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The Seaforth News, 1919-05-29, Page 3SYR!A, TURKEY'S GREEN SPOT. Lend of Patriarch§ end,ljrophets Will, dater 5.Y.Nfi',-A 9.,4 t r ..07.11 ill natio '4R whose disposition ris a Peace Oonfef encs lthea s pr ole n, ;Til s re i u, exLe ndin 1t, froth t'� t tvr %= o gYP- , 'and tient • . Sea,, 1p teat Q S it the land of the patriarchs .aid pre -j 1.1,1.1e iAleilJte eessettee ealledeleea1 Landes Its population n tmbers ebout"`tihiree aud'a htlitili1•ons, oilgiimitic•ortgtii speaking the'Arab: o language, and yet with... so, many sraoes. .intermingled thl'ougli, .t11e, centuries of the various' oonemests and, occepations that the' • people 'Cannel claim any line rase" as their o'wt1. ... , : C:. Greek, Rowan and European crtisa der lnawe all blended with the ancient Semitic stock :to,produce the Syrians of today, whom Lord Cromer, in. his memoirs, termed 'the cream of the Fleet." Ili Syria was the one green spot of -Turkey—the Lebanon mountains. In ancient times the mountains were everywhere covered with forests, The cedars of Lebanon not only fur- nished timber for the building of Solo- mon's temple in Jerusalem, but the kings of Egypt annually floated large rafts of logs from the Syrian coast to supply the demands of the° cities of the Nile. This constant demand from foreign lands, together with the lack of any system of 'reforestation, has practically denuded the mountains of the whole'' land. Once snore to cover the mountains and hills with pine and cedar and oak would be a simple task if carried on systematically. The chief enemy to- day of reforestation' by nature is the herd of goats, which every spring roam over the whole country and do- your every green thing, The little seedling trees suffer especially. In 1SG0, because of massacres, the . European powers insisted that these mountains be made autonomous. And following that date this little district became a living" demonstration of what good government will produce and of what the people of the land are capable of becoming. The steep mountain sides wore ter- raced to a height of 4000 feet and planted to olives, figs and vines. Taxes were low, safety to persons and pro- perty secured, good roads built and kept ;in repair. The people .construct- ed more comfortable homes and sent is t:'fine sons to schools and college. The story of the achievements of the Lebanon during the sixty years, of autonomy would be a thrilling nat- rative in itself. PRACTICAL ARITHMETIC. revezt Wear and Tette kAd-eff, and- Harnesses -- Imperial e e' MICR • r as Imperial laureka Harness Oil +=-keece-leather like,heti-••,soft,% lib` -strong arid,PTM1e"`-Siekeinand -oats-,'axle plate andkeeps ward::. :..eevonts hrnttn.- it 1s,srotlz"" a` 4er. P :last s.�v t a l el•,�. t F 6 R �g + I in and cracking. Makes it last' oi; soft yun Cl and gIfehe 'itiia , , longer. -.Sold in convenientsizes. ;banishes frl4ion, betweeni the ' 1. nidtair iurfarfs. Me. t iosFls. �j ' ,Znn,per al eu ieeitoplugsuplhillpr nlfhek 'y Eureka Harness Oiler roads, Sava wagon-w✓ear' a d '• ' —makes it easyte keep harness ,tear, Sol •l ln, sizes _, 1 lb to r i •-• , and leather thoroughly oiled. bel is Saves time and- work, ' At Dealers Everywhere TREASU E4AND OF ,, ARCTIC SPIITZBERGEN IS AN EL DORADO OF GREAT PROMISE For the. Prospector Who Does Not Fear Cold and Hardships the Rewards Are Certain. • There are few places left in the world which treasure -seekers have not , explored, and it stands to rea- son• that ,those few :mutt pe diffict5jt to reach: Otherwise, we should have reached, them long ago,.and 'should have. started draining them of their telt steres.Da not imagine then, that Spitz. bergen `which is known to possess silk richest Mineral deposits 'of zany land in the world, is waiting serenely for anyone who :,ares to buy a spade and book a ticket! Spitsbergen' presents as -many- dif- ficulties as wore ever presented by El. Doredo_,or _I{londfke pr ,any,other_ or the tVbDld s etsf h-rini k --ata sand. A Little Colony. abandon Spitzbergen some afterward. Russian trappers were the next to visit the ,archipel'go. Although they frequented it from 1750 to'. 