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CRATEFUL PARENTS POUR
OUT T1ANKS TO TANLAC
Five in One Family Are
Helped—Mother and Father
Give Details..
The value of Tanlac as a family
medicine and tonic is again very force-
fully demonstrated. This time in the
home ;o±:. and Mrs. Joseph E.
Kaake, 2436Kirby Aye. West, Detroit,
Mich.,. where father andmother and
every member of the family have been
benefited by the wholesome and help-
ful ingredients of the famous prepara-
tion.
Recently, in .speaking for herself
and chi dren, Mrs. Kaake said: "For
more (n a year our three little ones
—John, age 6; Elwyn, 4; and Merger.
ite, 2,—had been so peaked and life-
less that we were seriously worried
about them. Their stomachs were up-
set, appetites poor, the color had_ left
their cheeks; their nights were rept-
lees, and during the day they would
just mope arou"l, taking no interest
In play or anything else.
"They began to eat and sleep better
almost from the first dose of Tanlac,
»ad have picked up now until you
couldn't find three healthier or more
active children in all Detroit. They
eat ravenously, the color of health has
returned to their cheeks, and they
just want to be on the go all the time.
I have also taken Tanlac to build ,mo
up, and it never seems to fail."
"As to my personal experience with
Tanlac," said Mr. Kaake, "I simply
can't express in words the great help
it gave me. About a year ago I was
a victim of boils, actually having fifty-
one on me, and was so played out that
I couldn't do a bit of work for weeks.
My suffering was almost unbearable.
I cared little for food, suffered with
severe headaches and stomach pains,
and got so weak and 'nervoas that I
felt discouraged.
"Tanlac corrected my stomach
disorders, awoke up my appetite,
cleansed my blood and toned up my
system so that the boils went away,
and nothing of the kind has bothered
me since. I have gained 28 lbs., and
I eat, sleep and feel like a brand-new
man. We have given Tanlae a .fair
trial and found it wonderful, and if
anyone doubts our statement they can
write personally. We wouldn't think
of being without Tanlac."
Tanlac is. for sale by all good drug-
gists. Accept no substitute. Over
40 Million bottles. sold.
Tanlac Vegetable Pills, for consti-
pation, made and recommended by the
`manufacturers of TANLAC.
Lions and Leopards Ravage
North Rhodesia Farms.
Fan€ruses in the bush bordering
en the northern Rhodesian frontier
el have recently been in a state of siege
owing to the activities of lions. The
ly learned animals have come out of the jungle
honestly, n in daylight and attacked the farm ani -
equipment mals, carrying off some of them..
sion, and In some cases the natives working
rrassed in on the farms have been attacked, and
veral have been killed. The lions
ften joined by leopards and" have
red in such numbers that the set -
are forced to go about only in
arge groups and to- keep a constant
guard over their families and stock.
The wife of a railroad employee re
per. is a thrilling adventure in this con-
neition. Mrs. McLean left her home
at Garuso on a bicycle to visit neigh-
bors. Reaching a river she found two
large lions on the bank. She was so
near that she could not retreat and
prepared, ,o fight for her life, but at:
the first s1 ' the animals ran. She
then proceeded and shortly came
across a big leopard eating an ox. The
leopard also made a hasty getaway,
but. followed Mrs. McLean for some
tura.
Arriving at the farm she found it
haft been attacked for several weeks
by the animals and many cattle had
been lost. Next day she was escorted
bark to her home by a neighbor and
ten natives, who, on leaving Mrs. Me -
Lei n, found they had been tracked all
the way by lions. Mrs. McLean's es -
cane was probably due to the fact that
the animals had eaten their fill of oxen.
• boys
ves
amities,
the youn
ersevering
Dung men
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:ers of the
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ccupations
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Is• it not
ning Com-
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A SPLENDID LAXATIVE
FOlt TIIE BABY
g•
eaned me
✓ Easter,
ad.
ne.
