Loading...
The Clinton News Record, 1931-08-06, Page 3taSt! 'eul�eteenl! me i !t i. so ecoi iomiea1 Tm& salad dressing is different; It hits no oily taste..: it's creamy smooth and has an exquisite,fresh flavour that adds new pleasure to every salad dish. d • Tu addition, its so economical that now. you can affordto serve tasty salads often. A'large 12 ounce jar sells for only 25 cents,. one-halfp the rice .you'i.e used to 'paying for this stan and of quality. Try somG.• to -day. Your grocer cairsupply you. fir, 0,1a Uadnikrazd'Boiled Salad Dressing Made hs Canada by the Makers of Kraft Cheese and Velviceta Knights' " Meaford Flooring It's Good See your dealer WS Even etter Get our prices IT'S THE BEST The Knight Mfg. & Lbr. Co. Ltd., Meaford Frenchman Spends 21/2 Years Travelling Through African lush Wandering Adventurer, Who Began Travels as Sailor, Finds - Thrills in Wilds, but Is Dismayed by City Traffic Johannesburg, S. At.—Alone in a a sailing ship left, he abandoned the tx-wheeler from Algiers to Cape Town • vox. the • most diflioult routes 1a . At- Ica—this is the ` achievement of Gebrtei de Ramecourt, an adventurous Frenchman, according to a corres- pendent of The Christian Science Monitor. He has crossed deserts, braved the dangers ot the bush and lived on friendly ..terms -with :the . PST - metes, .yet Mr, Pettit, the French•comr tet hint ou arrival here, because eercialeeetache, had to .drive out and the was uneasy about fluffing his way through the city traffic by himself. At the age of 14 M. do Remeeourt }began his travels on a sailing ship. For 117 years he was driven about the seven !seas of the world by the winds. IIe ., !disliked steamers, and witeu, after )spending the war years iu au airship to the North Sea and the Mediterran- eau, he found that there was scarcely • this year" TNTERNATIONALLY famous for its magnitude, beauty of environment, univer- sal displays, fine buildings and brilliant entertainment, the Canadian National Exhibition arouses enthusiastic admiration. For Fourteen Days and nights there is a constant flow of new delights and absorbing admixture of pleasure and profit. Exhibits from almost every countty; collections of ancient and modern masterpieces of art in two galleries; famous 2000 -Voice exhibition Chorus—Sat., Aug. 29; Thurs., Sept. 3; Tues., Sept. 8; Sat., Sept, 12; "Orlentia" grandstand spectacle of sparkling brilliance de- picting mystic charms of the East; St. Hilda's Band of England (each member a bronze, silver and gold tnedallisty; Cavallo'sandotherbands; ;01 branches of agriculture in world's largestshowbuilding; MillionDollar Horse Palace to be officially °veiled ]this year. Sixth Marathon Swim in two events. -sport spectacle of inter- national renown. These are but a few of the features which enthrall and enthuse. Jllustrated literature will gladly be sent on request. •.educed gates by railway, steamship and bus lines. Consult local agents. AU0.28.to SEPT J2.I931 'WORLDS GREATEST'►A PERM N T EXPOSITION NSIECLE e'fIVE Y EAit • 21.000.O O INVESTED e1,, a DK U@ GS e l IN PAR EQUIPMENT 8.1M HARRIS H. W. WATERS Preskl`eet Geniraf.Manager sea and decided to explore the land. Like another Frenchman, Alain Ger- .bault, he preferred his own company to any other. In 1910 M. de Ramecourt landed is French West Africa and net out on foot and alone, exoept for.some native carriers,. into the , interior,, et. Senegal, Mauritania, French Guinea,• and the Ivory Ooast, •.Nigeria, and, the French Sudan- ,At times' he traveled by canoe, at others by,catttel, but for the.greater Part of the,three .yearsewalked at,tbr head of his little safari. It was In October, 1928, that the Frenchman, set out on the expedition now only .half finished after three years. With a six -wheeled lorry, which he drove himself, he left Boulogne for Mareeitlos and crossed to Algiers on the North African coast. From there he set out boldly into the desert until he reached tite French military post Of 131 Corea is South Algerian terri- tory. The officials hero refused to let. hint go on without a companion, So M. de Ramecourt lavitod. an acquaint- ance there to start out with him; and when official scruples had thus been satisfied his friend quietly slipped back into the town and left the adven- turer to go On 'alone. . Wandering Arab tribes furnished another obstacle, and he was made to waft for the Masselin mission to escort hint into tiro Sahara on its railway survey. The escort did not contiutto long, however, for ono of the cars