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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-7-16, Page 3NEW STRENGTH FOR WEAK GIRLS Can be Rad Through the Rich, Red -Blood Made by. Dr. Wil - Elms' Falk Pills. There, comes a time• in, the life of almost every girl whin .weakuoss at- tacks her. The strain upon her blood supply .is too great;, and there comes headaches and backaches, loss Of•appe- tite, attacks 'of dizziness, heart` palpi- tation, a constant weariness and a tendency to a decline., All these symp-. tom's may not be present in any par - titular case but the presence'oe any one of them, shows the necessity for Prompt treatment. And the very, best treatment is •through the .blood -mak- ing - tonic qualities of Dr. Williams' Pinar Pills. They are tile •one• •thing needed to maintain the health of grow- ing girls and women of mature years. Here is a bit of strong proof: ---Miss Matilda' Brenn, King Highway, New castle, N.B., says :="I' was in an "ex- tremely' run-down and nervous condi- tion. I,was losing flesh, had a poor ap- petite, always pale, and suffered fre- quently from headaches. In fact ray condition can best be described as - miserable. I had tried several- treat- , ',.meats but they did not help me in the least.. Then, reading one day about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, I decided to try them. After using three boxes I was niuchilnproved, but continued un- been a remarkable one in many re til I had taken, six boxes, with the re- spects..: In 1915: the value of these suit that I am. now well and strong, fisheries was $1,002,947, indicating an with good color and a hearty appetite. •increase in the value of production in In. view 'of what Dr. Williams' Pink the nine-year period of more than one 'Pills have done foe me I cannot re- commend them, too highly." You can get these Pills frgm any medicine dealer, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Poplar in Kent. There's a lar o • ,t as and besidea wall PP In the little Pillage of Hayes, in Kent, That very often I recall— - With au ocean between and a" con- tinent. I [1T LE FOR,Torg T • • 11 fzinilen of "D'uteli •Setiters mecentlg* ariiti ed 'in"'Western- Canada over Canadian 14ational Railways after crossing from,Antwerp on the S.S. Zeeland of the Red Star. Line. Many settlers of this type are moving to the prairie provinces during the presentseason and they give promise of becoming splendid farmers: PRAIRIE PROVINCE FISHERIES " death, They have •way of poisoning the blood streamjust as rage and pas- sion do, and they leave us limpand --o The coliimercial development of the fisheries of the Prairies Provinces has The -West` is good, and its sun -burnt men Are 'friendly; but still, from a rainy isle - Come'to me memories now and then; Ther 's a • belfry in yew -trees; a rus- tic stile; There's an ivied wall and a blackbird's trill; • A haze of bluebells, beneath .beech trees;, A.ploughrnan ploughing a,, loTig, 'grey hill, With rook behind; be ind; I remember .these. There's even :a pew, in .a time -stained inn, Polished by Serge adown the years, Through the dusky window the gold of whin, se But mostly, remembering, there ap- pears A curve of road by a red brick wall In the little village of Hayes, in Kent, The poular balancing over all — Across a sea and a continent. -Frederick Niven; British Columbia. One of the most surprising discover- ies of the German expedition at Ashur was a' tablet containing an account not only of the Creation, but also of the long -sought Babylonian Garden of Eden, the fall of man, his destruction and re-creation, and the redemption of the gods by the "death and resur- rection of Marduk. , - WE WANT CHURNING We supply cans and ,ay express charges. We pay daily by express money orders, which Mn be cashed anywhere without any charge; To obtain the top price, . Cream must be free from bad -flavors and contain not less. than 30, per cent. Butter fiat. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto 'For references—Head Office, Toronto. Bank of Montreal, or your•local banker. Established for over thirty .years. ►I•,!UNDOy� p OR' :l A 'HERBALIST For Removing Tonsils and. Adenoids or any form of Goitre ` without operation call to lee Dr. Thuna. • Maili Office and Laboratory 426 Queen St. W. Toronto Tel. Trinity 9771 - nches: 2 0 Br a 2 6 Queen St. East, Cor. Leuty Ave., Tel. Gladstone 0408;, 298 Danforth Ave., Tel, Gerrard 7275. Cal;' or write. hundred per cent.. The •capital invest- ed in the industry in the three pro- vinces in 1924 was $1,060,5117 as com- pared with $973,859 in the previous year, each province recording an in crease. In the same period the num- ber of employees in the industry in creased from 3,697 to 4,411. The market for the growing volume of fisheries h es production of the Prairie Provinces is in•the United States, par- ticularly' in the g'i'nat Middle West, whither it travels from the great in- land lakes in special refrigerator cars. The product of the -prairie waters, how- ever, is coming into continually in- cresing favor much farther afield, and •shipments are continually growing to the Eastern States. .In certain points in Manitoba in, 1924, shipments to the 'United. States increased by 75 per, cent. whilst from Winnipeg close on 500,000 pounds of Manitoba whitefish was in the season shipped to i New York and Boston each week. In the last fiscal year- the United States bought from Canada 106,233 cwt. of whitefish worth $1,147,356, almost all of 'which came. from the Prairie Provinces. Remarkable es has been the develop- ment of -the fisheries of the Prairie Pro- vinces,, it is virtually insignificant in view of what they might be made to produce with a greater and reasonable development of their logical markets. The amount of fish in the numerous mighty lakes of Western Canada is be- yond computation, and with the intelli- gent methods of •conservation estab- lished -by the Government their produc- tion can be multiplied many times without the remotest danger of deple- tion or exhaustion. Canada, is con- sidered comparatively to have a very low fish . consumption with about' 25 pounds per capita per year, but the consumption of fish in the United States is stated to be less than five pounds per capita per annum. It is said that many of the inland states have barely a speaking` acquaintance with this valuable article of diet, lack- ing a local Supply, and this large area as well as the field of the greater part of the United States is. the logical mar- ket for ar-ketfor the fisheries of the Prairie Pro- vinces. Smiling ani Frowning. A medical writer states:' "To frown, you =use sixty-four ,muscles, but to smile,only thirteen." So that less energy is expended in smiling than in frowning. Certainly.