1850, there was no move on the part of. the Russian Government towards 'annexa- tion. The hunting interests soon died down, as the fishing interest had,,and it was not until about thirty years. ago that attention was called to the mineral wealth of Spitzbergen, That opened a new era. It was the archipelago's coal de- posits that first attracted attention. Wonderfully beautiful marbles were then located, and iron ores in great quantity, and' of a high grade, were found. Industrial activity of course raised at once the question of the ownership of the land. For two centuries claims .to -owner- ship had lain dormant, but the fact was that the only country which for a long' series of years had consistent- ly claimed and actually occupied any considerable part of the country was Great Britain The north-west corner belonged un- questiona'bI ' ttr itis 'Dur At pres- ent, however, no Dutch interests are .engaged nn the • deeelgtmle,,n,,t-'•of,,'the years ser -t see •epesits can .e para in the "'world. A Mountain of Iron. ie ?t'S)Xl;c ixl911ilioilLaghr.c» A recognized a lcjng way off by `G e oxi-t disation of its surface, is close to the shore; in a sheltered bay, with deep' waterdirect loading. An aerial or for g ropewayr.fo'r.,leading,should make it possible to'load 2,400 tons"a••day. [''' The wonderful ;character of the mountain iita.yr be judged by the 'fol- lowing cent -Janson. While"the aver- ,je-.• One Parent Set Up a "Store" to Teach His Heir Figuring. We heard recently of a boy ten years old who was very backward in arithmetic and got poor marks at school. His father finally decided to help him by actual experience. He started him in business by keep- ing a grocery store in the attic of their home. The boy does all his own buy- ing, selects his goods and keeps a stock on hand. The mother buys her supplies from him at the regular price and he keeps the profit for his own, spending money. The father insists that he keep his own ledger and keep it accurately or the business will be stopped. The boy enjoys the idea of the store and his own responsibility, so has eag- erly learned_jront.IFis„ father the way to buy and sell, make cheep, figure profits and keep simple accounts. The result "is shown by his interest in arithmetic at school and by much higher manes. Ho has greatly im proved in the school wink, besides getting valuable training for business. Reforestation Essential. It is sometimes.. argued that we do not need to concern ourselves about the forests of the future, because the forests we now have will last us for 50 or 100 years, or even longer; that it is futile to worry about the matter, so Icing as we have wood. Of course, t' possibleaethelengthof i ns to estimate tinte.•ter present supply of timber will :hold. o.3lj:eeeptkuliu-g certain fixed done- esttc-.stud-foreign, dem'rnds (demands, incidentally;°,Niton aft' by; no means . lived I...A,. Thin.fttlestiofu' li.as. no. direct bearing on the.tilr bien1 of keeping forest )au4 Liarp dole: Let us sup- pose,. foneexampls, that,• under certaip es !deleted' denmtiids'olit lar, eent'foreste wlll, fast us fora hundred dac s.: Tlfat is nog' `reaoon:' at till 'Why' tpe ;eixottid alleviCour .Out -over :lands '.:tt...become Wastes' or neareWeetea "Ill the 'first placeit takes a. hundred.years,.let us , sey, fon a seeel'iinb to grow into a r•.e- sUeetable tree, fit fur • on saw, The trees we ere row eutiiiig are "on the average Mach .older. . 