HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-10-8, Page 7ducated Ears,
Who, in traversieg pougesten bay
01, esfees during a•heavy feg,:haa net '
marveled at the 0011 of the man in the
pilot hone. Shore in ere loosed,
ands the heat emerge teem herslip,
It is uncanny, this threeclieg the wey,
aemethnee at high speed ahrouge the
impenetrable mist, • PasseaSers ee
deck cav.not see theirhands before
them,
A.s for the ealetain, there is, fleet,
the comasee In, clear weather he
studied end noted the eOMPASS 'course,
There is also the eaptain'e watch, for
• he knOwe the speed of hie boat and
leow loieg it takes to ewer. given dis-
•tance; Along With' compass and watch,
• the than in tee pilot house must have
ears—good ears, There are the warn-
ing whistles ot other craft and the
• bells on the huoye and da the 'wharves ,
along the water front, each bell with'
its own peculiar tone and stroke,'
• One -three -one, tolls ,a bell, • and on•
hearing the 1-3-1 the captain knows
that he is, opposite a certain wharf. ,
Then there is the echo. Itswas the'
ability to read echoes that saved the
captain of a North River ferry beet
from serious mishap. Eoho-re.aditig is
something that one man scan neither
erplain nor inapart to another. Yet
one can become -very clever at it, es
the writex learned' while crossingthe
river in a fog. There was a medley
of whistles and belle, on. the water; it
seeined a •chaos of sound to the inex-
perience:1 guest In the pilot :house.
Three minutes out of the slip, the
captain put leis weathered face out
over the top of the lowered window,
at the seine time sounding the whistle.
His face was tense. 'Suddenly, a look
of perplexity on his face, he rang. for
slowed engines. Almost immediately
he signalled for reversed engines..His
- trained ear had detected something
that caused uneasiness. The whistle
shrieked out a warning blast Had
their been. a boat out there, the other
• captain",should have answered. There
was no answering signal. The layman
concluded that nobhing woe ELMISS.
'There's something dead ahead o'
me," declared the pilot with. convic-
tion. "Thereel na answer—but I losow
I'm right. I get an echo from •some-
thieg." '
• With that the captain rang for all
• ,•speed astern, and the boils windows
all a-teeinble ciene to a stop,and then
began to beck away. -
"There e Lcolt!"
• eelthe feg had lifted a -little. On deck
one cries from frightened passen-
gers. Just ahead, not ten •feet from
the bow, towered a huge steel scow-
• beat. It was one of a long tow of
empty barges, anel it had broken loose.
The lumbering craft drifted aoross the
ferry boat's bow and off into the fog.
• When the mist, had lifted and the
• captain was, no longer under a strain
the• landsma,n remarked that he had
heard no echo resounding back from
the scow. The pilot chuckled.
' 'Tut it was plain enough. God gave
e ears, but, we don't alawys train
' them. It's a matter of an educated
bearing. Sometimes my boys get tired
of school. Then -I adraonieh them that
trained mind and faculties make the
difference between getting ahead
tee world and just dragging through."
The Man Who Pays—An
WE WANT CHURNING
EAM
We' supply cane „end pay exprese
charges, We pay daily by Olpres3
our order, which can be ceshed
4tuywhere without any charge.
To obtain the top price, Cream
Must be free front bad taVers mid
contain not Tees dean 80 per cent.
Butter Fat.
• Bowes Company Limited,
• Toronto
For references—Head Office, Toronto',
Bank of Montreal, or your local banker.,
Esteblishea tor over thirty years.
Appreciation.
The will to pay tsh eredita,ry, just
as mach as red hair' or buck teeth.
It Is acommou fallacy that aenian
pays his debts because he has. money.
Tlais is not necessarily true. On the
coetrary, the matter of paying has
only a remote relation to money.
• On the one hand' is your friend with
arerrielance of money, who cannot be
cajoled, threatened, beaten .or gassed
into paying the most ordinary debt.
On -the other nand, the peed* fellow
• without It visible dollar—you know
him—who is, Johnny on the Invoice.
Money has little -to do with either case:
It is the breed of the men.
