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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1931-09-10, Page 3sinisamenanannamossay Finer' 'flavour ,dor all your salmis KRAFTOId-Pashiohed Boiled Salad Dress- ing has a piquant, freshly -blended flavour that adds stew pleasure to every salad dish. If offers delightfully rich smoothness .: yet has no oily tastc Best of all, k costs just one-half the price you're used to paying . , , A large; generous size 12 oz. jar costs only 25 sets s. Get some to -day: e7' r aahffonQ1 Boiled Salad { 4 MADE IN CANADA AN DA Made. by the Makers of Kraft Cheese and Velveeta. Rock Study Vastly Extends Earth's Age Geologist Turns Back Clock Seven Hundred Million Years Washington.—A vast aeon—known ' to geologists as Lipalian time-150,- 000,000 ime-150;000,000 years—appears to have drop- ped completely out of history, accori- ang to Professor Charles Schuchert of I¥ale University ih a report issued by tke National Research Council. Search the world over has failed to reveal the slightest clue to the er- lsant millenniums during which some ;of the most momentous events in the history of life on earth occurred. The !pages of rock on which the long story of life was written before man begun - to record events seems to have been torn out and thrown away for this period. The record of time, Prof. Schuchert explains, runs back in fairly gond order through the period known as 'Cambrian time, about 500.000,0PC years ago. Then there was abundant life in the great oceans. Many of the creatures had hard shells. They died, sank to the bottom and were buried in the mud. Through the millenniums the seas disappeared, the bottom mod became rock and was raised up into mountains. MOLLUSC DAYS, The fossils of the sea creatures were 'embedded in the rock, so that•geolo- ,gists today know what they looked like Ipnd what families they belong -d to. :Some of them were relatively enor- ontous creatures, measuring. from six to ,eight inches. They represent practi- tally all the divisions of the animal acingdom now found in the seas except those with backbones such as fish, *Mammals and reptiles. Seen in a museum exhibit today these lords of creation a half billion years ago look like very primitive 4creatures. But they are probaoly ;closer to the highest developed forms ;of life today than to the most comp:ex (forms which preceded theta and of ,which there is record.Just behind 'them lie the lost millenniums duritlg 14vlkich miimal life was beginning to take on the evolutionary processes ',which resulted in the mammals of many millions of years later, In the next oldest known' rocks, Prof. Schuchert says, there have been ound traces of some primitive sponges, some tiny protozoa -like crea- tures known as foraminifera, trails of worn -like creatures and of some un- known invertebrate animal, Thane Aro also limestone deposits of peculiar formation laid down ley tiny plants, the blue-green algae, who are still lousy in American rivers after almost a billion years. There also are traces of bacteria. Even some of these were already high in the scale of life, espe- ''efally the worn -like creatures known as annelids: SKELETON GROWTH MYSTERY. But, Prof. Schuchert says, "not one Of the known animals had yet learned r Send for This FREE ROOK. Maa the attached coupon and we will trend yours sops' of our new cool( book, "The Good Provider," with over a hundred delightful reclpea for puddings, pies, cokes. pastries. ere., and a wide variety of other things you can make tetter with— STCHARLES MiLK UNSWEETENEOJ EVAPORATED Borden Ca, Limited 115 George St, Toronto Send we free copy of your new cook book. N8 dd rrri . ..,...ww...- st,S.iI ' to- use lime for skeleton structures, either external or internal, and this when there met have been present a highly diversified mass of inverte. brates. We know that 'the pre -Cam•• Brian seas must have been replete with lime" salts in solution. If any of the animals had used lime they certainly would have been recovered by this 'time. This absence of skeletons is all the more astonishing since it would seem that there must have been an abundance of animals feeding on othe animals and on plants." Now, he points .out, it must bav taken a very long time for animals to have learned to make skeletons: --- either shell or bones. Consequently the Cambrian creatures and the crawl- ing worms of the next oldest rocks cannot have touched each .other in time. So. he says, "Lipalian time stands for the unrecovered interval during which the marine animals evolved mostly from very small floating and swimming forms without' exterior skeletons into the much .larger and highly diversified life of the Cambrian. How long Lipalian time lasted can only be guessea, since we have no guidance at all from radio -active min- erals or from rates 'f organic evolu- tion. "There