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The Clinton News Record, 1925-08-13, Page 3For the bridge party --for' afternoon tea—whenever you want something en- tirely. - different from "the sandwiches teat are usual-: ly served -- Salmagundi Sandwiches- made with Keen' s Mus- tard are simply delicious. This recipe i, one of nearly irir our new Recipe Book.: Write for.a copy.-- It's FREE. COLMAN-XEEN (Corrado) Limited. DEO. Ir ia? A-ullcist St 377Etontr.eal MOVIE -MAKING IN CANADIAN ROCKIES While itmay be true that in the nai;lring of'movin.g picture's Cana," a•. ;„ags a trifle ;behind the United States, there ie at feast one particular ditch American producers are becepalt` ingmore and' more depondent upon this,* Doiuinion for the prone.- production etj their super-flYms ' And thatarticular` ;s -scenery:. `.. �t They may have their star's,' their meelranical':contrivance t114'experi- once and their wealth bnt.,,,d4r,'ing the bast few years they have learned that. for sheer beauty of _scenery and splen- dor of "settings," the Canadian PaelLlc Rocky Mountains ;tire un.arpassable, That this discovery, was made at all. Is due mainly to one, Idr. Ernest Ship- man. Two or three years ago itoccurred to Mr, Shipman' (who has produced some notable pictures in his time) that there were certain spots. in the Rocky Mountains, such as Banff, Lake Louise, Emerald Lake and.. their', environs; -which were,. au account of their singu- lar beauty, admirably. adapted; to the production of northern dramas. So he Marshalled ' his forces, placed' his, be- loved megaphone securely' under his arm', and embarked for the Rocky P1_ountaine, Here, with IIenry:MacRae directing, he proceeded to farm "The Foreigner" nen¢ the shores of Lake Louise, with, the 'magnificent mountains. fora back- ground, and, for a stage, one of ,the most exquisite spots on earth. The result ;was that, not only did he pro= duce a splendid• picture, but that the Rookies sprang into instant popularity asa. setting for nor -Mehl dramas. '- 1 Since then spores of other "super - films" have J,een'produced and many villains. have paid the penalty of their foul deedeete many modest maidens have ytelded-te'the wooing of strong silent men; many dauntless ' heroes have faced the nameless terrors of the Alaskan wilds, on the peaceful shores of Emerald Lake and the innocent highway between Banff end Winders Ocean Rich in Minerals. The total amount of any of the e le moats occurringin entire ocean. is stupendous, says • "Thrift Magazine." Iodine exists in sea water only to the extent, of about two, partes per million, yet the entire, ocean contains some. 60,000,000,000 tons of iodine, valued at present prices a't.$540000,000,000,000. Bromine is .also obtained in a limited way from the mother liquor left after, the crystallization of salt from sea water. J gallon of sea water contains ep- ee' k'imately a ,quarter of a pound of sell, and since the average density of rock salt is 2.24 times that of water, the entire ocean, if dried up, would yield approximately four and a. half cubic miles of salt. • - Same Eggs. 'Upton Sinclair was •condemning, in Las Angeles, the extortions of the mid- dleman, "In prewar days," :he said, "the middleman sold us . eggs • for thirty cents, at, dozen. Now he makes us dray ninety cents a dozen, And the worst if it is"-- Mr.Sinclair gave a grim laugh. "They're the seine- eggs." Buddhas In Pearl, Miniature Burrhas are inserted into oystora In China to make pearl Bud- dhas. • Minaret's Liniment for Corns and Warts Wells have now to be driven to a depth of over 220 feet underLondon - to reach water. A ctlntury'ago the pressure of underground water was sufficient to bring water to the sur- face wherever' a boring' wag made., WE- WANT CHURNING C M We, supply cans and pay express charges. We pay daily by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. • To obtain the top price, 'Cream • must be free from bad favors and contain- not less than 30, per cent. • Butter Fat. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For references -Head „Caine, Toronto, Sank of Montreal, or yur Meal banker. Established for over thirty gears. Nese SMP Enameled Sink Price Complete goo -00 est value ever offered. -Made' of Armco iron, coated with purest 151' Wbita . s ffnamcL"• -Centre drain;. with or without tap holes. Price incliidee'all frttiag,. Alec the. SMP Enameled Drain Eoarel Price $6,ma., Whitearm meted Armco Iron, atrang,rigid, vcryhandy; aloe unique valnc Fitonugly to oink. Q. real plumbing tensation.. Price includes ail fittings Sgld by plumbers. hardWare'atorea, or write direct to eSNEEr'METAL PRODUCT Co "eat 81p;SreEPL '.TORONTO WINkIPEe '♦♦ ;e0MONTON VANCOUVER_;4AtOl1RY• f✓idA Use ` 'Sensate Crescent Ground Saws;, heir teeth areof. even thickness throushout tire 0ntir3 )owl'. of the saw, !brie molringbindinainlhekerE.: mpoesiblc. CrescentGrind 'ng 1s no exclusive $imondn feotnre.Simonde Canada Saw Cs. Ltd. nuNpAs 6T W T CanT0' MOMT nL �r. Lance Tooih Crass cut, fro, 22 9.24 Tam Corr! Tod Side'' Users Write Sinionds Canada Saw Co., Limited, 1550 Dliudas St: West, . Toronto, Ontario, for prices on Simonds Special Circular Cord Wood. Saw ISSIUE Ito, 32-'25a Notable Plrtures Screened Among the most nokable pictures screened' entirely or in part, with the Rocici s for a background, ground, are "Back to God's Country," "The River's End," 'The Alaskan," "Empty Hande," "The Sky P1501," "Glengarry schooldays, "The Man from Glengarry," "The Val- ley of Silent Men,", :"Frivolous Sal," "Strongheart" and "The 'Foreigner." The -chances, are that those who gaze M silent admiration on the forbidding beauty. of Alaska, the hills of. Shasta' et the still Sierrips, are, in reality g • :. EX -PRESIDENT OPENS COURSE - • Chief Justice W. H. Taft, ex -President of the 'United. States, replying to the speech of welcome at. the opening of the now 6;000 -yard championship golf course at the Manoir Richelieu, Murray Bay, Quebec, just prior to teeing off with a 170 -yard drive. Mr. Taft complimented- W. H. Coverdale, President of the'. Canada: Steamship Lines, Limited, on his Company's 'enterprise. In creating one of the finest golf 'courses -in EastepiwCanada;set among some of the (nest erenery in.tihat pee(; of the Dominion.: Stories About Well -Known Peopje Quiet "Heroism, vid Prato,, until recently director General sir George Higginson,-whd •of:the-R Sir Daoyai.Boteitie Gardens at -Kew, -celebrated his ninetyminth birthday' re- The medal specially ;marks Sir Gently was once the hero of an 123151- David's' work in connection with the dent which recalls a famous episodein production of that most valuable drug, the •life'of Lord Beaconsfield. .quinine.: By organizing the :Goyern The General icas, taking me. wile, meet cimchona;plantatione, which an - ilea Was just recovering from a severe: nuttily Yield vast quantities of quinine, he •has brow ht this drugwithin reach 11•lmess, to Bournemoutih, At Win-, g v' ch ter he called a potter and gave ,of every part of the world has- thereby nisn Some order. The mart executed it; saved countless lives, -. and then seining the door to. The Gen- A Duty Performed. eral'e fingene were caught in•it, but he Novelists as well as prophets, it ap- neade no comment, though, he Malec pears,Jack honor In their own country. have been suffering' the most excruoi-'.At least Sir James, Barrie. does.. Im Ming pain. But not until he had as-- eiemories and Adventures, 'Sir Arthur ;tired at Ida. destination, and had seen') Conan'Doyle tells of the: tolerant but his wife safely insltalled in. her hotel, unenthusiastic attitude .that Sir James? did h ave his handn e.hs eto. e _ old neighbors ghbors at Ii ir riemnir adopted Quiet heroism -like this seems to be a • toward him. chaaacteristc of our rage. Another-) "Itirriem'uir folk could -by no means good'eicamplo of it was provided des, understand Berries, success and look- ing looking the deelight raid of June 13t11,1917. el upon their great eon as en Inex- I The Shoreditch County Court was set- piicable phenomenon. They were ac- ting at the time, and though bombs tually aware, however, that tourists were -falling all round, and one of them were arriving from all parts to see the made a big hole in the ceiling, the pro- plate,. on account of Barrie's books,. •^ ceetlinge- continued:' I " 'I suppose you have read them, 3 "If we ere' to die, let us die as brave said to the wife'of the local hotel man. Englishmen should," observed Judge ""Aye, I've tend them, and steep, Clue,, and a girl who was in the wit steep, weary work it was;' said she." nese-box declaredher readiness to'eon-' A Titled Typist Now. 'theme if no one fainted. Counsel then . resumed hie crosa'examinetion, The Quinine King. 1' - "F the );cation ofbotanyto th a o . PP development at the raw materials of the Empire,' the Society of Arts has • Week by week come unnounoamenta that one or another member of the Bri- tish aristocracy has, gone into the world of business, . Lady Constance Howard, sister of ;the Countess of Car- lisle, ds the latest. She has turned az- awarded the Albert Modal for 1926 to stenographer and typist, Ing at something far nearer home, not 1 neetrly so 'forbidding and 'infinitely more beautiful -the :Rosy Mountains themselves.," So, the 'United "States. may leave her Hollywood and ber monopoly of the industry, but now that the value of the RockiM as a place Where people may shoot the rapids, kill each other, make love, win fortunes 'and indulge' in the other pleasant pastimes• peculiar to moviedoni, has been .realized, it ie to be hoped that Canada's position in the realm, of the silent drama will shortly become more prominept tlsasi it has- been in the past. vr The Rockies, are new easily access- ible, there are -hotels at some of the most attractive' points, the light,• at- mosphere end other conditions are goad, and there is no reason in the World why' they should not eventually become a j eritable "Hollywood of the Poems That.Aren'tr;True., How many who have recited- "The Wreck of the HeSBerus," possibly the beet -known ballad in our literature, know that the famous ship, Instead of, being' lost with all,hande•,actually re- turned to pont with no more serious damage than a broken bowsprit? Maritime records for the year 1889 record .a great storm on December lath, when, among twenty other ves- sels, ,the Hesperus was' driven into Bos- tonharbour. so it is-ditlicult to aecannt for Longfellow's entry in his diary two days later: •''News of ,shipwrecks. Horrible. p11' the coast. 'Twenty' bodies • washed ashore off Gloucester, ;one female be- ing lashed to--a`ltee of Wreck," He then mentions details regarding the Hesperur, and concludes: "I must write e ballad upon :this," A con week rse he le' of :1• p s amakes this entry: '!I have, Itolten ground an es new ileld, , namely, ballads, beginning with 'rhe Wreck of the Hesperus' Dai the reef of Norman's Woe, in the great storm a fortnightago.I'shall'send it.to` some newspaper, I have a great notion of working upon the people's- feelings. An almost equally -famous poem 1s' Guar cl., Iiingsley's "Throe Fishers." Tire story to graPiiically told' was the result of.a fit of love spirits onthe part of -a tired parson. • Kingsley was very keen an social re. 'form and was regarded in lea day ,aa rater a dangerous type -of clerical ScclaList. ,-Thus, when he went t9 preat'h in a West -end church lre,great- ly Off erred the incumbent and did not ebicape a public'protest. IID, returned to Eversley Vicarage late that night, but idiltead-of going to bed hepaced about liis'garden. The next morning he:recited' 10 his wife the beautiful linen; "Three fishers went sailing out into the ween:" The story of the boy.Felicla Heniane oagltf "Casati anoo," wile stood, ba the burning deck" of the French flagship Orient and Was involved in the 'sxplo- sign of.its powder magazine in the Bat- tle of the Nile, is not, well' authenti- cated. Thele may have, been such a .buoy, but seeing that be 'perished with his father it difficult to s -ay who „told, -the sstcry," and it is pertain that the poetess draws very largely on her sem' tinsentai imagination. One of the'mcet_flagrant cases of a Pohl, letting imagination igncre facts is ;furnished by. Oliver Goldsmith, wlljosse "Deserted Village" is one of the most, beautiful poeins in the language, The poet anticipated criticism' In his ide4c lieu of rue post" to Sir Jeahua indeed se "I knew you est object, andNEW HEALTH FOR ' indeed several of our best and wisest i Wends eoncur•'tn t'he opinion, theut the depopulation It deplores is nowhere to �gpp��t ,Ag4p he seen' and the disorder it •1 nts SUFFERING dtl f a h � ams llaffi'0� � ➢A are only to be Bound in ,thee .. poet's imagination:" Whenin Doubt. "What dies Dile do when all: the rest is taken away from one, when lifshas grown" trivial, stunted, and -narrow?" This question is asked by a 'character in -!'Wages of Sin," by- :Lucas Melet, The answer• given 12: "Aftep a time one lights la candle called Patience and guide* one's footsteps by -that" p ld dreary days that -is :a splendid light to' have, for it will shine when el/My other light is oxtingumehed. It is oar highest wisdom to have that lamp always clean and • burning. Many a dark path and obscure turning will be revealed by Patience. When we are in a corner or hemmed in by all manner oe,obstaeles, the need Hope as well as .Patience: To lose hope when evetythtng seems• against us, is to be in the slough of despair. 'Patience may become exhausted. It may be tried to its, lastestanda. but Hope need never burn out. Sometimes it may flicker and spiottereend burn low fir a moment, but Faith relights. it. If Faith failed, Love would do the re- lighting. Lotatebacit over your pant and you will discover that we are always being h'elpe4 in tills way. When; strength is failing, Patlence, slope, Faiathr-or Love Comes along and woos us, back to health and activity. They, are never far away from any of us. However,comgiex may be tlie"mlaze, there is a way out. The .exit has• to be' Considered, re cseetainlY, far it 'is haver selerevealed. It may be yeti are outaof the maze. before• you realize it, That often -happens. But don't Dom- plain if in your effort to get through you come up against a barrier and lint the way has a blind-encl. Go back cheerfully:. and try again. Keep up a good heart, laugh at' your. impossibili- ties, ,and -say: "It ,shall be done.' That is a wonderful tonic. Don't live in a fog if you scan poe- sibly be out of it. Try your hardest to see da'yllght. Things have their true proportions in the light. But -never complain and never blame any: One except yourself. Whilst everyone affects' ,and influences everyone else, no one else, is .to blamefor our mistakes. When you are doubtful what to do, 'just be advised never to look down. Look. tip, the sky, the.etare above, -Will whisper to thee of His changeless dove. We are not just as specks, an the ocean of:life, drifting anywhere. We - h.ave,a work to do, and we are .Gelated -to a '}Divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew.thonr how we may," • So, trust' the Star of the -Morning, for as certain as night follows the day that star 'will guide you through pa,j titmice and`laope to victory end -joy. Aching 'Backs az9d -Tired Limbs Need Not he Endured.- -- Tao many women enalura Suffering that castsa shadow over'half her ex- istence. Aching back, tired limbs, at- tacks of faintness, splitting headaches need) not be apart of a woman's lite. Such trials indicate plainly that 'the blood is thin and watery and that the _sufferer needs the help of a real tonic such as Dr. Williams' Pink' Pills. Sue ferin ': h S seamen who have -used this medicine speak of it in the highest terms. Among those who have been thus helpesi is Mrs. Ada L. Harman, Virden, Man., who- weltesc—"Follow- ing the birth of a still -born child a few years ago, I' had a very serious time: I -was ,so weak for months, that I could not walk across the room without a feeling of faintness.' I had scarcely strength enough to stand up, and when dressing would; have to it down two • or three times. My'face 'and lips were colorless, I had no appetite, and life did not seem worth living., A friend. urged .me to try Dr, Williams.' Pink Pills and I got six boxes. Before they were all gone I Mlt improved. My appetite was: returning, color Wm. com- ing 'into ; my face; and I was visibly stronger. I continued talkingthe pills and fully`regainee my former' good health. I -consider Dr.. Williams' Pink Pills a. bleasing to weak women, and hopemy-- , experience will induce some other sufferer to try then," - You can get these pills front any. m dioine dealer, or b y mail at60 cents 'a hex direct -from The 'Dr, Williams? Medicine. Co., Brockville, Ont. , Net Compulsory. Landlady—"You Must -try some, of this hash, Mr. Shye." Mr. S.—"Is it -compulsory?' Landlady — "Of course not it's o beef." • Lincoln Was Resigned. Even Abe Lincoln, though never noted for his beauty, had 'acme pride I"in hie appearance. One .day, the story is *told, while .going down, the street, he met 'a man,wbo looked )rim over Closely and drewgun on hint. "Stranger," the; man said, "I swore that 1f I ever net any pull homelier than X -,was, I would shoot hlcri on sight. "Brother," drawled Abe, "If I'm home: liar than you, I reckon you might go Nails Given Setter Hold. Packing!; cases conning from Europe have been found fastened together with tenpenny nails that have spiral flutes in the sides to afford: a better grip cn the wood, 'Phe grooves also decreg,sc rho liltolitood of splitting -the boai•cl and help -iii driving the nail' ,str•atgh fdi.iarcl'S Liniment for Burhs. Graphite In Greenland. The .world's richest deposits of graphite; sufiici'ent for largo scale, min- ing' for :ten years,: were recently dis- covered,iu. Greenland. • World's Biggest Bluff. The island of Finermsa. in the mouth Pacific possesses the ',Aghast sea el:ai'fs in the world, First accill got s. Altl%diCgii tvaceivatign is int sotnbly nkeJfllr to offer ncl there alnlde 'v'ldensS+ lirttbhtswau l,. a is od by las-in i�t 'and others,,:in rife Itur£ll districts af-Eselasid 'long below his: day, It was common, knowledge amongst these 'mold() that an attack of cowpox ' lanmuhizcd; the sufferer against shall: pox, 221(1 it wa$ucual for farm 'woriters- to`infect 't1 t'anselves ani their diildre,i with the Rosner complain;. -to protect' them against the hitter, indeed, twenty-two years before Dr. Jenner mode: his, first vaccination a rnrnutr named i3 nttnin Jesty, of Downaha3, openly annotated the prac- tice; but, not being a medical man, he .eras laughed at for his pains. Ja'parese View Gardens on Plan of. Paintings. 'Japanese, look upon a gar•.den as a picture, beautifullydesigned and framed, much'.as 'tire Occidental. looks nuposi n painting. Professor Takutna Tomo, landscape architect of Waseta. University, Japan, told Seattle 'on a lecture tour of the United States, "Our Japanese gardens --are entirely different from gardens in any other part of the world," Mr. Tone said: "In all Western nations the garden is con sidered a collection -of, rare' and beauti- ful plants, dowers shrubs and trees, rather.than the picture for which the Japanese strive. Japanese gardens, are more' naturailstic - than .architectural." Not Going Just Now.- "Why is it we never hear tire "Watch in the Rhine" any more?" •'Its in hock'." I(EEP CHILDREN .WELL 1 1 I DURING HOT WEATHER Every mother knows how fatal the hot eummer metnths are to small child- ren. Cholera' infantum, diarrhoea, dysentery, Colic and stomach .troubles' are rife at -this time and often a pre- cious little life is, Post atter only a few hours illness. The mother who ),ceps Bab,y'a Own Tablets• in the housefeels safe. The occasional use of the Tab- lets prevent stomach and bowel trou- bles, or if tmouble comes suddenly— as it generally does -the Tablets will bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail' at 26 coxes a box from . The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co:, Brockville, Ont,. Safe From Criticism. • "I was afraid my sermon Met Sunday Would annoy some of my people, but it didn't," said: the vicar. "What Was your eubject?" asked his friend. 'The Duplicity of the Average Man,' and I spoke eretty plalslly." "You couldn't tread on any corns that, way. Every man considers bin1- eelf above the average." A Rejoinder, e, 'Leonard Bacon, whowas one of the beat -known, theologians- . in New Eng- land ngland a half century ago, was attending a conference, and' some assertions he made iw'hia address were- vehemently. objected to by is member of the opposi- tion. "Why," he expostulated, "I never heard' of sachet thing in all my life!" "Mr. Moderator," rejoined Bacon calmly, "I pan not allow my- opponent's ignorance, however vast, to offset my knowledge, (however email." Play Safe, "Bet your lite I don't," - said the chatty'drummer to the other man in the •emoken•. "I was in Windsor when they had that last dose of smallpox and'-I'don't allow any child of mine to me to school until he is vaccinated. I say if a •scratch on the arm will pre- vent a fellow getting that, why I'm for it. The day I arrived, another chap and myself bumped up against a .nian Who was. just coming down with it. When I found out about 11.1 was a bit upset. and figured - that 5 was about ten years odd when.I was last vaccinated; the chap with me hadn't been done at all because his father didn't believe in it: I escaped just with the old scar. He came down about a week later and had a bard time 't0: -come through: That's enough for me—vaccination's all right. ^ ` "Wo commercial men—and of course it's just the Same thing with My wife and kiddies, too, when they go away from Home—can't afford to take a chance. I thinly any man Is mighty foolish whp walks into danger width will mean being sic)[ for six or eight' weske worry and anxiety, to nay noth- ing of doctor' hills', - Hospitals' and nurses; so that's why I take a shot' of typl}pfd vaccine every.2 years. They talk of the soldiers not getting typhoid inning the wee' -(and It is true, of course), but Ir judging from my'own' eiperience, Sometimes: on the -road I have had to drink milk, and water' in places which Were primed later to be real nests of typhoid and I' haven't had a day's sickness, while three or four times other travellers took the fever and were off for sine weeks` or more; this meant that my dose of vaccine saved me In'money•"alone' eix or seven hundred dollars'. "That vaccine isn't made for 'noth- ing, but the ''money the government spends on it (It's all free, you know) nrearen a real service to the people. Protection,.: safe- and sure, may he had against diphtheria, scarlet fever, typlicl40 fever anr3 smallpox. _ Tested products distributed free within the. province by Ontario Department of Health, "patina'IIoirse, Toronto, Minaret', Linitttent for Dandruff. 'garotte,' � This 1,a1 ,;ie -d of potatoes_ in 1924.; in Canada is estimated at 56.548,000; ewe. from 561.,625 acres, as compared .t,;;tred with 5.5,497,000 cwt, from 560,942 .cies in 1.923. and in lb 'VACUUM (AirF-TIGHT) TNP1$ 111111i1111111111111C The Tobacco Quality Superstitions of Alaskan ' Eskimo. Alaskan Eskimos have established idealsf ' o astronomy, Stays Lionel Tra- vis, trader, who spent many years with the . northern natives. They call the Great Dipper a herd of caribou spread out for mutual protection, with a long single be of leaders. 'Thetriangular staxe of Cassiopeia are three atones supporting an oil lamp. The Pleiades areteamts of dogs pursuing a polar bear. The new moon is either wet or dry by its curves. If the curve is capable of 'holding a harpoon line wet and stormy weather is due, so Eskimo hunters remain in the igloos. Should- the curve permit the lariat to slide off, the men hurry forth to Beek game. The Eskimos also maintain supersti bone about matinees and failing stars; all of which apparently control the weather, lee conditions, .the abundance of game or fee bearers. --- Romance of Opals.. , The ne-w -that a valuable black opal hasbeen found by a "noodler" in l Queensland will probably leave un-! moved most people in thiscountry.' „ret there he romance behind the brief trn- nauncement. The black opal is one of the costliest of gems, es it Le also one of -the most elusive. This is, being exploited today by•men, mostly Chinese, termed "need- leers," who rake over the heaps of de- bris ebris from old•aban'doiied workingsin eeareli'of opals thrown away through. not being seen. On the face of it this sounds, rather like looking for needles in haystacks. Yet many noodles; it is asserted, earn and Money. eY. 'Woodland covering 15,000 acres near Stettin, Germany, has been burn -1 ed down as the result of someone carelessly throwing down a lighted 1 Minard's Liniment for Aches and Pains mss - The royal yabht Alexandra, former- ly belonging to Xing Edward, has flow; been sold and will be used for pleasure" trips to Norway. Id PeIxsl`le Bltro-Phosphate feeds • the nerves and old people need it to make them, feel and .look younger. It's . the one beat nerve builder -for weak„nerve-ex hausted min and women and that is why we guarantee it, Price $1 per. pkge. Arrow"„Ohemical Co., 25 Front St. 17ast, Toronto, Ont. ATHLETE Minard's' is wonderful for the rub -clown. Takes' out the stiffness, soothes the br•uires. .r ar • Co-operation, like charity, must be. gin at home. FOR YOUR EYES .❑ 1. • Refreshes Tired Eyes t Wr14eMurineCo.,Chicogo,forEyeCar,Ecolc ViCakaaRaireVAtirdiftWz FAE APS DISFIGURED With Pimples. Terribly Itchy. y Una Healed. " My trouble began with black- heads and pimples on my face. The pimples were large, bard and very red, and some of them festered. They were terribly itchy causing me to scratch and the right side of my face was disfigured. The ir- ritation kept me awake, and my face was a eight. ” I read an advertisement for Cu- ticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free (sample. I purchased more and betoreiong I• saw a ;wonderful change.' I continued the treatment and now I am healed." .(Signed). Mies Louiee MacDonald, :Dox 172, Mary St, Newcastle, N. B. Use Cuticura to- clear your akin. 6..wpi, Bona Pro by 0551: Address pan filen Pinot: Btenbotue, Ltd.3ioatrut! Prlc., Sods 725Ointment 22 and 50,. Talcum 2A3. id- Cuticura Shaving Stick lac. L U T I -RED D T ,. All THE Ti Et s Nerves Gave Little Rest Relieved by Lydia E. Pink+ ham's Vegetable Compound Harrowsmith,Ontario.—"I took ,your' 1 medicine before my baby was born and j It was a great help , to asI was very poorly until I starts to take it. I just felit as though I was tired, out all the time and would take weak;; fainting spells. Mi nerves would bothe ould o melittle rest until X c , day dor' night. I was told by a' i friend td take Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vega., took a feveet table Compound and X only abl I phe ed mew wonderfully. bottles and itY l re oMmend' It to anywoman. 0 { would c am doing what I, can to publish this good medicine. I lend that little book you sent me•to any one I can help. toll i can with: the greatest efjpleasure eSe j my name in regard to the Vegetable.; Compound if it will serve to help.others. --MRS. HARVEY MILLIGAN,R.'R. No.2, ' 1-Ierrowsmith, Ontario. In a recent canvass of -purchasers of ,Lydia E.. Pinkham's Vegetable , Com= 1 Il over 00, 000 replies were receive and 96 out of every 100 said they hail been helped byits• lase. This medicine :! pp 1• u 'data aafor al'e` al dr a b, g J y- g Proved safe by millions and presc'ibed by physicians for HeadacheNeuralgia ,Colds Lumbago- Pahl umba 'o- , o Paill Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism Q/ v A "Bayer" package cccpt only B� y P � v1;11 cnlitailis proven directions. Bandy "Bayer" boxes of ' 12 tablets . also bottles of 2.4 and 1O0 --Druggists. i if Con .dal se .neer -it s,ifn lure et Niennaestic•' lei ,, (Lc , ll ell ( col,1torei i eS R , n i,r,td06l et el S.lIcYllcfrepY (Acpfpl'Sailcyilc Arid, '.1,5, h'). 1V11110 It Is -reel)^l;nntvn' that 'tapir's mc,nio Bluer uuu, laet,irr, to n$kioL the p 5810 ernlnat ImltaLtone, Ito Tablet) • r n ill'. stain aped nilly.tlleir. ^0si0ol trade mock the "sayer 01ee0," oL r3;t3 C ,COI pups 1V pa 1>< s e Y