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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1921-11-03, Page 3aalPao•-, -7.001P • 111110.001=04 I CURIOUS ISLANDS ALL OVER THE WORLD Surriames.'and Tlieir Origin HOYSTON ,Varlation-elustera LSI =161 . • Raetel; OrIgIne-Soottishe •••••••••••••• 41^ JAP .11-IATCHANGE 8e -A InoalitY.• • : • - The fOnatily names oil Honstent and POSITION CONSTANTLY • Raton may in some few inetenees be • , • Mysterious Cluster Aiiiong the. Aleutians Off the Western Extermity of Alaska: 4:4 Yaritagata, Japan, there is a • small lake seallik the 'Lake of the • .F1datingelelande. which is said to c,eat• tain 'as inany as'. sixty islands ,that •• chtinge tieW positiorneonstaatlY. The ..IKailds, which reeve filet one. Way and theh the etherestart.frorn masses et Vegetable debris that Are &wiled to , . the surface lay babbles tag gatie reeds • 'soon grow en. these 'riassnsin 4U011, • attantity. that tine; aoinetimen. become' •a eorrapticiii or variation, of the form Huglistar, hateioninemany. It is easy often to account for, the introductioh and elimination et many letters from eiyen and family names intlie cese of their development. .•The letter "t" tor inetance, is •readily • ellininated. But It's not easily introduced, and the, -change from lauglison, or Hestal, to -1,-Iteston is pot tenetural oafs. e , -Huston, or liciugteis (the spentags are interchangeable)." lattee deeelaped as famity namee from the place ,11141110 of Hodston. It is apairlith 4n. Retlfrean shire, Scotland, • Tradition had ft, that the aante or- igtnated areal 011O • Hugh Pedainard, 'whet, la the reigo Of ,Mateohn LV. of tOpheavy and oyertarn. en, that -ease, Scotland, about the year 1150 A.D., re- teereeds grow on the. newly _exposed calved grants of lead, at thle „place, in .• gide, untit the island% have become so the bardny of Hilpete'r, from.Baldwin "deep aad wide that they will ao tong- of Biggar, who was then.,,Sheriff of • er turn over Prot Kusakabe• of ths Lanark; T.olieku esimerial alhilvereity . and ,sever41 associates hive aavestigated • the mysterious movements- of-eliese‘ • floating islands. By 'placing wooden • .1loa0. in the lake to 1show the enact- " tion and direction of• the various eine • rents these- gentlemen found that the • combined actien of entreats of air, and. water is what makes the islands. move. Abent• ten years aao new island. was reported in that Curious '130goalet . Groap .aliteng the Ateutiana off the western extremity of Alaska. This -one 'suddenly rose through seventy'. tatherna, of water gad far tiboie, and , . its rise was acesimpezded by an earth- • quake that shook Unalaska and Dutch. •;:ilarbor. „ • . Disappeared in Three Months, „ One of the Most remarkable .events •• In die history tif this mysterious elus- . • tee oecurred in 1907. On July- 4,of that . • Year officers -of . the U.S. revenue eut- ter •McCUlloch Made a .survey efn Mountain( then meltingand fueling as though though from •its• exertion In rising 'velcanically from the E:O3; among the, Aleutian Wands:: It Wan reported in ..etne survey that naepeak was:2,000 ...feet through its base and 495 feetbagle :One of the eiireeying party, it IS, said, wanted tae niountain to be .1:lathed ' "Independence Mountain ,"• in honer of • the eley theesuryey was maa, hut it . was christened ge`NleCulloelL,Peak." A. • little more than tiire.e •mmiths 'later the eleCullocle'.agaie :visited the place, •terid. found that .the .pealc. of the name camehad totally disappeared. 