HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-07-16, Page 7NATURE'S WARNINGS
Danger Signals That Everyoiu
Should Take Seriously.
Pain is one of -Nature's warnings
that -something is wrong with.the body.
Inddgeetion, for instance, is character-
ized by pales in' the stunach, and of-
ten about the heart; 1'houmati,snl by
sharp Paine b the limbs and joints;.
headaches area sign that the nerves
or stomach are mut of order, In sone
' ailments, such asanaemia, pain is not
so prominent. In 'this case. Nature's
warning takes the form of. pallor,
breathlessness after slight exerilon,.
palpitation of the beget, and loss of ap-'
petite. Whatever form these warnings.
take, wise poalile•-will not Ignore the
Met that many diseases have their'
origin in poor blood, and that when the
blood is enriched the trouble diem)-
, pears. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. are
inoet helpful in such cases_ because
they purify, and build up the blood to
its normal strength. Inthis way it
tones up the nerves, restores the ap-'
petite and gives perfect health. Miss
Hazel Berndt, of Arnprior, Ont., has
proved the great value of this medicine
and says:—"I am a young giri and
have boon worlcing in a factory for the
past tour years. For two yearsT had
been in such poor health that at times
I could not work I was thin and pale;
and troubled with headaches and
fainting spells, I doctored nearly all
this time, 'put it did^ not help me. My
mother advised ole .to take Dr.
Hams' Pink Pine,' and after using them
foe. a while I Could notice an improve -
anent in my. condition. I used nine,
boxes and oral truthfully say that my
health is„restared, When I began tak-
ing the pills I weighed 97 pounds and
now I weigh 114. I feel that'I owe my
good health to Di'. Williams' Pink bills
and hope other ailing people will give
Weal a fair trial,”
You can get these pins through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 90 cents
a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont. '
Wise Provisions of Nature.
There le a curious eesemblance be
tureen the stomach of It hen and a corn
mill; the Drop answering to the hop.
per and the gizzard to the stones
which crush the corn. But the most
remarkable resemblance in this—to
Prevent too nnuch corn from going into
the stones at once, a receiver is placed
between them and the hopperso that
the corn may be dribbled out just as
fast as it Is required. The same pro-
cess lakes place' In the hen as the crop
may. be filled and it foodonly enters
the gizzard gradually and as test as
it is able to digest it.
A grub called the glow -wenn gives
bort a phosphoric light in the darkness.
Why? In order that her mate may
find her, for while she Is a worm he le
a°fly, and while she is on earth, he Is
in the air most of the time.
The web of the spider le a compen
sating• cbntrivance. The food of the
spider is flies, yet how is be to catch
them without his having wings? His
Web is a net and he not onlyeknows
how to weave it, but he furnishes the
thread to weave it from his own body.
In many species of insects tho eye
—1s fixedand cannot be turned in its
socket. To supply this great refect,
the eye of suck insects is a multiplying
glass with a lens looking in every di-
rection and showing every object that
May be pear. Thus at first what seems
a' privation, is In reality an advantage,
as an eye so constructed seems better
adapted to thewants of these crea-
tures than any other type.
The neck of the chameleon is stiff.
and cannot be tureen. However, Na-
ture is never at a loss. The chame-
leon's eye-ball
hame-leon's-eye-ball stande out so tar that
more than half of: it projects from the
head and the muscles function so very
curiouely that the pupli can be turned
in any direction. He can look back -
weeds without turning his body.
The parrot would have au Incon-
venience in the very hookeet.shape of
its upper mandible, if the mandtble
were stationary like that of other
birds, But t it is not, anis the hook can
be used in suspending itself and it can
be used ina variety of ways since it Is
capable of being moved at pleasure.
Many quadrupeds have -long ears
that they can move backward and for -
weed with great ease, and in this way
detect, the species of sounds. The ears
of the dog, cat and horse are so con-
structed.
