HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1923-5-17, Page 71ADETO.RTURRIG:
-BOMMRDION
N
FAMOUS LONG RANGE
GUN 'WHICH SHELLED
PARIS.
S.
Cast""ian Essen, Not in Austrian
Slant, Director Told Belgian
Envoy After Armistice.
One phrase of the controversy anent
the fa sus "Big Bertha," which is fill- blood enricher and purifier no other
medicine can equal Dr, Williams' Pink
hag dolumns in the French press, has pilin.
been cleared up by a Belgian—former They bring to Ilio blood just the
Lieutenant Maurice Berger, who, short- t elements necessary to restore it to
ly after •thearinistice, was sent official- normal richness and redness. Thiat is
ly to• Germany by the. Belgian General
why so many sufferers from sciatica,
Staff., says a Brussels despatch,. While and other farms of nerve trouble, have
there,,Lieutena it Berger visited Essen, found' relief through taking these pills.
where he was tali by Herr Wittfeld, Mr. D. M. Anderson, f3eachburg, Ont.,
director-general of the Krupp works,' tells what Dr, Williams' Pink fills
that the famous long range cannon was
liave done for him as follows; --"Some
made there, years ago I was badly afflicted with
This is contrary to the general be- sciatica. T could hardly walk and suf-
lief that "Big Bertha" ryas made at the faired great pain when I died sp. I went
Skoda works In Austria, where A.meri- to a doctor, but his medicine did not
can officers are reported to wave seen seem to do me any good. A roan who
it. What they saw, according to Allied was working with me told me he had
A Nerve Trouble Due to a
Watery Condition, of the Blood.
Fierce darting pains. Pains like red
hot needles being' driven through, the
flesh --in the thigh, perhaps down the
leg to the angle—that's. sciatica, None
but the victim can realize the 'torture
of, this trouble. But the sufferer need
not grow discouraged; the trouble Is
due to the fact that the nerves are
being starved by poor, watery blood,
and wilen the blood is enriched the
pains of sciatica will direpP ear. As a
officers who were in charge of the
Skoda works• after the armistice, was
along, range gun resembling the "Big
Bertha. Pictures of the gun at the
Skoda works wore.published in a well-
known French magazine, in' the belief
that' the Bertha had *been. discovered.
Development of. 1918 Gun.'
Lieutenant Berger was told at
Krupps that the long-range cannon
which; fired on Paris was but a develop-
ment o•f the big gun which the Ger-
mans trained on Dunkirk in 1915.
The Paris Bertha "was born of a de-
sire to fire upon London in case Calais
was raptured." No new theory was
employed in its construction. It was
like the other super cannon, only
longer and more resistant.
Berger said its calibre was 8ei
inches, its length 69 feet, and its muz-
zle velocity about 5000 feet a second.
The manufacture of the gun was so
closely guarded that mast of the di -
meters, of the Krupp works did not
know of its existence until Paris was
fired on the first time.
It was designed principally by Herr
Rosenberger, an artillery engineer,
who is sand to have felt such remorse
over the gun killing so many women
and children that they refused to let
anyone speak to him of this • master-
piece of ordnance.
How to "Keep on Topping
pts g
Your Last Success:
Mary Roberts Rinehart says: "The
most difficult thing about writing is
that one must always top his last suc-
- cess, and, when one thinks it is a real
success; it is almost impossible to top
it.
The moat progressive souls, these
wlio have Left their mark upon their
age, always. tried to top their Pant suc-
cess—to "beat their last batch of
rails," as Andrew Carnegie used to ex-
press it, in conectlon with his steel
plant.
From the start we should form the
habit of always trying our best, to
make the to -days a little better than
the yesterdas, and the to -morrows. a °
little better than the to -days, It was fl
lthie habit that made possible the 8
achievements of the great masters of fl
the past.
