N * ' THE DAMLY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1911. ~ : - g ie WHY SHOULD TEACHERS po MEDICAL INSPECTION? EAN ELS" ) { tsucher "shall be competent to look after the hygiene of 'the schools, aud | this is stiietly professional, as a pari {of school management. Yet ventilafion aud héaling belong to physics, not to | medicine. lighting is slso a matter * of physics and fatigue in school is » That is 8 Pepariment the Boards of ! Health Are Concprned Ip--if rei Nadel - Spee tts tn- Show be dine BOGE. lg, s6hiogl aad whe - has made gaged; Kiogétob, Nov. 20th --(To the Edit- or) { In last night's Whig there ap pearstl an ariicle which, to some ex- tent, is a repetition of others that have been printed at variobs times during this' autumn. The matter con tai cin these hax. pow taken that form that it can no looger be allow: ed to go uncorrecusl, The statement is made, for instance, that @ petition was presented asking for better teach ing in the matter of physiology and hygiene, "for those who: are iraiping for teachers. The whole statement re arding. this position is entirely false. Ko petition was presented jn sny way fecting the work of the faculty "or rela 10 it' and neither directly nor by impliention, can any such. mening be attached to inv communication that egme bheford! ihe senaie. 4 woed not sey more about this al. the pre sent Lime, because | have taken steps to heing the matier before the proper authorities in order to determine to what extent a member i» al liberty to wisrgpresent a department bi order 10 advance his own theories. Apart from that altogether, there is another side to the question. Why should teachers be trained to do medi cal inspection? Twe-auswers axe given to this. Fityt: The commugity will ot bear the expense. Second: The iotaes will not do its duty. Now, be 'cause the commupity and the home are parsimonious and negligent, the teacher must, of course, be made the dowdiey-engite to carry the load that neither of the others will hear. As one interest in the profession of teaching, [| ~ strenuonsly object . to thrusting into the schools ang put ting upon thie teacher the periormance of the diiies that rightly belong else where, and tlmt are pot. heeded. There has been entively too much of this in the past. : We A further element in this case is thal for most people medical inspection is a disgusting and repulsive operation. 1 turn for instance, to reports of this work, and 1 find that some of the most commop headings are: "'Pedicn losis, cos, impetigo, favus," and others of this kind. These look well conough in print, in Latin, but when translated into English, the words, 'Lousiness, rotting teeth, itch, erupiipe skin disenses and running sores," do not sound neadycso ate tractive. Those who are advocating this course, thereiore, do well 'to stick to latin, We ave just now troubled with a scarcity of teachers. IL sire tv would be an inducement to men and women entering the profession to know that they have to examine every child that came to school for vermin, skin digeases, foul teeth and diy cloth po far us contagious dis ting. PER ¥ he very ig porant, but I do net understand how the immature student withoul any basis of medics knowledge, "ean bw taught to diagnose such diseases as 's scarlet fever; megeles, and small-pox. I am told by medienl men that it re quires n long course, of praciice to gain agility in this work. Now wo have the proposition to hand it over to hays and girls, with only the mer est_ apology. for preparation for any such duties. It is claimed that' the faculties are deficient, in that they do not give iu . struction in physiology. hygiene aod anatomy. 