stuck in the sand, and tate six -wheeler not' daring to stop wont me alone. Tkte six -wheeler waited for six days at the next stopping place, but the mission did not arrive, and so 14. de 'RanlecOurt went on into the notorious Paye de la Soif,' 'tlte "Thristlaud" of the Sahara, 1000 miles without Water. He did not oven have a native or Arab companion, but emerged at Goa on the Niger safe and sound. Nigeria to Lake Tchad and Oudday on the Egyptian Sudan border, tate northern Belgian Congo, Tanganyika, Uganda, Mombassa next passed under hia six -wheeler, and then Tanganyika again and northern Rhodesia to Eliza- bethviile in the Congo and Luanda in Angola. M. de Rarnecourt was tho first man to drive a motorcar to Brazzaville, the capital ot the French Congo, but he had to leave it thorn and take to canoes to get into the Camoroons. For live months he lived in the thick of the jungle, his companions two native carriers, but he fell in with. perhaps the shyest and rarest of the human rano, tlto pygmies. After passing through Ovamboland and mart of southwest Africa, M. de/ Ramecourt was stopped at Otjiwa- rango because hie tires gave way. Ifo had to stay there two mouths. More tire trouble was ,encountered on the next stretch from Moshe Pan to Out- jo, for Ito made repairs GG times la .Six. days owing to the stony ground. Final- ly he reached Cape Town after two and a half years in. the wilds. A nervous young man walked into a large store and wits confronted by a salesman. "I want—I want, I really don't want what I want; it either a camisole .or a casserole." Salesman helpfully): "Is the bird dead or alive?" saw FoRP4sEm ;Y7IY7 YOU have not re - 9 calved your coy of Infant feeding lfteta. Mgr ura ro¢ether with our Baby Reseed Boohell kndthe achcoupon and they will. co sent you Ecco of oil coon Eagle Brand CONOEN000 Milk in The Burdon Co UM, C.W. 17 111 George St...Toronto. oggytC005t Please sent mofree, cornea ofw�v ur w,4hor,tnt,va liter. aura ou Child Welfare. Noma Owl Lars father -"Now 1 waist to Pat a little scientific question to you, my son, When the .kettle. boils, what demi 1:11e steam come out of -the spout for?" Son—"So that mother cau open your letters before you got them;''. Smile and the World smiles with you, Kick and you kick, alone;(' But the cheerful grin will let you las, Where tho knocker 18 hover known. A kindly but somewhat patronizing landlady inquired of the young bride how,skte and her husband proposed to spend their summer vacation; The Bride (a little digtantly)—"Our plans, so far, are tentative," Landlady—"Oh, how delightful. Irni sure you'll enjoy camping out more than anything else you. could do." et a pitcher, le jerked out and the game, is •won, that's strategy. If he is jerked and the game is lost, that's plain unadulterated' dumbness, Mistress•—"Why, did you ieavo your last place, Gordo?"' etald—"Because I did not know what this one was like." "Just hold the rec'o`ver a minute." said a woman to another this morning, Interrupting a -hair -hour telephone con- versation, "until 1 itefi my husband something ciao to dm" Mistress (indignantly)—"Just look at the dust on tine sideboard, Mary. It'sat least six weeks. old," Mary (calmly)—"Then It ain't noth- ing to de with me, mum. I've only been here four weeks." Tho man entered a cigar store, bought a cigar and left. Five minutes. later ho dashed back. \ The Man (shouting)—"That cigar is simply awful!" Storekeeper (calmly)—"Itis ail very well for you to eomplaine you've on1 ! got ono; I've got hundreds of the darn things." . You need make no more noise in the worhte tltan,,,a hermit calling to its mato, Aetieult tack, not words., ..Pretty Girl (et florist's)—"Have-you eny..pameton popple?" Elderly Ciotk (excitedly) — "col drug! Just you wait till I lay these roses down." --^ Doctor—"Now; young man, what have, you got to say for yourself?" Isis Son. (in for a licking)—"How about a little Iocai anesthetic?' O'Leary called at the home of his friend, O'Brien, to tell Mrs, O'Brien - that her husband was locked up for being drunk. Mrs. O'.Brlen—"Wily didn't you hall him out, man?" O'Leary --"Bail him out! • Bedad, you couldn't pump him out!" Au old-timer fs ono 'who can remem- ber when "Cut it out" was a slang ex- program xprogr iott instead of a popular cure, Tommy—"Isn't 'wholesome' a funny -word, rather?" Father—"What's so tunny about it?" Tommy --"Why, telco away the 'whole' and you've got 'some' left" Speaiing of a certain druggist, a man said: "Ho is a pretty good drug- gist all