The Exeter Times, 1919-8-7, Page 7CANADIAN TOURIST
TRA 9. IC.:; DOU LES
WILL OUTSTRIP ALL RECORDS OF
PRE-WAR YEARS.
-Many Parties of Ex.Troops Return to
Nature For Another Period
of Free Camp Life,.
The leadjustmont activity is very
Marked in the increased' tourist travel
in Canada this .summer. It is about
double what it was in any war year,
and. bids fair to outstrip all records
"elliteeof pre-war years. The warns weather
set in early, and June started many
moving who will wait for July in
ordinary summers. The reports are
unanimous in telling of big business
in both American and Canadiaun pat-
.:
renege.
One interesting feature is the in-
creased number of parties going "back
to nature." These parties are made
up chiefly of officers and men who had
experience in camp life and long for a
return to the free life that tones up
the tired body and bestows freedom
from care and bank worries. The
Grand Trunk and Canadian Pacific
Railways both have taken charge of
a number of such parties. There is
difficulty in securing sufficient good
guides and in providing canoes and
men to paddle the "freight and pas-
sengers" to their destination away
from civilization. This formeof outing No.8718—Child's Dress. Price, 15
is sure to grow in popularity, in the
opinion of tourist managers. cents. Straight lower edge; yoke and
Doing a Capacity Business. sleeve in one. Cut in 5 sizes, 6 months,
The Canada Steamships, which oper- 1, 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4, flouncing,
ates lines of steamers between Mont-. -
i
Fashions for the Small Folk
9014 9034
9014—Girl's Dress (smocked or
shirred). Price, 20 cents. In 6 seizes,
2 to 12 years. 'Size 6 requires 2% yds.
32 ins. wide, or 2% yds. 36 ins, wide.
9034—Child's Rompers (attached or
detachable bloomers; droppell back).
Price, 15 cents. In 5 sizes, 6 months,
1, 2, 3 and 4 years. 'Size 3 requires
2r/s yds. 27 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 36
ins. wide; belt, cuffs, a yd. 36 ins.
wide; one material, long sleeves, 2%
r.yds. 27 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 36 ins.
wide.
real and Toronto, Kingston, Rochester '1'E �BACKACHE
and Hamilton, and between Montreal, THE CAUSE V�
Quebec -and the famous Saguenay
River trip points is doing a .capacity
business east and west. A large num- Only in Rare Cases Does Back -
bar of Americans may be seen on I ache Mean Kidney Trouble.
these trips, especially east of Mgnt. Every muscle in the body needs
real. constantly a supply of rich, red blood
The Canadian Pacific Railway lake in proportion to the work it does. The
steamships are already doing almost muscles of the back are under a heavy
capacity business and there are still
two months to run. The Northern
Navigation Company, which is oper-
ated in connection with the Canada
Steamships. is having a like experi-
ence.
Transcontinental traffic on the rail-
ways is exceptional. The Canadian
Pacific Railway trans -Canada train is
usually booked away ahead, amply
justifying the enterprise of the com-
pany. A fine line of advertising in
American daily newspapers was put
on last spring by the Canadian Pacific
Railway,and the results prove
that it
was well placed. Capacity is the only
restriction on travel this year for the
people who have the money, and they
are legion.
Hotels are doing 'a record business.
Whenever any convention of moderate
size comes to town it is difficult for
business travellers to get accommoda-
tion. Ottawa is working in an organ-
ized way to care for the 2,000 delegates
that are expected to be present at the
national Liberal convention next
month.
Canadians spend a lot of their good
money in California, Florida and in
other parts of the United States in the
winter season. More enterprise like
that of the Canadian Pacific Railway
would result in a return of American
tourist money spent in this country in
the summer season. For Canada is a
delightful laud to summer in, though
there are reasons for feeling it is a
fine country any time of the year.
8718 8488
1% yds. 21 ins. wide; yoke, long or
short sleeves, a/a yd. 40 ins, wide. Mc-
Call Transfer Design No, 690. Price,
10 cents.