'The "trine to start our new forests, 'therefore, is now --riot a hundred years from• iiovt fol otherwise iv`e should ]Pave a long period during which .we should be without tctequate supplies Of - timber. In the second place, those who argue that no present 'action iSenecessary overlook one of the•most vital facto:in. the 'whole forest problem, namely, that the destruction of forests in any one locality, district, or region has a distinctly adverse influence On the prosperity of the country as a whole. The forest problem is essentially a local pioblein,_ To Make Sure. Mrs. Casey—Mo sister writes me that every bottle in that box we sent her was broken. Are ye sure yes .printed, this aide up with .care, on it? Casey -01 am. An' for fear they shouldn't see it on the top 01 printed it on the bottom as well, Ice -bound during thee -greater part of the year,• and always unmistakably cold, it is only accessible during the summer, when the. ice melts and al- lows boats -to enter its bays. Spitzbergen has been selected ley the British Northern Exploration bet of women and children among the Company as 'the starting point of its inhabitants, Live stock is raised, and aerial North Pole expedition, so it is no trouble is had with the keeping of sheep, pigs, and cattle, save in the winters, when they have to be stabled carefully. from the north of Great Britain and Spitzbergen used to be abandoned be the winter except for an occasional some 000 miles from the North Pole. fisherman or trapper who had the mis- Its entire area is about the size of fortune to become marooned there, Ireland, but to -day the winter population of. Several European . poi, have the archipelago is about 1,800. their eye upon Spitzbergen,and there s little doubt that one of these days Although coal is the only mineral big efforts. will be made' to lift its developed up to now, there are what treasures. At present claims haveseem, to be inexhaustible deposits of been snaked out by Swedish, Nor -high grade iron ore, equal, if not weginn and British companies. superior, to the rich deposits of Are - Before the ever a twenty -square- tic Sweden. Other known minerals mile area was granted. to Germany, include copper pyrites, asbestos, but this has now..: been reoccupied by molybdenite, graphite, lead, silver the British interests, and the Arctic and gold, Coal Companys properties at Advent There -arc -no fewer than forty vat - Bay have been taken ,over by Nor- reties of marble, many of which are wegian interests. This..eoel..companysuf extreme beautyand capable of attaining a high polish, At Horn 9ounrletitere:, are: Zetasm' dclTosits._;elt- tending five miles inland. • Fourteen of the eighteen coal field's Mitchcolo std"liiiv"'e dissevered in b B Spitzbergen are on the territory oc- cupied by the British. The outcrops The history of Spitzbergen from in various localities are visible for the explorers' point of view can be many miles, and so far only the shore told in a few words: • frontages have been prospected. Dutch ships first reached there in The coal is, mostly semi -bituminous, 1.596, , and although. possession was -°cud With in volatiles, but there is'also taken in the name of Holland, no at- anthracite coal, yielding a high per - tempt was made to make use of the of carbon and ver i to e alittleash., n cat e gY discovery. The English flag was Many orwe sn shipmasters say V hoisted n 1614, and in 1619 a con- that S, itzbe gen coal ,gives ahem a ferenee in London effected a corn- linot more per hour than Welsh coal. promise between the English and 'The whole of the archipelago's rich. Dutch claims to the new land, the iron ore deposits are under British Dutch restricting themselves to the control. In the neighborhood of Re - north -west corner and the north cherche Bay, in West Spitzbergen, coast, and the English keeping to the there are millions of tons of very rich other west oast bays, The destruc- ore, lying in a mountainous forma- tion of the whaling industry caused tion about 2,000 feet high and several 'both the Dutch and the English to miles 'in "length. It is doubtful whe- The most up to date developments thus far are the Swedish •coal mines at Braganza Bay on. the west coast. The camp is a well built and well furnished one, and there are a num- u‘,4. vu 5 lo.or LxP 79R°lr. your- two Lely rr v! Too.. 5'�L fly d your nNna nd alrnn+ .,i2Q inv try n rN4in L °011' d5 ,m -a' on,'ki 1, a°ll0,hdur Lxd amannL; au aaa a vul. k5rt,, 1 1v r d'i'm -nary< w,idina try,nwra, r.r L ,irfLa Lnanyj .:B's 'Premlmnst Ltd., Amherst N. S.q, age • iron content. 