HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-1-27, Page 7Nov
A short time ago the retail price of
"wasre-
duced
-Dose Tea • Crl<inson �a�el) r
1
duced 10 Cents a pound.
undo
. _
r
Whenever conditions permit, the price
will again be reduced, but never to such
an extent as to lower the quality. .
You will always find the quality of T
Red Rose °tea all you expect it to be—
the same good tea for over 25 years.
T. H. ESTE ROOKS CO., Ltd.
St. John, Toronto Winnipeg
Montreal : -Calgary Edmonton.
SEALING INDUSTRY
OF TUE DOMINION
ORIGINATED IN 1763 IN
NEWFOUNDLAND.
Canada Draws Revenue From
Seal Fishery on Both Atlan-
tic and Pacific Coasts.
The seal pack hi the Nortbern Pa-
cific water is considered to be the
most valuable herd of wild animals in
the world, its value being placed at
$75,000,000 and yearly increasing.
After a conference in 1911 between
the United States, Russia, Japan and
Canada, all of whom are Interested in
sealing in these waters, a close sea-
son was established for fifteen years
and pelagic cea'ling forbidden; Ac-
cording to the treaty signed at the
same time, Canada received fifteen
per cent of the catch of these waters.
The Dominion's credit has bean al-
lowed to accumulate, and when a set -
3 tiement Is made, which will probably
be done at the end of the present
year, It is expected that Canada will
g - receive something like $800,000 as her
Aare of. the catch since the opening
of the season. With the benefiolal'of-
a
sect the protection of the herd has had
and is still experiencing, it is pro-
dicted that in a few years Canada's
revenue from this source will be in
the neighborhood of $1,000,000 a year.
The Hair Seal. .
All the year round, hair seals, which
are great roamers, have been in the
habit of infesting the Fraser River
and the Gulf of Georgia, inhabiting in-
accessible flats, and .by consuming
large quantities of fish already taken
• in nets, have constituted themselves
a general nuisanee Various methods
of combating .this pest have been tried
unsuccessfully, amd experimentation
is continuing, in the belief that a suc-
cessful method of trapping will not
only terminate the -mischief these ani -
'"mals are doing but result in the crea-
tion of a new and important industry
on the Paoihc coast
The hair seal Is valued partly or a
hide, which is used in making various.
kinds of leather, for oil which is ex-
tracted from its carcase, and, on the
Pacific coast, for use in the manufac-
ture of fertilizer. The hair seal is a
particularly valuable animal at the
present time, his hide selling for as
high as $175. A recent development
in the seal industry 'is the utilization
of the skins of old reales, a hitherto
unprofitable section, which consider-
ably enhances the value of the seal
catch to any country. Canada draws
revenue from seal fishery on bath the
Atlantic and Pacific coasts, and tho
amounts accruing from those is, at the
present time, naturally of gratifying
proportions and will be more so in the
future.
It has been computed roughly that
one million seal shims are marketed
'every year, and to this aggregate the
largest single • collection is contributed
by the sealers of Newfoundland open-
! acing on their own coast and off the
shores of Labrador. In the year 1919,
Newfoundland's share of the seal fish-
ery accounted for 81,293 seals with a
market value of $278,000. The Indus-
try on the Island accounts for the em-
ploymeut of 1,685 men, and numerous
vessels take part In the often hazard-
ous undertaking.
Newfoundland, the Pioneer.