'he-yegiOn, hi which ;tine 'extraer- --dinare ,eyent, ccurred haslongeetag- ed,tee attention otscientists and is in 'faof beer,,of the etrangest 'totalities Ote :earth, Thereepeein to be proceeding there- a 'ort Of continueuse:Pecnoene N.. came. Of Thie a a rit vier , Of • a. geogra Plate cal vaudeville. k3howe in. Which Nature eneguines the -•role.:af - quick: change. • artist: These, startling el:tingesare circid to die() to the act on of the Bo- • :-giaslof VOIcado, in:the 'Aleutian Is lands._LITIiiii_natleande was diseoyered aboat:1790 by Aucalaii admiral of • that* nanie, and*. then eenstitated „a • single island, now :called, Castle' , noweeonjectiar-edethantheee as- iends ere probably ilir,Osin-M) by e* cleeP 'see yetnam„waich- eney thus be ' • --.-yergailded,'Uothellterallyan,d tiguratiye, as at the bottom. of all weird .ne, tural phenomena in This region. • Sur,' veys made by ••reyeatte cutters show that the 1I ds Musa. ha.eeneemaantrani --treat etdepths, •-the thonaandefathoni- cure.° being Iess • than. foitr miles to, • the • - • -see s se -es Isinntl'Peak Eiploded. • -.Daring the *hi et-•::r-Ofnia,(15,1906: there appeared a near, 'peak about halfway between.' the ald islands: enntien. tads • peak •developed it :formed 'Connection • with •Tfre• AMand, aha.lefi passage'. beeWeen 'it and Castle Reck in which • the "least depth et waten was :nye Xathoius Tas, peak was surieyed by efOare of the revenue cuttet Perry in June, 1906,., and, 'was named. Perry •Pet117,7"The tayabritats'Island-syea- 'ed july.,4,.1907, by the McCulloch's efficere .was then, as has laeint said, giving forth ;.sulpharo.us fumenodroW-, • big Its „repeat. yetceni•C. exegete This peek. had .sliserbecf ha its tiplift :abotit half of Perri. Peak' and had filled in • .• the :jittce of Castle Rock, thus .Making .aracteetillYene.leiane.on elre group : . It is thought that this ,Peik-eXPiticied on• •"Seerstehmele1907; as ea 5 reeleckennis . ;dense( 'Week cloud oaesed • over "Utialas.ka Island,' ceeterilig!dae land - With ashes.'• ° SO= years ago' the reveame Cutter -litialCiTaltenllife, and feund • ... great changes, Perry Peak having dis- • appeared.' A aigh, ridge of •latid ex-' tended 'from: Fire Island to Castle. Rook, havieg eit elevation of three ban- -tired fe et -at Ats -highest-Pointe the en - tit nee to the harbor ueav Castle Rock had:filled in; •high land wee formed fesetbeenteltatnitlIWeat.°,.."11eaernrileIn.:Ane amid. The navigator of the Rush made •a survey of the harbor as it then existed!, end found It to be One mile adreenewIth.: front NM twenty -line se• • fathoms. if Water. . The there to the • eseeth gaming, Althoutgb. the •;reports of these surVeys. reed, prosita' eally enough, one can eaidly pictilte the danger of tittreyhtg a IOCallty like- .ey to 'break out la a dekttictive eraln doe at anythami. • • No Matter heia tataletlia beeta can't do all the „ To reap from its sowipg you must -4u' More than merely read it. • „ STRACNAN Raolaa-CariginenSeottlshe . Source -A locality. : This family ulnae is 'derived front. a parish name in Kincardineshire, Scotland, and df course was bornein the fliat place either by those who held big lands in that. place or who,' upon =travelling to other parts, became Itnownhy it in preference to their pre-. vioue homed. • ' - . • But though the eigmily 'name has been, fermed.in the English rather than. in the Gaeta manner', the piace 'meaning' fe'• that of I e v arsine itself is Gaelic. • • ley".or'nealley-heed," and it is a COM- 1 TO D vktaibbn for . a Liirlzia. • Few inept( 1. :nee diet walling •onte WHAT- . . ... a .FOR.. . STOMACH ' TROUBLE 1.11.11.7••••.,M. • • h. :hilt:el:1:41t?l: withhit Ossilty30d1:14it,phy:proefisJozenyruci atleally done hit aroecy. _ 1 ions Jews abroad, who eaneet hope to, vi Jerenialem P .on, • send funcie tte lace' et- who =...a to the! Wall awl give expression to the abl seer eriet This money, known I as "Halaka Money," is one . of the maiestays. Of the Jewish colony in jergealem. There, are Scheseld..,61 ' Wallet* and IR aerrove at the Wall of •*Ailing expresaes itself in tearsetheee are collected and seal abroad as pre- eious relics. • • • • • • I ' Witen the Zion Cele:emission was es, tablishe in Palesdne tne "Halaira • . Money" front Jews abroad Wae di - veined lergeli Into its coffers, and ba financial suPPent of the -wailers fell away serieuely. But it Ms been . • re- stored tame; elth,er by subsides from'. .the 7:er fund, onby etnreaewal. of di- rect. -ecriptiona Doane of • the. words •"strath' • e.. "stra" ( which • ale r.) gi %:(,;i. the name • . Strathely.do) and "eeamin or "cline n. which aoU'll'also. find In the la.A1 4arar.) of • that.. lam9;ua histor141 figure "MaloolneVeamenior". (titeratly •"Plabgent But in the combinetima the •."ch" potind dominates and eliminates ;the giving 'tee pr 0: ut ti(la .1..stra- ehatt" rather .01 tn • esti.,,,,h.oPan,"' thoughmot . :11(.1ently the Pliee• was . • •, called I'Stralitaen." • . RANKIN, Varlatlens-Macrankin; •Flanktne. Racial OriginScettieh. Solitoe-A given name. • The family namea of Rankin, , rtait- Um 'Rue Maceauktit are cleyelopmeets et a name borne by ne et:the Clan; Maclean. of • ir,hu sept was palled it tbe DaCile", "Chain' 1VIhid Raing,", from .T.he .giVen; name of!a. chieftain prominent 11 history. • It was, however, ege,ordlug to Arad -lama known. as the "Clann Diane" in more ancient times, and the Mae- ra,nlcins Clean to be the descendants ' of an Trish cite, ftain named ."Cudutl- ligh." • . The forma Rankatand Rankine, of couree, are onfy.AngliOized forms of "alhic Riling.," or "Macitaing," the "kin in this case .being the English equivalent of clan or family, and pot •a diininutive ending. • „ .• • ..•Thiseept, of the clan. Maclean meree to have been neted.priticipally for the number •ancl. Importance of the bag- • TaPe Players that it produced, and it must be understood that under the Scottish clan system the- piper was a realeperecelage, a sad of custedian Of the.' Ciao ti•edittons and a Constant let- teada,ut upon the head of the clita as, well as a inusician-: • Cobbler's' Son As Prophet. . • More wonderful thitneany of his fairy tales is the story of Ilan,s Ander- son's own. life. : , I ' He Was berie Da April 2nd, .1895, in .the old city Of Odense; in Denmark. His father was' a poor Cobbler and his mother eventualle drank herself to. For, years Haas tan wire, without educationeZaliending Ids •time making dolls' destsnaand,„enend,itine, Shake- speare. Th ii. he tyenn.to dOpenbagea. Helivrote numbereoteplaas. which were: never performed, but aslienatat4 tor,.realizing that he. had talent,. sent him to s.cteson. kauil.knew nothieg at the age' a eighteen, but eventually he pasied his .eicanifnations and *went on 'a .voyege to. the East His: lite was spent- meatly tialielling and, writing, his ..woneerful. •-••• He Was something'.ota prophet,. for he wrote:-.---. • .• Yes, in years•,to 'come wo shall'fly --en the -wings of•steam high- In the air, over-the„mighty. ocean. The airShip. pomeS; it is- crawded.-witiCepilsengers; ,g6r tlejeurneyeengaicker than byeea., , Hans knew Many faMous ineanin- etudin,g the King of Denmark-fathen •ot Queen • Alexandria -and he „wrote abounthent inlieebeeke-n- • • • At die.age of Seventy the poor ceb- bier's spa, died, niourtiea by; Ail.: he • was buried Tike a king. IloW the MUcin Was -Made:. - -Miley% that arthlanatime '.thi---ni liquid. globe, zonsisting eit °matter in an.. almost molten etate... .Ucienttsts that . it Is 1.10er.;•'.it was a soft, semi, Man nal" ollfillinism. :la. years vatth.:.e_.,gbli. the wasefiu ' • - - - ventse is Called' centrifugal .foe.oei. s • ,- --;-- " . Any spinning 'wheel- give •an -example of this. forma Whtels enders:yore throw outwards -Matter