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The Clinton News Record, 1930-04-24, Page 3NEE Judge Nation by Child Death Rate Infant Mortality in hide* ,of Any Civilization This is part of an, article on Infant iVlortality, Prepared by The Social Hy- giene Council. Part two, will ,follow next week. One of the best criteria of the civili- zation 6 fa nation is the care which' it expends . on its infants. The only method of estimating this is by oh - serving the infant mortality . rate. ,This is usually computed on the num- ber of infants out of every.1000 born Who de not live until the end of the first year, it is a common superstition that the tearing of childrenis instinctive with the batman race. Nothing could be farther from the truth, The mother must .be taught how to caro for her_ child if the child is to have any sort of a chance of surviving the danger- ous - first year and of reaching , a healthy maturity. Poverty, may be au, excuse in some quarters for not giving a'child all that it.needs. But poverty 1sino excuse nowadays for not.know- ing what the -child needs and how -to take care of it. Ignorance on the part of the mother is inexcusable -as there are health centres throughout the country to which those within reach may go at regular iitervats and which will send reliable intormatiou to wo- men in outlying districts. Although ignorance, as 1 have said, Is no excuse, it, with poverty, is still the greatest cause of a high mortality late among infants, Poverty affects the child both -before and atter birth to several different ways. The child Of really poor parents, particularly If they are of the proud kind 'and will }lot accept aid when it is offered them, 3s often undernourished either because the mother .is herself uudernoui'islied Bud unable to nourish the infant suf- :4cleatly or because the child, if arta- fieiatly fed, doesn't get enough of, the right kind of food. Then too, living conditions .for the child are apt to be Crowded and more or less unhealthy. Poverty. may, force the mother out to work which is bad tor herself and the child. A working mother is unable to 'nurse.ber baby and the infant is some- times left at home in the care ot.some incompetent person, such as a small child or an ignorant older person. The ally of poverty -ignorance 1s usually helped along by meddlesome older persons who are more ignorant than the mother herself and who are sometimes superstitious. I have known of the most preposterous remedies be- ing used by an ignorant mother at the suggestion of some busybody of ci wo- luau who, perhaps, learned it from her grandmother --or perhaps invented it herself, The mother should learn from her :physician er from a competent nurse and if neither of these are available 'because of the mother's isolation•ia Soule inaccessible country district then from the literature which can be obtained from a number of sources, Children of ignorant mothers are rarely properly bathed, rarely get suf- ficient sunlight, enough fresh air or the right kind of food. They are near- ly always treated as if germs were son -existent. Their bottles are some- times filthy from a scientific stand- point. A public health nurse mice told me of a thing she saw one time. It is hardly believable. The nurse was paying her first visit to a poor family and it happened to be what the moth- er figured was the baby's feeding time, 'The mother was putting milk into a bottle which she carefully welshed un- der the tap before putting the milk into it. The procedure was to fill 'a tumbler with milk and then pour. it into the baby's bottle from that, As the nurse watched wide-eyed a fly fell into the glass of milk, The mother 'Calmly picked it out with her dirty Auger)) and %vent.on filling the infant's bottle. Needles to say that mother had a few lessons in the preparation of feeding for babies within the next few days. A baby's' food must 'be wholesome and pure. With a tether who is both poor and ignorant suck a standard is Impossible. A mother who knows what she is doing but who is Poor and satiable to afford the proper surround- ings Made it hard to maintain the .standards necessary 1f her baby is t0 grow up with an even chance in the