The Clinton News Record, 1926-08-05, Page 30 yfrecaaedatiutcad
if s' i8.t' eR, load 414 i4 44:46.4.
^TO LISTEN IN THE
WOODLAND SILENCE
Ono learus from experience that
'through the most pervading ellences
may conte sounds which the unat-
tuned ear rarely hears. If .one goes
'deep into the Comet and pitches his
'tent just bomb:Worn the *here of a lake
locked in by towering pines and hem-
docks and gracofuLenvoi' blrohed, he
will find himself in a. realm where even
'the sandpiper and herrn feel complete-
ly undisturbed.
Let him sit before that tont, open
fore and aft; as did the patriarchs of
old at eventide and listen and watch.
The sun flickers down through the
• mottled.cemopy of pine needles in rib -
bees of light forming golden flocks up-
on the brown forest carpet.. Through
silver birches is seen Ilia little Jake
Where dance.myriad globules of light
driftinyagradually away into the abed-
owe of a not dietant shore darkened'by
!other pines, heniocoks and ;broad
spreading epruces. A crane rises Prem
the margin of the lake, and wings Its
way across the water to the nest of
the farther side;, a kingfisher shrieks
as lee dips downward. Thou, for an
Instant, all Is silent again. The sun
lingers in the pine tops on the distant
shore, Long eleafts of light break
;through the thin fringe of trees about
the oleafing penetrate tar Into the sur-
rounding gloom of the great forest,
then gently shrink back, tip -toeing as
it were across the lake in timo to join
tate sun as it slips behind Lho old men -
melts of the wilderness,
Evening Vespers.. I
Softly, like the music of long -ago
days, from the pine-craclle above one's
head, the, wind .begins Lo sing the -
tree -tops to sleep. Tho shadows creep
out from, the environing dusk,and i
night shtties quietly aver this ettrirlr In
the tercet. Watching the last whim.l
,
oaring light ou the lake,. one sits
wrapped about by a background of
towering shapes thatoncewere trees.
A twig snaps in the shadows; then an -
..other. Still a third, somewhat nearer.
Then a slander; graoefal-form 1; out-
lined against the light of the .opening. `1c
A splash in the lake is followed swiftly
by a purling swieln wish, heard only
In such a silence; as the deer swims
far out into the fast blackening waters.
Another sound cornea, thia time less
cautious, more clumsy. ,There le a
sniffy nosineee anent it and a hedge,
hog is. 'g+limpeed, : pryingaround the
imche,
A limb breaks off` and tette far batt
tato ,the darkness ---yet it ifs not dark -
netted : A' sour• almost invisible light,
appeam along the: trunk oe a half -rot -
tine' tree. It is weird, fantastic, it
comes and it goes. The tree -toads be-
gin their evening vespers, a nighthawk
cella to his mate form far evenbead.
Suddenly Iighte advance Mid retreat in.
the sky, wavering, ehaoting out In Jon;;
and short ribbons in the open epao°.
above tate dark lake, now twisting, now..
etraightening out, shooting up from
one side and then another, . till the
whole heavens are aflame. This auroa-
niight be a maypole dance of the stars
that weave in and out. For a tinge
'nneariy every sign of the toditto is out-
lined in fire and Light..- Then at last,.
the calor fades behind the looming
trees, ieaving tlis forest camp again. to
darkness and its 'listening &lienee.
Weida of Tourists in Merrie
England i aavrn to Royalty.
what'wl.0 tho 250,000 visitors from
eneeen America who are expected this
Year In England enjoy most? This
emotion was propounded by The As
soclated Press to a number or tourist
agents, and hotel men.
"Royalty and its trappinge," was the
unhesitating, answer: or many Me the
4lmerioane and Englishmen who have
to do with the tourist traffic. Kings
and Queens and Princes and palaces
have :greater fascination for" Ameri-
cans-thttn for ContinentaLvisitors. The
latter, as the tourist -agents say, have.
had greater exparience of royalty and
accept it es a matter of course. --
The aiang1ng of the red -coated
guaida before Buckingham Palace at
10,60 every morning always attracts
many strangers and the changing of
the Guard at Wititehale every morning
at 11 o'clock. dratw6"evon . a greater
crowd..
