Porcupine Advance, 20 Feb 1936, 2, p. 4

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TIMMINS, ONTARIO Members Canadian Werkly Newspaper Association; Ontlarinâ€" Quebot Newspaper Association; Class "A" Weekly Group OFFICE 2%6â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"PHONESâ€"â€"â€"â€"RESIDENCE 70 Published Every Monday and Tharsday by: GEO LAKE, Owner and Publisher Subscription Rates: Canadaâ€"$2,00 Per Year Uniteqg Statesâ€"$3.00 Per Yea:s Next week will be Education Week in Canada. The week is sponsored by the Canadian Teachers‘ Federation with the purpose of focusing the special attention of the people in general on the educaâ€" tional problems of the day. If the plan succeeds, if. there is special interest shown in education, if the people become "educationâ€"conscious," to use a modern cant phrase that isn‘t particularly creditâ€" able to education, then a worthy purpose will have been achieved. . Ah t if. there is special interest shown in education, if : A writer in a psychological journal has attempt-‘ the people become "educationâ€"conscious," to use ai ed to prove that most people are gullible. Wheni modern cant phrase that isn‘t particularly creditâ€" the journal accepted his article, his case was partâ€" able to education, then a worthy purpose will have ly proven. When readers perused it carefully, he been achieved. ! was still further advanced in the proof of his conâ€" The Canadian Teachers‘ Federation suggestsi tention. With the article discussed in editorials that the hope of Education Week is not to advance in newspapers throughout the country the Ccase any special theories as to the proper solution seems to be fully proven. Apparently, people are‘ certain educational problems that may have aris-{ gullible. Probably it is a good thing for every~{ en, but rather to induce general thought and study| body that nearly everybody is gullible. If some so that in the multitude of counsellors there may| people were not gullible, a whole lot of people be safety, and that the reforms that may come| would have to go to work,â€"if there was anybody may be supported by an intelligent public. . In| gullible enough to give them a chance to work. other words what is asked is study, consideration.? Just how gullible people are may be exemplified discussion. s when attempt is made to find out what "gullible" Many will feel that the solution of the problems| means. Most people are gullible enough to believe ‘as well as the facts of the case will be most likelyi that a dictionary will give the meaning 0f a word. to come from the teachers themselves. A perusali "Gullible" is defined as "easily gulled or imposed of some of the literature they have issued in re-| upon; credulous." Then "credulous" is defined as gard to Education Week would appear to support| "gullible; easily imposed upon." such a view. They are in close touch with the The writer of the article on gullibility seems to questions involved, have given years of labour and| be himself among the gullible. He is gullible study to the matter, and have personal and patriâ€"| enough to imagine that he can gull the people with otic interest alike in the results that may be won| his gullibility tests. He has a list of test questions, from changes and improvements. But to say bhat! for each of which he demands a direct yes Or no. the public would be pleased to follow the lead Of| If he were not gullible he would know that few the teachers in the matter, and to do no more] questions can be answered without some explanaâ€" about it, would be to defeat the very purpose of| tion or elucidation. It was a gullible lawyer who Education Week. There is every reason to believel insisted on the witness answering yes or no to each that any solution decided upon by the teachers or| question. The lawyer was gullible enough to ofâ€" the educational authorities alone will prove unâ€"| fer to answer any question the witness might ask, satisfactory, because it will miss the viewpoint of /using no more than yes or no. "Have you quit the public and the facts that may be known to the| beating your wife yet?" was the test question of nannla alimnna â€"ITf the aim Of Educration Week is|â€"the witness. Many will feel that the solution of the problems as well as the facts of the case will be most likely to come from the teachers themselves. A perusal of some of the literature they have issued in reâ€" gard to Education Week would appear to suppogt such a view. They are in close touch with the questions involved, have given years of labour and study to the matter, and have personal and patriâ€" otic interest alike in the results that may be won from changes and improvements. But to say that the public would be pleased to follow the lead of the teachers in the matter, and to do no more about it, would be to defeat the very purpose of Education Week. There is every reason to believe that any solution decided upon by the teachers or the educational authorities alone will prove unâ€" satisfactory, because it will miss the viewpoint of the