The Seaforth News, 1930-04-24, Page 7Chinese Renew
Plan to Develop
Vast Oil Fields
croup Asks Government for
Aid in Exploiting Rich
Deposit in Szechuen
Province
Abounds In. Gold, Silver
Shanghai.—Attempts,to develop the
it fields of China, started before the
oxer trouble thirty years ago, are
ing renews in the famous Boon-
e i t mine d
Ch sal m n district of Szechuen Pro-
vince by a syndicate of Chinese.
In a petition to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Mining for rapport,
the syndicate asserts it has discovered
a field that will rival any in the world
for size. The govel nient has dis-
patched a group of geologists into
SSzechuerto examine the prospects.
That oil exists in Szechut.n, Province
has been known for forty years. Early
in 1900, a group of Chinese, backed by
foreign capital, started to drill in the
Boon -Chi district, but the. Boxer up-
rising intervened, bringing an end to
the ente irp}'rse.
Nothing was done to resiew the de-
velopment until last fall when a group
of Swiss geologists visited the region
and, reported good possibilities in oil.
Recently several Chinese manifested
their desire to become oil operators by
forming a combine. Government help,
however, is needed in obtaining land
leases, for the peasants who own the
district are reluctant to turn their
property over to any group who will
disturb the• bones of their ancestors.
The region alsoabounds iG depoeits
of gold, silver, copper, zine, jade, iron,
ore and salt, but salt is the only com-
modity that has received any serious
eonslderation in the past.
Because of its huge marring re-
(sources, Szeehuen is proptely called
the "Klondike of the Orient"
The Intelligence ,
Of a Horse
People talk about the intelligence of
certain animals and the degree in
which that intelligence is developed.
Let me tell of -a horse we had when
I was a girl.
As I remember this horse, he was
no special pet. Ile was just one of
the three horses that contributed to
the life of our household. All through
my childhood and youth we had three
horses in our barn. There were two
stalls and a box -stall and they always
had occupants, which accounts for the
number three,
One evening my great uncle and
aunt had overstayed their train, and
it was necessary to send them home
with a horse and carriage. They lived
in a'small town in Connecticut, some
five miles from our hone. Of course
in these days we do five miles by auto-
mobile, at a reasonable rate of speed,
in eight minu.es, but in those days of
horses and carriages five =ilea took
quite a time to cover. It was night
time, too, and traveling would have
to be done by slow degrees, for my
relatives were aged people.
I do not remember how ]ate it was
when they started, but they drove
"Tom" and the one -seated carriage,
and "Taro," the dog, went along, too,
for "Taro" had a way of going wher-
ever Tom went.
Sometime latex --in the middle of
the flight, maybe, or at least after my
parents were fast asleep—they were
wakened by a noise. My father said,
"It sounds as if there was a horse
tramping back and forth under our
bedroom windows."
We listened and heard it again. "It
is surely a horse," said my father
again, as lie went to the window. As he
put out his head, our horse, Toni, trot-
ted up and put his nose into Father's
hand.
"Why, it's Tom!" exclaimed Father,
"Something must ha'be happened 1"
And that horse had tramped back and
forth in front of the bedroom windows
to. bring the news to us!
In a short time Father had harness-
ed Tom to the business wagon and we
three started with a lantern lighted
and ready to use. We found great
uncle and aunt after a long tedious.
ride, seated on the ground at the top
of a hill, with the carriage overturned
and Taro standing guard!
And these questions always come to
my mind: "Did Tom really know that
his tramping back and forth would
waken him plaster, and how did he
know that my father was sleeping be-
hind those very windows?"—ill. Louise
C. IIastings, in "Our Dumb Animals."
Motoring to the Arctic
Edmonton Journal (Ind. Cone.);
How many years will it be before
)Canadian and United States motor-
ists can make a circle tour through
Alberta, north toF rt Smith, still far-
ther north to Fort Norman, then
through the Roekies within a hundred
miles of the Acetic Miele to the Yukon
and finally down a scenic highway
through the .Alaskan pauhaudle and.
mountain valleys of British Columbia?
It will not be many_ years before the
river route down the MacIfenzie Is
supplemented by a motor highway.
And Beltish Columbia is already talk-
ing of an all-weather road from the
international boundary up the-eolet to
Alaska,
"thence an l religion aro not o
4 g op-
resell to one another in the least."•—
Canon ]3i11ock-Webster 1
Ise
ED FEELING
IN SPRINGTIME
Not Sick But Not Up to the
Mark --.You Need the ylfelp of
That Sterling Tonle, Dr. Y�it)i
Banns' Pink Pills -They Give
New Vitality.
With the passing of winter many
people feel weak, degree e<', and eas-
ily tired. The body leeks the vital
force and energy pure .blood alone can
give. In a word, while not exactly
sick, the indoor life of winter has left
its mark upon them. A blood-bni]d'
ing, nerve -restoring tonic is needed
to give renewed health and energy.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are an all -
year -round blood builder and nerve
tonic, but are especially 'usefulle the
spring. Every dose helps to make
new, rich, red blood and with this new
blood returningstrength, cheerfulness
and good health quickly follow.
If you are pale, easily tired, or
breathier.- at the least exertion, if
your complexion' Is poor or you are
troubled with pimples .;or eruptions,
Dn. Williams' Pink Pills are jest 'what
yneed,to putyou h
you right. If you
have twinges of rheumatism, Lee sub-
ject to headaches and backaches, if
you are irritable and nervous, if your
sleep does not refresh you, or your
appetite is poor, you need the treat-
ment
reatment Dr. Williams' Pink Pale alone
can give—you need the . few blood,
new strength and new energy this
medicine always brings. Mr. A. Mar-
ootto, North Ham, gee., writes:—"i
have found great benefit from the use
of pr. Williams' Pink Pills. Before I
began using them .I was in a badly
run-down condition, and at times felt
scarcely able to work. ` Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills have ehanged all this and
since taking them I am enjoying the
best of health. Every man who feels
run-down and easily tired should give
this .great medicine a fair trial."
Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia,, indi-
gestion or nervousness. Take ;.ham as
a tonic if you are not in the best phys-
ical condition and cultivate a resist-
ance that will keep you well and
strong. You can get these pills
through any medicine dealer or by
mail at 50e a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medielno do., Brockville, Ont.
"KNOW THYSELF"
Sound thy heart to the bottom, and
•try it nicely, to be thoroughly satis-
fied of thy sincerity. Let no day pass
without an account taken of thy life,
and be sure to observe very diligently
what ground you. gain and lose, what
alternation appears in your temper,
behaviour, affection, desires; what
resemblance or degeneracy from God;
bow near approaches you make, or
to what distances you aro cast. Above
all other eubjecte, study your own
self; for he who is thoroughly ac-
quainted with himself bath attained
to a more valuable sort of learning
than 1f the course and position of the
stars, the virtues of plants, the nature
of al sorts of animals, eta„ bad ern-
ployed bis thoughts.
PHILOSOPHY
Philosophy is the art and law of
Life, and 'it teaches us what to do in
all oases, and, like good Marksmen, to
hit the white at any distance,—Sen-
ape.
istance.—Senace.
True dyes cue
e' 'siesit to use!
Dresses, drapes or lingerie look
tzew when they're re -dyed with
Diamond Dyes. No ,spotting or
streaking; never a trace of that
re -dyed look. Just rich, even,
bright colors that hold amazingly
through wear and washing.
Diamond Dyes' are, the highest
quality dyes you can buy because
they've 80 riots in pure anilines.
That's what makes them so easy to
use. That's what they've been
famous for )60 years, 15 cent
packages—all drug stores.
® a
iS.-, mo
yes
Highest Quality for SO Years
% Or TOTAL
FARES
�0 CANADA
A 'VANCED
BRITISHERS
in Canada may now bring
forward their Families,
Relatives and Friends
on Easy Terms.
roe full- details apply;-
.J. 35. O 1l5EE®18,
Wet. Bat. colonizatlppn
'Canadian Pacific Railway,TSronto
BRITISH
REUNION ASSOCIATION
TIP
0 � ATIO
COMPLETELY GONE'°
writes here. W. Wsllwa, Thousands
:1 say con5Hpadoa indigestion ggaos
end overnight with-"Fruit.a.fivee".
Complexion clears like magic, Nervee,heatl
quint. Get"Frulta.tives'homdrugglsttodgy.
'nes— 'neettesere
Optimism
complacency based upon the Inprosper-
itY of the past,
¶ i "It was significant, perhaps, that
E�agland during the same week .that the Mr-
"ft
eular appeared Bank rate was reduc-
ed, implyingthat money, at any rate,
was not flowing a?Pay from the coun-
try. At the same time the railways
recorded a further Increase in the
volume of -their merchandise traffic,
suggesting that our trade, unlike that
of America at the moment is improv-
ing.'
"That Industry is Healthy in.
this Country is Manifest if
We Look at Volume
Rather than Value",
There Is s mean attempt by some
people to exploit the situation. (I
am referring to a prominent old-ee-
tabiished 411y firm who can issue a
circular which Ie being printed in
foreign countries suggesting not only
that this country ie down and out, but
that there is no hope of recovery, and
advising their people immediately to
transfer their money from this coun-
try abroad ,Anyone guilty, of that
conduct ought himself to leave the
country."—The Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas,
in the House of Commons.
"What causes surprise is the frank-
ness
rankness with wbich the writer of the cir-
cular puts
ir-cular_puts himself in the forefront of
Britain's ultra -pessimists. He says
that in his opinion 'the industrial
prosperity of the country es much
more than temporarily depressed; and
that we are dome way down the road
of a long decline, at the end of which
we shall find our relative industrial
position entirely different from what
It was in the nineteenth century.' "=
The Scotsman,
The Scotsman bas :a reassuring
article on the statement made in a
circularby a Stock Exchange firm that
British Investors should re -invest their
money in American and Canadian
eecuritiee.
Well -Worn Arguments
"The writer of the circular," says
the Scotsman, "sets but briefly the
well-worn arguments in support of
this view—the progress of industrial
development abroad, whereby other
nations, who, used to buy certain
thinge from us, notably cotton goods,
have set up machinery of their own,
very oftenpurchased from us, and are
more self-suftloing. So they are; but
is not the whole history of progress,
one of continual decline of older In-
dustries and the growth of new?
"The cotton trade, by its very size
and importance in the employment
problem, evokes our sympathy and
commands our earnest endeavor to
mitigate its plight. But we are grad-
ually coming to realize that it and
some other great industries of the last
century are unlikely et anytime in
the future to occupy quite the same
relative place in aur Industrial econ-
omy as they did before other people
had learnt to operate spindles .and
looms.
"The Sussex iron industry, the
manufacture of cross -bows and far-
thingales were all good trades in their
time, and, no doubt, there was much
lament when they began to define,.
But in place of these and other old
trades there are hosts of new 03100,
and the workers of to -day enjoy far
better living conditions and better
wages In making motor -ears, aero-
planes, or turbo -alternators, - Our
forefathers never beard of these new
industries, any more than we can
know what will bo the great indus-
tries of the country in another hun-
dred years, or perhaps much less,
"Tho writer of the circular refers
to that favorite term of thedry-as-
dust economist, 'the Industrial Revo-
]uton,' which began with the harness-
ing of steam, as if it were something
that gave a great impetus to Indus-
try and then expired. Of the dim -
lids there is no doubt, but the assump-
tion that it was temporary, is alto-
gether wrong,
"The Industrial Revolution was a
great -awakening, and Its impetus
grows faster; new wants arise, and
al] the time better and quicker ways
are being discovered for meeting the
growng wants. 411 this points to
more rapid change in industry, and
the greater necessity for adaptability
in it. In the circular in question,
however, It is not Industry as .a
whole of which the writer is fearful,
but only that of this Country, and he
advocates investment in the Common
stooks of American and Canadian
concerns, basing his view on the
great possibilities of expansion across
the Atlantic. Scope there certainly
is, and progress has been rapid for the
reason that population was growing
and development proceeding,
"But this latter fast is mislead -
big en that account. In ltew coun-
tries growth Is proportionately great-
er, because it is measured against a
smaller basis. Such countries' are
much more subject to set -backs on
account of climate or decline ,in
prices of their staple' commodities—
art may be seen, for example, in the
case of Australia, America, Canada
and Argentina also aro all affected
by the fall in wheat, a movement
which in the Tong run must be ,bene -
Adel to our industry.
The Signs of industrial Health
"That industry in ibis country is
healthy is manifest if we look at
volume rather than value, In steel
producti9t1 last year we =ado a re-
cord, overtopping pre-war figures. In
industry as a whole employment Was
7 per sent, higher than in 1924, and
in overseas trade our exports were
substantially higher last year in near-
ly all manufactured goods other than
textilee than they were five years
ago.
"There is not the slightest ground
for thinking thatindustrially, and
as a whole, the country is not making
up the ground lost during the war,
doepite the great handicaps which
have held: it back in' some directions •
—the lack of mobility in labor, the
slowness of some manufacturers to
adopt new Ideas, and a little too much
HEALTHY CHILDREN
ALWAYS SLEEP WELL
The healthy -child sleeps well and
during its waking hours is never cross
but always happy and' laughing and
spreads sunshine to the whole house-
hold. It is only the sickly child that
is cross and peevish. Mothers, if your
children do not sleep well; if they are
cross and cry a great deal, do not
scold them. That is their way of tell-
ing you they are ill, When baby is
like this give him Baby's Own Tablets
and he`•will soon be well and happy
again. The Tablets are mild but
thorou b laxative whichregulate
the
bowels, sweeten the stomach, banish.
constipation and indig+stion, breakup
colds and simple fevers and promote
healthful sleep. They are absolutely
guaranteed free from opiates and
other harmful drugs and may be given
to the new-born babe with perfect
safety and good results.
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all
dealers in medicine or by mail at 25
c•nts a box *rem The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Building Higher
And Higher
Coincident with the adoption of an
important revision to her building
code, New York was treated to a fic-
tional criticism in the Saturday Even-
ing Post of her tall buildings. The
author probably was unaware that the
board of aldermen had just enacted
this code revision and he could not
have known that Mayor Walker would
give final consideration to signing the
new code on the day the magazine
appeared on the news stands. It is
significant, however, that after thirty
years New York has a new building
ordinance which is calculated to make
skyscrapers safer, yet more econom-
ical of construction,
Practically every city in the United
States has within the last five years
revised its code ao a uniformity in so
far as steel construction is concerned,
In most instances that revision refers
alone to the so-called working stress
which takes cognizance of the im-
proved quality of the material itself,
This permits the use of a smaller
quantity of a better steel. In the case
of New York, however, the code re-
vision goes further and includes de-
finite restrictions upon the design of
steel frame buildings, based upon the
experience gained during the last
forty years, or since structural steel
came into use.
Now 'chat buildings with eighty or
more stories are being built, as is the
ease in New York, and inasmuch as
designs have been filed for a 100 -
storey building, this question becomes
of greatest importance. Only Chicago
and New York boast of extremely tall
buildings as yet. Chicago is planning
a revision of her building code; New
York set about it more than a year
ago. It is asserted by structural en-
gineers that 200 -storey buildings are
entirely feasible and will be economic-
ally desirable when land values in-
crease still more in the urban centres,
As yet in but a few American cities
his land advanced beyond $400 a
square foot in price. Therefore they
are not so fax confronted with the
problem that is now facing New York
and Chicago,where land has sold for
as much as $1,000 a square foot. But
of course as land values and tax rev-
enues encourage the erection of taller
and taller buildings, it becomes in-
creasingly necessary that their design
shall follow the best and safest engin-
eering practice.