was no more fundamental evolution during the whole of the paleozoic period (the time of the be. ginning of life) than is indicated by this interval, and we have guessed its duration to be of the order of 300,- 000,000 years. To be on the safe side in our table we have allowed only half as much time and the future alone can tell how near our guess is to the truth," The evolution of living creatures, Prof. Schuchert points out in his re- port on the possibility of determining the age of the earth from fossils nrd from the thickness of rocks laid down by sedimentation, appears to have gone on at such a variable rate throughout history that it is a very unreliable guide to elapsed time. Thus certain sea shells now living can be traced back practically with- out change for 400,000,000 years and the race dhows no signs of degenerat- ing through old age. On the other hand snail shells in an artificial lime created in Wisconsin evolved into a recognizably different species itt sixty years, On the basis of deposits of sedi- mentary rock, Prof. Schuchert made. up a calendar of the earth's age back to the beginning of the Archeozoic area -about 700,000,000 years. A Happy Normandy >ViIlage 1 Owl Laff& "Por a good apple Year the year has not boon too good, but for a bad apple Year the year has not been too bad," That le the classical phrase attributed to Norman apple -growers, It is- heard in a thousand variants: You can never get nearer the facts. 'Things :might have been. better, but then they might 1 'have been worse, ,On the positive side the Norman philosophy is lacking.! There' are no enthusiasms. Suporla,j tives' are eschewed, Everything is comparative. In my Norman village I constantly heard the noncommittal reply. The workmen Were puttingup an elaborate kitchen with incredible" complication of pipes to carry hot water from;room ' to room; and were painting and car- pentering and generally making' my old mill inhabitable in order to make it habitable. ' Would they gave finished in a weep? Surely' they were approaching tate end? They had already boon a month and a"half longer than they had led me to believe, Could I rely on them to i complete their task by Wednesday? "Why, as to that," said' the enrepre- neur, blowing up his forge, "as to that, it will certainty be well advanced.°' "What do you mean by well ad- vanced? Do you !heart It will be fin - fished or not?" "I cannot say 11 will be finished, and I cannot say it won't be finished: It I will be well advanced." "But you have told me that ford r most than a month, What am I to e think?" Women in Politics A. A. B. in the London Evening Standard (Ind. Cons.): (The Duchess of Athol' has recently written a book on women in politics.) The Acts enu- metated by the Duchess as passed since 1918, and due to female influ- ence, may lead to disastrous conse- quences in society, All this .egisla- tion and taut, beginning with nursery schools which tear the infant of two from its home, going on to companion- ate marriages, Scottosh "hand -fast" experiments, sexual. experience, lead inevitably to American promiscuity and Bertrand Russellism, which is simply a revival of Plato's Republic, whore "the father will he completely eliminated and have no responsibil- ity." He has precious little now, under Socialism. The- Duchess of Atholl has, of course, no sympathy with such barbarous and anti -social doctrines, and not the least service which her book has done is to.•,open people's eyes to the dangerous specu- lations of American professors• and, philosophic earls. Done to a Turn: A system of memory trahiing was being taught in a village schopl, nd the teacher was becoming -eh- husiastic. .'For instance; he said, :'supposing ou want to remember the name of a oet—Bobby Burns. Fix In your mind's ;eye a picture of a policeman n flames. See—Bobby Burns?" "Yes, I see," said a bright pupil. but liow Is one to know it does' sot °present Robert. Browning.?" a t y p 1. APPLICATIONS '/\ APPLICATIONS Are Filled As Far As Possible in the Order In Which nay Are Received. ONTARIO. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Far! Help Supplied Offering Annual Work Aro invariably Given the Preference. The Colonization and Immigration Branch of the Department;of Agriculture for Ontario will have availablea number of Experienced Married Men With Their Wives and Femllies—Married Couples Without Children-. Also Single Men, Punters requiring help will iia wegg advieea-to make early application to Geo. A. Elliott Jireetor of Colonisation Parliament 131de„ Toronto; . On t. File Your Applioatlon ati Ono® All Plaped to 'Trial HON, THOMAS 'L. KENNEDY, Minister of Agriculture "at will ba well advanced!' �1, young Irishman was a ward cap - Wordsworth could not induce the 'fain and his nldermau gave a .dinner child to alter her simple reckoning: ,to the faithful workers and their "Wo are seven. 