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The Clinton News Record, 1931-02-12, Page 3PETFIIIE BARGAINS IA Ton Differential Chain Hoists with 28' of Cha' ' 8.59 1 Ton Differential Chain Hoists with 32' of Chain .. $10.50 Cord Wood Saws, Angle Iron Frame Ball 13ear'ing, Complete with Saw $00.00 10''-3 Square English Files, Bastard or Second Cant, ea. 25c 12"---3 Square English Files, Bastard or Second Cut, ea. 30c t . 4"-3 Jaw Universal Geared Scroll Chucks, with 2 Sets J'a'ws . $10.00 25 lb Anvil and Vise .. , ... $ 4.00 50 lb, Anvil $ 5.50 75 lb. Anvil $ 8.25 F'org'es, 18" diameter, One Piece Steel Hearth, Coni- plete with Fan $11.50 Ball Bearing Post Drill, drills 0, %8" holes to centre of 111/2 cir'cle. . . .. $ 9.50 5i/2" Jaw Stationary Machinist Bench Vises, 10;00 61/4Jaw Stationary Machinist Bench Vises $12.50 ELECTRIC MOTORS AND GAS®LINT; ENGINES, BELTING, PULLEYS, HANGERS, SHAFTING, '. • NEW AND USED, AT SPECIAL PRICES. H. W. PET IE, LIMITED 1 Phone ELg'in 1271 147 FRONT ST. W. Toronto 2 ussennsonoznismenanew mentoramong High School Boards and Boards of Education. Are authorized by law to establish INDUSTRIAL,. TECHNICAL AND ART SCHOOLS With the approval of the Minister of Education DAY AND EVENING CLASSES may be conducted in accordance with the regulations Issued by the Department of Education, THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL, INSTRUCTION . Is given in various trades. The schools and classes are under the direction of AN ADVISORY COMMITTEE, Application for attendance should be made to the Principal of the school. COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS, MANUAL' TRAINING, HOUSEHOLD' SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND,HORTICULTURE are provided for in the Courses of Study in Public, Separate. Continuation and High Schools, Collegiate Institutes,Vocational Schools and Departments. Coplee of the Regulations issued by the Minister of Education may be obtained from the Deputy Minister, Parliament Butidings, Toronto. • Au3t slur Slang • Jaokeroos, stattoa managers,'bound. ary riders, rouseabouts, offsiders, sun - `downers or swaggies—these are typi- cal names met with on any Australian ,cattle or sheep station. While .from tier days may still survive in Atts. tralia, they have not the glamour of • Harley- avidson Distribuiors Write at once for our bargain fret of used motorcycles. Terms arranged. Kennedy -I& Menton 421 College St., Toronto NO SNOW ON THE BOARDWALK TEL ST9 4.= A ,D Atlantic City, New Jersey Sends Greetings to its Many Friends in Canada, We are quoting such a very low American Pian rate that you will find it cheaper to stay at the "Homelike .Strand" than staying at home, Write we so we may quote them to you—so you will know the exact cost before leaving. Music—Salt Sea Baths—Compli- mentary Tea Daily, 4 to 6 p.m.— We. will personally see to your comfort. T. R..iANDOW, iiIgr. H. BRADt'ORD RICHMOND, Prop. a lurid Wild West. There are no Deadwood Dicks, no six-shooters, no cowboy outfits or Mexican saddles. A ranch In Australia 1s known as a sta- tion. A cowboy is called a cattleman. jackeroo Is an apprentice, generate ler a town -bred youth who aponds sev- eral years on a station" to learn the ropes before taking up his own stee time An offaider is a cook's assistant; he does all the' Bough work. A rouse - about stands behind the shearer at shearing time to pick up the fleece and do the odd jobs round the wool. shed.