats and beet -producing foods. Let
the diet consist largely of salads and
fruits, and the thirst may be quenched
by cold water, weak tea, lemonade or
buttermilk. Above all, keep cheerful.
Have ytu notice
hon many asF your neighbors
have changed. from tea or
coffee to
InrJ
The smooth, rich flavor of
this cereal beverage appeals
to the taste, and ft is free
from any eleilaertt of harm. 1
Better 'nights and br€ghter
mornings usually result
from Potst.u>n!ft in >Istce o
tea o1' Coco. ' •`i ,. .
11 „
It � ern a Rea vettY
,famn,nt00101 ,eel,nl 001001 ty, t 0 )* 1 1 ,O,r,,,,,, [, „ r100
..a.Al g2VEnAOIrM1.,,
inn.lmall &twirl HOMO,
Postern l re I CempO2Y
these, the fret twenty-six of which'r
present the alphabet, the ronhaiode
being numbers, and special t10;5 sun
.a "les, No," "Prepare," " dud t,
on. The lnternatl,na'i ende le, shortie
and diffcrent, There are enly' 1h
''twenty-six letters to the alphabet an
ono' over to servo 01 an answering pe
dant,
Most readers of nautical stories hav
h
heard of the Blue 1 cion, but few r
oogniz0.it when they see 1t heisted. 1
is a blue flag with a white spuarc 1
the centre, and stands for the letter
in the alphabet. Many who think the
know mistake tate white -flag with
blue aquaro fn the centre for the 131u
Peter. .It le, in paint of fact, the let-
ter 0, and the signal "I require a
, pilot."
Tho' Blue POter 10 the Navy, how-
ever, has quite a different meaning,
1 It Is rife nu:nerieai sign for "zero,"
while the international pilot flag in
the Navy is net S all, but V.
Another cau:-a Ol contusion to the
landsman is the quarantine *lag. The
"Q" flag, a yellow square, is used for
thte in the international Bede, and
many people think it means that there
113 plague on board. It duos not. The
flag for that Is L, made of equal yel-
low and black squares, the first yel-
low square being in the rep corner
near the staff,
o'
r
11
0
r'.
e
d
a -
e
e-
t
n
P
y
a
0
Rubbing It In.
Signalling with flags was not much.
practised iu the merchant service be-
fore the war, and musing with sema-
phore or flashing lamp was little
known. It is recorded of a famous
merchant skipper that on one occa-
sion, fancying his trained sigualler
could teach the Navy a thing or two,
he undertook to communicate with. a
I, using man -o' -war, The mercantile
signaller painfully spelt out his nhess-
age. The man -o' -war, much more
rapidly, winked out its reply ,
The merchant Jack made "LM.L"—
please repeat'—time and again as he
tried to read the winking dots and
dashes.
At last the signaller In the man -o' -
war with cruel irony spelt out vary
slowly and distinctly, "Do you speak
English?" And that to a ship flying the
blue ensign of a British auxiliary
cruiser!
The use of convoys during the sub-
marine campaign sharpened the need
for good signalling in the merchant
ships, and they became quite expert in
reading, against, the ditilcult back-
ground of the sky, the meanings 02
the jumbled colors, which said, "Altar
course two points to starboard," Ad-
miral intends to proceed at 15 knots,"
"Altar course in succession N. 86 E.,"
and so on.
Flag signals in the Navy are mainly
concerned with manoeuvring; general
conversation is carried on by means
of semaphore or flash -lamp. The
amount of talking that is done in a
"Men in twenty-four hours at sea is
enormous.
i''ew people probably realized, be-
fore the e ofllcial Jutland
papers were
issued, that from start to finish more
than 3,500 signals were exchanged be-
tween British ships in connection with
the battle.
Wit In War -time.
Some of them were quite humorous.
One senior officer semaphored to an-
other, just befort Jeliicoe's big ships
came into action: "It seems to be get-
ting a bit thick this end. What had
we better do?"
"A bit thick"'13 a mild description
of the whirlwind of action in which
the ships found themselves. It was
easier to Joke the next morning; when
we find among the recorded signals
this enquiry from the Princess Royal
to the Tiger by searchlight: "I hope
all is well atter our busy afternoon?"
Among the wireless messages there
were many little dramas, as, for ex-
ample,
xample, the signal made—of course, in
code—by the little destroyer Ambus-
cade about two o'oloclt in the morning
in the darkness of the night battle:
"Have, expended all torpedoes. I am
alone. Position doubtful, Request
instructions."