public and the facts that may be known to the people alone. If the aim of Education Week is achieved in any full measure, and there is general study, discussion, argument, the chances for a right solution will be greatly enhanced. Much of what is said by the Canadian Teachers‘| trouble to answer them. mnost gUIiLIViC JCUpAL Federation appears to be beyond question, and with the due appreciation and support of the pubâ€" lic, the plans indicated would no doubt prove as close to the ideal as it is possible to come in this he was right to a considerable extent, for he reâ€" ceived a great many answers. Some of the gullible questions are:â€"‘"Are you a practical person?" "Are you fearful of getting into an argument?" "Do you ever question the opinion of an authority?" (How could a married man answer that one yes or no, however gullible he might be?) "Are you imperfect world. The Advancte, however, quesâ€" tions whether the tendency to emphasize the value‘ of increased central authority and control is a| desirable one. Indeed, it seems as if this is one| fervently religious?" "Do you believe in the use thing that the public at the present time shouldl aof drugs?"‘ "‘Do you ever‘ visit fortuneâ€"tellers?" oppose in earnest fashion. Never before in the| "Do you believe in nudism?" (With the temperaâ€" history of Canada has there been so decided a| ture as it is that question might be answered to the trend to centralization of authority. It has reach-‘ satisfaction of the most gullible). "Do you believe ed a stage whnere thoughts of a Mussolini or a Hitâ€"| in hypnotism?" ler in the Dominion do not seem as impossible as; The gullible article proved to the gullible author they would have done a few years ago. It may be; that nearly everybody else is gullible. As the gullâ€" no more than a passing world phase, but it is here.i ible old lady said to her gullible old friend:;â€""I‘m Municipal councils seem to be encroaching on the§ afraid that there are only two good people in al) rights of school boards. Certainly there have| the villageâ€"myself and the minister,â€"and I’m] been striking examples lately of the provincial| not too sure sometimes about the minister." . | ' government deliberately stealing the rights Off The gullible writer seems to be gulled with the municipalities. . Then the provincial governmentsi idea that everybody is gullible, and that is too at the moment are loud in their boasts that they| gullibly bad. But what a sad world it would be will defend provincial rights against all attemptâ€"| without the gullible! There would be no progress, ed inroads by the Dominion authorities. In each| no interest, no fun, no nothing but dry old ingulâ€" case the justification of the theft of rights is along] libility (if there is anybody gullible enough to beâ€" the line that the smaller government has been; lieve there is such a word). The gullible Stephenâ€" wasteful or incompetent. The Dominion governâ€"| son dreamed in his credulous way of the steam enâ€" ment attempts to assume greater control of whati gine. The gullible Pasteur set everybody killing has hitherto been considered strictly: provincial| germs. The gullible Edison, the gullible Alexandâ€" affairs, because it is claimed that greater efficiency| er Graham Bell, and thousands of other gullibles will be secured in this way. The provincial govâ€"| gulled themselves and the gullible world into beâ€" ernment abrogates the undoubted rights of muniâ€"| lieving in gullible blessings and advances. Withâ€" out gullibility there would be no spanish prisoners, no gold bricks, no crooners, only a few newspapers, and a lot more apparently brutal murders. Asg it is in this gullible world, the gullible are the hapâ€" piest. What is needed is more of the right sort of gullibility and less of the other sort. e e t c o cce i ce es m ty i t o ce n ce ie nc en GRAVEL AND SANDâ€"AND PLACER lt lt l P PP um t P cipalities and the little excuse offered is Oonly tog suggest that municipalities have not been showing perfect judgment. Towns and cities attempt conâ€"| trol of school boards for similar alleged cause. The theories for centralization are all favourable. The facts are otherwise. School boards may have. been wasteful and incompetent, but the towns and% cities have left them in the shade in this particuâ€" lar. If towns and cities have been extravagant, they have been pikers in comparison to any or all; of the provincial governments. Provincial govâ€" ernments in their turn are far outdistanced for, apparent wastefulness or incompetence by Dominâ€" L. utm .A ie t l P Ssome Canadian newspapers have been finding fault with The London Daily Telegraph for pubâ€" lishing an article in which it is stated that in Canâ€" ada people often find it necesary to equip theil ion governments. Education Week will prove one| cats with snowshoes to enable the animals to move of the greatest boons in the history of Canada it‘l about in the deep snow. Misinformation of simiâ€" it will rouse people to study the quiet encroachâ€"| lar kind often appears in British