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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1924-02-07, Page 7hurtalaY, reh pry 7, 19 4, 1: ,..444114P4 THE WINGI ANGE `ier ete o•• e 14,• STORIES OF VVELL- ,, KNOWN PEOPLE Our Unpolitical Prince. askec1 a friend recently what his polities were, He looked perplexed, and replied; "Pm either a Conserva- tive or a Liveral or a Labor Mau." Which was his way of saying he had given it up, Of ,eourse, I looked superior and passed him by. There are few men who may own to no political mind without losing caste. One of them is the Prince of Wales. "i am not allowed to know anything about politics," he -said the other 'day. "That is one ofthe greatest priVileges I passess,' , .Perhaps the only real difference be- ''tween tile Prince and hie pople is that io pretearls not to know anything about politics when he does, while we pre - The ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY makes finer tea., and more.of Surnames arid Their Origin TYSON Variation—Dyson, ' Racial Origin—Middle English. ,Source -,-A baptismal name, The family name of Tyson le one of those which have developed from bap - tend to know all about polities when tzsmal names which are virtually ohs°- , we don't, • lete to -day, but which were very com- mon at those periods in the middle ages in which family names began to take shape. In Lauder's Wake. Benno eeolseiwitsch, the • famous •, pianist, has no tremors regarding him- •oelf now, but'once he was exceedingly nerV011$, Ile confesses that hie moat trying experience occurred before he was due to appar at a, ,concert at Devenshire Park, Eastbourne, some years ago. alaery Lauder was the turn before him, and prior to tbe eoncert, the anxious pianist was impressed by the size ot Lauder's name on the post- ers—so much bigger tha,n, his own, "1 wanted toe see this man who was so big aud so popular," says Moisel- witsch. "I was afraid for my playing. 1 alfnost wished I was not playing at "My friend. and I stood in the wings to watch Harry Lauder'e performance, thought he was wonderful, but all the time I was afreid that, when he had finished, the people would go, and that they would take no notice of my playing at all, "pid suddenly, flourishing his big stidk, Harry Lauder turned to us and shouted: • 'Get away, you boys! Do you hear? ' • "It was only part a his stage busi- nesel," concludes the pianist, "but - thought he meant us, and 1was so frightened that 1, turned and ran out as fast as I could!" The Spoken Word. Before you express an opinion of a • mans words you really ought to see • his face while he utters them. I have, Lor instance, seen a fat youth fill his mouth eagerly with apple-pndding while teergrenaerking: "This pudding's n.g." And wonderwhat expression Mr. Israel Zangwill wore when he eaid • to an American audience: "You New Yorkers are lazy and in- consequential, You are also "vulgar. •Toar million dollar drives typify this. Your minion.dollar temples are as vul- gar as your Sunday papers. Your im- migration policy is a cruel muddle, "Still, you are the best half-educated people in the world." Reminiscent, this, of the youth who applied for a jab as office boy, and eaid on his return: He told me my writing was rotten, • and that my boots were dirty, and that • my collar was a disgrace, and that looked -like a first-class liar, and en- gaged...Imo to _start next Monday." Aluminum Cars. One of the Swiss electric tramway companies has built cars of aluminum. tel'." One reason for using this metal is that the weight of the car is much lessened and another point la thaathe painting of the car lasts much longer. It was found that cars built witb iron ,platles soon showed rusting and the Paint suffered Much from this. In Zurich, •where the •method is being this is an important point, as the ears are painted in a light color. In the fir.st place the metal was used for the roof e of the cars, and the result was so setisfactory by reason of the absence of rust that It war decided to go further and to employ it for the body covering of the car and part of the flooring. A metal known as dur- • aluminuni, Is wee and It has a small • amOunt of copper -added so as to make it' harder. Mountain of Tooth -Powder. One of the greatest natural cluloel- ties in the world is the "Mountain of Tooth-FoWder," in Arizona, 'United States. • It is near Tonopah, the'greatest can in the World, and not far froiri the: famous Comstock Mines, where Mark Twain spent his early newspaper days. • The cliscoVery of this tooth-po*der nitluntain • is already "booming" the district. FOr some time people have been aware that the material from whieh iWotint Silperdent, ni It is called, 'is