HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1913-6-12, Page 7(AFTER . EFFECT
OF FEVERS
is It t e o Dr,
� I1 I�Btt _�1'� X11 the �� � ..
Williams' Pint Pills
Following wasting diseases such
as fevers, many peoplefled it diffi-
cult to regain their former strength.
,They become breathless and tired
out et the least ekertion,' their ap-
petite is ,fickle and they often feel
as though death was ,staring them
'‘the face, The trouble lies with
o blood which has not returned
to its normal condition and is lack-
ing in the red corpuscles without
which good health is impossible.
It is ata time like' this that Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills prove their
great Manic value. Every dose helps
to make new, rich, red blood, which
means health and vitality, Mrs.
Theodore Foley, Athens, Ont.,
says. "Following an attack of ty-
phoid fever I was left in a very
tweak and disheartened condition.
The smallest exertion left me worn
and tired out, and I was hardly
able to get around, onud, and naturally
felt despndent, Idecided to tr
'Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and they
.provedr
n
of the e g eatest benefit to
me. I am now as well and strong
ac ever, and cavi do all my own.
tWork, and as we live on a, farm, it
lgoes without saying that there is
!much to do. I feel, therefore, that
lI cannot say too much in praise of
iDr. Williams' Pink Pills."
If you are suffering from the
!after efffeots of fevers;, la grippe, or
any acute disease, you should be-
gin to get new strength to -day
through the tonic treatment with
Dr: Williams' Pink Pills. Sold by
a,11 medicine dealers or by mail at
,50 cents a box or six boxeit for
1$2.50 from The Dr, Williams' Medi -
Co., Brockville, Ont.
iTIIOUGIITS ON BUSINESS LIFE:
Integrity, Generosity, humanity,
• Consideration for Others.
Before a young man or woman
i•makes what we call a start in life
there should be some earnest
!thought on this point. A business
;career, it is often assumed, must
_lin its very nature be selfish.
Enough if we can atone by some
disinterested use of leisure for the
selfishness of our working hours.
Many' people have abandoned the
notion of taking a lofty view of
business life. "Business is busi-
nest," they say, ; as if the remark
were the last word of wisdom and
there is nothing more to be said.
But when this ,business life of ours
is just beginning we may take a
'nobler and more wholesome view.
atat, us fix it firmly in our thought
thatbusiness is service. To do
.business is to serve, our fellow -men.
There is room in every business life
for a character for integrity, gener-
1 osity, humanity, consideration of
others. Get the perspective right.
See that here also First things can
be kept in the first places
and there
i$ no need to thrust ideals into the
b ackground,
BABY'S TEETHING TIME
Mothers find baby's. teething a
sore of great anxiety-tho little
one becomes restless and nervous;
he ":becomes cross and cannot Sleep,
and .sometimes • eons'tipation, diar-
rhoea, colic or convulsions seize
hint. Baby's. Own Tablets will pre-
vent all this. They regulate the
stoinach and bowels; allay the fev
erishness, and baby will clot his
teeth without pain or worry. The
Tablets are sold by medicine deal -
'ere or by mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co,, Brookville, Ont..
9F -
Child Burglars Found Drunk.
On returning to her.home after a
short absence a woman who lives
at Plessis-Luzarches, France, in the
department of Seine -et -Oise, found
a kitchen window broken and the
rooms ransacked. She was fright-
ened and fetched a police officer,
who after carefully searching every
room heard snores coming frown the
wine ,cellar.. With his revolver in
his hand hie entered the cellar with
great caution. There he found,.•1y
;ing dead drunk on the floor, three.
brothers named Callot, whose ages
}are seven, five and three. They
!were the burglars, and they; had
,broken into the house to get cake
'and wine.
Don't• waste your time carrying
;about the : time you have wasted.
BORN CRIMINALS.
'Piefessot' Tells the Markt of "Val,'*
cows Types.
