HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-03-04, Page 3EARTH .S ALWAYS i AIG
E'veeleating Hills Exist Only in the Lane -nage of the 'Poets.
'thes.tormatk,ds of granite rockexposed on 'a hill -side fa the Mourne.
Mountains, Ireland, show how the hells are wore away by the elements. The
formations Sketched her are known by the picturesque title ore "The Castles
of leivvltar:'
Secrete of Science.
Ily David Dietz.
The earth as we know it to -day is
far different from the earth as pic-
tured by geologists•at the close of the
,formative period.
The continents aro not bare rock,.
but. almost everywhere are covered
with 1e,3Et, of loose materials of vari-
ous
araous sorts: -son, clay, sand and grantee
1f we dig below this loose material,
which geologists have christened the
rock mantle, .we do not always find
the -denture or ftre•hwedetied rooks."
Frequently we find looks of entirely
differrent_co•mpositlon. We hind rock
formations of various kinds ocourting
in layers or aerate, Smolt formations
The dust of the earth."
For water Is. one of the chief des-
tructive forces in this first set. Its
Members include the atmosphere,
er1nde, cold, frost, rain, rivers, lakes,.
Domes, end thetides
These forces wear away the land
and, ss, we shall see latex, create the
secondary rocks out of .the debris• of
the primary rocks.
If these forces alone were at work,
they would wear away the land until
1t etretehed in flat plaine from ocean
to ocean, The material; ;which they
wear away be deposited iu the oceans:
But their work is counteractee-by-a
aeoond sat of tortes. This set tends
to elevatei the land and to create hills -
could not leave resulted from the cool• and tnouutaine. They luso tend to
ing- of dawns, and Other causes had to lower the ocean floors.
be found io expiate them Geologiete ' As a result of these opposing sets of
call these the secondary rocks. throes, the earth has had 'a eonetently
Geologists now believe that the eon- changing surface throughout its bis-.
ddtlons wIYleh existed at the close of tory,
the tentative period—great contdneirts Geologiets believe that the contia-
ente and oestlate leave always occluded
of granite rocks protruding above the
oeeane---erdured only momentarily, ithefr present relative pcedtious. But
Immediately a great variety of when tho continents• wore low, the
egents set to work to 'cause ; change, haters flooded great sections of theta.
Theae .•ante causes have been at work With changes in the size and height
throughout the history of the earth of the land, geologists believe there
end are Stili et work. have been great changes in the ell -
These forces can be divided into matte •
tete of opposing tomess. There were not always great zones
The Mee set tends to continuously starting with frigid one at the equator,
wear avey.the land. There is geological evidence to
The poet who speaks' of . the 'ever- prove that for long periods the de
1as't eg hills" is drawing most liber- mate was very temperate at the Wee.
ally Mem Poetic license. And at Eche periods in the earth'i.
history—the so-called glacial ages, tits
polar field of ice extended far down
into what is now the temperate zone.
Next article -T -he Work of the At.
nosphsee,
The old Biblical writer, who wrote
the Book of Job, Siad'a better under -
Mending of the 'situation, when he
wrote: - '
!'Tice waters wear away the stones;
Let Everything Go By.
An Indian chief had just bought a
neW car, tend after careful • instructions,
driven. away in it. An hour 'later he
returned, battered up and drenched to
the skin.
"Me hey new oar -,-pee, one heap no
,good," be grunted.
"I start off in ear. See trees. rush
• el. turn dut and let, trees go by.
"Then bee.houses rush at me.
"'I tura out , an let houses go by.
Soon I see bridge rush at me.. I fern
out to letbridge go by--axed,"Wheelie
Cabin Liners
EUROPE
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Iavorites among thousands of
discriminating travelers—luxurt
cue accommodations, excellent
Cuisine, ,attentive servicer ,,,•�._
OoIllnr
frn, lurir- In
Cherbourg and So,tthamptomr
O1(O77\A. 11.(0'11' ".•
"Tisa Comfort /lot/tow
OYA
MAIL
TA d' of ar MAn STPAM 1''Ac••ETC o,
Sp n 'le non & Sn foe., Ag .rr
ib sr ad war N n ar Local Agema.
A Bad Guess.
A leading Paris prophetess
Informs the gide of '23,
Who sacrificedeachflowing tress,
That shingling will not long survive.
