Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 6 Nov 1935, p. 3

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* Find Out From Your Doctor if the "Pain" Remedy You Take Is Safe. Don't Entrust Your Own or Your Family's Well - Being to Unknown Preparations BEFORE you take any prepara- tion you don't know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains of rheumatism, neuritis or neuralgia, ask your doctor what he thinks about it â€" in comparison with "Aspirin." We say this because, before the discovery of "Aspirin," most so- called "pain" remedies were ad- vised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And the discovery of "Aspirin" largely changed medical practice. Countless thousands of people who have taken "Aspirin" year in and out without ill effect, have proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Remember this: "Aspirin" is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered for the relief of headaches and all common pains . . . and safe for the average person to take regularly. "Aspirin" Tablets are made in Canada. "Aspirin" is the registered trade-mark of the Bayer Company, Limited. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet. Demand and Get "ASPIRIN" Clothes Of Destiny Caljrary â€" Good clothes make a man, but poor clothes provide food easier, Bill Haraland, jfraduate of the University of Toronto, found, Unemployed since his firm in To- ronto shut down a year ago. Bill "hit the road" in his good clothes, but after his money ran out he found difficulty in making "touches." He said he found more sympathy when dressed in overall pants and »n old shirt, but admitted he found is easier to keep out of jail if dressed in his best. "Real popularity is something not caught with a lariat nor fished for, not even consciou.<»ly tried for." â€" Emily Post. NOW TAKE HEALTH from LITTLE MANITOU SPA FAMOUS MINERAL SALTS BROUGHT TO YOU Carlsbad, Vichy and other resorts In Europe are famous for their mineral springs. Canada, too, has its Carlsbad, for Lit- tle Manltou Lake In Saskatchewan Is an amazing lake â€" a lake oC wondrous virtues â€" yleldins medicinal salts o£ potent curative properties. These powerful healtli-Kivlng .salts are extracted from the waters of the lake, cleaned and prepared, with the addition of Iodides, by expert chemists. They mre then available to you as "Saskasal" â€" a very fitting name for these medi- cinal Spa Siilts of Saskatchewan. Saskasal is a non-effervescent salt highly recommended In all aliments arising: from over-acldlty of the blood. If you suffer from Kheumatism, Neuri- tis, Mild Stom.'ich Disorders, Kidney tnd Liver troubles, Impuie Blood, Skin Eruptions and Constipatiim, a short course of .Saskasal will soon put you In the chorus sinBlng Its praises. If you are drifting along in indifferent health, one bottle of Saskasal will Jive you a new experience of what It eels lilse to be In real good health. If you think you already enjoy good health, take a sample of Saskasal and then Judge If your stomach, kidneys and bowels needed the flushing Saskasal cave them. On sale at your druggists â€" enough for 10 weeks' treatment â€" (!'.lc a bottle. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY SASKASAL LIMITED, Bales Office; 102 Atlantic Ave., Toronto. I would like to try S.VSKASAL. Plea.se Bend me a FREE Sample as offered In this advertisement. Name Address Town Prov. M-25 Grace Moore Likes Black for Evening I . I Gets Molyneux Wardrobe; Two Daytime Ensembles In Same Shaae A millionaire, 77, has taken a bride, 37, but the chances are he will not take her very far. Can you drive with one hand?" asked the girl in a gentle voice. "You bet I can," replied the young man, eagerly "Then have an apple," answered the sophisticated young creature. Even the perfectly good lies are so ilow on their feet they're easily overtaken. Customer â€" I want to buy gome rouge and face powder. Clerk â€" For your wife, sir, or to match your coat lapel? Business Magnate â€" I am a manu- done more than the law-makers to combat the unrest. Politician â€" How so? Business Hagnate â€" I am a manu- facturer of mattresses and beds. "I've never had the pleasure of meeting your wife!" "What makes you imagine it would be a pleasure?" Actor â€" Hurrah! At last I have a leading part! Friendâ€" .