HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1922-4-6, Page 7SITS 0r
HUM
ROM HER MERE
Unwilling Pupil.
Visitor—"Well, zny little man, c
you like going to school?"
Little loan (aged eix)--,"Xes•; but
I don't like staying there,"
On friendly Terms.
Little Louise was last on the stre
and was brought into the police st
time The o*Hcens tried iu every w.
to learn her name. ]+'molly one of th
officers said:
"What name does your mother ca
your fathom"
"Why," said Louise, vary lenocently
#'h
"e don't call him any name, ab
likes him,"
tee result of a race whieh had been
run that day.
Ienowleg nothing about racing, and
feeling betted to justify iii;, existence
the .i venrtive youth liad the following
inspired paragraph inserted in the
paper next morning:
"Wt; regret to announce the death
at Lincoln at Ii,50 yesterday afternoon
of the Very Reverend Dean Swift, the
to auth•er or the wen kt .awn hymn "rite
Roseate hues of Early Dawn.' "
Tote
ms That Tell Tales.
•
From the Brit:,sh lion to the Cbdnnese
dragon, the old states cf the world
et looked to the animate for the designs
for their national crestas
IT SIMPLY' N j w
�j (' jj
SPRING IMPURITIES Better Than Goold Mines. ' I 1 4R 1 . Advertisements Paan Loa many gold, and silver ��Ra&�SWAle A
' ai wAnlTa:,n st;�Irx Aa.sei;;rP.:
4 DUE TO POOR BLOOD
ay The Prussian eagle and tho Gallia
e peek, like the British lion, signify
strength and pride; but new zealous
u have also •their official ere etc, or to•
tems, and in nearly every case we find
the choice has fallen on some kind of
animal.
These tctems tell tales to the in-
terested observer. In moot instances
the figure chosen is a link with the
past It may be sentiment or bust -
nese. which sways the +ehoiese but the.
animal is• there. The totems of a na-
e tion or state are often shown. on their
Post age etannte.
The Canadian beaver
ms and the Item
to
gam- of Australia are natural enough,
but Cantina pays 'her tribute to sand-
, anent by also adopting the mettle -leaf.
i On the names of the United States
there is a piituregaiieryr illustrative
of natiouul history, from Mlle buffalo
being hunted fly the Rets ].Tan to the
a+elf btndele for prairie corn
Sealing and eve hawing formed New-
feundla:ntl's early trade, so 4P/ anklet
colony stamps we timl the hair seal,
on another a codfish. A Newfound-
land dog grace°; yet another stamp,
evidently a concession to sentiment
rather than a record of trade.
s'
Japan'stampe usually incline to
bird objects, the osprey being at favor-
ite .choice, New Zealand inclines in
tl is direction. The apteryx is ossa•
raaemerated en the postal :natty
of :\e Z.eeland's great hien have been
naturalists, and it in reasonable'
enough to find the strange Mime et'
the islands imprhnted on the stamps.
Beeinc the national emblem of the
Republic of Guatemala, which is the
troi on, a tropical bird of geargeous
feathers and long tall -plumes, lies a
small hietarybook in itself. This is
one of the mast interestng of bird em•
r .blems, although the black swaus of 'Western estern Australia also have a story
' to tell.
n In India and the Far East tho to-.
t tenni ehoten vary from bounding
tigers to a tertoite asleep beneath a
' weenie -palm. Fancy runs riot in
some pcatage•stamps and national one
bierns; but, traced bark, there is al
ways re's°stn behind the choice. In the
totem we may read the poet.
Knew Something.
A postmistress ill a village was very
foul of tampering with the parcels.
One day a boy came in with. a. larg
piece of bride's cake, anti, said, "I
ti
sent this to you."
*`011, thank-. you," said the wont
"Tell her I have a wea'itnesa t..
Gradeone.
ke.
The bey eyed her coldly and said
"She sent it to you to get the edge o
your appetite afore she :lentis awa
the boxes."
it Has Its: Uses.
