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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-12-09, Page 7PhantanmFearso THS',®�il. �I3� W4• havo 'all of us 'laughed at the old romanwho said, "Such "a' -lot of trou- ble in the world, and half of it never ; happens, and' we ' laugh though, we i .. 1 Headed for Adventure. 'W'hY'� asks the. moral* tenderfoot; GIVES STRENGTH 'did God make it harder to do z-igtit then bo do wrong? Why does thio man who always tries to do right often go know that she spoke the truth and unrowat ded-o-9 far as man can see?." ';gave the world a bit of coed"-,naed anis- After 'Acute Diseadcg'the 13lood Let n., answer these questions by dem it( badly stands in need', of. That ' MUSt"be BuiltTT Iiefvre siting -others. » What glory nonlct is .specially true ,'Of ,physic:yl troubles, there .he in doing right: if it wag as Of which It may fairly be said that half , ' .Reco- very is complete. ' easy as. it is to do wrong? What irrould of it. only hapPene to the shape of nor- i then be heroic about 'dens; a heave vents' apprehenaigar and shrinking: ton•- I Fevers and other acute diseases like, deed if you know there wan no risk? roc. The Iussy,, frightened. person,' pneumonia and irifiuenza„ leave the Wouldn't a pay check every Saturday .who knouts just enough about fermi patient weak, with thin blood and nn' night' for every kind or noble thing you - and 'infections arwl•autOintoxioattans-to strung msrves. The period Of, con- had done during the week cheapen keep himb'o t i 1 an eternal state of•.uu- vaidescence is often Ing: end trying,! those' flue things? Th•e Boy Scents'. n easiness, is tilivays with §1e,. I and year of poor 1d'' have Ire - In We tln'ending war:`. 'that ie waged qucnt'iy 1,4;11070d se brief an illness tie be1',•iveen" the human,- robo:' and the an attack of 13ifitb1nza os..pseumouia_ , •germs' of .disease; we yield up our'woa-) Mn -ch of this '.sort of Misery could pons in advance when we give too' be avoided by taking steps to build iriuih ii aceto apprehension. It is the up tile- blood SO that it can carry to exact opposite Of the coerce we should. the nerves and other, tissues of the taker which is to increase :our resl"et-,I body the eiemente they .need to re,- ary dollies the verb adventure "to ante, The germs will always be here store their .normal funetienal aetivi- ride, to hazard, to put to the test," -all around is in every, Foom, in ties. 'CO build' up the blood and re- There's no gun in d'oing a thing that every vehicle, and;; more than that, in i attire it to its n1•efi, herra1thsgiving vigor, you know perfectly weil-•you can do-= every nese acid throat, and harberedi'no other medicine can equat•Dr. Wil - understand this. They do a kind dol each day, but refuse "pay for it. .TO take pay would take away all the glory of the kind deed. • No, you're headed straight for ad vetitune when you undertake to live a fine, strong; heroic -Life. Tho diction - by every system; but they have their hems' Pink PHIS... Froin first to last best chance with the panicky the tur•-it is their mission to improve the protected;• the nen-resistant, with all blood and ,thus restore good health those people who lack the powe'r,as and• vigor. we say, "to throw; it off;"'"and a state Tho value of these piffle in condltione of constant expectation and dread is descri'bed above' is shown by the state` a 8000 way 00 lower the natural resist- merit of Mrs Rebecca O'Brien, rem - mice, • broke, Oui:., who says':-t'Iii Nor., 1923,. An attack of influenza is a very real I was stricken with pneumonia, and at .alflictioar"when. it comes, but, the pilau- the -time but little hope was held out tom attaches with which many people for my recovery. However, with the 1111theirconversation from the middle best of eare•i was able to walk about of October till May are also real a8- after some months, i3ut I did ,not re - Motions and quite unnecessary ones. -cover my'strength. The doctor told Focal infections are serious .things, me I Was anaemic. My appetite was but so is the misery ofthe readers of poor, I grew nervous and restless, 1 street -car advertisements who •have no was deathly pale and practically gave focal infectionsbut, who have con- u'P hope of ever being strong again. vinced themselves that they have However,, remembering that le my But tile monarch of all these terrors girlhood .I had 'taken Dr. Williams' le "heart trou'b'le" -so' important; `so Pink Pills wadi decided success, I de - vague, and so easy to have: A silly aided to try them again. By the time habit of taking one's owls pulse in season and out is soonestabllshea, a few phs-a.ses such as "missed beat" are soon picked up, .and the mischief is done: Nothing is so salutary at this • juucture as a visit to a heart specialist who knows real heart trouble When he. sees it, and who will probably befennd reassuring when faced with a -home- made diagnosis. - Ptomaine Poisoning.. - Poisonous foods fall into two classes -those which'.ebotaln a poison pro - dated by the action ofbacteria on the food substance, and those wlireh eon - twin a liaison manufactured in the bac- teria and excreted by them. Poisoning . by the first class is often called ptomaine poisoning, a ptomaine being a poisonous alkaloid formed from the protein in the food through the action of bacteria. • Ptomaine poisoning occurs from eat - leg stale "leftover" food in which de- eompositdon has begun, though it may not have advanced fan enough to be perceptible to smell or taste. It ;is very common, arid• milli attacks of it have been experienced repeatedly by most of us.' The symptoms come on in a few holes after eating and consist, according to the severity of'the at- tack, in nausea and vomiting, diar- rhoea, cramps in the abdomen and calves of the lege, headache, fever, and more or lees prostration. In the mild cases the sufferer com- plains of a little:nausea and diarrhoea with a disinclination to vvsalic or work, batt in a day or so, atter a good night's rest, Ile is as web as even', In the severe =see the digestive disturb- ances are very marked. The mouth Is dry, the tongue coated,and the breath very •'offensive, but the most Striking symptom is the extreme pros- tration. Thirst is often excessive, If , 'the patient is seen, early enough, -the stomach must be emptied and washed ou with quantities of water in which - salt has boon dissolved. The opera- tion, bowever, is fatiguing and must not be repeated, too often if patient shows signs of exhaustion. A full doss of castor o'fl should be given. Stimu- lantsare called for and 0trong black coffee is the best, as it com''bines both • heat and catf'siee. To prevent ptomaine poisoning "leftovers" must not only be warmed ovea' but cooked over; especially if they have beenkept more than a day or if the ice in the :refrigerator' has been loiv. Delicatessen 'foods, es- pecially salads and meat pies and pat- ties must .be regarded with suspicion unless they :are lurown to be freshly made -especially in warm weather. The Squirrel. A ruddy streak of joy, the squirrel plays -About the forest" trees, And watts himself to lightest, leafy sprays, "Or spenia upboa•ne upon the 'very' bree¢e. • unless you are a moral tenderfoot. ,you love to dream about doing some - '(thing brave and heroic, just because 1t, is brave and heroic, 'tot for the ` re- Waad. And you'll find than it le going to take ell,that there is in you to jive a clean, strong, Christian life. That's Where the adventure comes in. Tell the moral tenderfoot, when he comes to you -with his.dis'turbing ques- tions, thatthe world cannot be, at the 'same time, easy and heroic. Let Me suppose a case. Here le a child on the railroad track. The engineer does not see him: At the risk of your life you snatch that child from danger. You are a hero. You have adventured., You have put your courage to the test. But if you had known, when you made the resole, that there was not par- ticle of danger, that the engineer slaw the child and mernt to stop dust in time,.. What_ would there have been I had used two boxes •there was no heroic about your deed? Wouldn't it doubt the pills+ were helping me Con- have been cheap and commonplace? tinning their use I was soon able to We'll say you are in a group of gay attend to my houeehoid duties. I con- young people. They ere good friends. tinned taking the- pills, 100107er, until You like them. They litre you. But I had used twelve boxes, by which they want to dr, something question - thus I -was enjoying bettor'ilealtl ithan able., something you can not approve at any time in the previous -ten years. of. If you knew there would be no In gratitude for what the pills bave danger of risking your popularity with done for rue, I give this statement in this group that you like, and that you the ]rope that it may point the way to wane; to like you, what would there be health ttl some other weak, despondent 'flue in opposing this questionable woman." thing? You can get these pills from any God is always very eager to make; medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cts. a heroes of us. -That's why he says: "I bot from The Dr. Wi liams' Medicine can't cheapen virtue by making it Co„ Brockville, Out. easy. 5 am not going to pay you in the gewgaws and grlmracks of life Por Healthy Finger Nails. living finely and bravely, I am going know, is • a to make it a real adventure. You'll The, finger nail, as we, all small henry, elate which develops from „ore, the 'risk something to win char- small matrix or for•mativo. portion at its ncter." base, resting upon what is called the But that's the joy of- it, the thrill of nett -bed. Any of us who have had an it There is nothing commonplace about living finely and bravely. accident which disturbs this relation - the nail and rile nail-b•eci, know Trow of close it is, and what CHILDREN LIKE THEM sessor 'attends hrteragony to its pas- 4 femence with it. The nail indeed 1s a very spirited lit- tle feature of the. phyeical 'organism, both in offense and-. defense. It not Baby's Own Tablets Are Effec only resents too much interference tine and' Easy to Give. with itself, but it also: resents any let- . . ting down of the general health of its - You do -not have to coax and threat - owner. In this respect- it resembles en to get the little ones to take Baby's all the outlying parts of the body, for Own Tablets, The ease with which hair and teeth, as well as nails, very they aro given, as compared with quickly show their preference'for liquid medicines, will appeal to every healthy owner. •Their well-being, their mottles'. None is spilled or wasted; strength, their beauty, and their power you knew just how big a dose has of normal growth depend npou the reached the little stomach. As a rent - general health, and we might as web edy for the itis of childhood arising. demand gorgeous blooms from a sickly from derangement of the stomach and plent as perfect nails from a stele Sys- bowels they are, most satisfactory. tem - Mrs. Rose Weyer, Willimantic, Conn„ Sometimes a 11aaa1111 illness, etre• says: --"I used Baby's Own Tablets in as all attack of grip, will leave its sig- the Canadian Notelet est and found nature in the shape of n transverse them a wonderful medicine for child- furrow, while• in prolonged ill health yen's troubles, especially Indigestion the nail niay,shrink•ar may become and constipation. I have also given fissured 'down its length. There is them to my children for simple fever precisely the -sante reason for this as and the restlessness accompanylalg for the fettling out Of the'hair Maier teething and they always gave relief. the same conditions; the body, is hay- 1"cart reeernme'nd Baby's Own Tablets ing so' mucic to do just to stay alive to all matters,"• that it cannot spare any nutrition for Baby's Own Tablets are sold by parts he accent vital to it. By-and-by, mecliclue dealers or by mail at 25 1f natural vigor returns ,then nature cents a box 'from The Dr.'Williams' NIR r'eamenrber to de something to Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. melte up for this neglect,; and the hair and nails will grow out again, and may Fitting Wolds. be as good as aver, especially if their you bring to me such heavenly blooms, owners will do his part to assist ln1r, : Great gond and.. crimson'clahlias,: tire's' effects. The nails t always show cid age, that You, cheer my somber oaken roams ail the uutnitive Arae, hat With bowls of pine azaleas. hove. clawed down. They have their But ah try friend your talk Is filled time when own especial sfeknesseo a•nd can be iu- \Vit11 gossip and strange stories, facie& with disease germs j tet 111ts At times it seems the moan grows any other past of the body. The whit- chilled, low, that exquisitely painful affection, And_dimmecl Lhe petaled glories, is the result : of an invasion: by pus germs. Tele possibility of germy cSince yon would -scorn to give to me, fection-'is the great reason far,cdn- I3nds stained by,eartil or shovers, stant care of the nalls. It is .a :bad So Might 'mit canversation be habit to trim and clip too closely in heaven' with t11'o Glowers. round them or til allow the shin to be 10.Hennikea Heatqu. broken. Many amateur manicurists,: in their determination to improve up01 Badly digested food, acidity +1 the stomach, and atuggish liver .cause headaches. Seigel's Syrup .will remove these causes- Any drug store. I Railways, and about. one year from -1):---- Koran Printed in. Gold. I that: time, when the amalgamation took place betweee the old Oanatlian Northern. and Canadian Government Ties, was appointed, Hast, :Assistant Freight Traffic Manager, with head- quarters at Moncton;: aid a little later Assistant. Freight Traffic Manager of Lines was-appolnteci, first, Aeeistant guessers at 'Moutreel. ' Ile continued in 'ibis position until the final coatsoli- dation of • the Canadian National in nbdre fancier which was liberated at i i 928, at which time he was appointed Reirnee on June 5 was Pricked upIn the I fri1110 ManagerAtlantic Region, 'with Bay of Biscay and. marled to Australia, 0ulieavlsio0 over' both freight and pas - their - 5ouger besineea With hsa�clquartors at. their birthright in this respect, are far too savage n their onslaughts with 13e leunchee gayly into empty space, Iittlo. n'strumonts. Perfect cleanliness A tight -rope runner without vine, and sightliness can be attained with - Then makes a dashing, nimble, cork- screw race - To reach the, topmost refuge of a, His .bright, alert, brown eyes will sharply peer - To ece if eau, will stay, Bat *hien in breathless calmYou •1 hope him near, Likelier he is half a mile away. He darts with 'saveep'of waving tali outspread, Adroit epitome of active joys; Or, efts; denten laelio,uent',Overhea , A charming bit o f tivgnity' and poise. out 'surgical operations. The intensity of light from the full moon is approximately 100 times greater than that front all the -stars together. FOR. A'L...•. Pair Poison Iron Works22",x50" 111(ht and left hand Brown ' ', r adve 'Engines coupled together, 161t. x 48" Fly Wheel, total 700 H.P., 84 R.P.M Also Cana dlan -Westinghouse 55'' X.W. Direct Current Generator, 125 V. 440 Amp. $60 R,P.M.' Running now. •:Open for -, THE LOST ART OF A VANISHING RACE • I is a strange fact that the art of but ding spruce bark canoes, which wel a used extensively as temporary conveyances in hunting expeditions by the Malecite. Indians of New Brunswick, should, within the short period of thirty years, be lost to these pe'op1e. This was disclosed recently by E.T. Miley, of- Montreal, who in telling his experiences at Windsor Street Station, in Montreal, after spending many. months among. these Indians, stated that it was only after a two year search that he had discover- ed an old Indian. in New Brunswick who was able to make an authentic spruce bark canoe model. Mr. Adney it an ardent student of Indian lore and considered, it remarkable,after many failures, to discover that old Peter Rear, age 76 yearn, and one of the very last survivors of the original tribe, still had the knowledge of this art. Ile is still living the simple Indian existence of years ago, and believing imphoit'ly in the legendary teachings of his people. The' task was an easy one for Peter Bear and he explained to Mr. Adney that it was,the. crimping of thebark at the bow ad the stern that required the skill. The photograph was taken at the Maleolte settlement near Saint John, N.B., end shoes Peter Bear sitting with the spruce bark , model be made. NAMED VICE-PRESIDENT OF CANADIAN NATIONAL 'Albert T. Weldon Will be in Charge of Traffic and Express. The new Vice -President of the Cana- dian National Rya. was born at Dor- chester, N.B., in 1876, and entered the employ ,of the old Inteicolondal Rail- way as messenger at Moncton in 1890. In December, 1901, he became Chief, Clerk to Division Freight Agent, Nova •Scotia Division, with. headquarters at Halifax. In 1904 he resigned from the railway to accept the position of Seer era to the Halifax Board of Jungle Silence. Never sunlight or flower or wi'ild song Into this green Leif -light all the day lang; Only the brown leaves, thick on th ground, Only the green, tall, tapering trees. Never a sound. High overhead canopied leaves, scale upon scale, Have wrought a shield, a helmet, a coat of mail. Strong and still proof a'gain'st sound ' and sun. 'Noonday is dusk, midnight is dawn, twilght and rhoonlight one. Before and behind, to right and to left the green, Slim, smooth tapering tree trunks melt ina screen Of somnolent, soot silence, breathing repose. Yet, sometimes, a tense, hushed, tie- ' miens striver goes Bird shy and wiled cool, slithering 51+11017 by' - 10 'it a phantom. lark lest and seekiug the sky?is it a fugitive song, a promise of radiant thugs, Shrouded in green, asleep, waiting for wings? In a Quaker Marne. Classified Advertisements. ~A quiet scene now rii ;g -before us, 11EMNANTS. A lrttrge.roanly, neatly pafalted kitchen, 3 LBS., 2. 5 LI3S. PATCIIES 1t5 S'elsr�v door glossy au'cl• smooth,.ariad � t wltbouta,particle ofdust; .afleet well - blacked cooking stove; rov.-s of shin- Ontarlo- ing'tin, suggestiv'b of rruillentlonable SILVER FOXFS. good -things to the appetite;glossy ;green wood chairs, old and firm ; a S I I.;Sr E P F 0 :K E S, $100-$504, smell ling -bottomed rocking chair, Larges, Gummerside, P.E.I. with a patchwork cushion in it ue.atl'y, o offer steady contrived out of smell »feces of lit- ��,� -• ;' employment and. fererrt tulore4 woolen' -goods: and a pay' weekly to sell our complete and - larger slced one, motherly and old, exclusive lines .of guaranteed quality, i11iose wLde'arms breathed' hospitable whole root, fresh dug -to -order trees invitt,ation, seconded by the solicitation and plants. Attractive illustrated of s rrl cnlshions-a psampleand full coroparation,- 6 suasiveitfe0th.old chair, earl "Nartir, in the er- monsy.smaking oppor;unity, way 01 homely ealjoymenL, a doz,earof Luke Brothers Nureeriea, Meetreel your plush or broehs'telle drawing - room gentry; and -in the chair, geartly swaying back and forward, her eeee bent on_ some fine sowing, sat our old friend EliJza, , BY her aide sat a woniea with a blight tin pan in her Lap into which she was carefully sorting some dried' peaches, She night be fifty-five or sixty; but hers was one of those faces that time seems to touch. only to bri„11:ten and adorn. The snowy nese crape oar made after the straight Quaker pattern, the' placid folds across ken: bosom, the drab shawl and dress, showed at once the communLty to which she belonged. Her fabs was round and rosy, with a - healthful downy softness, suggestive of a' ripe poach. Her hair, partially silvered by age, was parted smoothly back from a high placid forehead, on which time had written no inscription except "Peace on earth, gond will to mien" • and beneath shone a large pair of clear honest, loving, brown eyes.. - AB She gently swung backward and for- ward the chair kepi up a kind of sub- dried "creeehy orawchy," that would have been intolerable in any other chair, But old Simeon He1liday often declared it was as good as any music to him; and the children all avowed that they wouldn't miss hearing moth- er's chair for anything In the world. For why? For twenty years or more, nothing but loving weeds, and gentle moralities, and motherly : loving kind Hess had come from that chair- . ddtiioulties spiritual and temporal solved there -all by one good loving woman. God bless her! -Harriet Beecher Stowe, in "Uncle Tom's Cabin." e Every High Grade Man- Deap'ises a low grade joke -grade yourself. -Takes a pride in high grade work -rate yourself. -Holds himself in high respect--ln- speet yourself. -Is considerate of lowly friends - watch yourself. -Is as intereeting at close range as at long range -watch yourself. -Respects his . friendships as re- sllamsibildtics-judge yourself. Ss Spinsters live longer than either married women or bachelors, accord- ing to one medical authority. Nearly every muscle - in the body re- ceives a sight impulse during a sneeze -over fifty muscles in all. • gin, • mets Like 63 rl"Ims.n in Relieving Colts That's why so many people buy "Buckley's" to end Coughs, Boon- . thhh, Cesn Lungia troublesandall, III' instroatant, phleasatantd, guaranteed. You'll note its unique powers in the verytrot dose—and there are 40 doses in a 78 -cent bath)! Ask your druggist for "Buckley's". 'W. H. Bnttltley, Limited, 142 Mutual St., Toronto 2 Acts like a liash- �tf.. a single sip proves It 1 Albert T. Weldon V•1ce-President of 'Ciuladien National. Trade, and two years later was ap- pohhted. ,General Sales Agent, Port Hood Coal Compa:uy, with 'headquar- headquar- ters at Halifax- Anter being less than a year with the Port Iiood Coal Com- pany he again' accepted a position with the Inter•coiorial Railway ae Di- vision Freight Agent, tit' Halifax, in charge of.the Nova Scotia territory. I e continued In this position for two years, and again reeign:ed to accept a position with the Dominion Coal COM - Pay at Montreal, as General Freight and P805011ge'r Agent of what was then knootu as the Black Diamond Steam- ship Line, operating between Mont- real, Newfoundland and Gulf Ports. Iir October,' 1914, he again re-entered the service of the Ilrter oclontal 1Lail- way in the capacity of Assistant Gen- eral 1'i eight .Agent,' Welt headquarters at Moncton, and 111 1917 was appointed to the position' of General ',Freight Agent of the Canadian ,Government One of the treasures of B1-Azhan•, the great Moslem uuivnrsity 0n. Caitb is the -royal copy of the, Koran, Eery letter is grriniecl lu gels. Keep Mlnard'e Linlment in the house. Pigeon Ricked Up at e 9 P Sea. A. pigeon 'belonging to a Stafford - Irate collector, clerk to the palish Monotony, illi•. Welidoul was . appointed'' Man - council, and assistant overseer are to the ofIlceeoi General Trafflo Msia- among the posts held by Mrs • Rosa' ag'or et'ile,syste,nl in ug'net'last. tts' of Bacton Norfo,k. Phis. lad R ., F1R3TBROOK BR Limited • -�Iorelrce E.,'BlriSk, c ,r ' r !' 283 King St. 'fast � Toronto 2, Ont. else carries on a builde`r's business, iN,inard s LFnlment for DI'atemper. see Dissolve two "BAYER TABLETS OF ASPIRIN" i four tablespoonfuls of water and gargle thorou'ghly' Swallow some of the solution. 'Don't rinse the mouth. Repeat gargle every two hours if necessary. This is an effective gargle proried sate by millions and prescribed by physicians. Accept only "Bayer" package. Look for the "Bayer Cross." Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Atipirin is the trade mark (registered in Oanada) of 'toyer 1fanufacture of 2,tgnoaeetic aoidestor of earleylioacid (Acetyl Salicylic 6old1 'A... 9: -A.' ). whhe It in well huewn tbatAsplrinoieans Baver mw 07e.00w•e,to• attest t,o 0005 a:m.1mA lmltattons,tho Tabiete o1 Sayer Company-wlf be„ otaiaped tem their guaoral trade'oniu4, rho "Boyer Cross.", �ryq- For6r'^[(yq /w�� TQ y SIIATIS and SORE TU O,AT Song to Love. I weer love tenderly Anal as I'd wear a crown, A proud thing zed a dear thing, I wear it as a gown. I wear it in the sunshine It is eo softly fair, I wear it in the :rain, A glory everywhere. It is my soul's rare mantle The joy of all my days, My wonder-ha'ppiness-, That make's this esysti'e maze. Of life worth alt the living; Love is the shining light That lessens pain and sorrow, That conqu'00 death and night. -George Elliston. PJQn '7r r llama/ Last word, in builders' aid. Pretirul, up-to-date suggestions on planning building, fbnnsning, decorating and gardening. Profusely. illustrated, :and scores of actual d(Ste• saving sug- ' 'gestions. Sent. 25 cents for purrcnt issue. Maclean Bundera' Guide 'r'`(n. 944 aamno. St. w„ "t'� ihw Taranto, Ont. t 1 `.; _' oaf%;..-.... Mase:see with M inard's. It: relieves the stdifness, eases the pain. DRApm d F! N PAINS RELIEVED Woman Suffered Nearly a Year. Lydia E. PisI isam's Vegetable Compound Brought Her Health'. Moose Jaw, Sask.-"I am going to try to tell .you what Lydia /, Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound has done for nne. I suffered very badly with dragging -down pains and inflamma- tion, also pains ei my right side over my hip and down my whole side into my leg, I had it nearly a year when I went to a doctor and he said I would have to have an operation. But my mother said to take Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound asit saved her life years before. I took two bottles and I foundl was better, to 1 kept on taking it and also used Lydia B, Pinkham's Sanative Wash.' I have had two more children since then and am porfeetly well. I used to have to lie down two or three times a day, and, now I do all my housework without trouble. 1 al- ways keep the Vegetable Compound in the house as 1 fmd a dose now and then helps me. I am willing for you to use this letter any way you see fit and I will answerletters. If I can belp any other wOman I'd be only too glad to try." -Mrs. Estrum Hoeymo'roN, 712 Athabasca W., Moose Jaw, Sas- katcheWan. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a dependable medicine for all women. For sale by druggists everywhere. 0 J Cuticura Baths Best For Children 'reach your children to use Cuti- cura Soapbecauseit is best for th0ir tender skins. Assisted by oc- casional applications of Cuticura Ohitment to first signs of irritation or dandruff it keeps the skin and scalp clean and healthy. Cuticura Talcum is cooling andsoothing:: eereple rens .yrco n • ataa. Addrean Osga5Ine Degot atn,il, usa 1.ta, 744tte4!' t ries, ao.a. 28e. a nl t tt'.S ani 60n °•t-'Vill'SS t 2E2., Mgr' Cuticura SloaiiiileStlek 21St:. ISSUE No. 50--'28.