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-"MY CASE UNUSUAL
TEST FOR SARGON"
"'My case was an unusual test for
Sargon, for I had tried different medi,
cines and treatments for three years
for my troubles without lasting bene-
sessussessausiiiiiismarautus
JAMES DUNSIRE
fit. My liver was • out of order, I
couldn't get an elimination without
taking a cathartic, I was subject to
terrible headaches and an eruption
would break out on my skin at times
that hurt so bad I couldn't sleep.
Three bottles of Sargon put me in
'fine condition. The breaking out on
my skin is gone, I have a fine appe-
tite, nothing disagrees with me any
more, I sleep good and have .more
strength, energy and vitality than I
ever thought I'd have again.
"Sargon Pills reconditioned my liver
and completely overcame my constipa-
tion." -games Dunsire, 531 College
St., Toronto.
Sargon may be obtained in Seaforth
from Charles Aberhart.
Northern Ontario Leads.
Returns to the Provincial Apiarist
indicate that the northern parts of
Ontario give the highest yields of
honey. For 1928 the average per col-
ony was 160 pounds in Kenora, •137
in Bruce and Renfrew, 116 in North-
-timberland and 109 in Algoma, The
southern county, Elgin, has the high
•average of 143 pounds while the ad-
joining counties, Kent and Norfolk
have 88 and 80 pounds respectively.
In total quantity, Bruce, Grey, Sini-
coe and York take the lead, partly
due to their large area but also due
to the fact that clover and alsike are
grown abundantly. The honey crop
for the province for the season of
1928 was 13,859,969 pounds, three-
fourths of which was classed white.
The estimated value was over a mil-
liondollars.
WHEN YOUR CHILD
IS FEVERISH
Give Him Baby's Own Tablets.
The health of babies and little
children is subject to rapid changes.
Thus the mother must be on her
guard. At the first sign of feverish-
ness Baby's Own Tablets should be
given -this may avert a serious ill-
ness.
Concerning the Tablets Mrs. Nor-
man Lee, Uxbridge, Ont., says: "My
little boy, now three years old, was
not at all well. He was feverish and
had no appetite. I gave him Baby's
Own Tablets and he was soon well
again. I would not be without the
Tablets as long as there are young
children in the house."
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The 'Dr. Williams'
"Medicine Cp., Brockville, Ont.
AMY JOHNSON, LONDON,
PRINCESS OF THE AIR
It is no doubt due to someobscure
moral defect that we are unable to
give (vent to unbridled enthusiasm a-
bout the flights of women aviators,
or as they are called in more refined
circles, aviatrices. Speaking general-
ly, we class them with lady wrestlers.
Most of them take to flying not be-
cause they want to fly but because
they want notoriety. It is the same
impulse that drives other slightly out-
raged ladies to pistols and sympathe-
tic jurymen. Perhaps the latent hos-
tility to the tribe was caused by that
spectacular young lady whose name
we do not at the moment remember.
We know that she is an Anterican—
that we found easy to remember—
and that she nearly flew to the Azores.
'Earlier and later she had figured in
domestic difficulties. She was origi-
nally a manicurist, and she took to
flying because, as she frankly said,
Skinny! I Gained 11
Lbs. in 8 Weeks and
Boy Friend."
she. believed, that thus 'she could get
her name in the nenvspapers and per-
haps make a lot of money. It will
be immediately evident how niuch
good it did her getting her name in
the newspapers when she is unable to
get it an this column because nobody
hereabouts seems to know it. We hope
she had better luck with the money.
But these objections to women fliers
are immediately ove eome When we
eo ssider the exploit of 'Mass Amy
Johnson. We have read something
about Miss Johnson and what im-
pressed us was her determination to
become an aviator. She did not want
to be a mere celebrity or aviatrix.
She felt competent to do in an air-
plane what men have done and she
sett out to •prove it by flying to Aus-
tralia, a distance of some 10,000 miles
from England. She did not attempt
to break the existing record, but nev-
ertheless she did make incomparably
the most remarkable flight ever made
by a woman, and one not surpassed
by half a dozen men in the history
of aviation. She did it, too, in the
way of business. The business she
chose was that of demonstrating and
selling airplanes. She felt that cus-
tomers would ,object to being taken
up by a woman pilot,' so she wanted
to have' proof in advance that she was
a pilot competent to get a ''plane up
and down again without killing off
the prospective customer. We submit
that she has proved this and left a
considerable' margin to her credit
Mabel Something'—that's the name of
that other girl.
Until a month ago Miss Johnson
whose father is in the fish 'business at
Hull, or perhaps in view of his daugh-
ter's fame we should say that he is in
a business not unconnected with, fish
in Hull, had a job as stenographer
with a London business -house. She
is a well educated girl, with quite an
athletic bent, and her strong physique
and endurance made her a good swim-
mer and tennis player. Then she got
the idea that she would like to fly. In',
1925 she and her younger sister took
a flight over the city of Hull in ;i
commercial p'lane, and when she reach-
ed the ground again her desire to fly
had changed. to a determination. She
saved her money and took other
flights. She joined the London Air-
plane Club and had a couple of flights
with an instructor. Out of her salary
she saved 10 shillings each week in
order to be able to afford -half an
hour's flying lesson' every fortnight.
She distinguished herself from most
ladies who want to fly in that she al-
so wanted to know why a machine
can be flown. She was interested in
the mechanics of it, So she became
an apprentice to the ground engineer
of an airplane company and donning
a suit of overalls became a grimy
laborer round an airdome, helping to
take engines apart, clean them, re-
pair faulty parts and reassemble
them.
In time she learned about all there
is to learn about a plane. Her in-
structor, C. S. Humphreys, says of
her: "Ordinarily we don9t like wo-
men here, they can be so irritatingly
helpless where machinery is concern-
ed. But `Johnny' is different. She
came in like one of the boys. She
did every blessed thing for herself;
she never got out of anything because
she was a girl. More than ,that, she
used to take her turn with the boxing
gloves and get knocked all over the
hangar. She was physically strong
but we toughened her. You can tell
what she is like now by her flight.
You have to have tremendous physi-
cal endurance to make such a flight"
—we think that girl's name is Gladys
or Murial something—"You not only
have to pilot the machine and read
the maps but also to be continually
pumping petrol from the supply tank
to the feed tanks. After three and a
half hours of flying, pumping begins.
You have to make 3,000 strokes with
the right arm to pump 50 gallons in-
to the feed tanks. And when you've
flown nine or so hours you have to
spend half the night overhauling the
machine. You're lucky if you get three
hours' sleep."
Well, Miss Johnson continued, and
less than a year ago made her first
solo flight. Last June she passed for
a private pilot's license and soon af-
terward won a ground engineer's lic-
ense, being the: first woman in Eng-
land to do so. She had not flown her
necessary 100 hours before she kick-
ed off for Australia. . So it might be
said she qualified en route. After
she had determined that she would
make a long flight solo her trouble
was to get a machine. She appealed
to her father who was not enthusias-
tic. She appealed to Lord Wakefield,
head of a big lubricating oil concern.
and a recogni;ed angel of fliers. He
was not encouraging. Finally she in-
duced her father and Lord Wakefield
between them to give her $3,000 with
which she bought a second-hand Hand-
ley -Page which had already flown
35,000 miles and had not the slightest
idea in the world of flying to Aus-
tralia. Then she went round ' the
newspaper offices to make an ar-
rangement about publishing the story
of her adventures. One and all they
turned her down and advised her to
forget it. The loveliest incident in
connection with her flight is tha,,
knowing nobody in Australia she had
a lady give her a letter to a friend
unacquainted when she landed. Inci-
dentally after she did land the Daily
Mail cabled her $50,000 which is the
largest amount ever paid to a woman
for a feat of daring.
"After trying several tonics tried
Ironized Yeast. In 8 weeks gained
11 lbs., new complexion, round limbs;
best of all a boy friend." -,--S. M.
Salino.
Mn and women are amazed at
gain of 5 to 15 lbs. in 3 weeks, Ugly
hollows vanish. Bony limbs round
out. Sallow, blemished skin gets
clear and rosy like magic. Nervous-
ness, indigestion, constipation disap-
pear overnight. Sound sleep. New
pep from very first day.
Two great tonics in one—special
weight -building Malt Yeast and
strengthening Iron. Pleasant little
tablets. Far stronger than unmed9-
• cated yeast, Results in 1 time. No
yeasty taste,, no gas.
Don't go.tound "skinny," ugly, un-
attractive. Get Ironized Yeast from
druggist to -day. Feel great tomor-
row. 'Koney back from manufacturer
if not delighted with results.
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Ends hi '1 Minute
"Ended' burn, itch and pain of pUes
in 1 minute with 'Sootha.Salva ,"writer
L., T. Sears. "Bleeding stopped. Piles
soon vanished. Avoided operation.'
Get instant resultatoday. AU druggiate,
should be culled out and marketed.
The sooner they are gotten rid of,
the bigger will be the flock profits.
Labor is reduced, feed costs are low-
ered and the profitable birds are giv-
en more room in the laying house and
on the range. Poultry, also Should
sell for more money per pound in the
early part of the summer than later,
so there is a material gain in dispos-
ing of the non-productive birds. One
of the simplest ways to cull the flock
is to go over the birds when they
roost at night. Pick out those with
shrivelled, rough combs and shrunk-
en, hard abdomens. A bird with a
large amount of hard fat around the
abdomen is not in laying condition.
Treating Seed Potatoes.
' Naturally, the aim of the potato
grower is to produce the biggest and
best crop at the lowest possible. cost.
This is dependent upon a number of
factors such as good soil, qua9,t'y of
seed, spraying and cultivation. While
the importance' of these features is
unquestioned, very often the prospect
of a good crop is ruined through neg-
lect to practise seed treatment which
is aimed to reduce the enormous loss-
es and inconvenience caused by scab,
black leg and rhizoctonia, all of
which occur in every province in Can-
ada The commonest method used to
treat seed potatoes is the Formalin
treatment. A solution of 1 pound of
formalin to 40 gallons of water is
made up and placed in a barrrel. The
seed potatoes, uncut, are ,placed in a
sack and suspended in the liquid for
two hours when the bag is pulled up
and the solution allowed to drain back
into the barred.' Then the seed may
be cut and planted.
Farmers' Week at O. A. C.
The Ontario Agricultural College at
Guelph will be thrown open to inspec
tion by the farmers of the province
on four days, this month, June 16, 17,
18 and 19. The visitors are advised
to arrive early in order to have time
to see the big institution and are re-
quested to bring a basket lunch and
to assemble picnic style, under the
shade trees by the gymnasium by
noon. The college has made provision
to supply hot tea, milk and ice' cream.
After lunch the men will be shown
over the crop experiment plots and
will have an opportunity to inspect
the live -,stock. The ladies will be at
liberty to visit Macdonald Hall, the
various buildings on the campus and
any other department of the college
they desire to see. About four o'clock
the campus will be available for base-
ball games, horseshoe pitching or any
other sports.
Make the Meadows Pay.
Ontario usually has about four and
one half million acres of hay crops
each year, In passing across the
province just before haying one can-
not help feeling that many of these
acres are not paying the taxes and
the cost of handling the crop. Statis-
tical reports indicate an average yield
of only one and one-half tons to the
acre and this can certainly be much
improved upon. For the meadows,
good drainage and sweet soil are very
important. Roots of grasses and
clovers are slow to penetrate wet soils
and wherever there is a surplus of
water on the soil, air is shut out and
hence the bacterial life is either
weakened or killed. Another point in
meadow improvement is the use of
high quality seed. If poor seed is
used the meadow starts out with a
handicap. Good drainage, good seer]
and a liberal supply of suitable fertil-
izer make profitable meadows.
NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR
THE BUSY FARMER
New Appointee.
The increasing demand for market-
ing service and the general work in
'connection with the Crops Co-opera-
tion and Markets Branch of the On-
tario 1 q artment of Agriculture have
resulted in the Minister of Agricul-
ture appointing an assistant director
to this branch, A. H, Martin, of Ren-
frew. Mr. •Martin has been Agricul-
tural Representative for Renfrew
Countysince 1926 and previous to
that time was assistant representative
in Wellington County, having gradu-
ated from the Ontario Agricultural
College in 1924.
Crop Report.
The first crop report for the month
of June shows that despite frosts in
many parts of the province which
caused considerable damage, the crops
are coming along in fine style. For
instance, the Counties of Carleton,
Glengarry, Dufferin, Dundas and Dur-
ham all report fall wheat, clover, al-
falfa and hay crops in excellent con-
dition. Such tender plants as straw-
berries, tomatoes, beans, potatoes,
early corn and tobacco suffered injury
in many localities, but most counties
report no serious damage. Milk pro-
duction is reported to be above aver-
age in Dundas and Leeds Counties.
Pastures are reported to be in splen-
did condition without exception. With
the coming of warmer weather all
crops have shown rapid improvement.
Cull Them Out.
• As soon as the spring spurt in egg
production commences to lessen there
are certain hens in every flock that
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WRIGLEYS
Alertness scores everywhere.
Wrigley's creates pep and en.
ergy and keeps you alert.
A 5 g package may save you
from going to sleep at the wheel
of your car.
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.a in,aFu+�.�"div�h
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Style, plus Quality, for partic
At Very Much Less Q
Than You'd Expect NPky•��
as
A Special Pricing of Lovely Frocks"
THE GOODS
Rayon Chantung
Handkerchief Lawn
Batise and Pique
Rayon Piques
DNovelty Voile
otted Swiss
Seed Voile
1
TAILORED MODELS for
conservative women.
SUNNY FROCKS for the
young Miss.
ENSEMBLES — the favor-
ed costumes for Summer.
Sizes 14 to 44
Accurately Sized.
1
One Price Only
$3.95
THE COLORS
Gorgeous Prints
in a rainbow of new -
pastel shades and
highcolors, guaran-
teed to be absolute-
ly fast.
Flared, Plaited or Shirred
Skirts, Capes, Ruffles or
Novelty Yokes; organdy,
hemstitching, piping, t leated
frills. All new tri );, ideas.
Don't Miss
These
And A Wonderful Suit Opportunity
MEN'S HIGH-CRADE SUITS
$24,50
You will never see better values' than these Suits
we are specially pricing for quick clearance at
$24.50
Blues, Blue Stripes, Browns, Greys, Sands and
Heather Mixtures in imported Serges, Worsteds and
Tweeds. Wonderful suits, carefuy made and fully,
guaranteed in every way. Many of these Suits are
regular $30.00 values.
If you need a new suit, don't wait. Get one of
these wonder values at
$24,50
Stewart Bros,, Seaforth
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