The Exeter Times, 1924-9-11, Page 3NAME'S THAT MAKE
WORDS
as• de you kilehw.
-di
11)3' 'and
i,„„,orat, esiin
• e eaten
ecure men.9
'Most people can thilik ef a few of
the eommoner ones such as Welling- '
field (overcoat), and so on but it is. Folks Who want the very' best lase
tens lioetejt Bluchers (e' type of .halt
,
iref
011,
bo otsii Glad:St-One e(a beg ), , ches
not so so generally known thandlie worths- ,
r 'RED `- ROSE- ORANGE' PEKOE' "
ogiitudtiriv,;
Weenselstuti" are the names•.'4
e re&PotitiVe inveaters or innoyan
"Iilarilteit"; • "doyley'"; , • • • , •
. -
Cue flowers "feelislit" and "(tanned
are 'named after two Continental hot- ,
anis-ts Articles and Dael, .while the
)oWle -knife is so called'after a certain
bloodthirsty American., Cblenel
When we . say "Old 'Nick"-, for 'His
Sataiiic' Majesty end •"ma,Chia-v011ian".•
, for anything peetaining to him, we are
unconsciously . referring to Niceelo
EALTH EDUCATION
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board cid Health, Ontari
n o
Or. Middletowill Jo) glad to answer gulestions an Public fitealth IAA .
kink through. this colushn. Addrose hire et ilpadint Htesee, SpastiSa
Creecent, Toronte.
bsesse
•#‘40
n • •'5'
• •
,e,..,teniessasses
'ewe he essessi sefeid
Rernarkable advance has been made' children's dise,ases. Probably one lac -
h •i-
Maehiavelli of blorence, a clever
hardly done justice. in the prevention cind cure of disease to in our health standing is the p Ye
statessnan to whom historians have .
The Origin of "Dunce" . This can' examil'atch bY large rubber
during the Past few ;ears
• ' be attributed in large part to the gen-idn'tries 1-.)f all prospective employees
A "dunce" Neap ern -in -01y a term of • c t'on ith employers' liability
• • • e eral improvement in sanitation and lh °r•riec ''th IOW deeth
tow:sews esei .
Eighteen' whales' alongside this stile were.the leshills Of an 0?illecli-
'tsihoonwl,sut-,t°hoth.)9,e'erb:erinqesrouftii,h'therribleacpkhg°rt'oolgInrcial was eot . l'1:t3v. '131'1;et
UId
One Cure For All Disease.
What is disease? le it posSible, that
r5e
'We
• ""..'" TA..
vities sorierei'e vetil
. RoYa1 Ontario tl'11.,,s(3Jtri '
zqis 131nor St: Wet, 'kat fli,n, 11,,,::,,n, XAtrg,.^nt
, .
4,(;rni:41.0.3 ,,,,1111ntIon in,
41091u,kv,., :h.linvyn-lony„ l'.1;,,,(;:m ,1::,,:, , 'A iqn1;,,, , 0),Tn.
6 v. m, ; ;.3.:'..n.l.n,".. 2 IQ ,13,
- • -
711'171 VicAteltriMst StLe TC)0ArioNnt08. A
Mortgages purelleee itwyne
_
TRICKSEASY
PECULIAR§^.§. (er' The Cut Foretold •
CANADIAN \TEC NI:N.110N '
New Wiap .4„..reas of
Various Forfr:c of Vegeta-
tion aSeel Strik.
ing Features of Tree Growth
Lacic of kliewledg-e climatie andi
vegetation eonditioes nas caused manyl
mornieent travellers and visitors to
Canada to unjustly criticize this cause
try. , The same aliel. in many cases
greater ignorance of Canadians hae
peseeitted much of thee unjusie criti-
ciam. to pass unanswered and unre-
fated, with. the resutt that Canada has
often been unfairly condemned. .
Thie (stunt is invariably success-
.
Tbe Natural Reedurces, Ietelligence • r
tui if it fs performed in a trtetter
1 1 tfo ward manner.
