Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1925-6-10, Page 31 AVIATION IN CANADA Canada, in its great expanses, wi large centres widely separated, a tremendous tlletancee rr'entlently be .covered, has been described mere than one Aeronautical aUtller'i as the logical sinters of the aeroplan The Dominion has recognized tit eine° the war, and has taken Mackie advantage of the large number' of hig ly trained hell she had available the conelueien of hestiliti0e> AMOK] is coming to play a greater part e Year in many phases of the Dominion ,economic life,' and operations are c fled Out with a high degree Of e tic'leney. • The Royal Canadian air Force' 1924 took up 3,340 hours of llyiug tin without a single fatality or any ac dent involving serious injuries to a of the personnel, which, according the Air Board, "proves that flying carried out by carefully trained perso nel is quite applicable to every -da ciyil life," Returns show tlfat of th total flying tithe last year, 1,220 flyin hours were for air force training, to flights, etc., 60 hours were flown du ing operations with the militia forces 16 hours jolnteoperations with t Royal Canadian Navy, and the reneel ing 1,940 hours were flown wholly in connection with the work of other Government departments. Operations in Forestry Work. The Forestry Branch is using the air service more and more. In the Pr vinces of Alberta and Manitoba 1 1924, work of the forestry patrol 1 valving 1,360 flying hours was Carrie on, Over thre million acres of force land in Alberta were covered twic daily by forest patrol during the se son of fire hazard. In Manitoba forty A GRATEFUL LETTER From a Lally Made Well by Dr, th Williams' ink 1?ilis, 1111 1 "I wish from 1117 heart X could Por- to; suede every person who Is run down by In health to give D1•, Williams' Pink t9' Pills a trial" Thus writes Mrs, Louie 0, i 11i1tchefl, ()alt Point, Man„ wile further is Saye;—"About a year ago I was a al weak woman, suffering from a run lel clown system and impoverished bleed, at ( Any little exertion would cause 1817. n legs to tremble and my heart to throb ooh i violently. I could not sweep a room Is or walk fifty feet without being ex 081 haunted, Then I began taking Dr, Wil - f• flatus' Pink Pills and after taking 01117 six boxes I am as well and strong as In eves', X can walk and 1'n without stop-' ie ping every few •.seconds gasping for 01- breath as previously,. 'Dr. Williams"! an • Pink Pills will be my stand-by in the to future if ever my blood needs building ) ae up again, and I shall always 140 plea-] n sure in recommending them to anyone y needing a tonic, The Little Road to Nowhere, The little road to nowhere Is the toad for You anti lite, The little road to nowhere Ther rune beetle the sea, Between the sea anti meuntailla Where birds the silence break, The little road to uow110ie is the rose we long t0 take, Tho little road to nowhere i Tilet lies beside a stream, The little road to nowhere That Leede us to a dream, To where a dream, awaits 115, A. dream we've sought in vale, Tho little road to nowhere ' That runs past mead and plain. It runs past lake and mountains, Past farm and town and tree, It leads to wbere the sunset Is soundless In the sea; To where no envy whisper$, Aro grief or bete can mar, The litle road to nowhere, Where peace and silence are, This world is far too earnest, Is far too grim and cold, Too full of petty warfare, Too bitter andq too old. But we'll be young for ever! Because so well we know The little road to nowhere, The reed all wise folks go! —Mary. Carolyn Davies. Desert Born Butterfly Often Flies to Iceland. e There are many troubles due to g weak, watery blood which Can easily st be overcome by a fair use of Dr. Wil- r- Hams' Pink Pills, The sole mission of , this' medicine is to enrich and purify he .the blood, and when that is done all n- the varied symptoms of anaemia dis- appear, and good health returns. You can get these pills through any dealer i1 medicine or by mail at 60 cents a box by writing The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. 0. It Curiosities of Hair. n Some curious :anomalies regarding the hair and skin have been noted by Professor Joseph Barcroft, Ile 'tells ° us that hair is merely skin which has a . grown in a particular way, hardened, million acres were under observation from the stationer at Victoria Beach and Norway Rouse, and in some cos fire -fighting forces with their pump and gear were transported to the sten of fires by plane. and instead of being rubbed away, as happens with the ordinary surface of the skin, stinks out in tubular form. es The pigment which colors the hair Is s not the same as that which colors the e skin, for the skin of an Anglo-Saxon, No less than .40,000 square miles however black his beard, is• not ne- were photographed, from the air Yo ✓ gi-oid the topographical survey of Canada A new feature of the ffying program In 1924 was the fishery prote°tio work on the northern British Columbf coast, Other services undertaken wer for the Department of Agriculture 1 connection with the investigation o white pine blister rust in Britigh Co nimble; preventive patrols on the Pa eine coast for the Department of Cus tonin; tiro patrol and photography'fo the National Parks branch; photo graphy for the Water Powers branch and the transportation of treaty money parties for the Department Indian affairs, Work Laid Out for 1925. 'rbe program of work to be under taken by the Royal Canadian Air Force in. 1925 again exhibits expan Sion and will be the most extensive over undertaken, comprising opera- tions to be carried out in all of the provinces with the single exception of Prince Edward Island. Surveys cover- ing approximately 80,000 square miles will bo made in conjunction with the topographical surveys branch of the Department of the Interior. In addi- tion to the aerial photography work for survey purposes, considerable work will be done le the photographing of Canadian historic sites, whilst the for- est fires patrol areas for the detection of forest fires has been considerably extended. The fisheries protection • work on the northern British Columbia coast will also be enlarged this season. In addition to this work by the Fed - oral Government, additional flying operations are carried on by the vari- ous provinces having full control of their natural resources, which con - prises all with the exception of tbe three Prairie Provinces. Tile Province of Ontario, for instance, carries out a good deal of Its own forestry patrol, and, expanding its program this year, has purchased four additional flying machines, bringing; its fleet up to nine- teen. Experiments with a piebald cat show- ' ed' that though at first glance the skin, shaved of hair, remained parti-colored aas the hair, when the places were put e under a microscope it revealed that the colored parts were merely the hair E roots seen under the skin. Melanin is the name given to the pigment which colors Negroes or the black cat, and this pigment w111 also ✓ be found^when an apple or potato Is cut in half and exposed to the air. It of is not clear, however, what relation exists between the coloring matter of differently Hued animals. In studying white animals some in- teresting points arise, There are two sorts of white animals, as in the case of white rabbits ,pure wbite with pig- mented eyes) and albinos (which are - devoid of pigment or coloring matter). If one were t • Transportation to Outlying Districts. Some note should likewrse be made of the growing part civil aviation is coming to play in the economic de- velopment of the Dominion. In May, 1924, a commercial flying corporation commenced operations into the newly opened mining field of Northern Que- bec, inaccessible as yet except by the most primitive means of ti'anaporta- tion. It operated to the entire settle - faction of all concerned throughout the eun1mer months, varying pasSen- ger s, mail and oven freight, and at the conclusion of summer flying establish- ed 'a winter, service unto the same area, The use of the flying machine' ill the past cou111e of years has largely revolutionized the sealing operations off the Newfoundland coast, whore it has considerably expedited the work and reduced rho hazards of the hunt. A commercial flying company was in- corporated last year to fly front Ed- monton Int Northern 0 Alberta which is In a perenlfar moan0r the almost ex - elusive territory of the aeroplane for practical transportation. Quito True, The teacher had been lecturing hie pupils on fanmee proverbs. "Now, take ibis `ode," he said. "'Out of sight, out of mind.' Can any boy tell' iia what-titat proverb means?" "Yesy sir," answered the brightest boy in, the class, ."Invisible and i11. lane." iWe don't mind being old: it's not being young that 'hurts, The Painted Lady butterfly is as fond of travel over sea and land as s11e. is of her gorgeous coloring: Her bus- band, too, likes migratory flights and, according to scientific researches, these butteriliea i0 groat numbers have been known to make journeys from Turkey to England. C,' B. Williams, chief entomologist or tae r gyptlau 1Hlintstry of Agricu ture, who has been studying the habits of the Painted Lady for several years, gave an account of his work in 'a re- cent issue of "Nature." The butterfly of this species, he believes, originates somewhere in the south or southeast of the long line of desert stretching across north Africa. and Asia Minor, 2,000 or 3,000 miles from England. They leave the desert early in the spring and arrive in the vicinity of the southern shores of the Mediterranean usually about April Froni Palestine they appear to fly through Syria and Turkey to the Balkan states, and from Egypt, Tripoli and Algiers they cross t0 southern Europe. By the more hardy filers England is reached late In May or early In June, Scotland a week or so later, and here many of them spend the summer. The Painted Lady, those which ariginate /n the desert country, have been seen in Iceland in July; some 4,000 tulles from their starting place. whether in crossing great stretches of water they continue flying all night or rest on floating masses in the water has not yet teen determined. Neither s it known, so far as Mr,- Williams tvas able to ascertain, whether a return ourney is made. The Winnipeg Convention, 011 June 24, 20 and 26 the Canadian Weekly Newspaper, Assoclation will hold Its enema cenvelttlon in 111e Olty of Winnipeg. The ('.W.N•A. hos with. in its ulemberehtp over 600 weekly 2181Ysp(pel' editors, including 22001119' newspapers es far odort ns the YUiton and Newtouudllutd, 40 that every sec - 110n will be reprcet nteti at lbe meeting in Winnipeg, No one oaks the why of conventions. The Press Assoeiatiou, urgenlze(1 in 1860 by weekly newspaper men, bas Lorne E. Eedy President Canadian Weekly News- papers Association, 1924.25, proprietor of 'Walkerton (Ont.) Telescope. ors at fife eucial functions will he Pre- ' mien Bracken of Manhole], Premier Dunning of S;lsitatekewan And Premier Greenfield 00 Alberta, Sewing. The wind is sewing With needle,, of rain, With shining needles of ruin It stitches into the thin 010111 of earth; In, 1n, in, in,'. Oh, the wind has often oewell with (n One, two, three, Spring must boyo fine things To wear like other springs; Of sliken-green the grass must be Embroidered. One anti ttv0 and three Thou every 111'OCUs• must : be made So'eubtly as to seem afraid oe llftinl, tole?' trent the ground; Mid after cr01181es the round • Heads of tulips, a0d all the fah• Intricate garb that Spring will wear; Tho wind m101 sew with ueelles of rain, With shIning needles of rain, Stitching into the titin (810111 of earth, In, In, in, in, For all the springs of futurity, One,. two, three. —Hazel Hall. GIVE CONFIDENCE CE TO YOUNG MOTHERS A simple and safe remedy for the common ills of childhood should be kept in every home where there is a baby or young child. Often it is neces- sary to give the little one something o break up a bold, allay fever, correct sour stomach and banish the irrita- bility that accompanies the cutting of eeth. Experienced. mother$ keep Baby's Own Tablets on hand for such urposes and young mothers can feel afe with a box of the Tablets ready or emergencies. The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative that act without griping and they are guaran- eed to be absolutely free from opiates or other harmful drugs. They are sold by all druggists or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Spider -Web Secret. The •spider's web is remarkable in several ways. It is the only trap, save oneethat any animal builds, The manufacture of this essential accessory to the spider's life is per- formed by a series of actions in which intelligence takes no share. Such typi- cally Instinctive actions depend on the inherited structure of the nervous sys- tem and not on the inheritance of in- telligently acquired habits. A spider in the corner of its web is stimulated to rush out'and 21(10(12 an enmeshed insect by the vibrations of the silk threads. It will attack a tun- ing fork that is used to shake its web 1n the same way, for a certain time. On each occasion that it runs out to the fork it is performing an instinctive action, but when it refrains from run- ning out it is exhibiting intelligence. Iu its capacity to learn it shows itself, to that extent, intelligent. In an boor or so,ehowever, it will attack the fork again. In the act of spinning a web a spider 1 shows no sign of profiting by expert -1 once. It never spins more quickly or f symmetrically, or in a series of better • and better -chosen places, It never im- proves. Therefore, web -spinning may I be an unconscious act, an act that •e mantes no contribution to experience and thus affords no data by which the t individual spider may profit. been meeting every year (usually in t the Month of Juno) for 65 years, and the C.W.N.A. Is keeping up tbe splen- did traditions which brought so many t - outstanding newspaper editors to- gether year In and year out. The practice of .the Association in holding s conventions in different parts of the country has proved of immense value. In the est four years conventions ' P y white rah- 1 bit with a pure black, the family hl the first generation would all be white, j while if a black thoroughbred were crossed with an albino the first genera- tion would all he blaclt, Were Getting "Nerved" "My, what a herd of dry agents are being sent out of Washington these days!" "Yes; their presence was making congressmen so nervous they had to be•eent away." Sagacity of the Fox. The sagacity of the fox is most won- derful, and those wile have. studied the animal's habits are never- tired of di- lating on its cunning. Foxes, like dogs and cats, are troubled with fleas, and when the infliction becomes unbear- able they gather a mouthful of moos, and slowly walk backwards into the nearest stream until only the mouth is tett above the surface of the water, The fleas naturally take refuge on the moss, and when.the fox la satisfied that they have all embarked, he opens his mouth and the moss floats away, while the' fox regains the bank, happy in freedom from his tormentors, Come and Join the Party, Mrs. Tabb—"Does your husband ob. sect to cats?'" Mrs. Stabb---"Yes, indeed, He says that I feed all the cats in the neighbor- hood. Won't you stay and have tea?" WE WANT CHURNING EA We supply cans and bay express charges. We pay dally by express money ethers, which ran be cashed anywhere without any; charge, To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not leas than 80 Per cont. Butter Fat., Bowes Company Limited, Toronto Icer refereeces--•i•Iea(1 Ofilee, T0r°nte, Bask of Montreal, ur your local banker. eetabllshed'for over thirty -years. Death to Egrets. In Paraguay and parts of Brazil a great many white egrets, balled in Spanish "garza blance," are killed for their plumes, It 1s the long, white wing feathers, which grow out at nesting time, that are valuable. While there are no laws against kill- ing them, any one who' does so is a poor sportsman. It is the females that have the plunges, and killing her makes the whale nest of fledglings starve to death. nava noon 110 (d 111 Vancouver, xantax,. Ottawa and Toronto, while last year a further trip was made `through Bel- gium, France and the United Kingdom, The editors and their ladies: who E. Roy Sayles Manager and Treasurer of tbe Cana- dian Weekly Newspapers Association, with head offices at Toronto. accompany theta are to be especially entertained at Winnipeg by the Mani- toba Government, the City of Winni- peg, Board of Trade and other civic bodies. The business sessions of the convention include some excellent speakers on various publishing and printing subjects, Prominent speak - Surnames and Their Origin You have been intending to tory "Red Rose." Why not now before you forget, 09! "is good tea The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. 'Try t! CANADA'S .TRADE WITH CHILE .) . By Francisco J. de Lime, BA., B.S,C,, Consul of Chili, Montreal Chile, situated on the west coast South America, between the And mountains and the Pacific Ocean, fro the boundary of Peru on the 'north the southern extremity of the con vent, is one of the most peaceful a progressive countries of the world. I area is approximately 300,000 squa miles, or something less than the P vine° of Ontario, and it has rough four million inhabitants, or about on half of Dominion population. I coast line is over 2,600 miles 10n The capital, Santiago, with a impel tion of about 600,000 is a modern, we planned eity, universally recognize Os a very attractive and salubriou place of resdence. Valparaiso, ti principal port, tee a population over 200,000. Chile has a wide topographical and 1 economic range The southern sec 0 es m to Li- nd is re Pr l9' Tenderfeet. e- Young lardy (on flint visit to western to rich)—"For what purpose do yott use S• that coil of rope an your saddle?" a- Cowboy—"Phut rope, as you -call it, 11- lady, we use for catching cattle and 11 horses," s "Oh, indeed! Now, may I ask what le you use for bait?" of I The Oldest Book. Not seeking ghat] yoµ ;;Ind • • The red -bound Book of Elves; It is not on dusty shelves•, Whose books are for the blind, It is found, sweet friend, ' •Ata joul'ney''s/start, not end, It is nowhere and everywhere— East, West, North, South, Its leaves stir 10 the air From the loved one's mouth, As breath moves loosened bair. When our breaths blend How shall we read, 0 friend? In the heart's need, How s11a11 we fall to read? —George Sterling. I • Bens, rainy, heavily forested, are ex- tremely picturesque. The central zone features a very fertile soil and bas 'eloped a prosperous agricultural 1 dustry, In marked contrast is the d sort region of the north, an elevated,, arid plateau, where the world-famou nitrate of soda deposits are locate and mined on a large scale. Achieving a rapid progress In farm-, Ing and other activities, Chili ranks third in volume of trade among the re- publics of South America, Its chief exports are nitrate of soda, iodine, co;: - per, wool, dried sheep skins, cattle hides, lentils, barley, borax, sulphur, frozen meat, iron ore, etc. Chile is the second largest producer of copper in the world, and the only country of the world producing natural nitrate of soda, an invaluable fertilizer. In American currency the imports of Chile are annually over $150,000,000, in which Canada shares to the extent of less than one million dollars. In the fiscal year 1922, Canada purchased from Chile to the extent of 220,471, while selling to the value of $290,678. In the renewing year Canada's pur- cbases from Chile were $230,066 and her sales to that country $31,715. In the last fiscal year, Canada's imports dropped to $97,959 whilst her exports rose to $621,208, There is a decided opportunity for the development of a greater recipro- cal trade between the two countries. The fertile territory of Chile has been argely neglected in the past, and there is en assured opening in the republic or such Canadian exports as British Columbia fir, pine and other lumber, paper of all kinds and newsprint, wall ]raper, aheet and bar iron, railroad quipntent. motor cars, rubber goods, hydraulic and other machinery, binder wine, cement, calcium carbide, agri- cultural machinery, road machinery, aints, white lead, varnishes, iron wire for farms, asbestos, canned sal- mon. cheese and other products. By eking the necessary investigations rom reliable sources, Canadian manu- facturers and exporters could develop nd maintain a sound and profitable rade of a much larger figure, Flies Carry Disease. Some of the essential facts in the ;seas° carrying and transmitting ca. deities of flies are as follows: 1. Communicable diseases are caused y disease germs. 2. The germs of all intestinal dis- ses, at least, will be avoided in hu - an or animal waste, 3. Human or animal or other waste the breeding place of the majority EYES de -j 1R1i1TATED BY n-, SUN,WiNB,DUST CINDERS MECOMMENDED GSOIA BY 03060(MMS °OPTICIAN$ °• 1 AtTE FOR PRia ■1'o CAM DOOR MVNne C6CWCACO,Vlp d,i i p m FRANKLIN. I Fly f Variations—Steadman, Franklyn, Hoff- man. Racial Origin—English and German. Source —A title. Here is a group of family names which In their origin are traced to Ger- tale peculiarities of the social system as it was organized throughout north- ern Europe in the days of feudalism. The vast bulli of the common people, of course, were virtually all retainers of the nobility, virtually slaves of the soil. The great "middle class" of to- day was then but a scattered handful of free men, not of the nobility, but Yet who were entitled to hold land in their own right. Their ranks included the merchants in the cities and the owners of homesteads and large farms in the country, "Franklyn" and "steadman" were the designations of social and political status under which these wealthy mid- dle class farmers 00 the middle ages were known in England. Chaucer, writhig wllereet he knew about the people of his own (lay, so describes the "frankly»" as to leave no doubt that ho was a person of importance and wealth, entitled to ]fold offices as important as sheriff, and yet net fi member of the nobility, Ifo wa8, in fact, the forerunner of the oountriy "squire," though the letter' designa- tion was not applied to him 00111.5ev- eral centuries later, being at that time desoriptivo of members of the nobility, usually youths in the service of their relatives and overlords, and Raplrtng to an honor of knighthood. In 0820lan7,- where feudalism changed lees rabidly Into the modern order, and where surnames did not be. come general unlIl two or three eon - furies after they did In England, the "fl'a111t170" or "stead:nail" was known' as a "hafnium" MAGUIRE. Varlations—M acGwyre. Rectal Origin—Irish. Source—A given name. Like virtually every Irish surname, the name of Maguire was at first the name of a elan, for until as late as the sixteenth century there was still in existence in that country a clan sys- tem closely similar to that of the Scot- tish Highlanders. In fact, the High- land clan system is but a development of the Irish system, brought to the Highlands by the invaders and settlers from tbe north of Ireland. Among tho most powerful of the ancient Irish chaos and ono which fur- nished many of the "Higb-I{ings" un- der whom the Irish itingdonls were united in tt Bort of empire for a period of nearly 3,000 years were the (Marts.. As nearly as can be ascertained, it was early In the 11111t11 century A.D. that the chieftain "Odhar," n number of this clan, 011ta1ned a suflicient nun1' ber of followers to establish, under the prevailing hairs and customs, a clan of his own, 111 forming the clan natn0 by nreilxing "Mac," indicating "descend- ants tend - ants of" or "followers of," the com- bination had to be made with the pos. 1011;20 case of the name, The pee - 005012e case of "Odbar" Was "Uldhlr" (for the Irish tongue, 111 its inflection, often modifiestheentire word rather than merely the ending, films, the clan name. became "klacUidhir," the pronuneiatiof of which was approxi- mately "Mac -weer," In Anglicizzing the name 1110 "e" became a "g," and it 1va5 pronounced ".liaegweer." The so - celled long "I" 18 a comparatively mod- ern developmentpi' prbnun('iatinn 22111(inr `n tl a English a ih language iinelf, which has occurred 0111110 the name has beroflle rvideepread among those speaking English. d p 11 In Parts. ea Clerk --"How do you know he's a m rich American?" Proprietor—"Don't you see how will- is ing be is to pay too much for a thing?" ° For Every iII---Minard's Liniment. in a What She Wanted. The old lady was timidly inspecting g the stock of spectre -lee. "How much are these?" she asked, n selecting a pair. e "A dollar and a half, madam," "And how much without the case?" 11 'Well, the case ]Hakes little differ- ence. Suppose we say $1.45," tl Is the 'MED only worth five mtents?" t1 "Yes, madam," finale'. "Wee, I'm very glad to ]tear it; It's the. Cas° I want " w And, placing a nickel on the counter, an ilie dear old lady took up the case and walked timidly into the street, while tote optician ,gasped for breath. e flies found about habitations. 4. Fly larvae breeding in waste take to their bodies whatever organisms re present and often harbor these or- ganisms until they have 1erome 9u11- 20w'» flied 5. Adapt flies alighting on waste take p on their feet and in their food dis- use organisms, 6, Disease organisms can live in les for many days. 7. Flies deposit from the filth on heir feet 0r in a speck of their excre- ent the (itemise organisms which ICY are constantly skin picking I rip. g 3, Flies eau fly for miles, 9. A single case of intestinal disease here open privies prevail may start epidemic spread by flies, There are about 5,000 differentguages in the world. ltdoney talks all of thom. Indignant. "Naw, my s011," said the conscienti- ous father, "tell me wily I punished Yea." "That's it." blubbered the h°9' inellee' 11antly. "Fleet you pounded the lite out of me an' now 7081 don't kri3w why n did it." PEERLESS BICYCLE 70 `p•, BARGAINS .'•r2 and ,ll01t19 (Pd. 0(2.00 an. w'inr Int 2''0lglogna tl reeneesa g e10YCL5 WOKS (88 l,3ugdht at, Toronto About half the total world produe tni of tea is taken by .the United ingd0nl. • cep Minard's Liniment 112 the House, at Death on Warts. Apply Minard's daily. Also relieves up and disappear. Also relieves b11ni(1rs, "KING OF i?•A1E6 " Shave In Comfort With Cuticura Shaving Stick This delicately medicated anti- septic Shaving Stick produces a creamy lasting lather enabling ten- der -faced men to shave without any irritation, even twice daily. It leaves the skin smoothand fresh and makes shaving a pleasure. Cuticura Talcum is an ideal after -shaving powder. shmp(, Snob Fres by Matt, Addreee CaDad11111 Depot: Otenrioaee, Ltd., Moatr,,L' Pr(ao, Soan 260. Ointment 26 and 60e. Talcum 260. 630133" Cutlets Shaving Stich 25c. ABLE TO DO HOUSEWORK Sick a Year. Got Great Ben- efit from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Bloomington, N. S.—" I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for pains and backache, also for nervous- ness, sick headaches and sleeplessness. I was troubled in this way for over a year, and a friend told me about the Vegetable Compound and induced me to take it. I must say I have received great benefit from it and am able tido my housework now. I recommend the Vegetable Compound myself and am willing for you to use this letter as a testimonal. '—Mrs. W11.,1Jnnt Montsti, Bloomington, n Annapolis s County, N. S. Do you know that in a recent canvass among woolen users of the Vegetable Compound over 220,000 replies were re- ceived. To the quustion, "have you received benefit by taking this medi- cine?" 98 per cent, replied "Yes.' This means that 98 out of every. 101) Women are In better health because they have given this medicine a fair trial. Mrs. Morse is simply another case of a woman reedy inpp,•• ' great benefit." Women sufteringfrom the troubles so common to their sex should listen to what other women say who have expe- rieneed'the same sufferings end found relief. Give this dependable medicine a chance—and at once. It sold at all drug Stores. 0 ISSUE No. 23—'25,