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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-09-27, Page 7inrsd , Sejtzrbr s7, 192S. The ,40ss Elephant. Elephants 1,n, Asia are -easily tral ed; tOtrielt or a certain kited' of eve, coon becom,s,a hablatal with theih,in feet, sane adie (31iarieEl Mayer in Tarte- ping WilIl. Aniraals, in, Malay Jedtgles, theY Can fxm iabitS mate, rapidly than any other animals, I have ever In Burma, there are Mtge lumber . reale, and elle-Ph-wets are used for rol,l- ing the loge into position far the saws, iseliing witi thee hada they run the logs up two, inolined• alltlde to the plat-. fortn; two 'elephants, d,o, the, •pustiag, and a third elephant acts is bees. The bosseneaci net be an e'sPO'cially aairrial; he is taught simply that she idg inu-s.t go up the %kids, in a cer- tain way, an that he rints.t keep the two plusleers even. In his, trunk he ca-eries a few links of an,c,hor chain, which lie lives, as." a whip if one, ele- phant falls, behind. When the leg is on the platform the pusher's, t'urn ajrq pled back for another. The boss ele- phant is quite uninepr,e,s,s,ecl with. hie authority, and the 'other elephants elbow no resentment when he swinge, the chain on them. When the whistle, blowsthey all Iteow that it is time to stop work and eat. It limiters, no difference whether easy have a lag w,itatin, a fraction of an inch of the, platform; the boss drops ; his aitelie,r chain, and g.eits Out Of the 'WL WINGHAM AIWA 4 4 ,Lows, P°1311IPPe, Duke et Oriealr, one I SYIPTOTIS OF DEBIIITY R Yaltk it) fliding„ of the French 13-0Yaliefte who cetue now to Tell Whether Your Blood back to London is very ' iedifferent GOODVVI N way, and tile pushers step to one aide and let the log crash. Then without the least expreseion of interest they obey signals. so mechanically the ea - turn toward Vie:Stalls. Because they gineer steps. out when feeding time comes andlooks up and down the run- way to see whether an elephant crew has a log on the skid's. If so he waits ' 1 until it rea,ch•es the platform before h pulJisthe whistle cord. Premier Baklw,- Has • Romantic Son. 011eer Baldwin, the Prime Minister's °mantle Socialist son, wh,ose twenty- three years, of life liave been erawded with stireing -experiences, has written: it novel dealing with the decay of Western civilization., which is. t0. be published next spring, says! 'a London cle-spatcha Meanwhile he is about to eet vet upon another of his adventur- ous' 'tsavehs,2—hei . has been already in deerly every European .A•unta-y, Pol- and, • many -parts Africa and th Peet Ertd—but has- not decided, whithe h will go. He has left for Paris, and may go t Brussels', Italy 'or ,..Aff.i.ea. He says h wants to ,eee, how affairs are going on it is said Mussolini's. firrnne•se attracts hen, because he regard's it as so eon trary 'Eaegland'S; weakness. He say Surnames an Needs Aevitallziug. p4p6,11•titon"t'o4Aref:Ilitalt., °ItrfaithiL3 11:eiee-e4stistee The symptoms of general debility Que.°Amefla of Portugal, and h Vary acco-reling to the cause, but weak- n'eP-Ilew, lng Mato -lel, Who are Co, illl:gp.lisreealwnedyfeatpi;euSe•eiseta,sdalyt,eln,IdntneYg ,6ataeerietleXacilot. a,beeeaSeeei.4ttiea."Hallodi,gr:Qrielt4).°1 the ears, sametiMes bleck spote pas,s- grieved at being exiled frent Fane ineg, wheatkearileultiltleesseyee'aUe.evidIlY hine:bicilivtyerttle; t11911° 11:1' '1114 "rung days,Y°11 ienierg be.r, he More taan once insisted on g stop theating and iinrefreshing sieep. 1.ng there, " claiming his right no a Frenchman to serve as 1-4 conscellit' The 'cause of the tro ble m. be s , Variation—Godwin. r' Racial 'Origin—Anglo-Saxon. source__, given name. 0 - There is no particalar distinction in er.. being able to trace one's family name ! e ba.elt to a Nol'ara,n-P,rench origia in old f• o - England. Probably a rn•ejority of Mag - a 1iii fatally . names are derived from Their Origin nradn an the system, aa it may be mane the .kertny. He used to live at Yor n time as the bulk of the population ly 6 "‘• e 'England"NorMan. ' ; re, , The paradox is explained by the e fact that the Nerin.tansc being fer ser - )51 er Orredeal Overwerk, sometimes in- Rouse, Twiekenaam---his sister quee n Norman eourees, which is strange at k first thought, eonsidering, that at n,o sufficient nutrition due' to. digestive Amelia was bent there -63'1'd at 611 alai:urbane,. . time I was a ftequ-eat vieitor to .th If have any (n, alI ,0,2 these eamm house, The grounds are.,en the 'hart/ toms try 'building up tne. blond With of Thames the 'til(Ist g eral. e I; ' th' • '1' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and as the "bewere e:f roses''' but the chief tliin neW.hlOod courSes through your voiles ' al).°13t. York 1-1ollst is the big inarbl there iithould be an 'increase . in your swinim41g. 001 sp c ally leu lt by ti ttttpfeebtei t4a, .1 a 0 fh settrern gd,thig gionrd, SC" r apiticilt-se, and deCerated with tlie Orlear You care get, these ems, through any We ‘h4tre Seen Practically nothIng• 0 dealer in Medicine or by mail, post- ti1i.10 Queen pf the Netherlands. wh paid, at $0c a, boat "from the Di. Wil- with her 'F'. -1:46e CeUeell and he hams, medicine 00„ arac-aailica Oat daughter, the Princess '31111.ana hay ' been, here in England for a month' o , . doininited it in the matter of language e and names, thnugli numerically weak - 'n ler than the Anglo-gaxon element me 1 til finally they were abeorbe•d, and fol. lowing the pelitleal severance with their old, land, Normandy, drifted will- ingly into the "melting pot." e 'Ilhue, during this period ,of domin- ance of the French tongue, say through the twelfth and thirteenth 3 1 centuries,, the historical records s•hoW it very small iniaority of the olci Angle- r • Saxon given names. Anglo-gaxedn d names, indeed, disappeared for a, time 8 more completely even than Anglo - e .gaxon speech. a 1 But here and there they were,te be, r found. Among these rarer instances, e I are several Gotivrine, epelled variouslY r I "Godewin," "Godwyne"• and "Gotham." t They became familiar names, as did ' other given names, by the a,d.dition of r the termination "son" or the prefixing holiday in the poet Wordsworth' Private -0 Grady $ Nerves: • country at Clasinere aato'ng the lake Vetera-no of the Great War who of Westmoreland The ha -ye had th eervecl in the front-line trenches In quietest of times and their 'wish fo France will be able to sympathize with iniobtrusiveneas has beenie Priagate O'Grady. So,me of them can with Th P cOlon, i remember seeing the posts ,that held. daughter,' Juliana, Jolla- .climbs in th the barbed wire o•ut in front come to- evoted. gether en a moonlig•ht n,ight and ad- good, deal' of 'her^ time to water -nolo vence in a stealthy and threatening, painting oti the lake scenery. Th manner. They know hew they ieft as Data royal family never came nea evening came and they prepared to London, really for fear they- might ge "stand to," They can understand how engulfed in the gaieties ot the ,season O'Grady felt when after a day of hard . The mother of the murdered Cza eghting und.er it blistering Phil-foil/Me has been staying with her sister Queen Alexandra, mother of the Kiag The two widowed queens are insepar able. Mane than euee •reeentlY when. The form Goodwin' is explained, by I have saiinter'ed into Hyde Park on a the faet that1, • • the water's. edge. As. darkness fell senny .afterneon to listen to the band : ' • . o ev .11. and the stars ,carne out he felt weak of the -Grenadier, Guards have aaan ally wee pronounced long, as n hale, and that the spelling "oo" also at one and depressed. glanced the line their open automobile draWerup under time had_ the same,p1.0.3eme.eiateen. of a fire eeeete,a wave and watched it the trees so, they might enjoy the _ El sun he was assigned to s,entry. daity. The battalion camp was not niore that a quarter of a mile from a. curv- ing beach, and •O'Gra.dy's past was at o Norman fitz with the same • :meaning, and, in the course of titafe " these again have been dropped, �lierge toward the shore.. He gagneett nituare; es Of cutte, -everybcalY 'eateries - - at 4 fiat rock lying some dozen paces who they are, but no one is eo, bad . BABy s owN TAB us away. What! Bid the rack move? It mannered as to go near and stare at - certainly did! , them. Queen Alexandra, however, has He looked in the opposite direction. always the brightest smile for anyone Another flame -tipped wave was rolling who salutes her as the car drive toward a number of rocks lying a along, but the Dowager Empress o _ short distance front the...water. Those Russia always seems to be wrapped i rocks moved too! Very slowly they .sacleass--aa well ,Sthe might be.—Si John Foster Fraser,: . A Personal Instrument. The 'genera popularity of the piano that ine.trument which has long been a clas,sicaunit of the furniture of 'th home, is not the result of some arbi- OF GREAT VALUE n Mrs. Hermadie Chagnon, gte. Theo - ✓ dosie, Que., Writes:—"Baby's Own Tablets have been of great value t� me in keeping my • little one well and I • would not be without them." Thou -u sands of other mothers say the same ' thing. They have reamed by actual e experienee the value of the Tablets in e started to meet the I.incoming wave. r ' He shouted "Halt!" and brought his gun to hear. o The rocks halted, and O'Grady rub-, e bed his eyes. What had happened to . him? He had glanced back over his shoulder toward cainp. A rock directly -1 behind him was coining toward his. trary choice of ,the householder. Ac- ra back! O'Grady rested madly at O Ah! Sneaking up to bolo him in the' ear-.na ,•Ero a famons Dian -let the setts - it - - t I and dashed the bu-tf Of his gun against. faction which the listener findsin this e its hard surface. Thee he mopped his 1 instrument is the result of the com- mplex tonal effects which it is capable t sand! - forehead. Just a common rock on the of prodncing, and also of its peculiar adaptability --for conveying fully and There they were again! Rocks, every - He looked up and down the salore. directly the message of the perform,er. where were moving toward tWhat a remarkably personal instru- - creeping, crawlinby he water naent the piano is. It is capable'of im- g ones anothe,r war20 inevitable before Iong and the Teuton race is doomed; but i matters nothing' to him, as he is fre and without ties. He has, expresend the opinion tha the League of Nations is a gigantic wae.te of money, absolutely helPlIes, ie and rim by men who; don't knoW the butt end of a rifle from the other, add Mg that they are "theorists„ all of 'em and impotent in the face of facts." Young Baldwin, who has joined the , by twos, by threes and in large groaps! 'Then the sentinel's nerves gave way. ' The whole battalion was Labor pasty, which he aspires to re pre -sent in Parliament, is godfather to it gypsy. Motoring through the coma try he met a gypsy running. He stop- ped and inquired lila haste. Oa learn- ing that gypsy require& a nurse, he fetched one and suggested that if the newcomer was a boy he be warned at - ter him. The suggestion was adopted, • and as a result the little gypsy re- joices in the Christian name Oliver Baltaiiria Advertisers Please Note. Mr. Calvin Coolidge, the new U.S. President, was an Intimate friend of Mark Twain, and many are the stories he tells of the famous humorist pne that he is never tired of relaa ing concern's an episode in Mark's -early life', when he was editor of a sinallcolintry paper. He found on his desk one morning a letter ,from a superstitious sub - Scriber, saying he had found a spider In bus paper and asking whether that as a 'sign of geed -luck. or bad. The humorist printed the followipg ans- wer: , - "Banding the spider in eh -e news- paper was neither good luck nor bad leek for you. The spider was merely , locking over the Page to see which shopkeeper 40 not -advertisitig in our Paper, so that he can go to that shop, spin his web across the door, and lead a life ot unddoturbed peace ever after- wards!! - awakened by his yelling like a Com- . anche as his rifle spat fire in the dark- - ness. When it was safe to approach him A Nature Student Do yOu go in. air -nature study, old Irian?" "I'll Say 2 de—beer ath-d•Ying' 'the Da' titre tar erne woman for 'tea years." Low-dtrwri practices keep a man low CLOW11, aniesione beariags ale being U20d in Germany ort railway carriages arid in other pieces oif machinery in which the bearings work under pressate, pressing upon auditors with unique thoranglinese the personality of the artist or the character of a work. If music has any value that fact may b determined' by playing it eer on. the piano. We frequently hear composers, say that their compositions, for ernes- tra show to advantage only when pre - it took half an hour to calm him and ;sented by an orchestra, and that they to proVe to him that his treacherous, stlfould never be judged when played ! traveling rocks were only immense upon te Plane. This, tseeni, is- only but innocent tuftles making their an eXcuse for hiding utterly worthle.se nightly visit to the water in search of ,stutf trader it maze ot orchestral coax. - food. Ing. If a composition bee real musical attributes these may be easily discern - Worked viten p7op:m-1 unmihe plane. In. Let me but do my work from day to fact the piaao is, such a peculiar per- . day, sanal instrument that it is possible In field or forest, at the ,a,esa or Mom for the works of certain compo,siers, to In roaring market -place, or tranquil be properly_ set forth only by their room; creator. Let me but end it in my heart to say, ten vagrant wishes beckon me astray— "This- is my week; my blessing, not my doom; Of all who live, I am the one by whom woek can best be done, in the, right way." hen shall I see it not too great, nor small, To suit my spirit and to prove my powers; Then shall I cheerfully greet the laboring hours, And cheerful turn, when the long shadows fall At eventide, to play and love and rest. Because I know tar me my work is ' best. wa 111 —Henry Van Dyke. Keep Minarcts Liniment In the house. • Pays a Man to Wed Her So She Can be Briton. . . There are more ,ways than one of beceming it British subject, and one oE Elle strangest yet revealed—that is, for a foreign -born woman to pay $160 for the privilege of going through a inarrlage form with isa Englislatan, w,hermipan she automatically takes on hey'linsband'S natienality., • It is saidthat recently an Aoetria,n Yemen. W•110 had dtillettltY in. bedfin- ing naturalized and wished to te,ke-the sh'ori cat, offered an elderla and' lin- pecentous bachelor of her -wan:taint- anee about $160 it he -woad 'Meaty' iter, , On his agre,elnenti the' tterennany. teolt.'pla'oe at, the Regitry Ofilde, the bride and bridegroom agreeing, ad they left the building, never to see 00011 olher again The Home Office stateS that several tnarriage.e ef this 3Ort here taken elite° recently. railere is, the only high road' ;to suceess. Evidence Lacking. "Why dicl she fail in her breach-of- peornise suit?" "She nia,de the mistake of letting him make love to her by radio instead of through the mills." What is •Wisdorn*but having a great deal to say and keeping eilent? It takes lese effort to make good impressions than to re -make bad im- pressions. regulating the bowels and stomach; banishing constipation and indiges- tion; breaking up colds and simple fevers; and keeping the baby free from the many simple ailments of childhood. The Tablets- are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co. Brockville Ont. 'The Two Lovers. "How do you know you love me?" The modest maiden said The lover's eyes were big, round eyes, And high he held his head-. "Because you're fair es angels are, Because your eyes are dreams! Because without you all the world But tattle and empty seems. Because when I Et= far from you Life seems but -Death, ,alwaY. I cannot live' without you, dearl" She sent the man away. "How do you know you love me?" Again the maidfen said, „ The, lover's eyes were sleepy eyes, And down h,e east Ma head. 'Because when e'er I knot -my tie, I alwaye think of you. I Wonder if you'd like the red, Or would prefer the .blue. Because when/e'er I ,shieve myself, , Your face .contes' in the glass, And I'am mire to out myself." He won the:little lass! • —Gele,tt Burgess. Speculatio'n. and Respectable Graft. There is plenty of work to de. Busd- zees is merely work. Speculation in thing's already- produced—th'at is not business. lt is just more or less re- spectable graft. But it cannot be leg- islated; out al .existence. Laws; can do very little. Law never 'does anything conetructive. It can never be more than a policeman, and so it is a waste Of time to look to ,our state capitale or to Washin•gt,on -to do that which the law was not -designed to do. As long as we look to degialatten to cure ay - arty or to abolish speefal privilege we are going 'Co see poverty spread and spacial. privilege geow.—Henry Fond. Some people's ilea of taking life easy seerns to be making it hard for the rest of us. Refievied Rheurrnatism„ Too, Says Colaractor Thousands of people everyWhere have learned of Tenlac through the statements of others and have taken the treatment with subla Splendid re- sults that they in turn deem it only fah to rela,te their experience for the benefir,of suffering humanity. Such is the caee with L. Destirmeaux, well- known- eleetrical contractor, living at 1066 Berri gt., IVIontreal, who says: couldn't do otherwise than pub. 11 cly end ors o Tanfa a' tor 1 , was lucky to 0nd out about 2116 ntedielne the same Way neeeelf, For 1aearI 0year suffered from 'naive:1.121n, and els° had rhettlnattsm in my legs. About a Moat ago 1 was laid up in bed tor twe weeks with this rheumatism and is, bad case of grippe. I lost about eight p oun d d hnd1e1t Ialserab e, "Three bottled' of 'the Tanlac treat-, merit, beside,greaiTY iinproving my ' rheumatism, has Mecle My eating. and diges ti on b e Kat thati they ever 'were. I have -regained. My lost weight, and am feeling extremely well, "ratline is great," . Taalac is for sale by all good drug- ', gists. .Aceept sios stbstitute. Over 37 I million bottles sold, I • Tnnise Vegetable Pills ere Natare's earn remedy for ceastipatien. For sale evetyWhere. OAKES Variations Oake, Oakbelt, Oakley, °alcoves, Oalcsbot, Oaksiade, Oker, Nokes. Racial Origin—English,. Source—A locality. Here is another group of fanaler names belonging to the locality ogaest- fication. One and all of these names apparently sprang tap SiMultaaeouely and quite naturally in nearly all parts of Englan,d, at least ia all parte; where Oak tree$ grew, Consequently tbe pea - session ot this narii•e le no guarantee of relationsiatp even a remote 'one , with other pampas eea,ring the Same name or ones similar to The original forms of the name, of course, were neerly always preceded by words that ,show it was at first rnee1y a descriptive p ras•e, In the old record e we find the Norman pre- fixes, "del" and "de," meaning "of," used with it, and also the Anglo-Saxon "atte" ("at the"). Olcl speliings of the names inelude "dell Oke," "atte Oke," "atte Olt," "del Okes," 'de °kelt," "de Okhoit," "de Oclee," "de Akelegh," "de Olrovere," "de Oesla.de" and "Olcer.", The last of these is sinaply "oalt-er," that is, a contraction of the old "were,' meaning "man," with the word An oak "holt" is an oak thicket, An oak "s ad,e" is a grase-coVered open space in. an oak forest. An oak "lev," "lee" or "lees" is either it shelter or pasture near oaks. An "over" is- fiat land near the sea or a river. If oaks grew upon it, the medieval English called it an "okovere" or "okeovere." The termination "shot" in the name Oakshot is simply a contraction of :-"holt" tobe found inSL. great- many English place names,. The name of Nokes is; a contraction of the form "atten Olves," inwhich the "n" of the Prefix has been carried over to the name. 11;17rtigt'l!, '1 ,•"' 41;k t eilfit11.67 +14t•e-•,••t.le • 1, 20)11 'T1137r , KoZENZZOMNO LAI You ro_ your OVA, ak fC)r 'ff@DEM IFEIZE @UV (b'CQr, raint) One Neighbor of Another, Old Mistrese—"go you are going to mYtriered over the way, Bridget? Did you tell her that you -have b-een with me only two months?" Bridget—"Yes., ma'am.„, dad she said if I could stay with you tw,o months that was a good enough,refereeme for her,” Ask for MInard'e and take no other. You have heard of the old lady who always had something good to say about everybody, and 'when someone was slandering the devil, she protested that at least he had something com- mendable, and that was his per- sistency. America's Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on She—"It's hard to realize there are thousands and thousands of people in Europa of the lower -classes, only half clothed!' Rector—"Y05! And there are thous- ands, and thousands in this country of the WPM' classes in the same con,di- tion," MONEY ORDERS. Pay your out-of-town accounts by Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars coats three cents, Oysters are nervous creatures, and it is said that a sudden shock such ELS a loud thunderclap will kill many hun- dreds of them. Two-pronged forks were introduced into England in 1608. They were firSt made in Sheffield. Three -pronged forks came into use in 1150. Classified Advertisements cN II.VER FOXES—NOTES FROM MT WANT 1Book1ot).• Nino yearn' .exoarlenat ranckIna Nem IS cents, Dr: Iteadall. Truro, Sots Scotia. WASHUGTON NAND PtiStika. iurr5 HAYS AS NNQUINT FON A. WASHING - WV TON Hand Prase illot MD take DaSee eolurnne. long. Wilsoll rabittrhiu 54g1g15 55, W.. wow% 1.91•••{••••••••••••••••••• %••••••••••••••••• OG DISEASES • anci .1zi0ty to Feed Mailed Free to any Addreas bY The Author. H. CLAY GLOVER CO , Inn 120 Woet 240, Street New York, U.S.A. CUTICEIRA HUALS LARGE PIMPLES OnFace.ItchedandBurned. ' Caused Loss of Sleep. "1 was troubled awfully with pim- ples on my face. Little white spots formed at first which later broke out in large, red pimples that festered and scaled over. They itched and burned causing loss of eleep, and my face was disfigured 'Other remedies were used with- out success. A friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment so I purchased some, and after using them about a week 1 got relief. I continued using them and in a month was completely healed." (Signed) Miss Lilian Warner, Wil- liamsburg, Ontario. Daily use of Cuticura Soap, Oint- ment and Talcum laelps to prevent skin troubles. Sample Each ryes bylEall. Address: ..eyealeffe Ido2- tied, 841 St Vaid St, W,Sitontrall." 2015 every. Sottp250. 0intmen426 and 80o. Tale= 250, E.irlitts,—Ctiticura Soap shaves without mug. UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets you are not getting Aspirin at all Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Ba.yer • Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and close worked out by physicians during 22 years arid Proved safe by millions for Colds ffeadache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Andy "gayer" beeces of 12 tablets—Ake bottles of 24 arta 100—Druggists. 40211tin Is the teed o Mork reeStutered in Canada) 1:2 naves menettiettna et Mese- atatteseelegter et sstleatteatte. W1ilj 51 tg wen known that Aspire' teems Italus knatioritm re, to egoist tha Nene afeeiriet imitation/4 She troblete tif Bayer eitureienv win be stumped wit& thatr $tonaral treao mark, the "Bayer Ceose,a White Rhine's Handicap. • African tra.velers tele. us that the white rhinoceros frequently dies from 'eating .poisonous plants which have no effect on the black one, probably be, cause the fine scent of the latter tells him it is dangerous. rumunk ,oti.ote" IT Jrtl jug ToR yO.EYEUR $ Cleanses and Beautifies Write MURINE Co., CHICAGO for Free sookoa Eve care Tasula.616a61371...1011.41121......*;00.121.1 Attractive Proposition Nor mao vaith all round weaker Rowsieepar experience and ;404 or POO. Apply Box 24. Wileesi Pahliisittes Ca.. Ltd., 23 Adelaide Street West. Minards, applied fre- quently, dries up and removet.4 Warta. _mom= Harrobee, parody reattable, 'Infante end Chihlren't Regulator, formula on every 'rube/. Guaranteed non -narcotic, nen-alcoholic. 1411S, MEOW SYRUP The Infants' *ad Children's Regulatei Children grow healthy and free from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency, constipation and other tr.-Int-A-cif given it at teething time. Safe, pleasant—always brings re- markable and gratifying results. AtAll Druggista 0 IISUFF:ERELE FOR YiNTFZS Weak and Nervous., Made ell by Lydia E. Pinkbaltrat's Vegetable Compound Webbwood, Ont..—" I was in a very^ weak and run-down nervous condition, always tired from the time 1 got up until I Went to bed. Sleep did net rest 'me at all. My sister recommended Lydia t. Pinkbarn's Vegetable Com- pound to me and others told rue s.bcuit It, but it was from my sister's advice that T took it, It did not take lot 'until I felt Stronger, headaches lef me and my appetite came back to me.' 11 am a farmer's wife and have many thingS to do outside the house, suth as loOlcieg eiter the poultry? and ;other choros, leheartily re -con -Indeed the Vegetable Compound to -all who havethe same trouble 1 had for it is a fine Medi- cine foe women."---IVITe LOVIS sEtt, fink:treat Varna, Webbwood, Ont, Another Ner anis Wootaa 'Rads gelid .Port Ilfithitan.—"I stiffer* for two yeartrWith pasainnsido,tn :wafted voq numb 1 was torvoto and jut ae tired in the Inorl.ilnit aswheri 1 went to bed. 1 was sleepy all the tiay. arid didn't feel like doin' anYthing,e4nri Wes so nervouis I Would bite Ins, lingo nails, Ono of my Mends told me about Lydia E. Pitiltham's 'Vegetable Cona., pound, and it helped Inc so much that I Seen feltfthti. '—Mrs, caor,ne 135IPLE11, 001-14211 St., Port Iltirore Mich, Weeten who suffer from anv feminine ailment should try Lydia B. Ditilthara's) Vegetable Compound. 0 - tSSUr. No.