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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-7-23, Page 3Witat,;the Boy Thinks! 4n address was presented by th boys of the. Teeswater Troop to tho re tiring 'Scoutmaster. It makes interest ing reading .and also shows that Si Robert Baden, -Powell built wisely an well when he fashioned the Boy Scou organization an lines' that 'appeal t the boy. The address read: De' Scoutmaster, "We who have profile by your instructions in the school (th Scoutmaster is a school teacher), Wit nessed your painstaking 'industry i our behalf, and benefitted by your en thusiasm in the. Boy Scout inovereiit desire to "express our"appreciation o your services, and our regret at sever ing our happy and profitable relation ship. As a- teacher. you. have alwa been interested in our welfare, patient with our imperfections, just in you reproof, and ever'ready to:explai -away our difficulties and enlighten a far. as was in your power' our under standing. We have appreciated you efforts., ff s and -`hila perchance often an' While t noying, you by our mischief, or :though lessness, or our indifference, we mean no. disrespect •but were actuated only J '.. the'inrpulsiveness of youth Let this be ourapology. a o a a p gY. We h ld you lway in the highest respect. -The Scout movement appealed' to as most strong- ly. In it we -were brrouglit; more close-: lytogether. The physical exercise, the hikes into the country, the training i observation, ` resourcefulness, settee 1lance, honor, courtesy,and genera helpfulness; will not.soon be forgotten while the get-together feeling of th Camp:Fire' ,a• with the Camp -Fire yarn created.! feeling of comradeship suc as no other'relationship-could arouse We will remember the teaching an theexperiences forever." What.the Magistrate Says. ATURE'S Danger Signal "']Chat .Everyone Should Tate Seriously. Pain is one of •Nature's warnings that something is wrong with the body. Intiigestiou,'for jnstenoe, is character ized by pains in the stoine,ch, and of-. ten about the heart; rheumatism. by. e sh'tl!t•p pains in the l!rebeand joints; 'lieadaclies are a sign, that the nerves - or stomadii'are out ter order. In some ailments, such as anaemia; pain le not. tso 'prominent. In dais cage Nature's warning takes the form of pallor, ° breathiessn,eee after. Slight exertion, Des palpitation of the heart, and loss of ap- e petite, Whatever form these warnings' . , take, wise peo;�le will not ignore` the fact 'that many diseases have their 11 origin in poor blood, and that when the blood fs enriched the trouble' d.ieap Peal's, ` Lr. Williams' Pink Pills . are. f most helpful in such oases ,• because they purifyan mutbuiili- up the biped to its normal strep the Ys $ iii this way it tones up the nerves, restores the air petite and gives perfect health. Miss Hazel Berndt, of Arnprior, Ont., las s proved the great value of this medicine and says:—"I am a young girl and have been working in a factory for the past tour years. For two years I had y t_ been in such poor health that at times I could not work. I was thin and. pale, "'Boy Scouts do good turns for peo- ple, not annoy diem," declared amagis- trate recently in the ju r enile court, when releasing,two lads .with Instruc tion& to join some Scout troop. The boys were in court for destroying fences and cherry trees. They pro- , raised to join a troop. What Slmcoe Thinks. The people of Simcoe' think the Scouts of their town are really living up to their motto --"Be Prepared:" • Fifty seven minutes after the call from Fisher's Glen: for Boy Scouts was're- ceived four auto. loads of Simcoe • Scouts were `fighting a bush fire .re- cently, twelve miles out of town. What a Wolf Cub Did. Everyone has heard the story of Sir Walter Raleigh, the gallant courtier. who spread his, cloak on the road -that the Queen might pass over dry -shod. But listen to this story that gentle - Libman recently told about a Cub, having witnessed the event himself. Ina city last winter there was lined .up boys and girls, poor children, 'waiting to get into a free concert given at a mission. One thinly clad little girl, Whose shoes were also in holes, seemed to feel the. cold more than the rest and shifted. from foot to foot. Along came a boy who noticed her. He watched for a moment then suddenly pulled off his cap and threw it on the ground at her feet -and said, "Stand on that, kid." Who do you think did .the' greatest deed, Raleigh or the Cub?" We think the Cub, for his act was done simply as an impulse of thoughtfulness and without expectation of recognition or reward. "How did I