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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1935-05-31, Page 6} ,�-. ��� ,1% .r , r. :.tit... •;"T„n� . '• k}r �d,k ,. ...' " , ... „at:�', . ;• 1", y;,. i,.0 . Ip .�',9s•. , ` ',, , `h'hey+ ��itQa��-!',�' �� `, Q (, ,y yt{7 �...�. j1,: J .� - '� �'- ) ','Y S �'r '^"i'S^'�q�M. ',•�, ,"R,','�`'.' J• aQ+,W'Saua play- .+:N7'+,' 1�, rl d. k I � i I b m t in •• n; I, �"' ; � ��;; �; 'P . �' �' �• � ' ,1w_.s a an StUlated sev t f deatseGd+,n.Qna Fo!pnma?i` +sxzce P wer t .•(R m ' f • to .:i do I $: ,Boll n d Rf i'as which a a.+. er s 9). -glass lip l t x� l me r '. t C lox, . u aiaxt tilzle a�p x watched drat - pu ;bere tiatmeauts witch hi xy'. a V " molti'c dem!an4tratiizn• at 'n glass manu. .T eW,0A�p * pa,d'i'o wav`CtS. Ru qui �y ` w facii0yin6duxdng pleat isz Toledo, !o. A Z"e o mein for glass teeth, '84 r ;{ ttr' , �hx iidktles, evaeru foo• glass c�ofFnlsl, t, sh y steed 'bald, weiglzvlug more thin a „e IA era staff of chemdsts, ph; r larot�zd, f 111 from a rhea ht ei ht dolls and, felt, s'tivrk,a pane of glass, and re- ptical experts keep 'b "r bounded without leavdm a mark. It Idregeltaping mew glasses for $pa }g ' (ICondcnsed from Common Sense by Readers' Digest), g' pttrpases,- tfeslbiivg standard ambit w dxiapiped again fjttam 12 feet, and find nlgr Tie,"' uses fbr g4asswr This time the glass shattemed, but mat As a result, on the market you I as ordl.naxy glass !breaks•. In a flash, `laze American 'standard of living giving way to res,plendent caibets of dt didssolved dnto harmless' grannilar OZ. s wool, glass bricks, glass Ible �s ,itis' surpassed only by the American •walnut• mahogany, rosewood' 4x' fro monis file Imes boards. 'glass nuts and bolts t ' " of ibreakage ... „cry, :' taada"d sof dying. Even in these lean bronzie, fitted with silver or chonta crisscrossing like the threads of an re'aist the action, sof add, and, e 9;'3i dears' the undertakers harve a $400,- sum hardware and lined' with putted at lace. gl"s'• s'pan`k-plugs for motor cars. ' S '- ` , ,0100;000 volume of business. the man- satin and !v,elvet. The most recent (Produced ,by :bl'as'ting colld air over laj=tett' halving a care of heat- << urralent makers $40,000 000, an,d the, eimaginative addd't3on- is an, inner- sis�ting grass are designed to let y 4rg , glass that is almost molten, the mew Y ,1;�;; retadl flozists $60,000,0!00 for the dead spring mattress. material is said to be half as strong m!atorzst .dee the paT1k and tell if a a more than they have for the liv- To -day cemelteries are becoming a. as steel and, three times as elastic, plug ' a functibnnng Properly. G1 tom: ; ing. But this half 'billion total is part of the death trade far more im- Two men can stand on a windshield wallpaper lals formed pe plied i earls stand, .: ,but a small (part of the cake. portant' than the undertaking end. without breakiing it. The glass will colored glass placed' em a paper ba *taw' IBurial in America was a compara- There are 15,000 commercially im- bend under the .weight and then re- tin' g g y$,,I, tivlely simple perfotrmance until sixty portant cemeteries in' the United turn to its vormal position after- g, tkre.. hues blending ,together I� :a' years ago. The boom in funeral ele- States. In one Philadelphia deme- wards. Used as a safety -glass in novel and �brillian�t effects, One " ° ante came about 1875 With the ter 1,rts that were sold for $65 twen- Eu Pe. .it 'has just been introduced cent imiovatnan in glass tubing i! } .. 