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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1920-8-19, Page 7l f ti'fit006a. 'PX111]Bilriini VIM TORS le cal Da t f1)• at o ins o ua � t z fere et Note.Piano ar►. o R olls Perfection Rolla .6 for $1•QQ, Ptanostyle Sells,•QOce 4 for $2.00.. U Word Rolls, 90c. c Upward. d r . 'We leave the Largest nunnhe'' o, eoleebiane, hest quality, aneapeet prices in Torgnee, We Pay Special Attention to. Out -o1. Town Customers. OCTAVE MUSIC SUPPLY Adelaide St. East • Termite q doors from Yonge 8t, A Day With .Shakespeare.. So much has been written. about the life of William Shakespeare that oiie. a would have thought there WaoT noth- fqiig to add to existing records. Mr, H. E. Banuard, an English Writer, has, how$ver, cleverlyroeon- eructed the Tudor por"iod:in Loudon; he enables one, as it were, to spend day with Shakospeare- As dinner in Shakespeare's time was taken at about eleven o'clock, and the perform54oe. t the theatre was usually at three o'clock, the Carly morning between breakfast and linnet would behhet portion of the day which Shakespeare found available for hie own special Purpose's. This, in all probability,. was the time at which he was' accustomed to 't write, as the hours i'mmediateiy after breakfast Were the only.ones� in which, ,es a fule;,he_could be free from inter ruption; and, moreover, for Half the eCear the poorness of the artificial lightg,of the time rendered it a *natter of much physical difficulty to writo'in the evening., It must lie assumed ' that Shake- speare had the: whole Elite- between breakfast and dinner for composition.; Often in the busy year of. 1591 he meet have found it pecessary to go in the manning, either alone or with Bur- bage and, others ofehis colleagues, to see how the construction of the Rose Theatre was progressing, and to con- sult Henelowe on some point or other connected there'vvith. - T.he . playere Shakespeare, of course, among them—probably reached the theatre about noon. Between noon and three o'clock, the usual time for the performance, there were the hun- dred and one tasks incident to 'theatre., cal preparation to accomplish. • Rehearsals were presumably carried Out in those hours between noon and the opening of 'the theatre to the pubo lie, There would be various business - arrangements to be transacted and, perhaps, purchosete to be effected .and, at any rate, in the earlier „days of his profeseiodal career, Shakespeare would have to order and superintend' the lads whose tank it was to hold the. horses of those who rode to the play, there probably being solid reasons for the tradition of a group of horse• holders being known as "Shake- • epeare's Boys," X -Rays for Old Masters. The X-rays are used for a multiplici- ty of purposes in science and indus- try, from tracing the course of a bullet in the body to detecting the faulty construction of a golf ball. Dr. L, , Heilbron, of Amsterdam, has now applied radiography to art. Some pictures, which were under. the suspicion of not being quite what they seem, have been subjected to the rays, The result in several instances has been to discover that part of the paint- ing has been superimposed on a still earlier layer. In a picture of the " Cruciflction,' painted about 1500, many "restora- tions" were exposed, among them the figure of a monk over which the por- trait of a woman had been painted, probably some 400,yearo ago. Water in the Sky. Science tents lie that water in the atmosphere keeps' us warm, If the air were entirely dry the temperature would be 50 degrees lower than it is. Wo ,ahoul& have hard work to keep from freezing. Without moistu?e in the air, there would be no rain, of course. The earth would quickly become. a desert; so that, lacking food, we would soon starve to death anyway. One thing that rain does• for us is to wash the dust out of the air. et makes the rivers run and provideeeus with water to drink. All of which are con- soling refleotidns in which we may properly indulge during k spell of what we call bad weather. Berlin Returns Art Stolen in Belgium. .tYl1A I G" S VEONG ESS REQUIRING GREAT CARE BY MANY WORKERS. Shanghai s the Biggest of Slian Has � �'� the World's Silk Markets, Had About June 1. 