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The Clinton News Record, 1931-08-20, Page 3Exquisitely 'flavoured.. lower in price ��:\'itni iiull,+.tii:.,lu>n\ ��ti..,•1.4. re— ileskrtt'I x^rg sPREAT the family to as appetizing salad made doubly tetnptiag with .Kraft Old Fash,.ohed.".Soiled Salad. Dressing. Your grocer ens it in the large 12 ounce ;jar that costs only 25 cents, less thaa half the price you re used, o paying for this .kind of quality Get some today. atatiAir onflii Boiled Salad Dressing Made in Canada by the Makers of Kraft Cheese arta Velveeta i I throat passages. What mot �be ac - a he Principles : complished is the removal of water f Life �"�� tram- ti)e lungs and the stimulation of Jd.° L Saw respiration, and heart action. And, without apparatus, the•proae pressure By Paul William ;Gartner, :method of artiflolat respiration (roses - Back in the days when 1 was little , citation) is the simplest and moat et. more than, excess baggage on an out-; fective method known to achieve tbis door excursion, I hem/caned to see a :end. The method may be used with near tragedy in the Minnesota north ; equal success in cases of suffocation woods. A canoe bearing a wiry In-' by gas orsmoke. dfan guide and a white man of con -I The victim should'` be placed face' siderable weight capsized about 100� downward, arms up to allow the lunge Yards oEshore in the frigid waters of their fullest expansion. Naturally the arty spring. Neither the Indian nor throat and mouth should be opened 11e white man was a capable swim- III and cleared as- well as they may be. mer, and in the ease of the latter the 'Then the operator, on knees astraddle uddenness of the plunge, the 'cold. the subject's thighs, places his hand l nese of, the water, and the c he en um- on the small ribs of the back with the fingers along the sides, Pressure is induced by swinging forward slowly, arnis• straight, thus contracting the lungs, and releasing wither snap which causes the lungs to ewlpand and Inhale. With the incoming air water will tend to be displaced and 'forced out. Pres- sure is applied for approximately three seconds with two seconds be- tween contacts; Etats allowing between 10 and 12 movements of compression and release each minute. Resuscita- tion Should be zontinued untilethe••pa-. tient starts 'to breathe again, which brance of heavy clothing had him fighting desperately for air in Less ban a minute. He was within ten eet of the inverted canoe, but he fight as well have been ten mites, so blind and' frantic had the fear of death made him. The guide had suc- ceeded iu grasping an end pf the oratt, but apparently was unable to aid him without coming within reach of the powerful clutching, arms. The party to which I belonged was about water- craft, but an older ember, an excellent swimmer, quick- 'iy, took: off most of :his Malting and may not be for several hours. en swam; 'without haste, it seemed, Liquid mouth stimulants; such as' toward the scene of the mishap. I trot coffee or tea, should never be ad° recall having criticized, with the Ma ipulnfveness of youth, IUs slow pro- gress. I was further shocked to behold the lroscuer, upon reaching the drowning an, deliberately evade the clutching rms and livid face and swim to the auoe, where he clung for at least 30 none, unquestionably resting. Short- y, however, with the aid of the guide, o drew the canoe to the now feebly truggiingg man, who was very near to eath, I presently learned, Indeed, hen the was finally brought to shore no indication of lite was apparent— et, he was revived by the prone ensure method of artificial respire - ion after more than an hour of appli- cation. who. had the presence of mind -to Proficiency lite saving is the re,shove into the water a municipal park tilt of cool, deliberate thinning, as in ministered until the patient is fully conscious. Iia should be wrapped in warm blankets, for it is heat, both ex- ternal and internal, which is essential for a complete recovery, The' swimming method eau proper- ly be considered only the last resort in the performance of a rescue. It is, by far, more practicable to use a boat or to throw a lite preserver. Some very effective rescues have been per- formed with. the aid of a pole. One should never hesitate to throw some object that will serve to buoy another up, a bit of wood, a chair, table, or box, if nothing more suitable is at Hand, I know of an instance when an individual was saved from drowning by a man who could not swim but the incident just given, In the first iace •the rescuer removed practically 11 of his clothing—as any person should do who finds himself sudden - confronted with a considerable wim to