HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1918-7-11, Page 7Kee
The Home Bank
of Canada Makes
Steady Progress
.
Steady Progress and exltauafon
see
reported by the Home Bank of Can
de In its siatemont Cor rho fiscal
Year. ending.. May 81st,
Under uonservalive and energetic
dh•eotioe the Menlo Hardt ilea been
forging ahead and improving its
financial lloai lien.'
'Hight it.lgng the Management hap
earned out a number of thrift Cain-
paigns and these halve resulted in at
very considerable - increase in the
,number of savings accounts at the
various irrrt.nehea.
.With its,• larger resources the
Bank, in, tern, Alliti beptl.. able
handle a iargel• amount of general
buainesn throughout the country. •
One of the outstanding features
of the report Jo the gain, of almost
eertee,000 in total aicf>osits. Outing
the Motor. Loan Campaign the
Rank tent every assistance -•to Ate
result ttt and
erewerewith
e ie wira
that wals
by depositors for Investment in Vic-
tory Ronde of Clone to 12,000,000,
It this ealgpatgn had not developed
the increase In deposits for the
twelve menthe period would have
been close to $5,000,000.
The marked'gains. made hY the
Home Bank during' the, past sew
indication of athegfurthed r strides it
Is likely to make .with its ore -antes, -
Lion strengthened in different parts
of the country.
The total assets have increased
almost $8,000,000 and now stand at
$21,075,738, compared with 520,745,-
620 a year agog Of this amount
liquid .assets amount to 111,070,182.
Holdings of Dominion Notes amount
to 19,120,010, Canadian municipal
and British, foreign and colonial
public securities amount -to 52,727,-
312 as compared with $1,214,450 last
33Call'
f*', The success of the aft cam-
paigns carried out by the Bank has
steadily resulted in gains in savings
deposits, these now standing at.$11,-
•520,486 up from 510,243,553, while
deposits not bearinginterestnow
stand at $4,148,264 up fr•omn $2,306,-
865,
WHAT FLOWERS MEAN TO MAN-
KIND.
Sayings of Two Great Men on the
Value of Agricultural Work.
Eight hundred years before Christ
a clan on the plains of Assyria wrote
this prophecy "And the desert shall
bloom like the rose, and the waste
places shall be made green, and there
shell be no lion there, nor any rave-
nous beast, but sorrow and sighing
Shall flee away," Twenty-seven-hun-
dred
wenty-seven-hundred yeers have come and gone since
that prophecy was written, but now
the dream is coming true.
Never in all history has there been
such an interest.in gardening as there
is to -day. And we are gardening not
only for the sake of the fruits and
flowers but because we wish to raise
better men and better women.
Man is a product of soil and climate
plus a few other things.
I do not pretend to know just ex-
actly what a man is, but I know we
are well, happy and sane only when
we ale in close touoh with the soil.
Natalie who wrote the prophecy than enduring savage cruelties, ordy-
q'uoted above, was a farmer and a ing, from thirst' and hunger, "while
being lashed for inability to perform
hard manual labor.
"You know what the Turks do with
world's Met naturalist. Eusebius calls our middle-aged and older men. Chain
3ilint nature's private secretary. He them together in squads of fifteen,
wrote on the aubjeots of trees, flowers, twenty or thirty. March them for
vegetables, fruits, bees and birds• miles out into the open country. Stop
Aristotle named things, and the names along some desolate roadway. Turn
et many of his plants and flowers are their guns upon them and shoot them
the classic botanical navies by which clown like so many defenceless sheep.
they are known to -day. I have seen the roads in Asia Minor
In one of hie essays Aristotle says piled with the dead bodies of Arme-
this: "I have noticed that land that
produces beautiful flowers anal lus-
clous fruits also produces a very ex-
cellent, intelligent and able class of
mer, and women." Aristotle seemed
to. look upon this as a sort of coinci-
dence, but later in life he discovered
that instead of being a coincidence It
was a sequence.—E. H.
.3 -----
TALE.OF "THE j aE oODEL Winter Coat
I
FORTY MARTYRS_
TWO SCORE . CHRISTIAN STU-
DENTS OF ARMENIA.
