HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-7-20, Page 3OVERIVOIIKEI) ERYES
The Most $uccessful Treatnierut
is Through the Blood.
early stages of nervous debility
are notodbyrestleSs1167ss and -irrlta-
Witty in which the victims seem to be!
,t7.01}1111)715:6•clairbalcretehs'elircolirn.111.:0en, yirtoxu Sery toe and Leadership.
are a tired feeling; wealcriess in the The joy of it! To be keenly alive,
knees and ankles; headaches, back- broadly awake, to be v ng
aches and sleeplessness. Tile matter something for others. For loved one
requires immediate a.ttention, for noth- ne,ar, What ajoy' to serve the" Ami
ing but suitable treatment will prevent our neighbors and friends near and
Oomplete breakdown. fur, What a,"joy to take 'thought for
The nervous s3 -stent governs the them and as, we have onaortalaitY, "do
viLole bbdy,. controlling heart, iung",, them good," as the old Scripture has
digestion and brain, so that it is not it. And everywhere we go, if we have
eurarising that nervous disturbances I the seeing -eye and hearing ear, always
callSo acute distress. For troubles of I there IS the path of service beekonIng,
this kind Dr. William's Pink Pills, sac. I calling us.
`.•
ceed when othoi- treatment fails, for
these pills make 'ne w blood, enriched
with tile elenients on, wallah the nerves
' thrive, and in this way reach the root
of the trouble. In proof of this is the
atatement of 1)-Irs. Docke]•ill, Strat-
' ford, Ont.,ho says: —"My daughter,
w
Matilda, was suffering from nervous
delyility, and the usual remedies did
not seem to help her. I was aclaisea
by a friend to give Dr. 'Williams' Pink
•, Pills atrial, and soon we 'fouud they
were doing her a great deal of good.
She complainical Of pains in the atom -
and a severe fluttering of the
heart, with a general weakness. Un-
der the use. of these pills she con-
• tattled to gain, and I laelieve tbey have
saved her from gaing into'a'decline."
Yeti can get thes e Pills from any
• Medicine dealer -Or by mail at 50 cents
a box or s1 boxes for $2.56 from The
Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brook-
• .
ville, Ont. •
A .Slyori „ilea cauaht in Hawaiian
Waters ,had attained the remarkable
,Weigiat. of 120: pounds.
Remember, a man may be a million-
aire as the, bank teller ,counts, but a
bankrupt as the good Lordacounts.
To-daya a fathiliar voice is awillog 15
a new way. It is the voice of the boy.
The "eternal boy" has cried out foa re-
cognition, pleading to be natlerstoad,
asking tor someone :to guide, and lead
him to dare and do all he' th:inlet and
dreams. ' •
Finally, the answer comes in the
Boy Scout programme! EverYwaere
the boys )]ave heard it. They make
reply as did another in anciettat time
"Give it me, there'andtaing like that.".
To the boy it is,as SatisitYing, at water
to thirst, ata food to hanger. He liter-
ally "eats it up" as lie would a big
meal, "Arid if it be true that food is
digested in proportion. as it is relished,
then Boy Scout activitiet and prin-
ciples, EO eagerly, almoat greedily, de-
voured, must build and nonrish the
finest and best and noblest in the boy.
What a chance for service, for lead-
ership! Here's a program that faults
the boy on his own level of instinctive
hiterestsand recreational delights and
lifts him by this means to the highest
heights of Stalwart manhood—for a
Scout is brave, layal,,aind, obedient,
trustworthy.
Challenge such a st,tement if you
will, and instantly everywhere wit-
nesses rise to affirm that it ls so.
Wherever under proper leadership
Minard'a Liniment Relieves Neuraipla boys are following the Scout proaram,
•
HEALTH EDUCATION
BY 'DR. J. J. WilDrILETON
- Provincial Board of Health, Ontario
Dr. Alithileton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat.
Lters through this column. Address him at Spadina Islouse, Spadina
Creseeni, Toronto.
