West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 30 Sep 1926, p. 3

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rd Islawd be reoad? 2a807 A# COAST miad out ! Juts of rnace. siful experi. for the rapid 60 British nr4®, su ut eacd® 10@ »"C last sStaff of ir and on T he ‘ TOr were minâ€" O er says ha must be frugal, in« and attentive; and ? say he bhaiw.some, dashing, talented, We are still lookimg for him." "What‘s the matter?" "Well, father says that my husband must be a koen and experienced man, of good health and good habits; mothâ€" And at my window bid goodâ€"morrow, Through the sweetâ€"briar of the vine, Or the twisted eilantine . . . While the ploughman, near at hand, Whistles c‘er the furrowed land, ind the milkmaid singeth blithe, And the mower whets his scythe, And every shepherd tells his tale Under the hawthorn in the dale. â€"â€"Milton. 1‘ANegro The mountain Nymph, sweet Liberty And, if 1 give thee honor due, Mirth, admit me of thy crew, To iive with ber, and live with thee, In unreproved pleasures free; To hear the lark begin his flight, And singing startle the dull night, From his watchâ€"tower in the skies, Till the dappled Dawn doth rise; Then to come, in spite of sorrow, thee Jest and youthful Jollity . . . Sport that wrinkled Care derides, And Laughter holding both his sides. Come, and trip it as ye go, On the light fantastic toe; And in thy right hand lead with thee Haste thea go ( sing A « DIn@. ow says A Rare Type. "And so you are not marrted yet?" "No." "Engaged *~ three t tle moments up as an appe The only b baving is you overco i At the same time, adds the author, every ~part of the body should* be thought of in turn. f Then think of yourselt in the act of performing different functionsâ€"lookâ€" Ing at beautiful flowers, smelling their lovely scent, taating luscious fruit, Hsgâ€" tening to inspiring music. . . . Apâ€" ply the same princtple to your mental, moral, and spiritual development. At first sleep may supervenc before the exercise is completed, but this is a passing phase which observance wil How to #leep Rest and sleep should for it they are to be effici the author. Preparation consists in the f1 greater cont than the athl training. Here @ NT Ing b it th If De The w Threeâ€"quart angr These D& was fift ut H th 1J ation consists in lying down tching every muscle, after the of a cat, and clasping the ngers Muked, over the pit of ach. same time. adds the awtha» yourse ghiy s contro 6t é first thing a person who is anâ€" loes is to hunch his shoulders. squared his shoulders instead 1d find it much more difficult to ARE YOU BADâ€" TEMPERED? nonsense every the doctor awa Try the Laughter Cure. its which the &u ppendix : â€" m« ire among Nymph whole, the most badâ€"temperâ€" in the world are those given thinking, Mr. Eeman said, ire not necessarily the best rld is worsetempered than g years ago. larters of the bad temper in 1 is caused by round shouldâ€" n muscles Mental Control taken in ng fleld. into pl Mirth. ttl &n tie of medicine v elf. It is labelied shaken with laug ay. before meale al perfection, 6f course, unt of physical practics but the armchair athâ€" s himself possoessed of n‘t know y salvati < a cen of by his doctors in 1919 f an accident, he claimed pletely cured himself by own "Euclid of bealth," me a wellâ€"known amateur nlly as ed. ested ki AD ex and staying powers who relies on physical 0o apt to waste their ergy through fretting d unimportant trifies, that the last two hours he office are generaily applies to a vast proâ€" itary mental workers. is some startling views tles. As much exerâ€" en in an armchair as M SC n & i if the other fel an be exercised by a chair with eyes ng the mind to sport or exercise. ts, smelling their luscious fruit, Hsgâ€" music. . . . Ap development. supervene before leted, but this is h observance will the though uld be prepared Mcient, declares the maxims of Mr. RA.F. oficer, who book on selftâ€"healâ€" sus of habt‘ually u would find â€"that roundâ€"shouldered Sudden irritation their â€" shoulders industrious AV training of the m that exbreige,| "!Â¥es of his ich that exer.