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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1913-7-10, Page 3NERVOUS TROUBLES ON TUE INCREASE !they re Due to, an Impoveristea IOnditiou of the Blood Nervous exhaustion --or neuras- thenia, esmedieel leen call itis one of the greatest evils of the pre- eerit day, for it is destroying the aifeand energy of thousands of men, and woolen, or worse, driving them to insanity, The causes of .this tiesuble include overwork, mental lain? "weary, indiscretions, and ometer:es it follows la gripper The signs of this trouble are usually great.wealrness atter any exertion, nervous leadaehes, trembling hands, shakiness in the legs, irrita- bility of temper; weals digestive power,. insomnia,. The life of the sufferer becomes full of miseries. The.true treatment £or this trou- ble must eonsis+t of a building up process, for the &hove signs mean that the exhausted nerves are call- ing for more nourishment from the blood"supply.. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills make new, rich blood. that feeds the aterved complaining nerves, .and in this way they have ,curedd, thousand's of times neuras- thenia, neuralgia,, and other eer- NOus disorde,xs, and have restored strength and ;'nerve -energy to de- spairing people. Mrs. Isaac Wil- son, Calabogie, Ont., gives thanks for having been restored to health through the use of this medicine,. she says :"When I began using r. Williams' Pink Pills I was a neer; 'ecus wreck; I couldn't do my wok, !could not sleep at night, suffered from nervous headaches, and the least noise would completely upset me. Only those,.whe have suffered from nervous trouble e.an'tell what I endured, I doctored for a time, bttdid not get any benefit.; . Then I learned of Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills and sent for a half dozen boxes. By the time I had used these I was almost well, and & cou- ple more boxes completely restored my health, wand I have had no re- turn of the trouble. I can cheer- fully recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to those who suffered from any 'form of nervous trouble;." If you ,are weak, nervous„ aor outs of health begin to curd yourself to- day with Dr. Williams' fink Pills. You can get them from any medi- eine dealer or by maid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medieine Co., Brockville, Ont. $7,600 IN PRIZES. Will Be Given at the Ontario Rifle Association Meet This Year. There promises to be much =Hi- ke activity at the Lozig Branch Mille Ranges from August the 13th to the 2Snd during the five days' annual ineet of the Ontario Rifle ,Association. Capt. Armour A. Miller, Secretary of the Associa- ltion,- has just issued the annual programme, and it is full of inter - eating features. The aggregate of this year's prize list is seven thou- sand six hundred c1011.ars, about one thousand dollars ahead of any pre- ,vious year. Phi cities of Toronto and; Hamilton have vied almost .with each other in ,donations to the 'prize funds. Among the well-known Toronto people whose trophies will be contested are His Honour• the `Lieutenant Governor, Mfrs. H. D. Warren, Sir Henry It. Peilatt, and ,Colonel W.' C. Maedo•nald. Mrs. Warren has donated prizes to the amount of $275.00 for competition among school endets. ' Last year this youngsters to the number of one hundred attended the meet, and this year, as the Oouneil of the Association is offering to pay half the railway -fare of . each cadet from Ontario there should be e• regiment of them anxious to shoot buTls'- eyes along side the grizzled veter- :-sans of the militia. Teams of six members each from the nine pro- vinees may shoat for Sir Henry M. Peilatat's magnif•cent new cup in the Interprovincial Match. Earth marksman of the winning. team will get a miniature of the cup .and., a. share of - the oue huitdred and twenty dollars in cash that goes with it, Sir John ZVt. Oibson's gen- erosity has made possible a new; match •called the "Lieutenant ieutenant Gov- ernor's," with . 00 prizes, amount- ing to over $1,000.00, in addition to ,the Lieutenant Governor's gold. ° medal. This match will be a per- manent one on the programme' of the Ass,oeiation, and will atand a. Sitting menorial to his Honour's many years of active service to the advancement of rifle shooting and military edtcai;ion in Canada, An individual competitor in the Lieu- tenant Governor's Match, who is lucky, may reoeivt>' a Ross 'Rifle, ,offered. by Hiram Walker & Sons, /of 'V4 adkerville, and other prizes, totalling in all +$150.00 in value. Colonel W. C. Macdonald, Chair- man of the Executive Comannttee of ithe Associabion, 'has donated the that prize of a Ross Rifle, valued at. �M 50.00, in the All Comers' Aggro - g t M,te' stry of its founding by contributing aa, now cup, value $400.00, for tufo competition. Besides this :sup: the match than year contains 100 indi- vidual and tease, . prizes of over $500,00, Of the odder matches, the Tait- Brwssey is again to the fore with 198 individual prizes, in addition to team prizes, amountings in all to over $1,000,00 in value. The 'Tait- Bre,ssey i,?" the big zn.11itery match of the meet. Changes in the regulations gov- erning the meet are evident, in the pregranmme. These are not exton- 'sive, the chief one being a restrie- tion prohibiting the use of any ex- tension bridge which projects to the rear of the befit when cocked.. The Association has arranged. with all the railways for single -fare. rates, good to return several days after the mneeiting-: All dettlils of. the meet are given in the pro- gramme, copies of, which may be obtained from the !secretary of the Association, 167 Bay Street, To- ronto. Robert W. Service, the Yukon poet, who is to marry aParisienne. ,The. City' -of . B axil ton Match for Tiros is orle of. the im.portr ing matches from the point of view of the younger shots. This year the lxiby celebrMca .the X00th a,nniver- A CURIOUS WELL, Ingenious Neeieau Ras No Trouble Drawing Water. That the Mexican farmer is not the slow thinking, lazy person the average stranger imagines is illus- trated by an ingeniously devisred. 'well constructed by a farmer living near a little town just across' the boundry line. The nativesseldom go far away from their hofhesand they have very primitive ideas and customs. This well is about 'fifty feet deep and the owner has built a eurious device for hauling water from it. If this Mexican had been an educated man he might have been au inventor. A tree flourished near the well which had two branches growing out of the trunk. .These boughs separated into four branches higher up. The Mexican cut the branches in such a way that they formed a perfect rest for a long well sweep. He fastened the sweep to .a cross- bar laid across the two upper branches in the middles using stout thongs for the purpose. Then he fastened a weight on one end of the sweep and a long rope to the other end. The bucket is fastened to the end of this long rope, and all he has to do is to lower the bucket into the well. The weight of the . stone pulls itup again, brimming full. +1• CUBS' FOOD. They Thrive on Grape -!tits. Healthy babies don't .cry and the well-monrished baby that is fed on Grape -Nuts is never a crying baby. Many babies who cannot, take any other food relish the perfect food, Grape -Nuts, and get well, "My baby was given up by three doctors who said that the con- densed milk on which I'ha.d fed her had ruined the child's stomach. One of the doefors told me thatthe only thing .to do would be to try. Grape -Nuts, so 1 got someand pre- pared it as follows: 1 soaked 1% tablespoonfuls in one -pint of cold water fey half . an hour, then 1 strained off the liquid and mixed 12. teaspoonfuls of this'strained Grape -Nuts juice with ,six teaspoon- fuls of; rich milk, put in a pinch of salt and a little sugar, warmed it and gave it to baby every two hours. "In this simple, easy way I saved baby's life and havebuilt her up. to a sta=ting, healthy chid!, rosy and Laughing.The food must certainly be -perfect to have finch a wonderful effect .as, this. I can truthfully say I thick it is the be,st food in the., world to raise delicate babies on and is also a: deli,oious healthful: food for grown-ups ass we have dis- covered in our family.'" Grape -Nuts is equally valttablo to the strong, laealeby mat or 4�'0 roan. It standsfor the true theory of . health, "There's a reason," and it' its explained in the little book, ."The Read tui Wellville;" in ;pkgs. Ever read the above letter/ A noel one Annear* from tithe to tithe. ' Thee* are genuine,true, and full Ot hufttan ioteweit. FROM ERIN'S. GREEN ISLE NEWS Dr • MAC: FROM IRE. LAND'S 'S SUORES. RaYspeiings in the ittlerulit Interest to Irish.,` menti Tho esrpenters employed in the Dr•eghecla. building , trade, to the number of about 40, have 'gone en strike, Mr, Andrew Carnegie bas given a donation of $6$Q towards an or- gan for the Now Ross Protestant church. ll' !serious riot took place on the lands of Lord Ashbowie ,.and sixteen