Unless the habit has been firmly es-
tablished in youth, few people have the
stability of aim, the persistence of ef- m
fort, the anteneity of determination to 0
keep on topping their last.`sQcces.s af-
ter they have reached mi'd'dle lifer
once been like that and that Dr. Wil
Hams! Pink Pills had made, him al
right. I' began to take then, contin
Ing to work, and the trouble disap
peered, and t did' not lose. a clay, al
though sometimes I suffered terribly
Later I had another attack, and again
the pills came to my relief. Now
take three boxes of Dr. Williams' Pin
fills every spring and fall, and I have
had no attack of the trouble sine
that time."
"You can get these pills through an
medicine dealer or by mail at' 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams' Meda
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Plant a Tree.
Ile who )slants•. a tree
Plants hope.
Bootleg up ,thl-ough fibres blindly
grope;
Leaves unfoi'd lnto, horizons free..'
So man's life nru�st .ollmb
From the clods of.time
Unto heavens, sublime.
Const thou prophesy, thou little tree,
What the glory of thy boughs shall be?
He who plants a tree
Plants a joy;
Plants a comfort that will never clay,
Every day a fresh reality,
Beautiful and stropg,
To whose shelter throng,
Creatures blithe with song,
If thou couldst but know,thou he:pp
y
• tree,
Of the bliss; that shall inhabit thee!
He who plants a tree
He plants peace.
Tinder its green curtains jargone cease;
Leaf and zephyr murmur soothingly;
Shadows soft with sleep
1 Down tired eyelids creep,
Balm of slumber deep.
Never hast thou dreamed, thou blessed
i tree,
Of the benediction thou shalt be.
-Lucy Laramie
Divers and Dogfish Fight Over
u- Gold of Sunken Laurentic.
- The Racer, a salvage ship, has just
- left Portsmouth, England,'for Lough
- S y, w ere the aurel/tie was _tor-
pedoed and sunk in January, 1917. The
I
Laurentic carried a cargo of bullion
Pink for the United States• amounting to
£ 5,000,000, and of thin just over £ 1,-
e 500,000 has been recovered.
The other £3,500,000' of golds lies
Y scattered about th'e bed of the sea off
the north coast of Ireland, about fit-
- teen miles off"the entrance to Lough.
Swilly. " 'Phe Racer; had been working.
until August of last year, but the
weather then was •so rough that opera-
tions had to• be stopped. The gold lies
at a depth of twenty fathoms (120
feet), and as the rough Atlantic has
beaten the wreckage into fragments
it is mostly hidden under sand, which
makes the divers' work more difficult,
The decks of the Laurentic are now
settled on the':sea bottom and cover
an area of several hundred. feet. Steam
suction pipes operated from the Racer
remove the sand. During the breeding
season male dogfish are a. great trou-
ble to the divers and attack. then furi-
ously, but in spiteof
Y, P all difficulties the
greater e part of thegold`is x
g expected
p to
be recovered.
When. Crimson Tinges the
Maple Buds.
When crimson tinges the maple buds
And heavenly light a grey earth floods;
When the chickadee's 'elfin horn is
heard
In• leafless woodlands -0 happy bird!
0:happy bird, "phoebe, phoebe"—
Thine airy piping brings to me
Forgotten lays of Arcadie.
When faintly sighs •the, wind as it
passes', -
And' green flames run in the faded
grasses;
Or slanting streams, of rain descend,
Through singing vaiese their way to
wend—
() little sinning drops o sin
Which patter on my window -pane,
I am in Arcadia again!
- Helen Merrill Egerton.
Lighting -Up" In the Air
All Britisih aeroplanes wi14, in future,
when flying' at night, carry rear
lights—on eaoli wing tip and on the
tail. 'Blies is: a new Air Ministry regu-
lati�on. "Lighting-up time" will be malt
an hour before sunset.
will h L
From Toronto to Trinidad.
Many animals In the course of the -
year, or in the course of their lives
undertake regular migrations.
The eel, born in the sea, returns to
the sea to breed and die; other fishes
visit the sea yearly; seals, walruses,
bis'ons, bats, all have their seasonal
journeyings; and even insects and
toads` have their periodical fiittings,
But the most wonderful migrations
are by birds, who in autumn flit from
temperate to tropical zones, and in the
spring return to: the temperate. zones.
