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Durham Review (1897), 25 Nov 1920, p. 7

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experts aspects nger service Mustard belongs to the same order of plants as the cabbage, and is a near relative of the wallfower and on â€"week stock says an English paper. The Angloâ€"Saxons mixed mustard »|s with honey to give a piquancy . their sweet puddings, and it was med as far back as the time of Hippoâ€" crates for medicinal purposes. \rab physicians discovered the disâ€" n of alcohol from the leea of through experiments with musâ€" The life way, the strife way, and but one way to go; The old way, the true way, of bearing each his blow; T‘he long way, the song way, and after all we‘ve done, The twilight and the singing stars, the shadows of the sun. The mad way, the glad way, the way that all feet tread; The fire way, the high way, and never a "No" he said; The rough way, the gruff way, and in our time and place These are the two largest bottles ever made for use as such, but at another exhibition, held at Bordeaux, an erection was built in the centre of the grounds to represent a bottle of tonic bitters. This immense bottle was 115 ft. in height. On the ground floor was a large refreshment room, and there were three stories above. FT Another huge bottle, blown about the same time by the same firm, meaâ€" sured 10 ft. in height and 4 ft. in diaâ€" meter. Filled with scent, it was later on shown at the Paris International Exhibition, When the next general election for Parliament is held England will have at least a dozen prominent women in the Labor party field as candidates for the House of Commons. Practicalâ€" ly all of these women have a national reputation as social workere and re formers. the largest in England, and twenty feet high, is growing at Hounslow, Middlesex. Watch the saw. Circular saws are said to be our most dangerous maâ€" chines. You can‘t get funny with â€" buzzâ€"saw. It has NO 908C ~* anmar w‘ * "".. girts; the Arab desert woâ€" .an pérfumes her body by sitting A gooseberry bush, believed to be Girls are \ Hopi Maid‘s Courting. World‘s Biggest Bottles. hope that sent along our path the light of one sweet face. strong way, the wrong way, and then to turn and see right way, the light way, the bright way glimmering free; sweel way, the fleet way, true toil and song and rest n the gleam of stars the dream of some one‘s waiting breast. Mustardâ€"Pot Mems. present the blossoms of a vine, symbol of virx’nity.\but e untutored in their meaning epresent huge door knobs set ither violent angle. r this aggressive young lady has «1 her victim, and his mother reed that he shall be sacrificed, rves in the house of her future vâ€"inâ€"law for thirty days grinding very much after the fashion that served fourteen years for or actually in the smoke of a of slow fire of burning M‘ )oor youth in the meanwhile t sit idly by, but weaves her garments. d in its present familiar form made by Mrs. Clements, of who separated the black m the seeds before grinding Durham" mustard was popu* y George I., who liked its nd flavour. ition to its uses as a condiâ€" table and in medicine, musâ€" argely grown to feed sheep. ) the rapidity of its germinâ€" ; valuable as a green manure, ughed into the land when a ks old. to the scarcity of natural and manures, (Germany‘s corn ve been manured with musâ€" e the war. are two references to musâ€" the New Testament. 4 y and _ indirectly, 128,000 re employed in Great Britain ag, manufacturing and selling Women for Parliament. it The Life Way. th )ec firm of wineâ€"growers has sed to be made a bottle 00 quarts of champagne. ver, is not quite a record, blown some years ago at order of a Scotch whisky ipacity of two hogsâ€"heads, neâ€"fourth more than its of no race possess more cose husbands than the women _ of Arizna. _A 0t simply woo the man but simply and forcibly oposition to his mother encouragement on his liminary proceeding is n two gigantic whorls, ear. This is her anâ€" at she is going courtâ€" uliar knots are intendâ€" Mems. he same order age, and is a s wallfiower and English paper. Friendship. Old friendships that have stood the test of years And not grown dim Are like the miracles with which our God endears _ , The autumn glory and the tender springâ€" Repeating o‘er and o‘er His promisa True friendship is a mark of godliâ€" ness within the soulâ€" There‘s naught than Man may know more fair, ® Nay, nothing lovelier written upon life‘s scroll. The British highâ€" acroplanes stands a hour. To rest our bodies, we should stand up for ten out of every thirty minutes, according to one authority. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Distemper To bring about a decrease in infant mortality is one of the most pressing problems of the ‘hour. During the great war the countries engaged sufâ€" fered tremendously not only materialâ€" ly and financially, but also by a deâ€" crease in birthâ€"rate through the abâ€" sence of such large numbers of poâ€" tential fathers, and the high rate of infant mortality. Now that we as nations are trying| in certain cases, but they are the exâ€" to readjust ourselves to peaceful purâ€" ception. _ , suits, one of the fundamental under-’ Feeding the child at the mother‘s takings that confronts us is the welâ€" breast is nature‘s own way, and that fare of the coming generation. The it is the safest way is shown by the ravages of war, with the accompanyâ€" fact that ten bottleâ€"fed babies die toi ing scarcity of food and shortage of| one fed on the breast. Mother‘s milk houses for the people have reaped contains the proper elements of food their harvest of death, and the nations‘ in the tight proportion for the growâ€" are depleted of manâ€"power. How then ing child. It does not always have to can we set about to remedy this unâ€"| be prepared or measured; it is always natural condition? Obviously.by safeâ€"| ready, and is never sour. Breastâ€"fed guarding the life of the newlyâ€"born, babies seldom have bowel trouble, and heiping mothers to bring their which is so fatal in bottleâ€"fed babies, children through the first year of life especially during hot weather. Inâ€" â€"the most critical stage of their| sufficient or improper feeding of inâ€" whole existence. 'fants is prevalent and leads to dire A few figures will help to show| results, an example of this being furâ€" what great need there is for some conâ€"! nished only a few days ago by the certed, organized effort to reduce the, Medical Officer of Health of a large appalling deathâ€"rate of infants. Dur-l city in Ontario who found that thirty A few figures will help to show| what great need there is for some conâ€"‘ certed, organized effort to reduce the appalling deathâ€"rate of infants. Durâ€" ing the year 1918, in Ontario, 6402 babies under one year of age died. Think what this means. Imagine the sorrow it has brought to every home where the little life flickered out. But the most distressing point about the whole tragedy is that a large number of these babies died because their mothers did not know how to take care of them. Sometimes it was a herediâ€" tary weakness that caused death, the infant being brought into the world handicapped by some disease or deâ€" formity, directly resulting from the sins of the father or mother. In many cases, however, the child is born quite healthy, and if given a, reasonable chance will grow up a healthy man or woman; but in the critical months after its birth, when attacked by so many little aiiments that efficient medical and nursing treatment can successfully overcome, the mother does not know what to do, and not realizâ€" ing the seriousness of the baby‘s conâ€" dition, neglects calling in a doctor until too late. As regards infant feeding, much educational work is needed. There is a tendency nowadays among certain classes of mothers to feed their chilâ€" dren on the bottle, instead of nursing them. The principal excuse for th*s is that nursing ties them down, interâ€" feres with their social functions, and in general makes them slaves to their ly efficient in colds and Catarrhal Hi:hfle{twnoof rl:emoemd throat mums BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES m B A UME. BENCUE $1.00 a tube. _ _ THE LEEMING MILES CO., LTD. MONT REAL Agents for Dr. Jules Bengué INSTANT POoOSTU M A drink that resembles coffee, with none of coffee‘s harm, and it costs less. â€" RELIEVES PAIN When the Coffee Drinker makes a change in his table beverage, he naturally turns to iâ€"speed record for at 166.8 miles an BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON HEALTH EDUCATION His promise The Years . When I wis young and M I‘d ran a many mile, And when I came to thirty I‘d sit and rest awhile And now that I am thirtyâ€"five I am the sleepiest man alive. But maybe when I‘m forty I‘ll shake my legs again, And walk from then till fifty With yourlg and striding men. And hillward go in sixty‘s year _ To see how yet the counties fare. When I am oldâ€"and eighty All treasons will be done Of love and silly bitterness, And I shall watch the sun Go out, and little heed the fear That smote upon my middle year. THE FALL WEATHER HARD ON LIT ELE ONBS Canadian fall weather is extremely hard on little ones. One day is warm and bright and the next wet and cold. These sudden changes bring on colds, cramps and colic, and unless baby‘s little stomach is kept right the result may be serious. There is nothing to equal Baby‘s Own Tablets in kecping the little ones well. They sweeten the stomach, regulate the bowels, break up colds and make baby thrive.