HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1921-12-29, Page 7:HISTORIC GARDENS
iff THE MOTHER LAND
INDIAN GARDEN WHICH
;FIGURES IN HISTORY
With
The
BOY
was
'a
A short time ago the Rotarians of
Events That 'Swayed Fate of Oweu Saultd listened to a fine address
de -
Empires OCCInrkC 131 Peace -at one of their weekly meetingv, de-
livered by Mr. Frank C:, Irwin, assist -
full Pleasure Grounds. ant provincial commissioner of the
13oy Scouts Association. Mr. Irwin and
It was in the garden at Chequer; a number of the local Scout leaders
that the first intimation was given of,were the guests of the club. Follow -
the fateful conference at Washingtonlug the address a number of Rotarians
upon viii#ch, not in'peehably,. the fu-' volunteered to become interested in
ture of civilization hangs. 'the Boy Scout movement in their Lo -
It was Sunday afternoon, and the cality and the club itself will give the
American Ambassador •had arrived,' movement hearty support.
with a cablegram in his pocket from i In his address Mr. Irwin reviewed
the American President. It was an the splendid work accomplished by -the
invitation to the British Government Boy Scouts and told of some of their
to nand representatives to Washing- war -time activities. He referred .es -
ton to discuss the question of dis-
armament.
Mr. Harvey, the ambassador, and
Mr. Lloyd George Were seated to-
gether in the garden when the former
'handed the cablegram to the Prime
peciafly to the fine results obtained in
Pentang, where the Scouts hada com-
munity hall and where the movement
had resulted hi a much better Sealing
among the Protestants and Catholics
of that town. The boys had taken an
Minister. important part in the Tercentenary
Ina flash the Prime Minister was celebration there last summer.
on his feet. The members of the Rotary Club are
"Wo accept!" he almost shouted, right behind the movement, aa boys'
work is one of the most important
duties of Rotary Clubs, and Boy Scout
work is essentially boys' work.
* t 8'
The following editorial is clipped
A. Great Turning -Point. from the Halifax Herald:
The Temple Garden, on the Em- This happened in a Barrington
bankment, is one of the most his- Street restaurant yesterday. A little
torie spots in, London, for it was there gentleman of about twelve years of
that the Wars of the Roses really age was noticed holding a swinging
commenced. These wars were so- door open for an old lady. When she
called because the ensign of the had passed out to the sidewalk, her
House of York was a white rose, and "escort" saw to it that este was guided
that of the House of Lacaster a red safely across and into an automobile
rose. waiting at the curb. -
The sbo.ry goes that my Lords Som- One did not niee7d to be told that the
•erset and Yark, with a umber of their little follow was a Boy Scout. He did
1'a)baitters, met in the Temple Gardens, not have any distinguishing- badges
and commenced to quarrel about the "tip" and ho had left his "Baden -
weak XingHenry VL, for whom the "Baden-
Powell" at Mune—but he had Boy
former was . regent. Scout written all over him
In the. midst- of 'the quarrel Somer-
eet picked a red rose, and, turning
to his friends, -said:
"Let him whro •sides with me pluck
a red rannand wear it in his cap!"
Then the •' Duke of Yark savagely
'tore a white •rose front a neighboring
bush, and cried:
"This is my badge! Let him who
is my friend,pluerk a white rose and
year it!"
'This scene is pictured in one of the
frescoes in the Houses of Parliament.
It was one of the great turning -
:•points in English history, for the
Wars of the Roses shattered feudal-
ism. destroying the power of the bar-
ons, and set in Motion the spirit of
freedom and democratic government
blot is he keynote te of ntod„1•n
Eng-
land. ) t yn „
land.
A Momentous Decision.
The vast empire of India was vir-
tually won far Britain in a garden.
On February 5th, 1757, just outside
the Village of sPlussy, ,Surajah Dowlah
had G0,000 -troops, and Clive a,000.
Clive called a eauncit of war, which
advised him not to advance. Clive
went into a garden alone, and sat
under a grove of trees for an hour in
quiet thought. When he came out he
rejected the council's advice, and sub-
dued an empire in a battle which only
lasted an.hour!
