The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-10-09, Page 3e.ann�anc s
sJtEaAttention
r1Y ,Attention of. Doctor Cheats. ' Owl_ Lath
Who Has Lost' Her Charm and
Beauty
"Sha seems to be losing her ,lgoks."
This remark's often:heard about girls
who were once noted for their sgark-.
ling eyes, their rosy cheeks, .and,their
Di"eac n` ani a araIys of i t s
The biggest .screen triumph 'of the
r . ' Fall will be takingo-them down without
Parents Warned. to Noto •F xly.$ymptoms and to Call Doctor tearing them to pieces.•
Immediately ---Delay Is Fatal . - Wedding Guest -7 "This !s your
• ••f rth d ht tot led le 't
"If there is. one disease mitre than inflammatory agent which attacks and
destroys the spinal nerve cells which
supply motive power to the museles.
Tlie. ,early symptoms (it is most im-
portant that you note and remember
these symptoms, so I ane going .to say
them over very slowly), , The early
symptoms are:Fever, Vomiting,
'Slight .' Diarrhoea, Listlessness,„ Un-
usual Fretfulnes sand Drowsiness
Later and more .Characteristic SY14=
touts' are: The Appearance of. Weak-
ness in any•extremity, Skin and Mui-
•italit : The cause is not far to seek any other whose very name strikee
y dread into -tire hearts o4 parentse"'says
eethey have .become anaemic; that ac- a .pamphlet recently published by the
tomes for the pallor and the loss .of Health Department of the ()Mario Geri -
charm. The anaemic girl. '•if,: she nig- eeemeat, "it is Infantile Paralysis" or
leets her health, may be .. sufferer all "Poliomeutis." ,
her, life;
To -day l' want to telt you about this
Take heed, you pale, anaemic girls. dreadful destroyer of young lives, but
Plenty, et fresh• air,, :noilrishing food Ido not want to alarm yeti unneces
end. •rest•,wlIl help you, but what you eerily. Fortunately, it is possible' for
need ', most is good blood. • Those
me to p;omfse you a message of .gen-
wretched headaches; that fickle epee- ulne hope insofar a's this ' disease is
. tite and, those terrible, heart palpite- ' eider Sensitiveness,. Spinal Pain, 'Ap=°
tions . can only be, banished• if th coneternede. For medical' science has
reoently learned a' great' deal about parent .or Real Rigi• dity, .of •thee. Neck
blood is rich, red and Mire.- . • Muscles. ;
fighting it'sand ao, while . warning you .
Good • blood—the kind that brings against it; one is also .able to fRil, ybu New, .physicians• •have developed' a
• o°d' health, is.created by Dr Wil- how to protect your..ehildren from the ubstenee known as "Convalescent
rams' Pink Pills..' The whole mission crippling and death- that . so often fol- Serum." ;This serum es •actually. ;taken
low in its wake. . . from the blood• of individuals who have
These methods of• Protection ,diil*er, 'recovered from the disease.. As I indi,
cated ,it cannot prevent the, disease,
.batif given ,during the. critical period
eaf'rorty-eight hours after the onset 'of
the disease, it does 'enable the body of•
the sufferer to flight off and prevent
the crippling.
ou aug:. er ge marc , n
it?"
MacTight-"Ay; and our confetti's
getti'n' awful gritty."
•
•
The professor knows, of an, absent-
minded flapper who powdered her
knees and pulledher skirt up ever her
nose.
1 Nephew—"Uncle, when are you go=
.
•j� in ' to playfootball again?"
$ •
Rieh •Jowle—"I don't .play football.
What makes you ask metriatyques-
tion?r ' e f .
Nephew "Weil, `father says whew
you kick; off we are going to get• a
motor car and a hoytse, :
David 'said in his haste all men•are
liars,'. but it would have, been equally
true If, he had taken his time in say -
of these Pills , is to • build riche ::red,•
health -giving blood. The Pills. are
sold by all dealers fn • medicine or by
rail at -sq cents •a box from The Dr .i'rom these eployed intskfeguarding
Williams' ' Medicine Co., Brockville',• human life am
nd health fro*•. any, other.
Ont:
'Barter ,
"Count with me the. tjtiegs 1 sold
Porn stranger's paltry gold,
Pleasant things `: that. made • my
••.heaven—•
'To a stranger's keeping given!
"The four- walls that shut in loves.
And the .sturdy roof above; ` '
Homely things that ,were all'' mine,
Braided rugs in :quaint design,
Friendly chairs, and firelight's glow;
Gleatniag dishes is a•, row;__,
Swaying curtains shining floors;
"Windows whoset-locking
ou g§hawed
Garden. IleM, and winding road;
.Thriving plants•npon' the sill, .
Money -musk, and daffodil;
' . Scented herbs; and floater -beds,
• Roses, nodding loveiy'heads
Over curving , pathways, .,set
.m
With,marl old and mignonette;
g g
Clover patch,, and garden wall,
.____.__.Song=bird's-navrn'nig-madrigal;--•-•---
...Cricket's song, and hum of .bees,
Fiymn
of the wind in bending .treee—
AIl sweet . things that made. .my
heaven,.
To , a stranger's' keeping 'given! • .
"Now another hand han mine
Soon • shall train the . teeiiised 'vine,
Alien eyes shall watch unfold
• .Bnds of crimson and of gold.
.. Oh. little home -how well I know
• That no one .rise 'can love ,you so!"
--Edith D. ;Osborne,' in the Woman's
• . ;da?azine. , •
1 am going to the ball game."
'.What toe??"
"Just to kill time.'
•Why•waste your ammunition when
the empire is there?"
In 'a small village in Ireland the
lnocher 'of a -soldier hie, the village
priest, who asked her if she had bad
:news. "Sere, I have,', she said,' "Pat
has been killed." "Oh, I am •very
sorry,' said the priest. "Did:you. re-
ce i ve •word from the War •' Office?'
"Ne," she said, , "I received word
from- hit iself.".' The priest 'looked
perplexed and said; "But how is that?"
eSurP;A site said; "here is, the letter.
Recti it yourself." The letter said:
"Dear Mother, I am ndvr „in the Holy
Land." •
disease. We know how to prevent
smallpox,, and we know h'ow to pre-'
vent diphtheria, but .our doctors have
not yet Iearned how to prevent the
crippling that follows •the disease. -' •
That, of •.course, is, most important.
For 'while the disease isa serious and
dangerous affliction under any circum-
stances, it is 'robL ed• of much of its
terrors when parents know that they
canpractically assure their children'
ultimate and complete ..recovery from patient is injected into the blood of
it- ' 'one ' whois just contractingg the dis-
There .are,' however, some .things ease ,the new sufferer will quickly de
which must be borne in mind if this
happy -conclusion' is -tie-be- reaehedenn
Why doe§;'it do this.? It has been
proved that very very rarely. does this
disease recur in the same individual.
That is because the blood of one Who
successfully recovers from it . has de-
veloped en immun.ty.•to the disease. It
has' been found that if a very',small
quantity pf the blood of 'a recovered:
velop the same immunity that exists.
In-:theeblood-of-the -reeovered•-patient=
behalf of the littlesufferers, and it is Now you see *Welt is so •important
w' • kik e - fo agent .t me rize ca' of Il e
o f s r s o mo u t
those things which I u d a to � p r y >3.
peiia'Hy stress now. • symptoms of "this, .disease; And why,
In the first place, speed is essential . it is so necessary that the, doctor be
yin, 'diagnosis and in giving treatment, summoned immediately, upon, the' first
Every moment of delay in calling the, suspicion of their presence.
family physician when ,suspicious It's ,all a question of 'speed—if•'the
symptoms. manifest ' themselves, is a doctor gets .onthe scent' within forty-
moment of. added danger. If you would eight 'boors after the first sym'pto'ms
'savethe life of a sufferer from infan- .begin ;to,manifest themselves, he can.
tile,.Qaralysis,youu;iust Fail in tree dqc- flava the child from crippling•ordeathh
tor' early. Delay ie fatal. In order Otherwise the . ser in is ° useless, for it
fthat you may nnderstand why, this is' ;has beenproven. that ;once the crip-
•the case; let me •tell you something piingbegins to set in, it is too late for
about' the disease. itis caused by an the serum to work.
Doctors Don't Like. Aircraft [, . Y '
While: the man in' the street sees• - v+lit Babies
only cause for congratulation in the
way in which aircraft. are nowannihi-
lating distance,' medical experts are
1 farm
becom nd a little alarmed at it.,
1
They are pointing out that transport
•so , raped as this is destroying one of
the safeguards against..tbe spread of.
disease.
For instance, two of the most den
gerou• diseases of the East — plague
and cholera—are now heldin check
by, the efforts of health authorities at.
the world's. ,ports.. If a man infected
by either •of these diseases boards a
steamer;. the trouble has developed
during the 'voyage 'sdfifcie•ntly to en-
able it to be recognized, and the port
authoritiescan, take the necessary
steps. But eircraft,are 'quicker—and
an infected man may land in a new
country before the disease has de-
veloped.:' ,. '
. Anther danger• is that rnasiluitoes,
bearing the germs of malaria or yeI •
law fever, may "stow away" on. an
aeroplane and he carried from one
part of the World to another by air.
Clergyman ace Mrs; Jones, whose
little son has just been christened) :
"Oh, Mrs. Jones, I have never 'seen a
childthat has behaved so well at.•a
christening."• Mrs.'Jones: "Well, you
see ft's because : my husband ante I
have been, practising on hitn with a
watering canfor as hole •week!"'
•
Larkins: "You seething§ in a differ-
ent Iieht since you: married, do you
not?" Harkins: , "I ought to. There
were seven lamps among' the wedding.
presents."
Minard's Liniment gives quick relief.
Are Sick! .Babies
The welt Child does not cry", it is
only the sickly baby who cries. The
well child is laughing and happy -
Baby's cry of distress is his way of.
telling the mother or nurse that he
is ill. 'Therefore, if !your baby, cries
do not delay in looking for the trou-
ble. ' •
Baby's Own Tablets are a safe and
efficient remedy ,for '_hildhood ail
ments.' They are a mild but thorough
laxative which through their "action
On tine• stomach and bowels banish
constipation and indigestion; • break
up colds and simple fevers and pro-
mote healthful sleep. Tliey will make,
baby happy and keep' him happy. They
care sold by medicine dealers or by
ina1at25D
Williams' Medicine Co.,' Brockville, •
Mabel -"Could you suggest some,
thing suitable for a 'girl friend's birth -
,day?"
Clerk "How about ' these book
ends?"..
Mabel—Just the thing! She always
reads the ends beforeshe does the be-
ginnings.'
Did you hear about, the Scotehman
who wrote. to this newspaper that' if
they didn't stop printing • Scotch "jokes
he was going to read some other paper
the next time hewent to the. library.
The best school of extie0ence , Is
co-ed, too. ••
It maye�•ihneasap I to'play- poker
pt
with a .bad' loser, but its' a lot better
than playing,with any kind of a; win-
ner,
•
She . may be the wbole show to her.
mother, but she's only the intermis-
Sion:to me -
Free --;
e- ,
H`e="R erety ni ever eaccinaited?""
Her—"Why, yes."
He --"I don't see the scar."
Her—You're not going tie, either."
Why didn't you walk home 'trona
that auto ride last night, daughter?"
Daughter,f '°We went toofar, ma-
ma."
a-ma.
The ,beotiegger' • Las
P
tions ',but w, rile e"
.•
f 1,
many tempta-
•
Teacher . ;'Who can'tgll,nm2 ,way we
should always be neat clean','", • '
Kathleen,= "In • case • of,. accident,
teacher."
A beautiful young lady and her bash -
fill suitor were alone in •the parlor.
After Several minutes of silence, she
finally said:.-
She—"What are you thinking about,
John'. • • ti...
He—"The s-s-ame thing.as: you are."
She -"Ob, yon bad toy. I've a good
notion to slap you."
A' man bas to be very good to keep
out of .jail—or Very
Mother—"After ail, the boy is lotrls i
His wife ebea lent
began to at -him.
g
"You silly," she said; efancy beiing
superstitious •after all ;these years!
Why, do you remember. the first time
we met? We ,walked under a ladder,
and you said you *ere ,sure 'some
thing horrible would happen to you."
"Well?" said he., , '
Classified Advertising,
T SSUES .
'•ANTEDc CORPAR:-
Q
� I
or,
o.ne
"cinpromotions, g
E financing AT S
concerns. ^.ounse::on Merger I: consoli�,
dations. • Write. details. Lewis Co, 29l
Broadway, N.Y.
TENTS
List ' of "Wanted Irrventibns"
and Full', Information Sent Fret
on •P.tequest.
r : • EAMSAT • CO? Dept. Wr
273 Batik St., **wee oat:
RANTED—Personp, to•• grow
Mushrooms for. us in cellars.'
Earn. upwards of 125. weekly.
Illustrated .booklet free. J
Canadian Mushroom Co., To�bnto..
A Shaving. Lotion
When mixed. : with sweet` oil,'
Mir�ard's . serves " 'as' an. after
shaving' lotion and antiseptic.
, and_
freshensthe 'skin
Soothes e
^WHY. SUFFER
FROM YOUR
:LIVER?'
rich. Wily be handicapped with"unsightly
i cents a boxfrom • The Dr.
blotcheson the face, eyes with yellow'
tinge andthat tired -and -.languid.. feel
Iieadachc,'Dizzinessand Bihousngss Brest I was doubtful, because
tried so many things. At last, however,
ui R� This in dice tes. a
torpid liver
Ontario. . sowing his Wild oats."
Father—"I li'ouldn,t mind,. it he did 1
not mix in so much rye.",
•
Climbing the' Hills
"Far over the steep hillside It wound
The path where his feet must go,{
The road that summer knew blossom -1
sweet
Now covered with •'ice aid snow.
And he sighed; this lad, as he strove
to sef
His feet on the ice -bound track,
`Oh, the hardestpart of climbing a
hill • .
Is to keep .from lipping back,'
•
thought, as I watched him trudge
along,
Of the hills we all rtes! c:imb,
Whether the pathway te. elossoi -
starred . "••
• • Or white with the writer's rime,
Immediate
Relief f�r
INDfG6SYlON
VIIlWps - .....
,4,0"4441fs,
FTroubles
rreatG
soca 3'ro►i Cie "
N'EARTgURN
sr�IPATtON
,t,s , 1 1
W liAAT most people call indigell in acid. The
tion is usually excess, acid is the results are
stnniach, Food has soured. The , immediate with no harmful, after:
A merchant's biggest' boosts are'the ```
knocks of a competitor. • !
Running from creditors Is a very
R
unmanly way to take exercise.
Gent (as he paid a small newsboy
for his paper]—"I see that you are
'putting up a good many new -buildings
iia your town."
Boy—"That is the only.•kitid' We put
up•here, sir.",
°Visitor: "''here's the other wind -
'mill gone?" , Natlti e: " We. only •had
ii ind .enough for one, so we took the
other one down."—New Goblin.' °
I And one and all .. shalt find elite .
' true,
instant remedy is an alkali which
neutralizes. acids. but don't use
•crude helps. Use what your doctor
wouId advise. .
The best help is 'Philips' Miilk
'of Magnesia. Icor the i50 years'
einre its invention, it as tenanted
et•.:rtuard With physicians. Yon will
i:ru nothing else se quiek in Its,
egret, 90 harmless, so-ef5eit<'nt.
L r c t;+,steIe$ spoonful iii 4sater
np°., . r.izrs mate' ttiitcs its volume
effects. ;effect
Once: you learn this y
you'll never deal in any other
manner with the headaches, gas,
bleating, nausea. . dizziness; im
digestion. hi iiousnesa, etc., due
'Man over -acids otnacll and b weis.
Ue sure; to get' genuine, Phipps'.
It is always a liquid; never made in
tablet forint. Look for the name
Phillips' onthe 'bottle.' All drug='
attire 5trc. • `
MILK �6F
N5 N 1A
•
,t
•
Cutienra
The'Sanative, Antiseptfcfj.
Healing Service •
pueaceelled for an gears
Soap .Ointment • Talcum : Shaving Sttek
25e. Mich at all, Druggists
BAC
Wonderful' relief :from pain
1 Backache is one of those wearying
complaints which bind all their victims. `
•
,together with . a common hoed of
misery.. And when any one sufl'erer
from backache finds a sure 'remedy,
fellowship prompts : the quick report
of that discovery to others. Heie s a.
woman who has her friend to thank for,
knowledge of a remarkably successful,
treatment. Now gratitude compels:
her, in turn, th pass along the good
news to you.
' I am writing to tell you of the great
benefit I have received from Kruschep
Salts. My friend, Mrs: l., had received
so much benefit that she begged me
to -give Kruschen a trial, altho Tgi- a..
surely follow. Yoe must stimul to r of her Nruschen, and,
your lazy liver, start the bile flowing I triedsomed a bottle.
with Carter's Little Liver Pijis. feeling hopeful, I P
Th also act as a mild laxative. and I e'° onestly say that •before e
They •led th bottl my 1?ackaehe
• purely vegetable, free from calomel•
And poisonous drugs, small, easy to
swallow, and not habit forming. They
are not a, purgative that cramps -or
pains, unpleasant after effect follow
,mg, on the contrary a good'tonic.,
All Druggists 25c and 75c red pkgs. 1
As we fallow the ppw rd track, ;LC
That the hardest part o cli.nilring • ail
s t •-,,two nuno.•s r i par win• n' �E't; r linin,
krill drusci«±.. ; it leis t•n ,i llt. w Y
Is to keep from slipping back," t leth'anti tub th t r t r est:'Illy,
t,lAckhea,1 r<;if 1,0 ,ti i1. The on..
—Florence Jones Hadley, in the New i via, sure a[,•I-,rtYlrl tt tt,' t•i 1`v n5, r.\.•,
Outlopk. •t .t,:khp:twia. �.tti r t ..,n guru-ant..•i ,
•w .n. -r t of aid,• f P W Smear & CO.
' • The verger of a v ii.'rage church died; a?22. 'Wellington Et: lir., Toronto
and• it ivas•decided to appoihit, as his!
successor, a wise and worthy mem-t
ber of the cotnrrtnnity. He was effete!
Ad the job at $250 a year: bet then it i
` turned out that he couldn either read.t
nor,Write, so it was giver to another.
However, as a consolation $100 u as
pre'seitted to the ethet man. With
this he bought•bananas ani a barrow
and soon was making pot: of money., , . " . .
es'
Rail eN O.CK . one
as rias-tasfttir
t» riostretI5'.•.. EAR 011
$1.25 2111n tt, Iletrithrel teller :anent
A. Q. 1.EO1�lARD, InE.
70 Fiftfi Atie., jew Yortr City
This Ile deposited from time to tune'
in a bank. • One day the bank man -1 :
ager erote suggesting that, as his I
fortune was so large it.mightrbe ad-,
'visable to.invest it.. . But be got no!
reply. Finally he'went to see the' 11
Banana. king. wino explained that !I
Write. 1-
i - --
e td nehtli�r' read no i=• 'Gist
On �ak�li►ne
aimed the hank maeager,!
Ireartens" escI r�r1�,�r1�
oni
"if you've 'Made all that money as le Ma a temots'0
think how muck yeti would .. j
is, just y ., , . `VII,
h ve trtade, if you had learnt to read I _ __::,,...(---
how
write:" "1 will tell you eeactly , 1
hoar• tterclh:' was the reply. "'Tv.1"
hundred and fifty dollars a yearI"'tel �asca CelS
What is the oldest settler in the .
:west'? The Sttr. 1�
irit4, Sure Relief
LiOUSNESS
SLUGGISHNESS
ONSTIPATION
Minard's Liniment has a hundred uses.
*NEV. WOK,
11VIIILE YOU SLLEE
r.
•
If baby has
CO L. 1 C
A MY in the night. Colic, No
reuse for alarm if Castoria
bandy. -This pure vegetable pre para
tiomi bungs (Nick comfort,, and' can
never harm: It is the sensible thing
when children are ,ailing: 'Whether it's -
the stomacU, or the little bowels;,
colic or constipation: or ..diarrhea.
When tiny tongues are co'ated:or the
breath is bad. W heneVer there's need
of gentle regulation. CliiIdreri lou e
The taste ofCastoria, an`d is m+l hers
make it safe for frequent trse.
And a more liberal dose of Castoria
is always better for growing children
than strong medicine meant only for
adult use.
had finis e e
was gone. I have,, suffered for years
with kidney trouble and -dreadful
headaches, and now to be free frown
the . pain altogether is wonderfueli'
(Sirs. C.)
E`My daughter Catherine is
fifteen years old. She was very
irregular, , often sick at her
stomach and had to stay in,
bed two: or three days at a
time. one of your booklets was
sent to us by mail so I got her
a bottle of Vegretable Com-
pound. Catherine has been
taking it regularly and 'she 'is
gaining -in weight `acid every
way. 1 told"'the neighbors and
four ether .girls ' are taking it
waived results."—Mrs. Ctar-
efce Je't'ikiimstm; Boit z4, Ttorst•
.e, Qnfdm`io. •
Lydia. , Pink1an::.
,.Vegetable Gallipoli
•
•q..'S
EP.,th.n MeE. t :,
a,dt:ob.ott,Oelart., ean,llt t- d -.
ISSUE .No. 46--'30