men have been returned' for trial. At the presenttime the agents of more than one continental army are engaged in purchasing re- mounts in Ireland. The band contest held tinder the auspices of the Northi of Ireland Band Association took place at Windsor Park, Belfast, A ..shocking affair occurred, at Bree, gaup. Head, when a farmer named George Thomas Boggs was attacked by a bull and fatally in- jured. , Arrangements have now been completed for the erectidn of a new Palace of Varieties at Dublin, the site ehosen is eleee to the General Post Office. Damage to the amount of $2,500 was Bono by a fire that broke out from 'Duntreath," Kingstown, the residence of Miss Craig. One fire- man was slightly injured, The annual motoe pitting for the benefit of the cripple children, in Belfast took place from the exhi- bition hall to Mount Stewart. About 250 children, took part. An outrage is reported' from Templeruore, County Tipperary. A memorial cross has been .torn down and other headstoneschipped. The police aro investigating. William Faulkner, permanent way inspector, and Hugh Milling,. clistrict engineer en the Great Northern Railway, were both killed by a train near Raheny Station. Phineas John Davidson, postman at Hillis we, was, at the Newry Quarter Sessions, sentenced to six months' imprisonment for the lar- ceny of a postal -order, value for about $18.' The Ro-scree show, to be 'held an the grounds' of the Roserea Castle, recently acquired from the military authorities by the North Tipperary County Council, is to be held on October 2nd. An aged feeble veteran named- David Davidson. Belfast, late of the Royal Irish Regiment, has been awarded by the Chelsea eommis- sioners a. special campaign pension of 18 cents a 'day.' The members of the Committee of Management Of -the Belfast Savings Bank were entertained to luncheon to honor the fact that the funds of the bank now exceeded one million pounds sterling. A oaring robbery book' piece in County Limerick, when Mr. Cham- bers, manager of the Provincial Bank, Listowel, while on his way to the branch bank at Abbeyfe•ale, was held up by four men and rob- bed of about $3,000. si of Grains ,of Gold. Lies lead straight to Limbo. Nothing pays but truth,—Mr. El- bert Hubbard. Monty is the root of all evil, and sometimes of the family tree.—John. Bangs. Charity and personal force are the only investments worth any- thing.—Walt. Whitman. Hope is a good word to begin the day with. Without hope no man ever found his, ideal.—Westcott. Prayer is the marvellous breath- ing function of the new creature when in contact with the atmos- phere of a besetting God.—Henry Drummond. There's not a blessed thing in this world worth having without sacri- fice. The big people; the people that• have the big things in life, are those that have paid or are pre- pared to pay the big price for them. .-.W. J. Locke. A man should• dare to live his small span of life with little heed of the tommon speech apon him or his life, only caring that his days may be full of reality, and his eon- versation of truthspeaking and wholenessaajohn Morley. HAIR CAKE BUT IN HANDFULS Scalp In VeryBay dCondition. Dan- druff' Could: be Seen Plainly" Lost Most of Hair. Cutcura Soap and Cuticura Ointment Cured. - 42 Lippincott St., Toronto; ontmie.-- "'kbout. t, year ago I hada vert* bad attach oevee/ ea and my scalp was in a very bad condition, `rile dandruff could be seen. plainly and 1 lost most or my hair. My Bair fell out gradually, but anter having it sham- p000d it carpo out in. handfuls. I used: Cute ours Soap to shampoo my hair, then rubbed tho.Qutieura Ointment into the scalp, The dandruff 1v4s very seen removed and my. hair stopped falling oat. Cuticula Soap and Ointment cured me," (Signet:) Miss E. Chamberlain, Mar, 31, 1012. HANDS COVERED WITH ECZEMA Anse du Cap, Quebec. -"About one year ago my daughter had her bands covered With eczema. It broke out in a rash. She was unable to put her hands in. water and she used to scratch themuntil they were red and inflamed and cracked and used to bleed. She was unable to sleep by spells from the pain and burning. 'Wa tried sev. eral remedies without receiving any relief. After she began leashing with Caticura Soap and applying Cfutieura Ointment ails got relief at once and after ten days' treatment was entirely cured. "My baby .when Mobbing, broke out with: pimples on her face, After three days' treatment of Cuticura Soap she vas =red.". (Signed) Mad. D. aoubure, Feb, 12, 1012. Outicura Soap and Oaticure Ointment ere Sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. For a liberal free sample of each, with 32-p. book, send post card to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp,, Dept. SOD, Boston, IT. 8. A. More Short Than Tall. A detective had been called by a Western bank to investigate the •sirnuitanaeus disappearance of the cashier and a large sum of mouey. "How tall was the cashier ?" ask- ed the de•tective, producing his note -book, "I don't know," sighed the presi- dent of the bank, "but he was about five thousand dollars short ;" Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. lilisapplict1 Philosophy. "Mike," said Plodding Pete, "what would you deo if you was • "I'd lead a life of ease," replied Meandering Mike. • "No, you wouldn't. You'd be playin' pole or, golf or Makin' physa seal culture. Lot well enough alone. A life of ease ain't nothin' but work in disguise." SSl y( „S-:-'16. Minard's. Liniment Co., Limited. Gents, --I cured a valuable hunting dog of mange with MINARD-S LINIMENT after several .veterinaries had treated him without doing him any permanent good. 'Sours, etc., WILFRID GAGNE, Prop: of Glad Central Hotel, Drummond- ville, Aug. 3; '04. The Cure. "I haven't seen Bangsfor a long time. .He used to be a dickens of a fellow among the girls." "He'sbeen cured of all that." "What cured him?" "Marriage:" Minard's Linimeiit.Cures Cargo: in Cows, PARIS TREES E EIN Work Begun ;Under Napoleon UL. Average Life 40 Years. When` the Parisian work of tree planting on a great scale was be- gun under the reign of the ill-fated third Napoleon, holes five feet in depth were dug in the parkways along the streets. Tey showed that the soil conditions were' not favorable to tree growth. ;It was sandy and pebbly, and at the depth of five feet an impenetrable layer of hard clay was encountered. But Paris was determined to have trees. A trench 10 fent in length was dug about the site of each new tree and tilled with rich, black dirt, Then in the municipal nur- series the young trees were pruned and trained to grow their roots horizontally instead of straight down, so that they might get the needed nourishment from the layer of rich dirt provided. As e coxise- clueece of that good start and of the continuing care which is exer- cised, the trees of Paris are, per- haps, the finest in the world, and their; average life is nearly 40 years. arc Tile Value of happiness. There is no duty so much under- rated as that of being happy. By being happy we sow anonymous benefits upon the world which re- main unknown, even to ourselves; or when they are disclosed, surprise nobody so much as the benefactor. A happy man or woman is a better thing to find than a five -pound note. He on she is a radiating fo- cus of good will, and their entrance into a room is as though another candle had been lit. FOR MARRIED NIEN ONLY When your razor is dull as a hoe, ask your wife Mahe wasn't paring her Ctirne,. (let her Putnam's Corn Extractor; its the only painless and safe cure. All dealers sell "Putnam's"' at 25c. per bottle. ' Altering the Model. In his later years Fr"ederick Wil - hate, King of Prussia, was sorely afflicted with gout. The twinges of pain aggravated his naturally iras- ••cible temper. During the attacks he was accustomed to divert his mind by painting. His models were always soldiers. One day he kept a tall grenadier posing for a long time. At length the picture was finished.. The king turned to the man, and in a ter- rible voice asked, "What do you think of that V' "The cheeks are redder than mine," was the hesitating reply. "I'1)' soon fix that:" thundered the old king. So he seized his brush, anal)paint- ed both cheeks•, of the teirified grenadier a brilliant red. Minard's 'Liniment Cures Colds, Ets. Seeing the Wind. • O anger Otit at Riverside. "Is a eanoe safe for two?" is •asked by an inquirer in the col- umns: of a paper. No, sireel You fall• in the water if it turns over, and you fail in. love if, it 'remains right -side up till moonrise. Try Muyine Eye Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smelt, —Soothes Eye Fain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in, Aseptic Tubes, 25c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonto 4aod. for All Cyos that Need Caro Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago If you take a saw and hold it at right angles with the wind, teeth upward; and look along theh.tips of the teeth, you can see the wind streaming by and through the lit- tle notches just litre a,. flowing stream. The explanation, says Mr. Lawrence Hodges, must be pract- ically the" same as for the little streams of wriggly air we some- times see over our radiators; that is, that the air is broken up into. currents: of different densities, and, consequently, light Canting through these currents is bent *to our eye and their form noted. The wind, coming with some force, is inter- rupted by the saw, and this com- pressed or dense air streams through the notches. The forth of the stream is visible to us by the refraction or bending of the light that ;reaches our eyes from objects or .pi rticIes seen through the streams. WuL "I'm aself-made loan," snapped the Grouch. "Well, you might have made t=ourself more agreeable," respond- ed the Boob: Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. When Husbands Overwork. No true -wife will allow her hus- band to lay waste his life by un- ceasing work day after day, so that his life slips away without his hav- ing the leisure to enjoy it. Yet it is too often the case that a wife will force her husband into this dangerous path instead of keeping him in check. She sees that his excessive work brings- in money plentifully ; and spends it lavishly, regardless of the harm he does himself in providing for her whims. Some men are so absorbed in mon- ey -getting for the sake of their families that their hornee'have be- come little more than a sleeping place, their chief function is which to pay the bills. ' The child's delight. The picnicker's. choice. everybody's favorite, W, CLARK., ,ii!['fRr, Montreal, POTTED MEATS Full flavored and perfectly cooked make delicious sandwiches, FARMS FOR SAL£. N. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Strootq. Toronto. 1pRUIT, .STOCK, GRAIN AND DAIRY A' Farms in all sections et Ontario. Some snaps. �{ ACTORY SITES, WITII Qla:, WIVIIOUT A Railway trackage. in'Toronto. Brampton and other towns and cities. 11331 ESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN lir Brampton and a dozen other towns. N. W, DAWSON, Colborne St., Torar.to 3000 FR1R HQylESTEADS AND IhI- ! proved farms, $15,00 to $45.00 per acre. Best grain and mixed farming Country. Write Commissioner, Board et Trade, Humboldt, Seek. MALE IOELF WANTED. Ry, T ONCE -MEN TO LEARN BARBER Li. trade; expert instruction: constant practice; tools free; always sure employ- ment for barber. Write for catalogue. Moler Cnlleao. 221 Qneen I4.. To*onto. STAMPS AND 001N5. TAMP coLLic:C•roliy—HOONUltl;.0 1)11". ferent Foreign Stamps. Catalogue.. Album, only Seven Cents. Marks Stacey rem nn nv 'rornn MISOELLA14EOIPS. ANCEtt, 'TUMORS, LUMPS, NTo.,. tl/ internal and external. cured with out pain by our home treatment. Writs as hefore too late. Dr. Bell.man Medias) Co.. Limited. Collinewvood, Ont. The Soul of a Piano is the Actiionn,iinsisvtYpeon The '�e{+p Piano Action 0 "BLUE FLAME" SPECIAL To lower our stork beeJuly 31st--ear stocktaking—we of- fer these eaellent Plugs at $2 Per Set of Four "BLUE FLAMES" give perfect igni- tion and will give a hotter spark than any • plug at this price. RUSSELL MOTOR CAR CO., Limited. Accessories Dept., WEST TORONTO R1CIIU I4ON NAVIGATION CO. 'NIAGARA To THE SEA You will find relief in Za€r-Butt i I it eases the burning, stinging pain, stops bleeding and brings ease. Perseverance, with Zam- Buk, means cure. Why not prove this 7 "in Druguistil and box.'StOrca,— Your Vacation. Trip WHERE TO GO Niagara falls, Toronto, Thou. stud Islands, St. Lawrence Rapids, Montreal, Quebec and the Saguenay River—one of n a t u r e's . most impressive aconic wonders. Low rates for tickets including meals and berths. For infor. oration apply to local ticket agents or Hugh D. Paterson,. Gen. Agt, Toron- to, Ont.. or H. Foster Chaffee, l4Lout. treat Quo. Swedenborg's great work on Heaven and Heil and thelifc after death. 400 pages, only 25 cents postpaid. • H. Law, 486EncliiAre.,Taranto, Ont. Buy a "Ste ,tirt" at a Special Price An overstaok. i"n our warehouse roust be cleaned out before August lst. 'fence the price. Three inch dial -50 mile speedometer enclosed. 10,- 000 mile season odometer. Regular $16.50. Spacial Price 10.80. 'Three, inch dial ---60 tulle speedometer. 10,000 Haile season odometer, Auto- matic resetting trip regis- ter and a guaranteed vetc. lthegular price $27.50. Special Value $1',25. R 1,1 S 8 E L. i. :SIA O "i' -o R GAR, C O Mf P A hf 11', !A Nl I'il" E ° Annetotloriots Department, WEST TORONTO? Branches et Toronto, Montreal, Hamilton, Wlnelpeg, Calgary, Vanaouv'iirr Melaeorrr, Aust,