'of British ores is 35 per cent:, of, Spanish .4 little over 50, and of the famous Gelleeere iron mountain of Arctic Sweden 63 per cent., the Spitzbergen ore of this Bii- tish iron mountain contains' 64.44 per cent. . ,'Petroleum, ,bitumen, and gypsum deposits have also ,been located in this rich new land. On the western coast huge deposits of phoaphorite have teen found,. eminently suitable for conversion into fertilizers. ., Claims -for digging gold -,bearing quartz, samples ,pf which 'have..been declared by the i3ori'k of Epgland gssayers to, be the beat trey have seen foe a long 'time, have been staked out. In• the main the 'land: consists of wide, boggy, valleys, undulating 'hill• - tops, and flat ground near the. shores. The low ground is richly carpeted. with low -growing plants and mosses, but for a brief season it bursts into a glory of 'blossoms, when some 120 varieties of flowering plants cover the valleys with color. very much in thepublic eye from many points of view. It lies some 400 miles from the most northerly point of Norway, some 1,200 miles INTIMATE NATURAL HISTORY. Incident in the Journey of An Explorer in Abyssinia. That, the adoption of European dress among the native Africans causes dis- comfort and physical harm is the be- lief of Maj. C. H. Stigaud. In To Abys- snia Through an Unknown Land, the explorer, who wasstudyng the lang- uage of the natives, says he had ar- rived at one of the Abyssinian out- posts, and had stopped to rest his. men and animals when this instructive in- cident occurred: The people were under a shum, or I civil chief, 'and I lost 'no time in pay- ing him • a call. The shuns himself could not write, and he went through the vocabularies I had made out on my journey and suggested new words for pie to write down, Several of the natives sat close against me' in a most friendly way and said: "Has he: such and such a word? Write it down for him." One of them slid, "Has he got ken- cha down?" I replied, "No!' What is kuncha?" "Oh, write it down for hien; he ought to have kuncha. Show him what kuncha is." My instructor forthwith opened a fold of his shamma, and out bopped about twenty fleas. He casually re- marked: "These are kuncha. I will write it down for you." ' At that I said I was afraid I must be going; to which they replied: "You =hale not got kimal yet. Let me write that for you. Show hint a Finial." All those present began hunting in their clothes, and a very brief search sufficed to produce a few brace of lcimal—an insect' to which I trust any reader has not yet been introduced. I bade them a hurried farewell and departed. Subsequent examinations of my clothes afforded me further op- portunities to study the natural his- tory of the kuncha and the lcinla was to American firm, with hear- Lquaa tens �it� Bost-9.4.It- rs' rioteat pit- irnproable that the whole archi- pelago will be annexed by Greet Bri- tain -before -lenge . "' ' " tail: b g No Man's Land. reakfast is- early when you have a package of for this tasteful blend' of wheat &barley is ready: cooked. Not a bitof -waste. Usable to; -the last crumb Usual' priCe 15S per package. - 1 ' Canada rood 13oc,rd License No: a -ode Npr SRinardrs Liniment used by Fhysielana. MAKE THE SAFE. Defective Appliances in Houses Cause Many Serious Accidents. A home should bea safety centre- a sanctuary for every member of the fancily that occupies its Dangerous conditions, such as defective electric or gas fittings, insanitary plumbing, unprotected, stairways, or stairways without railings and witch invite ac- cidents, art lamentably coiiimen he our houses. h a survey of nearly 30'000 accidents in. the, •oity- a8'Glticago cav'- .ering a