Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 21 May 1925, p. 6

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DONALD ROSS, LL.B., BARRIS tor, .qnHr-ifnr nfn Mnunnin Tam Iavwsvl hJIIl\l all \lIJCl uuvll Provost, Alberta.- Perhaps you will remember sending me one of our books nyear a o. I was in a be condition and won (1 suer awful pains at timel and could not do anythin . The doctor said I could not have c ildren unless I went under an o eration. I read testimonials of Ly in E. Pinkhsm'I Vmretnhle Cnmnmmd in the nnners and BARRIE S BEST LAUNDRY teammomals or Lyme 19. rxnxnnnru Vefgetable Compound in the papers and 9. riend recommended me to take it. Affnr halrina fhv-an hnfnl I hm-nmn !LEM BROS. Irxena recommenueu no name rt. After taking three bottles I became much better and now have 3 bonn baby girl four months old. I do my eulo- work and help a little with the chores. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to In friends and am willing for you to use t in testimonial letter. "-Mre.A.A. Amms. Box 54. Provolt. Alhertn. 0 _ iPhone 616. - Five Points {OFFICERS OF NORTH SIMCOE I LIBERAL ASSOCIATION President-Dr. A. M. McFaul, Collingwood. I-- -~--: Sec.-Trea.surer-D. .-\.rt.hu1', Col- li n g`-wuood. Executive-W. A. Helmkay, Mrs. J. R. Av`t11ur, J. Shipley, R. J. Camp- bell, L. A. Adair, Mrs. Wal-ter Shie-lds, J. R. Lawrence, Mrs. Fergu- son, W. Bethune, Mrs. John Hood, Dr. D. Currie, F. I-Ia.-mmond, Gordon Longman, N. Harkin, Mrs. W. 0. McKinnon, Mrs. A. Cough-lin, A. Buie, Mrs. H. S. Scott. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Vice-President--D1'. V. A. Hart, Barrie; D. G. Bell, Stayner; Dr. Smith, Creemore. Workmanship guaranteed on all familv \\'nRhinQ' this line should turn to the Bell research laboratories. Dr. Harvey Fletcher took up the problem and under his supervision Clarence E. Lane developed an articial larynx. Public praise has come unsought to Dr. Mackenty and the scientists. Letter after letter repeats the story of men and women resuming their old places in life enabled to converse as before through the medium of 3 little rubber tube and a bit of silver. In vnrv f.ruf.l\ it mnv be said that rubber tube and mu 0: suver. In very truth it may be the inventor of the telehone. Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, t ouch dead yet; speaks. AUTO LICENSES Doctor Said an Operation D-Anna! A IL-..-I-n _ '13..-Ln nu nu - Debentures of the Town 0! Barrie. 5; Per Cent. Ian: Good Investment. See me. 'l`HUlLHl)AY, MAY 21, 11125 s}.""1 1a":i.'1IL"1's"s't':'i:ic _..._ _._...I..: DRS. LITTLE & LITTLE, PHYSIC- iane Qvn-rrnnna nmnn and PDGLI 7 O\VEN STREET Masonic Temple Builaiqg - ---u- -- C-out-uv1'-I-I1-5 Laundry called for J 1J.~-....J ._...ZI . Prices reasonable Successor to J. Arnold Insurance uucA.uu.n.J vs/\AA\J\4. -L` and delivered FOR SALE `DR. MORTIMER LYON, 122 BLOCK .Qf Woqf Tnrnnfn will hp at 9` DR. H. T. ARNALL. OFFICE AND residence corner of Toronto and Elizabeth streets. (Opposite Elizabeth St. Methodist Church.) Telephone 167. rumnuu nuba, 1..u.15., nruuua-` ter, Solicitor, etc. Masonic Ten) ple Building, Barrie. Money to loan. DR. VICTOR A. HART, GRADUATE of Trinity University and also graduate of Edinburgh and Glas- gow. Specialty, stomach diseases. Ofce, corner Baycld and Wor- sley Sts. Entrance off Woraley. Oice open until 8 p.m. Associate Coroner, County of Simcoe Phone 61. Ofce-58 Collier St. Office Hours: 8-9 a..m., 12.30-2 p.m., 6.30-8 p.m. Ll`LlJ11V.l'1U.IVDL' 0! 11.t\lVJ.LVJ Barristers, Solicitors, etc. 1st oor Masonic Temple ing. Money to loan at rates. VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES, Barrie Branch. Miss Irene Munro, 86 Worsley St. Telephone 751w. Eye: Examined Glluu Fitted Graduate Canadian Ophthalmic College. Toronto. 43 Elizabeth St., Barrie. Phone 80 RADENHURST & HAMMOND. DnIn|.:r4`~:\vu~< Qniinio-nun .-.4- nn EDMUND HARDY, Mds. BAC., 'F"T` (`.,M Tpnnhnr nf Piann_ Or- . PROF. D. E. WEIR, TEACHER OF `Diana and Violin. Piano Tuner. B. W. SYLVESTER, TEACHER OF Piano, Violin and 'Cel1o. 120 Bayeld St. Phone 974w. Pupils prepared for Toronto Conser- m.4-mm Ftvnminafjnns in Piano ..