know that he was a Wolf Cub?" said. -the gentleman who tells and witnessed the incident: • "Why, he was• wearing the same little button on his 'coat . that My own Wolf Cuh'son wears here at home." • What Twenty-five Thousand Scouts Promised. At the Wembley Exhibition last year there were gathered together a. great concourse of 'Scouts from every part of the world. In connection with a Sunday afternoon meeting held in the stadium, Sir Robert Baden-Powell, fol- lowing other speakers,addressed the Scouts. "I bid you pause for a mo- "ment," he said, "lower flags, and bend your heads, and think of your Scouts' promise --that you will do your best be - do your duty to God and the King,- to help other people • atall times,and obey the Scout Law. I want you to go forth from here eager to sere God, and the King, and your fellow men. Those who will do that stand up and tell nie' .And .immediately twenty- five thousand Scouts -stood on their feet and with hands :raised hightin the air, shouted—"I will,`" • Married in Mid -Air. A weddings in the air took place re- cently, when. a young Swedish couple were married (luring an aeroplane flight from Malmo to Hamburg When the machine, carrying a full complement of passengers, had risen to a height of 1,500ft.,' an altar was rccted in the cabin, befa're which a Swedlsh'cler•gyran performed, the mars riage ceremony, with a lawyer and his wife as witnesses. A wedding breakfast was then Nerved, and the health of the couple drunk in champagne by all,the•passen (, gers The clergyman and the lawyer left dile machine at Hamburg, but the eon - ale cotatinued their honeymoon trip to 4rnsterdam, The giant bu Which •sofietin;ea teaches 120 feet, /iro*s th foo a day„ and troubled with headaches and fainting spells. r 1 doctored nearly all this' time, but it did not hal P me. My mother advised me 'to take Dr. Wil- liams'.Pink Pills, and atter usingthem for a while I could notice an improve- ment in my condition. I used nine boxes and can truthfully say that my health• is restored. When r began tak- ing the ..pills I weighed 97 pounds and now I •weigh`114. I feel that I owe my good health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and hope other ailing people Ple w11 give them a fair trial." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mall at 60 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Wise Provisions of Nature. There is .a curious resemblance be- tween the stomach of a hen and a corn' mill; the, crop answering to the hop- per and the gizzard to the stones which crush the .corn." But the most remarkable resemblance' in this—to prevent too much corn from going into the stones "at once, a receiver is placed between them and the hopper so that the coma may be dribbled out just as .fast: as it is required, The sante pro- cess takes place in the hen as the crop may be filled and it?• food only enters• the gizzard` gradually and as fait as it is able to digest it.. A grub called the glow-worm gives nut a phosphoric light in the darkness. Why? In order that her mate may find her, for while she is a worm he is a fly, and while she is on earth, he is in the air most of the time. The web of the spider is a compen- sating contrivance. The food of the spider is flies, yet how is he to catch them without his having wings? Hr's" web is a net, and he not only knows how to weave it, but he furnishes the thread to weave it from his own body. -Inemany species of insects tho eye is fixed and cannot be turned ra tits' socket. To supply this great refect, the.eye of such insects is a multiplying glass with a lens looking in every di- rection and showing every object that may be near.. Thus at first what seems a privation, is in reality an advantage, as an eye so constructed seems better adapted to the wants of these Crea- tures than any other type. The neck ofthe chameleon is -stiff and cannot be turned. However, Na- ture is never at a lose. The chame- leons eye -ball stands out so far that more than half of it projects from the head and the muscles function so very curiously that the pupil can be turned in any direction. He can look back- wards without turning his body. The parrot would have anincon- venience'in the very hooked shape of its upper mandible, if the mandible were stationary like that of other birds. But it is not, and the hook can be -used la suspending itself and it can be -used in a variety of wayssince- it is capable of being :moved at pleasure. • Many quadrupeds have long ears that they can move backward and for- ward With great ease, and in this way detect -the species of sounds. The. ears of the