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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-6-23, Page 7The P.116• ,Tehn Reehe,zeltev hair jilet dee, .oribed tO greet) Of adMiring grena- !'ehildree how, seVenty-three years ago, , eareed hie fleet dellar by releing 'and Selling etirkeYe; Awl he hae eige , lialteed the ' Oetjaei0e. by dietributieg • haa' heafal0 iieeltels, whieli May .PneVe the useet-egg ot foettmes like his Soraebody might write an intereet- lag book by aseeMbling eccouats' oe 'the waY witieli mea Who noW have I nainee le the industrial 'world mate their first (loiter. If a leire this• current year of grace thieks Ie haen't a •ohance such as teat whieh Reeketeller or Cargegie orDdiefee or • iSoltevab had years ago, let bent ask hp -itself what the Joys of 2000 years :hence are going to do. The develop- :nient of elle world of ours is just be - ening. Our couetry itself is till ia .its infaucy, The,re are abounaieg lac- ive opportunitlea on every heed, to- day' such as no past era in the world's ihietorY has known. The way the first dollar ie earned anay determine the trend of a lifetime. If. it is earned dishonorably, it ma yi fie sa taste that in the long run assures elieaster. Every dollar earned. and put to work or put by make e it easier to acid, to the number. Those 'who, evert tram a sleudor pittance, are able to 'se a little, have acquired a habit Wb lays the surest toundatlon atone ,t Wealth. , •-te-----• — Measuring Stags. One of the most remarkable feats -of astronomy has just been a,ccomp Milled by Professor A. A, Michaelson. "By ineans'of an instrument of his eaan invention, named the interferometer, "he has measured a star. It is now known for the first time th,at Betelgeuse, a star which is visible to the naked eye thraughotit mozt of the winter, has a diameter of no lees than 260,000,000 ranee, Compared. with Betelgeuse, this earth is a mere billiards ball, for the lormer's bulk is many million times the larger. The sun, if it were a hol- low sphere, would hold a million globes as large as the earth, and yet the volume of the sun is twenty-s•even times less than that of Betelgeuse. It is believed by scientists that as the sun, many millions of years ego, filled the entire solar system, there a possibility that stars even larger than Betelgeuse may exist. The gteat astronomer, Russell, once stated that in his opinion ehere were two great classes of stars—those which were in an early stage of development; , and these which have shrunk to the size represented by the sun. Professor Michaelson's measure- ' meats were made with the aid of the 100 -inch Hooker teles•cope, the largest in the world, at the Mount Wilson Ob- servatory, California. Without going into technical detaile, it may be stated that the professor's method is based on the pheuemenon known as the in- terference of light. In Other Words. , The most truthful of us do not say exactly what we mean; there are phaees svhicb must be taken in a pure- ly symbolical sense, although we use them so often as to be unconscious of this. Thus:— "Two or three" always means, three and penally "at least three" or "three and upwards." "One or two" never means one, save by accident. "In a minute" averages anywhere from five to fifty minutes. "Oh, I beg your pardon." (in case of a collision on the pavement) means "I am too polite to ask you to beg my pardon for getting in the way." "That reminds me of. a story" means "Now will you keep quiet while I tell my joke?" "While I do not wish to appear critical" means "But I am going to have my say, anyhow." "Of course, We no business of mine"' means "But I am simply devoured with curiosity." "My conduct calls for n0 apology and. needs no explanation" is the esual Satroductio•n for hn explanation or apology. "No one could possibly have mis- taken my meaning" is what we begin svith when it is evident that someone has mistaken it "The Red Cross Sign." 0, crimson cross on field of snow, Embleiu of mercy and of love; Thou hoverest low o'er pain and woe, Blest symbol of a world above. In war, our sisters played their part, In peace, they conquer by "that sign"; Tender of hand and brave of heart, True bearers of the. Croesed Ensign. Our fallen comrades paid the price, On ,Flanclers' field