Wilberforce first mooted the ques-
tion of the abolition of the slave trade
to Pitt in et garden. 'Wilberforce had
just read Clarkson's famous essay on
abolition, when he was invited to
spend a week -end with Pitt, and wan-
dered with him into the '•t.autiful
park at Holwood, near Bramley.
`There he first announced his inten-
tion to the great statesman of bring-
ing the subject before the House. The
res &utas was m .de at the foot of a
tree still ealled Wilbeeforce's Oak,
and a 'stone seat, ereseed by the Earl
of Stanhope, marks the spot.
,9here a Great Noel Was Born.
A little later, when Wilberforce put
his cash before the Hoose, Pitt, Fox,.
and ;Burke sttpperted him, and all
England rang with applause.
Mote°r-buses, ciz...__1 ants, and thou -
"We accept gladly, we accept grate-
fully! We will do everything in our
power to make the conference a suc-
cesS."
WHERE NATURE
1THE CAUSE 4F BACKACHE ciessi lea Ative tizeme ,t3.
PLAYER PIANO P alt SALE.
�(
FIRES THE BOILERS only in Rare Cases Does Back nLLL 1 -'LAYER PIE NO iN GOOD
i,D Condit)on, with a large. somber of
ache Mean Kidney Trouble. music roils, for salt, ata bargain,
L. Costello, 73 West Adelaide Street,
Every iuu'ele of the body needs con- Toronto,
steetly a rtuppiy of rich, red blood in
proportion to the work it doe:'. The
zrtuscles of the back are under a heavy ATT KINDS UV :Lav AND Ustic,
strain and wave but little rest. When belting. I,ulleys,,jaws, eatbie,hose,pacicing,
the blood is thin they lack nourish.- gcice£;h) i iet'e"eti a err tECepi3 7'iitllCiot e t.
talent, and the result is a sensation of 115 YOltK, STRfelT, TORONTO.
Pair in those lnu,SCles. Some people HELP WANTED.
think peen inCthe back means kidney
ITALY'S INDUSTRIES RUN
BY N.f' TURAL POWER.
Boiling Springs and "Pulling
Holes" in Volcanic Area .
Take Place of Coal
Italy and its geographical neighbor-
ltoad comprise a volcanic area within
which plutonic marifes•tattons are by
no means restricted to Versnvfus. have progressed to a critical point
Stromboli and I3tna--the three "burn- without developing a pain in the back. The Average Man.
Ing mountains" so conspicuously as This being the case, pain in the back When it comes toe question of trust -
should always lead the sufferer to look 1i„g
to the condition of his blood. It millYourself to the risks of the road,
be found in most eases that the Use et When the thing is the sharipg of 'bur -
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to build up • dens.
tite blood will stop the sensatton of The lifting the heft o.: a load.
pain in the lit -nourished muscles of the In the hour of peril or trial,
back. How muck better it is to try In the hour you Incas as you can,
You may safely depend on the wisdom
And skill of the average man.
BELTING. FQR. BALE
trouble, but the best )medical authorl- • S swlO DU PLAIN
anti light etinc; at
home, whole or
i that backache id ort
BITS OF
NUM411
lEfE VIERS
.A .P.oft Answer.
New office tiny: A pian called here
to thrash you a few minutes ago.
Editor: What did you say to him?
New office boy: I told him I was
sorry, you weren't in.
Praise!
ties agree It se am spare time; r;oea Fats; work sent any "What do you think?" said a little
never has anything to do with the kid- jur29rttuirirHhat "ev'atiut ai Send
stamp
boy to his mother; "my teache has
neytt.: Organic kidney disease tatty Co.. 1\tontreal• been praising use to -day."
"What did he say to you, Charlie?"
"Well, he said nothing to me, but
he said to the next boy: `You're the
most good-for-nothing boy in the class
—even Charlie behaves i-e:te • ttiaet
soeiated witb the histoiy of the Medi-
terranean.
Thus in Tuscany (north of Rome)
there is a valley, south of the a•noleut
Etruscan city of Volterra, where for
a distance of thirty miles the land•
scope derives picturesqueness from
many boiling springs and "pui:irg Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the blood
holes" that emit steam, than to give way to, unreasonable
Geologists say that these puffing alarm about your kidneys. If you sus -
holes go down to great depths in pect your kldneys, any doctor can
granite strata -where exceedingly high
volcanic temperatures prevail. The
springs of bailing water, from the
same source, contain much boric acid,
and tar a century past they have yield-
ed commercial- e,upplies of that pro-
duct itt such quantity that a great deal
has been avaliable for export. An
Lilian engineer named C'iaachi con-
ceived the idea of drilling deep holes
in the vicinity of the springs, and
thereby developing new ones. It warn
carried out very successfully: but it
Oat the unfortunate man his life. He
fell into one of its artificial springs
and was par -boiled before ne could he
dragged out.
Profitable Industry.
The scheme was developed by his
successors, and very profitably. great
quantities of the boric acid being sold
to the French glass factories. It was
then a much scarcer and more costly
product than it is to -day. The simple
A true -gentleman in the making, rneans adopted for obtaining it was to
that Is what that boy is. •And if for no evaporate the water in huge caldrons,
other reason than the reason supplied wood providing the - requisite fuels,
through that delightful little incident, Increasingscarcity• as wood' made
we grown-ups . should beck the troy the process too; expensive, and he 1827
Scout Movement with every•meaa3 iu a Frenchman, Comte Francais de•Lar-
ta
our power derel,-hit upon the clever notion of
* * a, * * using the steam from the puffing holes
All information regarding the or- to furnish heat, dispen.eing with fuel.
ganization of Boy Scout and Wolf Cub altogether. The', water required for
(Junior Scout) Packs can be had upon evaporation was drawn from the
application to the Field<Dep•artment of springs into immense pane of lead, be -
the Boy` Scouts Association Headquar- neath which the 'steam was conducted
ters, Bloor and Sherbourne Streets, through -pipes. Production thereupon
Tomato. jumped to more than 2,000 tons of
;i boric acid a year. The industry
brought into being a number of tewns
Whence Conies the Om-an'.s and villages in a region which a few
Salt? years earlier had been uninhabited.
Ithaslong been an accepted theory Atong the moat important centres of
it nt time are the towns of
that the ocean derived its salt from
.at
the present
the rocks of the land. Rivers carry Larderello, yearsSeagoana and occurredLustmanor
salt to the sea, together with other A few it to the
Minerals, engineers in charge of this picturesque
inerals, and there it has accumulated
throughenterprise that steam from the puffing
the ages. This refers only to
common salt, which is sodium chloride, - holes might be turned to profitable sc-
an element so far essential to the count for power pd there weEe
suchs
health of the human body that we were installed, and there wad
could not survive without it, It is that the disappointment
mineral salts contained in the
when it was found
table salt, lacking which most of our that
'vapor attacked the metal or the ma
foods would taste fiat and insipid, chinery so injuriously that it soon re -
Sea water contains other salts, not- fused to operate.
ably those of magnesium and potas-
sium, both of which, like sodium, are Boon •t, Goalless> Italy.
metals. It is a fluid of very complex This difficult', however, was event -
chemical make-up, containing even natty overcome by the adoption of
appreciable percentages of gold and means whereby the vapor was put
silver. Which, of course, is what might through a prelitninary process of puri -
be expected in view of the .contribu_ fication, the salts being removed from
tions of land -detritus by the rivers, it. Turbine engines were installed,
But now a •new theory is being put and now a first-class electrical plant
forward, based upon the alleged fact Is supplying Volterra and other towns
that the salts of the sea do not corres- with current, the power being derived
pond quantitatively to the salts of the wholly from steam of subterranean
land, That is to say, their relative origin.
quantities do not correspond. For one The steam being supplied to the tur-
item there is an enormous excess of b#nes free of cost, the electric power,
chlorides. The backers of this theory usd for lighting and other purposes,
are disposed to contend that the salts is very cheap. In a country where
of the ocean are largely of volcanic coal is so scarce and dear as it is in
origin, taken up in solution from ma Italy, such a source of inexpensive
terials vomited up from the sea bot- energy is highly appreciated.
tom at a period when the terrestrial To augment the supply of available
globe was as yet in the making, its steam, many deep boring's have been
crust being in process of formation, made, thus creating artificial puffing
To support this idea, they say that holes. Eleven average borings yield
the crater of Vesuvius after each power equal td that derivable front the
burning of tentons of coal per hour.
Apparetttly the borings do not affect
the pressure at which the steam f3 de-
livered front the depths of the earth;
and the quantity of steam, at an un-
varying pressure, is not diminished as
time goes on.
.A Roaring Game.
snake tests in ten minutes that will
set your fears at rest, or tell you the
worst. But in any event to be per-
fectly healthy you must keep• the
blood in good condition, and for this
'purpose no other medicine can' equal
Dr. Williams' Pink Pilin.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine, or by mail at `►0•
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
Suspended Ferry Carries
Traffic Across River,
A novel kind of bridge for trans-
porting pedestrians and vehicles
aerce s a river, without interfering in
any way with the passage of full rig-
ged oceangoing shipping, is in opera-
tion at the town of Newport. Eng.. on
the river Usk, four miles from its
Junction with the Severn. On account
of the • steepness; of the banks, the
great rise and fail of the tides, the
length of the a pan, and the height of
headway needed, any ordinary loud of
-bridge was: impracticable, and there -
tore this special kind, called a "trans-
porter bridge," was erected.
The stationary members of the
bridge consist of a pair of supporting
towers, 242 ft. high, on each bank of
the river. These carry two trussed
girders, 16 ft. deep and 26 ft. from
centre to centre, across the span of
645 ft. The total clearance from
high-water level to the underside of
the ;pan is 177 ft. The horizontal
trussed girders are tied together and
braced as in any ordinary bridge span,
and their bottom chords form a track,
la each case, for 15 wheels on either
side of its web. These wheels are car-
ried oil steel brackets, which are part
of a large travelling frame, 104 ft.
long, which forms the means of trans-
partating a suspended platform or car-
rier. The travelling frame is propell-
ed by a continuous cable driven by a
drum in connection with two 35 -hp.
electric motors in the power house
near -one end of the bridge.
sands of Motor -ears pass by Box Hill eruption is found covered with a white
and the pretty little hotel which crust that is in composition exactly
nestles unsex its foot at Burford like sea salt! It is estimated by geo-
Bridge without knowing that' in the logists that the common salt in the
beautiful old garden at the back of ocean would make 4,800,000 cubes each
one mile in size, which if spread over
the house Nelson took leave of his Canada would form a layer one and
beloved "Emma"—the Lady Hanlil- six -tenths miles high.
ton, whom Romney painted over sixty
Imes ---,before he took coach to Ports- i HIED
BABY
mouth and thence sailed on that OFI��� 1�1�1h1! o 1)A1)
cruise which ended at Trafalgar.
Itt that very sante garden another
event happened which men do not The winter season�is a bard one on
teicel as mach etccount of, but which the baby. He to more or less confined
:nave nevertheleee'count for more in to stuffy, badly ventilated rooms. It
When the term of a certain gover-
nor-general of Canada expired and he
was about to retire to India, the de-
votees of the spirt of curling made
hint a farewell address. According to
the true evolution of the race. is so often .stormy diet the mother Lord Frederic Hamilton in his book,
:falls :Eats wrote the greater part
oz. " +'ttdytnion" ase he wanted those
paths, listening to the birds and look-
lezg upon the beautiful landseape, and
veined there that immortal phrase:
"A, thin" of beauty is a joy for-
ever'."
Canada°s mining industry has in-
ereeaed twelvefold in 80 years from
$14,000,000 to $,178,000,000.
does not get hien out in the fresh air
as often as she should. Ile catches
colds which rack Itis little system; his
stomach and bowels get out of order
and he becomes peevish and cross. To
guard against this the mother should
keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in
the house. '['hey regulate the stom-
ach and bowels and break up calls.
They aro sold by medicine dealers or
by mail at 25 .nate a box from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brock-
ville, Ont•
neeneet intents Cunelueively show that ""'
the pt'iein of tomato seed eanttain all OattwIa zzoodi'Mae people attd eapi.
the amino wide e5
yet
Ll to.11
'0
tol to de
dbt
o
)
herfertile lands and
growtIh of,aui:nals and also •auffieiont natural rosautreas, and presents appal--
wt�ater-soluble vit>antizttr. Thousands ttutities ul1 antit5'ed by zany eotitrtry
02 mita 'of ' onnaeo :semis ere washed - itt the world..
t,ac't ':t0'4.• Fly >ibei tomato pulping ,..... ,1- • 1 i
• piiintss 006tiarI'a uototeat fat riv'e't tits'CO is,
s
"Days Before Yesterday," the govern.
or-general—the present Lord Lans-
downe—made a very happy reply.
Speaking of the regret he felt at
leaving Ottawa and severing the ties
that bound hint to Canada, he remark-
ed that, bearing in mini the climate of
India, he did not anticipate much curl.
ing there, and that he should miss the
"roaring game." In feet, he thought
that the only roaring game that he
was likely to cache • itt contact with
would probably ben, Bengal tiger.
"Let us hope," Ire Concluded, ':that
your ex-govera0r•general-will be• found
pursuing the roaring game not beteg
by it.
punned it
'Tis the average. man and no other
Who does his plain duty each day.
The small thing itis wage f5 for doing,
you."
A Scottish Mother.
"Now tell nie," said the inspector,
"who was the mother of our great
Scottish hero, Robert Bruce?"
He pointed to the top boy and then
around the class. There was no ans-
wer. Then at last the heart of the
teacher leaped with'joy. The bay who
was standing at the very foot had held
On the commonplace bit of the way. up itis hand.
'Tis the average man, may God bless "Well, nzy boy," said the Inspector
him,
Who pilots• us. still in the van.
Over land, over sea, as we travel •--
• Just the plain, hardy, average man.
Soon through the days of existence.
All mingling in shadow and shine,
We may count on the every -day hero.
encouragingly, "who was she?"
"Please, sir. IIrs. Bruce."
Lucky Beatrice.
Deny was telling the next door. little
girl all about -it.
"My sister Beatrice is axially
lucky."
"'Why?"
HAMILTON WOMAN
ADVISES MOTHERS
SAYS HER TWO DAU H.
VERS NOW PICTURES
OF HEALTH;
'eels lit Day to Telt Others
How T ensue Brought Happi..
nes0 to Her Home.
"My two daugetere have been as
wonderfully built up and made tiff
strong and healthy by taking Tanlac
I just feel It is my duty to let other
mothers know about my. experlenee,"
said Mrs. Arthur f eliman, 134 V`er-
gttson Ave., North Hamilton, Ont.
"My oldest daughter, Amy, was ie a
run-down condition Ler three yeara9.
She had a very zzrrr,e• appetite and
what little rhe did Cat f-ecntelt to da
he more harm thee good. She vvas
pale, weal: and en'. i tired. Three
bottles of Tania made iter well and
strong. Icer appetite returned, her
sleet- became restfi c eco'. her cilec?i: t
gut rosy. In fast, alts is the very pie-
ture of health.
"My daughtc. Ida's rate was aia?a=,st
identical, except. her ecuditten ,.alert
quite as serious. Just two bottles put
her in the bait of ltealtit. Every time
I look at my girls now and see them
enjoying rub splendid health, I real-
ize what a bfeesing Taniae has been
to our home, and I feel it my duty t•e
talk out and let people lam* about
title grand medicine."
Tanto is sold b leading druggist,t
Whom haply the gods may divine. everywhere. Adv..
But who wears the swarth grime of hie "-She went to a party last nigh,.
calling, where they played a game in which the In the h'l.•ie. tit. were "girl" eremite
And labors and earns as he can• il:en either had to hiss a girl or pay but onset.
And stands at tate last with the a forfeit of a box of chocolates."
noblest-- "Well, how was Beatrice lucky?"
The commonplace, average man. "She came home with thirteen boxes
•
Energy Required in Sewing by
Hand and With Machines.
That there is a great difference in
the expenditure of energy required with
different ways cf sewing, was demon-
strated
scientists. )' tt e
strated recently by
variation was found in hand hemming
on fins handlrercitiefs ootton sheets,
S -oz. cotton duck, or army blankets,
but when the speed of sewing was in-
creased, the expenditure of energy
increased in proportion. Hemming
sheets on a foot -driven machine, which
was discovered to be about six timed
as fast as doing the sante work by
hand, required six times as much en-
ergy. but the energy, per yard of sew-
ing, was hardl} one-half as great.
'when an electrically driven machine
was used, the energy required per
hour was not quite twice that used for
hand sewing, and about one-fourth of
that used for the foot-driveu machine.
Canada has most extensive fishing
grounds -0,000 utiles on the Atlantic,
- 7,000 miles an the Pacific and 220,000
square miles •fresh water.
The postoffice pensions and labor
ministry departments in Great Britain
employ 8,000 women.
A Rhinoceros Horse.
The beast referred to in the Bible as
a "unicorn" is almost undoubtedly the
single -horned rhinoceros of Southern
Asia, which, needless to say, is a very
formidable beast.
At Calcutta there is a famous Zoo,
which, specializing in Asiatic animals,
keeps on exhibition a number of rhin-
os of this species.
The other day a native, who ltad
never before seen a rhinoceros, visited
the Zoo and, overcome with amaze-
ment was suddenly inspired with an
ambition to ride the biggest one,
which at the moment lay peacefully
dozing in his pen. He proceeded there-
upon to climb the iron fence, despite
the protests of other persons who
sought to restrain him and who looked
'in rain for a guard or keeper to pre-
vent the crazy action.
• Once over the fence, he boldly strad-
dled tite huge animal, and cooked
around hint for admiration. But the
rhinoceros, amazed and indignant,
leaped up with surprising agility,
threw the man off, impaled him with
his horn, cast him thirty feet into the
air and then lay dawn upon him.,
Guards, summoned to the scene, killed
the beast with explosive bullets. The
man was dragged out of the pen, still
breathing; but he died a few hours
cater.
A _
A True Home.
May blessings be upon your house.
Your roof and hearth and walls:
May there be lights to wetcome you
%Viten evening's shadow falls!
The love that liko a guiding star
Stili signals while you roam:
A. book. a friend--thesebe the thinge ,
'I'hit make a house a home.
—Myrtle Rec,i.
MONEY ORDERS.
it
es always sofa to sone a Oom€nioe
;Xpress Money Ostler. 11ty? dollars
wets eine cents.
Canada has the only two, Leal ee-
gi' ns on tiro seacoast of North Ant-
oritxa, and controls one.fiftlt of the
world's coal resourets.
For Sore Th root,
Cold in the Chest, Etc. .
of chocolates."
The stere you leave things to
chance, the less Thane there is for
you.
D
ND RINE
Stops Hair 'Coming Out;
Thickens, Beautifies.
If Headachy, l'"yt�i'Iim 3
or Stomach is Bad,
Take "Cascarets "
flet a 10-1•ent baa now.
Furred Tongue. Bad Colas. Indigos -
tion; Sallow Skin anti reeeerable Head-
aches- tante from. a torpid liver arta
,. i c
clogged bowels, .% az<I: cease your
stomach 'tit become filled with mtdt-
gestedfood, which sours and ferments
like'' garbage in a barrel- That's the
first=ste t 'to untold misery--1ndiges-
tion. foul gasses, bad breath, yellow
skin, everything that is sickening.
Cescaret to -night wilt give your cote
stipated bowels a thorough. cleansing;
and straighten you out by morning
They work while you sleep. Millions
of men and women take a Casearet
now and then to keep their stomaeh,
liver and bowels regulated, and never
know a miserable moment. . Dont for-
get the children—their- little insrdee
neem a good, gentle cleansing, too.
35 -cents buys a bottle of • Danderine"
at any drug store. After one applica-.
tion you can not final a particle of
dandruff or a falling hair. Besides.
every hair shows new life, vigor,
brightness, more color and abundance.
America's Pioneer Dog Bamellae
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
alAv Glover Co-, Ino,
118 West Riot Street
New York. U.S.A.
T iftldOL-TH. N. S.
Mother! Open
Child's Bowels With
California Fig Syrup
Your Little one will love the "fruity"
taste of "California Fig Syrup" even if
constipated, bilious, irritable. feverish,
or full of cold. A teaspoonful never
fails to cleanse the liver and bowels.
In a few hours you can see for your-
self how thoroughly it worka all the
sour bile, and undigested food out of
the bowels and you have a well, play-
ful child again.
Millions of mothers keep "California
Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea-
spoonful to -day saves a siek child to-
morrow. Ask your druggist for genu-
ine "California Fig Syrup" which has
directions for babies and children of
all ages printed on bottle. Mother:
You must may "California" or yon may
get an imitation fig syrup.
' ' "rket.rw thy work and do it." says
I
USE SLOAN'S TO
WARD OFF PAIN
LIT`fLE aches grow into big pains
unless warded off by an applica-
tion of Sloan's. Rheumatism,
tteuralgia, stiff joints, lame back won't
fight long against Sloan's Liniment,
For more than forty years Sloan's
Liniment has helped thousands, the
world over. 'ST'ou won't be an eae ep-
tion. It certainly does produce results.
It penetrates witTtaut 9'ttbiring. Jeep
this old fainly friend always handy
for instant use. Ass: your neighbor.
At all druggists -35:4.10c, $1.40.
ads in CAnaLs.
ar,
.__._J.
Carlylo, "and work at it Ilii.• a Her-
..
ti
•
�-
' is in the ���
1e monster Them y ��, A� N.�
rulers. Clt .#.�#, �
I o1'a 1$rafres +ilt;3a 04tri'lio3 Lucre word: an idia triad.."
;he latrglsait dyes of hated eresieteuttees,
and-terKleilelt o than in alt -3 flea. • t MtCtttltl',t Llelneene fee WAtereetatir.
1SSUu No. `a`?--'Owi.
COARSE SALT
LAN D Y S A L. T
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO
FA� OSFIUREO
ITI1 MPLES
itched aiadnu mad, Scarce-
lySlept, Cuticura Heals.
"Pimples affected my face. They
were large and always festered, and
they were scattered eil over
my face. They afterwards
turned into scales and
when they fell off they
left big marks until ray
f• ace was dial,;ured. Th ty
itched and burned co that
I scarcely stent at all.
"1 bad been bothered for rteurly
two months be ore I started u,:.r•,
Cuticura, and after 1 had uaud theca
boxes of Cutic-ora Ointment wihhtsc:
Cuticura Soap I was ca ogle t•:'y
healed." (Signed) Miss L. neenao,
St. Beene, Que., June 0, 1013.
Hee Cuticura Soap, Ointment cons
Talcum for all toilet .purposes.
Soap 25c, Ointment 213 awl SOo. Sold
throughouttheDominion. CanadianDepot:
t�y!� eau, Limited, at. Paul St., Nontroel.
' -
:R3f�Cuticu,c, Soap olla7e15 evathotst IM/11.
Never say "Aspirin" without aying “Ba.1,'er."
WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" on tablets,
you are not getting Aspirin at all. Why Ltk_. cllincesr
Accept only an"unbroken package" of • B vie 'f a llc~iw 0s
Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians durh g 21 e ears and p?•s vol safc llt in iit7sr _, ;or
Colds
Toothache
Farache
[Ieadaclle Rhamatiairi
Neuralgia Neuritis
Lumbago Pain, Pain
Handy t;e, Notes td l•, tablets ---Bathes oa 4 and 100 ---Ala Dt a 't ialt3
soIs the :ratio !Pau: ireRitnc.o0 to ('ands) o! 11:11:10:‘ t tt
sootaetura of Vino •
1 aiceticectdoator et oan0).ic$' ".late it Is tach Imo•xe win AiN1s?n Mosso )letter
manuntttuto. 40 &asidi tete pat,l et,* adz ittltatl:Me, the Tablets o" 44st•oc Com;aettb
{ WO be ,''aved evttletVie uea!ia': ;Ale :nark, the "Moose t.10M"