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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-10-25, Page 7Old Tea o Right Old tea aridfresh tea, poor f e h tea and good tea, all look alike. No wonder: a woman . . often gets a bulk tea she doesn't like. Red Rose Tea in the sealed package is always fresh, always. good, always worth the price pn the label, Kept Good by the Sealed Package GERMAN BID FOR BRITT TURIN TO LONDON IN SEVEN DAYS SIX HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SIX MILES WITHOUT A STOP. This Achievement Brings Nearer the Fulfilment of Predictions .Con ing Future of Aircraft. Wom r COOKS IN . ARMY Boys 'All rooks They B', WXll+l4T T1117I3A'iltlellS.. Soldiers Suffered Severely From leewill MIX all right if the boys Iaet-tits bury him here ab 1 lit' Innovation are ker * mentally alert anfyl Where the maples are red d' 1 Meals lges 7 e ea s e are nnovu ion physically active with 11°11r"Fite in load, Ono of the revolutions which the d thanking G d war has wrought in the British army fishing easily digested, foods And he die d a o� that he fell ' ' with the fall ha. s been the aclmieeioil of Women Shredded: Wheat liksicult Of the leaf and the year. coke to the camp kitchens every.- is the ideal food for young where except in the fighting lilies Where c.' on orthe "416 is sheer: peat One of the eat troubles of the SLerS t0 attito play Let it .echo our tread iitehener 'armies in the early days of on because it contains .the Wlioni he led, the war was the inefficiency of the life of the whole Wheat grainn Let tie follow,es, gladly as ever regulations cooks had to be drawn from each unit, but, owing to the in- kiddies like it with milk or Ere he died they had 'fled, cream, With sliced bananas Yet they heard his laet cheer or other fruits. Ring clear— ' ' When we lifted him up he Would fain have pursued, but grew dizzy instead, cooking arrangements in the old n a digestible form, The We followed who never Ignew fear, "Captain Laureati, of the Italian experience of most of the eitizen sol - Air Service, flow on Monday . from diets in this art, the food ino most Turin to London, covering a distance units, although plentiful and good, was, of 660 miles without a stop. He badly cooked and badly and the. car- ried an autograph letter from the kitchen frequently divty 'end 'sleiven'l . King of Italy to King George. The In consequence, at a timelwhen young soldiers especially needed appetizing journey occupied seven hours 22 min- utes. .food to strengthen them in their un - "Shortly before tea -time on Monday, !Wonted labors, many suffered severely quarter of a century for an overdraft morning papers from Italy were safe- from the monotonous and indigestible and was refused. Ilegot it from the ly landed at Hounslow," 'says the meals put before them.' Moreover, r r RADE German bank for his English business London Times. , t as well as fpr his Gorman trade with- "This very remarkable ' feat was out a question, and needless to say he achieved by Captain Giulio Laureati, afterwards transferred as much of his accompanied by. Private :Michael An- business as possible to that German • gelo Tonzo. Our Allies may well be bank. I proud of their gallant rind skilful air- The ingenious scheme by which , men, From the account of the jour - English banks were induced to finance : ney which we give elsewhere it will German 'competition with England be seen that the eactUal time from HOW GERMANY WARRED ON , ENGLAND BEFORE THE WAR, there was a great deal of waste. The first women cooks in the British army were employed in August, 1915, at a convalescent camp, and sin month'later the formal recruiting of women fin, this work was initiated. To -day there are more than 6000 cooks and waitresses an 200 damps in Eng- land alone. Women have also taken. WAS, worked as follows: British bum -.point to point was seven - hours over the kitchen service in all the Clerks Flooded London, Learned Hess .men were induced by the offer of twenty-two minutes and a half. Canadian and Auatr'alian hospitals, at prices a little higher than !those capital of Savoy at 8. 28, Italian , preyed in the regular army schools of To Hun Companies. asked for competitive British goods. and arrived .at ten minutes to four. cookery. One woman who enrolled Story of German penetration a The British goods, however, were only The distance in a bee -line is about` 560 as a cook two years ago and who is rhes p y d 1 credit t li y German goods even I "The travellers started from the old and women instructors are being em - Business Secrets and 'Reports long cro i o u 8 28 Tt 1 an tune from only twenty-two years old has risen sold either for cash or on short credit. miles, but that actually covered n British trade is one of the romances to the rank of superintendent and is earth to earth was a little over 66e responsible for the whole service in mile's. The speed, including the time of 22,000 men. spent in climbing and. landing, was,80 a camp miles an hour. The Alps were crossed The economy resulting from the em - at an approximate height of 11,000 PpYment of women cooks has been feet above sea level, and the Channel verymarked, In - one'large officers' passage occupied no more than a guar- -camp the daily messing charge was re - ter of an hour. ,,duced within a few weeks from, sixty - of business and is only another ex- ample of the wonderful foresightand capacity for organization of the Ger- man people. For years past the city of London has been flooded with Ger- man clerks. Many of them were what is known as "volunteer's," which is to tay that they worked for nothing: Well-educated young men from the German commercial schools came ,over to Londonand offered their services declined to toubh the same bills when Free of all charge in return. fore a offered by a British manufacturer. It chance to learn the business, and the is estimated that when the war broke easy-going British merchants were I out $250,000,000 of such Anglo -Ger - willing enough to have them on these man Wills were held in London alone, terms. Particular attention was paid and serious hardship was caused in by these volunteers to the colonial some cases by the efforts of the panic - and export trade, and the shipping stricken British banks to collect from houses were full of them. the British drawers. It has now been realized that most, The German banks in London also freshments were carried in a thermos of these young men were nothing discounted •bills direct for British. bottle under the airman's coat and more or less than commercial spies. manufacturers and traders, and it is absorbed through a' rubber tube like In many cases, indeed, they made reg- alleged that by doing so they obtieined that of a baby's bottle. alar reports to German firms ,of the valuable information for the Britons' "Although this is the greatest inter - business done by their employers, and German competitors. They . learned national peace flight yet accomplish - in others they returned to Germany from these bills all the secrets of their as soon as they had mastered their British customers, their markets, their employer's business and assisted in sources of supply and so on, and it getting it away from frim, with the alleged that this information was sent aid of the German banks, which were to Berlin and distributed among Ger- also deeply concerned in this game of man manufacturers -and traders. peaceful penetration. • German Clerks' Union. PLANS FOR FOOD CONTROL. As soon as the British importers' bills were received by the German manufac , turer they were taken to the German bank, which discounted them and sent them to its branch' in London. Information For Competitors. That branch then discounted them with the British joint stock banks, which would take -them with the back- ing of the German bank, but which Aircraft For Peace. Purposes. five cents a day to thirty-one cents, and, in addition, a fund of $500 was "The airplane was an S.I.A., as saved -for miscellaneous camp pur- those built by the 'Societe Italiana poses. The rate at this camp is now Aeroplani are called, and the engine a reduced to eighteen cents a day. 'Fiat.' The journey was in everything d' a brilliant success, though. the -north- p HEALTH FOR WOMEN west wind was contrary, and rough NEW H'EAL1 [I l OR and tricky over the mountains. "The route followed corresponds The most fateful years in a woman's generally to that of the railways over life are those .Between forty-five and a great part of the journey, and re fifty. Many of the sex' enter this period under depressing conditions through overwork or worry about the home, or through a condition in which the blood is weak or watery and sO they suffer heavily. Among the com- monest symptoms are headaches, ed, it cannot compare in the mileage feverish flushes, palpitation of the with Captain Laureati's recent non- heart, dizziness, backache, depression -stop trip in a similar machine from and other well recognized disturb - Turin to Naples and back, when he anoes of the health which signalizes travelled 920 miles between 10.7 a.m. that tate blood requires attention. and 8.40 p.m., or with the French Women urgently need rich, red blood Lieutenant Marchal's flight of $00 all their lives, but never more so than miles across Germany in July, in middle -life, when the nerves are "The point of real interest in this Great Britain's Food Controller Issues achievement is that it brings nearer An Appeal to the People of. Canada. to us all the great future which is Baron Rhondda has issued estate- opening to aircraft for peace pur-' ment explaining Great Britain's plans poses. for food control. Food regulations in Great Britain are much more drastic than those on this side of the Atlantic. 'Neverthe- less they are voluntarily, not compul- sorily, observed by householders and others. "If voluntary measures fail," says Lord Rhondda, "I shall have no compunction in putting the nation on compulsory ration." This crisply de- fines the spirit of Great Britain. Self- restraint and self-sacrifice are the keynotes of the nation's attitude. Men, women and children are proud to do their part in saving food and in in- creasing production. In both direc- tions the -national effort is sustained at a supremely high pitch. Baron Rhondda,. through the Food Administration of the United States and the Food Controller for Canada, has called upon both these countries to rise oto the occasion. That call must meet prompt and full response. Should Canadians fail to emulate Great Britain, then all the sacrifice, all the devotion of Great Britain's people Will have gone for naught. ' It remains for Canadians to make ef- fective the efforts of.the. Old Country. The whole of Baron Rhondda's message is significant. That he de- pends upon Canadians is evident. In effect he says: Price-fixing must be international, intercontinental. This means a read/ justment of international .Arid inter- continental trade relations.- Each country must of necetsity regard the others as partners and refrain from acting except with reference to them. Mr. Hoover, Mr. Hanna and I have been made responsible for food control this occasion he really needed some l in our respective countries. Food con - extra money and he determined to'trol in each must be adjusted to the try. He applied to the hank with l requirements of all. Therefore we which he had been dealing for a must work together to accomplish our Evidence has been discovered now that most of the "volunteers" were Financed by the German Clerks' Union, which in turn, it is believed, was con- trolled and financed by the German Government. It is certain that it was assisted by the great German Indus - trusts. The most. insidious and most dan- gerous feature of this peaceful inva- sion was that conducted by the banks, the Deutsche Bank, the Dresdner Bank and the Disconto Gesellschaft. [t is alleged that their chief function was that of commercial spying. In Germany, for instance, a menu - lecturer who has an order for $5,000 worth of goods can take it to his bank and raise a loan for wages and raw material on the order as security. A trader can pledge his customers' lia- bilities to him in the same way and so obtain capital to carry on and expand. A.. British .manufacturer who ap- proached his bank for a loan would be asked for gilt-edged security and if he could not supply it would be politely shown the door. ' Lest this should seem to be an ex- aggeration I will relate an instance which actually happened about three years ago in. London. A large whole- sale dealer in merchandise which is produced both in. Germany and Eng- land, and who was both an importer and a manufacturer's agent, had been accustomed for years to secure an overdraft from his German bank at a certain period every year to pay his German manufacturers, Bank Accommodation. He was a man of substance and all he had to do Was to notify the bank that he was overdrawing so many thousand dollars on such a date. He had never applied to his English bank for similar accommodation because he knew that it would be useless, but on I ends. Our people will have reason to know that profiteering will be wiped out—that it is now fast disappearing —and that where high prices continue to exist they are to be attributed to war conditions, Comprehensive plans have been de- veloped whereby all international pur- chases ,gf ur-chases.pf necessary foodstuffs are to be pooled and proportionately allocat- ed to area Britain and her Allies. All such contract prices are to be strictly regulated. 'Unless prices are fair," Lord Rhondda asserts, "an un- necessary burden is placed upon 'the backs of the allied governments and consumers, American and Canadian taxpayers, and reactively on every :feed eonsanlee in America for the sole benefit of a small section of the com- mtinity." It is only with Canada's unstinted help that Baron Rhondda's plans can be brought to fruition: "The world -peril is not the sub- niarine," says the British Food pen - troller, "but diminishing harvests and lessening herds." Veterans .at B.C. University. The provincial government of Brit ish Columbia has granted a 21 year lease of the ,200 acres of government land adjoining the present holding of the University of British Columbia at Point Gi.ey for scientific farming land, and le connection returned soldiers under the direetion of the Military Ilospitals Commission will be given agricultural training, Prophecies Near Fulfilment. "Lord Montagu of Beaulieu and Pills, forthese pills make rich, red others have foretold that before many blood, which in turn stimulates the years mails and passengers " wduld app'e'tite, strengthens the nerves and travel regularly by air between Lon- restores full robust health. Thou - don, the Cape, Egypt, India, and Aus- sands of women have found in Dr: tralasia to the East, and between Lon- Williams' Pink Pills new health and don, Canada and the United States to 'strength and with these a new happi- the West. The public listen to these Hess and, interest in life. prophecies without grasping how near So if you suffer, avail yourself at they, may be -to fulfilment. The Ital- once of the splendid home treatment inns, who,ehave long been conducting wheel' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills so a postal air service to Sicily, gave us 'easily afford, and you will be among an object -lesson in the postal poser- Chose who rejoice in regained health. bilities of flight. Captain Laureati These pills are sold by all dealers and his companion did in a little over in medicine, or may be had by mail at seven hours a journey on which the 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60 fastest time by steamer and train has by writing the Dr. Williams' Medicine hitherto been more than three times Co, Brockville, Ont. that period. also weak and overwrought. Now every woman can prove the prompt help afforded to her health by renewing and building up the blood. It le a test that any ailing woman can make by taking Dr. Williams' Pink "We congratulate our Allies on the HOW WE WASTE FOOD. brilliant performance of their soldiers, and we doubt not that it will greatly — Instances Where Small Leakages stimulate in this country the study of Might Be Profitably Stopped. flight as applied to the arts of peace. The air raid on London, which fol- It is estimated that food to the lowed not many hours later, , keeps .value of about $50,000,000 is wasted present to us its iinportance in those annually in Canada. This seems in - of war." comprehensible at first sight, but if we beginto analyse the waste it can WORLD'S LARGEST BIBLE. be mora readily understood. Let us cite a few examples of. what Measures 7 ft. 10 in. Across ' When might be estimated to be a conserve- - 'Opened—To tive waste in our homes. pened-To :Be Used in "Crusade." There is a wastein the nutritive A Bible 5 ft. 2 in. high and 3 ft. value of potatoes of probably 20 per 6 in. across has been "built" at the cent. as a result of peeling them be - Oxford University warehouse in Amen fore cooking as well as 'the toes from Court, London. In the binding of this pealing. .The peelings of potatoes great work it was found necessary to (not new potatoes) used by an average erect a wooden staging, from the cross family of five, weigh over half a beam of which depended an iron chain pbund per day. This means one hun- and pulley block, and by this means dred and eighty-two and a half pounds the position of the book was changed per family per year, and for the pee - as occasion required. Without this ple of Canada means 29,200,000 mechanical arrangement the services pounds er 4,866,672 bushels. of six men would have been required. Potatoes should not .ba peeled. They to manipulate the volume, should be • thoroughly cleaned and Th'e width of the back is 10 hie cooked with their jackets on, and are so when the book is opened it meas- even better consumed that way. ures 7 ft, 10 in. across. The binding The waste of bread is one of the —which is not quite complete—is of red levant mor.occo,- which absorbed a dozen large goat skins, ` The 'front cover contains the arms of the counties of England and Scotland in blue' morocco leather, decorated with gold, and e. surrounding the Royal arms, inlaid in heraldic colors. On the back of the book the arms of the Welsh counties are depicted in manner similar to those on the front.. The giant Bible is to be used in a "Bible crusade" in London, GUARD THE CHILDREN FROM 'AUTUMN COLDS The fall is the most severe sensori of the pear for colds --one day is- warm, swaren, the next is wet and cold and unless the mother is on her guard the little ones are seized with golds that may hang on all winter, Baby's- Oeni Tablets are mothers' best friend in preventingor banishing oolde, They 'sot as a gentle laxative, keeping the bowels tied stomach free and sweet. An oceastollol close will prevent -colds or if it does come oat enddenjy the prompt use of the Tablets will quickly cure it, 'fhb Tablets are said by madi- eine dealers or by 1ij4i1 at 25 cents a ;box from Tite Dr, Williams' Medloitio Go., Brockville, Ont. Made in Canada. THE BANNER PROVINCE. Ontario: Beads.. All Canada in Sunday School Wade. The last report received from all the provinces for presentation at the International Convention in Chicago, 1914, showed the Sunday School en- rollment in Ontario 100,000 more than all the remaining provinces of Canada combined. What changes have come in the past three years will be report- ed soon when the totals are assembled for the International Convention in Buffalo. Ontario is gathering statis- tics now for presentation at the Pro- vincfal Convention's in Chatham and Peterborough, these reports to be cor- rected and perfected for the Buffalo Convention next June. A campaign for the standardizing of Sunday Schools will be launched at Chatham and Peterborough. A Stand- ard known as "The International Standard Scholl" has been arranged for North America, and will be pre- sented with plans for bringing the same to the attention of the individual schools. The observance of a contin- ent Canadian wide "Come -to -Sunday - School Day" will also be considered. Flowers are more fragrant when the sunis not shining on them, according to a French scientist, because the oils that produce the perfume are forced out by the water pressure in the plant cells, and this is diminished by sun- light. Be sure to give the children a brisk rubbing down after their baths. It will send the blood leaping through the veins to carry life to every part. There is, nothing quite so good as spiced apple jelly. To make, pare, core and wash the apples, cook until soft and strain. Put into a muslin bag, ten sticks of cinnamon "bark, eight cloves and six allspice. Drop the into two quarts of the apple -juice, and bring slowly to boiling point. Taste this frequently, and when the desired spicy flavor has been obtained remove the bag,. add sugar and proceed as in making other jelly. We require no better demonstration -of the unwarranted waste of food on this Continent, especially fats, than the fact that men have become mil- lionaires through the refining of gar- bages in some of the large cities. Obviously then, nothing should go into the garbage tin that can be used for human food. Smaller helpings would do away with a great deal of waste. How often we hear women who do their own cooking say that by the time theyhave prepared a meal and it is ready for the table, they are too tired to eat. One way to mitigate this is to take, about half an hour before din- ner, a rawegg, beat it until light, put in a little sugar and milk, flavor it and drink it. This will relieve the faint, tired -out feeling, and will not spoil the appetite.for dinner. GIRLS! LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER How to make a creamy beauty lotion for a few cents. - The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most re- markable lemon akin beautifier at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of .the ordinary cold creams. Care should he taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets i1t, than 'this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon Juke is used Five dollars costa three cents, to bleaoh and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tau and is Rye is one of the best cover crops to the ideal skin softener, whitener and Get three ounces of use in orchards. Plough it under be- beauJusttifier. 117 111 fore the last of May. orchard white at any drug Store and two lemons from the grocer and make Break his sword and hie spear! Let this last prayer be said By the bed. W xfauelsP4 ' %a .P0.$4. PAX! )4,11l' -M i3iA,ii�i"itUl NA+14,9 ,AN IJ JQI • f�lr}res U;r eels in good Oneve resale, i'ny Meet userul and Jntateetlar of nil knohloasee, 1`ull Inrormtltlp r Olt 4seer RUIoasl 11il, Street=1eeereete, vote, .............. IV el aA non . taol0L 4 ri so 1 Ulnni ' l'a1lliehmi, Wr•ito URors,o NI,' r'aul, sarnlii „Cut. ClAk101n4, 'yGMOi;B, 1l'ne, �,/ loternal .0t0t xternal •eurti'd .with- out orb by our htl'mo treatlnen . Writ4 us.lair a too:lete:. 'fir„; BPI !man Medlasi Co.. 11ni1ten follinawoaa. Ont • The Soul of a Piano le the Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIG'!',LA9 PIANO AanoN IT'S VERY EASY 0 haVe matte underneath rho wet TO GET ID 7{q wind in the maple trees moaning O "0 Lord God, by the red Sullen end of the year That is here, We beseech Thee to guide us And strengthen our swords till his slayers be dead.” —Francis Sherman. .0—o—O—o—O—o--o-0—o—o—o—o—o YESI LIFT A CORN • OFF WITHOUT PAIN Cincinnati man tells how to dry up a corn or callus so it lifts off with fingers, , 9 0.-0-0--0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0—O You corn -pestered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly killed you before, says this Cincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone applied directly on a tender, aching corn ar callus, stops ' soreness at one and soon the corn or hardened callus loosens so it can be SISTOULS With CUT1CURA Bathe with Cuticula Soap, dry and apply the Ointment Stops itching instantly,clears away y pimples, redness and roughness, re- moves dandruff and scalp irritation, heals red, rough and sore hands as well asmostbabyhumors. Youneed not buy them until you try them, Sample Each Free by Mail. With 82-p. Skin Book. (Soap to clog• lea and Ointment to boal.) For samples add! 11a post -card: ' Cuticura, Dept, N. Dost ry U. S.4.." Sold tluougirout the W rid. lifted off, root and all, without pain. • A small bottle of freezone costs very Gd � I little at any drug store, but will post- ® 9 tively take off every hard or soft corn or callus. This should * tried, as it is inexpensive and is said not to irri- tate the surrounding skin.' If your druggist hasn't any freezone tell him -to get a small bottle for you from his wholesale drug house. It is fine stuff and acts like a charm every time. d• • "The man who is afraid of burning up his wick need not hope to brighten the world." Minurd'a Liniment Believes Nenralt;ta. Mother—Joan, dear, have you been doing anything to the ink? Joan— Yes, mummy; I put some water to it to make it write weak. I've been writing a letter to daddy—and I wanted. to whisper something to him! of the dairy districts of Canadd. R!NE Granulated Eyelids; + -"--'.