"What has become of Plerre !ou-t leur?" asked Minol Souleur. "He was the geenest of us allâ€"the one who was‘ going to outshine all the aces of metaâ€"| phystcs." ' "I know where he is," said Angus. "He is in eggs, butter and cheese, and | he is making a fortune." | "It is the mystery of the Licking Btone," Angus continued jokingly. "This is about how Souleur described his adventure to me one night last winâ€" ter: " "The Licking Stone was for me alâ€" most like the stone which one ties around his neck before jumping into the river. It originated in a perfectly cotrect idea, which at that time I conâ€" sidered a brilliant one. I had noticed in the mountain pastures of Francheâ€" comte, Auvergne and Switzerland that salt is a considerable expense to those who own large herds. The farm hands waste it. One morning I was meditating on this important question as 1 watched a herd of cattle. " ‘How much salt do you consume?" 1 said mentally to these phlegmatic animals. _ ‘How much is lost each year ? " ‘An idea fiitted through my mind, but I could not quite grasp it. Yet the call of a genlus is irresistible. I had my appleâ€"a good flat stone, about geven or eight kflogrames in length, which lay tranquilly in the short grass. It must have lain there for some time, for a pretty silvery lichen had grown all over it. " ‘As I thought of the farmers‘ plight my brain became heated. 1 was like Kepler or Newton, a prey to the saâ€" tanic spirit of discovery. " ‘This stone, I said to myself, wu' my appleâ€"the inspiration and model Of Its artificial sister, the Licking Stone. 1 see that curiosity distends your Jaws. 1 will not keep you in susâ€" pense. The Licking Stone was to be made of salt and a neutral substance soluble in water and consequently .ol-I uble in saliva. . Now you have “-“dl We would hang this stone by a cord in | tho middie of a pasture. The cood’ oxen, the honest calves and the noble bulls would come to lick it aceocdlnsl to their needs. theory practic manu 2 practice. I devoted my savings to the | manulacture of Licking Stones (lmkl ones to serve as samples, big ones to All the first orders)â€"two hundred or three hundred of them altogether. " ‘A clear and explicit set of direo tions completed the preapectus. I sent wbhout six thousand copies through thé country districts, especially the mounâ€" tain districts. After which I sat back, perfectly confident of results. Orders wero sure to flow in. The only doubtâ€" ful point was whether I could All them. How could 1 manufacture rapidly enough all the Licking Stones nacesâ€" sary for France, for Rurope, for the go to see!" "No order came in, not a single one. There were no requests even for samples. Utterly amazed, I attributed at first this prodigilous silence to mail delays. But at the end of two weeks a now conviction dawned on me: "Rouâ€" tine, accursed routine, triumphs once more over progress." " ‘By heavens!" I cried, ‘since the mountains will not come to me, I will go to the mountains. _ And we shall wor " ‘I never lacked obstinacy. I am one of those men who carry their good ideas and even their pleuanmu} through to the finish. I equipped my-; self with a sort of pouch, in which l' packed the samples of the Licking Stone, and the train carried me to our | boautiful eastern mountains _ And| thereâ€" There I got my training as an Alpinijst. What roads, bridlepaths and | trails I climbed! | " ‘They all listened to me. I received from heaven the facile tongue of a commercial â€" traveler. 1 explained learnedly, not without eloquence, the wonderful advantages of my Licking Stone. 1 licked it; I gave it to the men to lick, to the women and to the beasts. They were very nice about it. The men laughed, the women laughed, the childâ€" reon laughed. 1 even saw the calves laugh. They offered me wine, coffee, brandy, beer, according to their hosâ€" pitable dispositions. But no orders, not the semblance of an order! " ‘I retired into my wigwam with tears and gnashing of tooeth. There was not a plece of money left in my purse, which formerly was bloated out with 1,000â€"frane bills. ~So far luck goos. I returned to the ranksâ€"that is to say, to eggs, choese and butterâ€" with a soul more disenchanted than Christopher Columbus‘s when he realâ€" tzed that the discovery of a world led only to prison.