'Phe world ds indebted to the Chinese for the discovery of..the value o4 the siilcworm. Its product ryas unknown in Ronio until'tlle tine of Julius Cmsar and so costly was, the. material that even the lEmperor Aurelian refused a dress of this lustrous fabric to hie Empress, Now 1t Is nurtured In many, countries and its. Products are within the reach of most people. stieated Besides the ' several donne species there is a wild' silkworm found -1n Central, America 'which weaves a haglike structure two,, feet in depth that hangs from trees.' At a distance the nest resembles a huge Matted cobweb. The insect makes no cocoon, but weaves the silk in layers and "skeins around the side of the net. From. Tegucigalpa there -were sent ao the United Status come years ago six liounde of this silk. Hero it was shade into handkerchiefs not easily detect- ed from common silk of equal' strength and texture. . There is a curious sills .producing spider In Central America, the arreda de cede, which may be seenhurrying along with a load of fine silk on its back from which trail numerous. dell- cate filaments. ° A Do_esticated Insect. A, peculiar fact about the silkworin is that it is aetually a domesticated insect. Neither, the animals -nor the fowls do the barnyard, remote as they aro from the; wild 'types, need so little restraintas this creature, which, pro- digiously industrious as it_may be, has never' been able to meet the world's demand for its spun product. As a mite' ter of fact, the silkworm has been .so domesticated that it would become extinct now were it not for the aid of" man. Born into slavery, the caterpil- lars crawl contentedly over the nar- row territory of their feeding trays, aecl, though'°ila moths have wings, they have lost all desire to fly. As already 'stated, this slavery be- gan in China more than 4,500 years ago. The Chinese give the credit for introducing sihkworne culture to,S1-ling, the wife of the.Emperor Hoang -ti, and fix the date at -2,600 B.O.' Forty years later the Chinese were cultivating the white mulberry tree to provide the worms with their favorite food, hav- ing a start of Europe by a little more than 3,000 years. The ancient Romans obtained their precious silk frons Cos. Ccs probably got its material from Chins, through the Persians and Pimenicians, - As with the .culture of tea, the pro- duction of silk is'an extremely simple occupation, especially in China. Brief- ly stated, the following are the steps through which the staple passes on its way to the loom: ' About the middle of the month of April the eggs of the silkworm are hatched, When hatched the resultant little worms axe placed on bamboo frames, there to remain for certain period, during which their diet.con- sists of mulberry leaves cut into very small pieces:1 When the worms have -attained greater size it becomes neces- sary, of course, to provide other frames forthem,.and their diet, too, is altered -in that they aro now fed with leaves not so finely ctfras before. This process is continued unlit at last they are given whole leaves to feed upon. The Germans, bavd been forced- to' return to Brussels the six wjngs of the Van Eyek tleytych. "The Adoration of the Lamb,' which were removed dur- ing the German - coupatiou and placed in the Kaiser Friedrich Museitm in Berlin. Tito return of thele art works wes in accordance with article 247 of the Treaty of Versailles. There have also been returhed here the e1x wings.of the triptych of "The Last Supper," by Dierick Bouts, and which were formerly in the Church of St°Pe or in Louvain. It 18 intended - to hold an exhibiton of the works of these two painters tbis month, Feeding the Silkworms. A curious circumstance in connec- tion with the feeding of the worms lies in their varying- periods of diet. For instance, just after they have. been hatched the little creatures will eat for a space GE flve days, this being fol- lowed by a sleep of two days. , Later another change comps in their feeding habits. When they awake their an - petites are not so keen, 1nesmuch as they will, generally speaking, eat for four days only and then sleep for ono. Upon their attainment of their full size and strength the worms proceed with the,apknning of their cocoons, a task that consumes