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The Wingham Advance Times, 1924-04-10, Page 7l,, Se ThursdayApril 10, 1.24„ ^i.'•"„�..w!�..+�.wr�+.+*..,+M- '1'L:!,.y�r..v4.•,ww HQ�.YR4�! .1 JAMES S BROWN, LABOR M. P., REPRESENTS KING. Called "Your Grace" in His- toric Palace Where Mary Queen of Scots Held Court. Holyrood Palace, where Mary Queen of Scots fraunted her virtues andher frailties in the sixteenth century, and where her. secretary, David Razzio, was murdered in 1566, is to have a new tenant in ",ramie'• Brown, Scotch Lab- orite, whose appointment as Lord High Commissioner to. the General Assem- bly of the Church of Scotland was an- nollnced recently, says a Lohdon des- patch.' The appointee says that his wi who wasa former' mill girl, ju gasped" when she heard the news, b Brown, who workee in tbe iniues, fro the time he was 12 years old till was 41, beginning as a pit boy, ,since when he .has•, been .a mine • union eifl- cial and a member of tho Order of the British Empire, took the honor stoical- ly enough, saying' he intended to abate nothing of the ancient dignities and ceremonies of the office, which, for 250 years, has been • unserved far the Scottish aristocracy, princiiially belted earls. Nevertheless, many 'Scottish nobles must' have.. gasped, too "As the representative of king George at the General Assembly Brown. has -the privilege of dwelling fora fort- night or so, oras long as the :'Assembl Y is in session, in Holyrood, the palace of. the royal Stuarts; and during his •residence there is entitled to big; gun zalutes and an escort of cavalry. He will be called "Your Grace," as '-will Mrs. Brown, but he says that when the state duties are over he will revert to every. day life and to his familiar name, "Jamie," gorng back to hie lit- tle miner's cottage of two rooms and kitchen, or "but an' ben," in Annbank- on -Ayr, .where he has dwelt with his wife for thirty-five years, -But while at. Holyrood he will keep royal state and hold- levees, like the dukes and earls who have preceded him. To Maintain Traditions: "Just because a Socialist, the tenant of a £ 10 a year miner's cottage, has been given the office it doesn't mean that any of the old ;dignities and tra *•, ditione will be departed from," said: Brown. "I'm. a strong believer In main- taming, ancient dignities of office. I'M going to show Scotland, and England as well, that a Socialist and a miner can do things properly and maintain historc traditions." He would enter- tain extensively, he -added. Coal miners are now represented in three prominent cereimonial posts, for such the Treasurer of . the Royal Household and the. Oomptoller of the Household used to be. But if the :La- bor Government and some of its mem- bers have perpetuated certain tradi- tions, they .have as abruptly terrain - need others, for they have lost little time in proving that they are no re- spectors of 'pensions. • The Government. has suspended—or is -on the point of suspending -three munificent allow ances:granted-a..oentury or two ago to as many noted military, and naval. heroes, whose, heirs have since enjoy - e in at d _the au aggregate cost to the national treasury of about $6,500,000. The first to be loaded' off was the grant of a $10,000 annuity made to George Brydges (Baron Rodney), oont- mender-in-Chief of. the Leeward Is- lands, the admiral who triumphed over. the French fleet in .a running engage- ment' ending on April 12, 1782, after three days' fighting off Dominica, in the,West Indies. Thereby the admiral saved "Jamaica for the British and ruined the -prestige of:the French fleet. The present Lord Rodney eighth Bar an, is now terming in Canada, and has been awarded' a final grant of $110,000;, bringing the pension up to datewith ten years' bonus. May Cut Grant to. Nelson Heirs. Tile'two other pensions which may be terminated similarly are grants of $25,000 annually to Vice -Admiral Lord Nelson, Hero' of Trafai.gar and his heirs, dating from 1805; and $14,400 animate' to the heirs of Frederic Ar- fe, st t resided, but for the most part the rec- ut I curred only when he had moved to an - m other place, or if he happened tobe- he ahe long to the nobility and was a niem- -ber of the:famti'ly which exercised over - lordship; over that town. More often, however, he would take as his distinguishing name some par- ticular : part orplace of the country- side or town in which he resided. Fairbanks might he described as a countryside family name. In the Mid- dde Ages; when it ceased to be a, mere- ly descriptive name of a single individ- ual, and began to be passed down from father to son, it meant' just what it would be taken to -mean to -day, "fair banks."‘ Undoubtedly the original' Fairbanks dwelt at some '-riverside spot in. England 'locally described as such. More than likely he "was a farm. em. This family name, strictly speaking, has no variations, being •a straight combination of two words which have come .down from the Middle Ages with little or riu changte'in spelling. ` There are, however, a host of names which originated In England and consist of the combination of the r word "fair" with other words. Fairbanks, though widelyknown, i k 9 not an exceptionally common name. Yet it otecurs often enough to warrant. the assumption that it developed in- dependently in several different places and, probably in various periods. Fine, brisk flavor! Best of all in the ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY T.s - Surnames and Their Origin FAIRBANKS Variations -None. Racial Origin—Middle English. Source --Descriptive, geographical. There are a tremendous number of geographical family names which de- veloped in ,England. Often a man would take :the: name', of the town or village in which he had mend `Luke of Schomberg, ex -Marshal of France.anrt English General, for his services tinder William of Orange as comerander1n-Chief of the expedition• to Ireland against James II. in '1688, which' ended' with' hie victorious death. in' the battle of the Boyne in •1690., But before that he head: received a Poe tuguese pension of, £5,,000, and;the IIotise `of 'Cominens had voted him £100,000 to compensate for the loss of hie'reench,estatee, which had been taken from him by Louis, XIV.. This Sum, however; he turned over, to Wil- liam of Orange "for military pur- poses." Thief grant of tho £2,880 was re- duced to 4340 when it was purchased by a man named Gosling froin the Duke's heirs in 1792, but that sum Is still being paid regularly td Gosling's Ileil�,. Although, daring Stinley Baldwin's tenure of the Premiership, the Labor• Itoi',aeiced questions •colteerning' the �..l greed of $500,000 made to Field Mar Shad Earl 'Haig for his ecce es in the world war, Prime Minister MacDou- tld stl• r e rete r , inent lois not signified any Inteu a tion of reducin tile ensign oP gp Lord Haig ori athher arrrly or 'navy 'eblef- tains. PICKFORb Var etions-,-None.' Racial Origin ---Middle English. Sourpe-Desriptive, geographical. Pickford, strangely enough, is a family name•who.se deveiopfnent paral- Leis that of Fairbanks from almost S'VO y• viewpoint. It originated in England in the 'Mid- dle .Ages, and, like Fairbanks,. it is geographically descriptive and com- posed of two words which have offered littlo opportunity to change through the 600 or 700 yeah which have elapsed since it became a family name. At first glance you might be led to believe that the first syllable' of the name was derived from a weapon or implement, "pike" or "pick." This is not the case, however. Indeed, there seem to be very few family names which have developed from any con- nection with this weapon of the Mid- dle Ages, as familiar to the men-at- arms of those days as the bayonet is to the •modern soldier, though many have developed from the names of other weapons.. The ending of the name, of course, gives the clue. Pickford is simply a contraction of the combination "pike - ford," the pike being a well-known species of fish, which presumably was plentiful in one or more rivers at spots where fords existed. The original. Pickfords : undoubtedly were families which dwelt in the countryside near such spots. But this does not prove that all Pick- fords actually are descended from the ancient country people of England. Names are often adopted, and doubt- less have been through past centuries, in 'much the same. manner that the moat famous Pickford of the world adopted hers. Mary's real 'name is Gladys Smith. ODILDIIOOD COAST PATIO Constipated children can -find prompt relief through the use. of Baby's 0 Tablets. ' The Tablets are a mild bu thorough laxative which never fail t regulate the bowels and stomach, tau driving g. out constipation and indiges- tion; colds and simple fevers. Con- cerning them Mrs: Gaspard Daigle, De main Que., : "Baby's Baby's Own Tab- lets have been of great benefit to xn little boy, who was suffering from con- stipation and indigestion. They quick- ly relieved him and now he is in th best of health." The Tablets are sol by medicine dealers or by mail at25o a box from The Dr. Wi1liame' IVIedicin Co., Brockville, Ont.. e . Don'ts for Salesmen. Own t 0 s s- Y the e -The quality of Bulk Tea ` is always unreliable for several reasons. In the firstplace, being 'unlabelled Its origin is unknown and there is no one who has any' particular responsibility' for its goodness. In the second place, it is. exposed to the air and therefore very quickly loses its flavour and freshness. Even if it were as good as "SALADA" in the first place, it would rapidly de- teriorate and in any case it would be impossible for any dealer to follow consistently the same quality through- out the year. "SALADA" always main- tains an unvarying high standard, pos- sible through skillful blending• Salesmen; differ in ability, in train- ing and in method, but all of them who succeed pay almost as, muchat- tention to the "don'ts" as to the "dos" of salesmanship. p• Her a are the "don'ts" of: a famous sales organize, do -n: 1. Don't fail to seat the "prospect" properly. 2. Don't point your fingeror pencil at him. S. Don't sit - awkwardly 011 your chair. ' 4. Don't have a calendar on the wall. It may remind him of an appointment or a note falling due. 5. Don't put your feet on his chair. 6. Don't 'smoke. 7. Don't slap him. on the knee or poke: him with your linger. 8. Don't chew guni or tobacco, 9. Don't tell funny stories. 10. Don't talk test; go easy and see that the "prospect" understands what you say and do. Lift Off No Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little "I`reaeone" alt an aching corn, in- stnntly that corn 5ttops hurting, then shortly you lift It right off with fingers. 'our druggist. dolls a tin bottle of ixgg Y. "Freezone" fbi a few Cents sufildient to re maye every nerd corn oft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, Without aoreneeti pr iteltation, Right "My brother says be can't sit' down and he can't sttand up!" "Well, if he tells the truth, he lies!" THE QUALITY Q TY OF BULK TEA. Little Brown Bird. I.O little bro'wn bird in the rain, In the sweetrain of spring, How you earry the youth of the world In the bend tof your wing! • For you the long day 1s for song And the night is for sleep— • With never a sunrise too soon Or a midnight too deeps • For you every pool is the sky, Breaking clouds chasing through,— A heaven se instant and near That you bathe in its blue! -- And your's is the freedom to rise To some song -haunted sitar Or sink on soft Wingthe ,wood Where your brown nestlings are. So busy, so strong and so: le g d, So care -free and young, So tingling with life to be lived And with songs to be sung, 0 little brown bird!—with your heart That's the heart of the s- rin — Hawcang you carry the. hope of the world In the bend of your wing! —Isobel Ecclestone Mackay. u -- Must Have Been. First Renal B• -- ay I don't like thin book. The hero's a nut." Second Siiall Boy--JyW Boy -" Why?-" ?. ii I'list Small 1 Boy— .It says: leo "took „ a bath every filar ring, Ask for Mgnard'a and t1 kei no other,. NirmGHAM ADVAbgml-"TruEs. ^r^- wM.n M 'P- : investing a Life. Music Makes People Happy „St A rnnn may make several i,'ortu141404 gifts to mankind. It rias been he from time immemorial. The shophe watched his flock by the bleating the lamb, the saiiol',found music in wash of the sea, and the hunter W inspired, by the song of the bird al the rustle cf the leaves as the wi whistled through them, Primitive, man found music :ln t voice, and the skiacn eoofmthl,ae nlwmildent, beaa was used as its down 'through the ages mankind h developed flee mystical magic pov✓ until it is'eonsidered to -day as:ane the world's greatest forces, being us as a" curative for the insane and cri Mal, to stimulate one's nerves, in the advance to battle, and to enterta oneself and friends. Music is power; it should be every home; it should be taught in a sc'hbols as is reading; writing an arithmetic; ,it should be encourag by our civic authorities, Music is restful, and mat --s tett people. If you, are, anxious to g more happiness mit of 'life, get bus now antd, give more attention to mus Patronize the concerts in your iocalit and wee that the children become a quainted with the piano, the violi Cl1 °tai s t:, xtY:'i ' hj c,{ Music is ons of nature's, grtatt re ho can make but one life. 1 -le 1/41/1 ets' rd his yeaxu to build lite character as he of Invests his dollars to create and wag - the nify a,:business, If tlieSe .years are! as spent on mean find miserable things:.' id the product will be a creature admired fid ,and loved by few and probably 'en bad terms with himself. he`' Time is to youth what Bold is to a st spendthrift, There seers so,:i,much nd of it, the temptation i:9, to icing It 'wadi - as °ally in a train of folly or at�the booths t3 r, of Vanity Fair. There'. Chas not' carie of the sober e,ense of maturing yeas, that ed bids one take the long forward look, m -to calculate, to be methodical. Tb.e young Ambition images itself as in. In, 'evltabiy rising to the sun-crowrted heights and does notrealize -the lis in, cipline and self-denial that must be the it way of life for those who would sue- d teed. ed Fortunate: aro they who are advised in life's' morning, before high noon or, er eventide, that the night cometh when et no matn-can work and that every ma y.. meant counts'before the sun goes, dawn. ic; It Is a world whioh,'for all its laws: y, and officers, gives each of use an illilnit- ei able d°lrange of choices. We ere what ee � e to.be` n, d No circumstances the phonograph and the many other musical instruments. - A GOOD SPRING TONIC One That Will Quickly improve Your Health. With the passing- of winter many people feel weak, depressed and easily tired. No particular disease, but, the system lacks tone. You find yourself tired, Wow -spirited; unableto get sound sleep at night. Ali this is the resultof closer in -door confinement of the wine ter months, and shows that the blood has become thin and watery. New en- riched blood is what you need to put you right, andthere its no other medi- cine can give you this 'new blood as surely and as speedily as Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. This new blood goes to, every part of the body and quickly improves the general health: The di gestion is toned` up, you have a better appetite, nerves are strengthened and bleep is refreshing. The value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills when the .system is run down. is shown by the :experi- ence of -Mrs. Peter -Arendt, Raven- scrag, Sask., whosays:-"I was in a badly run-down condition, and pros- trated -with nervousness. I did not sleep at night, and grew so weak that when I tried to move about I would be overcome with dizziness. I _.heard about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and got a supply.,After I had. taken a few boxes I _bgan to feel -better, Con- tinuing the use of these, pills my appe- tite improved, I slept better at night, and I was soon as well as ever I had been. T have also given Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to my daughter, aged four- teen, with the best of results. , I de- sire in this way to express my thanks for the great benefit I`. have found through the use ofthesepills, and to recommend them to others in need of a blood -building medicine." You tan get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail, at 50 cents a box Prom The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • Motherhood. You are ',chatting together ,at the end of the day,• - When laddie boy talks of his 'reason.. and PiaY:: • He snuggles up close•to Your feet, and he leans His head on your knees, when curly head- gleans All manner of wisdom (to him you are wise ! ) "And what do you think, mother?" lad- die boy cries, He talks of his school, he's teo proud of its name, He mentions the old boys and 'their wonderful fame; - Ile tells you of something he "can't quite make out," A. bit of life's problems he's puzzled about; He 'looks in your face with- of in .his eyes; "Now, what do you think,mother?" laddie boy cries. And you :you must give him the high • est and best Of all that is in you; for mothers are blest With grand letuition .of right and of wrong, Of all that is noble and honest and strong, And in the long after, when you have grown. grey, And laddie bo.y's just at noon of. his day, ' In all his life's• greatness you•wili still be a link For often .he'll wonder "What mother would think?" —Hilary ary Brawn. If the top of the kerosene lamp be- comes loosened, it may often be tight- ened by applying a little melted alum. King crabs, found mostly off the islands of Japan, measure' from 8 feet to 5 feet fi'otn tip to tip of their great claws... Tho largest ever • caught is recorded as havingbeen n 7:0 feet froth ti P to tip. cul How � d You Like to Grow Hair in/ a Month/ Getting bald, lirilh [alllitg aril fading? lx you v no Ilenittr i ra', w I air rl l to g 1 t fit 1 wa a rytVny I will ran nbeolntoly Fraa; 5 shniplo. 0f. th ren¢ y o tam6tYs Alexander Qtnhdldbair, No nest, :n'a obligation. Inst Send name to A72,XA'i'il*ibb LMlb1t;I, oltlb;�, 04 14oban Yrirlu.. xorsntp, "Oenatla, '' can defeat us; ..what is within is the secret of conquest or overthrow. "The fault, dear. Brutus, ides not in our stars, but in`bu'rsielvest, that we are un-, desling s."' The old would pass on their experi- ence to their juniors if they could; and' they are prone to envy those who have the unspoiled years outstretched be fore them as a field after a snowfall lies immaculately white and fair. "If youth knew—if age could!" laments the old French saying. It will not take effect •1f the sagacity of the eiders. merely s,ermoniaes, like .Polonius,,- to those who still have manyyears to spend. Youth, headstrong and im- patient, would -learn for itself that firs' burns ` and the deep waters drown.` Who, then, shall teach those that do not care to learn? The inexorable' schoolmaster is experience. The word fits when we speak of "spending" our lives; and well. it 1s for us if, after the spending, there is gain, not floss. Happy are they who, having built a lifetime: •into, the purpose we were set. here .to fulfill,' have no -vain regrets, when it is too late to choose a different investment of the few P p re- cioue mortal years. It. Happened In '79. A party of tourists was about to be steered' through the ruin of PomtAeii. The guide began .his lecture by say- ing: "Pompeii was destroyed by eruption' in 79." _ "Oh!" exclaimed the lady from the 1Vliddle West. "Just eight• years after the Chicago Orel" DominionExpress Money Or dere• are on sale in five thousand aloes through- out Canada. Safety First. I prefer to patronize some other shop," said Professor Parte to the friend who had recommended a certain tonsorial establishment."Doubtless. you have- observed the truculent-look- ing ruculent-looking young barber: at the second chair? Well, I was his _first schoolmaslter." Keep Minard'a Liniment In the rouse No Arrest. He bumped into her car. "I had my hand out," declared the girl, l indignantly. m "Suck a tiny hand," murmuredthe young man. ,"Nowonder I didn't see it!„ There was no arrest. "Snoring can be cured by means of an operation on the air passages," says a well known scientist. Beware of Imitations! Unless you see the name "Bayer Cares" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine' BayertAs• pirin proved safe by millions and pre- scribed by physicians over twenty. throe years for - Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" only. Each unbroken . package con• tains proven directions. Bandy boxes of twelve tablets cost few Conte. Drug- gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered e a of 13ayet Mang' in Caned) y facture of 1livoi oaceticacidester . of Saiicylicacid, While it Is well known that Aspirin Meets Bayer Manufacture to egoist IIlea Y , 8 9t c a• ihst itn to 0 11b1 a ti ns h the i i the Ta g b I1 , Bayer Com an lets .01P e will be stamp• and With their ,igen'era4i trade mark,' the p 0' ACCO ,1S FOUR TIMES SEAQ The lrecuy (The Yam/ittpaper. to bring y., u the, fiull rich eels' and mellow sweetness of this—. Manufactured by IMPI✓RIALTODACCO CO. OF CANADA UNITED' Vision. It was a day in winter When quiet hours go, That I saw the Savious Walking in the snow. His feet lett no footprints, Ills, steps fell as, light Asleaves in the autumn, As dew in the night. And when he wentassin lz g The Sun took Ills hand, And light filled the valley And spread through the land. —Mabel Simpson. Who are your children's heroes? The great-hearted figures of the fine old stories, or the cunning half-wits of the newspaper comic page? Cold in lea ? Heat MInard's and inhale. • Quick relief assured. An enemy to germs. Pimples Disappear "You don't need mercury, potash or any other strong mineral to cure pimples caused, by poor blood. Take Extradt of Roots-- druggists oots—druggists call it "Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup—and your skin will clear up as fresh as a baby's. It will sweeten your stomach and Y regulate .our bowels." Get the 9 genuine. The larger bottle is more economical. At drug stores. 1 First Compounded This Remedy For My Own Neighbors Their praise of this -newer form of iron has spread so rapidly that now, after nine years, over 4,000,000 people use It annually.-. Years ago I began to wonder at the great number of my own friends and neighbors who were always ailing, complaining and doctoring, without ever seeming to get aniy better. Both working men and their wives were frequently all tired out in the evening, and a great many were weak, nervous and run-down. One had pains in the back and thought he 'had kidney• trouble..A;nother had pains around the heart, palpitations and dizziness, and was sure he was suffering from heart disease. Still others had severe .head- aches, floating spots before the ayes, tender spots along the spine and a great variety of 'alarming symptoms.. For years T made a spacial study of fids eondttiOn. consuitina a great numbor or ,uhyslotans an8 ohecn-: tots, Au immense nulnbor of tavastlgatlons 'by phystelans all over the oohntry showed that t11rne People out of every -four You meet' holt 100 per cent.. Iron In their. blood. Lack or iron'la the blood is the greatest of alt devitalising weaknesses. It is the Imo in your blood that enablos'you to get tis nourishment out of your food. Without iron. no thing You eat does you any good. Your heart; lungs and 10180118 and alt your octal organo got their nourlslpngnt from the blood stream, anfl uI,on thio blood locks iron and is thin, pale and watery, yott may suffer from the syrutneres of a great number, at diseases when Oho real and true cause Of all your 'trouble is n lack 0f Iron'7n the blood, In the old days peeplo otton tools ntotanho iron, urtica eoruo physicians claim Is not absorbed a.t a4, In compOnndtng Shunted Iron . I use the newer toren of iron, wlilclt is dies the iron 10 yOttt'blood arid hies the Iron In spinaob, iontlA find dpplas, linin°. the aldol 0001111 00 Iron, it trill riot tiljnre the teeth nor disturb the stomach, and It' Is ready for almost immediate tih0o1ptlon slid ass1m11atibh by tie blood, It Is tho .peoplo whoso blood is x1011 to tOon0 who 0oss000 gtcitt st0o0gth, Lobe/ and."snags, Lt o -on aro not 000(00 Or igen volt owe 1t to 3,0001i oursolf to, male( the fown ac, ltow bus lloyoniooghtact: work er how ;or ypn" ani walk without bocoming tired, Next talc/ two 1$, - grain -grain tablets of Notated- Tron three times 'a day for two *wears—then to after meals st your atrangt4t how nmdt yOi Mora Sith,sI.' An ag mbor of nervous, run-down people 04:75:1011: all the when. howl greatly tmpraroti their health and increased their strondth, '0100 and endurti 0e. ;a0ni'ty 15' taltina Ghtaa -'rlo ss 't >X tC .Cin 0 .:On 0 k Unless we reach the deep springs of life out, of which flow the deeds of men, our education of their intellect may only makethem all the more ef- fective to work social and industrial. evil. Classified Advertisements OOLGROVTERS-COTTS AND Rejects accepted for limited time only. Apply; Geo; 'etown Wo li g o en Mills, Georgetown, Ontario. NIGHT & MORNING to KEEP YUR EYES` LEAN CLEAR AND ,HEALTHi!! ra 000, 0000 SYS Cana boOiC: h3VNN¢ rA.Cn{rM�i[aQ Thin Peo le Thin, nervous, underweight people take on healthy flesh and grow sturdy and ambitious when Bitro=Phosphate as :guaranteed by druggistsis taken e, few weeks. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical "'Co., 25 Front St. East, Temente, Ont. FAGE A SIGHT] WITH PIMPLES Large and Bed. Itched and Burned. Cuttcura Heals. "My face was itchy and broke put with large, red pimples. They, were scattered ail over my face and itched and burned so that T scratched which: caused them to grow larger. I could hardly sleep at night. They were a real torture and sny face was a sight. "The trouble lasted 'about three months. s. I began using Guticura Soap and Ointment and the first` treatment stopped the itehing and'. after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Oint . went I.was healed" (Signed) Miss Ora Goulette, R. F. D. 4, BOX 86, Barre, Vt., March 24,1922. Lisa Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum exclusively for every -day toilet purposes. ample Each Treaty Mail. Address's, a,Lia it'd, 844 Bt. Pool 8t„ w., tiontreal." Bold every- where. Soap25e. OintmentOi and60c. Talmo:Mc, '"'Cu4ic ra Soapshoo ca without mug. S To EXPECTANT A Letter from Mrs. Smith Tells How M OTHERS Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Helped Her Trenton, Ont. --"1 am writing to you in regard to Lydia E. Pinkham s 'Vege- table Compound I would not be 'with- out it. I .have taken it before each of my children was born and afterwards and find it a; great hielp.• Before'first baby was born I had short- ness of breath and ringing 15 myears. g I felt as if Iwould never pull through. . One day a friend of my husband told h -m what the Vegeta- ble Cornet Mind had done for his wife and advised him to take a bottle home for me. After the fourth bottle I was a different woman. 1 have four children 'low, and I always, find the Vegetable Compound a great helpas it seems to 'make confinement easir. I recomi lend' it to my friends."-- Mrs. FREI) 11, SMITH, John St., Trenton, Ont. LydiaE.PmYcliam s Vegetable Comp, a �: pound is an excellent medicine for: ox* pectant mothers, and should b e taken during the entire period, I haskgen- . he andto e u�� the en t'l n atoatr n l ee t era, $ may �,. entire system, so that it unay WorXt itl< every respect ei'ectua ll ixs nature tended. Thousands of wonehtaa t •. feet. 4hits'this a ISSUE Ne, 1+-•'84