they sleep to -day; Shall we forget their sacrifice, And on their shrine no offering •lay? 0 Cross, keep thou our hearts from shanie, Frees sellisk greed and foolish pridGe; LortieGed of Battles, in Thy Name, We Will keep faith with tliose who (lied. 0 glorious legions of the Dead, 'Teaoh us to walk the letaeter's way; "Take up thy cress," the Saviour , said— We telt° it --up, 0 Christ, to -day. --W. Everard Ftelmoncls. RE ATIO J J. Wiir)01-ETOIN Promnoat Board et 41,ealt4. ontartc, blithiloton WW bro gad to ensWee QuestiOne ot juLl Health Met, l'80r:ontiltor1-101 t4ig eclialny's AddPosa Wire at the l'aelialneet Illde,tes 1, n KaMis Nall& in Nra+ VSls ..StaL I'M Uma vet, • mlah'24'Ngall - children a.,4 a Inele do not get not inclined to muscular activity and en,cmg,h, weep, 011 account of. their, are incapale of leaeneng. OecassoeaTe , , lv ebildren eheremg such signe are rapid g'rowth and devels7Mc eat ana f;ouonalin eppe, etaiedtel,ds cas vte their Almost ceaseless inclination for 11 , . They ase often h ard_,workingl, play and activity their little frames clever ehildren, When round, they get physically exhausted and need should be spoken to and advised, and plenty of rest. Only during Sleep ie the parents also warned of, the risk of absolute rest oetaieed for the brain overworking the brain. „Less time and nervous system generally. 'he given to study, and more to recreation • . infant shold spend most of ite time and sleep will often work wonders in th sleep; the Child of four at least such cases. In ,eities, children of the half of its time The child of seven very Poor often,showthe effecte Of eliould have at least eleven houre, and lack of sleep throegh selling papers, the child of nine as much as ten hours sometimes till midnight. In the couri- er more, try districts children often suffer un- Chiltron segue.° mose, sleep in'W'I necessary fatigue through thp strain, ter than in summer, and this neeeeeitY of home work. Teachers, of course, should be reeegnieet , he shoul I go insist hat the Junior pupils do a car to• bed' early, for the most refreshing tain amourit of homework, and rightly sleep is obtained in the first few hours so, but the nature of the study arid' after going to bed, • time required to master it should be, The child vein readily adopt these carefully arranged. In no case should) habits if it is trained to them and it is just as easy to teach a child the right way as it is the wrong, To let a child etay up late at night is a practice that has nothing to commend it. It is allowed by some parents as a matter of expediency or personal comfort,- because they will say the child, if it goes to bed early at night, wales up the whole household at day - ,break next morning. This however, This, is again a matter of habit, for up till nine years of age the child should have at least ten hours sleep. The brain benefits from regularity of rest, no less than the stomach from regularity in meals. The signs of in- sufficient sleep are mainly mental, but largely physical as well. They are most marked in the case of the child, and children who get too little sleep are readily recognized. They ,are anaemic, languid, dull, drowsy and stupid. The appetite is poor, the growth is stunted. The face is pale; the eyelids are heavy; the eyes sunken and dark ringed. 'These children are ••Ncl. child IS ;bornshortsSiglited bet ,the ,tandency may be inher,ite,d,e Trees,. geewn ,on' the 'northern' Side I bin Make.,,eriore;'aniabie, tiMber r than those grown ,.611,the south the work given children at home inter- fere with their time for recreation or sleep, The bedroom should be kept airy and , well ventilated. The body will not suffer if well and properly cloth- ed. If consumptives and babies can sleep in the open air and thrive on it there is no reason why healthy adults and children should not do so also. Children should also be taught to go to the lavatory at the same time each day. This arrangement if con- sistently parried out makes for health, in that it tends to prevent constipa- tion with its attendant ills arising from general lewering of tone and loss of appetite. , Plenty of restful sleep, and the right kind of out -door exercise, to- gether with good nourishing food, are the essentials for a healthy active childhood. With these supplied, the growing child may be expected to make the best progress at home arid at school provided its general health is good. FIND ROMAN HOUSE OF PETER AND PAUL ALSO TEMPORARY TOMB OF THE. APOSTLES. Inscriptions on w-ljs of An - dant Dwelling Show That Saints Were Once Guests. The vexing queretion of the exact locality of the temporary tomb of the apeetles Peter and Paul may soon be settled, if the excavations under the Church of San Sebastian, begun in 1914, are completed secce.sefully. There have been many delays, owiug to lack of funds and, during the war, to lack of •men. In the last six years only about one year's work has been done, The excavations already have brouht to light the remains of a Villa which apparently belonged to a pagan family of wealth, turned Christian dur- ing the time of St. Peter: It is a first century building, and on its walls are graffites which prove that Peter and Paul lived here and. were entertained by the family of Tonius Coelius. An inscription reads: "Petro et Paulus Toniu.s Coelius refriugerm feci." In thos.e -days inscriptions were al- ways scratched on the walls with a sharp instrument, and on the day that Petre and Paulus -were entertained some guest orattendant attested in writing to this great event. Besides this in,scripimi there are more than 150 invocations to Peter and Paul, all now carefully put together, which will be carriecl away to -.some museum. The ancient walls with their paintings will bo left in the church for all visi- tors to see. The old pavement of the Church will not be replaced. $t. Peter Lived in Rome. Professor Marucchi, the ,well known archaeologist, who has visited the ex- cavation's and watched the work dur- ing the last two months, insists that the discoveries of Professor Styger, as well as those of in.ore recent date, have unearthed the most important Christian monuments, because they provide absolute proof that St. Peter stayed and lived in Rome. This proof is offered by the many inscriptions uncovered. Heretofore erst-hand eve deace of St. Peter's stay in Rome was based on writings. and manuscripts. In the last few days three tombs have been found, unique in that they probably are the only ones which re- main undesecrated. The Christians had filled them ie. and coverefi theni with Plaster. Outside the are orna- mented with arches of travertine; in- side are marble sarcophagi still con- taining the .bones af the holy ones, and the ceilings eee decorated with light stucco. Near by has been disCovered a per- fectly preserved colonariuna, while to the other side is what is supposed to have been the baptistry of some holy shrine. It is for this reason that Pro- fessor Marucchi argues that the tomb of the apostles St. Peter and St. Paul must be near by. Tradition tells us that Peter and Paul were martyred on the same day, June 18, A.D. 66sor 67. St. Peter was crucified in -Nero's Cercus on the Vatican Hill, while Paul was beheaded on the site of the pre- sent Church of St. Paul., Then their bodies were taken by some holy people, washed carefully, embahned in fine linen and buried on the Via Cornelia, close to the Circus of Nero, and the spot marked with an inscrip- tion. Whenever there was trouble, persecution or invasion the Christians hastened to the burial spot of the appostles and carried the bodies to some safe place in the catacombs of San Sebastian. Hidden for a Century. Soon after their Martyrdom the Ori- ental Christians decided to come to Rome and carry the bodies back to the East for burial._ They succeedcl in taking the bodies of both apostles, and started on their homeward journey. They ha,d reached the Appian Way when a terrible thunder storm came up and they sought shelter from' the storm. While they were waiting the Roman Christians discovered the theft of the bodies and started after them. They ,catiglit up with them and. took yes 1he Saves Pak , Here is a table drink made as czpickly as you can pournot water Into the cup del:Wilts the taste; and eant.itz" nonof the harm tilat often COMeSftorn a and C,Offee, CI trle LA2ereps 13.0SirtiK: d rot.:101:: ..tt•P"' • r,•,•Pir: 64,0 Ori....4ti -4za- .