HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-3-3, Page 3You'll Succeed if You're
HaPpy
"Blake money liouesidy if you can;
bill, Ir not, by any arenas erre every
moo make eleney. Ws a devil's dee-
.,trine. Tile Idea that wealth is a sure
Avenue to 1lappineesi has lured men
Hite a shrews song be the ruin of all
that b worth cher/Stang to life'•
The words are those of Mr, Arthur
Porritt, who, In his book for bays and
Peellg meu, "The Strategy of Life"
gives same thoughtful, sound, and
prartleal advice. Wealth, learning,
genius, and power do not melte the
possessor happy. The secret ilea in
health, friendship, .love at bonne, and
children.
The tluthor loos not dopreoate
cella In lite --even 1luenelal suns
,"Bot," he says,.. "a young man h
serluusly to consider what suec
really Is, and to drake sure that be
not setting out in life to chase phis
toms,"
Usefulnes, goodness, and happine
aro suggested as the three ideals
life which a young man should kee
before• him, the last named baing t
'Used Auto
1�IpA1K1d7C (4r.I.E1 'mom; va1W
ars oP all typoet 11 oql b
feet to delivery up to ,Tee rnil¢p, Rr (Ort
run 01 00(80 dlsta eel 1r •you wipe. In ,ia
good ardor no pyraliased, or pureW,,so
rice rorunded,
1l1NQ rneehptl1 of your Rwn R1(010
to boli Sham aura•, or ask ns IR
r r
to a fa
ah a 1 oc representative �o cw a city
p,specllgn. very largo stnclt ,tiv:ayp pg
�1nnd.
Preakey's lysed .Oar' Market
0412 Tomo quest. 2'aiart
Soy Scout. Notes.
The first Niagara "Peninsula Scout
Odlcers' pally will be held in St,
Catharlues on Friday and Saturday,
March lull and 1211), according to 1n-
ue- formation obtained front Provincial
858. Scout Headtivavters, Bloor and Sher -
as bourne Streets, Toronto.' It is expects
ase ad that there will be a large attend.-
Is
ttendIs mice of Scoutmasters, Assistant flout-
renters
l out -
masters and other senior etrieers to
participate in the Programme, which ,
es will include conferences on troop or -
in ganlcat1on sad management, training
p programs, recruiting leadership and
he general Scout activities.
ng The 1st Exeter Troop (Thomas
nd Pryde, Scoutmaster), WW1 the honor
ke, of receiving the first ot the new char-
ts tens now being issued to Troops by
er the Provincial Council for Ontario. in
r- order to receive n charter for the coll-
ie duet of a troop, the institution or
r.1 group '01 people responsible for it must
n; definitely accept "responsibility for pro -
re) vidieg suitable leadership and ade-
on quate fao111ties for carrying on its
• work. It also appoints a Troop Com-
• mittee of three persona to co-operate
I with the Scoutmaster in his 'work and
e to help iu every way passible to ad-
ta vanee the interests of the troop and
n 1I1 its members.
8l - * +F * y p
e 1 On February 22nd, the birthday ot
e, Sir Robert Baden-Powell, founder and
On• Empire Chief of the Boy Scouts, liter-
! ally dozens of Boy Scout concerts, M-
e' plays, dinners, etc., were held.through-
t out the province, many of them largely
e attended by parents and friends. Other
d excellent entertainments have recent -
11 17 been reported front Florence,
Strathroy, Fenelon Faits and Sunder-
land. One of the biggest displays of
s the year will be that of the 3rd Toren -
o to Troop, which takes place on
h February 28tH and March est, and
which will be a veritable "Junior
a Canadian National Exhibition." A
s splendidly arranged prize list indi-
en cates that there will be departments'
- of Art, Collections, Domestic Science,
t Electricity, Maps, Manual Training,
reward of the other two virtues,
"The highest ambition of a you
mum embarking on bis career) a
working out the strategy of bis 11
should be to win a reputation as or
wire never dodges hard work, nov
shires responsibility, and never to
felts his self-esteem by lowering b
standard of right dealing," says M
Porritt. "To be known as a ma
wbose word is his bond is far mo
precious than to have the reputati
of commanding a big bank balane
These qualities make success worth
Success without teens is MMame,"You can't -force happiness. Th
story is recalled of a Lancashire co
ton -operative who took his cb(ldre
for a happy day in the country an
Bank holiday. Tire little fellows war
soon tired with wallting, and by th
time they reached their destinati
were peevish and tearful.
