wort ~~ Atlantic. ge ¢ New Ideas For Cheaper Roads - Scienfists. are constantly seeking --methods for making roads that will ~carry the tremendous loads of mod- ern trafic, and yet will cost less than those we now construct. They may be.on fhe right track with the new "plastic" roads now "being developed. on both sides of the At the military engineering. ex- perimental establishment at Christ- church, ITampshire, they have found a way to knit. soil together in. a solid mass and make it so hard that <it will bear. 'tlic weight of 100,600 tons of vehicles per day. = They "dope" the soil with chemicals ultil it sets as hard as concrete: Then the surface is tested by a "traffic simulator," a machine which beafs nthe road as would a heavy truck. ' "Roll 'em out" Engineers clainy that a beach, a soft mud road, or a muddy pas- ture can be turned into a stable road surface by this method. "The soil, mud or sand has first to be analysed before the appro- priafe binding chemical can be scl- ected. " United States Navy technicians have "rolled out" such roads at the rate of eight niles per hour on a beach in California. Another innovation is the use of chalk for building roads. For over two years hundreds of lorries a day have used a chalk y conserve water and return to the road at Prudhoe, Northumberland, . tien 3 : y ' soil the needed plant food and to take loads irom Prudhoc's PTET 2,000,000-ton chalk "mountain." EE . i. "ing about was. China, not Canada; 4 * * » "This nation" says.G. BR. Snyder, prominent agronomist, "wis once the centre of civilization; but today its extensive acres of barren soils stand as a' constant réminder of what the loss of fertility and pro- ductiventess will do to™a nation's well-being. So it has. been since time began that each nation pres- pered only so long adVits agricul ture prospered * L] i If those "words make you feel like ducking toward the nearest bomb-shelter, set your mind at rest. The nation Mr. Snyder was speak- and he coupled. the remark with the warning that the fate of our pre- sent civilization hinges largely -on what we do about soil conservation in the next few years. Such a warning is by no means new. But it is one that can hardly be repeated too often. » » * Fora prosperous agriculture good land management isa necessity, this soil expert states. This means the complete utilization of all lands for continued maximum production. To attain this we must. control erosion, After the minal flattening of the surface the chalk road has remmin- ed in perfect condition A tarmac road subjected to the ~.a1.0 heavy traffic would have requiica <0 sant maintenance, yet not a pe ov has been spent on the chalk pond "A cheap, non-skid upper Lo would have to be laid on a trunk road built of chalk. Lo - "We- could then -make the Ger- man autobahns (perliaps the finest roads in Furope) look like cart tracks," said one engineer. SALLY'S SALLIES / Be V. LSE Sra A 0, ere ie og Foo Adee Yn Wad rye eet "I didn't think I had to rush those. letters -because they're going by air mail." Perfume Racket ~ In a region frequently visited by "tion in sod. By terracing and con- a a ira yo] ~~ "have inherited ~~ perfume isn't all attar of os x scent factory established in a *-psed monastery the 4 Turned the police station. dug it up in a plant root. © _ tourists -- the little white-walled = 4 SF EF TTT, NE wy, pcos JL} ir) 1 TOW or-orasse; hack or me rrentn Riviera -- 20,000 people have just reaped the world's greatest flower harvest. "Perfume is third in France's lead- "ing exports, and the Grasse per- __fumiers have "been buildini_Jabor- atories four times larger than the old ones, with stills three times as large. : = With lemons from Sicily, gera- piums from Madagascar, sandal- wood from India, tonka beans from Venezuela, French perfume is in- ternational as well as exotic. At dawn the. jasmine pickers start work in the long, sweeping fields, for jasmine loses its precious quality if touched, by sunshine. Then the lavender squads emerge. with their portable stills, process- ing flowers and stems on the spot. Lavender loses its intrinsic es- sence if moved. Carnations are at their scented zbest after precisely three hours of sunshine. Such knowledge is elementary to the Grasse \ ted family secrets through ten generations. Every year Grasse 'absorbs two million pounds of jasmine and a million pounds of roses, som€ from as far afield as Yugoslavia