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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-06-01, Page 7Thu deYebnei 922• 1 MINING INI !,11-1E ATMOSPHERE ' , SCientifie':,,CASICOyerie, go on .e,a thrpres,ent rate. We may soon 'And , hat the thingii we now -bold Most heapier are. ,thoee �f 'the greateet 'Vallee! : ;• Who, for insbance, weuld haVe f000t that the air we lereathe holds Stt}re.of elements whicheealieernany el dalliers arenueley? It a Tact, .aineeZing as nay'S* IB; ,ankiets muta new industry is 'Up eonneetian with this mining of ateXeoeithere consists, roughly spetking,4)fee inixture .of the gases nitrogen ,an,d oxygen, as Well 'as enientities of ar,gon and neon, among .other things. • Since theadiseovery of a method of liquefying ,aix tby extreme cold, it had 'been found possible to .seParate these vonstituentS in the same way. And all theee elements have now as,sureed a great ,cornrnercial importance. , As eve'ryone knows, oxygen is Aften used 'to Maintain lite in invalids, yet the amount consumed in hospitals an,i1 laboratories a very small _portion of •the total output In the • United that States atione it is estimated at the !annual output of oxygen is a ,thou - nand million cubic feet. Tare Present value of that is` nearly fifteen. million dollars; • pkygen, is used in many different was in the engineering world: It is eontleined, With' acetylene to make the intenselithet flame Which outs, through steel rails With the greateseat 'eas,e. Vedic/nen are • often to be seen inthe 'Streets. using the flame in rebairing • tramway tea.ckst . The oxet-acetylene ,process is one of the most important laberesaving devices ever invented, and it was them Ming of the sir that • made it poesible. The oxygen is me,rket in steel cylin- ders, whiph may ,often be, seen heeded on. motarelorriee in any bid town. . Once the: Oxygen has been removed from the air, attention 'is turned be nitrogene,a•Iiich is trapped from the air for, the manutactiee of fertilizers --are.inclustry ,carriecle on in Norway on an erverireme.seale. It is eisedalso for the menefecture of. explosives,' fee the filling of' so-called nitrogen lamps, . while it is' sometimes- employed for the.patting out of oil fireis„ • Nitrogen is :obtained by ,driving,the air over an intensely het electric ,are flame', six feet in diameter, known as the "electric sun." The nitrogen is tr,apped as nitre oxide, from whieli the nitrogen, *Self is ultimately com- bined to form nitro ,compounds. Two of the remaining gases in the air :are argon and neon, recently look- ed unten as rare and costly, but new sod at a dollar or two a ,cubic foot Roth these gases are used for filling incandescent • electric lamps, • vehile • Small glass tubes of neon -are used • for testing 'parking. plugs in motor'.Electric lamps are often rendered es•eless by something going wrong With their fragile tungsten filaments, but teen has now made filementlese lamps possible. -An intense pink glow Is produced between two meat metal. surfaces in ,an. atmosphere of neon. • these With .aLl 'ases for the gasee from the 'atmosphere, it will be seen 'that the air .1S providing a new and valuable indu,stry. The .raw material is eastless and boundlees. It is there e for everyone and anyone to use. There are thirteen trillion ton,s of it avail - /4/.1e, 'end the eupply is inexhaustible, fax it is 'constantly being replenished • How insignificant, 'both -in ,srize and value; our greatecollierie.s appear when ,comparect with this vast new "mine"' • which. abounds ell- around us! Title) 'Trouble COMly Got Rid ofby Enrieblnkfbe B1od., M no disease doee'thell,lieed beeorne thn1301140dly as in litetinatisra• N,o't (Mir OM X become 'thit, but it'by a shell, of rarefaetiot, Apreadaeout Measuring a Continent. Until re'aently .no great ,continent had, ever been measured by means of the, surveyor's cleadre • • Maps are u,setally made by -means of aeteonomi•cal ,calenlatione •sirnilair to these used by the sailor in fixing his, po Sition at -sea.- These. 