Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Apr 1924, p. 11

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re THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG BOISSINOT No wonder people regard "Fruit.a-tives" as a faithful family friend and are s0 eager to tell what it has done for them, After years of suffering, they fruit treatment in relieving them of pain and misery and discouragement. As Mr. P. R, Boissinot, of LaBroquerie, Man., wrote: 'For three years, I had to give up work ; my arms were so swollen and I was so sick. I felt I would never be able to work on the farm any more. But one day, a cousin came to see me and advised me to take ' Fruita-tives', Now, Iam in good health. I rest well and do all my work. I can recommend * it-a-tives" for Rheumatism that made good remedy", ' Truitt tivey's i8 the wonderful medicine made from the juices of apples, o! figs and prunes and tonics--and is the only complete treatment ever for Rheumatism, Headaches and other troubles due bowels and kidneys. 250. and P0c, & box--at all dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont. 2 - ) Pain in the Back, Lumbago, Neuralgia, to the improper action of the stomach, The famous seaport of Amalfi, Italy, twenty-miles from Naples, was swept by a landslide which affected seven nearby villages. More than a hundred persons are known to have perished and thousands rendered homeless appreciate the wonderful powers of this me suffer so much and 1 thank you for this THE HUMAN 200 Lo ry, for at Feelings of a third-class- ¥ THE BATTLE AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS (Continyed from page 1). This theory of early infection is no doubt true in many or even mast cases of tuberculosis and therefore to me the guarding/of the very young infants against an possible exposure Is where we want to begin if we wish to do all we can, and to be suc- cessful in eradicating ' this disease tuberculosis from our 'midst, and fortunately we have many means and 'Ways of very materially - preventing the spread of this disease, : to tuberculosis and thus to infection, | WAGARVILLE. April 1,--~8ugar makers report a | fair run of sap, Miss Dorothy Good- * berry has been {ll with the grippe, but'is gaining slowly. Mr. and Mrs. M. Kirkham were visiting at n Simpkins' on Sunday for tea. Wel- lie Goodberry and Damon Good- berry were at John Chalk's, on Sun- the west, is renewing old acquain- tances in this vicinity, M. McCloud was at Earl Storms' on Sunday, Mel- ville Wagar at Charles Peters', on Sunday; A. Wagar at home. We think lawyers wise men, and they think we are fools. : It is as natural to fear as to hope th th culosis i There are two main types of tuber- mankind,-that caused by ¢ Bovine Bacillup® (derived from € cow) and called the Bovine type, and that caused by the Human Tu- bercle Bacillus and called the Hu- man type, ' Se------ Bovine Type of Tuberculosis. day, for dinner, - Bert Wagar, from Lace when one is unfortunate, SAY "BAYER" when you buy-<Jomuine Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumpago Pain. Toothache, Neuritis Rheumatism fd ang Accept onl "Bayer" package proven directions. wi cont of Bayer nfacture of Mono known, that means Beaver Tab a "or Bayer Company seaticagidester of : a 1 a public aginst -imitations, the Tablets Wil be ethped ON. Daal "ate: mark iaat ihe Tablets Luxurious Travel at ag -- Moderate Rates Thereisonly ene class of cabin passengers. 1 : arge--and 3 d ina upto the Years Amiris 1s the trode Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100->Druggists. -- This form is contractgd by taking milk from a cow which has tuber- culosis and usually one where the udder is infected and where the milk has not been treated either by pro- per pastuerizing or by boiling or sterilization, of the milk for three or four minutes, for either of: these treatments of the milk will positively destroy-mll tubercle bacilli in the milk from an infected cow, and will not materially injure the milk in any Way as a food, if brought to a boil quickly then boiled for three or four minutes, and then immediately cool- ed quickly after the boiling. This bovine type of tuberculosis is only found in infants and -€hiMren, as adults are practically never infected with the bovine bacillus. It is the cause of a considerable proportion of the tubercular meningitis and of the general tuberculosis cases in children under five years of age, both forms of which are fatal in practically one hundred per gent. of cases, and also the cause of a very high percentage of the cases of tuberculosis of the glands of the neck and' tuberculosis of the abdominal cavity, Thus we see how easily we can eradicate these fatal forms of tuberculosis in in- fants, and early childhood, and pre- «went its spread to other children 'it we will be sure to pasteurize or boil all milks used. Of course we know that the government is endeavor ng to have cattle free from tuberculosis by frequent tests and destroying those infected, with the hope of gradually getting the disease wiped out, but, in the meantime, the pub- lic should remember that any germs possibly present should be sure to be destroyed and to remember how this can be go wisely done by the above