HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1919-07-24, Page 7•
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I'IP"
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OK•LEVIED
TO FURNISH MEAL
SALT FROM CANADA AND PEPPER
FROM THE TROPICS.
interesting History ,of These Most
Common Articles on Our
Dinner Table.
In these days of kaleidoscopic
changes add rapid • advancement in
both social and business 'cirelere most,
eflus fail to 'appreciate the origin .and
vita)] importance of the things with
which We come lee daily contact. Take,
for instance, articles found on our
tables. Have lyent ever paused at ,a
meal and wondered how the dishes in
which, your meal is served, are made?,
Or where the salt and pepper come
from and the different processes they
pees through before reaching your
table?
No; you are mare than apt, like all
tile rest Of us busy folk in this rapid
age, not to observe the small things
of life which are usually overshadowed
lay the large ones and. are after all the
most interesting when we come to
study them and their relation to our
rally life. So let us now make a little
excursion into the mysteries of the
things commonly found on our tables,
and I feel sure that we will discover
many facts of great interest.
Balt is Luxury in Some Plage
.Most
Most everybody thinks salt is only
tied to give food a pleasant flavor,
when from a physical standpoint it is
a most important part of our diet.
Where salris scarce it is considered
one of the 'greatest luxuries and prob-
ably no one article is in more univer-
sal use, unless it be water. You pick
_up the salt shaker and sprinkle your
'food with it, not once thinking of its
wonderful qualities, where it comes
Irons or how it is prepared for your
US8.
Salt is Sometimes found In an almost
pure state, but as a general rule it is
. mixed with other things that must be
removed berm% it is suitable for table
use. However, there are some salt
mines where the only thing necessary
for its moneyed= is to pulverize it.
Salt is found in large quantities in sea
water, but this kind has never been
used for the table as the purer forms.
are so much more available. Rock
Clfarlitits Styles 'for Children
am, 28o4
No. 8292—Child's Paddling or Beach
Apron and Sun -Hat. Price, 15 cents
Out, in 5 sizes, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 years.
Size 4 requires, apron and hat, 2 yds.
27 ins, wide, or 1% yds. 40 ins, wide;
facing for hat, % yd. 27 ins, wide.
No. 8804—Child's Hot -Day Dress
Price, 15 cents
Body and sleeve in one. Cut in 5
sizes, 1, 2, 4, 6 and 8 years. Size 1
recpaires, with or without belt, 1% jag.
32 or 36 ins. "wide,
McCall granger Design No. 848.
PrIce, 10 cents,
8600
No. 8690—Child's Rompers
Price, 15 cents
Cloning centre -hack, or to be slipped
on over the head; dropped back; sides
snapped or buttoned. In 4 eine, 1,
2, 4 and 6 years. 'Size 1, either style,
1% yds.wide; 27 ins. collar and fac-
ing, belt and sleevebands, yil. 27
ins. wide; sleeve facing, belt, % yd.
27 ins. wide.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McColl dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
SUMMER COMPLAINTS
KILL LIME ONES
At the first sign of illness during the
hot weather give the little ones Baby's
Own Tablets or a few hours he may
be beyond aid. These Tablets will
prey.ent summer complaints if given
occasionally to the well child and will
promptly relieve these troubles -if they
come on suddenly. Baby's Own Tab-
lets. should always be kept in every
home where there are young children.
There is no other medicine as good
and the mother has the guarantee of a
government analyst that they are ab -
salt is the. purest kismet salt, and the +13014141y safe. The Tablets are sold
greatest deposit of this kind -is Rus- medicine dealoq or by mail at 25
slats Poland, where/ one bed alone Is cents a. box from The Dr. Williams'
known to be Ave hundred miles.in Medicine Co., Brockville,'Ont.
twenty miles wide and about
twolVe hundred feet thick. lin many VERSAILLES' HAUNTED PALACE.
of these European.salt mines the men
'working there never coins to sur -
From the Days of the 'Grand Monarch'.
e• face, as they would lose much
time. Assa result some of them have to Date Has Been Under
been known to spend their entire
lives down in the bowels of the earth
with their four walls of nothing but
salt, salt, salt. In one of these mines
there is a church sculptured entirely
from salt.
The salt wells of southwestern On-
tario furnish us with practically all
the salt we use. Besides its table use,
we Must remember that salt occupies
a most important place in the com-
mercial world. It is used extensively
in the process of glazing earthenware
A and in the preseiwing of meats, hides
and many other articles. Certain
smelting processes require its help in
separating metals Erosn'their tires and
it -1.1 utilized in fertilising dry soils.
Probably you do not know that your
blood contains about the same propor-
tion of salt as the water of the ocean
does normally. For that reason when-
ever you put an eicessive aniount of
salt in any of your food very soon af-
terevere you feel a craving for water.
This is because your system calls for
water or liquid of some kind to coun-
teract the oversupply of salt you have
absorbed. So, you see, after all the
tiny salt shaker has a big history to
teltif we'll only take the time to in-
quire into it.
Black Pepper From West Indies.
But we cannot make mention of salt
without considering its sister shaker,
—peppers-whieh Is almost as impor-
tant to some people,, The black vane.
ty of pepper,usually found in the Wile
pepper shaker Is a tropical plant and
most of our supply. comes from the
Welt Indies. ' 'It 'gl'ows there as a
rambling and climbing shrub whose
smooth and spongy stems are often
more than twenty feet in length, to
which are attached very broad, leath-
ery leaves. This black pepper, or
common pepper as it is usually called,
is a fruit about the size of a pea,
changing to a bright red when fully
ripe and gathered just as it begins to
turn from green to red, for when al-
lowed to get snore ripe it loses a great
deal of its pungency and, of course,
"pep" is what we like in pepper. When
in cultivation the pepper plants are
supported by poles, or sometimes
dwarf trees are planted to give the
viue a support, the second method us-
ually proving the more oatisfactory.
It is propagated' by means of cuttings
and comes into, beating within three
or four eears after being planted, Af-
ter, beginning to bear the blank pepper
yields two crops annually for about
twelve years, after which the vine
loses "its Vitality for production and,
another must be planted to take itr;
place.
When the car steps suddenly on the
road the first place to look is in the
gasoline tank. The veteran Motorist
does not need thins "advice, but the
newcomer shoiald take it to heart.
Look- into Ous gasoline [hank first,
Troubled Shade.
There is something of irony in the
fact that democracy's greatest victory
has been signed and sealed in that
dream of art which Louis XIV.
"wrought lordlike into stone" to sym-
bolize and perpetuate the magniti-
emcee of royalty,
It is a haunted.house, that -palace of
Versailles, The. 'ghosts 'of the illus-
trious and notorious, the beloved and
the -execrated, walk down its halls.
First of all, the "Grand Monarch" who
lavished the people's substaime in in-
credible sums for a grandiose depic-
tion of himself and thee, splendor of his
reign. The troubled shade of Be Pom-
padour comes back in lonely hours,
again "to rule a king and misimie a,
nation," to witness the triumphs which
ended finally on a dismal morning
when lackeys 'tossed her coffin care-
lessly into' a coach. There was that
life which was a royal idyl, into which
the deepair and. hunger of the mob
were to come thundering at last, to
splash the elegance with blood, to
jeer Marie Antoinette on the way to
the guillotine, to make Of France a
shambles. Thus ended the nalace as a
chateau'. It was never again a plac
rr
e
oresidenCe. But two centuries afte
the "Grand Monareb," the King of
Prussia occupies the palace and the
Iron Chapeellor's dream is realized In
the proclamation of William I., Em-
peror of Gentimy.
A Star Shower.
The soft mosaic of the Milky Way,
• That arches heaven with loveliness
by night,
Has floated down, across the floor of
day
To pave a primrose path for earth's
delight.
SPEAKING FROM THE SKY.
LISTLESS, PFEIIISH GIRLS
Every Word Distinctly Heard Fifty
Miles Away.
Wireless telephony has now been
definitely adopted on the London to
Paris air route, states the Air Minis-
try, and its value in night flying was
recently proved by a test.