right, but 110 puts too much pepper in his chicken salad," "It's the teeth that I speak," Says Archibald Green, "A girl on tate lap ' Is worth two on the screen," Male Straphanger — "Marlene you aro standing on my foot" Female Ditto -•-"I beg your pardon. I thought it belonged to the man sit- ting down." Boarder "Como quinlc—two rats are fighting in my room," Landlady—'V'Vell, wl''t do ye ' ex - peat to get for fifty cents—a bull fight?' If we know .ourselves ,we aro pretty well informed. people improve as long as they have a desire to improve, Courteous people are usually treated courteously. Admitted Martin was Calking at the c'' table about the inconsistency r` man, 'These girls who protest 'that -y are never going to marryl" he brotce out. "Everybody knows thatt,,wtll be- lie their own words at tilefirst oppor- tunity." Ile paused and evidently hoped that Mrs. Martin would come to the rescue of her sex. But that discreet woman held her tongue. , "Why, Mary," he continued, "you remember how it was with yodrself. I heard you gay more than once that you wouldn't marry the best mati alive." "Well, t didn't," aid Mrs. Martin. Father's YFootsteps . Mr. Smith was lecturing hie son. "My boy," he said, "you have rte. - relived an irritating habit of saying I 'forgot' Now, to cultivate the power 1 memory is very simple. ()omen - ' your mind on each act as you l'arform it; centre. your thoughts on every occurrence from the moment you awake in the morning until you go to sleep at night, When I say T have been endowed with a remarkable memory d .orale--" Ners. 'Smith putting her head in at the door: "John, you've forgotten to leave the car lights on, and two po- licemen are waiting to speak to you." Dig`game. hunter: "Oh, yes, I've been 'nearly eaten by lions many. tunes; but life without a little risk • would be very' tame," Mr. Subbubs: "I agree—1 agree! How often when th weather has seemed doubtful hevo I deliberately gone out without my timbre/1aI" Alexander Fraser Appointed production Manager ror Christie, Brown & Co. Limited. Christie, Brown & Co,, Limited, Toronto, anuounae the appoititmont of Mr. Alexander A. Fraser' as produo- tion manager for their 'Toronto and new Winnipeg plants. Mr. Fraser was born. in Arther, Ontario, and educated in London, Ontario. Tie has' spent 30 mire -in the biscuit baking business" with practical experience itt every department of the menetae- taring processes, Mr. Fraser's ap- pointment as production' manager for this leading • Canadian company is• a, guarantee that Christie% 131s. suits will continuo eo uphold the splendid tradition for quality •that. theyhave enjoyed for nearly eighty years. " Bird The mystery - of dawn which the lengtllening hours dispel is finely real- ized la The Commonweal (New York) : By Frances M. Frost The dawn came wan, the dawn grew gold, The light poured downward in the ear- ly cold. The cedars, dreaming against the sky, Leaned' over water; and the small cool cry Of crystal groped for rock and sand, While the airy dripped blue on lake and land. The sun rose up, a flower or gold:. The hills were petaled, fold on. fold, With flame. And suddenly morning stirred-' Morning was shattered by a hidden bird! Tho song blew east, the song blew west, The song blew wild In the listening breast! While morning woke to beauty and pain, The song was a breath oe Silver rain, A blossom of sun, and wings up-huried Over the known and lovely world! The song was the polated shadow of • leaf Oa the turning earth, and hint of grief, A shoulder of wind, and a star above A. dawn -dark hill, and an answer to love, • Silence cause, Tho sun grow tall; Tho dint woods watched the petals fall, And wind went searching Oaeh hidden way • For a lost bird caught to the heart or day! Smites That Start Early There was all interesting, if Dore sIbly somewhat unwelcome, addition to the Loudon Zoo population the other day when a Russell's viper, which had recently arrived from In- dia, gave birth to over 100 young. The Russell's viper is Otte of the most dangerous snakes itt the world, not only because it is very poisonous, but also because of its fierceness, In. tiian matte charmers, wito think notle ing et handling cobras, won't touch the Russell's viper. The young of the species are both motive and aggresive, and though they aro little larger titan earthworms when newly born, they will bite If they get a chance—and the bite will produce tlistittetly unpleasant results. Once before, when baby Russell's vipers appeared at the