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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-11-15, Page 7a • , ",,. .• • • I , I ily,°Y,111.,,.1)er 1 °Itigwjati**41"4441"1164146461411*6611ilitl WI'NOPIA.11,11 ADVCE • '• .,• ' the new .nioearcli,asvneever rnay be, ary ie not stated, but the civil list of: malt, geatternan; preferred,'" The ual- A11)iinie' wante Icing, "all B11411011- Kip.g! ' — His Jlearing' ftetore()1 'nhearevieible ean .invented n',itt, I fitting f)l.e•q. 'eat., -en* O. Leonard.,'Wteittli le, ,, miydatieeee ' , • Gritty out ot -eight le restorine is unliltelY to be'''ft 'very extrava.gant . I11114Tr-fli't.ree(108n:lielPeitt6ey'Peiti: , ,Pne, .seeing that tbe entire revenue ega, 1:110 country anionifts to no inore •"• THE VALUE QF 'value Of 'thing's is lia•Sed, on., the 4 ,.,„irtrkt?"'Irt"‘"t*N:7$00FX0rFPrrg,71tt'Prowr` ' ; 'f r11,7'; e: tronbre entailed, in entoearing thee); ' „ than about 1300 000 on the degree of rarity', aad the rarity T.4 7411. :and the trouble are; first consins, If 1 I give you a present which coSte we nothing in them or efforl or personal aaerifiee, the, gift is valueless. For tbe cause—whatever it is—that a man' puts closest to his soul he, will gJse himself, The clianioncls ea Kiberlek hnve a pride determined by thediffl! , Guilty if IS to dig thena out of the blue , earth, and bythe m011011013' that re. leases a few of them at a tithe to the . , open market. The pearle froth ; the East Indies CoMmand a prince's ran -- sore. when arranged, in a perfectry geaduated chain, because they have been winnowed from the toileof th'ou- eantis of, dark -brown- men groping . in' the dim sea -depths and holding their breath "to get them. , 'Phere, is . a checkbook representa- tionand there' is a personal 'represen- tation,: and a man might., empty the mines of Golconda on an object of charity and: still it wciuid need men , to minister to the aided need. We may be peimy-wise or pound-fooiish in our giving and still we have net ' done away with the fine thing it is to go ours"eivos and: to give ourselves as the best and most precious be- stowal of all. Plin;110 SfiltIKINO T.O.DACco , This, bythe way, ia riot the 'ohlY drum to relieve bleasele of deateCee, and head olees; and t dope tees to I, snoeessfully fleet no one conitletell io occasion on whieh a Europeanpain- , eettee :rev, . a deaf man_ It is effective when - ,cipality has been "in the market," so deafness is caused. 1)y catarrh or by , perforated- or wholly' destroyed' natural ' to speak. rtrhe late l?-tilte Edin- burgh; afterwards Duke of as , drums- A regliest ;for information. " '1144'.14 Itte :01 Leonard, Suite 437, 70 'Fifth , • Cobourg and Gotha, Queea Victoria's seeond • SOT1, was o-nce offered tlfe avenue,' New `fork city, b,e givaa • , • ate' a promPt,i'enly,, adrt throne Oreeep, and, so certain. were the Grdek that 1e Would..p;,eoeut that NoW ,yoU Can Shee're in piece; Darknesb they'. actuallY1 had . him proclaimed 'I'•(sing at Athens, • Deeigned, for , esti 'bv ' '" q01n4 were' •i '1 bearing .the new traveling , a • Not„• only this; 'hut "a' -number of . • "r. safetY raztar makes it Possible to sbave .".ino,narch's't effigy. These 'are now in' the dark.. ,,, • ,, . , greatly"prized by collectors. - It iper- In the handle of the razor as a tiny ' , haps un.neceSsary to add that, on neiks eleetric . bull), 'encased, in" a eubber - of these events 'reaching 'Windsor, the holder which prevents damns:lees from ' waS promptly de - LIFE SAVING'FOR FIFTY -YEARS. , W. Cooper, a coxswain of a British life -boat for fn. iety years, who has bee proffered ,lithaor presented with a gold watch by. Capt. Hussey, representing the President of clined. I the 'United State,si as a token of recognition of the services of the crew in Some time previously the Greek throne had been• offered to the grand- father of the present Earl 'of Derby, who also declined it. Following the fleeting it. The lamp is adjusted so that it always throws its light, on the Saving the men of the Steamier Piave en the Goodwin, Sande in 1919. 1VIedals spot where the razor is euttiag. and gifts -were given to all rnenthers of the life -boat craw'. ' clean .shave In pitch darkness is said to be possible with this device. , CAUSE OF BACKACIIES 1 ..............:__ ,. „„„....._____...... refusal the vacant throne was hawk-- oVir Do You Laugh?. Borne ' prahiStoric animal bonee, A, well-knowsl•POYeleologist has been dlireevtlegdedtoupdx tbl,a-seckNmerithioSnao,fa13.•0ealetiess • t lings in Europe, to be eventually ac- ____ making a study of :laughter, which ceptecl by the Grand Duke Otho of Every muscle in the body needs a he says differs in its. indication of when the North Sea was dry land. Blaa4rraridee,pw.oshe.odm. bis ungrateful §nly,jects supply, of rich, red blood in proportion character by its vowel sound. In 18.78, following on the Basso - been king of the then newly -formed ed ro-und a,n,acingst 'half the prince - Turkish war, Sir Henry Drummond Wolff might, had he so minded, have is thin they lack nourishment and to the work its does. The muscles of Those who laugh in "A," he says, the hack are under a heavy stain an or make a sonnd like "A," are loyal have but little rest. When the blood to their friends; frank in their speech, fond of bustle and movement, and of rebel. The result is a sensation of versatile character. , pain in these muscles. People who laugh in "E" are sel- dom cheerful company, because they are phlegmatic and melancholy. Most children laugh in "I," and peo- authorities agree that backache is ple who continue to laugh in "I" very seldom due to kidney trouble In after they have grown to be men and fact not more than one backache in a women have childlike qualities. They crowned forthwith at Philippopolis, hundred has anything to do -with the are timid but affectionr3e, irresolute kidneys. The whole tronble is due to but candid, and are always obliging thin or Impure blqod, and those who and ready to work for others. They are trutluldu Itatils lea tee= eeee- or -are armaxently not very etrong char - loins, either frequent or occasional, acters. should look to the condition of the People who laugh on the vowel "0" Let us cease to give away the things principality of Rumelia. we do not -want, or, rather, 'after we have given away' these things, lei us be a little' reckless and give -away something that we care to keep. If "high heaVen rejects the lore of nicely calculated less or more," high heaven presumably cloesTnot ca,re to have its alien,' piled high with a rummage sale THE PRIDE OF THE. iy what we have alsbarded as super- ., fumes. , It le no compliment to heaven. to immolate 'what we do :not care to ' keep. That is where the poor are ,often ' wonderful. They give till the shoe (if tlefy have a she) pinches. The rich 1, man trims a little'off the edge of his 4' • Maimfat4bired hipeyiall, Tobacco, Company of, Canada , Limited He was acting at the time as Eirit- Many people are 'frightened bete ish High Commissioner there, when believing that backaches are due to kidney trouble, but the best medical one morning a delegation of leading notables came to offer him the throne, _ AllitiCiPta.t.i0FI ... .assuring him of the support of R sia, and suggesting that he should be Much of the pleasure in life conies • from a forecasting imagination, The Sir Henry pretended to treat the BRITISH FLEET i satisfactions of vacation travel, to matter as a huge joke; whereat the 11 choose but one example, he as mudh delegates retired in high dudgeon, in prospect as in retrospect. ,it is 1 The after -history of the torn and dis- tracted little country showed that the astute Englishman's self-abnega,tion in. refusing a kingdon2 was a wise move on his part. This same crown was afterwards declined.. by' Prince AleXander Vogo- fun to read the lite•rature of „places -In dryclock, at rest and safe from -we may never see, to discusand waves and wind, yet still a flagship, compare alternative routes, to consult Nelson's old ship, H.M.S. Victory, is the experience of ()there and. "com- to be restored—,anade to look as she ,pare notes" with those who went and was when she fought Trafalgar. This returned : - - fortune ere a cook might trim scraps ship, the most famous us the world, Says the cheerless Pessvinst: I from the edge of a pie, but he does was launched at Chatham on May have learned to expect nothing. Life eye •'' '', eaot Stint himself, The poor man, who 7th, 1765', her tonnage being -9,16-5-ehas taught me that if you expect noth- -' ' , bas next to nothing, shares with him She was ,the flagship of both Howe jug you will not be disappointed." ewhose boOlekeeeing knows only minus . quantities. ' It "Sometimes hurts to see the way , • ,., . , t the ,generous strive -to atone for :the . , • . • a, non -giving of, the ungenerous; even a ,-.• .inay give in and give' up too "t""'.• '", and Nelson, anci. still holds that lionorezi rank. ' - After 160 'years of service in the 'navy, most -of the old oak timber in, the Vie'ur3r is in ,goecl 'condition; but some ebe. the wood' below. the water - But the man who has such a gloomy philosophy behind his modus operandi Is likely to find the "No Admittance" Sign hanging out for lithe at many a door instead of the proverbial "Wel- come" on the mat. People dislike a much to 80me.. spoiled tyrant of the lirie became so rotten that she had confirmed grouch, a chronic knocleer nursery, a boisterous, domineering to be taken from lier anchorage in as an asieciate in work oryplav We brother. Fair PlaY bas to sten in and Portsmouth Harbor and put' rperma- ' • • . do not ask that teammates slaall.ciwell 4. in' a fool's paradise of Pollyanna sun.- • Prevent , rank imPosition. -We all nently into dry dock. Here.,she, will know People, big anl little, who would remain las a lasting menaorial to. the. , snine all the time, but we want those give till, there is no more to giVe. nation and one of our greatest links' who take the cheerful forward look t 'Pliev .need to be protected from their with Empire. • ' : - and have Ike disposition to make the Great caution had to be exercised best of, things and, as the Scot says, in docking, as it was feared the ,tswilustre 0,er the lave. o' it." , weight of the hull would be toe much WhY was hope implanted in the .for the ag-ed timbers, and Len steel- human breast, to spring eternal there, frame clutches have been made to if we were not meant to, believe- the* grip the hull, and thus relieve the the best ls yet to be, and then to ke.el of, most of the weight of the labor With all our might to make that vessel, Across the end of the dock, belief come eitaa, in face? As eyes to the stern, of the ship, a concrete were madefor seeing, the heart was dam has been built, thue making her meant to hope. The chief incentive secure for all time. to persevere and to make Re -Ogress is During her long years of service, . not that -which, is—a fortune made, both on active work and for nearly an ambition realized, a .suceess at- e :hundred years as flagship in Ports- tained—but that which may be. A mouth Harbor, the old ship has under- man in business keeps going because gone many alteration,s, changing her he sees, to far horizons, and his am- bition carries even farther than his . • , own warm hearts. It is a shame to ; ; . take the money"; and, there are al- ' way S ,plausibly friendly panha,ndlers ' ,standing ready, Or 'lurking ' int ambush ' . : to fleece them, for they are as easy , prey as the lambs led to the slatUghter. : • Value of Human Being. , Such as these need no reaSsertion ' of the doctrine of the preciousness of ' the gift of self. We make a boast of nian's many inventions of machinerl, , but no machine has yet evicted man !. from his necessary place as the in- ' venter. Plan any enterprise YOU - please, ask any question, and thefirst _ st,e0 isteo secure the man for the place e . ' cr the answer. Out of a few ounces apPaa,ance '-"at•• of terafalgar. Nautical Research So- ot brain matter must cense a bridge, days. The a railway, a tunnel, a war, a book, a ciety, however, has undertaken her kingdom complete restoration, Provided for by ' A man's value Mr exceeds that of Public subscription, and intend to the things he Possesses, efen't when make her like the Victory of Nelson's - to' himself -he sernms worthless. He time, -when she led the wooden -Ivens elt So it is in all affairs of life. If only we dare and endure sufficiently, we shall not be disapPointed. Deprive a man of expectancy' and you shatter the mainspring of the whole mmehin- Channel towards ery ,of his being. Rat.you cannot de- , la worth more than all his hand can of England/ down grasp or his eye can reach, Tliere Trafalgar. - prive 'him of that central, primal force is no patentable substitute for 'him, This is no small undertaking. Many unless he wills it so. ' simply Decease he is Alia vehicle and details of structure have to be alter- , ed, and the old guns have to be re- ' the projector of a $oul, whether he ever prates of it or not. The soul is 'Placed, or ones of similar pattern put, net merely a vague, impalpable eswith their -carriages, in every port- sence esrhich provides the receptivity hole. Shot -racks, sponges, and ram - for inspirational experience and reli- mars have also to be provided. Eabins gions exercises. It is more, than a and the general accommodation' for reaSon to go to church, more than a the crew are to be restored, and even eandidacy for Paradise. Since "things the mess -tables between the guns will never yet created things," there is no eomparis.ent between the value of a - man with a soul and soulless things, An Alliterative Love -Letter, be brought back again, to give an ex- act idea .of thing S as they were ..on the, day -oe battle. The masts are to be nutde highdr, and the rigging will be preeisely the same as in 1805. ' -Adored and Angelic Amelia, ---Ac- Perhaps the finest sight for future , riePt an ardent and artless an:milers visitors to the restored Vitt.ory will affections, alleviate an anguished ad-- be the portion of the decks which is mire:as alarms, end answer an anion to be kept "clear for'action" as in the ()men days, This will give the pres- ous applicant's avowed a,rdor. he Antella, all assumes an awful ent generation eorne idea of the tre- aspeetl" Ambition, avarice, and :erre- mendnirg ev°1"ti°" hi the navy (11111ng ganee, nee, , alasattractive ailltre. Ille jakIt centilr'Y' mente, ansi abase an ardent attaea. - The Victory was coniploted in 1765, :meet,. Appease an aehing and affee- and in: the l'ire84 of 1:18:t daY halt:11Y . d f the sill ) tionate adorer's alarms and anon ac- al* meiOfl ' VII i911 pi ace to 'Lake so great a pee knowledge 'affialieed Albert's , alliance \ in history, , Early records 'show the as agreeable and acceptable. . Anx- • • launching of the Victory sandwiched] • mous y awe, tine, au e ee agswer, aoeent talien.1 between some 51011)08±10tic news items , • , admirer's aching adieu. one containing the aceetini, of a ealf klWaYs angelin and adorableb•eing -barn with five lcg$t andI the other of lia'e admieing and. affectionate , three months' old baby "Arthur 'Albert," being' drepped ailside" down in a. tub of hot water . With fatal. results, , Ilecoestreeting the Vietoey, and . A Mob. ... thtia. keeping hos Mernory sacred to A young man with a peeely out no- , . the nation and futtIre generations, torietisly flirtatien8 fiancee wrote to Will cost abont $750,000, of which. a eenimeed rival, "Pere been told that seine $400,000 lute been eallectied. Ad. you have been seen kissing my girl. spriest Sir Doveton Sturdee, the him - Come tb 'ins office at 11 on Vriday. . ous victor of the Palltiand Islands bat- tle, lies made isimself:reeponsible for C011ecting the ineasey, and he has the genereae cteeperatien of 1110 feerd .,....,...-.,,...-4,4 , -,--..----- iltayor of 1,Ondon, I Wena to Iray:e' tiiie matter out," The eival tinevered, "I've :received a copy (it your iiirceslaie leiter. and wfll be lieeseent at the Meeting!' Ti2a). on'ty iiarm *ho itt the downward 'Ptah i.e.' the, tvei14ligger, No ia1x eYet hvei, lo bb as old 1513 he fee.lo at twenty-one: liondees :force is 21,27,1 eti,,t;nee, while her,fire brigade nurebers anotber 2,000 men. blood. It will be found. 1» most cases that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills by build- ing up the blood and feeding the stare-, ed nerves and muscles will banish ..the pains and make you feel better in rides,' probably for a similar reason. every other way. How mach better to that.which had previously' induect. steis to try Dr; Williams, pink Pills the Count of Flanders to decline the honor of ruling over the turbulent pomila.ce of the sister principality of Rumania. - Said this astute individual, .when offered the crown -by the President of the Council of Ministers: "If you den guarantee that I shall not be assassi- nated, /IS was M. Catargheor interned for life -in a dungeon, like M. Petrov- ski, mY answer is 'Yes.' Otherwise it is 'No.'" ' The Ministers looked askance at each other, then silently withdrew. Not always, however, have offers of this description been declined. IVIany ?rears ago Sir James Brooke, an ex -officer in the old East India Com- pany's service, Was offered, and ac- cepted, the crown of Sarawak, in Borneo, over which country his de- scendant, the present Rajah Brooke, still reigns, it having been -constituted an independent State under British. protection in 1888. GUA D THE BABY AGAINST CO To guard, the baby against colds nothieg 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 and bowels are in good order that colds will not exist; that the health of the little one will be good and that he will thrive and he, happy and good- natured. The Tablets are seld by medicine dealers or by mail -at 25 •C eats a box from The Dr. Williams'. Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. for your blood than to give way to un- reasonable alarm about your kidneys. If yen. really suspect your kidneys any doctor can make a test in ten rah:lutes, that will set your fears at rest, Of tell you the worst. All dealers in medicine sell Dr. Wil - Hems' Pink Pills, or you can get them by mail at 60 cent's a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont. . Why Bread Grows Stale. Why does bread grow stale? When the dough is put into the oven, the starch in it is turned into jelly by the heat. ,This jelly holds the moisture in the loaf and distri- butes it evenly throughout the bread. As the loaf cools, the starch gives up its moisture, -which drawh from the centre of the bread into the out crust. Thuts the inside, or erinnb, becomes hard and dry, -while the crust ch:anges froin a hard 'and crisp sub- stance into a soft ;and "doughy" one. Cold weather makes bread stale rapidly, an.d for the same reason stale loaves can be freshened -by being placed in an oven for a few minutes. • Scientists have been investigating the staleness.of bread, and. are now trying ,to find out why some leavee keep much better than •others. At the S y "Bayer and Insisti san-ie time, it is pointed out that stale bread is wholesome and that there is really no need for the waste that goes on at the present :Ulna. are often successful in life, because they are not over -sensitive. Tlaey do not worry about public opinion, and criticism slips off their backs like water off a duck's. They are gener- ous, self-confident, and, in spite of their pushfulness, Usually liked, and trusted. ' Pew people like laughers in "U." As a Matter of fact, these individuals are very sparing it their laughter. Life for them holds little of fun and mirth. MONEY• ORDERS. Dominion Express Money Orders are on sale in five thousand offices throughout Canada. World's Record. The great steamship Leviathan can carry passengers enough to fill a good-sized country town, nearly 5,000 in all. But this number is nothing to her actual ,carrying capacity, for during the war as a tra,nsport she once carried 13,548, crew and soldiers --eas- ily the world's record la opkan. travel. 01005.140,itge. 11;tinfiftalktallnaftltr'P' -410 --,,Hglettilt1plealtbyesstlitieti ' ; ettiat1iFiemaie*:: _lace, it,.YewlertiiEjitritgooMtlece:ettodlp:k.,7,ealitby.. • ' . EfledneEeeSeeiddsr.000FiailOOkiteOgiciltle-eree I America's Pioneer Dog. Remedies ' B9ois3 igi , DOG ..DISEASES A pearl discovered in a freshwater mussel hi the River Conway, North Wales, is said to form one of the Crown jewels. Two El izabeths. Professor of History: "What do yOu know of the age of, Elizabeth, ' Mr, Jones?" Jones (dreamily): "She veill be nine- teen next week." Ask for Minard's and take no other. 0 Surnames d Their Origin DUDLEY SHOCKING, VARIATION—Herrick, :Erick. ' RACIAL ORIGI N—A cc lo-Saxo n. SOURCE—A locality. Fly Reformer: There's an opium den wide open—I shall have to report this to the police! - , Seals Show Grief. The cries of no animals approach , more closely that of the human voice than those at seals when lamentieg: the loss or capture Of their yens's& l'hey emit a wailing land affecting crY, similar to that of a woman in eep gine . Stingy Fattier, First T3oy: "Your father mest be an awful mean, man. Him a shoemaker, and makint you wear them old boots!" Second Boy; "Iie's 'nothit'' to What your father is. Him a dentist, and your baby only got (hie. tooth!" Th d f man is 150t ill' his shill, but in his eyes, ears, hands, and Feet. —Prof. D. F. HoWard. Men are known by the company they` k.eep; rtriernen by the clothes they keep on :wearing: A' true friend -is a man who lenoWs you thoroughly, but likes you just the sante'. • Bettr this in inind-lie wins the mal)leat fight Who slays Ilia sins. , • ., 'Keep Minatd's;Lininiteht in the house, 11ACIAL ORICAIN--Englisla also Norse. SOURCE—A given name. These famil3r names all are founded on the given name of Erick, or Erie, wbicl "i'M more of an /Anglo-Saxon and a Nor... name than a No,. a --ee theeeh -it has been by no ..asans ex- tinct in England at any time subie- quent to the Norman hive-. In- deed, it was ne of the comparatively few .Ang,lo-Saxon given names Which achieved • ome ponular a,' nom the first, even among 1,120 Norman con- querors. There is a very 'old line 'ot Ericks and Plerrick's among the British no- bility, and their tradition is that they 'take their name from Eric the For- ester, the A lo -Saxon chieftain who recrtilted the forces of the defenders -Who met William the Conqueror at Hastings, However thiS may be, it does hot follow that all IierrIcks a,nd Melts trace back to a single progesii- 'tor The given name wee quite coni - met in England, -ana still more 00 la Seiniclinevian lands, and it wotild not be reaeenable 10 aesatine, that :family name S dicl tint develop from it in many instanceS iti different sections of the coabIries ead vi4hout any I ,oloSo ;biped tiesbetvireen •the ;original founders of;',..tho different familioP. ; This, family name is quite a com- mon one. In many instances, too, it bas become a given name, in that thoroughly modern tendency to tiee family names in this matter. The Dudleys, it would appear, all trace batk to the town of that name in Worcestershire, but it should be understood that the use of the town amuse as a family name developed oaly in the eases of individuals or families after they had left the com- munity and were traveling or had set - U elsewhere. A map still living in Dudley would never have become known to other residents of that place as "Walter of Dudley!' It would have Constituted to differentiations, for everybody the. town would have bsen "of Dudley." Tlie name of, the town itself; like the majority of English place names, traces heel to Anglo-Saxon. times. Though the Anglo-Saxons dro :e be- fore theni and virtually exterminated the original Britons, settling the coun- try and besiowIng their own Teutonic names on places whic had Previously been natied by the Welsh, the Norman Comps eters se ttioedown among their conquered., and adopted their place 110551ee for the most. part.. The Dense Dudley was orlgieelly "Dods -ley," and signified meadoW,om field. of thz dead burying ground. • Unleitis you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not get- ting the genuine Bayee product proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-three years for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache. Rheumatism Neuralgia. Pain, Pain Acee t "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" only. Each unbroken package con- tains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tabletS cost few cents. Drug - „gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100, Aspirin is the trade mark (registered ir. Canada) of Bayer hianufacture of Itionoacetica,cidestor o.' Salicylicacitt While it is • well knowie that Aspirin means Bayer 1Vlarinfaetuee, to tiesist the public against imitatione, the Tab- lets of Bayer Company will be etamp- ed With their general trade mark, the "Bayer Cross.” " Constipatiook Banished-. el A doeggist says: "For netirly thirty yeata thave 'recommended the Extract of Roots, know e ae Mother sdigers Curative Syrup, for arresting arid p orrruplentiy irell OV. It io an oia tellable remedy that ing constipatilbrt And indigestion, never Nile to do the work." 30 reps thrite daily. Get theGdnnind I ta5I.°11#1.:Xid$1,31134.()i°Cb:tttle5.v arx7 Addrela _ M. CLAY- CLOVER CO.. Inv. 120 Wes2 24th Str,rEl Heys Yorit. U.S.A. Sprained ankles, bruised muscles, and other hurts yield to the healing in - finance" of Minard'e.' Lovely ilealthy Kept So By Cuticura- Daily use of the Soap keeps the skin fresh and clear, while touches of the Ointment now and then pre- vent -little skin troubles becoming, serious. Do not fail to include the exquisitely scented Cutiona Talcum in your toilet preparations. Soap2Sc. Ointment25 and 50e. Talennt25e. Sold throughout thenomiaion. CaeweianDenot: 1. mane, Limited, 344 SL Paul SI, W. Montreal. Cuticura Seep shrives without mug. YOUNG BMW DE ' 15 ELL Mother Tells How Her Daughter Suffered and Was Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkhama's Vegetable 'Compoluld Vancouver, B. C.—" MY datighter is a sailing girl who has been having severe pams aud weak and dizzy feelings for some time aid had lost her appetite. Through an. older daughter Vilio had heard of a woman who wee taking it for the same trouble, we were told of Lydia E. Pinitham's 'Vegetable Com- pound. My daughter has been taking it for several months and is quite all right now. „It has done all it was represenMd to do arid We have told A number of friends about it. 1am asever Withont a bottle of it in the house, for I myself take it for that weak tired, wont -out, f1Ietenlidnit7i8hbicuhiisdriZaitiru'l?%71:14stotr50114g0alni recornmend it to woinen who are stiffer-, ing 1 and 'my daughter have,"—Mm. MottoNALn, 2947 26th Ave. East, Vancouver, 13. 0. ' Prom the age of twelve a girl needs all ` the Care a thoughtful mother can give. Mcfny a woman has suffered years of pa,10 and misery—the victim of thought- lesSinee8or ignorance of the mother who should have guided her during this time. If she complains of headachet„paina in the hack and lower limbo, or if you notice a slowneas of thettght, nervous,. ness or irritability on tho part of your daughter, melte life eaelor for her,. Lydia Pinirhatwa "vegtqable Coiw pound is eopecially adapted for such conditions, 0 iSfiLir, No, 4L'.--'23.