ney) and inflammation or suppura- \ Pal te 4 bee EDUCATION HEALTH BY DR. J. Or. Middleton will | ters through _ Toronto. MEURABDEEEBEE (Continued from last issue.) ‘The temperature during the rash riod varies from 100 deg. to 102 > 403 deg. according to the severity f the attack, and almost as soon as re temperature drops to normal the papules begin to break, resulting in _ the so-called desquamation. After this stage the progress of the disease to- wards convalescence is uneventful, if particular care is taken to ward off the complications which sometimes arise in starlet fever cases and bring about serious results. The most _ dreaded of these complications are _ mephrites (inflammation of. the kid- tion of the middle ear, the latter ac- ¢eompanied by much pain and causing 2 rise in temperature. Kidney trouble can be best avoided by keeping the patient in bed for at least two weeks after the rash has disappeared and reserving the diet strictly to fluids. -heumatism sometimes intervenes in scarlet fever, usually in the legs, and causes much pain. It requires care- - ful treatment. During the second or third week of the disease, if conval- seence is proceeding normally, the atient usually develops a healthy ap- etite and complains about the insuf- ficiency of the diet provided. It is at his stage that the doctor in charge has to be firm with the patient as a oo early resumption of solid food is Rable to bring on kidney trouble. Complications such as inflammation of the middle-ear are especially seri- on account of the possibility of afness resulting, and must be ven earnest attention by the physi- jan in charge. The throat congestion an ‘be relieved by antiseptic gargles, _ warm applications, etc.,. which the doctor will specify. -- It was formerly believed. that infec- spread by the leose particles ! uring desquamation, but this 5 heory is no longer held, it having been definitely proved that it is from ae; the nose, threat or ear discharges that others become infected. To : Jow a patient therefore to leave the ge isolation hospital or place of quar- ntine, it is first necessary to see that or inflamed and that any discharge ‘om the nose; throat or ears is com- etely dried up. ll be glad to answer questions on Public Heaith mat this column. Address Shea - ae J. MIDDLETON Provincial Board of Health. Ontario him at the Parliament Bldgs, ; | ae SS Oo OO OY have disappeared from the body, hands and feet, and in addition the patient on the day of leaving the hos- pital, should be given an antiseptic bath and have all his clothes put through a sterilizer before being al- lowed to mix or come in contact with other people, whether children or adults. Although all discharges from nose, throat or ear may have cleared up when the patient leaves the hospital, even a slight discharge of this kind recurring a day or two later may cause a “return” case, that is, a case occurring as a result of coming in contact with the returned patient. Parents should be on their guard when the convalescent child comes home lest it develop “coryza,” or a slight “running of the nose,” for this is of further out- breaks, other members of the family infected usually the cause or neighbors becoming through fondling and caressing the child on its return from hospital. _ Some cases of scarlet fever show little or no rash and indeed little ap- pearance of illness, nevertheless these cases are dangerous to others and should be isolated for the full period of six weeks. The reason for this is that even the slightest discharge from the nose or throat may transmit the infection although the illness is hardly noticeable. cause of all the epidemics that occur, they being just as infectiqus as the more severe cases. A. T. asks how to relieve chronic constipation. Answer: Diet and ex- ereise are the two most important things to deal with. Do not eat too dry food. Drink plenty of water. Use fresh fruit and vegetables every day. Avoid aperient medicines as much as possible. Take sufficient exercise, preferably out of doors. J. P. R. asks if a child who previ- ously had whooping cough should be allowed to go to school if another member of the same family has whooping cough. Answer: There is no need for the well child to be kept at home, providing it is not allowed to come in contact with the patient. The previous attack would make it practically immune to whooping cough, and it is only by direct cough- ing or the discharges getting on the Miles of Cars Used to Ship SS Weed Seed. ng Was shipped out of the three during the last This at a time when the __ Prairie Provinces hree years. clothing that transmits the disease. threshed it, at a cost proportionate to that of the ‘highest quality of grain, afterwards shipping and paying the freight on it to market, where, owing to the presence of the weed seed, the grade-of the wheat was lowered. Fur- ther, when these 48 miles of grain. cars were being used to ship weed seed there was an almost universal demand for cars which could not be satisfied. Clean seed, cultivation to kill the weeds, and the cleaning of grain before shipment will overcome such waste. : ee) Been = SG j | EK Ft Sg me et bb oe oe as 9 ae baa, eat / or oe Sj a : ; Ve) a la Bs ‘ ¥. é ¥ . ; 4 . : i 4 otal P * PREAH RAD VoL gl re 40 Va f i ie i ‘ Fs " a 4 E ' t cits xep) “ ak en ay FERTI — ms Cay ees 5 ea, aT) — = = Fo -F _ ~ ~ i Facd f°" fs ol] e+ 2 aa + = Se i oe BEES 1 Pa gt toe ay ee , = ——" *? 4 fj 3 4 Bay. eS - ——. - oes fi 4 + pate & eae eae ee) TS ee ee! ee Bead PEW a afery. | + a sign cae we we ENCOURAGE PAYING INVESTMENTS ge CUT DOWN WASTEFUL EXPENDITURE | adopted the elght-hour system. 6 Mild or “missed” cases of this disease are the chief The Toronto ‘Hospital for Inour-} ables, in affillation with Ballevue and — mised Hospitals, New -York City, offers a three years’ Course of Train- ing to young women, having the re- _ quired education, and desirous of be- coming nurses. This Hospital ge G) pupils recelve untforms of the School, a monthly allowance and travelling expenses to and from New York. For ‘further information apply to the Superintendent. . | Selling Young Trets: ; A boy in northeastern Ontario built up an original and profitable business by taking orders for shade trees. © With digging tools, luncheon and some fishing tackle or a gun, he would go to the woods along a creek two miles away, or to the rivtr. There, while he hunted or fished, he kept his eyes open for straight, trees, from six to ten feet tall and well-shaped sometimes taller, and when he found good ones, he dug them up carefully, hauled them into town and set them out for his customers, For every tree he receivied from one dollar to five dollars, according to its size and kind. For rock maple, white ash and beech he charged a higher price than for soft maple or.elm, because they were, harder to find. Sometimes he tramped miles to find a particular kind of tree, ‘and wherever he went, he was always on the lookout for species that ho could not find in his own neighbor- hood. | ! He always asked the owners of the land on which he found the trees for permission to take them, and few withheld it. Sometimes they asked him to take only certain kinds of trees, or trees from certain parts of the woodland. Usually when he of- fered to pay for the trees! the owners refused to take anything, and he never had to pay more than. twenty-five cents for a tree. Often he was allow- ed to do some odd job in return for it. At first the boy paid for the ‘use of a team and wagon by working for the man who owned them; but when his father bought a motor truck, he used it on Saturdays. He usually planted his trees in the spring, to get the best results. He also dug and set out wild ferns, mosses, grasses and plants, for which he received from ten to twenty-five cents apiece. At his suggestion, many people planted wild-flower beds, and he became so expert in making trees grow that people often hired him to; set out fruit trees, vines, shrubs, ber- ries and rare plants from nurseries. For that work he usually received thirty-five cents an hour. When a park was laid out near the square, he furnished the trees, set out plants and planned the mounds and the wild- flower and fern corner. BO aca OR GLAD HE TRIED THE TONIC TREATMENT Through Its Use Strength and Vigor Was Restored. To be tired after exertion is natural, Rest and food restore the body to nor- mal after such fatigue. But to be tired all thé time is a symptom of an anaemic condition that will not be corrected until the blood is built up. Such an anaemic condition is so gradual in its approach and generally so lacking in acute pains that it is of- ten difficult to persuade the sufferer a condition that eorrects itself. | blood is not enriched the trouble will to do anything for it. But it is not If the increase. The nerves. will be under- nourished and neuralgic pains will fol- low. Digestive disturbances often re- sult from thin blood, sleep is disturb- ed and a general breakdown may oc- cur. Mr. Wilsion Johnson, Nineveh, N.S., says: “A few years ago my system was in.a badly run down condition. My nerves seemed always on