Loudon Tower, With' its murderous
bistory, Hampton Court•and otter psi=
twee associated with the life oe Henry,
VIII, and hie unhappy wives, have a
apeoiai charm for American visitors,=_
Even the menand women who are but
slightly versed In , English history
imow about Anne Boleyn, Catherine of
Aragon 'and the other unhappy ladies
who eat on the !' rye
^w)'. hila.
Museums, galiteee.e,b•q; theatres
which enable visitors to get back into
the atiuos1liere of the l?11iv,abethan era
are most popular, especially with visit-
ors coming Lb England for the first
time. Shakespeare and Dealt° aro eo,
inseparably connected that. they share
the popularity of the Virgin Queen hi
the estimation of the tourists.
The old Vie, with its haver -ceding
season of Shakesileare, and the"Shake-
spearian Theatre 1,at Stratford afford
visitors an opportunity to see the playe
of the'Band of Avon In Case the.
theatres In the heart of London are
hot offering .Shakespeare.
Tally -Icon and old 12105—in fact, any-
thing which reproduces the atmos-
phere of old English prints—have a
great attraction for: American visitors,
Warwick Castle, so the tourist agents
sayer comes nearer, perhaps, than any
°thee to filling the eye of Americans in
search of a real eagle, with walls and
moats and drawbridges and armor rind
a.bangdet halt -In _which the i nights
of the Round Table might be sitting.
There Is a considerable Dickens cult
among the American visitors and: many
of them are eager to visit the home of
Burns and the haunts of Wordsworth
and other poets in the English lake dis-
trict, University folks generally want
to; visit Oxford arid Cambridge. But
the.maJority of American visitors give
most of their time to London and:
points within easy reach of Ilio Brttisb.
capital.
Wo are -satisfying hundreds
of shippers. With our cream
prices, teats, pradea, daily
payments,. -Wo are paying to-
day: Special, 350; No. 1, 34o;
No. '2, 81o. We pay Express
Charges Ship usyourCream.
FRE
TR„..
J -Minute
Instruction
Book
With ,_:.,
Every
Q.R.S.
Olona
Ukulele.
Eei7J ii �` �6Si�lta,
TifIg SUMMER
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With every Olcr,a Ukulele pur-
chased from us we will give you
S'RIOE a 5-Mlnuto Instruction kook.
Teach ea you to play the"Vice" in
5 minutes,
Cut Off -Here. .P111 In mai Return,
tette. MUSiC CO., CAN., Ltd.
890 -Rine St. W. Toronto, Ont.
Picatre pond ine your special offer: of
"OloiL2” II1tubefs and - FREE 5 -
Minute Beek.
Name ..,,,.,'.„e
Town`
The Cat.
Pleasures, that 1 most, enviously sense,
Pass in long ripples clown her flanks
end d stir
The pldno that is her tail, She
deigns to purr
Arra tato caresses. But her paws
• world tense '
To Bashing weapons stale least of-
Iinmbly, I bend 16 atrofie ber silken.
fur.
1 ant 'ccntentto be a slava ' Z. •
1 am enchanted by ber i to her.
1,i�ISOIc-oto.
No one of all the woinen'I have known
Has been so beautiful, or, proud, es'
5 •ise
As, this Angora with her antbereyes,
She m5 ee leer chosen cushion seen
A
S
nd wears : the sante voluptuous,
-slow smile
he wore when She was worshipped
slrtppecl
by the Nile.
Vaster Adolphe Roberts in,
ece
Sane1vviches without; mustard -:are insipid. Diem
thean, and spread Keen's Mustard on ilii the filling lg and
—what a difference!
Mustard i o always
at :its best ,when
freshly mixed wilds
cold water.
•
415
Twb forms of preeevt-day microscopic 1t1a aresh
Is a one- Ted menial. own here: Tito ameba
•oe cl al, The voIvox-repreceeute a more advanced state sof
ovodution. Itis composed of thousands of oells in a Bort of coliony:
Secreta' of Science,
By 'David Dietz-
The trek life upon earth was prob-
ably the amplest sort imaginable.
Scientists agree upon this, though they
do not know iiowlife did ori'givate.
Probably the drat forms of life were
merely mioroseopia globules of living
matter..