.ons ---
others should constantly be on
uard to keep baby's bowels working
freely and his stomach sweet, for
,:pane -tenths of the ailments from which
a::ittle ones suffer are caused by de-
rangements of the stomach and
bowels. Baby's Own Tablets are a
,splendid laxative for the baby. They
are mild but thorough; contain neith-
er opiates nor narcotics, and are ab=
tolutely guaranteed to be cafe and
t`efiicient for either the newborn babe
or the growing child. By their action
an the bowels and stomach they drive
ut constipation and indigestion;
break up :colds and siinple fevers and
ake the dreaded teething period
asy. The Tablets are sold by medi-
ine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
ox from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
o., Brockville, Ont.
How Civilized Are You?
Don't be afraid of the question. It
easy to answer. The finest repre-
entatives of civilization are by no
eans,found among the so-called culti-
and educated classes. Civiliza-
tion) depends upon what we call pro-
ress for less than many think.
Here's the 'heart of the matter:
What is your attitude toward the vari-
ous forms of life about you? Men, wo-
men, children, the beasts of the field,
the birds of the air, the four -footed in-
mates of the home—these are the
things, if I may use the word, ..your
treatment of which will tell how civil-
ized you are, far more than your rela-
tion to bonds or banks or books or es-
tates, or even that highly exalted
thing men call "sdciety.."
The most perfect example of the
most perfect civilization was a man
who had' never been to college, who
was ostracized by nearly all the social
leaders of his day, who even had no
place to lay his head. This man, by
his spirit, his life of love, kindness,
goodwill, justice, compassion, stands
today, two thousand years since he
came among us, humanity's ideal of
what is highest and finest in the only
civilization wholly worth the name.
How civilized am I? Nothing ans-
wers the question more accurately
than my treatment of my fellows, my
sympathy or lack of it, with all those
lowly forms of life about me with.
their capacity for pleasure and pain.
Just so far as I have achieved my ends
at the cost of human kindness, in die:
regard of the rights of other sentient
beings; by so much am I uncivilized
and 'back in those far-off ages when
might made right, and force, not love,.
claimed empire over men.
When May Rides In.
(England)
When May rides in, rejoicing,
The speckled thrushes sing,
The buds burst forth to greet her,
The scented blue -bells ring;
While lower, softer music
Chimes from the pearly bells
Of lilies -of -the -valley,
That haunt the leafy dells.
In many a sheltered hollow,
Pale woodruff stars are sweet,
And blue ground -ivy carpets
The earth beneath her feet,
'terhile silvery willows shiver
By many a shady pool;.
And golden king -cups shimmer -
Above the waters cool.
When May rides in, rejoicing,
The snowy hawthorn flowers
Breathe incense sweet around her,
And from her verdant bowers
The merry cuckoos' music
Re-echoes all day long,
And in the grove and coppice
We hear the blackbird's song.
—Maud E. Sargent.
*
Keep MInard's Liniment to the house.
Every child should be given the
opportunity to learn something about
his relation to the universe in which
he lives. It is the responsibility of
parents and teachers to see that the
minds of our boys and girls are open-
ed to the voices of nature—that their
senses are so trained that all the
world becomes alive to them. Nature
study has a necessary place in child
training that nothing else can fila,
vary knivrowidtfripkriesto
ifomita-Arizona
%rado - orado -New &rico
a 4yoi b /!kwzaJ
Ask for descriptive folders --
F. T. Xirndry, Gen. Agent, Santa Fe. By.
604 Free •Press ]Sldr„ Detroit, i&iais.
Phone: Maly teal'
A Poem You Ought to Know.
"In the Spring."
The chief literary figure of the 'Vic-
torian age was Lord 'Tennyson, Poet
Laureate. Tho following passage
from "Locksley: Hall" represents the
poet at his best: ---
In the Spring 'a fuller crimson comes
' upon the robin's. breast;
In the Spring the wanton lapwing gets
himself another crest;
In, the .Spring a livelier iris changes
on the burnished dove;
In the Spring a young man's fancy
lightly turns to thoughts of love.
