HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1922-10-05, Page 3I ...V ■
THE BAR TO SUCCESS
PALE AND SICKLY
GIRLS AND BOYS
I have a pretty wide circle of friends
and acquaintances, and. I’ve been
studying them. Not, let it be said, be-1
cause the proper study of mankind is
man, but because, scribbled in an old
book I picked up, I discovered this:
“Everyone ought to succeed in life;
everyone should and everyone could
if he himself was not the bar to him- •
self.”
It made me think a bit. Among my ;
friends there were those who had sue-:
ceeded and those -who had not. There
seemed no great difference mentally '
between the two classes, so I searched
for the bar. And I think I discovered
it.
A is not a success. He is really
cleve hardworking, and a man of
ideas'- His bar is self-depreciation.
Not long since he was, as I knew full j
well, the man who did the donkey- j
work in making a certain function a !
brilliant success. He supplied the
ideas, too. But when he was thanked
for what he had done, he self-depre
ciated himself—mentioned B and C
andD as those who really deserved the
Need All the Strength That Rich,
Red Blood Can Give Them.
Youth is the time to lay the founda
tion for health. Every girl and every
boy should have plenty of pure, red
blood and strong nerves. With thin,
impure blood they start life with a
handicap too great to win success and
happiness. Rich, red blood means
health, full growth, strong nerves, a
clear brain and good digestion. In a
word pure blood is the foundation of
health.
The signs of weak, watery blood
are unmistakable. The pale, Irritable
girl or boy, who has no appetite or
ambition, is always tired out, short of
breath and does not grow strong, is a
victim of anaemia—the greatest en
emy of youth There is just one
thing to do for these girls and boys—
build up the blood with Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills. You can’t afford to experi
ment with other remedies, for there
must be no guess work in the treat
ment of anaemia. Dr Williams’ Pink
I
l
I
credit.
Very nice of him, of course, and
very modest. But it wasn’t the truth!
B and C and D had done a little bit.
Th,4 credit and the glory belonged to
A. But he passed it on, and, myself
and a few others' excepted, the crowd
took it as passed.
A’s stock did not rise in the market.
He depreciated himself. That’s his
bar. He hasn’t succeeded in life be
cause those—his business friends—
who could contribute to- his success,
have -the settled notion in their heads
that he’s not up to much. That’s the
result of A’s habit of self-depreciation.
Naturally smart, he dulls himself.
Are You Like Him?,
Once, when he brought off a really
good business deal, and was- compli
mented on it, instead of taking the
praise, he said, “O-h, it was really the
wife’s idea!” It wasn’t. It was his.
He had merely talked it over with her.
The moral is: Don’t bar your road
to success by self-depreciation. There
is no need to go to the other extreme,
of course. If you have earned praise,
take it. Don’t put your light under a
bushel.
Then there is F. He is more of a
juccess than A, but he could be a far
greater one if he were not so cynical
ind sarcastic. It invests' nim with a
lort of sharpness which puts people—
ind business—off.
A good deal of business, results from
3ne man talking with another. But if
i>ne of them sharpens his cynicism at
lhe other’s expense, that is not the
fray to create trust or make business.
Sarcasm, too, has an edge that cuts.
It’s not a successful weapon.
The moral is obvious.
Then there is G. He’s a success.
Whether he has acquired it and prac
tises it, or whether it is a natural gift,
I know not. But he has a “way” with
Him. He’s very friendly. He never
tiakes an enemy. If he were a coal
merchant, and you wanted coal, and
Le had none, you would end up by
laughing together at the situation. In
similar circumstances F would (have
been nastily sarcastic. A very friend
ly, cheery man is G. And a successful
one.
Again, the moral is obvious.
Break the Barrier.
H is another non-success. He’s a
born pessimist—if pessimism comes
that way. Everything, always, is bad
and going to be worse. He chills or
dinary folk, annoys the optimist and
dumps other pessimists farther in the
depths. He is in a certain trade, and
to my knowledge loses lots of custom.