"Look here," saki their father, in
patiently, "I've brought you boys on
for a happy day, and you've got to b
happy: go and play in that field, an
if you aren't harpy in ten minutes I'
give all three of you'a gene hiding un
to you are happy."
Some people's ideas of happines
are almost as quaint, and the man wh
tries to tones It by piling up wean
will never succeed.
Incidentally it is pointed out that
young man's greatest inheritance i
his character. Many a son has be
ruined because a tither lett hen for
tune. Who shall count the number o
sons saved because a rather left them
a character?
Tolerance.
"Jahn said unto Him, Teacber, we
saw one casting out demons in thy
name. And we forbad him, because
he followed not us. And .Jesus .said
unto him, forbid him net, for there is
no one that can do a mighty work in
my behalf and bo able to speak lightly
of me.". Much history is the history
of intolerance. But that is not of
Christ, Ile said 'ive are to love God
with our fcnreold powees---mind, body,
spirit and soul, and our nelhbor as
oursclt. That attitude is not past, but
we hope It is slowly dyrug, that it will,
bike the rnonstors or the ice ago, be-
come an extinct lrpecies. There is
much talk or the organized forces of
Christianity getting together. In fact
they are already together in ways not
commonly supposed. But they must
in time come closer, and there will be
one Lord and one; faith, according to
the 1311,18 ideal. But toletwnoe ought
never to mean the want of strong be-
liet in what Is right and wrong. It is
possible to believe everytblug, and se
believe nothing, A man said to me
once, "1 don't care what a emu's re-
ligion 1s, so long as be lives It," He
might as well have said, "I don't care
what 'a man's politics are, so long as
Ito !Ives them." Bolshevism Is one
kind of politics. Would he like to have
his neighbors become Bolshevists, and
appropriate his farm and his home?
Anarchy is one form of politics.
Would he like to see 1138 house its
names, some nlgbt? It dons matter,
mightily what a man. believes h
w 8th-;
er it be In religion or politics. To
tolerate others' 001131mis is good, but
there are ,oame things we must net
telerato. Intolerance becomes a vir-
tue, beyond a certain point, and I am
not certalu but we need an inocula.;
tion of intolerance to -day. And good-
will 1 s Al
wa 's im
3 tolernut
,yet neva •s
3
tolerant. Christ wets the
most tolerant
of leaders, yet against wrong, jujus-!
tics spiritual br3neneset, ciuse hate, lio 1
was a flame of intolerance. 1t is all
a
matter of being tolerant at the right
pines,
Quite Appropriate,
The new chaplain wanted to amuse
as well 00 instruct his men, and ar-
ranged for an illustrated lecture on
Bible sceuos And incidents,
One seaman, who Possessed a phone -
oath, was detailed to discourse 'ap-
propriate musk: between pictures, The
first of these represented Adorn and
lava in the Garden ot Eden. The sail-
or cudiled his, brains nue Mu
athroegh his list, but 5o111t1 lrat thhlt of
rmt+lt((a3xttetiy appropriate ie the pia
. lure,
"Please play up!" whispered the
nhaplain,,
Then an las• ' its
.-.r19 ,u
T n conte to the baa -
et)
r. (111(11, to the oonsrtdlrntttloal of the
obeplain and the delight of the audio
dace, the phonograph ground ettt:
"There's onit anti girl in the world fol•
mel"
Vit. Rust in Canadian wheat canes
' ltss Pf alseet $160)000,000 a year.
Itiodels, Photography, Woodcraft Siad
Inter 1' •00}}11 CO)npaL1ti0311 Hast of
the Taranto Uistriet Troops are repro,'
� scrawl in the entry lists, .
i
I Worm Mattes Soil Tillable.
1 The worm, persocnted, abused hill
nllsunderstood,is worthy or considers,-
tiuu, according to Professor J. Arthur
Thomson, of Aberdeen to it el ,ity
' who Ilan ust completed a series of lee
tures on the evoletien nf: lire Pro
fase°r The3833 133 190'0 11381 1118 w� *
Advertising Chinese Bargains
A Brftlee Columh,,t friend tolls Il
•
,•, DETECTIVE SERVICE
<'onnd,vlttal end loyal. Deteotivo ser-
l Ise for and) victuals, t'.orpuratlune, eta,
leets les setrel(ed. (nacos 7."Oreet0,
1%011%ipu,t i:'algai•y sad 4'ancoutur. Ad,
dross ca3ruap5ndentu: rv. 1', i•'etterA35
A0QPpnaltl ])eteot3.ve Agaaoy, Ftmlted,
)40Z94nnd 3)15g•, 0RrOatto, Ont -
Bow the bargain rule craze luta the
Chile -To guar ler in Y,Snccuver.
