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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-08-27, Page 3u' 8 s vl "OPTICAL SALE EXTL AORDINA}t'%' INVISIBLE !DOUBLE LENSES around to the prescrlptlon'you requlro to sad clearly, both near and .far. DURING EXHIBITION WEEKS ONLY < Flopulerly $15.00'to.$18,00' *SPECIAL SALE PRICE $7.95 Open o • Evenings u To 13 p.m., E. T. LURCH Optometrist 11 Optiolan 15 RICHMOND ST. EAST TORONTO, ONT. Tivoli Theatre Bldg. (South Ride) a 11 8 Y 0 �l1-' WATCH' YOUR � UR METAS STie�P�7 PICKfiI NG SHIPS' POCKETS 1 • l When a ship is in dock, and her crew all paid off and ashore, not Infrequent- ly the only man aboard is the 'watch- man. Ile is,. in charge of .the whole ,ship, and it is his job to see that no unauthorized persons ,wine aboard. Ile is there also, to protect the ship mora outbreaks of fire, and erom theft, Usually an old sailth' is, the watch, but though • he is eyor on .the nova from deck to deck, be cannot be every- where at Ince. Ordinarily, the ship br.rglar, 1s just a common potty thief. IIe cannot lass • the policemen at the Clock gates' carry- The-force arry; The force of education is so great help to exercise and develop his -brain Ing anything bulky. Therefore he yuet sneaks aboard to pick up anything he I 'can find lying about -clothes, engine. room trifles, tools laid aside by work- men -which 'he can readily turn into cash, at the Stores of- a dockside "fence".u' But to,get'his few quartees'twortal of Mai and ends. he will wantonly des- troy many dollars' worth of valuable strip's fittings and locks. Rarer, blit infinitely more dangerous, is the cracksluan who preys upon ships just as the city law•brealcers,prey Up- on jewellers' shops and hotels. He know& the "lay" of the vessel, and moreover; •is pcssesse'd of a pass or master key which 1vi11 open any lock that We may mould . the minds and ,as• hip pedal tore the muscles of his mannero of our children along the lines we please and give them the intpres- rlone of such habits as shall ever after With young children- one of the first 'things, tangible or material, that Perm an inipresion on their bleed° meads, is their playthings and toys, Wise is the parent who selects these toys, not only at the Ohi•lstmas season but throughous the year with an eye to- ward the constructive 'development of the child'e•auiud, This does not mean that parents should eo •nnold their cbildren's. mental ps'oceeees that their. own: individual childish initiatives are .smothered. Rather, that the parent, through wise and 'tactful direction of the child's play and the selection of his playthinge gives hint the opper tunitytodiscover himself and what he would like to do. The sand pile, a trapose, evagons, swings, slides, pedal toys, balls, and Jumping ropes are all exercisdng and healthy toys that every child should have his wise portion of, to develop himself physically and give his play spirit its natural ,outlet. But attention must not be given to tbe physical with neglect"to the mental. Certain "men- tal toys" really give the child food far thought. ,It fe surprising the initiative he will. how in working out new things in a formative way. The constructive toys, the. building blocks, engines, trains, mechanical 1 sets, and all the jointed building toys, body The' child is a great 1mltator, of his elders both In habit an a ith I b t 1l et on. 11 o youngster of the family is the possess -I or of a tiny engine, motor, wagon or garden .tools, the miniature duplicate of "dad's" his joy is complete. `Such+ mechanical toys 101111 a long list of others tends to help in developing the !initiative of both boys end gills` to- ward the mochanleal building of other. lines.. And every girl needs this sort of training to help her in solving the problems in her futurehome, The growing boy needs constructive toys to develop his powers as well as the younger child: He will enjoy a suppfy of shingles and carpenter scrar,swith which to make bird houses. and other articles. To snake such pray complete give him hammer and nails suitable to his age. The tools should be well made and durable with which he can do his work well. Almost every little girl is content to play' at home with her playmates it she. has a large piano box play Meuse. Such a box may be ^made into a very at- tractive place when it is furnished with a door, one or two windows and a porch.. Furnishing the playhouse is constructive play and develops the child's originality. Then it is for parents not to starve the trental development of Choir child- ren to feed their physical development, fora fifty fifty balance is essential for the normal growth of our - boys and girls. - CUULERA lNFANTUM. Cholera i11Pantnn is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. 