safety. Swimming at what The Crabs Marathon ppeared to bo a slow rate of speed Twenty-nine years ago a series of ward the drowning man was another experiments was started '' study the xam file 01 senslble procedure. Even migration of the finny attd shelly in - e softened life guard cannot swim habitants of the Red Sea. t the same rate for 200 yards that h0 A number of crabs were Marked and an for 60, and in either case he must returned to the iced Sea. One bas'just are considerable reserve energy af- been recaptured iu the Mediterranean, 0r he has arrived. A good swimmer The distance covered was 101 miles, ould be drowned in less than a min- so that, if the crab had made a non- te by a desperate, fighting victim. stop crawl, he would have moved— ndeed, battling with a subject who sideways, of course—at the dizzy as felt the icy breath of death re- speed of twenty-two inches an hour. (quires almost titantic energy. All kinds of sea creatures useful for The belt way to deaf with strangle food purposes are marked nowadays olds is to avoid them; that is to and their wanderings watched, The ay, the drowning person should be marking, whish is painless, 15 usually pproaehed front the rear whenever done by means 01 tiny silver discs ossible. This geology keeps the res- uer free of the other's arms and fees hint apportunity to gain a good arrying grip, Sometimes, before approaching, it S advisable to wait for a fighting per - on to exhaust himself, although it ay not seem humane. This preetudes e-possibilty that he will•attempt to a day.—L0110on "Tit -Bits," limb to the highest point at hand " •• latch, .of course, is the top of the, escuer's head. Danish Navy Uses Oil for Fuel But despite all precautions there A movement in Great Britain to re occasions when a drowning per- have the navy reurn from oil to coal ,n will obtain what '1 commonly as its fuel because it would help the ailed a death hold on a would-be res- unemployment situation through giv- er. In this contingency the rescuer ing the mines greatly' increased hurt- : ould remember to take a deep Ness and also because England, as an reath—if he tan—and then without island country, would be out oft from esitation to submerge himself with .oil supplies during a war, draws at - he drowning person. This move will tentionto the fact that the small Den- oted to make the subject release the (sh Navy uses oil almost exclusively, old as he struggles to climb upward the engi.les used being mainly of the legafn. The rescuer can utilize this Dieselmotor type. As Denmark, how-- endeneyt in. case of a front strangle ever, has neither oil nor coal supplies old, by shoving him upward. The of her own there is no question as to ack strangle hold is broken by twist- what is preferable -in case of war, It ug a subject'•s arm, by elbow and has been revealed that three recently riot, into an arm lock. The feet at finished torpedo boats as well ns three • lines can be brought into play, not in now under construction are made for oil consumption. The same is the base with the inspection ship Hvidbjornen, The Niels Juul, the only larger type ship in the navy, eau avail itself of either type of fuel. Ali ,submarines bench. It is not'colorful retinae that the world desires, but sato ones.— "The Sportsman," The valid of the experlmenta is ines- timable. It was in thin way, for ex- ample, that it was discovered where the infant plaice had their nurseries, and by protecting these, the value of the North Sea as a food storehouse has been enormously increased, Eng- land atone requires 200,000 Cons of fish kick but in a powerful shove against ho subject's shoulder. The carries - or towing drowning persons to safety i' 11 follow the principles of maintain - hg the subject in a horizontal Post ion and of keeping the rescuer out are furnished with oil -burning Diesel 1 his reach. engines, as is the new 'royal yacht, The ict Butim it is frequentlytowed aftertosafety. the nearthat American -Scandinavian Review says. has been Dime 01 the roost dllticult life=saving'' •°° roblems' are faced, especially if ' he 1 Ms ceased to breathe. However, arta- ; `. etas respiration is adopted only when he subject is not breathing. I1 he Is t1RCOnsei0u5, but breathing faintly, 0 romaine spirits should be applied to he nose and he should b0 massaged 'oward the heart, and kept warm. As a rule, swallowed water is not dangerous, although. it may bring a eines of sickness. ' It is the water 1} the lungs which paralyzes the dia• 1 `There's that expert 'tethers/1 leragm, A man can fast for, 40 days- Did he make a good showing on the more if plentifully supplied with,' stand?" ator, bat if his diaphragm is parol- I. "Yes; Ile seemed to know al- _ zed for three minutes he may die.=gems much, about his proteseion tele case never give mouth stixnu• 1 as the lawyer who cross-examined te, for they wilt merely clog the 1 Inez" Amusing Anecdotes "What makes you laug" at your own joke?, inquired a friend of tsrael, Zangwill onetday when; in convivial company, that'wittyrvwriter had just perpetrated •a bon mot at which all' had laughed and lee the Loudest "Well," responded Zangwill, "why should't e rough? That joke was as new to me as to you." 'There is an amusing story about the ex -Kaiser of Germany in Prince von Bulohv.s much discussed memoirs, It seems that William H. had a passion for designing—houses; churches, cast- I lea, and especially ships, In the 'nine-, ties, during a visit to Italy, following a discussion with Admiral Britt—He- lm Minister of Marino and one of the ablest naval architects in Europe—on, the beet way of buiidine ships, the Kaiser• -asked the Admiral it he`might ' Send - him a plan for the construction of a battleship which he had worked out. • Some weeks later, Brin received the design in question, I•Ie returned it to the Kaiser with a letter which Bu- low describes /.,1 a "masterpiece of Italian delicacy and also of quiet irony." "Tho ship which Your Majestyhas designed," ran the letter, would be the, mightiest, the most terrible, and also the loveliest battleship ever seen, It would have a speed which has not yet been attained; its armor would Our - bass anything nowafloat; its masts would bo the highest in the world; its guns would outrange any others. This wonderful vessel has only ono fault: if she were put on the water sho would sink like a lump of lead." The Kaiser .was not at all angered by the Admiral's reply, adds Billow. * * ,* To illustrate Russian subordination and mechanical obedience under Czar• dom, the great Bismarck used to love to tell this story, says von Bulow: While walking in theeroyal park of Peterhof, Czar Nicholas I noticed a entry standing in front of a bare rose bush. The Czar asked the sentry why he stood there, but the worthy grena- dier could not tell him. 'The Emper- or had anqueries. made and it was found that in the limo o1 Empresa 'Catherine II'that rose'bush'had once borne a lovely rose.' So that it should not' be plucked' tile -Empress- had es- tablished"a• sentry post over it, which, half a 'century and more afterwards, stili had this duty to perform. Bridge players, especially, will get a chuckle front this story about Icing Edward told by the annonymous auth- or of "Moak Turtle"—the memolre of a "Victorian Gentleman": Edward was rare keen on bridge al- though not much of a player. Once, at Sandringham, his partner, Mrs. George Koppel, .eft i' to Minh to make trumps and he decla.ad a no-trumper. Men. Koppel had to play the,hand. His cards went down, and disclosed not a single trick. Her hand was actually barren, * e * Before putting his cards down, the Illug remarked to Mrs. Keppel: "Well, I don't know what you'll say to It" "As soon a5 she flaw the lie of the land she exclaimed: "All I erne say, Sire, is; 'God save the King and preserve Mrs. I:eppel!" Edward's joy at the quip reconciled. hint to the grand slam against them. * R The reissue in a single volume of E, S. Martin's "Life of Joseph It Choate" recalls a ilood of stories about the eminent lawyer -diplomatist who was ono of the wittiest of men in an age when giants such as Whistler, Os- car Wilde, Mark Twain, William M. Everts and Chauncey Depew were making the whole world Iaugle. * ° * One of the best Choate stories—and it is not in Mr, Martin's boolc--re- lates to the time when he was Ameri- eah Ambassador in London. In those days the United States did not furnish its representative with an official home, and the story goes that one cold night a London "bobby" going his rounds on the Thames Embankment— that Haven of rest for homeless dere, llcts—found Mr: Choate upon a bench asloap, 4 M * Not knowing who the sleeper was, the "bobby" woke up, none too gently, and said: "Ain't yet got no honia?" . "No," replied Choate, "You see, I'm the American Anhilasswador." * * r At a rather enhart "At• Houle" in Mayfair, standing In the shade of a sombre hallway, 'Choate was mistaken for the butler by a bumptious 1ndlvid- ual, "Call me a cab, will you?" demand- ed. the latter, "You're a cab," said Choate, oblig- ingly, The 'shocked guest went and com- plained to his host, to be more shock- ed when he found that he •had been talking to tate American Ambassador. + * * Forthwith, the mortified guest went to Mr, Choate and began to apologize, profusely. „That's all mot," said the Ambae•, sador, soothingly, abut le you had been hirer about•it F would have called yon a hansom cab." • a * Then tiers is the story told by Mr. phoate about William M. Everts, when Everts was Secretary of State, They were going up in the State Depart ment elevator olio day—which was packed with young men who wanted jobs in the diplomatic service—when Evade remarked 'to Choate that it was the biggest collection for foreign missions: he ]hal ever seen: taken upl '1 Tee husband was sexing his wife away on, a holiday, "Ellen, dear," he said, "hadn't You, better take some notioS with you to white away the time?" "Oh, no, 'William," she re- piled; "you'll be,sending me some let- ters," FINDS TURTLE IN SWIM1diING POOL Sucked in by the hose pipe used to MI the deck pool on the Cunard- er Mauretania during • week -end cruises, the baby turtle in the ple• tore was found swimming in the sea water by Miss Edith McNutt, 'a voy- ager. She decided to make a pet of it and ,evidently seems satisfied with her success. Widow of Astronomer Obtains New Pictures of Hottest Planet Dark spots and yellowish, spots have been photographed for the first time on the surface of the planet Mercury, smallest -and hottest of the planets, by Mine. G. Camille Flamniarlon, widow of the famous French astronomer of that name, and were reported recently to the Academy of Sciences, in Paris, by M. Ernest Esclangon. Since M, Flaunt -melon's death Mme, Flammarion has occupied herself with observations through the telescope which M. Flammarion used. Recently conditions were favorable for observa- tions of Mercury, and Mme. T'lam- marion succeeded in obtaining several excellent -photographs; something sel- dom possible because of the nearness of Mercury to the sun so that it never is seen except just after sunset and when the earth's sky usually is too bright for good planetary photography. The new photographs agree, M. Es- olangnon told the academy, in showing some fairly definite markings, especial- ly a whitish or yellowish area slightly south of the planet's equator and pro- nounced darker areas both north and south of this brighter one. The markings seem not to corres- pond exactly with those which other astronomers have believed that they saw by eye, but since these eye obeer- vattons always have differed greatly among themselves their failure to match the photographs is not surpris- ing. The surface of Mercury receives about seven times more solar heat per square mile than the earth. Astrono- mers imagine that the Planet's endue is unprotected by an atmosphere and must be burned virtually to a cinder. No one knows what the actual surface is, whether cindery dust, volcanic ash, or something more mysterious, A Respite "011, lingering is a lovely word! A heart-beat falling into space Or tremor of a golden chord; Tile spell that binds the wandering breeze Above the shaken orange.trees. Let us not Spoil the dainty sorrow 13y touch or whisper. This sweet death When Ttme, indulgent, holds his breath Lasts but a- moment. Hold it feat, Forgetti.tg that there is a morrow in this, our respite from the past. For lingering al a lover's sign And, by 50)110 miracle, our eyes May lock, Your spirit sunk in nine." —Merle( iIine, in the Sunday Tenn. "Do you favor compslliag mar- ried men to wear thumb rings to distiugulsh them from single men?" "It'snot at all necessary. No husband who's been properly train- ed can ever be mistakeu for a single man" The Ocean woods' We wandered to the Pine Forest • That skirts the Ocean's foam, The lightest wind was in its nest, The tempest in its home. The whispering waves were ball asleep, The elands were gong to play, And on tee bosons of the deep The smile of Heaven lay; It seemed as it the hour were' one Sent from beyond the skies, Wihielh scattered from above the sat A 115111 of Paradise. We paused meld the pines that stood The giants et the waste, Tortured by storms to shapes as rude As serpents interlaced, And soothed by every azure breath, That under heaven is bl'ow4, To harmonies and hues beneath,' As tender as its own: Now all the treetops lay asleep, Like green waves en the sea, As still as fu the silent deep The ocean woods may be. ,—Percy Bysshe Shelley, in "7'! Iaecollection." ea— The ;poorest marksman may oeca- :ioualiy hit the target. Owl Laff Two tramps met at ilio end of a long ,and unsuccessfat day's begging. Both, were tired and hungry, hank—"Didn't you make anything,. 13111? What about that lionise I saw 'Viet looking at—the big one with the , opeeewindow?" Bill—"Dichee; trouble to rile, 1 look- ed in the window and saw two girls playing, on one piano, so I guessed they were too poor for me to worry." A ladies', aid society is a' group of women' organized' to pry the preacher's salary loose from their husbands. Miss Smoke and Mr, Ash were Mar- ried recently at Iowa City, Iowa, Mr, Ash is instructor at University of Mis- souri, but teaches English and not chemistry, by way of praying there is -nothing in a name, • "Turn oft the beat" Where were the Clinkers? The ehildrea should he refined. The heat of passion had vanished. "Where there is smoke there is lire." - The bride was a bit dense but the groom was fine. "There'll be hot time in the old town. lto-night" Other columnists are welcome to what is lett. Little Daughter—"Why is father singing so much to -night?" Mother—"He is trying to sing the baby to sleep," Little Daughter—"Well, it 2 was baby, I'd pretend I was asleep," Caution to Young Editors If you take the advice of the fellow who says he doesn't care to see his name In the paper, you are making a great mistake. Clarence-"Do„ZZou know what your one great detect is?" Isabel—"I simply can't think:' Clarence—"Right—but I didn't think you'd acknowledge it A man unaccustomed to praising his wife went out of his way to call her an angel. "Mary," be said one morning recently, "you are an angel," and she felt charmed all day, Itl'the .evening she ventured to ask him why she had been so honored. "Well," said the wily man, "you are always flitting about; yon are always harping on things; and by your' own account, you, have nothing to wear." Alexander—"Which is right: 'The girl began to walk home,' or 'The girl started to walk Thome'?" Horatio—"Wino was the girl?" Silence may be golden, but It evi- dently takes a greenback to matte it so, according to the fellow who tens this one; Lawyer—"Mr. Peek, your wife has been arrested and is being held in- communicado. But the police chief is easy and a little mon07—" Henry Peck—"Fine, Fine, and tell him that there's tea dollars for him for every day he can keep her that way." • Our idea of a heavy hint is some- thing that should be dropped. Doctor—"Deep breathing, you un- derstand, destroys' microbes." Patient—"But, doctor, how can I force them to breathe deeply?" Budget Blues The baby daily I1i110d away, lie got no vitamin called A, His hair fell out, his tooth was loose, He could not have the orange juice. This baby is a little dear, And so aro oranges, we hear; But lest the little chap should hate us, Lot's try to rear hint on tomatoes. It Is unofficially that the state motto of Nevada has been revised to read: "Divorce in haste; repeat at leisure." Mother—"What did your father say when lie saw his broken pipe?" Innocent—"Shall 1 leave out the swear words, mother dear?" Mother—"Certainly, my darling." Innocent—"Then I don't think he rald anything." In training a child for a junior part- ner, you also train yourself, City Vistor: "You're quite wrong in considering the birds a nuisance; they devour: insects and caterpillars," Farmer: "Thanks for telling nee, It's a great consolation to know that they eat my fruit merely for dessert" "Why should I marry?" said a con Brined old plaid, "I don't need a husband. I have a dog, a parrot and a cat" "But that has nothing to do with it", "Oh, yes, It has. The dog growls .all day; the parrot swears the whole time; and the cat spends every night out. That's en- , ough for ala." c4 `A ya—Stity4.0X 1kw Declares Plants Have Regular Sleeping Hours Plants sleep too—some by day and Some by night, A flashlight expedi- tion to a gardenreyeais a sleepy crew, as different from the bold lite of day hours as human beings curled in sleep are from human beings rushing for suburban trains. Dawn is too late, and dusk is too soon—ouo must catch the plants after they have had time to respond to total darkness, to the fall in temperature and to the action of the dew. The beans droop; the pea blossoms nott; that -succulent but accursed weed pudslane turns its leaves edge upward instead of spreading them flat upon the ground. The clover folds its tre- foils in various patterns, sometimes bowing the third leaflet over the others as if In benediction, The single roses fold all their petals inward; the. Pop- pies shut up like clamshells; the as- ters curl their petals inward. Meanwhile the scraggly evening primrose of the roadside seems to don fresh clothes at dusk, a coarse -leaved weed that sometimes fools the care- less weeder of a calendula bed and always looks withered in daylight opens fresh petals and becomes a gar- den ornament—it is the evening lych- nis, cousin of the gay roelt-garden plants; and many a Rower seems to unload an extra burden of fragrance at night. Perhaps that is an Illusion, a the old Hindu theory that plants Prayed was a11 illusion: They did -stand or bow, as the 'daily temperature changed, but it *as Slot in deference to man.mailo idols. 'Plante 'respond . to day 'and night, heat and cold, -aridity and moisture, but in their own ways. Queer She's very likely, any minute, To lose her purse and al 1tite' money in it; But not the verse she made at break 'Scrawled day, Scrawled while she dressed.and tacked somewhere away. At tea -time, Sirius, miles above, Is nearer to her than her kitchen stove; And should liar lover chance to bring A rose, she Mee it better than a ring. She hears, in some tall pine or other, The wind, but not the wise words of her mother. —Lillian Minor, in The Common- weal. No Farm Poor Victoria Colonist (Cons.): A news• Paine man has been investigating the MUMS of distress among the farmers o fthe Prairie Provinces. The con- eluisions he reaches are that some are stock market poor, some land poor, sumo poor through extravagance, but ho Beard of relatively few broke' through farming operations. In other 1 words, most 01 these farmers who stuck to farming through thick and • tiee and who built up reserve funds with their profits in the fat years are able to weather the present low twice , of Wheat. Conduct We should teach God's glory day by day, not by words only, often not by words at all, but by our conduct. It you wish your neighbor to see what God is tike, let tient gee what Ile can make o0 like. Nothing is so 1/Oedipus as example. -•-C. Kings- ley. Truth is as impossible to be soil- ed by any outward tone as the sun- beant.—John Milton, zs mom l l►ililUleplli iF V)t ars ('7;• esi• ��//• �orYau and Baby ion SA YTS S P sicca go,ps LLO{t,d an,, a.m,5.1 f Classified Advertising RE311A7iiY8T13 a LBS. PR1NTS, 51141 010 VII1LVIur, !3 51,0x.• A. MaCroery CO., Chatham. ()Mario. O112T1IDAY P.B12SQNALITY . P17R- it) 1 UMY'S. Character sketch on bottle; Finest quality, enchanting odolma. Real novelty gift Send 60c with each exact birthdate, Zodiacal Perfume Co., 1300 734, Ottawa, Ontario, Stand Right I like to see a man proud of the Place in which he lives. f like. to see a roan who lives ill it so that his place will be • proud of him. Bo honest, but hate no one; overturn a man's wrong -doing, but do not over- turn him unless it must be done in overturning the -wrong. Stand with him while ho is right, and part with him when he goes wrong.—Abraham Lincoln, bar' THY COMPL IONS Healthy complexions come firom healthy systems. Free the body of poisons with Feen-a-mint. Effective in smaller doses. All druggists sell this safe, scientific laxative. FOR CONSTIPATION t@J 1S I C y./ RA Sonne for daily ase. Ointlnerlt to heal skin irritations. Thiourea Ideal after betbfag. Seana, 2G°. Ointment 2C,a d1 ,,'®r°I,,n, 25a SPRAS Rub Minord'a i" neatly, Is penetrates sore ligoment., ,,l ny. inantnata/iott, .u0010., heal., 17 Puts you on your quoin R HUSBAND TEASED HER But not for long ! " I started taking itruschen Salts for biliousness, and for the last two years I have been perfectly free from an attack, Now I continue to take them, es I End they keep trio in perfect health, lily husband used to joke about me taking Krusehen Salts ; now he takes them himself, so do my children. My sincere thanks,' —Mel, G. P. When your gastric or digestive juices refuse to flow, your food, instead of becoming absorbed into your system, sitnply collects and ferments inside you, producing harmful acids and gases which give, rise to biliousness, heartburn and flatulence, 1(rusoheih is a combination of six mineral sults, which goes right to the root of the trouble. It first stimulates the clow of gastric and other juices to aid digestion, and then ensures complete, regular and unfailing elimina- tion of waste matter every day. And that mean a blessed end to bilioasneas, and a renewed and whole -hearted enjoyment of your food without the slightest fear of having to pa" the old painful penalty. • Wier P Y IME raI V Ethem a OW -Sof Borden's Choc,. l� able Melted Milk when they come In from achoolor ploy. Children Invg It, and as many a vire mother has discovered, 11 h highly digestive and Invaluable hot building resistance against sickness. CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK ISSUE No. 34--'31^ The Longer and Wider Fty Catcher That Will Not Dry Aeroxon is freeing thousands of Canadian homes from the dangerous disease -bearing fly. This handy spiral fly catcher is coated with a specially pre- pared glue; fragrant and sweet, which wilt not dry or lose its attractiveness to dies. Ask for Aeroxon et any drug; grocery or hardware store. It is the fly catcher with the push pin and the wider and longer ribbon ---good foe three weeks' service. AE Gets the fly every time - sots4gonta J. EDGAR M, GAMIEST, P,O. Box 23, Sherbrooke, feu 0, a l tna skrvy E a: •, Y ty.F,i4 V