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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-8-4, Page 7Ahove the Fog. PALE AND NERVOUS The /damper wee goingdown the St, Lawrence, T11e pa1,sen,gers Mien' that the river, though wide, was dotted 'With nuineraus lelauda between which. 'tile tawny flood Poured with almost Irresistible force, To make matters wore() a Mummy fog wrapped ilYer Auld steamer alike In Its ghostly ehroud. Tho passengers' on deck ob- served with alarm that the vessel SCHOOL CHILDREN Need Ries), Red Mood to Regal Health and 'Strength, ililny children start school In exec lept health, but atter' a short ti nevertheless ploughed steadily on her Loma week,. examinations, Muria ,course with 4nabeted speed, ii'lnallY, ltlpals., and erowdocl school room they sent one of their number to flues- cause their blood to bee0nle wee tfom the captain, "It's all right," he tlreir nerves over -wrought and the said, whet he returned, "1 niet the color' and nitrite lost. It is a !nista mate lost 001111ng down lrom the to let matters drift when hogs an bridge, and he says that up where the girls show symptoms of nerYOnsne3 captain is there Isn't any fog. It or weak blood, Theyare almost sur Just seems to be clinging to the'SIC% face of the river and the -lower part Of dr fall 10 debility of that lead dance, p drift into debillt that leads to. oth the boat" troubles, Regular meals, out -deo Well would it be for all of us if 011 exorcise and plenty sleep are ne0e the voyage of life. we should always nary to combat the nervous wear bear in mind that up where our Cap- school life. But it is still more impel thin Is there is no fog! In the fog in tint that parents should pay attentic which we live there. are many things to the school child's blood soap! -to perplex and frighten un, Every day Keep this rich and red by giving Dr, Williams' Pink Pills and the boy or girl will be sturdy and lit for school, Safeguarding the Community. '1'hc escape of a pair of untamed !lots from a wrecked chats trait Mug• geste to one's 1111nd the orgtrnizatf0)t of the entire community to destroy n common Thienae% Tho scriteb of the n llett'M elaw is alntost•always fatal. This fa due to the blood•polsonlog gvt'n1a that accumulato and develop on the claw as it remains within. the 'riblet n1e and warm sheath, Q - 'Yet that familiar limed bred le tin - speakable filth and ltnewn to us as the common 'meetly carries a edition le,; dangerous end deadly germs en its 1¢e hairy body and is n menace far more d Hazardous to the community than all the lions and other animals tliltt break e from circus cages. NatWithstending e tilte'. danger due to tire great nuulber or ofthoseinseet4 and to their 11e1tlnn er Mous habit to inspect, touch and taste r el ery object WIthin reach of their ae- s- tive wings, folks are net inclined to °f get together en a community program. r' loolciug for' the destruction of the eggs n and maggots of this pestiferous 1i - Y' sect. However, it is more than possible that In rural places individual effort with screens, traps, closed vessels for s` foods that attract these pests, But - s° phato of iron for. the manure piles, d etc„ will bring a sufficiently satisfaa- 2 tory return: in the reduction of the number of pestering flies with which p- the members of 'the family will have d to eonteud, to well repay for the in- ° vestment of time and cost of the neces- sary materials. Patience With a Limit. Dora has the common infantile com- plaint of wanting everything she can. think of before she win condescend to go to sleep, 1 want a drink of mllki" she an- nounced loudly one evening when Marjorie had already made several trips upstairs. "I lit the gas for you, didn't 1?" de - mended Marjorie, standing accusingly by the bed. No answer. "And I've brought you your black doll?" Still Dora vouchsafed no reply. "And I gave you a piece of white paper and a pencil?' This time Dora pouted went, "Well," decreed the .big sister, with 30 an air of finality, "just, you take the .pencil and paper, and draw a cow; then you can milk IV', life puts to us questions that we can- not answer, D' Very day We must solve problems of conduct and decide on The value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pill -sources of action the ultimate cense- to cases of