The Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-04-24, Page 7' The three following illnetra, ens wi
*i 11
be very interesting to • thosevihO,11..a.X4
• ihOt 'realized
.0*CTCY70-01':Ii‘-74i7eWn 1Oitt-40.071' drawo s
ffoirliJ.4:0-•:Rorfow ,o,txiox'Unc.o.
of the 'Welter,
•
In 1914, a stalwart Yeungfariner, de-
. string. to eninst for oyeriees,.ealn9:))er?
fore the Medical Officer at the King
..„Stee•Arinotirles.','When naked, to read
•the test card, he did eir• perfectly. .40
an ,atertheught• however, the MAipal,
Officer asked hlin'to---coVef hia-left'elce
• •
And'. read *Ith the :idght A al
• Passed setiafactorilr but When ti
Wit'S practically 'blindLLJULI!1 1.11
Inane
, The young mail had never realized'
defielency, hitt enenirY, ,glearred the; fa
that, the left had heed .4,lightlY,'11.4-1.f
when • he.,..:gt -sinall,7hey and lv
iieVerlicen. treated.
•
d'he next Case was that of n nihid
. • lady who was very: fond 'of' ree
Ing,,....•Noticing: that h.er eyes ,could xi
. fellow sinall thesame sap
as, in. earlier days, she visited a fiftee
C01.4 •StP;(3 , '11110, PlIFOGSPC1 Pair :
• glasseS .that "magnified/ this
months. She began to litiff0F froni'liea
• itehes and signs -of eye. strain began t
'Show, ,Sho ,visited a'specfallgt NO)
• 'pronotinded the' cheap glasses,
, Through' the nrePer” treatthen
• and 'use of ,, properly. fitted gl ads es:,.' he
• headache:a diaappearea. anj. he'r.
cyo
e-.. were greatly improved,- She had take
• the Prol3Or eenrae Juat' in the nick c
o' ' •
In 'still , another ,case., bay 'f
:years of age, atreng and well.,31eVelep
was attending .school regitlarlY." I
Spite of his. atiparent
COUhl not get con end alWays:Seemed
10 he :at, the foot ---or bts. class, . His.,
.. teacher prOno.unced dance.' Hip.,
:parents; could not iinclerStand
: hovieter, Since: he was industriOUS
, when at huni, F1,t1Jy 1 achol nurie
. made the •rounds , of, the, claas-rooni
suspected 'eye , trouble, .and Nand 'on
teat, that the .boy Possessed,' leas' than".
twenty per 'Cent...,nortnal,:V,61on..'l11
:WaS, at. once 'taken to a specialist' wh
prestrined proper glasses and Within
• a., year be steed at the head Of hi
class.... : •
• •
Protif.the feregoing. you will mid:et'-
.
Stand Ute need fpr care, no inatter,hOlV
,slfght may be the .injury Or. trouble!,
The Canadian.- National. Institute. for
the blind, .eatabliShed in 1913, 'Under-.
took as. one of,its chief activities, eight.
saving Work. Stattstida ahew ',,that
per. cent;' dr blind people the
.
whole country are over 'fifty, years of
age ,and again„ that. fifty • per .pent. of
all blindires8 is 'preventable. Iinagine
•. . "
• an infant er child in sehoolAosing
•-eight 41tota11y and .needlesely-:,' :Then
. , consider, for a mernent .'the ..,,relative
Care and eXpense•to all.00ncerned. • On
' •the one hand, necessary 'attention, .4,
• few drillers of ,expease. for -treatment
or glasses, tind the elifidgoes through
life wlth little ' worry and practically
as nranY otinertenities for einployment
and recreation -ea. -the cliild who has
never had eye 'trouble. On the: Other
and, no care. or preventiop expense;
but fifty or SiXty years Of fretting hy
the .new blinded. .child.at it g
oe
through life, remorse of:, the 'parents
•.•
'-entil death, special acheol edireation
..,„Costieg..hundreds-oLdelicirs Per7year,'.
atvaY, from the family And' friends::
•' and the 'coast. -int worry ,ofthe future
.. with, in many cases, Stateor other re,
'Ref...provision ,'fOr oid age.•'
.ThoSe of Us, ,.wscr :could -not . have
saved sight, no matter. hOw:rimelvwe
• tried,.in&who have aecepted thesitua-
. .
tion In whien. we find ourselves to
end of making.the best possible tide or
(lpportunitles still • , ,
permitted us, value
•sight. In feet?: we nossibly placea,
gTetiter,Nalue"On it than do the thous-
ands ,of, me 'nand • women •• who irityo
never 'given thought to this Most
pre-
cious blessing. 'We shall not..sttind•
idle and See our fellow Creatures: lose
eight needlessly: _Canada's blindipepu-
-lation now rininliers.'seVeti": thousand:
When.We considerthat fifty ter cent
...1.:!_of'•hilirdness-is'definitely-stated-to":lit'
preventable, wo cannot but • realiZe
that three thousand ,t1,1!0
peopjo whoare in Canada.
: Should have peen" enjoying the bless,
Inge of sight :if care had lieen• taken.
Wil1'4Ou Act • With us and misfit?,
-National, Inatitute, ,for the
BlitidtTOrtnte...
, . ,
•
;ft!
ure!' No chicOrY any ad-ulterant in
this choice coffee.
Varlationa-Suilivan. •
,
Surnames ,#n!I Their min
• O'SULLIVAN.
at_t_taelat:D_rial tiL--;;1
S9iirCe•oot given nntne,,
Sal.ilYati. ::ppe pf the most ',an'
:Cieur,faintly 'nether& in Ireland, Where -
aa, In
.all'• the 'raCes:V.
Eur-
ope originaljy had,' SO/Ile,. form Of
clan -or-tribal erganizatien, some cOni
neetioh can he' traced between allarge
ot Percentage of the modern aurnaineo, •
e' Find the. ancient, riomeeclature, the con,
• nectien often la More. or less Vagina,
of' rind like:Yto stretch across a gap, In
o history • betWeen, the•abandoriment of
the Clan System and the development
. or, the nioderri :stirnaine: 'This is not
0, trite oi Ireland. Aniong the:Irish. there
,has been 00 gap.. •
[ the. greeter ..uninher of Irlsh
.to foinid in 'Canada to -day
s • :trace back in an unbroken line' to the,
4, can And' Sent. 'nanies. sept is a
of, the elan). In fact, there
are many. persons . in -Ireland to -day
ri who, ain,OPZ their countrymen, are still
„known to „the. hereditaiW .tchiefttilna .of
n these .ancient lines. - -Such, pers,ons are
r, e6110(141411,Y known. by their. ,surnemes
with .the ,article "The" as...ra :Prefix.
Thin 7tThe, O'Siillivan Is the Mau who
would .bO„the 11,644 of the .cystiuivon.
'clan did" inedern conditions Pernitt Of
the actual-mainiennge of the .ancient,
syStem. ' •
is
f;x:"C" i imply' a contraction of
-"IftlaP Meaning "the descendants of.
' THACKERAW
;Variations ThaCkery; Thacl<uray,
'et
„Thaeliman; Thacker, „Thatcher.,
„SeurCe-7:-Art occupation.
In the 'governmental and,: rellikionS
records; tax lists and the like of medie-
val England such names as "Roger le
Thritecer" and "Hobbe le Thechere", are
to :be found. •
At that time of course, -the append-
ages to•, the giv,en. trainee for the.,most
• pert, were purely descriptive, 'signify:,
Ing the trade with which, their hearers
followed.' •:Thotradewas that of rbef-
.
• ing,,',for„,witli".rare exceptions. the Or-
dinary house of the Middle ,Ages had
a thatchedroof. " • •
lLater the earns names are Met, but
here and ,there'reinns, the "te,'' showing
that in somecases at least they :were
being used as real and' not merely des-
'Criptivenames., Still later. such :corn-,
binations as 'Walter Thiccer„ lo ,Cord:
Wainer," proved that the !Mine had be:,
'conie, a -family one, and that "the iaid
Welter Was not a thatcher; at a1,1
'though his name might indicate it
'77-The-1iarilitercp-ronniicfkt1on generally
,developed in thenorthern. parte .of •
-Englandand the softer in the smith;
plat is the, Smile Word "•became
<irchin the 'South and 'dark" In
the north, or .".fisk."„ In the north and
fish". in 'the southi•Or again "dike". in
• The ,given name, „ freni which, the "
name ,O'Sullivan is derived is Suilleah-,
hain; that is, as. nearly as ItTerin he re,
e' pretentedby English. letters.; for the: d
alphabet and' prohouncia.t.on dif-
fers- Considerably ,from the English. 'e
s But the spelling Probablya closer t
rePresefitation Of the sound,' :The Pre- s
. .
the north and ,"'ditch" in the s th. .
• • ;-
The' flourishing 'ending "'ai," later
eveloping :insome cases to a • plein.
were simply- • Whinisileal or vain
ridings ndded in ni-eph'the aeMe.spirit
hat some names were ,Latinized, to
how the' learning of. their bearers. .
- • - • • ,
The Temple.
. My botlyis a temple,
,•„My 'eyes its wincleWs are; -
My lipe the door which leads witlient
Which „often- s tancla
. • • •sias
, .
Each ornantent that Is within , •
Shiner3 through-4ta windOvis bright.'
Lordplielp mo to keep iny teniple pure .
AteloVely in `Thy sight.
. .
SPRING WEATHER
ON BABY
• • ,
In 1791 he weighed two hundred and
forty-two pounds in beets, in 1798. two,
hundredand twenty-four penrids "ct.f4
r''gout,", in 1800 two hundred and
orty-Seyen•peunds in hat and boots;
rid Ilater that ear two, hundred And.
-enty-nine pounds ,after -gout." In
03 "With gout" he Weighed two Irinv
red and eighteen pounds •
rhe figures -help Us to picture thee')
lid men of A ' centurY'ago. / We can
O em trotting or mincing or:. pro-
enading with an air, small and large,
wn the sunny -side of St James
reet :to Weigh theniselyes before din-
, -Labor's High -Class Club.
• ,
•
The workmen • of Havana, says a
liter In Travel, have achieved a pest
-
n for "themiselves. Probably in no
her part of the world hair the labor
-
g man' sueh a club az exists in the
era house building, in Havana. The
te
a
The ..Canadian Spring weather -one .ta
day Mild and bright; the next raw and 18
blusteryextremely hard On the d
baby., Conditions: are .speh that the• —
„mother cannot take the little -one out se
for the fres.,14iir,se •mucli to be desir- se
ed. •Hesia'cittilined to the house. Whick m
often over heated and badly, ventido
-
lated, Be catches: cOld; his little St
stomach and .bowels become disorder,
ed and the pother soon has .a sink
baby" to look . after. To Prevent this
an, occasional dose of Baby's Own
Tablets should be given. , They regu- '
late the Stema,ch and boWels, thus. -pre':
Venting:, Or relieving celds, slrnple 11°
fevers, colic or any other, of the Many °, t
minor •Ills of childhoed'. The Tablets
are aoldbY medicine dealers orhy mail °P
is two.dollars-
Aledicine Co., Brockville, Ont. a
ch
at 25c ahox....grmit Tire subscription
•
Se
• Some .111u.strimin Weights.
_ _ . ,
,111 an old . Louden inn known as the at
Sigh of the Coffee *ill Mr. E. V. Lucas T,h
'foetid •a,pair of acales en Which during ca
eentury and ;their many notable men At
'Were'," weighe'cl.= Ever since the year. ow
717-60,1%Certle- of-,41111,Strriffs-lifid- cilab =of, --I
regal ',ponder:044y have been, kept iit .roo
'Street.' If you- want to know hOW- mach me
Charles Lamb weighed 'in 1814; writes Pol
Mr., Lucas in 'thp ROI -hence or pia Lon-.
don;', Can -tell youthat when he was
thirty,nine.'years old jre turned _the-
Sealchn his boots • at one hundred and
twenty-nine pounds,Yintich more that I., to,
etpe,cting...._•_,But.-hia-boots,•,...maY,-Jsta
ave.been heavy. '• •and
.1 discovered that Lord 'Byron; Who
, •
Was. WeIglied-many Umes, dist In 1806,
when he was living at NO. 8,.only lIve
dbors .away; then he -Weighed One hinv..:
deed' and :.ninety-four 'Potinds in :his
htiets.: The 'realization; ninet have dig,
treaSed exceedingly One who llyed In
fear . ',Of -embonpoint •:,even Jo..the ex-
treind Of .drinking Vinegar, and general-
ly Mort lly ne the ,fiesh. In 1811. ',:in
shoes' ly had • get his Weight.'
month -but Ab are, wages, and every
auffeu,r, • cigar 'maker and domestic
mint seems to belong toit•
The rooms are of marble -decor-
ed iwith paintings' by .famous artiSts.
ere is a School; there is free medi-
i attendance ;' and there are henefits
death. The workmen themselves
n and Manage the buildlng
xi the cigar ',. fireforiee , the ": larger
ma arefurnished. witha -high rea77,
ifebtri,Whicli during Working hours
dem- paid by. the worl(men,• declaim
itican• articles from the daily news-
papers or poetry or fictiorr: On one of
MY Visits the reader was dealing with
high Politics at the ton of his Nefee,_
What he had to say was not flattering
the otherside, as I Judged. from the
mnine,o.f..his,-feet and the- .sawing
clutchieg of his disengaged hand.
.but you ;could. not ' judge froin" the Int-
Tesslie-faseavf--11113 'employers as they
rolled their cigars whether they agreed
with the newspaper or not At any
rate they must have felt that they
were getting their money's worth fro:4
the reader.
A.
down to 'one hundred and thirty-seven, me
And a half' pOunds.. Torii Moore seems, tire
iiiiilliity'ro'hAvol'e:dreasetiVOTtif',i147'
he was ' one hundred. and forty-laix or
pounds And in 1809 otro hundred ,end *drat
"'sAellneYtherand
the-fernetis one wile. also sue
could have had no wish to lose:his 'is a
figure.am -o *Size dovi lahistory. do
- linsolent questlon as'Dirt
t� the, identity of the Prinee itegent
:-;--"Who'S your fat, friend "-a for his
j_astiditnisness ties; was 13eau brum:
eel'. „Ili brinuntell stood at o*e
Mildred and seveuty4Wo .Pc•tindit In
Mots; In 1811 at one.bittidred and nixie
Y-.Lwp pounds :In boots frocki and
it 1810 at one hundred and Seventy- .
ight Delinda shoes,,-,., In 18.16, thtrstill'
• Os Hearing 'Restored.
The, invisible eat. drum invented by
0. Loonarti, which is a miniature
gaphone, ;fitting, inside ,the ear en -
!y
ring of hundreds *of people in New
k City, Mr. Leonard "Invented this
m to relieve hintself of deafness'
,
hoad noises, and it d�es this so
ceasfully that. no One could ,tell he
deaf Man.: It is effeetive. when
ness,,ls.•causod.,tty,-,catarrlirg-or rtr,
oiatell" or witour uoittfood natural
drums, A request for information
to A. O. Leonard, Suite 437, 70 Fifth
avenue, New York •eity, 'will "he given
a prompt• advt
'
,'-'1`.11rotigh:-Ite deorWCYL he :kind:
And inay Thylight burl' Ciletays ba .
111 The altar of illy thin& '
' ' — -Hai would • „llovor, haVe. 178
..-,-,-iervAd no as .. ---:, . .,, ..„ ,,.iiiii„.,,,
'My imail"If ns but for'.the habit
r
„..,r4..°141iild141:11udgiti httentiori...41)1ekens. -
pittce .hunthleiinttlemi t4 -7,
•
• The ability to 'laugh at ourselves Is
a true test of a sense of humor. -Mr.
W. :Uatilltcomh, the popular coni-
; f
. •
Portune take nothing front us
init what she govO,ti
, We somottinm sod a !fool With Wit;
but ,tieVor With judgment.
• 'Pluck Wins! IL always Wine!
Tholigli days' be 'low and nighte be
dark 'twist •day r4 that Como ,and go,
ittei7age is
•Te wins the moat Who Can the
tidiatire, WhO, fades iigues,- he who
r, Shirks, .Who, walla and *Ladies'
who always Works, •
lIeau had, to tiy,trqiii. the .dredittirS tO snit
Calais,. Note the lest; there le 'Still 'mei
one Mere', entry, hi .1.822,-, ettggeating.
that he was able' to Visit the, beerieti a and
hit ,triumps agalh,.. and them be
Watt One huluired and Afty-three
peunde lit boots,
As for the "kat friend," later ,Oeerge.
110,%, he earned' tbe epithet:
raull to actept 'what. you canw
not rePay.; •
•
liere are ,some of the small Pie. china used for the 41,11eeni'shouse which ar ' (1011
replicas of '44enui,ne •but Made in, one
,.
SPRING, IMPURITI
DUE TO POOR
A Tonle Medicine a Necessity at
This Season. •
' 1 •
Dr. Willianis,•:Pink puLs are an
Year-round tonic' for the, blood and
nerves; But they are especially: vain
able in the spring when the system
Is
loaded' with impnrIties, as a -resell of
the. Indoor ,life of the winter. Mrinths.,
There is no .9thr. eseason. when (he
bleed is, so much in need of purifying
and enriching, and- every dope of these
pills helps to enrich the blood...III the
:Spring one • feels weak and ''tired, -Dr.
VVIRianrs', Pink Pills give strength,',.In
the spring,. the appetite is often poor -
Dr
' develop the
ripPetite;': tone ;the: stomach and . aid
Weak` dige,stien. It in the spring that
.peiscins_•in_Ailehloo,d, find an Outlet -in
disfiguring' Thriples. eruptions: ;and
Willianuk Pink' Pills.clear
the akin `because they,ge :to the 'root
of the trouble, O.,. the blood.. , , the
Spring anaemi&, rhounietismi:Indiges
neuralgia end.mariy, Other trou-
bles: are-. meat 'Persistent because of
poor, weaktlood,..and it is iat,thil time
when all nature: takes, on new that
the blood most seriously 'needs ,atten-.
non: Some people -dose themselves.
Witli-purgatives;• but these only _further'
Weaken', ..,therriselves. •A • .purgative
merely gallops!' threngh. the system;
emptying the bowels„ but, dons not help
the blood On the other nandDr Wil
liams Pink 'Pills enrich -! the'. blood
wbieh reathea every organ in- the body,
bringing Strength, :and vigor to
weak, easily:tired ;men,. women 'and.
children: Try, • Dr::, Williants'.' Pink
Pilis this.springT4hey will :not diattp-
point you "-
Sold by 4.11,medicine dealers or sent
4
„by at 60c a boi,bi-The, Wil -
Heins' •Medicine. Brockville,. Ont.,
, The Back Parlor.'
We have 'Most of us seen it; when
'doors have been open
We have got just 'a giiiinise of it
„cosy and bright
The fire in the grate and the funny
old' Sofa, '
The lamp shining homeliness' over the
night
We have Wined from, our buying a
moment to pop , •
Right into that parlor behind the old.
And ,somettmes 'there's; been a nice
clatterof dishes, •
.And solnetimes a waft of the. hot
teak for tea,
And sometimes a mingle Of relish so'
• tbethsome, • , •
We have wondered whatever -the
•
fragrance could ,
if se -eine -el ;just the place ..for a chat and,
.._. a chop,
That little back parlor behind the
• shop.. ' ' •
0,11.
, •.
.It., hasn't tine ornaments, first a few
; .'phatos, '
r And bowls. of BWeet' 'VVilliatis and
; posies like. that,
..A ibuclticking.7cinek • and ,11''boOkalleif
And 'drovisily purring an old,,tahby
..-Out. 'tiredness:. end. worry; a.•sya.y,
• drop; ' • ,.." '
love that' back parlor, behind. the
.04PP. :
.Pay Your' out-of-town account,. by
Doniinion Express Money 04(31'2,7.
• -" Passed!
,Parine,"SO you've,. had Some eit,
Perie.nce have ),Oti.?"
New Mao- Yes, sir,". ,
Pitrrnr- Well, What side
,
116.- yotr.litr tiff • '
New mo -:-..-Th#. otitsad,o.P
- • .
Ask for •Minard'i anci take no :other.
•
I have never had time, not even five
minutes,,, to betempted to. do anything
any raw, whateVer: If I were to hazard
a guess hs to what' youitir people should
do to avoid temptation, it ,would be to
get_s_joh.:andLwork at it so hard. that
ttingtatidir IroAhrnot • exist; for them.
--Thomas, A. 'Edison.
•
--•*"
If you sulk' in the corner and rOiliSe
to. the game, you do gait°, as
much hariii7tO yourself ‘as yeu do to
anybody else. -Mt Asquith. '
• Worlcrs, Most 'Ancient ,
.'Building,' '
was 'King 4=au-niAia604•,Of Ur, in
.IgespepOtainia, , Who. built .• the oldest
building in the .world which IS still
'standing, .
He reigned. about 4;500. years. before
the birth of Christ, and the hutlding,15
thus..about 6,,000 years oId. Ur was
the, native :Piece of Abraham and the
citY, Of ,Nebuchadnezzar,'''. '
The King's name. and.: title ,were
learned by. the chance, discovery Of
gold scaraboid Iiead, on which they
were engraved.
Mr: C7., Woolley,' leader of the joint
expedition of the .British 1VInseern ;and
the University 'Museum of Pennsyl-
vania, made the 'discovery, during the
excavations, at -Ur.. The little -temple
Which, is ,. the Oldest building in ,the
world is at 'Tel': el Obeid,' about four'
miles-fronfIlr.• . •
Sealed' ,Pacitage
( which keeps the tobacco
• in its Original COM:111;M
•* I i
.a iso /21b.tins
Manufactured by ImperialitTfibacco,company of Canada Lialted
.•
• 13an1's. Prcicess still continues, Information.'
and d
t)
e ebris deposited on. the ,sea•
ALL.'
FOODS_SI{O1JLDLBE.._1?.attom makes it the great breeding
SEALIED;
it eentains food' for- these flail, and if.;
The medical profession very.general-
place, for 'cod, herring, and other:fish.,
ly advocate that all feed products
should. be sold In sealednaakages. All
cities eigerbusly, inspect butcher -shops
to prevent meat from. being infected,:
many prohibit inilk, from being Sold it
bulk and gradually this will'come.With,
everything. ffSAl.',ADA'' Was the firet
to introduce: the ,paokage idee„as re-
gards' tea, over thirty, -two 'years ego,
and "SAL,ADA" is still a 'little purer
aod,a little better than other terts.• It
has by far the largest sale.
•
Icebergs Help Industry,.
Of all :dangers that. beset ships en-
gaged: in .:tho,....North: A:tiantic. traffic
there is none 'so great :aer that of the
lceberg-.;
These 'great fleeting islands. , Of ice
will poen begin. to drift doWn froin the
.nOrth;,',Eind so 'well:Ls'. the' peril' recog-
nized that,. In 'the .snring, shipafcrosS-
ing the herring Pond :take •th More
southerly course than at other tiniee Of
the Year. Icebergs• -are nets only dan-
gerous.- in thent'aelYes;: but ut§y also.
canee 'fogs whiCh:hide. them, and. make
the_riks eVen greater thali theywouid
Otlierwise.be. .
.; The idea that ani,eeberg''could 'pea-
•sibly have any use Would Mike the
. • •
average sea captain -gasp, yet one of
the 'biggest , of :marine induatriei has
;been helped: consIderibly by iceberge.
,INearly -.all the •ciidfish Whinh
are made that ionderful-ntedieln-e-
,are caught on the Banks-
.Nev4oupdlatid, a,vast area of shal-
lows which -run .far &it the:Sea,
It is lknown thatthia great. siiinpa'rhie
plateati is eornpOSed..entirely,',of rock
and earth ;:drOpPed ,inelting Tice -
bergs., The great icebergs .corne.dOwn
trom.•Ine • huge , glaciers • , thD test
cast <'f Greenland, and their bases ,iire
fell detritusearth, , 'grayel; iand
rock. • ;Siti gra-, To -64 enough,
tOAhini4iildh'i• as
stuff is shed at' tho lcc nielts,
and in'ceurse.,of Ages has Imilt,up the
Beware -of )4)1' i011$
• • .••
the great bergs' ceased to drift smith
this gigantic' fishing industry. might
• b
soon e a thing of the past.
A High Grade of Paper..
"I want some paper", the small bey
Said to,the storekeeper.
• "What kind of paper?" •
"I3ptter make it Ily.paper," w•as the p URE,- BEAUTIFULLY FLUFFY,
reply. "I'm 'going kite..: • .a.c.om. rcoarrtdeetl osialamr'n. lew, eoncdoluegnh.mllignhoS. •
• . •
1 . Teacher -"Johnny, What are the two
' JohnnyH"Iga.cilline and feminine.
The masculines are divided into tem-.
perste and, intemperate"; and the fem.'
Mine into :frigid and 'torrid:" • i,
By bearing with others, you shall
be borne with,
Classified Advertiiemenb
The :Glass Slowere.' • Georgetown; Ont. ^,
Young Wife-,-7"Chester, -dearest,' hew .
do therarrange these pickles SO niee.
ly in the 'bottles ??, • " ......-
Young,H-1-Insband-=-"They pile. the.
pickles 'Petsey; and then they blow
the betties about. them."
Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a Mils'
:fPreezone" on an aching cern, in-
stantly that corn. stops hurting; then
shortly you lift it right off with fingers.
Your druggist sells tiny bottle' of
"Frees -One" for a few cents, Sufficient
to reinove every hard corn, sari corn,
orcernbetween the toes and the foot
calluses, without soreness or irritation.
• .
Rhetkmatism
Millard's Penetrates to the Tool
• of the trouble and eases pain.:
The unlversaL remedy,_
• UnieSs: you A.ed the "Bayer ,CreSS" On
. ,patkage Or on tablets, yOtt'Itrd not:get-
Ain*, the-teithine..',430..Y.er Aspirin .firOyedi-1
'Safe by N1111on s ,..,..nntt- 'presort:a'. by
'physicians &Or' iWerity.three,Yeara for
' ..,COlda ,...." '. . r; liettelaChe
Teethaehe ., ., Liiiitlfrigo
. .. - Netiritia,......"_....„„„„011intiliM4M.'.
. , Neuralgia-. . ' ' pain, Pain
. Adeetit ' "13aYer: Tableta Of Aspirin'
-..otity. , - Each ,enbrOkenipaeltM4t:-.'etni••
tains proven .direetleile.. IlirhO'Nos;.04,
of twelve tablets ;tett feW Cettts.;"I''Yrri'g,..
- gists .414O:, Sell. bottles' Of 24; and '.1.00.
Asnirrn: 4:4' the triule,;-iiittrit'' tregletered
!... -(' ri- yl , ' If tlayer.liatiiifiteture'bt
- 1 (,..,,,,±P4ter : et StilielliOaeld;
:kttelvtil that .Asnifin
;11 ),t... :k , a nit ftettire to atelat .
'agarnst hnitationsi the Tag, .
Cenvany Will be.atainad '
IWWS their geni3rai : trade'. Mark,' the
1.113)ei ;rasa. ,
- , t, -
Hem Many Pounds Would
• You Like to Gain, in a W,ek
If rou: are thin ana rant to exits Weiser;
atalovant to be etronarl wad you sample
af fomo)te Alexander N1111111010, absolutely Pree. tiu
money, ittet hOrnd and ecklrefo for:simple.
*Litoonaronmo, 14,1 13dhon
Keep Minard's Liniment in the hotiiik Tercet°, Canada. , •
ERIN
—10k YouR
EYES
Whoiesomemensingfleireshin
()wig Girls Clear Away
Pimples With Cutieura
Gently 'smear,. the Dimples , with Cuti-
cura Ointntent on the end Of the, finger.
Wash 'off the Chticura Ointment in five
Minutes' .With Cuticura Soap and hot
water, and.. continue bathing for 'some
irtinUtei. l'hia'fieatrneritis best rising
and retiring. „
/ample E!ieb Free bj Addre' Cam:liar:
Depot: 'Cutlet:re., P. O. Box 261.6,"Konfreel.'
SoriP2be. Ointnient25and 60e. Talcuoine,
91111F7
Try Our no«, Shriving Stick.
EY TELL THEI
EIGHBORS
Women Tell Each Other How They,
Were Helped by Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound
Weodhridge, ,OnL---;," I took. Lydia EL
Pinkham's Vegetable Com_nound for f•a- .
611d skin ,ci ,b66.0ine .soft •,a,:rifi .3t 0 0 i ,It has done rile ..more good than any
.
t:wttMpelreeit'i-Potiliotsopheal:ent:,ii,e3;L•Outiowab.nritg-hytTinr:t :iii-laW,:' told A me about the Vegetable
mprova You'r zn. .-...'
Re.ar.. ,, , . .: .ders Mid. un er iny alionider;bladea an
. n 0 1., •
workandati..ddf.e, 1,t 'very b.: a_d,1Y,: took1VIy, !nether: "
:, backaches yams between -my shoUl-
hcr
cinc
, dragging
, , , . . . e. troubles. ..46..wI. I , .,f,would.o1 1tl.haves,On,boe.aacdtaCshieecee..,:,..,., ,
' I.' was SOrtiOtilliCS unable to :do my„
and 1
Compound and I got i son* right away.
.•
..., . .•
.
Thin, .; nerve -exhausted ,peptile . grow ;; om.triehd it. to nly, nefgfibiprs,,;•,)coe,,aret..„,
....strong,...,:mi.,.....1311-to-,,PitesphateAucezdtne." iitliteIretCdtrieleiLtige,t,hiS4Ofter:44 a ,,
'gists:- gtiarf,tutee'iiP- Price ' $ r, per -1)kg-e-; ,testimonial- if 'iyou think it will help sorne
,ArrOw•Cheinical Co„ 267.Prorit iztt:. East, Peer aUffeter,",•---Mit..EOG".4.11SiMMOS,
Toronto, Out. , .,, ' . • . R'. R. , Woodbridge,:Pnt.•,r ,
.'-:,- •-. ,Tnnearly every rieighborhocid in eVery. ,
' .
,..---tewn:andeity-nrthia-cettritirthere are
-tireirwito,have been lieled by' Ly.ditt•
or .... . I 11, yo 1 1., 1 irlithprn s Vegetable Cotnneund in
.. the treatnient of ailment's' peculiar to
the it'd e
, ,., th6: ecit, and they ;fake pleasure in, ',...
...KidneY• tronbics-are-.4retjuently- , -passing,...thegood, word along toother--.
'caused b' liadly digested food wothen. Therefore, if you are tretiblecj.
which overtaxes these' organs to in this way,whynot give Lydiaa Pink; ,
etinii nate* the Irritant acids , ham!sVegettible Coinpound a fair trial,. ,,,
formed. Help your stomach to ! This famous remedy, the medieinal,
properly digest the food hy,tak.' ingredients of which are derivedfrom
Ing 16 to 30 drops of Extract Of . 'roots and herbsi has for fortyLyears
Roots, eold. as Mother Seigel's proved its Value in Mich cases:. Wemen .
Curative Syrup, and your -kidney' eVelyWbere hear willing testimony i'.45
disorder will promptly disappear. the wonderful virtue of Li-ditt E. rink.
Get the genuine at your druggist, hainra Vegetable CoMpotmd. ' .,,, cal
ISSUE No.
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