People won’t go to him. “He is such
a depressing man.” If it were not for
his wholesale trade, into which the
personal element does not enter, he
would be a bankrupt in a year.
Again, the moral is obvious.
If space permitted, the examples of
success and non-success could be ex
tended. But sufficient has been writ
ten to indicate certain bars. ■ If one is
yours, knock it down, and get on. If
you are a non-success, but none of the
above bars fits you, find out, even to
asking a friend the candid question,
what your bar is. Then demolish it.
—R. H.
Pills act directly on the blood, giving ■
it the elements it lacks, thus develop
ing strong, healthy girls and boys.
Mrs. R. Kinch, Hep-worth, Ont., tells
as follows what these pills did for her
daughter:—“I think it a duty to let
others know the benefit which Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills have been to my
daughter, and I hope this may be the
means of inducing some other sufferer
to try them. She was weak, nervous
and badly run down. She took medi
cine from the doctor but got no bene
fit, and finally she was not able to
walk to school. I was advised to give
her Dr. Wiliams’ Pink Pills, which I
did, and after taking them for a time
she was restored to perfect health. I
cannot speak too highly of these pills.”
You can get Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
through any dealer in medicine, or by
mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine
Co., Brookville, Ont.
A Love Letter Five Thousand
Years Old.
Archaeologists are continually mak
ing surprising discoveries among the
rubbish heaps that mark the sites of
the vanished cities of Mesopotamia.
It is not so long ago that the remark
able code of King Hammurabi was
found among the ruins; of Babylon in
scribed on a large and irregular stele.
That carries us back to two thousand
years before Christ, but the recent dis
covery at Tello, Nippur and Ur in
Chaldea of clay tablets nearly or quite
a thousand years older carries us back
to what we consider as the dawn of
civilization.
We find that the people who dwelt
along the Tigris and Euphrates so
long ago were both civilized and culti
vated and wrote letters much like
those we write to-day. Among the dis
coveries is this delightful little letter
scratched by a young man on a clay
tablet and sent to his beloved:
“To Bibea, thus says Gimil Murduk:
may the gods Shamash and Marduk
permit thee to live forever for my
sake. I write to inquire concerning
thy health. Tell me how thou art. I
went to Babylon but did not see thee.
I was greatly disappointed. Send the
reason for thy leaving, that I may be
I
happy.Do come in the month March-
esvan.Keep well always for my
sake.”
Does it not seem strange that this
eager inquiry of a lover after the
health of a girl who has been dead for
fifty centuries perhaps should so long
have survived both the man and the
maid and come to be seen and read
to-day by men who live thousands of
miles beyond the limits of the little
world they knew!
---------------------
Love Defined.
The other day we «me across a de
finition of love that is well worth read
ing and remembering: ‘‘Love is the
doorway through which the human
soul passes from selfishness into ser
vice and from solitude into kinship
with all humanity.”
---------------------
Wisps of Wisdom.
The best cure for hard luck is hard
work.
An ounce of caution is worth a ton
of regret.
If you try you may; if you don’t, you
won’t.
Conscience warns us as a friend be
fore punishing us as a judge.
Keep your face to the sun and the
shadows will fall behind.
The man who never made a mistake
never made anything.
Toil and trial are grim companions
without the gleam of hope that makes
them beautiful.
To breathe is not to lite. To live
is to think, to plan, to dare, to do, to
achieve, and to do it all with charity
in your heart.
Each person lives best who does
his best for one day at a time and thyn
refreshes himself for his level best
the next day.
Young people frequently rely on af
fected manners to win admiration and
praise, but most of us are quick to
discern affectation of any kind and
have a contempt for it. Give up af
fectation—be natural.
Ed'iezm’s firis-t patent w’as for a vote
ecorder in 1868.
Money-Making Memoirs.
It is estimated that when the world
book and serial rights of Mr. Lloyd
George’s forthcoming memoirs have
been sold, the Prime Minister will re
ceive approximately $450,000.
