The Clinton New Era, 1921-11-17, Page 4PAGE poi
ori afig
I Women
• with sensitive skins, but what dread an
-
Other Canadian winte1 Yet chapped
bands, chilblains, cold -sores and frost.
bites are readily overcome by Zam-Bok.
This famous balm keeps the skin smooth,
&many and flexible under moat trying
conditions, Zam.I3uk's pure herbal
essences are so highly refilled that the
pores and tissues absorb them readily.
They take out smarting pain and irrita-
tion instantly, heal roughness and
soreness, and prevent eczema and blood -
poisoning.
Mise B. Strojsa, of East Hansford,
N,S" writes :—" My hands bled and be-
came so painfully chapped that I dare not
put them hs water, Zam-Buk caused
smarting pain and soreness to quickly dis-
appear and I continued to use it until my
hands were thoroughly healed."
Mies A. Lepard, of Bea.verdale, Ont.,
writes : — "Where other remedies all
failed, Zam-Buk soon rid meof chilblains.
It speedily ended the itching irritation,
drew out the inflammation and healed
perfectly." Also splendid in eczema,
ulcers, abscesses, piles, poisoned wounds,
cuts, burns and scalds. 50c„ all de.alers,
NOVEMBER ROD. AND .GUN
The November issue of Rod and Gun
in Canada will delight the sportsmen of
the Dominion with its resplendent
cover painting showing a picture of a
ring necked duck in natural colors.
'The many interesting stories and art-
icles in this issue include a splendid
.ducking 'story entitled "Twentyl-six
grains of bailistite and one and one
eighth ounces of number :sik." A
thrilling account of one of Captain
Joseph Bernard's exploratory trips in
the Artie regions also appears in the
November issue. For the trapper and
lover of the outdoor life there is the
Trapline department ably edge/ by
/v1. U. Bates, from material obtained on
his own trapline. The usual depart-
ments appear in this issue of Canada's
National sportsmen's monthly. Rod
and Gun in Canada is published month-
.ly by W. J. Taylor, Limited, Wood -
.stock, Ont.
C S TO IR
For Infants and Children
In Use, For Over 30 'Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
FACTS ABOUT CANADA
In the year 1919 there was in that
part of the Peace River district tribu-
tary to Grande Prairie City approxim-
ately .125,000 acres in crop. About 10
per cent consisted of green feed, 10
per cent. of barley, rye and flax, 33 per
cent of wheat and about 47 per cent of
pats. There were approximately 800,-
000 bushels of wheat and 82,400,000
bushels of oats threshed.
Children -Cry
'FOR •FLETCHER'S 4,L
C,seetS r-0 R IA
The sawmill's of New Brunswick num
iter 255, employIng 4,821 hands and
paying in wages each, year the sum of
.$4,119,699, The total value of p. year's
output of lumber is $14,400,000,
On an average there are exported
from St. John, New Brunswicks, about
fourteen and a half million bushels of
grain, having a value of $24,300,000,
Notwithstanding' the fact that Canada
before all elie is an agricultural coun-
try, possessing almost unhinged pos-
sibilities for the development of that
industry, Canada last year imported for
home consumption milk and milk pro-
ducts to the value of $572,053. The
importation of butter alone had a value
of $176,944. Of these imports, butter
to the value of $59,000 came from New
Zealand.
From a practical standpoint the Nia-
gara River conies first in importance
as a potential source of hydro -electric
power consituated as regards centres
of population and Industrie! develop,-
ment. It has an inflow from Lake Erie
of 210,000 cubic feet •of water per
second, from which the potential pos.
sibilitks on the Canadian side are 1,-
500,000 horsepower of hydro -electric
energy.
THERE IS ONLY ONE
‘5• GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets with, "Bayer Cross".
are Aspirin—No others!
if you don't see the "Bayer Cross"
•on the tablets, refuse them—they are
not Aspirin at, all.
Insist on genuine "Bayer Tablets of
lAspirin" plainly stamped with the safety
"Bayer Cross''—Aspirin prescribed by
physicians for nineteen years and. proved
safe by millions for Headache, Tooth-
ache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago,
Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets—also
larger "Bayer" packages. Made in
Canada.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of
Monometicacidester of Salicylicacid.
While it is well known that Aspirin
means Bayer manufacture, to assist the
public against imitations,the Tablpte of
'Bayer atimpany, Ltd., will be stamped
with their general tiAgit mot, la
'Beyer Croae?!
•
lam Ey*
Thursday, November i7U, 4921,
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,• G•D-POBERT5
41
• 1111
If any evidence ware required of the growing interest in
Canadian literature, one need only point to the remarkable pro -
great of the Noodle* Av*)ea' Association, nisi& already num-
bers over seven hundred members, although it was organized
only eight months ago. Canada ranks exceptionally high in
the world of poetry, with names such as Bike Carman to her
credit. In the world of fiction Arthur Stringer, Ralph Connor,
L. M. Montgomery, Basil Zing Bertrand Sinclair, Isabel Eccle-
etone Ideckay, Madge Macbeth, and Prank L. Packard, are only
a few of au army of popes* novelists. Life on the prairies has
been admirably depicted by Jamey Catnuck (Judge Emily
Murphy), Nellie McClung, Robert Stead, and Sergeant Ralph
Kondall with his labor* of the North-West Mounted Police.
The chief object of the Canadian Authors' Association is to
create a *wider interest among Canadians themselves in theiri
own literature.
It has an official organ called the "Canadian Bookman." lit
has helped to organize Canadian Authors' Week for the thin
week in November, in which libraries and bookstores will make
special displays of Canadian books, and it has conducted a
vigorous campaign fey the improvement of Copyright condi-,
tin lzs Canada. •.
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