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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-12-12, Page 66 - ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN leewhich they Wild the honeycombs from the fi Jack London's widow is comnionly suppoeed ewers, as , is engaged on but th e t 't th 1 es The ey se re e emee v his biography. wax is a fatty substance formed in spec a Britain by 2,000,000. • , rings of the abiomen. It, exudes. in The British Ministry of Health '131"0 the form of W'bititsh flake re which the poses to employ women architects he bees gather with -„their legs and use the housing departmeut as a building material. It becomes With the exception of Oxfort and' -yellbviisk( Wee -under the transpiea- Cambridge, all of the Britirilyniiver- Cork of the bees., sities have opened their medical de-, The nectar formed -at the, -base of gree e to wwomen. the corolla efenemy flames is need, as Norma Talmaelgthe motion picture soon as the petals N1,14, the fertil- star, spends from $25,000 to !f3(li.000 lied fruit or seed as nattilment in year for costumes oveing—rinich as the yolk of an egg Women will hereafter be admitted to ail examinations held by the. United States Civil .Service Commissions. . There is a movement under way to establish a university for women en China which *in be planned ° after the style :if American colleges for women. The average hourly wage a women silk workers in the United States in- creased 102 per cent. during the per- iod from September, 1914, and March, esseei 1919. Late population statistics of New South Wales show that there are in that country 574,606 females and 969,579 males. Women bartenders who can under- stand the woes of women patrons, are soon to conduct the hotel bars in Neve York City. Nurses in Aurora, Ill.. are talking of forming a union and demanding . mentation. "Thus, says Bonnier, six hours' sleep and eight hours' re -1 "the bees invented antiseptics before creation $5 a day, $6 for centagious Women outnumber the men in Great i I glandi situated under several is uSed by the embryo chick. This is preyed by the gradual disappear- . ance of the nectar ' as the fruit bud enlarges. • , • But . the nectar has another use, namely, to cheek:tee evaporation of water from the surface of the' plant, for sweetened water •evaporates much more slowly than unsweetened. The bees suck up the nectar, which does not pass into their stomach bat into an expansion of the eeaophages. There it undergoes te partial chemical transformation, under the influence of a substance called invertase, which acts as a ferment. When the bee dis- gorges the honey into the wax cells it discharges a little invertase at the same time, and before closing the cell a tiny drop of venom from the bee's sting is added, this to prevent fer- • disease and mental disease nursing, and $40 per week ;for obstetrical work. After servitig the Government for 25 years as lightkeeper at Turkey Point, the Chesapeake Bay, Mrs. Gecrgia Brumfield •has been retired with a pension by the Bureau of Lighthoupes. A resolutioi asking that Mrs, Philip N. Moore of St. Louis, be appointed one of the three )representatives of the United States on the League of Nations has been passed and. sent to Washington by the National Council of Women. Miss Beatrice Joel, an automobile saleswoman of Trenton, N. J. recent- ly drove a car from Clevefand to Trenton a dstance of 500 miles, as an accommodation to one of her customers, who could not wait for regular freight delivery. Russia women especially of the mid- dle and upper classes are noted for their generosity, devotion to ideals' and their altruism. They never feel poor unless they are beggars. Bosnia women, who come down the mountains to sell their melons and e ------grapes or little brown goats in the Turkish bazaar don't wear skirts. On working days they wear huge black homespun trousers, very full' as to waist and tight as to laiee.- From carpet weaver ins. a Boston factory to delegate at the President's industrial congress is the history of Mrs. Sarah A. Conboy, veteran labor leader and international secretary of the United Textile Workers of Amer- ica. Miss Alice L: Sylvester, 17 years old, of Greene, Md., is credited with being the youngest dairywoman in New England. She not only has a well paying business, but has demonstrated that a woman Can raise cows and run a dairy every bit as' well as a man. The first woman pastor of any Southern Methoelist church in Mis- souri is Miss Josie' Smart, a Kansas City. Bible training school graduate, who hes received official appointment as pastor 6f churches in the nbighbor- ing towns of Bram City .and Arbyrd. Pasteur or Lister!" It is this drop of poison that preserves the honey for years. • —Last Friday evening the members of the Ethel Presbyterian congrega- tion assembled, at the 'home of J. K. Halls and presented D. J. and 'Mrs. Falconer with a beautiful library table and writing desk combined. A- very appropriate address was read by. Clifford Ferguson and the presenta- tion was made by W. T. Spence and George Dunbar. The evening was spent in games and music. All went away feeling they had a goodtime and wishing Mr. and. Mrs. Falconer maiiy years of happy married life. Astronomers Puzzled. florae astronomers are of the opinion that the moon was once upon a time part Of the earth, and that, while the latter was in a plastic state, our satel- lite vsas thrown out from it. They point to the Pacific. omen as the gash from which it was rudely rent. . ISiaybe so. But nobody knows why the surface of the moon, of which we never see much more than half,. is , covered with so-called "craters" that Ibear no likeness to anything on the earth. They are bowl -shaped, usually ' circular, and rimmed by cliffs 5,000 to : 30,000 feet high. There -are at least t. 25,000 of them visible to the telescope, the biggest being SOO railimi in diam- eter. 1 The late Professor Pickering of ' Harvard was conviaced that the moon has a little moon of its own, a few hundre&yards In diameter, which can - be seen only when the earth passes between the sun and the lunar orb, throwing the latter 'nth its shadow.— , Exchange. 1 In the Days of the Bustle. 1 was making a new dress for my- self. It was a good many years ago, in the days when we wore bustles. The , hustle which I wore was a home-made, crude affair. When fitting the dress, I had put on the bustle in order to get . Ithe proper hang to the skirt. So, to save time, I tied the bustle around NO ONE NEED BLEED TO DEATH "There is no condition se grave, from hemorrhage alone, that a patient cannot be revived by blood transfu- sion." This startling statement was made at the recent meeting of the American Medical Association by Dr. Edward E. Lindeman, of New York, in eleseribieg a case in which a man was apparently dead. and was revived by transfusion. The Patient had been operated on for gastric ulcer. All went Well for ten days, when he began te have hemorrhages from the stomach and became very weak. On the sixteenelt day he was on. the point of collapse and Dr. Lindeman brought a suitable _donor of blood to be transfused. On his arrival he found the man uncon- scious; his respirations ceasee, n� pulse could be felt, nor could the heart be heard to beat even through the stethoscope; and an incision. into vein failed to reveal any blood, There was no time then for blOod teansfusion, so Dr. Linderaae pumped cold salt solution' into his veins, until the necessary preparatiops could be made. After introducing 60 cubic cell- timetres - of salt solution, 200 cubie icentimetres of blood were, given. • The patient gasped. When another 200 cubic centimeties had been introduced he began- breathing and a flicker Of pnlse was preceptitde. Two him -tired cubic centimetres more and heopened his eyes. When., he had. received 80e cubic centimetres he seemed to awake 'suddenly and asked what all the fuss was about. The transfusion was stopped when he had received 1,200 cubic centimetres and was breathing normally. He had no realization of how close to the brink he had been. Dr. Linde- man said; "I have never seen it be- fore or since, and I never expect to see, it again, namely in the presence of every evidence of death from hemorrhage, revival was yet possible by blood transfusion." This man had two other severe hemorrhages six days later and blood was again transfused on each occasion after which another ;operation was performed, and this, too, was follow- ed by blood transfusion. The patient -made an uneventful recovery, andto- day is perfectly well and strong: WHAT. HONEY IS AND WHY FLOWERS MAKE IT Flowers .malce nectar for their own use and not, as Sprengel insisted a-nd as Darwin and the German savants believed, to attract the bees in order that these may carry pollen on their legs and bodies from one blossom to another. This is demonstrated by Gaston Bonnier of the French Acad- eniy of Sciences in a long article sum- marized in the Scientific American Supplement. The bees do not get the wax of • outside- or my house dress, and then tried on the new skirt. , During the morning I found it neces- sary to go to the store, an4 while wait- ing in the crowded grocery., for. my Parcels, a friend, came up to me and • said, to the anmeement of the by- standers: "Why,. Lillie, what have you tied around your waist?" I round I had forgotten to take th,e bustle off, and had worn It on .the outside of my honse .dre.ss all way to the atere..—Eachan,ge. T • i THE HURON EXPOSITOR ,7•,04•1001 Tellie PARIS OF THE BOUtigitilieteh An Unsavory Mixtures Having linth- • • ing '.Healty French. Paris attracts more foreignere thall any other city in Europe. It is in this respect a true cosinopolisa Around these visitofs—for them and thanks to thene—a big business of luxury and a profitable traffic in pleasure hav.e grown up; in1P0ning restau- rants. brilliant cafes, eleeant eb.ops--e alt of them Places that 'the French- man hardly knows and never fre- quents. Itis in tide artificial world elf the "boulieard". that the theatre industry has developed: We already possessed the "espirit du bouleeird," which was not the true Frencb, spirit, or was, at any rate, only a very small part of It says Firmin Bus in the Yale Review. Then there was added to this a certain boldness of langeage, a tendency to freedom in expression—for it is the French way to be outspoken. Imperceptibly this boldness became the worst ,sort of license, where grossness too „often took the plaee of wit. It is this un- • savory mixture, having nothing really French, which strangers are shown and by whichthey are to judge our race. This is the memory' they take away with them from Paris—from the Paris of the Sainte -Chapelle, of Notre Dame, of the Lenore, of the Invalides, and, the Are de Triomphe de l'Etoile; the Paris of history and art, of libraries and museums, of great schools and the oldest univer- sity in the world; the Paris of Bole leau, of Moliere, and Voltaire; the Pais of the seventeenth and eigh- teenth century salons; the Paris that has in all • times inspired kings, statesmen, scholars and artists. • i Apleri!21.113 Rear NISVI: TOW& A. atiiiher.or viewsa the up -iii -date . bunt by the Aiiieriein Red' Creen„neae Pisa, Italy, are shown in Popeeer -Meelaanics Magazine. The • village- h'es been built to provide hemee,fer tartlaaps and their fatuities; • , • who sfied ;from; Venice= durusi the min!, end gime have not been in a positain to return. The village , will aeconsineat, • fiate 2,000 persoute , i - ; Handicapped by Law. "You are suffering from -brain 'fag and mane" anneuncea tee. speclaliet. "You should take' more interest • in your business." • • t "I would like to," replied the pa- • ttent. • I P. I "Then why don't you I.-, demanded the specialist. •. "The law won't let me," repli.ed the pstient. "I'm a pavnibrokeee ; Battiest cash prices paid for Skunk, Raccoon and Mink Enquiries promptly answered - Rost LIMITED htANUFACTURSItS • Established 15*3 LONDON ONT1 New Rails for Old. One of the big tasks of reconstrue- tion is that of furnishing our rail- ways with new rails. •- Relaying has had to be delayed, notwithstanding that the traffic has been immense and severe during the war., The wear of railtops varies ac- cording to locality and the straight- ness of the line, since on a . curve there is more friction, due to the slip of the wheels is going round the curve. •Rails that are not worked very hard nevertheless suffer from rut, which cuts down their life.. It takes about twenty-five -million tons! weight of traffic towear down a rail one-tenth of an inch. The poPelar ideathal rails are turned upside-down in t eir chairs, to use the bottom side for a fresh lease of life, is not teceerect. By the time the top is worn out, the ham- mering of the traffic has indented the bottom upon the chairs and in- jured its structure too much to allow it to be used fer a running surface. The rail may, however, have further life inesidingi, or put to some other use. When laying rails the platelayers interpose a piece of metal of a cer- tain thickness between the ends at the joint, before boiOng up the fish- plates, 'afterwards removing -it and leaving a blank. Tbis is done to allow for ,expansion and contraction in summer and winter, otherwise the rails would buckle so ,much that the trains would be derailed. — London Answers.' Mow Darkness Is Photographed. Uutilquite recently cinema scenes that were supposed to happen in darkness were really taken in broad daylight, but before being thrown Oil to the screen the film"was dipped into -a large. tank containing deep blue dye; that prod -wed the required effect. • But the difficult problem' of night cinematography has at last been solv- ed. In a recent production there was presented a camp setting in which, the fire cast an eerie glow over the darkness. There were also exotiliant silhouettes of the -players. These were taken one moonless night, the middle ot the eamp being illuminated with a strong violet flame for just two , minutes, which Iig,hted up the surrounding country. •- A. second examPle wasa battle slap- lect taken at night-time. In this there appeared such detaele as .bombs *buntingover fields, with intervals of • blinding • flashesi ot light, , while balls of flame were pouring forth from the discharging cannon. The first problem :was to deter- mine the•composition of ammunition winch would not only be suilleientiY eteeeleeitve, bit produce a ,powerful light As well. The director had to manufacture a Special: kind of -.flash- light, Powder, which he aneceeded in doing after many experiments. .0it a wintry night, when it was Pitch dark, the man at the ,heriechetioed hid a busy tinte, for it eires his' date to, explode 3;000 bombs. These 'were Manipulated separately in no le911 "tbil2). 44,000 teet at' electric wiring. e of Paper itulp SuPiSer. %tem we thing of Holland, we are little inclined to think of anything except a- fiat, treeless country, eue up by canals, and exposed to -constant • threat of overflow., It is true enough • that all Holland is fiat, that portions of it are below sea level, and that it is about as highly developed, in- dueerially and .agrieulterally, as any seetion of the world. . The fact is, there is enough tim- ber in Holand to' torra the base of a • considerable paper industry. • About Aresterclam,„the northeastern arm of Holland, and down in the projecting etbow of Limburg, whieh the allies had some idea of .taking away from Vitilh.elinina, are to be found centres of p•iiip manufacture. The trees, to be sure, . are not from natural for- ests, but from plantations. In nOrmal times, Holland uses up all herI'own paper and more besides. But during the extraordinary- period Ithrough which the world has just been Diming this state of affairs, 'like most others, has been turned up- side down; England and France have looked to the little kingdom of the Duteh for a part of their paper sup- ply, and on. occasion the Netherlande has actually been able to help oat the -American market.—Family Her - am. . 30108MCOIJOIIS ,they assented, he gave the lamp. and arum key to one of them andeleft the room. Thettwo men took a trunk at either Continued from Page 7 . end and mounted the stet* Jahn following, and when the second one came up he put his lingers into his waistcoat pocket suggestively. °. "No," said the one addressedas Dick, "that's. all right. We done it to oblige Ame," • "I'm very much obliged t� you, though," said Johnk 001e, that's all right," tremarked Dick asthey turn.ed away, john surveyed the apartment. There were two smell -paned windows ;oirer- looking the street, curtained with ° "Wa'al,", said Robinson, - I don't gettaller praise, up One more'n another. You see, I- have more or lest; dealin' with all. on 'cm:" • "That's very diplomatic of you, I'm' sire," remarked, John, not at all diplematictiliy,s "I °think I will try the Eagle." Mr. Robinson, in his account of the conversation, -said in confidence— not wishing to be openly invidious— sorry he hadn't recommended the Lake t at e was. um bright "Turkey -red" cotton; near to House." one of them a small wood stove and It may be inferred from the fore- going that the first impression which our friend made on his • arrive]. was not wholly in his favor, and Mr. Rob- inson's conviction that he was "stuck up," and a person bound to get him- self ."gen'ally disliked," was elevated to an article of faith by his retiring to the rear of the vehicle, and quite out of ordinary range. But they were " if h 't almost nearly at their journey's end, and •presently the carryall drew up .at the Eagle Hotel. • . It was a, frame building of three stories, with a covered' veranda runs ning the length of the front, from which two deers gave entrance—one to the main hall, the other to the; office and. bar combined. This was rather a large room, and was also to . be entered from the rnain 11411. John's luggage was deposited; Mr. Robinson was settled with, and took his departure without the amenities which Might have prevailed ender dif- ferent conditions, and the new arrival made his way into the office. Behind the bar counter, which fac- ed. tire street; at one end of which was a small high desk and at the oth- er a glazed case containing three or four partly fell boxes of forlorn -look- ing cigars, but with most ambitious labels, stood the .proprietor, manager, , clerk, an4 whet uot of the hostelry, embodie in the single person of Mx. Amos El ight, who was leaning over the 'counter in conversation with three or four loungers who sat about the room with the t chairs tipped' against the wall. a wood box, containing some odds and. ends of sticks and bits of bark; a small ehest of drawers, serving as a washstand; a malicious little looking - glass; a.basin and ewer, holding about two quarts; an earthenware mug and soap -dish, the latter containing thin .bit of red translucent seep scented with sassafras; an ordinary wooden chair and a rocking -chair with rock- ers of divergent aims; a yellow' wooden 1 bedstead furnished with a mattress of A sketch of Mr. Elright would have depicted a dull "complected" person of a tousled baldness, whose dispirited • xpression of countnance was enhanced by a chinwhisker. His shirt and-tol- lar gave umnistakabre evidence that "excelsior", (calculated to induce early rising), a dingy white spread, a gray blanket of tome wool, a pair of cot- ton sheets which had too obviously done duty since passing through the hands of the laundress, and a pair of flabby little pillows in the same.state, in respect to teeir cases, as the sheets. On the floor was a much used and •faded ingtain carpet, in one place worn through by the edge of a loose board. A narrow strip of, unpainted pine nailed to the weal carried six or seven wooden pegs to serve as a ward- robe. Two diminutive towels with red borders hung`on the rail of the wash- stand, and a, battered tin slop jar, minus a cover,- completed the inven- tory. '"Heaven, what a hole!" exclaimed John, and as he performed his abtu- time (not with the sassafras soap) he promised himself a speedy flitting. There came a knock at the door, and his host appeared to announce that his "tea" was ready, . and to conduct him °to the dining roont—a good-sized a- partment; but narrow, with a long table running near the centre length- wise, covered with a cloth whieh bore the marks of many a fray. Another table of like dimensions, but bare, was shoved up against the wall. Mr. Might's' ravagement of the larder had resulted in a triangle of cadaver - °pajamas or other night -gear were re- , ous apple pie, three dotighnuts, some setting out a bottle and glasses, "hut I've gen'ally noticed that it's a damn sight easier eo git something' into you fellers '41 't is to git anythin' out of ye." CHAPTER XIII The next morning at nine o'clock John presented himself at Mr. Har- umse banking office, whieh occupied the first floor of a brick building some „twenty or, twenty-five feet in width. Besides the entrance to the bank, there was a door at the south, corner open- ing upon a stairway leading to a suite of two rooms on the second floor; 'The banking office consisted of two robins—one tin front, containing the desks and ceunters, and what AMY be designated ,as the, "parlor" (as used to be the case in the provincial towns) in the rear, in whieh were Mr. Har- garded as superflons, , and' his most conspicuous garment as he appeared behind. the counter was a cardigan jacket of a frowiness beyond compare. A greasy neck scarfwas embellished with a gem whosetruthfulness was without pretence. The atmosphere of the room was° accounted for by a re- mark which was made by one of the loungers as John came in. "Sax, Ain," the fellow drawled, "I, guess the was more skunk cabbidge 'n pie plant 'n usual et that last lot o' cigars o' your'n, wa'n't the'?" to which in- sinuation "Arne" was spared the ne- cessity of a rejoinder by oer friend's advent. ° "Wa'al, guess we c'n give -ye a room. Oh, yes, you c'n register if you want to. Where it3 the dum thing? I seen it last week somewhere. Oh, yes," producing, a thin book ruled for accounts from under the counter, "we don't - alwus use it," he remarked— which was obvious, peeing that the last entry was a month old. John concluded that it was a use- less formality. "I should like some- thing to eat," he said, "and desire to go to my room while it is being pre- pared; and can you send my luggage up now?" "Wa'al," said Mr. Elright, looking at the clock, which showed the hour of half -past nine., and rubbing his chin perplexedly, "supper's ben cleared off some time ago." "I don't want very mucla" said John; "just a bit of steak, and some stewed potatoes, and a couple of boiled eggs, and some coffee." . He might have heard the sound of a slap in the direction of one of the sitters, "I'm "fraid I can't 'conunodate ye 'fur's the steak an' things goes," con- fessed the landlord. e "We don't do •much cookin' after dinner, an' I rec- kon the fire's out anyway: Peeps," he added doubtfully, c'd hunt ye up a piece o' pie 'n some- doughnuts, .dr somethin' like that." He took a key to which was at- tached a huge brass tag with serrat- ed edges, from a hook on, a board be- hind the bar—on which were suspend- ed a number of the like—lighted a small -kerosene lamp,. 