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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1920-11-11, Page 7Quick relief :from RHEUMATIC pain BAUME w B ENDUE has immediate effect. BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES $1.000 tuba THE LEErMIOM DIKES co.. LTD. TREAL Amalie ter pr. Jules. Renaud RELIEVES PAIN " Living Thein Over.. What,good edifies of living them over, All the wearying, wearing things? Those phantom shapes from the pest, that hover So oft about us on night -black wiugs, With their horny daunts anis their creel stings? ' Who is stronger for bearing a burden Twice es heavy, or twice as far .AS need require? Lay it down, A. guerdon • is beckoning you from Hope's beam- ' ing star.,, .But, oh! the joy of living them over -- The friendly word and the kindly smile , 'That, like blooiiting roses or wind- blown clever, Cheer with their fragrance the weary mile, And warns and strengthen • our hearts the while, For hearts grow stronger When • vanished, pleasure Lend to the 'present their afterglow Of softened light and we catch the measures Of the old -time -melodies, sweet ani low. — joy live tfi�ltn over—the j y and gladness Of alt that has made the past life bright. Let their memories banish the care and sadness That signal and sigh from a by -gone night, And sear the soul with their canker - blight, And as over the changes of time shall reach us— Its joy and blessing; its pain and fret -- Be pleased, 0 Lord, in thy love to FOR THE WINTER WARDROBE 6006-907"r 9425 raiegeteory nabroldo mesa, No,10.35 - Desbfa Nw 1055 .., No, 9665—Ladies' Overdress. Price, 35 cents. To be slipped oil, over the head; closing at side front; two yiece bunjc, pleated. or plain, avttaoihed to waist. Cut in 7 sizes, 84, 36, 38,40, 42, 44 and 46 ins. 'bust measure. Size 36 requires, with pleated tannic, 5 yds. 36 ins. wide, or 3% yds. 54 ins. wide; with plain tunic, 8t/1, y'(. 36 ince. wide, or 2% yds. 34 ins. wide. No. 9725 -Ladies' Dress. Priem, 35 cents. 1'wo styles of sleeve; -with or without loose side panels; 87 or 35- incU, length from wsistbine. Cut in 7 sizes, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 ins. bust measure. Size 36 requires, with side panels, longsleeves, 3% yds, 40 ins. wide, or 2% yds, 54 ins. wide; upper front, Ya yd. 18 ins. wide; with- out panels, without cape eoliar,-2% •yds. 54 ins. wide. Width around bot- tom, 1% yds. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, 'or from the !VeeCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept.. W. No Need to. be Told. A lad of fifteen was driving along a country road, takieg a load of calves to market, when he chanced to meet a oompany of young folks who were evidently on a pleasure jaunt. _ The young men of the pleasure - party thought that they would have some fun at the expense of the farm- er's boy. and commenced to moo like calves But their merriment was of short duration. for, without hesitation, as the vehicles were passing, the coun- try lad called out to his would-be tor - teach r us mentors: likes- to remember end how 10 for- . "It's alt- right! I knew what you get, were before!" The Deed's Creature. CHILDHOOD 'AILMENTS. The ailments of childhood—consti- nation, indigestion, collo, colds, etc,— can be quickly banished through the use of Baby's Own Tablets, They are a mild but thorough laxative which instantly regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach. They are guar- anteed to contain no harmful drugs and can be given to the youngest baby with perfect safety. Concerning them Mrs. Alcide Lepage, Ste. Beatrix, Que., writes:—"Baby's.Own Tablets were of great help to my baby. 