There Is something plaintive about
that "I am alone," but it serves to
Show what an immense area was
covered by the battle, that a ship
should be without consorts in the mid-
dle of it.
Where Postmen Are Scarce.
'What is declared to be the loneliest
mission station in the world is situ-
ated on the Roper River, in the
Northern Territory of Australia.
Here dwell a missionary and his
young wife. They are cut off entirely
from the companionship of their fel-
low -whites, for only a few Australian
aborigines live in the district,
The nearest doctor is live hundred
miles away, and it is two hundred
miles to the nearest white settler.
Only once a year does the miselanary
obtain 110215 from the outside world,
and sometimes eighteen months
elapse before a mail is received,
some months ago the homestead
was buried twenty feet under water
through a sudden flood. It was a try-
ing time for the missionary's wife,
who had just given birth to her Bret
baby. For three days and nights her
husband, assisted by blacks, rowed
them in a small boat to bills sixty
hilts distant, heavy rains drenching
them all the time.
Vegetable Leather In Japan.
A plant grows in Japan whdoh fur-
nlshes a sort of vegetable leather. It
is a pretty shrub eallod the mitsunmta
and Its Inner bark, after going through
oertaln processes, is converted into a
eeesta0oe as tough as Ft'0101 kid, so
transiuoont that one can almost so
through It, and as pliable and soft na
calfskin.
CHOLERA INFANTUIR
Cholera irtfalaa;u Is one or the fatal
aIhnonta of childhood. It is a trouble
that eomee on euddouly, espeelally
during the 1010me2 menthe, and un-
less arcane amine i5 token the iltt
one may soon be beyond aid, Baby
Own Tablet:' are an Meal medicine 1
warding off this trouble. They reg
late the bowels and sweeten the eto
dell and thud prevent allthe (Meade
eutamer complaints. Concerning the
Mrs. bred hose, of South Buy, On
says; "I feel Baby's Own Table
saved the life of sur baby when ell
had chteera Menem nee I would n
be without them," The Tablets ar
sold by utettlol nc dealers or by nh
at 25 cents a box Prem The Dr. W
Mune' Medicine .Co., Brockville, Ont
Boy Scout and Girl Guid
As World
Leaven.
Iu Lho fcverlsh hurls --burly of me
ern life, in the strife and clash
men turd nations, there is a refreshin
' unity of purprse and achievement 1
le.
Tent in Coat. Pocket,
zi
e. Su thlhl le the materiel with which a
m- four feet high tent, invented 1n Lng-
d (arid, is made that it can be folded and.
m carried in u coat packet, the pole also
t, folding and serving as a walling stick,
re --
e On Sohedule.
ut th
Mistress --"Mary, how le it that e'
o eggs for breakfast ere sometimes bail
ail ed soft and sometiute., quite herd?"'
i1 Mare—l'i'ed, amu, lea ear:: I don't
, know, I puts them in re alar n5 the
clock stales eight. and 1 take:, them
ole attt withottt fall when 1 •teat:; the down
train gv by."
Equal to the Occasion,
An Irishman altp`.ied for a jut at the
gas works,
g "What can ycu do?" asked the fore -
the twlu fraternitlea which owe the(
existence to the euthuslaoni and for
eight of the defender of Mafekin
e -
g,
says the Loudon Three,
torially of the tar -dung Girl Guide nn
Boy Scout movements, Service In prat
of self-interest, giving 1i-.4ea1 0
grasping, doing rather than talkie
are the guiding principles, Frant a
organization, as Lady 'Baden -Powe
justly claims for the branch at whit
she is Chief Guide, and Princess Ma
the president, they have grown foto
movement, with an active power fo
good. They have expanded beyon
the bounds of the Empire. Like Puck
they have put a girdle round th
earth. Approximately three-quarters
of the total number of Boy Scouts in
the world (something over a million),
and a third of its total 320,000 Girl
Guides (six tines as many as there
were in 1912), live in foreign coun
tries. Each year the movemen
spreads and the totals increase, mor
boys and girls pass into the oompanie
and troops, and out of them int, the
fuller life of adult citizenship, in a
larger number of countries.
