Monkton Times, 31 Jul 1919, p. 3

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, Study or at second hand, MSA ~ Musical dcteon, ie despair to explain 'the developed technique and depth of emotional experience of musical pro- : digies, sometimes fall back on the _ theory of Fes crnarien and let it go at that. Art orttite have a facer of the same. . kind at the exhibition at the Leicester Galleries of the works of a remarkable child, Pamela Bianco, 'ways thes Man- chester Guardian. She is twelve years old. D'Annunzio has called her "this wonderful child, whose name is like the name of a flower," and Mr, Walter de la Mare has written a poom in her praise. . She was born in Barnes, her father being Italian and her mother an Eng- lish lady who had some fame.as a novelist under her maiden namo of 'illiams. The child lived for a little in the-Garden Suburb, but the family soon went to America, afterward to _ Italy, She is now.at San Remo. She is said to have had no art education, - but that, I take it, only means art tul- tion. «It is elear that she has educated ~ herself from pictures, partie larly "from Botticelli and the early Floren- tines, and also one would say, she has received impressions from Chinese art. Other wonder children have given us : 'prilliant drawing and extraordinarily - fresh observation in line, Pamela Bt- anco gives us something more of an | essence of art. Like Miehaelman, she | seems to know the secrets of the mas- ters as'bne of the family, and not by Botticellt | hag cre ated 'her whole world, ae she td moves ebbat I in it SE ee y joyful, and serene as a child, and, elaborate and highly wrought as many of the "draw- ings are, there is never a line that sug- gests'a task. 'Dance of the Children on Peace Day" is a maze of little figures with flags and balloons, with groups of smaller figures behind, as though the dolls, too, had come out of the nurser to dance. 'Rapture' is the quality that ie" shares with the Florentines. , It runs | through all the drawings, reaching its height in "The Fairy Spring," with its chacker of delicate, happy colors and | gildigs. The direction of her mind is indicated in such works as "The Ma- donna brings a mandaria orange™to an angel in prison," and "The baby ask- ing the angel's forgiveness," and "Ma- donna and Child with a flower in his mouth," There are no works here of this artist's first period, the earliest being a work at the age of nine. What will this child be like when she is twenty? Will the new world, with its freer ideas, not insist on her learning to draw and allow her to ma- ture her art On its present narrow, beautiful lines, and are they strong enough to support the adult mind? Will her "vision splendid" fail her as. the years go on? WiN her future be no more distinguished than that of so many musical prddigies? Whatever is before her, these works, with their innocent, lovely spirit and astounding command of the finest pic- torjal language, will probably remain udique in modern art. Sane eee water pe eee eee ene Fn "STANDING STILL. IN AIR. ee Air-Anchorage Problem Awaits. Solu- tion "by-Aviation Engincers. ~ Hay ng conquered time aid space, the Co uimbuses of the air must soon begin lookitg around for new worlds master. It is worth however, that before starting on a grand tour of the planetary system the air pioneers might finish the job of making themselves at home in their new field. This cannot come about ntil we are able to go up to a given place in the air and stay there until we are ready to come down--or move on to some other place in the higher atmosphere, Heretofore aviation has meant trav- el through the air from one place on earth to another place on earth, To be able to do that is a first-class achievement, but it leaves a lot to be desived, as a little reflection should - show. We can never be really at home _ in the air until we can stand still in it, The air-anchorage problem, must be solved. balloons, but they have served merely to hold our imaginations captive. When we have become a little more familiar with air travel {t will be in- creasingly annoying either to'keep moving at a terrific clip or to have to remain tied to the earth to stay in a given air location, A fiying machine used by a scientist has just been wrecked after having set out to watch a recent eclipse from the higher altitudes. This illustrates the need and one of the poSsibilities of re- % once comer Son pointing out, Of course we have captive | = ee eee maining sueieston in the ether. In England they are seriously discuss- ing the creation of aerial "spas" to | provide for treatment of tuberculosis patients. The plan is to have large balloons carry the afflicted up to the most desirable and beneficial altitude and anchor them there. The future, however, should greatly improve upon it, . The fact that health is to be found at high altitudes is a great incentive to experimentation along this line. But ordinary comfort, esthetics and human. preferences may yet lead us into trying out 'all possible altitudes in the vast wastes of atmosphere in search of new and pleasurable sensa- tions Merely to get above the mos- quito line would satisfy most of us dur- ing dog days, but that is because we are slaves of our accustomed environ- ments. We may yet be able to call any old place in the air by the name of home if we can stay in one aerial place long enotgh to get acclimated and find rents and neighbors tolerable --if not entirely satisfactory. o '. A very curious met is 'made by the tailor bird of India, a tiny yellow creature. To escape snakes and mon- keys this bird takes a dead leaf, flies up into a tree, and with a fibre for a thread and its bill for a needle sews the leaf to a green one hanging from the tree. The sides are_sewn up, an opening to the nest. thus formed being left at the top. The leaf, apparently hanging from a twig, would never be taken for a nest. Teronto Fat vs et Now is the Time To prepare your stock for the - To be held at UNION STOCK YARDS | DECEMBER 11th and 12th _ Barly preparation produces the prize winners. alan List, which will be ready for distribution in three | oa carries more classes than ever before. Stock Show Fall W! "Shur-Gain" Fertiliz fluences of a ROSEY. crop Aiea com ial field experience what Ontario farms need. are sal Phey ated dE apely groun by the rig ac od, or Ene now, oe or phone your dealer No ster Ontario. grows shows better beta oes proper 'fertilizing than heat. Returns 12 to 80 extra bushels per acre--with the same labor cost, 'rememb er---are ae Gh over and "ihe 8 again, starts the plant atrong, Ween rootlets that shake off frost, and eee; the rich, balanced nourishment needed. for oe 4 Bs" Pp) eG and stusase renintance. IN vino 1S NEAR uke GET YOUR avcllaaen will be wasted if we f eae eee, ny ng delays, on't let the o fellow Sown with the seed, with vigorous growth, gives heaving and root- -Snapping in- the 'Shur-Gain ? Fertilizers ounded by experts who Know tiem ace d, quickly assimi- Gee tha stalk-framer; on B bed and root invigorator, and Forty years of - SUPPLY NOW on' t impress you with the a. jast-minute rush and scarcit eat you out. Get eariy 2 hipping o-day, WEST TORONTO | Great Britain's 'record. }in 1851, wag the first vessel to,cro } the Atlantic in less than ten anys. er an Seasonable _ 9070 9030--Misses' Sailor Dress (suitable for small women; two styles of. sleeve; low waistline; twoe -piece skirt in two lengths). Price, 25 cents. Cut in 4 sizes, 14 to 2Q°years. Size 16, blouse, 2 yds. 86 ins. wide; collar, % yd. 36 ins. wide; skirt, 1 yd. 54 ins. 3» wile. Width, 1% yds. 9038--Misses' Dress (suitable for small women; in two lengths; blouse closing on shoulder and at underarm; two styles of sleeve and 'skirt attached to underbody). Price, 25 cents. Cut! in 3 sizes, 16 to 20 years. Size 16 requires 34% yds. 36 ins. wide, or 2% yds. 54 ins, wide. Width 1% yds. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. ee 5 ea THREE EPOCHS IN ATLANTIC PASSAGE BY SAILING VESSEL, BY STEAM- SHIP AND BY DIRIGIBLE. The Recent Marvellous Voyage of the R-34 Calls to Mind Daring Trips of the Old Days. Those who see significance in names may be interested in comparing the names of the three vessels which have | marked epochs in transatlantic pass- | age. Columbus's flag ship was the | Santa Maria, a name suggestive of the religious fervor of the man and of the | spirit of those days. The first steam- ship to make the voyage wholly by en- gine power was the Sirius, a name suggesting the mingling of science and romance which was dominant in the world at that time. And Captain Scott's aerial craft 'is the R-34, the very climax of bald utilitarian imper- sonality. Steamship Competition. Th one respect this latest flight dif- fers from the others, It was achieved in competition, while the others were not. They were not racing with any- body else. But competition soon arose among the steamships. The first | such rivalry was between the "Great | Western and the Britannia. The for- | mer was the first steam vessel ever built expressly for transatlantic nayi- | gation; owned by the Great Western | Steamship Company; 236 feet long, of 1,340 tons; of 800 horse power, and carrying 600 tons of coal. The Britan- nia was the first Cunard vessel built for transatlantic traffic; a wooden side-wheeler, 207 feet long, of 1,154 tons gross. The Brittania won the race on her first voyage, leaving Liverpool on July 4, 1840, and reach- ing Boston in fourteen days and eight hours. Then the rival company built the Great Britain, the first iron vessel, 822 feet long, a 3270 tons, and she made the run in.twelve days and twelve hours, completely discomfiting the Cunarders, until the latter built the Hibernia, which easily beat the The most famous of-the early con- tests were, however, Cunarders and the Collins Line, the latter the first American line ever es- tatiished. The four Collins steamers were tle Arctic, Pacific, Atlantic and Adriatic, side-wheelers, the first three 280 feet long and of 2,860 tons, and the last 345 feet in length and of 4,144 tons. They habitually beat the Cunarders by. a considerable margin; and a later Collins steamer, the Baltic, These statistics of early steam voy- ages seem very quaint and primitive, though men stil] live who #emember when they were the wonder of the world. Will the children of to-day live to see the time when Scott's daring and epochal - flight will be similarby eclipsed by immeasurably greater per-- eeea atm Ap a en When SSTStE pea soup put in a piece of bread. It prevents the peas sinking to the bottom and burning in the saucepan. ee There came at 'purple even To bear a gift of Heaven ea The fairest in the bowers, | pect your kidneys, between the|' complaints. - sow = 'Thou Art the Queen of Flowers. ha eK An angel from the skies, = To gladden human eyes; So now I see adorning My green and dewy lawn, This flower of the morning, Born at the early dawn. Thou art the Queen of Flowers, Thou sweet, enchanting rose, Kissed by the breeze that blows; " So sway my. héart forever ' And make it beauty's throne, That I, indeed, may never Dwell in this world alone. Upon the air ascending, How fragrant is thy breath, With dainty odors blending -- Beyond the lands of death; The holy incense offered j Upon the golden shrine, ~The sweetest ever proffered Itefore the throne divine. * I'll pluck thee for the maiden, Who pledged her love to me, Whose heart is richly laden With its sincerity; . She shall become the wearer Of thee, my rose divine, For none indeed, is fairer Than this sweetheart of mine. THE CAUSEORBACK ACHE 'Only in Rare Boe Does Back-* ache Mean Kidney Trouble. 'Every muscle in the body needs constantly a supply of rich, red blood in proportion to the work it does, The muscles of the back are under a heavy strain and have but little rest. When the blood is thin they lack nourish- ment, and the result is a sensation of pain in those muscles. Some people think pain in the back means kidney. trouble, but the best medical authort- ties agree that backache seldom or never has anything to do with the kid- neys. Organic kidney disease may have 'progressed to a critical point without developing a pain in the back. This being the case, pain in the back should always lead the sufferer to look to thé condition of his blood. It will be found in most cases that the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to build up the blood will stop the sensation of pain in the ill-nourished muscles of the back. How much better it is to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills"for the blood than to give way to unreasonable alarm about your kidneys. If you sus- any doctor can make tests in ten minutes that will set your fears at rest, or tell you the worst. But in any event to be per- fectly healthy, you must keep the blood in good condition, and for this pur- pose no other medicine can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail, at 50 cents a box*or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. TN A,' Army Put Canada on French Map. That business men In- France are turning their attention to Canada as | a source of supply more than before | the war is emphasized in the informa- tion reaching the Canadian Trade Com- mission. It appears that the participa- tion of Canadian troops, many of them with a knowledge of French, has stimulated interest, and has been, so to speak, an advertising force for Do- minion trade. A typical instance is quoted by the Commissioner General for Canada in France, who in describ- ing the requirements of a large im- porting house says:--"I sincerely be- lieve that much sentiment exists here in France from the many mterviews I have had and continue to have with men of all sorts--business, commer- cial and professional. I believe that the sentiment exists that purchases - would be much preferable from Cana- da than from the United States. There | is a great deal of love for Canada shown and Canada has become known from the many lines of endeavor un- dertaken by the Canadian Army." 2 ay We Call It Small Town Stuff. Japanese newspapers divide their news into two classes--"hard" and "soft." The former, says Prof. F. L. Martin, of the University of Missouri, treats of serious and important events, the later treats of all sorts of "human- interest" incidents. The third page of the soft-news department is devoted to trivial, gossipy stories, of which the following is a sample: "Since Htsunaka, a resident of Osa- kusa, has separated from her master, a coal dealer, she has lost a good op- ponent for her noted powers of quar- reling. The neighbors are breathing freely again at the prospect that they need no longer hear embarrassing quarrels, which have made the neigh- borhood famous. The reaction has been so great that Etsunaka has been downhearted. She says, 'I feel sick, now that I have no one to quarrel with.'" CHOLERA INFANTUM Cholera infantum is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. It is a trouble that comes on suddenly, especially dur- ing the summer months, and unless prompt action is taken little one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tab- lets are an ideal medicine in warding off this trouble. They regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus prevent all the dreaded summer They are an absolutely safe medicine, being guaranteed by a government analyst to contain no opiates or narcotics or other harmful drugs, They cannot possibly, do harm --they always do good. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by | mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Bee oe = na pct ; Canadian) troops never lost a gun, neve. failed to take an objective, and never were driven from ground once -eonsolidated.. They. conquered or died on the-spot.--Lord Provast: /Sir #. Lorne MacLeod (Edinbuven). > | 2 Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtherla, oF ess. eek = : x : = =. ISSUE No. 3119; TABLETS Saskatchewan, 688; Ontario, 942; | Brunswick, Baie 5 acy % BAY ER --eROSe": SNOT ASPIRIN AT ALL. i . Slee - - Get Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspir. in" in a "Bayer" Package, Plainly Marked With the Safety _ Bayer Cross." There is not a penny of German money invested in "Bayer 'Fablets of Aspirin," not will-a' German citizen profit by its sale or ever be allowed to acquire interest. The original world-famous Aspirin marked with the "Baver Cross" is now made in Canada and can be had at your druggist's in handy tin boxes of 12 tablets and larger "Bayer" pack- ages. Genuine Aspirin has biak proved safe by mil¥§ons for Pain, Headache, Toothache, Harache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Neuritis. Aspirin is the trade mark, register- ed in Canada, of Bayer Mantitacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid, " &y The Canny Scot. Sir Edward Carson, who recently celebrated hi 65th birthday, is a mine of legal anecd6tes. One that he is fond of relating concerns a certain Sandy M'Cute, known everywhere as the canniest Scot north of the Tweed. One day, says Sir Edward, Sandy as- | tonished a solicitor by walking into his office and squanflering six-and- eightpence recklessly, simply in order to make some trival inquiry about the law of landlord and tenant. Ah, but | there was a reason behind Sandy's question. "Now that you've heard the case," he asked presently, "ye thinks it worth fightin', do ye?" "Worth fighting. man?" replied the sojicitor, "Why, I'm almost prepared to guaran+ tee a favorable verdict." Sandy hnod- ded his head wisely. 'Ah, weel,' he remarked, "I'm much obiged tae ye, but I dinna think I'll go tae law this time, for ye see the case I've laid be- fore ye is my opponent's." Males' Large Majority. The excess of males over females in the Dominion is 437,347, which is an excess percentage of 13) males per 1,000 females, the male population be- ing 3,821,995 and the female 8,384,648. The number of females per 1,000 males is 886, the deficiency of females as compared with males being-greater in Canada than probably in any other country. The disparity is especially strongly marked in the Western Pro- vinces. The last census showed that the number of females per-1,000 males for each province was: British Colum- bia, 560; Manitoba, 622; Alberta, 673; New 956; Nova Scotia, 961; Quebec, 980; and Prince Edward Is- land, 991:--Canada Year Book, * + WHITEN YOUR SKIN WITH LEMON JUICE Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to remove tan, freckles, saliowness. GIRLS! Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply you with three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Squeeze the juice of two fresh lemons 'into a bottle, then put in the orchard white and shake well. This makes a quarter pint of the very best lemon skin whitener and complexion beautifier known. Massage this fragrant creamy lotion daily into the face, neck, arms and seed and just see how freckles, tan, allowness, redness and roughness Alaa appear and how smooth, soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless; and the 'beautiful results will surprise you. ------__-___--. -- Times Have Changed. "Times have changed and not for the better I think,' says Marse Henry Watterson. "In the old days, family : highly heated hydrogen gas---so vio- 1 serving the dark line of distortions na a afresh and overcoming many obstacles, " SOLAR FIREWORKS. Violent Explosions of Hyéragen Gas on the Surface of the Sun. We do not think of water a3 in any - sive;-yet one of its elements--hydro- gen--when heated to a high tempera- ture is one of the most explosive sub- stances known. On the surface of the sun there are Violent explosions of lent that they may be seen from the earth. At times, according to Dr, El- lerman of the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory, who discovered these hydrogen bombs, as they are called, they follow one another like balls of a Roman candle at intervals of ten or twenty minutes. three minutes. The bombs generally appear on the edge or at one side of sunspot groups that are in the pro- cess of developing. Repeated explo- sions occur almost exactly in the same place. j "The presence of the bombs is reveal- ed by the appearance of two intensely brilliant, narrow bands of nearly uni- form width on either side of the dark absorption line of hydrogen that is associated with the higher solar at- mosphere. The fact that neither the dark line itself nor any other of the absorption lines that belong to the various strata of the sun's atmosphere fs interfered with shows that the ex- plosions occur at a' considerable dis- tance below the" chromosphere--the lowest, densest layer of the solar en- velopes, in which are the majority of all the gaseous elements that com- pose the atmosphere of the sun. Dr. Ellerman first observed the two brilliant bands suddenly appear, one on each side rrr the dark absorption line of hydrogen, while he Was ob- and reversals in connection with an active sun-spot group. FJ eon .% | Surel High Heals Cause Gorns But | Who Cares Now 8-9 -- 9 --9----- 0 ---G 0 0 a mB Because style decrees- that women crowd and buckle up their tender toes in high heel footwear they-suffer from corns, then they cut and trim at these painful pests which merely makes the eorn grow hard. This suicidal habit may cause lockjaw and women are warned to stop it. A few drops of a drug called freez- one applied directly upon a-sore corn gives quick relief and soon: the' entire corn, root and all, lifts out without pain. Ask the drug store man for a quarter of an ounce of freezone, which costs very little but is sufficient to re- move every hard or soft corn or callus way having the nature of an explo- |: The duration of } '|the explosion is usually about two or NURSING. ANTED--PROBATIONERS FO}! the Montreal Women's Hospltal. Two years'.course, Monthly salary. dur- * ing period of training.. App Lady Superintendent, 1002 St. atheros Street -- est, Montreal, ( FOR SALE. EWSPAPER, WEEKLY, IN BRUCD County. Splendia opportunity. Write Box T, Wilsen Publishing Co., itmttod, {3 Adelaide Bt. W.. Toronto. al ELL EQUIPPED NEAVEEAPER and fob printing plant in 0 Ontario, Insurance carried $1,500. fo for $1,200 on quick sale. Box Wilson Publishing Co., Ltd. wine mene} POULTRY WANTED W HAT HAVE YOU FOR SALE IN Live Poultry, Fancy Hens. FupeeaD, Eges, etce.? Write I. Weinrauch I 10-18 St. Jean Gaptiste Market, Mon tren}, Que. ERCME BUILDERS! W RITE YOR OUR FREE BOOK O Mouse Plans, and information tell- ing how to save from Two to fetes are dred Dollars on your new i Ad-- srese Tialliday Company, . Hamilton, Ont. MISCELLANEOUS, ANCER, TUMORS. LUMPS, ETC. internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. sa valest ts before too late. Dr, ag ea Co., Limited, Collingwood, O sha Clean Up. A western mother writes respecting the business section of her town: found horrible conditions; piles of trash 'composed of papers, packing boxes, sweepings and sométimes garb- age, are found. These eventually con- stitute a rat harbor, fly-producing con- ditions and also a fire hazard," a Mudstaing may be removed from tan shoes by rubbing them with slices of raw potiato. When dry polish inthe usual way. This is to certify that fourteen years ago I got the cords of my left wrist nearly severed, and was for about nine months that I had no use of my hand, and tried other Liniments, also doc: tors, and was receiving no benefit. By 'ta persuasion from a friend I got MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT and used one bottle which completely cured me, and have been using MINARD'S LINIMENT in my family ever since and find it the same as when I first used it, and would never be without it. ISAAC EB. MANN. Meétapedia, P.Q, . Aug. 3ist, 1908. Keep an eye on cheep during the hot weather. If they are salted regularly they will learn to come when called, and in this way they can be counted to see that none are misis- ing. MONEY ORDERS. : When ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order, from one's feet, This drug is an ether compound and dries in a moment and simply shrivels up the corn without inflaming or even | irritating the surrounding tissue or | skin. Clip this out and pin on your wife's dresser. % ee Alpaca From Waste Wool. Some of the old folks talk a lot 'about the good old days, but most of |them have quit taking calomel and quinine. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cowg Never wear a blind bridle to keep Mr. (later Sir Titus) Salt, who had | been for some years connected with ; the woollen manufacture, happened , one day in 1836 to notice at Liverpool | soome three or four hundred sacks of | alpaca wool that had been imported | from time to time from South Ameri- | ca, in the hope of finding a manufac- | turer who might buy them for some purpose. Several men had tried to work up this new material, but with- out success, so there it lay for years, no one seeming to want it, till Mr. Salt came across it and, after a num- ber of trials, in which he modified his wool machinery to suit it, adapting it he finally solved the problem by adopt- ing cotton warps, and soon after put on the market a new material, alpaca, a soft, glossy, elegant fabric, which so took.the fancy of the public that, in some fifteen years, Mr. Salt amass- ed an enormous fortune, which thus enabled him to carry on the great philanthropical work which made him famous. < pia EN aaa TORONTO FAT STOCK SHOW. Careful preparation is the keynote pride and individual ambition ran hand . in hand. The son wanted to emulate | his father, and the father wanted to, see the son make his way in the | world ' his own.' But the change in the times is graphically illustrated | in a conversation I overheard recent- | ly. 'My son,' said the retired mer- | chant, 'when I was your age, instead | of idling and smoking cigarettes I was , laboring twelve hours a day building | rail fences.' I'm proud of you, dad,' | retorted the modern youth. 'Had it not been for your pluck and poktbhe ance, I might"be forced to do that same sort of work aa ee | Minard's Liniment Brie Colds, Ete. Frocks of a delicate color always, look better if washed in bran water, 'nio soap being used, to success in the live stock business, either in the fitting for the show ring or in the marketing of butcher stock. Placing of awards or the topping of the market depends largely on the con- dition of the animal when shown or offered for sale. Animals to be shown at the winter shows should, be selected now and preparations started so as to have them in the best possible condi- tion by show time. "The Toronto Fat Stock Show offers an excellent oppor- tunity for feeders who have taken the time to fully condition their stock to , get the highest market value, and in addition to compete for the many generous premiums that are offered. Men Sac Ree ae The foreign-born must not be the foreign-thinking. yourself from seeing tthe value of your neighbor's ideas and methods. All grades. Write for prices. TORONTO SALT WORKS Q. J. OLIFF . - TORONTO 'Tnvest Your Money | 55 % DEBENTURES Interest epayable half yearly. The Great West Permanent Loan Company Toronto Office 20 King St. West ------ CUTICURATEALS BABY S FACE Could Not Sleep Eruption Itched and Burned So. "T noticed a little pimple on my baby's face. I thought it was from the sun but it kept getting worse and the skin was red and veryhot. He could not sleep or rest the eruption itched and burned so, and it caused him to scratch. I was quite dis- couraged. "T saw.an advertisement for Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment and sent for afree sample. I bought more and after using twocakes of Cuticura Soap and two anda half boxes of Cuticura Ointment he was healed." (Signed) Mrs. S. D. McGuire, Clarksburg, Ont., Dec. 18, 1918. Use Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum for every-day toilet purposes. For free sample each of Cuticura Soap, ere ment and Talcum address post-card; "Ow Dept. A, Boston, U. 8. A."" PSold every where. | Minard's Liniment aden Distemper. ENSON 'S CORN STARCH Desserts--Rolls Sauces | FENSON'S is pure delicate and nouris cooking purposes. . It improves the t one-third of the repared corn starch, ing, unexcelled for all - | ture of bread, biscuits and rolls if our is substituted 1 with Benson's Corn Starch, It makes pie o crusts light and flakey. There. i. ; a aoe for the most delicious Blanc Mange 'on the package, together with a dozen othér uses, _ Benson's {s the best corn starch for making sauces ed graviea smooth and creamy. - 'Write for booklet of recipes acksop "Bagk of almost all of our stores are -- ¥

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