â€" The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents .a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A newly invented machine kneads dough with metal arms, which reproâ€" duce exactly the movements of the human kneader. children. On the other hand, I have actually heard women say that bottleâ€" fed babies are healthiest, because the mother can adjust the strength of the bottled milk she used to suit the child, while oftentimes the mother herself is not strong and therefore physically unfit to supply enough nourishing milk to enable the baby to live and thrive. This latter argument may hold good in certain cases, but they are the exâ€" ception. _ , per cent. of the children of that city arriving at school age were underâ€" developed through insufficient and imâ€" proper feeding during the first two years of life. What is the remedy for this Stat@ Tho nave a h of affairs? It must be to educate?;fl{glmvgg mothers=@$ to the best and most scienâ€"| th¢ P&tERt, M tific methods of child welfare, and it does Minard‘s is along these lines that the Division £9°4 f0" m# of National and Child Welfare in the| Provincial Board of Health is working) toâ€"day. Efforts are being made to get! closely in touch with the people, not| According from a legislative standpoint, but January 31, merely from a coâ€"operative standpoint.| Austria, in The first step in this scheme of child !imits, has welfare is to bring about close assoâ€", Compared ciation between the mother and the figures for public health nurse, without which no shows a los satisfactory working arrangement can ; cent. The be effected. It is more and more beâ€"| 4 P°p“lm°‘: ing realized that the state should| a loss of 18 share the responsibilty with the parent M? in successfully bringing up children, Send 1 and so develop a strong and healthy o rde Tah race, the nation‘s best asset. | Css * This will necessitate a Systematic Home Visitation by the nurse, a School for Mothers, and an Infant Consultaâ€" tion, coupled with a scheme providing healthy surroundings, facilitiee for proper feeding, fresh air and other general measures conducive to good health among young and old. (Continued next week.) 9728 9726 No. 9728â€"Girl‘s Dress. Price, 25 cents. With lining; straight gatherâ€" ed flounces attached to twoâ€"piece skirt. In 5 sizes, 6 to 14 years. Size 8, net, 5% yd. 45 ins. wide; flouncing, 7 yds. 8% ins. wide; without collar, with long sleeves, 3%% yds. 36 ins. wide; with collar and short sleeves, 244 yds. 86 ins. wide. * No. 9726â€"Girl‘s Dress, Price, 25| cents. With or without Eton jacket; two styles of sleeve; straightâ€"gathered flounces attached to twtâ€"piece skirt.| In 5 sizes, 6 to 14 years. Size 8 with| Eton jacket, flouncing, 5% yds. 10%| ins. .wide; with long sleeves, without collar and Eton, 2% yds. 86 ins. wide.‘ These patterns may be obtained. from your local McCall dealer, or from, the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. Where blackened war sowed powderâ€" ed, whirring sleep; 1 Where now the white and rigid crosses grow Like lilies undisturbed by wind or snow ; He stays; his last adventure there shall keep. Dreams take no measure of the partâ€" ing miles, I can but dream and step across a sea e And he foregoes those silent serried files, He wakes and strolls remembered paths with me. With smiles, not tears, he proudly seeks my gaze, As fits the young who braved great deeds‘ mischance, It troubles him that I should think him far To whom all things are near, my hands, a star Oh, not to cry my loss but his high praise I tell with voice so dim; He sleeps in France. t For years I have never considered my stock of household remedies complete unless a bottle of Minard‘s Liniment was _ ifftluded. For, burns, _ bruises, sprains, frostbites or‘chillblains it exâ€" cels, and I know of no better remedy for a severe cold in the head, or that will give more immediate relief, than to inhale from the bottle through the nasal organ. And as to my sunply of veterinary remedies it is essential, as it has in very many instances proven its value. A reâ€" cent experience in reclaiming what was supposed to,be a lost section of a valuâ€" able cow‘s udder has again demonstrated its great worth and prompts me to reâ€" commend it in the highest terms to all who have ?erd of cows, large or small, I think I fim safe in suylnf among all the patent medicines there is none that covers as large a field of usefurmess as does Minard‘s Liniment. A real trueism good for man or beast. CHAS. K. ROBBINS, Chebogue Point, N.S. _According to the census taken on January 31, 1920, the Republic of Austria, in its present territorial limits, has a population of 6,067,430. Compared . with the corresponding figures for 1910, the census of 1920 shows a loss of 227,209, or 3.6 per cent. The city of Vienna alone, with a population of 1,842,005 in 1920, shows a loss of 189,493, or 9.3 per cent. MONEY ORDERS. Send a Dominion Express Money Order. They are payable everywhere, During the war extensive use was made of radium for luminous watch dials. These were extremely useful, inasmuch as, in timing night attacks and on many other occasions, it was necessary for officers to look at their watches, and to light a match would have been dangerous. Radium was used also to illuminate gunsights, thus rendering marksmanâ€" ship at night much more accurate. . Unfortunately, since the end