'I could not induce wives.. Tito Irishman's wifo.was un - ilio entrepreneur to .abandon his able to accompany him and the fpl- phrase, "It"wiil be well advanced," lowing is Ilia conversation which took "'v gel,' said the Mayor of the tiny place on his return home; commune, "my: advice would be—'stay Wlfe'—'"Was Mrs. ith there?" on the spot if you wotild leave the Husband—"Yes," Sm holies made- ready. They have so Jlfe "What ]dud- of dress did she much work to do that they rush from leave on?'" - one place to- another: They do tete Husband—"Wep,'roally, T'didn't xeo- most urgent jobs. They will never be- tics?" Bove that your job is urgent it you do Wife—"Was Mrs. Martin there?" not,talte up your abode: Then when Husband—"Oh, yes." they see you camping in confusion Wile—"What did she have on?" they will take pity onryou." . "Husband -"I didn't' notice." I thanked, him for hip uSWife—"NowMitco, 1 don'nk you "Yours must be a happy, villcoagensel if wont to the dinner at all. "t thi there is more than enough work for husband—"Well, I'll tell you, clear. evorybodyl" They had nothing on above the table He shook his head. "For a village and I was ashamed to look under-" where there is plenty of words there is not too much cause' for complaint," "It's impossible to get money from hesaid. those who have no money," says an Che sun shone oat the red roofs, ir— regular, old, rain -soaked and sunburnt. sibie to get it front those ,who have, The hills on the other eido of the river we would add. Our idea of the real were green enamelled, Their efficiency expert is the man who, when mead- ows were rich and shining, Here and horseback riding, wears only one'spur, there a cloud, white in the sky, cast because he knows that 111 one side deep shadows on the grass. The trees goes, the other must follow. This old that crowned the slopes showed every world might seem like a heck of a hue from pale gold to black. The or- place,, but just try to imagine what it chards oa the right were heavy with would be with three sexes. When he fruit, For a village where nature was was about to have a tooth extracted, a both generous and charming, where patient suddenly attacked the dentist; there was employment for all, there as the dentist won, however, it ended was little room for grumbling: --Prom "Between the River and the Hills," by Sisley Huddleston. The Westr Through Eastern Eye Here we have an interesting an informative article, written by Kimpe Sheba, city editor of the Japan "Time and Mail," wherein we view customs and habits of the Occident as seen by the Orient. ing a guest, Again, in America ,it is regarded ail 'undignified to have ho ' furniture in a room. In Japan it is � S undignified to have •furniture_.in a room. d We differ not only in our actions but in the way in which we look at a things. For instance, a Europeen visitor to Nippon finds a litter of un- wanted puppies left in the bushes. lie cannot help protesting against such cruelty. On the other hand, when a Japanese hears that in western coun- tries unwanted pups are killed, he will ask, "How does any one know that the helpless puppies prefer to die?" Told that it is better for the puppies to be painlessly put to death than to be left in the bushes where their chance of keeing alive is very small indeed, he is• certain to ask: "Why then are net famine -stricken people in China killed painlessly?" Take the case of aged people. Elder- ly folk in America generally do nob live with their grown-up children. In Japan the children, out of considera- tion for their parents, prefer suffering a little discomfort --often it is a great deal of discomfort—to having their parents live apart from thein, Another matter in which the. Jap- anese differ is in smiling when they are reprimanded: This has caused a great deal of misunderstanding be- tween foreign employers and Japan- ese employes—almost as much mis- understanding as the Japanese custcen of actually saying no when yes is tneant, and vice versa. Visitors to Japan frequently find it difficult to keep from -laughing out- right on observing some of the ridicu- Ions trings we do in an effort to aifeut western ways. This is especially true in the ease of. English signboards, "Ladies have fits inside," you may read over a dressmaker's shop; or "have your head cut here," over a barber shop. When the firth• train was rut, be- tween Tokyo znd Yokohama, the late Meiji "Emperor attended the memor- able ceremony. To be in keeping with the wave of westernization that than swept the country, the Emperor Plan- ned to ride to the station in a horse. drawn carriage rather than in the court palanquin. The only difficulty in using a carriage was to find a suitable livery for the driver. After a search in the official wardrobe, a foreign gar- ment was discovered which seemed to answer very