The Wingham Advance, 1922-06-08, Page 7TinarsdaY, June 8, 1.922,
AR "TRAINS' RJJSII
r EEN CIMS
'TWENTY-SIX LINES FROM
LONDON.
Service is. Constantly. Being
'Improved and Safety, is
Unchallenged. .
;•• A new timetable of the aerial routes
hag been isstied by the Aerial Travel
Biareau, and it iennow poseible for one
to look up air eolinectidne with most
:pasta Of Europe and North Africa, just
as gne wawa cleoide on a train. Sti\e-
cessful service has Made the time
'table a practical necessity.
There are .tw•eretyesix regular routes
in operation inand out of Croydon
,airdrome, elghteen of avhith are con-
ducted by Great Britain, four bY
France and. four by Holland. Daily
there are nine- services • to and from
Paris, taSts scheduled to Brussels and
-two from, Brussels and the same for
Amsterdam.
The, guide gives a graphic idea of
the extension ef aerial transportation
nan the Continent. Under Belgrade
sane reads: "Leave Croydon 4 in the
afternoon, reach Paris at 6, leave
following morning at 6, arrive Prague
at 2, wait half an hour, depart again
and reach BUdapest 6 in the evening,
reach Belgrade at 10" --which makes
about forty hours of travel. This ser-
-vSee is available daily and beginning
in june will be further extended to
Bucharest and Constantinople-. Pas-
sengers leaving London Titer hi the
afternoon an fly to Warsaw via
Paris in twenty-six hours. ,
Another interestirig routeoutNned
in the guide includes etops in Spain
and Morooco. It is possible to fly to
Paris; take a train to Toulouse, catch-
ing an airplane at 9 in 'the morning,
• stoPping at Barcelona and Alicante;
' spending the night in Malaga, and ar-
rive at Casablanca at 10 the next
• morning.
Cheap as Train Transport.
It is both possible and practical • to
leave one's hotel in Langon and take
off in an airplane at .Croyderi within
the haw,to go to any point: in Bar-
one,- esteepting Russia, htnair. The
terins• are not 01113, not eXorliltant,
but, figuring on the longer time • re-
quired by trains, with Sleepers,meals
and hotels, actu•ally ainount to about
-the same, and in many eases, are actu-
ally cheaper than travel by boat and
train. The services are growing ex-
tensively, and it is believed the sum-
• mer months will inaugurate a new era
• in eommercial aviation. ,
As a result of intensive conipetition
• by Britith and French cross channel
lines, further -reduction in rates has
been proposed, making the cost equal
• to, if not, less, than by first class boat
and train. In the Channel air traffie
the British hold the su,premacY, do-
ing about three times the busineei
of the French firms, with the reselt
that lesser rates have been proposed
by the French, .but the British are
- • prepared, to meet them.
There is every indication that be-
fore many weeks it will be possible to
ttaiel from Trafalgar square to the
Place de l'Opere• in three hours,
cheaper than by boat and trait and
in one-third the tirrie. In addition,
the airpilarlencoMpanies clainS in their
• advertisezri4nts' a 'greater ,factor of
safety, • in air travel' than, by other
meting, and back tip the elaiin by sta-
tieties•thatstannot be Challenged'. e
Measuring Brides for
- • Dowries.
A quaint eerentonyeis observed. at
Raycion, in Norfolk, England.
About three hundred yeara ago the
Lord of the 1VIator bequeathed the
WUTY1 of 11,000, the interest from which
was to be voted annually to provide
do:Series for four brides. Under the
terms of the ibennest, the money has
to be divided between the youngest,
the aldestathe shortest, and the tallest
brides married during. the emarse of
• each year 'in the pnrisb church, •
This entails the "measuring of the.
"bride." After the marriage eeremony
the bride and bridegroom odeed to
the vestry to sign the register, and
the bride is then measured by the
. officiating minister. In order that her
eorrect ,stature may be ascertained,
she is required to remove lier shoes
• and let down her hair. At the (suck of
the year the marriage records are eai-
arnined, and the dowries awarded to
thae qualified to..receive them. ,
Z
How to Dry Fruit:
Experiments in he "dehydnation" of
• pears has been engaging the attention
of the Oregon Agricultural Experiment,
Station. Development of a satisfac-
tory 'probes'a has been attended with
. same' cliillcultieS; chief among them be-
ing that of preserving the natural col-
or of the fruit, but it is betieved that
that Wableen has been solved. .
Bait for the purpose seem to . be
Bartlett' pears. When Peeled., cut" in
halves and deprived of their cores,
what' rentaInS1 is about 96' per cent.
• v;siter. Thus.; as 'a result ofdryisig; the
Product fi greatly -concentrated. la
this form it oan be ubilized as a basis
, for very delicious tonfentioas, various
• flavors being added to the Material,
There are twe freedoms ---the false
where a. man is fee te do what he
likes; the true, veltere a man: is free
to do' Whet:he ought.--1(ingsleY,,
Let's Have
akin r a onign
i....TOW long eieceyon've had delicious ran!
isi
breaa—since you've tasted that incom-
parable flavor?
Serve aloaf tonight No need to bake it.
just telephone/your grocer or a bakery. 8ay
you want "full -fruited bread — generousl3r
filled with luscious, seeded, Sun -Maid Raisins."
The flavor of these raisins permeates the
loaf. A cake -like daintiness makes every slice
a treat.
, Serve it plain at rtinner or as a tasty, fruited
breakfast toast.
Make "delicious bread pudding With left-
over slices.
Use it all. You need not waste a crumb.
Raisin, bread is luscious, energizing, iron -
food. So it's both good and good for ydu.
• Serve it at least twice a week. Start this
good habit in your home today.
• But don't take any but a real, full -fruited
genuine raisin bread..
Your dealer will supply it if you insist.
,Bthel'ackage
aid
oft ee.g.
0 0
Lim u tra
otk.tvas. Al'e0144141.
Make delicious bread, pies, puddings,
cakes, -etc. Ask your grocer for there. Send
for free book of tested recipes,
Suka.Maid Raisin Growers
• Members 14 13,000 -
Dept. N-43-3, •liresno,
f
Surnames and Their Origin
COSTELLO
• Racial Origin—Norman-French.
Source—A given name.
Here is a family name.that is likely
to puzzle you. Forgetting any particu-
lar knowledge yeti may have bf it, it
leaks more as though it might be
Italian than anything else. But all
those of this name that you have ever
met have probably been Irish.' As a
matter of fact, the name itself is Nov
man French.'
But though the name and the origin
al blood of the Castanets was Normans
they really have more right to call
themseibVes Irish than any one' in
•Canada'S except the Indian; has to call
himself a Canadian. For the, Cos-
telles began to bei Irisb, long before
any 'Ca:110E419AM eicept Perhatia'cer-
tain Norsemen, began to be Cana-
dians,
• The OiastelWolan in Ireland became
a fixture therein the early days Of the
AnglozNorinatt invasion, • It derived its
name from one Costello Fitz-Gilheig
who Was the...Shia of Gilbert de Angule,
oneot. the first' or the Mom:loge Ai
was thecase' with many of these Nor-
man chieftains, they gathered around
them, when they settled In either ire -
land or Scotland, many native fotlow-
ers together with those of their own
raceastd, fatting ntito the Gaelic cus-
tom, gradually evolved their own
clans, ado,pttng Ike Gaelic language
and the Gaelic systeni of names. Thus,
thaie who tvehtd .otherwise have been
knewis (under the Norman systenS) as
"pits -Costello" became instead
"O'Costello" and finally jut Costello.
But it has been so long since the
eleventh and: twelfth centuries that it
is a safe bet that but little of the
original Normau blood remains in the,
veins of the average person bearing
this name to -day.
• FRANCONIS.
Variations—Francom, Frankham.
Racial Origin—Anglo-Norinati.
So u rce--Desc hint lye.
Here is e, group ot famtly names the
meaning and origin of 'vvhich you will
find it diffieult to guess, for hi each
one Cif the three cases the present
spelling'of the ending is misleading.
It is not an uncommon thing • for
names of Anglo-Norman origin to
change in title faehion, and the reason
• lies in the peculiar mixture of the old
Auglo-Saxon tongue and the French or
the Normans and from which modern
English is the outgrowth. It must:be
remembered' that the mixture occurred
ia a peeitttax way. The Normans, for
a couple of 'centuries after the con-
quest', spoke 1 -lathing but French and
their' tongue*aa but slightly changed
bY the Infitienee Of the Angto-Saxen.
Then carnea perfect when, as a rethli
'of politicareeparation front Normandy,
the. Normane began to Entept the trig -
nth, which., in eadioally dhariged form,
,finaldy again became the' dominating
'element of speech. It was natural
that when this final ,atage was reached
the nreaningh' of -.the Neiman. parties
Were cluiekly forgotten and there was
tendenny taspell them as they were
pinIncsineed at tne time. .;
Tti the Middle Ages. the "middle
claae," lying between the nobility and
their vassals iu the social and political
scale, were known as "freeman," And
F.:Boman has come down to as as a
family name. The Norman equivalent
to this word: was "frane-homme," or
as it was spelled at ,various times,
• "franchome," fraunch-humme" and
"fraunchome." It -.came to be .pro-
nounced, after it had become' a sur-
name, "frategorann whence the spell-
ings Francomb and Fratlehom have
developed.
Do "Box NuMhers" a e
You?
While the system of "box numbers"
addresses used by advertisers in news-
papers has been in operation for a
good manst yeate, thete are sense peo-
ple who do not know whit a "box
number" really rneans:
The "box number" came into being
as a result 94 the great increase in
the use of newspape.rs as a mediutti
ef advertiaing. It helped to save con, -
fusion and labor.
A person Who advertises in a news -
Pallor may not with to disclose:ibis
addresat In Stioli taies, when he in-
serts the advertisement he informs th
olerk 'at the counter that ho desires
a.",box nurabef," The relerk- gives llirn
a receipt ion which is a number. It
is this nuniber that appears in the ad-
vertisement; for instance, "Apply Bess
When the ionlvertissr calls for re-
plies, he presents his reeelpt, rand the
IreplieS are handed to him. Perhaps
the origin of the term 4`box' number"
may have something to do wiVh the
fact that usually the replies are kept
in boxes, being docketed in pigeon -
Wes.
Sonne newspapers--stratles journals in
partieular--aHow readers to send
money in paynaent of .gobels advertis-
ed. This "depoeit" is kept by the
newspaper ;until the buyer receives
the goods, when it is sent on to the
seller.
• By this means the bum is assured
of fair play, for if the advertiser fails
to carry out his part of the bargain,
the buyer's depdeit is retnrrts& ,
• Seeing the King•.
- For mine eyes have seen, the King,
the Lord of hosts.—teatah vie 5.
Unelean lips; yea, all uncleanness,
• cau nothing righteous bring;
Woe is me, undone, unholy—
For mine eyes have seen the King.
But the ,coat from of the altar—
, Purged and cleansed; oh, wondrous
• thing!
Here ant 1, eend me—what glory!
Le, Paine ayes have seen the King!
• Edith la Mapes,
114i.
G AN • APVANC:0
Dust Explosion0
The recent apickSion of ibin of ea,t.
;meal.;in Seine 'London worlts is said
to lias‘/•e 'been due 1e an adthixture of;
dust and air. It is a eurions and, un, -1
plea,saut feet that finch a mixture id
extreMoly explosive; and that Some of
the Most terrible aecident§' iloduS-1
trial liiatoryhave bean eauSecl by 'Oast
floating in dry air.
Coal (hist is sPecially dangerous,
and it is in order to guard against
dust explbSions mn Mines that ell clryi
mines have, by law, to be regularly
watered,
The dreadful •diaster at the Trade -
sten flour raffle at -Glasgow was caused
bye.
spark igniting the 'fine flaw dust
with a•hich the air was filled, and re-
sulted in the loss of twelve lives. The
mill itself was a roaring furimee in-
side five Minutes. •
The worst explasSori of the 'kind on
record was that which dettnoyed the
Waehburn corn mills in Minneapelia,
reputed to be the largest in the world.
The result was a loss of eighteen lives
and a million dollars worth of prop-
erty, -
, In the year 1908 Paris was shaken
by a most tremendous explosion, caus-
ed by the blowing up of the, great
Sar sugar refinery, near the Orleans
Station. It is believed that a spark
from a dynamo ignited the finely pOw-
dered sugar floating in the air. Forty-
two woelepeople were injured, and the
damage was $90,000,
la the early, days Of the last 'cen-
tury, all such explosione were attri-
buted to escapes of gas, or to lightn-
ing flashes; yet as early as 1815 Sir
Hainphry Davy seems to have had a
suspicion of the real reasen, and to
have made some investigations. •
Later, the Royal Commission of
1891 went into the matter more:close-
• ly, and their investigations proved
that explosions in col -mines, even
when not caused by dust, were often
aggravated by dust fleeting in the air.
It is not really difficult to under-
stand the Why and wherefore of such
explosionS. To light a fire, you first
chop up wood into small sticks or
shavings, 'ansi the smaller these are
the '1110re readily they burn. The rea-
son is, that the .act of combustien is
merely the •cOmbination ol the carbon
of the wood with the oxygen of the
air. • .
Naturally, therefore, when a particle
of dust is floating in the air, with
oxygen all arottud it, there oast needa
the requisite degree of heat for that
particle to burst into fierce flame,
which of eotirse igirestattly •communic-
ated to alt the other atoms of dust in
succession.
PALE YEAKLS
AND DELICATE WOMEN
Can Find New Health by Enrich-
ing Their Blood Supply.
Nature intended every girl and every
woman to be happy, active and healthy.
Yet too many of them find their lives
saddened by suffering—nearly always
because their blood is to blame. All
those unhappy girls and women with
colorless cheeks, dull skins, and sunk-
en lustreless eyes, are in this condi-
tion because they have not enough red
blood in their veins to keep them well
and in the chinm of health. They suf-
fer from depressing weariness and
periodical headaches. Dark' lines
from under their 'eyes, their heart pal-
pitates violently after the slightest ex-
ertion,' and the' are often attacked
with fainting spells., Theae are' only
•a few of thenaiseries ef bicOdlessness:
When the bldbd becoines thin,. and
watery it ca,n be enriched through the
Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and
the troubles that come trona poor
blood disappear. In almost every
neigil,Porhoo4.3ron will fiLd some fm7m-
erly ailing woman, or paha bieathless
girl who has a good word to say for
this medicine. Among them there is
Miss Laura Monaghan, Campbelltone
P.M., who says:—"Before using Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills 1- was ina badly
run down condition. I was pale, thin
and scarcely able to go about. The
least exertion made my heart palpi-
tate so violently that 1 actually' was
afraid one of those spells might carry
me off. Otten my nights Were sleep-
less, and as the treatment I was tak-
ing did not help me I was almost in
despair. loiaaRy a friend advised the
use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, 'and in
the mese of a few weeks after be-
ginning this treatment there was, a
decided improvement in trtY Condition.
I continued tieing the pills, and am
now,enjoyiag good health. I am glad
to giVe you my experience in tb.e hue
that some other sufferer may find the
way to better liealtb."
These pills are sold by all medicine
dealers or may be had by until at 50
teats a box'or 'Six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr. Tirilliains' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
• Wild Animal Sanctuary.
At Yerkton, Sask., S. A. M. Patrick,
K.C., 'has established at his own ex -
poise, and as means of affording
him pleasure, ae sanctuary for wild
elf:Malls. He has succeeded in obtait-
ing a number Cif specinums of our rap-
idly •disappe-uring 14fe, among
them being anteloA and, white-tailed,
deer., Be has recently purehased our
pure White deer from Grand Rapids,
Mich. These door are exceedingly
rare,only smienteen being known to be
in existence oa the oontinent. Mr.
Patrick is having the usual diffieulMes
in protecting his sanctuary, but is con
tinning the good work,
iViinattre Ltniment Reilevee Neurainta
• The "Silent Nine.
A Silent aerePlane engine has at lot
been invented, says a London news -
pa.
• In a recent test the degening rear
of the engine and exhaust Was own-
pietely eiiminatod When fitted' with
the "$ilent Nine," as the new luven,-
ibn is eailed.
Passengers will now be able to con-
verse with ease while in the air, and
not be forced to shout at the top of
their voices.
The "Silent Nine" is very Silnlole in
eonstruption and in prinoiple. It con-
sists of an expansion chamber fitted
to the end of a long exhaust pipe, and
arranged in such a Way time the IWAses
from the engine are cooled inarnedlate-
ly they leave the red -ht exhaust hole,
This is the secret af engine silence.
The inventor is Major Grant, the
superintendent of the Croydon aero-
drome depot.
One "Silent Nine" ean be solol at a
profit for less than $50, anel already
there Is a great demand for
In Canada's Favor.
The exchange of immigration aod
trade between Canada. and New South
Wales during the fiscal year 1920.21
shows that both were considerably in
favor of Canada. Imports of 'Canadian
produce, according to the New South
Wales*Statis•tical Bulletin for Decem-
ber last, amounted to $11,045,630,
while exports to Canada were 'valued
at $626,210, During the first nine
months of last year1e398 emigrants
left New South Wales for Canada,
while but 871 arrived from Canada.
45,
CHILDHOOD INDIGESTION
• Nothing is more common in child-
hood sthan indigestion. _Nothing is
more dangerous to proper growth,
more weakening to the copetitution or
more likely to pave the way to dan-
gerous disease. Fully nine -tenths of
all the minor ills of childhood have
their root in Indigestion. Mere is no
medicine for little. ones to equal
Baby's Own Tablets hi, relieving this
trouble. They have proved of benefit
ih• thousands of homes. Concerning
them Mrs. :fors.. Lunette, Immaculate
Conception, Que., writes: "My baby
was a great sufferer from indigestion,
but the Tablets soon set her right and
now I would not be without them.",
Baby's .Own Tablets are sold by
eine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Real " oat Trains."
When men are up against a difficul-
ty they are not satisfied until they
have got over it. The result of one of
these tlifficullties M overcoming Na-
ture has taken the form of the strang-
est railway in the world.
The question that had worried the
engineers for a long time was how
to improve the transport of goods
through the vast Belgian Congo to the
coast.
Great tracts of this country are
swamps, intersected by ridges of Steep
cliffs, In ,consequence, river transport
is the only practical way by which
goods tan be carried to the sea.
But the number of waterfalls, 'ra-
pids, and shallows have made this a
tedious business, as the eargoes have
to be 'unloaded many times on one
journey, and carried clown the bank
for some distance to the next boat.
However, as the result of expegi-
/tents in. Belgium, it is hoped this dif-
ficulty -will be everewhe. The invest-,
tion consists of twin boats bracketed
side by side, with a Space of three feet
or so between the two hulls.
• Along navigable water this auble
boat trav,els in the normal way, pro-
pelledby a screw at -the stern of each
hell. But over all rapids and shallow
parts a single railway line has been
constructed, supporteel nn trestles, the
rail rising up from the water -level at
each end of the unnavigable section.
Guided in by two guard- raile, the
boat floats up over the end of the rail;
then the wheels between the two hulls
engage, with the line. The driving
power from the engine e is switched
off from the screws, and drives the
wheels in contact with the rail. The
boat' runs forward on the' line, and
slowly lifts clear of the water. In.
this way the boat travels by rail over
the rapids, the hulls hanging one on
either side, •and so preserving the
balance.
In this ingenious way the boat, in
making its, nonstop run to the sea
can rise out of the water and sous over
a steep waterfall, or skim just above
the surface of .shallows. At a narrow
gorge the boat can avoid it altogether
by leaving the river and cutting across
land on its single rail, rattling along
a ,oleared pathway through the jungle
like a New York evethead railway,
Mrs. Newlywed (on her first day's
shopPing): '•I want two piece's of
steak and—and about half a pint of
gravy."
He who plants' a tree lightens the
burdens of his fellow -men. He who
plants a tree erects to himsclf,a living
monurnett and makes bold an attempt
to leave the world more beautiful than
be found it,
MONEY ORDERS,
Send a Dominion, Express Money
Order. rive Dollars costs Ogee cants.
The roses of pleasure seldorri lest
Iceng enough to adorn the brow of Min
whoplucks therra—Ilannalt More.
, se_
ISS OE No, 22—'22.
MRS. CIIAPLEAU COULD
GET ABOUT ONLY BY
JPAlikiFut. EFFoRT.
Three YettiflO Of Sul(forintit 4rucl-
ed and Stomach Trnuble
Also Overcome.
"It used Co be the most PalufUi ef-
fort for ince to move about the house,
but steel) taking Tanlac I am so well
and strong my housework Is ince 13i'
pastime," said Mrs. 5. Chapleau, $25
Mount Royal East, Montreal "Po'
three years I suffered constantly from
rheuraatism. My appetite was also
very poor and what little I ate caused
me no end of trouble fm indigestion.
I becarne BO thin and weak I almost
lost all hope. My nerves and kidneys
bothered me a great deal and 1 atwayo
bad a vain across the bacli- that kept
me miserable.
"Tanlae helped me just like it had
been made espeeially for my case. My
food now all agrees with me and law
nerves and kidneys never bother me
any more. I owe my good health en-
tirely to Tanla,c."
• Tanlac is sold by all good Oruggls Ls.
' Advt.
.Overworking the Brain..
Don't be afraid of overworking the
brain; you can't do it, You can't
think too much.
"The more the mind does," seys
prominent medical authority, "the
mere it can do."
• Another well-known doctor said re-
cently:
"In all my practiee as a physician
dealing with nervous and mental dis-
eases, I can say without hesitation
that I have not met a single ease of
nervous or -mental trouble caused by
too much thinking or overetudy: What
produeest mental trouble de worry,
emotional excitement, or lack of inter-
est in one's work."
So there is no need to be afraid.
The more you think, study, or plan,
the better it is for you, because you
are training your mental powers, You
cannot overwork the brain as long as
you keep it healthy with outdoor ex-
ercise whenever possible. Then it will
recuperate of its own account.
It is worry that destroys the brain
-.-worry, fear, bad feelings, and ments
al idleness.
a -es
England haa the world1/4 smallest
railway, a fate' horsepower gasoline
motor drawing a twelve passenger
car over a track having a gauge of
fifteen inches.
Minarci's Liniment for sale everywhere
It is estimated that 105 million
-matches are used every day in Can-
ada, or twelve to each person.
TROUBLED
ECZE
On Face and Arms. Lost
Sleep. Cuticula Heals.
"Iwas- troubled for about two
years with eczema. It broke out on
my face and arms hi pinitiles' arid
itched and,burned so baci.ly. that I
.lost nmeh tiliepon abeotint Of
face and wine were covered with
• pies, aand I was ashamed to appear
• out of the, house.
"I began using Cuticura Soapand
OintMent a n d,infinediately found
relief, and after using on ea/a of
Soap and one box of Ointment I
was healed." (Signed) iVliss lielen
Mirk, 4259 Mary laud St., San
Diego, Calif., April 18,1921.
Use Cuticnra Soap, Ointment and
Tfilcurn exclusively -for every -day
toilet purposes.
gwaph, B rash Pro by AWL Address: "Lxmors,Lito-
Itod, 31± St. Pant Et, W., Montreal." bold every-
• where, Soap,26c, 0intment26 sod 60e. Toleusa
REW'Cutocura Soap shaven without mug.
lssit7
‘..4a$ex1en atAFerit,
*wove, w41,,Avsle„
1.113.SPS' '}'V'ANTIJ.10 V.0.3 vnATN1.11-%
ehool in -charge ,et graduso t:grt
OEichno gopicins ITospital. nanny Sopsetne
tentloot, s1bmewoo2 '00.flifitriunt tnielP.Pg
resege ,r •1S,
ii NT y• reneetiselertONSSISIta,e--••
Amuse; NV'eed ESos lt 6t nicrnao,„
tps' Keeerig,tre,inipg,, rixli.reinutterig-
et Apply! eaneeintandeet.
A OENTS V./AN 77L„
014NT,9„ PARTIOLTLAR,s, run
winnow g,na Mitrople, Work(34,q,
Nnlfe Elba,rperier 25 cents. .44.genezt nelee
company, lop cliureu, Toronto.
_ . _
1341.11NO IFON sou.a
ALL KINDS 0 NttW AND iYnisU
belting, pulleys, saws; e#3)2e,lwee,PaelchOr.
etc., el -Seven enbleot te 8,1)OrqVs$1 at low-
est prises In CO.,15441.% YORK Ww-,1900
00„ U5 ToTat STRELPT, TORON`RO.
• One 0' the Sights.
. ,
A. Man wee viatting Ireland for th
brat tinte, •
In DablE114; age warm afternoon, he
enddenly put his handkerchief Wier his
apse awl said, in a choked voice:
"Wlia,t the desks is that?"
gronate"iald his Irisla guide. "Winy.
that's the River Liffey. Didn't ye
know, man, Ghat the smelt o' the Lifeey
Was one o' the :eights' a' Dublin?" -
-
Fish that flush 'criraaon with ex.21,1e-
ment when given food are forind in
India.
.1.41.1.1213.31.1,46MOWS401.
thairioncem pole teMealeo
Book ep
DOG DISEASES
and llow to rood
Mailed Pros to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
Z. Olay Glover Q�., Itze.
129 West ssith Street.
New York, U
7.-srrevint,i4n '
coARsg sALT
A N D:rS A L
Bulk Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
O. J. CUFF TORONTO
he publisher of the hest Farmers'
paper in the Maxititne Provinces in
Writing to us states:
"I an:Mid Say that Ido not know or a
medicine that has stood the test or
time like 1VIINARD'S LINIMENT, It
has been an unfailing remedy in our
household ever since I can re/nen:their,
and has outlived dozens of would -he
oompetitors and imitaters."
W AT
11 TER
Many Times It's a Guide to
ealth as is This One
Wonien—Read It
Marraion, Ontario.—"Before using
Lydia E. Pinkhaans. Vegetable Cpm -
pound I was a total wreck. I' liad
terrible pains in, my sides and • was
not regular. Finally I got so weak
I could not go up stairs without stop-
ping to resthalf-way up. I saw your
medicine advertised in the news-
papers and gave it a trial. I, took
four bottles of the Vegetable Com-
pound and was restored to health:,
I am married, am the mother of two
children • and do all my housework,
milk eight cows -and do a hired Man's
Work and` enjoy the best of health.
also foundthe 'Vegetable Compoina
a great help far not weak back be-
fore my _babies were'borna I recom-
mend .it to all my friends."--Lnee.
IIENRY JSaaten, Marian Ontarlas
Letters which you read! in the news-
papers recommending Lydia: E.,Pink-•
ham's Vegetable, Compound are gen-
•ulne expressions from women who
have been helped .by: this splendid
medicine. They are anxious for other
-women, who inay• be suffering as they
did, to know' of the great merit of
this medicine. Each one, 'with her .
weputation, stands behind it, to point
out to sick women the way to health..
Urals. E, Pinkliatekt Private Text-.
ook upon. "Ailments Peculiar to
Women" will be sent you free anon
request. Write Lydia E. Pinkhanio.
Iledicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not get-
ting Aspirin at all. Accept only an "unbroken package" of
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose
worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by
millions for
Colds : Headache Rheumatism.
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Liithbago 'Pain, Pain
nnnay -Bnyer. boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles t)f 24 and 100—bruggiets.
Aspnin at tho trade intu'k (tegletereet in Canada) of' 1.14Yor 111anUrOttUte 0g lannu-
netateaddebter of salicyticacid, Willie it 0 well known that Aevirin theaue Ilsgec
manufacture, to °eclat the unblic calmest Imitations, the 'rabies of Saver (L7eloestiy
WM he OtaMPod with theit• zotievai trade mars, the "Vial,vr Croce."
. ..