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The Wingham Advance, 1923-11-01, Page 7!'1 0! ,,, 11.111 ,0,g0,1t0,4;, ,11. 1111,, . . j I 11' • , 01. „ 1e, se• 101 eter eeeee nen.1 Jr% • ' ',".. •;.0'• ' •'. - • • l-, • •'•'• 10, • irt7.E ,IM4Or''1,16.21t; ' • ,WG4W VO '. 1,H ' •• ;,' ete • .0 • . -e-ess.-,4e.e;ee;s=-4=en-e-Seeh eee-e-reeeeeeeeese, • . • • ; • , , , ......„ ',...- t.'""i , ' ' ; t , ,, , , • , , ; , . , , AIN IN THE 'JOIN sTQfugs oF,,vvi.,t,.. , KNOVVN. PEOPLE Is An Indication That the Blood 4 • , 4 4 t ' ' , ' ' is Thtn andI'Vatefy' ' • • ' . , • ---,"-- i The first 'iiign of rhooniat,isna ie fre- . , . she's al Grandmother Bachelor!, , qiieritly a pain and Swelling of on ef • ' • • The" record does not 4 rsisatte whether a or not the feat of tile elder ami, cen- . serious ()to in learning Greek at 80 had -anything to "clo With spurring .her ginbition.. • At any rate, after ivIrs, . Sarah ShOpmakerFarley et Swarth - ;1 lore, Pa,,had Seen her ,three sens and a daughter thrmigh., college on 'a, wld- aw's 'moderate mens she .decided it .• stalher .own tutn to join the rah rah ..apite,.even. if she had paeSed 'the fifty ' year miles ton e, • Sp, she rriatriculated at P,enusylvanla tate.c.ollege and ,wlien the clip,lemas were •passed around re,centlY Mrs. Far- ' lei. fdlind herSelf Peasessor ofthe., de- gredo basdielor.Of Science., ' AU o th.: new mede bachelor's, child - 'ren 'are 'married and -betwe,ei them have Made her the proud proprietor of an eateia.,tiozeilegranclehildren. , During her student days .Mrs. Far- ley. wasaffectionately,. known . to her undergaeduateetaa.."Methea Fer- ree SO her resemblance to the 'fussy , old Roman who 200'. years: • before Christ Wes fightingefor laws regulat- ., Ing women's dress •and calling in and „ out at season for ,the destruction of ' cah,tliage •§eenis to haste begun and • eigled with the retention of a thirst for knowledge at sin age; when the .einiade of most peOple have crystalliaed st. and set in their 'final forns •• Famous' Ear Specialist to Treat' • Spanish Prince. The Congenital disease—deafness— whichehas, impaired the health of Don Jaime, second son of King 'Alfonso of .Spain, , soon to be treated by Dr. , Curtis H. -Muncie, of Brooklyn, N.Y., -.,. wisp; is widely known as a specialist , on:afflictions' of, the ,ear. Dr. Muncie • has just sailed for Europe with the 'ad- missionthat he, is going to treat a "well Iteown case of deafness, given np by many specialists of Europe." It has been • learned that this "Well • known" patient is troths other than Don Jaime. Dritil,h•e Was 9 years of age the ,young son of King,Alfenso was unable to ,speak, hut it was later found that - this, condition was brought about by • his deafness. He has been\ taught lip reading and now converses fluently by that method He is net the heir to the throne, ,the Crown Prince being the • Prince qf the Asturias. Dr. Muncie has-- also accepted invi- • • taticins to demonstr,ate his new meth- bd. of "manipulative surgery" or're- •,constructien ofethe eustachian tube" before leading needieat associations in paris,OGlasgow and London. He uses no instruments in his treatment of the • deaf, therele, Molding 'and shaping the tilhe avhfch leads from the inner ear to the noS6.' • ,-.• • . • - ' . • ' Office -Bo Y to Millionaire. Lord deicey, who celebrated recent- ly the "diamond jubilee" of his en- trance as office -boy inte the firm which he still controls, probably own's more • coal -mines than any other individual • In „the United. Kingdom. Theatoremost Items on his escutcheon are a couple orpickaxes and two ponies-. • Bern in the atmosphere of colleries and bridkyards at "Penfield, Durham, • 5eventy-six years ago, he grew up as bio i the "black environment." • Il;Li fathert eva_o worked in a Tyne- side eollierY, was aa . ° e saw aman 1 foresight and shrewd -common Sense. H • roe' fiat -ere of •fne engineering side of. • mining, and his son benefited by his • advice and instruction. • The future Lord ,Toicey ?saved every penny he eould while learning all he could; • Otit of two pounds a -week he saved enough to enable him to niake his first mining investments. Six Men to Carry Dad's Salary Every, Week.. , Colonel Shatford, of Montreal, ad- dressing the 261li District of Rotary at Toronto, pointed his morals with apt • saiecdote.s. I-I,ere N one of them that will go without adding on the moral: • Three small boys were sittin-g on a . fence bragging of their dads. •The one • eaid his father was:a-wonderful money malser, why he waa'a lawyer and could. write out what they called a brief and ,in X' few hours' make hundreds of dol- • lars, • ' • The secoa.d. said . that Ills father • could pull out teeth, put theni in and piug, them, anci•chatge„' feel as high as and still the customers Would he glad to•pay them.• But the third,wasa clergYmall's.s011. • "Why. at, takes si± inen'to carry dell's wages up to him every week,".said the • parson's heir. e for Another Rath Confessin ,pt y ,that' Jeer ideas for stories .carne to lier mostlY'in the betlt PhylliS AliStin the Teglish • •nsavelist, told an anniaing story on the • subjeca, ' ' • Before tak1uigto waver, writing, she WrOtO a numlfer :of is -ries., which were • , set, to htuslo by „her brother,HOrolO Austiii,. and publishedby different Arnie, On one 'occasion, when'aeother • eomposer waS particularly struck with ,the maCCeM,310f5lytlC silichali wrilten „ , for h,urn and which, she informeti hint • latter, as eataposedlu tlie bath, lie wrote; afterthree 1k101.1tha, R'iTO,DIV and • strihtftallY "Dear leilss Austin.e-Isn't • It time yell had a.not-lier hath?" , • eolored riebea irl • , ebonies fliest..displayed bv the MobriSh dvnggiettee ofArabia ant' " , the jointe. If thle is not treated , o , hcb is the eeat of the disease, the 'poison spreads, an, • fecting other joints and tissues—Seale- • times rheumatism attacks the heart'. r,nd is fatal, A remedy that ba e corrected many caeee of rheumatism' is Dr. Williams' , Pink Pills., *These Tills enrich and purify the bleed so that the poiseaous. rheumatic matter is driven Out of the sYetem as nature intended, Miss Ger- 1eDene, Washago, Ont., was attack- ed with rheuxnatiem and foUnd relief through' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. She - , sayse--"Ahout a year ago I was at- tacked hy rheuinatism and for two weeks -wee cenfined' to' my bed.. The trouble ,evas, so 'Paireful, affecting the joints of My limbs so that I could not stead alone. Mother hatd•a box,of Dr. Williams!,Pink pills in the house' and thought they might help me. I began takingathem, and when r had taken, these, pills' got a further supply, with the result that, the. rheumatism van- ished•arid•I Was a well girl. I may add thattiny mother and two of my slaters have also used the pills'for yarlodsall- ments with equal success, and now we are'never without them in the house.' If you are .suffering from any con- dition' due te poor, -watery bio'od, or weak nerves; begin taking Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pills now, and note how Your strength and health will improve, You"cati get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail, at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co )3ro k ill Ont. , A Cosmopolitan School. Twenty-nine different nationalities are represented among the pupils at- teuding one public school in Van- sousei, B.O. The largest talking machine 'needle in the.world measures 6 feet 7 inches in length, and was built for window display alone. Keep Minard's Liniment In the house. "91tipeai)S 'oit4.!:t0 -era! iikt IA Latest, Urestro of" •tia0 SeleXttiate /magiap Einstein, Marconi, 'Edieori, and Sir Oliver Lodge 'being able to head down their genitia, to, their child- ren as easlist as they hand •down their eetates!Picture a world in whieli Our deseenslante will begia.allticat where we left off. • • That this is not an idle dream hao been made abundantly clear, lay cer- 'tainexperiments on 'animals Carried Out by Profeespr. Paul .Kammerer, biologist of the IJUIVersity of Vienna, and a lifelong -friend of Steinacin the 'originator of the, "glarid" cure. Kano Meyer demonstrated' his theory ,before British scientists at Cainbridge. Plac- • ing before them a specimen of the ..eightless newt,,,lie said that Im had de- veloped the creature's' eyee,. - • , . Duriag thousands' 'of years' exist- ence'in deep; gloomy caverns, .its an - 'testers had not only lost ,the power' of 'sight, but eveenthe ,eyes themselves had shrunk' to mere rudirrientarY or- t • • na beneath the 1 in Professor 'Kammerer took -one of these eyeless newts at birth and exposed it to red light for five years,: .' The water, in which the neWtlived was continually illuminated •w,ith.red light,' which, was used because it was found that 'day- light merely caused as darkpigment to form in the skin covering tae eYes. ' Several' generationa „of, nev'sts. Weye Subjected to the red light' Until ' one group finally appeared'. with eYes that pushed through the head. The 'des- cendants of .this. group -had. eyes. The Professor 'then showed' Salamand- ers whose skins had changed corer as .a.-restilt of living on a background dif- ferent from that to which the Y had been accustomed. He said the change Waspermanent and heteditary. He then exhibited a land -dwelling toad, having the horny pads .of the water - toad, a wonder which the profeSsor had. -accomplished after a 'series of ex- periments. •• ' • These demonstration -were foiiow- hval.-knoll ficvn a cSn +tea posssatitse of,. applying the results , achieVed, on lower...animals to human beings, so that the 'good 'crtielities a man culti- vated in his Own. lifetime ,could be passed' on to his. Children . as "in- stincts.' . Kammerer himself says that further research along ,th,e,iinee of his experts Surnames and Their Origin URQIJHART Racial Origin—Scottish. So urce—A I oca I lty. • Urquhart was the name of oae of the most important and influential; though 'one' of the smallest. of the clans Of the Scottish Highlands. ,. But though the elan was pure Gae- lic, of that same stock which crossed over from Ireland toward the -close of those migrations which are respons- ible for most of the blood of the High- lands to -day, the clan name was not formed from the given name of a' chieftain. • In Ireland the clan names- were al- most without exception. deriv.ed from the names of the chieftains viho first elevated their following to the dignity 'of clanship; mostly from their given names, but at times from their nick- names or sobriquets. In , Scotland the excePtions • are more 'numerous, anti that of the Urquharts is one. Though the -"Clann Urachadian,". as it is styled in the Gaelic tongue, is admittedly -an old one, there is some vagueness as to -its early history, but it aPpears to have been closely con- nected with the clans MacKay and 'Forbes. The name of -Urquhart does not appear in the historical records As having been adopted by the clan until about 1300 A.D.; at which time the chief of the clan was also the com- mander of a. castle of that name, and, • the tradition goes that the clan name was adopted from thename of the castle. • BUCKLEY . • • • Racial Origlne-English. „ • Sou rce—Localitles.' • Here is a family- name originnally descriptive of the bearer by reference to the place from which h.e had come. , , _ There are,, however, .different mean- ings to the twn-place nan-ies' from which the family name N. variously derived. • One of these is the name of a com- munity in Chester, England: It is ,Bulkeley. R may also at various times have been a countryside name tor many localities in different sec- tions of England.. The, "ley," in the speech of the medieval Engl s , ofton meant an inclosedplace ,orepasture for animals, and -Buckley was originally simply a "builock-ley."• : ' This, however, does not -explain cer- tain old fornas of the family name whiCh'are to be foaind in the'rEedieval recercis,,"de okeie" aiisl "de DiSekey," which could not in so short a. Period have, been derived fresn, They repiesent rather the loeai des- , cription of pastures or mclosures for Buckdeer. ' In both cases the fp,nally name orig- inally bore the prefix ,"de," meaning "of," and clearly indicating the orig- inal descriptive nature of the surname. As was the rule, these prefixes in the vast majority ,of cases'. were dropped as meaningless after a generation or two; using the name, made it descrip- tive rather of, the bearer himself than the place from. which he had cone. • inentS, scone icaa tO a •_ , oi ist coyery ,b svb !eh our 'den -e9 -dant Will be enabled to grasp in a 'leas: monthe 'what rt.,...as taken -us a lifetime te learn; they will execute easily 'what we have aceorriplished with great ef- fortl. an-d:Withetand. WOunciathat in- jured : almost to the point of death. Wlier-g w sougljt. tliey will find. Where we left oft they will begin," Tug FALL WEATHER HARD ON LITTLE ONES Canadian tall weather is extremely hard on little ones. One day is warm had bright, and the next wet and cold. These sudden changes bring on colds, cramps 'and colic; and unless baby's little stomach is kept right the result may be serious. There is nothing tis equal Baby's Own Tablets in keeping the hittl onesswell. They sweeten the stomach, ,regulate the bowels, lareek up colds and Make baby thrive. 'The Tablets are, sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' IVIedicine 'Co., ItieoCk- vine, Ont. . eseseseas—as When Italics Ar,e Used. We are all familiar with words writ - ten in italics, Tri 1521 a printer of Venice invented the type when printing an edition of Virgil. It is supposed that he attempt- ed to copy the handwriting in which the translation wasr written. The style came to England in the following year and was knonwn as Venetian. It was, however, confined chiefly to, proper names and prefaces of boolts., Itailcs are used in the Bible for words inserted to make the sense of the translation clearer. , Nowadays italics are used almost solely for emphasizing a word or sent- ence, and if it is desireti for a printer to put any portion of a m•anuscrIpt in- to thN type,the words are underlined. Names 'of .periodicals and ships s ou d be in italics, but the rules re- garding ad hoc., •e.g., i.e., et seq., and so on, are varied, and italics• may or stet he rnayused.• . „ • Realized Ambition., "Ile seemseto haire realized his am- bition in- being able to cut- moakeY- shines in society." • • • ' . "Yes; I think. hers reached -the ape -x of his career." • - That nasty, irritating, tickling cough . that keeps you awake at n ght, maks life miserable, will -not stay when Dr.. Howard's Gum Balsam is used. The first .fibse relieves. .Every 50e bottle guaranteed aat1s1actory or money re- funded. Refuse substitutes and a.voicl, dieapPointment. All • Drug Storee. Manufactured Taylor Pharmacal CO., Birchcliffe, Ont. . • - like a nettle, wili always hurt the man who lays hold of it gingerlv. • The. People. avho report that businesS is coming back are those who went after it. Perfumes -to -day must'be much more skiifiiliy blended than even a few years ago; .the cruder ecents'•have al' together lost popularity. •• • • Ask for tVilnard'a and take eto other. essiseeseme. „„.„. . ..l.P.°..l.'Sle.tettlitetig*Ja LLOYD GEORGE VISITS SHOOS AT ArNfcus eft to right atedric Martin, Mayor osf ,-Montreal; itt Hott. David nieYd George. Datrie Margaret. George, Mr, a, se, Temple, Chief`, of Motive 'PoWer, Canadian l'edifid Raileva v. Inietograph talcon a the fetnatlien n eel ey us Shops Moutreal where the greet British Statesraael was 'accorded tin eel -talon by the 8,100 employees 1 g Di 't h Man ILIttnts 11h14tgoolie t 13 iY" &ITO. • • • wag the trip Made .reeently by GQii. stable P, Stevensea, of the Royal Cana- sdian Monnted Police, in bringing to jtistice a man charged with the mill. - der of a trader. • Thi, however/ is by no ineane a re- , cord in the annals of the Force, which hes Several louger aild no lese in man hunts to its credit. rl'aso years ago an 3-1..n.S'id,111Q who had murdered a white man lu the Yukon was trackecl over a thousand miles be- fore he was captured, following which I the Crown prosecutor and a judge tra- velled 3,090 miles, to conduct the trial. One of the longest of these littats Was that carried oat by Sergeant Frank Smith, wile covered seVente hundred miles by dog team and cane • In search of a murderer named O'Brien. I During the trip the sled in which the • sergeant travelled part of the way overturned into a dyke injuring its I occupant's leg so severely that h,e was ' unable to uSe it for some days. I7n- i daunted, he continued the journey, which ended in his finding his man two weeks too late; the civil authori- ties had succeeded in capturing him. The hunt cost the Government $150, - Another long-distance chase was participated in. by a member of the same• Force following the murder by Victor Fournier and Edward la, Belle of three French Canadians, The de- tective doncerned, Sergeant W, H. undertoolt to hunt the erimin- ala alone, and at the end of a thrilling nine hundred miles' trip'he sUcc'eeded in arresting the prisoners with as lit- tle fuss as a Toronto policeman makes in apprehending a pickpocket. leTobaccoo 11 a Pd in pack ges ligannfactured by Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada Limited ,• • rATik, . • . -Where Men Buy Wives. The Gift of the "Gamp." The well-known traveller in Far Eastern regions', Miss Ella Sykes, has been lecturing to the Royal G,eoghtiph- ical Society, London, on her experi- ences and observations on "The Roof of the World," this being Miss Sykes's mune fur a plateau -of the Pamir ivieun- tains bepond, the great river which borders Chinese -Turkestan. The Kelgis (inhabitants of the re- gion) have, said the lecturer, some pe- culiar customs,. The men spend, most of their time playing the goat game, a sort of horsebackdnotball, with the inflated akin of a headless goat for a belt Attending marriage and funeral teas,ts is another favorite occupation Most.ef the laborious work is left to the women, and they do it obediently, • though women are so scarce . that a 'father can demand a very heavy price for a daughter's. hand. The stronger and more capable that hand is, the higher .its, value in the marriage mar- ket, . When a Kelge dies, he- beteueaths no money to his relati-ves, but gives in- structions for a funeral feast that Will cost all the wealth of whichhe is pos- sessed. $4.60 Profit From Each Hen. A short time ago an article appeared in the "Pickering News" stating that E. W. Ruddy, who has a country re= sidence there, cleared $4,600 profit from 1,000 hens for the preceding twelve Months," and employed all help required to look after them. This cer- tainly shows there is inoney to' be inade from liens. How? By proper feeding, good care and attention. PoultrY raisingn is as Much a business as any other business and to make a success one must understand what he .113'11)i:1W lanntefir73sanot the natural laying season, therefore to get good eggapro- duction, when prices are high, the hens must be fed witb that object al- ways in view. They need exercise to keep the body warm, which should be -provided by making them work (scratch) for every' grain of feed. The feed shonid be Stimulating and .body- building, such as wheat and corn; say 40%' of each, making up the other 20% with Western oats, laniek-wheat, peas, etc, It is best just to feed enough at a time so as to keep the bird always ready for the next meal. A lot has been said for and ,agtiinsi "hot mash." Mr: Ruddy ,fea hot mash as a midalay meal all through the Win- ter, In the average home there is usually a cOnsiderable, amount of table scrap which can, profitably be utilized, mixing it along with tlie lay- ing mash and fed in a "crumbly" con- dition, not sloppy, l'eeti at mid-day and just enough.; if you feed too much the birds will go to roost, which is not desirable. Why not feed hot mash in the morning? BeeaUse birds will easily fill their "ereps," stand around and got chilled, whereas grain first , thing makes them active and keeps I them, warns Grain should also be fedi, in the evening, splt feed being more I easily digested, the birds' crops are ' -empty tang before daylight and yon cannot expect Man or beast to do their best on an empty stomach. .8alay's Color. • I The young ti ether had just read in a newelionght paper that everyone is surrounded by a halo, the color ot whieh is determined by the tempera- ment of the person. When her hus- band came herne she taekled him on the subject. „After eetiling the color of her ne,ighliers' hales to her entire satjAsatnactitast,,ai licreoltintb arkeatib:y; Artrea ? What celor is he, do you think? Pink, T elrecailee liets the pink of 1.)3`r'fll;''10 ,31' ;ili.Y dear," replied her bus. band, caustically, 'Ile may be pink re'len away, but When len home be'e ihe ince' stretling veller!" , , , .„ , , . . „ . , , . , ' • ' . • . • ' 1 I I , . , . e , • ' ,, t; •,' tj „ etit'• stSti• Brussels appears to be the only city Which has a 'well -organized umbrella - borrowing ,bureau. • The annual sub- scription Is haw, but if 'every Umbrella user were to join such a society, its in- corae would be enorm.oue. The Idea is rather similar to that in farce at the-Britien Museum, National Gallery,' and ()the± public institutionin where you are required to deposit yonr, "garap"' before being allowed to go round the galleries. • You get a ticket of Metal or a bone disc, which will redeem your umbrella' at any time; only in the case of,the umbrella exchange, the :umbrella ,is not your own but the property of the society. Each rnemb-er on. paying his sub- scription, receives a token, usu-ally of .metal stamped with, an hide& number, which he carries in his Pecketsinstead of an numbrella inehis hand: When eaugit by the rain, all he has to do is to ge. to one. of the ,seciety's.agencies, whichare tobacco shops, restaurants, and big stores, and hand over the tok- en, to .be.linmedia.tely provided with an :umbrella. ' When the ram ceases the borrower .deposits his umbrella in ' the •• next agency heliappens to nese, and in ex- chatsge receives another counter. MONEY ORDERS.. A Dominion Express Money Order for five dollars costs three cents. An aeroplane with a saloon for 25 passengers has-been designed with the whole body enclosed in the 'wings, so that it is all lifting surface. Cese. ay J.Jaycl. .1.111ZLI Aiming 'high isn't much use if you have no ammunition. • Woolen. clothes examined under a microscope cnn be tested not only for their quality, hut also to show whet:ter the wool was grown on a healthy animal. • ' rofiYouR-EYEs Refr eiises 'Tired Eyes, Write Murine Co.,ChicneO,for.r,eCrireeSeek 1:46tWitW,WitMti,-It;,,griozA.1151.11; America's Ploneee Dog Remedies DOG DISEASES anti time to, !cod lirdleti Prat, to any Addren • by the lUthor (1,. CLAY GLOVER CO., In% 128 Wpst 24t8 strect • Wear York, exquieltely scented Cuticura Talcum In your toilet preparations. 11111 Lirnited, 344 St. Panl St., W., Montreal. Soap 250. Oletniesit2Sand he. Teleran 2Se. Sold • parts. Do not fail to include the throughout theDominion. CanadianDepot: • hot water, dry gently, rend apply 1. Cuticura. Ointment to the affected bathe freely with Cutlet= Soap and • In the treatment grail skth. tsonbles • W,Ic:llytielHffaallrwe eTvre0:1tbitle 'Cutieusa Soap nhaves without mug. Unless you see the name "Bayer" oxi package or on tablets you are not get- ting the genuine Bayer preduct proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-three years tor Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" 'only. Each unbroken package con- tains proper directions,. Handy boxes' of twelve tablets cost few eente. Drug- gists. also ;sell bottles ot 24 and 100, Aspirin is the trade !nark (registered' in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of ; N on ()ace ticatedee ter (ie. Salicyl lea cid. While it is well knewn that Asplein means Bayer Manufacture, to aEstat, the public against imitations', the Tab- lets of Bayer Company will no stamp- I ed with their general tratle mark, the •", Si 4 ELT • Keep your health, Al; ways keep NI I na rd's handy. Tile liniV erS reMedy for every111 ••'tes THEII OF LARGE FA 1LY Recommends Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound to Other Mothers Heinford, N. S.—"I am the Mother of four ohildren and I was so weak after eny last baby' came that could not my work and suffered for months until a friend induced me to try Lydia E. Pinkhamte Vegetable Compound. Since taking the Vegetable CompOtinci tray Weakness; has left me and the pain m my back has gone. X tell all my friends who are troubled,with female weakness to take Lydia E. Pinkham's 'Vegetable Cornp9und„ for 1 think it is the best di . y advertiie rny letter. "—Mrs.. GEORGt Oft0ifalkle lianford, N. S. My .First. Child Glen Allen, Alabama —" I have been greatly benefited by taking Lydia 8. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound' for bearing -down feelings and pains. 1 was troubled in this way for nearly four years following the birth of entr first child, and et times could hardly stand on • nk, feet. A neighbor recommended the Vegetable eompoUnd to inc after I had , taken doctor's rnedicinds without lanach benefit. It has relieved my pains and gives me strength. I recommend it and give you permission to use my testi- rnonial \ettor."--Mrs, ta& 1ht, Glen Allen, Alabanni. Women WhO sirifer aould write to tlio Lydia 8.PinkharnMedieibe Co.,COboUrfa Onterio, Inc a froo oolv• of Lydia E. Pinitham'e Private Text-,Bool upon "Aihnonts PecUllar tO WOrnen. 4ti ISSUB. No, 4.3—t3, '