papers. The ment on their individual liberty and the marked| North on more than one occasion has suffered tendency, at least in Ontario, to l;uild a Soviet from such misinformation. But the British form of administration, with power centred in the| papers are not altogether to blame. Some cenâ€" hands of a committee of ambitious czars. § ! sure should also go to those Canadians whose perâ€" Timmins, Ont., Thursday, Feb. 20th, 193 it will rouse people to study the quiet encroach-i lar kind often appears in British papers. The ment on their individual liberty and the markedi North on more than one occasion has suffered tendency, at least in Ontario, to Quild a Soviet) from such misinformation. But the British form of administration, with power centred in the| papers are not altogether to blame. Some cenâ€" hands of a committee of ambitious czars. ! sure should also go to those Canadians whose perâ€" There are changes and improvements necessary| verted humor tempts them to pass on such allegâ€" in the educational system of Ontario. These’ed items of, information. There are Canadian should be carefully weighed and studied duringi newspapers that publish animal and other stories Education Week, and after. Education Week that equal The London Telegraph‘s cat with snowâ€" would also seem to be a specially appropriate time| shoes. Of course, at their home towns or cities the to recall that while there is "no royal road to| truth may be known, but even there readers find it learning," it is equally true that there are no difficult to separate the facts from the fancies. euts to good government, either in education or% and the wise ones count all as humour and let it in anything else. Under the present system thez go at that. It is difficult to know how London. people can secure an approximation to the type| England, newspaper could guard itself against of education they desire. Some sections no doubt‘ some of the startling misinformation sometime© Che Yorrupine Aduancee have better facilities than others. The general improvement of the backward sections in large measure must await the growth of public opinion. Central authority may help in various ways. Unâ€" til it shows a greater desire for unselfish service | than evidenced so far, it does not appear wise to | extend its authority. The closing down of Monâ€" ‘ teith Academy is one example of what a central authority may do in practice, as against the pleasâ€" ing theories that may be advanced. In sponsoring Education Week the Canadian Teachers‘ Federation seems to have kept in mind the proverb, "In the multitude of counsellors there is safety." During Education Week it would be vwell, indeed, if the people extended this thought to the matter of selfâ€"government in this day and "Are you fearful of getting into an "Do you ever question the opinion of an authority?" (How could a married man answer that one yes or no, however gullible he might be?) "Are you fervently religious?" "Do you believe in the use aof drugs?"‘ "‘Do you ever‘ visit fortuneâ€"tellers?" "Do you believe in nudism?" (With the temperaâ€" ture as it is that question might be answered to the satisfaction of the most gullible). "Do you believe in hypnotism?" The gullible article proved to the gullible author that nearly everybody else is gullible. As the gullâ€" ible old lady said to her gullible old friend:;â€"*"I‘m afraid that there are only two good people in all the villageâ€"myself and the minister,â€"and â€" I‘m not too sure sometimes about the minister." _ The gullible writer seems to be gulled with the idea that everybody is gullible, and that is too gullibly bad. But what a sad world it would be without the gullible! There would be no progress, no interest, no fun, no nothing but dry old ingulâ€" libility (if there is anybody gullible enough to beâ€" lieve there is such a word). The gullible Stephenâ€" son dreamed in his credulous way of the steam enâ€" gine. The gullible Pasteur set everybody killing germs. The gullible Edison, the gullible Alexandâ€" er Graham Bell, and thousands of other gullibles gulled themselves and the gullible world into beâ€" lieving in gullible blessings and advances. Withâ€" out gullibility there would be no spanish prisoners, no gold bricks, no crooners, only a few newspapers, and a lot more apparently brutal murders. Asg it is in this gullible world, the gullible are the hapâ€" is in this gullible world, the gullible are the hapâ€" piest. What is needed is more of the right sort of gullibility and less of the other sort. ARE YOU GULLIBLE? THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS Sovereign has Many Littleâ€"Known Rights Can Restrict Lord Chancelâ€" lor‘s Holidays, Censor Plays in Royal Boroughs, Has No Need for Car Plates. Custom, necessity, prudence and sevâ€" ecral other causes have keen responsible from time to time for strange rights attacheq to the lives of British Soverâ€" eigns, On his accession King Edward VIII automatically assumes many new and littleâ€"known rights and privileges. The King, for instance, has