The Clinton News Record, 1924-09-11, Page 70;
Folks 'lrwI o; want the '`very be beg use
RED R.OSF ()RANGE PEKOE T.'
HEAL E DUCAT IO '
BY DR. J. J. MiDDI E"I'OSI
f?rovinclal 800r4 of Health, Orittarie
• idfddlstoa WW be arIM t answer asoetiOn l ea Pabllo,uealttt
tt throtogh Oafs '-oo i i.; Address bile at !SWIM' 1100.80, 80a1t21/
EASY TRICKS
The Cut Foretojd
Stories
Well-Kalov/Li People
A Great Crime Expert.
t%henever a murder 01100 is beingin-
vestigated by ScotlandYard Sir 13er-
nerd Spilsbury`is-usually the man
called in to help.:
Pathologist t to the Home Office for
the Iast twelve years, Sir Bernardhas:
figured prominently in many famous
cases,
One of his most interesting oases is
also one of the least known. A soldier
was shot in a hut. The coroner's yer-
diet was "Suicide." Sir Bernard was
called in, reconstructed the scene,
traced 'the passage of the bullet, ark
proved that the' dead man •could not
have fired the rifle himself.
The Zulu Onkel.
The Duke and Duchess. of Athoil,
whose silver wedding brought
brow ht
and/ $is wife, who recently traversed
many hundreds of miles of, the'un-
civilized wilds of Portuguese Weat
rica, in the course of which they.faced
death many tines.
The bride, who is only twwentyand
the eldest daughter of IVtr•. F. A. }Iac-
quieten, I .C.,,MJ'., wished to see' the
country in which her husband' had
earned his fame as a hunter, and they
decided to take a honeymoon trip
across Africa -ea distance of over a
thousand nstles. • -Traversing: as they
did a country in which savages and
wild beasts, including lions and rhinos
abounded, they experienced' many
thrilling incidents,
Their most exciting adventure was
with s mad Englishman in whose ter-
ritory the lravellers;mado a halt. Be
them numerous 'congratulletions, aro had honnicidal tendencies and the
partners :in Parliamentary work as bride and groom ' narrowly escaped
well as in the domestic"Sphere. They with their live', Scion after they left.
neuaily l'uncli'together at the House to they 'learned that he had killed a
talk over pians, and it was at one of, Greek neighbor and then committed
'these lunches. a day or two ago that ulcido:'
the Duchess reminded her husband of, Although. Mrs. Strathom; has esad
a stary`thet deserves ,metalling. I enough' adventure` to last 'mosf people
When Ladysmith Was "relieved the a lifetime, she declares she would like
Duke, then Marquess of} Tullibardine, I to go back again.
was ono;of the, first to ride into the 1loo Respectable;
town, Returning to his bivouac at 1
, flight ho forgot 'the password. In re-' Sir Thomas Lipton told an amusing
sponse to the sentry's;-ohallenge he "'cosy the other day.-
called out, "Ti's all right—I'Tulli-1 He stated that he used to work in
right—len
l Glasgow for half a crown a week.': His -
staff then," came a C'oekney voice. staff consisted: of a little boy and a
"Nene e' your bloomin' fancy Zulu :black cat. Seeing the littile boy was
names' 'ere!' shabbily dressed; Sir Thomas gave
him a. sovereign to go and buy a new
A Jungle Honeymoon. suit. Ile never came back."
A honeymoon in the jungle! One of Meeting his mother later, Sir Thom-.
the strangest, most adventurous, and as inquired the reason. "Weil," she
most novel trips ever undertaken has said, he looks .do respectable now
been that of Colonel J. C. B. Stratham, that he has been able to get a much
the fampus English big -game hunter, better job."'
The. Selfish Cuckoo.
The curious habits of the "cuckoo"
will never cease : to be a matter of
wonderment. It appears that for • a
day after the young cuckoo has hatch.
ed out it lies quietly at the' bottom of
the nest'but on the second day of rte
life a. change comes.;overat: ,It nose
becomes restless and irritable,' and
seems linable to hearthe contact of Lack of knowledge of elinratic and
Common Errors, . About This
Trouble Into Which, People Fall.
