Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 2 Aug 1917, p. 7

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'**> frf " J AT IN THE AIR EXPERIENCE OF A CANADIAN AIRMAN IN FRANCE. & Engine Refused to Work and Flight Lieut. Munday Narrowly Escaped Imprisonment. An exciting trip was that taken by Flight Lieut Munday, of Toronto, who only a few months ago received his commission, arfd shortly afterward was sent to France. He described the experience as follows : "I landed in France on a Thursday, and Friday morning I was over the line for the first time. On this first trip I very nearly became a prisoner of war. "I crossed at eight thousand feet above the clouds and wishing to see what 'Hunland' looked like from the air, I shut off-my engine and came through the clouds to five thousand feet. Then I endeavored to 'switch on,' but my engine had 'given up the ghost,' to use a service term. You can imagine my feelings--my first trip over the line and a prisoner of war. Engine Refused to Work. "I pushed the nose of my machine Is Breakfast Ready--? Ttec- answér is'càsÿ in the home where Shredded Wheat Biscuit is the regular every.diy breakfast cereal. Being ready - cooked and ready - to - eat, Shredded Wheat Biscuit is the joy of the housekeeper in Summer. Served with sliced bananas, berries or other fruit, they make a nourishing* satisfying meal at a cost of a few cents. ARMENIA OF TO-DAY. v : -■ - . ~. ■--v . - Nation Has Preserved Its Traditions and Religion for Centuries.* In spite of the efforts of -barbarous masters, and notwithstanding the most frightful persecutions the Armenians have been able for centuries and centuries, centuries, to preserve their traditions, their language arid the religion of their ancestors. This persistence of the'Armenian vitality is one of the most remarkable facts of Oriental history, history, a fact almost unique of its kind; for, of all the people subjugated by the Arabs and Turks, very few have been able to preserve the three prin- nationalitÿ --cus- INVENf IONS NEEDED. Chance to Promote Industry and Incidentally Incidentally Wake a Fortune. "Anybody who wants to make a Made in Canada. A SCENE IN LONDON'S SLUMS. Influence of a Little War Shrine onf the Rough Inhabitants. I walked the other day through one of London's meanest streets. The bar rows of costermongers lined the pave- down and almost got into a nose-dive, i ments. Rough women jostled each but still my engine refused to start, other and shouted in foreign tongues. At one thousand feet I w r as on the \ Odds and ends of unsavory-lookmg point of giving up and selecting a washing fluttered from the windows landing place, when the engine showed signs of activity and with a little coaxing I managed to get its revolutions revolutions to half the number required for flight. I headed for France, or __ rather Belgium, and sagged over the gold against a background of white inscribed--the of slums overhead, writes an Englishwoman. Englishwoman. And in the midst of all this dirt and disorder I came upon a very beautiful beautiful little war shrine. In letters of AGENTS WANTED One Agent in each town, to Bell & new American, home article, OXOGAS, .'making .'making Light and Heat; from common coal oil, in any home, as needed. No dirt, smoke; odor, no fires to, build and no ashes to carry. Cheapest and most ef- fortune can get one' qulck'by invent- ! Relent of .all fuels. Write qxrickiy. i ■■■ Gloria, Heat and Light Co., 391 Yonge ing 8. machins that will pick Cotton street, Torpnto, A satisfactorily/' .says Prof. W. J. Spill-1 -- ' ' ■ '*'*'■ / ■ ' ' -- man, chief of the ^United States Gov- ! ernment Office of Farm Management. "It will be ..a: ; simple enough contri- '• varice when it 'arrives, and the every- 1 day citizen yill marvel that the idea ' did not occur to z him. | "Such a machine would enormously augment our annual cotton output. For, mark you, it is small trouble to plant wide areas--that is, to put the seed in the ground--but the gathering BABY SLEEPS. ciple elements of toms, language and religion.^^.^ D f the crop is a slow and laborious trenches and 'No Man's Land' at 500 fee;. Rifles and machine guns were turned on my machine, and upon landing landing just behind the Belgian lines I discovered discovered that my machine had been hit four times, but not much damaged. So that was my initiation to the war zone and I often wonder what I would be doing now if my engine had 'given up the ghost' for good on that trip. ^ Fate of Pilots. In :he squadron to which I was attached attached there were eighteen pilots, i To-day six are still intact for service. | Of the six, one only is at the front, the j remainder are recovering from wounds l and injuries received in action. I names have been informed that I will be unfit unfit for service for approximately two months, but I am eager to get back to j the front to get even with Fritz many sleepless nights and interrupted , to know- marble names were "Roll of Honor." Before the shrine lay great bunches of roses and pink carnations. As I looked at this tiny oasis in London's London's lowest slum a woman in a ragged ragged shawl and with very dirty hands slouched up. In those hands she carried carried a bunch of lilies. She looked about her furtively to see if any one was watching, then placed the lilies at the shine. Tears were in her eyes as she turned away. "Good old Bill!" I heard her mutter, "'e always did like flowers!" Then I saw that among the dozen inscribed on the shrine under i the title "Roll of Honor" was that of The Ghebers, the last remnants of ancient Persia, still form communities that are preserved solely solely by religion; for the old language has little by little disappeared to give place to dialects of modern Persia mixed with archaical forms. The Chaldeans', for the most part Christians, Christians, have in general abandoned their language, while a great number have changed their religion and become coalesced with the mass of the Arabs. The less numerous Christians of Saint John (Madeens), living in Lower Lower Chaldea, are still attached by religious religious beliefs, but their ancient speech is dead. The Copts, in Egypt, remaining remaining Christians, witnessed the extinction extinction of their language scarcely a century century ago, and Syria has experienced a similar vanishing of a great number number of its traditions; Copts and SyVb- ans now speak but the language of their masters. Little by little the Moslem religion has succeeded, not only in unifying the language, but also in reducing creeds. In the Turkish empire to-day we meet fragments only of*the Christian Christian races. The Armenians only have the moral force to cope with the calamity; calamity; they alone have preserved all the intellectual and moral inheritance of their ancestors. THE STORY OF THE STAIRS ! Private Bill Johnston, of the "Die Hards," and after his name were the for i words, "Killed while rescuing a wounded wounded comrade." A big policeman--a typical London meals. The., seemed to ^ °" r ; "Bobby"--and they have to be big and •meal time to the minute and would or- , ... , . jr few reminders of I very strong to cope with certain forms e-n-Ti* nnd ■ of liveliness evinced frequently in Lon- had i don's slums--strolled up. ' "That there little war shinne does ten favor us with a the war in the shape of bombs and on one occasion we 'gas' as an appetizer for breakfast." Flight Lieut. Munday was quite badly hurt in the shoulder at the time of his flight, and has been in an English English hospital since. MR. ROOT'S REPORT ON RUSSIA more to uplift the men and women of the neighborhood thaiv the sermons of a thousand parsons would," he observed, observed, "there ain't near so much drinkin' and cursin' and fightin' 'round here since we set up the roll of honor. It kind of sets 'em an example, it does. Countrv's Most Serious Lack is Money ! Take the case of that old woman just and Adequate Transportation. j gone by, that left her lilies here. One ^ -D , , of the worst and toughest cases in The Hon Elihu Root, as leader ot : c , ., . .• -c ; TTnitpd London, she used to be. But since the mission to Russia from the Lnited , ^ dson was k m e d--givin' his States, has sent forward a brief .tate-. ^ & friend _ and the War office ment or the. si ua ion - i gent the old lady^'is decoration that he quite reassuring He does not mm- ; ^ fQr 1Iantry _ welI> " she > s a dif _ iTTiiz6 either the dsn^ers or the dirii~ • , , , •» , , . , . . , ferent being, and that's saym' a lot, culties, but he does insist that the out-, t _ _„ _ t j_ ; _i look is hopeful, and that he and the ; for she was one of the hardest drinkers and the most quarrelsome in the neigh- : borhood. Now she spends her money members of his party are greatly encouraged. encouraged. -Jon flowers instead oi onnK, ana He tells us tnat he found no organic . h j don . t rrroc h hold with wastin' m ,r.=urable malady m the Russ.an * „„ it -, better than the democracy; democracies are always in ; 1 . J,, trouble, lie remarks somewhat faceti- j 1111 * ^ ou-lv and Russia is passing through ! ... . , ,, .. j * , , X . C- .....7, . The solution of the food problem lies no darker days that his own republic ; . -*■" ° ^ , ,, J , , , . in the hands of the women of the has gone through saiely. j "We must remember," he says, "that ' * w * or a people in whom all constructive ef- j fort has been suppressed for so long: cannot immediately develop a genius for quick action. The first stage is necessarily one of debate. The solid, admirable traits in the Russian character character will pull the nation through the present crisis. Natural love of law. ar.d order and capacity for local self- government have been demonstrated ' every day since the revolution. The country's most serious lack is money and adequate transportation. We ; shall do what vre can to help Russia in, both." _ ! To help Russia in both will be one of ; the great services that the United. States will render. ! * SOLDIERS USE NEW SLANG. Every time yon go up stairs you can test your state of health--the condition condition of your blood. Do you arrive at the top of the stairs breathless and distressed ? Does your heart palpitate violently ? Do you have a pain in your side ? Perhaps you even have to stop half way up, "with limbs trembling and head dizzy, too exhausted to go further further without resting. These are unfailing unfailing signs of anaemia. As soon as your blood becomes impoverished or impure the stair-case becomes an instrument instrument of torture. When this is so you are unfit for work; your blood is watery and your nerves exhausted, you are losing the joy of an active life and paving the way for a further break down and decline. In this condition condition only one thing can save you. You must put put new, rich, red blood into your veins without further delay and so build up your blood anew. To get this new, rich blood give Dr. Williams' Williams' Pink Pills a fair trial, and they will give you new vitality, sound health, and the power to resist and throw off disease. For more than a generation this favorite medicine has been in use throughout the world qnd has made many thousands of weak, despondent men and women bright, active and strong. You can get Dr. WilliamsTPink Pilla through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ❖ ' SAVING FOOD AT LONDON ZOO. process. It is, then, not the planting, but the labor required for picking the cotton, " that limits the output and raises the cost of the product. "Already there are., cotton-picking machines. ./The. essential feature of one of them is a revolving<belt .carrying .carrying steel bristles (that (operated by a man on a horse-drawn, vehicle) catch up thejcottqn, which is raked off the belt by a row of teeth into a sack. "Another contrivance, carried on a wagon, has several long rubber tubes attached to it. In the wagon is a gasoline gasoline engine that operates in much the same fashion as a vacuum housecleaning housecleaning machine. Men walk behind, pointing pointing the ends of the tubes at the bolls, and the cotton flies up them and into a receptacle provided for the purpose. "These devices are ingenious, but by no means wholly satisfactory. The steel bristles miss a good deal of the cotton. The vacuum contrivance costs money and is expensive to operate. operate. Besides, it collects a lot of dirt and waste vegetable material with the cotton. "Before long, however, the problem is bound to be solved. And by that time we may have another much-need ed farm invention--a machine that will not only dig potatoes, but will pick them up, knock the dirt off them and sort them in sizes ready for market." market." -- TIMBER GROWING IN CANADA. A One-Piece Dress The baby wept ; The mother took it from the nurse's arms, And hushed its fears, and soothed its vain alarms, And baby slept. x Again it weeps, And God doth take it from the mother's mother's arms, From present griefs, and future unknown unknown harms, And baby sleeps. --Samuel Hinds. KEEP CHILDREN;WELL DURING HOT WEATHER McCall Gil, LETTS e a*= 1.YE ' r- SrfS-DISINFEC TS Every merchant should unload freight cars promptly. Fruit growers are suffering for cars that are kept, standing for days waiting to be un-' loaded. During the month of May at the principal Eastern markets after the cars were placed on team tracks for unloading the average detention of cars for, unloading was four days. Help the whole country by unloading with as little delay as possible. New Words Developed by Contact With Experiences at Front. j After the war some one will have to compile--for the benefit of realistic, | but inexperienced novelists--a little \ code of the slang of the New Armies. It could hardly be done now for a good deal of that slang is in a state of flux. Phrases like "wind up" (i. e., frighten-1 ed), or to "put the wind up" any one' (i. e., make him frightened), hhve re-j mained pretty constant during the last two years. v But words like "washout" "washout" (noun and verb), have developed all sorts of varying applications. Bimply and originally a "wash-out" must have been the state of a camp Whose occupants had been almost lit/ «rally washed out by torrents of rain. By an easy extension it became a description description of any particularly unpleasant unpleasant situation--a water-logged trench very naturally indeed--but afterward anything at all, from a heavy artillery artillery strafe by the Germans to & poor: af"dr an unpopular officer. Preparing for To-morrow Many people seem able to drink, tea and coffee for a while 'without apparent harm, but when health disturbance follows, even though slight, it ia wise to investigate. Thousands of homes, where tea or coffee was - found to disagree, have changed the family table drink to Instant Postum With improved health, and it usually follows, _ the change made becomes • a permanent one. It^pays to prepare for the health of to-morrow. "There's a Reason" r>na/Ua-n Poatum Cereal Co., Ltd. Windsor, Ont, - Horseflesh is Only Meat Used--Bread Made From Condensed Flour. How the Zoological Gardens in London London are helping to conserve the* British British food supply was told by the Duke of Bedford at a recent meeting of the Zoological Society in London. He said they had not replaced the animals that had died since the war began and had killed off all of those that were easily : replaced. | The only meat they gave to the car- nivora was horse flesh purchased from the army. They had ceased using ! potatoes. The brpad given to the i. monkeys and other small mammals | was made from flour rejected by the j Board of Trade and ship's biscuits : that had outlived their usefulness as i human food. Instead of wheat they 'used dark paddy, rice and locust ! beans. They were replacing oats with ! a mixture of maize and split horse beans. Hay was that left by the army buyers, supplemented with park.grass and foliage. Only Chinese . pickled eggs were employed and the fish was that unsuitable for human "use. Bananas, Bananas, formerly fed to many small mammals and birds, had to a great extent extent been replaced by boiled mangold- wurxel and beets. Only five pounds of sugar a week were used, and this was "foot" sugar unsuitable for human food. And the "greens'" were limited to eleven bushels a week of kinds not sold for human Consumption. Two-thirds of the Dominion Area Should be Reserved for Forests. One of the surprises to those visit ing Europe in peace times is the meth od by which all lands are carefully examined examined and put to work according to their capacity. No farmer is permitted permitted to locate on non-agricultural soil and at the same time, good farming soil cannot be retained under such crop as timber. Canada has only made a beginning at applying such a policy of business efficiency in the use of the nation's natural resources. Thousands of farmers are to-day tied to farms that produce only a few dollars dollars ân acre, their- efforts and ambitions ambitions practically wasted in a time when man-power is at a high premium. premium. Taking the whole of Canada's area, more than two-thirds will never produce field crops, and the bulk of the two-thirds will prove profitable under only one crop, namely timber. All efforts for the protection of the forests against fire and other forms of needless waste aim to keep in a productive productive condition those millions of acres that can never grow field crops. Canada holds a tremendous national advantage in her forests, but from the beginning of the last century about two-thirds of the original inheritance inheritance has been destroyed by fires. Nearly all modern countriesriiave put an end to forest fires by carefully organized organized protective systems. * Told the Truth. "Jimmy/' .said the gentle old lady sadly to the young imp who lay with a broken leg in the hospital, "the nurses tell me that you have been a very naughty boy." "Yes, missus," acknowledged Jimmy, Jimmy, his sun-burnt face and tousled head half-hidden in the pillow. "But, why 1 ?" came the gentle query. "Can't 'elp it, missus I" shame-fac- edly whispered Jim. / "Now, look here," said the old lady as she'rose, "I shall be at the hospital again next week, and I want you to promise me to be a good boy till then, and, if so, you shall have a whole shilling. Jimmy fervently promised; but, alas, all his mischief reasserted itself, and he was sadly In disgrace when the old lady again visited the ward. "Well, little man," she sald mildly, "I'm not going to ask the nursès if you have been a good boy. Tell me yourself. yourself. Now, do yo deserve that shilling shilling I promised you?" Slowly Jim raised his big brown eyes té her face, and then" lowered them again.. _ "Gimme a penny," he said in a low voice. Every mother knows how fatal the hot summer months are to small children. children. -Cholera infanturh, diarrhoea, dysentry and stomach troubles are rife at this time and often a precious little life is lost after only a few hours illness. The mother who keeps Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The occasional use of the Tablets prevents prevents stomach and bowel troubles, or if trouble comes suddenly--as it generally generally does--the Tablets will bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. » -- Every garden needs a compost heap. A good way to start the heap is to cut sods and pile them up upside down. On this pile throw all the cuttings from the lawn, weeds from the garden garden pulled before they go to seed, tops of vegetables, pea vines, &c., old bones and if the pile is away from the house garbage can also be thrown on it, covering covering this promptly with a few shovelfuls shovelfuls of earth. Next year when rotted j Something absolutely new is the , and sifted this makes excellent potting slip-on frock sho\*N* above which re- soil and good compost to spread over j quires no fastening of any kind--nei- the garden, ther buttons, hooks and eyes, nor snaps. The two-piece skirt is attached attached to the blouse, and the waistline adjusted adjusted by an elastic which may be drawn tight or loose as desired. McCall McCall Pattern No. 7891, Ladies' Simplicity Simplicity Dress; in 7 sizes; 34 to 46 bust. Price, 20 cents. This pattern can be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. »> MONEY ORDERS. REMIT by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or stolen, you get your money back. When boiling coined beef you will improve the flavor by adding a small onion, a few cloves and several bay leaves to th" water in which it ia boiled. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. ' The "Queen of Heaven" (Jeremiah vii., 18; xivi. 17, 18, 19, 26) is the moon worshipped as Astareth or Astarte. WEWBPAPEBS POB SAXE ROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB OfflceH for eale In good Ontario towns. The moat useful and Interesting of all businesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publishing Company. Company. 78 Adelaide Street. Toronto. ANGER, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC- internal and external, cured without without pain by our home treatment.- Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited. Colllngwood. Ont. When Your Eyes Need Care Use Marine Eye Medicine. No Smarting--Feels Fine---Acts Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, Bore Eyes ana Granulated Eyelids, Murine is compounded by our Oculists--not e. "Patent Medicine"--but used, in successful Physicians' Practice for many years. Now dedicated to the Public and sold by Druggists at 60o per Bottle. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 16c and oOe. Write for Book of the Eye Free. Murine Eye Remedy Company, Chicago, Ads, It is doubtful if any of us realize the need that there will be for meat and live stock In the European countries after peace is declared. Canadian breeding stock and Canadian meat products products will be in demand. It behooves the Canadian breeder and feeder to grasp the opportunity and produce a-maximum a-maximum of live stock when prospects are so good for continuous high prices. No better outlet for the best of his stuff can be found than at the auction sale of the Eighth Annual Toronto Fat Stock Show, Union Stock Yards, December 7th and 8th next. The Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the * "OTTO HIGELV PIANO ACTION r BOOK . ON JÈÊ 8-fc DOG DISEASES And How to F eed Mailed free to any address by America's the Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. Dog Re me diet 118 West 31st Street, New York NUXATED IRON A canary's ears are at the back of and a little below its eyes. There is no outer ear such as animals have, but simply a small opening which is covered covered by feathers. It is quite surprising surprising that birds should possess the very acute hearing which they do while lacking the fleshy flap which enables the animals to catch sounds. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. It is estimated that there are 600 professional story-tellers in Tokio, who wander from house to house re- article soon to appear in this paper. «Increases strength of delicate, nervous, rundown people 100 per cent, in ten days In many' instances. $100 forfeit If It fails as per full explanation explanation in large I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured him with $1.00 worth df MINARD'S LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. Profit on Liniment, $64. MOÏSE DEROSCE, Hotel Keeper, St Phillippe, Que. lating tales. The story-teller learns a new set of stories when he finds that the old ones are too well known; Ask It. your doctor or druggist about Poor tea that can be sold at a low price is most extravagant in use. A little good tea, like Salada, makes | many more cups; hence it's real 1 economy. If winter flowering plants have not been repotted do not longer delay. Get good rich potting soil from the~near- est florist and repot the plants at once. Plunge the plants in the garden garden and keep them well watered. Minard's Liniment Cores Garget In Cows Now is the time to break up sod where wintér wheat or rye is to be gown fri the autumn, Canadians should not consider that 1917 will be thé only year that rigid economies must he practised, There is no knowing. at. this date when the -war will end, and. even after it has ended there will be. urgent nçed for Canada's surplus/pf 'food for many months while* Europe is being regenerated, regenerated, Â) Blasting" With Lime. When water is added to calcium ox ide, or quicklime, the lime expands, slowly with almost irresistible force. Rock Products describes how that property property of quicklime was utilized recently recently to break up piers twelve feet wide, twenty feet long and twelve feet high. The piers stood between similar similar piers <£hat supported engines in constant operation and therefore had j to be removed without injury to the machinery. It was impossible to blast the piers, and hand cutting was too slow and expensive. The work was accomplished accomplished by drilling three-inch vertical vertical holes, three feet deep and three feet apart in both directions, over the entire area of the piers and filling them within six inches of the top with fresh slaked lime, in pieces one half inch to one and a half inches wide. As goon as the lime was thoroughly wet the tops of the holes were filled with brick dust., which was well tamped." In about ten minutes cracks 'started in every direction, and the entire top of the foundation was broken into three- foot cubes. Influence Needed. He was very young and fresh and new, and he was a second lieutenant. One day he sought his elderly colonel, and poured forth a complaint. "Sir,.I should be so obliged if you'd use your influence to prevent the men in my platoon from calling me 'Baby Bunting.' " "Certainly, my lad--certainly!" said the old colonel. "I will, with pleasure --if you'll use your influence to stop the whole battalion calling me 'that bow-legged old duffer with the bald head.' " WOMEN ! IT IS MAGIC ! LIFT OUT ANY CORN Apply a few drops then lift corns or calluses off with fingers--no pain. Suffered Three Weeks With Chapped Hands. Sore and Unsightly. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed. Above are extracts from a signed statement recently received received from Miss Gladys Hambleton, Roxton Falls, Que., Nov. 29, 1916. How much better to prevent such suffering by using Cuticura for every-day toilet purposes, the Soap to cleanae and purify the pores, with touches of Ointment now and then as needed to soothe and heal the first signs of eczemas, rashes, dandruff and pimpl es. Y ou will use no other once you try these super-creamy emollients. For Free Sample Each by Mail address address post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere. DODDS KIDNEY , PILLS^f A [ ' X ' X v x x V " n'S^ , M L. u 1,-- r V ' 1 rT - u C t / IHEiPl Jrr In One Pea or Two Peas? We deceive yourselves much more_ often than other people deceive us, because we cannot rely upon the testimony testimony of our physical senses. Elusions of one sense or another%re everyday experiences. We-have'illusions We-have'illusions of'Vision and illusions of hearing. hearing. They are always interesting, But Elusions of feeling are specially curious, being raren Here is one that j ! anybody may try: Take a pea and roll it to and fro . on the table with the forefinger and middle finger, It feels, of course, like one pea, But repeat the process with those two fingers crossed and the pea becomes to the feeling two peas. Try it.- ISSUE No. 31--'17. Xiaard's Liniment Cures Colds. Bts. Just think I You can lift off any com or callus callus without pain or soreness. soreness. A Cincinnati man discovered discovered this ether compound compound and named it ' freezone. Any druggist druggist will sell a tiny bottle bottle of freesone, like here shown, for very little st. You apply a few rops directly upon a tender corn or callus. Instantly the soreness disappears, then shortly shortly you will find the corn or callus so loose that you can lift it right off. Freezon^is wonderful wonderful , It dries instantly. It doesn't eat away the com or callus, but shrivels it up without ^ the surrounding skin. Hard, soft or corns between the toes, as well as painful calluses, lift right àff. There is no pain before or afterwards, afterwards, If your druggist hasr.7 AND BLUES Symptoms of More Serious Sickness. Washington Park, I1L--"I am the mother or four, children and have suffered suffered with female trouble, backache, nervous spells and e blues. My chil- en's loud talking hrid romping would ake me so nervous I could just tear everything to pieces and I would ache all over and feel so sick that I would not want anyone to talk td me at times. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills restored restored me to health and I want to thank you for the good they have done me. I jbave had quite a bit of trouble and worry but it does not affect my youthful youthful looks. My friends say 'Why do you look go young and well ? * I owe it all to the Lydia E. Pinkham remedies." --Mrs. Robt. Stofiel, Sage Avenue, Washington Park, Illinois. If youhave any symptom about which you would like to know write to the freezone, tell him. to order a small hot- \ Lydia B. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, tie for you from his wholesale drug Ma==s.. for helpful advice given free of house. charge, even irritatin. you lim V

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