No. 8488—Child's Dress. Price, 15
cents, Tucked or •shirred. Cut in 5
sizes, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. Size
4 requires; front, back, 1% yds, $2
ins. wide, or 1% yds. 40 ens. wide;
yoke, sleeves, collar, 1 yd, 82 ins. wide,
or % yd., 40 ins. wide; one material,
2% yds. 82 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 40
ins. wide. McCall Transfer Design No.
690 and No. 448. Price, 10 cents each.
These patterns. may Ibe obtained.
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
strain and have but little rest. When
the blood is thin they lack nourish-
ment, and the result is a sensation of
pain in those muscles. Some people
think pain in the back means kidney
trouble, but the best medical authori-
ties agree that backache seldom or
never has anything to do with the kid-
neys. Organic kidney disease may
have progressed to a critical point
without developing a pain in the back.
This being the case, pain in the back
should always lead the sufferer to look
to the condition of his blood. It.'will
be found in most cases that
the use of,
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to build up
the blood will stop the sensation of
pain in the ill -nourished muscles of the
back. How much better. it is to try
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the blood
than to give way to unreasonable
alarm about your kidneys. If you sus-
pect your kidneys, any- doctorcan
make 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 pur-
pose -no other medicine can equel Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine, or by mail, at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
Liquid Manure.
Solid manure is a food, while liquid
manure is a stimulant. All ,sails re-
quire solid manure, and this should
be applied in the autumn, if possible;
certainly in the early spring before
planting or sowing.
The time to apply'" liquid manure is
when the plants are making growth
or just as the plants are about to
fruit or flower, if they are grown for
the flowers.
Fruit plants are best treated with
lige id manure when the fruit is 'in a
half developed condition; flowering
plants just before the buds show color;
vegetables when about half grown,
and foliage plants that make new
growth in the spring when the new
growth is well started.
Never apply liquid manure when
the soil is dry. Water dry sail lightly
before applying 'liquid manure.
Liquid manure may be prepared
from stable manure or from cows,
sheep, fowls or pigeons.
A barrel containing thirty-six gal-
lons of water in a secluded place in
which a bag of half a bushel of horse
or cow manure has been placed can
conveniently be renewed. The bag
should be moved about until the oen-
tents have pretty well dissolved. Draw
off as wanted and dilute with Water
until the color of weak tea.
Fowl manure is strong and only a
-pack tray the used to thirty-six gallons
of wetter. Alw•ityw Amnly licluici.Ixtal t>we
directly to the 'son.., not avel�'tlle fo'.i-
age or flowers. Pot, plants ehoilbct.1.1.19t.
be given more than one application
a weak.
•
General Mangin, one of the Most
prominent French leaders during the
afar, and hero, of Verdun, has, !been
'awarded the Grand Cro s 'of the
Legion of Honor.
Carelessness loses more jobs, spoils
Vlore careers, causes snore failures
,khan incompetence. . One moment's
itiarelesstess may umio a lifetime of
'ains1i king effort.
Fame is a plant that cannot 'be
forced in a hothouse.
To Get Most Out of Manure.
A subscriber who runs a dairy farm
thinks he is not gettingsuch good
results from manure as he has a right
to expect, .and wants to know chow
to get the most possible value from
it At present the manure is piled
FLY FROM AUFAX
O
.GRANDIERE.
NEW . MEANS FOR DISCOVERY
AND LOCATION OF FIRES
Aircraft to be Used for Forest Petro
On the St. Maurice River
Watershed,
CHOLERA, INFATUill
-Cholera infantum Is one of the fatal
ailments of childhood. It is a trouble
that comes on suddenly, especially due,
ing the summer months, and unless
prompt action is taken little one may
soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tab r, flint.
lete are an in
oft this trouuble. eal xnTheyne regulateding the ,."Is your watch going, George?" She
asked sweetly, stifling a yawn..
"Yep," answered George.
"How soon?"
bowels and sweeten the stomach and
thus prevent all the dreaded summer
complaints. They are an absolutely
safe medicine, being guaranteed by a
government analyst to contain no
The feasibility of an aircraft patrol opiates or narcotics or other harmful
for the discovery and location of for- drugs. They cannot possibly do harm
est fires is to receive a thorough try- -they always do geode The Tablets
out this summer, in both Canada and are sold by medicine dealers or by
the United -'States. mail at 25 cents a box from. The Dr.