'r- g y mul'tibore .product flor use in n, r unread of industrial insurance and ty years a;;u can be resold for $1,000 arid this country. In a dib- P the introduction of eirvbalming. Fur I to -day. Some choice lots in grounds tion in England, not Dong ago, a huge Signs. As many as 'thre'e or f a •. centurie•.; the bodies of those who died , near New Fork Pity bring $10,000, pane of one -inch glass supported a hornets run nide by slide in the t penniless had been g'iveii to medical I a price that gives a value of more three -tan truck. to permit different -colored gases 1,1 students or thrown into a c•ummon pit than $1,1100,000 an ,acne. In many of This Is but one of the recent ad- glow in close proximity for Ina without ceremon N,o wonder au- the uldc,l (display e�'bcts. • ,, , y p• I properties resale can ' •be vanes 'in the work of glass. ATio'therr �,e fact that glass care be pu per. burial became the unreasoning matte only to the managements v<hich innovation with fascinating passibali- out •fnto-;the finest threads hes gi i o he Dor. m r i so- - ,, ,_ '' I;orr r of t p S all burial al i � keep most of the accrued profit for ties' is a heat-abso2bnng window pane it nerd. obs !to, cieties.aro.se to help save the bodies .hem elves. that cuts out 70 per cent of the heat J perform. For y of members from falling into the The o:d burial grounds had few rays from -the •sun. It filters out the 'surveyors have ,been having fro i'' Brands of the authorities for burial, upkeep problems. 13ut the • '�.gber infra -red rays passed by Drains"ry �� tlf the sight v��ires of their trans `` and later these societies were sup-ccntetc+ies on the ede•es of cities ran Human hairs and s+pn"d+ers webs partes, and sante in summer more + S. lemented by industrial insurance, in into a hie i difficulties after a few than 0 treied but they were affected by m P ! a ' ' i per cent of the suns rays tu,re platinum wire proved too r �k S - which .mall policies tiv,ith a weekly re ee .ears -,eu le ne much more P' �N.. P i p u ca are infra -red, the new glass is ex- file. Recent! premium of a few cents were solei j lets of the appearance c•* property peet:ed to chip air-conditioning !bills t thread's of glass, p i';',; among the poor, quite frankly as pro-! they and their neighbors did nct see by a large amount. In Pullman cars, ed so fine they are !barely nisi "' vision for death expenses. Even t0- i every day. The truth is that inter- refrigerating plants, store windows hanie been found adapted .to the ... • day a large part of the 1S billion'dol- est in mo,s•t graves lasts but a few and homes, it may have wide applfca- 'Glass vwo d, made!of masses of s lays carried by industrial policies e4- years, a fact accepted realistically 'pion. I'i'hen I examined it recently thine As;—is employed fn insula sets chiefly as a reserve' against the in European cities where° burials work and in' taking dust from c g pace at the famous Goining+ Glass Warks, ,dIItioned aim. A new filter using gl casts of the 'inevitable end. _ ' is rented for from 10 to 5 year per- at Corning, N.Y., the only difference *col is Dried to extract 99 1.When the poor were able to pay iods and tenants are dispossessed to from ordinary panes that I could de - 11, cash on d'e•parture, embalming came make room for new ones if the leas- tett was a slight greenish tinge. tenet of all dust, pollen and tae to its modern form. Only Americans es are not renewed. ^Another product of the shme plant from the air that passes through accept 'it as a matter of course. Says + s' a, lass that transmits heat rays Ocean liners, using blankets of gl y " � After a couple of decades the new g a textbook on the subject: "Embalm- ,African cemeteries were filled with light rays. An eighth of wool around steam lines in place but cuts- off , g ordinary insulation. have been li Ing and the restorative art,..are the suniken graves, rank grass, broken an inch thick, it is designed for there- erred as much '•a5 g80 tons, or chief 'trade assets of the mortician. shrubs, rusting settees and fallen peutic work in hospitals, -So efflee- TTniess t)re subject can be presentable,! monuments, with no one willing to tive is it that heat. coining throu h equivalent of more than 4,004, for public