PECULIARITIES OF
CANADIAN VEGETATION --
Remarkable advance, has been made
in the prevention and dire of disease
during the past few years. This • can
be attributed in large part to the gen-
eral improvement in sanitation' • and
knowledge of : the science of healthful
living. As colnpared with the death
rate of 1180, a nil:lice 'and a half lives
were saved in the United' States last
year, according to iigai-r- just issued
by the census bureau.
Wide differences in the leath rate,
in some cases a little short of tragic,
are shown, while in other. cases there
is a. healthful condition of .affairs:
Here and there geography may eac-
count for the differences but in others
no such explanation seems adequate.
Very.. similar conditions prevail
throughout the cities and rural dis-
tricts of Ontario. to some cases the
general death rate is high, in some
cases the infant .death rate is high,
Reverse conditions are found in other,
cosnmunities.. j
A city withouteelntns and a Board 'of
Health that really functions are two
important reasons giyen:for the low
death rate in one city in Ohio. The
tep'ort says: -"A full time health offi-
cer laid the foundation of health work'
which has been continued and expand,'
ed, The enforcement of "quarantine
in' contagious and venereal diseases
has been very efficient. Mostly mod-
ern- `school ` buildings help keep 'down, `
children's diseases.` Probably one fac-
tor in our health standing is the physi
pal examination by large rubber in-
dustries of all prospective employees
in connection with employers',;lnbility:
laws." Another city with a low death
rate has this. me8sage:--There are no
slum districts or squalid tenements
from one end of the city to the other,
Pure -.voter, pure milk and pure food—
those are the things weat count in
OUP favor. In every ca , o . ;ow mor-
tality rate the reasons g1 t', are prac-
tically the same:--"Vigilanee of the
health Department; rind its result• on
pure food, the city clinic, the baby hos-
pitaI, the water, supply, a conal.,,nt
educational campaign, the seroice,,:of
public.health nurses*and similar meas-
ur•es.' . Measures that have been given
credit for "keeping' down epidemics;
especially water -borne diseases, in -
elude the system of' tv e inspection
in the schools, strict e, evreitiee regu-
lations among adult., tise work of the
anti -tuberculosis society, food .inspec-
tion and well -enforced sanitary'regn-
lations 'generr.';, Added to this, and
of great in --c ':ince: is the medical
fratert,r.y bf the cities concerned,
wh Ise c- r,,. -i t- s whole-heartedly,
and a public which sensibly recognizes
the .valueof precautionary health
measures.
' These points are worthy of consid-
eration if health work is to be really
effective in any community.
-reit
Eighteen blue whales alongside thi5sh1p were"the
New Map Shows Areas' of tion into the frozen south.. The photograph was made a
Various Forms of Vegeta- shows the l0e barrier in the background,
tion and; Emphasizes Strik-
ing Features of Tree Growth
result of an expedi-.
Disoovery Inlet and
RIALS OF E11DIGESTION
the 'ether young fledglings, or eggs, if vegetation conditions has caused many
any of these still remain unhatched, prominent travellers. mod visitors to
Indked, it is the eggs which- it first •
Canada to unjustly criticize this coon
seeks to get rid of, its- sides seeming
to find the touch of the:eggs' unbear- .ire..;: The same and in many cases
able.` Therefore, in moving to the bot- greater ignorance of Canadians has
tom of the nest, its back forms a hol- Permitted much of this unjust eriti-
low space wlsereln the egg sometimes clam to pass- unanswered and mire-
rolisr and when this is the case the feted, with the result that Canada has
young cuckoo straightens itself, and, often been unfairly condemned
moving backwards to the rim of the The Natural Resources Intelligence.