In time, simple one -celled organisms
evolved. To -day we end such simple
one•oelled organisms or. animalcules,
as they are sometimes • calldd, Rnhieli
probably resemble those lrkt organ -
lams.
Scientists cell these animalcules
"protists." • They aren't deituitely ani-
mals or plants.
Some time later, probably millions
of years Iater, the first great step in
evolution' came about, •
Some of these arranteens began to
assume the characteristics of- animals.
Others, those of plants. This urns the
great parting of the ways, titedivddiug
of life tato the plant kingdom and the
animal kingdom. '
i'rom this point on the evolution of
'life can bee compared to a dotter "V',"
the evolution of the plants going along
ono branch and the evolution of iini-
mals along the other.
We find, to -day upon the earth. micro
scenic one -coiled plants and animals.
We imagine that these first plants
and animals resembled them.
It Is easy for us to seethe difference
between the animate and plants around
us,
But it Is not ea easy to get down to
'the fundamental , differences which.
would differentiate microaoopie erea-
titres' into pi•ants and animate.
Modern science, however; has, sue
ooededfn doing that.
Plants aro organisms which'feed art
a iOW chemical level. That is, ,they
feed on, air, wetem, ane ohesnioal gaits.
They absorb these salts directly out
of water or ;toil, They poasesa a green
pigment known. as ohiorophyd, As a
result of this pigment, they are able in
aunli.glut^tit absorb carbon dionde out
of -the air and tiswn it dirsetly info car-
bon ebntpouuds.
Animalslaol�. these powers. They
feed at highclhemboallevsl, That le,
they feed on ate -robes, sugaree fats'and
proteins, getting them by damming
planta or other animals,
There is a second great difeerenee
between plants and animals, Plants
possess little activity. Their cells ate
boxed in wails of a su etauoe known
as cellulose.
Animate are active. Their roelis do
not Have walls of cellulose, and in most
cases not much of a wall of any sort.
The, Crab plaints upon the estrth were
probably microscopic one -celled green
Plants floating in the open sea. Similar
plants existing to -clay are known as
patellae.
The first animal Was also in. the sea.
Fie resembled the »ressent-day ameba.
The ameba, found to -dray in ditch water
and. muddy ponds, Ls a tiny irregular
shaped egreok or grayish matter like
jelly,. But it moves about and takes
food by distending Itself or flowing
around' the food; speck and thus ab-
sorbing it.
SOME SYMPTOMS
OF THIN BLOOD
]Everybody Should be Able to Re.
Cognize Them Because, Early
Treatment is Important.
The ,Coming of the Poets.
It would be interesting were it pos-
sible to know what proportion of peo-
ple really caro for poetry, and how the
love of poetry came to them, grew In
them, and when end where it slopped..
.To myself . . poetry canoe
with Sir Walter Scott.
Neat to Scott, with me, came Longfel-
low, who pleased one es more reflec-
tive and tenderly sentimental while
Anasemia, or lack of blood, Is n the reflections were not so deep as to
ssteethe' disease and is often quite ad- ho puzzling. I remember how ",Elia-
vanced before it is recognized, It is watha" carne out when one was, a boy,
much easier to correct in its early and how delightful was the free for-
stages, but if unchecked causesweak•
cess, loss of weight, lack of ,vigor anti
ambition,
Somp:synptoma of apse iia are -loss
of appetite, Indigestion, headaches,
sleeplessness, shortness of breath after
slight exertion, and often extreme nor -
est life, and Minnneltaha, and Pau-
pukkeewis and Nokomis. One did not
then know that the same charm, with
a yet fresher dew upon It; was to meet
one later, in the "leaiewala." But at
that time one had no conscious plea
enre in emetic Style, exoept In shell
vousuess. If you have any or all of :ringing verso as Scott's and Camp-
•bhese symptoms begin treatment now bell's in his patriotic pieces,
with Dr. Williams' Pink Pille, the tonic The pleasure 'and 'enchantment of
trhiell Will make the blood rich and style first appeared to me, at about the
plentiful. Every part of the body will.' age of -fifteen. .
reslvand to this treatment, as is shoivo Previous to this, when a child, I was
by the case of Mrs, Isaac Bell, Sr., Port told:that a poet was eternizes a g to house
Anson, Ont.,who says:—"A few years in the Ilighlands vvhebe we chanced
ago I was a very•sicksy woman. " west to be, -:-a poet uamed'Tennyson. "Is
all run down' and my nerves badlyhe a poet like Sir Waiter Scott?" I
shattered.' I had taken doctoies Medi -!remember asking, .and .was told, "No,'
cine, but as I got no 'nein) from it, I he is nett'. . . I was prowling, later,
tried other medicines, but with no bete among booke in an ancient house, a
ter results.'. One dpy while reading a rambling old place.:: . I tried Ten
newspaper, I came across' -an wive', ' nylon,.. and instantly a new light of
tisemeut of Dr, Williarns'e Pink Pills poetry dawned, a new music yeas audr:
describing a ease very much like my ibis• . "Men .scarcely •know how
own, 1 decided to try them, and by the beautiful lire is''' Shelley says, I ata
time I hadtaken two boxes I could feel convinced that we soarcely know how
the benefit I wee getting frt'om them, so great a poet Lord Tennyson is. .
T cheerfully continued the treatment The same hood has "1•aised the Table
and was, soon a wellwoman in !tetter Rouucl again," that has written the
health than' I had enjoyed for soma sacred book of friendship, that- has
years, rn view of what Dr. W.illir_nts' lulled us with the magic of tho•"Lotus
.Pink Pills have done for ma I cheer. eaters, and the melody of Tithonus,".
fully recorumend their use to:all weak, l Ho him 'enriched our world with 'a
run-down 1'
Conquest of romance, he 1}ns.recut and.
Dr: Williains' Ptah Pillsaresold by, a thoueand-;aneient :'goaste of
all druggists, ormay 'be had by mail" Greece 'and Route;' he has .roused OUT
et -.50 cente"a box by: writing The Dr. `lmtriotism; he 11as'� stirred our -ity
Wiulinihs meoefne co, Brackvilla, 'ther•�e is hardly a Raman P passion Uut;o
he
oat. A free' booklet; "Building, U p has purged it and ennobled it, inclutl-
the Blood," Will be.sent to any, address. ing ';this of love."Trjrly the Laureate
on request.,
remains the most various, the sweet-
est,`•tlre most exquisite, . theenost
The Lilac Tree. Vixgilianof all English poets:, .
A dreaming stillness mire as light, - -ler'e nray esaci the desultory tale of
A waft intangible as air, adesuitory'bookish boyhood.•—Andrew
About the blossoming Lilac floss, Lang, i'Y "AdrelrtureS Among Books.'
A lambent veil, a Scouted spelt,
Such as in Eden groves befell
When first a•lilac bloomed„new lent,
For earth a feetingravishment
The, Cherry in her April white,
The early Apple And the Pear,` •
The greenly kirtled Cinnamon Beep,
Are sweet as maids from neck to hear,
But no whist wonder alters',them
Only
tho r
listening steuiug Lilia.cc Tree
Is dimly enhemes inlam
g oury.
spice Brown, in learners iclegasitre
How Heiny Hairs on a Head?
Instruments invented by • Char es
Nessi r, of New York,; are::caliebla 'of
counting the hairs of the Tread and giv-
ing other dataof interest to hair -dress -
ere. , It has been shown that dm nuin-
berof hairs' growing on the average
heasi 1s -from :100,000 to •250,000, vary -
Ina with,thetexture of the hair,
1-lunian hair grows at the rate of half
an inch a nronlh,
tdinard's Liniment for tore 'Feet,
Comfort on. Roadways:
Speed lies much to do with .conttort
iu riding Over rough roads; There aro
some types ..of Pavements that can be
made to'seem smoother bydrivltsg ten
or fifteen utiles an hour fester, while
others, can .be smoothed' .,out only by •
driving -slower. It -depends upon Life
nature
of the road, tris wheelbase off,
the car, the i ember and weight of •pas-
senger§ Carried, toe' air pressure in
the tires grid tee, type: of springcontrol
devices used So the drivernmust ex-
pertinent with estch new stretch of
Canada Second in Exports. ”
Canada ranks second among the
countries of the world in value .of ex.
Ports Per capita, e
Dredge Coal From River.
Operating near coal ilps,' a Liver.
!tool dredger raised betvveee 50 and:
GO tens of coal In a day recently.
Descendant of Csovernor
Duke Dmitri, of Leuchtenberg, Count
de "Beauha¢•noire lineal deseenilant of
CleMilee, 1vlarquis cls Beaubarnolee who
governed Canada in 'tits name of ,the
P`sss ieb Icing .;Louie XV'. between 1720
anal 1737, id visiting for the Bret time
hitt 'country In which Pais anoeotor
made history. Ile is joining his ceueln,
the Marquis di Ai,bixai, in is tbhrtyviny
toUrf ore the Canadian ,R.ockiee and le
tailing part with, brim in- the., grand
Pow7Wow'hejd ittethe Ptarmigans
ley 'Iii Augusfi lie' travelled from
Cherbourg on, ;fillZS.fe Canadian l?acldc
liner Melina and t;aytlled C.V.R. across
Can
oda.
Coaling 'down the St Law-
rence he was deeply. interesthrd In the
-Frovinee' of Quebec with which he io
historioaliy connected, and• "Papering
through bort William he had, another
reminder of the.daYs, nearly two bun -
deed year& ago, 'when ".La Veaeedr'ye
founded the city under theauspicesof.
the Marquis de Bsauhaiatofs; Itis
fe,willy sdlil'keep& a highly interea'ting
Totter wiitteti-iu E5'enchand Indian on
birch bark addressed to tire Marquis,
thanking him; for "the kindly care you
have taken of your oblldreh,e the Iro-
quois. .
y' •
SAVE THEIRE
In Summer When Childhood
nrtents Are 'Mast Dangerous
• Mothers who keep a box of flab
Own. Tablets in the •house may
that flee lives of their little ones
reasonably sate during the hot w
er. Stomach troubles, cholera in
tum and diartrhoea 'carry off Ilia
ands of little ones every summer,
moat oases becau o the mother do
not have a safe medicine at hand
give promptly. Baby's Own Tabl
relieve these troubles, or if given
easdonally to the well child they
prevent their coming en. The T
lets aro guaranteed by a governor
analyst to be absolutely harmless ev
to the mew -born :babe, _„The'y are
m
Facially good in sumer because th
regulate the bowels and keep
stomach sweet and pure. They a
sold. by medicine dealers or byenaiI
'25 cents a box from The Dr. William
Medloine Co., Brookville, Ont.
y's.
Reel
a
ea
th-
fan-
us-
1n
es
to
fits
0C -
w111
ab-
ent
en
fig
ea`
the
re
at
s'
Summer.
Bees are in the lslobsoms,
Birds are ou the wing,
R,oaea climb, and summertime
Ie bdseing everything.'
Little pansy faces
Wink and smile at me,,
And far and near there's not a tear
That human eye eau see. 'se
There's beauty in the garden,
There's beauty in the agcy,
The stately phlox and hollyhooke
Rave put their sorrowsby.
The gentle breath of,isutumer'
Hae blown the cares away;
All maitre sings, for morning brings
Another lovely day,
Yet some are blind to beauty
And some are deaf to song,
The troubled brow is hearts to vow
That all the world is wrong, ' ,
And some display their. sorrow,
And some bewail their woe,
And some men sigh that love must die
And summertime must go;
Yet some there are'who blossom
Like roses in the sun,
Who dare to climb in summertime”
Whett'all their care is done.
They hide 'neath smiles of beauty
The sorrows they have borne,
They seem cement that God hath sent
Another •Iovely morn,
••-Etignr A.
finest.
The newspaper has the advantage
of hea,il'nes to tell us precisely, what
we do -not require to read. --Lord
Blnnesburgb.
Minard?s Llnimenttor Rheumatism.
If is good p ieo£ fur itr
ce .nt .lie becomes
scratched it maybe restored by paint-.
lug th'e, nark with iodine, applied with
a camel -hair brush, ' Then ,polish with
a good ;furniture.poash,
NURSES
•
Tho Toror•. Hospital Tor' InsUrallor, In
titillation with RollOvuo 551 Alllod hospital,,
Now York •Cllr Okra a throe mart' Course
of Traloins to }Tuna w nob. having tho:
retlutreddcdueatioo, and de„ronl'ur b000mjgqg •.
nurses.: Thn Hospllnl hao adoptgd thy tisk.
hour iysfam. 7110 1,015, reoaly, uniforms o1"
Ula soSool n. monthly, cltownnoa and teavotln4'
etpano, to and t on'. New YOU, For Ssrthar
Ielrnol•tion wnio Iiia Duberintondcht
t
A tTq°'
1 •'•E,�' A tom'" "S.'??, t«. w
Spread Minard's on blown paper•.
and apply to Ilse throat. Also
inhale Qniclu relief assured.
