Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 16 Apr 1914, p. 6

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Make T'THURsDAY, , JAP-A-LAC- tlle Furniture-Saver Stock and P "5? and W`, urple Calf A184 cultry Purple 1, also d Go-Carts has these goods, A cofnpariso11 of Canadian and European condxtions shows` that hinev. See our Wa ss Machines. This Store Recommend; iust 1300' M 1' `E ()1 ('ill' <.\'[ Canadians Pay Heavily for For Fire Protection and lnsur-I ante, Yet Suffer" Great Loss. IS CARELESSNESS of ` Cogmerce to be operated by `ail, and will receive ,the. same carevfulattention as is given to all er departments of the Bank's business. Money may be deposite or withdrawn in this way as satisfactorily as by a personal visit the Bank. 824 ibranchof The Canadian Banlr i k .v.o.LL.i>.,n.c.r..%n-uncut . JOHN AIRD. Au't General Manner Average . . rm: CA um BANK OFC MMERCE Scott : Emuision - . Tbeetr reli physicians for; forty yehrgi . ~L . . . , remedy to supptepsl the co _` and i;$;the enfb'`'8* 5V*hmA ' V T V Dvt="AIrs*%ez!6hIicVanbsti A ..g; mum. $15,000,000 ~ asssnve mun. $13,500,000 X; BANKIN % Y MAIL W7 you we -vuwv I II 1' The A-prp1icant-I ve lived `_ with my wife_ s relatives '_f0l' the four years and .I ve heard nothing but complaints in- all that` time. ' $100 REWARD $100 won .. .. ~31 JUVGI` an on ry .. .. La .. .. ax inc oIo I'.' Lto .. ..`.A-.- `ford not now- ip_e_g ,..-. ni toon WELL TRAINED, aARI=ug_a_n5_\cH .5 VA 4-` V3 \l_.a. Capita `Fires per 1' A-.. -innn .$3.3c? Per The M~anae.r--Yes, we n`eec 1Y it ' man fot the complaint desk. Hialve you. -had any experience? ' % % TO BISAME FOR THIS 2; No. of 3.9 -H.-J: Manager. -any-J LIULCDDGIVJ 11111.1 In- jurious, but he believes that at the [present time bathing has taken a sudden `bound into popular favor`, that it is the thing to take a bathrat presentmand. that persons unaccustomed. t6` the hobby` are rushing Iblindly into danger. So he endeavors to provide them with a chart by which they should`, steer their course through Turkish` baths, ' 5 shower ,bat*hs, needle baths, neutral baths and cold iplunges; His` re- marks... should he " interesting to. "those who Ibathe, if not to others; ' A " .When is a Bath Cold` . Probalbly mostfpeople who ! take a `V cold bathvi?supposeVthat they `are dis- porting :-~ themselves _ in, water-at a 1 iternperaturel` some few _ ins;ig"riicant.i _ .._\ '__ -, According to James S. King`, who writes in Modern Sanitation, most `people who take regular` "baths go the `wrong way about it. They take a .hot -bath when they should when they should not. take a bath` at all. They bathe ,three times where they should bathe once, and boa-stl where they ought to blush. Otherwise, the practice of bathing I gtake a neutral bath, and `a cold bath. I I is a proper one. -Mr. King does not go the length of the physician who `argued not long. `ago that baths were lrarely `necessary and , generally in- lkllf 11113 .`\I1I'nIvna '#`nnL' -L LL- ' [When to Bath 3 and How todo it l _If this statement is carefully lstudied the tremendous annual drafts made upon the public direct- ly and indirectly by re will be ap- parent. Exelusive of any` other considerastion, such as. that involved in the d.isorganiza~tion- of businws, the actual` monetary cost amounted to over $45,000,000, or $5.63 per. capita of the entire population of_ C~ana'da. , Hence `it results that each man, woman and child, out of their ' earnings and surplus, is indirectly assessed 5 per cent. on about $112, or for each family of ve persons, say $560, `for no other purposes -than A. indemnity "of re loss direct and indireet.--J,` -Grove _Smith~, B.A., B.-Sc., in The. Monetary Times. (Selected). , ..... ww uwuw -tutu uu.u:'uua` uurwvces of `the system, thereby` destroying the .. foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by; building up the constitution and assisting nature -in .d-oing its work. The ' proprietors have so much faith in its ~ctu`r,ati.ve p-orwers` that they, oer One Hundred Dollars for `any case that it fails to cure, Send for] list of testimonials, t . ` ifer Va re loss ve titna `greater than any -corresponding` `cities in [the Old World. 4 Leeds ' . .. . . Belfast . . . . %Brist~ol . . . . Edin-burg`-h D`uJbli11 . . . . I E11g1a1ic1,'1$12 London . . . .. .$O.46 lG1asgow . .. '; . 0.76 Birminglmann . .. . . 0.55 Manchester ; . . . .. 0.55 Sheield . . . . . . . 0.57 Leeds'..; ....1.26 .. . . 0.09 . . .. . 0.15 . .` . . 0.21 .. .. 0.42` there is someth-ingj rac1'ica1ly wrong in the present situa'tibn, In the fol-~ lowing table the per _capita1osses, and res per 1,000 of the popula- tion, are given for represen-tative `towns of England and Ca-nada.: Average . . . . $0.49 Capita Fires per 4l\1\I\ `Per No. of 1000 0.74 .62 .95 .69 .57 .67 Addrelsg'f.'V3Tf51I~IENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. " V . . Sold by -all druggists, 75c. ' * Take Ha.ll s_ Family }; ..i}1's ;f c_onst.ipa.tion. . . I .97 .47 T LOQf}&1 f3~IN fp`1_1II%;`I`.I;:&; T F % . 01.vzf;11i;a %Ti2:is~Mr:L of; l?a?vTt3s:`bor,a:v`sh.~f:DAivisi9n,Enaineo fat V W?` %RiVr`% setlomof ` I117 ' ._...~w~gvv. .vyu_a' Una UI U18 -`D9313 KDQW mgn in rSimeo_1"`eouI;ty -and was brether ~.of .Fran`k;: R;OSS_' bf Cook: nu vAAu auA1uJ Llcuu uuu IJUUFS it over the shoulders of the bather. Thi-s douche may be followed by rubbing or_ slapping the body, and afterwards the wet sheet should be llexchanged for a dry one, in which the bather is dried-. This hath should `be. taken daily, and, -if de- sired, 7the temperature of the water may "be reduced: :1 degree eaxh day until -the danger line of 7 5 degrees is reached. A salt ru-b is another form of 'bat`h recommeilded by Mr. King. This consi-sts '-of handfuls of` wet salt` `being rubbed vigorously over the body. 'It_ is `Am eh more `satisfactory w,-hens A done by my {.1- give- themselves _a . more C! less s tendkant, "though 'most people -can hnhnnlnl 1-urnnh-naval. I -. val wwu U, vu.U 115 ll. benecial treatment. 31:33 .A:i'ft0.53jl!7", ,is.%a;sst.ubii. llsdafmth 5,c;el:di-`watra.a1id;%mbsef;6r ass 1e1sure~ Ely. lbathe*thms1vfss;r;e.; .8 l:ouT,1b-1'?` if'they.'=.:ndi,,`ai1yigiiftei-Eeeets.-~shchj.as` 1:earcahe...,.depression. new feel-2 `ing -ingitlie `head--. `or-A"-general?-languor. The full _c,old-~ bath isjnot _for .them.. i They ought .to. try -the shower`, bath, a , which 9 is less of:-a `shock to the !syItem.._ ?Should '-that- proved" too . great a` Shock, it"inay.'be moderated ~ _ by they,bather'-standing" in a. hot ' foot ibathg ,:Still~ milder` is .the cold . . sponge `bath, and even more sohj the h A alleged cold bath-- that is taken` by fwetting the hands in cold water and K !' rubbing them over ` the body. , e ' . . The Question of Hot Baths > 7 a After all these baths there should 4 hea quick rub down, and a good . `test as to the usefulness of the bath '. will be found" in the raspidity with `which the body glows again with . lheat. The" slower the reaction the I r- less use is the -bath-. No one should take a bath at a lower temperature than 75 degrees, except upon the_ advice of a. doctor. - In fact there . is just a range _of 30 degrees in I g". which a normally healthy person 1 '1 _ may `bathe without a .doctor s order, 1 ' for to risk a hot `bath above 105 de- 1 3 grees is to court _ill-effects. Mr. ` 1- King says that the practi-ce of ta~k- ` ye ing a hot bath at night is a inis-- take. People" suppose that a hot I c c I I bath. will send them to sleep, `but ,f the fact is, according to Mr. King, that the hot bath is not a sedative, but a stimulant._ Nothing will re- vive "and refresh one more quickly 1: than a bath -about 104 or 105 de- grees. The -proper timeto take it, he says, is a.fter.a..1nan has had a t hard morning-and expects to have '1 `important -business to attend to in '1 the -afternoon. He will nd that a 14 hot bath will act like a tonic, and send "him about for the rest of the day feeling as fresh as when he arose in the morning. The Bath for Insomnia Hot ?baths, in fact, baths of any kind, should not be `taken witl1in_ a r couple of hours after eating a heavy I meal. *Nor should the taking of hot_ baths "-be permitted to become a habit. aWhen one is weak or los- I ing-weight, the hot bath should; be avoided, for it will" reduce the ' vitally. of the body. Itwill also re- duce the weight, -but only because "3 the bodily strength is lowered. In is health, hot baths will reduce the 8-1 weight` for a short time, but the s] esh returns as soon as the baths are discontinued. For everyday 1 purposes, Mr. King says that the th neultral bath is `better than either M the `hot or `cold bath. Theneutral bath is taken in water which is at m the same temperature as the body. '59 7 When this bath is taken a sheet 811 i should be spread over a tub and 11: quite close about the neck to `keep m. 1 oil the air. There` should be a cold wet bandage tied about the fore-l head, as is advised"for hot baths, and." the victim `should remain in no the tub for fteen or twenty min- lc` utes, if he desires to arise ready W to sleep. In some cases of persis- ` tent A-insomnia i-t has been found"`E necessary to .maintain the im'- mersion for a couple of hours. The H` neu-trail -`bath has been used with th `great success among patients with l nerve ,or mental trouble. wit . . Wet Sheet and Salt Rub t One of Mr. K_ing s favorite baths by _is the wet `sheet rub. The bather art should stand in a hot footbath, and ` im should be enveloped in a sheet an wrung out in water at .80_degi'ees. Then the attendant takes .a bucket o of `water.-at the same heat and pours 0170!! Q`l1t\I11r]nInn l\ `LA L..LL;_. I ms AN0_R1 .H_ERN ADVANCE. A ,'I1l1e readers of this paper will be pleased to learn thatthere is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able. to cure in all its stages, `and that is Catarrh. Hall s Ca-I tarrh Cure is the only positive cure now, known to the medical `fratern- ity. Cfatarrh being a constitutional- disease,` requires a constitutional treatment. Hal-1's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acting directly up- on the blood -and" mucous "surfaces A-C n--.-..LA.... J-1- ----` V ._Lumlnoua Swltch Light ` To aid 1nA1idivnAg%an electricnght men In rcqm _a `Philadjel: znft-W handling the rays. ,,-_ ..-...uuu auuac succeeded in impregnating `gloves with the salts. of metals to make thenij lmpen X-rays for `the protection qr vu -uuuuvij LIQUID For railnoad signals and locomotive; and car marking lamps` a lens has been invented. that spreads the light over `an angle of `90 degrees, making it visible in any position. it` is likely to be needed. ` -rvvs uu`Ul`8 I believe," says Secretary John * ` Heydler, of the National League, that the day is not far distant when we will see'a new column in the box score to record the errors of judgment made ballplayers. Errors of judgment. are frequent, and they have far more importance on the outcome of games lthan the ordinary mechanical errors a player makes. It seems to me that more attention is being given to scor- mg each year, and the recording of errors of judgment will follow before many more seasons. i Bone-he ad" Column ---`r -uvuu 151117 UlIl o Mars" having a year of 687 days, the seasons on that planet are also like thelyear, much longer than ours- In Mars northern hemisphere the sum- mer lasts for 381 days and the win- ter must be 306 days. During the summer time the polar cap at the north diminishes from its winter dia- meter of 50 degrees to about ve de-I grees. whilethe south polar cap, be- ing placed to one side of the" exact pole, appears to be quite free from ice and snow once. a year.-Toronto World. ` / _-__-..