HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1920-1-29, Page 7F'
HEN you buy a phonograph you
1rsure a L tobe s that you w ,tn t-
y get-
s.
W
Ming the best instrument to be
had for the money 1--- one that will
give lasting satisfaction. But how can
you be sure unless you know what to
look for? This book outlines the vital
points that should be considered. The
author, "Henry Purfort Eames, LL.B.,
is a renowned Concert Pianist, Lecturer
and Director of the -Pianoforte Dept.,
Cosmopolitan School of lVlusic.
The Brunswick "All Phonographs
In One" answers every one of the''rigid
tests which Mr. Eames says- should
govern phonograph purchases,
Mail This Coupop To -night
Tho 1Vrnatcal Mdkohauaise Sales Comaany,
Dept, W,L., 819 Tongs St., Toronto, Out.
Please send me free of charge and poet- I
pal ,t e b phonograph."
"What to look for in buy-
ing
a
Name
Street 'Br R.B. ...14
I P.0 Province
(Nouse and, Street Gow s
8234 825
No. 9234 -Ladies' Hodse Dress,
Price, 25 cents. Kimono sleeves; in•
step length. Cut in 8 sizes, 34, 86, 38
40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust
measure. Size 36 requires 3?4 yards,
36 or 40 ,inches wide; contrasting, .1r
yards, 27 inches wide; trimming -
bands, 38 yard, 86 inches wide. Width
around bottom, 2 1-8 yards.
No. 9255 -Ladies' Tie -on Waist.
Price, 20 cents. Two styles of sleeve.
Cut in 7 sizes, 34, 36, •88, 40, 42, 44
and 46 inches bust measure. Size 88,
with puff sleeve'$, 2% yards, 36 inches
wide, or 1% yards, 48 inches wide;
With dart sleeves, 2%'yards, 86 inches
Wide, or 1% yards, 48 inches wide.
No. 9259 - Ladies' Four -Gored
Sldr't•. Price, 25 cents. With or with-
out side ruffles; 88 or 86 -+Inch
length., Out in 8 sizes, 24, 26, 28, 80,
r -
f
5-9259 9269
32, 34, 36, and 38 inch waist measure.
Size 26, with ruffles, 38 -inch length,
3% yards, 40 ''aches wide or 396 yards
48 inches wide; without ruffles, 2%
yards, 40 or 48 inches wide. Width;
1$:i, yards.
No. 9269 -Ladies' Dress. Price, 25
cents. Two styles of sleeve; three-
piece tunic in two lengths; two-piece
underskirt, 88 or 86 -inch length, Cut
in 8 sizes, 84 to 48 inch bust. Size
36, longer tunic, 4% yards, 40 inches
wide, or 8% yards, 54 inches wide;
shorter tunic, 4 yards 40 inches wide,
or 21/4 yards, 54 inches wide; vest,
la yard, 18 inches wide. Width, 1%
yards. .
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept, W.
The Charming Eskimos.
Stefansson, the famous Arctic ex-
plorer, writing of his stay among the
:Eskomos, tells of their hospitality to
him, a guest and stranger, whole pun
pose in coming among them they d16
not know, and who was unable to re-
quite then` in any way for the kind'
nese they showed him. Dwelling upon
their individual and domestic charac-
teristics, he says that in an Esktmb
home he never heard en unpleasant
word between.- a man and his wife,
and he never saw a child punished or
an old person treated inconsiderately.
The moral 'value of some ways in
which the Eskimo is superior to us is
small, ,IIe can make Netter garments
against cold than our own tailors or
furriers; lie eau thrive in barren
wastes where men of warmer climates
. would starve, But the moral value of
other ways in which he is superior le
great, for he is less selfish, more ltelp-
ful to his fellows, kinder. to his wife,
gentler to his child, and more rets -
`cent about tiro faults of his neighbors
than auy but the rarest and best of
our race,
When I tried to express my thanks
for their kindness In my fragmentary
Eskimo, Mr. Stefansson continues,
they ,were more surprised than
pleased, •
-"Do, then, in the white man's land,
some starve and shaver while others
eat mucic and are warmly clad?" they
asked,
It Was on the Map Once.