The man who pays 15 the -man who
thinks in advance. He never flashes
a roll; he does not drive a car and
• carry a mortgage at the same time;
he does not hang up th,e butcher, or
• the grated', for food that be can not
afford to eat; he never -lights the fire
without wondering where the coal
man gets off. Hee never throws the
Bull, nor pitehee the Bluff, nor writes
cheques dated to -morrow, but when
theebills come in, he ifit there with the I
coinnof the realm, God bless'hine. I
Sometimes he feels sore at the rest
of us. Headoes, not see that he gets
on any better than. the fellow who
Odes as he goes. Still he goes on and
on, pees and pays, simply because it
is in the breed.
hend after all, the World does think
lot of his breed. The man who pays
Is the bulwark of Society. He is the
balalice wheel of civilization. He is
the mainsprink of commerce. Busi-
ness blesses hitt and he has honor
.among men for all tirne.—W. 11 II.
MacKellee.
A Hopeless Case,
Willie, who wee nearly flee, and his
Mother were sitting at home one
night. At the table his sister, aged
fteven, waa doing her honenwerk. Susi-
timely meteor looked up and saw Wil.
lie watching his sister,
"Well, Willie,"the eaid, "it will, not
be long befdre you will have to go to
'Oho ol,"
•
"Ohl" said Willie, "its' no nee send'
ng me to sellool,"
"How IS that?" asked hie Mother, •
"What'e the uee of eleeding me to
Stepan" osec1aitne4 Walk. don't
know anything altd read or
sHip youta
.POULTRY,GAME,EGGS,
BUTTER Ar'l° FEATHERS
-'WE BUY ALLYEAR ROUND
Write today for prices -we stuarantee
them fir a week ahead
R. Pop N (9' Co.. LIMITED
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vrsroeiwwINDOws
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TIVflfk-VHAMItAfl
Novelists' Fortunes.
• A- CYllie elkee Said that every man in
his, secret heart believes that he can
Write a novel, edit a newspaper, or
govern the country. It is also on the
reoords that an unsucceseful sereee
declared that he could write plays like system, better have the water heated
Shakespeare's, if he "had the mind to," to "lne extent. Many people simply
and it must have been the same
cannot stand cold water on their bo-
whoSynic:replied, "No doubt, if you had the
mind." '
• The reply to the question, "Does
writing pay?" can only be: "It de-
fine public taste he can realte a fortune should last, and it should be taken on
much larger than the $303,625 left by
Sir Rider Haggard. And the public
taste is an exceedingly • curious
quality. •
Charles Garvice left $355,000, but it
has always been an open question.
whether his books could be called
literature in the true sense of the
word. Jeseph Cooarad who came in a
widely different category, only lett
$100,000, ,and Mrs. Humphry Ward
$56,500. • Mrs. Waid's earning, how-
ever, were greatly in excess of the
HEALTH EDVcATION
BY J. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board of Health, Ontario.
Dr incidlettiii will be glad to answer qaestloze OP Public Health Mete
tars through this column. Address blue at Setteinsa House, Spadlna
Crescent, Toronto.
•••••
Finding Gold by Wireless.
The poseibility of Ancling gold le the
earth bY Wirelees sie fiSreeii4tclOWed, 11,3r
1511) Robert N. Kotze, the well-lenown
mining engineer, ,
Sir Robert eleelacee that in ihe efu-
ture---say, 100 or 200 years heuce—tee
science geelogy will reveel the geo-
logy of the earth to a depth (4 a mese.
He bellevee that methods wile be
d.evised whereby geologies will be
•i able to peep into the crust of tile
How to keep fit in winter is a time -e a.ture from day te n'ight is liable to,
I earth., They had elrearly euceeedecl in
Underarms/ad by
IY topic, In this Canadian climate, result in colds or chills, and should! ItvxiallreLzLititiivrigi:h9:collant that when wire.
there is a tendency—in fact it is al be avoided. 'Remember to try
necessity—to live too much indoors keep the roma Yea eectiPY well ventil- hese wasee were used the cruet of the
in a superheated atmosphere during i ated and there wi:l be PO g•reat neces- Parai Was transparent.
the deld weather. We can't do* any- 1 sity for lettiegs the ternpereture of Sir Robert suggests that an. appals
thing elee, but we can try to observe the room drep at night away ,beleW etas using such waves might be de -
Scene health facts •that may help in that ef the daytime. It is moving vised which 'could see into the earth
keeping us fit. I don't 'think I ever , fresh air, even if not cold, that helps and what would be "opaque" would be
reed a more reasonable program for to keep us fit. The best thrnpera.ture ore deposits, and with a refinerneet of
IceePirtg fit in winter than that offered for those who are working, is 68 deg, this principle the future geological
by an Illinois doctor, G. B. Lake, of Ith; fur these who are sitting quietly,
Highland,.Park. a trifle higher.
