HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1929-08-01, Page 7(Call it Geee7ert>
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—Toe-
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OP AMEItICA
Toronto
4W
J. T., An African
Monkey
One of J: T.'s daily amusements
waa looking at pictures in the 'illust-
rated magazine. She turned the
pages herself without any training,
the leaves passing between thumb
and forefinger. Atter she became
familiar with dogs she• recognized
their pictures and she would made ber
purry-p'r-r-r-r affectionate sound over
them and turn her hood coquettishly
from aide to side as if expecting them.
to respond. She allowed far more in-
telligence in recognizing :pictures
and keeping a magazine right side up
than the majority .of African natives.
One of her Christmas Presents was
n magnifying glass, and she would go
about examining objects and people,
adjusting the glass to suit her vision
in a surprisingly human way
J. T.'s ability to sea small objects
as well as her delicate sense of tuoch
was shown in the care with which she
would rip fine stitches froni cloth.
Sometimes when I was sewing or
reading and did not want to be dis-
turbed, I would give her an old gar-
ment, She would then sit quietly on
my lap by the hour and industrious-
ly rip out the stitches Without tearing_
the fabric She used a needle and
thread exactly like a child who at -1
tempts to sew for the first time, often
when I was called away to attend to'
some household duty I would return
to find my sewing drawn into puckers
by her efforts to imitate mo. In her
desire to eaglet me she would sit on
my'lap when I was sewing and with
lisr dainty thumb pull the needle
through the cloth, dropping it'immed-
iately to draw the thread tight
Common settee, patience and sym-
pathy are the qualities needed for the
study of animals. Equipped with
these and a desire to do honest,work,
one cannot help learning, something
of video to add to our knowledge• of
dumb creatures. -From "J, T„ Jr.:
The Biography of an African Monkey."
by Delia Akeley.
Athletics
An already ample bibliography of
track and fieitl athetics—sports will
their roots set deep in antiquity—h0s
boon enriched by the production of
these two authoritative workswhich
while contrasting Strongly in their
presentation, .supplement each other'p
va1nes to' the student of a very wide
as well as•intricato subject. By their'
own experience, the anthers are par
ticulariy fitted for the task of trans_
lating the practical application of em
^p]rical knowledge .into the written
theory of the subject. D. G. A. LoWe,
president ` of Cambridge University
_Athletic Club, 1924-25, has twice been
the Olympic - champion over 800
meters; his fellow -author, A. E. Por
rift, Oxford president 1925.26,' had a
meteoric Career as a sprinted . of the
top class,. and Butler, president'of the
C•U.A.C. 1920-21, is :the possessor of
'one..gold, one silver and one bronze.
Olympic medal;
Lown and Porritt, aided by C. T.
Van Geyzel; the renowned Ciambridge
high -jumper; and M. C. Noltes, of Ox-
ford, Britain's best' "strong man"', for
many Years, have. teamod. up to .pro
duce the most comprehensive survey
of foot racing ,•and its concomitants
since Sir' Montague Shearnran,wrote
hie classic on the subject in. 1887.
They start as near the commence-
ment of human activities as research
can tarty them; they revive the ear-
liest extant ` records, appertaining to
the Tailtean Games`• founded In - Ire-
land about 3000 D.C.' by Luguid of the
Strong, Arm;: they.. Pass through the
history of the Olympic Games of Anel=
ent .Greece to their latter-day counter-
part, touching, as they- go, upon •the
development of the sport in Britain,
in the United States, the British Do-
minions, •Europe, Asia, and . South
America. ' The reader is• lea gently,
to a scholarly exposition of how it
should' all be done, • or perhapst one
should rather•'write, how the best •'Mo-
yle do
eoyledo it, since the authors have striv-
en, successfully', from start to . finish,
to instruct *itbout dogmatism.