from four to, seven days. The spinning having been ac- complished- the worm turns its atten- tion to the business of stripping the cocoon, and about a week later each little cultleator is ready with his silk- en harvest, ' The harvests of all, duly gathered, go to make 'up the bales of the native Chinese traders: The first Lind foremost circumstance that goes to decide the quality and texture of the silk is the breed of the worm responsible for 11. Nextcomes the quality of the leaves fed to the worker and then conies the mode of feeding, Silkworms must be. fed at regular hours, The temperature of the quarters wherein theyhave their being must be maintained at a certain degree. Above' all they *bust be pro- tected against noxious smells, where- by they are strangely affected. They are peculiarly sensitive in the pros - Pryti •; tL , ,e Rath Flavor of is at >t9 best: after boilin, .a fun twenty minute's; and a well wide cup. of •Ppstu,r,n it hard. io beat. INsTANT a ,.7511° . ::: � .et, 11 .1.. Y'. 9 r , s made • •r y ,. ern . a wink, in Cls. }l�Ill ref ant tgi strata Cr ce self' bots ,w :,.,, DELICIOUS ana ECONOMICAL AtJTQ: SPAitE .PA t l011es an 1 to 01 r no r 1 rtnc. la o rla, a ak it Your ald' bsoler o1 HolIit Darla, Write of wire u& dqlurih 1115 what YOU )vont We pinu,,7 the lextreet and most complete stpck In Canada of slightly used ev neweerie and automohllorIain,(ment tiro •8110 1117ywllerp t 1'/a111Ldn, Salle. aetony el' re , fund In fun our motte, evee Auto.' r'alraff8 yarn ONApiyi l.23.03; 'Duifesi.ri St., 7;pronto, art; en00 of strangers and -ahautmost ewe Meet be 'ekercl•sea -by the natives 111 their handling of ,the little oreattu'es• Experts declare that the grea,test.de- foot le the production 1)i': Chinese silk 1109 in the primitive Mode of reeling which the Celeistlals perslst in• ,eih- p107,1ng. The biggest.' of all 'silk markets is Shang:tee whence about June 1 is sent all the silk apun by the worms tbrougliout Chiiia. No More Sea -Sickness. Ali,"kinds of attirauttle to prevent shipa trent rolling have been tried, hundreds' of inventors ° have" designed non raking, sips, but seasickness still reragine one'tlf the inevitable miseries of a sea trip in rough weather, But it was announced recently, at the Institution of Naval Architects, London, that a, new gyroscope hats proved so successful that a large ship can be kept so steady that'll; onfy rolls through two degrees, or no `more than a car inclines when,rounding a sharp bend. ' Vessels of as much as 10,000 ton$. displacement have been fitted with the gyroscope, and through the Won- derful steadiness; of the ship it main; tains a greater speed. Also, the' ship is much,drier in rough weather, as the waves do not break over 4t 16 anything like the usual extent. Pew of us know how much animals suffer, ,as well as, human beings, in rough weather at sea, and this may now be prevented, To keep a ship of 10,000 tone steady, the whole weight et the new Sperry gryoseope is only a hundred tons, or one ton in a hundred tons of the ship:. , TONE 1'Olt 'f1111i1 NER ES. The Only Real Nerve Tonic is a Good Supply of Rich, Red Blood. "If people would only attend to their blood,•instead of worrying themselves ill," said an eminent nerve specialist, "eve .doctors would not see our con suiting rooms crowded with nervous wrecks. More people` suffer from worry than anything else." The sort of thing.which the special - let spoke of is the nervous run-down condition, caused byovertvork and„the many anxieties of to -day, Sufferers find themselves tired, low-spirited and unable to keep their minds on any- thing. Any sodden noise hurts like a blow: 'They are -full of groundless 'fears, and do not sleep well at night. Headaches and other nerve pains are part. of the misery, and it all comes from starved nerves.' Doctoring the nerves with poisonous sedatives is a terrible mistake. The only real nerve tonic. is a good supply of rich, red blood. Therefore to re- lieve nervousness and run -clown health, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills should be taken, These pills make 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 are at all "out of sorts" you. should begin 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 $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'. Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. - Strange but True. When a chameleon is blindfolded it loses the power of chaeging its color. Last year London street collections for charities. raised 52,000,000. The artificial flower industry in Eng- land employs over 10,000 persons. • A crowd of 1,000,000 persons stand - Ing in. comfort would cover seventy acres. Butter was used for many years in India solely as an ointment for appl'y- ing to wounds., 'Mr. J. W. Griffith, a San Francisco motor -car expert, has invented a "me- chanical teacher" for instructing chlld- ren. . in handwriting.- This "finger guide" holds the hand of the strident in the scientifically correct• position round the pen, and is to be used until the pupil assumes this position . Hie tura.11y. A man is building, at St. Joseph, Missouri, a row of Houses to be let only to families in which there are children and to newly -married couples. Tho newly -weds -will he slowed to oc- cupy the houses with the provision that if there aro 010 children in their families at the end of one year's resi- dence, they will be asked to leave. Beep Smiling. Make up your mind to keep milling, And meet with a cheerful face The troubles %that fall to one and all, Whatever niay be their place. Courageously stick to your duty, Keep a stout heart, come what may; With a smile' in your eye hake care roll by, ' And gladden the passing day, make up your mind and stick to it! Don't like a weathercock be, Chopping and changing, and plans do- . ranging;, Keep to your course steadfastly! Though the wind may blow strongly against you, Don'te1ebout turn" and retreat; Yen'll eeteatleer the storm and good, works perforin . If trou les'pat cheerfully meet, . So mance up your mind you will carry Vhateo ryou start, rightthrough; 11 first rebuff don't cry "Enough!" At the s y oliG ! Bet tackle the thin anew. B t g w Stick to your job and troop smiling; NevOr got down In the dumps; Play a many game, keep free from, shame, And you'll finally turn up trumps. M(nard's Lltlmeiit fol,' bele everyw(lole UNGEFUE FOR ,SMALL FOLK 9187 Transfer Design , 9612 ut p �.l Now it the tine to et tid of Nature is ptilliilee for you The warm Weat'her's here* Alis is yciu.r chance -- grasp it—t0.ke T18@'67pletoro's Fthetinnatio Capsules Get it out of your system the ..easiest way! 'Sold by reliable druggists for a dollar. Aeic our agent or write us.for a free sample..' Temple ton's, 142 King St. W., Toronto, pg 739 95871-CNho;illPs Set of Underwear (corset waist and one-piece drawers), Price, 20 cents. In 6 sizes, ^1, 2, 8, 4', 5 and 6 years. Size 6 requires 1% yds. 82 ins, wide, or 134, yds, lel, his. wide. McCall Transfer Design No. 780. Price, 10 eent's. 9612—Girl's Straight -Pleated Skirt 'and Bloomers (attached to under- body). Price, 25 cents. In 6 sizes, 4 to 14 years. Size 8 requires, skirt, 1% yds. 86 ins. wide, or 1'',4 yds. 54 int. wide; underbody, % yd. 36. ins. wide: Thesepeeterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co„ 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. What is a Sponge? Spongesare animals. When brought to the surface they are black and slimy. Tho sponge of the shop is merely the skeleton, the. supporting framework, which' gives strength and firmness to the eoft, gela- tinous tissues of the ]lying anneal, *Nothing is known of the food of the sponges. It is 'taken in through tile canal ,system, and must be in a finely - divided state, but of what it consists, is not known. The so-called roots of sponges per- form no other purpose than that of anchorage, ' The average six-inch sponge is probably only four years old. Sponge fishing in North and South America is rather a modern industry, but it produces more than two-thirds of the world's supply in weight,' though' the fisheries of the Mediterranean pro- duce about one-half of the world's supply in value. There are two well-defined sponge regions on the Florida coast. In Cuba the sponge is found both on the north and south coasts. Extensive sponge beds also exist in the Bahama Islands. b•• — Teaching Trees to Dress. Experiments carried on in England in the art of making naked boughs clothe themselves decently with leaf - buds