period of. eleven years, it was found; that over 51 per cent were •, household ac cidents. These caused the `death; 'or perinucntly crippled: thensandseof persons, and yet the citi- zens:of.the United States claim .to be a "home -loving people." A similar, analysis of Canadian statistics would probably prove that Canada was no more successful in converting houses into hones. Faulty building construc- tion, defective wiring and plumbing are pitifully.cdmmon and, in toomany instances; are winked at by so-called building inspectors. Householders themselves use rocking -chairs for step -ladders, place kettles of boiling water so that small children can tumble into theme 'shave unfastened rugs on highly polished, slippery floors, or fasten windows down to con- serve heat at the expense of ventila- tion, These and similar practices cause the death, or result in crippling hundreds of Canadians every year. If houses and other dwellings were transformed into proper homes, these losses, which are truly national as well as individual, would be reduced to a minimum. But that little word "if" marks a gulf that it may require gene- rations to bridge. The speaker of the British House of Commons is obliged by custom to give seven official dinners each sea- son to the members of Parliament. —the monkey tribes. At present thediseaseis reported to be rapidly wip- ing out the baboons population of South Africa, The Latest ri Designs• •i'fT1JM 17E,g (TIER r" Unappfieelated{ uO'rscsTANT T II A C Il 1; R F O R i" School Section. No. 2, litIslon, at once; state salary expected, it- ISII,70S, see.-Trease Vimy Tttda'e Ontario aavn PowLthrf WA27Tnn.,:• yeo,Q'i. i'Alrt opt i'Ib ho.os!• A1.1D,1.v,EF.�,,. Inns fancy>poultry to 'sell , "Write for Lou'Prices. I efnrauch son. . IC -1s St, Jean Bupits,rlp.ihtarlcot. Mont- real, que. _. Mr. Stingy:esiislenl lYelpye-. Ytc o n , ...,-i,s ningin 3 ; +,p clinging i£ar. INT t1fsSEs E7AIiN $1i TO $05 A j$. �,. Mra: .Stintay.,-'�i>!oil; you-.onght.,;•to ' Learn wltltioitt:leaving- .hcntee.A- adore me in this "one, It's=beeie cling-:,fer Science. t� Atfitimarnntnir, n�,11a'e''°'r.,.=, Mg to me for the last three years. n those1' 1 Aiiotlier Mese. ° Proprietor (Met' demph'ilized)—Yue, I've been through i1;--niifieers' cook two years—wounded teeice. Tommy (tasting the soup)—you're OnaFELT, ICR'U2aPEFO,..NPtrSPiA• kll �,• :.and qb .pr(nting plant In •Eris a� 'L,'. rts, Insurance cars'lech..$1,600, 'twit go for $1,200 en quick sale. RoX 62: Wfi}son rube shIne Co., Ltd.. Toronto, f.+ MISCELLANEOUS lucky, mate. It'.a a wonder they didn't (LANCER ;'PU MMOR9i Lb a kill yer. . ,.) internal and external, cured wt;flt ogt,nain by op,,}some tr �ytment W •ltd us before toe 1t�Ie: n, r 1,enrkte:n lt0^udlc01 Co:, f.ilnited „Colltngwood,, Ont ' ,:. "' Life Is Worth the Living. Life is worth the living el but for Natpre's song. To hear the wild birds singing Through the whole' day long. Life is worth the living— See, thee4cpvers wed trees, Hear the merry breezed, Whisper in the trees. Life is worth the living For just one friend that's true; Seek but to find its gladness,.; And it will come to you. Seen rdinard's Liniment in the 'hones., Plenty of Cut Glass Pickle Dishes. "I suppose your friends gave you wedding presents enoughto start you. out housekeeping in good shape? "Well, it's going to lee a little awk- ward, I fancy, trying to serve roast beef and boiled cabbage in pickle dishes, but perhaps we can manage it" Pleasant: Name for it. "There was one thing I liked about the army." "What was it?" "When they had a nasty Job they wanted you to do they always digni- lied it by calling it a "detail." • Mixed Metaphors. A political-spealleer, warning the public against the impositon of heav- ier tariffs on imports, said: "If you don't atop shearing the wool off the sheep that lays the golden egg, you'll pump it dry." That reminds us of that other far- sighted orator who, in a burst of elo- What a myriad of color