HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1927-10-13, Page 3•
,t t1ie;'�electiooi of rich; tveatef ll vrheats -- ,tine fiiestt
grown on the prairies - chit gives c,rtl a,flavour to bread and
pps,, ancl extra richness to caves;sn"d riles; made from
Send 30c z z stamps fir oar 700 reci/ePur'ty Flair. Cook Book,
Vireate, Canada Flour Mills Co. Limited, Ty pato, Montreal, Ottawa, Saint 3o!
-^�^ _ �•�� ••--- -' "Aro you the man; that pulled my
husband 'out of the lake' after he'l
gone:' down?3'inihuireda portly. red-'
faced weman of the man 'feinted out
as the rescuer,.
"Yes,'• madam'," answered the res-
cuer, expecting a demonstration of
gratitude, "but 1 only did my .duty as
anyone else would have, 'and deserve
ll0 .special -i,
' "Weil, where's his necktie?"
- 'See," said the temperance lecturer
as he exhibited -a glass of water and a
glass of whiskey in front of them.
'•There is . lifein the one, there is
-death in the, other. These worms—
see? ..I immerse them in the water
and they wi'itheeliappily. I immerse
them en theliquor, and they stale to
the bottom, stone dead. Life for the
worms in one, death for them la the
other,"
A man arose from the hall and
asked, la a brogue:
"Mister mud yez mind tellin' me
where yez got that Ticker"
"Why do you want to know?" asked
the lecturer,.
"Well, I've been bothered wid thim
things meson a good dale."
The Horse Reflects.
I am amused to hear them say
That forty or fifty of me are hid
Beueath the hood of that benzine
dray--
I
ray—I am far too old for them to kid.
Mary --"What's the matter with
Frank" ,
Betty—"Eye strain.. Tie fell in love
with a.claorus girl and couldn't afford
anything better than a gallery' seat."
A careful girl is Betty Nye,
She never stands against the sky.,
A man, being congratulated upon
the economy practiced by his wife,
replied: "She certainly is a wonder.
She sold 60 cents 'worth of bearyt out
of the garden yesterday, took'„ $1.25
worth of milk bottles to the grocery,
etoppod in at a furniture store and
bought a walnut bedroom suite for
$175,00."
A woman likes almost as well to be
of w
asked. h she e o, d i e 1 s as a man does
to be asked how meth salary he gets.
The sagewho said a man's• best
friend was the person who tole% him
bis faults must hawebeen, thinking, of
the wives,
Waiter (after a long de/any, copes
back andaelcs): "Flow did you order
yoursteak, please?"--
"empatient Diner—"Just asked for
it, I'm sorry to say. I see
new,
, that
I
_should have ordered by mail two
weeks in advance."
l c
Sometimes it le hard to follow in-
structions. For instance, there was
the old clarity who was told by his
doctor to eat plenty of chicken and
was also warned to not go out nights,
South. Africa
'COL P. A. Silburn in the Fortnight-
ly Review: The Native question and
that of a South Africa Flag are inter-
dependent, and, that being so, the 50-
lutions can only be found by the set-
ting up of a joint commission, coniiat-
ing of British, South African and Na-
tive members to consider the future
-form of government for the Native
population of South Africa, including
the three Protectorates, all pending
�, legislation affecting the Nativos, in-
cluding the South Africa Flag 1vii11, to
bo suspended until the col nreiesion
pas reported. Should the ;;,Native
legislation and the South Africa Flag
Bill, ; new" before the Milton Parlia-
meiit, be enacted and the Royal as:
sent' he granted; then a peaceful arid
satisfactory solution of the Native
problem appears to be impossible.
The brisk, .pungent' taste of
Red Rose Tea is kept at its
best in the bright, sanitary
aluminum package. You will
never fired.txow the flat, stale
taste which is so often coni-
plained of in tea packed in
inferior containers. ..6T .
only one .modern girl in 20 knows,
how, to sew properly, declares' an ex-
' Pert. But then what's the use of
knowing how to sew now. There
doesu'tseeru to be much need of 11.
Teacher—"Joseph, .what are you
going -to ;glee ..your -little , sister -for -a
birthday present?"
Joseph, --"I dunno; last near I,gavo
her the chiclienpo�:
130 honest. laid 'you ever saccess-
fully get away with anything? Why
not quit trying?