and North "Africa, while alcohol is shipped in by the thousand gallons, : With more than 2,000 ingredients "In dis- writer -was phown a buffalo-liern of civet scent Irom Abyssinia. Ramming a needle through the fat seal, the guide al- lowéd him to sniff. The odour was appalling. Yet civet imparts to ex- ensive perfume the lingering qual- y "that the salesmen talk about. "Lack of civet explains the brief Jfe of some --post-war perfumes. husk, too; the dried gland of the Timalayan musk-deer, has been holding up the perfume works. The Geass manufacturers buy py weight, and the Tibetans have - Deen introducing lead pellets into the boxes of tissue. There's a trick In every trade, but-the perfumiers tonsider this little racket a stinker! ------ Up: P.C. Hedges, of Long Wittenham, lost a gold ring }8 years ago, while gardening at in. His successor has experts, some of whom | "feathers has been a costly problem Erosion conmrol may be Zaccom- plished by contour ploughing, strip cropping, erecting wind breaks and keeping land too steep for cultiva- tour cropping, water can be better controlled. Stubble mulching and leaving crop residue on the sur-- face are effective in preventing both erosion and water run-off. El * * The soil, climate and nwiure of the crop determine the kinds of plant food needed. Each individual farmer must find out what nutrients his farm and crops reqhire and apply them accordingly. High per- acre vields can be obtained by keep- ing the soil nearly neutral in re- action and well supplied with or- ganic matter and available plant food by the judicious use of crop residues, green manure crops, barn- yard manure, commercial fertilizers and lime. : * x »* <The use of feathers as a iced supplement for poultry is being ex- perimented with at a western ve- gional research laboratory. Accord- ing to the rescarch workers, feathers - are high in arginine, one of the amino acids. considered essential for the feeding of poultry. In the same laboratory processed feathers are being tested as a conditioning agent in mixed organic fertilizers, in the preparation of plaster retard- ers and the manufacure of plastic articles. 3 - * _ 'I'he process consists of a-cooker,-- "drier and grinder. Feathers are cooked under pressure in saturated steam at a temperature of 287 to 307 degrees F. To obtain uniform heating, the feathers are agitated during cooking 3 Fire WF * After cooking for 30 to G0 min- utes, the steam is exhausted and the feathers transferred to drying equipment where the moisture con- tent is reduced to cght to 10 per cent. The dry, friable material is then easily ground to produce a meal or powder suitable for pack- aging in such containers. ds multi- wall paper bags. : . * * * Thousands of tons of feathers go to waste cach year in Canada be- cause no suitable method has been devised to process them economic- ally. In fact, the cost of disposing for many packers of fresh and fro- | ed meat and scparate the meat from zen poultry, Before long, however, New Sting For The Air Force-- point out features of the plane. The twin-jet travels in the 600-mile-an-hour range, and designed for day or night operations_in all weather conditions. Pas a iba Bl gi " Dain fa Here is a.cutaway view of the I-80 Scorpion. Type boxes is a Po | | - these feathers will be changed from a liability into a real asset. - * * And while we're on this -fowl subject, I might as well pass along a message which may be of value to some of you who do not only raise | poultry, but have a home freezer as well, > * * Why feed perfectly good: grain to lazy hens when it could be used ~ for human food? Do you know that these non-laying hens consume 5 to 8 pounds of costly feed™a month? Why fiot freeze these loaiers who are slowly draining the country's grain supply? With these frozen chickens in your home freezer, a chicken dinner will present no prob- lem when unexpected. company drops in. * v2 ¥ To kill birds, nse a pointed blade that tapers from a width of 2. inch at the handle to a point. Hang the fowl at a convenient height and' press lightly against the bones in the neck as the blade passes through the jugular vein, This method "in- sures rapid, thorough- bleeding. - * * » - Scald- the birds in water about 128 degrees F. for 20 to 50 seconds depending on the age of the bird. This leaves the skin in good con- dition; wheres alding at a higher temperature makes picking faster but tends to make the skin look blotchy and unattractive. Chill the.