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The Clinton News Record, 1929-12-12, Page 3This Christmas; serve Christie's Puddings and Cakes. Their whole- some goodnesswill delight young and old: litinfahlik hai'e. ,V Christi y 9 e�opst aawn' s��et li din MADE BY THE BAKERS OP ®.. dile BPra uta a 61.2uahlyr race /8S3 qui.' tagaigiattleig Secret Things Of Horne Secretar ix Gives Interview do Bad - good -hearted people,Whe will be very. t Hospital for Sick Children 67 COLLEGE ST., TORONTO 2 December 1929; Dear Mr. Editor.,, ness and Goodness of Your newspaper goes to a lot of -London pleased to learn that the now country • inter Angela rBroadway- Tragedy :Copyright i9g9, by Reliert Henry Tocid:, Copyright 1929, by Robert Henry Todd SiSter'Angela is a cheerful, content- . "'Look out!" ed looking person. As she walks up The two score or so of People pass- Third Avenue this bright` AO, moinl• ing along 'Broadway, between Thirty- quite it number of the men and - fiftil)and Thirty-sixth streets,. hesitate women—yes, and,clilldren; too -71111r - uncertainly, then seeing danger, .they rying to work, touch their- caps, or scamper" to safety—all but one man,. nod, as they, pass.: tf - f who, apparently unheeding the warn - It was late the night before, that ,ing cry, walks 011, Sister Angela received a teiegl'aut ',Chore is a sickening, dull kind at- tent her brother Tom, stetiug•thatlie (noise;' a horible scream, and A sway' would arrive at the Grand. Central Stu- `ring figure. b'or.a-moment .,or two the tion at eight o'clock the following - people aro stupifiod, but fear quickly Morning; and now she is going to ! giyes way,to curiosity, and they,hasti meet•• him. ' Toni had enlisted, ; and ly. form •a ring; about ,; the Prostrate served 'hie time iu the,:1'liillipines wtthout'reeeiving so 'muoll as 'a' .scratch, He had been given his dis- charge and was now on his, way Bailie. :As she hurries up the street, 'she smiles;as: She thinks of the handsome, jolly -hearted fellow, whom more than one girl has missed during the pest OW years. Arriving at the station she ,goes through it, and out 'on to one of the platforms where Toni's train will -come in. There aro a great number of people waiting there for some of Tom'scompanions are coming home, 'too, they having enlisted the Sa e time as'he did, Atter a few :minutes waiting; the clang, clang of the engine bell -echoes -through; the station, and' the 'big:en- gind drews''up to the platform anti comes to a stop.. Soldier boys hastily climb .trona the coaches, and for -the ;next few minutes are busy kissing; hugging, and eilaltieg hands with rela- tives and friends. Sister -Angela's big brother Tom had spied her blaekclad figure' before ,the trate had dome to a stop, and you may be sure lie was at, her side: before you could say "Jack Robinson." .And. now •they'stand couv�'sing, watching with .pleased faces, ti}e many happy re- unionsof mothers and sons, brothers and sisters, and husbands and wives. As they stand there, a voice behind them is raised in anger, and the voice seems fami lair to Sister Angela. Clutching Ler I rother's-arm,'ehe'•turns and looks at the speaker. • He, is a handsome, broad -shouldered Young fel- lows -a returned soldier. _A. Stylishlg- dressed young woman=15resumatiiy, his wife—is pressing him to do some- thing, and: he is protesting. ", • ' Sister Angela presses Mier "brother's arm. Answering the pressure, the big fellow looks at her, and following the direction of tier eyes' he sees .the young, soldier and his companion., fie gives a violent start, and ills ''hands clinch. Sister Angela again touches: her brother's arm. "Let us go," she says, and she id looking very paie. For 'a moment Tom stands• glaring at the other soldier and his con• panion; but finally he wallas away with' his slater. When they 'reach the street, she speaks again: "So he isn't dead, -atter all" she says. - "No," he answers sharply." . "I guess it was her doing." s "But why should she want to de- eetve Ise?" "She wanted him- for herself, . I' guess." • "I wonder if Ile is 'happy with item." "Well it doesn't look that way to me. Why, she was actually quarreling with him ,before he was home two minutes," "And she deceived him?" • "Of course she did. First of all, she told you he was dead., Showed you the paper with the notice in it. 137 the way, her uncle owned that paper. Then, when you took Hie veil, she probably wrote to him •Sympathised iyith him, and all that, and the result was he married her. I: onlywish—" and the ,big fellow looked positively murderous. Once more Sister. Ange)a pressed itis arm, "Never mind, Tom," she said, and oh, the 5adeeas in her volce; "np doubt It is for the .,eat" ; • 'Tom stopped and regarded-, her. "Yes, my sister," he said,"no boubt-ft Is for the best" -and there 14 the street with tears In his eyes, he stoeped and kissed her. London—As soon' as a -new Home dren, established last year,;a.'few Secretary takes office he ,tic initiated miles away from the mala hospital In into certain- things that are going an Toronto, is producing fesults even' in London whidh hardly. any man greater than its :molt ardent support - knows or unless he lives the life of a- ers anticipated when the ambitious flaneur in the West null."—Lord projeot'was mooted. So please PO- Brentford—Better known as Six. Ilsh this, letter as apiece of good news, Six, whose pronouncements as for all friends or the poor little "Sick Home Secretarywere famous, made Kids' Thousands of small sufferers` front some more pubjectcoments- They all parts of Ontario, come to the.Hoe- rvere on the 'subject of London as 8 pital M the course of a year. ,Centre et Crime, and in, E few. drama- Generosity of - friends throughout tic sentences he— ) - the Province has made possible the marvellous expansion which has now earned for Ontario the credit' of hav- ing awinn the fittest hospital in the world for little ones, where every known child ailment,,,is treated and there is no distinction iii regard to race or creed. For'the information of your readers- 1tmight be stated, as a matter of . public 1913 the Hosp!talforSiok-Chil ren recorded 70,153. patient days, In 1923 the total was 92,401 and In 1428 it was 93,901. But in 1929, the business year ending September 30th, the total had increased to tate Impressive one of 121,417: This remarkable growth naturally carries with it correspondingly large additional expenses and as there is a loss every day on the cost of Mainten- ance of praotioally every little patient, the deficit to be taken care' of by big- hearted friends 09 the grand cause runs into an enormous total, PIease ask your readers to lend a hand. Who is there more entitled to a share of the Chrlstmas bounty than the "Sick I(ids"? This year there are many °taints upon benevolent citizens, but none stronger than that of the large number of afflicted children who can be restored to the benefit Or the whole community. branch of the 'Hospital for Sick Chit- Up held the, secret service, .work of Wei' police! Praised Lord Byng. Spoke. of things that cannot. be made public. and, as a final summing up,de dared that London is not as bad as some other places. It was to the solemn hush of a aol- cttor's once just oft the Strand -the oifiros 09 this old firm—that Ile walked up and -down on a soft carpet •and delivered his judgment on Lou- don. Secret' Service • H0 was sitting alone at the head of every long table in a very long room whou I was: ushered in (Writes a correspondent.) I asked him what were those mysterious things' he had hinted at to a speech which new Home Secretary learned. He rose from ,his chair. He smiled his friendly twinkling mnlle. Then he said) "Alt, they cannot be told in public," and shook his head. He walked up and down, his -head bent in thought. He paused In front 01 the fire, and clasped his hands be- hind im. And then he talked about Loudon, as seen by it Home Secre- tary. "A man who has hot• been Home Secretary cannot possibly know the ramifications of crime andvice which exist in London," he said. "He cannot be aware of the facts about bhe central part.ot Londou. "Nor can he know the real truth about what is commonly called the 'secret service. "But a Home Secretary knows it. "A home Secretary understands that bads 'secret service' is a partedt- ly legttlmate duty erhtoh the police are compelled to do in their fight Against crime and in their eaorta to combat aotivities detrimental to this ooulitry whioh come from .abroad. Six resunted his pacing. "Thorn are certain thing l3 rich ori- ginate on the Continent which can- not be made public" he said. "All bheso things add their weight to the burden of the great office of Home •Secretary—an Deice whleh I thinic is the most interesting in bite whole world." - I asked Six if be regarded the fee square miles around Piccadilly Cir- cus as the most wicked place in the world. • - Ho shook his head firmly. "Every capital must of,necessity be a centre of amusement and vice," he said, in a judtoial voice, "But I don't believe that London is as bad as some other places.' "Lord Byng,' the Commissioner of Police, has done a great deal during ,Acs list year of oifice—and is still doing a great deal—to improve Lon- don, '"He is doing it, moreover, without disturbing _legittmate amusements at sell"' Then Six shook, hands vrtth me and sat down at the head of that very long table in that very long room, and went on with his work. Rangers Snare Wolf, ` Long Terror of Deer Herd ng enough to Toronto, -•A large gray wolf, which for months has terrorized the:, large herds of deer roaming through Algon- quin Pee1k, is dead. Traps had been set in vain until it appeared he would never be caught. Jim Shields, chief park ranger, fin- ally outwitted the wolf by placing a cunningly laid trap fastened to a four - Inch pole, Visiting the snare one day, o er roti h the thick wolf had gnawed th , g pole , and taken the trap- sway with him. Shields and his assistants; fol- lowed the trail and after twenty-seven, o' tramping came upon the • body miles t p g of the wolf with 'the trap still fast to• ramp —"And you say you " liact ' tot P are an .educated ;mans" Tramp --"Yes ma'am; i'nt a' roads' scholar!" .,' Faithfully yours, IRVING E. ROBERTSON, Chairman of Appeal Committee. Journals Alarmed At Insect Invasions Redoubled Warfare' on Fruit Fly' Held Necessary Both ``Nature" (England)- and "In- dustrial and Engineering Chemistry" have resentlyexpressed alarm over the increased difficulty of insect control. "The recent invasion of One more in- sect, the Mediterranean "'fruit fly, serves again. to call our attention to the never -ceasing, warfare between man and these tiny competitors., We confess that there is almost enough in the situation to snake uta pessimistic," says the latter journal, "Nature" is concerned chiefly with the spread of the buffalo fly in Australia. This in- sect was brought in from Java. Con- ditions''there make the insect less de- atructive than in Australia, where the plan of cattle raising—the cattle being rounded up but once in a year, or even two years—makes its control next to impossible. "The raising of fat cattle for slaughter is rendered almost fin possible at certain seasons, and, indeed, it seems possible that this pest may prove to be a main limiting' factor in beef p <'oductioti in the northern areas of the commonwealth. In view' of the world position in the beef industry, the situation fs disquieting from an empire. point of view," says "Nature." Armistice Day figure ou the pavement. "What's the ;matter?" some ono "asks. ,A man up on the building let a brick -fall, `and.someone is hurt,":re- plies aspen' who had. Seen the ;mei dont, One than takes off his-oveieoat, and putsit{coder the brui-sedaud.bleeding head, : and another hltrries• away to -telephone'ior en' ambulance. A: fashionable dressed woman joins' the crowd. She gives one look at the. white' face and rushing forward, she loners beside the• injured. man, She- -passionately kisses the lifelss face, and moans inarticulately, something like: "Charlie, niy poor Charlie. ,For- give rne,-Charlie. Oh, God, what have I done;' what have I ,done. Won't somebody go for a.doctor? Oh, Char ;lie' my poor Charlie." • Almost like a demented creature, she fondles the calm, wax -litre f ace, re- gardles of the many curious eyes that stare at her. There is the .natter of, horses' hoofs, and the' sharp clang 'of a bell. , The anibulanee ;has arrived, and "tire cxow(' press, back, and matte way for the:doctor. Not unkindly he, shoves the )v Oman •to one side, Ta"liing lip 'the limp:hand, he feels the pulse.. "Dead,'' he says in a mat- ter of taut tone: - A'shudder Passes through the crowd as they realize the significance of the word; some even glance up at the building with fear in their: eyes. ' The stretcher is brought, and the 'dead ratan is.carried to the. ambulance. The doctor climbs up behind; once more the •bell clangs, and the ambul- "ance,quickly moies'awayyon its'jour- ney to the-Mo;gee, - All 'this 'time the woman: has been. looking on in a dazed manner,,.ocea- sionally 'moaning tiled . wringing her hands., A.lady steps forward and leads 'the agonized woman into a shoe store, away from the gaze of the curl ous. But the crowd still lingers, 'pok- ing In a hypnotized manner at the blood -bespattered pavement. ' A policeman comes um and he forces the crowd to disperse. From a nearby ,store a' man comes with a 'pail of water' and a broom, and he cleanses the pavement. And so ends another tragedy. of Broadway. Kappa, in the.Nation and-Aathen; aoum (London),: The vast. outpouring of eloquence on and about Armistice Day, is. usually aweariness to me. The not of insincerity is so patent in much of It. A ritual of appropriate senti- ment has become fixed and it is dead itnd dreary with convention, The .two - minutes' silence is a great conception, but two' mi ttutes is not to compensate for the toed noises from Press, Pulpit and Platform. Still, there. are hopeful signs of the growth of sanity and realism., As the cele- bration comes round each year, one notes the steady strengthening of <a desire to make use of it as a time of repentance for the past and, resolve for the future. Shields found the trap gone. The Eggs in Three Days are guaranteed` by crushing "Magic Egg• (rand Tablets' in your fowls' 'drinking • water ot•`mash; or your 0101157 band. Are rich in - ltamins, proteins, ;And wonder- ful, scientific, egg -making: ingredients, Nospoclnl feeding required, burs .Cran- ford, Ontario, writes: "Your tablets gate splendid results 00 secoltdflay et use," will keep your' hon4lnying' big through the,aria •Wi 11 ter, usedfor years bi thud Pa,nds 03 farmero Free'Itu it `ins rel the iishinr„ (grin. hie bak`O.ilc; ttt'e big boxes S1,06 Iritic Pau'. Agents wanted. 1 72 lis'+`'n efonlc 'Food Co,:. 2396 Ito -Ilia; IS THERE A BABY IN YOUR HOME? Is there a baby or young children in your home? If there is you should not- be witout a box of Baby's Own Tablets. Childhood ailments come qulokly and means should always be at handto promptly fight them. Baby's Own Tablets are the ideal home. remedy. They regulate the bowels; 'sweeten`the stomach; banish constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers -+in tact they relieve, all the minorills' of little ones. Concerning them Mrs. Moise Cabotte, Makamik, Que., writes:— "Baby's Own Tablets are the best remedy in the world for little ones. My baby .suffered terribly from indi- gestion' and vomiting, but the Tablets soon set her right and now she is in 'perfect health." The tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a box 'from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine ,Co,, Brockville, Ont, ;Low' Speed 'Competition; Gains Favor in Air Races Airplane races' in which the din- testants 'strive to turn in the lowest speed instead of the highest are gain- ing favor in air meets. 'To compete effectively in such a "race a pilot must throtle his plane down until it is flying slightly -faster than the stalling speed, and'' if he tries to go too slowly his plane will stole, downward and start toward the ground. • A race of this kind' held recently at Hadley Airport was won by Captain Ive'McKinney flying a Gates RSV convertible mono -biplane. His speed wa's 28.1 miles an hour. The greediest man is satisfied with a small helping when his wife is giv- ing him 'a piece of her mind. "Necking is an obscure term to some but most people',don't mind; be- ing in the dark about•it"- Australasian Flyers Map Flights of 80,000' Miles London.—Flight Lieut. E. A. Cor- nell and Capt. L. R. Ehaw, the one an Australiain and the other a New Zea- lander, have planned flights that will cover 80,000 miles and+ take more .than a year to perform. J A trip in a light plane from Aus- tralia to Japan and back will inaugur- atethe program, which will'be con- tinued by a journey to England in the same machine. ' In England they 'w'ill purchase a large plane' and attempt a 45,000 -mile flight around the world. ; • Of labor's , ended and 'the : stubborn: soil That have, striven • i'lth the - . whole clay long Yields now, and taites, us tit It soft caress, Money doesn't mean everything in this world, but somehow evetything in this world seems to mean money. • Minard's Liniment for Chapped Hands Mrs. O'Soalcs: "John, it seems to me that you are under the influence of Willer." Mr. O'Soaks: "Me -ender the iufluence.of liquor? Not by a jugful, my dear•'"•', { ule ss. - AtldgiVes t is q tne _T9 P. NeGtdre in, the Sydney, Bulletin Ate 'lr,ontn. .'. i S ' .. • Irtlernatlonal Aviation Schools have lust opened in Toronto, a' nets and highly modern 1355001 and 1s equipped to teach Aviation in ail its branches, under the guidance of ex -Imperial ground and:, flying Instructors. Thdro 1s a tremendous 'demand for trained Aviation experts, at 'Voty high,,salar- ies. If you -,contemplate or have plan. nod Aviation As your future profession, got In totipph, With us, at once. Free. employment service whlle looming: and graduates assleted' to highly paid'post- "tSons, Day and bvenlng classes. now being formed: _Call in person or write.. lNTERNA'3'IONAL AVIATION. SCHOOLS 131.143 Wellington Street 37 143 {'ellln toG , West, Toronto, Canada. ds YOU R APPETITE POOR iBRHAPS b dieting or g other me ens, you have been treating the symptoms,. rather than the cause. Loss of appetite, heartburn, sour stomach, are symptoms that the blood is impure. This explains the successful use of Or. Williams' Pink Pills in all such cases. Fiere. is typical example: -- "I began to feel caddy tired," writes'1Viiss Margaret - White, of Parry Sound, "and 'when I eat down to a meal I • felt I did not went to eat. A doctor told me I was anaemic but I made little progress "with his medicine. When Il started taking Els. 'Villains' Pink Tills ;I soon notsced that my appetite was improving, thatthe headaches came less frequently rand that I was not so easily tired: Now my. weight has increased, my 'cheeksam rosy and every ache and " pain ::has van- - isbews Start today "'to improve your appetite. Buy Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills from your druggist's - or: by mail, post. paid,,, at 30 cents a box from The Dr. 'Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ontario, Send for free book "What to Bat and•How to Bat". 8.14 Dr.'�f'��- PIN ''t ELLS e ""A HOUSEHOLD 018858 Aid 54 COUNTRIES" pt.0 Health f .4"lassified Advertisements I r0 5 7' t5 TUA N AGANT "O1ie man's toed 19 anothermalts li,i.oRpl LIIEN. WANTir11 l,IUIUlt', 111(1 Pay 0867 Work 1 Earn while ,:'tr:t.. Ino barber trade ander ratnoua Motet down to us through the ages; •in' -our . tt oilcan plan, worts e most roliahto poi00n is a eaytng Which has coma day people aro not content with 'a barber cahoot system ' Write or call "food supply 'which is SimPiY not harm' immedlatoty . nor tiro catalogue. broths A b CD 132 (a w t T t ar, er o age,. !leen oe , O50n o fulrbut insist.on one that is healthful as well as safe; What Does the Farmer Eat? The farmer' eats more than he re- quires of certain Mods (meat, sugar, and starches) and ho eats too little of certain other foods necessary for his health requirements (milk, fruit and vegetables). This is not a wild guess on the part of some Semi fad-, 'dist, lint it, the true picture of. the actual food habits of farmers in ,a county, studied over a period of years. At the time the study was begun it, was found that in many homes in the. county, although thes table was set three times a daryl the food was often the same old bill of false—fried, meat, tried potatoes, bread, cake and pie and coffee. ' From, their own state- ments many of the residents were going along from day today, not sick, but feeling below par: headache was common, constipation was reported by a great .number- and indigestion was a cause of annoyance to many of the farmers :and their- wives. Body Food Needs Man needs food to supply the body (1) with energy to work, (2) with, ma- terial to repair worn-out tisanes in the older person and to .produce new tis arae iu the -young, growing child. To 'meet these needs, man should eat every day 'the foods which will result in this service to his Body; in'Ce other words' be should include in his daily intalte foods from each nI ,the following classes: (1) Meat, eggs, fish, :cheese—about 10% of the fuel to supply this energy should come from this Blass, which is :called the proteins or tissue builders. (2)' Bread, cereals, potatoes and other starchy vegetables, cakes and other sweet desse'rts;• this is the sugar and starch class and should supply about 60% of the fuel' to sea- my the day's energy. ,- (3) Butter, cream and fat from -meats—the animal Yat class—should supply , about =20% of the day's fuel `sitppiy. "Protective roods" are milk and the leafy vegetables. These must be In= eluded in every day's intake .to snake up for the lack of certain' essentials in cereals, tubers, roots and meats. Growth elements are known as vitamins and it is absolutely essen- tial that these be supplied.in the day's food supply; their common source is milk, fruit, and vegetables. Warning Courtships of all chips Aro fickle, my her, It' May boa derelict Or;:a transport of jay. If tee maid in the case Loves a pet deg, beware! l' For your courtship will tura-s." To a bark of doepair. For Toothache—Minard's Liniment.' "What aro you- 00king nrou'iod in 11 n" "0 1 t e eclat f 1. o I card C lei's was g 1 a lot of money dropped in Wall Street," .. U FOR -THE HAIR;w Asps Your Barber—Re Knows Britain's New Forests Great Britain is once more becoming a country of, forests. The Forestry Commission has planted 275,818 acres of woodlands between 1920 and 1928, and .17,287 acres, were added in the past year. It has been the policy of the connnis- sioners to re -plant the old royal for- ests, such as Sherwood, the New For- est, Rockingham, Wyre and High Peak—ancient names that ring like trumpet calls down ,the lanes of his- tory. The greatest stretch of forest any- where in England will be in East An- glia, where an entirely new areh is being planted. Itis being started • with 24,000 acres around Thetford; and ul- timately the cemmissiondrs dream of extending this to a mighty forest of 80,000 to 1011,000 acres, This Would be four times the size of the New Forest. In Wales the annual demand for pit- props requires 900,000 acres of forest to supply them. This is exactly the area of forestabie waste land in the Principality. "Bridget, why are you sweeping the livleg room a second time? You d d it an hour ago." • "Yes, mum, but you see 'to -morrow is .rats day off, an' I won't have a Minard's Liniment for Coughs. chance to do it at all." _ GUILT 'Not So Easy Alas! ho dimcuit it is to prevent Natal Advertiser: Some people have the'couutenance from betraying guilt. a pathetic faith' to the Government Ovid. • touch which they seem to fancy- can transmute' life's leaden metal into; gold. Among these fond creatures we may count the wolnep: who voted at - the National Congress in favor of ask- *v ing General Hertzog's Ministry to compile forthwith a national anthem to "please both the ,English and the of.th Canadian Finds Electric Current in, Earthquakes Montreal.—Dr. Richard Hamer, pro- fossor of physics at Acadia University, has announced the'theory that con- siderable electrical disturbances ac- company earth shiftings, He states that these disturbances cause large electrical redistribution of natural earth currents and transient surges throughout the earth's crust, At the time of the recent quake, lie -says, power lines indicated a major 'electrical surge, or series of surges, lasting front. wo to three minutes be- fore the first tremor" until after the second. The speed of these surges is greater than that of the tremors them- selves, and- on the basis of the differ- ence in speed, Professor Hamei,.says, 'he calculated the centre of the disturb- ance as approximately 400•to 500 miles from Wolfville, N.S., before 'seismol- ogists had completed -their records, He believes that reliable advance notice may thus be obtained of serious tremors. Changing China Dr. Henry Hodgkins in the Inter- national Review of Missions: There is an ' increasing conviction among thoughtful Chinese that the problems confronting their country can only be solved as the moral life of the people is deepened and strengthened. To a large extent the old Confucian system has lost its former power. Its moral, sanctions are to be found in a deep- rooted tradition, an attitude towards the venerable past ivhich is rapidly yielding . before the forward-looking spirit of today. Belgian Roads Cut Potato Rates Brussels.—To facilitate export of the exceptionally heavy Belgian potato harvest, railroads have reduced their. freight rates 28 per cent. As all of continental Europe has a big potato crop, most of /the Belgian surplus will go overseas. Afrikaans speaking sectionna- tion:" "Not so easy, not so easy," as John Morley Used to say of writing English, , Britain and the U.S.A. ,- Spectator (London) : Great. Britain and America, having now no fear or jealousy of each other, could arrange. ,a permanent peace , tomorrow; ' But Other relations have ,o be brought in. The' Latin' nations will need a great deal of persuasion. They will -raise Constitutional objections. . The one clear thing is 'that the United States an teat Britain in combination have • a fair hope cif bringing the ether. Mi- tten's into line'and that 'there is no, other hope, • ',Minard's Liniment.for,Distemper. • A d's,lnond of the first water/. we 1 's' one that utas a: full- cont. presgme, 'i � pleme^t of facets.` - We Pay tie Highest Prices_ for DRESSED POULTRY Write for quotations The Harris Abattoir Co. Ltd. St. Lawrence Market, Toronto 2 ATA .'-- List of "Wanted inventions" and Full Information Sent Free on Request. THE ,BiAMSAT 00., Dept. W. 273. Bank St.. Ottawa. Ont.• f'la it on Coughs&Colds • Aepecdy,safe, proven remedy for children and adults. Ila ReliXTURE L911Jreanosh-ASioceeSiPE.c 'Why tolerate ll'ianpleiv Riascllteaals aanad, lIPeatalrnH'l C s 1tIlcritaIiea, Sal::' a]o Vii' and Ceitacura ointment • will quickly rind economically purify and pruscrvo your skin and ludr tooraT tins lifleADNOISIESie RUB WEARS-MEM ERT �" m n Te I.S. i, EAR. O3x, 1.25 all Orullltn Osrrlvlhe folder on repent A..0. LEONARD, Inc. 70 Fifth Ave., New. York city Beware h fecti n infection of cuts and bruises is best prevented' by applying Minard's. QIIIOrt RELIEF obtained nS "oat - sands through use o. Dr, 3 IC tlulld's ' Green Mountain Asthina Compound. its pleasant smoke vapor soothes and relieves. -Originated in 1309 by Dr. Gltiid, specialist In respiratory dis- eases Also relieves catarrh. Standard remedy at druggists: 35 emits, 00 cents and $1.50, powder or cigarette form. Send for FREE TRIAT, t age of of 6 Cigarettes, rlanattl',n Dis- tributera, T,ymaee, stn„ Dopt. 001, 886 St Foul St.'West Montreal. 010. , Dro�a����(l ASTniIACOhlPa 9 its „ e Rea$ tblerwondartttl-'Ittter from a. man of 70 who le " Par than 40 ream ago," thanim to' rho "dally diniclul" of RrtilAonea' Salts. - ";,de a 8,113001 of 6o12 est and nlieuimobos9` - forSuseover 60'7/eara,I,wtah 10-dcliecwleige that L have fou1405:51:1:g' d' tlotMni ao.d haohttelp. certain ad .' 14rsrchen Salta. P, sacra%and ober tht,tpe dui_ 1 Savo their-. 0111818,'500 area thait•!draldoacte.: inlachn Salta 3 haoe ob far fmual a/[¢r 5 years - •or' mora of.tialllp than; hats ria draw -boob ,-: no codxptes'offect whatever.: f am -70 and mors dctiva tie,; 10 5/5210 spa, ' orlglwl recur on aro ter Iaono tIoa, ICrusshon..Salta. Is' obtainable at drug anti department store§ he Creamiest 75e, a: bottle. bottle .aontntne.-'enough 10 last. for 4 orb- fi. Ab re tads. 0— mouths--lEoodhealtb to; haltoeen r, ,l�SUI; NO. "I tool; Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vegetable Compound for mis- erable and tired feelings and it gave me strength to do Stay work, My nerves are better and I feel well and strong and have a good appetite. I sleep well and am in pretty good spirits and able to, work every day now. I recommend the Vege- table Compound and you may use this letter as a testi- monial."—Miss Delvena Wa- Ycsce, Union Street, North Devon, New t3iunswiek.'