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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-10-05, Page 7I have a pretty wide eirele oj. grim and leceitiaintaimee, and I've '130 stladylag' them. Not, let it•be eilia, b cease tee prep.er ettudy of mankind man, but becauee, seribbled in an a book I picked up, I discOvered thee: "Everyone ought to eueceea in, if everyone eleoula and everyoPe cot; if he hiineelf 'wee not ,the bar ta hi self." ' It ;madeuie thirik a bit. A.mong n friends there were these who had su eeeded and Ghtase who had not. The seemed, leo. great 'difference mental between the two elasses,, se I s•earch for the bar, And I think 1 discovere A. is not a success,. ,He is real clever, hardworking, and a man of eleeas. His bar eelf-depreciation. Not long slime he WEIS, as I knew full Wen, the man Who did the donkey - •;work in maideg a certain function 'a , brilliant success'. • Ile supplied the ideas, tOo. But when he was thanked • for what lie had dene, he eelf-depre- elated himself—mentioned B and "endD as tlaos,e who really deserved the • credit. , Very nice of him, of course, and • very modest. But it wa.seit the truth! ,B and 0 and lD had done a little bit. • The eredie and the glory belonged to *je. • But he passed it on, and; myself and a few others ex.cepted, the crowd teak it. as passed.• , A's ,stock did not 'rise in the maekett. ge dePreciete.d himself. That' hie • , bar. He hasn't succeeded in life be- • cause those—his business friends ho could contribute t� Ms success, • heave the settled native in their heads, %that: he's, -not up to mach. That's the •,result of A.'s' habit of self -depreciation.. NatUrally smart, he dulls. himself. Are You Like Him? Once, when lee brought off a. really geed, bttsin ase dieal, and was compli- *anted on it, instead of taking the raise; he said, "Oh, it was really- the wife's .iclea!" It wasn't. It was his. He had merely talked it over with her. The'moral is.: Don't bar your road • to success by self -depreciation,. There Is- no need to go to the other extreme, of' co,ttrs.e. • If you have earned praise, take it. „ Doet put your light under a • bushel. Then there is F. He is more of a •snccess. than A, but he ,could be a far • geeater one if he were not so cynical and sarcastic.' la invests- nim with a sort of sharpness which puts people— and business --Off. - A geed deal of businessresults froni one inarotalking with another. But if , one of thein sharpens hie cynicism at thqother's •expense, that is not the way ,to create trust or make business. ,S,arcaem, too, has an edge that cuts. It's not a successful weapon. • The moral Th obvious.. -Then there is G. He's a success. Whether he ha,s acquired •it and prac- tises it, or whether it is a natural gift, I know not. But he has a "way" with him. He's very friendly. He uever •Makes an enemy. If lie were a coal merchant, and you wanted coal, and he had none, you would end up by laughing together at the situation. In similar circumstances P would have been nastily sarea,stic. A very friend- ly, cheery man is G. And a successful ,one. •• Again, the moral is obvious. Break the Barrier. 'PALE AND SICKLY IRLS AND BOYS Need AD theStrength That Rich, Red Mood Can Give Them. Youth is the time be lay the founda- tien for health. Every giri and every bey should iiaVe plenty of Mire, red blo'ocl and Strong nerves, Witbthin, impnre blood they etart life with *a handicap too great to win euccess and happiness, Rich, red blood. Means health, full growth, etroag nerves, a cieer brain and good digeetion. •In a Word pure blood is the foundation, of health, • , The signs of weak, watery hie° are unmistakable. The pale, irritable IY girl or boy, who has no appetite or ambition, is always tired out, short of breath arid doe.s net grow Strieng, Is victim of anaemia --the gretest en erny of youth. • There is just on thing to do for -these girls and boys -- build up the blood with D. William's Pink Pills. You can't afford to experi anent with other remedies for tb.er must be nO guess work in the treat anent of aeaerala. Dr Williams' Pin] Pills act directly on the blood, givin It thte elements it lacks, thus develop Ing strong, healthy girls and boys. Mrs. R. Kincla, Hepworth, Ont., tells as follows what these pills clid for her daughter:—"I think it a duty to let others know the benefit which Dr Williams' Pink Pillhave been to MY -daughter, and I hope this may be the means of inducing- some other :miter& to try them. She was weak nervous and badly run down. She took medi- cine from the doctor but got no bene- fit, and finally she was not able to walk to echool. I was advised to give her Dr. Wiliams' Pink Pills, which I did, and after taking them for a time she was restored to perfect health. I cannot speak too highly of these ;Ails." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 frothbe Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, A Love Letter Five Thousand EL is another non-saccee,s% He's a born pessimist—if pessimism" comes that way. Everything, always, is bad, and going to be worse. He chills or- dinary folk, annoys the optimist' and dumeis other pessimists, farther in- the • _depths. He is in a certain. trade, and • teemei knoWledge looses lots of cu,storn. • People wcjeet go to him. He is suck a:depressing man." If it were not for hes wlealesaleeeefaile, into, which the Personal element does not ,enter, be would be a ,51:011,;:rupt in a,year:' Again tlie Moral is ebviotte., If space permitted, the examples of sucCe.ss, and non-suCce,se Could be ex- tentlecl: But sufficient has been writ- ten to intimate certain bars. ;If one is yours, .knock, .):t down, and get on. If you are a nethesuccessebut none of the above bars fits you, find ottt, even, to asking a friend the 'candid question, what your bar la, Then demolish it. IL Wisps of Wisdom. Thebeet cure for bard luck is hard work. An ounce of caution is worth a ten of regret. If you try you may; if you don't, you won't, Conscience warns us es a friend be- fore punishing us aS a judge. Keep your face to the sun and the shadows 'will fail behind. The znan who never made a mistake ever made anytihhig. Toil and trial are grim eompartions , without the gleam of hope' tha.t maims elieni 11000 ifnl, To breathe is not to live. To liere la to think. to Wan, to dare. to do, to achieve, and to do it all with charity fl yourbeart, bilach person lives best Who Aoes Iris best for ono da,y at a time and thrin refreshes libusolf tor his level best the next day, , Young people frequently rely en af- feeted rintnnet's lo wiri clinfra,tion, apd pealso, but meet of us itre quick to diecere affectation of any kin 6 and lave a contempt for it. Give up af- ctation--be natural iirat patent niaat fOr a vote reeler:ler01.1 8 513, y-Makirig Memo:vs. is oaJooatoa that'Wben the werid book and serial rights' of Mr, LlaYel George's forthcoming' memoirs have been sad, the Prime Minieter will re- ceive approximately $450,000. A$ the book will contain 10'0,000 words, be will thus get three dollars a word, a rate, ot remuneration for liter- ary work that has seldom, if ever, been equalled, Mrs. Asquith's diary, *Wan ereated Such world-wide interest, has brought in about $75,000; the ex -Kaiser has Secured .,200,000 • tor his ille-ettory; while Admiral jellicoe obtained only a few thousand dollars. Mr. Church - memoirs, when they are publish- ed, well, it is believed, bring in about 250,000. Mr. A. S. M. Hutchinson has so far received $350,000 • for "If Winter Denies," whieh, by the way, marked a record in literary'TemuneTation, beat- ing the $300,000 Which Mr. Harold Bell a Wright, the A.m,erican author, received Lor "The Winning Of Barbara Worth." While present-day authors, are sup- , posed to reap b,etter harvests than their pred-ecessor, many popular - books of the past brought`their writer quite large suras. 11/rs. Barclay, the : author of "The Rosary," earned $200,- Years Old. Archaeologists are continually mak- ing surprising discoveries, among the rubbish heaps that mark the sites of the vanished cities of Mesopotamia. It is not so long ago that the remark- able code of King Hannnurabi was found among the ruins, of Babylon in.- scribed on a large and irregular stele. That carries us back to two thousand before years Christ; but the recent dis- co -very at Tello, Nippur and Ur in Chalclea of clay tablets nearly or quite a thousand years older carries us back to what we consider as the dawn of We find that the people who dwelt along the Tigris and Euphrates so long ago were both civilized and culti- vated and wrote letters much like those we write to -day. Among the dis- coveries is this delightful little letter scratched by a young man en a clay tablet and sent to his beloved: "To Bibea, thus says Ginn]. Murcluk: may the goes Shamash and IVIa,rduk permit thee to live forever for my sake. „ I write to inquire concerning thy health. Tell me how thou a,rt. I th went to Babylon but did net see ee. I was greatly disa.ppointed. Send the reason, for thy leaving, tarot may be happy. Do come in the month March- esvan. Keep well always for my sake." Does it not seem strange that this eager inquiry of a lover after the health of a girl who has been dead for fifty centuries. perhaps should so long e -havsurvived both them :ane an,d the niaid and come to be seen and, read to -day by men who live deo:Mende of nailes beyond the limits of the little world they knew! Love Defined. The other day we ceme tecrOSs a de- finitthn el love that is well worth read- ing and remembering: "Love is the doorway through which the human soul passes from seleshness into ser- vice and from solitude into kinship • with all hennanity," — 000; Lord Bea,consfield was paid $10,-1 000 for "Endymion"; George Eliot sold the serial rights of "Romola," for $35,- 000; and Charles Dickene the copy- right a "Barnaby,Rudge" for see.- months for $3.5,000. On the other hand the authors of many wofks of genius 'received very little indeed. "The Vicar of Wake- field" was sold by Goldsmith for $300; Miss Helen Matters• was paid only $150 for "Coming Through the Rye," and Sterne was refused $250 for "Tris- tram Shandy," How Hailstones Form, ft is during summer -time that hail- stones occur most frequently. One might expect -that these balls of ice woulti fall from the sky on the cold days of winter- but it is the heat of summer that gives- rise to thein, fOr they can be farmed oney in dean- dery weather, „ When there is thunder about there are always very strong upward draughts, of air. As raindrops begin to fall they are caught by these currents and carried to great 'heights, where they freeze solid. If they now fall to earth they arrive in the form of hail- stones that are usually seen.• a Sometimes, • however, after falling through the elands and receiving- a coating of moisture they are carried up again by other currents. The mois- ture freezes upon them, increasing theixesize. e The process may go on for SoMe time, int which caste the hailstone re- ceives coating after coating of ice un-, tel it becomes as large as a marble or even an egg. Thett it falls veith mil- lions of others, destroying crops tear- ing f3:ult off the trees, and even kill- ing cattle in the fields. ••••••.4 • •KEEP CHILDREN HEALTHY To keep childrea healthy the bowels must be kept regular and the stomach sweet. Nine -tenths of the ailments which afflict little ones are caused by derangements of the bowels and stomach. No other medicine can equal Baby's Own Tablets in guarding either the baby or.growing child from the ills that fallow a disordered condition of. the, howels er stomach. They are a, mild but thorough laxative and never fail to givemesults. Concerning them Mrs. W. B. Coolledge, Sarnia, Oat., says: "1 ibaVe used Baby's Own Tab- lets for over three years and have found. them the best medicine I have ever' used for my children. I never have any trouble giving there to raY little ones and they have saved me many a doctor's bill. My advice to all me -biers of little ones is to keep a box of the Tablets in the house." The Tablets are sold hy all medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The. Dr- Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Forest fires, by burning the saplings of to -day, destroy the 1oreets cv1 eo- morrow. -Put 'them out. Surnames and Their Origin McCRO RY Variatiees Macetory, Rodger, Rog- • ers, Rogerson. Racial Origin—lrish, Source—A given name. Except for the fact that every man has a right to spell his name as lie pleases, you would call this form Mc- Crory incorrect, and a' "eorrliption" ef the form Mac,Rory, The Gaelic form of the name is "MacRuadhri," win& isn't nearly se far from the Anglicized forul as it seems, if you'll just remember that the "c113" combination is silent, -The "Mae:Rued-1mi" clan eame into being about the year 1260 A.D., as a branch of the MacDonnels oX Anteine The clan name,. as Was usual, was coin- - Pounded floin the given name of the chieftain who gathered aiMend bine from toneag relatives, friende and fol- lowers the Melees, ef the nelt eltee and procured for it offieiel reeegnition as stich, TAM name was "Ruadlirigli,” whleb Signified • "red-headed." Tbe variations Rodgere, Itogere and Rogerson ell repreeent itere r rbitrary changes in ;the Anglicizing of the name, changes dictated for the most part either by political reason r et, by govern/nen iai rulings, 'mom CONWAY , -Variations---41acOonevy, Convey, Mac- Conmye Gentry. Racial Origin—Irish. , Source—A given name. There are a lot 0,f people who wouldn't believe you if you Lind them that the faMily name of Conway is Irish. it doesn't "souud" • But take a. lok at the Gaelic spelling of the narne. nit is "Ma,cCoreneatilia." That seems Irieh endegh. But it brints Up another question itt your mind.• Ihren in the transition from Trish into Ilinglish, hoer A° you change ap "M" into a''w?" The modern forma Of the name ,MacConmy and Conmy se -ern logical enough, but how about Conway and Conwy? The explanation lies in taite fact that. in Gaelic the "M" i SOMetimeS pro- nounced a,s a "w," as it is also pro- nouneed as a "b itt certaiu combina- tions, and When you etep and think of it, this is no More illogiaal than sound - lea "ph" like 1," as is done in modern English, This clan name ecntes freln the givee • name Of the chieftain who founded it, one "Cumeadh."• The olati is t of an ensue° the elder man of tire "I\DioSiorlolligh-el" or, a$ the name has TiU;icrrt 14AM • Care �f the Feel) rIPArINP:rnr, n'a WhatiO Done or What is Under Way in Each Province. Kr. .1. G. Sheerer,. Seeretery Social Service dounell of Canada. Canada is far baband, many of the large institution at WeYlmrn for tho American States such a:S Minnesota, Care of these defectives, As yet, hew- New- ItOrk, Pon'asYlvaUla, and ever, there is no WI equate legal autb, chusetts in the providing of a modern orgy and adrainistrative machinery system and adequate equipment for for disgovering and sifting out ol theee the eare of the Mental Delective$ requiring care. which unfortunately are all too Mira- This is true also of Alberta, whose erous in all our Provinces as in other Government, is building at -droonton' • Stetea and Countries, ite first home for the care of Defeo. TO an Cane -Mane it is of interest to tive Children. know what lo done for theee victims British Coluznbia has two 1-lernee, of heredity and of society. The care one far boys and one for girls. But as or such, under the Canadjazi Consti- yet no complete system has been tution, falls to the Provinces. It la adopted providing., for' the care 0434 neeeseary, therefore, to state the con- training of all classes- of the mentally ditions in each Province as to the deficleat. Such, how,ever, le in 'eon - Care of the Feebleminded. ' templation. The Canadian Naticmal domraittee Ontario has for Many Years made for Mental Hygiene has macle a, stand- certain provision for the care of ing offer to all Provincial Govern- idiots and iznbeciles at the Orillia inent to make free a survey of the Hospitel, where also a number of numbers, conditio-ns and imeds of the feeble-minded above the imbecile mentally abnormal and subnormal in grade are cared.for. Here, however, their respective Provinces and to out- inaclecpiate provision is made for line a programme or plan for their classification, for specialized traluiag, adequate care and the prevention of and for industrial occupations, the birth ot more of their kind, In a Ontario, moreover, Pee no machine - single generatioxt it is Possible to al- ry as yet for the discovery, sifting most entirely eliminate the feeble- out, and examination of the large num- minded. The Committee has made bers ot, feeble-minded of both sexes surveys of the four Western Pro- and all ages. vines's, of Nova Scotia and New Bruns- In the larger cities of Ontario and wick. In Ontario Judge Hodgins made -the Western Provinces considerable an investigation and recommended a provision is made for specialized edu- 9uebec and P. E. I. conditions ea,tion of children of school age in spe- have not been investigated. cial classes under trained teachers, Manitoba has led all the Provinces In this Vancouver' ha,s led all Cana - in this matter as in their new Child dian cities and has some two dozen 'Welfaxe Act. Some three years ago I classes and a speciel supervisor al the Government adopted the plans re- dies. departmen,t of the week of the commended by the Mental Hygiene Schools. Committee, enacted the ineceseary en- I Quebec, New Brunswick and P,E.I. abling and proceeded to have as yet made no provision far the put it into effect. It includes the ed.' care of their'feeble-reinded, excepting tablishment of an industrial farm in- , that SMUG of the worst of them are stitution, of a Psychopathic wing or in the Hospitals for the Insane, where ward in the. General Hospital of Win- of course they cannot be given the nipeg for study and treatment and un- training or industrial employment that der the new Child 'Welfare law prova they ought to have. m sion is made for the appodneent of In Nova Seat& what little care has a medical officer trained in Psychiatry in the past been bestowed has been to examine and report -on the mental given in. the various county poor - condition of all children. who are the houses, where harmless insane, mena wards of the Province, e.g., neglected, al defectives, aged poor, and even dependent, delinquent, .defective, im- some children leave all been housed migrant or those born out of. wedlo,ck, in the same institution without train - and for the appointment of a Board of nag, without proper occupation, witbe Selection to determine what shall be out adequate medical treatment, and done with all mentally defective child- without classification, • ren. The necessary specialized care This deplorable condition has be - and training are to be provided as re- come public through the survey of the quired. In the 'larger centres special Mental Hygiene committee, and as cla,eses are provided and taught by a result the Legislature has authorized specially trained teachers. All persons the Governmenteto establish and equip accused of any eilense before the an industrial farm for the care of the courts are subject to mental examine- feeble-miaded, and another for the tion and if found defective become care of prisoners. wares of the Child Welfare Depart- There is n.o more crying need in the ment • way of social reform in Canada than Parents of mentally deficient child- in thi8 matter of the discovery, train. ren can place them for traieing in the, ing and care eel the victim,s of mental institutions of the Province defect. When we recall that half of Thus fairly adequate machinery is all crime, two-thirds of all prostltu- provided for the discovery, s•ifting out, den and two-fifths of all venereal dis- special training and, when. necessary, ease is said, to be due to our neglect custodial care of Manitoba's mental in this matter we shall recognize that d electives. this is false economy in highes,t mea- Saelcatehtewan has established a auree Smile. If tthe weather looks like rain,, Smile. When you feet you must complain, Smile. -Do not mind if things seem gray; Soon there'll come' a brighter clay; You will find that. it will pay To, einile. • qf the world looks sad and drear, e . Smile. !Banish every thought of rear, Smile, Do the very best you can; Play your part now like a man; Make each day •a better plan And••sinne. If you taste lire's bitter cup, Smile. Should the doctors give you up, Smile. You are very far from dead; Waste no time in useless dread; Put your trust M God instead . Arad smile. —Grenvine Kieiser _ The Whale Is Nast a Fish. The whale who, because he lives, in the water, is often supposed to be a member of the fish family, is in reality no more one than is a human being. He is in reality an aliimal very much like a cow Or horse, and his flash is real animal flesh, nothing whatever like diet of a fish. And like 'ail other animals, he cannot remain under water without an occasional trip to the eurface. • The whale, however, is able to hold his breath far a long time. sometimes 45 minutes, teed he is able to open thee mouth under Water when eating be- cause his nostrile eonneet directly with his windpipe and not With the back Of his Mouth, as in most other an 1 in al s When he comes to the surface he blows the air out of his lung.8. It has by this time 'become so heated that it torero a eoluran of vapor whett expel- led into the ciool air of the surface and. this is what 'lappets when he is said to 'spout." incidentally the inoet famette whale of history ---the one evittielt swallowed Jonah- -Woe not A whale at all, bet is caliod in the Ellble "a great gee," 1000 Eggs in Every len New System of Poultry Keeping—Get Dollar a Dozen Eggs—Famous Poul- tryman TELLS HOW 'The -great trouble with the poultry business has always, been that the lay- ing Ole ot a hen was too shore,' says Henry Trafford, International PoultrY Expert and Hreeder, tor nearly eighteen years Editor of Poultry Success. The average pullet lays 150 eggs. if kept the second year, she may lay 100 more. Then, she goes to market. Yet, It has been scientifically established that every pullet is born or hatched with over one thousand minute egg germs in her system—and win lay them on a highly profitable basis over 0, period of four tO six years' time if given proper ca i-rieo'w to work to get 1,000 eggs from every hen; how to get pullets laying early; how to make the old hens ley like pullets; how to keep up heavy egg pro- duction all through cold winter months When eggs are highest; triple egg pro- duction; make slacker hens hustle; $5.00 profit from ever? hen in six whiter . months. These and many other mon' making poultry secrets are contained in Bir. Trafford's "1,000 BOG HEN" system of poultry raising. 0110 copy of which will be sent absolutely free to any reader or title paper who keoPS siX hens or more, legge seoind go to a dollar or A reol.e a dozen this winter. This means big profit te the poultry keeper who gets the egg. Mr. Trafford tells how, if you keep chickens and want them to make mow ler yott, cut out this ad and send irl'av,flfto1417,1°Alii4leal4e4IliegteMdtgo.,ILei.4-y hampton, N. Y.. and a free oopy return mail. "Telll 1,000 EC -7 will be sent by Not Necessary to Ask. "I hope you didn't ask for a second piece of pie when you Were over at Iolinny Smith's to dinner.' ,said his mother, , "No., ma'am, 1 didn't," said Charles.; ,'T just asked Mrs,. Smith, for the re- cipe so you could make some pie like I it, and site gave me another piece with - mit my asking for it at an." 'MONEY ORDERS. rhe sate way to send money by mail Is by Dominion Express Illopey Order,. The luau Who beets oi a viletetry is ritme.iry a man., who will.' for st ttOeiti. Ask for Mirierd'e and take, no other, A good Wateitesta,n etheaya puts out his tamp -fire voa tillakthet up hia, arnp beflore he leaves,. The hernial • adult eau hold his breath .frana 40 tO 45 egeonee. been called ler many gencrationa, the Fox -ea, aliiod to the O'Neilis et Ty een,e. Mina tit re en t tor D letetneer. ilhousanee of people needlcse•ly en- dure a half -sick, nervolis, ,itin1(10WA condition when they might enieev tatirabyieszbau:-.6t n 1? Iliny oiri-cilyalc1,1419tlys mwaLltit- to .do.' People in this condition and l'aulac soon ends their trouble and builds up abundant strength, energy and vitality. • Chas. F. Walker, 220 Langley Ave„, Toronto, Out, .says: • "My wife had become so weak she Was hardly able to de the honseWork, and it Pest 'seenlecl that my Whole sys- , tern was out of order. Taulae seemed to help us both right from the .atart, and now -we are enjoying the beet of 324l°Netlite4usness and •ei tii ed out feeling Ore but symptoms of a:hid- den. cause, 'Mulch usually lies in the stomach. Tanlao enables you to 0-1' gest your food properly,, eliminate waste and regain . your , old-time etrerigth and vigor. Get a botuo to- day at any good druggist. Advt. • Hope to Make Rain by Scientific Means. Praying for rain used to be znore than a verbal expression =long farm- ers who saw in- dry seasons their grains burning up, when they Suitea, the action to the word. Scientiste be- lieve that in a few years the problem will be solved of controlling rainfall. This means that they are seeking some method of electrifying the atmosphere. 'When they have accomPlished It man can produce rain at will. Has a Celtic Look, .Among the questious that young Malachi recently put to his lather wee this: "Dad, was • time invented in Ire- lan.d?" "What an idea? Why did you ask?" "Becamtle it is spelled o'clock." Rural Route No. 1, Alascouche, Quebec, The Minard,s Liniment People, grew again till about thre.e months ago lIa. dhya' ad trim° have had four tumors growing on My surgeon about fifteen years ago but they head for years. I had them cut off by a wrong if I neglected to write you. I Sirs—I feel that I should be doing a balsa, loatirgteh eanvdervshla,lipaeccie* l‘ivItheerae my hair should be parted, and it was getting so embarrassing in public that lt for another purpose and saw on three months ago I got a bottle of yourinimenE It was a consta,nt worry to xne. About the label good for tumors. Well I tried , with the result that has entirely re- moved all trace of the tumor, and were. E it and kept It for exactly two months, it It not that they had been cut fifteen years ago, no mark, would be seen. 1 have not been asked for this tetes.ntainauosninn: anpd.;ss-oIscIiiraninxreltidis)ae firatItam.sneDyroucan.sdReed3tmsoN. Ever3r NinarePie Liniment On a mare for a strained teution, and ampRilmoVgn n.fol: some results. qurei aripe .tett AA, e ee cntarto to 1ie11le Ouref in mashInes; c somegeove, Op,I)OrtlInitY to make e11t003 5, Veer; writ to,eee- rot, inrorrna t lo 0,4-4 territiore. the Varmenx" Supply OP., 13PnAtl2rd, '01Z, 15,411:,11, „ARN----WONDERIPUL VA1LE3 Colors, samples froa-----Geornatown Woollen U111% ()at , . terzeienereer ''ZT*W.ST , •,p.x.,TAvjo A: Q.ASR PULtQlEt ler' weeklY uowuaapor tar o. 'Pelee Meet be attractIve, l511ti fun Ireormaiton to 'Velieon P•utindilnoo • Co., Ltd., ee Adelaide' St. We 'Teepee -a' 1 ELT1 G F SALE flrutttEsI-IaR BEL -1,s A,ND Ono-, TION hose, new and used, sliipped enbleet to approval 'at lowest r‘riceeitt Canacle. York Belting co 115 rork 1st.. Toronto, cent COARSE SALT A'N17,) SALT Bulk Carlos TOROfeTO SALT WORKS 0. J. CLIFF - TORO rst -ro suetextotato Yekrzetaw Waal ..:3e • D Q ISEASES. . . ,44 now to xrssit $eallece laree to ant Ace - dress by the Aetrior, Clay elover •Coe pee. 129 'West 24th' Street Now Towle ........e.aeeeemeeeis.,,,waeeeetiweeteaaeaewe 011 omen's Wish. -- Read Mis. Cassady's Experience Paris, Ontario.—"For five years I suffered with pains in my back and from other troubles women often have. All of this time I was unfit for work and was taking the different meidicinee that I thought were good. I saw the advertisement in the papers of Lydia. D. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and have taken it faith- fully. I am now in good health and do all my own work. I recommend it to others and give you permission to publish this letter an your little books and in the news- papers as a testimonial."--IVfas. D. CASSAD; Box 461, Paris, Ontario, This medicine which helped Mrs. Cassacly se much is worthy of your confidence. If you are troubled with such ailments as displacements, in- flammation, irregularities, or other forms of female weakness you should give it a trial now. Lydia E. Pint:tiara's Private Text - Book 'upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent to you free upon request. Write to The Lydia NI. Pinkham Medicine Co,, Lynn, Mass. This book contains valuable infor- mation. eauty Prooted y C ticura Bathe with Cuticura Soap to cleanse and purify the pores. If signs of pimples, redness or roughness are present smear gently with Cuticura Ointment before bathing. Filially dust on a few grains of the exqui- sitely perfumed Cuticura Talcum. Soaptic. Oitttment2Sand Sec. Tuictim25c. Sold throughout:Lherpminion. CanadianDepot: Maims, Limitacl, 344 St. Paul St., W., Montreal, Stigr-Caticurs Soap shames without mug. UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, • are not getting Aspirin at all Youl AUTO only an "unbroken paaage" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains .directions and dose Worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved Safe by tninions for Colds Toothache Earache Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheurnatism Neuritis Pain, Pam }finely Ayer" lnes of 12tablets—tettbottls of 24 and 1001e-lemeiets aepirle le eite trede mark cregietereel Id canativ) of' iiixvcr liholithicttirc of aaCtititchli‘ster of Seileylleuvid, 1VbIle It IS w4511. ic1)01v» aiet 151112111 Moalle allele mailmi'aettnew lo 43evlill 1h0 1Mbile r5 111 1re11511i0)5, 100 Ti.,,alota, of'llayr tJullkrip.11,1e \inn. WI. ttilm,pc4 Ayltik neer Uet,i0a1 `tilltiti 1•1,14.trlr, the ..1,104.1,0 0,04,1,-,v,.,,,