West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 1 Jun 1922, p. 7

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THE HOME RST Your clothes if hung up carefully will wear much better than if fAung upon the cbais. ; .‘ Canaia possesses nearly half the water power of the world. f Considerable portions have been finished, and these show that up to the prosent, at any rate, there is no need for us to revise our maps. An error has been disclosed, it is true but it is hardly of the kind to affect the Atias. It"amounts, as a matier of fact, to rather less than one inch for each hundred miles. Not a very serious mistake! When the moasurement is completâ€" ed it is expected that astronomers and surveyors wil differ by about fifty yards for the entire length of this imâ€" mense continent. uacons Oy actualiy measuring the distance in a straight line from the north to the south of their country. When the work was finished it was {ound that the two sets of measureâ€" ments differed by only a few feet! Toâ€"day a far greater piece of measâ€" uring is being undertaken. Thanks to the construction of the Capeâ€"toâ€" Uairo railway, the whole length of the great African continent is being worked out by surveyors. able, and the supply is inexhaustible, for it is constantly being replenished. How insignificant, both in size and value, our great collieries appear when compared with this vast new “mino"‘ which abounds all around us! hey ‘rom the atn that the air valuable indu is costless an for everyone ; are thirteen able, and the for it is ennet P} Lt M whi m ar th on mot Once from t nitroce h h made it possi The oxygzen ders. which m W Measuring a Continent. W ntil ever UMD tre i pY Ar U Who, for instance, would have thoughi that the air we breathe holds a store of elements which realize many millions of dollars annually? It is a fact, amazing as it may seem; and as a result a new industry is springing up in connection with this mining of the air. The atmosphere consists, roughly speaking, of a mixture of the gases mtrogen and oxygen, as well as quantities of argon and ncon, among ther things, Since the Mennuume nf uw com ylls »M LN i to Torm wo of the orkmen are often to be se reots using the flame in â€" imway tracks. The oxyâ€" ocess is one of the most i orâ€"saving devices ever d it was them ining of the de it possible. If scientific discoveries go on at their present rate. we may soon find that the things we now hoid most rheaply are those of the greatest value! Oxygen p hi 4 Li‘ N recently no great continent been measured by means of vyor‘s chain. ‘ he vgen is used in meany different in the engincering world. It is ned with acetylene to make the ‘cly hot flame which cuts through rails with the greatest of ease, men are often to be seen in the‘ s alone it is estimated al output of oxygen is million cubic feet. The of that is nuarit Ehi. T Lt ing air by extreme ci)ld. it had ound possible to separate these uents in the anium amee," Nok o total P o y ents in the same way. â€" And + clements have now assumed commercial importance. ‘ryone knows, oxygen is ofton maintain life in invalids, yet int consumed in hospitals and ies is a very small portion‘ tal output. In the Tnitad the discovery of MINING IN THE ATMOSPHERE U T N‘ C iT & snunien + db wb utm ! oxygen is a thouâ€" ic feet. The present nearly fifteen million stronomer d in hospitals and ery small portion in the United stimated that the Â¥yo neat motal ‘re of neon. for the gases t will be seen # a new and raw material . It is there to use. There s of it availâ€" ne in repairing e oxyâ€"acetylene most important m which a method of s calâ€" e the invented. air that y com )0 the W :\.D.. and that coun ever since | This name, which .is often proâ€" nounced in England as though it were spelled "Clebburn" or "Clebbern," was originally a place name, and the localâ€" ity was the seat of a lordship estabâ€" lished in Westmoreland in Angloâ€"Norâ€" man times. The spelling then was "Cliburne," and it later became "Cleâ€" borne," from which evolved the form Claiborne and finally Clayburn. And strangely enough, this latest spelling indicates better than the others, quite by accident it must be "believed, thel' original meaning of the place name.! if you remember that in this case‘ the "burn" means a stream of water.] and not that painful result of too close’ association with fire. "Clagg" was | the Angloâ€"Saxon word for "sticky earth," that is to say, "clay." An Alan de Cleburne, apparently, settled in Ireland as early as 1200| A.D., and the name has flourished in! that country, as well as in England, | : In this they are not exactly correct. The truth is that most of the Claiâ€" bornes and Clayburns in Canada are Irish, but their name is not, though it has been known in Ireland since the twe‘lfth or thirteenth century. »st0ost of the Ciayourns and UClaiâ€" bornes in Canada will be inclined to quarrel with the statement that this is an English family name. _ They maintain that it is Irish. pin acro: place They conce s@cia L1ieso "arcs‘ visible. During the quently repo: bands of ie« h: M _ The best time to boeg Williams‘ Pink Pills is you feel the least bit out sooner you do so the so regain your old time ene; get these pills through ; dealer or by mail post pa a box or six boxes for $2 Dr. Williams‘ Medicine ville, Ont. M T inditmimicdif 4 s | Statements is offered by | Stanley, Sparta, Ont., _ "For a number, of years I | with rheumatlsm. which a ,very painful, My general also affected, â€" and I co drag myselt around. I ha toring a good deal, but did better, until one day n brought me a box of D Pink Pil}s. By the time ’used I could notice a slig ment and I continued taki until I had used about a d by which time I felt like a â€"and looked like one. I c work with ease, and have ; ed the best of health. I réecommended Dr. Williams to several others â€" who re same benefit as myself." ial Originâ€"Engli One of Grapeâ€"Nuts "There‘s a Reason 6: Grapeâ€"Huts ty reported of mysterious curved s of licht and shade that swept s the sky or over the ground near s where cannon were being fired. wore described as resembling the ntr.c ripples produced by dropâ€" a pebble into water. One abâ€" ‘his Trouble Can Only be Got Rid of by Enriching the Blood. REEVKATIC TrEatigAT Feed the body well A localiiy is a scientific food,containing all the nutriment of wheat and maltâ€" ed barley. Grape:Nuts digests easily and quickly, builds toward health and strength â€" and is delightful in flavor and crispness ; ""C &# box of Dr. Williams‘ is. By the time these were could rotice a slight improveâ€" id I continuéd taking the pills had used about a dozen boxes, b time I felt like a new person oked like one. I could do my ith ease, and have since enjoyâ€" best of health. I have slnce‘ ended Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Right food for the body is more important than right fuel for the engine. w Visible Sound the CLAYBURN Surnames and Their Origin time to begin taking Dr. ‘ink Pills is the moment least bit out of sorts. The do so the sooner you will old time energy. You can ‘s through any medicine mail post paid at 50 cents boxes for $2.50 from The s‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ar observation was fre My general health but aid not get any day my daughtor could scarcely I had been docâ€" received the But there is no doubt two forms of Hithereeve. reeve" could only have been the harborâ€"sheriff. We w of a port warden toâ€"dav. came in most instances from the of the town, and at first were u: show that an individual had from that place or was identified it in some way. came in Here then, you have three sources of the foregoing surnames. A study of the most usual courses of developâ€" ment in family name formation would indicate that all of them, with the exception of Hithereve and Hithersceve In addition there is Cheshire, the history of back to before the No called Hyde. It really had two meanings, or if you prefer to put it that way there were really two separate words. One of them indicated a small farm, speciâ€" fically a farm of the size which one man could plow in one day. The‘ other, which was used principally, but not exclusively, in the maritime sense,’ meant a haven or harbor. I _ None of the family names in this group have anything to do with our modern word "hide" which means a skin. They are developments of anâ€" other old Teutonic word which was variously spelied by the Angloâ€"Saxons and the Angloâ€"Normans, later, "hyde," "hythe," "hithe‘" and sometimes "hide." Hitherceve, ut Racial Originâ€"Engtish. Sourceâ€"A locality, also a title use of Baby‘s Own Tablets. They are| | In various parts of the worlvd.â€"in | a mild but thorough laxative which inâ€"| Australia, Canada, and the United , stantly regulate the bowels and sweet-" Statesâ€"plans are going ahcad for the en the stomach. They are guaranteed "(‘n_fifflmmn of four massive bridges | to contain no harmful drugs and can , which, when completed, will be among be given to the youngest baby with| the greatest engineering feats in hisâ€" 'porroct safely. Concerning them Mrs. ' to"n{- f f ’ ; Alcide Lepage, Ste. Beatrix, Que., ost wonderful of all is the strucâ€" | writes:â€""Baby‘s Own Tablets were of ture to ba crected over the Hudson great help to my baby. _ They regu-[ River at New York. It will be 6,660 ft.f lated her bowels and stomach and : long, or over 700 ft. longer than the,‘ _made her plump and well." The ’l‘ab-l famous Brooklyn Suspension Brid,-ze,’ lets are sold by madicine deaters or by | and over 1,000 ft, longer than the mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Wilâ€"] Forth cantilever bridgze in Scotland. , liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockvilte, Ont. f The pronk hP Hhak eB pue ut insy Variations The ailments of childhood â€"constlâ€" pation, indigestion, colic. colds, ete.â€" can be quickly banished through the use of Baby‘s Own Tablets. They are CHILDHOOD AILMENT of its dining cars with electrical cookâ€" ing apparatus. Powor for the apâ€" paratus is furnished by two generaâ€" tors, which are beltâ€"driven from the: axles of the trucks, each having a rab‘ ing of 6 kw. In the kitchon, across one ond, is the main cooking range‘ and roasting oven, with a stecaming oven above it, while over the latter, a grill and a hotâ€"water tank are locatâ€" ed. A boiling range having four hot plates, two 10â€"gal. boiling pans for vegetables, and a fish fryer, are also included in the installation, which has yielded such satisfactory results that' the company is seriously consideringt similar equipment for other trains. Inaugurating a new 'de[-)a‘rmre. the Great Northern Railway Co., in Engâ€" land, ha.sAequippod the kitchen of one compared ko a s;oap 'bill»-k;-l;'in";vr;ces; of blowing, and the "fAashing arc" to the circular outline of the bubble. _ The spreading spherical shell in the air is made visible by its effect upon the paths of light rays coming to our eyes. We say that air is invisible, but it is not always so necessarily. Everybody has seen air shimmeringj over a ‘iot stove or other heated surâ€" face tie more than 1,000 fect a second. Under favoring circumstances we may see it in outline. When it reaches our ears the vibration it imparts to our ear drums enables us to hear the ex-‘ plosion. These also are believed to have been visible sound waves. In either case, gun or voleano, an explosion gives rise to a steadily expanding "shell" of conâ€" densation in the air, which, followed by a shell of rarefaction, spreads o'ut“ l'rom the source at a speed of a litâ€" server told of hearing the explosion of a distant gun at the presise instant when the moving light band reache:ll his feet. Diner on English Railroad Electrically Equipped. The spreading shell may be aptly HYDOE, Hido, 1d> greeve. The "hite.‘ loubt about the is a town in of which dates Norman period, y names in this to do with our which means a lopments of anâ€" ‘at Nad come identified with en (literally) would speak were used to Hithereve "". *L â€" Last, but ho least, "hite| pension bridge to be ""a“-"’l Delaware River. It name iurrugesâ€"o!le O | atBorwickâ€"onâ€" Thames, one bet ‘amd one at Ric | the Severn. ® As for ram; United States st the one at Chic wetly liks 3 Hift, | _ When these bridges" are erected â€" Iand that at Philadelphia will take five years to complete, or eight years less than the famous Brooklyn structure â€"Britain will be outclassed in the matter of great bri.dgeâ€"buildaing feats, says an English writer. It is hoped, | however, that the armament firms deâ€" | prived of work under the disarma-: “' mont scheme will turn their attention | | to the matter, and proposals have alâ€"‘ | ready been put forward for \'ll’iO‘Ulf !bridgesâ€"uuu over the Tay; another; at Borwickâ€"onâ€"Tweed; two over the Thames, one between Barnes and Kew and one at Richmond; and one over| the Severn. f As for remarkable bridges, th United States still leads the way wil the one at Chicago. This works ex aetly liks a Hift, the centrai span be e, Longer Than Quebec Bridge, t While not to be compared with * either of these structures, the bridge to ‘be erected over the Detroit River " betweean Detroit and Windsor will be \| none the loss remarkable. It will have ‘| two decks. The upper deck will have ! two 28 foot roadways, two 7 foot sideâ€" ‘[ walks, and a double trolley line; while | the lower deck will be devoted to four | railway lines. | ! _ About 3,703 feet in length, with a | main suspended span of 1,893 feet, the ; bridge will be over 400 feet longer | than the Quebec bridge, the famous fstructure, the hoistinp: of whose cenâ€" | tral span was accompanied by two | disasters involving a total loss of | eightyâ€"cight lives. cities of Philadelphia and Camden. It is to cost more than twentyâ€"five milâ€" lion dollars, and will have a central span of 1,750 feet. Roadways, tramâ€" ways, and pathways are to be inâ€" cluded. _ A total of 33,000 tons of metal will be required, whereas a cantilever bridge would have needed 47,000 tons. I From the standpoint of actual length the Australian bridge, which is to be erected over Sydney Harbor beâ€" tween Dawe‘s Point and Milson‘s Point, is the next in importance. Unlike that over the Hudson River, the bridge will be a single decker with four lines of railway, a road 35 feet wide, a motorâ€"car road 18 feet wide,‘ and a 15 foot pathway for pedestrians. The central span will be 1,600 feet in] length. fong, or over 700 ft. longer than the; out, always downhill. Often that help jffl.mOU's Brooklyn Suspension Bfid\ge,l to make the hauling easy, but some and over 1,000 ft, longer than the| times the grades are so steep that i ’l"m'th cantilever bridge in Scotland. 'makes it too easyâ€"so easy that it en _ The groat skill that will be required) tAils difficulty. _ Indeed, in these in in the construction of the new bridge| stances the term hauling is a mis may be judged from the tremendous nomer, for that implies pulling the weight it will have to oarry. The| load, and the operation actually con central span will be 3,240 feet in Sists in pushing against the load in length, and there will be two decks stead of puilling it Two and a half for traffic. | miles of specially constructed track On the upper deckâ€"220 feet in‘ is used at one western logging camp widthâ€"will be a roadway with a car|for transporting heavy loads on a on cither side and outside this | larko motor truck down a very steep will be two footways each 17 feet| Erade. The truck is sixâ€"whooled, and broad. The tower bridge will have, has powerful brakes on its four rear ten lines of railway track. [ wheels. These brakes 4ra onnianliaa which, when completed, will be among the greatest engineering feats in hisâ€" tory. 1 WONDERFUL BRIDGES OF MODERN WORLD When a native decided he would have a totem pole, he and his family, and sometimes in the case of a great chief, the whole clan, set about gatherâ€" To be the owner of a t was a sign of social posit wealth, and power. Eve above the slave class aspire one some day. In the erect pole a great amount of wea be lavished; the more wealt? the greater the owner‘s st the community. Herewith is given for t] the first time the story of how these primitive peoâ€" ples of North America instituted a copyright law along exactly the same lines as followed by the white men toâ€" day. ‘ wo Decks for Traffic on the Great Structure That Will Span the Hudson River. That a "copyright law," very similar to that in force among the civilized nations of the world, existed among, the primitive Indians of northarn Britâ€" ish Columbia and Alaska long before the white man came, is a ramarkablei | fact which a writer discovéred m-‘ lcent'y while traveling through the‘ northern wilderness region of British| ,Colum'bia in company with William Beynon, of the Canadian ethnological research. The strange thing is that though njuch has been written of totem poles and some pictures of, them shown, the existarce of copyâ€" right has been entirely overloaked., In fact, the meaning of these poles, | and the strange ceremonies attaching ! to them, have never been made known to the genéral reading ’bl'ic. , II ntvesce itc 4 20000 0i 0e 12 L E/ E LAST WORD IN ENâ€" GINEERING FEATS. span will be 3,240 feet in &!Sts in pushing against the load inâ€" and there will be two decks Stead of pulling it Two and a half Tic. | miles of specially constructed track he upper deckâ€"220 feet in‘ is u8sed at one western logging camp will be a roadway with a car|fO" transporting heayy loads on a t no least, is the new suspâ€" idge to be built across the River. [: will connect the "Copyright Law" of the Northwest Indians the owner of a totem pole slave class aspired to raise y. In the erection of the amount of wealth had to the more wealth lavished, the owner‘s standing in cial position, rank the iry native The monument for Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary is a huge stone sphere on which the continents of the earth are outlined. _ At the North Pole is set a bronze star, symbol both of his discovéery and, as some one has suggested, of "the <star of unconâ€" quered will." His cpitaph is his own favorite quotation from the Latinâ€"| $ will find a way ar maka ana | Lement TinL.4 sar e. ® _i 2 UOnUCpOt: Lypmens, Limited, 344 St. Paul St., W.. Mentreal. fi‘Cficm Soap chaves without muz. nemmen smm uns1 2222222200 CCCE Free from dandruf and itchâ€" ing. It‘s easy. On retiring rub spots of dandruff and itching with Caticura Uiutment,rfetting()iut- ment well on scalp. extmorning shampso with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Ringe withtepid water, Scap25c. Ointment 25 a0d 50c. Telcom 25¢. Sold throw Domi . Canadian & ons enosiierslt oi ood Canadion Depot * Work was begun this spring in plant-i ing up the area in Vespra township, | Simcoe county, Ontario, which v.-he‘ county council has acquired â€" for a | municipal forest. It will take several | years to plant up the whole area of,‘ eight hundred acres but the work will | proceed year by year till it is done. It‘ is possible that a nursery to grow part | of the planting stock required will be ; started on the site. I Have Good Hair and Clean Scalp TORONTO Minard‘s Liniment for sale In the West, logging camps are mostly situated in the hills, and the heavy loads of logs have to be hauled out, always downhill. Often that helps to make the hauling easy, but someâ€" times the grades are so steep that it makes it too easyâ€"so easy that it enâ€" tails difficulty. Indeed, in these inâ€" stances the term hauling is a misâ€" nomer, for that implies pulling the load, and the operation actually conâ€" ’ Canadian nurses from coast to coast are raising funds to erect a monument at the Capital in commemoration of Canadian Nursing Sisters who lost their lives during the Great War. Onâ€" tario nurses are requested to send their contributions either individually or through their local association to the Provincial Secretaryâ€"Treasurer of the Fund, Miss Holland, 410 Sherâ€" bourne St., Toronto. ' Simcoe County Municival Forest. The Runcoin bridge over the Mersoy is in the nature of a suspension railâ€" way, the passengers being carried across in a remarkable cageâ€"like conâ€" trivance. ing raised straight up when a ship has to pass. i The past tense has been used jthroughout. for though an odd totem 'pole may still be raised among some ‘of the very primitive tribes, the cusâ€" | tom has practically passed, through | the natives‘ intercourse with the white man. in fact, the Canadian governâ€". | ment has stopped the natives improvâ€" erishing |themsolves by â€" such cereâ€"| 'fmonfnls. which have been commonly| ,known among white men as "potâ€"| latches," though their significance has been entirely lost upon the egotistical white man, for Zhe most part too conâ€"] temptuous of the native to inquire‘ closely into his doings. [ So, soon the Indians who first in-,l troduced the law of copyright will cease to need it. | Nurses War M;morial Fund. ims rule was very rigidly enfo;‘ced. marking the first workings of the copyright law in North America. When the Brakes Are of First Importance. T ing wealth to mest the occasion. These preparations usually began a year in advance; in some cases so long a time as three years was spent in preâ€" liminaries. While this was going on, the prospective owner called in the artist of the tribe, a man of a d'u-‘ tinctive class whose wares were vary 1SSUE No. 21 : everywhere An antiacid, such as Bisurated Magâ€" nesia, which can be obtained from any | druggist in either powder or tablet |form, enables the siomach to do its , work properly without the aid of | artificial digestents. Magnesia comes "ln several forms, so be certain to ask , for and take only Bisurated Magnesia, which is aspecially prepared for the above purpose. Yefopment or secretion of acid _ To stop or prevent this souring of the food contents of the stomach and to neutralize the acid, and make it DF » harmless, a teaspcontat ot fnagnesia, a good and effecâ€" 7 tor of acid stomach, should be in a quarter of a glass of hot or water after eating or whenâ€" ever gas, sourness or acidity is fait This sweetens the stomach and nenâ€" tralizes the acidity in a few moments and is a perfectly harmless and inexâ€" pensive remedy to use. | Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief For 1 Acid Indigestion. ‘ Soâ€"called stomach troubles. such as indigestion, gas, sourness, siomachâ€" |ache and inability to retain food are in probably nine cases out of ton, Isimply evidence that excessive secreâ€" tion of acid is taking place in the stomach, causing the formation of £as and acid indigestion. _ _Gas distends the stomach and canses that full, oppressive, burning feocling sometimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames the | delicate lining of the stomach. The | trouble lies entirely in the excess de»’ velopment or secretion of acid. To stop or prevent this souring of the food contents of the stomach and to neutralize the acid, and make it | Urnloss you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getâ€" ting Aspirin at all. Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 1(0â€"Druggiste, Axpiria is the trade markt (registered in Canada» of itaver Manufacture of Moneâ€" acsticacidester of Falicylcacid, While it in awcii kaown thai *spirin mesana Muyer manufacturc, to arslet the public againsi itait@tions, the Tabscis of Bayer $ o m apwaugy wi‘l be ctamped with their geatrat trade ai@rk, the ©Hay«> Crom* STOMACH TROUBLES | ARE DUE TO ACIDITY | _ A new process has been discovered J’for utilizing rubber in the making of paper. It is claimed that the introâ€" idu‘ction of cven very small quentities | of rubber into the raw material reâ€" | sults in the production of extraordinâ€" Electric capâ€"lamps are now being made for the use of miners, the curâ€" rent being supplied from an accumuâ€" lator strapped on the wearer‘s back. Many a man in the hour of his need finds that he has been so busy making money that he has forgotten to make any friends. America‘s Ploncer Dog Remedies L m Book on ary toughness and strengtl; Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia J *7"ac nas just changed things all round for me. For a long time I had | been going without any breakfast altoâ€" | gether and now I get up in the mornâ€" , made me feel like a different person," _ said Mrs. Wm. Allen, 1515 Wellington ’ St., Verdun, Montreal, Quebec. | _ "For five years I never knew what I it was to be free from stomach trouble “ and finally was on the verge of a breakâ€" ‘down. 1 actually dreaded for mealâ€" ‘ time to come as I knew no matter how . careful I was about my diet I wouldj | be BUPC to snffar aftnmurand. Cown 1 actually dreaded for meaiâ€"| Wood u.yflmw ' time to come as I knew no matter how as Fuel. » careful I was about my diet I would [ be sure to suffer afterwards. , In view of the threatened diMculty } "Tanlac has just changed things alt | in obtaining coal in the nmear futmwne, round for me. For a long time I had | the qu(~al'lon of the value of wood as a been going without any breakfast altoâ€" fuel enin Neroines Important Aeâ€" gether and now I got up in the morn. ; mv-fl ing tp the Forest Products Lab Oe ing so hungry I can eat bacon or most | lor‘wx of the Depariment of the Inâ€" anything elso I want and enjoy it [Q'f’“""‘- Canada, the main consideraâ€" have gotten over the nervousness, too, | tions in selecting wood for fuel aro its and am able to sleep aii night long | WOl8Rt and dryness. Pound for pound, without waking up once and I get up | all woods, equally dry, have about the mornings feeling thoroughty refrosheq.| 52M¢ heating value. A cord of ary I am still taking Tanlac and improving | N@rd4#W904, such as birch, has approxi steadily. In fact, it just seems that| M@@y the same heating yaiue as a every dose increases my strength and | {9" Of Coal, but in the case of soft energy." I 008. ho mnoh us us cxnedin nemgy ‘SAYS SHE HAD _ Tanlac is Colds Toothache Earache ACTUAL DREAD OF MEALTIME and How to Feed Mailed Fres to any Adâ€" dress by the Author. K. Clay Glover Co., Inc, 129 West 24th Street New York, U.8.A. Rubberized Paper DOG DISEASES â€"" VYer tne nervousness, too, ible to sleep au night long raking up once and I get up fecling thoroughty refreoshed. sold by all good stomach and ve, burning as heartburn and inflam the stomach y in the exc Headache Neuralgia Lumbago druggists. | Advt. , 1 Paris, Ontario ;p_ suffered with pa Pinlham Medicine C This book contaigs mation. "70a . PFinkham‘s Private Textâ€" Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent to you frae ltx!pon request. Write to The Lydia M. eE ET C Ets OPm Te good health and do all my own work. I recommend it to others and give you permission to publish this letrer in your little books and in the newsâ€" papers as a testimonial."â€"Mes. D. Cassaor, Box 461, Paris, Ontario This medicine which helped Mre. Cassady so much is worthy of your confidence. If you are troubled witia such ailments as displacements, iaâ€" flammation, irregularities, or other forms of female weakness you shoul& give it a trial now. _ Lydia B. Pinkham‘s Private Toxtâ€" Every Woman‘s Wishâ€"â€" Read NMrs, Cassady‘s Experience T0 ENJOY _ _ PERFECT HEALTH | Chinese is spoken | million people, Those H’ying ' In view of the threatened diMoulty [ in obtaining coal in the near fubmre, | the question of the value of wood As m ‘tuel again hecomes important. Acâ€" | cording to the Forest Products Laboraâ€" | tories of the Depariment of the Inâ€" [ terior, Canada, the main consideraâ€" tions in selocting wood for fuel aro its weight and dryness. Pound for pound, | all woods, equally dry, have about the ;"sam@ heating value. A cord of dry hardwood, such as birch, has approxi mately the same heating vailue #8 & '(ou of coal, but in the case of soft [ woods, as much as two cords world, in some instances necessary "o gei the bame amount of heat monEy orpEers The safe way to sead mon is by Dominion Express Mor 0. ALL KINDS or nEw belting, pulleys, anws . cable etc., ahippad subject to ap; |est prices in Canada. Y TORONTO sALT workse 6. J. CLIFF . Toromxto hushras,. Zâ€"WInS To GRow YVY mushrooms for us; waste space in cellars, outâ€"houses or gardens can be made yicld $2%5 to $50 'per week ; m:m trated booklet and particulars sent for 8¢ stamp. ‘Toronto Supply Co., Cumstook Irormumemmmmmmmmmmememmes,asos. 222220000 ho mmarchack 4 000 2PCTO0L Ifn charfe of graduate of Johns Hopkins Hospital, Apply Superinâ€" tendent Homewood Sanitariz.s "APSM® RSES Wanmuen m NURH[-:H WANTED ror iÂ¥ School in charge of TN _27 °5 WANT BOARD, PARM l/ mountains, â€" give particulare. 100. . Wilson Publishing Co., 114 , Adelaide St. W., ‘Toronto. Rummmemmmemss,. .. * 2 COARSE SALT L A ND SALT @UPL Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, Pain zy o. 2 OF _ NEW AND USEKi ‘6, pulleys, anwes . cable, hose,packing, shipped subject to approval at lowâ€" rices in Canada. YORK BBLTY NG 116 YORK sSTRRET, TORONrO ow mmamee ww 22000000400 1 KELP WANTEDâ€"pauer ANTRID PERsoNs To °0S V0,, Lynu, Mass imtaigs yvaluable jnfor BELTiNG From saucse laving Sick Animals SHOULD use 10~â€""For fAive ; pains in my ba NMUBSES WANTED. waNnr ana was taking the different medicines that I thought were good. 1 saw the advertisement im the papers of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" table Compound and have taken it faiitbâ€" fully. 1 am now in All was from t on often bave, f dhis time unfi( for work was {aking the 1 a becdanesi is d ..3 Ital. Apply Buperinâ€" Banitariuna, Guelph, h money by mail Money Order, four handre yrh TRALNING 19 & 114. 18

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