In Canada, the sponsor for the ex- Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
periment is the -St. Maurice Forest
Protective Association, which protects
an area oaf some 13,000 square miles
of forest country on the watershed of
the St. Maurice River, Quebec. You've read of the charge of the
The Provincial Government of Que- "Light Brigade,"
bet is assisting the project by a cash How they faced both shot and shell,
grant. Through the generous co-op- Of the gallant, desperate charge they
oration of the Department of Marine, made
two hydroplanes, belonging to the Into the very jaws of hell—
Dominioli Government, have been How only half of them came back
loaned to the Association, An exper- To receive the glory they'd won—
deneed aviator has been secured, to- Now, list to the tale of the Princess
gether with mechanics and other nec- Pats.
essary staff. Who won victory from the Hun.
'Dhe headquarters of the new scheme They sailed away to a foreign land
of patrol will be near Grand'mere. It A full three thousand strong,
is empected that Lieut. Stuart Graham, They went, a gallant fighting bane
the aviator, will maintain a daily pa- To right a world-wide wrong,
trol, covering the entire area of As- To fight for King and Princes Pat,
sedation territory once every two For home and fireside,
days. This patrol will supplement the They needed no goad, but et drop of
efforts of the regular patrolmen, who hat,
will still continue to travel by canoes, Rushed on—a resistless tide.
by motor cycle, by automobile, by
railway power speeder, or on foot, in Down into the valley of Deatei,
the old-fashioned way. Down Into the jaws of hell,
Lieut. Graham has himself flown And out from the fume of the battle
the two machines through from Hali- breath,
fax to Grand'anere, this being the first But few returned to tell
journey of the kind undertaken in How breast to breast with Beat- they
Canada.
Ont.
The Princess Pats.
An Interesting Experiment.
The application of aircraft to forest
in the barn lot till time to haul it protection is new, and the experiment
out, and a good deal of juice runs will be observed with the closest inter -
out of it into a gulley. . He says he est. It is expected that work will
is so situated that he can not very also be done in the direction of aerial
well haul the manure out and spread photography of timber limits with a
it as it is made.
Undoubtedly this friend is losing
much of the "goody" of his supply of
manure. The liquid manure from
cows is worth fully as much as the
solid, and he loses nearly all the
liquids. It would pay to make a good
concrete foundation for this manure should be undertaken this summer is
a -strong tribute to the progressive-
ness of the St. Maurice Forest Protec-
tive Association, the Provincial Gov-
ernment of Quebec, and the Dominion
Government.
'In the United States, arrangements
have been made for close co-operation
between the War Department and the
Forest Service. Definite routes have
been laid out for the patrol of Nation-
al Forest areas, particularly in .the
western states. Observation balloons
are also being used as forest fire
lookouts. A case has already occur-
red where a specific fire was discover-
ed in. this way at the foot of the Sierra
Madre mountains. Within seven min-
utes after the fire was discovered, en-
listed men in a special fire truck had
arrived, and the fire was promptly
extinguished,. The forest patrol planes
are equipped with wireless and main-
tain communication with permanent
stations. Emergency landings have
been provided.
view to securing accurate information
relative to drainage, forest types, etc.,
including the ascertainment of areas
burned -over, cut -over, and reproduc-
ing to young growth, as contrasted
with vlirgin forest.
That an experiment of this kind
to rest on and to put some kind of
a cover over it. Use enough bedding
so that the manure will contain
straw enough to absorb all the liquid,
and hold it. So far as possible haul
the manure out to land that is soon
to be plowed, so that the newly spread
manure will soon be mixed with soil.
In this way the manure will go fur-
ther. It would also pay to add about
forty pounds -of acid phosphate to
each ton of manure, either as the
manure 'accumulates or as it is hauled
out.
a�
Mice do not like the smell of pep-
permint, and a 'little oil of pepper-
mint placed about their haunts will
soon make them look for other quar-
ters.
"There is a spirit of dissatisfaction
on the part of the bulk of the Labor
party which betrays a want of appre-
eiation of the divine government of
the World. It seems to be forgotten
that man is to live by the sweat of
his brow.—Rev. Finlay Macrae.