Tile heal Chinese district, he writes
has launeb8d forth auto a "price -cut
ting" orgy that hat ire preeedcuit i
(llinetown'e 133story, Bargain vales
rat:ge from glnseug to Suit, and Dam
c31op Fluty to herbs.
('hiuettown has two newslmpers, One
' le publielled in Victoria anal to the
nloutilp3000 of progrose'ive or New
China, semetilaes caned Youup (]h3na.
The other Chinese publication is pub-
ifales;3 in VOO-COuver, i3 has the ]ire-
' fca•enee of the eaneervative element.
Lath
gem carries d!splay adver-
tisements by Chinese. Oecasinnaily
there is 'a familiar "ad" culled trona the
pravin0ial papers and translated Into
Chinese. Those, however, are infra
quant and tentative.
But Chinatown has another form of
publicity that is infinitely more Poise -
tar because it costs nothing to read,
The brick walls of Chinatown abound
with 03 1110 ebaracte
One of our earliest 3nee5tor•s tele was
the feet creature to emerge from the
sea with the coming of dry tat d.
Realleing the, great rials that lay be
fore them, the worms at once begun
the custom of moving with one end
of the body forward. Plowing beneath
the sn1•faee of the earth, they tem
over the soil .for a depth of three inch-
es once ovary fifteen years. 'Were it
net for this natural aerating of the
land, trees, plants and grains would
not grow, and the earth would be a
barren sandy place unfitted to sustain
any form of life,
NOTHING TO EQUAL
rtY'S OWN T ��'► LETS
3
Mrs. G8orgo Lefebvre, St, Zenon,
Que„ writes: ""I do not think there is
any other medicine to equal Baby's
Own Tablets for little oues. I have
used them for my baby and would use
nothing else," What Mrs. Lefebvre
says thousands of other mothers say.
They leave found by trial that the
Tablets always do just what Is claimed
for them. Thq Tablets are a mild but
thorough laxative which regulate the
bowels and sweeten the stomach and
thus banish indigestion, constipation,
colds, colic, eta, They are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
When He Had a Good Day.
Back in the dim distant years when
the 'bigh cost of livingwas not an ever-
present problem and some things were
cheap, James Whitcomb Riley walked
tato a barber shop fora 5 -cent shave.
The proprietor of tbe shop was an old
negro,
"Well, Sam, how aro you getting
along?" Mr. Riley asked, t�
"Mr, Jim, I had a very good day,"
Saar replied. "If I could make 76
cents between now and'quittin' time
I'd have a dollar."
MIna rd's Liniment Relieves Distemper
Surnames and Their Origin
PORTER
Variations Y.. Durward, .Dorman, . Do -
mart,
mart, Doorman.
Racial Origin — Norman-French and
i,,, Anglo-Saxon.
Source—An occupation.
As might be expected, the tannlly
name of Porter had its origin. in. the
ocrupation of porter, Title, however,
would really be a better term than oc
mutation, for in tho middle ages, under
the Norman-Freneh feudal system of
1 military -social organization, the porter
was a person of military lmportanee.
In those days the 'word had none ot
its modern meaning. The porter was
, not a bearer of burdens. He was the
' military onieer In charge of the guard
' at the gate, or "Hart," of the castle,
i The Anglo-Saxon equivalents of this
i title were "dare -ward" <and "dere-
man" (door -ward and door -man), and
family names developed from them
i are frequently met with.
But' the name Of Porter is far more
widespread to -day than the others, and
1 there is a reason. There was a period
et two centuries or more in England
in which the . Norman conquerors
•spoke only French, the language
1 which they brought across the channel
with thele, and Anglo-Saxon was:
•spoken by the conquered population,
The nobility, of course, was almost
! without exception of the fanner race.
Bence in the castles, where the port-
ers' duties lay, only, French ryas
spoken, an naturally
dt
p ho i.'r•ench title.
prevailed. Later, of course, owing to
the political severance of Normandy
from England, the two tongues com-
bined into a mixture that was basical-
ly Anglo-Satoti and from which mod-
ern English has d'veloped. But by
that time the word "porter" bad' be-
come tear u b
c b 7 fixed.