of the war something like 95 per cent. of our entire output of this most precious of substances has been used for luminous paint. It is a senseless squandering of what may be irreplaceable, for the sources of radium are fow. * Considering the proved usefulness of radium in the treatment of cancer, this reckless waste is little short of criminalâ€"especially in view of the fact that, for the making of luminous paint "inesothorium" would serve equally well. Thif is a byâ€"product of the manufacture of thorium, which is derived from monazite sand. Not oaly has the world‘s stock of radium failed to increase of late, but it is believed to be actually less by oneâ€"half than it was a faw years ago. There is one tele;hone to each eight inhabitants of the United States. He Sleeps in France. How Radium Was Squandered. Btfects of War. â€"Kathryn White Ryan. “ The Strenuous Conditions of Life j _ Toâ€"day Are Responsible. Mothers who remark that girls toâ€" day are. more prone to ansemia than the girls of a generation ago, should look back at the surroundings in which they and their companions lived. They would easily see the reaâ€" wWHV ANABMIA PREVAILS day. Now the schoolâ€"girl‘s life is more strenuous; her more numerous stuâ€" dies are a severe tax upon her strength. Also, girls enter business soon after leaving schoolâ€"at an age when they most need rest and outâ€" door life. Their womanly developâ€" ment is hampered by the stress of working hours, hurried and often scanty meals. Girls are more liable to bloodiessness torlay. ‘but there is this consolation that, whereas doeâ€" tors formerly regarded anaemia as often incurable, the cures are now counted in tens of thousands. Such medicines as Dr. Williams Pink Pi!s have restored to good health thouâ€" sands of weak anaemic girls and woâ€" men, simply because they contain the elements necessary to make new, rich, red blood which means good health and vitality. When your daughteor‘s strength fails i act line oi the Course, and pallor, breathlessness and back-1 The 360 feet correspond to the deâ€" ache disclose her anaemic condition, grees of a circle, If a circle be drawn remember that you can make her we]lI so that all four points of the baseball and assure her healthy developmenfldlamond fall upon its circumference, by giving her Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills ‘ the first base, second base, third base to make good red blood. Remember,| and home plate will be located at the too, that for women of all ages Dr,‘ 90, 180, 270 and 360 degree marks, Williams‘ Pink Pills are especially| The pitcher‘s station is in the approxiâ€" helpful in the many ailments that, mate center, result from watery blood. They| Baseball is really governed by make women and girls well and keoep| mathematics. It is highly scientific them well. This is amply proved by‘ pursuit. Those who understand it the case of Miss Eva MacKlunon,lbefit are even now learning a great Glammis, Ont., who says: "As a school| deal about it which they did not know girl I grew very pale and would take | before by a systematic study of picâ€" dizzy spells and sometimes vomiting. | tures taken with the soâ€"called "slowâ€" My condition was such that I was not, motion". camera. able to attend school regularly, and.. This sort of camera takes photoâ€" my mother was very much worried | graphs at tremendous speed, 120 of about my condition. Finally she de.| them a second, whereas the ordinary cided to give me Dr. Williams‘ Pink : movie camera makes only eixteen to Pills and I took these for a considerâ€"| & second. When the film is run able time, gradually gaining strength t through the machine at the ordinary until I was perfectly well. It is some | r&ate, the movements of the players on years since I took the pills and I gave the screen appear absurdly slow and enjoyed the best of health, and [it‘iellberate. so that the time required am certain pale, sickly girls will find new health if they give Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills a fair trial." You can procure Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills through auy dealer in medicine or they will be sent you by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing direct to The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Chinaman has a round head. Every hair on his head is shaped likeâ€" wise. That is to say, a crossâ€"section of it (as seen under the microscope) is circular. People of our own race have heads that are more or less oval in form, as your hat will show. The hairs of your head are likewise oval in section. The negro has an oblong head. Call it rather an oblong square. Each inâ€" dividual hair of his kindly wool is obâ€" long square in action. Which, in fact, is the reason why it kinks. Nobody knows why there should be this sort of correspondence between the shape of the head and the shape of the hair It is just a fact in nature Do you feel at ‘sixes and sevens" toâ€" day? You are bilious, constipated! You feel headachy, full of cold, unâ€" strung. Your meals don‘t fitâ€"breath is bad, skin sallow. Take Cascarets toâ€"night for your liver and bowels and wake up clear, rosy and cheerful. No gripingâ€"no inconvenience. Children love Cascarets too. 10, 25, 50 cents. in life‘s altered circumstances toâ€" «‘They Work while you Steep" Touch Tender Spots With Cuticura After Shaving tender spots on face or dandruff on scalp with a bit of Cuticura Ointment. ‘Then wash all off with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse with tepid water. The Shapes of Hair. CASCARETS I88UE No. 47â€"‘20. <Ii0 ARCHIVES TORONTO speed of the fastest railroad train,. It travels from second base to the home plate, or from first base to third base, in one second. Bee the man pick up the bat; he is going to hit the ball. At all events he will try to hit it A little over fourâ€" fifths of a second elapses from the instant when the ball leaves the pitchâ€" er‘s hand to the instant when it is struck by the bat. The man hbas hit the ball. If it is a straight hard drive the ball will travel at a speed of something like 150 miles an hour. It was, let us say, : twoâ€"base hit. The rynner stands at second base and the pitcher winds up for a fresh efâ€" fort. He is a fast pitcher, and the ball he sends over the plate is one of his swiftest. It travels at a speed of two and twoâ€"fifths a minute, 210 feet a second. Bang! It is a home run this time. The runner, if doing his best, covers the distance betwaen each two bases in three and a half seconds. The cirâ€" cuit he must cover is a track 300 feet in ‘length, or a little less than oneâ€" fifteenth of a mile, without reckoning the departures he makes from the exâ€" act line of the course,. The 360 feet correspond to the deâ€" grees of a circle. If a circle be drawn so that all four points of the baseball diamond fall upon its circumference, the first base, second base, third base and home plate will be located at the 90, 180, 270 and 360 degree marks, The pitcher‘s station is in the approxiâ€" mate center. This sort of camera takes photo-I graphs at tremendous speed, 120 of ; them a second, whereas the ordlnary‘ movie camera makes ouly eixteen tol a second. When the film is run‘ through the machine at the ordinary | rate, the movements of the players on | the screen appear absurdly slow and | deliberate, so that the time required | for each action can be exactly deâ€"| temined Accept "California" Syrup of Figs onlyâ€"look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is hbaving th» best and most karmless physic for the little stomâ€" ach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Zull directions on each bottle. You must say "Cali> "California Syrup of Figs" Child‘s Best Laxative The HALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited MAMILTON _ Factory bistrimurors For Colds, Pain, Headache, ;Neuralâ€" a. ‘Toothache, Earache, and for 30BHSEECOUOGHS MOTHER! Not ‘Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN CANA DA New Figures. Instead of the king, queen and jack, the latest style of playing cards are pictured as a "Tommy" for the king, a Red Cross nurse for the queen, a Sailor for the jack, and the ace is reâ€" presented by an aviator. Minard‘s Liniment For Dandruf®. Domestic economy was introduced as a lesson into English schools in 1874. it & C A 35â€"cent bottle of delightful "Danâ€" dorine" freshens your sealp checks dandruff and falling hair. This stimuâ€" lating "beautyâ€"tonic‘ gives to thin, ‘dull, fading hair that youthful bright» ness and abundant thicknessâ€"All ldm;glsts! Book on and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Adâ€" G@ress by the Author. x H ‘m Co., Inc. 11 est $1st Street New York, U.8.A. Immediately after a "Dartderine"* massage, your hair takes on new life, lustre and wondrous beauty, appear» ing twice as heavy and plentiful, beâ€" cause each hair seems to flufl and thicken. Don‘t let your hair stay lifeâ€" less, coloriess, plain or scraggly. You, too, want lots of long, strong, beauti« ful bair. Girls! Save Your Hairl Make It Abundant! ~I _ o mnenagme ~ / ceR N .. . . n 0 Th #28 §,+ y 1 4. B & y i /d h 5.945 America‘s Pioneer Dog Remedics package which contains wnrhto . rections. Then you ame gotting real "DANDERINE" $104a@7rs Liniment((©) is alwal}"s yready i3 easoe vThcuimalisnal “AT the very first twinge, down comes my bottle of Eloan‘s; then quick rolie?, cuthou? rubbing, for it‘s stimulating and seatters eongesucn. The boys use it for iff musgles, and it holps Sally‘s backaches, too.""* 35¢, 20¢, $1.40. A Kidney Remedy Kidney troubles ars frequently caused by badly digested food which overtakes these organs to eliminate the irritant acids formed. Help your stomach to properly digest the food by taking 15:to 30 drops of Lxtract of Roots, sold as Mother Scigel‘s Corstive Syrup, and your kidnes disorder will promptly disâ€" . Get the genuine. 7 ETATE BREED esh e@rs. Knipe,

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