'They regu- lated her bowels and stomach and made her plump and well." The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from -The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. The groat dramatists of Shakes- peare's day, though all of them inferior htm in man respects, bad all more or less of his profound and passionate Interest in human life and character. They filled their scenes with imagina- tive beauty. They also filled them with human truth. Even when they used the most violent incidents and carried their personages through the most bloodcurdling adventures, they localized that what counted was the living soul and not the mere melt - dramatic climax. They were hasty and careless and inconsistent, as Shakespeare himself was. But they could throw a flash of blinding light on the deepest motives of the spirit and make them stand out so that we never forget them. -I In a minor Elizabethan play a wo- man is led by vanity and selfish folly into instigating murder. When the terrible ant has been performed and she for the first time realizes what it means, she cries out in agony, "I am the deed's creature!" The deed's creature! Has the sequence of human wickedness and human suffering ever been expressed with more penetrating 'brevity? The deed's creature! No longer free to live and move and breathe happily in the comfortable light of heaven, but chained and bound -eternally in the clinging fetters of that inescapable, remorseless fate. . The deed's creature! Most of us do not habitually corn - mit, or instigate, murder, and it might ,seen, that the heavy weight of such a tragic phrasal could not descend upon us. It does, just the same. It Is not only the murders, the great tragic .,actions, that enslave . and tyrannize, 'The little words and gestures of to- day and yesterday, so easily forgot- ten unless some striking chain of 'consequence attaches to them, may have their significance, also and their 'vast, enthralling force. Every hour, every minute, we are tete deed's crea- tures, some deed's creatures; perhaps .the creatures of some ugly -deed, hard- dy realized at the moment, but cast- .:ing Its close grip about us until we. ;feel that we would give all we have to :shake it off, and cannot. Since we are to be the deed's crea- tures anyway, let us see to it that our 'deeds are such that slavery to thein may not be intolerable. • Bermuda celebrated recently the SOOth anniversary of the founding of its House of Assembly. It has the distinction ef being the oldest self. governing British possession. • —_y_ Power of Jaws. The U.S. Bureau of Standards has ascertained that, when you eat, the pressure exerted by your"jaws 15'lnore than elevefi tons to the square inch. No wonder, then, that your teeth are made of a material almost indes- tructible except by decay. A sound tooth conies pretty near to being the hardest thing in nature, and the most enduring. It follows that artificial teeth -must be made of an extremely tough quality of porcelain. The material dentists use for fillings nowadays is usually either a cement of great hardness or a metal composition that is mostly sil- ver, and which may contain zinc, cop- per and tin. The fillings are liable to break down under the tremendous chewing pres- sure. Various materials used for the Various materials used for the pur- pose have recently been tasted by the U. S. Bureau of Standards, and the conclusion it draws is that a standar!- zation of dental cements and amal- gams is needed in order that their re- lative resistance to wear may be de- finitely known. -It says that too much copper in fillings discolors the teeth, RIM RCD 0L.0 D • \EosSABY TO BEAM Said Too Much. "Oh, .Auntie, I heard uncle tell Mrs. Jones that there wasn't another wo- man like you in the world." "Ah, the dear man! Did he, Bobby?" "Yes'm, and he said it was a mighty good thing, too." L'he actual process of leaking bas- kets has 'altered very little singe the earliest time, only very simple tools being used. , tlllIsusausesI11ii1111111it11111ussiesfill usill1usaislltlll11111111!i sausllltionsiositll1iwg de From. our Native Gr.,. Grapes uts a g 11111111111iuit11111U111111 Il11I11111t11I11n11nIN111)111t11110113l1111[111311311111113111111(111U1,)Bj0111 Rich and Nourishin.g A blend of wheat and malted bar ley that costs ,but little,yet pro- vides a food of most attractive flavor, ready to serve direct fro the package. • When the ]Blood Bee0Hies Weak and Watery a Tonle is Needed • to Build it Anew. Why are we being continually told that good, bealthliviag blood must be bright red? What has color to do with til quality? Just tills --the oxy- gen in the air is the great supporter of all organic We, One function oS the blood is to take the oxygen from the ail'—which it• meets in the lungs and deliver it to the tissues of the body. When the blood, filled with life- suetainini oxygen, is sent out by the heart, it is bright red. When it re- turns, impure and deprived of oxygeci, It is dark, You will see, therefore, that there are two prime 'requisites of health, pure air and bright red blood --the. pure air to furnlell the .oxygen, the rich red blood to carry It where it 10 needed. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills make your blood rich and red because'they increase its power to carry oxygen, actually making it so much more able to carry increased life and strength to every organ 1u the body. Pale, anaemic people whose nerves are on edge, whose cheeks are pate, and who tire out easily; should try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and note the steady'ifnprovement that follows their use. A case in point is that of Mrs, J. P. Rolston, Sotfth River, Ont:, who says:—"About two years ago my sys- tem was in a badly run down condi- tion; and I kept growing worse all the time until I could hardly do my housework, I had severe headaches, and pains across my back and under my left shoulder. I did not sleep well and would feel just as tired when I got up in the morning as when I went to bed. Life seemed a burden. I had taken doctor's medicine for a long at i time, but it did not meet nt ' 3 case, least it did me no good.° Then as a result of reading about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I decided to tryt,theen. Wleen I had taken a couple of boxes I felt much better, and when I had taken five boxes more I felt that 5 was again a well woman. I have not since felt any return of the trouble and I advise all women who are broken In health to give Dr.Williams Pink Pills a trial." These pills are sold by all medicine - dealers or will be sent by nail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2,50, by The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Grateful Tribute: Great Britain has done a fine,thing in deciding to inter the body of an un- identified soldier in Westminster Ab- bey alongsde of those of her kings, statesmen, poets and distinguished warriors who have there found their last earthly resting place, says the Editor of the Philadelphia Ledger. In no more effective and impressive man - per could the debt of the nation be acknowledged, for the grave will stand forever as a -memorial that the empire realized and appreciated the sacrifice of .those who died not only in the de- fense of its liberties but those of the world as well. Westminster Abbey is the resting place of those who have contributed in the greatest measure to the well-be- ing of their country. Nevertheless, it contains few memorials which nark the existence of those who died to bet- ter purpose than the grave of this un- known soldier, who rests unknown but not unleonored amid the ashes of the elect of the earth. 1000 Eggs in Every Hen New System of Poultry Keeping—Get Dollar A Dozen Eggs—Famous Poul- tryman TELLS HOW "The great trouble with .the poultry business has always been that the lay- ing life of a hen was too short." says Henry Trafford, International Poultry Expert and Breeder, for nearly eighteen years Editor of Poultry Success. The average pullet lays 150 eggs. If kept the second year, she may lay 100 more. Then. she goes to market. Yet, it has been soisntiacally established that every pullet is born or hatched with over one thousand minute egg germs In her system—and will lay then on a highly profitable basis over a period of four to six years' time if given proper care. Bow to work to get 1,000 eggs from every sten; how to get pullets laying early; how to make the old hens lay like pullets; how to keep up heavy 050 WO - duction all through cold winter months when eggs are highest; triple egg pro- duction; make slacicer• hens hustle; 05.00 profit from every hen in six winter months. These and many other money making poultry secrets are contained in Mr. Trafford's "1,000 BOG }It7N" system. of poultry raising. One copy of which wilt be sent absolutely free to any render of this paper who keeps six hens or more. Lggs should go to a dollar or moven