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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-08-05, Page 3lam — -•. 11 1NL.r i°dD IriC)MES FOR ,t •• ORIEN Oatr. Hollaxed,'s . Co1or Thee- glory of 1301 and 113 its color. SEAMEN halt,±.. : ryJ TranapinntIng sa1t77; ea fishermen 'to the prairies• may Setitid•leke•e deeper - ate' enterprlye lespg'ciftlly-Wheal etles I added that these mets`"and their women folk are bred Prone'cotmtleas genera tions of island toilers, of the, sea. But the experiment gives pramiee: of sue ,'ease, writes,'.Maurece:Robb in;tbe,l*iew. =York Timed, recording the fact COB - t vritli the migration of Oet, few' thundrel t -hravo •bnt eat:m lees Hebei=. .pdeeetene from the,•rugged etoriles`vent %is1 ide that fringe -;the `weet'coaet df iS'cotl d . ;fhey:have-beers assisted Lo settle jn-an' nte'etor region of .Canada,-. .Alberta= "hoping that the neWo heti' i'rnay not be so Bard to conquer as Oita the cruelefeeltlieyie d theira'neektorte Med been" lighting' for generations." eAnii already, ae we. retell in the New rYork Times;:;, "Although nnaccnmtoaled•,to 9188 re-, {moven from the:tang of sett winds, they pee Blare oomrfertahle',established- I. in.th$ir-neW:8iorneathan their were 1n the Nears home island•after-years of -continuous labor. ' . , w'• ' • ',Theae lbytyl 18ebri$ans were per- seeded to emigrate'' to. Canada only: ".'when.; •etareation :confronted them.; 4' Their land is,largely barren• --a Ideal Of' Mountains and, 'Melee -female. -"Pi7na• toes and. ,turnips are the.onIT sure' crops; barley una• oata growing en a 'few ofethe-islands. Tbey fish, het;the sea ie 1lpngty too, and ,claims every year • someof the 'dosing fishermen k whose., vessels shied:. to master a, the �,. waves. Little by little the ,population has heeretaed,'leavieg in Many cases a whole island ittembeted by five Yams-; '` lies ar less: " EIrst Emigration to America. •"It was not unit' 1748 that the ping lish succeeded in appointing sheriffs' • and restoring peace to th_e islands, "'•hitherto constantly -at war. Better 11v- ing conditions, ne}q roads and social improvements resulted. Yet the peace , wars hetiinmized With troubles for the le Poorer alebrideans=-the • crofters; as` they were called. High rents, the first • emigration fto. Auk'erica :ofet.he Targe tenants, sheep farming on a big scale •—these contributed to make the life ''` of the crofter5-miserable. They were. thrust Intp villages, Instead of havleg their own wee bit of land on which,* grow their bit of oats and barley and potatoes. "Then, as if they had not suffered all that it was humanly possible to bear,-.in"8S4G a potato blight swept over the islands, leaving mote than ;hail the remaining population desti- elite, Temporary relief was provided by employing some In the work' of. building new roads.- . Many, Bete"ver; prepared to emigrate, this tiineto Aua- tratia. No relief carne to'the unfortun- ates 1•eft"behind; struggling tomerest'a living trout the 1•ebe111ons soil, until a :royal commission; In 1880 passed a Oroftees' Act, which gave them -soma assistance. "Nor bave conditions changed much since thea. The seas are just as ivtormy, the winds Just as contrary, the •-crops just as uncertain. On the small- er islands it is hard to see how the in- habitants could grow enough to keep 'theme during the tyintei•.° The only, soil is the sand blown by the winds into rock hollows. Hero the same crops are grown year after year, Canada W.alcomed. Them. "Cenada`hala welcomed them,,elweys, welcomed the, Scotch. Ashort dis- tance front Red Deer: a -group of :cote tages has been emoted ',by the Scot- -tisk Immigration Society to give tein- porary accommodation to the Hebei, cleats while they are endeavoring to! "settle on farms of their own. Senti- ment of the :higheet order ruled the - preparation of those eottagee for the, newcomers. Curtains fluttered at the i windows. The larders were well etoc.k. • ed with staples. Freshly, baked bread arid soon'es and oatmeal cakes were, prorvid•ed- 'hires were lighted ao that the demon of homesickness might flit! up and away out of the chimney with the smoke. "AL present these cotta.gee are eon- . ' pied - by widows and their families. Work Las )leen- found for the children old -enough to go into service; the. younger , ehildren gad been sent' to • school, Where they are'quiekiy learn. ing the ways of their new country. A teeoher•hes been engaged who speaks Gaelic ae well as linglith :for some of those children, although little British- ere, do not know one wed of,Finglish, The soft Gaelic tongue sufficed in their teolated home." usavrxrarr� a1� ibeielts (t.h.e tioet laid iii the ,world),; - ell but ,the bleb eyes 'ittid flaxenthair Need"Rich,_ Red Blood to Main- of the girls and chiklrea- ei eS finally to giroat mingled impreeslor, cf gaiety '•, tain GOOid Health. and repose such` as no other. country •I • lsnow;e�eegnl„even, to• try and yield, For After pttERIHg�.the:age of •fatty a-vta•y'many petioles years ethits national woman hes i rennet/ tto.,grow, anstioiut genius tom -colon centred in the art ot. about her health. This time of trial, pailnting, and the trludi'tidn is by no with its attacks. of,taintnexe and Site means dead•Y:o-day. •We have, )many of ,depreegion, tie often violent :head- fineDutoli'pietures in Bee ootmtry, but acii`es'aud' back pains is'righkly'daead- it. -ie neeessa*' to go to Holland=tn'or- ;ed by women; but if reanienableasteps 'dee to gee he* the 'most eetiiitsite or- :0,d taken to safeguard the health, no 4himge in their 'art flow from the daily seriotX•s7 in, effectee. will arise.; Al Mils life of the people and are the expres turning point in;lite Dr. Williams' Pink -eion, el the petered neatness of their rills have' given• a helping.;hand ' ie. lives., It is lnatoltiel and over•nreeise? thoneamgs . of suffering, women i who Maybe. . . Ile. found that .he could -Woke ,fighting a hopeless battle against, -paint •anything—from the human .face. poor health gad waning strengths • to a sheet of papee,or a pot of- .bee•1l• 'P ,e very best ,help for any 1(lomant arms calor it eo' divinely as to make of middle age le'the ,health help,given by 15r. Williams ,Pink.PSl1e. These •pills" reinforce the blood supply, en- riching end -purifying irk. In doing this they`nourish the 'starved., and over- -taxed,, nerves and give new diet -18th and vitality; to the- whole system. By men's handiwork seem almost as good ds Feature's. Nothing wee ce-ataluon to' such.. flatlets. a 'man's house Might' he his rharch, and'ite anteroom glitter like :a jewelled,altee. Nor was apiritugiity . Wanting 'ccs eta ,at',t which, ilea liberal view of It seems;' the most this naturalprocees Dr, Witlianria Pink Ob sedan ee the world-. There 8s no Phis completely efeeel •arid pakn_s and more religious picture than; Nicolas weakness, and a better, happierconelle hlon of, health and spirits arises, Every woman of middle "age:should take -advantage now of the wonderful health -help of Dr, Williams' Wink. Pills. They are sold by all medicine dealers,- or wily be sent by mail at, 50 cents a box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine, Co Brockville, Ont. 9 He' ll Land .on Top. No matter how little he's getting; No matter how' little he's got, If be wears a grin and trying to win He is' doing a mighty lot! . No matter how h nible itis job 'is, If he striving to reach the crest, The world has a prize for the .fellow who tries— The man who le doing his best! To -day be may be the bottom Of the ladder to wealth and fame, On the lowest rung, where he's bravely clung, - In spite of; the knocks --dead game.. , But -slowly he's gaining a foothbld, I -11s eyes en the uppermost round; IC's e leard climb, but lie•know in time He will land—and be looking down! The fellow yho,never surrenders, And is taking things as. they come; Who never says "quit" and exhibits grit When the whole world's looking gluon; The fellow who etay5 to the finish That nothing can hinder or stop, And who works like she is the chap who'll win Arid some day he'll land on top. Needle -Making An Art. Maee's Enddes's; Prayer,•,and ;the pee traits of 'Barham. and Vermeer come little liehInd it in the power to glorify the simple life and ennoble the refiled doe. Dutch painting is nd cede- bration of poverty and dirt, as so much or,;our,v is. Mesa's praying peaeant-is nonan the worse because she is '.'aedting a blessing" over a salmon cutlet, or Holland because its Broadland is a meat and peopled coumtryaid'e, wh[ie owe is a Jamie, and • kalif-colturedr marsh;: • or Mariam' a greater • artist than Jan Steen, because the Engld$h- man Ss a gleamy painter and the Dube' a merry one. -13, W. 