The Wingham Advance, 1924-01-17, Page 9Janet
PROMISE YO
•
'To Iceep
.'re ehat, fear al a worz> out of your
To be loyal to °there.
To' holdyour realltation 'as agered,
'.lro be honest and fair in all your
dealinge, '
•To keep year standards 'high,'
•To cheeish year friendshipt,.
. To be reliable and 'truetworthy.
To minimize year ' difficulties and
magnify- your blessings; . .'•
To learn everythilig poStible a'boat
, your brisinees-
" To make everyday a recaletter day
in your hie.
To be alwayg improving seatething
sometvhere, alwaye bettering your
To have a worthy aim and live up
to it.
To act; live, and work- In the
present moment.
"Po make tile least of yeur time,
- talents, and 'oppoetanities:
To be tolerant of others and their
weakeeeses.
To be ininclful of others' interests
and not always thinkliag of eels..
• TO avoid evil .cOmpanions; an . to
keep In an ambition-aroueing atmee-
phere. • "
•. To close the door to an unhappy
past and start life anew. .
To try Love's way. In everything,
an let jealousy and hatred go out of
.; your life. ..
To put: beauty ,Into every ' day—
beautiful thoughts, .beautifal deeds,
beautiful work. ' •
. ,
•
. To .,a,e:telf-reliant, and ready to' as-
• sumerresponaibility. '
,
To take 'time for study and self-im-
,
pretreat -eat, no Matter that year age.
• To learn to enjoy things ,. without
owning them. . •
To talk health, .happiness and proe-
peeity, iiistead of disease,misery and
failure. •. ' •
To- hold your manaooda-your chara,c-
' ter, above w-ealta, ereposition.
To thy to appeal to the, best in
othees; . to., encourage and help -there,
not etiti,cize and
To eqnsitiertheaimportance of rest
and 'recreation as well as concentra-
tion' and. application; .in other words,
to liveea balanced 1.1fe,
To hold . in your 'mind. .the things,
which you .wish to come trne In. your•
to 'think Of ,yeuraelf ,as you would.
like to bes . •
To make yourself a masterpiece.
• ' S. Marden, in New Seccets.
,
eVer-
Most Novel Police Force Com.
posed of Insects.
The 'tvorIcl'e most novel police force
is probably that which is being trained
• by a bonder' acientist. .
It consleast of insects! They are
bred and `''trained in a laboratory at
. Balhanit to fight against and kill other
• inseate, which destroy or harra crops.
For instance, caterpillars can be
prevented from ruining trees and so
On by turning against them hordes of
• other caterpillars, trained to have can-
nibal instincts, to that they will fight
etad eat pests.
•, The inventor of -this aid to farmers
andagardeneas is Mr, Crabbe. One of
his greatest successes is the produc-
tion of a slug -tiger. This 'creature,
ealled tes'taeella, has very sharp
jaws, With which it pierces the slugs
E ndteatsetliema _
Alinott any kind of insect pest can
be fought by other insects, and as
time goes on it may ,be possible to
make the process of destruction ab-
solutely natural.' That , is to eay,the
inseatatillert will breed without any
aesistaace from icienee.
Hour Fast Are Your Fingers?
Do yriu knoev that the lingers of yeur
riglit hand move more quickly than
those' of your left?Not mily are they
euickee; they are also much more ac-
curate.
• Experiments made recently show
that the ring finger of the left hand
Call work much faster svhen it is oper-
ating in ,conjunction with the fore-
fieger of the right hand.