Bowls of Planing
Autumn Berries
Now that winter ie not far away, one
begins to realize the fact that six'
months must pass before we are again
available the garden flowers which
have made indoors as well as out
deers beautiful during summer..
Why not gather some berries, which.
are plentiful and burn with fiery color
in the woods and swamps?
The earliest of these is the bitter-
sweet, with its gorgeous red and yel-
'loiv coloring. A. bunch placed in water,
say in a banging basket 00 the wall,
will serve as a gleaming bouquet until
replaced by Christmas holly,
Of all our native berries, none is
finer than the black alder. .Theso are
found quite late in the autumn in the
• swamps and the remote districts of
the woods. The scarlet globes' set
richly. along the black steins are tate
most vivid of all the autumn fruit.
One of 'the most luxuriant and ar-
tistic of the berry bushes is the bar-
berry. Its fruit ripens slowly, and its
warm, golden leaves,• -set thickly with
tiny thorns, aro almost as hardly es
may al
the berries. Bunches of these y va a t Vo e saw an .arm waving ap-
be kept in the house all winter, re- pealingly out In No -tan's Land. Fac-
taining their color and beauty. log a shell and machine gun fire, he
Then there are partridge vines and went ant to reconnoiter and found
tiny ferns, beautiful if set in a round one of the officers of his regiment -y-
berry bowl. Art is required In malt- ing out there wounded and helpless.
ing this quaint object. In the bottom Private Veale administtied .first aid
of the receptacle place a place ofand then crawled back to the trench
moist moss, green side out So` that for volunteers to colne and help carry
Tho United States' -Bureau of Stand-
ards says it takes fifty-one pounds to
break an egg. p'uuny, We can't remem-
ber ever having had to pound an egg.
that, ?number 0'f therm.
}or all pails—lvlmard's Liniment,
a....._._— ... -
6e1'
for•il abj
ori
Best
/rYou
r* s 4 nkfl
DOC'! Oft ltneeV ES"
Another prominent Englishman has.
gone home to "England bearing the
highest title of one of the picturesque"
tribes of ,I1idians that dwell on the..
plains of Western Canada. Tho title
of Chief Bear Bead was conferred on.
Dr, Edward Brown,; of the :poultry
World, -London, ..Dngland, recently,
during to visit of, the World's Poul-
try Delegates,
,Tile ceremony, took- place on -the
Burns Ranch, near Calgary, shortly
after the delegates arrived. A num-
ber of Sareee lntlian; Chiefs,.gay"in.
ersteeee
INDIAN eli11=F
their -traditional buckskin garb: with
beautiful eagle -feathered lieadp'eceso-
gathered to do honor to the second'
prominent Englishman within the
past te}v wealth, theThether being-Pre-
niter
eingPre-mier Baldwin' of Great Britain.
Chief Bunning Antelope, a vener-
able old-timer of the teibo, placed
the feathered headpiece en Dr, Brown.
and welcomed the paleface as a mem-
ber of the tribe. -The. photograph
above 'was taken., immeiately after
the ceremony and shows the new
Chief Bare Read and Chief Running
Antelope „shaking hands. -
"The Battle of the
Somme"
•
-
A Review ' of a New - British
Film Which Should Interest
Our . .Great - "Veteran"
Population
London,The long awaited picture
oe "The Battle of the Somme" has
now been presented "at the Marble
Arch' Theatre, and should prove a
popular draw. There Went; attempt
to weave romantic flctlon round the
grim facts or in any way to dilate
upon an.called romance of war. There
is no romance hero at' all just plain,
unvarnished,l'though t0 a certain ex-
tent cleaned -up, pictures of everyday
life in the trenches; following the big
gun, creeping along 01 the shelter of
the tanks, or flying with the air-
planes in, an attack upon captive oh-
servation.balaoone.
Is the Earth Cracking?
Morning Post (Cons.)., " The .ty-
plioone and tidal waves which the
world bad been experiencing are to
be regarded as secondary effects of
the seismic disturbances, and sortie,
observers have been bold enough to
predict that before the end of the
year there will ocpur a very. severe
earthquake on the line of cracking al-
ready so well marksd, . It is a very
interesting. theory, which may well be
sound; and yet, aitch is the force of
habit, men will go about their lawful
occasions in contempt of the fact that
the surface of the earth is cracking.'