An honoaed, place in Public Health
Work mutt he given to the Kiwanis
• Clubs. This splendid organization, in-
,
tea -national' in its scope, is animated
by a splendid ideal—building.. Build -
lag character, tbuilding goodwill, build -
lag friendships, and standing _with
head erect four-seinacre to all the winds
that blowl that is what,the K.iwanian
• aims to do. Toronto recently wet -
corned over six thousand visitors to
• the Annual Convention cyf the Kiwanis
Clubs, and the spirit of optimism and
good fellowship radiated its influence
through every section of our business
and municipal life. ,
The -delegates inattendance repre-
sented almost 70,000 business and pro-
fessional men, whose affiliation with
the movement centres around the
question of "blinding through greater
service," with the two -fold object in
view—to nstructing effectively, not
through the power of finance, not
through the wheels e incluistry, arm-
ies or fleettsabut by truth and lave.
A cheerful disposition, a bright obt-
leak, confidence in one's self and in
one's neighbors, indicate a healthy,
• vigorous mentality. With suah a men-
tality comes good health, good diges-
tion, and a happier life. There is no
reason why business men should not
be merry, and why butiness should not
be more of a useful, engaging occaPa-
tion and less of a grind. To promote
this new spirit in !business is the aim
of the Kiwanis Clubs, whose member-
ship includes the lbest-arnen in every
community and whose aims
indob-
jects are, dike the Retariarisa to make,
life happier, to, make a spirit of ser-
vice and helpfulness fill our lives and
dispel the clouds of pessimism, selfish -I
ness and indifference to the welfare of t
others, which too often seems to take'
hold of people in these strenuous(
times.
The Kiwanis Clubs include in their
membership doctors, lawyers, journal-
ists,„ financiers, executives, architects,
manufacturers, steamboat and rail-
road officials, and representatives of
many other vocations.- The Dissident,
in ,his annual address, stressed the
fact that hardly a phase :of national,
civic or social 'life but has felt the
ennobling influence of Kiwanis mo-
tives, adding: "To go on developing
manhood, up -building business char-
acter, making more rich the life of
our peoples—,should be the goad of
every Kiwanian," :-
More power to this splendlidoorgan-
ization. •
'
tlia result; is a new kind of bay who
does lceel) ititaselt ataollaa
meotally awake ond a-10mila' straight."
So that is tire talc of a real Scout
leader; to be a builder of boylieod ilu
hit eammunity; a master builder who
lays broad dat deep foundations for
the 'nOblost inaniibod. Leaders 'who
will count woric done ouly when the
result achieved id gc o d S con t--wh en
the bad boy is made good, and the bay
who 'is not bad." is made better, and
when/ the good boy 'becomes the best
at dal because, mare than any other,
he is one who "reverences his con-
science as his Icing."
Aye, higher still leads the Scout pro-
grann It daVelOpS the ou tsof-d Dort boy,
the out-otaaoars man, in:area to hard-
thip and the doing of the difficult, All
sue]] men i11 the past of fame and
favoltable fortune have revereaced the
Fat:het' of our spirits. And the oppor-
tunity Scouting offers is altogether
realized oaida when we have made vital
to the boy that the iellnite and eternal
energy everywhere manifest in the
beauty and glory of, the out-af-doors is
only another manifestation of the
power, not ourselves, that makes for
righteousness, and the h,ighest glory
of ihe infinite is not the beauty and
glory of nature, but human nature fill-
ed. to the full, with a constant 'purpose
to loye the noblest, to follow the quest
for the best, lead where it will.
What an •opportunity! Was,t a 're:
aponsibility! What a service! All
this.the Scout program offers to lead-
ers willing to pay the full price for
such abiding fruits .and sure rewards.
It will cost much, to be tare, and of-
tentimes the sacrifice may ma to the
very quick, for it will mean the squar-
ing cif personal individual standarde of
morality with the ideate and principles
of the very highest that we would have
the boy to pfactice.
