HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-6-9, Page 7OS PH , DROUIN, of Montreal,
deolares he suffered pix years:
With dyspepsia but six bottie6 of
ea Taniac made a now man of him*
Gained 38 pounds,
"I could hardly believe my east
when I stepped on the scales after
taking six bottles. of Tanlac and found.
"that I had actually gained thirty-five
Pounds in weiggtt" said. Joseph
Drouin, 2194A St. Denis St., Montreal,
who, for the past twenty-six years,
has been passenger conductor on the
Canadian Pacific Railway and -is well
and favorably known along the line
of his run between Montreal and
Mount Lauriers,
'Before I started on this medicine
I was in a bad way. Por years I'd had
to take my meals here, there and
everywhere and, as the result of this
irregular eating, my internal machin-
ery got all out of working order. I
lost all desire for food and what little
I ate would form gas and bloat me up
until. I could Hardly breathe. • I be-
came so nervous I couldn't sleep at
all well at night and was often so
tired in the mornings I didn't care
whether I took ray train out or not.
I fell oi'f twenty-five pounds in weight
and became alarmed about my condi-
tion., for I had tried all sorts of medi-
cine without getting any relief.
"Then, one day I react a statement
In the paper that decided me to give
Tanlac a thorough trial. 'Well, I never
would have believed any medicine
could do a 'man so much good in such
a short time, It quickly settled my
stomach and gave me such an appetite
that I .00uld eat . three good square
meals a day and no longer have any
trouble• with indigestion or gas and
I sleep so well at night, even when on
the road, that I think it would take a
collision to wake me up. I. now turn
the scales at two: hundred and ten
pounds, which is ten pounces more
than I ever weighed in my life and
feel bettor in every way than L have
for a very long time. Tanlac is the
best medicine I ever tried,"
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere. - Adv.
Marriage Market Revived
in France.
With a superabundance of comely
marriageable women unable to find
husbands, the ancient marriage mar-
ket idea is being revdved in. some parts
of France, particularly in western de-
partments, such as Poitou and Vendee,
says a Paris despatch, There tourists
ars witnessing some extraordinary
sights, as scores of would-be wives
line up in the central market place,
each armed with a huge colored para-
sol hissing is as conimo0 as smiles,
the whole day being given over to os-
culating youngsters, abandoning all
else to press lips, but always under
Me watchful eye of the market guard.
Frequonly during the market a will-
ing swain is accepted, the usual sign
being that the couple turn their back
on the rest of the crowd'and continue
their'ltissing behind a sheltering para-
sol.
But oftener the market .fans to bring
Immediate results and the applicant is
rejected by receiving a hearty brow
on the shoulders with the parasol,
Officials insist that the practice
should .be extended to all parts of
France, pointing out that in districts
where wives are chosen like vege-
tables there are more happy marri-
ages, fewer divorces and fewer illegiti-
mate children than In any other de-
partments,
In. Paris the movement has taken
another form. New matrimonial
bureaus are opening daily, all of them
being designed to lute spate francs
from the working class of girls, bat
apparently operating in good faith,
and well equippedwith long lists of
the names of men who are willing to
become husbands. The usual Yee is
200 francs, paid in advance, with the
nromise of another er as: soon as the
spouse's confidence is obtained suf-
ficiently to enable the wite to "touch"
him for
a bean oni
tl o pledge of wifely
obedi n e
e c,
In Germany there are now only 818
.men between the ages of twenty and
thirty to every 1,000 women.
i HEATH EDUCATION
BY DR. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board of Health, Ontarle
e
Or, Middleton will be glad t0 answer questions on Public Health O & 0
P tern through t11is column. Address him et the Parliament Dldgs,t O
0 Toronto,
mis n 1tai.1 ► 0# w1.cm:-
1! O ��'0 l& thiel
Ili' -health in various forms, and That there are different vt m g is
twin definite diseases can be prevented shown by the different dioceses that
if more attention' is paid to the kinds result when •oertaim foods are lacking
of food we eat; This• is 'becoming its sertaip essentials. Talce for in-
Mero and More clearly understood and stance the case of 'beri-beri, a disease
appreciated as a result of recent that is very common•ln certain epet-
studies on what are known as twos -,ern countries' where rice forms the
sora food uroducts or "vttamines!' chief article of diet! end where polish -
On account of the''absenen of Osage ed rice is used. Polished rice eoesiots
substances many so -paired deficiency of the kernelof the grain with the
diseases, such as ricket; in this cou.n- 'husks removed, and this process in -
try, anti beriaheri in the Bast, results waves not only the removal of the
As long as there is a sufficient var- husk but also the outer lining of the
iety of foods, and the food in its gra- kernel known es the . "silver skin,"
travel state there is little danger o£ which contains the vitamine,
any such disease developing. But when A type of disease mere 'heard of in
the variety .is limited, or the natural this country is infantile scurvy, be -
qualities have been impaired or licved to be due to the absence from
changed through boiling, heating or or deficiency in a diet, of a vitamine
preserving, as in tanned food's, then,it with weal -defined antiscorbutic pro -
is that deficiency diseases may melee pertfes. Infants, fed for long periods
their appearance, exelusively on condensed milk or pre -
Errors in diet often result in stem- served foods, have been shown to
act troubles, due to over -eating or the sometimes suffer from a1 farm of
use of too many meats and starehy scurvy, with hemorrhages under the
foods" such ars instates, :bread, etc. outer layer of the long bones, Where
Other errors of diot'inaiude a to free an infant is brought up entirely on
usa of foods fried in ,gravy, or of boiled or eternized milk, a small
sauces, candies, etc., which often pro- quantity of grape, orange or lemon
duce indegestion, juice should be acimintstered daily. In
It is trot, however, with over -Dating this country scurvy is seldom seen
or with indiscretion in diet that. this nowadays except during times of want
article Beale. ' It is rather with the or among crews of ships on long voy-
nature and ingredients of the food ages where the diet is of the tinned
used as regards thepresence or ab- or Banned variety almost exclusively.
sence of vitamines in its composition. It has also occurred in construction
The question• is:—What are vita- camps in this country where canned.
mines? I will answer 1n a somewhat goods form the chief articles of diet,
round -about way: and where fresh meat, milk and vege.
Science for a long time has be- tables are not easily procured. This
lieved that the essential composition vitamin° is also deficient in froth
of food that maintains life consists. of 'vegetables that have been dried, or
carbohydrates, fats And proteins in even kept for long periods without
certain proportions, with duo admix- drying.
ture of salts and water. Though this When vegetables are boiled the pro -
is theoretically oorreet, modern re- cars should be short, and the vege-
seareh on metabolism has shown that tables not allowed: to soak long. The
a pure diet of earbohydrates, fats, pro- sooner the boiling is finished and the
Mins, sults and water is not sufficient vegetables removed the more nutri-
to maintain health. Something else tions they will be.
must be present, although by comma- The fear of destroying the vitamine
ison it is infinitesimal in •amount, and in froth milk has been one of the
this something is described as a vita- chief objections to the wholesale pass
mine. teurivation of milk. However, by ex -
A professor at Cambridge who has posing milk that has been previously
dune much work on this subject, re- cleansed by filtration to a temperature
Gently fed a number of rats and puppy not exceeding 158 deg. F: for a shoat
dogs on an artificial diet of protein, period, the vitamine in the milk is not
fat, starch and sugar; •and by carefully destroyed but only slightly impaired.
watching the animals he found that This cannot be avoided:, however, and
they. ceased to grow, although the am- the deficiency is more than counter-
ount of food they consumed was acts- balanced by the greatly increased pur-
ally more than what was necessary to ity of the milk rafter pasteurization,
maintain normal growth. On adding and the destruction• of practically all
a small quantity of raw, fresh milk the harmful bacteria that •th•e milk
to this diet a marvellous improvement might have contained,
in the health and growth of the ani- The nose this subject of vitamins
mals became evident. The improve -10 investigated, the more apparent it
ment was not due to the last -albumin 'becomes that their absence or de -
or salts in the milk, as an equal rate ficiency is associated
.with many of
of growth was ob iined from paoteln dttsoases of metabolism whteh are
and -ash-free extracts of the milk so obscure, and which hitherto have
solids, and from yeast, in exceedingly been difficult to account for in, .human
small, quantities, , This Cambridge beings.