• A boundary rider is a solitary fellow who must look after fifty to eighty mites of wire feucing, A sundowner or ;waggle is the Aua Malian name for a tramp. Wander• ink across the cruntry all his life from one station to another, he generally arrives at sundown and does add jobs In return for some pay or his feed. He 'is a picturesque fellow, carrying his 4 evoridiy goods in a swag or bundle over his shoulder and wearing a bat- tered old felt hat from which corks dangle to keep off the files. A squatter is the generic term for a ;sheep farmer or pastoralist in the early days he oceupled or "squatted ou" the laud and so obtained the title to it. In the north of Australia there are cattle statloas larger than many States of the United States. Radio. Bargains Good Used 5 Tube Radios Priced from $5 "up. Write for Bargain Price List. DANFORTH RADIO CO. LTD. 2086 Danforth Ave., Toronto APPLICATIONS /"\ APPLICATIONS Are Filled As Par ONTARIO As Possible in the DEPARTMENT Order In Welch OP AGRICULTURE They Are Received, r Farm Help Supplied .The 001onlsatfon and immigration Branch of the Department of Agriculture for Ontario will have available a number of Exgertenced Married Men With Thele Wives and Faniilres--Married Coupiea Without Chlldres• -. Also Single Men, Renner(' requiring help will bo well advised to make early application to Geo. A. Elliott Plreotor.of Colonisation Parliament Bldgs„ Toronto. Ont. Offering Annual Work Are Invariably Given the Preference.. File Your Appticatlon al Once All Men Placed Subject to Trial Period HON, THOMAS L. KENNEDY, Menister of Agriculture eeeee PHILLIPS For9e For Troubles due to Acid iNt noSsT1eN e n 0 N A 59UR ST NSARTaURN GAS, NA When You OVER- NDULGE EVERY man, woman and child will oecasionally over -indulge. But don't suffer for your indiscretions. It's folly to do so when .you can so easily sweeten and Settle a sour, upset stomach with a little Phillips Milk of Magnesia. Hearty ,eaters have longsince learned the quick comfort tis per- feet anti -acid brings. Smokers know how it neutralizes nicotine; brings back a sweet taste; guards the breath Women know what it does -for nausea—or sick headache, Aad hen children have over-eaten— are bilious, constipated or otherwise Upset—give them a little of the blade i same, teasant-tasting and milky; . white Phillips' Sulk of Magnesia. You'll be through with crude ' methods once you learn the. perfect way. Nothing else has the same quick, gentle effect. Doctors pre- S scribe it for indigestion, nausea, i heartburn, gas, sour stomach and headache. It has beed standard with them for over. 50 years. An Arabian Home One of Natwxte's 71re rows of w :d)s lois, fiat -roof ed houses are like so many white white • Wonders rHow the Surinam Toad Raises a es robed figures Sitting close togethe with thea backq ta the vevsicolo concourse of the street: men-iueow loft bariutis, brown or striped, 'don - hey -drivers and scampering children in anomalous garments of many hues women draped in- multifold white,', biokerini vender or by -0, and house ,wives on their Way to the river, bal arcing bundled family washing 01 their heads, with long fringes o bright -colored kerchiefs dangling be - tore their face's in place of the con ventional balks, making pretty con trasts to. then black, red-patterne shawls and dresses. , . And inward ly, each house. is an taviotable. dwell 'ing, an frrevealabie home, similar• i structure to its neighbors, but as ills tinct from them . as they are al reserved from the half -voiced bust tress of the streets Above "each threslrcid 'of the wall juts out perhaps a :foot 'and in the pr'ojeetion is a small square of iron grating through which any one in: side may see who asks to enter. A friend knocks on a stout Ms, door Ornately studded with band -wrought nails. A voice answers; he gives his name, and the door "opens into a • small entrance flanked on each side by a recess heaped with color- ed blankets and cushions: Here he is cordially" received by the-fat)ier °r- am r son of the family, passes -the time of day or gives a- message, and eon= Unties on his way. But should the friend be a woman, she, iso conducted' along a earnest corridor at right angles to the doorway-, to- the inter- ior of tine bone,—unseen from the entrance„—and accereed hospitaiity as a guest of the. family. Perhaps in a small open court she . is • offered bread end honey and` a gourd' of Milk and gossips with the •.women -folk while they resume, their tasks. ib : a large central” room ventilated and lighted fiom•above; ladder=like stairs lead up to a narrow 'balcony adjoin- ing the sleeping quarters, and to