that is adher- ing to its • circumferenee. It in centri- fugal face that makes OA rear wheel earth -Was not-sthee hard, solideocasT )0•111,•011.11. of a bicycle splaeh mud on the cloth- ing Of the rider.' • - . The earth in them far -distant days Med to, spin much' fester than it now does, end is it revolved it tended to fling oft great maises of Matter from its surface. These would. collect to- gether ,•in the fOrm of a 'gigantic "bloir at one point of its.surface, and eventually the "blob" was flung into space, where, owing to Its own rapid 'rotation., it, soon became the globe which. we call the moon., . . • Headed in the Right • • Direction. ..." . . . • ..There is one success sig -n that is !levee lacking in the men who is Made •of the staff that manse Ho is alWays. leaded in the right direction; always _moving forward. He . tney •not, bp al, neu;;;Es-goiuk 'at a rabid Pate but be is always, facing.' toward.. his goal, No 'matter:its what Way you aonsideie this main his, appearanoe, dress,- his .manner doing thinkeebta. haitietlyes• •hls letterseeeyerytinng• about. him bears :the. stamp of progress, sheet That- henissaamanewitheeedefinitelairne who is headed towards e definite goal. • , h; 7 , The Boy Was Right. • •••••.0tenet.--then-greate-• linage schools, says the 'London MOraing. Post, had a fore master wheat:. name was Bird. So teMptiug a •tees • ss nerd :for the. boys toe' 4itn. . eoming into. -the- -• class ••• g i u eh profound -gravity-eithernee4neeeenslesepreatetlio eeiling thee ee •ound. for syi1i toms ef treable. Sureenough, on the blackboard was writtenetheemotation: Hail to. •hee,•biithe spirit - Bird thou never wert. ••• . 'en!eiiefeereacenta.'aaitnaealiteelleeit-einede. •Manaed shaep'ly. - -There was dead, 61.1plio I'm': a, eiini:• mentnand7thew a smelt tibia, Studioase 1 Id b spectaclee'rose 'and on plied; • , •'Please sir, I .think it was $1telley,n. Succeps of Forestryln France. . Oen haadred yeaaa °ago the' Landes, some two million acres, ia extent was a barren waste', grazed by a poor and unhealthy type 'of Steep; aptly des- cribed by a local writer as swampy, leyearitiden, and desolate. The area, by intsilltgent 0-operatioa between state, eomnaunes, and Individual own- etr)s has been turned from the poorest district in France into two otthe rich- est departments ot that rich sountry. • In that hippy district practically no local rates. are pisid, aire-wood. 'ce,n he had alinost for the asking. Individual peasants own up to 100 to 300 hec- tares (250 10 150 acres) of vilmi was once barren soil, and now is forest land worth,2100 per acre, and baing.. ing in a ateady revenue front turpein tine and from pit props for the British market. The wages in the:died:let are • high, and the shelter and humus given by the trees' allow the • once sandy waste to be used for vine Mature, and cereal crops, TIie foiZeih-Inan.ewio bUilt h13.164 -31 -on the oieincr= . aa gaye*an example in folly which anybody .cari-understand. I • It isn't so easy, however, to sense the mistake of trying to build the bocly, on foods which lack essential nourishment -- - • • Here, again, a a, foiindatien of sand which gives 'way when the test comes. Many a food that tastes, good lacks honesty 4•.• •of tiourishment.to equEtl its 'taste. Thus it tempts - - the appetite into mistakes that. often are costly. • , Grape -Nuts is a food which helps build bodily • ;• endurance for life's stress and storm. ''The full , nourishment of wheatand malted barleyttogether. with -the vitaltnineral salts so necesiary to bone ' : structure and red 'blood corpuscles, with phoS- --rollatea4MT-the-bIainii6I-retained-in,•QrapenNlitsr-,----, -.