•=64,Lif:•tterc6,•••:14:aittscatisittVitAt. bodies eWaY, htalnt tI 11 941 edo`'i:11; ;;;Anit atitzlnaLi rrhi 11,041:: A century, wheit they 1,Vere re, ucvaU to 1u th "Velerieu We:sant:We they were hidden again and afeerWard St, Paure relalaiee Were burled lit the spot on which now stands the Churce of Sn Pani, Pontificalis tells us that the Emperor Oenetanttue, atter ele etnivereleS1 Ordered that the body or St. Peter should bo encased. in silver, within tt gareophoglie of brass The Einporor then placed 41, orges Or g01,d weighing 1.50 polerida, au which was iseribed. the neine Of ilia mother and himself, The tore); 'wee then decor- "lavtaeidis wwitehrejosivneil4sg, ww11,41tei tasiiver iramait.IT, Tiee ab.ras$ heaareboeprh,awgbuis h \ivy: lathceeicti with gold plates. The disappearance of all these jewels and Piatee oectu•red during the 'eackine•of Rome in847 A.D., when the old Church of St, Peter, erected in his honer by Constantine, was resecrateel, and this also lexppened later, in 1527. No 'reputable writer of that time t 11 whether the saceophagus was close- creted. Only an old letter discovered fifteen years ago, written on June 17, 1527 by Theedoricus Vafer, says that I "the tomb in which the bones of the 7 holy Peter and Paul were laid they, the iffiperial troops, broke and pro- fanated." Completing the Excavations. 1Vfoclern archaeologists refuse to be. 'Wye thie caeual chronicler, especially as Father Torrigo, in 1594, when Use basilica was being demolished to make way for the present church of St. Peter, writes, that the architect of the new church, Della Porta, opened a hole in the pavement and sent for the Pope, element VIII., to view it. The Pope, accompanied by two cardinals, Bellarmine and Sfonerati, visited old St. Peter's, and, with a lowered candle saw below the church a marble sar- cophagus witha eross of gold on top. This cross evidently was that which the Emperor Constantine placed there, but the brass was.gone. The Pope was so overawed that he ordered the cardinals to cover up the hole with rubbish and rubble. The architect also saw the tomb. The spot would have been exactly where, in. the present St. Peter's, is venerated the tomb of the Apostles. Torrigo writes that the Pope bound the cardinals to secrecy of what they hat' seen, but the story was made public. Vieitors to the church are many and the sacristan, Prate Damiano, an ar- dent archaeologist enjoys showing every one the new finds. It was due to his passion for digging in the cellar that many valuable inscriptions were brought to light before the official ex- cavations were undertaken. As he wishes to see the tomb of the Apostles before he dies lip is working hard to aid the excavatiOlis. A SMILE IN EVERY DOSE m in a See^ OF BABY'S OWN TABLETS Baby's Own Tablets are a regular joy giver to the little ones—they never fail to make the cross baby happy. When baby is cross and fret- ful the mother may be sure something is the matter for it is not baby's na- ture to be cross unless he is ailing. Mothers, if your baby is cross; if he cries a great deal and needs your con- stant attention day and -night, give him a dose of Baby's Own Tablets. They are a mild but thorough laxative which will quickly regulate the bowels and stomach and thus relieve constipa- tion and indigestion, colds and simple fevers and make baby happy—there surely is a smile in every dose of the Tablets. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail- at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Jest Fishin'. One doesn't care much fee politics, Or questions big and great, When his mind is on the minny pail Or a place to dig his bait. He doesn't think of sickness, Ah! he never could be, ill When he feels the line a-tuggin' With that joyous sort of thrill! The place to lay aside your cares, Yer yearnin' and yer ishini, Is 111 a boat beneath the 'sky; Jest sittin' there. a-fishine Ask for Minard's and take no other. Invocation. thought that beauty wos forever d° Until IsaacN1' N, a da.ffcdil abloom And two bright tulips i11 my garden bed And silver spills beyond my little i•oont I thought that grief would never go from me, Yet how wonderful are all the days; I am no longer hurt by misery But wild with joy and trenatilous with praiee. 