the roof -top'' where the family gathers of an evening. The ilsingaoont. is cleanly swept and.bare brit -tor a fee' benches and the, simplest necessities of housekeeping—earthen anal metal cooking utensils, and . great jars of provisions... Water -skins hang in a corner, brigbt-red saddle and bridles are in another; beside one wall Is a large loom where a young girl Is. weaving on. a rug, and two older' women are' busy near the enormous fireplace watch' reaches almost across one side of the room,—Hafsa, in ." "Desert Winds (By P. B. Prior in "The Humane n Pleader,"ost r One of the hrextraordinary a, methods en Natui;al "History of raising . a family is that adopted by the Suri - mule in toad—Pipe Americana. The mar - 1 supial, with its pouch, is n cdriosity. e but, as a freak it is not to be compared .for • one instant 'with Madame Pipe. She is uutiiber one in Class A. of Na- ture's wonders. The Surnivam' toad is not a -true toad, though it is a bleb:Olian, that is, an amphibian -whish goes through u <a tadpole' stage before becoming fully adult. It is a rather fiat creeturo, much like a fat:toael in appearance, with a' short, wide head, coining to a curious naerow point. Its hind legs' are enormau.: things, and are supplies with webbed feet which have an out- size spread. The forelegs are not so large, and the toes of thein are not webbed. Each front toe, however, is provided with a curious little star-shaped projection. The color of this animal is blackish - brown, •• and it is not small as toads and frogs go, seeing that it grows, to. a length of nearly twelve inches. It is a -swamp dweller, from the neigh berhood of Surinam, South America. A few fairly close relatives of the' ani - anal live in Australia, lent they do not adopt the remarkable family -rearing , method of Madame Pipe. This- is her method. Her back is covered with a very thick, soft skin, and when She lays her'eggs- the .male toad 'stays by her, watching closely. As -.the eggs' are deposited, the male carefully lifts them up with his front paw's; one by one. He then pressos• each egg hard into the soft skin of his mate, piercing theskin and get- ting the egg into- the underlying tie - sues. When all the egge are pressed into the back of the mother; the latter then goes into .the, water and stays there for about three months. The* pierced skin heals and grows over each egg, so that the eggs are held, as it were, each in a separate cell. Son the eggs hatch out, but the little tadpoles do not emerge. They stay embedded under the mother's skin and live in the -soft tissues of her body. Por three solid month's the mother goes about under the water with her offspring tucked in under her skin. Then, one day, she returns to land again. Her children set .to work to break out froni their mother's .back, and soon each one hops out ofhis pri- son cell, not as a tadpole now, but as a perfect little tondi How the mother .enjoys the break. ' ragout process I cannot say,. but the skin over the baby -cells is very tough, and the tearing open of it cannot, J should imagine, be a very pleasant. sensation. After her babies have come out, the mother casts her skin, and so obtains a new back -covering, ready is carry out her most remarkable job once more. It is very difficult to account for the origin of such a method of develop- ing the young. Why should only this toad of alt the batrachians which ex• ist, have evolved such a curious man- ner of birth? I cannot say. But ignor- once of the cause noes not lessen won. der at the fact. In one way, Mr, Pipa is fortunate among husbands, His wife is not pro- vided with a tongue. But as Nature has left that organ out of his make-up also, the benefit works both ways. Na- ture, you see, is quite impartial. Profits from Comfort Comfortable working eoaditions make for efficient service, This was not the opinion of our fathers, wito believed that "pamper. ing" the workers would, encourage then to take their ehse, Opiuiou about this has notably changed. The Industrial Butletin of Arthur D. Little, Inc, (Cambridge, Mass,), notes the signilieanee of a changed attitude of industrial execte tives as shown in their recent adop- tion 01 scientific methods In improv lag the physical condition of em- ployees. It goes on: "Miners are treated with short. -wave light to supply sunlight deflct. ency, with reported improved health, fewer accidents and, incidentally, res duce(' net operating costs. "An English firm has found that special spectacles have increased the efficiency of textile inspectors an average of 20 per ceut.