NTsii(:\ torior, paroy as 0 ie,u, 0 g
diseases are really one, tied thee one eared and publislied an exceediugly In-
.
aavnetirclyotiommight, be discovered to cure ceteeeme..e • En.crs About This terestiug Vegetation and Forest Cover
, Man oe Canada This shows at a
That is the ist-er"ro., the • ery of eir. It '''''''''' l'-'1° hiell er-)P1' I all- glance the different zones of vegeta-
J. E. la. MeDoaagh,-F.R.C.S., discussed Many peeple 60 far misunderstand tion and their chief diatinguisning
I "'the Word To- a " y M t
nueaber•of enquiries received has pre -
d y b i r. J. Ab- he digestive system as to treat it like chara_cteristies, from what are knowu
knowledge of the science of healthful relearn, the femoral British surgeon, a machine; neglecting it until it work s a$ the barree la.eds, e i ,
living.' As coinpared vsith the death rate has slum d Mr, Tolinslcil Abraham believes that inuggishly, then irritating it into work sense barren but support a growth of
that ar n no
rate of 1880, a Million and a half lives this,: message -,—T a e ,
year according to figure's jUS t issued
, those are the things w nch count - -
fromone end
rule evatet, puo.re milk Jr pure. foed—
istrices for squalid templet -its '
tile cit to the other.
jell new ere' Wye crisis in modern medi- etornach needs help et all times, but
this theme' may ,be the beginning of a again by the use of putgatives. The hardy' grass. and vegetation •peculiar
were saved in. the United States ,last
Wide differences in the death rate, tality rate the reaeons given ate -erste- "Diet: e," he well es, "if , Mr. Mc- thew that pergatives, as commonls-
in some cases a little short of tragic, tically the- same :---"Vigilance of the Donagh's thesis be accepted, is simplY taken, are seldom necessary and often
a seetessful attempt on the part of harmful.
is a. healthful coridition of affairs. Health Department, and its result' on
rob the pro- r To safeguard your digestion the diet
are shoWn, while in other cases there
the invading organism to
Here' and there gepgraphy .• fnay , ac- pure food, the city clinic, the baby hos- ,
tective particles in the blood of their heist be controlled, Over -eating is al-
eount: for the 'differencee but in. others pital, the water. supp:y, a constant
free electricity; and recovery from ways harmful but one must assimilate
,
no dSuchlexplanation seems. adequate. educational campaign, the services of
disease is a reversal f
o this process, enough food to supply the neede of the
' • Very similar conditions prevail public health nurses and similar meas -
1 t tl 1' t ti • • b - h
throughout the cities' and rural- dis- ures." Measures ehat have been given
i ue o le pro ec ve paiticlee finally lood. Remember, the blood as to
tricts of Ontario., In some cases the,
' credit -for; keeping down epidemics,
ise getting the upper hand of the invading carry nourishment to all parts of the
,gerferal death rate is high, i
dn some elude the system of health inspection organism by recapturing 'this elec- body and find fuel for its energy.
especially water -borne diseases,
s the infant death' rate is high.' in the Schools, strict quarantine regu- tricity. Hence when the blood. becomes weak
' "It will thus be seen that the idea and fails• td do its work, indigestion
underlying this revolutionary doctrine arises. Therefore the sure remedy for
Is based on the electron theory—the indig,estion is to build up the blood.
theory which has already altered all If you auffer from any form of indiges-
modern ideas of physics, chemistry, tion cheese your diet carefully and
and electricity." , take whclesorrie neurislunent. Above
In Mr. McDonagh's view, the body all, start building up your blood. by
poseesses a general protective sub- taking a course of Dr. Williams' Pink
stance which- resist generally. The Pills. Then under the influence of the
basis of cure woulsl be in every case new blood supply, your digestive sys-
of organic illness the strengthening of tem will rc,s.pond naturally, your ap-
this substance; and, given certain petite improve and your food will do those of Sir Alexander MacKenzie, Sir
poisonous conditions, the antidote 'von good. So begin to improve your John Franklin, Senmel Hearn and
contempt need by • the followers of'laws." Anoth.er y NV1 a
Thomas Aquinas to describe the fol-
lowers of Duns Scotus, a very learned
echol6r "of the thirteenth century; but
the word iS now used for •a stupid or
ignorant:perm, •
• The werde "Herculean", and "Panic"
us of .Hercules, the girat hero,
• ' -to Whole' nothing -was impolsible and
of the God; Pan whe terrified belated
travellere• and. sent them - flyiny for
their lives:
• Charles Lyech of Virginia some-
".- time& took the law into Ins own hands,
_and "to lynch" now means to kill any-
one, summarily, „without a trial, es-
• pecially by hanging on the nearest
by- the CepSUS bureau. 1our fever. :In every case of low riaore eine- ' • a study, of the prooese• of digestion will
Reverse conditions are found in other lations among adults, the woi o
damp-pos t. •
- Silhouette Was a Frenchman._
A "martinet" is a strict disciplinar-
ian, and Martinet was a very strict
officer in the army of Louis XIV. of
Prance, while Silhouette was a Freiach
statesman, whossehobbyiwas "the mak-
ing of shadow pictures, -and Gulilotin
a French physician, who propeeed the
adoption of the instrument of death
which bears his name.