and flower-buds..have resulted this season in some very striking suc- cesses, '.rliis wont iras been carried on by the National Cider Institute, on the lines" of a method used for rather dif- ferent, purposes two hundred years -ago by French gardeners. If a tree has any part of any bough without shoots, you may clothe the naked parts without expense or much trouble. All you have to do is, to cut a circle with a sharp knife, Jost above the place where buds should be. The cut should go through the baric 'and the ,layer below it. In respect of young wood, the cut is only a slicing; nothing is removed. In the case of older wood it +may be necessary to cut out a narrow piece of bark and "cambium," or the layer below the bark. The yield of many trees it the cider -growing districts has been ,much increased by this method. BABY'S GHAT DANGER MEG HOT WEATHER More little ones die during the hot weather than at any other time of the year: Diarrhoea, dysentry, cholera infantuin and stomach troubles come without warning, and when a medicine is not at hand to give proinptiy the short delay too frequently means that the child has passed beyond aid, Baby's Own Tablete should always' be kept -in the house where there are young children. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent stomach and bowel. troubles, or if .the trouble 'comes suddenly the prompt use of the Tablets will 'relieve the baby. The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail et 25 cents a box from 'Phe Dr, Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont, _ Flowers for Heroes. In this Country the long-lasting little flowers called "Immortelles" are com- paratively little known, in France, however, they are grown in en0rmoes quantities for the decoration of graves. Nearly all of the immartelles pro- (lnce'd in France are grown In the neighborhood of the village of 01- iioulee, which is in the south, not far from Toulon, The Harvest begins in May and lasts ten days, it period Called elle "decade of the hmnortelles." They kayo to be picked veiny early In the morning, when. half open, lest they wither. Usually they are sold by weight, The war has, brought pros- perity to the, village of 011iouies, be- canse of the increased demand for hn- mortelles fQ) the sir eselektive of seldkor Ask for Minard's and take no other. I' •HU. v—e7 Corsica produces thoe largest q( e t tl ty of wax of all the countries in 1Jaut- epe, if not in the world. The Only t o coil/Aries in which the Mile is of equal length etre Britain. and America. Alariit clocks, better than the 'Get - lean pro -war odes and !iiso:t a cheap, aro to bo made in Y ontlon,:' 1t SUB No, 34—'gor About Claudland. You watch the clouds: and admire their beauty, but what ,else do you know about there 'Little or nothing! Study, then, the follo•widg Cloud collec- tion; C Clouds are of,alfheighte, The aver- age .ie one and a half miles. The high- est is six, The most highly electrified clouds are the lowest—about 700 yards from' the ground. The cloud classes are Simple, Intermediate, and Compound. Simple clouds alt cub -divided Into Cirrus,. Cumulus, and Stratus 'clouds. The first are the most elevated, ,and are like Sabre or loose hair or "mares'. tails." The. name "cirrus" is Latin, and means a lock of hair or curl. Oh - rim clouds pretend fine weather. Cumulus clouds are lumps, 11110 great sugar -loaves or 'volumes of smoke. When this sort are fleecy and move against the wind, rain is coming. When their outline is hard and non. fleecy, a.nd they move with the wind, fine weather es pretended. Stratus clouds are the lowest, and are creeping mists, generally rising and forming in the evening. Nimbus clouds are the rain -bring- ers. They have no defined outline, their edges gradually shaping off from the deep grey of the mass into trans- parency. The purpose of clouds- is threefold. They are Nature's ,screens to, arrest •undue ''radiation of heat from the earth; they temper the sun's rays and Create temperate countries; they are the great storehouses of rain. That tiny bit of fleece you can see on a summer's day, high up, le just— a newrlakes —0S MOTHER! "California Syrup of .Figs" Child's Best Laxative Accept. "California" Syrup of Figs only—look for the