- _-_-----uvu vs. nvaugngp that each of the poles of Mars was made conspicuous by a white spot. To William Herschel we are indebted; " It had been noted byearly observers for the rst systematic study of these extraordinary polar caps. He dis- covered that 7 these `arctic tracts on Mars vary both in extent and dis- hemisphere on which they are situ- ated, attaining a maximum "develop- ment from three to six months after the winter rolsticegon that planet and then shrinking until. they are smal- lest about three to six months after the _summer solstice._ This parallel- ing of the behavior of the snow and ice which -surround the earth's poles remarkable and there is scarcely any question but that the white polar spots of Mars are about like ours. It... L-_-1-- - - -H Itinctness with the seasons of the `ju- There is no doubt that the main features of Mars are-to be regarded as well established and some astrono- mers have given names to all the prominent cbjects. The markings on the surface of the planet are of two kin_ds. Some of them are iron-gray in color verging on green and the others are generally dark yellow. or orange, sometimes verging on white. It seems natural to think that the for- mer represent the oceans and the latter the continental masses of Mars. 911 v.\I.s wuaaaxru-I1 VB 'L`U !pU,TUL,U I U. If interest upon debentures and depreciation ~ is included, the aver- age cost per head of pop~1'1~1'ation.of, the communities protected by this expend`i;t.ure of pu!b1-ic money is ap- -proximately $2.20 per annum. The annual direct expense of brigade, maintenance. isya tax u-ponthe pro- -tected citizen of $1.06 per annum. In '45 European cities from which reports were received, the average annual cost of `brigade maintenance is 22icents. In other words,` the cities and towns of Canada, `after- paying five times as much for pub- lic re protection and ve times as much for insurance protection, suf- One night she went uV to rggl out, and found him practising putting! ?Do These Indicate Land and Wafer, Snow and Ice? % Then he `had togo to school, but his mother says that his heart was really in golf and nothing else. When he used to `come home fromsohool in the evenings, and after he had gone % to bed, his mother used to wonder'j what was the cause of the noises that 3 came from his bed room. Frencis Oulmet; fwho at the o age oi twenty we-`on what prscticallymmounts to the golf championship of the wm-1a.. has been :3. golf enthusiast `since he was six years old, when_ he would sit for `hours zsatching the members of a club near his home playing. .When' only a little older, his mother was unable to prevent him becoming 9` caddy. He always tried to caddy` for those whom he considered the best` [soon began to p1a)5_`himselt. players. _ He used to copy them, and MARKlN"G86NMARS Tr I-erg: For Railway Light. Pu":-nn ml......-1_ __, . FreZ(1(1'-,h - hospital. I.) 1- ` -- Safe Rubber Gloves Ekvnv-palm `--~- ' Aynonu GOLFER The value of the equipnient used..g by fire departments in Ganada -is $5,]:67,425, and of the bui1dings.in' which the departments are housed $4,692,247. The annual expense for maintenance- of fire brigade protec-[ tion amounts .to $3,401,670. _[ 'T. .'..A..._.-..1. ,___--- ,1 1, A `I hospital attahes Jhave rubber 1 me .sa,lts. `certin -vvn VGA - ixpgrvious to 0.... 4- j motor. Box Scores pefson 3 S -uuya uu Canada, 1912 - Loss Hamilton .. ..$1.88 Vancouver 4.45 Calgary .95 Regina . .. . 3.47 'IIaI1ifax 6.66 .Toronto . 2.45 Braimford. 1.95 Winnipgvg 3.88 Lmmdoxi 1.05 m-Saskatoon '. . . v . 6.85 Hambly Our stock of Baby Carriages J arrived. We can save you money 0 ` This is the season of the year t Foods. We have a full line of Dr. Stock and Poultry Foods, Royal Cream Equivalent for Calves. By u_sir.Ig M up-to-date washing Tm Motor, Electric, New Idea and Nois I . ` _ H > you start bn your campaign`? > 10 beautifying this Spring. 30* - . v k for " ' " ---ask f0` ?- V JAP-A-LA ` ind don,':mI:h content will` (V T as-vthius but` AP-A-LAC. Always put ~ V ' ` up in Gteax-1T' . bearing the name CLID` M`dA_,il|` 2' utiful colors. providinz f `J Fgiliremen `of-the`: house_wjfe. 1A,? I ,_ an C-anada s average ai1nuaI re ldss per capita for the last three years has been `approximately $2.90, and the num*ber of res 1.16 per 1,000,` of population.

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