Zoo, a keeper was bitten by one of the `nand suffered considerable pain. There aro other species of shakes whose young are just as pugnacious. The baby ringhals, or spitting cobra, of South Africa, sits tie with expanded hood and tries to bite es soon as It is born,—Answers," London. • lanes Warned to Fly High Over American Prisons Washington -- A warning to all aviators against flying above either Federal or State prisons at an altitude lower than 1,000 toot was given recent- ly by Gilbert G. Budwig, director of air regulation or the Department of Commerce. Stating that complaints had been re- ceived recently al planes flying near prisons, Mr, Budwig said fihat the amendment made to the air traffic rules in April apparently was "not un- derstood.." This 'rule, he said, applied except when there was au established landing field nearby. IIe pointed out that under the air commerce act penalties might be es- eesaed for y'lolatiotfs. - '31 To :Be Record Year For Winter Fair Increased Number of Exhibits 'front Prairies in, June Butter Competition Toronto.—An 4nmistakahle proof of confidence in Western Canadian agri- culture hag just been: registered at the Royal Winter Fair In the remarkable entries received in the June butter competitions, Not only; does the total make a 'word for the ten years of the Royal Winter Fair but a more sig- nffi.cant'feature le that the whole oe the increases are accounted for by the, prairie provinces. Those from -Sas- katchewan, for example, have been Increased nearly 100 per cent, The directorate of the Royal Winter Fair considers the record entry this year a most .convincing proof of Western faitli-in the underlying soundnesseoe agriculture. It may be added that so far as can be judged from early inten- tions to exhibit; the outlook for live- stock entries is equally rosy. All the Juno butter exhibits have now been received at the Royal and are safely is storage under controlled conditions of temperature, etc. They will not be, disturbed until removal for display . ad competition at the Coliseum just prior to the opening of the 'Winter Fair on November 18th. The Royal of 1031, its tenth year, is to be a "Commemorative Show," intended to nark its "birth," and to signalize the establishment of a na- tional centre where Canadian•agricul- tltre was first focussed so as to Virtual - lie ltd importance, and whore, in the decade that ha, ensued, It has poen given a worthy and rightful place in Dominion affairs. . Dentists in the States With 017,000 dentists, one to every 1,700 persons,.Anierica leads the world in des'tistry and dental training, Ac- cording to the United States Office of Education, in spite of the fact that it has been estimated that only .one- fourth of the American people recelve dental service. There is, however, only one dentist to every 4,000 persons itt Alabama, Arkansas,, Miasissippi and South Carolina, and one to every 3,000 persons in Arizona, Georgia, Kentucky, New Mexico, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia, Thera 1s said to be only one Negro dentist to every 8,500 Ne- groes, Wife: "You were tallcing in your sleep lash night, dear." Husband: "Well, I've got to talk sometimes, haven't I?" Giant "Spark Plug" New Foe of Lightning. Pittsburgh engineers recently shot enough electricity through --an experi- mental lightning -rod to lift the Wool- worth Building off its feet. The giant "spark plug" at the new Westinghouse high-power laboratory blazed into action for the first tante as over 132 million volt-amperes leapt across the..terminals.te the lightning rod on test. There was a burst or Heine from each end of the rod and a report like a six-inch cannon as the experimental lightning -rod "knocked out" the ter- rific lightning bolt in less than 1-500 of a second. J. J. Torok, faventor of the rod, is thus quoted in a Westing- house News Bulletin: "The results of the tests are so pro- mising that wo aro working night and day to finish its development. We hope it will effect greater ecouomies in ere - sent forms of flashover protective de- vices now in service 10 protect insu- lator strings ou overhead transmission litres which supply cities with light and power. Iu addition, it is expected to provide permanent protection against the ravages of lightning and save the country millions of dollar's a year, "Now, after a lightutug stroke, pro- tective clevtoea of the fuse type must be replaced. This requires constant patrolling of the lines. Because of the limitations 01 a single line, duplicate