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The Clinton News Record, 1921-3-31, Page 7SI E.. WA',4.4 , Wit VIVA '4` 1%ItSid ,? 01Ifra ink • Ifil 1111 HEALTh EDOCATION „1 0 BY DR. 3,J MIDDL.ETO N provincial Speed 4f Health, Ontario d 0 Or, Middleton v1!1 be gladtoanswer auesClons on Public Health Mate 1 M twee through this column. Address him at the Parliament Midge, Toronto, e. I1 B, Gon'bi'nuect from. last is's'ue. have disappeared. froth, the body, ( ) pp Y hands aha feet, and in addition the patient op the day of leaving the hos- p'itnl, s'h'ould be given an antiseptic b:tth and have all his clothes put through a sterilizer before ,)being al- lowed to unix or'eonte in contact with other people, whether children or adults. Although all discharges from nose, throat or ear . 'may have .cleared up when the patient leaves the hospital, The temperature during the rash period varies front 100 'deg, to 102' or 10s d•eg. according to "the .'severjty of the attack, and almost as soon as the temperature drops„to ntirznal the. papules begin to brealc, resulting 3n the soecalied desquamation, After this stage the progress of the disease to- 'wards convajeseence is uneventful, if particular care is taken to ward off the complications which sometimes even a slight discharge of this kind arise in scarlet fever cases and bring recurring a day, or two Pater may about serious results, The most cause a c return" caro, that is, a ease occurring as a result of coming in contact with the returned , patient. Parents. should be on their guard when the eonva'lescent child comes home ''est it develop "coryza," or 'a slight "running of the nose," for this is usually the cause of further out- breaks,, other members of the family or neighbors becoming infected through fondling and caressing the child on its return from hospital. Some cases of scarlet fever show little or no rash and indeed little ap- pearance of illness, nevertheless these cases are dangerous to others and should be isolated for the full period of six weeks. The reason for this is that even the' slightest discharge from the nose or throatmay transmit the infection although the illness is hardly noticeable. Mild or "missed" cases of this disease are the chief 'cause of all the epidemics that occur, they being just as infectiou's as the more severe cases. dreaded of these contplications are nephrites .(inflammation of the hid'- trey) and inflammation or euppura tint of the middle ear, the latter 'ac- companied by much pain and causing a rise in temperature. Kidney trouble "can bo best avoided by' keeping the patient in 'bed for at least two weeks after the rash has disappeared and reserving the diet strictly to fluids. Rheumatism sometimes intervenes in scarlet fever, usually in the legs, and causes much pain. It requires care- ful treatment. During the second or third week of the disease, if conval- escence is proceeding normally, the patient usually develops 'a healthy ap- petite and complains about the insuf- ficiency of the diet provided. It is at this stage that the doctor in charge has to be firm with the patient as a too early resumption of solid food is liable to bring on kidney isrouble. Complications such as inflammation of the nniddie-ear are especially seri- ous on account of the passibility of deafness resulting, and must be given earnest attention by the physi- cianin charge. The throat congestion can be relieved by autiseptio gargles, warm applications, etc,, which the doctor will specify. • It was formerl'ybelieved that infec- tion was spread by the loose particles of skin during desquamation, but this theory is no longer held, it having been definitely proved that it is from .A. T. asks how to relieve chronic constipation. Answer: Diet 'an'd ex- ercise are the twb menet imiiorbamt things to deal vfith. Do not eat toga dry food. Drink plenty of water. Use fresh fruit and vegetables every day. Avoid aperient medicines as much as possible. Take sufficient exercise, preferably out of doors, J. P. It. asks if a child who previ- ously had whooping coughshouldbe the nose, throat or ear discharges allowed to go to school if another that others become infected. To member of the same family has allow a patient therefore to leave the whooping cough. Answer: There is isolation hospital or place of quar- na need for the well child to be kept amine, it is first necessary to see that at hone, providing it is not allowed to come in contact with,the p<ittient. The, previous attack would make it practically immune to whooping cough, and it