If a roadway subsides, or a building
collapses, there is an immediate'
alarm and an anxious inquiry. But
the news that the great globe itself Is 1,
giving way produces no more than a
fitting of the eyebrows.
Waiting for Sanity
London Observer and. Cons.); 12
It there is any reg am left in .2fos-
cow, it will riot be long before the oil -
.No fiction is introduced, pertain well- igexclaical Empire accepts' the ordin-
known occurrences are aenroduced,'ary conditi'ona'of international inter -
among them that act of supreme :aonir- course.. The Soviet will not be over-
agef0r which Private Veale, of the 'set by any foreign' agency.. War
Eighth Devonshire Regimenteloth the scares may sel•'7o to pump artificial'
Victoria Cross. This scene is enacted-hysteri- Into the flagging fortunes of
by the gallant soldier bin:welt Pei- the world -revolution. But the pre-
tense that any European Government.
is marl enough to think itself capable
of launching, much less of maintain
lug, a "capitalist" crusade is too lndt-
arous to sustain. Equally, European
Governments, and 'the British Gov-
ernment especially, delay the return
to sanity whenever they give color
to that pretense,
its roots and the earth clinging) to i the wounded officer in. Two men Vol -
them may Corm a,aaipst for, the Ilttle i unteered, but both wero put out of
tendrils of the vine and ferns. Place action. Then leriVato Veale made an -
these latter firmly, bnt.net.too closely I
together, and have about a fifth of
the space in the bowl free at the top
for growth and expansion. Turn all
leaves and berrice se that they may
look ,out of the bowl; and tlye pretty
thing Is complete. .
These dishes should be filled late
In the season and should be opened
at intervals during the winter. Plac-
ing them In the, coldso that the bowl
may frost over is the surest way of
gaining the moisture sleeted!.
heavy `
The great oluste . is of ah s
berries are, beautiful for house deco-
ration, but mean so much as food .for
the birds that one torelfears to pick
then.
'The heavy blue fruit of the Carrion
flower; the berries of the Jack-in-the-
palplt and of many other plants are
found in the woods and along the
fences.
"Sibs a song of seasons
Something bright in all,
Flowers, in the spring time,
Fires in the fall."
NO• QUOTA SYSTEM
FOR AUSTRALIA
Bruce Says Foreign. Migration
Not Affecting Racial
Purity
Sydney, Australia. The Prime
Minister of Australia, Right Hon.
Stanley
Stanley Bruce, replying to Labor de
mands that immigration trom."South-
ern Europe be restricted, contends
that Australia already;Ilea sufticlent
restrictions -'en immigrants.
The Government would not intro-
duce a quota system,, Mr. Brune de-
clared, , The rate of 'foreign migra-
tion was not affecting' racial purity.
The British proportioh-of the popula-
tion was 88.5 per eent. -
"We cannot accept the principle,"
e said the Prime Minister, "that no
more immigrants ehotsld bo landed in
Australia until employment, was foetid
for all the people here already, , The
only satisfactory 'ihoans of settling
the country is by co-ordinating the
work of development of our re-
sources.
"Australians seem to have arro-
gated tothemselves the view that they
are white people and that aliens are
not, rontinued Mr, Brune. "Aus-
tralians should regard Europeans as
being as white as themselves. It will
only and in disaster if Australians
they- -take Tip •tlie''attituile' that * -hey are
better than,other nations." -
Stoljirng along the (mays of a large',
seaport ail Irishman. came' acrossthe
wooden barricade which was placed
round the enclosure where emigrants
suspected'' of 'suffering 'from -contagi-
ous diseases were isolated, "Plawat's
this boarding for?" Ile inquired' of 'a
bystander.. "Orr," was the reply,
"that's to keep out fever and things
like that, you know!" "Indedel"'said
Pat. "Oi've 'often heard of a 'board
of health, but it's the ,first time Oi.'ve
seen ones," ,
other journey to the trench, bringing
back more volunteers and his awn
Lewis gun to help cover their return,!
Eventuailythe officer was rescued,aud
Private Veale returned safely after
several hours of fearless and gallant'
work. Other tneidenis are also re -1
corded of personal heroism, in each of
which cases the Cross • tad to be l
posthumously awarded.