A third of the Boy Scouts who cam
over from South Africa to last year'
Jamboree in London were Dutch. In
India, from which Sir Robert and Lady
Baden-Powell have recently returned
there are in the eight provinces thous
ands of Scouts and Guides, some o
them English, some at them of mixed
English and Indian parentage, and
some Indian. Tile Chfef Scout and
Chief Guide went out on the invite
tion of Lord Chelmtfurd, the viceroy
with the object of consolidating the
movement on the original tines of a
unified organization. As the result o
their visit some 20,000 Indian Boy
Scouts, who had been enrolled Indo
pendently of the parent organization
and a further association of 15,000
Scouts and Guides enrolled by Mrs
leesent, agreed, with "Indescribable
enthusiasm," to come into the world
brotherhood. These are but two in
stances out of many of the univer
sality of the spell exercised by the
principles of Scouting, British by
origin, panBritialn by adoption, they
have in them something that appeal$
to the boys and girls of all nations,
and binds them together in a common
fraternity that can rise to u plane
above the ordinary distinctions of
race. With the passing of youth and
its enthusiasms, the inspiration of the
movement and its ideate must, In some
cases, Inevitably decay. But if, in the
majority, they survive, then it Is mere-
ly visionary to hope that, in each coun-
try where they thrive, they may In-
sensibly leaven the lump and become
the germ of a real and abiding League
of Nations,
Good Company.
matt.
"Almost anything, tor," said Mike.
"Well," said tee foreman, who was
a bit of a joker. --you ;menu to be all
le right, but could you wheel out a bar-
d rew of .smelts?"
e -Shure( could do that." said Mike,
I "if yet would fill it for lee flrat"
g, —.
• Credit Where It Is Due.
11
h Evider.;ly a young editor in Missis-
re slppi was a firm believer in the duc-
e 'trine that if a newspaper copies an
1, item front another paper, it should al-
e ways give full credit to the Paper froze
wlticll it copies,
e This young man copied in Lis sheet
a poem beginning "full filthonl five
thy father Ilse," and at the end put
these words 1•f credit:
"William 171:aka peare in the New
Orleans Static.;,"
t Spanish On- ions.
e "And now, children," asked the
a teacher, at the end of the lesson, "can
you tell me the Enlish national flow-
er?„
"The rose!" came in an eager chorus
e from her pupils,
a "And the French?"
"Lilies!" was the response, atter
some hesitation.
, "And the Spaufeh?"
Dead silence. The pupils looked
f blankly at each other. Then a hand
was waved frantically in the air, and
a shrill voice p19ed out: "Onions
miss!"
To -day I have grown taller from walk-
ing with trees,
The seven sister poplars who go
softly in a line;
And I think my heart le whiter for iia
parley with a star,
That trembled out at nightfall and
hung above the pine.
The call -note of a red bird from the
cedars in the dusk,
Woke his happy mate Within me to
an answer tree and tine;
And a sudden angel beckoned from a
column of blue smoke—
Lord, who ant I that they should
stoop—these holy folk of Thine?
MONEY ORDERS.
Dominion Express Money Orders are
on sale ht five thousand °tunes
throughout Canada."
Why Dogs Bark.
It a curious fact that dogs bark
only when they are in association with
man. The dog in a state 01 nature
merely growls, howls, or whines.
Possibly the act of barking is it
dog`s attempt at speech; it would car -
thinly seem like it sometimes; ns, for
instance, when a pet dog Bees yen car-
rying food, he will bark as his way of
asking for sone.
Another dog, which is in the habit
of going to bed at sundown, will bark
to tell you he Is ready when the time
comes.
12 is also curious that, although the
dog is so much the friend of inan, hie
name is used in matey expressions of
abuse and reproach, Snob phrases
probably arose in the Best, where
dogs are oonsldei'ed of Very little rte -
eau at
Minerd's Liniment for sale eVery,vhere
Not An Acorn.
It is related that when a certain
Ohio man brought up his son to be
entered as a student in a college in
that State he ma,'e itnewn to the
president his desire that his boy take
a course shorter then the
regular nue.
"I*ly son," he explained, "can never
take all those stupes. Ile wants to
get threuglh more quickly. Can you
arrange it for him?"
"011, yes,' said the president. "lie
eau take a short course: it alt depends
on what you want to make or him.
When God wants to make an oak He'
takes a hundreds years, butho takes
only two months to make a squash." j
Never explain; your frignds do not(
need it and your enemies will not be-'
dieve you anyway.—Fra Elbertus.
BRINGS HAPPY EASE.
Don't Endure Pain. Apply
Txe Remedy your Grandmother used to
Fe Sure Steller. On Sale Everywhere
A Good Thing. Rub it in.
Amerios'a Pioneer Dog 'Remedies
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad.
dress by the Author.
R. Gley Glover 00., gra,
115 West 91st Street
New York, U.S.A.