--
Apple -tree Borer 'control
The�Round-headed Apple -Tree Borer
Is an orchard pest which is causing
losses of economic importance in Que-
bec, and one which should be watched
for wherever apples are grown. Ira
seven years now the Entomological
Branch of the Dominion Department
of Agriculture have been studying this
orchardpest and find it one which it
ie difficult to control, as the larva
which does most of the boring may
be at work a year or more before its
presence is detected; in combating
the pest woodpeckers aro 02 Some
help, the mounding of young trees In
nurseries is desirable, wire wrappers
around the base of the trunk telp, ar-
senie sprays are of some use, but the
most practicable and effective mature
is to apply a paste of raw linseed oil
and calcium cyanide with a brush to
the parts of the tree where. eastineS
from borings are noticed. This mix-
ture should be appbed lender Quebec
conditions from May 25 to June 5, The
Mixture will not injure the trees,
"Ono thing this generation deeply
needs to learn is that we cannot wash
our line clean in dirty water,"—Harry
Emerson Fosdicic,'
idinard's W: d'K1II Cana
Josephine Dunn, screen star, wears
attractive frock in sheer black vel"vet
that shows dainty traces of rare lace'
at cuffs, lapels and blouse.
Now Ready for Research
"I believe we are just on the thres-
hold of a considerable development in
the field of agricultural economies re-
search," observes Dr. J, F. Booth,
Commissioner, Agricultural Economics
Brancb, Dominion Department of Ag-
riculture. "I think as time goes on
both farmers and the general public
will appreciate and value all economic
research hi the solution of agricultural
problems." Coming, as this does, from
Dr. Booth, it has particular signific-
ance. On two occasions recently, the
annual meeting of the Canadian Hoe
ticultural Council and the All -Canada
Agricultural Conference, keen de-
mands for economic surveys and cost
production studies -were evinced. Not
only does such work reveal relative
profitableness of farming; it also pro-
vides a medium for finding and cor-
recting the difficulties in existing
methods.
AFFECTION
Think of life ,how short it is; how
much unavoidable bitterness it pos-
sesses, how much which it is easy
er r to chas
thinitherlc bow
tobeathe opower of affeotfoneaway; canand
make all things right! Tremble be-
fore the ehaine of selfishness; free
thyself from them by a new sacrifice
of love, and purify the heaven of
home. Ascending Clouds can easily
expand into destructive tempest, or
disperse and leave not a trace 1n the
air. Oh! chase them hence with the
powerful breath of love.—Miss Bre-
mer.
"To prevent crime is a fax wiser
thing than merely to punish it."—
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
If Skinny, Beware,
Says Doctor.
Gain Quick
New Ironized Yeast Adds 5 to 15 Lbs.
in 8 Weeks. New Health
Strong Nerves—or No Cost
"Skinny folks subject to many
grave diseases," says an eminent
p'iysiolan. When sick they lack re-
serve strength and many die.
Don't run risk of dangerous dis-
ease from skinniness. New Ironized
Yeast adds 5 to 15 lbs. in 3 weeks.
Ends nervousness, constipation, Ind7-
gestion over night. Clears skin like
magic. New pep first day.
Two great tonics in .one. Weight -
building Malt Yeast and strengthen-
ing Iron, Far stronger than unmedi-
cated yeast. 'Results in 1A tine.
Get pleasant tablets of Ironized
Yeast from druggist to -day.
, Get new health and weight quickly.
Feel great to -morrow. If not delight-
ed manufacturer Tefunds your money.
Science Has New Weapon 1
to Aid in War on Insects
Washington,—In the great war with
insects man has a new and promising
weapon in the form of rotenone, a cry-
stalline material which Is both a con-
tact and stomach poison. This new
insecticide is especially welcomed by
seientlets at this time, when they are
looking for organic compounds to take
the .place of arsenate, which leaves
an undesirable residue.,
Demand for organic insecticides is
much greater than the, supply, accord-
ing to Dr. R. 0. Doark, of the Depart-
ment
epartment of Agriculture. The most wide-
ly used materials in this class are
flowers. Nicotine is derived only,from
the stems and floor sweeping of to-
bacco. Pyrethrum Bowers are grown
to a limited extent in California, but
virtually all of the 11,000,000 pounds
used annually in this country is im-
ported from Japan. This plant is
grown in the 'United States, but the
coat of harvesting the flowers is a de-
cided handicap to its production.
