HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-7-21, Page 7STOMACH TROUBLE
DUE TO THIN BLOOD
It Usually Disappears When the
Blood is Made Rich and Red.
Thin blood is one of the most. com-
mon causes of stomach trouble. It
affects the digestion very quickly. The
glands that faarntsh the digestive fluids
are diminished in their activity, the
stomach muscles are weakened and
there is a loss of nerve torte. In this
state of health nothing will more
quickly restore the eppettte, digestion
and normal nutrition than good, rich,
red blood.
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills act directly
on the bleed, makng it rich and red,
and this enriched blood strengthens
weak nerves, stimulates tired muscles,
,,% `and awakens to normal action the
glands that supply the digestive fluids,
This is shown by an improved appetite
and soon the effect of these blood en-
riching pills Is evident throughout the
whole system, You find that what you
eat does not distress you, and that you
are vigorous instead of irritable and
listless. If your appetite is fickle, if
you ;.ave any of the distressing pains
and symptoms of Indigestion, you
should at once take Dr. W,Villian's' Pink
Pills and profit by the better condition
in which they will put your blood,
These pills are sola by all dealers in
medicine, or you can get them by snail
at 50 cents a Dox or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co„ Brockville, Ont,
A Little Wisdom.
If yen can't mend, don't meddle,
Bad weather reveals the 'good Lea -
Man.
Beauty and folly are often companl-
Das.
Hope is the tie wbich keeps a heart
tram breaking.
There's no use in running if we're
noton the right road.
Those who grasp at too =eh end
by getting too little.
"Be content "was never meant to
blunt the spur et "I3etter thy,selt
The express train to Ruin is often
drawn by the engine Gambling.
Ideal precepts may lead, but it is
practical examples that draw.
The Foolish Man,
There was a amen in our town,
Lunt ho would never learn;
He went upon n fishing trip
And let his camp -fire burn.
Oh, swiftly spread that forest fire
And many bottles it burned,
And from that little fishing trip
That man has ue' et ^ returned.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia
The Bowl and the Necklace. I
to a certain Balkan, state"that I will
refrain from naming, says Lord Fred- ,
erie Hamilton in his book, Days Be-
fore Yesterday,the inhabitants are
confirmed souvenir hunters. 1
During a dinner party at the British
legatee, in that reemeless state one .of
the ladies was wearing a fine necklace.!
of. pearls, wbieh a native of the state
admired immensely and begged for
permission to examine. The diplomat's
wife very unwisely nnfastened the
necklace; and amid loud expressions
of admiration at its beautiful work-
manship they Massed it roundfrom
hand to hand.
At the end of the dinner the lady
asked for her neeklace, but no one
knew anything about it. The British
minister, wile thought that he under-
stood the people of the country, rose
to the oecasion, With -a smile, he said,
"We have just wituessed a, very clever
and very amusing piece of legerde-
main, Now we are going to see an-
other piece of conjuring"
He walked quietly . too both doors of
the room, locked then, and put the
keys into his pocket. Then, placing a
small silver bowl from the sideboard
in the centre of the dinner table, he
continued, "I am now going to switch
off .all the lights and eouut ten slowly.
Then I shall turn en the lights again,
and, hey, presto! Madame de—'s
necklace will be found lying in that
silver bowl;'"
The roam was plunged in starkness,
and the minister counted slowly up to
ten: The electric lights blazed on
again. There was no necklace, but
the silver bowl had vanished!
Wilhelntiiina Plans Trip.
Queen Wiibelmina, who tor years
has never lett Holland, is planning a
three weeks' boat trip to the Norwe-
gian fjords this smuttier, says a. des-
patch from The Hague. She will
travel lucognita.
To the Manner Born.
The Ilenuessy twins were keeping
the whole neighborhood on the jump.
"Holy suferin" cats'." exclaimed
Mrs. McTavish, "what do you boys
think you're going to be when you
grow up anyway?"
Anil with the promptitude of per-
fect conviction cavae the joint reply:
"irieltmeu "
Queen Maud of Norway has a won-
derful collection of old embroideries.
The British Museum contains 2,700
complete Bibles written in all Ian
guagcs,
One of the most curious exhibit;,; at
the Paris Fair is a huge neere a er
P
F ,
a giant number of "Les Echoes." It
measures nineteen feet in height anti
is fifteen feet wide.
Surnames and Their Origin
METCALF
Variation—Metcalfe.
Racial Origin -Welsh,
Source—A focality.
There is a tradition regarding the
origin of this family name of the a ,ort
that is often met with an attempt to
explain it by a fanciful story woven
around the apparent elements of which
the name is supposed to bo conpound-
ed,
This tradition has it that a certain
strong man, having had an encounter
'with a bull, in which he finally con-
quered, explained laconically that he
had met a calf."
Actually the family name of Metcalf
is one of those which have been adopt -
ca as indicative of the localities in
which the first bearers of the sun
names lived. And its origin is traced
to Wales.
The original Metcalfs were dwellers
in or near a spot called anciently "the
valley of the church" in the Cymric
tongue.
In the Welsh the word "medd" indi-
cates a valley, more specifically a lit-
tle vale, and "car means variously a
cell, chancel or little church., If the
ancient form had been ad Bred to in
the development of the name, rather
than an unconscious approximation of
English 'wards in the Anglicized form,
the name to -day might more properly
be spelled "Medcalf."
But though, of Welsh origin, it is
more than likely that the name's prin-
cipal development was in Eugland.
Certainly it would never have been
aced by a person still living in the lo-
cality of that name, unless he were
the owner or overlord of the section.
MANSFIELD
Variations—Mansell, Manser.
Racial Origin—Anglc•Saxon.
Source—A place name, also an occupa-
tion,
The family name cf Mansfield comes
from the town in Nottinghamshire,
England, of the same name. Its first
use as a surname, of 'course, was to
tlesignate the place from which the in-
dividual had corse, raid later, from
which Ilis ancestors had come.
The name of the town is ancient,
dating back to Anglo-Saxon days.
"Manrian" in the tongue of the Anglo-
Saxons meant to trade or traffic, and
this has given us the first syllable of
the place name. "Field," of course, is
synonymous with the modern word.
But in the olden times it also had a
special, restricted meaning, indicating
a place of trade, a fairground. And
this was, in the ancient days, a trad-
ing centre.
Derivatives of this Saxon word
"manrian" appear to be among those
which survived the tidal wave of
French which the Normans spread
over England, for in the period fol-
lowing, when many of the old Saxon
words came to the surface again, there
are found the words "mans•er," "man -
sell" and "manciple," indicating
tradesmen specially skilled in buying
rather than selling. They were, in
short, the "purchasing agents" of those
days, in the service of big institutions
and large households of the more im-
portant nobility. And from these
words denoting occupations. have come
the family names of Mansell and Man -
ser.
YAWN Y Y..soma* astai .re. e...• ■ emir . sour rLleintuits* Re„ r9
A Gift t from
Nature's Storehouse
The delicious, crisprP Tulles
of the wheat and. barley food.
contain all the natural itp'-: bu ld-
g values of the grei„m, includinj
mineral salts so essential to heaai:
A Food eoi ally well suited to the'
rekpirements of youuui and.. old..
,7heresaReason" /rG!-eMlts
Sold by *rovers everywhere
High h Climbs g, DHOT
Speaking of the 14loania r verest ex- i R DAYS I IRE
pedition, Sir Francis Tounghusband
says; "At great heights men get very
nervous and irritable. At 10,000 feet
they begin to lose patience with one
another, and the higher they climb the
deeper they bate."
There ie a moral in that for nen
seeking high altitudes in our common
human life.
May it never be isaid of them with
truth, "The higher they climb the deep-
er they hate."
It is a fine thing to find a man who
goes upward to great heights without
losing his head, his nervous equipoise,
his sell-coutrol. It Is an inspiration to
us who plod and drudge along at the
lower levels to find him generous,
amiable, affable, ready to meet all
comers and faithful to his friends.
On the other haled, a is deplorable
to serve upon a man v>kto wins itis way
to eminence of any sort, and in that
lofty station, instead of locking to the
sky and a superior Power, looks down
upon "the common herd" and thinks—
and tells--•hAow great he is in compari-
son with them.
What is so-called "success if in win-
ning it one hates and is hated?
High climbing spoils many a man.
He eanrot stand the atmosphere. Ile
is as one intoxicated by the spreading
view of the kingdoms of materialism
beneath him. The more he sees the
Mere he wants. Once he was liappy
with little; naw be is miserable with
Much.
The best land of climbing is that
described by :Matthew Arnold in "Rug-
by Cbapel" In that fine poem he telis
of his father, Thomas Arnold, the
headmaster, who is hero of Thomas
Hughes' noted book, "Tont Brown at
Rugby." He shows us that Thomas
Arnold was ever a climber, but was
unwilling to climb _alone. He led his
boys upward and onward with hien.
Nobody admires a man whose strug-
gle is all far himself, that he may
gather riches, and make his boast of
them and "show off" to the world.
When Death eornes, Death does not
care to see any of his things. The
question et the last is siuiply, "Di
you serve?" It is not "How much have
you?"
The only portable baggage on the
last and loneliest climb of all which
the soul is called upon to naal;e are the
imponderable qualities of character.
Love and truth, courage and faith, if
we choose, will go with us all the way,
All Allies at Louvain.
The laying of the cornerstone et the
new Louvain Library July 28 will oe.
casioa a gathering of world-famous
statesmen and educators from all na-
tions that were allied in arms with
Belgium, after the shock of war, says
a Paris de:patch. Cardinal Mercier
has announced the acceptance by
Nicholas Murray Butler of an invita-
tion to preside at the et•remonitee. He
has, fu.rthermor'e, extended invitations
to all American universities to send
delegates.
Ex -President Poine;ue will lead the
group of visitors from France, and it
Is announced that Whitney Warren,
the American architect, who was en-
trusted with the honor of pi:tuning the
famous monument, will assi,at at the
ceremonies in addition to attct,ding to
the architectural and artistic' details.
of the structure. Tee iuternatlonal
committee in charge of rebuilding the.
library, of which Xing Albert and Car-
dinal Mercier are among the foreulost
workers, regard the gift of the library
by the United States not only as a
monument consecrating the sacrifice
of Belgium in the first onslaught be-
fore the German invasion, but as a
manifestation from America which
will be an eternal protest and reproach
against the "cultural" ntethods used
by the Germans. Cardinal Meatier
himself has said that erection of the
library by American friends is 'a pro-
found symbol for the future and an
event of the greatest spiritual import-
ance.
A Good Creed for Club
Leaders.
I believe in boys and girls, the men
and women of a great to -morrow; that
whatsoever the bay soweth the Ivan
shall reap. I believe in the curse of
ignorance, in the effciency of schools,
in the dignity of teaching, and in the
jay of serving others. I believe in
wisdom as revealed in human lives as
well as in the pages of a book, in les-
sons taught, not so much so by precept
as by example; in the ability to work
with the hands as well as to think with
the heart; fn everything that makes life
largo and lovely. 1 believe in beauty
in the school -room, in the home, in
daily life, and in out-of-doors. I be-
lieve that every hour of every day we
receive a just reward for all we are
and all we do. I believe in the pre-
sent and its opportunities, in the fu-
ture and its promises and in the di-
vine joy of living.
Easily Remembered.
Angry voices were heard as the mid-
night express was about to start.
"I tell you," cried the attendant,
blocking the carriage door, "this is a
sleeping -carriage, and you can't tread
in it without a special ticket."
"Begorra, I had a .ticket!"
"Valiere is it?"
"I've lost it," replied the Irishman
who was causing the disturbance.
"If you've really had the misfortune
to lase your ticket, perhaps you can
remember your berth?
There was an interval of silence,
Paddy evidently employing his think-
ing powers.
"Och, be Sabers, that's aisy!" he
exclaimer, at last: "I was born an the
twenty-sixth of October, 1892."
HARD ON THE BABY
July—the month of oppressive heat;
red hot days and sweltering nights; ,
is extremely hard on little ones. Diar-
rhoea, dysentery, colic and cholera in-
fartum carry off thonsande cif preelous
little lives every summer. The mother
must be constantly on her guard to
prevent these troubles or if they come
Polite.
Little Johnny was sitting by the pig
Pen. Neighbor .Jones passed.
"Hullo, Johnny, crow are the pigs
to -day?"
"
are
all
How suddenly 1 h I 3 thankyou. 1`
on to fight t tI enA. No other "Nicely,
medicine is of such aid to mothers your folk?"
during the hot summer as is Baby's
Own Tablets. They regulate the
bow els and stomach, and an occasion-
al dose given to the well child will
prevent summer complaint, or if the
trouble does ranee on suddenly will
banish it. The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. "Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Bits of Canadian s..
>F News.
Coast Indians expect to take about
two thousand fur seal= this scascn.
Last year the catc:'a was ewe vc- hun-
dred. Indians are the only per::o;aa
who Pan legally take tker:e arinmis,
outside the legal peree mtege permitted
by International Treaty.
The Airman Manufacturing Cem-
pany is raow eper,ttjAtg, a tar;
eornmercitl aireraft service in Van-
cottver. A large mud. rn (Indies sea-
plane has been secured as a nucleus
of atuueh bigger fleet and the hale
'flare are situated on Burrard Inlet.
Passengers will be taken up at Eng-
lish Bay and a regular service to
Seattle, Victoria, Nanaimo and ether
cities wil shortly be inaugurt.ted. Its
addition to this aerial photography
will be undertaken by the eompany,
which druid prove a great service to
the orr Leer s of timber areas.
A re.eointion urging the Federal (ley-
ernmeut to permit women to frig on '
bane teatds on the Fame basis as men
was passed at the ct+nvc-ntion cf the
Federate'l \V hien s be:t ntee at Ed-
montr,r. At the prete-nt time only
widowe may alta under the hotneett ad
regulatinrs aid It is peitated cut that
since the war weme!a have discovered
they are quite c av abie of performing
all the w rk a farm. entails. Sevfaral
nurse,, wi o served over ease have ext+r
elsed their suladier:.' right to to :e
honor i'•aads rs1iiist other wnnuei leave
purcli.G-c',I l.teas they are meat& to
seeurc otherwise.
Saxkatele w,ti, has doulded her dairy
produt•t au tiering ;Le rant yv u. xe"-•
coMien- to figures is.--urtl hy the De-
partment of agriculture. The totul
output to :lay 1, 1921, was 071-17.
Founds in a ;.mpat lean with 320,20S
pounds fee the same period in 11t;.0
Comparetive fisurt':i for May, 1921, and
May. 1t' h , are '323,104 poniels awl 187,-
025, respectively.
Three hundred thousand doll:irs
worth of Prate were offered ft r salt. at
Ei ]nnil eft in , ,`ie by the Winnipeg
Fur luctitnn Sale: ("timpii nye The ...ale
int ,'sled the entire collet t c to of the
I.au* on-Iiultleser;l t'areolian t tinipeny's •
Mackenzie and Atetie stir.. ."<'1 of the
furs which wort. lire .et:ti ad at 1h04 fair
were guaranteed t,1 be of thia ea -
son's each.
The prairie provi;ie•c- et :e`enet::he,
Sas1catehewan end i v.• mine
than ninety per met. lt,eeleh•n
wheat acreage this we,: sante :,ting to
the government's tt eeet:r• i ubi ciw l
figures. Out of a Vital Ot .t.*ge Al' le.
654.110 of wheat. the three province
account for 17418,1+40, an ,:I••t°a':tst- t}i
557,000 acres ovex'7.,a l yc>ar.
It is predicted by agrkuit<ara1 auth-
orities that within tea eines tee pro-
vince of Manitoba will be pi :elm -hag
suflicient tante strawbertine claire,
ly ll her preserving ntF le :aei'1 the
hulk of these required for 1.,eee ling,
conetunptlon.
Immigration to Cateda fur the
month of April, 10.1, t• ' e.:l 11.952..
in comparison with 13,2.:, in„Math
1919, an increase of 13 per cent. of
the total newcomers `,1"a were frrau
the British Isles, 5,035 from the
United States and 1,541 from other
countries.
a•
Punished.
Wife—"Johnny was very bads this af-
ternoon; be stole a lot of jam and
cake, and ate so much lie was ill."
Husband --"Did you punish him "
Wife --"I should say I did. 1 Bent
him to bed without his supper'."
Good Business.
Featherstone ---"I wonder if your sis-
ter realize.., Willie, taut during the
lest month I have given her ten
pounds of sweets and some flowers."
Willie ---"Of course she dere_. Tliat'.o
wire she is lseet,`ng lee: engagement
with Jim r3u lhng a secret.”
King's Hearing is Geod.
When Meg Chrietian vu,Vrd etre
town in sort aero Sehle n-1, a Uertn:ar
weanan renreelted as they were panting
the King. "You can't e it h`kn gee e
e:okerg nayway; Time' I ing truce'£
and answered in Gelman, "But hi
hearing is excellent."
Fresh Milk in Cubes.
} In Holland milk is now put up and
sold in solid forum, being made into
little cubes which are readily dire
• solved in tea, coffee or ether fluids.
The milk, after removal of the
cream, is reduced by heat to dryness,
then powdered and mixed with the
cream, the material being pressed in-
to blocks.
Pilose milk cubes have the advent
age of preserving their freshness for
a long time. They are recommended
for use in regions where milk is not
easily to be had, and travelers may
find it convenient to carry a supply of
them.
MONEYORDERS
A Dominion Express Money Order
fox five dollars. costs three cents.
Brief.
Freed was being sent to a boarding -
school.
"Now,” said his father, "when you
write do not send hie pages and pages
describing all the pupils, where they
Dome from, and what cin s they are.
in, because I really shall not have time
to read it all.
A. few weeks later bis father re-
ceived the following letter: "Dear
Father.—S.O.S., , R.S.V.P.-Fred."
Paraguay is experimenting with
the cultivation of Chinese tea
plants, one variety at least being
readily .acclimated.
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere
She Ccutdn't Erpl:ain.
The other day Jots•+ ,caret a cent
undrum
ert-
undrum and decided to try it o.I dta.%
wifE,
"Ms tett hoe w way I ant ate r,
mule?" he' asieel her whee he get
home.
"Non" she replied prtt ,pti . "I 1
know you are, but I don't, know way
you tore"
Go to the Top.
Examiner—"I ant surprieei tla.a*. yl.et t
,all merle nnixt tte.a it: ;u..•%varb .t t'l"
q..,. ,inn:: "Itreer a was the ategee
t'harta signeadt" Thiele it ever-. etel
no one tel tee?"
Little Bey tat i.e tten7
„
.an.SilT.
F x311411rc r "t1 l?"
Little 13x -r --"At t:ie l;'¢'tte'xn G'f tii,s
page.'
A Cheerful Proopect for the 0.0.
4i, rucor.tly t:+lAsttd *:oid.t•t' wao v..asI;
ing Tea,' tor the first tame. :t il:tal
form appronehea hent. -haat!" ha
er;eel ira a threetc nice to e. "t4:•o ;the
yen?"
"The Waver tf the Clay.'
"Advaut,r"
The cftec'.'r or the ..lay' ,a' vaaee•.: , kin
before he had ere ' dr•'t let;f :were;
rte€'.; the et ntiee'l .nee.n C`f','4, " iia:It`
IMPROVEMENT IS
TALK OF FRIENDS
TANLAC DU) HER WORLD
OF GOD, SHE SAYS.
"Change It Has Made in Me Is
Simply Wonderful," Says
Toronto Woman,
..'t
T< nl ac has certainly had a good
chance in my case to show what it can
do, for I sure had a long hard struggle
and had just about tried everythiug,
said Mrs. Mary Richards, 251 Ashdale
Ave., Toronto.
"I have been In a badly run-down
condition ever since I had pneumonia
six yearn ego. My etcmneh was near-
ly :always out of order. illy appetite
was very poor and I had to he very
careful about what I ate, as I suffer-
ei terribly from indigestion, bron-
chitis al ad pars in my chest. My sleep
wee never sound and I had a tired,
w•orn.o At feeling all the time. I had
dreadful headache, ear't weak speer
and had fallen off itfk waigtt until I
was tcareely ,were than a ehadaw of
my €cr oxer seif, and I was alteolutely
uellt for wee% of any hind.
"But Tan kce has clone .me a weuii3
of goe<i. sliczateit to in fine cm-
Glat.on at.d I exit all I want on:1 every-
thing ;:gree.; with me perfc:et1y, A I
my aett"q an.i F Iiia. are a xL ng of tate
pee! atnd l m .At '-itger than I've tteen
in a l.,ug tins: 1t: fact, Taanlae has the
satne tease a nee las r. eii of e.co., for
I can do my ix'Iuteworl; with tate and
my friends are taw` tri; about the weir
]crful ehunge Mitt hes; come ever me.
I at<an't beiieve any-e,r.e who suffers as
I did can do better than take Tantae"
Taakxct Is ,old by h r'iing druggists
very:: l:ere, Advt.
Integrity.
In the r ;rid t f th:nigh er.-atei3, In -
r!,= fie i> . rdi'r3ag-
' ,;8_ , E y eaSt:•c ., ?.4V ' berm l*•4t.O u .
p•1 �.:y fee, ,34.t <q,.,9;': '•tr ;ta:'.i-yeer-
tt
The r - ae . i ave rte;a.b'.: d. viae.£ code
en> c...,.:;1 1 ;.t :.i4 :i ,y gee. 1, their
!i it = r=fit A tel 41 1..
In tee .t.r ,i ea :era, Integrity ty Fit
.. t r .:1 r tear ,.. c .tint sera r f
. , '1' ...1 ;t:.t., f t tT;tde
4'1i,:ah a. 6 :1:A07, NO
t,i.., • laiteee aanp erti sl
f• , G'6 iia- i :n heat. eteetlay
e t a to£.. 'r:,,a -'radelt ;led
1:, leer :> ..s.
leatr ty ta:e• tr.e:'.a •t:"d> of :a tee -e-
h .„
een.. t•: itrl.r i. ,: .•s� . -'s ;its a and
£e r. ,.
Ii t. t rre .r t .r v.e [,ua.1-'; it is
"res the '.0 Tt al tine' ,,int ha.;,
lA,attt.l viae,' .' t ,cal the ,.filet `,
--kyhtt, :),re e'on;! a ti"1+e + e"
"Xt°Vt 1 *;a eft 'L ily ere 1c..!
t`a 11 "€d:tit. tli,te ;.:41t,'•:, titt•r,
AraertWe Pioneer Dog FaatedlSc1
Soots en
SCG EUr.A+ ii 8
and now to Feed
Mailed 1oree to any .14•
dress by tho .1utItor.
�yg rt. (::ey Glorcr t3o., Zr...o.
111 West 31st Street
New Yors, %'.8.A.
COARSE: ALT
LA E4 D SALT
Bel Caritas
TOROesTO GALT worms
CUFF Tonotrro
F acei,Neek,Armis. Ter ribs
Sight, itched And Burned.
Cutioura Heals,
":maty was two moatbs aid whe a
c.'al little pimples rn her head.
Thee Iver, getting worse tied spreal
till her head, face r t, and ..r..,:,
were finer..... w cf extipta: rso, turnip:'.
iec: i , ,, area bier dim . I was t .1
:as ...""...es..enta. Iba1t•osew up
ides ei . leen In linen. She r'
terrieie. riele. For one year I .
z.Cnreet rikht or day.
Cetizexa flozp^_n.
zinc,: Ia lees t1+ n two weeiee
l : . to reend tied in a ._ter re eee
•mac:?`.-.,- _:, " ..s`ann..._>., Fs:c.
C!.i., A 1:
C c? the oar. of all deeteetel ecee
tree Ceta.ara far all t..tat a arpar-_
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YARMOUTH. RMOUAH. N. S. --^F a(tl��j
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TheOriginal;:lily OnlyGenuine�
�
Beware of imitations sold on the
merits of
MINARD'S LINIMENT
AQ'IR
ua
Only "Bayer" is Genuine
1,Var;-ir.g! 'finless you see the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting Aspirin at all. Take
Aspirin only as told in tho Bayer pack-
age for Colds, Headache, .Neuralgia,
Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and foe Pain. Then you will
be following the directions and dosage
worked out by physicians " during
twenty-one years and proved safe by
millions. Handy tin boxes of twelve
Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few
cents. Druggists also sell larger pack-
ages. Made in Canada, Aspirin is the
trade mark (registered in Crtnada), of
Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacid-
ester of Salicyliexcid.
What Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound Did
for Mrs. Baker and
Mrs. Kie'iiei'.
Vancouver, B.C.—"I am leased t,
say that Lydia. E. Pinitham's Vegetable
Compound has done me a lot of good.
I can now walk about without the aid.
of a support and feel real strong again.
A nsu.se advised hie to take the
Vegetable Compound and itis certainly
helping me. It seems like Heaven to
be relieved after mantas of pain."—
Mesa H. W. Been, 8874 10th Ave..
West, Vancouver, B. i".
Albert Co., N.B.—"I have taken
Teelia E. Pinkham's medicines anti
they have done me a lot of good. Since.
then I have been able to do my house-
work and bare a.lot of work to da as
we lire on a farm, Seeing your adver-
tisement in the papers was what made
me think of writing to you. I hope
this may help some one else." -
1 Minas. \Vrl. B. Hsivnn, Upper New
1 Morton, Albert Co., N. B.
I The reason women write such letters-
to the .Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co..
and tell their friends how they are
I helped is that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
1 table Compound has brought health and
� happiness into their lives. Freed from
their illness they want to pass the' good
news along to other suffering women
that they also may be relieved.
If there are any complications you do
not understand write to Lydia E. Pink -
ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
ISSUE No. 29--21