'Massingliam, to The Nation (London). • CHOLERA lgi���g1 S 8 VFAN nU • Cholera infant* is one ofLees falai ailments of childhood. '• It is a trouble that domes .on suddenly, especially dur- ing the summer months, and unless prompt aet(on'is taken the little one cut .5000 he beyond aid. Ruby's Own Tablets are an ideal medicine in ward - leg off this trouble. •:They regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and 'thus prevent the dreaded stta111107 com- plaints. They aro 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 sold qty medicine 'stealers or by mall at 25 `cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., B'reok Ville, Ont, • The First }'Vaccinators. Although vatecination is Indissolubly it thkes'7 men to melee a single Helmet with the name of Jenner, there needle.- Each noedleleas to;gothreug'h ie ample evidence that it wan-'prac- tweutyJtwo different processes, before .tiwofl by farmers aural others in the rural districts of'England long lefore his day. • young men who want to see life is It ivaa"conunon knowledge amongst that they int.bine'ntane of it le worth these .people that"an attack off cowpox seeing by dey*.fight. immunized the sufferer against: smal•1- pox, and i:t was quite usual for farms workers to infect bhemselvos• anlltheir chleteren with the former complaint to 1101ect them agatnet the latter. 'Indeed, twenty-two years befere D1'. Jenner made; his 'antvassinatton a former' nem -ecl8Benjaniin .Testy-, of Do„tynehay,Englan•d, openly advocated the practice; but, not tieing a medical man, he wan :laughed at for his pilins, Plane Types Reduced. Standard typesof aims' aircraft have been Teamed frons 15 to,5, It Peaches its marketable form. The • tzouble with •a great Litany ii Musk .as Medicine. A medical journal ham recently an- - nuanced the results Of some experi- ments made to ascertain the relation of music and medicine,' One curious piece of news obtained Is that it a lively air is played on a harp or ma•Ldoiin, a mane tired mus- el'ee regain their' original vigor. The music o1' a viollucello, on the other hared, bas a• precisely opposite •efleet, in temporarily .lessening- the'peal strength end vitaSity of the hearer, In nervous andImpressionable pee-'. -pte;. sad music iu n minor trey, s'uc'h as ..Chopin s Funeral Ivlarch," actually weak ens the /Miss end uncles the beat- ing of the heart feebler and more lore. gulag. A doctor sta-ted not long ago that alnecet every mental trouble cpulbk btj cured by suitable selections -Of cltissi• cal Inmate regnlea'ly adaninistexotl.- 3-mxllousy, grief, overwork, homicidal mania, nervous broeekdown, alt bad their l ol_ asp )nding afir. - We are sat;eying'- huiitileds of shippers with our cream q•; prices,: testa, (trades, daily . payments. • Wo are peeing to - ,day: o -days' peciat, 350; No:1, 3401 No, 2, 31c. Wo pay. Express Chargee. Ship us your Cream. `..Their teeth are of a tough- nces which mnlcesthemhatd their keen cutting edge urs- - , , der eiery usage, . SIMONDS CANADA SAW CO. LTD. .• MONTSSAL ' , vAN0Oayeo, AT. JOHN. N.A. TORONTO C The British Museum contains books inscribed , on oyster • shelyk, bricks, tines, )3ones, ivory, lead, iron, • copper, sheepskin, wood, and paler leaves, RETS WANTED Men and women -We?tad .in unrepresented territories with Inlet ability end goad community- standing` to re80iont a ANN ex1011,1ve range of knitted geode sold direct from manufnoturort Drawee, apart elate. awonter.,. bathing sults,silk Muscle, hosiery, under- tow and woolens, equal to the highest grade ported lines. All fine made completely leour.own. Anton, from raw aaterlela, Liberal oommll,ion bonne cydomt oiling outfit eppplled. Pleasing and Profitable' nth/nation munrenteod. Our represents., rive make good and stay withus.'Write for full neelloAlnre et area. BRITISH KNITWEAR COMPANY, - 8lmeoo,. Ontario., TOURIST 8 Tourit+t. Camps and Refreshmeut Booths along the highways ells roads of Ontario are now inspected by. the DeYiarimentof Health and each pro- prietor- who ro-prietor-who maintains his premises anti the necessary equipment in a sanitary planner is granted an Approval Sign: When yon are motoring, took for thie sign: 1MOTOR 'TOURIST CAMP APPROVED Ontario Department of•Health It will help you to locate water este to drink and proper accommodae Lion for reit and camping. Away from hews, you. cannot offerer to tape chat ccs with your food. and drink. Aa attach of typhoid Severfollowing the Tree of infe•oted water or mi111 or swimming in a polluted stream will certainly spoil the effect 'of the ha pieet holiday. ' • - • Milk "iinow your Milkman" -at least tryto secure- pasteurized milk. !Phe next )last is milk that is milked clean and kept clean and cold, Meat Buy meat kept to. ice. You w•ouItle.'t think of eatA.;p.g "hot doge" which •hes tem heated ac]e�d re -heated for a wtelt, if you were 1iseme—•then insist qn having; your weln,,ers taken oil the ice and' boiled Voll' for you. WIt(:er Secure your :dminking'water at App1'oveti:Campa and Refresh- ment Bbothef `tIni3Y have safe water eupealtlril'• o aathing •TI?.ere'are :yplagty safe Pieces, to swim. Bathe only ,1 water' Ole'''. is.,f:}rp4 Pee Ortmau a_tion. Safety iY'lrst! A;litrtle mishap :10 ,e,bQp ill, 041,6licnese. Prevention le the bests plea ter Met_ ' s et innecfllltbs�tu a eeitsttyphoid fever baton) i siert en Your ni' r ho-li4u . V `'o ee 1a su lied free for use of Ontario resitien'ts b the pp., tY eF len np e by 1}o)lartrlxiii •cif ireklth, .446.14141,f461,4,1.11.10 41141.,10,461.4.01444.0,041,44.4.1.4mtempura • •r, LIVING EAKIII LOO,KED LIFELESS That • 'Was When Only Microscopic Oligartifeinni. Eiiiated. The .upper, sketch shbwg .the eight -armed cattleileh` or octopus._:The loner sketch shows the ten -alined cuttlefish or squid caP4uring a' fish. The ' cuttlefish are misuses and represent 'the .giieateetdevelopment of the balk bgneleee forma of lite.; Secrets of Science. BeeDavid Dietz. the first great stop in the evolution af-'lite upon .the earth was the origin Of ,ife. . The.eeeond great step was the divi- sion, of ivicion„of the first, microscopic globules of living matter into the two classes, plant and animals. But both the first plants and the first animals were o n e -celled organ' isms. • The third great step was the de- velopufent of many -celled animals arid plants. An organism which we find on the earth to -day gives us a clew to how this happened and lead us to believe Chat there was a halfway step between` one -celled and many-_ celled organisms. ee.In canals and streams we find ;a Microscopic oa'ganfem which baa been named the • "volvox.” It looks like a little green ball In reality it is a colony of one -celled animals' all living together. All the microscopic cells forming volvox are alike•. But there are other colonies of or- ganising rganising which show different kinds of cella.' Here we have •a division of labor, as It were. This probably marks the beginning of the many- colied• animals, land plants. Today_ we find mieroscopic many- oolled animals anti plants. Therefore we may assume that for millions of Years all life was microeoplc, The. r h wee min eat stao gwith life but it looked ilfelese. Gradually,' as time went on, organ- ism increased in a1ze. `b Gradually more complex ' forms of life evolved. All of them, •however, were bacliboueleas animals. They included sponges, jellyfish, and round and fiat worms. All of these aro very inactive forms of life. .Sponges are entirely fixed, growing on one soot just as. plants do. -Jellyfish are only feeble swimmers al the mercy of tides and currents. The sea woriins are only feeble crawlers. • — ,,,Only one `form of backhouelese ani. mal has developed any great power of locomotion in all the millions of years from the time of their first appearance upon earth up to the present. This is the squid. The squid has a spindle -shaped body enclosed In a muscular fold known as the mantle. There is a space between the body and the mantle known as the •mantle cavity, Thestkttid moves backward by draw. Ing water into the cavity through a funnel just below the head and expell- ing it again violently by a muscular contraction of the mantle. The next great atop in evolution was the h development e opment of the baclt•boned «01010l. The first one was the fish. All These 1 Own. 1 own the memory of whispering trees Which gossip in the ivied at early dawn; A roving cloud's swift ehadow on the leas, And petals, like soft snow adrift the lawn. And mine the apcetred cry of wild, sby icon, The gulls like sliver foam upon' the bar; And scented ?meet dusk beneath a MOOR ` Shining and crescent like a Beene:ar. I -call theeenine; the rocks limn -set and cool Where 'baenaoies and shaggy sea - wee -ds .ate, Tolten of vagrant tidee; this shadowy pool - Whleh mirrors back the radiance of a, star, Mine is the teatime in the thunder's roll Tossed as by night of T•itane from OD. high, Mine is that splendor as the lightning. scroll Olenves li «wilt'pathway in the riven sky. .. I own the dreaming hose on distant halts, Tho long pale pathway of a wind- ing lane, The -nodding smvalipe, fern and def. foals, . The magic curtain of a eumumer rain, Mine is the smell of freshly furrowed earth, The gleam of eunllght: on a running brook; Mine is the wonder of each spring'o new birth, - • The autumn iield•s and grain within the. stook. And min's the mystery of a velvet night Across whose sky a far-flung jeweled 00110 Arches the lienroute scintillant with light; These memories are mine --nail these I own. 'q- -Mal;v Chayye Witberhee, in Ob•rislea Science Monitor. Q Plane to Carry One Hundred. An airplane that will carry 100 pas: eengera is being burst. The lalieoay adeepete In Central Africa are made of metal, because the gutta would very quickly deetro•y weed - en sieeepere. MInard'e Liniment for Corns and Warts High Birth. • High birth Is a tieing which I never know anyone to disparage except those who had it not; and I never knew any one to make a boast of it who had anything else to be proud of. —Bishop Warburton. ?01l14, *•'W.Vfa,.? s 4' t T41i1 AWD tilt. co. smin AtPB1010o (t 64:cit_ tt. cis`: u: e- 3 iG easerabereeneeseevereano Driftwood:- ltlach stick and spar and battered) keel, That comes 10 rest: upon the shore, Ho,de pa'isoneof d ghoete • other days; and chimes. n1 Froth far off eeais,,.andseeties of war. • and death From :Barque and brigentite and aro- pie;hie, - •Tdtey bear strange 1nemories. Of'youth and life and love and gallant dead*. Those restless ghosts,' Within their W-ee:clied'and5alt-encrust- ed walla, - Await -the teaeir to set them free' , To rine in iridescent dame And join the storied romance.of the sea. —Herbert Greer French, Tetanus. -` Lockjaw is something we have a1.1 feared since the days when as emerald -children we were -warned to tell teeth- e', every time we ran a runty -nail into our foot: And the fright the whobe family got if any out his tlan,d be- tween the thumb and first finger: We are stili anxious" when a little foot hae a rusty nail run into it. Why? Because; we are afraid of Whet may happen Menacing poisoning of the whole system and perhaps death. We leave particular mem to fear any wound which has 'touched any culti- vated soil or road dust. The chief rea- son for our fear is that the spore of tetanus, or the germ causing doekjaw, might have e)lteeed with the soil or dust in' which manure was present at some time. This is tree, too, -of any •injuries from fireworks, firearms, etc. Wleen, therefore, any one in your family ie suffering from a wound into which them is the slightest chance that this germ 'of lockjaw may' have entered, take . no chances ---ask the doctor to use tetanus antitoxin, which is a sure , preveeitive. Tetanus anti- toxin is supplied fres for uee of per- sons living in the Previnoe'by the De. partment of Health of Ontario. Keep Minard's Liniment handy. Wise Egg Layers. Little Reggie, having„had am egg put before frim for breakfast, said: "Mam- ma, where did you get this egg?" "From grandnea'e chickens," his mother answered. "Well," said Reggie, "how do .gran- ny's chickens know the size of our egg- cups?" British Thrifty. Before the war, there were only 400,- 000 holders of English government securities altogether. To -day 14,000 new holders of government securities are being registered every week, which equals about 700,000 now subscribers per annum•—Thrift Magazine. ECZEMA. and Other Skin Troubles Yield to this new, scientiflo skin treat- ment. It is a combination treatment of ointment for external use and tab- lets for purifying the bloon in the •ointment, the active ingredients of SOREMA are combined with an circ- 1sent base that is readily absorbed into 111e third and fourth layers of the skin with gentle rubbing. It is In theee under layers of the skin that the dis- ease germs work. Thus, SOREMA at- tneks akin troubles at their source, SOREMA the New Skin Remedy is the discovery, of a Canadian Drug- gist of thirty-five years' experience, who'tvas, for fourteen raze, a'satfferee from 'Psoriasis, After all the usual treatments (including X-ray/) had fail- el ailell he began experimenting with vari- ous com.binatlons of drugs used in rases of Chronic Skin Diseases and de- , veloped, a formula, with which he FREED HIS SKIN of the DISEASE SOREMA has, winds, been used with equal emcees in a largo number of long'sta;-ding cases of Psoriasis, ;JezO- ma, etc, Numbers of enthusiastic users testify to its amazing results. SOetEMA le sold at yours lruggist's or write us direct. Sorenta Ointment, $1,00 per box; Sor oma Blood Alterative Tablets, 75c per box, FLASH PRODUCTS, LIMITED 1104 BAY ST, TORONTO Elliott School and egaaploy alma deeeet aeeke hlcve started thousands en the ,read `to sues ce. You tee may 5ueceoo1 Talo /our tiros step by 'Klniting Peet.: "p" for a Copy 08 our eatwlogitte t•O•day. Volga and Alexpaelor Sta., Tor•ento Frankl A man who waatted to reprove a boy for remaining at the table too long, said: , "Naw, you see that vnhen I have lin- o, fished eating, I felony,' leave th{e table." "Yee, air," said the boy; adding, tin- der his breath "and that is about all you do leave!" , • One of tha'n'e writers who forever use the phrase "as elean as •a whistle" ought to nee a small boy pull one out of a sticky pocket. Real economy is not saving ''Abney . at all; real economy is spending mon'ey vpieely. Wardlaw Milne, M.P. .`17.,‘ 4 . 1 Jf -af /an 800J tlawioomely illustrated with plane of mode ate prtold hotpooby Can,diaa Ar- dbltecte. MacLean Buttlero' Guide vr1i1help you to decide enthelypo afhes., exterior Midas, matotiobe,inlorior u- m o10 rnagtmant and do oratlnn, fiend 15c fora copy. �, • • T0ocl-ear' Bugdera'Cui.1e a Cad id letda at W-si. Naomto. Oat J° `t•8.t.�(ii-`JtM . r ri1 30 o a CORNS. Remove the hard flesh and apply Minard's freely and often. Also splendid for bunions. � 9 sn , F1 Q{i, 1 il PAINS RELIEVED D Woman Suffered Nearly a Year. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Brought Her Health Moose Jaw, Sask. Saab.—'! am __ggoing to try to tell ,you what Lydia E. Pink hams Vegetable Compound has done for me.. I suffered very badly with dragging -down pains and inflamma- tion also pains in my right side over my hip and down my whole aide into my log. I had it nearly a year when I went to . a doctor and he said. I would have to have an operation.. But stay mother' said to take Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound as it saved her life years before. I took two bottles and I found I was better, 00 I kept on taking• it and also used Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I have had two more children since then and am perfectly wall. I used to have to lie down two or three times a day, and now I do all my housework without trouble. I al- ways keep the Vegetable Compound in the house as I fmd a dose now and then helps me. I am willing for you to use this letter any way you see fit and Z will answerletters, If I can help. any other woman Pd be only too glad to try."—Mrs. ESTHER. HOUGHTON,. 712 Athabasca W., Moose Jaw, Sas- • 1Catchewan. Lydia E. Pinkham'e Vegetable Componnd is a dependable medicine for all wtdmen, For sale by druggists everywhere. 0 Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache . Neuritis. Lulnba o .. g Wain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism LDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only "Bayer" adios which contains proven directions. Hand -'d "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottlee of 24 and 100 -Druggists. •. f1nlrle 10 Cho trade mark Ovidalerel in Canada) of Bayer Mannitotorc of.lSonooctio- aoldenter of aalieyltencW (Acetyl Salicylic Amid, 0A, $ d."), while -ft is wan known that harlrin-means Buyer mangtootore, to whit the public millet Initetloan the Tablet, of Boyar Ommpany will be clamped: vrtth their general trade mark, 00 Bayer .Grout" Relieve Irritations By Using Caitiicura Bathe the affected parts freely with Cuticura Soap and hot water, dry without rubbing, then apply. Cuticula Ointta:mt.. For er.seiTas, rashes, itchinge, ism tations, etc., they are -wonderful. 'Use Cuticura Soap daily to leaep year skin clear, sample 020111 Or,e b Mets Ad epee' Canadian 1)rpot, 'a.wohew, 15,0. U0l,k at." erica, Soap tire, ninanent ".a sad see I eleum 2bv, Cullman 811001n 8,. ISSUE No. 32-'20.