'calculations, ate totted to be amazinglyeaccurate when they are elieclied by the measure. -• When, more! than a cen they ago, the French instituted the metric syistein, they were VerY'lfixlaus that the metre • should be an •exaot ' feactien of the earth's circumference--whieh the yard is net. , They ;checked the astronomer's 'cal- culations by actually measuring the Alla "nee in a straight lin,e from the north to the south of their country. When the -work was finished it was found that the two sets of meaeure- ments 'differed by only a ,feva feet! , To -day a far greater piece of meas- uring' is being undeetalc'en. Thanks to the cotstruction of' the Cape -to - Cale° railwy, the whble Jength ef the, great African tontinent is being worked out by .surveyOrs,. ; Considerable portions have been finished, ,ancl.these show that up to, the present, at any vale, there 'is no need for us „to revise our Maps, • An• error has been discloaed, it is trite: linteit is 'her*. a the kind to affect the Atlas, It aniautts, es a matter of feet, to rather less than one Melt:fee 'each' hundred: Miles, Not a Very sexions mistake! ! 'When the measurement is ,complet- ed t ib expected thee- astrontoinere and earveyo.rs witl differ by about fifty yards fax the entire length of thie ini- inease continent. Canada po,s'sess'ea nearly h,alf the water power of the World Your olothea. ff hung ep earefulier will. wear much bathe than if fliellg 41)0.ri the clrit •• server tad a 'hearing the extelieSien if pra .a, distant gun at ,.the eiee ineten, When ,the movieg light band seethe his 'feet. ' Ilbee glee are believed to have been vs'ibiaSionted 'Waves. : In. either ease, gten. oe volGano, an exPloeion eiSer to a steadili expanding "eltell" of elpsaton , fp: the 4,1r/ whiall, lea,ded with rheumatic peleees. met proper treatment tee poisonin- oretete, the general heafitli is limier - mined, the Inflamed jeliete Swell, and, are very painful and often the eel, fever becomes cell:vied, • Dr. Williame' Pink Pills build, up the blood and enable it to cast out the rheumatic poisons with the /lateral Secretions of the body,' thus driving out the pains and benefiting the gen - oral health. Sound proof of theee statements 1/1 offered by Mrs. George Stanley, Sparta, Ont, who saYs:--• "Poe a /lumber of years I was trembled with rheumatism, which at times was very painful. My general health was also affected, and I -could scarcelY drag myself around. L had been doc- toring et good deal, but did not get any better, until one day my daughter brought me a box of Dr. Williams' • ?Mk 'Pills. ,Ber the time thes.e, were used I could notice a slight improve- ment an,d I continued taking the pills until I had used about a dozen boxes, by Which. time I felt lik.e a new person —and looked like one. I could do my work with ease, and have since enjoy- ed the best of health. I have since reoeramen,ded Dr. Williams? Pink Pills to several othees who received the samebenefit a myself." • The best time to begin taking Dr, Williams' Pink Pills is the moment you feel the least bit out of sorts, The sooner you do SO the so•oh,er you will regain your old time energy. You can get the s,e pills through any medicine dealer or by mall post peel at50,cents a box or six boxes fax $2,50 from The Dr. Williams' • 1Vredicite Co., Brock- ville, Out, : :Visible Sound. One of the; strangest of volcanic phenomena is the "fleshing area"— thin, luminous rings --which, when an eruption is in peewees, are sometimes seen to rush out and up freen atbe„ crater and disappear in sPace. • They have been observed. on ..Mount Vesu- vius ancl,alsozon Mount Etna. .. • Each ,euecessive • ring follows int- • mediately upon an. expestion, and there seems to be nor-doulit ktif the fact that thee "arcs" are sound 'waves rnad,e visible. • During the war observation was•fre- quently reported of mysterious curved bands. of light and shade that Swept across the sky or over the ground ne'ar places where cannon were beintg fired. They were described ge resembling the concentric riles produced by drop- ping a pebble into water. One ab- i'reee, the eeurce at a. speed of a - tle more .than 1,000 feet a second. Undee faVerring eireunastancee we,MeY jOe ltji etteline. When it reaches ene • Sars the. Vibration it' imparts to per r drum's' enables we to hear the exe, 'Pio elan, The Al?reerling spherical eaten in the air is Made Visible by its, Wept iton the patht of light rays 'corning to 'eur cyes. ,We say ..that air is invisible, bet it is not always so neceSsarily Everybody has seen 'air shimmering over a hot stave oriothereheated, sur- face. The spx•eadiog ,shell may be aptly compared to a soap bubble in process of blowing, and the "flashing arc" to the eirculair outline of the bubble. - Diner o Engligh ailroad Electrically Equipped. Inaugurating a lieSe departhre, 'the Greet Northern Reilway Co., in Eng- land, has equipped the kitchen of one of iota dining ears' With ele!etrical cooh- ing apparatus. Power fax the ap- paratus is furnished, by two genera - toes, which are belt -driven from a e axles of the trucks, •each having a rat- • ing of 6 kw. In the kitchen, amiss one end, is the main cooking range and roasting oven, with a steaming oven:el:hove it, While pver the later, a • grill 'and a hot-water 'tank are locat- ed,: A boiling range having four hot plates', two 10 -gal. boiling pans fax vegetables, and a fis,h fryer, are also • in•clucled in the Metafiction, which has yielded! 'such satisfactory results, that the company is seriously considering similar equipment for other trains. • EILD1-19 D AILMENT The. ailments of childhood—eonsti- patiettain&igestione•colice colds, etcpee, can be quickly banishedethrough. the use of Baby* Own Tablets. They are a exalt' but thorough laxative which in- stantly .regulate the. bow,ele and sweet - et the stoMach: They' are guaranteed to contain noharmful drugs and can be given. to' the youtge•et' baterevvitli perfeet safety. Concerning them Mrs. Alciae Lepage, Ste. /Beatrix, Que. writes: --"Baby's Own Tablets were of great help ,te my baby. They regu- lated her bowels and stomach and made her plump and well." The Tab lets axe sold -by medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont. TIU WIN -00A ADVilla doX riight Law" Of the Northwest Indians• -aseree-reteeseeseee ing wealth to meet the eeeaSien. Thes,e preearatielle tienally• began a year ineadva,nce; j sem.e'caseeso long A tbrte as three Yeara was spent in pre-: :wee Ping on, the white, .Man 'ewe, is a reraarleable That a "co,pyright " very eireilar to" iiirat in Terra among the 'civilized lilatiolese Of sthe World, iiexleted; alMenig the pelleitire Indians 'of ehrtherieBrit- ish Cclundela land! Aleelta long before the ,:proepeetive , owner ,called the f,a:et farliielt a writer dis,eovered re- , :cert. - Vet While tee/Vein-1g :through the , eiregreeefe SAYS tSHE HA ACTUAL DREAD 1Viovner tregaef l ,`0,W 0,17 14 , 0., rt Was On Yen 0, Eats AnYthing Now, arid NervousnOss is Gc00,04 Too. "Taniac is wonderful, It has simply made rue feel like a different person," said Mrs. Win. Allen, 1515 Wellington St„ Verdun, iliontreal, Quebem "For nve 'years I never, knew what, it wee to be free front stomach trouble and finally wae, (3/Ito verge of a break- down. I actually dreaded for meal- time to come as X knew no :matter how careful I was about my diet I Would be sure to sufter afterwards. "Tanlac has just ebanged things all round for me. Fax a long time I had have gotten peer the n.ervousesess, too, and am able to sleep an night long ing so hungry I can eat bacon or 111004t ab 'every dose increases my strength end noreings feeling theroughly refreshed. , a, • y. In gether and now I get up M the morn- .1e),enTeenragngylo.a,i,ce,giswsiothout any breakfaet alto - anything else I want and enjoy it, 1 without waking up once atd 1 get up I Vil takingT I. a d 'ea roving fact, h e , Id by all good druggists, noralsen •WildIereese legion ofritish 'Columbia in eomPanv with William ,Beynon, of the Oaaaelee etlueological .roseat•ch. • The ,strange thing is that though mucle leas been •veritten 'totem poles, and leerne lectures 041. ,them shown, the .exietence of copy - 'right has been etteely ,overio,olted. .1n fact, the meaning of these Poles, 'and OP,Strange ,ceremonies atteehing to them, haere never been Made known to the ,general reading Vailelic. • Herewith is given Seif.the fiest time the :boy ,of bow these primitive p,eo- pies of North Aneeseica ,inetituted: e copyright law along exactly the !smile lines as followed by the white men to- day. To be the owner ot a totem pole *as a sign of social position, rank, Wealth, -and power. ,Evea•y native above the slave class 'aspired to raise ene eoree, ,day. In 'the erectien of the pie a great amount of wealth had td' be lavished; the more wealth lavished, the greater the owner's standing in the coMmunity. When a native decided he would have a tote/ft 'pole, he and his family, •and sameeimes, in the ease of a great chief, the wh,ele elan, 'set about gather- l4C: ag'n$11 very high To the ,ertist the prospective oWner related all the traditian,e of each figure and crest he wished carved. The artist tallikl'Fitalted to work, spend.