'It is a trouble that comes on suddenly, especially dur- ing the summer months and unless prompt action is taken the little one may soon be 9ieyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets are an ideal medicine ih ward- ing off this trouble. They regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus prevent the deeaded summer com- plaints, They awe an absolute safe medicine, being guaranteed to Contain neither opiates nor narcotics or other harmful drugs. They cannot possibly do harm -they always do good. The . Tablets are soid by medicine dealers or by mall at 26 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, • • The Cornet. The cornet is a very ancient instru- ment, but not the cornet as. it now known. It was made of wood, usually covered with leather -some were of horn -its mouthpiece was of ivory or hardwood and itstube .and six holes for•the fingers, with two ,inderneath for the thumbs. Its date is unknown, but mention of It is found la a Psalter of the year A.D. 1000; and the Har- leian manuscript gives a list of Henry VIIL's musical instruments, from which we learn that the cornet was ,known' by the name of gitteroune. The metal cornet,' cr cornet -a -pistons, no we now know it, is very modern, and dates from about the year 1825. It teas never intended to be rival of the trumpet. Its tone Is much coarser and less musical. The great classical and symphonic composers have not in- cluded It in their orchestras, A Love Pat, Kind 0014 Squire -"Bless my soul, Mirandy, Where slid you get that awful bruise on your cheek?" 11Zirandy-"We-all had a pality last snenin', and Ali vine tricked tri -the face by a .gentleman friend." - • The first white` woman to enter the e forbidden city of Lhasa, Tibet, has just returned to Paris. .This intrepid Frenchwoman 'made the journey to, Lhasa on toot, dressed as. a native beggar, andaccompanied only by a young Tibetan., Not until 1840- were watches` sac. ..`eessfully made by machinery. WE WANT CHURNING We 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 mast be free from bad flavors and contain not -less than '30 -per cent, Batter Pat. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto - .For references -Head Office, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker. Established for over thirty years. ' Where Skill Beats Strength. There are many examples in natural history of skill overcoming sheer brute strength, and there is on illustration of educated animal einctinct which conies very near to human skill. This is the collie dog, which by hereditary and acquired skill, is capable not only of Controlling the movements of flocks of ,sheep and herds of cattle which, as regards brute strength, aro infinitely superior to itself, but Is further able to count the herd 01' flock and discover if one is missing from it. Cases are on record in Which collies, missing one out of. a_flock o£ sheep, have gone back and either hunted it up or found it dead. This is certainly the nearest approach to human skill exhibited in the animal kingdom. In the jungles of India there are monkeys who are able by means of something like human shill to .talse hold of snakes, which could easily kill or crush tlieni, in such a Weldon that the reptiles cannot s•trilce with their fangs. The monkeys then hit the snakes' heads against stones or trees until they aro dead or stunned. A still more curious fact is that the monkeys only do this when they know they are within reach of a Herb which frequently proves an antidote to the bite of the particular snake they at- tack. . - Of marine animals the whale is pity sically the most powerful" Its most determined enemy is the thrasher, a fish of much inferior strength, which, by superior skill in attack, frequently comes off victor. There is also a kind of shark which arranges its attacks so skilfully that it will wound to death a whale which could kill it with a single stroke of its flukes, The Longest Way Round, etc. "How is it 0011 always slice oval' in- to the woods from the ninth tee?" 'You d•on't know how- to Bold your club yet.'' "No, that's not it. You don't know' any partner?' He` Had Grit. Inspector (to constable who has just, brought in a prisoner) -"So this is. the fellow ivho stole the Wagon -load of sand. Did you get the sand?"' Policeman "No." "Search bini!" 