West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Oct 1923, p. 7

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By Robson Black, Manager Canadian Forestry Association. At the present time every voice is raised and every ambition strained to win new population. New population eosts. Immigration is expensive salesâ€" manship. While every conservationist wants to see new settlers brought to Canada, his sense of proportion makes him ask why we cannot spend at least a couple of extra dollars to block the emigration of Canadian families driven out of the forest areas by the plague of humanâ€"set forest fires, Disâ€" trict after district has been abandonâ€" ed, whole counties have decreased in population, railway lines have lost the bulk of local traffic, towns have been boarded un, and for the sole reason Lesing Population from the Timber Zones. that a off the the re 2€ T * bu eichty mil the Crown. lease to an 42,000 worl lowed to d and that : allowed to vear and t! pulation, railway lines have lost the lk of local traffic, towns have been arded un, and for the sole reason at a forest resource which should ive been perpetual has been swept ‘ the ledger of Canadian assets by e recklessness of Canadian citizens. Whose fault is it that the forests \Canada run down hill? We as citiâ€" ns own 85 per cent. of the forest nds of the Dominion and are directly id personally responsible for what is me with the only crop that can grow i these our lands. Every civilized muntry on earth looks to the state ith its selfâ€"perpetuating life, its rovidential relationship to its people, ) look after the forest properties hich, unlike wheat or potatocs, reâ€" wire as much as a century to mature. ‘he state is the obvious and only effiâ€" lent custodian of the rights of future enerations in a very slow growing at utterly essential national resource. Before an intelligent and helpful, nterect on the part of the public can‘ ring about a measure of completal orest protection we will have to jettiâ€"‘ on two or three fetishes, all of which| re p!‘el!-flrh‘.inc\nuy false and yet fix‘ hemselves upon succeeding gonora-‘ ions. One of these fetishes is that he forest resources have been "given| way" or otherwise alienated. 'l‘hceyl iever were and are not toâ€"day. A“‘ ut fiftcen per cent. of the timbered| scres of Ontario are under the control| »f the Ontario Government as conâ€"| cerns measures of conservation. The| richt to cut timber is leased on ten million acres and the remainder of eichty million acres is still held by the Crown. What is the meaning of a lease to an operating company? That 42,000 workmen in Ontario shall be alâ€" lowed to draw a regular week‘s pay, and that 26 million dollars shall be allowed to circulate as wages each year and that 122 millions received for forest products in Ontario shall be forest products in Ontario shall D8 spogk . anjoyed by every business interest and "John svery workman in the province. Th® they d soâ€" called timber baron cuts down 10g3 rulo all worth five dollars. Out of that he for in hands over $4.50 as wages and fOf merely materials and the remaining fifty| well, cents he splits between interest on his a yery investment and taxes to the Ontario0 to who Government, aggregating $4,400,000 applied a year. Strangely enough we vianll-: Family izc the motor car industry as the "life| jy, T blood" of Oshawa and Walkerville and’ a peric a dozen other towns, and the "meal| In one ticket" of thousands of workmen, Ifld‘ come | at the next instant discuss the lumber : tury, business as the sinecure of a quartet Then, of "barons" into whose purse pour? childre untold millions wrung from a wretchâ€"| So a n ed peasantry driven to build twoâ€"car| not so parajges with high price boards. More the na men have loft the lumber industry in | was u. the last ten years than have entered| As t it, and most who moved out were not! names financial gainers for their experience. from t You ask what is to be done to glve= the co Carada a permanent forest, and the Lepeti immediate and only comprehensive‘ possib answer is Keep out the fires. We';“le" a citizens burn ten times the trees that, â€"â€"â€" the lumbermen have cut, and since thet 1 earliest days of Canadian history have “‘R put a torch to 600,000 square miles, | as against about 100,000 square miles , A utilized by all the lumbermen from | coast to coast. Please let us lay off the cry for tree| Wh planting to produce timber until we consti look into a much more inviting pro]»icollc sition. An acre of humanâ€"made planâ€"| other tation of spruce is a lovely sight. How ) the m few of us know that there is in Canâ€" lets a zda a plantation of just 50 million | late densely packed acres of young fomts, banis set out by Nature without human conâ€" of ch trivance or expense. _ They lie ingl'l D patches from coast to coast. That 50| says: million acres is richer than ali the goldi from mines for its gold grows and repelu!m“ into endless generations. _ All that|l“d ' plantation asks is that fire be kept out.; alwa" If that is done that young growth will| in th be able. under carefal management, to, ®% meet all Canada‘s needs for the future| C9"!" and provide a great surplus for exâ€"| Me*U This is Interesting. i Croatian girl while tending her sheeyp and her geese will generally be found knitting. _ Before her "teens" ashe begins upon her trousseau, and when she marries she must have enough stockings to last her and her husband ail their lives. In addition she must bave ready a complete outâ€" fit for herself and for her bridegroom as well. When evor a young man in that country gives a young girl an apâ€" ple, and she presents him with a handkerchief, thesoe simple tokens algâ€" nify an engagement which rarely is broken. port For Astronomers. For astronomical or othe tance work a short talesco, be attache1l to one tube of has been Izronted. Charles Dickens said: _ NO OM useless in the world who lighters burden of it feor any one vise" omical or other long dts-"' 00000000 .\ @Weeenbimmmemniffecer cammmamet i a short talescope tube to : MmMoNnEy ORDERS. to one tube of blnocularll Send a Dominion Express Moneyt ranted. Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. oo mmcaniifffeourccmmearrccem mm i y mmecmmeaccenents | ons maid: "No owe 1/ . The soul refuses all limits. It afâ€". u. eo 38) s o« in man always an opumxsim.; ~ga z* Fill your pi 4O !.lm)A cur SMALL Variationsâ€"Little, Pettit, Lepetit. Racal Originâ€"English and French. Sourceâ€"A characteristlc. Here is a family name, with varia-z tions, which "means just what it says." If you bear this name you may?' be sure that the particular ancestor of | yours who first bore it was a small | manâ€"unless, perhaps, he was proml-’ nent for his great size. At any rate,| bhe was not of medium build. | Some people find it difficult to con-'i ceive how such a surname as this can | develop into a hereditary family name. | They grant that it was ’natuml to . spoak of a John who was little, as | "John Little," or "Little John." But: they don‘t understand by what law or | rule all his descendants have borne it, | for in the first place the name was. merely descriptive of the individual. | \ Well, to begin with, not more than‘ \a very small percentage of the persons ‘ to whom the name was descriptively | applied passed it on to their children. Family names did not develop suddenâ€" | Iy. They took form gradually, over ‘a period of three centuries or more, ; In one family the name might have beâ€" | come hereditary in the twelfth cenâ€" , tury, in another in the fourteenth. 4| Then, too, it is not uncommon for the _\ children of small parents to be small. ‘So a man‘s son might be cglled Little, not so much because his father bore the name, as because he, too, actually was undersize. â€" As the strongest evidence that the names Little and Small developed from this descriptive source, we have the corresponding names of Pettit and Lepetit in French. Lepetit leaves no possible doubt, being a combination of "Io" and "petit"â€""the small." BARY‘S OWN TAGLETS AN EXCELLENT REMEDY | Falih always takes th ward. It is sight, whic | yond the physical e courier which leads t \the closed door, sees . {smclos. and points to | the loss spiritual facu When the baby is iliâ€"when he is eonstipated, has indigestion; colds; colic or simple fever or any of the other many minor ills of little onesâ€" the mother will find Bab~‘s Own Tabâ€" lets an excellent remedy. They reguâ€" late the stomach and bowels, thus banishing the causo of most of the ills of childhood. Concerning them Mrs. IPCIPUC .MR Pemmemd Gneee t ces the mother will find Bab~‘s (r)‘wn Tab-‘ I was eighteen years old. For the | lets an excellent remedy. They reguâ€" late the stomach and bowels, thus :;‘ISt t:lne i was free: kM’ p;:’entslhad| banishing the causo of most of the msl ow me to make a trip A one] of childhood. Concerning them Mrs. through the country. _ For a whole| E. D. Duguay, Thunder River, Que..?month I could realize my dream of| says:â€""My baby was a great suffarer |rambling over the Breton roads, my | from colic and cried continually. 1 sack on my back, without won'!lns:: began giving him Baby‘s Own Tablets | about the length of the march, sleapâ€" | and the relief was worderful I nO#W |ing under the stars and eating my | always keep a supply of the Tablets | preaq on the bank of a stream. | in the house." The Tablets are sol?*{ Sometimes I was tired and condtâ€" | by medicine dealers 0~ by mail at 25 ) ;ions of travel afoot were not favor.| conts a box from The Dr. Williams‘ | apra Thus one oppressive July Sunâ€"| Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. \ day I regretted that I had not stopped . F Eth ds | at Sarzeau when it grow dark and the aith. |\ sky clouded over. 1 had still three: Falih always takes the first step f0Tâ€" | good leagues to &0 to the next village. ward. It is sight, which peers far beâ€"| The southwest wind blew in equalle yond the physical eye‘s vision, _ & across the country, forcing me to stop. courier which leads the way, OPODS|to catch my breath. I was pot disâ€" the closed door, sees beyond the 0b conraged until the rain began to fall stacles, and points to the path which in torrents, blinding me and almost the less spiritual faculties could nOt strangling me. The lightning luminâ€" see. |ated the horizon. The thunder and . wartmunwnnsaliess ces ue , the ocean mingled their tumult so comâ€" Addicted to Smoking. | pletely that 1 feared any minute I Passongerâ€""!1 say, driver, what lli-hould reach the odge of a clif and the average life of a railway engine"" | stumble Into the waves below. I had _ rtatane..â€"um > about thirty yo-r-.};mn up bope of finding shelter. #alntin Addicted to Smoking. Passongerâ€""!1 say, driver, what is the average lifeo of a railway engine"" 1 L a weresa waave Bit. Passeager "Gracious! I should have thought such a toughâ€"looking thing would last longer than that." Driverâ€"*Well, perhaps it would, sir, if it didn‘t asmoke so much!" _ Driverâ€"*"Oh, gir." (5¢ 80 acR@ MmMoNnEy ORDERS. a Dominion Express Money Five Dollars costs three cents. iys takes the first step forâ€" sight, which peers far beâ€" physical eye‘s vision, _ a ch leads the way, opens Aoor, sees beyond the ob points to the path which trltual faculties could not Surnamss and Their Origm Tt Satisfies® _ | It is traceable to no given names | among either the Angloâ€"Saxons or the Norman French, nor to any other | likely source in the language of those | peoples, â€" On the other hand, it is | traceable géneafiogically, through the‘ ise:[ling in Englanrd of a family bearâ€". |ing that name, to a certain merchant ; of Lyons named Peter Waldo, who in | ‘ the twelfth century attracted considerâ€" | :ab!e attention for his denial of the | church‘s doctrine of transubstantiaâ€" lion and his translation of tne gospelsl ‘into French, or rather the Provencal; ! language. ! \ _ with this clue it is not difficult to ; | trace his family name (and this was\ \ just the period when family names | were beginning to come into existâ€" -lence) to a given name among the 'iGoth. Comparatively little is known of the language of this Teutonic race -lwhlch dominated all southern Europe â€"‘ after smashing the Roman Empire, for .‘ both the language and the customs of â€" the Goths gave way rapidly before the .isuperlor civilization which they conâ€" w,Iquered and settled themselves into. » Their nomenclature, however, persistâ€" j\ ed, exerting a powerful influence on lthat of modern France and Italy. WALDO. Raciar Origin â€" Gothic, French. Sourceâ€"A given name. Here is a family name which does not sound English, a name borne by Ralph Waldo Emerson, and though it has been settled in England as a famiâ€" ly name for many centuries, it is not an English name. wet The given name in question apparâ€" ently was derived from the Gothic word "Valdan," and signified "one who rules." Names ending in "o" were as typical of the Goths and the Franks as those ending in "a" were of the Angloâ€"Saxons. Suddenly I saw on my right a dark: mass in the shadows. It must be. a house on the side of the road. Who would be cruel enough to refuse hosâ€" ;pmmy to a drenched wayfarer? I felt for the door. I discovered it and rapped on it. There was no answer, lA lightning flash revealed a low, lth.tched cottage. I rapped again. Not a sound in reply. Then out of irritaâ€" | tion than anything else, I seized the ‘knob and turned savagely. The door THE INTRUDER Translated by William L. McPherson By Rene Bizet CUT PLUV G OGDBETS If you roll your OWI ask or FING CUVT or anclent openéd. I entered with a sigh of re lief. Finally I had a refuge. . But where was I? What was going to happen? I drew my lamp from my pocket and walked ahead. There was a long passagewayâ€"then to the left a furnished room.. 1 called aloud to awaken the occupants. No voice reâ€" #ponded. Tha house was empty. Since I was the sole possessor for the night and there was little chance that the owners would return in such weather, I docided to install myself as comfortâ€" ably as possible and go to sleep 1 found copper candlesticks on a manâ€" telâ€"piece. I lighted the candles. In the room were chairs, a table and a peasant clothes closet. _ But all the furniture seemed to have been chosen , by a city person with rustic taste rathâ€" ‘er than by country people. "It is a lucky chance which brought me here," I said to myself. "At dawn I shall get out, for after that I might not find a welcome." The tempest raged outside. I was #o tired that I closed my eyes as soon as I sat down on the bench which I interdéd to make my couch, and I thought I was dreaming when I heard these words: "What are you doing in my house?" I gave a start. _ No, it was not a dream. Two steps away was a woman who, a candle in her hand, was exâ€" amining me curiously. l As she said this she drew a revolâ€" ver from her pocket. I jumped up. \ "But, madamoiselle"â€"â€" | "Don‘t be afraid. It is not for you. | It is for me. So I am going to give | you a piece of advice If you want to | keep out of trouble and avoid being accused of a crime, go away I intend to kill myself. And if they know that you spent the night here"â€"â€"â€" She spoke so audaciously and bad !f the air of being so little frightened my | P« presence that I did not know what to answer and contented myselft with | t! looking at her closely. She was a ) O young woman and very good-looklng.\ y as far as I could judge, for the water , 9 was streaming from her clothes. Her; t locks, escaping from under her hat,| were matted against her cheeks,. But ! even so, nothing could alter the purity U of her profile, and I could see her wide | © blue eyes glitter like two pale sapâ€" phires. ! 2 afraid?" I was sure that she was not joking. She expressed herself calmly, without bravado and toyed with the weapon in ber hand as she might have toyed with a pendant to her necklace. "You want to kill yourself?" “W’hy" "For reasons which don‘t interest you." s â€" "Nevertheless, what justifies you in killing yourself?" f |\ me, in spite of my tears. I am indifâ€" \ferent to everything. I can neither ‘smile nor weep. I ask your pardon | for sending you away. But it must be. ‘Go. Continue your journey. Think of \ me until the dawn. And swear to me ‘that you will never tell any one what | you have seen. ) Ske put the weapon and the candle \ on the table. She pushed me out and \slammed the door violently behind "Noâ€"no moralizing. If you please. There is something so ridiculous in our dialogue at this hour and in this place, that I almost feel like leaving you here and killing myself outside on the road." "You came to rob me?" "But it is raining too hard. You want to shoot yourself, but you are afraid of the rain!" "It is true, And now, go. I beg you, leave me here alone You don‘t know me. What difference does it make to you if I kill myself? At my age, when one is tired of life, it is beâ€" cause one has suffered in love. The man whom I loved has just deserted "Well," she continued, "are you I know that I ought to hava resistâ€" ed, that I ought to have defended her against her folly. But I had neither the time nor the strength to do so. We had talked but a few minutes, and the scene which I had passed through was so strange and so unexpected that out on the road I hardly knew if it had not been all a dream. I walked abead abstractedly in the rain and mud. I paid no attention to the howlâ€" Ing of the wind. I tried to keep on "Yes," my feet and to plunge through the darkness. I remembered nothing. Stumbling against a stone and alâ€" most falling over it restored me to my senses. My memory came back. There was a thatched house and a young woman. There was the revolâ€" verâ€"and death. There was the drama which I was allowing to be played through. 1 turned about and ran toâ€" ward the house. I shouted aloud my remorse, as if men could hear me. 1 hurled mysel fat the door. The flamos of the candles threw fitful shadows on the wall. 1 listened. All was silence. Ifi:nv her stretched on the bench on which I had lain I had arrived too late. $ I drew nearer and heard the sound of regular breathing. 1 saw her beaut!â€" ful bair in a golden network about her closed eyes. Her hands lay on her breast like flowers. The revolver was still on the table. Weary, exâ€" hausted, no doubt, sha had been overâ€" come by slcep before death appeared. I put the weapon in my pocket. I blew out the candles. I went out again into the storm, this time joyously, leaving my Sleeping Beauty. I was not, -\;;der'my va'glb-ond cloak, enough of a Prince Charming to awaken her with a kiss. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. Rriy s â€"onlmerpi 1 d o, ais 62 Five light cruisers of the type shown in the picture are to start in Novemâ€" ber on a tour of the world in which outlying parts of the Empire will be visited. The ships will include the Delhi, the Dauntless, the Danae, the Dragon and the Dunedin. They will be commanded by Sir Hubert G. Brand. May Obtain Relief by Enriching the Blood Supply. In the days of our fathers and grandâ€" fathers, rheumatism was thought to be the unavoidable penaity of middle life and o‘d age. Almost every elderly person had rheumatism, as well as many young people. It was thought that theumatism was the mere effect of exposure to cold and damp, and it was treated with liniments and hot applications, which sometimes gave temporary relief, but did not remove the trouble. in these days there were many cripples. Now, medical science understands that rheumatism is a disâ€" ease of the blood, and that with good\ rich red blood any man or woman of any age can defy rheumatism. There\ are many elderly people who have1 never felt a twinge of rheumatism, and many who have conquered it by simply kecping their blood rich and l pure. The blood enriching qualities of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills is becoming every year more widely known, and the more general use of these pills has robbed rheumatism of its terrors. At the first sign of poor blood, which is |\shown by loss of appetite, dull skin ‘and dim eyes, protect yourself against further ravages of disease by taking ‘Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis. They have helped thousandsâ€"if you give them a fair trial they will not disappoint you. RHEUMNATIC SUFFER You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. j Genius does nothing without reason. Music may be termed the universal language of mankind. Music is never stationary, succesâ€" sive forms and styles are only like so many resting places on the road to the ideal. â€"E\‘llt;slé has, like society, its laws of propriety and etiquette.. r“.’hat 'ls genius ~else than a priestly power revealing God to the bhuman soul. A sympathetic recognition is asâ€" sured to everyone who concentrates his art to the divine service of a conâ€" viction of a consciousness. I wish it were possible to speak of. God without the implication of dealing with religon. By this I mean that I am anxious to keep religion out of this subject of the conquest of fear. The minute you touch on religion, as commonly understood, you reach the sectarian. The minute you reach the sectarian you start enmities, The minute you start enmities you get menâ€" tal discords. The minute you get menâ€" tal discords no stand against fear is possible.â€"Basil King, in "The Conâ€" quest of Fear." Good All Year Egg Proâ€" duction. 8. W. Knife. Now is the time to get your birds inâ€" to winter quarters. They should b01 fully matured by this time, and to / start off in the race for high egs& proâ€"‘ duction for the year, should have & certain amount of surplus fiesh and fat. There is no particular secret in getting late Fall and Winter eggs. The essential factors are good stock, well matured (not mongrels, as they cost more to keep and pay less dividâ€" ends). Hens should be confined from early in October throughout the winâ€" ter in a well ventilated, dry, frequentâ€" 1y cleaned and disinfected house, free from draughts. For each bird allow 34 to 4 sq. ft. fcor space. Provide straw litter about 6 inches deep for them to exercise in. Feed grain in the litter night and morning, and above all, feed at regular times, not 7 a.m. toâ€"day and noon tomorrow. _ Laying mash should be available to the hens at all times. They never eat too much of it. Feed greens, mangles, cabbage, etc.. daily, If possible. Remove any . sick birds at once. Keep drinking vessels clean. Gather your eggs often and market them beâ€" fore they get old. And you will soon have the pleasure in seeing your profits come in. A cheap comfort in summer is a shower bath. If you can do no better, even the sprinkler head of a watering pot attached to the bottom of a tenâ€" gallon keg will serve. To get the most out of the coming year, we must put the most into it. â€"James Freeman Clarke. Timely Thoughts. God and Religion. BRITISH WARSHIPS TO TOUR WORLD. AERS What Ails the Dance? Friendâ€""What you doingâ€"subscribâ€" ing to the dance?" 7 Doctorâ€""Noâ€" prescribing for the dance." Too Slow. Jimson had barely taken of his coat when his motherdinâ€"Jaw, pale of face, rushed up to him and grabbed his arm. "Oh, Arthur," she gasped, "that great, heavy grandfather clock in the hall just crashed down on the spot where I was standing only a minute ago. Jimson did not seem to be greatly agitated at the news, and only murâ€" mured : slow!" Keep Minard‘s Linimsnt in the house. ‘Tactiess. "Tact," said the lecturer, "is essenâ€" tial to good entertaining. I once dined at a house where the hostess had no tact. Opposite me sat a modest, quiet man. "Suddenly he turned as red as a lobâ€" ster on hearing his hostess say to her husband, ‘How inattentive you are, Charlie! You must look after Mr. Brown better. He‘s helping himself to everything." Son, don‘t wait to be a great man â€"be a great boy.â€"The Watchman. "H‘m! I always said that clock was America‘s Plonesr® Dog Remedies LEAN CLEAR AND HEALTHY 1 NIGHTé& 'I yMORNINGm\ EEP YOUR EYES Â¥OR vASE EYE CARL BoOK: MUALNG 00. Guitaoowad *"Eczema broke out on my body in small pimples with white heads. At first there were just a us !)fe' smail spcts but it '\; ) quickly epread, causing C intense ftching and disâ€" comfort My clothing h seemed to aggravate the \yâ€"Â¥ breaking out, and I could not sleep well at night. "A friend gave me a sample of Cuticura Soep and Ointment and after using them I got relief so purâ€" cake of Soap and one box of Ointâ€" ment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Maybelie Brett, Puliman, Wash. Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the care of your skin. Te rit te Pool Bl. W . Aeauan . baly en where. SeapZe. Ointment 25 and i0e. Tateum 24, EOGZEMA ON BODY N PIMPLES Itching Intense. Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Heals. tcura Soap shaves without mug. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO DOG DISEASES Mailed Free to any Address by the Author. W. CLAY GLOVEAR CO., Ins 120 West 24th Strest New York, U.8.A. tears that have been #ghed on account ef debt could be gathered into one place they would form a NiagarA Falls. Who could ever estimate the heart aches, the sufferings, the prematur®e deaths caused by debt! Debt is the killer of ambition, the blighter of hopes and prospects, the murderer of love, the cause of upâ€" happy homes, the monster that makes life, intended to be beautiful and full of promise, a hell upon earth for mil lions of men and wo.nen and for countâ€" less little children. The Russian people complain that readable and interesting newspaper» in their language have ceased to exist, All they have is an "elaborate ma& chinery for spoiling paper." An ob» gerver in Russia writes that under the present government the newsâ€" papers are merely the mouthpleces of a emall despotic group; the really able 1ourgnus!s have given up their profesâ€" sion; and the daily run of priated matâ€" ter is little more than & lot of colorâ€" less propaganda,. Before the revoluâ€" tion the Moscow Ruskoije Slovo had & circulation of more than 1,200,000; today the combined circulation of all | the soviet press is no more than that. Someone has said that #! all the Say "Bayer" and Insist! Unless you see the name "Bayer ‘ on package or on tablets you are not getâ€" ting the genuine Bayer product proved eafe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty three years for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin‘ only. â€" Each unbroken package conâ€" tains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drugâ€" gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of ‘.\lonoloctictcidutor of Salicylicacid. While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayor Manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tabâ€" lets of Bayer COompany will be stampâ€" ed with their general trade mark, the | Will Be Interested in Mrs. llo-E ? san‘s Rearavery hy Use of Lydi. | E.'lie;&‘f;y'_ii Use of Lydia |\ Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compoun Winn‘ipe!. Mrna "Lydia F. l‘dink- \ ham‘s Vegetable C mpound has done | me good in every way. 1 was very i weak and runâ€"down and had certain | troubles that women of my age mre i like}{ to have. I did not like to iooto | the octor so I took the Vegetable Comâ€" | found and am still taking it right along. | recommend it to my friends and to any | ane I know who is not {oe‘.'mg well.""â€" | Mrs. Tnomrsox, 308 Lizzic St., Winniâ€" | peg, Man. "Beyer Cross." WOMEN FROM * FORTY 1O FIFTY When women who are between the ages of fortyâ€"five and fiftyâ€"" veare beset with such annoying symptoms as nerâ€" vousness, irriubi?igy, melancholia and heat flashes, which produce headaches, dizziness, or a sense of suffocation, they should take Lydia E. Pinkham‘s \}.fi table Compound. It is especially adap! to help women through this crisis. It is prepared from roots and herbs and contains rno harmful drugs or narcotics. This famous remedy, the medicinal Ingredients of which are derived from roots and herbs, has for fortvnn proved its value in such cases, Women everywhore bear willmf testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. P‘nk- ham‘s Vegetable Compound. . Women who suffer should write to the Lydia E.Pinkham NedicineCo.,Cobou.r!, Ontario, for a free u}py of&dh Pinkham‘s Prisute Textâ€"PB upon * Ailments Peculiar to Womon." _ G ‘The Russian Press. ASPIRIN ISSUL ~.0. 42â€"25. A We $y

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