A colored infantry regiment was
being mustered out, and the company
commander sent the home address of
every man to the quartermaster, so
that each, could draw' his travel pay
to go home. There was some little
difRculty about one man, and the cap-
tain called Irina in.
"Jaoksem, you gave your )tome ad-
dress as Prince Frederick, Maryland,
and the quartermaster says there is
no such place as Prince Frederick,
Maryland." l
"Doan't you believe him, suis; they
is."
"Well, they can't seen to find it"
"Huh!" grunted the soldier, "They
didn't have no trouble finding it when
they drafted rue."
4liva4.,..,.•nn3tiriM1,1
a
The entire -food values,
of wheat arid mialted.,
barley are found in
A foe in every 'sense:
nourishing; delicious,'
economical,
Easy to digest because
1
of twenty l7lxl�>i' bkillP e
'rid -ser e.
'ir:ai
An Island Where Deer
Are Safe.
The deep Music of a deorhanfltl's
voice game faintly Bowe. the wind,
shortly it blended with the sharper
Voice of a hunting Airedale, The
screont of a hungry cougar 1$ lint
morn terrifyltag to the timid deer of
the British Columbia (oast titan the
bay of the ltouiids on the trail. When
they hear it they got up and go ---
straight for water,
The little spike buck, born. a •fate..
seasons before on the l'uggod, forest•
clad (oast Of the Pacific province,
lifted Ilii head. His eyes and his ears,
Ms very pose displayed the High ten -
son of lllb teat nerves, 140 looked in-
tp,the i'oreet of the island on which
die stood, and he saw nothing alarpu-
lag,.,Ze1e turned and stared across the
water toward Nels(it Island. The only
thing that caught his eye that did not
denote, restful nature in primitive
grandeur was a smudge of smoke that
smeared the horizon and ahowod that
a P.P.R. coasting steamer was out-
bound, from Powell River•. Then "the
boom •of the hound's voice rolled,
again otiose the waters; from Nelson
leland. The 'deer moved nervously,
ooked all round again -and salnily
bent his head to bite a mouthful of
grass. He was safe, ' He was 00a'
Hardy Island.,
Hardy Island hi tite city of refuge to
all the deer that know about it.
Three years ago it was good hunting
grounds. _, :'o -day it is taboo to men
with guns, and hell pops, as the, say'
ing goes, if men -with both guns and
dogs appear. It le unlawful to hunt
deer with dogs In British Columbia,
but it is still done in certain districts,
in spite of law. Two years ago, or
porbaps slightly more than that, Mr.
C: J. Leyland\of England purchased
IIardy Island, a gem ofand situated
just off Nelson Island, at the mouth of
Jervis Inlet. He bought it to ex-
periment
xpeliment with British trees in the
'B,C. "climate. There were 2,600 acres
et rich lands and forests, and there
was a good orchard. He placed, a
watchman, Tont Brazil, on the proper-
ty, ane did no more toward develop-
ment, preferring to await the end of
the war, Brazil, a laver of animals,
caught two of the wild deer that fre-
quently swam to the island front the.
other nearby lands. IIe tamed them.
They in turn brought other wild ones.
Many..of then had been run to water
dogs and took refuge on. Hard ..Is-
bY g g y
land. There, seeing how intimate 'the
original tame pair were with the man
who controlled the orchards where
the luscious apples grew, the wild
newcomers gradually gr:ew intimate
.too. To -day a herd of thirty deer,
most of them born in wildness,- re-
spond to the voice of Tom Brazil when
he calls. Some of them will step for-
ward from the herd when called by
name. They have no fear 'at all Sf
man, when on Hardy Island. Some-
times they swim to other parts of the
coast, and range about a bit, but they
come back, often fagged from sone
fierce run and swim;
Tony Brazil's herd is becoming a by
word on the coast, but no dog -and no
man dare brave what might happen
should -he try to hunt on the island of
refuge. So the, deer are fat, are bring.
fag new little lives into the world,
and are adding to their numbers by
recruit volunteers from the wild
ranges where such safety is not
known.-L.V.K.
British Valor Won.
Captain de Parseval, of the French
navy, who has just written a book on
".Che Battle -of Jatland," says:
"The British owed their success to
the valor of the sailors, the strength
of the, chiefs, more than to any me-
tal/al superiority, because, as a (nat-
ter of fact, the material at the dis-
posal of the British admirals was re.
latively inferior . to that of the Ger-
mans,"
AN EXCELLENT MEDICINE
FOR LITTLE ONES
Baby's Own Tablets are an excel-
lent medicine for' little ones. They
are a mild but thorough laxative
winch sweeten the stomach and regu-
late the bowels, thus bringing .relief
in cases of constipation, indigestion,
colic, colds and simple fevers. ,Con-
cerning them Mrs. L. J. Chiasson, Pa-
'quetville, N.B:, writes: -"I have found
Baby's Own Tablets excellent for my
young baby in the base of constipa-
tion and (olio and it gives me great
pleasure to recommend them to other
mothers.." The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers' or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont. •
Lessons From the Enemy.
There is an old Latin quotation, "it
is lawful to learn from the enemy."
In Central Europe there are some
little things that they manage much
better than we do, Over` there all
the deer -handles are not knobs, but
levers,.: This makes them much easier
to open, especially when the hands
are full,
In Munich post -offices there ie a
-dial-scale for the use of the public, to
'weigh letters and parcl`(which
saves tune), 'and an automatic ar-
rangement for registering letters.
In Munich trans there Is a mark
at each end, one metre (thirty-nine
inches) from the floor. Children be-
low tele height are free, and there are
no disputes about age.
JJ Central European windows, Slice old
English windows, move in -and out,
not up and tlobvn. This quite does
away with the bother of window -
cords' and the windows gave more air
wh n They open. class quite tight]Y
if properly fitted.
In Bavaria, before the war at least,
there were all sorts of kindly little
eelebretiens and other things which
make life friendlier sand more pleas-
ant, 1f an employee had romafned In
the same place for five, seven, ten
years, eta, his employer frequently
gave him a sort of little jubilee cele-
bration, Nor 'did the employee forget
the chief's birtliday or "name -day,"
Nothing eripensive-a Bees at two of
wiue34`a cake, 'a little friendiy speeeif,
A TOMO FOR, TOE NERVES
TheOnly ReNe Tonic is a
Good Suppbyal oferyRtkih,, Red
Blood.
"If people woilld Ditty Wood to
their blood, instead of, wc"rrying them-
selves ill," said an eminent nerve
specialist, "we doctors would not see
our consulting rooms crowded 'ruff
nervous wrecks, bore people gaffer
from .worry than anything else,"
The sort of thing which the special -
1St spoke of Is the nervous, run-down
condition caused by,overwork and the.
many anxieties. qqa� to -day. Sufferers.
end themselves d'i'ed, mot5ose, low-
dpirlted, and unable to keep their
minds cat anything. Any sudden noise
hurts like a blow, They are full of
groundless fears, and do not eleep
well itt night. Headaches; neuritis and
other nerve pains ere part of the
misery, and it all comes.frotu starved
nerves.
Doctoring the nerves with poisonous
sedatives is a terrible in atalte, The,
only real nerve tonic 16 a good supply
of rich, red blood. Therefore to cure
nervousness and run-down health Dr,
Williams' Pink Pills should be taken.
These pills actually snake new, rich
blood, which strengthens the nerves,
improves the appetite, gives new
strength and spirits, and makes
hitherto despondent people bright and
cheerful. If you aro at all "out of
sorts" you should begin Curing your-
self to -day by taking Dr. Williams'
.Pink Pills.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50
cents a box or six boxes for 02.60 from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
•a
Pity the Poor Pianist..
Piano playing is real hard work,
Ria in no other sphere .(except that of
typewriting, perhaps) is the wear aaid
tear on the nerves so great.
The rapidity with which a pianist
consumes energy is so onofnioue that
ilr only it couple of hours' work the
consumption of heat is sudlcient to
boil twenty gallons of iced water.
At a confereuce of muelcians, held
some years` ago in Dublin, it was
i Y player shown that the ord ear la er must
cultivate the eye to see no less than
1,500 signs per minute, while this fin-
gers had to fly over the keyboard and
make upwards of 2,000 movements.
In a part of Chopin's "Etude in E
Minor," the rate of reading reaches
3,950 signs iIr two and a half minutes,.
which is equivalent to over twenty-six
notes per second. As the eye can re-
ceive only about ten consecutive' im-
pressions ipor secbnd, sit will be ap-
pareut that the brain must accustom
itself to read in groups.
Generally, speaking, a greater force,
is required to make a note sound or•
a Piano than is required to lift th4
lid of a kettle. As most kettle -lids
Vary ha weight up to about two ounces,
it will be seen that a pressure of some-
tMng like three to fa
ounces is re-
quired to produce a send on the
piano, even though it be very soft.
Li Chopin's last study in C Minor,
there is a passage which takes two
minutes and five seconds to play. Tho
pressure which mast bo brought to
bear on the keys during this time is
equal to '2,130 kilogrammes, or suf-
ficent to -move over three tons.
In the same composer's "Funeral
March," a passage occurs which takes
a minuto•ancl a half to play, and is on],11
estimated at 384 kilogrammes, but
even here it will be seen that a pianist
would only require to work four or
five minutes to move a ton.
From other examples, it will be, seen
that the total tonnage of one hour's
playing varies from twelve to eights--
four
ightyfour tons.
•
Wise Men Say -
That life is a duty, dare it; a bur-
den, bear it.
That if you want to make light of
trouble, keep it dark.
That worry is. the interest paid on
trouble before it comes along.
That the man who does what he
pleases is seldom pleased with what
he does.
That the man wins who forgets to
criticize others but remembers to
criticize himself.
That all easy ways are downhill.
You don't notice it till you try to climb
back,
That experience is what a wise man
gets,atthe expense of otbers, and a
fool at his own.
That excuses are the patches with
which we try to hid. the tholes in our
business suits,
That the darkest shadows of life
are those which a man makes himself
when he stands In his own light.
LISTEN TO THIS 1
• S'YS CORNS LIFT
RIGHT OUT NOW .
You reckless men and women who
are pestered with corns and who have
At least once a week invited an awful
death from lockjaw or blood poison are
naw told by a Giucinnaot authority toe
use at
drug called freezone, wioich the
momenta few drops are 0591106 to
any corn,tbe soreness is relieved and
noon the entire corn, root and all, lifts
cut with the fingers,
]t is a sticky ether sompon li whloh
dries the mmnent it 1s applied and
simply shrivels thecorn without in -
gaming or even irritating the surround.
lug tissue or akin. It is claimed that
a quarter of an ounce of freezone will
little at 'any of
thedrug
cost ,veryY.
stores, but ie sufficient to rid Duo's feet
of every hard or soft corn or callus.'
You are further warned,that matting
at a 0010 is a suicidal habit,•
•
a -
Munch interest is being shown in
China in motorcycles, due to the
fact that they can travel on the nar-
row paths used by foot passengers
and for wheelbarrrows. 1
AQinard"s X.ttirrnont Cures !Auto/filler,
ISSUE No, 5-'20
War Lingo,
Of all the things the war has brought
11i1
The citteerefst is the words it's taught
kGo find In ear voonbiilal'y
Words stranger to the diottonary,
And sonle•ef tharo most annus)))(,
Arid to ltue studenteta quite confusing,
Por instance, who knows what the
root is
0f that fan5iliat' byword "(mottos?"