this kind Is shawl) by th ,quenees of which we oannot foresee. statement of Mrs. Watson Grail Shall we go in this direction or in Falls, N.B., who says: "In the slain that? . Sometimes we are like Men of 1919 nit clauahter -Without a e0mpass and cannot toll whether we are .speeding toward the sale channel, or toward the rocks and sepals, And sometimes the fog is the fog of religious doubt, It hangs persistently ever that sea of material things on whish, we spend our lives, It blinds vim vision and terrifies our souls until ^sometimes we cry in despair that the only tiles we can he ,euro of is the bit of plank on which we stand. As we. glide on through the darkness we vender whetber after all we can be sure of anything except what we can 000 and touch and feel.. We know we are out in midstream. We can feat the relentless grip of the current as. it hurries us on. What if we lose the bit 0f plank beneath our feet? The shoals and the rocks are never far away. Why should we not rise above the fog? We can do it, By enduring poverty or pain, by studying God's' Wont, by doing kindness to others or by praying with fd,umbleness of 'heart we can rise shave it Up where our Captain 13 there is no fog. The doubts and the perplexities that dismay the uubelfever and the man who loves the world never trouble him who lives Mose to God. His one discerns the channel, knows the place 0t every rock, where the currents run swiftly and where the waters are tranquil and stile Why not trust Hint to guide us? To -slay, as of aid, he who treats God may !tear His voice saying, "When thou pas«est through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they ohall net overthrow thee." A Victory for Pacifism. The new commander in chief cf India, Lord Itawlinr,on, tells an amus- ing story of an experiment he once made to test the accuracy. of oral races - sages. Two hundred men, he says, I strung out at intervals of two paces,' Then I gave a message to my adjutant, tell- ing Jalm to give it orally to the man at the head to be repeated from man to man down the line until it came to me at the other end of it. This was the message: 'Wo aro going to advance. Can you' send us reinforcements?" When 4t came back to me some minutes later it had turned to this: "We are going too dance. Can you send us three and fourpenco?" A Mistake Is No Sin. One of the stories told by a clergy- man concerns a lady who sent word to him, juet before Ire was going to the pulpit, that she must see him, years of age, - began. to show sym toms of nervousness welch. develope into St. Vitus dance. She seemed t lose control of her limbs nod at times every muscle in her body seemed to be, twitching and jerking, and the trouble seemed to be growing worse. We finally deckled to give Dr, Wil- liants'.Pink Pills, and the result was better even than we had taped for, and she is note enjoying the beat of health" You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills thl•ough any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Flies - and Colors. If you. want to make your roost at- tractive to flies, paper it in bright yes, low. They like that color best. They do not seem to care about blue, green or orange, one way or the other. Red they markedly dislike. Houseflies are our most intlinat companions, and everything that can be learned about them Is worth know tug. Their talar preferences have been ascertained by recent elaborate experiments. London's oldest bridge over th Thames is Waterloo Bridge; Black friars Bridge dates back only to 1809 Fortune awaits 'the gamuts who can invent :a drum that oast be heard only by the amen boy who :beats it. o ' Castor 'bean production is being en- - couraged in Java, where the ail is utilized in the textile industry. Surnames and Their Origin COLBLIRN Variation—Colborn, Colbern. Racial Origin—Welsh. Source—A locality. These surnames belong to the class!