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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1924-08-28, Page 3itrg, 411,7 *I> 11'.fstiaY, iltirtSt 19244 A Pair of Toci, wade brought nue in. taeli rebegoiug amidst" 'tem; oil a little group of beei- Isms men deelered reflettivelY Whe4 COM 1a.(1 drifted round to ate enthmee at church, "That, :doesn't always Cont, to be sere, for, as Bur- ton at sgid a man feels sometimes that be had church enough in his boyhooe to laet him, all the reet of his life, It etaesel, eo in my ease, though, and thee it waen't wee 0Whig largely to one et the seddeet and most im- pressive incidents of my early years. "Mother's health was alwaYs deli- cate, though she waa always bard- workleg end uncomplafeing. People nowadays eau hardly understand ,what ecanty meeue a small farmer had fifty Years ago„ and how much toil and planniag and :scrimping were required to keep a family of four clothed and fel. Seem -day nights mother often sat uptil the Stroke of twelve, patching and recanting our clothes 20 that We could go to allure.'" the next day. Fether used to remonstrate with her, but she always had much the same an- swer: The children can't. go ta church without clothes, •IVilliarn, and they mustn't get into the habit of ,staying at home. lt they don't learn to go when they're young, they'll never take to It When they're older,' "My eleventh birthday I spent at 'Uncle Sidney Fletcher's, A. day at Uncle Sidney's was a rare treat, and I eeturned, happy and excited, except for •one disquieting accident. I had •tore the knee of my new grey Sunday troueere. , I ean remember just how, mother• said, 'Why, Joey, dear!' as she drew the fraged edges together be- tween her slim whiteefingers, planning no doubt hOw best to mend the rent. "How little I suspeted what the next few hours would bring! That Was a Saturday night, end motlisir died sud- , fleetly in the gray dawn of the morn- ing-folloWing. For hours I couldn't be- lieve it. rt seemed like an uglie terri- ,fying dream, • and 1 kept thinking I should wake up presently and find everything 'afil it bad been before. The first thinr, that brought me out of my daze was, that, pair or gray trousers hanging- on a hook behind the stove. ,I turned them around and looked at the neatly mend.ed, knee—mother's last work. 1Vly eyes blurred with tears. (Me so near dying 'must feel ill and weak, I thought in my boyish way, ' but she had stitched and stitched and stitched, so that I could go to church Sunday morning! That WRS her dear- est wish, and I resolved that it should not be disappointed. "Apparently no one noticed me when I stole dut of thefront door, ar- rayed in my •Sunda.y best, and set off across the fieldon foot le was five miles to the little country church, and • the day was hot, but I kept plodding on,. blinded half the time with my tears, but buoyed up by the. thought that I wasdoing wlaat mother wanted me to do. I don't remember mach about the service :or what people said 'to me, but that dogged determination to carry out mother'i dying wish has clung to me far fifty years. She was a wise, good woman and must have known what was best for a boy In his teens, for a young man, for any man' • Or woman. As ray ovvn judgment has matured I have come more and more to agree with her conclusions. When- ever I have been tempted to sty away from church the neatly mended knee of that pair (if gray treuisers has Come up before my mind's eye as a gentle reminder." More Laconic Than Lucid. The recent revival of interest in old- time sailingeveesels has led to the re- telling of many half-forgotten anec- dotes of ancient sea captains. bile of the most ,successful and experienced of those old fellows was Capt. Ezekiel Jenkins of the' Jehu, who, despite his lack Of educatiore was as good at trad- ing as at navigation, The owners of ;the Jehu once sent him with a Valuable cargoto a port of South America at a time when tvvo or three at the young and lively re publics of that region were in a state of -belligerent ebullience. On his ar- rival he found all ports where the goods meld possibly be marketed closed: against foreign vessels. He felt it his duty to inform his owners • of the situation atonce and sent word to them by a ship, larger and swifter • than his awn, that .he fettled on the pbeit of depseture as he arrived, • The message duly reachedthem in Boston. It read: , • "Sirs ---Own to the blockhead the vig . is spilt," • ' ' They eould make nothing of it. But another sea captain, a former ship - mete of Captain Jenkins, was ashore' and near at hand, and they sent for him to asstst them. Being himself "no, scolard" ahd finding his old friend's vagaries of pronuneiation and spelling • quite n,aturagthe Was astonialted that they had. foend any difficulty: he read • oft easily and at ones: "Sifd--,CiWing to the blockade `the - see -Ur -sea.; /Melee WINGIIAM ADVANCE -TIMES. Its goo and the choicest of, Red Rose Teas is the • ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY " • Surnames and Their Origin LLOYD. Varlation—Lhuyd, Racial Origin—Welsh. Source—A given name or a descriptive one. The family name of Lley1 is some- times, though infrequently to -day, spell Ltmyd. It is a Welsh name, rather common- ly met with in England and particular- ly .so in the Central Eastern section of the United States, notably in Pen- nsylvania, where the Welsh played an important part in the early coloniza- tion. •' As a family name its use' traces back both to the 'given name, and to ita use as a deacriptive surnames, for the -word means "brawn," and like such Gaelic names as Dougall and Douglas, which, rneaat dark, it became a given name. Again it was used, as 'sdhu" and "dein" have been used in Seetland and Ireland, RS a sort of surname., deserip- tive either of the personal appearance of the bearer or of that of the particu- lar branch of his family from which he came. •, In 'short, in many Instances, its des velopment Seto a famile name has paralleled that of the English family name of Brown, the meaning of which GALBRAITH. Variation—Galbreth, Racial Origln--Scottish. Source—A given name. At; the period when the Scottish clans were at the height of their power the Gelbraiths formed a veey import- ant divisien of that meet Influential clan, the Macdonaids, North .and • The Gaelic • designation of this branch of the IVIacdonalds was "Chlesan a' Bhreattannalch,deor "descendants of the Britons," but they tookas a family name the given name of their chief- tain, who prayed an important pert in the national affairs or Scotland about the time of James I., "Galbraich," of Balde,a-speck: I Of course, in the earlier use of this name it was regularly prefixed by the "Mac," indicating followers or deed. cendants of the Person named. • But as Ints.been the case with's° many Scot- tish and Irish elan names, the prefix was dropped as euperfiuous after the translation of the name ,into English In later generations. The strongholds of this branch of the Macdonalder were at Macrihannish and Rrumore, and prior to 1600 they held the island of Gigha for the Mac - is the same. • donalds. •••••10.*INITNIMMO "Lord Nelsen" and the Cooks.: Yachting in the Mediterranean was on the whole "Blue Water," as Mr. A. S. Hildebrand calls it .in b1, book of that name. But on .one Occasion at Almeria, 'Spain, wheu the boat was witheot the • services of a cook; not only the water but theyechtmen also Were blue. The ship chandler at that place, a man with one eye, says Hildebrand, kept asking what he could do for us. In the_ end we told him, We needed a cook; and as he left he hand- ed:us his icard,,'which- we found bore the .nante "Lerd Melee/nee ubsequently we asked the British consul whether Lord Nelson was de- pendable. "Ile's about as goad as the -general run of them," was the reply. • "He's about the only ship chandler here at any rate. Some of the othera, younger men for the most part, hage tried to break into his game from time to thee, but he 'has money enough to undersell them, and he doesn't hesitate even to give away eupplies for the sake of freezing out his competitors." When we asked Lord Nelson to re- commend us a eook he thought for a moment and at last muttered, "Pepe! There's a man for you. Good cook, good sailor. For six months he cook on Norway salvage ship; he go away, be- cause ship no go to sea. Always he want go to, sea. He marry my little girl. You see? And I try ,to make him go into ship -chandler business with me. But no. Noano. He love sea. Always sea. Good sailor? Whoof! Bad weather? More bad weather, better he like!" • Since the wind was in the east, we • stayed three days in Almeria, and Pepe came' and cooked for us. He was e good Cook and neat and pleasant, but he was so fat that it wasimpossthle to imagine his going aloft. We asked °him whether he was willing -to stay eardtla us. , • I go," he said "For six months I try get into ship -chandler business here in Almeria, but Lord Nelson, he give away meat, figs, wine, eggs, every- thing to ships that tome. So I lose three thousand pesetas and, give up. No got mare money, , I go. Where you go? — voyage is spoiled," • • Refuge.. 1 ani afeald of empty days that fill with sudden thoughts of . I anuet, seek •peece in little thitige; As othee women learn, to de. 'Therge to time tositand -dream; A. leetely house needs eedleea care To keep it, gay and .beelitifule As it Wee once, when love waa there.. 8o I Will trite my garden. patlia, • And I Will sew and sWeep end sing, And ibaie to braver hearts than Mine The ,conafert; rememberisigt —Matgaret De Laughter, When we told hini his eyes grew wide with astonish -Meet 1 -le reflected tor a moment. and then said -he thought range Of 13ritish Columbia by Prof. R. T. 'Chamberlain of the University of the ship was too small- for safety and resigned. We sent for Lord Nelson agate and asked for another cook. •"I know eery man" he said without -a moment's hesitation. "Speak Eng: lish saxne as you; better than me.. Name Martini. Good cook, good sail- or. Been ten year at sea. American ship. Yes. 'Fine man: I tell hina. You see." • Martini Was quick and clever in the 4 :1 • Failing Sighi Arresta E DI I' GIRL Wile"' Plain Tats allies • eight, the ,tetertlef rhell madici or other infective, er ewes the penetretten bf the eyeball, .,,,can be 'arreeled. 'within three days by tittles'', times of pure eowef milk Into the Jun - bar regien.of the patient, according to Dr. EdWard R, Goolde, of Beaten, who arrived. at New York recently after live months' study in Veinea ofis ' th new diseovery by phyelcia.us • of the hospital atteched to the University ot Vienna. Dr. Gookin denied early reports that the, milk injectioes are a mire ,for blindnesi. Those who are already Whitt,- he Said, may not •hope for the restorationsof their eight hyalite meth- od; but those who are but partially blind from infection or penetration, or those in whose eyes the iefection has just been diecoverecl, have good rea- sons to hope that their sight will get no worse, ena also that gympathetic ophthalmia- .(aftectiou of the other eye) will be prevented. . For the naltk injection treatment, said Dr, Gookin, no one Vienhese doc- tor claims. credit. , It was discovered, he declaredby agroup • of deetoes • ebief among whom, perhaps,' are Ade - end' Doctors Lindner and 'Guist.- (Cot - :ens •inditates' zoinething more than a doctor, or combination of.doctor and professor). "Successful treatments have been given in so many cases in Vienne," Dr. Cookie continued, !Ilea the d:iseovery may be ectid to have passed the peperis mental stage. It is establiehed as an absolutepreventive in far More,' than fifty•per ,cent. of .cases. if the patient does mit respond in three dage'thead he is considered beyond hope " and no other remedy ie. attempted. The discovery Is particularly valu- able in the case of infaites tv.hase eyes are affected at Meth. Any. eye temple; resultant from infection, may be ar- rested, In them at cisme by the milk in- jections. It seems simple enough for home treatment, but there are details which only a 'physician experienced in this work 'can handle.". " "Pure, unadulterated cow's milk is the only ingredient. , This is 'boiled for not less than four, nor more than five minutes. Then it is Permitted to cool to body ternpe.rature, 98.6 degrees, be- fore the injection .is made., The isenotant injected in an adult i ten cubic' centimetres, or 160 grains. This muchis injected in the lumbar region once al day for three 'successive days: That is all. After that the infection; or falling sight, is arrested for good and all, or else tlae'case is hopeless. The dose for 'infante under one Year galle-y and had once made a voyage in lidone cubic centimetre once a day for a steamer to Newport News,but he three days." ,was no man for going aloft, and it wee" hard:p -understand Lord.Nelson's en- thusiasm for him unless—sure enough, • we learned -on investigation that Mar- tini had been trying to break into the ship -chandler business, and that Lord Nelson had had to give away supplies to defeat hins. • The wind; came westerly on the fourth day, and as we were making sail Martini appeared on deck with • his bundle under his arm and, saying that his son was eery 'sick, resigned, So we went to sea 'without a cook. History of the Cabbage. - Remarkable facts concerning the cabbage have been discovered by Pro- fessor' Ruggles Gates, the botanist. It is stated that cabba,ges, kales, cauliflowers, and brussels sprouts ell originated in the wild cabbages. a na- tive of the coast and the South of Eng- land. The cabbage as we knowit was the first developMent of the wild 'plant, and 'from it came the cauli- flower and the sprout: . APparefftly there- WaS no gradual de- velopment. . It Just happened spon- taneously. In the case of the cauli- flower there was an inflorescense, and the green flower turned to vvhite and became Succulent and fleshy, though not to the degree we know it to -day. A,s a food the cabbage is extremely valuable, because it contains lime and To be completely healthy people re- quire roughage, coarse indigestible material, just as animals do. Cabbage furnishes roughage and supplies lime. It should be steamed, and not boiled or cooked in soup. • New,Peaks FOund in CaribOo • Range. • Eight new mountains have: been • found and ascended in the , °teethe° Say 'Bayer Aspirin" INSIST! Unless you see the "'Bayer Cross" on tablets you are ..not getting .the • genuine. Bayer Aspirin' proved safe by inillioriS anctpresP.ribed by phy- sicians for 24 years. Accept ot,.21/ -a Bayer plac,,M1.!. • • Which cOntains proven directions allayee boxes 4 15- teblets Abe bettlee of te and 100-eareggiets A44101,10ertelie teak fiegifaeree in tekeeSial -be '11,4!tikeetsts •mote seetieteleiester oil 0114.004 Chicago's Department ofGeology, and Allen Ceepe, Nev York, engineer, who have recently returned. One is among the highest in the Canadian North- , Hitherto even old guides imAlberta were unfamiliar with the Alpine slope of the range. • • Chamberlain and Carpe also ideated the he dwate s br the Thompson and Canoe- Rivers, and they ere the frret white men ever to note the glicial sources , of -thee° twO mountain Weems. • They camped on the,rocks as high as 10,000 feet, using a epecial powder for fuel. . In yourTofage.MI?:012etttlit; p,soen. e Shadowings of the man to be, And, eager, dream of Whet, my soh Will be in tsventy year& and one,: But when you are to manhood gragrie And all your Mai/heed ways are knoWn • The shall I, Wistfill, try to tegtee , The eland you onee 'were fel yottr faae. TA -Julia .Tuhua6u Davis, rit 1 :Pal 1'30(1'4c ,,'‘ Re?±•Cilled EAFiT In 'ttt86 Ma deard th motho ,wasi,44.e. the Ce at, XilaPreYed iiM 'vat sttould 1)0 as 0,0),8, 0001, Their ji)Wa:gruhaienhmo'01:Pr<41ch e0:11.$Y dleex; mixed soil Jand„•,111(1.(.'1.• y lo • girl of elghteeo- -write$ tleh. f'117 brieic bease with 'frante vat 11 growieg girls are to become w*il a o1dier,---tnied to give pie n danee ciressi NI, J. Kent, BOx 419, LOlidonr developed, bealthy women, their oow and then, and SO I got to know 011ta.cle. ealth must he carefelly guarded. him, lindyard's mother and stater 100 papti Pereflittii8,/ eMe°1: edrse140'.. 101 t°11s11 do 0 ilt°1•ite felfeleeusn:t',Iarepoillmb ti%vio:rortievattillieeurpec'offloolell';:t1.:ef8CW:at174,ea. rlelt:41a: 0 jw.)1.0;)1gearptilleittilawnir that tell of approaching W It is an fraporiane tints of life, Where then Sub -editor of wirat, he -Noted wh.orp bfller sprinkle fleetise, sweet signs or anaemia. are evideut you must zette Lahore. pallor, heaeactie, baclfache 00 ether loco rag, the CiVil and WittarY 13Welallas eovr:r.iytswriagudow:if.caliceblows— movicie the sufferer with the eurest tPlain Thki fhmatmtitenteejtiltaalts he;,,ui-vavrro)tee.: nSetaoulcdi isaunt,dlila.,Lortraeitiexl.,ozar,reci, means of makirig new blood. I And down tho Path pink hollyhocks heed plenty of nourishufeele plenty of Remember, pale, blgodlcsse girls pearP4rtEkl:natedielpel ettei:ti e page Y gurthd•e'001% 'Words.. whicb, With thonghtfal/inge steep, and _regular .opee-air exe,ecise. and Military . Gazette • mad curiously tdeg But to save the bloodless euffeeer she enough did, not Set the hills ablaze. As child, 1 used to tracer: must hatte new blood—and nothing Some pebple thought them "Father "Tiaras non roamer° nisi meets the ta,se so well as, Dr. Wil-; funny," and some wondered IaghId1y, serenas," Herb 0/ ;grace These pills increase ; Who the, dickens is It. H..?" But the, And comfort, no.,,vadays, since life the supPlY ef new, red blood; they tales and dittiee .gave no offense'at J1 ,Mac mixed my saa with showers, stimulate. the appetite and relieve theitar the simple reason that no .one re -1 To itnow the dial yet ptociaims-- weary back and limbs; thus they re- .00.gnized himeelf., though he immede More he,alth and charm, and being to ,ately saw how exaetly the ce,p fitted anaemic .girle the rosy eheeks, and some one else, bright eyes of strong, happy girlhood. Ituelyard Kipling was so eldom Y91.1: can getthese pills through any Simla that I have always bit eon - dealer in medicine, or by mall at 50 vinced that his sister helped hint a gents a bps from The De. Williams', great deal in the ground -work of his Medicine Ces, Brockville, Ont. tales and ditties; she .had a more in- timate knowledge 'than he of Sinila The stolen Duchess, and its society. Miss. Kipling was a bright, clever girl, aed,,though ah e did No oue ever loved promihmiee more than 0,8.0/g:tante Duahess �f Devon- n{ltday.,rat°b'she.'everything dis- shire; at her London na.xision she, was tinctly.She was the bright darusercomplete the hen bird lays her .large. the . cenere er, tee .s,oetat aee degatteet who, when Lord Dufferin laskeds her geoaps that swayed the kingdom. Hew wily she was not dancing, replied With red eggs in the, heap ,and the natural tore, could she have known that alter a ' smile, "You -.14 I sem. quite ,heat hatches', • them. The hammer.. amounts to a three -roomed tenement, delighted she Would have -b•eete there- hea_cied stork Africia builds what young; I am only eighteen. Pe -has when I am forty I shall get some part- . her death she would be the most talked -of wornaa in the world! •nere." This quiet little •dig' at .the. made of enormous sticks fisted be- tween -the braechee of e tree.: Any or- • meddle -aged ladies ho pranced about Gainsboa•ough, writes Mr. E. M. Dole Rowers when the auburn -haired duch- in the Mentor, was at the height Of his • with .tlee Hill ea:eta-Ms while their dinarY boy could Creep into the lowege Rudyard KiplingSs verses,. ,'elep'artment. • daughters at out appears in one ef O • ess ordered frem•him a full-length per- ' veling publisher happened to find the "H.aven't1 paade you what you are?" Plain Tales, on an Indian railway book- asked the wife, proudly. , ancl" the costume. • After the picture • had passed into the lady's possession, about the year 1178, he aecasionally . lent it for •exhibitionse then it dropped out .of 'sight In 1841 a well-to-do haberdasher saw the picture in the cottage of an old seametress, who had cut it down to fit a apace over. her mantel. He bought it for two bun - deed ' and seventy -flee deliars and thirty-five, years later sold it to a well- known London firm of eat dealersat a prott of over fifty thousandelollars! At this point there enters the sir:tit- :WI', figure of -.Adam: -Worth, au,. Am eris tan criminal, who in May, 1875, was directing from his luxuriousapart- ments in London the operations of an enternationel.band of thieves' and fort gars.. One of ,his aide. had fatten into the hands of _thepolice and .was in Newgate Prison. While' trying to de- cide whetto do to get him out Worth, pessing. along Bond Street one after- noon,. noticed .the line of carriages drawn up before Agnew's, where the DaChess of Devoitehire's picture ara,s on view. Immediately he conceived a plot. He would 'steal the 'painting that had set Londo0 astir and hold it as. hostage against the release of his con- eeclerate. , The next night he climbed through a window, cut the portrait from a stretchingframe and -carried it to a safe- hiding place. When the robbery I was , discovered the world of art was thrown into convulsions. A day or se later the Messrs. Agnew received an anonymous conimunication stating that the picture Would be surrendered if they would go bail for the prisoner th Newgate. A scrap of the convas was inclosed in the letter. The own- ers would enter into no negotiations thet"would associate them in doubtful proceedings, and 'Adam Worth found the stolen masterpiece on his hands. , Despite desperate efforts • Scotland Yard got -no Clue te the perpetrator of the crime, and some .time afterward the .robber carried the portrait to America, concealed under the false bottom- ef his trunk. For twenty -Aye .years the painting was sought by de- tective agencies all over the world while it ley concealed in warehouses -in New Yerle in Brooklyn mid in Bos- ton. • • • In 196.1 word came to Pinkerton's detective agenty through Pat SheedY, a •notorious New York ..gambler, that the picture, th,e disappearance of which had never ceased to be the bb- ject of. dieeussion in art 'circles and in the underworld, would be surrendered 'upon payment of the reward oe five thousand. dollars. After a -life of eX- travaganee'. Worth was penniless. A secret message was sent to Mr. Mor- land Agnew, and in Chicago a few -1 weeks leterthe canvas was plated in his hands, • ,. When exhibited in ' Londen the • Stolen Duchess' • was viewed by hys- terical crowds. ,T, Pierpont Morgan, after. .a few 'moments' examination, bought, the picture Mr One huadeed and fifty thotmand -dollars. At Ur. -Margate's death -the' 'painting estMe ba.cic to America and waa Shown for a white at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 10 1916, it Went tb ;Mrs. Herbert L. Satteriee, Mr. Mciegan's daughter. How's Your Practice? "Well, Bloom," a phyeldian asked a -yetue.g. colleague Who was just tetetet- leg; "hew's' 'goer practice?" In the Morning hardly enStone comes," was the reply, "arid tis the afternoon the rush 'falls' off 4 bit." .When sending money by mail Mile Dereinien Exiles/fie Money • Orders, Safer than sending' bills. • ees wings beat the air it the rate of 190 ateoltea a Second. Perennial as the flowers— , Its gospel: "Take no heedof rain -- Count just the sunny bents!" , •--Mazie V: Caruthers • Wonderful Eird Architects. The mound birdsof the East Indies are notable builders. In size they are about...as big as aa average barnyard fowl, but they build houses teller than the tallest man and, sereetimee fifteen yards round. As 60011 as the house is Not Reproachful. It. eves same years later that a tra- trait., .He made four peeliminarY sketches before.deelding on the pose . Acute Sight Enables Birds to Spot Food. Compared with birds, human wings have poor sight. It is•weil known that an eagle • is capable of sighting its quarry from a great height, and is able tb swoop clown and seize it exactly in the centre of ite neck. Most birds have good sight, but in some the faeulty is more developed than in others. The woodcock, for it - stance, has the remarkable power of flying at a great speed through dense thickets as though it were flying through an open space. " It.is also.astonishing to see the pace at whIch a bird will alight upon a tree •or building. Only most acute sight en- ables it to do this accurately. • Then, how quickly birds discern food that has been left on- the ground! Throw a piece of bread down at a time when no birds are near, and in a few moments a, number of them will be on the spot: SUMMER HEAT HARD ON BAB No season of theyear is so danger- ous to the life of little' gates as is the summer. 'The excessive heat theti`ws the little stomach • out of order so quickly that unleee .prompt aid. is . bend the; baby may be beyond all hu- man help before the mother realizes he is ill. Summer is the ;season when diarrlaoea, cholera infantum, dysentery and ,colec are most prevalent.' Any one of these troublet meg perdre deadly' if net promptly treated. . During, • the summer the mother's best friend is 13aby's• Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels, .sweeten the stomach and keep baby healthy. The, Tablets are sold by.medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box,from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont. "As She is Wrote." •Over the office of a forwarding agent In.front of the old Shinbashi ,Itailevay Station in Tokio is the alluring invi- tation to -"Leave.youreluggeige ,with us and we willseed „it:in every direction," • Not tar of 44111 11101,6 remarkable advantages were offered pe, a millin- er's shemssign, bearing the ' somesehat egitivacel legend: ' "Clothing of woman tailor: Ladies furnished ,in the upper storey"; and yet more misleading, "Respectable ladies have ills upstairs," Olean Minds. He—"Ot •eouree women should .vote. They deserve.. suffrage as much as .men—more, because their /MIAs ere purer end cleaner." She --"Of • wares their tubule are cleaner, but how do You inaolv that?" 1-1e"Because they change these so match ofteeeri" , Man is Immortal till his work is ,done. --.460.06 Williams. fillnard'a Linifnent for 1111MM:fetish% stall and, grasping the genius of them, "Darling," ansWered the husband, arranged to republish them. From have 1 ever reproached you for It?" that moment Rudyard Kipling became • famous. Minard's Liniment Relieves Pain. To a Boy Scarcely Three. When you are. old enough to know The jogs of kite and boat and bow And other ;suchlike splendid tlaing,s That bayhaod's rounded decade brings, I shall not give you tropes and rhymes, But, rising to those rousing times, shall ply well the craft I know ." F0of a-hyaelluipsghakllitteea'acilhd mboeaotnaenedabg°awin' The goodie art of beleg ten. Meanwhile, as on' a rainy day When 'tis not possible to play,. The while you do your best to grow, I pls- the other craft I know And strive to build for you the mood Of daring andof fortitude, With fitted word and shapen phrase, Against those later wonder days, When first you glimpse the world of • men Eseyond the bleakeg side of ten. G. Neihardt. • The Tyrant. Young Mother --"What in the world makes the baby cry ao?" Ditto Father -(wearily)—"I suppose se overheard .me say that I managed to get R little sleep last night." BACK ACHED TERRIBLY Mrs. McMahon Tells How She Found Relief by Taking Lydi;,T. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Chatham, Ont.—"I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a run-down condition after the birth of my baby boy. I had terrible pains and backache, and was tired and weak, not fit to do my work'and care for my three little children. One day I received your little book and read it, and gave up tak- ing the medicine I had and began taking the Vegetable Compound. .1 feel much better now and am not ashamed to tell what it has done forme. I recommend it to any woman I think feels as I do." —Mrs. J. R. MoMARON, 163 Harvey St., Chatham, Ont. Lydia E. Pinitham's Vegetable Com- pound, made from roots and herbs, has for nearly fifty years beenresthring sick, ailing women to health and strength. It relieves the troubles which cause such symptorna as backache, painful periods, irregularities, tired, worn-out feelingS and nervousness . This is shown again and again by such letters as Mrs. McMahon writes, as well as by one woman telling another. These women know, and are willing to tell others,what it did for them; therefore, it is surely worth your trial. •• Wornen who suffer should write to the Lydia E.Philtham1VIeclicineCo.,Cobourg, Ontario, for a free copy of Lydia U. Pinkham's E'rleate Text -Book upon "Ailitents Peculiar to Women." *a 4 Insect Bites! • Minard's taltes the ethig out of them. Take it to the woods With you. 7 It is a vain man that grins to show how white his teeth are. People a sense avoid affectations. 1JRIN fonYouR EYES WholesomemeantRefreshing !) Nervous Peopie That haggard eare-worn depressed look 'will disappear and nervous, thin people -will • gain in weight • and strength when BitroPhosphate is taken for a short time. Price $1 per pkge at your druggist. • Arrow Chemi- cal Co., 26 Front St. East, Toronto, Ont. Cowie Baby's Skin With Cuticura Baths Don't let your baby suffer or fret becauseof rashes, eczemas, irrita- tions or itching. Give hien a warm bath, using cuticura Soap freely. Then anoint affected partS With Cu-' ticura Ointment. The daily use of Cuticura does much to prevent these distressing troubles. Sample E!ioh Fro br IteR, Addresil Cedusdial Depot: 'Outioato, I", 0, Sox SUS, IA mama.' Prine Soap 25a. Ointswint ES and No. TalcutolSa. ZINO" elm nolo. Shaving Stick. Asthma and Hay Fever— A Guaranteed Relief. "I have arranged with all dreggists here, as well as ifl all other towns of Canada, that every sufferer front As - flame:, Hay Fever, Bronchial A.stirina or difficult breathing • in this city can try any treatment -entirely at My risk," Dr, R. Sehiffmann announces. Ile sayS "Buy a package of my Asthma: - dor, try it, and if it does not afford you immediate relief, or if you do not find, It the best remedy yeti have ever used, take it back to your dru.gglst and he will return your money, cheerfully and without any question whatever. After seeitig the grateful 'relief it has af. farded in hundreds of °Rees which had been considered incurable, and which had been given up in despair, I knew what it will do. I am 50 sure that it will, do the same for °theta that I am net afraid to guarantee it will senate inetantaneously. Dru,ggiSts, anywhere handlitig Asthentstior urlli return your money it yoU sey SO. You are to be the sole judge aad under this positive guarantee absoletely no risk is rue hi buying," Persons preferring to try it before buying • will be sent a free sample. , Address R. Sebiffmaxt Co., Prom., 1184 N. Main, Los Aagelese Calif, ISSUE No.