exhibition it is difficult to fire lass, will light a bit o£ tissue sergers. pad° for repairs grid .ga?d-ening,, Since g g tin• an eastern mill, a new a 1 .promote the sale oftbur'ial goods, in'pe,o,ple prefer to buy space in well- Paper without the holder being able 11 desirable quantities. The use of kept property; managements were to see the source of the rays. tion of glass is reducing the num' chemicals, faxes, rouges, powders driven to giving Bare to the neglected Almost every week, curious orders of Tuns in silk sb ckings, The woo ,and colored ,lhghts is then explained. lots: To avoid su come to..the Corning plant from all en blo'bbrns in co neon use, exp Embalzirin �brou ht the rafession- P suggestive hollows g p Intents rEvealed, absorb some of g P that appeared in time, cemeteries be- natural waxes from the silk thr al. under'Itake'r. `The 'census of 1930,1 gen to urge their clients to line the _ and 'thus increase it r 111. found 34,000, including womenj since for every service. Many of them du s brittleness. some ultra -refined funleral i lower parts o£ the graves and place substitutin glass (bobbins, this ' 1 parlors some sort of stone slab over the cof- retail business in vaults, crypts, grave g g P find it profitable to advertise "Lady- linings, etc. They supply jan'i'tor sex- has taken a long step ,toward ov 11 n „ fins, Later they evolved grave boxes domino• the difficult embalmers for women and children. of thi"ri slabs of concreke which could �''� `or mausoleums.and monuments. Q y §. In 1894 there were,.194 deaths in the' be made up by grave -diggers in their ' They rent lowering devices, tents and A recent product of ,the Oo'rn country to each undertaker, in 19301 spare time. Manufacturers seized burial ,equipment, as well as space r'e'se'arc'h men in collaboration 1.- _ but 44, The population.. increase has 'the idea and put on the market vaults in receiving ivaults, temporary maus- the 'Continen'tad Can Oompany is Wit benleflbte& uamerbaker% because I og metal or concrete. Whereas the o}sums and niches. •Same of them tin ,can with �a, glass vwindow'that health education has .lowered the slab box sells for $14, the concrete make specifications for special kinds mits shoppers to intspect .the conte il 11 death rate. OuWd+a the dnfluenza I vault brings' $50 to $100 and the mete of vaults and tombs that only they before , buying. T'es'ts conducted epidemic, the greatest stimulation of i al one $125 to. $500, 1'.'+'.i"at „began ' can supply.. At the cemetery' code the Middle 'West showed a 340 the business was the result of inten- a method of grave reinforcement, hearing the' story was told of a wo tet increase ,in the sale of ve sive work among the Gold Star !promoted by cemetery managements man who shopped for a fine sari- soles and fa ui packed in such r; TnbtheTs and patriotic socneties for in the interest of upkeep ecoriotity, tory tomb "approved approved by -the Board tainers. the return of the war dead for re- has become "a final protection to the of Health. After buying the tomb Frequently in research work, sol" (burial- „ he was told by the: graveyard where fists evolve +by-products of impo. dear ones. The rise of the dead to commer- she had a lot that it dad not come up ante and value. While seeking tial importance is shown by the , Out of the ,landscaping and main- to their specifications and her hus- devellop glass less' affected by sud present average burial costs for in-) teuanbe difficulties of the manage- band's body'.was refused admission. Extremes of temperature, so that meats came two developments, the + dustrial policy holders, which range P � As ye, the significance of perpet- way* lantern globes, for instar memorial dark idea and. the perpet- from $194 in Norah Carolina to $4841 ual tare funds is little recognized. would na't `break when struck do New Jersey, The standard of dy- ual care funds. The memorial "parks The fund at Fsreat Latin estabiisli2d thundai5lhrawers, they enoIved ing set .by thb low income majority) have cleverly promoted a campaign on a new plan in 1917, is already ov- formula for the revolutionary gl 'bas stimulated expenditure all up the I agains,, the old, ghost -haunted, bat- er half a million dollars; that of now urged in making cooking dish k , , lime. Under "the tutelage of,the, Na- filled, depressing graveyards. In West Laurel Hill, near Philadelphia, Experimenting further with i h e m ' r;.,' •n,. edamal Casket Company, the old -1 h em. rial park all old-fashioned is nearing a million and' a half; it is same heat -resisting glassware, t Leath emblems are taboo. Even the fashioned .pine coffin has disappeared ; ltimla= easy to estimate a billion dollars at ev+alvad a whole new system of el morns ed teams are abolished , . and even the cloth -covered one is i „ least in he near.}futu•re for the ev- tric cooking 'which may prove vas �;� s aveyards, become gardens of mem- rntual t st funds of the cemeteries in ortanet in the 'home. In it, 90 •• cry" and "valhallas of love," An out- now in existence. What. they will be ce t'of the electrical energy goes ¢!x .. standing example of this new type is in a few more generations is beyond to the food, and the latter is just z' Forest Lawn,, near Las Angeles. imagination, but they and the insur- well done at the center as on tate which boasts that it has more inter- an'ce r•es-r-ve should provide the coun- or bottom. An ordinary elec P menta than an other cemetery in P'. I Y try's tidiest reservoir for i;rvest- bulb in a reflector within a s Southern 'California and an annual `' payroll. of half a million dollars. Its meats. chamber gives off the radiant en The American cost of dying has, that does the cooking, I Little Church of the Flowers, inspir- in all truth, reached absurd heights, The frs't factory in America j";. ed by the Stoke Poges church of We forget the simplicity of an earl- a glass works. In 1609, a plant "` � & Gray's Elegy and containing a fram- I ier time, when friends prepared the marking colored beads and glasses ed tribute from Bruce Barton, a body, placed i,t in a box made by the was turning out its crude product i- , Bride's Room, and a collection of neighboring carpenter, and bare it Jameat�wn, Va. Three and,a qua :songbirds that "trill only the melody on their shoulders to a grave in the centuries later, in the midst of d of lose," has become the most popu- village churchyard. Only the great Age of Glass undreamed of ,,th t,,_ y it lar place in the region for weddings. in those days had elaborate tombs. research men are busy making n L.. �MaIF -I.P Land is but a single source of mod- Even that of George Washington. discoveries, devising new metho R - " g, erngraveyard revenue. Mat mart- however, was much .plainer than the opening u new fields, pushing ah :; 4aar P. P P >; P THE agemen�s .permit no outside labor on .mauso"leum of many a small-town toward dramatic possibilities r the grounds and, 'make high charges 1 business man 'to -day, still lie in the future. r4,. . . f; . I '. F :., r rr4. (iV":: V "... tl.,,,'.!,....I'e��*"'-"."..,'I 1041,111111 Pli""���,�,�,�m��;",�k�'ll�""...,...",",,.,�:���l'o",�',�l, !!I""**�",..il��""".,�-,�-1, .1 .", ,'.. t -�'� �i 1 ,t.W7) v y /a. n .k., _Z, i' !led ven ears u'blle its. were oas- brit- u11- ble, work. uch tion on - ass pei feria it. ass of lig pas- rca- ber od eri- the cad By ant Br- ing with a per- nts in Per get- con- en - z t - to den rail- ce, by the aSs es. his hey ec- tl y per In - as top tric pedal eTgy was for are at rter an en, cad V& i'>T»; u 1% I '�L',y ,y pp,�� per q�,,,q� ,P.r�, .1. yIyy. , ' .',:t4 t , �1 ^f1'] .49i T,..'J ,+e.•A"r-1$ i'Ii'}�IF.E ae �,.4+ 1,?K .•:'r. :, I •Y! } o t$. IMa..i q.` a Via:. d „'-; . „ t! F•' V . yrs` M :� IN: yy I• - is. t I '.