HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-4-21, Page 7f"
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Illik111i111'11111.1111 1111 1111,1111 1111 MIMI Anima ma 'Ilk III MIL 111 ',am int " NERVOUS PEOPLE
0 ,2 HEALTH EDUCATION . i NEED A TONIC
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON • 0, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Enrich
„ Provincial Board of Health. Ontario ; 1 the Blood, Thus Increasing
Ai Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer' questions on Public Health nutG pi
Your Nervous Ene
'gy.
r
p tors through this column. Address him at the Parliament Sidges, III.
0 Toronto. ' ier Nervbus 'people who have eat yet
. .
developed e disease that can „be lire-
.
t. vial& 1111 1M mi la lays. mAliouli vs, va ‘L'1111 MB 1111, M1L 111 11 00
grazed and treated by the medieel
The need or medical inspection of
*Ihools is becoming increasingly
• 41ent to people even in the most res
linlote districts of the Province, To
their redit be it staid that the ealioel
trustees sire rapidly coming to realize
the impatient° of this branch of pre-
• ventive medicine, and meeting'e of
;these officials have been held recent-
ly tn various rural distriete, with a
+View to Obtaining medical and lung-
ing inspection throughout the ;schools
of their townships.
As educational work is what is
needed at the outset, a nurse will first
of all spenclssome time in each dia-
rist where medical inspection a
schools is to be inauguesated. She will
"get acquainted with the trustees,
members of the Women's Institute,
local doctoes, newspaper proprietor,
'clergy and prominent citizens general-
ly, and outline the work that is. plan-
ned. Certainly the ,comparative
healthiness of the country, with pure
air and facilitiee for enjoying the
great out-ofedoor amid natural sur-
roundings, does not make the need for
continual inspection and supervision
as .pressing as in the city. However,
a systematic scheme for medical in-
spection and nursing of school chil-
dren is very neccseary,..even in couti-
try districts far removed; from any
great 'oentre of population. Ailments
found among eity-hred ehildren are
also prevalent to an even greater de-
gree in rural schools, owing to the
lack of skilled attention. These ail-
ments include: defective vision, de-
tective hearing, defective teeth, defec-
tive nasal breathing, hypertrophied or
diseased tonsils, defective nietrition,
heart disease, lung troubles, nervous
diseases, orthopedic defects, skin and
scalp ;conditions.
• Of MI these defects taken together,
medical and nursing attention has
corrected about sixty per cent., and
a large her cent. of the -remainder
could have been corrected before they
became chronic, had the children be-
fore school age been under the super-
vision of the Division ,of Maternal and
Child Welfare. Think of what an im-
mense blessing such a combined
scheme will be when properly organ-
ized! Pre -natal clinics instructing the
mother how to diet send deal with
danger signal's even before the birth
of the child; clinics to look after both
mother and the child at birth, and
• help the mother with advice and co-
operatioti in bringing up the .baby
through the critical first years of life;
then school inspection followed later
by a medical inspection of young boys
and girls preparing to enter Indus -
trial pursuits; these will eonstituto
the links in a strong chaise oe medical
,superyieion from the cradle to young
manhood and womanhood,
neeossary adjunct to medical in-
spection of scheols is the dental die-
pensary, the importance of which is
becoming inereaeingly evident. Just
how many of the more common all -
merge of childhood and youth can be
directly or indirectly traced to defec-
tive teeth it would bo difficult as yet
to estimate, but invesigabiett along
this.line is proeeeding.
It is certain, however, that nutni-
tional and digestive defects as well as
serious secondary disease in other
parte of the,body, are in a great many
cases the result of decayed teeth. 0b -
servers stete,that dental cariee (tooth
decay) + :re present in progressive
stages in themouths of ninety-five
per -cent. ef' our children. Good teeth
as a rule bring abut good digestion,
and this in turn develops good 'health.
But good health is not long maintained
if the child, is not supplied with nour-
ishhcg food in adequate amounts. In
this connection the Department of
Education in some countries like Eng-
land, provides meals for school chil-
dren, and recover the ,cost from the
parent, where possible. Where this
provision is made at the sehools, the
teachers often assist in the 000king,
and the elder girls are also encouraged,
to do so; the latter thus receive some
of the instruction in simple cooking
which is so necessary.
On first thoughts it would seem
there would be little need for these
measures in a land of plenty such as
Canada. But it has been found in the
rumal districts especially that many
of the children coming some distance
to school bring cold lunches and eat
them un -der somewhat unhygienic sur-
roundings. To obviate this, the On -
tante Department ef Edueation in
many -districts proyides hot lunches at
the mid-day recess, and supervises the
-children while eating. Not only de
the youngsters thus get the benefit of
hot, well -cooked food during school
hours, but they aro early taught the
advantages of hygienic principles at
the. table, and these youthful impres-
sions very often remain through life.
This combined scheme of medical
.and dental inspection, systematically
conduCted, cannot fail to be an im-
mense boon to children of all 'ages.
It will make the next generation
stronger and more free from,physical
defects than any preceding .eno, and
bay the foundations for a race of
supermen and superwomen in genera-
tions to come.
Saving Big Trees.
A public-spirited organization call-
ing itseit the "Save the Redwoods
League," is at the present time mak-
Ing great efforts to secure the .preser-
vation of some, of the giant trees in
California, which are in a way the
most interesting of created things.
They' are by far the most ancient.
of living things. Many of these trees
were well grown and flourishing dim -
fug the lifetime of Christ. Some of
them were living when King Solomon
reigned in Jerusalem, when the pyra-
mids were built and when Babylon
was at the height of its glory and
power. Their years can be counted by
their rings of annual growth.
TJnfortunately, nearly all of the sur-
viving giant redwoods are on land be-
longing to private owners, most of
whom are disposed to log them off, re-
garding their money value as of more
importance than any sentimental con-
siderations attaching to them. The
league has undertaken to oblate pos.
slesion .00. some of the tracts by pur-
chase.
Many of the giant trees are more
than 300 ' feet tall. "Old Goliath,"
which was blown down in a stover a
few years ago, had a circumference ot
more than 100 feet at the base, and
one of its limbs was eleven feet in
diameter. The "Father of the Forest,"
now lying prone, has had its heart
eaten out by are, so that ono can ride
erect on horseback through•ies trunk
for a distance of eighty-one feet.
When standing it was more than 100
feet in height. The "Blether of the
I:serest," long ago stripped of -its bark,
measures (without the bark) forty-
three and a half feet in girth seventy
feet from the ground. ' It is estimated
to contain 527,000 feet of sound inch
lumber,
Ontario has the largest end one of
the longest hydro -electric transmis-
sion lines in the world, co-operating
with 248 Municipalities and with lines
extending hundreds of miles through-
out the province. Its capacity will
reach a million horsepower with the
completion of the Chippawe-Queens-
ton power canal in 1922.
Municipal and Real Estate
Finance in Canada.
The pamphlet entitled "Municisial
end Real Estate Finance in Canada,"
just issued by the Commis/sten of Con-
servation, touches upon some of Cana-
da's most difficult financial problems.
It is a clear and convincing statement
by Mr. Thos. Adams, Town Plannlug
Adviser to the Commission, esgarding
housing, land speculation and high
taxation, resulting froth municipal
waste and mismanagement.
No national problem in Canada is
of greater importance than that which
has to do with the conservation of
human and fifth:eclat resources in our
cities and towns. This publication
emphasizes- the fact that until we em-
ploy saner methods ie developing our
community lye any efforts being made
to conserve our natural resources
must he nullified as a result ot the
careless way. In which the wealth de-
rived from those resources is dissi-
pated by bad form of 'land develop-
ment.
This pamphlet may be obtained free
on application to the Commission of
Conservation, Ottawa.
Squirrel as Tree Planter.
