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The Clinton News Record, 1925-12-03, Page 3Cs Via Taranto, lt¢etngt` iw,thantitins t;,t.., ,reffillaiirry with 401lawafaPod Jttticd ngipitats; W nx Ywk: Vly „nerri'Al livor years'. Canhe of Traluing to younow9non, fawlnu Or' '. r 4ulred eitcc:tItfl end daeiraus,cf 1,rtoonnl bursar. T„i:'fiospital ..hasadoptrd tira:•olpnt tour ryatera. Tha pupils actalso anitarms•o) ti 'School,'. 1 marithly >tiawanrs' and troweling: erne is s tq and trate' 4.0 Y rp'"'For hnrihe.`" It r rmaban aptlyto tho $al rintnndent. - Why Do We Say It? How many• people'ean explain tit meanings of the tern's they use wile wtli.ing letters? - Why; for •imstane • do, ice address a man ase"Dear'''Mr .,Smith," and a woman as "Dear Mrs Smith," or "Madan,?" "Mr." itt au abbreYi .tion of "Mas ter" Mrs," is an abbreviated.forth 0 °Misty ens," and • "Mada;n is our way of writing the French 'Ma Dame." And what of "Esq."? - That, o course, stands fon 'Eoquwe,',=tood' latter is atphonetic corruption of tin Prench "Escuyer," meaning,_a shield bearer! "Sir" ds our way of writin the sylltible of "Monsieur," You may add a liiiedor to 50'0 Tette and put 'N.B. " or "P.5,," as the fanc takes you. "N.13." stands ,for "Not I3ehe meaning "Note well," or "Talc good notice," 'P.S,"-is- not 'really "postscript,". but "Post scrlptum," meaning ;written afterwards. '• And why `bear' Sir'? Obviously we' do not "love" or "hold in affection" all thci5e we aderess as "deal:"' Once, however, "dear" Merely meant "es- teemed," and was used"only, by those who were addressing anyone in a high - or station Of life than themselves, Why She Was Sure. T' HE. ; EARI -TEXTILE, Ali A hit, of cloth-tvlietlrer it.be wool or velum or,sillc -'-lis one. of t most interesting evidences ;of ma clinlb'from days of--;sdvngery...to two tieth-ccritiury civi1ization. AS, once, notes, how tini'ly `spun a how intricately. woven are the three •and haw;b'aautii'ul often. la the desi e the ,Yonder grows that -•a. piece n cloth can be so.dexe,rously tashioze e And aet,:aa-one reads of Lho.Par taking etforta -spread over many Ca turies—which reran Lias put fort?. to tain perfection in spinning and we' ing, the wonder fades into adtnir•atio f POT 'the pales ire has'take to perfect the art, Civilization's pat way is, strewn with- the ev}dances the labor to compass a fastery of th the industry. Older far,„than recorde e history is the tale of -fabrics. A -:Ver Earl r Y At. Early �• g art was pract�od in the eariie Stone Age ; How much farther back ✓ was a domestic art it' is impossible y learn, Owing to the perishable nate a of the Materials, from which many f e' ries were fashioned According 't some authorities It may have be en 110 man ii al d5 -. g0,_ of ' s.' n-„ a av- an li= of d st it to 1•e ab- o; on contemporaneous with the discovery of fire for cooking and the building of shelter. Others -are sure it is ',older than the fashioning, of, domesltic'uten- ells by the art of pottery. It 1s• -fair to conjecture that thous- ands oe, years before the dawn of eivili- zation some savage matron; sitting in front of the eaves or rude hut which sheltered her, wove the original bas- ket from the rushes of a brook that c_ perchance may have burgled. at her feat, or may have cut strips of skin , and plaited 'theme into the, original fabric that was the beginning' of textiles'; It does not' require meoh e stretch of the imagination to conceive. of this. taking place in the different parts of the world where the industry began, • s Ancient 8pectmens. Plax fabrics dating back to a period thousands of years ago have been un- earthed In :England, The ruins, of the Lake Dwellers. of the Stone Age in Switzerland have produced them. Tex- tiles e of much c beauty 'tat'. belong thousands of years B.O. bare been die - covered r among the- earliest -ruins of Peru, Mexico, and Egypt, and in the cove dwellings of ' New Mexico and .Arizona. "The ruins of the -Swiss Lake Dwell ers, which were discovered, in th winter of 1853.54,' •abundantly prow that the art visa known in :the earliest era of the' Stone Age -the period of. the mammoth ark cave bear. The win- ter of 1853-54 was cold and so very dry that water in the Alpineiakes of, both Switzerland and Northern Italy re- ceded so far that the dwellers.on malty of them saw evidences of ancient dwelt Ings built on poleseprojeoting from the lakes. Some sections were dyked, and many excavations • commenced' which unearthed village after village that had been covered' by the mud .of centuries. Wangen, In Lake' Con- stance a village In IiSke Mosseedorf, Robenijausen in the beg of Lake Pfal•. flit i i, and Auvemnier In Lake Neuf- chalet eut chs tel -were the most ' t inters i Bt ll. g I o m ban p t Industry,,'- " Seale of. the loeveat villages were w manfeet. d Y own, ante belonged to the earliest Stone Age. , In them were found crude but serviceable fabrics of bast, flax, and wool, and signs that tho growth and manufacture of cloth' of flax and wool at s0 early a date was an important 3ndustiee Spindle whorl; `were .without number. Play in all stages, from the unprepared straw with seed capsules�ili perfect preserva- tion to excellent epeeimena of plaited and woven fabriee;,wee unearthed, and same of it was ornamented with rude human figures.- Strings, yarns of flax in bales ready for the spinners,. rope and cordage, were also. found. A quaint story illustrating the weri fug of a child's mind, was told' recent ly by the Duehese, of Portland. A little sir?, grieved becauree her brother had set a trap in the garden for the sparrows, . -prayed that:. nog should he caught. Next mowing, hbty' evetr, there war,' one in the trap. Her faith wde sorely tried, but she continued to pray. Still sparrow were caught. Night after night she went to bed hoping that, the eparrowe might escape.. Each metrning she was moved to tears - Then one night, after .offering her udu petition ion'for the ' petrel p t e birlsy she lacked up at her mother and ea8d: "I know my prayer will be answer- ed tonight; niiimmy;" • "Why are'you 00 sure, dear?" "Because 5 _smashed up the trap be- fore I came in to go to bed," wast the reply, - d Chinese Expert In Jade. • The Chinese, as d' result of many generations of experience, are the meet d e careDrs In the world,,. • Patience may boa virtue, or it may he euat'plain laziness. WE WANT CHURNING EA We supply cans and, pay express charges. We pay dally bee express mane Yalrf ers which can be cashed anywhere yw o .without anY..charge. To obtain the top price, Cream mum t be free e Prom had flexors; ' and contain riot less than 30 pei• cent, Butter Pat. - • Bowes Company -Limited, Toronto Lor references --?lead Office, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker, Established for over thirty yeams. Florence �� Radio THE STANDARD SHOP 48 Adelaide St. West TORONTO Florence Head Seta . ,53,50 Crystal Sets ... ,,.2.50 Couplers .. 1,50 Condensers 2.60 Three Circuit Tuners 3,00 "A" Battery' Dry Cell .. .55 "5" Battery Dry Cell 1,85 All Parts Reduced Pricee, The "Distantone" Five Tube Set $118,80 Complete: With All Requirements Ne-Victor'2-Tube Set, $42.00' • WIth Tubes. Come. See Us. Savo Money on Your, Christmas Radio. ailt e healettere After Dishwashin To heap utai tt r hands whltoand soft,. qtppm, C8a1111i195 �1.ta t,•ii B iISA6•. Specimens of these fabrics may be seen in many musetnne, and show that the Lake Dwellers of the oldest' Stone Era plaited, wattled; and wove cloth, and knew all the operations, tram binding and tying, basket and ?fiat plaiting, to weaving, Basket making o0 'a liner scale, with Abe i a crtwisted into'a'Thread, probably led to the tex- tile industry wblch these brehiitdric -people practiced. . Evidences of a similar textile .,in- !histry have been found In the bar- rows of the early , Britons, .where bodies., were discovered that; were wrapped in plaited woolen' cloth." Simi- lar tfabrics, of an era so many titans- ande of years ago that archaeologists cannot accurately. fix the date, have, been discovered 10 Cm, homes of the aneient Dwellers of southwestern Anierlea,—Petry 'Walton,- in "The Story of Textiles," 'Plisse lout. smiling bonny tas,_iles aro not in the least known Canadian o depressed at leaving the: rugged shores.. of: "Auld -Scotia"t llhn poet and offor:. some tallps y rng; 1 n o g his eager four some`ta11 an•ns^ far 'in .the background, They s�aom�. overjoyed at the oven the unvarnishedtruth Y, ,but Yo decnoe o about the .Do minion'.. prospect of .:r'.tarLing` life anc}t-. in various.. parts the. 1 would no doubtl?e enough to account for the ,� . , P 6"n,.:✓'s�Piu`it great Canadian wean: But more, than that, they, wilIin evidence. have, to go ;with then through hire, sturdy Canadian Names are; lent to right: Miss, Cook, Leith, to Marry • husbands, Mr, A, Thomson,,Saskatchewan; NI!Ss 1 The young ladies are just a row of a party of Scottishlsnd to " Ma colmsC, ;Sues Marry Mr. , J. Sinclair; r. N. M'Att i11, Ontario; brides tvhiclt s -ailed recently from Glcts�gow'to CanaclaPorguson Storrrownicilia..miss o the Canadian Pacific ' er t t Mr. N. MMr, A. n C d •tn _ crflc liner NIetagama. The young munNIfsst C. 'Smith, Stornoway„ to, mann 1(2r with them le Robert A. Murray,a, Watson,Wa'Csoneditor-of Beaver, well -Windsor, Ont •• BABY'S FIRST WALK 1• FANS GOOD � HEALTH Dentists for Trees.•' One of the latest ` applications of By P. G, H.Selusbucy engineering to the preservation of old, diseased, or damaged trees is the science of tree surgery. There are The period which holes -the most un - •now a number of professional . tree usual and often disturbing emotions debtors, for youngfathea•e and mothers is tha Perhaps the most curio o us part f the —measured by unstoady seconds business le what may be called tree when they realize that their child can 'dentistry. This applies: to the filling fir' giving hood lees not end merely in of old cavities and the -covering of the She -let us suppose the child' is, a ' ago laces and'lu wounds caused' by -a crack or the: con= p lustreless, eyes:. It is Also it Means Bright Eyes, Red Lips and Rosy Cheeks: , The lack of suflloient red health - girl has been 'hitherto a pink bundle much more serious; 'Bleed' eo le mon- operation of "bracing" a tree of uncertain desdres whish moved in ase p with iron bands, are the tired, ,languid, run-down folly accordance with no known laws, _She who have no enjoyment in life. They • A tree that has any part of its in-. crawled on ben sidle like a swimmer: have heart palpitation,. headaches and ,terser exposed to the atmsophere is in She grasped her toes: and reeked sol backaches, no appetite; 'sometimes the same situation as a tooth having mainly head over heels: She advanced. In a series of orashs9; rising each time with a fixed smile and gazing into the and these troublerpvanish. To get this cause decay.' In the case of the tooth world' of baby hearts that we all for- iams, Pink •the remedy lies iu excluding agents of gat with our: first coherent spoken Pine arse Just the thing youh, red bloodt Dr. ?neat That , leery by means of an appropriate fill - words. - - Is 'why, these lime have a woe'ld-wide mg; with the tree, the. tree surgeon She has been doing all this ono af- reputation as a blood and nerve tonic, 1 fills all covitiies that: constitute ex ternoon. The father has been reading Among tem who have proved the Pommes .with concrete! and stretching out a. intent mechanical- truth ,o8 these statements is Mies• The tree sturgeon further imitates ly to pat a head that sometimes risesAnnie M. Blonskl; Woodbridge, Mab„ i the dentist in ridding the cavity of all as high as the arm of his chair, The who says:—"I, became eery weak and decayed matter before he puts.in his !nether would tell you that she was nervous,, had pains in my .side and' plug. He -cuts back until he comes to knitting to IrOep pace with her grow -back and suffered from frequent Kick' live, healthy Lisette. An antiseptic Ing daughter}s requirements, . Reallyheadaches.. I was, hardly abletodoee'resa55 pts applied, and then the. tree she leas been dropping stitches, her anything about the house an won's d'enttsrt puts in iia cement.." eyes and i soul. following the zig-zag awake with a start at night, with myf In large e-ctlo os the concrete: ieiae-, bourse' over the meet of an' atom that heart pounding violently. If I walked , deiced in sections to - ensure an elas- she feels hers especially because of ' �tici ecu ae t that will m 'p yupstairs I would be breathless• and my : Y permit the tree to away' its helplessness. r heart would flutter rapidly. d used nalturahy. These. slight breaks also Sudu,enTy this atom rises to its feet. donor's atedicine but it did not do me` prevent too great a stress being;: set The a firm ther supiloxt.s .The hand. mot erscatolres ,?nail to take Dr. Vailliamsoh any permanent geod: n I wee, itra 11,P, as this might calmto snap 11.10 severe g°1°' s whole ,llmb Pink Piitis fainting spells, and always nervous- ness, Just a little more rich, red blood a hole through which impurities can penetrate to the soft living tissue and her breath, and perhaps two or, three and decided to try them, and I can! When the fllliug'-is properly done, dropped stitches: at the salve time. only say that they did wonders • 'forthe tree shows a tendency; to There is utter silence, r me..I am now well and strong again spread aoross'the joint ' between wood Then the baby begins to walk. and able to do all my Work, and this I and concrete, and gradually cover the Hands rigidly by her side, face set is all due to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, r space with bark. In cases where the determinedly, elm makes, with the un- I have recommended the pills to others ieavity le small, it is not unusual for. consciously pompous gait of extreme who have taken Jewett with equallyf youth, for the surrounding bark to grow all over he doom, good results," lee Riled 'spare, So, in tree surgery, Everything happens at once. The . You eau • get the pills Froin your cobcrete takes the place of vulcanite. father smiles; ho is absurdly 'pleased. 'dtuggist, or by snail at50-centsa box He can se for ' e o t h aPart time "tine fi from Dm. Williams,' Ito T Medicine Ga., vision, of a pretty napper lauglrter''all Brockville, Out. long, silk stockings end Curls, who will bully him and love him and call him "Dad,„ The metier•, she is young, sees that rhe has a daughter, will -eh is quite an- other thing from a baby- Her smile quivers. There may be a tear in her• eye—no, there is a tear, and it drops on the hale-lmi'tted baby garment., ` And the baby? -She C011ap$es: so - suddenly as she rose, and is gathered up by four armee But eiie ie different; she 1s now a separate human being, ,a Probably Won't Be, a' Go. ' "You've •a standhig engagement wi h Sam, of course.?" "Not at ail -he's the worst sitter I ever knew!" Chilblain Time. In a few weeks the'chilblainiseason will open. I8;)'on aro a euterer; your know from painful experience what chilblains feel like. But do you know what causes them? • Had to 'Foot it Up. . s Wide --"John, 1 went down,, and pa d e my milliner's bill to -day." Hubby—•'',Nell, did you foot -it up?" eo Wifle-'o "Yens; when the bill was pa d i i diclee.have even carfare left," 5 • � s BABY'S OWN TABLETS Most. people are under bhe-Impres- ion that the causes are' external,— old xternal—old weather,: snow, frost, -and so oft. That, however, is Wrong, ' The causes' f chilblains are internal. "A chilblain' s merely the outward and visible re - tee of a wrong interna.] condition tagnant blond, e poor circulation; t'rong or poor nutrition. Ntttaition,.'it Ona reason for;this queer notion is• must be remembered, does not depend. that prisons, cilli ideal sanitary.a,r- n the quantity cif food eaten but on langenients, separate bails for each is gnat az azld su abi1 •thy io winter inmate, and three meals 'a day, are —1. - Their teethare-of a ' toughness which makes Thom hold' their' keen` 'cutting ^o deo -under' "evety usage„, SI,6i0ND3. CKi1ADlt, SAW C agar shoe : , tl GINI[TEh. veuea,lppnrkitr n AG Int,O itn.l. No Numbered Wives. Oorntossel • (at' 'phone)' -,— 'Hello,. hello! Kin you let "me talk' to my wife?". "Number, please." Cerntossel -€:'Say, I' ubn t no: Mer - mon, Niiss!" • Mlnard s Liniment for Chilblains. f ale 08 nntinals-develops responsi- bilite for the helpless. When you drink RI L Y°L1 dti t. PEE fire dr:tee, teeteee or other m t r ateri l ram fl113 a nga, and iron m and nd blas r ca resent the old sii g bands sometimes used In human den- tiatree . 'Where Prison Means Honor. Prison life in'tits country has lost many 0f the terrors, but the "prison datnt" rename. We are etiil'very far removed from tate point of view of the natives• of West Africa, ,who consider a term' of imprisonment in ops of the Government'prisons the greatest hon- or that could'be eonferred.en them, -. Imo this part of the world convict la- eor la . almost universally employed for .such tasks as read -malting, 'laying out public gardens, and building houses. In addition, householders" who want any kind of job done are in the habit of sending to the town prison, which will aupply a gang of competent, corn-" victe in charge. of a warden to carry] out the work.• ':. As a result, the West African gets IL into- his weeny Tread that he has been specially selected to'rendrer.s•em- vice to the.. Government, •and, when he is released and returns to his -own. hone and friends, his prestige among them is:enor'mous. rn fact, eine. lean who had had his. sentence shortened, because of his good Comilla, took the respite as 'd great\insult and inquires? what he lied done that he should bit turned out' before the proper time. !ts OF GREAT ti 61S9s�Y8t eondltious: if;palaces•of "splendor and delight corn - These . orn-'ihese. wi>a get plenty of exercise, paled with the average native lint, N at nutritions "heating" food "neree• soundings. TO All Mothers Raving Young e ho Clotho themselves' Warmly, anal with its mud noel. and squalid. 8111•= Children in the Home, s No other 'medicine, is of such* aid' 11 et chilblains. The ciothing:,"be,_the say, mai be loose, for tight. boots Possible ssible Origin of "Greenbacks." ght gloves, or anything tltat'inipedes Ainong Englt,li coal miners there to mothers oP yming children as is. Baby's Own Tablets:. The Tablets ere cl the very Best medieitie a mother can '1) give her little ones tlata•ing tho dreaded teething' time becamsre they lie;$ulate b the 'ston?aclt; :and bowels. and time :r drive out 'ice etiliation and incllges, ° tion; prevent colic and diarrhoea and 1` break, up colds anti sslnple`fevers. nl Concerning- ,Baby's"- Own Tablets, pIrs. ,Iobn A. Patterson, 'Scotch Vih lase, N.S., says have six children, and all the Medicine tbey,ever.get is, Tlaby's Own Tablets.' I woilld use nothing else for thein and can strong - 1'y recommend the Tah els to, all other •motherg "' ` etiitiy's Own Tablets are field by medicine dealers or 'by mail at „25 cents' a box' from Ther Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, the circulation is certain to produce was formerly a.ourious old belief that rilbi tins-' Porridge, fat ba0on, drip- when having a. bath they muist not ing, and so on are "heating" foods. wash the back, as water weakened There is no external cure for chi?- that part of the body. tains, but the following is the ap- roved medieal remedy for broken nes: Coptiba (one ounce) and metily :ted collodion (three ounces) applied ght and morning. A Mozartian Reason. A young composer,; went to Mozart ane day and aelred how he should set about writing a symphony. "A syn? phony!" — ertclaimed Mozart — "You are Much too young for that,": But, Milker," objected theyonngster,,"yotl bad written many symphonies- before you were my' age," "Yes," replied the great composer, "but I didn't need to ask hew it was done." ',In other words, he did it because it was in hint to dr Strange, Occurrence,' "How did to accident happen?"' "Misioolt'a puncture -proof Lh'e for',: life -preserver --and , went down: ' , • Pimples come front blood. that's not jus. right• It you want to get rid of facial blemishes try Seigel'ss SYYtip, Any dims store. When hoarse use. Minard's !Inerrant. It i5 a woman, Arid on.y a woman.= a woman all by hcrsele, if she likes, and without any man to help her -"- who can turn a house' into, a ]tome.-=- Frirnces, Power Cobbe. Coughs' and Colds " "'twDhialinecdghe=..rslehariano crtllh.: setio v tihtaeali' ltey r ' ttel+I.,,Y;at'r•.i.t,'Vc x at n!�l"-�- andstreegtt and ovoid serious complicallans bGrahs'Sormupt useO0of 60 years in Use. boll Atteaaao SRestlesa Nights 'tourdcold is allowed tonin.'': Attistnat(ire obri our tlrildrea SPRUCE G h froar. fJiffiAt`s®Pa F1 ra, Nrnvlcrlc, r ISSUE No. 45--'25. yogic • e htt1'i_. ', pleas: IdIV t a forO years. Try It'>� Invitation. At dawn I wandered forth. --invited 13y the misty mcadog', lighted With I.he starry fires' of dew; Ay the little lake aquiver By the rippling of the river 13y: the skis; of smiling blue; By an amber cloud, slow sailing Through the eastern a gates., .es; unve111ng O'er a flashing shaft of gold; BY She Mork of its..lea r g ml❑ g 13y the story of its dreaming That the dappled morning told. At dawn I.: wanderod forth, enraptured, All my 'senses beauty captured; By thesun _uprising aweet By the caroling and eallleg By the sea fcreverfalling In soft music at my feet, R, W, Van LSew.' Planting for Posterlty.•' It tabes imagination toplaint trees that require them four hundred to a thousand years• to reaeh anaturity, but the lunrbea'man• of California have be- gun to plata-redwoods to replace .thoeg that the demands of 'trade :have so rapidly devoured. Altheuglti the red- Wood lives: to a great age, it is one of the fastest-growing conifers and even in forty pears attains' a size that makes it • . commercially valuable- sometimes a height of one hundred Minard's'Liniment for stilt muscles. Scandal is like counterfeit money. Many people 'who would not think of being the ' rat fi to circulate it will pass it along when it comes into their hands. POULTRY,GAME,EGGS, BUTTER ANo FEATHERS -Ws aZJYALL.YEAR ROUND - If3ife iodayforprices —WO , 1iarantee, them fora week ahead; P POUI_IN fa'Cft LIMITED b7ablNhaq ova.aad rear•. 86�J9 Bbmacourt hfarhot > Montreal TOE EXPECTANT MOTHERS Letter from Mrs. Ayars Tells How Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compouqf Helped Her Spring Valley, Sask,—"I took the Vegetable Compound 'before my last confi ttement'h n ' w e I got to#aeling so badly that I could hot sleep nights, m backt ached so across my hips, and,I could hardly do my work during the day. I never had such an easy confinement and this *my sixth baby, Iread about Lydia E. Pinkham's. Vegetable Com- pound in the 'Farmer'sTelegram ' and wrote you for one of your books.' We have no druggist in our town, but I saw your medicine in T. Eaton's catalogue., I am a farmer's Wife,, so have all kmds of work to do inside' and outside the house. My baby is a nice healthy gide who weighed:rine pounds at birth. f am feeling fine after putting in a large;. garden since baby came. • (She is as good as ehecan be.) Yours is the best medicine for women,. and I halve told about Reed even written to my friends about it." — Mrs: ANNIE E. AYAas, Spring Valley, Sask. Lydia E. Pinkhant's Vegetable Come pound 18 an excellent medicine for ex- pectant mothers„and should be taken during the entire period. It has a gen- eral effectto strehgthen and tone up the entire. system so that it may work in -every respect.es nature intends. All, druggists sell this dependable medicine.' Give it a trial, '0 Classified Aeitrertisertreci ▪ Aimsse' OVEr,: WAITE ROE OATATDOnl9 ▪ and lint or used ovens Hubbard Oven, Com- j zany, 102 Rine We,t, Toronto, NURSES WA0jee• ; T'n Deur 'Nuns1Y5 win'Fb, NASSAU hospital, Mineola, Lyng: T,land:• nealgtered school, 40,ihtinutos from New York; 2 yearn 4 n1°244 114 qualified Inntbugiora. ie Soda]. ?bane. Three tvaoku vocation annually. >' Ono year nigh soboat'or, equivalent .monad, . Ago 18 q 8e' years, 1./Lor: . probationary terra, :allowance of $46,00 ;a mmnW, also ur uniforms r and bonito, ' Sadgos catalpa 5, 5,er n and aoateht on1401, ' of V b oo,Mine a, tS al N1traingr:Na,sau: Ho lt 7 >' , acbopi or ep n . Mineola, tag IalandrN,Y.' . Dancing to Paradise! It le the belief of the Port l'ib t fl hat t , a. e of South Seci,.�Islairdert9�; that une. less you are a good daneer you will never go to Heaven! A0oording to their creed,, every soul passing to the "Great Beyoiid"' ds' ob-' ldged to *rope a bridge guarded by de- moniacal watchmen waiting to -Pounce upon .hfm and drag him to the lower regions. If, however, the soul is abbe to dance aceoss .the bridge the wartciamadr, will b•e ton eneressed in studying the move- ments that they will forget their duty and, before they have time to i it, the.. soul realize will, ship past hent nto Pradise! Keep Mlnard'e `Llnlmegt handy. It is bettertobe able to look back to a day well 'hived than ahead to a month ofp romises. 11 '! Keeps EYES Clear., Bright and Beautiful WNteMurine Co ,Chicago,forEquCareBook. AROLY.i Your throat every morn-- f ing with Minard a fa water and prevent colds.` 1 PIMPLCS ON FACE AND HEAD Itching and Burgling Ter- rible. Cuticura' Heals. "My trouble started by little pim- plea coming out on my face and- the ndthe back of my bead. After a few weeks the pimpled scaled over and the itching and burning were some- thing terrible,causing meto scratch. I lost rest at night. because of the irritation. I heard about; Cuticurd Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. After using it a few times I got relief so purchased more, and after using about four cakes of Cli icura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Dorothy Welsch, Dare, No. Dak„ July 16, 1924. Use Cutit uraSoap, Ointment and Tafcum for daily toilet purposes. Bangle Eceh Yr,s D4 flail' Address „ Ogna lien napotl auric... htbnMan" Elbe, soup 25e. om Cut s and son,1u 81 ckc. , ltd•^cn,ecee'n, Stung sarlr aha, Proved safe by Millions and 'prescribed by•pliys 'dans for, Colds' Headache Neuralgia Lumbago. Pain Toothache Neuritis T: Rheumatism DOES' NOT AFF,EaC T° `T r t' Accept o "Bayer" package, which contains proven directions. Bandy' "linger", boxes of 12 tablets Also, bottles of 24 and 100 -Druggists. Anptrin tg teetrade mark.. (realntored' la Canada): of nnycr Meant 'mince -id Momoneetle- uesdgner ot,tinllcyllescid .(Acetyl Ssiteylle dell, 'A e A."). while It ale well known r" that dapltbn Manna Diner mnnntaet ki, to assist the public against itut(tttloun, the THbletu of eller Company tvlli Lti; otatny,d salty thalr general trade murk, the "Payer Scooa:"