world. A mother between the ages of twenty-five and thirty has the best ' chance of giving birth to a healthy child—one which will be able to re• mist the dangers besetting it during the first year. Care of the intent should begin long before the elufid is born as the physical condition of the mother 41 of the utmost latportance. If the mother is poor and. endothelia. .fished et offering from any of the Complications of'pregnancy the child's .chances of ,I#fe are- greatly lessened. - If the mother has to work ahe altouid. arrange it that she has some r'eaJ:'be; tore the birth of the baby. The death 'of weakly infants, duo to overwork and undernourishment on the part et. the mothers, forms a great part of the infant mortality rate, It is quite obvious the Part that Poverty plays in keepingup our 111 Pant mortality late= -and in bringing children poorly equipped to,maturity.. Bad housing and'pool. eanitatidh aro detrimental to the health pf the child, Families that are forced to live in cramped quarters of one o1' two rooms cannot but suffer. There is lack of Yresh air and sunlight, there is dirt ttud filth tracked, in, from. the street by many feet, and -a very MIportant eon- sid"eration—a lack of proper storage' space for food, Nearly always there is a complete lack ot refrigeration—a11 these things tend to lessen a child's chances for lite and in .life. . As long as our cities have slums 011 mortality rate will not be lessened. 'Great strides have been takeu.by'the health authori- ties, but there Is much work yet to be done, The 'work of liealth officers coaneotiorl with housing is no bed of roses. You may find it hard'tu believe but .their efforts are often uiisutder- stood and they are always meeting strong opposition from different gnat - tors. No landlord—unless he is very public spirited, will allow a heiuse or building of Itis to be condemned with- out a fight, There are many landlords of course who are ready'and willingto help In any way. 'possible, They very often need no word from the health officers that theft' propertiesare unin- habitable and they make changes or rebuild of . their own 'volition. If you are a landolyd' you cam - help greatly by taking a. pridei'n your pro- perties and by seeing to it that alley are a. help instead of a hindrance in the. solution of the very real housing problem. - You musti not think that the probt lent is confined wholly to the cities. Towns and villages have it just as well. I know of au Ontario town where a great- percentage of the hobos are on the market for sale of rent. The same economic conditions that have reduced the town to this have made the poorer residents so poor that they cannot afford to pay even the ridiculously low rental that are asked for excellent brick houses in the best of condition. Many of these people are living in what are real slums and under unsanitary, unwhole- some conditions; Without -hurting the Own, any, ntuety per cent.—Yes, 100 per cent.—of the bad houses could bo condemned. But—and here Is the problem—la that town everybody knows everybody else. It is extremely hard ter the health officers to d0 any- thing at all. Statistics compiled in England show that the infant mortality rate varies directly with the amount of space in which a family has to live. Was W k, Skinny, , "After Baby Cause Indd 22 lbs," "Alter baby was bore I was very weak, skinny. Since taking I1 onizdtl Yeast feel fine, Gained 22 lbs,"— Mrs. Laura Benoit. ',Thousands write new Irenized Yeast adds 0 to 15lbs, in 3 weeks. Ugly hollows 1111 out, Bony limbs get graceful roundness. Muddy skin gets clear 'and rosy like magic, Ner- vousness, indigestion, •constpation vanlah overnight,Sound sleep, new pep from Very first day. Two great tonics In one—special weight building Malt Yeast' and strengthening .Iron,. .Pleasant little tablets. Par stronger than untuedie- ated yeast. Results in to time, No yeasty taste, no gas., So quite being "skinny", tired, un-' attractive.., Get Ironized Yeast;from druggist to -clay.' Feel great to -mor- row. Money back from manatee truer if not delighted withquick. re- sults.:, "After years of rbottmatism now in perfect health," Bays Me. A, Duch - acme, Thousands write. rheumiatitc pains, neuritis, vanish like e e trith"lrull.e.tives".Coa0lipatlon,lttal gestIon end overnight, Nerves quiet. Got"Prait• .fives"tromatuselsttodae. KEEP T HAPPY BY KE21NG THEM WELL It is natural for children to be leap• 5Y, active and full of fun. When they are fretful, fussy and disinclined to play you may be sure something is wrong. Almost' invariably that some- thing lies in the digestive tract. It is to meet the peed for an abso- lutely safe corrective ot ehlidhood ailments that Baby's Own Tablets have heel' designed. They gently re- gulate tine stomach and bowels and thus drive out constipation and indi- gestion; break ftp colda and steeple. fevers and allay teething pains.- Com corning them Mrs, W, E, Forsyth, Dover, N•B„ zvrites:- "I would not be without Baby's Own Tablets as I know of nothing to equal them tot fretful, fussy babies who aro troubled with colds or sour stomach." , - Baby's Own Tablets aro` sold by medicine dealers or by 'mail at 25 Dents a box from The Dr, , Wiliams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Oat, A Pioneer in Photographic Mapping Canada was the first country to make practical u00 of photography in surveying, on an extensive seals. Methods of photographic surveying were devefoved over forty. yeara ago by the late Dr. Deville, Surveyor Gen- eral, Department of the Interior, and large areas ot the Rogky Mouutatns have been so surveyed. • Minard's-50 Year Record of Succoth Picturesque Yukon Huse Has Bottles in Window • :w :.at;„a t is F,: •ivw. th.�' fi3 5 �:k4,; pjt'r,+ .5 X s -Sea • iia•z, liZ e5.:: rat slap b'.lt.'t .Gaon�"ti tx k&0vm• 53 x3iti3mlyc�w, z>, This is.a house of hospitality -whose °Intel combined his oxtravaganee in. entertainment with an innate, modesty in Mane eeonolny by using the bottles left atter his guests had departed to make a substantial and' unique filling for, an empty window frame. Window panes . were -scarce is the Yukou in 'those days 92 the .Gold Rush and -the chauoes are that before: the bottles were placed in the opening, paper or hide was used to let the sun rays in and to keep out as much as possible of the cold and rate. The Yukon and Alaska are alive -with mementoes of a past that is dead. Each summer thousands of tourists from the U1lited States and Canada, and many from overseas as well, take the colorful journey across the continent through the great wheat fields ob the prairies and by Jasper Park and Mount Robson in the Canadian Rockies—Mount Robson is the highest peak itt the Rockies ---to Vancouver -and• Prince Rupert where steamers equipped with every modern detail take them through the Iueide Passage to the glamourous land on the Midnight Sun: Tho lower picture shows the Prince Henry, newly constructed ship of the Canadian National Steamships, rwhlcli v•ill make its first voyage on this popular run from Vancouver on Jufy 3. Launched by ishb0l. MaoDDonald, popular run front Vancouver on July 3. Launched by £shbel &LacD'onald, for ,the Canadian National Pacific Coast Service. Two others, the Prince Itobert and the Prince David will ply between Vancouver,'Victoria and Seattle.. The Pritice`Henry will supplement the Alaska service already afforded by the CNS Prince Rupert and Prince George ot the same line which have be- come widely known among travellers on the Pacific Coast, Britons ake Own Beer High Excise Tax Encourages Home Industry and Works Greatly to Injury of Brewers London,—Bootlegging, an industry supposedly confined mainly to the United Status, is now battling British excise authorities, Home brewing of beer is being carried out on a large scale, according to customs officials. Snob. practice eliminates paying the duty now enforced by the Govern- ment, Brewers' associations are eh - Seating to the new underground liquor traffic. A Govornrnent inquiry is to be made and some forte of national control suggested. Penny n Pint Packets of malt and hops and ether ingredients necessary to make three gallons of beer can be secured from the corner grocer, or nearest drug store, for about 85 cents, The boot- leg brand can be made for two cents a pint, compared with the usual price of 18 cents a plat now charged, Official figures show that during tate past 16 years the annual consumption of legal beer has decreased by 67,052,- 286 7,052;286 gallons, Cellar end kitchen brew- eries are held largely responsible for this diminution; Beer is excisable If 'it contains the alcohol equivalent of 2 per cent proof spirits. Packets now Hold with the proper ingredients also contain Print- ed rinted instructions for correct brewing. Still increases An excise official said about the existing condition when questioned: "We know that home brewing is on the intreaso and we are taking .0.11 possible Precautions to dieetIver those making beer without license. There have been inany prosecutions -this year. "We are ahnost powerless, for a house to house •search is obviously int= possible. We- take immediate &tion, however, on information received, or •evidence obtained by police," A t Many Uses for Spruce The wood of all Canadian spruces is tasteless and orourless, making 11 valuable for food containers. It is oleo 1n great demand for musical ir1- etrttimenta, inanci50lly for, organ pipes, piano soitwit:1g boards, violin backs, etc, One ' Day Old, But Lively ST. VITUS DANCE SUFFERERRADE- WELL • ,Every spring m11110110 of baby elitclts go est from the British Columbia coast and Vancouver Island 'to' the interior of the ,province and the Prattle Provinces. Batched•eariter on. the milder Pacific slopes than elsewhoro,in Canada, they are'rushed'Uy express across the oouutry to poultry breedel'6 inland. Taken when they ale but one, day old, they are placea:MS cardboard boxes' with breathing holes puacltod'in them, and. loaded Into'ettpress cars kept at fust' the right 'ternperattire- for (their benef`y(, " They can go 72 hours without:feed .or:Waters • Above package has, iast'beea landed at Vancoil'voe and is beingexamined prior to trMll•ehipntent. Adeording tosefflolals of the Canadian Paelfl0'LlxpresS Company which. annually handles mi11[onn' of these aufry balls? the traffic is 'growing Steadily from• year to year, • - Owl Laffs Best Friend (Meow! ) 5ary, where did you get that gorgeous diamond "-• Choos a g a Vocationn Young Widow (Pura', Purr! )—"You . Choosing ,lie's mate, onot' religion, remember when `John ;dear died lie an riche's vocation are:tdroe very,im- left $1,000 for a memorial store? portant matters upon -which the Sue - Well, this is 11." Gess or failare of one's after life mot, FOR, THE Wernan Reader' Bait digging time has come, the happiest of the year, Classified 'Advertising RA13r,.Ct11Cr{S_.WID tlA'T171:iIDD -9 - 21i e0 folaat• year n fourties. Write Write For free eatatoguo,'..4. 10 Switzer,Granton, Qat EASY MUCKS 0 INGLE , 000213 WHITE LUG-RC/RN 1.7 and Barred Plymouth Rook ldaby Chtalts, wonderful winter layers, Wo- havo been hatching for 27 years. Dela, dopend• None ot these choices are mere .Poultry Perth, Stratford, Ont, 16 be:made lightly. FOPS SADIS In choosing a vocation, one should 50 CORIGNL 7i'IRSOETii NorthernAI 4nItaArto Iced" CedarT fencROWe, grape and .anchor' posts, telephone poles. and poles for tobacco barn frames. Phone or write, 17, A. Edwards, R,R, 2, Thedford.. • consider the "following points about It is sai dthat a good 'diamond will the industry ho is thinking of enter - cut through nearly anything: It cer- ing: • tatnly can make a bole in a bank ac- Scope -What about the variety of count. its products or lines of work? What about' its geagraphical,distribution? uitor—"Cavi' you . tell rue anything Importance—Are many people en- aboutyour sister's hobbles? gaged in. ft? Has it mush mori'ty Small Brother—"All I lutow' 5:'sbe value? Is much capital invested in don't, wear any in, the summer," A man and his wife were hotly dist 'cussing tele merits of a book. Finally, the wife said to her husband: "No, Jelin, you can't, appreciate it—you never wrote a book yourself." "No;",retorted John, "and I never laid an egg, but I'm a better judge of an ometet--than any hen in the state," Nerves Strengthened Through . the Use of Dr. Williams Pink Pills. Time after time cases are brought to the notice of the public whero suf- ferers front nervous troubles have been relieved by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills—where victittts of St. Vitus Dance have heels made well through the use of these pills after other medicines have tailed to bo of Ueue• AC The reason for this is that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills act directly upon the blood—they make new, rick red blood and 01 thus banishing' all im- purities from the blood strengthen the nerves and make St. Vitus Dance Int• possiblo, Mrs, P. Donnelly, Montreal, Que., is One more gratetnl mother who wish- es to and her testimony to those al- ready published. She says:—"MY little girl, aged eleven, was a great sufferer from St. Vitus Dance. Sev- eral everal doctors prescribed for her with- out benefit. She was in the hospital for two weeks—still no benefit. I then sow an advertisement recommending Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for St. Vitus Dance, so decided to try them. Ili little girl had only taken a couple of boxes when I noticed some improve- ment so i' continued with the treat- ment till now she is completely free from the trouble and eau enjoy her- self as other children do. I can high- ly recommend Dr, Williams' Pink Pills to anyone suffering front St. Vitus Dance or guy other form of nervous trouble, for what these pills have done for my daughter I am sure they will do for others." Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine 7'1ry snail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Out, Do You Know- A slice of lemon stewed with the prunes will greatly improve their flavor? I2 you rinse cooked noodles with hot water they will not stick together. You can ivake pistachio flavoring by mixing equal' parts of vanilla and al- mond flavoring? Before washing new lace curtains, calico, or anything containing lime, soak -item overnight itt water to which salt lies been added. This takes out all the Bale and, Consequently, saves sooap-and la1Or. An egg is "new -laid" for ten to twelve days.; it is "fresh';' until it 1s twenty -cue days old; then It becomes a "cooking -egg." If a cracked -egg has to be boiled, wrap it in •greased paper, tie with string and put in belling' water. To give a stove a good polish, prix a teaspooniiui of powdered alum with two ounces of blacklead and apply in the usual way. When cleaning knives mix a pineh of carbonate' of soda with the bath - brick. They can then be polished qutekly and easily. Moist table salt will remove egg stains front silver, A .cupful of 0110 ashes And two tea- spoonfuls of bicarbonate of soda mixed With 'watuir into a moth paste make an excellent polish ..for metals. Varnish may be brightened .by rub- bing with a cloth moistened in linseed oil. A. few .drops of lemon juice added tp Ate dough when 100121125 pastry .ren- ders it more digestible, SE DEN T11e hardest doctrine io' practise is , the doctrine 01 'self-denial, This is doctrine. tha.tpfnches. S rt l'e, s ab Use Minard s In the ' Some salesmen , were vaccinated avlth rusty phonograph needles,`iudg- ing front their sales talk. '• r^ Imagine HIs Embarrassment Little Oscar Duckling ,Met the world witha frown, When he first discovered That his pants were down, "Public speaking a business -asset," says a headline. Go down the street any day and see it demonstrated. And that brings to mind the question, why does•everybody else want to•talk when You are trying to say something? Why will a girl stock 'up on hose and then go bare -legged? ISSUE No. 1 7-�--'30 Little Junior, six years old, from the city, was visiting his grandmother in the country. He had been going to school and had been copying his A B C's. He went to help her gather the eggs and, finding the china nest egg, cried out: "Look, grandma, what kind of egg Is this?" Grandma—"Put that one back In day. the nest and leave it for a nest egg." The present demand 1'.1 heuoe-bulld- Junlor--"What do they have to have hug is for a greater scale of space. a It for, grandma, to copy by?" keener feeling of perspective, more light, Mamie and harmonious lines and space wel utilized and not overcrowd- ed. Tassels, fringes, carvings, do - dads and germ catcher's are absent from these forceful modern homes, Situplicity, expensive and luxurious, prevails. The hardness and monotony is relieved by a play of bright colors. Strong reds and blues and purples and orange appear in pillows and hangings. A new invention Is the bathroom vtake!t b telt- tugone uta, u suuUat y o tug Ite the window wh1,111 is glazed with ultra violet glass. It permits the health giving violet ray to flood Into tite room. Cement and metal take the place of wood and, incidentally, the ntolet'nis- tic house bt easy to clean and is firm proof. f. o it? Will it have a normal pr abhor• nitll growth and is that likely to be steady? What is its value to society?. Demand for product --Is it local, na- tional, or international? Temporary, permanent, seasonal'? Staple, declin- ing, growing? Retluiromeuts ;Whitt innate quali- ties would bo demanded for success? What disposttional? What special gifts? What habits and standards? What preparation, knowledge, skill? Conditions of Employment — What hours would be required? What as to its -healthfulness? What risks re hazards would one meet in it? What rewards might 0210 expect as to wages or- salary? What competition would one meet? Would the chance of pro- motion be good? Could 0213 work at this vocation to old age? Does it give opportunity for education andintellec- tual and social advancement? The New House Newspapers and magazines are glv- ing architecture prizes to a type of house which resembles the abode houses of the Indians or the Spanish, homes of stone and cement. They hive flat roofs, definite forms, sharp angles, plain surfaces and good pro- portions. At first one is inclined not to like them, but as they are further studied and more frequently seen. they are more appreciated and are be- coming more popular. They typify the vigor and strength of the life of to - Cheer up, folks. Lett he dentists do alt of the looking down la the mouth, Toastmaster (to principal speaker: -"Oh, Mr. Brady." Speaker—"Yes?" Toastmaster—`Had we better have your speech now, or shall we let the people enjoy themselvesa little while longer?" The law can be enforced, all right. You never saw anybody kick a bull- dog. A pretty girl likes to be told sloe's intelligent, and au intelligent girl likes to be told she's pretty. "Waiter, take this steak back." "I can not, sir: You have bent it," Elizabeth had not heard from Bill for a long time. Filially Mere came to her doorstop a very largo box, Eliza- beth fainted when sho read on the label: "Bill inside." After a man has lived 65 or 70 Years he 100105 that ' he doesn't amount to much. Mother—"Please keep quiet, son, ley head is just about to split." Small Offspring—"It I keep quiet, can I see it split?" Am an is made or marred by his use of spare five-minute periods. In just a few more days college .graduates wil be astonished to find out that the average boss doens't know or care what "fret" they belong to, - Father (wrathfully)—"Your conduct has made you the taut of the town." Daughter—"Yes, but show tong, will it last? Some dawn aviator will fly across the Pacific or something, and 1'11 have to do it all over again." 1inard's Will Kill Corns. The Suburbanite: "What will be the outcome of the simple life?" • The City Man: "A simple death•" Cooking Vegetables Thera are four general ways of cooping vegetables: steaming, pres- sure cooking, boiling la a small amount of water, and boiling in twice the amount of water needed. Goasid- eritlg the great value of tate mineral salts in vegetables, the first methods are the most desirable. Water dissolves these precious salts out of the vegetables. What a waste is it thou to drain that valuable water down the sink! it is better to retalnal the mineral constituents in the vegetables themselves, as can be done by steaming or near -steaming them. Calcium, iodine, Iron and phosphor-- 1m hosphor•1m are lltdlspetttiable t0. health. Many a mysterious i11 is due to the Iack of one or more of these elemeitte. Cook in the very smallest amount of water yourturnips, parsnips, onions, kohl- rabi, beets,. spinach, cauliflower, cab- bage, beet greets, string beans, as- paragus, celery, potatoes and carrots. If you have to drain water Off them, save it for soups and gravies. 'Best of all, eat as many vegetables raw as are in for that, Use them in salads. Minard's Kills Dandruff. Bungs 0,0 GLADIOLUS, 28 VARIETIES, 01,00; or 8 Regal 101153; or 10 .Dahlias, named. L1st'l!reo 300 varieties, Swishy, 107 l.;otlefair Ate., Toronto, Largest Deposit of Diatomite The largest deposit of diatomite in the Deminton at present known is in the vielnity of Quesnel Iu central British Columbia where material ot pure grade occurs in beds forty feet thick that extend over a large area. Child enC" C ABABY 1?5 APPEffaID BIS t>i lOStg• 208 CO2C 0041511sOrtON.01ARRREA ;f PNIti.iP�= Por uc Tro to ubles Acid INO; rrsor0N 9010 500MACN 80001110/25 Hes•N aNE OASES •NAUSEA What many '3)00510 call indigestiou� very often means excess acid. in the stomach. Tlae stouhaclt nerves have been over -stimulated, and food sours. The corrective is an alkali, which neutralizes acids instantly, ''And the best alkali known to medical science is Phillips'. Milk of Magnesia, It has remained the standard with physicians in the 5 years since its invention. One spoonful of Una Harmless, taste, Strengthening :;utter Boxes Recent tests on butter boxes at the Forest Products Laboratories, Depart- ment of the Interior, Showell that one wire applied around the centre 01 the box doubles its strength, IF SALE FIVE D.C. MOTORS Kt 1, 11/2 4 and S Horsepower, ail in good condition. Cheals for immediate sale, H. Watkins, 73 Adelaide Street West,. Toronto. less alkali in water will neutralize in- stantly many n-stantly-many tunes as much acid, and the symptoms disappear at once. You will never use crude methods when once you learn the efficiency of this. Go get a small bottlo to try) • Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk Of Magnesia prescribed by':pltysl-. clans for 50 years in correcting'excess acids. Each bottle contains fel[ dlroe- tions—any drugstore,, fro o)TO`TAL FARES to CA A ADVANCE %+ B) RATISHERS in Canada may pow bring forward their Faanilies, Relatives and Friends on Easy Terms. E'er full details 551)21:-- I. D, CAMERON, Dist. Supt. Colonization • Canadian Pacific. Railway. Toronto BRITISH RE -UNION ASSOCIATION Changing Seasns Bring colds and other sickness. Beep Minard's in the tnediieno chest- It's a great preventative, liEAIL IN QUICKEST TIME KNOWN "Sores onle6, ulcers, for months. Doctors L to heal. Thon'Sootha-Salva' heated them Salo" heals sores, les ulcers, ulcers bolls, burns, scalds, eczema, like magic. All druggists. ®O YOU p�� SUFFER MTpfd So easy to get quick relief and pre- vent an attack in the future. Avoid bromides attd dope. They relievequick- iy but affect the heart and arc very dangerous, They are depressing and only give temporary relief, tis: cause of the headache stilt remains within. I The sane and harmless way. First correct the cause, sweeten the sour and acid stomach, relieve the intes- tines of the decayed and poisonous food molter, gently stimulate the liver, start the bile Sawing and the bowers pass off the waste matter which causes your headache. Try Carter's tittle Liver Pills. Druggists 25c red pkgs. flow well you look! "I ata writing port again to express nttl sincere atttittude .for the continued success I hero maintained through fm)) dailp dose of tirusrhen. Only last week a mum ntri ata (mho sato 0101) n Jets 400001h0 0100 when I WAS crippled tenth rheumatism), His Jest remark as Moto teen I looked. I replied, Poo. I have 0005 liruschen Salts to thank,.' I)o said he was feeling ail oak:€.5 and mould start the Rnrs• ohm.. habit next day. I abnos recommend ICruschen salts; d 1S r. woorsea. odglnot lotto ca ala for laa0ecnoa- Itrngelten Snits is obtainable et dais and department atoms b, Canada at 71e. a bottle. A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or re months --geed health tor halt-o.ceat a day: YOed NG ST IF E EMT After Taking Lydia E. Pinklinrrn°s Vegetable Compound Bancroft, Ontar'o—"When 1 first took Lydia .i+,- Pinkham's Vegetable Compound -1 had been marred about a year and my strength was leaving me on. ac- count of my cone dition. 1 was only 10 and it was my first child. M mother told me needed something to steady my nerves and a girl 10 chum told me to take the Vegetable Compound.1 am so thankful I did because it strengthened my whole system and now i feel per. featly well and have a sweet little baby bey."—Mies, I. 3, STAratss1 Bancroft, Ontario. ,+ • • • -