We are shown the first advance of
the tanks very vividly and share the
amazing surprise which their
appear-
ance u on the scenccaused to holth l
friend andfoe alike, from wbom the
r
secret had bean so cleverly kept.' One
sees lit a flash the revolution in trench
-warfare that was produced by their
arrival. One day the enemy's trenches
were practically impregnable, the next
day they were almost obsolete.
We see many repro luctlons of spe-
ciflc engagements in which specific,
regiments distinguish themselves;
night surprise attacks and marches
by the light of tire fitful flashes of
the guns. Nor are the Scenes entirely
without ehir note of comedy. One
remembers one scene especially 'where
a village is oceuphed at night with
great stealth and strategy by' an Eng.
ash teoonnditeriug party; "lingers oft
triggers of revolvers „ and -pins of
pins of bombs, e'seryone on the riot-
vive of excitement and intensity on
both sides. One shot from 'either
side and pandemonium will reign. Por
tunately that shot- was never fired.
For, at the last moment, It is die.
covered that these two forges' Steal-
thily creeping on each other In the
darkness are the allies.
Among the last films are some'pic-
tures of the most prosaic and yet nn -
conquerable enemy of the whole war
--the Flanders -trim]. These' pictures
should certainly destroy arty linger-
ing illusions ofwthe romance of war,
an:d a fitting climax -is the eloquent.
Map showing, the ultimate gain in
these tremendous struggles, self -sacci-
flees and incredible toil, work ape ex-
pense which this Somme battles'Gest.`
A ,few hundred square 'miles . of shell
riven bud! And this perhaps. illust
rates tare most lasting good that may
be done by these pos'ti'ay1s 02 his-
torically accurate' pictures of the
Great War.
The one pervading impression that
remains behind is one of waste. A'
waste of everything -money, courage,.
ability, invention and all the things
that should be hus1iy employed mak-
ing `ha ier 'place
ingtiiewblrla Pp
tolive
'in. If thie'eftect o6 these pictures is
lo expn'oss indelibly and unforgettably
upon the multitudes who sed them the.
utter wasteand wickedness' of War.
from any point of view whatsoever,
then they *ill not Have been- released
in vain.;
M'. Iienpeck`(after seeing a drama)
—"She bas a very difficult part in
that play!" Mrs. henpeck -"Damm.
cult? Why, she doesn't say a wordl"
Mr. Henpeck—"Welt, isn't that •tiff
flcult for a woman?"
The Battle ,of the Flags;
Manchester Guardian (Lab.): Doubt-
less to Germans. the battle—still rag=
Ing hotly—for supremacy between the
official colors of the Republic—black,
red, and gold—and the olcl 1aclt,
white, and red of Imperial days is one
of principle, but to the rest of Europa
it Is becoming slightly ridiculous.
There 18. no doubt which in law are
the national colors, but the 'present
Governmentt being composed of . Re-
publicans, lukewarm Republicans, and
Monarchists, cannot agree to enforce
the law, and the tame compromise
that the black, red and gold flag mi s
t
be Aown along with tiny other flag
displayed is all that it dare suggest.
NO BETTER _=
MEDICINE
FDR !JTTLE ONES
Is What Thousands of Mothers
Say of Baby's Own Tablets
A medicine for the baby or growing
child -one that the mother can feel
assured is absolutelysafe as well as
efficient—is found in Baby's Own Tab-
Tete. The Tablets are praised by
thousands of mothers througl(out the
country. These mothersahave found
by a,etual experience that there is no
other medicine for little ones to equal
!them. Once a mother has used them
for her children 8118 will use. nothing
eiee. Concerning them Mrs. Charles
Tutt, Tancock Island, N.S. ,writes: '"I
have ten children, the baby being just.
six months old. T' have used Baby's
Own Tayiets,for them 'for the past
20 yearsand can truthfully say that
I know Of no better nnedioine for little
ones. I always keep a. ,box of the
Tablets in the 'forme and.'wpuld ad-
vise all other mothers .to do so."
ea-Baby'5 Own Tablets aro sold by all
medicine dealers or will be mailed
upon receipt of price, 25 cents per
adz by The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co„ -Brockville,, Out,
The small boy wlho used to take his
toys apart to see how they worked is
now the main who takes his car apart
to'see why it doesn't work.
