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DID YOUR CHILD WAKE UP CROSS or FEVERISH?

Look, Mother ! If Tongue is Coated, give "California Syrup of Figs" to Clean the Bowels. Mother ! Your child isn't naturally cross and peevish. See if the tongue is coated; this is a sure sign that its little stomach, liver and bowels need attention at once. When listless, pale, feverish, " stuffy " with cold, throat sore; when the child has tainted breath and doesn't eat, sleep. cr< act ntturally, orhasstoma hache or diarrhoea, remember, a gentle liver and bowel cleansing should always be the first treatment given. Nothing is equal to " California Syrup of Figs " for children's ills; give a dose, and in a few hours all the waste matter, sour bile and fermenting food clogged in t e bowels pass out of (he system, and you have a healthy and playful child again. All children love this harmless, delicious " fruit laxative," and it never fails to effect a good " inside cleansing." Ask for "California Syrup of Figs," which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Of chemists and stores, 1/9or 2J times the quantity for 3/-. Mother ! You must say "California Syrup of Figs" (or you may get an imitation fig syrup), and look for " Califig " on the package.

There can be no doubt about the physical benefits of dancing, and if only it were possible to combine this exercise with fresh air, two or three foxtrots a day would keep a man as fit as a round of golf and consume much less time. Unfortunately, it is difficult to get dancing except in hot rooms and at hours on which bed has, at any rate, rival claims, and there seems no chance of dancing taking its place among the field sports. A puttinggreen is an ideal place for an oldfashioned polka, but the modern style of dancing, which forbids you to lift your feet from the floor, demands a parquet, and that cannot be in the open air. "Dancing 'Then zAncl 3*{ow WHAT heroes they were thirty * * years ago when they danced polkas and waltzes and lancers. The polka, with a spirited partner, was a highly concentrated form of physical exercise, and the lancers, in addition to being a romp, demanded in the last figure not only mental attention but some knowledge of the relations between the circle and the square. The waltz is still with us, but it is a very different thing from the old waltz. The good dancer in the old days was he who executed the prescribed steps with most mathematical precision and disciplined energy. Now the good dancer is he who cultivates the greatest ease, achieves the greatest variety, and infects his partner's feet most successfully with the fancies of his own. Dance an old-fash-ioned polka after a modern tango and you compress within five min-

zAl'pme Scenic Reserve In The Canadian Rockies Ovlt. Robson "Park A Paradise for Climbers, Big Game Hunters, and Holiday Makers djoining Jasper Park (4,400 ■*"*- square miles) on the Canadian National Railways route, is Mount Robson Park, a stupendous ice region containing the highest peaks of the Canadian Rockies. Mt. Robson, mighty monarch among mountains, is 12,972 feet high, and presents three utterly different aspects on the cast, north, and south-west sides. To view this district from the C.N.R. Train is indeed wonderful, but to realise to the full its aweinspiring majesty, and to taste its sporting joys, the tourist must arrange to stop-over for a few days. There are Log Cabin Camps at Mt. Robson Station, Kinney Lake and Berg Lake, very comfortably and suitably furnished. At these camps, experienced guides for climbing and big game hunting can be engaged, and hiking

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/LADMI19260701.2.67.2

Bibliographic details

Ladies' Mirror, Volume 5, Issue 1, 1 July 1926, Page 48

Word Count
616

DID YOUR CHILD WAKE UP CROSS or FEVERISH? Ladies' Mirror, Volume 5, Issue 1, 1 July 1926, Page 48

DID YOUR CHILD WAKE UP CROSS or FEVERISH? Ladies' Mirror, Volume 5, Issue 1, 1 July 1926, Page 48