combing- queues, said: "All along the .aired - den pathways of the past we view the tions suggest themselves as we look. at this little frock! This tot had hers footprints of an unseen hand," developed in pale green linen and "Flu" Fantasy. wore a dainty organdie guimpe of white. McCall Pattern No. 8932,1 Fistful Flore found "flu" fiercely Girl's Dress. In 6 sizes, 6 to 14 years. fatiguing, "`Fudge!" fitfully fumed Price, 20 cents. Flora. "Flu feels far Erom funny." Febrifuge fatted flatly. Feeble Flora, fidgety,feeling fancy flightful; fretted, "Father, fetch flowers for Flora; feverfew festooned fends flu." 0 atoce,,r, MONEY ORDERS, Faithful father, feeling Flora fitful When ordering goods by mail send fictitiously feigned festiyity, a Dominion .Express Money Order, Forgetting former fleeting fancy, Flora feverishly found fault. "Fanci- ful, fantastic farce, fervidly fretted Flora, forbidding further flurry, flout- ing father for flagrant folly. F tuous •,father,,, .reeling flustered, forbore further floral foistings, Feeling father felt foolish, Flora fal- tered, "Frankly, father, faulty food furnishes fuel for flu—fever flares. Feed fricasseed fowl, find fever tee- ing." "Fickle ef,male!" fumed father, "Freakish filly, fricasseed fowl fatal; famishing fasts forestall flu," "Faugh:" frowned Flora. "Father's formula foolish. Furious fumigation future formula. Former factotum fad- dled, failed filthily. Fire frowzy Fan- ny February first" "Far-fetched fib!" flared Fanny. "Flora frequently finds fault." Father flatly forbade firing Fanny, fearing future frenzy from Flora. Fatigued Flora felt fever flaming The bertha isis on this fiercely; face flushed fiery. Fancily which, indeed, featured a suiting corn -felt future funeral favorable. ather's frock plement to the uneven tunic. McCall frantic felicitations failed. Freakish foyer fluctuated; finallyIII 3 sizes, 10 Cu 20 years. Price, 25 feebly faltered Flora—feeling fine Pattern No. 9954, Misses' Dress, In fell, flush, faded. "Farewell, flu, cents, These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. Free from fear of future funeral, father forgave Flora's freakish faults. —Finis, --F Conservation for Consideration. It is a fact admitted by thinking farmers that through negligence or Minard's Liniment Co., Ltd. misplaced frugality in not providing ' Gents,—I have used your Min- covering for implements of agricul- ard's Liniment in my fancily and tune, when not in use, they get about also he my stables for years and half the years of service from them consider it the best medicine ob- tainable. Yours truly, ALFRED ROCHAV, Proprietor Roxton Pond Hotel and Livery Stables, To a Returned Soldier: Oh, LaddieI We are proud o' you, That, when the fearful fight was through,' YOu were of those who rode apace, x f a gallant race' Thesaviou saviours 1 ori•• of Mons into the reined t . h Where the new light of freedom dawns. The ribbon pinned upon your breast, by Belgian maiden, Hun oppressed, On that most memorable, day Will be your talisman alway. No king could boasta prouder crest Or bold. Crusader be.more blest. Oh, Laddie! We thank God that you Stood for the right. to truth were true, And that within your boyhood's span You proved the measure of a man, You caught the torch and held it high Ready to conquer or to die. —.r-- To Consider Infant Welfare. A National Conference on Infant Welfare will be held in. London, Eng- land, on. July 1st, 2nd and 3rd, 1919. Problems related to the medical, social, racial and industrial aspects of infant and child welfare will be dis- cussed. The Conference is being called by the National League for Ilealth, Maternity and Child Welfare, the officials of which urge that similar conferences be organized in other countries during the present year. Then in 1920, an International Con- gress is planned to bring together the results and findings for further de- tailed discussion. It is hoped in this way' to carry out the plans of the League, 