Winter fitness rests on five funda- The fourth condition cannot be met
mental principles: without thought and regulateme
•Clothing should be adequate to cedi-
serve the body heat, but not heavy
,enough to cause obvious perspiration;
loose enoligh tin permit free movemeet
i (1) General physical well-being.
(2) Accustoming the skin to cold, (3)
Adequate ventilation and a proper
tertiperature. (4) Proper clothing, of all parts „of the body ; paeous enceigh
(5) Avoidance of infection. The first to permit air to reach the skin; and
of these, generale physical well-being, adapted to the temperature and wea-
ls attained by regular and systematic tier conditions,* A big order you may
exercise, moderate and considered ,e
eating., adequate and regular sleep, seLY,ebut well worth considering,
free elimination by bowels, kidneyet clothes outside, which can be removed
When, it is very cold, put on more
lungs, and skin, plenty of congenia on entering 'the house. There is no
work, enough rest and recreation to necessity except in the case of people
relieve the tension, • and abstinence
from worry. who pre almest continuously out of
doors to wear fleece -lined or heavy
,
The 'second is brought about by en- uederwear, -because the terneerature
posing the skin daily to cold water, of the average Canadian home in win -
cold air, or both. Begin with a tepid tee. is that of a summer's day oat-
gradually- reduce the temperatnre
or warm weter for one minute sena pcl0000ple, who
liveun de indoors
dtoohresse a conditions,
gradually -
from day to day until the most in- of the time need only lightweight
vigorating results are obtained—then' clothing. Women are much more sen -
stop. If cold water is a shock to' the ell:fie than men in this matter of cloth-
ing worn indoors in winter,
When it. rains or snows, put on a
raincoat and rubbers. The very
young, the old, and those who perspire
dies, eepecially in winter time. It, is
.too much of a shock to the system. In
those cases it is better to leave cold
water alone as far as a shower or
• bathing is concerned. Two minutes
'sends on the writer." If he can hit is about the length of time a shower
figure indicated by her estate. One of
her novels alone, "Helbeck of Bennis -
dale," brought her $30,000.
Even that is by no means a remark-
able figure for a single _book. • Bos -
tend received $1,250,000 tor "Cyrano
de 13ergerae" and Daudet $200,000 for
"Sa,pho." On the other ,hand, George
Elliott only made $40,000 out of "Mid-
dlemarch," and Bea.con,sfleld received
$60,000 each for „"Enymion" Red
"Lothair."
• Charles biekens, after he had made
his name, was in receipt of an ineome
of $50,000 a year from his books, and.
he left $4.00,000 on his death. Themes,
Hardy, still happily with us, has, been
estimated to have made $1,250,0,00 out
of his books. Victor Hugo left $1,000,-
000. On the other hand, George lalere-
dia. only left $160,009, Edna -Lyall
$125,000, and Marie Coi•elli, whose
books enjoyed extraordinary pepu-
laxity, left $120,000.
Mr. Winston Churchill once admit-
ted that his war book brought him
$75,000, but he hardlycomes into the
category,
No Such Person.
• trIa0Paae Was not prime favorite
with his rich uncle. • In vain aid he
try to impress him, but the olel man
was not easily impressed.
One evening the young man went to
his uncle's, home for a call, and in tee
course of coevereation. asked: '
"'Uncle, don't you think it would be
rather foolish for me to marry a girl
who was intelleettialty my inferior?"
"Worse than foolish,, Thomas," was
the reply. "Worse than foolish -1m -
possible."
"Makes old Ilkd Neve,
-REFLEX
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rising in •the mornings, following
about fifteen minutes of vigorous ex-
ercise in a room having an open win-
dow and with the body naked or in
night clothes only. Follow the bath
with a brisk rub with a rough towel.
For the third requirement, there
should be sufficient ventilation to sup-
ply every occupant of a room with
three thousand cubic feet of fresh air
per hour day and night. It iS a corn-
rn.on but 'Poor practice for people to
live alI the day in .an overheated and
stuffy office or housewith all the win-
dows &peed, and then at night take
precautions to sleep witlithe windows
open. This quick change in temper -
prospector could determine the nature
the sdze of the deposite. art, the creation. ot which ie as far be-
andyoed his powers as the coloring of a
If you'd like a little better tea tha
are using, please try "Red Rose"
4
lit. goo ea
for 30 years. Try it! -
The same good tea
• . The Wonder of It.
Who ot us has not rejoiced in the
unspeakable Sladeess that has eome
into hie life from books a,n4 works of
•
suneet cloud..And yet this is the glorY
NATURE'S WARNINGS of it, that we can so largely appreeiate
and delight in What the great have
done, can even. summon. into our press
•
Should Take Seriously: upon. the Pr' '
t6uursieestliw°b.soes ela'athstoeurgh8trairsittsill olfiVteb eforseuns"
•
Danger Signals That Everyone
Pain is one of Nature's warning tceonntv,etsh'seeywniethyethr emwea,troyionugr ohtelaS.,'s con-
• ted page hold intimete
lleTe
that something is wrong with the froWnin.g at our stupidity, williegtor
/body. • Indigestion, for instance, ie let us question the meaning of their
characterized by pains in the stomach, words over ,and over aga4n until we
and often about the eeart; rheuma- understand.
tiSIP by, eliarp PthaSin the limbs and In hie little book, "Twelve Tests of
joints; headaches are a sign that the Charaoter," Dr. Harry E, Fosdick has
nerves ea stoma,ch are out of order, • strikingly emphasized this. He says:
In soeue ailments, sueh as anaemia, "We forget that, while we nifty not be
pain is not eho prominent: In this case able to create those forms Of beauty
Natdhe's warning takes the fonot
breathlesenese after slight ex-
ertion, palpitation of the heart, and
lose of appetite.- Whatever form these
warnings take, wise e people will not
ignore the fact that many diseases
have their or?gin in poor blood, and
very freely should wear underwear that when the blood is enriched the
containing from 15 to '75 per cent.
trouble disappears. • Dr. Williams'
woOl.
Pink Pills are most helpful in such
To meet the fifth requirement, keep
as far away as' possible from thosecases because they purify and build up
who cough, spit and sneeze; avast ,,the blood to ito normal streength. In
crowds, especially indoors, avoid` the .this •way it tones up the nerves, re -
chilling of parts -of the body, whieh stores the appetite and gives perfect
leads to local Congestions and opens health. Miss Hazel Berndt, of Arn-
the door to bacterial invasion; breathe prior, Ont., has prov:d the great value
through the nose day and night, and of this medicine and says :-"I ern a
and have your nasal deformities cor- and have been 'Working in
if this is impossible, see your doctor young girl
a. fa.ctory for the past four years. For
rected; wash out the nose and throat
two years I had been in such poor
thoroughly after yoer day's Work,
health that at times I couIdelot work.
with a solution of half a teaspoonful
of common salt in a glass of warm I was thin and pale, and troubled with
water; wash the hands frequently, the headaches- .,and fainting spells. I dos -
face two or three times a day and the tored nearly all this time, but it did
hair often. If you will follow the not help me. My mother advised me
above suggestions faithfualy and con- to take Dr. Williams' -Pink Pills, and
sistently every day, you will have no alter using them for a while I could
need for a "spring tonic."
NO BETTER MEDICINE
FOR LITTLE ONES
Is What Thousands of Mothers
• Say of Baby's Own Tahrits.
A medicine for the baby,' or growing-
child—one that the mother can feel
assured is absolutely sate as vrell as.
efilcient—is found in Baby's Own Tab-
lets. The Tablets are s praised by
thousands of mothers throughout the
country. These mothers have found.
by actual experience -that there is no
other medicine for little ones to equal
them. Once a mother has ,used them
for her children she will use nothing! see -
else. Concerning them Mrs. Charles L
Hutt, Taneock Island, N.S., writes:
, Hoped He Could Keep it Up.
"He's made a, splendid start with
his flyiesemachne."
"Fine—hope he can *keep it up."
ong Hdps for Grasshoppers.,
"I have ten children,' the baby heing Perhaps if yon wera asked. to name
just six months -seed. e im.ss used ! the 3110St, remarkablefact about grass-
13aby's Own Tablets for them for the ;110hDeas, you wouldementiori their ears
past 20 years and ca,n truthfully say e -that they are found on the front
that I know of no better medicine f or legs, and that the great green grass
topper has his under his knee.
little ones,. S alwaers keep a box of
the Tablets. in the house and would, •But here is something mere remark -
advise all other mothers to de so." able. The grasshopper Wellid seem to
•Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all have nothing ne common with the sea
medicine dealers- or will be mailed up_ gull, yet grasshoppershave been pick -
on receipt of mice, 25 cents pee box,
hi: The Dr. Williams,' Medicine Co.,
-Brooker-111e, put. A. little booklet,
"Care et the Baby in Health and Sick-
ness," will be sent.ftree to any mother
on request.
• One More Effort Needed.
"I .caliet remember the words of that
new song," said the girl.
"That makes -it easier," returned her
father. "No* all you've got to do to
make libm,e happy ia to forget the
tune."
• * It he estimated that 10,000,000 peo-
ple in the British Isles listen -in to
the programs provided by the B.B.C.
Ask for Minard's and take no other.
ed up in swarms at sea, 1,200 miles
from the nearest land!
The African grasshopper, according
to good authorities, has been knowa
to cross the Red and -Mediterranean
so -as in re,structive numbers, and, even
to fly to the •Canary Islands. For the
most part these gra,sshoppere are of
a migratory epecies (Sehistocera tax-
tariza), noted for its great flights. The
bodies are about four inches long and
are equdppecl with large air sacs in
addition to the usual breathing tubes.
These sults buoy up the insect so that
11 13 able to stay in the air for days at
a time, exerting practically no effort.
During fiight its speed varies from
three to twenty miles an hour, 'When
It grows tired it rests on the water
and is borne along on the waves.
THE MERCHANTS'. CORNER
• Determining The Amount of Space.
52e inchee of newepaper space per-
mits you to advelse every week in a '
10 -inch space. I
During some weeks it may be Sega
eta for you to advertise mere heavily
than Other times. Suppose there are
twenty such weeks, Keeping your se-
gular 8,ehede1e for 32 weeks, and
doubling the amount of -that teace for
26,eelts " would remaire about 720
Mabee for the year. • ror five months
during the "eeitr you give your adver-
tising extra /arose, and for eoven
montliserattiatain eftective constant
showing, yet 'the total- is a conserva-
tive -4illoalit of space for even the -
s mall business.
It 10 a truth demonstrated many
thnot over that the• stricar.basitteips
an advtirtiae profitably A the news,
mtammosempos*•••••••16
paper. To do eo is, eimply a matter
of intelligent plannieg, Effective news-
paper advertising ean be done With a
small appropriation. Money so used
brings a more profitable return these
from any other live to Which it can
be put,
• 13y studying the, businees of the afb
vertiser, a echedule'of adVertieng eau
be arranged to that' both. the censtant
frequeenyneeeesery for any adeertie-
ing filiccess, and the extra stress ad-
visable at eertaie seasons, can be se,
cttred within an appropriation the
business is warranted in unsking.
The editor of this 'peeler is at your
eervice for ate% planning. Such tore
'sultation le pat of the service we are
glad to reitclet. It im giveii withetit
'eost obilesetion,
which will last forever, we have an-
other ability almost
love them when they are created; 1
most as woxiderfue; we
we can rejoice in them and grow rich
because of them. So Browning makes
his; Cleon say:
"1 haye not chanted Verse like Homer,
no—
Nor swept string like Terptander, no—
nor carved /
And painted men like Phidiae and his
friend;
I am not great as they are, point by
point.
But I have entered into sympathy
With these tour, running these into
one soui,
Who, separate, ignored eech Other's,
art.
Say, is it nothing that I know them
all?"
A Square Meal.
• I've not had a square meal for days,"
groaned the tramp,
"I'ra indeed in a most sorry plight."
"Here's a cube of meat extract," the)
notice an imprevement in iny condi- ' housewife replied,
tion. I used nine boxes anclecan truth- "And that ie a square meal all
fully say that my health is' restored, • right!"
When I began taldng the pills I
weighed 97 pounds and now I -vieigh
114. I feel that I owe my good health
to Dr. Williame' Pink Pills and hope
other ailing people will give them a
fair trial."
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Oat.
Cheerful Either Way.
Anxious Old Lady (on river steam-
er)—"I say, ray good man, is this boat
going up or down?" •
Surly Deckhand—"Well, she's a
leaky old tub, ma'am, so I shouldn't
wonder if she was goingsdown. Then,
again, her b'ilea•s ain't none too good,
'n she 'might go up."
Germany's Steel Workers.
nowmal times the great Krupp
steel works at Essen employs 50,0e0
Minard's Liniment for Distemper.
Her Long Suit.
Cook—"I can't break the ice, mum."
Mistress — "That's very strange,
Bridget, Didayou try letting it fall?"
Belgium had 100,000 - houses de-
stroyed during the Great War; when
the present reconstruction scheme is
completed, however, there will be 1,000
more houses than in 1914.
Lok er
Care -worn, nerve exhausted women
need Bitro-Phosphate, a pure organic
phosphate dispensed. by druggists that
New York and Paris' physicians. pre.,
s,cribe to increase weight and strength
and to revive youthful looks and feel-
ings. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow
Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East,
men. • Toronto, Ont.
• Classified AtIvertisenwents
en lioveceue wine= • remigesee
1,-", Dower. We allow the way. Studoata sell Work
DefOre trout ooarpo, • Away, oloativo. S41114
$01001a. Toronto, rorty -two Bloor Wept,
Safety Birds.
.A. bird fancier was in the act of
sending out some carrier pigeons
when he wee approached bYa paner.
by, who remarked:
"Excuse me, but how far do your
pigeons fly avastrele?"
"Oh, thousands of miles come -
times!" replied the fancier.
"And don't any of them ever get
lost?" inquired the stranger.
"Well," answered the other, decid-
ing to end the desultory conversation,
"you flee, I -used to lose one now and
then, but I've done away with that
now. I've had all my pigeonte crossed
with parrots, so that should they lose
themsielves they can ask the way
home."
Why is it that the wrong telephone
numbers are never busy?
ifinffer01100111/16t039.
New Eyes
you tan Promote tt
• Clean,lleallbyCendilio
OUREiebuggx1::dEAyrie A2VP
Meep Ooeur Eyes Clean, Clear and leetdUsys
• Write for Free Eye Cara Book.
intlaGrafgcmg,go..p,EasiOhlaelsoseCideeges
CORNS
Rub them frequently
with Minard's and get
speedy relief,
BOTHERED IA ITH
ECZEMA IN RASH
Face Was Disfigured.
Healed by Cuticura.
"Some time ago I was bothered
with eczema which broke out on
my face in a rash. I took no notice
of it at first until the trouble began
to spread and the irritation caused
me to scratch. My face was disfig-
ured and the trouble lasted about
three months.
"1 tried different remedies but
none seemed to do any good.
heard about Cuticura Soap and
Ointment and purchased some, and
(after using three cakes of Cuticura
Soap and one box of Cuticura Oint-
ment I was completely healed."
(Signed) Miss Gladys Pahl, 353—
Slst St., N. Milwaukee, Wis., Sept.
29, 1924.
Use Cuticura to clear your skin.
Sample Bach rees by Mali Address Cenadlan
Depot: "StenhattsaLtd.,/dontesel," Pelee, Soap
25e. Ointment 25 and 50e. TalcninSie.
Mar Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c.
HER iltinVES
BETTER NOW
Received _Much Benefit by
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Chatham, Ontario.—"I started to get
weak after my second child was born,
and kept on getting
worse until 1 could
not do my own house-
work and was so bad
with my nerves that
was afraid to stay
alone at any time. I
had a girl working
for me a whole year
before 1 was able to
•domy washing again.
Through a friend 1
learned of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegeta.
ble Compound and took four bottles of
it. 1 gave birth to a baby boy the 4th
day of September, 1922.1 am still doing
tnyovrnwrkand washing. Of course,
I don't feel well every day because L
don't get my' rest as the baby is so croee.
tut wilen tget my rest 1feel lino. I
Mt still taking ,,,the Vegetable Com-
pound and am rung to keep on with it '
until cured. 1Vlynorves are a Tot better
since taking it. 1 can stay alone day or
night and riot be the least fiorghtened,
You can Use this Tette), ris a testimonial
and 1 will aftswer letters from women
asking about the Vegetable Compound.
—Mrs. CleenteSs Certeole, 7 Porsythei
Street, Chatham, Ontario,
Mrs. Cats& is willing to write 0 any
ghlt)r woldan suleting from female
gables,
Proved safe by millions and prescribe&by physicians for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism
eamoleasonamrairearioneeniata.
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
Accept, •Only "Bayer" package
whiCh contains proven directions.
Handy "Bayet" bezels of 12 tablets
Aloe bottles at 24 and. 100 --Druggists,
Aspirin ts tbo trofle mark crogiatered jt ennaday tit Beyer ereenteetere of treetecetts-
teldnlitef of Sslityllotteld (ACetk1 salieelis end, e. „tee). Wein it is Wrtil kttwfl
that AlPolrin tnenria itirstv reahatattefe, to assfsit the PUIJ1W afgaitart traftraletm, the irobleta
tit iLlft.VOr COhlgthaY Will be statnped 15.1111 their 44tef41 trial() Mark, the "flexor •fkos$."
1SSUP
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