Loading...
The Exeter Times, 1921-10-13, Page 7:NEARLY HALF IMPERIAL SERVICE CANADIANS. Supply, of Highly Trained Ex., pets. Ready to Staff Ma- chines as They Are Built , The Great War in the tremend Impetus it, gave to invention o thrust aviation fora* several epochs. Great • atrid'eta.a., 0unde toward perfection inappara, •and •thousands of men were -• ;for the various branches Of the pule ;suit ' who in the ordinary coarse of events; would never have dreamt of 'this itovel vocation, and to whom, in. the meaority'ef cases, opportenity, for, Iollowing it would never have pre- „sented itse. Tlieend of, the war ;found thousands of machines :with the Work for' W.hich ;they.had been mana: , :factured accomplished, and thousands of men specially trained to operato them going back to their'ordinary civil -avocatiens. • Reviewing Qanada's part le tho war, it was the most natural thing that with intelligent government apprecia- tion,and support, flying sh'Ould receive great Isciost in tate Dominion, Many Canada'e sons favored this hazard, .ous branch of war aviation. and Cana- alians,ccinstituted nearly fifty per cent. the Lperia1 Flying Service by the conratiaalfall Of, hostilities. Many of these 'youngemeir, apart from zest and -adventure which made them lore aoar- • ing in the air, from the speciality of their ,traissing andetise length of time they -.had aevoted to the pursuit of aviation, regardealt as their Iffe:; pro- lession, ,having reached heights of greater efftdieney in this line than • their pre-war occupations. On de- - mobilization the:viewed flying with greater congeniality and saw in it greater opportunity than tile' pursuits they had given up to enlist. 'Put to Multifarious Use. Canada was quick to realize the many uses ' to which these war -per - feted machines could be put toin her • national life 'le times of peace, and the advisibility of enlisting rapidly In, her peacelflying` army the host "of trained • men who were returning to her shores. Aircraft were quicaly adopted for all manner of public work and their utilization es still, being „rapidly ex- tended: Mosa provincial governments -find flying craft invaluable ia forest work, patrolling,, assisting surveys, Photographing and particularly in re- porting, and combating forest fires. They have been introdueedinto the fishing industry- to locate fish schools and signal their approach: Machines of both heavy: area light 'types flair° engaged- iu the seal:butt-and threaten to revolutionize the industry. In many sections govermisent mails are cartried by aeroplanes. "." • ' The Canada Air Board. Tea -supervise, flying, to stabilize the pursuit in Canada, and ta protect both flyers, and the pablic ..seeing that only capable qualified men engaged in the practice, the Canada Air Beard was authorized by act of e Canadiafi parliament in 1919 and has practically entire supervision of all -matters con- nected with aeronautics • in the Do- minion. Among the phases of their work is to construct and maintain government aeraromes, to examine and report on; proposals for commer- cial air services, .and to pres-cribe aerial routes. , The Board regiilates the licensing of pilots in aircraft, s-ees to the registratioh of licenses and • generally thateflying in Canada main- tains t'aftleience And precautian,• government body, having direct con- trol over government flying, it em- promos and Theit Origin M cGOVE.RN VariatIons—Magovern, Maaatlran, Me. Sowean, Saurin, Soraere, Summers. Racial OHO rish. Source --A given mime, "IVI'SamhradIsain” doesn't look as though It sounded'agsything like Mc- GoYern- NoVertholeS8 it is the true Gaelic form not only of this; family eame, but of Magov•ora, Magalif MacGov n . braces 'in its scope all Canadia.n avia- tion. :The higli efficiency of Canadian gov- mem-seat flying is, illustrated in the Board' a published statistics fpr the year 1920, when" in an approXiniate mileage of 33,612 miles covered there were only three slight crashes and one person ,slightly injured. Government machines made 398 flights -during the •year and the number of hours flown e was 489. The statistical pummary of civil aviation in Canada shows 18,671 machine flights made and 6,505 ma- ' .chilie hours flown:0. The average dura- - tion of civil flights in minutes was • twenty-one and 15,265 pa'ssengers were carried in the flights made. Passen- ger hours flown. were 5,614 and a total of 6,740 pounds of freight aware . car- , ' tied. • 10,000 Took "Refresher" Courses. The government, through the Air Board, is -making the greatest utiliza- tion of the expert ;training se snarly Canadians have received ,and in' ad- dition to those engaged in the regular pursuit of flying, endeavors to keep all trained men ,who desire to so fit themselves up to a stateaof efficiency, Thus "refresher" courses have been inteoduced to give 0X-pi1ot0 a montla's flying at the government's expense. This Summer ten thousand expalr vice menavailed themaelyea of these courses,. In the fli•st eight inorathe this innovation, exesiy force Withers 0dicl over 2,200 hours of flying, covering a distance, of approximately 200,000 miles, -Thus, as the air service 'of • Canada Increases there will always be a suPPlY Of highly, trained experts to ataff machines, NO, receptacle hap ever been made With' sufficient strength to resist the rimrsting power, of Xrozen watero re also, trace- ces.and Norman - f either one is yours n whether your ancestry •r notas to which source your family name came from. - As a matter of fact, tne 'pronuncia- tion of "MacSamisradhain" is not so far from allacGoVern. The InIsh con- sonaule are Uften not what they seera, elspecially v,rhen combined. An "an" sametirims has th,e sound of "b" and Sometimes of "v." Often, too, COD- sonants arc silent in certain combina- tions. In this case drop the sound of the "s" after the "Mac," assume that "roll" has tee "v" sorind and. that the "db." is silent, You get a pronuncia- tion, something like "Mao-avra-an" or "Maceavra-au." The "G," of course, doesn't really belong there, except that it just happened in the. Angliciz- ing of 'the •name. It comes really as •a result of the "k" sound of the "c" 111 "Mac:" If the name were scientifical- ly Anglicied, with asmuch respect as possible , for' both spelling and pro- nunciation, it would 'be "Ma.cOvran." But names don't change in tbe hasty speech of the "man on the street" and hie equivalent in the Middle Ages. "Samhradhain," wha founded the clan about 900 A.D., was one of the more ancient Clan O'Connor. The given 'name means "summer," hence the English variations of Somers and • Slimmers through tae ProC5a of tranelatiou. ,CHANCE Variations —Chau rtc y, CheunceY, •Caunce, Chanceau, Cance, Ohanzy, • kensall, Racat oriq In—English and French. Source—A given name or a tribal name. When the Anglo-Saxons came to England following• the fall of the Ro- man Empire, and drove back the 13ri- tons into Wales and Cornwall, they brought with thesrs an organization that was loosely tribal in form. In. some cases 'the tribal names that: were used, and which have survived principally in names ;of places eettled, were formed on the spot, after the 11111110' of the chieftain of the band. In other eases, and by far the majority, thee ;were brough with them from their old .Teutonie homes on, Us& Con- tinent. It was typical of these Anglo- Saxon tribal nanies that they ended in "juges," ana their counterparts are to be found in many ',sections el" Ger- many traday as place names. The German tribal name ending was "inga." Kensington, from the Anglo-Saxon "Censingaston" or town of the "Cone - singes," or followers of "Cenos," is a place name in England. In Germany is found Kenzingen in Baden and Gen- singen in Hesse -Cassel. The family names in this group ap- pear to have been developed as pat- ronymics trolls the ,same Oren names. from which these tribal names were developed. Fan' the most part they came through the Noaman-Freach (who wereTeutonic in bleed rind in their nomenclature if net in softening introduction qf the.`"h.". Kensall, how- ever, appears to be a straight develop-. Meat from a dIminutive.of the Saxon nante. Chanceau, Canoe' and Chanzy are family names that have developed in France. The Record of a War - industry. Like an echo of the Great Wtar in a period. ..ewhen the Dominion is just eases -ging from the economic mael: strom in which the Titan .conflict plunged her, comes the report from the Dominion Bureau of ,Statistics of the Carnation explesives ilichastry for the year 1918 and its record of the meteoric career of what rose' to be for •the time, an important Canadian in- dustry to wane as rapidly as it had risen. During the year 1918 when the pin- nacle of the munitions iaduetry was attained this order of manufacturing .a.ccounte.c1 for a capitalization of , $54,- 112 884 and a production of $186,034,- , 980. Eleven firths were manufacturing piPlosive,s. in Canada, of which five were in Ontario, three in British Co- lumbia and three in Quebec. The total investment of all the firms engaged in the industry was $19,172,539, an aggre- gahe of 4959 persons being engaged receiving in salaries and wages $6,- 420,847. Among the materials used in the manufacture that year were nitrate of soda to the extent of $3,000,000; mixel acids to more than $2,000,000; ;linters to more than $1,500,000; nitric - acid $1,500,000; pyre $2,500,000: and sulphuric acid, el•eum, toluol each to the, extent of $1,000,00•0. Among the more important products were general explosives to the extent of $30,000,000; smokeless powder $5,000,000; , dyne- nite $4,500,000; and mercury fulminate $500,000. . Three establishments made matches o.nd two made fireworks in Canada in 1918, the total assets of the five firms being $2,634,289, the number of per- sons engaged in the manufacture be- ing 617, receiving $368,468. The total cost •af the materials used amounted A to $788,182 and. the value of the year's output was $161,795,, The valne, of impor*as into Canada of materials for the manufacture of fire - Works and snatches totall-ed $2,594,448 -o:nd in the issanufacture ,qf eplos•ives $7,139,254. Finished products of the eplosives• industryimported for con- sumption in Canada totalled $634,522 in value in the year. Exports of manufactured goods during the same year were aa follows:—gun and pistol cartridges, $232,634,973; explosives. and fulminates, $40,108,383; ,sulphuric acid, $165,579: charcoal, $3,841. The manufacture of explosives. in Canada in 1918 invOIved an investment in plant and equipment of over nine- teen million dollars, with, expenditures of almosb seven nsillioa dealers for wagea, and accounting for a produc- tion•ofeforty-theee inillionedellarseThe magnitude of the industry is also re- flected in the fact that over five mil- lion dollars was spent in tha last ye.ar of•the war in tha construction of new buildings ,and nearly an additional mil- lion dollars in general expenditure. t The ;Lowest Tender. Do it Now. lt ,,picagure you:aro vieWieg any wore a map_ is doing, If you like him or you love hies tell lien new; Dopa withhold your approbation till the parson make()ratites As he lies with snowy lilies o'er his , brow: For no matter how you shout it, he won't really care about it; He won't know tow many teardrops y If youtolilliallireSeisnheecIaLratSe 15 dila; Man now's the time to slipit to him, For he cannot reaa 1ii tombstone When he's deed. More than farne, more than money is the comment kind and sunny, And, the heartY,,Warm approval of a friend.; For it gives to We a savor, and* it makes you stronger, Wavor, And It giVes you heart and spirit -to the end; nt If he earns your praise, bestow it; if you like him let hilts know it; Let the words of true encourage- ment be said. Do not wait till llfe is over and he's underneath the clover, For he cannot read his tombetono when he's dead. —George A. Turner, Growing Fuel in Six Years. Many of the •spedies which can be used on the prairieare very rapid growers, for example,' cottonwood, wil- low, Russian poplar, and Manitoba maple. It is safe ,to say that wood large enough for fuel can be grown from any of these trees within six years. After that time a plantation will increase in value and productive "teas year by year and. will prove one of the best investments on the farm. On the Nursery -Station at Indian Head,, Saslc..• a plot threeaanarters of an acre iii extent was planted. out to Russian poplar in 1906, trees - spaced. four feet apart each way. In 1913 the' average height of these trees was twenty-three feet. In tha fall of 1913 half tae plot was cut down and yielded six and three-quarter cords, of quite fair fuel. This is at th&rhae of about eighteen cords per acre in eight years. The soia,waa a medium clay 'loam. The labor cast of planting, wa.s $5.86 per acre and cultivation for two years about $6 per year.—N. M. ;Ross, Supt. of Tree Planting, Dominion ..Forestry Branch, Indian ' "Yes" said the specialist, as he staedl at the bedside of the sick purchasing. agent, "I can 'care yon:"' "What will it cost?" Asked the .sick manl;faintly, "Ninety-five dollars." • "Yeu'll have to shade your price a little," replied the purchasing agent. "I have a better bid from the under- taker!' A little lessehaste in our decisions, a little less of the court-martial in our judgments, a little less do-or-die, a little more do -and -live. The world has been made a safe place to live in. Let's act •as if we felt, safe. Whosel'ault is it when your husband is crosss-at breakfast ? • If you Ht your thumb . with a -hammer -'y'ou wouldn't blame your thumb for hurting, Then why blarno your husband whose nerves may have been pounded by tea or coffee, and. whose rest probably has been broken by the irritation of the thein or caffeine it contains? • If you stay awake hall the night 'you don't feel any too cheerful. The thein of tea and the caffeine of coffee are known drugs. If their u'se is persisted in, sooner or later the nervous system may give way. Then you may have insorx-inia, or disturbed sleep. Your nerves and tissues will be robbed of that stability essential for normal and happy living. You can avoid this possibility if you'll stop drinking tea and coffee -and drink instead, rich; pleas- ing Postum. Posturn is the deli- ciouacereal beverage with a satisfying flavor. It affords the advantages of a hot drink, without the ill effects of tea or coffee, Order Posturn frorn your grocer today. Try it with the family for a few days, and see what a di& ference there'll be-- how it will permit Nature, to bring sound sleep and strong, sturdy, quiet nerves. Sold by grocers. Possum comes in two form; Instant Postural (in tins) made instantly in the cup by the addition of boiling wafer, postum Cereal (in packages of larger bulkifor those who pre- fer to make the drink while the meal is belog prepared) made ...by boiling for 20 minutes. .UARDIVAE.C1%,911EN FRQ.M..MITUMR.CQWS' The Fall is. the most severe seabon. of the year for colds—amee day is warm, the next cold and wet and unless the mother is on her guard, the little ones are seized Withecold.s that may hang • on all winter. ' Baby's Own Tablets .are mothers' best friend .in Preventing or banishing colds. .They,act as a gentle laxative, keeping tile abowels and stoni- eels free and sweet. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent colds, dr if it doe's came on suddenly their prompt use will relieve the babY. The Tablets are sold by Medicine dealers ;or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine,CP.,,,Brockville; If tile Blood is Kept Rich and Red You Will Enjoy Health. More disturbances to health Is caus- ed by weak, watery blood than. moat People have any Idea of. When your Wood is inspovoriehed, the nerves suf- fer from lack of nourishment and you may be troubled with insomnia, neurit - le, ,neuralgia or siatica. Muscles sub- ject to strain are' under-nourithed and )'u o-io•luinuilia,ay3vgoh.Iern f yotuurcba!,eaerdrilleust]mallataisnilla you ,begin to show symptoms of any of these disorders try building up the blood with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills have a special action on the blood and as it becomes enriched year health improvers. The value "of Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis in cases of this kind is proved by the experience of .Mr. D. J. McDonald, North River Bridge, NS, who says: "For some years I +suffered severely with head- aches, PaillS in the back and a run- down couditien. At times the pain in till back Would be so bad that I would alt up in bed all night. Frans time to time doctors were treating 'me, but did not give me more 'than terripmeary relief. And then one day when 1 was suffering terribly- a neighbor came to see me, and urged me to try' Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. After taking two boxes felt relief. I got tilie boxes more and before they were all gone I felt as though they were giving me new life, as in every way they built up and improved my health and strength. I am Maw, -workieg as a barker in a -pulp mill, ten hears a day and feeling none the tvorse after-, my day's work.' I. say With preasere that this condition is due to Di. Williams' Pink Pills ." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills from any :medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box, or six. boxes • for $2.50, from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Seed Pearls Used as Medicine. For the low class of seed. -pearls there is a constant demand . among Oriental physicians and apothecaries, who grind them into a powder and ad- minister it to patients as a cure for many ills. Ask for hilnard's and ,take no other. Marvellous Eyes in Tiny Insects. - On the top of a fly's head, are three little eyes, set above andebetWeen the huge compound ey•es. Their Useful- ness has long been,a puzzle. As a result o.ferecent • experimental „ study, h is believed that they are for: long-distance ;Vision, ( thereby suP- Plementing the coinpouncLeyes, which. appear to be for close -at -hand magni-, Ten Millions., Instead of Nine. The Canadian people expect that when the complete census returns are published they will disclose a Do - Minion population of ' nine million souls. The increase is gratifying. Some who would see their ' country rnaking- yet more stalwart ptrides are not satisfied, however. To an inquir- ing mind it occurs to ask what would be the effect on Canadian economics if the population were greater, say ten millions. What, in brief, would be the effect of a million suddenly added to Canada's population, the increment of a million immigrants of that splendid. type Canada has been attracting to her sheres since the termination of the 'Great War. To take cnly three 'Ilse three "ci,aelli,".set in triangular arrangement, aae, net Pecualar to flies; a great many SPeeies of insects have. them. They are, simple eyes, like ours,. • whereas the compound eyes' 'are made hp of thousand's oi tiny eyes massed together, each with' its own cornea, re- tina mid optic nerve. Strange it seeme that nature should provide a 'fly with a seeing apperattts se inomparably more ingenious and complex than that with which a human being is equipped: • " If it be true, as 'supposed, that the compound eyes of ;a' lly .are powerful ma,gniflorst th& insect must be, able to zee with distinotnesa things which are matte visible to us only by the aid of a microscope. • It has often boon said that tha hu- man, eya is a -very imperfoet optical instrument. Se it 'fa, undoubtedly; but it is an excellent all-around instru- ment for general perposes., adapting itself to a great variety of uses. Appar;ently, of,all the mammals, man hag the best long-distance vision, A cat, can see better in the dark owing to the wide expansion of its pupils to take in as muoll es possible -of v.that nealt these is, In abeolata darkness a 'eat could see po better than a man.. Anybody who kinivAs dogs is aware that theY 'are llqaa".1,4ighted- heaxdUntnheactess8lizIerY;alha In Ite ca;:FatrinY! And they v,0"ith two mote oto ,p The Limit,' meTavish "What's 'tide, stewed ruit?", • His Wife—"Ay, Dinna ye like It?" "Indeed, 1 do o; but wiseha" ye clone with the rice we left yeaterdaY?" Impossible( "Now that. we are married, dear,' said the bridegroom, "yoa have a seri- ous task before you." "Why, George, .what is it?" ."Yon must prove to my three ski., ter.s that You are worthy of mea' The Wrong Place: A teaches' was explaining to her lass that if one 'wanted to do any- thing well, one had to laegin at the bottom, when a voice from the back ieterrupted her, -"How about swimming, teacher?" 'When Father Forgot Himself.' Dad—"Do you know, young man, that when. I was .a, boy I was never' al - ;lowed out later than 8 o'clock." Son—"Some father!" ' Dad (hotly)—"He was a better one cardinal pgints "of Canadian national economic life. e In -the western provinces there are approximately 800,000,000. cres of - good as•ableland which alave ,never known the plough and are unproduc- tive. If the entire millien'immigrants went on .the land and each took a homestead it would aettle and render productive more than half of this tre- mendous area and multiply four times' the west's present -agriculturallypro- ducing area. , Canada has_a nationalgiebt Dt 2,349 milliens of dollars, which is slowly be- ing p'aid off by nine million, people. The per capita debt is approximately $261. eAdd a million tax payers to the country's population and it dror,s,at 'On'ce to $235. • ' ;rho :whole nation is worried. by the deficit dra the gevernnsent railways for whieli io solution has yet been found. Expert statisticians have 'estimated from carefully Worked out.figures that each new Canadiara settler is Worth in revenue to the Dominion railways the sum of $746.33. Add a million to Canada's: population and the $746,000, - 000 conteibutary revenue Wipes out the ;railway deficit for all time. a. • And this is not vistonary. Why should Canada'S poliulatian not be ten million?Overeas the most desirable ,people,, 'in a proportion Canada has never ),previously experienced, , are looking thaVards Canada and its offer- ing of neW hashes and en -Viable citizen- ship. This favor:is the result of the country's economic disturbance. It will not be the last. Now is the time for Canada to seize the opportunity presented and hold out the hand of welcome to a million new citizens, How to Prevent Forest Fires. , , Never leave camp with your camp- fire burning. Never drop lighted matches or to- bacco in the woods. Never clear land by fire in very hot weather. Would Have Walked. An Irishman.' had just aanded. at Liverpool after a terrible voyage, on which, as someone had said, he finit feared he was going to die, then feared he wasn't. As he crawled on to terra firma, his lack lustre eyes fell up „on, a diver coming out, gaistening, front the water, “Och," he muttered, "it I'd known It was going to be so rough I'd have walked myself." Wise is the man who knows what not to say) and remembers not to say it. , „ • eeneataate-,------- ' en...t...te, LOW tend Theta la Dry.' . ' C1.1-1-$0q6d Alie'llii§6016:66° ' The IoweSt p 0 ert .of dry /and -in the W k NTE15---Y0 UN G , !LADIES or I , tatted 8tatoS, is in, Death. Valley, Call., et ea, AA'.7)(L.?:,.,17Ati cal..1`0,,t,a6i,t2elittinert, at.req:,.'`. ,forula, ' It iS 2'75 feet .below sea level, 1.11.-4)`o.,Ona. '... • than yours." Just a Chanee. cant see any - Editor (testily)—"I ca , . thing in that manuscript of yours."... •Struggling, Author—"I presuirse not, but it is possible that some of your readers may be quite -intelligent." Two Varieties. "Bill of fare, waiter, please," de mended the diner, Theold waiter ambled. forward. "The bill of fare, sir, is ham, egga, bread, and coffee." The old waiter bowed and shuffled out. But a moment later he put his head through the doorway, again. "Guy'ner," be called, "hoW d'ye want yer eggs—, blind, or lookin' at yer?" Forbidden to Wear Calico. Calicut, the storm -centre of the In- dian riots in Malabar, gave a new word to the English dictionary by the cotton stuffs originally exported' there, and lanown as "calico." It was calico from— Calicut that caused serious trouble In England two centuries ago, when the Springfield weavers went about' assaulting any- one wham they saw wearing the In- dian cotton_ gice•cle, which theeefeared, net without reason, would, injure their own trade, • Consequently an Act af,Parliament was passed forbidding the use of Cali- co under a penalty of $1,000, Nowa- days; Calle& exportmore teak and s•an.d•alwoad than calico. Many ;acres of :valuable orchards en the -edge of the Annapolis Valley'svere destroyed by fotest fires rec.ently. ASPIRIN "Bayer" is only Genuine. Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin at all. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headacho, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism, Earache, To-othacne, Lumbago ,and for Pain. Handy tia boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Ding - gists also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (regi-stered in Canada), of Bayer Mauu- Lacture of Monoaceticacidezter of Sail- cylicacid. GIVES TANLAC CREDIT FOR FINE HEALTH, Says She Only Weghed Pounds When She Began It, "I only weighed 98 pounds 'when started on Tanlao, bisti now weigh 130 and am feeling like a different per- son,"• said. Mrs. Frleda Brydges, 078 John St., North Hamilton, Ont, "I underwent an operation four years ago and ever since then I have been in a very weak aed rundown con- dition. My stomack was so upset that could hardly eat a morsel of Solid food and 1 got so title people told ma looked like I was starving. I. Was very -weak and my nervee were se ma- st -rung that I could get but very little pleep at night. "That was my condition when I got hold of Taailace but five bottles of the medicine have simely transformed me, Why, I have actually gained 32 pouride in weight and am feeling- simply fine, "I have a splendid appetite and caa eat' whatever I want and never suffer a particle from indigestion- ally nervea as'e steady; I sleep well at night and am so much stronger I can do my housework with ease. "It is nothing less than marvellous how Tanlac has built mo up and I take pleasure in making this statement for the benefit of others." • Tanlae is sold by leading druggists. everywhere. Ada. Hundred Signatures. Chinese property deeds or leases of- ten aaVe a hundred signatures. The reason is that land is usually owned by syndicates, and agreements must be signed by every member of art ora ganization. MONEY ORDERS. Remit by Dominion Exprees Money Order. If lost or .stolen you get your money back. Sheep Are Accurate Barometers. Experienced shepberds declare that sheep turn their heads to thc; wind when the day is going to be firm; it they gra,zo with their toils to wind- ward it is a sure sign of rain. Mallard's Liniment Lurnberma n's Friend A woman is glad to be twenty, ashamed to be forty, SOF/7 to be sixty, and proud to be eighty. The victor is he who can go it alone, iii..30221•1•0011.011ICCEM. Arust Yr exama To Cuticara Tho inajority of skin and scalp troubles might he p5evented by using Caticura Soap thecluravely for all toilet purposes. ()lithe slightest sign of rednesa, rough- ness, pimples or dandruff, appIy a little Cuticura Olntraent. Do not failtoinelvdo the exquisitely scented Cuticura Talcum in your toilet preparations. • Soap2.5c. Oiatment25 anil 50c. Taleas2Se. Sold throughout theDorninlon. CanadianDepot: Lizeited, 30 SL Pant Si. W.. itioatrtvl. kgalg.""T"Cutictu:a Soap shaves without mug. MO.E...Z.r,46354.1.013vasi TL: LL GO TO SCIMO Mother Tells how Daughtev was Made Well by Lydia E.Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound Cobourg, Ont.—'' Lydia E. Pink. barn's Vegetable Compound was re- commended to me for my daughter. She ,had trouble every mouth which left her in a Weak and nero vous condition with weak back and pain in her right eide. She had these trouble.s ior three years and frequently was unnble to atl tend school, She has become regular andi feels much batter since she be taking the, Vegeta]d CoefilPeandand attends school replanY. reeh'iryarirag- aesarillagsegl 1 rititefta cY Pa I.( i _.,,,e, / 1 antmot,riz y ., anit .Tetal,Ag C011apc6 A.117.,y la b, salchean'Il P10904 4 - e, '-l-NicA, Jctpx T,topt, ..,o' al! §14, c`91?-6arg, yii.n ..z1) tptandint OnYt kg Ottme In tramped ooSitalais yetmg girls Ol)1rar,1 deranged' conditlans tu;d deveknO , i headaelles„ ba male, trregulsrltLes, ' nervousness an(Ibearing-down pains, all of which are sympto.ys of woman's Ms, ' very mother Who _lase dasighte, • tal'erIng from such symptoms should Ivo Lydi,3 m,„Pinkbarifa Ilogetable moiled a iair trU issve l'illk, 44-F—'21* YARMOUTH, N. Fishermen ancl'Campers, ,Quick Relief. - PUT A BOTTLE IN YOUR OUTFIT GOAPS'E SALT LAND SALT C*100 1 7060041"0 NWT 10/(filK$ 4 MAW• 1OR01411, Avaartes.os rionOtt Poe ROhletil ook n n tooFlca. Date DR§IASES W.l'allod :Free to .s.raY .cltoss by tho Authon, V., QUO Gioren f.lo.#, Mk; 119 'MS gist,„Strt'hp New York, tt.al.A.'