Burke was an infamous criminal
a -ho, with his partner, Here, suffocated
a number of people and sold their
bodies fob dissection. The two men
were executed at Edinburgh: nearly a
a hundred years ago, belt Burke, in par-
ticular, is• still. remembered because
IG ' t food mspec-
communities. • anti-tu eic ,
•
A city without slums and a Board of ition and well-eaforeecl sanitary regu-
Health that really functions are two lations generally. Added to this, and
important reasons given for the low of great imporienee, is the, medical
death rate in one city in Ohio. The fraternity of the cities concerned,
report says :—"A full time health dB- ' which co-operstes whole-heartedly,
cer laid the foundation of health work and a public which sensibly recegnizes
which hag been continued and expand -1, the value of precautionary health
ed. The enforcement of quarantine] measures.
in contagious and venereal diseases1 These points are worthy of consid-
has been very efficient. Mostly mod- , Grail= if health work is to be really
ern school buildings help keep down' effective in any commmiity.
\- Mosquitoes. and Malaria. The Sdfish Cuckoo.
nually from malaria number some tsvo will never cease to- be a matter of
• be multiplied by two or three linndred day after the young cuckoo has hatch-
. in the dictionary we. see: ."to-burkeews a we would -arrive at the total number ,
to in-undee, 'especially.: by sEifling; to of people in the world affected by the the ne-et, hut on the second day 'of Its
Pat an end.to quietly." complaint. •• ' life a change comes over it. It now
.---Boycott an Irishman.'
Malaria is mainly a disease Of the beccm es restless 1, and .irritable, and
"lioyeett"--to leave severely alone—
is another familiar ward' that conies
from a -name. . Capt. Boycott was land
agent on.a.big Irish' estate about fifty
years ago. The tenants United in de-
manding reductions in their rent, but
Boycott •refused .to meet -their de-
mands. As 6 result, ditherer& refused
to work for him, shop-keeperetdeclin.ed
to supply his needs, and he even had
difficulty in obtaining delivery of his
letters. Boycott_ lived... 's.iewn -nut'
popula•rity in the end, but not before
• the word- "boycott" had crept lute( cern-
.
mon use. -
' A doleful story of a "Jeremiad"—
Jeremieb. was the prophet 'who ''wrote
. the Book of Lamentations. •elMaudlin"
represented in pictures with tearful bites, it inieets a saliva in vibleh are tiny,hirds on his soft sides,' it grows
more and more irritable, and keeps
' eyes, and the sailors,' beloved "tree" the malaria para.sites. These' are car -
is e -o -called aftersAdmieal Vernon, who ried into ..the human circulator Y sys- restlessly jerking about. last its
wore grogram breech"es,anewas often
referred to as "Old Grog," ,Abont
1745, he ordered the sailors, to' dilute
their rum, and thus achieved imnised
• tality and a permanent place in the
English Dictionary. •
• It ie. es'tim'ated that the deaths an- The curious habits of the "cuckoo"
millions, and this figere may probably wonderment. It appears that for a
ed out it lies quietled at the bottom of
tropics, and is caused y ' t 'cents unable to bear the contact of
In one malaria patient may ,number anY of these still remain unhatched.