Sold S7, p
Into laver • ' Deported ..
• Arabian Deserts, or Brutally
Massacred by Turks. •
Our Mall Order Departenent h'i11,W1slat
,'0u, '1'o'onto'e Best Deellaruers and
1,,, ore do our work. Tile a null charge
poon Pleaae and any, , �vo remodel
'Will
any vronten'e coat of any material. This
offer la good for July and Aunuet only,
Send up your net by rnel.t or express,
We will reply at once with suitable etzgg
gestione and price, No oher$e 111 inane
for title advice, Yoe nap titan metruct
Us to do the work er return your coat.
The summer !!lack season makes our kw
oherge poselble, Toe get [Jew Nall
Style' lill[eete, Iudlvidunl Attention and
r 0 Prompt Service at a big -ovine., 16.00
will remodel a. coat .that 125.00 w111 pot
buy this Nall. Wo do this work for
Merchants
CO., or Private 4la
?4 fly Moron,et.. Tcreat4
,' One of they l'Forty Mar'tyrs," dti thin
wraith of an. Armenian woman, has
arrived,, in the United States frosts the
inferno of Asia 'Minor, bringing a
Wretched tale of the terrible condi-
done that maintain there now under
Moslem rule, backed up by the pur-
veyors of Hun frightfulness, now re-
cognized .as every whit as dark and
hideous as the, barbarities practiced
these many years by the unspeakable
Turk against the helpless Armenia:la.
It was my privilege to hear her story,
says an American writer.
"The "Forty Martyrti" were two
score talented young Armenian girls
who at the beginning of the world
war were students at Anatolia Col-
lege in the Armenian city of Marso-
van, and who vowed among themselves
in a secret, pact, sworn to with all the
passionate ardor of their race, that
they would each and every one submit
to the most harrowing tortures or die
by their own hand rather than em-
brace 'Mohammedanism.
So far as known, this young girl,
Armenuhe Damerjian, is the only one
of the "Forty Martyrs" who has
escaped to America, although every
once in a while the Armenian colonies
in the various large American metro-
politan centres welcome to their midst
with tears of joy some emaciated tor-
tured exile from the harems or prisons
of the Moslem.
Father and, Mother Taken. '
She took up the story of the "Forty
Martyrs" as though an ordeal that
she dreaded.
"My father was an Armenian min-
ister," she began. "Wheel the war
began many of our young men were
commandeered and forced into the
Turkish army. Think what that means
—brother fighting against brother!
My father, with many other men, was
deported. Can you imagine what that
means? A gendarme at the front door
during the night; a peremptory de-
mand to be at the mobilization point
in the morning; forced to go whether
you want to or net, Oh, it has hap-
pened a thousand times just as it did
in the case of my poor father. Where
is he to -day? I do not know. Prob-
ably dead—at least, I hope so, rather
shepherd.
Five hundred years separate Isaiah
and Aristotle. Aristotle was the
Cosmos Stands Abuse.
Cosmos appeared in my garden last
year from self -sown seed. This year
the garden was covered with seed-
lings that were mistaken for coreop-
sis. Having plenty of coreopsis, the
seedlings were turned under in spad-
ing. Now the plants prove to be cos-
mos. They are coming up, though
some of them are covered entirely,
except the tips, plants fully a foot
long. On digging these up I find the
plants have rooted along the stent. 1
, have transplanted them and they are
doing well. I never knew before how
much abuse cosmos would stand.—
,.
Something in That.
leather looked up from his perusal
of the morning paper, and remarked
to mother:
"The reading this morning is aw-
ful. There's no atrocity at which the
Germans would draw the line."
Before mother could reply, little
Willie chipped..in with:
"They might, dad, if they' had a
proper ruler!"
When You Eat
rae Nuts
p
you get the solid nour-
ishment _oi whole wheat,
malted bailey ,and other
grain's in more pleasing,
easily digestible form
than in any other way,
This great, ready -cooked
cereal is Very economical
—requires no sugar, less
milk, yet is probably the
richest of all prepared
Cereals.
Grape-Nats
A Pitting
Warmtinte Food
"There's a Reason"
Canada Trend Tigard receive
lie. 2.628. of the .i1'orty Martyrs, were scorched, - - --
W and some of them thrown inti vats Z6itlitard's T•sfulntoat tlttJ:es t ar,rot
of boiling 'oil, ' Mttny of the priests'
and preachers were erueified,
'tI could go on and on. But it is all
the same horrible story. I. got hack
to Constantinople from Beirut . and
thence into Switzerland, through the
kind offices ' of our good miesionary
teachers, all of whom were driven out
when the United States and Germany
went to war. And now I have ar-
rived in free Amttica. And /fere I
shall remain, hoping and longing and
praying for the day when the oppres-
ed of my poor Armenia will be op-
pressed no more."
1. Styles for Summer
Combinations of materials are con-
sidered very smart this year. Mc-
Call Pattern No. 8420, Girls Dress.
In 6 sizes, 4 to 14 years. Price, 15
cents.
t- •13 OD
Mans so that it was impossible to pass
until the barricade of flesh had been
removed. 1 have seen whole families
massacred in this way—the bodies of
mother, father and innocent „children
stretched out upon the highway.
, The "Forty Martyrs."
"My mother was torn away from us
in just this fashion. It was terrible
to see father go and to think of what
probably would happen to him, It was
terrible to think that mother—
"God in heaven, I have prayed over
and over, will it ever end? Will poor,
downtrodden Armenia ever be saved
from the horrors of her desolation
and her crucifixion. Surely, if the
world is to be made safe for demo-
cracy, little Armenia will be saved
from her destroyers' and made safe
for her own brave people."
'The 'Forty Martyrs,'" this girl re-
sumed, "were all young Armenian
women just like myself, college stu-
dents seeking to elevate themselves
through the educational facilities pro-
vided 'us by Christian America and
Christian Europe. A leader of the
gendarmes came to our school and
made it known that we, too, must fol-
low in the footsteps of the cavalcade
moving eastward to the deserts. It
was either a case of suicide or go
along. And well we knew what•was in
store.
"All of us agreed that we would
suffer anything rather than bow --"to
Mohammedanism: A number of them,
the prettiest, were taken into harems.
It has been established that one of the
forty escaped theie after killing her
keeper. Many of them had tried to
avoid just such a fate as the harem
by scarring their faces.
"The director of our school per-
sonally round several of the girls be-
ing auctioned off on the public block
and bought them back. They were
obtained for $5 each,
"I was gotten back through the
intervention of one of our teachers.
I will not go into all the details of
my lot, except to say that first we
were invited to accept Mohammedan-
ism- Then when we refused we were
asked to marry the Turks. Refusal
of course meant that same of tine
gives were hurried off to the harems
while others were departed, as I eels,
'toward the cast,
i
ANQT']31;,R CANADIAN Y« C,
•
Charged the Enemy Single -Banded
and' Captured Plisonere,
The Victoria Oross was to -night
gazetted to Lieut. George Burdon Me -1
Keen, Canadian infantry, aged 30,
says a London .despatch of June 30.
Ile enlisted at Edmonton as a private'
January, 1915, He wen the Mili-
tary Medal and was wounded in 1010
and r'eoeivod 11 commission in May,
1017, He as still ie ' l:''t'anee, Ilia mo-
ther liven in Calgary, McKeen'.s
party was bele up in a communication
,l'reneh by a .most intense lire f%ni
grenades des and machine guns. Roaliz- I
ing this block unless destroyed might
spar the sncceee of the whole opera-'
tion,,McKean ran into the open, leap-
ed over the 61'ockitead on top of, the.
enemy. When a.tnalt rushed at him
with a bayonet McKean shot him �
through the body, then phot the man
underneath him who was struggling
violently. This gallant aption en-
abled the capture of the position.
McKean's supply of bombs ran outi
and whilst waiting a further 'supply
he engaged the enemy single.handed.
On bombs arriving he fearlessly rush-
ed a second blank, killing two ehd
capturing four and driving the re-
mainder, with a machine gun, into a
dugout, which was destroyed, This
officer's splendid dash and bravery
undoubtedly saved many lives.
•
Cream Wanted
$WEFT OR CHURNING CREAM
We supply Vane, AMY e%pretid ehargsd
end remit dally,
our• price now is forty -all coma
Mnteel 12algr elan oeeamalg -llo.
7.48.1 sink tit. Welt Toronto
Hawaiians Use Canadian Ceel. •
Up until a few montlie agar Japan
supplied the islands or Ilaweii with
most of their supplles of cgai. During
the S',ear 191e Hawali imported 87,989
tons of.coal, exclusive of the require -
merits; of the army and navy, The
bulk of tills ceme,fr•om Japan, 00 ship-
ments leaving been made from Canada,
and only one or two from Australia.
In 1917 Japan and Australia failed to
inalntatn their coal trade with the is-
lands on account of shortage of cargo
space. The United States, for the
same reason, was unable to ship to this
field. An a result of this famine the
Hawaiian Islands turned to Canada for
a supply of teal, and were able to buy
about 50,000 tons from the Pacltle
coast coal companles at high prices.
It 18' reported that nearly all the coal
used en the islands now to of Cana-
dian origin. It is to be hoped, that
Canadian merchants will take advan-
tage of present conditions to retain
this new business.
YESI LIFT A CORN
UKRAINIAiI GRAIN 1S COSTLY. OFF WITHOUT,'PAIN
elncinnatl man tells how to dry e
German Press Indignant Beceuse Na-
tive Farmers Receive Less up a corn ot,callus so It lifts °
From Government. off with fingers.
e--p--e 0--) 0 0 0 0
are filled with violent protests against You corn -pestered men and women
the Government food director, who is need suffer no longer. Wear the
paying higher prices for Ukrainian shoes that nearly killed you before,
grain than German farmers are per- says this Cincinnati• authority, be-
mitted to charge, says a despatch cause a few dr•ope.of freezone applied
from Amsterdam. The matter has directly on a tender, aching corn or
been taken up by the German Farmers callus, stops soreness at -once and soon
Union. The rich land owners, who the corn or hardened callus loosens so '
wield groat influence within Govern it can be lilted off, root and all, with.-
ment circles, are up in arms and pre- out pain.
dict dire things unless this "shameful A small bottle of freezone casts very
discrimination" is stopped immediate- littivtle elyAt any take off rug store, but will eose
vs y hard or soft corn
ly.
While consuming and starving Ger- or callus'. This should be tried, as 1t
many was hailing the arrival of Ilk- is inexpensive and is said not to irrt-
raluian grain with shouts of joy and tate the surrounding skin.
songs of praise, the Junkers who are If your druggist hasn't any freezone
in the agricultural business not only tell him to get a small bottle for you
for their heath and for glory, but also from his wholesale drug house. It' is
for profit, made the surple--sing dis- fine stuff and acts like a charm every
cpvery that the German food dictator time• _ �•
is paying for rye imported from the ants in pots that have been
Ukraine 140 marks per ton more'than Pe
German farmers ate allowed to paurlg d outdoors must be tprned
charge. And for Uksainfan wheat around occasionally to break off the
Germany pays even 200 marks per ton roots that have grown through the.
more than is the maximum price fixed drainage hole. If this is not done
for German producers'. , the plants will be injured when they,
are taken up in the autumn. The
plants should be repotted as this may
LEMON JUICE 1S be required.
FRECKLE REMOVER MONEY ORDERS,
Girisl Make this cheap beauty lotion It is always safe to send a Dominion
to. clear and whiten your skin. Express MoneyOrder. Five Dollars
costid three Fents.
r
Buckwheat is a useful cover crop
for a small orchard and will make an
excellent lot of fall feed for the poul-
try.
a_inard's Lntment Cures Distemper.
A pure-bred sire is as necessary to
who specializes in breeding animals,
the succes of the man who disposes of'.
his stock to the butcher as to the man
Western Orel?Conditions,
A need of rail, lover considerable
sect:Iona or the grain growing areas in
Manitoba, Saskatchewan end Alberta
1s indicated in the weekly crap report
of Canadian Northern Agents to the
general olices of the ooinptitY. There
are, however, a large nlunber,of agents
I who report that its yet the drought
,had not :greeted any da.nulgo, and thea
rain would antlr'ely relieve the sites. -
Goa. Mof'eover, advicee received
Oboes that rain leas already fallen over
a considerable section,
'!'lie, presence of eut.worms le re.
ported In a small Mandan to the north
on both sides of the harder of Mani-
toba and Seeketoltewan, the damage
however appearing to be but slight.
A mixture of lime and sulphur, two
parts lime end one part sulphur,
makes on excellent tungic:1de for dust-
ing the mildewed foliage of roses.
Along the 1st of July mulch the
rhubarb plants with the fresh supply
of manure, first turning under the old
',,mulch.
Tamara'* Liniment Cures DSDhtkerta.
"Trifles make perfection, and per-
fection is no trifie."—Michael Angelo.
German newspapers received here
Here is a very good model for the
tub skirt. McCall Pattern No. 8106,
Ladies' Two or Three -Piece Skirt
In 6 sizes, 22 to 32 waist. Price, 20
cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept, W.
How Persian Lamb, Broadtail and As-
trakhan Furs are Obtained.
Persian lamb fur, states a pamphlet
issee 1 by the Live Stock Branch, Ot-
tawa, that can be had free from the
Publications Branch, Department of
Agriculture, is the primary market-
able product from Karakule sheep.
Both in Canada and the United States
there is a keen demand for this fur,
which is being filled mostly from
Asiatic countries, through the pro-
duction of these same Karakule
sheep. This Persian lamb is obtain-
ed from killing the young Karakule
lamb when only a few clays old; at
this age the skin is very black and
tightly curled, while as the lamb be-
comes older the curl rapidly loosens.
The qualities determining the value
of a skin are lightness and size of
curl, the lustre and size of the skin.
Another grade of far, the product of
the Karakule, is Broad ail or Baby
lamb, the skin of prematurely born
lambs, when these skins vire strong
and of good size they usually possess
•r1
Death by Torture.
"It was either a case of go along re
take your own life, And -means of
suicide were not always available
Yet many, many Armenian girls cast
themselves into rivers or ever cliffs
to a death preferable to tortures or
h dacenaies.
"In the town of Harpout' the Turks
took 200 Armenians into a church,
olid as they pleased with them, then
killed every slegle one and finally
burned the church to cover the awful
• grime.
1 "In one fireplace wove hand elle
skulls of forty children.
1 "Many, very many, including some
more lustre and a longer, closer cu
Astrakhan
At
'asps, s
than do the other grades.
fur is the dressed and dyed skins of
young Karakule lambs which do not
possess the:regular, tight curl, but
rather loose and open. Astrakhan is
also frequently the result of late
(tilting. These three classes of fur,
Persian Iamb, Broadtail, and Astra -
]than are invariably black when talten
from the young learelcule; there 14,'
however, a fourth grade which is us-
ually included with the above by the
fur trade, namely, Kremer fur, This
class is vo•y similar to the Astrakhan,
except that it is grey and is dressed l
in its natural state. It is said to bei
the product of the Karakule produced
mainly in the Crimean Peninsula. The
Karakule has new been introduced
into Caniada,especially in Nova Scotia,
where it is crossed with commercial
success on. Lincolns, Cotswolds, and
Leicesters. '.['he skins ae produced
are worth from $5 to $7. -The wool
of the ICarakule and its tresses varies
in cotes .from light gray to black. Se
fat the lCarttkule indnetry in Canada
Is only in ;bite experimental stage, but
there seeing to be no geed Masan my
Permian l� nb, - tt :liklion end ether
similar classes of fur cannot be pro-
duced. in
ro-cluced.in this country.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons In-
to a bottle containing three ounces of
orchatrd White, shake well, and you
have a quarter plut of the best freolcle
and tan lotion, and complexion beauti-
fier, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will sup-
ply three ounbes of orchard white for
a few cents. Massage this sweetly
fragrant lotion Into the face, neck,
afllIS and hands each day and see how
freckles and blemishes disappear and
how clear, soft and white the silo be-
comes. Yes! It is barmiest:.
Summer and Loss.
Spring has leapt into summer,
A glory has gone from the green.
The flush of the poplar has sobered
out,
The flame in the leaf of the lime, is
dulled:
But I am thinking of the young men
Whose faces are no more seen.
► 1 a N
Spring will come, when the earth re-
members,
In sunbursts after the rain,
And the leaf be fresh and lovely' on
the bough,
And the myriad shining blossom be
born:
But I shall be thinking of the young
men
Whose eyes will not shine on us again.
I fell from a building and received
what the doctor called a very bad
sprained ankle, and told me I must net
wail on it for three weeks, I got
MINARD'S LiNIMLENT and in six
days I was out to work again, 1 think
it the best Liniment made.
ARCkl'Ili/ E. LAUNDRY.
•
Edmonton.
Fauitlees Logic
"Ma," remonstrated Bobby, "when I
was at grandma's she let me have
fruit -tart twice,"
"Well, she ought not to have done
so, Bobby," said his mother. "I think
once is quite enough for little boys.
The older you grow, Bobby, the more
Wisdom you will gain,"
Hobby was silent, but only for a
moment,
"Well, ata," he said, "grandma is a
good deal older than you are."
No prizes For Heifers,
Our readers w111 note by advertise-
ment of the Toronto Fat Stank Show,
which appears in tiffs issue, that they
have eliminated classes for female cat-
tle.
At a ,time when beef is so badly
needed by all the allied countries, the
management decided, although heifer
classes have always been 'well filled,
to not offer prizes which would be an
Inducement Io slaughter female nati:le
which should be utilized for breeding
Purposes.
Meat loses one -05tH and upWardloses one -111111 and a tanks of
its 11 ht in cooking.
nate
ars 3[,,iniui.ent Cures doltlh, rite.
ISSUE No, 28—'18
S'
'�
PAIN
iiiior
TO* SAZ411
}tt7'ni1otw 1 CsUpUlnaIlItWµnlr8yatE,o0lg,cIr0ok0. p,AiIsaiwN„nWnli4s o9cnhM/toslIttttIro9W
'dtunoalu
v7Xtno4a,i7NNu
Publishing Co,, ldrnited, Toronto.
Ontario.
rta.inl5t0o lo41 e160X6.oaW1otine')ln1
giio'ptsett 18alsshingH.Toroote.8,t
lefonecratAlecelV4
1L5 1'UHtOSLMiE ALTERNATING
7 Current Motore for Cash. Milton
and won1as, Traders Bank enticing.
Toronto,
to,
A1r1060. TOMoIts, 'Lumra, gra,
out pain by eui home treatment. Writ
us before too late, Dr. Hellman Medical
Co„ limited, Collingweod Qat.
yEm&L71 raslL ' WLMW5C01n
WANTED
10.0 GIRLS
to work in knitting mills. All
kinds of operations on Underwear
and Hosiery. Good wages paid
while learning. Write or 'phone
Limited
PARIS, ONTARIO
Don't Suffer Pain.:
Buy Hirst's
and be prepared ,galnt attacks of thein
madam, lumbago, neuralgia, appine and
all nimllar painful ailment.. For over 40
>vara, lamlly',lend. Don't eaperament-
try dint's -a, dealer., or write as
HIRST REMEDY COMPANY
Hamilton, Cao.oa
81551'S Panaly tees. tied,
HINT'S Peaor d Strop olrlore �v0'
hoend and Elecampane, 195,1 BOTTLE
SOFBIN•E
reset eeiiiitettee S PAT,OEF.
Will reduce inflamed, Strained,
Swollen Tendons, Ligaments,
or Muscles. Stops the lamenessand
pain from a Splint, Side Bone or
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair
gone and horse can be used. $2.50 a
bottle at druggists or delivered. De-
scribe your case for special ingtruc.
tions and interesting horse Book 2 R Free.
Amank,odR3 RRIN,.dac,JRes. Ile
Strainedantiseptic,Tliorn nimentLigafor
-
p�nnents. Stwollen Glands. Veins or [genital
Berle Cute, Scree. Ulcera. Allays pain. race
11.25■ bottle at deah"ot delivered. Dnott" idantr,,, etl.'free.