dog, cat and horse are so con- structed. The elephant's short neck is com- pensated by the admirable device of a pboboscis. The queen •beetle carries brilliant lamps which she lights with phosphorus furnished her by nature. Moles' eyes are tiny and fur -bedded, se that the"dirt may not get in. WE WANT CHURNING EA We supply cans and- day expreal charges. Wo nay daily by express money orders,. which can bo cashed anywhere without any charge. to obtain the top ;price, Cream trust' be. free from hid flavor. and contain not leas than 80 per cent, Butter Vat. Bdtwea Company Limited, Toronto For references --Head Orrice, Toronto, Bank of Mori 1%1, or. your local banker: Patabliskitcl for av`i; thirty years, The Oxen. Ob, white ale the oxen, whiteas the brook That eleangies to Scant on the rack; Anti they pdod the length of the Wood, land road Under the sun's rod clock! They go delve the shadows of even - tire They thread their way so slow,. Oh, there iu the fading purple light. -- There, there in the afterglow*? The ferm-boy sings irpin his laden reek; Ile whistles with -long day dorso, 'While the great wheels rumble along the track Toward the rim of trio setting ran! The oxen clash a spreading horn And ,quicken their pace a -bit, •Fdr yonder are cribs of yellow corn And lampsof the farm -house lit! Olt, yonder is peace in the drowsy stall Beyond the tug of the day; Beyond the lanes of the forest tan And the ring of the axe always It is good to be back in the twilight hour To the crib and the clover -mow With a fragrance thereof the withered flower — A dream of the slow trails now! -Leslie- Clare 1PI`anchester. The` senieeele : e� t i"'ac`fele Gari cl s` -t'Vi for T3 C , the lar• es't' salt . � ,�4 l a k elf x .,,.c �, .... .; a?. :, _, �.Ys. Water natatoa;ium ;•ii the -World. ' It is 14Q feet brag. ShOuld 'Encourage.. Boysin In- .strumental School Music.. Weighing a Sunbeam.'' What pressure can a beam of light exert?• 'A beam of light, like a jet of water, pushes an against obstacle g y bs tae 1 placed in its path, but the push, al- though g very minute can be measured Every child spends a large part o bis first eighteen •years:Si school. Hi k • h work must progres music and sc col n p g s T}ie: English simultaneously or one' or the other b physicist, James Clerk neglected, if fret entirely abandons Maxwell, watt the first to suggest that here light can exert pressure and he works If he possesses musical ability of ed out mathematically what the force. marked degree, the school studies ar should be. It rvas.not till nearly•:.usually sacrificed, Rith a permanen thirty educational deficit -to the child. I years later than an attempt was made 1 t i ` measure it experimentally .,The music be to his dislike, he fs most car man who made the experiment was tain to fade later ti regret that musica P 0 you'd like a little better t a,' than you are using, please try"Red Rose" Te: samegood tea for 30 years. Try it I d:' RED HOT JULY DAYS a n D®N THE E f The 4 l July'`-- month of oppressive ;Professor Lebedeff, a Russian scient- ist. From a delicate fibre of quartz he instruction was discontinued at a time when mind and -muscle was retentive and pliant. Veryfewarsons acquire facility a i q t in hung a small 'vertical rode across the P - y lower end of which were secured two any drill subject' after twenty years o shorter rods, carrying at their outer age. Tbe concert- artists now before ends discs of 'very: thin metal. Two the publid were masters of technic on of the- discs were blackened and two their chosen instruments while still in were polished. The vl ole airan a-1 their teens. ,It is imperative then, tha. g music bo part of the instruction re- heat; red hot days and sweltering nights; is extremely hard on little, ones. Diarrhoea, dysentery, colic and - cholera. infantum carry off thousands 0 f•precious little lives every summer. The mother must beconstantly on'?her: to rev guard e t these. •o hies• P n tr u orif they come on suddenly to fight them. No other 'medicine is of such- aid <to . t mothers ;during the hot summer as is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels and stomach, andan toe- casioual dose_ given to the well child will prevent summer complaint, or if the trouble does come-on suddenly will banish it. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from. The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ment was in reality an extremely sen carved during the sldiooi years, and sitive balance, and the twisting was for that reason: it should be part of the measured by means of a tiny mirror attaattached to the apparatus and turning curriculum of the school. All progres- it. It was enclosed in a globe of sive school systems have music in glass from which air had been - some form, but it is more frequently ex- eluded. confined to singing. In the last decade however, instrumental music has at A beam of light was concentrated ' ' on to the pair of blackened discs. The tracted considerable attention, 'and many cities have incorporated it in the programme. This particulam phase of music usually appeals to boys'. Taste in et/ literature and music pressure of Light caused the quartz fibre to twist slightly, and the angle of deflection was measured by reflecting a spot of light from the attached mir- ror on to a flied scale. The beetlewas7 can be acquired. The average boy" of average intelligence, with good teach then played on the polished discs, and the angle measureding, again, in this case ng, can learn to play almost any in g b barn a out twice the previous amount. s'trument, and • produce therefrom nount- .sounds that are quite above the aver - tion t In ofis the eway avers accurate determine.- .sounds - The unusual instruments .of the force of light -pressure was orchestra, such es `the oboe, bassoon, obtained: French horn, string bass, flute and The effects! astronomer.of r Perhaps re are t e clarinet, fall easy prey to the nimble be t -kr oo the cseithfthe fingers and alert minds of bright-eyed, best known case is that - of comet's vigorous boys, and they derive no tails. The materials composing the 'small pleasure from b`elrag'able•to• play. tail of a cornet' are so light that the.. If the boy can do it, and can, he pressure of sunlight has more effect should bo given a chance to he it. on them than the sun's. gravitational attraction. tonsequently a comet's d tail always points away from the sun. On Sunday Morning. They Won't Wash. It is reported that last year a special sanitary commission of the Soviet goy- - ernment in Russia .discovered in Si- beria an isolated tribe 600 miles from any -other 'human. coinn%unity. ' They know about as much .of the world in which they live 'as' we know of Mars and its possible inhabitants. "Though there was naturally no lack of water, it was found thet they never used it except as a drink. Force had to ba used to wash these strange people. Net only did they never wash their bodies; they never washed their clothes or their cooking utensils. They were, in short, what Gilbert calls in "The Mikado" "very imperfect ablutioners." Dr. Johnson is reported to have de- clared that he "hated immersion," but the first man the commissioners at- tempted to bath actually died, either Of fright or of some form of -auto-sug- gestion. Eupeptic and Dyspeptic. Stcries about Eugene Field or that Eugene Field used to. tell "are always •-amusing„ Sind M. C. H. Dennis's . book, Eugene Field's Creative Years, is full of, them. Speaking of the dyspepsia which was so often a burden that made Field's cheerfulness a triumph''`al well as a gift, Mr. Dennis says: . Sol Smith Russell, the4cdmedian, was not only a close friend but a •fel- lotid dyspeptic, and Field- used to tell with huge glee a story to the effect that one midnight, after giving a per- formance in an Eastern city, Russel. went intoa restaurant to get some- thing to eat. While he partook spar- ingly of bread and milk he. sawld I love to go. to church On- Sunday morning! The folk I meet Are all dressed up so nice. Even their faces look ironed out (To. me it seems they must have pray- • 'ed-- 1'Lord, take bur cares away Just for to -day.") And' 0, I like to watch The chi]dreril They are like flowers gay. Though 'tis Sunday They find it hard to walk Decorously. Even the lawns and streets an o And houses friend of the name of Perseus attack- Wear a festive air.. ing with gusto a plateful of corned '('Tis most beflttting so!) beef and cabbage. "Merciful' heavens, Parsons!" cried Russell. "How dare you fill yourself Gleam and glow, with -suchvituals, at this time of O how the bells call outl— night?" "Little folk, big folk, "Oh, Lean stand it" replied Parsons Rich folk, poor folk, happily. • "But, my dear fellow,",;expostulated Russell, "do you know bow long it takes corned beef and cabbage to di- I can't resist that invitation, gest?„ So 'I go to church. "No, I haven't the remotest- idea," And to my soul there conies said Parsons. A benediction. "Well, I happen to know," said Rus- sell; "It takes five hours --five solid I And now you know hours." a "Oh, that's all right," said Parsons. 'I've got just about that much time to devote to it." - A somewhat similar story of J. L. Toole was told to Field in London. Dropping in at the Garrick Club one evening, Toole found Irving eating a Welsh. rabbit.. After gazing fixedly at the concoction, ToOle shook hands with Irving and said solemnly: "Give ray love to dear cid Charles Mathews." Then he turned and walked away: Mathews had been dead three years! Coal Mine in Not Always Dangerous. in Street. "I r , Coal discovered while laying a sewer gerousconsidethings,"these motor cars dan- in. e busy street in Coatbridge, Scot- "Well, that depdhds." land, is being dugup at the rate of "Depends on What?" nine or ten 'tons' a day. The "pit" is 'Whether ..they have drivers in 'em thirty-eight feet deep. - - or'not " The spires of the churches Sad folk, glad.eolk Won't you come to church?"' Just why I love to go to church On Sunday morning. --Ella H. Eckel. Wilding to Assist. Cliatles---"Ilio in' love with a`cbarm- ing girl, and 1'd 'like 'to ask your ad- vice." •Maisie -"I'm- willing to help you all I carat' • • ,'Well,,now, would, you advice me to propose to you?" Foe; Every ill—Minaret a "Liniment. Ancient Eclipses, Eclipses as far back as 1207 B.C. are recorded at Oxford University, Obser- vatory, In -thesame huge book are predictions concerning future eclipses as far ahead as the year A.:D. 2163; There's Always An If. "XV' is a little rooky islet hi the gulf of Lyons, France, two miles southwest of Marseilles* "Does Fred like parties?" "He says I'm the only party he's t interested in." The King and the Cow. Faisal, warrior chieftain and ally of the British in Mesopotamia, now King of Irak, is a man not easily flustered. After the Peace Conference his friend and Comrade -in -aims, Col. Thomas E. Lawrence, took hien fpr a tour of the British Isles, and while in Scotland they were entertained at d formal din- ner• in Glaugow. r The Emir had been ail day so busily seeing the sight& along the Clyde, re- lates Mr. Lowell Thomas in Asia, that When the time came to respond to the toast in his honor he was unprepared, Asick li would have it, the only other person present who culd understand Arabic was . Lawrence, who acted : as interpreter. So when Faisal was call- ed upon to speak he leaned over and whispered in Lawrence's ear: "I haven't a thing to say. I will re- peat the passage from the Koran on the, cow, and you may tell them any- thing you like!" :-. It so happens that the passage ex trolling the cow is one of the most sonorous and euphonious parts of the Koran and nd t h e business men of Glas- gow were accordingly much impressed. Had that melodious"outpouring utpouring been literally translated, thisand more of it ;t; what the Scotch gentlemen would • 1tave heard: f - "Moses answered, He saith she is neither an old cow nor a young heifer, but of a middle age between both; do ye therefore that which ye are com- manded. She is a red cow, intensely- red; ntenselyred; her color rejoiceth in the behold- er, . She is a cownot broken to plough the earth or water the field; a sound one, there is no blemish in her. Then they sacrificed her; yet they wanted but little of leaving it undone." But Colonel Lawrence, keeping a straight' face, provided such a suitable and ready misinterpretation that they never suspected they had been hear- ing the proper qualifications of a sacri- ficial .; cow and -not an eloquently -turned Oriental compliment to their hospi- tality; Singers' Please Note. Why is it that singers, good, bad and indifferent, invariably ignore on their programmes the writers ° of the song - verse? 'Surely the poet is entitled to some slight recognition, for the poem is the source of inspiration to the (=- poser, the foundation of the interpre- tation and the current of understand- ing between singer and audience. Who would want to hear a singer, no matter how beautifltl :the; voice and melody, stand up and give sixty mea- sures off Tra-la-la.,`and call it a song? We Iook for a poetic sentiment besides a well -sung melody, and we can only find it in the venae that existed before the song, and without which the song could not exist. Moreover, do not some powerful songs, such as "The Blind Plowman," "The Grey Wolf," "Rand- ers Fields,"` -etc., although coupled with very beautiful music, make their dra- matic appeal and lasting impression through the words? There 18 no more reason to ignore the writer of the wards than the writer of the melody, yet such is generally the 'case; and still worse, the program- mes• of many choruses, which even go so 'far as to print the poems ire omit the names of the poets. CIasSif ed Advertis•Sin•S11t3' res—eriteesx 2 nabt4uira' , seSer ane by Trcacii', Rrmod5. O1mpi3 home treatment', 6 years' success, thousands tostlrnoWais. Write at Once for tree hook. Trnoh's Beredlos limited, pest, X, 76 Adelaide East, Toronto, Canada. teat this u't) Australia's Child Brides. Australian marriages t i arr es during 1928. included 433 brides under seventeen years of age, the youngest being only thirteen, and seventy-three women of sixty-five years .and over. The oldest bridegroom was eighty-six. Among the young mothers was a child of twelve, while six •girls of only thirteen years B y gavebirth to .children. Referring to infant mortality, Dr. J. W. Springthorpe, president of the Health Association . for Women and In Children Victoria, stated that Ahs- . had tri is 1 d lost 122,473 children under the age of five years between 1918 and 1922. - Cotton waste has 'heel prohibited as packing for imports- ix Africa, N 1 son ��{■/� '/0.y IRRITATED y� Y SUFI' : ,'i�d1N�,�ITST F�.Cit1iDS A/COMMENDED G 6OED Sr DRUGGISTS .. OPTICIANS. Warta eon rata XYa CARa a*AK aunuuswausmataa OH ! MY BACK ! Massage with Minard's and feel the pain disappear.. TINC OF FAN Cuticura Clears The Sca/p Of Dandruff 1 Regular shampoos with Cuticura Soap, preceded by light applications of Cud - cure Ointment do much te cleanse the scalp of dandruff and promote a healthy condition necessary to producing thick hair. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are ideal for every -day toilet uses meeting every want of the skin and scalp. Eissalgo Each Pros nun. Addresa Canadian Depot: "Stadion:is, Ltd., MontreaL° Price, Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25c. A Close Observer kimrpinur "Oh, mamma," little Margaret ex- ickinairt PLL AND claimed in an awed tone on returning from a visit to a spinster aunt noted I ALWAYS, IN PAIN for the prIra neatnese with, which she kept her house. "I saw a fly in Aunt Maria's house.. "But," she added houghtfulty, as If halt justifying its A Wireless Warning. A doctor states that many people us- ing wireless headphones develop the "radio ear," a type of eczema. Young people are particularly sueeeptible. The malady, if not recognized and treated in its early stages, is apt to develop into an obstinate and painful in the fact that the headphones, fitting tightly against the ear, exert considerable pressure on the ear cartilage and render the skin sensitive. Ear -piece covers made ref sponge ruisber reeteove the pressure on the ears and do not interfere much with ventilation, aince they are more or less porous. Ord Ways Best, They still. like the old ways best on the west bank of the Tiber. When it was determined to illuminate the dome of St. Peter's in oonno tion with the ceremony Of canonizing a new saint the idea using electric Imps that eould be turned on mid eff by a switch was at once disnaissed. Torches and candles were used, and three huadreci men Were kept busy lighting and tend- ing them, Keep IVIinards's Lailinent In the House. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- - presence, "it was washing iteelf." ble Compound a Dependable Help for Mothers Say "Bayer" - Insist! Vnless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer prod- uct proved safe by millions,and prescribed by physicians for 25 years Accept only a Bayer package Which Contains proven direotions tIariely "Bayer" boxes of 32 tablets '.0.140 bottles of 24 and' 100-1)ruggints Aspirin Is tire tr4eir. (tegisteroa amain) ea floret littitultneturti 444, Port Greville, Nova Scotia.—"I took ' your medicine for a terrible pain in my side and for weakness and headaches, I seemed to bleat all over, too, and my feet and hands wore the worst. I arn the mother of four children and I am nursing my baby—the first one of four I could nurse. I took Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound before the baby's birth, so you can see how intiett it helped. me. I cannot praise it beo highly for what it has done for Me. I took all kinds of medicine, but the Veg- eteble Compound is the only pne that has helped me for any length of time. I recommend it to any ono with troubles like mine and you may use my letter for a Port Greville, Nova Scotia. ' Before and af ter chil d -birth the mother will find Lydia E. Pinithatras Vegetable Compound a blessing. IMany, many letters aro received giv- ing the Same sort of experience az is, given in thie letter. Not Only is the pass On to the eluld. No harmful drugs are need in the c preparation of this inedieine—just Toots and herba—and it can betaken in salrety by the nursMg mother. 98 out of every 100 Women reported benefit Anne its tee in aecent canvas among women Mere of,this medieitle. • ISSUE No. 20 1St