But in order to make Iiiinself wholly
fit, like a "good Scouf,'14- the real leader
of boys pays willingly the price for the
sake of the boy, in the end to diseover ,
that any lost finds fall compensation
in the joy that bomes from such whole-
hearted service; ,
t'I
they iirQ made iota biellds. 131euding
is• art in „i'ttsOlt, and Tuohy who are
good tatters ttre not necessarily skilled
blenders. Contl'axY tO oornmou belief
tetatatsters de not die YOung.
Wisps of Wisdom.
Consele,ne.m warns u•S as n friend be -
fors a
saIatni: al:itsa:11,4;roluigoa2d1..iuei Iis;:teoe it is )ivpIll;.],(1.10)gsne:11,:eada.c],wri taitiao-siet
le
icr
who. ask for justice that they don't get
it.
Every day a ,new teacher, and ar-
rives with fresh lessons tor all /3
are willlag to learn,
Ono bit of heroism is- always within
our power—the Itcephig of our petty
trorauhbeleisnotom°euitlt.8oetivii:sr's see "that, money-
.
grabbing is yoar dominant pa.ssioti, the
bud of your nobility perislies,
We sow an act and reap a habit;
we sow a ha,hit. and reap a eitaraatea;
weffso;ovuiitrye-ihlaaral'ecatril; atililtle.r:1"1.1113e ndteeasntillyg
aabf eth et wsople-" ,NLi 4- ••07, oYcohiel wayround,
nbde,
. •
Good retolutiont are for the weak.
Itis -better to -be able, to loek back to
a day well lived than ahead to a month
of promises.
The number of diplomas a young.
man has in his Pecket isn't half as MI -
portant as the amount of determina-
tion he has in his !head,
a The man. who inloothes a -wrinkle
into a saline; be who snppiles apieas-
ant thought when one is wanted; '41/I1,0
thlIG repairs and renews God's heath -
work, counts with the truest of the
world's benefactors,
RED HOT JULY DAYS
HARD ON THE BABY
The Tea -Taster at Work—
Tea-tasting is a peculiar and inter-
esting procese.
To "liquor a batch of tea" the taster
arranges the necesta.ry numbe,r of
china pots and bowls of standard size.
Into each pot he weights a uniform
making of tea, irrespective of the kind
of leaf. (A spoonful of tea dust na-
turally- weight more than aspoonful of
a bigger leaf tea).
A flat kettle with a wide bottom is
filled with water and placed over a
gas -ring flame. The boiling of the
water is hnportant point of the pre-
cast. Water which it -not exactly boil-
ed will spoil the best tea.
At intervals the taster lifts the lid of
the kettle, peers through the rising
steam, and listens carefully for the
dala murmur which avill tell him that
the water is ready. On the appearance
of the first bubbles seizes the
kettle, prestet the spring' of a "six-
ininute tea -time- elock"—so called by
the ,trade—and fills the pots.
The ringing of a bell attached' to the
clock a,nnounees the completion of the
six minutes, and the tea is then pour-
ed into the ahina bovils, which are
brought to the 'edge of the counter.
The infusion left in thepot is shaken
out on the lid. .After:the tea has cool-
ed down to about blood heat; It is
ready for tasting, and here the skill of
the worker. is manifested—a skill at-
taiaed only by careful training and
long Pra,ctice in the classifying of teas.
With, a ,specially -shaped spoon the
taster moves along the counter, judg-
ing the liquor in each bowl, classify-
ing the tea 'as he 'progresses'. The
Points on which teals are jndged are
flavor, thickness of liquor; pungency
and color. The calor of the infusion
also assists the expert.