An old Scotehwornun, Hutch agalnet
Iter will, wait Induced to sit for her
picture, the first she had taken sines.
the was a. girl in her teens. When
the pltotograpli was banded to her she
failed to recognize herself. She
thought there lnu4t, be corse mistake.
""Ie 'this me?" she asked. "Yes, ma-
dam." said the photographer, "and it's
a si:eakleg likoneae." The old lady
eu erl at her counterfeit presentment
for u full minute in. ailanto. "Aweell"
she said reelguedly, "ire a huanbliu*
i+ieht.""
What Worried Horace.
iloraee •tiorawnrthy, of it'teirpeth, is
the ehanpiou grouch. Hie pastor .Laid
to Pim Duo day
"lirc•:l, Horace, you're. a glint grow-
ler and complainer. but you certainly.
can't growl and complain this year
about your potato crop. Why, man
they tell me that bath- in quantity and
ti
quality it's 's fnet potato crop it
Kent ('aunty,,'
"Oh, Yes," muttered Horace. "that's
all right as Sar as it gees, doctor, but
wbar ani I hobs' to get the bad pota-
toes to feed me hogs^"
A Dead Beat.
Pat, while on a visit to America, be-
oa:uie deeply interested in watebing a.
Yankee gardener. • After a while the
iolloiviug dialogue took place:.
Yank • --"Sonne fine ve»-etables here,
a, 18
Pat --"Yes."
Yank • "I once grew a - cabbage
which, when cut in two, and the
heart removed, made a grand cradle
for kiddies:
Pat---"Begorral But, it must have
been at mighty lime one. But we have
some fine vegetables in old Ireland,
I once remember seeing three men
sleeping on one beet!"
Yank= "i beee men?"
Pat.- eSure: Policemen:" HI
Revised Version.
A young Alient:llan reporter was
left in Charge o€ the :ae es room one
evening. Suddenly he was confronted
with, to him, an inexplicable cable
from England.
It ran.: "Lincoln, 3.50. Dean Swift
Obit Roseate Dawn,'. and was, in fact,
BABY'S HEALTH
PRINC
i
•
The tiering is a time or anxiety to
mothers wilt) bave little ones in the
9lhome. Conditions snake it necessary
. to keep the baby indoors, He is often
conflued to overheated, badly vent( -1
lated rooms and catches colds which
rack his whole system. To guard
egainat this a box of Baby's Own Tab-
lets ehould he kept in the house and
Ian cceadonal dose given the baby to
, keep hie stomach and bowels working
I regularly. This will prevent colds, '
con,;tipation or colic and keep baby ,
well. • The Tablets are sold by nmedi-
cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
1 ('o„ Brockville, Ont.
1 It's not the man who knows the
mot that hs the most to say.
Surnames and Their Origin
POMEROY
Variations—Pommery, Lapommeraye,
Appleyard, Applegarth. •
Racial Origin—Norman-French.
Source—A focality.
. Pomeroy is a family name belonging
to that group which originated as des-
criptive of the locality in or• near
which the original bearers of the name
lived. TL means `apple yard."
It is an old name in England, befn.g,
traceable back to the days of Norman
domintance, in width, together with
the period following- it, most of the
En•gli'sh family names developed into
,such from mere descriptive llhiases.
The original form of the name. as it
is found in the old records, Is "de lit
Pommel -aye" ("of tate Appleyard"),
but the - Saronized version appeared
quite early, at - first in tho forth of
".Atte ppley ard," and later with the
prefix elimin'ateil, • - .
Pon:mery, of cours•e,' le simply a
:"variation. froiu Pomeroy In trine Bevel-'
cpnlent of the spelling from ""Pon-
viireraye."'
While Pomeroy in some instances
pis more recently imported from
prance, the more uses] foram of the
•nanre as existing ,in that country to=
(day Js La.pommeraye.
.--there ha been lithlo ibiftereuce in
he manner in which the true Fr�eneh.
the t • l,o l
' r
1
1 t Anglo-French . eta,
c;h fan it tonics
1 I
*aye developed. In. mainly castes. they
Ate almost identical. The ptiueitpal
tiifilereucte in trend, except iu the 'large
;#',lass : of family names forhned trout
dila"inntines p�.f given nettes,. has been
to droppira.g.of all pre'dxes• in Buggered,'
1
f e the French,
h. the though- dre i 'tt,
.h h the
g 1p g
'de" (tete once, have tendred to re-
,
+,it the "la" or "le."
MacSWINEY
A Tonic Medicine a Necessity at
This Season.
Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills ere an all•
Year-round tonics for the blood and
nerves. But they are especially ramie
able in. the spring when the-syste
is loaded with impnrittes as a resu
of the indoor life of the winter monti.,
There is no other season when th
blood is. so much in need of purifyin
and enriching, and every dose of the
pills helps to enrich the blood. T
the spring one feels weak and tired
Dr, �iifllialzis' Pink Pills give strengti
In the spring elle appetite is often poo
—Dr. Williams' fine: Pills develop th
appetite, tone the stomach and al
weak digestion. It is in the spt•in
that poisons in the blood tied an qlh
let in disfiguring pimples, eruptio
and boils—Dr. Williams' Pink Pll
clear the skin because they go to tlh
root of the trouble in the blood. T
the spring anaemia, rheumatism, into
gestion, neuralgia and many 0th
troubles are whet persistent beeaus
of poor, weak 1r1Qod. and it is at till
time when all nature takes on ne
Life that the blood most se,rlousl
needs attention. Some people dose
themselves with purgatives at tilt
season, but these Only further wealco
themselves. A purgative merely gal
•
lops through tee system,.emptytng til
bowels, but does not hep the blood
On tilt other hand, Dr. Williams' Pin
Pills enrich, the blood Which reache
every nerve and every organ in th
body, bring new strength and vto weak, easily tired Hien, women an
children. Try Ilr Williams' Plnk P01
this spring --they will not disaPpQina
you.
Sold by all medicine dealers or se
by mail at GO cants a box or six boxes
for $2,50 by The Dr. Williams' ;Medi
eine Co., Brockville, Qnt,
"With All the Saints."
"Certainly I am not so Seolisli as to
doubt the existence ot God," Rob Kerr
declared. "Tho memory of my parents
Wes and prayers would prevent m
doing that. ,and I haven't forgottet
their faith."
"Don't yon think that part of their
faith in God was the result of their
lifelong faithfulness to the ebureh?'
Dr, Parker asked.
"1 am not, prepared to answer that
They would have bean the same
wherever they were. I believe that
their spiritual life grew out of their
Poisonal eelationship with God. And
it is the peesonul relationship that I
claim far myself. Times are changed
now. Many of the customs and meth-
ods=
eth
ods= ot the church are obsolete and
inadequate, and I feel that it is poor
business to use them.""
I am interested in the position you
take," Dr. Parker said. "What or-
gauizatioa seems to you better fitted
than the church to meet the need of
Oxley?"
I thought I made it (dear that I
believe in a personal relationship with
God."
""Surely that is one of the founda-
tion stones of the ehurebi Do you
mean that ycu believe you can achieve
suck a relationship better cutsldo the
church teen in it?"
"("ertainly quite as well." The young
man seemed a trifle nettled.
"Whitt I am trying to understand,"
Dr. Part er continue. "is why you
hold such an a nttude. Surely you
don't take the sante position toiard
business; you never would ignore
business men's clubs and conferences
and other means ot co-operating." You
wouldn't take the same ground in
s•eien.ce and refuse to meet other men
of scince or to make ycurs'elf fami+liar
' with thlr discove'rie's. How theu can
1 you think that Rob Kerr all by him.
I self is going to become master of true
great spiritual mysteries? St. Paul,
who knew Ibis business as welt as any
ruari wrho ever lived, told his people
hat they mast learn to apprehend cer- .
rain things' 'with ,all the saints.' in
othrer words: no man could apprehend
Ii •of them by himself. You have al-
ready intimated that the thiug than'
?Weise, but the guano deposits on the
islands, which extend at iuterval;s
alt'xng one thcusond miles' of avast, are
far mere veinable.
Hundreds of millions of tons have
..been exported, and as the pare -war
price was gonerally in the neighbor-
hood of ten nom* a ton, it is evident
test even seabirds have their value,
awl that the poseeadon of a guano
island is .a chert cut to fortune.
tit
These gualre em nits are eemetimee
hs. of great depth --tea deep, in flet, that Stomach Troubles Quickly
the lower strattue is as bard as that
a stone, and d°ales baclr to remote Y lrt:prCie' and She Now En -
everlong before the sight of a Ivan joys Health,,
ever disturbed tte countless riiiions 2
n of birds which gen•eratidn after gene. "I was in a badly run slows condt-
r' ratioit bave nested an the islands.. i tion and needed sonnetbing to build me
Such enormous quantities of guano ap, and. Tarlac certainly proved to be
r
SAYS MRS. ALLISON
COULD HARDLY EAT.
ENOUH TO KEEP ALIVE
BEFORE SHE GOT
TANLAC.
would neem incredible to -anyone wile
has not seen the wonderful sight any
one of these i=slands presents ill the
g breeding season. The birds gather
there in countless numbers, hatching
ns' out their eggs in such close proximity
e • that there is barely room to turn
e round.
Cormarunt-s are the meet numeren%
specter. A recent observer estimated
er that there were ten million hires of tills
e specie; alone sitting upon their en, s
in one place at the one time. They
net would appear to feed in relays. one
Y "shift" taking cure of the eggs whilst
the other is at sea,
It is an amahIng .Fact that, auteng
u the testi of thou -ands of nests, no
bird ,arms to make a mistake u' to
e welch i3 iter Own. "
Gannet; and pi'lieans are a1 -•e very
numerous;, it is quite a zn'ual sight to
a see twenty thousand gannets busy
1). fishing at the same time. and if the
vigo story is well founded that these vore-
d --us birais devour ten pounds of, flet' a
s day, it goes to prove the enaliess pos.,
• sinilities of the ocean as a source of.,
toed supply for human twinge as well
son as birds.
Thus one flock, each es the above.
may devour in the course of a day one ;ee
Itundre'd tons of lisp, and as it is probe /1'g"
>t
the right medicine for me," said Mrs.
W. K �ilOson, OS Melbourne Ave,
Toronto, Ont.
"I was :n miserable health for a
whole year and felt tired and drowsy
all the time. I never felt like getting,
up in the morning, and my appetite
xva.s ea poor neearele managed to eat
er ougb to keep me up. Many days I
couldn't do my bouseirork, and the
least exertion left nae completely tired
out. I was away below my normal
weight, and my wretched health war -
:tied me not a little.
"Wen, 1t surely was a delight to ole
when I noticed a great imprnvetueet
fit my appetite after taking my first
two hottlea of Tarlac, and I Fats then
that it. was a wonderful medicine. I
am perfectly wail now, can eat any-
thing I avant, a nothing hurts nm, evil
1 ieel,t,trong and well all the time. I
tau do my housework without a let: of
trouble. Tanlae is simply grand.'
Tanlae' s sold by all good dttrle"ei;,.
r�e3vt-
c --
The Puzzled Wife,
Mr. (woodman tallowiug his v
and his ctcunilrg house) ---
e: a are the day bt ks,"
Goodman- ""1 C=s. Show me the
ooke. "
able that met lrundrett million seabirds Mr, Goedin:in (my ti�'ed) The
of dntermit SPeciet, but ail veru:ioud,• uft;I't hooks?„
. a very elementary SUM will
these that
you have to work *veer at night and
feed day by day oft the coasts of Peru, Airs. Goodwin "Yee-
et give "" e, that keep you down here until two
ging lig re multi
a oltrutuetl. The result• until you get the
fug llguro multiPiieil by the number of o'clock in the n'ortlint;:'
Y days in a year stagge*s the imagine- ""--'— q`'^ M Spanish influenza
a tion. MONEY ORDERS. l U S E
Send a Dominion Express Money
6 � fl ■
The Origin of Our Marl age Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. "Ililiment
Customs. Did You Ever?
non and price. John J. flask,
4NADI.A,N Md'TRIp1ONIAI+ PAPI,R,
* . 2rie. No other f®e.. A McergarY4
Gbatham, Ont.
°moi AItN $x0:00 To $40.00 P1511 D K
J-i,f vuicaniaing, Be independent: hve
teach you, Wz'ite for particulars. Chtet'
Instructor, Canada Vulcanizer, London„
Ont.
zr s...W;Att!°r' -,-• ,o DO t seely
Cad light sewing at home, whole or
spare time; good pay; work sent any dbs-
i tante; charges paid. Send stamp for
particulars. National Manufacturing
' Company. Montreal.
WOOL MART' I:TTO i;LA.l�'ICI TS AT
reasonable prices, Tarns. Pure
wool, chiefly grey seconds, fifty cents per
pound- Postage extra- Sweater yarns,
six beautiful. colors, eexenty-^tiva cents.
° s'an+Ales free. Georgetown Woollen
dills, Oeorgetotrrn, Ontario.
AmTacZEB Leon SALE,
a,uIcioneitRIS' sl 1 i'ione .-I nNO-
STItOTl and Jumbo hives and
ar ishings, honey extractors. pu»npa.
engines and storage tanks; a complete
stoetr of beekeeping requirements. send
for on eatatogug. Ilam Brothers Com -
pane. Ltd., Manufacturers, Brantford,
Ont.
BEt,TtNP FOR am.e
:WS OP' r;EtV ND it's&ti.
lento . pu1leya. earrst cable.bo$ ,packtnir,
ate-, ai loped tsat:;eet to approval at toss*
¢rlccsi Ili Canada YOflK nnr..'rzs GQ4
tee Trot{. trrawicrr. TORONTO
Keep going, it: y o:t tra et w
ae
•auaerieles a'ipme i• Dog itontedtss
g00% on
DOG DISEASES.
nasi ,Flow to Feed
Mailed .'leree to any Ad.
dress by the Author.
Ii, Clay fiiov r CO., Inc,
129 West 24th Street
New York. U.S.A.
COARSE SALT
LAND ,., SALT
Bulk Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
.1» CLIFF TORONTO
A Health Saving Reminder
Don't Wait
The "best man" Is an essential feu
• tura in all our marriages, and can be
traced back to the days of "marriage
by capture," when tho "best man" was
the comrade called upon by the bride-
groom to assist in the catching of his
bride.
The "honeymoon" was not always a
- pleasure trip as it is now; originally
it was a rapid flight of the newly -mar -
reed couple to escape the wrath of an
:,outraged father. There is no doubt
that the bride and bridegroom deemed
it advisable to keep out of his way for
at least a mon�eh, to allow time for lits
vows of venge7rnt'e to cool down.
The custom of giving protests to
bridesmaids originated in a form of
tell. The briee's girl friends went
through the form of preventing the
bridegroom and hie friends from tak-
ing ber from her home, a nock battle
ensued, each party pelting the other
with sweetmeats, and this was finally.
settled by t:e bridegroom malting pre-
sents to all the girls.
The euatom of throwing an cld show
after the departing couple is another
link with the past, but writers on the
history of marriage disagree as to its
origin. According to one view it
originated in the ""marriage by cap-
ture" days, when, during a fight at the.
bride's house, the nearest things that
carne bandy were thrown, Another
• explanation is that it, yas a symbolic
act on the part of the brides father,
sig eifying that he renounced all
authority over his daughter.
The throwing of rice was symbolic
of abundance and fertility, and clearly
expressed the hope that the bride
would live in plenty.
The wedding cake, still cut by the:
bride, is one ,of the oldest marriage
customs. The taking of food or drink
together by the bride and bridegroom
was always the principal, and some
timers the only, ceremony among primi-
tive people, and this is still the case
in many parts of the world to -day.
Variations—MacSweeney, McSweeney,
Sweeney, McSwiggin, MacSwiggan,
Sweeny, McSwiney, Swiney, Swy- L
ney, Swain, Swayne, Swaney.
Racial Origin—Irish.
Source—A given name. j a
There is little doubt that in many
las held you steady Chas been, not j
tween this group of Irielt- surnames I
and the Scottish family names of the p
MacQueen-MacSweyr ala'ss, for the ' s
cases there has been a confusion be- ` 1
Your own experience, but that of your f
arents. Suppose you had not had
uch parents? How far would your
i
given names from white• the -groups i
have. been d•evelnped are quite simi-
lar.
'J~he Well given name is "Suibh-;
neach," and belongs to that fairy- IP
name class which, incirdentely, is: ai-
uiost as large among the Teutonic as �.
the Celtic races. It means lite any the i
spirit or apparition of the strawberry
plant. The Scottish name was ""Sui-
bhne." It was, however, from an en- d
then -different •source, being :in. realli.y b
but the Gaelic rendering of the Nobe 1
and Danisih name "Swarm"
The MeeSuibhanea ghe", elan in Tre-
land: zeas a branch of telemorean
deet O'Neilis, of•Tyraihe, tlt,rough•on:e T1
"Aodh .An;racha"n," h�re her ':of "Donal •
am-Togdhaurh," one °or the O'Neill' •
princes, and a brother 'of a Suibh-
neach," who, crest -ea 'oval to -Scotland v
and es"tabiis{h+eih himself there and 'is
credited with being the fouii der of hhe
MecLaughiaa res of that Country,
There were several divisions of the a
117acSwiney clan ultiivately. Once seas i s
in Penal. Another bore the name of '
""11:(acSttibhat eaiglte i1a-Tuatghii (the n'
MacSwd'neys of the.Axt,"). lnoLber h
was in, Bauag�h, and stili another at y
Outtleauec e, in Cork. ' h•
The.'variation�s of the t acne at tee' Y
1aeed nI ..this athiok are, of course
merely' titre ,Mtgticired 9:oiii s. M
own experience have caarired you?"
There was silence foe a moment
lien the old minister heed cat hist
hand, ""Come and join your father's'
eople, Rob. There ere saints +till,
a a rd we need their help."
This Sad World,
Ile—"`Darling, why are you so sad?"
'Shoe (gulping down a• sob)—"Oh,
eeresit, 1 was jest thinking tris' will
e out' last evening together until to -
sorrow night"
Waite it in Stow heart :that every
d' ay ; is the beet day of the yeas.--
merson,
'The cotnvicttion �that yore. eau will
ir.�nish the peeverttlhiait •aaIn. , The 'co/l-
ie-time that. you can't -will ,padaly e
" h atev er ability :yeu have,
If you whir -take the trodl♦ble to srtuclir
nd think, you w'iiirl unquestionably
tenddt out alitong yourfollo,vs, If ,you
rill hhe'ow y+otireelf into your job,
Thetever it is, study ill you see and •
eat, reaiy,c�r*ave a"chra•uce to use all;
our powers, '• you need not generally;
omit 'sync ees, 'tori success.. will tee:-'
nu oast -A, Barton Hebb:ern. I
inard s Liniment for coughs and Colds
ISinard's Liniment prevents Spanish PM
Neves mind others' ingiratitud+e.
Shine en, .0, nobble s+ou1, "It nein
troubles •t+'be`ssnrn that some of hie
rays fall wide and vain into ungrateful
space an,:1 orly •a sus all part on il:ra r fl e: honer!'."
DID PAIN .DISTURB
i @/ V ■ tl ■Ji1■.4ii . •
HE pain and torture of rheu-
matism can be quickly relieved
by an application of Sloan's
Liniment. It brings warmth, ease and
eon -non and lets you sleep soundly.
Always have a bottle Handy and
apply when you feel the first twinge.,
It penetrates without rubbing.
It's :splendid to take the pact out of
tired, aching muscles, sprains and
strains, stiff -joints, and lame backs.
For forty years pain's enemy. Ask
your neighbor.
s -35c, ?0c, $l.40.
Agacl l in Canada,.;
At till_ dna gis.L
e
limmen
ISSUE No, l!3—'2.2
A minister, with two lovely girls, . At the first sign of It. Its Healing
stood entranced 1>y the beauties of a " Quail#las are Amaztng. THE
flowing stream. A flshernlan happen-; QLD RELIABLE.
Ing by. and mistaking the minister's : -- -
occupation, said, °`Kotchin' Haan,. aid ' NURSE
pard?"
""I am a, fisher of men," answered THINKS
. the preacher with dignity.
""Well," replied .Ute flsberman, with 9
•
an -admiring glance at the girls, "you " NOTHING BETTER
sure have the right kind of bait."
A Japanese wooer presenter his
sweetheart with a beautiful earth by
way of an engagement token,
Lydia E. Pii:kharll's Vege-
table Compound Advised for
all Women in Poor Health.
Toronto, Ontario. "I took Lydia
E. Pinitam's Vegetable Compound
for years and it is the only patent
medicine I ever reeommeud. I am a
nurse and it I find a, woman is in
poor health 1 always tell her to take
it. Although. yon know that doctors
and nurses do isot use patent medi-
cines I must say that T think there
is nothing better than your Vegetable
Compound. When I flrt took it
many years ago, 1 was so tired when.
I got up in the morning that I could
not eat, and when I went to bed I.
was too tired to sleep. My mother-
in-law told zee that Lydia. E. Pinke
ham's Vegetable Compound was just
what I wanted so I tried it and only
took two bottles when I felt better_
Since then I have found that there
is nothing that makes me feel so.
Powder and Perfume well, Lor it seems to build my system
right up. I don't hnow any other
With Cutieura Talcum medicine that has done so much for
An exquisitely scented, antiseptic 5 Ave., Toronto, Ontario.
13'0
powder. Gives quick relief to sun
burned or irritated skins, overcomes
heavy perspiration, and imparts a
delicate, lasting fragrance, leaving
the skin sweet and wholesome.
Soap25c. flbtnent25=tine. Talcon�25c. Sold
throughout theDominion. CanadianDepot:
iwmau Limited, 344 St.Paul St.,M l
uticurn oaps nveawithoutmug-
, women: —Mus, W. H. Pan rsn, 19
Wellesley
I Women testifyagain. and again. i 1 that they have been helped by Lydia
Ill. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
'"after. other medicines have failed.'
l It has been tried for nearly fifty
years and not found wanting.
I1 you are suffering from any of
., :m,e• , W., enerea . , the various ailments which aceom-
C S h Pini halo's VegetableIComweakness pound.
WARNiING! : Say "Bayer" when you buy : Aspirin.
Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are
not getting As , iris atachances?
o g t � pl�. Why take
Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer
,,.. � $ Y Tablets of
As iris " which contains directions sand cissa worked out by
physicians during 23 years and proved safe by millions for
Colds . .
Headache
Toothache
Neuralgia
a RCL1tisr
�Ne.11rii-i
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
.Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets --Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade mark ,(registered in Canada) of Bayer :Manufacture of 2•rono-
acsticacl5ester of Saiicylieaeid. While it iib well known that Aspirin means Bayer
rnanufa,eture; to assist-the,puldie againat.imitatlons, the Tabs t;s or rtaver:Cehirranrr
Fin be %tamped with Molt general ttade marl;, the "Parer Ci'o=s,"