dozer: this'wlnter. This means big profit to the 50111117 steeper' who gets the eggs. Mr. Trafford tells how. It pelf keep chickens and want -thein to matte Money for you, cut out this ad and send it with your dame and address to Henry Trafford Suite 021-N, Tyne 131dr., Bingham -totem N. Y.,•and a free cam' of TH17 1,000 EGG TII]N"' will be sent by return mall. Western Farmers Building Silos. It Is to be anticipated that before stall, years have. elapsed almost every farm 111 the Canadian prairie pr0- ylnces will Have Itis silo, The growth of the dairy industry weuid naturally l)r111g title eouuUtlon ltbeat In conree elf time, but the movement 1s' being ex- pedited by the success farmers are having in growing sunflowers, Small fields .of from three to thirty aures have been planted in various parts of the three prairie provinces of Canada. The yields are proving more satisfac- tory than the farmers generally dared to hope, and each acre yields OA an 'average from fifteen to thirty tons of ensilage. ' - Many.farmers have erected silos on their farms during the-.suutmor to take Dare of this crop, but most of them have under -estimated their re- quirements and will have more crop than they can put In their silos, Sunflower silage Ys due for a more extensive trial thiswinter than it has had before. The results. In pre- vious years have been very'satisfac- 101Y but only comparatively few .farmers have grown the crop for sit - age proylous to tilts' year, • If in its more extensive nae the crop proves. to be as satisfactory as it has already proved in a few cases whore it has been tried; itis safe to say that in a few' years the farm without a silo will be an exception in Western Canada. Since last year's results have be- come known, considerable interest has been shown in silos and ensilage in Western Canada and several hun- dred silos have been erected during: the past summer. Typical of this movement is the Cardston district iu Southern Alberta, where eight silos have been erected this year andwhere about fifty acres of sunflowers were planted, The Drop has proved so suc- cessful that it is predicted that one hundred silos will bo built in the dis- trict next year and more than a: thous- and acres of sunflowers planted. Similar plans are being made in other parts of Western Canada, and the already rapidly growing dairy in- dustry promises to grow much faster with the general acceptance of the sunflower as a silage crop. Another evidence of the value of sunflowers as a forage crop will be the big gain in finished steers. Many of the larger livestock raisers are growing sun- • hewers and erecting silos for this pur- pose. Thus will be considerably tn- •creased the finishing areassof Canada, which, hitherto, -have been somewhat restricted, cooupared with the large -feeding areas throughout the countryp and tire livestock industry in the West will be placed on a sound basis. Use for Clinkers. iVifeu the householder's. furnace get& out of Whack, there is usually reason 1.0 suspect an accumulation of clinkers in the firepot. 11=15 rather a job to clear them out, Now, however, a practical use has been found for these exasperating things, represent- ing incombustible material in the coal. 'Phey aril turned to account for build- ing blocks. For this purpose they are crushed and mixed with, sand, luno and ce- ment, the material thus prepared be- ing molded into blocks. Such clinker blocks are used for walls, cellar floors, warehouses, gar. ages and pavements, They aro cheap• or than brick, and being made in larger sizes, fadilitate quick construe - tion. They take plaster on the in- terior and stucco on the exterior of buildings, In a I7 ami d climatei r1t filo' t b) 1,1t o s are s )eciali desirable d i able T e 1 Y > causel t10 y Withstand nioistuie and do not drip, as brick does sonietfines, en tete inside of bnfldltigs, .ISSUE No 46-''201 CASCARETS -- "They Work while you Sleep" You don't know whether you are "coming or going." You are bilious, constipated! You feel headachy, full of cold, dizzy, unstrung. Your meals don't fit—breath is bad, skin sallow. Take Cascarets to -night for your liver and bowels and wake up clear, ener- getic and cheerful, No