name' California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stom- ach, liver end bowels. Children love 11s fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say "Call. Sonata." • Controilipg Flower Colors. It is generally known that the colors of vegetation vary in Intensity In direct ratio to the amount of sunlight, combined with coolness of tempera- ture, within certain limits. Examples are the Intense redness of apples grown in northern climates and the deep colors of Alpine vegetation. But the soil and other influences also have aei effect upon plant colors. Experiments have been made upon the artificial control of colors of plants through the introduction of chemicals into the soil they grow In. In very small quantities such chemi- cals are absorbed without apparent in- jury, but the effect upon the colors is slight. Yellow noses, for instance, ap- pear to become deeper in color under the influence of • aluminum sulphate and potassium sulphate. With the use of these same chemicals the petals of the white carnation show a tendency to, develop red streaks, whereas When fed with ammonium sulphate, alumi- num sulphate, iron citrate and citric acid, scarlet carnations' tend to form whits streaks. Minard's Lininient Co„ Limited, Gentlemen, --I - have used MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in nay family for years, and for the every -day ills and accidents of life I coesider it has no equal. I would not start on a voyage without it, if it cost a dollar a bottle. OAPT. le R. DESJARDIN. Sehe, Sterile, St Andre, K'amonraska, Tale of a Shirt. In Scienddnavia file bride always gives her future husband a sliirt which he wears during the marriage cere- mony. After that, when once Ito has de f1)' l,tl ng 1na,ser to wllai: do1»t1t0 of 15oyee y is may descend, he nbviir Wears that shillt•a10inuntil ho lies in iylal, ri awaiting Ut a 1 lits coftl w g MONEY ORDBRS. PaY Your i t ants • out-of•t0w1 aea0l by Dontlttiott Express Money Order. Five Dollars costs three cerate. A gardener, with a conservatory full of flowers for sale to passengers, le the latest addifion to the ittxtttdo05 Atlantic linets. lyiidarci's Liniment used by Physlolails ;• "Coins of the .Pest. " The' Prat 01)1118 0804 by Civilized nee Mono of the ancien( wa]'hl were smell metal 1nget9 etailiped with a ruler's seal. It is probablp,i,t they were 111'0 minted in Lydia, the ricin Asian icing• ib m of wltlolt Gi'eesus was the meet famous The "punoii•marltetl" coins of India are -assigned to .a period .older even than that of Buddhism, and .golds sil- ver and, copper .coins it(tay have been need In Judie before they were known In the West. The 01161e11t molietary system of Persia, in wlilch the 'ratio Of silver to gold wag thirteedito one, 13 said to have been estabikshee by, Cy- rue in 533'0.0, 1 Ancient Hebrew money consisted of rings, w bangs, hunt Iron, copper, sil- ver and gold coins 'followed, The Greeks were using goad aiul silver Money by the ninth century, B.0"'and ancient Rome used loathe''; bronze, silver and gold money Ina bewildering number of systems. nOUBLE BEAUTY OF YOUR HAili *'Danderine" creates mass of thick, gleamy waves 1I'd . �. ': . Vii,• �� t4 r In a few moments you can trans- form your plain, dull, fiat hair. You can have It abundant, soft, glossy and full of life. Just• get at any drug or toilet counter a small bottle of "Dan- derine" fora few cents. Then iinoieten a soft cloth with the "Danderine" and draw this. through your hair, taking one small strand at a time, Instantly, yes, immediately, you have doubled the beauty of your hair. It will be a mass; so soft, lustrous, and so easy to do up. All dust, dirt and excessive oil is removed. Let Danderine put new life, color, vigor, and brightness in your hair, This stimulating tonicwill freshen your scalp, check dandruff and falling hair and help your hair to grow long, thick, strong and beautiful. Distracted Mother: "Oh, dear! What shall I do 'with baby?" Young Son: "Didn't we get a hook of instructions with it, mother?" Keep Minard's Liniment In the house. The brain of an idiot contains less phosphorus than is •contained in the brain of a person of average mental power: Classified Advertisements. 5011 ne.r,le f'110010l1 Slfelet It BLACK i31?,1t1QDXNC8 /Jeeps, Reed levee B0010011, VW, 1 Amorsigatr llo�asY Aar,?4e as 7iook' on " " DOG DISEASES - and Jievr to food *ailed Frap to,ait Md- dress bit 8110 ,Ituthor, ef. bfay {*lover 00:, Eao. 11'8 West 8iet'Atreet , Now 7c0rif, °COARSE SALT LAND :.ALT Bulk Cariot+a TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J.OLIFR • TORONTO Beauitif etl Women o octet durin the a f $ Y. >; p st seventy years have relied upon it for their distln• guished'appearance. The soft, refined, pearly white complexion It renders instantly, Is always the source of flattering comment.. The opal shows its exquisite 'colors best when warm, and dealers, aware(. of this peculiartty,. will hold an opal ! in the hand: before showing 4t, 4n order to enhance its changing lustre. A special appeal is being made to the women in both city and country by the Canadian National Eihibition tide year. Women's Day will be Sept: 2, and every department capable of being so handled will be turned over to women for the purpose of dehnon- strating her adaptability and effi- ciency, Know The Joy Of A Beautiful Complexion Hair And Saves They may be yours if you make Cuticura Soap and Ointment your every -day toilet preparations. The Soap cleanses and purifies, the Oint- ment soothes and heals redness; roughness, pimples, and dandruff, Soap 26c, Olatmont 25 and 50o. Sold throughoutthoDominlon, Canadiaalepot: scams. Limited, St. Paul Sr, alontraal, Cuticura Sone shaves, curl mug. DRETTY good milking you will admit! Yet it is by no means unusual for one man with a Macartney double unit to milk a herd of this size in less than an hour. What this means in dollars and cents is easily illustrated. The average person milks about 8 cows in an hour, by hand, Figur- ing wages and board at 25 cents an hour, handmilking one cow costs about 3 cents or 75 cents for the entire *mrd.. Twice a day for 865 days'means a wage expedse'of $547:50. At 25 cents en hour the labor cost per cow with the Macartney Milker works out at 1 cent, or 25 cents per day. Twice a day the year 'round this would mean a milking cost of 8182.50, or a yearly saving of $365.00 through the use of the Macartney Machine Milker. Slnippfe fisitres but','c,•y expressive.' And remember that Moeartney means profit in ether ways, It means more mill; per cow, longer lactation periods, less hired help and more time for other important work In the fields. The Macartney Machine Milker la a real money making Investment. You arc losing money without it, You gain in every way when you adopt it. Free Particulars Further Information concerning the Mncart. ney Machine Milker will be mailed you on receipt of the attached coupon ailed in as Indicated. This Information will not obligate you in any way. - 'Even if you arc not con- templating. an Immediate purchase our literature will, prove help(al and Iateresth g. r / i , Name.,. .............._...._._....._..........-........_.. The PVIacartney Milking .J illiI Address......_._.__.......-.:...._.._._._._.-.__ /have COWS 1 Tho Macartney Milking Machine Co. Lifnited OTTAWA Please send me full particulars about tho Macartney Machina Milker Machine Co. Limited 310 CATHERINE ST. OTTAWA (n-1) ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN - Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" Tar Colds, Pain, :Leatleche, Neural- package which ooittaine complete di- ggia:, Toothache, Ilaraahe, and for rsetione. Then' you aro 581111tg real Rheumatism, Lumbago, Seiatfca, Nen- As irin—the genuine Aspirin ] a e- ride,trko Aspirin marked with the am�ec by h si0inis for over elec. name "Mayer" or you are. not 'taking . teen years, Now made In Canada. Aspirin at all, Ilandy tit boxes ro111aln111g 12 tab. �leeopt only "Mayer 01'abbets . of lets cast but it few cents, Druggists Aspirin" ht an unbrolcee "Bayn" ttleo Boll larger "Bayer" packaSas. Thrace in ably 0110 Aftefri1-+"B1gcr1 etlrev1 iitotst 0:11 1x4oyor" Aebtrin 3n the Prado murk (ronlati'red 11 Canada) Cit r3avrr htaaufaeturo tv ;i one. nrM is aeldaatar (;f i;alleyllca td. wlrilo 11 Is -won known 11151lupi,•11, moans 115149 n itoul,Letere, la nselst Via pnl,il" eviln"t ',Malone, the Tablets al 7i11yor ComPOKKg will he'slanu)e1,with . their gamma trade nark th0 "Bance 000658"