0 God, let not too really white stars Nor let your beshee blOoal in one small hour. I could not bear the beauty of it all, For I would pause with awe before each flower And touch each !sloes= with my fin. And tegeelrithiepswind's hrst sweetness on lily lips. Photography is eighty-two years old, next. August, the Secret Of the fleet pieturee, these of Daguerre, hav. mg been disclosed in A DE. IR AT Stomachs qan be ° IlealtbY eQracUttionre. t° 'a , Not to p() Limited iii dietelpet to eat whateVer he pleases IS the dream Of every ,dygpepetc, NO One Oat" 'Weevily Promise to, restore any stomach to IWs people carmot eat the same things -haPPY condition, becanse all with eqUalde Satisfaet011 results. Dat it is Deeelsie to eo tone up the ..o tive organs that a pleesing diet may heaseloct1,9froannlef oarrtt, ieleS of food that ealleao When tee stOniach-laelte time there I s no quicker way to restore it than to build up the blood. Good digestion without rich, red blood ie impoesable, mid Dr, WilliaMe' Pink Pills offer the best Way to eueleh the blood. For this reason these pilbs are especiallY good in stomach trouble .attended by thia blood, and in attacks of nervous dyspepsia, Proof of the value of 'Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in cases of indi- gestion is given by Mr. John A. Mcs Donald, Tarbot, N.S., who says: "Every sufferer from ludigostion has MY heartfelt sympathy, as I waa 01100 myself a bond slave to ft. Eating at all became a trial, and as time Went on I became a mere skeleton of my former self, I took all sorts of re. commended medicines, doctors' and advertised, but to no avail. Then a frienll said to try Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills. I got a box and I tbought be- fore they were done I could feel a change. Then'I got six boxes more, and by the time they were used I was eating my meals with regularity and enjoyment. My general health is now good, and it is no wonder that I ani an enthusiastic advocate of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." You can procure Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any 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. What the Boy Scouts Are Doing. Has Walkerton got the "Scoutiest" family in Ontario? Mr. Fred B. James, County Engineer, is a fornaer Scout- master anll a member of the Troop Committee of the present 1st "Walker- ton Troop. 1 -lis son, Treve James, is Scoutmaster, and three younger sons are members of the Troop. A daughter is Captain of the local com- pany at Girl Guides and the youngest in the family, a little girl, is a mem- ber of the "Brownies"—the junior branch of the Girl Guides. The 51st Toronto Troop has a Wo- men's Auxiliary •with • Mrs. William ,Kay, mother of the Troop Leader, as president. The auxiliary is arranging for a garden fete for the., Troop to be held on the grounds of Beech Avenue Methodist Church on June 18t11. Boy Scouts throughout the proviuce have been busy recently assisting lo- cal committees having the Red Cross and National Sanitarium Association Campaigns in charge. Toronto Scouts alone distributed contribution envel- opes to 75,000 homes and a few days later returned to gather them up again... 5 Carleton Place Scouts have a base- ball team which is the talk of the whole county. On Victoria Day they journeyed to Lanark and defeated the Lanark crack junior team to the tune of 8 to 6. Most Ontario troops were on the trek on Victoria Day and a great many also on the King's 'Birthday. Lindsay Scouts held a field day with Fenelon Falls at the latter place. The 1st Whitby and the 3rd Oshawa Troops hiked together to Quigley's Woods for games, camp cooking and other exer- ciees. The two Belleville Troops jour- neyed to Foxboro to help the Foxboro Troop with their sports, and the West- port Troop spent the day with their brother scouts of Brockville. As the Scout Movement spreads throughout the province similar get-togethers will no doubt be much more frequent. The only part of the King's Birth- day programme carried through at Lindsay was a demenstration by the Boy Scouts of Lindsay, Fenelon Falls and Cannington, the other events be- ing cancelled because of bad weather. To Scouts there is no "bad" weather. There are just a whole lot of different kinds of good weather. * During the month of May new troops were formed or old troops reorganized at St. Thomas, Cayuga, Caistorville, Deseronto, Belleville, Lawrence, Mar - more, Enterprise,_ Tamworth, Chester- ville, ,Iroquois, Cardinal, Kingston, Osgoocle, Metcalfe, Russell, Verona and Avonesore through the efforts of the two speciel field representatives of the Provincial Council for Ontarie. If your town is not a "Scout Town" yet, drop a line to the Boy Scouts As- sociation, Bloor and Sherbaurne Toronto, and mar how you can help to make it one, Opposums, which were introduced into New Zealand from Australia many years ago, have icreased until they have become a pest in the fruit- groWing regions. Nevertheless, their value for fue outweighs the -damage they do. It is therefore proposed to give them every chance to breed, imi the forested regions WatArnielorts too, grow in New Zealand. Sad lIlfferenee, Eareld--''What's in, a phrase?' Margaret --.)'Well, botore you mar. nr lie:11117ml w3ii°eIlnelViseet?'I d to sally; tb-lin'og7 u.c1Vwo' it's. 'Thates elet Illte mi woman'," " How Ho W.nted "Any special way you want your -hair triMalaci?" aelted tha barh"at'•• "ardte'it Yspwatriolnt16Ci .1"8aP°' Wr:1.1.''rP t odili6tCtirtin1131 Melt with passemertterie and a bird's wIng ',a have gorse. to a milliner." Not Possible. When, a lady who was "burning up the road" on the boulevard was over - token by a traffic °Meer and motioned to stop, she indignantly asked: "What do you want with nse?" "You were running forty miles an hem, answered the °Meer. "Forty miles an hour? "Why, Officer, I havea't been out an hour," said the lady, "GO ahead," said the ofileer. "That's a pew one on me," Wrong House. The book agent raeg the bell. "Heve you a Charles Dickens in your house?" . "No, we haven't," said the woman who answered the ring. "Or a Nathaniel Hawthorne?" -"No. I guess, mister, you got our house mixed up With the boardine house two doors further along. Try there. And she shut the door. Not His Sisters. "I say," he asked, as he stood in the streets of Paris for the first time and watched two Sisters of Mercy pass, "what kind of withmen is them I seen go along; all in, black, with a white thing round their face and neck?" "Oh," replied the man addressed, "they're Sisters of St. John the Bap- tist." "Get out!" was the sneering an- swer. "You can't fool me. Why, John the Baptist has been dead for cen- turies." They Was Walls. After a block of new houses had been partly finished, the builder and his foreman went on a tour of inspec- tion. The former left his assistant in one house and went into the adjoining one, when the following conversation ensued: "Can you 'ear me, James?" "Yes." "Can you see me?" The builder rejoined the toreman, and remarked, with a self-satisfied air: "Now, them's what you can call walls!" Work, the Solution. I am the foundation of all business. I am the source of all prosperity. I am tbe parent of genius. I am the salt that gives life its savor. I have laid the foundation of every fortune. I can do more to advance youth than his own parents be they ever so wealthy. must be loved before I can bestow my greatest blessings, and achieve my greatest ends. Loved, I make life sweet, purpose- ful and fruitful. I am represented in the humblest savings, in the highest stack af bonds, All progress springs from me. Who am I? I am WORK. MONEY ORDERS. Send a Dominion Express Money Order. They are payable everywhere. The ,distinctive scientific fact in the recent great earthquake in China is that it literally made the whole world tremble. Most earthquakes are lacal. They usually originate in the ocean near an Wand or a continent and radi- ate inland. The trust of the earth, which is estimated to be from fifty to one hundred miles in thickness, must from time to time undergo readjust- ment to changes in internal heat and to other internal happenings, but a squake that is felt anll recorded the whole world overis unusual. -Women who play golf number Mare than 50,000 in Engle/1cl and Wales 'alone. To a lover there are but two places in the world—one where his sweet- heart is and the other where she isn't. Rural Route No. 1, Maseotiehe, Quebec. The Millard's Liniment Peo.ple, Sirs,—I. reel that 1 shoula be doing a. wrong if I neglected to write yeti. I have had four tumors growing on my head for years. 