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The Clinton News Record, 1923-10-25, Page 7
1-11EALth E, IUCAT1ON BY DR. J. J. l Il3DLETON Provinolai Board of Health, Ontario Dr, 1diddleton will be glad to answer nue$ttotim on Puble Health mai' tern through thief column, Address him at Sea(lina Ilousa, apellas Crescent, Toronto. A festal?, or passage, means an opening which normally does not exist, communicating between the surface of the body and one of the internal organs. Thus a gunshot wound that pene- trated the stemach and left an open track behind it to the surface,' would be a fistula of the stomach. There are also fistulas of the lachrymal ducts and salivary glands; but the common- est of all, the one that is always meant! when that word'"fistula" is used, is that which communicates between the 'bowel and the surface -strictly; speaker, Ing, a fistula in ano, How this arises Is not always quite clear. Sometimes I an abscess forms next the back pass- ageand either -breaks or is ripened by the surgeon. This is known as an Ischio -rectal abscess, and very corn=) welly leaves a fistula behind it as a ]legacy. Fistulas are also rather: liable to develop of their own accord' in con- sumptives:' It has also been suggested that they: may arise by some foreigif body such' as a fishbone, penetrating the bowel and setting up a track' of inflammation outside it. Inany case, the.. fistula forms and presents itself as an accomplished fact to be dealt with. Such a fistula may be of three different kinds. It may run as a nar- row track from the skin around the anus and be blind otherwise. It may exist as a narrow track from the bowel, arid be blind toward the skin external- ly: Or thirdly, it may run as a nar- row track from the shin externally'to the bowel internally, and this is by far the commonest type—a complete Do not run away with the idea that a fistula is a big thing, It is•in one sense, because it always needs an op-. Aeration before it can becured, But actually,in mere . size, it is a ,very shall thi ng, and very difficult to find. A patient ie not likely to discover it himself. But there are certain .symp- toms of which warning should be taken. There is genera `e Pain in the region of it and tenderness. There may also be eliglr,t streaks,. of blood and pus, asad there is a'general sense of discomfort. Of course, these syrup tome' are generally set clown, by the ptient as piles, but though pi are very common, they are not painful unless they are .inflamed, and , with piles there is always a lump, some- times .of considerable size, either in gide or outside. What is the treat- ment of ,a fistula?, IIere, more than anywhere else, surgical treatment is essential. It es* the . only treatment, Otherwise the fistula will continue for -a ever,. No drugs and do "palliative treatment are of the slightest use. An anaesthetic' must be given, en, and the e fistula, laid completely ietelY o en>and al- lowed to ileal from. the bottom' of it: This usually mean a month in bed. There is no risk attached ;to it, and the eupe is absolute and permanent., I lay stress on the necessity of this surgical cure because many people go on suffering pain and discomfort and 'ill -health .indefinitely just on account of the fact that they do not have some trouble in this region properly ram- ined, and go on and on regardinit.ns piles, and applying various sorts of ointments in the hope of a cure. Such "cure" will never occur. A fistula must be opened, and until at is opened the subject of it \Sall be a semi -invalid. Auld Lang Syne. it singeth_ low fn every heart, 'Weimar it each and all— A song of those 'who answer not, However we may call. They throng the silence of the breast, W e see .them as of •yore • — The kind, the brave, the true, the sweet, Who walk with us no more,. 'Tis hard: to the burden.up When these have laid it down; They brightened all the joys of life, They softened every frown; But oh! 'tis good to thinkof them, When eve -,are troubled sore! Thanks be to God that such have been, Although they .are no more! More 'homelike seems the vast un- known. Since they have entered there; To follow them were not so hard, Wherever they may fare; They cannot be where God ie not On any sea of shore; V4fhate'er betides, Thy love abidee— Our God forevermore. —John White Ohadwiok. ---'t Neptune eorapaetes its revolution around the sun' in j65 years. Classified Advertisements PEMAZE KELP WANTED, . in .Music. Every work of art emanates from an Interesting and absorbing .idea which seems• to demand expression in the mere artistic and Complete form. Especially is this the case in, music, the most intimate and the most intro- spective of all the arts. This magnifi- cent art depends for its effects upon channels of its, own, While the paint-. er and the sculptor speaks.directly to their 'public tluough a completed' work, tile musician on the other hand must depend upon an ,artistically trained interpreter. His work is not finished when he places It upon paper. Its value inay be, raised arlowered de- pending upon the character and the training' and the. talent of the one who elects to Perform the work. In the work of musical art there .slumbers under the veil of notes and staves a sleeping beauty awaiting the magic touch of the interpreter to bring all the loveliness to life. The interpreter must first of all be A real artist, otherwise It will be MI - Possible for him to liberate the magi- cal vibrations of the music. In the work of the creative mutilator there s must naturally be more dependence upon `intuition and individuality, while with the interpretive artist greater ''stress ..1s.laid upon the'estent of his interpretive knowledge. What is of greeters. importance to the inter- pretive artist is that he shall know. not 'r Amee 'ANTED. TO eo PLAY[ AND I.00115 swine at Uomo, wrioto• or enure time; aoed,.lnerely the composer and his work, par, work cant am dl.tanoo, charm paid, bane but shall comprehend the nature of stamp for particulars. 'Nelda/II Manufacturing eo„_ Montreal. ... 1i,vEa s,oxsss—NOTES Sn0M MY mane (nooltret). Nino. ceern', esperleuoo ranoklae foxes. -25 coots. Dr. mesan, True, Nora septa America's Pleheer Dog Remedios Molt au DOG DISEASES' and How to Ford Wailed Free to any Addreyt' by tiro Author. H. CLAY.GLOVER. CO„ Ina. 128 Wott 2105 Street -• New York. U.S.A. To supply the; steadily increasing demand for 9 MATCHEA Eddy's make 120 MILLION matches a clay • astarecessamszetteruarestasaarasztrams 01-118i c' lI7 cam. Feel'iiae perdect'balance aaull the hand cormtort of the Smar'd. made -I aardta r ora l,le cal a .�.at . I r►,,at � » tui temperedmout who 16nowbewt by >i o e t build rxlalnli - and ai bbl ,vale into every .e lreyrottlte ASK Yoofi HArDWAAiMAN FOR ['4.44•" S`»zg/e 8/f'-Dou6/a f3/t Af/i/She eel ,4/]a/ Wo/gfr't eteffatoesieftleifteifflitlit the musical receptivity of .the public mind for which he must performs The House and the Road. The little Road: says, Go, The little House says, Stay: And 0, it's bonny here' at home,: But I mustgo awayi ToBoost Canada at Evapire Exhibition EASY TICKS Blow It over e TO BOOST' CANADA AT EMPIRE BXHIBITIQN Among the many magnificent buildings.. nearing completion which have been erected to house the British Empire exhibits at Wembly,-next year, 'the Canadian Pacific pavilion 1e particularly outstanding. - 5 'T i l 1 t year and that 123 millions received for j Hal forest products in :Ontario shall be I<k1�;,,���TIC Std' � enjoyed by every business interest and rItman :in the rovince.' The May; Obtain Relief 6y Enriching -the Blood Supply. In the days of our fathers and grand- The little Road, literite, - , Would seek and turn and know; And forth I must; to learn the things Tae -little Road would show! - And goI must, my dears, And journey: while I may, Though, heart be sore for the little House That had no word but Stay. Maybe, no other way Your child could ever know Why a little Rouse would have you . Stay, When "a little ]toed says, Go_. —Josephilvie Pt sto•n Peabody. Doer Not Fear Publicity, every Wo P so-called timber baron cuts down logs worth five dollars. Out of that he hands over $4.50 as wages and :for materials " and the remaining fifty ents he splits between interest on his anvestment and taxes to the Ontario Government, aggregating $4,400,000 a year. Strangely enough we visual - Se themotorcar industry as the "life lood" of Oshawa and Walkerville and a dozen other towns, and the "meal ticket" of thousands of workmen, and at the next instant discuss the lumber business as' the sinecure of a quartet of "barons" into whose purse pour untold' millions wrung from a wretch- ed peasantry driven to build two -ear garages with high price boards. More. men have left the lumber industry in the last ten years than have entered it, and most who moved out were not financial. gainers for: their experience. You ask what is to be done to give Canada a permanent forest, and the immediate and only' comprehensive answer is Keep out the.fires. We citizens burn ten *nee the trees that the lumbermen havecut, and since the earliest days of Canadian history have put a torch to GOQ,000 square miles; as against about 100,000 square miles utilized by all the lumbermen -from coast: to coast: - Please let us lay off the cry for tree planting to produce timber until we loop into a much more inviting propo- sition. An acre of human -made plan- tation of spruce is a lovely sight. How few of us know that there is in Can- ada ",a. plantation of just 50' million densely packed acres of; young forests set out by Nature without human con- trivance or . expense, They' lie in fromcoast. That0 patches coast to c 6 oa oa million acres is richer than all the ggld mines for ars gold grows and repeats into endless generations. ' All :that plantation asks is that. fire be kept out: 1f that is done that young growth will be able, under careful management, to meet' all Canada's needs for the future and. pttovide a great surplus for ex port. fathers., rheumatism was thought' to c be the unavoidable penalty. of middle - life and old ego.. Almost every elderly person had rheumatism, as well as. Many young pgople. It was thought 1 that rheumatism was the mere effect b of exposure to' •cold and'danip,, and -it was treated with liniments and hot applications, which sometimes gave. temporary relief, but did not remove the trouble. In these days there were many cripples.. Now, medical science upderstands that rheum[ism is a dis- ease of the blood, and that with .good rich red blood any man or woman of any age candefy rheumatism. There are many elderly people - who have never felt a twinge of' rheumatism, and many who •haus conquered it by simply keeping their blood rich and - pure: The blood enriching dualities of Dr, Williams' Pink • Pills is becoming every year more 'widely known,'; and the more general use of these pills has robbed rheumatism of its terrors. At the first sign of pool blood, which ie. shown by loss of appetite, dull- elfin and dim eyes, protect yourself against further' ravages_ of disease by taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, 'ley have helped thousands—if you give them a fair trial they will not disappoint you. Yon can get these pills through any dealer in medicine 'or by mail at 60 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville; Ont, . Losing Population from the Thnber Zones. By Robson Black, Manager Canadian Forestry Association. At the present time every voice is raised and every ambition strained to win new population: New population costs. Imidigratiola is expensive sales- manship. While every conservationist wants to see new settlers brought to Canadae his sense o"f proportion makes. him ask whyywe cannot spend at least l a couple of extra dollars to block the emigration of Canadian families driven out of the forest areas by the plague of human -set forest fires. Dis- trict after district has been abandons ed, whole counties have decreased in population, railway lines have lost the bulk of local traffic, towns have been' boarded up, and for the sole reason that aeforest resource whichshould have been perpetual has been swept off the ledger of Canadian assets by the recklessness of Canadian citizens.' Whose fault is it that the forests of Canada run down hill? We as title' zeas own 85 per cent of the forest lands of the Dominion and are directly and porsonally responsible for what is done with the only crop that can grow, on these our 'lands. ]Every civilized country on earth looks to the state with its self-perpetuating life, it'4 providential relationship to its people,' to look after the forest properties. which, unlike wheat or potatoes, re-' quire as much es a century to mature,1 The state is the obvious and oul'y, effl- When Lord Dunsany presided re- .ent custodian of the rights of Lotus's cently over the Shakespeare dinner of genelations in a very slow growing a certain London literary club, it w=is but utterly essential national resource. recalled by one of the speakers that Befere en 'intelligent and •helpful Mumma, used to: be s bit shy of this interest on the part of the public can hind et -,publicity, "1ou_'do11 t call this bring about a maastt`ie of complete public?" Dunsany retorted. 'You forest',peoteetion we will have to jetti- ottglil to lave.eeen (1111 trenches 551x- son two or three, fetishes, all of which der Messitles Ridge, Teat's the most are pr edomina ttly. false and yet fix P ublic plans I havt3 quer been in' \V6 themselves upon succeeding gene'a- wore is a valley' Tite Germans were tions. One of these fetishes is that on a hill. 'They Could ass dowel to otic " the forest resources Have been given boot tops, I son six feat four. Our away" or otherwise alienated, They Irenrhee were only six feet deep, r' never were and are not to -day., AlI shall never fear publicity again,"- . but fifteen per cent. of the timbered All Must Work. acres of Ontario ate under the control of the Ontario Government as con - cone measures of conservation, The right to cut timber Is leased on ten million acres and the romainder of 10 million earth s 1 eighty m 1 aril hold by the Crown. What Is the .meaning of a lease to an operating company? That 42,000 workmen in Ontario shall bo al- lowed to draw a regular week's pay, and that 80 million dollars shall be allowed to circulate as wages each Pul gala has a compulsory labor law winch ,provides that (511 persona of botsexes, namely, men of.20 or Oster and girls• of 16 or over, sno,n be liable to 'admpuldory labor eeryioees lasting of twejve months he case of a totalla t ]non and ale montits on,• girls. l<eep'Mlneed0 Liniment In the hottalt. It is not at50i0;1;7-necessary that an education sllould be crowded into 11, few yeare of school, life. The 'befit :ANADA FSUNeeita & mamas, eda0nted people aro those who aro al- ktl.1r•raa ways Kerning, always absorbing' A tES SIsitA UT PLANT, )triow1otige f"in 6"11 possible 5"re° OROCIVVIC.1.8, Ohl'it d11d et *very opportunity, AUTOMOBILE SCHOOL bno of• the' Beat Equipped la Ontario, Vire have Firat•lilaew nuitt'udtora to make you a Rom, Expert, Write or .sea W. 0, Paton, 661 queen $t, 10., Toronte. Bend a business card or A visiting° caro its the shaae of the carcLen tee drawing. Floe it on the table and ask' a aunt! to blow It oyer, AS a: rule ne will go ahead andblow with the, greatest confidence and to .the smallest -effect. It will seem that the harder ne blows,.the more 510 termined the card will be to suck to .tee table, or merely to slide. When, you try ft, of course, the card obliging flops over, if :yoe • practice a little, ao that you get the. knack and can do the trick without giving away _the, secret, you will have a trick that 1s certain to lam ate. The trick is done by blowing, not under the card but at a spot about a foot or a toot and a`itelf in front of 'It Blow almost directly down so that the current of air, etrticing the table ;will be 'directed upward against the wader pert of the card' and the cart] will behave as you want it to behave. ` (Clip this out and paste tt, with other of the series, in a soranbook.) - -My Hour: In the great play, that's never done I have my part, a splendid one: No one can take this part from me, 'Twee •cast at my nativity.- . What if I die and drift away? - What if I weep? ,'Tis in'.the.play. I might have owned no garden sweet, No grass to 000l my burning feet. • I might have lived a lamplees one, Who lit no candle at the sun. And so 1'I1 play the part I'm given, And . for my hour thankearth and Heaven. -Morley Roberts. ac k— Out of the travail, Rest; ' Out of the there Confessed 'Hope, like a spark • That aerie— Hope in the thought Of you! —Maurice Morris. Good All Year Egg Pro- duction. - 8. W. Knife, Familiar Naivete. s Bernard Baruch, the noted financier, said at a luncheon in.Washington. "Germany's declaration that site is too peer t0 pay her War reparattous —well, it's a little naive. It reminds tie of the drafted mail. "A drafted man told .the army doc- torthat' he. couldn't serve. " Why,not?' the army doctor in - []nixed. 'Short-sighted,' said the . drafted Song. Out of the alk, The. bars; Out of the cup, The stars; _Out :of the east , The sun;': Into the wes .. ,e All's done. Now is the time to get year birds in- to whiter Quarters. They should be fully matured by this time, and to start off in tie race for high egg pro' duction for the year, 'should have a certain amount of surplus flesh and fat. Therels no particular secret in getting late Fall and Winter eggs. Tho essential factors are good stock, well matured (not mongrels, as they cost moreto keep and pay less divid- ends). Hens should be •confined frons early In October throughout the win- ter in a well ventilated, dry, frequent- ly cleaned and disinfectedhouse, free from draughts. For each bird •allow; 3% to 4 sq, ft, floor space. Provide straw litter about 0 Metres deep for them to exercise M. Feed grain in the litter night and morning, and above all, feed at regular times, not ,7 am, to -day and noon .to -morrow. Laying mash should, be available to the hens atoll times. They never eat too much of tt. , reed greens, mangles, cabbage, etc., daily, if possible. Remove any sick birds., at once. man, • Keep deluking vessels clean, Gather "Prove it' said the doctor, 'Show your eggs often and market them be - me,' fore they get old: And you will soon "'Well, do you see that nail`sap there `Itave the pleasure in seeing your in the calling; doe? -auto the da'afted profits censein, MAIL yr "4'; q $!q ,0. or alee,t - A, 12th\. if you 1601, your ask fYr OWYI: ffit?.I®1W O 'FEE ©UN (4loon151011 Show Me the Gates of Morning. "Where are the large ways of the world? • For I • am : tired of . little paths. Oh, show me The gateways, . the everlasting gate - And highways that do not know me.` Guide me away from, little things of me and mine,, And ownership and greed; and, scorn ing Flomelceepiug thrift and providence, Show me the Gates otMorning! "Show me broad paths! other than I have known! - Star-strown! . To which in all these cabiued yeare I have been stranger. Iiave not a tender care of my email powers, Think not anxiously of danger And unreturning hours: What if the .night 'fa11s1 Are there not stars to light'me? Or the moon's pale lanternhung o'er sea or glen?. Or, failing these, 1f unguessed storms should break ane, What then? - Would not -God's kind - hand ' reach down and take me?" ' - -Laura Spencer Porter, A Race. - Yes, said,the doctor. ' 'i don't,' said the drafted man." tteo joy to see a.riilpliitg field of wheat, A brawn,iirook slipping 'teeth the. Joys of Mature. - BABY6 OWN TWINS broad• highway. ' Young birches all on a steep, �:�(I4 ,81l+,1�`1' ftEiI 1;'I)Y . meadow that is filled With blos- somS gay- . When the baby is i11 --when he is A,tangled berry vine' the :old wall constipated, has indigestion; colds; knows, colic or simple fever or any of the other -many minor ills of little ones— the mother will find Bab;''e Own'i'ab- lets an excellent remedy. They regu- late the stomach • and bowels, thus. banl,shing the catiso.of most of the ills. of childhood; Concerning then] Mrs, 1L, 1), Dugttay, Thunder River, clue,, And I am glad that nature offers all• $6,7 4.: babY was a, great sufferer Who have the seeing eyes, her trod= front colic and criod contieualiy, I began giving trim Baby's Own Tablets anti the relief was wonderful, 1 now always keep a ellpply of the Teblols in the house, The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers; or .by mall, at26 Conte a box trees '1'11e Dr. Will11uns' Madeline Co., Bs'oolstille; Ont,'. Self., No natter how unfavorable your en rosen vlrontnent or .your p tau 1bollt, piing to your highest :vision of your. rad believe self, .Ddu'[ be afraid tpin your power tobe what you long to be, for he tau wise ±11111105 .lie can, Trust yourself; grasp eVery'oppoetunity for self.dovelopreent, • and' .you will urr- eovor possibilities, get hold of re- soiitMes In the great within of yourself that gtrrhapl'' you dohot noW' oven deepest yeti post se. --•O.' S. Mertloir. Minard'e Lldlaiont Neale Cats, The rnonai•ch Galt that lifts great branches high,,. - Whose leaves in silhouette stand splendid eat Against 'a radiant reach of summer sic,. .. sures rare. A bird's clear song, a tender budding spray, Can sudden make my life semi sweet and fair, --Alix Thorn, Nilnard's Mille the inflaalimation, dleinfects 'and r'elleves, The plaintiff, a voluble Italian; -talk- ed as fast as Isis knowjedge of English would permit. - 5s" Looking down at the official repart- ee the. Italian noticed . for the first time that his testimony was being re- duced to writing (the reporter was trying Ills best to keep up), and there- upon began to talk faster than ever, until finally he burst forth,: "Don't white so fear; I cants. 'keep up with you." - What Was the Joke? A young man had the misfortune to bruise his forehead. Meeting a friend, the latter said: "What a terrible bruise youhave on your forehead!" Wishing to pose as a hero, the young man replied: "Oh, next to noth- ing—next oth-insnext to nothing." "So now I know for certain," said his friend es he passed on. And: the bruised one wondered why the other laughed. - - MONEY ORDERS. Send a Dominion Express. Money Order. Five Dollars coste three cents. It ishalf-made bargains that make ' trouble. Make your agreements conn- piete in every point and then write them down. Minarets Liniment for Dandruff. Advertising papa for itself' provided the: goods are right. A "dud" article never lasts, -Sir. Haeo1deldeckintoeh. Judgment. - "It is the judgment of your contem- poraries that is most important to you; and you will :find that the judg- mont of your contemporaries - 1S' made - up alarmingly early,—it may be made up this year in a way that sometimeS lasts for life and beyond. It .is made -up in part by persons to whom you. have never spoken,' by persons wlio in your -'view do not know you, and who -' get only general impression of youi. but always it is oontemporaries whose - judgment is formidable and unavoid- able. Live now in the Year of that tri bunal."—Chat•Ies, W: 'Eliot: Auk for Minard's and take no other. If you .have ceased to smile, you have lost out in the game of life, no Matter what your bank account may be. Pse; IN NIGHT F&' MORNING & KEEP Y';$; UR EYE% ]CLEAN CLEAR AND HEALTHY WT. 5OR 5550 SYS 0055 COOK.MYMNE 4O.0n1Ge9.1.4.4 BABIES LOVE M85.V1id51,10a1% SYRUP no [due, . and Children's ttegdotor Pleasant to give—pleasant to take, Guaranteed purely vege. table and absolutely harmless. It quickly overcomes colic arrhoea,- flatulency and • other like disorders. The open published formula- appears on everyieble. AI All Drugglsls ASPIRIN say "Bayer" sand Insist! [mese' you sec the name "Bayer" an Package or on tablets you are not get• Meg the .genuine Beater product proved safe try, nttlliens and prescribed by physicians over twentythree years for Colds Iloadaolie xoothaehe I.umbaga 11ara5he Rhieumatisan y Neuralgia Pain, !am Accept "Bayer. Tablets of Aspirin" only. --1155511 unbroken package eon- teene propos' directions. Mindy boxes of twelve tablets tort few cents. Drug- gists also sell bottles of 24 and 104. Aspirin is the trade marls (registered in Canada) • of. Diver Manufacture of `Ionoacetloacidester of aallcyiloaeIQ, While it is well known that ,Aspir'in. means Layer Manufaeturo,. to assist the publlo against imitations, tho Tab, lets of Door Company will be stamp• ed with their gonornl trade marl., the. "sJayor Cross," - ECZEMA ON BODY IN PIPLES itching Intense, Could Not Sleep. Cutiecura Heals. "Eczema broke out on nay body in small pimples with white heads. At first there were just a few emeltspots but it quickly spread, catioing ,intense itching and dis- comfort.- My oiothing seemed to aggravate the breaking out, and I could not sleep well at night. "A friend gave me a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after using thein 1 got relief so pur- chased more, and after using one cake of Soap and one box of Oint- inept I was healed" (Signed) Mies Maybelle Brett, Pullman, Wash. Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the care of your skin. SampleraehPreebyMaa, Addren.:"Lymana,Una eted, ad+, St, Pant Bt., w. Moatroal." sold every tlhero, SexpSsc, Ointment Pb nntltia. Talcum E6e, P Cuticura Soria ahnvea wrlhout meg. 0 }'EN FROM FORTY TO HETY Will 'lie Interested in Mrs. Thomp . sons Recovery by Use of Lydia E. Pi kham's Vegetable Compound Winnipeg, Man,— "Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound has done me good in every way. 1 was very weak and run-down and had certain 'troubles .that women of my age are likely to have. 'I did not like tri go o, the doctor so 1 took the Vegetable COM-'' pound and am still taking It right along. I recommend it to my friends and to any ane'I know who is not feeling vl�ell;r'-- Mrs. Tn Mrsow, 303 Lizzie 3t.,'Wmni- peg, Man., When women who are between the ages offortprfve� and fifty-fiee are beset with such ant -toying symptoms felt nerr% vouslrese irritabillty, melancholia anal heat ilaskies, which produce lleadaelse8t dizziness, or a sense of suffocation,they should' take Lydia Pu, Pinitham's Veggei table Compound. It is ospesiallyatlnpted to help women through this crisis. 11 . is prepared from roots and herbs and Contains no harmful drugs or narcotics,. rr This bulimia remedy, the tnoditBaal 1, ingredients of which etre derived fro foots and herbs has for forty Air proved its value hseneh cases. Wom everywhere bear wiliingtestimony E. of� Lydia tai the wonderful virtueI i ri� ham's Vegetable Compound, Women who suffer should write to the Lydiab.PinkhamlIstodininaCo.,Cobohr , Ontario',. for a free cony of: Lydia 'E. pinklanin's Private 'I'rxt-]look upon 1, AiltiaentS )Peculiar to Women.',', t#, •