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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-05-17, Page 7Thur toy, May 7 1923: •, , STORIES OF 'WELL'e KNOWN PEOPLE The King's Stamps. The stamp collectors( -4 the world, are going te'llold a marveloas exhibi- tee at London, Ihigland, within few 1ontfls. * The stamp collectors of 'England Atre hoping that King George' e collection of stamps will be exbrbited. ' I It is not commonly known that King • George hes gee of the meet interest- I ng collectems of •po.stage stamps in the world. The Kiiig atarted t& col- lect.atempe when he was a middy in the *navy, and he has maintained this hobby ever sineo lie'ascended the Eth SCIATAT GE PLANE CARRLF A Nerve Trouble Due to , Wateryailadiffela Cif tilepfe'ififid. bo neetilee being chives:, tl rough th ntains Pl SFACRPTLY. fiesh—in the• thigh, perhaps aowu the ' leg to the angle—that' As sciatica. Norae • but the victim can realize the torture CoeetfOrial ()1-A of this trouble. But the sufferer need ; NEW ENGINE IS BEING Fierce ilarting Peies red! ,Geen DO t grow discoureged; the 'trorible is the Fastest machines - due ta tb e at that the aerves are , Alight Safely, - being starved by poor, watery blood, I Deid when, the blood is: eariched the I 'The s.triders Great Britain is taking pause ef sciatica will disappear, lie a in aviation are evideneed bY the °oil- 'blood etricher and purifier no other iStruction now Ander way of a giant air medicine can equal Dr. WI/ilexes'' Pink engine said to be twice ats poweeful as Pills. They bring to the hieod jut the I ansr in 'existence, and thedevelopment elements necessary to restore it to I throne. of a naval airelane carriee a a re-; normal richness turd redness. Teat is volationary character, ' why so many sufferers from sciatica, Old Ford Employe's Pay Envelopes Tee airplarie engine, which will geand other forms of nerve trouble, have Surprise. •yelps) 200 horsepower a •cylinder, le found relief througb. taking these pills, Mr. Littell Young tens the followieg beieg built secretly on the oettekiets of ,eare D. el, Anderson, Beachburg, Ont., THI WING:1114M DVANC3 A Warne:3 Barrister, Mies Muriel dockery, of St. John, is New Brunswick's only woman halide - story of IlenrY Ford. One' dey Mr. London, Air Ministry officials are re- tells what Dr. Williams Pink Pills p ter practising law in that arovinee. i Ford was going through one e hie fac- ported to be confident that the new have doue for him ,as follows;—"Some she was recently admitted to the bar. • threes. Among hundreds oothers he engine will make a transatlantic trip years ago I was badly afflicted witb saw an old White-haired man, tending in lees than, twenty -our hours a possi- raciatioa. I could hardly Walk and sua one of the machines. Ford went up to bility. fered great pan When I did so. I went him and said: "I'm, afraid you eye too Originated In Italy. tosa cloctore'but kis medicine did not Old to be working here...1 expect you The principle of the new engine was seem to do me any good. A man who •bed better get yottr pay and lay off." i originateden Italy, but the British en- was working with me told me he had The old employee quit, and, with hie Igineers have made improvements on °he° been like that and that Dr.- Wit. . job gone, eoerawfully nide his way to ft; If fitted into a bombing machine of Hanes' Pink Pills had made him all the cashier's. oface. He was handed:, ordinary type the plane would have an right. I began to take them, continu- ' Mg te an envelope contatning his pay. When , effective radius of 3,000 miles/ Yet it work. and the trouble disap- he opened it there was a slip inside,' is asserted that tbis powerful engine is I peered, and I did not lose a day, el - saying, "Plea8e call, every week • for •ucp heavier than the average: airplane I though scenetimes, I suffered terribly. I Later I had another attack, and again engine. - I the pills came to my relief. Now 1 -The decks. of the new airplane car - take three boxes a Dr. Williams' Pink rises are free of obstructiens. The fun - Pills every spring and fall, and 1 have nets are set dn the etarboardside • of your pay as. usual." Mail Order Catalogue Used by Justice of the Peace. Genevieve Lipsett-Skinner, who Is the vessels., making it apear as if all. ' • • not only a lawyer but a gifted public addition had been added to the vessels. that time." . speaker, was recently asked to eluce "You can get these pills through any The two upper decks are connected by medicine dealer or by ma,11 at 50 cents date the British North America Act to huge lifts with the aerodrome deck, . a women's club in VietOria B.C. while the lower ones are ea box from The DrWilliams' Medi - quipped as eine Co., Brockville, Ont. In the course of her ad.dress, Mrs, workshope. for Making repairs. The fly - _._...a.....—, LipsetesSkinter impressed the eudi- ing deck also is fitted with a search- _ „t Ke , ence with the fact that women who light and a kinding tower so that the • Don'ill the Earthworm. were ambitious to participate actively planes, can alight at night. • To rid soil of weeds a roller has -in. th.e public :life .of Canada must -have • H'as Platform to Alight On. • been inveeted into Which a boiler _an understanding of hAw to govern. - The carrier is equtpped with an in- feeds steam, whiCii ie injector" into the knowledge of laws in force than thl.,...geni°us rotating I the planes to land and get off. The spikes. endless platter:et far ground for several inches through "They must have a more intimate • machine hops off in the .oppoisite di - possessed by a justice of the peace 1 It occurs to me that such a weed rotates so that more speed oan be at. killing worths. The part perform.ed bX., lee Tungsten filament, in high state of tained By the -use of this. platform worms in rendering the soil fertile is before him he always consulted a large perfection. Whet will be the next? • :History of Lights. 1 Here are some interesting facts In regard to the progress of lighting. The earliest farm of lighting was a weed fire Ip a cave. 5000 B.C.—Terchetteor lighted splin- ters. ptaced in holders of atone or tiny. 300 B.C.—Lampe, made of brass or bronze, became highly artistic. • 50 13.0. --Romans used rushes eeaked in grease—forerunners -of ehe candle 300 .e..D. -- Phoenicians introduced cendles in Coustantinopie: 400 to 1700 A.D.—The candle, tallow or wax, vies with lamps and lanterns. 1700 Oil lamps, with wicks, began to be used. '- 1780-011 lamps were equipped *Ala round wicks and glass chimney. 1800—Gas lighting perfected, but candle still most univereal light. ' 1850—Discovery of petroleum, revol- utionizing oil lamp lighting. 18797 -Edison, apostle of light, pro- duces incandescent electric lamp. .„ 1885—Auer Von Weisbach produced incandescent gas. mantle. 1895—Incandescent electric lights ma,cle with carbon filament, in growing use. a certain rural district. When one, ad treatment will de a lot of harm by rection to that in which the platform 1922—Incandescent electric light, lic- ensed of a minor 'crime, was brought book 'whichthe ignorant thought was the fastest plane can adight on the not generally understood. Darwin es - the criminal code but which in reality d.eck of thesairplane carrier, for a ma-. tinseled taste worms, by, swallowing was that household- elassic—Eaton's , chine which eis going ,three miles a I earth for the sake of the vegetable mail order catalogue. • , 1 , ; minute can be brought to a eve) in a matter it contains., And afterwards ex - "One day a negro appeared before space af not more than forty feet pellipg it, bring to tbe surface as mob s him charged' with robbin'g a hen•coope The fact is that though 'the British as ten tons of earth per annum on an . •. after dark. The S.P. took down his arear behind France in the number acre • big book and flipping over the pages, of plates they have, they ease devoting By boring, perfoaating and loosening hia eyes centred on something—8 great attention th designing a.nd ewe- the s.oil, worms make it pervious to . H then announced the eentence of the stracting huge, and powerful aircra,ft. rains .and- the fibres of plants. ;The man before him, 'I fine you four dor- Among the "hush-hush" planes. being stalks of leavet, twigs', straws, etc., • iars and fort -nine cents, to be worked I constructed t.- iMinistry is a they draw into the soil is no inoon- out on. the read at twenty-five cents . per elst*.y!' " 'I su-ly C.,& an unlucky n1gge41.1a- pleated' the man as he was led away • by the constable.. " !Unlucky nothing!' retorted hie keeper,' `if the judge had opened the book . at . automobiles instead of trousers, you'd he working on the road for the rest of Year natural Mee " machine':carrying fifty SoF siderable help.. The cylindrical mass diers through the air at a speed -of 130 'of earth voided by earthworm(called miles anehour. worm -casts) constitute one of the ves-y best manures for grain and grass. Let • Alone, the warms throw these ut• in Art by the Foot. countless numbera; travelers have found them et Bitty mountain heights, notably in the Sikkim Mountains of Northern India. The earth without Worms would eventually become cold, hard and bar - •short cute, and saving time. -• •, ren. This actually has occurred in sec Vanderstraaten had little diflicultY, - tions where the. Worms have been It Ls said, in painting in a day thirty either accidentally or intentionally de - According to the Britieh Board of landscapes the size of an ordinary etroyed, and the tertility of the soil Trade, a Goveen,ment department, 420 sheet of drawing par. He would sur- thus lost has been restored only when eormer German ships., from travelers to mind him.self with pots otpaint, each the worms have again collected and ocean liners, were sold recent'lythy the of which had its particular purpose_ resumed tb.eir fertilizing. worle—L. E. Britieh Gotvernment at about a third one for the 'bleeds, one for the grass, the price for which ships Were then etre for the shadows. When he was building, ready to begin painting he called, to The total price of the ehips 'was his assistant, "Boy, a cloud!" and the Hurry is not •characteristic of the present century alone; ear ancestors were not always immune from the - habit. The Dutch artist Vanderstraa- ten was a master in scheiniag out • Great Britain ,Sells Former German Ships. Eubanks.. Oldest Map. • The oldest map in existence is a .219,459,838. Of.this the Government la& speectily brought' the desired pot. piece of mosaic in a Byzantine church is still owed about 43,500,000 and Vanderstraalen, with a thitk brush, at Malaba, in Palestine. It represents, about 46,000,000 le held up because quicily transferred the elonde to the part of the Holy Land, and is 1,700 repels', towage and delivery ' charges canvas. With the-finislring strokes, he years old. e .are still undetermined, I called: "There' are the .cleuds;. being! Shipswere then—in 1920 and 1921— the grese!" And so it went, without' • , There aele some souls in the world building for about :630 a tonaliere,1 a moment's, waste of time, until the , who have the gift of finding joy The Ounerd Line' bought the Imperator thirty landscapes were :finished. .1, eveiywheee, and leaving it behind at 51,969 tons for R500,000, or..some- thing over as a ton, The same firm recently cemints.sioned the Cameeonia them when they go. Their influence is *" New Dish Washer. I an inevitable gladdening of the heart. For restaurant use an autematic They give light without meaning t6 of 18,000 tons and it is said te have disa washing machine has been given shine. Their bright hearts have a Cost nearly aLsoo,00s. The Canadian two sets of pumps anclemotore to great work to do for God.—Faber. 'Pacific bought from the Government . avoid delay should one set break down. tares liners for about. :610 a ton and t a buey time Minard's Liniment used bp Physicians. similar Pekes were paid by other Bra Ugh companies'. Evedthe Majestic of 56,000 tone teent to the White Star Line for a little more than :£1,000,000, It would prebably cost about $2,500,000, ta build to -day. Cotton In East Africa. •rts,,cperiments in the production of cotton are being made in Portugese &Ina BRENTWOOD. Verlatien—Brantwood, Racial Origin—English. Source—A local natne, es and their Ongm ceived its name before the Anglo- Saxon form of the word changed. K E RSTE D. Variation—Kiersted, Kersted. ----e-atea---- East Africa. •Those who are at all familiar with Racial 011gin-- an s an g . Feet. e the so-called- Scottish dialect should Source—A locality. . Cui‘es Cold ' have leo great &ling:My in peeetratiug Ae an English peoduct this family With heat applied by an electrie the •ariginal meaning of this surname. name traces hack through' the nam Amp, a device hes- heen paeented to -The name, however, is not neces- of a place to the days' svhen the hosts k`'''el.) a Person's feet warm In bed. sarViy-Seottish. It is a fact not 'genera ef the Danes overran the entire north- . s ------*----a - , _. ally known that this so -celled Scottish eastern eection of England , New Call Bells, a' deal t Is 1W no leseene a dialect el The eaistern eoast of North Dr:gland NOW e1h4de dell bells. and buzzere. English or lir any gene, a borruntion ot and the Scottish Isolvlande are marked can be •operated from dash light bat- teries Inserted in their basest ig gest Ever. Tile gasetteter with a capaeity of Engliali el:meek but is, in' reality, a today by many n Aries ot Daniels Origin, 'full-fledged tongue In Itself, comilig and there is no small proportion of down in a straight line from the Anglo- Danish blood in the people who have Saiton and Daniell tongues, which were dwelt in these sections for many cen- Spoken in the north of Ezigland and turiee. And, as might be expected, a 7.,000celiac feet—astid, to bethe the Scottish(' 'lowland's' pjrior to the search of the reeord.s pf the old towns ,000 . , . largest in the world: -1e being built at, 'Norman invasion:- It ie also a torigae and parishes' in these s.ectiOns brings Belfast. 4n which the Anglo-Saxon strain is te light a. fairly heavy proportion of purer than, in meadera English, the family namee which trace either majerity of its werae showing lesa rectly or indireetly to Danish seethes, Maybe you'll he wanting: 'my change frOin the eld An5le•Seion spell- .Xlersted Was a place tame before it ,, • delipitlen 01 ,the difference be- ing bd pronunciation, , was a. family /lame, Therefore a does tween thrift and stinginess,. Thies the •Scottis h word for "burned" mat iteeesearily indicate ,that those Thrift is keeping your money In • or "bernt" is rinser to the old Anglo- who bear it .have Any blood in yont "pooch" ''bidiog the day Saxou "brethren". than is the modern their veins, though it ic not unlikely when need it Stingineee' Eriglieb word. .Aert it la from this' that they heve. The plaee name is 13 pittlag a Dad,1641, 00 yoqr word "brenhan' that thefirst elernent .taken 'from two Datish words, "Icier" aotiltet and your heart to In this family name epoMes. Brent- tied "steel," the former meaning A keep free': helping the other Wood Simply iirearie "beret wooa."'The "place,o- "village" or "loWn," Iiierally chap when I'M'S needing it-- Vriltelpal plathe ottlat neMe, ;however,' a piece where men dwell. "I•Iabltes Sir Marry Lauder, happeiis tti be le Essee, far free': Scot- don' 'is probably the beet weed to ex - land, and the, exp1ate:11011 Ls that It re - men the tireAnirig. A NOTHING TO EQUAL BAY'S OWN TABLETS • Mrs. Georges Lefebvre, St. Zenon, Que., writes; "I do not think there is any other medicine to equal Baby's Own Tablets for little ones. I have used them for my baby and would use nothing else." What Mrs. Lefebvre. says thousands of other mothers say. They have found by trial Eh% the Tab- lets always do just what is claimed for them. The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus banish indigestion, :constipation, colds, collo, etc. They are sold by medicine dealers or bY mail at 25 ets. 'a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Out. Twin Cities of the "Soo." Canadian "Soo," with Union Jack, And reek -ribbed mountainsat her back le builded by St. Mary's. Falls Where Nature's liquid music calls, Aoross the Rapids to the west, The eagle brcuxling on her nest, Another city welcomes you, With Stars and Stripes—the Yankee , teS00.0 ' No fortress facing north or south; No "Bertha" lifting morbid mouth; No frontier with police patrol; Each city seesthe otlece"s seta. The peace that ,for a hundred years Has triumphed over all our fears Shall cover for a thousand more Atlantic and Pacific shore! Republic and Dominion stand As friend .to friend, with heart and hand, Across the Border, to and fro, Fond levers and their sweethearts go. . . Through north and south, from east to west, Not "hate," but "song of love" is best; All hall, Twia Cities 01the "See," - The world shall go to scheol to you! —JoseDutton MONEY ORDERS. Dominion Express Meetly Orders are on sale in five thouSend ()aloes throughout Canada. Oss------ e An Arch of Triumph in Ypres Salient. Preparatiops, 'are in an advanded state to erect an Arch of Trampu at, also Meeln gate to commemorate the feats' of Brit,lsii arms n 1)1%1 eallent, according to the Ypres Times. It is learned that agreeneete has. been reached with the el:mix:loam end India on the matter, and that the meanorial wilihe erected to the memory of all wbo feraght in the salient, but Will in - etude a :special reference te the "rolse- Ing,H whose nameswill. be thscrIbed 011 It, as they cannot be, of .course, Scribed in the eemetries . The arch was particularly designed tinder the supervision of the (Alibi& Committee for battlefield. Memorials, and was not agreed to Until i5 eels: fled teem that It was a Worthy menhir - lel feels: every polet of view.' Tt fs Possible to say, Of conrse, svben It le Itkely to be completed: It will peels - ably take sonietbleg like two yore to eoinplete, but the etantrart for Its erection is 10 be signed at once: ”7, ,1117 rt,n1,11 A PLAIN 'TALK. We all know the, Men and wee: man In haelnees wlw, e.ornehow, never 'seem to suoceea at any- thiug—uever get on. What's the neater with them? Are they naluelty, •or is it !that their hearts are not in, their Some' people easpect Mastery without aporentlaselAP, knew - ledge without study, wealth with- out week, They Dive dresarnS and reveries audvaireregrets tor the past, 11.•()Y31, grappling with the present and malting the most df it, Thvy wade their 'tents and energy,- and weaken their deities: lave, by oonstantly formiug Plans' and repolutione whielethey never carry out, They have no etrong purpose running through their live, the one thing which ecu 'unify and give strength aud 'meaning • to their,faculties, They think that if etey pceily keop osi working, even if they have no definite goal in view, they wile somehow, arrive at &tweeze They are atrala of the new, the untried. They want oth.er people to do • the- .experimenting, • while they get into rutsand cling to the old', the conventionae, and the out-of-date. These.are a few reasons why some dent get on. IAD TO FIGHT TO -GET HIS BREATH Reed Declares (lases WPMSo Bad He Nearly Choked at rane9. "The best I can say 13 riot half good enough for Tanlec," etetes Wrederielt E. Reed, 286 Roxborougla. AVO., San, Ont., well-known business mare 'Last winter grime and tontellitle confined Me to roY lieme for weeks and left me so thin and frail it looked Ilke I could never get back to my buelnees again. I would choke up with gas until 1 had to fight for breath, was 01:1 nauseated I could scarcely retaiil thine) and VainS in ease stomach and sides would dguble me up. I could scarcely sleep a wink and my liande were so teembly 1 ouldn't even er: range ray tie. "However, the Tauten treatment suited my ease so well it ended mY troubles, Increased my weight, and fixed me up to where I felt as fine as I ever dict: I feel right all the time now, and haven't missed a day from my businees sinee I finiebea the treat- ment. Taulac has no equal." Tanlac is for sale by all good drug- gists. Take no substitute. Over 37 1111111mi bottles sold. • 9 The .Ca.rtoonist. Seated on the deck of the :sem liner, •the cartoonist am -used himself by drawing pictures of the different pas- sengers. A few months before he had been employed on a Chicago news- paper; IlOW, a professional cartoonist no longer, he was on, ibis way to the Phillippines, ,a missionary of the gos- pel. His vision -had been as swift as it had been, bright. A. number a notable people were makingthe trip, and among them were the captain of an American battleship and three or four millionaires with. their wives. One of the women, be - doming enthusiastic OYEIT the cartoon- ist's ability, asked him whether he would draw a picture, of her husband. Tihe cartoonist 'complied graciously, and while he was at work the wife of the captain watched- with interest. "Oh," she exclaimed at last, "I sup - Pose you are one of our great Ameri- can artists on your way to the Philip- pines for new ideas! What a weeder-. ful thing it is to be so gifted! I sup- pose you inake barrels of money?" • "No, madam," the cartoonist replied, "I am going to the Philippines ae a missionary. I have. given up my career as an artist." . The woman regarded him. first in • astonishment, then. with reproach. "The very idea!" she exclaimed. "To think of a young man like. you with all of your ability throwing his life away en a lot of worthless heathen. I can hardly believe you're serious! Really yeti:Are joking, aren't you?" Bight yearpassed, and the cartoon- ist and bee wife were sailing for home an doctor's orders, for the climate had proved too much for the woman. The I lives of bath were wrapped up in their • work; it was hard. for them :to lave the natives, who had dome to depend on them, but these was no* help for it. A great crowd of Filipinos came to the dock to see the missionaries off. Tears were running down the faces of many of thene All were sad and made no efforts to hide their feelings. As the steamer pulled out thousands of hands waved the missionaries good -by. The cartoonist and his wife stood silent together on the deck; their eyes were wet, and their throats felt tight and strange. If the captain's wife bad witnessed that socane, would she have said that the cartoonist's life was wasted? What Music the Boys and •.Girls Wanted to Study. - With the assistanceof the Rotary Club and °thee public-spirited bodies, plans were made in a small city to give the chtldren of th'e masse e instruction music at a nominal cost by means of music elase.se in connection with the seheole. A survey of +several schools revealed an interesting set of desires. "Men asked the particular kind of museastirdy .tlbey would like to take ep the eupils in one school re- ported as foleowe, a000rdlug to a cot- reavondent in Musical America,: —101 for vIcaln, 58 fer piano', 57 for singing, 32 for cornet, 11 for drums, 10 for man- dolin, 8 for saxaphone, 2 for guitar, 2 for 'cello. 2 Per clarinet, 2 for akulele, 4 for ix -anthems. In another seheol the pupils respond- ed itt foatows:-7fi for Violin, 47 for piano, 32 for singing, 3.0 for drums, 3. Lor menden*, 10 for saxaphonei 1 for guitar, 2 for banjo, 2 for darkest, 1 for bass horn, 1 Dor trombone, 1 foe flute, 1 far xylophone • Butterflies Eye Spots. What do the eye :spots on butter - fits' wings mean The naturalists say frankly, "We do not knew." It is thought taat, these eye •Spot$omay hese some utilitarian applicallen. 'They form one of the most intricate of all natural designs. The fact that:butterflies have been captured with their eye site Teemed, as if from the attack of birds, has been used as an argument in. favor of the view that they must be "protective marklegs," imitating eye% because birds, strike at the 'eyes of their vic- tims. But this suggestion is hardly regard - .ed as satisfactory. ,Among butterflies the most striking examples of eye spots are found 011 the under surface pof the wings.. . PLEAT1 $1.00 A SKIRT --HEMSTITCHING 100 PEW' YARD. Out-of-town orders prompt attention. Lingerie and Specialty Shop, 120 Dan. forth Avorme, Termite ...042.0itmineineteletVine..stax............eseusniscinc.ceMniumcchtcoOle .0.merlea'a Vloneer Dog Beano(1iaa Boot on DOG DISEASES .nd BOW to Feed Mailed Prea to. Any Ad- dress by the Author. It. Oaat.s, mover ce.oino. 120 Wes th Si r -et New "infit. 11.11. A. te.i.ormenateeseemofterogeelexthe*, ,sOista tO,Y4k ISSUE, No. t—'23. M I:lard's Liniment *for sale everywhere Good Made!. Tommy entered the village store with an assured air, and said to the man: "I want a lamp globe, and - mother says she would like it as strong as the bacon she bought here yester- day." • Extremely Plain. Customer --"Which way to the hos- iery department, please?" Shopwalker (an ex-soldier)—"Right tern at the next aisle," sir, forward about twenty paces, left. 11101111e, for- ward, left turn, halt, and it's. there." KeepsYour Skin Fresh ABd Clear The Soap cleanaesand purifies the pores, the Ointment soothes and heals any irritation, redness or tr, if e _ --e4.--> e On retiring /Zee, \ Treatment: roughness. Ismear the affected surface with the Ointment on end of finger. Wash off In fiveeninutes with Gude= Soap arid bot water. Do net fail to include the exquisitely scented Cuticura.Talcum in your toilet preparations. Soap 25e. Ointment 25 tmd Soc. Talenm 25e. Sold throughout the Dominion. Canadian Depot: Wiwi,. Limited, 344 St. Paul St., W., Montreal. 9 mW' Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. 0 .1 0. ;O:.4fit I :It, c ,d, 0 Artets, ,****,.........,.....-.*,,,... 11,91.1 ct , ,, . ' r1,04,* , . ...f.. 4141340.-..XOTT130 1. '49 sef Ai ..,.. . Le to trout ' go n . 04141' !to .4.4 ity-atte Mop11•41,.. eiep Oseareloo IOros NA1,41- lalattYP, larGarg. Sonan ' ren • rival' to ato consumer, a A.' eliterehii . laoteerete GOo, A ' ..,,,, . ,.,; ,,...._, ...„.„ , . „, ...--..., ......k. 911101114t4510,411010, x,01,Aoriai.A419tIal (12(4151t,14%,, ..1N6taOili.;1;ii;11,:li11,1 , $ mxtuatima ana our snedini 'artal. 41,y otror of fro) rottlrat 15151 grow tho 1111: rootavy orOfo rruit log, bit.cco, oorrt, boanti, ato. 1.11 adriglon. to general farsOk feraMirks. ilthanoso Tloal Batuto, reopeolts, caoe s , --pe _ 1100,7„ 1,,,Awap.,._.0Q, se:Smut reaeran4); ' itooeire :Mee In oOloo, (etor1e$, 4011104° ..41,1, vow% , 05,40450 to' rpitoritto, TnaTigto Millet ' 1)151, He lax :M. Munfrep,I, T.(tr4,171/Briatitt 1,14tig arfaXt afklara.--419NMKOTO Durao,o ority---soloottitt roots, welt Istoitotta 4.3,00 per thougatid, 30,00 por 390, pr $1,00 per amiacirOd, Loavene DaTILArras, 731041ftleld, Ont Exp ens Iva. "I hope our honeynioon will last, through life," , said the young brida'1 "Don't you, dear?" -"No'," he replied, Pchecking up bie aesse counts, "not unless' I become a milel lionah'e." • Agreeable. "If I lend you ten. dollar's what see eurity will you be able to give me?" "The word -of an honest.man." "All riglit, bring him alon'g, and Mite eee what I cea do dor you." • Expectation. is Tic justification lase expenditure. EYES zREUTATtia fly SUNNITIND,DUST &CINDERS RECommENDED ("SOLD DY DRUGGISTS &OPTICIANS, W5.V10 PM r5.00 BYE CAP.* BOOK MYLUCIII CO. e0ie/00,1MA, LAY SAFE! 1 With cuts and wounds. Pre- vent poison by applying Min- . ard's. It cleanses, heals, . , . ..„ ES A1S NERVOUS WRE K TellsWezneallow She Wag Restored to Perfect Health by Lydia E. Ilikhara's Veketukle Compound Winnipeg, Man.—" I cannot speak too highly of what Lydia E. Pinkhamie Vegetable Como pound has done for me. I was a nervous wreck and I just had to force myself to do my work. Even the soundof my own -chil- dren playing made me feel as if I must scream if they did not get away front me. I could net even speak rigbt to my husband. The doctor :Red he could do nothing for me. My hus- band's mother advised me to take the Vegetable Compound and I started it at once. I was able to do my work once more and it was a pleasure, not a bur- den. Now I have a fine bouncing baby and am able to nurse her and enJoy do- ing my work. I cannot help recom- mending such a 'medicine, and any one seeing me before I took it, and seeing me now, can see what it does for me. I am only too pleased for you to use my testimonial."—Mrs. EMILY DAYIS, 721 McGee Street, Winnipeg, Man. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text - Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women." will be Bent you. free upon request. Write to the Lydia E Pinkhare Medicine Co., Cobourg, Ont. This book contains valuable information. UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose Worked out by physicians durink 22 years and proved safe by luillions for Colds Toothache • Earache Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Neuritis Pam, lin ITandy "Bayer" Boxes of 18 tablets--Aieo bottles of 114 end 100 --Dregglate. Aufritt 15 the trade mail,: rr.giaorrd In :C:anadel or Dever Manutertere ot 1080*,. ee‘graeideater Salievik•acht While it le V' 011 hilMNI) ilInt A tOilln tneeitt :aVor manufacture, to 'assist Ono nublic against tm i+ 0 done. the, l'uninta of nayor Cempaniet ' Will he atanMed thoir tsaao mare, teo esteor cease': ,,t