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The Clinton News Record, 1921-8-25, Page 3.SIMPLICITY:; THE KEYNOTE OE ,SUMMER LIFE OF COTTAGE COLONIES IN EVANGELINE LAND • iletip[9i:91i11lege h Canada.. Earmc3'e of Saslcnitelhewon invested approximately $0,Q00,000 in new trace ors 111 1920,. no iese 1101-11 ;1,000 trate ' 141014 -ANS � tore being sold to 1)0101111.9011 duri0) 1 iY AT LOW �•. ,... ,• tea year et a cost Averaging $3,000 AFG BA"tH1NG� ,.,r r Iiia hl s1;' each, Sasltatchawal faro -pre are de - MINAS' 1 i U e eu.pFF �'. LU S Hr,?Fr A R. � 4 leAeu.. ` � ,y Pending eval'Y lyear upon •mlreohantoai av t�AS'iN 0;03;0 `�ti 1'1< �1' contrivances to a greater extent, t aa S ....:: ,. .�:.,.:3;ai •,. ��:..h,.... :: � Stewart Moore, a Winnipeg pros. enter, hoe radts<levered a rich the posit of meet- in the district Adjacent to Point do Bois, Mn.,aand 3talted 0 flfty-tWo acne claim, The 101Qa• is traceable fol' erten hundred feet in leugtlt and ,several large bleeps have already been taken out, A emelt anew le now working on the deposit, A large deposit of sodium sulphate has been (Recovered on Baxter Lake, net 'of Waintvzdght, , Alberta, Front analysis, it ,appears• that the lake it- self le strongly Impregnated with this chemical, while a toot made at the lake's edge gave thirty-two per cent, sodium carbonate and thirty per cent. each of sodium chloride and sodium sulphate. A oompanY has been do- ne/tined to exploit the find. Tho Saskatchewan Grain Growers' Association reports a heavy demand for binder twine, one local branch, which ordered 24,000 pounds, last year, having requested 70,000 pounds this year. Canada imported from the United States last year 34,641,000 pounds of twin, . A total of, 7,11,0 persons entered Western Canada from the United States during the six months ending Tune 30, 1921. They brought with them personal wealth to the value of $2,446,804, and effects worth $702,453, Out of the total number of immigrants 2,600 gave their occupation as agri- culturists and will engage,. In farming on the prairies. Of the total, 4,892 were United States citizens, while the- balance hebalance of 2,218 were composed of Britisher,•, Frenchmen, Canadians and Scandinavians. Development work is being carried on at the Sinclair asbestos property in Bauocklurn township, Matachewan district. Samples of first class asbes- tos have been brought out from the property and arrangements have been made to bring .out a carload of "crude." Owing to transportation difficulties only tho better grade of fibre is being considered at present. As No. 1 crude brings over $1,500 per ton, transporta- tion on this class• of material is not prohibitive. The new light railway which le now in the course of con- s- deaths of chilid?'en resulting from im- structton in Northern Ontario will aid proper feeding in childhood and some development to a great extent. hiea is given of the tremendous but preventable infant mortality amongst tis every year. Nova Scotia's wealth of woods and water -ways lends itself meat agree- ably to summer cottage 11fe and draws greater numbers of sojourners each summer,. The many -miles -long bays flooded and then laid bare by the shift- ing tides, have a unique charm and matte ideal bathing beaches—beaches that are a huge delight to kiddies. Summer e.ccomnhodations of Evange- line Lund do not run to vast botele, although there are a number oe find -.large ones, the greater number of visi- tors live in comfortable country -side hotels and boarding houses and cot- tage colonies, EMIL among 1110 latter stands the I(eegemakooge Pad & Gun Club, lo- cated on the shore of Lake 1(edgenma- hooge, at the end of thirty miles of good motor Toad which begins at his- toric. Annapolis Royal. Kedgenta- koage 1s in the heart of a wild, rich ,poling country. Here the lisilorman may enjoy excellent fishing, and here the hunter may bag the biggest of moose. The cabins are rustic in de. sign, but modern in equipment, fitted lisped institutions, for mind and body, and the busy with fireplaces- and running water. These resorts are either in or close mother peace and rest while her live. The general club house is all that a to farming centres and guests aro fed ly youngsters, nate from city perils, -country club should be. on fine fresh dairy and garden pro- disport themselves in daisy peels or Other well known and popular cabin duets. Bathing, boating and fishing 011 the red Hurd flats that at high tide colonies are found at North West Arm, are the principal pastimes. Tennis, are glorious bathing beaches. it RURAL SUMMER HOTEL OVERLOOKING LAKE AT HEBRON near Halifax, Annapolis Royal, Evan- geline Beach, Milford, Port Lorne and Smith's Com. Cottages are run in connection with The Pines hotel at Digby, the Bay View. Hotel at Yar- mouth and The Gainsborough at Hub- bards, while. Camp Acadia for girls, Located at Hebron, a short five miles from Yarmouth, and Aldercllffe Camp for boys at Weymouth, are aid estab- golf, squeal'. and croquet grounds are Provided at most resorts. Then there is always the lovely historic country to be explored. One cannot travel many miles in any direction without passing spots of historic interest. Hero the painter finds inspiration for new canvases; the writer for songs and stories; the tired business 111911 and weary teacher find balm and strength HEALTH ED CA ION BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON Provincial Board of Health, Ontario Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat- ters through this column. Address 'him at the Parliament Bldgs, Toronto, Under Deep Blue Slid. The sky at great elevations is of a richer, deeper blue dolor than any- thing we experience down at sea•level. When the philosophical De' Saussure made his famous accent of Mont Blanc There are reasonable and scientific ed by' communicable diseases or where towards the end of the eighteenth con - grounds and quarantine measures tutu, he experitmlented In a singularly grounds for the relief that during re- p q interesting way on thi,3 phenomenon. 1130 enforced, for the prevention or cent years the average span of life is Before he lett Geneva he prepared splty,ead of any outbreaks. Child nan some sheets at paper of sixteen gradn- lengthenir.:g—thaC,is, that people on (edify, however, results from maty) the whole are living longe: than form- other causes, outside that due to ated shades or blue, front the deepest Qtly, To Pniblie Health activity; 'in- organic changes of the ,heart due to i color to the palest tint, and these he eluding the control of .communicable numbered from one to sixteen. disease and generally improved sani- tation and dbscrvance of public health principles, this increasing longevity is chiefly .due. Because, counteracting those reforms aro the stress and strain of modern conditions with resulting wear and tear on the, human system which have during the past quarter century reduced the average lifetime to 55 years or thereabouts, instead of the alloted three score and ten. An old saying, with a grain of truth in it, is that a man is as old as he feels, and there is no reason why he ,should not at (10 or 70, provided his general health is good, be engaged at, useful work without being a burden to anyone. There are many causes leading up to early or premature death that could be largely eliminated if health habits were formed in early life and more observance made of the quarantine .and control of communicable diseases. To illustrate this latter point, take infection. One very noticeable and regrettable of these causes is the motor -car, In Toronto alone, there have been four or five fatalities within the past few days due to children be - Three sets of papers were made. Ono ho lett at Geneva, the second at Chamouni, and the third he took to the summit, Tho result was as follows: On the mg run clown by automobiles. In some top of Mont Blanc the sky at noon instances, of course, the driver is not was between the first and second tint to blame, but generally speaking, a —that is, the deepest "bleu de rel"; careful man or woman at the wheelat Geneva it was of the seventh tint, seldom meets with an accident. If and at Chamount between the fifth so, it is the exception mid probably and sixth. Thus from the summit of 'only occurs once. Newspaper readers Mont Blanc the .sky was of a deeper were interested last week in a des- blue than it was below. patch :from England stating that a One can ' hardly imagine what it motor -car driver was given one yew's Must bo like in that respect on the top inpnis•onment for running Over a of Mount Everest. child with fatal results, There are The explanation of this intense blue - many Caen in Canada that could be nese is that the smaller the pie ticles thus summarily doalt with to advan- in the atmosphere the Less strong the tage, and it would have the result of light, but the greater proportion of making our streets safer for pedes- that is blue. trians. Fatalities to children as Lisa i Near the horizon at lower altitudes result of automobile accidents must' the sky lacks that rich blue tint, ho- bo stopped, and to this anit the recent: cause the particles in the atmosphere recommendations of a Toronto cor-, which scatter the light aro larger, and oner to have school playgrounds kept there are more of them proportionate - the case of heart disease, which causes open all day, es very commendable. ly, an enormous number of deaths in this Popular sympathy is nearly always, 11loiutt Everest's peak rises into an country every year. What makes the with the injured child, but when atmosphere which trust be as pure as heart diseased and unable to properly carry on its function? 'There are many causes, but a very important New World and Old. one is poisoning of the heart tissue by germs of communicable disease. be made a criminal offence to allow Map makers are having a busy time Scarlet fever, 1110as18), smallpox, children under six en a city street ill these clays of everchangiug boun- whooping cough, acute pneumonia, without a parent or guardian. Chil- darios. Europe has regrouped itself, rheumatism are •among the diseases dren, however, mist play, and the old the old map of our schooldays is that affect the heart and prepare the school playground seems the most wrong from top to bottom, way for sudden or premature death suitable recreation place for them in But what tremendous changes have in years to come. Then there is mal- large cities. Arrangements might be taken place in the Christian Era, a n0trition, and aenettmia, where the made to have vacant lots or institu- comparatively short time in the his - heart, through its efforts to pump tional grounds sot apart for children tory of the world. The Roman's neap enough of the weakened blood through to play in. To prevent damage to pro- of the world was the Middle Sea—the the system to keep the body strength petty extra caretakers would of course Modit01'rfbean—and the lands washed to normal, is sta'ahle'd or overexerted: 'lee necessary, but reforms and precau- by its waves, To sail out of the 0n can readily sea how an itcreas- 'tions e£ this nature are of such vital Straits of Gibraltar—the Pillars of ed vigilance both on the part of Pub- importance that the question .of ex- TIercules—was as great an adventure lie Health officials and the general pense should not .be allowed to enter as beteg shot in a rocket to Murs public, can curtail the spread• of cam- --especially when human life is at would he to-dayl municable disease and thereby pre- stake. Por another• thousand years, after ' vent weakening or injury to the heart, Then, of course, there are avoidable the decline of Rome, very. little pro - especially in young people who are accidents in industry due to leek of gross was made. India. was a sort of more susceptible to infectious disease protection for the worker at his trade, fairyland, China—or Cathay—might than adults. In feet, there is a not- and often to carelessness on the part have been in the moon, Russia and Si. iceable low rate of deaths from heart of the worker himself. beret were wholly out of bounds, disease reported in localities not visit- Add to this the appalling list of America was not dreamed of, Australia had never been heard of, no European ship had ever sailed on the Pacitle none. Then, quite suddenly,' came the age of exploration. The Spanish and Portuguese navigators, followed by the groat English adventurers,• doubled the world's land area ' for the map• makers. But oven then the maps were fearful and wonderful, America was a Diode of guess work. Even Europe part of Abide. the same, TlVen Europe looked like nothing cm earth, and where they were at a lose they drew fabulous beasts and Jirds to 1111 up the spans.. Pine Needles. • If Mother Nature petei ea The leaves of trees and vifles 1'i» sn•re slhe does ler darning With needles or the tiniest 'l'boy aro se long mitt Meader; And sotitetimos In tali view, They have their threads of rollwe13s And thlftfblea made of (IOW, wVus, fl, Pay, youngsters are allowed to play indis- it is rich in color. crinminately on the streets it is prac- tically impossible to lay the blane entirely to the motor driver. It should fo'od builds strength �6 U. 31.3o1LE'i.•ituma,I nourishment with 'E•10 burden to the d'i• gestion is secured from that , famous food "-' Grape=N- m,t;s. The nutriment of wheat and malted barley, £rolrr;t which Grapegi •t,s is shade, builds strength and 'sragorr- and delights the taste. "T/l re s a „ 1rGra � 9 (�3, s �'� y , f®A :Sob alA leilo tyce' is A Toothless Race in India. Toothless babies are familiar. We malts allowance for their edentate ap- pearance because we know that they really do possess teeth, almost ready to sprout, If a child were never to develop any teeth at all, and to remain through life what scientists, would call an "aho- d'ont," how unpleasant it would bpi That Is exactly what happens in the case of a type of men native to a town called Hyderabad Sind, in India. They are Hindus, always have remarkably bald heads and are toothless, through life, These men are Irnowu as Bhudas, which means "toothless." Their wo- men, oddly enough, always have, a nor- mal, equipment of teeth. Toothless - nese is exclusively a male trait among then. When a Bhuda man marries• a girl whose parents are both free from the defect, all of the children resulting from the hating are properly provided with teeth. But when the daughter of a Bhuda marries o normal man their female children are normal, while the sons are toothless. It is through such marriages that the toothless characteristic is per- Potu;ted from generation to genera- tion. It Is evidently an inheritance trait that remains lacking 113 the fe- male offspring of a Bhuda, How They Advertise in the Orient. Oriental countries, having awaken- ed within very recent years to the tvorthwhileness of advertistng, have adopted methods or their own which are rather odd and picturesque. In particular they go in tor street processions. Enterprising advertisers in Chinese and Japanese cities argan• me parades, with banners and strange devices, such as dragons and other monsters, carried by men or on wag- ons. Title is real jazz as applied to pub- licity work, We have nothing equal to it in its way, In the Philippines similar methods are pursued. Not long ago, in Manila, to advertise a new cigar, there was a very striking pro- cession in which gigantic walking cigars took part, accompanied by men carrying huge placards lettered in.Eng- Iislh and Spanish, extolling the Pro - duet and inviting the public to try it. KEEP CHILDREN WELL IMO HOT WEATHER _Every mother knows how fatal the hot summer mouths are to small child- ren. Cholera infantum, diarrhoea, dysentry, colic and stomach troubles are rife at this time and often a pre - Claus little life is lost after only a few Hours' Illness. The mother who keeps Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The occasional use of the Tab- lets prevent stornech and bowel troubles, or if the trouble conies sud- •donly—as it generally does—tho Tab- Iets wIll bring 11131 baby safely through, They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Ca., Brock- vi11e, Ont. . �. He'd Been, "How fah' do you travel 10 (Massing the ocean from Liverpool to New York?" asked the teacher. ".Four thousand utiles," replied the bright youth, "Olt no, Think again," said Lite 1enc110Y, "Fin right," pslslsted the youth, "It, says three thousand titles in tho book, and that's what It 1s in a straight title, 13u1, I'M totalling the 1)1)5 ,and dow)t's, I've been eoroesl" --.�'y---._,h.-,.-,..,•..tea ftlinerd's Llnlens"fol' 15an1ruff. f1�f11i; OAJ'SE OF ,t(1 tom Bits orf iCotnttdiall News. ^�- it Lias been intimated 11191 the 0amt' roue re111113 for the 01.7 of He Joint, Q➢dtly. idd•Th11e Comms Dogs Rua., ((.11„ will show an increase of about eche Mean Kidney Troll's/ft. irla 0,000 in 130pt11at1oa. Making the total about 47,000, Most of the oity's 111ve1y nn10010 11 Lbp borbY nouns can..8'awth sh1ca tine previous 030008 has ,tautly a supply of 31913, Teri blood lu b'aen uuielde the city lihnits. proportion. to the work It rhos, The AuoInns been granted to- the linlseles of the bee* are 1313003 a hoary Mlnfsiothrrity of Agriculture to purchase a strain anfl have but little rest, Whoa Mom of land 91Itlnauski. Que., for tile bleed ll thin 11117 /not nomih'lelt. t tho num of 415,700, on whloll will he meat, and the result !s a sonrantiat pf II erected a lnediuln•gi'ade agricultural pain In those muscles, Some people lsuhool, which' -13111 be appn8d 310)4 thick pale in the back Lupous kidneyIl spring. Construction will star( 11n- treable, but the beat medical author!. tnodtately, ties agree that backache seldom or An aerial week -end fired prevention I10Yer has anything to do With the 1110- patrol has boon instituted by the Iirl- ney3 Organic; kidney disease may bolo Columbia government to protect valuable timber on Vancouver Island have progressed to a critical' point without devoloping a pain in the back. and along the coast, The patrol will Tine Doing the (ase, pain in the back cover an area an the mainland for the should always boa the su000103 to bolt province and Vancouver Island ` be - to the condition of hie blood. It will (ween three hundred and four hundred bo found In most cases that the use of miles long. Dr. Williams' Pink Pine to build up 011 claims have been staked along the the blood will step the sensation of Mackenzie River right up to the pain in the ill•nouriehed muscles of Arctic 011018, The staking extends the back, How much better it is to from a point several miles south of try Dr, 'Williams' Pink Pills for the Port Norman, which is 1,500 miles blood than to give way to unreason - within Edmonton, to another point able alarm about your kidneys. If you within some fifty milek of Good Rope, suspect your kidneys., any doctor can a post just sixteen 0ta south of the make testa in ten minutes that will Arctic Circle, P110 total distance of sot your fears at rest, cr tell you the the oil staking along the Mackenzie worst, But in any event 10. be per- River in this torritol:y Is naw epprox1. Poctly healthy y0µ must keep tits blood mately 150 miles, though not con. In good condition, and for this purpose (hued over this• entire length. no other medicine can equal Dr. Wil- Saskatchewan co-operative market - Hams' Pink Pills. ing soeiotles had an increase of $1,- You can get these pills through any 126,103 in the amount of business dealer in medicine, or by mall at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2,50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont. Scouting and the Kiwanis Clubs. If a man can write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a bet- ter mouse -trap than his neighbor, though he build his house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to hie door. Literary men have been having a squabble over the ,author of this mouse -trap quotation. Some credit it to Elbert Hubbard, But he has been eliminated as he did not begin to write until after the quotation had be- come famous. Then Emerson's works were looked into. DM no comfort has been. found there. But who cares who wrote it? It fits tate Boy, Scouts. That is the only reason it appears In our thoughts to- day. Business men are peculiar dudes. To say they are egotistical Is putting it so mildly as to be complimentary. They have such confidence in their Own powers that one cannot interest them in a proposition which does not entail miraculous accomplishment, They really believe that they can work miracles, So when a gang of fellows goes parading by bearing their miracles with thele, the Kiwanis Club blinks its eyes, stares, wonders, and then, as if seized by one common impulse, falls in bellied to do what it can, as tickled as a boy carrying water for the ele- phant at the circus. It's hard to fool men. But you can't fool boys at all. And when moll real- ize the work of the Hoy Scouts, they aro not being fooled. Neither are the boys who compose the Boy Scouts, They get training, mentally and physically, and if there are any other ways they get them too—real down, right valuable• stuff, that makes hien out of them. And they like it, just as our boys who entered the army liked the intensive training that was handed out to them by their superior officers. The Scouts have made good in spite of the ridicule which was heaped up- on them only a few years ago, when their elders first heard of them. The police and the rest or as laughed at the idea of having 1307 Scouts help handle big crowds. But nowl—why, they are the first ones we turn to when something big and difficult has to be done. That is the reason why the I(iwanis Club is for the Boy Scouts. Their lives are open books by virtue of the honesty which they are taught, They preach better sermons than the rest of tis usually here—right in the lives which they lead. They 'make better mouse -traps than the rest of us—aid 111 the woods. --and our happiest hours are spent in our pilgrhnages to them. They have done melt. They have dared much, They have done that which was assigned then. Worthy of our confidence! Not worthy of our coufldence? Who, then, is worthy of our confidence? A Swift Boy From the Country. "Iiow fast can you run?" the humor- ously inclined hell boy of a Taronto hotel asked the country lad who was on 11e first visit to the city, "Well," replied the lad bashfully, "Not very fast, I guess." "How fest is that?" asked the bell boy, winking at some of his friends who had gathered to see the full. The country lad frowned thought- fully, linen replied: "Weil, now, seeing as you've asked nee, the fastest I, ever ran was one time last sunrm01'. Yee see fellows, '(was like this. 1 took my gun ane morning and started out to get spino gauge, I hadn't any more than stepped out or the house berme I saw a wood- chuck sitting by his Hale an a 111118ide, So I fired at bine ' "But 1'0 heard tell that a woodolhttok might drop bads 11116 his hole ween you alit hint. So, having that 11 mind, I threw down lay gun 90 20011 as I'd shot and started for tho woodchuck. Well, felioso, Pd have got him, 1)1lt AWL as I stooped vies' 10 grab hint by the hind legs, the shot 1'11 fired lilt ale in the back(," M(Hard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia Old Greek Gotha. Coln tellectors regard the collecting of old Greek collie tis diol' most for, 111109.1310 teak, not because of their rarity, but 110ca1iso 01111y :1,000 lurlepem don 0I110e had a distiitelivo sorted et coins, _:a handled last year, compared with the turnover in 1919. The membership was Jneraaset[ by 046, making the total at the and of the year of 18,804. The haft -up capital tweeted increased from 3362,251 to $406,009, 1e ifty-four FEARED S lin KART TROUBLE MRS. SMITH SUFFERED AFTER EVERY MEALL, Toronto Woman Says Since Taldhlg T a 60 L a c All Her Troubles I-Iave Disappeared. "Before 1 had taken half a bottle of Tanta° 1 began to o-Lraigthten right up and no -w I feel jest dos," cold Mre, Q, E. Smit, 101) Yarmouth Road, Toron- to, Ont "I was told that I had high blood 1)1055ure, but whatever my troupes were they began to disappear when I got Tanta( and now I haven't a trace of any of then[. For one thing, I suf- fered from indiges=tion something aw- ful. After eating, tate gas from my un• (digested food would press up Into my eldest until my heart fluttered fright- fully and at times I actually thought ft would stop boating. My hoed ached terribly at times and I got so dizzy I couldn't stand up. My lrlrl0eg's also bothered ma and my back and legs drurt coatstantly. My logs hurt (worse while lying dcwu alai nights 1 couldn't sleep any t:, e. -eek of, 8(3 that 1 always felt tired and (x•)111 0(113 "But all my troubles aro gone now. My digestion le just perfect and I never have a headache or dizzy Spell any more. Evert those 1)0,10.1 have dis- aDpeared from my back end logs and I'm so thankful far my geed health that I Just want to praiao Taalar. elle societies marketing livestock shipped the tinter" 912 carloads and received therefor 31,- 529,209. The value of supplies sold was $6,885,385. The total business handled amounted to $7,314,695. Paying for all irrigation system in one year is the unique experience of the Tabor project, comprising 17,000 acres, in Alberta, just asst of the ir- rigated area operated by the Canadian Pacific Railway. It cost sixteen dol- lars an acre to build the ditches• and laterals and conservative estimates of the average yield on the 13,000 acres un(1em crop aro twenty bushels• to the acre, as against eight bushels. on the dry land adjoining. 'rhts is the Rrst Year that the Taber project has been 111 operation, The Financial Times, Winnipeg, in its latest suryey of Western Canadian crop conditions, states that the wheat yield this year should be the most valuable the West has ever produced, worth at least half a billion dollars. In Praise of London. I, the son of London men, Give thanks. to London once again. Here was I born; and 1 will die Under this friendly leaden sky— Like grandfer's graudfer, so will I. City of beauty, flower of cities all -- Where "Thenmmos" runs swiftly, and the buses roar (Even down the stately reaches of Whitehail) While chocolate trams invade the Surrey shore— Yours: to a glamour which the years enhance And in your grimy streets lives all mo- maneo`. - ter ASPIRIN "Bayer" only is Genuine Warning! Take no chances with substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tab- lets of Aspirin," Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or 011. tab- lets you. are not getting Aspirin at all, In every Bayer package are directionn for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Bheu- nlatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumba- go and for Pain, Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also sell larger packages, Made In Canada, Aeplrin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Menu - facture of Monoaceticacidsster of Salicyticacid. How It Was Dene, An American poultry termer went over to England to have a look round the poultry terms there and see where the farmers were making mistakes, He did not hesitate to tell how tar advanced was the air of poultry keep- ing, in the States, and spun several very tall yarns on that subject. Twenty chickens Crate twelve eggs appeared to be an everyday occur- rence in the United States, if the stories he told could bo believed. But a bluff old English farmer was mune for 111111. "Happen, moister," said the old man, "ye have never seen as many as a hun- dred chickens hatched by one het at a setting?" "Waal,," answered the American, "I can't say that I imave, but--" "Well, then, 1001013 here, mister; happen I have," returned 11e farmer, "Down Ipswich way we alms 1111 a bar- rel with eggs and set the heti on the t bunghole!" Mlnard's Liniment for Burns, etc. The Oxrerd Utlivoreity Nese will Tanlac is sold by leading druggists everywhere, Adv. The Forestry Authorities cf 'Great l3ritain are planting oomparativoly large areas with Douglas fir and S'a'.ca spruce. The seed for this planting was gathered by the officers of the Forestry Braasch of the Department of the Interior, Canada, NOTHING TO EQUAL For Sprains and Braises. T n thing to do when you Bala an In1ury is to apply 3/leant's f t,. , Lin men(. IL is untiaep1ie, sauthin;„ lien frig, aril gives gulch relief, COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlota TORONTO &ALS WORKS O„ d. 0I.IPV - TORONTO America's Pioneer Dog Remedies Book or, 000 DISEASES and How to Y'eed Mailed Free to any Ail• dress by the Author, V. Olay Glover tie, 1r� 118 Went Dat Street New Yark, 01.S.A Caticura Is Just Right For Baby's Tender Skin Bathe him with Cuticura Soap and warm water. Dry gently and it any sign of red- ness, roughness, irritation or rash is pres- ent anoint with Cuticura Ointment to • soften, soolho and heal. Finally dust on a few grains of the fragrant, delicately med- icated Cuticura Talcum, Sose21,. Ointmeet2SeedSee. Tdrem23,. Sold throughout thenomlhion. Canadianl)epot: t ane, Limited, 344 St. Peel St., W. Meatrml. l"Cutieun, Soap shame walkout mug. i';' l; DO ALL Y HOUSE ORK Before I took Lydia E. Pink,. ham's Vegetable Compound I could hardly get about Cobourg, Ont.—"For many years Y have had trouble 'lith my nerves and have been in a general run down con- dition for some time. I could not do my work half of the time because of the trouble with my monthly sickness, a was told of Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vege- table Compound by friends and advised to try it. It has done me good, and I strongly recommend it. Since 1 have alien it I have been able to do all my own work, and I also know friends who (fhave found it good. You can use these n .LI '[PLATTRIr Box 701, Cobourg, O Why will women continue to suffer so ong is more than we can understand, publash shortly a collection of verse written by women from the sixteenth century to the present day. MbNEY ORDER'S. when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? For forty years this good old fash- ioned root and herb remedy` which contains no narcotics or ]harmful dru sr Has been the standard remedy for ie- ne10 ills and has restored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displace- ments, inflammation, ulceration, meet'lar`tk s ate Dominion Express Money Orders are on sale in five thousand otlkecs n throughout Canada. The people of the United States oat sufficient randy and see cream every year to build half a. dozen sopor- droadh><nugllte—'in two yaars, enauglh to build another P4inamna Canal, Mldard'r [Jubilant for Sale every1vhare t e, Ii yon Want special advice write Eo Lydia 19. Pitklham Medicine Co. (confi- dentiai), Lynn,. Tviaos. Your letter will be opened, read and answered Lay 51 woman 11)1 i held its atriet confidence. ISSUE No. 815-t1214