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The Clinton News Record, 1931-08-27, Page 3specially good For CHILDREN. Children can eat all they want o[ this nourishing. whole milk food. On gra• ham crackers ... toasted .. or in tempting sand- wiches for cool lunches. • Velveeta contains all the elements of rich whole milk. It is digestible as milk itself. Made in Canada Made by the makers of Kraft Cheese and Kraft Salad Dressing Nortlh . American Continent ich Field For Prehistoric Animals Discovery of Phytosaur Armor in Texas but One of Many Traces of Early Monsters Tho discovery in Texas of the dor- sal armor of a giant phytosaur, a croc- odile -like creature which lived more than. 50,300,000 years ago, emphasizes the fact that the North American sou- (Anent is still a <fertile field for pale- ontologists, seeping the fossils 60 pre- historic animals, Traces of many species of these monsters have been found fromtime to time. Judging front thenumber of tracks found, the dinosaur, or "terrible rep- tile," seems to have been the most common in all parts of the country. Beside the Connecticut River -near Northampton are preserved dinosaur tracks said to bo the meet perfect over found. Nearer Now York, at Woodbridge, N.J., dinosaur tracks were discovered last year measuring twenty inches across the toes. They • tion to the machine and providing an ermarr are thought to date hack to the ere- ��t�'®�°s advertisement for the owner. I racoons period of the Mesozic Age, I The arrangement of ventilation In The haunts of the dinosaur in New Si®t machineJersey were flsrt•discovered, however, combination with Cho heat generated is 1858, and a mounted skeleton is in by the electric bulbs. is said to safe- the State Museum at Trenton, •Wide . Variety OF Goods Is guard the goods against frost and In the Prgvince of Alberta and some Parte of the -Western States dinosaur bones have been most frequently found and most easily excavated. Some huge tracks, thirty-eight inches long have been discovered in Colo - j1} Sold Through 40,000 Auto- matic Devices in Operation Owing to the strict legislation gov- erning 'shop hours in Denmark the automatic vendor has become a popu- lar selling medium and a special in- dustry producing slot machines has been developed, says a recent report of the Dept. of Commerce of the Un- ited •States. Sales at first were con- futed to cigars and cigarettes. Now, however, a wide variety of goods is handled by the 40,000 machines which' are estimated to be in use. Many of the models offered of late by the local industry are much more complicated and better fitted than the original cigarette machine, which be- cause of the uniform price of Cigar- ettes and their standard packing is one of the simplest types of auto- matic machines, says the report. Among the new models is a ma- chine adapted for the sale of an ex- traordinary number of different to 4,926 units and 1,298,000 crowns, articles. The later models' are so ex- respectively. ranged that the customer can assure No figures are available covering himself of the quality of his purchase, exports and imports, but it is report - each compartment being fitted with ed that Danish automatic machines mirrors and illuminated by an electric dampness, while sun blinds can be fit- ted as a protection aseinst direct sun- light. • The question of the protection of slot machine sales against both theft' and the use of spurious•coins has had close attention. Additional security against burglary is offered in some of the new models by a cast aluminum front plate and every effort has been made to make the machine sensitive enough so that false coinswill fail to operate the releasing Mechanism. The Danish industry engaged in the production of this type of machine is well established and of long ex- perience and is making rapidly in- creasing sales in both domestic and foreign markets. Evidence of the striking development of the industry can be had from the production fig- ures. In 1927 a total of 1,616 units were turned out, valued at 662,000 crowns; in 1.928 the number of ma- chines manufactured rose to 2,040 units and the value to 752,000 crowns; while in 1929 the figu.as had increased light; some of the machines have a separate slot for each compartment. The top and base of the machines are likewise illuminated. This serves the double purpose of drawing attest - have become a very considerable. article of, export and are sold 'n.0 ouch countries as the Netherlands, Switz- erland, England, and Sweden. Ma- chines are also manufactured abroad under Danish patents. The latest., field to be entered by minimal Nowathe automatic vending machine in Copenhagen is the restaurant math. 