HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1924-4-10, Page 71416.444.4.4.444.444,
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Scout .vvritca en scout pcctniac.
Ihc ist pccr raCities (Windsor)
meson of, Boy Scouts a' fe NI' e e ks ago•'
conducted an es -say eontes1: amongst
its members. `Pile subject wate.P.ThP
S'cout Promise." See-Lain:aster I). W.
F.. Ni10j of: the. 2red ,Ilonder Cities
' • .tProodie ti-tia "in to act -as Sledge0 ,
,tne papet.s- sub I tt6a.. °TIP ,pieleed eat ,
,.tWe. other ni.en to hell') °him, and these
,clat-,se the .easa 3' , ..written by
.Patrol Leader .Norman Streceett of the
• "Floand Patrol" as one of the best:
Patrol Leader Strevett's Essay.'
"On
in lionotn• I promise, to do my
duty to God and the King; to help
othanneetile at 11 tne, aud to cheY
the Seaut•Law." '
la is the per -muse that every boy
h is being; ac-
eepted into the great brotherhood of
13oy Scouts. It 'iseibdead, a great pro-
mise tor any person to make, anti the
,recruit must realize the iin,pertance'of
it. • That alone is licit enough; he
must carry out that promise with the
same ein,eerity in which he entitle; it.
As ono of our great sta,tesm,en once
said: '''My honor is my life, you can
tette my life but not iity- honor." So a
Scout sho.uld look upon his honor in
the seine way.
To do his duty to Gad does not neces-
sarily mean that he, atten,d •churelaaL
every service orgo aroun.1 with I n
recruit maktas when e
'
sad face as if he is efraid d th
things in the world .around him. In
InY view it,rne,ans that he- belongs to
a religioM° faithWhih he beldeves it
and thatThe is, interested enough la
the same to do the every -day church
work, and enjoy.- the. life of one -,who
has his trust in God.
To do his duty to the King is a
,
Puie which. any boy, no matter
Fine brisk flavor!. Best of all in the,
ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY -
amorek,•••
EDUCATION
,13Y, DK J, J. MIDIDI,ET014
praetacial Board of hi eeith, Ontario
'Or, paidaietaa non aa glad to answer questions on Public Health 1210.
,
ICars through this column. Address him at Spatlina Howie, Spa4123
•Creqe6RIt., '1'01-011t0.
Arterial disease is usnally an indi-
cation elf advancing year and tends
to begin at forty or forty-five. The
life of the arteries uia greatly in
different individuals and, poeuliaritioe
of this kind may rrin in families.
Strain, continual .strain, is one cause
of their degeneration, apart from the
,age of, the ,vessels, so that persistent
high tension is a most , important
cause Oa' arterial disease.
The•nexi; point to consider is what
eausos the high tension. It maY be
the result of an inherited tendency,
or of Bright's disease, lead poisoning, i
gout, pregnancy, constipation, excesses
. eating and drinking, or a laborious
occupation
,tvay. Slight disturbances of digestion
and attacks of diZziiiess are warning
signs. Eat very sparingly ander these
conditions and keep the bowels active.
It is well to take a purgative. Lead'
a quiet life and avoid oyer -exertion
.and :Fatigue, That is abont all one
cam do. Some tnediciaesare good for
lowering the bleed pressure. These,
the physician in "attendance will pre-
Iscribe as the occasion demands.
1 Mrs. L. A. D. wants to know the
symptoms of diseased tonsils. Some
of these are sore throat, swollen
glands oE the neck. If there is pus
exuding frof';•°- the tonsils they are
seriously diSeased. Symptoms differ
in _each case but spots on the tonsils
do not appear and disappear on short
notice as the correspondent suggests,
Symptoms of kidney disease include
puffiness or swelling under the eyes
e Any of th r f IA b d
be affected.' One effect of persistent
high tension is thickening of thehitalls
ot the arteries, After- a time, the
„tendency is for fibrous tissue to be
' added to or 'replace muscular tissue
The result is a narrowing of the lu- ',V„ith increased .or degreased amount
men oTthe artery, rigidity and 'Weak--lor urine pased according to the .
