HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1924-02-28, Page 7„.
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•
••411-',!InOffeaellve,”; ;
Tia beutLi
HOlinee,
1oues 11bite1at
tl*13,10IWVOnlier:',Ociira a Preot Of
be;:00,,...t.T.Ie'e ding, Ore om-
ingrelaing Av'erage;. Man
'*4n'On."S'a..,' 0000*ioraa inaY 4'en1y-",;
have thire to fuas With
!rai•''.fte,410,2;•'..4-d-''i,eaOnet.ager•gt-'4,stahle•!
('-inrY.a4SWer•-lothiS 'Werthi. be
No c
this choi66 coffee ,
grit AiOlar, pf9ip
fico`ry or .any adniternnt. in
to -remind him that the'boy who drives
the hoicie usually eares for it. It you The Soval Service Council
,employ• bo Y Who regards a horse • 'of Canada.
.triereliy: as a, sort •of. power machilie to •
goeds• from one ,place to an, ' By Dr. X. G. Shearer,
other;you nay be SUre tbat he :will Wliat is it? What are ",ita ideals?
eau .11,;e1P. The harness Yanked oE and societY It is a •council. In •it are lt° alone has frinied a.nd promotecl• the
training schimls Mr neglected and de -
Eminent 'children, and of training
schools and, special Glasses, or the
care •and • education of the mentally
deilaient Whose need of protection is
o
not'spend any morw
e te on /I thaP he- What is it aecomplishing? It is not a sen tigreat, and who, by no fault of theirs
•tute. so great a social menace,
hung UP ntd W ithot looking at it; sone fecerate the various churches and
ftlecl slaPbed down in fronnew law eompellin ille itimateath-
t of the ani-• other bodies sYmPathetic with Chris- ers to suppOrt their children until 16
• mall" a Pail of Water splashed under. tian, social Progress. Each body is re- years, of age, already in operation in
his perhapli IVO •or three licks presented by ten delegates on the four provinces. It is promoting also
717
er*titi034,;." „
mea,t Difgaivi'a pot `tO
rePerted ieeentlY ,that
•Sclitie bread .110 beea tbrOWn ors- the
water in hope' of 'abating a ditnyn"
WhiCh •it is •seirmonly sup -
most, extraordinary of all sniper-
.stitiOhs in regard-, to breadwas ex-
areeeed in the old-tin:1e ,caSteipe Of; Sin -
eating,. "•
Itwas ustal to ,have poor people at
a funeral to take on thein the sine. a
.the ,cleceased." 'When. tlie body was
brought out Of the, licitise and 'laid on
the bier, a; loaf of bread was given to I
the Sill.:eater'ever the corpse. Also Ito
was handed; a bo;w1 of maple full of
beer,' and, a' silVer sixpence, in con-
sideration whereof the sin -eater took 1.
upon hiiriself .alti the sins of the de ;
cea,sed, •and freed him or her from
walking after they were dead.
• ST0. VITUS DAI‘CE
Shows Through Twitching of
bruh—and he hasteas away to Council and one o11 the executive. facilities for the education of the
.tet,readY for the movies. T, en the. These are of their own choosing. Na- mind ,,t/id, the deaf, and the cure, care
•,bth:or., liancl, a boy_ is employed who turaily each body elects. its strong
loves' horses and makes a pal of the leaders This gives a -hi h a er 07f and education of the crippled.
• g g age A grea,t work has already been done.
:ILU th d ea •-• • •
- , s qengti and sanity "
^11 -le A t •
'stobedne It
feW tra mfnilteS4pent on its •.eare. ; council membership.' •• • - - • .