\re you to play the hero? Actor â€" Not exactly â€" I lead a camel on the stage. The minister persists in askiny the bridegroom: "Do you take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?" just as though he didn't know they sent for him. Paris. â€" Black will be tlie popular color for evening styles if Grace Moore has anything to do with set- ting female fashions. Slie's back in Hollywood getting ready for an- other picture, but her wardrobe came from Molyneux in Paris. She selected three black evening gowns, one in tulle net with the full skirt sprinkled with chejiile dots, another in black taffeta that is striped in white and a third in black lace for dinner wear. This gown is fashioned with a small cape. There is a pale pink satin gown which has no shoulder straps at all, but is molded at the bodice. The skirt is flounced and quite full and a long pink scarf is tied about the waist For more formal occa-sions she chose a lame gown of peri- winkle blue and silver. For an evening wrap she will wear a long cape of emerald green velvet lined in silver lame. Two ensembles for afternoon wear are in black. One tailored en- semble has a dress of pleated black crepe with a buttoned bodice and is worn with a black and wool coat fastening with black patent leather buttons. The other is dressier al- though in wool. It consists of a caped dress with bows at the neck line and at the side of the waist. It is worn with a full cape of black Persian lamb, long in bacK and at the liips and shorter in front. This ensemble is completed with a black astrakan toque trimmed with a black of violeLs. For traveling Grace Moore wears a beige jersey dress and a brown coat trimmed with nutria. Woman â€" A letter from your hus- band, I see. Friendâ€" Yes, it's chiefly to send these two needles for me to thread. He's camping, you know, and has to do his own sewing, you know. Maybe somebody will invent some- thing sometime that will never need any spare parts. Great E.xpiorerâ€" We were slowly starving to death, but we cut up our boots and made soup of them. Fellow Boarder (at boarding house)â€" S-sh-sh-sh Not so loud. The landlady might hear you. Wifeâ€" How do you like the potato salad, dear? Hubby â€" Delicious! Did you buy it yourself? Learn to take the low hurdles so that when opportunity comes you can make the high ones. Bill â€" Why do the leaves turn red in the autumn? Johnâ€" I suppose they are blushing to think how green they've been all the summer. In a country newspaper appeared the following advertisement: "The man who picked up my wallet in the High Street was recognized. He is requested to return it." The ne.xt day this reply was pub- lished: 3Si WHERE PAIN TORTURES Don't dope yourself inter- nally to stop pain. Authori- ties say, "Use Omega Oil to break up the congestion that causes it." Omega Oil works quickly and safely to bring real relief. At all drug stores, 35c. RUB IT IN IT WONT BLISTER* Heathen Ritual Cures Measles Placental Extract Found Effect- ive, Health Association Told â€" Given as Injection. Bees Need Help (Experimental Farm Note) The honey-gatbering season iias now ended and the bees are now pre- paring, In Bo far as they possibly can, for the coming winter They will, however, need some assistance In or- der to survive the long cold months that are ahead. During the summer months the bees worked feverishly to gatiher enough honey to sustain them through the following autumn, winter and spring. In most cases the amount stored far exceeded their re- uuirements and the surplus has been taken from them. Unfortunately, there is a tendency on tihe part of many beekeepers to take from the bees an unfair proportion of their stores, thus placing thrni in danger of star- vation before new supplies can be ob alned the following year. To pack bees away for winter without an ade- ([iiate food supply is to court disaster. It Is far better to find living colonies with a surpli's of food in the spring tlian it is to find colonies dead or de- pleted through starvation. During the autumn months, the colonies are pro- ducing a large I'orce of young bees that must survive the winter and con- tinue the activity of the colony next spring. For this purpose a large food supply is needed. Should the supply be Insufficient bi-ood production Is curtailed or stopped entirely, tiius weakening the colony when strength ii of extreme importance. Af.er brood rearing normally ceases the consump- tion of food is greatly reduced but does not cease entirely. At the end of Septomber. or early October, every colony should have at least forty pounds of well capped honey or hug- ar syrup for winter use Any deflclen- cy in this amount must be made up by giving conilis of sc^aled •honey or an equal amount of refined sugar made into ^yrup. Bees also require protection during the winter months and as they are unable to provide this for themselves it must be sup- plied by the beekeeper. Protection can be given by either packing the bees in well insulated packing, cases or moving iho apiary into a well con- structed cellar or dugout. For