,young,, likes to do. Oue, will :elite
a group ef sanall boys lined up
. .
g G Perhaps.one will h
flag which he is proudly waving.
boys are, inwardly longing' tor the
when they will grow up nes
King's malform.
But .soldiaring i
the only way in which one may d
:duty to the For instance,
ethe :sitar, Boy Seeets In every
of the Empire sold tags, poppies,
in aid ,of the Red °TOSS,. In 1
Wlii ,fighting wata aotivity
ening of the walls, as well as
ed blood pressure. 4 A special and restricted diet is the
increasilticular form of kidneY disease it is.
howl Arterial disease or atheront.a, when best cure, and. it should be worked at
piny_ to serious effects upon the heart Th don't think radium treatment ad-
pal -
.11, see lit affects the. coronary arteries, leads 'under the g4midtiaace. af your physician.
symptoms are a high , tension pulse
ave
These
at..itliee are very
and the difficalty of re,moving the
In the young people the blood vessels
pulse beat even when pressure is used.
elastic. The walls, largely
s not composed of tissue, having the quality
his
dur-
part
etc.,
ands
they
acted as messengers. lookotits., and
hospital attendants; and did many
other tasks whichathey were able, to
_perform through Scout ,experience. A
Scout should respect his country's flag,
he should never allow it to be insult-
ed, flown upside down or in any way
liSused. He should always be proud,
no matter what part Of the world he is
in, to point to it and say "That Is the
flag I live 'under.
Scouting is not -meant to make sot:
tlie,rts out of boys, but to make them
men enough to do their duty to their
country when thale comes. One of the
inost beautiful things a Scout Can do
is to help other people., Ile is always
willing to give up .his, own•time and
pleasnre and at the same time be in
-
the highest spirits to know that he is
helping Someone. else along the road
t• ppfnesr.; -and success. A Scent
wi ver expect par fOr tvliat he does.
The pleasure is Iris 'and he realizes
•,that he IS, being rewarded through
the praise the one he has helped will
shower upon the Scout Movement.
When a Scout tindertake'S 'to obey
the Scout Laws that, he has previouslv
Laa• ec he has a very easy task ahe
of him if he will look at them th
way, but if he regards them as
drudge, and Ihinits that some of -the
are useles,s or foolish, he will firsd
no ',lemur° at .all being a -Scout.
Scout who knows he is able to kee
the ten Scout laws,will be al the rim
luispired o make the other fellow
realize what it.means to him. He will
always remembelne, Scout should be.
'Trusty, loyal and helpful,
Brotherly, courteous and kind,
Obedient, smiling and° thrifty,
Pare as the rustling wind."
visable in this . "
Bed-wetting in a healthy child :is
due largely to nervousness. It earl
be controlled by regular habits, the
avoidance of Iyino• on the b 1 •
stractmg The amount of fluid taken
of rubber. Such vessels do not break during the afternoon and evening. In
easily. If the arteries are diseased it I same cases it is a habit, but if it does
break may &emir. Sneezing "sometimes Inot stop soon, the boy should go under
acts as a cause of the arteries giving the care of the family ,physician.
.----_—....--_____a
CIIILDIIOOD CONSTIPATION'
Constipated children can find prompt,
relief through the"ti•Se of Baby's Own
Tablets,. The Tablets are it mild but
thorough laxative which never fail to
regulate the bowels and stomach, thus
driving out, constipation and indiges-
tion; colds and simple fevers. Con-
cerning them Mrs. Gaspard Daigle, De -
main, Que.. writes: "Baby's Own Tab,
lets have been of great benefit to my
Idttle boy, Who was suffering from con-
stipation and indigestion. They quick-
ly relieved -him and now he is in „the
best of health." The Tablets are sold
by Medicine dealers or by mall at 20c
a box froni The Dr, Williains? Medicine
13rockville, Ont.
Japan a Babies Eden.