nest, it ejects the egg with'aspring 01 Service of the Department of the bi-
ble tiny legs, and then returns to the terior, partly as a result of the great
bottom of the nestt number of enquiries received, has pre -
Its exertions have tired it sa much pared and published an exceedingly in -
that for a long 'while It lies as. if in a teresting Vegetation and Palest hover
state of collapse, but gradually, as it Map of Canada.- This' shows, at a
again feels the pressure of the other glance the different zones of vegeta-
tiny birde on his Soft sides; it grows ' tion and their chief distinguishing
more. and more irritable, and dreeps' characteristics, from what are known
restlessly jerking about: At: last its els the barren lands, that are in no
movements rause a small bird to fall 'sense barren but support a -growth Of
on its back, and again it stratus every hhrdy •grass anti vegetation pecufiar
nerve to make for the rim of. the, nest, to the cold climate, to what is termed
Ikthe ,Cri
a b inion zone, i
n southeastern
Abovee o •w Ontario, where le found almost- sub-
• th Sin wline.. - .tropical vegetation. du .the fruit belt.
That animal.' life ascends the noun C' The enormous ares of Canada must
tains far beyond plantgrowthis one; aeceasity provide a wide range of
of the discoveries of .the Mount Ever- vegetation and forest Conditions- In
est expedition. • • f the northern country, extending from
The highest growing plant observed the shore of Hudso Bay to the Maet
was: blue vetch at 1B4O00ft,,. writes - lcenele delta, the white spruce ;frog
glen for existence, while on the south=
eastern 'portion of Vancouver Island
are found a number of. Californian
types oftrees, the most remarkable
being the madrona, or arbutus; the
only broad-leaved evergreen tree' in
Canada.
The new map is. an intensely inter
esting one, and one that will conduce
"In 'these ali1tudes'there lei no ether .to much study and investigation. An
Lieut,•Col. E. F. Norton, leader of the
expedition. "Yet animate possess per-'
maneut habitations as high as 22,000ft.
A minute and inconspicuous black
spider hops. about on the :rocky cliffs
and hide; beneath stones' in those bare
places which happento be swept clear
of snow by the wind. I cannot think
on what it lives at such a height.
living thing—nothing but rock and immense amountsof hitherto upublisas-
lee, This -little spider Is worthy of ed Informatics is shown thereon, leech
note, being the highest permanent in, research work was entailed; and„the
habitant of the earth. We therefore notes of explorers and surveyore,from
find 1110, on the highest inountain far those' of Sir Alexander MacI{enele, Sir
above the permanent snowline,” John Franklin, Samuel Hearn and
e
others, .to the more modern stirve
' y
Twenty miles of sewing cotton may -andexplorations of the different
hr tiled in the making g of a fur coat. Federal and Provincial government de -1
partmente, were carefully examined •
of Canadian the new map
Wilezz YouChange
age a°Tie?
h ng x
Then avoid titre 'freebie by
et! 1pping with
AERO-CUS-iION:
INNER TIRES
No -more punctures. No blow-
outs. No need at all of a spare
tare—and double the mileage for
yrally casings.,, Easy riding.,
If ,there Is no Aero-_
Cutthion Service
Station steer you
write for particulars..:
Aero -Cushion Inner Tire
and Rubber Co., Limited
WINGHAM; ONT.
for authentic records: To the student
ana tan -
will be of much• asaistanoo in enabling
him to segrevate the several vegeta-
tion zones, approximate- the possibili-
ties of forest exploitation, and estab-
lish the areas of known farming dis
•'trios.
From north to south, frons east to
west, all the wonderful changes in our,'
natural .vegetation are vividly pope ,
trayed on the new Vegetation and
Forest Cover Hap. It fills a want long
experienced, and will no doubt be in
considerable demand. Copley may be
obtained frons the Director of the Na -
three. Resouerela.
aturee.,Resoureea-: Intelligence .Service,
of the Department of the Interior at
Ottawa,
Nature's' Sunshade.
