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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1925-11-12, Page 3r,+ rOza. from your .grocer his >best tea an .Bell usually send "Red Rope." t30iCii3n. De could not keep a single tune Nor count upon a single note. The came easy, and the rhyme, e , OI3utometh 'in h , t trdat s � ing wayward is 1 :Would spoil the mnstc every time.' . The sezntest his. was sure to stray And somehowarish b Y the way, P y So, for he knew the humble art Of yielding, in his patient' -heart ile wrought one little meagre 1'lne, Of love and supplication blent,-- Pour words, two bars, $ sinrlile thing, A fragment that a chilal, might sing',— And'mastered that, and wee content; At work, at re$t_in storm and calm, Itis prayer, Ia•i paean and his $palm. "O Lord; remember mei:" it went. Sometimes 'Would la$ts'e for week and' their Corrie drifting: down the stable lot !Timed to a saunter, staid and slow, Familiar and serene again, Or sound across the garden plot, Tuned to the .ticking Of a hoe; And often in av1 hour of gloom We heard it like a bugle tone Calling tp courage, high and lone In an old shabby upper room; Or. -eke, somme .sprit morning long, At brief, contented intervals It filtered through the study walls, A. low monotony of song Like droning of a happy ba •"" • vel- Lord, remember mel" And so,. when day was in the west But net_gne shade -of gathering night Clad dulled deed memories in hie sight Or touched the things' he loved the bast, With 'life still sweet and hope still _ springing And peace his portion to the last, Re took the summons, clear and late, And scarcely faltered in hie singing, For almost as lie sang he Passed One evening ,thydugh `tile .open gate:— Upon ate-Upon his brow a faint'surprise, '2b'"quickening light, as though he •cauobt Old echoes, in the fair new skies. Dia little lowly melody ,With unimagined music wrought. The broken beat, the halting bars, The wistful,. -"Lord, remember mel" In measure with the morning ataxia' The song that on' and upward led Sounding beyond earth's utmost rim,.. A. /fart 01 Heaven. "A we said y, Iiia. Lord remembered aim.„ -Nancy Byrd Turner in Youth's• Com pando'n, A Bishop on Honeymoon, 1 A bishop once said: "1- oneymoone are a forced homage to false ideas, a' ,Wieteof money and a loss of time, /which aeon cornea to be dreary and weary. Most of ale they are a .shalt for love, which ought not so Book to be uupieasantly'tested by the inevit- able petulance of,a secret ennui. Mk days, if you must, and then go straight home,” When hoarse use Iliinard'e Liniment. "Well, I. hbpe this is my Iast Tap in the matrimonial race," Said Widow Smith as she married her fourth hus • band. - ilATEVER YOU SEND SUITS COATS DRESSES OR HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES they will be cleaned or dyed faultlessly. All the leading Col. Ora are included in our dyeing list. r o sr➢..p §,erVice. Carriage 'Charges paid one way. A Tulchan. In. this seventeenth century—tw hundred years ago ----the tiaboym u o Scotland, when ever, they had an u ruly cow which refused to let dow her pride to the `inllker,, would brio out a tulehan, by ineans •of which the completely deceived the, animal, an indu>eed her to give her milk to th dairymaid freely. A •tuichaa wear simply e bait -ski stuffed `with hay 1n a rude"inanne This imitation calf . was brought, it head bent under the cOw, end whil .the mother thought her young en was drawing off ,the milk, it was, 1 reality, the ounning Milkmaid who wa doing so. In 1.617, King James, as Carlyle, i his Cromwell'a Letters, tells us, a pointed certain men tor certain dutie th Scotland, The :gcotoh were ver ranch opposed to these new 'appofnt menta, for the object of them fuss t 0 n- u y e 1i e 0 n n P- y 0 deceive the people and to drain the money .away from them. For this', reason, the Scotch- gave these new: arppointees the •name of tul- ohans—pieces of political meohan1eni constructed by Parliament and the liiug'e Council, to deceive the poor Scotch and "print" them of theiirsre-. Venue, In -.life, these. are, alas, tulohan friends and iulchan friendships, even Unto this day. Many a lad is decoyed into evil by tulahaa promises aaid pro- fessions. Whatsort o friends are these? heal ones?. A thousand ,times• no. They 'are "tulehans"—false=a. mere similitude of tire-tr•tth, Beware of them, 'iy3iile they are beguiling you. Satan may sten in and make you his, prey. When badmen try to win the hearts' of others, they make all sorts of pro- fessions and use a1I aorta of sPecfoue' arguments; but their, .words are tat - Oen, stuffed with falsehood and meant to cheat. Gloves Throught the Ages. (doves have a Curious anecdotage of their own, especially in.regard to their use` as symbols. Perhaps the fact that gloves were an important item is the growth of luxury during the age Of chivalry has• something to do with their prominence-01er ail other artic- les of wear in regard, to symbolic us0. Gloves -adorned with rubies and sap- phires, ea and perfumed prod .gioyes from Spate, were part of the outfits of wealthy people at an early period in our history, and stories of the Convey- ance of liaison through richly' orna- mented gifts of this sort brought with. them the 111-bmeden phrase el "poison- ed gloves." Naturally the poets took an early op. portunilte of making a prettier use of this' aa gale Of apparel, and "0 that I were a glove . upon that hand, that I might touch that cheek!" was only one of many eouceitse or a similar kind. • From this it was a short step to the granting of a lady's glove to her cava lier as a Cymbol of his championship, and the prize of the Queen of Beauty's glove in tournament$. The symbolism—of the glove wea used again between hien at variance. A common way of provoking an enemy to a duel was to flick' a glove across the face. A glpve, too, was sometimes a mark of fealty •between friends. Then there was the custom of fringing amen a glove to be taken up in de- fiance, of which the last relic in this country was the challenge of the Ring's Champlon to all and sundry at• a coronation. Another, -form of symbolism has passed into our proverbs with Oow- Der's "As if the world and they were hand and glove" Again, we have the phrases about "kid -glove •diploinacy" and: "ltld-glove methods," *Iden may be set against that "mailed fist" of which we heard too much in the first years of this century. .' A Poor Marksman." "I -I thought y -you t -told me. Y-ou •wcc'e,experfencedl''a much-shaken,eld gentleman sputtered as. he -crawled. from the wreck of his handsome liow car,'whicll his, chauffeur had just wrap-, ped around a' tree. "l' em," asserted the chauffeur, "ISSby; I 'drovothree years .:for en ef- facer during the war and wa,s wounded every year,'l -a'Wounded; only wounded!" -snorted his employer disgustedly. "By George, he must have been a rotten shot or he'd have got ypu the first year!" DYE: WORKS LIMITED CLEAN ERS&DARS COLOR IT 'NEW WITH - 791 YO1'ItGR- ST TOROl1oi to IdU h 1h nW d • S t i n:1l DlRESS1NC1 T' 0110 P, nllahn..1,11. nsannnn` "DIAMOND DYES" ust Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye ,Each lo"-emit:pack- age contains diree- tl,.ns so eirnplp a01Y i'omari'ean teat soft, (11.e?icate allacIea ar q,72 ;rich, permanent' colors ill hngorlo, sillta; iipbots,``eltirtsf waists, dresses, coats stockings,' sweaters, draperies, coverings, hangings —evarythingt Buy Diamond Dyes—mo othe l.ind- 4nd toll yeti' druggist whether tie nint serial you wish to color wool or' silk, or whether it is linen, cotton or mired t code. A -Poem You Shouicl'l now. "The Ancient• Mariner." You might roll Shackleton, Scott, and Amundsen into cite, and then Tall' to produce a 0ombtnation of expert, ence that would .oven begin to rival; Coieridge's picture'of the South Polar, regions in, his great poem,' The AM .etent Mariner." Yet