1 do not wee why they should not equally be called upon to give instriction in architecture, drain- age apd sewage disposal. As a mai ter of fact, the students are now work: od to their utmost eapacity? to get, in one year, the training necessary to do their cluss work efficiently. It, there fore, rests with the proposers of all other schemes: to Hind time for the new work without trenching upon that which is nvoessary for the pre er service belonging to the teacher, "other words, shall we put on a two years' tra course in order that Students. may get thix knowledge ? Anyway, it i me more proiessiopal training than iv elemuntary. alyshra.or » Latin, If it is taught at all, there fore, it should be outside the faculty and iu the preparutory course. Refer ence is mude to the wermal schools, put it must be kept in mind that the normal school teacheis are. wing trained to deal with pupils at an en- tirely different age. from those with wh almost oll students in the face ulty will have to deal, and this is an essentigl element in the case. Fur ther, wo have constant and just com- plaint nt an overlonded curriculum and présumably it is to be lightengd by heating in extra work depart ment provides that the $ LER, CONSTIPATION CASLARETS Sick headaches! Always trace them to lazy liver. delayed. ferment- {ng food in the bowels or a ick stomach + I8 reabsorbed into the blood. cate brain (issue it causes congestion and that dull, awful being thrown Todas {he do throbbing, headache. Pstrietly pedagogical subject. | sub mit, therefore, that the man who for {twenty years has heen manhgiiyg these i himself Tgmiliar wilh the teaching of the authorities (whose statements Te garding heating and ventilation are requéntly not horne out by the ex | periments) is more competent to guide ¥voung teachers than ical or otherwise, whose experience has [not been gained in actual class rooms {under conditions that prevail in the {ordinary school, ; To my mind the logical solution of {such a problem as medical inspection is the prevention of the propagition of those who are uafit to take enre 'of themselved™ in a civilized commun- ity. But so lofig as the "tate does {not interfere in this matter medical { inspection may he a neceswity. Theres Lis no question though that it should ibe carried out by officers who | are competent, who will be paid for i thieir service, apd who might hy ar | rangement use the schools as cop | venieht work places. At present wo have hoards of health which are the , moet autocratic bodies in our country tand rightly so. If this matter is to be. dealt with it should be by the Lhoard of health and not by the teacher, and it is the business of the state or the community to make such provision as will secure efficient in- spection by that board.-/Truly yours, W. 8. ELLIS : Te & phmm---------- Fire at Hartington, Hartington, Nov. 20.--Fire visited our neighborhood agein last Saturday night aud laid in ashes the home of Thomas Trousdale. The fire originat- ed in the ralters, near the chimney? the occupants of the house were aware of it. Mr. Trousdale was not living in the house himself, but had rented his farm last spring to Hubert Wals- worth,.and had moved into the vil lage. There was only a small insur- ance on the house. The furniture waa paved. Migs Dollie Cimpsall hay gone to Ottawa to visit her brother, Mr 0. Wr-€ampsall. A voung daughtér has arrived at the home of Mr. Will: iam Babeook. Conundrums. Why is a pair of skates like, apple ? Because they have both ensicned the 4all of man. Why can a blind man always his father 7 Because the father nlways apparent (a parent). Why can vou never expect a fish rman to be gonefous ? Becauge *) his bugdness . makes him sell fish Why did the Highlanders most harm at Waterloo 7 Decause covery man had one kilt before the battle. What ailment is the oak most sub ject to? A corn. : " What is odd about a horse's eat ing? He eats Hest when he hasn't n hit in bis mouth, What city is drawn more than any other ? Cork. oe "en is do frequently Barriefield Notes. Barriefield, Nov. 30.--Miss B. Allen thas left to spend the winter with her sister, Mra. J. Milton, Kamloops, ° B. C¢, Miss Clara Ryan, M.D., who was visiting her ister, Miss Ryan, las leit for Devonport. lowa. Mra. James Dennie, Cobalt, is here to spend Christmas with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Byrnes. Miss Lettie Saunders, city, has retnmed home, having spent the week with her grandmother, Mra. N. Stanton. My. Nelson, Winnipeg, bas visited Mrs. W. Hutton. Mr, and Mrs. Arthur lender have returned home af- ter visting at Mountain Grove. John Stanton spent Sunday with his pa- rents. F. Allen has returned home af tor visiting" at Watertown, N.Y. , Many Become Despondent. Many persond hecome despondent be- canse they have been upsble to find a permanant cure for eczema (walt rhieum) and kindred skin diseases, such as pimples and blotches. Wade's Iron Tonic Pills will ailments and maké the skin lealthy. Price, 6c., at Jas. B. McLeod's drug stores, A Caddinal's Hat. A cardinal's bat is probably the most uncomfortable form of hea «r ever devised. It -has a round, shallow crown with a'very broad brim through which a gold sord js drawn. To this cord are atigched thirty tassels, placed so that fifleen hang over each Car: Hats of a similar shape, but not so heavy, are worn on ceremonial occar rions by other Roman Catholic digni- tarvies. An abbot wears a black hat with twelve tassols, a bishop a green hat with the same number of tgssels an a violet hat with twenty tassels.--London Chronicle, , DIZZINESS, YORPID Poisonous matier. instead of When this poison 8 remove the cause by stimulating the liver, making thie poison move on and out and purifying the blood. The effect is almost instantancous. | Ladies whose sensitive organisms arc especially prone to sick head ' carets, Ope taken to-night will : Sy Loo tent need not suffer, for they cam bo quickly cured y Cas straighten you out by moraing--a 1e- box means a clear head and perfect health for months. Don't forget the chil dren -- their litie insides need a gooss gentle cleansing, too. Children gladly take Cascarets because they taste good, never gripe or sicken. ] LD A Toronto Star. the man, medi- 3 5 and had gained some headway before || itively cure these | sect [HE REGULATIONS SERPRISING ANSWER OF PEACH. A ER IN A BILINGUAL SCHOOL. Continuation of Investigations Into Educational Conditions by Star's "Representathves=--=Teacher's Eng lish Hard to Understand--To- ropto Losing Trade in Northern Ontario . ¥ " x Waren, Ont, Nov. 25.~H, in the words of the atiorney-general, bi-lin- gual schobls are illegal, so that "if any ave found they must cease to ex- ist," thers is a revolution coming in the educational systemi of New On- tario, ' Of the villages of the north country Warren furpisbes a fair School matters in the villages differ from. thowe in ihe larger towns, such oh Sudbury, or Sturgeon's Falls, or North Bay, and also from those of the purely rural school sections, and War- ren 1s a fair type 'of the villages, It is situat on the main line of the C.P.R,, shout midway between North Bay and. Sudbury, snd has a popula. tion of. about six b souls, four hundred of whom at least are French. It used to boast of mills, but when the timber dibappeared they vanished. Most of the residents are farmers, There are two schools in the village, one English and the other French and English. Tn the 'bi-lingudl school two teachers are busy with the forty-odd children, three of whom are of Anglo- Saxon descent, ! | Both the teachers are French, and i noithér has the regular qualifications. Que has a distriet certificate and the other a merely temporary one. "Nou teach Jrench in the school 7 =tgne of the teachers was asked, "Cariainly," she replied. "More I'rench taught tish 2" "Ng, they are both the same *' "Could you teach more English ¥* "Nao. Why .2" "The inspector wouldn't allow iu." This answer was perfectly sinesre. Pethups she noticéd a look of surprise on the newspaper man's face. for she added than Eng "Then there are the regulations, vou know." A request brought the tion : "The regulations stite as much at- tention is to be paid to teaching French ds to tenching English." It was not surprising to learn that French is taught equally with English through every class, right up tq the entrance examination. The children leave the sPhool with a och better knowledge of French than of English. During the last half-dozen vedrs but two pupils have succeeded in passing the entrance examination. These pass- ed the yenr in which there was a rega- larly qualified teacher. Close to Warren, three miles away, is the sehool section of Hugel, and the story told to the Star by one of the farmers therd was as follows : "We wanted to start a school here four: yeats ogo. There are fiftesy fam ilies, and in the winter it was too far for our children to go into Wairen. We confidently expected we would be aided by the government fund for poor schools, "Well, we got our school up at na cost of about $400." Then there was the question of a teacher. To get a thoroughly qualified one was an im- possibility. We couldn't afford to pay the salary. "We received an application from an English girl. She had no certificate, so before she could teach she had to get the inspector's sanction, 3 elucidation explana: for further enlightening her, but he did. Most of us French, sand we expected French be taught. This girl could . speak French very well, and was able to teach our children all the' French thev useded, } "The inspector still refused, so the matter was taken up with the educa- tion department at Toronto, and we ber cortificate "Took what followed, school was built §l1 the money tot frome the poor school fund 90, and we had trouble in getting that much. Compare that with what took place in Warren, where the poor school fund contributed $200 for a were gddition to the school, aud the people in Warren are far bette able to do without help than we are. We are still in debt. However; we saw where teachers from Quebec bad uo diflioulty in getting permission to teach, so we couldn't see why this girl, > was far better qualified, shouldn't have the same privilege. We won out, but it was costly victory." Today the school at Hagel is closed because no teacher is avail able. . They did have one for the first wi itn the school year, but she left. Most of the children, are staying at home. "Fhe school being closed is a good thing, in One sense," .one of the farm- ers ph ically remarked. "What we save in the teacher's salary will about pay the debt off the schoolf"' 1 to Warren, there is another school called "Dunnett and Kirkpat- rick, No. 5" It is a hi-lingual school with' thirty pupils, ten of whom are Engli Bog he teacher is Keguch, bat ish "pretty well," one was told. The school has been open but two years. "The Leacher has a temporary certi- ficate, She attended the swmuner Lrain: ing sthool , .at Spurgeon's Falls the year before. We consider her far better qualified than many others ia tario." VO bi-lingual school 'at W y bi: a at W v the i: Road ces, Constant's - are to the we is Since fifteen or wo, itin Saught in the' schools heraghout? "one o*3 nrren's leading citizens was ask- "Thats the irouble)" he answored: "What they are Yamght a g * am teachers can't a good thing example. "1 don't know why he objected fp [© Léok at the salarigs they are getting ~$300 | vear i¥ the most a. grent $40. The people themselves cannot de much more, so it loqks ag if the gnly ope of a remedy must come from he government." d 2 he "awiul pwddle"--as one man ex- pressed ,it--in which educalional mat- ters in New Ontario are in is exempli- hed BR AudiEr viral woliool "not fa from Warren. It has a number as the anly means of distinguishing it from others, and though there are tweniy- five pupils in the school, half of whom are French, no French is taught there. The teacher is English, aud . all the children are being taught English, But from the force of a of the other = 4chools roundabout, a strong agitation is on foot to estal- lish a French school Toronto travelling men met with are practically unanimous Jn 'Staring thar the steady French growth in New Ou tario, is having its effect on trade with English firms. They say ihat while a few years ago Toromio houses did most of the business, now it is going to French firms in Montreal. A LAND OF KiSSKs. Epgland in Olden Time Very Much Given to It. A London journal stated not long ago that the British boy 'has quite given up being kissed by kis father, and he is kissed by his sister aud his aunt only by compulsion." No doubt he is disgusted when he reads of Nel) son's words, as he was dying: "Kiss me, Hardy." v The English were for a long time jn- veterate and promiscuous kissérs, so that they excited thé wonder of visit- ing foreigners. A Venetian gave this report of London ladies early in the sixteenth century: "If they meet a friend they take his hand and" kiss him full on the mouth and go inio some tavern and eat with him. And theic people do pot take it ill. And they are most beautiful ladies, and most pleasant." There: was thig: free kissing every where, openly in the street and in the church. Samuel Kiechel warned his countrymen to do in England as the English did.. "A guest does well to take his hostess in his arms and to kiss her; who does it not 'is looked upon as ignorant and ill-bred." Books of travel written by visitors of . var- ious cduntries, abound in evidence