‘ V"'Havfns concluded thus, the good Souleur laugbed a dry laugh. Then he added : " "The stone which was to ruin me really saved me by revealing to me the world of calves and even chickens. I know that butter, milk and eggs carâ€" ried one further than metaphysics." en memmmamnten Afge m mmmmmmme The Perfect Lover. The two girls were walking in the garden at twilight. "I wonder," said the first, "I wonder If Rolio really loves me." "Oft course he does, dear," satd the second. "Why should he make you an THE MYSTERY OF THE LICKING STONE It Tranalated by William L. McPherson remained only to pass from to practiceâ€"to contemptible By J. H. Rosny, Ainse The English Farmer‘s Tools and Buildings Have a Marvelous _ The first impression on viewing Engâ€" ;llsh farming equipment is that nothâ€" ing wears out. The tools look as old as the buildings and the buildings have , been there hundreds of years. One day I passed a too} shed and '"ODM to talk with two old men who were painting wagons. There must lhn.m been a dozen wagons standing | under this low open shed covered with | a tile roof. :s I watched the red paint go on a huge wrinkled hub I remarked that the wagon looked pretty aged. "No, sir, ‘tain‘t so very old," remarkâ€" éd the painter. ‘"‘Bout sixty, I should judge. There is one down the line there more than ninety." These old farm wagons are of a heftiness suficient to furnish a full load, though empty, for an ordinary farm team. Much of the farm hauling is done with 2â€"wheel carts. _ Every farm is equipped with eaveral small 2â€"wheel carts. They are all rockâ€"ribbed, ironâ€" bound affairs and are used for any sort of small load work. It is usually a 2â€" wheel cart that takes the milk to marâ€" ket and that hauls out the manure from the stables. A few days after my encounter with the wagon painters, going along a byâ€" road I met an old man driving one of these carts. The body of this vehicle was perched way above the wheels and oextended out over the horse‘s withors and for an equal distance beâ€" hind. It is a common type of cart used for hauling bulky material,. Noting my interest, the old man told a story about it, a story he recalled hoaring his father tell. May Turn Out All Right. It seems that the cart was made to order. When this man‘s father got word it was ready for delivery he went around to inspect the new vehicle beâ€" fore finally making the purchase. At this Inspection one of the hubs did not appear quite satisfactory, and he was on the point of calling off the sale when the wheelwright sternly protestâ€" ed. He claimed the wheel was as sound as any he had ever made, desâ€" pite an apparent surface mar of some sort. There are several angles to this "nothing wears out" tendency of equipment on English farms. In the fAirst place, there is enough material in the ordinary English wagon or plow to make two or three of the size we grow over here. Just what the adâ€" vantage would be in lugging through fifty years enough extra material to make a thing last another fiity is a litâ€" tle hard to fAigure out. Finally the cart was brought home under the strict understanding that if the wheel ever showed any weakness it would be replaced free of charge. "That‘s been nigh into seventy years ago," said the driver to me, "and I beâ€" leve it‘s going to turn out to be a pretty good wheel." On the other hand, a great deal of this perpetuity of an implement is due to constant and painstaking repair whenever a weakness develops. That old story about the 500â€"yearâ€"old barrel must be of English origin. A man was boasting of a very ancient barrel and took his friend down in the cellar to see it. They switched on the lights and the friend ended the barrell up for more complete examination. "Why, this head does not look old at all," he commented. This drew forth the admission that twenty years back new heads had been put in. The staves next came in for inspecâ€" tion and their reputed age was quesâ€" tioned. Again thero was an admission from his host that his grandfather had reâ€" placed half the staves and that his father, shortly before passing, had reâ€" newed the rest of them. "And how about the hoops?" said the visiter, as he dropped the barrel on its side and rolled it over. The hoors looked almost new. "Well, you see, valuing the barrel as I do, I try to keep it up and only a months ago I had a new set of hoops put on." At this the visitor began to grin broadly, and the man who owned the barrel sheepishly covered his tracks by exclaiming: â€""It has, at least, the same old bungâ€" hole." And I dare say that many of the imâ€" plements in use on British farms, desâ€" pite the rugged way in which they are put together, have been repaired so often and had broken parts replaced that it would be only after the bungâ€" hole fashion that they could lay claim to an original birthday. Wa supply cans and «pay express charges. Wo pay daily by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhore without any charge. To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not less than 30 per cent. Butter Fat. a For referencesâ€"Hoad Office, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker, Established for over thirty years, CREAM WE WANT CHURNING Bowes Company Limited, WHERE NOTHING WEARS OUT By J. Sidney Gates. But the fact that they are made #o solid, thereby having normally such a long life, while cutting down current uen Bicricasd Siil esc in ie scA nds on t i y ad cost, has led to a scrious stagnation in so far as design is concerned. The British farmer keeps his oldâ€"time equipment because it is in such good conditicn he could not afford to scrap it. The British implement manufacâ€" turer has accepted the replacement role instead of venturing forth with something so new and so superior that the farmer would ecrap his old stuff to buy it. Of all the English farm equipment, the most striking to me was the plow. Of course, there are plows and plows in England. They have steam plowing down apparently to a more economical basis than we have yet developed with the mobile tractor. Under their steam system the engine remains stationary, or nearly so, at the side of the field, while the plows are drawn across by windlassâ€"operated cables. But the typical 2â€"horse plow in deâ€" sign looks like the greatâ€"grandfather of the hoariest old implement we have over here. It is known as the Kent plow. The beam and handles are the main part of the plow shoot are all of wood. The beam, I should judge, is morée than eight feet long, and the handles slope far back. i There are two different Irish clan names from which these Anglisized : forms have developed, and there is no | method of telling from which any one | of the threae have come, in the case of l the individual, aside from‘a genealog!â€" \ cal research. You could make a guess ‘wuh some chance of being right, 4f you knew the section of Ireland from l which your ancestors came. These plows appealed to me as beâ€" ing primarily implements of precision. Not only does the great length of the thing make it relatively easy to run a straight furrow but there is an arâ€" rangement for gauging depth which is equally as precise. Depth is never trusted to mere clevis control. Under the British system of handâ€" ling stock, particularly sheep, they do a great deal of hurdling. Sometimes a sod in late summer is used as a feedâ€" ingâ€"ground for fattening animals. A few acres of this fleld will be fenced off at a time and the flock confined in this space until the droppings pretty well cover the land, and then the hurdles, or temporary cross fences, will be moved along to a new area. At the front of the beam are two wheels and a stout axle. In the centre of the axle, spaced a width of the plowâ€" beam apart, are two upright iron bars with a range of opposite holes through which the beam is pinned and its height above the ground steadily and accurately controlled. "These hurdles do cost a considerâ€" able sum," he replied, "but they never wear out and that must be taken into consideration. The lot on this farm have been here, I suppose, for two full generations. I can‘t conceive of this plow ever wearing out. The type of hurdle fence used is of wroughtiron â€" panels, mounted on axles and wheels. These panels are hooked together and one horso can pull into place a 50â€"yard section. I asked a farmer about the cost. Wroughtâ€"iron fences, equipped with running gear, can‘t be had toâ€"day for a song. One of the most ponderous and apparâ€" ontly least likely to wear out pleces of English farm machinery, was the hay or straw carrier used in stacking. An Ordinary endlessâ€"beltâ€"type carrier is mounted on a long ladderlike frame made of heavy timbers. I should say the sidepieces of this frame are fourâ€" byâ€"ten beams. This frame with carrier belt is mounted on uprights supported by a 4â€"whee} truck. On the truck is an old style circular horse power. The carrier is adjustable. It can point any direction and tilt any angle. Round and round underneath goes a horse when it is in operation, and by an ingenious gear arrangement the The family name of Meldon is not one which would bo popularly regarded as Irish, though there‘d be no doubt about the forms Muidoon and O‘Mulâ€" doon. Varlationsâ€"Meldon, O‘Muldoon. Racial Originâ€"Irish. Sourceâ€"Given name. In the ancient province of Meath was the headquarters of the clan "O‘Maoldubhain," which was founded apparently, about 870 A.D. by "Maolâ€" dun" (from "maol!" and Dubhan,‘"* meanâ€" ing "follower of St. Dubhan), who was a brother of "Fogharthac" (Fogarty), the 157th monarch, or High King, King of Ireland. (This lne of "High Kings" or emperors reaches from 1700 B.C. to the thirtenth century A.D.) In Tirowen was the Clan known as. the "Siol Maolduin." It is the branch of the O‘Neills of Ulster. It was es tablished by "Moalduin," the son of "Aodh Ornaighe," the 16t@#monarch of Ireland. Ponderous Hay Carrier. A Brake on Progress. The Hurdlie Fence. MULDOON Surnames and Their Origin Even the ordinary horse rake on the English farm has, I should judge, more than twice the material containâ€" ed in on of our rakes. But an English heavy endless belt of this carrier jour« neys upward with its burden of hay. The English farm buildings, barns, stables and outhouses are mainly built of stone. Evidently the foundations went down to solid, unshifting earth or rock, for you rarely ever see a cracked wall. The universal roofing material is tile and & tile roof appears to be good for all time. farm, once equipped with hayâ€"making machinery, should be out of the marâ€" ket for pretty mearly the next hundred years. To do all this buillding over again toâ€"day and to do it in this permanent style would cost a pretty sum. But it is a job that former generations have done so well that very little of it will ever need to be done over in our lifeâ€" time. m I have a feeling that much of rural England was built so solidly and so well because it was built in an age beâ€" fore there was very, much else to do. The «pirit engendered in those times has trickled down through the latter ages. It is a spirit one likes to see re kindled and passed along. There can be no doubt that weight is an important factor in the producâ€" tion of a horse that can pull a heavyy load. ‘This has long been recognized in the United States, where for many years draught horses, pureâ€"bred and commercial, have been sold by weight; and it has recently been definitely proved by the Iowa dynamometer, a mackine for measuring the pulling power of a horse. It has been abundantly shown that a pair of horses cannot exert a tractive pull greater than their own weight. A tractive pull is not merely the pulling of a heavy load over a required disâ€" tance, but the maintenance of the pull required to start that load over & disâ€" tance which is now fixed at 27%4 feet. Thus, the weight of a horse is unâ€" doubtedly a limiting factor in what it can accomplish. Moreover, the fact that a horse can make a tractive pull of nineâ€"tenibs of its own weight is significant; and these two points, taken together, show that breeding for weight in horses is no mere fad or ‘‘fancy point." P Heâ€"*"You‘re a bird." Sheâ€""And you‘re a wormâ€"but I‘m not going to grab you." SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL LITTLE ONES At the first sign of illness during the hot weather give the little ones Baby‘s Own Tablets or in a few hours he may be beyond aid. These Tablets will prevent summer complaints if given occasionally to the well child, and will promptly relieve these troubles if they come on suddenly. Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets should always be kept in every home where there are young children. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guarantee of a government analyst that they are abâ€" solutely safe. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 250 a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine €0., Brockville, Ont. The family names of Jacobs and James, with their respective variations are virtually the sams, not in the sense that they imply relationship, even reâ€" mote, between families bearing them, but in the sense that meanings of the names are similar. . JACOBS Varlations â€" Jacob, Jacobson, James, Jameson, Jamieson. Racial Originâ€"English and German. Sourceâ€"A given name. This is the obvious result of a fact which is not generally recognized, that the given names of Jacob and James have the same moeaning, which is "ha that supplants" or "the supplanter." Both given names became widespread throughout Northern Europe. in the growth of Christianity and the hold which the stories of the Bible took upâ€" on the populations of those days, for at one period in the history of Europe a given name had little chance of surâ€" viving unless it was of biblical origin or had acquired a religious flavor through the sanctification of some early saint of the Church in one of the northern lands. The simplest form of family name is that which originated as designating parentage, the combination of the father‘s given name with the word "son" in English, "sohn" in German, "sen" in wedish and Dutch. The "s" in Jacobs is what remains of this endâ€" ing in Jacobeon. Horse‘s Pulling Power. Let me give out whatever I may hold Of what material things life may be heaping. Let me give raiment, shelter, food, or gold, If these are, through Thy bounty, in my keeping. But greater than such fleeting trea sures, may I give my faith and hope and cheerâ€" fulness, t Belief and dreams and joy and laughter God, let me be a giver, and not one Who only takes and takes unceasâ€" God, let me give, so that not just my own, But others‘ lives as well, may richer BEST MEDICINE SHE EVER USED Among the well known and esteemed | residents of Hemford, N.S., is Mrs. Amanda Woodworth, Some four years ago Mrs. Woodworth had the misforâ€" tune to lose her husband, and as a reâ€" sult of caring for him during his i11â€" ness, and attending to farm duties, she{ became terribly runâ€"down. Mrs. Woodâ€" worth says she felt as though her! blood had turned to water. The least exertion. would leave her tired and‘ breathless. She was often attacked by spells of weakness that left her alâ€" most speechless, and frequently sufâ€" fered from severe headaches. . The medicines she took did not help her, and she almost despaired of gaining her health. In this condition she one day read in a newspaper of a case vyery similar to her own, in which health was restored through the tise of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. This made her decide to give these pills a trial. ‘ After using a few boxes she found the pillis were helping her, and she conâ€" tinued their use until her oldâ€"time health and vitality were restored. Now Mrs. Woodworth looks after a small farm of fifteen acres, besides doing all her housework, and says she never felt better or more energetic in her life. BShe gives credit for her present splenâ€" 4d health to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which she says are the best medicine she ever used, and strongly recomâ€" ! mends the pilis to all runâ€"down people. Dr. Willlams‘ Pink Pills Highly Praised by a Nova Scotia Lady. The bestâ€"known wind in the world is the trade wind. Jt is commonly asâ€" sumed that the word is connected with trade or commerce, because in the old sailingwhip days mariners used to seek this wind that it might blow them steadily in the right direction, be dependable, and not subject to variâ€" ation or calm. This is a common error, In Angloâ€"Saxon, it was the treddeâ€" wind, a wind with a specific tread, trend, or direction. You can get these Pills from any medicine dealer, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The trade wind, then, is one of uniâ€" form track. In the northern hemisâ€" phere these winds blow from the north east, and in the southern hemisphere from the southâ€"east, about thirty dsâ€" grees on each side of the Equator. In some places they blow six months in one direction and six in the opposite. The mistral is another famous wind. It is a violent northâ€"west wind blowing down the Gulf of Lyons and felt parâ€" ticularly in the neighborhood of Marâ€" seilles. The simoon is a hot, suffoâ€" cating wind that blows in northern Africa and Arabla. The sirocco blows from North Africa over Italy. Minard‘s Liniment for Corne and Warts But How Big Was That One? Skinnem had invented a new hair restorer, and ho had sent a large numâ€" ber of sample bottles out to various wellâ€"known people in the hope of obâ€" taining some testimonials for advertisâ€" ing purposes. "I don‘t know whether to publish this testimonial or not," he said to a friend who was calling upon him as he ceived. "What does it say?" inquired the other, "Well, it says," replied the proud inâ€" ventor, " ‘Before I used your hair reâ€" storer I had three bald patches. Now I have only one.‘" Bome lonely soul to bless. â€"Mary Carolyn Davies. "Prince Edward" Brand English Fox Wireâ€"recognized by the above label on every rollâ€"has given more than fourteen years. of perfect service on ploneer ranches and is being used for most of the new _ ranches. "There‘s a reason." Write or wire for free sample and prices. § » ummerside HOLMAN S P. E. Island ALLISTON The World‘s Winds. opening the letters he had reâ€" See That This Label is on Your Fox Wire Ontario Saies Agent w. H. C. RUTHVEN Be a Giver! Captain F. L. Barnard, winner of the King‘s Cup in the air race round Briâ€" tain, is one of the most popular pilots in the fiying service; he is also one of the most skilful. Tributes to his magâ€" nficent airmanship are paid him almost every day, for there are many wellâ€" known people who, when fiying from FEngland to the Continent, will only book passages in machies piloted by For more than twentyâ€"five years Mr. Charles Rose has been called the "royal" guard, for during that period he has conducted every royal train Alat has run over the "Brighton" Railâ€" way system of England. him Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of his feat was that in the race he atâ€" tained an average speed of over a hunâ€" dred and fifty miles an hour, which is a record, As he landed, Captain Barâ€" nard pushed forward to receive his wife‘s congratulations. "I‘m glad you won," I heard her say, "but I‘m much more glad you got back all right." Czar of Russia was evidently & timorâ€" ous traveller, for the monarch gave orâ€" ders, whilst on a journey to Portsâ€" mouth, for the communication cord to be pulled outside Epsom, and in conseâ€" quence the train stopped at the etaâ€" tion. Rushing ealong the platform to find out what was th matter, Guard Rose was informed that the train was going too fast and that it made the Czar feel nervous. Chaperoning Squad of Parrots. For the most peculiar job ever unâ€" dertaken by a woman, at least one prize must go to Miss Grace Chapman, an English animal dealer. She brought a trainload of parrots across Spain. The birds made such a racket that they frightened the train crew and on one occasion she had to act as her own enâ€" gineer. T had a chat the other day with the great pianist M. Viadimir Pachmann, who has just returned to London after nearly three years‘ absence, says an English writer. As interesting as ever, M. Pachâ€" mann told me he has evolved an enâ€" tirely new method of fingering for the plano. And by way of demonstration he sat down and executed a series of the most intricate scales, talking afâ€" fectionately to the instrument as he did so. "Why do I talk to my plano?" he said, as he rose. "Ah, that is my little secret! But I can give you one reaâ€" son: it is because I love it; it is a part of myself. Yes!" Minard‘s Liniment for Aches and Pains Preparedness, In one of the Southern étates the neâ€" groes are great patrons of a matriâ€" monial agency. One darky, anxious to find a wife for his son, went to the agent, who handed him a list of his lady clients. Running through this the man came upon his own wife‘s name, entered as desirous of obtaining a husâ€" band between the agos of twentyâ€"eight and thirty, Forgetting about his son, the father hurried home to announce his di#â€" covery to his wife. She was not at all perturbed. "Yes," she eaid, "I done give him my name. I puts it down when you was so sick last winter. He once told this story. The late Say *‘Bayer‘"‘ â€" Insist! ‘The Ontario Agricultural Coliege offers you an education that wilt Ait you for practical upâ€"toâ€"date business farming or profession@! life, An education to a farmer is a lifeâ€"time gift. The years of youth are short. Come to the O.Af. on September 18th. Tuition fee for the first year only $20. Board and room only “-09 per Unless you see the "Bayer Cross‘‘ on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer prodâ€" uct proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years..® > week. Mn-g-;ml,vi‘; live stock, modern, wellâ€"equipped bulldings, living conditions best. Write for College Calendar, descriptive of all science and practical courses. J. B. REYNOLDS, M.A. A. M. PORTER, B.8.A. President _ ______ Registrar. Asp Wwhichcontains proven directions mnd{o "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100â€"â€"Druggists STORIES OF WELLâ€" KNOWN PEOPLE Pachmann‘s "8weetheart." FARM BOYS! YOUR OPPORTUNITY! Do Not Let It Pass Flying Champlon. A "Royal" Quard. TORONTO ONTARIO AGRICWLTURAL COLLEGE @GUELPH, ONT. Acccgt 911! a Baver package Doctor‘s Orders. In an outâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"way village in Scotâ€" land a mar entered ong of the mournâ€" ere‘ carriages at a funeral. Opposite him was another man he did not reâ€" cognize. _ Leaning forward, the newâ€" comer said, "Ye‘ll be a brither o‘ the corpse ?" "Naw," replied the other. A minute later the man remarked, "Maybe ye‘ll be a cousin o‘ the corps@?" "Naw," came the answer. "Ye‘ll be a friend, then?" suggested the man. "Naw," said the man emphatically, "I‘m nae relation, but 1 hinna been verra weel, an‘ the dochtor ordered me to take kerridge rides!" The largest leaves are to be found on trees of the palm family. . The leaves of the double cocoanut palm are often thirty feet long and several feot wide; only one leaf is produced each year, and they are so strong and so firmly attached to the ttem that a man may sit on the end of one and rock to and fro in perfect safety. Wants Other WomentoKnow | About Lydia E. Pinkham‘s | _ Vegetable Compound ONTARIO WOMAN REGAINS HEALTH . pound ] falt weak and M fll MA miserable, and had | ~~* & l gains all through me. 1 < was living in Ailsa 4 Craig at the time.and * one day a friend came ,‘ C in and told me her ex= f % Q,erience of usirg the l + | egetable Comâ€" AlllE |’ pound and advised | a I I me to take a bottle, , which I finally did. 1 } I began to get | & strongcr and those | pains left me. 1 am gla© I found out about this medicine as I think ~ers is ‘ none equal to it for women whc have | troubles of this kind. I cannot ;]»raiu | the Vegetable Compound too highly for | the good it has done me. Whenever I | know of a woman suffering I am glad | to tell her of it.‘‘â€"Mre. Wa. RIDsDALE, ‘R.R. No.1, Mount Forest, Ontario. | _ Women throughout the Dominion ave ‘ finding bealth in Lydia E. Pinkham‘s | Vegeublocomponnx §Nohmfuldm¢l ave used in its prepaâ€" | rationâ€"â€"just roots and hgrboâ€"cnd’;?eu Mount Forest, Ont.â€"*‘Before I took Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vefeuble Comâ€" res«â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"s nound| felt weak and hy :> HQUNH sers U lt iss *T L was *# Â¥" _gr::‘dga f & ? maad L3( *ug |†Ing t me to f ~ which ; s es I flb(‘ Comfort Baby‘s Skin The absolute purity and delicate medication of Cuticura Soap make it ideal for baby‘s tender skin. Used daily, with touches of Ointment to little skin troubles, it keeps the skin smooth, clear and healthy, Cuticura Talcum is soothing and cooling, ideal for baby after a bath. Sample Bech ?notllnll Address (;Int: Depot: "Btemhouse Lt4, Montreal" _ Price, Wgwe % and 60¢. Faicum 250. Cuticura Shaving Stick 25¢. NFLAMMATION ! Sore muscles, strained ligaâ€" ments, swollen joints yield to the healing influence of n in safety even by a nursi . For sale by .u'zv“mm‘, URIN 188UE No. 33â€"28. For Your YESED mflemsm[ i# x w q M%