'carrying a single wick, and, shuffling out from behind the counter, said, "Say, Bill, can't you, an' Dick carry the gentle -- man% trunks upeto 'thirteen?' and, THE MAKING OF A FAMOUS MEDICINE How Ldia E. Pinichards Vegetable Compound h Prepared For • Woman's Use. A visit to "the laboratory where this successful remedy is made impresses even the casual looker-on with the reli- ability, accuracy, skill and cleanliness which attends the making of this great medicine for woman's ills. Over.350,000 pounds of various herbs are used anually and all have Ix be gathered at the season of the year when their natural juices and medicinal sub- stances are at their best. The most successful solvents are used to extract the ;nedicinal properties from these herbs. Every utensil and tank that comes in contact with the medicine is sterilized and as a final precaution in cleardinesa the medicine is pasteurized and sealed in sterile bottles. It is the wonderful combination of rootsand herbs, together with the skill and care usi ed n its preparation whicb lass made this famous medicine so suceessful in the , treatznent of female ills. • • The letters from ,women who have been restored to health by the use of Lydia E. Pinkhanes Vegetable Com- pound which we are .continually pub - Milking attest to its virtue. chunks of soft white cheese, and a plate of what are known as oyster crackers.' "I couldn't git ye no tea," he said. "The hired girls both gone out, en' my wife's gone to bed, an' the' wa'n't no fire anyway." • "I suppose I could have some beer," suggested John, looking 'dubiously at the banquet. "We don't keep - no ale," eaid the proprietor of the Eagle, "an' I guess we're out o' lawger. I ben intendin' t•o git some more," he added. - "A glass of milk?" proposed the guest, but without cqnfidence. "Milkman didn't come to -night," said Mr. Elright, shuffling off in his carpet slippers, worn out in spirit with the importunities of the stranger. There was water on the table, for it .had been left there from supper time. John managed to consume a dough- nut and some crackers and cheese, and then went to his, room, carrying the water pitcher with him, andeafter a cigarette or two and a small pota- tion from his flask, to bed. Before retiring, however, he stripped the bed with the intention of turning -the sheets, but upon inspection thought better of it, and concluded to leave them as they were. So .passed his first night in Horneville, and, as he fondly promised himself, his last at the Eagle Hotel. When Bill and Dick returned to the office after "obligin' Amee' they step- ped with one accord to the counter and looked at the register. "Why, • darn it," exclaimed Bill, "he didn't sign his name, after all." "No,", said Dick, "but I c'n give a putty near guess who he is, all the same." "Some deummer?" suggested Bill. "Naw,' said Richard scornfully. "What 'd a drummer be doin' here this time o' year? • That's the feller, that's ousted Chet Timso-n, an' Pll bet ye the drinks mit. Name's Linx 01 told.m.,, x, oresemething like that. Dave "So that's the feller is i0" said Bill. "I guess, he won't stay 'round here long. I guesseyoull find he's a little too toney fer these parts, an' in perticeer fer Dave Hamm. Dave'll make him feel 'bout as cc•mftable as -aerooster in a pond: Lordte he ex- claimed, slapping his leg with ,a guffaw, "'d you notice Arne's face when he said he didn't want much fer supper, only beefsteak, an' egga, an' tea, an' coffee, an' a few little things like that? I thought I'd split." "Yes," said pick, laughing, "I guess the' ain't nothin' the matter with Ame's heart, or he'd 'a' fell down dead.