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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-12-21, Page 91 The Opportunity. 9 , „ The Lawseba never mod hod e.,0 Wee- dierful;•e'getOeIttleVee-yontisexeept Meth:- er ',Etna Phyllis surrendered' 'at' ty,Ight, anti Phyllis; "'who fireit,had thought thativitsis rfrailand Warkiiiits•t a missiOrt. ;try,'" IDkazike 'Phte.:m9t Pr4t1,11qvi1geqe ef tTha 11 wuely-gt.Le Ois,Govered that She was;:a teacher of literatare 4. great . , sionary college.',:, is,"fer. niether,' shehad surrendered . • , yea ' yeas before. .When Phyllis 'cried ' •re, • , •, Prgachfitliry, "Youneyer ,told•ps 'Mee, Harland, was in college work," blather, had Sitnply replied, .11.AltFirt, Tr, Alta '.smilcd a 1seirrethilng'airrused`lier,' ' '11nt-; the reit, of the family1 beeimin,e:,11-Cen aind ,alert 'and, gager, .ariN . hie when .peoplle., • . about, world'eYebts. And• ehe,childien teased' for more and more:Storie.s: till •-Beeellis. warned! them -it -ha :they, would eteea', Ott' then Ba .hio.g.',.a.b64t,, end; Phyllis. boa to be rather sharb 'With 'her iodoivlSci thfe, illsffsqlfs,111711104.€11,9N0hrom the • room. "She is a dIanecing," she ;staid. "Sheeeonelded in. .me • thattelee wanted. tohe a. meselotioey,,, . In, the first 'real •liee' ne.1Mt shehas ever talked, to. z set werseEihguld 904,0 dere 'of:the Professian.i 'eter.g".4c('044;; ,d;Fea#17. Ln g `the inest linpogsibledireanitsr I ere' to make her See things sensible-, but j'aaVeret been succeseful - .."tehy•-• le' ?" • MiSt& Herland a•skee. . 1 • "Wider?" PhyiUs looke,d,acs. if She had not heard aright. "Why, because she hasn'tthe. ability. She doesn't like seuelyingeetou know, Oh, it just isn't in her." " • . Miss 'Harland wa's,sfle.nt. But pre- s,entle •they', were talking about the' tragedy of W0111,010.'6 lives inethe,Orient "It must ,be tateefteet",,,rhylik cried, her-teyee dark 'With, eYm. Pag;11,Y-• • a -•-• • "Yeas" Miss Harland replied slowly. "And yet soinebimes I wonder if I haven't seen almost as great ,trage- dies - in MY furloughs home --young people Who start witfh ,.etinillg dreams oesUccees and have them slowly killed by the desire for wealth OT pleature; • she, stentsitieee boys andgirls who axe laughed at by clievemer or More adapt- able peeple till they lose confidence thems•elves; and the world is, robbed of what -they Might have contributefi to it; boys' and girls like little Bare- baraae" I -ler eyes; •sempathetie but , steady, 'I/reeked,' _see:vele-Into th.e eyes of Phylhs ••••• • 'teliY-!2-You don't Meian-a" began hastily. „ .„ - "I mean, der, that no human being le wise enough tO judge down en§ , other human being—least of a1a child. Neb.acle but God- leniows the powers and possibilitiles latent ill a life. • And big sisters have euble tre- mendous Influence over little one, Palettes could not tenet heinself to ane - wee. Mess 'Harland' put a waxm luand over the girl's cold -eine. "I conguatu- late you ma your opportunity," she field.• •• • Japanese Doll Festivals. • Eirery, „year in the •spring,: tett, be: „ forathe'Doll festival, the toy -shops in Telryo blossom wthlbeantiful, dolls, ee-. p.eciallea made for .tlies Particular raae etre Though the. etecksare replen- ished from time to 'time; ,as• otoasica :requires, these dolls are carefully put „ • away:like .our.Chriistines toyetand not heaught out -again eantil the. following ',It is b,elefiet tibn,se efolile,, the ,Ohinkt ningyo,' . that are dieaussed 'by ante queries and iiefeered toItii polite erne:Lira Among ehein are always two • principal leen* representing the em- peror and the empresis. With them ma.Y be, associated ether dolls, • the 'Tank of welch in fixed althiough the eneebee is indeterininate, The. ern - never' IS. Pla,ded always, on the right and .tee empress on the left. Next .to ;thee imperial personages, Corae 'the .ministers of the left and right, ,civii. officers ef .the ,court, and two arirow- hearing Ministers, the, highest mellitary °Totals,. Court ladies, some serving wine asid others w1th Mueical the/etre- neents, follow,, • succeeded • by -.eolert Musicians!, poMmoney; five ,in iiiumber. Vire.° tradditeonal dolls repre•sent foot- , Men the lowest rattik•of •cdurt set -Vents., often called: the, "drunk:aerie of thiree imrnors."' f One is, represented aig anetheres weeping, and the • third, laughing, They are -characters eftetiatia ,Japanipeeroinauce which is of- ten.Played: mao interlude hi; Japanese elheatrae41.1 thesie china dolls have their .clothe securely • fastened, ',OR them, by; -their Makers • and'ibey are ,not udedeeseedeby jibed"' owners as, are ordinary dell babies. The materiel for their clethes -le epeeially weethe In thinieture patellae. - At the present •day the individual delle ere mountedeen ,wooden stands covered:with mating and faced With bro cacti like, the .,Seaftis, Used by nobles,. Thee' are, ria•ranged hi the Oeder of th•oir .rank on.. the, -seeps.; of aided of plaeforra cdvideed -with a red blanket, A. pier .of miniatane elereene• or a curt Lain it pla dad ,beltiltd•the red platforen lelowee veitee (attain:leg 'peaell-leloe- serail are sliced on either aide at the botten1 of the elattern1 and with them a bottle of sWeet Wi110 and little elms fOT drinking, Thorp, arc also special alliO /11fi-SIO11;.t? (I. rice- cakes 1110110 arid offeecel to the della, tt talcas 100 ,Avers to yield one loll of taid ivei oil, ate • when you can buy bread like it, read3r baked? ("401[INT the raisins-- at keel least eight big, plump, tender fruit -meats to the slice; Taste it—see how the rat - flavor permeates the, ' - • ,need..to hakeat ho When .':We'ye • arranged. -vg bakers in alrnosverytov - nilFc:ity.:-.46 „bake this full- - .tiir bread: Just 'phone ariethey'll de- liver it—all ready- to sitr- prise the family tonight. It comes frem master balo;. ere' modern' Thae..anatlidr'ricipq for its st!porier.lty,. A rare. conibination of euttitiens cereal _ Mid feeit-- . betiregeoe".and geed ter you, gat you sh�uldperve it at Irnattwice a Week. i..• • . • Use 5en-1vIsed.1teisitiS'. alsOn pu4ding,14,0kda and cookies. Yin •, nay be Offerier-Other. briedstirat •-•• you knOtte lees Welt .tlIair:Siine.' Maids,,,bili the irtind:Yeie Wei:tithe ,khar,yetiielinoives gi8t:7 therefore, on .Sirer-lelidid brand.: Tliey„cos(na Mere, than, '• ordiniety • - Mail coupon 20r:fifer's boot.ed. teited Sun -Maid recipes. N IVIA1,1) RA_ISINS • The SUpr€fl1e Bread Raisin Mr • It Ira a #.41 bun-riflaid aisinurowers Memberohji? 13,000 • . Fresno, California NM mai won can wow mem mar mom mama wow =MO 9=3 CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT Sim -Maid Raisin Growers, Dept. N-533-12, Presno, California Please send copy of your free book, - "Recipes yriA,1 I NA1/18- .. . . . .. -..-..- Blue F'ackagi •I •• ,F,!.•-• rovalior- or ittiite • • ••.•••.••••• • ••,..„,..••••,..• • • •• • • . • _ _ BY -REV. PETER BRYChe About a year ago- I eeeeived a letter from a man in the eity, who, after out- lining his qualificationsems matri- mony, stated he would like to marry a widow with a furnished house, as lee was boairdin•g, and just go in and "hang 'up his hat, as it were," and make him - .self at home and look after her and the house.' He added as a postscript to his letter, "The Lord wellepnovide," evidently with the desire to impress me with his piety. • • In bhe matter of providing for the niter& thele are some who say. unc- tiOusly "The Lord will provide." Some anneee to be sincere, and -to believe it would manifest a lack of trust in God to • "Thka thought for the marrow." Others, I fear, are like the man of the letter wItb pretention•e to faith in God which are of doubtful v,aine, 2 find neawantant in the revelation of God for believing that we need Make no provision for the future. All that *a know of the great Provider -would indicate that He expects all Up- on W11014 TO,I130I1Sibi1ity 'rests,. to dis- charge, that •reeperisibility to the full- est:Possible extent. ' • It is ap.peeeniato alt etho have know- ledge of family, life in Canada that many men have fail•ed :to • appreciate the importance - of providing in an ade- quete manner; tor the, Incidence of deathand its consequent effect upon those dependent on them.: Clergymen all:over the „eountry.haVe been again and again brought face to face wieh the tragedy ot the death' of a, father in early taanlebod leaving e family witeeput fleaxecia.1 resources, . e•The man With a 'family and in re- oelpt of a mall wage finds It most fieelt to de more than. providefeT the •learegit neceesities• in the pree.ent; and the whole problem with very many le 4`gP•vated by. Periods of depression, bringing ia their unemployment with consequentdebt and geiteral &scour - Mamma: :,RoY,a1„911teirlo Museum mofizon.,-ai.: West; Near ..a.vene.e..a084 largest, permanent exhibition in Canada. Archaeology., GeOlogy, Mineralogy, Pal- aeontology, Zoology. open daily, 10 0„i0. to 5 SutglAy., 2 to 5 pan. , Bolt 1.,Ine, Dupont and ,A.venue. .oars. When in' 'Toronto visit C0ARSEEA LAND SAL latilk Ca14102S TbieleNTO SALT •WORKS C J. CLIFF TORONTO IPIOneeV DO1t.ltfilliot1190 130trii,01 D G. DISEASES and Row t� Feed. "Nialled IONA, le any A& dress by, •tho Aothor. ir deer 0/64or C10.0tito, 129 'West 24111 Street , 'New York., oarromeemeeetein. I spent three years - on the west coast. of Neweeendkend and. I ob,served • there in certain talnilie.s an arrange - meet whereby a bey, when he reach- ed. the age of eighteen os: twenty' Yearn, proceeded to lay the foundation of a housa.spendtrig his savings, #1 do- ing so, and e.ech year adding to the foundation until -the house was emoted. and he had a house- of 'his own to which .to take his bride. The same • thing, panhapa Could not be clone here, but the principle is -sound for applica- tion ,anywhere. The yoting man who contemplates • in,atrimiony, and most yeang men hope to have, a home,. shelled begin -early ,to prepare for it. Irh.e young man who can present his bride with an insuran,ce policy, or take her ,bo the home he has acquered, has, .shoeivet ina practical Way; his dove -and his ca.paaite for the responsibilities that 'belong -to ,the married state. Youth. i the .time to lay foundations, physically, mentally and .voCationally. Should we not as naturally think of youtli as the time to lay foundations financially for the fetuee home, an•d evi2e and. childrea? I -Wish every young man, far instance, were expected to purchase Insurance, endowment OT life, when hie age makes possible a low rate. Many men and wonien in middle life to -slay would, if endowment policies were coming due, have occasion to bless -those who had urgted such a plan upren them. 'rho widow with an in-' Revs that love and lea•teed are both ex- cbme grateful memories, of pertenced by flowers. Every plant and the one who hacl provided for her need. vegetable hies. its own character, we beyond the period or ea ale. swam axe told, • and lose endured by 'great numbers of ' Science has still much to learn in women, and children might haYe been avoided if ordinary measures of pre-, -caution toe the future had been taken by the young masi of the beet genera- tion. I am tot a real estate agent nor a411 oarScieenrd raivDe opnolinion Express Money an, ineurance agent! The suggest • coeits three cents. times made have the ordinery man of44- ' 23, limited meals in view and they appear ' is.n.ocking vvood for 1...uck. the best available; • If there a,re bet- 'Why does a person "knock wood" ter rneens within the reach ea such a whenever lesedoes• not want his luck to Man Whereby he may safeguard the 'desert him? future of leis family, let them be made The mitt= da believed to originate known, •from an old Danish Meth, My hope is thiut an increasing none ' According to lee legend an old ber of the younger men, though, living Danish sea eaptain, just before sbare in a Spetecithetit age,, an age which' ing a:: voyage, would alwaYs tap on lives up to and etdeed beyond its ; the side of his ship, a.nd then etted in come, may appreaiate' the necessity- Fistful Del' a few rathrates• •and value of providing as espy and as t belief was that Ue there wesa so ,wisoly as possible for the future. many millions, of their kited in ehe tine •• bere of tiee ship, the elves of ite 'wood • Equal i° the Veca8len. W011411 Mee Out and bless the geed and mrxxou4km ADV NC • It.can J. Hers if Sho-aelaps Bter Blood, in Good Comlition. • . , To every- wemanbelongs ifee right to enpy a healthy .active life. Yet 'nine out ,of 'ett suffer, often in ,silence, 'front splitting headaches, torturing back- a,cheS or some ()their of tbe many ,evile. that follow' anaeinie or ,bloodlessness. • That is why one PCss so P147.11;i"' Men with pa,Lee.third cheelie, due eYee and drooping epee -a -nil sigue that the blond Is out ef orOer. • These Women , pleauld win the right te be'well by re- freshing their bodies with the new, rice bleed of health that so promptly eraneforate ,tidem inee , healthy, attract-, . . . . .,. tiveitevomeni - • ' , e *- • . .facesiablige'teasit. in Paleetgne ., • Sie• Heebert • S'ainneel • Therele• no other', medicine eau stip- Who , . , . . ,. . , . • ;where; according to "bishop MacInnea;" . , Pirtitls rich, red blood,so speedilY and so allieljeae Dr: -Williaras' Pink Pills. . . , . Through. this :medicine thousands' of 44 •JruRais'ai,. now In in Canada; Moham- medans rind' '.0hiristians ' 'are Joinitag :tired' ' siille'ring women have fOund fcis o the Zioniste. ;new health. • For example, 1VIre. F,• orces oPpoSethe. highhanded Toli- • , A Bit Added.. - He rang in •a little sooner • Tba,n .the fellawe Len his shop; Aad• he stayed, a little Tenger , . • Weenie's weest1ieamelefeedi'fateleg7tei He • • Axid:eSeerheefed, ihitauredeekem lee *tamed but Sitite hue -Tied "Aud"he shewedi but little steeres, For. -eve& littinovenient 1418 'efti*nir expressed, Thue-latnieelicilpee grew • je st A little thicker the. the.resit. Ile. saved a- litele :Money in a hrtmdred •way; He37a,r7:eo 1-e 'blitalliftl tta,e.-exti .y,me "raise. ." A little vW-Orkinvmodiel"• . Took hths lade "idistire" 'thee; lete weought each little Pant of it Withepacteende Meet sfuhErne. RoW. We very little wont:lime That he marmides with a senile, -As! he sca„ne hes „little. bank book: "Are .the 1thinge- worth while?" 'Douglas Fir. . , Go account .of Its strength and the size in which' it can b,e obtained Datig- lian 'fir:of British. Coliiiirbia ocineider- ed as Caamdals. finest 'Wood for struc- tural pterpbsies• elf:di/bee"' it has many other uses The tree reaches heighits exceeding 260 t feet .and diameters -above 'seven or eight feet although its size its Maid/ below this on an. average in the interior part ot -British Colum- bia.. It. is an important timber for atilictural puemeseet ter the Prodne- tion-of • !lumber, • railway „ties,' piles, mine-tfinberi,Wood bleak' paving and many other pie -poses. Gll D THE B AGAINST CO S . To guard the baby against colds nothing can equal Baby's Own- Tab- lets. The Tablets are a mild laxative that will keep the little one's stomach and bowels working regularly. It is a -recognized fact that where the stom- ach a,:ad bowele are in good order that colds -will not dxist; that the health of the little one Will be good an.d that he will thrive and be happy. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 26 cents a bux from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The Emotional. Cabbage. • Do plants and vegetablee.,experience • the -same exiled:one Vest are felt by litunan beings? Scientists 'ame begin- aing to tchielt that they do. Some .extraordinary disteeveries have been made; and it lras ' been proved that:eV:en the hunible dabbage has feel - is also latowe that noses; ex- perience a rise ett temperature after they leave been pruned. Experts declare that there is no emotion, however delicate, which can- not be felt by plants. The ja.panuese have always vecag- • nized this feature in plants. They be - this direction, but it may be that 'be- fore long we shall know everything that goes On in the plant "mind." • MONEY ORDERS. you buy Lille pair of itieleas, • ensure it a safe return, , your elyereece?" cisked Pat. "Sure, I Other Danish slcippisie fonnwea thn I and illeY're ralo Catholic Itittone," practlte, • awl, strangely enough, at -Now then, Patsaid the padre, re- lease soi we are told, Ike 11'088feet; SO previngly, "only yesterday 1 hoard you ' submitted to tezila quaint ritual seem ed tell a cliergyttnia iticy Were Protestant , to acquire intinunty bein'the perils cf kittens' tbe eea. ' lidded, sir," replied Pa "but AS a result the superstition lie,:anto bed :heir °Yes opened in 1,1t; a, custom which has lived to thst pre' !"• sent flay, -seexleili)ii eat sait with cratif,40., Arlinard's Lintroctit for Oturget 111 Lane, Paris, One., says:—"A fewyears ago I was in a- badly run down, condi; teen. My appetite was poorer, felloff in Weiaht, and coiled -with -difficulty, do. my heusewerit. Nothing I took -seemed to do Me any geed until seiteighber ad- vised me , to., try' Dr. •Willehinea' Piek .Pile.s. I. hid conly taken, a. fe* b,03Ce8 'the plHsWhen 'began to feel -stronger and 1 continued 'using 'them Until I had ,taken ten boxegewhen I felt as well as eVer 1 did, and ted regained. my "net weight. ' 'MY husband and children have alsoneed the pills witIh good re- sults; and I would' arkeise anyone, who - Is; ennelown to 'give thene a; fair ''tatiel." :You caraget•these pills through any dealer id' medicine or by mail pat - paid at 5-0 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 been' The Dr. Williams' 'Medicine Co., Brockville, Oat.' ••••••••••••...•••••••••• , . Britain'a Oldest. Road. One Of the world's enesit famocas thoroughfares _ is Watling • Street, whiele runs from Riehborough, near Dever,. to ,Wroxeter, in Shropshire, an important place en Roman days. Pairt of this road is now the scene of • a great modern .engineering feat for It is being widened and remade. Watling Street,- which passes through Canterbury, London, St. Al- bans, Dunstable, Towcesten•, aad Wel- lington, was made by the Romans. The driglnal name was Via Vitelltand, but when.'the Saxons came to Britain: they renamed it after One, of their heroes, Wastla. This -person. was 'a god who was sad to live in the mass of sters known as the Milky Way, which was also called Watling Street by the Seeeonee • Howe:well the old Roman, road was Placed can be judged by the fact that :when theaLondon and North Western -Railwayfeas being built, modern en- gineers'could find no better route, and laid their line alongside it. • Funny Signs. A dentist placed over his doorway • a business sign wlecieh reaide "Teeth. extrabbecl with great pains" This was something iiite the butch- er's sfig,n which ran: ,"Beeif • is- very high; our pikes are the same"; and the grocer's: "Don't go else,where to be robbed. Try ust" • • Baby Carriage Motor. A motor .whael foe baby carriages that an Elniglisbanaa Invented also enables, art attendant•to ride by stand- ing on a low platform. • PNEUMONIA and other Lung Diseases Claims- many Victims in Canada and "• should be guarded against, MINARD'S LINIMENT is a great preventative, being one of the •oldest remedies used. Minard's Liniment has relieved thousands of cases • of . Grippe, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Asthma and kindred diseases: It Is ail enemy to germs. Thousands of bottles being used every day. For sale by all druggists and general dealer's, Minard's Liniment Co., Ltd., Yar- mouth, N.S. •110111., '• I •••••_,70,4=!•••••• KlitOW N.4.161 • Vrb.lte CfniPiartferar- 010.0^Violted,, h 1,411; of ..cent-ral 013.1n4 to ,wittich to the ,heor,tet '11,1'fk,',.hotypedve sticinary. had ••eveir pwtreted., ..Oather. f1 big orowd of Chrniedeed.r.tecind he 'ape ;of- the bowele,1:he *gentbteed. te. thine freed the 'New • .12e.e*nieeit 3,4 Ohinesie. He read the Sitory,of •Jeei*s• healing a blind man and Op 'pf healing a lame Man • Thenbe reed ef of th WdePeo ciroel e ' ' etreetis the toWen, htt:neupon the fethee lueupg Leip.eita, t'1719. witerrA,siS rialf.3' we know 'Mtn!" they cried. "He used to live here. ,Othr, ntaithers and fathers have toed es about 'hien. Be lived in, a, house dowo the street. We knew whore rbte 13 buried. H1Ls gPavo ris here; eve will sheer it to you, teach - .When the great plague curie the resit lefit.usy but he wOuld not lettOre 11104 He- gave vs strange tivItntgis 'out of a bottle We took the efilinge, arnid were better. We had babies; they' Were blirud. 118 washed their eyes and made thiem well; they .could vela Cite we know helin very well! , He hesfoftenff Waliced doison Our 'streets and 'atelien toms wtsen we were • "No, that could a I; bo!', seed the col- parteur. "He lieed in a land •flttr, far :from here. He beloadged to a different 'nationality." • • ••• - "No, Sir,".!theie insieted "yolu are Inter *kept.. He waneelghe bere,, Come .and ,We will 'show you the Waite! "."' He went tiod Slav/ this grave and its iinSeriptioxi,whichi was in...English. Ire .10otea up the heeterY"of the tonere and. that the meet lichenedbhe peo- ple had spoken of was a British celun- . t.eer, yeirang elector who hate juet coat- ' ,pleted lite medical course, who had 'gone up, the .Yangtise RiVer ;:sibc •bsu.n 'deed. Infil'eS RDA, breaking into the cen- teal.and northerly interior, had settled in the Mete toWn. The plague at last 'bad taken his life. • And :away :out 'theme years •atter. when, 'tie people heand the wceeds about Christ ibher- tailed out: "We Ireeetw him'. He lived here! . We knew ellen well!" • Poor .Oo;sotation, Quarterrnaster--She'll steady' up a bit, sir, Onee she's round the Lizezd.", Passenger—"Oh, • er—good, le it •very far to tbe Litard?" Quartermaster—"Oh, no. 'Bout thir- teen Mans." During its lifethne the -sturgeon lays about 7,000,900 eggs. Diamonds feel' much colder to the ,The All -Year Hog Cabin. The Feeding of Sheep. tongue th• an' paste .or • Keeping Dairy He Records. • ',Why arid How to Use Milk. •,Why and How to Use Cottage Cheese. • IiVinter ,Egg Production. .Poultry keeping in Town -and Country, •The Farmer's Poultry House. Simple Methods for the Storage of ice. •Dehorn Your Commercial Cattle. 'Dressing and Cutting Lamb Carcasses. 'Bovine Tuberculosis. !Feeds for Wintering and Winter Fat; teeing of Beef Cattle in Eastern Canada. Mew varieties and Selections of Grain, IThe Root Vegetables Act, 1922. 'Illustration Community Work in Dun- das County, Ontario. The VVInter Finishing of Steers In , Western Quebec. Report of the Division of Horticulture, ; Dominion Experimental Farms, 1921e 'Report of the Poultry Division, Domin-i Ion Experimental Farms, 1921. List of 300 Available Publications. • Veler•rageti 44:111' iecenT, ti t• 1T * .V,P/SNO Ilerentn illiaraSte 1 ent..sttorrieye_ ig4,p,14.0 for i:100 ,151';%s lecfeeteAt RgilQUIRE PARTLEps TQ f•fpffte 4or us at hhMe, either witb, rean• rhino or "by band"; •, write for infoloa- tien; scud postage, Tlie Carlatban sato Wkslg- 1D1, Pgar, A, Or4llIQzlt- - irfaJa eszn, 11 04D- WOOD, $T..,A 'WOOD, . .2t •N., Iota. Reid Bros., 13othweli, (Mtasr• .4,TRI;141317:;.°P171:4i14741:r'fia• 4ow grales teachers', gertiboatest 'twenty4ive Years of euecesor ',send for ' Catalogue. Canadian Correspondence College,' • 5.01' York Ridg., Toronto, Ont., Dept. W., • • form ng---stucteats accepted t4;9; f•••••••••••••••••• OXItS. 211,LVBE BLACK li!''OXOS,' Amos, adulte, Reid ltroa, Bothwell, pntarie.. . , ,BELTING FOR SALE: 'n ELTING OP A14, HINDS, NEW, OR, Al used, • pulleys. • saws, cable, hovel, etc., shipped auhieettp_approy.aLat low - cit prIceslin :Canada. •AuPit Pirt• 115 York Bt. Toroate. Ellrokeri Glass. • The eafest way to gather up broke?" glass itt to wipe it up with a wet wool- eit r.ag, whicfle shaped then. be 'wrapped in,' paper' and thrown away. ,., ce :Mineedia-Liniinent for OistimPer. , Saved 'eland Labor.. „ Operated ..by compressed etr, a tat - been inivented to rub doivie the paint on automobile borlies and save muce, lea.nd labor: • , -The horse hae no eyebrows. ER RO KLETS SENT, FREE Any of the. it:c1te/10.1dg may be heel %reel oxi appleceition to the Publications Branch Department of Agriculture •ttawa, Canada. Alfalfa growing In astern Canada. terop Rotation for Central and Easter's E 1 Canada. • !Potato, The, Its Cultivation and Varie-1 ti 7or Nervous eadacaes TS THE RELIEF frorn bead- ..gL ache or neuralgic pains worth one cent to you? That's all it costs for an application of "Vaseline" Mentholated jelly. With the first indication of a 'headache rub a small amount of it gently on the forehead and temples. So convenient, effec- tive and economical! CHESE000UG1-1 MANUFACTURING COMPANY am-medal:ea) 1850 Chabot Ave. Montreal a; le mR1,T.MAT 4 daily trains' yla the Santa lre. Pulltria.no 'Vie, Grand canyon Park, also 10 Souther"' Aileen:1. 'Fred Raiivey meals "ail the way." I..loigiycirits? ?end YOU ur our picte ze• Urnary, Oen., Atreat, • seats, re nate:ay 4trft rxoet,ress sIIIIg,/eat-rote Mice, • debate c atelli.0847 thein'a Cany' issue No. 56....'22, , ase in Trade Mark MENTHOLATED enreiti Lean Jft1.1% CliTIARA HEALS ITCHY PIMPLE Face inflamed and Disfig- urecL Lost Rest at Night, "My face broke out with hard, red pimples which festered and scaled over. They were in blotches and itched and burned so badly that I had to scratch theta, and may face was inflamed t reed disfigured. 1 lost rest at night on account of the irritation. "It saw an advertisement for QUI:. CUTR Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample, Which relieved me. 1 bought snore, and niter usetg four calms of Cutieura. Soap and two boxes of Ointment 1 was healed, in about thre.e weeks," (Signed) lilies Juliette Ortiz, tiox 1018, San Diego, (Wit.," Feb. 7, 1021. Use endows, for alltolletpurpose.s. Semple Seehtheby Addreeet"Riesee,1424. Ptak 254 St, Teta et, W.., Idteettertl,' Sold Avo0. Where:Sertp22e. 0hltaient45wed 60e. ,Te.Rulx2.5e. Detrattiettra Seep lithearte without lerania 0 Name /Post Office R.R. No...... Province (No postage required). MER'S WIFE NS EALTH Gives Credit to Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound Fork River, Manitoba.—"I saw in the newspapers where Lydia, E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound was doing so Much good to women, and as I needed something I began to take it. I used to be very sick but I am ant • now. I live on a fate in the home- stead district and we have to do all • our own work, 1 tell all tho *women 1 see what Lydia D. Pinkhaires Vege- table Compound doeefor mo. I think it saves me from going to a doctor • and is the best medicine Women can • take."—MXte, Wee Comae% Fork River Manitoba, • Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a medicine for the ail - meets peculiar to women. It is pre- • pared erorci Medicinal plants, with care and accuracy. I1 eau be taken, be women of any age, Women make a serious raistake int allowing themselves to become SO weak and nervous that It is well-nigh Impossible for lbem to attend to their necessary household ditties. • Stich symptonas as pain.s atul irreg- ularities, all -gone feelings, backache, headache, hot flashes, nervousness, ' with a general run-downcondition, indicate some form of female trouble, • The Vegetable Compound hest brought relief to thousands of women: suffering from such ailments. • Let it help you. • YeOeteate COIrGAItTGe VS11 Spohn's Disterniper Comptolind to break I1 up and get them back 10 relic:eaten. Thirty Years' mai has nuta "sPoarvs,, thals-pentlabhy 181 teetaidie ecoglie are Colds, Influenza, and Dietereper with their d• a. meting oompitetaibm awl all diseases of the throat, rinse and Ittags. Mite marvelovely 015 iweventlyet acts equally Well AS cure Reid in two siraea at all drug woe 'OeiterrellME120AX leletentelle, eetleteeleie, excel/ea/1A