•
Elaborate layette a are unknown to
'the 6,000 bable,s born amid the ruins
and havoc in Japan since th.e earth-
quake. If a mothenhas 'even sufficlent
warmth to share with it the little new-
comer is fortenifte, with the.dearth, of
clothing and sufficient bedding in the
ad ..devastated region. Yet, according to
Iles Jane Scott, jiist back from Japan,
babies are w,e1cOme, and family affec-
m• tion and considera.tion s,till abound.
a I
it "Fur babies and old people Japan is
A 4 paraclis,e," said Miss Scott yesterday,
"Old people are loved and cherished
1
re
by their families and given every con-
s sideratron. Seven hundred thousand
people in and near Tokio and Yoko-
hama are still living in tents aral bar-
racks, While suffering from cold ,and
inadequate clothing 18 still distressing-
ly prevalent, the people are full of for-
titude and uncomplaining, even pheer-
ful, under their hardships and losses.
The spirit of family love and con-
sideration, I think, unquenchable."
•
To a Fur Scarf.
'The trap ja-ahs• clanked and held hin• i
fast;
•°None marked his, fright; none lieand
his cries. ,
His struggles ceased; he lay at last ,
- With wide, uncomprehending eyes.
la nil watched the sky-, grawrdark above
• And watolied the. sunset burn to
. gray,
A.11 (.1 'limited in anguish while he strove
• To gnaw the pris,oned leg away.
Then day came ras,y from the east,
But still those steel jaws kept their
- hold •
no on watched the prisoned
But fear and hunger, thirst'and cold.
• oercased hy pain, hisdread grew
numb;
l'eight no more stirred his flagging
breath, •
Ile longed in vain to see him conte,
The,41111 biped, bringing
Tlic day flappe,d past on li,e,avy wing,
saw the shadows 'longer grow,
.A.,ho,peless, wrecked and dying thing
• Encircled by the trampled snow.
The,ri through the glooin that night
cameOne
Who eel, the thilid spirit free.
°I know thy angtvigh, little son,
o ono0. •toen tray6eec1 and tortured
Lift Off -No Pain!
Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little
"Freezone" on an Rafting oorn, in-
stantly that corn stops hurting, then
shortly you lift it right off with fingers.
)rour druggist sells it tiny bettle ot
"Freezono" for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, eoft cern
or corn between the toes, and the foot
calluses, without Soreness or limitation,
Have You .Found It SO?.
Hubby --?`What Youtaking that
patent medicine for -- you're well,
aren't you?" ° •
' Wifie—"Of course, Tani; but the ad-
vertiaements cf this (tape aretoo at-
tractive net to give it atrial."
THE QUALITY' OF BULK.
'TEA'
The duality of Bulk Tea is always
unreliable far several reasons. In the
, first place, b,eing, unlabelled its origin
unknown and there is no one who
has any particular responsibility Inc
its goodness. In the second place, it is
exposed to the,air and therefore very
quickly loses its flavour and f,re,shnes5.
ven 11 it were as good an ",SALADA"
iui e 11 place, It would ralhidlY de-
teriorate and in any case it would be
impossible for any dealer to follOw
consistently the same quality through-
out the year. "SALADA" always main-
s)
taiiinies tahn:otiiinvarying high standard, Dos-
gh skillful blending.
•- The Sugar Maples.
Lazzily lietthe fields to -day,
Blinking, up ,at the sun;
Steaming fences stretch away,
werians spring's begun.
And the Whispered lilt where the ice
block slips,
Is wafted by the breeze; •
Gently- astir in the tingling. ips
Of the sugar maple trees.
Drip, drip,. drip, drip,
Sodden fields may lazily lie,
Blinking tip at the sleepy sky;
There's warlt to be done In the fields
close by,
Drip, drip, clrip.
Merrily flows the shining stream,
Newly awakened to spring; '
Where the shadowy willows sway ancl
drown'
The .robin sits to sing,
Sweet is the whole of the out of doors,
Sweet is the breath of the breeze,
But sweeter still is the sap, that poura
From the sugar maple trees.
Drap,..drip, drip, drip,
Sweet le .the breath "which. the breezes
bring;
But Sweeter the song which tale
• maples' sing—
The first fresh song of awakened
spring, ' 'met to gro
Drip, drip, drip, •heel ,vos
moment
slat• role
Rear twice befere you speak epee, TORIP,S, si
Roses,
rose is biaubeoup
,
,Aad theiitintist 1anguJalit»n04tg "(113..8 I.
44,4. pioId^
Slicaild not its petals•h„Va.lte, barlstun-
• fold .
lecatise their. CrIniiiiiic muct turn
- to' gray'? •
Sit:Gadd it 'lament.' alttunia 411 e
caY, ' •
il'Ore tell lt youth grown tiO6'er-chteelte d
„ ,
and. <lids •
An•cl In a ea/Lice:soul. dpsp,itr. Nottolcid,.
its ardent, lilat'es.ontat'froin. the' Itis.s
. May? •• *.`•
Bettor to hicittra .4°Itr,,
Better to shed its feageinCe. or the.l
wind , • ,
To waft. abroad, and. blow froth, 'dela'
• and ,raind
Than iltourn Its"doom ,and never flaunt
• n flower!
Sweet ,is its 'day of beauty i tbe
•
bower,
Sweet -though it leaves no lingering
. scent behind!
--Stanton A. Coblentz.
A GOOD SAING TONIC
One That Will Quickfy Int
Your Health.
With the passiag af winter
people feel weak, depressed and
tired. No particular disease, be
systeni lacks tone. • You find yo
tired, low-spirited, unable to get
sleep at night. All this IC the PCi
closer in -door confinement of the
ter months, and shows, that the
lias become, thin anal watery. Ne
rioted blood in what you need t
you right, and there is no other
eine can give you , this new bloc)
surely and an speedily as Dr.
lia.ms? Pink Pills. Thie new blood
to every pant of the body and. au
improves the general health. Th
gestiou is toned up, you have a b
appetite, nerves are strengthened
sleep is refreshing. The value o
Williams? Pink Pills When the sy
is ruii, dawn is shown by the ex
ence - of Mrs. Rater "Arendt, Ra
scrag, Sask., who says:7-"I was.
badly run-down condition, and p
trated with nervonan,ess. •4 I did
sleep at night, .i.hn,c1 grew SD weak
when I tried to move about 1 woul
oVereorne with „dizziness. I 1;
about Dr. Williams' ?ink Pills and
a supply. After I had ta..ken a
boxes I began to feel, better.
tinuing the use of -these pills my a
tite improved, I:slept better at ni
and I was -seon as well as ever I
been. I have also givenhDr. Willie
Pink Pills to my danghter, aged f
teen, „with the ,be'st of, results,
sire ixe this way to ,express my ha
for ,:the great benefit I have fo
through, litiiguso 'theiet pills; and
recommend them to, otehers,in need
a" blood -building medioine."
You cam get these pills'through a
dea,ler in medicine, ar by mail, at
cents a box froM The Dr. William
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
"How .to Get Rid of .a Bore
Olid of the amusing and original
characters in Pa.ris is M. ,Sachat,Gut•
try, who made his fEune as. adfor and
playwright; and who haatineneesed
prove
many
easily
t the
urself
sound
alt of
win -
blood
w en -
o put
medi-
d as
Wil -
goes
ickly
O di-
etter
and
Dr,
stem
peri-
ven-
in a
00S -
110t
that
d be
eard
got
few
C921'
ppe-
ght,
had
611T-
de-
nkS
11Pd‘
.to
of
ny
50
s'
•
it
by the oddities of Ms temperament.
He as a witty, versatile and quick -
minded man and n naturally' inclined
to be impatient with bores. laeceiatlY,
says the Sketch, there was one who
plagued him with unnecessary calls.
One day he burst 111 on Guitry,„ who
greeted him warmly, though that
morning the appearance ,ef the man
put him more "on edge" than ever.
"Just in time," said Guitry. "I want
you to see a new cenjuring trick I
have thought out," and he grabbed
the unsuspecting -viiitor's hat and ex
•
claimed, "Watch!"
Then Gaitry poured a jugful of water
into the hat. The owner of it, got- up
in alarm -
"There now," exclaimed Gultr,y petu-
lantly, "you've made Inc forget my
trick!" •
• The "trick," however, is reported4to
-have worked admirably. The -same
visitor ha's not troubled M. paltry
since, '
.
Dominion Express Money-Ordeni are
on s:aletin, five .thousand offiees'throtigh-
..
out Canada.
Noblesse 9b119e.
An impecunious tenant had not ,paid
the rent of hisr room font Several
months.• • --
"Loek here," said the landlord, "I'll
meet 'you halfway. .1 am ready to for-
get half of what you owe!"
"Right. I'll meet you. 111 •forget
the other half!"
Ask for Minard'a and.tako no othoc.
• c_
•
A Poor Champion.
Jack --"Father, one of ,tare boys in
my classi.,•said 'I looked like -Jell."
Father—"What did you say?"
Jack.--"Nothint He's a let higge
than me"."•
The, gro.ss ,agricultural wealth of
Canada in, :1922 was esthnated at $6,-
774,461,000 of Which $681,Silii7,000 was
represented by live stock. ' 'The eSti-
mated gross agricultural', ',revenue
amounted tO $1,420,170,000..
ar, •
How Would You Like to
Grow Irlair in a Monti -A?
(letting bald. 1nlr falling i1ntl tadlry 2. te bIt
w nem healthy lialr right away 1. 0111; t
1/W1ite1y Prue, a sample Of the . fatimata t
(Ilatula hair. , 310 hoar. to Obligation •
taloa to ,AJJ:xxoqiiaj iAtknst,
4 1101,50 utais., Toronto, Caustts.„
-3ASY TRICKS
• No. Il33
The Missing Mindreader
83)
'Phis stunt requires a confed-
erate but, as the confederate's aid
Is acknowled,gee,
l it is vary effect-
• I've. A spectator is asked to men..
tion, any number, not greator than
9-9, to the performer who agrees
!peocctottniocie.:11ttoedooens niont knAonwotItiteer
enerahs,r, calls on the phone a
friend of the performer, described
as a great mind reader. The
"great mind reader" tells- tbe
number upon which the performer
Is concentrating. ^
The performer doe ,s not men-
tion the name of the mind reader
until the number Is decided upon.
ThJs is because the name of the
mind reader is the code word
which tells the confederate what
number has been selected. Two
series of code letters must be re-
membered by the performer. The
confederate can refer to -it written
list. Jack means one, Frank
means two, Fred means three,
Will. means four, Henry means
five, James means elx, Daniel
means seven Albert means eight,
Arthur means nine, Charles
means naught. ThaE gives the fig-
ure in the tens column.' For the
unit column, Stein means one,
Berg means two, 111111er means
three, King means ,four, O'Neill
means five, O'Connor moans six,
Smith raeans seven, Jones means
eight, Castel means nine and Wav-
erly means naught.
If the spectator decided upon
83;,the performer would say to
the other spectator:
"Please call Blank -7871 on the
phone, ask for Mr. Albert Miller
and ask him of what number I am
thinking." .
The confederate, who would be
ready to answer the phone, would
know, when "Mr. Albert Miller"
was asked- for that tie number
was 83. Of course, the trick could
not he repeated the same evening
with the same spectators.
(Clip this out and, paste it, with
otker 01 the series.,in cz scrapbook,)
c Painful Confession.
Billy was in tears when he came
home from school.
"'leacher whippednne because I was
the only one who could answer a'ques-
tion she asked the class," he stilted.
'His mother W2tt indigriant.
Why, I'll see about that! What was
the question, Billy?" -
His eyes lighted reminiscently.
"She wanted to know who pat the
glue in her ink -bottle!"
Keep Minard'a L.,1nIment in the house,
Posoketed.
"What did the editor offer you for
your poem?" asked Scribbles.
"Five dollars," jinglea. replied:
"Why; that was.- no better than an
insult,' said Scribbles. "What dkLyou
say?"
"Nothing, I just pocketed the insult,.
It was -the best thingto do with it."
To explore Britain thoroughly 1,y
'motoring over its full length of high-
ways would take 1,773 day, travelling
at one" hundred miles a day.
Who will help everybody, will help
nobody.
Beware of Imitations
ignIese you sea the I/3111 "Bayer
Cross" on package or on tablets you
are not getting the genuine I3ayer As•
pirin proved safe by millions and prat
seribed by physicians over twe.ntY,
three years for '
Colds Headache
Toothache iminbago
Neuritis .Itheumatisin
Neuralgia Pain. Pain -
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
only, Bach unbroken package' coa.
tains proven directions. Randyboxes
Of tweive`tablefs cost few cents.- DrtIg.
7304utept,,c;4wor
ofia9.tr-dostura.cf.n.
P'00,P(411/Ar94,4
Pt? raislar Zi'c?"
Chum titieper
shoviih, nem&
Cd troaettwrir
t bring you the fedi riehneAs
. and mellow 'sweetness of this—
Nannfactured by
IMPERIALTOBACCO CO. OF CANADA LIMITED
That Can -Opener.
"Can 1300 the lady of the house'?"
asked th•e canvasser.
"Yea, you can."
"Well, naadam, I am selling a can
opener which cannot be hearten. It
opens any can that can be opened with
a ca.n opener, and any can can be open-
ed by this can opener that can be
Opened by any can opener. If you can
show me it can I can.—" °
But the door was shut, and he could
Dot.
Every scratch in the hand is not
a stab to the heart, nor does every
false opinion .make a heretic.
What weapon does the earth most
clo.591,y resemble? A revolver.
Cold in Head'?
Heat MInard's and inhale. Quick
relief assured.
An enemy to germs.
Nothing More. '
Nurse--2930bbie, you shouldn't tease
your little sister."
Bobbie ---"I'm not. I'm just anausine
111.3"S elf."
Classified Advertisements
-COLGR017hRS—00TTS AND
V T Rejects accepted for limited
time only. Apply Georgetown 'Woollen
Mills, aeorgetown, Ontario.
!IV
NIGHT fe
, MORNING
KEEP_ 'YOUR EYE
CLEAN CLEAR AND HEALTH
Wart. 00A PAZZI Val 055.1 1500K- ArtY,S. IYU 5.411405,1
555
J.ro
Thin, nervous, underweight peopla
tahe healthy' flesh and grow sturdy'
and ambitious when tBitno-Phosphate
as a-uaranteed by druggista is. taken a
, few ,weelts. Price $1 per pltge. Arrow
r Chemical Co, 35 Front St. East
'Toronto, Ont.
! "You don't need mercury, potash
or any other strong mineral to
cure pimples oaus,ed by ,poor
blood. Take xtract of Roots—
druggists call it "Mother Seigene
Curative Syrup—and your skin
will clear up ae fresh as a baby's.
It will sweeten "yohr siomeoll and
regulate your bowels." ,Get.the
. . , .
genuine. The target' bottle is
more economical..At drup stores.
Pimples Disappear
I First Compounded
This Remedy For
My Own Neighbors
,
Their praise of this newer form of Iron
has spread so rapidly that now,
after nine years, over 4,000,000
people ttse it armually.
Years ago I hes-an to won,der at the
great number of° nay ,own.friends. and
neighbors who Werealways ailing,
complaining and' doctoring, without
ever seeming to get any better. Both
working men and their wives were
frequently all tired out in the evening,
and a great many were weak, nervous
and ran-doa-n. One had pains in the
.back and thought he had kidney
trouble. Anothe,r had pains itrOrlititi,the
heart, palpitations and dizziness and
,
Was sure he was sufferin,g from heart
disease. Still others had severe head-
aches, floating spots before the eyes.,
tender spots along the spine and a
great variety ef als.rming'symptama.
rat years I made 0 special study of this eoudirion,
censillting a great number of phyalelats and phern-
Istit Air Ira:ilium number of InvestlgatIona by
Physiaiaus all over the country showed that three
people 0111 C7Crr. 1014.r you meat laok 100, nor rent.
irrin lo .1130ir blood. Lack or Iron In the blood iS 1
the grad:tett ot all delltallging wealmeases. It la 'the
iron ,in yetr blood that enables yo5 to g.t the
nourislutont out of your food, WIlhont Irtm,
g ,c,:lio,cels 5,1.1.01u 1)051)goveittla " "1,0-lovi tarn sl et,4
nOurlahnient from the blood streamand when the
blood lads iron and Is thin, pale anilwatery, 30)1'
1505 s.uftor from ilia sYmPtems of a ;Pauli :ntimber
of diseases When the real and type Noise of all
your trouble .10 a lack of iron tue, blond.
In the oItl days people often took metallic; :I'm
whieh 00050 tlalin la not abaorbed at an.
In earnpouildIng Numitod Iren 0 use the towor
form of Iron, 14.11101 18 like the iron in. your blood
1
7)tulinkl.(1'sotalti° 1:ludnecurliart°.eth17.17S:rtnt:::::1:11 0115 1101
tho, tooth nor (111;111117' 11144 a0r1111011, and it II ready
he blood. /t la the 'merge whote blued ia Y1-13 in
ron who possoss gron.t. tronsth, core° snd oteigy,
f you aro not strong or wan you owe it to YoUrse'lI
'make the following 1001:
,
11)
•a4.11ts ty,7avlionAto,111Zilzlinc;at tlWrelk. 'elxl°t.W al
0 ISa 5-
titaL lableta Of ILciuxatail Iron thrSa times a. da,
110. bleala for tap weds—then teat your strsysth
gain and see how much You 11.Ave gainid, 511
stonlahIng number of nervouS, nott•41.0avn 100ple
to ware ailing all the while; h111
are gralay trunrOved
lodr health and Inerased their srretr,ih, 'enemy
erultrauce tanaply IP' tal, lug ne',155 rarai
it*
Mul Ilhe the . iron in Upluttelr, imItps and
gists also sell bottles 01 '24 and 100,11
Azpirft is the trade mark registriretli
In Canada) or BaYeit Manufacture of 11
IsTonoaceticacidester ' of Salieylicaeld
h
While it is wall known that Aspirin t,
ineana Bayer 1Ylanutacture, to 055131 h
he public against imitations, the Pah I
eta of, Bayer, Company will be stamp. j1;
d with thele,genenal trade mark, the
I
BA,Trer croor,"
PLES
Large and Red. Itched and
Burned. -Cuticura Heals!
"My face was itchy and broke out
with large red pimples. They were
scattered all over my face and Ached
and burned so that I scratched which
...caused them to grow larger. I.Fould
:hardly sleep at night. They were a
real torture and my face was a sight.
"The trouble lasted about three
months, began using Cuticurza
Soap and Ointment and the first
'treatment stopped the itching and
after using two cakes of Cuticura
Soap and one box of 'Cuticura Oint-
merit I was healed." (Signed) Miss
Ora Goulette, R. F. D. 4, Box t36,
Barre, Vt., March 24, 1922.
Use Coticura Soap, Ointment a.nd
Talcum exclusively for every -day
toilet purposes.
Sample Each rresbylEall. Addresa:"ZYnnatiCatiVi•
!tad, Sit St Dmil St., W.,Siontreal." Sold every-
where. Soap 213e.. O1nient25 and 50r. Taleura2So.
ISEW'Cuticura Soap shaves without must.
TO EXPECTANT
0 HERS
A Letter from Mrs. Smith Tells Holi4,
,Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound Helped Her
Trenton, Ont.—"T am writing to you
in regard to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound. I
would not be with-
out it. I have taken
it before each of my
children was born
and afterwards, and
find it a great help.
Before my first baby
was born I had short-,
nese of breath and
ringing, in my ears.
I felt as if I would
never pull through.
One day a friend of
my husband told him what the Vegeta-
ble Compound hrid done for his wife atict
advised -him, to take a bottle home fot
me. After the.fourth bottle was a
different woman. .1 have four children,
now, and 1 always find the Vegetable .
Compound a L2',TEISAi 1101» 48 it eeenas to
' f emen' (Nester. Truro -amend
falai«, con . °,`;'' r,
it to my :taiiencs. --al is. RE
SMITH 'joint St.. Trenton Ont
Lydia E. Pinkh any s egetab.e
om-
pcud exaellent Medicine for ex,
peotant inothera,,and shonid be taken.
during the the entire period. it has n ,gen.
°rat effect to strengthen and tote iat the •
entire systeM, so that iit May Work in '
every respeet effectually as naitte n.
-tended, ThatleandrS whinen testify
to this f IbIp No,