As the bock will contain 150,000
words, he will thus get three dollars a
word, a rate of remuneration for liter
ary work that has seldom, if ever,
been equalled.
Mrs. Asquith’s diary, which crea’ted
such world-wide interest, has brought
in about $75,00'0; the ex-Kaiser has
secured $200,000 for his life-story;
while Admiral Jellicoe obtained only
a few thousand dollars. Mr. Church
ill’s memoirs, when they are publish
ed, will, it is believed, bring in about
$250,000.
Mr. A. S. M. Hutchinson has; so far
received $350,000 for “If Winter
Comes,” which, by the way, marked a
record in literary remuneration, beat
ing the $300,000 Which Mr. Harold Bell
Wright, the American author, received
for “The Winning of Barbara Worth.”
While present-day authors are sup
posed to reap better harvests than
their predecessors, many popular
books of the past brought their writers
quite large sums. Mrs. Barclay, the
author of ‘‘The Rosary,” earned $200,-
000; Lord Beaconsfield was paid $10,-
000 for “Endymion”; George Eliot sold
the serial rights of “Romola” for $35,-
000; and Charles Dickens the copy
right of “Barnaby Rudge” for six
months for $15,000.
On the other hand, the authors of
many works of genius received very
little indeed. “The Vicar of Wake
field” was sold by Goldsmith for $300;
Miss Helen Mathers was paid only
$150 for “Coming Through the Rye,”
and Sterne was refused $250 for “Tris
tram Shandy.”
How Hailstones Form.
It is during summer-time that hail
stones occur most frequently.
One might expect that these balls
of ice would fall from the sky on the
cold days of winter, but it is the heat
of summer that gives rise to them,
for they can be formed only in thun
dery weather.
When there is thunder about there
are always very strong upward
draughts of air. As raindrops begin to
fall they are caught by these currents
and carried to great heights, where
they freeze solid. If they now fall to
earth they arrive in the form of hail
stones that are usually seen.
Sometimes;, however, after falling
through the clouds and receiving a
coating of moisture they are carried
up again by other currents. The mois
ture freezes upon them, increasing
their size.
The process may go on for some
time, in which case the hailstone re
ceives coating after coating of ice un
til it becomes as large as a marble or
even an egg. Then it falls with mil
lions of others, destroying crops, tear
ing fruit off the trees, and even kill
ing cattle in the fields.
KEEP CHILDRmTEALTHY
To keep children healthy the bowels
must be kept regular and the stomach
sweet. Nine-tenths of the ailments
which afflict little ones are caused by
derangements of the bowels and
stomach. No other medicine can equal
Baby’s Own Tablets in guarding either
the baby or growing child from the ills
that follow a disordered condition of
the bowels or stomach. They are a
mild but thorough laxative and never
fail to give results. Concerning them
Mrs. W. B. Coolledge, Sarnia, Ont.,
says: “I have used Baby’s Own Tab
lets for over three years and have
found them the best medicine I have
ever used for my children. I never
have any trouble giving them to my
little ones and they have saved me
many a doctor’s bill. My advice to all
mothers of little ones is to keep a
box of the Tablets in the house.” The
Tablets are sold by all medicine deal
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brook
ville, Ont.
Forest fires, by burning the saplings
of to-day, destroy the forests of to
morrow. Put them out.
Surnames and Their Origin
McCRORY
Variations — MacRory, Rodgers, Rog
ers, Rogerson.
Racial Origin—Irish.
Source—A given name.
Except for the fact that every man
has a right to spell his name as he
pleases, you would call this form Mc
Crory incorrect, and a ‘‘corruption” of
the form MacRory.
The Gaelic form of the name is
“MacRuadhri,” which isn’t nearly so
far from tihe Anglicized form as it
seems, if you’ll just remember that
the “dh” combination is silent.
The “MacRuadhri” clan came into
being about the year 1260 A.D., as a
branch of the MacDonnels of Antrim.
