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The Clinton News Record, 1924-07-31, Page 7Mother preserlp „on jGI-INNY is taking a prescriptCon. His careful mother ---thc familly health doctor—ordered it. Her daily Ounce of prevention ---Lifebuoy Soap—works wonders in combating disease. ' Every day your children touch dirty objects and cover themselves with germ -laden dirt. Give them Lifebuoy el -the health soap. Li.1._ bu y pr tects The rich creamy rather -of Lifebuoycarries a wonderful health element deep down into every 'pore. The skin is completely ' purified, and cleansed --delightfully stimulated. HALTH SOA • Vlore film Soap - a HeAltitildbit The odour vanishes after use, bpt, the protection renwins. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO Lb44J2 a BrooklYll's bobbed -haired bandit has j in the morning be aroused and sent been landed'in prison. The record of out on the street to.beg for pennies to crimes committed by this dare -devil bur their father whiskey, Half the young woman hat occupied the front time they were scaotily clad and had page of all the daily newspapersfor very little to `eat. • sorne -weeks Test. What is the record It sad- story all the way back of all this hectic career that led ' to prieon? It is a sorry story, but one toceeeften told. The young girl Cecilia n Cooey, had .no proper uptiringing. She was born on the East Side, the squalid, section of New York City, .1Ier father was a drunkard. She was reaod in neglect. Sometimes Dhe was eared for by the children's sthiety and somotinies she slept in the coat -cellars •when there was no other shelter for her. As a child she had to live by her ',Wits, and, growing up, she lived with whatever men she chanced to meet. Finally, she adopted as her philosophy the emmomprial attitude of criminals, 'What the world does not give ine, I take." From the very day she was horn, Cecelia got if had Start. Her Mother coUld neither Tend nor write. The father had verrelittle edneation tilEALTH EDUCATION BY DR. J. J. hilIDDLETON Proviacial i3oard ot Health, Ontario De. Middletiin will be glad -to answer questions oti Public Health an* tars throttgh this column. Address him at Spadina House, Spading Crescent, Toronto. thronglic The mother, heartless and iedifferenty-the father, a', drunkard. Whet -is the likely f ate of,the children of. such parents? Just what A'd san here, a life of crinee and then' the prison. . . Character -building, uprightness, lionesty and decency ale products of heredity, but they are also products of environment. The I tunny life, the home circle, xnust never depart from our country Or its doom is sealed. A nation's greatness' depends upon the character, uprightness and trust- worthiness of its people. What a lesson there is here for par- ents to learn. What a clarion -call it is for them to bring up a child in the way he or she should go. The care of the child does not cease at weaning' time or when It goes to school. Intel o.nd had been" an habitual runkard ligent supervision, kindly interest and Sound Troop Organization, le summer lime Is a good time for persons interested in Scouting n and desirous of making Its benollis todocal boys to start thiuking,and planning in order to achieve this ob- ject in the fall -,--after schools reopen, It Is wit); this in mind that the folio,. lug notes on sound troop organization are published in this issue. Like any other body, a Boy Scout Troop Will not be it success if organ- ized:in hasty, haphazard fashion by those who have little:knowledge' of what' Sainting really is, and. the Troop foundation' ,required. Numbers ,:'of tiOops have been Started only to die" within a ,few months because of an unwise beginning. ." Practical experience in Canada has. imoduced the following general rules for the organization .of a Scout Troop that will last, and that will realize for the boys the real intent and possibili- ties of the Scout training:, (a) Select. a Tram') Committee :of capable men really' interestedin the church or community boy work;.ancl who have first read such informative literature as What Scouting IS and 'Does, 'What Are You Going to Do With Your Boy? The Wolf Cub', the Troop Committee, furnished free 011 'applica- tion,by Provincial Headgaarters, Bloor and Sherbourne Streets, Torcinto. '(.)) A suitafile meeting place. (c) A Sc,bntmaster suggested by the boys therneelves, preferably, it there is a .cholee, a man with sons of ,his own. (d) In spite of pressure, a small be. ginning, made by selecting three or four natural boy leaders as Patrol Leaders, and the selection by these but of their Seconds. 4 (e) The 'training of P. L's and Sesonds by the Scoutmaster until they have passed fheir Tenderfoot and Sec.ontt Class Testa: Then, . (f) The adding to, the Patrols, one by. one, of Tenderfoot candidates chosen by Patrols themselves,. and trained to pass' their Tenderfeet .tests by.the P. L. or Seconds. „. (g) Study by the Scoutlnaster ef Scouting for Boys,. The Handbook for Canada, Aids to Scbutmastership, The Patrol Systeni, Scouting Gaines. (h) Monthly reading by tb.e Scout- master of The peout Leader. , (i) if it ail possible, taking the Stilwell Course by the Scouttaas- ter; if 710t the Stilwell Course, elle of the correspondenCe courses provided by Dominion. Headquarters. ' all his life. Re never werket steadily trnia comradeship are necessary eV= and never supported the family. What up to college days and after the little support came into the family young person is to benefit to the full - came through the mother. The chil- est from parental care. -If more of dren—there were eight of them, and the old family spirit, carried out amid Cecilia was the youngest—were sadly the right' environment, was hi evi- neglected; they were sent out to beg denee, it is most likely that fewer and as little children, had been known young folks would stray from the to sleep all night in a coal cellar and paths of uprighkness and honesty. Show m Pale Tire hig and :Breathless ,PeoPie who are pale, 'languid, h falpitatien of the' 15 'ort and shortness ,or breath at,Slig,ht exertion aro suffer- ing from thlim impure hlood. If they have the resaintion to take Die right,' reinedy' and stickdo it, --they will find new hcaltlianci siveng0: The remedy that" can always be relied upon is Dr.' Willianis Pink Pills, With every.- doss they improve and invigorate the blood,' and this new blood means. health anti strength.. 0Trs. A. 'Griffiths, Piersom, Maim is ono of the many thoueands Who have,proved tha. value of these pills. -She says: ---"I was'so badly run down -in health that I WaS 'almost bedfast,. The least, exertion would 'leave me breathless, I suffered Troia: 'headaches 'and hacitaches and had no appetite. coulci only, drag 'about the house and found even light housework alMost impossibIC. I tried eves -a1 remedies but they did Lot do 'me a particle of. good. Then a friend came for a visit and she urged me to I try, Dr. Williams' pink Pills.' When I had finished the second hex I could feel that 'they were' helpilig me. By. the tithe I had taken. four boxes rnore I -was a, well woman and every symp- tom of my trouble. had disappeared. 11 'wOuld not be possible for inc to say too much in favor Of 'this medicine, and I alway. s recommend it to run; down people, and have seen it prove i hist as satisfactory in other cases." If you are Wnalf and run clown, you can begin getting new strength to- day'by taking Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. Sold by all druggists or sent. by mall, at '50 cents a..boN by writing to The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, strong rooms and boxes. Of late years, mannfacturets' have used the most re- sistant materials in combination with - the finest ,w,orkmanthin ant the meet intricate examples of the locksmith's craft. Side by side with those effdrts has gone the adoption of explosivea-by 'the burglar sna finally cif the oXyacety- lene torch. .The use of. explosives -the mautifac- turer countered by making the doors of safes and strong rooms fit so. close that no 'crack was available. in. which • PI insert the nitroglycerine . for blow- ingpieces off.But for a leng.time now thti burglar has been able to cut through any safe" or strong-roem door with the oXyacetylene torch, . Iteoeintly, .1i:waver, a metal .alloy las been invented that successfully resisto the intense heat of that flame even if it Is applied for the fifteen hours or so that a burglar can safely work during 'a Week.end. Moreover, au Important alteration has been made in the disposition ,of the materiale in safes end strong -room door. Instead of placing the new alloy outside, the manufaeturers place' it near the Aside lining of the safe or of the door. That gives the burglar Mx more trouble, for he has to cut through twelve luaus or More of special steel and fireproof material before he can get at the re- sistant a110S' At a recent demonstration at the works a the originators of the motel att oxyacetylene torch wa,. played on eel - Napdleon of Science? In Any case' a Revolution. There is one great man who has not yet eineirged—the 'Napoleon of Science. And, Oonsideriug the desire for power with, which humanity is imbued, it seeing surprising. Whether, i1 has' been due 10. a want Of ambition in this directlini hi such men as Watt or Fara- day, or bad business en Ate pert of thole Who hrs,Ve had sach ambitions, its realization has somehowfallen through. It may nave been front prin. ciple or front dieinclinatien to worry about businese prospects that dis- toverers have published their records .for the free perusal of all. At any rate i1. was; bad .beSiness, for what might • not "e, man have done had he "corner- • ed." "scientific interests? It is not, even yet, beyond the bounds of pos- sibility. It is an anomalous, indeed almost, a grotesque poeltion which, science holds in modern society. It's culthate ors have already produced a harVest boyoilll the dreams Of our forefathers: It has beee aegreat labor 01 love with men. like Pasteur, a voyage of adven- ture With Huley and Darwin, or a life time recreation with such as Kelvin, but it hag seldom or never been Is struggle, for gain. • The desire for money end the, scientific Minn an in- compatible ; the seientist has no time for making money; like the artist 'he has otheregreatee values in life, Ile Ploughs and tills and sows, but leaves the harvest for humanity.. And enme- times .humanity ip apt to forget that money givon for scientiflo 'research and to' seientific societies is not 11 be- nevolent dona,tion, but just a little of the .great harvest eeniried to its pro - The three classica,1 economic fact- • oes, Land, Labor mid Capital, hove 'been tredited with produelbg wealth., , for thousands of years, and there are Still continual equabbles ,as -t6 which pre- cludes Most. Mow these last hundred Years. Prolsobly as Much -real wealth hie been prodeeed as in the thousand . before it;. yet the three factca,s have net changed. 'What has -changed our wealth Producing' power 10 a fourth factor—discovery—the revealing of the. Means ,for' the Utilization of the 4Oc1:lltuilated 'energy' - of the ages. Scientific dis,colefry hos. provided the Pittn,derers 'of 'hidden treasures with 'tee's; and RD iaociety-wo are for the Meat part living., on this heritage !Wiriclr'we have Mew ,found how to use, 'When ;we have squandered Mir riches '1,' will be for science to' find other mean of obtaining 'energy, if the world goieg to' support the same number pociple on the same:standard of • • ily- that., accurately as our sauiscss xnen balance their assets and ebts; ,thcir books are riot 'strictly .Come of their assets were afned' by ser.entifie ,disoovory wh.,01.1 our present systeni. of accountancy does not take into consideration,. 'It has been Stated that if one tenth of (Ate per cent': orthe wealth, produced by science were at the 'disposal of scientists, then: the scientist could work in cemparative luxury. ' That is why a Napoleon of Selene Is still passible If neither probable nor desirable. Whethel' 'he emerget or not -the greatest and most inevitable revolution of the age Is that being wrought by the poorly paid soldiers of researth. It Is a revolution. that Will effect the life of the ordinary citi- zen probably to an even greater extent than it hat already altered it,. I1 is a force which will affect philosophy, politics and religion. Theie are some soMeties already iu existence to clear the Way. for this new po.wer which will shower ,biessings on humanity .11 'we can direct it rightly, but may inflict untold misery as long as men remain blind to the dictates of reason, lIliSi- nent among these 'ELTS the lioyal So- ciety, the parent among British -scien- tific societies and -the .first to realize the necessity for placing the services of science at'the disposal of Seeley, and the British' Assepiation foe. the Advancement of Science, which was. instituted for the purpeee lot ,assisting in the reconstruction of the e,camoinie condition of ;England., after the dd- vaetating years of the Napoleonic 'wars, 'The British Aeeeciation has -been ceded , the "Parliainent of Science," a CogneMen which indicates In softie degree the nature of that body. It As a Parnan10111; 62 Which any citizen may become a menTher ter ' the week, of its amnia' session, without election, nierelY by indicating his de: sire to -do so. The reports of its pro- ceedings are noted with interest, for perfoaieal adjustment of our kleas to the new contlititins of life iseone of the inotst needful requirements of our - modern age. ° The Suri's a G,ay Philander. The S'un's' a gay philander, ' As each syket flower knews; 0' mornings early, 'first of all, Tie visits every, rase— Then, while their loaves with dew a 1 -le L1OYGYS near' the mignonette. , By noon he'S kissed the zinnias, Likewise the lilies tall;, 'Plating about impartially, IVialting 'each. hucl a, call— ' Late afternoons the hellyliocicS Ha conrta-alSot the purple phlox! • Within ills glaclen7cicise Pspend . The days, and must, confess , Tire ,sim's my lover, tone -my cheeks . Are broWn frem his carese. His worehipper am I, and he Thus seta ist roYal.Scal on me! , ' Caruthers, For Sore Feet—Mlnard's Linlment,, YOU SAY MR.FLY rELL INTO A BOTTLE Or HAP'PEtlED- To Hirt, THEN? -... NO WHY HE GOT A BAD CA BE or I-I-1E13)41Es! Foiling the Enterprising Bnrear. Ever since locks wertnirst applied to treasure chests, ' says Chamber's 'Journal, a contest of wits has gone on between the thief and the maker of EASY TRICKS The Mystic Figure -27 (2,-I-7.'9) ks, 3 x 6Z1 (6+ Z+.1- ) 845,-1,x72 = 552818 5+3+Z -1-13-i4+3 - (64-(c? '= 5) The trichsler's 'fel/mite number ought to be ihe number nine bo- w -I -use manY of his best -tricks are ,J)ased upon the mysterious quali- ties of that number. I-Ierer is a ,siniple etunt With Which feW are acquainted but which 15 decidedly SYlt0YOUtiLlg. • Write the digit "0" on a slip of paper and put the slip face' down on the table. ,Asir a friend to write on another slip of paper any number he likes and to mul- tiply it by nine or any multiple of nine. When he does tills, he' *ill show yen the product and you will show him the slip on which you wrote the digit '"9." Then it is ,your johN to show him that his precinct really totals nine. Here are a -few examples .but You will have to look carefully some- times to avoid missing the ar- rangement. , (Grip this out and .poste it, with pther series, in erscrapbook.)_ 'Brook Trout: "0 tell me," asked the artist of a ma,n Who ' gtahaeerde ita'ana a dell through which A little babbling brook— "What do -you see in yonder silver Thstream?" . • e mranreplied—as if he spoke in dream -- "I wish I had a hook." "0 that, you cannot mean!" the artist cried; -- "To catch those wohdrous shades, I long have tried, Biit ere my paintrare mixed, From broeze andgreen they've • ehanged to argent grays- -To catch a hue, I've waited many days-- • A tint that is not fixed."; Then there passed by anian with rod • and line, And 'twat agreed that they two should combine . 4. -Th' illusive glints to snare; - But when the fish lay still upen the • bank ' The artist's finer soul within him shrank-- , The °Mors were not there! —Arthur J. Peel The ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY makes finer tear andi more of it Oracles in Flowers. ' Cinderella's Song. , . o little ce.t.' beside the stool, , Pulling oft the petOls, is the t . familiar' of itll ways'ot consulting fate , MY graYish oat, my ashY one, by IneOnn 'of'a floWeh but it le nit the1I'll tE'il You soemUthing in Yettr ea only way. r— An American, in Enit.euad , ' It's I can put the slipper on. , staying recently in an ancient and re- mote country inn, one day missed, her way in its rambling corridors and en- tered 'by mistake the heat be,droofn of Ser pretty chambermaid. .; The girl was there, changing her dress, and.of- fere(' presently to guide tho lady back SUMMER HEAT HD ON BABY The cinders all will brush away, 0 little cat beSide my chair; And I am very„beauttful When I comb down my hair. My dress was gold, my dress was blue, But you can hardly think of thaf. to her apartment. In the brief wait. My dress came th the through the air, 0 little einder-ent, the visitor noticed something that struck her, as, odd. , 'Why litrOi ..ydit pinned that little plant up on the wall?" she inquired. 'Surely -it will fade Miles sit is put in 05, no, ma'am., begging your par- don, It won't," said the girl with pride and satisfa.ction In her voice. "That's .a pin plant, and it's been growing there a week, very innl, has opened too. It's doing grand!" ' It was 'a, pretty ttItt tot yellowatone- crop, starred with tiny golden llow.ers. A few questions abciut its, odes as a "pin plant," and the girl, laughing and blushing, admitted that it was custom- ary muting the girls of 'the village to pin a tuft of the budded plant.upon their bedroom wall as an , oracle of leve. If it lived feebly but did , not bloom, their present rove affairs would come, to nothing; if it withered and' died, they would meet disaster' in love; but if at the end of is few days the little plant, suspended by a leose- ly-tierl thread head downwards from its pin, begau to curio Its steins up- ward till they &toed upright and final- ly the tips beret into bloom—then all was well, and they might expect to Marry and live happy ever after. • In Premed a similar eerious expert- thent with another plant that will open for a 'while and simply live on air is practiced with the common houseleek, which the French call herb of St. John: They drive two hooks or long, project- ing nails into se wall about a half a yard apart In a horizontal line:Aross them In early June they lay a budded' stalk of leek. Gradually ,the leaves along the stalk dry up and fall off at the end neat tho base and new Ones put out near the tip; the flower buds swell an.d finally open in a pretty rose-. colored corymb of blossoms. When the leek, is first placed en the well a Wish 'ea made; whether or not it will come true depends on whether or not ,the leek blown:fa beford the twenty- fourth;of the month—the 'date of the feaseof St Sohn the baptist • This iloraloracler of $t. John was a `serious affair seriously believed in a century ago; it is still commonly tiled in many peasant cottages of /Prance, but nowadays only In the seine spirit of simple ouriasity in Which any little Canadian girl appeals to the daftly tp -tell whether the coining husband will be "rich man, poor man, beggar man, .thief." Minaret's Liniment tor Rheumatiero. , It is not enough to keep only your hands going—a clock's hands keep on 'going, but only in circles. No season of the year is so danger- ous to the life :of little ones as Is the, summei. • The excessive heat throws: the little stomach out of (Miler so quickly that unless- prouipt aid is at hand the laby;_may be beyond all human help before the mothei• izes he is ill. Summer is tha". tendon when diarrhoea, , .pholera iniantum, dysentry and colic are most prevalent. Any one of these troubles may proire deadlyif not promptly treated. Dur- ing the eurnmer' the mothers' best ictEhotiihte 'ainleywiiiamllb.oly.. friend is BabY'S Own Tablets. They Flo,V Ma,liiii,WO.rtiq D. ,0 YOU f°41)1; fisfl)tetletitcliftiatutPtleast. ew ' Speak? effect other than raising a slight blis- ;stomach and keep baby healthy. Tho regulate the bowels, &eaten the The average tinedticated person uses 1 ter. 'rite same torch 'when tried on or - hut 400'1i/eras in his or her -everyday dinary steel -Cut throliet,it. rapidly. life. , I It will be interesting to see whether The average school child uses about the burglar will be able to overcenie. SOO Words lodailyconversation. 1 the new obstacle: Per the present the The average business man has a ' honors* are 'with tbe safeenaer. • I vocabulary of about 0000 words—but - ---- to.. ---. gets along on 1,000. ' Get Horses to Work VVithout the The average college, man or wonian ' ' ' D'ilver. speaks Omit 3,00 words—and kdows in hanling eoncrete from the mixer 8,000- or more. ,,..., to the e Mut where 11 15 needed In malt - The average -Literary" PerSon uses mg pavement, the horses of a Chicago 10,000 to 12;000 words—and knows compahy have., been Gained to wcirk 10,000. . I witlicsat drivers. One Moe. at the The scholar knows and Uses about Aixer• turns them' around and spots 20,000 words. . Ho.,W many words do you.know? Needed in Her Work, Maid—"I feel_terrible, mum, about losing, my two front teeth." mistress—"Oh, ru don't look badly without them." Maid—"I don't Mind the looks so Much, but they were my pillOwcase. teeth." • the carte...ender, tile chute, another at ad dump turns them around arid trips the.gate, and O thirclemidway between the other two,keeps the homes. mov- ing. -owe the a,nimale are broken in; 11 is Enid 'that they rarely give any trouble, Making Rugs In Persia. The making of 5150 is the chief and almost only , industry in Persia. , Ati idea st the slie of: this po.ir IS Obtained by. the pre.ence o , , , xys,s '1 tlie,picture: 'The larger Is a 'lunge; 35 pounds in 'weight, a lake trout; of 24- 'pounds. Both with' many. others won landed ow:1y tiii scasoli at Itenora, Ont., on, Loire of th•ty' 'Woods. , . •the 'young n' one ,trip Tablets are solIl by medicine dealers or by mall at 20 cents a box from The Dr. 'Williams' Medicine Co., • Brock- ville, Ont. _ The Horse to His Driver, • • in Summer. If a horse could talk he would have many things to say to his driver in, summer. He would sav.:—:" “water inc often when the heat is intense, a little at a time if I am warm; don't water me te'seon after I have eaten, and always at night wben I have eaten my bey. "When the sun is hot let me breathe once in a while in the shade of some house 'or tree, Anything upon my head, to • keep off the Still, is bad for Ina unless it is kept *et, or unless tho air can,circulate freely underneath It, stop sweating suddenly, or if I act strangely, breathe short and quick, or if my ears droop, get me into Ole shade at once, remove harness and bridle, wash out my mouth, sponge me all over, sfliower my legs, and give me two ounces of aromatic spirits of am - _moult, or two puttees of sweet spirits of nitre in a pint of water, or a pint of warm coffee. Cool my head at mice, ttaing cold water, or if noce,essary eliopPe,d ice wrapped in a cloth. "A warm night in a narrow stall neither properly cleaned nor bedded unfits me for work. "Turning the hose on me is too risky a thing to do unless you are looking for a sick horse. Spraying the legs and feet when I am not too 'warm on a hot day would be agree -- • "Please sponge out my eyes, aml nose end dock when I come in tired and dusty at night with -clean cool water, and also sponge me under the odllar, and saddle of -the harness." ' PA Ina rd's Linimentl-leals After Rain.' I never caw the sky so blue; The rain has, washed it clean. The wiS,ps ofcloud are white and few; The pasturee,, diadomed with dew, With cobweb.,tented grasses, shine ,'Aud buttercups between, f, So Shin,e the spirit's. earth and airy, Swept clean by storm's of White thoughts go drifting, sett and My dress Is gone a little 'white; My dreee was sWeet and blue and cob?: But it will come again to me, 0 little cat besid,e my stool: --tlizabeth Madox Roberts. Buy your out-of-toWn supplies with Dominion Express Money -Orders: • And golden.starred the gras,s,es lio. With deeda of..gfdee lilre buttercuPs That open after, rain, , ' , Starbuck. Think inure 'about , the troubles of o aliptrt your own, 'smte00000505,rans,00000505,, spinvirall IMPAIRS, inatledl.to shipment on machines Or tenons. All „goods shipped [rem warehouse at Guelph, Ont. All diggers equipped with shOrt him truck. Sprayers: 100 DORM tank, 12 noz- zle., Triplex maim. Catalonia and prices on rainiest. A. E. COMAS, 20 Pork Aga., amilph. (Int. °uteri* nod Maritime Distributor. Here 'sill° Puny You Need SMA TAN EM Douzaze ACTING PUMP Pumps more easily, more Weal and more efficientlytheranewing pe model which it has deflriltelY reo zed Repairs easibrmadeviith housebold tools. Can be drained to prevent 'freezing. Easily primed. .Ass APOUT MAT YOUR HARDWARE 50051 4AMts SMAILT.PLANT , BROCKVIttE,ONI- Last year 198,000 people emigrated from Great Britain -92,000 more than in 1922. witnard,s Liniment Relieves Pain. Ten thousand Finns expect to emi- grate to Ontario this summer. Of course, it's a new beginning and yet it virtually means Ontario's Finnish. IRMITATEI) BY St . N,WIND DUSP&CINDEkS RECOMMENDED 1,501.0 BY -DRUGGISTS G. ornemsia WAITS FOIS P.t. 001 CARS 0000 01II1N,000.C411C.140014 Say. "Bayer Aspirin' INStSTJ Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you . are' not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved' safe by millions and prescribed by phy. sicians for 24 years. Acpept only a Bayer package Thn Ptpk3 'Thin; neiwous, underweight people take on healthy dealt and grow eturdY a.nd ambitious. when Bitro-Phospin:te as guaranteed by druggists is taken a few weeks. Price 01 per pkge. Arrow' Chemical' Co. 25 Pront St. East • . .Toronte,' dn,t, • After ',,,ha'vink 9 Kith tilt face witlt 'IVIInard'a Mixed with, sweet ,oil. Very' Poothing to the skin, •• which contains proven directions Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100-Drugaiste Aspirin ts the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Boyar Manufaoturo of Mono. aceticaeldestor of Salloylicaeld Rough Pimply Skin Cleared By Cuticura You may rely 6n Cuticura Soap and Ointment to careforyour skin, scalp; hair and hands. Nothing better to clear the skin of pimples, blotches, redness or roughness, the scalp of dandruff and thehands of chapping. garapie Bitch tree by bioalk. AgfirlsaixtlAtan '.5110°,e'SOGOarDfacirill.GrIt2Strul SOD: Talcum 26c. OW"' Tor ono now Shaving Stick. THEY TELL THEIR KEIGHBORS Women Tell Each Other How They Were Helped by Lydia E. Pink- - ham's Vegetabk COmpound. Woodbridge, Ont.—"I took Lydia B., Pinkbarn's Vegetable Compound for fe- male troubles. I would have headaches, backaches, pains between any shodl- . dere and 'under my shoulder -blades and dragging down feelings on each aide. I Was tometimes unable to do my wak and felt very badly. Sty mother- imlaw fold me abeut the Vegetable Compound aed I got some right away. It has done me more good than any other medicine 1 ever took and I roc- orembncl it to my neighbors. 'You are, quite welcome to use this letter as a testimonial -if xou think it will help some poor sufferer: --Mrs. EDGAR'SIIYareNs, 'R. IL 2, Woodbridge, Ont. rio nearlyeveryueighborhood irtevery' town and city in,this country there are women who hatte been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the treatment of ailments peculiar to their sex, mad ,they take pleasure.in passing the good -word along to other women. Therefoe, if you are troubled in this way, why not giveLydia F. Piffle. ham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This ftunous,remecly, the medicinal ingredients of which are deriVed-feom roots and herbs, has for focty years, proved its value in ouch casee. Women everywhere bear willing teetireony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink- harn'-e Ve.getable Compound. •0 ISSUE No. 30--'24,