� . ... .. �9 al . & a • y"s d •th � " a P2 t � & , .M,. ..lzttie a:+ J, not I .l.e �ht 1!xu4a •e1d ` ' 70-Y1.ealr'-al,'*#O". P L&> 1Pt5. °r shed unless prollrex. y' .lyrbtect+ ti mrt' 0)"a'', 4.il -tables �yeozn the e#ects "' ear Kx1XS1 } Chex, It is'npt'always feasi'lr�e to af�' ' man who 90W .this sort of Ivretoo, on to ma.. i once. ruerad severely gineryr wn a farm, !l?uf ' a great deal " `P £tom rlieumatdsm writes,-`,. more can, fixe done to prevent d!et;er- .' "!For a long time ,Z' suffeied with 10rat'gn than is ,sometimes, the case, ' rheumatism, and at one time was, laid 1Vlacl#inery retlI.;_ Quitalble hou Ilsep 109 up for about nineweeks• A•�out nve all the year round', if the aftrixead is•,. years pgo I was. advised l to try to -be kept in check. although often Kruschen• I did` so, and' have contin, in the exigencies of farming this .is tied tisdxig them ever. since. Krusehen not always an easy matter. IIi the did the trick, as. I have not had a aibsenee. of proper protection from, rheumatic pain for over four years• the weather, rust' sand decay* plpy I dam nearly 70 years of age, and. feel- havoc with ilio various pants,. and , ing fine, and always able for my day's- careful' farmers make it a rote to worrk—thanks to Kruschemll-- L. S. 0'^ t their machines ,upder cover as Kruschen dissolves 'away- those si"on, as Possible.' These farmers needle -pointed crystals 'of ttrie acid krw% that stabling for mach5nery is which are the cause of all rheunfatic as nett-ssary as for the live stock. troubles. It will ' also flush .%ese kf.Odes ,building inexpensive but of dissolved crystals clean out of the ficient sheds for their maehdnes,they rvtstem, Then if you keep tip ,"the make it a rule to ,inspect each ma - little daily dose," excess uric acid chine every day' to see that the bear - will never form again. � ings have 'been properly oiled, that If the guts are. tight, and the working 1 } t7 ` ,� 'It.... a, 1� r�,f� y �s�.. r# t �r 1_ W'. I *ry�tt�,� mt . 1.� + ;)t fin,•. a ' i tilt i •r . yyf TA # , i:. 0. I A t �� . ., 11 parts are in, alignment and working The Usefulness Of smi.ofbly. These precautions have I ' saved money, prevented loss through Farm Accounts delay, and Obviated exasperation and worry. The sound Ilio the many obvious, reasons for y fih 'present-day machine-.. keeping farm accounts should oe add. worked farm really requires to be • ed the following one, at least under equipped' with a forge, an anvil, a present conlditions• Farmers seekin stack of ,dives, A. drill, a tool grinder... •. I g and sets of hammer`s, wrenches,' ' credit are .!being required to furnish punches and chisels, 'not to mention a , cx n amount Dunt o • f infarmati n. g o s 71 of stock ock A y re • ars for a relS1,80p,. A statement of net worth! as, obtain- ment of parts. . r, P Pace- • ed from a"farm account !book ,is the, basic credit statement. In addition, .•- `- I. borrowers may' !be, required to furn- COOKERY HI11T'1`S wFmq that hungry feeling budget ash a of expenses and income eova"I to in the evening, in order to arrive at a schedule of (By Barbara B. Brooks) �' . Ibbrr'owing and repayments., With- ' serve yourself a big "bowl of • out adequate record's of 4rig farm " Cookery (hints were s'toc'k in trade long before there were cookery ,books, Kellogg's Corn Flakes let self j sus the. borrower cannot do him- women's magazines,. newspaper food self justice or ,preserrit his 'application pages or radio kitchen broadcasts. ' milk or cream.' These a e• ' in .the. 