welt. It was dignified, had buttons and decorative striPes and was said to have been bought at a foreign auction in Yokohama. So His Majesty rode in his new carriage, and all -seemed well to Japanese eyes, But it was difficult for foreigners among the spectators to keep from laughing, and naturally so, The driver was in pajamas! Just as our Japanese days appear unaccountable to you, so your Occi- dental ways are equally unaccountable to us. Suppose I set down a few of the customs, observed during a brief stay in the United States, which seam strange to a Japanese. It is early morning in a typical American home, You are resting on soft pillows and spring beds. We are different even wile"'we sleep, since in Japan people lie on hard beds and. rest their heads on firm pillows, those used by the women encased in wooden sheaths. Presently you awake. You sit up and stretch yourselves, facing the foot of the bed, As we in Japan rise, we make a turn so that. when we stretch ourselves, we have our faces turned in the opposite direction, to- ward the pillow. In brushing- your teeth you devote as little time as pod• Bible to the undertaking: Our coun- trymen take as long as possible, in fact it is not uncommon for a Japan- ese of the lower classes to be seen out on a morning's work in the neighbor- hood of his home, brushing his teeth. After washing your faces, you use a dry towel. We wipe our faces with a moist towel. As the typical American fenny is about to sit down to breakfast, the mistress of the house may call to her husband, "Harry, won't you run up- stairs and bring me something to put over my shoulders?" And harry runs up, In a Japanese family, Mr. Sato would be sitting at the breakfast table while his wife was still busy in the kitchen. As she came into the dining room, Mr. Sato might call out: "Run up, will you, and fetch my glasses," Mrs.Sato would obediently , tastcr upstairs, Yes, it seeds we do things de exa;'t- ly the opposite way --even to' saying grace. In American hones, if grace is said, it is before food that is eaten by the living. In' Japan prayers are recited only before food that is prof- fered to the tead. And, when we say grace, we have our faces tuned up, while you pray with your faces turned clown, American and European we - men in mourning wear black dresses, whereas in Japan women wear only white during this sad period. • On the other hand. black is the conventional costume worn at weddings in Japan, Your people develop loye before marriage, and 11 very frequently hap- pens that this love grows less intense as the months 'sass after the cere- mony. Our people frequently devetap love only after the marriage ceremony is over; for in the majority of cases the man and woman re not sufficient- ly well acquainted even to hold hands during the period of their engagement, A Japanese carpenter pulls his sate, while an American pushes his.' In using a pair of scissors your winner - folk operate the handle end, while we push together the tips, You stand your umbrellas with the 'handle erd up; we stand ours with the handle down, In carrying a closed umbrella, you hold the handle, but we dangle curs from a string attached to the op- posite end. In entering a house: you first of all take off your headgear. The 'first thing we do is to remove our footgear. If you have brought a guest home with you and he has a gift, he presents it immediately. -'par custtsn is to leave the :gift on parting. 111 presenting the gift, you inform your host thet it someth'ng'very nice and you hope he will like it: In Japan we assure our. friend that anything we may choose to present as a- gift is really of no value and we know he will have little use for it. You open a gift inthd'presence of the person who gives it to,you. •In Japan this is never done. Our . "after dinner" speeches are made before dinner; In. Japan people will wait holies, drinking tea before commencing to eat but will leave assoon as the rneai is over. In western` countries •people object to Waiting for their ideals but will stay for 'hours after ElletT rngais,, drinking coffee. In the .Occident people sea supposed to eat all that is on their plates, ' This is bad taste, in Nippon., You stand as a sign of respect, but in Japan it is disrespectful to stand—one s must always sit on the floor in greet - But there are things in America which seem just as ridiculous to Jap• anese eyes. For instance, in New York recently, when I happened to be walking on Fifth Avenue, I beheld a sight which almost caused me to hold my shies lest I burst from laughter. For what should I behold in midday and in the very heart of the greatest city in the word but an American woman pridefully walking along, wearing a dark blue Japanese coat, or "bappi," on the bac.c of which, in flar- ing red Japanese characters six inches in height, were the words "Fire 'Ex- tinguisher." It was a coat patterned after those issued by elle Tokyo fire t.epartment. • - So, hereafter. to the American vi'ei for in Japan who exclaims, "Gosh, you're a strange people!". permit me to reply --in a spirit of friendship, of course—"The -same to you." Speeding Up the Trees ' The. English Lake District is•.,now undergoing a process of transforma- tion, large areas, formerly bare, hav- ing been planted with trees, which areappearancegradually gradually changing the appearance of the mountain -sides. This is part of the systematic plant- ing lanting Of trees for thither -which is noW in process in Great Britain. Side by side with this, experinieuts are going on with a -view to procluc`"ing the per- fect tree ;for timber purposes. The object of these experiments,is to produce trees which will come more quickly to maturity, and yet which will yield sound ttintone, pogo pf, the trees isaltich gfei faest etre, tthfor-' tunately,.uneatiejactory, in other ways, But It is hoped that, as a result of Fs election and cross -breeding, for in- tepee, poplars which will be ready for felling alter twenty yeare. is a draw, What you save, yon leave behind; what you spend you have tor awhile; but what you give away in a worthy cause you take with you. The Happiness of people is all that makes business or anything else worth while. If you don't earn your reward you won't enjoy it.. There is no man liv- ing who cannot do more than he thinks he can. A woman Should know that often, from the shape of things, oue cannot .blame hosiery for want- ing to rem. For Doormat Husbands A judge declares that home life needs Co-operation—who'll deny it? 'Tis hard to bring the bacon home And then to have to fry it. When it came to the naming of the new mlue, the prospector's wile said:, Wife—"Will you name it after me, dear?" , Prospector—"Yes, darling, I will. Yes, I'll name it in your honor:" And from that day to this, one of the richest gold mines in the Black Hills of South Dakota has been known as "The Holy Terror." Hock—"Xiow did Slim, the burglar, come to reform?" Sack—"Iia went and got married, and the wits won't lot hint out nights," Young Man—"To what do you earl. buto your longevity?" Old Man—"To the tact that I• never OW." Clarence—"I had a date with a real gold-digger last might. She spent all my money." Xgmma—"And I suppose you got itt at 11 o'clock sharp?" Clarence—"filo, I got la at 1 o'clock 1101," Jerry—"I hear you've been studying for months how to increase your sal- ary. Hary did it turn out?" Freddy—"Poorly. The bola was studying the same time how to cut down expenses." There was a clever young operator who caused the rescue of a sicksman when she beard him groaning Into the telephone. She knew at once that something wits wrens g because the groaning carie before and not after he had tried to get a number, Housewife --"What do you work at, my poor Man?" Tramp—"At intervals, !madam." First Salesman -- "Meeting with much sales resistance lately?" Second Salesman—"Yes. I ran into three brooms and two bulldogs yes- terday. The Bible It lays a pillowfor ttto weary head, It puts a staff within the pllgrlm's hand, It meets us at each bend of life's rough road, It evermore anticipates our range, It is a guide to life's last boundary Hue, It opens vielis no drought .of Time can fill, It satisfies the most artistio sense, It is a gallery ot matchless charm, It 1s an honest critic of the soul, It is a cheque-book wo too seldom use, It kindles hopes beyond our fondest dreams, • It has a. balm for every wounded heart, It speaks a language that all "under- stand, It ends in an apocalypse of gold. - —Alexander Louis Fraser. PLEASURE \\ZA't(ghtLX. 4434 a , Ul.fvtAbk4 A19,6kAZZai .fJ.hl \ "\ ED ROS .. N, fe 240 Zed®tiCt, Et.E ;•;1Z—ReaLolveli Z,ciia ee oe Snow Scenes Stopping into the wonderland of white, Our lanes in snow, I ani so heaped with bliss I wonder which bewildering wealth to mics That I may hold just bearable delight; Tree -corals or lamo-shadows, moon cut bright, Roofs deep in ermine, tarry barns gone hoar As fabulous roes that slumber ever- more In a 'valley of diamonds and' forget - ten flight, No, there's a port -hole epodes on .ro- mance Wider than any Sinbad knew; the hold Burns richer than most ancient Span- lelt gold; My breath, my thought hantia'la a frozen trance Before a ship unetnohoring from the stead— The window of a child just gone to bed, --Geoffrey Johnson. New Method Devised To Oust Plum Beatles Entomologists of the 'United States Department of Agriculture have de- vised a simple and effective "jarring sheet" for use under peach trees to collect plunk curculio beetles. Jarring the pests from the trees in the Spring and destroying then has long been recommended as a supplementary con- trol measure, but the new jarring Shot is an improvement over the col- lecting frames