Ceder/ago had nevelt ben there and. i ao writing Durely front his imagination., following,extract from the poem is intelresting at the present time for the 1>iscovery, Captain Scott's Antare, tic expiifratlon ship, now known as the Royal Resesareh Ship, recently Pail; ed en a yoyago of research in South Polar regions, And now the Stora: -blast cane, and be. Was tyrannous and strong: Ile struck with hie o'ertalling wings, An dh A6 t a .0d t a soitfh along.: With sloping mast& and flipping prow, 'As who pursued With,yeil anti blow Still trends the shadow of Ails' foe And forward bends his heat), The e'hipdrove fast, loud' roared the blast, And southwa¢'d ay we fled. And now inhere eame both mist and snow And it grew wondrous cold; ::Aad ice, haat-high; canto floating by. As green as emerald. And through the drifts and snowy cllfts 'Did send a dismal sheen; Nor shapes of men nor beasts we sten— The ice was 'nil between. The ice was here, the ice was there, The ice was, all around; It cracked and growled, and 1roared and howled, - Like noises in a swoundi -•`-` • The Clever Beaver. Sitting upon the bank of a Colombia River,sleugh, I observed: two beavers malting their, way from the water's• edge up a beaver'slide and back to a small clump of willows. They selected a willow about' six inches in circum- ference and immediately began eta - Ong with their sharp, chlsol-liite teeth. Within two hdurs the tree fell and then one of the animals began to cut off a section of the trunk .abont four feet in length while the other rested, sitting upon the log. I e one-half hour the task of cutting the log in two wee half completed, and the beaver that hurl been rating took up the . task while the -fine that hadbeen working rested, and, within the next half-hour the log was severed• completely, Then a strange thing happened: one of the beavers•, stood upright; braced its body; With he stiff tail, and -made a peculiar whistling seudd, Directly two more bee ve¢•sne of t j lie to • coming mit g f rem' some distance atlataaathe along'. After holding a short consultation, they all pitched in and began to turn the log nbeut so that 1t was arallel with the slough. Thea they began rolling' it just as nicely as any crew of men could have done. It was in- deed a curious and interesting sight. Those our animals got behind the Heavy willow tog and pushed' with their fere paws,; and oyer and over rolled the heavy timber till splash, it landed in the water. Then they float- ed it down to the house they were building.—W. R. 9 �_, F d CHILDREN N LIKE TliEfil Baby's Own Tablets. Are Efiee- tive and Easy -to Give. You -de-. lot have to coax and threat- en to get the little ones to take Baby's Own Tablets. The ease with which they are given, as compared with liquid medicines, will appeal to every mother. Nom) is spilled or wasted; you know just how lag a doss has reached the little stomach. As a rem edy for the ills of'ehtttlhood arising franc. derangements of the stomach and bowels they are most satisfac. tory. Mrs, Rose Voyer, Willimantic, QOM., says:—"I used Baby's' Owe Tablets in the Canadian Northwest and found them a. 'wonderful medicine for child- Ten's troubles, especially indigestion. rind constipation. I have also,.gjven thenn to my ,children for simple fever and. the restlessness accompanying teething and they always gave relief.. I can recommend Baby's Own Tablets to all mothers." • Baby's Own Tablets aro soil by medicine dealers or. by mall at 25 coats a hex from The Dr. Williams' Medicine :Co., Brockville, Ont. Savingthe Buiag0. Many people recall ' "BuffaloBi 1. 1 " He got Iris name from ale prowese' e.s a hunter' of the American -bison. Ile, and others, almost exterminated this, magnificent beast,• which, wlthlii the 111011101•y Of many MON living, retained the prairies of the United States and Canada In vast herds, ' Today the only buffalos Ieft In the United States. are preselo'ed in Yellow - atone Para; but in •Canada, .where there Is mare'reem, the buffalo is like- ly. to ikely..to become a national asset and a 6oar ce of•rev enuo. It is estimated that there are In Canada 10,000 head of .buffalo, and theirs -preservation is, due Id the late Lord Strathcona, who, nearly fifty years ago, collected 'a: small 'herd for his estate near Winnipeg. Tliey=flour• fished and Increased; and werehotight by the dovei't.nreut to stock_ the na- tional pant at Banff, in the Rockies When the herd had, ine'reasod to aboilt 700 it was removed to 100 Ware miles of territory in Alberta: Herm for d tnr I feed, and now it is ebgat 8,000 511031(0, The Dominion hat ett,abllysbad,an0ther tread In All2orta, at pl:1t Is -and Pane, A W`olnan Blacksmith. spa hfur '`', There is nothing snore unnnymg, wllc'n- triating:to got along, than' to 1a he •met with the •notice, "Nc -thorough- 'e." The nearest way ie blilcltal] to you,nod to get to your destination you. must take the long way round. enrprising how''tp tte3L people igoo over tlrege matters they • to&e titer, ea a rule quite ;plal elophically: It is lttterectilrg to watch people at t,toli:: tunes. Theirlaces tela tho tale.' The! - Char-,ctor come o -t tte11, Porhal)0 �e Crigiia (A� "9 i "usoary ` it ie Ivo ] tat:. ve don't fres. s11 they say, of vmnitl like to say, Rhyme. The inconveniences of elc:yday life, Sol/blurs are always finding out that the .petty obs,Lructions and thwarting,, the most nonsensical uurscry rhymes aro tile very things, that:, put Itra11 havos11 respeotablc ancestry and were on his mettle. If ho can live through be their lni'ancy sy .:belie to the point, these and not lose his soul,' he Ls the ler mind of some striking happenings victor for EsIt time.' In .politic rr'a. faro or social, progress. A number of us h v Her.isam al toff c,wiin Tiers. an waiting to 7;rnt o w t g the 1 n tair.'reeds for: years only to fi+id, ivirsu Times about a similar, meaning in one we got well going,. that we have. had 01 the moot familiar- of eueb rhymes,•to-turn back again, 11 has been so;in Our readers 'Will , Pro Interested if not business and!'social life. Just when conviaced. by what iso says. we th',ought everything was going wea- 1 was taught in MY 'youth, ho says„ we frays had to pull up and turn round:. 'some sixty years ago, that "Sing'a It a.man will only listen he may hear song of: sixpence" arose as an occult this story told every day. jubilation over, the first planting of the 'Wo go 'along for months, and the complete lAnglisli Bible to the year • way gets 'better 'and the pun clearer 1885„ : Tho _ "four.and-twenty black- every day. Then• the path becomes birds" stood for • the alphabet. Theyltreechereus and dangerous. Someone were "baked in pieta. when set up be who knows says•: "You mustn't pale" the printer in' ,'plea" form. The --"No thoroughfare," "opening" ea the "pie" was the pub11- To pass certain points in life would cation of Miro voiume, which, be Its he dangerous': to some or us, We can dedication; In the -preface to I'Tonry only, carry sosnuch luggage, and when VIIL,"was set before the King." that is exceeded we fail. That is what p=y a� �y r we mean when. we speak of elle suffor- pj®'g19 y0'va 'WORK car- ing from "swelled -headedness," and 4! YV gY13i9 i7 "having more ballast then he'can i' I� NEVER DONE Wone all'knowthe 1't th, They DONE have n0 beyond the '�"No tha'ro h- ri�f fare" sign. • Wrongdoers Pass Barrier. No Wonder Health Gives -Out All wrongdoers have passed this and She Becomes Weak and Sante_ barrier. They did not heed the warning. They Saida "We are w Despondent. enough to -tread carefully, on the oth side; this notice is only for chi It .la literally true: concerning :woe people. ' We will go- and see wh man in the home that her . work .15 there is." They 'went and they elm. never done.. She starts with house- led int work when, alts rises in 'the morning ` We must: be kept within bounds. and 1e kept busy up to the time she Not one of no is really free. We car retires at night.` T101 work must, be not do as we like. When a man says' done whether she is feeling well or he can, ,be, is deliberately declaring not. ' It b no wader that she often what is not true. eery policeman in - breaks ,;down under the stmain. She dies-teethatwe are not free. Our laws becomes breathless at slight exertion, and judges and prisonsdothe same., feels'exhausted if she walks upstairs. There are boundaries we must not Headaches' and"'elizzy spells become pass: • For instance,• the boundary of, frequent, and life seems` a burden. a man's'rlght Is the safety of.his Much of this trouble Is slue to the fact brother mad- Whe11. 'another bran's that her blood has become thin and life la imperilled by our action, it Is watery, and to regalia her good health for us to stop. We have -no aright to she must take a reliable blood -enrich. go farther. here is "No thoroughfare." ingtenth such as Dr. Williams' Pink People say, "I want this and that,' Pills, ' The great 'value of this ,tonic and they may be . speaking the truth, medicine is shown by the statement Our needs are elute, different ream our of Mrs. Mary Nolan, Llntlaw; Sask., wants. .Over our needs this' notice,. la mato says;—"When I began using Dr.' never written; over our. wants it 1e Williams' Pink PMa I was a j3hysical mostly there. Some things we haven't wreck. It was. with great difficulty that and soma ye must not have. I coed do light housework. I suffered, Let tie some to believe that every from headaches, my heart' would' beat street in our life that is stopped Is so violently at the least exertion; and T because someone who has our interest alwb ' e f 1L tired d AIId d aL,h as depressed. I d heart has done e us that did t tsr e uses.' The • not sleep. well at night, and I had no doctor does•it with our appetites. The appoti'te-my limbs would s'we11 as In parson with mar moral decimations. dropsy, it was at this stage that a Our friends with the thinge they 000 neighbor advfeed me to hake. Dr, Wil- are not good for us. llama' Pink Pills. I had used -the pilin It is for us to think kindly of such for some weeks before ;I began to feel people, and to realize that if one their benefit, and tuusl,eneouraged I avenue is rightly closed another Will coatlnued taking thezy'"q for several assuredly open for our good, and it months, when I was again as strong will lead to our home, and well as ever 1 hail 'been. I have p no hesitation In saying that these pills Minard's. Liniment for Ch!lbialns, are a remarkable blood, builder and - strength renewer,' and • I shall over be f `.Tse only "Snowflake." 1 ssolye one tablespoonful of s 8' � �nw�f u.�e lu. � 'gallon r hot Waters t will Fe';.`;. 1nov 1 e � grease and 't9$'oti�'�ll`�':? sterilize the cans lrl. baa ie a fh 3 Ip8nt44 e&Elt+a?d pian s ES.Itdisers, • attialoena, La unttng tae Sentence Sermons. ea There is something Sade -About the may man' who has any serious momenta, nt 'tbout the shots which must de - e, base women to provide entertainment. —About the joke that leaves an evil memory. • —About the home where cards ere more important than .children. About the llusineas which must wreck Men to make money. —About the candidfito who has won. aa_election and loot his independence. —About the man who must choose 'between hiatatends and his conscience. Fight Weevil With Airplane. The airplane' has been used. to "duet" the boll weevil In cotton fields with calcium arsenate, and now the,experi-, nrent is being tried in "dusting" sugar cane to control the borer, Thousands' of dollars will be saved planters if the experiment is successful, Keep Minard'a Liniment handy. Reading is the inspiration of youth and the coneo:ation' of old age,—Mr, T. P, O'Connor, M.P. grateful for what they did for me." 11 is ridiculous that man, who has You can get those pills, from your 'established his empire