Then her cheek was pale and thinner
than should be forone so young,
And her eyes on all my motions with
a mute observance hung.
And I said, "My cousin Aruy, speak,
and speak the truth to me,
Trust me, cousin, all the current of
my being sets to thee."
On her pallid cheek and forehead
camea color and a light,
As I have seen the rosy red flushing
in the northern light.
And she turned—her bosom shaken
with a sudden storm of sighs—
All the spirit deeply dawning in the
dark of hazel eyes—
Saying, "I have hid my feelings, fear-
ing they should do me wrong";
Saying, "Mat thou love me, cousin?"
weeping, "I have loved thee
long,"
Love: took up the glass of Time, and
turned it in his glowing hands;
Every moment, lightly shaken, ran it-
self in golden sands.
Love took up the harp of Life, and
smote on all the cords with
might;
Smote the chord of Self, that, tremb-
ling, passed in music out of
sight:
GIRLHOOD DANGERS
Can Be Avoided by Seeping the
- Blood Rich and Pure.
The anaemia of young girls may be
inherited, or it may be caused by bad
air, unsuitable food, hasty and irre-
gular eating, insufficient out -door ex-
ercise and not enough rest and sleep.
It comes on gradually, beginning with
languor, indisposition to exertion and
a feeling of fatigue. Later comes pal-
pitation of the heart and headaches.
In the majority of cases constipation
is present, and the complexion takes
on a greenish -yellow pallor. The treat-
ment -is quite easy and simple. Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills are just the tonic
to- remedy this wretched atateof
health. They act directly upon the
blood, and as it becomes rich and pure
strength and activity returns, the
glow of health comes to the cheeks,
and soon the trouble will disappear
and good health follow. Miss Pearl
Parks, R.R. No. 1, Reaboro, Ont., has
proved the value of this medicine, and
her statement will point the way to
health to all other weak girls. She
says:—"I was very ill with anaemia.
I could not sleep at night; my appe-
tite was poor, my face and lips were
very pale and my eyes dull. I got so
weak that I could not go upstairs with-
out resting. I took dizzy' and fainting
spells, had no ambition whatever, and
did not care to go about. I was in
this condition for nearly a year. "I
had treatment from two doctors; but
did not regain my strength, so my
mother, who was very uneasy about
me, decided I should. try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. After using the pills for
a while I felt somewhat better, and
continued taking them until I had
used about a dozen boxes, when I was
again well and strong. I can strongly
recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for the treatment of • any suffering
from anaemia."
You can get these Pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail . at 50 cts.
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Willie's Wisdom.
Willie was fishing.
"Willie!"
It was his mother's voice, but he
was sheltered from the house by
trees, and she could not possibly see
him.
So Willie went on .fishing.
"Willie!" •
Still Willie went on fishing.
"Willie!"
Willie began re -baiting his hook. He
had just secured the worm, when his
friend, Bert, approached.
"Don't you hear -your mother walla'
you?" said Bert. "That's three times
she's shouted. Aren't you going in?
"No," responded Willie, imperturb-
ably.
'Won't she whip you?" asked his
friend,
"No," repeated Willie, disdainfully.
"She ain't' going to whip nobody. She's
got company; so when I go in ,she'll
just say, "The poor little fellow's been
so deaf since he had the measles.'
The safe way to send money by mail
is by Dominion Express Money Order.
A foreigner just beginning to speak
English recently desired a .helping of
boiled tongue, so he said to the man
next to him; "Will you please be so.
kind as to pass me the language?"
Watches are sometimes.. very seri-
ously affected by the magnetism of
their wearers. In most cases those
who have this effect are dark coni-
plexioned.
,Ask for MMnartre any take no other.
STORIES OF WELL.
KNOWN PEOPLE
MacDonald's Magic Hat.
"Mr. Ramsay MacDonalds. magic_
top hat will live in story as one of the
most potent pieces of headgear ever
created—it has sent up the prices of
stocks and shares," says the Daily Ex-
press.
"Prices began to rise on Tuesday as
soon as the tact became known that
the new prime minister had donned a
top fiat when he was summoned to
Buckingham Palace.
"They continued to rise on, Wednes-
day and Thursday, and yesterday they
were higher than at any time during
the week."
�---aJ
The Parson and the Pig.
Famous as the author of "Onward,
Christian Soldiers," the late Rev. S.
Baring -Gould told a quaint story of an
old Cornish woman who was worried
about the health of her favorite pig,
and asked :him to say a prayer over it..
He suggested that it might be as
well if she brought a "vet" to the ani-
mal, but she had such faith that he
went to the pig -sty and thus addressed
the porker:
"0 pig, if thou livest thou livest;
but, 0 pig, if thou diest thou diest"
The animal got well and strong, and
the old lady believed that it was the
parson who cured it!
Interpreting Her.
A delightful story, reminiscent pos-
sibly of his own schooldays, was told
recently by General Sir Ian Hamilton.
It concerned a lady who drove up in
a beautifully -appointed motor -car to
the entrance of the football field of a
certain big public school.
Alighting from her car she called to
one of the boys, and said, "Will you
tell the Hon. Algernon de Montmor-
ency that his mother, Lady Fitzwater,
wishes to see him?"
A moment later the boy was heard
shouting, "Stinker, your mater's land-
ed!"
How He Knew This Ship.
Scotsmen tell stories against one an-
other with gusto, but it has been re-
served for no less a personage than
the Madquess of Aberdeen to start
broad casting them.
Here, for instance, is one, and to an
Aberdeen audience, too.
An old pilot at a certain port of en-
try professed to be able. to tell ° the
home port ' of any incoming vessel
within a reasonable distance by what
seamen still :call "the ,cut of her jib,"
meaning thereby her general appear-
ance, and did so.
To test his powers still further, how-
ever,
owever, an onlooker called his attention
to one in the far distance.
The pilot gazed long and earnestly,
and eventually pronounced her to be
an Aberdeen boat.
He proved to be right, and a chorus
of surprised voices inquired how he
knew.
"No seagulls following her!" was
his terse reply.
e
Harbor Lights.
I rarely glimpse from this far hill
The sapphire band they call the sea,
For my house broods within the wood
And I am held there helplessly.
But I can feel'its mighty breath
When all the world is wild with wind;
And I can hear the voice of it
When great ships cry, fog -frightened,
blind;
And always in the finespun dark
Between the leaves I see its eyes;
The tireless, gleaming; friendly fires
That guide each captain's enterprise.
One steadfast light is poised o'er all;
A silver shaft leaps up to it
To fix it there—so they believe—
For none save seamen's benefit.
Yet though my ship's an empty room,
My haven but a visioned thing,
That constant star points out a port
Where I may find an entering.
-Gardner Weeks Wood.
CORNS
Lift Off—No. Pain!
Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little,
"Freezoae" an an aching corn, In
stantly that corn stops hurting;; then
shortly you lift it right of! with fingers:
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
''Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
or Corn between the toes, and the foot.
calluses, without soreness or Irritation.
...ea, ,1
l
The lo�bacco of
ualit '
Sealecl Package
(which l keeps the tobacco
P l
in its original condition)
also in • / Ito tins •
Manufactured by Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada Limited
Power from the Tides.
The French are to make an import-
ant experiment in harnessing the
tides, a problem of great importance
in view of the dwindling supply ' of
coal.
A long barrage is to be constructed
in Finistere, where four groups of tur-
bines will be worked by the flood and
ebb tides. The energy thus captured
will be used to drive an electrical
power station.
An obstinate heart shall be laden
with sorrows.
Do not in an instant what an age
cannot recompense.
Say "Bayer Aspirin"
INSIST! Unless you see the
"Bayer Cross" on tablets you
are not getting the genuine
Bayer Aspirin proved safe by
millions and prescribed by phy-
sicians for 24 years.
S e#004, -
Accept only a
Bayer package
which contains proven directions
Handy `Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
Aspirin is the VYrade mark (registered in
Canada) of naS?sr Manufacture Of Mono-
aceticaeldester of Salrcylicacld
PosIe
Bitro-Phosphate feeds the nerves
and old people need it to make them
feel and look younger. It's the one
best nerve builder for weak, nerve -ex-
hausted men and women and that is
why druggists guarantee it. Price
$1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 26
Front St. East, Toronto, Ont.
DON'T
DO
%Hi
TRY THE
WATCH
TEST
i ��
- ., '
Can You Hear?N`N.
Place watch to ear then draw
away. You should hear tick at X.
1 56 inches. Does- a ringing in your
1 etre predent your. proper hearing?
I. LEONARD EAR OIL i
( relieves both Head Noises and Deaf- 1
1. noes. Just rub it beck of ears and i
i, insert in nostrils. bac,,
t
For Sale Everywhere.
XIateresting• descriptive folder l
• sent upon request.
• A. O. LEONARD, inc, ,.I
Te 5th Ave. e
N!� New York ,. .
DANDRUFF
Minard's applied four times a week
removes dandruff and -stops hair
from falling out.
Two Sir Positives can set,lce meet
without a skirmish.
Water freezes every night in the
year at Alto Crueero, in Bolivia, while
at noon the sun is almost hot enough
to blister the flesh.
Classified Advertisements
u ttE, BEAUTIFULLY FLUFFY,
A. carded wool; sample, enough light
comforter; ane dollar, Woollen Mills,
Georgetown, Ont..
LADIES ONLY.
OUR BOOKLET "LADIES'
FRIEND" mailed in plain en-
velope, free. Casier 2423, Montreal,
URIN
NIGHT&
MORNING FS
IKEEP YOUR EYES
CLEAN CLEAR AND HEALTH•ie
tfaxra fon spas era cans aooa• "vuxa co,a 14.100Ys+9
CUTICURAI
For Children's Baths
Cuticura Soap is ideal for children
because it is so pure and cleansing,
and so soothing when the skin is
hot, irritated or rashy. Cuticura Tal-
cum also is excellent for children.
Sample Nash Pres by 'Mail, Address Canadian
Depot• Oettaur•, P, 0• Hoz 3616, Montreal"
Price Saa 26e. Ointment26 and 60e. Talcnm26c.
Try our new Shaving Stick.
BACK ACHED
TERRIBLY
Mrs. McMahon Tells How She
Found Relief by Taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Chatham, Ont.—" I took Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a
run-down condition after the birth of
my baby boy. I had terrible pains and
backache, and was tired and weak, not
fit to do my work and care for my three
little children. Ono day I received your
little book and read it, and gave up tak-
ing the medicine I had and began taking
the Vegetable Compound. I feel much
better now and am not ashamed to tell
what it bas done for me. I recommend
it to any woman I think feels as I do-"
—Mrs. J. R. McMAaoN, 153 Harvey
St., Chatham, Ont.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, made from roots and herbs, has
i~or nearly fif ty ye ars been restoring sick,
ailing women to health and strength. It
relieves the troubles which cause such
symptoms as backache, painful periods,
irregularities, tired,; worn-out feelings,
and nervousness. Thus is shown again and
again by such letters as Mrs. McMahon
writes, as well as by one woman telling
another. 'These women know, and are
willing to tell others, what it did for
them; therefore, it is surely worth
your trial.
Women who suffer should write to the
Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine obourg, Co.,Ontario, for a free copy ofLydia EE
Pinkham's Private Text -Book upon
"Ailments Peculiar to Women," C.
!$SUE No. 20—'2a,