__------` , HILDRETH F. LENNOX, A.T.C.M. 2 North SL, Barrie. LLJSAANUIEK. uuwz-nu, DUUL:.l`4o' sor to Lennox, Cowan & Brown. Barrister, Solicitor for obtaining probate of will, guardianship and administration, and General Solici- tor, Notary, Conveyancer, etc. Money to loan. Oicesz Hinds Block, No. 8 Dunlop street. SURGERY AND DISEAEES OF WOMEN Successor to Creawicke & Bell Barrister, Solicitor, Etc: Money to Loan Ofce, Ross Block, Barrie. Graduate of McGill University, Montreal. STEWART & STEWART, BAR- risters, Solicitors, Notaries Public, and Conveyancers. Money to loan in any sums at lowest current rates. Office, 13 Owen street, Barrie. D. M. Stewart. IICD. 14l11L;I`4 OK 1411 LLILI, l'l'l.1DJ.LI'l ians, Surgeons. Ofce and Resi- dence, 47 Maple Ave. Office hours: 1 to 3 p.m., 7 to 9 p.m., or by appointment. A. T. Little, MD, W ("., Liftln, M.R_ Pbnma IIC. lV1UIY.].llV.ll`4IV LIULV, LZZ DIJUUI` St. West, Toronto, will be at 91 Owen St., Barrie, 1st Saturday of each month. Diseases--Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Consultation hours, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and by appointment. 1u..u., 213. umvlumu nauux, MUD. mun,` F.T.C.M. Teacher of Piano, Or- gan, Vocal and Musical Theory. Organist and Choirmaster of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Gold Medalist of Toronto Conser- vatory of Music and of the Uni- versity of Toronto. 113 Worsleg street. Phone 663. 'ROF. 1). hi. wxsut, '1`n.Aunr_.n. U1` Piano and Violin. 21 Collier St. Phone 513. lplls prepuruu ;.un Lulvlnvv v....... vatory Examinations in DR. E. G. TURNBULL D. F. McCUAlG, B.A. O. R. RUSK, OPH.D. GORDON LONGMAN Page Si x DR. W. A. LEWIS 3ppUlHLlllt3IlL. A. 1. LIILLLU, W. C. Little, MB. Phone MUSIC LESSONS Teacher of Piano LEGAL MEDILAL OPTICAL Phone 387w ` LVIULV J). Ofce, Build- lowest |?"r1iEmi)EBi' WE own I TO OUR COMMUNITY ESTEN & ESTEN, BARRISTERS Solicitors in High Court of Jus tice, Notaries Public, Convey- ancers. Office, 1st oor Masonic Temple Building, Barrie. Money to loan at lowest current rates. G. H. Esten and M. H. Esten. shzould (Continued from page one) How Can We Pay the Debt to the Community ? We can help to pay the debt we owe to the community by respecting the laws of the community and do- ing our part to uphold those laws. If there is no'1-espect for laws we would have chaos, and democracy would decay. Then we should be living examples to the youth. Our fathers paved the way and set us an example, and it is for us to do bet- tor for our children by clean livling. l-Zach life is a mirror reeoting what we really are, so we should do to others as we would that they showld do to us. We can help to repay this debt by encouraging good schools and seeing that every boy and girl gets the benet of an education, and by providing libraries. 'I`.he four greatest inuences on a boy s life are the home, the school, his com- panions and books. Many boys have gone wrong o-n account of the books they read and bad companions. We provide good healthy re- creation for the young. Energy must have some outlet and it is im- portant that this be rigilitly directed. We can't expect youth to grow up in a haphazard way. Some will say that youth must sow their wild oats. 'Dhis is a false idea, for if they sow wild oats, the stain will be left. Service Greatest Thing our community by individual ser- vice and collective service. When we come to the end of our journey we will nd as we look back that the greatest thing in our lives was the service we were able to render our fellow men. We can render a ser- vice by engendering a community spirit. All can help in this by elect- ing good men bodies--men with the right ideals. We can help by making the surround- ings more attractive, and so make our community a better place to live in. In this we must have co-oper- ation. All must pull together. As liiwanians we can help to pay our debt to the community by encourag- ing and promoting that which ele- vates and eliminating that which de- grades. We have a wonderful jroung country, with opportunities for ser- vice. We are standing to-day where the United States stood a hundred years ago. Canada with its seventy- ve different nationalities and forty- seven di"erent religions presents a complex problem. It is for us to lay the ground work for the citizenship of the future. Let us do it now and do it well. In concluding the speaker quoted the old poem, The Water Mill. We can repay the debt we owe. to our governing ` Dr. Tanner, president of the Mid- land Club, and District Representa- tive Starr of he Orillia Club broug'l1t greetings from their clubs. Rev. H. E. Wel-lwood, who was present, ex- pressed his apperciation of the ad- dress of M1`. Hiiitz. There were three kinds of sermons, said Mr. Weilwood, the kind you can listen to, the kind you can -t listen to, and the kind you must listen to. The a by ex~M`ayor Hiltz was the` last kind. G. 0. Cameron was the booster for the day and I-I. A. Felt drew the pnize. A farmer in the Orono district writes to the Globe, wanting some information. He Itook a ve-quart pail full of buttermilk and gave it to a small pig. The pig drank the enibire contents of the pail (ve quartis). 'Dhe farmer then picked up the pig and put it in the pail and replaced the lid. Chief of Police Church of Orillia, acting for Inspector -Reid, has made a canvass of the town and nd-s that only three of Oril'lia"s vtwenty-seven grocery stores are applying for per- mits rto sell 4.4 per cent. beer. It will be served in all the hotels, show- ever, and one restaurant will also carry it. A temperance lecturer once ad- dressed an unconvinced audience in Kcntuck, and when he made the an- nouncement that the effect of alcohol is to shonten life, he was astonished to have an old man rise at the back of the hall] and shout, You're a liar ? Why ?" inquired the advic- sate of Adam's ale. Because, sir, [ ve been drinking for seventy-ve years, and I m ninety and am likely to l-ive to be one hundred. I am strong enough to lick you if you'll step outside. Oh, no doubt, sir. You're an exception, sir. If you keep on drinking"-4bhe lecturer paused. \lI.lnn+ `H nnlynnl kl. ;w....-.A:,....L ..1.I -.. --~..... W~hat`." aske uvn , topper. If you you 1-1 have to be ment day." WHERE DID THE MILK GO ? . u.vvuL\.L yovuacun the rimpatient old keep on drinking shot on the judg- ALEXANDER COWAN, SUCCES-\ urns 1-n T.nnnn1r (".nu7nn Xv. Rrnwn. isnuw MUREALFAIIA [T BUILDS UP THE SOIL AND MAINTAINS FERTILITY. Ex-adicates the Worst of Weeds and Furnishes Great Abundance ot Rich Buy For the Live Stock. Use Hardy Strains. |1Contx-ibuted by Ontario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) In 9, survey covering an investiga- tion on 900 farms, those that were: growing alfalfa showed an average net profit of $1,200 per farm against , $728 per farm prot for those that were not growing alfalfa. This dif- ference of nearly $500 in profit was due to the alfalfa and farm practice that goes with it. n_;....x.. 1r....x......-.: ..._.: L1,... r..:...-u. way ...u-- `.4 -.:-. -...... Ontario Variegated and the Grimm varieties are more winter proof than the congmqn or southern grown. These alone should be used in On- ta.ri9._ l_1eV.B2_e_(_l` play coat a little m 8"r`, bu when everjvthing is at stake against King Winter, _the ad(liti_onal cost of good seed ls"your insurance for a return in crop. Hardy varieties last longer, and when once establish- ed and given rational treatment, re- main vigorous and protable tor many years. Altaltws Greatest Need Is Lime. Altalfa is a lime hungry plant; it cannot succeed where lime does not exist in abundance. Each ton of hay produced requires approximately 100 pounds of lime. So the attempted growing of alfalfa on soils that are sour or lacking in lime, is time, money and labor thrown away. Cor- rect the lime deciency first, it the soil needs it apply up to two tons per acre every five years. Most On- ` tario soils do not require more than a ton per acre every ve years. With a yield of four tons of alfalfa hay per acre over a period of ve years a ton ot lime will be removed from the soil. So you see the need of re- turning lime to the medium in which the plant grows. How to Apply Lime. L1,, ,__,,p,_, ,- - -v --rr-v ------* Apply lime to the surface of ploughed land. Do not plough it under; work it in with the harrow. Lime may be spread over the surface of the lagd by using g. llngg d_is- tributor, the Iahuf szirader, 33' shovelllng from the Waggon box by ha.nd_. Autum}; _i:3 _t_1;e best time, after the `fall ploiighing has been done. nx_.__._.__ /1____._4n_ ua_n-,.__ 1,, , ___u,4:- . . . . . n .. ,.v.......u nu... ...,v.. ..-4...... Vigorous Growth Follows Inoculation. A... A... ...I.:,.I. -11.--10.. 1.-.. ....a. . -3... V... v.. V .. --- - `rune an;-vu-Annuavllo Areas on which alfalfa has not been grown should be treated through the application of 200 acre. Soil obtained from successful elds fulls this requirement. Seed may be inoculated to accomplish the same result. This is generally the easiest way, unless soil is close at hand. The Bacteriology Department at the 0. A. C.. Guelph. will supply for 50 cents sumcient culture to treat 9. bushel of seed, the requirement for three acres. Seed Bed Should Be Well Prepared. I a..I....o ..............L1_- _x..I_ ....n ..__1 ___ pounds of bacteria carrying soil pert Select reasonably rich soil and pre- pare it well. Do not waste time on .worn out land unless you realize the necessity of applying lime and ma.- nure to feed the crop to a point of vigorous establishment. Land that has both good surface and under drainage is best. Avoid heavy, at areas, with hardpan or tight clay subsoils. Alfalfa is a. deep-rooted plant and must have root room. Pre- pare for the seeding by working up a line surface on a rm seed bed. Autumn ploughing worked down in the spring with cultivator, harrow, and corrugated roller will give the desired condition providing that the weather is right tor work on the land. Use Plenty of Seed. i rs. 1--.: 1.. _-__u ___._`lLl__, . BOYS & BOYS, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Con- veyancers, etc. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. Offices 13 Owen Street, in the premises formerly occupied by the Bank of T=oronto. Branch Office, Elmvale, Onmario. W. A. Boys, K.C., M.P., J. R. Boys. nuuytcu LU uuuira. growing 1:) pounds of good Canadian grown Ontario variegated seed is sufcient. Timothy may be mixed with the alfalfa seed as an agent of security to hold the blue grass in check until the alfalfa is well established. Its presence en- lures a hay crop should the alfalfa winter kill the first year. It is a good practice to use three or four pounds of alfalfa seed in the general hay mixture over the farm. Such a 1 practice will bring the entire farm into condition for successful alfalfa growing without very much effort or cost. AID-.10- -`A...-I... .. __..L-_Ll.__ _A--rl I -..v _ -..._.., \IA uvvuu I On land in good condition and adapted to alfalfa growing 15 pounds of znnd Canadian nrnurn nntg.-an It is highly important that the soil be given a. rest, oats following oats, or corn following corn is not good farming, it is soil mining. If the soil is rich the evil day will be de- layed, but the time will surely come when those who do not give the soil 3 chance must pay the price and sut- ter in reduced crops, plant diseases, i insect injury, and weeds. ` Mn nnn rnfnflnn In fhn haul nnn... DUEL. Alfalfa needs a protective covering over winter. Eight inches or more of growth to hold the snow is provided by the alfalfa plant in its September growth. Those that cut or graze alfalfa. after September 15th kill all chances of future prots from alfalfa growing. Two good crops taken at the right time should satisfy. then give the plant alchance to recover [or winter. II`-.-In nuH>l.<.- .......I....... AL- _u_.,. LUI. WIULUI`. Early cutting weakens the plant. late cutting gives a coarse, poorer quality hay. Cut when the crop has nearly reached the full bloom con- dition. Cut but twice a. year, leav- ing the third growth for winter pro- tt-ction.--L. Stevenson, Director of Extension, 0. A. College. IHHUUL IUJUI) , 111111 WUUUS. No one rotation is the best under all conditions, but to all accepted crop rotations, certain principles can be applied, so that each particular (arm can be fitted with a. denite plan suited to its pecufarities. Give the matter of crop rotation some con- sideration, it will Lay you. The staff of the Ontario Agricultural College will be glad to inlp you with any term problem.--l.. Stevenson, Dept. 0! Extension. 0. A. College. Rotation of Crops. ul.--LI.. I-..-.A...b....4 A|__A The Northern Advance MUST GET LICENSE THREE l DAYS BEFORE MARRIAGE According to amenduments made to the Marriage Act at the last session of the Ontario Legislatu1'e, proof of the age of the parties nsxmst be pro- duced before. :1 marriage license can be issued, and no marriage can be preformed wlithzin three (lays of the date of issue of a marriage license. This legislation comes into force on `June 13th, 1925. .. .. `O Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money to Loan Ross Block, Barrie, Ont. .. ....v -..-.., _..._-. 2. Section 19 of the 1VIarria5:c Act is amended by adding; the fol:low- Eng subsection : .,.. 1 .u-.- . .1 :- (6) In addition to the proofs re- ` quired in subsection 1 at the time 1 of the -application for a license or ` certicate, there shall be produced ` and fyiled with the issuer or deputy issuer a copy of the registration of birth of the other party to the mar- riage, certied by the Registrar- General or other proper officer in this behalf, or an ai made by such other party to the nfarriage, or by some person being a member of his or her family and having person- al "knowledige of the facts, stating` the age, (late and place of birth of such other party, and the a1(lavit shall be in` such form as may be prescribed by the Provincial Secretary. ., .... 7-_ ,,,,_ ,. 3. '1\he Marriag`e Act is amended by ad(Ling' thereto the following` sec- tion : 23a (1) Every license shall be dated and every person who solemn- izes a marriage under the authority of such license within three clear days afrter the date thereof shall be guilty of an offence and shall incur 4 penalty of not more than $100, provided, however, that the Brovin- cial Secretary in his absolute discre- Lion may authorize the solemnization of marriage within three days. in which case there shall be no penalrty' hereunder. tr\\ 1- .| - - u I I|\.L\.uA|\ (2) Nothnig in subsection 1 shall apply to or affect the solemnization of any marriage under auvthority of a license issued under section 1621 of this Act as enacted by section 3 oil 5 n.;. Lhe Ma1'1'iag'e Law Am-ndment Act, 1916. \\v ;.u4u. (3) No prosecutions shall take place under this section except with the approval of the Att-orney-General. I In its monthly commercial letter the Canadian Bank of Commerce nds that any change in trade and industry (luring April was of 21 fav- orable character. Manufacrturers were somewhat busier. The amount of building` under way was larger than anticipated and fewer were out of employmen-t. Merchants, how- o -`...,l LL.-.5 LL... ....Ll2.. ..:1l us \....`nu_v nu,-u... ;vA\,LvA|uL|va, nun ever, nd that the public still eon- fine their purchases to absolute es- sentials, but the fact that motor sales are equal to last year would indicate that there is~i.o marked de~ pression in business. Seeding; oper- ations in the Western Provinces commenced two weeks earlier than a year ago and the land was in splc-n (lid shape. It is probable that the acreage in wheat will exceed previous years. There is no large surplus of farm products. at present and good market prices are looked for. The price of cattle is better than a year ago and export bwsiness has been stimulated. It is noted that the number of cattle on farms and ranges in the United States show a decrease of 1,500,000 head in 1924, so that competition from this source will not interfere. grezuzmea. In the accompanying photo raphs we see in use the artificial arynx which represents the triumph of Bell Telephone scientists over one of surgery's most difficult oiserations, namely, the removal of the at x -- the familiar Adam's Apple and adjacent parts of the throa.t---becauae of cancerous tissues. 1'} ulna nnlv no!-an-nl that h. I.:.. rl cancerous CISSUCS. . . It was only natural that In 1113 Ofce Hou1's--9-10 a.m., 1-3 pm.,` 7-R nm He, Being Dead, Yet Speaketh! Orillia Monument Honors(:hW4amplain The bronze ilLtuI`l.'. -4 for tho monu- ment to ho (:rL`v0L(:(l in Urilliu to UN` memory of Samuel the (,'4hum.pluin ur- 1-viod from ldnpcluntl lnwt wmsk. 'l`hv: unvoilim: of the monumum, will lukv: place on Dominion Day next and in to be made the occuaion of :1 (I: won- stmtion between the l rovim--.-;-i of Ontario and Qll(:l)(:C. nzul tha: two races who m'clominu1.(: in their popu- lation. 'I`iho comniibtuc: in charm: is busy propurim: zi prognun which in- cludes an lxisboricul :~;c(:m,- r(.-pr(:;+vnt- _ inn,` 1;h(.- rluntllinig of Oho.mpl:;.in, in which a couple of humlrml pcri'orm- V cm (ll`0SS(,'(l in Indian and French , costumes will take pzmt. All `bhc ` momb'or.=i of Parliament from the two provinces will be invited to at- tend, as well as mony otlmv promin- ent men who have taken an acitvc interest in the umlortakinig`. L` The project was first staivted in 1913, the year `before the gum-at war, and it was intended that the monu- ment would be unvmlru`. in 191.5 for the commemoration of the three hundredebh anniversary of the ad- vent of the white race into Ontario in 1615. The war interfered with the project and it had to be aban- doned for the time. However, t:-e plans had gone too far for the com- mittee to think of abandoning it al- together, and as soon as the war was over the work was taken up again. with the result 3;hz.t the climax w.l1 be reached on Dominion Dav next. The monument is not a local 01 e, but a national one, -the funds being- largely provided by the Dominion ] Government and the Governmrgnts of Ontario and Quebec. These have `been supplemented by subscriptions, the -largest and rst coming from! Lord Stratnhcona, $1,000. The p1o i i i i H | ject also had the active sympathy and assistance of Sir Edmund Walker. 'I`.he monument is being erected at Orillia because near that town was the site of Caliiague, the capital of the Huron nation where Champlain made his headquarters with the Huron Ohief Darontal dur- ing` the eigvht months he spent with with his Huron allies on the famous expdition against the Iroquois, which ended so disastrously for the Hurons and the French missionaries settled among: them. The winter of 1615- 16 was spent in Cahiague. Txhe bronze gures are the work of Mr. Vernon Marsh, Kent County, England. These gu1'es, which ar- rived last week, are of colossal pro- portions, that of Champlain himself standing; twelve feet higih. Besides _ the main gure there are two groups, one representing Christianity and. the other Commerce, which also are eleven feet high, and each of which in itself would be a memorial of no mean proportions. The total weight of bronze is more tvrm nine tons. The whole is to be mounted on a pedestial of Benedict Stone, thirty feet square at the base and eighteen feet l1`lg1l1, giving the monument a total height of thinty feet. -Those who have seen the work agree that for both imposing dimensions and artistic conception and finish there will be nothing ner in monumental line in Canada. The cost will be about $35,000. his I-ndian allies. It was from this ace that Champlain started out desire to provide a means of speech for those whom cancer had robbed of this precious functiop. Dr. John Mackenty the leading surgeon m PMNS |N LEFT y S|E_AN~D_BABK Otier Troughs Women Often Have Relieved by L din E. Pinlduufn Vegeub e Co|_npound Lnchlno, 3uebeo.--I took Lydia E. P|nkhnm n eotableCompoundbecauBo I suffered wit aim in my left side and back, and wit`: weakness and other troubles woman so often have. I will this wu about six months. Inw the V:Fetu le Compound advertised in tho ` nntrnnl Standard ' and I have taken Ve etable compound aavemaea In mo ontreal Standard and I have taken four bottles of it. I was a very sick wo- man and I feel so much better I would not be without it. I also use Lydia E. Pinkham a Sanative Wash. 1 recom- mend the medicinesto my friends and I am willing for you to use my letter as n testimonial."--Mra. 1!. W. ROSE, 580 | Notre Dame Street, Lachine, Quebec. Oice and Resi(1ence-Corne1' Eliza- beth and Bradford Sts., Barrie. Phone 105.

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