Their migration
be due t
may o the
food question, and year by year they
niay have learned to fly rather afield;
but it is strange that they „always mi-
grate from the tropics to the north.
temperate, never to the south temper-
ate zone; .and there are many other
things about their migration very dif-
ficult to, explain.
For some years investigations have
been made at Washington' to' deter-
mine how far birds travel in their long
migrations. More than 200 birds have
been, caught and labelled, and sent off
on their travels from a lake near To-
ronto, and thus the distance of their
migrations has been measured.
, So far the record for speed and dis-
tance is held by a blue -winged teal.
It was labelled and set free on Sep-
tember 24, 1920, and it was killed nine
weeks later in a swamp on the island
f Trinidad. The distanoe.as a bird
les between Toronto and Trinidad 1s
,000 miles. So that bird must have
own about 50 miles a day for nine
weeks.
Then the great majority ;of'those who
have had brilliant careers up to that
time begin to slowdown; they do not -
put out anythink like the same ramount
of effort they did before. They do
their greatest work before they are
fifty, and some 'before they are forty-
five.- After that, as a rule, their am=
bitions are not quite the same, their
Ideals are not quite iso clear cut and
vivid, and the"re la a falling off all
along the line.
Now, a man should keep growing
I Blear to th'e end of hie life, and one rea-
son why his work begins to lose some
of its snap around the forties or fif-
ties is that most of us' expect to de-
teriorate about that time, and we'stop
trying to better our best. We don't
put the same vim into our effort. We
don't start each day with the deter-
mination to put the best of ourselves
into the day, to better the best we did
yesterday, to excel everything we have
ever done before.
'There is only one way to keep top-
ping your last success, and that is, to
make it a life rule to try to better your
best every day: ----0: S. iIarden.
An Aristocrat.
16t 1%40.116(a -1s he exclusive?"
2nd Mtmse--"Ishcufld nay so.
jives in a c001 bilil"
Pool' Soup.
Waiter (set'vlttg'soup)---"•books like
*ten sir."
• CU est With ^ s -• r a1''es - anti
, l tsiks 1'ika 'tilshwai .i,
To get, the habit. L of reading<.lseful
)oke is to •ani exit) of the run, Heat
ad to altot
of the 1
�Qe
�sad xt
There should be something in a
an's life greater than his occupation
r his achievement; grander than ac-
quisition of wealth; higher than gen-
ius;
en-ius; more enduring than fame.
HEALTH D ATI
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board of Health, Ontario
Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat-
ters through this column. Address him at Spadina House, Spadlna
Crescent, Toronto, '
"Citizenship!' was the theme of an
address by Lady Baden-Powell during
her recent visit to Toronto She said,
that although the viewpoints of cite'
zenship dif?ered gi oatly, hers wee e
first the mode of living, and second
the mode of doing. That was` where
Lady Baden-Powell's hobby of girl
guiding calve into play. •
There is no reason at all, however,
for applying this viewpoint solely to
girlsandboys. It can and does apply
to everybody, and from the standpoint
of health it is most important.
The mode of living means much to
every •rown-up just, as it does to
every child. How often this mode or
Manner of livifig is at fault! In our
daily lives we: see otirsolvos doing the
things that 'the good fairy called
"Ilealth" - warns us we should' not dot,
and .similarly' we leave undone many
things that from a health standpoint
we should do. ` .
' People often bring ill -health to
themselves through neglect, or delay
in putting matters right thaat; eo4 at-
tention. Even such
t-tentior.vensuch a simple thinh' as
o nelected :oath nilly catnap uittoi
e 1 r i .: Not, only is the e
t h' N o rsoi'
0
V
g l
p.
a;
inconvenience distressing, but ft may
gad to poisoning of th' s stem
l e Y wlt�
t,he'comnion result --rheumatism, indi"-
gestiori, and similar complaints,
Our daily habits of life have a llro
gll (l bearing on our state of
�.
h
eel�
.
h
,
nn run,. Some,peo to are not parci t is the routine that counts in the
,Ong
about o daily bath, others for -
et or re averse toeleeprn w th
ilsir be -room, virad �� Open anig t
°there are neglectful of their personas
habits, and fail to get sufficient sleep
to keep their general body mechanism
fix perfect tone. Some people on the
-other hand are quite careful about
their personal hygiene, but neglect to
regulate their dieting and often over-
eat or eat' the wrong combinations of
food, thus paving the way for consti-
pation, indigestion and all their at-
tendant evils.