During days of prolonged sunshine
and tropical heat, itls not sufnciently
realized that there is nothing especial-
ly healthy about a "tanned" Satin, The
practiceof exposing one's face to 01-
reot ,sunlight in !order to,get sunburn-
ed. is both absurd and dangerous'
Ultra -violet rays destroy the animal
tissues of the satin, cat Nature's mat:
Bete is the brown pigment-nnderneate.
which dovelop,0 and; acting as a filter,
sinus out the harmful influence.,
The most ohviousa precaution is a
big sun hat, and if the hint furnished
by Nature bd acted upon, the color will
be light brown,
Many people so far misuuderetand
the digestive system as to treat it like.
a machine; negieating it until it works
sluggishly, then Irritating it into Work
again by the use of purgatives. The
:stomach needs, help et all times, but
a study of the process' of digestion will
show tbat purgatives, ,as commonly
taken, are seldom necessary and often
harmful. i
To safeguard your digestion the diet
mita' bo aontrellel'.:Over-eating is al-
ways harmful, but must assimilate
-snough`food to supply the needs of the
blood. Remember, the blood has to
carry nourishment to all parts of the
body and find fuel for its energy.
Renee when the elood .becomes, weak
and facie to do its work, Indigestion
arises. Therefore the sure remedy tor
indigestion is to build up •the blood,
If you suffer fram any Perm of indiges-
tion cheese your diet. carefully and
take wholesome nourishment, ;;Above
all, start building up your blood by
taking a' course of Dr. Williams' Pink
'Pills.: Then under the influence of the
new blood supply, your digestive sys-
tem will respond naturally, your ap-
petite improve and your food will do
yeti good. So begin to improve your
digestion by starting to take Dr, Wil-
liams,' Pink Pills now.
You can get these pills from your
druggist or by. :nail at 10 cents a box
front The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„'
Brockville, Ont.
Mosquitoes and Malaria.
• it is estimated that the deaths ani
nually from malaria number some two
millions, and this figure may probably
Ibe multiplied by two or three hundred
if we would arrive at the total number
of people in the world affected by the
complaint. • ,
Malaria is mainly a disease of the
tropics, and is cauaod by a mihute
parasite in the blood. The parasites
In one malaria patient may number
anything frons one hundred to a thous-
and millions. ill niahy. cases `there are
more. parasites In the system of a
malaria patient than there are people
on ,the earth, and for ages it was < be-
lieved that marshes mut malaria were
in sossse way, connected.
Sir B.onald Ross discovered teat it
was not the marsh but the •mosquito
which bred in the marsh which was
the originator of the disease, and he
declares that the parasite of malaria
is, to the mosquito which carries it, ae
a,' threepenny -bit would be to: a hippo-
potamus )
When a disease -carrying mosquito
bites, it injects a saliva in which are
the malaria parasites. These- are car-
ried into the human circulatory eye -
tem, .and so throughout the body.
The euro of malaria is quinine, but
the prevention of malaria Is the des-
traction of ,the mosquito in winch it
breeds.
Seven Modern Wonders.
The wonders- of the world are us-
ually divided into, three periods• -the
seven wonders 'of Use aneleat world,
the `itXiddlu Ages•, and the modern
world.,
Thougli there is some difference Of
°pinion
• on the question, • the seven
wonders of the ancient world are us-
ually given as: the pyramids' of Egypt,
Pharos of Egypt, banging gardens. of
Bahylon, statue of emitter by Millets,
rssarroleum of Artemisia; Colossus of
Rhodes and . the Temple of.Diana at
Eplsesus. The seven wonders of the
Middle Ages are as follows: Coliseum
of Acme, catacombs of Alexandria,
great wall of China, Stonehenge in
England, leaning tower of Pisa, por-
celain tower of • Nankin and : the
mosque of St. Sopasia et Constantin-
ople.
The seven, wonders of, the modern
world' may be considered to be the
telephone, radio, . aircraft, radium,
antitoxin, spectrums, analysis and X-'
ra.y.
Sheep Tracks:,
"Sheep tracks running horizontally
along the face of steep "slopes, a Dan-'
ish geologist says, area natural forma-
tioe. He calls the little paths "ter-
racettes” and says they begin as a
succession of horizontal cracks in the
loose; earth caused .by. settling of
the earth to a: more .:stable position.
Once the crack` is started the action of
the rain causes the marking to become
rapidly nsor distinct; and it soon re-
sembles a. path made by aninale.
Sheep and other animals naturally. use
the paths, but they do not begin ttsesn,
Mlnard's Liniment Heats' Cute
Many times the readingof a book
lsas;made the fortune of. a -Aran ehas
decided his way in life.`-1Dmerson
O ,E. SEED DRAIN
,•
Fannlng Mills -I SueelY`screeus, wire
loth, zinc, repairs --Chatham Fanning
Mills Anti other makes. Incubator
supplies; Thermometers:,
01)NOON CAniPI1IELI,.,.i:hatnan.t.Git
•
A Mystery Fish.
The British Museum authorities
have notified' the/ curator of the Hull
Museum of Fisheries that a strange
fish caught off the Icelandiccoast by
a Hull trawler and landed at Hull is
apparently unknown to science. T}✓n g
fe nothing like it int the national col-
lection.
The fish. . is -ono yard in length. The
fish is very Soft and flabby, and the
head is, after the type of a halibut, its
entire surface is covered with sharp
and hard conical ,spines resenx:)iling
white -ivory. The skin is coal black.
Ito tail • reeem blesegloyeefiandwith
Its tall resembles a gloved: hand
with eight fingers, •between:,each of
which is a thin web. In the centre of
the track is a rod-like feature. with a
tassel -shaped structure. At its end is I
a red ;flesh ball, which, according to
the experts is used„se a bait to draw
smaller fish,. near so that they can be
snapped 111 the powerful jaws.
Six -Years of Pain:
There is a prevalent opinion on the
oteside of China that the custom of
foot -binding .among tise girl .children
of that country has -been generally
abandoned, but such is not the case.
The movement appears to have taken
root only in the nsorepopulous dis-
trict/5, but at other par•t0,.the cnstosn
is still followed to a very great ex,
tent. The foot of the infailt girt is
turned under so that, the toe is bent
back toward the heel and it fa tightly
bound in tlsis, position.. Itmeanssix
years of constant pain before the foot
itas taken the desired shape and -then
it measuresfrom three to five inches
in length. At one time a law was
reseed forbidding' foot -binding, but
there was no penalty and no means:of c
enfoi'cing ft, so that no attention was
paid to it by •th,enativeS.
For Sore Feet—shard's Liniment
.Tttls.stunt ist invariably..snccess-'
fan 1f-11 petfot'meri• in ii ,,;atter
of fact, ' ctraientforu al'd mantles
Obstrve: 'chile'hnfrline, the ^ai•ds
which' card is on the bottom of
the pack. eels . can ea 0111/ 1.18`
done, and will excite no shsplcion
as the trick does not immediately.
follow. Borrow a business card,"
write the name of the :card you
observed on it and seal it in the
envelope. 'Before doing.this,..
place the pack of cards, face
dotvn.'on the table.
Asks the spectator to cut the
cards Into two parts in the usuel
manner, Place the envelope on
the packet -which was, the upper
pack—or, ask a spectator to do
this and: place she ether packet, on
the envelope.. -
The rest of the trick consists
of showing, in as impressive.,a:.
-manner as: possible, the "fact"
that before the cards were cut
that you wrote the name of the
card at which the' spectator cut.
(Clip this out -and haste ff. 1000
other of Me series, in a scrapbook.)
Itis...; :: ,:'G`3=;•.
One Cure For ,1l1 Disease.
What is disease? Is it possible that
diseases are really one, and that one
antidote might be discovered to cure
every ill?
