The Exeter Times, 1923-10-11, Page 3A Story oY Scouting.
(Continued from last week)
Simmer came,,and Camp began to
be the talk. Mothers shuddered anew
at yieions of unset canoes, whittled -off.
fingers, and starved lost boys, The
Scoutmaster interviewed each one and
outlined plan for. a cheap camp on
the lake, with 'supervised swimming
and a first aid expert:
i e
‘4131111‘4131111 lube will cook their . ,m ais?,,
asked each anxious provider of "moth-
er's cooling." •
"They cook their own," promptly re-
sponded the Scoutmaster.
"Nonsense," rose the chorus.
h r and Y
But the troop:-served.a Mothers'
Sons' Banquet ----and the mothers cap-
itulated. Then came mese surprises.
The Scoutmaster read a list of "good
turns" and they realized that the mys-
terious supply of Widow Jones' larder
was explained that their sone had di-
rected strangers; and sodded a church
lawn. They remembered now a subtle
change in the youngsters' attitude to-
wards
Y g.
wards "chores and errands, Bank-
books were flourished, the fruits of
manful toil at •ten cents an hour. The
boys revived an apparently drowned
member, signalled to an imaginary dis-
tant calors for ,aid and carried the em-
barrassed "patient" ear on a coe.t
stretcher. A Serious young orator
Blade the address of the evening, tell-
ing in boyish phrases of "What the
Scout Movement Means,"
.The troop went camping.
But when they got hcme, it was
their turn to be surprised. .,The
"Mothers' Auxiliary" of Troop 1 had
been formed, and when the boys saw
that ;fitted out Headquarters, they—
But that's another story.
All this' happened a good while ago,
and most mothers know more about
the Scout 'movement than they once
did. But not all, even yet, realize the
Serious aspect under its 'fun and out-
door good tunes, Women who live in
some of the larger Canadian cities
have seenthe outcome' of Scouting
plainly. They have enlisted the khaki
clad youngsters in, distributing "swat
the fly" or "clean up" literature. They
have been met at trains coming for
big conventions, and courteously'' es-
corted to hotels. At community cele-
brations the Scouts have -`been ready,
no crowd toe big to yield to their good
natured persuasions, e no task too
great for their ready help. •
Gradually these sons have grown
more hardy and self-reliant, yet more
helpful and considerate. They can
mend a broken 'table leg, suggest a
waye
keeping water cool in hot
of
P g
wearl r t,a' ri in afire alarm, direct
the hien accurately and swiftly, While
other Scouts, close windows, carry out
furniture, and uncoil the,, hose, "A
Sdout is resourceful," they say teas-
ingly to each other, but they are proud
to have their resourcefulness tested
and proved. 'They even are not
ashamed to be seen helping an old
than. across the street, for the old-
thne ''gang" will recognize it as the
day's "good turn."
Then perhaps one day a crowded
rowboat overturns, or a child is push-
ed off a pier. The "little boy," as he
is still called at home, dives instantly,
his brown arms flashing through. the
water. He breaks the "death hold"
coolly, and swims slowly back to
where.his comrades are ready to pull,
:rescued and ,rescuer. from the water
and to pump he air.backdnto the half
drowned lungs, The wet, shivering
Scout looks up in astonishment as the
crowd cheers, or frantic,parents thank
him. "'Twas'nt anything, he mut-
tors. "Any Scout could do 'it. Is she
comin' round alright, fellers 3;' The
Scout is a hero. But more than the
knowledge of the proper thing to do
his
mother values the spirit of sacri-
fice. that prompts action too quick for
th o:agiit, r
(To be continued).
Get It Done.
There's a task that awaits you, a task
which is yours;
-; To neglect it were surely pure mad
ness. -
1 •tin of. dutyr
De ellv raostsurely ensues
A harvest of sbrro-w .and sadness.
Then heed net the voice that will bid
you delay
And tell you to wait till to -morrow:
The task ,that you ought to be doing
today --
Get it done, if no trouble you'd bor-
row.
OE
GREAT SUCCESS OF
CAN,TA$S'1UM TREATMENT
A we11-known'London Surgeon and
recognized authority on Cancer has
created worldwide interest in the dis-
covery that Cancer is due to a de-
ficiency 'of potassium "salts" in the
body,' which causes the cells; to break
down and become malignant:
In order that everyone may learn
The Real Cause of Cancer
a remarkable book has been specially
written.
This'` book' will be sent free to
patients or anyone who is 'i'nterested
ill the ernost subees sfel. method of
fighting "THE' CANCER SCOURGE,"
The fallowing is . a list of the
chapters: -
1. The '.imitations or Surgery. 2. Some Doctors
Oppose Operation. 3. what Caneer Is 4 Why the
BODY CELLS S BREAiK DOWN 5 1111 irlous Cooling
Methods. (1Common Errors in Diet. 7. Vital Elc-
momts of Food. 8, Medical Endoraaneats of Our Claim.
' 11 Thymus
'mils
-. Body. 10. r 0
0. The Chief Dl[n6ruls of the ni y.y
A
Gland. ' 11. Ago when Limo Begins to c
cum lilata.
12. Potassium Causes Lima' Excretion. 13. Great
Value;.: of rotas,tnin. 14. Parts of Body Liable. to
Cancer. 15. Parts. which Are.: Seldom Affected. 10.
now a Doctor Can Yelp. 17: flow to Avoid Cancer.
18, Death. nate From Cancer. 19, Arterial Sclerosis
Gout and
Iilndred
Id. A X
Age. 20, ihoumatlsm, G t t
had 0 u
Con,platpte.
With this book area number of in-
teresting case -reports, proving the
great value of "Cantassium Treatment"
in various oases.'e The. treatment. 'Is
simple and inexpensive, and can ,be
easily -taken in one's own home. .Apply
for free book to Charles Walter, 51
Brunswick Ave„ Toronto, Ontario,
Canada,
Socialist Aborigines.:
ears inthe'.Carib-
bean. ahiiost two years
Carib-
bean Sea among. the primitive tribes
of :Panama'the,naturaliet and explorer.
Mr. F. A.`Mitchell-Hedges has return-
ed to 'England. He visited, says the
London Times, every village and 1s -
land of the San Bias coast and pene-
trated the' little-known Chucunaque
country. He describes the San, Blas'
Indians .as an extraordinary people
and as pure in breed.
They live, he says, a socialistic kind
of lifer One man grows bananas,- an-
other grows plantains, and a third
grows ' cocoanuts. They exchange
their" produce. If a house is to be
built, all the men, including the chief,'
share in the work. They suffer badly,
how'ever, with smallpox, and their eyes
are affected by a tick that gets under
the lids.
I believe no white person before my-
self ever entered' the ,Chucunaque
country. The people are about four
feet three inches in height, and the
, women, wear nose. rings. They are all
simple and honest; they "do not use
money, and they have no steel weap-
ons. They have very big heads, very
broad 'shoulders and are mostly bow -
lagged. The women seem to be the
f food c
d is a kind
sex. The c
superior
of corn, plantains
and
bananas, as which
are cooked unripe. They eat no flesh.
I did not see a four -legged creature in
the country. They like fish', however;
and they have a dish of pineapples,
Pears" and otherthings, which are all
boiled together in a common pot.
The Indians made idols of wood, and
each tribe has its own - special god. The
people believe that when they die they
enter a canoe and that their spirit
guides them until the river divides in-
to many streams. The, spirit then
points to the stream they are to fol-
low, and alley are led to a'comfortable
hut in a happy land.
For burial the dead body is placed in
a hammock and, carried to a grave
house, a thatched structure two hun-
dred feet long by one hundred and
fifty Pett wide. When the hammock.
1 has been 'placed in a hole a vine is
put down into. the hole so that the
I spirit can come out at night. The dead
man's stool and the utensils from
1 which he ate are placed near by; they
•
believe that, the spirit comes forth to
sit on the stool and talk with' other
spirits.
To -day, is no time '.to: -he Mazy and slack;
To be wilfully idling and shirking;"
The hours you are wasting will never
come back,
Those': hours when you ought to be
working.
So tackle that task with a cheery good
will--
'r.o-lnarroav its dutie- is bringing—
For well -finished work to the heart'
brings 'a thrill, •
Get it done: soon for joyy
ou'll be
g b
sin in I
—AliceWliq e
..
Steady
Job.
Every day; far two y -P
ars 3.1r
,000 war
service medals have been engraved
with the recipient's name by an Eng-
lish firm: of medal -makers.
The best way to remove freckles
1 at tight equal a mixture •of
td app Y fi
strained lemon juice glycer-
ine',
parts of ] , 8 Y
ine, and olive oil,
Essentials of Church Music.
Music in the churches varies from
cheap,trashy anthems to the music of
the great masters, both with and with-
out accompaniment. Music has come
to mean so much in the daily life of
the individual, particularly in recent
years, that there has :developed a
much larger general'musical_.apprecia-
`tion than -is often recognized. "A poor-
! Ty attended church' generally means
poor music. Those in charge of such
matters often do not ,consider the
standards -of public taste which must
of necessity- be high to appeal to the
musical public. It is 011 this acCOul]t
that the church which has worthy
music well presented at its services,
is generally well supported and attend -
.ed, fornthere asa. spiritual beauty and
exaltation in such music which cannot
be -measured: and which exceeds great-
ly that of the spbken'word.
The first essential to good church
music is a chorus choir, and if the
church has sufficient funds that isnot
dfffclilt to maintain. This Is a prim-
ary
ary cosidatio z n er.of much more lin
z
portall ce than _ a solo quartette which
is too limited" to be useful in produc-
ing ` fine chloral effects. " 1f the church
cannot at first pay its singers,
a volun-
teer chorus choir must bo organized.
Under the prevailing• conditions and
cit In countrya boy' chi is
C116t 1S this choir
most difiicult to maintain, and in maIly
places where it 18 maintained the
same.energY and fuaucial backing
g
would produce inflnitely grater and
more -ins ortant results if applied
P Id
a nixed choir.
A difficult job requires a somebody.,
an easy job, ;an anybody.
re
The Anchor.
Here on the wharf I Ile, idle and rll,st-
ing,
Scored with the scars ofstrife,
Wars that to win meant life;
Many a sailors wife
Gaye, all unknowing, 1)er heart to my
trusting.
Ofttimes the restless sea
sweep o'er me,
In a 'familiar tongue
Singing the days +l swung
From a stanch vessel slung,
131ue sky above and wide waters be-
fore me.
Many a mighty ship peacefully riding
Held I nor counted cost;
Fag -wrapped or tempest -tossed,
Ne"ver my grip I lost,
Never broke- faith With. , my ' charges
confiding.
Here on the wharf I'lie, home from: the
ocean,
Never to plunge again,
' m turd
Bearing •, •y S Y chain,
Down through the yeasty main--
Symbol
ain—Symbol unsullied of^faith and devotion.'
—Harold Willard Gleason in- Youth's
Companion. ,
breezes
"Sermon" in Leaves.
The Corporation of London's - gar-
dener who 'attends to. the little green
spaces around St. Paul's Cathedral has
chosen the City's arms and mottq for
his landscape lesson, .or -"Sermon 111
Foliage," this summer.
It' can be, seen ' on the 'grassy slope
near the south door. The general
groundwork is in dark green "thrift"i
grass, the cross and sword in the
shield are in rich bronze, and the
"quarters" in delicate leafy plants in
silver tones.
The motto "Domiiie Diri S ge
Lord Guide Us), and the text from
the fresco in the Guildhall of St. Paul
Presenting his sword to the City
fathers, "Except the Lord keep the
City, the watchman waketh but in
vain," are in golden pyrethrum.
ti
Preserve Your Health
Yourself.
"Disease is always due to breaking
the laws of health."
"To beconstantly commenting upon
the high death -rate from cancer, with-
out taking into account the fact that
it is primarily a blood disease, is the
height of folly. And when it has been
demonstrated over and over again -that
it is only by raising .,the .blood to a
healthy standard, ' and 'retaining it
there, that cancer Gam be, and has
now, in innumerable instances," been
1 cured, what possible ground can there
1 be' for denying such a truth?"—Medi-
- cal Times, Lon. -
The late Dr. Forbes Ross, of Lon-
don, Eng in 1912, proved in the most
conclusive manner that cancer is
caused 'by potassium deficiency. When
certaine
om d assimilable ble salts of
c, bssimil a
p m
otassiu have been administered to
far advanced and apparently hope-.
lessly incurable cancer patients, every
ono received marked_ benefit. And
while it may be conceded that the
small quantity of medicinal assistance.
given is imperative, the fact remains
that -fully seventy per- cent. of "the
credit due to every - completely- re-
stored. cancer case belongs to -the- cor-
rect diet taken.
It is of supreme importance to adapt,
the diet so that, it may supply those
organic salts contained in vegetables,
cereals a d fl
n fruit,n
when in their. atur-
al' condition, combined -with the living
,principle of . •these products. ote the
vegetable kingdo
importance. •
Cancer is; an
flitted blood. till_
warnin ednn:-the'most trifling poovuun.-
tion is liable to attack any adult. read-
er who consistently adheres to the
generally -accepted diet -of the civilized
world. The best proof of the truth of
this appalling •statement, arises from
the -fact that if individuals from un-
civilized,• cancer -free races- `p'artake o`f
European or American' fare, they
speedily 'become cancer -stricken.
There is . no reason why cancer
should net be eliminated from this
country if the public will exercise com-
mon'sense in the matter of its diet and
positively refuse to continue to des-
troy, in cooking the organic salts in
all ,vegetables, which are essential to
the continued,'preservation, of -our
health. We must 'admit that we pay
muck gi^eater attention to the diet of
, burr animals than we do to our own. As
a consequence, one hund_ed and tea
thousand persons died from 'cancer on
this continent alone during 1922, and
this awful mortality will be increased
in 1923 unless we reform our mode of
living. We must face these unpleas-
ant facts,.
Believing . that 'every man and • wo-
man`: should personally Nell) to relieve
humanity ; frenl its needless sufferings,
the writer has printed and copyrighted
a dietary upon which the eminent' can-
cer authority, Dr. Robert Bell, of Lon,
don; England, has complimented hirli
Fathers., and mat.l ers, adopting such,
diet, will very speedily find that they
and their children are enjoying such
health as never before experienced;
that, consequently, _doctors' bills don't
q
have to be;paid, •and no medicine, is
wanted,- and, last but not least, a con-
siderable money saving is effected by
the,.greatly, reduced "cost ot'living. To
help seine who may not know how to
Cut loose from civilization's present
disease -producing, , premature death--
habits, thee writer will gldly:
dealing w gladly.
l y.
and freely mail one thousand .copies Of
his dietary to the first one thousand
apply
readers who for samo to Charles
WL
altor, 51 Ihuh viclAve., Toronto
t,
HAVE YOU(rANY OF
THESE SYMPTOMS?
tf You pave You Are h Need of
,a. 'Tome Medicine.. .
wea
A:re -pale and l., easily red
and out ofyou'bl'eath oil slight exertion?ti
Areyou nervous? Is your sleep dis
turb"ed? Do you 'wake tip in the morn
ing feeling as tired as when you went
to bed? i& your ;appetite peer; your
digestion Weak, and.do.you have pains'
after eating?
If. you hate anyof these symptoms
you need 'a" tonic,. and inthe realm of
medicine )tel e es no better tonic, than
Dr.''`\\1illianis'' Pink Pills, which enrich
the blood,. restore shattered nervas
a.n'tl bring. the glow of, health to pale
cheeks. "` The value of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills: is shown by tho case 01 Mr.
Horace 'Cuphill, Woodward's Cove,
N,13., whosa s:— Phe
first indication
that 'my 'general • health was not goad
was 'a 'shortness of breath after the
least exertion. Then my appetite be-
gan'to fa11,' and' after eating it seemed
as if there .was,'a'lump in my stomach.
I grew so -weak,' that 1' could not walk
a hundred yard's:without resting. Then
I was taken with a numbness all over
my body and was in a sad plight. I
was under,adoctor's care, but as I.
was not ;getting any better, I decided
to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The
iirstfew boxes ,did not seem to help
me' but my wife urged me to continue
their use and: 1; got four boxes more.
Before these were gone I could eat a
fair meal, the numbness was leaving
me and 1 was feeling much better in
every way. I took the pills for a while
longer, and feitthat I was.again a well
man. I still take: the pills occasionally
but' „have. -had no .return• .of the .'old—
trouble."
Youcan : get these pills from any
medicine dealer, or by mai: at 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
a7
Animals as Prophets.
The sensesof animals differ error-
nrousier from those of human beings.
For instance, a cuckoo, five months
old., whichhas never been five miles
from the place where it was hatched,
can find .its way, unaided, from: this
country to Africa, says an English
writer.
As all fishermen know, trout go- off
their feedbefore rain. They cannot
see the sky, yet they know flours in
advance when. a change in the Weath-
er:is "coming.
Animate can tell in advance 'when -a
bad earthquake or volcanic eruption
is 'about to occur. In Sicily dogs
showed great uneasiness' two days be-
fore the eruption of Etna. Cats car-
ried their kittens away from houses,
and' *hares seemed stupefied by, fright.
Similar knowledge was exhibited by
animals 'efore the great V
al araiso
a tthis
e r h e -case
halt trf'`19-00 but. he c a
q ,
horses and cattle'as well as dogs' were
desP"erately uneasy ,for, twenty-four
hours before the big shock. Dogs
howled all night, and cattle lowed.
Before the Messina earthquake of
January, 1915, birds were noticed to
be flying in flocks, evidently greatly
disturbed, but it is an odd fact that
there were no such signs before the
sudden and dreadful earthquake which
destroyed San;Francisco.
One explanation of this sense pos-
sessed by dumb creatures may be that,
animals, having finer powers of heor-
ing than man, may detect under-
ground rumblings, ar quiverings which
man cannot seuse. Or it may be that
is about to take place.
Largest• Building,
For- exhibiting furniture Chicago is
erecting the world's largest building,
a sixteen -storey 'structure that will'
contain 1,500,000 square feet of floor
space.
MONEY ORDERS..
Send a Dominion • Express Money.
Order. They are Payable everywhere.
The serious young man wrote to'`his
prospective father-in-law: "I hope..my
recent appointment to the curatorship,
of the museum of antiquities will in-.
` duce you to trust your daughter to,
My care:"
s,
. Keep Minard's Llnlmcnt In the house.
Washes Shoes.
When a person steps on a stand: la -
vented ie in'Japan water is automatically
turned"on to washhis shoes.
SALES.
Iib bay weekly. ml offer steady ainployment. seIlllig:.
0111' complete and .esdl,isiye lines of'.whole•root, fresh -
dug -to -order tree, and plants. Best stLek find 0700106.
We teach and mitt, }Yell froe. A modc3-11iaking
opportunity.
! LU ICE BROTHERS. MONTREAL
gsm
f
CI
nkaori . No. ,40— 23.
o ISSUE E I
Keep Stomach and Bowels Right
By giving baby the harmlees,`purely'
"vegetabie;infants'ane children sreavlator.
I WS SUP
brings astonlshing, Stratifying exults.
in' malting baby's stomach digest'
, foci and bowels move a3 ,.
they ahould•at teething,
ip 1 •
time. Guaranteed free
"from narcotics, epi-
atpe a h0 leo landail
harmful ingredi•
Safe r . meta.. 9n a and
satisfactory.,.
At Ali
A
nM Druggiata
i.l .
EASY TRICKS
No. 47
'A Card Mystery
The performer asks,: a spectator`
to select a card from the pack, to
look et it and without showing it to
anyone, replace it in the pack any-
where he likes. The performer
then asks the spectator to shuffle
the pack. Apparently, : the card is
lost in theack The erfoz•zner,
n p ,,
however, puts the cards behind his
back and repeats a magic phrase.
Then he brings the cards intp view
l
and a3.tsh spectator '
t o toto or p c t namethe
card he selected. .The performer
turns over the top card. Itisthe
card selected.
This trick can be done without
s,
ei nt of hand byusind cards.
which have pictures, injtead of con-
ventional designs, on the back. Be-
fore presenting the trick, arrange
the cards so that the pictures all
face thesame way. When the spec-
tator Islooking at his' card, turn
the `pack around. When he replaces
his card, therefore, it will be the
only one that is upside down. 'After
the spectator has shuffled the cards,
shuffle them yourself, keeping your
eyes open for the inverted picture.
It will nbt be di'filcult to complete.
the shuffle so that this card will be.,
on the top or bottom. Placing the
cards••.behind your back is merely
to make: the'trick;seem more com-
plicated.
(01ip this out and paste it, with
other of the series, in a scrapbook.)
THE FALL WEATHER
HARD ON LITTLE ONES
Canadian fall weather is extremely
hard on little ones. One day it is
warm and bright and the next wet and
gold. These sudden changes bring on
colds, ` cramps and colic, and unless
baby's little stomach iW kept right the
result may be' serious. There is noth-
ing to equal Baby's Own Tablets .in.
keeping the little ones • well. They
sweeten •'the stomach, regulate the
bowels,- break up colds and make baby
thrive. The Tabletsare sold by medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
box from, The Dr..Wi1Tiams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
4. .
Illuminated Sign.
An advertising- sign to be placed on
aoor and illuminated automatically
d 1 y
when the deer knob is turned in the
inventioh'•01`a'Chicago man.
Starting Well. :
Employer—"Your first duty will be
to post' this ledger."
New' Clerk—"Yes, sir. Where shall
I send it?"
Dt x' 'T C•UGH
.il(11I1I'
a.
Cm.
-Coo_tTA „-0-pelta
.
lfrJou
•0
BQ_. Q
own.
1
as Z for
, 9
DUE (g07
Q 0
teen tabid)
P ,1,!r4sl4fi(
He Admitted It.
"English as she is Japped;" is the
term given „by Anglo-Saxons in the
,Orient to the weird, effect sometimes
produced by Japanes-e in their efforts
to employ English in their shop signs.
This Oriental capacity for using our
mother tongue with strange twists: 'of
unconscious humor is perhaps.no.bot
ter exemplified than in the wording of
a delicious sign on a Japanese baker's
shop:
"A Kashinuru, Biggest Loafer in
Tokio."
Cancer Unknown..
Cancer is unknown in Tunis and
Abyssinia.
Ask for' MIna rd's and take no other.
The King isCobra ,
the only reptile.
that' will attack everything'. that it t
meets.
Se
JIN
FOR '
EYES
I$ IRA TA .
I TLID BY
SUNN DUST -C N
It D
,t1COMFeENDLD a SOLD BY DBErGGISrS° a0PT1CIANS.
WAITS YOR razz LYE CAAC 0000 MUa1YE CO. CaICAGayM
Don't wait for •someone to
p get Kendall a
Spavin Treatment in the
house.
For all external hurts and pain:.
Fur -for all muscular troubles.
t throatand .chest with ,
Rub the i enda11s3pavinTreatmantmakegood.
Minard's. Also inhale. It
r
eleven
in: Gin to.
2135,33102, Sask., December 6th, 1921
givesquick relief.
"Diem send me ono copy or your TR13ATISr, ON rms
g HORSE, L Here uoid your endall•s Spayin Cure for over
even years and found it one of the bestltnimentsi have
ever used for all kinds of sores (Signed) 11. ZEMAN.'•
Get a bottle of your druggist's today. Regular
for Norse Treatment—Refined for Human use.
e1R. B. J. SSENDALL COMPANY,
-,burg Falls, Vt., U.S.A.
A
.,, --name "Bayer" on `tablets o
UNLESS you see the you
not getting Aspirin irin at all
are lot getting l?
Accept only ars :"unbroken package" of "Bayer "Tablets of
" rt directions and dose worked out b
Asplllp, which contains s Y.
during i 1• for
safe b millions
2z years and proved y
physicians
.
Rheumatism'
Headache Colds
Neuritis
Ot
`io laCl eNeuralgia
IPain
Earache ` ° Lumbago Pain,
" •" tablets—Also bottles of `24 and 10{i ---Druggists.
12 t let s
l ant3,y .Bayer hetes of..,n .
Agilrin t}latrade inn It iregletored in Canada) or Bayer Dnnn£,tetnrc or Nono-
eeetleacldester of Sallcylleaeld,-Whileit.lo wtl known 'that A:pirin to 00g i1ay«,1
marorfoelttrc, to assist the public, ntalnst tmitatftiiili, the 'tablets .or Bayer nen-nearly
will be stamped Wltb, their general trado mark, the "Bat'Or Cros.a"
Gia
Hotla.nd's Handicap.,
Lacking quarries, Holland is obliged
to import all the stone it requires for
every purpose.
It. appears to us there is much truth
in the following: A deacon of'a church
asked a man as he entered tine House
of God, "Have you come to serve the
Lord?" The man replied, "No, T ,have
been serving God all the week, now 1
have come to worship Him."
Classified Advertisements
II,VER FOXES—NOTTS raosr .'M) DLAft'Ir:
(Booklet)_ Nino years' experience ranching
foxes. 25 cents. Dr. Randall, Truro: Nova Scotia.
America's Pioneer Dog Remedies
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and 'How to .freed
Mailed Fred to any Address
by the Amlot.
H..,CLAY QLOVER CO,. Inn.
129 West: 2411 Street
Now. York, U.S.A.
PIMPLES ON FADE-.-
CUTURA
H
Hardt Large and Scaled Over,
Itched and Burned,
°' My trouble beganwith a breaking
out of pimples on my face which
soon spread up into my hair. Some
of the .pimples were hard and large
and scaled over. They caused much
itchingburning,
and andmy face
was sore and red.
"I began using Cuticura Soap and
Ointment and in two weeks I could
see an improvement. I continued
using them and in six weeks was
completely healed." (Signed) Miss
Flora Noteboom, Box 52, Fairview,
Mont., Feb. 7, 1922.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal-
cum are all you need for all toilet
uses. Bathe with Soap, soothe with
^ant, dust with Talcum.
"dl. AddreOo: «'L ans,.Lfm.
' ut sal." Sold every-.
,ea: Talcum 250.
r mug.
jF
is le ' c, IP
RS.Istil,p„
a
A HES
,,.
m
a.D PAINS
Vanished After' Using Lydi :t
E. Pinkham's; Vegetable
Compound,
1lclltait, Ont. —" When 1 Wrote
for help my action was mostly
1 prompted by curios-
!xfi . ity. I wee -leered if
I, too, would benefit
by your medicine. It
was the most profit-
able a •tion I 'have
fiver taken,'( heart-
ily assure jou, for
through its results f
am .relieved of most
of my sufferings. 1?
have takensix boxes
of 'Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
ink-ham'sVegetable
Compound Tablets and a bottle of Lydia
Its. Pinkliani's Blood Medicine ,and I can
honestly say I have never been so web
before, 1 had suffered from pains and:
other troubles since I was fifteen years:
old, and during the 'Great War ' period
1 worked on munitions for two years,
and. in the heavy i1 f".ing whichm wor. k
Y ,i ,
called` for, 1 s ..tl,.>n„d myself, causing
civic ihftainmation from whish I have
p. _
t-`
r
fi' ;red untold,
su c u d agony,and X often lxafi:
togive up and go ) b. .!had doctored
l
for several years without getting
er-
Tfa nt relief. tlel ] started to take
your medicines. Mis-
LNFit; 13ranchton, Ont.
"Er.
tis you
Write to the Lydia E. Pinkhatn Medi-
cine Go,,
edi-cineGo,, (lobo ow, Ontario,for;afreecopy
of Lydia F-,, t?inkilatn s Private Texts
Pok upon Ailments Of .Watnen."
' eased*