Another fault of many people is
indifference. They know the right
things to do to keep the body and mind
active and alert but fail to carry out
the actual duties that are necessary to
tnaintain health. Not knowing what
a profound influence daily habits have
on their future health and happiness
they treat good habits with indiffer-
ence and often drift into slip -shod
nnethods that bring ill -health sooner or
later in their train.
Our mental attitude has a lot to do
with how we' feel. If we are easily ir-
ritated, or have a tendency to lose
our temper on account of trifling an-
noyances, there is something wrong
with our nervous system, that may
Iead to other and more severe symp-
toms as tlin e .
e goes Qn.
1 • this re I rd the value of self-
tr l g1 can
self-
control 11 '•t n , %1 ch
0 1s a lirepOl t }
be done if we realize our position to-
wvards oar neighbors, and appreciate
the fact that our neighbor has troubles
of his or her own. A perpetual
gr uch, a t ndenoy to Paul-flnctiing
lack . e le v -
o s li a h o t� v ti
n a � $
bt
Y
posit of others will ifi'Set the benefits
thate
nom from an observance of the
ordinary principles of hygiene and
antation as they .a. 1 to each of us
in our daily life and apply
Your lletitale
How can you say that life's a weary game,
Monotonous and drugged with Bain and care,
When
the great reale of thought so glorious
Lies all about you beckoning everywhere?,
h n e..
Un xe
> d d
andunfettered
...� fat t'
�ele � QL"l may go
.. Y Y
Each morI
� 1 11ng down soxrl,, rapturous unknown trail;
6
Each evening when the days last task is done
Drink fresh from but us' soxrle jeweled holy grail,
How can
you say that lifes a ge.
ary game,
you are heirto kingdoms so
sublime •
To
ndr0U5hex' ; ,
sP eg In which God's angels keep
Your heritage which shall outlast all time?
—Kate Randle Menefee.
EASY TRICKS
No. 26
The Ferocious Lions
Do not scorn this little trick be-
cause of its apparent simplicity.
It Is a catch that is almost certain
to puzzle your friends if you pre-
sent it as if it were a difficult
problem.
Put a half dollar on the table
and around it place four matches
(or toothpicks) in the form of a
square (Figue A.)
"This half dollar is supposed to
be a lion. He is very ferocious
and this cage, is just big enough
to hold him."
Throw another half dollar and
a handful, pf matches on the table.
"Here is another ferocious lion.
How many more matches do I need
to make a cage for him 7"
If the answer is "four," the
trick is successful — from your
viewpoint. Figure B shows how
the second cage may be made
with three additional matches.
(Clip this oat and paste it, with
others of the series, in a scrap.
book.)
NOTHING TO EQUAL
BABY'S
Mrs. Georges Lefebvre, St. Zenon,
Quo , writes: "I do not think there.'is
any other medicine to .equal Baby's
Own *Tablets far little ones: I have
used them for my baby and would use
nothing else." What Mrs. Lefebvre
says thousands of other mothers say.
They have found by trial that the Tab-
lets always do just what is claimed
for them. The Tablets are a mild but
thorough laxative which regulate the
'bowels and sweeten the stomach and
thus banish indigestion, constipation,
colds, colic, etc. They are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 26 ots.
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
A Jack of Ali Trades.
A quaint notice appeared in a local
paper of a New England town, where-
in the name of the versatile advertiser
is the only thing here changed.
"Notice—I have opened a shop on
Front Street and am prepared to file
and set saws. I carry a line of Cigars,
Tobacco and •Confectionery and can
furnish hot oyster stews, boiled eggs,
etc., at short notice. Repairing um-
brellas and sewing machines, also bot-
toming chairs. Sheeting • .gallery in
connection. Henry Moss."
o o1;
Difficulties' Surmounted.