Y
The name was, of course, purely
p y
descriptive at first and it is found in
the oId records In the form "'Nicholas
le Porter,"
LES
o Variations—Leigh, Lea, Atlee, Atiey,
Atiay, Delay, Lay. -
Racial Oreen—English.
Source—GeographIca
f.
Ali of the family names in this
group at one time bore either the Pre-
fix "atte" or "de," according to wheth-
er the original bearer of the name
styled himself in the Anglo-Saxon or
the Norman fashion. Often the name
of the same man would be spelled both
ways, according to whether the clerk
or official making the record of it pre-
ferred the Norman or the Anglo-Saxon
custom.
All of thee family names also have
come from one er the other of two
sources. It Is impossible to tell which,
for such a variety of spellings of the
two words le to be found in the old re-
cords thatait le impossible to distin-
guish, exacta from the context of the
writing, which was intended.
The words • are "ley" or "lee," meant -
leg a. shelter, and "iea" or "lee,"
meaning a pasture, The shelter, like
the pasture, was given up to the use
of the livestock. It was, in fact, the
le oval counterpart of our barn or
stable.
Thus, 'Roger atte Ley ("at the Ley")
would have really the same surname
as Richert' de la Leye' ("of the
Ley"). It is easy to see hew all of
the modem var1atio3ls of this name
haveev to
d e ped from one or tho other
Of the following old forms:
"Atte Ley," "atte Leigh," "atte
Leye," "de 1a Leye," de la Laye," "atte
Legh," "dee la Lee, "atte Lee," "de
la Le," "Atte Lees," de la Lea," and
50 Oti,
The medieval English were not re-
nowned ! for
the uniformityof
their
spelling, but for short words, 'ley" and
lea' appear to take the 3)0130 for an
astoundingly largo number of spell -
11350.
7be
Choice Parts of Selected Grains
give t o
rape% ut
�. aaledlil and t i ay [building value
11A.-
• This wheat and malted barley Food
1
sso9
rotes ell. and baked that the
nourishing s ualit'iets and pleas.,
ing Flavor are Cully brought out, p1;1
r
Healthful -S itxsfying . heres a S01t
rs tenmg of
things interesting to the Celestial
reader.
Inscribed In Chinese characters of
nrulti,coicred hues and gigantic pro-
Pertiwle, are sentences that draw
crowds and comment from the faithful
readers.
Occasionally an enterprising Chinese
merchant breaks into pidgin English
with something like this in the mese-
age:
Very Cheap for Bargain Price--
Please
rice—Please Buy Soma.
But it is not all illiterate or labored
English that one finds, Here and there
are seen "ads!' written 1n the polished
English of the Chinese -English schol-
ar. There is one—it tells of tea --that
contains this flower of lofty speech:—
Every Drop a Vision of the Perfect
Tea. That Only China Grows!
And thin one about somebody's silk:
The Silk With a Shimmer That is
More Than Human—Rare Indeed,
for Value.
Chinatown's poultry section le rich
with gems of quaint advertising,
Tanked upon the orates of imprisoned
fowls in one Celestial hennery Is a
sign that tells the beholder:
Good Hens Very Fat With Much
Eatings.
HOW TO SAFEGUARD
YOUR DIGESTION
The Blood Should Constantly be
Kept Rich and Pure,
1f you suffer from any form of in-
digestion your diet should be care-
fully chosen. Over -eating Is always
harmful, but .;at the same time one
must take enough food 10 supply the
needs of the blood. It must be re-
membered that the blood has to carry
nourishment to every part of the body,.
find fuel for its energy and defences
against disease, as we11 as the re-
quisite juices for digestion. Hence
when the blood becomes weak and
falls to do its work, indigestion arises;
also when 3ndlgestlon begins the bleed
still further stiffers, Therefore, to
safeguard your digestion, the blood
should be kept rich and free from im-
purities, . For more than a third of a
century Dr. Williams' Pink PIils have
been a favorite tonio for eurihhing the
blood and strengthening the nerves, of a murderer guard fora long time
If, therefore, you find yourself troubled speaks of dried blood, while bits of
with indigestion, or other ailments dos hair and minute threads torn from a
to weak, watery blood, you will find victim's clothing are sometimes found,
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills both sate and
'.atter the s ie the More
Beautiful ---M Africa.