Opportunity.
tV1th doubt and dismay you -are tq
You th'inlc !there "fs n6 abanen
yon,,'iti sena?--
Wi y
the be"t bodes haven't -been writ
ton;
. Tho beet race llahss t been rum
The beet atom hasn't been rrado yet,
Ths.boot song, llama been Emig,
The beat tune hasn't been played Yeti
'Cheer up, for tire, world ls' young! . .
ire chance? Witty the world is JIM
par thiiiga•'yoaz ought to orteate.
Its store• of true wealth is, elib meager,
Its neods'are; lnceesent and great.
It yearns for si ore power and beauty,
7blere laughter e and. love And re-
Moro ,loyalty, labor and duly..
No oltanct,--wliy`there's nothing hit
ch4Vnoei
Ivor•the best verso hasn't been rhyniece
yet,
The bestt house hasn't been planneid,
The highest peak luien't been climbed
yet, .,
The.,mightieet rivers aren't spanned.
Don't worry and fret, •faintthear•ted,
The ahanoes have ,lust • begun,
B'or then best Jobsbavene heen.etartee,
Tats bast worn hasn't been done,
Barton Braley,
1
Coldstream Guards Band Will
Tour Canada.
The band of 14,M, Coldstream i uarida
are to snake a four -of Canada. They
wee visLt Winnipeg, Vancouver, Bean -
don, galgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon,
and wlli be at the Canadian
National
Exhibition in Porento, where they will
net only give a nntaiiber of concerts,
bfit they 'will also appear with the Ex-
hibition Chorine of 2,000 voices,
The olefin et: the Coldstream Band,
to bo the oldest Itt the British Army,
is, lay the way, oltallisngedi by one, who.
states that the teed of the Royal Ar.
tiliery was foeinecl f n 1702, 23 years
before the Duke of'I'Ark imported Ger-
matt musicians as a nucleus of the
Coldstream . Guards' Baud, and it was
the first band to be officially* recog-
nized
ecognized, by a •prove/Ion is the Army Usti -
mates.
• The formation of the Coldstream
Guards Band, ills said, was due to an
army strike, Thb eiviifen mustolane
who had previournly provided music for
the regiment put' in a demand for high -
sr pay, which was refused, whereupon
they "downed Instruments" and went
on strike, a strike which failed owing
to the strike-breakers engaged by the
Duke of York, at the time 'Commander-
in -Chief,
Minar'd's Liniment for all pains,
An • aluminum saucepan that has
been badly burnt canbe cleaned by
pouring in a little water'and boiling
an onion in it. The burnt matter will
rise to the top ana leave the pan clean
)124611an.hook
Handsomely illustrated with rtassa of
moderate priced homsby Canadian /tr-
hhitnota, NaeLenn Mindere
le wlli belpp>rou to decide
e ty50 of home; eiterlor
, matsrialrintonor ar-
ttnn8gel!nn1ott and decoration.
Sand 75c for a copy.
, MacLean Builders'Gaido
041 adelaida at. Wont,
3btonte, Oat.
�rr.o�atia,sa�
Ra s T'AN�ARD
EXTRA ISEAVY
ZINC
COATING,.
IMPORTED DIRECT AND
MANUFACTURED DY
GEO.3' S ArMDJObr.nate
mar Nara
MONTRONTSI EAL,
SEND US THE DIMENSIONS OF YOUR ROOF
OUR PRICES WILL INTEREST YOU
WE PAY FREIGHT CHARGES
t3,�_
I0lliott,Sohooi,opd employ*
meet departmon-h flare
started thoutoanda on the
Toad' to euceeae.
'You too may succeed,
Tuire your Ilret step by
writing Dont, "S" far a
-copy or our catalogue
to -day.
Yonne and Aloxandor Sieg Toronto
Out With the Ice -Patrol,
Icebergs ere constantly being wat
cd for off the coast of'N f dl
b
ell
ew elan ant
y an foe -patrol boat, which at en
no
atifiee tiioir positions to all dth
ships by wireless.
Minard's Liniment for Barna.
To remove rust from steel, nickel a
iron, cover the affected parts wit)
grease, leave for a'faw days, and the
wipe with a rag dipped in ammoni'
YOUNG
WOMEN
SUFFER MOST
These Two Found Relief by
Taking Lydia L P?(,�il..�'1ani'S
Vegetable Compound
Ayer's Cliff, Quebec.— "I have.
been teaching for three years, and
at theend of, the
year Ialways feel
tired and have no
appetite. I was
awful sick each
month:to:allaying
pains in my back
until sometimes I
Wae'oblged to stoi"y
working. Afriend
recommended
Lydia
ydiaD. Pink
ams Vegetable
Compound to me
and /heard many women telling how
good it was so I thou htit would hal
me And it did. Now I take si
bottles ever year and recommend i
to Dithers," — DONALDA PAI•ITluuuy
Ayers C11f, Quebec.
t;
Canning, " linable to Work"
Nova Scotia.- "I had ir-
regular periods andd great suffering
at those tiniest the pains causing
ing
vomiting
and ofteengfor some teach.
.
I would be unable to attend toiny
• work. Through an atiyerbisement in
the papers I knew of Lydia E. Pink -
ham a'Vegetable Compound, and it
has been of. great' benefit to mo, the
troubles being completely. relieved."
--Luau. J. J;A'roN0 Canning, King's
County, Nova Scobta, o
HAD PIMPLES
OVER A YEAR
On Arms and Limbs, Lost
Rest. Cuticura Healed,.
"I was bothered with pimples
for over a year which affected my
arms and limbs. The pittipfes were
ratheriarge and red and quite hard,
and festered and scaled over. They
itched and burned cauoing me to
scratch, and I lost rest on account
of the irritation.
-" "A friend recommended Cuticura
Soap and Ointment so I sent for a
freesample. There was a difference
lifter using it so I purchased more,
and after using two boxes of Cuti-
cum Ointment and three calces of
Cuticura Soap 8 was completely
healed." (Signed) Miss Martha
iilnsche, Box 13, Fillmore, Seek,'
Nov.10, 1935.
Use Cuticura to clear your akin,
atmple Snell Fre by HW, Addreas Cannnadlea
Debet: atoobeuu., Ltd, Montreal" P05,,, Sap,
2s,. ." Cut t 25 and 15,. Tal un, 25,,
,ice Cuticura ShavinR.SHeIr 25a.
e
Tsath414140
Ida
Ceas4
l''ii
Air4
"t
t,.
Ike 'e i I� rays fi e
4C}erte t dietance between
ERM$ -6,000,000 kenos on a Dingle fly, says'a
lj notedhealthoffieer Protect our
y fall?ilyvvfthFlit.
Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of,
disease -bearing flies and mosquitoes, It is clean,
safe and easy to use..
Tills All A'l'out -holt!
�0 Insects
Flit spray also destroys bed;buga roaches and ants. It searches
out the cracks and crevfree where they ]tide and bleed and
de-
stroys insects and their eggs. Spray Flit e e.
s.
F . it i eat les. Extensive Flit kills moths and,their:larvae which !roles. Extensive
tests showed that Flit spray did not stain the most delicate
fabrics, ,
Flit is the regsulttgf'exhaustive research by expert entomol-
ogists nd chemists. It is harmless to mankind. alit has
repl}t , • -y'hta old Qtitods because it cII s all the insects --and
dee l i,`ig1.13v _ gots e, ?1 sin apd sprayer t?day.
•,e,,,,o,."` „ lees, !fie ;' k".,its+. 1, ec.ti +``•n,>,'�'heA,
�: g�
Y
nr
Distributed ' n�
in Ga a
a i�`red tT . , .
d b �htti
�� C
Y off e,Toronto.
rs
ISSUII No, 21-x26,
•
i17PiSTItQYs
nee Mosqu itpcy Moths!
Ante Bed Bap Reactive