is only by direct cough- ing or the discharges getting on the clothing. that tra:nsmi:s the disease. the tonsils no longer appear enlarged or inflamed and that :any discharge from the nose, throat or ears is com- pletely dried up. All the desquamation should also Miles of Cars Used to Ship Weed Seed. According to the chief grain inspec- ter at Wtunipeg, -Man., enough weed 1. seed to fill afrelgRt train 48 miles long was shipped out of the three Prairie Provinces during the last three years. This at a time when the cost of production of craps was at its highest point; seed, implements and farm help were high; yet the farmers grew this weed seed, harvested it, threshed it, at a cost proportionate to that of the highest quality of grain, afterwards shipping and paying the freight on It to market, where, owing to the presence of the weed seed, the grade of the wheat was lowered, Fur- ther, when these 48 miles of grain cars were being used td Ship weed seed there was an almost universal demand for cars which could not be sat'sfled. Clean seed, cultivation to kill the weeds, and the cleaning of grain before shipment will overcome such waste. ENCOURAGE PAYING INVESTMENTS CUT DOWN WASTEFUL EXPENDITURE Three Ontario Potato tests gave an average gain of 50 bushels per acre, and corn teets.on increase of 23 bushels per acre. Indiana Station Itas just announced a gain of $1O7.OD per acre for an expenditure of $63.00 in tile, lime and fertilizers, ' Order your fertilizers Now—and make sure of the piantfood supply. Booklets free on request, SOIL AND CROP IMPROVEMENT BUREAU Henry G. Bell, B.S.A., Director, 14 Manning Arcade, Toronto ti The Flat 011 Paint For Interior Decoration • Icor the walls and ceilings or any room !n your house, most delicate and harmonious effects can be secured by the use of NEU-TONI'b It is cheaper and mere sanitary than wall paper and will last much longer because it ran be melted, without injury. It positively will not rub off, NEU-TONE 4 mmade in eighteen Shades, and by the us¢ of VsrietW ego most plaaaibg combinations may be sttured,;, l7' FAR tl IV`s-5 NOU1 PAINTS AND VARNISHES NEtI-TONo:s a�sy to rappply. It covtrs welinm! leaves no beset, niarke,' Intheing a u,dl, soh, vCivcty anioh Nhrcb hill leve therm to any 50005 tri the boos t ASyy �eurfneo anyy l; suttcssluliy trental ah1,1 PlSU-TONE--Ploategw•ooa, burlap or metal, Eziio There it a rivets! SSA RTIN.SEA'OUR percdluif., every enface ant for every *Nrpo,e, €ontldl cue nearest 0::),:1) t, or write us &reek Our booklet Term and Cowdry lionret moiled free on request. • ItAr MARTIN-SENoti Ga ' oYN DpapUCra6 Or R1iNre q,b 1kaNlllal, ' ,vgnoou,-e fAONTftEAG'anurnr, lnxnsLcmT,4 t4Ilktl500r', �• ,tirt,r r... "100% Pure" Paint For buildings, outside and i o m,, SENOUR'S FLOOR PAINT It wears and wears e n d wears, "Varnoleurn" beautifies and preserves Qii Cloth and Leo oleum, "Marble -ire" Omar Flnloh The one .perfect floor finish, ?' Wood-t,ac" Stair! tmproves the hew—renews the old. l� The Torente ibspite.tor Incur -i itliStatltentt lednel,Iw0'Bellevue4y,, Offore a three yoare' Cearae p5 Tralri- ism to young women, having the re - mitred education,r a d 1 And ea o of b - gonning• uw'age,rl'h!s Rlospltal' iron adopted trio eight-hour eletem, TI,p pup le, rooeive unlrornis .of tile, School, a monthly allowapoe and travelling exnenees to and from New 'Sto•1c, 'roe Anther information apply 80 the Superintendent, Selling Young Trees. . dr A In uottltealstern On'ta'rio bait up alt' original and profitable basihtess by taking orders for shade trees, Wllh digging tools, l'un'cheon and eome fishing tsvokle'Or a gun,'110 would.. go to the woods' along a'emelt two mils away, or to the rlvtz'. There, white he hunted or fished, he kept his eyes open for straigbt, wellohapod trees, from six to ,ten feet tall and sometimes taller, and when ire found good ones, he dug them up carefully, hauled then} into town and set 'them out for his customers, . For every tree he recelvied frotu one dollar to five dolll'ars, according to its sire and kllld. For rook maple, white atilt and boeeh he charged a higher price than for soft maple or elm, because they were harder to find, Somet[rines he tramped miles to fled a particular kind of tree, and wherever he went, 'ire was always on the lookout for species that be 'could not flad 41 his own neighbor. 11ood. He always asked the owners of the land on which he found the trees for permiselon to take them, and few withheld it, Sometimes' they asked him to take only certain kinds, of trees, or trees from certain parts of the woodland. Usually when he of- fered to pay for the trees the owners refused to take anything, and he never triad to pay more than twenty -floc cents for a tree. Often he was allow- ed to do some odd job iu return for it. At first the boy paid for the use of a team and wagon by working for the ,nian who owned them; lent when his father bought a motor truck, he used it on Saturdays. He usually pleated his trees in the spring, to get the best results, He also dug and set out wild ferns, mosses, grasses and plants, for which he received from ten to twenty-five cents apiece. At his suggestion, many people pla'n'ted wildflower beds, and the became SO expert is making trees grow that people 'often hired him to set out fruit trees, vines, shrubs, ber- ries and rare plants from nurseries, For that work Ise usually received thirty-five cents an hour. When a park was laid out near the square, he furnished the trees, set out plants and Manned the mounds and the wild. flower and tern corner. GLAD HE TRIED THE TONIC TREATMENT Through Its Use Strength and Vigor Was Restor.'ed. To be tired after exertion is natural. Rest and food restore the body to nor- mal after sack fatigue. But to be tired all the time is a symptom of an anaemic condition that will not be corrected !until the -blood is built up. Such an anaemic condition is so gradual in its approach and generally so lacking In acute pains that it is of- ten difficult to persuade the sufferer to do anything for It. But it is not a condition that corrects itself. If the blood is not enriched the trouble will incredse. The nerves will be under- n'ouris'hed and neuralgic pains will fol- low, Digestive disturbances often re- sult from thin blood, sleep is disturb- ed, and a general breakdown may oc- cur. Mr. Wilton Johnson, Nineveh, N.S., says: "A few years ago my system was in a badly run down condition. My nerves seemed always on edge, and I found thyself so weak that I could hardly ilo any work. I suffered from headaches and from pains la the back and under the shoulders, and was often se sleepless at night that, when morning came i felt as tired tis when I went to bed. I was taking medicine all the time, but it was do- ing me no good. Then I read the testi- monial of a man whose condition had been similar to mine, and who strong- ly recommended Dr. Williams' Pinlc Mlle. I decided to give this medicine a fair trial, and when 1 had taken six boxes I felt lunch better. .8 continued taking the pills until I had taken six more boxes, and I can only say I am glad 1 dill so, as I aunt now enjoying the. beet of health, and i advise all men who feel rundown to give these•pilts to good trial." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can be ob- tained from any dealer In medicine, or by mall at 50 cents a box or six' boxes far $2,60 from The Dr. Williams' h'ledicine Co., Brockville, Ont. iLare Taking of Whitefish Eggs, The Dominion Fisheries Branch re- ports that upwards of 50,000,000 white- f4sh eggs have been placed in the Smoke Island hatchery, Lake Winni- pegosis, These eggs were oollected at the mouth of the Waterhen rfver, which carries the discharge of Lake Wine 1pegc,sis to \•Vaterhen Lake, thence to Lake Manitoba, With. take' 4Vin'ntpegosis freezng early in Noyem- ber, the greatest difficulty was ex perlenced in securing the eggs, the tug and outfit fiacling it necessary to winter at the egg -collecting canup. The collection of 1920 is treble the quan- tity collected the previous year. — In skating, as in no other sport, man has succeeding hi imitating the flight of birds; especially of the birds that soar and float, like gulls„ hawks and vultures. A good skater will move for hours without apparent ef- fort, and with 110 violent motion of arms Or legs. l:.Ie progresses, as the bird does, by constantly changing the equilibrium of his body. To perceive the likeness and the beauty of it, watch a group of skaters horn a point high up in mime lofty building, Whore ,• lO ed Windows flint o,5 rho sound, of the steel on the lee, and tie only •itnpression cones through the eye: 'MhiaUd'a Liniment f61' osedeUt1u Birds Are Forest Policemen. Lassos kava done and are tieing a great deal of injury to the fal'.est's .01 osersda, Tile forest services, federal and provincial, are carrying out pro, tective llteasill'e'sy and the federal de- par'thllen't of agt'loulturo' has 'a staff of ontontolglsts who. devote' :all their energies to 111s work, ]1Tany Ingot* One methods are being d'evise'd, bat the public will be most 1n'torestecl'in one .tiling that stands out in these investigations, nisinely, that tie pre, servation of bird fife le clue means of reducing ,lite, 'numbers of fere5t .in- sects, Thom may be seine birds which do not eat forest insects, but general- ly speaking' it's true that„ the more birds;" the fewer insects,' Canadian boys and young !nen in the past have been too prone to go into the woods With a gun and shoot a't everything In sight without thin'kin'g of the injury they might cause. Canadian forests are fine places for healthful reared' trail, but let those who go into them be careful not to burn thein up and not to destroy un'tllinlchhgly the non- game birds which are forest police - .men, Let tire' young people shoot as much as they like, but with a camera, nota gum, - Thoughtful Smiles. A bad 811110g Is dear et any price. A bad husband cannot be a good man, 1 If you owe nothing, you know what you are worth, , There are' always more foolish buy- ers than sellers. Noone is so wise but that he has a little folly to spare. Adversity Ls the balance in which to weigh your friends. It is a mistake to think that danger can be surmounted without danger. You should pay just as mticlt for your experience as the resultant wis- dom is worth. SPRING WEATHER HARD ON BABY The Canadian spring weather—one day mild and bright; . the next 'raw and blustery, is extremely hard on the baby. Conditions are such that the mother eanhot take the little one out for the fresh air so much to he de- sired. He is confined to the house which is so often over -heated and bad- ly ventilated, He catches cold; hls little stomach and boweis become dis- ordered and the mother soon has a sick baby to look after. To prevent this an occasional dose of Baby's Own Tablets should be given. They regu- late the stomach and bowels, thus pre- venting or banishing colds, simple fevers, colic or any other of the many minor ailments of childhood. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont, Boy Scout Notes. Canada's capital city has the distinc- tion of having more Scouts per capi- ta than any other city of 100,000 Or more people in America,. If the Bay Scouts of Ottawa were to john hands they would be able to encircle a very large section of their home city, * * •* s To have saved three persons from death by drowning at three different times is an excellent record. It is held by Assistant Scoutmaster Ed- ward Walker (19 years old and a Scout since 1911) of Grimsby. He was recently recolrmtended for one of the highest Boy Scout decorations, * * * * New Boy Scont troops ar'e being formed iu many parts of Ontario. The latest towns to register new Scout or- ganizations with Provincial Hgad- quarters at Toronto are Port Col- borne, Manotick, Merritton (two troops), Dunnville '(a second troop), Whitby, Minden, Richmond, Fort Wil- liam (a .third troop), Trenton (a second troop), and about a dozen new troops in the cities of Toronto, Otta- wa, Hamilton and London. Many other new troops are also 111 course of formation and will be chartered by the Provincial Council later. O 0 * * "The Trail," Ontario's publication for Boy Scout Officers and Leaders, has now tt coetempohary in "Scout- ing." a similar paper _published by the Saskatchewan Prov nclal Council. Both are greatly appreciated by those for whom they are published and are already wielding a big influence in co-ordinating the work of the Boy Scout Movement tlttottghout their re- spective provinces. * * * * P010015 interested to the Wolf Cubs the junior bran.clt of Scouting—will be glad to know that a new booklet describing their worst is now avail- able from Provincial Scout Head- quarters, Bloor and Sherbcucne Ste„ Toronto, upon application. What Ono or the Best Known Travellers in Canada Says. "Now I um going to give YOU an un- solicited testimonial, 010 they say 1n the patent medicine udvectiping, Heretofore C have had a profound contempt for patent medicines, particularly so-called liniments. Perhaps this 1s due to the reason that I have been blessed with 0. Sturdy constitution, and have novel') been 111 a day in my lift. Ono day last fall after a hard day's tramp 10 the slush of 'Montreal, .T developed a severe pain in my legs and, of course, like a. man who has never had anything wrong with him phnslcall', I complained rather boisterously, The good little wire says: it will rub them with Borne liniment 1 hane,' tlo 0heed.' T veld, just to manor her,lG 11 In sh e o mimes with a bottle of DIINeti2D'S LINIMENT and. leets busy. Believe me the pale dlsapneare41 a few minutes after, and