HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1925-7-15, Page 3The
O
T
Fl re Prevention.
Tim Pl•oeincial Fire Marshall bee
been to WOodatock to 1iceent to the
winning Scouts the '.nodule won in 0011-
neption with the Jiirb Prevention coo.
tot, The deetered winners are Scouts
Eisner Mole and Harold Protege, oaoh
having eubeittteel excellent papers.
About forty Scouts gathered together
in bolse•uhoo formation under the di-
rection° of the Scoutmaster, A few.
very appropriate verses were read
from the book of Proverbs, atter which
the group repeated the Seout'e Law.,
Fire literehatl Heaton In his address
said: "We in Toronto appreelate very
much the Boy Scouts' work, There Is
no better worn for the Snouts than to
loam are prevention and to know what
to do and how to do it, when the oc-
casion a'riees." In presenting the
medals he sail] it gave him very great
Pleasure to perform such a -duty and
be congratulated both of the boys on
their aplendilt-•papers, confessing him -
Self that it was necessary for him to
look upsome of the questions on the
examination papers to find out the cor-
rect answer. He emphasised that are
prevention easily comes witbtn the
purvey of the Scouts' Motto—"Be Pre-
pared."
Patrol Leadere.
A very successful Patrol Leaders'
Conference has just concluded In Ham-
ilton. So nnlch good was accomplished
that it was .unanimously decided to
hold more of them. This is a step
which might well be taken by other
cities and towns. In the Patrol Lead-
er you have the leader of the gang; he
is responsible for the progress, well
beteg, In fact nearly everything per-
taining to the gang, and whether the
whole Troop is efficient or not rests
very largely upon him. Boy leader-
ship is the goal towards whioh we
must strive more and more, and con-
ferences are very helpful to this end.
Camping.
There are many little hints with re-
gard to Camping which, 11 remember-
ed, will make all the difference be-
tween a profitable and an unpleasant
time. lu camping you must not forget
the ground sbeet. It is more important
to have one under youthan to have
halt a dozen blankets over you. .As a
substitute .for the approved ground
sheet you might have a piece of table
all cloth, a large rain coat, or a heavy
piece of canvas.Be careful of ex-
posure too sudslenly to the sun's rays.
A sun bath Is an excellent thing but
the way to take it is in small quanti-
ties at tt time, until finally you can al-
most with immunity expels your whole
body (not the head) for several hours
together and benefit. from. It.
If you should -get wet and suffer
from the cold there is nothing better
then a good rub down with a rough
towel,
Be particular In not having the tent
flap closed entirely. Fresh air Is one
of the things you have gone to Camp
to enjoy, and it is good night and day.
In the daytime give the tent and its
contents an airing—out everything -
Dont overfeed or over drink, and
whatever else you don't do remember
that at meal times your behavior
should not be any more dieorderlythan
it would bo at home; and don't forget.
Grace.
Hiking.
Numerous reports have Dome to hand
respecting individual and party hikes
being taken or planned. There is
nothing more exhilarating than a well
planned Hike. It should bewell plan-
ted—boots, feet, stockings, packs, dis-
tance to be travelled each day, the
objectives—these and many other, de-
tails enter into the make utp of a pro-
fitable Hike. Then having clone all
this, and at last you are on the road,
try plenty of singing, and be sure and
have your note book at hand so as to
make notes of everything of interest,
and othern'lse, that is seen and telt.
March along, march itlong, singing all
the while,
Shouting out a rousing song, as we
reel off mile cm mile.
March along, march along, spirits
never fail,
When again we aro on our way, on the
good`old open trail.
t
Why Worry?
Worry never -yet has made
Life's pathway any clearer,
Only brought the jagged stones
-, Just It little nearer.
Worry never yet has'heiped
To climb the rocks ahead,
Only made the climtb the worse
For weary feet to tread,
Worry never yet has tried
To make the dark seen] fair,
But makes so much of what she sees
Site doubles all that's there.
Sentence Sermons.
I 'Will Not Allow—Bitterness tc rob
me of my faith in men,
—Suspicion to steal away my faith
in men.
—Envy to spoil' my enjoyment ;of
what I can afford.
••--Gossips to tempt inn into mud
slinging.
—Any mob 14 do my thinking for
Ole.,
Criticism to frighten me from the.
performance of duty.
—Intolerance to blind me to the
fact that other Hien aro also /deetue,
NEW STRENGTH_
FOR NEAR GIRLS
'Gan be 'Had Through the Rich,
Red .Blood Made by Dr. !Wil-
liams' Pink Pills.
Tbcre Comes a time in the flip of
almost every' girl when weakness at.,
tacks her. The strain Mean her bleed
supply .le tea great, and Otero comes
beadaches and baclraelteo, Mee of appe-
tite, ettacks of dizziness, heart valpt-
taUon, e .eoneteet weariness and a
tendency to a 4eellne. Ail these aymli•
tents may 114 be present in any pare
tinter case but the presence of any
duo of them shows the noceasity for
protupt treatmoent. And 'the very beet
treatment is through the blpodonnait'
Ing tome qualities of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. They are the one thing
needed to melanin the health of grow -
Ing girls and women of mature years.
Here la a bit of etroag proof:—Miss
Matilda Brenn, King Highway, New -
Oaths N,B., says;—''I was in en ex"
tremely run-down and nervous condi*
time I was losing flesh, had a poor ap
petite, always pate, and suffered ire^.
quently from headaches, In Pact my
condition can best be described as
miserable. I had tried several treat -
least. Then, reading one day about
Dr, ll'ilifams' Pink Pills, I decided to
try them, Alter using three boxes I
was much improved, but continued un-
til I had taken six boxes, with the re-
sult that I am now well,'and strong,
with good color and a.hearty appetite.
In view of what Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills have done for the 1 cannot re-
commend them too highly,"
You can get these Pills from any
medicine dealer, or by maii at 50 cents
a box from The Dr..Williams' Medicine
Co, Brockville, Ont.
A' Poplar in Kent.
There's a poplar stands beside a wall
In the little village of Hayes, in
Kent,
That very often I recall --
With an ocean between and a con-
Linent,
The West 1s good, and its sun -burnt
men
Are friendly; but still, from a rainy
isle
Come to me memories now and then;
There's a belfry in yew -trees; a rus-
tic stile;
.DUTCH SETTLERS FOR WE T
Dangerous Axone.
geoue 15 really axygen—net the 01'-
divary oxygen we breathe, but aft 10.
;Mx/gilled fern) of 1t. Hence, what oxP
gen will do, ozone will do with greater
1)01501'. Freels alr, containing plenty
01 Oxygen, is good for us; how )much
1 better, then, is "ozonised" air?
Neverlhelese, on account of its
• patency only very .little ozone Omelet
be present in the air we .breathe.
Where oxygen merely snakes fire pee -
MUM, ozone causes excessive coniia-
gretioP; many things that are ordiu-
tu•ily incombustible burn 1n 11; rubber'
rots or "burus" ill it in a few minutes,
and so do ,the soft tissues ,of our air•
passages, lungs, end eyes.
Even in the freshest air of the sea
coast ormountain top the ozone pre -
tient is infinitesimal, not enough to be
stlielfed, tbpugh, the oder of seaweed ie
often mistaken for it.
It is formed naturally by the action
of the sun's ultra -violet rays ou the
upper atmosphere, but it is absent
A family of Dutch Settlers recently arrived in Western Canada over from the air of big cities because, ow.
Canadian National Railways after crossing from Antwerp on the S S Zeeland ing to Its activity it destroys or "burns
5 moving ,natter like
of ilio Red. Star Line, ' Many settlers 0f this type see mo i g to he prairie up" all sorts of organic t p dust and soot, and is itself used up in
Provinces during the present omen and they give promise of becoming doing so.
sp)endtd Amnion, This characteristic activity of ozone t
6
PRAIRIE, PROVINCE
meats but they did not help me in the FISHERIES.
The commercial development of the
fisheries of the Prairies Provinces has
been a remarkable .000 in many re-
spects. In 1915 the value of these
Pcase in the•value of production
was $1,002,947, indicating .au
I incro uction in
the nine-year perlod of more than one
hundred per cent. The capital invest-
ed in the industry in the three pro-
viucee lu 1024 was $1,060,657 as com-
pared with 3973,850 in the previous
year, each province recording an in-
crease. In the same period the num-
ber of employees in the industry in-
creased from 3,697 to 4,411.
The market for the growing volume
of flatteries production of the Prairie
Provinces is in the United States, par -
titularly in the great llfiddle West,
wc;ther it travels from the great in-
land lakes in special refrigerator cars.
Tl c product of the prairle waters, how-
ever, is coming into continually in-
cre;ing favor much farther afield, and
shipments are continually growing to
the Eastern States. In certain points
in Manitoba in 1924, shipments to the
United States increased by 75 per cent.
whilst from Winnipeg close on 500,000
pounds of Manitoba whitefish was in
the season shipped to New York and
Boston each week. In the last fiscal
year the United States bought from
Canada 106,233 cwt. of whitefish worth
$1,147,356, almost all of which came
from the Prairie Prtncinces.
Remarkable as has been the develop-
ment of the fisheries of the Prairie Pro-
vinces, it is virtually insignificant in
view of what they might be made to
produce with a greater and reasonable
development of their logical markets.
The amount of fish fn the numerous
mighty lakes of Western Canada is be -
mi.! computation, and with -the intelli-
gent methods of conservation estab-
1is1)1.1 by the Government their produc-
tion can be multiplied many times
witlrut the remotest danger of deple-
tion or exhaustion. Canada is con-
sidered comparatively to have a very
low fish consumption with about 25
pounds per capita per year, but the
consumption of 8011 in the United
States is stated to be less than live
pounds per capita per annum. It is
said that many of the inland states
have barely a speaking acquaintance
with this valuable articleof diet, lack-,
ing a local supply, and this large area
as well as the field of the greater part
of the United States Is the logical mar-
ket for the fisheries of the Prairie Pro -
There's an ivied wall and a blackbird's
• trill;
A haze of bluebells beneath beech"
trees;
A. ploughman ploughing a long, grey
hill,
With rooks behind; I remember
• these, •
There's even a pew, In a time -stained
. Polished by ,Targe adown the years,
Through the dusky window the gold
of whin,
But mostly, remembering, there ap-
pears
A curve of road by a red brick wall
In the little village of Hayes, in Kent,
The pouter balancing over all
Across a sea and a continent.
—Frederick Niven, British Columbia.
—
One of the most surprising discover-
ies of the German expedition at Ashur
was a -'tablet containing an account
not only of the Creation, but also of
the long -sought Babylonian Garden of
Eden, the fail of man, his destruction
and re-creation, and the redemption
of the gods by the death and resur-
rection of Marduk.
WE WANT CHURNING
0
EAI
We supply cans and lay express
chargee, We pay daily by express
money orders, which can be cashed
anywhere without any charge.
To obtain the top price, Cream
must be free from bad flavors and
contain not leas than 20 ,per cent
Butter Fat-
Bowes
atBowes Company Limited,
Toronto .
For references—Head 'office, Toronto.
Bank of Montreal. or your local banker,
Establlshed for over thirty years.
• DOCTOR
1 NliU1'rA •
HERBALIST
For Renioving Tonsils and
Adenoids dr any form of
Goitre without operation
call to see Dr. Thuna.
Main Office and Laboratory
426 Queen St, W. Toronto
TeL Trinity 9771
Branchesi 2206 Queen St. East,
Cdr. Louty Ave., Tel. Giadetone
0408; 298 'Danforth Ave,, Tel,
(lerrard 7270. Call or write,
vinees.
Smiling and Frowning.
A medical writer states: "To frown,
you use sixty-four muscles, but to
smile only thirteen." So that less
energy is expended fu smiling than in
frowning. Certainly In spiritual and
moral things it is inflnhtely better and
more progressive. There le no better
advertisement of happiness and suc-
cess than the !male,
Watch the people in your street.
Their faces will assert the type of life
they are living. Our features aro re-
markable indicators of the inner life.
How many of them are sad and depres-
sed! Could people but know that fret
and fume and frown and fear and wor-
ry are the slow poisons Of human life,
they would probably pass them over.
What good does it do to'be anxious?
What good does it do anyone? Things
get worse Instead ot better with it. The
end is not reached any easier or
quicker, but we are left to go on with
diininislted strength, " Nothing good
ever came by brooding over troubles—
either our own or those of other peo-
ple.
Frowning has fellowship with nega-
tive tillage. Success nevercomes that
way. Only as we claim the positives
do ere move towards the goal of attain-
ment. .An you frown you entice the
drab and grey things of life; and we
always become like the things we look
at and live with. Get into touch with
1110's barmoenea and you will se0
things in a very different color.
All that is dethroning in life. comes
from the same sources as the Crown,
Misunderstandings,, slights, misdOncep
tions, soandais, selflehness, and sins
are all black fellows Mad glue rIzO to
the eoowla by which our neighbors are
often presented to us, Nat only do they
look black, but they are the very
taeatLss that oreate dit'eaa0 gad end in
combined with the fact that Its action
death. They bave a way of poisoning leaves behind only pure, harmless oxy-
the blood stream just as rage and pas- gen, makes it at once a powerful and
Mon do, and they leave us limp and a "sato" disinfectant,
wretched It is manufactured, electrically, on a
Nobody wants to have much to do largo scale for use in the arts, as well
with people who look always on the
seamy side ot things. Faultfinders,
grumblers, cantangerous and non -smil-
ing people are those we desire to
strike off our list of friendships. They
have to be tolerated. The law forbids
these "Mrs. Gummidges," these
"torn, lone creatures" who dwell
amidst the mourners, to be put away
until they naturally cease to be. They
are weary, wanton creatures.
On the other hand, there is some-
thing buoyant and cheery and breezy
about any person wbo can live above
Ms surroundings—that is, can find
something to cheer in every state, and
wbo prefers to ponder on the bright.
Mess of the sun rather than discover
the spots on 1t,
If we would sing and whistle and
laugh more, heartaches would be few-
er; Laughter is a contagious thing. It
calls forth a similar response, People
feel the tingle of life, and experience
its thrills as they laugh. And there is
such n lot. In life to smile over.
Lighthouses for Air -Liners. -
Before many years have passed, "By
Air to Anywhere" will bo a suitable ad-
vertisement for the world's service of
air -liners; and just as ocean routes
resulted in our coastal lights, so these
air routes will produce lighthouses for
the guidance of air traffic
The first of a series of these light-
houses has just been completed on the
outskirts of Dijon, on the top of. Mont
Afrique, a hill about 1,800ft. high. It
is one of several that will mark the
air route. from Paris to Algiers. The
light bas a strength of Dight hundred
and seventy-four million candle-power,
and gives a flashthat will be visible
on a Clear night for over 300 miles. A
similar lighthouse is to be built in the
neighborhood of Paris.
At the same time comes news of a
proposed survey, to cost $45,000 ,of an
air route between Kenya and Khar-
toum, and there can be no doubt that
Africa, once the Dark Continent, will
loom large in air annals, and will pre-
sently have many such lighthouses as
Sia one at Dijon,
Big Game.
"Why do you call yours a sports
model car?"
Cause it gets more pedestrians
than any other type of ca'r,"
Your Wonderful Eye.
Few people realize the extreme min-
uteness of the linage received by the
eye, according to Dr. Fraser Harris in
the . "Optician and Scienjfile Instru-
ment Maker." ,-,
The eye is a camera which hes a
double convex lens In front, a sensi..
tins plate (the retina) behind, and is
blackened Inside, and, as in the plate
of . tl'e photographer's camera, the
imago in the retina is upside down.
The centre surface of the retina is
only about one square inch, a very
small portion of it receiving the image
of the outer world, This portion where
the image is received is a specialized,
slightly hollowed spot about one -
twelfth of an 111011 in diameter—'.lie
macula lutea.
The photographic camera Is adiast-
ed for light by stops; the•eyo samara,
by little nmsolee that dilate or con-
tract the pupil.
Although Waterloo and Charing
Cross Stations, .London, aro drily a few
hundred yards' apart, a heavy loco -
Motive had to travel 100 miles, by
way of Guildford, Redhill; and Tun.'
bridge Wells, to, got from ono tenni-
mote the other.
By Govern/nett orders, no more
than 100,000 seals may be taken front'
the Behring Strait in any one year.
as for cleansing wounds, ventilating
meeting -houses and zoos, and keeping
fresh the water in aquariums. By its
use, too, the water enpplles of such,
towns as Lille and Leningrad are ster-
ilized.
Oeone was first noticed in 1785 by
du Marum. Fifty odd years later,
Schonbein, the friend of our great
Caraday, found that the smell was due
to a special gas formed from the air
by the electric discharge. He it was
who named the gas "ozone," meaning
"the smelling stuff."
UNSURPASSED FOR
CHILDHOOD AILMENTS
Mrs. Howard King, R.R. No. 5,
Truro, N.S., says:—"I am the mother
of four' children and have always used
Habra Own Tablets when any of them
heeded a medicine and I can recom-
mend the Tablets as being unsurpass-
ed fbr childhood ailments." Thous-
ands of other mothers agree with Mrs.
King as to the merits of the Tablets.
There are thousands of homes through-
out Canada where the Tablets are al -
Ways kept on hand in readiness for
the least sign of any of the minor ail-
ments which afflict little ones. Baby's
Own Tablets never fail to regulate the,
stomach and bowels, thus they banish
constipation and indigestion; break
up colds and simple fevers; relieve
colic and bring the baby through that
dreaded teething period is safety. The
Tablets never do harm—always good
—as they are guaranteed absolutely
free from any injurious drugs. They
are sold by medicine dealers or by mall
at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wit -
Surnames and Their Origin
HURLEY,.
Yariatl.oro—Harley, Flood, Torren9.
Racial Orlgbn—lrieh,.
source—A given name,
Fiero le a groti]; of family natnee
which most anybody might easily tape
for English, TIM only one of 1110 five
which roily sounlle as though it were
Irish is Herlihy, Yet they are Eng-
lish only in the sense that they ere
anglicized spellings and derivations of
a very' old If•Jeb elan name, Not even
Flood deserves to be elaseifled as Eng -
Ilett, though It le distinctly an English
'Nord, Though titers are sone modern
families named Flood which are Ling -
the name Rolf '.mace hack in-
evitably to Irish sources. Flood is not
to be found in the p14 English records
as a surname with sufficient frequency-
to
requencyto have occurred other than by acci-
dent of importation from Erin.
The Irish clan name la "o'h•Ilt'thu
Ile," and was formed from a given
name . in combination with the "0"
(more anciently "Ca") which signifies
"tile descendants of or "tile followers
of." The "h" sound is inserted in this
case only as a matins of keeping the
prefixed and the initial vowels from
slurring into each other, The given
name itself is "Urthuile," and has a
meaning that 1n the Irish pronuncia-
il io is silent, tt ie not hard to
see how. "O'h-Ur(th)ulle" developed.
into "O'Hurley" and "O'Harley," tiler-.
lihy fs simply an attempt to pl•eaerve
a separate pronunciation of the vowel
elements in which the syllables have
become twisted around, a thing that
ie common in nealy all languages:
Flood and Torrens (torrent) are mere
translations.
DAILY.
Variations — O'Dally, Daly, Palleyr
Daley, Dela.
Rectal Sirloin—lrleh,
flource.--A given name.
While the faintly names of Irelalf4
and Scotland are more often btdtvative
of blend than these or England, they
arena a ecesearily So, for bout the Irish.
mad the Scottish clave of the olden
days wero composed of mem wbo; mere•
ly aokuowledged the leadership of the
Various chiefs; as well as those who
actually were related to thorn.
But most of the i';ish names,
through such clan conneotions tie these
trade straight ba,olr• to very dellnfte
som'cee. 'Ptls source of the Daily
group of names 1500 the great-grand-
son of "Adamb;' who was a brothel'
of "Fergal," the 156th monarch of me
Meet Ireland. .
This Ole was 'iDallapb,." The name
is derived trona the Gaelic word for
"blind," and the clan which he founded
took from him the name 01 "O'Dal.
lmigne," "
Like so many of the Irish elan nanlee
it has developed a number of different
English spellings, due in part to the
effort to get a spelling that in the let"
ter language correctly represents the
sound, and in part to the enforcement
of British legal enactments at various
periods intended to foster the Eng-
lish language and customs. Euphoni-
cally either Daily or Daly is a (enem t
English 'rendering, of the name. In
the ease of Dale, some bearers of the
name, either througi choice or pres-
sure, have' gone a step further and
taken this English name which sounds
somewhat like' the Irish one, although
of different origin.
Still Blowing Hard.
Two young lawyers, both trying to
make reputations as orators, happened
to be pitted against each other in ar-
gument. Both spoke at great length,
and in closing the second speaker re-
marked
masked that he was sorry to find his
colleague on the wrong side, for there
was every reason why they should
agree.
"We were brought up together, we
studied together, and we were born
on the same day,"
"Did I understand you to say that
you were born on the same day?" ask-
ed the judge.
"Yea," came the prompt reply.
"On the very same day?"
"Yes, air."
"Then it must have been a very
windy day."
Remarkable results are claimed for
a new glass recently tested in London.
This allows the health -giving ultra-
violetrays of sunlight to pass, So
that patients may derive the full
benefit of sunshine treatment with-
out going out of doors,
Classified Advertisements
SALES ORGANIZER WANTED.
Hams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. r Att011 FLAve11r11'O BaT1u0s nouns
,chine Street to homes, wants brightenergetic
MOO Or 004020 a, sale organizer 10 each 000017.
Made Rich by Rain. such'. party ,on easily male $00 a meek Craig Bro..
Desk 13...so,,,,a Fall,. Cat.
When one speaks of weather making l
it place rich and populous, one's first'
thought is naturally of health and plea-
sure resorts where blue skies and sun-
shine are usual and rain scarce. But
there are many places that owe their
success to bad weather.
Dufftown, in Banffshire, possesses
no Sewer than. seven Large distilleries
and is famous for the line quality of its
whiskey. Ret Dufftown is one of the
wettest places in Scotland.
The average rainfall must be some -
tiling like fifty inches a year, or much
more tban double that of London. Now,
the quality of whiskey depends, largely
upon the water used .n the distilleries,
end probably Dufftown's big rainfall!
Spread Minard's on brown
paper and apply to the
threat. A 1 s o inhale.
Q u i c k relief assured.
Her Social Secretary.
' Hilda—"Now,' mother, try to remem-
ber what I want you to do. If Harry
0011es, telephone, Jack that I can't
meet him because I've got to keep an
lappointment with George."
!Keep Minard's Liniment 1n the Nouse.
Inmates of British prisons entitled
to have library books have been known
to ask for text books on higher mathe-
matics and advanced seionee.
rfP S/ New Eyes
Eat you can Promotes
t5? E Clean, liealthyCcedillea
Ude Murine Eye Remedy
Night and Morning."
Beep Your Eyes Cleae. Clear end Healthy:
Write for Free Eye Care Book.
raids Ora ll:redy Ca.. a End Oleo .6lrcat, Ctkests
Eczema On Hands
For Two Years
Cuticura Healed
"For about two! years I suffered
with eczema on my hands. -It
started with small scales and then
turned to a rash and was very sore
and red. It itched terribly at times
and kept spreading until my fin-
gers were covered with it. I. could
not put my hands in water nor do
any work. I did not get touch sleep
at night on account of the irritation.
" I used other remedies without
much success. I saw Cuticura Soap
and Ointment advertised and sent
for a free sample. After using it 1
purchased more and in s month's
time I was completely healed."..
(Signed) Lawrence Chauvin, West
Chazy, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1924.
Make Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment your every -day toilet prepa-
rations and have a clear, sweet skin,
soft smooth hands, and a healthy
scalp with good hair. Cuticura Tal-
cum 3s unexcelled in purity.
Sample Each pmo b Matt: Address Canadian
nopot: atoahouee, Ltd, Moatronl," Prko, 0oup
k11 Cintmunt 10.0,3 roe Talcum 10,,
•Cuneus, Shaving Stick 25.,.
gives the water supply needed for the
CTANT
production of the finest type 01 spirit. Y 10 ��`
1)I11nohester and its neighboring ` p rove .fit E t6a°
cities have a damp atmosphere that Is
of cotton, and
particularly adapted to the Spinning Appearance MOTHERS these pianos would be
In a fix if the rainfall were suddenly illore Phosphate if you want your i
halved. For similar climatic reasons
and skin to become soft and smooth. Letter from Mrs. Ayars Tells
How Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Colrlpou4
Helped Her
Belfast has become the world's centre
0f the linen trade. Belfast has 231
rainy days out of 365, and this suits;
both the growth of flax and its manu- 1
facture.
For Every•
Ili—Minaroro Liniment
complexion to clear, -Cyes to brtgnten,
Thin, nerve -exhausted people grow
strong on Vitro -Phosphate and drug-
gists guarantee it. Price 31 per pkge.
Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East,
Toronto, Ont.
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Headache Neuralgia Colds Lumbago
Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism
Accept n"Bayer"packanke
wiilly flab contains proven directions.
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade ]nark. (terlstored in Canada) of Bayer iielotneture or 1,1Onencetia•
ac1,1001 r pt. enlieyllcaalet (05.471 Salicylic Acid, "A. a, A."). while It la well (mown
that Aspirin memo. nn er manufacture, to asalet the public against lmitnifang, the T,hlots
05 131170ey w
Company, mpanill 1)e @tamped with their general 101415 mark, the "Jiuror prone."
131170e
Spring Vallee, Sask.—"I took the
Vegetable Compound before my last
confinement, when I got to feeling so
badly that I could not sloop nights, my
back ached so across my hips, and
could hardly do my work during the day.
1 never had such an easy confinement
and this is my sixth baby. I read about
Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Com-
pound in the Farmer's Telegram' and
We
wrote you for one of your hooks.
havee no druggist in our town, but 1 saw
your need -cine in T. Eaton's catalogue.:
I am a farmer's wife, so have all kntdd
of work to do inside and outside the
house. My baby is a nice 1tea1tlty girl •
who weighed ,nine pounds at birth. I
ant feeling fine after putting in a largo
garden since baby came. '.She is as
good as she can be.) Yours is the best
medicine for women, and I have told
about it and even written tatty friends
about it." — Mrs. ANNIE E. AYARO,
Springg. Valley, Sask.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound is an excellent medicine for ex-
pectant mothers, and should be taken
during the entire period. 11 has a gen-
eral effect to strengthen and tone up the
entiresystem so thatt it may wot'k itt
every,respect as nature intends. All
droggisi.s sell this dependable medicine.
Give it a trial.
i8sUk i;o. 28—eb. "•'"-'