The clan name, as was usual, was com
pounded from the given name of the
chieftain who gathered around him
from among relatives, friends and fol
lowers the nucleus of the new clan
and procured for it official recognition
as such. His name was “Ruadhrigh,”
which signified “red-headed.”
The variations Rodgers, Rogers and
Rogerson all represent mere arbitrary
changes in the Anglicizing of the
name, changes dictated for the most
part either by political reasons or by
governmental rulings.
Care of the Feeble-Minded in Canada
What is Done or What is Under Way in Each Province.
Dr. J. G. Shearer, Secretary Social Service Council of Canada.
Canada is far behind many of the
American Stated such as Minnesota,
New York, Pennsylvania, and Massa-
■ chusetts in the providing of a modern
' system and adequate equipment for
■ the care of the Mental Defectives
i which unfortunately are all too num-
i erous in all our Provinces as in other
States and Countries.
To all Canadians it is of interest to
know what is done for these victims
■ of heredity and of society. The care
of such, under the Canadian Consti-
' tution, falls *to the Provinces. It is
necessary, therefore, to state the con
ditions in each Province as to the
Care of the Feeble-minded.
! The Canadian National Committee
’ for Mental Hygiene has made a stand-
' Ing offer to all Provincial Govern-
! ments to make free a survey of the
numbers, conditions and needs of the
mentally abnormal and subnormal in
i their respective Provinces and to out-
• line a programme or plan fo£ their
■ adequate care and the prevention of
i the birth of more of their kind. In a
single generation it is possible to al-
' most entirely eliminate the feeble
minded. The Committee has made
! survey^ of the four Western Pro
vinces, of Nova Scotia and New Bruns
wick. In Ontario Judge Hodgins made
an investigation and recommended a
policy. Quebec and P. E. I. conditions
have not been investigated.
Manitoba has led all the Provinces
in this matter as in their new Child
Welfare Act. Some three years ago
the Government adopted the plans re
commended by the Mental Hygiene
Committee, enacted the necessary en
abling legislation, and proceeded to
put it into effect. It includes the es
tablishment of an industrial farm in
stitution, of a Psychopathic wing or
ward in the General Hospital of Win
nipeg for study and treatment and un
der the new Child Welfare law provi
sion is made for the appointment of
a medical officer trained in Psychiatry
to examine and report on the mental
condition of all children who are the
wards of the Province, e.g., neglected,
dependent, delinquent, defective, im
migrant or those born out of wedlock,
and for the appointment of a Board of
Selection to determine what shall be
done with all mentally defective child
ren. The necessary specialized care
and training are to be provided as re
quired. In the larger centres special
classes are provided and taught by
specially trained teachers. All persons
accused of any offense before the
courts are subject to mental examina
tion and if found defective become
wards of the Child W’elfare Depart
ment.
Parents of mentaUy. deficient child
ren can place them for training in the
institutions of the Province
Thus fairly adequate machinery is
provided for the discovery, sifting out,
special training and, when necessary,
custodial care of Manitoba’s mental
defectives.
Saskatchewan has established a
large institution at Weyburn for the
care of these defectives. As yet, how
ever, there is no adequate legal auth
ority and administrative machinery
for discovering and sifting out of those
requiring care.
This is true also of Alberta, whose
Government is building at Edmonton,
its first home for the care of Defec
tive Children.
British Columbia has two Homes,
one for boys and one for girls. But as
yet no complete system has been
adopted providing for the care and
training of all classes of the mentally
deficient. Such, however, is in con
templation.
Ontario has for many years made
certain provision for the care of
idiots and imbeciles at the Orillia
Hospital, where also a number of
feeble-minded above the imbecile
grade are cared for. Here, however,
inadequate provision is made for
classification, for specialized training,
and for industrial occupations.
Ontario, moreover, has no machine
ry as yet for the discovery, sifting
out, and examination of the large num
bers of feeble-minded of both sexes
and all ages.
In the larger cities of Ontario and
the Western Provinces considerable
provision is made for specialized edu
cation of children of school age in spe
cial classes under trained teachers.
In this Vancouver has led all Cana
dian cities and has some two dozen
classes and a special supervisor of
this department of the work of the
Schools.
Quebec, New Brunswick and P.E.I.
have as yet made no provision for the
care of their feeble-minded, excepting
that some of the worst of them are
in the Hospitals for the Insane, where
of course they cannot be given the
training or industrial employment that
they ought to have.
In Nova Scotia what little care has
in the past been bestowed has been
given in the various county poor
houses, where harmless insane, ment
al defectives, aged poor, and even
some children have all been housed
in the same institution without train
ing, without proper occupation, with
out adequate medical treatment, and
without classification.
This deplorable condition has be
come public through the survey of the
Mental Hygiene Committee, and as
a result the Legislature has authorized
the Government to establish and equip
an industrial farm for the care of the
feeble-minded, and another for the
care of prisoners.
There is no more crying need in the
way of social reform in Canada than
in this matter of the discovery, train
ing and care of the victims of mental
defect. When we recall that half of
all crime, two-tliirds of all prostitu
tion, and two-fifths of all venereal dis
ease is said to be due to our neglect
in this matter we shall recognize that ■
this is false economy in highest mea
sure.
Tired Feeling Is
Soon Ended
By Tanlac
Thousands of people needlessly en
dure a half-sick, nervous, rundown
condition when they might enjoy
sturdy, rc-bust health and all its mani
fold blessings if they only knew what
to do. People in this condition find
Tanlac soon ends their trouble and
builds up abundant strength, energy
and vitality. Chas. F. Walker, 220
Langley Ave., Toronto1, Ont., says:
“My wife had become so weak she
was hardly able to do thle housework,
and it just seemed that my whole sys
tem was out of order. Tanlac seemed
to help us both right from the start,
and now we are enjoying the best of
health.”
Nervousness and a run-down, tired-
out feeling are but symptoms of a hid
den cause, whiich usually lies in the
stomach. Tanlac enables you to di
gest your food properly, eliminate
waste and regain your old-time
strength and vigor. Get a bottle to
day at any good druggist. Advt.
” ■ V
Hope to Make Rain by
Scientific Means.
Praying for rain used to be more
than a verbal expression among farm
ers who saw in dry seasons their
grains burning up, when they suited
the action to the word. Scientists be- j
lieve that in a few years the problem I
will be solved of controlling rainfall. ,
This means that they are seeking
some method of electrifying the atmos
phere. When they have accomplished
It man can produce rain at will.--------.
Has a Celtic Look.
Among the questions that young
Malachi recently put to his father was
this:
“Dad, was time invented in Ire
land ?”
“What an idea? Why did you ask?”
“Becau4fe it is spelled o’clock.”
Rural Route No. 1, Mascouche, Quebec.
The Minard’s Liniment People,
Sirs—I feel that I should be doing a
wrong if I neglected to write you. I
have had four tumors growing on my
head for years. I had them cut off by a
surgeon about fifteen years ago but they i
grew again till about three months ago I
I had one as large and shaped like a ' lady’s thimble, on the very place where I
my hair should be parted, and it was ’
getting so embarrassing in public that
it was a constant worry to me. About
three months ago I got a bottle of your
liniment for another purpose and saw on
the label good for tumors. Well I tried
it and kept it for exactly two months,
with the result that it has entirely re- i
moved all trace of the tumor, and were
it not that they had been cut fifteen
years ago, no mark would be seen. I
have not been asked for this testimonial
and you can use it as you see fit.
(Signed) FRED C. ROBINSON.
p. S.—I am a farmer and intend using i
Minard’s Iilniment on a mare for a
strained tendon, and am hoping for some
results. FRED C. R.
Classified Advertisement*
WANTED—YOUNG LADIES WITH
Good Education to Train as
Nurses, Wellandra Hospital, St Cath
arines. Ont.
