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The Clinton News Record, 1921-8-4, Page 3i BY DR. J. J. MIDI)LETON i0 .ftNrovltielal Board of Health, Ontario •.I Nldtietmn 1511 glad to a1 swnr eutiatains on k ub1 o Health ties 1pr tens through this column. Address hum et the Parliament Bides. Q Termite. st48t ti NM EU ega Ifee. rsia le43PaAgin'Td+A it tw5i = til A - TH HE` ItEDUCATION .. When anyone ie overcome with the beret, it is important to know whether tate 'condition is .one of sunstroke or • of heat exhaustion. Immediate steps have to be taken to restore the nor- mal heat of the body and promote normal ' ejaculation of the blood, so one must notice whether the striken person's temperature is high or row, If there is fever and the shin airy and hot, the ease is evidently sunstroke. 'The patient first i:oinplains.. of a tired feeling accompanied •by a sense of •dullness or3oppression in the head. Dizziness may ensue, leading to un- • conseiousress if the attack is severe. 'The face is flushed and the ••breathing labored; the pulse is irregular and week, ▪ At the outset the symptoms of sun- stroke and heat exhaustion are very similar. The skin is cold and •clammy, and the body temperature below nor- mal. If energetic and proper measures are not taken to revive the patient, he or she may quickly succumb.. The very first thing to do for a 'heat victim is to. remove, him to a shady spot and loosen his, .clothing. 'Next examine whether the surface of the .skin is hot or cold. If it is hot :sponge innnediately with ice water, and when the patienthays been re- moved to a favorable place in•doors, a .coil bath should he given,' and the :akin rubbed with e dry towel to en- tourage eirculatian. As soon as con- sciousness returns, cold drinks may be given freely and• the patient should •be kept in a quiet and shady room. In case of heat ,xhaustion, rapid 'stimulation is necessary. If the skin 'feels cold, clammy and moist the pa- tient should be immediately covered -with blankets and hot water bottles applied to the feet. Ilot drinks such as tea, milk or lemonade should be !given if• the patient is conscious, and -aromatic spirits of ammonion placed -on a obit of cotton or on a handker- chief should be held near his nostrils. :In a cooling breeze the patient will revive 11111•ei1 quicker, and if an electese fan le available so much the better. Should a 'hospital be convenient, every pa- tient should be made to have the - l a tient sent there on alecoun•t of the special facilities for treatment, as oomelete coidart:e and death some- times follows attacks of !teat exhaus- tion if peeper treatment is net resort- ed to' without delay. People should take war'nivis of the dangers of having the stead uncovered for any length of time in the sun's rays. If this precaution was heeded, and suitable headgear used in the 'heat:•,af summer there would be lnucio leas 'risk of sunstroke resulting. Summary -of treatment: Sunatroke— (1) Remove patient to shady spot and loosen clothing. (2) Sponge with ice` water. (3) Rub skin with dry towel. (4) If patient is conscious, •cold drinks may be given, (6) Keep patient in a quiet and cool room. Beat Exhaustion— (1) Cover patient with blankets, (2) Apply hot water bottles to feet. (3) Give hot drinks such as tea or lemonade, if patient is con- scious, ,(4) I3•ol•cl aromatic spirits of am- monia near patient's nostrils, W. D. nibs if tiler' is any cure for hives. • Answer; Yes, eosin water and other alkalies are of servize in giving re- lief. H. W. P. writes: -17e t'o eterl three years eel s: ; 1,• n „ r+ from ceratha it J 1 ,,e . sometimes fee r•r;r11 ," .. . •troubles l'e ,'rt t- ea Answer; Ye". t.' • You shoe}d ha. e • :- 1 . • r. I threat e"-.rnrnti 1:' ry' • 1 ade:alids remove -1 ree ere Enlargel teuells tl• 'dl ...z3 ,•c at- tended to l:y a ihyzinan, Keeping Fit. 'Semler or late., ...ere 1s impressed •Un area of as the need. or. taking 000e LU keep Inc pular! machine 111 rull- .L.,., (.raer. ...: ;1_,,,,d gives little heed La the =Lee.. unu I,L -bi01 mese Inlulunieled era. ......n a., 1: c. c:lml,t ironi tare eauut t. .-ae..uw,t..e GLe .,. .. .u:_.ete ear t,. -._..j, n •. .. ... a.a..,, .eine lealtle Sr a.w.r .eu:lt,y eepau•en the Sot,' as tae teals .ale al. .. _. ter any injury i.•r 11111e0s, the Calla is resuuene. '.one syat,__, b.rieeptay le - t alus w what it w„5 w..l:auc ,.•eg.scer- nug an 111 meet. As we grow eller we learn the .11eea U1. Cotte. N'b ue net 5o aeon le- e ert to rue mega -tat el:en:ion after ,sat.•gue arta s.teee. ere teern W 50U4 a wee er a aeeu that 10 nut 100 our b'ouu. \ve oa uo-e •a:.vays act upon L,le ainowarage 04.40 we nave. Buz 12 we over -run tate gauger eignuls we ale sure to rue u, Some ,.nen train for lin event; some .nrert team eer 'a lite. An aenlece: lfi .r.goroes m aastmel.ee and sun-aemal tin the race se rowed, me game is played, the mese or tee bout is over. '.)'hen he thinks he bias a license to •cut loose again. But a Aran emend to keep fit xor the ousiness-of tieing •cannot afford to "break training: tee may relax, he may rest; lout Ars va- cations are perious for the restora- tion and not the destruction of his .energy. For his amusement Ile finis that which builds hila up, that he may do his work better when he conies back to it. A vacation never was intended for a dissipation. The purpose of it is an improvement in the general physi- cal condition. Those who are idle always, whose life is one long play- time, do not know the recuperative meaning of a respite. Never having toiled, they cannot enjoyably rest. The fun is his who has worked hard to deserve the recreation. And when the recess comes in his business he does not find it pleasure to sit idle in stagnation and vegetation, He finds something to do—.some interest mental or manual -to keep him ace cupied, The maul who would be fit takes 1 care that neither mind nor muscle is, atrophied by disuse. You cannot wish any man, at any age, a crueler fate than that of having nothing to do. Monkeys are sometimes made to perforin their tricks by means of wires attached to their limbs and manipulated by a hidden trainer. Pianos made in Britain in 1918 numbered 120,000; last year the num- ber'made was only 60,000. StIOCCitei RCP„Zgg:to, Luck never ecniee to the sbia•kee— it always docs to the weaker, The present hour is the decisive hone, and every day is dooms'e,v. It is the man who persists in seelug his ideal, who ignores obstacles, abso- lutely refuses to see failure, who clings to his confidence In victo>sy, that wins ont. Genius has a twin brother by the name of Perseverance. Success is not measured by what a man accomplishes, but by the oppose• tion 110 has encountered and the cour- age with which he has maintained the struggle against overwhelming odds. Don't waste any limo belaboring tbo cause of all your troubles—you're the troubler. Many men fail because they do not see the importance of being kind and courteous to the nen under thorn. Pull on the oar, and 1101: on your friends, Nature does not say, "You must not,” hut she says, "If you do, you must pay the price, for I cannot make it less." Nature does not argue. The way to be happy is to take what you get and do what you can with ie Great Deeds. Who can stay the winds oewinter with a gesture? • Who can hold the 1•1111S of spring in her two hands? She can hide the gusty tears of her love When her love commands. Who can oast Is veil across the face of the sun Lest ho be too hold when he shines at noon? He can keep guard upon his lips day and night Lest they speak too soon. —Marquerite Wilkinson, The Brute. The young married woman went home to her mother and sobbingly de- clared she just couldn't be happy with her husband again. "I wouldn't have minded it sa much, mother," she sobbed, "if Cherlie had answered me baclt when I scolded hint, bu-bu-but be did something worse." Her mother was duly shocked at this. "Mercy, my dear child!" she ex- claimed. "He struck you then?' "No; worse titan that, snother!"