professor therefore came to the con- Mortar is comparatively an ex-
clusion that there was some other es- tremely small fraction in the meter -
senate factor in food, in adding to the ials that make up a house, but it is
protein, fat and sugar, that is essen- a very necessary part. Vitatnines,
tial to growth. similarly are an 'infinitesimal 'part of
The next question is "Are there the amount of food necessary for the
more vitamines than one?" Yea, up maintenance of health and growth in
to the present there are three kinds the individual, but without these ac -
described, viz:— cessory food products the body will
(1) Tho- That Soluble A, vitamine, not thrive. The small fraction of vita -
,present in fresh milk, butter, animal nines usually yielded by articles that
fats, etc, contain them is a serious difficulty in
(2) The Water Soluble B, or anti-- the way of finding out their exact na-
beriJberi vitamine. ture and composition. It is improbable
(8) The Water Soluble C, or anti- that vitamines are in themselves nu -
scurvy vitamine present in fresh tritive, but they produce co-ordination
fruits, vegetables, etc. of metabolism, By this means the
Nor are those carrying on the re- body is able to adjust itself to carry
searches by any means certain that on life and maintain health under
these three are the enly ones. varied conditions and surroundings,
London, Smokeless, Bathed
in Sunshine.
A bright day has dawned in London
out at the darkness of the coal strike.
For three weeks 7;000,000 persons
there have been astonished by the re-
markable improvement in the air they
breathe. For the first time in their
memory London Is practically a smoke-
less city, and meteorological experts
can give no other reason for We than
the enforced cutting down in the use of
coal. It is an absolute fact—suspect-
ed for some time, but no Cully real-
ized and appreciated—that London
can.- so, breathe, smele, touch and
taste the benefits of 'the minors'
strike.
The great gray curtain that has al-
ways been as much associated with
London as is the Thames has ['deap-
eared and the city t
e t s bathe i
P Y d u warm
sunshine, and is seeing the blue sky.
There has never een
b sucha thorough
s
spring cleaning in the memory of liv-
lug man. The atm
os here is cleaner,
the people are h 1
e a or and it is
p P nn now
apparent that one of these is c0itlte
gent on the other. Observers readily
say that it is reasonable to believe
fie inn en n„enenI 1,,1ealmalelO amen 099111 J5 11 51 1 J,
a
Let This Food
ei You to ealth
Sound nourishment for body and brain
with no bvsrloadinn and no tax upon the
digestion;is secured from
Grar1 3
r.
It embodies the nutrition of the field
grains, and it make$ for better health
and bodily efficiency, fit:: 0
eee
Ready to serve-
-an ideal break
fast or lunch, lunch."272ereS a Reason"
1,111140 ll 11 (5 i 4111 11 f o9to ease m0 re IA -III „19011 1711e1011Ismm 1. ,, rn
8
0
that the coal tniners' strike is respons-
ii11e for all this,
Dr, John Owens, superintendent of
tate Advisory Committee on Atmos-
pheric Pollution to the Meteorological
Office, said there had been a gradual
Improvement in conditions since Align
16. He insisted that the reduction In
the amount of coal consumed here had
had a remarkable effect and urged the
'public to take steps to make the at-
mospheric purity more or less pernman-
cnt. For years he has been experi-
menting by filtering air through paper
discs, and the density o1 one period
compared with another was easily dis-
ceruible. On the last day of March,
the clay before Alm beginning of the
strike, hie discs showed a deplorable
dirty state of atmosphere. Three
weeks later ilnprogement was noticed
until the last day of April, wheu it
was almost clear, Since then the•
discs have continued to improve, rove and
now Dr, Owens is forced to use mora
delicate discs in order to get final` re -
London air is dirtiest les in
Y t win-
ter, wren h. 1
i ouseho d fires.
- arsrii ci
t -
A
pally to blame, The last months in
the yr
Yoa bringthe famous Laudon
fogs, but since the miners' strike be -
mune serious the public have boon un-
able to burn coal in their holies. Dr.
Owens said the London fogs' were
caused by the huadreds of thousands
of chimneys which send Porth smoke at
such a rate that baween 7 and 0
o'clock la the ntoraing more than 200
tons at soot have been sent over the
clty, where It hangs like a black cloud,
causing the fog. He denied that the
chin:meye 0f industrial plants were
t Mostly responsible for this,
Miser.
1 •have seen tnany things,
To beautiful Por words;
Twilight -1 tremulous with Inlet—
Birds.
I have heard mole
That was to me—
Soft as the clinging li0.gers
01 the sea.
I have Rowe many things;
Now I ism aide -
I nm a miser
Counting my gold.
Jack O'Leary's Coat.
401il prisenors, WPitld fie eohttent to
escape punieement ;or a xrl410, they
ilk committee, But pot so with Jaolc
01105417, He wanted his oat, I•low
badly he Metall It is told lit the
Canadian Magazine by Col, George
T, Denisonn, who as a young barrister
Was asked to defend O'Leary against
a charge of 1iurglarY.
He was almost oaugbt in tate act,
says Colonel Denison, being found in
e lane in his shirt sleeves behind the
shop that lie had broken into; in the
shalt as his coat.
There was little chance of getting
hint elf, but I did the best I could with
the jury, making a ,strong point of the
Met that the Crown had not proved
that the coat was lits, and 'that there
was no evidence that it was his coat.
To my amazement the jury acquitted
him, I left the court, and O'Leary
came actor me and asked me to ala
ply to Chief Jnatioe Draper far the
restitution'of the. coat. I refused moat
emphatically, told him to say nothing
about it, and adyised him to leave the
pity at oriee.
The next morning I was paas'lag
through the courthouse when Dan
Dwan came up to me and said;
"Good morning, Mr. Denison. I was
In the court yesterday, and I heard
ye pleading for Jack O'Leary. Be
japers! Ye did It well, Ye mulvath-
ered that jury till they didn't know
where they were at. For he was
bloody guilty."
"I am afraid he was," said I.
"Yes;',said Dan, "But you know, he
had no business to ask for his coat."
"I refused to apply for it" I replied,
He then told me that O'Leary had
gone in himself, just as the court was
opening that morning, and had asked
the chief justice to order- the return
of his coat.
"But you said that it was not your
coat," replied the chief justice ,
"Na, my lord, I did not."
"Well your counsel dld."
"No," said O'Leary,' he did not. He
only said that they did not prove it
was my coat, But I can prove it is
my "
.- eecoatthink this is the most impudent
request ever made of mo," said the
chief justice. And he ordered the
coat 10 be old and the proceeds given
to a charitable lnetitutioa and order-
ed O'Leaiiy to be removed from the
court,
I do not think I ever defended an-
other prisoner. I was not pleased with
my experience in that rase,
iHow Tan Are You?
Most men are quite Are,
as' to
their exact height .and would become
indignant if you questioned the ac-
curacy of their statements an that re-
spect, but, as a matter of fact, no man
can say, unless• he has just then been
tnea2ured, exactly how tall he is at
any particular time. If the original
feasurement on which he banes lris
statement was made early' in the morn-
ing, he has been crediting himself
with too much height most of the time,
while he has, not givea himself all the
height to which he is entitled if the
measurement was made ran -the even-
ing. This tor the reason that all per-
sons are taller in the morning.
The disks of cartilage between the
twenty-four vertebrae of the backbone
yield considerably to the pressure clue
to the weight of the body when it Is
erect, and expand themselves while
the body is la a recumbent position.
The effect in the case of a fairly heavy
man of average height may amount to
a half inch, and !n the ease of a police-
man or postman who walks upon pave-
ments all day ,the difference in height
at morning and night might amount to
three-quarters of an inch. •
These are facts worth keeping in
mind If • you contemplate a physical
examination for some appointment re-
quiring a certain height, and you are
very near the uiintmum. Do not stand
or walk much before the examination
—and take it in the early morning.
PALE AND NERVOUS
SCHOOL CHILDREN
Need Rich, Red Blood to Regain
Health and Strength.
•
Many children start school in excel-
lent health, but after a short time
(tome work, examination's, hurried
meals and crowded school rooms
cause their blood to become weak,
their nerves over -wrought and their
color and spirits lost. It is a nttstako
to let matters drift when boys and
girls show symptoms of nervousness
or weak blood. They ere almost sure
to fall victims of St. Vitus dance, et
drift into debility that leads to other
troubles. Regular meals, out -door
exercise and plenty of sleep are neces-
sary to combat the nervous Wear of
life. school
1 e. But it is still more int -
portant that parents should pay atten-
tion to the school child's blood ,supply,
trich and redbygiving this' in g v g ll r.
Williams' Piok Pills and theboy
or
girl til be sturdy
aed in for school,
The value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
in eases of this kind is shown by the
statement of Mns, Watson, Greed
Valle, N.13„ who says: "In the spring
of 1919 my slaughter Thistle, then 12
years of age, began to show symptoms
et nervousness whish developed into
St. Vitus dance. She seemed to• lose
control of her limbs and at tines every
muscle in her body seemed to be
twitching and jerking, and the trouble
seethed to be growing worse, We
finally decided to give Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills, and the result Was better
even than ws tiad hoped for, and she
is now enjoying the best of health,"
You cart got Dr, Williams' Pints
Pills through any dealer in medicine
or by mall at 50 cents a, box or six
bozos Cor $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'
Modiolus Co., Brockville, Ont.
Sweden eccupies the Leading posi-
tion in the lumber market of the
world.
Mlnard's Liniment usod by Physicians
Por ate 011 tenet tables a now per-
funle.aternilei' worts on the litsmp
pf•ieciple without the use of a rubber
bulb,
AUT9 .REPAIR PART
r !oast melee and iesee111 sf camel Dun old, brolton OP • worn-out parte
',Wailed. 'Write or wire as deserib;
Ing what yen want, We carry the
largest an'd 51101A con{Moto 019915 in
Canada et 1111BBbhy UO991 9h new parte
al11 .automobile erste O1enf, - Wo .step
puce, anywhere In canalis, eatls-
feetery or roilinnd in tell Our muerte,
Shawls e100 19a1vann Part - 5931071
023-031 Dhifisrin f1l,, 49101159 uy,
On a Bamboo Bridge.
n Anlel'lean tells of eroe'siug the
Teesta Myer, in the Himalayan re -
glop, on a rickety baniboo bridge.
Tile bridge, always datlgerous, was
at that time a mere ragged skeleton
of itself, and to make matters worse
was slippery with green slime. Suet
bridges are usually rebuilt•onee In two
years, but this one had evidently not
been touched for ouch longer than
that, On this narrow, tottering struc-
ture, open at the sides, the Ameripan
had to cross over the turbulent, rapid
river, 300 feet wide and seventy feet
below the bridge.
The instant one steps on sueh
bridges they recoil from him and
swing and shake in an alarming way,
rolling from side to side and pitching
like a ship in a storm. They swerve
with a sudden jerk every time one
lifts his foot; not only sideways• and
lengthwise, but downward and for-
ward, as- one's weight depresses, the
bridge. Thio goes on until one passes
the middle of the bridge, after which
the vacillating structure kicks up be-
hind one as he ascends.
Now this American got on fairly
well as long as he could see the bam-
boo rod on which he had to walk, al-
though the open sides, heightened the
sense of insecurity. But away from
the balk, If one looks down to see
where to plane his foot, the rush of
leaping water in the torrent below
gives him the giddy sensation that
both he and the bridge are running
swiftly up stream.
Yet ono must keep his eye upon the
single bamboo overhanging the -abyss
and find a shaky footing upon it, since
to miss it means certain death,
The American was a quarter of the
way over, perhaps, when as he stepped
from one bamboo to the next it tilted
up and he could see most of these in
front were lying loose and disjointed
in their V -slings. They had been
broken away by the passing of per-
sons who had preceded him. He could
not awing round to go back; forward
was his only course.
He went on with long strides to get
a foothold on this shaking, swinging
line of slimly bamboos. After each
step be had to half close his eyes to
counteract the giddy feeling of the up-
ward rush of the bridge. It was a
creepy, ghastly process. A false step
meant death in the raging"gull below.
Atter what seemed an age he reached
the opposite bank,
WHEN BABY IS ILL
When baby is 111; when he. cries
a great deal and no amount of atten-
tion or petting makes Min happy,
Baby's Own Tablets should be given
him without delay. The Tablets are
a mild but thorough laxative which re-
gulate the bowels • and sweeten the
stomach and thus drive out constipa-
tion and indigestion; break up colds
and simple fevers and make teething
easy. Concerning them Mrs, Desire,
Theberge, Trois Pistols, Que., writes:
I am well satisfied with my nee of
Baby's Own Tablets. I have found
them of great benefit to my baby when
he was eutterlag from constipation
and I can strongly recommend them
to other mothers," The Tablets aro
sold by all medicine deafens or by mail
at 25 Dents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
With the Boy Scouts. .
"Gee! I wish I could belong to that
troop," said a young Toronto Scout
.the other day when he heard of the
pians the First Penetanguishene Troop
is making for its summer outing. It
is one of the most interesting enter-
prises yet attempted by Ontario
Scouts and takes the form of an ex-
Peditton Iron Penetauguishene down
to Ottawa and Perhaps Montreal by
the route followed by Champlain and
his fleet of two hundred war canoes
in 1615. The boys will niake the trip
in canoes by way of the Georgian Bay
and French River, across Lake Niels -
sing, down the Mattawa and the Ot-
tawa, and if they go to Montreal, down
the St. Lawrence too• The Hudson's
(lay Company officers to North Bay
and Mattawa are endeavoring to se-
cure the old-time large voyageur birch -
'bark canoe of the Chasse -Galeria type,
in order that the trip may be made as
realistically historical as possible.
• * * 1
At the Victoria County Boy Scout
Belly hell in Fenelon Falls on Victoria
Day the 1st Fenelon Falls Troop cap-
tured
pa-
trol
the George Beale S00 a-
y and 1
trol roy race trophy which is one
athletic
big to Scout
0
f the
work in that part of the province.
hthe ether field dayevents,
Fenelon
-
Palls fire prizes andt captured ova t
three seconds, while Lindsay Look
home tour seconds, -
* M 11
The ,Scout Movement "keeps mov-
ing." Grimsby had one troop last fall.
Since then it has grown so large that
it has been found necessary to reor-
ganize it as throe separate troops un-
der a District Scoutinaator, Mr, J, A.
M. Livlugstoe. And that is not all,
because two whole patrols of boys
who came from Bonneville have be-
come the unciens of a new troop with
headquarters in their own town. Ilen-
frow, too, has experienced a similar
growth in Scout interest, and Kincar-
dine has a troop which is also eullor-
ing Cron growing pains and plans are
being made to divide it into tWo.
Preparations for tite summer ca.ntps
aro proceeding wherever there aro
Scouts, aecoa"ding to I'rovittcial Mead-
canisters in Toronto, A recent doable
number of "The Trahl," the Ontario
Scout allots paper, was deeded en-
tirely 10 the subject et Camping and
0atitlt IVlauagcinent,
Wearers Liniment iielieves Neurefel h
leeUe No, 04---'21,
Truth,
Wiieii I must die I shall net fear the
vette;
There will be eeybrealt sOniewltere.
• a new dawn
Spreading before ane and new strength
bestowing,
And I shall De no amore 50 earth -
bowel ,pliW11,
There W111 be life enriching, pulase
leaphtg,
Vision 810011ed before my eager
eyes;
And I shall still be 'loving, learni155
teepees'
Tire zest ok iife in some fair Dent-
dtee.
I have no 'tear that I shalt be but
blended
With Being infinite and undefined;
Only the service of the body's ended,
I shall not lose my eager soul, my
mind;
I shall not lose my love, and'you, 0
dearagt,
Seeking your way, will meet once
more my own
And when you fear me farthest find
me nearest;
All that ie true, though each must go
alone,
All that is true—but truth does not de-
ceive me;
These poor wise words no shield of
comfort snake;
If it were you, 'and death did thus
bereave nme,—
It it were you—were you—my heart
would break.
A Spool of Warp.
When I was a child I went one day
to the weaver's house with rags that
my mother had saved for a carpet.
Once there I lingered a while to watch
the weaver at his, work.
On a shelf at one side of the room
were spools of colored string, which'
he told me Were spools of warp. One
spool I especially admired. It was a
deep red; and the last thing I saw as
I turned from the door was that spool
standing there on the shelf.
A week later, when the carpet was
done, I wept back to the weaver's
house, Mindful of the pretty spool of
warp, I glanced toward tite shelf. Tile
spool was gone. When I asked the
weaver about it he smiled and pointed
to the end of a red coni in the fringe
of the carpet.
Atter I had reached home with the
carpet we spread it out on the floor,
"Look at that deep red thread run-
ning through it!" exclaimed mother.
"It ie just the touch needed to set it
off. I should never have imagined
that a little bit of red could make such
a difference."
When I told mother of the spool or
red warp at the weaver's and assured
her that the thread in the carpet came
from the spool she traced the thread
as it twined in and out, and said, "Do
you remember the thought I was, try-
ing to impress on you children Inst
Sunday? The value of a life depends
not on what it is by itself, but on its
filling Its proper place in God's plan.
The spool of warp, beautiful in color
though it was, would never have
amounted to anything so long as it
stood on the shelf. But here iu the
carpet what a wonderful' difference It
makes,"
Our lives will never amount to any-
thing it we live them selfishly. But if
we give cues -elves to rod, who' is the
great Weaver in the world, Ho will fit
us into a'place in the universe, and
we shall serve a noble purpose, even
though our lives are but cords running
through the pattern of the Kingdean.
His Hearing Restored.
The invisible ear drum invented by
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 sloes this so
successfully that no one could tell he
is a deaf man. It ie effective when
deafness is caused by catarrh or by
perforated, or wholly destroyed natur-
al drums.. A request for information
to A. 0. Leonard, Suite 437, 70 Fifth
Avenue, New York City, 0111 be given
a prompt reply, advt,
Maglo! Drop a little "Froezono" on
au aching corn, instantly that corn
stops hurting, then shortly you lift it
right off with lingers. Doesn't hurt a
bit.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
"Froezono" for a few cants, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
of corn between the toes, and calluees.
Salt mixed with starch will prevent
ib from sticking.
Ask for Minard's and take no other.
ASPIRIN
"Bayern" only is Oenuine
6.3
piAvER
rel
Warning! Take no ehaneoa with.
Htlbetitntes for genuine "Bayer 'Tab-
lets or Aspirin" IJulces you see the
name "Bayer" on package or on tale
lois you are not getting Aeptrin at illi.
At every Bayer package -are dlroc''leare
for Colds, Boadaohe,, Nenraigle, Wane
ma'am lllar'nelte, Toothache, l,,umbugo
and for Pala, klandy tin boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents, Drug.,
gists also sell larger packages, Made
In Canada, Aaptrin is the trade mark
(registered in Canada), of Ilayer
Manufacture of Moneaceticactdoster
of Salicyilcacld.
The coronet of a baron carries six
silver bulls.
Keep Minard's Liniment in the house.
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
0. J. OLIFF - TORONTO
America's Pioneer Dog Remedios
Dock on
r Y'.
DOG DISEASES
Y r and Flow to Feed
Mailed Y'roo to anv Ad-
dress by rho Author.
5! / i1. Clay 010vor Co., 000.
119 West 31st Street
Nem Yorlr, U.S.A.
evaeaussasemessessatesses
Pack up your lot anal strip to Us..
We do the rest—fair grading• --
highest prices—spot cash pay-
ment, Try us.
WM. STONE SONS, LIMITED
W00DSTOCK, ONTARIO
Established 1570
Baby Chicks
Bathurst breeders are the largo,
early -maturing, trap-nestosl,
brad -to -lay S.C. White Leghorns.
Tjtey aro prolific winter layers
because they are Canadian olid
acclimatized to our severo wel-
ters. For Jane delivery;
100 Chicks, $20; 50 Chicks, 510;
25 Chicks, 55. Special prices for
larger quantities. Free circular.
Bathurst Poultry F'ti;I
RICHMOND HILL - ONT.
PHONE YOUR RUSH ORDERS
For anything In Fancy Goods, Cut
Glass, Toys, Smallwares, Sporting
Goods, Wine Goods, Druggists' Sun-
dries, Hardware Specialties, etc„
to MAIN 6700
on a Reversed charge,
Torcan Fancy Goods Co.,
Ltd.
TORONTO
Major Harry Cameron, Man. Dir.
C TICUA
FOR THE DAILY TOILET
Use Cuticura Soap daily for the toi-
let and have a healthy clear complex-
ion, soft white hands and good hair.
Assist when necessary by touches of
Cuticura Ointment, The Cuticura
Talcum is also ideal for the skin.
Soap2St. 0;ntment25o050c. Taleum25e. Sold
throughsuttbefominion. CanadtsnDepot:
I)•�,,sy�e�s,. Limited, 344 St. Paul St, w., 0lontmot
24il"CuticunaSoap Blume. without mug.
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Wear FLEET FOOT right through the summer, Put on FLEET a,
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Have the FLEET FOOT white shoes, oxfords and pumps to wear ❑❑
when work is done, ❑
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women and childreu. Put the whole family in FLEET FOOT ❑
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and make sure your get )1loet Foot