you can tell the world 0 sant so," (Signed) FltA2100 17. JOHNS, Montreal. What other language ever spoken by than can compare in richness of opportunity with English? Take, for example, these words: self-conceit, self-assurance, self-sufficiency, self - complacency, self-will, self-confidence, self-esteem, self-reliance, self-respect, All of then, express something of a man's mental attitude toward his own abilities and achievements; yet with what various and delicate shades of moaning! As they aro here set clown elm rnlln Wiliest a ntogressivo series from t e neutral of Innis/ tiontieuut- story to the worthy and desirable, 'there are both racial psychology and history In that list, DOveloped- fel' leo roll. Prints from 3o each. Eipeoxin 1Et11a'ging, PgUr--Au Art ''Mount, ed Oi0 loaay ulargemont, size 4x4, from any good negallve, 20o, We pay postage, QOODFI=LLOW 68 SAUNDERS 10 Zielat,ma?t street, a Toronto New Citizens for Canada., With a population of loss' than two Omensto the square !vile simperedto Tingland's six hundred, with only ave. per cent, o1, herrich agricultural land iii the West andercultivation, with a, heavy national. indebtedness and only a few people to pay the in- terest -in life form of taxes, the reason why Canada Is hungry fatJmuligrants oast readily be unden5tood. Itllmigra- •tion, is the bemoan rain without which Canada must parch Slid wither up. If Great Britain load a large ermineof farmers and farm hands, Canada height not have to Invite immigrants from any other mune, But Great, Britain is not so Hutch as agricultural as a merchant and manufacturing centre, and every year grud'ge's more and more the fanners or farm bands who Mayo her Calonies for the Do- minlone,, She is quite willing to send out countless city foils in the hope that they may be transformed into ,farmers in their new environment, .but site has fewer farmers to spare many.thamany othercountries from which Canada in the past has drawn excel- lent settler's. This is illustrated by the homestead entries. From 1597 to - 1919, o1919, only eighteen per teat. Of the British immigrants made entry for homesteads in Western Canada as compared to twenty-seven per cent, of the American immigrants and twenty- nine per cent. of the foreign horn from Continental Europe, In certain perilof Europe ,where there is a genuine land hunger, there is not enough land to go round, Five or six acres per family is all the laud available in certain parts of Belgium, and even on that the thrifty Belgian frequently brings up a family of ten. The great immigration of Ukrainians from Central Europe which has given Canada nearly 300,000 of her Western farmpopulation was due to the con- stant subdivision of fares which wore only fifteen acres to start with. These Ukrainians' have become a great as- set to Canada, and have at their own expense erected four 'large colleges for higher education. Then again we owe our fine stock of seventy thous- and Scandinavian settlers' to the lack of sufficient land in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. Have these foreign born made good Canadian citizens? Read "The Edu- cation 'of the New Canadian," by Dr. J. T. M. Anderson, of Saskatchewan, and. you will say "Yes!" In one or two groups at first there was opposi- tion to the learning of English, par- ticularly among the older people, but 110w it is difficult to find sufficientteachers to meet the demands of the schools. And it is !tot only in the schools where you find the foreign born. More than half the students at the University of Manitoba are of foreign parentage. You find children of the foreign born as leaders in the professions and in 'the Cabinet of at least one Provincial Government.Canada is after all only repeating d' on a largescale the welcome to and the assimilation of the .foreign born which bas characterized the history of the Mother Country. The Flemish weavers and the Huguenots who found refuge In England, are but a few of the foreign born •inmlgrants who help- ed to build up British industry. Cana- da's chief industry is agriculture, and her agricultural prosperity is dole in no small degree to the thrifty and in- dustrious new Canadians who have come to the wide acres of the West from the over -crowded lands of Eur- ope, and whose children to -day are Proud to speak English and to sing "The Maple Leaf _Forever."