- birds in ice water or chill room immediately after they are scalded' and picked. his - SI onl imeem Ho rion sis - Noun-laying hens are likely to be big boned; therefore, the and bony picces should be ated in order to prevent a waste of storage space. Disjoint the chickens; separate the meaty picces, which include: breusts, thighs, and legs. Boies may be removed irom the legs and only the meat stored separ- meaty «can be cut into cubes of uniform size. These are just right for mak- ing wonderful crcamed chicken with your favorite recipe. * * * Meat from the necks, wings and: backs of six chickens yields approx- imately 4'4 pints. If. the legs are added, the yield is about 8 to 9 pints. Cool the chicken quickly, package, and' freeze it at zero de- grees 1°. or lower. Ancient Pottery Found In Israel Pottery from thie first Jewish kingdom to the Herodian epoch was discovered when excavators opened an ancient rock-hewn cistern in the northeastern corner of the Na- tivity' Church. in Bethlehem. The- excavators belonged to the British-staffed Department of An- tiquitics- of the Hashemite Jordan government which is carrying out restoration work "at the famous shrine. According to the 'excavators, the cistern corresponds far more to the "David's well" mentioned in the Old" Testament than the cistern in wesiern Bethlehem whicli is usually claimed to be the historic well. They said that "the close con- nection between the cistern-and the Nativity grotto tends to confirm the tradition that the grotto was a sub- terrancan stable." The cistern has seemingly been untouched since "the Roman destruction of Bethle- hem .in 70 A.D. Some Records For You To Shoot At Do you want to break a world record? Here is a selection of challenges, er led --to-preserve--spaees--Fhe--back, wings and necks may be made into tasty creamed chicken, Ein * * * er Birds must be packaged in mois- ture-proof, vapor-resistant wrappers which "can be scaled tightly, Use 'medium or small containers accord- ing to your family's needs. Cartons may be labeled with the. iate and contents. A fold of cellophane should be placed between. the pieces before packing to prevent sticking together, Frozen chicken may be cooked without thawing in either stew or fricassee. * * * / In preparing creamed chicken, ~ cover the bony pieces. with salt water and simmer until tender. A small bag of herbs (12 teaspoon thyme and ¥ teaspoon marjoram may be added to the cooking water as a mild seasoning. Cool the cook-_ skin and fat. In stripping the bones, try to have good sized pieces thaf] 1 " i ALE Comin' Round The Mountain--Demonstrating. his skiing skill on a mountainside, John Litchfield, 34, executive director of Sun Valley Ski School, is the first American ever to head a major ski. school anywhere in the world. Litchfield was "a "member of the 1940 American Olympic ski team. F-- LET TY » I i i i It is on record that a man can hold his breath "for 20 minutes § seconds; stay under water for 6 minutes, 29 seconds; live without sleep for 115 hours; run 5,625 miles in 59 days; live in a heat of 248 ' degrees Fahrenheit; live in a cold of 103 degrees below . . . All you have to do is do better. Sixty-four Vancouver smokers recently gathered to see how long they could make a pipe last. The winner kept his one-cighth of an "cunce puffing for v1 hour, 57 min- utes. To Moscow oh Stilts Then there are the R.A.F, cor- poral who recently swallowed a yard-long glass of ale in 55 seconds,' the champion packer who has squeezed 187 different objects into a matchbox, the Tokyo champ fly- * swatter, who swatted 180,003 flies in a day -- no D.D.T. and no cheat-* ing? Freak records are nothing new. In 1891 Silvain Dornon walked '1,800 miles from Paris to Moscow in 58 days on stilts. In 1900 Jokan- .na Hasslinger strolled 875 silles "from Vienna to Paris on her hands. ---In 1880 Johann Ketzler, a porter by trade, a champion ecater®by in- clination, ate 80 liver sausagés in two hours, 200- fried potatoes it three hours, a whole roasted ox in 42 days. Sr oe = _ But let's be more reasonable. Two Aussie -tree-fellers, - Harry Jackson and Pete McClaren, hold the "double-handed saw champion- ship, slicing through a tree 78 inches in circumference in 42 seconds. George Hossfield won the world's typing championship By * rapping out 139 words per minute from unfamiliar peinted copy for |: 'an