over the whole 'druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a. box world, should continue, to die 'from from The IDs. Williams' Medicine Co., such contemptible things as a cold In Brockville, Ont. Countries Out of Shape. Modern map -makers regard the maps -made a few hundred years• ago as great curiosities --and so they are, yet' every atlas pujrlished in the twien- tieth century . borrows au idea frons the fifteenth century. It Is known as litercator's• projection. As a rule, the map of the world is represented in our atlas in two forme, --first, the', two hemispheres side by side, with America and the Pacific oc- cupying almost the whole or one, and the rest of the continents and oceans nearly the whole o6'the other. But the two circles, are difficult of mental ad- jtiatnrbnt, as they require to be placed back to back to representthe actual geography of the globe. This iii1licuity was recognized by a famous geographer named' ,Geraa•dus Mercator, Ile originated the system, still followed, of drawing the map of the world aa• though. the globe were Rat, having all the 'meridians .of longi. ludo parallel and at right angles to the ,parallels, of latltilde. Tires one gets a bird's eye view of the world, as ft were, bet only the part of the map adjacent to thelagnator are correct to scale. As the man proceeds north and sou'tls- towards'tile holes,` Oceans and continents expand more and more, find are thus out of proper - tion. Nevertheless, the advantages, of this projection, named afterMercator, see obvldua. Eve's Apple :free, Among the many botanical curiosi- ties of Ceylon Is a frust, supposed to hear the marks of kve's teeth? The tree on which 11 grown is known by the significant name of "Forbidden Fruit," or "Eve's; Apple Tree." The blossom is. pleasantly scented, alio tho fruit is orange in color outside and a 110033 crimson within. 'Each fruit has tiro peculiar appearance of having n: piece bitten out of lt. This fact, together with its poison- ors, quality, led to .the bore-- that it.__ wee the forbidden fruit of tab Garden of Edon, and aeavess tho useful pur- pose o'f warning such as might bp toiltlited by its lovely apiloai'ance to imitate Eye r and title a bite. A 'P110010, 12tt10 boy recon iy puveled hla Ilioti101 with this 211113: "What's. tate Hilo? The OIis, dos"? .5315 sure 1 don't o v-Sdhere did'you hear 'about it?" At Sundaysshltool. ho snperitr, dent said I;o;i ratarle heaven and 111 and 3111 that in a nark's Llnilrant far stiff mllccles. E. Tile distinction of being the only. kit. woman blacksmith 'in Now 'Yiirlt City goes to icirs..,Sellhie Jenleinson,'54, who • i:en has 7leen eft the forge for 30 years, She oar has never l0eon hurt 113 a borne and is (( not afraid of any !porno, 1 iyt] flitter than a hot water bag. MATS ITSELF, says hot is 0 16 hours, OWE leak, scald' Tit for Tat. "The dealer made you pay more than this car fa worth,", commented the candid friend. "I know at,"'answered Mr. Cumrox, "I'm selling him a piece of property, and I want to convey the lmpressfoii that I am guileless and easy" ANDRUFF F Rub the scalp with M i n a r•d' a, It stimulates the roots of the hair and removes dandruff. PUZZLE.Find SANTA CLAUS �.v t _.J-- • at. First 4 Prizes, es, each Wrist Watch' 100 Prizes of each a • Fountain Pen Hundreds of other Prizes 11 you aaa salve this Puzzle and will Ill 24 trate % IN/Ames aE 10c each, you Can W o cue •ol the above Frisco. wilt you do Ws? 0 15 very easy. Ileo just mark Santa with on X and send t to us et once and II amzeetwe 35111 tend you On Podium to soli rigbtarray, r 8elfaot;SpecialtyCo, Dep; WWateriord, Oat, awn or buret, 5. tnbleouoou of cold wateretpsto tba hheat.: works like music. -& gr1at comfort at all Woos; a lick roam necessity. Retlevos y�,qp�, ��g/g ip!/�,p neuralgia, lumbago, tenth. ache, bock ache, etc.. a a YP w! For the home, travelling, nattptag,motoring, old. Seatcl t ost std on re o D P receipt f priCC. the Bead or a mosquito bits—Sir Roh CLGAR MANUFACTURING COMPANY aid. Ross.. - p at:.A1B 22.22 Duals St. W., Toronto,. 3 WE WANT CHURNING GENUINE ASPIRIN We supply cans and pay express charges. We pay daily by express: money orders, 'which can bo eashoii anywhere without any charge. To obtain the top 'price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not .less than 30 per cant Butter Fat.. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For references -Bead °lice, Toronto: Bank of Montreal, or your local banker. llstebllshed for over thirty years, w+.SHlP .G7S •YOlJ2•+�'•r-s�:. •POULTIn, ,EGGSr BUTTE R'AND FEATI'E "Wo BUYALtYEARtROUND r - Mae today for prides - pro h+ifdrantee them for a' lvoejc ahead FiP®llltt rld Co..f UNITE D Erlpp.,id & of Y5V 1'cc,•.c - :1.$-39'}lonserou*r.! larkat - Monir@a2 Tif I fOnYOUR` EYES heatillRe (INS Refreshing PROVED SAFE Tate without Fear as Told c. in "Bayer" Package DAY Does not affect the Unless you see the "'Bayer Gross" on package et on tablets yon aro net getting the genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin proved safe by millions and Prescribed by physicians over twenty- aye years ter. Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia - Pain, Pain Bach unbroken `Bayer" package con. tains Droves directions- 1 -Candy' boxes et twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- glets, also sell 'betties of 24 and 100, 'The SMP Roaster is a fine time saver. You put the roast or fowl in the oven. The roaster does'' the rest, bastes roasts•toperfection; It roasts with very little shrinkage, thus saving dollars every year. None of the tasty meat juices are lost; all the rich flavor is retained. Resides you, can buy cheaper cuts, for it makes cheap cuts taste , like choice ones. r,„• , The close tang cove, !redo nil the eoo,cin Edo nd, c c�333 maids t0 19 r 0 the G c doesn't ] ,o ax.r the ?melt of cooiun d fl a hh va Is ke t e t ?arse end •CHo o n � P P o 1 06t often the ^ p sp • 50. 10 Ante splendid •ilea els, 15 l a according to slat. an ealah. Sold in all blydwsrc aboral ¢pct cl^,¢u 15",' of all It clasps out fn Pains in Back and Legs Rea lieved by Lydia E. Pinkham'a ' Vegetable Compound Ford,., Ontario.—"I had a nervous break -down, as it is called, with severe pains in my back and lege,' and with fainting spells which left me very weak. I, was nervous and could not sleep nor eat as I shouldand spent much time i in bed. X was n this state, more or leas, for over two years before Lydia L. Plnkham'a Vegetable Compound was recommended to me by my neighbor, Before I' had taken 'five doses z was, sitting up in . bed and when the first }rottle was taken I was out of bed and able to walk around the house. During my sickness I. had been obliged to get ore one to look after my home for me I but thanks to the Vegetable _Compound I am 'now able to look after it myyself.1 I have taken Lydia E, Pinkham's Blood Medicine in turn with the Vegetable Compound, and I certainly recommend these medicines to any one who is not enjoying good health. I am quite willing for you to use these facts as -a testi- menial." —Mrs. estimenial."-Mrs. J. SnisPiilyl»,150 Jos. Janisse Avenue, Ford, Onthrio. Nervousness, irritability, ,painful times, run=down feelings and weakness are symptoms to be noted. Women' suffering from these troubles , which they 00 often have, should give Lydia E. nkham� Vegetable Compound a fait, trial.Al druggid s sell this medicine) , 9 uac rr willhelo youtohave lair and yy .Mflovely Coo Iexion 1Tso Cuiicur'a Soap. daily to keep your skin olear0 ;uta C tour a Olni' ' rne nt toxo ,' ileus acrd prevent irrita- tions. Veep the scalp healthy by shampoos with Cutiatrra Soap, assisted by teaches of Cu- ticura Ointment when needed, aatur Ie 05,1, 1:3) by 1,1011 5,31,,,a enccedun vapor; Sal hougo Ztd J¢ , tcecl Price, 8051 WC, O nlmaht IN and 5 c, 101canr 21 , Concato Shoring: Stink 25c,, I O1 U E No, 40--'25.