—the spectacles are supplied even to girls with nor- mal eyesight, a corresponding cor- rection being made for others. The end of the working day uo longer finds them exhausted by tong -con - tinned eye -strain. "Humidity control in a blade fac- tory reduced accidents from crit fin• gers to an almost negligible number. The dryness of the inspectors' lin- gers was found to be the major fac- tor.' Paper's New Rival - Experts have recently been in vestigating the durability of paper, with a special view to the preserve. Hon of books and records of historic value. According to a recent report made In England on ,this subject, issued by a speclal'committee set up by the Library Association, paper made from chemical wood -pulp le more penman. eat than that made from esparto. The very best paper is the all -rag variety,. A nary competitor, however, is now taking the field. This is "letter cloth," which looks like ordinary writing -paper of the best quality, but is said to be stronger and more last- ing than paper. Letter eleth is made from cotton and is being produced In America at a cost slightly below that oe good quality paper. According to Brit- ish experts, it oottld be made more cheaply in, England and it is prob. able that its manufacture will be commenced shortly. Hawks Fly South Ottawa—Apparently choosing tor .themselves the role of vanguard to the trade , delegation for South America, ap al•t au hawks Y oPanadi C recently made a trip to Argentina. According to word received at the Na- tional Parks Branch of the Interior Department, the flight of these ad- venturous spirits was cut eitort by a blast 11 birdshot on a farm in Buenos Aires Province. 'The nationality • of the birds was established when an Argenttne farmer, not recognising he .hawks as on a good -will tour, let o Itis shotgun. into a tree. , On the eg of one of the trail-blazer0 :was found a celluloid ring, red on the le- vee • black on the outeide, mark- ed "50 Canada," The baud is of a vee used In Canada for ictehtifying Insist on genuine Phillips' Milk t; t of Magnesia; a lees perfect product b Thou wilt , find rest Prete, vain fancies if thou dost every stet in life as though, it were thy last ---Marcos 1 • Asia• may not act the same. The genuine is always a liquid—never in tablet form -wand the name Phillips' is always on bottle and wrapper. n Canada 40 Years Service William Pulton, assistant genera passenger agent, Canadians Paein Railway, stationed at Toronto, wa guest of honor at a dinner given hi by brother officials at the Royal To Hotel, ;January 24, in honor of hi forty years, service with the railwa completed' on that clay. Joining th railway January 24, 1691, Mr. Pukeat one time or another, met most o the C.P.R. men wino have made Can dian history iu'the colortui years e 1 e s- rk s Y n, f f the railway's growth. Thimble Will Be Burmese Consider Animals As Children A very charming book about "Bur- mal) and the Burmese," has been writ- ten by' G. II. Fielding, and is publish- ed by Bentley and Sou (England), which shot's the habits of the Bur- mese in a very attractive light. The author says: "There are no dark places in the lues of the Burmese, as there are in the lives of other Orient- als. All is open as the light of day In their lives, and their religion and their women aro the freest' ill the world." He also states that the Bur- mese treat animals as a father would little children who are very stupid or troublesome, but who are lovable. The Burmese' loot'upon hunnntty es the highest virtue. The