1 had them out olf by a surgeon bout fifteen years ago, but they grew again till abbut three months ago I. had one as large and shaped like a is,dy's thimble on the very place Where my hair ShOuld be parted, end' it was getting so embarrassing in public that it lima a cob - slant worry to me, Abottt three in on ths ago I got a bottle of your liniment for another purpose aild saw on the label good for tuinbrs. 'Well, I tried it and 'kept at it for exaetly two manilla, with the result thatit lias entirely verriovea all trace of the turner and were it nat that they had been cut fifteen years ago, no mark would be aeen. 1have ilo.t been asked for Mee testimonial and YOU ear). us0 it as yea See ' (Signed) PRDD G., ROSIIISON iviii:;,,,,,,,,,,nruefistriTer and iliterlAail4,,. tendon; a,nd am hopraglirttimrlAcr.6148111ta,, RS. BEVE IN FEAR OF A lizzY SPels Ovcrcomo A e Taking Tanlac an Dreon't FQei L4ike Same Peradu. "Tartlac leas relieved trio oi 147 sat - 1 just Mal praisl it enough," said Mrs. Marg,aret130yeeage 305 latighson St, Nortb, Haspiltort, diet. • "Foe two years myaPPVtitf) Wee very poor and 1 outfored. a groat deal from formetion og gas on lay. 'gtoinach, was also troubled with frir,,,,uout at, tacks ot dizziness and, was actually afraid to go out or even flet away fraM eleinellitng to hold oa 10. Orie of these, chesty spells came ou while I was calling on one ot niy ergs:401111d- 0e11 one day Ana I Jest fell reslit delve on the lawn. es epreaeS, w len started taking l'anlac, I heti been eon- ttuell my bed for a racestela end so weak I could not walk, "Tarlac helped me trans t e very start, as I have not heti a weak spell since I etartod taking it and I feel so good. I can hardly realize (lett 1.`ta tho same wome.a. Tae dizzy spelle aro gone, my appetite is ilne awl every- thing 1 eat agrees with ine perfectly. I have recommended Tanlac to any number of my frio,nds and, 1 um glad to say, it has benelitted them. all, I just wish I could tell everybody who suffers as I did what Tar.laz did for Tarilac is sold by leadlag deugeists everywhere. Adv. Glassmaking m Belgium. Glasse:wising is one of tee great nes 'Lionel industries of Benelans., Even before the war it was a source of large wealth, and to -day it is playing an ins - portant part 111 reha,bilitatiag the ceun- try. Belgium has been famcus fe: its glassinaking fer many denturies, and at the present time glass holds first rank among the general exports from Belgium to all other countries,' There is scarcely a civilized nation in the world that is not more or less depend- ant upon Belgium for wiaacri glass, mirrors and table glass. Minard's Liniment Relievca Neural:31a Lucky the boy who li-en in the lane bf trout streams! .To push thro1le4 the tall ferns, crawling foot by Loot 'Ce within reach of the clecp, qniel peel just under the bank, there to stese1:1 a east over the willow bush and hasee the fly light neatly on the glassy sole face; then to feel 11 spin away at the strike of some lusty patriarch of the river—that is for boyish delight -and for lasting memories' in pladei 'reit-cite from brooks. America's Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on DUG DISEASES and How to Vpoel. Mailed rreo to any Ad- dress by the Author. Z.,`Glay Glover Co., Ina, 115 -Moat 21st Street - New York, ASPIR N "Bayer" is oniy aenuilie A C3AYEatz Warning! 'Unless e-ou see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin ' all. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also sell larger paekeges. Made in Canada. Aspirin is tho trade- mark (registered in Canada), ot Beyer Manu- facture of Mouoaceticacidetter of Sall. cylica cid, • All over baby's face. Came i water blisters and then formed a solid sea e. Began to itch and „burn so had to bandage his hands as be wanted to scratch., Face Wae, bar* disfigured. Trouble.lasted 4 months. Began usin g Cutlet= Soap ,and Oint- mem. "Used one cake Soap and one box Oinutent when he was healed., From signed stat‘einent ot Mrs. Albert Bilis, Wettenberg, N. S. Pot every, purpose of tbe toil Cutienra Soap. Ointment and cum are supreme. • Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50e. Sold throushouttheDerairtion, CrusidileaDepen ' L Mina, Limitid, St, Paul SL, Montreal, Cuticura Soapahaees without MUM.