When the teas have been arranged
according to the special qualities,
,ke'intt-4
k4.4tt
'
a
A r°°. -.0-t•
welt
xttr,
.103, SUIT mn. Jr
,
I
July --the month of oppres,sive heat;
red hot da.yst,and sweltering nights; is
extremely hard on little ones, Dia,r-
rhoe,a, dysentery, colic and cholera in-
fantum Garry off thousands of precious,
little lives everaatummer. The mother
must be constantly on her gu,ard to
prevent these tro,ubles or if they come
on suddenly to fight them. No other
medicine is of such aid to mothers
during the hat summer as is Baby's Own Tablets-, They regulate the
bowels. and stomach, and an 00ea.91031-
ful dose given to the well child will pre-
vent summer coinplaint, or if the trou-
ble does ooine on suddenly will banish
it. The Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by. Irian at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
.•
,
Horses Not to Blame.
"It's ftinny hciw your horses are still
afraid of automobiles hero," said a
city resident to an old farmer.
dunno,.." answered the -farrier.
"It's 'none sos'funs-,,y when You think
how an "autonifoWe"ridst steerti to a
harse. Wouldna if ocean queer to -you
if you saw my °lollies coming down
the road with nothing in 'em?"
His Hearing Restored.
The invisible ea,rdruin invented by
A. 0. Leonard, aallieh is a miniature
megaphone, fitting 'inslide the ear en-
tirely out of sight, IS restoring the
hearing of hundrecIS of people in New
York city. Mr. Leonard invented this
drum to relieve 'himself of deafness
and head noises; and 'it does this so
successfully that•ne one could tell he
is a' deaf man. It is effective when
deafness is caused by catarrh or by
perforated or whafily destroyed natural
drums. A reqUeSit, for information to
A. 0. Leonard, Suite' 4:37 70 Fif th Ave
New York city, will be given prompt
reply. adv t.
What's the Answer?
In a aortal]] town there it on Irish
„cobbler whose conversata of thalach
relished. by his lellow ae tea rat
. .-. "Good morning,.Mr. Muiphy,7•said-a
customer one day,- going into the -shop
with shoes to be repaired. "I hear
• your wife is ill. What is the matter?"'
. "It's tnesilf fillet's tried to find a rea-
' son for Mary's being took since yister-
day mor.riing," said Mr-Mar:pay. "Un -
lees it's the heat,. I don't know what
. the trouble is.
' "The day before;;Yisterda.y she was
as well as iver s,[11,e, was Ye mind at
was a powerful , hea'aday, day -before
ylatel-day? Well :thin,. lqary took no
notice of the weather, no mere than
usual, She picked -blueberries all th,e
marniog; thin she -made a blueberry
pie for e
dinner, an shate the half of
that pie, and 51 qtarther of a water-
melon I'd bough_t, • and she relished
every mouthful,
"Thin elle matlet,the riet of the bine-
berries into a •niee ,cake for supper,
and she ate the half of thot--me eatin'
the rist, as I (1111 oa„th a pie—an' the
last quarther of the watermelon.;.'
what with the fri,sh doughnuts an' the
last end of Mrs, Daoleyis,weddin' 'cake,
she made out a lotus meal. An' in the
avenin', it being so terrible hot, she
made a pitaber of lemonade, an' drunk
ththeta-
e whole of the '
„: "Tta the (Mare thing her being Cook
.,
sdok yisterday maritin' tufther being so
wall the day before," said Mr, 1Viurphy.
"She.ole twolce what I did, and
mimber spakin' to her about her folne
, appetite, With the beat an' all; and
she is fiat on her back since yieteaday
morn:inf." :
......-......_-....
, Iowa leads all the states in the
•' gross value of farta products. '
, In
ppetite and Health
o -vvelcome Grape -Nuts
PV, HERE'S nothihg more gratifying
1 and delightful than a dish of
Grape -Nuts at breakfast or hunch
time. ,The crispness and tlie full,
rich flavor of this splendid food
have a wonderful charm for the
taste.
And Grape -Nuts builds health.Nourishment for tissue and bona
and nerve and brain is contained in
Grape -Nuts in easqy-dige.stibie
form.