Butler's book is. not, by compari-
son, ,such: leisurely reading:' He
piunges without preamble into a dis-
course on track technique and organ-
'zation, illuminated by a profusion of
photographs, many from the "slow-
motion"
slowmotion" camera. These •strips repay,
careful analysis. The work is writ-
ten by one with personal experience
of -the trials of 'rams master g s ma to at a
big. British public school, and its
value would seem greatest to- those
charged with the instruction of boy
athletes. Hie chapter. on the
of school athletics excels any-
thing the reviewer has previously
read on this subject ,
When the authors cone . to their
pet specialties they 11aVe muck of.
nterest to say, as, for example, when
Lowe propbunds his theory of the
'constant factor" In half -mile run-
ning.
unning. Broadly and briefly put, • his
argument Is that however slowly,
within reason, the first quarter -mile
may have been run, the time for the
second is practically a conetant.fac-
tor for each. runner, and that, there-
fore, the time for the first quarter, is
all-important. In other words, if 67
seoonds is appoximately a runner's
"constant" for the second quarter-
tulle, after a 65e. first quarter, no ad-
vantage ,will 'accrue if the pace falls
below 66s, in the opening "440." 00
the other hand, he points out, the
Pace in the first lap may be so hot
as to be economically unsound, in
which case the 87s, taken as 'tire
"constant" for an exceptional athlete
would increase perhaps to 505, or 605.
It is a tribute to these two books
that one can read them both without
a wearying sense 'of repetition. The
ground they cover is, for a good deal
of the time, common to both; but the
avenues of apprach are widely dif-
ferent, and whilst' J. comfortable arm -
their is desirable for the complete
enjoyment 'of "Athletics," Butler's
book calls for close attention to dia-
gram—and a notebook and pencil,
LONG SLEEP MAKES
• BABY HAPPY AGAIN
"Our baby kept waking 'us several
timesauight until we s
arted •81vin
g
him a little Castoria atter his last
nursing," says an Iowa mother. "Ile
slept soundly from, the first night and
it made him loots and feel worlds
better.", Baby 'epee/alists endorse
Fletcberei ,Castoria; • and millions, of
mothers know how this purely -vege-
table, , harmless ' preparation helps
babies and children, with colic, con•
stipation, colds, diarrhea, etc. The
Fletcher signature ie always on the
wrapper of genuine Castoria, Avoid
imitations. •
The Predominance of America
Norman Angell in the Spectator
(London); A]ike in Europe and
Amerce
a ]
, we have slipped into the
habit of assuming, not merely that
America is now ''Blre great noise," la-
dubitabiy the most powerful single.
'national unit In the world, having
captured an economic predominance
Which yesterday was Britain's, but
that this predominance is.bdund to
'he Permanent beoause'inherent In the,
natureof things, in American super-
iority of natural resources, more
fortunate situation in physical advan-
ttages denied to Europe. The un-
doubted superiority 02 America and
its economic preponderance to -day 15
not to be explained by superiority of
natural resources, but by a political
'fact (which gives rise, be it noted,
to an economic one) The States have
political unity; Europe has not. If
the 0001'55 of historical development;
in North America has been more like
that of South America, so that Eng -
'Jell -speaking America had been as
melt divided as is Spanish-speaking
Amerita; if, in what is now the Uni-
ted States, there existed, not one na-
tion .but a dozen .rival nations—as
south of the Mexican border there aro
more than a .dozen different nations
—we should not
`now be talking about
American power and its predomin-
ance in the world. North America
would figure' for very little more in
such terms than does South America.
Minaret's Liniment for aching joints
Mr. Dawes Stays Dry
Now York World: Mr Charles G.
Danes, our Ambassador to Great Bri-
tain,
ritain, has let 1t be renown that no
liquor will be served at' the Embassy
00 long as he occupies it. "I never
made it a practice to serve liquor in
my home in the States," he said, "and
see no reason to change now." Ansi
while it may be doubted whetber his
motive es quite so simple as that, he
certainly deserves no criticism. HeI
raises no tedious point of law, yet,
places himself in an excelent posi
tion With regard
to a question that
be
comes, from a ]liternational point oe
view, 'continually more difficult.
The inferiority complex would, be
i a fine thing if the right people had it.
'
Highly "Prized Trophy
tt c itet .zrengo
This is the Beatty Trophy, ,present-:
ed by the "chairman;and president of
the Canadian Pacific Railway, for'
inter -regimental competition' among,
pipers of ,Canadian ` Highland Regi-
ments, to be played for at theHigh-
land Gathering and Scottish' Music
Festival scheduled to be held at Banff
August 30 September 2. The gath-
ering brings together pipers from one
end 'of Canada to the other, from
Nova Scotia to 'British Columbia, and
is the great event of the year in Scot-
tish -Canadian circles.
•
•
Naval Defence of the Empire
Bloemfontein Friend: Great Britain
has all along been supplying naval
protection not only,forher needs, but
for those of the self-governing Do-
minions as well. It, she we •e now to'
seize the present opportunity to tell
the Dominions that in future they
must look after themselves in regard
to naval protection, and especially aseerste
the protection of their trade routes,
she would be relieving her taxpayers
of a heavy burden and, forcing the
people of the Dominions fairly to
shoulder their own burdens.. As
independent member's of the League
of Nations, the Dominions claim and
exercise the rights of independent
states. They could hardly object,
h f
t Bre ore - if..Gres thorn
t Britain it n t o1 d h m
puietly but frankly that tor the fu-
ture they must look after their own
defences, both on land and on sea.
A realization of the potentialities of
such a position would be a useful
corrective to some of the political
and constitutional shlpboleths that
one hears expressed so airly from
Party Platforms.
ATCH the health of
your growing children!
See that they have the health
and energy necessary for
their school work and plaq-
Por growing children—pat'-
titularly girls—a rich supply
of red blood 'is' essential: '-
Languor_, nervousness, de-
pression, fickle rappetite .or
pallor indicate amentia.
Dr. Williams' Pink' Pills -
enrich the blood, prevent
anaemia and build healthy:...
bone and tissues. Thousands
of mothers have proved this.
"bily twelve-yearold gid,"
writes Mrs. Robert Devitt of
Brougham, Ontario, "became'
so' pale, so ill and nervous
that lye had to take her out of
school..1 tried Dr. W'iliiaina'
Pink Pills for her and
' she gained in weight and
strength. She is now the pic-
ture of health."
Buy a box of 1Dr..Wiltiame'
Pink Pills at all druggists and'.
dgalers'in medicine or, post-
paid,;by at 50 cents a.
bo,t from The Dr. Williams
Mediiiise Co., Brockville,
Ontario.
1.21
5o
PER 6015
PIS ► PILLS
SAVE THE CEII REN
In Summer When Childhood Ail-
ments Are Most Dangerous. .
Mothers woo keep a box 02 Barry's
Own Tablets in the ]rouse may feel
that the lives of 'their tittle ones are
reasonably Safe during the hot wea-
ther. Stomach troubles, cholera in.
fantum and diarrhoea carry off thou-
sands of little ones every summer, in
most oases because the mother (lees
not have a safe tnedielne at ]land to
give promptly. Baby's Own Tablets
relieve these troubles, or if given do
casionally to the well child they will
prevent their -coming on. The Tab-
lets are guaranteed to be absolutely
harmless even to the new-born babe.
Tbey are especially good in summer
because they regulate the bowels and
keep the stomach sweet and pure.
They are sold by medicine dealers or
by mail at 25 cents a box from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock -
le, Ont.
WANTED;
Malt with good reliable travelling equip-
iyient for Watkins District in a nearby
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>rA ;
THE J. R. WATKINS CO. Desk 6,
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�> merely bad noise in a burry "p l
•'A HOUG5HOLO N5110
19154 COtINTRt1G'•
Reparations and Debts
London ' Evening Standard (Ind.
Cons,): The question of reparations.
cannot be dissociated from that of
inter -Allied indebtedness, and in this
latter Great Britain has gone as far
lenient generosity n t erosit g n y can go. France
is paying .us . eight millions a year,
on both capital and interest accounts
combined, against an outstanding debt
of $650,000,030—which settlement has
not yet even been ratified. Italy,
whose debt is not much less, is pay-
ing us only four and a half millions
a year. Meanwhile we are paying to
America a colossal sum annually in
respect of moneys which we borrow-
ed from her to lend to France and
Italy. Mr. Churchill's last statement
on tire subject was that we had paid
since the war £247,000,000 to our cred-
itors, while receiving only £34,000,000
from our debtors.
Fear and Conduct
Robert Dyed in the London Daily
News and Westminster Gazette (Lib-
eral): (Abel Canoe, a French prod-
ucer, is preparing a film which will
depict the end of the world, in which
Poor mortals will be stripped of their
everyday disguises and. will be ex-
hibited 1n a state of -spiritual naked-
ness through fright.) I doubt, how-
ever, whether 10 Gance's preliminary
assumption is true. It is no more
true that a man reveals his .true na-
ture under the influence of fear than
that he does so under the influence of
drink. You can take almost any test
of a man's true nature -his attitride
to money, his behaviour ,when in love,
his treatment of superiors or sub-
ordinates -and each of these will t811
you,'esomething about him. Any of
them, indeed, will tell you rather
more about him than his conduct when
lie is stricken with panic. •
The Channel Tunnel.
London Daily Mail (Ind. Cons.):
The fact that the construction of a
tunnel should supply a "greatdeal
of work of a useful hind for toe un-
employed the
ought to recommend employed g
enterprise strongly to the Socialist
Government, and Mr, J.,•17. Thomas
has publicly approved tie project. it
is calculated that quite 24,000 men
would be directly engaged; and in ad-
dition there would be a large amount
of .indirect employment in the manu-
facture :of the steel and the boring
appliances required. The stimulus
given to British industry—tor we as-
sume that British labor and British
material would be exclusively sped. -
fled for the British section of the
work—would therefore be of great
value in..a period of •trade depression
such as the present ,the old objec-
tion 'to the undertaldng need not be
treated too seriously in OUT day. In
a few years everybody will be wonder-
ing that there ever was any opposi-
tion to it •
President and Prune Minister
Philadelphia Ledger: In the United
States: there has Been no disposition
to gnestion the importance or ttlie
propriety of the meeting between
President and Prime Minister, thou„ i
a Pew years ago 'a furore 0f 001SpiO3en
would have been aroused by any pro-
posal of the head•of a.British Covent.
Dent to establish direct personal con-
tact with President Harding' or Presi-
dent Coolidge, .The, gentleen, who
careers 'of pope The thing wanted like to aslc rhetoricallm
y, "V�1ha ha''e
is "drastic reduction" of navies, with
a human'demonetration to the whole'
world that the two fleets will rover
be used against 'each other. It 15
true. But covert mischief will work
right and left until openly we clinch
the truth, Let. us breiak down
Chinese etifuette by the first • emit
Of' a British Prime Minister to Wash-
ington. After' that, ell' ordinary
decent people 'In our tubo countries
would go about their business feel-
lug better`. aHAIR
a
.;e
d4"t bti., IasseltR
eee
111.
"A 'woman has sunk pretty low
when she has to swing for it
MacDonald and Hoover
J. L. Garvin in the London Observ-
er (Ind•): President Hoover by law
12 prevented from coning to Europe.
The more reason why Mr, Ramsay
MacDonald should go to 'America.
Both the President' and the.Pr•ithe
Minister know how to lay all the
cards on the table. Each of them
would find the other amongst the
most. interesting men . that either
. can. ever encounter:. Each of them
can explain a good deal •from differ-.
eeit standpoints It would be are -
'v
Who is" , Doctor?
In your hands. wo place our social
and individual health. You,. and you
'alone may use the hallowed title,
"Doctor 01 1tledicine"and 11y virtue
of that title. heal the sick and inc-
servo 1110 lvell� - °
'Perhaps the best answer to that
question,; is this, imagine, if Yea can,.
th; condition Alia would-eiiist if the
nodical profession were not 00' re-
cogni(el, Suppose that any man
who had:tho laudable ambition to heal
leis fellow -men of their ills—could'
without ,any supergiolon;tall himselt.
"Doctor" and begin cutting people
np and dosing' them with 'potations of
his own concoction. What an epid-
emic of horrible deaths there would
be. •How 'quickly the public's present-
• profound respect;. for the - title "Doc-
tor," would be changed' to the deepest
distrust!'
, What then,: is the medical profes-
sion, and how' does ;ht maintain_ the
high 'standard- that this; great public
-confidence demands? - Let us con
cider ivhat the Province :of Ontario
expects of a man who would practise.
medicine.Its requirements are typi-
cal of those of the rest of Canada,
To become a -medical strident, one
meet first pass leis honor Matricula-
tion. That takes five year's. After
that, he must spend another. six years
at a recognized medical school
It is hard to adequately suggest, in
a sketchy article ot this nature, the
vast scope of: a modern medical cur-
riculum. The ' neoph3'te must learn
pliysics, chemistry, biology, .physio-
logy, pharmacology, anatomy, his-
tology (involving ' a nunderstanding
of themicroscopic structure of the
body.)
li'rom these basic studies, all of
which, where they; touch. the human
ening, deal •merely' with the norinel,
the student then proceeds to patho-
logy, the stedyof sickness, in its dif-
ferent aspects, pathological' oheinis-
try, bacteriology and immunology,
medicine and eurgery in all their
branches, preventive. medicine hygi-
e to do with abroad?" wili,doubtiess
shortly bo heard from. But they are
likely .to find that their rhetoric is
much' less powerful than it was be-
fore the present fortunate conjunc-
tions- of men and circumstances..
Jazz has recently been described as 1 Ask Your Barbel—He linowS
It' is still harder, for the .reader to
appreciate the vast historical back-
ground, the great wealth and rich-
ness of meaning of all Of those terms;
of the . tremendous accumulation of
knowledge that a •wouldebe doctor
mist painstakingly acquire. And
when he has spent six long years ac-
quiring 'it, itis, then customary ;for
him to spend one or more, often two
years as an interne in a bospital. So
that a youth of nineteen who finishes
i starts 'to
his honor' metric and its "go
through for a doctor" knows that he
will be about 28 before he starts
earning anything. And even then, it
wi11- take Trim another five years be.
fore be begins to earn more than
enough for the ordinary necessities
of lite.
Which means that a doctor doesn't
begin to earn anything to speak Of,
as a rule, till he is thirty -three -
in the meantime, he leas spent from
six to. eight years learning his pro-
fession, he has bad to master all the
oid, as well as all the new branches
of medicine, he has passed a number
of stiff examinations—made extra
stiff in order to keep an already
e owded profession from becoming
overcrowded. (And from this extra-
ordinary severity of examination, the
general public is obviously the great-
est gainer,' since only the -more in-
telligent, reliable students succeed in
passing.)
He has spent an absolute minimum
of $1,000 a year for six years, includ-
ing $150 for tuition, $100 for books
and equipment, which leaves very lit-
tle for room, board, clothing and in-
cidentals, to say nothing of amuse.
ments.
'But in passing through those years
of test and trial and hard work, he
has become legitimate heir to all the
tested medical knowledge that man-
kind has ever acquired and saved.
The wisdom of long -dead leeches has.
been poured into him, and be has
become greater than any of them—
greater by virtue of his greater knowl-
edge, a scientist, able to work by de -
groes from the known to the unknown.
And for the privileges that society
accords the physician it exects, and
i cc
is almost invariably accorded, a ten-
fold return ..There is no other divi
i h
glen of mankind, with the possible. ex-
ception
ception of clergymen, that gives
r ince energy
gratis, more Of its t
and knowledge than do the doctors.
A doctor does an enormous amount
of wont -for which he is not paid.
Common Humanity demands that he
answer any serious call made upon
]rim, at any hour of the day or•night,
even iE he knows that the patient
cannot pay. In a way this is unjust.
No expects the keeper of a gro-
cery store to give away hie goods,
even though there may .be people
starving for lack of them, Yet a doc-
tor is expected to do just that—and
in most cases lie roes.,
In malting this concession to the
race generally, the doctor becomes
the .greatest giver ofcharity in the
community. ",Noblesse oblige" is to
him no idle elegan tphrase and itis
indisputable that the professioir bears,
collectively, a great burden of heal -
leg the indigent, which belongs eight-
ly tothe state, just ae •the, feeding
of the starving is becomin recogniz-
ed -as a state responsibility.
And so, within the limitations of
this:short article, I have .endeavored
to establish the following facts: that
every doctor belongs to a profession
whose object above all other things
is to heal the sick and to prevent sick-
ness; a. profession that les constant-
ly
onstantly hnproving`itself, a profession that
bas pi'oaueed men Bice Koch, Jenner,
and asteur, whose discoveries have
saved the lives 01 hundreds of thou-
audit,and will save unorn hundreds
of millions, a ,profession- whose pride
is in efficiency, and whose record is
one of service that ha@ been 1.'1'4
larger degree "u)itelflsh than that of
any ot,lierq nnini10h calling.
So Would We
Ottawa Journal (Cons.): Stocks on
the New York Stock Exchange have
declined by 76,000,000,000. What we
would.like to know 18 whore le the
70,000;000,000? ' •
Keep Minard's Liniment aiway0 handy
r
% or�Nutar.
��l@IL�BES>
�4OF MAeh,Fs
i'or idt ottbie1
due to Acid
INDIGESTION
ACCO STOMACH
HIAFVEURN
HEADACHE
GA5aJ-9 NAU9-_�
Many people, two hours after eat-
ing, suffer indigestion as they call it.
It is usually excess acid. Correct it
with an alkali, Tire best way, the
quick, l armless and efficient way, is
Phillips Milk of :Magnesia. It has
remained for 50 years the etandaidt
with physicians. One spoonfosl in
water neutralizes many . tunes its
volume in stomach acids, and at once.
The symptoms disappear in live min -
Yon will never use crude methods,
when you know this better 'method.-
And
ethod.And you will never suffer from excess
acid when you prow out tole easy
relief, Please dor sthat—fort your
own .sake --now.
Be sure to get the genuine Phillips'
Milit of Magnesia prescribed by physi
ciaaia•"tor 50 years in correcting ex-
cess .acids.
xcess-acids. 'Bach bottle •contains felt
0ireotions=any drugstore,
E
E S
POR PALL WHEAT
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Our Watto: Quant'=-Oervice 3utlstaotron ran
Granada -a
Montahn. City
Granada is held to be one of tho
lowliest. places in the whole world -
The city lies at the point where the
Sierra Nevada puts forth its'foothills,
a bundle, of rays extending toward
the •Vegalure gigantic roots that have
come up out of the ground. rite
new section .of the city has spread
plaeidly'over the plain with its spaci-
ous horizontal streets and lines of
elms(alamedas);.or is wedged in be-
tween the hills, 'following the valleys
and riverbeds, and terminating in
thin :lines extending far into the
Sierra. The older part of the city
has not been able tomake itseif so
comfortable. These ancient quarters
still bear marks of having been built
in insecure times, wben Lire houses
clangng for protectioa to thee steep
mountain ridges. There they still
stand, a densely peci:ed mass; like a
neck of 2righteee1 mountain goats.
So have they stood for many peace-
ful centuries, still spying out the
enemy in a sort of petrified pante.
Steep staircase streets lead through
the city, with traces of Moorish times
meeting your eyes everywhere. Ilere
a great vaulted cistern covered with
glazed tiling; there tie ruins of a
little mosque or an arched gate built
to break the force of '8 hostile ort
slaught. In the city walls are frag-
ments of stucco arches resting upon
marble columns, and now and again
your eye wanders into a still perfect
Moorish courtyard.
In some places the slope becomes
too sharp to be negotiated by stair-
cases
taircases and the path is then obliged to
assume a long zigzag rise. It has
been impossible to build houses ex-
cept on the inside of the zigzag, whore
they must use tire mountain for a
back. The outer edge of the path is
a white railing and a file of slender
cypresses topped by an ocean of blue.
As you mount the path into an end-
less labyrinth et cabins and weather-
beaten, walls, fig trees peer for(
from the ruins. .. .
We creep under the limed Moorish
wall, cross a sun-dried, parched
mountain top and are again on the
southern slope of the range. The
steep declivity is covered with' Indian
fig -cactus,. which grips the cliffs with
its broad, fiat roots. Below us, the
paths meander down like ribbons
along• the mountain -slope, and over
them irregular rows of smoking
chimneys seem to stick at rigbt
angles to the red mountain sell. We
can see the- entrances to the caves
from here.. , . At certain points the
SteO n-,
rocity wall changese
e
to terraces
(here peach -trees and almonds bios-
som; at other points the walls are
h
pitted by soft phase sites of caves
that have eollopsed.—Martin Ander-
sou. Nexo, in "Days In the Sun."
"How's your wife . coming 'along
witb her driving?" "Sire took a turn
for the worse last week, sir."—Life.
Minaret's Liniment for Neuralgia.
Classified -Advertisements
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11
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- Alcock and Brown
Detroit News: (Bruce Gould, In his
book "Sky ,Larking," predicts that lots
fearshence Captain John .Alcock and
Arthur E. Brown will •be honoured
above all other pathfinders of the air.)
The acclaim that should have been
theirs was denied them, It may be,
as Mr. Gould suggests, that all coun-
tlies were too near the . dangerous
days of the war period in 1019 to
properly appreciate Brown and Al-
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in fact there were more of them than.
there were Jobe, and in the news of
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were quickly forgotten,
Minard's Liniment for summer, Colds
•
e«—,a of taxi-
cabsreducing the legal arc.
cabs in New York City it has been.
estimated that the pedestrian will be
in a position to be menaced by three
taxis in the same space :in which he
noW dodges only two:
Sunburn
Youll sleep in comfort if you
apply Minard's. •
FET � PAIN
ISSUE No. 31—'29
74111117hent
'The one' iy l (ar1
You Must Do Your Bitf:!
tin the war against the fly, carrier
of germs and breeder of disease. I
It le proven that AEROXON Is one
of the most convenient and most
efficient means of combating this
fly evil 1t is convenient, because
of the posh•pla ft if hygienic,
Flies never gel away when once
caught. Each spiral gives three
Lweeks' perfect service.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS:
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l,s De C. 0. Genesi & Fils, timilSe
911enn1te0Ke. pen
SOLE nCLVt5 •
aY µ$i'4 1 L. 2��.1.1. rtu.?�}St{kvlt"a�I,�M ��. •'iy.. Y
Distributor for Ontario
NEWTON A. HILL
5e Pront St. B. • - Toronto
Sendfor,4maxing
,Fa4'tsAbout the
realtIvelY
lffeedien,ce
P(f�
Vy. not f int
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Others regatta higher speed, 'Wleeomlu dairymen am
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cold lethal etntearaG5-n5S wdtefarcpWlen.
GEHL BROS. MFG CO.
ass S. Water St
{Vest Dene, wls��/
gip* `() S,
Ar 4erre'r.:414041114A 'Wilkrlir�'a,,. ..,�
549
"1 took Lydia E. Pinkhain's
Vegetable Compound for mis-
erable acid tired feelings and
it gave me strength to do my
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I feel well and strong and have
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now( I recommend the'Vege-
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New Brunswick.