edge, and I found myself so weak that I could hardly do any work. I suffered from headaches and from pains in the back and under the shoulders, and was Often #0 sleepless at night that when morning came I felt as tired as when I went to bed. I was’ taking medicine all the time, but it was do- ing me ne good. Then lL read the testi- | Birds Are Forest Policemen. | day mild and bright; sired. Insects have done and are doing a great deal of injury to the forests of Canada. The forest services, federal and provincial, are carrying out pro- tective measures, and the federal de- partment of agriculture has a staff of entomolgists who devote all their energies to his work. Many ingeni- ous methods are being devised, but | the public will be mest interested in one thing that stands out in these’ investigations, namely, that the pre- servation of bird life is ome means of. reducing the numbers of forest in- sects. There may be some birds which do not eat forest insects, but general- ly speaking it is. true that,, the more birds, the fewer insects. Canadian: boys and young men in the past have been too prone to. go into the woods with a gun and shoot at everything in sight without thinking of the injury they might cause. Canadian forests are fine places for healthful recrea- tion, but let those who go into them be careful not to burn them up and not to destroy unthinkingly the non- game birds which are forest police- men. Let the young people shoot as much as‘ they like, but with a camera, not @ gun, f a, uf Thoughtful Smiles. A bad thing is: dear at any price. A bad husband cannot be a. good man, If you owe nothing, you know what you are worth. . 3 There are always more foolish buy- ers than sellers. _ No one is so wise but that he has a little, folly to spare. Adversity is the balance in which to weigh your friends. © It is a mistake to think that danger can bessurmounted without danger. You: should pay just as much for your experience as the resultant wis- dom is worth. SPRING WEATHER - HARD ON BABY The Canadian spring weather—one the next raw and blustery, is extremely hard on. the baby. Conditions are such that the mother cannot take the little one out for the fresh air so much to be de- He is confined to the house which is' so often over-heated and bad- ly ventHated.. He catches cold; his little stomach and bowels become dis- ordered and the mother soon has a sick baby to look after. To prevent this an occasional dose of Baby’s Own Tablets should be given. They regu- late the stomach and bowels, thus pre- venting or banishing colds, simple fevers, colic or any other of the many minor ailments of childhood. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Fano ~#,9 Boy Scout Notes. Canada’s capital city has the distinc- tion of having more Scouts per capi- ta than any other city of 100,000 or more people in America. If the Boy Scouts of Ottawa were to join hands they would be able to encircle a very large section of their home city, we oft oh e To have saved three persons from death by drowning at three different times is an excellent record. It is held by Assistant Scoutmaster Ed- ward Walker (19 years old and a Scout since 1911) of Grimsby. He was recently recommended for one of the highest Boy Scout decorations. Lg + a ae New Boy Scout troops are being formed in many parts of Ontario, The latest towns to register new Scout or- ganizations with Provincial Head- quarters at Toronto are Port Col- borne, Manotick, Merritton (two troops), Dunnville (a second troop), Whitby, Minden, Richmond, Fort Wil- liam (a. third troop), Trenton (a eecond troop), and about a dozen new troops in the cities cf Toronto, Otta- wa, Haimilton and London. Many other new treops are also in course of formation and will be chartered by the Provincial Council later. x % a * oe) ‘Developed for 10c roll. Prints from Special Enlarging Offer—-An Art Mount- ed Glossy Enlargement, size 4x6, from. any good negatiye, 25c. We pay postage. GOODFELLOW & SAUNDERS. 