The elephant's short neck is acm-
pensatedby the admirable device of a•.
phoboscts. The queen beetle carries
briliiant lamps which she lights with
phosphorus furnished her by nature.
Moles' eyes. are, tiny and fur -bedded,
. eo that the dirt may net get in.
WE WANT CHURNING
We ,supply, cans and ?ay :exprees.
charges, We pay daily by express
money orders, which- can be cashed
anywhere without any charge.
To obtain the top price; Cream
muse -be free from badflavors and
contain not- leas than 80 per cent
Rutter Fat
Bowes, Company Limited,
Toronto •'
For references—Head Office, Toronto,
Sank of Montreal, or your local banker.
Establlahedfor ,over thirty year,
` The swinnning pool at Crystal Gardens, Victoria, B.C., the largest salt
water natetorlum in the world. It is 140 feet long,
Weighing a Suribeain: ' Should Encourage Boys in In-
strumental School Music.
What, pressure can a beam of light
exert?' A beam of light; like a jet of
water,e pushes against any ' obl'ttaele
placed in its, path, but the push, al-
though very minute, can be !measured.
The l'7pglisi physicist, James Clerk
Maxwell, was thefirst to suggest that
light can exert pressure, and he work-
ed out mathematically what the force
should be. It was not till nearly thirty
years later than an attempt was made
to measure it experimentally, The
man who made the experiment was
Professor Lebedeff, a Rsisslan scient-
let,
From a delicate fibre of quartz he
hung a small vertical rod, across the
lower end of which were secured two
shorter rods, carrying at their ,outer
ends discs of very thin metal. Two
of the discs were blackened an two
were polished. The whole arrange-
ment was in reality an extremely sen-
sitive balance, and the twisting was
measured by means of a tiny mirror
attached to the apparatus and turning
with it. It was enclosed in a globe of
glass from which 'all' bad been ex-
cluded.
A. beazn of light was ooncenti•ated
on to the pair of blackened discs. The
pressure ot light caused the quartz
fibre t0 twist slightly, and the angle Of
deflection was measured by reflecting
a spot of light from the 'attached mir-
ror on to a fixed' scale. The beam was
then played on the polished discs add
the angle measured again, in this case
being about twice the previous amount.
In this way a very acgurate determina-
tion of the force of'iight-pressure was
obtained,
The, effects of light -pressure are re-
tainer to the astronomer. Perhaps the
best-known - case Is that of comet's
tails'. The materials composing the
tall of a comet are so light that the
pressure of sunlight has more effect
on them than the sun's gravitational
attraction. Consequently a comet's
tail always points away from the sun.
IP
Eupeptic and Dyspeptic.
Stories about Eugene Field or that
Eugene Field used to tell are -always
amusing, and M. CP 11. Dennis's book,
Eugene Field's Creative Years, is full
of them, Speaking of the dyspepsia
whichwas so often a burden that tirade
Field's cheerfulness a triumph as well
as a gift, Mr. Denials says:
Sol Smith Russell, the comedian,
was not only It close friend but a tel -
low dyspeptic, and Field used to tell
with huge glee a story to the effect
that one midnight, after giving a Per-
formance in
er-formance.in an Eastern city, Russel
went into a restaurant to get some-
thing to eat. While he partook spar-
ingly of bread and milk he saw an old
friend of the name of Parsons attack-
ing with gusto •a plateful of corned
beef and cabbage.
"Merciful heavens, Parsons!" cried
Russell. "How dare you fill yourself
with such vituals at. this time of
night?" '
"Oh, I can stand it,' replied Parsons
happily.
But, my dear fellow," expostulated
Russell, "do you know how Iong -ft
takes corned beef and cabbage to di-
gest?"_
,"No, • 5 haven't the remotest idea,`
'said Parsons.
"Well, I happen to know," said Rus-
sell; "It takes_ five hours—five solid
hours."
"Oh, that's all right," said Parsons.
"I've got just' aboutthat'much time to
devote to it,"
A somewhat similar story of J. L.