The seal industry originated in New-
fcundiand in 1763, and for some years
after that the annual catch did not ex-
ceed three or four thousand skins per
season. With the incredsing demand
for oil and skins, however, the indus-
try grew, and more men and vessels
came to engage exclusively in it. By
the beginning of the nineteenth cen-
tury, the annual catch exceeded 60,000
Akins, and larger and larger vessels
were built for the pursuit, t111 later
these were superseded by fast stearn-
ers. At the present tiute, though there
are some sailing vessels still engaged,
the steamer Is the big unit in the
activity and accounts for flvo-sixths et
the catch,
Of Iate years the seal catch of New-
' foundland has fallen off somewhat,
!due to the heavy toll and indischimin-
1 ate killing, which is now regularized
1 by legislation, The 1908 catch, for
instance, numbered 213,863 seals, and
that of the following year 269,320 ani-
mals. A single vessel has been Imo
S. Mk MIL __ane, . X, ' lift VP. VII ',, , IR 1M VI& Ilk��4
HEALTH EDUCATION
0 BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board of Health. Ontario 0
Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer questions• on Public Health mat-
ters through this column. Address him at the Parliament Bldgs„ gil
A Toronto,
From time immemorial the treat- er generation slial•1 grow up as fit
ment of the sick has relied, not un- physically and mentally as the applied
successfully, on the organizing power science of the day' Intakes possible.
0
0
of human.: sympathy, Nothing in our But the healthy growth of a child is
modern civilization is more impressive
a function of many variations. if we
are to make sten out of children we
than the splendid growth and special- now know that, in the infinitely conn-
izatian of hospitals, convalescent plex conditions of modern life, we
homes, sanatoria, dispensaries, clinics, cannot do so by letting the children
and other organizations for the ap- take care of themselves.
plication of scientific ideas to the cure The school clinic fills an important
of disease. The impulses of philan- place in the healthy upbringing of the
thropy are no less numerous and young. Medical treatment and sup -
.powerful to -day than in any past gen- envision, it is true, cannot solve all
eration, but as civilization advances, the problems centred in the sch3ol
the intensive study of disease de- child; yet this it can secure; that he
-mends more and more organization. shall come to school Olean; that he
The multitudes of minor ailments re- shall have his vision tested and cor-
vealed in the inspection of children rectal if it is defective; that he shall
tend to outrun all our ifresent re- have bis ears treated if he cannot
sources. The children's hospitals are hear; that he shall have his skin (Us-
es busy as ever, but wherever volun- eases cured or kept ]harmless; that he
tary clinics for children are establish- shall have his heart, his lungs, his
ed they rapidly become crowded, and bones, his joints examiners before he
there is urgent need For. more and is required to • undergo any physical
more clinics all over the Province. instruction; that he shall have his
Open-air nurseries and nursery schools hours' of work adapted to hie India
are all urgently needed, for immense' vidual dapacity; that are shall have
fields of treatment are still unoccupied. sufficient healthy play to preserve his
The recent report of a Medical Officeer elasticity and to promote his growth;
of Health for a large city in Ontario that, in a word, he shall have, at every
showing that thirty per cent. of ehil- stage of his growth, his maxiumm1
dron arriving at school age are physi- chance of attaining to fitness of mind
cally defective, gives much food for and body. '
thought, The medical and nursing This is the purpose aimed_at:in the
supervision o2 tTre child Is emperat:ve, med3tal 1`,rap me;ltm of sebot •s, arra eta
and 'the purpose of inspection and importance of the work cannot bo
treatment is to secure that the young- overestimated.'
to bring into St. John's a oateh 0* 411,'
1100, sand a total Of nearly 7.00,000 seale.
have boon talcen be the 0rtt1re NW,
foundlaad Liget 111 a eingle s'eas011.
A Neve! Trapping Method, .
A. novel method of ituu'tiil'g seals,
under' the ansplces of the toovernneet
r "i r dice
ot Newfauadlalld, is t0 a e nt o f d
tile, Spring by two Nova Seotia
aviators, wnieh, If sucoeaeful, may re-
volutionize the entire hadus'try, The
party of three men, with two. aero-
planes and dirigibles of the type esea
rs succesaful1y tiering the war to
"GPO Submarine*, will All from
Montreal early In January to Join 111e
Newfoundland acelous et Da. John's,
the augmented party of thirty-five or
forty leaving for the Labrador ice -
Hitherto the locating ea seal herds
has been dono'eby men in the rigging
of ships' Whose range of vision iv na-
turally limited. This work it is intend-
ed to do wth planes, "spotting" being
possible by this means witnln a radius
of fifty' miles, The method then Ls as
follows. The aeroplane, which ear -
ales five Men besides the p1101 and me-
chanic, descends to the ice where the
animals aro despatched by bullets
from machine guns, The skins are
then packed in bundles about the base
of polos to which a flag is attached.