'tryt, the opening of two restaurants of thihaving been announcedo EIHIIIIJONequipment, according to reports, will I be furnished by a vending machine manufacturer of Berlin, Germany. All the visible parts will be made of pol- ished metal. The walls will be faced with marble and topped by an elec- trically -lighted glass molding on which will appear the names, of the foods served below. It is also planned to place ambu- lant automatic machines at railway stations and on the principal boule- vards. These vendors will supply both beer and lemon soda water. Such machines are reported to cost about 2,500 crowns apiece (the Danish crown equals about 26 cents United States Currency) and hive a capacity of 55 liters. They are equipped with refrigeration units and also with in. genious apparatus which manufac- tures a paper cup for each customer. —a— Sensitive Puffball Mushroom Is Poor Man's Weatherglass "The poor man's weatherglass" i3 a mushroom, so named because it ;o so sensitive to changes in the moisture of the air that It serves as a baro - OPENS FRIDAY, AUGUST 28 meter, says The United States De - Keen enjoyment and inspi- partment of Agriculture. It grows in woods, sandy places, and on partly linden followavisit to the largest cleared land. As it develops, the two annual exposition. Take a dayouter coats of the puffball containing br two—or the entire fourteen 1 the spores split into segments, but re- days—seeing things new and 7` main united at the top of the ball. he two coatings vary in compositiim strange from other lands, listen- ' and do not absorb moisture in the Ing to music of famous bands, ' sante degree. The result is that 10 or the Exhibition 2000 -Voice wet weather or when there is consid- horus; watching some sport + emaabe suit tnidstuofirnomChtoheaiprlatnhte. seg- spectacle of international re -i, In dry weather the inner layer con. rado; and in Diuoeaur Canyon, near !Flagstaff, -Ariz,, 300 tracks were found lby one expedition, One of the large0t skeletons of this beast was found in Utah in 1023—the diplodocus of the species. This specimen was seventy- one feet long andthe pieces •diecoyer ed weighed about 52,000 pounds. This creature is supposed to have lived 170,000,000 yens ago. Mastodon, it is believed, were abundant here about 25,009 years ago, whereas this animal was thonght'to have become extinct in Europe ;1,000 centuries back. Mastodon teeth seven Welles long have been discovered in the ocean off the New Jersey coast; and the vicinity of Niagara Falls has furnished a fertile field for such dis- coveries. Near Medicine Bluff.% Wyo., was found the skeleton of one of ,the largest of the prehistoric reptiles, the. brontosaurus, or thunder lizard, now in the Peabody Museum at New Ha- ven. When alive, its weight is esti- mated to have been. about forty tone, and it lived about. 120,000,000 years ago. The jaw of a tithanothere, to which family belong the modern horse, tapir and rhinoceros, was found in the White River Bad. Lands of , South`Dakota in 1846. Water Babies Condensed front Safety Education By Readers' Digest. In a village of lagoon dwellers, peo- ple who raise their thatched houses on pilus in a water village half a mile from shore, T watched the parents of the Manus tribe train. their small children to meet light-heartedly and efficiently the continual challenge of their precarious water existence, writes Margaret Mead, author of "Growing Up in Guinea," who spent six months aulong the Manus. And there was march in the educational methods of these lithe brown Baynes,' in G string or grass skirt, which could be trausptaated with profit into our educational systems. In the first place, the parents con- sidered that the physical training of their children was a serious matter, not one to be left to chance, nor the casual ministrations of other children —thy primitive equivalent 01 ignorant nurse maids. The baby's first step, its first experience In the water, its first attempt to haadle a paddle and a punt, all were carefully au_.lrvised by a pa- tient, attentive parent. They never forced the children to walk or swim or climb too soon. But a child was never allowed to go babk- wards, to refuse to do something which he had shown he was strong enough to do. We are all familiar with children among ourselves, who start to walk and fall down, getting a painful bruise or a bad fright, and subsequently refuse to walk again for several months The Manus are in. own; or the Grandstand tracts more than the outer and causes, fa aC geantgest unfoldedon the world's 1 the segments to curve in sharply. Be. outdoor stage. i cause of their habit of splitting Into , starlike segments this group of fungi The Canadian National Exhibi is known as the earth stars, and Gees - tion is different, bigger, more er hygrometricus is known both as the wondetful,more diversified than baromsand as e pour man's eter weatherearth glasstar,. Tho pufthfball any other exposition,. Send now . mushrooms are` not poisonous. for illustrated literature describ- g in detail the forthcoming Canadian National Exhibition. Mail reservations now for ttOR1ENTIA," gglamorotu spectacle of the Eastern World—nightly grand - hand pageant; also for the 4 concerts by internationally famous EXHIBITION 4.00o-VOICB CHORUS in the olifeum. GRANDSTAND PAGEANT "ORIENTIA".