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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1921-09-08, Page 3IIEA,LTft:th1ICATION BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON Provincial Board of Health, Ontario, "Dr, Middleton will be glad; to aruswer questions on Public 'Tulin :.at• tens through this column. Address, hive at the Parliament Bides, Toronto. Preparedness is the watchword .of the day—of the hour. This old world is changing with buch kaleidoscopic effects that no nation or individual can tell what a day may bring forth. What is to be done to meet any em- ergency that may . arise? : What . can bo done? It is to prepare ourselves, to brace ourselves to meet whatever conies. For this battle of life we must feel fit,' our health must be good, 1 we must live naturally among healthy surroundings. We must see that the health of ourselves and one children is being maintained bythe practice of personal hygiene, and moderation in everything. All this: cannot be ac- complished at once. Education is needed and this education must be done as elaborately and persistently as possible, to hold the attention and lasting interest of ail Glasse of so- ciety, In the front rank of the forces in this Province that. are diffusing health education is the Provincial Board of Health, Just what the Board is doing in whole as well as in part is concisely shown at the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition this .year. In the Government Building -the exhibit of the Provincial Board - of 'Health has been planned to include or indicate ai1 the branches of Public Health ac - 'lefty: the fight against venereal dis- eases and other communicable dis- eases such as tuberculosis; the efforts being made in the interests of the workers, and the promotion of in- dustrial hygiene; the ramifications of the Provincial Board of Health's ra- boratory services; the registration of births, narriagea and. deaths; and last but not least the Division of Maternal and Child Welfare which is laboring to produce a healthder childhood inethis province. A special . exhibit has been prepared showing the :advantages of Milk as a food, and demonstrating many of the up-to-date • devices for 110 :r't@as'on for keeping the ,loves ex - keeping the milk Supply clean and -hosed any' longer, and usually, !they free from infection,were 'buried or deposited in snort, safe guest; than .i11;. our eweee itis; and the mute idet• Iuected wltls ,fhe esposur e, lands, of the body tc '.ther rain on a platform until dye tf,!ix.Se Bill may nottfortti,expootiro atliteSun also ensure th rn shall be pre - tie pin sent at the daily disintege tteleas,,tiie daily loosening of the bonds, and-elia11 ovefatuallldraw 01) the ;soul, ct2 the dead to its o15 -n embrace? After the lie :h had llitlrerodt; away and the ghost had depar teJ; 'tllere'ivas The fact is becoming more and rno--e place, the skull, however, "`being re - realized that if people are to be im- tained as' a revered part of the de- pressed with the inrportairc•^ of .health deased to give aid wh •ailed ,Botta Come From, the Same Cause—min, . Watez,*y Blood. R SC; ATI A 'FROM t&TI EE4 Quite Easy, 1-1 CSS Oil' 1 TH'it'-e A• A : OFTEN FORCED TO LA" OFF FROM WORK. Most people think of neuralgia as Flo—"7 shall marry a girl who is my' a pain in the head .or face but'neurai- —� gra may effect any nerve in the body. She.—'" Ontario Man Tells 4Ve11, you've got lots of How Tan. .f 1 exact Opposite,+, Dili'erent names are given to. it when it affects certain nerv;;s, Titus neural- tala of the sciatic -nerve is called sciati• - The Reason. fchances, '.'here are heaps of intelli gent girls' about." - lac Restored Health Feels Fine All the Time. "This Tarlac is doing me so much r , good that I've come for another bottle and I should like to tell everybody Y y about the wonderful way it has helped me," said Charles H. Davis, popular lima:mat, 12 Crosthwaite Ave., Hamil- ton, Ont. "About a year ago my kidneys start- ed to give me so muc:r trouble tliet.,I often lead to lay off from work for two or three days at a time, I had severe, nagging pains across the small of my back and frequent spells of weakness, when I hardly knew how to keep on the job. "I lost all desire for food, frequently going a whole day without anything to eat, because my digestion was so up- set that after a meal I would have severe pains in the pit, of my stomach. I just feIt tired all the time and was getting weaker every day. "When I heard so many people talk- ing about Tanlac:.I decided to try it, too, .It gave me a fine appetite, and yet, .after a' hearty meal, I had no trouble with indigestion and have beep. getting stronger every day. I'ni right on the job every day now and feel good all the time. I am glad of the chance to recommend such a splendid medicine." Tarlac is sold by leading druggists everywhere. Adv. Pay Day. A man was digging by the side of the road when an elderly, gentleman of an inquiring turn of mind stopped to speak to him. "Well, my man," he began, "an.t what are you digging for?" "Money,"snapped the digger, as he paused for a moment in his work. "Indeed!" came the astonished re- ply. "And when do you expect to find 'it?" "Saturday morning," retorted the upon' ea, but the character of the pain and tha nature ;of the disease are :the same. I Peggy ----"Why The agin in:it'ei ral is is caused b' don't you and you g Y enc n, stitirved Nerves, The blood which eat- znuinrrrie go to the church that me and education they' must be taught while and, to give the people their due, often my inunirriie go t �" young,' so that they can foam health as a token of affectionate renrei. ries nourishment to the nerves has be -.'Violet -----"Cause e' we belong to a come � habits. It is not knowing how to live brance. The preservation Of the 'hones thin and impure and .no lougel different abomination." does So, and the pain you feel is the right, so much as practicing "right of the "Saints" in the Roman Catholic • ts, f tl p y o nterestuli to 'review, the food Y y s -pas o which includes d talks g neural various methods appertaining to eFtnoe •gra with hot applications, hu exposure or burial. J nee tee altoxua- envie elief from the trop to conies by tive, as the actual burial enriching incl purifyig the blood of the -whole For this purpose Dr; Williams' Pink canoe with the body in it has 0c Ufs,ed Pills. are within my. own exstrongly recommended• These Island, in the Lau Group., The more usual way was to set adrift the body in a canoe atevening towards : the set- ting sun, taking the frail bargiic "par Church had no doubt the saise origin. cry o re nerves for living" that coup By a program wS is me u es by physicians and nurses, demonstra- tions tions by health clowns and by mar- ionettes, the Child Welfare Division diffuses important information on Public Health in an up-to-date and pra•etical manner The. suhjeets taught are directed especially to the children,• but gr. own -ups will .also realize the importance of the lessons that are being conveyed. By attractive lighting effects the location of the Provincial Laboratories and Venereal Clinics alr•eady,estabIish- ed throughout the;province are shown, and other electrical devices on hand include an, attraetoscope, and Public. Health messages flashed inter- mittently to,, arrest the eye of the passerby, 'Sanitary • Engineering pro- gress is also demonstrated in a practical way. The exhibit of the Division of Industrial Hygiene is en- tirely new and' unique in design. It shows two paths, one leading to good health and happiness, and the other to i?: -health and misery. All the steps along these paths are.lighted by elec- tricity, and warning are exposed show- ing the inevitable res alt at the end; of tile journey. Altogether the Provincial Board of 1 :Health's exhibit in the Government1 1 J Building at the Exhibition this year is an attraction that should •'trot be missed. generally that in this particulate in-' their natural Descriptive, t , 1 --le was: to take her for a tri new yacht the next day, and s questioning hen about It. " 1-Iow awfully nice of you t the boat after me!" she 'What is she like?" p in his he was o name giggled. perience at .hono out beyond the circling reef, anti: pills make new, rich blood and thus you are suffering front this most dread- much to' leek at, you know, but sire's ed. of troubles, or any form of 'nerve . very fast. trouble, give .those pills a fair trial; act as a most effective nerve tonic. If "Well—er," he answered, "she's not watching it till it disappeared slowly incl note the ease and' comfort that Not Now, into lire darkness. Such tollows their use, procedure - in- Pills was followed at Savage' Islan i, an in You can get Dr. Williams' Pink many of the islands of Micronesia - P 11 from ;any medicine dealer •orby mall at at 5 cents a box or six boxes for "Journey of the Shades" ' S2'-rom''The :Dr. Williams' Everyone knows the old. Greek �a cfry Co `13i r' s Medicine odcville Ont of Charon, the ferryman , ho •,rpws souls across the River Styx. This Ocean Travel To -day. tale is found in modified forms around the Indian Ocean,'. in Siam,' and on to We recently had occasion to go over the Pacific, though in the latter re- `o• the '101d Land." Having had the . not pleasure of crossing in many of the gems the obol for payment was placed in the hand of the dead ;because famous ships of different lines, we, the idea of payment in cash for a Ser- this time, selected the Olympic, of the vice renderedwas alien to the. ideas White Star Line. We certainly made of most Pacific Islanders. y ~' no mistake; indeed, we were so There was a regular "Journey oft the: pleased with the accommodation. pro- : Shades" among the Fijians, and at one vided that we planned our trip to re -1 part the soul had to be ferried acifoss` turn by Tali same ship, in the same l a river. The Fijian dead were b ' e' cabin with a valuable "tabua," or whale s . , The. Olympic, ' undoubtedly, repre- i Bents not only the last word, but the t tooth,. in their hand, but hough this may have been regarded usually, aj a verylast syllable in ocean travel. She i sort ,of currency, it is considered burns oil, and consequently the black BEATING DRUMS TO FRIGHTEN GHOSTS BURIAL CUSTOMS OF THE PACIFIC. South Sea Islanders elan ere Cline t0, Ancient' ' Superstitions erstition . ...p s . aid Strange Ceremonies. There is nothing more fasci• nating than the pursuit of some strange and curious custom to its origin, the triumphant fitting of a common-sense explanation to a mass of apparently senseless ceremony and ritual. The peoples of the Pacific are more wrapped in queer and singular cus- toms than any other • nations of the earth. Ancient customs, too, for the people: are conservative to a degree, and it is only -within the last few de- cades that the white man has brought about any radical changes. Before this they had looked upon him mare as some god from the spirit -land, and not as a man like themselves. Thus, the customs of their forefathers were almost all- in the full vigor of their strength until quite lately, when the great uprooting of the old gods and the ancient faiths was brought about: Had they ail been of one nation, living together on one big island— but secluded by the' barrier of ocean from the rest of the world, like the • Australian aborigines—their customs would have been comparatively easy to classify and tabulate: but the many different waves of peoples that have poured into the Pacific throughout the QUALITY GUARANTEED NAILS and CEMENT NRNISNED Mtn aftcS'! ROLL Vire guarantee at least nine - tenths of these mill ends to be number one quality roofing in rolls of full length and perfect in every particular. Yet We melee the astonishing offer to deliver them at your station for, practically half the present More prices. hfe similar offer ever made before by us. Ie This sale we reach the top notch mark in value -giving and your dollar is back to its full 1914.18 power and bettor. SAMPLES FREE, See our free mail smninks and learn the full facts before buying roofing for any purpose, We Arc offering equally sensatftinal values in walk Board, Aspl'idtShin gles.nndminter-u•ehrhtSheath. ing Pelt. Our samples and "Risk Free" offer will convince you. FREE On top of onr•acncrtie allow *femme pile the 'gen gheef' f W Salivary to nto.t DELIV1 RY at aril t,C.nede ifil.I.aowt.mon over nnd.nMVn am Iewprlcee, CUT OUT AND MAIL COUPON NOW.. Mark "X" what fntereste your ,,.,,,Aiph.it Shlnel.Y' , ..:.Sheathing Pelt 'leery Roofing 2 Ply Recant *Nag Boort Stec of Soot.......... .... :..Bi111dlny Material* Addreee our n..reet onto. *V. guera,4l.e .ell /.cY1nn Y ill IUD WI HALLIDAY CSIlIf1l�9I�S NAMII,,toe, ONT. ',MONO, NOVA s�^wt(A centuries have rendered the task no means an easy one,, The Solemn Presence of Death. No matter what our various religio may -be, writes Lieut, -Colonel T. St. -Johnston, there is no doubt th all of us feel nearer to our gods the solemn presence oe death.` Wh that 'strange `thing we call the sou has' been sent free, we onlookers fe that somehow, in the neighborhood the sc enc, the gods have,un'same;lny terious ,way =been 'brddght for a bri space into more intimate contact wit us, that .there is fer a few momen something• awe-inspiring. In the ve atmosphere. to be buried at a pandanus tree ion by route, the successful hitting of ;eke tree being a test of the widow's fideli- ty: ons In the Fijian myth there is. a curious. R. likeness to one 'at iViinahassa in y�I-- at donesia, in which there was a;log,ifor in a bridge across a river, during one.por- en tion of the journey. The log wiggles, l and the ghost is either thrown.:ofl'or eI has to turn back. In the.Fijian ar- of sten there is at one stage ,of s- ney a;serpent.Eor a••ir i' `' of serpent wriggles, and is 'alit' to h off the unfortunate shade.- is ver With primitive man this local mys- tery remained for days, and sometimes for months. . Though the corpse was' GUARD BABY'S HEALTH stance: the whale's tooth was'interded inanimate, the soul, that link with th gods, hesitated to leave the neighbo hood. The dead man knew all tha was going on, and if the ghost wer offended. in any way woo betide th offender. With many peoples th ghost, if that of an ancestor, would b helpful if properly approached an propitiated; with others it was alway a menace, to -be got rid of if po+nble This accounts for the two broad dis tinctions of the people who kept their dead with them, and of those who thrust them away. Williams, one of the early observers of customs in Fiji, stated`hat on th tenth day the women .were privilege to rush about with whips and beat the men; In Cook's "Voyages" it is said that in Tahiti relatives of the corpse might go about in masks and beat people; the Maoris and the Hawaiians could Blunder and ravage in the vil- lage for a brief time after a death. Professor Rivers considers that al this is due to the belief that the ghos of the dead man is still prowling abou and must be allowed to enter anybody and do whatever he will without let or hindrance. All over Fiji I used to no tice houses left deserted and empty for a considerable time after the deathr, of the ownesometimes till they de rayed and only the posts and beams remained. This was, I found after some pressure,•due ,to the reluctance of ,the relatives to invade the house "occupied" by the ghost of the dead man, till it was estimated that be had finally departed. In Africa certain tribes get over this difficulty, and "puzzle" the ghost, en- suring that he shall not find his way back, by blindfolding' the .corpse and taking it off for burial through a hole made in the siderof the house, rather than through the `door. And in Fiji, too,' in the case of a large and valu- able house, economy sometimes won the clay, and rather than let the house rot, they used to adopt a similar meth- od, Williams noting that a Tui Cakau was removed. through a hole in the house -wall, though he could not give a reason for the carious custom •' Tokens, of Remembrance. IN THE SUMMER e The summer months are the most> r' dangerous to children. The coni- aplaints of that season, which are cholera infantum, colic, diahoea and e dysentery, come on so quickly that;of- e ten a little one is beyond aid before e the mother realizes he is ill; The d mother must be on her guard to pre- s vent these troubles, orif they do: coine•r e d ' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.: smoke and toes of.cinders, that usuaI- iy render the promenade decks of the crackeliners almost unusable, are con- spicuously absent. .She times her de- parture from the other side and the ar- rival on this side, always at the same _hour, so that the trav'elier may abso- lutely rely'upon keeping his dates . al- most to the minute—wind and weather makineno .difference whatever, as she las ample power and speed, always in reserve, rendering her as• dependable as the first-class; express trains on 'The Olympic,. as • everyone Iynows; did such wonderful service in the Skorld War, in the transport of troops, carrying 'aver' -200,000 without :the loss of a single life, or' the slightest delay through ,derangement,. of 'nr;aolninery- a record of .which banrsnander Sir Bertram F. Hayes,. Ii.,C.14I.G., D.S.O., R.D., R.N.R.; and Chiefliingineer. A. Ferguson, O.E., have every 'reason to be proud. Previous to her being. taken over by the. Admiralty in April, 1917, she had- carried many thousands off I h passengerth set e y rough the sub- marine infested waters, and performed ()me gallant feats ..of rescue work, otably that of the 'entire crew of :M.S.,"Audacious," and the attempt - d salvage of the ship herself off tho oast of Ireland. It 'was hardly possible to imagine ou were at sea, when seated in that reat dieing saloon, capable of accom- modating 500 persons, and dining .s uxoriously as it is only possible to a in tha veryfinest est and most .famous estaut'ants in London, Paris •or New ark. The cheerful, willing service leaves positively nothing. to be de- ired by the most exacting travellers. The White Star Line, evidently in ends.to, keep ahead' too, for not only the Olympic, of 46,439 tons, the largest steamship afloat in the world, but they are now building an even larger vessel; ttie "Majestic," of 56,000 tons, which will shortly take her place on the .ocean ferry.—Toronto.Truth. s n 11 e on suddenly to banish:them. No other c medicine is of such, aid to mothers' 1 during hot weather as is Baby s Own • y Tablets. They regulate•the stomach g and bowels and - are absolutely safe. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at I 26 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' d r Y Mystery of Snow Images in Andres.. s Weather scientiets are puzzled about ssomething, and they will thank any- is body who can enpiairsf it In the high., ; i er Andes of Argentine and Chile, with - t in a very limited regiou,_:where there. t is a polar climate in which no human beings can dwell,'tho so-called Snow Penitents assemble. The traveler comes imeitpectedly up- on a great throne of them, gathered on the , barren slope 01 a mountain is peak. Seen from a little distance, they `' have the appearance of 4 a crowd of hooded monks, all in white and .kneel- ing in serried' lines. It is a relnar•k-I ' able illusion, for the "monks" are not human at all, nor alive. Each ono of .w then is a'biock of snow or ice. But p what is the meaning of this curious vi Phenomenon? .' How are the snow of figures fashioned? And why aro they i ri I i some islands the ghost is driven out of the house by the banging of Bruins. The general. idea seems to be , that the ghost keeps in close touch with the corpse so long as the latter 1 remains in the bodily shape. But as the corpse decays away, so is the tie 1 that binds the ghost Weakeired; thus, in. Sat, in the 'Sol'onion,s, they facili- tate this desirabl+ • object by applying Seethe so that the corpse may putrify 1 and dissolve Inore quickly. This, of I course, is done surr•eptitioutsly, as it is e �•:-•-' ea po near a politr, %to hurry the parting MONEY ORDERS. The safe way to send money by mail by Dominion Express Morley Order, ..ep. The;. Changing Face of Chinese Citi sa - A tourist on the trip round the orld always stops at Shanghai, the rincipal port of China, and from it sits the show places of th'e provinces leiangste and Chekiang. Be sees ce paddles, the canals, the Yangtze, found in that particular region and no- , the temples and pagodas, but he may Where else i.. the, world? Nobody net realize that the smokestacks tee - say; .One theory is that the 'fallen sing 'caul here and there in the palm of the e . snow may be of uneven density, and Chinese lar dslcape denote important that the powerful rays of en overhead sun first melt those parts of it around the denser spots, leaving the latter Still frozen, to assume the form of snow risen, As the snow continues to melt water best of their kind anywhere in the trickling down the blocks may help to 'world -Is adore striking. ' Once the deepen the surrounding hollows, while tourist understands what Chinese prevented froni accumulstiisg in the planning; is capable of he cannot e t latXt 1 latter by the slope of the mountain, wonder if awakening Chino is not des-' The arrangenmat of the white figures 'tined to become one of the greatest in rows may be explained by the slope, nations of'•the world. the water all draining_in•ne direction. I This., however, is only one of several theories offered: in explanation of the' "Snow of the Penitents," as itis called' in: that part of the world, The facts' cotton, flour andbean-oil industries `that are the beginning of a Modern in dustrial, Isation. In Canton, the chang- ing face of the city -broad streets, great stores, hotels comparable to the SPECIAL OFFER In the case arca still undetermined. RXI re4T 1`Lgauge Pump Gun, 30 -inch. Pull Choke The chipanzee and the .gorilla aro 1j'arrel, 13rand.New. Special Price for born with brains .as large as those of 10 days. $'54.00, a new-born infant but tlr • , o do of THE PI v n �' E Ci, 1 Cb,, Ltd, develop after birth. F 123 King Street Fast - Toronto No Permit N•eceseary Cor I3ritish' Mlnard'sLininientLtrnlberma,, Pedant] ' Slrbjects. A member of one 'of the theatrical clubs tells of a stranded -but still haughty leading man who was obliged to put up at a dilapidated country hotel,. He glanced frowningly about the office, reluctantly signed' the re- gister, and took the brass key from the proprietor. "Is there any water in my room?" he d,n'anded. "There was," replied the proprietor, "but I had the roof fixed." A Puzzle. One morning, when Billy woke up, he sat on the floor for some time gaz- ing at his toes. "Burry up, Billy, you'll be late for breakfast," said Ms mother. "Why' are you looking at your feet?' ' "Well," said the boy, "isn't it funny that on of -my o my toes is so much larger than the others; I had them all at the same time, didn't I?" . Harbor. I drop my anchor in the bay Where gentle little ripples are, And in the water and the sky I glimpse the placid evening star. Outside I watch the tall ships pass, Their thin sails "dip and disappear, And I can watch them endlessly Nor fret because I linger here. I who' have sailed -o• an ,,...�..,., �4?n v seas Inun'a i s d sterni and sterni and -sun, Now stay in harbor quit content Though all my-venturings are done. Yet if a passing ship should hail . I think the eager heart of me Would 'turn from love of peacefulness And break because it was not free. e Good health, it is said, will become more prevalent in the future owing to the growth of the Boy Scout and Girl Guide movements. ' For years I have never considered my stock of household remedies complete unless a bottle of Minaret's Liniment was included. For burns, bruises, sprains, frostbites or elrillblains it excels, and I know of no better remedy for a severe cold in the head, or that will give more imrnctliate relief, than to inhale through the nasal organ. And as to my supply of veterinary rem- . edies it is essential, as it has in very many instances proven its value. A recent experience in reclaiming what was supposed to be a lost section of a valu- able cow's udder has again demonstrated I its great worth, and prompts me to re- t commend it in the highest terms to all who have a herd of cows, large or small. I think I am safe in saying among all the patent medicines there is none that covers as larges. field of usefulness as does Mlnartl's Valmont. A real trueism: good for man or beast. CI -IAS. K. ROBBINS, • Chebogue Point. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bat Carlos TORONTO SALT WORKS Q. d. CLIFF • TORONTO pioneer 1.)o5 Remedies Book on BOG DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. 7Q r. (nay Glover Co., Iris. 111 West slat Street New `York, U S.A. "13a AS Pi .9 I N er" i. s only Genuine Warning! Unless you see the Immo "Bayer" on package or on tablets you! are net getting genuine Aspirin at all. In every. Bayer package are directions for Colds, Ideadaehe, Neuralgia, Rhen- nratisin, Earache, Tobthache, Lumbago and tor Pain. Randy tia boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also. sell larger packages. Made In Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark' (rIpgistered in Caluada), of Bayer. Mitnetacture of Mono 'cet!ca i 1 . of Salley] icacid. • man. Ask for Minard's and take no other. Strict Vegetarian. Ordering a eapy of Tennyson's poems, .a: customer wrote to -an Eng- • - lish bookseller: "Please do not :send .me kale bound°an::ealf as 1 ani a Ysge. tarian." • ' . - FACE WAS FULL OF PIMPLES For Three Years, Harland Awfully Sore. Disfigured. Cuticura Heals. "I had been suffering with a pim- ply face for three years. My face was full of pimples and they were hard and awfully sore. They fes- tered and dried up, and were scaly, and disfigured my face. They =teed me to loce a lot of sleep, and e. _:e awfully itch -r, making me scratch and irritate my face. "I started to use Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I used two cakes of Cuticura Cocp and two bites cf Cuticura Ointr e. t when 1 was healed." (Signed) Cii crd Yeomans, East Chezzelcooh, N. S. Use Cuticura for every -day toilet purposes. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and Sec. Sod throughouttheDominion. Canadi ,nllepot; Lyman, Limited, St. Paul St., 11?ontreal, 'Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. WOMEN OF •iia+ ��� May Pass the Critical Period Safely and Comfortably by Taking Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Regina, Sask.—"I was going through Change of Life and suffered for two yearswith headache, nervousness, sleep- less nights anden- eralweaknoss. Sonne days I felt tired and unfit to do my work. i gave Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve e - table Compound ab trial and found good results, and 1 also 'find it a very helpful Spring tonic anduse- ful for constipation from which I sutler much. I have rec- ommended Vegetable Compound to sev-. eral friends, and am willing you should publish this.” --Mrs. MAR'rnA W. LIND- SAY, 810 Robinson St., Regina, Saslc. If you have warning symptoms such as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backache, dread of impend, ing. evil= timidity, sounds in the ears, al tation of the heart palpitation , sparks befora the oyes, irregularities oonstspation, variable appetite, weakness, inquiet,. z anddizziness, ode, diz, get a bottle of Lydia�, i , .C. P nkham s Vegetable Compound and begin talon the medicine at once, We know it will helr. you a$ it did Mrs. Lindsay, I 1SSUre Nee 26--21, • •