"The that p1131ce1t1. I ever met
a wtenu33 so fat she couldnot
through the doorway to nee ale," s
the Rev. John Itascoe, ethnologist
East African explorer, in telllug of
i adventures with tribes who Bever
fore bad seen a white reap.
":'131 the women of East Africa are
fat, and the 'broader they grow the
more beautifulthey are considered"
he said in a recent lecture In London,
"The natives all live on mitis, and a
mats with only 100 cows 10oud consider
himself poor, Such a man couldn't
marry, He would adopt the native
custom' of joining with tbree or four
others and when enough cows had
been obtained to supporta wife they
would combine and marry one wife
between them.
"1In :Mast Africa the women pierce
their ears and insert any form of de-
coration in the distended lobe. One
woman used a wine bottle for decora-
tive effect, and another, who had 110811
near the white man's civilization, used
an empty cigarette tin."
According to Lord Dewar, who also
spoke at the meeting, the price of
wives hasgoneup among the South
African tribes who use spearheads Por.
money.
BIB'S OF
HUMOR
Ftl®M IIERE &DERE
Nothing Mean About Him.
A farmer boy and hie bent g'iu'f were
res seated in a bu3'57 ono evening i11 town,
watching the people pace, Nearby wee
eat a popcorn vender's stand. Present/7
lane'
d the lady remelted:
he "lay, that popcorn smells good!"
b1 "That's right," said the gallant. "I'll
drive up a little closer so you can
smell it better."
"I found that while a good, strong,
upstanding wife formerly cost four
spearheads, the price heg now risen to
eight," he said.
"Cascarets" If Sick,
- Bilious, Headachy
To -night sure! Let a pleasant, harm-
Iess Cascaret work while you sleep
and have your livor active, head clear,
stomach sweet and bowels moving re-
gular by morning. No griping or in-
convenience. 10, 26 and 60 cont boxes.
Children love this candy cathartic too.
Curious Crime Clues.
Many a murderer has been tracked
by the camera.
The first act of the modern crime
detector 3s to record every detail of
tbe scene of the crime and every foot
of the locality by means of a metric
camera. This camera rules oft the
space under observation into small
squares.
The camera detective is the blood-
hound et the laboratory force. He re-
cords finger -prints, impressions on the
ground, unusual marks — anything
which he thinks might have a bearing
on the crime.
Criminals have often been caught by
analysis of the dust clinging to their
clothes; by dirt under their linger-
mans
ingernails and on the soles of their shoes;
by the scratches that cold chisels have
left, and by hundreds at other clues
which hitherto have existed only In
the mind of the writer of detective
stories.
T
he nails ot a suspect, previously
much neglected in criminal Investiga-
tion, have become very important to
the laboratory experts. Criminals, as
a alas, are not patrons of the mani-
curist's art, and the dirt that has col-
lected under their nails often forme a
perfect means of accusation. The nails'
effective. The value of this medicine Not long ago a burglar was Identified
in cases of stomach trouble is shown tlu`ough particles ales of grease scraped
from a cable al
by the experience et Mrs. J. Lewis, atone which he had slid
Lake George, N.S„ who says; "I sof- in an attempt to leach a goldsmith's
window.
fered very severely with indigestion.
I had severe pains in the stomach at- In another case a murderer left his
ter (leery meal. I had a loathing for vest in the roam in welch his victim
food, my rest at night was vary much was discovered. The expert picked it
disturbed, and m up, and in the laboratory placed iter
Y general health was a paper bag. The dust collected after
decl,ning, I was uudern a doctor's beating the bag Proved, under a micro -
care, but did not and any improve- i
went. Reading of what Dr. Williams"
scope, to be full of minute pantiles of
Pink Pills had done in a similar easel
wood' Obviously, the murdered tees
I a ra a„it either a carpener er a tmbinetmakar.
decided to try them, with th
that after giving them a fair trial, my Particles of glue were also found,
health was improved, and all: which went to prove that the lana be-
general9ynlptOnlS of the indigestiaa that longed to the latter trade, and from
had afflicted me disappeared. 1 feel these deductions he was traced.
•
very grateful to Dr. Williams' Pink MONEY ORDERS.
PIIIs for saving me from so much A Dominion Express Money Order
misery,' for five dollars costs three cents.
Some Knowledge.
Employer
(to
youth aP
p1y n
g nor a
eltuation )--"And have you a ltnove
ledge of any foreign language?"
Apelicant----"Yes, sir, a /ttt.Sle."
"Do you know Latin?”
"Well, sir, 3 began to learn it, and
got oft fairly well, but i hod to throw
it up in favor of shorthand because I
couldn't pronounto scale et the
awards."
"What were the wordy yeti couldn't
pronounce?"
"Words like 'MDCCCNIt,' sir,"
Tau can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pals
through any medicine dealer, or by
n ail a
t t60cents no-
b not six boxes for
$2.60 from The Dr. Williams' :Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Why We Blush.
Any shock or emotion which makes
the heart pump an extra supply of
blood into the arteries and v01na which
supply the face will give rise to blush-
ing,
The emotion, of course, must bo one
os the variety which causes the heart
to beat faster than usual. Exeftement,
embarraseament, or anger 10111 cause
this, while tear, ivhicb•retxirds the ac -
fon of the heart, will produce a pale
white look.
B3ettuse the 511oc1t or emotion must
lie one to which we are not accus-
tomed, some persons blush far more
readily, than others. A person who Is
not in the habit of listen -111g to certain
language will *Alt from embarrasa
re1whe h h
U n o ears 'i the t ns•st few
tinea but if o
v erlonce i con-
tinued
p ,9 CO r
tined 1re will become hardened and
lose the ability to blush--wilIch isthe
reason that blushing Is considered to
be one at the attributes of innacnnce,
`1"i: rev: d 111 13rt; i .`•1 er ,l";ins�.
busitl:_s u. I,+•nd. n,.
Quick relief from
RHEUMATIC
pain
BAU
BENGUE
has immediate 03(003.
BEWARE Or SUBSTITUT11
SI.Oer, tabu
YNE 1,1E10813 MILD CO., LTD.
MON700AL
A3386is for 111. ,13eha 8(17:'r0
1§t Li EVES b3AI
His Complaint.
"Yee, madam," said Barry the Hobo,
"I know'i laoit like a strong atlas, but
out of my fifty years of life I've spent
over sixteen years In bed."
"Wily,' you poor roan," replied the.
lady sympathetically, handing hint a
2uurier. e•tl'ltat Inas been the trouble
—paralysis?"
"No, ma'am.," said Barry, "Jest a ie-
g'lar habit of 5leepin' elgbt hours a
day, ma'am,"
A Word or Two,
"And," says I, "short Is shorter 12
you add a syllable,"
"But, says Sam, "a '13' will make .a
road broad,"
".9 mere letter," says I, "turns a
word into a sword,' •
"And anteater," says Salu. "is all the
difference between here and there."
"Funny," says 1, "What you eau do.
with letters."
"She sells sea shells," says Sam, "al-
ways annoys me."
"Sam sawed nix slick, sleek, slim,
slender saplings, is more difficult for
me," says 1.
Montreal is the second largest port
in America and the largest inland one.
The 1919 exports were $700,000,000
worth.
MOTHER!
"California Syrup of Figs"'
Child's Best Laxative
Accept "California" Syrup` or Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most
harmless physie for the little stomach,
liver and bowels. Ohll:-on love Its
fruity taste. Full directions 013 each
bottle. You must say "California."
America's Pioneer Dog Remedies
Book on
DOD DISEASES
and Bow to Fees,
1 llfarlod Frao to any Ad -
yr 2,7ZybrilgIr
d-S.r014vbGlover Aar 2np,
j 118 west Slat street
New Took, D.B.A.
For Sore Throat,
Cold in the Chest, Etc.
saseaseitneo,,,sew aas..A
c: Rheumatic Pains
re Are relieved in a few days by o
•) taking 30 drops of Motherai el.
s
0
Syrup aFteratealaand on retiring. s)
ilii:It dissolves the limo and acid Co
•i accumulation in the muscles and
O joints so these deposits can be o
o expelled, thus relieving pain and (o
• soreness. Seigel's Syrup, aboo 6!
3( known as "Extract of hoots," so
contains no dopenorotherstrong
o drugs to kill or mask the pain of 5
e rheumatism is
R
m or lumbago, 1 m a it •
c
•
ag r 7
u moves the cause. 5pc. A bottle m
e at druggists, 1, o
8ey0ve®T4 OR9 ses3.a6 ae 05
'Wtrmi relief' Aar
'i kaeuma e aches.
Plin'S just used Sloan's
iment and the quick
comfort had brought asmile
of pleasure to his face.
Good for aches resulting
from weather cattier ax os
ore
A ,
, strains, s rains ams beak
A
e ns
354 overworked muslame
70$ trams without rubbing. All
4140 druggists have it.
Classiized Ad•vertiscrnenta,
FARM WANT50,
rp ARAI SEAis117I), WW1) D1733(',tlp,
1`11:)14 «n. Joht1 J. Mocktt,
C31npewa Pallsil, avis.
1IB4 pr1epWp34TEI1,_
'(. Apnns 19ANTIID i o il)O 1'1,A1I`T
.J4.,s 131111 11g11t 85103)15 s,1 Heine; lvholp or
s 1ar•e (unci good pay; work spot any
distance charges repaid. Sona at4nlp
for nartivularll. National lfower:tux.
tag e1)., )103151•e0.1,
r.ong'Distance Osfl,
Thomas Jones was satti'11g down to
breakfast one moa1151a'g whoa he was
astounded to ace in the paper ala en,
nonncenretrt of his death. Re rang
up friend IIowara Smith at once,
"Bello, Smith!" 110 8131(1, "bare you
seen the announcement of ray death
In the paper?"
Yee,' repd Sm1'7, "'Where Preyou".epcalting 1z'ol1enr7"
Mlnard's Liniment for Dandruff.
,Japanese Gardena,
Gardens in Japan are lain out ee as
to suggest famous. scenes in Japanese
hl5ory. Miniature landscapes al'e.ar-
ralrged eo R9 to recall wall-lulo3va
spots in history, and suggest the
events that have taken Waco there.
The Follett population during the
war decreased by 4,000,000.
ASP9RIN
"Bayer" only is Genuine
Warning'. Take no chances with sub-
stitutes for genuine "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin;" t:n1ees you sea the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting 1..spir;n at all. In every
Bayer package are directions for
Colds Headache, Neuralgia, Rhein
matiem, Eara3310,'fcothache, lumbago
and for Pain, handy tin boxes of
twelve tablets cost few Canis. 03 15-
gisto also sell larger p. ,•kages. Made
3n Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark
(registered in [.anoda), of Bayer
Manufacture of Moneaceticarridester
I et Saileytietwid.
Mrs 1 erber t Osborn
'Yells How C is ra
Healed His Wive
"My wife began to be troubled with
itching and burning of the palms of
her hands and the soles of
her feet. Later the skin
cracked and bnearae In-
flamed, making warning or
oven stonv'ing very pate -
fu] and preventing sleep at
night. Later itbecame nec-
cseary to bandoge both
hands and feet.
"She was treated but obtained no
relief, Sbe saw an nclvetincr•ent for
Cuticura Soap end Ointmeztand sent
for a free coxple. Sho 'Douala tn000
and after using two calico of Stale=
Soap and two b •les cf Cuticuro
Ointment 33131w:isheated. (Signed)
Herbert Osborn, 1332 Che.tbroolto
Ave., Ottawa, Ont., Dopt. 2, 1.01.0.
Cuticur4 le ideal for every -day mi.,
1st wars. Soap to cleanse' d pnr'`y,
Ointment to soothe and heal.
Sona 25c, ointment 25 and 500. sold
throughout theOominton. CanadianDepott
L', nnna, (3 ,118, St. Pau/ St., Montreal.
3311 rCuticura Soap ahovca without tn„p.
"DANDERINE"
Girls! Save Your Hair`i
Make It Abundant! ,
"w•
Immediately after a "Banderine"
massage, your hair takes on new life,
lustre and wondrous beauty, appearing
twice as heavy and plentlinl, because
each hair seems to guff and thicken.
Don't ltt your hair stay lifeline, color•
Iess, plain or scraggly. You, too, want
lots of long, strong, beautiful hair.
A 36 -cent bottle of delightful "Dan-
derine" freshens your scalp, cheeks
dandruff and falling hair. This atimu•
luting "beauty -tonic" gives to thin,
dull, fading hair that youthful bright•
nese and abundant thleknoss:•-All
druggists!
Send for 1'tet, of inventions wimte
by Manufacturers. Porttat13el have
been
made (rep eiliine to ideas,
"Patent Protool o .tt is o o t ke.kA and
r
"Proof of Conceptions" on r'oquost,
HAROLD C. SHIPMAN fis CO.
PATIENT ATf'0111NEV3
an1,8308 CRAM 0500 . .01TAWA, CA(A00
i! -ail mens
issue No.9
R 1t