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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-08-23, Page 7IlnIlreday, Augt st23 1928. MEN THE WORLD'S RICHEST Who are the ten rlehest men In the world? Henry Ford is easily rich- est, while Andrew W. Mellon, 'Secre- tary of the United States, Treasury,. was said recently to be the'fourth wealthiest. Who are the other eight? They must possess private fortunes of over $100,000,000 to secure a:.pl�aoe on sueh , a list, and fortunes of such proportions. are . almost impossible to estimate with accuracy, Authoritative estimates, however, supply the follo.W- ing liet of men credited with the pos- session of more individual wealth than � Wag ' other, group on earth:— Y. THE WI G/HAM ADVANCE Classified Adirertisaerelgts PALE FACES AND �• ] d fait() o dorp tor 1'k Bl one WOPN OUT t EMT Surnames i heir OrIgin to distribute sapxpas as dLco r fl4AOLURE, d'art chess hateable o eclalts. No r y. U money, y. : l.i� RI M E R llontlst proposttl9m Incas products Co" Deet. TN Variation--Lorrimer. VarIatlons--MOClare, ltetecleod, Mac- Hampe.ton, Ont. - : �.i e:se a roans—NOT.Lrs Irnou ' NY AJanir 'Racial Origin•—IOnglieh. Leod. (Bootaot). 'glee yearn* expprtetm'e tahclilnl Due Solely to _,,Weak, Watery Source—Au occupation. • RacIal Origin'•—I�l'rorsaScottisii. 'area; YK cents: Jr. l;.icndatl, Truro, Nova Scotia., is one :• which dates' elven ne. Blood—A Tonic is Needed This family mune OPPORTUNITY, It AL HAIR NETS, ssell easily, Send :ten cents 'foe Samples. kinu.DroPoeltion, 116ara1.commlaalon.Dorothy 7iatr Nit Co., Lindsay Building. Afontroul. WASHINGTONHAND 'PRESS; % J J TBOAN Y1BaSAndN L'=NcaQt Ot' IhUaYt es, foltu t, pdkC. co tcolumns, lona. Wilson Pgbtleabap Adelaide seW Toronto. from the days of Ne?nnan . domination It's' hand to know whether to class Anaemia lit@slip, impoverished in Epgiand, It was originally the this Highland Scottish .name as Scot- blood—comes on so stealthily that it mere description of oceupation, added raise, Norwegian orIrish,.becau$e in a is often well advanced before its Pres- ext a man's, given name, to distingeeh• � .sense itis each one of them.. a- encs is recognized. Feelings of fatigue hien from 'other leen of the same given 3 PAZ" of and discomfort, arethe earliest mans- name., II? rs festations of the trouble and these: are l itis in this, that a very k s rouser Gradually ,ea i 1.: iii titian of nlro.d'ern family Begining es the cad NolneY•given name of "Leoid," it became the name of two Highland clans as Macleod, was. 1 d where it became Ma- talten to Ire an , h small ,tasks become an effort and . ex- names same into •• being throughout the attire, and was briiught 'back to' Scot- t ertion causes the heart to palpitate twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth cen- land in that form. 111 STORIES OF WELL.. violently. The complexion becomes turies. • , q Of Heary Ford ..... ..$550,000,000 John D. Rockefeller .. 500,000,000 Duke of Westminster. 150,000,000 Andrew W. Mellon.. , 150,000,000 Six Basil- Zaharoff.... 100,000,000 Hugo Stinnes 100,000,000 Percy Rockefeller 100,000,000 Baron H.:Mitsui .... • 10.0,000,000 Baron H. Iwasaki 10,000,000 The Gaekwar of Baroda 100,000,000 Breath -Taking Figures. teacher under the Board of Education, ' J. B. Duke, the tobacco king; George and' pursued her own studies with such. F. Baker, of•the First National Bank success that she obtained a scholar - of New York; and T. B. Walker, the ship in the Dublin School of Art. MVlinneapolis timber landowner, Might Miss. Girling's design has the merit be ' added to` the lint, since they all of effective simplicity. On a back - have fortunes estimated at $100,000,000' ground of shamrqck is' impaled a while there are at ;least three other shield containing the arras of all the end'•an rulers whose fortunes' probably exceed this, amount, The Rothschilds, Guggenheims, Van- derbilts, Weyerhaus,ers, and the Astors do not appear becatfs!e theirs are fame Girl Designs' Irl J./ sal cw or pale and.there 1 loss Often such a descriptive app,ellation weight. The nerves grow weak and Would, through common usage, develop then of Magnus!, the last lung of Man, the victim displays irritability under into, a family frame during the first for fairly early in the Christian era the conquered, and established "Leo]d" was a son of Olive, a bra - slight provocation and is extremely Vikings had q generati'o'n, so that in the mint's of es n coast a name i ; of England and Scotland. His ances- the man directly, and its' reference trytraced back through •six genera - 1 t ht Y some_ sh Stamps. sensitive to noise, The appetite is speakers th would des gelate themselves along the western The latest stamps, that have been is- fickle and indigestion often follows. sued by the Irish Free State, the four A condition of anaemia calls for a 'p,ence and nine pence den�ominatione, tonic, one that will enrich 'the `blood to his calling be os' sight . t , tions to Harald the Black, who Was' times' it would not be until the secon king, of the Norsemen about the tame: have been from the design of Miss Mil- and strengthen the nerves, and for or third, generations that this atm licent Girling, a Waterford girl oY this purpose there is nothing can equal intangible' change would tape place i the Normans invaded England. twenty-one.pills . Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These When Miss Girling was an art stu- give the blood all those missing'`ele- dent she qualifiedasa technical in- extents necessary to give strength to' s'tructor in the Irish Department of the nerves, color to the cheeks,. and Agriculture, as' well as a certified nourishment to starved organs' and tis- sues.. Miss Margaret J. Fraser, R.R. 2, Thessalon, Ont., has proved the value of this treatment.' She says: "I was very pale and weak. My blood was poor and I was very nervous. I lost my appetite, my feet and ankles were swollen and I was in. a very miserable condition. •A friend advised me to try Dr. Wilhelm? Pink Pills and I. -got two boxes, and found before- they were finished that they were helping me. .I. continued the pills until I had taken', a half ,dozen boxes, .with the result that I am naw enjoying the nest of health, all symptoms having disappeared. t. feel confident that what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills' did for me they will do,for others, if given a fair trial." YOU can get these pills front any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ily fortunes. The, Rothschild wealth has been estimated at from $250,000,- 000 to $500,000,000, and that of the Actors at from $100,000,000 to $500,- 000,000. Henry Ford is' possibly the hichest man in all history. He Ms a net bust- nese income of $120,000,000 a year, which, capitalized at 5 per cent. mere - meats $2,400,000,000. ' He earns $225 per.. minute. Croesus may have been - richer, since his famous gift to Delphi cost $10,000,000, and that, reduced to today's terms, might mean $200,000,000. Guns of Gold. : John D. Rockefeller gave away $500,- 000,000 to charity and to foundations before 1921. He is the head, however, of the biggest group of wealthy • men ever produced by a single .industry, and his- private 'fortune must still rank him second. The Duke of Westminster's wealth is in land. He owns. 6.00 aores' 111: May- fair, Belgravia, and Pimlico. When the leases of Belgravia fall in he will be easily the richest man in England. Sir Basil Zahariff is Europe's mys- tery man, . but it is no mystery that heis one 'of Europe's wealthiest men. He awns- ,more than halt of Monte Carlo, and his, holding in armament firms are even larger. , He is in ail, finance, shipping; in fact, it is dlfll- cult to say what he is not interested in. The Mitsuis and the Iwasakle are financiers, traders, and - shippers. The Gaekwar of Baroda's wealth is! almost impossible to estimate; ", but his dia- monds alone are valued at $1,250,000, and he has a jewelled. tapestry . worth $1,500,000. Gunn. of gold weighing .4001b.'etand at his palace gate, provinces, with "Ireland" in Gaelic as U ve and the value below. Not What She Wanted. Speaking of the art of handling cue- to'mers, Lord Leverhulme told a good story the ather'night. He said that a Certain grocer, after being • absent from his shop, asked his assdsta.nt' whetherany customers had been in. The reply was, "Yee, one. She wanted. seine apricot jam, but I told her we hadn't any." The grocer pointed' out that the as- sistant ought to have offered the lady some other jam, and should always en- deavor to sell something similar to what was asked for if he had not the precise article. The next time the grocer went out he inquired of the assistant when he returned what had happened in his ab- sence. T he employee answered: "Mrs. Tompkins has been in ,and wanted a "Big Cinnamon Bear!" Mr. Zane Grey, the writer, has had some interesting experiences out of doors. In Tales of Lonely Trails he tells this exciting and amusing story of a bear hunt in which he took part on a skittish horse: When we topped a ridge the baying ofthe hounds rang clear and full and tooth brush I told her we had not got fierce. My horse stood ` straight, up: any, but that we had blacking brushes Then he plunged back and bolted down and scrubbing "brushes. Shetold me she had never been so insulted in her lif e. "What a Pity!" Lord Ba,lfour's' health is friends would like it to over seventy; and the n he was expected neon party, we. got a moment regretting that up in bed. It was ago I saw him playi e of tennis,. Lord 'BalYour—I may. say not want to be made a l definitely resigned from public everybody knows, he is 1's cousin, and it is some heredity that his or was Prime M1niste .beth, and he himself same high dignity. When ythe title will not d I a bachelor, for by ape when he was made a p to his nephew, the her, Mr. Gerald Balfour. Here Isla s•tary which' is but it is very- char J.'s" manner. When ' waa,shownthe Woolworth highest building in was told., "Indeed," s at all excited, It ac thousoud. people." "Does remarked with bared. ciao and it is fire -proof Balfour affixed his pince-nez his eye roam over the then remarked. "What a' Lo not all his old fbe. He is farother day whe at a little lunonote at the last he was laidonly a few weeksng a sturdy gam he really did lord -4s now definblic 1dfe. As ever Lord Robert Ceci a evidence of long-time pact. an-• cent r to Queen Elizrose to the he passes ie, although she is cial remain- derpeer, the title goesson of lila brother, r. possibly not truecharacteristic of ""A in New York he Building; The the world, sir," he said Balfour, not accommodates five it?"'he aln•es•s. '"Yes, sir, throughout." a-nez: slowly, let building and pity!" The Dahlia. I never knew the dahhlia bloomed so sweet Tall I saw one in your old-faehlaned plot, Where still you try To ]seep old things' alive; Old faiths and sentiments; And flowers• that knew their day When boiilbet-strings, and, crinolines, were fresh, Romance as formal as forgotten valen- tines. For you who love them' yet All these are deft, plaintive and fragile ghosts Who come again into your garden When' you are there alone.*' But, for us all Each summer in remembrance ' . The dahlia blooms', Nodding in queenly .spate, Bi eathing of older things; Lost days and nightly Romance gone by. -Elizabeth Osborn. I ritish Gardeners Look for Diamonds. Does it ever rain diamonds? That t'troubling resident1 t` eallzes thought, A ew o s t to put in overhead spihmlelinb of Hampstead, a suburb of London,I h© is „ill.Summar is the sewith low branches. Like a squirrel 1 systems windmills and irrt- the slope. His, mouth was like iron; I could neither hold nor turn him. He was running away! No doubt he had smelled the bear. He hurdled rocks•, leaped • washes, slid down banks; plunged over places that made my hair stand up stiff, and, worst :of all, he did not try to avoid brush or trees or cactus,. Manzanita he tore right through, leaving my coat in strips, decorating our wake. I had to 'fold on, to lie 'fiat,to dodge and twistand all the time to watch for a place where I could fall off safely. ' But I did not get a chance to fall off. A loud clamoring from thehounds close behind ddlove my horse. frantic. Before he had only run; now he flow! He left me Banging in the thick bran- ches of a juniper, from which I drop- ped, blind and breathless and shunned. Disengaging myself from the broken andhanging branches, 'I staggered aside, rifle in hand, trying to recover breath and wits. Then in that nerve- less and shaken condition I heard the breaking of twigs and the thud of soft steps right above me. Peering up with my half -blinded eyes, I saw a huge red furry animal half obscured by brush. A shock came'over me; I felt a gush of hot blood that teemed to turn to ice. "Big cinnamon bear!" I w•his- peredhoarsely. ]instinctively :1 Docked and leveled the rifle, and,.. though I could not clear- ly see the red animal bearing down the slope, I fired. Then followed a roaring trash, a terrible breaking on- slaught upon the brush, and the huge d flashed down toward me WEER HAT BABYHARD ON One vital faetor In the. stabilization ! There are two branches of the clan of names' was the fact that so often he founded, the Macleods•, or, it you the sons followed the same occupation choose to call ehexu so, the two clans. as the father under the -social ' and in. One of thes,e is known in Gaelic as dustrial conditions. of feudal days. 1,"Siol Termed" (Clan Norman, or Nor- In its earlier and descriptive form mnanson) and the other es "Slot Tor - the name of Lorrimer, or Lorimer, ap- quil" (Thurkildeon), through in English pears as "le Larymer," the "le" be they are referred to asI the Macleods ing the same as the modern French of Harris and the Macteods of Lewis. "le," and meaning "the." Even at a very early period, however, its use or omission appears to have been op- tional with the speaker.' It was, of course, entirely dropped, as soonas the name became a family name. The thus giving "Macioce," or Mediae. In r "lorymner" was one who made , bite this, form the name returned to Gai- ter a -for horses. loway in the seventeenth century. After the -defeat at the Battle of Worcester, certain of the Macleods of Harris' fled to the north of Ireland, where the tendency was to pronounce. the final "d" in their name ae an "r," In Search of "L knits". Some years ago, Professor Dewar, by boiling liquid hydrogen in a vacuum, reached a temperature within about 50 degrees of,absolute zero. This. temperature, : described as that at which the heat energy of matter abso- lutely disappeared, to no less than 490 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. Mauls' mind is not so constituted that he is able to comprehend space or infinity, and to the average person these words mean little, if anything. Yet in regard. to positive science we are now reaching points which, like that of the intense cold mentioned, are absolutes so_ far as terrestrial exist- ence is concerned. !At the' same'time that Professor De- war was •experimenting with liquid hydrogen other men of science, such Harizona. Ten acres gone to grass. He felt as though The clover and the daisies under- stood By what neglect they had been al- lowed to grow. Well, thinking about an orchard did no good. And then he gathered back to him the dream; Next year it would be different — no more need Of hiring help or some one else's team; No more of seeing then acres go to need. itsummer's Almost before we know here, And grass, to be of any use at all, as elloissan and Aches n, were expert- Has. to be mown. The,wheat iso in the entin with electric furnaces. in ear; m g which temperatures, as high as' 7,000 The patient cow keeps munohing m her s=tall Barns' have been eaten empty of their hay Next year, perhaps . • Next year heel find a way. —Leslie Nelson Jennings degrees Fahrenheit were obtained. Under such heat nickel and platinum burn like wax, and even the best fire- brick, is consumed, leaving na trace behind it. Yet sleience has not yet yeached the'absolute of heat, and it is not known what -that temperature would be. By the use of wave -lengths of light, the scientist can now measure•accu- rately to the seventy -millionth, part of an inch. The mechanism which .is very conmplioated, - shows a startling difference between, , two standards MONEY ORDERS.' Send a Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. Identification. As a means • of identification a Eu- ropean scientist has combined X-ray made in the same mould. photographs of persons,' fingers• with As! for size, theoretically speaking, their fingerprints. ,r10.00100:1100.041%0 IP l,r .NW,um..rb,ny. ,.lW1 e, .1N. Ie•0b,w,.EJ"n,,4w,Lnp�klI ,{,a;I,•'00040i'N^L', ,,r4Ft�Y'.-�iM1IK•': �.• Would Quiet Him no Doubt. "Listen to chart fellow out there rais- ing Cain! He says I've got plenty of hoobah and won't give him any." "Well, if you want to 'stop the row, why don't you give hl a drink?" Three sets of claws of different sizes enable a new hammer to pull a nail from any angle. there is na limit one way or the other.. But in the laboratory man has succeed ed in discovering the dimensions of the atom,'which as now 'known to, be about one -thirty -millionth of , an inch in diameter. 'Yet even the atom is built up of electrons. These we believe to be the smallest particles which can or do exist: Why Climates Change. "The wanton cutting of timber' is responsible for the radical change in the climate'of the United States, says Gene Stratton -Porter, the famous' American author. "With the cutting of our timber has, come a• change in our climate; weeks) re mass as ' of drought in summer and destructive I worked the lever of the rifle, but I 'cyclonic windstorms, winters alter- nating from a condition so open as, to did not work it far enough down; the freeze prematurely forced fruit and next airThe jammed. Ta ashried again; grain, and winters. so stringently cold I r vain!-fihe terrible crashing of that the fruit trees are killed outright. brush appearedat right upon I Far an ""The even temperature and the instant that spot; an age I stood'rig .rains every three or four days, which the "spot; my blood seemed we knew in childhood are things of the heart was choking me f past. Summer in these days• means eted No season of the year is so danger" 'oOnge�tled; my e and y tongue was, pasted to the roe to scorch for weeks' at a stretch with ous to the life. of little ones es Is the of my mouth. Then I dropped the summer. The excessive heat, throws rifle and whirled to plunge away. Like •,unalleviated heat; and in the same the ` little stomach out of `order sostate in which I was• born, it has the quickly that unless -prompt aid is at, a deer I bounded. To.escape; to find a come necessary for the sons of the hand the baby inay be beyond all tree' to leap into that was my only men who wasted the woods and the f r d down th siope— &mer8cea's Diane -Or Dog Stamm/dog BooL. can DOG DISEASES and How to reed 1 au1gi Free to any Ad- dress b'y the'Author. 8i. 01st/ Glover Co. a 329 vbest S44t:/ Street New York tLB..4. Keep Minard's Liniment In the house. Prevents Accidents. An automatics' locking device has been invented for street:manhole. covers to•prevent' accidents due to them being displaced by vebieles. A great many oxeye daisies went to seed last month. The outlook for an improved crop for next year is good. Hawaii is " a country of rainbows. Scarcely twenty-four hours pass with- out one or more of the celestial arches appearing above. Honolulu. question is now sou ing a res' en human help before the mother waters season, when 1, it seemed a mile—I reached a Pirie urs in order to grow their circle'' I who, following a recent severe thun- diarrhoea, cholera infantum, dysentery straddlin a hi h 'flab, vezetables, while a ndmi s der storm, vyulnd embedded in his gar- an collo are most prevalent. Any of ran up it and, g g cation are becoming 'common. ' den a heavy.lump of some metallic these troubles may prove deadly If gazer' back. "In the cbildiicod niy father planted substance'which was sodded with g1is�! not promptly treated. During the suln-1 • I heard the crashing of brush, tiro tonin - points, resembling recious'I mer mother's boat friend is Baby's Bound, of soft jumps over to my ]oft. grain with the slime certainty of lter tonin. p , - . g. precious' wn'.''.Talllets, They regulate the Then I saw a' big. red woolly steer- ing a full Crop, that he had. alter - I onate day and night. TM apparent meteorites ars only; Dowels, sweeten the Stomach and keep , Plunge wildly 'down the slope and'""To-day the night, fanner on my land has weigh ' S-Xhealthy, The Tablets are sold ' disappear. , I had mistaken a wild, no more. !lea whether he will get a Six lay five inches but' v' g,th t babymedfcine dealers or by mail a` 25 frightened steer for a red einuamon pounds each, and. pare so hard a by alliums' ibearl paying' Yield from the wheat, coin and 'fragments of diem will etit glass cents .a hox from e D C. 1'.I Fitzgerald, in whose garden Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. meteorites were found, is an ex- meal a da was the custom.of. One mea Y t d statesthegift a ! plebeians had two, only e rdlarrlati?d-bearing quartz ' found.. in had three mid the thef d pert nth allergist, and the Greek patricians; the soldiers and! from the skyexact' ''resembles•,the f the population h • Ion South Africa" ' Ila has sent his find � ° � at farina were the healthiest ell • to a . laboratory for ilzvoatigatioii to Gre p and lived the 1 g tate that he puts into the ground pa c' s. 1 than he has as to whether the next lake or pass a few yards on the other side of it" cyclone Will blow his l'obe's into the ' Radio for Jap Isles. L r til 1' to i k to tan working ou is wo 1.. r 1. ,l iii '��.�,.- Japan g rionradio: to larad' u . d islands ythe ions s by her vii ofp,.,Y •.t, 3 1? { i ten 1 e s iti ertain whether th Xou ,: •I sa'\ , g'obvious—if g.0 ib you is k� Hat, moral; :The est" T. .79 i is 1 lI d' mends .. _� ya o n ea tire is . i4le'anwhile, there: is 'aim extraordin-I want to•apply j The wheelwrig t as g d is of. for public 'spealcers to remember: � d l h p 11ampstoafi. „ e spoke the bigger the 1 le longer th p w � T g iii y activity' reported in the digging' u a: -ar ens' 1 of or residents p g' �' 'Yf r 'Title seta ct,.vars three-fourths of the tire. earn'ii sutotal area oa' rfileile or a k Mtnar&a and tattle no other. lxti on , about 1. 5 . 'll 'square inties s Asfor Would Get 'Ern Soon Enough. Fe'm,a.le 'Orator (fiercely); When Will' Women get. mall's ''rages? Mr. Meakton (in etalicure): S'lo'b get utile Saturday night, A hurdy-gurdy ill Landon has blos- somed into a "radio barrel organ:". ,The music box contains a radio re- oeiving set With a loud speaker, su'r- nicunted by a small aerial, The out- fit is novel enough to attract crowds of 'listeltarss Attractive Proposition For man with all round weekly newspaper experience and $400 or $500. Apply Box 24, Wilson Publishing Co.. Ltd. 73 Adelaide Street West. 1 HEAT Minard's, counteracts t h e inflammation, eases and heals the skin. ` • In the Furrows."" From: the cool and dark -lipped furrows breathes a dim delight Through tae woodland's purple plum- age to the diamond night Aureoles of joy encircle every blade of grass Where the dew -fed creatures silent and enraptured pass. And the' restless ploughman pauses; turns, and, wondering, Deep beneath his rustic habit finds' himself a king. —George' William Russell. Exactly how a bird soars is not a determined fact. !I' Vim, ..' . . j'QJV2Y.. "Eyes t7 i ° = 6$dt' you can 'Promote > . MR ? ' Clean, ldeaitby eadiilals n� � $InedVFutinsr`EYe.;Remedy' �� N'1ght2nd,Motning" Keep year Eyes �lean,,Ciear and igealibyt. F Yirrite;for Free Ess Care freak: Es1arlaserG60®edYCQ.?S s:I®lilR,Slieca.Csissas se it cura Tak Dailyfor The S,kin After a bath with Cuticura ,Soar and warm water Cuticur& Taalcnm. is soothing, cooling and refreshing.' If the skin is red, rough or irritated anoint with Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal. They are ideal for all toilet uses. Soap25c. autos. e2SandSlie.'lalcum25c. Sold throughoutthe)ofninlort. CanadianDepot: Limited, 344 5e: Paul St., W., Montreal. Cuticura Soisp shaves<witlrout smug. UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets are not getting Aspirin at all Lydia E.I iialdham's Vegetable Com- pound Brought Relief When Other Medicines F'ailer, Port Mann, B. •C. "I took Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound because 1 was tired and run- down. I had head- aches and no appe- tite and was troubled for two years with sleeplessness. I tried many medicines, but nothing did me any real Food. While I was living in Wash- ington I was recom- mended byastranger to take Lydia E.. Pinkham's 'Vegeta- ble Compound. I axil stronger and feel fine since then and am able to do my housework. 1 am willing for ,you to use these facts as a testimonial. 1VZrs, . C. Git i& sis, Port 14ann,' P. C. 'eels New Lithe and Strength Eeene,N. I.1.--•'tI was weak and MO., down and had backache and all sorts Of troubles which women have. X fotiXxtl eat relief 'when taking Lydia ld. pink t'n'e Vegetable Compound and 1 also . used Lydia E. Pinkham'a. Sus ativa work and feel i to do my wa ti am able Wash. l la '� Y neve life and strength from the Vegeta- ble Compound. 1 am doing all 1 tali to advertise it.'"--• i.fro. A. F.:TIAletMO14P, 1 :Carpenter Street, Deena, N.11, Sick and ailing tvomein eVerrtiioliere hi the Dominion should try Lydia 1i. ' e compound. 4(,s1?ii�ikliain a Vagtitabi a.ro in. pou Accept only an '"unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of which contains directions and dose worked out by Aspirin," physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Toothache. Earache Headache Rheumatism Neuralgia Neuritis Lumbago Pains' Pain Tlantly b :' " oxes of 12 tablets --Also Bottles of 24 anil100--Druggists, 'layer ,Agplrin 15 -the trade marit •(ogI9terod in Canada) of barer ntentlfacttlra of 'doine- Montle i3 n er n Y rant � rr A 11 1 aortia W otiar tar -or Silt the Ptibi a eftetettnitettiCna, the t'sblots Of 34Yer 'Cg?�i ani will be eiba, o lYw b Lha ran 1, S', 50111 il:a iitaYYlllad tvltll tliail° l;oneral trade 'mariYr the :"E'at'er Cruise,' ISSUE No. 33•. -*!g0.'