made, would take tobacco -stains • frern their teeth., hut not until recent- ly hag the claim beerl staked •and de- velOped,' It, WaS a woman, Mass Josephine riobinsonawhoee .trial of the Material --with pearly white teeth as a tesult aeconVinced eertain-business men that the Mountain was better, than a gold - Mine, Now the produdt Is being eold broadcast, and fortunes are piling 1113 for the ownets of the Peck- I Contrion colds are infeetious, and probebly due to a germ to small that it etemot be seen theoeigh the most powelful Micirescope. Ws a long stretch from Dipnisius to Tyson, but that's really what it de- veloped from, Tyson is one •of those names Which became a family name at a fairly ear- ly period, though it by no means be - longe in the earliest classification, which is composed almost entirely, of Anglo-Saxon names. It belongs to the period when the Norman influence was still ,strong, but those of Norman blood had begua to regard themselves as Englishraen, dropping French as the "every -day" language. This is es- tablished by the fact that Dionisius was distinctly Norman, 'while the end- ing "son" shoVes the reassertion of the Anglo-Saxon tongue. - Diortisius was variously abbreviated in. the Norman-French speech into the nicknames Denis, Denot and Dyot: 'Prom the latter developed Dyotson, which at a later period was shortened by many families to Dyon, and filially changed by others to Tyson. The lat.. ter is the more common form in this country to -day. The name often is erroneously ex- plainedas having originated from Tony, or Antony, but historical re- cords show no such conection, while the path back to Dionisius •may be traced step by step. • • The King of Courtesy. • "They take it already upon their sal- vation, that though I be but the Prince of Wales, yet I am the king of court- esy." • These lines from the second act of the "First Part of King Henry IV," re- curred to my mind recently when, at a big luncheon. given by anaassociation of business men, at which he was the guest of honor, I sat within a few feet of ltis,Royal Highness, says a London writer. His cheery courtesy • to • exeryone round him—to the eager, fluttering waiter, who leaned over his shoulder and held a match to the -Royal cigar- ette Flats elongated holder; to the two audacious spirits •wao, at the close of the banquea.ventured to bring their menus, to hini for his autograph; and to the flashlight photographer who de- sired to "record" him in a character- istic attitude, irnpreseed nee very Seen so close, he looks much young- er than his twenty-eight years, appear- ing morelike aegood-looking, brown - skinned, well -set-up youth of nineteen or twenty until he speaks, when his maturity becomes more apparent What surprised me more than any- thing else abott the Prince was his voice. I em sorry to say that I did him the injustice of expecting hien to speak with that ugly intonation rather unfairly known as the Oxford drawl, though had. I considered for a moment I should have, realized that the best type of 'Varsity men do not possess it. The Prince's accent is • immeasur- ably More pleasant, for it is quick and reliant and, though' I hesitate to de- clare that it contains Just -the slightest suspicion of a Cockney intonation, have ao hesitation in saying that there could be no mistaking him for any- thing but a Londoner. He would prob- ably impress rnostepeople -who inet him, incognito, as a leen young brisi- fleas Man, -who led a etrenuous exist- ence and was accustomed to makisup leis mind quickly. And that he has a mind of his own GIRLS! A 'CLEAIVIY MASS . OF I3EA.UTIFUL /HAIR '35 -Cent "Danderine- So lin- proves Lifeless, Neglected ' Hair. An abundance of I u3rerient hair fall of glosa, gleams and life. shortly, follows a genuine toning up• of !acted edalps With' dependable "Darn derine." Flailing h e 1 r, itching Oettip and /1 the dandrizff le cOrree ed • immedia ly. Thite dry, WienY Or fading hair is gaiekly Invigor- ated, taltiag on new' strength; 'color and youthfol beinitaa “Danderbee" Is aelightful On the h.airi" 4 refreshing, stiratziating toile het sticky • oe greaSY1 Arty theigatere. GREENWALD Variatiens Grunewald, Greenwalt, reenvvood. Racial Origin --German, also English. Source—Descriptive of Locality. Tile last named of the variations of this family name gives you the clue to its meaning, as it is the only name of English origin in the group. The rest are of German development. Bylar the larger number of fami- lies in Canada bearing the various ferrite of this name trace it back to German origin, for the name had a much wider development in Germany than in England, This is ascribed to the •fact that even though the period of family name formation took Place considerably later in Germany than in England,, most sections of that eoun- try were Is developed than tete Eng- land of two or three hundred years be- fore. In short, there were more for- ests, hence more "Greenwoods" in Ger- many than,in England. It is rare that an English and a Ger- man family name of exactly the mine meaning run so near parallel In the' philology of the words of which thay are • composed. Both "green" and "grune" come from the same, root. Formerly the English word was spell- ed, "grene," and the older form of the German. word was "greene." In the development of one language the "e" hasprevailed and in that of the other the "u." • In the same manner the words, "wood" and "wald" come from _the sarae root. The older form of the .one was "wode," developed from a still earlier "wolde." ' Grunewald is, of course, the true ;form of the German name. Greene- wald and Green.walt 'are modern varia- tions, developed, as you rnay plainly observe, from the first syllable, under the influence of English speech. • ark.••••-a.e. is obvious for, despite his boyish ap- pearance, his face is a strong one, with steady dyes full of resolution. An old journalistic colleague who was sit- ting next me at the luncheon, echoed my thoughts when he said: • "By Jove, they'll be no hurrying him into a marriage with a foreign royalty unless his heart approves, for if ever a lad had a will of his own he has!" • "You're right," r replied, "and it's probably a legacy from his great- grandmother, • independent, deter- mined„ beloved old Queen Victoria." And rfeel eure that we were both correct. 1 Honeymoon Stilt On. • "Hasn't their honeymoon ended Yet?" "Not yet—she still believes every- thing be has to say." Gold From Sea Water. The modern alchemist no longer dreams of transmuting the baser Met- als int0 gold; he is more concerned with the possibility of extractieg erom the waters of the ocean the vast qutn- tity of the previous metal known to be held i11 solution in them. As a matter of fact, it was rumored recently that. a profitable method of doingthis- had been discovered, and that Germany might pay. her repara- tion debts in ,sea -water gold. ' The rumor, however, was premature. . It has been calcUlated that thele Is one ounce of gold in every 31,000 tens of sea -water. And this gold is tot in simple solution but in what Ja kieown as the "colloidal" state, thus render- ing its extraction a 'very difficult and ooetly matter. At Present, itaeod, the cost of pro- aucing gold frora eea-evater is about twenty times the market price. Orders from Hindquarters. Murphy, a new cavalry recruit, was given one a the worsthorse in the troop. "RemeMber," field the sergeant, "no 'One is allowed to disnaotint without orders." Murphy was no seoner in the sad- dle than the horse trackad and Murphy went over hie head. "MarehY," yelled the sergeaat, "You dismounted!". "I did, sergeant." "I)Id you have orders?" "I did." "From headquarter" "No, sor; from hilidentarterS." •Here li areplendid mid-air action pictureof one of the contestantS in the ski jumping competition at the Quebec winter sports held at the Chateau Frontenac. Modern Surgery Speeds Up Nature. Man, as everybody now knows, is the result of million.s of years of de- velopment on this planet; perhaps even on some other before "the star- dust swirled." What we do not al- ways realize is that this development is still geing on, very slowly, as it al- ways has done, but surely. • There are a number of scientists, es- pecially surgeons, who think that the process may be speeded up, and that mankind would be saved much suffer- ing if Nature were assisted in this way. • Not many months. ago Prince George the Ring's youngest eon, passed through an experience which, in a more enlightened age, everybody will undergo in infancy. • In the first place, he was operated upon for appendicitis when what physiologists call the "vermiform ap- pendage of the caecum" was removed. At one time in our history, no doubt, the appendix served a useful purpose. It is a relic of, our ascent from a lower form of life. In seine of the other mammals it is a large organ, but in our own bodies it is, as a rule; quite rudimentary. Sometimes it is absent altogether. In another thousand years or so, perhaps, no human being will be born with this excrescence. But we cannot afford to wait for that, and a few years hence, very likely, the operation for its removal wilt be as common in infancy as vassination is Prince George had scarcely recover- ed from the operation when it was learnt that he was again in the hands of the surgeons. , On this occasion it was an even simpler matter, involving only the loss of his little toes'. ' There was certainly a time when our little toes were of use to us—pos- sibly, in chiml3ing,trees. But that time iselang past. They are now•meraly en- cumbrances; they do not help us to walk or run. or jump; they do nothing toimprove our golf handicap or our batting or bowling averages. To the majority of people they are simply sprigs on which to grow corns. The only person to whom little toes are conceivably of importance is the bare- foot woman dancer, who would per- haps look rather odd without them. Nature is very slow in extinguishing parte of animal structure that have served their purpose in the%process of evolution. Some time in the future, Perhaps, children will be born without an appendix, and with onlY four toes on each foot. In the .meantime, eur- gery has to be called in where their possession causet danger or 'incon- venience. GUARD THE BABY • AGAINST OLDS To guard the 'baby' againat, colds nothing 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, whfre the stom- ach and bowelsnre in good order that colds will not exist; that the health of the little one will be got)" end that he rill thrive and be nappy. The new sales tax will not increase the price of Baby's Own Tablets, as the ,company pays the tax. You can still • btait the Tablets through any medicine dealer at 25 cents a box, or by mail;post paid, from The Dr„ William' TvIedicine Co., Brockville:,,,Ont. ' tea; 'The Preliminary Step: "You say Bron is fitting himself to beconie an American stateernati?" "Oh, yes; he's just left for a year in Moscow, you know." „e, Clock Tells the Weather, A elook is hot the only ueeful chanisin that can, be dieplayeed to pub- lic view in tower fer etoeple. The Ger- ma.P city of Munich has recce:Sy set In the tower of 'the fritmetna a huge dial that showe the height of the. bait - °meter, The. Mean baroiueter figure tor, Munieh appears at the top, and the. passer-by has only to 'notiee whether the litind points.; to the right Or to the left of, that meek to know the tendetiey Of the weather. Age for Mftirsft 4in t,I( 'At 'Grips' With, a Leopard; S94100141/4 he4 frightened tile Mettle in the' itrael. ;Jan Plenaar; owner .of the ranch n lehotlesta,, erept • Perth la tae moonlight, rine in nand. • Sudden - 1y witbOut warning sharp (eaves sank into hie 'shoulders and he found him - Self Starl.ag into the gaping rrioeth et leopard' The ehoek was 80 Sliddett and tin- nervieg, says Mr. J. H. Main in the Wide World Magazine, that Pienaar dropped his rifle. Then in an instant he recovered his presence of mind end gripped the animal by the threat with both hands to keep it from biting -his face, There they stood locked 'in a death grip; the leopard, upright on its hind legs, rested all its weight, upon him and he with all hes museles braced cleuched his fingers -upon the beast'.s throat. "although the leopard's form- ideble dawn were tearing his shoul- ders and arms cruelly, Pienaar darea not shout or move, lest the animal SO NERVOUS SHE should tear itself away, leap upon him again and kill aim. . How long Pienaur and the leopard COU NOT SLEEP sateocomeeathearne he cannot say, but it •eternity. leopard stood so close' glaring into his eyes, that he could feel its hot breath on A Quebec ONornan Found Relief and Wants Others to Know. Mrs. Donald M. McLeod, epringhill, Cile., was a victim, of great nervous- ness until she found the right remedy, and is near anxious that others shall profit by laer experience. Mrs. Mc- Leod says: ----"Some years ago I be- came run down ead grew so nervous that mY life was a burden to myself and all around me. Every night I would wake up with a chobing feeling, numb all over and my heart beating at an alarming rate. I would jump up and walk the floor and declare I was dying. Then I would have sbaking spells, and all day long would be so dizzy that I would stagger like a drunken person. I was afraid to be left alone, and my condition was ter- rible. I was the taken to the Sher- brooke hospital, but the treatment •there did me no good and I came back home so weak that I could hardly cross the floor, I could not take care of my children, and my mother did. so. Everybody thought l'was dying, and I was just welting and wondering when the'end would come. At this stage my attention was directed to Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pills, and I got a supply at once. By the time I had used five boxes I felt much better, could- eat better, and sleep better, and felt al- most like a new woman. I continued the pills for some time further, and am now a strong and healthy•woman. I advise all run-down women to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as ram sure they will do for others what they have done for me." The new seise tax will not increase the price of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,. as the company pays the tax. You can still obtain the pills through any medicine dealer at 50 cents a box, or by mail, post paid, at this price, from •The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • The Tree's Heart -Beat. • Has a tree a soul? Has it a per- sonality? These apparently absurd questions are provoked by Sir J. C. Ro•se's recent 'lecture to the Royal • Society of Medicine on the heart -beats of ifee tree. ' His experiments show that a definite active 'tissue extends through every tree. The cellular• pulsations of this tissue in regular sequence by their einennifig- aveleeoree-eanze- tiic nieveaeent of the sap. When these pulsations are arrested they can be revived by drugs, by blows, or by massage. In Bengal the sugar -canes are actually milked, The pulsation of the cell is -ultra- microscopic, but Sir J. C. Bose has detected it by his electric probe in cir- melt with a recording galvananeter. Any agent which quickens the heart- beat of the animal also quickens the heart-beat of the tree. The life of the tree is as -wonderful as the lite of man. Pay your out-of-town accounts by Dominion Express Money Orders. Got the Goads. A man wanted to ring up the par- cels office at a railway station., "Is that the parcels office?" he in- quired, whea he heard the eound tif a girl's 'RAU over the wire. "No," she replied; sweetly. "I'm the goods!" 0 Keep tillnerdee Liniment in the house. Egypt has 166 daily and weekly newspapers. of these, ninety-four are. in Arabic, six in other Oriental, languages, sixty-three in European! tongues, and three in combinations ofl Eastern and Western languages. Cairo is responeibIe :tor 105, Alexan- dria forty-six, and the vest of the country fifthen. In feet, Cairo, with a population of between 600,000 and 700,000, has twenty-four daily news- papers, thus ,lar outstripping London, children should be taught to live dangerously. By reducing life to a business of instrance and safety first parents might produce long-lived chit - &en, bat they will have no character, —Dr, Crichton Miller, hvgirooctimot . Kelosyco , out yea ethi 'kabala a 41:".4"fe ouft Ey the lAuritie tete Remedy aed MornIoe." notillitif:•EyeaCieluti,Cleatanid:PiealtlaY Write for'Fteatieciaattileteer, _ Meielia f((een& fele 0 gull 01110•SlaVete C.fiateet his face. 'Mien the rifle dropped from his hands it had fallen against a tree and now was lying with the muzzle point- ing towards him about three feet from his right knee. How to get it was the question. That the bea,st remained so quiet was, he believed, owing to keeping quiet himself. So ever so gently he loosened the grasp of his right hand on the brute's throat and, at the same time tightened the grip of his left. He slowly crouched lower and lower and then cautiously stretch- ed his' right hand towards the rifle. All the time he stared steadily into the leopard's blazing _eyes. Presently he found that he could just touch the weapon With his fin- gers. With infinite care he edged over until he waS able to grasp it firmly. Now came the crucial moinent. Should the rifle as he pulled it toward him catch even momentarily in the under- growth, the liaise would startly the fierce brute into a raging fury. He tightened his grip on the beast's throat and began to pull the rifle to- wards him. As luck would have it, the weapon came away freely from the bushes, and inch by inch he man- aged to draw it to him until its butt rested on the ground against the in- side of hia right foot. From there he sIOWly 'raised it -with his ftngers until, the muzzle • pointed straight at the leopard's under, jaw; tb.en he lifted it a little more and got his finger on the trigger. Quicklyreleasing his grip on the beast's throat, he pulled the trig- ger and leaped backwards. The animal, as he discovered later, was killed instantly; the bullet broke its neck. But Pienaar will carry to his grave the scars of the Wounds that his adversary made in that horrible night 'encounter.' Timely. Advice. "I don't know all about how at farm should be run, but I do the best I can," acineitted Johh W. Broadhead. "I raise cern,' oats', potatoes, alfalfa, hogs, chickens, and so on, do a fair dairy business and ,manage to own u mid- dling 'good car; I have lights, water and atfurnace in the house, keep' the buildings painted up, and so forth. And then, just about every time I get ta feeling Iciada good over the way things are going; here comes an earnest town. man and urges me to diversify." Mother! Give Sick Baby "California Fig Syrup" Harmless Laxative to Clean Liver- and • Bowels of Baby or Child. Even constipa- ed; bilious, fever- ish, or sick, collo Babies and Child - ren love to take a 4a,--. genuine "Califor- xI , ‘.....!et.., nia Fig Syrup." 7...‘ to '4:;V•••:.. No other laxative , 1 th.; aia4t, regulates the ten- lift Ws' der little. boWels..aaaa... . so nicely. It , ad..7-;:a , as.., • sweetens the stomach and ata.rta the liver and bowels acting without grip- ing. • Contains no narcotics or sooth- ing drugs. Say "California" to your druggist •and avoid counterfeits! In- sist upon genuine "California Fig Syrup" which contains directions. Clear Your Compleion Bathe With Ctitielita Soalaancl het Water to free the pore of' inapurities '11,E1d iblIoW with a gentle application elf Catienea 'Olettnient to soothe and. heai. They are 'ideal 'for the Is ..1.4turi t�r peeve deting and perPtunIng. sono2te, OiaIme,tt5 htta Telettelete Sold 'throtigholetheDonlinion. CainlelifitiDepot: Ltainii, 3441 Si. Praxf 'Si, W., Mogvonl, C ifled Advea- _, OR SAW- ini Ow) 1V-6-63), S-1 length. Bothwell, Ont. MILL S.!. .).e) STO V q Car lOS. ltuid Bee), , , Man v. Eagle Minting is a dartgerein ipurt, and ono not often indulged in TIVYS'il° clays. Some years age a climber in Olea. Alps was leoking for eagles' ncsir when lie was attacked bY two Psreat B i birds. Being obliged to let go afe hlio" lie, fell a great distance age was se- verely injured. The 'birds cont:nned to attack until one was ,shot, • Not bong ago a thrilling fight be-, tween a man and an eagle took place on a Scottish moor. Seeing an eagle with a rabbit -trap dangling from ib. foot, the man tried to attract the bird - so that he might remove the trap, Mis- taking his intention, the eagle swoop- , ed down upon him and he only escaped!, by diving into the heather, Then, as. the eagle eir-cled round la readiaeea for another attack, the man hit it witie a branch. The bird dead, reeled and feili The Crushing Blow. Grown people have lots a disapef pointments, but none of them come pares to that which a little fellow feels, when the clerk informs him that shoe* like his big brother's are not rna.de inl sizes emai1 enough for him. i se. • Don't let us manufacture imaghee" ., ary sins, but concentrate on the sinus we kaoW to be real.—Bishop Welldorr , , . it l ' 44 44, I, , 0 Beware of Imitations!. 1E3 E Q , . , i , . Unless ., you see the name "Elayet•, Cross" on package or on tablets you) are not getting the genuine Bayer Az.; pirin proved safe by millions and pre. acrihed by physicians over twenty,/ - three peen for i • Colds - 'Headache Toothache Lumbago - Neuritis ,Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain . Accept "Bayer Tablets ' of Aspirtrel, only. Each unbroken package eon, tains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cosafew cents. Drug- gists also sell bottles of 24. and 101 Aspirin is the trade mark (reg1stere4. in Oatutcla) of Bayer Manufacture ot I Manoa.ceticacidester of Salicylicacid While It is well known that Aspirin; means Bayer lVfannfacture, to assist the public against Imitations, the Z3134;, lets' of Bayer Company will be stanito ed with their general trade inark, the' "Bayer cro..... liOAR„,,S -E? Remove the danger of bronchitis by gargling with ivi inard's :in water. An enezny to germs. , ..if f. 1 ''' 44 • .) "MG OF ,-. Ampiepsomisrommettall •44.4• BACK ACHED TERRI: Mrs-, McMahon Tells How SW Found Relief by Taking Lvii;-E: Finkham's Vegetable Compound I Chatham, Ont.—"I took Lydia TX. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound for run-down condition after the birth o my baby by. I had terrible pains mai backache, and was tired and weak, not fit to do my work and care for my threet little children. One day' received your little book and read it, and gave up take ing the medicine had and began Lakin .g the Vegetable Compound. I feelmuch. better now and am not ashamed to tea) what it has done for rile. 1 re00mmen4 it to any wonitin I think feels as I do.' f —Mrs. J. R. Mealailoaz, 153 liarver Ste Chatham, Ont. , Lydia E. Pinkhareas Vegetable Com; • pound, made front roots and herbs,„haer • for nearlyfiftyye ars beenrestoring sick, ailingwomen to health and Strength. 14 relieves the troubles Which cause suela eymptoras aa backache, painful peviotlea irregularities, tired, worn-out feeling and nerVoustiess . This is shown agai a an again by such letters as 'qrs. McMahon Writes, as well as by one woman taint another. These women know, and at Willing to toll others, What it did ;fel thane; therefore, it is surely wort14 your trial. Women who suffer should write to tho , Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co.,Cobontege Optatio, for a fee copy of Lydia ip Pinkham's Private Text -took upon ” Ailments Petuliar to Women." cl isSuE N.