The Lucknow Sentinel, 1921-04-21, Page 3• 4,
AUTO IFIRPAIR PAIITS
l'or most anakee and tnodels c ars,
Your QM broken or worn-out parts
replace& Write or w .3 us deserib
what" you IA ,Lot We carry the
largest and most ec, npleto etoch in
'canatia, (if slightly 4ed 0!'' new parte •
was auste.•,,ohli,, ece• ,,merit. We ship
0.0.D. wht, re it. 17an0do.„. Setts-
feotory ,,r retania in :tot our motto.,
• Shaves Auto salvage rart
023..931 Trinfferin St.. Toronto, oat.
_
GOrgeOlIfS.CaYeS4 ' •
+gr..O.I.i.• On ,ou caves, which .a hunter
•:, .npon in 187'4, by no means
' M•aminoth (eve of Kentucky
• • ,titer4, but far surpass 'that of allY
4ther known. Cave in the United States
'1IL natural splendor. , •
•`Watik.',• g ted with carbonate, of
- lime, seeping from the ground above„,
• has slowly incrirsted .the whole sur-
face ,of •the ca". Ceilings and walls
are frescoed; alcoves, balconies and
• eerrfdors are fringed with the most
inniactilate , of drape rre.. • "leers, have
,the hietre of 4iltand as if never
nleant.Nr, tie'tread 0. inortal feet.
• The fintmations'' are curious; many
bear, actual or 'fancied resemblance to
ehlectd of various' kinda--weird;',fan-
• tastic, 'awesome. . Everywhere crystal
.facets gleate in response' to the ex-
plorers' light. .Here the Walls glow
softly as if with the sheen .pf velvet;
there they blaze as If with'the twinkle
Ot distant stars reflected in myriads
• • •
.••
• f r -rors giverywherer-diareend-like=
point* and facets gelatilliate with Are
and polor. ' • ,
The caveshave not been wholly ex-
plored,' bpi, the visttor can travel per-
haps- three miles and a half under-
groend. The trip, talce, three hours:
•The 1'1.10'411de to, the Icayea _is ,twenty-
sev miles from the riearegt •railWay.
statie .
NOTHING TO EQUAL
BABY'S OWNTABLETS
a •
Mrs. Georges Lefebvre, St. Zenom,,,
Que., writes: "I do not think there is
any otheroiedigine to equal Baby's
Own Tablets for little ones. 'I have -
used them tor my baby and would use
nothing elsee". What. Mrs. Lefebvre
says thousands- of Other Mothers say;
They havalound by trial that the Tab-
lets alwayi3 Ale just- what is claimed
lor them. The Tablets are a mild but
therougli laxitive which regulate the
bowels and sweetenthe stomach' and
thus hellish indigestion, constipation,
.colds, colic,' etc. They are sord by
medicine dealers or by Mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams',
Medicine. Co., Brockville, Ont. ,
Nurse a grievance audit will grow
up to est you ot1 of house and lame,
1
esk m ma tot law MR ISIL Ill ms.•
r. • "MAUI" EDUCATION . . •
0
• ' 0
ft- 'P. BY DR. J. J. MIDISLETON 0,
• 0 , Provincial Board of. Health. °Marin • • , •
• Or. Middleton Will he glad to answer questiona on Public Health lig.
p, ters through th!,ii column. Address. him at the Parliament India, 111
0 Toronto. ,• . • P '
-am ogs. Is* ipik 11.111i 11111.3111 1111,11111, INI VII, 'IL in,
specific organisms of' tuberculcisis,
•diplitheria, enteric\-• fever, cholera,
dysentery and diarrhoea, • It -is there-
fore a 'Valuable measure of Protection
against the recurrence of, those' Milk -
borne Outbreaks whieh figure the.
epidemic records of this country
Overcoming objections—One obt,
jection in the past to pasteurization
Was that:. it was a *Sufietitute for
eleanlinesS. It Was claimed. that
farmers and, dealers would be inclined
;to :be, lax in:their efforts to keep the.
milk supply clean and- pure, if they
knew that the milk was afterwards
to be pasteurized: Such laXity can be
:entirely controlled by testing the raw
milk before it is pasteurized,. and
keeping it up to .a certain, definite
standard of purity? Anything belOw
thiS standard will i'ndicate that the
milk is a queStionable. purity and
•cannot- be recommended. - .
