HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-12-10, Page 713ea.11., Tuberculosis. , i The Forest Firs.
ag �� haE Ma carie tall, }melting, grand,
'FLAMES 100,000
�"�17(lifYldrll a s t j MILES HIGH
no age Is immune against tuber-mimes'.i lite forest fire le glory stand( ---
illi�l,�;r����' goo tea t It By God's approval, vie a geed," 'I'I�ley Flare Forth I�'rolrhl That
tea your glocer re The Public Health Servicea Y
,, , ,
Y infants succumb rapidly o
Young
(MRS; cod, te
And most grocers recommend it.
Salt Water for Teeth.
"The best thing to use for the daily
oleensing of the teeth is salt water—a
teaspdonful of Molten salt in one-
third of a tumbler of water," said Sir
Harry Baldwin, sugeon•dentist to the
King, in a recent lecture: Psatee and
powders, be °onti riled, might be used
for occasional polishing otteeth,
Pyorrho.eit tan be/avoided if the
edges of the gums aro kept tight and
hard by daily Motion. .Every part of
the gums, .back and front, .should be
rubbed vigoously with a tooth -brush
night and morning. Although pyor-
rhoea does not cause pain, it is a seri-
ous disease that might eat through the
bone of the jaws olid penetrate to the
..,.nose.
The destructive action of aside re-
sulting from stagnation of starch
footle In the mouth is the cause of the
decay of the teeth. ' Fruit le an excel-
lent thing to stimulate the formation
of an alkalin saliva, as an'antidote
to the acid.
MOTHERS I1IIO HAVE USED
BABY'S OWN T:jli+ltl'
Always Strongly Recommend
Thein to Other Mothers.
Once a mother has used Baby's Own
Tablets for her little ones abe will use
nothing else—actual experience teach-
es her that there is no other medicine
to oqual them for any of the minor ail -
meets from which her. baby or little
ones suffer, Having found the value
of the Tablets in her own home, she
is always anxious that otherr mothers
should share her knowledge. That is.
why Mrs. Ceeightan White, North Noel
Road, N,S., writes. the following:—"I
Have a baby seventeen months old and
have given him nothing but Baby's •
Own Tablets eves` since be was a week
old. I know of no other medicine to
equal them, and it is certainly a plea-
sure to "recommend thein , to other
mo there."
Baby's Own Tablets are a mild• but
thorough laxative that regulate the
stomach and bowels; banish eonetipa
tion and indigestion; break up eelds
and simple fevers and make the sickly
baby web and happy again. They are
sold by nvedltene dealers or by
at 25 cones, a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Twelve masts, eaoh 800 ft. high, will
euport the largest aerial in the world.
This fa at H111morton, near Rugby,
where the British Government have
the largest wireless station in the
world.
Rheims Reborn No' ', Lacks
Population.
Itltoime, rieen phoenixlike from the
ashes of the wax, le suffering from a
new malady; "twice dead," writes a
French observer. And the malady is
one ttect is estrange to most of the
cities o1 the world, foe Rheims is. suf-
fering not from overcrowding but from
stagnation. The city has been rebuilt
for a population whichee actually al-
most twice that which it now has, and
its streets andpublic places seem al-
most deserted.
During
During the' was some 13,000 houses
were destroyed in Rheims; -•`.and with
the funde available from the repara-
tion commissions, augmented in many
eases by contributions from America,
it was decided to rebuild the city along
the most modern linos. Alter com-
petitive plana for the new city had
been submitted a program was laid
down of which the first result was the
erection of .some 10,000 houses, all
.Inure spacious and up-to-date than
their. predecessors. At the same- time
the public eei•vkes were extended to
provide for a population of 120,000:
en American architect was largely re-
aponsible for this new city and it has
won general admiration -broad -(oven-
ues and tree -bordered boulevards, &r-
aided streets, gardens. Rheims was re-
born.
But to -day many of these beautiful
new- buildings are empty. Signs of
"Building for Sale" and "House to
Let," long since forgotten in Paris, are
seen on every hand. There are empty
office buildings and unleased hotels.
There Is an a
city. Built iter 120,000 people, barely
half that number wander about its
streets. '
desertion about th
If your foot slips, you may recover
your balance, but if your tongue slip's,
you can not recall the words.
SAW-.
a
SAW
Stays Sharp longer.
SIMOND5 CANADA SAW CO. LTD.
1600 01.10006 61'. w.. TO605TO
MONTREAL
VANCOUVER ST. JOHN,N
(.7c'x -ev
S t op Wi qh t
Cou hs
One dose of Buckley's
Mixturebrings imme-
diate relief and sleep
returns. Keep it handy
—acts like a flash on
coughs, bronchitis and
all throat and chest irri-
tations. Stops coughing
spells as soon as taken.
Wards off the more dan-
gerous diseases — pneu-
monia, flu, etc.
All druggists sell Buck-
ley's Mixture—"Strong"
or"Modified"on a money
refunded guarantee.
75c-40 doses
KLEY
-STRONo- OR "MODIFIED
W. K. Buckloy, Limitarl,
142 Mutual St.;Toronto 2 205
%+reset ...Els... t1 :".,.,.rice
n A work of wondls' wl`oughl In Ween
and, contrary to the general belief, �CEthin I"tIr17C ,
Number Four.
Persona over fifty years of age are by Whene'er beneath their spreading
00 means exempt, and deaths occur arms
I eland Uo contemplate their charms, By,Davfd Dietz.
Despite' the fact that -the sun le lnil-
lions of milds, away from us, astrono-
mers have assembled a renealtable
knowledge about the structure of the :
sun through the use of large tele a ,p e
and delicate astronomical inslrtt newts,
The first felt of interest is that the
5<11 is not a stationary hotly as many
suppoe.
It is rushing through space hal the
rare of 12� miles a aeeond.
That nesse that stnee the astrono-
mers of .ancient Egypt began ob,•er-
ving the stars 5000 years ego, the sun
has moved two trili:lon miles.
Of course the sun carries the earth
and the ether planets along with it in
(fats journey through the sky,
`Secondly, the sun itself 'rotates en
its axle just as the earth does.
It lktkes the sun 20' of our days to
complete one revolution.
It is imposeilee, of course. to Itnow
anything about the centre or inner
core of tI,e sun, though there is greet
reason to believe that because of the
intense heart of the sun, itis liquid.
We know, however, that the surface
of the sun is a great white luminous
molten sea.
This fact, and the time which it
talks the sun to revolve upon its arts
were both obtained by the observation
of dark spots ,..on Ohe ' sun's surface
Icnown as.auna•pots. -
The fact that these spots move
acrose the disk of the sun prove that
the sun is rotating,
The equatorial regions of the sun
move with greater speed than do the
polar regions. Thie proves the sur
face of the sun is liquid. If it were
solid, like the earth, all parts would
rotate with the same speed.
Above the sun's. surfaoe is a layer
of cooler gases about 600 to 1000 'Mimi'
]n thieknees.
Above this is a third layer of red
sunficomposed of flaming gases.
T41frgis layergre Is Prom 5000 to 10,000 miles'
in thickness,
It Is invisible to us because of the
Intense white light radiated from the
son's surface which "drowns out,' so
to speak.
From this layer, great red tongues
of 'flame shoot out in all directions,
somelmes for a distance of more than
100,000 miles.'
This layer of red fire with its gigan-
tic tongues of red flame becomes vis -
ibis during a.total eclipse of the sun
when the main body of the sun is ob-
soured from our view.
Daring an eclipse, a fourth layer
around the sun is also vielble—a sort
of silvery halo. Astronomers believe
this le composed of pa1'tlelea of molter
shot out from the sun which are kept
from falling back into the sun by the
repelling force of the sun's rays,
These various layers on the sun are
given names by the astronomer. The
surface of the sun is canoe the photo-
sphere. The neat layer of gases is
called the reversing layer. The layer
of red fire is called the olsromosphere,
and the slivery halo' ie. called the
corona.
Neat article: The sun -spots.
e the SL1I1.
Secrete of Science.
from it in .°, considerable percentage
of the fatalities occurring in old age.
About ten per . cent. of all diseaces
among children under Wesel]. of
age are due ;to various forms of • the
disease,- and, about one-third of all
deaths between twenty-andforty are
due , to it chiefly the pulmonary
variety,
No Brains.
"Under the mistletoe once more I
ask you to be my wife. Refuse me and
I'll blow out my brains."
"Sirs You batter yourself."
•
NEW STRENGTH FOR
WEAKSTOMACHS' So reverently they speak of Ilfm,
Longer Life for Shoes.
Winter weather Is with us, and
shoes are going to suffer, Stitches will
rot; welts will open; leather will
pexis]—unless preventive measures
are taken.
To keep wet from penetrating sales,
give the latter, when quite dry, two
coatings of oak copal varnish. The
soles of new shoes, by the 'way, must
first be roughened with sandpaper, so
that the varnish may penetrate.
Snow Is destructive to stitches, It
will penetrate 'between the uppers and
the soles of shoes. Then, in due
course, when the stitches rot and
break, the welt opens.
To prevent that, prepare In advance
a pot of mutton fat made by melting
down the trimmings from an uncooked
roast. Mix with the fat a tin of black
or brown polish, according to the color
of *our shoes. Then, with a piece of
pointed stick, or a small stiff brush,
work a little of the fat (you may have
to warm it first) between the uppers
and the soles. .
Uppers can be preserved if now and
then you wash off the coating of black-
ing and oil them with a little paraffin,
They will shine perfectly after two
applications of polish,
To preserve the shape of beets or
shoes that have got wet, cut off the
feet, 4 inches or so above the ankles,
of a pair of old stockings, insert them
in the shoes, and then fill with oats
well pressed clown. The oats will ab-
sorb the wet and keep the shoes In
shape.
Nothing to Boast of.
A bank in Boston, says- the Globe of
that eity, Lakes on a number of young
men during the summer. On their
salary receipts ie printed a legend
something like this:.':Your salary is
your personal hnsinese—a confidential
matter—and should not be disclosed to
anybody elec."-
et One of the new boys in signing this
receipt added': "f won't mention it.
len Just as much aebanied of it as you
are."
Tho difference between' a goat and a
Scotchman is this: The cue delights
in cold oat meal and the other delights
in an old ooat.meal.
Minerd's Liniment for Chilblains.
I bare my head to.honoi• them—
Tho 5191, y FIR! a'forest genii
Cathedral -like they wts11 me 'roused
And change the sed to. holy ground:
ehey cleanse 111y thoughts like p4119r81
nave,
And Worship strives my nous to
Save.
Their sky -aspiring heads t'11eyeafsie
And urge in me the upward gaze;
So straight. of trunk,so clean of limb,
Companionship.
I count the shadows on the grass
Beyond vemembering,
I catch the moonbeams as they pass,
And hear when wild birds sing.
A light 1 come, a wind I go,
Yet I ala not alone:
Companionship is mine who know
That beauty is my own.
—George Elllston.
Take the pep from your dyspepsia with 15 to 30,
drops of Seigel's Syrup in a glass of water as
directed on the bottle. Any drug store.
Prince's Motto Mystery.
Few emblems have aroused more
controversy than the Prince of Wales'
crest and motto—three .feathers and
the words "ioh Dien." The usual story
Is that when the Black Prince killed
John of Aus't'ria et Crecy he assumed
the latter's crest and motto, but a
\Vele.ta tradition indicates that when
B:tiward I. promised the people of
Wales a prince who could not speak a
word of English, he presented to them
his infant son, with the remark,. Etch
lyn, which means "Behold the man!"
It la further said that the feathers
formed te rebus of Queen Philippa,
mother of the Black Prince,represent-
ing her hereditary title, Countess of
Ostre-vau.t (Ostrich feather).
Now we are told that the giant re-
plica of the Prince's .crest, made of
splendid ostrich plumes, that was seen
at Wembley, Is quite wrong, because
the real crest Is not made of ostrich
feathers, add never was•!
The truth is that the real crest is
made from the Leathers of the feriwah,
a bird found in the denser jungles of
Bengal.
--a—
If
a—If our water were as dirty as our
air we should either have a revolution
or cease to exist.—D. R. Veitch Clark,
WE WANT CHURNING
We supply cans and pay express
charges. We pay daily by express
money orders, whtoh can be cashed
anywhere without any .charge:
To obtain the top price, Cream
must be free from bad flavors and
contain not lees" than 00 per cent.
Butter Fat.
Bowes Company Limited,
Toronto
For references—Head Office, Toronto,
Bank of Montreal, or your local b ranker,
Established for over thirty years.
Ands as my soul with them •communes,
Indigestion Disappears When Some notea wind -uttered, sweetly
the Blood is Enriched.
And some, but for the denier ear.
The urgen.t need of all wlio suffer
erom indigestion is. a tonio to enrich The anthems of thie boly choir,
the blood. Pain and distress efter eat- In music potent to inspire,
ing is the way the retornack ellows tbat Oni all 006066.031S bring to me
it is too weak to. perform th,e work Their holy themes. of seseride free.
of digestin,g the food taken. In. this
oondition some people foolishly resort Great beams to bridge elle tharting
to purgatives, but' these only further keeeStrlitteinm;e,..tee urge the toiling
aggravate the trouble.
New steength te given weak etom- steam;
ache by Dr.. Williame' Pink Pills be- Rich -glowing embers for the grate,
cause these pills eneloh. and purify the
blood. This is the natural process of
giving eteength and ton,e to the Stom-
ach, and it accOunts for the speedy re-
lief in stomach disorders that follow
. the use of Dr, Williams' Pink. Pills.
The appetite revives, food can be
taken without discomfort and the bur.
den and pain.s of indigeseon are dis-
pelled, The following statement trora
proves the value of these pills in cases
of this kind. He saye:--"A oouple of
Years ago I -had st bad attack of indi-
gestion. I had little or tic app'etite,
and wha.t I did eat did not agree with
me and caused me much pain. As a
result of this trouble rny general
health broke down, and I finally had
to give up my work, I heel taken doe-
. tor's medieine but tt did not .give me
any relief. Then a friend advised me
to give Dr: Williams' Pink Pills a
trial, and I got Silt: boxes. Before I
had completed the third box I fonnd
that they were helpin,g me an,d by the
time I had taken. the six boxes every
symptom of indigestion had disappear-
ed, my general health had improyed
and I have since been in the very best
of heaath. I Took upon Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills as a wondeeful medicine for
all who are run-down."
You can get these pills from any
mediciue dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine
Co., BrocIrville, Ont.
They answer me in whispered tunes;
The winter's chill to dissipate.
Stoat wales, to bear the family roof,
Protection kind! and torrent proof:
And as, to count their wealth, I .try,
The eea•vice-seems to multiply.
The church, temeohoo;, Olre warehouse
wall,
The home, the legisietive hail,
The epar to spread the trader's sail,
And ties. to bear the tra$lc-rail.
These gifts, lull 'these, and vastly more,
Enrich the vision of their store,
Till unto men, they tiny etand,
Examplee of God's open hand.
• —R. Manly Orr.
Tales Told by Rocks.
The ancients . describe briefly the
creation of the various groups of ani-
mals on several suocessive days.
These days instead of being stwenty-
four hours, as formerly .understood,
are now considered to have been long
periods of time, each equaling several
million years.
The earth's surface was once entire-
ly covered with water holding in solu-
tion or suspension large quantities of
mineral matter , which settling to the
bottom from time to time hardened i -
to layers of rock,
Th.o skeletal portions of the animals
dying also dropped to the bottom, and
oft -times left the indelible impressions
of their bodies 1n the forming rock, or
the skeletal structure was itself re-
placed with stone (fossilized).
By contraction of the earth's cruet
certain portions were forced up out of
the water and made ready for habita-
tion by land animals.
These coming to the water to drink
or rushing into the lakes to esoage
from their enemies sometimes perish-
ed, and their skeletons were likewise
entombed in the eedimont-forming
rock and there became fossilized.
Therefore, each successisve• stratum
or layer of rock containing the re-
mains of the life of former ages serves
tie the leaf of a hook giving a des-
cription of the a,n•imate world before
the era of man.
By oarefui computation scieutlats
have determined that life has probably
existed on the earth for a period of
from twenty million to one •bundred
million years.
The fossil remains how that the in-
vertebrates lived here more than a
million years before there were any
vertebrates; the fish preceded the am-
phibians by several million years,
while as much more time elapsed be-
fore the advent of reptiles, which
.dwelt bere at least two or three mil-
lion years. before the appearance of
birds.
There 1s evidence indicating that
man has been on the earth from 750,-
000 to a million years, and it is pos-
sible that he has been here even many
millions of years. In England aalnen's
skeleton was found at Piitdown in
rock 600,000 years old.
Safer
The village doctor has just bought
himself a new "cat, It is to be -feared
that all his interest In the machine
was not solely due to the fact that,
with its aid, 11e would be able to reach
his patients more quickly, Truth .to.
tell, the medical nlan had in him :the
instincts of a "road hog." Soon be
decided that the car was mot powerful
enough to satisfy his craving for speed
and he advertised it for sale. in due
course it prospective'purchaeer turned
up and was taken for a trial run.
They whirled along at a furious pace,
"I say, look out," cautioned• the pas-
aenger. "You're doing over sixty,
miles an hour."
"Don't wary about that•1e"-chnckled
the doctor. "I've got the village po-
liceman in bed with rheumatics,"
A Coutlous Owner.
A Pennsylvania farmer was the own-
er of a good Alderney cow. A stranger,
having seen the animal, asked the
farmer "What will you take for your
The farmer scratched Ills head for a
moment, then sail: ."Leek e -here, be
you the tax es8eaSOr or has she been
killed by. the railropd7"
-ff
Keep Minard'a Liniment handy.
If men were as clever as women
they'd long ago have devised some
way of making baldness fashionable.
Some people are so busy praying
for more that they have no time to re-
turn thanks for what they have re-
ceived.
g,%sn l0) 8 (8 IPP- 1t5
"�f}I4+a'o �i�C4i01P�G (62BC71'`8"6t"rof0)
EVREPESZELSIV em-fte ...,
Counsel to Verse -makers.
Seek a grove maturely tall-
- slopes have proven good;
Build a camp to last, and haul
Quantities of wood.
Tap the trees on heel of frost,
Catch the sap in shining pails,
Let no hour of it be lost
Whilst the run prevails.
Boll it, test and boil again
Till the sweet be clear and strong,
Nature fused to crystal—then
Sell it for a song.
—T. Morris Longstreth,
A Gentleman,
"Sadie, what is a gentleman?"
"Please, ma'am," anewered the well-
bred child, "a gentleman's a man you
don't know very well."
SKATES 1 $ICI 1
Joe. Malone Tubular l5tioiey
Skates, rivetted on strong boots
with ankle etmpe. Regular prise
$11.00. Oar pprice, for man arde
,atamnn only 87.00. 511, aqd
a
50501. ' 0 equipment.boil Thepried. snob,
ob,
Ark for ser entalotoe and prlw•
l I S THE BANCROPT CO.
1247 Bleory at - Montronl.
•
4,-i. li.. v ty (tri s t -A.1 —
We offer steady employment and pay
weekly to sell our complete and exclu-
sive lines of guaranteed quality, whole
root, fresh -dug -to -order trees and
plants. Attractive illustrated samples
and full co-operation, a moneymak-
ing opportunity
Luke Brothers Pllurserien Montreal
f-••++•-sHIP us You2-'e•.•••••-.j
POULTRY. GAME, EGGS,
BUTTER AND FEATHERS
'-WEDUYAL).YEA2 ROUND -
t1S•fEe lodayfbrprices-Ivo Anra,ftea
fo
them r a week ahead
P. POULiN Lo' CO., LIMITED
ErlR occurs. real
Yeart
36-3S.Bonsecourr hia.hot - Montreal
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Lumbago Colds Neuritis Neuralgia
Headache Pain Toothache Rheumatism
DOES' NOT AFFECT THE HEART
Accept o "Bayer" package
which contains proven directions.
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets.
Also bottles of 24 and l00—Druggists.
Aspirin to the trade marc (registered to Canada) of Barer Dfan0factare of aYoaoaL1etle-
aetdester of Salleyileaeid (Acetyl 06110711e AMa, "A. D. A.").. while It L well known.
that Aspirin meow, Boyar manufacture, to assist the publle 'walnut Imitations, the Tablets
of Bayer Company wni bo otamped with thole gte at41 trade mark, rho- Beyer Grose.
Well -Worn indeed.
Ile tock her hand in his and gazed
proudly at the engagement ring he lead
placed on her finger only three daye
before,
"Did your friends admire it?" he in-
quired, tenderly. _
"They did more than that," she re-
plied, coldly. "Two of them recog-
uized it" -
Classified Advertisements
/3 AKERS' OVE2413, WIOTII 5011 cATaIeenn
end 011 or used ovens nul:bat-d Oren Com.
1eL8, 001 Rina west. Trona.
the
NIGHT fe'
MORNING f,'
,KEEP YOUR EYES
6'.1.0Y11'005 LEAR AND FiEALT1d'f'.
858 0006 neon' MValai CO.00ICAC0.VLt
TAYLOR-'FORBES
Tree ILdkRskTEEil
Pruners
For every purpose in the
orchard, cutting limbs up
to ii inches. Handles -
4, 6, 9, 10 and 12 feet.
Your Hardware Dealer knows the quality
Our descriptive circular sent
to any address on request.
TAYLOR-FORBES
COMPANY, LIMMITBTF
GUELPH, ONT.
GRIPPE!
Stop it with MInard'a,
the gr eat. preventative.
Heat and inhale. Also
rub on throat and chest.
C T1CURA HEALS
CHILD'S ECZEMA
On Face in Red Pimples.
Itched and Burned Ter-
ribly, Lost Rest.
" When my niece was six
months oldeczema broke out on
her face in small, red pimples. -It
itched and burned terribly causing
her to scratch, and she was very.
cross. She lost her rest at night,
and her face was disfigured.
" I sent for a free sample of Cuti-.
tura Soap and Ointment and pur-
chased more, and after using two
cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box
of Cuticura Ointment she w a s
completely healed." (Signed) Miss
Mary Marchand, Box 12, Aricbet,
Nova Scotia. •
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum are all you need for all toi-
let uses. Bathe with Soap, soothe
with Ointment, dust with Talcum.
ample Raab rreo h 'oeSlk,- /Wrens Canadlon
neaot Stenboaee Ltd., Montreal Price. Soap
tae. Ointment 21 and 401, Talcum 23a,
War Cuticura Shoving Stick 25e.
SS E, No 00--'20.