The Adventure of Mr. Dubois
Mr. Dubois, a retired Belgian pro-
fessor of mathematics, lived in . the
country until the Germans burned his
house. He then went with his daugh-
ters to Brussels, says the Belgian
Bulletin, where he rented a modest
apartment.
One morning one of his daughters
came to tell him that two German offi-
cers were waiting to see him. He
found them inclined to be excessively
polite. One of them studied him care-
fully, and then asked if he was the
person known as Mr. Dubois.
"I am, as a matter of fact, Mr. Du-
bois, professor of mathematics," he
answered.
The officer smiled and stroked his
moustache. "Have it your own way,"
he said. "Please get ready to leave
with us within ten minutes. Take
clothing sufficient for several days.
You may, if you like, take leave of
your family."
The officer took the prisoner to one
of the best hotels in Brussels, where
he turned him over to a barber. Mr.
Dubois found it hard to restrain him-
self when the barber cut off first his
moustache and then his cherished
beard. The officer, upon inspecting
him, seemed pleased, even triumph•
ant, and handed him a monocle; But
when Mr. Dubois plotested that he had
pever vlorn one and was unable to
keep it in plade, t),i S?1l1COr. said:
"AdnniraLdo not keep uii this farce,
,...�_
1'V'e nave, ttg'Yoti ghe, the groatost rpt•
act for your rank and your misfor-
tune."
The officer then informed him that
they hit received orders to conduct
hi;ll to 'Zeo'briug e,
When the party arrived at the canal
the officer, with apologies, bandaged
Mr. Dubois' eyes, and when the band-
age was removed he found himself In
the presence of several aged officers
at a table covered with maps and
plans, One of the officers conic tor -
ward with outstretched hand and said:
"Admiral, allow me to shake hands
with you as one does with an enemy
one respects.
Mr. Dubois took his hand and re-
plied, "I am Mr. Dubois, professor of
mathematics.'
"You are so far from being Mr. Du-
bois," the spokesman replied with
great politeness, but firmly, "that your
right thumb bears the scar of a wound
you received on board your ship six
years ago when a cannon exploded."
He pointed to Mr. Dubois, whose
thumb lacked a joint.
"That," said Mr. Dubois, "is the re-
sult of an accident I met with while
driving twelve years ago; the flying
glass cut my hand, and —"
"Do not insist, admiral," said the
chief officer in a stern voice.
At that moment a young officer ven-
tured to interrupt his superiors. Hold-
ing up a photograph, he cried out:
"Look, the admiral's left thumb is
injured, while this man's right thumb
lacks the tip."
The photograph was passed from one
to another amid an ominous silence.
The two officers who had brought Mr.
Dubois shivered. Presently the com-
manding officer crossed his arms and
addressed Mr. Dubois:
"So you are not Adm. Beresford?"
"I am M. Dubois, professor of
mathematics," he answercj¢ oneei
more, with his eye on the door.
The oommanding officer raised his
arni and, jointing tq the door, said,
+'gieer mitt!'
Need1(415 to say, Mr, Dubois did not
atop until he reached his own a>ert-
ment, where he burst in upon his
family,
they stared in astpnishmeut
at his beerdl€rss Paco.
"What is the meaning of this?" de.
mended his father•in-law.
Mr. Dubois drew himself up, put the
mohocle in place, and announced: "I
am .Ani. Beresford," •. .
SWALLOWS EAT MOSQUITOES
Birds Do Much to Keep Down Insect
Life Increase.
Pleasant Silences.
"If there is anything I enjoy it's go-
ing to the moving pictures." '
"I thought you were such an admirer
of the English language.'',.,„„,_
"I am. I hate to hear it abused. I
go to the movies to rest my ears."
it Wasn't Fair.
Father -"I'm ashamed to see you
crying because a bee stung you. Act
like a man." ,
Bobble—"Yes, and th-then you-
you'd gine-me a li-lickin', like you; said
y -you would i -if ybu ever h -heard m'me
usin' that k -kind of 1 -language,"
Home Camouflage: .
Neighbor—MY dear, why are you
covering your jam pots with wall pa-
per?
Efficient Mother—Camouflage. It's
the same paper as that on the pantry
walls.
The Power of the Vote.
A suffragette lecturer once brought
down the house with the following ar-
gument:—"I have no vote, but my
groom has. I have a great respect
for that man in the stables, but I am
sure if I were to go to him and say,
'John, will you exercise the ;franchise,'
he would reply, 'please mum, which
horse be that?' "
Precaution.
fought, Mother: "Johnny, on your way
To uphold a fair Princess' fame, h:,ilie from school, call at the grocer's
Her flag, a flag with honor fraught,
Inscribed with Royal name.
In France they lie, with poppies red
O'er them—as cross their valor'd
won,
A pall of beauty o'er hero dead,
Royal color for Canada's son.
Qn honor's shield, their name engrave,
Let nation mourn. their loss,
They died the silken folds to save
Of their Princess flag, at any cost.
TORONTO FAT STOCK SHOW.
Careful preparation is the keynote
to success in the live stock business,
either in the fitting for the show ring
or in the marketing of butcher stock.
or the topping o
awards
of g L
Placingpp
the market depends largely on the con-
dition of the animal when shown or
offered for sale. Animals to be shown
at the winter shows should be selected
now and preparations started so as to
have them in the best possible condi-
tion by show time. The Toronto Fat
Stock Show offers an excellent oppor-
tunity for feeders who have taken the
time to fully condition their stock to
get the highest market value, and in
addition to compete for the many
generous premiums that are offered.
He Got the Job.
It was through bad luck that Jack
had sunk down to rags and hunger,
but his heart beat hopefully as he ap-
plied for a job on the coasting steam-
er.
"Afraid you won't do," said the cap-
tain curtly, doubting if this ragged
person really was a sailor.
But Jack's reply proved it.
"I hope, sir," he said, "that you will
not condemn the hull for the sake of
the rigging."
If you want to free the neighbor-
hood of mosquitoes encourage swal-
lows to make -themselves at home,
says the American Forestry Associa-
tion, which is conducting the national
bird -house building contest among
school children. These birds feed al-
most entirely upon obnoxious insects
and they will do much toward protect-
ing orchards and other trees from
insect pests. No better investment
tan be made, therefore, than some
houses set out for martins or other
swallows.
Of the blue swallows 'the purple
martin is the largest, the male being
entirely blue above and below, while
the female is blue above with a gray
breast. Swallows are highly migra-
tory, mast of them spending the
winter in +South America.
•
Larkspurs.
The difference in the foliage is so
great as to lead a person to believe
that the annual and perennial lark-
spurs are a different family of plants,
The foliage of the annual is fine and
graceful, somewhat resembling myrio-
phyllum, or parrot's feather, the popu-
lar aquarium plant. The broad leaved
foliage of the perennial larkspurs is
entirely different; this also is attrac-
tive.
The annual larkspurs make hand-
some beds with their light, graceful
foliage and bright colored flowers,
The flowers keep well when cut and
placed in water and really seem more
delicate and refined than the peren-
nial sPrts,
tioth the annual and perennial lark-
splits are befnef.tted-by liberal tertiliz-
lug and daily watering during the hots,
Weather,
fa dog attains full 'growth at iihe
end of the second year, it old at 15
years, and seldom lives beyond 20.
The intrinsic value of •a British
shilling in 1914 was 4d. To -day it is
worth 1031d+.
This is to certify that fourteen years
ago I got the cords of my left wrist
nearly severed, and was for about nine
months that I had no use of my hand,
and tried other Liniments, also doc-
tors, and was receiving no benefit. By
a persuasion from a friend I got MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT and used one bottle
which completely cured me, and have
been using MINARD'S LINIMENT in
my family ever since and find it the
same as when I first used it, and would
never be without it.
ISAAC B. MANN.
Metapedia, P.Q.
Aug. 31st, 1908.
an...Feet me some coffee and a bar of
soap."
Father (after Tommy had gone) :
"Why do you want coffee?"
Mother: "That's so he'll remember
the soap."
Bang Went "
A new and pleasant turn has been
given to the story of the Scot's six-
pence. Lord Shaw of Dunfermline,
speaking of the practice of economy,
stated that he recently met in a ,Lon-
don 'bus a distinguished Marchioness
and her daughter. They were distress-
ed -because they had just discovered
that they had boarded the 'bus with-
out any money. Lord. Shaw paid their
fare for them—amounting to sixpence.
A couple of days later he received six
penny stamps from the Marchioness,
and in writing to acknowledge the un-
expected payment, he stated it was
unkind of her to visit upon him in this
way the traditional love of a Scotsman
for a sixpence.
MONEY ORDERS.
When ordering goods by mail send
a Dominion Express Money Order.
The Parson in Literature.
Both Charlotte Bronte and Jane
Austen—,although the former was the
daughter of one clergyman and the
wife of another, and the tatter's father
was also a clergyman—seldom or
never snake their parsons wholly sym-
pathetic personages. Perhaps the
reason is that to do otherwise meant
solving What Balzac eats "the diffi-
cult literary protblein of how to make
a virtuous person interesting," or per-
haps they believed that it *as from
the unpleasant. characters in novels
that we get most of the excitement
anti fun, At any rate, the curates in
"'Shirley" are merely caricatures, and
Mr. Helstone--"a 'conscientious, hard-
headed, hard -handed, brave, st rn,
placable, faithful old man"ails to
win the reader's 's� paths*, 'w4�ile Mr,
Brociclelrurgt, an 'Jane tyre," mast
be classed with the cleliteal goats
rather 'than thelerical si.eep of Ile-
tioll The best that can be said of
Oat of -Charlotte Tronte's parsons is
tflat they have fax snore character and
virility than diose pale and uninter-
esting teaad'iinidng clergymen who
appear in so many Victorian novels,
dead to• the world,
Lazy men arc
but they remain unburied,
T 11IT1R0 tek1 1 ##
Twq ys a' eo. r+se, : an.t441 )0111""
ins; period ot� trai iinr. ,,AAfitly t
SuperintendenR 1.06:1 tjG Qetherins JI e.
West, Montreal.
IsrvsAF � j�j
County. pp gpdid op rt fi �y, "RI'tlt °
heat '1'. 't'S+ll8on g1t.hing qa, .1iwttii;
'i Adelaide $ , , Toronto.
11170I.L EQUIPPED NEWSPA.P#IR
T T andob printing plant n IKtastelre,
Ontario, Insurance earned $1,600, WIlli
o for 64,300 on quick rale. Box
wni,01, Publishing Co„ Ltd,. TQi'1/10.
icor ZWItE WerxT5i
Virr HAT IIAVIll YOU Fon SAL,ifl I 1
T Live Poultry, Fancy Hens. Pigeoons,
Pggn
a, eto.t Write L Weinrauch !r
30.18 St. Jean 2 aptiete Market, Mont.
real, Que.
1EeerI3•i sTrzLnisust
WRITE Fort QUIt FRED 33OOIC -ol,
House Plans, and information tell+
inr how to save from Two to Pour Hun-
dred Dollars on your new Home. Ad-
dress Halliday Company. 23 J'aeicsos
557., Hamilton, Ont.
zsis CEL L Ai4EO V p.,
CAl4CD'R. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC.,.
internal and - external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment Write
as before too., late. Dr. 13ellman Medical
Co., Limited, Collingwood. Ont
A Prisoner.
The city's hand extends its grasp
Across the sunny countryside,
Till even brooks and rivers wide
Are held in iron clasp.
My little brook with waterfalls,—
That, sparkling, sang so cheerily
Upon its journey to the sea,—
Is now in prison walls.
Its course is bound in tubing dark;
I, peering down through bars above,.
Attempt to see the brook I love,
I hear it singing—hark!
That blessed song of joy and wings:—
"They cannot chain my soul in me!"
The way it sang when it was free,
And bravely, still it sings.
efinerd's Liniment Cures Colds. Eta
Why Nursey Left.
On his return to civil life Jenkins
was told about the nice nurse his wife
had engaged for the baby.
"Don't be misled by her looks," ex-
plained Mrs. Jenkins. "Although she
is rather pretty and childish -looking,
she is really very sensible and well-
trained. Why, she won't let anyone
kiss baby while she is near."
"No one would want to," said hubby
absent-mindedly, as he gazed after the
slender grey figure, "while she is
near."
Sure! High Heels
Cause Corns But
Who Cares Now
The Finishing Touch,
Paddy was showing a gentleman
over his master's new house, and of
ter he had gone through it the gentle-
man said to Paddy: "Well, it's really
a very fine house, and beautifully,
finished." "Oh, no," said Paddy, "it's
not finished yet." "Indeed!" said the
visitor; "why, what more do they In
tend to do to it?" "Well," said Paddy,
"I heard our master say the other day
that he was going to have a mortgage
put on it."
Slinard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
To lengthen the usefulness of -fat;
pour .it through a. cloth laid over the
strainer each time after use. This re-'.
moves the foreign substances that
usually burn 'before the fat is thor•
-
oughly heated and cause the dissetts-
f.>.ctien of repeated fryings in the
camp fat.
see e O O
Because style decrees that women
crowd and buckle up their tender toes
in high heel footwear they suffer from
corns, then, they out and trim at these
painful pests which merely makes the
corn grow hard. This suicidal habit
may cause lockjaw and women are
warned to stop it.
A few drops of a drug called frees...
one applied directly upon a sore corn
gives quick relief and soon the entire
corn, reeet a ,miss all, lifts, out without
pain, Ask the drug store man for a
quarter of en ounce of freezone, which
costs very little but is sufficient to re-
fmrom-one's every tehardcor soft corn or callus
t.
This drug is an ether compound end
dries in a moment and simply shrivels
up the corn without inflaming or oven
irritating the surrounding tissue or
skin. Clip this out and pin on your
Wife's dresser.
GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN,
WITH LEMON JUICE
Make a beauty lotion for a few cents
to remove tan, freckles, sallowness.•• .
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter'will'supply
you .with three ounces of, orelar4,
white for a few cents. Squeeze the
juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle '.
then. put in the orchard white anti
shake well. This makes a quarter pint
of the very best lemon skin whitener i
and complexion beautifier known.
Massage this fragrant creamy lotion
daily into the face, neck, arms and -
hands and just see how freckles, tan,
sallowness, redness and roughness .
disappear and how smooth, -soft:' '
clear the skin becomes. - Yes! It is
harmless,and the beautiful results
will surpise you.
GENUINE ASPIRIN
6d, R CROSS" t
Jam_-.. CROSS"
TABLET-S-- WITHOUT "BAYER
CROSS" NOT .ASPIRIN -AT' ALL." '
Get Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Asptrti i
In" In a "Bayer" Package, Plainly 1
Marked With the Safety
"Bayer Cross."
There is not a penny of German
money invested in "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin," nor will a German citizen
profit by its sale or ever be allowed to I
acquire interest.
The original world-famous Aspirin ;
marked with the "Bayer Cross" is now
made. in Canada and can be had at
your druggist's in handy tin boxes of
12 tablets and larger "Bayer" pack --
ages.
Genuine Aspirin has been proved
safe by millions for Pain, Headache,
Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism,
Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Neuritis.
Aspirin is the trade mark, register-
ed in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
CUT1URA HEALS
BARY'S FACE
Could Not Sleep Eruption
Itched and Burned So.
"I noticed a little pimple on my
baby's face. I thought it was from
the sun but It kept getting worse and
the skin was red and very hot. He
could not sleep or rest the eruption
itched and burned so, and it caused
hire to scratch. I was quite die-
couraged.
"I saw an advertisement for Cuti-
cure Soap and Ointment and sent for
a free samriple. Ia bought more and
after using twocakes of Cutic ra Soap
and two and a half boxes of Gittictua
Ointment he was healed." (Signed)
Mrs. S. D. McGuire, Clarksburg)
Oct., f ec. 18, 1918,
Use Outicura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum for every -day toilet purposes.
Tor tree sample each of.Outicur y Soap, OW.
mese: and Talcum address poet -coy 0uticntm,
nope It, Dasten, e, 0. A, • sold evo/Wheeo.
7. ISPSUE 31---'19.