ASMIN
Only "Bayer" is Genuine
Warning! Unless you see the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
aro not getting Aspirin at all. Take
Aspirin only es told iri the Bayer pack-
age for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and tar Pain, Than yott will
lee following the directions and dosage
worked out by physicians during
twenty-one years and proved safe by
millions, Handy tin boxes of twelve
Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few
cents. Druggists also sell larger
packages, Macre in Cattadn. Aspirin
is the trade merit (registered. Ln Cana-
da), of Bayer Manufacture of Mouo-
acetieacicloster of Salicylicacid,
WORTH ITS WEIGHT
IN GOLDS. }1F SAYS
• BRAT -IAM POURS OUT WS
GRATITUDE TO TANLAC
Toronto Mata Declares He Was
Almost Physical Wreck
When I �e Began Taking It.
"I wouldn't 'take all the gold you
could pile up around me for the good
Tanlae has done 1110," said George W.
Malian!, 31 {trove .Ave Toronto, Ont.
"When I returned from overseas 1
was pretty much cf a wreck, T used
to have fair tine epelis and' DIY nerves
were in'surl; a bad state that I used
to jump at tht' least canted. My &tom=
ach was always cut of order, so Butt
whatever I ate upset me,
"I never knew' what It was to have
a goad night% sleep and I always got
up lu the morning feeling tired and
weary, I wee tteadiiy losing weight
and fleetly got vtry wcalt.
"One smiting I Bald to my wife: 'I
think I'll try 0 bottle of Tanlae•,' I did,
and the result was 1".1.11,00r201. It lust
seemed to meet my :reds fr;;nh the
start and it:, relicvei me cf all lay
troubled,
"!t gave me 1 go;,'1 al pc t•t sr, l::at
I can Loa, eat well at. my Lod agrees
with ole. My nerves are l:ow steady,
I no longer Have fainting spe'la,
I sleep fine and feel stronger and het -
ter in every way .
"If t' we's ono medicine that's worth
its weight in gold, it's Tanlac, and i
want to eXprese my gratitude for what
it has done for ate."
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists•..
everywhere. Adv,
That Proves Him Sane.
"He's crazy. Your Iionor" s:ad the
policeman to the magi,: trate. "I Lund
him standing at the corns; scolding
his wife."
"That doesn't prove him crazy." re -
Joined the judge.
"His wife wasn't there, Yoer Manor,"
added the officer.
The Canadian Pacific 114 the only
solvent railroad on the North Anh-
erican continent, says the Wall Street
Journal.
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C1 a.
GUFF TORONea
ECZEMA IN RASH
CUTURA EALS
Very Itchy and Burned.
Troubled Six Weeks.
"Our daughter's face came out in
a rash that we were told was eczema.
Her cheeks got sore
and she rubbed cans-
ingloss of Bleep. The
breaking out was very
itchy and burned so
that I had to tic gloves
her fd
from scratchingr hands to .
"This trouble lasted about nix
weeks before I used Cuticura. I used
one large box of Cutlet= Ointment
with two cakes of Cuticura Soap
when she was healed." (Signed)Mra.
H. Stares, Blenheim Rd., Galt, Ont.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal-
cum are ideal for daily toilet uses.
Soap 25e, Olntmont 25 and 80e. Sold
throughoutthel)ominion. Canadianlepotr
Llimited, St, Paul St., Montreal.
C0,icurn Soap .have* withoutmutt.
1 SUFFERED
FIVE YEARS
Finally Was Restored to
Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Paris, Ont.—"For five years I suf-
fered from pains caused by displace-
ment of my organs
and in my back. All
of this time I was
unfit for work and
was taking different
medicines that I
thought were good.
I saw the advertise-
ment in the palters
of Lydia E. Plnic-
ham's Vegetable
Compound and took
it faithfully. I am
now inperfect health
an, do a my own work. I recommend
it soothers, and g've you permission to
publish this letter in your little books
and in the newspapers as a testimonial."
—Mrs. D. CASSAOY, l3ox 461, Paris Ont.
Whywomen will continue to suffer so
long is more than We can understand,
when they can find health in Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
For forty yours it
e
a Ole. and ttheh are-
stored
Stand-
11114- rumen ave
stored the ivtealth 0f`ttjl usaeds or wo1N9r
who have been troubled with suchail-
ments as dlspiacom ts, inflammation,ut oration irregularities, etc.
I£ you want Special advice write to
Lydia E. PInkhpm Medicine Co. (conti-
tleneai), Lynn, Mass, Your letter will
be opened rend and answered by h
woman anti held in strict confidence.
IISSUE No 34--'111.