- flcation of those which have been de- rived from places, their first applica- tion having been to distinguish the in- dvidual by reference to his place of residence or former place of residence, in addition to his given name. Had the name been an English in- stead of a Welsh development, it would. have been "Hazelhiil," and in the sense of meaning alone it would be put in the same classification with such English family names as Hazel - holt, Hazelhurst and Hazelton, The Welsh form of the name, how- ever, is neither Colburn, Colborn, ner Oolbora, but "Colbrin" or "Colbryn " It is a compound of the word "bryn," meaning a "hill," and "cell," which designates the hazel plant in the au- olent tongue of the Cymric branch 0f I•Ie promised to see her at the close the Celtic race. of ther e. se vi c Itis to be noted that a much heavier When - he joined her, after the rust proportion of family names from the of the people had left the church, she Welsh and Cornish tougues belong In confessed that she was worried over the classification of place names than a matter 0f conscience, among ,tea Gaelic branches of the Vanity, I'm afraid, vicar," she told Celts; that is to say, the Irish and the him, "Is my besetting sin," Scott' -sit, The reason for this Iles in "Toll me more, mn child," lie en- the higher development of the clan treated. system among the latter and a develop - "Every morning, vicar," she coatin- meet of clan nomenclature which was ted, "I yleld to the temptation of gazs virtually a system of family names, As Ing at my reflection in the mirror, and eat as the tenth century tlds 83.5 - thinking hew pretty I am," tem was crystalized by royal -edict in The clergyman gazed at her fully a Ireland. But in Wales 'lathe -113,11110s minute, and .then replied: held strictly to use as definitely des - "If that 'la a11, toy daughter, go In criptivo of the individual's parentage, peace, For to make a mistake is no often becomlug virtual genealogies of sin-" ,r up to a dozen navies, finally to be dis- carded ter a place name, in On s1, la Ready With Answer. Tommy was• boasting. "My father and I knew everything the world," he said to his compant- "Ail right," said the latter, "where Asda?" It wits a stiff (111e5ti0.0, but the lit- tle fallow answered coolly: "That is one et Ilio Wrings• my father knows." 1' Steam issuing from the spout of a kettle ofbailing water was inhaled Teeently by is baby, who was fatally scalded. The day conies when a maim gets no thrill as ii'11ts :Coot touches the eelf- stamtrnc to get nation, or his hand presses at button to get heat, light or .toed, He langb to grapple with life at first- hand through the 9Odldlc, fiho 'wood fire and,the frying pan. He yearns to 'prove that ee long as ho lids matches) and, floor end u came lie Dan Boake his way through the wiltlern158 by his owtu.strengths Onix' re3011'11cofi1- tu0ss, es the old breed of pl0neea"s inade their wary, MacNAMARA Variations—McNamara, Macnamara, Racial Origin—Irish. Source—A given name. Here is a family name with a tang . of the salt sea, and which, if you were familiar with the speech of the Gael, would call up visions of clashing arms and splintering, galleys, with Celt and Viking locked in deadly combat off , a shore. Nor, if you were familiar with 1 the history of the Gael, would the to -!b cality of the vislone necessarily be off i S the Irish coast, for the Irish in the h early .1%iiddlo Ages, united under a 11 single "high king," took the offensive v as often as tho•defens,ive, and at one s period their campaigns penetrated as e far as northern Italy, as well 'as along .m the shores of the Baltic and Scandin- avia, a The meaning of the name of the ancient Irish clan, or "Siol Conmara," p or, to use the more usual and modern 111 form, "Macconmara," is "descend-. W ants" or "followers of the sea pro- 1 teeter," and the clan derived its name atsomc point in medieval history from p a sea chieftain to whom had been given g the name � "Gu -ma m," derived t from tine combination of the words b "ell" and "muir," and signifying "pro- W teeter of the sea." a With the passage of the Gaelic clan a system many generations ago, ander the pressure of English law and cue- c tom, the use of the word "slot" and the 5a designation of divisions of population g by clans has been dropped. The Irish in have not succeeded in preserving their e clan organization as well as the Scots, at though the prefixes "0" and "Mac" as v denoting descent aro stilt in wide- 1 spread use with family names with s hereditary connections strongly cher pa Med. im This faintly name is not Scottish, al beteg found, but Seldom in Scotland. 