— and the young wife. sobbed afresh. "Tell me •at once!" indignantly de- manded her mother. "He—he just yawned." Hca • eleeee If coffee, which is known to contain caffeine, disturbs your health and. comfort - drink. INSTANT POSTU: 'There's a Reason 05202 4 Ok, THE.,.NEW EYasS , it look at no'leis that! the enerin0ns a i amount oC twelve :tad a half ]pillion times its natural size, That wield OF MEDICAL SCIENCE INVENTION OF A BRITISHSCIENTIST, Wonderful Weapon. Which Will Play a )Big Part in the I"ight'Awai$tst Disease, A we:lpon of immense 'value, in thegreat light ngeiret•disease 11a's just been forged, It Is a new kind of ince• 1e5ee.pe which15 115 11111011 strenger Mall. the old kind as the big tee:e cope in 'elle Creetwlch Observatory is stronger than a pair of opera glasses, writes a noted London physician. Tho ,story of the now microscope is a 10101000, strange and fascinating„ The things which It may accomplish for all of ns can as yet only be guessed at know we now that they will be• great things, amazing things, Make an ordinary !louse -fly bigger than tate demo of St Paula, Mese It is se t0 see what ibis must meanto doctor's' and to the science of medielne, A great neneva-future opene out, full of all sorts of oetonislhtng hopes. Moreover, the u o of this violet light allows its t0 eee germs alive, Iib! till 11010 We could oniy see themal terthey had been stained with various bright dyes—that is to say, alter they were dead. This is very Important, 50 the natui'- el living gore,. met afford far 1110.10 real information then the dried, stall- ed, weed COG. so Mr. l3aruard believes his discovory is only • the boglaning of a new ad - 1 vane° in knowledge, for there 5eeme 1 to be reason to the*that ether rays, Including the mysterious X-rays, maybe able to give oven greater results Blau the violet light rays. That, how- ever, is a matter still hidden in the future, . The doctor's meet powerful weapon A 'WOMAN'S R1CL7 against disease is his eye. Once the can see where the danger lurks, wlltit it is, what it looks like, he Is hair -Way towards preventing it. Microscopes are the new eyea•of nieeilicine, with which our stealers are able t0 keep a constant and a splendid watch On our deadliest eutemies. Fl3hting.Deadly Germs. Imagine . an army to -day without aeroplanes, or 00 army of the past without zconte! They would be on the name footing as would medicine without microscopes. • All our knowledge of the berms of disease, of diphtheria germs, oe ty- phold fever germs, of suppuration germs, we owe to the microscope. - Once upon a time diphtheria !tilled about ninety out of every hundred children it attacked. Then, by the aid of this great, all -seeing eye, a doctor found the germ of diphtheria. He studied its shape, its way of living. It became, as It were, a "marked man," PO that its-appearanee was known to do e --tors, In the Scotland Yard of etiele.:.a:—the laboratory—they had • r..ption complete, After theft it eel alar very difficult to prepare all entleete: to this poisonous fellow, so that whenever .he appeared steps • eauld be taken to destroy hint. That s •ltidoto le known to everyone "Ant's.:ieitheria Serum," And since •:., • f• "ow—very few—children 'o diad . he dreadful white growth ti::: - come at the back of the throat :end is called diphtheria. 01000 tha serum has been given, the growth peels off and comes away. • Too Small to See. That is what the microscope has done for ono disease. Unhappily, there are other dbsease•5 which remain to bo conquered. One 0f them is measles. No plan has ever yet seen the germ of measles, and yet that germ certainly does exist. TYioasles kills far more children now than diph- theria. Measles is, therefore, a more deadly disease. now than diphtheria. Why has the germ et measles never been seen? The answer is that it is to.o small to be seen. The microscope is not able to magnify it, to enlarge it sufficiently to allow the human eye to detect it, In the words of science the germ of measles lies beyond the microscope, It is "ultra -microscopic:" And here we came to the new micro- scope. The old microscope was thought to be absolutely perfect. Manufacturers of the exquisite glass lenses with which it 13 fitted said that the very limit of its poseible powers had been reached. Lenses could not be made to give a greater enlarge. ment. That idea has lasted for ten years. Doctors thought that no further im- provenleut was possible in their won- derful "eye," and so bad given up all hope of seeing the very minute germs which probably caus•s measles and other familiar diseases, such as whoop- ing cough, scarlet fever, chicken -pox, and so on; for no one has yet tohnd the germ of these commonplace ail- ments. New Light on the Subject. But the new microscope brings new hopes with it. 7t le no less than twelve and a half times stranger than the old one. That is to say, that an object which looked no larger than a pea ander the old microscope looks as large as a penny -piece under the new one. The new microscope, lilte most great ideas, makes use of a new prinolple which is yet beautifully simple. Its discoverer, Mr. Barnard, whose name is !mown all over the world for his knowledge of this subject, thought that equally as important as the glass lona' in a microscope was the light which enabled the eye of the person using the lens to see through it. • Suppose that, Instead of trying to make better lenses, one tried to use a better kind of light? He began to work on that simple idea, and employed colored Ilghte in- stead of the ordinary daylight, The daylight, as most people know, 10 made up of seven different colors, Somethuee it gets split up into these seven colors again: This happens when it passes through rain --the rain bow --wand when 11 passes through cut - glass of a special shape—for example, the blue and red lights seen at the bevelled edge of mirrors. The colors, when daylight is split up, always come in.esaet order, violet being at ono end of the row, and red at the other end, The order is: violet, indigo, blue, groan, yellow, orange, red, Mr. Barnard used quartz glace, so eat ae to sp(tt up the daylight and send only one color at et time into his interas0bpo. He found, by making telalh that violet light gave him the results he was Iocking for. So he eta ranged his quartz glass in such a fag- hlon that only YdItli et stou t d 4a11 ou the Obeli/tent he had under exactil fiatiere $tudyinq L(vifig Biidoli a ifs. Arid fly thin meanie add other teekinl- eai chat Bele he forged his great neve weapon, t io neer Microseope, with its eleletJigitt, can enlarge any oWeat .,r.Ai..".as,v TD GOOD HEALTH Most Troubles Afflicting Women Ake Due to Poor Blood. To every woman belongs tile right to enjoy a healthy, active life; yet nine Out of ten suffer from some form of bloodlessness. That is why one sees on every side pale, titin cheeks, dull eyes and drooping figures—sure signs et headaches, weak backs, acle ing limbs anti uncertain health. All weak women should win the right to be well by refreshing their weary bodies with the now, rich,, red blood that promptly transforms them into healthy attractive evonie0, This new, red blood is supplied by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which reaches every organ and every nerve in the body. Through the use of these pills thousands of wo- men have found benefit when suffering from 111100111 la; indigestion, general weakness and those ailments • from which women alone suffer. Among the many women who tell of the good Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done -then is Mee. L, Hicks, Round Hill, N.S., who says: "I became very much run down in health; my blood seemed weak and watery, my strength failed, and I was so easily tired that my work was a burden. I had often read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and decided to try them, ander can truly say that after using three boxes I found my- self gaining, and my 01d -time, energy and vitality was restored. Out of my own experience I can strongly recom- mend this medicine." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 20 cents a box or six boxes for $2,60 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Insect Samsons. If a man could jump as far as a flea can in proportion to his size, he could leap with. ease Over the dome of a cathedral. Were he is agile as the common grasshopper, two or three bounds would•take him in a twinkling from his office to his house. A flea suspended in a minute sling will grasp a match -stick and juggle with it as though it were a mere noth- ing. Were a man equally strong he could toy with 0, giant forest tree weighing five or six toes: The ant thinks nothing of dragging a piece of wood fifty tinges his own weight; while if he falls off a leaf a hundred times his own height from the ground, dee does not hurt himself. If our appetite were as great as those of caterpillars we should each require more than a ton of food every week. Could we but learn all that the bee knows about flying, we /night soar In- to the air 111 aeroplanes whose wings were no more than four feet across, and wlhose engines were no stronger than those of motor cycles. The Lightest Wood. The unfamiliar balsa, wood, growing in Costa Rica and Ecuador, is the lightest wood known, weighing only 7.3 pounds to the cubic foot. Cork weighs 13.7 pounds. Growing much more rapidly than almost any other known tree, it ie said that within four years a balsa tree will attain the height of thirty feet, with a diameter of tell inches, It is as durable as cedar, The wood is white, extremely straight -grained and easy t0 work. It is soft when green; •but ,seems to hard- en saber. It is usedextensively for making lite -rafts and life -preservers, and it is thought that it will eventual-. ly constitute a valuable soruc0 of pulp wood. It le believed that the tree would flourish in Florida, and because of its rapid growth would spread rapid- ly over the southern pant of the state. Berlin's Best Jokes. Is the ex -Kaiser as popular in Ger- many as he was before the war? It would appear that he is not the wor- 1hdptul idol he was. At die time his vary name inspired tearful admiration among the German people—their great rulerwho could do nes wrong. Nowa= days he is the subject of music -hall Jokes, The following patter was given by tw6 crosstalk comedians (Germans both by nationality) In one of Berlin's leading vaudeville theatres recently' "Goad -evening, Iians•1" said the first comedian, "So you're bank front the War?" "(food -availing, Fritz!" replied the second. "Yea, I'm back from the war, but ' ft took me a long time to get back!" 1 suppose, £taus," continued Treitz, "you must have been the last one to leave," "No, Fritz; there le one who isn't home yet." Tho "one" referred to Was the ex - Kaiser, And the house reared with laughter, •'- rev,oJ.h:; , Natives of Algeria bury with the dead Nal •medieihos /iced Aly thele tel; their Islet Illnesses, I II t IINNI k eAi4 tlwbrYwh'e l St " wy ' 4."10 0.._ ,. nl, �w'v. r1 J Scouts at the Texointo. Fair. Por many years 1)010 t e Toronto hale, or 10 use its 151010 eupjleniop0 Hallie, the '(:re Natrona,. I:ixhlh1, tion," tee been .the iusoca of Boy Scouts franc all Balis of 01/tari.01 One day ulwani hetng ;.gat 41402 by the management :to Boy Stlonte' Day. '±'111e year lioy S,,0Onls' Day will be Satin.. day, September 3rd, right In the mid - rile of flue I7xbibition season when everything will be at its heist, Local CcuunitLees at Toronto 010 now worlo- lag hard getting. 'everything in shape far 1111:1 big day and oleo ger other fea- tures crier to it and following it, all cf which have to do with the Smelts. One c0 tee r91eeell features this year will 1'e a 14Ic•lel Camp f01••about 000 Semite. Troupe from outside 'Toronto will be accommodated ih this camp without charge except for food,, and that" they may ar1211g0 far to suit Clleir own desires, 1'ente, bltnitets, ground sheets, cooking fliee, cooking Utensils, stoves, elo„ will be 110i'e at their disposal, and Special arrange - meets aro being made for the supply et the ingredients of their ]Heals at the tweet passlble price, • The boys attending the model camp will neve a special prograultnit of ac- tivities for them every flay, inclurlitg. both recreational and educntionel fea- tures. Bach afternoon there will be a series of Boy Scout tinct athletic com- petitions of various kinds on a. parade ground which 1s being sob aside for their own use. And each evening the campers • will form up and parade through a portion of the Exhibition Grounds and adjacent sections of the city. On the rally day itself, Toronto Scouts will turn out, over two thous- and strongto greet their brother Scouts from outelyilg sections of the province, and It is assured that they will all have ono greet big, happy day of it, Lundeen on ally day will be provided for both visiting and Toronto troops by the Provincial Council, Another special conoessiou tills year is that every registered Boy Scout pre- senting bit -melt at the Exhibition gates in uniform and wearing the Boy Scout "Ontario 011iofal Badge," Willbe permitted to pass through the turn- stiles without payment of fee or other formality, Those Exhibition talk sure do think a great deal of tho Scouts. And, if you could lhe:u• 14lanaging Di- rector John G. Kent, .they have every reason to be. For haven't the Scouts in former years proven absolutely in- valuable to the Fair officials by lopat- ing Inst children, acting as guides fox visitors, staffing the big grand stands with ushers, attending to emergency cases often long before calls could be put through to the regular ambulance companies? "When in Doubt Ask a Scout" has become onoof the slogans of vieltors to the big Pair, and it is very seldom that Ito. Scout has had to disappoint those who would heave his help. The Sunday following Rally Day will be marked by a monster "Scouts' Own" service, of Toronto Scouts and of visiting Scouts who roman over the week -end. It will probably take place on the University Campus or in Convocation Hall, in Queen's Park. SUMMER HEAT HARD ON BABY No season of the year is so danger- ous to the life of ilttle ones as is the summer. The excessive heat throws the little stomach out of order so quickly that unless prompt aid is at hand the baby may be beyond all human help Before the mother realizes Ire is in. Summer is the season when diarrhoea, cholera infantuln, dysentry and colic are most prevalent, Any one of these troubles may prove deadly if not properly treated. During the sum- mer the mothers' beet friend is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep baby healthy. The Tablets ere sold by medicine dealers or by mall at 20 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Out. Medal Muddlers. There is always• a good deal of grumbling about the delay in the dis- tribution of war medals, some of which do not reach their owners for many years, says an English paper. The record medal in this respect was that given for the Duke of Wel- lington's Peninsular War. The cam- paign ended in 1812, but it was not until. 1847 that it was decided to award a general service medal. The last of them reached their reeiplents more than fifty years after they had been earned! Though medals to commemorate wars• or single battles have been struck in this country ever since the time of Queen Elizabeth, they were not at first distributed to all who had taken part in the lighting; they were given rather es rewards to those wlio had shown special bravery of per- formed meritorious services. Those struck by Oliver Cromwell af- ter Ms Dutch wars wore Large gold plates of considerable value. The first distribution that was anything like general was that made by Charles L during the Civil War, when he pre- sented a silver medal to every Royal- ist soldier. The Chinese lasted the first known general service medal nearly two thousand years ago. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia Tommy's Howler. In a small village school a teacher asked the scholars in her class to write a sentence finishing With the two words, "bitter end." One boy wrote, "The enemy fought to the bitter end," Another Add, "Tlie aftiern0On's day came too 50011 to a biter end," 0202 the 5ettenee that•cappoil thein all Was written by»it bright bey of ten, whose name wee Tonittly, It reit thea; iiui-pip t'an atter Murphy's eat $4'fitiitdilY, And es' She Was i•tuillug through the Woodelt 101100 he ,.hitter The Wer•Id Has Need ofi, T ve1'J Tree. The world has noed of 011 the LlUnge Of beauty that fila mumu )u- brings ' pewee and perfumes, gauze and wings, The planet has sa melt of snows The world bas noed of every rose Wherever any traveller goes, There aro such stones the weal'Y 111000 Ot nnou in daily Journey pass,,. The world has need of all its grease, There Is such gray in every scene, �aGh sbatdowe 5051113' dills batWee11, TUe wdrld teas need of ell its greou. So much of drab there la lo PCO, Drab 111118 turd drub humanity, The world luta need of every tree, Empire Timber Exhibition. The value which !cutlers of entre in the British Empire sot 011 forests and forestry is shown by the hoidiug of a conference of tercet administrators in London last summer and by the or- ganizing of assaciutions in the differ- ent Dominions and colonies to keep this subject before the people. In con- nection with the conference there was an exhibition of timber from all parts of the Empire and it was found that there were opportunities for a most advantageous exchange of products. For instance Canada exports strac- turcel timbers while Australia, New Zealand, India, Trinidad, East and West Africa, Borneo, and other col- onies export tropical and semi -tropical woods, useful far furniture and cabinet work, A report on this: exhibition has been made by the officer 115 charge of the Canadian exhibit and embodied in Circular No. 12 of the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior, Any interested citizen who has not yet re- ceive(' a copy may secure one free by applying to the Director of Forestry, Ottawa, ASPIRIN Only "Sayer" is Genuine Warning! Tarte uo chances with substitutes, for genuine "Bayer Tab- lets of Aspirin:' Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tab- lets you are not getting Aspirin at all. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumba- go and for Pais. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manu- facture of Iiionoaceticacidoster of Salicylicacid. Not Invited. In Ripling-'s Jungles Book the monkey -people, whooping iktrough the trees, are overjoyed when, by throw- ing •cocoanuts, they can get human be- ings to notice them. The Soviet crew are like that. Their latest manifesto is a long, loud ululation because they are not invited to that international party in Washington where affairs of the Par East will be discussed, The very name Parliament implies talking things over. Bolshevism does not speak the language of. •coca and sane and ordered debate. It fills the air with fireworks: its sound and fury signify nothing. It is not invited be- cause it does not know how to behave. We had a very fair sample of the Bolshevist ideal of political convoca- tions in their weird .lathering of the clans at Baku last September. Any wild lie went at that gathering. if only it was sufficiently vitriolic against property and private 'right and established order. The dominant personal force at that congress was Enver Pasha: the paramount political concept was Lenine's dream of bhe world ascendancy of communism, as Zinovietl expounded it. Naturally, there can he no enthusi- asm to ask to the council at Washing- ton those who come with knives and rifles bristling like a Cossak dress parade. This council is for peace. Those Having Sick Animals SHOULD USE need tor all throat and chest diseases, 1) stamper, Cargot, Sura1,15, 13rulses, Colic, Mange, Spavins, 12u nling Sores, ala, etc. Should alwayI be In the stable —SOLD IOVI.IOYWHIMEI, • He Explalhed. An Irishman had a spiendid-laokiag cow, but site kicked so 11151011 than it was impossible to milk her. He sent the cow to a falr to be sold, ordering the herdsman not to disease 0f the animal without letting the buyer know her "strong weaktlass," The bordelnan, however, brought back a targe price. His piaster was surprised. "Aro you sure you told the buyer all about Iter?" he asked, "Betted, I did, sit'," said the herds - Man. "He asked me whether she was a good milker, 'Bogor, sir,' 'flays 8, 'It's you that Would be tired milking Iter' " Minard's Liniment for Burne, ata Liones0 tteutles, camel eitops, and fidtett of dolphin Have recently figured in the menti of A Parisian restaurant. At ate dispensary in the ,.dile itnd Road, London, free medical treatment de ,given to pet acid other animal/ on 4prtain night DAVIS SLEEPS ALL NIGHT LONE NOW TANLAC STRAIGHTENED HIM RIGHT UP. Hanilton Man Stars He Now F'eelo As Weil As He Ever Did in His Life. "Before," wag half thea ugm h t Y first bottle of Tania° 1 began to straighten righht asp," declared Robert ',Davie, 22 McCu.uley St„ 7lumlilon, Ont, a valued employee et the \Voud-Allexande'r !lard• ware efore. "For meet six aneutils• before taking rankle I estil been In a badly run-down condition. At timate I had no ap100b11e at all and tllo:l sometimes I could eat heartily, but suffered terribly atter- Wurde from indigestion, "I was nervrms and restless, never slept wall, and many a night I rolled and tossed nearly all night long and in the meriting felt so stiff in my joints it was some time before I felt like moving at all, 1 sullered a great deal from constilratlan and was sub- leot to splitting hoadaolies, "But Taulac helped nee richt from the start and now I have simply a iavetltous appetite 'and everything agrees with me %perfectly. I never have a headache or a pain of any kind, sleep iilee a healthy boy and feel as wall as I ever did in my life,, Tantao will always get a goad word from 1110," Tanlac is sold by leading druggists everywhere, A:dee Collars of the double variety can now be ironed by a machine which gives them a rounded bend, sa that the tie is inserted more easily. The nails on our fngers do 11CVOW with equal rapidity, that of the thumb being the slowest and of the middle finger the fastest. MONEY ORDERS. When ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order. King George was born at Marlbor- ough Ilouse and Queen Mary at Ken- sington Palace; they are 'believed to be 111e first pair of Londoners by birth to share the throne. Minard's Liniment for dandrtrff. Mille is so constituted as to corree t the deficiencies of other foods when used in combination with them. COARSE SALT SALT I LAND SALT Bulk Carle/IS TORONTO SALT WORKS r TOlIONTO Pioneer Dog Remedies ,.look on WIG IZ;ISEAS)S and clow to Peed Afatled Pree to any Ad- dress by the Author, 221. Olay Clover Co., 2no, 113 West 3155 Street New York, 11,8.A_ Miss Flora Boyko Tells How Cuticura Healed Her Pimples "My face was very itchy at first, and after that it was covered with pimples that disfigured it badly. The pimples ware hard and red and they were smell, and they were scat- tered all over my fact and were so itchy Ihad to�yrratcb and I could not sleep. 0J'These bothered me nearly a year before I used CuticuraSoap and Oint- ment and when I had used five cakes of Cuticura Soap and live boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Flora M. Boyko, Gardenton, Man., Dec. 26, 1918. Having obtained a clear healthy skin by the use of Cuticura, keep it clear by using the Soap for all toilet purposes, assisted by touches of Ointment as needed. Do not fail to include the exquisitely scented Cutl- cura Talcum in your toilet prepara- tions.' Splendid after bathing. Soap 25e, Ointment 25 and 50e. Sold throughout theDolninion, CanadianDepou L'''yymm�ane, Limned, St. Paul St., Montreal r-Cuticurn Sonp .lmv.e without mus. SUFFERIN OF YOUNG 0KlEi This Letter Tells How It May be Overcome—All Mothers Interested. • Toronto On 1.— "I have suffered since I was a school girl with pain in my Left sideandwitheramps, growing worse each fundown.II asso bad at times that I Was unfit for work. I tried several doc- tors •and patent Medicines, but was only relieved for a short time. Some of the dootors wanted to perform an operation) but t. - my father objected. Finally Y learned t !rough my mother of Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound, and how thankful I am that I tried it. I am relieved from pain and, cramps, and feel as if it 11 avod, sty life. You may' use my tetter to help other Women as I am glad to recoil—mend rho ntetlieleeal--1v11ts. .A.. Goonnteu, 14 )iAye.; ye-1'TorpPtO1. these who oro troubled as Mrs. . n rat i seek ro n o ticlit mod e Gi odm was sh t yy qqhealth taking L din E. • storntion to110 b Pinkitam'Vegetable Compound. Those Who need &pecial advice May write to Lydia E. PiAltham Medicine Co. (confudent10),14nn Mass. Theseiettert will be opeled toad and answered by A woman and held in strict confidence. ISSUE No,