This kind of Minting Continues to tie
end of the season when the ice breaks
up, the huuters proceeding from place
to place, transported by plane as new
herds, are "spotted." At the alone of
the season the vessels visit the ice -
breaks and pick op the bundles, being
materially assisted by the planes in
locating and signalling.
Close upon the announcement of the
projected activities of these aviators,
there arrived in St. John's two
"blimps," or war airships, a present
to Newfoundland from the Imperial
government. These it is intended to
use in the seal fisheries in the same
manner, the Dost of operatilon,...eet1-
mated at $60,000, being borne jointly
by the Newfoundland government and
the owners of the sealing vessels as-
sisted in their catch.
The co-operation of the ggverngrnent
In this new venture would augur a be.
Het in the practicability and success
of the novel enterprise, and doubtless
their success, which is highly Prob-
able, will have a marked effect upon
sealing on both coasts and tend to
bring about a revolution In 'hunting
methods.
E STURDY 'bD\. LUE
of wheat and. malted Marley
are combined. in
rav
as ix), n.Q other
prepared cereal ,co o tl
lite rich, nutlike ..avor attracts
and its nourishing t alines
are staunch.. U7tlike most pre-
pared cereal. Grape=Nut
needs no added, sweetening
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
HOW TO BE HEALTHY
DURING THE WINTER
Queer Storage Pace,
Awe's bofwie, L''rench mnister Of
War, alae a distinguished olteintst, i-o-
eently startled the Cb,amaer of Depu-
flos with the ;prolea854 t'o store the
Frond! stock of guncotton and nitro-
cellulose
itro-
col A sexplosives n n f 'he eke.
li a e1 o_eo. 4 1....9
of the I'yre'neee,
F1'ance •liar on baled , about 90,000
tens of high exploslves'r enough to last .
Iter 300 battt'e days, even at the enor-
moue mate at whaeh powder was con-
sumed during the war.
Explosives deteriorate with time,
Chemical devomposltiop began sooner
Or later 1f the mats of explosive is not
kept at a safe and eonahant tempera-
ture, The te1n eratna'e of the water
of Pyrenean lakes never varies more
than four or five degrees,
Houce M. Lefevre would sink
France's Stook of war eieplesdves in
waterproof' tanks in the lakes mend
keep them thus, for decades.
WINTER HARD ON BABY
Many Troubles May be Avoided
if the Blood is Kept
PUrg.
Donot let your blood get thin this
winter. For people who have a ten-
dency towards anaemia., or bloodless-
ness, winter Is a trying season. Lack
of exercise, lack of fresh -air, and a
more restricted diet are among the
things that corlibine to lower the tone
of the body and -weaken the blood,
As soon as you notice the tired
feeling, lack of appetite and shortness
of breath that are warning symptoms
of thin blood, take a short course of
treatment with Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, Do not wait until the color has
entirely left your chocks, until your
lips are white and your eyes are dull
It is so meet' easter to correct thin-
ning of the blood In the earlier stages
than later. This is well illustrated in
the case of Mr. B. M. Day, Newcastle
Bridge, N.B., who says: "From my
own experience with Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills I can most heartily recom-
mend them, Some time ago I was
badly run down and my blood seemed
thin and watery, nccompanted by the
usual symptoms of this condition, A.
friend recommoneded Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills, and after taking several
boxes I felt like a new nhao,"
You can procure Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills through any dealer in medicine
or they will be sent you by mall at
50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50
by writing direct to Tho Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co„ Brockville, Out,
France May be World's
Radio Centre.