the auâ€" thority to govern the holidays of one member of the Cabinet to a considerâ€" able extent. The Minister concerned is the Lord Chancellor and Keeper of the Great Seal,. Upon no account must this Cabinet Minister go abroadâ€"even on holidayâ€"without first receiving the King‘s permission. This particular right of His Majesty‘s is, of course, of fairly ancient origin. Toâ€"day it is hardly likely that ~the Lord Chancellor‘s wish to leave Engâ€" land temporarily on any occasion would be refusscd, unless it were likely to be detrimental to the State. C The rights associated with British Royalty in other similar directions are so numerous as to be almost bewilderâ€" ing. In places containing a Royal palâ€" ace, such as Windsor, the theatres come under Royal jurisdiction. King Edward has the right to veto there any play that does not meet with his approval. Every play, and other productions pressgnted at the theatres in those places, in@sed, must have Royal sanction, a copy of the script beâ€" ing sent for approval in advance. The right is similar to that of the film censor and the watch committees of cities and towns, but in the case of places with a Royal Palace, the right to sanction or prevent the theatre shows really rests with the King. The task of reading such plays is naturally too big for the personal attention of His Maâ€" josty; neither is it undertaken by the Lord Chamberlain, upon whom the duty directly descends. There is a speâ€" cial official for the work, who is simply styled "The Royal Examiner of Plays." Another Royal right, of very ancient origin, again relates to the palaces. In olden days, a strip of land 200 yards wide around the Royal residences, came within the King‘s jurisdiction. He had the final "say" in matters affecting this immediate neighbourhood of his palace. The result is that in one or two cases matters in the vicinity of the preâ€" sentâ€"day Royal houses are beyond the authority of the local council. An example is to be found in the heart of London itself. Whitehall Palâ€" ace in the past had one of these 200â€" yard strips encirceling it, and even toâ€" day there are licensed houses in the neighbourhood of Whitehall that do not require permission from the London County Council to keep their doors open. Their licenses come from the Kingâ€"or, more strictly, from the King‘s representative, in these matters, the Lord High Steward. It is common knowledge that the King has the right to run a car on the roads of Great Britain without, number platesâ€"a right which no other person can sucecssfully claim. Even as Prince of Wales, Edward VIII dig not posstss a similar right, Less widely known is the fact that the King‘s car carries a purple light on the roof, in order that advantage may be taken of another right, the right of priority over other traffic. This Royal privilege, however, is usually confined to the occasions when the King is travelling to fulfill a public engagement and a timetable must be strictly adhered to. Royal weddings in recent years have made well known some of the rights associated â€" with Royal marriages. Among other privileges of the King in this direction is the right to sanction or deal othsrwise with the list of bridesmaids. The bridal dress must be approved, too. There is a similar privilege in conâ€" nection viith the debutantes presentsd at Court each year. The King issues instructions concerning the length of the dresses and so on. FPurther rights are associated ~â€"with Royal train journeys. The statiqn-/.,.mas- thrust upon it. Canadian newspapers, on their side, often publish misinformation about the Old Country. At least there are occasional uprisings of Britishâ€"born peoples here in Canada to say so. Perhaps, if there were not so many Britishâ€"born here, a certain or uncertain Toronto newspaper would be forward with stories of London, England, cats having to wear blue goggles to be able to get around in some of the fogs. As a matter of fact some Canadian newspaper stories of London fogs are like the cat‘s snowshoes. Commons what clemency, if any, is to be extended by His Majesty King Edward VIIIL. to inmates of Canadian penal institutions. For a great many years in a great many countries, it has been a cusâ€" tom to mark the accession of a new monarch by showing favour to men serving prison terms. It appears to be a particularly foolish form of celeâ€" bration. It may appeal to some who allow themâ€" selves to be swayed by false sentimentality. Probâ€" ably these people would be equally pleased at the release of all in mental hospitalsâ€"poor fellows! The release of a great many of the type Oof people serving sentences in penitentiaries can hardly be justified. Why not try something new this time? King Edward VIII. is a modern monarch, with oriâ€" ginal character. Why not do something for the est of his subjects, instead of the worst? Why T. L. Church, M.P., has asked in the House of (By Arthur Nettleton) ter at each station along the route must await the Royal train on the platform, and each bridge over the line