'which, but for the war, would have convened an International Con- gress in September, 1915, Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Priem, they should. The loss from exposure is greater than the deterioration that follows through legitimate use.' We Will assume that the necessary equipment required to work a farm costs $1,000 and thatw ith care' the equipment may be used for ten years. Without care these implements would be scrapped in five years. The de- duction to be made from these figures is that an implement shed built and, in use in five years is equal to $500. It doesnot cost -half that summ to build a good implement shed, but how many farmers, otherwise up. to -date and progressive, fail to provide 'pro- per care for ties tools with which they work? Ask for Minard's and. take no other. It is not the men who are doing the talking who are solving our problems, ' but the men who are - at work. When they talk, they know what it is about. LEMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion for a few cents and see for yourself, What girl or woman hasn't heard of lemon juice to remove complexion blemishes; to whiten the skin and to bring out the roses, the freshness' and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, 'therefore irritating, and should be mixed with orchard white this way: Strain through a fine. cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter att of aboutthen and cost one complexion lotion usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon juice so no pulp gets into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months, When applied daily to the' face, neck, arms and hands it should help to bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin, Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white et very little cost and the grocer has the lemons. The man who does better ' and more prouctive work to -day than hs did yesterday is asocial reformer of the highest type. He is. doing some- thing genuine. He is squaring his own account with the world, and helping 'others to square theirs. Sure! gh Heels Cause Corns But Who Cares Now . Because style decrees that women: crowd and buckle up their tender toes in high heel footwear they suffer' from corns, then they cut and trim at these painful pests which merely makes the corn grow hard. This suicidal habit may cause lockjaw and women are warned to stop it. A few drops of a drug called frees - one applied directly upon a sore corn gives quick relief and soon the entire... corn, root and all, lifts out without. pain. Ask the drug store man for a quarter of an ounce of freezonee, which costs very little blit is sufficient to re- move every hard or soft corn or callus from one's test, This drug is an ether compound and dries in a moment anti simply shrit'els up the cern without inflaming on 'even irritating the surrounding tissue 'or• skin. Clip this out and pin on your wife's dresser. BOX HIP SAWYE:18 WAS .7 FIRSSTBROOit( BROS ,1 Lilaeited TORONTO, ONT. r. ORA 0,5>ane. , Ord\e. nsa/leil©110. nt\e.o O Q A tyspepsla CUM.• c M.D. advises : "Person. Who e • suffer C om severe enc 8esteonCao am sad constipation caEacurethem. eel L, selves by taking fifteen ,-to :(a oafter -o each meal oaland`atlbdim . emaorrtdrops of Extract ofRoots IL') This remedy is known •an. MthGpo 0 Bei en's Curative Syrupra is the� n u ; a0 :tcade.,Catthe"gspurne. SOL.sa 1 and $1.00 Bottles. o o 0 0a, N/P02.map tit.0nMEN nana/tio.A,erars` `i' Ladies Perfume Your Skin With Cuticura Talcum Antiseptic, prophylactic, deodoriz- ing, fragrant and refreshing, Cull - cure Talcum is an ideal face, skin, baby and dusting powder. Conve- nient and economical, takes the place of other perfumes for the person. A few grains sufficient.. One of the in- dispensable Cuticura Toilet Trio for keeping the skin pure and sweet. Cut cur soar,25m, Cin opt 25 Mt 50e, ral- saaeafiso9loq4everywhere. lb � duties.: .Ottt,DoPt N,Btau, Us.8." ISSUE 22-'19.