HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-8-11, Page 7r.'
EMPIRE'S MOST
OUS FORTRESS
WE R OF TERRIBLE
MEMORIES.
Romantic History of Tower of
London, the Mecca of Sight-
seers in Old Land.
Many .people visit the Towbter, u
few trouble to equip thomselvee for It
tour of London's worl¢•Pamous fort.
reqs,
Yeitr imagination will respond far
More readily to the romantic atmee-
011ere of the historic edifice a you se,
quaint yourself, proyious to your visit,
with some of the main facts relating
to the Tower,
In a recently -published book, "The
Tower of London," Mr, Walter Bell un-
folds its terrible and romantic his -
tore.
Willipm the Conqueror built the
Keep, or Tower, wbtch is the central
and most conspicuous part of the fort -
rose,
• Foot -Prints of Illetory.
Mr, Bell tells us how the Conqueror
had two objects in view. He wanted
to dispute the passage of an enemy up
"the Thames 'and to overawe London-
ers! With studied insolence, he did
away with part of the Boman wall
round Loddon so that ho might erect
his Tower, and to this day part of the
Keep is outside the City boundary.
The walls of the Keep are fifteen
•,feet thick and eleven feet above the
ground.
It w•19 not until the reign of Henry
tbnt the Tower of London assumed
anything approaching its present ap-
pearanoe, and after that several -mon.
'eras added to the structure at vari-
ous times.
The"'Tower became a State prison
because It was almost impregnable. It
was also used as a Royal Palace—the
last time by Charles IL
British coinage reas strucic in the 1
,Tower until 1812, so teat this weeder
ful fortress is closely ideetilied with
the whole of Ilr1tieli h1::tory.
R was 10 the Council Chamber on
the top floor of the Keep tbat Itichard'
IL gave up his crown to henry of Lan-,
caster. His death has always been a i
mystery, but it is probable that he was
starved to death. The execution of,
Anne Iloleyn wits also decided upen in
the Tower, and she spent the last
seventeen days of iter life there.
Places of Oppression.
There is an amazing collection of i
instrurnonts of torture in the crypt be-'
noath St. John's Chapel. Tbeee 1n-
+iude thumb- t'retvs. a splliel collar,'
and that appalling 0!'!,1I00ce known as
"The Seavenet' r's Dauelter," t:hich
crashed it. vice kis tr death,
(,ray leevekee peak some time in the
Tower, lac is supposed to tiovo been
confined in a dungeon Styled "Little
Esse,' The spare allotted hfhn was
very small, dark, and without ventila-
tion,
The Bloody Tower and, opposite it,
Traitor's Gate, are full of memories of
cruelty and oppression. Through the
gate passed all State prisoners.
From the tiny square window fac-
ing tbia arch Arelhbishop Laud gave
Ye last blessing to Strafford as the lat.
ter was on his way to execution. Laud
himself was beheaded three years
later,
Sir Walter Raleigh spent thirteen
years in the Bloody Tower, and Wil-
liam Penn, the Quaker and founder of
Pennsylvania, was imprisoned in the
Tower for writing a harmless pamph-.
let.
The pitiful tragedy of the two litho
Princes has served to make this
Tower notrotously famous. The
twelve -year-old King Edward V. and
his younger brother wero suffocated
by order of Richard III., who had them
sent to the Tower for that purpose.
The famous prisoners 'who perished
miserably in the Tower, or who spent
the time previous to their execution
there, are too numerous to mention.
The Royal Regalia is kept in the
Wakefield Tower, and is of special in- I
tereat on account of the Golder Eagle
which holds the anointing oil need at
Coronations, and Ile spoon into which
the oil is poured.
Until 1834 lions were kept in the
e. Tower,
A WOMAN'S RIGHT
TO GOOD HEALTH
Haydn Lumps.
A Londoner paid his. !list visit to
the country, Whilst viewing the rus-
tic settee the observed a large hayrick
near a. farmhouse, and asked hes corn-
panlon what it was,
"Why, that's hay," was the reply.
"Wot, all 'aye" exclaimed the be-
nighted Cockney, "Blow mo, Bill,
don't the 'ay grow to big lumps dahn
'erel"
Handle With Care.
"Jack has placed his heart in my
keeping."
"Well, you had Netter be very caro-
led 0f it, deer, Me told me last week
I had broken it."
Housekeepers who have trouble
with ants will findthat borax is ono
of tho best oxtexerlinntors, Pantry
shelves and crocks should he well
sprinlrled with 3t,
ieortility is a by-product of good
farming. flood farming is u eAnnbina-
tion of science and art with plenty of
field for eldpansiot.
The tallest races of mankind, In-
eluding the Patagonians and the Gal-
loway'Scots, seldom attain a height
elf U feet d incluse, '
Most Troubles Afflicting Women
'Are Due to Poor Blood.
To every woman belongs the right
to enioy a healthy, Retie() lite; yet
nine ollt of ten suffer front some form
oP bloodlessnese, That le why one
sees on every side pale, thin olteelts,
dull' eyes and drooping figures --slim
signs et headaches, weak backs, ach-
ing limbs and uncertain health. Ali
weak woolen should win the rightto
be well by refreshing their weary
bodies with the new, rlah, red blood
that promptly transforms thein into
healthy attractive women, ''eels new,
red blood is supplied by Dr. Williams'
Pink 1,111s, which reaches every organ
and every nerve In the body. Through
the use of these pills thousands of wo-
men have found benefit when suffering
from anaemia, indigesUon, general
wealtness . and those ailments from
which women alone suffer. Among
the many women who tell 0f the good
Dr. Williams' Pink Phis have Bono
them le Mrs. L. Hicks, Round hill,
N.S., who says: "I became very much
run down in health; my blood seemed
weak and watery,. my Strength failed,
and I wasso easily tired that illy work
was a burden. I had often reap about
Dr. Williams' rink Pills and decided
to try them, and I can truly say that
after using three boxes I found my-
self gaining, and my old-time energy
and vitality was restored, Out of my
men experience I can strongly recom-
niend title rnedieine."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink ills
through any dealer in medicine or by
mail at 60 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr, Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont, '
Value of Forests.
Canada t3 one of the greatest forest
countries of the world, Much of our
Canadian soil is unsuited to farming,
but is capable of growing magnificent
timber. Our forests provide work
which madntalus half a rnillion people:
They give work, too, for cur callers
and railway Wren and furnish bu mere
far our nnerd-nuna and banker:;. All
citizens can assist in taking etre of
our forests and, particularly in pro,
testing them against fire.
A person enjoys a rub -down after
a hard day's work; so does a horse.
M!nerd's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia
bi �� the Festive Dow
w
Japan hoe her rules of the road, not
Phrased Rs are our awn, but very
much to the point, The rules are le,
titled le lengliell al»o, for the use . of
British tourists.
Tihwe first rule rends: "At the rise
at the hand of the policeman, stop
rapidly; do not pass ilial by, or other-
wise dlsrenpect elite."
Tite second: "Witen a passenger of
Ute foci bene in eight, tootle the horn
trumpet tc him maledtously et first,
if he still obstacle your passage; tootle
him with vigOur turd express by word
tf mouth the warning, 111, 1211"
The tlrhtl is t:iucling. i/dwara.or
tile. wandering horns that he ellen not
Luka !rt'ht as y^.0 pas him by. Dn
nut explode the exhaust Ito:: tit hero.
Go soothingly by err atop by the road-
side until he pass away,'
The fourth aloe has its pathos:
"Give big space to the featly() dog that
snakes npert in the roadway. Avoid
entanglement et the dog with yopr
whlleI spokes."
Here ie an awful warning against
sltidding: "Go soothingly over the
grease -mud; for there turns the skid -
demon. Press Ole brake of the toot
as you roll around the corners to save
the eellapee."
He Ate 1t Atli
"Crop failures?" asked the old-
timer.
"Yes, I've seen a few in my day. In
1864 the corn crop was almost noth-
ing. We cooked some for dinner, and
my fattier ate fourteen acres of Dorn
at one meal,"
Hope H Found It,
When the bell rang the other day
little Johnnie Went to the door, Soon
he returned aloue.
"Who was it?" asked the mother.
"Oh, it was just a man looking for
the wrong place," was the reply,
Vour Best Friend.
A young man may have many
friends, but he will tine none so stead-
fast, so constant, so ready to respond
to ills wants', so capable of pushing
Trim ahead as a little loather -covered
book with the, name of a bank on its
cover.—Ser Thomas Lipton,
Universal Solvent.
"Now," said the professor of chemis-
try, "under what combination is gold
most quickly released?"
The student pondered a moment. "I
know sit;" the answered, "Marriage."
Oculist^ Leave found that a peculiar
form of cry. --strain is due to persons
rcu.ii.ng white elyiiug down.
Surnames and Their Origin
LINDSAY
Variation—Lindsey.
Racial Orig i n—N orman-French.
Source—A clan name.
To classify the family name of Lind-
say as Norman-French origin, when It
is Scottish, and to call it a clan name
though the Liudseys were neither
Gaelic nor Highlanders, demands.
same excuse and explanation.
It happened during the rein of
Ring lialcolm Ceann-mor ("Big
Bead") of Scotland, which extended
from before to many years after the
Norman invasion of England.
In the years immediately following
the first victories of William the Con-
queror,
onqueror, many Anglo-Saxon warriors
and chieftains sought their fortunes
anew in Scotland. Malcolm welcomed
them. Later dissatisfied with tine re-
wards William had granted or with-
held, also sought the service of a more
generous, overlord. And Malcolm wel-
comed them also.
The Lindsays were among the lat-
ter number. At that time they bore
a surname descriptive of the lo-
cality from which they had come in
Normandy, "De Limesay," In the
course of time this has become Lind-
say.
The family won for itself, through
grants of the Scottish court, lands
which though not in the Highlands
bordered on them. Throughout sub-
sequent history they played a large
part in the wars and confeeleratioas of
the I3ighlands. They adopted the cus-
toms and manners of the clans, bore
the sante weapons as the Gaels,
evolved a dress and a tartan similar
to those of the IIighlateders, and so .in
the course of time have come to be re-
garded, let us say, as sort of honorary
Highlanders, if not Highlanders by
blood. It was a Lindsay, indeed, who
Was firet colonel of the famous Black
Watch Regiment of Highlanders,,
CHATTERTON
Variations — Chatsworth, Chetwood,
Chatham, Chadsey.
Racial Origin—Anglo-Saxon.
Source—A place name.
This is a group of family names
which has been derived from place
names', which, though not the sante,
are all of the same character.
The bask: element in these names
is the ancient Anglo-Saxon word for
cottage, or hut, which was "cyte" or
"este" (the pronunciation of the An-
glo-Saxon "C" was alwaya like "lc,
for, as a matter of fact, there was no
"It" in the Anglo-Saxon alphabet).
This was the usual word denoting
"haus" or "dwelling," the ancient
equivalent of the modern word
"house" being reserved for buildings
of a more pretentious or public na-
ture,
The plane name of Chatterton, or
more properly "Ohadderton," from
which the family name was, descrip-
tively derived, was compounded from
the Anglo-Saxon "cete-doir-dem," and
signified "the fortified dwelling in the
wood,'
Chatham le the name of a town in
Kent. It is compounded of "cyte" or
"tete" and "ham," the latter signify-
ing a village.
Chatsworth is a compound of "cete"
and "worth," At the period when
family names were formed this word
had come to mean any farmstead. But
the compound of the place name had
occurred long before, when the word
still preserved its literal meaning of a
"warded" or inclosed place. Flence
the place name meant not a farm cot-
tage, but a cottage in an inclosure.
Usually die knolosure was a wooded
place.
Ohatwood was a place name signify-
ing a Cottage In the wood and Chad-
sey a dwelling near the sea.
If coffee,
Which is known
to contain caffeine,
disturbs your health
and Comfort
t., a •. $y :(1NSTANM1
n.&i
•
tt �'.•,, id
liere4 a , easotst
eenteeen ',epee
k11TO 4DE'PAiR PARTS
for moot melte; end medals of eery,
lour old, broken. or wormout parts
replaced. Write or wiro us the e:db.
Ing Weal You want We eerry the
largest and !nest complete steak in
Canada at sttgetly used er neer parte
and automobile eg6!ipment We ;blp
C,O,D, anywhere in Canada, teeth -
factory or refund In full Dar motto,
Shaw's Ante Selvage part seemly,
923*931 Duffcrla at., Teroate. Ont.
1. Progress in Canada.
According to preliminary estimates
the go'd production from the mines of ii. "Wel'.