simple method. v Now, as to. the ot roo type of tuberculosis, the Human type, that contracted by contraet with or in- feétion by the Human Tubercle Ba- cillus-and causing sny form of tuber- culosis and whith may affect any organ of the human body, but par- ticularly the throat, lungs and bron- chial glands and it is from these fo that. the disease is most likely to to others through the spu- tum and other secretions of the nose 'by spitting alone, but also by sneez- ing and coughing when particles con- covering the mouth and nose proper. ly is taken when cted and active tuberculous pers n prohibit- ing such being done Sy and throat. This type is not spread i Copyright, 1934, by Pudlic Le@ger Company MR.EARL DARCY By C. D. Batchelo: ' MR. EARL DARCY ~ FR BARL Darcy tea hound on being paged in a first-class place. all do our best to see that such is properly .carried out especially in public places and we should also see as a further prevention of this dis- ease spreading, the placing of a proper drinking fountain in place of the old-fashioned common drinking CRD. $ Against' this "type of 'tuberculosis the young infant must also bé pro- tected especially the malnourished and the bottle fed babies, as these have a less resistance and a greater tendency to infection, if exposed by residing with persons who have ac- tive tuberculosis, as often those car- ing for babies on the bottle thought- lessly always moisten the nipple with their own mouths before giving the food to' the baby, or later on al- ways taste the various foods before feeding the baby, with the same spoon, or baby gets an extra share of kisses and usually on the mouth. Thus in thése many little ways the germs are thoughtlessly transmitted. Remember all 'babies have a good start in life, for noné are born with tuberculosis, none inherit even when the mother is suffering from active tuberculosis at the time of the baby's birth, but in order to keep this in- fant from exposure and infection it will be necessary to at once separate mother and child and to keep baby away from the infected mother and by so doing that infant will grow up free from tuberculosis if not exposed from some other source, So we see the absolute necessity of safe-guard- ing all infants and children and by so doing we are helping very much by preventing infection and thus al- ways remember the great helpfulness or proper sanitation and especially of the wonderful blessing we have Beauty A Gleamy Mass of Hair 35¢ "Danderine" does Wonders dor Any Girl's Hair | taining the baclilt are expelled into | ypg¢ the surrounding area and thus fnfect | | others, . unless the precaution of Constant Headaches' ; aL It is hard to strubgle along with a head that aches and pains all the time, and in nine cases out of ten the persistent headaches are due to some derangement of the stomach, liver or bowels. v Undoubtedly the cause must be re- moved before permanent relief may be had. : Burdock Blood Bitters removes the cause of the headaches, as it acts on every organ of the body and streng- thens, purifies and regulates the whole system. e Mrs. Peter Curran, 27 Morrison St., Sydney, N.S., writes:-- "I have been troubled for the last five years with constant headaches and diszi- ness. After trying several remedies, which I found to be of no avail, Bur- dock Blood Bitters was recommend- ed to me. B.B.B. did me a world of good, and I cannot praise this remedy en- ough." . Manufactured only by The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont, L" in sunlight fn helping to stamp out this disease. If, we can get the proper care and treatment for all those who have ac- tive or even dormant tuberculosis, or can even get them instructed as how best to care for themselves and to take precautions against infecting others, we will have done a great deal towards stamping out this dis- Base. But in order to properly handle and instruct these active cases it will be necessary to get legls- lation which will aid in giving tree treatment and care where such is needed and to this end we are now striving, and when this will have ing of tuberculosis diminish rapidly and we hope #€0on be entirely wiped out, : BLUE HOMESPUN. By Frank Oliver Call. Ryerson Press, Toronto. Price $1.50. II- lustrated by Orson 8. Wheeler. 2 of sonnets which will be found at- tractive if only for their lyrical qua- lity, simplicity and freedom from the striving after effect which mars much of the work of the younger school of Canadian versé-makers. In a daintily-bound book, Frank Oliver been obtained then will the spread-' We have just received a collection. SEAMAN. with a smooth and silky finish. Jeu are building see that f you what little cost is involved in laying of hardwood floors. SEAMAN Red Oak, has its own individual VICTORIA ST. Raconteur," warming himself by the great red-hot stove of a winter eve- ning tells weird tales of the "Windigo" that haunts the woods and "The Walker of the Snow." We hear the shanty-men singing the old chansons ending.in a prayer Saint Marguerite, Very beautifully does the poet bring out the deep re- ligion that permeates the daily life of the simple men and women who live far from the stress of modern life. Old Marie bending over her loom is watched over by the picture of the Holy Virgin in a robe as blue as the pile of homespun ever grow- ing larger; "The Mother," whose pride in the son who sings the dally mass at Saint Hubert is tempered with sorrow for the boy who had fol- lowed the long empty road to search for adventure, and the black-robed nuns in the grey walled convent are typical of the life of French Canada. Mr, Call has struck a daring and ori- ®inal note with success in "The Su- gar Maker." Old Philippe", when April wrought" its, magic ~--'lg" comas 4-4 | | usu m the early Sevemmg and to him "The dropping sap rang out like sanctus bells". Lifting his eyes to the 'blue mysteri- ous sky, he bowed as though the Host were passing by." And why not? The gift of the maple sap was assuredly a sign of the presence of the Bon Dieu. The illustrations by Orson 8. Wheeler are remarkably good. -- SIEGE. / By Samuel Hopkins Adams. Thomas Allen, Toronto, $2. "Slege" is distinctly the most am- bitious, and in, some respects the most successful, in the long 'list of Mr, Adam's accomplished fiction, It is a study of the lust for power as embodied in the person of 'a very age of twenty-four, who for nearly fifty years has been the dominating personality of the large clan of the Ruylands, the industrial magnates of a good-sised American (probably New England) city. Like all uncheck- ed and irresponsible power too long maintained by one individual, Au- gusta Ruyland's authority has be- come tyrannical, over-conservative, and ill-adapted for dealing with new problems and new conditions; and this novel exhibits the conflict be- tween Augusta and a new genera- tion of executive ability in the per- son of the young wife of one of the Ruyland graadchildren. Incidental- ly it is fevealed that one-man (or rather one-woman) domination is as destructive to a family as to a po- litical party, and that the later Ruy- lands are so impoverished a stock that the author actually ventures to close with his heroine throwing over- board her Ruyland husband and seeking 'a more adequate match by means of the divorce court. The con- a The World's Richest Man Can't have better Floors than YOU Can have rooms in your house With rough uneven them--ask us for estimates. You will be delightfully 'eur transforming -KENT HARDWOOD FLOORING is made Quarter Cut White Oak, Maple, character and beauty, to | capable old lady, a widow from the i -KENT HARDWOOD FLOORING gives you a floor matched--it scientifically kiln dried--it is tongued and grooved on sides Yodo 20. Sapcily. tat a purfect sad ficor results, FLOO! is these rooms by the is Plain Birch, cach » ' ALLAN LUMBER C0. PHONE 1042 A ------_ flict in the Ruyland circle is exciting enough while it lasts, and Augusta is clever enough to fascinate us even while her hardness and tyranny re- pel; but she and several of the other characters have somewhat the air of being dramatised formulas: vather than observed human beings. TOLD BY AN DOT. 1 By Rose Macaulay. Ryerson Press, Toronto, $2, It will be no great surprise to the readers of '"'Potterism' to learn that its author regards as Iife as being a tale "full of sound and fury" ana devoid of meaning. It is of course possible to represent any given transverse section of life as having that aspect, and it is particularly easy in the case of the life of a rather futile Engifsh family from, say, 1870 to 1920; and it is such a family and such a period that Miss Macaulay has chosen. The futility of human affairs is decidedly a favority note of a large, school of modern govelists, and is probably popular with a great many of the younger novel-readers; who read with the conviction that {t is not their fault that life has been so futile and that it only 'rémains for them to make ft much less so. Older readers are like- Iy to conclude that there Is little prospect of its being materially im~ proved in the near future, but that it never was quite so meaningless as Miss: Macaulay wants us to believe or rather, that whether it ever was so or not, no large nunther of the human beings who have participated in it have consented to regard it as being so. A clever, cynical, cruel book, the acceptance of whose doc- trine in full would result in a rath- er general epidemic of suleide. MISTRESS WILDING. By Rafael Sabatini. Thomas Allen, Toronto, $2. Mr. Sabatini needs no recom- mendation from wus. He is univer- sally known, not only to all read- ers but to the miNions who can no longer read but can absorb mental nourishment from the movies, as the 5 author of "Scaramouche" and a half-dozen other dazzling tales of romantic adventure. And this is equal to the best of the lot, with an open- ng more exquisitely intriguing and exciting than any of the othdbe, . fine narrative of plot and peril in the Monmouth Rebellion, and that inevitable flavoring of romance that is added by a marriage that is no marriage, and a hatred between the wedded pair thet is gradually turn- ed to love by the hero's heroism and the lady's truthfulness. In justice to the incautious reader, we should warn him or her that marriages of this sort are less common in real life that they have lately been Im English and American fiction.

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