Minard's Liniment for Lumbago.
Canadian -Javan -Trade
Victoria, B.O.---Canada's -Matte with
Java and contiguous territory will
show an important there= in the
next few years, ; according to Robert
S. O'Meara, Canadian Trade, Commis-
sioner at, Batavia. After a lengthy
tour of Canada to confer :with bus'•
Hess men, Mr. O'Meara said this coun-
try would soon begin to shill increas-
ed quantities of many pi'oducts to the
East Indies, Indo-China, and snnrroenilr i
ing countries. This trade will include
foodstuffs,'cannecl goods, hams, bacon,'
confectionery, paper, and flour. Fresh
fruits will become' an increasingly im-
portant item of commerce, and this
year the first shipment of, apples and
oaten% will be sent to Java from
Canadian Ports,
Mr. O'Meara said
"e-Gloonlei
Childless,,Servanless Homer
•in 1950' F orecasf by
Dean Inge
Lmldon elIoine let 19oti 0;111 oe 111110 -
loos '_aud servantla ,s,; .po-edicts Very.
Itev.'William It, Inge "Goloon.y bean,".
of St".Paul's.
"Tim whole (rice of the country;
ho writes in ...The Evening Sta'ndard,
"will be spottefl" with brlagateiif
growths; within which childless, eaii--
pies-wi4Z'-sleep, ,afte¢• racing about the
roads gin, their...little motor naps, A$
in America, the typical house will he
servantlese, heals will be brought
in from'. a delicatesseii shop 'and heat-
ed' by a gas 'or electric cooker, The
art of supplyarig standardized needs by
pressing buttons .will .he-, carried, to
great perfection.
"1'he population will, I think, begin
to decrease slowly about 1950. ; The
increase at pa•esont is entirely due to
the, preponderance of young dives in
the population, which keene the crude
,death' rate '(about, 12 Per 1,000) very
much below the foal death. rate (about
18 per X,000).' A decline in numbers
would relieve the terrible burden of
unemployment, which, in, part at least,
is clearly due_ to over -population and
a little more elbow -room would be very.
desirable." ,
A F
ILY MEDICINE
A Welland Lady Tells of the
Value of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills in k' er Home.
"I have many reasons for praising.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills," says Mrs.
George L. Swick, R.R. No. 2, Welland,
Oda "My first experience with this
medicine wag in my girlhood, when,
following an attack of scarlet fever,
I was'°left in a. badly run down condi-
tion, and the pills restored me to good
health. Later in my married life I
had a severe attack of rheumatism.
The pain in my right arm and should-
er was so bad that I could not dress
myself without help. Again l resort-
ed to Dr. *illIams' Pink PilIs, and
again they proved`a blessing to me,
as. soon the rheumatic painsoand stiff-
ness disappeared and there halt been
hol'.return of the trouble. Dr. 13111
Barna' Pink Pills have also been of
great benefit to my children. One -of
my boys was threatened with St.
Vitus dance. Idis limbs and tate
would twitch and Jerk. I gave him
the Ville, and again they did not fail,
as under the treatment the' trouble
ceased. I have also given the pills
to my little girl, who was 'anaemic,
and in ilii$ case also with 'the great-
est beuelit. Naturally when I hear
anyone complaining of not feeling
well I recommend Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills as I know' of no other medicine
to equal them in building up the blood
and restoring health"
'Pathe Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills for
anaemia, .rhoitmatism, indigestion,
neuralgia and other nervous troubles.
Take them as a tonic If you are notin
the best physical condition, and cut-
tivate a resistance that will keep you
well and strong. You can get these
pills from any dealer in medicine, or
by mail at 60 cents a box from The
Dr. •Williams Medicine Co., Brock-
ville,
ville, Ont.
Collegiate Abstainers Attract
Youth
hoodoo,—That Colonel .Lindbergh'
and Wtiliam T. Tilden 2d are both
total abstainers is brought to the at-
tention of the readers of the Young
Abstainer, the monthly publication • of
the Young Abstainers' 'Union sec.
tion of the. Temperance- Collegiate As-
sociation of - London. Among other
well-known sportsmen who have
made their mark in the athletic world
and wlio are abstainers, are E. H.