The more we increase the use 'of our
• fingers the more proficient and accur-
ate they became. If you are atypist or
a pianist you will find that practice
tends to Increase the rate of wpeking
of the fingers of the left hand, which
are naturally slower than those of the
right. Two fingere woilting togethee
are considerably faater than one fitter
working alone,
alla"Pest an Bearings.
oirio time ago there wag made aft
enoesuous'eenter ball bearing at Nor-
folk', in Englaatl, • tor the Eireadon
Swing Bridge, at Yarmouth, for Wren -
At this brhigd tlatiS about 400 timea
every niantla, after teveaal years' ser
-
rico the "V" grooves of the orlginal
bearing were found to be ninth worn,
MoStly due to the fa,et that tho' had
• not beei sufficientla hardened. 'The
Original 1Yeariag coasisted of two rings
• vitig V_ grooves, in Sahieh thore
Were sixty -tide balls • twa inches
• diameter, the largeet Made at the time
the bridge Was Jiistalled.
• The new centee ball bearings have
h alemeter of three end a half inehee:
Europe Maw eerinne, fifteen moil-
elalla and tell presidente, I
the prineipal countries which
tok part in the Great War there
'1,124,000 I'disabled Men in receipt' of
1engkr1t,
itIrrr
14
111411111
od the choicest of Red R9se Teas is the
• ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY '1
Surames and
• WATKINS
Variatiorts—Wataent Wat rat er-
son, Watts, Watkinson.
Racial Origin --Medieval French. •
Source—A Christian name.
As a family nevi°, of course, Wat-
kins is a purely British product, with a
decided Ang-lo-Saxpa influence appar-
ent trt the eitaing, not only of this
name, but of all its variatfons„
The explanation is this, It, was
taken t� England as a Christian, name
by the Noernans at the time, of the con-
quest, • and throgga the several core
furies ilia -Which close •communication
was maintained between the Normans
In laiegland with Normandy it became
aulte widespeead. It begen to develop
iato a family . name • at about • what
might be calleci themiddle period of
family-nama formation; that Is to say,
at, tae period when the Norman pope
lation of England decidea to consider
iteelf English, and the Anglo-Saxon
tongue An modified farm began to re-
assert itself.
The Ohmetian name, from which it
•developed was Walter, and the specific
,nerson evh,ogave that name pepularity
on the continent just prier to the Nor-
man invasion of England was a -saintly
Walter who lived in the dukedom -of
Aquitanie about the 'yea r 990.- The
more famous Waltela famous in the
historical, sense, that Is, St. Walter,.
Abbot of Fontanelle in tile ,middle' of
the twelfth,centirrya, prribairty did net
have so much influence -on the popia
larity of the name in England, for by
that time the ties With the continent
werheen
lessaMe'tr°ng.
Twas often' Pronounced,'
and even spelled "Wattere"; and also
contracted into "Wet." The ending
•"kin". was the regular diminutive of
the, Anglo-Saxon atone -lie, and tae final
'as" indicates a shortening front the
tending
."soma '
woi,4oat
-
v41-cen Toor
DfRtA 1)Mt-fre
efeeallataa )5 n ..:
---1---aradltaa
T 47* --------,--Ar ".-
VariatIcnsa—theaaellanip 3ecohsm.
Racial Origin—Norrean French.
Source—A locality.
Catnebell IS •One Of those Ilanies
which .we are accustomed ta think of
as essentially Scottisa; and so it is
If we restrict our consideration of it
to the histoay of that particular spell
frig.
It Is not a nett -sr°. Scottish name,
however, not-withstandieg the: fact
that it is • approximately' 800 or 000
years since it wits transplaated there,
and that it Is 'clearly • traceable'
through the prominent part played by
the clan in the history of that land so
'far back as the thirteenthecentury.
But in .another form it was a family
akame even beaora that time, It was
the descriptive name -borne by one of
the lieutenants of William the Con-
queror, when he invaded. England from
Normandy, and simply was the nain.e
of that warrior's estate in northern
France,. "Coinpo Bello," oa "beautiful,
field." Being the name of a nobleman
.it ea:Delay became crystallizea into a
fan-iily name De Campobello: . When
the Norman 'invasioa reached up into
Scotland, minember of this faraily 're-
ceived largegrants of land. This was
in the thirteenth century, -since which
time the family and ,the following it
acquired has from the very start be:
-•
come as Scottisat as any of the clans
which trace back to prehistoric days.
. In the development tif. the French
language since, the time of William
the Coaqueror, "qampoa has. become
"champs" and • "belle" has become
'Champ • which was brought over to
England later, and which also develop-
ed with the progress in, the French
language from the original name of
De Campobello' in England. But the
English pronu.nciatien has corrupted
It from Beauchamp into "Beecham,"
which is the reason that it is aome-
times found in that spelling.
• War Increased Illiteracy
Arnong French -Youths.
Twenty-five per ceat illiterate—that
is the war's effect -upon the working
class youths of France, accoeclang to
examiaations in two regiments of con-
scripts last month, which showed that
only 600 out of 800 could read and
write, whereas only 160 had the educa-
tion of the average boy of 12. Daring
the war, instead of continuing their
studies, boys of 9 and 10 were recruit-
ed ipto factories of all kinds and paid
men's -wages, Naturally, they aid. not
go back to school after the war, '
A movement is under way te compel
all such. conscripts to attend special
classes, ten hours a week; untnaethe
menace to French intellectual prestige
Is reinoved. Less, than 2 per cent of
Frenchasoldiaree were 'classed ne, de-
ficient before the war, coming ehleily
from' the 'seafaring folk of Ntarrnahay
and Brittany. '
The highest juniper in the animal
world ,is the black jaguar of South
Atneeica, which has lbeenseen to leap
front the ground to 'a braneh fifteen
feet overhead.
' • ' .
Beware of Imitationsi
• Unless yet tee the name "Bayer
Cress" on paeltage or on tablets you
are not getting the, genuine Bayer As-
pirin proved tate by millicals and pre.
earthed by phasicians over twenty-
three years for
Colds alearlaelie
Toothache Ltanbago'
• Neuritis Rheuntatiem
Neuralgia -•Pain, Palm, "
•,Aceopt "Baer Tablets of Aspirin"
orilY: Naeh unbroken package eon -
tains proven directions. tittnaybomos
ot twelve tablets smolt feat ceett, Drag'
gitth alto aell bottles of 24 and 100,
Aspirifl is the trade mirk (registered
1,0 ceeeda) of , Bayer Manufacture of
Monoiteetiaadichlietee of Sallealicacia,
While it i3 wGil knowtl Mat , ASP.11111
taaartS Belem" 'Manufaeture, to, afialat
the pUblie againat imitationa,th Tab-
lets ef,Baaer Dainpany Will be Siena?.
ed With their genital trade ruark,.tbs
vows*. Cresit,
GUARD THE BABY
•AGAINST COLDS
Toguara the balay ' against' plat
nothing can,equal Baby's Own Tablets.
The Tablets are a mild laxative ,that
Will keep the littleone'S- stenu.ch and
boatels 'werking regularly. It isa re-
cognized fact -that where the stomach
and bowels. 'are in good order that
coldsewill not exist; that the health
.of the little one will be good and that
he will thrive and be Iteppy and good-
natured. • The. Tablets sae sold . by
,medicine dealers' Or by naell at 25
.cents a boa from, The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co.; Brockville, Ont.
Not When It's Being Hit.
Plubby—"No, it's not possible for me
to -keep a balance at the bank!"
Wifle—"Why not?",
• Hubby—"How can I When yetOre
hitting it every day?"
•
Couldn't Return theCompliment.
. A Yorkshire farmer wasaasked
the funeral of his neighbor's third
wife, and, ae: he haa 'attended tab fun-
eral of the first two, his own wife, was
surprised who he informed he that
he had declined tlie, Invitation. .
. On being pressed, for a reasonnhe
said, with hesitation: "Well, you 'see,
less,' it makes a chap feel a bit . awle,
ward to be alias accepting other folit'S
civilities whenhe never has,anything
Of the sort to risk 'em backets!'
Uhreasonable.
• "Whadya think the death -bell said?"
enorted taa coal Man, banging up the'
receiver, "Hp said our substitute tar
anthracite wotildn't burn, 'What fi'ya
repose he expected?"
•
The climbing 'perch, ariabas scan -
dens, native of India, hen rudimentary
lungs at well an gibe. It cein live a
long ,tinie out of watere; can travel
eannitierabie distances overland, and
by eitending the ends of ite gill covers
and pressing its fins against the bark
ean Mount the stern of a conveniently
Slanting palm. tree ,at least far enoligh
to deserve its itainea
Ask 'for Miniastlas end ito notheN
•
4
.11 , •
11.\11(1: 41(' . •
511;
1
Vei3O(
•
YU/17:r
kr4,40Pf
t
r• ,
e.'"13"eitaialtaes
The Social Condition of
the Bugs.
• On the long roll of the Lord Chan-
cellors of England stands the name of
Lord Chelmsford, who before lie was
elevated to, the, woolsaok bore the
name of *Thesiger. In. Sir Algernon
West's entertainiug book he tells how
young Thesigee first attracted to him-
self 'the notice of his profession.
• He was engaged as 'junior counsel la
, .
a case where the point.in dispute was
whether a tenant 'inigat throw up bus
lease on finding that there were bugs
in the aortae that Ise had taken. Coun-
eel ail/ the other side began his state-
ment by saying, "Our contention, my,
lord, is that when the defendant took
otter the house these was net a single
-bug in it."
"That is exactly the plaintiff's ca,ae,
my lord," said Thesiger, jumping up;
"they were all married and had ex-
tremely large families.'
•
Watch Worn on Wrist is Bit
of Congo Vanity.
A Conge black -never oarrles • his
watch -In his pocket, for he's too anxi-
ous to have it displayed to public gaze.
He wears, it on his wrist or ankle, or
hanging about his neck—very proud
of his Europea.n possession:
All blacks in the Congo are divided
into two classes—those who own
watche land those who, don't. The
bright little metal case with It mys-
teriously beating heart seems to have
a magic influence over its dark-skin-
ned possessor, -
Last year France exported to her
African possessions, according to a
customs report, 689 gold watches, 1,520
silver watches, 7,370 of- ordinary metal
and 2,928 clocks, including ajarm
clocks.
Rich Farm Lands Offered t
Earthquake Sufferers,:
As a part of its .contribution to the
relief •of ,ea,rthquake,aulterers the, aria
ministrationof the island of Hoklealdo
.offeriag •special inducements to set-
tlers to take up land In that rich agri-
i...111+Iira1 RE &inn. .
The administration is offering 700
yen and travelling expenses to. these
Isviehing to take.em land and 300 yen
plus' traveling expeiatste,-, to these port-
ing to the island to become tenant
farmers..
Bore.
"When a man keeps talkies.' 'bout
.hlsself," said Uncle Eisen, "he gets to
be about, as •conta'anianable as a fiddle
player .wif only one tune,"
When ordering goods by mail send
a Dominion Express Money Orler.
French Africa south of the Sahara
is now raising wheat and- cotton.
Three years ago this section imported
its flour, but there are now flour mills
at Timbuktu and Kati, and as soon as •
irrigation works being built along the
Niger are eem,pdeeed there win be "Did your hubby cut out anything
crops for export The /Preach also, for tll'a• New Year?"
plan meat Packing and refrigeratingi "I'll say s°1 Ile cut off half my
di-
plante with a capacity of sixty-five 1°1.'711'36°2'
thousand tons of chilled meat and
packed provisions a year. Butterfly's Tiny Nose Longest
NEW STRENGTH FOR
WEAK STOMACHS
Irtdigestion. Disappears.When the
lBlood Supply Is Enriched.
'
The urgent need of all who.' suffer
from -indigestion, ' and who, find the
stomach unable to • perform Be 'usual
function, is a tonic to enrich thetbload.
Pain .and dietress efteteating, is .the'
way the stomach thews that it is too
weak to perferta. the Work of digesting
the feed taken. In this condition some.
aeaPle foolishly resort to 'purgatives,.
but these only further .aggravate the
New strength is given weak stom-
achs by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills be-
cause these pills enrich and purify
the blood supply. This is the natural
procase of giving strength and tone
to the storna.ch, and it accounts for the
speedy relief in stomach disorders that
follows' the use of Dr. Willa:lass' Pink
The appetite revives, food can
be taken without discomfort and the
burden and pains of Indigestion are
dispelled. Me. Williams Johnson, a
prominent business man of Lequille,
N.S., beam testimony to the .value of
these pills in cases of this kind. He
says: "I was attacked with indigestion
accompanied by severe cramps in the
stonfaeli. I was prescribed for by the
family doctor, but got very.little bene-
fit. Then I tried some of the adver-
tised remedies but with no better re-
sult. Indeed my conditfon was grow -
Ing worse. Then I read of the case of
a man who praised. Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills whose condition was similar to
my own, and I decided to try this
medicine. The result, I think, was
amazing, as the use of six boxes re-
stored me to my former good health.
I can therefore warmly commend the
use of this medicine for stomach trou-
bles."
,You can get these Pills from .any
ineclicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box Or six boxes for $2.50, from The
Dr. Williams' Medicate Co., Brockville,
Ont.
. Thetotal number of ,sehools within En Scent Range.
the Empire reported. as keeping- Em. The Germans arid French are agreed
pie° Day amounts to 71,264, •and the that the betterily has the keen:est at 1ea5a upon one thing, and that is
aPproximate number of scholars at -1
tending these schools is nearly.
750,000. •
The "air age" is arom 20 to 30; offi-
cers in the Royal Air Force are there-
fore only of much use for flying in
their youth. •
STOMACH MISERY,
GAS3,17;ESTION
'Tanen Birinepsino Is the quickeit,
stireStrelief for linaigestioa, gases,
flattil en est, h ea rtb ern, smileless or
tam/meat distresS eaused by acidity.
Aafew tablets give alatost immediate
itonlacls r�lif. Oarrec t oug ttolna0h
and digestlen neW for a 'few' tents,
biliggitts ii 1-oflflos o aelfttgaa• �t
P4es. Dispepoin.
sense of smell of any living creature.
- The marvellous emeillieg power of
the Puarde Emperor, -the Zebra Swal-
lowtaltz, the, Painted Lade and other
specieis so acute and operates at
such long range that it is almost in-
concelva.ble to the average person,
considering the minuteness of the but-
terfly's olfactory apparatus,
an a book writtea by Dr. Iaurt Floe-
rieket one of Germany's' best knoWn
naturallets, the writings of the French
entomologist Fabre are qiibtecl ' at
length, Professor Fabre citing new
Preach alitheritiet .to preve that the
batteray's sense of eaten is astouna-
Mg, •
Beam* the War about 50l000 people
emigrated frein. Great Britain every
year,
p Mlnard's Linifraint la -the hCUssa
tbe
rer
e Early Risers.
g age, 'atritise s coutrlbutoi
eared la ii, Sunday pept
,
at ran Somewhat as foll9Was
Cati J. Farley's. hair wee curio;
Some feike • called ijhn carley Farley:.
4e agreed to plant come barley
For e man 'Lamed: leter Woi'leY,
• Worley liked to getup early;
'Twas .otherwase with curley Farley;
He came late .tp. plant tbe, barley,
Which made Peter Worley surly.'
Worley said, "New, Mr. Farley,
Vv been, looking for you hourly."'
Parley said, "1 got Lore fairly
Early, though I'm feeling 'poorly!'
°Hey could 'net steed tot pa.rlY,
at the tinie •wan feeling burly;
So he landed. fair eti Feeley,_ .
'nocited him through the gates called
pearly. '
The verses bring to mind the real
Peter Worley, who was the original
'early laser. He and his hired mail,
Louis Bunsen, weae putting out a crop
in Nah.ite River bottoms, and, since
their house.Was near the railway, they
could the time pretty well by the
, _
trains. aTo. 4, which paeeed at 'half
past three o'clock in the .13101.n:fug, was
at conVenient as an alarm clock.
Louis Bunsen was a nungry-lookina
man who apparently never got enough
to eat. Hilda, .Worley'e wife, Said
more than once, •."11 I could. only get
that inert filled up, I'd be 'satisfied."
One flight after- Worley heard a
train go by he called 'Hilda • to get
breakfast. Then lie and Bunsen nista
ea off, to the barn, to feed and water
the teams. When they came back
lirealtfast was ready, and they all sat
down to eat.
"Soniehow I don't feel hungry thie
morning;" remarked Bunsen Ithtleesly.
Hilda leoked at him in unteigiied
-surprise.
"You're not side are you, Bunsen?"
she said. •
"Np,"replied the ,hired teen; "just.
don't 'feel. like eating. I wonder -why
It isn't daylight yet?" • ••
Then someane looked at the 'clock.
it Was just half past eleven! The sup-
poged No. 4 had been a returning ex-
..
cureien tranit "
Toil Away.
Toll away and let the stone
That shall stand when you are gone.
Ask net that another see
_ The meaning of your masonry.
Grind the gem and dig the well,
For what? for whom 7—I cannot tell.
The stone may mark a boundary line,
The well' may flow, the gem • may
Be it wage enough for you
To shape them well and set them true.
Of the future who can tela?
Work, my friend, and so farewell.
—John Jay Chapman.
Sayings from the French.
Our surest protectors are our own
powers.—Vauvenarguee.
The great art of,being happy Is only
the art of living well.--Proudhon.
Let us be gentle if we would be re-
gretteth-e-Pierre Lott
The smallest undertaking is worth
the pains 01 a good woakman.—Niver-
nate.
Man without patience is a lamp
without ell. --Alfred De Musset
Cleanliness is the adornment of old
age—La Haye.
His Hearing Restored.
The invisible ear drum invented by
A. 0. Leonard, which is a miniature
megaphone, fitting inside the ear en-
tirely out of sight, is restoring the
bearing of hundreds of people in New
York city. Mr. Leonard invented this
drum to relieve himself of deafness
and head noises, and it cloos this so
successfully that no one could tell he
Is a deaf man. It Is effective when
deafness is caused by catarrh or by
perforated or wholly destroyed natural
drums. A 'request for information
to A. 0. Leonard, Suite 437, 70 Fifth
avenue, New York city, will be given
a prompt reply. advt
The Pink of Courtesy.
He was a cab driver of the old sort,
and he was called ae a witness in an
action for damages incurred la a
street collision. Ignoring the airy, he
persisted in relating his story to the
judge. Ultimately the judge stoppea
him and observed; "Address yourself
to the jury."
So, turning awkwardly to the Dew in
which twelve tradesmen sat scowling,
he smiled, nodded reassuringly and re-
marked: „
Mcirnina gents; all well at '0019, I
tope?"
agtAsSi
Hia1oryPittillitloPestQ;PI:?11.4Y9! i11nc6, joiltn
4itate
' loguo free. AeademY
Spaaina Aventie, Tekonto.,
alwe It 14 Melo ElOrbil,.
Ppt rid alike were deilvealltelat I
el by 41 fauarratihveriorepersoo
egrness wan helte
'I' wish I knew wbere I 'la
to tile," emulated Pat.
BlVehiaurSe4;81teCglol*Atslatilla never go3
titAt place.'
his
sem
qa is jpIi ttee.
K.EEP YOUlt EYES
ANT CiLEAFL AND REALTatY
Ilfrar* OF* NoliR sXg cmus DOOM, 14CiftWii C5.GUICA4+4144
That haggard, teare-worn, depreesea
look will disappear arid nervous, thin
people will . gain " In 'welght and
strength • when Bitro-labospitate is
takeo for a short time., Price $1 per
pkge at your druggist Arrow Chem!,
cal Cot, 25 Front St. iast, Toronto, Ont.
Frost Bites
Are often dangerous. Rub well
with Mlnard's• It eases pain
and heals.
r•. , ._.
For the Kidneys
1 Kidney troubles are fiequently
caused by badly digested food
which overtaxes these organs to
eliminatetheireitantacidsfonned.
Help your stomach to properly
Idigest the food by taking, 15 to
30 drops of Extract of Roots, zold
as blether Seigel's Curative Syrup,
and your kidney disorder will
promptly disappear. Get the
genuine. 50c. and $1.00 bottles.
SS 11111=111=1 A
,v,•;-,,,r.'d•V,-,1
Mother 1 piGivoerritickFgshild
rivp,
miegs Laxative cfoorhstelPa:3:151:
ZeCvhoirldi11, or
sick,' colic Babies
•-.= and Children love
to tako genuine
"California 11".1 g
ittraupi ril:gulatetite:
the tender 111119
bowcis so nicely,
It sweetens • the stoniach and starts
tho 11.1761. ti,DA LOW431Z acting WithOilt
griping; COntaina oo narcotics or
soothing drugs. SaY "California" to
your drusgiet and avoid contiterteltal
TOMO itoen genuine "California Elg
Syrun" WhIOh COUiAltS direiri1010.
BADPATGH OF
ECZEMA .ON CHIN
In Rash. Itched and
Burned, Cuticura Healed.
"I had a very bad patch of eczema
on my chin. It broke out in a rash
and was very troublesome, itching
and burning a great deal. 1 lost my
rest at eight on accouat of the Rai-.
tation, and rny face was disfigured
for the time.
'I tried many different remedies
without success. 1 began using Cu-
ticura Soap and Ointment, which
brought relief right away, and after
• using two cakes of Cuticura Soap,
and two boxes of °Canicura-annrinent
I was completely healed,!' (Signed)
IVEss Mary Campbell, Big Pond
Centre, Nova Scotia,.
TJse Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum exclusively for every -day
toilet purposes.
Sample E/ch Freebyttril. Addresgt
hod, 314 St Rh.P1 St., Ff., Montreni." Sold everr.
where. Sonp25e. Ototraent25and50e. Tateurnge.
RarCuticura Soap shavez without mug.
Mt;THER 1pF
.LARGE FA IL
Recommends' Lydia E Pink.;
ham's .Vegetable Compound
tO Other Mothers
Bernford, N. am the mothet
of four children and I was se weak after
any last baby came that I could not do
illy work and suffered for months 'until
a friend induced me to try Lydia E.
Pinicham's Vegetable Compound, Sine()
taking the Vegetable Compound nay
weakness has left me and the pain to
my back ha S gone. I toll all myfried
who are troubled with female wealuiesiii
to take Lydia E. Pinkham's aregetablat
Cornpeunda for I think it is the best
anedieme ever told. Youmay advertise
toy letter."—Mrd. Gaol:al:I I. CitatlaSo.
Itemford, N. a
My First Child
Glen Allen, Alabama.— “I have been
greatly benefited by taking Lydia K.
inkhorn's Vegetable Compound ior ,
bearing-dovvn feelings and pains. 1 was ,
troubled in this way Tor nearly foit4
'years following the birth of my first ;
child, and at tithes cotild hardly stand o
tny 'feet, A neighbor recommended th
Vegetable Conmotmd to nie after i heli 1
taken doctor's medicines W ithout muc
benefit. It has relieved my- pains and
glveS me etvengt'h trecotnitend it ay
give you permission to use my test
menial leder. Tina RYE, 'Mart
Alobaina.
WOnien who suffer shoulcl Write te the
Lydia E.Pinisharn Medicine Co,,Cobotirg),
Ontario, for a free toity of Lydia Et
Palatines Private TeXt-took Upon
Aihnents reouliar to Women." a