511 Bits of Canadian News. The output el zlr.o front Caned miles has mere than iiva1rtlpl.el sit 1910, According to the Mines Baran The output in 1910 was 2,(3360 to whilst by 1919 it lied jumped to 11, torr. e. 11001 record in milk product1011 the attire globe bas been set 117 Be Pontiac, ow:"od by T. A, Barren, 13rantford, Accelding t0 tee ofIle test taken by the supervisor of t I e:stein Frelsan Association t splendid animal pr0dueed for t twelve mount perlod ending June 18 a total 01 27,017 pounds of ei11.113, 1,2 hounds of fat; 1,173.70 pounds o1. b ler. T1113 le far in excess of a world's ree0rd pt'ey10111C7 set Rud Utles Bella Pontiac to the title 0f t world's record cow. The making rf gov tnlnetlt -et reit orders has commonoed at the 1) minion Iran' and Steel plout at 07dn N.S„ and .2,400. tutee are engaged the work. The heavy governn,'nt dere will alone steep the plant operatics for the duration of the su ilex and fall, Evidence of the favorable receptl of Canadian cattle in Scotland is co tained in a cable from Glasgow, Se land, which annpuncos that 629 Cali dian cattle have ben sold at 18 to 20 centa per pound, Pians are pr0ceedfltg for the ere tion of a huge wireless receiving st tion In Montreal under the owner'sh and operation of the Marconi Wir less Company of Canada, A new Oanaddau automobile co Patty has been formed by Canadian 1 terests to be known as the Pork Motor Car Company, It has taken ov a large plant in the north end o1 Mo real, formerly used extensively f munitions, and will planufacture wt aro known as the Parker automobi and the Parker motor truck. T president of the new organization Sir Alexander Bertram. In the examinations at McGi School of Agriculture, Lieut, R. Unwin, formerly of the Royal FI Artillery, an Imperil! prospective so dier settler under the Soldier Setts ment Act of Canada, stood at the to of the list, He wrote on twenty-tw subjects, its seventeen obtaining f] class. honors, and in the remainde second class 'honors. A native of En land, he served in France, Belgium and Germany, and after demabiliz tion came to Canada under the Soldie Settlement Board and secured war on a Prince Edward Island farm, kI intends continuing practical far work this summer and purchasing farm for himself next year under th Baird. Alberta's population ie put at 620 000 by the provincial vital statistic branch, Births in the province in 192 taaned 18,665, or at the rate of 27.7 per tecusand or papulation. E,lmol ten and Cnlgery run practically nee and neck in the matter of birtbs, th record being 2,339 and 2,369 rsspec Lively. Children born of British stoc predominated in both cities, North "Sea Fis lerrnen Con- las IConvicted by His Fingers. A jury in 9lleblgan recently found a is? man guilty or burglary. Yet no wit. 013, nese appeared 5ga11111 11 2m.. the stolen, us, goods 01810 not found In Ms Iiosses- 005. Mon; no one saw hint eonlntit the crane, and - no one saw lion in t110 for nslgih'borllrftt or the t011w' shop that lla he had robbed. . of ; Ile had entered the tailor shop by sal re 113vire a pane of gine. from the 110, door. 11:: 1 31!iie:10un bureau of the hie Detroit p'aic.. deeartment examined he the ),i... ::a the neat day and f0uud fin- th, i10rprlr,ts 1i1,�7 compared teem 013!111 59 prints 00 file h1 rho bureau and finally tea Identified them l.:• those cf a lean who 137 .more than a year beftere'Mel been nc. eft- quitted of a charge of breaking 0131 ho eremite ;t hou,:.e, TheY are:;tetl 11itn, and six menthe after the crime, dur- eel Ing ',villa t:me lie meetly malutlitle.1 ;- his f„lttcenc0, brought 11 On into court, There the fingerprints Were the sole wittiest against 111m. The police of ne11117 all c413(13 ries know that fingerprint idents; ^nine❑ is an exact science; but 111e diiliceity is 10 001111 nee the jurors. In 0rd0r to do so the Detroit pollee called for ex- perts and the oplillen was that tea flngerprinls of the t)1 ener end those on the glass taken from the taller allot) were exactly alike in thirty-nine chief characteristics. One of lite e 1,ertt asserted that the chances cf two emu having so many chief ellaracterl..tics in coalmen were about mei in three hundred. and two soxtrilliou, two hun- dred and thirty-one quintillion, four hundred and fifty-four qulLdrlllior, eight hundred and thirty-eight tell- i lion, one hundred ani twenty -ane bin-; lion, two hen:teed and