W. F. IOUNO, P. 0. F., 516 Winans 8148., g, Oan.
rbsorbls, Aad JSsorbl,e, 1r.. Are Side la ono.
DOCTOR URGED
AN OPERATION
instead 1 -took Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound
and Was Cured.
Baltimore, Md.—"Nearly four years
I suffered from organic troubles, ner-
vousness
e -vousness and head-
aches and every
month would haveto
stay in bed most of
the time. Treat-
ments would relieve
me for a time but
my doctor was al-
ways urging me to
have an operation.
My sister asked :fie
to try Lydia E. Pink -
h a m's Vegetable
7Compound before
consenting to an
operation. I took 7five bottles of it and
it has completely
cured me and my
work Is a pleasure. I tell all my friends
who have any trouble of this kind what
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound has done for me.'-NELLIE B.
BnITTING1sAM, 609 CalvertonRd., Balti-
more, Md.
It is only natural for any woman to
dread the thought of an operation. So
many women have been restored to
health by this famous remedy, Lydia E.
Pinlcham'a Vegetable Compound, after
an operation has been advised that It
will pay any woman who suffers from
such ailments to consider trying it be-
fore submitting to such a trying ordeal.
e Ealia4A.1*ZI 'iI[4^5'. 2W !
OMM
t11 lCli�slsNS; '
(1y�MPOAT SOAP e •
r ° :aielle
krh its Pure,
'Cleats sinks ,closets
Kills roaches. rats mice
Dissolves dirt that nothing
itihw_ else will move,._.;p
«bag'{' Plants
Of all leading early and late
varieties, 46c. per hundred, mall pre-
paid, 92.50 per thousand, express,
collect.
Also Cauliflower, Brussels Sprouts
and Onion Planta.
Plante are being shinned decease -
fully to all Darts of Canada. Ask for
Price 1181.
$erold's Farms, P..rnitland, Ontario
Dept. "yn Niagara District
Farmers who ship their wool
direct to Ise get better prices
than fanners who sell to the
general store,
ASK ANY FARMER 11
who has sold his wool both
ways, and note what he says-
orbetter still, write tis for our
prices they will Show you how
much you lose by selling to•tho
General Store.
We pay the highest prices of any arm
in th a coo utrynnd are the largest wool
dealers is Canada, 1+nyorant la re-
mitted the aeineday wool is recdvcci,
slllp ua your wool today -you wilt be
more than pleased if you do, mid are
11000 red of a awn': deal from ea. 2
H. V. ANDREWS
13 CHURCH Slaw TORONTO
eosaae t
nph84 Dp $lfiIAS Hind
Cal0i' I{ttdtpap,
yli 6u 10terilrUITO USE rRIVl4S411SCnAFI
�wFnr'ERC
nCK f. INGIRAM CO
*.""""172"'":¢-4.0' a ,r"
OM
R trey, y.ey. 7+, IFC a,.n,.y;,.•,. —
'Wee
Two Sizes -50c and $1
You are young but once, but
you can be youthful always if
you care for your complexion
properly. Daily use of Ingram's
Milkweed Cream prevents
blemishes, overcomes pimples
and other eruptions. Since
1885 its distinctive therapeutic
quality has been giving health
to the sarin and youthful color to
the complexion. It keeps your
skin toned up, soft and clean.
The refined way to banish
oiliness and shininess of nose
and forehead induced by
perspiration, is to apply o light
F. F. Ingram Co„ ",Windsor Ontario
touch of Ingram's Velveola
Souveraine Face Powder, 50c.
1 the minorb
lem-
s
talocnnceas
I
ishes. Included its the complete
line of Ingram's toilet products
at your druggist's is Ingrate's
Zodenta for the teeth, 25c.
A Picture
with Each Purchase
Each titne you buy al package of
Ingram's Toilet Aide or Perfume
your druggist will give you, without
charge, n large portrait of a world-
famed motion picture actreos. Each
ilmc you gel n diffe,cnt portrait so
you 11-101:5 a colleili„n for your
home, Ask your tlrupr•vt.
�.F, k'�t S''((��
T,d'�Yd`!'