'm'os't favorable light. I , app e. and men, too, where cooking Furthermore, over a Pperiod of sev- vas "a man's' jqb, passled on their lit tizing golden Bakes -will satr oral years; farm, account boak� bring tie kitchen secrets or guarded them out an increasing number of useful carefully, according to dispositions isfy your hunger. Ant; ' facts. The records suggest that and circumstances, ` different fields •'need different soil The use of the word "hint" in this they'll let you'sleep soundly, treatm8rit. They give definite Stan- connection tells much about the` because the estsoeasil . dards 'of performance in the use of tory or development, of cookery. Iain- . y y feeds, in the -production of (butter#at 75 used here in the sense of "a sug- and other, livestock products, and do gestion or a reminder without a full You can he certain Heat much to change the .yearly• plans of declaration". In the early days cobiks Iearnecl from one another by seeking Kelloggs are always crisp the fax+Ilier from a matter df chane', and passing on hints. Recipes going and guesswork into reasoned' plans "a' full' declaration" of ingredients, and oven -fresh because 'based on demonstrated facts and re-, amounts and procedures, as we find s lationships. -.111111— them now, were practically unknown they re petit -sealed' in the until comparatively recent years. # patented WAXTITE bad At To=day our cookery knowledge' for ,One must look ahead a good many the most part is circulated in the grocers everywhere. Quality, years ip (trimming hedges. If too form of (precisely stated, -tested rec- much grgwth left on e'a6h `year•. ipes, However. all cook _ s' still seek ' _ • guaramteefl. Made , by Kr& --- the -hedge will take up far too much "hints" and find in them practical space. If, for instance, one, inch of suggestions for new ways and short- logg.in London, Ontario. growth is left all over the, hedge cuts) which make cooking easier and • each year, that means an' increase; of more interesting. two inches in width each year, and 'We ' all like to exchange cookery ' 111 o lour years the hedge would be over' secrets, so here are some which may f"our feet wide at the baste. With 1}��0�., ,new, Do you know that -- two inches a year left of growth, the `Vegetable cocktail is made ,by com- base of the hedge' would be over bincho A�' B ®ir iV4 eight feet in width in'25 years. g Pped cabbage, celery, green pepper and seasoning in a• thin gels- ' • tin mixture.. .Serve with a spicy __ _ I -V i. I.cocktail sauce. Pickles have a variety of uses other than to garnish sandwiches and seal- / ' rad ads. Add finely chopped pickle with II--►► -r AW a few drops of onion juice to mayors- Cl of �. naise to serve with fish or to moisten !LAK � �p choplfed meat for sandwich filling. •ova " s . �l Add chopped -pickle to white. sauce #'4OA°r' '". U. ' just before s!erv�ing, it on cauliflower. 9' R j A HEALTH sERWCE or - Chop mixed mustard pickle and cream ti THE CANADIAN MEDICAL I with 'butter; use 'between very thin ' ASSOCIATION AND LIFE slices of buttered bread; hast and INSURANCE Cb IAPANIli • IfJ CANADA Servo hot with tea. Add thin slices i ' , ' of -pickle to potato, rice or macaroni GETTING WELL salad At the ,best,getting well of tuber- Cereals are not only it extenders" g g for fish saladst, but improve the flavor down, it will dd the basting and save culosis is 'a long, tedious and expen- by cutting excessive oiliness. sive experience, The earlier the dis- �' you the. trouble. If the roast does steamed 'rice with tuna and corn not have fat -of its, sown ease is diagnosed, the (better chance flakes with salmon in the raportion ee of there is for recovery in a shorter of one-third cereal to two -girds �h. bacon or salt pork will, wive the space of time. The severity of the Combine as usual with other ingre- ,purpose. disease and its extent when. discover- dients in your fish salad: recipes. A !bowl of corn .!lakes and a,rYe- ed determine, in large measurewhe- with cream or whole milk is a' res !Cold water put into a hot skillet fresihan'g and delicious- dturchluncheonik ther or not the (patient will get' well, . the time it will take him to recover twill time cause it to ,buckle, due swPper. and how fit he will be after reoov- t0 Uneven expansion of the metal. , If baked potatoes are opened or ery. All of which leads to the con- A scoop of ice cream on a serving pricked as soon as they come front of corn flakes, makes a •wlholemme the oven, they will not be soggy. elusion that it is important to bring tuberculosis under treatmeert early. pourishang dessert, especialIy good To divide a Pie alto five portions. . for the children s supper, first mark it with a well - (Pneumonia. typhoid fewer, measles praportiou- and other acute, diseasesrun their It is not necessary to !baste roasts' ed better "Y"; then divide equally the course; .the patient ,usually recovers if the meat is placed in the -pan fat two large sections an each side oil and 'although some permanent dam- side up. As the fat" melts and runs the "Y." age may result, the disease itselfis elided. Tuberculosis is not self-lim- ited in this way. Tuberculosis is us- ually a chi`oiide disease and even when �T the disease is said to be cured, but DONT RISK BAKING FAILURES! what should be designated as arrest- ::Sri'>'+.L>:::::•::2?t ::i;2•:;;•r,:t:::-::;u•w:.>x+•:::::.r>:.:::e,.., ,...: . ed the tuber :...:...:......:. •:.,, ;:>>.::•.<. <>: <;;r :> <T :::;<::»::.:.::.::., ::.;.:" culosis will recur unless .: •>. { =a'>:a, ey,;;s theoffer :>•>:<•<•..>s:•>:.:•:::.:::::: patient takes ro er care of hila- •:::,:: . P P :�.: •::t•:::.;.... self. This idea is ex[�xessed' in the �� :s< >:•: ' GOOD BAKING NE DS GOOD `:``:: ""'" '`0;1�!.".-'�,;�'. `W. ``ix. ..:>. .. Phrase, "once tuberculous - always � ���'s'%'r#%`'%�`'�''-. :#� tuberculous," which means that once MATERIALS. DON'T RI K r` d a person has had tulbereulosis care • S ` !~l "'''"" R� :<::: must. be taken throughout life to a- DOUBTFUL BAILING POWDER.'fo void a return of the disease, .' �'' j This is not a gloomy outlook. The LESS THAN 10 WORTH OF � arrested case who .takes reasonable t �t1. '!`:;b 11 di' care of himself, above all avoiding MAGiC MAKES A FINE CAKED' ,y -Fe F`�� & ra fatigue and securing plenty of 'rest, '*--- ;fin+. ::�•. will, in all likelihood, outlive his �+�F ::'f friends who have never had tuber- says MISS HELENG.CAMPx ", culosis and who do not ,pay attention -�*�:.:% BELL, well-known director „�,...,.`;>�c to the health ,needs 'of their 'bodies. "�txewnrtesrd of the crwr¢latne institute '' :'s,:i> .�.�;t;;, F �' Illness teaches us the value of >,:X..r, health and •those who (contract tuber- culosis learn how to live a sane ' healthy Iife for the maintenance and Canada's Leading Cookery Experts caution against Promotion of ,physkal well-being. # trusting expensive ingredients to inferior baking The treatment of tuberculosis is I powder. They advise MAGIC for best resuftsl built around rest, good food and fresh. t 1 1 r air. Of the three. rest is by far the CONTAINS NO ALUM—This apatementonevery most impbrtant. It is not to ,be ex- roloNNsNOP,u� tin is your guarantee that Magic Baking Pow- MADE IN petted that a diseased' 1•un�g will !real N.derisfrAefrom alumor any harmful iagredlent. CANADIL without rest any more than a broken ' stints. 11 knit -unless kept at rest tryNEW LOW PRICES No chanty p Perharps• the chief reasan'for send,- ■ in Quality in:g patients to sanatonuita for treat- ment is that they may learn how to > y rest. -Sleep is,rest, but azo one can sleep all the time. The patient must, therefore, learn to rest in bed when awake, with 'the mind at !peace and the b'&dy relaxed, and avloid'ingg any GlyppSE THE ECs unnecOssary ,physical effort, As the 1 0 o ti c 'lE4 AN fir t � condition imlproves#i;the ep$tle!tdt is, by WQy� tgQyp°he C(5!NMEWLY C`A1'ED degrees, (brought back to aeti'vlties. 750 ROOMS=-�RA"9S " fe gib $ 'ea c1 750 ROOMS --RATES.." ThrOu hoot do r�emr'aind'e> Vf, his life. fr adequate Test, will itve his dAhl7ilant ..•1 1.50 th • $Z50 , as tl � p�.i`irar $1.50 to $2.50 ,�. tressed to ttt� malt• int h d th' 4& =