Toole was told -to Field .1n London.
Dropping in at the Garrick Club ohs
evening; Toole found Irving eating 'a
Welsh rabbit, After gazing fixedly at
the concoction,' Toole shook' hands with
Irving and said solemnly: "Give my
love to dear old Charles Mathews."
Then he turned and walked- away;
Mathewshad been dead three years!
Coal Mine In Street.
Coal discovered while laying a sewer
In a busy street fn Coatbridge, 'Scat.
land, is being dug up at the rate of
nine or fen tons a day. The "pit" is.
thirty-eight-feet'deep.
Willing, to Assist.
Charles—"I'm in .love with a charm
Ing girl, and I'd like to ask yeur-'ad-
vice!" -;
l ,g $ie -"I'm willing to helpeydn all
�ca0"
Wollolow, would you advice me to
propose to you?"
0
For Every Ill--Minartt'r .Liniment
Every child* spends a large part of
his first eighteen years in school. His
music and school. work must progress
shnultaneously or one or the other be
neglected, if net entirely ,abat doned.
If he possesses musical ability of a
marked degree, the school studies are
usually sacrificed, with a permanent
educational deficit to the child. If
nsuaic be to his dislike, he is most cer-
tain to face later a regret that musical l
instruction was discontinued at a time
When mind. and muscle was retentive
and pliant. • (
Very few persona acquire facility in
any drill subject after twenty years of
age. The concert artists now before
the public were masters of technic on
their -chosen instruments while still in
their teens. It imperativethen, that
music be part of the ins'uctiou re,
eeivecl'during " the schcol years, and
for that teason it should bo part of the
curriculum of the school. All progres-
91va school systems have music in
some form,. but it is more frequently
congaed to singing. In the last decadq,
however, instrumental music has at-
tlaoted considerable attention, and
many cities have incorporated it in the
programme. This particular phase of
music usually appeals 10 boys.
Taste in art, literature and music
can be acquired. The average boy of
average intelligence, with good teach -
Ing, can learn to Play almost any in-
strument, and produce therefrom
sounds that are quite above the aver-
age.` The unusual instrumelfts of the
orchestra, such as the oboe, bassoon,
French horn, string bass, flute and
clarinet, fall easy prey to the nimble
fingers and alert minds of bright-eyed,
vigorous boys, and they derive no
small pleasure from being able to play.
If the boy can do it; and he can, :he
should he given a chance to do it.
"Water, water everywhere,
I Tor any droll to drink."
Hese words of the ancient Mariner
nlui t have recurred many times to the
Inca and women who traveled the
broad and briny Atlantic in the days of
sailing vessels when the voyage lasted
for many weeks and drinking water
was carefully treasured and sparingly
doled out, . This .experience 01 Priva-
tion doubtless remained in their mem-
ory when later they pushed on` to the
Ontario bush and helps to explain why
the site chosen for the log cabin was
invariably convenient to an abundant
supply of Pure water.
In the year 1925, were it not for the
activitiesof the health authorities in
this province, we who live in cities, in
towns or on the farm might also quote
the old lines, but during the last few
years our -health authorities have teat -
ed and used to the fullest advantage
every means of protecting and purify-
ing water—with the result that -we can
to -day boast of the purityof our drink-
ing water supplies,,- In addition, this
effort has earned for Ontario the en-
viable reputation of showing one of
the lowest death rates from typhoid
fever in the world; while only a few
years ago over fifty men and women
out of every -hundred thousand resi-
dent In this Province died from ty-
phoid, now we lose only two (2.5)
from this cause: The greatest factor
in this immense saving of lives has
Veenthe protection of drinking. water,
Protect your water supply,- Write
for free bottle and instructions for tak-
ing' of sample to the "Provincial La-
boratories" in the centre nearest your
home: Toronto; London; Kingston,
North Bay, 'ort'William, Owen Sound,
Peterboro and Sault Ste. Marie. Exam.
1nation is tree for citizens of the Pro-
vince,
Not Always, Dangerous.
"I aonsider these motor -oars dan-
gerous • things."
"Well, that depends." •
"Depends' on what?"
'Whether -they have drivers In 'em
or not." r
Ancient Eclipses.
,Rolipses as far back as 1207 B.C. are
recorded- at Oxford -University •0bser- I
vatory. In the 'Name .huge book are
predictions concerning future eclipses
as fax ahead as the year A.D. 2103,
What the Boy Thinks'
-An address was presented by the
boys of the Teeswater Troop to..the re-
tiring Scoutiliaster. It'snakes interest-
ing reading and also shows that Sir
Robert Baden-Powell built wisely and
well when ]ie fashioned the Boy ,$cont
organization oe lines that appeal tp
the boy. The address read: Dear
Scoutmaster, "We wife have profited
by Your instructions In the school (the
Scoutmaster is a sehdol teacher), wit-
nessed your painstaking industry in
oar behalf, and benefitted' by your en-
thusiasm in the Boy Scout movement,
desire to express our appreciation of
your services, and 0110regret at sever-
ing our: happy and profitable relation-
ship. As a. teacher. you have always
been interested in our welfare, patient
with our imperfections, just in your
reproof, andever ready to explain
awayour difficulties and enlighten as
far as was In your power our uuder-
standing. We have appreciated your
efforts, and while perchance often an-
noying iota by our mischief., or thought-
lessness, orour indifference, we meant
no disrespect but were actuated only
,by -the impulsivenessof youth. bet this
be our apology. We held you always
in the highest respect. The Scout
movement appealed to tie most strong-
ly. In it we were brought more close-
ly together. The physical exercise, the
hikes Intl the country, the training in
observation, resourcefulness, self -re=
Bance honor, courtesy, and ganeera
l
helpfulness, will.not soon be forgotten,
while the gel -together feeling of the
Camp. Fire with the Camp Fire yarns
cleated a feeling ot comradeship such
as no other • relationship could arouse.
We will remember the teaching and
,the experienegs forever."
' What the Magistrate Says.
"Boy Scouts do good turns for'peo-
ple, not annoy them," declared a magis-
trate recently in the juvenile court,
when releasing two lads with instruc-
tions to join some Scout troop. The
boys were in court for destroying
fences and cherry trees. Tliey`pro-
mised to jgin it troop,
What Simcoe Thinks.
The . people of Simcoe tbink the
Scouts of their town are really living
up to their motto ---"Be Prepared,"
Fifty seven minutes after the call from
Fisher's Glen for Boy Scouts was re-
ceived four auto lands of Simcoe
Scouts were fighting a bush Bre re-
cently, twelve miles out of town.
What a Wolf Cub Did.
Everyone has heard the story of Sir
Walter Raleigh, the gallant courtier
who spread his cloak on the road that
the Queen might pass over dry shod,
But listen to this story that a gentle-
man recently told about a Cub, having
witneseedrthe event himself' in a city
last winter there was lined up boys
and girls, poor children, waiting to get
into a free concert given at a mission.
One thinly clad little girt, whose shoes
were also in holes; seemed to feel the
cold more- than the rest and shifted.
from foot to foot. Along came a boy
who noticed her. He watched for a
moment then'suddenly pulled off his
cap and threw it on the ground at bar
feet and said, "Stand on that, kid."
Who do you think did the greatest
deed, Raleigh or the Cub?" We think
the Cub, for his act was done simply
AB an impulse of thoughtfulness and
without expectation ofrscognition or
reward, "How did I know that he was
a Wolf Cub?" said the gentleman who
tells and witnessed the incident:
"Why, he was wearing the same Little
button on hie coat that my own Wolf.
Cub son wears here at home."
What Twenty-five Thousand Scouts
Promised. At the Wembley Exhibition last year
there were gathered together a•great
concourse of Scouts from every part
of the world. In connection with a
Sunday afternoon meeting held in the
stadium, Sir Robert Baden-Powell, fol-
lowing other speakers, addressed the
Scouts. "I bid you pause fora mo-
ment," he said, "lower flags, and bend
your heads, and think of your Scouts
promise—that you will do -your best to
do your duty to God and the King, to
help other people at all times, and
obey the Scout Law. I want you to go
forth from here eager to serve God,
and' the King, and your fellow men.
Those who will do that stand up and
tell me:" And immediately twenty;
live thee:send Scouts stood on their
feet and with hands raised high in the
61r shouted -"I wilI."
Married in Mid Air.
A wedding in the air took islace re-
cently, when a young Swedish couple
were married during an aeroplane
flight from'.Mkimo to Hamburg.
When the machine, carrying a full
complement of passengers,' had risen
to • height of 1,600ft., an altar `was
erected in the cabin, before. whicit.a
Swedish clergyman performed the mar -
/gage ceremony, with a lawyer and his
wife as witnesses,
A wedding breakfast was then
served, and ,the health of tbe condo
drunkin champagne by' all the passen-
gers.
The clergyman and the lawyer left
the machine at Iambs rg, but the cou-
ple continued, their honeymoon trip .to
AInsterdam.
P ---
The .giant bamboo, which sometimes
yeaches.120 feet, grows a foot a da
The Oxen.
Oh, white Inc the oxen, white as the
brook
That s'paneles to foam on the rode;
And they plod the length of the wood-
land road
Under the sun's red clock!
They go doyen the shadows of even-
: thio;
They thread their way so slow,
Ole therein the fading pt: -ole light—
There, there in the afterglow!
The farm -boy Bangs from hie laden
rack;
He whistles with long day done,
,+While the great wheels rumble 'along
tbe track
Toward the rine 01 the setting sun!
The oxen clash a spreading here.
And quicken, their pace a bit,
For yonder aro cabs of yellow corn
And lamps of the farm -house lit!
Ah, yonder_ is peace In tbe drowsy stall
Beyond the tug of the day;
Beyond the lanes of the forest tall
And the ring of the axe alway!
It is good to be back in the'twillght
hour
To the crib and the olover.mow
With a fragrance there: of the withered
flower— '
A dream of the slow trails now!
—Leslie Clare Manchester.
RED HOT JULY DAYS AY
HARD ON THE
BABY
July — The month , of . oppressive
heat; rad hot days and sweltering
nights; is extremely hard on little
ones, Diarrhoea, dysentery, colic and
cholera !titanium carry off thousands
s
of precious little lives every summer.
The mother Must be constantly on her
guard to prevent these troubles, of if
they come on suddenly to fight them.
No other medicine le of such aid to
mothers during the hot summer as is
Baby'seOwn Tablets, They regulate
the bowels and Stomach, and an oc-
casional dose given to the -well child
will prevent summer complaint, or if
the trouble does eome on suddenly will
banish it, The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont, -
4
They Won't Wash.
It is reported that last year a special
`sanitary commission of the Soviet gov-
ernment in Russia discovered in S1-
beria an isolated tribe 800 1n11es from
any other human community: They
know about as much of the world In
which they live as we know of Mars
and Its possible inhabitants, Though
there was naturally no lack of water,
,it was found that they never used it
except as a drink.
Force had to be used to wash these
strange people. Not only did they
never wash their bodies; they never
washed their clothes or their cooking
utensils. They were, in abort, what
Gilbert calls in "The Mikado" "very
Imperfect ablutionere.'
Dr. Johnson to reported to have de -
cheese that he "hated immersion," but
the first man the cammiestoners at-
tempted to bath actually flied, either
of. £ igitt or of some form of autosug-
gestion.
"Does Fred nate parties?"
"He says ['m the only party he's
interceded In."
A Wireless Warning.
A doctor states that many people us-
ing wireless headphones develop the
"radio ear," a type of eczema. •young
people are particularly susceptible.
The malady, if not recognized. and
treated -in its early stages, is apt to
develop into an obstinate and painful
0andltton, which, in later stages, Is dif-
ficult to care.
'The cause lies in the fact that the
headphones, fitting lightly against the
ear, exert considerable pressure en
the ear cartilage and render! the skin
sensitive. Earpiece covers made of
sponge rubber remove the pressure on
the pare and do not Interfere much with
ventilation, since they are more or
less porous. -
Old Ways Best.
They still like the old ways best on
the west bank of the Tiber. When it
was deterinivecl to illuminate the dome
of Si, Peter's in canna tion with the.
ceremony of canonizing a now paint
the ldea"of using electric lamps that
could be turned on and off by a switch
1,Vas"at.0000 dismissed. - Torches and
candles were used, and three hundred
men were kept busy lighting and tend-
ing. thein.
Keep Minard's L'rnlment In the House.
If you'd like a little better tea than you
'are Using, please' try «Red Raise"
"is good tee'
The same good tea for 30 years. Try it!
The I ing and the Cow. 1' Chtssifed Advertisetr.-rata
Faisal, warrior chieftain and ally of is 'r'I rsx trualArrrrrir o1 n,
the British in Mesopotamia, now King
'of Irak, is a man not easily flustered.
After the Peace Conference !tis friend
and comrade -In -arms, Col. Th'onias E.
Lawrence, took klin.for a tour of the.
Walsh 'Isles, and while in `Scotland
•they were entertained at a formal -din-
ner in Glasgow -
The Emir had been all tray so busily.
Peeing the sights along the Clyde, re-
lates Mr, Lowell Thomas in Asia, that
when the time came to respond to the
toast in his honor be was unprepared.
As luck- would have 11, the -only other
person present who could understand
Arable was Lawrence, who acted as
interpreter: So when Feisal was call-
ed upon to speak he leaned over and
whispered In Lawrence's ear:
"1 haven't a thing to say. I will re-
peat the passage front the Koran on
the cow, and 700 may tell them any-
thing you like!
It so happens that the passage ex -
trolling the cow is one of the most
sonorous and suphonious parts of the
t'
Koran, arid. the business men' of Glas-
gow were eecordingly notch impressed.
Had that melodious outpouring been
literally translated, this and more of
it is what the Scotch gentlemen would
have heard:
"Moses answered, He saltll she fa
neither an old cow not' a young heifer,
but of a middle age between both; do
ye therefore that which ye are com-
manded, She is a red cow. intensely
red; bar color rejoiceth in the behold-
ers, She Is a cow not broken -to plough
the earth or water the field; a sound
ane, there is no blemish in her, Then
they sacrificed her; yet they wanted
but little of leaving' it tontine."
But Colonel Lawrence, keeping a
straightface,,provided such a suitable
and ready misinterpretation that they-
never
hey
never suspected they had bees hear-
ing the proper qualifications of a sacri-
flcial,cow and not an eloquently -turned
Oriental compliment to their hoeld
tality.
I E t T ,, •. . STOPPED,
ty r chi iicmnds. 83,3(15-.90,10 1rtetinent
.S ears' 333000, thousands YustSaonlala Kier at
(! oil t for fens boll[, TrtSplrs lletlo9loo I,1mlt.Sd, nr115
T. Se Adoluldalast, Toronto, Cards: (Cut this 503.3
Singers, Please Note.
Why is it that singers, good, bad and
indifferent, invariably ignore on their
programmes the writers of the song-
vease? Surely the poet Is entitled to
some slight recognition, for the poem
ie the source of inspiration to the com-
poser, the foundation of the interpre-
tation and the current of understand-
ing between singer and audience.
Who would want to hear a singer, no
matter how beautiful the voice and
melody, Stand up and give sixty mea-
sures of Tra-lala, and 'call it a song?
We look for a poetic sentiment besides
a well -sung melody, and we can only
find it in the venae that existed before
the song, and without which the song
could not exist. Moreover, do not some
powerful songs, such as "The Blind
Plowman," "The Grey Wolf'," "Fland-
ers Fields,' etc,, although coupled with
very beautiful music, make their dra-
matic appeal and lasting impresslon
through the words?
There Is ea more reason to ignore
the writer of the words than the writer
ot the melody, yet such is generally
the case; and still worse, the program-
mes of many choruses, which even go
So far as .to print the poems in full,
omit the names of the poets,
Australia's Child Brides. ..
Australia+n marriages during 1923
included 483 brides under seventeen
years of age, the youngest being only
thirteen, and seventy-three women of.
sixty-five years and over. The oldest
bridegroom was eighty-six.
Among the young mothers was a
child of twelve, while six girls of only !
thirteen years gave birth to children,
Referring to infant mortality, Dr. T. i
W. Springthorpe, 'president of the
I-Iealth Association for. Women and
Children in Victoria, stated that .Ails-
ralia ha122,473
t d lost .children under
the age of live years between 1918 and
1922.
Cotton waste has bee t prohibited as
packing for imparts i'a Africa,
Use
Eft S
,TRRITATED nY -
SUN,WIND,D'USST .CINDERS%
010014555ton DED DFD20 al, 3, ascot 01 )1(5OIStol LOPTiCIAD388,•
wran F2 cwcf,.Raiiii
OH i MY BACK i
iriassage with Minard's and
fe01 the pain disapl.lear,
Citicura Clears The
Scalp Of Dandruff
Regular shampoos with Cuticura Soap,
Preceded by light applications of Cuti-
cura. Ointment, do much to cleanse the
scalp of dandruff and promote a healthy
condition necessary to producing thick
hair. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are
ideal for every -day toilet uses meeting
every want of the skin and scalp..
tease 8,.013 See Dq Mrs Ad*r .. C,madlan
Depot• Stenhouse, td, M. atraal, 0,1,,, 9033,
rbc. Ointment 25 and 600. Talcum tb3.
Mgr' ' C,o0oor, ab.ving stick 28a
•
•
A Close Observer,
"Olt, mamma," little Margaret ex- 3SERA B LE AND
claimed in an awed tone on returning
from a visit to a spinster aunt noted
for the print neatness with which She ALWAYS i PAIN
kept her house. "1 saw a fly in Aunt
Maria's house. "But," she added i
thoughtfully, as If half justifying its
presence, "it was washing itself."
Say `Bayer ' - Iilsistl
Unless you see the "Bayer
Cross" on tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer prod-
uct proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 25
years.
Accept only a
' Bayer package
,whichcontains proven directions
]Tandy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
Aspirin ds the trade mnrb (registered is
Canada) of Bayer hfnrnl OcLate. oP a.eao-
acetteactasster of Sullcyiicadd.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta:
bre Compound a Dependable
Help for Mothers
Port Greville, Nova Scotia,—" I took
your medicine fora terrible pain in m
side and for weakness and headaches. I,
seemed to bloat, all over, too, and my --
feet and hands were the worst. I am
the mother of four children and 1 am
nursing my baby -the first one of four
I could nurse. I took Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound before the
baby's birth, so you can see how much
it helped .me. . S cannot praise, it too
highly for what it has done for me. I
took all kinds of medicine, but the Veg-
etable Compound is, the only one that
has helped me for any length of time.
I recommend it to any one with troubles
like mine and you may use my letter for a
testimonial,"—Mrs.9l oaERT MCCumBV,
Port Greville, Nova Scotia.
Before and afterchiid-birththe mother
will find Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable•
l Compound a blessing. -3
Many, many letters are received giv-
ing the same sort of experience as le
given in this letter. Not only is the
l mother benefited, but these good results
pass on to the child:
No )!armful drugs are used In the
preparation of this medicine—just roots
and herbs—and it can be taken in safety
by the nursing mother.
98 out of every 100 women reported
benefit from its use in a recent canvass
among women seers of this medicine, C,
ISSUE No. 29-'25.