hour. A Manchester barber 'can shave a man in 12 seconds. A U.S: naval officer can tie 772 differ- ent knots, Is anyone game for 773? Could you beat any of these? Swing a club 17,000 times without stopping? Sit on-an-ice-block 2714 hours or on a flagpole 300 days? Drink 37 scalding cups of coffee at a sifting? Rockin a rocking chair 92 consecutive hours without cu- shions. ; = A gallon of beer has been drunk in 27.6 seconds, 200 yards of spag- hetti consumed in five minutes, A bath-chair has been taken round the world. A game of rummy hag been vlayed for a million points. _ doubt_if half of them were born. game in the past half century. DID were not,"in any position to form _ ORY Over the stretch of years during which we have been cobbling around with various sports columns, the reading world has been spared many picces from our typewriter - because of one of our most persis- tent beliefs. (Incidentally, we have also personally been spared a good deal of work.) : * * * $ Whenever we think of something assailed with the belief that (a) somebody has already said the same thing and said it better or, (b) if we wait long enough somebody else will say the same thing and say it better. 0% * Jover since they started this "Ca- nadian Athlete of the Half Cen- tury". thing, »which filled so many columns of newspaper space and so many minutes, of radio air, there has been one interesting point we had a desire to bring up. But we never got around to writing it, for some reason or other; and, sure enough, we weren't kept waiting too long before it was done for us in a manner which we could not hope to equal, let alone top. * * * Tok So, without further ado, we quote the following .from the pen of Can- ada's ace columnist, J. V. McArec, as published in the Toronto Globe and Mail. oe Low, * * "We do not dissent from the choice of outstanding Canadian athletes made by a poll of sports writers and sportcasters. We have seen most of them and have known some of them. We do not deny-that ..Btreetsvjlle, nt. .Classifie d Advertising... AGENTS WANTED BELL new type electric light bulbs in' your locality. Commission. Enquire: F'. Giles, BABY CHIUCKN ALL OUR CHICKS are ROP, <Sired with a proven breeding background of ups to 293 eggs. These certified breeders are officially pro¥gn the cream of Canadian poultry and their production will truly astonish you. We have, 8 Gov. banded .breeds from which to chdose, Free cata. lague. Kelterborn. Poultry Farm, Mivers ton, Ontario ..& - lets at fio extra cost, It's eggs that pay, you your feed bill. Fhink of your extra profits if the chicks you buy lay not" 150 but 200 eggs or more. The proved R.O.1, blood in Tweddle R.O.P. Sired Chicks can give you these extra eggs, We have special chicks for layers and others for broil ers. Also Turkey Poults, Older Pullets, Send for yeduced prices for early delivery. Free Catalogue. Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Ltd. Fergus, Ontario. BABY CHICK BUYERS. ( Tour 1951 baby chicks now, and take advantage of our early order discount. Fach breeder is Government-banded and pullorum-tested. Write fo our 1931 catalogue and price list. © Monkton Poeuliry Farms, Mankton, Ontario WHE ou can buy Proven perforinanc why settle, for less? Whether yon buy 1060 or 1,000 Top Notch Chicks you get the sane blood--same breeding--same quality that consistently satisfies Jour many cus- tomers. Top iNotch R.O.P, Sired Chicks do "the trick. Algo Turkey Poults, Older Pullets, Top Notch Chick Sales, Guelph, Ontario, SPRINGHIT Blood-tested Chicks ave pro fitable. All popular breeds at $12.72, pullets $24.00, heavy cockerels $4.60. Spe- eclals on started chicks, Springhill F rm, Preston, ID AND CLEANING, HAVE you thing needs dyeing .or clean: ing? Write to us for information We are glad to answer your questions De partment H. Parker's Dye Works Limited. 791 Yonge St.. 'Toronto. Ontario, IMS 1OR SAL TWO. FARMS 100 ACRES with 6-room brick house and bankbarn $4,500.00 with $3,000.00 down, 218 acres, good building at $6,500.00 with $3.500.00 down payment. Further informa- and used, bought. sold, exchanged Large stock of guaranteed used motorcycles Re: palrs by factory-trained mechanics Bi cycles, and complete line of wheel goods, also Guns, Boats and Johnson Outboard Motors Open evenings until nine except Wednesday. Strand Cycle & Sporis." King at. Sanford, Hamilton ' ONLY $250 UP + OIL BURNERS - 4-HOUR CHANGEOVER . FURNACES REPLACED ONLY & OURS FOR EXCI" NGES Abr-Conditioning Furnace Repairs TORONTO'S FASTEST SERVICE Our experts can golve your heating problem and give you heating comfort the same day PHONE WAVERLEY 7198 like Henry Hoobin and a lot more. x 0% & Take as another example, foot- choice as the half-century's great- est. On his record, he could hardly be passed up. Still, 5if we were al- lowed to make just one pick for a player around whom to build a team, we would take Joe Krol ahead of opinion. Big Con himself. says that the greatest Canadian football player he ever saw was Warren Snyder of Varsity, and Conacher certainly talking about. Yet just how often did you sce Snyder's name men- tioned: when the hullabaloo was on? ud x. * * the choices were wisely made, es- |} pecially the choice of our friend, Miss Bobbie Rosenfeld. * * * > "What we feel inclined to doubt is the competence of the judges. We fifty years ago. We doubt if nine- tenths of them fifty years ago were in any position to form any but juvenile opinions of what they saw. ¥ * * "If they were adults in 1900 they must be in their seventies now, and we do not know -any of them who from appearance would be taken for venerable citizens. How many of the judges ever saw Henry Hoobin, the. Shamrock lacrosse player? We doubt if most of them cver saw Newsy Lalonde, who was chosen the best player of Canada's national THEY DO THEIR JUDGING "FROM NEWSPAPER CLIP- PINGS?" > * * * To which Mr, McAree might well have added the doubt that fifty per cent of the pollsters ever even saw a real game of lacrosse--that is, the old 12-man style played on wide, open spates--or are in a position to compare Newsy Lalonde with the likes of Billy Fitzgerald, Eddie Powers, Mickey lon and a whole host of other top-notchers. - : . EAH, Ying | hes AE "We, ourselves, saw in action a farge majority of those mentioned" in the various polls. But-in sport, as in everything else, distance has a way of lending enchantment. When you are young and enthusias- tic, members of your "home team" adquire a glamour that is largely in the eye of the beholder. For years we, in lacrosse, were a-dyed-in-the- wool Tecumseh fan, Anybody not wearing a Tecumseh uniform was an enemy. If Lalonde or FitzGerald scored a goal, it was by sheer luck, not ability, In other words we any but juvenile opinions" of men | Was Nearly Crazy - With Fiery ltch-- AL HES ER Gan and 'trom cruel h ng ¢ Pheeds ¢ Ho © Fi Fae of personal taste. The experts have mixed and pullets, tion apply -Arthur Vale, R.R.1, Arthur, Ontario. Tron sane MOTORCYCLES, Harley Davidoon New ball. Conacher was the outstanding of Conacher,---and --Red--Batstone-- -ahead of either, So it's alla matter should | know what he's -So it all boils down to a matter "BUY Tweddle Brecding=--get 200 esx pul- |. 4 curing, _ Nurseries, eu. Lat Branches: spoken, but don't let that throw you. If you still think that \Whoozis was better than Whatisname you have a right to your opinion; and if your old man maintains that ~Whatchacallum was greater than either, don't try to argue with hin. The old song said "There'll be pie in- the sky bye-and-bye" but we never heard anybody hold out hopes that there would be sport there too. And, unless there is, it will .never be settled definitely who would be the winner in a bout be- tween, say, Jack Johnson and Jack Dempsey or who would finish first in a field made up of Man O"War, Exterminator and Noor. * Ca ® - We would parlay Johnson and Exterminitor; but we could be wrong, at-that. For now that we have taken "time to think it over, nadian athlct¢ of. the half century might very whose name 'we never even saw mentioned. Jimmy Archer, whose family lived right around the cor- iter from us in Toronto, was the first big league catcher to throw to second from a squatting posi- tion--an innovation which probably a major sport than anything ever done by any other Canadiaif, First thing you know we'll be starting a poll of our own. In fact if there | "doesn't soon come up-anything bet- ter to write about than this "mys- tery hooch" the New York Rangers are hopping themselves with, we'll darned well have to! ; Va HARNESS & COLLARS Farmers ~ Attention = Consult "P6ur nearest Harness Shop about Staco Harness Supplies. We sel) .our goods only through your local Staco Leather Goods dealer The goods are right awd so are our factories -- Harness Horse Collars. Sweat Pads. Horse Blan kets, and Leather Travelling Goods. Insist on Staco Brand Trade Marked Goods and you =| get' satisfaction Made only by SAMUE)L TREES CO LTD 42 Wellington St. E. lorunto well "be a gentleman - had a-iflore revolutionary cffect on "our prices. We manufacture in | WRITE FOR CATALOGUE Hee t appl! i nse RT RO ELS a. . --our -choice of -the- outstanding -Ca=-- FOR SALE i] § REGISTERED HEIFERS accredited and vaccinated. 2 ton Spotlight C. i. Hayward, Ontario) wt HOMESPUN YARNS 2-3-4 plfy made from long-fibred New Zealand and native wool, Natural white, grey, brown, fawn, maroon, royal blue, paddy green, dcarlet, yellow. black, * heather, $2.96 1b, Deljvered, North: landl sweatér patterns, Adult: Deer, bean Indian deslgn, Arctic Snowtake, Wild Ducks Childs: Deer, bear, Indian design, dog 'and squirrel, dancer. .2ic each. Knitting necdles Loc pair. Mics Mary Maxim, Box 382, Bifton, Man. : bred to a son of Bramp- Sport. 3 ready to breed, IR. 3, Campbellville, "EAR Corn or shelled Delivered any place in: Ontario, Writ Glenn dalbraith,, Ridg¢town, Ont. Phone 367. & Couemear Proven 'Remedy--Every sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should - 0) try - Dixon's Remedy. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin r Ottawa 1.25 Express Prepaid CRESS CORN SALVE--for sure relief. Your Druggist sells CRESS, : WHAT IS SACA-PELO? Saca-Pelo is the most remarkable scientific discovery. of the age, which will perman- ently kill-the roots of all superfivous hair, Saca-Pelo contains no drug or chemical, and can be applied easily in the privacy of your own home or in LOR-BEER LABORATORIES 679 Granville: St, - Vancouver, POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles Post's Ecze- ma Salve will not disappoint you y Itehing: scaling, burning eczema, acne, ringworm, pimples and athlete's foot; wil} respond - readily to the stainless, odorless: ointment. regardless of: how stubborn or hopeless they reem . PRICE S100 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES Sent Post Pree an Receipt of Price BRO Queen SiC E arner of Logan, Torante "PEP, u P" : : v ry . C. C. & B, TONIC TABLETS for tow vitality and genera) debility One Dollar, At Druggists TTT NURSERY STOCK YOUR Invitro e Free w.eping they jast, Fer 19 new planting economy willis and shrubs while {euraation Watts Ont. write, OPPORTUNITIES vof slF -~ BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Oppoftunity Learn - flaiYdressipg - Pleasant "dignified profession. good wages - Thousands of successful Marvel graduates americas Greatest System . Hiustrated Catalogue Free t Write or Call MARVEL AAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 358 Bloor St W., Taronto 4 King St i Ridean St MORE AND MORE MONEY! Through a profitable hobby that can bs built into yo#r own paying business. Free Literature, 3 ELLIOTT ANGORAS (Canada) - Winona, Ontario Hamilton Miawa "AN OFFER 10 every inventor--List of tne ventions and full information sent free. The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Attor- neys, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company." Pa- stent Solicitors, Established 1890. 350 Bay Street, Torante Booklet of Informa- tion on request Ea -- WANTED WE pay highest prices for nll types of good and torn, jute and cotton bags-- including feed bags. Weiss Bags & Burlap 'CASH _FOR-BAGS = -- Company, 235 Albert St. S. Kitchener, Ont. Open 7.00 a.n.-5.00 pon, Saturday 12.00 noon. < ¥ Protect sour BOOKS and CASH from FIRE and THIEVES, We have a size Visit us ar writé for orices. Ww. purpose. ete. to Dept. J.6¢J. TAYLOR LiMiTED ToRONTO SAFE WORKS 15 Front St. RB. Voronte TC Establishied IRF WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE-- Without Calomel -- And You'll- Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go The liver should pour out about 2 pints of . bile juice into your digestive tract every day. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food may not digest. Jt nay just decay In the dig tive tract. Then gaa bloats up your stomach, You get constipated. You feel sour, sunk and the world tooks punk, ' : It takes those mild, gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of bile Aow- - ing freely to make you feel "up and up." let #-package today, Effective In making _bile Bow freely. Ask for Pills: 35¢ at any drugstors. "EXPORT" CANADA'S FINEST CIGARETTE Carter's Little Liver ---- api type af Safe=ar--Cabinet--for-any------