If you and your children have-
not yet begun to enjoy the benefits
of this wonderful food, suppose You
begin today with an order to your
grocer. ,
Grape -Nuts is ready to serve
from the package—and alvvays crisp
and appetizing. -
47, GrapesNlits--.-1-11-ITYO-D-Y BUILDER,
114ado by, 4 t • •
Canottion Ptitti)ra ,Criteol Co., 24S.
The,re s a Reason
Windsor, ()otettIo#
,
.,••, IWO
T E WORLD'S
OLDEST ALMANACS
ANCIENT 'CALENDARS
COT IN MARBLE.
,
Modern Almanac Has Ances-
try raost as as
Huntan Records.
T,},lose who regard th.f.t.1111111tIlae. as
, .,„
mushreom, aaawtla of modern time
shaula pay a visit to the British Mu
a
earn, n London, where :they can
,
'.:;,.•
'
STEEL FOREMAN
GIYESDETAILS
TO THE PUBLIC
He Sued a Complete Break-
down From Overwork But
Was Completely Restored
ca
by nlac, an Galas 11
• Pounds Declares Edward
• Whit
a °
s "I want to give a little Irlsttory of
s- my case arta to 1et the public know
ee what l'aulaic has really done for late,"
one which eild good service a thousand.
EYenaglistaibidosho
fois•e,Irteasis Caesar sot foot on
It was produced in -the far-off daYs
Itameses the Great; arid we can pic-
ture that dusky and almighty king turn-
ing to the pretty little Hittite priacess
wile was hit' wife and asking her to
"have a lack at the almanac and tell
hios what clay of the 'month it. wat.a
"You Inay still see the hiaelc,..and red
marks which branded certain days as
luolcy or waluelty inothe year 1300 B.C.
The almanac which hangs on our
wails to -clay has an ancestry almost as
old as human records. At Pompeii has
been found a calendar, eut upon a
square block of marble, each site of
which contains three months of the
year, with_ the ivigria of the Zodiac;
and even our muck less advanced Sax-
on farefathers "used to engrave upon
certaine squared sticks: the courses of
the moones of the Whole yeere, fest:
val days," and so
Thus through the ages every civil-
ized country had its almanac -a, which
grew more and moite elaborate until,
In the centuries that followed the Con-
quest, they became, in monkish hands,
beautiful .works of art, with rich il-
lumination in gold and colors:, and
with a wide and curious range, ea in-
form,ation.
Varied information.,
01
in an "Almanac for^ the year 1886,"
for example, we find among the con-
tents a chrotnicle of events from th.e
birth, of Christ, notes an medicine and
blood-letting," the Houses of the Plan-
ets. and their Properties," and a "des-
calption of the Table: of Signs and the
Movable Featte."
When the printing pres,s superseded
the slow ancli laborous process of writ-
ing and, illuminating, the,supply of al-
manacs naturally became much more
abundant, The fast printed in Eng-
land was "The Sha,aphearda, Kalen-
da,r" for the year 1497. And in the
Bodleian Library at Oxford, you may
see an "Ahnanacke for XII. yere,"
printed. "ia the yere ot the reyne of our
most redoubted Severeagne Lorde,
Kin,ge Henry the VII."—a fascinating
little volume of fifteen -pages.
„ How ambitious these early printed
almanacs were is proved by the in-
scriptions! they bear, sueli at the fol-
lowing" (in modern speittne:° "A'proi"
noticatian and an Alman-ac. fastened
together, declaring- the Disposition of
the people and also of the Weathe-ia
with cartaiii. Electionand Times ,
chosen bath for Physic and Surgeay
and for the Husbandman,. Alto for
Hawking, Hunting, Fishing and Fo-svi-
ing, according to the Science of As-
tronomy; with. the Variety of the Air
and also of the winds, and unfortunate
times to Buy and Sell, talce Medicine,
Sow, Plant, Journey, etc."