Rotenone has been obtained mostly
from the roots of derris, a plant grown
on the rubber plantations of Sumatra
and the Malay Peninsula. Another
promising source of rotenone is
"cube," a wild plant which grows in
the mountains of Bolivia. The Indians
of those countries use the roots of this
plant to poison fish. Small amounts
of the plant thrown in streams stun
the fish sufficiently for the natives to
catch them with spears or nets.
A Thrilling Mountain Drive
One of the most thrilling drives
in the mountains of Western Canada
is along the new motor road to the
top of Mount Revelstoke in Mount
Revelstoke national park, a reserva-
tion of one hundred square miles in
British Columbia.
Minard's Kills Dandruff.
Rayon from Black Spruce
The slow -growth black spruce of
Wertheim Canada, on account of its
consistent yield of cellulose, has prov-
ed
roved to be the most valuable wood in
the world for the manufacture of pulp
used iu rayon manufacture.
"People often seem thoughtless be-
cause the do not know just how to net
or what t, say."—Bruce Barton.
YOUR HAIR NEEDS
70 GIVE IT HEALTH AND LUSTRE
ASK YOUR BARBER
DON'T SUFFER
WITH.DANGEROUS
INDIGESTION
Do you suffer after meals with a
belching, from sour and acid stomach?
Many believe they have heart trouble
and tremble with fear, expecting any
minute to drop dead, This condition
can be prevented, likewise relieved.
Take Carter's Little Liver Pills
after meals and neutralize the gases.
Sweeten the sour and acid stomach, re-
lieve the gas and encourage digestion.
The stomach liver and bowels will
be cleansed of poison painful and
dangerous indigestion disappears and
the system enjoys a tonic effect. Don't
delay. Ask your druggist for a 25c
pkg. of Carter's Little Liver Pills.
Irritable, Tired?
Nerves bad?
That may mean kidney or liver
trouble. Warner's Safe Kidney
and Liver Remedy
Bow can your nerves be sound if your
blood is clogged with body poisons that
should be thrown off? now can you keen
the admiration of people if you are a1 -
iways cross, worn, dnld?
Olean out your system with Warner's
Safe Sidney and Liver Remedy, a safe
herbal remedy that has won the grateful
thanks of sufferers Tor more than 50
years, Pleasant to take, it gently stuns -
uteri liver and kidneys to do the work
that Nature intended. Originally a)l00-
tor's prescription --and met as g0a:1 to -
der as it ever was.
Every druggist knows Witrnor's—hoe
for years., Your health may be in bettor
condition than that of hundreds of
Othe5s, bat an the =lore reason to take
care of it while you have it. Geta bot -
11e of Warner's Safe Sidney ani Liver
Remedy toddy, rt Softs Httie, rt door
much. Warner's Safe Remedies CO.,
IOrento, Ontario.
Warner's Safe Kidney and
]Liver Remedy
es 41
For
les
t
due mAoitit
INDIGESTION
ACID STH
HEARTBURN
HEADACHE
GASES•NAeeEA
SOW*
StOh
lust a tasteless dose _ of Phillips' departs. You aro happy again in five
Mdlk of Magnesia in water. That le minutes.
en alkali, effective, yet harmless. It
has been the standard antacid for 50
years among physicians everywhere.
One spoonful will neutralize at once
many times its volume in ,acid. It is
the right way, the quick, pleasant and
relent way to kill the excess acid.
e le maah. beeomes sweet, the pain
Don't depend on crude methods.
Employ the best way yet evolved in
all the years of searching, That is
Philips' Milk of Magnesia.
Be sure to get the genuine Pbillips'
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi-
scans for 50 years in eorrecth g excess
acids. Each bottle contains full diree-
tioe-any drugstore.
Classified Advertising
POR s43 E
Ay BABY CHICKS—WEhlATi:TI174
l 215,080 last year ;-.r four vale.
ties. Write for free catalogue, A. 13G
Switzer, Granton, Ont.