If the Frenoli Government carries
out its present plane to develop the
mastery of the world'swireless tele-
graph service, es was indicated in the
commencement of the sixteen tower
station near Melun, it enay bein a
position to take 'all business from the
cable companies in Franco, as these
companies are now handling only be-
tween 40,000 and 50,000 words n day,
and even then with greatest difilculty,
The new wireless station near Mel -
011 ie to be completed In two years and
will' be able to And 1,000,000 words a
day, The apparatus designed will be
able to send seven and recotvo five
separate despatches eimultaneonsly•
and will have a radius of 10,000 miles
and the power•10 transmit urgent sig-
nals as far -as 16,000 miles,
Thus, with Eiffel Tower reserved
for ofltclal and scientil10 despatches,
such as noonday signaisi the Nantes
station reserved for maritime pair-
poses, and with both Lyons and Bor-
deaux handling Imeetr3d8 of despatch-
es daily for the United States and
European countries, France will be in.
wdrelees contact with the uttermost
points of the globe,
Tho wintor'season fa a hard one on
the baby, He is more or less confined
to stuffy, badly ventilated rooms. It
le so often stormy that the mother
does not get him out in the fresh air
as often as she should. Ile catches
colds which rack hii little system;
his stomach and Bowels get out of or-
der and he becomes, peevish and dross.
To guard against this the mother
should keep a box of Baby's Own Tab-
tete in the house. They regulate the
stomach and bowels and break up
colds. They are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 25 cents' a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„
Brockville, Ont.
Boy Scout Notes.
Patrol Leader Frank B. Johnston, of
the 64th Toronto Troop, Boy Scouts,
has just been awarded the bronze med-
al of the Carnegie Hero Fund for sav-
ing Miss Daisy A. Hooper from drown-
ing in Lake Seugog. Scout Johnston
was awarded the highest award The
-Boy Scouts Association could give him
-its Bronze Cross for Gallantry—
some time ago.
* * . .
Lo Comi'to American pour les Re-
giones Devastees de la France, which
conducted a large Boy Scout Training
Camp at Compiegne, France, last sum-
mer, will next summer conduct five
similar camps, for French boys. Last
year The Boy Scouts Association, the
Boy Scouts of' America, the two Bel-
gian Scoht organizations and the
several Boy Scout Associations in
,France co-operated in this work and
some 276 older boys and young men
from the devastated •region of France
graduated from this "Camp-ecole," se
it was called. Mr. Frank C. Irwin, the
Executive Secretary of the Boy Scouts
Association for Ontario, represented
Canada on the staff of the 1920 camp.
M 5 * *
Charters permitting organizations. to
form Boy Scout troops are granted by
the Provincial Council for Ontario,
Headquarters, Sherbourne and Bloor
Sts„ Toronto. The conditions upon
which charters are granted are, first,
that the organization—it may be a
church, a school, a community club,
a parents' association or any other
group of citizens—will guarantee for
one year adequate leaderahip and
facilities; second, that it will endeav-
or t0 provide an opportunity for the
members of the troop to spend a week
or more in a summer camp; and third,
that it will conduct the troop, through
a Troop Committee appointed by it,
in accordance with tin rules and re-
gulattans of the Association. There
are now nearly 250 registered Boy
Scout Troops iu Ontario.
Algeria SuffersF mro Drought
"The Drinkers of Sunshine," as the
Arab egh•opherds call themselves in
their own language, aro on the verge
of starvation throughout Algeria, and
unless wheat is imported from Ameri-
ca may have nothing but suus'hine as
a steady diet during the winter. The
threatening famine in Algeria is the
result of a long drought.. No rain has
fallen for a year,
This has proved a calamity for the
Arab hopherds, nomads living ,practi-
cally by their flocks., oventy-five per
cent, of..the eheep to Algeria have died
as a result of the drought, and the
Arab ".Drinkers of Sunshine," dreau-
era unci philosophers, incapable ot any
work but tliat of guarding. the flocks,
amain dire straits,
Governor-General Abel- of Algeria
leas left for Paris to ask the Govern-
ment to arrange for the importation
of wheat from America or Argentina
to tide the people over the crisis:
The Right Spirit,
Handicapped.
Thio story is 1o1,1 by 0 certain Phil-'
arthropist in the West, who is a man
of big business as well and who as
noted. for his sympathy for the "down -
un - tors." 1f 1 1
d ou ossa i.o no will give
I
any deserving applicant for weak a
chance to make good,"
On one occasion this gentleman was
approached by all individual that any
hut the pbilahtibopist hitnself would
have had ]nim ejected from the office,
"Can't you find any work at all?
asked the good man, when ho had
hoard 1110 roan's recital of his woes.
"I can find work all right," said the
man, "plenty of it, but everybody
wants references front -try last em-
ployer."
And cannot You get tiloso refer-
ences front him?"
"No, sir. Yon sae, lie's been dead
for twenty -lave years,"
The cold situp, hardening the pond
near sax -year-old Harold's, .house, gave
hila nn opportunity to try his first pair
of skates, Of course he made a poor
job of it and was down every minute
or two.
Observing the hard time ho was have
ing, a woman on•the bank said kindly,
"Why, little bran, I wouldn't stay on
the ice aild keep failing down so; I'd
a
tat come off and watch the others.”ors:"
The tears ..from the last hard bump
were still on the roes' climate, but the
little'fellow bolted ft•0m his advisor
to the shining steel on. his feat -and.
said pluckily, "I didn't get some new
slkates to give np with! I got 'em to
learn how with." •
—v-
i Fape's I�1'Laibe;shi" Coo ectS
'"Fape's
'
"'Palo's Diapopsin" is the quickest,
surest relief for Indigestion, Gases,
Flatulence, Heartburn, Sourness,, Per -
mentation Stomach lateness caused
o • 1 s n d
by acidity, A few tablets give almost
immediate stomach relief and shortly
the stomach is corrected ze you can
sat favorite foods without fear, Large
ease costs only 60 cents et drug store,
Absolutely harmless and pleasant,
Millions helped ann0aily, Largest sell.
tug etoulach corrector in world. --Adv,
"Billy" incendiary bombs, which our
aircraft used during the war, were se
shall that 0 Handley -Page aeroplane
could carry 4,000 of them, In six
weeks 45,000 of these bombs wore
dropped on German ,industrial towns.
Minaret"s Lieimont for Dandruff,
will do the soma work •
without blistering.
SEINJ II"c OF SUBSTITUTES
et.oaa bairn.
Tag.LF,iN'9c MILOO co„.Lia,
MONT n CAL
Agents ler Dr, ,Pules nonane
RELIEVES PAIN
Million •Surplus Women in
England. '
"'Jackless Jala" are emigrating irr
considerable numbers from England
In the hope of finding suitable "Pilless
Jacks" for husbands In the United
States, according to Norah March,
bachelor of selene. Her comments
on England's "marriageable women'
wlro may never marry" before the Na-
tional Birth Rate Commission ,have
been widely discussed in the British'
press.
Government figures show there is a
surplus of a million women in England
whose only hope of marrying depends
on their migrating to some part of the
earth where there is a more even dis-
tribution of the sexes. According to
Miss. March, they are doing it. She
says she is receiving letters from
America that are "significant of the
loneliness of some men's lives."
"Women are enterprising to -day,"
she added. "Many are emigrating wiio
a few years ago would have feared to
take the great adventure."
Judging from an official report pre-
pared by the Census Bureau in Wash-
ington
ashington indicating there are nearly ten
million bachelors in the United States
above the age of 20, there is, consider-
able consolation in store for .the Eng-
lish "Jiils "
•
Your Grocer Is
Not a Profiteer
Have a heart!
Your grocer is not a profiteer!'
He is passing along to you reduced
prices, as fast or faster than they
come to him. Just because Prices 011
many good things are still high, don't
blame him. It le usually the poorest
quality of everything that shows the
greatest decline.
If he is as geed a man as the aver-
age,
verage, your grocer is still doing bus ut-
most to give you the best value for
your money. But don't push him too
hard. He as only human.
You don't know, but we do, that he
is recommending goods that pay him
less profit than other well known
brands which he might easily per-
suade his customers to take if he
cared to do so,
We lmow this because he pays 11s
more for Red Rose Tea and sells it
at less profit than other teas, so when
he recommends you to buy Red Rose
Tea, you w111 know it is because he
believes' it the best and Is willing to
take a lttle less profit for the sake
ot giving you the best value he can,
We are publishing this because we
believe the more our people know of
the true. facts concerning the profits
made by those they deal with, the
more generous' they will be in their
judgmente.—T. H. Estabrooks Co.,
Ltd., Toronto, Ont.
White Negroes.
Early Portuguese explorers found
on the west coast of Africa a number
of "white Negroes," who, by reason
of the peculiarity, were held in vene-
ration by the blacks. They were, of
course, albinos. •
It was to describe them that the
word "albino" was first coined, and
since the it has been applied to ane
man beings' of all races whose lack of
pigment deprives ther shin, eyes- and
hair of normal coloration,
Albinism is assuredly one of na-
ture's strangest Lemke, In former
day's persons so agitated were regard-
ed with horror and systematically
shunned,
Because of their Islorl'ntcing from
bright light the approbrfous name of
"cockroaches" was bestowed upon
them, and It was ignorantly supposed
that they were defective mentally. For
the latter notion, noodloss to say,
utero was never the allghtest basis et
tact;
Alblees at Caucasian rico have pe-
culiarly firm' hair, glassy and silklike,
Which. rather resembles co1'n-tussal
silk.
AS'PIRI'N
Only "Bayer" is. Genuine
• Warning! 'Unless you see the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets YOU
are not getting genuine Aspirin at all.
In every Bayer package are directions
for Celds, Headache, Nouralgla, Rhein
maim, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago
and for Pain, Handy tin boxes of
twolvo tablets cost foe/ conte, ,Drug-
gists also sell larger paokagos, Made
in Canada, Aspirin is. the trade mark
(registered. In Canada), of Dam
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidestor of
Salicylicacid,'
Perfume Hunters.
Tore 6001118 to be no good reason
why in this 003111117 the gathering of
ewoctsmelliag herbs and flowers for
the perfumery trade might not be
found profitable. It hos reoea't1y
be-
come aconsiderableindustry 1halma.
parts of 141ngta11 T n groat mtr'ay women
and oblation tuning0taken le, up,
In April the platting of 0owsllp3 be-
gine, those flowers being to demand as'
St euro for'eleepleseness, and also for
""potzziourri" and sachets,. Broom and
elder`3lowers follow, Mullein end mei,
low, bergamot, peony petals, rose
.penile And red poppy petals bring good
'prima: 'nowise' raspberry leaves,.
Age, mint, balm and thyme,'
The great dome or 51, Paul's Cathe-
dral, London, is supported on eight
underground piers.
MInard's Liniment Relieves Colds, ate.
Osborne house, formerly Queen Vic-
toria's residence in the Isle of M girt,
was built'at a cost of 1200,000, from
designs of the ).'tines Consort,
D.A N DEM: 4'.
OMs!' Save''Your' WitMake' 11 Abundant!:
Immediately after u TDs iderine"
massage, your hair takes on 0011 life,
lustre and wondrous beauty, appearing
twice. as heavy andplentiful, because
each hair seems to fluff and thicken.
Don't let your hair stay lifeless, color-
leas,plain' or scraggly. You, too, want
lots of long, strong, beautiful hair.
A 35 -cent bottle of delightful "Dan-
derine" freshens your scalp, checks
dandruff and falling hair. This s•tlmu-
lating "beauty-tonlo" gives to thin,
dull, fading hair that' youthful bright-
ness and abundant thickness.—All
druggists!
Classified Advertisements.'
(/i•�►►'13081 T NiCIT32'O 111111ia vvi7fee "'t0'A1a
Al. near'ceten, Ontario, !rt affiliation
With iirrlle1ue and Allied llostrlte's, Nein
Yank 1137214 to young women 4eslrortb
ar
becoming (Malllfed nurses a three
year eogl•sn 7f general 1rr41r)1r1g;. anise-
Ci'va I e,G! lanoo' single `07nJ, Forsalaryand
,,rlI other: reformation apply 7.Uo, Hap.
orintendent, Tororrte Jr'ree Slospiialr
Mission, Ontario,
The Canadian Chaplain Service had
an authorized strength of 200 in the.
recent wail 424 served overseas; 101) "
gained awards; G died, and 21 wero
wounded' in 'battles while dlecharging
duties.
MON'EY' ORDERS.
Send. a Dominion Express lldorey
Order. 'I'liey are, payable everywhere.
Of' British home troops,. numbering
153,000, nearly 50,000 are in Ireland.
The total strength of the British
Army all over the world is given at
205,0001
Minard's Liniment Relieves Distemper
The J'apan'ese language is taught in
Australian high echoole,
SAFETY RAZOR BLADES
RESHARPENED
Made -good as naw,
Double Edge iso a dos.
Single Edge, 250 et dos.
Durham Duplex' 800 u dos.
Remit money order with blades to
GRASP EDOF. BLADE 0o.,
a Alice Street, - - Toronto. On;.
Are won Having Trouble With
Your Horses or Cattle?
MAKE YOUR OWN •
ANIMAL. MEDICINES
Toll ne what your trouble Is, and on
reoelpt of money order for 52.50 we
will send you a recipe compiled by
one of the most eminent Old Country
Veterinary Surgeons,
THE VLIT MFG. CO., Limited
038 8T. PAWL 8T. WE8T
MONT:Et11AL
Magnesium From Sea
New salt works established at Ber-
gin, in Norway, will turn out as a by-
produot about 100 tons of metallic
magnesium per year. Sen. water (from
which the salt is to bo derived) con-
tains four -tenths of 1 ]ler cent. of mag-
nesium chloride.
Increased demand for magnesium in
airplane construction, with cheap elec-
tric power, makes extraction of the
metal a paying proposition.
Sea water continua four cents' worth
of gold to the ton, and, in quantity,
twice as much silver. Copper and
other metals likewise contribute their
salts• to the ocean in appreciable '
amounts—as, indeed, might be ex-
pected,inasmuch as rivers carry down
to the sea all the materials of which
the rocks of the land are composed,
including the metals contained in
them.
It is familiarly known that certain
marine plants—•the kelps and other
aeaweeds—take up iodine and potash
from the sea water, concentrating
those mineral's is their own structure.
Such plants are important commercial
sources. of potash and iodine.
In Spain a plant which secretes soda
Vas long cultivated and harvested for
that chemical, the ash derived from
the burning of it being called "barilla."
Thus it would seem that the notion ot
a mineral farm is not altogether an
absurdity.
MOTHER!
"California Syrup of Figs"
Child's Best Laxative
:s -,r,: •itis>-. •r.• -..
HIDES -WOOL -FURS
OUR REFERENCES
216 Regular Shippers.
Imperial Bank of Canada.
Dun's orBradetreet's
Try yourself and bo convinced.
WILLIAT't STONE SONS LIMITED
W00DSTOCK. ONTARIO
PSTABLISMED 1870
America's Pioneer Dog Remedies
nook on
DOD DISEASES
and Now to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
N. Clay Glover 00., Ino.
118 West Slst Street
New fork, U.S.A.
COARSa SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
0. J. CLIFF - TORONTO
WEEKS
BREAKUP, -COLD
AB1,ETSTRYTfJEN
PR/CE 25'
A Quick Relief
for Headache
A headache ie frequently caused
iby badly digested food; the gases
and acids resulting therefrom are
absorbed by the blood which in
turn irritates the nerves and
causes painful symptoms celled
headache, neuralgia, rheuma.
thus, etc. 15 to 30 drops of
Mother Sel3e1's Syrap will correct
faulty digestion and afford relief.
a
Accept "California" Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child' is having the boat and most
harmless physic for the little stomach,
liver and bowels, Children love its
fruity taste, Full directions on each
bottle. You must say "California."
Tho effect of any writing on the
public mind is m'athenatieally meas-
urable by its depth of thought. blow
'much water floes it draw? If it
awakenyou to i. it 1i.
f ft you
think; y
front your feet with the great voice
of eloquence; then the effect is to :be
wide, slow, ,permanent, over the animas
of men; of the pages instruct you not,
they will die lake flies in the hour.—
Emerson.
Ono of the best known guides in Neve.
Scotia gives this testimonial or 331N-
Al2D ii 1.1N11114NT--
11ave nned 311r.4ltiri 1.11Cti4117N'1' in
my home, hunting and mains roe
370(111 and 001151011 11 1110 best tubi tc lini-
ment on the market. I and that it Rif en
(1(1(11 relief to minor ailments, Much as
• 1 .0 A Icinds of
sprains, 1 3 ut, a and all
001133 8,
Also et is 0 great remedy for
coughs, colfls, sic„ lvhicrll one is heble
ta-enich when log driving arra cruising
daring the winter and spring months, 1
would not be without 31INA1tU'S 1.1141-
31N'r U1andcannot reeonlln3n,1 it too
higi`i1 S'• (ilgnril) 1;1111711 finny.
P11111gt helnat71110, N,O.
If 0 man calk write a better book,
preach a better sermon, or make a
better lnousot.rap than his neighbor,
though 11. 'build his house :11 the
woods,- tho world will make a beaten
path 1.0 lila door.- Ralph Wallo l+an-
ersen.
M 111a'd"s L1nUI1e.e,t far alathe, etti,
Slop tita. pain!
(.UICIC" wannintr„ soothing. comforting
`�, ent.fo net. nnpiplication os. Storm'.
Liniment. Suet slap it on 11,0 strained,
overworked muscle. Good for rheumatism.
too. Pc:mircics without rubbing.
r5� ° lPain's
enemy
CUflCUA h[AID
MMPLES ON FACE
Also itchy Scalp. Hair Foil
Out, Face Disfigured,
•
"My heed began to itch and there
Wort males o/1 my scalp. 145y flair
cams out badly when combed and it
became very dry and thin. I also
hadppimplee and blackheads all over
myshard,
co1
large, fa The o imo were e, and red, and canoed mo to
scratch and irritate them, and my
face was disfigured.
"This trouble lasted about two
months and I began uoi1113t, Cuticula
Soap and Ointment. After I had
axed two cakes of Soap and two
,poxes of Ointment 1 matt complete-
ly 1lealed (iirncul 1P,tra Gana
Jackson R 3, Ootdcndale, Wrote
t a 1ttvr your skin by daily use
of Caltlaura Boal,, OL.xmeut en,l
• '1113110,1101. r 1 J arc ideal,
S.33,33!>7,.. 11 es4;.(e.'T,lrum." sod
.,,,,•••;11,• •, 7n,„ninn. t::m:,Cii 11 1'si.;
i u
:P.1 st. , ,3,103„ w., 1.313,x333.0,wh n,tmom
-, n, „
•1m,t !ae
n
. eere,
lz•ti . Id ax
Cr- -"Al,