must be guarded. Spccial rights come into force when the King travels in Scotland, for on these occasions many British rights lapse, and Scottish ones take their places, His Majesty has his own Seotâ€" tish Court officials, and he takes on privileges that go not exist when he is in England. ONTARIO Indeed, the rights associated with British Royalty are so numerous that probably nobody knows them offâ€"hand in their entirety. One person cout of every dies ahead of his or her time of diseases which could be prevented. Sound auâ€" thentic estimates show that from two to thrse per cent. of the population is continually on the sick list. Of these between 91 per cent. and 96 per cent. are ill enough to be disabled so that between 1.8 per cent. and 2.9 per cent. (let us estimate conservatively, 2 per cent.) of our population is always too sick to work. Two per cent. of Canada‘s population is 180,000 persons and that is an expensive and dangerous sick list. Public Health officials agree that sickness costs the people of Canada over $311,000,000 per year. Almost nineâ€" tenths of this is a direct charge upon the individual. But the loss in man power is infinitely more staggcfing. Canada needs larger population. Yet she is allowing so many Canadian lives to be taken by disease that an estiâ€" mate places the loss in the future earnâ€" ings of those sacrificed at over $500,â€" 000,000 per year. Out of Every Three One Dies Too Young Two per Cent of Canada‘s Population on Sick List. Cost of Illness a Serious Matter. These statements are made by Dr. Gordon Bates, General Director of the Health League of Canada, in a recent article in the current number of the Canadian Public Health Journal advoâ€" cating the nscessity for nationâ€"wide hbealth education in Canada. "The problems of sickness and health have more than a personal significance. They have a social significance and an economical one. The country with the highest sickness rate and the highest mortality rate is probably, at the most, a backwarga country," writes Dr. Bates. "If we allow our babies to die for lack of clean milk or because our moâ€" thers do not feed them properly we retard, by our neglect, economic and social progress. Similarly, if instead of running into debt to build hospitals and asylums, because of an adequate comâ€" munity conscience we adequately supâ€" port our health departments, train our physicians in preventive medicine and keep our citizens alive to the need of spending money as it should be spent to conserve health, by so doing we speed up economic and social progress." Referring to the toll of deaths from preventable ‘diseases, Dr. Bates cites the instance of diphtheria with up to 13,500 cases in a single comparatively recsnt year. These cases have resulted in as many as 1200 deaths, although in the year 1933 this was reduced to 200. Typhoid fever was responsible for over 1100 deaths in a single year recently. In the year 1933 there were only 280. Tuberculosis killed 7000 in a single year and the toll of cancer has increased to 10,000 in a single year. Heart disease has increased to 14,000 in a single ysar and from 1200 to 1300 mothers die in childbirth annually, Referring to the efforts of the Federâ€" al Government and the Provincial Govâ€" ernments to inaugurate a greater camâ€" paign of health education, Dr. Bates wrote: "The conference of ministers in Ottawa last May was aptly styled a Cabinet of Health for Canada. In the meantime it stems to me that individuâ€" als and organizations interested must do everything possible to call to public attention the facts of healith and the need for hsalth education. Education as to personal health must be to a deâ€" gree futile if we do not build up official machinery in the form of well staffed departments of health covering not only a portion of the Dominion, but the entire Dominion, not limiteqg to a few of the wealthy municipalities but covering poorer municipalities and rurâ€" ruot, for instance, declare a moratorium for a month, or a year, for the poor, honest, struggling Or is there any clemency in this world toâ€"day for the poor, honest, taxpayer? In an address at a bangquet given by mining men in Montreal in honour of Hon. T. A. Crerar, Dominâ€" ion Minister of Mines, J. M. Forbes, president cf 1 the Montreal branch of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metalurgy, paid wellâ€"deserved tribute to the late Noah A. Timmins. His reference to the late Mr. Timmins as "Canada‘s greatest prosâ€" pector‘" was more appropriate than most people may imagine. The late Mr. Timmins was much more than a financial backer of mines. He had the pioneering, the prospecting spirit, and most of the properties in which he became interested passâ€" ed under his own personal inspection. At the banquet given here on the occasion of the twentyâ€" fifth anniversary of the discovery of Porcupine mines, Mr. Timmins had many chats with oldâ€"time prospectors who had walked the trails with him. Johnny MacLeod on that occasion recounted with great satisfaction stories of times when he and Mr. Timmins had done actual prospecting toâ€" gether. There were other similar reminiscences. Noah A. Timmins has genuine claim to the title, "Canada‘s Greatest Prospector," because of the personal interest and effort he gave to the develâ€"~â€" opment of Canada‘s mineral resources, and Iht-: ducation | to a deâ€" ) official Mother Test Mrs. J. Steele, House P.O., ] writes: *"When dren took cough, nothin; QUICKL ' any good unt Buckley‘s, e o n T o P i o almost ‘imme EY coughing sps disappeared. céase to hb q | . MIXTURB nd rurâ€" J REFVSE SUVBSTITUVTES: t"(i L O d ities but Buckley‘s.