Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1929-07-04, Page 3(can it Catj Vert ) o TRY THESE TASTER, BETTER. FILMS You'll be amazed with the r es u 1 is clear's iarklin negatives— fewer failures S better pictures—rain Or Shine --anytime, anywhere. Remember — Gevaert filmt practicallyeliminates under exposure—tare cause 'ofninety per cent of poor pictures, At dealer's everywhere, Say.. "Gevaert'` the next time you ask for film, GEVAEfiT COMPANY OP AMERICA Toronto "The Greatest Pitot Imifrouonad in a Decade" sw Dept, of Health Silmmertime' arid Accidents In Ontario, according to the` latest figures' published, ,here were 269• deaths among males5'and 44 among females, due to drowning during the year. The age group claiming the highest' number among the then and boys was that from 20 to 24 years, having a total of 42 fatalities. The women and girls who Inst their lives. in this way numbered 10 in the age group -'-14,to 24, the highest single P number as regards age. So far as our boys are concerned, : instruction in swimming might well be given at an 'early age ;as Ontario loses her boys by accidental drowning in large •num- bers -be ht n3n the g g in h afth year of life. It goes without saying, ot course, 'that girls also should be taught to swim- at the earliestpossible. age, Deaths Due to Automobile Accidents- Our death -rate front accidents In Ontario •to -day is alarmingly high. Automobiles are an important factor In fatal accidents. "Be careful" is . a. bit .,of self-help advice which will help note only yourself but tbe rest. of the world as well. • If you use a motor car—be .careful,. Tine driver, and his passengers derive just as much' protection from- his careful driving as do the people -lie meets on his way. If you \iae a bicycle—be careful. There are very dangerous risks to be considered in riding a bicycle; be fail to the motor car and to the Pedestrian,but-first of all, be fair to yourselt, • If you do net ttse• a -motor 'ear be careful. The deaths of children following motor accidents are not al- ways the fault of the driver;, they are often due to carelessness on the part of the parents or the children them- selves. Old people who are nervous should not cross streets and high- ways busy with trafilc by themselves. The motor, car is a blessing of mod- ern progress—reasonable care will do much to prevent it becoming a curse.' Owl .iia fffs ` It. wouldseem that the reason all young women don't get-married.is that they're: not willows. lt. ain't impossible ,to take a' Small -amount of dough and Mahe both ands meet Look at''the dung/mutt. • A: • needless" noise always is 'miser' than •a necetsary',one. Daughter: 'Well, (jail, I'in engaged" Tra'thei "You"don't mean it??? Daughter: "Certainly not, • but it's Tots o fun•",_ The enorniiig atter the night before :The 'eat cause bask at the hour of four The innocent 'Moir. in .iter eyes. had Went II But the smile on her face was -a 1' saline of content. She: Spent my vacation in the mounts n,:' ''ifs: Realty ;did you have a guide? - - ' Ste. Well,. only MY consetenee• g4�e • o , ,,,99 . • The ,.League ,; , fi}�11� a�e�s �m Surely this isn't, a resm't" said 64 g Pliiltp Iierr in the Nation and .Atli- he stranger. . "Why, it .h en't' rained y e i t of a . led �i�e� �®ngt��s� n ro lm advance guard of economic pro in three a d sv Y ssmutc i s out nue t o bo 'ca rta�r t, 1 &2 s Ent it is vital that', an tnereasing pro A Jos High CIimbin ', Tree Topping rttoraot our basic ,and estabtiah- Bose: My. boy your work has ,fallen arid, ,Chopping 'Races; Willa en services should cease`:'to be down; and if you aregoing to pick it ftp, yen will have to ..step on it. MOONDRIF1 The: moan drifts In. the purple sky,, ,A silver boat onshoreless seas, Ain't ghostly 'clouds go floating by, While softly, sings the evening Breeze, 'Across the 'lake 'the ripples stir, And moonbeams glimmer, Cold and Prince; at Caxdeui Party A Prineo Honey, third son of the Xing receives at a garden party held in. honor of Hie Majesty's birthday at Victoria, B4O. , Lt, Governor Ronde ph Bruce is -an the right and Miss' Helen Mackenzie the Tatter's niece'onbe left. Tt. And in a light' canoed with her, He follows down the •ntooulight .trail. • The Moonlight trail: It leads .afar, Beyond the earth's horizon. dim, Anil farther than the farthest 'star— -And thither. -she will drift tenth hire, To, fairy regions wild and lone, Tbey glide ondreaming seas afloat-- 'rill float=Till Ryan through a Megaphone Yells out: "Come back with that there boat!" If b luau's face is his fortune some of no are in. debt. At the picnic the other evening a young couple slipped away and were spooning. She asked•: "Does 'MY 'bead on your' shoulder give you a thrill?" Hesquirmedas he answer - The Vote • a New Statesman ` (London) : The fate or elections, it is often said, de- pends on the "floating .vote," which changes sides according to the tem- porary emporary, merits of Governments and Opposition policies and leadership. But this view represents the situation. rThere,is a floating vote of this sort; and it is an important electoral" factor. But there is also a floating vote, probably as large, that depends not on considered judgement, but on pure .prejudice. There are voters who may"vote either tray, --ac- cording a "stunt" which roaches the donsciousness of the non-polities'el- ectors. There are voters who, will, Certainly vote for a'.political party if theft vote at all, but care so little that it needs a successful "stunt to get `them to the booth. And there are even—astonishing thought—quids a number of voters who have been on theregister for many years, and have never even troubled to vote' at all, despite all the expension propaganda which the various parties have lavish- ed upon them. Even the voter who does vote ordinariy regards voting at least -as much in the light of duty as a privilege. . A Turkish woman has found her way into the bankruptcy court in that country for the first time in hitt-oils This shows how real the emancipa- tion has become. Forsuilbunn, appiy"Minard's Liniment In the matrimonial market, we as - Mime that a -girl who marries an avi- ager may be said to be taking a flyer. One thing we do know, and that MI the man who sings while he .shaves ;has got a better vizor than we have., ed: -"No, I .think I'm sitting on some sand •burrs." '• Clara "Do you get your alimony regularly?" Marie: "No, I might just as well be living with him." Gladys: Her mother always:called her the fairest' flower of girlhood." Helen. Isn't it •too „bad she grew up to be a Wall blower," A free Country Is 0150 -I1 tt passes ound. He then rigs , te.tree with At rill time of life is delay or ne- lawa to please iia conscience and ;s then Means them to please its RP- pulleys and cables, and"' - is used 'as glect more •serieha than at childhood. petite.•a spar tree fora "log -setting" to haul The Ins et 'little °nee come quickly Be Other . f'eatur'es " of Novel' Exhibition Illus- trating Waadsmen's Skirl in 'Tasks of 'Every Day iongviesv, Wash. --Riding pines in.; stead of•ponies, panelling logs instead of :cows, sealing trees instead • of steeples, 'luniber/ien of the Northwest are peptining for • a, widely advertis- ed day—or, rather,; Purest day is to be devoted' to competitions according to arrangements now being made: • Called a "rolleo"-because It offer's. many similar tests' of skin with none of the objections of the rodeo—tate days is to' be devoted to competitions in sports and practices common to lumbermen in the Northwest. As the name' implies, the contest will center about the rolling logs which lumbermen. "herd," ride and drive through the great mill ponds•to the slips of the bead mills. - Some of the other competitions which ere being arranged are high climbing, tree topping, log bucking and chopping races. - High climbing and tree topping are spectacular and necessary parts of the Northwest ,woodsman's job. Every woods camp 'has at least one high• climber whose job it is to mount thei t g an Douglas ug s firs to a /might varying from 150 to 225 feet, using a belt ands spurs similar to a telephone autocraticaIIy ,govelrned by those who act,"for the ` share holders, with te; steary ' conniption of public spirit by selfishnese en- aeinf facts .of our time is ;the way in which the commercial motive i5:in- vading and prostituting the mental and artistic as well as the Press, mass of the Stagerail'•the movies,and the whole field of advertising have been captured for profiting. If we go an as we are today, it ns only'a goes. tion. of time befoge,'as already to'a large extent in , America, politica, education and religion will be exploit-, ed for profits, on the hideous Rotarian slogan, "Tie rofits most who o serves best," A Will -o' -thee -Wisp Winnipeg TAbune (Ind. Cons.): Canadian farmers might as well make `ftp their minds In 'the feet 'that when- ever trade in any item of agriculture -produce reaches a substantial figure there will be a -demand for higher pro- teotion from the American 'lateness and the demand will be answered • with drastic action. Desirable as it is, the United States market for farm products is a will -o' -the wisp, and the 1 farmer's who have pursued itPolitic- ally for many years will have to ad- just their economic reasoning accord•. ingly. I1neman'eequipment. (O NOT NEGLECT ,At. the highest feasible point, he Ld @@ ats , h 'oxo ad oef theOfftree,witand clingsn4osaw, the Itis "precaritop- YOUR :ITE ONES due perch as the top, frequently 50 feet high itself, thunders to the No really great man •ever thought himself so. in the logs and load them aboard logging ears: Other lumbering communities hi + tate Northwest are being asked by "The difference between a cemetery tbe Longview Chamber of Commerce, and li raveyar.1 i that one is in which is sponsoring the event, to co- g $ tooperate, and the competition, Which team and the other in the 'country, will last two days, is being billed as • Tightskirt Tillie says that civilize-. rho.world's chanspionship, tion won't be perfect until they pat Thb "r•olleo" will be held: in Lake out canned foods that can be (Maned Sacajawea Park, within the city lion. with a push button. its. • Twelve Modred dollars in cash laud°prizes are offered, and the event Canada and naval Defence ' i Toronto Telegram (Ind. Con) : The pacifists in • the commons are again howling for further' cuts in the National Defence estimates, And to pacify the pacifist the 'minister declares that this youngItation spends less par inhabitant for defence than any other nation in the world, And from this distance it looks as if the Minister's statement wasn't anything to hoist about. Canada has set up as a nation with embassies at Paris, Washington and Tokio. She insists on the right. to make treaties and settle disputes with foreign powers .off her own hat. She practically tells the Mother Country to go away back and sit down, that she is running. a household of her own, Like the man who is playing a "bob. tail flush," she is all right as' long as she isn't "called." But sometime the showdown will conn. And when it does, what has Canada got M show? When she. shows the smallest defensive expenditures in the world, what - 'a laugh will follow, However, if Cana- da has filled her hand by drawing in the Blitish. Navy that laugh 'won't.be loud, Neither will it contain a trace. 01 mockery. - South Africa and the Empire Manchester Daily Dispatch: Gen- eral eral J. B. 141. Hartzog is reported to have declared that he is unable to acknowledgethe Empire except in name, and that, ..as for the Union ,Sack, it is a:small thing whether it be flown near the natioysal flag or not., Why should' the tax payers of those islands spend money advertising 1 South African "products only to be ' :sneered at, given the ' cold shoulder, have their flag dishonored? Let South Africa be cut off fro'n-the benifts of the Empire 'Marketing Board, If the Enmpire. is' acknowledged only in: naive let • it be in name only ,where benefits are concerned as "well' as obligations England is the best customer of the Union. England is the guardian cd Tier trade routs. 'Without England's support thin Union. would stand weak and shivering. We cannot withdraw that support fan the sake of} Ioya3 e)u�bjecte of the Crown. But we do believe that' complacency has gone to Ian and that a hint or our p i er-in the withdrawal of the "boosting" and buying of South African products, s advertised especially as a tourist ' would have a most Salutary effect, If You are troubled with macaroni FOR THE HAIR Ask Your Barber --Ile. Ii.nows. - - ISSUE No, 27—'12 sticking to the bottom . of the sauce -1 pan while boiling, but it into a Wire 'sieve and .Immerse this in boiling water. To draM it,ju t lift the sieve With its contents. Minard's Liniment for ellen animals. and unless 'the mother Is prompt in administering treatment a precious little life may be snuffed out almost' before the motber realizes the baby is 111, The prudent./nether always keeps something in .the medicine chest as a safeguard against tine sud- den illness of her little ones. Thou- sande, of mothers have found, through experienbe, that there is no other medicine to equal Baby's Own Tab- lets and that Is why they always keep a box or tate Tablets on hand—why they always fool safe with the Tab - Are you afraid to eat a hearty meal? HAT does meal- time mean to you? Is it the pleasure that it should be to restore" the energy your 'worse has taken from you? • Or, must you pkk and. choose — in dread of indigestion? Here is a remedy that has brought relief to men and women ` the world over. Dr. Williams' Pint Pilis are taken every day in many countries, ,speci- fically for digestive trou- bles and stomach dis- orders, tnd have brought happiness to. thousands of one -tine sufferers. For, besides strengthening the digestive nerves, they in- ..-vigorate and purify the entire system and lay the foundationfor continued " health. Buy Dr. Williams' Pink Pills now at you; drug- gist's or, any dealer in medicine, or by mail, 50 cents, postpaid, from The Dr. Williams Medicine. Co., Brockville, Ont. S-47 1 INS. EU 'A HOUSEHOLD NAME 1N 04 COUNTRIES' Syrian Wo men In A: Classified Advertisetadents. erica,:BABY onzosts ay TERFSE ROSE NACEL 'What the women of the eastern countries who have lead a s'eclitdod life do when they reach the United State? Do they enters the ';field of politics, business and commercial ac- tivity or' aro they' content to\lead a sheltered life as hat been their cus- tom for generations past In the Orient? This and many other fined. tions relative to. Sys -sail women h1 America were answered recently by Saloons A. Mokarsel, editor of the Syrian World, who has, written and lecturedextensively on this subject. It is only during the last40 years that even Syrian. men have come" -to America," said NIr.'itiokarsei to a re- presentative e PSe e tative of The Christian n Science Monitor. "As theimmigration of wo- men is • considerably more recent,` they have as yet not developed the American, point of view. I ant happy, to say,. ,However, that through the es- tablishment of many distinctive or- ganizations,' Such as the recently Permed Syrian Junior Leanne of New York City acid other associations throughout the country, .our women are' gradually coming to gartake of the customs and manners of our adopted country. They aro more used to home lila, however, than.' to' outside interests.. They are excellent cooks• and .if you' have ever tasted our 'warak -anab wa mat`foof,' which is a c0tnbination : 91 grape leaves. meat and rice, you will readily under- stand why the men prefer ,that their wives remain domestic. "The girls who come from Syrian families, although• they bave . grown Americanized, are .brought up to ob- serve a strict moral code. They are taught never -to talk to strangers,. Of course, the young Syrian -American woman who ' ss more ilberty, goes but tittoose notbusineengagedItas in business seldom go, about unchap- eroned before marriage. "The very few of our native women to usiness," n- tinnedwhodo, (`usuallygoinenterbtufo tiiehe jewelcory or embroidery lines. ' There aro Emma Maloof and Maria El Klioniiy, who have proven their worth in the merchandising world, and Louise Yazbecic•: of Shreveport, La., lino is very •active in the Music Week ac- tivities o vitt s P that o it y "We Of the East are proud of tate The Talkies ' ./. to Shakespeare Modern producers of plays have long ego given up the idea of render- ing Shnkelpeare in his"• entirety, ,and although the modern playgoer Would' shrink from allowing the greatest of all the'playws'ights to be inanhendIed in the unscrupulous way, of thy Res- toration or" even the early Victorian stage, well-meaning suggestions are, from time to time, 'thrown out for bringing Shakespeare up to date. No leas a person 'than the Englith dramatist, •Asbley .Slakes, himself .a playnrignt of rare charm of style and Invention, has even gone so far 0s''to suggest recently that, while Shakespeare should not be acted in modern clothes, be should be rewrit- ten in modern English The advent of the talkies will, per- haps, mane the realization of this seemingly inconoclnstic suggestion iii Ti ABY CiIICXg0: J'CJLY -AND ATJGU'ST, .OJ Rowe 2e, Brown- Legltorns and .Anconal 11c 'Whl to Leghoi•no 10o, as- s rte1-e1,1ctr0 to, -til p,•ess paid. on 200 or over; fres catalogue, A. 18 Switzer, Granton' Ontario, +11 :MTN 150.r0TBD. 13 it 1IN W 3N 16 DW' TO C2ILL W T16150S 106. 160 Qnallty Pro] ccs ,6 mal 00o - tions sit Ontairo, :''Totio s All -yet factory'•' to opositnon, organization, All -yea laoung proposition, business, to ed buildupladttuq suitiarlent business, CrecIltiarranged to suitable inar ties, \t's'bte aiming ago to S. R 'arid. ns L`oniparly, Desk 0. IIainil ton, Ontario. An timtnswereds'tiuestion in animal behaviorism/Is why high-strung thor- oughbred racers prefer the company, of a scrub pony they ]chow to that of Bello w-thormigbbreds. iURSES, WANTED •to affiliation with Ri' revue and . -Allied The Toronto Respite.' /or .incurables FlosPitals, rlc vity, ofcrs throe years' Course 0. of Training to young,, women, having the required education and desirous of, becoming nurses; This Hospital has adopted rue eight-hour system. The pupils receive uniforms of the, School, a m5ntbly allowaliCe and traveling- expenses t4 and fret Now York. - Por further Information write ,thio Superintendent. i1h F ;ww7d& :41telleraeyllyCatel You Must Do, Your Bit kis the war against the fly, carrier of germs and breeder of aiglase. Its proven thatAER08ON fame,. 'of the most cgnvcriiont and most •rP efficient means of combating this fly cot It is convenient, because of the posh.pin. 1t i. hygicnor ' ibis never set away when once caught, Each spiral gives three weeks' perfect fervic*., BEWARE OF MUTATIONS Sold u, dug, groes y and hordµcrereto,es ri rt La Cin C. 0. Genesi fi Filo, Lanitee t%✓ (4e a.lennaOr:P., ,: SOU 41035 '1%NN : ,i Distributor for Ontario fact that although at first we were NEWTON A. HILL only pedlars in this country, we have se awns St, D,, - Toronto prospered greatly, and are able to. In 99?- express with our ymeriean-made dol-' Si n Gain lays,"the hospitality of the. East. We; area law-abiding people anti are' sen i Weight dour found Si the courts or jail& ITlie Quick Way filial - respect and devotion' which characterize the Syrian home are the New IRONIZ cD YEAST adds ultimate reason for Syrian good citi- zonship. This brings us to the mar- pounds in fevv Weeli9. ReSl}%b>?: rises problem. Our traditions: Iean Guaranteed -or pay nothing heavily to tate. aide of restricting :On: Men and women write us every tiny men 111 their personal liberties. Wo- they aro positively amazed at speed with which Ironized Yeast added 5 to men throughout the East are in gen- 15 pounds, Gave thorn new strep ecit; - eral rigorously' 'aecinded in their a youthful shin; banished age•dlnes- homes, forbidden to meet strangers They aslc-r-now does Ironized Yeast ' of the other sex, and among ilibslems; work so fast? when compelled to appear in public,1 Ironized Yeast is Iwo great topes to be .heavily' veiled. It is only in in one. Weight -building YEAST treat - these latter years that a- movement ed with two kinds of strengthening° hag been inaugurated for the,ensancil blood -enriching iRON used for years station •ot women in the East, by biggest medical autboritil e l`be Yoaetis also treated with Violet Rays "We are passing through a trans'- to increase its effectiveness, tional atage at the -present time, Only when Yeast is Ironized is It when it is perhaps a little bit dial- most effective, , Iron is needed to cult for our• Syrian parent; of the old bring out the weight-buihling. order to adjust themselves to the strengthening values of Yeast. American liberties of their children, Pleasant tablets. No "yeasty"' who • associating in . the schools and taste No gas m bloating. Stop being 'skinny anis mantras, colleges to which they ate sent with. tfve. Still out bony form. Get a clear Fee l years attraction. "tats. cnuuren of ail nationalities, are skin and new alien th. evitabie fer the technique of 'the g a bound to seek the freedom of their younger and look it. Geta full size rw Baby's Own Tablets are n mild but tallcles ]lei Airplane or Aereplane? even more remo a rem new-found country, They are urged treatment of Ironized Yeast at any that of the Illizabethan stage train - ng the bowels and stomach banish by their social leaders not to forget dreg store to -day. I4 not deli;lrted constipation and indigestion; breast up ton than the moctatn-theatto, with its the traditions ot their fathers, nor with quiclt results, get your money Truth (London) r Iiaving expressed still surviving traces .of the , Tudor basic. If inconvenient Co buy from a preference for the American word colds and simple Savers and; promote inn•yard, the transition to modernized' to adopt too strenuusly the license druggist, send $1.25 direct to Canaciinn ,,. • healthy, natural sleep. Concerning! which some young people mistake for aeroplane, T was a trifle disconcer- them, Mrs. Isaac Sonia, St, Eugene, speech could hardly bo resented,' liberty, and to adhere to the finer Ironized Yeast Co., Ltd., bort Erie, Ont, Desk 425•1VIT. o rend in the Tnoes 1ast. week a Out.,. suites.—"I have been using 'call declared than "airplane wastats aver since baby ]taps anticipated the wish of the most y p was a. month did and have found that "not English --only journaie11e." Next they reach the spot 011(1 'do more good fervent reformers when she disclosed her ambition to Shakespeare day, however, I was relieved by a than any other medicine I.Itave ever "51 a' real setting' tackle a talkie version crushing report in the 'Pirates to the tried. I always keep the Tablets in effect that "airplanes" was advocated the house and would advise all other of the "Taming .of the Shrew." And by Professor Skeet about 1913, on the mother to do 'SO." The Tablets are grounds that -..jt was more English than "aeroplanes." Evidently you pays your money and takesyour choice. letter from a gentleman who dogmat. Baby's Own Tab Is l4lary Piekford, m bier enthusiasm for her newly found speech, has per - sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 26 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liam's. Medicine Cel Brockville, Ont.. An Old -Time Canadian He is a member of •the I{wakmtl-Nootka tribe of West Coast Indians and this is the regalia In which he, appeared when his tribe -welcomed the'Gov= eruor-General. on his- recent trip; on -,Canadian Pacific `:ateaseship Princess Norait-along the islands and shores' of Vancouver leland. The quill through the nose is more ueminiacent of the West,CoasC of, 'Africa tbiin'•the West doast of Canada, but it shows that atrange oustome' and costumes are, to be found still. in' the bominion, ; who, indeed, will not delight to see and hear Doug taming Mary in, that rollicking way which is ,all his own? Those, however, who may still de- sire to see their Shakespeare in his traditional, though hardly real, set- ting will be grateful to 'Dr, Barley Granville -Banker, who has ' just ui sued a'olemu warning to the gov ernors"iii the Stratford Memoriai Theatre against snaking the new home of Shakespearean drama a place of �grantliose and startling' productions, against, that is, that "teal" setting for which the talkies can be depended ars so mob better than any theatre. "In Stratford," Dn Granville -Bar- ker writes in a letter:to the London Tines, "tate object mast bo the creat- ing and sustaining ;of a 'lobe!, sensi- tive and intelligent tradition of the sating of Shakespeare, and the inter- preting of his plays for their .own sake, the whole canon of them." The West and .the ast John S.'ilolyland in the Nineteenth Century (London) : It is ,eommon to Near reference made in the West to the disillusionment which :followed the War, especially inregard to political affairs. Rowever•bitter this disiltus- iontnentmay be the west, it was prob- ablq much: greater in the East. Be- fore the Wan India was inunenselyrmn- terested:in ,many aspects of Western life and had a .great beliefs that the Westmight, bring to her many veiy. valuable benefits. This feeling has now all but disappeared—at any rate ainongst: the vast majority of nation- alistically minded Indians. Few, are now found (apart from a Very small tory of moderates, headed by Tagore) Who are wilting to admit that the West has reaily anything to teach In- dia. On the contrary, the majoiity are .deetniy 'concerned lest Willa be corrupted beyond repair byf• the pre- vasive forced o. Western efvilization, Aa a great living Indian phisclipher had expressed it: "There ale men in the East .who spend sleepless nights in cursing God because He has•aisiow to ed these' civilizer • s get into `their lands . Use Minard's for the rub down, things that they bave been taught from childhood up." Mr. Mokarsel, who Ieaves the early 1 part"of Jnly for a two months' tour of the Holy Land, expects to make a I complete' study of the feminist ques- tion there. Disarmament and Security P'rofess'or II, A. Smith in the Spec- tator (London) : In the actual'order of things disarmantenn is not the parent of security, but lather the offspring. In civilized countries rho average man walks about unarmed, not because the carrying of arms is illegal. but be- eause he is practically certain that nobody is going to attack him, If he believed himself to be in danger he Would go armed in spite of the law, - since no man values the law above his own life. So it is with nations. They will disarm when they feel safe, and. not till then. Until this feeling of security is established a general ttteaty of disarmament is as impossible as would. be a statue prosibiting the car- ry ing of rifles in Afghanistan. Keep Minard's in lite Medicine chest, The chief objection to treating a guest like home folks is that he might get mad and detaliate; Fishermen Take Mlnard's along to relieve irritation of mosquito bites, Also good for cuts and bruises. Every day 10,000 women buy a bottle of Lydia E.Pinkbans's'Vege-- table Compound. They know that there is no better remedy for their troublesome aiimente witb their accompanying nervousness, back- ache, headache, "blue" spells, and rundown condition. , About two hours after eating many people suffer front sour stomachs. They •call it indigestion. It means that 'the stomach nerves have been over- stimulated, • There is excess acid. The way, to correct it is with 'an alkali, which neutralizes many times: itsn olume acid. v i a ' The right way ris. Phillips' Milk of Magnesia—just, a tasteless dose in water. It 'ie Pleasant, efficient auEl. ours barmless, It has ren%ained the bra and with physicians in the tib y since its invention, It at; the quiclt method. Ileeiit come, almost instantly. It is rho .' Droved methods YOu 'will neven fl another when you know. Be sure to netthe ge}tuine 1?hillip ° Milk of Magnesia: prescrineil by plays ciana for 60'yoars incorrecting mule .acids. Bach bottle. conts. tns fn_ directions -any drugstore.