griping—no in- convenience. • Children love Cascarets too, 10, 25, 50 cents. Novel Way to Fumigate Fowls. Henry Wintlahl, of Indiana, has in- vented what he calls a "sanitary chicken roost,' which is guaranteed to dispose of the insect parasites that afflict poultry, while incidentally kill - Ing bacterial germs. His idea is to attach beneath the roost-pel'ch an ordinary preserving jar, with a screw top, the receptacle being filled with a strong disinfectant, and' from it to conduct a thick wick all along the top of the porch and along the bottom of the. latter. The fluid disinfectant follows the wick, keeping it saturated. Along the top of the perch the wick runs in a deep grove, so as to keep it out bf the way of the chickens' feet, but along the bottom it is stretched without a groove. Livaporation.'of the fluid, while•the fowls are roosting, gives a sense of ex- treme discomfort to the insects hidden among their feathers, causing' them to drop out and seek safety on the under side of the perch. There, always seek- ing a hiding place, they crawl between the with and the perch, and the disin- 'fectailt ]cies them. -The lid of the jar (which has a hole for the emergence of the wick) is pet'- manently fastened beneath the perch. When the jar needs refllliug, it Dan be unscrewed at a moment's notice. The inventor. prefers a series of short roost -perches, with so jar beneath the middle of each, Parasitic insects not only matte chickens uncomfortable, but impair 'their vitality and reduce egg produc- tion. Hence the 'economic hnportanco of Mfr. Windahi's idea, Mlnard's Liniment Relieves Distemper. The longest papyrus roll brought down from early times is forty yards long. . Boom a CC SP1 9Uii41.1T OF H 0 �' IR P TC Enroll with the Canadian Chiropraotig College 767 Dovercourt Road, at ltloor r t Write for Free Info ma lone Gasolene is Dangerous, Gasolene fumes came in contact with a lighted lantern. Ten buildings destroyed, lose, $250,000, Gasolene is dangerous, 11 is ono of the most rapidly volatilizing fluids, One pint of gasolene will impregnate 200'feet of air and make it explosive. Many miens Oros have been started from the careless, use of gasolene, • Gasolene should only be used in the mien air, anis clothes; after being cleaned with it,. should' be hung out- side to allow it to evaporate, It should always be kept in tightly closed metal cans, never in glass bot- tles or jars'. The latter are liable to breakage and the conseqtient freeing of the` dangerous fumes when, open flame may ignite them and cause a serioue fire, Enthusiasms can very Well be liken- ed to electricity. There may be in a plant an electric machine of wonder- fel potentialities; •,but if the electric 'current Is withheld from it, it will stand idle and useless. So with the human machine. It need's the electric otirrent.of enthusiasm, "DANDERINE' , Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buys "Dandel'ine," Af- ter an application of "Danderine"' you can not find a fallen hair or any dand- ruff, besides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickness. AUTOqRE PARTe • for most and medals' edels' of ears, ' 1c wet• •nut. 1 broken c1' sole 'Your b o n at t o , 11 i Wire .150 donor li- .-7 Write of e aced, r � sluff xvatr went, 1Va mires, the o yt Com ate etesk in st 1, tai' cat a m g '•tit or nD r a Car ads o8 6b n,•, red We sip MA Is, ttaninitlefe fin `Catftra- Sates, factory o' reftiurl in fillrl`-our !teetto. Bltaio' d.ato `Oalvaae Start chi '4:9' 918.931Dnf4oian Nt„ ".Comate, Cwt., The !belief that most typewriter rill bons • are discarded when only one- eighth of the ink and one-fifth of the fabric have been ,consumed es given as the reason for the recent appear- ance on the matiket of a tiny attach- ment which gives longer life to the ribbon. It is attached• near the reel of almost any standard machine, and consists of a container in which are a wick ef felt and a brass roller. Be- tween these the ribbon is threaded. The wick is saturated at intervals with a drop, of•oil introduced 'through a hole in file top. Miiliard's Liniment Co„ Limited. Gentlemen,—i have used MINARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, and 'for the every