'A notice displayed in a New York restaurant. "Do. not look upon our knives and forks as medicine; they are not to be'takan after meals," Minard's Liniment for Aches and Pains on the ship. He has an almost encanny know- ledge• of the movements of the ship's officers, and it doesn't take him, long to find the, valuable'paperfi and trin- kets they leave behind; In their locked cabins, Sometimes he has to be con- tent with jewellery, email sums of money, nautical instruments, and other portable articles. But now and again he secures a nice haul. . But.whetherthe thief be an expert burglar or a paltry pickpocket, •itis theft may mean the dismissal of the ship's watchman. So it isn't surpris- ing, therefore', that when a crook does happen tb step out of a cabin into the Bands of a waiting watchman, he has a vary rough five 'minutes. Probably the greatest difficulty which faces• the ships watchman and the dock detective is that of combat- ing the rope thief, especially in an Eng- lish harbor, Rope isveryvaluable, Old rope is eagerly bought for use in paper -mak- ing. For short length of thick hawse rope an unscrupulous dealer will give a thief 'as much as seven dollars, The rope thief ^steals -nothing but chip'sropes. Trow ropes, lashings, falls-thero is no lack of cordage on the deck of a vessel in dock, He works only et night. Under cover of darkness he rows out into the river. Little fisher boats pass so frequently that his small tub attracts no atten-. tion. lie draws alongside his quarry. With a sharp knife lie cuts lengths from any rope hanging over the shipas side. IIe has- his' own monkey ntethofls of getting on deck. And he will steal rope even if he. has to climb the peril- ous aneher chain! -W. J. H. A Fear That Does a Lot of Harm. • A doctor" declared recently that if 'he wished to be literally accurate when he filled up a death certificate ho should, in scores of eases, put the "Cense of Death" as "Fear of Death." Ile had in mind not so much those who were i11 as those who were well. ' • So many people, when they reach middle age, begin to feel afraid. They ought to- be quite happy really, for they have. passed the "danger period," and, 'accidents and the like barred, there is 110 reason why they shouldn't live for another thirty years or more. But this type of fear -mentally esti- matiug the years ahead, and so on - seizes thein, and then their days are numbered -self -numbered. • 'Push fear from you. Refuse it ad- mission to your mind. Be cheerful. Remember that we are all living ever so nmclr longer nowadays. • As a mere matter of arithmetic you may be getting older, but What does tient matter so long as you peep young in spirit and in hope? You'll be just as old as you allow yourself to be. And you'll be very' old, and quickly, If you permit fear, to get a footing.. Keep it away. Surgeons have repeatedly told us that the will to live has pulled.hun- dreds through the after-effects of a severe operation. And if the will to live is so effective then, it should be a hundred times more effective' when there le nothing the matter with us. Most of us have }net the type of cheerful old country dams who at 60 declare -s she's going to see 70 all right, and at 70 laughs and says sho's going. onto -80, and at 80 braces herself for 00 -and wins! She doesn't know what "fear" is. Nor need you. Take care of yourself and the years, will take care of themselves. Ring for Special german Service. The "German Ring" has been' created as a now distinction by the Pereign German Institute: This linger- ring,is to be accorded every year to such a person -who has merited the dis- tinction -by reason. of having served the German canes abroad In some spe- cial form. Clocks are-responsib:e for a great deal, of matrimonial infelicity. What this country. needs is a clock that will go very, very slow• after 9 p.m., and then catch up with the right time an hour or so after the allegedhead of the family conies home from -the Iodge. "Land Of Floueiii MCOA," To pest English peopPsi 1116 Argon tine is known• chiefly as "(he' pla'c where the frozen moot 06m'05 froiu,;' says a Laudon deeda'tch, Certainl froze t aneatt deco seine front there, bu the Argentine produces coin, cattle sheep, homes hides and wool as well 1t hoe millions of else and goats an 11 grows enough grapes to produc nearly r_ mlllicu gallons of wine .originally the ccuntry was called Plata, which la Spanish for ,oilver, th 1191110 having been given"by the Spani ards to the great river -Ilio de 1 Plata abecause the natives they. saw 011 It yvcrp' much silver Inr their cop tumee The capital ` of the Republic 1 Buenos Ay 1 p , It was occupied in I80 ' by, a L'ritish force, but the Spaniards during the war with Spain, took pas sesslonl.. EvenitualIy„ however,' the colonist founded `a provincial overnment and g ' after many wars, the independence of the country was acknowledged by Spathe But for flft 1 y years after that tiny was constantly disturbed byaevo- lutions, civil wars, and riots. These disturbaficee, though, came to an end some forty years ago, and now Argon tine lr, politically s-ettled and commer- cially prose -emus. - The visit of the Prince coincides with. the Centenary of the first, and still existing Comuievcial Treaty made between G -neat Britain and the "United Provinces of the' River Plate," as the Argentina was called a hundred years ago. , The Treaty confirmed Britain's cognition of tbe young rep sovereign • state, and for t Argen- tina has always respected tain. Consequently the -• cel ed art v h a g t royal aacepti ' Star -Gazers' zers G. re- cognition as a Lis Great Bri- tain. I 'The Job of Living - Life is not a problem: it is a task.' e We don't' have to understand it, we , have to live it. Con aequently those 'Y' simple folk who set themselves about t living -their days as. tire, come have', much easier views about tlremeselves • and the world than the philosophers d have. 0! . Why should we make ourselves un - a happy:over what Is none of our bus!