anything from one hundred to a thous- Indeed, it is the eggs which. it first
and millions. In many cases there are seeks totget rid of, its aides seeming
more parasites- in dhe system of a to.find the touch of the eggs unbear-
malaria patient than •tliere are peoPle able. Therefere, in moving to the bet -
on the earth, and for ages it was be_ tom of the nest, its backsforms a hot
lieved that marshes and. malaria -were low space wherein the ,egg sometimes
In some way connected_ *•
rolls, and When this is the case the
Sir Ronald Ross diseederecl ,that it young cutkor6 straightens itself, and,
was not the marslidbut the mosquito moving ba.clews.rds to the rim of the
,
which bred in the mdreh. which was nest, it ejects the 'egg with a spring of
the originator oe the disease; and 1).-- its tiny legs, and then returns to the
declares thee the parasite of 'malaria bottom of the nest.
is, to the mosquito which -carries a.s Its exertions have tired it so much
parasite rhe. blood. The parasites the other young fledglings, or eggs, if
a threepenny -bit wOuld be teearhippo- that for a long while it lies as if in a
comes from Magclaleneeewho ns -often W„.hen a 'disease -carrying mosgeito ;again -feels the pressere of the other
petal:lush • , • state of collapsee but gradually, as it
•
•
' A Mystery Fish.
',. The British Museum authorities
have notified thecurator of the Hull
• Museum of •Fisheries that a_ strange
fish caught off the Icelandic, coast by
a Hull trawler and landed at -Hull is
apparently unknOwn to science. The -6
• Is nothing like it in the national -col-
lection. s• - * s •
The fish is one yard in length. The
fish is very soft and flabby, and the
head is after the type of a halibut. Its
• entire surface, is covered with sharp
and hard conical spines resembling
white ivory. The ekin is coal black.
• Its tail relemblesaglovecleiandwith
Its tail resemblee a gloved hand
with eight fingers, between each of
which is a thin web. In the centre of
• the back is' a rod-like feature with, a I
tassel -shaped stiucture. At its end is
1
a red flesh bell, which, according to
the experts, is used as a bait to draw
smaller lisle near so that they -can be
enapped in the powerful jaws. •. • •
tem andesodthroughout the body.
•. The cure of malaria is quinine, but
the prevention of malaria is the des-
truction' of the mosquitain which it
breeds. '
' • Sheet; Tracks."
"Sheep tracks" running horizontally
along the face of steep slopesoa-Dan-
ish geologist sayse\tare.a natural forma-
tion. He calls the little paths "ter-
race-ites" and says they begin a
opinion on the question, the seven
as
wonders, of the ancient world are us -
loose
of horizontal cracks in. the
unity given as the pyramids of Egypt,
iwose earth caused by tire settling of
Pharos of Egypt, hanging gardens of
the earth to a more stable position:
Babylon, statue of Jupiter by Philias,
Once the crack le staited the action of
mausoleum of Artemisia, Colossus of
the rain causes the marking to become
-rapidly mor, distinct, and' it soon re -
Rhodes and the Temple of Diana at
sembles' a path made by
mits/lain Epheens. The seven wonders of the
Sheep and other animals naturally use middle Ages are as fellows: Coliseum
-the pa.ths, but they do not begin therm' of Rome,catacombs of Alexandria,
great wall of China, Stonehenge in
England, leaning tower of Pisa, por-
celain tower of Nankin ahd the
masque of St. Sophia at Constantin-
ople.
The seven wonders of the modern
world may be considered to be the
' telephone, radio, aircraft, radium,
antitoxin, spectrum, analysis and X -
movements eause a small bird to fall
on its back, and again it strains- ev,ery
nerve to make for thewim of the nest.
Seven Modern, Wonders.
The wenderz of the world' are us=
welly divided bete three periods—the
seven wonder. of the ancient world,
the Middle Agee and the modern
world.. is
Though there is some difference ef
to the cold .climate, to what is termed
Ontario, where ie, fou.rid almost sub- manner. Place the envelope on
the packet which was' the upper
the Carolinian zone, in siouth,eastern 1
pack—or ask a spectator to do
ti?o,Pieal• vegetation in the fruit belt- this and. Place the other Packet on
The enormous. area of Canada meet
01 necessity provide a wide range 01 .theTheenvreelostpeo.
f the trick consists
the northern country, extending from manner as possible, threess?;Ifraecta"
vegetation and forest conditions. In of showing, in as Map
tkheenzsihoordeeltoaf, HthuedswohBitaeysptoracthee sletrluagc:: tthhaatt yboeufory,rerotthee theearcnIsamweeroet the
gles for existence, while on the south- card at which the spectator cut.
other al the series, scrapbook.)
types of trees, the most remarkable ,
are found. a number of 'Californian
Minaret's Ltniment for Rheumatism.
being the madrona, or arbutus, the
only bread -leaved evergreen tree in
Observe, svhile shuffling the cards
which card is on the bottom of
the pack. Thisi can, easily • be
done, and will excite no. susspicion
as the trick d.oes not imneediately
follow. Borrow a business card,
write the name of the card son
observed on it and seal it in the
envelope. Before' doing '
place the pack of cards, face
down, on the table.
Ask the spectator to but the
cards into ,tWO parts in the usual '
eastern portion of Vancouver Island (074' thi3 °la and poste it, with
Canesla.
The new maptis an inteneely inter -
astir& one, and (me that will -conduce
to much study and 'investigation. An
immense amount ..of hitherto upublish-
ed information is shown there6n, much
research work was entailed, .and. the
notes of explorere and surveyore, from .
mos•t suitable for increasing the cone: digestion. by starting to take Dr. Wil-
densed power of the protective par-ilia.ms' Pink Pills now.
ticles could be worked out by chem- ' You can get these _pills from your
-
idruggist or by mail at 50 cents a box
lets.
This antidote would be a cure-all. It from The Dr. Willianes" Medicine Co.,
would put reinforcements into the Brockville, Ont.
system to fight the 'germs of all ,
•
ease.
, Above the Snowline.
That animal life aseends the motile.
tains tar 'beyond, „plant growth is one
of the diScoveries, of,. the Mount EVer-
est expedition„. • , ,
rlsbe •highest grewing .plant observed
was . blue 'vetch at 1.8,600ft.,1 writes
• Lieut. -Col. E. F. Norton, leader -of the,
expedition. "Yet' animals. possese. per-
manent habitations, as high as 22,000ft.
A minute and . in,conspiCuous black
spider hops about' on the rocky cliffe
and hides beneath stones leOthose bare.
s ,places svhich ha. peen to be 'swept clear
- (of snow by the wind. 'I eennot think
On What it lives at such height.
"In these altitudes there is am other
living thin,g—nothing but rock and
a ice. This little spidew is worthy of
note, being the highest permanent in-
"'
habitant of the earth. We therefore
11nd dn the highest mountain far
am
above ths peranent' enowline."
• Say 'Bayer Aspirin'.'INSIST! Unless you see the
"I3ayer Cross" on tablets you
are not getting the genuine
Bayer .Aspirin proved safe by
millions and prescribed by phy-
sicians for 24 years:
Accept only a
at/04.
Bayer package
which contains proven directions
Haridy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabletd
Also bottles of 24 and 160—Druggists
Swede is the trade mark (registered In
Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mona
,
a 'se
seeticactderstor of Salloylicackl
„
CUILDIWODINDIGESTiON
Nothing is more common in child-
hood thau 'indigestion. - Nothing is
more dangerous .to proper growth,
More weakening to the constitution or
mere likely to pave the way to danger-
ous disease: Fully nine -tenths of all
the rein•or ills of thildhood have their
root in indigestion. There is no medi-
eine for little ones to equal Baby's
Own Tablets in relieving this trouble.
They have proved of benefit in thous-
ands of homes. Concerning them Mrs,
Jos.'Lunette, Immaculate Conception,
Que., writes: "My baby was a great
sufferer from indigestion, but the Tab-
lets soon set her right, and now I
would not be without them," Baby's.
Own Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers od by mail at 26 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville., Ont.
. Dominion Express, Money Orders
,are on sale in five thousand offices
th-roughout Canada. • .
others to the more mo.dern surveys
and explorations of the different
Federal and Provincial government de-
partments, were carefully examined
for authentic records.. To the student
of Ca.nadian conditions the new map
will be of much. assistance in enabling
him to segrevate the several vegeta-,
tion zones, approximate the possibili-
ties of forest exploitation, and estab-
lish the 'areas of known farming dis-
tricts.
From north to south, from east to
west, all the wonderful changes in our
natural vegetation are vividly por-
trayed on, the new Vegetatiou and
Forest Cover Map.. It fills a want long
experienced, and Will no doubt be in
con,siderable demand. •Copies may be
obtained. from the Director of the Na-
tural Resources Intelligence Service
of the Department of the Interior at
Ottawa.
41
Three golden rules of life of a cerei
tenarian who died, aged 107, were;
Never to enter a ball -room; .never
talk scandal; and never to enter a bar.
. -
Dancers to the number of 10,000
can be accorr_modated on the new
dance floor at. Wembley; this is the
largest in England, if not in the world.
Six Years of Pain.
Of Course. • There is a prevalent opinion on the
Mother — "Bobby, this note from
outside of China that tbe custom of
foot -binding among the girl children
our teacher says you're the last boy
of thee country has been generally
abandoned, but ench is not the ease.
The movement appears to have taken
root only in the more populous dis-
tricte, but at other parts the custom
Is still followed to a very great ex-
tent. The foot of the infant girl is
turned under so that the toe is bent
A little boy, six years of age, recent- France is rapidly growing in popu- back toward the heel and it is tightly
in a class ot twenty -fiver
Bobby—"Well, it could be worse."
Mother—"I don't see how."
Bobby—"It could be a bigger clase."
Butterfly Culture in France.
His M'other's p
Sirit? Butterfly culture in the south of
lsr ran away larity. There, under expert scientiflc
- bound in this position. It means six
-2-about twelve miles from Naples—to guidance, hundreds of beautiful speci
years of constant pain before the foot
Iran his home at Averse,
escape from his stepmother, who ill- mens are bred. The farms are pro- has taken the desired shape and then
treated him. aidecl with special leafy trees, and
measures from three to five inches
Having searched for him in vain, his plants on which the 'eggs are hatched. it
in length. At one time a law was
father informed the police. 'Soon Pas- Directly the young appear the branch-
passed forbidding foot -binding, but
qat ualino was discovered Naples Wes are taken to a well -ventilated room,1 there was no penalty and no means
ith
his grandmother. The latter told how, where they are placed in pars of of
enforcing it, so that no attention was
a few days before, she hal heard da water. As soon as tlae caterpillars
knocking at her door, and, on opening have eaten up this• first supply of id t it by the natives,
-
it, she had seen, to her astonishment, leaves fresh branches are provided.
her small grandson standing there , Haying been in an even temperature
Nature's Sunshade.
During days of prolonged sunshine
and tropical heat, it is not sufficiently
realized that, there is nothing especial-
ly healthy about a "tanned" skin. The
practice of exposing one's face to di-
rect sunlight in order to get suriburre
ed- is both abeurd and dangerous.
Ultra -violet rays destroy the animal
tissues of the skin, but Nature's anti-
dote is the brown Pignient 'underneath
which developand, acting•as a tiller,
shuts out the harmful influence.
The most obvious ptecaution ie a
big sun hat, and ,if the hint furnished
by Nature be acted upon, the 'color will
be light brown, • •
Wiinard's Liniment Relieves Pain.
„
alone. for about two weeks, the young eater -
"Who -brought you here?" she asked. pillars are taken out into the open,
"A woman," answered Pasqualino. where they are placed on plants pro -
".'1 Wdon't
wlorinnosiwn„said the child, who 7" tected from birds by nets. When fully
,
grown this protective net is removed
then told his grandmother that he had. and soon they retire into, cocoons or
run away because his stepmother beat roll themselves up into leaves. There
him, but had got frightened, not know- • are collected and stored in boxes,
ing where to go. 'While he was wari- where in a very sheet time butterflies
dering about the streets of Averse, a of wonderful hues, are evolved. Cross -
woman came up to him and took him breeding has been tried and numerou
by the band. Without speakingashe , experiments are conducted to obtain
lifted him on to the .electric tram that brilliant and original markings On the
runs between Averse, and Naples, wings of these insects, which are after -
holding him closely to her all the waY. ward sold to cellectors or for the
At Naples she •led him to his grand- adornment of women's hats and dress-
nictber's house, knocked, gave him a
kiss, and left him. *If se
Had you never seen, her before?" Not a few fellows -who tried to dodge
asked. the wondeving grandmother. work. have wound up in the peniten-
,
"Never, bat she, was like that," said tiary at hard work without rernun-
the boy,Pointieg LO a photograph Of his eration. '
Frame ,your mind to mirth and mer-
riment, which bar a thousand harms
and lengthen life.
own mother that stood on the, table:
P1 is niother had died when he was only
a few montriaold..'
, In Doubt.
I-Te---dYou are the sunshine of my
life. Your simile tails, like lightning
fmy souWth bY my side 1ino l. i
Iswenty miles of sewing cotton may
be wied in the making of a fur coat.
Would defy all the storms of life!'
tlis a. proposal et a Weath-
• • The 'o,ptimist its 'a barorneter stack
‘‘'set fair"; 'tae peSsithist is 'a b'alfol
deeter Steck "Set1stetray." No seneihle
'Man Woiald Pay SiXperice for .eitilier.
CLEAN SEED CRAM
EftdS-
• 1.14.78.ITA.TED BY
SUN WIND DUST &CINDERS
4.• SOLD ny DRUGGISTS & OPTICIANS '
./.1.ce eon 'arc axe ChIC64100V. ?•51.9UNS. CO. GUIC16.9.94.1
MRS. M1SENER'S
ACHES AND PAINS
Vanished After Using Lydia: -
E.' Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
"Branchton, Ont. — " When I wrote
• to you for help my action was mostly
prompted by curios-
ity. -I wondered if
I, too, would benefit
by your medicine. It
was the most profit-
able action I have
ever taken, I heart-
ily assure you, for
through its results
am relieved of most
of my sufferings.
have taken six box es
of Lydia E. Pink-
_ ham's Vegetable
Compound tablets and a bottle of Lydia
E. Pinkharn's Blood Medicine, and I can.
honestly say I have ne-ver been so well
before. I had suffered from pains and •
other troubles since I was fifteen years
old, and during the 'Great War' period
I worked on munitions for two years,
and, in the heavy lifting which my work
called for, I strained myself, causing •
pelvic inflammation from which I have
suffered untold agony, and I often had
to give up and go to bed. I had doctored
for several years without getting per-
Inanent relief, when I started to take
your medicines. "—Mrs. GOLDWIII Ws-
ZWER, Branchton, Ont. .
Write to the Lydia E. PinIcham Medi-
cine Coe Cobourg,Ontario,foe1afreecopy
of Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text -
Book upon "Ailments ofWomen." 0 , •
Fanning Mills—neepply screens, wire
cloth, zinc, repairs—Chatham Fanning
Mills and other makes. Incubator ,
supplies; Thermometers.
MANSON CAMPBELL, Chatham, Ont.
Rub it in
For pain, stiffness, or inflammation
apply Minaret's and rub it in.
Snip your Cream." to us and ob-
tain,. the best ,IWS1.1.1:tS with high-
egt:price Or,nurnber orie quality.
Daily returns, cans supplied, and
express charges paid. „Write for
cans now., , •
.
—Dean , • POWES CO LtTORONTO i
e,
Bitro-Pbosphate feesIS the nerVes
and old people need it to make them
feel and lools younger. 110the one
best nerve builder for weak, nenve-ex-
hausted men and won-ien and drat' 1)3
wby druggiste guarantee it. Price $1
ter. pkge. Arrow, Chemical
rent St. heas,t, Toronto, Oat.
ei•
•„.4 '
0:4
Keep The Hair Live And
Clossy With Cuticura
1 On retiting, gently Mb epots of den-
clitiff and itching with Outicure Oint-
ment. Next -morning shampoo with
a suds of Outicura Soap and hot
water. This treatment doe e nitich to
keep the scalp clean and healthy
and promote hair growth.
Samnlo Each Frac by 52.3%. Arline/in Canadian
DePati " Ontionra, P: 0. Oax 2616, Montreal,"
Prica, ones Mc. Ointment 2,K end 60c, Talcum 26c,
Ear ry sew h (INV Shaving Stick.
5
•.••••••.:e• i,".••••"Lee.,,VeseiniiseiiifSiSieei'iiikd'
t owes.
,