bacteria: •••
Paitenrized •germ -free -Pas,
teUrization& is a process of litsti,he
. milk at a moderate temperature ,
short' time, so thit any ternis it may
- contain may be killed off without de -
•'.un qffiekest nird-Inost-effective-forn tire.of telling those
The dangers frora milk -borne dis-
eases, Such as tuberculosis, are such
constant.mentice to health, that the
necessity:Of pasteurizing all milk with
the exception of "certifiedr is 'he -
coining increasingly apparent The
New:' York Milk Qonimission hal re-
cently recommended that no other
1 milk be sold to the public except certi-
, 'fied milk and* pasteurized milk, and
. the same recommendation should ap-
ply to Ontario.. ,
. When a milk supply is certified, it
Means that every known precaution
has been taken to keep it pure, and
to. prevent its contaraination; The
milk is, obtained from cows that are
• tuberculin-te0edand safeaguarded by
• a very: close veterinary inspection;
•' there its a Medical, inspection of the
• employees,-. sanitary inspection_ of the
and testing of the. .for
-
.1 The Toronto I-lospital
alaten,,to affiliation with -Bellevin aYai
Allied Hospitals, n•W.. York city,'
offers a three years' t'ours e of Trate-
ins to young women, having' thrt re-
quired education, and desirous of be-
coming nurses. Vitis Hospital has
adopted the eight:bour•system. The .
:Moils receive uniforms of the School,
nionthlY allowance and traVelitme
expenses to and from New York. For
further Information apply to the
Superintendent. . '• "
..
considered. There is a ,general im-
Peesslon tliat the (May. iumigraiits
Canada -needs, are those going direct-
• ly on the farms. That •is' true, but -
will the immigrant coining to Canada
go directly to the farm? M. W. S.
Bennett, Member ef the United states
Immigration•Commission, Who -worked
two and a halt years inirestigating the
question of immigratioh abroad, chal.
lenges any, statement that the cities nal organizetfons, officers and bo. . With• 4 loan of $2:50, which he Pre -
are, the wrong place for the imml-, .ys
grant, se far as. the immigrant ,is con.: 't4rhe BO Scouts Association main- mised to return in a few daysche al,
4
.cerned. . , .. ,* tains that no boy ' can grow .into the 1 evieuA
two or three weeks to pass with-
. '.. best kind of citiZemehin'without Agog-
ou.4:
making any ',mention . of his in -
Mr. Bennett goes On to say that th,e nizing his obligation to God. The re- debtedeess, and, in „,fidt, 'seemed to ,
immigration Commission ,fouildthe
'•-• cognition of .Oed. os W.:. rulit;-, and
--- avoid 'his, creditor. • , ,
tact tillbe. that 98 per cent, qf the lin-, leading pbwer in.,ths uniVerse anti the
HA:ROL,D , ROBB . „
Torontia.bok *lio Wen the 2 ..1•73.
mile Ward Eight School.-13oys' Bun-
ning Road Race, held on -March 30,
1921, He is 16 years of age.and lives.
at 20 Kingswood Road. He is the
Petrel. Leader cif the .5ist -Toronto,
Troop BoY •Scouts.
•
NEW STRENGTH FOR
VICTIMS OF ANAEMIA
. • '
helm q,constructive and lacot a relatlia-
rtve volley of immigration7,=Empl0rt
erF' AF.-iciation Maidtphai,
, • •
Scouting andrthe Church.
.-
11,1aPY•Men who have beenitociated
-.With SO:eating an well as citlaer types
of boys' Work, over a period of years,
helreVellitit it pre...serits..; greater 51)0r,
-Ai;err-At:1.'7i 06-7- •
.410iieln$ W.e.igrai. • •
OBNTs WANT3E0: BLISS NATIVIS
'.rz. Herbs 'is a remedy for the relief Of
Copistipp.utora. Indigestion, ' Biliousness.
Rheumatism, Kidney •Troubles, is
well-known, having been extensively ad- .
.vertised, mince it wan first manufactured
in 1888;_hy_rdistribution of 'large quanti-
ties of alnie,s,tacs, •Cook Books, Health
Books, etc., which. 'are furnished. to
litgents free of charge. The remedies,ar
t e. price that alloWs agents
tO
tunities for cleveloping the bo,:, re delude their. money. Write Alonzo, 0. •
ligiouslY' than. does any' other move, BwrioinestrAfearicmalenCtot.o,n12tilifisst.o.a7etki St. Eat. '
ment instituted solely for beYs.. Its
,
aim to develop the 'boy' physicallY,
„ . ,
mentally and morally is being realized,
Very- widely. ,
The. Boy Scent MOvement has beeti
. •• . H is Excuse.
Gus Stevens, the. village white -
Washer and man-of-werit, was a
frequent borrower of small sums from
clevelcsped on suelt broad lines as to his.neighbor, Major Norton, and as a .
embrace all classea, all creeds, and rule he 'repaid these little 'debts' at
at, ON sante time to allow the great-. the appointed .time: But On, one occa-,
est possible independence -to individ- sion when he had been accominodated.'
Loss of .Strength Follows When
• "
the',Igood •Beemnes Thin.
'Anaemia is 'the medical term. for
thfri, watery blobd., The: suffer loses
stfength, becomes short of. breath and
coniplains of palpitation of the heart
after the slightest exertion, such ,as
walking. up stairs. lightest- ta,sk
beck:elms a burden. There is a loss
of ambition, the viotinf loses Weight
and as the diSease Progresses the ap-
•petite is affected., Color fades linni
cheeks and lips and fainting spells
•
may occur. , . ,
Anaemia is not a disease that cor-
recta itself, and it unchecked it
gressee steadily. But it can bei.ecini-
batted by good fciod, fresh. air .and a
proper tonic for the blood: As the
blood, becomes'. rich and. red- under
this treatment,: the ..nymptrans disap-
peal.. as in the case of 11/11Ss Evelyeen
JOyce,:Westirille, *hose mother
says:: "Almost from; ,lniancY .thy
daughter was7 Very delfeate; and , was
often under the doctor's pare. As her
'father had died of • conslnnption my
frielids. feared alie 'would .fall a vic-
tim •to : that :dread disease : , As the
yeara went by. and she was Merging
into womanhood began to fear that,
I would lose her. Then 1:deeided to
try Dr. Williams' Pink' Pills, and I
&Mid" soon see a change- rer the bet-,
lie-tat.,threO YO,re,
. Epidemics :sometimes,
esult-Itis
e dut of Public Health autlioritiei
to educate both the.consumer'an
dealer tO the danger of nen-pasteur-
ized milk • and the liability -of milk -
•borne •diseases .being •conyeyed .by it.
raigrarite in a general way, and some-
times. *erY specifiCaily, kiltrv"' .w.11.abi and bletaings, Js neceesdry te'tbo
grateful acknowletiginent of Hi favors
ibest type of citizenship awns a whole-
emplbyrnent they are • going into be 4
• z in ilte education -of. the
fore they leave their homes, their wives some thin._
and other dependents..., The reason
. growing heir: No matter what the boy
may be -:-Roman ;Catholic, protestant
or Jew --(and in Scouting there are.all
three). this fundamental need of,. good
citizenship should be kept before him.
The, BoY Scouts Association, as an
,organized body, recognizes the religi-
ous element in 'the training of a ,boY,
but it is absolutely non-Sectarien in
KS attitude toward religions traieing.
Its policy is, that; the religious 'organif
zatioxi institiltion with which the
Boy Scout is' connected ' shail. give;
definite attention to his religious -lite.
If he be a Roman Catholic Boy Scout„
the church of which he. is e member.
IS the best •cliantel for his training.
If he bea Hebrew boy, tire Synagogue.
will trate him. in the faith of his
fathers. If he ----be 'Protestant, • no
matter to what denornination`of Pro-
testantinn he may belong, the Church
„of which.he is *an ailhereet or_a Mena-
-mentla to gain a wider knowledge of ,ber Will only perforin its fulI duty
Canadian condition's 'from people of when it accepts this respqnsibilitY? •
his own birth who are always to he It is interesting to note in ithis con,
,found. in the cities' and .towns. ,If
.when the inunigrant first lands he is.
not- trained or evert equipped to go
cut On theprairies to settle doWn and
get a living from the soil, ,what is the
use of sending him ourthere"tO be
come' a..disgrentled and ,dissatisfied
citizen? . Immigratieu ie. a problem of
great consequence to the people of
Canada to-d'ay. Immigration. has a.
great influence on.inclustry and .on Our
prosperity which .is: the. basis of re-
venuesfor the government. .The pal).
lic generally, shottld Seriously protest
against any goverarriental.• action
whieh *Old _prevent' the entry, of de-
sirable • immigration': into 'Canada.
constructive policy of selective i131:
•migratiop is needed' and it is Up to
:Canada ,to establish- .,,,a--censtructive
eliey-based_on a careful examination:
of conditions here .and abroad ,to the
,
why•the immigrant goes fo the cities,
Mr. Bennetcexplains,„is-lhat he has
a betterrehance to earn a little ready
money and that there are also oppor-
tunities for him, if he .is sof a foreign
tongue, to talk to' men of his own
peopleewho speak his language, which
Is most essential during. the time tb,at
he is learning the English language
and the local situation, "If the oppor-
tunities fan the farm are greitter'than
those offered in the City, the
ImmI-
grant will soon nad out and act ac-
cordingly," says Mr. Bennett: •
Mr. Bennett asks hie question
should anyone blame the newly ar-:
l'ived immigrant for going to, the plaea
*here he finds Compatriots,. a 'place of
worship, and helpful surroundings
for•him to,get the right start in a new
land. If he cannot speak Eiaglish, he
has an •opportnnitY , in •the first few
. . . .
•tervals, she took the pills, ,always
with the best, Of results. •NoW. at the
age. of sixteen: she is a. line healthy
- ;ficial constitnents of fresh milk. P
as- • . f d .t,.. .• f ,. , ..d • who see. the wond,erful charge inksr.
o e nee ion is, o comse, an elm., emit, . .
teurizataon"may be • defined' as the ex- as iii Poughkeepsie, New York; Where condition that she owes it to Dr. Wil;
postire Of milk ..previously eleanedli
a--fewyeaas. ago ..a serions epidemic Hams' Pink Pills," ., ...
, filtration. Or •centrifiikalizatiOn), to , a
of scarlet fever broke out due to int, 'Mi.% lc:Tee herself says: "It gives
to gOnffrini.,':ihe''Sthte-
' li':-Tfiii- agliert peria,:ar.utheil la; --old-_,Hiasteurized ' milk : This at aike Start- T•e; • -1711.e-Ouie.
— temperiature• net .exCeeding,:q.§.13 _deg
' ea an agitation Whith. resulted • in using D
g
ei'lfsiil
. Di Williams' -15y-iii-Incit.li01.1-11--ce-
• Williams'', Pink Pills' 1 have.
1 .
gainedin:weight, and from a sickly
-girl,sUfferingL from headaches,::dizzi
ness and alariguid "feeling, ,I ani new
ly.-v-ooling it toa_temperature as much
•
7-10-10,w' 50. deg, F. as possible. • P.PugfikeePsie. ad"ting prOinances
• cotripelling ;the, pasteurizatiOn-of all
-.7, WiTer 6. pitstettrized 'milk •canno, be
niilk with the.exception of "certified."
Pui:ciftised or where for other reasons
It;certainly' 'seems too bad. dial we
it Vie: desirable .to- pasteurize milk at , . .
must wait for epidemies to qtimialktP-
, 11,()-nec, ;thelproceSiein ,e4SiTY. be Per,
tiublic interest in such matters, but
' .fon'oed withotit special. apparatus; as
at the present tune this, appears to be
'f°11°ws: ' ' ' ' • . -de' Op the only route by which drastic and
.: '. 'How -,to pasteurize=_Take a
saucepari; fit .at the bottom s' piece
ahatitlialf_an antelLthiaL
nect‘on.that Eloy Scont'Headcivarters
statistics'show that the great Majority
of tScout Troops in Ontario. are. eon
-
fleeted with Churches, Scouting activi-
ties being specially . promoted by the
churches .concerned as real, Worth-
while . tor. their boys. And
exitertenee; Shows that the Sunday,
,Sehool or Oburch• gehoOl Class Organ-
ized on 'Scout linen has better.diScip-.
line, better attendance and greaterin-
terest than Was evidenced before, the
Boy Sybut idea was put
One morning, howeVer, the major
unexpectedly encountered Gus at 'the.
'Post Oflide,. .
Gus!' he exclaimed. "Didn't -
you borrow a little 'money trim 'me ...
several Weeks ago?" ,
' "That's right, major," said the old
Man. "I sliere'ly did.". •
f.."You told me you'd pay it back in
three:er four days. Have you had tad
luck?" • ' •
•' "No, •snh," said,Gue. "I'll tell yo' •
how it Was, ,major..1 lacked jeat.,$2:50
of havlif $10 in de savin's bank, an' 1 ° •
iised4t 'fo' dai. • It's 'all right major,I
'an' I won't' forgit it."'
MONEY OROERSt
-Buy your, ont-of-town stipplies with •
. „ .
. . .
•Miriard's Lirilnient stellevis DistemPer,
•• • • Returned lib Kind. '
.• An Irialithan ,paid a. Visit te
•lie as qUick-tetripered and it Wes.- not.
long.before_he_liad_an_argument7With
.4. native who .Spoke very broken Zng-
lish. 'Seizing •a," dish •froni a -counter
end that it inay safeguard -our -close at hand,' Pat let flt•whh it and
te.rests and promote Vie, general wei-: the Chinaman's head was cut. :On be
tare, regardless of any one class. ing ;brought before the English consul,
'-Canada --needs new 'peap16;-., treeds he was asked whyhe had' ittittlt-eci-the
thenx badly,. on the .fainis and hi all native. ••• , • • • '
'lined induStrial activityWhereif is : "SOre,!' replied Pat .• "„he spoke ,
now almost impoSsible to get' meta to. broken English and I just gate hint
_ , _ , • • .
do the great =bunt ef necessary broken China•in return." ; •
Dominion Express' Money Orders.
Mire Dollars, costs three. cents.
The North-West FUT Co. of Mont.
real was ferme•d in 1779, in oppotitien
to the liudsor: Bay 00. • It Set up fur
trading -posts in' the country west bncl"
north of Lake S'uperior. A bitteetrade
riva4ty: foIlOwed- for Some, years, until'
-they, were arivalgamated in 18.21.
, •
Minarcrs t.inimant for •Dandruff..
Aecor"ditri-to OffiCial returns fo,:. the
.. .
year 1918, the `awn .. of $635 'Wts col- .
•lected in fines fa setting •fi.re to for-
ests:ii'differeert par6. Of C?nsda. and •
one man 'received a jail 'sentence kr
this offenee. • • -. . 4.••.*,?, '" . ,... :'
iatiglOkher:tn_iteep- iiipStry'iticiving;`
Certainly, there are' ,4ieopie who
should not 'pe. permitted to- come into.
-th_e_country, because in. the very an-,
ture• of- things their admittance means,
conflict and'radical social-,distiir,bances
I "JaWeilt,' all to Dr. Williaths' 'Pink in. our midst. •Canada already has its his beaten. you but •stay • and • study
FREEZONE
Corns lift Off
with. Fingers
... .........
Drop a little. fi,Preezone”- on an ach-
-big corn; instantly that .corn .stops
_hurting, -then ..shortly _you lift _it ..
off 'with fingers. It doesn't hurt a bit:. •••,
•,, Your-druggist-selle-a-tiny-bottle4of •
"Freezone," for *a. few cents, sufficient • .•
to remove every hard soft'
or 'eorn between the toes,. and, the cid,
_Lases., without a particle'of pain.' , •-•
1: 'America'!"
.
• NOrway has ° eSttiblished nationall-
domestic science Scheel -for-, girt.- at •
Stavanger.: ,• ' •
.
•
• . Share Of. this • Iro*Witnay'.fri'Oet,..his.,lik'e again
il,Bams' Pipit Pills can be. ol.)7 , Canada is •not :the congested coun-
• „ . T_
asrwell..•aa,other girla, of -my, ago; and Tur.n. not aWay from the Mall Who
• FF P
•
Plerleer • Dog Remodtei: ,
Book on
DOC DISEASES
•
and How to, Feed, .
TMatled Freqe-to any -Ad.,
dress by -Ow Arithinti-'
Z. May Glover Co., TAO.
-1'11-Wast Stint -Street
Yorki U.S.A.
, . •
. • :brough throtigh any.,medicine -dealer; ,tyy. that ;Labor' leaders. wou d -have . The hien- cott of. living is increased
" ilk --1 lati br 4 t . •
•
• •
-to-date-1h . § (n115.': er. bY perif. . or_ six peeple tfitnk: ..0a.11-64.1-6„ •
•
••••
y ores ---Cry...ettizen;Should
Omit. Education, bowever we hope
"the Ultie-Of etietitfon "Of el' -vi e, ,,..„ .,
t '4210,trancTne-Eir!„Willia . of .3-,60,3,910-squarc_nalesnclet us -.1.10,1).sto_k,est, „ •
. • xes Or .
-this _point ef" view, and
..43-C41:tr":01ThigiaditiNtf0 hillf,Pint bottles, Y1117-ellitrige
gktana place e •
dernirather than their ,chre.
- k 11 0-t' 1:00 •
•th • bottle" or , P - square miles of what inightihe classed'
hot t containing thelniiik, and ,Steri..
'in I Ctd.. within_ the, saueepan, and then
pour In some v_ery hot, (bet not -bail-
ing) water; put over -firer and ,when
- Witi'r comes •to the. boil remove.
• • the saucepan and set•it "aside:for fif-•
teeirinillutes. Theirataluflt to the
: sink ,,and, 'put it under the deld -Water
. so that the -het water gets rapidly4eplaced by told: "Keep the •.•bottlesin
water" till a meal has been prepared:,
• L,BY the anicro-organisms
which are capable Of being cultivated
, • tieect,tot:
• less than five per :.cent. , .these
Which can be eultivated, froni
tho.„ Original milk; the' fermenta-
tion bacteria can be destroyed ,or, in-.
-7111hTt'eVae-AS".-ts- delay -the- --natural-
• 'enuring of the milk swim' tweTveto
' 'twenty-four hours?,,,the Milk mean -
shire. keeping .perfectly wholesome._
Pasteurization will also desthy the
•
W. 'E.• C... asks if flat feet:can be
Cured, ---------'
Answer: Yes, in many casei-wheie
the condition not %become chronic:
Beth -flat ..-feet-and-7weak--au-kles-:-
.deriendent upon wpak and:poorly Ae-
.veloped niutcles -as -much-As ehangeS
,iii -the shape vp the-bonest-m7What4s
• ls Cariada Bar the Do?.
'want immigratien ,stopped., ;Lobbyists
have been busy at Ottawa for some
tine picturing before , members- the
fearfat-tesultpentialyniemOhat
would likely t011ow if °Canada, doesnot
bar the,door to iimnigratibn., The un-
,employ.ntent....situation-ia....DRt a new
Labor leaders end the babor Press
•
required to prevent • this is proper
exercise for the•feet,and lower 'part
of Ole- leg6; also sliea .that.-perhstt
.,the;•,toe,t_to be moved. atul that
of 'Chronic cases hos. beer.' effected,. but
it is slow and :'-"tediona . process.
Rheumetisni is sothetimeS• the • con-
Isibuting•cause,of-flat feet,:light shoes
another', poor tnusele-' tone. a - third.
Consult a reliable orthopedic stirgeon, grans and all -for years to Come. The
before getting a, foot support, or .4e. present difficulty 'IS- tlnit capital' Will
fore starting the feat eXerciSes... not gamble on the present ,higli cost
prOdUction. 'Therefore it is not the
puSli', cramp and b,end-i3fir es:7 ure
.problein. Winnipeg •Canada have
been dealing With it anguallyfor the
Tpast twenty 411'e
em 12.32ient at the present tinie is due
buying goods'niade dear by too high a
cost of :prodtiction,. in 'which; labor
figureS, largely. -There is. •abiindance
of work in Canada and' therewill be.
Plenty • tor- eVe'rybody .to cleirinniz:
at "present,as „nadeSirable or .unPro-
ductiVe areas.- This leaves a.basis of
atipreximatPly two and a half LAM:Will::
•scpiare Canada could -absorb
the entire ponulatipa :of the British
Islee..,(England,,Scotlana and Ireland),
_raid _then, have 3.5„(li ess..p.e.O.p I e the
square .mile than no* 1.)1 the
Oki Land:: Placing our present poP11-.
It's Really Amazin
the amount of nourishment
youll find in a Sinai dish of--
with*creara or good, milk added
Sweet Withlts-pwn sugar,
developed from the ,grains in
the making. this stardy blend
. of wheat and, malted -barley
contains,in compact form and
at low cost, the nutritive and
mineral elements needed. to
build.' health and strength.
•
'scarcity a .wovk thkt. Is causing' the:
-trouble,but the ocapti,,
,The prepagithda that •,Labor,leader-s-
heye,..been • spreading in the Labor
rieSS . IS' f• ab;thitirelylll'A • mid
lass •distinction. The phase of the .possibilities. for the future -are sO
immigration question ,considered by , 6.2i.eat?:•..ts :.thereanf t.eaon :why lo a
thern, Is T,i0W-W0l-ahlin1iVat 10 afet' -Itart-OV•the -Great -
Labor er to be more concrete, should elo"ie, our,:gateS to .the people
:hew will it.:affePt. w 8.7 IAN; t :Britain .eSpepally,', •er to the
erS , speak of -possible..initnigratioa4kg•Lr_073opte of • FFenie, 33elgiuni.:;•:. or-
.gregates thatAill iikeiy ilooa Canada,- unitedates, from whence sp iViany
St
per cent, of wonien,school children,
find ender, included in iminigraticin
totals, that da not enter:the labor'intif.'„1110111U1
katStailsties show.. -that f of eVery.
twenty niale ininiigrants, oirer, 21:years Prue original and only Genuine.
Of age, the average is about three
skilled laborer, ten unskilled Wtufiterii,
and. the' Other seven, of profess.lonal
and miscellan•eons occupations: What
-would Canada have done In Pee -war
yearS Withotit inlinigration? Where
will Canada he „If ,,the resollition now
before the"Ottawa'llou.ie 'ghat Ali Mi.
migration:be. imspendeduritil a nortnal
condition .of. dffalta is tatebliailedP Y.1.1tUoi:i.L .8,
ATHLETES--
lVfuscular fatigue'
quickly yields to
• the use of
latigno.0Q,orlo that meana an
'average of .4 neeple Per -,,.square anile
in Canada; ; •.:. '
" The optiatinn per squIre 'le' fbe
.dreat Britain,and Ireland is 374. The
kturrim
census 0! 1913, gave 40„412,220, :or a.
population ,of:, 193 Persons to the
square thlie. In 1912 the•popttlation of
13elgium nas 7,510418; and the Donn- '
lation Per'square nitle -Wad 658. per
sena. The population of the German,
Empire in Etirepo'in 1911, was 60,190;
gr a population. a 311 to the
sqitare.mile. ; • •
face °Cam aboite,,i1S7 More any ,
won a..er,whY...tte
tu1irnFrafle :and of - -13elgiuin;
'Should not be turning their eyes to a
ceuntrY Birch-. as '-calitida” 'where the
:
Try a tube today.
E. OF itIFISLIJILAITE
$.1t.ora
THE LEEMING MILES CO., LID.
• MONTREAL
Agents for Dr. Jules BengUe
RELI EVES PAIN
'You can just teil by its healthiv,
----Ertirilulonintinaljt-dedvivaddr;I:_hgriootd!".:LS,
IF I. only had soniepoin's 'Lini-
ment!' How 'often you've said -
that!, •And then when the rheu-
matic twinge Subsicied-lafter hears of
auffering-'-you•forget,it!' •
D'on't do it again--get'a bottle- le- -:••
day: and heck fl. hailliy_for possible use, •
tonight! .A.sudden attack may come "
Ons—serit-re•i:i.= liithhagioreinuseles.".
._:.:paios and aches resulting frorrCe.xpos- _
-'nfeiT.-:-Youlli_soon. find_ Varmth and reat
lief in Sloan's, the liniment thatpene-
Oates laiihoui rubbing. Clean, econemi.
Three,Sizes-435c, 70c, $1.40 ,
backa.che stiff joints-. neu-ralgia, the'•• •
Ilse Cuticura Talcum
To" Powder and Perfume
An ickial fete, 'skit, baby and dusting
povvder. Convenieneand edonomi-
cal. it takes the place of other per-
fumes. A few grains sufficient.
Sesp2Se. Qintitnent 25ninci 1.11kilt1125e. Sold
throughootthellenriniont CanadionDepori
1.0MAIIP. !Amite.% 344 St, Pao! St,, W.. MOntrellif
new-Culicure Soap staves without mut.
ASPIRI
Only -Bayer" isGenuine
'Warning!, • Talte--ii,o -chatieeS-Witit---
.....;_atiliptitutcs.lar *enable ',13qyer. Tabiete ' •
Aspirin." tinlesi-yett see thp -name •
Bayer' on package ,or on tablets you •
are not getting Aspirin Mill.; In every
,Bayer. , package are •directions for •
...Colds.... headache, Neuralgia,- Blight:
Earache ; • Teethe„ `
bago and for Pain. Handy tin l'okes.
ot• , tweslve; tablets coat feW cents:
• Druggists also sell larger packages, .
MadeSil 'Canada, Xspiritt the trade
'mark (registered in ('anada), of.Bayer',
Mairafaettire • of Moneaceticaeldester
of 'SulIcylieacitl. , "
•..,
ISSUE No.
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