If
� you must a'; man oohing dawn.
the street whose nose is largeand
aquiline and perhaps l bit twisted,
whose lips are swollen and pro-
trucling and whose ears are 'large,
with large lobes, it might be just
as wise $0 right about fade and take
to your heels, for in all probability
that man is a murderer -
potent -Tally if net actually,
If the rnan raises his hat and dis-
plays a pleatifu1 thatch of hair, if
it is not gray, if his forehead re-
cedes and his skull is abnormally
large, coming to a noticeable point,
you can be sure that you have cliag-
nosed his case correctly and can
accelerate your pace without laying
yourself open to the charge of cow-
ardice„
- At least that is what Prof, Fred-
erick A. Bushee says. The thief
has the sarrne egglike head that
marks the murdered and the same
long arms and big ears, but he can
be distinguished by hisflattened
nose. His face is apt to show many
wrinkles, especially on the side of
the face and in the forehead, prob-
ably caused by the shape of the
skull. This is a mark of all born
criminals as i thedepression ressf
is lap on at
the base of the skull, which prob-
ably indicates a similar depression
in the brain,
The swindler can be recognized
by his thin lips. His features will
probably be asymmetrical, one side
of the face being different from the
ether. This characteristic is not
confined to swindlers or to crim-
inals, but is one of the traits gen-
erally found in conjunction with
the others mentioned.
If a man is bald or gray haired,
according to the professor, you can
be reasonably certain that he is not
a born criminal. Of course he may
be of a class of unscrupulous money
makers, but he can't blame his
wrongdoing on heredity.
Mrs. Enema O'Sullivan.
She, is superintendent of the
Mercer, at Toronto, and has been
made chairman of the Committee
on Reformatories and Parole by
the executive of the American
Prison Association.
HENS ON HIS ROOF._
Can Always, Rely on. Six Eggs a
Day -Retire Early.
The architectural enterprise of
Mr. Woollard, who has a fowl farm
on the roof of his hone in Mincing
Lane, London; England, will com-
mend itself to • all thrifty house-
wives.
The average man may be content
with the regulation allowance of
chimneys .and •slates on his roof, but
it is. two and a half years ago since
Mr. Woollard, caretaker of Mar-
ket buildings, Mincing Lane, put
together some boards and wire net-
ting and added a fowlhouse to the
flat part of his roof.
Fowl keeping in the city is a pro-
fitable business. Mr• Woollard has
seven birds--on,e'Houdan, two Wy-
andottes, three White Leghorns,
and. one Cambridge game, which
has just hatched out five ohiokens.
He estimates their joint board and
lodging expenses at ls. a week, and
can rely onan average supply of
six eggs a day.
When asked how town life agreed
with • his" fowls, Mr. Woollard told
a newspaper representative that‘he
had never given way to them on
that point,
"Town birds .must keep as early
hours as their countrycousins,'' he
said. .
'Tog makes no difference to their
laying. Since. November 7 last
year they have laid 561 eggs."
Smoke Inspector Roberts, of
Cleveland, Ohio;' estimates that
there is an annual waste of $8,-
000,000 through the chimneys of
that city. He will be .supported in
this statement by "estimates of
smoke waste in other industrial
communities. The loss in other re-
spects is even more pronounced and
direct, It means the defaccnient of
the city's architecture, it means. the
pollution of the, air, it means the
destruction of vegetation, it moans
damage to - wearing apparel, to
Hangings,; to upholstcriee, to pic-
tures -It means incalculable injury
easnote trco It you wrlta National tiru>l to the city as a place of business
Momlaal Co, of Canada, Lwow,
Toronto, ane residence.
SJie Was Helpless
For Two Years.
Why ;its. Ballwin ` :ft,eeoluntenfls.
Dodd's? Kidney Pills.
Site Could :find Netlaittg to Cure'
aler Itkelul►atiftin Till On a'.Neigh-
bier's A,dv'iee $itu Tried OadiL'S
Kidney. ruts.
St, Walburg, Sask,, June 9 (Spell'
cial).--"I can truly recommend
Dodd's .Kidney Pills for any one;
suffering from rheumatism.'' ;These
are the words of Mrs. W, A,• Bald-
win, a highly respedted resident of
this place. And Mrs, BaldwiX,, gives
her reasons
"I was nearly helpless with rheaa.
matisxn foe two years;" -she states.
"I got medfeine from the doctort
and tried several other 're nedies,
but nothing .helped me. Then one.
of my neighii•ors advised me: to try
Dodd's,KidneyPills. I bought four:;
boxes, and they helped me .almost.
from the first. I have used'nearly
T
two dozen boxes and am nearly
cured,." . ,
-
Tliat rheumatism is oneof the
results i
sof diseased se sed kidneys,is x again
r.
shown in Mrs. Baldwin's case. She
had headaches, stiffness of the
joints and backache, her sleep was
broken and 'unrefreshing, and she
was always tired and nervous.Her
limbs swelled andshe was always
thirsty. These are all symptoms' of
diseased kidneys. When she cured
her kidneys with Dodd's Kidney
Pills, the symptoms vanished -and
so did the rheumatism.
TELT, PEOPLES AGE BY EARS.
They Continue to Grow When. Rest'
of Body Stops.
Persons who have Large ears in
their youthful days are decidedly
unlucky, according to students of
anatomy, for ; no otherportion of
the human body is so ambitious in
its growth. We get old and 'shrivel
up and decrease in stature, but the
ear still grows.
A woman ' with small ears at
twenty probably will have medium-
sized ears at forty and large ears
at sixty. Again it is said, as the
result of the examination of 40,000
pairs of tare, that probably no per-
son in the world has ears perfectly
matched. In most -people • the two
ears differ perceptibly, not only in
shape, but he size. Frequently they
are not placed on the head at ex-
actly the same angle or at the
same height. .
Int is declared by those who have
devoted their time and abilities to
the study of ears .that the age of a
person can be judged by them with
great accuracy by an expert.
After the ageof ten, ears assume'
an increased. form and give the clue',
to the age of the, owner. Norden,
Lombroso, and others, lay great
stress upon the ear as an indication
of eharaaoter; yet some of the best'
men we meet have outrageous ears,
while almost everybody can recall
some bold, bad man of his acquain-
tance .whohas small, well formed
and well placed ears.
PUT>AWA3.. PICKLES.
Mathematician Figures Out the.
Foots • Question.
If any one requires. a clear head
itis a teacher of mathematics, " He.
must reason in .the abstract,as it
were, and full concentration of
mind is necessary :if, correct results.
are to be forthcoming.
A man writes :
"I am a teacher of mathematics
and for 15 years prior to four years
ago, I either took a lunch composed
of cold sandwiches, pickles, etc,, to.
school or hurried home and quickly
ate a hot dinner.
"The result was. that I went to
my afternoon work feeling heavy,
dull of brain and generally out ;of
sorts. Finally, I learned about
Grape -Nests food and began to use
it for my noon -day lunch.
"From the first I experienced a
great change for the better. The
heavy, unpleasant feeling and sour
stomach caused by the former diet
disappeared. The drowsy languor
and disinclination to work ' soon
gave way to a brightness' and vim.
In my afternoon work, a feeling
entirely new to me.
"My brain responds promptly to
the requirements put upon'!, it, and
what is of more importance, the re-
sults have been lasting and more
satisfactory, the longer I have used
Grape -Nuts as a food,
"My wife had been suffering from
weak ` stomach accompanied by sick
headaches nearly all: her life. She
is invariably relieved of these when
she sticks to Grape -Nuts; either
eaten' dry nor with milk. Her atom-
ash has gradually grown stronger
and her headaches less frequent
since she began to eat Grape-
Nuts." "'T11erc's a Reason," Name
given by Canadian :Poston' Co.,
Windsor., Ont. Read the booklet,
"The Road to 'Well:viIle," sn kgs
Ever Mead the above letter/ A new tont
appears front time to time, Thcy are
gereeno, trues and full of human InteVest.
Nailing a lie won't always keep
it clown.
A well-trained memory -ono that
admits of discreet fprgetfulness.•
autyofSkin
BeautyofAair
Frcscrvc�
by
Gaffe 'So
Assisted by an occasional use, of
Cuticura Ointment. No other emel
lienits do so much for poor core-
piexions, red, rough hands, dandruff,
and'dry, thin and failing hair,
'cutlass soap and Ointment are sold throughout.
tho world. A liberal sample of each, with 32 -Page
booklet an the onto and treatment of the akin and
scalp, dent post-free. Address Potter Drug Sr Uhefn,
Corp,, Dept. 381), Boston, tJ. S. A. •,
BLEW THEMSELVES UP.
German Soldiers Chew Cordite, the
• Explosive..
One of the troubles of most Euro-
pean ,armies is that those: soldiers
who .can get hold of it; insist on
using that terrible explosive cor-
dite as if it were a sort of chewing
gum..
Its popularity is doe to the fact
that When chewed in small quanta-
teles it has a stimulating and ex-
hilarating effect, like small doses
of alcohol. Its taste,, too, is sweet,
cordite being three-fifths nitro-gly
cerine, stn explosive wllichis sugary
of the taste.
,When chewed in large quantities
cordite becomes more powerful in.
its effects, bringing on a blissful
state of ecstasy, and sometimes
making the victim of the habit see.
visions. But the real danger of the
habit , lies in the fact that_ though
nitro-glycerine. will only eel -ode,
wlnen:t given a• very hard.: blowor
issucheslaby an electric'spark, there
is always a possibility that the
grinding- of exceptionally hard.
teeth might provide the necessary
hard : blow. Within the last few
years .at -least three soldiers -two
German' and one Austrian -have
been blown to bits, the useof oar-
dite as a chewing -gum being the
•suspected cause.
Offensive Action."`I had to. kill my dog this morn-
ing."
""Ws he -read 2"
"Well, he'didn't seem any too
well pleas
e•d.'"'
Men Swear -Women Complain
,rust because their corns ache --=easy. to
cure them with Putnam's Corn Extractor;
it' `acted 'painlessly in. twenty-four ' hours,
For corns; *warts and •callouses'the only
thing is 'I+utnaui's"; try it, 25o. at all
dealers..
Fortunate is Rich.
Fortunately
"So you think your daughter has
exceptional talent."
"There's no doubt of it," replied
the fond mother, "although we
can't exactly. locate it. The music.
teacher says it's for painting and
the art teacher says it's for music."
mineral Llntmant. Cures Distemper.
Headed Off.
"Did you tell her when you pro-
posed to her that you were un-
worthy of her. That always makes
a hit with them "
"1 was going to, but she told it
to me first.''
Wonderful.
"That. new': suit of hers has me
guessing."
"What about2"
"I've been wondering whether
or not there are pockets in the tails
of her cutaway coat."
ISSUE 24--'.t
011IllAT MEN END FAMILY LINE'
Nally Instances 1>xoye 'Putt Illus-
trious ;Men Leave 111.0 Rin.
When one considers how many
families there are which trace their
ailoo,:try in a Olivet uric, for 'ninny
generations; it is rather a eurpris-
met fact that there is not a single
living descendant in the male line
of some of: the greatest men the
world has ever pxodueed.
For the preservation of our illu-
sions regarding genius, it probably
is far better that there shonld'b•e
no disappointing, ordinary personas
left in the world to represent the
men whom we delight to honor,
To find a Milton engaged in the
insurance business, or s Byron o•n.
the stock exchange would jar.dread-
fully on one's sense of the fitness of
things.
The following is a list of the illus-
trious men whose line never will; be
represented on the earth again as
long as the world stands :-
Chaueer, Shakespeare, Spencer,
Milton, Cowley, Butler, Dryden,
Pope, Cowper, Goldsmith, Byron,
Moore, Sir Philip IP
Sidney, eey
Sir Wal-
ter Raleigh, Drake, Cromwell,
Hampden, Monk, Peterborough,
Nelso
n, Bol in brake, Walpole,
T
Chatham, tam Pitt Fox, Burke, Was '•-
h
ington, Canning, Bacon, Locke,
Newton, Hume, Gibbon, Macaulay,
Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Sir
Thomas Lawrence, David Garrick,
John Kemble, Edmund Kean.
Surplus Population.
A Harlesden butcher's shop is ex-
hibiting the .notice, "Wanted, a
boy for sausages." -London Punch.
Stomach Always Baulked,
Had Constant Indigestion
SMELL OF COOK NC MADE HIM SICK
--01LIOUS TWO DAYS A WEEK.
Cured by Dr. Hamilton's Pills.
Mr. Clemmons' experience is not limas.
nal. Nowadayo poor,stomaehs are more
the rule than the exception. But She
proper treatment is surd to make a quick
eure. You can always depend on Dr.
Hamilton's Pills, they reach the trouble
at once, go right to business, work .while
you sleep and have you feeling better if
not cured next morning.
"My food seemed to decompose in my
stomach," writes Mr.' Ralph Clemmons,
of Newbridge P.O. "I had a stomach that
failed in some way to perform its work.
Digestion seemed- more ' or less arrested
and I grew thin, yellow, nervous.The
stomach became distended and' impeded
apparently the action of the heart, for
often at night it would do great' stunts.
At times my head ached most terribly. "A
friend who had been cured of a similar
condition, advised me to 'take Dr. 'Ham-
ilton's Pills regularly; which I did; The
result in my' case was simply marvelous..
Dr. Hamilton's Pills removed the cause,
strengthened the stomach, excited the liver
to normal action, the kidneys were re-
leased of excessive work. Health soon
grew within me. I can now eat, sleep
and live like a live man."
Be advised -use Dr. Hamilton's Pills
they are sure to do you good. 25c. per
box, five for $1.00, at all druggists and
storekeepers or by mail from The Ca-
tarrhosone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Ring.
ston, Canada.
Iitupossibic.
"I should think you could get
rid of that young man . before 11
o'clock."
"That 'shows you don't know
Charlie very well,: mother. When.
he gets started talking about him-
self there's no stopping him.
Itinard•e Liniment Cures Caner In Coua
Objected to Red.
Little George -hd just taken his
place in the barber's big chair.
"Do you want your hair cut like
mine 1" asked the red-haired bar-
b
"No, thank you," replied
George. "I don't want it cut that
color. '
A. Tip.
If a girl worked half as hard to
please a man' after marriage as she
does before marriage, lots of law-
yers would starve to death.
IRlnard'e Liniment Cures Diphtheria,
Keep Your Friendships.
Do not allow your own friend-
ships to lapse -too • many. do not
cherish our friendships while " we
have them. We subject them to
strains. We undervalue them as
we do all things that we feel we
own.We accept them in a spirit
of lethargy or worse, and'when the
friend is finally driven from us too
often we 'put up a. bitter plaint
about ingratitude. There are a
groat ninny things: that a decent,
soli -respecting friendship will not
stand. If. we .allow otsrseves, feel-
ing sure of the devoted churl, to
assume the unpleasant fault-finding
manner, why should we expect any
one to wish- to sit opposite us at.
dinner and listen to our grumb-
lings 2 When friends depart
friends ,that apparently cared for
ue--pit is because we have become
unbearable, although this may be
ftlrthost from our perceptions,
They have sotlg'hb• room cheerful:
company, aocl it is right they should
do to.
A 11 ready baked
to a nicety; Whole,
mealy Red full
flavored, Beating
only is necessary,
to
/
zogj&i4s
r,,.�
''N GIffiwiei.1 Ts..Mu,t ...: 4...
FARMS POR SAL!,
H, W. DAWSON, NlnetY Colborne Street,
Toronto.
FILTI r. STOCK,;GRAIN AND Y,
li
Forme in all sections et Ontario.
Route naps
L' ACITQRY BITES,' WITTE cin WITIIOUR!
IP
Railway,
trackage, aRe Toronto,
to
"
Brampton and other towns and oitiee.
R EEIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN
Bramptonton end a dozen other town•
.
H.
W, DAWSONGalporne t.T Toronto
3,000 FREE HOMESTEADS AND
oved farms, $15.00 to 845.00
per acre. Pest grain and mixed fanning
Country. Write .Commissioner, Board of
Trade, 'Humboldt, Sask.
MALE HELP WANTED.
A T•ONCE-MEN TO LEARN BARBER
CA. trade; expert instructions constant
practice; tools free; /aware sure employ.
trent for barber. Write for catalogue.
Maier ' College, 221 Queen F., Toronta
STAMPS At4ti COItl9.
TAI8P COLLECToait-aC N i)1t '.i, tl1r•
17 ferent Foreign Stamps, Catalogue.
Album, only Raven Ceuta. Marrs Stamp
f'mmnann; Toronrn,
MISCELLANEOUS.
WANTED—LADIES TO DO PLAIN
and light sewing • at , home, whole
or spare time, good pay; work sent any
distance; charges paid; send stamp for
particulars. National ]danufaoturing Co.,
Montreal.
cANGER. Tur ons. Lull Ps. 1 x0..
internal and external. cared witty
oat rain by our home treatment: Write'
ne before too. late: Dr. Bellman Medical
Ca.,. Limited. Collingwond. Oat.
When buying your Piari,o
insist on having ars
OTOU EL5>
Piano Actio
A Business Head.
"Open the window, waiter-, I ant
roasting," a customer exclaimed
who had just dined at a Paris res-
taurant.
"Shut it up, waiter,; I am froz-
en," protested a man who had just
sat down.
The waiter hesitated. The pro-
prietor settled the dispute ;at once.,
• "Obey the customer who has not
yet dined," he said.
At the Yarmouth Y.M.C,A..Boys' Camp,
held at Tusket Ealle in August, I found
MINARO'S LINIMENT most beneficial for
sun burn, an immediate relief for colic
and toothache.
ALFRED STOKES.
General Secretary.,
A•lwhays Too Late.
"Old chap, didn't your better
judgment tell you -not' to make that
investment?" '
"No, my better judgment never
tells me anything until after I've.
gone and made a fool of myself." -
When Your Eyes Need Gare
Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smartiug—Peels
rine—Acts Q niekly. Try it for Red, Wealt,
Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Illus-
trated Book in each Pabkage. Murine is
gqotnponnded by ottr .Ocullste—nota "Patent Mod-
ietno"—but used In sncnesaful Physlolane' Praa-
t1ce for many years. Now dedicate to the Pun-
Be and sold byy Dreggtsts at 26a and SOc �periottle.
Murine L+ye S$tivo fn Aseptic Tubes. Zoe and 60t
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
An egotist is a man who feels
sorry for the people who don't like
him.
peittard's Liniment Cures Colds. Eta.
Love's Torments.
Neighbor -"What's Mamie cryin'.
about'?"
Mother --- "That fortune-teller
told her that sh.e's gain' ter marry
a tall, handsome, dark nobleman,"
Neighbor -"Well, , ain't that a
good fortune 2"
Mother-`•"Yer'd think so; ,but
now she's broken-hearted at the
thought.of givin' lip the ugly, little,
sawed-off, sandy -haired bricklayer
she's in leve with!,3
Yea will find relief in Zarin -Bink
R eases the burning, stinging
!lain, stops bleeding and hrings
ease. Pel'sevetante, with bias
Cuk, means curb: ,Wily not provo
Ibis lJnO gl t,•at9 anti s'tof'ea,
400 box.
ukTeol
Atk.Str1"lNt 0