Soon °after Handley -Page machine
had left Kenley communication was -
opened, and, after speaking to the
ground station, the receiver was turn-
ed in and speech was very clearly
heard from Kenley. The officer con-
ducting the test states that he easily
recognized the voice as that of an of-
ficer known to him.
To a distance of about 25 miles the
strength of signals was 'so great that
speech from the machine could be
distinctly heard at Kenley with the
receiver laid upon the table.
At 50 miles it was still distinct and
constant, and was heard until the aero-
plane was crossing the Channel and
was in touch with Marquise, the first
ground station on the French side,.
On the return journey conversation
between the machine and Marquise
was again picked up at Kepley, and
the latter station itself was in com-
niunication with the machine 30
minutes before it landed.
One of the recent developments in
this.eonneation is the production of an
aeroplane set which can be convected
within a few moments for transmis-
sion of either voice or Morse signals.
Too Careful.
Arizona Joe, the animal hunter and
trainer, was telling an after-dinner
story:
"Old Bill had charge of the animal
tent, and among his pets was a leo-
pard. 41e was a bad leopard, too, and
gave Bill no end of trouble. One day
I event away to arrange some busi7
mass. While I was 'having dinner a
telegram was handed me. It read:
'The leopard has escaped, Prowling
about town. What shall I do 9—Bill,'
"Bill was one of those fellows who
had to have explicit directions to do
Anything, even in an emergency. He
was always afraid of making a mis-
take.
'Shoot him on the spot,' I wired,
I forgot all about the affair until about,
two hours later, when I returned to;
the hotel, and another telegram was•
handedme. It proved to be from care-
ful,,conscientious .Bill, and asked:
" 'Which spot?' "
-- is
The cycle of cultivation _daring the,
'crop year consists of after harvest
cultivation, fall Ploughing and 'spring,
seedebed preperation. Each of these
three distinct* filieses must be prac-
ticed systematically if the most suit-
able seed -bed conditions are to be con -I
sistently airteintained.
When, a girl in her teens becomes
peevish, listless and dull, when noth-
ing seems to interest her and dainties
do not tempt her appetite, you may be
certain that she needs more good
blood than her system is provided
With. Before long her pallid cheeks,
frequent headaches, and breathless-
ness and heart palpitation will con-
firm that she is anitemie'. Many
mothers as the result of their own
girlhood expelience can promptly de-
tect the early signs of anaemia, and
the wise mother does net, wait for the
trouble to develop further; bet at once
gives her daughter a course with Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills, which renew the
blood supply and banish anaemia be-
fore it has obtained a hold upon the
syStem. '
Out of their experience thousands
of 'mothers know that anaemia is the
sure road to worse ills. They know
the difference that good" red blood
inakes in the development of woinanlY
health. Every headache, every gasp
for breath that renews_ the slightest
exertion by the anaemic girl, every
pain she suffers In her back and limbs
are reproaches if you have not taken
the best steps to give your weak girl
new blood, and the only sure way to
do so is through the use of Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills.
New, rich red blood is lefus,ed into
the system by every dose of these
pills. From this new rich blood
springs good health, an increased ap-
petite, new energy, high spirits and
perfect womanly development. Give
your daughter Dr, Williams' Pink Pills,
and take them yourself and note how
promptly their influence is felt in bet-
ter health.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine or' by mail, post-
paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Oct.
CARIBOU ,FOOD PRODUCT.
Explorer Stefansson Also Suggests
Musk Ox as Source of Supply.
Vilhjalmur Steransson, the Arctic
explorer, by a recent address before
the Canadian Commons and Senate,
has awakened Canada to the Import-
ance of the caribou and musk ox as a
source of food supply for the nation.
The Dominion Government, upon the
recommendation of Arthur Meighen,
minister of the interior, has appointed
a commission to make a thorough in-
vestigation of the Arctic and sub -Arc-
tic regions with a view to the conser-
vation of these wild herds.
There are between thirty and sixty
million caribou in the North according
to estimates. They range as far south
as Churchill rivet. in winter and retire
to the tundra region in the summer.
Thousands are slaughtered by wolves
and hunters every year. Their meat is
equal to fine venison and their hides
tan into leather that resembles cham-
ois skin. The completion this year of
the Hudson Bay, Railway, a branch of
the Canadian national system, extend-
ing from the Pas to Port Nelson on
,Hudson Bay, will open a route by
which the animals can be conveniently
shipped to market.
The musk ox are, not numerous.
They never venture south of the Great
Barrens. Their meat is like beef and
they yield a wool equal to that of
merino sheep. Mr. Stefansson be-
lieves that if the herds were superin-
tended by a force of rangerl they
could be greatly increased and would
become in time a valuable commercial
factor.
F.O5',ortrectrItiEW"
-Health-Bringer !
Make your morning ce-
real dish a strerthener.
is not only most, deli-
cious in taste, but, is
a builder of tissue.
"There's a Reason"
LAKE LOUISE AND THE ROCKIES.
...—
To the ancients all roads led to
Remo, , and it was the ambition of
young and old .to behold the "Eternal
City" and its wonders. Now, however,
op, might say it is the 'ambition of
every Canadian to behold the "Eternal,
,Snows," and as the Appiiin way led to`.
Rome,, so, the great iron road, the
Ceeadlan Pacific Railway, leads.te the,L
Rocky Mountains. 'Canadians have a
wide field to pick and choose from.in
thee matter of places to spend holidays,
but the West has an attraction all its.
The Old Melodeon.
There, like some ancient visitant
Of bygone days it stands;
Its yellow keys a weleoming
Extending 'to the hands.
No lingers wander o'er the keys,
No feet its pedals press. .
'Reft of the soul of music there'
It 'waits some hand's caress.
It leans against the chamber wall
Like some qld broken form,
Too weak to stand alone 'without
Assistance in the storm.
Its bellows gaping wide is hung
With cobwebl to the floor;
The dust upon its yellow keys
Is strewing thickly o'er.
Ah, in the stillness of the night
The ancient thing it grieves,',
And plaints in echo to the soft,
Low whisper of the 'leaves.
Then from the lonely chamber float
Sweet tones of Beulah Land;
A. spirit song front spirit throat
Chorused by spirit band,
'Rut when the light of morning falls
In glory everywhere,
The dust upon the yellow Irefs- Is strewing thickly there.
From Beulah Laud the player came
To spell away the gloom;
And passing, left behind the same
Sweet lavender petfame,
Royalty and Movies.
Lake Louise is one of the many
beauty spots in the Rocky Mountains,
and a trip West is not considered com-
plete without a stop -off there, Lake
Louise in one of the Lakes in the
Clouds (the others being Lake Agnes
and Mirror Lake) and at one time its
existence was only known to the Ind-
ians. NIV, however, thanks to the
enterprise Of the C.P.R., it is visited
by thousands of tourists yearly, the
railway passing through at this point,
and a palatiaL hotel, the Chateau, hav-
ing been erected on the lakefront, af-
fdrding ample accommodation.
Stepping off the train at Laggan the
tourist boards an electric car, which
runs up the gradient to the lake, the
trip, only occupying twenty minutes.
The drive is a most delightful one, the
car, being open on both aides, affords
an uninterrupted view of the wonder-
ful scenery with the minimum of exer-
tion. The Bow River is crossed by a
pretty little bridge, and in the early
morning sunshine the waters sparkle
like opal fires, tossing furiously in
eddies as the river forces its way down
the valley.
Arriving at Lake Louise one feels
transported into another atmosphere,
if not to another world; feelings of
wonder, awe, and admiration grip the
mind, compelling a reverential silence.
The lake itself Is small, but a perfect
gem, lying at the base of the Victoria
Glacier from which it is fed, its waters
being pure turquoise in color, that
deep turquoise so difficult to describe.
Behind the lake Mt. Lefroy towers
like a giant to the heavens, reaching
an altitude of over 10,000 feet—one
huge mass of dazzling snow and ice,
resembling the Matterhorn in Swit-
zerland- Mt. Aberdeen and the Vic-
toria Glacier form a background unsur-
passed for grandeur.
The surrounding country suggests
an—Alpine valley. Ranges of snow -
clad mountains stretch as far as the
eye can reach, while the air is filled
with the scent of the pines. Flowers
of brilliant color bloom everywhere.
Facilities can, be obtained at the
Chateau to escort parties going to
Moraine Lake and the Valley of the
Ten Peaks by automobile or carriage;
ponies can also be hired .to take tour-
ists to Lake Agnes and Mirror Lake.
On the way to Moraine Lake a splen-
did view of Mt. Temple is obtained.
This mountain is one of the highest
peaks in the Rockies, rising to an ant:
tude of 11,000 feet. Its sides, resemble
walls of spill ice, and its crest is cov-
ered with snow. At this point a fine
view of the Bow Valley is obtained
from a height of 11,000 ft., the river
looking like a. slender silver thread
down in the valley. Still other beauty
spots are the Giants' Steps and Para-
dise Valley, where the opalescent wa-
ters come thundering down from the
sublime heights above, forcing their
way through the mountains to the dis-
tant valley.
Moraine Lake is soon reached, and
the to(xrlat is allowed half an hour to
rest • befOre the return: journey, en-
abling him to enjoy the magnificent
scenery. Moraine Lake lies at the
base of the Ten Peaks, a Chain of
mountains all over 10,000 feet high,
covered with snow.
LEMON JUICE IS
FRECKLE REMOVER
Wrist Make this cheap beauty lotion
to clear and whiten your skin.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons„into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, shako well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle
and tan lotion, and complexion beauti-
fier, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter witi sup-
ply three ounces of orchard white for
a few cents. Massage this sweetly
fragrant lotion into the face, neck,
arms and hands each day and see how
freckles and blemishes disappear and
how clear, soft and white the skin
becomes. Yes! It Is harmless.
The movies have,ei great fascination
for several -members. • the Royal
Family. Princess Arthur of Con-
naught visited the Cinema Palace at
Marble .Arch some time ago to see, a
special film depicting the .work of. the
Church Army aniong the troops. Lady
Patricia Ramsay is another enthusiast,
and takes her father • to. see the pic-
tures occasionally. Prince Arthur
thinks that the most enjoyable films
are those of current events, and she
delights in seeing "tlie week's news in
pictures." Scarcely a Windsors visit
passes off without a cinema show at
the Castle, when the Waterloo Cham-
ber is transformed iero a mieiature
theatre.
Anyone Could.
Elsie—"My grandpa has reached
the age of ninety-six. Isn't It wonder-
ful?"
Bobby—"Wonderful nothise! Look
at the time it's taken him to do it."
From Bad to Worse.
"Sedentary work," said the college
lecturer, "tend e to lessen the endur-
ance."
'In other words," butted in the
smart stUdent, "the more one sits, the
less one can stand."
"Exactly," retorted the lecturer;
"and if one lies a great deal, one's
standing is lost completely."
Not What He Meant.
A University lecturer began an ad-
dress to the students the other morn-
ing in this way: "Now I'm not going
to talk very long, but if you get what
I'm going to say in your heads you'll
have the whole thing in a nut -shell."
And he looked surprised when a
roar of laughter followed his uninten-
tional slam.
A Wonderful World,
"Don't talk to me about the wonders
.of past ages," said Uncle Joe Cannon.
"The world to -day is far more wonder-
ful than ever before. Just think. It
took Columbus as "many months as it
now takes days to cross the ocean,
and we talk about flying and traveling
a mile a minute as though they were
nothing.
'Why, the other day I dropped into
a country school Just in time to hear
the teacher ask:
" 'Johnny, into what two great
classes is the human race divided?'
and Johnny answered promptly:
" 'Motorists and pedestrians,'
"That's what I call progress. After
a while there won't be any pedes-
trians." •
This is to certify that fourteen years
ago I got the cords of my left wrist
nearly severed, and was for about nine
months that I had no use of my hand,
and tried other Liniments, also doc-
tors, and was receiving no benefit. By
a persuasion from a friend I got MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT and used one bottle
which completely cured me, and have
been using MINARD'S LINIMENT in
my family ever since and find it the
-lame as when I first used it, and would
never be without it.
ISAAC E. MANN,
Metapedia, P.Q.
Aug, 31st, 1903.
GREATER PARIS SEEN.
'5
Statistician Expects City to Have
6,000,000 Inhabitants by 1970.
A statistician who has made a study
of the growth of the Population of
Paris estimates that the city, within
Its, present limits, will have 6,000,000
inhabitants in another half century,
and that the population of the Depart-
ment of the Seine, which he thinks
will then be a part of the capital, will
have increased to 14,300,000, says a
Paris despatch,
He bases his figures on the actual
development of the city shine 1800 and
on the progressive detisity of the popu-
lation which went from eighty-five to
the acre in 1861 to 146 to the acre in
1911, In 1961 he anticipates Paris will
cover 482,000 acres, virtually the en-
tire territory of the Department of the
Seine and some communes of the De.
Pertinent of Seine to Oise.
The greatest fortune a man can
leave his children is not a big bank
;leer:rant, nor a fine residence, Ler a
place among the, aristoctacy, but the
legacy of an un rght, critle and use -
fu': life.
minr.trus T.:at:neat Oases Distemper.
"Paying Off."
The act of "paying off" in a big in-
dustrial plant is a considerable item
of expense when there is taken into
consideration the accounting, putting
the money in envelopes and the loss
of time of the employees in going af-
ter their money. Pay day is abolished
by the latest scheme for handling this
')blem which has been suggested
Isa.adoption at a great English soap
manufacturing establishment. Each
employee would be required to have a
private bank account, either in the
lirm's bank or in any other; the week-
ly or monthly pay roll would be sent
to the firm's bank, and the sum each
malt is entitled to would be placed to
his credit, Then he could draw what-
ever he needed for household or other
expenses and leave the rest to his
credit, where it would draw interest.
The firm would supplement all bal-
ances with additions. This would do
away with pay envelopes and standing
in line and would encourage saving,
MONEY ORDERS.
A Dominion Express Money Order
for live dollars costs three cents.
Gooseberries.
Gooseberries produce fruit both on
the old and new wood. Pruning, which
is best done in the spring, should be
confined to thinning out the branches
so as to secure well rounded bushes
with open- heads. Cut back to an
upward pointing bud "any branches
that bend down to the ground.
Gooseberries like water. Not that
they cannot have too much, but in well
drained soil they enjoy a good sprink-
ling daily so the ground about them
will not dry out.
A mulching of well rotted manure
about the plants as soon as the fruit
buds have set is beneficial, enabling
the plants to perfect their fruit and
form flowering bads for the following
year. Keep the mulch damp,
Hurrah ! How's This
NURSING,
WW ANTED--PRODATTONE128' F R.
the Montreal 'Women's, Hospital.
Twp YdarS' coUrse. Monthly Salary dur-
I44ng period of training, Apply Lady
uperintdndent, 1005 St. Catharine Stheob
West, Montreal.
TEs.coEns wArpron
'OD TAN°, BLOCIPPTON AND BXNGIN0
.1L Teachers Wanted. A,ddress censer-
l'a,tory of Music, jgetlibrialms, Alta,
AATANTIUD—FISlyiALE TEACH
(Protentsnt) .for the Jade Laycock
Children's :Borne; must be of good Chris-
tian character and willing to take sin
ierest in the obildrent,net Wily during
School hours, but at other times as well;
there 0,313 about ,Se ,gbildren the school;
boys and girls, ages ranging from seven
to fourteen years; Salary thirty dollars
',per mOrith, with board arid residenne;
Auties to commence ,Benterieser.
'Clock/Mutt Securities, Litnited, Brantford.
Cincinnati authority slays corns
'dry up and lift out
with flog° rs.
0
Hospital records show that every
time you cut a corn you invite lock-
jaw or blood poison, which is needless,
says a Cincinnati authority, who tells
yon that a quarter, ounce of a drug
called freezone can be obtained at lit-
ile cost from the drug store but is suf-
ficient to rid one's feet of every hard
or soft corn or callus.