lines meet be constructed. The now lightning -rod does away with this ex - 001050." T110 coustruction or the device le simple, wo are told. It consists of a hollow tube about the size of a lady's umbrela. A piece of metal at each end serves as an electrode to eutice the lightning inside for the "knock- out" blow, It is supposed to work so fast that the lights in a house will not oven flicker. The bulletin concludes: "This device, technically known an a 'lle-ton' lightning protector, is used to protect 'imitator strings ou trans- mission lines against flashover. Da- glueers have estimated that if the Torok lightning -rod Is successful and had been available ten years ago, the world would have saved a hundred million dollen." TO gREAT BRITAIN and back SPECIAL REDUCRI) third claws fareffrowMontrealtoilolfast, Gina" gow,,Litverpool, Plymouth or London and back; Good goingfro. Aug. lst to Oct. 15th Return. portions valid for 2 years. Round trip -rate to Continental. points reduced proportionately. Tsailinga week. Forftili infowvo mmtton. apsply OUNARD LIE+ Cor, nay. and'welltnNaton Ste. 0(Phone 01511, 3471) `� Toronto Or any steamship ggn,e I A ANCHOR -DON DON H.1 Cs W b s4r^"r. Midsummer Eve Lovers of Nature will enjoy this ex- cerpt xcerpt from "Wild Iioney," by Samuel Scoville, Jr, All the color of form, foliage and bird voice are clearly por- trayed. It was Midsummer IDve when I reached the cabin. The swift stream stretched away in the moonlight ll1t4 silvered velvet, and the leaves of the swept gums and the swamp maples made a dim, green' web along its' banks, - Overhead, some bird which I could not identify gave a strange, wild .cry Classified Advertising REMNANTS: .y LBS. PRINTS, SILK OR S'0ILYJO'r, aS 91,00. . A. McCreery 00., Chatham, Ontario. STAGNIEIENG '!f CORM) MYSELF AFTER ST:tM- Il atieaxNO- twenty years. Write today for my leaflet. William Dennison, 198 Moor St. ]Oast, Toronto, AGENTS. WANTED. ITOOIS UP THE FIRLPI0OOP CAR - LA and Safe advertisement in a recent. issue et this paper. They want agents. Fireproof Cabinets and. Safes Ltd„ 303 Greenwood Ave., Toronto, - and repeated it a few seconds later al. Doufbtful great distance away, showing how fastA tourist agency' inserted an ed- it was flying through the black -velvet vertisentent for a man who was re - sky above. 1 quired to escort parties abroad. A The shadows of the waving trees hard -up young man, who desired: an made a 'fretted, magical pattern on:. easy post, applied and was given an the smooth surface of the water. A interview. pine -barren pickerel frog, all emerald' "Good morning," said the agency and gold and purple -black, snored, and' official. "Parlez vous Francais?" some other frogs unknown to me gave I "l—er—beg your pardon?" stem - a couple of loud, startling notes which mored the applicant. sounded like the clapping of two' "Parlez vous Francais?" boards together. Then suddenly, in I "I—ah—frightfully sorry, but I the distance, the stressed, hurried didn't quite catch . , !' notes of a whippoorwill pealed throuKit , "I said, 'Do you speak French?' the darkness to be answered by one. The young man smiled easily. close to the cabin. Over and over and "Oh, yes," he said, "fluently." over again those birds of the night re- .seated their,tripto notes with a little click atter each one,.Yturying as if they feared ,to »e interrupted before .they could finish. As the wild, sweet mel- odp,thrilled. through the darkness, it Saks Exhibit Ship To Visit South America Loudon,—The ship British Exhibitor will sail from the port of London on Nov. 1st with a passenger list con' Meting or commercial travelers for British goods. This is an effort to pro- vide manufacturers and exporters with e, means of making personal contact with foreign buyers. The first voyage 01 the British Ex- hibitor will follow the track of the re- cent visit of rho Prince of Wales to South America and during the course of its 11 months' voyage wilt touch at more than 30 ports. The ship of 15,000 toils, formerly the Leicestershire, of the Bibby line, will have space for near- ly 500 exhibits as well as room for 233 representatives of firms. There will be an expert sales staff with a knowledge of Spanish and Portuguese andof commercial conditions in the countries 'of South America, There will also be a einema theatre where Rime may be shown. The project is being supported by the sons of e2750 for an exhibit. A very slender girl entered a tram- car and managed to seat herself in a narrow sxace between two men. •A. portiy woman entered the car and had to strap -hang. The girl, thinking to' humiliate the men for their lack of gallantry, got up., "Madam," she Said with a wave • of her 'land towards the place she had' vacated, "take my seat." "Thank you," replied the woman; smil ing broadly, "but which gentleman's knees were you sitting on?" How Are Your Feet? boot troubles ottani; health arid ,.otnfort, CESS SA1LVE, removes Corns, Callouses, Warts, ln- grown, Toe -nails outplay. easily, safely. Just rub it on. At loading drna'gtsts or send for jar, 506 TREE CRESS LABORATOE1BS 34 Ahrsne Street West, Otitonenol;, Ont. ISSUE No. 32-'31 • -1 The young auctioneer was conduct- ing his first sale. "Who will bid 5S for tills magnificent clock?" he asked. A. bid was soon obtained and the price seemed to me as if the moonlight it- wont up gradually to 512, when a self had been set to music. When it deadlock occurred. "Come, come," stopped, the lonely waste land lay still said the auctioneer, warming to his as sloop. Then, as the full moon work; "who says guineas?" "I do," climbed the sky, from far -away bogs said one of the bidders: "And a half," and gold -green pools came the clear called another. "Twelve and a half voices or late hylas, like tangled guineas," shouted the auctioneer: chines of mey silver bells, "going, going—" "Thirteen pounds," SVhen they stopped for breath,'tee said a woman who had previously wood frogs, as it they had waited for been silent. She got the clock! that moment, burst out into a perfect] panciemoniunt ot honking, quacking no tee. When at last the clamor of the frogs stopped as suddenly as it had begun, I left my bag in the cabin and in the moonlight Hurried down a winding path which. led through a tittle dip to the soft yellow grass where, not fifty yards from nporch, rho deu bed in winteriy, Juat at rhowild edge orf • this hollow I found a clump of the flowers which I,had hoped to see Red, 1 gold, ivory -white, and pale green, they grow front a mass of lioiiow, crimson - streaked leaves filled with clear water, and I knelt down 111 the moonlight to revel in the betuty of the pitcher plants, which I had not seen. itt blos- som for u'n. The sig11htee oflothemgyearsbrought to my mind another discovery that I had made the day when last I found them blossoming, and I followed the path until it wound through tussocks of ochre -colored grass, Parting their Stems, I searched through several without finding anything. Then, as I• came to the last tussock of all. a tiny bird slippedwfy liko a shadow, giving an alarm Tote sharp as the clicking of two pebbles together.Safore me in the moonlight showed a deep utast of woven grass containing four rose - white eggs blotched with 'brown at the larger cud and showing in the moonlight tike pearls in a Casket of tawny gold. Ilefo and there through the fabric of the nest were woven dry leaves, the field mark of the nest of the Maryland yellow -throat, who wears a black domino and has a song that sounds like "witchery, witchery, witchery." As always, when I leaned down to study more closely the ex- quisite little eggs in their beautiful set- ting, I had tate feeling that had come upon treasure•trove, finch as he meet experience who unoartho a crock of gold Or stumbles upon a oiliest et doub- loons. The ,aid was allowing the some- what flashily -dressed individual to iiia room in the seaside boarding house, At rho door he pau.,ad.and said: "t presume everyone here dresses for dinner'?" The maid :coked dumbly et him, "Oh, yes, sir," she replied at !r' `. "Any meals taken in bed are extra." WOOL HIGHEST PRICES PAID The Canadian Wool Co. Ltd. 2 CHURCH ST., TORONTO / Kennedy & Menton 421 College St., Toronto Harley•I.avids0n Distributors Write at once for our bargain list or used motorcyctcs. Terms arranged. • FOR CONSTIPATION e dire in snratterdares SAFE SCIENTIFIC Get hint of 5)arribrudr by teeing Cuticula -a Scall oestated by Cuitiesrras ,1 intment Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. and 50c. Pour ildinard'a into n ween dish. .Rub liniment gently in;. then apply it according to. directions . . and soon you'll get relief] Rid your home of'.flies with Aeroxon—the F improved spiral fly catcher with the longer and wider ribbon. Aeroxon is guaranteed not to dry out or deteriorate. The glue is,aldvaya fresh, fragrant and sweet—irresistible to dies. Aeroron La Good for 3 Weeks' Sorvioe. \ Gets the 'liar every time Sofa Agenea: NttW rON A. IfILX., 5G 1! rout Street End, '.t',g fQgt�o, �,