HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-4-7, Page 3Surnames and Their Origin
HENDERSON.
Variations-,Andeson, Andrews, Hen-
dry,' Hendrie, Macelendry, MacHen
-
drte, M KendriGk, -tenrl5 nHen-
son
e-son Kendrick,
Racial., Origin --English, Soottish and
Irish,
Source— givene.
Sou A warn
•
One thing is certain about all of
the family names in this group, They
are all derived from a given name.
But which of three given navies they
trace back to, and through what lan-
guage, are matters that only a genea-
logical research lu the individual ease
could eetabiish-
Anderson and Andrews, of. course,
are quite definitely indicated. They
are simply developments of "An-
drew's -son" and for the most part of
purely English -orlg u, theuglt in many
eases they are but Anglicized versions
of either Scottish or Irish names. The •
"Mac" name in the group are quite
as definitely Celtic. but they may be
either Iri.lt or Scottish. The given
nallle of "Henry" earl "Eanruig"
tie). are ate o teInterchanged,
A northern branch of the Scottish
"Clan Gunn" !tears the name of Hen-
der'son, traeeattle to Henr v, a son of
George Guuu. the "C'rowne:r" or Car -
cater, who nourished in the nfteenth
century. A branch of the Clan Mac-
Donald of Glencoe traces its name to
one " Eantut
g 1or"
a MacDonald
chieftain who settled in ICinioelhlevee
la the year 1011. The names; MacKen-
drack and MaeHendry are else borne
by•arc
bt the. of theClan '1 • c e
s oat - Ia \ ,u h-
g
ton, who trace it to cllteftains of their
own elan named Henry or leanruig.
Irish, develogineet of the »ante has
been similar, ICendrick is a shortened,
form of MaeKendrick.
But tee name of Henderson dray I
also be .English, as also Andrews, An-
derson, Hendry aiad H'nni!rie Gime 1
two when not contractions of Mac -
Hendry and MaeHendrie) and Hen-
sen, for these forms are all English.
The confusion of English and Scot
ti": h forms at a very early slate in the
development of the family name sys-
tem is clue to the fact that the Icing -
don of Scotland in the Middle Ages I
contained a. large Norman and Sawn
element, virttutlly dominant in the
Lowlands and often penetrating to the
Highlands. In Ireland this confusion
began later, the logical cosequer ee of T.
the English conquest of that country
and the actual enforcement of English
speech and ct»stans,
GLAD HE TIED THE
TONIC TREATMENT
MEN
T
Through ifs I.'se Strength and
Vigor" Was Restored,
To be tired after exertion is natural.
Rest and tood restore the body to nor-
mal sifter snclr fatigue, But to be
tired all the time is a symptom of an
anaemic condition that will not be
corrected until the blood is built tip.
Suell an alut+emle condition is ago
gradual in its apl,roaeli :trial, generally
eo lacking la acute lh..ltla that it is of-
ten
ften difficult to persuade the sufferer
to do anything for it. But it is not
a condition that corrects 'itself. If the
Mood le not euriched the trouble will
increase, The nerves will be under-
nourisliexd and neuralgic pains will fol-
low, Digestive disturbances often re-
sult from thin blood, sleep is disturb-
ed and a general breakdown may oc-
cur.
Mr. Wilson Johnson, Nineveh, N.S.,
says: "A few years ago my system
was in a badly run down condition.
My nerves seemed always on edge,
and I found myself so weak that I
:alibi hardly- do any work,: I a;uffered
bowl headaches and from Maine in; the
back and under the .shoulders, and
was often so sleepless at niglit that
ween morning came I felt as tired as
schen I went to bed. I was taking
aaetlieine all the time. but it was do-
ing me no good. Then I read the testi-
monial of a man whose condition -had
Leen similar to mine, and who strong-
ly recommended Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. I decided to give this medicine
e fair trial, and when I had taken six
boxes I felt much better. I continued
taking* the pills until I had taken six',
more boxes, and I can only say I am.
glad I did so, as I am now enjoying the
best of health, and I advise all inen
who feel run down to give these pills
a good trial."
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills can be ob-
tained from any dealer in medicine,
or by mail at 50 cent, a box or sid
boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. •
New Citizens for Canada.,,
With a population of less than two
persons to the square mile compared
to England's six hundred, with only
five per cent. of her rick agricultural
land in the West under cultivation,
with a heavy national indebtedness
and only a few people to pay the in-
terest in the form of taxes, the reason
why Canada is hungry for immigrants
oan readily be understood. Immigra-
Mon is the human rain without which
Canada must parch and. wither up.
If'`Great Brit-ain had a large surplus
of Wieners auel farm hands, Canada
might not have to' invite immigrants
from any other source. But Great
:Britain,is not so much an agricultural
as a . merchant. and manufacturing.
!centre, and every year grudges mare
and more the farmers or farm hands
;who leave her Colonies for the Do-
minions. She is quite willing to send
out countkess city folk in the hope
that they may be transformed into
farmers in their new environment,
but she has fewer farmers to spare
than many. other ootultries from which
ianada in the _ past 'has -drawn excel-
lent settlers... This is illustrated by
the homestead entries. From 1897 to.
1919, only. eighteen per cent. of the.
British iruitegrants made entry for
homesteads in Western Canada • as
'compared to twenty-seven per cent. of
the .American immigrants and twenty
nine per cent. of the foreign. born
from Continental Europe. •
In certain parts of Burette where
there is a gennine lati-tl hunger, there,
is not eziough ']and to go -roitiad, Five
or six acres per family is all the land
available in certain parts of Belgium;
Mand even on that the thrifty Belgian
ifrequen.tly brings up a'family of ten.
The Toronto I-lospital fol; Incur:
abies, in affillalion y6t[h P•ellevue and
'Allied' 'il'ospltals, New • 'York City,
offers a three years' Course of Tr arai
Ang ton,young women. having the re
quirededucation, and. desirous of •he
opening nurses. This Hospital has
.adoptecl the eight-hour system. The
j�ttpilsreeeiv'ebolicorms of the School;
a monthly alto•w-enoe and travelling
expenses to and from i\, re ?fork. For
further information 'apply to the
$'uperinie dent.
.74
The great immigration of ltlttMullane
from Central Europe witielr has given
Canada nearly 300,000 of Iter \Yeetern
firalno
p Puiatlan was due to the con-
stant subdivision of fames which were
only fifteen acres to start with. Thee
Ukrainiane have become a great as.
set to Canada, and hare at their own
expense erected four large colleges
for higher education. Then agate we
owe our fine stock of seventy thous -
.d Scandinavian settlers to the lacer
of sufficient laud in Sweden, Norway,
Denmark and Iceland.
Have these foreign born made good
t`unadian citizens? head "The Edu-
cation of the New Canadian," by Dr.
J. T. at. Anderton. of Sashatehewau,
areal eta will say "Yee:" In one or
two group: at first there was oppesi-
(ion to the learning of Eugltsh, par
titularly among the older people, but
now it is difficult to find suffielent
teacltera to meet the demand, of the
schools, And it is not rally in the
schoole where you Lind the foreign
boils, More than half the students at
the University of Manitoba are of
foreign parentage. You find cirildren
of the foreign born as leaderi in the
professions and in tine Cabinet of at
least one Provincial Government.
Canada le after all only repeating
on a larger scale the welcome to and
the assimilation. of the foreign bern
wiiiclt baa characterized the hlstory
01 the Mother Country. The Flemish
weavers and the Huguenots who found
refuge in England, are but a few of
Lite foreign born immigrants who help-
ed to build, up British industry. Cana-
da's elilel' industry is agriculture, and
her agricultural prosperity le due in
no small degree to the thrifty and in-
dustrious new Canadians who have
come to the wide acres of the West
from the overcrowded lands of Eur-
ope, and whose children to -day are
proud to speak English and to sing;
""fire Maple Leat "1" orever."—A.I;.
Spilling the Salt.
The superstition that it is lead luck
to upset the salt at table is sometimes
said to have originated from Leopard()
da Viuci's picture of the Last Supper,
in which Judas Iscariot is represented
as upsetting tile salt -cellar.