de- tailed information on preparing bees for winter write to the Bee Division, Central Experimental Farm. Ottawa, for Bulletin No. 74 entitled "Winter- Bees In Canada'". REAL ECONOMY! f In Dixie Plug There is no waste I It's fragrant and Has better taste. The smoke for you, The smoke for me, In a plug that's Real economy I IE PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO Milwaukee. â€" An old heathen ctis- tom revived with scientific improve- ments at Boston, was credited by speakers before the American Health Association recently with preventing measles in a surprisingly large num- ber of cases. Physicians from that city explained for the first time to the medical pro- fession a modern technique involving use of placenal extract. Some abori- gines, after a child was born saved ] and dried the placents. In after years ; whenever the child ailed, it was ted , him as "good medicine." At Boston, ' a purified placental extract is given , by tihe spoonful tor measles. Dr. Elliot Robinson, M.D., of the Massachusol s !">:•"»: imi'iit of Public Health, and Charles McKhann, ot Harvard Medical School, reported in a paper on the use of this extract both by intra-muscular Injection and by nioutii. The Answer A candidate for the police force was being verbally examined. "U you were by yourself in a police car and were pursued by a desper- ate gang of criminals in another car doing 40 miles an hour along a lonely road, what would you <lo?" The candidate looked puzzled for- a moment. Then he replied: "Fifty." "The recognized man who picked up the wallet requests the loser to call at any time and collect it." Don't you just love the good fel- | lows that telephone you at two \ o'clock in the morning and say: "I hope I didn't waken you!" Warden â€" Who gave the bride away? Connolly â€" Her little brother. He stood up in the middle of the cere- mony and yelled: "Hurrah, Annie, you've got him at last!" Creamery Butter Cost of Manufacturini::: Butter In The P r a i r i e Provinces Economy in the production of a commodity is always important and i; is mucij m<ire so when, as in the case of butter in the Prairie Prov- inces, a large proportion is shipped to distant markets, states a recent issue of the Economic Aiuiallst. A knowledge of tihe factors affecting cost is therefore necessary in order that the most economical practices may be adopted. It was for this rea- son that study of creamery manage- ment and the cost of manufacturing butter In the Prairie Provinces was conducted jointly by the Departments of -â- Vgriculture in the three Prairie Provinces, the Rural Economics Di- visions of the Universities In these provinces and the Dairy and Econo. mic Branches of liie Dominion De- partment of Agriculture, lleconls from 91 of the 210 crrameries oper- ating in 19u3 were obtained by per- sonal visits to the creameries. Only 7S of the records were used for tab- ulation purposes and cover the lis-! cal year of li'>i3. 1 In this study, the cos, of manulact-j uring a pound of butter includes all j items of cost from the time the cream ! is received at the creamery until thej butter is packed into 56-pound boxes. Charges for ga.herlng the cream, | costs of printing and sliipping the' butter are, therefore, excluili-d. Com- missions on cream cheques have also been omitted. The average cost of manufacture in plants in wbich tho production was under 100,000 pounds of butter for the year was 4.82 cents per pound, while in faclories having an output of over 500,000 pounds, the figure was 3.18, a range of 1.64 cents per pound. The range In cost from the lowest to the highest cost factory was from 2.62 to 6.56 cents a difference of 3.94 cants per pound. The cost of manufacturing In liia 78 plants averaged 3.45 cents, the av. erage production being 350,500 pounds. Thirty plants in Alberta with an average production of 316.303 pounds had a cost of 3.56 cents per pound butter. The average production in twfrniy-flve Saskatchewan plants was 404,178 pounds and the cost 3.47 cents. The cost in Manitoba was 3.28 cents in 22 plants producing an av- erage of 336,757 pounds of butter. Overhead and administrative costs wei-e muoh lower in Manitoba than in the other two provinces. The greater volume of production In Saskatche- wan brought costs per unit in this province lower than those In Alberta. About one-third of the cream go- ing to creameries was transported by motor trucks, one-tihird by railway ex- press and the remainder delivered by the producers. In very small factor, les producers delivered about 60 per cent of the total cream received by the factories, while In larger factor- ies only 25 per cent was delivered and 75 per cent, was either trucked or expressed to the creamery The cost of trucking in most cases was over two cents per pound butter fat and averaged 2.25 for all cream trucked. The cost of expressing cream averaged 1.74 cents per pound butter- fat. Cartage charges on cream de- livered by express averaged .05 cents per pound butter-fat. Tiho coat of trucking, railway express and cart, age amounted to 2.08 cents per pound butter-£at on ail cream so haudled. The total charge divided by all cream used in the manufacture of butter amounted to 1.37 cents per pound butter-fat. Classified Advertising mVENTOBS 1 A N OFFKIl TO EVERY l.NVENTOR List of wanted Invcntloiiti and lull Informutiun sent free. Th* Siuas»y Company, World Patent AttorneyB. 