That is the startling theory of Mr,
T.' E. R. 1ti;cDonagh, F;R:C,S., discussed
in 'The World To -day" by Mr, J. Ab,
reliant, the famous British' surgeon,
Mr. Johnston Abraham believes that
this themes may be the 'beginning of a
new-.ereatiye crisis in modern medi-
oine,
Disease," he writes, -"if Mr. Me.
Donagh's thesis be accepted, is simply
a successful attempt on the part of
the invading organism to rob the pro-
tective particles in the blood 01 their
free electricity; and recovery' from
disease is`a- reversal'of this 'process,
due to the protective particles' finally
getting the upper hand of the invading
organism- .by recapturing this elec-
tricity
'It will thus be seen that the idea
underlying this revolutionary doctrine
is based on tate electron theory—tire
theory. which has already altered all
modern ideas. of physics, chemiatry,
and electricity." -
In Mr. McDonagh's view, the body
poseesses a general protective sub-
stance which resist generally. The
basis of cure would be in every ease
of organic illness the strengthening of
this substance; and, given certain
poisonous conditions, the antidote
most suitable .for inereasing the con-
densed power of the protective 'par-
ticles; could be worked out by chem-
ists.
This antidote would be a cure-all. It
would put reinforeeinents` into the
system to fight the germs 'of all dis-
ease,
CIIILDIIOOiD ILVIDIGESTIOii
Nothing 15 more common lu child-
hood than Indigestion. Nothing is
more dangerous to proper.•growth,
more weakening to the eonatitutioa or
more likely to _pave tile' way to -danger-
qua .disease. Fully nape -tenths of all
}tae minor ills of childhood have their
root in indigestion, There is no medi-
cine. for little ones to equal Baby's
Own Tablets, in relieving this trouble.
They have proved of benefit, tri thous
ends of homes. ,Concerning them Mrs.
l los. Lunette, Immaculate Conception,
''Que., 'writes: "My baby was a great
sufferer from indigestion, but the Tab-
tete soon set Iter right, and now -I
I r
won d not be with
out t
ham.
Baby's
Own Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers' or by mall at 25 cents a box
j from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co,
Not a few fellows who tried to dodge
work have wound up in the peniten-
, Bary at hard ,work without remun-
eration:
Minerd's.Liniment Relieves Pain.
Frame your mind`te mirth and mer-
riment, which Isar 'a thousand harms
and lengthen life.
�.. WHEN IN TORONTO VISIT THE
Royal, Ontario '
263 6100' 51.:'Weot, near Avanua..nort .: Lararst
510i185cnt .,ehalunn.'1n Canada, Atahaeoingy,
bocolll',grih M5Ii,mr.aloI0r 5 POpn:a'tOElmoO,os1,olm: 5 °n.1o0n,
3118*,. non and 01 811111 0011
His. Mother's Spirit?
A littleboy, six..years o ..age, recent;
ly r,ln a s -ay rrom:h's home at Aversa
—.bcuttwelve miles from Naples—to•
escape : from his stepmother, who ill -
Having searched
ll-
Having'searched for him in vain, iris
father. informed::tlse'poliee. Soon Pas-
qualino was' discovered at Naples with
his grandmother. The latter; told hos,,.
a'few days before, she 'had hearda
knocking at her door, and, on opening
it, she had seen,to her astonishni-e t
her srnali grandson standing there
alone.
"Who brought you here?” she rinsed
"A woman," ans,wered'Pasqualino,
"What woman?"
"? don't know," said the child, who.
then told his grandmother that he had
sun away,beeense his stepmother beat
him, but had got frightened, not know
ing-where to, go,: While he was wan-
dering about
an-deringabout the streets of Averse,>a.
woman came up to him' and took nim
by the hand. Without speaking she
lifted: hlm'en to the'eleetric tram that
runs between Averse. and, Naples,
holding: Vim closely -to her -alt the way,
MONEY TO LOAN,
-ARM LOANS MA•DE--
Je Mortgages purchased. Reynolds,
77 Victoria St., Toronto.
FOR See,E:
rBIEAP
ON EASY �.TERMS,
only $500. down or secured,
Improved at 7 0Im raved farm '126 �aeres
p
hs
in Township
of E ]tfrid, County of .Mid-
dlesex; mixed soil, sand and clay loam;
out -buildings.
brick house with frame'
About a mile west of Middlemiss, Ad-
dress: M. J. Kent, Box 419, London,
Ontario.