And it woultd take .l lot of study
To trace the lingual birth of "buddy,"
Wo borrowed from the S'reuoll "Per -
rage,"
And soon adopted "camouflage,"
And then of course wo .rnust corral
That very useful word "morale."
1t seonretl at first a bit surprising
Te glibly talk of ""moblilzing,"
And when we heard of "morat0tluln"
We vaguely thought of "ill Memoriam -a"
In anoint days we 1re4s'd of hautboys,
But why/were men christened "dough -
'
boys?"
And everybody wonders how
They canto to speak of food as "chow.
B}ave ICitchenor's `non were called a
"nrob;'
And sailormen are nielcnaned "gob,"
And British Tommy in his ,nightie
Dreamed happy dreams of far-off
"blighty,'a
The airplanes with 'their dives and
dips
Are to their daring pilots "ships,"
I ask kyour pardon if I limp
In trying to define a "blimp,"
And though I know of cards the faces
I've learned of other klnds'of "aces."
Who doesn't know the name of Foch
Ie one that disagreed with "Bothe?"
And ab I could go on and write 'em
Ad nauseam, ad infinitum.
SWITCH OF.!
Put aside the Salts, Oil,
Calomel, or Pills and
take "Cascarets."
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure, and fresh
with Cascarets, or merely whipping
them into action every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Oil, or Purga-
tiye Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash -day, Let.
Cascarets gently cleanse and regulate
the stomach, remove the sour and fer-
menting food and foul gases, take trio
excess bile front- the liver and carry
out of the colon and bowels all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
SO yo`u can straighten up.
Cascarets to -night will make you
feel great by morning, 'They work
while you sleep -never gripe, sicken,
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
so little too,
A Modern Raleigh.
Tho cloak of Sir Walter Raleigh,
hasbeen a symbol of chivalry for
many,yoars, but a schoolboy's chivalry
deserves an equally honorable place.
A Christmas treat was to .be glven,at
an Edinbargh school, and hundreds
of poor children has assembled at the
doors to wait until theyewere opened.
Among 910m was a sweet-faced little
girl, thinly clad and barefoot, who
trembled with cold,
While she was dencing from one
foot to the other on the cold, hard
stones, a schoolboy, not much older,
came along. IIe hesitated for a n9o-
Aleut; then, snatching off his soft
woolen cap, he put it down before her.
"Stand on that, little girl," he said,
and he passed in hatless at a side
door.
LET "DANDER9NE1r
SAVE YOUR HAIR'
Get rid of every bit of that
ugly dandruff and stop
falling )lair
To stop falling' Bair at Mute and rid
the scalp of every particle of dand-
ruff, get a small bottle of "Denderine"
at any drug or toilet counter for a few
cents, pour, a little iu your band and
rub well into the scalp. After several
applications all dandruff usually goes
and hair strips coining out, Every hair
in your head 5000 shows new life,,
vigor, brightness, thickness and more
color,
Iron rust staisls can be quieklq re-
moved if you saturate the spots with
lemon juice and immediately hold over.
the steam escaping from the tea ket-
tle.
BRlnard'8 'LiuUuent Carom Garttet to Cows.
Seagoing ships numbering 2,025
passed through the Panama Canal
between June 30, 1918, and July 1,
1919, and paid 05,140,598.54 in tolls,
MONEY Ofi0ERS.
Buy your out-of-town supplies with
Dominion IOxpress Money Orders.
Five Dollars Costs three cents.
Artificial light f or increasing egg
production is a good thing with a
Wong, robust flock. A flock that is
notstrong will break down tinder the
Arlin.
l,tlnard's Ltatiaestt for sale everywhere,
Before the war Belgium was the
third gine-smelting country in the
World, producing about 200,000 tons
c8 unnianufaetured nine per year, of
Which 775 per cent, was exported,
"SYRUP OF FIGS"
CHILD'S LAXATIVE
Classified ,Aa,dsrertiaemaiste.
G150Ii s WAITTA D,
IOI;L IAlT A0 3NTld WAI'l'47 ` (5
5o0)1 prints and itnlehos---lowest
tilaes ea for eatalogue.
nted- Art grantee-ask
4 lir enswiek Avt., 2o.
ronin,
ook at tongue) Remove gold Rolf Sana
sons from little stomach,
liter and bowels
Accept "California" Sirup et Pigs
only -look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most
harmless laxative or physic for the
little stomach," 11ve and bowels,
Children love its delicious fruity
taste. Pull directions for child's dose
on each bottle, Give it without fear•
(Mother! You must say "Callfornla,"
Farmers ass: for "a fair field and
no favor" in the 'opportunity to enter
the export market. The oosordinalted
work of producer and packer will at-
tain this in a business way if mutual
confidence is not shaken by outside
.interference. -
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Sirs, -I have used your MINARD'S
LINIMENT for the past 25 years and
whilst I have occasionally used other
liniments I can safely say that I have
never used any equal,10 Yours.
If rubbed between the hands and
inhaled frequently, it will never fail
to relieve cold in the head in 24 hours.
It is also the Best for bruises, sprains,
etc,
Yours truly,
J. G. LESLIE.
Dartmouth.
Half the (business of life is concern-
ed with knowing how to use men and
women, how to understand them, how
their
how
to get on with them,to turn
faculties to the best account, -Vis-
count Bryce.
Millard's Liniment Believes Neuralgia.
If a fire is slow in starting, burn
a newspaper in the throat o£ the
chimney to warm the flue.
ususcuisTurcoursuszuccummuussmsompusit
The Great West Permanent
Loan Company.
Toronto Office 20 King St. West
4% allowed on Savings.
Interest computed quarterly.
Withdrawable by Cheque.
514%a on Debentures,
Interest payable half yearly.
Paid up Capital 52,412,570.
•
""`ut'"s
All grades. Write for price .%
TORONTO 'SALT 'WORKS
NIL S, CUFF . TOROhf5'16
--.tea
Pit, av°e "C a. s"
--use warm water stud
Baby's O31,17A1 Sods.
Wash in warm. water with Baby's
Own Soap -rinse well and dry
perfectly -and your skin will
be soft and never chap.
---
,.)Yost for Baby met BeaI,M' pea."
i Im,ot Soap,Limited, Sipe., faonitsal, 00 t
11WOPAl:'isi`C, Wi91ti6i,Y, IN 0.3)11015
Countrv'"Splendid opportunity. Write
ox J', 141leon Publishing tlo„ 1dlaited,
78 Adelaide St, W. "Toronto,
S)117'EII,L Ipllt7IPt"IAll *NI.,aY'll!'AI'i035
W and lel) printing plant in Nashua
Ontario. Inettranee marled1,600. Will
so Por 51,200w,in gulch sale. Brox 85,
Wilson, X ubllshing Co., Ltd., Toronto.
4DTISS WANTED TO Po PLAIN
-light sewing at homo whale or
term, time,
nail y`Slendlstenip any
per.
Haulers. National Manuraotur ng Com-
"any, A7entreel.
11 D0701.0 sILv1OSI IILACI( .S.R18ft1DINCi
J Ir oxes. Also, we are buyers of lima`
burs. What have you -what nrtoe4
Reid lire's.. Bothwell. Ont.
d(1001'111 S''OCIc WANTIOD, 178' Tot;
¶.JJ aro able ,M euppiy, advise 00, as we
will pay the highestprides, dry or green'
front the saw, Ifeetu,,h Bros, Limited.
Owen settee, out,
,/`IANCisit, '40140 )5, IiVMIM,...Ewa.
N...., internal and external, mired without
pain by our home treatment.. Write us
before too late Dr. Hellman Medical
Co„ Limited Collingwood, Ont.
Anlerion'a Pioneer Dog Bemedtos
Nook of
DOG DISEASES
and How t0 Teed
Mailed IProo to,any M -
dress by the Author,
8. 0iay clover Co., Dm.
118 West 81st Street
New York, U.S.A.
�\\t
THEX do not,l,�y
fear coughs, /
colds and allied .n:9
complaints. For .,i4
, over 60 years they
• have relied on
for prompt results. With the lowered.
strength and vitality of age they realize
more than ever before the importance
of having Gray's Syrup on hand for
Immediate use. . e2
Thoy ulwoye buy the Letts Mho
Montreal D. WATSON &C0., New York
GET SLOAN'S FOR
YOUR PMN REEL
You don't have to rub it in
o to get quick, comfort..
ing relief
•
Once you've tried it on that stiff
joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheu-
• matic twinge; lanae back, you'll find
a, warm, soothing relief you never .
tiuooght a liniment could produce.
Won't stain the skin, leaves no
muss, wastes no time in applying, sure
to give quick results. A largo bottle
means economy. Your own or any
- other druggist bas it. blade ,(npCan-
ada. , Get it to -day. 35c., 70c., 51.40.
ZEA IN RASH
CUflCURA HEALS
On Face and Head. Itched
and Burned; Disfigured.
'Last year I became affected with
eczema. It started on the cheeks in
a rash, and the water spread and
`node my face sore all around the
ear and partly on my head. 'Sheakin
was 'very sore and red, and the
breaking out itched and burned so
that I could hardly help scratching.
bay face was very diaiigured.
"Then I used a free sample of
Cuticura. It helped so I bought three
rakes of Soap and one box of Oint-
ment, and my face viae healed."
(Signed) Mies Martha Berger, Span -
away, Wash„ Fab. 11, 1919.
Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum the caro of your akin.
Soap Ole, Ointment 26 and )Sec. Sold
througt outtbellominion. CnnndienDepott
Lyman, LIeni d, 65. Poul St., Montreal,
Cutieue, Seep above. without mug.
neoa-
_ _ - _ °"•ssPeA13ft5 R4etr4r Pa'Y1 .
r F54 MERS' CLUE EWWuI T PULP/5
We are Buyers of Ontario Grains and
Sellers of Western Feeding' Oats and Baxley.
fler OdYJ .'311C,i; 5I
,e.0 , ,,,p %'two "'•T t
r ur-.muC: tviltr PAIL BANES t3l18A .(Phil
ArDF.tAlok 4'603
411,
TORONTO
dEllAd:48Fi1M'iilY.EM7t Mg..Eili ' .,241114=11Mi. t..'EiSidiIMMI''Ee.3' i'""s`"i.::..--..
ONLY TABLETS MARKED
"BAYER" ARE (ASPIRIN
Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross"
a
Thu flatus "Bayer" idn Lif,es the contains proper directions for Colds,
only genuine Aspirin, --the Aspirin Headache, Toothache, Earnrhe, New. rescribod by phgrioiaus fey over nine- valgia, Lumbago, Iiheumatism, Neuri-
teon years and, now made in Canada, lis, ,joint Paitls, said Pain generally.
Always buy nn unbroken jpa package '1'in boxes of 12 tablets east but
of "Bayer '.)'apicis of Aspirin willcit a few cents. Larger "slayer" packages.
There ;is only oro ,ASysnwun-.+"720ycr"w"5.aa must soy "Bayou"
7.5p9'rhl 10 tbo i.rn,lo mcrk +r a ':d In real,,) el )tare)' ltenufaetnro of nleno-
ot,tlaitetdenlor of li,i .I'. Pit an ih:d .,taplrin 0105081)5305
Willbaeture, i0 115"5151.11.,..,"141111,- , -1. f Intl ns 1110 !1shtSle of Ir'eym' L'e Po501»'
Will be aLonipul leilt, cal; Ln.,,... .,,a ,, 1_n).,