You simply apply a few drops of
freezone on a tender, aching corn and
soreness is instantly relieved. Short.
ly the entire corn can be lifted out,
root and all, without pain.
This drug is sticky but dries at once
and is claimed to just shrivel:up .'fly
corn without inflaming or even Irri,
tating the surroending tissue or Bs;
If your wife wears high heels s....,
will be' glad to know of this.
POULTRY WAISTED
WHAT HAVE YOU' FOR SALE IN
Live Poultry, Fancy Hens, Pigeons,
Eggs, etc.? Write I. Welnrauch Son.
1'0-18 St. Jean Baptiste Market. Mont-
real. Que. .
POE SALE.
,EWSPAPER; WEEKLY, IN BRUCE
County, Splendid opportunity. Write
ox T. Wilson Publishing Co, Limited.
7; kadelaide lit. W., Toronto.
WELL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER.
and lob printing plant in ,Easterre
enteric, ItioUrance '$1.600. Will
So for 51,200 on quick sale. Box 51.
Wilson Publishing Co,. Ltd., Toronto.
Erman susrmtheol*
tXrItITIO FOR OUR FREE BOOK OF
WV Rouse Plans, and information tell-
ing how to save from Two to Four Hun-
dred Dollars on your new Hotne. Ad-
dress Halliday Company, '23. Jackson
W.. Hamilton, Ont.
MISCELLANEOUS.
CANCER, Tim:ions. LUMPS, ETC..
Internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment Write
tle before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical!
Co,. Limited, Collingwood. Oct
Resident Sales an
Wanted
TOSELL THE INTERNATIONAL
KEROSENE GAS BURNER
This burner turns Kerosene (Coal Oil)
into gas. Fits into any cache -stove or
heater and is conceded to be by far the
most practical Gravity Fed Oil Burner
introduced. No wick used and ab-
solutely odorless. Applicants must be
men of responsibility and well knewn
in their community. Address Sales- ,
Manager,
NATIONAL BURNERS, LIMITED
414-116 JARVIS ST. - TORONTO
A poor farmer will ruin even a rich
farm. A good farmer will make a
run-down farm behave itself and
grow fat.
3dinard'e Liniment Cures Colds, Etc.
She—"Were the British soldiers
happy when they came back' from
France?" He—"Happy? They were
in transports."
THERE E ONLY ONE
GENUINE ASPIRIN
ONLY TABLETS MARKED WITH'
"BAYER CROSS" ARE ASPIRIN.
If You Don't See the "Bayer Grose',
on the Tablets, Refuse Them—They
Are Not Aspirin At All.
Your druggist gladly will give 7011
the genuine "Bd5-er Tablets of Aspirin"
because genuine Aspirin now is made
by Canadians and owned by a Cana-
dian Company.
.There is not a cent's worth of Ger-
man interest in Aspirin, all rights be-
ing purchased from the U.S. Govern-
ment.
During the war, acid imitations
were cold as Aspirin in pill boxes and
various other containers. But now yon
can get genuine Aspirin, plainly
stamped with the safety "Bayer Gross"
—Aspirin proved safe by millions for
Headache, Toothache, Earache, Rheu-
matism, Lumbago, Colds, Neuritis, and
Pain generally.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets, also
larger "Bayer" packages.
Aspirin Is the trade mark, registered
in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoacetic-acidester of Salicylleacid.
Use Cuticura to Keep
Your Hair From Falling
How many times have barbers given
this advice to men who are losing
their hair because of dandruff and
scalp irritation, At night rub Ceti -
cure Oietment into the scalp, Next
morning' shampoo with Cuticura Soap
and hot water. A clean, healthy
scalp means good hair.
Cuticura Soap Me., Ointtrient 25 and 50c,
Talcum 25c. plus Canadian duties. Sold
pverywhere. For sample each free address:
"Cancer*, Dept. N. Bootea, U. S. A."
ISSUE No, 30--'l9.