nlnety-threo million, six bundred and seventy-six • thousand, five hundred and forty-four (302,231,464,$33,121,298,076,544), All Use experts asserted that a person's 1 fingerprints did net change from birth ! until death, ! In order to emphasize further tea exactness of the method three of the Jurors were asked to etarnp their 11 - gerprints on. cards. Then cue of the: three stamped on a fourth card tee Impress of a: a of his fingers. The judge placed the cards In a row and the experts examines then) with rang. reifying glasses. In four aeeonds they hadidentified anti d lied rho juror wee had stainped the print on the fourth card. ey, in or - in m- en n- ot- 0- a- Ip e m- p- er er Mon at le Th is 11 H. Fie e - P 0 fir r, g- n - r It 0 m a e Just 80. 'What is It that lte)1133 leo moon I place and prove:as It from falling? asked Jim, "I suppose it's 1110 beams," relate bis brother, It Pr,id Dividends, Was your daughter's mi ica odu catkin a prefltable t:::.:tie?" ache Smith, ".Ratter," sai.i I1:wn, "1 bought (be house G:1 either side of tip 1 half 11 =ir valor„” OWES BER IIFE TO TA L SHE SAYS �/ HAD SUFFERED TWENTY- FIVE LONG YEARS. n Mfrs. !Blesses Declares the Medi -- Ci;:,. Has Completely. JRe- c:s;fi'erl Her Health. "I firmly lielleve I owe my life to Tauter, Elm it has completely restored 1117 1,31111%3',1•113 311 "fter- suflertng twenty -eve - 731(3131," t its the stateme It )1103130 by d Mrs. S. Nelles, 503 Parliament St., Toronto. During all (!rose years I: hardly at knew whin tt t was to eat a good meal '•vitht:ut ,u e.ieg dreadful -liable in the pit. of 1117 S 1,1,) 10h and also palpitation of the 110 1 afterwards. My liver wee badly cut of °e'er and I. was troubled ' a lot wait nausea. I generally woke up in the mornings with a fearful headache and had eue11 spells of dlzz!, tress that i had to hold on to the furni- ture to save 1114801R from failing. I was just tired out and weary all the time .and every now and then had such a sinking sensalsou conte over me that 1 thought my eed Mot come. In fact, I wan aim01t a confirmed invalid and used to lie awake for hours at night stelae Mg about my c:ndiila, and never e.:pecte31 to Le wen again. "But the way Taelac hal bunt me 119 has been really wcuderfu'-. The first few doses seemed to do me good, for I began to sleep better and had less distress after my m3ala. After taking eight bot. 'es of this medicine 1 can honestly say I am as well 0s I ever was in my life. All my stomach trouble )las dlsappcared, I sleep dine at night and ant so mural stronger that I cats do my housework with ease. I have recommended TanIac to lots of: my friend, and am glad or this oppor- tunity to tell everybody what a grand medicine it is," 'rankle is sold by leading druggists everywhere, Advt. No Fair Play. Joan --"Why won't mummy buy me a new doll?" Nut's°—"Because yours are not broken yet, dear." Joao—"Well, mummy's had a new baby—and l'm not broken!" Minard's Liniment for sate everywhere Eliminating Trouble, Teacher—"Which one of the Ore senses—sight, feeling, hearing, taste or smell—could yen get along beat without?" Small Boy—"Feeling, because when you get in an accident you won't get hurt." 1 Pre fees le eat fnim; pity. Little Boy—"W 've basin p1ayinli schctel, mother," Mother--"Ne;.1'., 1 hope you were ; 1:1111 balls) 31.1 1:01-10g 1„11001 flours, Little Boy—"1 eide 1 neq:l to be, be ci.useI was the teacher," Harmless Mayor. An Engllehlaan was pay.ng his first visit to Scotland. Ile arrived at a email town. anal begun to question 111e patter, "1 suppose you have a provost here?" `•Aye; ,aid the porter. "And does he have insignia like our may0rs?" "'flan. what"" "lneignia .ire:], for instance, does ha have a chain?" "A chain?" said the astonished por- ter. "Na, na. Ile gangs loose; but 1111nat be feared, lie's quite harmless." GUARD !ta#If1',4 lIti-i.Sittti( R 1 HE smut The summer menthe are the most dangerous to children, The cam- 1.laente of that reason, which are s ebalera •inial tun, colic diahoea and g dneentry, came on so quickly that of- t , ten a Iitile one is beyond aid befo 1- the mother realizes lie is 111. Th k mother must be an her guard to pr e : vent tbel'e troubles, or if they do emu on suddenly to banish them. No othe c. medicine Is of such aid to mother during. hot weather as is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the stomach and bowels and are absolutely safe Sold by medicine dealers or by mai yet 2"o cents a box Prem The Dr. Wil d i Iiazes Med :eine Co., Brockville, Ont. The Changing View. We used to think it rala0(1 because we i wanted to have fun Out in the blossoms of the lane be- neath the glowing sun, • And we were petelalrt and cross and 1 whimpered all the day -- I Put note we view the rain that falls in quite a different way, Sttcks to Dad. Tommy had been a naughty boy, and win his father came home he spoke to eau tints: 'Tommy, do you know what happens to good boys?" "Yes, dad; they go to Beaver." "Do yoa know what happens to bad bees ?„ ""Yes, dad; they go to the other place." • "Well, Tommy, wouldn't you rather bo a good boy and go to Heaven?" Tommy tbt:ught a minute and then said, "'No, father, I'd rather go with you." The Foolish Girl. An Irish pr:G;t was talking to his gardener, Pat, one day. Pat was an old servant, awl it was the priest's cu,tom to diocu;31 with the man vari- ous items et news from the news- papers, "Fat;' ,said the clergyman, "is this Te not scandalous"" e "And what is that, Father?" asked Pre Pat. a "It says in the paper this morning r that a large number of English girls s ata marrying Chinamen." "Shure, and that's nothing, yer hon- or," replied Pat, "I know a handseme ' - Irish colleen that's married an Eng - theme." tinning War. 'he combination or war -time hatre nd cOmrnerchtl rivalry is responsible or the feud which has broken out etweon English alai German North ea fishermen of which the Danes ave fallen victim. Several days ago atives of Grimsby, an English fishing )liege, attacked a German fishing res- et when it attempted to discharge a ergo there, and, according to the Ger- an version, boarded the ship and threatened the captain, beat up the rew and broke up the furniture. Later an .iingllsh fishing steamer was Noted into tho harbor of Geeste- unde, an important fishing city. hen the dockworkers and fishermen earned a British vessel had, arrived, they, according to the report of a sit p- osedly reliable news ease -elation tion to which many Berlin papers subscribe, <: hreatened the .hips, which- proved to e from Grimsby, the same town here the German boat was attacked, nd forced the German pilot to come shore. Then, states the report, the Englirli aptain, smiling in a scornful mustier, w it was impossible to land his ear• o and put out to sea again. It 1e- ains tor the Fretheit, the Social st pan to bring to light the comptate ors of what happeeel to the English easel. It states she came to Geete• made, not to sell fish, but because ho 11et1 run out of coal rand rifle!' de- rting, either because she Melted (ha orvices of a Garman pilot or was • tort of fuel, ran aground on the etas near Helgoland and sunk, All Ificers and crew managed to reach rt after eight hours in an open boat. t about the same tone the natives of ! rlmsby, Unaware of the fate that had. fallen their taweemen, attacked a i et cf banish fleeing vessels, t Is-' charging cargo there, and order wee' only .restored after a severe steeple with the police, tvllo finally were vial tort -ties. Further retaliations are ex -1 "sleeted, Feed the body well Right food. for the body is more important than right fugal for the engine. tS is a scientific food,cont amnia' all the nutriment of wheat and, malt, ed. harky. Grape:Nut. s digests easily (31131 Quickly, un.lds toward ., health and strength — and is. delightful in. flavor and crispness There t)0 se O ., be fle 1 His Advice, Young Policeman (who 100,3 broken! Mt fight between two calor. seamen): "Where do you live?" Larear- -:"Calcutta," Policeman (to the other dao) - • , "And where do you live?" ('hjnt.man--"t111nrh 31l li,' Policeman • l•m — 0,1:;, the hest! thing you two 30111 do i, t:, atop off halite to bed," We used to think the stormswere sent t to spoil our picnic date, And. keep us penned up in the house or right inside the gate !And we were angry all the time that things should go that way -- But we have learne:l to view the storms quite different to -day. 