273 13ank Street. Ottawa, Canada, SAIiESMSK WAKTXO COR A CLIE.NT. CITY, TOW.N AND county salesmen. Write to Advertis- ing Counsel, Might Directories Limited, 74-76 Cburcli Ht.. Tonmtu. BANISH RHEUMATISM So live that folks in your com- munity would rather take a bust of you than at you. A very proper and careful old woman was engaging a new garden- er. "Have you a reference from your last place, my man?" she inquired. "No, mum," replied the applicant. "They wouldn't give lue one." "Why?" "Oh," answered the man, absent- ly, "I hit one of the warders!" SHORT-STOR Y WRITING CONTEST 'T'HERE is at least one good story â- â-  in everyone's life. For the best 3 Stories received on or before November 10th, 1935, A CASH PRIZE, >nd Two Other Valuable Prizes, will be given for Original, or True Life Stories of 1,000 word* or under. Send in with your story a signed statement that it is either original, or a true life story, your name and address, and number of words in the story, enclose return postage for its return. Entry Fee Twenty-Five Cants. Typewrite if possible or even legible handwriting accepted. GIFF BAKER, 39 LEE AVE., TORONTO The Longer Evenings or Fall and Winter afford op- portunity for mental Improve- ment. Yoii Can overcome Inferl-. orlty Coiliplex, develop a power- ful memory, learn the secret of success, and Improve your mental calibre by fascinating correspondence courses which yon can study In your spare time and In the quiet of your own home. For full particulars, write to The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology 910 Confederation Building MONTBBAIi, QUBBSC All the Vitamins of COD LIVER OIL PLUS Bone Building MINERALS Cod Liver Oil when digested sup- plies many necessary ckmeius for proper growth of body and bones. Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil and the Hypopbosphitcs of Lime and Soda, prepared for easy diges- tion helps insure proper body and bone development, without the unpleasant taste of Cod Liver Oil. SCOTT'S EMULSKON THE DIGESTIBLE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUES Per Sal* tf YOUR DRUGGIST DOCTORING YOUR DAIRY HERD Cows aren't machines. They can get sick or hurt. But Minard'a Liniment makes it easy to care for their ills. Mrs. Thos. Bulmer of Lardo, B.C., found one of her herd with a lump in her udder. "I rubbed it with Minard's Liniment", she says, "and it soon got better." Minard's is best for Cuts, Bruises, Colic, Distemper, etc., and equally good in stable or in house. Well named "King of Pain". it ,^ BURNS iSCALDS Sold by all Urii|;t:iil!- 25c, J5i. nut).- I. "iUc .md Jil.OO TTW ^OINTMENT ^ JiLiiipi£MneM. Take PHOSFERINE. Thou- sands endorse this great British tonic for the quick, sure way it ends rheumatic aches and stiff- ness, and soothes the nerves. PHOSFERINE builds you up. Gives you new energy. Helps you to sleep like a log. Start with PHOSFERINE nowâ€" just a few tiny, economical drops each day. FOR Fatigue â€" Slfcplesanessâ€" General Debility â€" Retarded Convalescence- -Nerves â€" Anaemic Conditionâ€" IndiBestion- Rheu- matism â€" Grippe â€" Neuralgia â€" Neuritis â€"Loss of Appetite TAKE 46 PHOSFERINE THE CREAT BRITISH TONIC At- your Drug Store â€" In Liquid or Tablet Form at the following reduced pricei 3 Sizes - 50c - $1.00 - $1.50 rh« 11.00 lilt 't ntarly louf timcl lh« 50c six* and Iht S1 .SO iii< It Iwlet the $1 .00 ilt«. UVE STOCK MARKETING SliipfiiiiB (jii tlio <"-uiici:itivi. plan lia* heeii pruducthe of spU-ndid icsulta. .Scllinif on tlie open market means real value fur the owners. Utt In touch with us. Write â€" Wire â€" or Telephone liYndbnrat 1143 THE UNITED FABMESB CO-OFEBATIVB COMPANY, IiIKITBD I.IVK .STiiL'lv C(l-MMIS.-^1".\ lUCl'T. Union Stock Yards, Weat Toronto That's why millions have confidence in the blue colour that guarantees the quality of this fam- ous D. L. ac w. Scranton Anthracite. Issue No. 44 â€" '35 19 ^bluecoaF • THE FINEST QUALITY COAL MONEY CAN BUY •

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