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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-08-13, Page 3Tho o itsitanding feature of agricule tare as pursued in Westoa+n Canada of lata years has been the pronounced tendency towards diversity. Gradual- ly farmers are branching out from the few main issues !which weed to const'- condition -which induced important tutu ory, agricultural devoted of the Maritime fox breeders to locate near territory, and farms devatod to what used to bo Considered minor phases of Calgary, Alberta, what ieclaimed to agriculture have been toned to be Very be the largest fox-breeding'estab lsh- profltable and are coming to an in:: meet in the world, creasing extent to dot' ,the wide ex- Having Serioatsiy adopted the Indus,. Pane°. The suCeeso which has, attend, try, -Western Canada has set out to ed the application to dairying has been' expand it. The West was the pioneer nothing less than 'phenomenal; fruit 1 in domestic beaver ratsin.g, an activity raising, poultry, and apieubture are re, practically forced upon, certain farm- ceiving tncreasdng attention; of'late � ere who, overrun by these animals of-. there has been a remarkable amomat ter a lengthy close season, hold fro re- ef interest evinced in fur farming, and dress but to apply to the Government having regard to the, ehsnicterletio far permission to faamt theme, The first vigor with whin/lac! West Patellae any'coyote ranch, on the continent bees boon objective It takes up, co.neiderande de- established in Western •Canada, and velopreent may be exeected j from the first Canadian • chinchilla rab- FUR FARMING IN WESTERN CANADA CANADA 11.3NARLIS IN for experiment, have•theived materiel - ly better in the Western provinces, where the pelt of the animal, it le stated 'cannot told from these in the aninbad•'s native land. It was no doubt a realization of the same excellency of The fur -farming industry, which orig. bit farmiu the same area, stook:is' be- inete.d in Prince Edward Island, has ing distributed all over the country. been slowly moving, West. Fra while The eloneestication of, the flsher, which the indu,§try seemed to be confined to for so long presented such difficulties the East .and little interest was ex- in Eastern Canada, has been stracese- bibtted by the West. But einoe West- fully accomplished in British Columbia. ern Canada came to seriously adopt Many New Ranches Established. this newest phase of farming, growth There has apparently ,been consider - has been rapid. Stimulated by the first able activity in this direction since. the successes, this area has not only come beginning of the presienit'year. A mina to rival the East In the successful farm. has been established 'on Van - breeding of the established damesti couver Island,'British Columbia,_ with dated fur -bearers•, but has been the imported stock fauna Quebec, by a pioneer in the domestication of certain rancher already raising Alaska foxes'. other of Canada's fauna. In the last Minks have 1•lkewiee been introduced Governanent return, 143 fur -farming into Alberta; where the Industry 18 establishments tablishents are credited to Wage thriving. A State et Washington rest - ern Canada, of wkich 23 aa'e in Mani- dent recently established a substdnntial toba, 9 in Saskatdhewau, 50 in Alberta, meiskrwt ranchin Alberta, A rancher 40 in British Coluanbia,•and 21 in the in Oregon, after scouring the whole of Yukon Territory. These coverthe the United States fora suitable toes, tion fora similar enterprise has pine chased a large tract of land is the Co- lumbia Valley of British Columbia, 011 which there are already several beaver: end iuusderat houses. The Western pyovinces of Canada have a way of going vigorously ahead with any enterprises they adopt and result In malting the- fur-farnriug in- whose practicabliity they prove. This dustry of Western Canada a substan is reasonably to be expected of the tial and prosperous inelnstry ina short i fur -farming industry, especially In tome. Conditions forthe raising of rich view of the enthusiasm with which Paltry are probably unequalled any- this novel and interesting phase of are where else. This would seem to be riculture has been tankup and the prayed in tbo case of the Karakul outstanding developments of the last sheep, which, distributed over Canada few yeas's.'_ The.latesit addition to the growing lest of titled eanc.liers in Southern Al - berth ie Belem Josef CeevossY et Hun-' gary, wino, together with his brother,' Baron Andro:Caavossy, has purchased! a ranch on the Bow River noon• Coch.; rang, in Alberta. The .ranch consists of alemet 1,600 acres of fine laud, and' it io intended to follow the raising of { dairy and beef, cattle as well as grain growing. The colony of old world I noblesse to adopt farming in this re-, laitively limited area is swelling at a ronta8lca.ble rate, There is, however, additional sigtiifl-'' conte In this establishment. I7pon the rearing of eleven different animals, in w2toh foxes naturaidy lead, and others are "coyote, skunk, chinchilla rabbit, muskrat, racoon, I{arakul steep, beav- er, marten, mink said fisher, Becoming a Substantial industry. The combination of Western leads. Give and amltabslity of condition should first visit of the two IIungarian noble- men, which remelted in their own ac-' quisdtion of ,tltie ranch, they were great ly struck with the opportunities exist- ing in Alberta for °thereof their coun- trymen, and after having put the maedi in order for a commencement next year, they have reterned to Hungary with the object °i inducim,g others of their connpaariote to settle on the prairie roach and. farm lauds: The two are confident of returning with other Hunogarien settlors for Alberta. Though Hungarian immigration has never loomed up as, a paalticularly large item in the movement to Canada, since there is no great exodus at all from Hungary, there has, been at all times a fairly steady movement to the Do- minion, until it is. estimated that at the present time there are between 50,000 and 60,000. Hungarian nand - grants and their chlk1ren in Canada. Saskatchewan is the home of the great- er number of these; about 40 per cent. of the total beteg in that province, Proved Good Farmers. gather the shells into baskets slung round their necks andltangiont, t. 1.PEARL ISLAND • and after fitly to eighty secondsngdn fr' rapid work are pulled to the surface. On an average, about one shell in every thousand brought up contains a Apart from its world-wide reputation pearl, as, one of the moat scenically beautifu The buyers place their purchases in places on the mail, Ceylon ranks as the "kottus;" or enclosures, and the aye - world's largest producer of pearls,' its tors are allowed to rot for eight or ten output being exceeded only by that of Northern Australia. Tho Ceylon fisheries are opeeateil'on banks covering an extensive area off the north coast of the island; but the banks mast famous in bygone times, and still the most productive, lie close to the shore in the Gulf of Manaar. A Ceylon pearl oyster'e life is about eight years, and it is most produotive of its coveted prize from its third year A Poem You Should Know. 1 I The Wandering Wind. fiollcia 2lemens'-l00 Ilio distinction of having written some. of the beet- known Damns in the language, ineiild- ing "The'7,jetter Land," "Casabittn,aa," , and "Tito Craves of a leousehold," Here is one of the less familiar of her poems: Carl Lome:., a runoher of the Yukon, has over 60,000 head of reindeer and owns six and half million acres of land. He went north in 1900 from St. Paul during the gold rush. 'The wind, the wandering wind Of the golden summer eves— SVhenoo is the thrilling magic Of its tones amongst the leaves? ods, is it rrom the waters, ,:v Or from the bang tall grass? if Cr is it from the hollow rocks i i!A'r Through whiclr.the breathings f SeaCooka and Sea,Food. The profession of sea Weak is one BEST MEDICINE EVER SHE USED Dr. William? Pink Pills Highly Praised by a Nova Scotia Lady. Among the well known and esteemed residents of Hemford, N.S., le Mrs, Amanda Woodworth, Some four years ago Mrs. Woodworth. Thad the nilafor- The heavy settlement in Saedcatche- tune to lose her husband, and as a re - wan has been largely due to the efforts suit of caring for him- during his 111 - years ago of Baron . blaterhazy, who nese, endattending to farm duties, site pioneered a movement Moan Hungary became terribly run-down. Mrs. Wood - to the rich farming cotuatry east of worth says she felt as though her Saskatoon. Hungaaians! have rams to blood had turned to water, The least own and control large strips, of land exertion 'would leave her tiredand In this province, to develop them pros- breathless. She was often attacked percusly along agricultural :lines and by spells of weakness that left her al- to establisdi thriving little towns in most speechless, and frequently oaf- them.- Hungarian colonies are among fered from severe headaches. The the most outstanding terming settle medicines she took did not help her, ments of the province. and she almost despaired of gaining The Iiungarian has proved himself her health, In this condition she one a good farmer in. Western Canada. Be day read in a newspaper of a case arrives with, as the result of early very similar to her own, m which training, at least a deep realization of boalth was restored through the use the importance of mixed farming and of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. This made pursues it intelligently. Though us- her decide to give these pills a trial. ually possessed of little capital, his After using a few boxes she found the industry and perseverance early over- pills 'were helping her, and she con- come this. Among the many individual tinned their use until her old-time castes et Outstanding success may be 'health and vitality were restored. Now mentioned merely that of a settlor at Mrs. Woodworth route atter a email Charon; Alberta, who, s tooting out with farm of fifteen acres, besides doing all a capital of $200, now owns twenty her housework, and says shenever fait better or more energetic in her life. She gives credit for her present splen- did 'health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which she says are the best medicine she ever used, and strongly recom- mends the pine to all run-down people. You can get these Pills from any medicine dealer, or by marl at 60 cents a box from The Dr. "Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont: FARM BOYS! 'YOUR OPPORTUNITY!• Do Not Let It Pass The Ontario Agriculture! College offers yen an education that will fit you for practical up-to-date beakless farming or professional life. An eduoationto a farmer Is'a Iife-tlme gift. The years of youth are short Come to the 0,A.C. of September lath. board and room only $5.50 per Tuition fee for the first year only S20. week. 700 -acre farm, fine live stool<, en/del-11, wail -equipped buildings,, living conditions the best. Write for College Calendar, descriptl.ve of all science and praotical courses, A. M. PORTER, B.S.A. .1. B. REYNOLDS, M.A.- President Registrar. ONTARIO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE GUELPH, ON -1'.,., Or is it from the voices that has always poen looked upon with Of all in one combined,profound contempt by the rest of the That it wins the toia'e of meaning? seafaring eommnnity, admits IYi1ss The wind, the wandering Wind! Cicely Fox Smith, that sailor-souled Na! No! the strange sweet accents. Engaish lay who has made ,herself a That with it come and go, recognized authority on matters per - They are not from tbe osiers, taining to ships and the sea. "Old Nor the flr-trues whispering low. Slush" and "Grub -Spoiler" were the uncomplimentary nicknames bestowed They are not of the watere, upon hint; and the familiar old chanty Nor of the caverna hill; Paddy Doyle's .Boots further attests Tis the human love within us the usual attitude of crews in the That gives them power to thrill: cheerful lines. They touch the links of mem'ry weep,, a; and tremble We'll all throw dirt at the coo -oak And we start, and Around our spirits weep, And pay Paddy Doyle for his boots! To the wind, the wandering wind! Birth of the Moon. In the &pinion of Dr. R. H. Rastall. the moon is made of material that was once part of the earth's cruet, Dr, etas- tall's theory is that a layer of the earth's crust, about forty-one miles think and covering about two-thlr'ds of its total area, was peeled off by the at- traction of the sun, This action of the sun was effective while the crust was still in a piaetic state, and the m0021'8 own gravitational attraction caused it to roll up into a ball of the form we now see in the sky. The crustal area left on eaeth formed the continents, This theory also accounts for the fact that -while, according to generally accepted ideas, masses of lighter den- sity such as make up the earthly con- tinents should cover the entire surface of the globe, they actually cover only about a third, the missing two-thirds consisting of the 1110011. The new theory also fl.ts in with the ideas of a German geologist, Professor Alfred Wegener, who believes that the American continent was originally united with Europe and Africa, and per could not fail to witness it. He that it floated away to its present would then be compelled to admit that place. This would not have been nos- the grievance was a genuine one, since covered with such a crust; but after eo long as the entire south was hungry men do not go without a meal coveunless for good and sufficient reason, ant even if the cook were disgraced ; and sent forward, it was rare goad luck' -days in a boa covered In from the sun. quartan sections 02 land. Plies are allowed free access, as they Not only aro they line tillers of the assist in the process of Totting. soil, but .excellent craftsmen. Their Later, the whole decayed mass is buildings are largely- of native log, thoroughly washed, the shells, stones, splendid pieces of handiwosd , making and byssus (the green, fibre -like sub- for the most economic far mactivltY, stance by which tho,oyster attaches It- Other products of their spare. hours self to the favorite rock) are picked) are weaving, rugmaking, fancy needle. out, and the residue placed on long work, hammered brass, and wood carv- striiis of black calico to dry. int. At Regina tbe Hungarians have While drying, the whole mass is care- a' literary society with their own club on, both as regards number midsize of fully gone over again and again, and house, 'and this organization is very pearls. Very few three-year oysters many small "seed" pearls are found active in social, and Canadian national contain pearls, of any value; but when and added to the larger ones previous- work, A Hungarian magazine is pub- s bed of oysters is Relied just as they ly discovered, lilted with the object of carrying the are dying of senile decay the pealsa -- •- � a ideals of Canadian citizenship to Hem - then obtained are many and large, SUMMER COMPLAINTS lTS' garians throughout the. country, The Diver's Share. �,9MlYPita ,�i+�i jvj True pearls, which' are the result of disease sometimes brought about by the intrusion into the shell of some for- eign Body, such as a grain of sand, an undeveloped egg, but more otter a Parasite, , are formed in the tissue of the oyster. When the irritant matter reaches such a size its to cause great Altogether to •date Hungarian agrl- oulteral•settle7neut in Western Canada KILL LIME ONES lcinesos pwrhoivcohtl astatetnh300hOerye,ffaonrtds oafnBarswon Csavossy will be of distinct benefit to __ At the first sign of illness during the the Dominion, hot weather give the little ones Baby's . - Own Tablets or in a few hours he may Nelson's Famous Flagship. be beyond aid. These Tablets will The work of restoring Nelson's flag - discomfort to the unwilling owner, it prevent summer complaints if given ship is making rapid progress at Ports - either dies or forces too intruding mat- occasionally to the well child, and will mouth, and in another year or so she ter towards the edges of the valves, promptlyrolieve these. troubles if they will present the perfect semblance of where it is retained by an absolutely come on suddenly. Baby's Own Tab rite proud three -decker of her fighting transparent skin -like substance. This lots should always be kept in every days increases in growth, and eventually home where there are young children. To naval men the Victory means becomes the prized bauble destined to .There is no other medicine as good more than Nelson and Trafalgar, for go towards a necklace or adorn a lin and the mother has the guarantee of a goverunient analyst that they are ab -1 Keppel, Hardy, Howe, Hood, de Sam ger. eolutely safe; The Tablets are sold by marez, Yorke, and other admirals all The pearls are brought up by divers in charge of a "tindel," or representa- medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a t tive of the owner of the boat they Work box from The Dr, Williaius' Medicinefrom, and a "peon," who safeguards ;00., Brockville, Ont. the interests of the -Government. The ' banks are tinder the -control of the "Master Attendant of the Port of Co- Iombo." . As payment for their hazardous work on these shark -infested collate, the divers are rewarded by one-third of the oyster's brought up, while the Government auctions' off the remain- der on the beach day by day. One In a Thousand. The divers go down with the aid of a' forty -pound weight tied to the line by which they are -.lowered. They AWE WANT CHURNING Wo supply cans and pay express charges. We pay daily by express moneY orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain' not less than 30 per cent. Butter Fat, Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For references• --Head Office, Toronto, Dank of Montreal, or your local banker. Established for over thirty years. " Z n rod her decks. She was inaction In Ushant, Brest, Gibraltar, Toulon, and St. Vincent, as well as at Trafalgar. When she is restored, the decks will be shown cleared for action, with all her guns run out. Tho Victory's prob- able armament at Trafalgar was thirty long 32 -pounders on the lower deck, twenty-eight -long 24 -pounders on the middle deck, thirty long 12pounders on the quarter deck, and two long 12. pounders and two 63 -pounder carron- ades in the forecastle. Eight of the 32 -pounders on the low- er deck and four of the 24 -pounders on .the middle deck are in the ship; the others will have to be replaced by modals, - Just 8o It Was Kept Dark. "Can I get a beer here withouk'any-` one knowing it?" "Yes—pale?" "Anything --just so yon. keep it. dark." ...Always Acceptable. Author -"Tho very ate thing .6 sent to a ma.gazine.was accepted" Young Friend—"Was it poetry or pecse?" Author -"Prose. It was a cheque for a year's eubscniption." Education does not stop with the eoheoi, but with life, Why Tigers Are Striped. At an examination a boy was asked t0 state why a tiger is striped, and he 'wrote:— "it is striped because it makes it bet- ter for circus proprietors. If a tiger eso8.pes from, a circus it is easier to find hie than it he had no stripes.. no ivill not go far without someone no - The sea -cook, she .explains, is the sea -going equivalent of the mother -in flight, law. He is the preordained and per.I saw the morning break." petual butt of ridicule and. abuse. That —(Poem found on the body of an un - he should have become so is not sur- known Australian soldier in the Prising, To begin with, he was pro- World War•, vided often with the poorest and 2 Scantiest materials., Burgon and, dog's Sell contains more sugar than the body were simply euphemisms for y I solution from which it is made, cabin scraps; hard-taok and salt junk were unobjectionable, 'but wearisome, served ' plain; cracker hash united , them in a baked form, Dandy -funk was also nada of bard -tack, pounded very fine with a belaying pin, mixed into a sort of paste with jam or treacle and cooked.ou the galley stove into a sort of pudding. Duff plum duff or fig duff—was a boiled suet pudding !. with dried fruit added. Often bad cook made the sailor's I food nearly uneatable; "he might not know a sauce -pan from a kettle, but, once he had got his jab, the unfortun- ate Drew would have to put up with his experiments for the rest of the voyage. The usual thing in extreme cases was for the whole watch to commit their food untested to the deep, choosing for the ceremony a moment when the skip - Faith. Ye that have faith to look with daunt- , less ogee Upon the tragedy of a world a strife, ' And see that out ofdeath and night shall rise' The dawn of ampler life Rejoice, whatever anguish rend the heart, t,. ;.. That God bath given you a prieeless dower -- To Sive in these great times and have a part In Freedom's crowning hour; That ye may toll your sons who see the light High in the heavens (their heritage to take): "I saw the powers of darkness put to the moon had been torn away it was possible for the continents to separate from their long embrace. Cold Light. The production of cold light is a sub- ject which continues to attract the quality of the food at sea, even on the energies of investigators. Among the humblest vessels. And . there are, latest workers in this field is Profess- ashore, schools where aspiring sea' or Riseler, of Paris, who has been try- cooks may learn the trade. In a few Ing to emulate the performance of the 3'em's, perhaps, it will be no longer the glow-worm, which gives out light with- direct insult a sailorman can hurl at a out heat. despised enemy to call him a "son of a It is stated that he has succeeded in sea cook."amusingly enough, there are malting a large tube which, it is claim- But, ed, yields a light of 12,000 candle-power still a Sew tough old salts who do not tor the expendituee of two and a half aipreoiate the change. kilowatts of electricity. His tubes are The old sailor—conserwattve in this tilled with atmospheric air at reduced a sin all things—strongly resented any pressure, and are orcited by high -ire- t od. You might pt yointerfere with his to make his diet moroe varied quency currents. After the current has been out off and But attractive 10 yeu had got to He didn't t tram them, his treated tubes continue 'vlggv tuff" he the proper day, or else to glow, though with. diminishing the fat was in the 11lire! brightness, . for a period said to be „Thew 'ere cathe 11: aces and such are equal to that for which they have been all very well. But where's my duff?" excited, ,. Borne tubae that he has exhibited in London aro 8mm. in internal diameter, Minard's Liniment for Aches and Pains and require for their excitation a cum- rent of one-tenth of a milliampere at a presure of 6,000 volts, and of fre- quency in tate neighborhood of 1,000,- 000—and they are twisted into forms suitable for adaptation as illuminated advertising signs. or lettere. It may be Where the Rub Corns Off. I know a young girl, she's an ace, She's possessed of much beauty and grace, But one thing she abhors, About summer sea -shores; It washes, the paint from her face. Y,N FOR YOUR EYES heieSOmegmirgRefreSking Q 11F1AIVINIAi 9(T ! , Sore med muscles, strainliga- ments,:swollen joints yield to the healing influence of if there chanced to be anyone among" eeee eemee thecrew who could do better. 'rimes have changed, and there is a vast improvement in the variety and Musicians and Nationality. Nowadays, when mn,dcal national- ism 1s so much to the fore, we are apt to overlook the fact that many of the greatest mus./Onus Inv() come of a mixed nationality, and some people claim that the more cosmopolitan a family is the more likely it is to pro- duce geniuses. In England, certainly, there is the striking instance of the Novella family, which was very mixed and procheced at least a number of very highly talented ntetnbers. Bee- thoven. was a german of Dutch extiac- t tion, and Brahms, a Gelman of Danish extraction, .Feruccio Busonl, the pianist and composer, was half Car- man and half Italian; as is Wolf -Fer- rari, the composer of "The Jewels of the Madonna"; ' Sgambati, the Italian , domposer, ,hed an English mother; Frederic Delius, the English composer, comes of a German family of remote Dutch extraction; Frederic Lomond is ticing (hat he he not a horse or a dog, a, Scot, whose parents or' gt.tndparents . Sentence Sermons. You Can Never Know—Tree love un - till you arra willing to give everything i for your beloved, i —Real happiness until you love life - men_ mentioned that the term "cold light" more than things. r W�; + iANI Is, strictly speaking, a misnomer, as —Genuine Srieadship until you bay( T p�10 d Ei f . r in amount of Beat must be gen- dismissed all spirit of bitterness. �7 :::333ttt erated. —Lasting success if you rest your s HEALTH -1, claims on rusts pre�tensioms, Tattoo English Pigs ---The highest joy until you have A� 0 e g English farmers propose to tattoo made some thing useful with your their initials on their pigs after this, hands. instead of marking them by notching —Life's greatest thrill until you Wants OtherVoinento,Know, their ears, using black pigment for have made your supreme effort, i About Lydia E. Puilcha.m s Life's deepest sorrmv until your i E7egvtd�➢� C0lnpound Cuticura Baths. Comfort Baby'sa-•+ mfort Skid The absolute purity and delicate medication of Cuticura Soap make it ideal for baby's tender skin. Used daily,with touches of Ointment to little skin troubles, it keeps the akin smooth, clear and healthy. Cuticura Talcum is soothing and cooling, ideal for baby after a bath. Snmpla Sash Fre by Moa Add see Canadian Dep t: Stanhaus Ltd, Meptraat F 1 a. Soap e Ointment rn and bac• Tatou ISO. CuNaura Shading Shot 25a. Cheaters and Tamworths and light- colored pigment for Berkshires. Cattle also are to be marked in this fashion. To Survey a Desert. The United States government Is planning the exploration and survey of the Great Salt ,Lake desert in Utah, one of the largest unsurveyed areas in the public domain. on account of his stripes, and calling camp from Middle Europe, and Eugene 1 d'Albert is also a Scot of Teutonic' or Alsatian exteactiona And quite a large number of musicians who are general -1 1y credited with being Germans:) Haydn, Liszt, Dvorak, etc., .come from the Slav races and were born putsidlo Germany. Minard's Liniment for Corns and Warts • pp and asking the circus people 11 they have lost a tiger." Go Ahead, Sir. "Would you like to take a nice long walk?" she asked. "Why, 'd love—to," replied the young man joyously; "Well, don't let me detain you." INCE EDtVAR45 BRAND Wine- Sce That This label i5 on Your FOX `Wire "Prince Edward" Brand English Fax Wire—recognized by the abbve label on every roll—has given more than fourteen years of perfect .service on pioneer 'I ranches and is being used for meet of the new ranches. "There's a season.. Write or wire' for free sample ami prices - Summerslde dIQ)LMA>Nite E. Island Ontario sales Agent W. H. C. RUTHeeEN : ' ALLiSTON ONT. r `. .. C13110 has turned ingrate. Ii II . Mount Forest Ont:—"Before I tools Lydia E. Pink➢•tam's Vegetable Com-- poundlfeltweakand Ellj !till miserable, and had pains all through me - I was living in Ansa Craig at the tiine,and one day afriend came in and told me her ex- perience of using the: Vegetable Com- pound and advised: me to take a bottle, T which S finally did. Say ``Bayer" ilisistl � ;r I began to get --- .strongee end triose. unless you see the "Bayer pains left me. I am gra' I found out about this medic ne as I think ' ere is Gross" on tablets you etre not Mane equal to it for women whc have getting the genuine Bayer prod- troubles of this kind. I cannot praise. the Vegetable Compound too highly for UCt roved safe by millions and the good it has done me. Whenever L P know of a woman suffering I am glad prescribedars.by physicians for 25 to tell her of it. —Mrs. Wm. REDSDALIi, lysate. Lt.R. No•1e Mount Forest; Ontario. 1 1 Accept onlya 1 Women.throughotft the Dominion are Iieep Bayer package e. finding health mLydia: E. Pinkham s Compound. WhiCh containsproven directions Vegetable Comp Noharmfuldrugs areusod in its prep0 '. p ration—justroots and herbs—and it can be taken in safety even by a nursing g ists. For - sale byall dittgi� mother. 1 -Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottloa of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin is the trade marl: (registered '•in Oosads) of Bayer Alannf,cture or Dion. acettcdoldsstar OE eallcynceelp. ISSUE No. 33—'25.