day ills and accidents of life I con- sider it has no equal. I would not start a voyage without it.11 it cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. F. R, DESJARDIN. Schr. "Storke," St. Andre, Kamouras- Ica. The Land of Fire and Ice. Geological pap. of Iceland by Dr. Thoroddsen, who has spent many years on the work, gives much infor- mation about one of the world's most wonderful islands which few visitors ever see. An example of the strangeness of Iceland is furnished by the volcano Katla. This is buried under immense snow fields, but from time to time its fires burst through the glittering buan- ket, and then such floods' are poured from the melting ice that a groat stretch of country between the vol- cano and the sea is inundated and huge masses of ice are carried out in- to the ocean, It is unsafe to chess the territory lying between Katie and the sea, so suddenly come the floods. —a— MOTHER! "California Syrup of Figs"" Child's' Best Laxative Taking No chan.cee, AaAmerican uaC oRamlUas patient. ly 'followed for severed weeks a wife anti claugllter wild were more Moen than be was about visiting Donlan reins, At last tie rebelled and laid clown this rlll0:. n, lei go with you to neo any build- ings that still have roofs on 'on1, but as to the rest, I any, let bygones be bygones."' ...•M'O'NEY ORDERS, It is always' safe to seine a Dominion Express ;Money Order, Five dollars costs three emits. ' The atennae masts of two new Jap- anese radio stations 'consist of rein- forced concrete poles 660 feet high. Minard's Liniment Relieves Colds, Eta • The thermometer scale was really invented by Sir Isaac Newton. ra11- renhetit, finding that a more ' intense cold could be created by mixing ice and snow, took that • as his zero, and for convenience divided Sir Isaac's scale by four. - BUY "DIAMOND DYES" DON'T RISK MATERIAL Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con. tains directions so simple that any woman can dye any material without streaking, fading or running. Druggist Lae eoloa pard—Take no other dye! In Norway a ger) must' possess a certificate showing her abi'iity to cook before she is allowed to marry. Di !nerd's Liniment For Burns, Eto. A natural couriosity of Japan is the "insect heli." It is a black betide which emits harmonious •sounds like those of a little silver 'bell. Accept "Catliorula" eyrut, of L'iga only—look for the name California on the package, tthen you are aura your child Is having the best ,anti meet harmless physic for the little stom- ach, liver and bowels. Children love Its fruity taste. ; uii directions on each bottle. You must say "Call. tornia " a A wireless•!g'ramophone has been constructed for the transmission of music to vessels at sea, Mtnard'e Liniment For Dandruff. • Lieenses to be may be granted by the local authorities in Italy. Toa world oppressed by1 the con- stantly rislllg price of coal 'comes tan- talizing Stockholm that a i2in • acus from S al � new vein t of 'cowl'cowlnearly two metres thiole has been discovered in the teal fields near Braganca Bay, in Srritz- ,betlgen, But Spitzbergen is a long way £roni tial; coal 'bills, , STORM WINDiIWS &l OORS Y Lr -t d.,tr Nyya, ILFS to suit your . ,, DJ oncn!ngr, Fitted '+ w;ah cions SDfc dc- �-yi?> lively suarantced. $ ; •,.-i, Write for P ' •J neo foot i.3,�i • G [ ,. Cut down fuol -•..Q,rs bills. insure whiter wafort. The HALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited nnena05 1,0017101. D'sTRIOUTORO CANADA Mr8 Herbert Osborn Tees H';,:w Cuticura Healed has Wife "1V1y wife began to be troubled with tching and burning of the pains of her hands and the soles of her feet. Later the skin cracked and became in- flamed, making walking or even standing very pain- ful and preventing sleep at night. Later it became nec- essary eo-essary to bandage both hands and feet. "She was treated but obtained no relief. She saw an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointmentand sent for a free sample. She bought more and after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment shewashealed." (Signed) Herbert Osborn, 135 Sherbrooke Ave., Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 2, 1919. Cuticura is ideal for every -day toi. let uses. Soap to cleanse and purify, Ointment to soothe and heal. Soap 280, Olntelsat 25 and 500. Sold throughouttheDominion. CenadianDepotl L5"rnaru, Limited, St. Paul St.. Montreal. CutteuraSoaa Aomori without wee. r.� ClassiUed Advertisements, frost ffs,744 1 11'! xo'tl,[i 9I0Y1I,8 I bxls'i 1 fleet 4R' mo, D•1yy six* all 'Stibbard bred.' and gutirenteed. Prices right. 4 N. MaaDouuell 'west (lore, N.N. a'4447,A =AV WA?OTBBS, J�• Achill WA.11'1111Y TO I00 La1,A1N AJ -and Light Sewing at 1105,11; whole or spare time; good Par; work sent (1511' titn- tau0el 0har5os paid, Seed stamp for Aparticulars, Nntlanat Matturaeturing Ca, i:entreal. , AC}y;17TH W 10THD, AI1714'' Us '1VAN'1"1lt): 111,1SF1 NA7'IVIl1 Ilorbe 1s et remedy fur the relief of Rens Li pat IofI, Indigestion, 1511!Ous neve, Rheumatism, kidney Troubles. it it, well-known, having bran extensively ad- vertised, snare 1t was 11 ret',riedlufilcitl red in 1755,by distribution Of lar"e quant!, ties .of Almanucs roes I3noiss, Real tit Books, 'ate., whit, it are furnished to agents free of charge. Tian remedies aro sold at -a ln'lee that allows Aponte to double their money. write 'Bonen 0. Bliss 14ledlral Co„ 324 St, I'auI St. 1•litst, Montreal. Mention this Paget•. 7029CL'LLAN130T1 (1NYdLY I104I'l.ld lI0ND 21„ VCR our big Friendship Magazine: you'll be glad you did, Thousands waiting to correspond with you, Lausier Agonoy. llathurst N. B. America's Pioneer Dog Remedios Book on DDD DISEASES and Plow to Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. 3i. Clay Glover Co„ Inc. 118 Went Slat Street New York, TJ.8,A. ARL.EY S DANCE ORCHESTRA TORONTO to be the best in Canada. Any number of musicians desired. Write, wire or phone Al. Manley, 65 Ozark Cres., Toronto, for open dates. ` OARSI:: SALT LAN D SALT Balk Carlota TORONTO SALT WORK3 O. J. CLiFF TORONTO At�i&E�at D RED �l,�ati.lf CEDAR SCENTtCHESTS Absolutely moth -proof and wonder- fully handsome Pieces of furniture. ssiseet from manufacturer to yon. Write for free Mentrated literature. Eureka Refrigerator Co., Limited Owon Bound, Ont. 0z,STiDBY,FOR ACHES AND PAINS Any matt or woman who keeps Sloan's handy will tell you that same thing ESPECIALLY those frequently attacked by rheumatic twinges. A counter -irritant, Sloan's Lini- inent scatters the congestion and Acne• Crates without rubbing to the afflicted part, soon relieving the ache and pain. Sept Lundy and used everywhere for reducing and finally eliminating the pains and aches of lunbngo, neuralgia, muscle strain, joint stifinesn, sprains, brbises„Eind the I-dssit: of c-:;lossrc. You just know from it -i stimulating,' healthy odor that it will do yen good! Sloan's Linirnent is sold by all drug- gists -35c, 70c, $1.40. � Linins emir donau vee.,r.....-- Have your Cleaning Done By Experts. Clothing, household draperies, 1;nen and delicate fabrics aan be cleaned and made to look as fresh and bright se when first bought. Cleaning and Dyeing Is Properly Done, at Parker's. It makes no differanoe where you live; parcels can be sent in by mail or express. The same care And attention IS given the work as though you lived 'in town, We will be pleseed to advise you on any question re- garding Cleaning ,or Dyeing. WRITE U. f,r, Palters ye Cleaners& 7 MYonge St" ers etronto unfflocisunniononswicannialti ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at All without tlhe "Bayer Coss" ate) The flame "Beret" iclontiflos the contains proper directions for Colds, 4n ty genuineino As iris --the Aspirin headache, Toothache, aler Earache, New, YraeeriUol byf r over Ise might,Lumbago, Rheumatism, Nar * tom sears rind now made rn Cnultda, tis, joint Pains, and Pain go n eraily" Always buy an unbroken package Tin boxes of 12 tablets cost bah bC "Bayer Tablets Aspirin" uilYunion afevicents Ittr crrBn or"Paaka as There is obey ono Aspirin. "BayoT"e--Xon must sag "Bayer" Aspirin Is the (redo hunt (rralstcrrd I t Canada) or Myer Manufacture of MeaD- scnttcaetctester of $ellayllcerid, While It is well known that Asplrin Moans Beyer manufdrture, ix. eaglet the plumepgninat Imltattonn, 11'0. Tablet/5of 13ey'or COmneitt Will he Camped wit[ their soncrat trade mark, the "534300 Cross,".