e greater.remain o
' 't
_ , goes wi hont saying :that, the thirty
• caring 'for a horse is • a pleasure to a I Its object is the study and solutiell Innits,; ' ehureh and others, that consti-
, horse -lover, as well as a duty, and the
of aey or all of the moral, socialand tute the Connell' are entitled to the
spe.eeete Who baeie, done anything woinli.,'ecoubmic problems - , with which the creditfor all it has accomplished and
'While in this world are the People community, the province or the'' ee Do -
..,'whose work has been a a pteasu • 11111110111111111011ss facet. Its .conssdered that M many. 1:Xf itS untlertakings it ,
." claisings time, end Made of thefr• Wnrk-1 Governments net ' oillY'' welcome
iIhe-..irave, not •cOunted the ham's to entsarerespectfully listened to. of in' ' -'()thhcidiesoutside its , uits
.nof
Jubdug7t-, Inhaesinh:ed,r.shtl:rie. .,support and .- co-operation
lY
Ing-' days Budges % Cf.' Sighs connecting; seek the advice of its eepresenta-tiyes• .
them- with the the eVenings wherein they .In its seventeen years of history and Where Whistling isWicked.
really. livea., 'There are boys who kris service it has seen many g-reat evils •
_.
'Iterses, boye••Who Would , rather fuss overthrown or greatly lessened. . The head. master •of a school in the
occupied area .of Germany was recent -
'around an animal they laVed than g9 The white slave traffic, sthat is the! ,
to a show; boys w w raffic in girls for • h would rather be t • • , moral lir oses . .
p p ly arrested by the Fi•ench because a
uncOmforta,ble themselves, than see has 'Pra•ctically ceased to be. Red boy 111 his charge whistled a Teutonic
• the liorsetney' drive uncomfortable. light districts and melody while a French' regiment was
tolerated hi:mses of . •
We,; have seen tbem ourselves. •I la shame have closed their doora, except passing.
only -a 'matter .-of selection, and the _
in Montreal and one or two small
'man who -selects a boy as driver (or centres. - •
inan either) ,Who, is not a lover of Gambling, except on race tracks, has
• ,hoCses",' does not deserve trade. -There been made much more difficult.
re' so many, little ways . of being un- The clisrePutable traffic in me:a-tat
• 'kind ia the stable—a jerk, a kick, a
'
Jab fron a fork, 'a rough word, neglect
of the littleattenti�ns that constitute
..,the Only happiness in a. horse's life. ;
Alfriendly pat, -as chummY slap on
••••••',tne. flank, :an apple or,..a. bit, of bread
:s,ugar ,ineans, as Much to a horse as
iiewsneper .enlogy• to a, man. A gen-
• ermis bed -on a coed night, a hot drink,
-aegond grooming-ethese are things
•.1that .a good ,herseman will do without
•••beie.g. tbld. S. He will do it because he
•eleires -the horse, and the man who does
not love a horse should not be Allowed
to drive it.
Musical Education for
Children
Until recent years the general music
eaucatioa ot •children 'was so limited
as to be the cause e critical comment
,
In Leleestenshire coal -mines .whist-
ling is strictly avoided by the inin.ers.
They consider:Nit to be a .sign of im-
pending disaster. •
Whistling superstitions, are, in fact,
and moral poison in the foam of had very common all over the world.- The
Arabs, for instance, have a proverb
books, salacious literature, and ob-
scene pictures has been driven into a whic„h says that after whistling it
takes a man forty days to cleanse his
feW dark corners and reduced to very
mouth. call it "the devil's
small proportions as compaed with the music!,
They
early days of the Council, and, as it 1 In Iceland the sound of -whistling is
reappears on news tands or e seldom heard, for it is against the law.
where, it is banned by Customs and i The champion whistlers of the world
post Office Departments, or ite vend,- :are the natives of Goniera, one of the
ors and distributors made to pay the Canary Islands. Their whistling is
penalty, of eontinuance in a crime used, for signalling, and -can be heard
among the lowest, most despicable and four miles off. No finger's are used
debasing that depraved minds have and 'only two or three notes axe 'era -
Sought to live and profit -by. played. a. seePtical Engliehman once
The deadly traffic in opium and doubted the power of the whistling,
other strong narcotic drugs, that is and got oae of the natives 't� whistle
the illicit traffic, Is being steadily re- I Ws ear He was deaf for fifteen
duced as the .Council co-operates with days afterwards.
federal, provincial and municipal autle- ,
orities for its suppression. STORMY
WEATHER
But its positive' and constructive
work is more i n ortamt and- f -re h
p ac - , •
by educators. According to aecepted ing than its destructive and restrictive
'Standen:Is, every child.was entitled to efforts in suppressing the great evils
aesthete, inheritance. However, until that are continually -preying upon the
the introduction of the phonograph weak, the foolish, and those unable to
and reproducing piano, comparatively defend themselves against the insicia
d terrible influence of these
Sitths music education was accomplish- ous an
• ed in the home. • When we consi r evils,
• thenmi
'umber of children in this n- The voice of its leaders was ever
trtand the small number who actual heard in advocacy of full orbed de-
•. lt took lemons in instrumental music, mocracy in the enfranchrnent of wo-
•-the percentage is diacottraging. For men that means so much on the side
a 'great many yeara now the schools of moral issues and the welfare of
-this country have been valiantly children. It supported the establish-
,
. carrying bri the battle in a limited ment of the Federal Department of
• way, ,-St is true that the progress has Health that is doing so much in pro-
, iSee'E el:icon:raging, but after all, un- tecting the -public against venereal
• 'esp.:tile work is carried over into the and all other disease, and against
honk, ;very little.canm
•be accomplished. physically, mentally and morally de-
-Ka'nha -111Fablean ar rn115,1e (•lnantion fective immigrants from. all lands and
slidnld -not. be lett entirely to the in the proraotion of maternal and child
S'cleeseis. The modern tendency has welfare.
been. to'carry whatever work has been • The Council also put the full weight
dene' (Rising school hours into the of its influence behind th.e abolition. of
home:a There has been a growing ten- the partizan patronage system in tad-
dency on the part of text -book Pub- eral and provincial politics that lias
• •lisbers to include simple pian n anoora- in days gone by hoe done so much to
panlmantalls -sobs:sot textbooks; so that corrupt the electorate and debase po-
litical life and waste tbe people's
money.
But perhaps the greatest Work it Is
doing is in behalf 01 underprivijeged.
children in the various provinces. It
has supported the effort to establish
mothers' allowances for the support of
dependent widows and their children,
for the estab]bshment of induetrial
SySternsWheen pupils buy their own
:Sbeelte'thea"mat hayie the added joysof
splaYitig aecempanimen,ts • • to their
• .sahotal songs at home. -•Such a method
.linnteeSiately.establishea' interes•t on
•. the -part °cif parents This message can-
ibit be reiterated „too often..
.curious.: reasons music
• Ochieatiollwasnot•CenSidered a part of
.general training '41,Ways accepted as
• cillinie;:_it.,Was net ,- looked' :upon as
hntOmerelye, necessary
hMne ,Young' peopli3 are
• ncit,ednested ia niatheMatica because
•we desire to make Of "theno aceount-
anti;, or ti,,,11terature; beeausse ;We ex-
theni•-tO •beeome writers. Why
:then de ,w0,alWays expect,inlIsIC
t� line ninsicians?. The lat-
ter ,terth Is „Used; in -the Most generaltly
..a,Ccepted:'Senee----en.ther. pfsafessiotally,
:ar talented amateur,
Y,et, it le 'true--'4.f.;the‘11tereige Parent
were left to decided music training he
•• '''sestilide` diScredit:it., 'largely' because of
..inon-Uttliterlan
. ,
PlaCed it'..riegie. means Of .earning
H. Garilen; In Musi.
Courier,
The Iinniali,,raeola. divided ;into two
:claiSeSt"'tlitise 'Who' .go and do
methingiatid 'thoSe''.whe :alt ;and in,
'tfuye,rhy 1rWAS.110 done. `the.. other
:W Wendfl Holnes,
,
that Or ilmninated with phos-
plioreseenit„'AiklitSi, and on, Make: die-
•, tracthig ibises : pursuing ite
prek, haS bean, fotind eg, the CalifOrOia
Only -el) out, Of averY ' three
it ,Li1doijkleeivesi''eny. edticetion be,-
;0141;'tt provioa.b.r,the•414.00:tavy
;•czhaolo.,•' • • •
Mother! Give Sick Child
* • 6
California Fig Syrup"
• ,
the Yluseles of Face and
Chorea, or as it is InCire generally
known, St. Vitus dance, is a trouble
that usually attacks young children,
though older people may be afflicted
with it. Its most common symptoms
are a twitching of the •mescles of the
face and limbs As the disease pro-
gresses the twitching takes the form
of spasms in which the jerking mo-
tiou may be confined to the head, or
all the limbs may be affected. Fre-
quently the patient is unable to hold
anything in the hands or to walk
steadily. In severe cases the speech
is often affected. The disease is due
to debility of the nerves and relief
comes through an enriched blood sup-
ply, which feeds and, strengthens the
nerves. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
been most successful in reaching this
trouble through their specific action
on the blood, which it enriches and
purifies. The following instance will
show what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
can do in this trouble. • Mrs. S. E.
IVIakins, Parry Harbor, Ont., says:—
"As a young girl I was badly stricken
with St. Vitus dance. My parents tried
several medicines but without avail.
was steadily growing worse and
could scarcely walk without falling. I
had to quit school and had no control
of my nerves or actions-. Finally a
neighbor advised the use of Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, and the use of these
for a couple of months restored me,
and I have had no attack of the trou-
ble sites. I have, however, taken the
pills at different times since, when I
felt out of sorts, and find them all you
• claim for them if given a fair trial." ,
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
through any dealer in medone, or by
mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr.
Williatass Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ontario.
HARD ONIAI3Y Where Do Elephants Die?
The stormy, blustery weather which
we have during February and March
Is extremely hard on children. Condi-
tions make it necessary for the moth-
er to keep them in the house. They
are often confined to overheated, bad-
ly ventilated rooms and catch colds
which rack their whole system. To
guard against this a box of liany'S
Own Tablets should be kept in the
house and an occasional dose given
the baby to keep its stomach and
bowels working regularly. This will
not fail to break up colds and keep
the health of the baby in good condi-
tion till the brighter days Ocnne-along.
The Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
• Brockville, Ont,
Their exarivie,
1 The inspector was paying his an-
nual visit to the village school, and
was putting the children of Class III.
through 'their Paces. He tried them
with arithmetic and geography, and
then came on to testing their know-
ledge ,of Engliele words..
• They did quite wall until' he flaked
them the • meaning of the word "ape-
d exine.
Nobody knew, and so ha had to help
them out.
• "An. epidemic," lee explained, "is any-
thing that spreads, Now, can anybody
give me an example of an epidemic?"
There was a long silence,
Harmless Laxative for Bilious, "Canono one tell me?" asked, the in -
'
Constipated Baby or Child, spector ot last. "Remember, anything
• that spreads." • .
Constipated, bli-
- ions, feverish, or
sick, colic Babies
sad :Children. 'eve
to tako genuine
"California F 1 g
Syrup." No other
.0,te
(t•the • tender little
laxative regulates
ea,ase...1.ases<ese-se.„ bowcia so nicely.
It sWeetens the etch's,* and tarta
the liver and bowels acting without
griping. Contains 110 nerooties or
'soothing drugs,. say YOalifornie to
your druggist and avoid countoifeltal
Insist Upon genuine "California rig
SyruP" which contains directions.
'..Chey had it this time. • Like one
voice came the reply:
"Jam, sir."
Down From a Tree,
Kapok, used M making mattresses,
Is white down found surrounding .a
tropical tree in Java,
Pen alui Pencil.
J
• A cembined fountain pen aial ine-
°inimical pencil, the elze of an ord•in-
ary ,fountain pea, is one of the latest
pocket writing oonvenienoes, he pen
portion le seif-fliling, Pencil points
Can be replaced.
One of the •great mysteries of the
natural history world is Where' ele-
phants go when they die. •'Curiously
enough the body of an elephant that
has died from natural callus has
:never been discovered either in India
or Africa.. Among native races there
is a widespread belief that, when the
great beasts feel the end approach-
ing, they make their way to some sec-
ret hiding -place in which to die. The
whole question is just as big a niY ss
tery, as ever, in spite of the fact that
many attempts have been made to
solve the problem.The districts
where elephants occur -in a wild, state
have been. scoured_ in all directions in
the hope of discovering:the last rest-
ing place of the huge animals, but
without any result. Quite recently an-
other determined attempt has been
made to penetrate the mystery, but,
up to the present, nothing of any value
hasbeen discovered. As a matter of
fact the problem has more than a
scientific interest to it. Any individ-
ual who le 60 fortunate asto, find the
elephant's graveyard will certainly
have Made si, tertune. On this epot
there mast be a huge accumulatiou of
ivory, a commodity which is continu-
ally increasing in value.—Seientifle
Aineric a n.
Buy your out-of-town supplies with
Dominica). Express Money Orders.
Some folks in Looks take so Much
pride they don't think much On what's
laside. Well, as for me, I know my
face can ne'er be made a thing of
:grace, and ao 1. rather think PR see
hew I can fix th' 'Weide o' Me so folks'll
say, "He looks, like sine bat ain't he
beautiful within.' --•-• John Kendrick
Bangs.
Keep Minardre Linirrient In the house.
.The world Is ea constituted that
'whatever we do comes back to us in
ki d just es a boomerang 'sfl1 clroia
back to the' point from wEich it is
thrown Bad habits foolish indul-
gences, fault-linding, fretting, and ill
temper reappear in disappointed, die -
contended, soured mind; in cynicism,
pessimism, melancholia, and impaire'd
health
London's busiest spot tor traffic is
Hyde Park Corner, where, on sn aver-
age daY, 56000 vehicles pass between
the hours of 8 a.in. and 8 p,M,
, A .Prouch motorcycle is equiPPod
with a water-coolod engine, the radi-
ator :and ci.i•raultitioti system .takingtip
bot little ;mon,
...‘et 118 tell( to etteh ether more and
about eliadothrOjess.--.7-Ananymons.
717
A
t,trvlfl
, Ma plaekleck, geltipM Wenlataii
BOG eurvfrOr -of the 11144te4, Are* eX-
PeditiOn under Al1 OraWfOrd,, the
Canadian expo, probably saVed her:
self and refused 1;6 aid Lorne B,
Knight, a member of the „party, word-
ing to ea laterview with Harold Noice,
publietted .1a the 'New York World.
Noice.led the rescue party that reach-
declWr
ead aannd!ella
AlirasuCnrdpawttYtofard)XilialtdilonlOallt
ie
and Frederick Mauer missing, Ada
Blacitiacic•was rescued.
Early stories paid tribute to the
heroism of the woman. These stories,
Noice said, 'were based en her. owa
statements and on parts of a crude
diary she kept. Some entries in this
diary, thought to have been unread,'
able, have been deciphered by Nolee
and his wife. These, the explorer said,
revealed that Ada refused to aid
Knight ae he laY dying on the island,
and probably saved herself on food
isht:rtvawtioounl.d haVe saVed Kicagilt from
Ada was tallea along .with the Craw-
ford expedition as a seamstrees and
cook. The diary kept by Knight re-
veals that she had other plans, Noice
said, and proposed marriage to Craw-
ford, and, when he repulsed aer, de-
clared she had left Nome determined
to marry one of the four white mea in
the party. None could see ,Mrs. Black-
jack as a mate, however, and eventual-
ly the diary spoke less and less of her.
•When Crawford, Galle and Maurer
left on a dash for Siberia to get :out:
side aid Ada was left to look after
Knight, who was sick with scurvy. The
three men were never heard of again.
Knight's. diary tells of the woman
refusing to looliSafter the traps, which
were set near the tent, and of her
washing her hair and making beads
for herself when Knight was dying.
When the Noice expedition reached
Wrangel Island late last summer they
found Knight's emaciated bedy, weigh-
ing only 90 ponnds. Mrs. Blackjack
was well and fat. The party's original
eupply of food had not runsgpst. There
were 12 pounds of hard -tack, tea and
blubber, Noice said.
Mr. Noice said he intended to bring
the facts before the .Explorers' Club
and start some kind of an inquiry
which would establish the facts offi-
cially.
Musical Story -Telling.
Many people object to the idea that
music should be made to represent a
picture or a story, and think that it
should be merely a succession of plea-
sant sounds. The greatest musicians,
however, including Haydn, Beethoven,
Schumann and Liszt, as well as many
only one degree down in the scale of
composers, like Mendelssohn and
Sterndale Bennett, have written their
most inspired work,s for the, piano or
for the orchestra with the definite in-
tention of telling or illustrating a
story. Beethoven, the greatest of
them all, in fact, saidthat he never
composed without having a picture in
his mind. But he did not always tell
us what that picture was.
Ask for Minardi's and take no other.
Jade is employed by the Chinese for
making certain kinds of music gongs
used in the temples. The tone of these
gongs, which are not hell shaped, is
said to be very beautiful. We all know
of the tremendous cost of jade, and
we earl imagine the value of a jade
gong shaped like a carpenter's square,
with one end of two and a quarter feet
and another one and a half feet. Such
a piece of fine green jade would hold
its own with 5. Stradivarius violin in
cost.
"If thou canst for a while, but
cease from all thy thinking Rnd will-
ing, then thou shalt hear the nnspeak-
ale words of God."—Poehme.
Beware of Imitations!
Unless you see the name "Bayer ,
Croas" on package or on tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer As-
pirin proved sate by millions and pre-
scribed by physicians over twenty-
three years for
Colds • Headache
Toothathe Isnaibago
Netritis Rheuxnatisin
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aepirin":
only. Bach unbreken package con-
tains proven directions. Handy boxes
of twelve tablets ;cest: few cents. Drug-
gists also' Sell bottles of 24 and 100.'
aspirin Is the trade mark (regiatered
In Canada), et Bayer Manuradture of
Moneaceticacidester of
while it is well known that Aspirin
Saeana Buyer Manutacture, to assist
the public ligttitiat indtatioes, the Tab.
lets ot Bayer Company Will be stamp-
ed Willi their general trade mark, the.
",'Bayer Cross,"
UR' TRIMI
aptrie,vppof
eneaseassissasee
" fsssfass4safasase
• Tr'/e/-
chum wrapper' '
shetaints, name
• and lara'e merit
The 4'ytia,
Et+
Pit
811ctiT
dariLt4,40t,
it* bring ye the full richness
esod mellow Sweetness o this—
d
Manufaitured by
IMPERIALTOBACCO CO. OF CANADA UNITED
A Human Cow.
• There are a lot of complaining peo-
ple in the world who strongly remind
nie of an old cow my fatter once
owned.
She was never content with her
situeticn. If you put her with the rest
of the cattle she desered to be alone.
If you turned her out by herself she
would stand by the fonce and bawl
herself hoarse.
When she sdian't have either of
these cauties, for bom.pla.int, she would
stand and bawl and bawl, apparently
from no other cause than force of
have seen her standing knee deep
habit,I
In nice, sweet clover, take a bite and
stop' to bawl before swallowing and
let the whole buneh drop out of her
mouth, thus losing what she already
had by bawling for eamething she
ought of her
knew hasvhee. croeupleden'tetd gi yet th.
peculiarity and find she was almost
human in this one particular trait. -
Lots of people are continually corn-
plainIng,that others have things just
a little mere plentiful and a little bet-
ter than they have, and in their dis-
content' they make net only them-
selves, but others about them, irrit-
able and unhappy.—A. E. Stewart.
It does not matter what feelings of
revenge and jealousy 8, person may
have toward us, if are hold the love
thought, the charitable thought toward
him, hie javelins of hate will glance
from us, fly back and wound only him-
self.
To be conscious that you are ignoe-
ant is a great step to knowledge.—
Disraeli.
INDIGESTION, GAS,
STOMACH TROUBLE
"Pdste'a DianensItt" is the Quickest;
surest relief for indigestion, gases,
flatulence, heartburn, sourness, or
stomach distress caused by acidity. A
few tablets give almost immediate
etomach relief. Correct your stomach
and digestion now for a few cents.
Druggists sellemillions of packages of
Pape's Dis.pepsin.
fi
Rb1 tic Pains
Are relieved In a few days by
taking 30 drops of Mother Sel-
gers Syrup after meals and on
retiring. It dissolves the lime
and acid accumulation In the
muscles and joints so these de-
posits can be expelled, thus re-
lieving pain and soreness. Set -
gel's Syrup, also known as "Ex-
tract of Roots," contains no dope
nor other strong drugs to kill or
1.,mask the pain of rheumatism or
lumbago; it removes the cause.
, Ail< your Druggist. • 11
''' ----- --'
Minard's aegis the pain
stiffness.
The old reliable remedy.
If you aro' weak, thitt and neavoila
let your 'druggist supply you with /mire,
phosphate. It is 4pcircintecd toftJi
nresse weight sad strength and re-
store energ, vigor and • ildrire force,
Price $1' per pkge, ., Arrow Chemical ,
t :frent 8t; li`a,st; Toronto, t,
It adds nothing to my satisfaction
that another man shall be disappoint.
ed. --Lincoln.
Patience is a necessary ingredient
of genius.—Disraeli.
Classified Advertisements
FOR SALE
OOLGROWERS,, YOUR OW11
wool manufactured or exchang..
ed for yarn or blankets. Woollen
Mills, Georgetown, Ontario.
LADIES WANTED TO DO PLAIN
and light sewing at home, whole
or spare time; good pay, work sent
any distance, charges paid Send
stamp for particulars. ' Nationa,l.
Manufacturing Co., Montreal.
se -
IN
NIGHT
'MORNING le
KEEP YOUR EYES,
ic LEAN CLEAR AND HEALTHY
kaur* or. WRZa Era cAnn Aeolt• "MUNI, 40.01,,CAOA544
ACNE ON FACE
CUT1CURA HEALS
Hard, Large and Red Pim-
ples. Itching Was Terrible.
"Had been troubled all my life
with acne on my face. My forehead
was a mass of pimples.
They were hard, large and
red, and the itching was
most terrible. My face was
disfigured. I sent for a free
sample of Cuticura Soap
a• -e' and Ointmetit and after
using them got instant
relief. I bought more, and after
using two cakes of Cuticura Soap
and three boxes of Cuticura °int-
r'ent r nesa larres
G. S. Miller, Box 14, Marshall;
Wash., Jan. 9, 1922,
Use Cuticura for every -day toilet
purposes. Bathe with Soap, soothe
with Ointment, dust with Talcum.
Sample Faola Free brIMill. Adams: "Lvagaihtica•
3114 St. road 98., ISSontrool." sold every-
vlibero. Son.V211o. Ointment Zand 60e. Talomr:Ze.
kr'Cutictsra Soap mhavea
EXCRUCIATI 0
P 1 S CRA
Entirely Remedied by Lydia.
E. Pinkham's Vegetable.
Compound
Eberts„Ont, -"1 started with cramp:$
and bearing -down pains at the age of
eleven years, and I would get so nerions
I could hardly stay in bed, and 1 had
such pains that 1 would scream, and my
mother would call the doctor to give me
something to take. At eighteen I mar-
ried, tuid I have fo.ur healthychildren,
but I still haVe ins in myright side -
1 am a farmer's wife with more work
than I am able to do, Ihave taken three
bottles of Lydia X Pinkham'S Vogq?..
table Compound and I feel that it a
helpipVcie every day, My sister-inelows
who nes been taking your reedichle for
some time and uses your SanativeWnsh,
told mo about it and I reeornmend it
slow, as 1 hme received great relief.
from NELSON Yoal, 'R. R. 1,
IrlQrttl, Ont,
Lydia Pitiltham's Vegetable Cott*
pound is a medicine for ailinenta coint
mon to women. It has been need for;
• such troubles for nearly ilfty,years, end
thousands of women have filmed relief
as did Mrs., Tett, by taking thts 41endia
Meditine.
If ypurtre suffering' Preto irregilleirlt3r,
Dein sul bases, herVaileDeSS, headathe,
Wekaeite or melancholia, you should ai;
one° beeln to take Lydia E. Pitldhatals
• 'Vegetable Compound, It is excellent to
strengthen the eySteM and 'help to Dar.
Terra Its fonctims wiTh t,oSe and a:eV.
)8$11'5: PO/ /
„y