By the eighteenth century Britain
was flooded with almanacs of every
conceivable variety. Francis. Moore, a
quack doctor, launched his famous
!`Voice of the Stars" almanac, which
proved so popular that its sales soon
reached half a million caplet a year,
and which still flourishes after more
than two centuries of life, "
• The "Ladles' Diary" followed with
"entertaining - particulars peculiarly
adapted for the use an,d diversion of
the fair sex."
Measuring Ocean Waves.
The shock of the Atlantic Ocean
beating upon.the west coast of Ireland
has been felt a,nd recorded at Blaming -
This remarkable statement was,
made in a lecture by Professor W.
Evans, who produced the actual record
of th,e arrival of the shooks. Each
wave on the -record represents a tre-
mor that it believed to have travelled
throng.]: ,the earth's roOky crust, pass-
ing um:lei:the Trish Sea at a speed_ of
180 miles a minute.
An. Atlantic roller measuring 130 It.
from crest to area has been tinseid to
pass a given spot in five seconds, while
a. roller 335 ft. long passed in eight
seconds.
The instrument used for recording
these shocks is a, very delicate' seis-
mometer, which also registers earth-
.
quakes and so on, ••
Some idea of the. Size of the Ocean -
wave Shocks can be gathered from an
illastnations giVen, by Professor Efans.
A feeble earthquake shoGic produces
disturbance like that experienced by
baggage on the Seat of a train travel-
ling at thirty-four miles an hour, if the
train mime to a standstill in one min-
ute., A severe earthquake produces a
shock simila,r to that which would be
felt if the train, stopped in one second;
while the wave shocks are the same as
if the train took six months to stop.
*
s What Did She Say?
Professor's Wife --"I suppose yo,11
have forgotten that this is the anni-
versary of your wedding day?"
Absent -Minded Husband (a bStre et -
0 himself from Conic sectionS)—"El),
Files live as latig as five years, • What? Dear irie! IS It really? And
ISSUB...No. 28—'22, when is youiss, my dear?"
said F,d^,vard White, of 27 Caroline St,
Soith Raxfribtou, Ont., 'a well-known
foreman, tor the Dominion Steel Com-
pany.
'.E.theut two years age I .sufferod
complete brealeclovt, brought on by
overwork. We , were dl,oing e gaeat
deal of overtime work, walch !finally
,got :the laelat of me and 1 just had to
go tobed and, Stay there for stove:rill
days. This, le'ft me in suca a bad cent-
ditton 'Chart I had no, appetite, at alt, and
was to weak . that! when 1 walked
around I woucti juat..,.stagger,' I took
all kinds Of medicine but failed to get
any belies'. , •
"However, Tanlao has haat me uP,
until I .feel like a different p,ensant..
I've. 'gabled eleven pounds, and am
hack on the job worktng as good as
aver. • 1 Just ,ean4 u16.}nlk Taaalac
entou,gh for puttiag, Me inenah fine
"
condition," ,
Tanlac is ,sold by all good druggists.'
Motors lose to Rear Axles.
To permit the use of smaller and
lighter bodies on automobiles a French
designer mounts the motors and radi-
ators close to the rear al. -less
MONEY ORDERS,
It is alwaya safe to tend a Dominion
Express Money Order. Five dollare
costs, three cents,.
Chinese, six centuries before Christ,
performed surgical operations.
Vir 4,4,P .
WtrAV4 (,-A'$
. ,
tor a woaaly
tart, ,P.rtce 'rl40 ' b174
fill' Infer/nation 4
•Ltdy 73 44
t
BEI.TIN., ,,,„,
rri-LIIE.AsHIRV BE1iT5 ANTY
TION hose, aow, and, used, ship et',I
subJeet to ativroyal at lowest primes lb
Canada- .•Yoloc jtielting Go-, 115 York
'St., Toronto, Ont.
The First Step,
"I have jii,st been elec,t,ed grand lin-
1)(3,1.18)1 pote.ntate my. badge.",
"Congratulations, olcl'Maas. ,;,That)s
"ilrell It's a hr;innthig antthow,
hope to get one of tlie really important
offices later oml"
• r
tab -lard's Liniment for talc] evevywhet4i
! • ,
God will trot have His work made
manifest by aotwarditea,-Fraerson.
The 1st oo• • in'tare Pacifie North-
west was opened in, 1833,2at.Fort Van,
couver.
Ansorileohi ikozser, Deg XiosnomIttlii
Book on
1010G DISEASES
and How to ki'eeid
Mailed Freeto any Ad.
, dress bthe Author.
Olay lover Co., IBC.
125 Wet s 24th Street
New YOrk,
"
COARSE SALT
LAN DVS A L T
Bulk Carlota
'TORONTO SALT wonka
C. J. °LIPP TORONTO'
amsamosoroulgo
1-----Titaratta atavsaaasta
ataatr: esaanotaat
naaallalta
eataaa'a
EAK
e s D ,
. ,
t,
,_ , . Pi 1 g t
.
ARLT
Blistered Peet, Sore , 2?eet, Tired Feet,: cl.
Bitinistir and 'AChin,gt .reot.
0
After a hard day's 'work or a long tramp '
and your feet are completely used up, ', Tlii G.
„...,
,,,,
bathe them, in hot water, then rub them g
-well with ITINARD'S LINIMENT. at
will relieve -you and you 'will never bo
without a bottle. Now Looks After Home,
Thanks to Lydia E. Pink.
ham's Vegetable,Compomld '
PI tE
• FOR 3 R
Also On Arms. Very Sore.
Cuticura Ilealed.
"For three years my daughter was
troubled with pimples on her face
and arms. They were hard, large,
and red, and some of them festered
and were very sore.' Her face was
disfigured for a while, and she stayed
in nearly all the time.•
"Shetried different remedies but
they did not do any good so began
to use Cuticura Soap and Ointment
and after using three cakes of Cuti-
cura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura
Ointment she was healed." (Signed)
Mrs. S. F. McDuffy, 20 Franklin St.,
Exeter, N. H., Dec. 31, 1920.
• Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum the daily care of your skin.
Sample rachFroebr MEW. Address:"Lytatns,L1m-
ited, 244 Et. rad St, W., biontreal." Sold every-
where. Soap25c. Ointment25 andate. Talcam25e.
ailtrCuticureg, Soap shaves without mug.
•
1VIeaferd, Ontario.—"I was so weak
I could hardly do anything and ray -
back seemed the
worst. I read so
much about Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound for
women that I
thought I -would
try it. I feel that
it did help me for
ani looking after
my own home now
and seem quite
strong again. I
have recommended
your Vegetable Compound to quite a
few friends and you can use my name
it you swish to do so." ---Mas.
PORTTR, Box 410, Meaford, Ontario.
In your own neighborhood there are
doubtless women who know' of the
great value of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. Women every-
where, either by word ot Mouth or
by letter, recommend this splendid-
raedicine. These who have suffered
tram female weakness, change of life,
and similar troubles • know of the
wonderful relief brought to them by
the Vegetable Compound.
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 dtrectiotIs and dose worked out by
physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions "(Or
Colds ' Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Handy "flayer" boxes of 12 LIblets----Also bottles of 24tand 100--M•Ugg14
Aspidn lo tb!" 31,100 nlrS (,0r,1,1(9r,1 In ('alla,t1,) of 13, 3StlanttracV1i3te of Motor
toci.1.(otriclOotttl 01 f.,1)3<tt ticaela, 'Whi)p Irho'ct.,n thot ALpirth Inorolg 13a5515
blanufactutP, to assiott 111," MAU(' 001.50t5 irl5535leZ1s, tIto l'abl..tH or B.,..yer c,tolopah;
will be 5Lan2ad with thei; 6•envei trado, i;),;.t.ilz, the "Bayte OrOau.."