- •oripcie:;ts gsinonMeaent:lMe weseS:vyme rd037:371 skialet•nei s taint\ ev,:yoireaa_ictrriv,we:atz,se Mia,d.e highly difficeit VeleadSe already in existence ie the eegion. Thisrele wee' very rigidleaserifileeed, maxleing the first 'workings of the oopyright law in North America. The past tense has been used throughout, fax though an odd totem pole may still -be raised among some of the vary primitive -tribes, the 'cus- tom has press-tie/01y passed, through the natives' intercourse with the white man.. In fact,' the Canadian govern- ment has ,stepped the natives imprev- erishing themselves by such cere- monials, IN1111,eh have been commonly known :am.oaeg white min ae, "pot- la.behes," thettg,h their .significence has been entirely lost upon, the egotistical white man, for the xn,est'part too COB.- tempt:Bow of the native to inquire closely into his doings. So, soon the Indiane who first in- trraluced the law :of copyright • will cease to, need it. • DE FUL ORMGES 111161 1110411411 n REULIFLIAll Y V UMW./ THE LAST WORD IN EN- GINEERING FEATS. Two Decks for Traffic on the Great Stricture That Wal Span,the Hudson River. • In varlotes parts of the world—in Australia, Canada, media the United Stabes--plans at -ageing ahead fax the • construction of four massive bridges w'hich, when 'completed, will be atretteS* -the greatestengineering feats in his- tory. • , , Meet wonderful of ,all is the struc- thee to be ereeted, over the Hud•sen heavy loads of logs have to be 'hauled River at New York, It will be 6,660 ft, long, �r over 700ft. lenger than the famous Brooklyn Suspension Bridge, and over 1,000 ft, longer than the Forth •cantilever bridge fn Scotland. The great cleill that will be required in the construction of the new bridge may be judged from the tremendous weight ix will have to carry. The central span will be 3,240 feet in length, and there will he two decks for traffic, • On the upper deck -220 feet in width—will be a roadway with a car on either side and outside this will be two footways each 17 feet broad. The law,er bridge will have ten lines of railway track. From the standpoint of actual length the Australian bridge, whith is to be erected over Sydney Harbor be- tween Dawe's , Point and Milson'e Surnames and Their Origin CLAYBURN Racial Origin --English. Source—A locality. Most of the Clayiburns• and Clai- bernes in Canada will be inclined to quarrei.with the,, statement that this is an English family name. They maintain that it is Irish. In this they are not exaCtier car:rect. The truth is that most of, the Mai - homes antrOlaybu.rn.s in Canada are Irish, but their -name is not, thangh it has been known in Ireland since the twelfth or, thirteenth century. This . name, ;which • is often pea - flounced in England' as though it Were spelled "Clebburn" ler ,ItCeleibleein," was originally a place n,ame;and the locale ity was the seat of a lordship estahe lished M Westmoreland' in Anglo -Nor - Men tireee: The 'Spelling then -we's ‘eoCliburte," and it later beearne "Cie - borne," from which evolved -the form Claiborne and finallY 'Clayburn. And strangely enough, this latest spellin,g, indic,ates' better than the others, quite by aecltlent it must be believed, the original meaning of th-e place tame, ifyou rep/el-Meer that in this ease the •"been" means a stream of Water, end not that painful result of to 'close association with' fire.. "Clegg" Was the Anglo-Saxon word fax ",sticky earth," that is to say, "clay." An Alan de Cleburne, apparently, settled in Ireland as., early as 1200 A.D., and the name has flotrish.ed in thateeceletry, as well ab in England, ever since. • HYDE. Variations — Hide, Ide, Hitherive, Hithereeve. Racial Origin—English. Source—A 'locality, also a title. None of the family names in this group have anything to do with our mocrern word "hide" which means a skin. They are 'developments of an- other old Teutonic weed which was variously spelled by the Anglo-Saxons and the.Anglo-Normans, later, "hyde," "awhile," "Iiithe" and sometimes "hide." It really had tvvo meartegs, or if you peeler to put it that way there were really two separate word•s. One of tient indieatede. 'small farm, spiel- &eller a 0,ent a the Size Which one man tould ,plow in one day. The other, wihich wad us,ed principallyfebut not'exclizsively, in the maritinie settee, meant a haven or harbor. b. !additioxi there is a town in • Cheehiree,the history of which dates back 'to • befOre the Norman Period, Jae& Hyde.' Here the, you have three eourcet of ',the foregoing' •surnames. A study of ,the most tienal ,cOursee of develop- ment in family name formation Would indicate that all ,:of them, with the exception of Hithereve and Hithereesre came in most instances from the name of the town, and at fireb were used to show that an individual had •cerne from that place +or was identified with it in ',some way. . But there is 'no .doubt about the two forms of Hithereeve. -The "bite - reeve" :could onIrliaye•been (literally) the harbor -sheriff. We would speak of a port warden to -day. .eed the:b* w Eiht food. for the oily is MO= laniar taint than right fuel for the . engine. is a scieniific food,containing aft the loptOmeot, of wheat and mak- aii digests e4stily at 9Lurickly, builds toward 1e4thanctstre'nttth --- and is deli haul in Ravi* alu.d vispneoc4, id elle3a 1eaadireg u s 7!. tug raised straight up when. a ship has pass. . The Runcoin bridge over the Mersey ie• in the nature of a ,suspension rail- way, the . passengers, Pbeing •carried alcrests in e remarkable cage -like .con- trivance. • Nurses War Memorial Fund. • Canadian nurses from coast to coast ate' raising funds to erect a monument at the Capital in commemoration of Canadian Nursing Sisters who lost their lives during the 0-reat War. On- tario -nurses • are requested to send 'their contributions either individually or thrmfgh their local association to the Provincial Secretary -Treasurer of the Fund, Miss Holland, 410 Sher - bourne St, Tarontn. • When the Brakes Are �f - First Importance.- In the 'West, logging camps are mostly situated in the hills, and the out, always downhill. Often that helps to niske the hauling easy, but some - tines the grades .are so steep that it rittaltea it too easy—so easy that it en- tails difficulty. Indeed, in these in- stances the teem hauling is a mis- nomer, for that implies pulling the load, and the operation actually con- sists in pushing against the load in- stead of pulling it. Two and a half miles of specially constructed track is used at oue western logging camp fax transporting heavy loads on a large meter truck down a very steep grade. The treck is six -wheeled, and has powerful brakes, on its four rear wheels. These brakes are controlled exclusively by one man, while another takes care, of the driving and steering. tViinard's Liniment for sale everywhere Paint, is the next in importance. Unlike that over the Hudson River, the bridge will be a single decker with Simcoe County Municipal four lines of railway, a road 35 Zest wide, a motor -car road 18 feet wide, an,d a 15 foot pathway fax pedestrians. 'The central span will be 1,600 feet in length. Loner That/ Quebec Bridge. While not to beeompared with either of these structures, the bridge to, be -erected over the Detroit River between Detroit and Windsor will be none the less remarkable. It will have two desks. The upper deck will have two 28 foot roadwaysi, two 7foot side- walks, and a double trolley line; while the lower deck will be devoted to four railway lines. About 3,703 feet in length, with a main eutspen,decl span el 1,893 feet, the bridge Will be over 400 feet longer than the Quebec bridge the fampus structure; the fh.oisting {:f whose •cese- teal span was accornipanied by two' disasters inVolving a total lose ,of eighty-eight litres. Last, but no leas, is the new snap - pension bridge to be built acrose the Delaware River. It wild canned the citiee of Philadelphia and Camden. It is to cast mare than twenty-five mil- lion dollars!, and will have a central span of 1,750 feet. Roadways, tram- ways, and pathways are to be in - eluded. A 'babel of 33,000 tons ,of metal will be required, •whereas a ' oantiliever bridge would have needed 47,000 tons. Forest. Work was -begun this spring In plant- ing up the area in Vespra. township, Simcoe county, Ontario, which the county council has acquired for a municipal forest. It will take several years to plant up the whale area of eight hundred acres but the work will proceed year by year till it is, done. It is passible that a nursery to grow part of the peanting stock required will be started on the site. Rubberized Paper. , • ' 'A new patte.ess: has been discovered fax utilizing rubber in the makingof paper. It is claimed that the intra - dation of even very small quentities of rubber into the raw material re-. sults in the production of extraordin- ary toughness and strength. , Wileard,s teniment Rellevea Neuralgia • Many a man in the hour of his need finds that he has been so busy making money that he has. forgotten to make any friends. Eleetric capelamp,s are nee beieg, in•ade fax the use -of miners, the cur- rentebeing supplied from lanracietiMetli: later straPped on the' Wedreiee ba eke S'IfOIWACH.TR011. ARE JE TO AMITY The monument fax Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary is a 'huge stone sphere on which the ,continents of the • earth are outlined. At the North Pale is set.a. 'bronze star, symbol both of his discovery an,d, as some one has Suggested, of "the star of uncone queued: will." His epitaph is his own favorite quotation :from the Latin— will find a uway or make one. • When these bridges are erected— and that at Philadielphin will take five years itaecomplete, or eight years, lees thaa the lemons Brooklyn structure —Britain will be onteilses,s,ed in' the mietter of great .laridge-huildin!g feats, says an English writer. 110 is hoped, however, that the'arratiment firms de- prived ef work under the clizarrnae inent sclteme will tune their attenbion to the /tatter, attd proposals have nI- rady ben put foreterd for various bridgee—one over the Tay; another Derwid.k.on-TweAvd; two ever the Themes, one between Barnes and Itew and One a0 Riehmond; and Mile over the„ Severn. eAc ter remarkable bridges, the tinfted.Stat.:ea still leade 'the way v,ribit the one at Chicago. Phis works ex - wetly like a lift, the eentral apjtn he Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief For., Acid Indigestion. So-called stomach troubles, such as indigestion, gas, sourness, stomach- ache and inability to retain food are in, probably nine cases out of ten, simply evidence that excessive Beare - tion of acid is taking place in the stomach, causing the formation of gas and acid indigestion. Gas distends the stomach and causea that full, oppressive, burning feeling sonietimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames the delicate lining of the stomach. The trouble lies entirely in the excess de- velopment or secretion of acid. To stop or prevent this souriug of th'ep.food contents of the stomach and to neutralize the acid, and make it bland and harmless, a toa,spoonta ot Bisurated magnesia, a g,00d and effec- tive corrector of aoid stomach, should be taken in a quarter of a glass of hot er cold water after eating or when- ever gas, sourness or acidity is felt: This sweetens, the stomach and neu- tralizes, the acidity in a few moments and is a perfectly harmless and inex- pensive remedy to use. An antacid, Bach as Bisurated Mag- nesia, -which can be obtained from any druggist in eiblier powder or tablet form, enables the stomach to do its work property without the aid of artificial cligestents. Magnesia comes in several forms, so be Certain to ask for an. take only Bisurated Magnesia, whichis especially Prepred fax the above purpose. .wanceamatamontemealmerammtatmeantorm littaintlea,s Vona= Mogi Aliernedies Book on DOG DISEASES and Row to Feed Mailed Free to a.ny Ad - dregs', by the Author. 