In Mrs. Ayan T iia E. Pinkham". {bk Compound elped Her um. July 9, 3y. “P‘ Ono-ova w~o~m~o-~W JRING JULY l and see it. Durban, Ontario “I took 1‘ y, $115k: ‘- Caps w ear Q)urham r Store 0-1- w o o OHOHO-W HIGH SCHOOL k :luringthehy. 4:31; confluent lby. I read .N Vegetable C0- 's Telegram ’ in. {HUT books. w. ’ {HWY}. butll 88' mm's cam oguo. have all kmd: 1.11:! "utside tho ‘ unalthy girl, .::(..-' .u birth. I :r' vg in a large nu. Who is as 00 . :hly Pquipped Pg: mmrses: Ill:|lit)ll. u'mnl School. Stan' is 5: Uni- l wxpvnenced and tone up the it may won; in * intends. A)"; {able medicint. I prepare to mm. «m may be "will. “IMP r960?!) 0"“ to main- \ vur trou- tinting on Pop Power r. â€n solo w'x'l wear â€Io~ bi“. ~hnuld in. lmvl‘ $1.00 w. 0. ~\~ 29' inc ipal man. mmodfl- 1s. mablï¬ ll. Dur- mhopp friends Anus, and Many apparently healthy people are troubled with! insomnia. It is not always easy to locate the cause in any individual case. Even though one regards himself as, perfectly healthy, careful examination may reveal the be- ginning of disease. The abnormal wakefulness may be a symptom of faulty functioning of one or more organs. When this is the case, the treatment of the insomnia is the treatment of the abnormal condition on which it is based. Ir nu disease is present. the habits A bedroom that is too hot or shuuld be carefully investigated. poorly ventilated may cause rest- sumu pomplt’ are wakeful because lessness. So may a bed that is too tho-y indulge in tea or coffee, or use soft. too well covered, or otherwise 1.... much tobacco near bedtime. uncomfortable. . 'l‘ln-w sometimes result in a nerâ€" Ell'orts to overcome insomnia by \Hlln' stimulation that makes sleep means of drugs are usually unsatis- Illipns‘slhlt‘. Much mental effort dur- factory and dangerous. Many sleep ma: Hlo' evening may also make the producing drugs are habit-forming. mind too active for sleep. They should he avgideq except when s-.‘-“- nun-um Lat. In] a Cause The, cause sometimes consists in eating too heartily a short time be- fore going to bed. This is especial- ly likely to be true if there is any tendency to digestive disturbances. Hu the other hand, some peo le have difï¬culty in sleeping if t ey are hungry. In such cases. a glass of milk and a cracker, taken at bed- time. is all that is needed. Mrs. W. D. writes: “My lower o'yt'lld so-oms to he turned in so that â€w nyq-lashes grow into the eye. 'l‘h.» vyo is always sore because tho o-ywlushvs koep scratching it. Some- “"1“." I can pull some of the lashes will. but they grow back again. Is lllo'l'v anything I can do to stOp than from growing like this?†Raply This can ho cornected by an op. wrzilinn on the eyelid_._ If yuu object to this little oper- atxun. you can have the lashes pulled wut whom they bother you. Or, mu van draw down the eyelid with a pit't'v nt' adhesive tape so that the int margin will be kept, turned out. and tlw lashes kept. from scratching Ilw vyo. Operation is the hast. They Probably Can’t Swim the Channel .I. M. writes: “I had a young nmn staying with me and found out. that, hn had lice. I have boom try- w; tn got rid of_t}3pm «wry since 1)): viii-hing and killing them, and \\l.~‘l|lllg my clothes in boiling wa- mz I am an Englishman and nevor fun-w what lim' WN‘N until I came ln-i-o. Would you ploaso toll me “ill†to do to got rid Of them?†Roply 'l'ho clothing should be boiled, Mzilwil or gone ovor with a hot iron. Lu-o liw in tho soams of clothing. l'r'o'ul tho bod clothing in the same on} as \vuat‘ing apparel. The body ~llulllll ho thoroughly scrubbed with wup and hot water. As a proven- l w. tho clothing should he dusted ‘lll'i' a wool; with wasth sulphur. ltw sin-o that the sulphur is distrib- :'w.l .Ilong tho spams: 1‘ l,__I CALEDON [CURTAIN ROAD TO BE IIPROVBD Road 13 to Be Put Straight Through. ‘l‘hn dangerous part 0! the Centre ‘i w! known as Calvdon Mountain wt the scene of many motur ac- 5-sz is going to ho changed. In- n! Hf the pl'PSt‘nt twisting road- _- 'u‘. a new road will be out through lull and tho gradvs consider- ngt‘lnklo‘ sulphur in the INSOMNIA By DR. w. J. scnoms Note: Dr. Scholes will mar wk health questions in these calm†as will be of_iutcr_agt to {than «41ch in A A-l A“ Thursday, J!†9, 1.. (Copyright, 1924, by The Bonnet-Brown Corporation, Chicago) HEALTH QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Eyelashes Turn In and A bedroom that is too hot or poorly ventilated may cause rest- lessness. So may a bed that is too soft, too well covered, or otherwise uncomfortable. - Ellorts to overcome insomnia by means of drugs are usually unsatis- factory and dangerous. Many sleep producing drugs are habit-forming. They should be avoided except when grescrihed by a physician. A warm nth. a hot foot bath and sponging the head with cool water before go- ing to bed are safer remedies. And the sleep produced by these sim- ple measures is natural and re- t'reshing. But the cause of the insomnia should be sought in the habits or in the presence of some beginning disease. Removing the cause is the best way to a cure. clqthing. Rooms which may harbor lice should be thoroughly cleaned by washing the walls with a 5 per cent solution of carbolic. acid. Kerosene will kill lice in the hair. Leave it on all night. But keep away fi'nm open flames! Vinegar will dissolve the nits. To Purify Water R. G. S. asks: “Will you tell me what it is that can be put into water to purify it? Someone has telcl me that there is something that one ean carry on trips that you can use in water when you don‘t know whether it is pure or not.†Reply Halazone tablets are used for this purpose. They liberate chlorin in the water. Ynur druggist can sup- ply them. A. B. P. writes: “I am 20 years} old and seem to be in fairly good health. But my heart beats too fast. It beats 90 times a minute, and it beats that fast. even when I am not exercising. What would cause it to heat. so fast?" Reply Some people normally have a more rapid heart action than others. Any weakness in the heart muscle may cause the heart to beat fast. It makes up in the number of beats the power that it lacks in each heat. The weakness of the muscle may be caused by infection or valvular disease. (her-activity of the thyroid often causes a rapid heart. Fever. such as that occur- ring in tuberculosis and the toxins of some diseases. may increase the. number of beats. Tobacco or cof- fee may be the cause. ably lessened. The trees and brush have heen cleared away. and a huge steam shovel started work on Mon- day morning. It. is expected three months. will he required to com- plete. the job. The McLean Com- pany. Tornnte. have the contract. â€"â€"-â€".--.-â€"â€"â€" “‘Lmk. papa.“ said the garage- man's daughter. when she. saw the dachshund. "what a long wheel-haw that dog has." Heart Beats Too Fast it}? The Journal-Bulletin. of Port Hawkesbury, a weekly newspaper published there for the past thirty- xgive years, has suspended publica- on. After some delay, occasioned through failure to secure a suit- able location, arrangements,are now virtually complete for the estab- lishment of another oil reï¬nery at Edmonton. Vince Motle, a Belgian, killed his wife at their home in Frank, Alta†Saturday and committed suicide. Motle’s mother was an eye-witness to the tragedy. No motive is known. Motle was a miner. Nelson Nickerson, of Trenton, N.S., who suffered a fractured skull on Dominion Day, when he was. thrown from a car in which he was motor- ing to Sydney, his former home, died in. the hospital in Antigonish, Mrs. M. F. Winters, of Lunen- berg, N. S., was elected Provincial Grand Mistress of the Grand Lodge of the Loyal True Blue Association of Nova Scotia, which has jnst con- cluded its annual session in New Glasgow, _N._ S. . Fifty delegates including men prominent in the fishing industry throughout Canada and the United States are expected in Halifax, N. S., to attend the three day session _of the Canadian Fisheries Assoeiation. Following a brief break in the weather during the last week, high temperatures are parching British Columbia forests and creating a fire situation which is causing serious alarm to ofï¬cials of the Provincial Forest Service. .‘JU' “Ix-â€" Assault charges preferred against three Clover Bar miners in con- nection with the present strike in the Edmonton coal ï¬elds. were adâ€" journed until Monday at a session of the Provincial Police Court on Friday. No_ evidence ‘was taken. A- It!“ Commutation of sentence to life imprisonment, has been granted by Governor-in-Council in the case of John Kollesavich, sentenced to hang at Lethbridge, Alta., on Tuesday, for the murder of J. H. Calkins at Wash, Alta. The murder took place on March 9, last._ _ 5'5“. ‘1 -- Norman and Ruby, children of Arthur Walker, of the Colonsay Dis- trict, near Saskatoon. were drowned on Friday in a slough, when Ruby lost her balance and fell from a raft on which the children were playing and dragged her brother in after her. “I v‘. D Much of the Alberta wheat Cl‘Op is from ten to thirteen inches high in the shot blade, and generally of a beautiful, healthy color, according to a survey by the Calgary Herald correspondents which goes to make up the sixth er0p report for 1925. Some of the early wheat is heading out. vuv. Pouring forth clouds of gas and dust, shooting sandstones heaven- ward and roaring at intervals with tho oxtrome pressure from the bowels of the earth, number 11 woll of the Northwestorn Utilities 633 Company “came in†as a big pro- ducer at Viking, Alta.. on Friday afternoon. The Nelson-Whitewater forest ï¬re attacked a ZOO-foot trestle over a deep gulch almost at \Vhitewaler. B. (1., early on Saturday, h t the Forest branch pumps saved i .. “While the llre had made progress in the direction of the ['tica Mine, it is not believed the buildings are. in danger. Barometric conditions in- dicate rain. \I‘LIIL" 5“..- Citizens of Kendra and surround- ing district united in welcoming Field Marshal Haig and his party on Saturday. A civic. reception was extended to the distinguished \‘lSl- tnrs. following which Earl Haig was presented tu more than 100 mem- bers 0f the Kendra Branch 9f the Great, W‘ar .Vetm-ans‘ . Association. An Improsswn memonal ceremony was held at. tho local cmptaph: In its third crop report issued on Friday night, based on returns from 320 correspondents, the ManitOha Free Press states that the genera! crop conditions in the p‘airie prov- inces is very satisfactory. The re- port. indicates that there wil' be no increase over the 1924 acreage. Large. sections of Alberta and dis- tricts in Saskatchewan are in need of more moisture despite the damp weather last month. Several delegatos to the third Im- pnrial Press COUfQI‘PDCP “111011 “in ho held at Mnlbom‘nv Austialia, at the 9nd of next month. arrived in THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Quebec on Saturday on the 8.8. Em- ress of Scotland from Southampton. he purpose of the conference, stated Sir Joseph Reed, who is rep- resenting the Press Association at the Conference, is to consider the best means to he adopted in order to provide the most rapid transmis- sion of news to all parts of the British Empire. . W. W» Gort'orth, B. A., has been appointed special lecturer in econ- omics at McGill Uuiversity. Mr. Gotorth aduated with honors from the niversit'y of Toronto. Approximately 50,000,000 bushels of wheat were delivered to the San- katchewan wheat pool up to April 3, or practically halt the total de- liveries made from Saskatchewan up to that date. according to a re- port Saturday hy the secretary. After thirty-ï¬ve minutes’ deliber- ation, the petit jury m Supreme Court in S dney, N.S., before Mr. Justice Gra am, found a verdict of “Not. guilty†in the case of the King Vs. Ernest Devisorr of__quce Bayer; AAA AA {61331338 'o? 166' 'éhért ' of $19,994.47 from the Glace Bay branch of the Royal Bqnl'g 9! Qanada. - â€"- "fl 'Aâ€"Aâ€"‘A-n n‘ “-nâ€" v- 'â€"â€"â€"w ___V Samuel Fullerton, 73, foreman at the Acadia Sugar Reï¬nery at Dart- mouth, N.'S., was found dead Mon- day morning at. the foot of the ele- vator shaft at the plant. A coron- er’s jur found that death was due to skul fracture caused. it is thought, from a fall down the shaft from the ï¬fth floor. No blame was attached to the company or equip- ment. A large number of tourists were forced to flee when fire destroyed two summer cottages and several tents with their equipment and con- 1tents, and threatened for a time to wipe out an encampment of 200 tourists at Veddar Crossing and Cultus Lake, in the Fraser Valley, British Columbia, Saturday, accord- ing to word received in New West- minster. l.va- Secrets of the archives of France, England, the United States and Can- ada are to come to light and a num- ber of the interesting historic facts will be revealed as a result of the competition on the history of Can- ada, which has been instituted by Hon. Athanase David, Provincial Secretary, judging by the interest manifested abroad by distinguished historians. I 5;, VI. I Hon. W. R. Motherwell, Federal Minister of Agriculture, arrived in Winnipeg Saturday on his way West. Mr. Motherwell stated that he and the Hon. Charles Stewart Minister of the Interior, were meet- ing at Bantl' next week-end to dis- cuss with several prominent West- ern men various Western problems. He would not state in detail what these problems were. .. “-4- _ ‘1‘-.. With airplanes of the Forestry Patrol soaring over their heads, thousands of persons massed in the streets of Calgary to see the great historical pageant celebrant, the fif- tieth anniversary of the coming of the R.N.\V.M.P. to Alberta. The floats. on a more ambitious scale than in any previous year, were escorted by hundreds of Indians in their war paint with cowboys and chuck wagons. “I. to the ofï¬ce of the chief of police of Medicine Hot and confeeeed to e cherge of ereon. lie was Stineon, the owner of the herdwere store. Stinson has been brought backto Weyhurn. Seek†where he will be Three slight earth tremors. all re- garded as local disturbances, were recorded on the seismograph at Dal- hous'te University, Halifax. one on Saturday night and two on Sunday night. according to information given out Monday morning by Dr. . L. Bronson, head of the physics department. Saturday night’s tre- mor occurred at “2‘ o‘clock and lasted two or three seconds. Sun- day night’s shocks were of longer duration, the ï¬rst lasting from 9.05 to 9.07 o’clock and the second from 10.15 to 10.23 o’clock. A peculiar position on the ques- tion of church union exists in Flesherton at the present time. the working out of which will he watched with interest~ Both churches here were practically unanimous on the matter of union. The Methodist minister was exceed- ingly enthusiastic on the questionl until recently. He told his congre-i ,gatxon that “It was God’s work and was bound to come as sure as there was a God in heaven.“ He was a true rophet. but for a few weeks past or some reason, his enthus- iasm appeared to have waned. Rev. Mr. Harrower of the Presbyterian church has always been a uiet but Isturdy worker towards t e same end. . Under the sanction of both min- isters, a committee was appointed to draft recommendations to placel before the united congregations and these recommendations were sanc- tioned by the members of both churches. Among these recommend- ations it was decided that the Methodist church and parsonage should be used and the Presbyterian minister, Rev. Mr. Harrower, called to the pulpit of the United church. This arrangement was deemed sat- isfactory by both congregations, :and harmony has prevailed in a “marked manner in both flocks who fully expected to enter into the new relations the first Sunday__in_ July. In the meantime, the Methodist' conference met last month, and the stationing committee sent along another minister for the Methodist church here to take the place of Rev. H. H. Eaton who has gone to Unionville. The people of the Meth- odist church resent this action of the conference and do not feel like accepting the situation calmly, as they were not consulted through their board of managers, and their {preparedness for immediate union was utterly ignored. Many of the Methodist congregation have ex- pressed themselves in vigorous terms and state that as far as they are concerned, the actual union will take place on Sunday next, when the new Methodist minister is ex- pected to take his charge here. There has been no explanation made as to why a minister was sent, pre- sumably for another year, and the indignation is quite justiï¬ed. The result, as we said, will he awaited with interest.â€"Flesherton Advance. Advertise in The Grhoniclo, it pus UNION ll PLBSIBRTOI A colored my am into the ofï¬ce of the estate {or which she worked to receive; her monthly wuss. As she could not .mito. she shuys made her mark on the rs- ceiptâ€"the ususl cross. “But on thus occasion, she made a circle. t‘What‘s the matter, Limb?†the clerk in chute asked. “Why don‘t you make a cross as usual?†“Why," Linda explained enm- estly, ‘ Ah done got carried jester- day 011‘ changed mnh mm. All Our Graduates hunbouphoodwdntemd It!!! mmwumrmore. th Got your course NOW. If you donotptuyoupoyrorit and led opportunities hia- uy my. Write. «it or phone at information. mm â€mm Mid-I08 PAGI 3.