- ness? La l' Tho• man who gets up cheerfully in e .the morning and goes to bed reason, ably contented •every night, and -e- a . twoen tiro two' carries out hi„ natural instincts, ,works hard, plays' heartily, • thinks honestly, • feels strongly and deeply, and who every day trios to do s all these,tliings a little better --such a 0 `uian Gives. • For life.ls. an art, not a science, It - 1e a trade, not a puzzle. You, • learn to live as'you would learn to lay bricks s or carve statues or 'manage a furrn. But at bottom life is not so much a task as it is an opportunity. •We,are full of forces. Nature means us to operate them. In the functioning of these forces we find pleasure. Itis not enough, however, to say that we are merely to follow ocr own in- stincts. We have something else be- sides instincts. Wo have brains. Rea- son criticises and constantly improves the quality of .life: Thus the natural forces in us become refined and pro- duce a pleasure We call higher because it 19 most lasting'and wider it its scope—Dr, Frank Crane, re - on, • The two hundred and flftieth anni- versary of the founding of the Royal Observatory in Greenwich Park will shortly be celebrated, Is was not founded for astronomical work in the -usual sense of that term, but fbr `tlto practical business of enabling seamen to have correct tables for the purpose of finding their longitude` or angular distances east or west from a standard meridian (as that of Greenwich to the meridianeof any place, reckoned to 180 degrees East or West. In 1675 a French scientist devised tables based on the movement of the noon, but King Charles II, decided that English seamen Should have their own tables, and John Flamsteed was appointed Astronomer Royal at 2100 a year, Sir Clu'istopher Wren pro- posed Greenwich Castle as a suitable site for the observatory. The founda- tion stone was laid on Auguat 10th, 1675, and the building was first occu- pied by Flamsteed on July 10th, 1676. Perils of Anger. Both anger and griet have a mental basis, and indulgence in both produce intuited ill-effects on the body, says a writer in "The Times." Sir James Paget and Dr. Murchison, for example, considered that protracted grief and anxiety were the cause of .cancer in certain organs. of tbe body. Further investigations into this subject tend to prove the truth of their assumptions. Anger, which, like grief, is a mental quality, is known to provoke indiges- tion, headaches, and neuralgia. Seek- ing relief le Ceara, therefore, when the feeling of anger is sought to be over- come. would-be tantamount to jumping from the frying -pan into the fire, Both anger and grief, therefore, "ought to b'e shunned by all right-thinking peo- ple, and this modern applied psychol- ogy teaches one how toedo it. --o The Latest Bulletin. "Sorry to lay my eister has had rather a bad accident. She's been bit- ten by an adder." "Good gracious! An adder? Where was this?" • "Well, perhaps not exactly an add. er, but she got her fingers mixed up 1n the machinery of the cash register." "Dear, dear! Is she getting better?" "Well, the latest report is 'no changea" . • -`— —•0. O Mohair goods in the dress line are made iron goat's hair. TUE ONE SURE AS_ TO GOOD HEALTII Is Keeping the p g Blood Pure by • Using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, Impure, weak blood la the cause of most of the troubles that afflict people. This is the cameo of the wretched feel- ing of languor and faintness, pains in the back and aide, headaches and breathlessness, that afflict women and make her daily life a torture. To get new health and strength the blood must be enriched. What Dr, Williams' Pink Pills do in cases of this kind is told by Mrs. Augusta Emery, Wool- I ford Station, Alta., who says; -"Living on the prairie, and knowing that there are thouaands of women like myself Miles away from a doctor, I want to tell them what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for me. After my first baby was born I seemed to have little energy. I felt weary and run-down and unable to do oven the ordinary house- hold duties.' I felt I needed