"He tried everything on earth and
met only obstacles."
"Well, since he took up flying he
seems to have risen above all his dif-
ficulties."
MONEY ORDERS.
Dominion Express Money Orders are
on sale in five thousand offices
throughout Canada:
Always the Game..
For an lidur the teacher had dwelt
withpainful repetition on the parts
played by carbohydrates, proteids and
fate in the building up and maintain-
ing of the human body.
At the end of the lesson the usual
test questions were put, among them;
"Can any girl tell me the three foods
required to keep the body in health?"
There was silence until one maiden
held up her hand and replied:
Yer Yes, teacher! I el broalcfasi; yer
dinner and yer slipper."
If you 'greatly admire a quality,
.you have at least a trace of it your-
self.
Constantlyy force to the r, • the
surface
best of that which 1s in you. Think
.h
and speak only thos,. things you wish
to become ,true.
Migard's Linintent Used by Physicians.
Two hundred Scouts on one hike!
Well, that's going some!
You dont read about that kind of
thing every day, nor is it perhaps de-
sirable that many hikes of that ldnd
be undertaken, but the Brantford
Scouts say that once in a whine it is
great sport. Two hundred of them
hiked from Brantford to Mount Pleas-
ant recently, prepared their lunches by
patrols, visited the big fish hatchery,
learning all of its mysteries from Man-
ager Jerry Edwards, participated in a
great big treasure hunt and generally
tad a wonderful time.
About six hundred boys of the Ham-
ilton district participated in a parade
and inspection by farmer Lieutenant-
Governor Sir John Gibson on Satur-
day, , April' 21st. It was a fine after-
noon and the boys, both Scouts and
Cubs, made a fine showing. After the
inspection Sir John preseinted a Cer-
tificate of Merit, signed by Lord Byng
of Vimy, Chief Scout for Canada, to
Scout John Milroy of the 8thi Hamilton
Troop. Scout Milroy was successful
in his. efforts to apply artificial respira-
tion to a man who was rescued from
drowning last summer.
Stratford will be Ontario's next city
to have a fully organized Local As-
sociation for the conduct of Boy Scout
work. At a meeting held in the Cham-
ber of Commerce a few days ago pre-
liminary steps towards. farming such
an association to co-ordinate the work
of the four existing troops and to pro-
vide for the extension of Scouting in.
the city were taken. Rev. S. A. Mac-
--done'll-is' the senior Scoutmaster of the
city and largely through his efforts
Scouting in Stratford is in excellent
shape.
The Boy Scouts of Chatham are mak-
ing arrangements to publi5ie a little
magazine of their own. Though the
proposed publication has not been
given a name as yet, it is likely, that it
will be known as the "Pathfinder" or
some other name typical of Scouting.
Chatham has three active Scout troops,
These were formed through the in-
terest
nterest taken in boys' work by the
Chatham Rotary Club and at the pre-
sent time are in a thriving condition.
Scout troops all over Ontario are
busy planning field days, short camps,
and other outdoor events to be held on
Victoria Day and on the King's Birth-
day—the latter a Dominion holiday
for the first time this year. Field
days of more than usual interest which
have already been announced will be
held at.London, Thorold, Petrolia and
Foxboro, troops from surrounding, dis-
tricts participating in each, The Lon-
don programme is part of the big Lon-
don Boys' Week being staged by the
local Rotary Club.
What might have been a serious fire
was recently averted by Scouts of the
West Hamilton Troop. Some small
boys playing around the ball field set
the grass on Piro, and high, windawhich
were blowing made things look pretty
serious just about the time the. Scouts,
who had been ant on a hike; arrived
on the scent. After an hour's hard
work underdirection of Scoutmaster
Cameron, the Scouts succeeded in get-
ting
etting the flames 'under control, thus
preventing the possibility of damage
to property. The thanks of the whole
community has since been extended to
the Scouts.
Largest Dam in World.
Quebec has the largest clam in the
world, the Loutre' Dam and the Gov;
ernment has induced capitalists to cte,
velop a Million' liorsepawer at Lake St.
John "Grande Lecharg" which will
cost over $200,000.
Ti
$1.00 A SKIRT --HEMSTITCHING 10o
. PER YARD.
Out-of-town orders prompt attention.
Lingerie and, Specialty Shop, 120 Dan-
forth Avenue, 'Toronto.
Auierieese lienee • boa B1'ni.eciied
13ool;. on
DOG DISEASES
and .11oty` to Beed
Mailed jailed I+'reo to Any Ad-
dreS's bytte A
1 t uhnr.
l.X. fi u l ♦ A
s v G o x t,0.t'.btisa.
121) West 54t let}est
Neto York, .S::1,.
,Yeeeeee ae sae
ISSUE No. 19 ••'23.'
HAD
TO F!GHT TO
GET 115 l3REATH
Reed Declares Gales Were SQ.
Bad He Nearly Choked
at TTInes..
"The best I owe say is not half good
enough for Taniac, states Frederick
10. Reed, 286. "Roxboorout;ll; Ave., Hamil-
ton, Ont., well-known business man:
"Last winter grippe and toeeilitis
confined mo to my,hoine for weeks and
left me no thin and frail it looked like
T could never get back to my business.
again. I would • choke up with gas
until I had to fight for breathes, waa so
nauseated I could scarcely retain a
thing, and pains In my stomach and
sides would double me up, I could
scarcely sleep a wink, and my hands
were so trembly I couldn't even an
range my tie.
"However, the Tanlac treatment
suited my case so well it ended my
troubles, increased my weight, and
fixed me up to where I felt as fine as
i ever did, I feel right all the time
now, and haven't missed a day from
my business since I finished the treat-
ment. Tanlac has no equal."
Tanlac is far sale by all good drug-
gists. Take no substitute, Over 37
million bottles sold.
Beware of Strangers.
Kate, the cook, had an inherent 'dis-
trust of mankind in ` general and of
banks in particular. Being of a frugal
nature, she saved a certain proportion
of her wages every week and stored it
up under her mattress.
For some time past she had been
"walking out" with the gardener, and
so her mistress was not surprised to
hear one day that she was going to
marry him.
"I want to ask you, mum," said Kate,:
"the best way to put my money into
the bank."
"Put your money in the bank," ex-
claimed the lady in as'tonis'hment.
"Why, Kate, I thought you did not be-
lieve in banks?"
"Ah, that's all right, mum; , that's
all right," replied the, emir- you
know I'm going to get married next
week, and I think the money would be
safer in the bank than in the house
with a strange man about."
Mlnard's. Liniment for sale everywhere
Woodstorte.
Woodstone is the name of a material
made of sawdust mixed with magnesia
cement and cem resse
p d under
enor-
mous pressure. This woodstone is
very like ordinary wood, save that it.
has no grain.
e;P
Greatness is measured not by what
men do for themselves but for others,:
ffiSi °fed Adl;erti "eiT
viyA2,1T1; —YOUNQ Lap
education to train as
course• d.pp1y- wenanctiq Uaaplt
wu'ii PO()ai
ones, ;Cluese +.a#
11t. O,:thaxhtes.
UnnaLkl'LF) sYlttrP, filttl,ir A'ltplx T[i1'{..
farm to tho consumer, 12. A, 0illeenta,
4bal,oteford, cue.
are, lax" 2 1741m 014 LAag twin, Thi W CTEB;C
Ontario, thO y'lorlcta of Canada, Seal tc;• Tt{lI
us'
S orma
tion
and our ep'oi1aI eixEY clic offer ' of frg®
return trip: grow tho bib's' tuonoy crops, fault, to -
bacon, corn, beans, etc., :its addition to 5onorel letxedi.
tarnbing, Sucoees Meal l=otate, ltlelihoim, Out,
-...GaNTS WANTED—$00.00 WEEKLY BELL/N0
hosiery. direct In 0tats, .factlrlcs,, looses,
est rnluoa, exclusive terrktorlpq. Tpiapglo
Dapt, 67, Box.: 003, Montreal,
Ali TsA.wuLItny PLANT$ rfoR SAi•,L—SnNATDIa
Dunlap ortiY--splendid roots, Well packedl $5.9
Per thoueanil,. $3.00 Per 500,. or 01,00 Dar • hutnitred-.:.
Laapene Orchards, Bloomfield, Ont,
1,800 Miles of Ribbon in
British Decorations.
It took more than 1,800 miles of rib
bon for tte 14,000,000 medals which
the British War Office has issued" since
1919, says a London despatch,. The.
most Oommon taken is the medal
signifying service• in the British army
in war time, of ,which, 4,700,000 were
issueU here,,and 600,000 in the amine,
ons. There were also 110,009 bronze
medals for service in the native labor
oorps -and victory, 'medals, of which, 4,-
550,000 were issued here and. 450,000
1n the dominions,.
ITATED BY'
SUN WIND UST &CINDERS
ItFCOMMENNDED 1p sots 8Y etwaei$3S, to- OPriehVig
Wq,Ta POP. EYC CA0.a 0001. moats; 0o.CnrCA00,V.L
PLAY SAFE!
With cuts and wounds. Pre-
vent poison, by applying .Min-
ard's. It cleanses, heals.
%R5, DAVIS
MERVOUS WRECK
TelIsiNomeilaHowShe Was Restored
to Perfect Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Connpolnhd
Winnipeg, Man.-" I cannot speak
too highlyof what Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-'
pound has done for
me. I was' a nervous
wreck and l just had
to force myself to do
my work. Even the
sound of my own chil-
dren playing made
me feel as is I must
scream " if they did
not get -away from
me. I could not even
speak right to my
husband. The doctor
said he could do nothing for .me. .My bus
band°smother advised me to take` the
Vegetable Compound and I'started it at
once. I was able to do fray' work once
more and it wasa pleasure, not a bur-
den. Now I have a fine bouncing baby
and am able to nurse her and enjoy do-
ing my work. I cannot help recom-
mending such a:medicine, and any
Geeing me before Itook- it, and seeing
me now, can see what it does for me. I
am only too pleased for you to use my
testimonial."—Mrs. EMILY DAvls, 721
McGee Street; Winnipeg, Man.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text -
Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to
Women" will be 'sentou free - upon
request. Write to the Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Co., Cobourg, Ont. This book
contains valuable information.
KeepsYour
Skin Fresh
.And Clear
The Soap
cleanses and
purifies t he
pores, the
Ointment
soothes and.
heals any
irritation,
redness or
roughness.
/ Treatment:
G�2 On retiring
smear the affected, surface with the.
Ointment on end, of finger. Wash off
in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and
hot water. Do. not fail to include the
exquisitely scented Cuticura Talcum
in your toilet preparations.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 ad 50c Talcum 25c. Sold
throughout the Dominion. Canadian • Depot:
Lyman,, Limited, 344 St. ;and St., W., Montreal.
Cuticura Soap shaves without srccg.
UNLESS you see the name "Bayer'! on tablets, you
are not getting Aspirin at all
Accept only an "unbroken unbroke1 plckage" of '
Bayer Tablets of
Aspiriniriil " which contains directions and dose worked out by t �
physicians .during 22 years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache
Rheumatism
Toothache- Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache
Lumbago Pain, Pan
�O
Ii}Tandy"Bayer"
tBayer i boxes of 12 tablets ---Also, bottles of 24 and 100--Vruggiats,,
Asiirin is rho trade mariarealstored In Canaan) of Bayeri:i
hlanuctoro of Niono-
tttc.icaMcIaOkst bf f:allcVltcaeiacid, wtilie it Ic we;t known that Asp[t'ln ra;.sills' 13rtyOi"; ."
manuttxtttire, to assl6t the Ilublld
agatnat Imltutiane, th,'rableto of 3aYar Ci4;nptaD$t
win be stanipa
WWiththeir .general trade mark, the "Bayer Cttlp'.."