formerly used. 0. I. Snapp and J. R. Thomsen of the Bureau of Entomology. who de- veloped the improved jarring sheet, sewed together three 36 -inch -vidths of unbleached cotton 16 feet long, mak- ing a sheet 9 by 15 feet in dimensions. They put small holes, 10 feet long, through a hem in each of the 9.foot ends, to facilitate handling, and put a; rope through a hem on each of the other sides, fastening the ends of they rope to tine poles. Then they stretch -I ed a chain across the centre of the top of the sheet parallel with the poles to weight it down in the middle, 1 When ready to collect the curculios, they place two sheets under a tree, one on each side. and jar the large limbs of the tree with a pole, padded on the end with a piece of automobile tire. w.`..-- The ratan with a grievance is a grievance to his friends. Such lather! Suck refreshing fragrance, such skin softening and cleansing!- 10Cts Ifnflividual tenons 9.31 Classified Advertising N OPI!'ER TO 17VIRY INVPN'POtt. ai List of wanted inventions and toil information sent 'roe, The wamasy floe-. Peaty, World Patent Attorneys, 273 rtault Street, Ottawa, Canada, WANTED TO ant toziaSE 4-1 OLD SCRAP UOUGhIT 1'OR CASH. s Ur Send ggall teeth and bridges, Croti'n Specialty Company, P.O. Box 254, Station I3, lviontreal, Sometimes it is What a man doesn't say that is the most interesting. LAC EA Don't -'suffer any longer from these unstghtiy hlemishoa. Overcome them at home. Get 2 oz, Peroxide Powder from YoUr a little on to face cloth, gapply ist.switlhrinhrae circular motto•' and the lilackneads will be alt waSZSEI8 A'WAY. Satisfaction or money refunded. SCIATICA Wash the painful part welt with warm water; then rub to plenty of Minard', and you'll feel belle?! "SUFFERED EVERY EMT "IITHEN I was twelve years VV old my mother wanted the to take Lydia E. Pinkhanns Veg. etablli Compound, but I wouldn't: IFI had I might have been a well girl now. I have suffered terribly every month. "The girls where X work used the Vegetable Compound and urged mo to try it. Is helped nay nerves. t intend to keep on until tam well and strong." Miss Rose Lama, 6 Brighton Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. VEGETABLE COMPOUND 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 schoole 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 Hleh Schools, Coilegiate Institutes, Vocational Schools and Departments. Copies of the Regulations issued by the Minister of Education may be obtained from the Deputy Minister, Parliament Buildings, Toronto, S�¢ E F TO AFTER F ¢!f Over -acidity add Flatulence • To give pleasure toa single Heart Nemec Acute Suffering by a single kind act is better than a thousand head-bewinge in prayer.— Saadi. KNOWLEDGE True knowledge is 10 know how little _can' be known.. ' —George Sand, "ET KEEP YOURSELF: .. HEALTHY The lot of mostpeopletis much Indoor work and little roil ex- ereise. That's why it's sensible, every so often,to'give thesystem a gentle, thorough cleansing with Dr. Carter's Little Liver Pills. All vegetable, '60 years in use. • 25c & 750 red packages �yAsk y�our druggist for y+ JKa ER S =PILLS ISSUE No. 37'•—'31 .: Corrected by Kremlin "A nurse's life docs not: leave much time to spare, but Ravingg derived ntuch benefit from taking I4rusehcn, it's only fair to you and others to pass the facts on. I was suffering from over -acidity and flatulence to such an extent that I was completely ill. I couldn't take food. The very thought of it nauseated me. When I actually forced myself to take something, X would be wretchedly ill, and faint afterwards. I really begsa to feel life was not worth while. I have now taken Hrusehen for 12 mouths, and X have no doubt that it has righted my digestive system. 1- ant now •quite fit and able to work with vigor again. ' I recommend the same treatment to those of my, patients who are likely to benefit by it "—Nurse L, S. Indigestion is caused by a failure in the flow of the gastric or digestive juices; As a result, your food, instead of being assimilated by your system, aimplycolloets and ferments inside you, producing harmful acid poisons. Start the digestive juices flowing normally, andyou'll not have to suffer any more. And that is just !low ICiuselten Salts brings swift and lasting relief from OD indigestion. The immediate effect of the six mineral salts in ICrgehen is to promote the healthy ltow of the vital juices ot the body. -And that means a blessed end to Indigestion and a re. newed and whole -(hearted enjoyment of your food without the slightest fear of having to pay the old . painful penalty, And more! You will- soon experience the tonin 'influence of Kruschcn upon your bloodstream. You will begin to feel a new ing-- happier, heartier, and hungrier than you ever felt in your life, • ttrctschen Salts" is obtainable at all Drug Stoma at 42c, and 75e, per bottle,