Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Oct 1925, p. 14

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIGC ! SATURDAY. OCTOBER. 17, 1925, er re ------------ETTY I NEWS OF THE Fags | THIS BLOOD-BUILDER Extras! Extras! ri STRENGTHENS NERVES These are the best grade WHITE CEDAR | dering Hints. : AND PROMOTES VIGOR SHINGLES, If you have any shingling to The average yield per acre of po- | tario. There has been much delay . * tatoes, turnips, fodder corn and (from wet weather, and in some sec- do, see these before buying, Choice lot. Snel SOR Everywhere You Will Find People Who ALLAN LUMBER CO. public by the Dominion Bureau of (counties of Western Ontario report Have Gained New Health Through the Victoria Street, near Union. "Phone 1042 Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Statistics. {work well advanced with 'more fall With a decreased acreage in po-|plowing than usual completed. Wheat ter. I continued their use with great | my shoulders and neck that I conld benefit, and after my baby was born | not turn in bed without the help of tatoes, this means a decided cut in has come up well and made good the crop, which is now placed at|growth, and pastures have been hold- somewhat over 41,000,000 hundred- ing on better than usual. Milk flow weight. Last year's crop was over(Hs generally good and there is a 456,000,000 hundredweight. The strong demand for fresh cows. Ontario crop is over 5,000,000 hun- dredweight And the Quebec crop 4,- Worry, overwork, severe shock and improper nourishment will lower the bodily tone, upsetting the delicate ---- Alfalfa Acreage Climbs. When a Scream Startles You up in throat-- d heart j and You Keowee of hy aout thioat and you know one o run to the medicine Whether itis a cut band or a gashed iene -- to! arm, er, sprained JR." full strength. It may smart for an instant--but jt will cleanse the wound, event infection, ease the pain and promote rapid pi [eal healing. For toothache, saturate cotton with "ABSORBINE IR" and oer nmrate Colton with Then rub the face with this reliable liniment--it stops the pain. make a use--it saves so $1.25 & bottle--ut most druggists" or seat postpaid by W. F. YOUNG Inec., Lyman Building, - MOST EVERYBODY every day--everywhere_-- READS A NEWSPAPER What Do They Read Most Thoroughly in the Smaller Cities and Towns? Is it the big metropolitan daily, some of which arrive in the morn- ing? IT IS NOT! It's the local daily paper of the home town --every time! It comes first in popular demand. The city paper, as a rule, is merely glanced over hurriedly for important news of world events. National Advertisers Should Heed This | Don't be misled into thinking your advertisin large city papers is all that is necessary for com It is not--far from itl dailies coming into the smaller cities of Ontario cover a mere fraction of the residents of these places and districts surrounding and the very people you want to reach with your advertising me: About one-tenth is the estimated coverage of the market outside And the richest market in the Prov- ince, concentrated in and around the smaller cities, is merely touched. The Small City Dailies Afford a 90% Coverage of - Their Important Fields It's the home town paper, with its local current news and reader- smaller cities and towns. the cities by the large papers. interest, that dominates the local fleld. Here's the list of Ontario small city dailies that are absolutely necessary Jor complete coverage in an advertising campaign outside the large cities. 'Note the way they cover their respective fields: Population 24,000 45,000 27.648 50,000 1542 30,000 17,380 33.000 000,000 hundredweight less than | last year, while the total for New |age under alfalfa in Ontario has been j balance we call health, Brunswick has declined by one-half. | The western crop is somewhat bet- | ter than that of 1924, but the in-| crease does not begin to offset the decreases in the east. Turnips and Corn Down. In the past fifteen years the acre-| multiplied by almost ten. the acreage was 45,500. it had climbed to 76,000. Then a! combination of causes, the most im- | portant of which was the use of | tender seed and resultant winter | caused a decline to 52,000 in 1917. | In the following year it rose again | In 1910] In 1912] Those who can read the early signs of thinning blood can generally arrest the decline before any of the more painful symp- toms appear, but thé disease creeps on so stealthily that it is frequently well advanced before it is discovered. Among the early symptoms of de< cline are pallor, especially of the lips, a slight palpitation of the heart. they were the only tonic that helped {my husband, and the pain at times me nurse her. I found them a splen- | did blood enricher, and cannot re- commend them' too highly." Advice to Young Girls. The anaemia of young girls comes on gradually, beginning with languor, indisposition to exertion and a feel- | ing of fatigue. Later comes palpita- | tion of the heart and headaches. In | was almost unbearable. I took doc- tors' medicine which did me little or no good, Then 1 began taking Dr, Williams' Pink Pills and have since been free froin rheumatism. I cen also recommend the pills to young mothers, as in my own case I found they are unexcelled. 'I may also add that I recommended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to a neighbor who took the majority of cases constipation is | fainting spells at the change of lifa, | 000. tons. g campaign in plete coverage in the ssage. Both turnips and fodder corn, the to 144,000, ing | Shortness of breath after walking a two late feed crops, are well below ever since, nd Ss ash slimbigg | Short distance and a tendency to E last year's totals. More than half (a ced at 408,000, and the age Ira | 228ily. Continued decline causes ner- of these crops is grown in Ontario. COmmitice XPors | A 2! vousness, irritability, depression, The Ontario turnips crop is about © 8€e | sleeplessness, headaches and fainting three-quarters that of last VeoF this raised to over the million with-| '|in the next f N amounting to nearly 19,000,000 hun- . ey. No pe fuer Le hit, ra dredweight. lobjective in acres is being set, how- | nerves and good blood begin treat- Corn has dropped bY ever. "Our object is to get alfalfa | ment now with a tonic that has been simon 430.900 tone to 3/537,000. 0a every suitable farm in Ontario, | Used successfully in many families Quebec also has less corn. In t o | particularly those interested ig Dower imer one iy J | in | for generations. Dr. Williams' Pink west, erta has doubled last year's stock raising." y | Pills build up the blood and enable it crop, but Saskatchewan and Mani- | ember of £5 ip J. A. Carroll, aj --- | to carry nourishment to enfeebled or- toba have reduced their acreage. {we do that mitten, and if} a0 i j ans, nerves, muscles and tissues. An increased acreage of sugar | gure ln 14. reage w take | This new blood will so tone the entire beets in Ontario has offset a slight system that colds and epidemic dis- reduction in yield per acre, and eases cannot get a foothold. brings the total crop to nearly 350,- In the Raymond district ab. of Alberta, whére a sugar factory |g has commenced operations, the crop is estimated at 58,000 tons from 6,000 acres. -- Winter Stores. out fifty pounds of heney or syrup | have used it. ored away to carry it over the win- When Nerves Are Starved jens St, x x ig Of the) ster oid Wome with nerves ont of gas i quently unless the ten | 8ear become irritable and fretful and H angstroth hive with IDDer | are blamed for ill-temper; whereas cover and bottom board weighs atthe fault is not theirs. Their poor least seventy poundg © the colony | health is the cause. For "this purpose a busy wife or mother, whose house- sugar syrup, made of any) hold cates have worn her out; good white granulated sugar, two [breadwinner whose anxiety for his is recom-|family has worried him until he is !parts to water one part, jmended. Feeding is best done in | thin and IL are the Serve fore { he evening, any time after. October 15th. Progress Is Slow. ! Fall work has been going forward 'needs feeding under difficulties during the past | white : few weeks, especially in Hastern On- | "mn, Aran} | who become run-down, Their nerves, like all bodily organs, need healthy red blood; worry tells on -- their digestion .and their nerves are Ontario Leads in Apples. ill-fed. In such cases a course of According to the most recent re-| Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is necessary, port of the Dominion fruit branch, | for these pills make new blood and Ontario will lead aj provinces fn|tone up the nervous system, -The jthe production of apples this year. patient becontes full of Siersy and The crop is estimated at 1,190,880 happiness for. Thamssiyes aug thers | barrels, while' that of Nova Scotia, water Ont., has proved the value of the nearest competitor, is placed at Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and does 860,450, and British Columbia at | not hesitate to say so. She says: -- 2,318,000 boxes, or the equivalent | "Two years ago I suffered untold Of 835.490 barrels, The total com-{sgonies CID oy sort Ne The pains mercial crop for Canada will be 103 |in my head and the back of my neck ber cent. of 1924. The quality of the| Were unbearable... 1 was depressed fruit is extra i and cranky all the time. All the rest B good In Ontario and 1 took and best of medical attention risk Cofumbla. but very poor in did me no good. I was advised to try = : otia. In fact the latter pro- Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and after nce will barely have half a mil- taking them for a time felt much bet- lion barrels for export. While many growers in this province are wonder- ing whether it will be dispose of their Crop at a profit, of- ficials at Ottawa advise them not to be stampeded, as the crop in Eng- land and Continental Europe is light, and prices should pick up, once the domestic crop in these coufitries is cleared off the market. Further- more, in the United States, a rival of Canada in the export market, the apple crop is only fair, ---- Apple Marketing. The extra large apple crop in On- tario this fall has brought the pro- to dry. Cut off stalks a few inches from the tubers and place the clus- ters, stalk ends down in a loose crate, in a cool cellar. In a few weeks, inspect these. Remove any damaged parts and wrap the clusters in newspaper, packing same in pa- per lined barrel or box. Allow gladiolus bulbs, tops cut off a few inches from bulbs, to dry and then store in cool airy cellar. The little bulblets may be saved by storing in sand to prevent drying out. These will increase in size when planted Proof of the value of the remedy is | The ordinary colony of bees needs | found in the statements of those who | at aight; } face and lips were very pale and | The tired, over-| treatment from two doctors: but did {not regain my the | mother, who was very uneasy about present, and the complexion takes on | a greenish-yellow pallor. The treat- | ment is quite easy and simple. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are just the tonic to remedy this wretched state of health. 4 They act directly upon the blood, and as it becomes rich and pure, strength and activity returns, the glow of health ' comes to the | cheeks, and soon the trouble will ais- | appear and good health follow. Miss Pearl Pdarks, R.R. No. 1, Reaboro, Ont., has proved the value of this medicine. and her statement will point the way to health to all other weak girls. She says: --'I was very ill with anaemia. I could not sleep my appetite was poor, my my eyes dull. I got so weak that 1 could not go upstairs without rest- | I took dizzy and fainting spells, } ing. had no ambition whatever, and did | not care to go about. I was in this | condition for nearly a Year. I had strength, so -my me, decided I should try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. After using the pills for a while I felt somewhat bet- ter, and continued taking them un- til I had used about a dozen boxes, when I was again well and strong. I can strongly recommend Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills for the treatment of any suffering from anaemia." Rheumatism in the Blood. Rheumatism comes with thin, im- pure blood, and can only be driven out of the system by enriching and | purifying the blood. The chief symptom of rheumatism is pain. The most successful treat- ment is the one that quickly banishes this disagreeable symptom. Many rheumatic people suffer pains that could be avoided by building up the blood. The value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in rheumatic trouble is proven by the testimony of Mrs. A. Bryson, Arthur, Ont., who says: --*"I was so used up with rheumatism in and who could not walk any distance, She took the pills for nearly three months and they made her a strong, well woman." Unable to Do Any Work. Among those who have proved the value of Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills is Mr. Austin Wile, Hemford, N.§., who says: --"I havé reason to be deeply grateful for what Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills have done for me. An abscess developed in my head, and the doctor who was called in said my whole 8ys- tem was poisoned. My appetite com- pletely failed and I grew so weak I was unable to do any work. The docs tor's medicine did not help me §&" decided to try Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills. At this stage I was reduced al- most to a skeleton, and my friends did not look for my recovery, I found, however, that the pills were helping me and after taking them for about two months I was fully restor- ed to health. My case was known to all my neighbors and my recovery looked upon as almost a miracle." Keep Your System Toned Up. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills assist di- gestion, correct the lassitude, the pal- pitation of the heart, shaky nerves and the pallor of the face and lips that are the results of thin, impure blood. Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for anaemia, rheumbttam, nsuralgia, nervousness. Take them as a tonic it you are not in the best physical condition and cultivate a resistance that will keep you well and strong. Get a box from the nearest drug store and begin this treatment now. If you will send your name and ad dress to The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,. a little book, "Building Up the Blood," will be mailed you postpaid. This little book contains many useful health hints. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents 2 box from The Dr. Williams' Medi- ciné Co., Brockville. Ont. next year, and will flower in a cou- ple of seasons. Canna roots should be dug when frost cuts down the tops and stored in an airy frost-proof cellar, If the latter is warm cover with some coarse material or sand to keep from drying out. -------------------- He Asked For It. Senfor--How do you like my ---- EN A A man cinindl Old Wine in a New Keg. Comic Artist--This joke oughta be good. I've had it in my mind for 10 years. Heartless Editor--Sorta aged ° ia the wood, as it were. ---------------- A Sare Thing. Marjorie--Oh, Mr. Aviator, would you take me for a little fly? Aviator--Of course, not. You look room, as a whole? Freshman--As a hole it's fine; as 8 room---not so good. blem of marketing into the front rank. The grower has often been severely criticised by economists tor not devoting more thought to the large home markets. It is pointed out that British Columbia sells much fruit in Toronto and Montreal, and even the smaller cities lying in the heart of the apple belt in On- tario and Nova Scotia are not ne- glected by growers in the Pacific Province. Ontario producers are told "that they should adopt the box for selling to the domestic con- Sumers, as the barrel is too large for the ordinary consumer to handle, and at best this large package fs unattractive, and that in using it the fruit too often becomes bruised. {Many growers in Ontario are using they box for packing their choicer such as Melntosh and Spy. but it is claimed that even the The metropolitan much more like a little girl, Wil te Eyes of Children Change

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