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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1924-09-11, Page 7Ntr, vt„,„ 19.1711:;71117.1,7-11r.nivii, !i11,15;77.1176,11;"". rr,rr 1'1 ";10,--;•;.;-.r irlq1.10.1.17A,741in!;q14,71,411,1117777,17,irriry , . ; 1 5 Thuteclay, September 11, 1924. lecrTNOHAM ADVeselerCEsTIME, M(II1SI ENTER PLANES IN RAcE FACTORIES WORK NIGHT AND DAY ON CRAFT. Four Nations to Compete for • Schneider Cup at Baitirnore in October. British aircraft manufacturers axe working day and night constructing two seaplanes to compete for the cev- eted Schneider Cup, which was hest to the IJnittsd States at Cowes last year, and for which four nations will con- test next October in Baltimore. A ,tecue of pilots and mechanics al- ready have been pelected, and satis- faction over the poesibility of winning the cup thi,s year is expressed gen- erally theoughout the ountry, At one tenth it appeared -unlikely that Great Britain Would enter the contest. Ow- ing to the poor financial coneitione of the airgiaft, industry, there was little prospect of sending over even a team, much less specially- .cons.tructed auper- speed seaplanes. •Arrangements were completed at, the last moment, howe-ver, and evork en tee planes is being rushed. One of the 'neebhines will be a one -float sea- plane driven by a 550 -horsepower Napier Lion motor, and is beteg built by the Gloucestershire Aircraft Coin- Pany. ....She is a biplane—a develop- ment of the famous Bamel—and de- signed specially for the contest by H. P. Folland. The Napier'engine is one der tile feudal custom of the Norman,s of three, also built specially for the was • the officer responsible for the race. It is generally believed the "buttery" er• foocle warehouse of the • Plane will do better than 270 miles an castle, an efece of great responsibility Folks who Ivarit the very best Use RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE T-2 Stirnarfles and Their ()Tiffin . SPENCER, Varietion—Spenser. , Racial Origin -.-English. Source—A title of office. One of the most peculiar points about the social and military system of the Normans was the manner in which occupatione which to -day we look upon as of an humble, household nature, Were exalted lute titled of - flees. The answer, of course, Is thee in those days each feudal castle, the social 'unit of all who were not tillers of the soil, was, though a single "hoteselield," a small nation in iteelf, largely independent and ovving vassal- age to coants and kings only as' a unit. Thus the keeper of the "family" purse was in reality, the "secretary of the treasury," and the head of the household kitchen was the commis- sary-general. • The "despenser" or "clespencer," un - hour. Flying Boat of Great Speed. , The other entrant is to be a super - marine biplane flying eoat, driven. by 650-hem.sepower Rolls-Royce Condor, and is expeeted to attain almost un- believable speed,. Lord Edward Gros- veseor • will ,ba.ve charge of the, team In days -when sieges weee laid, often not to be lifted for months or even years. This, title, however, when coupled With the word "le" (the), as of course it was, seen became too elumsy even for the Norman tongue, with the restilt that it did not take many generations , before.the more oonamon form of the when it sails for America next month. word evae"spencer" or eseenser." There Larry Carter, one of Britain's fore- • • most air pilots, will handle the Glou- cester boat. Henry 13irad, who won the Schneider Cup in 1922 and was the only'British starter. in last year's oontest, will pilot the super -marine. • Hubert Broad, noted for hie experience with De Haviland plaiaes, Will aCCOM- weee many, many castles in medieval England. Hence there. are many Spencer families to -day. Variations—Seller, Seeler, Sadler. . Racial Origin—English. Source --Occupations., It is not possible to tell with aceur- acy in the iedividual case -which of two s.ources these family names have come from, with the exception of the last named. It may be taken for granted, how- ever, that, like. saddler, the rest of teem 'in-- the vast majority o1 caees come "from the oecupation of makeag saddles, The assumpti,on that there is any connection with our modern word, "seller," or salesman, is erroneous, for the medieval English did not use this word to desigeate tradesmen. Sadler is a form of the name trace- able to ,the Anglo-Saxon. word. "Sell," however, was the word most often used by the Normans in the early period to denote a saddle, and it en- dured for a long time. In fact, it did not become obsolete until after Spen- cer wrote: . "He left his lofty steed with golden. sell, • , And goodly gorgeous barbes." The form. Sellers, Seller and Seeler, however, may also be derived from the old word "eeler," which was the, appel- ation of those craftsmen who manu- factured seals. < • A RECIPE, FOR LASTING LOVE pany the team as relief pilot. .Botli France end Italy are reported A, young eusband, speaking ofs els to be devoting leech time and thouelit bride, said o his mother:. She ie so 1 on planes with which they hope to win the highly prized trophy. However, the coneensus 5 opinion is that the contest will be chiefly betWeen Great Britain and the 'United States, with , - England having a shade in its favor. The predictions are based on the re - ,poet that the American entrant -will be a Curtiss'navy racer which as a land • machine did 266 miles an hour last ,• year. Coneerted into a s.eaplane, its speed, accerding to the experts here, will be reduced considerably. , „ - • Odd Accident 'Statistics. Every day in the year two people who leave their homes in London to go to business fail to return. They are killed in street accidents: Each year, sees • an increase ie the number of street and road accidents, so that to- day More people are -killed in this way • than by any other sort of accident. Insurance comperdes transacting ac- cident businessliave ealculated that • one out of every 'ten pees -ems insured •- meets with an accident of sense kind in the course of the year; and that one ,.. accident in every hundred ends fatal - The number ote people Who eie as, the result of accident is highest' in the United States There, out of each 10,- 000 deaths, 370 ate violent ones. The number of fatal accidents 'which occur get money out of hira if he is tight- —Dorothy Dix. 'yearly in the milted States is over T4-- pleasant to live with." The mother was thankful, for she knew, that all was well with her sou. When all is said, the greatest domestic virtue is to be pleasant to live svith. It is the dis- positions, not the looks, nor the brabas, of the contrecting parties that make marriage a. success or a failure. It is curious but true that things that count so much before 'marriage matter very little after mareiage. Be- fore marriage we put great stress on mentel brilliance, on charming man- ners. We are allured by a beautiful face. We are 'fascinated by a witty, and entertainieg converstionalist. We are channed by those who have gra- 11 he never shows her any tenderness o raffection, or gives any sign that he still cares for her. The thing that would make her go down on her knees and thank Heaven for having given, her her hearts desire in a husband would be for him to be Pleasant to of Japanese homes -for many years, is live with; for him to keep -up the lover- being displaced rapidly by the gas like attentions of their courting days;. stove. SatUrday's Child. eorne,aee teethed on a 01,1Yer epotni, With the stare etruile for a rattle' I out eliy teeth ae thebiack•raecocin, For Implemente of eattle.- Some tire eweddied in eilk.and dOWP, Ane.heralded bY a star; Th.ey ewethed.ree limbs in a sackcloth gown len a night teateiva.s blaek'as tar, For some gedfather and gotleame The epeleet fairies be; Dame Poverty gave me My name, And Pain godfathered me. For I was born on Saturday, "Bad time for plenting a eee•de" Was all my father had to say, And, "Ono mouth; more to feed." , Dea,th •cut the -strings that gave Me Titfe, , And handed me 'to Sorrow, The only kind of middle wife My folks could beg or borrow. • —Countee P. Cullen. • A Cross of Pearls. What are perhaps the most remarle able natural pearls in tbe world are weeks, but the iron hand of authority being exhibited in tee Auetralian Pa„ has won out. villein at the .ritaeli Empire Exhibe • tion, •TitiliS OF INDIGIN`FION This exti.aordinary exhibit, known - - • Witee• Y11PT T.1,`, a • , . MONEY 'PO Ise/sea-la . . ' , 1031(1071'R14,1W911,11' tiRaei•r' ,iereseet steslese ce 11, I.. A'11111.0141F31, tt-ettetc,1,• '71501cl- •ecology, 11,11u,1 c logy, 1 tg NO 011 4 ()pill .77, victoria et, "It •4104, 111 gm, to ,s tne. to a 11 B1001, 135, sss (Iam) ,tttl,„ Att • , Ivo n14;ketanni,11lwir1 hone wbop igitx,Q1trel • `."4:1F4' L" 444A4'''"4. Bil'O'likets of c kw It le Jest over a yo -r einse Mr eitae sey ttbo rd:Itiiansti•he Otir 11:;1 srtlettier lee tr!neritalfleirll. useelasei lwea Inc:tea ,tsuo:11:11ier hia put the Cobol in bts Tjlo Southern Alps, wilic North to Sleuth of the Soutli brjru,:r1,4:3,elpi'le.un111,,vd1::(7001t131,,v0,.itTtteia,40one../e..clejf, 1524, Melte Years formed an insurnMentable beerier to railway travel. onga lied been constructed to the eaStern Isilemeialaert. 5'anYlail7lsed onflerlEhtviPti"9:1110 ana western slopes ef these motentains ptirlaebti':omts°0,1:1d°vtehethsaatml l'eleti14:11.1)721tIshole:sh el: over1C) ill' Ot.ssdAel der tblilly:Irga, siltpSatIis dangerousMej Yee:a gliad t'0r 7bcI, dthaeydoatyelcier3fg tGeeeerlg)lelayeaolie ae in tlie Teen, for a long time, engineers be- zeeo.e ea7thge are contained in tile looping to the 13ritieh Elec.:tele Coin- moral pawri, which hove bee23, collect. • Prielnythwroeur;libtahricsi pa at s's.vs ,osiv.kh ebroerltnhge otuuini fienedgmlse"peyuebSei---iiir:heI:edterIlifeensetiebe:v'ottekleshd's oar't"-eneill.fingeeoes.' ibe he- tarrinhseriosetilt,ao aTultiemigeelei:fneea0r010y ffieveet and gems from this huebands' "Golalen • Major-General sir Lee stack, Igever- dieect eorineeting link between the .. nar-general of the Sudan and sirdar 01 a half miles long, and forms the only Treasury" are: , The interfering man otae e'ote emu - the Egyptian army, has had a difficult it is now possible to travel from Cerist- e east and west coasts of South Island. If thou wouldst be wise or prosper- fusiort in his house." situation to handle the past few ceurch in the east of Greymouth on One, get married," . the weet. coast without any change at .. • having drunk bee. For if thou close "Undertake nothing as the result oe Constructed entirely by Beitish words which can have e second. mean - workmen, using only British materials, ing may come forth from thy mouth Otirst Tunnel is one mile longer than . e svitnout thy kno-wing it. 'When thou the Severn Tunnel and is the seventh longeet in the Werlde ' there will be no one there to Put Pitt fallest down and brealteet thy bones, his hand to help thee. Thy boon com- panion will stand 'up and say: `Away with this drunken beget!' " Minard's Liniment Reeves Pain. ----o-----_..__ as the Souteern CT OSG, is a el:aster of nine pearls fmaning an almost perfect Latin .cross. The sheet is composee.of seven eeeres measuring an inch and a half ir, length, while the arms of the cross are formed of one pearl on each side opposite the second pearl from the top downwards. Exansination under a powerful microscope shows that the gems were , precluced by nature In dole present arrangement, probably as a result of metual &impression .durivg growth. • The pearls were discovered in 1e74 by a pearl fisher at Roeburn, ixi Western Australia, but so aanaied were the finder and the owner of the vessel that, belileving it to be a heaven - wrought miracle, they buried the trea- sure and left it to be forgotten. It remained hidden until 1879, when an Australian explorer, Alexander Forest, passed through Roeburia and, hearing accidentally of the pearl, dis- closed its existence to the woeld. It is now the property of a Londe merchant, and Is valued at $50,000. • Gas Replaces Brazier. The charcoal bhazier, characteristic for him still to give her kisses with a thrill' to them; for hina.to tell her that she grew more beautiful to him and dearer as time -years went by, and that his lucky day was the day he won her Lor a wife. A woman rejoiees in her husband'a success in business. But she ca.n be utterly' mi-serable if- he he a surly dis- position; if he 'never speaks. at home exeept to find fault, and if the family lives in terror of delete or saying Some - thin gthat will bring one, burst of tem- per. The husband who makes life a grand, sweet song to his wife is the man who is pleasant to live With; the man who is cheerful and good-natured, ciousness and poise, but after rear- who jollies his wife and pets his child- • siege we grow tired of looking at -even ren,. and at the very sound of whoee a living picture, and we soon cease to key in. the door exerybody brightens ,see beauty in it if that ie all there is up and begins to smile. ' " .. to a person. • And precisely the same thing Is true wife es not necessarily- the best wo- • 1 - Keeping Affection Alive. of wives as of husbands. The good. . The thing that is of vital importance man, or the best cook, or the best is the disposition of the one with housek-eeper, or even the woman who vrhom we have to live day in and day loves her hesbancl best. Many a wo- . out, in prosperity or adversity, in sick- , man who would gladly die for her hus- ness or in eteelthe I band nags him -so that he would. be Of, course, a wife is. glad that her 1 willieg- to die to get 'rid ofher. e husband is a man whose word is as i The erfect -wife is the woman who good as his bond, and that he is ia, le.asa.nt to live -with. -She is the spoken of as "Honest John Jones.e , woman -who is cheerful and good-na- But the knowledge that he husband is ' tured; Who is reasonable; who is ap- incorruptibly honest does not make, preciative and contented, and Who cane it any easier for Mrs. John Jones to ' asy a thing once and let it go at that 50,000. • listed- I * In English towns road.accidents act The thing that would matte for her 1 I -- count for nearly one-fifth of all violent happiness would be for him to be plea -1 Model of Niagara. deaths. Next come mune and scalds, sant tie live with, for him to be fairl A model of Niagara -- carrying In this case the greater numberof vic- and generous about money, and for , an amount of water directly prober - tints are. children, but a good many him to give her what he could afford tional to that of the real Niagara is women are killed in this. way. without haggling ovr.e •et. m helping engineers to reedy an evil The largest accfdent death -roll Nothing is of avail in making a wife thatthreatens to destroy the beauty among men. 18 caused by a,ocidentin happy if her husband Apparently ese of the tales. As the limestone wears s coal mines and in factories. Then garde her as nothing morethan a away underneath the "throat." of the comes the Mmilier of those killed piece of ,useful hounehold furniture; Horseshoe more and more weter Is on concentrating there and seems likely rahWaYs' The riSh of- d'reweini is net before many years to make the falls so great as fe generally -supposed, for ,no more than 'a huge V-shaped gully. out of 10,090 deaths °fey twenty-one Expetinlents with weire and artificialare eaueed by this mesens. irogissk is even smallele for in Eng- islands, placed in the stream above the falls on the mOdel, show how the hied enlY eeven persons in each 10,000 water tan be distributed se as to give aro berried to death, Out of 100 deaths the American Falls a greater volume front fire, flfty-eight are women aud forty-two are and keep cm the Canadian edge of the men. rn- - The inost risky occupatiote are Horseshoe water that the power co pany. on that side new 'fears that it thesse of miners and fishermen. Next etomee. that of' Motor -driving., arid will lose. • toilette thatof the housepainthr. The te ' re - i .ofe,qt. occupation is that or the cob- Quito Res ectable Spoile.d. "I hope," remarked his mother to , Say Bayer Aspirin little Willie, who had been to aparty in her absenee, "that you - washed -'11 Irva.,9 her birthday. ' "Delteest," his note read, "I'm seedieg. you a rose for INIST! Unless you see the "1 didn't have time 10wash more each year of your life."• "Bayer Cross" on tablets you 'than one," he eonfessed, "but I ate Dieleseatieelly, he ordered the liar- are not getting poe'tete the gent ' with that and kept the other in my 101 to deliver bet twenty roses. Wheo he had gone the florist said ost . , , p n is a good millions and prescribed by phy- to himself "Well 1311m Se ' The Only Reason. custelner, lei add another thet for geed sicians for 24 yearS, meaeuee," Bingo—"I'm going to bring my wife , round* to call on yea toesight." eie04,„5, A____,ccept __only _a. Witaerby---"Thaes right; but do me Ile who reeeives a good turn should Bayer pa.ckage a favor, ohl man- Don't let her wear never forget it; he who does one ---""--"" her new costume, I don't want my • thould never remember it.----Charrere whichcon tains proven directions wife to see it juSt now." Bayer Aspirin proved safe by Kindnest is the Motley Cie the, spir- .f...1 .1 A Isle e i eet , Alte, bottles of 24 and 100—Dreggiete 1-tia-i l'ea.'hl Jane' seellsee ; ee. ' ee". 311. Agpirat la .11 .e Mae Mork (regAtercA la tirenatton. ' 'vy nen 'yolk eeemee elee fie Canada) et 1n,aser gturtaggtout a dauxik. the pieciette rTit,:s: pins it, on. , lieetleisidester et eaUcellsatie Valkcly "Bayer" lioxea of 12 tabletri nine() (griel/Y)---"Why, that's just what we are eel-ill/1g for." • Japan is alseeusing 1,000,000 gas lamps in city stieets and '2,300 gas en- gines in the tiny factories that pro- duce everything erten ivory carvings to tooth -brush handles and from san- dals to seepages. Gas production to -day, with 10,000,- 000,000 cubic feet annually, is double that of 1914. Seventy-six companies, as compared with ten in 1914, furnish the service. , INDIGEST[011 s Nothing is more common in child- hood than indigeetion. Nothing is more dabgerous to proper growth, more, weakening to the constitution or more likely to pave the way to clang-er- ous disease. Fully nine -tenths of all the minor ins of childhood have their root in indigestion. There is no medi- cine far little ones to equal Baby's Own Tablets in relieving this trouble. They have proved of benefit in thous- ands of homes. Concerning them Mrs. Jos. Lunette, Immaculate Conception, Que., ewaites: "My baby was a great sufferer from indigestion, but the Tab - tete soon set her right, and now- I would not be without them." ]aby's Own Tablets ere sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. -Aquarium Too Small. Coalition Errors About This The Simplon Tunnel, on the main Trouble Into Which People Fall. Pares -Rome railway, is cut though the , Many people so far misuederstand heart of the Swiss Alps for a distance the digestive System as to treat it like of 12ee miles., while a huge boring a machine; eeglecting it until it works made through the Si, Gothard Pass, eluggisbly, thee irritating.it into work also in Switzerland, is nearly ten miles again by the use of purgatives. The in length stomach needs laelp at all times, but The greatest achievement of this a study of the proceseef digestion. will kind in the United States is a four • show that purgatives, as commonly and three-quarter mile tuenel through taken, are seldom necessary and- often the I-looso.c Mouetains in Ma.seachu- harmful. setts. To safeguard safeguard your digestion the diet mustbe cautioned. Over -eating is al- ways harmful, but one must assimilate enough food to supply the needs of the blood. Remember, tlee blood has to carry nourishment to all parts of the body and find fuel for its energy. Elence. when the blood becomes weak and fails to do its work, indigestion arises. Therefore the sure reraely for Indigestion is to build up the blood. If you suffer froze any form of indiges- tion choos.e your diet carefully and take wholesome nourishment: ' Above all, start building up your blood by taking a course of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Then under the influence of the new blood supply, your digestive sys- tem will respond naturally, your ap- petite improve and your food will do you, good. So begirt to imerove your 'The five -mile spiral tunnel in ther Canadian Rockies at Kicking Horse Pass ie a marvellous piece of engin- eering. , , Pocket Sundials. It was eat uncommon in the days of Queen Elizabeth for men to carry pocket sundials for the purpose of time -telling. Nothing•Less Th*an a Million 10'1 This Little Girl.. The perfectly absurd leeat,lort of the German currency has li•een the source of some humee along with a great deal of wretchedness. So the Berlin paper Ulk tells ef ,a,little German girl who la - farmed leer father that ,she could count, "Wonderfult" exclaimed her father. "• B"eOgnille-tmilielnlilo'nt, two miilion, these mil- lion," said the ehild importantly. Important as it may be to consider what you are making of life, it is no less important to size up just what life is making of You. Dials of all kinde were common then; If you say nothing, your words can - though previous to that time they had been little used in this country. One not be brought into court. of the oldest, erected ae.out the time of,Edward the Confessor, is still to he seen over the south door of Kirkdale Church, in Yorkshire, England. It bears the ifiscription: "This is the sun's marker at every hour, and Hay- ward made me and Brand the priest." The fashion- for dials began to spread digestion by starting to take Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills now. until the whole -countryside, partieu- You can get these pills from your druggist or by naail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 'What's become of the good old names 'Prudence' and 'Patience'?" "I guess they'v-e changed them to 'linprudenee' and 'Impatience'?" Useful Watch. Two brothers—call them William and Henry, although being good busi- ness men, were absolutely ignorant in so far as book-leaening goes, not even being able to tell the time of day, so that a clock' being entirely useless to them, was not among their posses- sions, However, the idea of having a good watch took their fancy, and so one was purchased to be owned jointly and carried by each on alternate weeks. One hot afternoon as they were weeding the corn, Henry paused end, wiping the moisture from his face, observed, "Wonder what time 'tis." William, whose week it was to • carry the watoh, leaned on his hoe • handle and, producing the glittering timeleace, held it out toward his brother with a elourish saying, "Wall, thart she be." "lDarn if she ain't," re- plied Henry, whereupolm they took their customary glance at the sun and resumed work. , -et Nature's Wonders. Muriel, visiting the country on a May day, came to a potel wlease shal- lows were full of tadpoles—thousands of them floppmg about in an itch of water, I "Oh" she cried, "see those tad•- I 1. poles! And just to thine that some day every one Of the horrid wriggling: Creatures will eatch into a beautiful ;butterfly!" • Mr. Youngheide--"Now that you have your water spaniel, ,dear, hole are you going to keep him?" . Y gb id "1' 1 1 a as ted that, lOve--our aquarium is al- } Ancient Indian people of the Valley age er too ..ma . of Mexico built a mighty stone strue- . I ture to the gods of their land, center - Dominion Em'ore 8s 1 mone"y. O ' ld-er 8 1 ins before Pharaoh and his slaves built - are Oil sale in five thousand oflices throughouCanada. the great pyramids of tgypt. It is t - said that this great structure has re- - The effect 01 athiales an eeomen en,.. ained silent and buried for nearxy and girls was the subject of a latent ee°°° Years' queetierinaire in Englerid. It was ad- dressed to those. persons who were thought to have special imowledge on the subject, such as physicians, prin- cipals of schools„and women students.: • Ultra -Plias lhate feeds the nerves The 0,118W61% $IloWtd a gerieral ap-', Stile Your Cream to tIS aild Ole. and old potteile need it to make them proval of all games except football, , tail' the hest reSlultS With 'high- feel and loo .[ younger. It'o the one hot cautioned girls to b. mederate in 1 est price for number one quality. bestneree builder for weak, nerve -ex, beekeY, ev7itiming, rowing and other , Daily returns, cans supplied, and Imitated men and wornah and that is larly in the North and in Scotland, was dotted, with them. We see them to- day in interesting 'forms at St. An- drews, Melville House., Hoilyrood Castle, Dundee Castle, and Many other places which are popular resorts of sightseers to England. • • The legends engraved on some of these old dials are very quaint. One, humble in its opinion of itself and mankind, , announces: "Shadows we are, like shadows we depart." • In. China, and Japan small dials made of boxwood are stilecarried and. consulted by their owners. Deserved to Succeed. • A story that is characteristic of Lord Leverhulme—for hae he not him- self made good owing to his dogged persev.eianee es -relates how a certain dogged and persevering eonenercial traveller worried the manager of a business-, in the most praise -worthy way, loran eider. . The manager, however, Was one of these nasty, soulless creatu.iesee' and • turned the traveller away every time. - Finally, he went still further and had the poor mate thrown out. Tame traveller pickel up his hat, and also himself, rushed upstairs again, and hailed the manager. "Look here, sir," he panted. "Joking apart, what sibout that order?" Plane Photos of Crops. Airplane photographs are beirig ex- perimented -with as an aid in °roe re- porting. - CLEAN'SEED CRAIN • Use IN EYES . IRRITATED By SUNNIND,DUST&CIND_ERS AECOFIMENDED 5010 B1 DRUGGISTS a-0211'MP* VISITS :Oh ro.10 000 CAhlt gops. 1.14/Il1to0 CO, CIIICAOO,VIII TO EXPECTANT • MOTHERS Letter from Mrs. Ayers Tells • How Lydia E. Pinkharres Vegetable Compound Helped Her Sprint Valley, Sask.--"I took the Vegetable Compound before my last confinement, when I got to feeling so badly that I could not sleep nights, my back ached so across my hips, and I ' could hardly do my work deringtiae day. I never had such an easy confinement arid this is my sixth baby. I read about Lydia E. Pinkhaves Vegetable Com- pound in the 'Fa.rrnees-Telegram' and wrote you for one of your books. We 0' have no druggist in our town, but I sew your medicine in T. Eaton's cataloeve. I ELM a farmer's wife, so have all kinds of work to do inside and outside the house. My baby is a nice healthy girl, vette weighed ,nine pounds at birth. I am feeling fine after putting in a large garden since baby came. (She is as good as she can be.) Yours is the best medicine for womens and 1 have told about t,_m t iita.n,devenrawwrittentorittentoBmAyfryu friends ab , Spring Valley, Sask. Lydia E: Pinkbam's Vegetable Com • - pound is an excellent medicine for ex- pectant mothers, and should be taken during the entire period, It has agen- era' effect to strengthen and tone up the entire system so that it may work in every respect as nature intends. All druggists sell this dependable medicine. x 0 Give it a trial. Fanning screens, wire --- cloth, zinc, repairs—Chatham Fannieg IVIIIIs and otter makes. Incubator supplies; Thermometers. MANSON CAMPBELL, Chatham, Ont. • Rub it In! For pain, stiffness, or 'inflammation apply Minard's and rub it in. - • • • • sports in which severe cohipetititte ef.1 eXleeeSe charges Paid.. Write for wily druggists guarantee it, Price $1 fort ins3. pioduce unusual fatigoe or cans riOW., eel' pkg.!, Arrow Chernietil Co., ter elleard's Liniment tor Recemetism. strain4 BOWES CO., Ltd. TORONTO Pewit St, Meet, Toronto, Ont. Keep The }laic Live And Glossy With enticnta On meth -4, gently tub spete of ee druffand itching with Cede:I-Maim- meet. Next morning shampoowit1-: a suds of Cetieura Soep and hot -teeter. Teis ireetment dots entitle to keep the scalp clean and healthy end prOZIOM hail giowth. involt tr.!! Mga. Aclaterc t2e;:n7"Vflgio:Nt4ci tAM 4V . 0%.Teear AbW Shdat,y No, ee-