Temme, who swam the Channel this
summer; Joe Wright, the noted Cana-
dian smiler, and Dr. C,. kl. Vernon,
who won the King's prize for shoot-
ing at Risley..
The Temperance Collegiate Assn.
?cation has juat jublished its annual
report and a general prospected for
1926-27. Throughout its campaign in
the cause of temperance the associa-
tion is fully alive to the necessity of
proving its case as to the falseness
of the claims of alcohol. It 'conducts
n well organized system of education
in all matters relating to the tempet
angio question, training students to
speak and write on the subject, For
this purpose a .throe years' course in
chemistry, social economics and othez.
subjjects is provided, and certificates
granted .to those successful in the
searching examinations held in' con-
nection therewith.
Imported-diFeet-'ro . -the "Orient
Ili met:, lined Chests® Blended
and ' packed. into .11b., % 1bti, /411,„
bright Aigarainu pas a e ®
'100.1
RED ROSE ' ORANGE PEKOE is "extra good.
B;.i mons Travel
in Great Style
Only. after it reaches the push -cart
or horse-drawn cart at a shopworn
price does - the banana become de-
mocratic, As a traveler,, It' isa fruit
of privilege. Banana porta receive the
fruit et wharvert especially designed
for the purpose. Private cars are set
apart for their transport. At some
destinations warehouses exclusively
fol' 'minutiae await ; therm, swept end-
garnished and kept at even'tenipera.
ture.
The regular banana pier has towers
tad.; the unloading, four of them -work-
ing at' a time on thelarger vessele; Q. ALBS hi 1 N-5TBADY,PRO7•TT-
thsy are equipped wins 0nveyore cell• t7 AELii employment, weekly oar,
sailing oar: universally known, gran-
elating 02 an endless chain of oanvas teed quality, .macs ana Plants, Newest
cradles. The phalli is lowered into the god best varieties, There is good money
hold of the ship, where the bunches to !n it for you. Illustrated up-to.the-
r - minute equipment. B:eai, sates' co-on0ra-
avoid crushing,• are, packed two deep tion: UR
Write LTMCE) MOTHERS NS -
in from four to six stages, separated EEILS, MONTIiLAL.
by false floors. The hunches are drop- lx6t3 a Q;c�p 00 g .i zrO Wo$s
Pod gently. Into the cradles on top. of (:l2iLfi `p' o !.S well 550 PIIiz
giminy sell b0 Sots of Our Famous
a straw Hist. - - � Csr stmks Seals Sar lOc a set.. When
By band or by belt -conveyors the sold eerie us 13.00 and keen 12.00. We
fruit is brought to cars a uipped,with trust you ,till Xmitsk St, Nicholas Seal
4 Co., Dept 3o4WL, Brooklyn, N.Y„ U,S.A,
floor racks, necessary for the free air f
culation of air, and they must be
thoroughly cleaned in advance, as dirt
has a bad effect on the cargo. Ba -i
mons must be kept at a temperature
of about 60 degrees; and so that care,
having been made airtight, are iced in
hot weather and supplied with? straw
in cold.
African Stone Age Finds . Go
t To England
Staroderton—L. Leaky and B. News-
bam, members of the East African
Archaeological Expedition Have re-
turned to England with 110 oases of
specimens connected with the Stone
Age In Kenya, The Ands Include parts
of over 40 skeltoiss, and represent a
year's work. Numberous deposits
containing bones and implements were
discovered, some probably dating back
et least to the early Pleistocene era.
Mr. Leaky believes the Ands will he Two Women Owe l lealtl>m
of the greatest importance for na-1 to Lydia E. Pinkhana's
thrill science, possibly revealing the!
origin of European Stone Age allure,Vegetable Compound
more particularly that of Capsian man,
who left his traces ever a large partSt, Adolphe, Manitoba.— "I was
'very weak and had great pains durin
of Northern Africa. r myperiodssothe
1 ,1 I could not sweep
Just as duelling was stopped by pub , „the floor. The
Iia opinion, so, when we are really Pains were in the
i right side and ex
-
resolved -
resolved to stop war,wars will cease K
to
tended
, the 1 : te£G
-Lord Cecil. .n. �° w^+; and then d o w a-
Minard'a Liniment Tor Asthma.
wards. It seemed
,. {a x �' as if the body wan
'h 's^
r t heavy and upside
Can thosevi o insist that a word is
aro
>�` �', down.It
..�� aW is for
not a word, until .t is recognized In these troubles
the dictionary cite any example of a..r s� ai,. took the Vegeta-
word being added to the language by $ ` w '" ble Comgound. 1
saw about it in a paper and one we-
appearing 10 a dictionary first? man prevailed on me to take it. It
has helped me in every way, the
pains are less and,' have more appe-
tite. It is a pleasure to recommend
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound to other women.''—Mrs. J. L.
CotraoaAMB, St. Adolphe, Manitoba.,
Found Great Relief
Toronto,Ont.—"1 am at the Chango
of Life with hot flashes, dizziness,
weakness and nervousness. I had
head noises and was short of breath.
I was this way about six months when
Iread abouti ydiaE.Pinkham'sVeg-
etable Compound in the newspapers.
I -have taken eight bottles so far and
found great relief."- Mrs. R.J. SAL -
nee, 112 Lawlor Ave;, Toronto, Ont. Y
Many who have never been up in an
airplane find it increasingly difficult to
keep up even with the news of avia•
-
Minard's, L,Infinent•for Toothache.
Wiienra womancanread her hus-
band like a book it is generaiiy,'advis-
able to skip a few chapters.
Classified Advertisements
IRUSICAL irgsTIWNsEIQTs.
17LTBApae0sgIC GRAItIOPMOND(38 .•
1.,) selections $106,00 for $56.s0, ua•r.-
Mantre
0.151058. al. Poisson, 3Mount-Royal Lag
J. nIOSAf MANY BAR* Wriesfree lfrms
Mr. Douglas, Iierkrner,
N.Y..
s
List.. of "waisted ! Inventions"
and Full Infarmatlon Sent Free
on Request,
TICE RAMSAY 00., Dent• W,
273 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont.
Cutictira Soap
Pure and Wholesome
Keeps The Skin Clear
Soap, Ointmsat, Talcum .6!8 everywhere,
THEY SUFFER
NO MORE
NEW LAW FIRM
It will interest many of our read-'
ere to:kn•oev that after a successful
career as a student at the University
of Toronto and Osgooded . HalI Law
School, Martin MacMurray Kelso, eon
of Mr. J. J..ICelso, has opened ae
office in the Confederation Life Bldg
as a Barrister and Solicitor. -Saving
grown up an an atmosphere of Social,
Service,- he willnaturally devote a
good deal of attention to the legal
aspect of social and child welfare
problems, and should be of consicler-
able{ assistance' to clients confronted
with troubles arising from the home
and family relationship.. I•Ie will also
have the advantage of eXpes0eneed
counsel.
euralgia
'Phe maddening pain will • Suc-
cumb - to applicatioi0s' of • M i n-
aril's.
lS$UE' No. 42--'27,'
YE
AND
TINTING
are so easy and perfect IP you
use the same kind of dyesProfes-
sional Dyers use. Dyes that aro
put up in highly concentrated,
finely powdered, soluble form.
No work to dissolve them.
Never any shaving, scraping or
crumbling them up. They are: --
DYES
Proved safe by ' millions -and
Headache; Neuralgia
Paill Neuritis
'Colds „: Lumbago
Toothache 1 he u matism
R•
'• DOES NOT AFFECT
THE HET
prescribed by physicians for
.WARN ING!
Beware of Counterfeits
is
There is onlyone' enuine
"ASPIRIN" tblet. If a tab—
let is offered as,"ASPIRIN
and is not stamped with the
"'Bayer Cross" -refuse it with
contempt -it is not "ASPIRIN"
at all I Don't take chances!
Accept only "Bayer" aCka r
which contains proven directions
,t 1landy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of. 54 and 100—Druggists.
AreiNn is rho trade markk(recfetered In Canada) of payer Manufacture of Moneucotie-
ncideeter el Sa3toylieecld (Acetyl Salicylic Add, "A. S. A.").. Mile it is well (mown
that Aspirin means Beyer manureeture.to itselst the public against Imltettons,tho Tablets
of Bpyer Getupatiy will be clamped with Moir general traria merit, the Bayer Cross: