The Clinton News Record, 1928-10-25, Page 3Make Your ' nter Holiday Pay
Dividends
Own a 20 -Acre Farm in Georgia. Grow To$acco,
Early Vegetables and Fruits: AOne Crop, Often
Pays for the Farm. Send for Particulars.
Write:
W. E. FRENCH
A2aeager,`Industrial Dept..
Georgia & Florida Railway,
'VALDOSTA, Ca.
or ROSINS LIMITED,
Michigan Theatre,
Bundles,
Detroit., 'Mich.
Cockshutt Plow Expands in Scope.
Owing to the fact that Cockshut
-Prow Company has siguecl a contras
to market Allis.Chalmers Co.'s -tree
tors In Canada, end to the tact ilia
this Iatter company has decided
enter the tractor business, which, wit
involve salesof about $6,000,000 i
1928, or one-fifth of the total business
it is thought that this expansion Wil
be reflected , in the activities
'Cockshutt Plow. As Ainerican con
panics this year have found thei
most lucrative field for tractors tills
year in the Canadian West, and tit
•
t of Flin Finn mines are going into 'tiro
to site of the plant at the rate of 100
1 tons a day," states John Callinan,
presiclent of Callihan PIM Flan Mines,
who is in the city from an inspec-
i don trip in the North with a party
of of New 'York and Toronto financiers.
t, "The freighting in of supplies by
is capitalized at 4,000 shares .of, no par
value.. Directors.include Capt. F. C.
Wright, president;. L. Cote, IC.C., H.
L. Nichol,. secretary -treasurer; T. W.
,Bathurst, Dr.,;•`J. 0. Itobillard and J.
Ryan. The syndicate -owns claims in -
the Dryden gold, area, lCenora 'nrining
division, Ontario.
Fein Pion Mines Rushing Materials
to Power Site
Winnipeg.—"Supplies for the con-
struction of 'Island Fails power plant
1• barge and portage' will shortly•reaoh.
400 tons a day, and it is , -expected
s that 5,000 tons will be at the . falls
tractor business itself haaproved one
'of the most profitable lines handled
by farm implement companies, thio is
a development of,major importance to
'Cockshutt, and estimates are tha
sales of the tractor will increase the
r company's turnover by -from $2,000,00
to $3,000,000 ' year, with corre
spending ,increase in net profits
Tractors enter Canada duty 'free, and
Cockshutt's sales offices will handle
the tractors on the same basis, as
though they had been manufactured
in Canada. It has been an expanding
and profitable line for Allis-Chalmers
Cockshutt is building several nem
warehouses in Western Canada to
take care • of its increasing business
It is also having better business in
the east, and not alone from the farm
community. General Motors and Ford
have proved good customers for the
department which manufactures motor
truck bodies.
Unscrupulous Tactics in' Buying and
Selling Mine Shares
That there have been nuscrupulous
tactics act ce u ed _on the e fart of certain
1
c to u
traders, with a view to breaking the
market on various listed mining
stocks , has been brought to the at-
tention of the Financial News Bureau.
One house received a. call, to ull ap-
pearances from a responsible trader,
to sell a block of 4,200 shares of Teck -
Hughes at the market. This order,
111 when executed, broke the stock badly:,
Later, the mag absolutely repudiated
the order and a trail ou the long-dis-
-lance call found it to have come from
' a "pay" station.
Similar instancea„ltave been cited.
Fictitious buying order's on a certain
low-priced producer, in the names of
various doctors and professional 'nen
recently moved this stock up sharply.
As a result of these tactics, brolcerage
houses are checking tluir orders very
closely.
Mining Briefs
Amulet has the street guessing at
present. It was rumored that import-
ant ore was cut in diamond drilling,
Further reports came from Rouyn to
tate effect that the drills had cut 40
feet of high-grade copper -zinc ore at
a depth of approximately 220 Leet. At
the time of the report life drill was
said to still have been in ore and
it was thought that this was an en-
ttrely new body, lying about 200 feet
to the east of the "C" ore body,
Another despatch dealt with devel-
opment and it was stated that the
shaft was now down 225 feet, with
.timbering completed to that depth.
Work is now said to be in progress
on the 'foundation for the new hoist
which is expected to be on the prop-
erty by 'November 1st.
Conservative
before the freeze-up," Mr. Caltivan
The gross earnings et the -Canadian
t National Railways for the week ended
October 15 were 56,917,041, as cora-
0 Pared with '55,872,728 for the corre-
- aponding period 01 1927, an increase of
.!51,244;315, . or 22 per: cent.
Toronto .Change Average at New
' High
Industrial ustrial o
1 common o stocks ' oollec-
'tively on the local stock market as of
Oct. 20 are' selling at the highest ou
' record, Individually there are many
m'' issues Itelow the top for all time, but
an average of 30 listedand 13 unlisted
• industrial common securities compiled
as of October 15, places the average
above the figure for end of any month
this year and exceeds that of January
Iwhen the bull movement was rampant,
The average price of 30 listed on Oct.
15 was 79.20 at tlte•-eud of January and
'for' 13 unlisted stocks it is 50,23, mas-
k/erect with January's mark of 48.09.
February's reaction saw a toss of near -
1 eight e tt tot
Y nts in
I
g 1 the listed
stock and
over five in the unlisted. The low for
'the year by both groups was touched
Mr listed and 42,75 for the unlisted.
!August indicated a slight improve-
ment with a more pronounced advafiee
lin September And a new high nark
t set in the first half of October. The
average of 60 stocks, including indus-
trials, banks and utilities, however,
is still below the peak of 11.0.23
touched in April. To -day the average
stands at 109.71 and the greatest por-
tion of the decrease is accounted for
-by tate bank. stocks, In April invest-
ment trusts were active iu the market
and carried the average tor the. bank
issues up over 19 points to 325.02,
compared with 314.75, as of (Welter
15, Utilities are also lower at 115.611,
contrasted with a high of -t21.33 at
the end of May.
One of the most conservatively
capitalized companies, to come into
• the ptfblic eye for some time is the
Gold Rock 'Mining Syndicate, which
•
SAVE
MONlEY
BUY BONDS -
$100
Denominations ' $500
$1000
';rite for List
.. H. R. . BAIN &CCD., LTD.
350 :':ay Street, Toronto
`y�oe MACNFs'
F
cables
due to Acid
due
INDIGESTION
HEARTBURN ,
HEADACHE
GASES -NAUSEA
•
IN WHAT
"She Saye she's all its."
"She can't be ' referring to her
clothes, I'm sure."
Canada's Status
Quebec :Soleil (Lib,): The High
Commissioner of Great Britain. to
the Government of Canada has ar-
rived Sn Ottawa, This marks an epoch
in the history of the politioal evolu-
tion of the Dominion. . The, nomina-
tion of a High Commissioner was -in-
evitable from the day when the Gov-
ernor-General ceased to be the agent.
of the British' Government, We are
autonomous, completely embank/mous,
but •.we have not .broken our associa-
tionwtlt Great Britain; for different
reasons' it will pay us • to maintain
that relationship.
Stomach
a as e ess dose of Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia In water. This is an
alkali, effective, yet harmless, It haft.
been the standard antacid for 60 years
among : physicians everywhere, One
Spoonful will neutralize at once many
times its volume in acid, It is tete
i right way, the quick, pleasant and eitl-
1 eient way to kill the excess geld, The.
�stomaoii becomes sweat, the pain de'
parts. You are happy again In five
minutes: -
Don't depend on crude !methods.
Employ the, best way yet evolved in
all the years of searching, That is
Phillips' MIIIc et Magnesia,
Be sure to get the genuine I'hlllips'
Milk of Magnesia, prescribed by phyel-
cian's for 50 years in correcting excess
adds. Eacir bottle contains Mit
drugstore,
e'aga e'of Nations
CIhineese Coins Phrase '
The latest definition of the•function
of the League of Nations is given in
an article in "Interdependence", a
monthly review of the League of Na
tions Sdteiety 10 Canada, in a story
copied from the Now'York Times.
Many words have been•' vrltten in
attempts to define tete scope and pur-
poses of the League' of Nations. To-
day a Chinese summed it up in three
when he said the League was "a
Shock absorber',
When -this terse phrase was drop-
ped by Wang Citing -Ceti, spokesman ,
for Nationalist China, Aristide Briancl,
who was nodding, came (thickly. to
attention; Herman Meuller peered
with sharp 'interest' through his in
evitabie spectacles and George Ber•-
nerd Shaw, who was, in the gallery
threw up his head.
The phrase was being repeated o
all sides in League circles to -night
because it held to embody` suceiss
"lp the'nuiesion of the League to stave
off: War by ree lvilig itself the firs
clash of national interests. Wall
Ching -Chi is now a celebrity, and
from this speech the delegates.hay
gained the' impression thatCliina wit
be heard from on. -frequent occasions
at Geueva. Wang differs from Kip
ling by believing that East and Wes
can find common ground here.
Mr. Wang in his speech, wbielt'was
listened to attentively by a grea
audience, pledged the new , unified
China's, whole -hearted support to the
League. He watt convinced that'I
was destined to be tate domain of un
derstanding between the Par East and
the Western world, which,- while re-
presentieg different cultures, were
not essentially hostile to one another.
Confucius, he said, night rightly be
considered a pioneer of tete League's
work.
Emphasizing that the League stood
for protection of sovereign rights, he
vrelcom financial
ed and chute
i technical as-
sistance for China, and continued:
"Undoubtedly readjustment in our
relations with some foreign powers
must be made, but, acting with a
spirit of good -will and an atmosphere
of friendly cordiality such as prevails
at Geneva, the difficulties will be
overcome;
, "I believe that the East and West
will' often find the League a shock
absorber. When the League shall
have helped care the great evils from
which China has suffered since her
first contacts with the outside World
it will have brought serenity to a na-
tion that has been anxious and uncer-
tain where to turn tor a friendly
hate and heart."—New d i teart. —N 'o • -
ew 1 11. Times,
e,
Il 1 .e.-. ,. '.
t IVMayors'Cift,
"Lindy was a citizen of'the No'ttPi-
t ern Ontario Woods. He is now a
g citizen of the United States, although
he has not taken out many papers.
e He chows- every paper he sees. - The•
1 gift of Mayor Hondo of Montreal to
Mayor Jimmie Walker of New York.
"Lindy," as Mr. Walker named him,
t was tete first shipment to be 'h4lidledt
by the Canadian Pacific Express Com-
pany, on its daily Montreal -New York
t air' 'service, )(Vitae he thinks of this
pioneer Fait' service has not been re-
corded, but Canadian Pacific officials
t who greeted him at the New York end
i- state that he was in line fightingfettle,
on arrival. Several hundred pounds
of other express matter accompanied,
hintL.
The Wife
Tq3
, -
Hunts Too
A LAUGHING BABY
IS A
GREAT JOY
I;Itat eau give more joy to the
house titan a laughing, happy baby.
The well child makes everyone happy
With his tuneful gurgle and bright,
laughing eyes. It is only the sickly
baby 0410 is not a laughing baby, for
it is the little one's nature to be
happy when well,
'Mothers, if your baby is cross, if be
cries a great deal and no amount of
attention seems to stake him IrappY,
give !tint a dose of Baby's Own Tablets
and Ile will soon be well and ready to
radiate that happiness through the
home again. d . •
Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but
thorough laxative. They regulate the
bowels and sweeten the stomach and
thus banish .constipation and indiges-
tion; break up colds and simple fevers
and correct those troublre which aro
company the cutting of 'teeth and in
doing those things—and doing them
well—they make baby happy and keep
him happy. The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr,. Williams'
Medlcige Co., Brockville, tint.
War Trophies
Il'Iancitester Guardian (Lib.): The
other day a local council decided that
a gun displayed in a public' place as
a troithy of the Groat War should be
broken up• and flung ou the scrap
heap. The 1!Iayor of Southwark is
raising the same question ou a larg-
er scele. Ile intends to consult the
Metropolitan Mayors Associltticn, and
find out whether they share his op-
inion that it is useless to eontinde
the exhibition In public buildings and
parks of guns and otltei' munitions
captured from the Germans. His
view is that it would be much 'better
to sell them, if possible, or else to
scrap them.. Ile finds a Widespread
dislike of these . gt•im' exhibits, not
only among people who hate war, but
arming ex -service men who object to
being reminded of what they went
• Tail Lights for Carts
Three Rivers Noevelliste (Cons.):
In face or tete hostility of rural: ele-
ments, tete Roads Department Have
not dared to ask the Legislature to
pass a lag; making it co:01)u1s41'y to,
carry a light in the tear or all!
vehicles, . . (Yet) already a great.
slumber of 'farmers have recognized
1' at it 1; not merely its the interests.
of motoring but in their Gem as well
to car'r'y a, light on the- regr of their
carts. The reform will not he asked
Until the great majority of the .lural
population 'lave been convinced that
it is
s to their f Interest
so do
t so
Minard's Liniment for Every Pain.
ti
At the Bottom
"Tiley say he is, attractiug atten-
tion as a unique artist,"
"Yes, many critics believe he hag
no inferior." `
What is more satisfying aft
Y, g. ter
the bridge.game than a pu
.or two of fled Rose Tea?
Millions of ,Canadians
pre-
fer it to an thebe
of .finer y other because
flavor, remarkable
strength and dustless bur_
sty. Put up in aluminum --
the onlymateriai which coins..
pletely protects good ,tea.
•
37IiW
"I am not prepared tosay that your
wife will make a success of it—I don't
kno
WY.ur 0 wife I f t
( dont know my
own)—bvt you should be sufficiently
well acquainted with her to tell who -
there she would get a kick out of it
or a grouch." Captain Pant A. Curtis,
"Field and Stream" shooting editor,
suggests, in the November 'issue of
that magazine that the hunter include
his wife on a trip,
"Women are now fighting for ring-
side seats for a title bout instead of
for standing room on the sofa when a
mouse appears on the horizon," he
says, and when they are successfully
swimming the channel, making trans-
Atlantic hops, holding up payrolls• as
well as hubby's bankroll, and visiting
the Interior of Uganda for elephants,
it's a
bit flatto say wha
t they cannot
do, It is not a question of what they
eau stand, but what they are willing
to put up with.
"Tell her she has got to forget that
new fur coat," advises this "Field and.
Stream" writer, "1f it's a bear ltuut
you contemplatd, o1' if it's just a few
days' duck shooting at some local re-
sort, that site has got to forego the
possession of a little hat she scouted.
for in Madame Chez Blois, If site
passes that test she is eligible—no
woman will pass up a new hat for an
idle fancy, not it she's sober!
"Let it be known and thoroughly
understood that site is going out to
do a Alan's job, that it really is not
a woman's vocation and that 110 must
face it entirely from a Iasculine
point of view if she is to make good,
"To begin with her equipment must
be right," adds Capt. Curtis. "It is
only fair to you, to her guide and to
herself. She must wear two pairs of
,woollen socks its a clumsy pair of
shoe -pats for the same reason you and
the guide do, even though site never
wears any but the sheerest silk at
home and abhors wool. For the rest
let her equipment be just what com-
mon sense would' direct you to take
for warmth and protection from wind
and rain. Remember it is a man's
game; s0 site needs A malt's equip.
nest."
Immortality
London Daily Mali (Ind, Cons,): It
Is a truism that' the famous can have
no private life. The relations and
friends of a great man, more parti-
cularly when he is dead and has pass-
ed into "history, must resign them-
selves to seeing 'tire weak points of
Mt character as well as his Virtues
exposed to the public gaze in the in-
terests of truth. If alt biography is
not .o.be reducedto a monotonous
level ' of meaningless eulogy those
thingsmastbe.
Veterinaries use Minard's Liniment
With the campaign at full blast, and
'with hurricanes and tornadoes hitting
here end there, it might notbe'nip-
propriate_ to !refer to 1923 as the "Year
of the Big Wind,"—Seattle chimes.
Y` LIS9-I FROCKS
AT LITTLE COSH"
Jtae rraatin,,,
By spending
't text to nothing,
tresses from last
season or the sea-
son before can he
made stylisit
again. They are
, t.ttauy 10510,10 aped by' a few
changes in lines and 'the quick magic
of home tinting or dyeing.
Alcyone Cali tint or dye successfully
withrue fadeless Dien
t aceles s toad Dyes.
Brilliant stylish tints or shades
a1
-
pPar lite magic right over the faded
or out -of -style colors.' Diamond Dyes
never disappoint, - they don't streak,,
spot or run. They nevrer give 'things
that redyed looks They .have been
perfected by over 50 years of dye -malt-
ing, Tinting with them., is easy . as
bluing and dyeing takes just a littlo
more time to "set" the color, You eau
get all the' fashionable shades from
thein. Insist otr Diamond ,lyes and
Save disappointtnent,
"Color Craft," my big acv, book of
dollar -saving' ]tints, will be sent you
FREE. Just -write Mae Me:stin, Dia-
mond Dyes, Windsor, Ontario,
ISSUE No. 43-''28.
Leh'or and Its Life
London Observer (Ind.): Labor in
most ambitious mood has no de-
sire to take over 0 country made
bankrupt by industrial' dissohsions.
IL realizes, too,that weals though
capital' may be- 'when confronting a
democracy,' it has an immense econ-
omic advantage, Its mobility per-
mits its to abandon a„stricken field
whereon Labor must stay 'and starve.
Appreciating theseIfacts, Laboris
formulating two principles of action—
in politics, independence; in stamp
omics, co-operation. It may go 'for-
ward confident that its political op-
ponents understand and welcome. Ito
attitude.
WEAN AND NERVOUS
A Condition Due to 'Watery
Blood — Easily Corrected.
Through the lise'of Dr.
Williams' Pink' Pills.
Titin, pale girls lack She power of
resistance to disease that rich, red
blood gives. Nervousbreakdown is
the result of thin blood,' So is iudi.
gestion, headaches, backaches and
many other troubles. Girls suffering
from thin, impure blood need just the
help Dr, Williams' Pink Pills can give.
For many years Dr, Williams' Pink,
Pills have been a world-famous blood -
builder and nerve restorer. They ac-
tually make -new, rich, red blood which
imparts new vigor and life to all the
organa of the body. Thieir first effect
is' ustiaily shown by an improved ap-
petite; then the spirits revive and
restlessness at night gives way to
health restoring sleep. For sufferers
from anaemia, nervousness, general
weakness -or
physical exhaustion Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills are a restorative
of the utmost value, This is proved
by the experience of Miss Sarah A.
Mchacitern, R.R. No. 3, Brule,
who says:—"About three years ago
S became very weals and nervous. I
had pains in my side and back. I
also had frequent pains In the back
of my head and neck. I was very.
pale and very weak. 1 had attacks
of nervous irritability, and at times I
was so nervous that life seemed hard-
ly worth living. While in this condi-
tion a friend -strongly advised me to
take Dr. W'lliams' Pink Pills. I began
taking theseapills and used tlterh for
about two months with the result that
there wag such an improvement inmy
condition that friends would ask me
what I was taking, and 1 was only
too glad to tell them it was Dr. Wit.
llama' Pink Pills. I ani now enjoying
good health and a
m lag t
g og ive this
statement for of then
benefit it may be
to some outer sufferer:"
You can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from The Dr.11
1[ Hants Medicine
Co,, Brockville, Ont.
aintiness -and
Individuality
The vogue for formai afternoon
clothes brings back the dressy blouse.
Contrary to the recent reports from
Paris that velvet has reached its
peak and consequently will be on the
decline, most of the very newest
blouses are of plain or printed velvet.
Por blouses, as for dresses, the trans-
parent, silk -back velvet is most used,
but because velvet is so popular gen-
erally, the shiny, stiff, cotton -back
fabric is seen in some dresses Of the
bouffant type. Evening dresses shown
by some Paris openings feature panne
velvet, as do blouses on which soft-
ness and suppleness of- line are not
the main style points.
Contrasting the frocks of a short
time ago with the "fashions at the
present time, it is difficult to imagine
what -selling appeal their standard-
ized simplicity had for women who
wished to express their individuality
by their clothes. Dresses now differ
in their necklines, sleeves, waist -and -
hip -lines and also in their skirt
lengths, so each one stirs a note un-
like the others.
One of the sharpest style points of
dresses, one which betrays whether
they are this year's model or survi-
vals of the past season, is perceptible
in the treatment of the hemline, In
fact, the fashion of the up -in -the -
front, down -in -the -back movement and
other unevenness evidenced by long
fluttering points of chiffon, swaying
fringe aranged in tiers, or tulle in
ruffles, has so captured the fashion
world that stylists are predicting its
passing, as a mode always does the
minute it becomes overdrawn.
For blouses the point of interest
centres at the neckline, with possibly
the hips as a close second. The square
neck is "out,” and both round and V-
shape are in style, lf1s.effect of the
dainty feminity is achieved by touches
of flesh, white and, pink -at the throat,
On blouses tailored to simplicity the
tuck -in style is rarely seen. Sports
blouses use scarfs to add a note of
color to a costume, Instead of tying
oat the shoulder, the bow of the. three:
corner scarf ends in- the back. An -
,other tie for sports wear has ends
lite a'man's tie' and is similar to the
oblong rtarfs worn this summer.
]inched about the throat with one end
ressing through a loop and falling
over the left sire of the blouse, it
comes directly from France and is the
latest chic touch to s smart sports
costurne.0
DAINTY TOUCHES.
For formal wear,
iblouses of rich
material may easily
be matched to
skirts of equally fine material, and the
conibina.tion is a two-piece afternoon
dress, supple enough to bo worn under
the dressiest coat' as well as the after-'
noon dress itself, whose style points
aro almost identical,
Whether developed in 'nasturtiums.
kiargflshei'-blue, rich garnet or other
modish hue, each luxurious dreds has
a touch -of daintiness often expressed
by fine lace or the manipulation of a
light color near the face, es do blouses,
Sometimes, very often, in faet,
blouses have Jabots of matchjting„ma-
terlal ot+ lace or else scarfs a the
same fabric, Jeweled ornasnants strike
Minard's Liniment for aching Pointe,
Red Rose
•
range Pekoe
—To;1r {�
In clean, bright Aluminum'
a nota of brilliance at the side or front
mvhere the neckline -comes to a V -point.
In the new boat neck, the piped linea
of the back extends around in a curve
to the right shoulder.
Another characteristic of blouses
that shows their diet derivation
from afternoon dresses le the treat-
ment about the hips. Blouses follow
the normal waistline by having a nar-
row belt, in. some 'cases: In others,
they are, molded at the hips and
slightly full above, or they are shirred'
gat the sides to seem bloused. Where
the model falls straight, following the.
natural lines of the figure, there is
usually a tie in front, swathing the
flips.
COMBINATIONS.
A dull material, such . as canton
crepe, makes a good background for
the luxurious shimmer of velvet, and
enables designers to secure a rich ef-
fect in inexpensive frocks.
Metal cloth and brocade provide the
color to lighten a dark fall Costume.
These materials, by the way, are
rarely seen except on blouses and
elaborate evening wraps, due, perhaps,
to their lack of draping possibilities,
in contrast to the suppleness of velvet
and the softness of chiffon.
"A srong wind has driven mag y a
Man out to see.”
Worthy of His Hire
London Evening Standard (Ind•
Cons,): It is infinitely better that
men of ability and enterprise should
leave Westminster for the city than
that they should stay in politics and
bleat of the meagreness of their mate-
rial rewards or devote their energies
to the Increase of those rewards rath-
er than t0 single-snlnsed service Of the
country. We want In these days Wren
of ,diverse types in politics. There
will continue to be men bred and
trained to the political life who will
dedicate themselves -wand that use-
felly—to Politics entirely, but to have
tete Houses and the Government filled
by these is to give ourselves over to
an ver -stiffening bureaudracy.
Perhaps the most convenient way
to pass an interstate bus while en
route is on any parallel road in the
adjoining county—Detroit News,
Fifteen nations • signed the peace
treaty, and one thing all have in com-
mon is the conviction that fourteen
aren't to be trusted. — Muskogee
Phoenix.
Minard's Liniment cleanses cuts,' etc.
Weassume that the first clay of the
millennium will be given up' wholly
to wets and drys agreeing as to how
the liquor problem could be sorted.—
Louisville Times.
Witty
Classified Advertisements
RUG YARN
��l' 1 e) r one samples 1 D ee.. StookIng
a n Aline, Dept, 1, Orilha, Ont'.:...
ORXNOBRLR:A R0A138RTs.
® EGTSi!BREll, P1 DIQRBnD; ..$15.00
Liuper pall,. -. AI'so poet table; Jacob
Wagner :C • Son, Shakespeare,
PDMS. WA14TED.
�'•� ASH 'PO W TOUR SrARM. R ,
ll.Inforntatlen, internationalP );E
11'indsor, 'Ont Realty
` EARNS POR. BALE.
100 ACRES, STOCK, iAMPLLMENTS,
dairy, good buildings, nice tom, -
Wm, Woodstock lyoodstock district, A. Eder',461
Xing St. E., IIamilton.
1.
An PINE ASSORTED STAMPS POR .
160, two packages 580. - write
today• 'A bargain.. A. It1. Stilwell,
liovgemon:h, Que.
The. winds "and waves are always on
the side of the `ablest navigatore.—
Gibbon. •
•
A man was found guilty of killing
.another man in church. We're glad
there Is some pelage where you can
commit murder and' not get away with
ft—Efi'
IIImiN,
ews.
YOUR SKIN
can be made perfect by the daily use
or RECHERCHE Cosmetics 'Tor Ladies
who care,"
Ono 2 -ounce. Jar of Vanishing Cream
and 1 Rex of Pace Powder malted to
any address In Ontario for $1.00,
ROBERTSON'S,
258 Tonga Stree' - - " Toronto
eumatism
A little Minard's rubbed into
Parts affected relieves rheu-
matic pull. Also good for.
bruises and sprains.
!
t
t
' r.. i., :a
"KING OF IAINtot
V' iiir a
. t,s�
n
-at
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Ariu.g: t FREE BOOK
rt'U UlLA U Sent on Request
Tells cause of cancer and what to do
for pais, bleeding, odor, etc. Write
for it to -day, mentioning this paper,
Address Indianapolis Cancer Hospital,
Indianapolis, Ind.
HELPED D
DOLE AGE
Woman Praises Lydia E.
• Pinlcham's Vegetable
Compound
Sarnia, Ont."I am willing to
answer letters from other women, to
tell them the won-
derful good Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound
did me. I cannot bo
thankfulenoughfor
the benefits I re-
ceived during the
Change of Life. 1
do housework and
my troubles made
me unfit to work.
A friend advised
me to try the'Veg-
etable Compound, I felt great relief at
once, began to regain my appetite, and
my nerves got better. I will recom-
mend your medicine to all with trou-
hies Iilce I had."—Mus. JOHN 1313NsoN,
162 N. Christina St., Sarnia, Ontario.
How many people you know who end their colds with Aspirin!
And how often you've heard of its prompt relief of sore throat or,
tonsilitis, . No wonder millions take it for colds, neuralgia,
rheumatism and the aches and pains that go with them. The won-
der is that anyone still worries through a+ winter without these
tablets ! They relieve quickly, yet have no effect whatever on the
heart. Friends have often told you Aspirin is marvelous; doctors
have declared it harmless. Every druggist has it, with proverbdirec
tions, ,Why ' not put it to the test?
Aspirin 12 a Trademark Registered in Canada
•