AGENTS WANTED.
1\iO MATTER HOW SMALL OR
1 large the place you live: in
you can make money as .our Agent.
Ten to Twenty -Five' Dollars - weekly
for any lady with a -few hours to spare.
One dollar forsampleoutfit start o
in businessAgent wanted
.: Resident`- s you
in every town and village age: -to takeor-
ders for Ladies'. House Frocks, Porch •
Aprone, Mee direct from Manufacturer
to Wearer. We deliver and collect.
Send One Dollar for sample outfit and
At Naples she led him to his grand shake hands with successl•- W. It.
mother's house, knocked, gave him a Jarmatn & Co., Manufacturer 01 Rouse
kit* and left him. Frocks, Porch'Aprbree Wash Drosses,
"Had you never seen her before?"' etc., London, Ontario.
asked the wondering grandmother.
Never', was )ike'bhat,'•said
bay, poinbuttingshe to a photograph of ate the
otheayn' mother '' -that stood, on the table.:
'His. mother had diets when he, wasonly
a few months old;
EYES
__ IRRITATED 9Y
to _____.. SUN,WIND DUST -CIND
Butterfly Culture in France. 1 'emu.'"
ICO)HSNOED &SOL0 DP DRUGGISTS 5- Io ANS
Butterfly culture in the south. of 0"n ren .nza Bra tent 8088 *18laa 8a ,ora
France 10 rapidly growing = m pope -'P '
amity. There,' under expert scientific l
guidance, hundreds' of beautiful specs -1
mens are bred. The farms are pro-!
vided .with, special leafy trees and l
plants on which the eggs ars hatched.!
Directly the young appear the -branch: l-
es are takento a well -ventilated room, j
where they are placed In 'pars of
water. As soon as • the caterpillars I
have eaten up this drat supply of 1
leaves ,fresh branches are previded.1
Having been in an even temperature
for about two weeks, the young cater.
pillars are taken out intothe open, 1 . e e
where they are placed on ,plants pro-; Say layer Aspirin"
9
tested from birds by nets. 'When fait
grown this protective net is removed INSIST! Unless you see the
and soon they retire into cocoons or "Bayer Cross" on tablets you
roll themselves up into leaves. There*are not getting te genuine.
are collected and stored in boxes,.
where in a very short time butterflies Bayer Aspirin proved safe by
of wonderful hues. are evolved. Cross millions and prescribed by phy. .'.
breeding has been tried. and numerou sicians for 24 years.
experiments are conducted to obtain
brilliant and original markings on the Ac- cept only a
wings of these insects, which are after -
a er asks e
ward_ y g
sold to collectors ec rs o � `��''!
r for the 4../
adornment of women's hats and„dress• `~
�, which contains proven directions
e Bandy "Bayer” boxes of 12 tabletd
The First Envelopes. Also bottles of 24and1 0—
0 bruggisGt
Melds b the trade mark (rrslatoted. Is
The first: envelopes of which there °Mnsadstta) of Havoc MaanteetdK of Mote-
ls
ono-is any knewlodge inclosed a letter , "tattra°ldeakr 00 641011eartd
sent 226 years ago by Sir , William
Turnbull to Sir James Ogilvie. The
epistle dealt with English affairs of
sate and with its cove i c MRS Il
state, w r ng, is are"
fully preserved in the British Museum. I
was the
At that period, and long afterward, it
general custom to fold letters
g t N 0
A�HS� N
and 'seal then with wafers of wax..'
