HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-2-3, Page 7Nsthen you pay 30 cents for a
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rr HEALTH` EDUCATI
ON
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r
0
By DR. J. J. MIDDLETON "
Provincial Board of Health. Ontario
Dr, 1lfiddle�tgn will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat -
0
r tele through this column, Address Atm at' the •Parliament Bldgs.; r
0; Toronto. r
Never was there a time when the stone will be left unturned' to oyer -
•come these prejudices. The people
want to know how to keepwell and
be healthy, and the Prover/0W Board
of Health is taking energetic steps to
send this information broadcast over
the country. With this end in view
child welfare demonstrations and
baby clinics aro being conducted at
various points throughout the Pro-
vince by trained nurses„and the rav-
en earth—a nhol.e oivildzed world, a ages of venereal disease are being at -
cleaner and stealthier world. And tacked by a network of treatment
clines that aro being established et
many centres.
Iiow beautifully • George B. Shaw The protection• from injury, and
expresses this thought in "Candida,” ease of the health of workers in in -
when he says "God has given us a dustry Is being affected through a
-world that nothing but our own fool- Division -of Industrial I-lyg'ienewh'ich
isleness keeps from being a Paradise." is working to Meng about conditions
That is just the point. ' It is foolish- in factories and industrial concerns
netts that pennies disease genus to of all kinds, that will not dnjure or be
•speead unchecked in our ,midst --bring- a menace to the stealth of the em-
ing ill -health and misery where there ployees, especially es regard's trades
should be health and ba:ppiness., It that aro considered dangerous, un -
is foolishness and lack of knowledge healthy or aeelentary. The increasing
that is the cause of so much infantile numbers of women in industrial per -
mortality, so many physical detects suits having an important bearing on
of childhood, and so much venereal the health and vitality of the coming
disease in every community. More generation, will be given mach atten-
aad more it Is becoming evident that tion. The importance of ,cleanliness'
•oixlinarily intelligent people want to in the home, and the necessity for
keep well, want to keep their homes pure foodland a good wholesome water
Olean and sanitary in every way, want supply for drinking purposes will also
to have healthy children and keep be demonstrated.
them healthy, want to live healthy In addition, .there will be numerous
lives and enjoy more and More the public lectures and moving •picture ex -
great blessings of sunshine, fresh air, titbits on general Public health topics,
good food and sanitation. Foolish- Hying particular attention in 'some
netts and lack of knowledge are the ,cases on the value of the Public
two main stumbling blocks in the way Health nurses who are now conduct-
ef getting all .important knowledge ing clinics allover the Province and
of these basic principles of life calf -1 doing important educational work in
f. used throughout the country, and no Infant and Chill Welfare.
Having discoveredthe proper meth-
od of treatment, Instead of resting on
his laurels, he set to wort[ to put his
CREAT DISCDV �' discovery, to practical use.
The story of his discovery of the se-
%_ cret that solved his problem is told
— nowhere in more interesting fashion
PROCESS OF VULCANIZA- than in John lfartht's recent booklet,
TION OF RUBBER. "Rubber: A Wonder Story."
"One day a Connecticut hardware
merchant et an inventive turn of mind
went to a store to buy a lite preserver.
Accidentally Found Out When The only ones he could find were im-
perfect affairs, but they drew his at -
Inventor Drooped Spongeful tension to the ,stiedy of rubber, and
On Hot Stove. presently he was thinking of it by day
and dreaming of it by night. Rubber
Charles Goodyear's tame rests ou became a passion. He neglected his
hie discovery of the process of the vul- business and grow poorer than the
canizatlon of rubber. Upon title pro- turkey Job kept. He pawned his
cess rests the whole rubber industry goods and borrowed from his friends
of to -day. until they dreaded to have hilu and
The annals of invention contain few his rubber talk enter their floors. IIe
more romantic chapters than those re- even pawned his children's' books to
latlug to him. Convinced that rubber get stoney or his experiments. I•Iis
was one of the most useful substances family hardly dared walk into a room
in the world he undertook the task of to sit clown at a table or fear they
fluding,a way to make it serviceable, would come upon some of his ever
After years of effort he learned that present 'guns elastic; as he called it.
sulphur was valuable in its treatment "With an inventor's tireless patience
but only half solved the problem. Dur•- anis endless hope, he tried one 00111 -
lug all his experiments he had never I binaton after another, but they all
dreamed of applying heat, because failed. He had an entire suit of rub -
even a slight degree of heat turned ber clothes and one of his friends once
said, `Mr. Goodyear is the man you
will see walking about all dressed in
rubber, carrying a rubber purse with
nothing in it.'
Discovered by Accident.
"Finally, in 1339, when ho. was mix-
ing some rubber and sulphur together,
a thing he had often dons before, Ire
He was a quiet, sickly, religious accidentally dropped a spoonful on the
•
Alan. During the period of his expert- hot stove. Rubber melts at such a
meats he and his family were in dire low temperature that he had never
want, and only the kindness of pitying thought of applying great heat. In-
-and, at times scornful—friends and stead of melting, as he expected it
nelgbbo's kept thein tram starvation. would do, it flattened out like a silver
Goodyear refused to be swerved from dollar. It bent end stretched easily
his objective and wrestled with his without cracking or breaking, it al -
problem until he had won complete ways snapped back to its. original
success. shape, and strangest of all, it was no
When Charles Goodyear began his' longer sticky. Apparently half the
experiments, rubber as known to elvtli- problem was ,solved. Whether his new
nation was the crude rubber of to -day. mixture would stand cold he hied yet
The possibilities it possessed were to find out, so'he nailed ft ou the out -
realized to a degree, and fortunes side of the door attd went to bed.
were spent in the attempt tonanufac-
Probably he slept but little and was
tura durable goods from it. But these up early to fled his rubber quite untie -
goods were so affected by temperature fatted by the oold. Then he knew that
changes that they were usually a total he had made areal discovery and he
loss to the manufacturers. In cold named the process 'vulcanizing' after
weather they became stiff and brittle, the Roman god of fire. 'Vulcanizing'
and in summer grew soft and sticky simply means mixitg sulphur and pure
and lost their shape, and deoomposi- rubber and then applying heat."
tion caused them to give off an often- In planing rubber at the service of
sive odor, mankind he made available a sub -
permit of health and 'happiness ap-
pealed more to all classes of people
than it is doing to -day.
Warm rays of optimism are be-
ginning to break through the clouds
of doubt and despondency that follow-
ed everywhere in the -wake of the
world war. We are planning for and
looking forward to a better world here
there is 110 reason why our hopes and
dreams should not be realized.
GOODYEAR AND HIS
the substance into a sticky, shapeless
nutss. Then by aoeident he found that
a high degree of heat was the very
thing needed. After making this dis-
covery it took Min five years more to
work out a process that was satisfac-
tory.
A Quiet, Sickly Man.
After .3t Ah "trial ofI
cST
r
r
s
instead of coffee, you're apt
to wonder why yawl stuck. to
the coffee habit so long
NST NT POSTOJ
IS IELICRO S
AND HEALTHFUL,
66P�r*t� se9 ))
.Q-tlexs aReason"
.s'tueee of so malty important obaraoo
terletice that Its uses are counieeaet
Rubber 111, used for some certain pur-
poses beeeuse it stretchP,s•, fpr others
because 4t is a uoneeneuctor of oleo,
tt'Welty, for others beceil'se it iras either
plasticity
great or great hardness, for
othere because it is shpek-absorbhrg,
and, for others because it is adhesive,
Rubber dlterltll'y holds lip th.e stook -
Ings and the trousere of the world,
Info s
Alt cut their lei' t e
eth on it,,and old
age uses it In false teeth, Eight mil -
motorists and other million f
enlist in the United pates ride on Tub-
ber tires that aro duretblo, noiseless
and airtight, Balloons of rubber float
aloft,, and huge submarines plow their
routos beneath the oceen's'.nem' pro -
Polled by electricity stored in great
rubber cells. Sheathed in rubber, the
lightning mires a peaceful way
through our homes, offices and fac-
tories furnishing light and telephone
service, Divers, sink out of sight be-
neath the waves in rubber suits: Rub-
ber air brake hose makes' safe the
travel of a nation, air-clrlll hose rivets
our ships, fire hove protects the pro -
party if" city and town, and garden
hose brings nourishment to our grow-
ing„plants, Rubber clothing protects
against storm and rubber footwear
guards.us against cold and wet, Ten-
nis balls and golf balls and rubber -
cored basebaltls give healthful sport to
the mi•11IOns. In hospitals and medical
work the uses of rubber are without
number,
M `
Hot Ice,
Water has always bean regarded as
au incompressible substance. Never-
theless, a VI'as1iington scientist, Prof.
P. W. Bridgman, has succeeded in a'e-
diicing 1t to four-fifths of its normal
volume by subjecting it to a pressure
of 150 tons to the square inch.
Most remarkable, however, is the
act that tate water thus compressed be-
comes a Bolide turning to ice, though
nearly boiling shot!
By the use of high pressure Prof.
Bridgman Itas converted water into
four new kinds of ice, each shaving its
own peculiar properties. All foul -are
more dense than ordinary ice and,
therefore, heavier. They are so much
heavier• that cakes .of them will tic,
Wally sink in water instead of !looting.
Water Curtain.
•The Cinctnuati FIre Department has
been experimenting with a new khhd
of fireproof shit which s' supplemented
by a helmet so contrived as to dis-
charge' a curtain of water downward
over the body of the wearer. Thus
equipped, the fire-fzghter can with safe-
ty venture Into the midst of flames..
The sttit is' made of fireproofed can-
vas and Is of two thicknesses, between
which (conveyed by a tube) water
flows. This keeps the wearer cool,
and is in itself a protection. But the
defense is made complete by a brass
perforated pipe which, encircling the
helmet, discharges ail around pial a
sort ofveil or showerbath of water.
The Modern Maid of All Work,
Mrs, Sefton advertised for a woman
to do general housework. A. colored
girl applied for the place.
"Are you a good cook?” asked Mrs.
Sutton.
'"No, indeed, I don't cook," was the
reply,
"Are you a good laundress?"
"I wouldn't do washin' and ironin';
it's too hard on the hands."
"Can yen sweep?" asked Mrs. Sut-
ton.
"No," was the anseeer. "I'm not
strong enough:"
"Well," said the lady of the house,
(suite exasperated, "may I ask what
you can do?"
"I
dusts;' replied the girl placidly.
WINTER WEATHER
HARD ON LITTLE ONES
--
Our Canadian winters aro exceed-
ingly harts on the health of little ones.
The weather is often so severe that
the mother cannot take the little one
out far an ailing.. The consequence is
that baby is confined to overheated,
badly ventilated rooms; takes epic'
and becomes cross and peevish. Baby's
Own Tablets should be given to keep
the little one healthy, They are a mild
laxative which regulate the stouta.ch
and bowels and thus prevent colds.
The Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box
tram The Dr. 11'illiems' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Out.
Weighing Air.
Unfit very- recently nobody knew
how much air weighed.
We cermet see the air, and, except
when the wind blows, we do 1101 Leel
it. Hence it seemsto us
f s to have al-
most no substance.
Yet it is a rather substantial hold,
When it moves at a rate of 100 miles
an hour it uproots great threat trees
and theme the waters of the ocean
into turmoil. '
If our bodies were empty of air the
pressure of the atmosphere surround-
ing us would crush 11s to an immedi-
ate pulp.
A roots ton feet long, len feet wide
and ten feet high contains seventy-
five peueds of'air•.
—.i..
Land -Going Warships,
There i. t now type 1
,. t e i, le of armored
craft which in war may be utilized on
laird as wei,l as on the water,
It is an armorclad motorcar mount -
e1 on the deck of a beat, the propeller
of which 11drives, by.tte help 01 Sn11-
ablo gearing, with its own gasoline en-
gine. But, if tlier'e be occasion, it cat
run off of the boat and operate in the
ordinary way as an armored ureter
car,
Ono use. Suggested for this nmplhibi-
otte vehicle is that of transporting
troops from vessels to the slhore, the
ear being provided with a machine
gun for defensive or offensive pur-
poses,
•
Of Queen V'ieteria1s grand children,
oto is a reigning moil3i'dll -ling
George—aitd three are Queen Con-
sorts of Norway,'Spain, and Iltunatia.
Resistance
of Hunan Hotly.
The United States Bureau of Stand -
oras has recently' moo some hlterest•
ui
In ' experhnente for eesuriog the
+ g
eleetrlo t'esietaece of the human body.,
They were made for the first time in
such" a way as not to include the re-
sistaisce through the skin (a Variable
factor) where the current enters and
leaves elle body,
The measurements allowed that the
electrical I•oalstaneo of the Same part
Of tlio' body In diff0r0ut individuate
may differ by ratio oe 3 to 2, or evenmore. The reslstanoe of a person
change* from day to day, and often by
small amounts, to an hour, Also the
resistance depends to soma extent up -
"on the position of the body and the de
gree to which the muscles are relaxed.
It is drought that a• knowledge of
the resistance of different' parte of the
body, exclusive sof the skin, may be of
interest to those concerned with life
'hazards from hlglevoltago circuits,
since when eceidentai contact is made
. to•'suelh circuits tlhe skin is burned at
tars point of contact and therefore
largely losses its protecting power,
PALE, WAN CHEF S
INDICATE ANAEMIA
New Health Can be Obtained by
Enriching the Blood.
When a girl in her 'teems• becomes
Peevish, listless and dull, when noth-
ing seems to interest her and dainties
do not tempt her appetite, you may be
certain that site needs more good
blood than her system is provided
with. Before long her pallid cheeks,
frequent headaches, breathlessness
and heart palpitation will confirm that
she is anaemic. Many mothers•, as the
'result of their own girlhood experi-
ence, can promptly detect the early
signs of anaemia and the wise mother
does not wait for the trouble to de-
velop further, but at once gives her
daughter a coarse with -Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills, which renews the blood
supply and banishes anaemia before it
has obtained a hold on the system.
Among the many who lhave benefited
bs the use of these pills is Miss Dora
Kerr, R.R. No. 4, Wiarton, Ont, who
says: "For a long time I had been
feeling tired and worn out. I was
troubled with headache and bacicacho,
and would wake up in the morning
feeling tired and depressed. I had to
walk a considerable distance going too
and from school and would feel so
deed that it seemed I could not go an-
other step. About this time. a lady
doctor came to the school, to examine
the children, and she told me I badly
needed a tonic to build me up. Dr.
Witilams' Pink Pills had been used in
our home before this and I began to
take them. I can only say that they
have greatly helped me, I no longer
suffer from the headaches and back-
aches and I now wake up in the morn-
ing feeling rested and refreshed. If
ever in need of a tonic again I shall
lose no time' iu taking Dr. Williame'
Pink Pills,"
You can get these pills through any
dealer la mediclae or by mall post-
paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
e2.50, from The Dr, Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Disease Ct.rrie\'s.
Ilealth experts have been trying to
find out whether our • too intimate
friend, the bedbug, does, as long sus-
pected, act as a carrier of disease.
The answer is probably yos. It may
carry relapsing fever, bubonic plague
and possibly leprosy. But if it sloes so,
such cases are merely accidental,
germs acquired by biting a sick per-
son being transferred to a healthy in-
dividual with another bite. Unlike
th'o malaria mosquito, the flea and the
louse, the bedbug does not serve as an
"intermediate host" for the develop-
ment of the parasitic organisms' con-
cerned.
On the other hand, Lite bite of the
bedbug is quite poisonous to some peo-
ple. There is reason for congratula-
tion that the insect has no wings,
slilce otherwise there would be no
safety from it even for the most care-
ful of housekeepers,.
It is one of tiro most intelligent of
insects. Niven bedsteads of brass and
iron do not insure safety front its at-
tacks, inasmuch as 4t may find hiding
Places in such beds or get to them
readily from other places of conceal-
ment,
The best way to get rid ot bedbugs
is by the liberal use of keroseno.
CORNS
3 Y
Lift Right Off 11
without Pain
wn...,,,.n.l.,nr.....rnun1nd
l.hY,.,.t net
Magic! Drop a little "Freezole on
nu aching corn, instantly that corn
Mops hurting, then shortly ybu lift it
right off with fingers. Doesn't Hurt a
bit.
Your druggist sells ,t, tiny bottle of
"Ft'eezone" for a few cents, sutRcient
to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn between the toes, and calluses.
Dumb -bells wet'o 'first used, it is
said, in the time of Queen Elizabeth,
the f earlier lm u oras being sticks loaded
with lead at the ends, -these 'being
bell like in shape,
Minard's Liniment Relieves Colds, eto,
Used as a 0uee :tor "scolds," the
cluolcing-stool was a chair fastened at
the end of a long beam over a pond 01?
river. The last record of its use was
at Leominster, in 1809.
AUTO REPAIR PARTS
for sleet snakes and models of ears.
Your old, broken or. worn-out parts
replaced, Write or wire us doserlb-
likg what you want We sorry the
largest and most 'coinpinto stole in
Canada of slightly used or new DJa.rt&
and aui.Omobito eoulpment, Wo see,
(1.0,3), anywhere In Caliente itatts-
eactote or refundle frill our motto,
Shtawee Auto Salvage Putt, Sttp t y,
8113-501 buffalo let, Toronto, glut,
OLD CARPET
1
of 011 kinds made Into
NRW RUGS
Rag Rugo Woven, Carpets Cleaned
Send card for catalogue,
SANITARY .CARPET CLEANING Co,
83 Ryerson Ave., Toronto
What Is a Boy SoQut?
r
A Boys Scqut# He altjoys a walk
throegll the woods more tlsun he does
the exclteneent of the ally streets, ile
leaavrs the facts about the winds., the
stars, the trees and all living tlhtngs—
taongf� becomes
"ae1er of himself" in
o ol)eSt.
A Scout ems tie a knot that will hold,
he can swim, he can patch a tent, he
can mend a tear in his th'Qns'ers, he
east tell you what weeds erre poisonous
and what are not; if Ijving near the
ocean, lake or river he can reef a sail'
or pull an oar.
A Scout does not rim :sway when an
accident occurs, If a person'ltas been
cut lie uses lila first aid knowledge in
stopping the flow of blood; if a person
has bean bursted he knows just what
to do to alleviate the sufferings; and
should anyone be drowning, his train -
ing
raining helps shim to meet the emergency,
to swim, with all clothes on if neoes-
sahy, to the poison in danger, and to
bring hint back to safety. And when
the drowning person is pulled ashore,
be doesn't stand around waiting for
somebody else to do something. He
knows how to apply artificial respire -
Lion an,d sets to it at once because he
knows that not one moment can be
l'os't,
A Scout is kind bo everything that
lives. He prides himself upon doing
a "good turn" every day—for which
he, of course, will not accept a tip.
A Scout promises to do his duty to
God 'end This country, to help other
people' at all times, to obey the Scout
law, sopa .at all times undertakes to do
his best to keep himself physically
strong, mentally awake and morally
straight.
Any Loy, twelve years_ of age gr,
over, may become a BOY Scout .by
jbining a troop that has already been
started. In ease there Is 110 troop in
his neighborhood., or if for other rest -
sone it is advisable to form a new
troop, this may be done after consul-
•taton with Scout Ileadquarters in
Toronto. But ite any case, the consent
of the parent or guardian must bo
shown on the enrollment blank,
Adrift. I Classified ,Adyertiserxl.ents,
Adrift on lire ocean;
No ottu by day, nor moon by slight,
Nor throbbing stays to guide 010 right;
Oar And rudder fail rue.
ia'ror •
arroyo grim atter«ill Me;
siolpless, be raging wave I'm borne
In tempest loud is howling 'storm,
Adrift on the ocean.
Adriftn
p life's sea;
in the shy no 115111 1 see ---
le any there? Abl not for 1110;
\Yaws of doubt enfold me;
11'ean5, death -boding, hood me;
No Faith 1 know—no Hope—uo• Love—
And yet I cry to God .tbore
Adrift on Life's sea,
DANE I E
N
Stops Hair Coming Out;
Thickens, Beautifies.
r „
r 7
I1iJ 1i) I vaton
lUi to O i .a
I
sin Weston,
li SS A
p!Ontario, r a' Il 1'
i r At t tion
York, afrers t0 ;moos women d0sireetr
of beookrking elualtnecl nurses a plums-
year _enures of mineral t+nirtfnlal ettreo-
tire resl(tghoei. 8111015 rooms. Inc salary
end other lnfarmatlan 0nnly 00tdv 8111)-
erintendent, Termite "free emeettai,
'Veetcth, Gotarfe.
' w th l0eltuvun anm41111811 line lltnls New
t
A ar- Service Lit
B1tte i^ {riCe'• Kit.y �
Ail the ueoessalry paraphe'rnalht for
giving service ea automobile storage
batteries ars kept canveetentiy to-
gether, ready for use, by means of a
portable lift,. Tele ,wsailtoied-steel case,
12 in, long, 12 In. Miele and Oee In.
wide, contains a rubber jar for dis-
tilled water, a hydrometer safely hold
in a clip, a throe -compartment slidfng
tray for extra terminal nuts and vont
caps, and a full sot of tools. The kit,
which weighs 10 ib„ Is (Maily carried
by the long bar handle at the top,
MONEYyOROERS
Buy your out-of-town supplies with
Dominion Express Money Orders,
Five Dollars costs three cents.
There are over two million people
in the world suffering from leprosy;
over half of them are ill• India,
Minaret's Liniment for Dandruff.
Bacon is more than twice els valu-
able as rump steak, from the food
point of view. e '
A few cents buys "Dandel•ine." Af•
ter a Yew applications you cannot find
a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides
every hair shows new life, vigor,
brightness, more color and abundance,
,g
All Wrong.
A party at the Zoological Gardens
stood puzzled before a bird,
"It's a beagle," said one,
"It's not," said Another; "it's a
Irowl."
They appealed to a bystander.
"Both wrong," ho sale shorty; "it's
s nawk!"
• ASPIRIN
Only "Bayer" is Genuine
Fun Exchange
The Ratepayer Publishing
Co„ of Toronto, at No. e
Columbine Ave., will buy
or
stale' on anyntopic. 1st be
less than SO -word stories.
Send your contributions to-
day. Liberal rates.
1IDES-WOOL-F'U}tS
Our business hos been built
up on the witlingnese• and
abittty to give you real
service.
WILLIAM STONY SONS LIMITED
WOODSTOCK, ONTARIO
ESTABLISHED WO
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Cariots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO
Blistered Peet, Sore Beet, 'Bared Peet,
Burning and Aching -Peet.
After a herd day's work or a long tramp
end your feet are completely used up,
bathe them in hot water, then rub them
well with MINARD'S i,INIMICNT, It
will relieve you and you will never be
without a bottle,
Islands For Sale.
Almost any island sounds altl•iteL,,i'e,
which probably accounts for the fact
that many famous specimens have re-
cently changed hands for quite large
sums, irrespective of their actual
worth.
Ilerm and Jethou, in the English
Channel, are rented by Mr. Compton
Mackenzie, the well-known, novelist;
the Shetland Isles of least and West
Burry—the latter closely associated
with Sir Walter Scott's novel, "The
Pirate"—will also • probably change
hands shorty.
The Pembroke Islands of Skoner•,
Grasshoint, Gatehoint, and Midland are
another collection which should not
lack bidders, particularly among na-
ture lovers. Besides their scenic
beauty, they aro the home of rare sea-
birds, rabbits., seals, and tbo elusivo
porpoise.
From Italy comes the news of yet
another island purchase. An enter-
prising firm of cinema -producers have
bought Monte Cristo, immortalized by
Dumas' novel, and propose using it for
Mining purposes. s
MOTHER
"California Syrup of Figs"
Child's Best Laxative
Warning! Take no chances with
substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tablets
of Aspirin." Unless you see the name
"Bayer" ou package or on tablets you
are not getting Aspirin at all. In every
Bayer package ere directions for
Coeds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheu-
matism, )earache, Tootlhaoh.e, Lumbago
and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of
twelve tablets cost fow cents. Drug-
gists also sell larger packages. Made
its Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark
(registered in Canada), of Bayer Manu-
facture of Moaoacetieacidester of
Salicylicacid,
Slow Work.
Guide—"Thie wonderful redwood
tree has taken centuries to grow 10 its
present size."
Tourist—"NO wonder! It's on a
government- reservation."
Minard's Liniment Relieves Distemper
The first colors used by artists in
the early history of the 'world were
mode from various colored earths,
bound together with honey or one of
the gums.
Accept "California" Syrup of Pigs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you. are sure your
child is having the best and most
harmless physic for the little stomach,
liver and howols. Chile ten love its
i i 1 on each
as citeatots
fruity t to Full y
bottle. You must say "California."
The sea -cow, or.dugong, is a herb-
dvorous water-anhnal found in the
Rad Sea and the East; froi, 8 to 12
feet An length, it resembles a small
whale,
Minard's Liniment for burns, eta
Owing to an ice jam the American
Falls wont dry 'on March 29,1.840, and
the 1-lorsoahoe Fall was reduced to •n
rivulet, from P similar oanso the
American bails disappeared for o Toru
clays in the Winter of 1909, and, in
April, 1900, lie ice jam in the lower
levee lifted the 'water 85 feet above
normal at 4o661t0o1, flooddng the
banks end obliterating the Whirlpool
and rapids,
Imperial Mica Axle Grease and
IP
Eureka Harness Oil lessen
Imperial
the strain on wagon, team and har-
ness. They make heavy hauling
safe and easy.
The mica in Imperial Mica Axle
Grease forms a smooth, heat -resist-
ing coat on axle and hub. Over
this the grease works easily and
kills all friction. Imperial .Mica
Axle Grease goes twvhce as far as
ordinary greases. ,
Inhperial Eureka Harms keeps
harness soft, flexible and strong. It
protects leather from sweat, dust
and moisture, and prevents crack-
ing. Itis easily applied And quickly
saves its smell cost in harness and
repairs. It improves the appear-
ance of any dark dressed leather
and keeps it in good condition,
IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED
Power Hent Light Lubrication
Branches in ell Cities.
Imporlat Mioa Azle Crease comes in
convonient altos, ranging front a 1 11).
tin to a harm!.
Imperial Eureka Isar.
moss Oil in sines front
1 pint to a Garret.
Sold by dealers
everywhere.
America's Pioneer Dog Remedies
Hoek 0,1
Det DISEASE'S
and How to Peed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author,
13. C1a9 Glover Co., Inc.
118 West 3151 Street
New TorIa
Chilblains, Frost.
Bites and chapped
hands use
AU M
P
i.q
for immediate relief try a tube
to -day and be convinced
BEWARE 01 SUBSTITUTES
$1.00 a tubo
1111 LEEMISC MILES CO., LTC.
MONTREAL
Agents for Dr. duten nrngu6
!RELIEVES PAIN
I211H ANOTHER
iEUMATIC TWINGE
Get busy and relieve those pains
with that handy bottle of
SIoan's Liniment
IIAT Sloan's does, it docs tlhor-
oughly—pcnctraies without rub-
bing to the afflicted part and
promptly relieves most kinds of exter-
nal pains and aches. You'll find it
clean and non -skin -staining. Keep it
handy for sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia.
over -exerted muscles, stili oints, 1lel:-
ache, pains, bruises, strains, sprains,
bad weather after-effects.
For 39 years Sloan's Liniment has
helped thousands the world over. b'oa
aren't likely to be an exception. It car*
tainly does produce results.
1111 druggists -35c, 70e, $1.40.
--x
X . ..pp.
Pai
Liniment enemy
b temsstarz .,Y2.,•;s'+3iw' tP5t295ri' tau
CUTICURA
p97. ICJ Ria:+,
SOOTHES SKIN TROUBLES
S
Bathe with plenty of Cuticura Soap
and hot water to cleanse and purl,
fy. Dry lightly and apply Cuticura
Ointment to soothe and heal. Cutl-
curs Talcum soothes and cools the
s
skin and overcomes heavy p er
pi.
ration, Delicate,del#ghtful,distngud.
52)220,, Otnimebt2SenlSee, Telenm25t. Sold
thronghon1tbe1Joolinlion CanndienOepob
I,.�+r�a,,.s�.e,I Ii,olIeI, 344 St Peel 91. W Montreal,
tffeS t:ilticues11oap theve,withbut 18810.