A tame squirrel, kept as a house
pet and allowed liberty from its cage,
will, if supplied with nuts, bury them
la the most curious places. It will
hide them in people's pockets or even
inside their collars;
It is eyident that, in a state of na-
ture, squirrels are not able to keep
track of many of the tuts they bury in
odd spots, Thanks to this fact, they
are quite useful in helping to seed
burned or logged areas in some parts
of the country.
This feet has been particularly
noted in the States at Oregon and
Washington, where chipmunks are
giving important assistance in tho
business of re-establishing forests of
the Douglas fir. They collect the
seeds from the fir cones, and many of
those they bury and forget produce
young trees. Mice do much geed work
of the same kind.
-What's Your Experience?
If coffee keeps you awake
nights, thangeto
a clelicious meal -time drinlc,whole-
scale and. satisfying , but containing
nothing that will disturb your rest,
Economical — Better For You
"There:5 a /Zeasort".
profession, often have great trouble
in finding relief, Irritation, headeche,
aleopleseness, nervous indigestion. All
these dime -if -efts make life miierable+
but aro endured rather than rue a
doctor's bill,
, Suck sufferers 01100110 know the dan-
ger OE Such a condition, which, if al-
lowed to persiat, may result in a ner-
vous besaktiown. In this condition
what is needed is rich, red blood. .A.5
a tonic for the blood and nerves, Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills have been used
with much success, .They have a di-
rect action onthe blood, and through
it carry to the nerves' 'the elements
needed to restore their' normal func-
tion, at the same time improving the
general health, The benefit e that [pi-
law the use of Dr. Williams! Pink Pills
is shown by the case of Mrs, Norman
Selfried, West Montrose, Ont., who
.seyst "It would be hard far nie to
overstate the benefit 1 have ,derived
from the use of Dr, Williams' Plnk
Pills. Before I began taking the pills
I was very nervous, weak and ran
down. I could hardly do my house-
work, and as there is a great deal of
work to do about a home on a farm,
I felt very much diecouraged. One
day while reading a newspaper I saw
an advertisement of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills and decided to give them a
trial. I could notice -beneficial effects
after taking a box of the pills, and by
the time- I had taken a few boxes, I
could again do my work with ease,
was no longer weak or nervotis, slept
well at night, and Smoke in the morn-
ing feeling wall and strong. I am
happy to say that the pills so greatly
benefitted me."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all dealers in medicine or will be sent
by mail on receipt of 50 cents a. box
or $2.50 for six. boxes by writing.The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont,
Father and Soo:,
We w111 hazard the assertion that
by lar the greater number of men
whose lives are useful, fruitful and
reasonably happy had fathers who
made friends- of their boys, and that
the greater number of mou whose
lives are 'wasted or evil had fathers
who never made friends of their leks.
It is 'from the father the boy should
get Itis first lessons in good humor,
sportsmanship, generosity, good fel-
lowship,. perseverance, industryg-he
deed, in all time qualities that should
eventually enable him to bear himself
as he should in the rough-and-tumble
of life. From the mother comes usual-
ly the fostering of the gentler and
more spiritual side of his nature; but
that outgrowth is likely. to be arrest-
ed and may even die unless it Is ac-
companied by growth -of the manlier
virtues. Those may be fostered in
school, by teachers and by association
with other boys; but there is no Me
auence so potent in nourishing them
in shaping the boy's character as that
of the father who makes a friend of
his son.
Paternity 'implies - nearly always
some measure of affection, but it.does
not always , imply some ; measure of
friendship; There are many fathers in
the world who have a kinder and more
tender feeling for their boys When
they are away from them than when
they see them. The nervous, irritable
father whose high-spiritedson is a
source of annoyance rather than, Of
pleasure, the overworked father who
comes home too tired to have any zest
for play, the preoccupied father who
cannot shake eft his problems and
troubles, the self-indulgent father who
regards his home as a sanctuary for
himself and wants only to be let alone
with hie newspaper, his magazine and
his pipe—none of em is by way of
cultivating his boy's frieudship. None
of them is meeting in the proper spirit
the responsibilities of parenthood—
even though they may ell be taking
proper -measures for the health and
schooling of their children.
