HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1931-04-09, Page 3if
PETRIE BA. GAINS
%2 Ton Differential Chain Hoists with 28' of Chain . $ 8.50
1 Ton Differential Chain Hoists with 32'.of Chain .. $10.50
Cord Wood Saws, Angle Iron Frame .Ball Bearing,
Complete with Saw .... $00.00
10"-3 Square English Files, Bastard or Second Cut, ea. 25c
12"--3 Square English Files, Bastard or Second Cut, ea. 30e
4"-3 Jaw Universal Geared Scroll Chucks, with 2
Sets Jaws . , , $10.00
25 114 Anvil and Vise $ 4.00
50 lb. Anvil rc 5 '5.50
75 Ib. Anvil $ 8.25
Forges, 18" diameter, One Piece Steel Hearth, Cont-
piete with Fan $11.50
Ball Bearing Post Drill, drills 0-S4" holes to centre of
11q circle
$ 9.50 •
1/2" Jaw Stationary Machinist Bench Vises 510.00
61/4” Jaw Stationary Machinist Bench Vises $12.50
ELECTRIC MOTORS AND GASOLINE ENGINES,
BELTING, PULLEYS, HANGERS, SHAFTING,
NEW�rAND �yrUp�,Sy�E�D•t,7�}��AyT���1SPECgpItA►�L(Q� FPgaR91gI-�C��EpgS.
H. W. .fm E ,ew RIE, LIMITED
ED
Phone ELgin 1271 147 FRONT ST. W. Toronto 2
Australia Still is the Home
Of Wn..rld's Largest Nuggets
Other Gold Fields Continue to
of Precious Metal
To the gold seekers of modern days
the Yukon and Klondike have furnish.
ed the romance of prosperity attained
after intense hardship and the African
ll.and has given the largest production
and cold profits gained through busi-
ness methods, but Australia has led
the world in the output of nuggets,
those huge yellow harbingers of sud-
den wealth. The recent discovery' of
the "Golden Eagle" in the Larkintille
alluvial field of Western Australia
bears out this reputation of the Island
Continent. It weigbed 1,130 ounces,
mid was sold to the State Government
for about 530,000. This was the largest
nugget yet found in that district of
Australia, being neore thaa twice the
Be Outdistanced in the Output
Found in Lumps
size 0f bits '"Bobby Dazzler". discovered
-there In 1899,
The nuggets of record size were,
however, discovered on the other side
of the continent. The "Welcome
Stranger," found near Dunolly, New
South Wales, weighed about 2,500
ounces and was sold for a little less
than 550,000. The "Welcome," :dis-
covered near Ballarat. Victoria, weigh-
ed 2,195 ounces and was worth more
than 5455,000. The "Blanche Barkly,"
which came from near Iiingower, was
priced at about 534,000. These dada
were ma . In the most thickly popu•.
!aced part of Australia, In the south-
east corner, not far front such centres
as Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney.,
Straight to the north, neatly 1,000
miles from the Ballarat Melds, was
found one of the richest and most ox•-
traordinary gold mines in the world.
A nameless Bill in the Queensland
bush was, in 1892, owned by a ratan
hauled Gordon who earned a precari-
ous livelihood by pasturing his cattle
on it, Tit: tem Morgan brothers, pros-
t/eatiug ' . that vicinity, found signs of
gold on the G40 -acre hill, and bought
the land from Gordon at about 55 an
acre, mount Morgan turned oat to be
a veritable hill of gold.
Western Australia, where the latest
large nugget was found, is far the
most part an absolute desert. here
the total annual rainfall is only about
five inches, and water eau bo obtained
only by sinking deep wells. Yet It Is
one of the richest gold -mining regions
in the world. The first discovery was
made at Ytigau'n, 210 Tulles east of
Perth, the capital of the colony. From
there prospectors a preati further iu•
land.
Although nuggets are oceastonaily
found iii other parts of the world, they
do not compare in size with those of
Australia. Canada produces the metal
in pieces of ore combined with quartz.
Yellow grains of gold, it will be recall-
ed, ts'ere found at Sutter's 112111, near
Sacramento, Cal, to start the west-
ward trek of the T'orty-niners.' And in
the Yukon and Alaska regions the pre.
Mous shill leas usually been discovered
in. sand or gravel deposits.
Sweden's Huge Garage
A garage of record size, Is soon to
be built at Hornsborg, in Iiiingshoi-
men, Sweden, which will hoose 400
large motor buses. Work is to Com-
mence in the boar future, and the
garage is to be completed 'In Janu-
ary, 1931. The cost is to be more
than 51,000,000.
4
gold
striees
.. , is a genial man,
with art air of quietstrength
that compels conkdence,
On his shoulders rests
the responsibility for
your safety.
imbued with the fin-
est traditions of British sea•
manship, he has spent his
lifetime mastering the
moods of the seven seas.
Sailings weekly from Montreal
Cabin rates from .. , . 5130
Tourist Third Catrin . . $105
Third Class Round Trip 8155
Special Seasonal Third Class
Round Trip Ettcursron Rat¢
$129.
Information. from
Cor. Soy and Wellington Si,,
(Phone Elgin 3471)
Toronto
or any steamship agent
e)
'late human hand is the most re-
markable .of all machinery which has
not yet been fully exploited.'—Ray.
mond Duncan,
"I lament tate importance et head-
lines and the unimportance of head-
wroth."—G. IC, Chesterton.
Makes Homes Healthful
and Beautiful
Always sweet and clean
Free stencil premium label on every pack-
age. Send for Decorator's Guide and
Stencil Catalogue.
nos
GYPSO ,tate AN IM ABAS tNE,
cANADxaTED
Paris Ontario
leer.
High School Boards and Boards of Educations
Aro authorized by law to establish
INDUSTRIAL, TECHNICAL AND
ART SCHOOLS
Withthe approval of the Minister of Eduoatlon
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
may be conducted in accordance with the regulations !Betted by
the Department of Education.
THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION
is given in variola trades. The schools and classes are under the
direction of AN ADVISORY COMMITTEE.
Application for attendance should be made to the Princlpai
CP the school.
COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS, MANUAL TRAINING, HOUSEHOLD
sOIENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE are provided
F 1 the Courses o Study u
for n f u y in Public, separate, Continuation and Hlph
Schools, Collegiate Institutes, Vocational Schools and Departments.
Coptee of the Regulations issued by the Minister of Education may be
obtained from the Deputy Minister, Parliament Buildings, Toronto.
Old Mother Nature
AudHer Marvels
lay Charters D. Stewart, Condensed
from The New York Times Magazine.
Nature ie, above all, au inventor.
Her specialty -is tools and machinery,
The naturalist, taping things apart
;and looking into their construction,
rinds Wilmot* Wonting iu the, atmos-
phere of a `patent office. Life itself
may be a mystery, but a. mechanical
Motion may be at once so clever and
so simple that -the mind seizee'. upon it
with, delight. Natime is full of such
shrewd devices as .are• produced by
the inventor. ' •
In inventing a ;bird, for instadce,
Nature was confronted with a Rue Iii.
tie peol leim. How was she ;to make 'a.
roosting burl that could tuck its head
ilnder its wing; settle 'down for
night's rest and go eo'und asleep with-
out danger of falling. oif•the perch?
The problem was soiree ley attach-
ing to the'•cords which operate the
toes art eletremely long tendon—One,
which runs nearly the' whole length of
the leg and broadens into a Muscle
situated high up on the trout 'et the
thigh. This Ingenious tendon passes
over 'the knee in front, runs in a spiral
direction 'round the bone of the lower
leg, and then passes over the heel be-
hind, As a result of this wigging over
opposed joints the bending of the leg
serves b put the muscle and tendon
on the stretch, and the weight of the
bird in settling down to sleep causes
them to pull the toe tendons together,
Thus the bird is clamped nuttimatical-
ly to the perch. No brain wont, no.at-
teutiou is required. It works while
the bird sleeps.
Any b'.1 that is equipped with Na-
ture's Patent Roosting Clamp always
brings her toes together. every time.
she raises a foot in walking.
It isn't an easy feat to walk on stilts
whiels have a hinge itt the middle, as
do those et the stork. And to tuck
its head under its wing and take a nap
while stapling in water is more pre-
carious stilt, Muscled which work
very long aro likely to become fa-
tigued; and in such an event the stark
would topple into the stream. To
obviate anything like this, Nature has
made a contrivance for locking the
joint. The bone of the lower part of
the leg is made to fit into a socket
above it, When the two are allowed
to come together the leg becomes as
one piece of bone: the binge is thrown
out of service and muscular fatigue 10
Prevented. This is Nature's self-act-
ing lock -joint for the use of storks and
other 4tltitudinons birds,
The beehive presents to the mind an
industrial community 00 completely
given over to factory methods as to
make us wonder whether it is not the
bee, rather' tha:e man, who should be
given the credit for the great idea be-
hind the Industrial Age. Every bee
carries with her a huge assortment
of tools, consisting of special adapta-
tions of legs and joints, and of these
tools the sting is an epecialty well'
thought-out contrivance, It has tate
power and mechanism to drive itself
Into anything as thiek and tough as
a horse's hide, with. a seat -acting mus-
cle of its own, which is detachable
and even capable of going of wanting
by a sort of pumping motion, and
driving itself in after the bee has
flown away.
The sting consists of two highly
polished javelins, each With barbs like
a fish-hook, fitted into a supporting
sheath or scabbard, so that they can
be alternately thrust forward by the
self-acting muscle, The bee needs to
insert only the first barb or two of the
lance, and the self-acting muscle does
tite rest. Even it the bee loses her
sting, the sting drills into the victim,
emptying its bag 02 poison into the
wound through a groove between the
two sliding spears.
Here is a mechanism as ingenious
as tate self-starter or anything to be
found on an automobile.
The poison gas of the Worid War
was not new when one considers the
Meet world. The little Bombardier
beetle, when danger threatens, fires
off en emplosive charge of an acrid and
irritating gas. When a number of
these beetles are alarmed and all fly
at once, their little explosive shots
seem lilto a miniature regiment in bat-
tle; each beetle is capable of produc-
ing from ten to twelve shots hr suc-
cession.
And how about the submarine? It
is this au invention tmparalloled out-
side the patent office? Of course it is
one thing for nature to make a lisp
capable of breathing water Ilietead of
air, and of remaining pertuanently be-
low the surface, end another for man,
a land animal, to do down into the
water and stay submerged..by means
0f a reserve supply of. oxygen. But
this is nothing new, either, in Nature's
machine exhibit. The, whale, a land
animal which has been made over to
Kennedy &
Menton
421 Cotiege St.,
Toronto
HarieyDavidson Distribucorr
Write at once ror our bargain list;oP
used motorcycles. Terms arranged.
NO SNOW ON THE BOARDWALK
HOTEL
STRAND
Atlantic City, New Jersey
Sends Greetings to its Many
.Friends in Canada.
We are quoting such a very low
American Plan rate that you will
find • it cheaper to stay at the
"Homelike Strand" than staying
at home. •
Write us so we may quote them
to You -so you wile know the exact
cost before leaving.
Music—Salt Sea Baths—Compll.
mentary Tea Daily, 4 to 5 p,m.—
16 We will personally see to your
comfort.
2'. 10. %LANDOW, Mgr..
1 1 1.1. BRADFORD RICHMOND, •
Prop,
5t conditiona-at soti,bee storage pieces'
for carrying, extra; supplies of oxygen.
ESeentiali,i the Whale is at much a .
land anima( as is a horse or a cork, but
the young whale is fed from • the
breasts by a quick gulp, an set of rapid
refueling aiuong tire tumultuous
waves. The whale -is provided with'
a thick wall 'of insulating fat against
alto cold, "an essential part' of the de-
sign to keep the engine of the waym-
blooded animal going, •
The oxy;en reset:yes' of the whale
are exten ire tracts of arteries' and
capillaries currying a supply „of oxy
genated blood- that is not needed when
the whets is on the surface and
breathing, but which is drawn upon
dming periods of submersion; The
Cry "Thar she blows!" which rho sail-•
or raises from the masthead, means
that the whale'is blowing off the car-
bon dioxide Preparatory t0 filling its
teaks and going down- again.
Deep down in the fat of the whale:
are to be round the"remnants of. legs,
which are taken asate evidence of evo-
lution. But the whale bas been so
deeply macro over by means of special
devices that If it were deprived of
them 'there would scarcely be any
whale left.
It is scarcely known that an egg 15
a piece of machinery, a real, moving
mechanism It ie not simply au or-
ganism and a mystery, but evofks ac-
cording t,, the principles of the ma-
gician's magic bottle and of physical
laws. The chalaza, a thick cord of
twisted, tough albumen stretching
from the yolk on opposite sides to the
two ends of the egg serves to hold the
yolk in place. When an egg is turned
in the finger's or rolled slowly back
and forth, the yolk does not revolve,
but remains with one side always up-
permost.
The means by which it does this is
the weight ou one side, due to the
tatty. globules on that side being
heavier and denser than in the rest
of the yolk. Floating in tate white lice
a ship in ballast, it turns on the alba
mon cord like a ship's compass hang-
ing In the gimbals; it is as true to the
Zenith as a compass to the pole. The
lighter, 'o: uppermost Side of the yolk
bears ou its surface the germ spot
which repreeeuts the future chicken.
As -a result of the way the yollc is built
this germ spot,' being always upper-
most, is near the warm body of the
heu iu hatching.
The chalaza is 'slack enottglt to let
the yolk float near the upper surface
of the egg—a further Quezevidence of
tate needs of the chick to be close to
the source of heat. Nor is that alt. A
chick .ar'y.rung bird even before its
true lungs are formed, needs a small
but constant supply of fresh air. There
is a special organism by means of
which it absorbs air through the shell,
and for this reason alt eggshells are
porous. There is a great unity in the
complications of the egg, tate yolk as
a whole being ot less specific gravity
than the white as a whale, all assist-
ing in staking the machinery act as it
does,
The small slat place at the big end
of the egg provides an alt compart-
ment for the use of the chick just be-
fore it is hatched. A chick develops
with its head toward the big end;
when it le fully formed and its lungs
are ready for use, it pricks the slight
membrane which forum a wall to this
air space and takes its first breath.
Inspired by this now access of energy,
the chick gives the shell a vigorous
peck and melees a hole throtigit witielt
it can continue breathing. The soft
bili of the chick le provided with a
point of t3htt•like Hardness, which it
uses for the purpose of breaking its
shell and then discards.
Working models in our museums
would be valuable to illustrate these
principl.1 or nature.
France Had 2,000,000
Tourists During 1930
Paris.—Taro taillion tourists cause to
France in 1030 but they spent 50 per
cent. less titan its the preceding year
when fewer came.
Even the number of American tour-
ists increased, the li'rench statisticians
have learned to their stuprlee, but the
after -crash traveler from America is
less free in lhis expenditures than ever
before. . The Preach experts put that
down to the probability that the
Americans wbo have been traveling
sincethe depression represent a differ-
ent clime ot society tha 'those who
were trnveling in the years of in'os-
perity',
The figures of the Trench National
Office of Tourism show ,hint 313,000
visitors came to Prance from the
United States or from neighboring
countries in 1929, while the figure for
1030 -is 400,000,
By tar the greater influx to France
.from. abroad was trent England last
year. Por the different cations the
list for last year shows 381,000 British,
nearly ail of whom remained in France
for a considerable period; 1,110,000
Spaniards who, however, are ranked
below the British because the number
included some 400,000 frontier work-
ers wlto crossed .the border by reason
et their employment; and 150,000 who
merely traversed Femme en route to
other countries; 100,000 Mexicans,
South and Central AmericaUlt, and
700,000 Belgians, Germans and Cen-
tral Europeans.
Yet despite this record number of
visitors for -the year, French hotels,,
and alt tourist industries are complain-
ing 0f exeepttonally poor season.
The chief sufferers have been the
hotels de luxe, the big dresamalting
establishments and jewelry and per-
fumery houses. The small hotels and
118210 industries have done well,
From these Statistics, M. Varlet, di-
rector of the Tourism Office, deduces
that Mope, cannot be raised too high
by the 'prospects for the currant year.
French tradesmen who are hoping for
the revival of the tourist trade through
the' International Colonial Exposition
this year, must bear is mind that ill
the countries of the Continent and et
the New World have suffered more
than Prance Tiom the economic de-
pression,
A. woman Is known by the aerluaint•
acmes she cuts, •
Owl Laffs
Perk tip
Your nose may be battered, your jaw --
beim nicked,
Your visage may be a sight,
But always remember you're never
licked
No Matte hew Madly they mess up
your map, -
It won't be beyond repair; '
While stilt you eau stand and fight.
And there still is a chance that you'll)
writ the scrap
As long as the punch is•there.
You'll make mistakes . and you'll do
things wrong—
The best of them always do; r
But as soon as yon get to going sarong
Your grit will see you through.
They enmeshed Paul Jones to 'a fare -
yon -we,
But he t1ldn'tltobserve "goodnight,"
He merel,' paused in ;his tracks to yell
That herd just begun ' biles
fight.
There II. be plenty 0f to ,peddle
gloom
There'll
be plenty of folks to say
That they see thesterrlble day ot
` doom
Iiurt'ying on its way.
But the fellow Who knows that rile
fight is bard
And still has the nerve to grin,
And neve: gets rattled and drops his
guard,
Is the fellow Who's going to win.
lleantitul Modern Daughter—"Well,
Mother, I proposed to Jim myselt to-
night."
Her Mother—"You must be mad,
EdIth:"
Daughter—"You're darned right I
nat.' He turned me down.' -
A flapper who learned that Kipling
had referred to woman as a "rag; a
bone and a hank of hair" indignantly
retorted: "Yes, and a man is merely
a jag, a drone and a tank of hot air."
Seems to be a ease of about fifty-fifty.
Mrs. Hendricks—"That woman next
door certainty has a. violent temper.
Have you seen her husband?"
Mr, elendricks—"Yes, poor fellow.
Ie'look like her battered half."
The station -master rushed out of his
room after hearing A .crash On the
Platform Ile discerned a disbereled
young man sprawled out perfectly flat
emoting confusion of overturned
milk cans and the scattered contents
of his travelling bag.
Station -Master (to small boy stand -
lug by admiring the scene)—"'Was he
trying to catch the train?"
The Boy—"He did catch it, ltut it
got away again."
istentioniug aa old flume has caused
more than nue &aro-up.
Those long, skinny greea things
Poking their treads up out at the earth
are what the seed catalogues assured
us would be cabbages.
Teacher—"When water l,esanies ice,
what is tate greatest chane that takes
place?"
Bright Student—"The pike. sir."
Questions and Answers
What is a polecat? A cat that should
be Milled with a pole; the longer the
pole the better.
Why wasn't .Eve afraid of getting
the measles? Because she Adam.
What is a dry dock? A doctor out
of proscriptions,
What Is a bigamist? The mu who
makes the same mistake twice,
Teacher (during test)—"I hope I
didn't see you look at your book, Satn."
Samuel—"I hope you didn't, either."
When a girl is forbidden to smoke
site starts to fume,
Mistress—"Bridget, prepare
sou on the gasoline stove."
Bridget—"Indnde, mum, I did try,
but the stove whit out."
Mistress -"Theft try to light it
again,"
Bridget—"Yes, mum, I will, but It's
not coma back yet. Y'see, it whit out
through tilt roof, atounl."
The Success of Sanctuary
(!amia hi a great believer in the
cr'iter'ion of figures. She evert counts
the birds in her sanctuaries and as a
result the value of these establish-
ments has been proved beyond any
shadow 0f doubt. There are now
more titan forty such sanctuaries
scattered across the country from
Nova Scotia to British Columbia and
it is safe to assure that no species of
bird life now in existence will ever
become extinct, As compared i'Itlt
1925 the bird population of the re-
served :areas has actually increased
by 10 per cent the ten sea -bird
sanctuaries in the Gulf of St. Lawr-
enee being the scene of the batching
at well over 100,000 I h'ds et 16 dif-
ferent species in 1930+ alone. Some
of the most linen:ea.:' of the birds
In Canada's reserves with their t'e-
spactive gains daring tee past five
years are: eider duck 27 per cent.,
puffin 12 per Cent, razor -billed, auk
37 per cent., common mune 11 'Per
cent„ black guillemot, 134 per cent.,
herring gull 159 per rent. anal eem-
mon tern 57 per cent.
lunch -
Watch Gasoline Tank
Trouble may result front showing
gasoline to get low in the -tank, as this
may cause sediment and water to be
sacked into tate feed line.
Lindbergh, America's famous air•
man, received 1,943 gifts after his
famous solo flight across tate Atlantic
its May, 1927• Most of these took
the form of nteciais, plaques, and
other "mementoes." •
FREE
Large illustrat•
ed catalogue of
new and rebuilt
bicycles r r e m
010 up, Motor- _
cycles, Boats, "4'a''• ,,.
Ot.tbear,, Motors, Palilas, etc; i'ranspor-
ISSCtE No. 15—'31
on paid. Write to 33131E11 CrYCLE -ASID 140018055
eaa Queen Street W., • TorO.tito, Out.
t3eXe Oa, jtegaWS, AA
aSaVan\tSk\k,%)ag9434-ttle7 w
Ros
Met SU —TW Lill\i1 Zt onAgiftoe
Classified Advertising
YARD?
A-1 Ott NHLNIT IAQUa ti AND Lr. NtTT1at .
LI "Alt - Wool," "Silk and Wool,'
t)10 - Tyme," all colors, lac lb, un
bantples tree. Stocking & .Yarn Mills
Dept.T. Orilila, Ont.
BABY ouzczs.
7. BABY lskllCteS—IN Sul VAI;-
' L 1t1TUta3, Ino and up. Jatalogues
A. II. Switzer, Granton, Ontario,
'p11 ASTIGRN CANADA'S LAY:GEST
L1 selection registered stallions aures
and work horses. Freight. prepaid Write
giving exact description y'ourrequire-
ments, Price, terms reasonable. Arnold-
wold Farms, erenvhle, Quo,
Street at Night
There's something, rather lovely
About our street at night:
The dusky gabled houses
With Isere and there a light,
The pattern of the elm leaves
iu lace work on the walk,
The crun'ch'y bulky tower
Transformed to silver chalk,
The whistling velvet figures
Of homeward -faring men
Whose footfalls tali the silence
Till stillness wakes again.
The sky's brocaded curtain
Tassel tied with stens,
The post -historic monsters
We know as motor cars.
A kitten's furry -scurry
Across the street-lantp'e are --
Our sheet is rather lovely
To traverse after dark!
—Doris \birder, its Poetry.
TEARS
Tears never. yet wound up a cloclt
Or worked a steam engine,—Wiste
Sayings.
For
Constipation
Won habit
forming
Safe
Scientific
FEE TRIAL OFFER
1KOFvt 6 1 . h
t
Poetry is Expression
By poetry I mean the art of erodue-
,ing pleasure by the just expression of
imaginative thought anti feeling in
metrical laugnage,—W. 3', Courthope,
in "The Liberal Movement in English
Literature,"
DRAPERIES MADE NEW
'Whoa we resumed housekeeping a
mouth ago I found my draperies had
become c'reaed trent packing, I h nig
theta our on. the line, hoping to remove
the creasee. Then I forgot then. The
result was they became badly faded
and stat -spotted.
"I was heartsick until the happy
thought struck me to dye them, 1
jolt dyed theta a deeper green, and
as I used Diamond Dyes they loop
gorgeous and new. I have never seen
easier dyes to use than Diamond Dyes.
They give the most beautiful colors—
wheu need- eltlter for tutting or dye-
ing—and never take tate life out of
cloth as other tlye;u do."
Mrs, J,F.T., Montreal.
CORNS 6 WMMTS
ncnwvc dry skin. Dab on
hltnard's 3 times daily. Ler it
dry on. Aber a while Corns
anti Warts
23 lift right off
If you have never tried Trusehen—try
it now at our expense. We have
distributed a great many special
"GIANT" packages which make it
easy for you to prove our claim for
yourself. Ask your druggist for the
new "GIANT" 75e. Package.
This ce,oista of sur regular 75c. bottle together
with a separate trial bottle—sufficient for about
one week, Open the trial bottle drat, put it to
the test. and then. if not entirely convinced that
Frusclten does everything we claim it to do. the
regular bottle is atilt as good as new. Take it
back. ]our druggist is authorised to retires*
tout f5c. immediately and without ,USStian.
YOU (Lace tried ICruscttea free, at our expense.
What could be fairer? Manufactured by
R. Gtllliths Hughes, Ltd., tdanchester, Eng.
(l(stab, 1756). Importers. IrlcGlIl(tmy Bran.
Let,. Toronto.
C a AL1 F 0)-R ➢ T----
CwIlILDREN Irate to take medicine
as a rule, but every child loves
the taste of Castoria. And this pure
vegetable preparation is just as good
as it tastes: just as bland and just as
harmless as the recipe reads.
When Baby's cry warns of colic,
a few drops of Castoria las him
soothed, asleep again in a jiliy. Noth-
ing is more valuable in diarrhea.
When coated tongue or bad breath
tell of constipation, invoke its gentle
aid to cleanse and regulate a child's
bowels. In colds or children's diseases,
you should Use it to keep the system
from clogging.
Castoria is sold in every drugstore;
the genuine always bears Chas. H.
Fletcher s signature,
onutNt
PHILLIPS
92
For Troubles'
due to fkcsti
ND 61S ION
SGURSTOMACH
HEARTBURN ON
CONSTLEA
GAS, NAUSEA�
hen
EVERY man, woman and child
will occasionally 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-
fect 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. And
when children have over -eaten ---
are bilious, constipated or otherwise
onset—give them a tittle of the
same, pleasant -tasting and milky
white Phillips' Milk of Magnesia.
You'll be through with crude
methods Duce you learn the perfect
way. Nothing else has the sante
quick, gentle direct. Doctors pre-
scribe nausea.
scribe r, for indigestion.
heartburn, gas, sour • stomach an
headache. It has been standard
with theta for over 50 years.
Insist on genuine Phillips' Milk
of Magnesia; a lens perfect product
may not act the tame. The genuine
is always a liquid ---never in tablet
form—and the name Phillips' is
always on bottle and wrapper.
APPLICATIONS ." . APPLICATIONS
Are Mad As Far
As Possible in the
order in Which
They Are
Received,
/ ONTARIO
DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE
Fann Help Supplied
Offering Annual
Work Are
Invariably
Given the
Preference.
The Colonization and Immigration Brandt of the
Department of Agriculture for Oaterfo will .have available a
number of Experienced Married Men With Their Wives
and Families—Married Couples Without Children—
Also Single Men•
aneaoarayiu ne+odvisto mlearly
Geo. A. Elliott
)lreotor of Colonization
Parliament BIdgo„ ,i
Toronto, Ont- /
File Your
Appllcatloh
es once
AI! Mon
Placed Subject
tp Trial Petkid
HON, THOMAS L. KENNEDY, Minister of Agnlcsitu