Combines Widely Used
in West
In the harvest season of 1928 a iota
of 4,341 combines were used it West-
ern Canada, This represents an oto'
lay of about $2,934,300. There wen*
1,973 windrow tweeters and pickups
used, which adds $1,578,400 to the
total cost of ,the equipment used he
this method of harvesting,
'Don't marry for money; yon can,
borrow it cheaper."—Lord Dennison.
Born's
.srICYCLES
o r LOWER PRICER
fires; Coaster Brake,t
Wheels Inner Tubes, Letups
Bells, Ltyclometers, Saddles
Equipment and parts of Bi
cycles. You can buy your su
plies from us at wholesal
r • once s. Catalogue free,
I
9, IN'SOYD & SON 37 "iggTREALLtc.
IMPLE
ActuallySeeThemVanish'
Pimples ended so quick by"Soothe.
Salva' you can actually see them dry
up. Many go overnight. Get"Sootha-
Salva" from druggist today. New
skin beauty tomorrow morning.
Aching Muscles
Experience quick relief when rub-
bed with Minard's. 'Use also for
stiff joints or strained ligaments.
d1,idrenOg r t •
408 Cc*rnr3nvoltR5l:A,I1yt5I0asess
Could not a Eat or seep
after Husband's Deet
Her husband's death left her erre run
down in health unable to eat rd" sleep
much. Now she 18 brio ter in spires 10141
eats and sleeps well. What caused the
difference ? Let her answer u1 in•r „wn
words
I think Krusenen Setts are a ail, had
tonic, After'nty husband's death in
December last 1 became vers rim :town
In health. clad terrible fits of depres-
sion and was unable to eat or steep
much, 1 was also troubled ,viol
rheumatism. 1 derided to take tiras-
ehenSalts and have nee taken tine litho
daily dose for nearly two mouths,
durieg which time no stealth 118,8
greatly improved. The rheumatism has
completely left ma 1 um much
brighter in spirits and both ear and
eteep well."
When life begms to ' get you down,"
when you begin to feel the results of
modem artificial conditions -enors of
diet, worry, overwork, lack of ekereise—
then you should turn to li.r'oseben Stilts.
They possess a wonderful power of
Wing new life and vitality to the
countless millions of cells of wine]) the
Minim body is composed. The gets to
keep smiling is to take Krusihen Salta
every morning—just a pinch in your
first morning cup
ofcoffee ori tea,
^�g
FREE TRIAL OFFER
It yea Imre never tried 1;nuehen—try It now
at our erpen+e. We hate dl:�trlbuted a great
many epeata5 " GI &7T" t aekages which make
It easy for you to prove oar riot• fur youtecl4
Ask your druggist for the sew'• tij,lkT" 750,
igneoga
aelste nl our regular 755. bottle together
with separate trial bottle—autlirlent fur about
ons week. Open the trial bottle first, Int it to
the test, and then, if not entirely convinced that
Krnechen does erorvtldng we claim it to ,l0 the
regular bottle Is still as guod as now. Telco It
back. Your druggist is authorised to retire
your 755, Immediately and without question.
You hove tried Kruse ten tree, at our orange.
What could be fairer? Mannfae(cred by.
T. erilllths Hughes, Ltd., \Innehrot, r,. Bog,
(12,55b. 1050). ImportersL3SCillivray 8005"
Ltd.. Toronto.
TWICE BENEFITED
� Y SAMEREMEDY
I)
Recommends
Lydia E. Pinkharn's
Vegetable Compound
Cobourg Ontario—'Tears ago when
I had a sick father and a nursing baby
to care for, 1 got
all run down and
I took Lytta E.
Pillkllam'e 'Vege-
table Compound
to get strength to
do my work. An-
other !time at
Change of Life, 1
had severe head-
aches and felt tired
all the time. Itook
seven bottles of
the Vegetable
ompouncl and felt leo a new woman.
lI recommend it toany woman who is
at the age when she needs building np.'r
,—Mns.T, E. Sl nni>1Arr, RR,R,4, Cobourg,
Cntarl,ioc.Cy �- 1�T
ISSUE 1 Vo. 13—'30