Early in the last century envelopes Vanished After Using Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
MISENER'S
began to cone Into more general use,
and stamped adhesive envelopes
achieved wide popularity In .England
shortly after the establishment of the
penny posts in 1840, and by 1850 were
largely used on •thin side of the At-
lantic:
The first machine for the manufac-
ture of enveiopee was patented in
1844 by George Wilson, an English-
man, and improvements• were made
the following year by Warren. De La
Rue and E. Hill. -
Domialon Express ltloney Orders •
are du sale in fie thousand offices
v s d o es
throughout Canada.
"Branchton,- Ont.—"t When I wrote
to you for help my action was mostly
prompted by curios-
ity. I wondered if
I, too, would benefit
by your medicine. It
was the most profit-
able action i have
ever taken, I heart -
through you, its results I
' • am relieved of most
ofsufferings.
m
Y
I
K
i ha o takensi
V XaXe6
.hv re
<N�::, of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable
Three golden rules. of life of a ten- E PinkliamneBlo d Medicine,e of and Ic an
tenarian who- ,died, .aged 107, were; bonestiy say I have never been so well
Never to triter a ball -room; never to before. I had euffered from pains and
talk scandal; •and ,never -to enter -a bar. other troubles'sincelI was fifteen years
old, and during the GreatWar' period
I workedon munitions far two years,
and, in the heavy' lifting which my wort'
Dancers to the number of 10 000 called for, 'I strained myself, causing
, pelvic inflammation' from which I have
can be accommodated on 'the new ;suffered untold' agony, and I often had
,dance floor at Wembley; this is the to give up and go to bad. I had doctored
largest in England, if not in the world, for several years without getting per
boanont relief, when I started to take
your medicines. 'r•=Mrs. GoLDWerr Mts-
iscsca, Branchton, Ont.
Write to the Lydia R Pinkhare Medi -
tine Co-,Cobourg Ontario,for,afreeeopy
of -Lydia E. Pin�Cham'a Private Text -
Ship your'Crealn to us and ob- -Book upon `"Ailments of Women.": 0,
tain the best results with high-
est price for -number one quality.
Daily returns, cans supplied, and
express charges paid. Write for
cans now.
BOWES CO., Ltd. - TORONTO •:
Minard'a° Liniment for Rheumatism.
ewe .on merneat'
• This 1'Vixexer-
;AWorm housse:and acted
Cellar day and nigittthe win.
fer•throuih:And a saving he
your feel illsoffnomxltosoZ;
A KELSEY
WARM AIR It;'N1:f2ATOl
7hour cellarwill ensurethie„,
s Kelsey isthe most efficient
and economical system of
home heating everilevisit 1 e�
and will beet the smallest
cottage orthe largest mansion Ns
properly end heel Gifu IIx.
MAVWE S[ND YOU PARTIOULARSii'
X
CANADA FOUNDRIES & FORGINGS
teetteo
JAMES SMART. PLANT
_ • BROCICVILLE ONE
•0
E
eop
e
Bitro-Phosphate feeds the . nerves
awl ell people need: it to h'al'e then:
eel and look - younger. It'a the one
best nerve builder for weak, nerve-ex-
liausted' men and women and -that is
ashy druggists guarantee it. Price,$1
per plige. - Arrow' Chemical' Co„ 25
Front St. East, Toronto, Ont..
Rub t hi
For pain, stfffnes't, or inflammation
apply Mlnard's and 'rub' it in.
Keep; The ;Darr Live,And
.Gloss�r With ,
G1ltichra
J�
On retiring, gently rub Spots of din-
druffaird `llching'with Cuticure Oint-
;trent. Neat morning shampoo with
a sudsof Cuticsra Soap and hot
water. This treatment does much to
keep the scalp clean and healthy
and promote hair.groWth,'
BarnpIe Eeooh rr b'O olI Memo Cnnndlan.
flip t ' eatla to P. 0, n 26x6, Montreal."
P le„yaou� p2fc U tmnntieu dlQ,.'ralona 26c.
ego •Try our new Shaving Stick.
1SSUe No. 56--•'24.;