| 098. and of will #gend the| b44 survived must be and rich and exercise Captured by Sa hey were be A few years ago a na letter, arrived at â€"a Be 1, of course,| the mouth of the‘ Fly leal practice| Guinea, the huge is‘and rmchair athâ€"} tralia. f n & | Makes a l:fmerenco. ights for| "I don‘t know what it is, doctor," r serves | said the invalid, "but I feel 1 shal never pull through." ' e worth| _ "Nonsense, nonsense," angwered the liedâ€"To| doctor. "Why, ydour case is absoluteâ€" aughter, | ly the same as an illness I had ‘years als. ago, yet look at meâ€"strong and hearty: Sk usls s T b nust icles h good doctor Keeus fustant | â€"â€"The happiest people are those lwho are doing honest work., â€"â€"The luckiest people are those who lhave a work they can respect. &â€"The finest homes are those furâ€" nished with love, not Inxuries. The most beautiful woman is the one making herself most useful. â€"The avcrage employer is a pretty dependable fellow when treated right. â€"â€"The villain is partly good and the hero is partly bad. r ~â€"The story does not end with the 3 wedding scene. ‘ r"(°°a, ine nuge is.and nofth of Ausâ€"! The stirring story of Arctic exploraâ€" tralia. 1tion abounds with similar incidents. To everybody‘s amazement the letâ€"/ The Canadian explorer, Stefansson, ter was found to have been written and two companions, were given up by a Danish explorer named Peterson | for dead when their ship was crushed who, four years previously, had uart-'by the ice and sunk. â€"* ed with three companions to explore| Two years later they were found in the unknown interior of the Island, | Banks Land, a large island in the Arcâ€" and had long been given up for dead. |tic Ocean. They had subsisted ma.ln-‘ They had, it appeared, been capâ€" ly on seal meat. j To everybody‘s ter was found to by a Danish explo who. four vears n ! Some disappear utterly; but there Qare cases where they have been given |up for dead, yet have returned or heen | found after absence of many years. | Take the :)ae. of the heroic misâ€" juionary explorer, David Livingstone, l[or instance. He vanished in the un known interior of Africa, and when more than six years had elapsed withâ€" out news of him, he was mourned as | dead. Yet after all that time Stanley found him alive and well at Ujiji, on Lake Tanganyika, which is almost in the centre of the country. ; ‘ |_ _A little while later Stanley himself | disappeared, together with three otheri | white men and 353 native porters. | | The expedition set out from the But on August 4, 1877, Stanley turnâ€" ed up unexpectedly at Boma, on the west coast, having marched by deviâ€" ous ways right across the continentâ€" a jJourney of over 7,000 milesâ€"through territory the major portion of which had never before been visited by whit The expedit east coast of 1874, and when elapsed _ witho was feared The terrible jour ives of his three F mns, and of his 353 When explorers leave their native shores for littleknown parts of the world, there is no knowing if they will ever return. . C. Ruthven, J. M. McGillivray Alliston Pricevilie Special Ontario Agents ood Pickle Recipes Ht Every roll of Prince Edâ€" ward Brand Fox Netting opens out as a 150 foot long wall of perfect proâ€" tection for your foxes. "Prince Edward" does not bag nor sag and has 10% more meshes than any other brand of fox netting. Write or wire for delivered prices. Summerside Holmans P. E. Island "~"1s goofire‘;’.’- TEA ,0% #°° Mustard Picklesâ€"Chowâ€"chowâ€"â€"India Picklesâ€"Sour Picklesâ€" Dutch Picklesâ€"Relishes and Catsup.. Our Recipe Book gives splendid recipes for making all of them. f Write for a copyâ€"malled Free. Colmanâ€"Keen (Canada) Limited, Dept. 1or _ 1000 Ambherst St_ Mantreal In Real Lifeâ€" n s the reply, in a very hopeâ€" "but I expect you had a Mext time Giy the finest grade w ~~Red %fg‘ Ciange PehocJea. st of Africa in November, when nearly three years had without "tidings, the worst EXPLORERS LOST FOR SIX YEARS ible journey had Perfect Protection With Every Roli y Savages. a native, bearing a a settlement, near Fly River in New uropean porters nofth of Ausa cost the companiâ€" only 115 | â€"Fools pay just‘aé much attention to ! the counseis of the wise as the wise pay to the words of fools. ; 1 know it‘s folly to complain : Of whatsoc‘er the fates decree ; Yet, were not wishes all in vain, I tell you what my wishâ€"should be: I‘d wish to be a boy mgain, Back with the friends I used to know ; w# For 1 was, oh, so happy then; But that was very long ago! And all theâ€"woods and crows knew i knew a spot upon the hill Where checkerâ€"berries _ could be found ; I knew the rushés near the mill Where pickerel lay that weighed a pound; , *2.*., I knew the wood (the very tree) ‘ Where lived\ the poaching, saucy * ‘crow, | I knew & spot My friends were woodchucks, toads and bees, I knew where thrived in yonder glen What plants would soothe a stone bruised toe: â€" Oh, I was very learned then ; But that was very long ago. 1 once knew all the birds that came And nested in our orchard trees ; For every flower I bad a name, _ Fie‘d. He certainly wrote mainly for children;, but there is a depth and sinâ€" cerity about these things which make them very acceptable to their elders. There have been very few ‘poets who so delicately could touch‘ the pathetic strings of the harp of poesy as Engene Two years later they were found in Banks Land, a large island in the Arcâ€" tic Ocean. They had subsisted mainâ€" ly on seal meat. Alaska, came upon a tribe of Eskimo who acknowledged a white man‘ as their chief. ~‘The white man was‘none cther than Lucky Moore. He had, he explained, been found by an Eskimo hunter when on the point of death front cold and starvation, and had _ remained with the tribe â€" ever rince, not daring to run the risk of reaching the settlements, on account of one of his feet having been ampuâ€" tated owing to frostâ€"bite. But that was God, feed me understanding Bit, by curious bit, } So that my tiny soul Shall not be surfeited With wonder. __An expedition succeeded in ransomâ€" ing them with presents of glass beads, looking glasses, and similar articles dear to the hearts of savages; and they were ultimately restored to civiliâ€" ‘ zation and their friends. The furâ€"trappers of Hudson Bay mnf tell the story of "Lucky Moore,‘"" as he | came to be called. He was & hunter, and prospector who was twice réportâ€". ed lost in the frozen wastes‘of Northâ€" ern Canada. ‘Yét ho turned up alive, and well after disappearing for aeven‘ months, and then again ~for clevenr months. f * [ 10r 1000 Amherst $t., Montreal~ tured by a tribe of savages who had killed their carrier%, and made them prisoners. Very Long Ago! A, Prayer. very long ago M. Sullivan. Certainly, the fair way is the best, though it be something the further about. . ... Constraint is for extremiâ€" ties, when all ways else shall fail; But in the general, fairnesgs has préferâ€" ment. If you grant, the other mayf supply the desire; yet this does the like and purchaseth love.â€"Owen P‘e)lt-‘ ham, in "Resolves," 1620 Minard‘s Liniment relieves stiffness. TORONTO Certainly. though it | about. . . ed, fancy put metal into thelrie;s-;;l;l they came cheerfuly home.â€" Thomas Fuller (1642). could not do, but told them he would provide them horses to ride on. Then cutting litt‘e wands out of the. hedge as nags for them, and a great stake as a gelding for himself, thus mountâ€" A gentleman baving led a company of children beyond their usual jJourâ€" ney, they began to be weary, and jJointly cried to him to carry them; which, because of their multitude,: he Baby‘s Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and Eweeten the stomach ; drive qut constipation and indigestion ; break up colds and simple fevers and make teething easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ‘ ,- Once a mother has used Baby‘s Own Tablets for her litt‘s ones she _would Inse nothing else. The Tablets give such results that the mother has nothâ€" ing but words of praise for them. Among the thousands of. mothers throughout Canada who praise the Tablets is Mrs. David A. Anderson, New Glasgow, N.S., who writes:â€""I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets for my children, and from my experience 1 would not be without them. I, wou‘d urge every other mother of yo?mxl, children to keen a box of the Tableu, in the house." 4 Strongly _ Recommend > Baby‘s THOUSANDS OF THANKFUL MOTHERS The tuning classes at the Mudic Trade School are full and a waiting list Is ne&orted. A large percentage of the entrants are women. * The profession is said to offer exâ€" ceptional opportunities for the eduâ€" cated girl. The course of instruction in Englang lasts for about two years, and the pay is said to be _about ten pounds a week, with opportunity to travel to all parts of the country. and untuned for want of proper attenâ€" tion. % Girls have already invaded the realm ‘of the piano tuner in England, and mere man must look to his laurâ€" els. There is said to be a lack of efâ€" ficlent, wellâ€"trained tuners in England, and thousands of pianos remain silent and shiver;" â€" The buttonwoods and low. and ‘neath the murky mirage o‘er the s river, The wildling asters in profusion grow; The yellow catkins nod brown heads and quiver, o Just as they did this time a year ago, There stirs a breez.e; the aspens dance Unfurl bright golden banners to the . â€" . breeze; 4 And scatter leaves o‘er every vale and mound; w The goldenrod bedecks , the byways ‘round ; A stray, brown bee roves o‘er its yel £ low seas; Then silence falls in magic mysteries, As Summer‘s skies in Autumn‘s hazse are drowned. a ‘ When fall‘s first early frosts subdue the ground, . . And paint with artist‘s fingers all the trees; English Girls Tune Pianos The strongholdsd of this branch of the ‘Macdonalds _ were Macrihannish and Drumore, and prior to 1600 they held the Island of Gigha for the Macâ€" don&lts. *4 At the perioi when the Scottish 'chms were at the height of their power the Galbraith formed a. very imâ€" | portant division of that most influenâ€" ltial clan, the Macdonalds, North and Bouth. "mac," indicating followers or desâ€" cendants of the person named. . But as bas been. the case with so many, Scottish and Irish clan names, the pree fix was droppedd as. superfluous after the trans‘lation of the, name into Engâ€" lish in later generations. The â€" Gaelic â€" designation of â€" this branch _ of _ the Macdonalds .. was "Chlann a‘ Bhreattannaich," or "desâ€" cemdants of the Britons," but they took as a {family name the given name of their chieftein, who played an imâ€" portant part in the national affairs of Bcotl‘and about the time of James I., "Galbraich," of Baldernock _ Variationâ€"Galbreth. Racial Originâ€"Scottish Sourceâ€"A given name. Of course, Tablets to Their Priends. / Advent of Autumn *â€"~â€"â€"~â€"â€"~â€"§~â€"â€"._«_. ch," of Baldernock. . rse, in the earlier use of this was regularly prefixed by the indicating followers or desâ€" Rose E. de Ribcowsky GALBRAITH Surnames and Their Origin maples murmur Wifeâ€""Yes, dear. That"u as I got with ‘the recipe when the broke ‘down." ~ Men came one day and felled the tree, And sawed it into thin, Smooth, fragrant pieces, finely grained . As wood for violin, j And wrought them in an anroplane To course the boundless sky; ~~ "Now," sighed the wainut jorouely, "Behold! at last J fiv." It tugged and pulled in vevery gale s Against the roots that bound Its graceful trunk and waving boughs Bo firm‘ly to the ground, And ever lifted_up its top Through storm or sunlight clear. A litte nearer to the stars _ _ And clouds from year to yoar, ©it P e o e e en Transformation. * . X * en i4 A walnut tree upon a hill He Gets Most Out of Lifeâ€" For many a season grew, Who spoils no happiness he has And watched the eagles upward soar| by envying that which be has not. And vanish in the blue,â€" | _â€"Who lets the otherfellow get mad It envied all the birds that built I first. * > Among its branches high, | â€"Who finds his greatest pleasures And murmured to the passing breeze, in‘ the.simple pleasprés. "Would that I, too, could fiv." " â€"Who works contentedly for one M I‘lu and some little children. . It tugged and pulled in every gale ,L â€"â€"Who laughs himself out of difiâ€" Against the roots that bound "culties instead of fighting his way out. Its graceful trunk and waving boughs â€" â€"Who forgets his pay in the jor of Bo firm‘!y to the ground, \the work be does. â€"peâ€" .‘ Mrs. Buffâ€"Orpingtonâ€""Decidedly my dearâ€"she‘s an out and out RJ Islan« Red." An Out and Out Red. Mrs. Plymouthâ€"Rock â€" "You advise me to have nothing to do with her thenâ€"her tendencies are very | Bolâ€" shevistic?" Incomplete Husband â€" "H‘m! Fi fine appetite they have and how much they enjoy life. 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. Do not submit to "this. Get new blood and with it new vitality. â€" There is no difficulty in doing this. Dr, Wiiâ€" liams‘ Pink Pflls build up and enrich the blood, which brings with it new health and vitality. The man, woman or girl who takes Dr. Willams‘ Pink Pills is never run down. Their friends notice how energetic they are, what a Thousands of men aro run down by! anxieties of work. Thousands of woâ€"f’ men are broken down by their hcuseâ€"| hold toil, with tired lHmbs and aching ‘ backs, thousands of girls are pate,. listâ€" . less and without attraction. It al'l: means the same thingâ€"thin and watâ€" ery blood, vitality run down, a.nnexnia.! poor appetite, palpitating heart, shortl breath. C If you feel run down, it means that your blood is thin and watery, that your vitality is low. You do not sleep well and are tired when you rige in the morning. You find no pleasure in your meals and are listless and dispirited at your work.. You have no energy to enjoy yourself. 1 Find New Health by Improving Their Blood. {you drop out the "f" in this, which is | -_â€"â€"_;_â€"-___ }lufected into si:enf;e,_and simplify tbej Rmerrre t mm mates se o ereiiaseges se oc e mmmommmeee matey reasth" n â€" Gohamegan | Toh Good Rules for Broadâ€" | clation â€"roughly | like ‘"O‘Canninan. | s Then slur through that middio sylfable | cast Listeners. i:md you arrive at "O‘Cann‘an," or| The following ten rules for radio simply Cannon. And this is just about broadcast listeners have been evolved the way the name has become Angliâ€" by Dr, Alfred N. Goldgsmith, wellâ€"known cized through ‘simplification of both radio engineer. the Gaelic spelling and pronunciation. ! The rules themselves are as follows: The name comes from the nickname . ~ 1. Don‘t try to hear ordinary broadâ€" of "Ceanmfionngn," méaning "fairâ€" casting from Australia in midâ€"summer, haired, and which was the sobriquet. BÂ¥ satisfied to enjoy. the good proâ€" glven"to a chieftain by the name of ®rams from nearer stations most of "Fiachre," who was the founder of tho time. t\ m e w the sept. The territory of the O'Can-iv 2. Don‘t be disappointedd if an occaâ€" nons from medieval times was that slonal disobliging ~storm â€" interfores: around Ol"‘f‘u. * * [deirh:" vour > Snmmamasx nadin ununbs 1 WORK WORN PEOPLE ‘ . Instead, it comes from the Irish clan or â€"sept name of "O‘Cecnnfionnain." If It is remarkable in how many inâ€" stunces a mere obvious gucss gives you the exact origin of a family name and in how many this very obvious guess leads you totally astray. Knowâ€" ing that the family name> of Cannon is Irish, you would, of course, distrust the obvious." Naturally it would not come from the Eng‘ish word "cannon." Varlationsâ€"O‘Cannon Racial Originâ€"trish. Sourceâ€"A nickname. CANNON. Funny pu&_!»:llhg, Minue Irving 2ecidedly go.: and out Rhode‘ far as ‘ PALCOSEEL® fur ‘ 2. Don‘t be disappointedd it an ooc&’ prmsin s * 1. Aippnit hat slonal disobliging ~storm â€" interferes| _A !ttle girl had jugt been listening |with your Summer radio evening.| t0 & description of heaven. m rl’here are many fine concerts coming.! â€" "And do thoâ€"angels all wear white, pogen PMRY uin inaiaWihile Sonvare S l 4 cCc t c 2 20 s u> Onimninnr t arin e Amaan dmanel â€"Who gives every other man the benefit of the doubt. Rub your scalp with Minard‘s Liniment | 10. Do not throw away the direction sheets or booklet that came with your ‘Bet and with the tubes. Read all such material carefully now and then, and folow the suggestions which are given. ‘The direction sheets answer most of the questions which have been puzzling you and preventing you from getting the best out of your set. Ba Ask your music dealer for advice; he can probab‘ly tell you what you want to know, and will be glad to do o. The manufacturer of your set is also willing to help you get the desired results from its use. a How your set works.and keeps you upâ€" toâ€"fate in radio. Information of this sort is an aid in getting the concerts loud and clear. 7. A little patierice in learning to handle your receiver yields rich reâ€" turns in satisfaction from fine signals. Remember, that "Rome wasn‘t built in a day," and keep on getting more and more failiar with your set @nd how it works. _ . * 8.. It is @good idea to read the radio column of a newspaper or a good radio @_\asntnoor two. It helps you to know makes tires puncture proof. 6. In selecting your evening‘s proâ€" gram try for the higher powered broadâ€" casting stations. They*were designed to give better Summertime service, and you will generally find that they do. ly less pleasant than moderate sigâ€" nals, particularly during the Summer. 5. If your local station comes in too loud and drowns others out, a smaller aerial willâ€"help in tuning him out, with a small‘condenser connected between aerial and ground., Or a simple wave trap may do the trick. And if ali meaâ€" sures to get rid of the local station fail, why not enjoy his concerts? He is workigg hard for you and it is noâ€" body‘s fault that you are so close to him that you are bound to hear him. Broadcast stations have to be closer to some people than to others. ‘ 4. .A pleasant signal filling a modâ€" erate size room should be enough to give satisfaction.. Musically, such a signal is ideal. It is not worth while producing signals whick deafen the reighbors. It is wasteful to insist on tremendous signals which are generalâ€" 8. If you want louder signals, use a larger aerial, more tubes, higher plate voltagé, more sensitive loud speakers and more carefulâ€"tickler and receiver adjustment. . You can‘t expect to find a pearl in‘ mummy*" she inquired. Â¥ every oyster, nor. to receive a recordâ€"| â€" "Y*» dear," replied her mother. breaking concert every night. | _ The child ~thought for & moment, Radio a Free Lecture Sunday Afternoon, Sept. 26, at 3.00 sharp. Station CKCL’ 357 (Reliable and Maximite Battery Co.) By Charles 1. Ohrenstein..(‘..S.B., of Syracuse, N.Y. A member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, "CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: THE â€"â€" _ waAY TO THE TRUE KINGDom From Massey Music Hall, on Christian Science, entitled The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Mass. The Christian Science Churches in " cordlally invite you to hear by % THIS MOTHER â€" CLAD DAUGHTER s . £ months old and l ht s bhas been com | { mt pelled» to remain - s out of school thc; ind m i. â€" reater 0 wl ‘%a A 53'; time.m.\ e . B\ytR e tried different $ uis . [kinds of medicine â€" id but none helped d ®e |her much, 1 f:;u I . 445, se wiltaken Lydia E. .+. i _Â¥ |Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" i â€" conade 4. trable Compound Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vmubh etal Comypound is a dep-uh.blo medicine for young woman‘s broubleg. For sale by druggists everywhere. 0 After the scales came .off nty face would, burn and amart terribly. "I used everything Icould think of withoyt any benuit. A friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment so I purchased some, and in four weeks I was hésied, aftor using two cakes of Soap and one box of Ointment." (83-;:".4) Mre. Edith Brown, 37 Fortney PL., Barre, V1., Sept. 24, 1025. Rely on Cuticure Soap, Ointment anid Talcum to keep your skin clear. s the time. We have 8 tried different tm . {kinds of medicine i but none helped & & her much, 1 fn:;u' . A2e, s e wltaken Lydia E. * o I@_"~_ _R |Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" BHPScancati C table Compound when~ Iâ€" was runâ€"down, and it bad helped me so much that I thought it might help her at this time. She has gaimed ever since she began taking it. Sheâ€"attends school every day now and poes skating, and does other outâ€" ofâ€"door sports. I recommend this medicine 5) any one who is runâ€"down and nervous and weak."â€"Mra Paft®s, 106 Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario. and red at first apnd:then fektered and sdfed over, '!\e‘ epread all over my face making it %ery sore. *"My trouble was coused by eatâ€" ing apples. My face Kegan.to break out with pitiples that were heard _ FAGE WOULD SMART TERRIBLY Hard, Red Pimples Broke Out. Cuticura Heals. Mrs. Parks Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Restored Her Daugliter‘s "What e s :» big W“Mn‘ M must have then she eatd thoughifully *"* and light sewing at home, whole or spare tfme. Got:? pay. Work sent any distance, charges paid. Send stamp for particulars, National Manuâ€" facturing Co., Montreal. _ After Shaving G RATIS (LTTLE FRIEND) To either sex; mailed in fihin enâ€" velope. Paris Speciaity Co., Montreal. Rub the face with Mlurd’o‘fnlxed with sweet oil. Very soothing to the skin. ADIES WANTED TO DO PLAIN Pitied the Laundress. 1$ WELL since she was six months old and bas been comâ€" of i4 jo n *

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