` 0SoreEyes, Eyes Inflamed by 1i Son, Auat and Windqulckly FFOR— relieved by Murine. Try !tin OUR` jCbourDyeseeCInBaby'sEyes.- j NoSmarting,JuetEyeComfort MurineEyeeemed t Ynnr DrngRiet'a, ar by snit Y oen of th,ftlo. Mudna Eye Salve, in Tubes Fie. For IIoob• 4f the rya—Frees AskMiYiueEye Remedy Co., Chicago Casey's Care. Mrs. Casey—Me sister writes me that every bottle in that box we sent her was broken. Are ye sure yeti printed, "This side up with care" on it? Casey—Oi am, An' for fear they shouldn't see it on the top 01 printed it on the bottom as well. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gents,—A customer of ours cured a very bad case of distemper in a valu- able horse by the use of MINARD'S LINIMENT. Yours truly, VILANDIE FRERES. Do not sell breeding animals unless they can be replaced immediately with better stock. The temptation of high prices or undue fear of high prices of feed mislead the owner into the error of selling at this time. MONEY ORDERS Buy your out of town supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders. most inexcusable Wastage§ in any up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra- Home, in as much as small pieces of grant lemon lattou and massage it crusts of bread can always be turned daily into the face, neck, arms and to good account in soups, with stewed hnkie. tomatoes and in many other ways. One slice of bread a day (1 ounce) or one third of a slice every meal is not an unusual waste for the homes of Canada, thisamounts, to 100,000 pounds' a day, or 36,500,000 pounds per year. To this loss .add the man power wasted producing thio food, and the land necessary to yield the wheat., One-sixth of an ounce of butter per Meal would mean 18,250,000 pounds of butter wasted every year in Can- ada. This means tons of milk, herds of cows, and a large number of men to, produce this wasted butter fat. These are only a few instances of the possibilities of conservation and the responsibility resting on the indi- vidual home and oti .the individual. We have been so accustomed to being surrounded by plenty of the necessaries of life that we are afraid to be seen guarding the little wastages of food lost we might be . considered . small, meati, mercenary. On the contrary, waste is at any tune a demonstration of ignor- ance, lack of appreciation of vahio 0f foods and lack of e knowledge of the principles of thrift Murard's 3lintinent duties 'riaitdrnif. Whatever sacrifices health to wis- dom has generally sacrificed wisdom, too. mamma zinirnont cures Burris. ilio. During recent years the export of Canadian apples to the. British Isles have totaled about 1,500,000 barrels per annum. ISSUE No, 48---'17. Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. Experience has shown that fertiliz- ers cannot profitably be used as sub- stitutes for manure, for the growing of clover, or for good soil manage- ment, but that their role is rather supplemental to all these rational means for the upkeep of soil fertility. LIFE Change Safely Passed by Taking Lydia E. Pin€Ihaaxr's Vegetable Compound. Wagoner, Okla.—"1 never get tired of praising Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vege- table Compound because during Change of Life I was in bed two years and had two operations, but all the doctors and op- erations did me no good, and I would . have boon in my , grave today had it not been for Lydia E. Pinkham'a Veg- etable Compound which brought me out of itall right, so , I am now well and doall my housework besides working' in my garden. Several of my neighbors have got well by tak- ing Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetableCorn- pound."— Mrs. VIOLA FINICAL, Wagon- er, Okla. Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, back- aches dread of impening evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu- larities, constipation, variable appetite weakness and dizziness should be heeded by middle-aged women. Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound has carried many women safely through the crisis. A Slanderous Printer. It wasn't his fault, it was the proof- reader's. But the doctor never for- gave the editor when the paper print- ed this notice about him: "Doctor Johnson felt the patient's purse and then issued a prescription." It should have been the patient's "pulse." No Need to Rub Try Sloan's Liniment and sec how quickly the swelling is reduced and the pain disappears. No need to rub; it pene- trates quickly and brings relief. Have a bottle handy for rheumatic pains;, neuralgia, back ache and all mus- cle soreness Generous si ' bottles, at your druggist, 25c.. 50c., $1.00. sy LiSH 104.81,ACK-Wrsl`rr :T'AW 9O4 17, ly. Dalley Co. of Candela, Ltd. Hamilton, Cnn, a ft iia ( $ 1N 91