Northern Ontario will amount to aleforty million cubic yards of orator-
proxhnately 81,000,000 during the ial will have to be reinovetl; and it is
mantel of June, as compared with $1; aspected ti recover Siena 11 twenty -
300,000 in May and $1,084,345 in April.! flee minion tans or copper ore, winch
The productionfor the quarter' 1..11 8.011 •r, t:,u and million Bounds
amounted to around $3,734,346 and is tt pure neat il, Anlready Lao miners' arra
the highest quantity In the liletory i•8 at work, an over five million cubic:
gold minipg, in Ontario. It io exp0et.' 'aids 1. are beet dug away, Seven.
ed that gold preduction in the next, large ate rhe shovels am chnpinyed for
quarter will even exceed tihese figures, the i:urpt:=0. and SI£teen iprcrnottves
J. W, Broach, a farmer at
Iloharm, j 1 Sul .tt:e nnsieriai'away ni it it clog
Sask., has developed a strain of fall c.it.
wheat vihlch lee centrales willrevolu-' The digging goes ea at three dii
Lionize the 'greeting of fall wheat in ferent levels—AWL forty -ave. and
Weateru Canada. He nas experiment -
/iglu
feet is height -and Sixteen
ed with the new cereal for three melee c•f railway et ane t these with
years. The mature lies a red- the waste dumps where the material
ready for crus
dish appearance, similar to Marquis, is stored ready and the
and gives promise of an exceptionally,
heavy yield from the 25 acres he has
under crop this year.
Canada's hat, cap and fur industry other less.
for the year 1919 accounted for a total
•
production valued at $20,790,000, of
which fur and fur -lined goods amount- SUMMER EAT
ed to $2,800,000. Cloth caps were pro- FEAT
dueed to -the value of $3,700,000. The q
total capital Invested in the industry HARD O i .9 BABY
amounted to $14,653,814; the number v ! 5
of establishments 208; and wages paid
amounted to $4,145,462. A total of No season of the year 15 so daager-
4,170 people were employed in the in- nus to the life of little onea as is the
dustry, summer. The excessive heat throws
Plans aro in progress for the forma- the little stomach out of order so
tion of a model town for tubercular quickly that unless prompt aid is a:
returned soldiers on a 7,000 -acre tract hand the baby may he beyond all
of land near Kamloops, B.C. Inspec-. human help before the mother realizes
tion has already been made of the he is 'ill. Summer is the season when
land and if the report is adopted at diarrhoea, cholera inf:urtum, dyseatry
the coning session of parliament, and colic are most prevalent. Any one
work will be commenced in the spring of these troubles niay prove deadly if
of 1922. not properly treated. During the sum- '
The Triangle Chemical Company mar the mothers' best friend is Baby's '
are arranging with the city of New Own Tabiets, They regulate els
Westminster, B.C., for a lease of all bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep
the waterfront comprised in the en• baby healthy, The Tablets are sold by
dian reserve on the North Arm, It is medicine dealers or by mall at 25
the intention of this firm to erecta cents a box from The Dr. Williams.;
plant for manufacturing muriatic acid, iMiedicine Co„ Brockville, Ont
sulphuric acid, superphosphate and a
full lino of chemical fertilizers, Freaks of Sound.
A test shipnheut of two carloads of 1f, when the air is elleyou stand
horses is being made to Port of Spain, ,near a high wall and speak a ward
Trinidad, by Alberta livestock cam- used
loudly, it will alma back to you as if i
hnleaioCarlyle. These horses are repeated by an invisible person. It le,
to be used for ordinary working Our- of course, an echo. {
poses, and are costing between $40 parallel wails separated by tt few !
and $15 per head In Alberta, If this hundred feet, as in a canyon, may so'
shipment proves. successful, ProfessorCreflect a sound as to cause It to be Ms -
inthe futmueipates a heavy movement tinctly heard again and again in a
1n the futrue, long -dying series of repetitious.
Although the ban upon the importa- if the reflecting walls are irregular,
tion of Canadian cattle into Great 13r1- the repetitions, instead* of being dis-
tinct has not yet been removed; the ex- tinct to the ear, will be mere judib!ed
portaticn of cattle from the port of and unintelligible reverberations. This
Montreal is showing an activity that is noticeable in certain caverns,
has not been seen for many years, prof. W. J. Humplueys, an eminentSince navigation opened this year physicist, deaeribes a curious phorate.
there have been carried from the port moon which ho calls an "acoustical
7,074 cattle and 1,884 sheep, mirage," sounds uttered at a distance
on the surface of the earth. seeming
IV -Vying
a Mountain of
Capper,
000 .0E
Lite grcntect teats ever ,at.
tempted in motet training is naw being
Carried out in theUnited Staten,
At Biebee, in the State of Arizona,
there is a. itiii Itnown as Sacramouto
Hill, which is composed of popper ore
and 'contains ea immense Amount of
valuable metal. American mining Ox -
ports ]lave Set 1- 'rhnselves the task of
digging away the alele of Ole bili in
the neat sixteen years and recovering
extraction of the metal.
When the work is finished teem will
be no hill, but in its place two pits,
one a Quarter of a roil; deep anti tate
The Orphan.
Yoang Poet --•"What do you think of
my latest brain child?"
Editor --"I'm afraid our magazine
will be unable to adopt its"
Not New to liim.
"here`: a lisp advorttniug shtrta•' ""ltr;nre I was half through myflrst
'bottle of T: 1^ ebegan
wltlicut buttons," said his wife. t Rn a I to
"Nutliiu now ibu t ti•{ " ile { right up," decli;rod Robert Davis, 22
g r u t, , d
DAVIS SLEES'ALL
NIGHT LONG NSW
TA'NLAC STRAIGHTENED
HIM RIGHT UP.
Hantip:.on Man Says He Now
Feels As Well As He Ever
Did in His Life.'
liar. husband: "I've' been wear!ag them
for yeUl'S."
Me( 'auiry81., Hamilton, Otte a v tilled
employee of the Wood•Alexander hard.
ware tlare
{ Wanted Informrtion. "'Por ub rat r:x months before taking
Tanlac 1 Mid been in a badly ren -down
"1 can sere the lipe ui yens ears.. t'Ondltion. At tines 1 had 00 petite
dearle," at. all and Hien selaetkmos 1 could eat
ti'ell, whet 02 it?" Heartily, but suffered terribly after -
"Is that an ereide01 or are knee mine wards fr;m indigestlen.
leg hack gradual]:''?" ' "1 was nervous and rootless, never
- - slept well, and many a night f rolled
A Scout ie Thrifty. and to: -sed nearly all night long and
Tcniderfeot--"Why do you taste such in the morning felt Se Stift in m7
long ."-tops?" joints it was scale time before I felt
First ('lass- -"t neve shoe leather like reeving at ail. I suffered a great
that way," Boal front constipat;ce and was sub-
ject to splitting headaches.
The it/lasing Emblem, ''i;ut Tantne helped me right from
t:te start and now 1 have simply a
ravena:us appetite and everything
agrees with Ino perfeetiy, I never
have a headache or a pain of any kind,
sleep kite a healthy bay and feel as
well as 1 ever did in roe life. Tanlao
will always get a good evord from me."
Tanlae is sold by leading druggists
evens,. here. Adv,
Mottoes and Bits of Wisdom.
The steady drop bores tete stone.
Many Lines it happens that we get
what we want when we are even net
aware of it.
A good maniple is worth mere than
scores cf theoretic doctrines.
Love of the work that Is to be done,
makes it easter.
Practical sense very often is more
needed than a ,rest etock 0f know-
ledge -
tee__
Mtnard's Liniment for sale every.vhere
Not So Dbwa In the Mouth.
Joe- "Did you get much relief when
you went to the dentist?"
Jim- "Yes! The dentist wasn't
hoiuo."
indications of Trouble.
Johnny -"Did Mottos lave dypsop•
sia like what you've got?"
Dad -"How on earth do I knew?
Why do you ask such a question?"
Johnny --'Well, our Sunday school
teacher says the Lurd gave Mos. t.,o
tablets."
.1t the lotting docks of a large sea-
' port town the rather remarkable coin-
cidence was noticed of three steam -
trawlers lying berthed side by side,
their name's being respectively, diose,
Shamrock, and Thistle,
"What a pity that Wales is not ro-
t preented," remarked a visitor. "That
to come from high in the air. Such anI
It Doesn't Matter. uplifting of sound (corresponding to I
"It doesn't really matter—notbdng the dplifting of a landscape by a vis -
does," is the motto I saw recently in ual mirage) may occur when a stra-
a house, and it set me to thinking. tum of warm air at the surface is over -
Why should we make much ado about laid by cooler air. The sound travels
things that we cannot prevent or faster at the top, and so appears to
help? Why not receive the blows and Come from aloft.
knocks passively instead of being so A balloonist can often hear the 1,
wrougbit alp all the time that we get earth -echo of his own volce when he
the double effect of these unfortunate cannot, by shouting, gain the attention
happenings, both physically and men- of people standing on the ground be.'
tally? low him. It is because he—at an alta -1
Why are we so chargrined and mortl- tude of 1,500 feet, perhaps—is in a re-
tied when we think we haven't done gkon of silence, whereas they are im-
ourselves justice on some occasion— messed in a flood of sound.
presiding at a meeting, or filling a
place to an entertainment program,
for Instance—and public attention has
been attracted tous in any way? Why
do we make ourselves so miserable
over conviction that we have not ap-
peared at our best? It doesn't really
matter, does it? It is not of vital im-
portance, and should we allow the lit-
tle things of life, the little pin -pricks
and annoyances, the little perplexi-
ties which disturb little minds, to
throw us off our balance, to spoil our
happiness and peace of mind? No, a
thousand times no! Whatever hap-
pens', it isn't of half so much import-
ance as we probably think. The main
thing is to steep our poise under the
little trials. If we are cheerful and
optimistic, they will soon be forgotten
by us and others.
wt.nld have rmmpletod the coluci-
dence "
"Don't worry about that, guv'nor,"
hr;rlied the old salt, to whom. the re.
nt'rk was addressed. 'I expert there's
a leak In one of them."
Wareing Salesman.
Tho wcm:uh shopper toulced and
loidced, but seemed to be un'-bie to
find altyilelee to satiety her. The
nl'liging t tri: putted down aux after
box in an attentpt to make a sale.
Finally the wuuian pelted up her
gloves are parneel and observed:
"I.4011 t Wok I'll buy anything to-
day, I'm sorry to have U. .ubled you,
but the fart is I was just looking for
a filet d."
"Oh, thot', all right. 1t was no
trouble at all, I assure you," the clerk
answered "Irl feet. if you think your
friend piglet, l.' in any of the few re-
maining boxes, ell open them, tool"
Allowing Plenty cf Time.
An old lady, with great bustle .and
hustle, hurriei into a way;•ltie r,tiiway
station.
Trotting iturrie-ily frnni hankies-ef-
flee to W0it'h Q rcoin. 1201 from there to
the porter :ra. eLe at Last found
:n nfdicial .f nae i -.grab a quiet
snooze.
She ,,batik '1.'mant ;! he .iwolte,
and then q.r ;c1 i c i::.
"When 15 iia r. Xt t 111 am,:"
The potter i.iei:od il'1 syn,. p11,l re-
plied:
"lei an Ilea. anti .testy ui!anies,
nil ni "
"7 't.:k you:" repl,i'il the oil i laky.
T ani RAI glad :het 1 111,1 1 )1 ta,t lite."
' Those Having Sick Animals
SHOULD CSE
h"FY iq Ri1r o 'tr! "!'r:
Prospects in Alaska.
Alaska to -day has fewer people than
it had in 1910 or in 1900, but since the
territory has always grown rapidly
when business wan dull iu the States
itis expected that the records of 1921
wi11 show unusual progress- The gov-
ernment railway from Seward to Fair-
banks is nearly done; coal mining and
gold mining are going on, and so are
the fisheries, A pulp inill has been
built, and a number of new industries
like reindeer raising, have been start-
ed. There is plenty of room, for 54,899
people in an area larger than Ontario
make only a sprinkling,
The Wrong Department.
In an English town, the town hall
provides office -room for several public
officials, among them the pollee -sur -
When Is a Man Less Than goon, to whom candidates for the
force go for medical examination,
The other day a =smiler young fel-
low presented himself at the eurgoou's
oblco. He was told to strip to the
waist,
"WIrot's that?" said the man.
"Strip!" repeated the doctor, sharp.
ly.
He Complied, and was duly mea,•
sured, punched, and pounded,
"Skip over that chair," saki the eur-
M1 go01t,
The man did so, and harked his
A good Laugh is sunshine in any skies, lie was gettlng indignant,
house, but a Billy, simpering laugh is "Knees back; touch the fdoort Now
only e tallow -candle imitation of the run round aud let ins teat your heart
sunlight, and wind-," said the surgeon,
The candidate oaploded,
'Melting your wagers to a star is "I'M fanged if I will!" ho roared.
all right, ,but you've got to watch "1'd rather, stay single."
the earth to see if there's et good roar( He had strayed into the wrong room,
ahead. The registrar's Oleo was on Um other
elite of the earridoe:'
The driver of nn automobile should r-- O'--
koop n sharp lookout ahead, but re- MONEY ORDERS, "
member that theta may be .A man When ordorlug goods by mall 9010
close behind, a Dominion Iaf:prnss Wiley Order,
a Man?
When he makes a vow he fails to
keep;
When without sowing he would reap:
When he would rather beg, borrow, or
steal
Than work to earn an honest meal;
When ho delights to stir up strt£e
Or values boner less- than life;
When he Insults a fallen foe,
Or at a woman aims a blow,
Good for all threat and chest dtset see.
IJis cin Res, Garnet, Sprains. ire scs,
.olid, Si Log' , Npa,ins. Running Sores.
me., ^.te. tthr a1'] -'lwsys be in the stable
---8',1.P P\-T:IIVW t17STnt:.
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
O i OI.,FF • TORONTO
Amertoa'a Pioneer Doe Remedies
Book on
DDD DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
10. Cloy Glover 00., x050,
119 West 91st Street
New York, U.S.A.
ASPIRIN
Only "Bayer" is Genuine
Miss Flora Boyo
Tells How Cuticura
Healed Her Pimples
"My face was very itchy at first,
and after that it was covered witli
pimples that disfigured it
badly. The pimples were
hard and red and they vera
small, and they were scot-
tosed all over hay face and
we esoitchyIhadtoscratch
and I could not sleep.
s
"These bothered me nearly a year
beforeI used Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment and wher,I had used five cakes
of Cuticura Soap and five Waxes of
Cuticura Ointment I was healed."
(Signed) Miss Elora M. Boyko,
Gardenton, Man., Dec. 26,1918.
Having obtained a clear healthy
skin by the use of Cuticura, keep it
clear by using the Soap for all toilet
purposes, assisted by touches of
Ointment as needed. Do net fail to
include the exquisitely eceuted Y:uti-
cura Talcum in your toilet prepara-
tions. Splendid after bathing.
Soap 255c, Ointment 25 nod Sac. Sal:..
throughouttheDominion. CanadianDapon
omo
LLno. Limited, St. Paul St., Mentoel.
C
aboose Soap abases without". ng.
��
SUFFERN li
YOUNG INNEN
This Letter Tells How It May
be Overcome—All Mothers
Interested.
Toronto Ont.— "I have suffered since
I was a school girl with pain n my left
1111111111111i1111111111 sideandwltheramps,
growing worse each
year until I was all
rundown. was so
bad at times that I
was unfit for work,
I tried several doc-
tors and pa.t en t
medicines, Out was
oniv relieved for n
":port time. S`omctorq
of the dos
wanted to perform
an operation, but
n y father objected. Finial)/ I learned
through my mother of Lydutl B,.Pink• e
ham's Vegetable Cemnoutl y„ and holy
thankful 6 am that I tried it. 1 am
relieved from pain and cramps, and
fool as if it has saved my life. Ton
may use my letter to help other
women as I ant glad to recommend the
medicine. "—Irflts. H. A. Q000tasas, 14
I.toekvalo Ave,, Toronto,
Those who are troubled as hMrs.
Coodman was shouldimmediatelys
eek
restoration to health bytoll gLydia
Ii. PInkhrttn's Vegetable Compound;
Those who need special advice May
write to Lydia Il. Isinkha n Medicine Od.
(confidential), Lynn Mas„ Theseletters
Will be opened read' and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.
188U5 No. 41.-- 1,
Warningl Take no chances with
substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tab-
lets of Aspirin" Unless you see the
name "Bayer" on package or on tab-
lets you am not getting Aspirin at all.
In,every Bayer package are directions
for Oolds, headache, Neuralgia, Phew,
inatsm Earache Toothache,�n
I moa
go amt for Paim handy tin boats of
twelve tablets Cost few cents, Drug-
gists also sell larger paeknres. Mario
In Canada. Aspirin ie the trade mark
(registered in Canada-), of Bayer piano.
beton) of MonoacetiOacldestor of
SaltCybt!atltd.