—A,B, Forest Experimental Station. The Dominion Government estab- lished about four years ago under the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior, a forest experimental sta- tion at Petawawa, Ontario. This is on a part of the' military reservation that is not required at the present time for miliary purposes. The tract is admirably situated for the purpose, as it is a territory from which the Umber has bean cut in the past fifty or sixty years, and he new forest is coming on in various stages of growth and different kinds of trees. The tract resembles so much of the cut -over lands in Ontario and Quebec that the results of the experiments made in it will be applicable over a. groat ex- tant of Eastern Canada. The experi- ments cover too wide a range to be gone into in a brief note, but, in aword, the result will be to shoe; how quickly forests of different kinds .of trees grow, and how hest to handle a cut -over or bunted -over' forest area in order to get a crop of pine, or spruce, or birch, or any other desired tree ready- for the•saw. Already valuable information has been secured and this will be increased as each year goes by and the effects of the different meth- ods of treatment become visible. Penalty of Success. No man desires defeat; and yet When all the balloting is o'er, The loser treed no longer fret; The \valuer has to work still more. Spring Forest Fires. ie o ibe alas, dangerous seasons of the year in regard to forest fires: i5 ailw ailplroaeliilsg Sand It bebovos all who go into a fol-os1) ail nary business to be careful with fire, Whoa the snow leaves the 101051, last scar's leaves, grass and twigs, are lett as dry as tinder, and a lighted Match or cigarette stub thrown down oat'eieeslY Palle Belo nhaterlal as iniIanziniibie ae a barroi'of shavhigs. 413851' ilio apring rains 00100 00 and the new grass and new foliage starts dile danger is great- ly reduced. People do not realize that just at the close of winter, through which there is scarcely any danger from fire 1n. the woods., comes' on the most dangerous, season, Care by all who go into the woods at this time means a great reduction in the flre•lhagard, ASP "Bayer" only- is Genuine Warning! Take no chances with substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." Unless you see the name "B'ayer" on package or on tablets you are shot getting Aspirin at all. fa every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain, IIandy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also sell larger packages. blade' M Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), o•f Bayer Manufacture of Mionoece•ticacideistor of Sallcylioacid. A Dubious Farewell. The minister of a Scottish country parish, whose estimate of himself was not of the lowliest type, had accepted a "call" to a wider sphere, Sad was paying a few farewell visite, "So ye're gaun tae leave us," said one of the oldest of his female parish- ioners, as he sat clown. "What wilt we dae Imo?" "Oh, Mrs. Macfarlane," replied the minister, in affable tones, "you'll soo41 get a far better man!" "'Deed, sir," came the despoadeat rejoinder, "I hae my doots. We've had five in my time, and every ,vin o' them has been waur than the last!" His Hearing Restored. The invisible ear drum invented by A. 0. Leonard, which is 0 miniature megaphone, fitting inside the ear en- tirely out of sight, is restoring the hearing of hundreds of people in New York City. Mr, Leonard invented this drum to relieve himself of deafness and head noises, and it does this so successfully that no one could toll be Is a deaf man. It is effective when deafness Is caused by catarrh or by perforated, or wholly destroyed natur- al drums. A request for information to A. 0. Leonard, Suilo 437, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, will be given a prompt reply. advL The bee, in proportion to its size, is thirty-five times as strong as a horse, Minard's Liniment for Burns, etc. "Please," gasped Mrs. Newlywed excitedly, on giving her first order to the butcher—"please send me a pound of steak and' some—some gravy!" Life is .constantly weighing us in very sensitive scales and telling every one of us precisely what 'h'is real weight is to the bast grain of cleat. —Lowell, 7� Classified Advertisements, 1? 005, SPUN 2)NTO TA2U8 ' 013 Mills,bionkota, Gaort;elown Woollen _ ....1105101)08 Watz=Zn, . __ .... ,Ap CENTS W'ANT14D; BLISS IOATIVIO .tF,. Carlin le a remedy for the relief of cecotlpatton, Indigestion, lillleuanoss, Iiiloamallsn, ltldney Troubles, 11 to won -known, having noon extensive) ad. verttSed, since it was dratmauufaoluretl in 5558, by diattlbutionof large nuantl. ties of Almanacs, (look Books, Health Books, eta, w'hioh are farniehed to agents rt'11e or oltarge. :The ronadtes ars Sold at a price that allows agents to double their money. Write Alonzo 0,. Brass Medical Co„ 121 St, Paul St. ;Cast. Montreni. Mention this paper. Wisps of Wisdom. Lttek 1s a good tiling to trust lu— g you aren't hungry. Contentment is better luau riches —if you 71 have lam a tl both. An echo is the only thing that can elheat a wonhun out of the last word. Meet trials tvillt shales and they vanish; face cares with a song Mid they fleo. Do not Measure your enjoyltlent by the amount of money spent in pro- ducing it. A 111E111 who allows 'himself to be carried away with ethhusiastu often has to walk back. It is the height of folly to throw up attempting because you have filled, Failures' are wonderful elements is developing character, MONEY ORDERS. It is always{ Safe to seal a Dtuninion Express Money Order, .Five dollars costs three cents, Women are permitted ti drive motor -buses in the streets of Tol:io, Japan. Minard's Liniment Relieves Distemper "Tho head of s child dues not in- crease in size after the seventh year," says a scientist. Scottish Customer (to dentist):— "hoots, mon, five shi:l:at' for it ries bit tooth, No, no; the man over the road pulled cot two rn' brake 010 jaw for one and sa :pence." HMS -WOOL -FURS 010211000' 68x5713—The handl- ing 01 these stilus W mit, SOo- cialty. 1t will pay yon to to its Ir you have three or mor,' skins, but on a less number the freight charges are too Mut, y. WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED WOODSTOC!<, ONTARIO CSTAGLISHEO 1870 r COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk' Carlota TORONTO SALT WOR -f8 0. J. CLIFF - TORONTO America's Pioneer. Dog Remedies Boole on DOG DRSEASES and How to Peed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. �. Clay 01over Os., Ina 115 West '31st Streit New York. U.S.A. for quick and sure relief. BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES 51,00 a tub. THE LEEMINO MILES CO., LTD. MONTREAL Agents for Dr. .13111 Bonged RELIEVES PAIN The smoothest looking axle is rough and pitted under the microscope. The powdered mica in Imperial 'Mica Axle Grease fills in this roughness and makes every rubbing surface smooth, Grease can then lubricate prop- erly anti will last twice as long aait ordinarily would, Imperial Mica Axle Grease is the best and most economical grease you can buy for your wagons and trucks. Leather is honeycombed with pores—thousands of them to every square inch. To pre- vent these tiny open- ings from absorbing dust, sweat and moisture use Imperial Eureka Hao- ness 011, Lift Right Off 4 without Rani l J) ,FF ltiagicl Drop a little "Froezone" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then sho'tly you -lift it right off with fingers. Doesn't bort a 1)11. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Froezone" for a few cents, sufficient la remove ovary hard corn, son corn, ar corn between the toes, and calluses, rn sere pacts of Central Afrt.m it IS a mark .of:respect to tt>r.t the be -,lc upon olo1's superior, hilr,ard's t.in!nrent Relieves •)chis, etc-, It closes up the pores of leather and keeps it strong, flexible and new -looking. It contains no acids and it will not turn rancid. Farmers, teamsters and liverymen use and recom- mend it. Sold in 00nvonlertr alsca by doaiers srerywlioro. a= a Soap Shampoos Best For Child ell If you wish them to have thick, healthy hair through life shampoo regularly with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Before shampooing touch spots of dandruff and itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment. A clean, healthy scalp usually means good hair. Sosp25e, Ointmeot2Send50c. Talcana5e. Sold throughout theDominion. Canacbaniepot: Leman, Limited, 344 St, P'o15L, W., MWntr,,L Cntleara Soot. ailoV ee without snug, OUCH! ANOTHER RUMAT C TWINGE Get busy and relieve those pains t with that handy - t : 1 shotIc of Stoan's Liniment IIA't' Sloan's docs,.it does thor- oughly—jicnetrales without rub- bing to the afflicted part and promptly relieves most kinds of exter- nal pains and aches. You'll find it clean and not -skin -staining. Kaki/ handy for sciatica, lumbar o, heut:nlgia, over -exerted muscles, stiff ,ouits, back- ache, pains, bruises, strains, sprains, batt weather after-effects, For 34 years Sloan's .Liniment ha0 helped thousands the world over, You area t likely to he an exception. It cer- tainty docs produce results. All druggists -35c, 70e, (i1,4O. - IS1UC No. 14--'21. Linimen-Amy 3aif3s 'tMM " 4.oJt:an.Ma�.ae:,t"n..w.w A .rr,,vY riti