Friendship requires a certain
amount of effort, a certain amount of
self-sacrifice, yielding frequently your
own desires to those of the person
that you befriend. 'The father who
reads aloud to his boys and discusses
with them the books that they read,
who helps them with their' leesons,
who teaches them the use of tools,
the names of trees •aed flowers and
birds, who makes holidays and Sun-
days ire occasion for giving 'pleasure
to them rather than for seeking it for
himself, servernot duty itis sons but
his countrY.
Yap Money.
The island ot Yap Is noted, among
other things, for having the meet ex-
traordleary currency in the world..
Beeldes the ordinary shell money
there is a stone coinege, consisting of
calcite ar limestone disks that vary
frdm six inches to twelve footle diam-
eter: The larger stones, Which are
rather tokens than melee, are piled
up round the chief's treasure house
and seltioni change hands in the trans-
acting itt which they figure, though
the ownership cheeses. Oneshuga fel,
or stone coin, Was lost in a storm
while being ferried from one place to
another, hut is still regarded as valid
money and has been used many -times
as a modlute of trade, although It lies
at the bottom of the sea. Evidently
there is something to be learned front
Yap. To lose your annoy and Still have
Ilia use of It appeals even to a dull
fancy; and , could hardly grow
monotonous itt a land Where it is the
-Mist= to trundle a ample of eight -
feet grindstonedown to the earner
store Wbon yen watit a grapefruit or a
yeast cake,
Brightly -colored walls and other
gay hues in factories and workshops
are said to lead to itereasod erode's-
tion.
Minfird's Liniment Relieves Dist:Imps/
Character,
Whou w0 ase the Word eetecese, we
too ether Mean 0 fortune, Bet the bet-
ter kind of wealth 10 1101 the wealth of
dollars, house% lands and vested In-
torests. It is the wealth of a good
name and the essential quality iu man
or woman that makes sucit a name
and stands behind It.
Some who maintein it very respect-
able character in the community think
they are better than ahem who fell,
when the truth is that they were never
similarly tempted, They were cusie
toned en MI aides against a shock.
They were sheltered from the tempest
others had to face,
It takes extremes—either of adver-
sity or of prosperity—to bring out the
real charecter. We find certain men
who hay e inherited preposterously
large stuns of money going all to
pieces morally, "drunk with sight of
power," failing to realize their stew-
ardship. Quite as bad as to be prodi-
gal is to be niggardly. In fact, the
picture of a dissolute rake flinging Me
money away is rather more attractive
than the view of a mean old miser
eitting on top of a pile of money and
loving it to death.
Character is not to bo simulated.
Now and again oue encounters. the
man who thinks he can go to the
stores and buy the makings of a
gentleman, The swagger outfit of ex-
ternals will not die—it remains obvi-
ously an outfit, merely the external
raiment, entirely separable from the
substance and the spirit of a man,
How amazing is the difference be-
tween two that are fashioned original-
ly in God's Image' and of the same
clay! One breathes benignity and the
other is malign. One is spiritual, the
other is of the earth earthly. One has
only commonplace ideas and a torpid
imagination, the other abounds in
bright and delicate fancies and a
quick and humorous sympathy, so that
the association is a pleasure all too
brief and rare.
To keep a character worthy of one's
own respect implies self-control. Nor
will the respect of others be won if
we have reason to despise ourselves.
TIIANKFULrOTHERS
Once a mother has used Baby's Own
Tablets for her little ones she would
use nothing else. The Tablets give
such results that the mother has- noth-
ing but words of praise and thankful-
ness for them. Among the thousands
of mothers, throughout Canada who
praise the Tablets is Mrs, David A.