‘ al, well Stressing the need for government interest in national health Dr. Batts writes: "I suggest that it is necessary to hammer into the minds and consâ€" ciousness of the average man who votes, elects and is elected to our muniâ€" cipal councils, our legislative assemblies and our Dominion parliament the need for health legislation. I suggest that this is necessary because the average man who is as yvet unaware of the sigâ€" nificance of community health is senâ€" sitive to any influence which touches his personal pocketbook and hence in some degree to anything which depletes the community pocketbook. As a matâ€" ter of fact anything that affects the community finantially in the long run does affect the individual." Lad Killed by Traimm in Blizzard Saturday The pitiful story of how an underâ€" ncurished, poorly clad 14â€"yearâ€"old lad was killsd on Saturday in the midst of a blizzard that was sweeping down from the North, drowning sights and sounds, has been completed. Johnny Cudmore, who lived with his parents some miles from Porquis Juntâ€" tion, set out with his dog and sleigh on Saturday to get grocerics at the Junction. It was a stormy, cold day but the lad made the trip successfulâ€" ly. He was returning home in the eveâ€" ning, driving into the worst of the storm, when a T. N. O. passsnger train, boung for Cochrane from Porâ€" quis Junction, struck him, and killed him instantly. The dog died too and the sled and groceries lay scattered along‘ the right of way. Johnnie Cudmore _ Meets Death While on . W a y Home â€" withâ€" Groceries. Trainmen Unaware of Tragedy. ‘The engineer of the train never knew anything had been struck. It was not until some hours later t.ha} the accident was discovered. The lad must have besn near exâ€" haustion when he died. He had jourâ€" neyed many miles that day, breaking trails through the fresh blown snow. When found, many bones of the boy‘s body were broken, indicating that death must have been instantaneous. He wore few clothes, considering the coldness of the weather. North Bay Nugget:â€"Cheer up. Six months from now you‘ll be kicking about the heat, it is to be hoped. even spal lv ttled Canada as THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20TH, 1936 There was bang. McDonald recovâ€" eerd consciousnessâ€"on his back, his clothing blown or from his body. The chamber was knocked to pieces. The cat hasn‘t been seen since. You can‘t be Sure € 4 4 € <b 4 ave They Looked for This Cat in Sault Ste. Marie? A meeting of those intsrested in the Timmins Building Company Limited will ‘be held in the 1LO.0.F. hall on Monday evening, All members of the company are expecteg to turnâ€"out, as this is tue annual meeting. Meeting of the Timmins Building Company Mond: (Stratforgqg Braconâ€"Herald) Just to show "it could . done," Rebe Leblanc mushed from ~Montreal to Winnipeg, a distance of 1400 miles, in 30 days, with five dogs, not all trained huskies, there being only two of that breed, the others being a fox terrier, a collie and a Great Dane. Mr. Leblanc has been receiving praise {for the feat, and having done it we hope he will not attempt the journey The Credit in This Case Should All Go to the Dogs cack to show do not see th: of â€"value to | complishment human being Montreal and But if any praise is due we think it should go to the dogs. They had to do all the hauling, ang when one considers that they had to average nearly 50 miles a day it is obvious they were subâ€" jected to terrific strain, especially when one of them was a fox terrier which would not be able to do much â€"pulling. 14 Pine St. N "That your eyes are normal unless you have them examâ€" ined. Â¥Ycour eyes may be deâ€" fective from birth and as you‘ve never experi¢nced betâ€" terâ€" visionâ€" you don‘t realize how well normal eyes can see. There is one way to be sure you can seeâ€" perfectlyâ€"have them examined by a compeâ€" tent optometrist." OPTICAL COMPANY will not how "it e that I| almost immediate coughing spasms ¢ disappeared. I‘l céase to be gra Buckley‘s."‘ r Testifies Steele, Stanley Q0., Muskoka, ‘"When our chilâ€" ook whooping nothing did them od until we tried it 11 Relief thers being a fox Great Dane. ‘n receiving praise ayving done it we empt the journey ilq be done." We is added anything knowledge or acâ€" s trip. No other _to travel between 9e that Way. I‘ll new grateful z.. quickly 1 never Phone to € V

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