The Lucknow Sentinel, 1922-06-08, Page 3s
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AIR ',RAINS": iJS1t
BErWEEN CITIES'
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TWENTY -SD EINES rRom
LONDON.
Had Your Iran Today?
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,Soz.vice.k C rietapitly ig
IfieptlaVed, 'and Safety is
Unchallenged,
" Anew time table of the aerial routes
•bEtEt been Issued by the Aerial Travel
, 'Bureau, and it is now.possible ,for one
'to look up air connections with most
:parts of Europe and North Africa, just
.1113 one would deride on e train. Sue-
cessful, service hag Made the thne
21 table a aracticil beceissity.
;There are tweatY-six regulaf routes
operetion in and opt ef" CrOaloal
airdrome,. eighteen �f vihich are eon -
ducted by Gregt Britain four by
'France and four by Holland.; Daily
, there are nine services to and 'from
Paris, two scheduled to Brussels and
'bee from Brussels and the same fer
Amsterdam. •
The guide gives a graphic idea of
the extebsion. of aerial ,transportation
•on the Cantinent. Under Belgrade
•one reads: "Leave. Croydon 4 in the
afternoon, • reach Paris at 6, feave
following' morning at 6, arrive Prague
•at 2, wait half an hour, depart. again
•and reach Budapest 6 in the evening,
• Teach Belgrade at 10" -which makes
'about forty hours of travel. This ser -
'vice is available daily and beginning
In June vrillabe further extended to
Bucharest and donetantinaple.. Pas-
sengers leaving Load= later In the
'afternoon can fly. to Warsaw 'via
'Paris in twenty:six hours.
' Another interesting..route outlined
in the guide inCludes stops. in Spain
• and Morocco. It is possible to fly to
'Parts, take a train to 'Toulouse; catch-
ing an airplane at 9 fa the moral -lig,
stopping at Barcelona and Alicante!
• :Spending thanight in Malaga, and ar-
' rive at Casablanca; at 10 .the next
morning.
Cheap as Wain Transport.
It is both -possible and pragtical to
:leave one's • hotel in Landon and take
•,off in an airplane at Croyden within
ithe heurato go to any point in Eur-
ope, excepting Russia, by air: The
terms are not only not eaorbitant,
figuring on the longer time re-
quired by tiains, with, sleepers, meals
. and hotels, actually amount to about
+the same, and in many cases are actu-
- tally cheaper than travel bY boat and
• 'train. -The services are growing ex-
• tensively, and it is believed the sum -
tier Months will inaugurate' anew era
iln commercial aviation. .
As a result of intensive Competition
. lby British arid french cross channel
SineS, further reduction in rates has
been. proposed, 'making the cost equal
••ko, if not, less, than by first class boat
and train. In. the Channel air traffic
, _ -
the ;Bsh, -hold the supremacy, do -
about three times the Mistiness
of the French, firits,•ivith the reSuIt
that lesser rates have heel proposed
• by the French, but the British. ate
• prepared to Meet them. '-
There is every indication that bo -
fore many week's if will be Possible to
• travel from Trafalgar square to the
Place de l'Opera in 'three hour,
elmapertthan by boat and train and
one-third• the time: In addition,
UM airplane cempirliel--c-laina in their
• adVertisennents a 'greater factor of
safety t' in air ' travel than by other
• means, .and back up the • claim by sta-
tistics that catmetabachalien
Measuring Bodes -�r_
. Dowries:
k Lguaint- cerernoty is observed at
dROydon, M Norfolk England '
- About three hundred years age the
• Lord of, the Manor bequeathed the
• Sum Of 21,000, the interest from which
was to be Yoted annually to -provide
dowries for four brides.' Under the
• terms of the bequest, the money has
te be divided between the youngest,
the eldest, the shortest, and the tallest
• brides' married during the course of
each year in the pariah church. ,
• This entails the "measuring of the
• bride." After the -marriage ceremony
-,athe 'bride and. bridegroom- proceed- to-
• •the vestry to sign -the registeaaand
the bridal is then meastred by .gtie
' officiating minister. :In order that her
• • correct statare may he ascertained,
eb-eisa :required to temeve her shoes
,• and let down her hair. At the end of
the year the Marriage reeords are 'ex-
• amined, and the dowries awarded to
• „those qualified to receive them. ' •
•
et's Hive
aisin Bread Tonight
'
• W long gar You'Ve had delicious raisin,
• brean--sinee' you've tasted that incom-
parable flavor?
• Serve a. loaf tonight No need to bake it '
Just telephone your grocer or ikbalcery. Say
,you want "full -fruited liread - generously
filled with lucious, seeded, Sim -Maid Raisins.'! '
The flavor of these raisins permeates the
loaf. A cake -like daintiness makes every slice
• a treat. • • •
• Serve it plain at dinner or as a tasty, fruited
breakfast toast. ,
Make delicious "bread' pudding with left-• ,
*over slices, •'
* Use it alltou need not waste a crumb..
• :Raisin.. bread is luscious, energizing, iron-
" food. So ,it's bath good and good for you. •
•". Serve it at least twite a week. Start this
good habif in your home today. •
But don't take any but a real, full -fruited
genuine raisin'bread. • ,.
:"Your dealer will supply it if you insist. ,
Sun -Maid
Seeded aAsins
Make 'delicious bread, pies, puddings,
cakes. etc. Ask your grocer for these. Send
for free book of tested recipes.,
Sun -Maid Raisin 'Growers
' Membership 13,000 •
' Dept. N-43-3, Fresno, Calif.
lue Pai•kage
• IMISIMISSISSISSIMM.M911111111/311111Mo
• , How to.,DrE - ,
Experiments in the ilehydration" of
eeara bas been engaging the attention
• of the Oregon Agricultural Experiment
-StatiOn, ..Develapartieet_atattasatisfaea
-tory pioeeesabas been attended tvitli
some difficultiesaeldef among them be-
-• ---ingthat ofairostErvingatha tetanal -ea -
or of the trait, but it is believed that
that problem thee been -solved.
Best for the purpose seem to be
Bartlett Pears. When peeled, cut in
halves and deprived of their Corea,
what remains is about 96 Per cent.
• water. Thus„ as a result of drying, ihe
• product Is greatly concentrated. In.
• title term it can be utilized as a basis
for eery delicious conteotions, varidue
flavors belpg added to the mateelal.
.4.
c"'"•
• , " Dad Ex14091011$ .TJIe`‘fident Nine' • gAyS
• irbe.pnea plesion et OVA et eat.: silent aeroplane calcine has at last w
AneOl, some „tendon wotits is, said been invented, OsaYS a 1.1cadont paws-
•
• to haye been due, to an admixture gfpapee,
chnit and air. It'ia a ourims aid Un"I ^Ip a recent test the deafening reale
pleasant fact ,thit such a Mixture b. of the engine and exhaust was corn,•
.
extremely explasive, and that some , pletely eliminated when fittedwith MRS. CHAPLEAU COULD
the most terrible,,accidents in indusia the "Silent Nine," AO the new laven- GET ABOUT ONLY BY
-
trial history have been caused by dust tion is caw.
PAINFULEFFORT
floatr da%tis'
in dry " it -Passengers will now :tie able to con -
co .. ' . • •
dangerelifi,' verse with• ease while in fhe air, andi mkt_
and it is In order to guard 'against not be forced te.'"shout ee Years of Sufltrin0 tad,'
the tep of aur
End -
dust explosions in wines that ail drla their voices- . • aatJ ant Stoadaell Trouble
min hal .have; by law, to be reStilariFl. The "Silent:Nine-1e very' simple lie
tvaalthereedcireadui diaster
at the• fasts Of an expansion chamber fitted used is the most Want et-
canstruction and in priaciple. It con,. . Also Overcome.
sten floUr mills at Glasgow was caused- tp the epd of a long, exhaust pipe, and for for me to move about the slieneet
by a spark igniting the fine flour anal arranged in such a way thee the gases but/Once taking, Tanlac.I am so well
with which the air was filled, and ae•a from the engine are cooled immediate- and strong my boustivviek is 'like a
pastime," said Mrs. S'. Chaphaata 326
%Mat Royal Aut. montreal. "For
three years 1 suffeied cenktantly from
rhethrootirLd wMhyat,iarttlPeetlItentwae Cauasledso
very
me no mad of trouble from indigestion.
I bectune so thin a.nd, weak I elnioat,
lost all hope. My -nerves and kidneys,
beethmeriliederma:ie,.agreat deal and I alivayr
had a pain acmes the back' that kept
m
"Tanlac 'helped me just like it :had
fboeoecin mn oawd e all es paegcrl ea el 143, jiyf oirt km my se aas .d yy
nerves and 'kidneys never. bother 'me
any more. I owe my good health ee-
tirely to Tanlae."
Tanlac is sold by all good clrugglits.
, ' Advt.
HELY GONE
• suited an the less of aweive laves. The ler they/cave the red-hot exhautsthele.
mill itselt• was a rearing fal'IlaCce 111- This is the secret of engate silence,
5i4e fire Minuteti. , The ;inventor is Major Grant, the
The worst explosion a the kind on euperintendent of the Croydon aero -
record was that which, desteoyed the 'drdme 'depots
"Washburn corn miga in lViinneapohat One ."Silent Nine" cen basold at a
reputed to be the largest in the world. 'Profit • for Jess than '$§6," and already
The result was a loss ofoeighteen lives ..there"is;a, great demand' for it. '
. and a. niailon dollars :worth of proPr
•
•
In the year 1908 Paris was shaken. The IenxchCaangneoaf9simFmaivgrton and
prop-
erty. •
•
,hy a most tremen:d,-ous explosion, caw- trade between Canada and New South
ed by the blearing upof the great wales during the fiscal Year 1920-21
•:Say -sugar refinery, tear the Orleans shews that both were considerably in
Station, It is believed that a spark favor of Canada. Imports of Canadian
• from a dynamo ignited the finely pow- produce, ace:carding ab the New South
dered sugar floating inthe• air. Forty- Wales• Statistical Bulletin for Mama -
two workpeople were injured, and the ber last, amounted to $11,045,630,
• damage was $90,000. . while exports to Canada were 'valued
In the early. days • of the last Cort• at $626i210. • During the firat nine
tury; all such explosions were attri- months of last year 1,393 emigrants
bated to escapes of gas, or to lightna left New South Wales . for Canada,*
ing flashes; yet as early as 1,815 Sir while but 871 arrived from Canada.
.Humphry Davy seems. to have had a
suspicion of the real reason, and to • 11.I•M•
CHILDHOOD INDIGESTION
have made some investigations.
• Later, the Royal 'Commission cif • .
1891 went into the matter more closer Nothing is More common in child;
ly, and their investigations proVed liaod than iridigestiot. Nothing. i3.
that explosions in coal -mines, even more dangerons to .proper growth,
• when not caused iby dust, 'were often more weakening to the conetiattion or
aggravated by dust floating in the air. more likely to pate the way to dan-
• It is not really difficult" to under- gerous disease. • Fully nine -tenths of
stand the why and wherefere of such all the miner ills of childhood Ware,
explosions.- To light a fire, you Itrat their root in indigestion. There is no
chop 'up wood into small sticks or medicine for , little ones , to equal
• shavings, and the smaller- these are Baby's Own Tablets in relieving this ,
the'mere.readilY. their. burn. The rea- trouble, "They have praved or benefit
SCA is that the act of combustiOnis in thousands of homes, 'Concerning
• merely the combination pf the carbon them Mies Jos. Lunette, Immaculate
• of the woad with the oxygen of the Corieeption, Qua, writes.: • "My baby
• air. • Was a great sufferer from indigestion,
Naturally, therefore, when aparticle but the•Tablets soon set her right and
of dust is floating in the air, with now I would not be without them."
o oxygen all around it, there only needs Baby's Own Tablets aresold by midi -
the requisite degree of heat for that ,cinadealers or by Mail et 25 cents a
particle to burst into fierce flame, box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
which Of course is instantly communia7 Co., BroCkville, Ont
ated to all the other atoms of dust in •
succession. •
Real "Boat Trains,"
Surnames and Their Origin
-
• • COSTELLO
Racial Origin -Norman-French.
Source -A given name. ,
• Here is a family name thatielikela
to pazzle„ you. Forgetting any particu-
lar ,knowledge You may haitinf it, it
PALE WEIR GIRLS When then are up against.a difficul-
ty they are not satisfied until .they
FRANCONfa3. ,
Variations-Frantom, Frankhem.
Radial Origin--Angio-Norman.
Source -Descriptive. . • .
Here is a group Of family names the
meaning arid origin cif which you will
looks._ More as though: it Might_ be find it difficult to guess, for ineach
Italian- thenaanytaing elseaaa:Butattli one ,,of :the three. cases --a the • present
spelling of the en -ding is mikeadine--
a It as not artuncommoathitig,ior
namesof• Anglo-Norman' origin •to
change In this •fashion, and the reason
.liesjn4he.pecuilarnitxturo of. the old
blood ot the Cestellos was Norman, .Ataglo-Saxon tongue and the` French of
they really have more "eight to call the Noefeene end from which 'modern
themselves Irish than-. any one in English is the outgrowth It mast he
Canada, except' thaindienahas.tecaU -remembered thatthe mixture occurred.
himself. a 'Canadian.. For the Cos; in 'a p•ecutliar way. The blarmans, for
telliasabegati to be Irish -long before a couple' iirrbeittutleii atoll ttie' 'emir
EaWatCaucaalatas, except peahens ceie quest,- spoke nothing- bute•Freneleltner
tain Norsemen,,, began,. . to: be Cana- theietongue Wate but alightly.Changed
dlans. • .• • • by the influence. er .the Aegio-Saion.
The Costello clan in \Ireland beeline° Then came a period when, as a result,
-a4Ixturothere iatbelsarly_days of the of•paliticalseparatien from Normaluly,
AngiaasOrman invasion. .It derived its the Normatm began to adopt the Eng -
name front 'one Costello'. Fitz -Gilbert, Bala which, in radiciallY ehanged form,
. wise _was the ,son of Gilbert de Angulo, finally again becaine the dominating
one of the lest a the invaders. As. element of •speech. . • It .thts .nataral
:was -the caseivith,many of these Nor- that when thiEr finalastaga was reached
man Chieftains', gathered -amend names:
theta, When they settled:in either Iva were quickly fargettea and alfetal wee'
land or Scotland, many native follow- a tendency to spell them as. they were
eta together with those of their .owat pronounced, atathe time. •
race Rad, 'falling into the Gaelic 'cute.. In the Middle Agee the "middle
tom, gradually 'evolved . their, Own. •class," lying • between the nobility and
plans, adopting- the Gaelic language their vassals 1.n. the social and political
and the Gaelic_systeth, of na_mes: Thus, scale, were known- ._!fo reenienar and
those whoWbuld 6therW1se ha've been Preethan has .poma down to us as a
known (under theNerman system) as faanily name.. The. Norman equivalent
aFitz-Costello;" became •.. instead to this- word was "franclionime.". or
"O'Costello"' and finally jest . Costello0 as. it was. spelle& various . times,
But it has been se long since the afianchome,". traunch-hunatne" and
-eleventif.and.. twelfelLeenturiee Abet ::afraunclaomeaf . _ came..to -the-pro-
is a safe bet. that bat, littlear of the bounced, . after it had beceme a' star
-
original Nornian blood rernaina hi name,' i'francoin,;" whence . the spell -
the puree 01 14 few weeks 'after.be-
veins of the 'average person 'heating ings Francomb ,and .Fratikhotat . have
. ,•. . ginning this treatment :there was .a
this' 'tame today. • developed. •
• • • • - decided improvement in my condition.
. •• • •• • - • centintieUnsing- the nilleaned .ara
those of thiabame.thet you have ever
-met have- priabably :been:Irish. :As a
matter of fact, the name itself is Nor-
man French. , , • .
- But though the name and the. origin -
AND:DELICATE WOMEN :
have •got over it. The result of one of
•
. 4., these .difficulties_ in overcoming 'Na-
,..
•• ture has taken the form of the strang-
Can Find New Health by Enrich- r...
" • est railway in the world. •' .
. brig. Their. Blood Supply. '• Ile queation that had Worried the
etonglinmeeprr:v• eforthae .1 • torn.aLptiontrto oWfasioboodws
'Nature intended every girl and every through the vett Belgian Congo to the
-woman to he happy, active and healthy. coast. • •
Yet tocamany 61. them. find their lives' Great tracts of- this countra are
saddened by suffering -nearly always swamps, interseeWd by ridges of steep
because. their blood -larto-blarnaa All cliffs. In etanseqiience,ariveraransport
those unhappy giiis and women With' is the only practical Way by which
colorless. cheeks, dull skins, and sunk- goods l'can be Carried to the se8.
en lustreless eyes, are in this condi- But the number of weterfalle, raa
-tion becaese they have-not. enough -red pus,. -and shallows have made this a
and in the charm of he,alth, they suf- tedious business, aS the cargoes have
blood in their veins to keep them well
from their- eyea, theirheart -pal! ---.---However, "an therressult-et-experi-
- depressing weariness . and. VS be unloaded many- times: on one
for some distance to the next boat. •
ter from
periodical headaches. Dark. tines journey, and carried down the bank
pinatas idelentlyetter-the-ellglitestex-
ertion; and they are often attacked fieuity, will, be overeome. The inven-
ments in-Belgiunn-it-ist-hoped thia •dif-
with fainting smells. These are only
a few of theinlaeries of bloodlessness. tion consists of twin boats bracketed.
When the blood becomes thin and side by side, with' a space of three feet
watery It can -We enticRed throUgh: the or so-hetween theatavo hulls.
use of .Dr. Williams' Pink Pills ' and „boat
Along navigable water this double
the troubles that -mime from pap' . travels hi' the normal way, pro-
w In . ra.rniewr-eome f-bormery. "lika 1-7.
hull.. But over all rapids and ehelliciw
a screw at the stern of eatli
' * ill 11 d
nbleologdhbotirihsooapdpe:orti
erly 'ailing: woman, Or pale breathless Parte a .single railway line has been
girl_ who has a good word to say for eonstructecr, supported -on trestles, the
this medicifie. • Among theta, there is rail rising up from 'the Water-leVel it
• • - each. es
Miss Laura Monaghan, Campbellton, end o f the ' unnavigable section
P.E.L, who says: -"Before using Dr. Guided in by two guard rails, the
floats up over the end of the rail;
Williams' Pink Pills I was rin a badly boat
run down condition. I •was pale, thin then the wheels between the two hulls
and searcely„ able to go about The engage with the line The driving
witched
least: exertion made thy. heart •palpf- power from the engines is ,s
off from the screws, Ind, drivesthe
tate so violently that I actually was .
wheesThe
afraid one of those spells might carry l: in contact with the rail:
inns'forward On
me off. Often my nights were sleep- boat ,-`the 'line, and
treatment I was tak- slowly lifts clear Of, the water. • In
less, and as the treat
itig did. not . help me l was almost ie, _this way the boat travels hit rail over
despair Pinalfy a- friend advised the the- rapids,„the'„,hulls-hapging,cne.en
use of Dr Williams' Pink Pills, and in balance. .
either side, and so preserving the
„Overworking the Brain.
• Don't be afraid ot overworking the
think too much.
More it can do." .
brain; yell can't da it. • You...can't
prominent medical authority, • "the.
Another well-known doctor, said• re -
"The more the mind does," says a
•
my practice as ;physician
dealing with nervous and Mental dis-
eases, I can say without hesitation
that I have not met a Single case of
nervous or mental trouble paused by
too much thinking or overatudy. What
prodecea mental trouble as worry,
emotiopal•exciternent, or' lack of inter-
est 'in One's work."
So there is no need to be afraid.
The mere you. thilik,7study,'•or plan,
the better it, is fel. you, because you
are training your mental powers. You
cannot overwork the brain as long as
you keep it healthy with outdooi. ex-
ercise whepever possible. Then it will
recuperate •Of _its• Own account.
It is worry that destroys the brain
-woiry, fear, bad:feelipgs,, nient-
al idleneis. •
• There are two freedoms -the false
, where a man is tree to do what he
bikes; the 'true, where a man ifree
, to do what he ought. -Kingsley.
Do "Box Numbers" Baffle fact that usual!, pli
..v re -es are kept
now enjoyinggood health:, I am glad
to give you my experience in thehopc
that some other sufferer may find the
way t� better health."
'These pins are sold by all medieine
dealers or may be had -by nisi! 1 at. 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co Brook-
ville, Ona
•
You? .
While the system of "box'aiunibers"
addresses used by advertisers in news-.
paperoAhas. been in operation for, a
goad thinly 9ears, her fire some Peo-
ple who . do not know what a "box
number".really means. • • ; •
_The "box number" came into being
as arenult of the great there:is& in
the use of newspapers ate a medium
-of advertising ItAtelped-to asave &in-
fusion and labor,. •
A person who advertises in a news-
paper may, not wish to disclose liis
address. •' In -such eases, when he •in-,
sorts the advertigemenf he informs the
dolt at the counter that he desires
• a "box number." The clerk gives him
a receipt On which is a number. It
is this nensher that appears in "the ad-
vertisement; for inetance, "Apply Box
•
When, the advertiser calls for re-
plies, he presents his redeipt, and the
replies are handed to him. Perhaps
the Origin of the 'term "box number"
• may have something .to.de with the
•
in boxes, •being docketed in pigeon-
holes.
Some newspapers --trade journals in
particular -allow •readers to eetid
motley in payment of goods advertis-
• ed: -Thli "deposit"• -is: kept by the
newspaper untit the buyer receives
the goods, when it is sent, on to the
seller:
By thie-means-the buyer la Maur:a
of 'fair play, for if the advertiser fans
to, carry out his part of the bargaitt,
th-e'bnaer's deposit is teatime& '
Seeing the King. '
'Yor mine eyes have seen the King,
the Lord of hosts. -Isaiah vii 5.
Unclean lips; yea, all uncleanness,
, I can nothing righteous bring;
Woe is me, undone, untholy--;- ,
For mice eyes. hate seen the Klitg.
•
gut the coal from Off the altar -2-
• Purged and cleansed; oh, Wondrous
thing!
Here aili 1, IONA alle-aaleliat ghnt
Le., mfae eyegthave aeon the tole
Wild AmanaI Sanctuary. ;
At Yorkton, Sask., J. A M Patrick,
ICC., has established' his-oWn-eit-
pense, and as ,a means of affording
hint pleasure, a sanctuary for wild
animals. He has succeeded in 'obtain-
ing a number of Specimens of opt rap-
idly disappearing wiikt life,among
them being antelope and white-tailed
deer. He has recently putehased four
pure white deer from Grand Rapids,.
Mich. These • deer are exceedingly
• rare, only peventeen being -known to be
in existence on the continent. Mr.
Patrick is having the usual' difficulties
Protreeting his :Ancillary, but le.soit-
tinuing the good work.
MapeS. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuraigli
•••f
•
Classified Adver,tisenssats
amminalt•
_ „
Ult6E8 WANTRat FOR TRAININO
enaree er graduate.
ohne 110Pitirts liospitall.-Apply Superior •.
tendient..,001rnewQ04 Sanitarium. fiaelitle
WANTEJ?-rEtoplasomsiefts.--
AMAIN, W0011 litospitai., St. Tiger:lain
I yearn. general training. with remorse/in- •
Won. Apply SUPerinIendent•
AGENTS WANTgla,
s A omwro." rnaTzoult.amitc•. 1r=
4. winners and samples". Wonder
Knife -Sharpener 25 cents. Agency Salop
Company, 150 church. Toronto. •„ „
•.111181.111413 .F01, MLR •
°ALL 'KINDS 'OF NDW AND MOW
belting, pulleys, saws, rablahose.pao king:
etc., shipped Nutrient to approval at low-
est prices in Canada. • "YORK BELTING
CO 115 rottx STREET, TORONVI,
On cr 'the, eights...
• A: than was visiting; Irele.'nd for the
first' trine.• s • •
ni Dimas, on,e warm afternoon, be
anadenly,pikt las handkerchief over Ms
nese sad said. In a choked iokee: •
"Whatthe deuce lathat?"
"That?" field his Irish &Me. -mit.
that's the River Liffey, Didn't •ye .
know, r•easis that the smell o' the utter
was one ce Mt?.igiht o' Dublin?"
. • .
• Fish th nseri with excite-
ment when a food are found in
• •
Assoriews Plosoor Dog Monodies
Book 'on .
DOG DISEASES
, and How to row
mailed Free tunny Ark
dress by .the Author
U. -Olay Glover Co.. Dna
129 West Zith Street •
New York, 13,0.A.
COARSE SALT
L A N DS ALT
Balk Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
,O. J. CLIFF " TORONTO
• The publisher ot the hest 'Fat -mere
Paper in the Maritime Provinces in
writing toils states: • •
would say that I do not know -of a
medicine • that has stood the teat or:
• time • like, MIN-ApD'S IANIMENT. It.
has been an unfailing remedy in our
• household ever sitee I can remember,
and has outlived dozens of woUld-bri
competitora and imitators."' •
•
.
• England has 'the world'ssmallest
railway, a four ,horsepower gasoline
motee drawing a twelve passenger
car over a traak 'having a ,gauge of
fifteen inches.
-M inard's Liniment for sale everywhere
.I1+Iany Times It's a Guide to
' Health in is This One
HAT Is
A LETTE
• It is estimated ' that 105 million
matches are p...sed every day in Can-
ada, or twelife.7-te.ceeli person. -
..IROUBLEDATIE
rECIERIYEARS
On Face,..andlratiost
Sleep. Cuticat Heak
"I' was troubled for about two
years Viith•eczona. It broke out on '
my lace and arms in pimples and
Itched lima burned so lbaly- 0Rn-f-
• loat much sleep on account of it. My
face suid arms perecovere4 with pim-
ple‘sod I was ashamed to appear.
out of the house. •
• s.`I began using Cutieura Soap and
Ointment and immediatety found
.rsliefrand 'after using -sine cake _of
• Soap and one box- of Ointment I
was healed.' (Signed) Miss Helen
Mark, 4259 Mary land St.; San
Diego, Calif., April 18,1921,
Use Cuticura Soap, Ointmentgeld
Taman exclimively for evety-disy„
•
miletaturposes.
e Pimple Seeti Ins 'by Mai Address: "LyststriAtile•
ited, 344 St Paul St, W.,Idostrsal." Bold es
'where, $itap 25c. Ointraent26stadb0e. Talcum
11111rCutiessra Soap shaves without snug.
Women -:-Read
marraten; 0,atarloa--"Before• using
• Lydia B. Plnkham's Vegetable Com-
pound I was a .total wreck. I had.
terrible pains in my sides and Wtt,
not regular. fluidly I got so weak
.1 -could not go.up_stairs without stop-
ping 'to rest half -way up. I saw your
medicines advertised In the newer
`'
• papers and gave• -it a. trial. -I took
'four bottles' of the Vegetable eom-
poUnd to- healthr..-7
I -am- marriedi_em_the_mother of twor-; _
children' •and do all my howie*brle,
milk eight,. cows and do a hired MEWS
work and enjOy the beat of health..
I also found the Vegetable Compound
Ereat-helP .
• foie my babies were born. I recothe
mend it to all shy friends."-Mna. .
- -HAAT JANKt. lVfarmion, -
• Letters which -you' read in the news- • -
pa.pers recommending Lydia. E. Pink- "
tam's. Vegetable 'Compound are gen-
uine expresilions - from women. who
, have. been -helped by 'this splendid -
medielne.- They are anxious for -other
*women, who may be suffering as they'
did, to know • Of the great merit of t
-this medicine. Each one --with her.
reputation, stands behind it, to point
out to sick women the way to. health. •
•Lydia E. Pinkham's Private' Text...
Book 'upon "Ailinents Peculiar tri
Women" will be sent you free %ion'
request, Write Lydia E. Pialchana
• Medicine Co., Lynn,' Mass. ----------------------------•
In this ingenious viaty the boat, in
Making its ton -atop run to the 'tea,
can rise outofthe water and, pass oVeei .
a steep waterfall,•or skim just -above
the surfate shallows. -At a narrew
gorge the boat can avoid it altogether
by leaving the river and etitting across,
land on its single tail, rattling along
a cleared Pathway through the jungle
:flea NewYork overlie -AA' railWay:
• Mrs' Newly-wed 'her fiPrst day's .
shopping): , "I want:._ two pieces, of
steak -and--and 'about' half a pint of
He who plants a tree Reit-ens the
burdens of his fellow -men. He wile
plants it treeeretts tt hiens3lt aliving
motiument and makes bold an attempt
to leave the world more beautiful than
he found- it. •
. , .
MONEv . Oh*DERS.
Send a7'. Dominion Express Money
Order. five Dollars caste three cents,
-The roses of pleasure •seldorn last
long enough to adore the brow of him
Who plucks thent.-Hatinah More.
ISSUE No. 22-'22e ,
• WARNING! Say "Bayer" when yott. buy Aspiiin.
J.Tilless)!ou see the name "Bayer" on 4b1ets, you.are not get-
t1.- A:,pirin at all. s Accept only an "unbroken package" of
`Tay9r Tablets or Aspirin," which contains directions and dose.
wurked out by physicians during 2'2 -years and proved safe by
millions for
Colas
Toothache
• Earache
• Handy. 43:teree.' boxes of la tablets --Also bottles of 24 and 100-Druggiste.
Headache • iiiteurnatistn
Neuralgia •'Neuritis
Lumbago Pain, Pain I.D.•
Alpftiti tte t trials mark (resistered 4.,Catiatlaa or tiayer Manutactus* ot 14990.
eeetlearidester or Salicylloaeid. While it is well known thsst Asaivin mesas Barer
onthinfttetare, to assist the nubile against imitattlines the Tablets sre Defer company
will b9 atamOos1 with their general trade mark, the "139syer Camas' ,
• s,
.40•••••*