Exeter Advocate, 1913-7-3, Page 7TSE DANGER
OF ANAEMIA
" IJonsumption,[ayy,Follow 'bleuS. its
" ." Ravages are (toakect
l 'Ph¢,,(+ is danger to every girl and
tevety woman who falls a victim to
anaemia -a that is bloodlessness.
They become listless, feel too weak,
'too wretched and too •hopeless to
take prompt steps to stop 'the trou-
ble, Too eften, through neglect,
they drift into a worse eondititm,
N " eating that anaemia frequently
Iola en to consumption. if yen
we entiemie au the least degree lou
should lose n`o time in beginning
treatment to iiiorea•se and .enrich
the blood supply. To do this there
is no other medicine eo good ` es
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, Every
lis
11e make rich, , reci blood,
�which drives out disease and brings
gain'the bloom of health to pale
'and us.allow cheeks. There are thou -
,sands of women and growing girls
in Canada who: owe their present
good health to the timely use of
;Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, Among
`those, who have been restored to
health by this great mediaine is
Miss Rose Neville, Mount Forest;
Ont., who :.pays : ''Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills performed almost a mir-
acle in lay case, I was a, victim of
anaemia,in what my friends con-
sidered a dangerous form, I was
very pale; always felt tiredout,
suffered from eevere ,headaches, and.
had no .appetite. I was taking doe -
tar's medicine for a long time in
fact I tried two doctors—beat' in-
stead of improving I seemed to be
growing worse. My parents were
at a loss to know what tk'a da fli
me., and thought I would not reco-
ver, Then a friend advised -"Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. and I had only
taken them a few weeks when I
began to feel better. This greatly
encouraged me, and I 'continued
taking .the pills for some time
longer, and found' my ,health again
as good as ever it had, been, In
lad I am stronger than ever I was
before. 1 have advised the use of
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills to other
girls who have found the results
equally beneficial,"
Sold by all tnedicine dealers or
by mail at 80 cents abox .or six
boxes for $2,50 from The Dre
'Williams' Medicine Co. Brockville,
Ont.
ZEBRai.S•AND LION'S.
Wild Animals Understand Each
Other's Ways. -
Once, when Major Stevenson-
Hamilton was following the tracks
of some .lions in Afrioa, a small
,troop of zebras a little distance in
,front of him caught sight of the big
eats at close quarters, although
they were still invisible to the hunt-
ers. Their sudden headlong rush,
Major Stevenson -Hamilton writes
in "Animal Life in Afriea," was a
thing to remember. Conduct of an-
other sort on the part of zebras,
however, was observed by, one of
;the rangers a few years ago.
As he was riding along the bank
of the Olifants River, he suddenly
heard zebras making a great noise
,just in front, and coming into a
clearing, he found that three lions
:had pulled down a mare, but had
net yet killed her. The rest of the
treed were standing some twenty
paees from the lions, facing them in
a semi -circle, much excited. They
were making a great noise, but
showed no disposition to bolt; the
foal was between its dam -and the
herd. When the ranger fired at one
ofthe lions, the zebras at once
staanpeded; but the young animal
waited about for its mother, which,
although badly clawed, was able to
get up and make off also.
Another ranger came on a lion
and two lionesses taking their mid-
, day siesta. within a. hundred yards
of a trop of zebras, One. lion was
Tying on its back, with all four
;legs in the air, like a cat before the
fire, while the zebras were standing
'about, apparently half -asleep. The
'lions must have been clearly visible
=to 'them.
. -
• -Incidents such as this illustrate
the perfect understanding that the
wild creatures have of each others'
ways, and how far man is from a
clear comprehension of them.
d
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
r
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
No medicine forlittle ones is so
Ihighly' recommended as is Baby's
. Own Tablets. They are gua,iran-
teed by a government analyst to be
absolutely safe, and besides • that
thousands of mothers `throughout
';the" land praise them as theonly
,sure cure for childhood ailments.
Concerning them Mrs. Edward Mc-
' Donald, Douglastown, Que., says:
"I' can highly recommend Baby's
,Own Tablets to any mother who
°ihais a baby s iffering from eonstipa
,tion or teething trouble." The
!Tablets, are sold by.medicine deal -
era or by mail at 25 cents a "box
'from !f'hci Dr. Williams' Medicine
,Co., Brockville, Ont;
If we could see otuselvcs 'itis
ethers see us we wouldn't believe
Mdlle. Ilelen Mangenot,
a typical Parisian with sparkling
black eyes, rich warm lips, raven
hair, and clf•a. vivacity characteris-
tic of the French metropolis, who
has just been eliected Queen of
Rases in. that city. She is a dress-
maker and an artist'•s model.
FROM MERRY OLD [ LAN}
NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT I
BULL AND MS PEOPLE.
Occurrences In the Land That
Reigns Supreme in the Com-
mercial World,
It is proposed to erect in London
a, hostel as a tribute to M. W. T.
Stead from women of all nationali-
ties,
About $20,000 damages was, done
by a fire that broke out at Msesrs.
Barkers furniture repository at.
Kensington.
It is rumored that the King is
purchasing Byrkley Lodge, Burton -
on -Trent, as a residence for the
Prince of Wales.
A copy of the rare original I<il-
arnock edition of Robert Burns'
poems, .1786, was recently sold at
Sotheby's for V700.
William Hiitchcoek, a dairyman of
ichmond, was fined the maximum
penalty, $100, at Richmond for
adulterating milk.
A fifteen -months' -old child at
Birmingham, in trying to get out of
its cot, got its head fixed " in the
ironwork and was suffocated..
Ann Caterer, who blas died in the
Henley Workhouse ` at :the age of
ninety-two, was first admitted to
the workhouse in 1.857.
There are now between 15,000 and
20,600 people on strike in South
Staffordshire in connection with
disputes in various industries.
Mrs. Alice Jane Hicks,, of Hare
Street, Woolwich, who was known
as the "Queen of the fosters," has
died alt the age -of ninety.
Several policemen were injured
in a fierce fight at Bradford in con-
nection with the carter strike.
Some 3,000 men are now out.
Selby, formerly' an important
centre of :flax growing, has been
chosen by the development as the
site of further experiments " in the
industry. •
The new tramway route between.
Rushey. Green and Forest Hill via
Catford Hill and Stanstead Road,
has now been opened for traffic.
The Lord Mayer, of Leeds ese- •
ceived ai deputation of citizens ad-
vocating aproposal that the city be
converted into, a seaport with a ship
canal
To effect the reinstatement of a
man who was discharged at the
Holyhead Mountain Clay and
China Works, over one hundred
employes struck work,
Ilythe Town 0o4.1n6l have inau-
gurated a campaign against wasps.
They are offering one cent a. head
for every queen wasp killed in the
borough.
Captain Fred Wombwell, the
famous animal trainer, was badly
mangled by a lion at Bostook and
Wombsyell',s menagerie at Ply-
mouth. -
The scheme to reconstruct .the
%elation pavilion of Worthing Pier,
wrecked, at. Easter, with a. wider
structure at a cost of $50,000, has
now :been approved.
A suffragette tried to burn down
the goods yard of the Great Central
Railway Co, at Nottingham, but
fortunately •all: but two .stacks of
timber was. saved.
Burglars broke into the Berkeley.
Hotel in Piccadilly, bound • and
gagged the ten porters en duty and
rifled the safe of money and jewel-
lery tti the value of $15,000.
The Thames Ironworks pi+operev
at Canning Town, where the Thun-
derer was built, has been disposed
of to the Great Eastern Railway,
whose Line adjoins the site.
A tombstone erected in the Wel-
ford Road :Cemetery, Leicester, to
the memory o'f a man and his wife,
have cabinet portraits of theca.
The photos are let into the stone-
work' " and onvered by"glass.
4
A Bad Heart
its Cause and Cure
Many, Firmly Convinced They Are
Dying of IUeart Trouble, nave,
Often the Strongest Hearts.
sometimes you wake ue at asset, lxeart
throbbing like a steam kngtne, Your
breathing is short and irregular; pans
shoot through' tbo 8best and abdomen,
and cause horrible anxiety.
Your . trouble isn't with the heart at
a11. These seueatiot;,s are the outeoxne of
tudlgestioiz, which' has canned gas to form
oxx the stomach and Frees against the
heart.
Just read what happened to lame
Malloux, of Belle li:iver, Ont.:
"Three month ago I was a weak, olak•
ly man. Mr appetite was. vOor, food for,
naented in my stotattell, I' had sour r£s,
Inge and indigestion. At night I would
often weaken with gas in the stomach
and heart palpitation.
"I consulted my doctor and used rem -
ales that any friends advised. Nothing
helped, ,
"Ono day I received a sample of 1)r.
$amilton's Pills, and my cure eomme;i-
ced. Today I have a vigorous appetite;
strong heart action, and no sign ofin.
digestion, I feel younger and healthier
than ever before."
Your druggist or storekeeper sells Dr..
Icanetton;s Pills, 2&o per box or live lose$
for $1„00. By mail' from The Catarrho.
none ;co., Buffalo, N.Y., and eingston,
Canada,'
SWAT TILE SPARROW NOW.
'L`lte Chirpy, -Little Bird Is it .Nuis
auee in City and Country.
To the slogan of "Swat the Fly"
might well be added that of "Kill
the Sparrow." Flies and sparrows
belong in the same class as nuis-
ances and_ menaces to health, says
a writer in a health magazine.
Most birds deserve to be protect-
ed for some iservioe they perform;
but when all the evidence has been
submitted in the sparr+ow',s case it
will stand condemned. Perhaps it
occasionally eats a harmful worm,.
but the greater part of its food is
of grain. Then, it is the constant
enemy of native birds which, unlike
itself, live mostly on worms and
insects that are Injurious to trees
"and crops.
For ninny years the sparrow was
unknown except in the towns, and
it gained the name of "town bird."
But it later year, it has spread all
over the country, until now it is
prebably a 'greater nuisance on the
farm than in the city: The spar-
row's habit of living .always near
settlements and in sheltered places
makes it a most•prolific bird. It is
almost independent of the seasons
in breeding. •Several broods of as
many as seven or eight birds ivay
be reared in a, year.
The sparrow helps, to spread
eases by building nests,- upon, or•
near houses. Building en houses is
especially a menace to health in the.
country, where people catch water
from the roofs to fill their cisterns.
This nests are of such construction
that they are likely harbors, for var-
ious sorts of vermin and germs.
•
When Love is New.
.A paper states that aoung loco-
motive eiigrneer recently married
attracts the attention of his .wife
by blowing the whistle from the
time he strikes the outskirts of the
town until he reaches the station.
Old heads in the business say that
in two or three years he will be
trying to make the old engine come
into town on her tiptoes.
BANISIIED.
Tea and Coffee Finally IJad to Go.
The way some persons cling to
tea and coffee, even after they know
they are doing them . harm, is a
puzzler. (Tea is just as harmful
because it contains caffeine, the
same drug found in coffee): But it
is an easy matter to give it up fore
good, when Postum: is properly
made and used instead.- A girl
writes :
"Mother had been suffering with
nervous headaches for seven weary
years, but kept en 'drinking coffee.
"One day I asked why she did not
give up coffee, as a cousin of mine
had done who has( taken to Postum.
But Mother was such a slave to oof'
fee she thought if would: be terrible.
to give it up.
"Finally, one day she made the
change to Postum, and quickly her
headaches disappeared. One morn-
ing'while she was drinking Postum
so freely and with such relish, I
asked for ataste.
"That started me on Posture and
I now drink it more freely that I
did coffee, which never comes into
our house now."
Name given by Canadian Postum
Co., Windsor, Ont, Write, for book-
let, "The "Road do Wellville."
Postum comes in two forms,
Regular Postum (must be boiled.)
Instant Postum doesn't require
boiling, but is prepared instantly
by stirring' a level teaspoonful in
an ordinary cup of Jot water, whish
makes it right for most persons.
A big cup requires more, and
some people who like strong things
put in a heaping teaspoonful and
temper it with a large supply of.
cream.
Experiment until you know the
amount that pleases your palate,
and have it served that way in the
future. „.
"There's a Reason" for P'ostuicn.
The Rihf Soap
I3or Baby' Skin
Cuticurq Soap
N the cage of
baby'sskin and
hair, Cuticura
Soap is the.
mother's fa*
neurite.` Not
only is it unci;
va,led inurit r and refreshing
flagrance, its but t gentle cmoh
liens properties render it of
great value inpromoting skin
and hair health generally. For
the treatment of eczemas, rashes
and other itching, burning in-
fantile eruptions, warm baths-
with
athswith Cuticura Soap, followed
by gentle applications of Cuti-
curs Ointment are usually eff'ec,
five when other methods fail.
Cuticura Soap wears to awafer,
often outlasting several cakes
of ordinary. soap and making
its use most economical.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold
throughout the world. A liberal sample of
each, with 32 -page booklet on the caro and
treatment of the skin and scalp` , sent post-.
free, Address Potter Drug & Chem. Corp„
Dept. 16D, Boston, '[7. S. A.
- NIQUE EDIFICE.
Vancouver Will have Four Story
Building Six Feer -Wide.
Constructioxi is at present pro-
ceeding in Vancouver on a building
which will be a curiosity, for the
plans show •a four .story "steel struc-
ture only six feet wide and 120 feet
in length. So narre!w is the pro-
posed building that above the
ground floor it is necessary to show
a •continuous, row of bay -windows in
order to provide room for a stair-
case. The rite of the curious block
is the southwest corner of Carrall
and Pender streets. The lot had a
width of 33 feet on Carrell Street,
flanking on Pender. The city, how-
ever, took the greater portion of
the lot for the Pender Street widen-
ing, paying a sumin the neighbor-
hood of $65,000 as recompense to
the owners, who alleged at that
time that the :six foot • :strip left
would be of no t se, as the indivi-
duals owning the' next lot on Car-
33'1111
ar-r 11 :Street would notconsent` to
any satisfactory arrangement for
using the property.
It is j aid now that there is a pos-
sibility that the new narrow build-
ing may be thrown in with .the block
standing on the adjacent lot, there-
fore losing identity es a distinct
strueture and merely becoming the
Pender Street face of a, " building
fronting on Carrall Street. The
estimated cost of the ,six foot build-
ing is $8,000. It is to be built by
Chinese labor. The upper stories
will be laid o it for sleeping room
purposes and every tenant will en-
joy the privilege of having a "hall
bedroom.''
The Gift of-Synipatily.
None know better than women
how -infinitely the little things in
life, count, and yet we often are to
blame in leaving the little things
undone. Lame dogs do not always
limp, aiid it is sometimes difficult
to heal a hurt that is hidden with-
in, but by cultivating the gift of
sympathy, which is so important a
part of our women's heritage, we
can often ease- an ache and make a
"dark: world aglint with sunshine.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc.
An army officer, noted for his
bluntness of speech, rudely remark-
ed in the presence of a clergyman:
"If I had a son rvho was an idiot I
would make him a parson." "Evi-
dently your father held a different
view, ;;sir," responded the clergy-
man, quietly.
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
An Ancient Legend.
"This inn must be very old," re-
marked a tourist; in a story printed
in London Opinion, to the landlord,.
who was serving him with dinner.
"Very old, sir," assented the
landlord. "Would you like to hear
some of the legends connected with
the place 2",; •
"I would indeed," replied the
tourist. "Tell me the legend of
this curious old mince pie. 1 no-
tice it every time I come."
Being unable to find a seat on the
overcrowded train, a, large woman
went into the smoking car and sat
down by the door. The man next
to her, absorbed in .his newspaper,
kept on smoking. "I was foolish
enough to suppose," said she glow-
ering at him, "that some of the
hien in here et least were gentle-
men." "Pardon me, madam," he
answered, politely offering her a
cigar,
Experiments made In nglaud and
Sweden.
Experiments made in Sweden
with a view to obtaining tt• "pedi-
gree"
gree" wheat were referred to in a
recent lecture by Prof, T, B. Wood,
of Cambridge, England, at the Roy-
al Institution.
The two important eltaracteris.
ties which the farmer wanted, the
lecturer said, were a good quality
and: a, large yield. Ccmparxson of
the yield per acre over 10 years, in
Lancashire, 35 bushels, and in Mon-
tiioluthehire, 26 bushels,. indicatedat, once, he said, that soil and clim-
ate were responsible to a large ex-
tent, and meteorologists were of the
opinion that the weather during the
autumn sowing itt n large measure
determined the yield. The average
yield, per were in different coun-
tries: Denmark, 42.1 bushels;
Great Britain, 82.8 bushels; Can-
ada, 17.6 bushels; India,, 11.4 bush-
els; and Russia, 10 bushels.
Experiments ab Cambridge and
other places showed that there wee
no relation between the size of the
ear, the .size of the ;grain, or the
number of stems and the bullk of
the crop. Both squarehead and
rivet, one of which had e small` ear
and the other a large, gave an al-
most equal yield. In this connec-
tion Professor Wood pointed out
that the efforts to obtain a pedigree
wheat had been unavailing. In
Sweden, by mechanical separators,
they -had picked the largest grains
from the largest ears out of eu ees-
sive crops, but the result was act-
ually not so good as that obtained
from an, ordinary sowing.
o
HARD, SOFT, QR BLEEDING?
No matter what kind or where located,
-any corn is promptly eured by Putnam's
Corn Extractor; being purely vegetable it ,
causes no pain. Guarantee with every
bottle of "Putnam's," use no other, 25c.
at all dealers.
Gl tt's
Quality, flavour, and
perfect cooking,,
ccinbanecL
The anaxitnum
of nourlehment
and palatability,
S," WITli'i, 1t Ji st beat -- then serve
+. llCr minimum trouble
�,. ,, Monrsea� and cost 4
FARMS FOR sm.. _
Id. W. DAW. SON, Ninety Colborne Street;
Toronto,
pny,.aT. STOCIK, GRAIN dND A31RX
5. Paring in all sections +,t t?ataxic.' '
Rome snaps.
FACTORY ' SITES,. WITH OR WITItOU75
Railway trackage, In Toronto.
Brampton and other towns and cities.
`i) ESIDENTIAI; PZOPEItTIFs I�`I
.11 -ti Brampton and a dozen other towns.
N. W, DAWSON; 'Colborno. St., Toronto
3000 FREE ilO1ifl'1STEADS AND IM
9- proved farms, *15.00 to $45.00
per abre, Neat grain and mixed farming "
country. 'Write Commissioner, Board of '
Trade, ilumboldt, Seek,
MALg' Fi LP WANTED, -
A T ONCE --MEN WANTED: LEARN
21. Barber Trade; greatdemand; good
wages: twenty to thirty advertised for
daily in Toronto papers alone. Can teach
You in six to eight weeks. Fenn for Cata-
logue. ' Maier College,. 221 Queen East, To-
ronto.
STAMPS AND COINS.
TARP cows nous •H111e•bRNt) WV -
1.0 ferent Foreign Stamps. Catalogue..
Album, only Seven Ceuta Marks Stamp
Cmmnanv, T.-moor/1
3
A Bad ilr oke.
"A famous college president de-
clares that there are no new jokes."
"Ah, he does, does he 2" grimly
returned the Old Codger. "Well,
he ought to see the husband any
niece has• just married and brought
home to live on me."
Kinard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Dear Sire,—This fall I got thrown on a
fence and hurt my chest very bad, so I
could not work and it hurt me to breathe.
I tried all kinds of Liniments and they
did me no good.
One bottle of MINARD'S 'LINIMENT,
warmed on flannels and applied on my
breast. eured ane completely,
C. R. COSFABOOM,
Rosaway, Digby -Co., N.S. •
Repeat.
"Did Mr. Cumso" seem annoyed
at your calling with his bill 2" asked
Mr. Gaskett of his ne* oollector.
"No, sir," replied the young
man; "on the contrary, he asked
me to -call again."
Try Murine Eye Remedy
If you have Red, Weal:, Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart
—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell ,
Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c.
Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, i
25c, 50e. Eye Books Free by Mail
An Eye Tonic Good for A11 Eyes that Need Care
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Limited.
Jack Makeit—now can we mar-
ry 2 I'm only worth fifteen thou-
sand dollars, and that wouldn't
bun your clothes.
May Spendit—Oil, yes, it would,
Jack, for nearly five years !
Minard's Liniment Cures Carget in Cows.
Fact and Fancy.
The average, man's idea of econ-
omy is to preach it to his wife.
Hebrews are the longest -lived
race.
Strong fish brine will remove su-
perfluous hair.
It's easy enough to die game.
Live game!
Siamese women, to avert bad
luck, take down their hair when a
funeral passes.
The under dog in a fight gets all
the sympathy, but, unfortunately,
that isn't all he gets:
So•ine dealers consider 'an egg
newlaid till it is seven days old;
others till it is fifteen.
_The lazier a man is, the more he
is going to do to -morrow.
In general pride is at bottom of
all peat mistakes. 1
ED. 7.
1.861 41 27", '13.
MISCELLANEOUS
CANGER, , TUMORS, LtimPs, 1420..
LJ Internet and external. cured with-
out pain by oar home treatment, write
vs before too late. Dr. Renmao liedidai
Co.. Limited ' rnllinewnnd. Ont.
s
BOYS AND
make one to -n lling Post
0ardsif�r your vacationdollars traip, aivoekndsewin ,Llan a
beautiful prize, write for particulars.
[ TORONTO TRADING 00,
456 LOGSPt AVE., TORONTO, ONT
"BLUE FLAME"
SPECIAL
To lower our stock
by July 31st—our,
stocktaking -we. of-
fer these excellent,
Plugs at,
$2
Per Set of Four
'BLUE FLAMES'
,give perfect igni..
tion and will give
ahotter spark than
any plug at this
price.
RUSSELL MOTOR CAR CO.,
Limited.
Accessories Dept., WEST TORONTO
PICHWEIJecONTARIO
NAVIGATION CO
'NIAGARA
To
THE SEA
Your
Vacation Trip
WHERE TO GO -
Niagara Palls, Toronto, Thou.
sand Islands, St. Lawrence
Rapids, Montreal, Quebec and
the Saguenay River --one of
n a t u r e's most impressive
scenic wonders.
Low rates for tickets including meals
and bertha. For infor-
mation apply to local
ticket agents or
Ilugh D. Paterson,
Gen. Agt., Toren'
to, Ont., or
Foster Chaffee,
P.T.M„ Mont-
treal. Que.
?CAFE' GPL TR ITY
Acrobats in India.
The wandering acrobats of India,
are recruited from a low caste of
people called Dombartunos, who
live by this profession alone. The
children are trained from their
earliest childhood, and do- not re-
ceive any educationin schools.
They travel from village to town
and give their performances, which
are really wonderful, in the open
air before .crowds of onlookers, -
Rajahs and rich Indians are very
fond of the acrobatic displays, and
engage the best of the men. to per-
form . before their guests at enter-
tainments. "
Minard's Liniment cures DtStenrper.
Many have fallen by the edge of
the ,sword, but not sn many as have
fallen by the tongue.