author asks; "Do you thine that a Burmese boy would"be allowed to rob birds' nests, or to worry rata, or to, go ferreting? Not so; they would be crimes." In many jungle -villages there are deer -hunters, but they are disgraced men, and (according to the Burmese belief) will have a terrible penalty to pay tor it all, and itwill tape much suffering to wash from their souls the cruelty, the blood -thirst, the careless- ness to suffering, and the absence of compassion regarding the pain they in. filet by their hunting. They ask: "Is there no food itt the basaar (their market) that you must take life?" Mr. Fielding states that these merci- ful people build sparrow cotes in the villages, and when he shot some spar- rows that built about his rooms and inade an unpleasant litter, the Bur. meso reproved him, telling hien that if he , had built a sparrow cote the birds would have used it and not have troubled him, Mr. Fielding justly says: "11 you u a. '•t kind to animates YOU will be kind to your fellowmen."—Our Dumb Animals. - Wisdom (Jive oe body, give of mind, Give of words, and where you find . Hunger feed It from your bone, But,always keep ,your soul your own, • (five your laughter, give your youth, Give of reason and,of truth, And tate innocence of play, And a lilac bough in May. Let no man turn from your door Wearier than lie was before;' Bet in• wisdom this le known: Each males soul must be his owe, '--Gertrude Callaghan tit tite New Coal Bina of Future Liners Will Race Across At • Iantic Consuming, Only a Lump of Coal Our grandchildren may store theft whole winter's supply of fuel in a thimble. Today even out ' most effi- cient heating systems and our hes machinery waste 99.9999999 per cent of the fuel they use. Nature knout how to make the fullest use of fue but this is, one of the secrets the, science has. not yet worsted from het Every •day the sun gives out lige weighing 300,000 tons. Yet he h. been doing this for millions of year and will go on doing 'it for miflfo more. If the sun produced light n wastefully as we do; he would ha become a burnt-out cinder king ago. AN AMAZING POSSIBILITY Speaking the other day at tfr Worlds Power Conference, in Berlin Sir Arthur Eddington gave an indica tion of what might happen when mar had discovered the, secret of sun Atomic energy. Then a teacup cont, contain the whole athe fuel required to run the largest mower station fat a year. The worlds biggest liner could voyage at top speed across the At- lantic and back again by consuming a piece of coal the size of a currant. It is believed that we may possibly tap this mighty energy if we can find a way to produce temperatures far exceeding those we know now. Water boils at 100 degrees centrigrnde,'and the temperature of white-hot steel is between 2,000 degrees and 3,000 de- grees. At the Cavendish Laboratory a teinperature neae 1,000,OG0 degree's has already been reached, but to re- lease sun -atonic energy something like 40,000,000 degrees may be neces- sary, • If this can be done itis an astonish- ing thought that the end of the world may be postponed by man himself. Even if the sun ourns out and ceases to give heat and light, he may be able to produce sun -atomic energy and pro- long the existence of the world from a matter of millions to billions of years. Rainy Night By Daniel Whitehead Hicky This is a eight for long remember. ings. Light up the fire and watch each ripening spark Drift like a firefly where the chim- ney sings With all the purple mystery of the darn. This is a night for books. 'Turn to a page That throbs with Aprils that were lost; go deep In folded letters yeliowiog with age; A night of rata is nota night for sleep. Pile up the hearth with cedar boughs and listen To silver music flashing• Olt the pane; Speak long -forgotten words, and they will glisten Wrapped in their vanished glory once again:. Turn back the clock, and till . the break of dawn Your heart will bee: with hours that are gone. THE USE?UL "'ELEPHONE The world's tote) t telephones is almost equal to the. population of England. Figures just puha"' )5 by the "Tele• graph and Telepho'.