a tonic and as I had long seen Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised I decided to try them. I got a supply and carefully fol- lowed the directions and before very long the result was wonderful. Day by day I regained my former strength and energy, The pills seemed to gine me' a keen appetite and I gained In weight and soonwas able not only to do my work about the hones but to help with many chores on the farm. For this reason T would advise women, particularly those on the prairie or the farm, to keep a supply of bless pills always on band. One trial will con- vince you of their worth, I have re- commended them to many oP etty friends and never have theP failed to produce good results," Yon can get these pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, A Dire Threat. Fly Lover -"Refuse me end I will alight on you bald pate, and permit m_•self to be crushed by a slap!" "I didn't mind her calling me 111-1 egible, Mrs. Brown," said the irate woman, "but when she starting cast- ing asparagus on Pity 'asband's char- acter' I 'ad to take notide," Sometime! • noth, The °ORANGE PEKOE as extra b3. good. Try it The Miracle. A delightful story comes from the Christian, Medical Missions in Bagdad In the lovely date -palm gardens of the city a thief was discovered, not long ago,,x•obbing; one of the Leese of its lusuious emit. The owner,' a hasty, passionate man, promptly shot him, and the man fell from the top et a lofty palm to the ground. He was hur- ried away to the Christian hospital, with a bullet in his body, a broken arm and a shattered leg. • On his way he 1 begged to be put beneath a Moslem roof, even !f it were a prison, rather than be left in the clutches of dogs of infidels. But as he was a criminal, his captors paid no attention to his wishes', At the hospital they speedily put hint under an anaeethstic, extracted the bullet, set his broken limbs, and before long he was comfortably settled on a palm -fabric cot, trussed up with dressings, but alive and likely to get Well. For a "long tune he was very suspicious and surly and would have little to say to the missionary when- ever he attempted to converse with him, Butra u ' g d ttLy he yielded to the kind treatment he received and. one flay he astonished the missionary with the remark, "This Is a miracle! It's a place of miracles!" "We deal," replied the missionary, "with much more difficult rases than yours, Ibrahim. You should see some of them." - "Ah! That is not my meaning," re- plied the man. "As I have been lying here I have seen rich men come.to the door of this hospital and offer jewels even to half their wealtlh to the sur- geon to come and attend their wives and children; but always he says, 'The poor must come first'; and he who - might be so rich slaves here in the heat night and day for wretches like me, who can _give trim nothing. That is a miraclela • Indeed, so touched was Ibrahim by the loving sacrifice of his, new friends that he amply had to be turned away from thehospital when he was re- covered. But what can I do for you, sir?" he begged, To there nothing 1 can do?" "Yes," replied the surgeon, "send mesome more patients." "Allah!" cried Ibrahim. "Here is a nran who might have all the world. if he asked for it, and all he wants is more work. You are a miracle,' sir! But I will do something for you. Do you like dates, sir?" ''Yes, I like the dates," said the sur- geon, smiling. "Then, sir, let me know when you want some, and I'll always steal them - for you!" The missionary and the surgeon shook their heads over their patient, as he left them, and one remarked to the other, 'Another miracle is wanted there, but evidently we've made some impression. Let us have hope that the rest will come in tune," Minard's Liniment for Corns and Warts Some Consolation. "Well, Mrs. Johnsing," announced the colored physician, after taking her husband's temperature, "Ah has knock- ed de fever cut of him. Dat's one good thing'," "She 'Huff," was the excited reply. "Does dat mean dat he's gwlne git well, den??" Classified Advertisenientsi 'INCOMPARABLE SILVER FOXES ' OWE=I' 1'I110585, 1111511150 (IUAT.r0Y. 'lnaulro nh sit.. tl on oto a Ftlu 0 ars b , - x D e n. 1 s }r. mnn' Fur Fnrm; eummorsido,. Prinlo Etlwaixl,XyL,na, Sentence Sermons. Woe Unto -The man who thinks God' 10 not watching him. -The youth who has never learned from old age. -The boy who thinks his troubles all arise from:oranky teachers, -The girl who comes to know more than her mother: -Tho friend who thinks friendshiii" must be proved by constant candor. -The teacher who judges his work by; what he does for Ills brightest pupil• • The first daily paper published in England was the "Daily. Courant," the first number of which appeared on March; 11th, 1702. It was "printed by E. Mallet, against the Ditch at Fleet I' Bridge.' UREV EYES IRRITATED BY SUN,WIND,DUST e CINDERS' WAITE roc. DEDeV SAP COLIP DAUG01505 & OPTICIANS. NE 6008 8456,NE 604010800044 For Warts Apply Minard's freely and often and watch them disappear, Have You Pimples or A near booth Skim If you wish a skin clear of pith - piece blackheads and other an- noying eruptions begin today. the regular use of Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment. No other method is so agreeable, so often effec- tive and so economical. 