But the superstition is much older
than that.
In ancient times salt was a com-
paratively scarce commodity; fre-
quently it was placed on the table in
one dish for all hands, and just as a
dinner -guest of to -day would feel that
he was having a run of bad luck if he
accidentally broke a eyes plate, so
would one of the ancients feel about
accidentally overturning the salt cel-
lar.
Besides, as the ancients regarded
salt as an emblem of redemptive
power, it was not unnatural that they
should have looked upon the spilling
of it as an evil omen,'
The custom of throwing a pinch of
the spilled_sait over the left shoulder
three times to break tile "hoo-doo" is
clearly,. a, pagan survival of the' times
when salt was one of the propitiatory
offerings made to the evil dieties who
sent bad luck- Da Vinci undoubtedly
had in mind the ancient superstition
regarding spilled salt when he iitro-
duced the overturned salt cellar into
his great picture,
Minard's Liniment Reu)ev-es Distemper.
Two "Fired" for Breaking
Great .Armistice Silence.
Two coopers employed in the Shaw -
field. Chemical Works have just com-
plained to the G•laggow Munitions -Tri-
bunal that they rweee. dismissed from
their entitle -meet without noticeas a
resultof their failure to observe tee
great silence on Armistice Day, No-
vember 11, says a London despatch.
At 11 a,m. on Armistice Day all woe it
in England was stopped and .everyone"
kept, silent for twominute's in honer
of the war dead. These coopers• talk-
ed during the period, and since their
they have !leen ostracized by their
fellow 'workers, who. finally: refused
to work with them. • Tice firm ter-
minated their contract by giving atheist `
-a week's wage's.
.The tribunal found that the men
,,,wore guilty -of misconduct in rnot-1:Cep-.{
ingthe two minutes' silence.
It is a common but errollcat,,
5 (Tina
ion that money is the only fertilizer}
for _a ;family tree.
The Sit ength of the Nation.
Nearly three-quarters of a century
ago, just six years after the first
Public Health Act was passed. and
the first Health Officer appciuted In
Great Britain, Benjamin Dlsrat}li, talk -
ng over the beads of his Colleagues
in the British. House of Commons,
Oahe "Public Health is the foundation
upon which rests the happiness of the
people ant the strength cf the Nation.
h
Take a the most beautiful kingdom, gine
intelligent and iudust'rious citizens,
progressive manufactures, productive
agriculture, let Art tionrish, let arehi-
ects cover the land wide, palaces and
mansicne, and maintain all l tiS with
th
an indomitable army and navy, but if
the populatlen of this country remain
Stationary, if it decreases p#tysit ally
and mentally, that nation must fall.
Tbat is why I ray that the first duty
of a statesman is the care of the pub-
lic health."
A_
SPRING .. N WEATHER
Tate Canadian spring weather -
Clay mild and bright; the next raw
and blustery, is extremely hard en the
baby. Conditions are suck chat t114
mother cannot take the line one out
far the fresh air to much to be de-
sired. lie is eoutiued to the house
which is so often over -heated and bad-
ly ventilated. He catches cold: iris
little
,c
stoztr•i h and bowels become dis-
ordered and the mother Boon lute a
sick baby to look after. To prevent
this an occasional doee,of Baby's Ovnt
Tablets should he given. They regu-
late the steinaelt and bowels, thus pre-
venting or banishing colds, simple
• fever;?, colic or any other of the many
minor ailments of childhood. The
Tablets are sold by tuedtetne dealere
or by wren at 25 cents a box from The
Dr. William Medle:roe t$., Ilroeketlle,
Oat.
Radium Cures Many Briton;
of Cancer.
The Medical Researeh Cannell i ea
p.riwentiug extensivele with radlur
treatment for the eure rat cancer, an
the work hit,, been intensified by an
inereare in fatalities from cancer" in
England. says a London despatch, The
latest reports show that the three
greatest enemies of mankind in Lon-
don are bronchitis, eanoor and tuber•-
c•trlasis. in the order named. with the
last two limning elate together. The
first beading Includes influenza and
other complaints resulting from bron-
chitis, se that tete greatest perils aro
cancer and tuberculosis.
I)r. Addienn, Government health
Commissioner, added, however, that
cancer !g a disease of middle and old
age. Ile said 'tiy average age ci the
population is hcreastug; therefore
there are more people who escape the
• diseaees of childhood and vile to the
age when cancer attacks, and for that
reason there are relatively more
Heaters .from this disease. He asetert-
ed that a huge amount of preventive
work had been done and was being
done. Last year 42,000 died in Eng-
land and Wales from cancer.
Sir Alfred Pierce Gould, an eminent
surgeon, has had much success recent-
ly in treating cancer with radiuut. A
woman 01 85 had cancer of the breast
for four yeas:,, A tube of radium was
introduced into the breast and after u
time the cancer disappeared. Another
Patient of 78 was likewise cured with-
in a few months. A man of 76 wito
had cancer in the mouth underwent
radium treatment for three months,
atter which the cancer disappeared.
Sir Alfred is a firm believer in
radium treatment, but admits that
there is much - about cancer still to be
learned. He declared that he had
cases where incomplete and apparent-
ly
pparently useless operations had a surprising
effect in getting rid of cancer, and at
times when temporary measures had
been taken astounding relief resulted.
He says that this proves that further
light is necessary • before the treat-
ment can advance. He does not be-
lieve `that the new cure has. yet're
ceived a fair test, because -it usually
has been applied only to advanced
cases where the general condition of
the patient rendered an operation un-
necessary. In his opinion the remedy
oughts to be thoroughly tried on early
and average cases, and he has high
hopes that it will ultimately be a great
medical triumph in the treatment of a
baffling disease. •
For. Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Gout,
use
UME
ENDUE
for quick and sure relief.
BEWARE OF SUBSTSIUIE$
el.00a tube
IiIE 1,EEMDH MILES CR.,U0,
MONTRSAL
Agents for Dr. Jules Bergin
RELIEVES PAIN
'Twas in a Restaurant.
e—"That's hat:S anice-GO.
ng' Cha you '
spoke to. Is he a friend of yours?" ,
She,—"lies, indeed.".
��
j -e1 � 1 o ,_
A ask him t join us
She --"Oh, tests is so sudden! Didn't ;
'you know he's the new minister?" 1
He --"Well
Very Cautious.
He was a cautious witness, ami re-
garded every question rut by the
Boy Scout Notes.
Canada's capital city has the'distlnc
tion of having more Scouts per capi
to than any other .city of 100,000
more people in. America. If the B
Scouts of Ottawa were to join hands
they would be able to encircle a very
large section of their home city,
4 4 4+
from
To have saved three persons fro..
death by drowning at three dffferen
crass -examining solltettor as a trap for'.
the unwary.
-r "And• what,"he was asked, "was
- " the complainant shouting when you ;:
or heard hint?"
Bo
, "He was •shouting, 'Torn: Tom!' "
replied the witness, after a deep
thought: then, fearing to commit him-
self to such a downright statement,
he added. hastily; ".Or words to that
effect:'
tF
s'
times is an excellent record. It 1
held by Assistant Scoutmaster Ed
wars! Walker (19 yerir,s old anal
Scout since 1911) of Greueby. Ile wad
recently recommended for one of th
, highest Boy Scout decorations, -
4 s 4 *
New Boy Scout troops are bein
formed in many parts
of
Ontario. Th
latest towns to regitlter new Scout or
ganizations with Provincial head
quarters at Toronto are Port Col
home, Manotiche Merritton (two
troops), Dunnville (a second troop)
'1'4 bitby, deluders. Rielltnond. Fort Wil
liam (a third troop), Trenton (
seeoinl troop), and about a dozen new
troops lit the Cities of Toronto, Otte
Thrift.
' 1
A. man adverbs ei his car for ;tale.
a , Earl} the next morning a Man were
lived aertss the street came over and
e said: 'Verdant tae, but I seal ba• last
night's paper y oe udvertieed your car
for sale."e
g "Quite so," Faid the ]man who adver
0 f tisa:d the car, "'but surly you are not
' l in the rna it f�'sr it e"
'tido," was the reply, "but i only Iive
" acro`s the street .and I oleo want to
• I} sell my ear. And there wasaid he no
need of my speeding my money for an
" , advertisement 11 after the people were
a• through looking at your car you could
Oast send then :teres the street to
- look at my car."
at, Ilaulllton and Landon. Many
other new troops are also in Course
of formation and will be chartered by
t Provittetal Colwell later.
. ae•
`.The Trail," Ontario"s publication
for Boy Scout 0ftleers and Loaders,
has now a contemporary is "Scout -
ate," a similar paper published by the
'1114acbewail Prxlvfnelal Caaur.eli
h are greatly appreciated b„Z, those
for Whom they are published and are
already wielding a big influence in
CO-ordlnating the work of the Boy
Scout Movement throughout their re
epeetive provinces,
w" * e •
Persons interested in the Welt Cubs
the junior branch of Scouting ---will
be glad to !snow that a new beelike
deseribing their work: is now avail-
able from Provincial Scout Head-
quarters, Moor and Sherbourne St::.,
Toronto, upon application.
No Need for Him.
In an. ancient mansion which re-
cently changed !sands on account of
the ups, and doors of wartimefortunes
there dwellas� and. works .a parlor maid
of very expensive and rather cultured
and' superior type. Her mistress does
not mind the expense, but is often
much bothered by the culture, this be-
ing on too 'high a plane Eor li•ea under
standing:
"Ma'am," said the maid, meeting her
mis,trers .in the hall, "there is a men-
dicant at the door." •
"Then tell hien, said the mistress
of the mansion, "we have' nothing to
mend.:'
e.
An Engi sh novelty
�, Y is a shopping
L'aaloet mounted oil two hr eels.
AUTO REPAIR PARTS
for most makes and models of cars.
Yom old, broken or worn-out. parts
replaced. Write or wird ns describ-
ing what you want. We carry the
largest -and most complete stoop in
Canada of slightly used or new parts
and' automobile, equipment. We ship
C.O.D. anywhere in Canada.. Sats-
7aotory Or reiuncl in lull our motto,
1Shawls Auto Salvage Part Supply,
923-831 Dui:csin St., Toronto, Ont.
Men Who Inherit Wives!
One of the most extraordinary cue
toles in the world is that observed be
certain Persian tribes,
When a native woman wishes to dis
play her affection for a friend of her
own sex, she proposes that the latter
shall become Iter husband's wife ou
equal terms with herself.
"This is the greatest compliment
she can bestow, ' wrote the late Dr,
Elizabeth Meebeau Rees, who spent
some years as a doctor among the
tribes 01 North Persia, She had the
hand of many Persiau husbands of-
fered to her In this way.
"1 must say it is somewhat embar-
rassing," she said, in her reminis-
cences, "when the gentleman himself
happens to be present, and I have
sometimes wondered what the effect
on the wife would be if her generous
offer were accepted.
"When I told them it appeared to
me a curious thing that one wife
should select another, I was informed
that it presented many advantages.
'It is much better for us to choose our
husband's wife; then we get someone
we like and with whom we can
agree.' "
If a husband dies his wives are
divided among his br-others, the eldest
having first choice and taking all or as
many of the women as�'he fancies:
Find Old Church Ruins
Under Rheims Cathedral.
,The work of repairing the ruined
Cathedral of Rheims has brought to
light the buried remains of ancient
churches which formerly stood on the
same site. Under the pavement of the
Oby
choir, which was s shattered Ger-
man shells, have been found the old
foundations of the Cathedral of St.'
Hincmar, which was destroyed by fire.
,in the ninth century. Beneath these
ruins;, workmen came upon traces of
the first church to stand on this hal-
lowed ground, the Church of St. Remi,
built in the fifth central'
Under the broken high altar was
discovered a hoard of 250 pieces of.
ancient silver and near this a sealed
up and long forgotten well. From the
bottom :of tliis well a worn lead pipe
leads the water away into the earth
and it is thought that this originally
connected with the lona lost baptis-
mal font where Clovia was received
into the Church. Antiquarians from
all parts of France have cote t0
Rheims to examine the discoveries.
*china's Iron Ore.
China, is estimated to have 400,000
000 tons of iron ore suitable for
modern furnace reduction and prob-
ably 800,000,09.0 more that could be
treated' by native methods.
I-Iodisecl plans to increase its salt
supply by mining rock salt deposits
n one province and tapping under-
ground
nder-iround salt lakes in another.
There Was intone to Spare.
o skipper sof a small steamer that
and down the Clyde River men-
the!: at low tide to get Isis
vesl an at mud bank After he had
Itis entire rocabularyF in
deseriltltig urtfavot-they-- the tide, his
i.tean'der a Ids crew, he leaned
gloomily over the side to wait with
what patience he eon d mtester for the
title to rise. While so engaged he saw
a girl approach the river, swinging a
bucket In her hand and obviously ln-
tending to get some water, The wrath
of the sklpper flamed tip anew. Lean-
ing farther over the tilde and shalting
Iiis fist at her. he said:
"My asste, it you tak' one drap o'
water sot here till I get afloat again.
I'll worth e'er ear for V"
MONEY ORDERS.
It is alwaytt safe to send a Dominion
Express Money Carder. rive dollars
costs three cents.
Kind of Had to Go.
Tony is an Italian laborer employed
in the construction of a new building.
The other evening he asked his fore-
man for a vacation during the follow-
ing two days. "Tony. yen don't want
Classified Advertisements.
jJ 00I, SPUN INorgetFO own Y_6'ri; Woollen, QR
3lftils, Ont.leets. Ge
.. ... fi.(I•FIfIT5 -WP,`ZMED.
A (iib TS 11"AN'T`I:1). Bk+15S NAT1YFI
2r1 herbs is a rerneciy for the reit:f of
'.onstipatiuO, Indigestion, ijillousness,.
Rheumatism. liidztay Troubles- it ia.
well-known. iravint; been extensively ad-
vertised. since it was first manufactured
in SS.
x s
byi-
lar••e tit
of clue,
Ue o 1
0
s f A menace, Cook Boake. Health
Beoks, etc., which are furnished to
agents free of charge. The remedies aro
sot a D o
d k a rice that altatvs a„onts tea
doable theft mono y- vs -rite Alonzo 0
IillssMedical Co.. 121 St. Paul St. Basi;
/tinntres'. Mention 'OAS paper.
War Heroes Get Alsatian.
Legacies.
An interesting patriotic ceremony
occurred in Paris recently when the
first distribution was made of a legacy
written many years ago by a French
Alsatian, who in Itis will left a grant
to be distributed among live soldiers
who especially distinguished them-
selves in the great war that was to re-
store Aisaee-Lorraine to France.
The name of the Alsation was Metz-
ger Ile died in 1902. but felt so sure
of the restoration of the lost pro-
vinces that be gave in trust to the
town of St. Germain the five legacies,
each of 800 francs. Each of the live
man who received the gift tad the
Meclailio Aliiitaire and the Legion of
Honor. Two ef them still are in the
emir. one is an upholsterer ami two
are naw (anneal.
UFS Nearing Restored.
Tito invtaible ear dram invented by
A, A. Leonard, which le a miniature
megapliene, fitting tustde the ear en-
tirely out of sight, is restorlug the
hearing of hundreds of people in New
York City, Mr. Leonard invented this
drum to relieve himself of deafness
and head nalses, and It does this so
sueeessfully that no aha could tell bo
is a deaf mum It is effective when
deafnese is caused by catarrh or by
perforated, or wholly destroyed natur-
al drums. A request for luformatlon,
to A. O. Leonard!, Sure 437, 70 Fifth
Avenue" New York City, will be given
a prompt reply. advt.
.
Germany's Victims.
Counting the len es inflicted during
the World War on tate Russians,
Serbs anti Italians ou other fronts,
according to General Renanld, a
lerenneh military expert. the Germans
stilled three Altled soldiers for every
German killed.
rte•--------•
A man may lee deprived of life, but
a geed name can rat be taken away
front hint.
What One of the Best Known
Travellers hi Canada Says.
-Now 1 am going to give you an un-
solicited testimonial. its they Hay in the
Patent medicine advertising, 1Iersttofat•e
1 haemo had a profound contempt for
patent medielnea, particularly so-called
liniments. Perhaps this Is due to the
reason that 1 have been blessed with as
sturdy constitution. and have never
• been 111 a day 1n my llrn. Ono day Iase
!'all after a hard day's train!, in thei :lush
• of Montreal, I developed a rain ere painin my legs and. or ettua•ne, like a mart
who has never had anything wrong with
him pityslrally, I complatnet1 r,tthet'
bolaterouitly. The good little+ wif.• says;
'1 will rub them with w„ntc lintmntt 1
have.' 'ten ahead. r said, Jn11. to humor
her. 't1'ell. in she Chiu, v with a bottle
of MI. \Rll'S L1N1�MI1iNT- unci gets
busy. Uolieve me the traits dtnapu eared
a few minutes ttcr, nitd you can tell
the world i said so ”
t iiened) FRANl. L, J0}1::: -1 Montreal.
any vacation," remonstrated the fore-.
man. "All you would do would be to
spend all the money you have saved
up and come back to work all out of ,
luck." "Well, Imes, Isort of have to
go," said Tony. "you see, I'm going to
be married and I'd kind of like to be '
there'"
Minard's Liniment for Dandruff.
West Australia, the largest state
in the continent, has an area of over
975,000 square Hailes,
.',PN•NYP„•N'"'b•aq:•4.,,Ad.y..y,,r ,.
CORNS
Lift Right Off
without Pain
S.,% ,...r,.,..• r4,4,,,,,, "" 1A .R.•t. ".t% Mal:
Magic! Drop a little "Freezone" on
an aching corn, instantly that corn
stops hurting, then Shortly you lift it
right off with fingers. Doesn't hurt a
bit.
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 calluses.
America'. Pioneer Dog Remedies
Book on
DOG. DISEASES
and .F o
1 w to Feed
Marled Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
B. GloverCiaO0.,• Yaa.
118 Wv est 81st Strait
New York, U.f,A.
MUCH! ANOTHER
RHEUMATIC TWINGE
Get busy and relieve those pains
with that handy bottle of
Sloan's Liniment
WHAT Sloan's noes, it does thor-
oughly --penetrates wi o
g y percetrates tk art rub -
1)15 to the afflicted part. and
promptly- relieves • mostJdnds of exter-
nal pains and ,aches. -You'll find it
clean and nail -shin -staining. 1(eep.it
handy for sciatica, lurnbago, neuralgia,
over -exerted muscles, stili joints; back-
ache,,, pains, bruises, straiins, sprains,
bad weather after-effects.
For 39. years Sloan's Liniment has
helped thousands the world over. You
aren't likely"to be an exception. It cer-
tainlydoes produce results.
All. druggists—35c, dru is s-3'
ac 70c, 1,40
Linitnerkt
Peaks
ettelgty
1
Cuticura Soap Shampoos
Best For Children
If you wish them to have thick,
healthy hair through life shampoo
regularly with Cuticura Soap and
hot water. Before shampooing
touch spots of dandruff and itching,
if any,, with Cuticura Ointment. A
clean, healthy scalp usually means
good hair. •
Soap25e. aintmest2SsadS9c. Weem2ic. Sold
throughouttheDominion. CanadianDepot:
Lesion. LimitN, 344 Se. Pad St., W.. Montreal.
"Cuticura Soap absvea without num.
ASPIRIN
"Bayer" only is Genuine
.Warning! Take no chances with
substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tablets
of Aspirin" Unless you see the name
"Bayer' on package or on tablets you
are not getting Aspirin at all.. In every
Bayer package are directions for
Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheu-
matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago
and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug-
gists, also sell larger packages. Made
in. Canada. l rA:spirin is the trade mark
(registered in Canada),, of Bayer,
Manufacture of Monoacoticacidester
of Salicylicacid:
ISSUE No, 14—'21.,