The Exeter Times, 1921-10-20, Page 7•FOR RIVER BOAT PORT-
' AGEIN THE CONGO.
'Main Feature,of the Schenne is
a Vessel That Will Travel
by Either Water or Land.
The most inaccessible of the earth's
wildernesses are easily accessible as
far as their rivers are navigable. If
the rivers were continuously navig-
able, the remotest depths of these
wildernesses would be readily reached.
But in all such territories the rivers
are of a very unaccommodating na-
ture, being interrupted at intervals by
waterfalls, rapids, shallows, and other
obstacles that make continuous navi-
• gation impossible, ,
It is obvious, therefore, that any
aneans of making the journey along
• such rivers uninterruptedly in the
same vessel would make transportation
very much more rapid and economical.
Such a means has been developed ex-
perimentally in Belgium for use in the
Belgian Congo, that African colony
that is 83 times the size of Belgium it-
self. The products of this vast unde-
veloped territory all have to be trans -
parted faont the interior to the ,coast
for export, and it is now proposed to
adopt methods on the great river Con-
• go that will make,possible uninterrupt-
ed transpFtation. The work has been
done under the directiOn of the Bel-
gian goVernment, and several schemes,
• -were tried out on the canals near Ant-
werp. The main feature of the favor-
ed scheme is a vessel that will travel
by either water or land. Thus, where
the river is easily navigable it runs
along, propelled like any other ordin-
ary steamboat, and when it reaches
any such obstacle to navigation as a
waterfall, a rapid, or a shallow, it
• leaves the water andatraverses the ob-
stacle on a permanent single-track
railaoeid.
Dual Purpose Boat.
ISATIMED1111.,
Once alnotlanahasaised Baby's Own
Tablets foraher little ones she Will Use
nothing else, Experience teaches her
that the Tablets arethe very best
medicine she can give her baby. They
are a gentle laxative; mild but thor-
ough in action and'never fail to banish
constipation, colic, colds or any other
of, the many minor ailments of child-
hood. Concerning them Mrs, J,
Chareat, St. 'Leon, Que., writes:—"My
baby cried continually and nothing
seemed to help her till I began using
Baby's Own Tablets. These Tablets
soon set her right and now I would not
be without them." The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers or by mail at
25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co., „Brockville, Ont.
• .2144,...*4
Bible City Found
What is regarded Dy many scholars
as the most valuabledisdovery which
To Cur e 131indnes8 by
Engtaffing Dogs' yes
Dr. Koppanyi, of Vienna,
who has successfully cured
blindness in animals by
transplanting eyes, believes
that it is possible to restore
human sight in the same
manner.
He believes that by en-
grafting the eye of an ani-
mal prefera,blY a doo., sight
may be restored to blinded
humans. He declares that
the transplanted eye will,
rapidly take on the appear-
ance of a human eye and
will function norrrtally in all
respects. He is asking for
volunteers.
GOOD .. HEALTH
AND GOOD SPRITS
•Depend Upon the Condition of
the Blood—Keep it Rich,
• Red and Pure.
When a doctor tells you that •you
are anaemic, he simply means, its plain
English, that your blood is weak and
watery. But, this condition is one that
May easily' pass into a hopeless de-
cline if prompt steps are not taken_ to
enrich the blood. Poor blood, weak,
watery blood is the eause of headaches
and backaches, loss of appetite, poor
digestion, rheumatism, neuralgia, ner-
vous irritability and many other
troubles. To poor blood is due the
pithples and blotches, the muddy com-
plexion that disfigures 50 many faces.
To have good health, a good complex-
ion and a cheerful manner, the blood
must bp kept rich, red and pure. This
is pasily done through the use of
blood enriching tonic like Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills. The whole mission
of this medicine is to help enrich the
blood which reaches every nerve and
every organ in the body, bringing with
it health, strength and new activity.
That is why people who occasionally
use Dr. Williams' Pink Pills always
peel bright, active and strong.
Mrs. IL E, 050k, Shaine, Ont., gives
strong testimony to the value of Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills when the blood
is in an anaemic condition, She says:
"I have been a sufferer for some years
from a run down condition of the sys-
tem. I suffered from pains in the
back, twitching of the nerves and
muscles, my appetite was poor, I had
indigestion and would get drowsy
after eating. My hands tied feet were
almost always cold, and though I was
constantly doctoring, the medicine I
took did not help me. I had. practical-
ly given up hope of good health, until
a friend from Hamilton came to visit
me, and urged me to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. It took some persuasion,
but finally I consented to try them.
I have reason to be grateful that I
did, for after using seven boxes I felt
like a new person. I have gainod in
weight, have a better' color and my
work is now a pleasure. For this con-
dition my thanks are due to "Dr, Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, apd I cannot praise
them too highly." •
•
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
through any dealer ia medicine, or by
mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.60 from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Broekville, Ont. .
A Quick Turf:,
A new method ,of making turf for
golf courses with almost miraculous
has yet been made by the archwolo- quickness consists in stripping o
it
gist in Palestine is the location of the good sod to a depth of an inch and a
site of the city of .Cepernaum. Among hale and running it through a feed -
cutter so arranged as to slit the sod
Its ruins have been. fertnd the remains
of a synagogue belieVed to be the very
one wherein our Savious ,preached.
For over nineteen hundred years the
very site of such an important Bible
city as Capernaum has been in dispute.
It was thought that it stood. at the,
nerthern end of the Sea of Galilee at
a place called Tell Hum, where there
are extensive ruins.
A systematic examination of these,
and the discovery of ancient docu-
ments, now make it clear that this, in-
deed, was ancient Capernaum.
The vessel is composed of twin
• hulls„ connected with overhead plate -
birder brackets that retain the hulls
rigidly and permanently parallel to
each other, with a space between them
of about half the. width of each hull.
When afloat, each hull is propelled by
Its ow4). power plant, each,, having as
• propeller and a rudder. In the space
'. between the hulls, and supported .by
the plate -girder brach its that connect
them are toothed, wheels that, 'by
means of a train of 'gearat can be
sWitatied into driving connection with
` t 1 ' 1 • -"t1
powcax w rite n:are tiON,n
out of connalion with the prOpellers.
These toothed a-eas,els are for running
on a rail in the ferin of a rack, the
teeth of which fit those of the wheel.
This rail is the meant of couverting
the twin boat into what might be call-
- ed ajwin coach balanced on either
side of a monorail so .as to make it
somewhat like the coach of a monorail
road,' of which many are in use in
,various places. In the .same manner
this , Monorail road is tiril the form of
trestles, safitahlytd spaced and con-
structed. tt7! support the rail at e grade,
and in a direction that' enables- the
boat to leave the Water at the begin-
ning -of any obstaele, and enter it
again 4t- the, end, Oa it. These tracks
will be permanently installed at every
" obstacle toe aavigation, 'and . thus the
river Congo Will be -as easily traversed
as if it were one , of Belgium's many
home canals. •-•
,411k -
The ruins of a Jewish synagogue
have been brought to light. Explorers
say this temple stood there in the
days' of Christ,- and is the very build-
ing referred to in the Gosaeis. The
position of the stones would indicate
that it was destroyed by 'au earth-
quake. It is the belief of the excava-
tors that the whole edifice can be re-
constructed. •
Ask for MInard's and take no other,
Lifted Up.
;into. ribbons. The latter are then
shredded .by hand, leaving a maes of
grass roots, which are ,eewn broadcast
over ground previously ,prepared by
plowing ',and harrowing. This ac-
coMplis,hed, the ground is rolled, and
within three or four weeks the golf
course is covered with a fine, thick
carpet of grass, without waiting for
seed to grow.
Qualified.
Oswald --"My love for you is like the
deep, -blue sea."
Clarissa (for such 'was her name)—
"And I take it with the corresponding
amount of salt."
In some French rural districts
eighty per cent. of the inhabitants
own their own houses.
Americans own about one-half of
all the diamonds in the world.
Surnames and Their Origin
LESTER
Veriaticns--Leicester.
Racial ,Origin—English,
Source—A locality.
In virtually every country, with the
eiaeeption. of Ireland, a very large pro-
portion of the family names have been
developed from the names of places.
Sometimes these were the names of.
the places over which the family ruled,
Out more often, for -the bulk of the
A little child, in tears comes by:
You lift her chin and look into her eye,
And speak soft, werdeeet ,edinfort and
of cheer,
Until she smiles --and you have come
so near
The lifting up and bringing to the sun
The pitiful hea,rtacb.e of a little one:
: es • ,
When I go up to meet the judgment
, word
I hope that I'll be able to reply
To every question that mine ears have
heard
"I lifted up some heart that life made
cry!"
For I would rather have done that in
life ,• •
• Than won the glorious triumphs of the
strife. a
fix the Norman "de" ("CV) or the
equicilent Anglo-Saxon expression. •
GROVER
Variations—Groves, Graves; Greaves.
Racial Origin—Anglo-Saxon.
Source—Descriptive, geographically.
Grover is one of those family names
the descent of which, can be traced
straight to Anglo-Saxon sources,
and -
one of those ,of . which the origin is
,
-,,....—..z....--,
[FROM HERE &THERE
War Talk.
"Shall I go over the top?" asked the
talkative barber, poising his sciasors.
"Yes, as soon as your gas attack is
over," answered the weary customer.
Wisdom Defined.
Teacher --"Now, Edgar, can you tell
me what wisdom is?"
Small Edgar—" Yea, ma'am. It's in -
fort -nation on the brain."
plain to theonodern eye.
population naturally fell within the plIt falls within that large classifica-
classificatien. of the ruled srather than
tion of semen:tee which May be toll
tlie,rulere, the names were first used
merely to'indicate the locality from lowed back to words denoting topo-
graphy or character of the country in
which the persons bearing them had
which the original bearers of the
come. " names pie...slime* lived.
In modem ' English .the word grove
were us'ed only when the persons bear-
Suele earnest, too, it should.be noted;
has come to take on the meaning,' as
big them'. actually, had left the locale commonly used, of a clump of trees,
ties and had settlecliowere travel- r hr a park studded with trees. As used
ing in other parts. It-kwOuld onstitute bye, the •Anglo-Saxons, , , however, if
no differentiation to giveMan the- ' ' ' -
. , .
later 'it -naturally. took on the 'inean'g
living, together with hundreds, ai a - . e " -in-
0 i .an anSeaue „lined. with trees. --
probably thousande, of others.
Our Wise Tots.
. Novel and yet, very .reasonable was
Marjory's excuse for her, baby sister
who had .pulled some books off the
table. "She's so little," said Marjory,,
"her know -better haan'tigroWed Yet."
Tight Money.
Neighbor ----"Got much moaey your
bank, ,Tommy?"
Tommy—"Oh, no. The depositors
have fallen off since sister got en-
gaged."
naane of a place in Which he was meant roa th.r°1,'1411:1,11Y°
The names .,Grover, Graves 'and
Grecteree- all coins from this source.
The form Leicester gives a better
idea of the source of this family name Families which dwelt along such
than. Lester, though the latter is by
far the more common. name. The
place, however, is still -known as Lei-
cester. It is a borough in England.
The Anglo-Saxons, upOn.their invasion
and setlement of Eifgland, found the
place known simply as 'Ca -strum," for
it had been, a century or two before,
a Roman camp. Th. distinguish' .`it
from other places 'Cit''siettilar name:
they called it "feagceaster," or
"meadowcanap." In the early use as
a family name the custom' Was to pre-
•
From Helpless Invalid to Com-
plete Restoration of Health,
Strength and Happiness Is
Wonderful Change Miss
Root Experienced in Three
Weeks—Statement One of
Most Remarkable On Re-
cord.
"Suet a week before I started taking
Tanlae I was down in bed so crippled
up with rheumatism I could not move
without pain. My son had taken Tan -
lac, and it had done him a world of
good, so one day he brought home a
battle and said, "D/lothera"I want you
to take this." When had finished
that bottle, I felt like a different wo-
man, and by the time I had finished
my second bottle, I was out in the gar-
den hoeing.
An Obstinate Child.,
There was a dear little baby on the
train, and an elderly man stopped to
peep -be at it.
"A fine youngster," he said to its de-
nture ..teother. "I hope you will bring
him up to be an upright, conscientious
man."
"Yes," smiled the young mother,
"but I'm afraid it will be „a bit diffi-
cult."
"Pshavs le' said he. " 'As the twig
is bent so is the tree inclined.' "
"I know it," agreed the mother, "but
the trouble is, this twig is bent on
being a girl."
The Reason Why.
Charlie—"But I asked you, dearest,
to keeP our engagement a secret for
the present."
Claire—"I couldn't help it. That
hateful Elle Sharpe said the reason
I wasn't married was because ne fool
had proposed to me, so I told her you
had."
A Combing Mill Needed.
The woollen industry of Canada is a
basic industry and should be a domi-
nant facier in thq predUction of wealth
for 'our Canadian people. Sheep rais-
-lug, when. properly encouraged:- will be
one of the most profitable departments
of,„our agricultural life. The bulk of
wehl produced in Canada 'during the
peat -has; 'through fack Of* a combing
Mill, been exported to foreign coun-
tries where, after being combed, it has
shiiiped back to oar .worsthd
mills e,taa ggeatlY,increased value.
'Something like 'twenty -fours million.
(24,000;000) poueds of"wool. wai grewCi.
in Canada lest'i'kear. This .queiiiitYr:i'S
eufficient to' provide for something like
(8,000,000) ' slits of
clothes, Which WituatleSell in the
neighborhood of Four hundred Million
D liars (1400 000 000). If, the various
"Tanlac has simply done wonders
for me; it almost seems like a mira-
cle." This is the remarkable state-
ment made recently by Mrs. Annie
Root, residing at 1499 Powers St.,
Portland, Oregon, and is only one of
tens of thousands from well-known
men and women who are daily testi-
fying to the powers of Tanlac.
Continuing he„r wonderful 2 tate-
meat, Mrs. Root said, "For years I
suffered terribly with rheumatism,
and would often be down ia bed for
dais at a time. In the last five years
there was not a time that I didn't feel
those rheumatic pains all through my
body. About two months ago I got
ver Y much Worse and my arms and
legs were so bad I was almost help-
less and couldn't even hold a pen to
sign my name. I was so weak I could
not do any housework. I couldn't
even sleep, and had. no rest day or
night. Even to walk a few steps would
tire me out completely. When I tried
to walk a little way and at down I,
could not get up without some one
helping me. I had no appetite and
hardly ate enough to keep me alive. I
could not stoop over far enough to
get my shoes on.
"I never knew what a night's sleep
waa, and would lie awake for hours.
At times I would get very cold and
would have to get up and sit bY the
fire all huddled up, and my daughter's
would put hot wafer bottles all around
Father Knew Better.
"Well, dad, here we are," said. the
young man who had persuaded his
father to attend a boxing match. "I'll
warrant you'll get more excitement for
your $2isthan. you ever got in your life
'before."
"Huh! I clOubt that," grunted the
I id
old man. "Two dollars was all pa
for my, marriage license."
His Hearim, Restored.
The invisible 'ear .drum invented by
4. C. LeCnarde which is a miniature
niagapii:oile., _fitting 'Inside the ear en-
tirely 'et of 'sight, is restoring the
;hearing. of hundreds of people in New
York Cify. Mr. L'eonard invented ,this
drum to relieve himself of deafness
sand heads noises, and it does this -so
succesefully that no, one cOuldetelashe
is a• deaf man: It, is effective wilhaii
deafness' is cauSedehy catarrh or by
perforsttedeam destaoyed natur-1
j the "caas is. the same as for'Vegetables.;
stretches of road naturally came to be processes of manufacture were coras
'be set •Ci. ' hiating in Canada' through
plated in Xanacla•this large sum would
distinguished „at a very early period
by their neighbors by such phrases as
riAla
'
"at the grove" and the like, Which 'is ' thousands Of people ernployeA „n4
acter are of much longer seni as fweavi'ag of the 'c,rotlei-endthe taaloriaig
ta,Viii
the eascin that surnames ofathistchar-
. combing and spinning,of nhewool, th
hereditary titles than ttr6s`e''d,tstip ing . nd.selling : of ilie.4finished mroduct..
same descriptive name without- any ue,stba.ben.'1€: eton,tthine eCo.a.7tai.ay. ,cifs.r. aa
personal characteristics or pairsidage•
the father, he naturally acquired the ‘marraheaa
wool combing mill would ,nretteii. ilre-
As the senlived fa the same place as
conscious attempt 'at the establish- whole ea *Would 'Undouh,ted.ltreeei4e
Do -
merit of axegular family name. ...
the 'WhoIV-hearfdd'slipporl of the DO-
miaion and Provincial 'eaverilmenta;
-,
The sad are many- and the gay are few,
'And there little ease that we can do
That eeents so much as lifting, day by
day,
The hearts that waudelain the shadows
, gfay,
, Keeping clean service in our lives the
goal ' "
Of every 'manly, Jorthrig,ht, etalWart
soul.
Airplane Used to Combat
Insect Pests.
Another experiment in tlie adapta-
. •
tion of. the Airplane to peace -time ac-
tivitiee• was , reeently made near 'Day-
ton, Ohio., ,A six -acre grove of young
Catalpa trees had been attacked by in-
sects* and was in. danger of being'des-
troyed. An airplane soared directly
over the grove and eifted powdered
arsenate of lead onto the trees. Only
a few minutes, were required to no-
' complish this, work, which. would
otherwise have demanded the. services
of a large manlier of men and sprays
for several days, and, moreover, it. waS
den° more effectively. by the Plane.
A iliandful of hay put into .a pailful
,
'of water Will obviate the smell el
paint in a ream
The Man Who Said:
"The proof of the pudding
is in the eating"—
was only half through
He started a good pudding -
proof, but he didn't 'finish it.
There's a lot of trouble in
the, world from puddings that
taste good but don't do good.
They "eat' well, but that
ends the recommendation.
Sanitariums are full of pud-
ding -eaters who Stopped the test at
taste and forgot to inquire whether
their food gave the Joody what it
needed—until the body rebelled.
e- 4
Grape -Nuts is a food that
tastes good and does good. The
proof of Grape -Nut begins in the
•
eating and'goes on thropgh the
splendid service vehich
Nuts renders as a real, food,.
Grape -Nuts is the perfected good= "
nese of wheat and malted bar10
—deliCious to taste easy to `di.
gest, and exceptionally rich in
• nourishment for body and brain.
"There's a Reason" for Grape -Nuts
MRS. JENNIE ROOT
and took all kinds of medicine. Noth-
ing ever did me any good. I am just
like a different person now. All those
terrible aches and pains have left me,
and onlyethe other day I was able to
walk upefour flights of stairs in an
office building when the elevator was
out of order.
"My appetite is just splendid now,
and just to -clay for the first time in
years, I felt so hungry that I had to
go and eat a piece of pie between
meals. In fact, I can't remember the
time that I have felt as well as I do
now. I have not only regained my
health and strength, but I have gained
fourteen peunds in weight. To tell
you the truth, I wouldn't exchange
the benefit I have received from Tau-
lae for the best ranch in Oregon, and
I will praise it as long as I live."
Taailac is sold by leading druggists
Adv.
me. I was treated by four doctors, eeeryw .
Canned Salmon.
Thrifty housewives on the Pacific
Coast nowadays buy salmon when
they are plentiful and cheap, and put
,them' tip jars or cans f Or winter use.
They End it as easy ae'the cal:ening of
vegetables or -fruits.
.-,The salmon, dreSsedlead:taliOf
, .
bhne remsseetl,' are cat in, drosswise
pieces'-ef se size to fit the -!jar or can.
Salt is added, 'kid the 'Processawb.ich
irseludes cooking foasethree heurs
al druing. Asresettest forsmformatioe,
:to A.' Suite 437, 70 Fit*
Avenue, New yerle City, will be given
a prompt re,ply.'' • s adyt.
textile manufacturers and breedelt 'oft
sheep. • ' ' •
The Proper Course.
Mrs. McIntyre was calling uponalVirs,
Ca,saidy, • whose husband ,was af-
fluent circumstances and whose daugh-
ter had, therefore, been sent aviay to
college. j
"By the way," said Mrs. McIntyre,
when the tivsehad been gossiping for
a` while, "wheth' is Clara? I haven't
„seen her for an age." '
."Clara is at college," 'proudly re-
sponded the fond mrther, and then
added: "And I am se worried about
her. I haven't had 'a letter front her
for nee/437'0h weeks."
• "There "Where you . made a mis-
take," waS the prompt a•eleinder of
Mrs. BlIntyre. "Instead of letting her
go to college, why didn't you send her
to one of those corresporidence
schools?" .•
Pertinent Inquiry.
• ;
That Man IS HaPpy-,----
. Who valnea ,honon and a good' uttnie•
7bwovheoricephnies.eanoay 4,161.
Out Owigag thpaaai:4'.
WU' can" ta tiOyea't:y-t and..
tune with caleel'N'Ii4S,s` 1.11.4,.eat-uragea.t.
Who has a lie,aaty,aappaeeisiep.:
the beautiful in Inina'an
in nAture..- ' ' • ,.;ne, •
'Whehas contented:mind' liberally
• stewed eiith the itnetirledgta,that makes
interesting.
ating'
lioharmonious happy hom.
'Who has learned how .fo';,neutraliie
fear thoughts and worry thoughts by
their antidotes. . •:
'Abbreviated Verse.
•
MONEY OfeDffniSate "
?ay you?, Out-ht-toien: accounts
Dominhen Express Money Order. Five.
'fidlars doste titres cents. -;
•
. Sweet Solitude. ' '
Mr. Younghub—"pifl yenaLtalte.alii
lytead, darlingtt
Youtighub-Jiiar•ega dear."
Ma'aYounglmaaL:"Welli please don't
do' ani‘tiling 'Ince "that' '5,&ain. Yon are
SCr-ottig for: such heavy
work." •, t a a
t- -a
The, most nourialthig 'rrdea.:t is mat-
• • ar. aa! b" • a at,
„A:warden of 12 st. 8 ass.
Wears dear little belle on
her Ems*:
Most sweet is the sound
As she waltie,s, around;
But what must it be when
' she boss! "
,
Of Algeria's 7,500.000 'acres ok 'for-
ests 1,112,009 are covered with cork
trees.
The newest member of Miss Jones'
Sunday -school claes was a' lad whose
frankness was equaLto his curiosity in
inanY matters.
On one 6c'easion Miss Jones made a
few remarks touching untruthfulness
and earnestly endeavored to Impress
her charges with the necessity of be-
ing truthful at all times and under ell,
circumstances. •
.Now 'thefee-w appeared to be
intenselY'intere4ted `in Miss. Jones' re-
. •
marks, 'and, „after due eollection, put
querre to her: ' ° •
"What I'd' like td -know, ma'am," he
said, "is it a lie nobodY ever knows?"
'
Scotland's population ie now 4,-
882,157.
I. ASPRU't
Only "Bayer" is „Genuine
. -
Fisheronah9q. Frwid
The Original and Only Genuine
• .
. 0
Warning! Take no chances with sub-
etitu,tea for genuine "DaY.anTe.hleta ,of
_
sleSpirin," - Unless you see the name
L"ayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting Aspirin at all. In eVery
Bayer package at:e directions for Colds,
Headache, Neuralgia, lItheurnatiani
Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for
Pain: Handy tin boxes of twelve tab-
lets cost few cents. ., Druggists also
Sell larger packages. Made in Cana-
da. Aspirin is the trade mark, (regis-
tered in Canada), of Bayer :Manufac-
ture Of INIonoacettaacadester of Sall-
cylicacid. •
Men with grey or ,bitte eyes make`
the 'best marksmen,
Little Niles.
Teacher (to class) --"Which is
largest river is. Africa?"
Small Boy—"The Nile, `sir."
Teacher—"And what are its
taxies called?"
. Bby--"Juveniles, sir."
he
•
1Viinard's Liniment Lum&erman's Friend
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Valleyat9Plei yeas' 11 titteestednirnarli243,-
•01)0,000 Is, or thie liasrgeet in the
Ilsthory 0 . hat faanoes section.
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44. 013Fp. , s 7 TORONTO
iunerier.Pa Piteaepe,„pog Romerains
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001) DISEASES
How to Feed
Mailed.Free to any Ad -
&rasa 'hy the Author.
cinx.CRover Co.. Zwit.
a:3 West alst Streot
Neer' York,
YARMOUTH, N. S.
BABY COVERED
\\fill ECZEMA
When 4 Days Old. Cross
and Cried. Cutieuralieali.
nay baby brother had eczema
which began when he Wee about
, four days old. It came
in little pirrit)les end then
a rash, and he was con-.
•••ae ered. He was so cross
Va.& he could mot slew,.
anci ne crieu.
"This lasted about two
\ months before we used
Cuticura. It helped him, so we bought
more, and he was all healed after we
had used two calms of Soap and two.
exes of Ointment." (Signed) Miss
AleseL;eWilliams, toangs Cove,
B., Mai 22. 1919.
Use Cuticura Ohhsildiit dild
Talcum for all toilet` asurposes.
Seep ebs, Ointment 29 nod 50c. sold
throushoutthenereinion,csnadianDeoot
Lyalaina, Limited, St. Pool MDtit.reol,
DW-Cuticura Soap shav'osS4flout tame,
• •
STATE
Young Mrs. Beecroft Had
Miserable Time- Until She
Took Lydia.g. Pinkham'ss
Vegetable Compound.
\
.Hamilton, Ont.—" I have suffered for
three years from a female trouble and
consequent veeakness, pain and irregu-
larity which kept me m bed four or five
days each month. I nearly went crazy
with pains in may back, and for about a
week at a time I could not do my work.
I saw Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable
Compound advertised In the Hamilton
Spectator and I took it, Now I have hee
pain and am quite regular unless I over-
work or stay on my feet from early
morning until late at night. I kee
house and do all my own work wi
le.
, a:any.troubIhavrcou.1m.m
tten::I4:ed'
Compound to several friends. "—litre. oev-.
:m:I3EEeOFT, 2;9VictoriaAVe.::.5
Hamilton, O:tarita
Frfortyyr:w°P"l"
lnngtL_dla,ituisv:
cpm:ad64:restored:
health Wtielf;itgthfem1lee1.1
1 This accounts for the enormous demand
1 for it from coast to coast. If yeti aro ,
I troubled with any ailment peculiar to
1 women why don't you try' Lydia kl, '
' Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? It Is
made front native roots and herhe an!!
contains no narcotics or harmful drum
For special advice women are atiked to
write the Lydia E. Pinkhata IWItedichie
Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of forky
years experience is at your ratav-103.
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