'Au Is so in all a ,1 1 s here that L mark li t our quiet 1ire-- We see the wio,lom of the toil and of the pato and strife, And we have grown a gentler tv111 and welcome all He sends For 11071 we take another view o1 No- ture's destined ends. We know, for instenee, that the rale is sent to fill a 1188,1. And net to spoil our happy day and slake out spires bleed, And Waugh gh the larger purpose cf Ills will and wish we knot' The blessing of the flying c']oud; Os the Bun's blight glow, MONEY ORDERS, When ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order, ' The Heart of Friendship. here's to the heart of friendship tried and true That laughs with us when joys our pathway strew; And kneels with las whoa eorrOW lilte a pall I]nsllrc•-ada our ttt'takon soul; when s11111es through all The midnight g100n1 with more t.'03,n human faitih. Here's to the leve that seeks not self, amt hath NO rcnsure ter 011r frailty, hitt doth woo, By gentle arts, our spirits back into. The way of tenth; then 111ed,31 upon our lives i radience that all th13)01 o1:•0 sur- vives. 1 Every neem taffcrs from th •1.`. viten I1: wee; rf 1123r,e , :1 $4 Pau1'at 1:i1. he is mireastiry to the 1s e .`nes .Cethienal len nee tt leen pence -nag: of eerie wenete 13,1''it. to 7, rive y 1313 1 t n .;pent on' one job alone. What's in a Name. The reason dentists call their offices dental parlors is that "drawing rooms" would be too suggestive. 0. McPherson, Furniture Dealer and Undertaker, Minard's Liniment Co„ Ltd., Armstrong, 13,0, fffjjj Yarmouth, N.S. Dear Sirs—Since the start of the Baseball season we have been hinder- ed with sore muscles, sprained ankles, etc„ but just as soon ss we started us- ing MINARD'S LINIMENT our troubles ended. Every baseball player should keep a bottle 0f your liniment handy. Yours truly, W. E. 1XOPH1LRSON, Secretary Armstrong I•Iigh School Baseball Team. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS 0. J. CLIFF - TORONTO Amor:lea'a Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on DM DISEASES and HoW to Feed Mailed 7100 to any Ad- dress by the Author. 3a. Clay Glover Co., 1Srp,, 111 Neat 91st Street ... New York, 'COLA. ASP IN "Bayer" is only Genuine 'Wareing! in,1 Unicss 90)1 ,see the name "!layer" on i3Ocksige or on tablets yet are nal, getting genuine Aspirin at all, In every Bayer package are dlreellons for Colas, as Headache, *Neuralgia, Bleu - me 1oeu-plat ;sin,. niter hc, Toothache, Lumbago .and tor fain. dlancly Litt boxes ell: twelve' tablea (('st foto coats. Drug. .23.33 alto ae11 larger ales arcs, Ilade- in 3 11 ,(111. A Writ, I Ih, ,r:t,?' 11111'lt trzezatercal ,i, ten:tll), 01 ;layer Ri:rnu.mu-121l''d' ,1i'n1an, t ttentld. 1 er or 'Ward's Liniment Relieves Netmetela t):ilitellca3icl. ll LA i Cuticura Insures Thick Glossy Hair Shampoos with Cuticura Soap pre- ceded by light applications of Cuti- cure Ointment to the scalp skin do much to cleanse the scalp of dan- druff and promote the healthy condition necessary to producing luxuriant hair. Soap 25t. 0intmea 25 and 55c, Talcum 25e. Sold throughout theDominion, Caned(anDepob L men., Limited 31410 Pan 15t. W . Mon: Cuticurn So rel. ". n cin orJ wi P tl,out a M s TO WOMEN -- OF WORE ACE This Woman's Letter Tells You How To Pass The Crisis Safely. Laseeiles, P.Q.—"During the Change of Life I felt so weak and run down I could hardly do my worst, The per- spiration would pour over my face so that I couldn't see what I was doing. We live on a farm, so there is lots to do, but many who felt as I did would have been in bed. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it did me e world of good. I tried other remedies• but 1 put Vegetable Compound ahead of them all, and I tell every one I know how much good it has done me."--• Mrs. DUNCAN BItOWN, Laseeilos, Prov, Quebec. t� Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backaches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ear, ,palpitation of the heart, sparks before the oyes, irregularities, Constipation, variable ap. petite, weakness and dizzon085 should be !heeded by middle-aged women, and lot Lydia 1. Pinkhanl's Vegetable Com. pound: carry them safely through this crisis as it did Mrs. Brown. You are invited to write for free advice No other medicine has been so sue. °essful in relieving woman's suffering , 88 has Lydia: E. 1inkham's Vegetable Compound. Women inn, receive free - and helpful advice by writing the Lydia h . Pinklram Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass, ISSUE No.31—'21.