•, Journal" show that there were 34,°00,0^') tolephones in the world on the last nay of 1920. The incl'ease' Curing the Fear bad been nearly 1750,000, ' Another year has passed since then, and the increase tiuriag 1030 has probably teen big enough to bring the 'phone population within a few hundred theeemee of leegand's total population of 36,900,000. • Britain has four ane a fifth 'phones for every 100 people, as compared with ten and four-fifths for every 100 of population in New Zealand, and practically seventeen per 100 in the United States. North America pas just over three out of every five of the world's 'phones—her total is 21,- 706,000. t a t t as 6, ns ve e • • 1 remaireaffer .J. Hairdressers MAKE BIG MONEY Classes' -are nowformhtg. under the personal direction of Mrs. Robertson, Write for free :)ooklet regarding terms, s,ebertson'e'. Eairdressing Academy T,imited,, 135 Avenue email, Toronto. leteEmesmeigimemeemserosisuaffeasiammem Owl Laff$ Classified Advertising vans The weok'e mast embarrassing "me. ' eOR MAOtIsWE10,R.BANDKN1T7!INO mont'occurred when a.IitoraFy minded n Alt Wool, Silk. and Wool.'l "t)ld ITy,^ , , ielfellowlooired 'wine favorite big".wpxd Samples' mfefree, Stooialttin colors& 7Ge Yarc ihtigipptta, Pent. '0 Orinra; Ont. in the dictionary .just to. prove that lie was spelling It correctly and- at th last report hadn't' been able to even find the word. , To succeed in Otho future, you must break with the past. - e PEMALR:Ii.31+P WANTED, �ADIISS WANTED TO; DO PLAIN . andlight, sewing at - home; whole or spare time; good pay; work sent any distance; charges. mud. sed stamp o,, s. Partt all'„iVatioOal manufacturing p facturint,Co„ NfotiCreal: There aro many ways a woman. can catch a husband but being a t'idow is the surest. We never :waste any sympathy on it woman who complains that her husband: is no longer tender, when she knows he is hard;: boiled be- cause elm keeps trim in hot water, most of the time, The boob; is usually a fellow doesn't see things the same way yon. do Nothing looks 0o, much lace wasted' energy as a couple- of. pretty •girls kissing, each, other, "Daddy b know hew tod0 ever thing,!' said the little, boy of five. "'What 1 dolt knowisn't. worth, knowing,' said the young." man of. twenty.. `., . - - Well•,. anyway,; E Cin nue* my own a short lifett'mer"' eaid: the man of sixty --five. "There. are; very: few. matters,. I am. sorry to, say, that I. am: malty quite sure ahout, said: the man. of, fifty. L halm learned; a bit,. but not much;. since I was borne, but knowledge is so• vast that one cannot become wise• in a short lifetimeeeene dthe man of. eixty- flve.; @ustomer (dndigunntly), — "Surely Sou are not wiping teiat pieta with Your Handkerchief,. waiter?" Waiter -"That's alt right,, sir,;, it's only a dirty hnndkereliieti" A tooth paste that removes the film front the• teeth, may be all. right,, but what we need. more le a: hail oil, that will remove fog from the orale.. It was summer time t.nd a farmer was stowing his' new laborer• around the farm,. at the 'same time explaining to hymn alt tee. duties he would have to db.. When: the Termer had: given: a list of the numerous -Antes required;. the laborer paused' a li'ttl'e end: said: Laborer ---"What about cleaning all' that snow front around the. house?" Farmer—"What are you; talking about? Th:re's no snow at this time of the yem.' Laborer—"No, but by the time I've done all the jobs you have laid out for me to 1a, there c=:•: be:" I•Iarold, so we are told, got a wrong number the otlt.: eveniug. Anxicus Young Man (at Salvation Army Iieadquartersi—"Do yell save young girle"" Salvation Neff (]ilndly) — "Why; yes.' Ausious You' Man -.