HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-04-20, Page 7Inday, April 20, 1922, '
Tgg WINGOAM WANCg
,10
How Collars 'Came.
, The s ard "colia.r" ia taken Mai the
'Latinfoe necks Rad the thing is Prola
abla :as o1l as alm'ast 'ally article of
'Iranian deem .A.t. all events we have
• -direct evideitee,of tate ase of Some sort
,• of "collar" as 'far baelt as the times 'of
the aacient Phoenicians., to say neth-
ing of the Remelts and Saxons.
In those days' the, "oollar," often of
geld, was a mark of wealth and rank,
a Kane which till applies to tbe of -
tidal oollers a th•e great orders of
ltudashatood,, Later, the collar 'in Great
'Britain became a "livery" the retain-
ers of Mlle' great lo'rd wearing their
master's collar. Our avva stiff linen
-conar originated in Tudor days, and
its direct ancestor is to be seen la the
huge ruffs of the Beefeaters at th•e
Tower. •
The cellar remained a part •ot the
• "shirt, until, in 1825, • a Mrs. Hannah
Moutagne, a blacksmith's wife in
• Trey, near New -York, discovered ,in
• the, never-ending task of washing her
husband's shirts the advantages of a
•oollar that could be taken off and
washed by itself. A local tradesman,
Ebenezer Brown, took up her idea and
Made a fortune. •
Advice to a 'Salesman.
Every time you fail t� make a
remember that it needn't be all
failure.- The time is not lost. If you
'leave him with such a picture kn his
-mind that he will say, after you have
gone, "There goes a man. I have met
a real genuine man to -day. He made
.an impression upon me for his manli-
ness', hie character. I shall remember
him as a real man."
Leave him with a good picture in
his mind .so that he will say to him -
elf, "I have met a real man to -day, a
100% gentleman. I 14.ke that fellow."
Yea never know, my friend', alien
that will end. I have known oi s'everal
instances of that kind where a sales-
man who, lost an order was recom-
mended by his prospect for a very
niuch better position than he had. You
never know where the bad:impressions
you make will land you. ,
If you caaaleave a man with a good
taste in his mouth, make him- feel that
he has met a rare character, you need
not feel that your time is wasted or
that you have failed.
,Life is What One Makes of It.
Life is what one makes of it,
Etary hour of ev'ry day.
If one gives the best one may
One ellen reap the benefit,
When one gayly does one's bit
Through adventure, work or Play,
Life is what one makesof it
Ev'ry hour of ev'ry day.
Though one fear to lose one's grit •
When the skies bend dark and gray,
Helping otters on their way
One shall find with happy wit
Life is What ene makes of it!
—Charlotte Beeken,
The Truth.That Makes Free.
--"You shall know the truth and the
truth. shall make you free," ,
"Ignorance makes for sla.very and
enlightenment leads to emancipation."
-Good -reading, a liberal e.ducation
and\ travel, an open mind and wide
• mixing with the world set us free from
a lot of supers'tition's and fears. Know.
ledge is constantly freeing us from
ourlimitations. ,. The more We know,
the. • broader our knowledge , and ex-
perience, the freer we are, Comnare,
for example, the degree of freedom of
narrow-mindd ignorant man with
that of a broadenindea liberally- etas'
oated man. One lives in a prison; the
()thee in :a limitless univease. Verily,
the truth makes as free.
1, A Giant Spring.
Not fan from the townaof Twin Palls,
in Id•alio, is a spring that runs a Dig
electrical plant, It is called the
Thousand Spring, and there is nothing
like it to be found anywhere else in
the woeld. What a tremenclone spring
it' is may be judged from the fact that
it deliVers almost 1,000 cubic feet of
water a .second—eaeugh water to sup-
ply all the needs of the City of New
York!, It fiow,s outni a' lava cliff at a
oonsid,era.ble height, like the water-
fall of a eiream, and furnishes power
which, converted into electricity, is
distributed"for lighting and for other
purposes over an extensive area.
This World First.
There is an English caurch where a
box hangs in the porch. It Is used for
counnortidationa for the pastor. Cranks
put their notes ,in at, hitt occa,sionally
it does fulfil its purpose. Recently the
nalaister preached, by request, a sera
anent on "Keeognitioe. of Irriencla in
;Heaven," ,and dining the: week the fol-
lowing tote was, found in the box:
'Dear Siras-I•altontld be' much obliged
f Yeti could make it conyenient to
Preana to year coategatian on "The
Rocognitsen of Erie ds on,Earilin as
I have been comieg.,to Yew' church for
nearly e1c Months, and n'obody aloe
taltai anY aotite o ine
Straight 1-1aittand.
From .1,11ei 'women's, Peint of. arieW,
the ProVinee oBotgon, in, $01.Iebilweilt
N'tirleay, IS in eee•pespeei the
eirahle place of repideilbe tn.•,the Werld.
It 'rains there 800 'day•Sj& the -year
and, °Whig to the rao4•ttiesa :of the. cle
• • • •
mate, hair will not staiid to %cult. It
is to, 60111e:ill For tills, very reliSon,
lioeeever, ,hair-etirlers aee extra.
crIl'inarY 4enUttici thero,..ariel to Mitirti-
•faetueere •of mareet waVers,ant1.9tlier
stlehacoatrivainses • Bergen •offere
Moat prontising „opportnitity, tor th• o
8010 thete beatitifYing, 1-liatrulitatifiao
• .
ACID STOMACU IS
SOON .OVECOME
WALTER BRCiliDEUR SAYS
HE CAN NOW EAT ANY-
THIlkilG ON THE TABLE
Suffered So From Stomach
Troublo'He Dreaded For
Meal -Time to Come.
"Par the first time "in tWo years I
can eat a hearty meal without fear of
distress afterarards and I certeialy
am strong for Tanlac," said Walter
Brodeur, 1472 City Hall Ave., Mont-
real, Que.
"I had acid stomach of the worst
sort aud nothing agreed with me. Of-
ten for as long as an hour after eating
I felt that I was about to choke and
would just have to fight to get my
breath and I was so vvorried and ner-
vous that I dreaded for night to come,
as It meant hours of rolling and toss-
ing.
"Everything is changed now, how-
ever, and I am like a new man, eat
what I want, sleep all night long with-
out a break and get up hi the morning
feeling as fresh and active as a boy."
Taulac is sold by all good druggists.
—Advt.
The most uncommon sense is com-
mon sense,
British shipping was first registered
in 1960.
•MONEY ORDERS.
When ordering goods by rciail send
a Dominion Express Money Order.
The only -civilized state in the world
to be ruled absolutely by a woman is
Bhopal, the second most important
Mahomeneclan state in India.
Minard's Liniment for Coughs andColds
Don't Say It!
The harshest words that one can
throw are often these, to14 you so."
Nor are you pleased, yo•u must edenit,
Wheal you're the one they elision to
5oine people seem to take delight
in anything that smacks of spite--
,
they smile within at othera woes and
pelt them with "I told you so's."
Perhaps you try a venture new and
Somehow fail to see it through; there's
always emaeoae standing by: te give
the old "1 told you" cry.
With heart and Soul we all despise
the man who ever waxes wise and
very spitefully beetows his cynical "I
told you
— •
Age Mellows Bells.
The quality of tone M many cad
European bells could be accounted for
only by their age. After careful in-
vestigation, an ingenious bell maker
determined Met with a century of
use the bell clapper and the inner sur-
face of the bell became so worn that
they fitted exactly 'and a considerable
surface of each came in contact. Ac-
cordingly he cast a clapper in a form
that gave them a considerable con-
tact surface to begin with. The result
was all that he had hoped, A month
of lively ringing is still needed to give
any given bell a tone of the desired
quality, but the eeenomy in time is
obvious,
KEEP BABY WELL
• IN THE SPRING
Mothers who have little ones in the
home find the Spring a time of great
anxiety. At this ,season conditions
make it necessary to keep the baby in-
doors. He is often confined to over-
heated and badly ventilated rooms and
catches • colds which reek his whole
system. To gimrd against this a box
of•Baby's Own Tablets should be, kept
.in the house and an occasional dose
given the baby to keep his stomach
and bowels working regularly.. This
will prevent colds; constipation or
INVESTMENT. Good company. seko colic, and keep baby well.: The Tab -
Particulars from Campbell, 40 Adelaide
Tab -
0
Price $100•00. mail at 9-5 e a box 'from The Dr
WestToronto. . Wil -
one ommo,n share.
hams' aleclicine Co., Brockville,..Ont.
,
Preferred $100,o0 Stock, with Bonus •lets -are sold by medicine dealers or by
Surnames and Their Origin
FROBISHER
Variation--Forbisher.
Racial Origin—English.
Source—An occupation,
'With the "hp" that the family name
Frobisher or Forbisher is based un -
on an •occupation, Can you guess' its
origin? ; •
Probably not. Andthe reason is be-
cause the Word is alfbut obsolete, and
the exact occupation isobsolete also,
though there are a great many more
cir less akin to it in the Various indus-
tries of modern times'. ,
Occasionally, however, You will run
across the word "furbish.' Probably
a majority of people cannot tell, you
exactly what it means even thoUgh
they have heard or mare likely, read
it. ft -Means to polish. The "furbish-
er" or "ferbishee" of 'medieval Eng-
land was n "polisbena And again you
heve to conjure up a picture of life in
the Middffe Ages to realize what kept
him "so busy, what it was that needed
,so much polishing as to give, rive to
a :regular occupation. To -clay he- would
probalay polish automobiles, or put the
fifi gloss on combs. In the Middle
Ages he was kept busy polishing ar-
mor. He did for theiron and steel
clothing of the knight, squire and man-
atee= what the littletailor anima
the corner does' for the. ,worsted and
serge Clothing of the Sales manager,
'bookkeeper and clerk of to -day -for
rust was justes active 10 the Middle
Agee as dust is now.
RODGERS,
Variation—Redgere Rogers, Roger.
Racial Origin—English. •
Source—A given name.
The family .names of _Rodgers and
Rogers have been formed from a
given name, through the regular meth-
od of adding the termination "son,"
which in the, course of time has been
shortened to a mere "a" and in some
cases dropped :altogether, 'taus bring-
ing the family name back to the same
farmiias the given name from which it
developed.
Tae name of Rodger, tr Roger, is
Teutonic. In one form or other it is
to be found among most orthe Teu-
tenth races. In the Icelandic, that
branch of the Scandinavian tongues
which has changed the least of all the
Teutonic languages in the mine of
time, it was "Hrothgeir," beiag a coal-
pouad o/ the words laroth" and "geir,"
and lia.ving n meaniag of "famous,
spear." Incidentally it is from this
same root "geir" that the Feencli word
"guerre," meaning "war," as well as
the word- "war" itself, has been 'de-
veloped,
The old records show tat the forms
"Rodger" and "Roger" (the "g" being
pronounced herd) were used by the
Anglo-Saxons before the Norman in-
vasion. Tile form "Roger" also was
Norman and Fleurisa. The Danish
form was "Roedeger," 'Willie farther
south on the Continent under the
Latin influence, the given name be-
came "Vogler."
• Hemp Hairdo for Paper
• aking, -
An latereatiag itiveS'tigation resent-
...
ly %carried:out at the Foo -est Produets
Laboratoriee ef the r)epartmeat lef the
Interier, Canada, reates to the value of
hemp hu.ras aa a paper -making ma.
torial. Hemp burde are the waste
stalks of heinp from whieli the fibre
has been removed. Considerable
quantities of the hurds,„ at present a
mere waste product, are available in
Canada. • Seine attention haa been
given ,to this ,saajeet in the 'Gaited
States', where experiments have been
made in WI/doh the soda process was
used. The work at the Laboratories:,
hOwever, has been directed towards.
the applicatiou of the sulphite process,
widely used in. Canadian pulp mills for
the manufaeture of chemical wood -
Dile.) The results obtained indicate
that while the enaterial lends itself to
sulphite cooking the resulting pulp has
an extremely short fibre and is some-
what hard to bleach. The yield, how -
every is large, ; and the pulp might
advantageously be used as a filler with
pules of longer fibre. •
Seventeen Dynasties Instead
of .Forty-one.
Seyenteen soirereign ruling dynas-
ties exist in the world, as against
forty-one in 1914. Twenty-four dynas-
ties, of which the most were Germans
lost their thrones through the war;
and the most tragic fate was that of
the Romanoff family, of which sixteen
members were aseaseinated during
and after the Russian revolution.
Those 'mid ether figures, character-
istic of change in the world's affairs
since the outbreak of the war, appear
in this, year's Almanac de Gotha, that
classic encyclopasdia of world eoyalty.
According to this authority the ruling
German palaces abdicated in 1918 as
individuals, only, Not one of the
HoleeneolIerne or other • dynasties who
rebel over ahe several parts of Ger-
many:abdicated in the name of tbe en-
tire family.
The only central European State
with a s'overeign—Liechtenstein—as
situated ' between Austria and Swit-
zerland. It can be traversed in a mo-
tor car in twenty Minutes.
She Turned Out the King
of Sweden.
One day a scholarly looking' man,
plainly dressed, went into a church in
Indiana" and took a seat near the pul-
pit. In a few minutes a lady ap-
proached thepew, and, seeing a
stranger in it, curtly asked him to go
out. He took ,oae of the seats re-
served for the poor and joined de-
voutly in the service. When services
were over • one of 'the woman's friends
asked her if she knew who it was
whom'' she had ordered out of her
seat. "Na" she replied, "but at- w,as
only sem° bushing stranger, I sup-
pose." "It was King Oscar cf Swed-
en," replied her informant; "he is here
visiting the queen." The only point
was this: that the woman forgot to
carry her "company manners" to
church.
•
Six New Instruments Added
to the Violin Family. '
It bas been said by musician's that
the violin family is composed of two
pygmies—the violin and the viola—
and •two giants—the violoncello and
the double base. It is reasonable to
suppose that the great gap between
these two extremes, .could be advaa-
tageonely diminished. ' It is not sur-
prising then that two well-known
French musicians, father and son,
have, after years of study and experi-
mentation, created a number of inter-
mediary instruments whlich have en-
tirely changed the nature of the violin
family.
In a Mile of railway track there are
over 2,000 sleepers.
When Will There Be A
Disarmament of Dining Tabks?
Suppose everybody would
recognize the fact that there's no
gain but much lossAn keeping
up hostilities with the stomach!
• Suppose the Ancient aggrava-
tion of iMproper food on indig-
nant digestive. organs should be
settled with guarantees of sen-
sible diet and tranquil digestion!
The saving would be beyond
all possibility df counting.
Yet millions go on declaring
%6 War on the stomach and atceptL.
ing war in Teturn—loading up
on .starchy, heavy, 'unbalanced
_ and highly -seasoned
fbocl at .brealtfast or
lunch and wonder-
ing why comfort, hap-
piness, and fficiency
,..are out of reach. ,
teat 50a „,
cosies puss.
m^4.0.teass
Ptjop,
• it.oestessy
NAN
./1
t5i,r3
tfel
eas
Grape -Nuts makes a friend
of the taste and an ally of the
stomach.
There's a charm and satis-
faction to this delicious food
which prompts appetite to say,
"There's a meal!" and digestion
to answer, "Thank goodness,
here's peace at last!'
Grape -Nuts is the perfected
nutriment of wheat and malted
barley—sweet, crisp, and won-
derfully nourishing. It digests
, quickly, and provides the neces-
sail elements, including the
vital mineral salt's, for body,
nerve and brain,
Order GrapNitte from your
grocer today, and let a delighted
taste pass a treaty of peace along
to an enthusiastic digestion and
assitnilation,
Builder.
"Grape -Nuts the Pod)
ts'o.re',it« geasOn"',
Made by Canadian. Postum Cortrol CO" Ltd,,, Windsor, 0
irrr.
SHE FOUND RELIEF
AFTER FIVE YEARS
Fiv-Service Mall Tells How,
His Wife Found New Health.
• "I wish to testify," says Me. R. A.
flugbe,s, 'of Hamilton Oat "as to
the efficiettey of your Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills for tile following reaecals:
"When I returned home 10 May,
1919, after nearly five years absence
on army service, my wife had changed
tom a healthy, robust woman, to one
whose life was a burden and ordinary
duties almost imposeible. Through
war worries, loneliaees and other fac-
tors contributed though my unavoid-
able absence, ' her health had been
steadily undergoing what Ian:mat des-
cribe as an undermining process, for
"I was fully aW,are frem her letters
that I would not field her the same
woman, but, wheel I reached home, I
wag terribly shocked to find her in the
conditioif she was in. Her healthy
color had changed. She seemed blood-
less and her skin was sallow. She
was weak and listless, and with ditn-
culty moved about tha lionise. She
hardly everanoved out of the house as
she became so short of breath and
feared she would fall during one of
her dizzy 'spells, which she said were
becoming more frequent.
"The day I arrived homo I visited
our doctor, who' is an old friend, and,
later through his advice, consulted
with another physician or this city.
Everything was done that could be
done and riza,ny medicines were pre-
scribed and faithfully taken. As these
were of no avail I trusted that time
alone would suffice to build up what
had gradually been undone in the
course of five years. After twelve
months conditions haa become worse.
Then T decided on change of air, gave
up my position in the city and moved
to the country. Even this' did not do
any good. I think it added to her
depression. •
- •
"One day a friend visited us and as
a result of their conversation my wife
made up her mind to tea Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills,
"I had not much faith in what I
did, but procured three boxes. This
happened nine months ago. I' was
surprised to "hear my wife say, after
about the tenth day, 'I believe these
'pills are doing me good.' A week or
so atter that I certainly believed they
a -ere, for I saw color returning to her
cheeks and the sallow, unhealthy color
disappearing. The pills were certain. -
la doing what you claim they -will do,
and of her own free will she continued
them for about three months. At the
end of this time she Seemed quite a
different woman. Life was worth liv-
ing. The listlessness had gone and
she could walk up the steep hill,
which. is half a mile long, leading to
our house, without the slightest in-
convenience. At this stage she dis-
continued the pills and she is just as
well new as ever she was. a
taTow, sir, I want to say I have every
faith in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, as I
have had proof, and I beliele that
what this medicine did for my wife,
it can do for others."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
from any medicine dealer ox by mail
at 50 cents a box, or eix boxes for
$2.50,Williams'
from The Dr. WilliaMedi-
eine Co., Brockville, Ont.
The Fire -Bug and the East
Winds
"It's time to hit the trail again,"
The careless camper said.
And left, his little fire ablaze
Within its leafy beta
"I'll light another cigarette,"
The idle loafer said,
And chucked his old `snipe' in the
brush,
• One end still glowing red.
"Good time to fire my slashing now,"
The thoughtless ranelter said,
And touched it off without a thought
Of how far it might spread.
"Millions in lives and timber lost,"
The newspapers next said
What made those fires. all shoat at once
We wondereeas we read.
"It wasn't us., it was that wind,"
- The fools in chorus said.
So they're alive ,a,nd loose this year.
—We hope 'the wind is dead.
—E. T,
New Forests for Great
• Britain.
A shipment of seven hundred pounds
of Douglas fir seed was reeently for-
warded from the Dominion Forest:ea
Branca seed -extracting plant at New
Weetminstene B.C., to Great Britain.
This is the final shipment of seed col-
lected mn 1921. The total quantity of
each, kind of seed shipped. for the sea-
son was: 'Douglas fir, 4,000 "'pounds;
Sitka sprucet 3,000 pounds; and west-
ern hemlock, 100 pounds, As tree Seed
Is very small •and light, ranging from
an average of•forty.three thouSand to
the pound of Douglas lir to four him-
dred thousand seeds to the pound, of
Sitka spruce, 11 well be seen that
matey millieles of seedlings will be
gerainai'eil 'from these shiPmente • fee
planting in the ,extensave reforesta-
tioa, sal:team which the British rorest-
ry CoMmiersion hes 10 hand.
Couttry life, is enere condecive to
101'4 life thim town Mae, aceording to
Statistics Collected by a well-ltitawu
doetor.
ISS(JE, NO 5
Flowers Think,
Luther Burbank says that flowers
think; tlret they have inteleleence, and.
respond to oitr thought; that they
know whether we love tasesn ar are in-
different to them.
Scree people can ratee flower e al -
must •anywhere, even With very little
sunshine, wane othere can do nothirig
with them ander the mo•et favorable
conclitieus. That, is because, as Mr,
Burbank says, the little mind eelle' of
flowers aud plants , knew Who like
them and who do not, and respond ac-
cordingly. A very intelligent woman
I know eitya that she aever could grow
flowers, and that they wilt the me -
meat be puts them ami her person.
All plant life is senaitive Le can
tanagat, to our meatal 'attitude, Tile
farmer who hates tannins; never has
the suceess with has crops lhal Ms
neighbors who have growirig things
have. 1 -lis mental attitude is not right,
and his crops respond to hes thought
in kind.
IVIinard s Liniment prevents Spanish Flu
• A Youth Preerver,,
,
A noble lite aim is more that an
ambition. preserver; it is also a power-
ful health and youth preserver. It is
a tonic that prevents premature aging.
Then the faculties are employed in
Working out a splendid destiny we are
happy, contented; the mind is so tally
occupied that it cannot rust • out or
lose its buoyancy. And it is •the maid
that keeps the boay Young.
MOTHER
Classified AilvertiSex
aaiarataN MaTatargayftAL,,,,VAPI5
Alc; 444er. f"" .'4aA,P0felit•
. . • •• • ..• • ;•,.
" •• Oe•Te Pei INTO. IFAI4eCtKINTS: Mt°
•
yy reaSOuable PlUes,
wool, chlOdY gcrgr $P90104. na 71. 90P tft PAP'
pound, nee awe extra,' Sw, sawn, . yannS,
six aeautiful copra' apaesety7eyee,efiafa
Sarno 0.3 f rev, Georgetevere;, TiTeppilee
Mille, Georgetown,. Onterieei •
••• ..•
43tN $1.0.00 TO S8e•00..
-vulcanizing. Be independent:: we
leach you. Write •for aartleulara.. Ohleaa
fristreetor. Canada, neleimiser, Lanaeo.
,
areentonfras ST0P-,L1TE eaves„ae• a.
cidents—Never 'falls.1 ferfee.
.welte Deacon Co, .40 "..aoelaideW.,Tee-4,... •
mete. (Agents wanted.) ' , •„
• 4-417CX.ES 27'04. 114X411 • •
-
131,,,ila,1±11113:1..ttb P
sTEOTII and Jima))) nlyos and
fOrnishIngs, 1Mney extrarltors,
engines and storage tartitS) a erunPlote0
stoOk of beekeeping requirement. sena ,•.
for, our catalogue, Ham BrotherS Cai.
psay, ata. Manufacturers, al-antra:ad,:
IBELTINO FOR eAL,a.
rL KINDS OF rtele AND,. tre.Ore•
telting, pulleys, 013:51714 cableOloss,packing.'
etc., shltiped subject to soproval t lowqss
'prices In Canada. YORK IlIOLTING co.
115 YORK, STREET,
, .
Besides devouring lip speoies of in-
sects,' most ef them harmful, quail
eat sixty epeciee of weed seeds,
. King Gorge can trace ills descent '
ia a clieecb line from William thci 'Cons
eueror.
Amerkuva Pioneer Dog likniedlea
Book on
DOG DISEASES,
and How to Feed ;
Mailed Free to any Ad.
dress by the Author.
X. Clay Glover Clo., Inc.
129 West 24th Street ,
New York,
SYRUP
1
is excellent f or indigestion
because it assists stomach
.. and live: to do their work
• naturally and efficiently.
With the organs in perfect
1 working order—indigestion 1
is impossible. Try it today
foR 1 DIGESTION.
LiMoiherSeigersSyrup is soldn 00e. and 51.00 bottles,
USE 'PANS TO 1'
• EASE LAME:. BACKS.
OTJ can't do your best when
your back and every muscle
aches with fatigue.
Apply Sloan's Liniment freely, with-
out rubbing, and enjoy a penetrative
glow of warmth and comfort.
Good for rheumatism, neuralgia,
sprains and strains, aches and pains,
sciatica, sore muscles, stiff joints and
the after effects of weather expokre„
For forty years pain's enemy. Ask
your neighbor. Keep Sloan's handy.
At all druggists -35c, 70; $1.40::11
Made in Canada,
10
Liniment
I
Permanent Hair Health
• Promoted by Cuticura
Frequent shampoos with Cuticura
Soapi, assitted when necessary by
gentle anointings with Cuticura
Ointment, afford the purest, sweet-
est and most economical method
of freeing the scalp of itchings and
scalings aid of establishing a hair -
growing condition.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25e. Sold
throughout theDominion. CanadianDepot;
Unnens, Limited, 344 St. Paul St., W., Montreal.
War Cadman Soao shaves withoutmug,
• COARSE SALT
LAN1EiSAL.T
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO $ALT WORKS
O. J. CLIFF TORONTO
For• Spanish Influenza
The Linirrierit That Relieves All
Ailments.
FkR ER'S WIFE
REGAINS HEALTH
Gives Credit to Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
Pork River, Manitoba.—"I saw an
the newspapers where Lydia, E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound was doing
so mucb good to women, and. as
needed something I began to take it.
I used to be very aick but I am not
now. I live on a farm in the home-
stead district and we have to do all
our own work. I tell all the 1V01114311
I see what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound does for me. I think
it saves me from going to a doctor
and is the best medicine women can
take."--MuS. WM. , COULTAS, Fork
River, Manitoba,
Lydia E. Pinkhant'a Vegetable
Compound is „a medicine for the ail-
ments peculiar to women. It is pre-
pared from medicinal plants, with
cane and accuracy. Ii., Cart be taken
by women of any age.
Women make a serious mistake in
allowing themselves to become So
weak and nervous that it is well-nigh
impossible for them to attend to their
necessary household duties.
Such symptoms as pains and irreg-
ularities, all -gone feelings, backache,
headache, hot flashes, nervousness„
• with a general run-doWn conditioa,
indicate some form of female trouble.
The Vegetable Corepound has
brought relief to thousands of women,
suffeting from sad' ailments. Let it
help you.
WARNING!
Unless you sea the name "Bayer” oii tablets,. you are
not getting -Aspirin at all. Why take chances?
Accept only an "unbroken pAekage" of 'Sayer Tablets of
Aspirin," imhich contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians duting 22 years and proved safe by ',millions for
Say ° ."Bayer when you buy Aspirin.
•'Colds
Headache. • Rheurnatism
Toothache Neuralgia. 'Neuritis,
Earache. Lumbago Pain, 'Pah
Randy 130,yor",tioxos a le iatlotz—Aligo,bottiog Ot 24 and 101)—Brulglatit.
• . ,
Atoll, Is Ole trade inr,r)r (rostetered 1h Canada) of Barer ,Manafattnre
steetiCaohleater of Salloylloatitl, white it la woli known thin AtPlitt YiketlTI.4 0070
0hUP0A3 tlit'6, 10 assist tas 1013115 againat imitations, 1110 -1.4.wiati, 51 i1ty0iContlAnY
*111 l.lotteretee, with; taiilr. tonna nada:mark; the "Oaret CrOire' ''•
. . , • .,