16 Heintzman Street, _ Toronto : few Citizens: fir Canada. With a population of less than two persons to the square mile compared to England’s six hundred, with only five per cent. of her rich agricultural land in the West under cultivation, witha heavy national indebtedness and only a few people to pay the in- terest in the form of taxes, the reason Why Canada is hungry for immigrants can readily be understood. Immigra- tion is the human rain without which Canada must parch and wither up. If Great Britain had a large surplus of farmers and farm hands, Canada might not have to invite immigrants from any other source. But Great Britain is not so much an agricultural as ‘a merchant and manufacturing centre, and every year grudges more and more the farmers or farm hands who leave her Colonies for the Do- minions. She is quite willing to send out countless city folk in the hope that they may be transformed into farmers im their new environment, but she has fewer farmers to spare than many other countries from which Canada in the past has drawn excel- lent settlers. This is illustrated by the homestead entries. From 1897 to 1919, only eighteen per cent. of the British immigrants made entry for homesteads in Westefn Canada as compared to twenty-seven per cent. of the American immigrants and twenty- nine per cent. of the foreign born from Continental Europe. In certain parts of Europe where there is a genuine land hunger, there is not enough land to go round. Five or six acres per family is all the land available in certain parts of Belgium, and even on that the thrifty Belgian frequently brings up a family of ten. The great immigration of Ukrainians from Central Europe which has given Canada nearly 300,000 of her Western farm population was due to the con- stant subdivision of farms which were only fifteen acres to start with. These Ukrainians! have become a great as- set to Canada, and have at their own expense erected four large colleges for higher education. Then again we owe our fine stock of seventy thous- and Scandinavian settlers to the lack of sufficient land in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. Have these foreign born made good Canadian citizens? Read “The Edu- cation of the New Canadian,” by Dr. J. T. M. Anderson, of Saskatchewan, and you will say “Yes!” In one or two groups at first there was opposi- tion to the learning of English, par- ticularly among the older people, but now it is difficult to find sufficient teachers to meet the demands of the schools. And it is not only in ‘the schools where you find the foreign born. More than half the students at the University of Manitoba are of foreign parentage. You find children of the foreign born as leaders in the professions and in the Cabinet of at least one Provincial Government. Canada is after all only repeating on a larger scale the welcome to and the assimilation of the foreign born which has characterized the history of the Mother Country. The MPlemish weavers and the Huguenots who found refuge in England, are but a few of the foreign born immigrants who help- ed to build up British industry. Cana- da’s chief industry is agriculture, and her agricultural prosperity is due in no small degree to the thrifty and in- dustrious new Canadians who have come to the wide acres of the West from the over-crowded lands of Eur- ope, and whose children to-day are proud to speak English and to sing “The Maple Leaf Forever.”—A.B. >. as Forest Experimental Station. The Dominion Government estab- lished about four years ago under the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior, a forest experimental sta- tion at Petawawa, Ontario. .This is on a part of the military reservation — to be careful with fire. snow leaves the forest, we dae noo?” eee Spring Forest Fires. One of the most dangerous seasons of the year in regard to forest fires is now approaching and it behoves all who go into a forest on any business last year’s leaves, grass and twigs are left as dry as tinder, dnd a lighted match or cigarette stub thrown down carelessly falls into material as inflammable as a barrel of shavings. After the spring rains come on and the new grass and new foliage starts the danger is great- ly reduced. People do not realize that just at the’ close of winter, through which there is scarcely any danger from fire in the woods, comes: on the most dangerous season. Care ‘by all who go into the woods at this time means a great reduction im the | fire-hazard. se. a ASPIRIN ae only is. Genuine Warning! Take no chances with substitutes for genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.” Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting Aspirin at all. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is. the trade mark (registered in Camada), of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid, *, se “7 A Dubious Farewell. The minister of a Scottish country parish, whose estimate of himself was not of the lowliest type, had accepted a “call” to a wider sphere, and was paying a few farewell visits: “So ye’re gaun tae leave us,” said one of the oldest of his: female parish- ioners, as he sat down, “What will “Oh, Mrs. Macfarlane,” replied the minister, in affable tones, “you'll soon get a far better man!” “Deed, sir,” came the despondent rejoinder, “I hae my doots. had five in my time, and every yin 0’ them has been waur than the last!” His Hearing Restored. The invisible ear drum invented by A, O. Leonard, which is a miniature megaphone, fitting inside the ear en- tirely cut of sight, is restoring the hearing of hundreds of people in New York City. Mr. Leonard invented this drum to relieve himself of deafness and head noises, and it does this so successfully that no one could tell he is a deaf man. It is effective when deafness is caused by catarrh or by perforated, or wholly destroyed natur- al drums. A request for information to A. O, Leonard, Suite 437, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, will be given a prompt reply. advt. Ra, tena The bee, in proportion to ibs size, is thirty-five times as strong as a horse. Minard’s Liniment for Burns, eta “Please,” gasped Mrs. Newlywed excitedly, on giving her first order to the butcher—“please send me a pound of steak and some—some gravy!” Life is constantly weighing us in very sensitive scales and telling every one of us precisely what ‘his real weight is to the last grain of dust, —Lowell, ~ When the Rheu- | -We've | we in | ” ee, en) é Se =} 7 . AE . Classified Advertisements. i. a - mee . 4 7 Y 0OL SPUN INTO YARN OR . blankets. Georgetown Woollen Mills, Ont. Pig ad paem ee ROSE te i“ s AGENTS WANTED. Herbs is a remedy for the relief of — Constipation, Indigestion, Billousness, Rheumatism, pr pigs & Troubles. It is well-known, having been extensively ad- vertised, since it was first manufactured in 1888, by distribution of large quantl- ties of Almanacs, Cook Books, Heaith Books, etc. which are furnished to agents free of charge. The remedies are sold at a price that allows agents to double their money. Write Alonzo O. Bliss Medical Co., 124 St. Paul St. Hast. Montreal. Mention this paper. ; Wisps of Wisdom. Luck is a good thing to trust in— if you aren’t hungry. Contentment is better than —if you have them both. An echo is the only thing that can cheat a woman out of the last word, Meet trials with smiles and they vanish; face cares with a song and they flee. Do not measure your enjoyment by — the amount of money spent in pro- — ducing it. : | , A man who allows himself to be carried away with enhusiasm often has to walk back. It is the height of folly to throw up attempting because you have failed, Failures are wonderful elements in developing character. a ——— * + MONEY ORDERS. It is always safe to send a Dominion Express. Money Order. Five dollars costs three cents, Women are permitted to drive mobtor-buses in the streets of Tokio, Japan. Minard’s Liniment Reileves Distemper “The head of.a child does not in- crease in size after the seventh. year,” says a screntist. Scottish Customer (to dentist):— “Hoots, mon, five chillin’ for a wes bit tooth. No, no; the man over the road pulled oot two an’ broke me jaw for one and saxpence.’ 3 xg ; Li heh ; ets Co AE ee be Gees P| 7 HIDES-WGOL-FURSs DEACON SKINS—The handl- f& ing of these skins {Ss our spe- cialty. It avill pay you to ship to us if you have three or more skins, but on a less number the freight charges are too heavy. = WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED : WOODSTOCK, ONTARIO be ESTABLISHED i870 Se COARSE SALT LAND SALT Buik Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS Cc. J. CLIFF - TORONTO ee ee eR America’s Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on. .| BOG BISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. eX. Clay Glover Co., Ino, 118 West 3ist Street New York, U.S.A. B For Rheumatism, } q Neuralgia, Gout, | BAUME BENGUE | for quick and sure relief, my BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES gx f $1.00 a tube fa THE LEEMING MILES €O., LTD. ea MONTREAL mM Agents for Dr. Jules Bengué § a RELIEVES PAIN GENTS WANTED: BLISS NATIVE ~ riches that is not required at the present time for miliary purposes. The tract is admirably situated for the purpose, as it is a territory from which the timber has been cut in the past fifty or sixty years, and he new forest is _Three Ontario Potato tests gave an average gain of 50 bushels per -#/ acre, and corn tests an increase of 28 hushels per acre. 2% Indiana Station has just announced a gain of $167.00 per acre for an- expenditure of $63.00 in’ tile, lime and fertilizers. i Ovder your fertilizers Now—and make ‘sure of the plantfood supply. Boy = Booklets free on request. monhial of a man whose condition had } . at ‘been similar to mine, and who strong- ; > | RUM SES ryse or ape ge (fOr Boy -Scout. Officers and Leaders, ity. recommended « Dro Williams’ “Pink |. Ses oes ; +: phas now a contemporary in “Scout- PPila. 1 decided to give this medicine |, —-,, ..., : : ; a . | ing,’ a similar paper published by the | a fair-trial, and when I had taken six uskatchewun: —=Provinal> hobancH | . . . : hs al § ~- A" at . i boxes I felt much better. I continued ge “The Trail,” ~ Ontario’s publication 4 : tll "The Flat Oil Paint For Interior Decoration . | any room in your house, most secured by the use It is cheaper and more sanitary than wall paper and will last much longer because it can be washed, = For the walls and ceilings of ee: gee ane frarmonious effects can be of NEU-T ONE. without injury. It positively will not rub -'NEU-TONE is made in eightedn shades, and by the use of various tate A —s_ most pleasing combinations may b¢ sec et -- MARTIN-SENOUR | so. PAINTS AND. VARNISHES : fe Sea “ . Ye covers well and leaves no brush marks, _ NEU-TONE io easy to apply Tt covers we Set pase sh 45 any tobe: : - producing a dull, sof, ve ; vety finish which ap the house: b, every surface and for nearest Dealer Agent, * ae _ Any surface thay be successfully-treated with } NEU-TONE— *laster,wood, burlap or metal. There i¢-a special MARTIN-SENOUR product for every purpose, or write us direct, Our booklet “Town and Country Homes" mailed free on request. _ PRODUCERS OF PAINTS AND VARNISHES - yinuece MONTREAL nauran | Bie MARTIN-SENOUR Go | : f Seittid 74 NT @ 4 5 VARNISHES 74 196% Pure” Paint For Suildings, outside and in, © SENOUR'S off, FLOOR ) PAINT ‘Lt wears and wears and wears, ‘*Varnoleum’”’ beautifies and preserves Qil Cloth and Line leu, i Macble-Ite”” ‘fish eggs a | ber, $ Floor Finish — The one perfect floor finish, #4 Wood-Lac” Stain ~ ‘onsull our Improves the new—rencws a | Minard’s Lintment for taking the pills until I had taken six more boxes, and I can only say I am | glad I did so, as 1am now enjoying:-the best of health, and [ advise all men who feel run down to give these pills a good trial.” . Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills can be ob- tained from any dealer in mediciné, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams’ Metficine Co., Brockville, Ont, Large Telane of Whitefish Eggs. The Dominioh Fisheries Branch re- -ports that upwards of 50,000,000 white- have been placed in the Smoke Island hatchery, Lake Winat- pegosis. These eggs were collected at the mouth of the Waterhen river, which carries the discharge of Lake Winnipegcsis to Waterhen Lake, thence to Lake Manitoba. With Lake Winnipegosis freezng early in Novem- the greatest difficulty was ex- perienced in securing the eggs, the tug and outfit finding it necessary to winter at the egg-collecting camp. The collection of 1920 is treble the quan- tity collected the previous year, oe — In skating, as in no other sport, man has succeeding in imitating the flight of birds, especially of the birds that soar¢and float, like gulls,, hawks and vultures. move for hours without apparent ef- fort, and with no violent motion- of arms or legs. He progresses, as the yf | bird does, by constantly changirxg the equilibrium of his body. To perceive watch a group of skaters from a point high up in some lofty. building, 7 : ag . Dandru ~ te _| There are both racial psychology and) ie SE a 5 = MESES Pes : Mi nerd’s: ti niment Relieves A good skater will} \the likeness. and the beauty of it, | where closed windows shut out the sound of the steel on the ice, and the orfly impression comes through the by man can compare in richness of atory to the worthy and desirable. Both are greatly appreciated by those for whom they are published and are already wielding a big influence in co-ordinating the work of the Boy scout Movement throughout their re- “pective provinces. -~ * oe a * Persons interested in the Wolf Cubs the junior branch of Scouting—will be glad to know that a new bookl&t describing their work is now ‘avail- able from. Provincial Scout Head- quarters, Blocr and Sherbourne Sts., Toronto, upon application. What One of the Best Known Travellers in Canada Says. “Now I am going to give you an-un- solicited testimonial, as they say in the patent medicine advertising. Heretofore f have had a profound contempt for patent medicines, particularly so-called liniments. _Perhaps thiS is due to the reason that I have been blessed with a sturdy constitution, and have never been ill a day in my life. One day last fall after a hard day’s tramp in the slush of Montreal, I developed a severe pain in. my legs and, of course, like a man who has never had anything wrong with him physically, 1 complained rather boisterously. The good little wife says: ‘Il will rub them with some liniment I have.” ‘Go ahead’ I Said, just to humor her. Well, in she comes with a bottle of MINARD’S LINIMENT and. gets busy. Believe me the pain disapneared a few minutes. after, and you can tell the world I said so.” SB (Signed) FRANK E. JOHNS, Montreal. ~ What other language -ever spoken opportunity with English? Take, for example, these words: self-conceit,|: self-assurance, self-sufficiency, self- complacency, self-will, self-confidence, self-esteem, self-reliance, self-respect. All of them express something of a man’s mental attitude toward his own! abilities and achievements, yet with what various and delicate shades of meaning! As they are here set down they form almost a progressive series | from the neutral or mildly condemn- history in that Ist.” fee Ee coming on in various stages ef growth and different kinds of trees. The tract resembles so much of the cut-over lands in Ontario and Quebec that the results of the experiments made in it will be applicable over a great ex- tent of Hastern Canada. The experi- ments cover too wide a range to be gone into in a brief note, but, in a word, the result will be to show how quickly forests of different kinds of trees grow, and how best to handle‘a cut-over or burned-over forest area in order to get a crop of pine, or spruce, or birch, or any other desired tree ready for the saw. Already valuable information has been secured and this will be increased as each year goes. by and the effects of the different meth- ods of treatment become visible. - +—_ —__.--_--__.. * Penalty of Success. No man desires defeat; and yet When all the balloting is o’er, The loser need no longer fret; The winner has to work still more. oe i * MINIT IAP L MEPS NA NANA NA NAN a AP Na PNPM Malt 2 : 3 2 ' * Ww i ra ’ * * j - = ; EE without Pain) | RS an Be a 2) Magic! Drop a little “Freezone” on Lift Right Off — without Pain an aching corn, instantly that corn ‘stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Doesn't hurt a i ~ Your druggis or corn between the toes. and calluses. > Pe +> % ¢ 92 : ee at In seme pacts of Central “Africa it ‘is-a mark of respect to tura the baci upen one’s superior. 3 PPA Py ene ae®y Your ist sells a tiny bottle of ,.; “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient! § , to remove every hard corn, soft corn, The smoothest looking axle is rough and pitted under the microscope, The powdered mica in Imperial Mica Axle Grease fills inthis roughness and makes every rubbing surface smooth. Grease can then lubricate prop- erly and will last twice as long as it ordinarily would. . Imperial Mica Axle Grease is the best and most economical # grease you can buy for your. § wagons and trucks. a: Leather is honeycombed with pores—thousands of them to every square inch. Topre- § vent these §& tiny open- ings from absorbing dust, sweat and moisture use Imperial — - Bureka Har- — mess Oil. a. It closes up the pores of leather and keeps it strong, flexible and new-looking. & It contains .no acids and ~ jt will not turn rancid, Farmers, teamsters and liverymen use and recom- mend it. Sold in convenient sizes by dealers everywhere. _' ld Reh ME Cuticura Soap Shampoos Best For Children If you wish them to have thick, healthy hair through life shampoo regularly with Cuticura Soap and | hot water. Before shampocing touch spots of dandruff and itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment. A clean, healthy scalp usually means good hair. Soap 25c. Ointment 25and5%. Talcum25c. Sold throughout the Dominion. Canadian Depot: Lymans, Limited, 344 St. Paci St., W., Montreal. "Cuticura Soe> shave: without mug. OUCH! ANOTHER RHEUMATIC TWINGE = Get busy and relleve those paina with that handy bottle of ~Sloan’s Liniment HAT Sloan's does, it does thors ; W oughly—penetrates without rub- "bing to the afflicted part and promptly relieves most kinds of exter-_ nal pains and aches. You'll find it cledn and non-skin-staining. Keep it handy for sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia, over-exerted muscles, stiff joints, back- ache, pains, bruises, strains, sprains, - bad weather after-effects. J , For 39 years Sloan’s Liniment has. helped thousands the world over. You aren’t likely to be an exception. It cere tainly does produce results. Al druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40.