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The Clinton News Record, 1925-10-29, Page 3The ORANGE'PE OE ,:elan, geed. Try THE � R� NI a A A 9 .. CORNER i o CORNER Atlerertinin . lll»mgtratfloms he � h e i "ement=hel" create in Ilhtstrations have strong attention of, the adv i t s p value: For `that'reason alone they be- the minds. of the readers a favorable h eor s0 ... come impor•taat•in adyortising,.�:. opon3on of�inorc m:ttdls ryiceand This importance is increased when be an iriiiuenep in securing favorable theillustration -can an. be made a, p r picture action—it 'should' not be used. Atte• iit of the merchandise offered. '.1'he-tion aedured for an advertisement power of the illustration becomes still through a picture at the osponso of opinion for the thin adenee h toed -able tv}tote thepicture combines the greater1 merchandise with a means of rising tieed awl the advertiser, 'tad better it, cc' anyadvantage to be gained fromnot have been secured. having the neorchandiee. Snell a pie- Pictures are by no means: necessary tuts is ,the most .,effective, iflugtreling.,Cor,attention,Vs,1ao.. Much highly sue - that can be done to advertising. easeful; advertising has been 'done, chile pictures have great power and, is' done, Without illustrations, A for good, they else have great rower pure type advertisement can be trade for harm, in advertising. ;A .picture •a picture itself -impelling attention may create unfavorable thoughts in- Fowler put into it -by right use of type stead of favorable ones, 'Suet a pie- styles,, setting of headlines, and artie- tare is much' better not need in an ads tic -balance of type and white space.'. ' vortisement; e.'Dont traitor dilHculties _ let i lluQ Cute fpr adneetisemente must be keep you from advertising. In ebbe okosen with care. Attention value ae in all other factors of good a4ver- of a ptetui'e is. snot of itaelt reaspn tieing, tlnie newspaaper is ready tie ren - enough -for using a, etut. rases the der yeti most helpful and profitable Picture will etreheethen the message service. Let Thein Try. Are you a "damper?" A -youth of my accquaintanctti is go- log o-1cg up to college. A Week ago he was eager, enthusiastic, ambitious: He had been studying the pertlouiara. of themany scholarships and prizes- open to undergraduates, and in `his own wards, "he Was going to have a shot at them." That was, -the right spirit, But along ozone a "'damper" with: "147y dear fel- low, you won't, stand a chance. . The chaps who get those things heeee. had special 'coaching', far- the last year or two at school. You'd be no -whereto The eager youth has lost hie eager - gess, his enthusiasm, and his ambition; he's been thoroughly "damped," - It was a Wicked thing to do. Tor one reason, the "damper's" statement was- too sweeping. Doubtless: someof the Very special prizes are won by Wile Who are trained by expert coaching; but there are scores of others open to those possessing brains and spurred by ambition.x -. Au ex -Service man, barred by die. ability from following big, pre -War oc-' pupation, determined—feeling he had It in him to write—to try his luck as a free-lance journalist. Along came e "damper" with—"Waste of pen, ink, paper, and stamps, old man. klditors always sling back everything it new- comer` awls." Quite untrue, of course. But the ex- Service man was damned, and gave up all idea of writing. There are far too many "dampers" in the country. They kill ambition, choke enthusiasm, and douche the ar- dour of those who want to get on and do something As likely as not, if we go' back and review our .own lives, we can See now what we have lost by. listening to the "damper." If you're a "damper," stop itl Why • tell a boy, who is- going to run in a race, that he hasn't an earthly chance of winning? Let him try. We want triers, And we don't want "dampers," Rejuvenating Silk. A process by which worn out hills can be restored to its -original state IS reported to have been deseovered by -a. young Japanese saisntigt whowee re- cently, graduated front the Uyeda Seri- culture School. Tee process still re- inainsg t secret, but it is believed to have great commercial possibilities. The "Get There Spirit! - "The unsuccessful person continually speaks of what hi could and would do —1f only such and such a thing would happen! So- assured is he in his boast that to others it seems that if only the gppor- tunitp presented rade hoe -would do wonders. Yet it is not actually the Iter of chance or luck whit% keeps the ma- jority of people in the background. ' It is something far different, -And the lest thing to. do to discover that "something" ie to examine the lives of those who have got there—those who helve become successful. -Looking at their 'earlydays -very closely, you will find first of -all that they were not content.. to standstill waiting for a golden opportunity to present itself. Neither did any good fairy come to wave her wand over Vide future careers; Instead of this, instead of spending their time assnr- iug their friends^what they would do if they hadbo and so to aid them, they just got down to work, This, then; Is the secret of their succesee • They set to work to' realize their ambitions, They worked hard dud long for their present standing— s/Inch did not come by leaps and bounds. In many cases, it came only after long toil. Does this. truth dismay you; that if you want esuoeess in any shape or form you must first of all be prepared to' work for it? _, - It should not do so it you eat -your, mind upon a successful issue from the struggle, it your,future welhbeing,is not worth dome trouble, leeis,not worth having, The fact. that whatever comes most easy to your hander is invariably not great valued, Droves this. It is the apparently unattainable, when et - tabled', that seems always- best. So it is plain that 'if you wish to se- cure a success: you will not obtain it without some pains. And having -tirade up your mind that it is worth pains,. drop wishing and set to, week upon the tack. lfeep at it regardless of obatac- lee, awl you, too, wili'gst.there! Describing SUMS Heat. The eiin givesout asmode heat in. a years' time as the burning of sixty earths would It composed entirely of anthracite coal. Foil like Kraft Cheese because of its inimitable flavor. To be sure you get it, always look for this trade -mark. `r FREE Rpci..I'E BQOK_ Write Krait-Mnaimren Choc. Co., Ltd., Montreal, i,}. -le e Cleans 'Like China When you use FDI CP Enameled ;Ware, Utensils, you never need to scrape, SCOUt and scrub the wayore wares demand. hot water, soap,. a doth -that's` all you need to clean than. It washes like china, has the cleanliness' and sur- - face of china, but weal -a like steel. • Don't Ire -..the slave of your cooking ware` equip wrlleelean, pure sant- tory- lasting Enameled melcd° 181A , -INDUS` i IA,i ,HYGI ENEr zN N `ADI® Ontario isthe only province in Can- ada which has a Divider of Industrial Flygipne organised in the Department of iieglth, for the fru spew of promot- ing the''heaith of industrial worker i. l%o nittin objective of the lvision it the pre -ye -Litton ` •of -general sickness; the special objective, -the' prevention of tbdl'te disease's which, arising out of vror1Cng' condltlane, are called "oc-, cupstional disoeosa," Now it is impossible to know bow much -wastage -hr Ontario :industry Is caused by s}chnoas, because there is as yet _ little health' •supervision and few adequate records of lost time. But such data ss exists shows that in ;On- tario loaf time from sickness amounts to at least double lost 'time from a0• ohieuts, Asregards disease traceable to a g a man's .occupation, the a'eeorde of the Division "cover 472 eases .follo-ied': up E,fectitlwe of Canadian byes � ..lf during the last.4 yearn.' The rite for Ipad Poisoningin Ontario in 1025 is higher than tat which was consider- ed alarming in -England 25 years`ago. i'hiri alone'rillows the ueed,tedta ors- teme,tic and rlgorous •attempt to guard the health of oti workers:' As .a basis fob' this, a few cardinal facts need to the grasped:- - Tlteie 'is - a close- connection lie- tweeu':the health of tire worker and. the- economic prosperity of the ,coon - try. A w -o ,her'a health is inevitably„ af- fected' by his working conditions, litany diseases among workers can be tr'ac4d to risks, audit as potion, dust, et,•., associated with their occu- pation, On all paints of iudustrial health, in- formation can be obtained,; both by ems ploy -ere and employees, from the' De- partmept of ,I-Ieaith of Ontario, Spit - diva I3ouee, Totonto,'' ly ' Ne*spapers' Association, L r 'ed the oa u printing busi- ness in Galt, go- ing west 'twenty seven years ego where lie, built ;----op The Vernon (BC.) ' Dewar to. itspresent high - standing ill r . Ball is chilled in office manage- ment, In costaa. - me L counting, and in ...1. B I` a 1 newa#paper mak- President C.W.N.A. 1ng.,The C.V1f:N. A. is- fortunate In obtaining the ser- vioes of Mr_ Ball, who has been ap- pointed Manager and Taseat;ulet,'suo- ceeding 1\6', Ill, Roy Sayles. Mr. Ball Was elected President of the C.W.N.A. inOJune, 1925, after having served on the Board of Directors: for several POT several years a member of the Staff of T 11 e Brantford Expositor; was maneger of The Brantford Cour- ler ,for a short tune before chasing the Port Elgin '(Ont.) Times. After a Miocene/4 Pro' sI T E.o S les Roy . ay -pxietorship,' 0 1 First Manager and The Times he Treasurer C.W.N.A. was chosen" by the weekly newspaper: ownersofCan- ada. to establish the Canadian Weekly Newspapers' .Association, as its first manager and treasurer. Mr. Sayles has purchased The Renfrew (flat.) Mercury, one of the outstanding week- lies of Canada, The City of David. The site of the ancient . "city of Davin" lute been found. Prof. R. A. S. Macalister, leader of the joint expedf- tiott to the Holy Land sent out by the ,Palestine .Exploration P`und and the London -Daily Telegraph, contributes to that newspaper an account of the discovery and identtiloation of Mille, near Jerusalem,' to which repeated re- ferences: are made in the Old Testa- ment, , , . One of the references" is in Second Samuel, where we are told that David, after having occupied the stronghold of Zion, :'built round about, from Millo and inward." In 'the -Tlrat Book of Kings, however;`we are told specifical- ly that it Was Solomon who built. Mille, acid in' the twenty-seventh verse of the eleventh chapter the statement, 1$ made: "Solomon built, Iv illo and repaired the breaches of the city of Davidehis father." Professor Macafieter indicates the utmost precise correspondence of the literary material with the archaeologi- ent evidence dill in the ground. "We should find a fortress bunt, to fill a breach in the wall, and we haus found it. That tower should Show signs of a laterrepair under stress of immin- ant danger, and it does. There should be a fortification wall built "inward froth" the tower, and there is. There - should be no conspicuous fortification here earlier than the time of Solomon, and there is not. Absolutely every- thing that we know about Mjho—ex- cept the murder of leash, which could hardly be expected to leave recogniz- able trages—is 'reflected in the struc• tubes which have now passed under the reader's eye. In the absence of inscripttons,'leone ot'whfeh have come to Iight, I venture to say that thece,;co- incidences Constitute' the .strongest possible argument in favor of the claim that Millo has been discovered, antra hitherto unsolved, problem of the topography, of Jetusalem in the early days of Its history settled." leaving made his discoveries, Pro- fesor Macalister is taking the unusual step of. oevering them up again' with earth. It is not eractieable to remove what lie has found for permanent silel• ter in museums, and bitter experience has convinced him that to leave -the stonework• above ground would simply be inviting the fellaheen to make a seine, quarry of it. • • Where Tears Come From, Near OUT eye is a gland the besinoss of which is perpetnaliy to allow the escape of a sort of secretion. In the -ordinary way this fluid passes inside our eyedid,'i5 brushed ever the eye eyery time we blink, 'so keeping our• eyes bright and free 'frons the specks op dust which w:.aid otherwise cause us intense irritation, It is Dual- ly passed away through tiny channels into the hose. Under, however, either the physical Irritation caused by, sey, a speck of dist in the eye, or some mental emo- tion- whether Of pain or joy, more liquid is soinetimes released than will pegs away in the ordinary fashion, the tiny channels Will overiiow, and we shall be crying. It iii this overflow that we call tears. Bone -Slack Substitute. A, substitute for bone -black has been developed after sixteen years of re- search, -; ?Fiinard's Liniment for Distemper. Poems ought net to be written just to say that one is happy or sad, but to make that happiness or sadness cheering ome Consoling to ouch fellow men. NURSES The. Tdroslo '.noehltsi ,for I ncimahl.e, m ' stfitentlon wrtn e,llovua And •Alirad itosnttale. New 5,,, City. Clare n three: years wore, of TralnInv to young women, haeIn, th,:r required education, mitt desiroa, of rr,oidnp ours,,. Th, Hoefittni has nderted loo elrhI- hath eyetem. • 'Ti, pupil reroute uullomine' of the Saool. a mnnihlY ailrwaneo and traveling '' expense, ''to and front Now York.. rd fprthor.. information apply I, 5,, ensoriuinvdunt. Notions Worth Noting. Of two people using .the same tea one makes a delicious brew, the other 'tea not fit to drink, yet both -have used boiling water. The first uses water freshly boiling; the other has had the kettle on the fire for an hour, and has boiled all the air out cf the water,. leaving it fiat and dead. Poking a lire seems a simple laud - nese, yet there' is a right 'and wrong way of doing it. The wrong way is to pound the coals from above, the right to push the poker in underneath, and by dealing out the burnt ashes leave :room for a draught of air to page through the are, so allowing it to burn 'brightly. When packing to leave Pomo a'wo- utan always' puts. boots and slices and all heavy objects at the bottom of•the trunk,and the lighter articles, on top, This is the right wet,to pack, and it men followed the sante exatifple, there would. be fewer cracked shirt fronts and creased sults at a journey's end. Most people treat a cut finger by wrapping round it •a piece of soft rag,, This Ie a to etakeia idea, for the rag encourages bleeding. If the cut is' a bad one the blood supply should be stopped by, tying something tightly around the joint: below the cut., Whoa a door sticks, the average moo puts his slloulder against it and. tries to force it open. Tbie may or may not prove successful, but surely the simplest way of managing the job Ise first to ascertain the offending spot, when comparatively light pressure will probably do the trick. NERVODUS DEPRESSION Why People. Are LOw Spirited' and Depressed. y - t Nearly wmen and. most aUt- ear at times from•% fits of depression and low spirits. 'Everything seems a burden; thencome perioda of nervous ir'itirbiiity, headaches -and 'weariness; People avho:suffer this way' lack vital - eV because their blood is poor and nerves are starved In consequence. The' only way ..the nerves can be reached is through the blued, By en- riching the blood with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills the starved nerves are sup- plied with just the elements theyneed, This is proved by the experience of Mt'ss. I. 111 'Dantean, 12th Ave.` East, Vancouver, B.C., who, says• --•"About three Yeats 'ago I became very weak and nervous. I lead pains in my side and: back, and also suffered tromn fre- gnen•t pains in'Use back of my head Arid neck. ,,l was hardly able to do -any thing about the house. 'I would wake 'with a stltrt in the night and my heart Would flutter cc that it 'Shutost choked me. 'I tried notch doctor's =elicin°. but it did rue good, One day.I read aboneeDr, Williams' Pick Pills and decided to give them' a trial-. These pills produged each a beneficial change in a'short time that i kept tak- ing them until I,had used a dozen Innen. By this time there was such an.'improvement in my`condition Chat friends woulft;as'k one wit I was tak- ing, end of course I was- only' too pleased to tell them 'it was Dr,' Wil- liams' Pink Pills. 1 air now feeling like a new person and am deing my own housework; We would not now bo without Dr: Williams' Pink Pills in the house." You can get these pills from your druggist, or lty`niail at 50'cents a box front The Dr,-.Wllliants' Medicine .Co., Brockville, Out. ' Clever Chickens. Little Reggie, having bad as. egg put before - frim for breakfast, :taken: 'Mantua, where did yea get this- egg?" "From. grandma's chickens," his mother answered, "Wolf,"'said' Reggie,'how dlo'gran- ny's chickens knowthe slza of'°our egg—cues?" I -lair'. In Violin Bows, The hair hi violin. bows is obtained Team ' white horses, "tire best supplies coming from Sibertti. Keep Min,ard's'Liniment In the epees. Ireland Forbidden Lap i�oga in Olden Times. Dogs figure largely. in the lore of all lands, says' The Vancouver Prevhieest. Thera is a legend that relates 11o:5" lap dogs ,went to Ireland.: In the begin- ning Britain scents ..to leave':: had a' rrronopely of , tin'' dogs, while Ireland wan'vipeut tfieut, ,and it was forbid- den to give or sell a tiny dog :to an Trichinae. But as it,happenec,`an Ihig:dshlaw decreed that a criminal should to given to the men—ho had wronger, SO a clever Irishman 'succeeded in: getting a 'tiny lap dog to"'injure" )tins.` The ruse auceeeded, raid te`dog was taken to Ireland, winces all the Icings fonngh among themselves- for possession of her instil she--prought about peace by producing a'Iatge lifter of' puppies. A most extraordinary -law concern- ing dogs was current in:Englrindt:fn the days of Edward' I Only those peeple living a ,,considerable' dts-tance from the -forests were allowed to keep large dogs,- fo € , r fear tis, might for into hunting pacice;. A dog -env -watt aged and 'only dogs that. -could squeece through this werer allowedwithin a ted-milei rad us.iio e n &Lye doge ] those d were so valuable that fines were often pais in them. Another astounding law was passed in tie reign of -Edward III,, when tt Was dooreed that only "gent'lemanly doge" Wor'e',alloeved to wander Iron don's utreets -alone or at night. Others were liable' to a fine of forty pence, FIGHTING FOR' f BABY'S HEALTH L H Is the Constant Care of .Every Young Mothelr, 'The young molter has a eonstao5 care'.int;looking timelier has welfare of her Little ones. Childhood ailments' come on so suddenly sometlmt S with- out at minute's warning --the mother may have a -very sick baby on her hands before help can be obtained. That Is unless she lute a remedy in the house which the can safely give the baby for any- of the many minor ail - manta of babyhood and childhood, Such a remedy iso found in Baby's Own Tablets, Thousands of mothers throughout the country always keen. a box of the Tablets on hand and they proclaim them to be without an equal for sweetening ' haby'g stomach) regulating his bowelle, and thus dello lug out constipation and indigestion, colds and simple fevers, and making the.'dreaded teething period wane, Baby's Own Tablets are an absolute- ly safe remedy. They are guaranteed to be free from opiates or day other arootic drug which are so harmful to e future welletre of the baby. Moth - ere, -it you value the Iife of your Iittle ones give him Baby's Own Tablets when he is ill, or, better still, give him an occasional dose of the Tablets to ward off illness. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or will be sent to any address, post paid, at 25 cents a box by addressing The Dr. Williams' MedioineCo, Brookville, Ont. Why the Tender of a Loco- motive is. So Called, Strictly speaking, this- word is a corruption of "attender," Long before the days of railways, ships in harbor and rivers were waited on by smaller craft, which brought them -their sup- plies and an on. And even to -day we speak of passengers being taken out to: a ship by tender—the attender of the larger vessel, - So In the early days of railways the engine was attended by a small wagon to carry its cone and water, andthis was the origin of the modern tender. Feather -Has t,olO,itCo Parts." A feather, one of the world's moat perfect structures, ha* been growing perfect for possibly a million years. A single pinion from an eagle's wing has nearly a million different parts: The whole wing is a sail "that strikes the wind firmly yet elastioaIly; not letting the air through the web, and _yet pot being broken. It enormously increases flue bird's power of soaring in the air, and yet how.littee it adds to weight. cut Rates. "Are Ilia charges low at yon rr'bar- bet's?" , "Cut rates." Ask for .Minard's and take no other. Amusing statistics have bean issued. by two Chicago. investigators, ' who' state that :after two years old girls cry, more frequently then boys, wki e the, five youngest children .under watch to'use words were all female, WE -WANT CHURNING'. SOLID IDI BOT'I'L,ES ONLY Business First. i1 ,inen and women leant into busi- neas as thoroughly as ,they ought to go we should „hear -less 'of ppOr.busi nos, , and Mere Of better results, Half the people who go Into busi- ness, never take the trouble to learn the ropes. And then they wonder when things -go Wrong. By learnhag the ropes I don't mean the ropes of ally • particular, business, but -of, business routine and etiquette generally, flei.V be a. goad beeinese man or women the 'fleet essential is -pone-' tiiality, Employers;; and customers must be able to depend on you, It is: nogcod star tiog out With the idea thatv fl o r nisiut4t here ate "min - vein ir- Utes 'there -de not matter. They do. Ton cannot he too punottfal. Secondly, you must leave your own private business et home when you take 'a situation, All- your employer. wants froth, you 1t your work, not your;. worries, and if YcU let them obsess you, you are not playing fair. You are paid to give your brain, and perhapg Your, fingea•S • as Well, for acertain time, Don't cheat bydreaming' or fidgeting over outside .affairs. .1iou can't de two. things atn gs once, Then, if you want to be a good buei- 'leis, man or womanyou: must work right through your Working hours, and not steal your employer's time to ans. wer private -"telephone calls, to write privateletters, or to reed, Get it into your heed that your -time during your working hours belongs to 9 $ter employer. - Some people work with thee* eye gn the clock, niefese the hour for line aeon or' departlpe arrives you will find them' making elaborate prepara- tions to go out, They are more -eon cerned, about whether they, will be in time to squeeze in a game of billiards or a visit to to ,the hairdresser before going house than about the letter their employer told. them must catch a car•. tain .amain. That is not the way to make your job a'steppingestone to higher polite. If you regard. business in this way, i2' that is the interpretation wields you place on your duties, then you wilt never get any further than the foot rung of the ladder of success: Indeed-, the odds may be against you hanging on even there. Minard's Liniment ogee by Physlcfene. Profiteering is to be dealt with sternly in Budapest, where, big res- taurafitie Must provide a 25c dinner for customers if requested. The menus for these meals will be approved by the police,: ;. CAPD CLEANSER Foe Painted Woodwork, Walle, Enamelware, Windows, etc. The caro' Pollshes. Ltd., Hamilton ra DYEING TO ALL THE LATEST SHADS Cia�irsifatl Addwertiaerm-eaits" 11O.W .linWHIT1NO INCREASES uataamSe ,errs, 'tYt'ahow Ilio. Ivey. Students tell Ivor:: ore th »" ti MIP qe ter S Nag, effective, v0 actino Is, ✓)croute, p'oYlq-vitro nlgor wear. ' a: o '',LEARN SLCC'ilfimhTV,: .: .. 4ourse. IN PRAGTrcAL '. tifZeTR CAT, en`stnecrtne ta. your- spare C � r pro Ire, at home t,,, entleo' So rs-If to ..erre n Isle. , aryt,O of g' intes. mein,,, fop Y e rcir, Write Inc Ir,o troloino pork ncosloe trldotrkal company, Dont.. I, Crawford., St., Toronto, ami.,.,-„.,,�- Stever Foxes, es Teen r/ye r:rinmteN en more els 1unIIL1 �t pp t91nLT yY sa teen SHIP 'OS YOOU/a crrw,G �r ANO`. }} >• j' J� 1.',. eRs 11fUY;dLL. ��O AR UN - PIP O mite {,�y�J)' roes n' Y pf ra s -ale j �ori o week ah¢a a t e ” lttblfsM1PU. ,res 4iN f�1. 1. �� Z99.9P. nsa LlVi ce, r. e t 11 NIgTh MORN® 4imif'r ?a' � EP 'YOB ._bi 1V f�v�L. E-Y'g -g,D ,p,>L Prins >�A[� p g� � .. 'r 8 C C`Ah3. d�b- :svaerli. ���,[[yy�yy 9 .dliia GENUINE ASPIRIN PROVED SAFE Take without'' Pear as Told in "Bayer" Package • Unless you see the "Bayer Gross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty- five years for Cold* Headache Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism 'Neuralgia' - Pain, Pain Each unbroken "Bayer" package con. tains proven' directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug, gists also: sell bottles 00 24 and 100. 'ABLET. DO HOUSE t" ORK NOW Sick a Year. Got Great en- efit from Lydia E. Pinkharn'a Vegetable Compound I Bloomington N. S. --"I took Lydia -gee E..Pinkhao'a Veggeetable Compound for pains and backache, also for nervous- ness, sick headaches and sleeplessness. I was troubled in this way for over a year, and a friend told me about. 'the Vegetable Compound and induced me to take It, I must say I have received great benefit front it and am able to do pry housework now. I recommend the Ve-getable Compound myself and am Willing for you to use this letter as a toatl?rlonal, — Mrs. Wyy'uI, .u.M MOnsu, Bltounin tont Arpiapolis County, N, S. D0ell know that in a recent canvass among women users of the V'egetabie m bund over 220,000 replies were re- ved, To the question, "Have you received benefit by taking this medi- cine?" OS per cent. replied "Yes." 'phi moans that OS opt of _every 10Q• women are . in ; better health because ' they have given this medicine a fair trial. in either wearing apparel or house- Mild. furnishings. Prompt, service, carriage charges paid ane way. Our Mail Order ll'elfiilrtment is glad t'o •answer questions. We supply cans and pay express ss charges, 'IVa pay 'dally by express money creme. which. can be cashed. anywhere Without any charge. To obtain the 'top ).rice, 'Cream must' be free from bad flavcre and contain not lees than 30 per cent'. Clutter Fat. Bowes Cofnpariy Limied, Toronto 'Oct re:neeeces.-head Office; Toronto,. Renin of llotatreai, oreour locke banker., Established for over thirty years. jP DYE-WOP.KS LIMWi7-Eb CLEANMOYERS, 191 Y,ONGE ST TORONTO j , a .11.1171.10 TOOTETACETE )card Bathe the face with 's In water au .' M d place a piece of cotton, wool, saturated with Miard e, in the cavity. tars. Morse ie simply another case of a woman recefrgfn "great benefit." Women suffering from the troubles so common to their sex should listen to what other women say wile hale expe- rienced the same sut%rinkks;and found relief. Give this dependable medicine a chance -and at ohce.• It is sold at all ,drug stores. O Like Cuticura Because it keeps the complexion oiear,tee handle soft and the hair live and'glossy, The Soap, used daily, rieansee antlpuriiee,whilethe Oint- mert soothes and. heals. Cuticura Talcum, is an ideal: toilet powdere acral, enoh Tied bdNst7 Addla3 Canadian Depot? 'etfet,anno, LLtd„pd ftreN Pylae, soap 6c. Dirltment er h I moo; 1 u , its, h'aTT Cttticara Shaving 91tek 25c, i,.:suE lvc. 43—'25, _.