060,511 aaoh Srec by MNL Address Canadian 01)epot: PStenbouge, Ltd., Montreal:. Price, Soap 215. Ointment 26 and 6Oc. Talcum 210. •TSS-' Cuticura Shaving stick 25e. "No," replied the doctor, "dey'e no hope fo' him; but you has da salisfrac-BETT tion ab knowin' that he died cured," Silk probably is the most precious commodity, weight for weight, except- ing gold and silver bullion, that is carried 011 a large scale by commerce. It is usually sent on a special train, • i After Taking Lydia E. Pink i which will carry $5,000,000 worth: hami's Vegetable Compound The ugly _e silk -worm istreated ITh hit' 'k with -respect in the Orient, for it i brings to the eastern people a fortune Ie formar, N. S.- I took your medr- TUEMERCHANTS'CORNER I every tent. cine for arum -down condition and inward troubles. I had pains in m right side , • so bad at times that I could not walk any distance.. I saw about Lydia Il. The Advertising Appropriation. 'The advertlaing appropriation is a portant as staking many Sales. Mak- percentcgoof annual sales. Logically 1. ing many Sales quickly is maximum an djest;y then it should be expended merchandising Snceess. Wlien we speak of a Sala we mean I throughout the entire year. And the soonest: buciuens reasons justify a merchant in advertising regularly each week. Results 91070 the profit of it. 'E.ales,.are made every- day -in season a. transaction with a profit. Otherwise! it is a gift You dcn't have your profit from a Salel until you get the money 1 Tor the merchandise from the cu,' - tomer. . Until the money is in hand, and out of Season in good tines and you have your profit to collect. In ba times. The ideain busiliess far • Sales are made in the store. The Lo snake Sales. The idea in Adverbs- custciner comes in, picks out the mer- ing is to increase the number of Sales-. chandise. You wrap• it up, take Iris The Sale is the crux. of the Whole money, hand it to Lim or deliver the business. Everything else that is done merchandise. Until then the trans- is merely leading sip to the Sala: Until action with a profit is not complete: the Salo is made there is no profit- Obviously then you must get poop te. no money 1n -running a business. Up into the store in order to sell then. to that point .everything is expense. .Advertising gets people into the money laid out in order to ]cake that store -gives you the opportunity - to• 11101181 make money. make a ale, More opportunities and The banger Lite Sale is In coming, the bettor ones. greater the expense. '-]:very day mer- That is why' you advertise. Adver- 018ndt,e remalne in the store adds to lasing brings more people into. the its cost. The carrying. charge caul starer -send mere of then oftener, And easily, become a worn that blights *Advertising wo:nl all the time, if you profit, Making 'Sales quickly is is lin-: let it. ' Say " Bayer" - Insist! For Colds Headache Neuralgia Rheumatism Lumbago ` Pain Accept only a Bayerpackage a cka e which contains proven directions Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabiete Also bottles of 24 and 100 -Druggists Aspirin to the w trade marts (registered 1n Ceende) of Boyer \fnnnfactare. of Mono•.. aoeticacldebter of lallcylleacle - - Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the newspapers and have taken -five bottles of it, 1 am better in every way and you can use my letter to help other women." - Mrs. ALVITA M. Pi m or Ergomar, N. S. Nervous Breakdown Relieved- Toronto, Ontario.- "It is pretty hard to explain your feelings in nervous troubles. 'I felt low spirited, had pains,. • in my head and eyes, always crying, and did not want to go anywhere. I do knitting, and fancy work, and I would get irritable after a few minutes of work. I have been in Canada five years and have been this way ever since 1 came. I am taking Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I sleep better and it seems to make nee eat, and 1 must say I am feeling more jolly. I have.. graat'faith in in your medicine, because° of what it has done for my husband's sister and she recommended it to me." -Mrs. A. SMITH, 10 Burleigh Avenue, Todmorden, Toronto, Ontario. All druggists sell this dependable tncd icine, and women suffering from these troubles • so• common to their' sex shouldf give it a trial now:J ISSUE No. 35--'25.