The Seaforth News, 1928-12-06, Page 7TIre.cyDodging
New Health Cult
Elderly Men in England Find
Cure For Dead Livers
Loncicu, An air of extreme agility
IS becoming more and more apparent
about the inhabitants of Great BM -
tale, There is an unusually alert ox
pression in their eyes, a new museelar
bulge on the calves„,of theiralegs, The
great traffic problem is breeding a
new race, find Britons are winning it,
This is all to the good. Modern
pulses beat more rapidly than tn pre-
war days as fo11t prepare to dash from
pavement to pavement and a vivid
flush of health results in our cheeks.
.See that pretty girl about to cross
the Strand. See how sire grips , her
bag. Her Dyes widen. She draws a
deep breath (the veriest child knows
how beneflcialis deep breathing). She
seizes her, aunt -who also has been i
inhaling profoundly by the band, I
mnurrnurtt "One, two, three!„ and offs
they flash, balancing on the right foot,
balancing; on the left, over theroofof
that limousine,' under the ehasis of
that omnibus,, until there they are--
safe so far, auntie!" on the halt-
- way refuge.
lt2QS
T1;
EXCITING."
.,,
Bless my soull" says Auntie, "that
was most exciting, my dear. Just one
minute while Itake a jujube to re-
fresh myself and we'll make a dash
for the Test of it,"
That is but a small exaggeration of
what rally happens every minute of
the day in the cities of these islands.'
Even retired colonels are jumping to
it. They carry bank to their little'
pieces in the country impreseivel
stories of their powers in fording the,
Piccadilly traffic stream. They
spread the news in. their clubs. Thus
n 'epitit of het,lthy emulation is'
:Moused in elderly choses. You is re-
captured, Life begins again to surge.
Contemporary traffic has produced
a marked reduction in the number of
sluggish livers, if for no other rea-
son than that most of them are now
dead.
Anti -Fox Hunting
Crusade Started
Movement in West of Eng-
land Gains Impetus as
Land Owners Ex-
tend Ban
London. The West of England has
seen the commencement of au influ-
ential crusade against fox hunting in
the past few days, The movement
was started by Fleury Nation, a promi-
nent West Somerset farmer, who an-
nounced that ho intended to forbid
hunting on his land in future. His
example was followed by two other
land owners, and now the papers pub-
lish the decision of Mrs. Bonham
Christie not to allow hunting over
her
Estate
of
2,000
acres near Fromm
In
a letter r to
the South and West
Wilts fox hunt, Mrs. Christie, after
denouncing what she describes as
"barbarous cruelty" to a "poor, de-
fenseless animal," says, "when your
pack becomes a drag hunt (in which
an artificially laid trail is used) I will
help you all I can and allow you any-
where over my land."
The movement may be regarded ail
an outcolhe of the recent eonfroversy
which threatened to split the Royal
Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals. The victory of Stephen
Coleridge and other members who
want the society to work actively
against "blood sports" naturally has
led to increased activity among their
supporters throughout the country..
School -Leaving Age
C. 11. P. Mayor in the Nineteenth
Century (London): There are those
who strongly advocate the raising of,
the school -leaving age: it is difficult
to understand why. Already many
teachers realize that hundreds of
children are kept at school too long
as it is; they have acquired all the
khowledge the present stage of their
mental development allows them to
absorb. Contact with the realities of
life is now he best teacher for them.
1:bereave those who can gaih knowl-
edge only from experience and find
in it that stimulus which boot.- learn-
ing and class -room work do not pro-
vide; and while an attempt is being
, made to increase the number of ad-
tanned -courses in the secondary
schools we do not find an equally
hong desire to liberate those ail.
dren wliC ."ave aigeadY b.on kept in
school too long; if the increasing of
the one is necessary for the sake of
those who are clever in book work,
the freeing of the other is no less
necessary for the sake of those wbo
are not.
Mayors are not a1' ays happy in
their choice of words. On one occa-
sion a mayor-, presiding for th5 last
ame at a meeting Of hie local council,
said: -"I !lave 10100 to the enc; of my
`morality' and ant pleased to Tatum
to the feeedo% of my forbear life."
Acts are nothing eelleera co` they are
fruits of a state, except 04 khey Tiede,
tate what the man it; eterds are neth-
ing except as tbey zxpross a mind Mt
pnr'poee.-p';: P', 'Maurice,
1'Ft11B'- 'i'm inclined to suspect yetir
mar see'' banit account is greatly exag-
gerated." Daughter -"Oh, no, Arthur
teats it's only :a tiny bit overdrawn."
When we give 'nap looking for hap-
piness, we Rad ba1**et+0.wess,-Carlyle.
Hospital for Sick Children
07 Coil.° Si., Toronto L, Osis
Aocemoor. lege,
Dear Mx. Ndltor;-
lpox soane yoara past the ?Milt that
this tloeppttal bee been able • to de
for the children of Ontario boa been
sortously cramped through lads of
apace. A plot was reached where
the Trus.ees, nad to decide syhother
Ito service should be restrieted to
the utmost number of "Sick Kids"
wbotu it could provide with cots or
whether it should add tq its room.
There are many youtigaters suffer-:
ing from afilictlees of tho spine and
Joints, wbom only many long menthe
Can restore to health and strength.
Medical oars will help; but what
they principally need is fresh air
and sunshine. Hitherto the Hospital
for Sisk Children has loolsed after
such children in an institution eioss
by a city playground, where more
fortunate boys and girls enjoy their
'ports, Imagine their plight, lying
month after month listening to the
abouts and laughter or other children.
in October last, the Hospital for
Sick Children opened its country
annex devoted to youngsters whose
One Ob/1n08 to have, their limbo
straightened or their bodies built up
must be in some place where they
have sunshine and fresh air Pius,
nursing
care and o f al attention.
.
Ona height of land near Weston,
away from the murk of the city,
children are winning their way back
to health in an environment of sun.
shine, ,pure breezes and quiet.
The countryhospital at Thistle.
town is a od-send for children
whom it will take a long time to
cure. It deo liberates a hundred
cots in the parent institution for
.youngsters wily can lie set right in
a short time it quickly given con-
stant attention. So the Hospital for
Siok Children has now two doors to
keep open day and night to ever]+
class, color and creed.
For more than hall a century the
Hospital has depended for its very
existence upon the public response
•to its annual appeal which, being in
behalf of children, is appropriately
made at Christmas trine, For over
fifty years the HIF.S.C, has been
enabled to make both ends meet by
the donationsof its friends, whether
such be a dollar or an endowment.
But the end of 1928 finds it with
many large bills to pay for its new
venture.
To its old friends the Hospital for
Biok Children once more appeals. It
Is because so many of your readers
are included in that ever-growing
circle, that I trespass upon your
epa4 to remind them that it was
their generosity in the past that em-
boldened the Hospital's Trustees to
build for the future. With an extra
effort stimulated by a new need,
cannot the income of the "Sick
Kids" be put once more abreast of
Its urgent needs?
Faithfully yours,
IRVING E, ROBERTSON,
Chairman Appeal Committee.
Hero -Spirits
Still the race at hero -spirits
Pass the lamp from hand to hand,
Age from age the Word inherits
Wife, and Child and Fatherland.
-Charles Kingsley.
•
"Those darned soaks!" exclaimed
the husband angrily as he threw them
across the room. "What's the mat-
ter with them?" demanded his wife.
"They're not darned," he growled.
•
"That's an old car of yours, Tom.
How many summers has it seen?" "I
tjon't know how many summery but
it's had over lifted' springs since I've
bought it!''
at
rh dial
for It
U ATJC VICTIMS
Can Find Relief Through Bails;
lag Up the Blood
Pain is the symptom of rheumatism
that every :victim rooeguizee, and h
generally attributes the trouble to
cold, damp or changeable weather,
But doctors know that thin blood le a
marked characteristic of the trouble,
Trying to cure rhouniatiem ;virile the
blood Irotates thin and poor is an tin -
possible task because there is nothing
to build on, A tonic like Dr, Williams
Pink Pills that enriches the blood and
frees it from poisonous impurities
'Soon banishes 'rheumatism from the
system. So long as the blood ie main-
tained ]
1 in a healthy eondiC n h
y Io the
trouble will not return,' This le not
theory. It has bean proved l.loun
(!rode of cases; here is one: -Mr
J. W. Rose, R.R. 2, Albauy, le.E.I,
says: -"For 501116 years I was a gree
sufferer from rheumatics] and al
though I tried a great many remedies,
I clic] not get' any permantent relief
until after I• tool: Dr: Williams' Pink
Pills. Tho trouble was ;coated mostly
in my shoulders, and at times wee so
bad that •i
my right t arm was almost
• useless, 0f course I suffered Much
pain and great inconveniehee. My
attention was directed to Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills through an advertisement
in otlr newspaper, and I decided to
try them. I took the pills according
to directions with the result that the
rheumatism has left me, and I hays
never hacl a twinge of it since. If this
meets the eye of any rheumatic suf-
ferer my advice is try Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills at once."
l'ou can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from Tho Dr, Williams' Medi-
eine Co., Brockville, Out.
0
•
Briand Cleared
of Matchmaking
Rumors Spiked by Romance
of Francoise and
Christopher
Paris. -The announcement that Prin-
cess Francois° of France, second
daughter of the Duke do Guise, would
starry Prince Christopher of Greece,
cleared Aristide Maud, Prance's
Foreign Minister, of the charge of
royal matchmaking.
When rumors of the princess's en-
gagement first began to fly, M. Briand
was accused of having arranged a
match between the princess and King
Boris of Bulgaria. Ile denied the ac-
cusation. The formal announcement
that a marriage has been arranged
between. Princess Prancoise and
Prince Clu'istopher is supposed to
climax a true love affair between the
twenty-six-year-old princess and the
forty -year-old prince. No ministerial
connivance 1,0 suspected.
Christopher,
a prince of both Greece
and Denmark was the husband of the
wealthy widow of W. B. Leeds, of
Cleveland, sometimes called the tin-
plate king. Mrs. Leeds became the
Princess Anastasie upon her marriage.
She died three years later.
— -
Second Chances
'rhe hedge has many buds; the rose
Will bloom and bloom and bloom
again;
The clematis profusely shows
In clusters at the window -pane;
Hoping in one or other way,
In one or other happy hour.
To find the incomparable spray,
The perfect Rower,
But not to man the high gods give
A score of lives, ranged side by side,
That one of many may achieve,
Howe`er the others be denied;
He has one flower, and one alone,
And if the facts a canker send,
Or 1f it fail for lack of sun,,
It is the end.
--J. M. in the London Observer.
Canadian Wheat for India
Ottawa, Canada. - Another market
for Canadian wheat, the excellence
of which is attested by the fact that
it bas won the world championship
at the International Grain and Hay
Show 14 times in the last 17 years,
has just been opened by a shipment
of 285,725 bushels from Vancouver,
B.C,, to India. This is the first time '
:wheat grown in Canada has been
sent to that country, which is one of
the principal wheat growing coup -
Interesting St
y of Empire's War Time Premier
LLOYD, GEORGE ELECTIONEERING
Leaving Euston Station with his daughter Megan for Ashton-under-Lyne,
to addrose a mass meeting for W. 0, Greenwood to
d in a by.
Liberal candidate Y
election,
�.._..-..
'd
A Noranda Querle
In the quarter ended September
30th, 1928, 1t cost Utah Copper Co.
,6.1 cents to produce a pound of the
red metal, while in the same period
it cost Nevada Consolidated 7.89
cents' per pound. The next annual
report of Noranda Mines, Ltd., which
should appear in February will give
an idea of how this big new Canadian
Company will perform by way of
costs per pound. Being a much
smaller producer at present than Utah
of Nevada, not costs will doubtless
be higher, possibly 10 cents per
pound. On the other hand, the aver-
age content of Noranda's ore now be-
ing produced is 4 to 6 times that of
its big contemporaries in copper alone.
Then there is the higher gold content
of Noranda's ore, which will be velvet.
It is anticipated that when Noran-
da's new shaft is completed and; the
rich "11" ore body is drawn on, smel
ter facilities will be doubled, giving
Me company a capacity of 4,800 tons
daily. Average mililleads may also
be stepped up, unless the company
proposes to mill low-grade ore, with
the rdch.
The second unit of the smelter will
go into production early next year.
This should increase daily output to
2,400 tons. Noranda's first smelter
unit is doing more than double its
rated capacity, and the second unit,
when it comes in, may be expected to
do the same.
The market is likely to be pretty
bare of news on Noranda between now
an dthe publication of the annual re-
port. Intimations have been made,
however, that directors"are keeping
good news for the report." In view
of what has taken place this year and
what is taking place now, the state-
ment should prove a brilliant docu-
ment, with some senastional.. aspects.
Ifow will profits work out? What will
ore reserves show?
Weighted Index Number of 17 Mining
BLOCKS for 1926 EC,uals 100.
The weighted index of 17 mining
stocks, computed by the Dominion
Bureau of Statisticson the base 1926
equals 100, was 114.7 for the week
ending November 15th, as compared
with 116.9 for the week ending No-
vember 8th.
Gold copper stock represented by
Noranda and Amulet fell from 288.4
to 283.2. Eleven gold stocks rose
from 5,2 to 66.7.
Among the gold stocks the average
weekly prices behaved as follows:
-Hollinger fell from $9.06 to $8,86,
McIntyre from $20,39 to $19.82, Lake
Shore from $20,64 to $19.02 and
Wright -Hargreaves from $2.63 , to
02.74. Dome rose from 08.45 to $8.61.
tries of title world, Another shipment
". ,of 235,000 bushels leaves Vancouver
rhea; effective,, too, for older children, ! w
Twenty -live million bottler Were ' C
bought last year. t
ee,� t
..''i, -•lis✓ `°, I h.. ., x`r
fdr 0gipuita in December,
Canaches agricultural wealth za esti-
mated' at $7,820,000,000 and the
mount of capital invested in agricul-
urn, the basic industry of the Do -
is about $3,800,000,000.
"The Wall That Canada
Built."
Brooklyn Eagle: Nearly twenty
ears have passed since the'Canadian
onservatives tberuselves ]Hired a gg
iprocity scheme WORM out `ley ire,
aft Administi:tfldii and the Laurier
overlt Aent, As matters stand, Can-
tle ntiw wants reciprocity more than-
did
handid then, aria] the United States
ants ft less, , . . In other words,
anacla made its own bed, in the Mat-
er of tariffs, and may have to repose
n it for some time to come. Tariff.
ioponnts, there as elsewhere, failed
o consider that conditions might
change,,
Baby has little upsets at times. All a
your care cannot prevent them. But t
not/ can be prepared. Then you can
do what any experienced nurse would
ao—what meat physicians would tell
you to do -give a few drops of plain
bastoria, No sooner done tban Baby
ie soothed; relief IS fust q metier of
Moments. Yet you have eased your y
child without gag of a single doubtful 0
drug: &eta fs vegetable. Set it's a
safe to tithe as often 55 all infant has', '7
may little pain you cannot 'pat a, 441? .,0
And it's always ready for the crueler'
None of colic, or constipation, or dims- it
Mlitard's Liniment for Chapped Hands.
t
25
OCEAN
FRE
TO CANADA
for the
Wives and Families
of British Subjects
Children under
17 years—FREE
Apply at once to
: CANADIAN SI6RViOO t
Cunard and
Anchor. Donaldson
Lines
Cor. 'Bay and 'Wellington
Sts., Toronto.
-or nearest agent
a
� o
ISSUE No. 48—'28
Sylvanite from $2.30 to $2.57 and
Teck -Hughes from $8,61 to $8,81.
Average prices were lower for both
of the gold copper stooks. Amulet fell
from $3 to $2.83 and Norancla from
$64.65 to $53.
In the silver and miscellaneous
group the average price of Caniagas
rose from $2.80 to $8 and Mining Cor-
poration from $3.12 to $3.27,
• Lake Shore
It is reported that, commencing
December 1st, Lake Shore will step
up production to $500,000 monthly and
that two adidtional tube mills are be-
ing installed towards this end. The
foundations of these are now said
to be in prooess of being poured. It
is further stated that an adidtional;
filter will be taken in. At the lowest
Ievels- of the mine two new, almost
solid, quartz veins are said to have
been discovered. These two breaks
are reported to be 40 feet in width.
Toronto Weekly Bank Clearings
The bank clearings in the city of
Toronto for the week ending Nov. 22,
1928 amounted to $181,786,122, an in.
crease of $28,516,541 over the corre-
sponding period last year and an In-
crease of $56,981,739 as compared with
the previous week of this year.
Week 19;7 1928
Nov. 10th 131,806,827 188,317,589
Nov. 17th 149,024,661 124,804,233
Nov. 24th 153,269,581 •181,786,122
WHEN YOUR BABY
CATCHES A
CQLD
•
In spite of all precautions little ones
will take colds -especially during the
changeable days of our. Fall season.
When the first symptoms appear-
sneezing,
ppealsneezing, redness of the eyes, running
nose -Baby's Own Tablets should be
given at once. They will rapidly break
up the cold anal prevent more serious
complications,
Mothers who keep a box of Baby's
Own Tablets in the home always feel
safe. In fact they are lilt:e having
a doctor in the house. They are a
gentle but thorough laxative that
sweeten the stomach and regulate the
bowels, thus driving out constipation
and indigestion and relieving the baby
of the many childhood ailments which
are the direct. result of a clogged con-
dition of the bowels or sour stomach.
They are absolutely safe -being guar-
anteed to contain no drug at all harm-
ful to even the youngest babe. They
cannot possibly do harm -they always
do good.
Baby's Own Tablets are sola by all
medicine dealers or will be sent by
mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
Novice: And how should 1 p ay
the 19th hole?
Pro.: I think you'd better stfolc to
iced teal
Strawberry Production
The largest proportion of Canadian
g
strawberry production is consumed in
the Domihion. In addition Canada im-
ports about 3,000,000 pounds of straw-
berries annually.
"What did s'hame's little baby learn
at school today?" "I learned two
kids not to call me 'mama's little
baby ,,h.
Minard's Liniment for Grippe.
Crowded Cities Are
"Signof Decay"
Mussolini Starts Campaign
Against Migration. from
Country Homes
'Bono.-•Premmier Benito Mussolini
has started a vigorous campaign
against the recent wide migration
from country homes to crowded cities
of Italy and demanded that all Fas-
cists join- in halting the uxodus'fr'ont
rural regions, The premier's war cry
was expressed in an article he wrote
for Popolo d'Italia, chief Fascist
journal.
Mussolini '
rnr riseried the tendency of
Italians to abandon country ]tomos
and to increase the size of cities until
the housing problem has become acute
was a "sign' of decay," He set June l
30, 1930, as the date by which Fee-
eists must settle the .'back -to -the -
land campaign.
The article, signed by the prelltier,
said the migration since• 1922 has re-
sulted irl the building of "whole cities"
almost outright and said that it was
absurdto believe b Neve the housing prob-
lem can be solved as long as such a
tendency exists. But sometimes a diet of fruit and
He said t}hefil'sthalf of 1923 found vegetables is too slow in its action -
was marked by the migration of 68,-, you need prompt relief. Then take
621 persona from' rural districts to I Beecham's Pills. They are vegetable
eight of the larger cities of the na- 'cetnposition and contain in cone--
"Those figures are not et sign of
power as a few imbeciles may be-
lieve, he said, "but are the surest g ,cove YELt°W TINGE Wirt,
indication of decay. They explain why
the housing problem cannot be solved
unless the present system is eban;ad." ,
The premier said Italy could not T" k° , regular
datlr rouuo t
afford to spend many millions of dol- I Bceehem's Pit. 4 Vegetable Prodaer
lars in building in the cities and must f°r short period, e.g
find better investments. .Your eget rvtll soca resect improved beaks,.
"The watchword for Italians in all
ranks of life must be to facilitate the 1 Maid- (seeking new post) -"Yes, I
exodus from cities by all means, in- go as a general servant but I don't
eluding force if necessary, and to cook, or wash or sew or wash-up . or.
hamper in all ways, including force,' clean shoes, or polish, and I must go
the abandonment of fields or country-, out as much as possible." Registry
side generally." Office Official -"But you will never
get a post like that." Maki -"That is
all you know -I have already had five
in six days."
YOUR FAMILY'S
CHARACTERISTICS Y THE EYES
WHICH PARENT .DO THE
CHILDREN TAKE AFTER ?
Color and shape of the eyes indicate
disposition, temperament and encs -
try. 'Slue eyee come from Northern;
Ancestry, In the Celtic Races, eyes of
hazel gray predominate. People of
Southern Ancestry are invariably
dark - eyed and of brunette cam-
plexion, What color are your eyes$
EYE$ ALSO DENOTE THE
CONDITION
A YOUR AUR. HEALTH
TH
Whatever be' their color or natural
spends their beauty is marred if they
are dulled by' poor condition of liver
or headaches, or biliousness arising
from constipation.
The whites of the eyes should be clear
and slightly bluish, If they show a
yellow tinge you need a laxative,
NATURE'S LAXATIVES ARE
FRUITS AND VENETARLES
I
trated form the equivalent laxative
value of fruits and vegetables -safe
and certain.
Britain Abandons
Clams to islands
in South Atlantic
Classified Advertisements
ArTZST8' SUPo:018rs.'
A ATIST EltUSE ui COLOIts, 1`A-
.13 PEAS, canvas. Complete Moe artist
Norwegians Free to Developmaterials. Write for catalogue Vat 5t -
L mas cards for hand ootot•,nb. t:. It,.
Whaling Near Bouvet Crowley Limited, 1388 St, Catharine
West, Montreal.
and Thompson
Islands .
London. -The withdrawal of the
British claim to Bouvet and Thomp-
son Islands in the south Atlantic
leaves the Norwegians free to further
develop the whaling activities in that
region.
Apart from two British and one
Argentine company; the whole . ant -
:mak whalin • trade
is in the
ghands
of Norwegians, and latterly they have
earned dividends ranging from 25 to
nearly 60 per cent. though they can
only operate some four months yearly.
According to a report to the League
of Nations by Dr. Jose Leon Suarez of
Buenos Aires, whales are rapidly be-
ing exterminated, some 15 to 20 per
cent being destroyed yearly.
Hitherto the British Government
has demanded a royalty on the whale
oil produced round Bouvet Island, as.
it still does on that from the Falk-
land Islands -a practice which Dr.
Suarez descrebed in his report t;
being "very doubtful legally," and as
"quite inadequate" to prevent the ex-
termination of whales by a process
which, he said, was "veritable but-
chery."
It is reported that one of the fastidi-
ous newly -married ladies of this town
kneads bread with her gloves on, This
incident may be somewhat peculiar,
but there are others. The editor of
this paper needs bread with his shoes
on, he needs bread with his shirt on;
he needs bread with his pants on; and
unless the delinquent subscribers pour
up before long he will need bread
without a damn tiling on.
Let those who bewail the "decadent
youth" of this day ponder that "hot"
one written in 1760 by the French
jurist and philosopher, Montesquieu:
"It is not the youug people who clo•
-
generate; they are not spoiled till
those of mature age are already sunk
in corruption."
15 t•)lt HOUND U1'.: TWENT r' -
ono samples free. Stocking d't
urn 2tuts, Dept. 1, Orilna, Ont.
ATENt:
List of "Wanted Inventions"
and Full information Sent er•e°
011 Request.
THE BAMSAT CO., Dept. W.
273 Bank. Et., Ottawa, Ont.
a:t, 'Children ;✓;keit--'
So Will You
Ath
t o drat t o of a
e l
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Cord bu '• v ti to '
v B s . The
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th•st'dcse does two ihinas—
relieves the cough instantly and
delights' the taste. Different from
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Colds,Bronchltis. Prevents" Flu",.
Pneumonia and all Throat. and
- Lung troubles. Sold everywhere
under money -refunded guarantee..
iii
W. It. Buckler, Limited,
•,.., 142 Mutual St., Toronto 2
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'fie."
Ito Acta tae a /loch --
0 single sip proves it
I5p and d•()c
Cutle hitfa
Toilet Preparations
Delightfully fragrant, highly developed
toilet necessaries—a ,uott reliable method et
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Winter Sports
Winter sportsmen film Min-
ard's ideal for taking tho
soreness out of bruised
muscles. Try a bottle.
owetmee
PtIILLlP
y4OrllAGIyrSs
For Troubles
due to Acid
INDIG1STION
ACID STOMACH
NEARTeuaN
NEADANn
OA9E5•NACU9EA
t
Sick stomachs, sour stomachs and
indigestion usually mean excess acid,
The stomach nerves are over-stin4u
lated, Too much acid makes the stone
'ea and Intestines sour,
Alkali kills acid instantly.; Tie best
form is Phillips' Milk of',Magnesia,'
because one harmless, tasteless dose
neutralizes many times its volume in
acid, Slime its invention, 50 years ago;
it has remained the standard with
physieia,tes everywhere.
e ce
e AAcid
'rake a spoonful in water and your; •
unhappy condition will probably end
in five minutes. Then you will always
know what to do. Crude and harmful
methods will never appeal to Foe. Go
prove this for your.tewn sake, It may
save a great many disagreeable hours.
Bo ,sure to get tho genuine Phillips.
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physl'
cute for 50 years in correbting exees:e
acids, Eerie bottle contains full :lino
trona -tree tlr'ug':sGore