—Hullo, Ame!" he, said when the gentleman in question, came back af- ter ministering te his guest, "got the Prince o' Wales fixed up all right? Did ye cut that pickled el'phant that cOme last week?" "Huh!" grunted Amos, whoee sens- ibilities had been wounded by the events of the evening, "I didn't cut no el'phant ner no cow, ner robno hen roost neither, but I guess he won't starve 'fore -moraine') and with that he proceeded to fill up the stove and shut the dampers. "That means tit,' I reckon," re- marked rked Bill as he watched the opera tion. - • "Wa'al," said Mr. Elright, "if you fellers think you've spent enough time droolin' 'round here swapping Hee," I think I'll go to bed," which inhospit- able and injueions remarkewas by no means taken in bad part, for Dick said, with a laugh; "Well, Ante, if you'll let me run my face for 'ern, Bill take' a -little somethite for the good o' the house before we shed 'the partin' tear." This Proposition was not declined by Mr. Elright, but he felt bound en business principles not to yield with too great a ehow of readiness. "Wa'al, I don't mind for this once, he said, going behind the bar and: ResIsAtiresies, Seetbeii your Eyes Strong and Healthy. If they'pre.Snuut,Itcb,gr Burn, if Sore, Irritated. 1nned.r Granulated, illietfurine often. -Safe for Intent OrAdult. At all Druggists in Canada. Write forFree I Eye Book. Huila Compaoywaikap,11,9.1. • DECEMBER 12, 1919* nedeeseska,4a, safeasortofmmente 'u dimet ezillutiMZits!hriaenvited a lounge. There was aim a ThelargesFriraankvilinas iretopavre. ateci from- the front room by a partition, in Which were two doors one leading into the inclosed space behind the desks and counters, and the other into the pas- sageway formed by the north wan and a length of high desk, topped by a roiling. The teller's or eashieree counterefaced the street oppoeite the entrance door. At the left of thes -counter (viewed from the front) was a high -standing desk, with a rail. At the right was a glass -inclosed space' of counter of the same height as that portion which was open, across video latter the business qf paying and re- ceiving was conducled. (Continued next week). Its ASSAM quality gives it that rich flavor TEgis good. tea* Sold only bri sealed packages • A , TAN9iiiERVIE wir • .k.•). Barrie sad No 'over W Street, PROL Barris lie, etc. - ten Mon lUdd BI Melo Honer eery C,oll the Medi Veterina *Bdont ern prin Itever DUOS H ord • pr =milted to°"4''' 111 4.-*0`sl•er cA N.l tV• •Sli'' V- ot'4‘1,\e,c:41e.'".ks :zees:- Pireule% S. PtION to• ete..6=4/".‘ • JO • v. to# S Nc% • < v . 0 0 8-0,14,c,I,Ik .ceezipS.4‘ ol'-e AS> 1, v -v9 -tVz.:7•::::::::::: r'4SV\:°:•C1.0e..:a::C:10:VC:l:;I1P.9::-if:'cp03'::,3 \!,00::5dr 4as-es sosi s sP vi.- w- AP -0"- v- t..'b eti ,e•se se dtete 0 teeete- detee e' V *0' ke .P. Ca NitcP.%-6" 1.19:::0::.c„;ouo'c:6:01:, t`e; 4.0 ce'tz•e>-V1.‘ NP-e,s'cNe tO OP* %t°N10‘00c-,0 croisaip04;e;ott\r to. I -9V-1; .14 S?\:ele'ace..(4Ekt 14°,,k3%E. :3,--1.- 44<t\i e I* cS*.eN-V> o -4 ?V--07:71::::::•1,.S.:::::A..t.:43-4vey1)A.:::1,:storet 00,4‘";,YV\)*•te'SIZZO- els- 11'1101 I; S S C -°N` 'v.-e°174et V9:::::::;41!...,,,;;:? G. Wl 1S-') ca 4 OS a IP 4 s' -e l ' : s 4:;* '‘Air '.' 0.1 'IPCP $1:1 DR. • Osteop Specialist j diseases, and nerv and thrO *bow U Tuesdays Gradua SUM IT of Colleg ef Ontario en of of Resiu llospital, doors ess Ifensan, ---e,..eleeteedeeiet • DRS reellege Ann Arbo l'ece P 0. *17 Soothes ,ore Mouths' Hardens Soft Spongy Guns Kills Disease Germs Prevents Pyorrhoea Disease germs enter your sYstem through the mouth. If the mucous membrane of the mouth becoines sore and inflamed it may be the beginning of Trench Mouth. Soft spongy gums are the fore -runners of Pyorrhoea, which is caused by tartar de, posits and germs. McCrimmon's Mouth Wash relieves soreness, hardens soft spongy gums, and kills the germs that attack the mucous membrane. McCrim- mon's Mouth Wash penetrates into the tiny openings of the gums around the tooth base, and leaves a clean wholesome feeling and a refreshing taste in the mouth. Ask Your Druggist - 0: Viliefigo • R.4.rid OP land. S e Calls ans toren" Stre and Public, Go week at • MANUFP,CTUFilN:C- CHEMISTS • . • 0, RC N T.43 10041f:1TC . VANCOUVER ee. MAIL THIS COUPON McCRIMMON'S CHEMICALS 'WAITED, TORONTO, CANADA Please send me a bottle of McCR1MMON'S MOUTH WASH (postage paid), for which 1 eneloie 50 cents. Name . . Address 0•00•0•0••••0•0•0066400000. e • • 4 • 1 fa, • • • 0 • • • • • Name of Druggist ... . • . • • • • • • . (THIS OFFER FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY) 4,C Lioens if /farm of the eo aatisfactio forth, R. Sesforth. License of Huron arrange= 3nade by orThe E erste and Licensed •of Huron. pa of of t perzence wan. T 115 1.11, B. No.