___________AGENTS WANTED.
WANTED—AGENTS IN ALL PARTS
of Ontario to handle our fast sell,
ing- machines; liberal commission basis;
opportunity to make $5,000 a year; write
to-day for information and territory.
The Farmers’ Supply Co., Brantford
Ont.
FOB SAXE.
YARN—WONDERFUL VALUES AND
Colors, samples free—Georgetown
Woollen Mills, Ont.
WEEKLY NEWSFAPEB WANTED.
WE HAVE A CASH PURCHASER
for a weekly newspaper in On
tario. Price must be attractive. Send
full information to Wilson Publishing
Co.. Ltd., 73 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto.
BELTING FOR SALE
THRESHER BELTS AND SUC
TION hose, new and used, shipped
subject to approval at lowest ’'rices in
Canada. York Belting Co., 115 York
St., Toronto, Ont.
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORK8
C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO
Ecmw Bcsnsdiss
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad
dress by the Author.
H. Olay Glover Oo„Xna,
129 West 24th Street
New York. U.S.A.
TO ENJOY
PERFECT HEALTH
Every Woman’s Wish —
Read Mrs. Cassady’s
Experience
Smile.
If the weather looks like rain,
Smile.
When you feel you must complain,
Smile.
Do not mind if things seem gray;
Soon there’ll come a brighter day;
You will find that it will pay
To smile.
If the world looks sad and drear,
Smile.
Banish every thought of rear,
Smile.
Do the very best you can;
Play your part now like a man;
Make each day a better plan
And smile.
If you taste life’s bitter cup,
Smile.
Should the doctors give you up,
Smile.
You are very far from dead;
Waste no time in useless dread;
Put your trust in God instead
And smile.
—Grenville Kleiser.
1000 Eggs
in Every Hen
New System of Poultry Keeping—Get 1
Dollar a Dozen Eggs—Famous Poul- |
tryman
TELLS HOW
Skin Beauty Promoted
By Cuticura
CONWAY
Variations—MacConwy, Conwy, Mac-
Conmy, Conmy.
Racial Origin—Irish.
Source—A given name.
There are a lot of people who
wouldn’t believe you if you told them
that the family name of Conway is
Irish. It doesn’t “sound” Irish.
But take a lok at the Gaelic spelling
of the name. It is “MacConmeadha.”
That seems Irish enough. But it
brings up another question in your
mind. Even in the transition from
Irish into English, how do you change
an “m” into a “w?” The modern forms
of the name MacConmy and Conmy
seem logical enough, but how about
Conway and Conwy?
The explanation lies in the fact that
in Gaelic the “m” is sometimes pro
nounced as a “w,” as it is also pro
nounced as a “b” in certain combina
tions, and when you stop and think of
it, this is no more illogical than sound
ing “ph” like “f,” as is done in modern
English.
This clan name comes from the
given name of the chieftain who 1
founded it, one “Cumeadh.” The clan
is an offshoot of the older clan of the
“MacSionnalghe,” or, as the name has
been called for many generations, the
I Foxes, allied to the O'Neills of Tyrone.
The Whale Is Not a Fish.
The whale who, because he lives in
the water, is often supposed to be a
member of the fish family, is in reality
no more one than is a human being.
He is in reality an animal very much
like a cow or horse, and his flesh is
real animal flesh, nothing whatever
likh that of a fish. And like all other
animals, he cannot remain under
water without an occasional trip to
the surface.
The whale, however, is able to hold
his breath for a long time, sometimes
45 minutes, and he is able to open his
mouth under water when eating be
cause his nostrils connect directly
with his windpipe and not with the
back of his mouth, as in most other
animals.
When he conies to the surface he
blows the air out of his lungs. It has
by this time become so heated that it
forms a column of vapor when expel
led into the cool air of the surface and
this is what happens when he is said
to “spout.”
Incidentally the most famous whale
of history—the one which swallowed
Jonah—was not a whale at all. but is
called in the Bible “a great fish.”
“The great trouble with the poultry'
business has always been that the lay- i
ing life of a hen was too short.’’ says!
Henry Trafford, International Poultry j
Expert and Breeder, for nearly eighteen !
years Editor of Poultry Success.
The average pullet lays 150 eggs. If:
kept the second year, she mar lay 100 ;
more. Then, she goes to market. Yet, i
it has been scientifically established that I
every pullet is born or hatched with
over one thousand minute egg germs in
her system—and will lay them on a.
highly profitable basis over a period of
four to six years’ time if given proper
care.
How to work to get 1.000 eggs from
every hen; how to get pullets laying
early; how to make the old hens lay like
pullets; how to keep up heavy egg pro
duction all through cold winter months !
when eggs are highest: triple egg pro
duction; make slacker hens hustle; $5.00 i
profit from every hen in six winter '
months. These and many other money '
making poultry secrets are contained in
Mr. Trafford’s “1,000 EGG HEN" system
of poultry raising, one copy of which
will be sent absolutely free to any
reader of this paper who keeps six hens ! j or more. Eggs should go to a dollar or i
I more a dozen this winter. This means j
I big profit to the poultry keeper who gets i
■ the eggs. Mr. Trafford tells how, if vou i
| keep chickens and want them to make i
| money for you, cut out this ad and send j
i it with your name and address to Henry ;
I Trafford, Suite 630P, Herald Bldg., Bing-
I hampton. N. Y., and a free copy of 1
i "THE 1,000 EGG HEN” will be sent by 1
' return mail.
------ --------------
Not Necessary to Ask.
“I hope you didn’t ask for a second i
piece of pie when you were over at |
Johnny Smith’s to dinner,” said his i
mother.
“No, ma’am, I didn’t,” said Charles. I
; “I just asked Mrs. Smith; for the re- 1
cipe so you could make some pie like j
it, and she gave me another piece with-1
out my asking for it at all.”
MONEY ORDERS.
The safe way to send money by mail
is by Dominion Express Money Order.
--------- ----------—
The man who boasts of a victory is,
rarely a man who wiol blutsh for a
defeat.
Ask for Minard’s and take no other.
The normal adult can hold his
breath from 40 to 45 seconds.
Minard’s Liniment for Distemper.
A good w’ocd'sman always puts oirt
his camp-fire and! dteams up his camp
before he leaves1.
___________________________________________________i
ISSUE No. 39—'22.
Bathe with Cuticura Soap to cleanse
and purify the pores. If signs of
pimples, redness or roughness are
present smear gently with Cuticura
Ointment before bathing. Finally
dust on a few grains of the exqui
sitely perfumed Cuticura Talcum.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and SOc. Talcum 25c. Sold
throughout the dominion. CanadianDepot:
I.ymana, Limited, 344 St. Paul St., W.. Montreal.
Cuticura Soap shaves without mug,
' Paris, Ontario.—“For five years I
I suffered with pains in my back and
from other troubles
women often have.
All of this time I
was unfit for work
and was taking the
different medicines
that I thought were
good. I saw the
advertisement in
the papers of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound and
have taken it faith
fully. I am now in
■ good health and do all my own work,
j I recommend it to others and give
; you permission to publish this letter
' in your little books and in the news-
I papers as a testimonial.”—Mrs. D-.I Cassady, Box 461, Paris, Ontario.
This medicine which helped Mrs.
Cassady so much is worthy of your
: confidence. If you are troubled with
i such ailments as displacements, in-
i flammation, irregularities, or other
: forms of female weakness you should
I give it a trial now.
j Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text-
i Book upon “Ailments Peculiar to
j Women” will be sent to you free
; upon request. Write to The Lydia E.
1 Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
This book contains valuable infor
mation.
UNLESS you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you*
are not getting Aspirin at all
Accept only an “unbroken package” of “Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin,” which contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin Is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Moro-
aceti'-acldester of Saiicylicacid. While it is v.eil known that Aspirin Bayer
manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tablets of Bavc. Company
will Le stamped with their general trade mark, the “Bayer Cross.”
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain