HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-7-22, Page 3eee
THE BOOK ,,p
PRIVATE' SHED'
Iknow, ,nen who say .they had
lief 'read atay book in a 7tbrerY atopy
as in one from thein own shelf.. To
me t'aat is unintelligible. : Fee One
tiring, I know every book.; of mine by
it scent, and I have but to put my
nose between the pages to be remind
g's My.G
i.:
o ,. � o thIUbtiSr
d of- all sorts'
I I,S f tlg r
for example,. MY avelabeuuda eight -vol
rune 'Xiamen editth which I have read
and read and read. again for more than;
" thirty yeai:s--never do I open it but'
the scentof the noblepage restores
to me all the exultant happiness of
that moment 'when I received it ant a
prize. Or my Shakespeare, the great
Cambridge: Shakespeare -int' lias an
odor which carries me yet'further back
'in life; for -these volumes' belonged to
my father, and before I was o);d =tingle
to read them_ with eunderstancliag, it
EN.:Ap..w.omp.4..T07DAYH
A Scot's Prank 'on a ccerlther:"
The lateststoryabout Sirarry
tl
Lauder concernsanother famous Scots-
man, Lord Dewar,
had Si FIa r oiaying
Was often permitted me, as� a treat, to Lord Dewar r y
take down on
e of them from the book- with hirefor a fortnight. When the
ecase, and reverently to turn the:keaves. comedian, was leaving his host pre-
The volumes'sm•eiI exactly as they did sented him with six valuable homing,
in that old time, and what strange ten-. pigeons as a farewell present. Lord
derness comes•°upon me when I hold Deward pigeon lofts are world-famous.
ono of them in hand, • For that reason But he 'cantioried Sir Harry to keep
I do not often read Shakespeare in this the birds .penned for a fortnight, otber-
edition. I take the Globe volume•,! wise they might fly back. Sir "Barry
which I bought in days when such a waited tile' prescribed time and a week
puirchase was something more tiian. an longer, then he opened his loft, think -
extravagance; wherefore I regard the ing it would be safe. Immediately the
book with that peculiar affection which birds •lose up and awaid for their old
results from sacriflee. home..,Even• a Soot can't get the bet-
Dozens of my books have been pur- ter ` of a "brither free the Land o'
chased with money which ought to 'Cakes."
have been spent,upon'what arecailed From Fogerty to a Palace.
the netssaries of life, Many -,s time
I have stood before a stall, or a book- The miracles ofethe Arabian Nights,
se'ller's window, torn by conflict of -in- are not finished•. I have- just heard of
tellectual desire and, bodily need. At a Russian doctor, living in poverty,
t'he very hour of dinner, when my who wandered into a cinema and saw.
stomach clamored for food, I' ha'Ve the .film of the coronation of the new
been stopped by sight of a 'volume, se Shah ` of Persia. H"e thought the
long coveted, and marketed at so ad-
vantageous a price, .that. I could not
let it go. . My Heyne's Tibuilus
was grasped at such a moment. It lay nate' soldier in the Russian army.
on the stall of the old book -shop in He wrote to the new Shale, and' some
G'oodge'Street—a stall where now and weeks later received -"a letter appoint -
then • one found . an;., excellent thing ing him Court Physician to the King
among' quantities •of"'riibbish. Six-.. of Kings," and asking him to.come irn-
pence was the price—sixpence! At mediately to Teheran, the Persian
that time -1 used toteat by midday meal capital. Who said, -,"Put not your trust
eta coffee shop in Oxford Street, one in Princes'?
of the real, old coffee shops, such as
now, I suppose, can hardly be foiifid.
Sixpence was all I had—yes, all I_ had
in the world; it would purchase a plate
of pleat and vegetables:• But I did not
- _collapse. of Douglas.
A good story is being told in film
circles of Douglas Fairbanks and Mary
Pickford and King Alfonso of Spain..
The film couple were invited en their
Buropean tour to meet the King, and
Douglas, in particular; was determined
to make a good impression.. He pre-
pared in advance a pretty speech about
American and Spaui li friendship; and
had it ready to trill off his tongue,
;when, to his amazement, the King
stepped forward with, "How do you
do, 412r: Fairbanks? How's Fatty Ar-
buckle?"
,
King
Alfonso who visits England
nearly every year, is almost as keenly
interested in films as. he is in. tennis.
Good -Bye, Melba!
Your'Ear Sight..
If, for airy: reasop, tlae ;luthorith s Y i� valA
forbade o jsits in cinonuts, rho .ilial in-
d•ustry �woid.•die. Attendances w:ousd y
dwindle, net.sbecanse the absence of ('oxne Through .;a 'Weakening "o#
D »ANGERS
inusle made""for dullness, taut„becease; aha Boo , -,A Tonle is N4ede, .
the piottu'es 'woitl;i. „flatten” and lose'
"life," We•should. not be able to 004 Ii their early teens it is quite eom-
theni, withoa t music, a quarter a&• well iron' for glide to outgrow- their
as we de now, with muster -; strength, an mothers should, carefully
It is a scientiile fact that we assist watch the health of their .daughters at
our hearing with, aur eyes, auci assist this time, it is when the ;strength is
our si;gint with our ears. Do we not, i sapped by rapid growth that anaeanta
when we wish to "listen hard," screw develops. The first sigrue-niaY be no -
our eyes up? The act is involuntary, 'aced by peevishness, ia;ngour and
and has the"e#•ect: of sharpening the : heitdaches., The face ` grows pale,
hearing, breathlessneee and palpitation become
The reverse effect is obtained when`, apparent, with low spirits and depres-
our ears take in sounds. Our sight is i sloe.
quickened. •,t'ual ex i r'iments it 14-egieeted .anaemia often -leads' to a
1rened, 73Y &� i e
has been proved that those who could l decline; but 11 you see that your
not read printed nutter without spec- daughter's blood is enriched, there
tacles have been able tcz,do so, unala- .need be no cause for-•-•anxietY. The
ed, when music, was played. The 1 finest blood -builder ever discovered is
violin, on its high notes, is the Metro- Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They will
tent which r'oduees the greatest in- build up your girl's health and ensure
P
crease in vision. Thus music in .eine- for Iter healthy womanhood. In prod
of this Mrs.- George Justason, Black's
mss, even if it is selected to fit" par -:t_
ticula IsY to help r scenes . reads to Harbor, N.B;, says: --I think Dr. Wit -
Millar
p
"see." Hams' Pink Pills a wonderful medi-
cine. My daughter,..lvlargaret, was in
such. a :badly run down condition that
we fearcd'she was going tato a de -
Cork 18the bar of an 'evergreen ^ ale the least
g olive, Her face was p ,
tree which grows in Southern 'Europe, ,exertion would leave her breathless
The bark is of great.thickness and and she suffered from headaches. She
gets thicker every year, one layer had no appetite and: lost a lot lie
forming over the other. weight. Up td the time we began giv
After about ten years the bark fail' in her, Dr: Williams' Pink Pills, no
off naturally, but for commercial g
,Pur- treatment hal helped her. gut thanks
poses the outer layers are striped be- to the.. ase of this wenderful medicine
fore this and are' etrippei again every she;,is again well and strong, showing
no signs of the. trouble that had so
eight or ten years;
Recently Dame Nellie Malba, easily The bark <is removed by making a weakened 'her."
the most pepular of prime donne, sang deep cut in the tree, and then slicing In all `troubles due to• weak, watery
her last songs in public to a Loudon off slabs with a curved two -handled blood, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will be
audience. She made her first appear- k-nife. These pieces are boiled or found a reliable remedy. Sold by all
slice as an- opera -singer at Brussels steamed for an hour, in order to get medicine dealers or sent by mail at
thirty-nine years ago. Her popularity rid of certain substances in the bark, 50 cents a box by The Dr. Williams'
is almost as much due to her unfailing and also to decrease it in size. Tee 1tSedicine Co., Brockville, Ont:
kindness of heart as to tier wonderful pieces• are then scraped and flnaliq; C-
o"
and by her 'retinal Australia pressed fiat by machinery. The cork• The Still, Small Voice.
Shah's` face was familiar, 'and some loses her best-known citizen. is then ready for the market, voice of common sense, as well
days. later recollected he -had met him The story about Melba which 111ke 'The corks that are used in bottles The v as
when the Shah was serving as '"a pri- tl Sh 1' i a d b tri d th as of conscience, l
Cork is Cooked,
The Old Gate.
It was a boisterous day; the wind
was (casing the tree tops into billows
dare to hope the Tibullus would wait over the hills of.the evergreen isle. A off mysteriously into the woods. 1 aoiun oa ills of babyhood and childhood
until 'to -morrow, when a certain small :thick; cold Mist was plowing,white stopped to lieLen to water trickling should be kept in every home where
sum fell due to me. I paced the paves caps:rode the waves of the lake and down through the -ferns.- • Beau had there is either a baby or a young child.
ment, fingering -the 'coppers . in my crows, shrieked from the top of an old chased off into a Thicket. Then it'was a. Often it is necessary to give the little
pocket, eyeing the stall, two appetites fir tree;. my dog sat;shlvering at my: that I noticed' the old gate. 'It stood lone something io break up a cold, allay
at combat within me.;: The, book was' -feet, "Lets be off to the woods, Beau," open, leaning .back against the bushes,, `fever, coined sour stpmach and banish
boughtter I gloated over the pages. . . . wound along through the -woods; hos- venture in. I leaned on, the old gate
' and I went home with it, and -said. I. , ti The road followed the ravine down'the the Irritability that accompanies' the
as I made my dinner of bread and but- The road ran up a gravel hill', then hill in persuasive way, but I did- not cutting of teeth.
Experienced mothers always keep
Baby's Own Tablets in the home, as a
g n e nis
not always
most runs lbs:. a was ,twin are made y ma cry, att a waste
sertive above the strident sounds of
hotel on one of her tours and sat down helps to make ffoorcl.oth.
one morning to practise. A little boy
happened to be in :the room with his
mother, and When 'the singer's liquid
notes trilled out he jumped up with an
excited, "Hist mainlnie, birdie!" Mel-
ba regards .that as the greatest corn
p:inient ever paid to her 'voice.
GIVECONFIDENCE
the day's work, the importunities of
social claims or business,' We have to
learn to listen to what our better more
deliberate judgmeut is ready to tell.
us even though it speaks in a whisper,
not in a shout.
inspira-
tions
TO
YOUNG MOTHERSpurer
31 � V�the greater, P
• In fact,
tions of our lives never come noisily.,
._ They take possession of our horizons
ushers; -firstly willows, nodding ferns By"Alway Keeping Baby's Own almost imperceptibly, like tides of a
and drifts of blue alder smoke lured Tablets in the Rollie.
me on.
After_ about a mile -the road 'turned simple and late remedy for the
d So with many anbther book on the. 'linablemaples in their gay spring while I walked for Beau.
• hronged shelves. TA) take them down green spread their arras in welcome, The wind has calmedeinto-a••breeze safeguard against the troubles that
dignifiZd firs wearing buttonhole bon- that set all the trees to _singing -and seize their little ones. so suddenly and
quets of
t is to recall, how vividly, a struggle and
a triumph.-george Giseing, in "The
Quiet Book Hour."
A Song: of Summer:
John.Milton in his youth was extra-
ordinarily handsome and bedonair.
There could hardly be a greater con-
trast than that presented by the blind
bard of "Paradise Lost" and the youth
of twenty -Emir who wrote that lovely
poem of cheerfulness; "L'Allegro," and
that equaily_loyely poem of contem-
plative melancholy, +Il Peneerose,,"
Frain •which the following' linea are
taken:—
Sweet
aken:
Sweet bird, that shuunest the noise of
folly,
Most musical, most melancholy!
Thee, ehantress, oft, the wooda`among'
I woo, to hear thy even -song;
And, missing thee, I walk unseen
On the dry smooth -shaven green;
To behold the 'wandering Moon,
Riding near her highest noon,
Like one that had. been lied astray
Through the heaven's wide pathless
wayat .
And oft, as if her head she bowed, ~
Stooping through`a fleecy cloud.
Oft, on a plat of rieing•ground,
1 hear -the far-off curfew sound,
• Over some' wide watered. shore,
Swinging slow with-mullen roar:
On if the ale. will not permit,
• Soule still removed place will fit,
Where glowing embers through the
Teach lightto counterfeit a gloom;
Far teom.all resort of mirth,
Save the cricket on the'' hearth,
Or" the beliman's drowsy charm
To bless the doors from nightly harm.
To a Sixteenth Century
Engraver.
Patient artist, line by line, -
.'i'ou have traced this�print of mine
With your deft, incisive tool.
'Tis no print of modern school,
Dashing; •style, and drawn with :ease,
Done with mere intent to please,,
Andits beauty ,was net'born
,In the flash of one bright'ingrn;:
'B:ut'twas sanely brought to birth,.
Each line' adding torts worth.
is
There It hangs upon my wall;4 ,
Many ties it not at all..:
'Tib of widest calor, size,
But in this its lesson lies—
That its value grew le part,
Master, from your patient heart,
-Rosalie $, Jacoby, in "Poems,"
dogytiooil b:ossorus . stood like'
the' mist bad begun to lift. I hearda the young mother can feel reasonably
•
Early Street Lighting.
Paris established the if;,rst rnuflieipal
eyetoni of 'highway /igliting ina 1558, by,
burning eiteii or retro torches;
The "e'(eaL e4' h star fish are at the
ends of isy, atrns,
The new kind
of soap
Dissolve
Rim)
and
pour into
1A7ater.
1
Put
ale Giothee
/
Rinse
se
a/isolates an
10041.
dirt: o
111111 mil
".
MApE C'IY
THE MAKERS OF
}eeeaa enen,,e4nerenneenmennaenneen power.- And dad le the carrier.
door 'slam- down by the water's edge T
safe -with a box of theseablets - at
and a boy whistling; the ring of an ax stand and ready for ees.
echoed through the'woods, a man Baby's. Own Tablets are a' mild but
called, then a woman's voice singing thorough laxative that act without
fleeted up to.me with a message -of a griring and they are absolutely guar -
content. 1anteed free from opiates or other
The next time I saw the old gate, ! harmful drugs. They are sold by
the maples had changed thein' gowns medicine dealers or by snail at 25 cants
of 'green to ones of soft yellow, firs,' .a bon from The Diff Williams' 4iedi
were wearing dark velvet coats with clue Gb., Brockville, Oat.
boutonnieres- of -rich red .burs that the i • •
dog -aromas had pinned to their -lapels.
Adventurous sunbeams flitted through.
the trees aril shadows lingered at;the.:
curves. The gate was closed,. but I.
did not feel forbidder for its weather-
beaten boards hung from their hinges -
with the grace of -an unspoken wel-
come.
Once again I passed that way. A
battered car came chugging up. the
hill._ The boy was driving, his dog sit-
ting in'"tbe seat beside trim; in the
back seat sat the man' ;ant the woman,
c:onteuted, serene.
And so the gate still calls, me. Some
time 1 shall wander,, down that ferny,
drive. sure to iinci a smile and a wel-
come hand to greet me. There will
be flowers, there will beaapple trees;
and a tea -kettle will be singing in the
kitchen. ^,
Garden ,Hedges.
There are few dowers that tower above
The stately hollyhocks,.
Or wear suclidaiuty frills of pink,.
Silk ,pettihoats and smocks. e,t,_
Nor can the nodding tour -o'clock
Present a'titatelier spire °
Than salvia, -stiff and tstraight, that
flaunts •
A head of flaming fire.
The California poppies vie
With many -colored phlox;
Bine butterflies of larkspur hide
13.chind the giant stoeks.'
But take me to the hetlge•rows deep,
The hidden,, lowly spots,
`4ylueze bloom the hearts -case, softly
sunder etch cmnelitions the 'Harley-
shrined Davidson Single is piling up an lm-
Holthess- -
A white bird in a dark-boughted tree
Gave to the rain -wet wood
A. touch of holiness, a place
„Where God had stood.
The weeping greenness: of the leaves
Poised in the heavy ;air,
Arid hung, forgetting to fall, since -Ha
Was •standing there.
peaceful coast or clouds of a quiet sun-
down. We receive these ennobling
and fortifying impulses, these clearer
indications of the way to take, when
we withdraw to the deep, intimate re-
cesses of our being. It is there that
And the dark boughs bent, and swept
togetherord
}iushed ws in an undertone;
Talking of one bright;, beautiful mo-
ment
Long after the bird had flown.
Marion Peacock.
Motorcycle Piles Up Big
Mileage in Recent
EconomyTei;
I Witnessed by representatives of the
press and membees of the Richmond,
Va., Motorcycle Club, a new Harley-
Davidson Single recently hung up a
highly impressive record for economy
in fuel consttmptioi A. strictly stock
Machine, with no previous preparation;
other than the sealing of the gasoline,
tanks, proceeded to pile mile upon
mile," until it reached a grand average
of 120.8 miles pei; American gallan.
Commenting on • this, Waller An-
drews, Toronto •distisbutor for the
Harley-Davidscn line, stated: "While
'economy tests are'vei`y interesting
and
impyessive, the real test 01 any motor-
cycle Is in its every day constant use.
L.ivMtg $y His Tasty.
Some boiling water, a tittle tea, and ".
a c limns :cup—with these a Mari Cu;
earn 2,0011 a yeas, says an English
writer,
PBvery day, In the City of Lindon,'
neat' Mtn:eing Lane, where haudredn of
chests at tea, are bought and sold, Hien
are busy tasting samples;
The sampling and tasting is carried
out its this manner. A sample 01; the .
tea is taken, and a preliminary opinion;
is based on the appearance of the leaf '
azid aroma while dry.
Then tek to the weight of a sixpence
is put into a tea -tasting pot minde of
the best white china, This is filled
with boiling water and a china lid put
ou. For five minutes the tea le left to
brew, and then, by almost inYerting'.
the pot with the lid still on, the to is
strained out into a china ,onp.
The taster now has two things be-
fore him, the tea itself; and the tea -
leaves on the lid. In this .state the
leaves are known as the infusion.
If the infusion Is light and bright in
color it is a sign that the tea. is good.
Darl abrown leaves are a sign that,
generally speaking, the tea 15 inferior,
As regards to the tea itself, the ex-
pert looks at -it for c;oier, The liquid
may be what Is -known as "coloring"
tea, in other words, of good color
Which, when blended later with . -.a tea
of good flavor but thin in appearance,
will impart the color wanted,
Finally -comes the actual tasting-.
just one teaspoonful.
Though the whale process bolls
down to personal Judgment, the years
of experience behind sound tea
tasters is such that three or four men
examining the same sample would
Chore than likely agree within a farth-
ing a pound as to the worth of that
particular consignment.
a
Minard's Liniment for Burns.
Where Go the Boats?
Dark brown is the river,
Golden is the sand. .
It Sows along forever,
With trees on either band.
Green leaves a -floating,
Gaetles of the foam,
Boats of .mine a -boating
Where will all come home?
On goes the river
And out past' the mill,
Away down the valley,
Away down the hili.
Away down the river,
A hundred miles or more,
Other little children
Shall bring my boats ashore.
we meet onrreal selves and encounter.—From "A Child's Gard -en of aerses,
instincts. that are shy and usually in--( by Robert Louis Stevenson.
articulate, ready to be put to flight by•1
churlish, inhospitable contacts.
As•music cannotlive on terms of fel-
lowship with noisa, so the essential re-
finement of a nature cannot survive
constant discouragement. The inward
mentor that is ready to show us the
things in life that are not merely most
beautiful but most sensible will cease
to function as a muscle atrophies 1f we'.
never give it anything to do, 3f we
never listen when it speaks, it we rush
onward in a heedless and belligerent
course, never pausing to listen to that
most precious source of counsel that
was given us when the soul was be-
stowed upon the body for a faitbful,
lifelong comradeship."
What is the use of the• still, small
voice that is within us 1f we uever
heed? -
Among forget me -nota,
--Ada Borden
Cricket Balis:
No color has been found so suitable
for cricket balls as red, which natural,
ly' ithoivs •sip to advantage ags.itr,st
grass. Green belle have been tried',
bat they proved a failure; Other colt'
ars experimeullocla with include yellow
and' bine.
Ask Him,
1 .
,
S • ,rec, says that,o all .rani :7.
�c,o iys f 1 ids,
baby's fury has time greatest carrying
Early Railways in Canada. •
On April 1a, 1353, the Toronto Loco-
motive Works completed the first loco-
motive built in Canada; it was named
the —reroute." 00 June 13, 18,53, the
Northern Railway was opened from
To'roni:o to Bradford. On. July 18, 1853,
the Grand Trunk. Railway to Portland,
Me., was opened. The Great Western
Railway was opened from Niagara
River to Hamilton on Nov. 1, 1853,
from Hamilton to London on Dec. 31,
1853; from, Lan San to Windsor, on Tan.
27, 1854; from Hamilton to Toronto,
on Dec, 8, 1855. The first passenger
train went from MIonercal to Toronto
on Oct. 27, 1856. The railway from
Port Ilope to Lindsay was opened on
Dec. -30, 1857. The railway from God-
erich to Fort Erie was opened on May
28, 1858.
pres•sive record, eighty miles to the •
St American gallon and 100 miles to the
evens,
Canadian gallon and better being the
average report. i3ecause of' this, the
motorcycle has fouEti 'its place in
Modern business,;anii ever,,i•ncreasing
number of storeshad business: estab-
lishments are installing motorcycles
for rapid delivery' Servide,"
The 1„aryost L1brary.
The lvorlcae largest -library. the
Ilibliotheciue Nationale, in Paris, which
has 5,000,000 volumes, bee it st been
equipped with artificial light.
" eat i'o"r a
lNrinard s Linim tl p y
clear head, bright
eyes, an alert
mind, a body
full of healthful vigor
,—you can have them
all every day if you are
a normal being and
keep your system clear
of clogging poisons.
How? A spoonful of
Sal Lithofos in a glass
of water daily 'before
breakfast and at bed-
time.
•
For ,2Q : yeare our eznpioyrneat de*
partment has beets , actively ,epi
operating with bmtineriw hhowbeit lit
titin .and other Cities Qf airs* ctntry
For 20 years aur graduates hairsed character arid elf +shod`
attestHess of ourthe work, a
Your chance of suooess ,as well
your cou`z•a'd of ataxy is our probiete.
Write Dept. "" Tfor aiarticulara.
11>i c.Dr
ideitede
Portrait of Virgin.
Tho only authentic portrait of the
poet Virgil known to -day was found in
Northern Africa .in 1898.
No key to the Maya language, like
the famous Rosetta stone which helped
scientists to read Egyptian hiero-,'
glyphies, lilts yet been Pound,
Fief'? Bool
iiaridsomoip Uiurfated vrith pians of
moderate priced honteebY Canadian Ar-
Guhltects, MacLean Builders'
ide will help'You to decide
on the typeofqhome, exterior
Snish, matotials,interior ar-
rangement
rr{•angement and decoration.
Send 25c for a copy,
MacLean Buildatn'Guide
s>tii sauce Bt. WON.
Yaraaw,out.
PILES conquereu by PILE -
pm treatment. The
world's greatest rem-
edy. Gives.inatant relief. Why suffer,
send to -day for 5 -day FREE treatment.
THE PILE -FIX COMPANY
Dundas St. E:Ont
�� Toronto,
My ck!.
Get someone to massage it
thoroughly with "Mlnard's. `"
It relieves pain., •
RONBDWN AFTEI
BIRTH IIF
Ottawa Wolman Made Strong by
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Ottawa, Ontario.—"1 was terribly
run-down after the birth of my third
baby. I had awful bearing-downpains
and was afraid I had serious trouble.
1 was tired all the time and had no
appetite. My sister-in-law is taking
Lydia' E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound and cannot praise•it too highly
and asked me to try it. I have had
splendid results and feel fine all the
time now. Any one who needs a
thorough pick-me-up soon learns
from ine what to take."—Mrs. BEl
PAQUIN, 320 Cumberland Street, Ot-
tawa, Ontario.'
Terrible Backache
Hamilton, Ont. •— "After niy baby
was born I had terrible backache and
headaches. I could not de my work and
felt tired from the first minute I got
up. But worst of all were the pains
in my sides when I moved about. I
hadto sit or lie down for a while af-
terwards. 1 could keep mybouse in
order, but many things had to go un-
done at the time, because of my ail-
ments. I was told by a neighbor to
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, as she said it would build
me up. I was relieved before 1 had
, Send 1Oc for generous sample. taken the first we bought and have
WINGATE CHEMICAL CO., LTD. I not had any trouble like it since." -
468
w,..
St. Paul St. W. - Montreal Mrs. T. MARIE; 115 Ferguson Avc
nue South, Hainilton, Ontario. a
physicians for
Proved safe bymillions and presci e.d r h by p y
' fNeuritisLumbago
Colds Headache
Pain" Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism
g� HEART
�v •gym p^�ry'._ r��'&
NOTAFFECT A. 8
Accept only "Bayer" package
which contains proven directions,,,.,
Handy "Bayer" boxes of "I2 athlete
Also buttes of 24 and hitt-"--Druggiete.
,:.. r Ntantlitteuro of Aioimaeetic
Aspirin in the tall old (Acetyl
to danactal of I rich I t va It la,aWn
act6i`srer of t3i1t1$t1c8O1d (Acetyl 5aticylle MEd, ".8. 8, 1. ). While t -8 e
that eel?lrhi means Bayer: trotanfectnre, to n;ialIt tiro public atihtnet imitat1nr8 +Ito. '(s:,1 t8
Of Beyer t,R!parfy Will be sttunpcid with their gettctsi trads: "tier 81z4
ECZEMA IN
FORM OF RASH
Lasted About a Year•
Healed by Cuticura.
"My scamp started to get red and
itchy and had a burning feeling.
Later eczema broke out in the form
of a rash and spread to my face at
body. It was itchy all tile tincts, and
my woolen clothing made it Worse,
My face was disfigured, and my
hair tell out and got dry. The
trouble lasted about a year.
"1 •begat using Cnticura Soap
and Ointrrient and After using one
cake of Cnticura Soap and one bort
of Gtiticura Ointment Iwee healed."
(Signed) atliss Alice'Bickeli,'k2. R.
5, Woodville, Ont.
Daily use of Cnticura Soap, Oint-
ment and Talcum helps to prevent
shin troubles.
9anutle 80.81 tree b Mali 'Arldr, 0111:111..1170111:111..117llepot, 8t tAthot'4e, Ltd, A'Iauh-# tt: Peep, 8018
,1a, manse t PS and Gate, 1'n' hem ate.
Cuttatra Shevine 54x114 2ss.
isSUi. No. 20.. '20.