West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Apr 1922, p. 7

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ns in Canada Similar ® in Holland and Conâ€" »» to Their Prosperity. | SETTLE®S IN THE DOMINION S OF STERLING woOr‘tH. op= If you sannot havre what you ..,J try to like what you have. dvranl Th ao Now fral, wee growing things awake Whoare beachen woods are scirred ; Frosh loaso of lifs the fowers take When spring‘s low call is heard. Hapaticase in furry hoods Uncurl thommelves from sleep. Though stil within the droway woods Late emowdrifts vigil keep. The saxifrago and wiudflower gUide Into their snowy dress, While favored spots arbutus hideâ€" Such starry loveliness! And soon will follow thick and fast The lator flowers of spring, TUI one and aH have hoard the ceall That stirs oach growing thing. with his coat ho noticed that there were no tips for him an the table. "Don‘t forget the waiter, please," he sa id . Davic turned on him with the most solemu look ) ever saw on a man‘s lace. "Forge: :>!" he said "IH nerer forge® â€"« <‘ill my dyin‘ day:; and what‘s mair l‘lH never forgive ye." Hugh said the same thing to me, and I replied as Davie had done "It‘ll be a lesson to you to keep out of such places," I added. A4 the wuiter was helping Davie on ahillin Tead,â€" In fact I wanted to go out there and then, but the others stopped me; we had a kind of struggle, but at last we all settled down. The bill of fare was printed in a language none of us could "They‘l! make us pay here," I said. "It‘ll cost penny afore we get out." But Ben Sayers and Hugh were so enthusiastic over the restaurant that they offered to pay halt of what the supper might cost Davie Grant and me. Since that seemed fair we agreed to risk eating there. Waiters came and helped us off with our hats and ovcr-‘ coats; a string band was playing fancy music on a platform; and finely dreu{ od women and men were chatting and eating and drinking. ‘ "Andra," Davie said to me, "yo dinâ€" na see a sicht like that in St. Andrews. I It dazzles my verra een. Them‘s bonâ€" ule women, but the men look voor‘ things," Pointing to a brigh looking restaurant, Ben was one o‘ t‘b. ”n'n .‘ in theore." "They‘ll mak ye pay 10se in that braw place," A DP PIITL CCE The onme thing that bothered them, we learn from his book, Fifty Years of Goll, was the price of the supper they tlo: \ native Scotchman who en retaurant far from his hil heather is almost sure to be an ing fellow. Andra Kirkaldy, th fessional golf player, who has ; filty yoars of his life on the f links at St. Andrews, Scotland, had to spend a few hours in L in company with three cther The $ 4 00 _ . _ . _ _ YA CUME sSeÂ¥ere fimess, In order to make the service of real value an ol law has been enforced which requires every ship to carry a medicine chest and a firstâ€"aid equipâ€" mont, so that the advice sent from the medcal station can be Oc'lrrM out, Such a wonderful Plan for healing by wireless will AnmhHace m a us & Can anyone be more. utterly foriorn than a sick sailor on a ship in midâ€" c~cean with nobody to understand his aufferings or to know how to alleviate them? But news now comes of a speâ€" clal wireless station where medical advice can be sought by a ship a thousand miles from land, and it will mean a feeling of comfort and secu rity for tens of thousands or sea®aring men. The Seamen‘s Church Institute of New York bas established a wire. less medical station which will send out advice to any ship, no matter what its nationality may be; and if the ship be out of range owing to its having only a small wireless apparatus, the meossage will be sent on from one ship to another, The ship seeking advice has only to send out the call KDKF; it may be an urgent mecsage asking how to set a broken limb, or it may be a request | from hour to hour or from day to day | for informagion in order to nurse a man through some severe illness 6 euch a wonderful plan y wireless will doubtless y other countries, so that on, the medical director ute, believes, every sean ble to receive without de ro Sort of treaktmant aw4. ie mother of a lnmil;-;n an >untry spot would be able to Auld Scotland Abroad. _ "" _ T"C~s now comes of a speâ€" wireless station where medical * can be sought by a ship a ind miles from land, and it will a fecling of comfort and security ens of Hhomsmez. F C leves, every seaman wiil receive without delay at 14 of treatment and nursine + pay through the Â¥ hours in London three other Scots. bpay for coming Tight, attractiveâ€" Ben Sayers, who ng Davie on that there i the table. m--.'-ul h Mas s uck nas passed the famous nursing that _ an isolated ¢ to give, for healing | be followed I , &s Dr. Wll-, of the Instiâ€" enters a hills and an amusâ€" , the pnoâ€" , once difference in trend, except in the large class of famfly names formed from diminatives of given names, has been the dropping of all prefizes in England, while the French, though dropping the "de" qute often, harn temded to roâ€" There has been little difference in the manmer in which the true French and the AngtoFrench family names France, the more usual form of the name as exristing in that country to | The original form of the name, as it is found in the old records, is "de la Pommeraye" ("of the Applayard"), but the Saronized . version sppeared quire early, at first in the form of "Atto Appleyard," and later with the prefix eliminated. Pommery, of coursp, is simply a variation from Pomeroy in the develâ€" opmentâ€"of the spelling from "Pomâ€" least It is an old name in England, being traceable back to the days of Norman dominance, in which, together with the period following it, most of the English famdly names developed into such from mere descriptive phrases. \ Racial Originâ€"Normanâ€"French. Sourceâ€"A locality. Pomeroy is a family name belonging to that group which originated as desâ€" criptive of the locality in or near which the original bearers of the name lived. It means "apple yard." While Pomeroy in some instances POMEROY Va_riaflom:â€"?ommcry, L It ran: "Lincoin, 350. Dean Swift Obit Roseate Dawn," and was, in fact, A young Australian reporter . was left in charge of the news room one evening. Suddenly he was confronted with, to him, an inexplicable cable from England. Patâ€""Yes," Yankâ€""I once grow a cabbags ) which, when cut in two, and the heart removed, made a grand cradle " for kiddios!" | Patâ€""Begorra! But it must have been a mighty fine one. But we have 'some fine vegetables in old Ireland. I once remember seeing three men sleeping on one beet!" . Yaukâ€""Three men ?" Patâ€""Sure! Policemen!" be ariationsâ€"Pommery, Lapommeraye, Appleyard, Applegarth. Pat!" Pat, while on a visit to America, beâ€" came deeply interested In watching a Yankee gardener. After a while the following dialogue took place: Yankâ€""Some fine versotabhlos hara en t w iCP uhh | _ Horace Norsworthy, of Morpeth, is the champion grouch. His pastor safd to him one day: "Well, Horace, you‘re a great growâ€" ler and complainer, but you certainly can‘t growl and complain this year about your potato crop. Why, man, they tell me that both in quantity and quality it‘s the finest potato crop in Kent County," "Oh, yes," muttered Horace, "that‘s all right as far as it goes, doctor, but whar am I goin‘ to get the bad potaâ€" toes to feed me hogs ?" | !L Mas Its Uses, ‘_ An old Sootchwoman, much against ‘hm- will, was induced to sit for her | picture, the first she had taken since | she was a girl in her teens. When ’ the photograph was handed to her she failed â€"to recognize herself. She | thought thero must be come mistake, l“ls this me?" she asked. "Yes, maâ€" dam," said the photographer, "and it‘s & speaking likeness."" The old lady gazed at her counterfeit presentment for a full minute in silence. "Aweel!" she said resignedly, "it‘s a hamblin® sicht." piece of bride‘s ca sister sent this to : “Oh, thank Ym'u "Tell her I havye bride‘s cake." The boy eyed her "She sent it to you your appetite afore the boxes," Mfi uts A postmistress in a village was very fond of tampering with the parcels, One day a boy came in with a large piece of bride‘s cake, and said, "My Sister sent this i2 _‘ 2 likes him," _Wnat name does your mother your father? "Why," said Louise, very innoce "she don‘t CalH M anv wawls Unwmlng Pupit. Vlnlhoh“We)l. my ‘little you like going to school ?" TikLs e 9 Little Surnames and Their Origin What Worried Horace Revised Version A Dead Beat. It Has Its Knew eyed her coldly I havre a Something. vegetables here »" said the woman. " coldly and said: to got the edge off : she sends away very innocently, any name, she vw""y, ney, Swa Racial Orig iging | Sourceâ€"A 468"| There is near | cages there ame | tween this and the Sc eing | MacQueenâ€") man | given name with , have been the | lar. into| The Irish es. | neach," an s i; | name clase s 12 | most as larg q»), | the Coitic ra wred | Sbirit or ap; of Dltnt.' The use | bline." . Tt w aken since 1s. When to her she lf, She e mistake, "Yes, maâ€"| , "and it‘s3 ] _ old lady l esentment 1 "Aweel!" p _hamblin‘| . in â€"atend., _ s ___ 2 VC ~JOD, 2. . 51. .\ _ i â€" ‘A6N0 naâ€" Tuaigho" (the whtcnrithuwdlm..“ r&esvtmoethoud'). AAmneJhm,mlyma&-ubu-dl was in Banagh, and etilil another at your powers, you need not generally Castiemore, in Cork. ¢ h-tm--,dormwfilad:‘ The variations of the name at the you out.â€"A. Barton Hepburn. head of this article are, of course,| not n lporrrnei mss | merely tie Armiglicized forms. V3 // on m eragnrean nerasimeeet NCOET ETT RECRDEE [moh,'f who ccrosged over to Sootland and extablisived himself there and is credited with being the founder of the MacLaughlans of that country. There were several divisions of the MacSwiney clan ultimately. One was in Fanad. Another bore the name of ‘ ‘MacBuibhaneaighe naâ€"Tuaighe" (the Ts Affrade l s s Dgr ue s 2A but t _ There is little doubt that in many cases ther\has been a confusion beâ€" tween this group of Irish surnames and the Scottish family names of the MacQueenâ€"Mac§Swoyn class, for the given names from which the groups have been developed are quite ulml-i‘ lar. Varlatlomâ€"nacawooney. McSweeney, Sweeney, McSwiggin, MacSwiggan, Sweeny, McBwiney, Swiney, Swy. ney, Swain, Swayne, Sweney. Racial Originâ€"Irish. Sourceâ€"A given name. It‘s not the man who knows the most that has the most bo say. 1 s na e 0 P ie lets should be kept in the house and an occasional dose givren the baby to keep his stomach and bowels working regularly. This will prevent colds, constipation or colic and keep baby well. The Tablets are sold by mediâ€" cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. | ’ The Spring is a time or anxiet mothers who have little ones in home. Conditions make it neces to keep the baby indoors. He is 0 confined to overheated, badly v lated rooms and catches colds w rack his whols system. To gi against this a box of Baby‘s Own * for call BABY‘S HEALTH IN THE SPRING _ In India and the Far East the toâ€" tems â€" chosion vary â€" from bounding tigeors to a tortoise asleep beneath a occonutâ€"paim. Fancy â€"runs riot in some postageâ€"stamps and national emâ€" blems; but, traced back, there is a1 ways reason behind the choice. In the totem we may read the past, ;\ _ ___" 1CC5, the osprey being a favorâ€" ite choice, Newâ€" Zealand inclines in this direction. The apteryx is comâ€" memorated on the postal issues,. Many of New Zealand‘s great men have been naturalists, and it is reasomable‘ enough to find the strange fauna of the islands imprinted on the stamps. ‘ Behind the national emblem of the Republic of Guatemala, which is the,’ trogon, a tropical bird of georgeous feathers and long tailâ€"plumes, lies a small historyâ€"book in itself, This is ore of the most interestng of bird emâ€" blems, although the black swans of Western Australia also have a story to tell. In India and the Far East the toâ€" tems choson vary â€" from bounding § tigeo~s to a tortoise asleep beneath a ccconutâ€"paim. . Fancy runs riot in l YOMA Iiataara k. ° ) Irish given name is "Suibhâ€" ,." _ and belongs to that fairyâ€" class which, inclgdentuuy, is alâ€" hy i. dlilaatha is 0 siniees N6 332 lroundlam.d's early trade, so colony: stamps we find the on another a codfish. A | land dog graces yet anoth evidently a concession to rather than a record of trad _ Japan‘s stamps usually i bird objects, the osprey bein ite choice. Newâ€"Zealand i this direction. The aptery memorated on the postal iss O0f NOW ZAAInTA‘G mnang i olcy t infntnbninitintbcten d & .2113 From the British lion to the Chinese dragon, the old states of the world looked to the animals for the designs for their national crests. f The Fraiksian earle ank tno:rmen:. the result of a race which had been run that day, Knowing nothing about racing, and fesling bound to justify his existence, the inventive youth had the following inspired paragraph inserted in the paper next morning: > _ "We regret to announce the death at Lincoln at 3.50 yesterday afternoon of the Very Reverend Dean Swift, the author of the well known hymn ‘The Roseate Hues of Early Dawn.‘ " TotemsThat Tell Tales MacSWINEY and cod-fl:shingrifc:rmed New ices yet another stamp, conceéession to Bfen;flment . record of trade. the British lion, it necessary He is often badly ventiâ€" so on oldest the hair seal, A Newfoundâ€" anxiety to and the Gallic incline to which 1 WMinard‘s Liniment for Coughs and Colds Tabâ€" | viction that ; vietion that | whaihs tha | _ The W'Tch you :f‘“‘!‘h' the power that can, If you will take the trouble mfl‘:"tk:m wikt um the T I ® V VaR WVHILILML o Write it in yom-bu.rttlbtvva HG 'fiun"' and torture of rheuâ€" g;“ is the best d!yofbhoynr.â€"fll r I matism can be quickly relieved merson. 5 No oiraih . Heâ€""Darling, why are you so sad ?" She (guiping down a sob)â€""Oh, dearest, I was just thinking this will be our last evening together until toâ€" morrow night." *# °o up,,, . _ ___ U7C naq/‘s many parts of the world toâ€"day. such parents? How far would your meâ€"Afrenmmmmm own experience have carried you?" Minard‘s Liniment prevents Spanish Fiu There was silence for a moment. s & « Then, old minister held out his| Never mind othersa‘ ingratitude, hfle”%um and join your father‘s| Shine on, O, noble soul. _ It never people, Rob. There are #aints still, | troubles the sun that some of his and we ueed their help." rays fall wide and vain into ungrateful * bfrrrnazraees manduiy-mnpnrtonther&} This Sad World. W sen l e P es signify 4 "What 1 am trying to understand," _’Dr. Parker continued, "ig why you |hold such an attitude, Surely you | don‘t take the same position toward business; you never would ignore business men‘s clubs and conferences and other means of coâ€"operating." You: wouldn‘t take the same ground In] science and refuse to meet other men | of scince or to make yourself familiar ‘ with thir discoveries. How then can you think that Rob Kerr all by himâ€" self is going to become master of the great spiritual mysteries? _ St. Paul, who knew his business as well as any man who ever lived, told his people that they must learn to apprehend cern tain things ‘with all the saints.‘ in other words no man could apprehend I all of them by himself. Yon hava ar | "Certainly quité as well." man seemed a trifle nettled "Surely that is one of the foundaâ€" tion stouas of the church! Do you mean that you believe you can achieve such a relationship better outside the church than in it? "I thought I made it clear that I believe in a personal relationship with Pnd I am interested in the position take," Dr. Parker said. ‘"What ganization seems to you better fi than the church to moet the neef toâ€" | _ "I am not prepared to answer that. They would have been the same ’wxherever they were, I believe that their spiritual life grew out of their personal relationship with God. Aund it is the personal relationshi; that I claim for myself. Times are changed now.. Many of the customs and methâ€" ods of the church are obsolete and inadequate, and I feel that it is poor business to use them." | _ "Certainly I am not so foolish as to doubt the existence of God," Rob Kerr declared. "The memory of my parents‘ lives and prayers would prevent my doing that. And I haven‘t forgotten their faith." ‘ "Don‘t you think that part of their faith in God was the result of their lifelong faithfuiness to the church? Dr. Parker asked. day ?" MÂ¥ ul Mabaity Gerias Aucuidiine h id â€" ...3 s themselves. A purgrtive merely galâ€" lops through the system, emptying the bowels, but does not help the blood. On the other hand, Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills enrich the blood which reaches every nerve and every organ in the body, bring new strength and vigor to weak, casily tired men, women and children. Try Dr. Willtams‘ Pink Pills this springâ€"they will not d!sappoint‘ you. » Sold by all medicine dealers or sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co., Brockville, Ont. » ~rouniles are most persistent because of poor, weak blood, and it is at this time when all nature takes on new life that the blood _ most seriously needs attention, Some people dose themsalves with purgatives * at this season, but these only furthar wasl._. 1 4 .o Intaby wl t inss s ht â€"Dr. Willlams‘ Pink Pills develop the appetite, tone the stomach and aid weak digestion. It is in the spring that poisons in the blood find an outâ€" let in disfiguzing pimples, eruptions and boilsâ€"Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills clear the skin because they go to tho‘ â€"Dr. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are an allâ€" yearâ€"round tonic for the blood and nerves. But they are especially valuâ€" able in _the spring when the system is loaded with impurities as a result of the indoor life of the winter months. ‘ There is no other season when the blood is so much in need of purltying' and enriching, and every dose of these | pills helps to enrich the blood. In I the spring one feels weak and tiredâ€" Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills give atrentth., In the spring the appetite is often poor ce Pm MWARRNNLLL L it n cd 4 A Tonic Mediéiné a Ne This Season. 66 Rewu mew o c 00 00â€" Aeemmemenmemernnnitenimmmmmmmmnprramatiees %PR]NG IMPURITIES [ _ Better Than Gold Mines. / eru tas ‘man UE TO POOR BLOOD =*= «m mer se yourself into your ith All the Saints." sHLiLt" ta ‘CLention... some people dose the other ves with purgatives * at this If 15A but these only further weaken the tens ves. A purgrtive merely galâ€" bird seen ough the system, emptying the which is 1 but does not help the hlood. Gannets ther hand, Dr. Williams‘ Plnk‘ numerous. rich the blood which reach“]see Iwan BIVO ANf avary rmumas bo aro That can, 'lhoon-, trouble in the blood. In you better fitted neet the need of ONTA position you The.young â€"‘ecessity at Orâ€" | act on the part of the bride‘s father, ‘siamylng that _ he renounced all authority over his daughter. The throwing of rice was» symbolic of abundance and fertility, and clearly expressed the hope that the bride would live in plenty. Thoweddmuh.!.mmbytho bride, is one of the oldest marriage customs. The taking of food or drink together by the bride and bridegroom | was always the principal, and some-[ times the only, ceremony among primiâ€" | tive people, and this is Still the case | in many parts of the world toâ€"day. ‘ DID PAIN DISTURB ~YOUR SLEEP? _\ _ ~mds originated in a form of toll. _ The bride‘s girl friendo went through the form of preventing the bridegroom and his friends from takâ€" ing her from her home, a mock battle ensued, each party pelting the other with sweetmeats, and this was finally settled by the bridegroom making preâ€" sents to all the giris. ‘ The custom of throwing an old shoe after the departing couple is another link with the past, but writers on the history of marriage disagree as to its origin, According to one view it | originated in the "marriage by capâ€" ture" daye, when, during a fight at the bride‘s house, the nearest things that | came handy were thrown. Anofher‘ explanation is that it was a symbolic | act on the part of the bride‘s father. | ultmactes. . T . 1 The "honeymoon" was not always a pleasure trip as it is now; originally it was a rapid flight of the newlyâ€"marâ€" ried couple to escape the wrath of an outraged father. There is no doubt that the bride and bridegroom deemed it advisable to keep out of his way for at least a month, to allow time for his vows of vengeance to cool down, The custom of giving presents to bridesmaids originated in a form of bolU. _ "‘Thte BFMMGG‘s ®irt Feianas _4 1 TORONTO ine "best man" is an essential feaâ€" ture in all our marriages, and can be traced back to the days of "marriage by capture," when the "best man" was the comradeo called upon by the brideâ€" groom to assist in the catching of his hrida tion ’ Thus one flock, such as the above,;' may devour in the coutrse of a day one | hundred tons of fish, and as it is prob-‘ able that one hundred million seabirds | of different species, but all voracious, | feed day by day off the coasts of Peru, | & very clementary sum will give the | weight of fish consumed. The resultâ€"| ing figure multiplied by the number or‘ days in a year staggers the imarina. as birds m one place at the one time. They would appear to feed in relays, one ‘"shift" taking care o° the eggs whilst the other is at sea. It is an amazing fact that, among the tens of thousands of nests, no bird seems to make a mistake as to which is her own. J Gannets and pelicans are also very . numerous. It is quite a usual sight to’I see twenty thousand gannets busy | fighing at the samga tima ana is u1° | The Origin of-Olmarriage C Customs. Cormorants are the most numerous species, A recent observer estimated that there wore ten million binds of this species alone sitting upon their or~s $s m $ 2O POC Soos Hme STTeRUS, _ Such enormous quantities of ‘guann would seem incredible to anyone wha has not seen the wonderful sight any one of those islands presents in the bréeding sâ€"ason. The birds gather there in countless numbers, hatching } out their ogrs in s1n1mh almca «2.2i0. .20 that ’ mines, but the guano deposits on the islands, which extend at <intervals along one thoueand miles of coast, are .| far more valuable. _ Hundreds of millions of tons have been exported, anrd as the preâ€"war price was generally in thé neighborâ€" hood of ten pounds a ton, it is etident | that even seabirds have their value; and that the possession of a guano | islard is a short cut to fortune. ‘ These guano depoits are sometimes j of great depthâ€"so deep, in fact} that | the lower stratum is as hard as lima . "~C iower stratum is as hard as limeâ€" etone, and dates back to remote periods long before the sight of a man ever disturbed the countless millions of birds which generation after geneâ€" ration have nested on the islands., Rellq ul Chare E0 e ©Egs in such close proximity 0 is barely room to turn imaginaâ€" e c uC > k WANTED. â€" SEND i price. _ John °J, = soras SAYS MRS. AtuSpn £:= 2s "= e at â€"intervals | râ€"â€"â€"4 or coast, are | â€" â€"_____ {!ANaADIAN MaTRIMORTaT. 3 Mll be stamped wir;, "/0, PADUC #@Alast imitati S will be m-p:: with their general trage mark, # rora.| Tanlac sh a ‘ posâ€"| e or!‘ Mr. G | wel | round _ his ts Aimels r‘:)l;: | nighit boo! il‘dl! Mr. Go | night bool ous, | NS Go i::: ' you have =... TS SIMPLY GRAND |_ .01 ALHC Lumbngo' P:f'l.. Pain ; M'hy-"bmduh“â€"mm‘“-‘l Tiolnei 3'_-!'.:-:. ::'?‘.a-‘:""".:.(_&._ Nefi n Ci22008) of Bayer Manuftacture of tHone~ A Japanese woser presents his sweetheart with a boautiful sash by way of an engagement token, " ig _a°° o eghjz~s®> °C‘ ""0 UHecrNons and dose w Bfiysku:m _dumg 22 yeafts and proved safe by "Well," replied &â€"l;;};ii;erm, with an admiring glance at the girlsa, "you sure have the right kind of ha it." Unless you see the name "Bayer" on taMct;, you a’re) not getting ‘Aspirin at all. Why take chances? ‘ Accept only an "unbroken ’pfie" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,"‘ which gontains directions and daca Z.o.r.s .=ls ** the preacher ylfix ;11;;11; uES COnn PAmETTe? Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. Did You Ever? « A minister, with two lovely girls, stood entranced by the beauties of a flowing stream. A fisherman happenâ€" ing by, and mistaking the minister‘s occupation, said, "Ketchin‘ man, old wasd a» WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you Unless you see the name "Bayer" on t; not getting ‘Aspirin at all. Why take ch Seap25c. Ointment 25 and §0c. Telomm 26¢. Soid sheiens\ Mitithqrelbmmmmemanmmmmensa 222220 CC Send a Domlnio;'l-ix-x;r‘;.u Order. Five Dollars mnets +1.. Powder and Perfume With Clllcn Talcum d Hct hese. Tok o‘clock in the Mrs. Goodman â€" "Yas you have to work over . that keep you down he Mr. Goodman (mystified) â€"â€" "The night books ?" Mrs, Goodmanâ€""Yes nighit books." The Puzzled Wife. Mr. Goodman (showing round his counting house) these are the day books." Al up in 20 AOECZ THH NUHER UORUT tion and nesded something to build me up, and Tanlac certainly proved to be the right medicine for me," said Mrg. wW. H. Allison, 68 Melbourne Ave., Masic ut «+ |Chatham Ont. _ COULD HARDLY EAT E\;flm:g" ENOUGH TO KEEP ALIVE fesust" w BEFORE SHE COT _ | Overcome and She Now Enâ€" joys Perfect Health. Toothache Earache Money orpers Meipnintnliiietices. ... bevtveces Of Gablevilcania® ~y. _ °® Canada) o!lwwll.n.nmw r of a.meuu. While it is known -..‘m :: with mr general trage mark, thot‘.‘;.;y.&n. morning.*" of men," answered 1 L e certainly proved to be: .______ _ ABTICLES rOR siaLs run down condiâ€" ; those that at night and me until two Show me the curaigle ght to me | t rovement l .r"“_'. f my first saw then licine. I eat anyâ€" me, and time. 1 t a bit of ra n l * smm > > wnerpearon Money PFP P RORRT CZ WHC C i was too tired to slufi. My mother | indaw told me that ydia E. Pinkâ€" | ham‘s Vegetable Compound was just what I wanted so I tried it and only took two bottles when I felt better; Bince then 1 have found that there | is nothing that makes me feel as | well, for it seems to build my systena | right up. 1 don‘t know any other | medicine that has done so much for | women."â€"Mrs, W,. 11 Paraee, 19 | Wellesley Ave., Toronto, Ontario. | _ Women testify again and agaim that they have been helped by Lydia E.. Piniham‘s Vegetable Compound "after ogxer medicines have falled * It has been tried for nearly Afty years and not found wanting. ’ If you are suffering from any of ; the "r::'l.. u!ln::u vhlehmceoo-h ‘- pany ale weakness try l Pinkham‘s Vegeiable Compound. and nurses do not use patent medt. cines I must say that 1 think there is nothing better than your Vegetable Compound. When I first took ig many years ago, I was so tired when I got up in the morning that I could not eat, and when I went to bed L Toronto, Ontarioâ€""I took E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Com for years and it is the only medicine I ever recommend. I nurse and if I find a woman poor health I always tell her tc lt.‘ Although_ you know that d L'di‘ | M Pillklllm'. VQ‘e. table Compound Advised for all Women in Poor Health Minard‘s Liniment NURSE THINKS _ NOTHING BETTER A Health and dose worked out by | ul‘uLnL KINDS OP :mw AND u.'.o | 5. pulleys, caws, Cable.bose, t | ote., shipped subject +2 . .. W OOE@.Packing, Spanish Influenza Ont B EEKEEPERS® BUPPLIESâ€"1ANGâ€" . STROTH and Jumbe hives and furnishings, honey extractors, pumps, engines and storage tanks; a compht: stock of beckeening requirement®> sen for our cataiogue. ° Ham Brothers Comâ€" pany, Ltd., 'xanuuctunu. Brantford, Ont. YÂ¥ reasonable pri wool, chiefly grey sec pound. â€" Postage ext six Abeautiful colors, Hamples free. _ Ge RSICTE L 30 poung. o 7 ,@tey seconds, Afty cents per pound. Postage extra. Sweater yarne, six Abeautiful colors, seventyâ€"five cents. Hampies _ free, Georgetown _ Woolien Milis, Georgetown, Ontario. sn t Bulk Carlots TORroNTo sactr wonrks C. J. CLIFF .‘ Trorontro the first sign of it its Hes Qualities are Amazing. THE OLD RELIABLE. ANADIAN MATRIMONTAL P C Marta® Marepaongar £ tance: charges NAX* WOrk sent any disâ€" unoe:‘chnrce- Paid. _ Send itamp for particulare. National Manufacturing Company, Montreal. spare time Don‘t Wait Classified Adv BELTING For until you get the light :;"-in‘ at ‘~;. goodpay; we d i ind a woman is im always tell her to take you know that doctora > not use patent medf. say that I think there MADE INTO BLANKETs ar nnulila cuqc e buy Aspirin. o Py‘ : ie Anc Vegetable Compound Saving Reminder and How to Feed Malled Free to any Ad dress by the Author. K. Clay Glover Co., Inc U SE millions only patent its Healing for home, whole or Lydia

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