-=Reservedseats$1.00, ao is wnmen don't ,$ox seatf $1.50 each (5 or 6 chairs in stand tigto trouble , each dux). "They don't. Well, you just ;EXHIBITION 2000 -VOICE watch thein on a bargain counter." HORUS S at., Mu291 T hat'',e t. y;,Titer, Sept. 8 dd Sat., Sep* .Gad„9o°rreseryed 7Sc. ox airs 91,00. AUG. 28.to SEPTee2e 1931 oiS 1441ST PE NT $ TIQ W$a UTWYEXI QK 21.000.000 0111/14111,0 i» I,i.II,PMNGS,PARK, EQUIPMENT �Ident iMuuSrd. w. wATis amoral lIlanagentr S A SCAR Judge not; the workings of ado brain And of his lteat•t thou canst not 1Vhat ooks to thy flim Dyes a strain, to God's pure light may only be A scar, brought from a well-worn field, ' Where thou. wouldst only• faint and Yield, • -Adelaide Proctor and quick footed over the treacherous muddy shallows of the lagoon at low tide. They can be trusted to carry father a glowing cinder to light his pipe, without fear that they will fall and set the light thatched house ou fire. They can climb all over the big canoes, work their way out along the slender booms of the outrigger, slip into the water and swim beside the canoe, one hand on the outrigger, un- til weary of this they climb aboard agaife. At about two or two and a half, their fathers make them small canoes of their own, tiny craft, four or five feet long, simply shallow wooden shells hollowed out of small tree trunks. aIi these little canoes, the children 'race and play about the la- goon, learning to paddle accurately, to judge distances correctly, so that they will not catch the outrigger which pro• jests from one side of the canoe, in the house piles, when they bring their canoes up to the house landing plat- forms. About the same time, their parents begin training them to hand- ling larger canoes, and it is no uncom- mon sight to see a child of three or four, slowly punting along a 12-001 canoe, while father site patiently, cross legged, upon the platform. The Manus are a busy people, ever up and about their fishtug, their trading, their canoe building or voyaglug; but they are never too busy to spare the time to properly traln their. small children, because they realize that upon good early physical adjustment the child's future efficiency depends, When the whole atm of the parental training is to stake children feel at terested is the e'.itd's making the home in the world, feel self-reliant, maximum physical adjustment of easily resourceful, surely contldeut, which he. is capable; they have de• they do not try to deter a child by the lighted praise and vociferous applause sayings which are so often on adults' for the baby's first ate t, cold Indif• lips eaten ourselves. "Don't do that, fereuce for the baby who fatly down you are too little." 'Your legs aren't and refuses to take another step. The long enough."' All such counsel tends only way itt which the child can re- I to breed fearfulness, lack of cou6- capture the delightful' admiration of deuce in children, and a Manus child his elders, is to stifle his cries, strug wito Jacked self confidence would be gle earnostly'to' Itis little bruised legs, a tiutsanee to himself and to everyone else. A child who attempts some- thing beyond his strength is diverted, rather than discouraged. The Manus child consequently grows up com- pletely sure of himself, sure that he can handle , ny situation, afraid of ,Owl Laffs Household Help; We clean your dirty kids for a. quarter' -Ad. in the'. Elmira, ,N.Y. Advertiser. Daughter—"Nothing gives the thrill of those three little words, 'I love you'," Daddy Dear—"How about' those three little words, 'Enclosed Find Cheque'?" The worst. fire menace in this coun- try—The fellow who ie 'always firing off his mouth. Some people notice that the days are 'getting longer;others that the 'nights are getting shorter. To anhonest man a debt 18' never out- lawed, regardless of: what the law may be, Mr, Perklnsop—"Do you act towards your wile the way you did before you married her?" Mr. Livingston—"Exactly. I' re- member just how I used to act whoa I first fell in love with her. I used to lean over the fence In. front df her house and gaze at her shadow on the curtain, afraid to go in. I act the sante way now." It now costa more to amuse a child than it once did to educate his father. When a man wants his handkerchief he reaches around and yanks it out of his pocket; when a girl wants hers, she arises, shakes herself, and picks it off the floor. Yesterday's neglect causes moat of to -day's worries. Sweet Young Thing (to hotel clerk) —"How much are your rooms?" %Iotel Olerk—:'Two dollars up to twelve.” Sweet Young Thiug—"How much for one all -tight?" Out of depression comes necessity; Out of necessity emerges invention; Out of intuition grow new methods of work; Out of work will come renewed prosperity. and try agaiu. For the very small baby who falters, ami hesitates, the parents have only indifference and temporary inatteu• tion; au older child who falls down oe makes some other awkward mistake, is likely to be actually punished, so • nothing, for certainly much of tee. that the Manus child doesn't look ' basis of fear Is lead is the frights, the about to see if Mother Is near enough failures of early childhood. to make it worth while to cry, but I One other good effect tele type of rattler looks'abo::: in devout (tope that childhood training has. The. children no ohs the setae his stupid wawa. 1leant to tape a realistic view of the hvet'se Instead of sitting idle, de - We, on the other Mann, aro too anxious'tarred from the activity which they to console the stumbier, to surround , it was more necessary for good heads him with wand .tans, kind words, and covet, and dreaming of seven league to be used hard. We simply must take comforting sans :Hees,' Thls associa• poets witiclt would enhance the power better charge of our awn affairs than bad method or tion of a method of o°with ti reward is a training children not about, happy 101 their short legs, they are up and in Continuous activity in we have dobe, in the past, and to Flo to he awkward, careless, stupid 1n which they are always becoming more that something more than mere atter" is needed. their physical adjustments• fable, more sure of themselves. They 1 t blame, not their tools their Gladys—`Why is Dorothy so angry? The papers gave a full account of her wedding." Eloise—"Yes, but they put it In that Miss Biackfeld wee. married to the well-known collector of antiques:" A bride, so the story goes, sent a dollar to New York recently for a copy of a boors advertised as "What Every Young Married Womaw Ought to Know." She received a cook book. Jacob—"I've a good Job now, Reu- ben, working in a shirt factory Reuheit—"flow does it happen that you are not working to -day?" Jacob—"Oh, they aro ntakiug night shirty Ulla weals." 33111—"Our oat has kittens.' Sue—`"What did yott expect have?" Gayful Gladys Giggles—"A bachelor is a man. who believes in freedom of the sea of matrimony," Most people get what they deserve, but COW are willing to admit 1t. Brains and Character It to 'vD .�. ^x..144, " Y �.ki �tii.•f ' Z CIAG1CF. BUMS .i S m-' e.�Lalve1 Nave"' ', oe S'ia`m 't� ®f �'} an '� a nuns �'iyE.,'ty1���{ a in Tests Xt17L-N7]Dw st.V . I O CA'1AI,OGUi+7, Classified Advertising BrinrCI 3$B, NOVO T1$ES5, SPOUT' Auto Jlj A L Accessorlca, Tires., Snorts Ooods.• Bicycles., Audios, Dig money Public Health Service Find savers. Toronto Tire and Radio Sales Heavily Built Ate Usually Stronger Than Slender of Same Weight S llo„ 1,91 -a -e "Dundas West, Toronto. Different Languages of Sexes in Tribes The difference in the language used How strong is a man? The answer by men and women of the same tribe, Sas suet been made er the United discussed by Sir James George Fra - States Public Health Service through! zer, English anthropologist, in his re - orally, series of tests given to 500 men, Gen -1 cent book, "Garnered Sheaves," calls orally, heavily built men were Sound to mind the varied words employed by the Incas of Peru to describe the same object or operation. Spinning, for instance, by a woman was called "buhca," but when a man engaged in this task it was called "buhco." Before the . Inca youths` .of royal blood were invested with arms, they were tested as to their ability to .acct the exigencies of warfare, such as the making of shields, weapons or even sandals, of any material available. Thus they practiced the manufacture of woolen sandal cords by twisting wool with at small stick, This dtethod of twisting was called "milluy," and as the work was for men, women did not use the word. According to news from Parte, it begins to look as though the Old Family Album Wright servo as the lat- est style book.—Tho Christian Science Monitor. Manchester Guardian (Liberal): It is quite possible to have a strong character without very bright brains, and there may bo a temptation, as Sir Josiah Stamp has suggested, to as- sume that if people only had char - aster everything else could be allowed to go." For the better correction of that attitude he enunciated the defi- nite doctrine "The world is fall of very good and very stupid people gad a horrible mess they have got us into" —a very sound and stirring proposi- tion, though it might be strengthened by the rider that some of the people who have made the mess are not only stupid but are also not particularly good. And it is also certain that we shall never get out of the mess with- out men of character to help us. But when all is said and done, there never was a time in the world's history when to be stronger than slender then of the same weight. The tests' wore made to ascertain the pulling, pushing, handgrippiag, Lifting and lung Dower of men be- tween the ages of 20 and 34, betwesa the weight of 120 and 169 pounds, and between the heights of 63 and 70 inches - The greatest pulling power was de- monstrated by men is the heaviest weight class, between 160 and 169 pounds. Men is the two heaviest classes, 109 to 159 and 160 to.109 pounds, tied as the most powerful pushers. In each of these weight groups the taller men proved to be the hest pushers, with a force of 121 pounds, the record figure. In the handgrippiag contest the tall- est and heaviest men gave the most powerful hand grips, with a force of 108.48 pounds. But the shortest men la the heaviest group were the most Powerful lifters, lifting ou as averato 519,2 pounds. The men having the greatest lung power were found among the shortest itt the 150.159 pound class. Their lung force was measured at 154 milli- meters. So far as general strength went, it was found that the taller men were for their weight the less ^trength they had on the average, and the shorter 1 they were for their weight the strong- er they were. This rule applied through practically all weight grcupe. I As a rule heavy men were found to be stronger than. man of a lighter , weight. Men is the 63.84 inch 011s8 were found to be tate strongest in the 120.129 pound class, as they were In ' the next weight class, 130.139 pounds.' and also in tate 110-149 pound class. However, the tallest men in the 150- 159 class proved to be nn egeeptiou tit the general rule, for they were bound to be the strongest. But the general rule held actin In the heaviest class, 160.169 pounds, where the shortest men were the strongest, The Manus parents aro a100 ax., earn o a , eeediug careful not to frighten a canoes, their paddles, for mistakes, Chinese Fisherman Spears child, Dither purposely or accidentally. !but themselves, because they have a Son Thinking He Was a Fish When a baby has taken its first steps, clear and accurate knowledge of how 8hauglle-a Chang Ahtsiu, a fisher - its mother or' father puts it down in these mistakes wen made. They aro man, 41 years old, 'who lives within the water at low tide, leaves 1t there healthy, flexible minded children, sn• three miles of Shanghal'b Intornation- tor just a few minutiae, repeats the ex- premety sato in a dangerous world, al Settlement„ speared and Wiled hie perfinent next day. Later, he will be made so by the tutelltgence and pe - only son, thinking that the boy was Permitted to , play about in the that- nonce with which thou parents train tows under the house, au alert parent them so early that they have not time on the verandah or within doors, lis' to learn to make Inept adjustments to the physical. universe. toning for a cry which would mean that the child had strayed out into' deeper water. The child is not made •To a Sunday School Teacher conscious of continuous supervision; How God once made the Heavens acid no hail storm of "don'ts," "be care -i the Earths full" rains upon his playground; he,And all that in them is, a wondrous is trained to use his own judgment as way; much as possible, bu,t he is not allow- The starlit story of tate Christ Child's od to get had frights wheft his own]3it•th, • two-year-old judgment fails. The 1 And how, kind Christ hung, nailed, 'Manus Would find our pleasant little' one Spring day— way of accustoming children to the These I have told my son -and gentle Sir Charles Hobhouse'in the Con - water by force, a brutal, horrid' cus- things " 1.1 temporary Review (London)) I Since tom, without any excuse. I Out of the Scriptures, bids of psalm the League, at it exists, is not the Manus 'parents, like their children,' and prayer, League envisaged by Germany or de - were given this sante training witeti Titus fashioning for his faith, soft, try- sired by France at •the time of its they were little. All their lives they : ' gile wings ' ' creation, it remains ,n authority dis• Uwe lived neon the water, managing.' To lift him into blossoms -sweet appointing and not wholly acceptable canoes, hoisting sails, carrying great'1 Spring air! to the two nations whose relations and water pots, balancing babies on the Noty you must teach him—it is time the chief cause of un - differences backs of their necks, while they stand he knew— rest in es are a 1155. Atter a hard day's work ,spearing fish near his stud hut, Chang was dos• lag 'at dusk on the bank of the cauat when his wife shook him excitedly, pointing to a splashing in the water near by, and declared- it must be a very large fish. Chang Jumped to his beet and threw his spear with perfect aim, only to flud when be pulled it In that he had p1e•rSecl the body of his 5 -year-old son just below the heart. League of Nations Europe. At no time of fie led the punt of a large canoe. They About the fruit of that forbidden existence has it been more necessary aro so efiefeut that children are never tree; or more imperilled. Every problem made to doubt their world through Of Eve who tempted and of Cain who that concerns, interests and baffles the, 1automatic- ginning atic- tial` danbting parents slew; human intelligence 15 now a m I nailed' Wed Christ hung(, The child learns from the vary bei And how h ally referred to Geneva. ginning that the physical world can + on Calvary, .......-- be be handled, is handfed, every minute,' Forgive ate, ft, at Bret, with tearful Australia Eats, Most Sugar every hour, by all the grown up people, eyes, with sure fooled, clear eyed compet T watch you light . the way from London.—Australia consumes more envy, Those same adults never per- Paradise! sugar in proportion to its population mit the child to oven consider that he Violet Alieyn Storey. ban any other country in the world, will not do as well as they do Peace In Europe New Statesman and Nation (Lon- don) ; We are convinced that no poi' aliment peace „1.4 possible in Europe unless some of the provisions of t tt Treaty of Versailles are rectified' by the constitutional means provided in the Covenant. Ever since the Wat Europe has been built on a lie—the hr that Germany was solely responsible for the war, and as long as we ref us: frankly to admit that lie and to a".is cept the Implications of that adm- sion, Germany must remain danger- ous and unstable, ani! Europe must live on a volcano. • with America second and Britain a The results of this system of train- - I eonceive the sta-110 of the blessed close th,rd. These facts were men ing are truly amazing. .Children of to be a total forgetfulness or absence boned. by Dr, T. Drummond Shields when he opened the first Empire Sugar Conference hare, attended by ngs n t delegates f>:om.nine countries to now and then—she's not counting on :climb up and down Cho slippery house whole happiness of heaven.—Rev. discuss sugar -cane production and're "I hear your wife is thrifty and three are perfectly, at home amid the of self and to consist of beholding the, saves for a rainy dart" "Well, she. perils of their water world. They can good and the happiness of others, so puts a few shillings i the bank swim .00 well as they walk; they can that every individual will enjoy the for y " ( 'i they tread . Chelr sure rein Cloves, search. more than a sprinkle, pies, tau way . . BORDEN'S . CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK IS GOOD AT ANY TIMiE ERE le o delightful change otor nthat your o a kluncheom, plcnk6 and u! children will lova. Borden's Chocolate Malted Milk is rich and cteamy, with a real MALT flavour that pun a finishing touch to any meal. Buy a tin of Borden's Chocolate, Melted Milk today—Your dealer has 1t In pound and half Pound sizes. ewe 14:a ??a,dun az... a Kennedy & Menton 421 College 81., Toronto tiartey-Uavldson Distribucorr Write at once For our bargain tint or used motorcycles. Terms arranged, Best for Nu and Bail too When?rano". WBS y'ounS she used: BABY'S WN AP Then as Now-theleading Canadian Soap for Toilet and Nursery. "Batt for Yon and Baby 7'os" In lee. Indietdual cartons err ALBERT SOAPS LTO. - MONTREAL IIF ]OULIEfli READ FOR iNDI EST O \ "For some years previous to 1922 I was alibied to indigestion, with head- aches and thousands of stars sparkling in my eyes, which prevented me front reading. 1 decided to try Nrttselten Salts. That was August, 1922, and I have taken a little in my hist morning Cup of tea ever shit. I now eat any- thing, and am entirely foe from indigestion or `stars. "A•--3, C. Now let it be said'quite definitely, that what ICruseltcrt did for hint, it will do for everybody else who suffers front indigestion as he did. The fact is that '• the tittle daily dose" first stimulates the flow of gastric juices to aid digestion, and then ensures complete, regular, and unfailing elimination of ell waste natter every day. Soon after you start on Kruschen you will begin io feel the benefit. You will iiad to your satisfaction that you are able to enjoy your food without any distressing after-effects. And, as you persevere, you will see that the relief which ICruschen brings is tastang relief. 1 Neighbor Suggested Compound and non •tone little ill Res They can't get away, once they touch Aeroxon. There's something, in it that has say irresistible attraction for these household pests. A wider and longer ribbon provides a greater area, end the glue does not dry --good for 3 weeks' service, grocery & hardware atone. At dura, kr ry Soto Agents: S. 1300 A-11. 11 GBINIDST. P.O, Pox 22, Sherbroolce; Que C•".T HE . • Gets the fly every time, "'f IJAVE bean married for ten 1. years. I • had one child who would be seven years old now if ie bad Lived. "My husband and I are both -.era, fond of children. A neighbor told me about Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I have a been n taking it for abouttw omonths: "1t took away the pain 1 used to suffer and I am getting well and strong' This medicine is helping Mrs: Kenneth Cooper of 9 Davison St•, Halifax, Nova Scotia: IS will help lyoutoo. Won't you buy a botttc? VE C LEr.,i9I ISSUE No. 33—'31