Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 25 Mar 1925, 1, p. 14

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[ S After taking Two Boitles ~my wife made rapid progress back to health" 7 0 e Tz 4 /////////,.. fl €1, * 14 # BJ L Py k ar 'os ) .4 ",“4-\“4 8 ’.‘,.L . .I"’ 4 «."qq + ols 48 it .5 #@ sys r,fl* O o O DR xk o §# . 62 stt Carnol is one of the finest remeâ€" dies ever discovered for use by the expectant mothéer. There is no time in a_ woman‘s life when it is so vitally necessary to safeguard her health. Not only should she protect her own health, at a most trying period, but she. must consider also the health of the unborn child. Read what Carnol did for Mrs. Perry,â€" "My wife, about two years ago, just before our baby was born, was sufâ€" fering from anemia and indigestion. She could keep nothing on her stoâ€" mach. We tried a great many soâ€" called remedies, phosphates and even beef, iron and wine tonics, but to no effect.> One day I went into one called remedies, phosphates and even beef, iron and wine tonics, but to no effect."> One day I went into one of our local drug stores, Crawfords by name, and asked him to give me a reliable tonic for my wife. He handed me a bottle of Carnol, reâ€" commending it highly, and told me to give it a fair trial. After taking two bottles my wife made rapid proâ€" gress back to health. _ The colour came back to her cheeks and her appetite was completely restored. We find Carnol almost invaluable for our baby. It serves as a useful medicine, : especially at ; geething time, and we are ifthout a bottle in the house. It Â¥fes me a great deal of pleasure to r‘gommend the merits of Carnol. Afia bodyâ€" builder, nerve remedy aid a wonâ€" derful restorative in al Jrun down «conditions, I don‘t think there is any medicine anywhere equal to Carnol." C# â€"Arthur I. Perry, 527â€"10th Street, Brandon, Manitoba. 5â€"24 You know where you can get the BEST CANNED GOODS ICE CREAM AND FRUITS Soft Drinks, Tobaccos, Cigars, Cigarettes, Candies, stc. If you break your Electric Light just come toâ€" P. ANTOINE 39 Fourth Ave. Opp. Fire Hall MARBLEâ€"ITEZ FLOOR FINISH It pays to use /Voflzum lz/te it for Hardwood Floors + wears litke Iron Write to Heud Office Montreal for Free Booklet HOME PAINTING MADE EASY sSOLD BY GEO. TAYLOR HARDWARE LTD. Timmins. Ontario. IT IS EASIER TO PUT SALT oN THE TAILS OF BIRDS. There is an old saying that the easy way to catch a bird is to put salt on its tail. This procedure would be just as easy and just as dangerous as taking a wolf by the ears, as desired by The Toronto Mail Empire. The Mail Empire in an editorial note whether he had ears at all or not. The wolf in its wild state in this country is about the most cowardly of fourâ€"legged â€" beasts, approacing inâ€" deed the ingrained sneakiness of some | twoâ€"legged animals. _ More men in lthis country have been eaten alive by black flies than will ever be attacked by wolves. The ferocity of the wolves is onlv a silly varn fostered by senâ€" n e ons e ie ioi n o e w last week says attack human beings know a great deal about the lupine nature, but we question if any of them ever ventured to take by the ears a fullâ€"grown wolf in the wild state. The testimony of men who ever did that is not obtainâ€" able as it was usually the wolf that w ho men wWho ever dld LNdbD 1» 10QL ODLALLLâ€" able as it was usually the wolf that survived.‘‘ ‘ The reason that no one contracts the habit of taking wolves by the ears is that few men have ever been able to get close enough to a wolf in its wild state (and that is its natural state, and the only state that the Canadian wolf has ever beenâ€" known to have). . Hundreds of oldâ€"timers who have roamed this country in all seasons and times and have heard the wolf pack howl and have seen the tracks of the brutes in the snow or mud, and even, perhaps, have caught on occasion a glimpse of dim figures that lookedlike sneaky dogs, but no doubt were wolves,â€"these hundveds ‘of oldâ€"timers frankly admit that they seldom got close enough to a live wolf to be ready to swear as to whether he had ears at all or not. sational simpletons. _ Editor Curran of The Sault Star has had a standing challenge out for the names and facts of any case where any man up in th North Land ‘was ever attacked by wolves. He has never been able to No doubt the that wolves will not ontroversialists THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Lo E_ RETURN VISIT BARRETT Will Present ‘‘The Hottentot,‘"‘ Under Auspices Cochrane District C.A.S. ©The Hottentot,""‘ a very attractive offering, will be produced at the Goldâ€" felds Theatre, April 13th and 14th, by the Barrett Producing Company. The event will be under the auspices of the Cochrane District Children‘s Aid Society. The Barrett Producing Company some weeks ago presented "©That Girl Mickey" at Timmins, unâ€" der the auspices of the Daughters of: the Empire. _ ‘‘That Girl Mickey" made a big hit and there will be very zxeneral interest accordingly in any other offering by the same company. ©The Hottentot‘‘ has been vresented in several towns of the North Land and has won very high commendation, both for the event itself and for clever direction of the Barretts. At Timmins on the 13th and 14th of next month, the Barrett Company will be assisted in the production of **‘The Hottentot,"‘ by very ecapable local taâ€" lent. In addition, the worthiness of the cause for which the event is beâ€" ing held,â€"the Children‘s Aid Society, â€"should assure a very large attenâ€" dance. The proceeds will go to the Shelter Building Fund of the District VALUARLE ADDITION TO END SCHOOL LIBRARY Alut land and to whom the profits go towards the carrying out of their 1925 proâ€" gramme, that being the furthermg of Voeational Training, Hospital Work, and Service among Returned Men. The registration page in Vol. 1 is worthy of note. It is at the disposal of the ])lll(‘ll.l%@l‘ Many are regisâ€" tering the work in their son‘s name to commemorate a birthday, dnd as it may contain the name of a donory '14 son can in the years to come turn to. the registration page and show his son that his grandparent served in the Great War. Many state that they expect the work to be handed down as a sort of family. heirloom from generation to generation,. The work is being mtroduced by Major R. D; Sutherland, late Queen‘s Uniâ€" versity Highlanders,, CE.F., and in order to enable everyone to subseribe it is being sold on monthly instalâ€" ments within the reach of all, and for a limited time an introductory price is obtainable. Major Sutherland, in addition to the Dominion and Overseas comments on the work, has local reâ€" ferences from those purchasing the books and passing approval on them. Major will be here fot another ten days or two weeks. At tention is called to the advertise ment elsewhere in this issue regardâ€" ing this valuable work. who resigning England. i High Commissioner in Egypt umoured to be contemplating r and retiring to civil life in LORD ALLENBY N to me this summer in July on the Nipigon River in the rapids just below the Canadian Pacific bridge at Nipigon, Ont. It all happened late in the évening. The trout at this point are the most famed and largest brook trout in the world. But just at that time they were not striking as usual on account of the exceedingly cold night. Howâ€" ever, I decided to go to the river to try out a little split bamboo bait casting rod, 2%{ ounces, that I had made for casting very light lures. It would be a revelation to myself and other anglerg to take trout in this manner, when fly casting is the vogue. The water under the Canadian Pacific bridge, and below for a quarter of a mile at least, flows like a millrace. I attached to my line a small weighted feather casting minâ€" now, just to see if the little rod would shoot it. At the first try I shot the lure at least 125 across the water toward the west bank andtin the opposite edge of fast water. The very instant that the tiny lure struck the water the second of the only two large rainbow trout that up to then had ever been taken out of the Nipigon rose and seized my lure. He was a monster. Itseemed an impossible accomplishment ever to land that fish with the little rod and the fine nineâ€"pound test casting line. The thrill that came in that approachâ€" ing darkness was incredible. The killing of moose and grizzly bear was tame in comparison. I worked in a bad light nearly an hour, and in danger of falling into that deep, swift reach, trying hard to lead that fish out of the fast water where the current would not aid it into the long upstream swirl on my side.* The only thing that helped me in that fight was the generous supply of filled line I had in store on my reel to help perfect thumbing of it. I worked up and down those rapids in despair and hope, and as the whims of the strong leaping fish OZARK RIPLEY Being an Account of an Adventure Which Overtook Ozark Ripley On the Nipigon. "My Greatest Thrill In Sport" For m:mÂ¥1 I have hunted and killed all kinds of big game on the American Contiâ€" nent except polar bear, and I have taken most kinds of fresh and salt water game fish. But the greatest thrill I ever exâ€" perienced durmg my thirty years‘ devotion to outâ€" door sports came Ks ‘w | directed. Yet the thrill of trying to land that whopper leaping rainbow with that tiny rod was something I had never conceived possible. _ It began to grow darker. Suddenly on the left bank I saw a big black bear take to the water and swim deliberately toward my fish, despite that terrible current. Evidently he took it for a eripple. Right off, that rainbow sensed his presence and darted for the east bank as fast as I could real in slack, and the bear kept his course direct for him. The rainbow heading straight for the upstream water, with occcasional leaps from it, finally gained the stretch of upstream current, with the bear only a few veards behind him. "It+ seemed an impossible accomplishment ever to land that fish." That bear did not become apprised of my presence until he made a lunge for the fish, missed it as it leaped out of the water, and then scrambled for the bank to get a better survey of his expected prey. That very momen‘t he got a whiff of the man scent, wheeled and scrambled as fast as he could for the thicket of spruce along the sheer hillside. And then the thrill of thrills ocâ€" curred in the darkness as I roughed that spent rainbow, and brought him along the coarse, narrow sand bank where, as he was far too large for my landing net, I fell on top of him and held him captive with my hands and knees until his strength was entirely exhausted.â€"New York World. r»lLeuUelUls svelo

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