3d. Cday Glover Co., Mao. 129. west 24,t11, Street Ne Vtt York; ThS.A. CiOssified Adirertisexue or.sram reitenitaine, give partion :lee.•Pei/Netting Co., Adelaide Se, ,W,, ToeuntO. •191.P44444'llnr.firni». ItSPISYINANTP.l.) 'ai"PR TRAINING ,Seboell :lir elerese et graduate of Apply SUperip- temTent Hemereao ;ss:giUrigrri, 15E 4rnI4L tity ANTISIS"rr<a. cirow nitirdir„boinS'forusl, waste, .ti)ix.Pc, osiesentees • V • gerdetle can re yield:,..1;95. to, ;1; .9 .f?er sveeltl illtia- trated hooklel and partteularS ,eer4; ter e eastarnp, ,Teronto eiippteer:o., Cunt4topk o'rrFOReftlkieg 'ASA, larkeie 'OP NEW belting, Pulleys, saws; eael,e,hose,perecine, ete.,,sbineemeuedeet to Approval n't low- est prices In 'Canada,. :Y,(:).R.K.T3OLTlNO 115 YORIC STA,DE,T, Teall.PHTO. Wood IVIlijr Bo we iroportan a.$ In view of the threatened difficulty in obtaining, co,a1 in the near futare, the question of the value of wood as a fael again becomes lieportan't. Ate cording to the Forest Produces Labore- toriee of the Depaetreent ofthe In- terior, Canada, the main consid,era- tioes i scleeting wood for fuel are it5 Weighty-5,nd dryness. Pound foe pound, all woods, equally dry. have about the same heeting value. A, cord of dry hardvrood, se,ch as birch, has approxi- mately the saina, heating value, as p ten of coal, but in the ca...;,e cf soft- woods, as much as ,twe cords w Quid, in ecane Metal:10as neceeeerr to get tess same amount el heat, • - •.• • ' MONEY' 'onotRs. „ . 'The sate way tO Send Malley by mall is by Dominion ExPress IVIoney,Order. Chinek is s Poleen by four hundre nilbion people. ARSE SALT 61'8 A L T Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS • O. J. CLIFF TORONTO Those. Having- Sick Animals SHOUI-0 USE GUoci for all throat and chest alteases, D stemper, Garget, Sprains, .Bruises, Colic, Mange, Spavins, Running Sores, etc.. etc, Should a1w,ays.he in the etable, —SOLD ErcTERYWHERE. • r- ENDI PEFECT , Every Woman's Wish— ead Mrs. Cassady's Experience Paris, Ontario.—"Fer five years .1 suffered with pains in my back and from other troubles women often have_ All of this time was unfit for work adniffder•wasent tinakeindigeinthe: that I thought -were good. I saw the advertisement in the papers of Lydia. E. Pinichant's Vege- table Compound and have taken it faith- fully. I am now in good health and do all my own. ‚work - 1 recommend it to ethers and give you permission to publish thiS letter In your little books and in the news- papers as a teitimonial."--eMes. D. ASSAM; Bex 461, Paris, Ontario. This medicine -which helped Mrs. Cassady so much is worthy et your confidence. If you are troubled 'with euch ailments as displacements, , flannuation, irregularities', or other forms of female w.ealcn.ess you should give it a trial now. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text - Book upon • "Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent to you free upon request. Write to The Lydia, E. Pinleham Medicine Co., Lynn. Mass. Iheitsienb.00k contains valeable Infos- Have Good and '(]leon Spa' Free from dandruil anci It's easy, Ott retiring rub spots ogtiandruitanaitchbag With Cutiortra ointmenVgettingoint. went well on scalp. Nextinaning shampoo with Cutioura$eab and hot water. Iiinse withterild tva,er. ofrot...Ri Is .6a silo. Telsesx25e. Sold throughquttheDominion. CanadianDepot: ity5ss9, Lide1,usIst: PAO W.tlYt.114441. ••opodito olltire* tee • ISSUE No, 21—'22. • WARN IN G z Unless you see ting Xspirin at "B ay tr Tablets worl<ed out by ui1hions for Colds Toothache Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. the name "Bayer." on tablets, you are riot get - all. Atcspt only an "unbroken package of, of,Aspirin," which coutaitisAirections and' dos, physicians duting 22 years and proved safe,by H ea d ache Neuralgia Earache Lumbago Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, 'Pain :Gandy "Bayer" boxes at 4 tablets'e-Also bottles of. 24 and loo ---Druggists, Attorit, lava trade mark Oreigletered In canads:o it MOnufaeture •otitrae.. ,tw.a.ttdmster of saneyuelew. 'While It Is v,011 knowii 'that Aspirin means . slre9 itmeufeetltre, to littehtt the retitle egtibiet imitetions,Alto Tabiste et omit -wow win b., $fatitocta t5tth tItair oetteret trade mark, the "„gager Cross.", •