The Wingham Advance Times, 1924-08-14, Page 3‘.5
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ItUISS4kwy, AraglaSt 14 1.94
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WINGHAlY1 ADVANC%4IWIES,
. .
S• TORIES :OF liggriTheOok of
NOWN : * togra*Ot.
Fernier Peasant ag French Presid n e t
The eon of peasant parents, 1S1. Gas
ton Douniergite, the hew President
• the Freucla Republic, has risen •fro
the humblest beginnings to ais lag
office.
In. the . ordinary course he won'
havls succeeded to: the scanty acres o
the family farm, • but his father be
lieved the boy had keen inteltigence
and providedan education for him t
flt hirn for the law, Before the yout
was twenty he was celled to the Bar
He entered the French Colonial Set
• vice and held poste abroad; theii h
returned to France, where his ap
ointment, later, as Colonial Miniete
was his.first big step towards fame.
M. Domnergue is tae flrat Protest
ant or...bachelor to be elected French
President.
A Fright for Thomas Hardy.
A friend of Mr. Thomas Hardy, Q.M.,
who recently celebrated his eighty-
fourth birthday, tells the writer that
he is probably the shyest great man
in the world. Any siert of notice al-
most hurts him, and in Dorchester
Mildly people avoid greeting him,
knowing that 'hehrinks even from
such. attentions. Mr. Hardy was a re-
gular caller at a quast little inn for a
glass of port. He came daily for a
fortnight, and then someone at the inn
said to him, ."Good morning, Mr.
Hardy." • He looked up with frighten-
ed eyes, finished his port, and went.
And never again dal he enter that inn.
The Old sea captain and lila Mates
„ were, sticelers for form. Ie fact, et -
f key,' as they celled it, had become a
ns Mania with them. After dinner when
a the clota was cleared, writee Sir
Henry Robinson iu Merimeies, Wise
d And Otherwie, the • eaptairi often
g Would send for the mates and the en-
. gineer and ea we sat round the table
profound hard cases-, on points of eti.
to
quette.
h He used for his g-ulde and mentor
, an amazing old tattered book that I
s sometimes think must have beee in -
e tended to be comic, because it pee
- anliipoeed such -utterly absurd • situa-
r tions. For example, if •you were on
top of ah omnibus and saw a duchess
_ in the street you could not with ,pro-
priety wave your umbrella, at her, no
matter how well you. knew her, An-
other thing: when dining with strang-
er' you Must :rot ask the butler for a
A• Dispute With Queen Victoria.
Among the many interesting memor-
ies of Lord Eversley, the veteran Lib-
eral who has just celebrated his nine-
ty-third birthday, is the occasion when
he: was involved in a dispute - with
• Queen, Victoria.
He was then, as the Rt. Hon. G. J.
Shaw-Lefevre, the First Commissioner
of Works in Mr. Gladstote's Ministry
of 138e. Some trees were blown down
In Hampton court Park, and examina-
tion having proved the wood to be un-
saleable, .Mr. Shaw-Leevre decided
that the poor of Hampton might be
permitted to take it away for firewood.
But an official in the department of
Her Majesty's Mersa claimed tb,e wood
as his perquisite, and when a wordy
argument followed Queen Victoria
vigorously defended the rights of the
Crown.
It was Lord Eversley who, as Post-
master -General in 1833.-1884, intro-
duced the sixpenny telegram.
Canada's Lumber King Used to Feed
• H is Men.
J. R. -Booth, the veteran lunaberman
of Ottawa, is said to be the wealthiest
man in Canada to -day, but his begin-
ning in the lumber business was a
humble one.
• He was telling an acquaintance re-
• cently that in the early days when he
started his little saw mill on the
Chandler°, he boarded his men in his
home down on the fiats just to the
s'cluth of the Ottawa river.
• He said that in the morning he
would go down and start the fire and
put the kettle on, and while his wife
• Was making other preparations for
• breakfast he would pare the potatoes,
and—"By George," he said, "you've no
idea how many potatoes those men
• would eat."
Air Post 'Stamps.
Although the earliest experiment in
the transport of mails by aeroplane
took place only. so recently as 1911
• same of the stamps borne on letters
carried by aerial post are alreadY
fetching fairly high prices.
At a recent auction 'sale in London
the envelope of a letter brought from
• America by the airship 11,24 realized
$160. .
• Froni $175 to $260 is the worth of
the envelope of any one of the ninety-
•'. five letters carried by the late H. G.
Hawker when he tried to fly across
• the atlantic by aeroplane.
The 24 cents aero stamp of the
• United States, printed in error with
the aeroplane flying upsidedown, real-
izes $760.
Seek. Grave of Hun King,
The unearthing of Tutentchamen's
tomb Lias started a general kieg-hunt
among archaeologists, and no peace-
• fully resting bones are secure.
Hungarian and Austrian scientists',
led by Dr. Ferdinand Attich, 'have re-
opened the ,search for the original
grave of the Hun King, Attila, digging
in the neighborhood of Semites, near
the River Theiss, in the big Hungarian
plainiand.
POViOUS OX MVO tiODS in the terra
tory uricoVered valuable archaeologii,
cal Material dating from Attila's reign,
though, the grave of the king, who
called himself the "Scourge of God,"
• remains unteuncl. It is believed his
grave, if discovered, ' would contain
few valuables, because Attila, though
he received at his court the jewela and
• gold of plunderers, Wed hiMself In
• the utniest
„
Scarcely anything else is so taste -
lees ea pure water, yet everyone wants
Iii drinldng water to "taste good."
The problem of the sanitary engineer
is not only to 'keep the public Water
supply pure—that is, free from dis-
ease germs --but also to eliMinate ob•-
joetionable tastes, such ii$ vegetable
matter often cauSes.
teothpick at sonp. Sallere were many
such "hard cases,"
• The captain used to rule a sheet of
paper and put all our name's down and
award marks in, accordance with our re-
plies to, the queries put. There was
one that made auch an impression on
me that I made a peacill nate of it; and
I remember it to this day: We were
all sitting round the table; the paper
was ruled, and the captain began:
"Now, Mackay, we'll take yeru first.
If you was walking in a field with a
young lady with 'coni you was but
slightly acquainted, and she was to
sit down on the grass, what should
you do?"
Mackey pausedto try and imagine
what his feelings and intentions, would
be in such a case and then replied,
"I'd offer to git her a chair."
"Una ah!" s'ald the skipper. Not
bad, but you might 'aVe to walk a
couple of miles to get one, and it
wouldn't look shipshape for an officer
of one of Her Majesty's finest cruisers
to be walking about the countryside.
luggin' a chair after him. However,
it's a thoughtful -like thing, and I'll
give you five rna.rks. Now, Mr. Tre-
lawney, what do you say?"
'Wel," said Trelawney, "I'd argify
with her agin it, and if weeds- wouldn't
move her I'd take off nay coat and gly
it to her to sit on."
The captain thought deeply. "Well
I don't think that's the answer, but i
would be a delicate kind of thing to
e
do, and I'nl glee you seven. Now, Mr
Lyons, you're next." • -
• "I'd ax the ye-eng lady for to get up
and run me a race," said the plump
little second mate. • •
"Go on!" said the skipper. "How
could you expect a lady with 'cora yeu
were but slightly acquainted to start
rennin' races with a pot-bellied little
bloke like you?" --
Then after we had all offered our
solution's to the hard case the skipper
consulted the key at the end of the
book and announced what the cannons
of refined society ordained as the duty
of the male escort if a lady of high
degree decided suddenly- to eitedown
•
on the grass. " 'The gentleman,'
read the skipper, " 'must remain
s-tanding till the lady axes him for to
sit down,"
"..Of course, of course," said the
mate; "fools we were not to have seen
it."
Gibraltar's Height.
• The rock of Gibraltar is more than
1,400 feet high.
Every motoring party • likes to
choose a naturally beautiful spot for
the roadside picnic, but, if the place is
littered with broken bottles, tin cans,
newspapers and a discarded tire or
two, the beauty is spoiled. The first
rule for picnic parties is to leave the
grounds, not as they found them, but
as they would like to find them.
The above photograph shows the prOSentation of colorto the Mohawk
Company of the Brantford Girl Guides, the only company. of 'ashen guides
in Canada, •• , •
PEOPLE "ALL. NERVES"
What to Do if You Find Yourself
in This Condition.
The sort of thing that specialists
speak of as nervous debility is the
run-down condition caused by over-
work, household care or worries. The
sufferers find themselvee tired, MO -
rose, low-spirited' and unable to keep
their minds an anything. Any 'sudden
noise startles and .sets the heart pal-
pita,tings'siolently. They age full of
groundless slave, and do not sleep
well at night. The hands tremble and
the legs feel as if they would give
way, following a walk or any exertion.
The whole condition of such people
may be described as pitiable.
Doctoring the nerves with poison-
ous sedatives is a terrible mistake.
The only real nerve tonic is a good
supply of newerich blood. Therefore
the treatment -for nervousness and
run-down health is Dr. Williams' Plnk
Pills, which promptly build up and
enrich theblood The revived appe-
tite, the strong nerves, improved
spirits and new strength which comes
after a course of these pills will do -
light every sufferer.
You can get these pills from. any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50e a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Oet.
Wills With Strings.
In a will recently probated in Ena
If-th"0104*.Cefillis
Ordinery: seelety„, shanid QAO
..a4a7Call 'xipop,''ani?tber, it 1s7 the'.rule. to
• 0114 'irleit Within ertairt,:
Tit shOlrld Royalty do
subject Ithe,'henor of a yisit; he rule
i'6-ltei'ed,,'saYo'an.VnglIsix'
'tinlese , .spdeially requested tsi;'d0 Sea
Yea de' net's'eturn the. Call,• • , ,•
• late Mr,Stead on deseribod
a call he Made en 'the late Czar of
lineal?, and related how, after alo.ng
•Ohat, he felt.•he was•, thritig.the Czar,
so politely. teak lite }ease. • This,.. of
course, -was quite' against e•stablisbed
etiquette.. It IS, always the 1-yel host
'who on such occasione, dienilases the
visitor.
King George has made himself one
with his people. Sailor -like, dis-
likes • an ,excess of .cererneacs, and
many rules which were in 'force sie
previouS reigns he has relaxed.For,
instance, In Queen Victoria's time,
when anyonewes.presented to, her, he.
or :she kiseed. her .handa' To-daYboth
the King and the Queen shake hands
e anyo e else.
But it is still the- custom, when the
_ King din -es, -that he is helped befre
land the testator, who was a teetotal-
ler, loft his house to a relative on con
dition that not only should no spirit-
uous liquor be drunk by the legatee
but that none -should ever be eon- cedure put him even in front of ase-
eunied in the house.-- men. It was King Edward who alter -
la
pais will recalls that of the late Mr. ed this. in entering a carriage or cal.
ic,hard 'Cory, 'Who left over half a
he always stood aside to help in the
million, and provided. in his will that Queen or other ladies.
no esrsen should henefit under it un- You should still be careful, when in
lesslie or she remained a total ale Royalty's presence, not to turn your
stainer back upon thens, and 'equally -se not to
He also direct... that no per-
son should have any 0s eie sneaey sit down, unlese invited to do so. The
who adopted the Roman Catholifaith.
Queen hersra,
elf has tber a custom of
c
Novelists are fond of a plot in welch standing, and some of her ladies are
a will lays dowa that the Inheritor
said to find this habit of hers a little
anyon•e else, and that both he and the
„ Queen have their special footmen to
serve them at all meals.
In the old days the monareh'a pre -
mus marry within aecertam. period., trying times.
1 Such *ills are rare In' real life; but
la Mr, Nelson Roe, an Irishman; on his BAB'S GREAT DANGER,
death, 'left hi 'brother three farms
and $30,000 on condition that .he mare! Ik1
WEATHER
•
G 1101
ried within six months. The brother' URL1
lost no time in fulfilling the hecess-ary
co. it on.
I The late Sir J. Blundell Maple left weather than at any other time of the
a great fortune to his daughter on con- year. Diarrhoea, dysentry, cholera
dition that she spent at least 240 days infantum and stomach tro bi
out ot each year in England. An ap- without warning, and when a medicine
peal' against the condition went is not at hand to give promptly the
against the lady. . !short delay too frequently means that
Conditions made by testators are the child has -passed beyond aid.
not, however, always good- in law. A Baby's Own Tablets should always be
More little ones die during the hot
man left his sister $20,000 on condi- kept In the house where there are
tioin that she never married, but a young children. An occasional dose
year or so later, when she went to the of the Tablets. will prevent stomach
Courts about the matter, the judge and bowel troubles • or if the trouble
granted her relief. comes suddenly the prompt use of the
In another case a man left a large Tablets will relieve the baby. The
V fortune to a nephew, with the stipula-, Tablets are- sold by medicine dealers
Cruel.
She -"Sweetheart, would you die
far me?"
He—"It wouldn't do you any good—
I'm not insured,"
Autos Increasse in Palestine.
Motor traffic, insignificant in Pales-
tine before the war, is to -day more
developed than in most European coun-
tries', due to -the system of excellent
roads constru.cted by the British gov-.'
ernment and the Palestine Founda-
tion Fand, according to a report from
tion that hid—the uncle's—body was or by mail at 25 cents a box from The
to be handed over to a hospital. Other-' Dr.. Williams? Medicine- Co., Brock -
wise the money was to go to the hos- ville, Ont.
pital.
It appears that, in English law, a
subject cannot legally bequeath his or
her body for scientific purposes, so in
this case the nephew was not obliged
to carry out the unpleasa,nt condition
An American left $300,000 to his
wife, with the stipulation that she
should toilette every penny of she ap-
peared in any public place unveiled, or
even stalled at a man. These ridicul-
ous conclitions were held to be tyran-
nous, and the widow was set free from
them by the Courts.
So, liao, in the case of the London
stockbroker, who left his son a huge
fortune on condition that • he never
visited or saw his raother.
But not everyone is so fortunate.
Some apparently strange wills have
been held good in law.
The oddest will of recent years was
that of the Indian merchant, Mr.
Charles Wallace, Who left $1,260,000
to his son, but only on condition that
he obtained a baronetcy. The son at-
tempted to obtain relief, but the Court
decided against him.
Jerusalem made public by Sanruel Un-' ----a-
termyer, president of the fund, which.'
receives most of its fina.ncial support'
from American Jews,
The world has an estimated stock
of forty-two tons of diamonds.
Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism.
Surnames and Their Origin
Raclal OrIgin—Engash. •
Sourcea--A locality. •
The Otigin of. the 'family name of.
Lincoln, is, simp
town of the sa
Like all surnle. It comes front the
me name in England.
ame,s ef the same clasta
fication it wag originally descriptive
of the bearer's place of residence, or
rather his former place of residence.
In that period of thesmiddle ages when
populations began to increase rapidly
thessupply of given names- was over,
taxed. The first result •of this Was the
. tendency among parents to give their
offspriing new variations • of given
names, made up often 'by the addition
of diminutives added to the name or a
single syllable of the home, Even
this, however, was not enough, when
communication between various coat -
meanies becatee more common and
men moved more from place to plaCe,
It became quite usual to speak ofthis,'
that or the other Roger or John or Ivo
by reference to the. place from which
he had °mile. Thus, the name of Lin.
&loin was Origlnally preceded by "de,"
Mdleating "of Lincoln': or "from Lin-.
cubit
1The place name itself is a relic of
pre-gaxon. days, being -a compound of
"lin" and "eeln," signifying in. .the
ancient tritish tongue, a Ialte on a
hill, The Wo1011 18 "IlYn." the Corn,
isb,,,gyn" and the 08418 'thine." '
'ASQUITH. .
VariatIone-Hesketh.
Racial Origirs---English.•
Source—A given name.
Here is a family name, widely known
if not widely borne, which Would -be a
good bit of a puzzle were it not pos-
sible to trace it back, step by step,
through the ceaturiee, to a s.ouress
. • •
. Would Be Pleased Indeed.
This latter is' one of th.ose
! • Bum Conaposer--"Woultr you like to
h.esx my last settg?"
have entirely disappeared in the
course* of the development in nomen-
clature which follawed the Norman in-
Vasioe and :the language 'changes of
pare mestere, times'. And it might be
reinerked here that the number of Are
gla Saxon given names, which have
disappeared completely is 'far greater
than those which are still In use to -
4 •• ' •
Iri this case the name was "Hes-
culth,"••• It probably suffered a loss in
the period immediately following the
Norman invasion. Nevertheless., :the
Old names Wore retained t,q0,a certain
extent among the 'subdued Anglo.
SaxOns, probably the greatest number
of them disappearing in the latter
period, of. amalgamation than the ear-
lier one of subjugation, )3.0 the name,
had not entirely dienippeared at 'Jae
time faintly vanes began to form, and-,
14 18 first traceable aS, "I-Xesoulth's.1
eon." Ease of pronunciation , firstl
ceased. the dropping of the ending and
then the changesin spelling t the
4,,, niodern ferntS. . 1
• '‘
I • . •
• , „
,51
1 The Girpu•ch—"It Would give nip
,
genuine pleasixre, my dear sir."
! '
ing time might be pardoned if they'd
only kill their own; but they murder
yours and mine—kill our moments as
they shine, butcher minutes which are 4
A Dinner Jacket in the
•
J
ung1
e.
Discussing the influences that make
the character of a man, Mr. Raymond
Blathwayt in the Tapestry of Life
give's credit to the English public
1 schools er inculcating in the youth of
the land the spirit that build the Bre
1 lash Empire, Such slogans as "Go it,
Eton!" "Well done, Rugby!" --Which
Once gave the thrill of a great deter-
mination never to quit whatever the
odds—have, he believes,. carried the
English into far places-. As. a good
ample of that dogged apirit he tell
this story:
I was once traveling through a vast
forest In India when I came upon a
lonely bungalow far ram th.e haunts
of men. A young Englishman came
ferward to meet vie and insisted on nay
stopping over as his, guest for a day
or two. I gladly accepted, for the
heat was terrific, and a great storm
was coming up over the mountains
But de,spite the fact that the ther-
mometer,- marked one hundred and
twelve degrees in the shade and that
my host was trembling with, fever and
ague he insisted -on putting on a s -tiff
white shirt and a dinner jacket! No
one who has net experienced it has
any -conception what the discomfort
of such a costume mea -ns in *the plains
of India in the height of the hot sea-
son. I commented en it with a good
deal 'of astonishm.ent.
"Well," he replied, "I daresay it.
does strike you as rather odd. • I
haven't seen a white woman jar two
years, and I am always alone here,
but I feel it keeps me in touch with
the old country, and it helpa to keep
incd,ecent and from becoming a slack-
er."
As I looked at the poor young fel-
low—he was only twenty-five years
old—and gazed sadly upon his thin,
'white face and noticed hew now and
7
' ...0 ,le ppo •
ivuz4;r....,,.,..
, Purel No ctlicort , or al.ni.1,',,a'ciOitoit'aOt,
.. . .
-- ' thxs c,oice cc? fee - . , ',, ',. '.',,-.-,. ,,,.;,,•,-
,... , . . • .
, ..,. ...,. .. . .. ,
Seventeen-Year,Old Youth
is 7 Feet 4 Inches.
Gunnar Edwin Johnson seventeen
years of age, who expects ite be a great
help to his mother when he grows UP,
wriggled out of a passenger coach at
the Canadian Pacific station the
other day and breathed a sigh, of relief
as he stretched his kuees again -
Gunnar is, from Maryfielt1, Saskatche-
wan. He is just seven feet four
inches tall and is still growing,
He has no use at all for train jour-
neys, because he has to tie himself in-
to knots in the !seats, and sleep la out
of the question.
The young 'skyscraper was born at
Maryfield and has -worked on a farm
and in a garage there throughout hie
life. The trip to Winnipeg ifs in the
nature of a holiday. He is visiting
C. H. Olson.
The lad is of Icelandic parentage.
His father and mother, Mr. and Mrs
J. IC, Johnson, are of normal height
his father being 5 feet 11 inches an
his mother 5 feet 6 inches:
Early in his life young Johnso
showed rapid growth. At five years o
age • he could just walk under hi
father's outstretched arm. At seven
he was his dad's equal in altitude.
"I've never been sick a day in iny
life," he said recently, "and I wan
now to take up some gymnastic train
ing. I've never had a chance to do
that yet, and I think a boy should de
velop himself while he's growing."
The gigantic youth does not drina,
smoke or chew. He passed his high
school entrance examinations two
years ago, having attended the coun-
try school at Bardal, Saskatchewan.
He is in able motor mechanic. His
strength is proportionate to his size.
Despite his size the boy has not a
large appetite. He eats very little
more than the average man. He
wears a No. 20 shoe.
Hereditary traits' may have some-
thing to do with his abnormal develop-
ment, for his grandfather, he said, was
more than seven feet tall. At present
Gunnar weighs 245 pounds and his
reaoh—from fingertip to 'fingertip—is
seven feet four inches, exactly equal
to his height.
Cane Juice Heavy.
The sugar cane juice, constituting
about 80 per cent. of the weight of the
cane, says "Nature Magazine," le
clarified by the addition of lime,
n
The hairspring of a watch weighs
but one -twentieth of a grain per inch.
One mile of such wire would weigh
less than half a pound,
1
Say "Bayer Aspirin"
INSIST! Unless you see the
"Bayer Cross" on tablets you
are not getting the genuine
Bayer Aspirin proved safe by
millions and prescribed by phy.
sicia.ns for 24 years,
Accept only a
awe
Bayer package
whichcontains proven directions
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tableta
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
Aspirin Is the trade mark (registered in
Canada) of Barer Idanufacture of Ilona
asetleaeldester of ealimdleaeld
again the dreadtol fever and ague
took hold of him and shook him until
hia teeth rattled I could not but re
-
fleet upon the inagnifIcent dominance
of that undying sixth -form, spirit::
play up play up, an d play thegame!"
Minard's Liniment Relieves Pain.
rightly ours- alone. Which is why s
say in rhyme that the men who will 8
one time Should e banished to an' 13
island in the sea,' 'Where, among the 1
leafy bow'rs, they can kill a string of a
hours and tot have a chance to bother
you and me. ----Walt Mason
•
June brides may be interested in
he account of a recent wedding. in a
mall town in Roumania, Ten thou -1
and people appeared as guests and
rought presents that filled throe'
arge rooms. The ceremonies lasted
week, and the guests consumed
hirty-two eXen, two hundred and ten
sheep, one hundred and sixty ca,lves,
twenty-one -hundred geese and three
thousand chickens. The bride was the
daughter of a famous rabbi.
Avoid loss when sending money by
mail. Use Dominion Express Money
"LoftY," the world's tallest man, is
0 ft. 81/4 his, in height, and has stimk-
ed ever since he was a boy. He ie 23
years of age, and hla real name is
Jan van Albert.
0
A deal and dumb person who is
fairly export at the Anger language
can speak about forty..three Words a I)
rders—the safe, tenvenieet, Inexpen-
iVe way.
It isrit your poSition, hat your die-
osition, that intiles von happy or
minute. unhappy —gilt hat e
g
pr
e TliTJr
r a
More Pliespba.te if you want emir!
complexionto clear, eyes to brighten,
and skin to become s -oft and smooth.
Thin, nerve -exhausted people grow -
strong on Hitro-Phosphate and du.
gists guarantee it. Price $1 per pkge.
Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. Est, !
Toronto, Ont.
Save Your Har!
Rub the scalp with Mirs.rd,e.
It removes dandruff and stops
the hair from falling out,
171X s. 0 R ID A OFPHRS '0H/1iAlit ' :
•"- •opportunities.for basfe,inv'eStr4eirOli:'W
with profitable retarris../c-ii;g4ii.#.ter,-.4 :.:
eating .particulare sent fro. .:We :410 ,,':' .,,,:,,,,,,
wish to communicate with. ,repatablet .' ••.., •.":',• • s
persons to represent ug in their, Ineela, ' '''',.S.,,, ,
rty. Write now. Box..66, .Stuart,. , ' ' ! ' 6rA '
Florida, ' , . • , : ' . .- '' ..,':,
.., . ,. , , •
. .
To the ItItige,
Friend Of my earliest youth, • ' •
• '
Can't you arrange to come down
And visit a fellow out bore •.in
Out Novf(1°tdn'es'—dust of the town? '
Can't you forget you're a judge, '
And put by your, dolorous' frown,
And ten your wan face in the smile
of a friend—
Can't you arrange to come down?
Can't yeu forget for a -while
The arguments prosy and dreara--
To lean at full length in ingle, •haltas •
In the lap of the greenery here?
Can't you kick over the Beneh,
And husk yourself out of your.
To dangle your legs where the ilehing ' • 2
Is good, •
Can't you arrange to come down? '
' t ' • ' • • •
y"Jouud gateriatv,'aouthneorte,ciofmypoini1
etinwt Is , —but
sketch ar
The birds ere in session by diswn ,
•
Testi can open your heart, like a case,• • s's.
To a jury of kine, white and 'brown,
dlid':;w, of the hill .
And a breath that your betters have
And their verdict of "Moo" will juet
satisfy you— •
Can't you arrange to come down? !
—Jas. Whitcomb Riley.
—
cradle.—Th1:e Bisho:of ETsalute. tha
Exeter.
I would make every girl
1 •
sw
NIGHT &
MORNING &
•KEEP YOUR EYZSJ.
FLEAN CLEAR AND PCEALTIHEr
VOR 111.33 STIL CARS D00%. MULUNIS CO.CUICAO,
. ,
•Mlese ttttt
111111/111(lUi
Powder With Cutieur
atm After Bathing
Altera bath with Cuticura Soap and
warm water Cuticura Talcum dusted
over the skin 3s soothing, cooling
and rfreshing. If the skin Is rough
or irritated, anoint with Cu icura
Ointment to soothe and heal.
Saran!. Raab nee bp Mail. Address Canadian
Depot: " antlaura, P. 0. Box 2616,ttreal..."
Pelee Sean 25e. Ointment 25 and 60. TO cnn 25e,
Try our new Shaving Stick.
1 •
UN DO
AILI
Lydia E.Pinkhana's Vegetable Com.
pound Brought Relief 'When
Other Medicines Failed
Port Mann, B. C.— "1 took Lydia EL
Pinkham'sVegetableCompound because
I was tired and run-
down. I had head-
aches and no appe-
titeandwastron bled
for two years with
sleeplessness. 1 tried
many medicine, but
nothing did me any
real good. While
was li ving. in Wah-
ington 1 was recom-
mended bye. stranger
to take Lydia E.
cmaronmniaJj Pinkham'8 Vegeta-
ble Compound. 1 raestronger arid feel
Arm since then and am able to do my
lbouework. I am willing for you to
tist thesefacts as a testimonial."—Mrs.
J. C. GBBAVES, Port Mane, B. C,
Feels New Life and Strength
1Ceene,N, H.— "I was weak and run, -
down and had backache and ail sorts of
troubles which women hve, 1 found
great relief when taking bydia t. Pink.
harn's 'Vegetable Componnd and I also
used Lydia El, Pinkham's Sanative
Wash. 1 ani able to do my work and feel
new life and strength from the Vegeta.::
ble Compound, I am doing all I can to
advertise it. "-- Mrs. A. P. PlAfOxno.
72 Carpenter Street, Itecne,
Sick and ailing women everywhere
In the Dominion should try Lydia I&
rthithatn's Vegetable. coupound.
sun No,
• • • ,