Long hair will be once more the vogue,
And, though just now she may not l
knew it,.
Will tlecotate each dainty rogue
As fast as she can- grow it.
Well, Fashion pian astounding tricks,
And -those who search the trystel
sphere
For trews of 1926,
May think they see the future clear;
But in the busy barber's shop
They treat such gloomy forecasts
gaily,
Since ehfirgle, bob anal pJl:oe crop
Still claim, fresh converts daily.
As for ourz
wnenfo,
t they smile
To think that they Gould e'er again
Revert to that old-fashioned style,
Which cost them' so much, toil and
pain,
Reversions aitch as Fashion craves
Way be designed, but few will pearl
She lost her humble, willing slaves
The day they lasted freedom.
—Touchstone in London Daily Mail.
Spring Dance.
tip frpm indolent sleep the eyes of
the iiowors to wake,
Over their faoas each dawn c:oudiels'
of ,gpr rig hater; ahaho.
Denizens all or the mead now with
new vigor are i111od,
That nc e its foot not ceenrod,
Into cla,ncing the cypress would break,
-prone the Ttu•itish of Meath], (1512)
(Geyeey • ,s
Canadian rise Book.
co-operation with Canadian
Architects 21esioms of moderate
prlied'hoines are published in the,
MacLean Builders' Guide. • Detail-
ed information on pian.ning, bnikl-
irig furnishing, decorating and
and
.. g e.,11'. Profusely ofusoly 1:lustrated.
An ideal reference book. Send
20e for a copy, MacLean Building
Reports,
Ltd.,
l 344
Ad.,lald
o
St,West Toronto.
Minard's L'
r Liniment ficr!dandrufFP
HONORED BY INDIAN TRIBE
Here is a photograph of Robert Randolph Bruce, now •Lieutenant -Govern-
or of the province of British Columbia, being appointed asa chief of the'
Stoney Indians.. The governor was given a puff at the Pipe of Peace and
'seemed to enjoy It.
Yon - T e Two
Untamed.
Plough FIGHTING FOR
and drain '
And the forest with arse and saw;
You may pierce tho hills with powder-
dmills -
And shatter the mountain's awe:
Bill there eve two you will not subdue
Though you curb however you can,
They will brave the test of your worn
and best— -
The tea and the heart of tau. •
The desert may yield as•.a watered
field,
And the wind may grind•, your grain,
The rivers' might niay be yoked in
light
Or tug at a factory chain.
But "muscle nee mind these two can
bind
By eunnjngest plot or plan.
Tbey,a ail have free pit,y to the judg-
ment Day
The sea and the heart aflame -
t
You may note their deeds and geese
at the creeds
That govern their' ebb end flow,
These are tales to tell why their pas
done swell, •
Bet the secret you never will know.
And•, willing ne loath, Yee must love
ahem both,
Though Heaven alone may open
And fathom the breast of their deep
unrest
The sea and the heart of man.
—Charles Wharton Stork In the
"Itbrunt;"
Landscape Art.
Soma may, perhaps, think that an
intense study and love of nature is nil
tbut is needed for _the appreciation of
landscape painting: nothing, however,
ecoid be further from the mark.
Titers are many who delight in the
study el nature, who revel in a coun-
try walls, who are in raptures at the
sight of growing corn . . , who
yet aro ahsolutely Innocent of any
artistic emotion, For appreciation et
nature does not riecesearily imply ap-
precfation of it as interpreted by art,
though nen general rule it may be said
that appreclntiou of nature so inter.-
pretcd induces a greater love of na-
tur , in itself. There are others who
aro solely impressed by nature's utile
tartan 'side. I remember once going
for a country walk with a highly intel-
ligent Swede, a passionate stedont of
music and a man with a very line
literary taste. We canto across a
splendid stretch of country, a pro-
minent feature in the landscape being
a mr'estic elm. To my almost involun-
tary exclamation of pleasure at the
sight of this noble tree, my companion
simply remarked that he saw no good
in it; it would not repay the trouble
of cutting clown on account of its age
and certain Melformetionte He look-
ed at the tree from the Point of view •
'
of his father, a timber merchant, and i
in the surae way others would onlY'1
think :in looking at a splendid fle'.d, of I
'wheat oY-tbe probable amount of its
yield.. Artistic pleasure must
xo
be�,
excited _b by elle e natural' cbjer;t itself,
Re form and color, and though the re-
sponse to ice appeal (loos: net neces.I
sadly depend tin the capacity for look -
Mg at nature .through art,this me
doubtedly is a powerful 'stimulant; -
that -le, the power of sympathizing
with what some great artist has felt'
in regard to seine landscape a portion;
of Wheat kernel, so to speak, he hes
extracted' and placed on his canvas: --
Percy Moore Turner, ht "The Apprecia-
dewed Painting," -
BABY'S HALT
Is the Constant Care of Every
Young' Mother.
The young mother has a constant
care in looking after the welfare of
her little ones, Childhood ailments•
come on so suddenly'—sometimes• with-
out a. mipute'a warning—the'-mother
may have a very sick baby an her
hands before 'help can be obtained.
That is unless she has a remedy in
the house whielt sbe can sanely give
the baby for any of tete: many minor
ailments of babyhood and childhood.
Such a remedy is found. to Baby's
Own Tablets. Thousands, of mothers
throughoutthe country "always keep
a box of the Tablets on hand and they
proclaim them to be without an equal
for sweetening baby's stomach; regu-
lating his.bowels and thus driving out
constipation and indigestion, colds and
ahnple fevers, and making .the dreaded
teething period easy.
Baby's Own Tablets are an absolute-
ly sate remedy. They are guaranteed
• to be free from opiates or any other
narcotic drug which are so harmful to
the futut:e welfare of the baby. 14loth-
ers, it you value the life of your little
ones give him Baby's Own Tablets
when he is 111, or, better still, give him
an occaslonai,:dose of the Tablets to
ward off illness. The Tablets are sold
by medicine dealers or will be sent to
any address, post paid, at 25 cents a
box' by addressing The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co.pBrockvilie, Ont.
The Touch of Gocl.
Down 'mid tho Heide crusted white
with snow,
Where the ramp mists hong, and.the
title winds blow,
And scarcely a 'gleam from the sky
breaks through,
And you'd think that never .a .daisy
grove—
1 felt tiro sun and I knew the and
Was but awaiting the touch of God.
Down where the blues of solitude fall,
dna,
And the curtain of loneliness hangs
o'er all,
And scarcely a glad, brave light shines
through, •
Arid you'd think that a 'happiness never
grew,—
I felt a presence beside me Stand
And I touched a hand that had touched
God's band.
The Stott/makes Wife.
Scots tell more good' stories •'about
therneelvete than any other race, In
. fact, it is said that there is a society
in Akertioen-tvitici meets mice a week
to 'concoct tales against their own
town and townsfolk. The Bari 01
Aberdeen himself is an inveterate
etarY-teller, and the point of his yarns'
le egetinst hes' countryman.
The latest yarn from ' Ap North"
hoe to do with a man who went to the
beta minister antinsiced how ms.ch it
would cost to get married. Ile had
his fiancee waiting in an ante -room.
"it will cost you jest what you think.
she will be tcarth to, you as a wife,"
jocularly said the nrinistet•.-
Thereurou the tnau hande1 ovei'•a
shDiing'and at the same' time shouted
to the girl to "Come in, :Maggie!"
The minister took ono quack leak at
the.young woman one promptly ban.
el the peeslleetive husband a sixpence
change, from the shilling! '
Junior Scales.
1tuth was fond of music, and wished
to take piano lessons, but her mother
thought she was too ytiling. "I might
begin with junior ,scales," urged the
little girl. "With whet?" asked her
mother, greatly perplexed "Oh, minor •
scales,' aorrecled Ruth, "Surely I am
big enough to learn to ,play minor
scales."
Oh Mother! What Cern I Do''
1•iow many ,,Limas a day do your
babies est: you; that 'question? ,and
bow often are you ably' to suggest
some interesting gains for them to
p1113', some amusing occupation for a
rainy day? If you'd like niweys:.to
have a 'practice!, 11013151. yuggestlon
for them, read this snappy hew teal.
tore. •
All Tired Out—Feel ---
Miserable, Generally?
If you,reel out of sorts, your kidneys
and liver one not acting naturally.
Dont -delay beigo to zcur dtuggiot
and het a boe of tlraer's Safe Kid-,
n'ay aid Livttler hVjeated
19 take 'according
o direet'ions. In a;
short time you should
notice the benefit from
thisi-emedy rccl lc from
herbs - and other bene-..
ilyial ingredients. -D sed
for over tie years by
milllions in all parte 01
the world. .t d.. Por your,
health's sake .a e telco caro.
O your ur ltldne
a mid
Y d
liver.
Solei by Y all druggists. Price $1.2ir
gmr bottle. -Warner's Sete Remedies
(U, Torolvto, OntaBo,
T
111 l? Ol ''1
i
Dot a big bite being true epnl t0 101.
?leve
I •,
In t.- r fier'tel u:
e 1 11111 Slrly It ,
At
etY fno fortune for ro :110.ev
e cls;
r end Lor the nl;l
.t,i l: l
( c 1 roll the f
l or male
11p in the 'hollow).
Mina!d' L ntet for colds.
1
HH E IMPROVEMENT i ". , A Prayer,
0
:._ :tee '1 o the .(i7 cel S.nr;I of All,
From -tyro and soil
1,Tron 'Mart and noisy strr t
Weak and stun-Down—Restored:-Whgno tread the Iattent c f=r,`
by Dr.' Willianlsi'-Purls Pills.
"Two • years ago,," ars '1111 s. L.
Wright, Seciretan, ,Resit 1 was very
much run-down in health I suffered
frolic Indigestion, rick headaches en l
sleepless nights,' Faint spells would
often cone over mo and 1 Weald have
to Ile down,till the faintness pessed
away, I wza':so short,of breath that 1
could notjyallr any distance or do any-
thing that required:.nulteh exertion,
withori feeling completely used np.
As 3 was constantly growing weaker,
7 consulted a doctor who told uie I
was anaemic and needed building Up
•
I,tpol; several bottles of tonic he gave
me, but the help I got front it was duly
tenporttry. At this. etoge 1 decided to
try Dr. Williamse:Piult Pills, which I"
bad,uaed'in girlhood with nnuch.bene-,
fit; It was not long after ,I began
using them that I knew I had at last
found 'the ;right medicine, I thinit 1
took altogether gone fifteen' boxes,
and the iknprovement was remarkable
Ms I was feeling ae weir as ever I had
been, and my gone -health has eon:
tinned to. this day. -I had also been
troubled at times wall rheumatism,
and this as well as my. other troubles
dta'appeared,.:'I leave since recommend-
ed Mr. Williams Pink ,Pills. to neigh -
hors who have need them with equally
good results;"
All weak, anaemic women and girls
should follow the example of Mrs.
Wright, and give these pilin a'fair
trial, New health and new strength is
sure to follow. You can get the"pills
from your druggist, or by mail at 50
cents a box from The Dr, 'Williams'.
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
An Age.old Ceremony.
A' ceremonial 490 years eld figm•ed at
the installation In Westminster Abbey
of ifs dean, Dr. William Foxley Norris.
A medieval procession conducted bim
into the cathedral to read one of the
lessons of the day. An address was
presented nad replied to in Latin.
Most impressive of all was when Dr.
Norris told .a parable from the Pullet
One densely foggy day, when he was
dean of York Minster, he had groped
his way up to that catholllal hardly
able to the the road. "sly door led
into a lofty vestibule," he said, "where
all was dark tie nightAgain S groped
my way, and opened the floor leading
into the cathedral. To my amaze-
ment, the. interior was flooded with
brilliant sunshine. The lantern. tower
was -sigh, up out et the Pos. I need not
interpret my parable. . I pray
to -day that not only in the itnmedlate
problems et the puzzling life of this
great city, but tar and wide, wherever
temporary darkness reigns throughout
the Empire and throughout the world,
this abbey shalt. stand • 111te that lan-
tern tower, bringing the light of heav-
en to pierce the world's darkest abed -
owe."
"DIAMOND DYE" ANY
GARMENT, DRAPERY
Fust Dip to Tint or Boil
to Dye
b]ach 15 -cent peek
.age contains direc-
Cone so simple any
Woman tan tint soft,
delicate shades • or
dye rich, permanent
colors in ifugerie,
silks, ribbons, skirts,
waists, dresses,
co at s , etooeless,
sweaters, draperies,
coverings, hangings
everythiegi
Huy Diamond Dyes—no other kind—
and tell ycur druggist whether the ma.
terial you wish to color is wool or silk,
or whether it is linen, ccltou or mixed
geode.
, Nowadays everyone looks down upon
the woman who clots not werk:--Mrs.
Stan;ey Baldwin.
Minard'e Liniment tired' by physicians.
Home lessons, are as unnecessary as
they are hard - on parents, says an
American educational expert.
The word is better and brighter
than when ): Was . a boy.—Mr. Will
Thorn^,
Cr s ;up
and ho* ping
Corgi
Guard your children
from, the dangers of
winter weather. :Cheek
their first cough with
Buckley's "Modified"
Mixture. Pleasant to
take and brings instant
relief.
3uckley's Mixture.
"Strong' or "N[odified"
acts like a flash on
Croup and Whooping
Cough or any affection
of throat, chest and
lungs. Keep a bottle
handy. Wonderful at
night. ``A. dose ` stops
coughing. 208
1(1'111111111
Sa RA.¢.:.'OA YA,
vb' laa.lt', CTLLSOE
.'51,001" or "Modified"
ifie— li) dioses
ft
i
. su . ,fe acro.
.ISrro 7
(
ll
1(lim, %c il11111111
LSCUL No. 9—'03. i
0:.Ka t and Parse—
Pile' vassals of man's` force, --
Prom. steel:toothed trap, from bondage
till Clo ends;
i'or all 'We suffer, make us, Lord,
• amends!
Irorget n,5 -not in our humiliat(onl
TIie lomlisr beings' of Thine 0w0 crea-
tion
Look down upon our. anguish 'and diet
tress',
Olt; Thon, who made tho Greater and
thetIaoas!
Forsake tc not, Thine humble furry
things.
F000olte 01 not 'Thy feathered folk
with wings!
Look down and Seo with what unheed-
el pains ,
We tread the path of Reath for human
. gains..
Look 'down:and mark how long we
agonize
Amidst 'theme Jeers, and under, mode
ing eyes!,
as-
A GE ..:f A t71
o
WANTED -2-61e reliable man in every
town merchant preferred, to take
otdo .r for best Custom -Made Clothes
in 'Canada. Highest commissions.
REX TAILORING CO., Ltd.
TORONTO 2
nonuser, aro mole from rkeSin bXRas,
�1 for lit of invention woofed o r"PaNat .v-
7;11 tate," booklet end tgo:Sumo"7bc Thin or"
,$N t°Y,AN Fi CO. -Tee 01.0 ftsupptp Rata
ea ,S,Crien ea•iar±r n.rron"era, Wrsrs. dgtl
d
WANTED
CIGAR STORE
, Rormeriy used -,in front of Tobacconist
Store. Must be In good condition.
State priceandwhere can be then."
• H. WAT K I N S.
73 W.. Adelaide St, • Toronto
Oh, Tbou, who made each, wood and 1p>113ZzJe Find the Principal
stream and Mead, . PRIZE LIaT -
F r us as well se man, behold our need, rr
The Stable, Lard, was sanetitiad by "- ' 25 Wrist
ee; ta�l�,Aea ea.
ForsakeThus not In our - humility! 25 Cameras
Great Lord of Lias! Great' God ofek
creation! all # r rj. a HUNDREolOF
. rx OTHER PRIZES
Thy creatures pray Thee, show Thy •le this puzzfa and win sell h
saivatiOn! .. Porfumcancs 01 sotOvs ascii you c in win one of th24le a4ovooaen
to es. Will you do this? It 1s vcryeasy. If so, just
--1fl, Sparvel-Bayly in The` Anima/ iaark the PRINCIPAL with un (0 and peed it to
World, - its at once, and iritis correct we wig shad you oto
Perfunio to-sctfrlght away,
Black Butterflies. Belfast Specira1ty Co, X Waterford, Ont,;
B'rteit butterflies come fronting down
From many a
I chimney pot town.
wish theirwingswere blue and gold '",\ iffrlvS1Plge
S
gOPTOO HgC b
•'-which -LY
T<mparary r�lap.,-whkh
Loaf a coag Tia,e. i
SOLD EVERYWHERE ewe,*
elem. s. west. k ce, twee V800eew, Taraae.
now gladly then would I be told,
That Emily lead in the Are.
How often too would I inquire,
If Emily had lit the fire.
• —Robert E. Key
De you get a sensation of pressure on thabeartl
Oen't he Ir!ghtened les not heart trouble—It's
indigestion. Snigers Syrup will rix it. Any
drugstore.
Had it been my good fortune to have
sons, T would have preferred to spend
my capital in giving them education
Lather than leave them something
when I die. -Mr, Justice Sankey.
MInard's Liniment for sore throat.
i believe in education. The more
one knows, the better will he be able
to see opportunities, and the greater Stratford, Ontario, — "After myy
�vi'fl be his happiness. Therefore, Rent baby woo bctn I started to worJt
eve itf:d should have bion advance es on the tenth day and did a big �vash-
c g in on the twelfth day. Being so
of a gaol education. _ _ young (I was married at 19) I did not
know what was the matter, so let it
go until I was all run-down, woalc
and nervous, and had a bad displace-
ment. For nearly two years I could
not sleep and I Would always complain
of having 'not a head -tube, but a
brain -ache,' My mother is taking
Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
toend during the Change of Life and
site recommended it to mo. After
'taking two bottles I began to get a
little sleep and to feel better and I
have never left off since then, except
for about three months. I can safely
•ay I have taken thirty bottles Pince
tray second baby was born. I think
it makes child -birth easier as I had
terrible pains with my drat three
children =decry sew with my fourth
en I was so much ettonger. I am
now able to do my work alone but
I am still taking the Vegetable alone,
as I am nursing baby. "--Mrs.
Omen. PAUL, 49 Cherry Street, Strat-
ford, Ontario.
if you are suffering from shy weak-
ness which. causes sueh symptoms
as pains in the side and back and
suagioodtrihnervous
m VegetbleCpundaal •
now,
$a
STRATFORD
- WOMAN
Restored to Health byLydia
E. Pint ham's Vegetable
Compound
Canadian Made for Cans.
dint Climate. Poublo wall,
Copper lint water heating
nyatem. Sensitive Automatic
regulator. Batches strong.
healthy chinks. write for
711.014 Circular to:--
3.11.1liac(eenzte, Georgetown, Ont
RSEMEN I
There Is no better friend
in the stable than Minaret:.Splendid for enrolee, well.
ing, stlffnes.
Self .. Poisoning
Increasingly
Cormora
Modern Living Habits Pro.
mote Self . Poisoning —
Thottsatnds are Victims
The average man or woman does no
enjoy consistent good health. Loss of
appetite, headaches, biliousness and a
lack of enthusiasm for either work or
play are consttint complaints.
Scientists have. ascertained that such
a condition is usually caused by eelf-
poisoning resulting from constipation.
Due to modern living habits, the
natural secretion which promotes regu.
ler elimination by softening tete bowel
contents, is often deficient -especially
among middle-aged people. The poison
from waste matter remaining in the
systems of people thus affected is the
insidious enemy of good health.
Such people need NUjel, because
Aiejol softens the waste nutter and
permits thorough and regular bowel
elimination without overtaxing the.
- intestinal
musclee. I
e helpstNature
help you. a
.Ask yoer druggist for/VW/4 to -day --
-and remember, look for the name
Nttjol'-' in. red on both bottle label
and package.
Cuticura Talcum
Is a delicately medicated, anti-
srptic, deodorizing powder ideal for
both children'. and adults. It is
cooling and refreshing and imparts
a pleasing fragrance leaving the
skin sweet and wholesome.
Soopde Snell roe sr tonic, Address Canadian
moot aIle sore, Ltd., Ltoetaeir Mee, seep
6n, Clnuncnt 11'i Oral Enc. Taiwan 5a -c.
a', •'F-• Cuticura Shaving Stick 26e.
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain ' Neuralgia Toothache., Rheumatism-
wvareoreawrocarwroarwarow
DOES NOT 'AFFECT THE HEART
Ache t• only '.013ayer" package
which contiins proven direClions.
Reedy `Bayer" boxes cf 79 tablets
- Also bottles of 24 mut 309—Druggists,
Aopitin In the trade mark (registered In Canada). nt usior Mounfaotare of 'Mnnencotle-,
ac0lenter 05. :3alloyilen,ad "(Acct“ Sallcytle Acid, "A, S. A.!'). Willie it It troll known
that Aoplria. tuenyn• ,1303er and; 'declare, Ie narks Ike public: ogallst lmitatiena, the 'Tablets
et Sayer Company willhe oiOnped wits their general trade mark, tee !'Bailor Ores,