- The long baking process by which Grape -Nuts is made gives the food a natural sweetness and an unusual ease of digestibility and assitnilation. Served with cream or milk, Grape -Nuts is • fully 'nourishing,. suld whether: eaten as a cereal at breakfast or lunch, or made into a pudding for dinner. 'Grape -Nuts has,a particular delight for • the appetite. Sold by grocers. Gnipe.Nuts-the Body Baildei • • 'ilhere's a,ftes-§oe" • fp THE FALL WEATHER HARD ON LITTLE ONES . • • Canadian 'fail weather is. extremely hard on little ones. One day tt •is wet= and bright and the next wet and old; These sudden cheageie•bring. on Nadi:cramps:and Collo; and uneess. babi'd little stomach kept right the result may be serious. There is noth- eng to 'equal Baby's Own 'Tableti3 in keeping the little ones well. They sweeten the ' stomach, , regulate the 'newels, break up: colds and make baby thrive. ,The Tablets are 'sold by,medi- . eine dealers or by mail at 25 ceate_il- laTenfisstirThe :Dr. Wi ill einsnaled ieine Co., Brockville, Ont. • Belgians Dig Fifty Feet sableneheitalrePeed'efrIlin 2.0=ekni,g' _Pf f. °nu' ta.: • In thellas7-n•ye .6,000 feet on the village of Havaic be- tween Mon 4 and anauheuke,,says„ a IlrusSels despatch, ' It did. net explode, lee _it enadeoehole_inetheneaftheabout 50 feet deep, V.there it had remained. .•This shell weighs two tons, ad the charge of .explosive is estanated to weigh from 16 cwt. to a.ton. The Ger- _inenseeylieeregerdeci the shell as of - Much importance, ,fried to extract it, ,but were unable to pp The Belgian authorities •succeeded in pulling out the shell after making -a large •emayation about IL The work demanded great pieciution• as a shell. -et-a-skallar-k4M1-,-testheeenenbitriecleaa onay_sfellenotelarefrannethee "•- frontier ana.made.a,cratee more than _100 feet in diaMeter; • " . • MONEY ORDERS. . ••• Send a Dominion Express. Money, Order. They are payable everywhere. inten114101111t1 'Court of . -ti _ us ce. 1.._:tho__Leagne...of Nations has consti- tuted the international Court Of jua, tiesprovided for iii the Treaty of Yee- Wee- •te.--a= Matta tglsc...ers1 wo give the names of the- judges: Vis- o:east Finlay, Great Britain': Dr. Yore- gieOda, Japan; -The Andte*. Weiss, France; • Commendatore Anzilettn. Italy; ,.Dre_Ruarentaigsa, _Beazite T. C., Loden Holland; Antonio& de Began:mate, ' Cuba; Judge Didirk NI - holm, Denniark; Dr. Max Huber, Swit- Zerlende-Die ItaPhael y.Crevea, apatite': Dr, john 'Bassett • Moore; United States., Four deputy judges wore also etepted; Dr. Negulesco. of'Roumania, •Dr. :Jevanoeie of ingo-SlaYia, • Mr: Wang of China and ,Jildge T,teicliteenn of Norway.: ee • Monarchist Mentkee in . Germany.: After 1871 the French exiled all -ineistheis-'4it .tue-reigning.-_eittitilyeatal,„ -thereby remoyednan. elanieat Of dan- ger, a Course that did much =toward -ecinalilidatifin-thineratirtigereallblilitit: the former kaiser of Germany is still . awarding crosses of merit, though '5. three years out of power, •that Prince dde whileeti a i • re ---,nothinng- se. -is- Aspirin - --say Bayer °sear epittet: daily etit-band' - - • • plays' the royal :hymn end that there •' •••°- . TORONTO WOMAN GAINS 35 PONS Good Advice trout „foie'. Who ..i. Had Sulrered Dfuch. • Not Lost At Ali. Nice tenths Of all forms of isidiges- Milte ate hie son)-.- NOW,, you've tion cy so,called etomanil trouble are, 13eon iigaing 'again frYollerk% lost 'yr noi,dde to •the condition, of tile etOnl- two front eathe." ''.' • . Itch at all, but are 'caused by Other in ' Flene-e'Naw. l'ain't lost 'elii.I.,1 got fluen'Oes. The great ' coetributing 'em. in me. pocket."' • --- .1 cense' of indigeitioil „ is thlri blood. ...: . 4.-..., " • 4 ONLY WEIGHED Mart POUNDS,SHE SAYS. , Geod"alead and plenty of it Is'required ' . .Got Her Anewer. .. by. the- stomach to. Mice care of thes •Hearing aetaint rustle in the dark feed. 'If the blood is thin the stone batlway below, the elder sister, nut), ach functions sluggish, food lies undi- posing s the young Min .Ine gem, getted,•gas forms and cluaes pains in leaned ever the balustrade and called. vatiouse parts of the body. Instead of out: '."Wello, Dessle,. have you landed getting nourishment from theetnetsa hinn?" •There was l•deeiii, sePalchral the system gets poison. , . i silence for_ some nionaents. It, was Relief . froth . this. cond Moto; cau be, broken by the heelteting, eatistrained °braided by the tcinic treatinenn widen :voice of the yoting. Men: "She has!" : axle now warmly rec.oniniends 'to1 ' :: ,' ' , • ae.• yery. carehit. - • . ' Mr: D. Shaw, 'Mt. SteWert, P..IFI•a11.1,11terrino& It :r:ie sunow.sehool,trlat xraii. ja_...014 ' , ..---, , •.„, . others: •Mr, ,,Shav says. from ledigastion for over fear years,' awing, and after the games Phe young - known reinedies for each troubles, and. • More tried many of the well well-. tje aohnnie, ' unaccustomed. to. such .sters ail,sat down to a good feed. Lit-. but never obtained: more than .tem- rich fare, had euten UnisParingly: e.nd porary relief. The trouble was ' ag- gravated now) at the end, he was feeling rather by ionstipation setting. in .iiriCondortable. , • • . • owing to the stomach failing to do its e „Can I lift you Mem?" asked the work, and laxatives only gave relief, ',mod old lady; .. . • to the. bowels and left the stomachin- i "l'es, ena'ant, y• eu •can. lift me• dowa,n worse condition. The reault was my.: replied Johnnie; "but"-eand he looked blood was growing More and more' pleadingly tip into her .eyea---"pleage anaemic; I did net sleep Well at night Mita bena me." •, • • e .. and was- growing despondent, I was I T. • -id- -this t.. wretched condition . when•.1,40ei.kie woo 1.4,1. • . friend advised me to try Dr Williams 1 N°w Hortense was very • Proud of Pink Pills.. I got three boxes and by ter small feet. This fact was quite the time they were finished there was well known to young Wilkine, one of seine change for the. better.' greatty eneouraged me and I continued her numerops suitors, and he deter - k od use of it • taking the pills for some three months., . by Which time my stomach ivas all • 1 • • Atter mtpathe of ardent toll beape right. again,' any blood good, 'writesproachd her wlth hz amall sav1zgs. strong and life wits again worth liv- 1 'Hortense," he cried, "I lay .the whole Mg. My advice to all who suffer from of nay fortune at your feet!" stomach trouble, is toogiye Dr, W11-1 'Fortune!" •gaaPed Hortense, • lianas' Pink Pills a fair triale'isn't much," gallantiY 1 Itwain't awarecertaifity that you had atry." . ". ' Di. Willittras' Pink Pille can be ob- I - tabled through' any medicine dealer. lresponded Wilkins, "but it would look or by mail at50 cents a box • or six Mies for $2.50 from The,Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Beeckyllie, Ont. • , • :' • • • Pauper Invented Blanket. • Poverty IS responsible, for the in, 'Y'ention Of the blanket. Years ago e map in England lost all his wealth and became very poor. • One cold win- ter night in 1340 he used ,a piece- Ot reugh unfinished cloth for a bed cover- ing tokeep himself warm, and from tide ; Makeshift be4, covering he ie.' .rentedthe blanket. The name•ofelde shan wits 'Thomas, Blanket,and the new kind of bedding hai been known under the name Of blanket ever since. immense . beside those .tiny feet :of yours!" • •• , I • The date is as essential -an erticle of diet to the Egyptiaines eice is to the: Hindu. • . • Mother l Move Child's Bowels With California Fig -.. • Syrup. ' Hurry mother!, Eyete, . sick child loves the "frill ty" taste/ of."Celifornia Pig Syrup",ancl it- never fails to open the bowels.. A teaspoenfurto-day may preee.nt a sick child t� -morrow. If con- stipated, bilious, feverish, fretful", has cold, cold colic, or .if stomach is sour, AsiaoreMItraidareandetake-nosothinreIl°ngue-eoatede-nreatn- 1:Ianit• -raTOmber- • a good cleansing of the little bowels . that is. necessary'. ' • Oh, it is =greatearid there is no other is often all Ask your druggist tor genuine»'Cali- lornia_Eik §Yrue" which 'has directions for babies end children of_ an Ages printed on bottle:- Mother!. Yod-mitst sayeedalifornia4 or you they get as lnaltatioriengesyrups---- nee-- - e•----- greatnees,-to -make some nook • of Gotl-e-tw.titar-inere-fraftfiffHhetter; More worthy of __God, ".to make some human - heart -a-- little 7wL5er., :lia.ppierentilseteebien1P.1411ene eee_oeuera_.-e-c -Carlyle. ',.• . • . - . : - Fine-ed•ged .weepans should. not .11;*e lased- onereagh .• Cascareb To -Night for' Liver Bowels, if Bilious, Headachy. • • Feek. Fine . Ina Scand 'Gtito Tanlsc ilir,auld10111MleattUde m;T:zifiarac.has wbentellbtingtne .0lizaPy frOliksenair'll pounds to a strong woman 110/1148F • oneandmituyedgremdtit.ta°ty-” PC.de:Itswunenboundecog MoTOtiljto7,Ont,diaPi!k1111,12 4ar1 1 '8 7 Zi T .• ."My stornaelt troubled me St, during the past three yeara that ,ilY life •waii .a•peffeet, burden. Mn imp& lite was gone entirely, gas would for* and peatly si.t. me' yrildwith pale fa • .the pit 'of my 80)1,114,01.- The gas Mee; le smetheredmeand my heart mast so eueerla that It alarmed me. emia 'get scarcely any sleep 'and was ,ftros and 'dull and all mien out: I often 'turned .so dizzy I •could hardly Stand up, end et times my head hurt like it would buret open. I lost weight Punta my clothes wereentirely too large and I was po Weak I• cop!. hardly Move. '• •: 'One day T. saw a statement eh* Tanlac and I determined to try it. 1 . have new tatted ten bottles In all ant. 'my `appetite has- eothe back, 4 eat any- thing I want and as much as I want at every meal without pain or any, nis- comfortable feelleg attetwaids. I de not have headaches • or •dizzy spells any More, a sleep s,ohadly every night and get up feeling 'flue and strong le 'the morning.'' • ' Tanlac is field by leading "druggteta • everywhere. 1.• '• . ,• . - ; . .; • ' ivory ;great 'and Oommeading rnov ment ih the ,annels ot the worldelit.I....e-eaeseee- teiuniph of enthusiasm: Nothing gett. was ever aChleved without „IL-Einins 1 Classiti-eaAdvertisethents. PLAYER PIANO FOR SAL& ' ,ELL PLAYER PIANO IN GGQD ▪ condition, with a•langearamben its; music e rolls; fOr sale at a bargain. . L. 'Costello, 73 West .Adelaidet.. . Street, Toronto. . COARSE sAvr L., A N. D vs ALT • Bunt earliito TORONTO sAL:r • wontis C . J. CLIFF • e • TORONTO • CUTIcURA HEALS. SKIN_TROUB InTimplesOnrace. itched -So Had To -Rub Ihem;..- Buened-andiliats• A ••••• Health Savin AMMER' Don't Nitalt until you get tkiel...-7-14SE Get a 10-eent box. now. ' You're headachy! - You Mersa bad, taste in yeetto mouth, your eyes burn,, your ekinai yellow, your lipp,arelied: • No Wonder youfeel mean. 'Your' 'Oil - :tem. is full On..bileaoteproperiennaken& Olfnand whateyoueneectia,a_cleaning_na • Inside. Don't hontinne :being a bribotts nuisance to yourself and th6Se who love' you, and .dont iesert to harsh physlies that irritate and ihjaree- Re- member. that most disorders of tae stomach, liver and bowels are gene by morning with eentle, thorough Caseate ets--they. work while you sleea, 10-ceut box will keep yeur- Byer and bowels. clean; stomach siirnet, and your head clear for months. Children love to tate Casca.rets too because they. never grape �r sicken. ' • „Athertnele :Pioneer Dog Itemetillegi ;Book On • DOG DISEASES • .. and 'How to Feed •Itatiod-Free any; : drege,:hy• the Author.. It. Clay GlIciver • 118 West Slat' Street New York..T.T.S.A. 011 .can't do your best when your back . and every mUsolo , aches with fatigue,. . Apply loan's Liniment freely, with- euf_rubfring, and enjoy a penetrative low of warnithand comfort. Good for rheumatism, neuralgia, speainaiindstrainseachesandepams =sciatica, sore muscles, stiff joints „the after effects of weather exposuees.! , "My face was a ,maas af.pinspiei and 1 had an onunnsd • my forehead and chin. ;Th were bud. and red and. later they enme tO, white.heads;--They -itched so I !would rub them, and, then they Muted to burn. arid -hurt. • „ -"Isa*an adverthatmeistforAlud-s, Mrs Sap and Oirmi3ent and tied them and found they helped me, . thaied more and *Inn lr-had used. three cakes' of Cuticula Reap •__Etp•_.4 one and a helfhozei Of „Cuticula ._Ointment.LenekcomWelicliaieW• (Signed) Miss Anna li)ralka,Cattoita, Wash.Dec. 6;1919: , • •Giire'Cuticutst Soap. Ointniesittied Taltuto"the care of your akin. , Oiatatat25a215te. TalammtSi. Sold throughout theDominion. CanadianDepoW Lynaes. LiaItel. 304 St. Pad St.; M.,,Mestrial.. INW-Cutiestra Sone 'shaves liniment nmee; . • ele ••-• ' ern 0.-1•10 • • ' 1` • rice-iv...years pain'a enern.n: ' Ask' your neighbOr. Ktip-Sloan's haira50. 'At all draggists--35c, 70c, $1.40.':1 I Made in Canada. • 9 This Wonian's Letter Tells You How To Pass The Crisis Safely. a 'lumen E•00100000,00' • • e • are monarchist, demonstrations .all over the country have finally aroused some et • the German newspapers to • urge the kelehstag "to mike an ex- ceptiohal laW applying .to an eiCep= 1,,, tional caet." Otto poai. pes is to exile all German prieces,, especially fhosi of the _Hohenzollern' and Wittlesbach fatuities, .c.'• . tainard"sLinirnetitt.umberman'a*tlend 2.. Warningi, .thiless .you .tee .11MM amines.", on tablets, you tete not get= ting,Aspirin at all. Why take chances? Aeeept only 811 unbroken "Bayer" 0400 Which ,contains direetiOha woeked otit 10: nhysiefans deriag 21, eeters, and proved safe by millions' or colas, Headache, ' Earache, Tooth a the, 5sgle'n:tiny., RheanattatiM, Neuritts, Lum- at baps, and Pain, tide in Canada. ' All :druggiste sell Bayer rablets of Aspirin in heady titt boxes ef 12 :tab- • lets, and In bottles of 14 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered, in Canada). of 13ayer alanufaclure of Montraceticacidester of Salicylic/told. ',While it Is well known that Aspirin recaps Bayer Manufacture, to a.seist the public agelnet imitatiotts, the Tab. lets,of Bayer Campany will be stemp- ed With their general trade Mark, tao 'Bayer Cross. • Chang* Ts. of Life I felt so weak and ran down' could hardly do my work. • The pati. saPiration would pour over My -ince se that I couldn't see what I was doing. Ve live on a farth, so there ie.:lots-teat, but many who felt as I did would have heen in bed. I took Lydia E.4rinitharall• Vegetable ble..„644;),C°44do)ti 1nT. tinirilalelf.:1444 ees al -11. • but put -Vegetable Compound ahead them all, and I tell every one I lmow how much good it has done 1110."--a. _ Ivirs.:1)_micAlj*BscAtc Lasoelles, Pre*. • Seaii warning' Symptoms as siiiiie ot suffocation, hot flashes, _ heada ' htiamCkidSiCtylir-,s-o`undrudsedh-i-ette-intearpairipdlidpitaliasy col the hurt, sparks before the Ofdde irregularities cohstipation,varia' hie 114bletiell-edeVTallit eseefdlnedenged woe." Ipeotunpound Lydiaoa rrEy. thinekinhanstat%iyretathroughtet4 elm I crisis as it did Mrs. Brawn. I You are invited to write for free shies: No other medicine has been la OW ecssful in relieving woman's su R8 has Lydia Fe Pit* *0 WE. i Compound. Women May ree.lvq tuld helpful advice by Inning' the E. Pinkham Medicine Co, Lynn, Mut NI ISSUE No. 44* -414 • , ; Ntaa • • 4 ' eisesiltes: