The Clinton News Record, 1931-03-19, Page 3228
Germs Eat Germs
Effecting Cure
According to the English. ciassicc..
r "Great•deas have little fleas upon their
backs to bite 'ern,
And little Ilene 'Wye lesser flea's,'
and so ad infinitum" • This principle
-Of "dog eat dog," which has been long
employed in boththe animal and
vegetable world to get rider injurious
parasites. by "sielanga enemy para
sites on them, may now be employed
against the. game of dlsease,
The "bacteriophage,",or germ -eater,
that destroys tae germ of dysentery
has been known for some time, and
now we have another that'annihilates
the germ responsible for boils and abs-
cesses. Te quote a recent press bul-
letin front a well-known New • York
laboratory:
"Dr. John F. Anderson, director of
the biological and .research Tabora-
tortes of E. R. Equibb & Sons, and for
many years in the 'U.S. Public Health
Saralee, now announces that after
more than a year or research and In-
vestigation; the particular pilrasitice
enemy for bollss carbuncles, and abs
cesses has been found, and this mod
ern method of treating them has been
perfected. Dr, Anderson says:
"'The 'phage' that has attracted
Most attention in titin country is the
Staphylococcus bacteriophage, Staphy-
lococcus Js tire. organism that. is re-
, eponsibie for almost all varieties of
bolls, .carbuncles,' and 'abscesses, 'The
Agent To Represent Us
A Reliable Bond house, Selltng
Gov't, Municipal and Corporation
Bonds, will pay liberal commis-
elons to an aggressive man.
(4, J. SAMPSON & CO., LTD.
10-12 King St. E., Toronto, Ont,
PIANO JAZZ
World famous recording artist now
offers 20 -lesson • course to Popular.
Plano ['laying. Lessons mailed singly.
Personal supervision and assistance
regulates the lessons to suit the indi-
vidual,
This is your opportunity to learn the
hitherto unpublished secrets or your
favorite artist.
AU the affects known only to the oro_
fessionnl radio and -recording artists
explained In detail.
WISYTE: 7. Sawrones Cook Stnoioo,
2o1,} Clinton St„ Toronto, Oat.
VvVcan never be sure lust what
e makes a child restless, but,
the remedy can always be the same.
Good old Gastrula! There's comfort
in every drop of this pure vegetable
preparation, and not the slightest
harm in its frequent use. As often as
your child has a fretful spell, is
feverish, or cries and can't sleep, let
Castoria soothe and quiet him. Some -
tunes it's a touch ot colic. Sometimes
Constipation. Or diarrhea —a con-
dition that should always be checked
without delay. Jest keep Castoria
bandy, and give it promptly, Relief
Will fellow very promptly; if it,
ttoesn"L you should call physielan,
•
nein bacteriophage ie a parasite of the
Staphyloccus, which grows in or on
the bacteria and filially destroys them.
"'If a drop of the 'phage' is added
to'e •culture of Straphyloecus, the bac-
teria are killed and diesolved,'and the
Mature becomes sterile. If a drop of
this dissolved culture is added to the
fresh Staphylococcus culture, the
samething takes place. 'The process
can be carried on, indefinitely. In
other words, the baacteriopttago repro-
duces Itself in cadging 'the destruc-
tion of the bacteria on whicheif.grows,
late dissolved culture contains 'bac-
teriophage in a concentration so great
that one -billionth of a cubic centimeter
will cause destruction of a culture','
Fateful Years in Art
of Canada, 1806"1812
Montreal.—Tho years (between 1806
and l•$12 were the most fateful, fn the
history of Canadian art for in that
period were born the five moll *be
were destined to put it on; Its feet,
said W. M. Barnes, A.R.C.A to mem-
bers ot the St. Sanwa Literary Society
here recently.
Tracing the progress of Canadian
art, Mr. Barnes tleelareci that it re-
ceived its impetus from these -five men
—Paul Kane, Canada; Otto Jacob,
Prussia; Cornelius Iareighoff, Hol-
•Iand; Dan Fowler, England; and Geo.
Berthon, France. While they were of
different nationalities, they chose
Canada as their home, and produced
work here which was characteristical;
ly Caitadfa•l.
'As a .painter:s laud," declared the'
speaker, "Canada is second to :none.
It offers variety, from the snow and
Ice of Labrador, the rugged coasts and
I surf of Cape Breton, the pastoral
scenes of the Annapolis Valley,. the
forests of New Brunswick, the historic
qualities of old Quebec, Ontario's
northern woods, the grandeur of the
Rockies tr tho warmth of the Pacific
coast:'
At the time of Confederation, he
went on, art in Canada was still strug-
gling tor existence while England was
worrying :bout the pre-Raphaelites,
'The Ontario Society of Art was term-
ed about this time and from that time
on, Canadian art flourished, and the
speaker reterred to artists who had
achieved distinction front that time,
Illustrating his remarks with colored
slides ot paintings.
Ottawa. -The production of com-
mercial
ommercial apples in Canada for tate year
1930 3s estimated preliminarily at 3,-
106,936 barrels .ot the value of $10,-
363,940 as compared with 3,879,380
barrels, value $10,461,076, the finally
revised eatimate for 1929. The aver-
age value per barrel in 1030 was $3.43
as compared with $2,70 in 1929.
Kepnedy &'
Menton
421 College St.,
Toronto
Harley-Davidson distributors
Writeatousaredmetryc eTermarangd
NO SNOW ON THE BOARDWALK
H
Atlantic City, New Jersey
Sends Greetings to its Many
Friends In Canada.
Wo are quoting such a very low
American plan rate that you wilta
p
find it cheaper to stay at the
"Homelike Strand" than staying
at home.
Write us so we may quote them
to You—so you will know the exact
cost before Leaving.
Music—Salt Sea Bathe -Compel•
mentary Tea Daily, 4 to 5 p.m.—
We will personally see' to your
comfort.
T. E..,,ANDOW, Mjnr.
Ii. BRADFORD RICHMOND,
Prop.
1
after eating
WHAT many call . "indfgestiou" Is
very -often nothing but excess acid
In the •stomachnt
• The etoech
• nerves shave been over -stimulated,
and food sours, The corrective is
an alkali, 'which neutralizes acids
tndtantly, "The best. alkali known
to medical science le ?Millis'Mitk
of 'Magnesia'. I
t has remained the
standard anti -acid with physicians
n the 60 years singe -its invention.
Otte spoonful of tide harmless,
tastelosa elralf' will neutralize In-
stantly •nlanil tines as much acid,
anti the symptoms disappear et
Made in Canada
once. You will never use, crude
methods when once you learn the
efficiency of this more pleasant
why. A. small bottle is sufficient to
show its merit.
Ba sore to get genuine Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by
phyeicans for more than 60 years
in correcting excess acid. 50c a
bottle; any drugstore. Complete
directions for its malty uses are
enclosed with every bottle.
The Genuine Mille of lliagatesia
is always a liquid—never. a tablet.
Look for Phillips' name on bottle:.
Bird ingtR .the Arc l� board and one of the others fmmedt
Ldl atelY- jumped over after him; .how
the spare hand was found and
sign in a bank window reads.'
Owl Lags
Winter `
:Gallant Little Trawlers that
Sail the World's 'Wick-
. •'.. edest' Seas
•
V ILLI.ERS, in "Answers"
Even during winter' the trawlers
steal out from Hull and other Brit- .
.ish porta ead-•steanm out 'to thee tite
rigours of the' .long Arctic night, -
that the public's demand for
may be, met.
•How can they fish ip the froz
boas? The surface of thesea w
not freeze over unless- it, is de
calm, and where these ,plucky traw
Iers go it is never dead calm, So
you find the apparent anomaly of
temperatures. far; below' treeing
point and no ice.
No ice in the 'sea, that .Is; tt area
N enough oak on the trawlers' decks.
Everything there is frozen—the ro
-lines of the trawl, 'the hatches, t
lifeboat gear, the. fish that tome. out
of the water --even the Very 00
PASS. Indeed, the themouteter eon
times, win* gats: down as far as
can and then •bursts:
'risibility 18 very bad and .the u
naturally darkened atmosphere. yer
deceiving, Sometimes the trawls
can clearly see others working tw
miles away; .at other tlntes'they can
snot .see' them at all. They .work wi
powerful electric aro lights to ilium
nate the. decks.
Iceberg—or Ship?
The men work with bare finger
though, their paints and the low
joints of their fingers are cover
with woollen 'matte. Their ling
tips most be .clear to give precisio
wee: the sharp knives.
The trawlers are wonderfully tri
tittle vessels, high in the bows, to
astern, with no cluttering'superstru
ture to gather the ice,. and nothin
on their decks but the tumour
machinery and the thin, high furan
piercing the' engine -room skylight.
Twenty of them could be stowed
away quite easily, without even be-
ing rigged' down, in a big tramp's
hold. Yet they habitually make
voyages and fade conditions •which
tramps would never .dream of en-
countering deliberately.
.It speaks volumes for the -staunch-
ness of the. trawlers and the ability
of the men who work them, that In
the past Meyer! :mare only three
Kull trawlers have gone missing.
They clipped out of the docks and
were never heard- of again. One 'was
the St. Louis; another the Field-
alarebei Robertson, which disappear.
with thirty-five men on board, most
of whom were Icelaaders engaged to
split and clean, the fish.
There is a carious story of tit
German trawler Scharnhorst, whic
was given ttp as lost fit. November
1097. She had gone on a voyal
and watt, not heard et again to
weeks. The weeks grew into months
she was posted missing, aid the in
aurance paid. Then, months after
wards, the Soiiarnhorst WAS found b
a sealer, so wrapped In ice and froz-
en• spray as to be scarcely dieting-
uishable from an iceberg, pushed
high and dry upon a north Russian
beach, Nobody remained aboard to
tell how she had come there; no sur-
vivor was ever toned.
Heroes of the Polar Deep
brought back to the ship; how he
•
shaped back .into the water .when be-
ing 'taken' over- the, side and :,was
rescued` by the game man again';
how he was dead tram ;the bitter
cold when at last his bpdy was got
aboard, 'and his reacuer all but died,
also, Shprt, cryptic sentences—
What edenes they bring before the
mind!
so .I And yet the Arctic fishing, to ,the
fish 'men who are engaged in it, la an ordi-
nary commercial seafaring occupa-
en tion—nm more and no..Iess. They
ill : see 'no ' special 'glamour 'or hardship
ad•about it.
If they have 1lfeessant dreadful
cold to tate-well, they are. spared'
tropic heat, and `,sand etorme, and
Sties. :'There are no -lien In the
Frozen 'North-, It is too cold tor
them to live 'there.The' ice wastes
and the sullen sea •are given up to
Pe fish, and stout'little ships, and brave
he :men -
Snake and
Bandicoot Fiala
•By An Australian
y The early morning Suit, blaz
TS down on the big Queensland teamster
o as he searched for one of his lost
working bullocks, through the. dense
tisernbfringing the Stanley River.
. . "Dunning old beggar," he mutter-
ed to himself, "He's standing quiet-
ly somewhere in the shade, so that
he won't shake .his blinking bell."
Pausing 111 his quest to fill his
pipe, ',the silence of the bush was
broken on his • lett by a rustling,
'swishing sound coining from near the
"The .man who hate one dollar itt his
pockets must take the first job offered
him. The'man. who lase` 91,000,;.ean.
make. his choice of a few. The Men
who hap $5,000 tan dictate. who should
get ,his services." pave., your money
and be a (Rotator..Smile
'Eeen'titough your heart -be sad,
Try to smile, pretend•yott're'glad,
Trbubles won't seem, half so. bad,
If you smile: ,
When you're feeling very blue,.
, No one seethe. to care for you,
Here's -the best thing, you can do—
Try a smile,
Life is what we make of it,
Sorrows, Joys, 'of each a bit;
You can make. the 'best of it,
With a smile, •
Too inany•people grow stoop should..
ered carrying around the responsi-
bility 'for sthings that don't 'concern
t them in the least. •
s y
" Hat Itosie—"Haour husband a
ed. good ear for music?"
Sal Hepatica—"I'm afraid not_ He
seems to think drat everything he
hears playedipchprek is a lullaby.
About the only thing it man eau run
into while standing le -debt.
s,
er
eel
er•
n river bank..
Quietly walking in• the direotfo
M. -of the disturbance, he came Budde
w ly on a_ email open space—an a
0-. propriate arena for, surely one o
g the. strangest battles ever staged fo
y
el
a
n-
1)
f
r that withstood. the, terrible strain of
the early nineties is living on easy
street. If it;were not tor "Lome, Sweet
Home" there wouldn't be any harmoni-
ca players. Many a mum has lost a lot
of joys while saving a few dollars.
Arthur Brisbane Cnys „ averag
man's mind is closed ht, tit fnrly-
seenns that way in a pellilc-ti way an
how. Pone are so veli to :to as Veer
meet of tile depositors in a baste
bank—to hear then tell it.
Dtnnb--"I've Got a cold in the head.
an open audience of one.
..Gently as the teamster. had stop-
ped; the brushwood underfoot had
ciunclle8 with a certain amount ot
noise; but now• he stopped suddenly
in his' tracks behind the cover :of a
big tree -trunk, and from its shelter
witnessed'•the sight of a !listing, at -
though as a returned soldier, he had
seen many wonders.
The centre of the clearing was
held by a six-foot black snake, his
opponent being that, tiny animal the
bandicoot, and if the combatants had
heard his approach, they were tar
too much -occupier' in their own'af-
fairs to heed anything else.
A ono -sided affray, everyone wil
say, but, incredible as It may appear
the little marsupial was holding hi
own, striking at its sinuous advers
ary with both fore and hind paws
e and bafliing the snake's advance by
h the most persistent defense. The
• latter was not idle, as again he steely
0ahis poisoned fangs into the bandi,
•
y
Teacher—"Why do you always add
up wrongly?
. Scholar—"I don't know."
Teacher—"Does anyone help you?"
Scholar—"Yes, my father"
Teacher -"What is he?"
Scholar—"A waiter."
Life is easier after one gets over
the rough spots. The corset string
Prompt relief front
COLps. .... .
SORE THROAT .
RHEUMATISM .. , >
LUMBAGO .
14EURIT1.5 . .
ACHES c and PAINS
Does not harm, the heart
,YetAet[-.,sAR" ',-G
r4r orals **Angara!' ackage which coatatna proven directions Bandy
"Asph4a" lessee of, 42• tablet`s, also bottles of 2'4 ands 1081 tb6l dro¢e1Ste.
• Dlndo In (la nn Ia
Classified Advertising
Sr A a re
e getout tifet.ltt`L ur rtrN.10EXhrL1,`t:I.i;, 1
Tt Il ,•in I5 ltv,i: sltic .TTS Ibtv,wh
y-uti j ks. Gree, Stucldnc N 1 art! slips
e 1 •apt• T uriittn, Out. • ,
cl ' n.nBae oaxCz5..
Bright --"Wen, that's something." At,1'rT.t: TO EWER? ,1>1VE141.O1t.
List of wanted Intentions and futi
t hoortnatlon sent'free, The Ramsay Com -
t, uany, Werk. 1 stb'nt .(ttarttees, 283 Irene
Shaer, Ottawa, Canada.
a
o Ni Alt w.s "rum 1JI rfNJtt C0lIJIUN-
il ITl to tak.. care of pints and
•
1 ABs' 1 H1ty1Cs--lf4 stS"- RikR-
• 1,1;T11;J, 700 anti up, 'atett,eues
A. ti. Switzer, Grantee. Ontario,
If se Hottentot tot taught a Holtentb
toy to talk e'er the tot could tette
Fought the Hottentot tot be taught t
s say aught, or naught, or whet ought 1
be taught her?
It to !toot and to Loot a Hottentot be
taught by a Hottentot tutor, should
tho tutor get hot ff the Hottenot to
hoot and toot at the Hottentot tutor?
The teacher was telling Iiia class
about parrot fever,* and warned th
pupils never to hiss animals or birds,
Teacher—"Can any pupil give me an
instance of this danger?"
Little Jackie—"I can, sir. illy aunt
Emmy tirel to kiss her lap -dog."
Tenches—"Yes, and—?"
Litho J:tckte—"And it died!"
Make Your Life Complete
'Tis tato hand yon grasp with an iron
est clasp,
That gives you a hearty thrill;
'Tis the good you pore into others
lives,
That conies back your own to 1111.
'Tis the dregs you drains front another's
cup
That mattes your own seen sweet,
And the ,hour's you give to your broth -
Thatman
That make 'your life complete.
A Londoner came out through the
gate after viewing his first baseball
game, when he. was stopped (sy a news-
boy, The score -board -had recorded
that both teams had made a run in
tate first inning and badu't scored
since.
Newsboy—"Say, Mister, what's the
50080?"
Londouer—"Realty, I don't knew,
but it was same place up in the mil-
lions when I left".
With such men as the Acetic flair-
ermnen heroism i8 so common that
they think it commonplace. If ever
anything out of the ordinary hap-
pens—the rescue of the crew of an•
other trawler; the recovery of a man
washed overboard—it is exceedingly
difficult to get any report of it after-
wards, A Roll of Rottour, on which
was to be recorded the outstanding
teats of tate trawlermen, was begun
at Hall in 1864.
If only half of the heroic deeds
which tate trawler skippers and crews
habitually perform were receeded in
the volume, it would have grown into
a library long ago, But only a few
of them are recorded.
I glanced through this book. In
barest ship's log form, It recorded
remarkable e.dventmes—of sailors
who, though heavily burdened with
thick jerseys, heavy sea -boots, thick
shits, and oil -skins, had leapt over
the side to save drowning shipmates
washed overboard; of others who had
swam miles in the depth of winter
to bring succour to some wreck, to
save life; of others still who effect-
ed the rescue enc a oC whore crows.
It was a stirring and remarkable
record, Iacking tit detail as It was;
the short, almost perfunctory sen-
tences which recalied these graitd
adventures Hafted the natures ot the
nlen who had met with them.
At Risk of Their Lives
The book was neatly ruled into
columns, at the heads of whit[. ap-
peared ;titles such as "ship," 'Mame,"
"deed," "reward". I saw "nil' enter-
ed now 'and again under the last
heading whoever had .performed the
deed opposite that name world, not
mind.
The longest entry I could find read
like this:
20/12/25.1 Steamship Verd (Cap-
tain. Bjoradal) on passage Blyth to
Rejkjavik Iceland full cargo coal mid-
way between Farces attd Orkneys
vessel shipped heavy seas hooded en-
gine -room pumps becoming choked
and vessel took heavy • list railings
starboard side beingawe t
.awash s and port
rails also, awash'.amidships. Crew
were about .to take to boats When,
trawler Knaresborough sighted their
distress signaie and tnanoeuired On
lee side,' - Halt crew of Vard reach-
ed the trawler in their own boat. Two
mea front the, trawler rowed to the
easier in "'the boat and saved the
tnainder, Rescue only possible by
fled and risky manoeuvring of the
peeler.
"Strong S.W. gale for days; heavy
a ruuuing."
Man Overboard!
That 18 all.
No names of the two
row men: who rowed' back in that
at no name of the toaster of the
rd Knaresborongh; no names Of
n
28lybody but the•master of the Vard! ;
There are many other similar en- .
es—of ;hoiv the trawler Rudyard
?Hag ,.lost her spare hand over--
St
re
Sk
tr
se
b1'
bo
Lo
a
drl
coot's body, Invariably aiming for rho
armpits. But no sooner was a wound
received than the little animal
bounded to tete side of tate clearing,
and rapidly bit into a bunch of long
"Wady" grass, which it as quickly
chewed, Mee rushed back to renew
the fight.
During these brief intervals
(which in the language ot the prize
Meg would be styled "time") the
snaite, evidently tired. from the de-
termined resistance of -his dauntless
little enemy, lay still on the battle-
field, waiting for his opponent to
resume hostilities. Seven times the
astonished onlooker watched the
bandicoot rush off to tate patch of
"blady" grass and devour hurried
mouthfuls, attd always, tiros fortified,
it would renew the fight with un-
abated vigor. But the tiny creature,
although game to the last, was. after
ever round, becoming perceptibly
weaker, not front the poison, because
unquestionably the "biady" grass
was the antidote, but from sheer eo.
haustioti.
"This is where I come in," said the
teamster to himself, and picking u9
the nearest stick, he rushed straight
for the snake and settled him,
The bandicoot meanwhile ambled
rather than ran back into the scrub,
followed quietly by the man, who
had already made a shrewd gross
as to tate reason of the small ant-
mal's wonderful light,
Yes, a few feet in front the edge
of the scrub, lying peacefully and
safely on a sett bed of leaves, was
the wee, pinky baby "Joey.,'
Well, I'II be blowsd if I didn't
thinkit," said the teamster, aloud,
and added, "She fought to save her
yottngsterI Hats oft to the little
mothel'!"—Animal Life.
The Dawn's F• irst Prelude
It was a pleasant thing
To hear the dawn's first preluding,
'pill the tinkle of starlight died away,
And the golden, trumpet -blast of day,
Clanging an up the eastern gray,
Broke on a hollow. silent world;
And totuseeriad the banneret flowers un -
Prom the battlements of the turf, and
own
A new earth, lit tor hint alone.
.—Prore "Tice Clocks of Gnostertown,"
by Edward Rowland Sill.
Just think et theterrible: depres-
sion there will be in the apple busi-
ness •I
s r ton -times
get better and the
unemployed go back to their regular
jobs.—Nashville Southern" Lumber-
man.
BLACKHEADS
�ADS
Lott salter any longer from these
u alghtly blemishes., Overcome teem nt
hamel Get 2 oz. Peroxine Powden'lrom
Sour uruggist, Sprinkle a little- On' .Ste
.ace
the
apmiy with a elroular motion
n. the blatkheads w111 bo ell.'tr'A98ED
A•.I.air. Satisfaction or looney returned.
€tidura
AI IdTMEN'T'
Atried and trusty
friend for 50yeafa.
ISSUE No, l 2—'3 0
roofing requirements of farm and ore -
party. owners. Whole or wart time work
will earn you rroad commission. Must
be well known end of good reoutationt
bend -parttauiars about yourself, age in-
cluded, with two references, and we shrill
submit our plait proposition. All Gan.
Milan products, Sturgeons Limited,
Toronto
• pD Lusa c'oITNT1 sLF,Ds—TVL` SPP•.-
C'I>Lifal17,i•.rIn ,gel grown seeds,
r t•!mm Sa, Ontnrto t'arfegated al-
faera, edt CIOcer, red M"Cer, timothy,
merits anand hay mixtures • \vette for
prices. R'holeenle and retail. Our
motto, "Quality first." Peel Need Grow-
ers' Co -Operative, Ltd., Cos 1100,
111•amptnn, Ont,
1,000 Fight London Fire
London.—A tt-ousanti London fire•
men fought for hours recently against
a ,spectacular waterfront aro in the
Smart of the city's "danger zone" near
the famous Tower,I3ridge across the
Thames.
The fire started in Butler's 'WL ot'.f
and although fanned by a strong wind
was confined to a six -storey ware-
house stocked with rubber and tea.
Great clouds of acrid smoke shroud-
ed the river n;td a wide area of the
south side, The :ors was estimated
at between $25D,000 and $600,000,
Britain Says 'Goodbye"
To "Slush" Annoyance
London, — Although Great Britain
has not, perhaps, had her full share of
snow this winter, there have been
803110 big tails in the North and the
Midlands, And, as usual, the street
sweepers have been faced with tate
long and arduous task of throwing
snow into carts and removing it sever-
al miles from the towns to be dumped.
Even so, traces of the falls have lin-
gered for weeks afterwards at tate
sides of the made.
Much expense and trouble will be
saved in future it a new German pro-
cess Is introduced. ltiobile tanks now
appear in certain German towns atter •
snow has fallen. 'The snow, when
sliorolled into these, is rapidly melted +
by coke fires, and thea poured down
the nearest drain. By this means a t
street can be entirely cleared of snow
in less than half an hour.
Some tanks are also equipped with
an Ilpparatus resembling a painter's
blowpipe, Upon the tank being wheel-,
ed along a street, the snow is melted
in gutters and other crevices before t
it hag a chance to torn into Ibo tit
":slush" that both drivers and pedes-
trians find so trying.
Mors ofx
Mande •
h
sdo•`
mr t•
aetev
but there
ee
are many echoes,
antemsnoutrzansumatsiscommainsassi
1rlcaia'dressoa's ' MAILE BIG
MONEY
maces are now forming under
the persunai tlteactlon of Diia.
Robertson. Write for free 'menet
regarding terms. Itobcrtson'n
ktalrilreesing Academy rdlnl pd,
137 Avenue 720141. 'SOCOOI O
Deranaearausilleelaperaaaniallig
LOST 1 Las. Y
A Trac Ste I of Weight Reduction
"I have been taking I{ruschen Salts
for nearly 3 months. 1 have continued
taking one tcaspeonful in warm water
every morning. I then weighed 217
pounds, was always bothered with
pains in my back and lower part of
the abdomen end sides,
Now 1 n glad
woman, Leet Hutch stronger, years
younger, and my weight is 170 pounds.
I do not only feel better, but I look
better, so ail my friends say..
°I shall never be without l8ruschen
Salts, will never cease taking my daily
dose, and more than glad to highly
recommend it for the great,good that
is in it>" --(Mrs. S. A. Solomon.) •
"?.S. --You may think 2 am, exalt•
Berating by writing such a long -lettere
but, truly, I feel so indebted to you for
putting out sack wonderful salts that
1 cannot gay enough."
1Kruschen :Salts are different, from
ether salts—Kruscitea is eix salts in
one—the very same six salts thugs
nature demands for your health.
When you take 1<niechen Salts younot
only stimulate your bowels, liver and
kidneys to function naturally and per-
fectly, but you supply every internal
organ,gland, nerve
and fibre i
n I
t to
body wall ndtures own revitalizing
and rejuvenating minerals.
Take laruschen to a glass of hot water
every -morning before breakfast—do
not over -eat --correct your diet—cut
out the tat-forming.4foods-.get aerie
gentle; regular'exercisc--in just a few
days, indolence 'Manges to activity and
lite grow', brighter.
Before ,tile bottle is empty you'll feel
years: younger --eyes will ,brighten--
step grow•sprightl'er—nerves--steadier
—you'll sleep sound, eujoy,.your meats,
and after a hard day's work you'll be
ready for :wholesome,recreation.
Kruschen '. Suits, is 'obtainable at art'
Drug Stoma at 4 0
u c. and 760, per bottle.
FREE TRIAL OFFE
. - Try 1Crasohen now atour oxpowte. Wo.hsvo 111
disttibutoda groat many Riedel "QUANT'
packages tpkloh make it easy .for you to
prove our claims for yourself. Ask your
drugglst for-tbo now a (SIANT 1' 76o, peekdgo;
Tldsoondsts of our regular e6e, bottle together
no wes(cnnrAmin Gifs C10! beta,' ta'rd , fort 151 E0l
OF K USCNEIN
icet, and:then,.ti:notoatlrely convince
hat 1Cresohon does everything wo.Olehe 51 to
o the regtdar bottle le still no good ax new.
Take it back, -Your druggist is authorised to
tura year �.70o.,1inmedlately,.aad tylth050
ioatton. Pon quire aided •ICmeolien^Eros Rb
nr.exponee. -•bwhat.eould.bo felrerY
anonaturod by l tl(anistmns,wuaen t, tele
s (listsbalsitwi 1,760),
T
a
•qt
DI4
20
CUTS el SURES
Apply Minatd's freely. It
washes out poison and
cleanses- Anywound heals
i
quickly after ts tut.
there's nothing bettor!
Five Boys—
Best Evidence.
Mrs. Corcoran, of Leigh, writes:—
"I suffered with biliousness accom-
panied by sick headaches for days
at a time, and every medicine I
tried failed to bring relief. A friend
gave me some of your wonderful
Carter's Little Liver Pills and the
first dose gave me great relief. Por
three years I have taken them every
night as a regulator and I find they
prevent these bilious and sicie head-
ache attacks. I have five little boys
and I give them three or four ever}
week. I have great faith in them."
Take Carter's Little Liver Pills.
All druggists
2G
d and 6
4 red pkgs,
`Your Vegetable Com-
pound is a good medicine.
Anyone who is in poor health
should not hesitate to try it,,
When 1 was taking the Vega-
table Compound 1 triedthe
sample Liver fills 1: found in
the package, 1 have taken
than every night since and 1
can feel myself -improving. 1
ani so thankful fothe od
•they do me that I ;have told
several women about it"—
Mrs. O. W: d'odif, 263 ,l -Tums
St Stratford, >rofd , Onta '
fro,