of the .habit that is now. regarded as dangerously microbie. : But Englishmen, apparently drew the line in Cowper's: time, for when Mr. Grenville, standing for parliament called on Cowper to secure his vote and influence, and the poet told him be had neither vote nor influence, he did pot embrace him. me by the hand, kissed the ladies and withdres. He kissed, likewise, the maid in the kitchen, and seemed, upon the whole, a most loving, kissing, kind- hearted gentleman." Boston Heralh. A SMILE WITH EACH CIGAR. A Young Mau Bought Gifte--Didn't we wks The first timé the young man enter od the cigar store he noticed only that it was a girl who sold bim- the cigar. The next time, aud the next, however, hé noticed 'that she was not only a pretty girl, but that she had a very pleasing smile. The girl and the smile became quite an attraction for him, so much so that he made it a point to buy all his cigars there; gnd his smok- ing habit grow considerably, It wor- ried him to think, though, that the giel"s smiles were given t6 all custom ors; so just before he went on bis va- cation be asked : "How is it that you can stand here ne ! "Ob, I sell"to everybody, but the smiles are only for you," she replied. When he returned from his vacation about two' weeks later "ho warried n small gift as he went to buy his ci- gar; but he thought thal he would make his return yisit_ a sutprise, - so stepped astealthily up 16 the door of the store. Apother voung man was at the counter, and . he heard the other man ask : oe "Doesn't it tire you to smile at all your customers 7" "Oh," he heard her reply, *'I sell- 10 all; the smiles are yours alone." the youhg man's sister was surpriss ackage a few ity ar. Why Geyser Bob Pansed. Whea Raymond Hitchooek, the popu- lar star, who is now appearing in: the musical play, "The Red Widow," at the Astor Theatre, was at Yellowstone Park last summer, he engaged "Cey- ser Bob," one of the famous drivers in the park, as his guide. "By the way, Bob," queried Hitch cock one day, "how did you get your nick name?" "Well," answered Boh, "I chum wp 'Old Paithiul' ove day, and got too near the crater, and fell in." "Gee, that's great stuf," commented Hitcheock. "What happened?" "Why," said Bob, pointing to the 'Beehive' geyser, hall a mile away, "I came out of the 'Beehive --over there." "Well, well," said Hitcheock, urging him on, "how long did it take?' "Ob" came the reply, "H I had come straight through it would bave taken me osly about ten minutes; but I stopped ou the way for a hair "cut and shave." * "Get owt of my theatre," said G when Titcheock days later--~Kansas veorge M.- Cohan, told him this tale. Complex American Legal Problems. No country has such fomplas and 'aried brobimes 10" sope with as the ¥ United States. Conditions arising by reason of the heavy tide of § a ing to the of pr of estions number Of thes got -a few may etd 25 FREED fac} {under the British flag. That is false "He squeezed | all day and sell and smilé to overy- | Ps v ed when she opene® a small exprods| ah FROW OAT BOER WAR' AS SEEN FROM THE INSIDE. -------- John iys Hammond Says Much na iy Has Been Wasted on Kruger... Boston, Nov. 30. --Released by a lapse of time from an oath sot- tol talk ou South African affairs or! re | veal any of the "inside" events lead- | ing up to the Boer war, for ithrpe years, John Hays Hamond, thg Ameri- can mining engineer and wmalti-million- aire, whe was conspicuous in that | war, broke his silence for the first | time at a dinner of the Clover ciub Mr. Hammond save that the Jame son raid was the result of the activit ies of a reform association formed ai Johannesburg, and consisting largely of Americans. "1 want, especially," said Mr. Ham- mond, "lo correct a misunderstanding. It has been said that we were acung Much sympathy has been wasted on 'Oom' Paul Kruger. He was si to progress, believed the world was fiat, and that the devil had a tail. His impositions were such as no man of the Anglo-Saxon race would have tolerated, The Americans voted to take up acms against him. There was a spy in our camp and for his benefit we voted that if we were com- mandeered, we wonld, upon the first orders to fire, shoot down our com- mauding officers. As a result, no Am- ericans were made to enlist., The = reform movement Kruger wag not an English ment. Jameson came into the against our wishes and against wishes of the British high commis- sioner. I sent word to him to go jback and when he persisted, the only 'thing to do was to blufl Kruger into thinking we had more arms than we really did. We did eo, and Kruger sent over an olive branch to Jolanneshurg. They agreed to all but twp things, and that was thal no cohtrich should be accepted with a Roman Catholic or a Jew. This we flatly refused "Kruger played false with the ve- farm committee after the Jameson raid, broke all his promises, and as the had secured the arms in Johannes- burg, through Sir Hercules Robinson, he arrested the entire committee. He gave the men to understand that if {they pleaded Builty they would be lot off with a fine. Instead, they were sen- tenced to be hanged within twenty four hours. ° An emphatic despatch from Secretary Diney caused Kriger and the Boer council to hesitate, and after an all-night session the council voted to commute the sentences . to life imprisonment." against move- fight the sem tne GREAT DOGS OF ST. BERNARD. Hospice Often Crowded With Those Who Were Lost, No animals employed in the service of man have a more grduous and try- ing task during the winter months than the dogs of the famous St nard Hospice, . animals, of course, is to seek for lost travellers ju the snow; they commaice their work jn earnest at the end of September and continue hard at it wo til the middle of June, and sometimes later. "There is no question as to the val uable service these noble beasts por form every winter," said M. Bour- geois, the present pravost of the Bt Bernard Hospice. "You must remem ber 'the hospice is situated some B,000 feet above sen level and is the second highest inhabited building on. the globe. The mountain pass, on which the monastery stands, is one of the principle highways between Switzer: land and Italy, Over 20,000 persons trav the road every year, nearly two-thirds of this number accomplish: ing the journey during the winter. Those that make the journey then are invariably poor laborers either going to or returning from their -work on the other side of the whuntain. "We, of course, get a lot of tour isté iu the summer, but I imagine many of them would be swpri if they attempted the road in mid-win | ter. The dold is intense and thy pass | is seldom free from snowstortna {latter are tercible things to face. She wind" often vises to a hurricane, ind times blizzards come on that last many hours aud evem days. "At the moment we have some mix teem trained dogs in the kennels: theve | are also about a dozen younger ones. | There is certainly no nonsense ihout the able work they perform and the many lives they save every winter, The stories fold of their wonderful sagacily are not exaggerated. Last 'winter was a very trying one with us, and on one ocension the hospice was crowded with 1,000 weather-bonyd travellers. The dogs had a very ney time and frequently remained out in the bitter weather for twelve, foartenn and sixteen 'hours at ms stretch, During these long hours they suffer from "ke tere. rheumatism as a result of the ex- posure and have to be sent down to the vallevs below to reciiperate. "1 could tell you many wonderful | stories" of rescues our dogs have of i fected. 2 Our most famons animal, per- haps, is Oliver. He has a record of fifty-six rescues. He is very fond of going out and prospecting on his owp atcouni. At the begingpidg af las winter he found and guided/to the hos- ipiee a party of twelve travellers, among them three women snd two children. The path was blocked hy un {avalanche and the dog had to inake a wide detour belore the monastery {was reached. Shortly aiter this he steuted a traveller we were looking for and who was buried twenty feet | deep in the snow. Mad it nef been for The ' the dog the man would have tesishe | ed. Once he found a child on the vi of death. Ile carried it in hs month for threequarters of a mile to the hokpice. ; To Quit Office at Once. Charlottetown, PEL, Nov. 3. <A ia meeting Of the executive of the Palmer government it was i to resign as soon mm departmental 4 ters wore put in shape. is course taken owing to the.two byeslections HINC STOPS BLOOD FLOW Sargeon were made in man pitals by famous benefit of delegates ussenibled to at tend the clinical conpre wyweons of North American. { considered fatal unt modern surgery lent formed at the Lniversity deflect the flow of blood from of the injured head of u purpose John 1). Deaver by internal carotid, of the neck Kroater pact internal ear THOSE blood to' the brain the nel, relieving the « cent amount, The mission of TH&ET oi PAGE SEVEN. E IN TEA PRICES THE REASON WHY! The ever-increasing consumption of tea throughout the world--particylarly of British Grown Tea---has created a de mand much greater than the supply, which among other raises prevents really good tea being sold ai former -low prices. - $ Russia: and Australia are buyisg iremendously of brl- tish grown teas in place of China teas, and the consumption in Great Britain is larger than ever The shutting out of over 15 militon pounds of colored China Green Tea by the United States Government, the fu- creased use of tea due to higher prices of coffee, the greater acreage given over to the planting of rubber in Ceylon, the shortage ip the Japan erop this year aud the labor problem in all tea-growiny countries are all fsctors which aceount for the much hihey primary markets. The present revolutipn in China may also mean much smaller crops there next year and present indications are for still Ligher prices in the future. * AN these condition: either mean a lower quality at the same prices, or the same quality at higher prices Our experience shows that ithe fers the latter. p "HONEST TEA IS THE BEST POLICY" tex drinklag public pre- Thomas J. Lipton, Toronto, Ont. TO BRAINY life is still conveyed by the external jenrotid and its branches; and wd the Injured injured portion of she skull heals na | taro will adapt itseli to the changed advanced surgery condition, and he artacion which have Philadalbbia Fos been forced to dy a duiy will for the Bradusily dilate until the normal sup ply of blood is distributed in all parts tof the head Deflects It Head. Demonstrations in in y added gurgeons Ax operation MANY NEW STATIONS. its aul was pu frosp } to . : 3 hospital Grand Trunk Pacific Called Upon to une par ® tient. Id Hulld 150, necomplishid by 1h Winnipep, Man, Dee. Owing Uh ition of the jth + number of branch lines econ the principal artery Iotracted by the Grapd Teunk Pacitio lyin} Lthis i} h supplyini=bloot 1q tho jthis year, the has bad to hundred and Of tdi ay fowild wo les and the t Lhe Uf thowe. ninety leight Juve bron established, upply of Jt ' are in course of construe. + while the balance of the numb {contracted for will be finished in tha Wis tar company aif, the orp than ope ! " i rehen av slatiagus ahrendy Lhe operation stopped tha ven h this chan. {li A sul maintain | spring | ON es 3 however, to remember these two points about OXO Cabos. vn sd 0 nies Aa GXO Cabe, inn gliss of hot milk, increases the food value of milk enor- mously-and gredatly assists digestion, An OXO Cube, spread on bread and butter, Ine wes the food vilue of bread and butter enormously. CaO Cabes are foods in themsel and add to the valpe of oth fouds by helping \ Jigestion "A VERY mother should 1, 10 for 25¢c. A for Lie. LIST YOUR PROPERTIES NOW For Sale or to Rent. " Sales Negotiated Rents Collected : Fire Insurance. Conveyancing and Real Estate E. Blake Thompson, _ _ OVER NORTHERN CROWN BANK MARKET SQUAKE, 'Phone 286, KINGSTON, ONT, An Always Acceptable CHRISTMAS GIFT A IT IIT SL SIITASIOI LITT UI TIN CSS) SN For that good mother of yours who does feel the 'first hill of winter weather is a pair of louse Slippers that are comfortable 50c. to $2.00 and warm as doast By Sm facies REID & CHARLES P.3.---"Phone ws tor your Rabibers. A ------ EE T---- Opticians agree that the light from a good oil lamp is easier on the eyes than any other artificial light. The Rayo Lamp is the best oil lamp made. It gives a strong, yt soft, white hizht; and it never flickers. It pre- serves the eyesight of the young; it helps and quickens that of the old. You can pay $5. $10, or $20 for other lamps, but > cangiol get better light than the low-priced Rayo gives. y "Made of solid brass, wickel plated. Eadly lighted, without remov- * ing shade or chimney. Fasy to clean and rewick. - ¥ Desslery svetywhane; or wrise ft Seeetiptine curcuhs direct 2 aey spew if | The Queen City Oil Company, Limited -