Anderson, Now Glasgow, N.S., who
writes:—"I have used Baby's Own
Tablets for my children and from my
experience I would not be without
them I would urge every other
mother to keep a box of the Tablets
iri the house." The Tablets are a mild
but thorough laxative which regulate
the bowels and sweeten the stomach;
drive out constipation and indigestion;
break up colds and simple feversand
make teething easy. They are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Out.
A Mile With Me.
0, who will walk a mile with me,
Along life's merry way?
A comrade blithe and full of glee,
Who dares to laugh out loud and free,
And lot his frolic fancy play,
Like a happy child through the
flowers gay
That fill the field and fringe the way
Where he walks a mile with me.
And who will walk a mile with me,
Along life's, weary way?
A friend whose heart eas eyes to see,
The stars shine out o'er the darkening
sea,
,.And the quiet rest at the end of the
day—
A friend who knows, and dares to
say,
The brave, sweet' words that cheer
the way
Where he walks a mile with,rne.
With such a comrade, such a friend,
I fain would walk till journey's eud,
Through summer sunshine, winter
rain,
And then? Farewell, 'we shall meet
again! •
—Henry VenDyke.
ASP1MN
"Bayer" is only Genuine
Warning! It' e criminal to take a
chance ou any substitute for genuine
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," prescribed
by physicians for twenty-oue years
and proved safe by millions. Unless
you see the name "Bayer" on package
or on tablets you are not getting As-
eli•in at all. In every Bayer package
are directions, for Colds, Headache,
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, ; Earache,
Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain.
Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost
few cents. Dreggists also sell larger
packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin
Is the trade mark (registered in Cana-
da), of Bayer Manufacture of Mono-
aeetleacidester of Salleylicacld,
Oriental Goldfish.
Goldfish, as bred in Japan and
China, assume strange shapes; the
Celestial has eyes on top of its head,
the Telescope has grotesque protrud-
Mg eyes, while the Tumbler cangot
maintain its emillibrlem in the water
revels to its curious shape,
The first explerer to cross the Oath
adiari Rockies was Alexander Meg.
Iconic, On a greet rock ai Tide Water
is the theerintion; "Alai:ender Mae-
lierizie„-frint Cenacla by land, July 22,
1723. Lat. 82.21, 48 N. Ole also ths,
covered the river whirl+ hears his
name
_...—
Mirterd's Liniment Reliever some ete
uaauit
ele. 17-21,
ise
of afi kinds Math Into
CARP ET
NEW RUGS
gag Bugs WoYnil,Carpets Cleaned
Sencl semi for elitelegue,
SANItARY CARPET CLEANING CO.
03 Ryerson Ave, Toronto
Useless Appendix.
Not long ago a lumber 01 maws
left Scotland to scale in this country,
One of them wrote to his wife ehortly
after his arrival, and instructed her
to sell their household property and to
take passage out to him. The good
wife had'a ireigliber who came- to help
her with the' paciting, in the midst of
it they fell upon Themes' watch. The
neighbor ;examined it dimly and then
Bald: "Ilte a grand watien Catherine.
Yell be taldn' it wi' ye?" "Na, net"
was the reply.. "It Wad be o' nae use,
oot there, for Thomas' tells- me in his
letter that there is some 'oors 0' dif-
ference between the Wile here and in
Canade, so needna be talthe uselees
things,"
Por years I have never considered my
stook of household 'remedies complete
unless a bottle of Millard's Liniment
was included. Por burns, bruises,
sprains, frostbites 0,' chilblains it ex-
cels, and 0 know of no better remedy
for a severe cold In the heed, OP that will
give more immediate relief, than to hi,
hale from the bottle through the nasal
organ.
And as to my supply of veterinary
remedies it le essential, as It has In very
many instances proven its value. A re-
cent experience In reolahning what was
supposed to be a lost section of a valu-
able cow's udder has again demonstrated
ifs great worth and prompts me to re-
commend It in the highest terms to all
who have a herd of cows, large or small.
I think I am safe in saying among all
the patent medicines there Is none that
covers as large a field of usefulness as
does 1Vlinard's Liniment, A real trueism
good for man or beast.
CRAB. IC. ROBBINS,
Chebogue Point, 108.
Tho Selkirk settlers were a body of
colonists who CMG to Western Can-
ada by way of Hudson's Bay in 1812
and founded a settlement that has
grown into Winnipeg. They suffered
great hardships and many died, brit
the plucky survivors maintained their
position in the Great Lone Land and
thus are to be numbered among its
founders.
Mlnard's Liniment for Barns, eto.
Of the eighty -throe Zeppelins Ger-
many possessed during the war,
thirty-four were shot down and de-
stroyed, thirteen caught fire accident-
ally, and nineteen were destroyed in
other ways.
COARSE SALT
LAN ID SALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
0. J. CLIFF TORONTO
TORCA
FANCY GOODS CO., Ltd.
7 Wellington St. East
TORONTO
Importers and Wholesale Doalors
in Fancy Goode, Cut Glass, Earth-
enware, Fancy China, Toys, Sport-
ing Goods, Smallwares, Hardware
Specialties, Druggists Sundries.
Travellers Exerywhere
Wholesale Only
Should Make Up His Mind,
The newly arrived visitor trent the
"sticks" tithed ist the- curbstone wateh-
Mg the traffic cop and his SeinaphOre
itt 00410 bewilderment. "Bay, mister,"
,he asked a passerby, "can't that °Ili-
cer make up his maid? Phut ho says
S, WI). and then he says 'Oo' on that
,there contraption of hisM, Can't he
decide once and ler a11?"
Ono ostrich egg will make au omelet
sufficient f or thirty people.
Mleardeis Liniment for Dandruff.
Canada leads the world ia the pro-
duction of nickel and asbestos, 85 per
cent. of each, nickel in Ontario and
asbestos in Quebec.
America's Pioneer Dos nerasdhell
goofs on
DOG DISEASES
and How to Ireed
Mailed rrea to any As -
drone by tbe Author.
Cfloy Weyer 43a, tato.
118 Wuet slot street
Now York, II
HIDES -WOOL -FURS.
EXUEUXUATO
Mit money can still be made
on these skins, Ship youv lot
to us anti make sure of re,
calving the right priee, Re-
turns sent the same day as
Shipment Is received.
WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED
VVOODSTOCK, ONTARIO
EsviniaListico
For better painted porches, for
appearance,protectlon and wear,
U80
Porch Paint
•B‘ollte_..114.4.15121Axtfili
" The "tied Paint to Paint !tight"
ASK YOUR DEALER
a;
"The second blow-out in a week!
Why don't you get good tires ?"
DOMINI IN TI
ARE Cs 1110. TIRES
IMPLOOOPPostmailaial=3
DOMINION TIRES are the same quality, no matter what the size.
DOMINION "NOBBY TREAD" 30 x 314 Tires for Ford, Chevrolet,
Gray Dori, Overland and other light cars are the same design, same
material, same construetion as the big "NODDY TREADS" for
Pierce -Arrows and Packards. You get the mileage when you ride on
"DOMINION TIRES".
There are Dominion Tires For every car and every
c,
purpose—DOMINION INNER TUBES, too—and a
complete line of DOMINION TIRE ACCESSORIES.
Sok/ by the best stealers From coast to coast.
309
Warming relief for
Thellillatle aches.
just used Sloan's
Liniment and the quick
comfort had brought a smile
of pleasure to his face.
Good for aches resulting
from weather • exposure,
sprains, strains, lame back,
overworked muscles. Pene-
trates without rubbing. All
druggists have it.
.35+
704
$140
s
Linim
ineseaL-42matnorsextue.
At Your Sort4os
Wherever You Live.
The woman in town, or ocruatry, has
the same eierserthes as her Meter in
the city in expert advice from the
best-known firm of Cleaners and
Dyers ba Canada.
Perces from the =retry- sent by mail
or express, receive the same careful
eettentiensais week delivered. persenally.
Gleaning a, d Dyeing
( Clothing or Household Fabrics.
For years, the name et "Perkees'° bas
irignifled perfection in tbis work of
making old thintgs lank like new,
whether perSon0l garments of even
the most fragile material, or house-
hold curtains, draperiee, rage, ete.
Write to us for further particulars er
send your parcels direct to
Works Limited
ie'SA 8
LiTia,RA HEALS
NTENSE ITCH.NG
BurningOn Hands, Could Not Put
Thom In INator. Lost Sloop.
"My bands wcro vcry SOTO and I
could not put them ftt water to wash
„,, thorn. ThOre wet° oomo
pinvlco 011 1107 hendo, and
the itching and burning
wore so int nOo that I
scratched and irritated
thorn, and I could not
t sleep At niGht.
"The trouble lasted two
weeks before I teed Cutieura. Whoa
had treed two caliee cf CutiCura
Soap and ono box of Outicura Oint-
ment for about two tecalst 1 woo
healed." (Oigned) TIcginald
11. F. D. 2, Fort Rent, Maine. .
Use Cuticura Oar eVe.11.day toilet
purposes. Bathe with Soap, soothe
with Ointment, dust with Tatman.
Sop 25e. Ointment 25 and 50s. Talcum 25e. Sold
throughout Ihchoinicion, CanntlinoDeont.
tynEttia, Limited, 044 R. Paul St., W. Montreal.
OW'Cuticure Sono shoves without mos,
(iVeas0.0....,..:O,Nttabassurataaoasuceat.rati,a.a.....t,
A Quid Relief
for ikadache
A linadache is frequently cansod
by badly dig t ed food; the (cages
and ireidsreAril tine Crowe from ere
absoA)ed by the blood whish le
turn irrila1cs the r.ervot olid
coated painful sympteris called
Itdach mouteigiat theUtta.
eta. 15 to 00 drops of
Nlethrr gcluti'tt gyrtip tyihi correct
feel te digestion wad effoedrellief,
1,,,,stsr-rmtvavalvei...rets ax,.ramermserrr.eontotes era,
Toronto
r." '=osaatoreasereasm-..====MOte=a,
Oa NE PAT &VARNISHES
The' Herd -Drying, Long -Wearing
fie% KM"
rmiser
o paint for wow
and weather.
SSNOUR19
01.000 Mist
It wears and wears
and wears. ,
"VAII40I0tr1.l“
beautifies ltd prr•
serves 011 010111
And ynoleunt.
"IftiOD.LAD'i
STAIN
Improves the neer
renews the 001.
''NF,U•TONV'
Ihei.artitsry, waah.
able Plat 04 relet
for I atelier Decor-
AtIMt.
Floor Finish
Nothing addeso much to the heauty of n home
An Boors that ore properly oared for; on the
other hand, floors that are not tautened ore
unpleasant to look at, are hard to keep olean,
and become ;Owed through wear. Don't
neglect your flown, beautify Want And nava
that Save the surface and you save All
itmtnix-irs Flow lintel, I; the ported
treatment for Rom of All kinds. It Is the ono
kw finish that hoe 0 money.kack coronet,
attached to every can.
In 24 hove MARTILF..TTE dries hard whit a
beautiful finint that will not show boat markt,
It 0,, A high glom, yet 11 toldtp enough to stand
any amount of wear without injOry. 11 000 be
trotted with snap and water and It WM not
mar nor sornteh white. .
Phut tr a tteriat 111A ItrIN...MNOUR Iroduiffor
;very surface Old fn, entry ot0o, 000 ppr
'Oared Drakr bt iwile Ohl. MP briala
'Taw and Country mailed Imo% rikitut.
GI* MARTIN-SpIOUR
t,;.*&.... aligiese Weenie
=2= motlinanL Mt=
tit
leF.-'°'----------7
4P. sttieete.e. aney
all "..-. Ohiet '—