--"Welt, save me a collide of red'ltends for to-itight-- •will you?" The average woman grows old just about as gracefully as he climbs a fence. Jimmy, four, small but wiee, had been in the company of visitors tete day before. At one period, when itis mother had left the room for a min- ute or twQ jus: long enough to get the iced tea Iced -roue of the guests had asked hint where he was born. He was telling the story, next day, to a playmate, about witat he had said when asked that question. "i knew I was born in the Woman's Rospltal, But I thought flu sounded sort of sappy, so I said the Cuba' Baseball park." The ice man says IsTrs. Jones isn't as friendly as she .used to be. She rears such a Frigidaire. A man said the other day: "You can find anything you Want to know about In a World Alumnae—if you know where to find. It." If we believed what their opponents say, we would conclude that all candi- dates are unfit t hold office, Ano ,'ay to avoid the income tax Is to earn less than $1,000 a year, 9. The brave man cartes out his fo - tune, and every man is the son of It s own worlts.—Cervantes, STIFF ESS Plenty of NLaard's well rubbed in soon seta you right, Botha the sore part with warm water before you start. You71 soon Umber up 1 ,: iellWrttl.t� r, W%...i:<t x 14 'i} S FOR s,. CGPISTbPATO 0N etzBvest EONA EAR '? 11/... ' RU8'T/N BACK Or EARS /NSEpr/N NOSr/t/L5-, AWE 04,25-.1r 44L nnucWs: Excellent: for Temporary Deafness and' Head. Noises when due to congestion caused by colds. b,rro vrow•vrovvvv♦rrsrroro rrororo. ry 'Macre Should kie No' Ugly Women ! There aro 2: classes of women. (1)+ The. beautiful, healthy and attractive Creatures. (2) Those- pitiful ones who don't know how tomake themselves benuti• ful—rather those who don't know the vitae importance. of Kruschen Salts to physical perfection and attraction? Ierusehen• Salts are a perfect blend of the see vital minerals which Nature ordained„ glands, blood, nerves and body organs should daily receive from food if they're to function correctly -- end which are impossible to obtain in this age of modern cooking. Get a bottle of Kruschen—and before the bottle is half empty your com- plexion should be gloriously smooth and clear. ltrusclrere clears blood of harmful acids and poisonous waste. mutter witch cause blemishes, black - beads and pinrpies. Your wonderful new energy will surprise you --mind feels so keen and ,tent- no mere washed-out feeling getting up in the mornings, Ifii°byh 5 L c A CRY in the night. Colic! No ree cause for alarm if Castoria is handy This pure vegetable prepara- tion brings quick comfort. and can never harm. It is the sensible thing when children are ailing. Whether it's the stomach, or the tittle bowels; colic or constipationor diarrhea, When tiny tongues are coated. or the breath is bad. Whenever there's need of gentle regulation. Children Love the taste of Castoria, and its mildness makes it safe for frequent use, And a more liberal dose of Castoria is always better for growing children than strong medicine meant only for adult use. Rheumatism Routed. Rapid Relief. Mr. Arthur Padgett, of Barnsley, writos:---"For the last few years R have suffered with rheumatism, also severe attacks of indigestion. I suf. fered great pain in the back and tried various remedies without re- lief. A friend advised nae to try at once Carter's Little. Liver Pills— this I did and evolved immediate relief. I am a miner, and I strongly recommend your valuable pills to all sufferers of rheumatism, fndi- gestion and constipation." Take Carter's Little Liver Pills for sick headache and 'indigestion. Yolk Times. ISSUE No, 7— 31 i Ail druggists 250 and 750 red plcgs, e us. • • BOTHER Of TWINS HELPED .Restored to He "11 by Taking Lydia Pn-tltk+,,orl's t'ege. fiE.bre Cotri ,i^µd Mitchel., Ont. ---"t nm? Atte twin babies and tot quite a while after :1 was so weak I: could not de ay work because of pains all the was ap my legs at the pack. 1 also had headaches and got very little sleep, f took Lydia 11 Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound, and soon T was ., , able to get up and doily work, l' have taller three bottles and f am fine do ray work without rouble and am gaining in weight and strength. T will gladly recommend the Vegetable Compound to anyone."— 'liens. V. SUTTON, Hos 220, Mitchell. Ont. •