- in spiritual and moral things- it is infinitely better and more progressive. There is no better advertisement of happiness and suc- cess than the smile. Watch the people in your street. Their, faces will assert the type of life they are' living. Our features•. are re- markable indicators of the inner life. How many of them are sad and depres- sed! epres-sedi Could ; peaple but know that fret and fume and frown and fear and wor- ry are the slow poisons of human life, they would probably pass them over. -What good does it do to be anxious? What good does it do anyone? Things get worse Instead of better with it. The 'end is not reached any easier or quicker, but we are left to go on with. diminished strength. Nothing good -ever Came by brooding over troubles - either our own or those of other pea pie. hlrowning has fellowship with nega- tive things. Success never comes that way. Only as. we claim the positives do we move towards the goal of attain - 'meat, As you frown you entice the drab and grey- things of. life and we always •become like the things we look at and live with. Get into touch with life's harmonnes and you will see things in a very different color, All that is dethroning in life comes from the same sources as the frown, Misunderstandings, slights, reisconeep- tlonsr scandals, selfishness; and sins aro all black l b fellows and give rise to the scowls by which ourneighbors are often presented' to us. Not only do they look ,-black, but they are the very wretched. Nobody wants to have much to do with people who look always on the seamy side of things. , Faultfinders, grumblers, cantangeeous and non -smil- ing people. are . those we desire to strike off our list of friendships. • They have to be tolerated. The law forbids these "Mrs. Gunimidges," these "lorn, lone creatures" who dwell amidst the mourners, to be put away until- they naturally cease to be. They are weary, wanton creatures. On the otlrer hand,there is some- thing buoyant and cheery and breezy about any person who can live above his surroundings—that is, can. find something to cheer in every state, and who prefers to ponder, on the bright- ness of the sun rather than discover the spots on it. If we' would sing and whistle and lough more,heartaches would be few- er. Laughter is a contagious thing. It cane forth a similar response. People ecel. the tingleof life, and experience its thrills as they laugh. And there is such a lot In lifeto smile over. Lighthouses for Air -Liners. Before many years have' passed, "By Air to Anywhere" will be a suitable ad- vertisement for the world's service of - air -liners; and just as ' ocean- routes resulted in our coastal lights, so. these air routes will produce lighthouses for the guidance sof air traffic. The first of- a series of these light- houses has just been •completed • on the outskirts of Dijon, on the top of Mont Afrique, •a hill 'about 1,800ft. high. It is one of•several that; will: -).nark the air route. from Paris to Algiers. The Iight Illas sa, strength of eight hundred and seventy-four million candle-power, and gives a flash that will be visible on a clear night for over 300 miles. A similar lighthouse is to be built in the neil hborhood of Paris. At the same time comes news of a proposed survey, to cost $45,000 ,of an air route between Kenya and Khar- toum, andthere can be no doubt that Africa, once• the Dark Continent, will loom large in air annaisrand will pre- sently have: many such lighthouses as the one at Dijon. Big' Game. "Why do you call /ours a sports model car?" . . "'Cause it gets more pedestrians than any other type of car." Your Wonderful .Eye. - Few people realize the extreme min- uteness of the image received by the eye, according to Dr. Fraser Harris in the "Optician and Sciehtfije Instru- ment Maker." The eye is a camera which has a double, convex lens in front, a sensi tire plate (the retina) behind, and is blackened inside, and, nein �a , the plate of the photographer's camera, the image dn the retina is upside down. The centre surface of the retina is i only about one square Inch, a very'' Small portion of it receiving the image of the outer world. Thie portion where - the image is received is a specialized, ff� slightly hollowed Spot about one- I twelfth of an inch in diameter=the macula lutea. .• The photographic camera is "adjust- ed for light by stops; the eye camera, by little muscles that dilate or cons tract the pupil. ' • E ire• Prevention. 'The Provincial 'Eire Marshall has been to Woodsteek ib present to the wi4nklnK,.$40uts t,�heetedalswen in con vection with the Fire Prevention' con - Lest. The declared •winners are :Stoats Elmer Lick and Harold Prestage,°each having submitted excellent papers. About forty•Scouts gathered together in . iiors'e-shoe, formation. under the di= rection of the Scoutmaster. A few very appropriate verses were read from the book of Proverbs, after which the group, repeated.' the Scout's Law: -Fire Marshall `Heaton' in his address said; "We in Toronto appreciate very Im uch the Boy Scouts' work, There Is no better work for the Scouts • than to learn fire prevention and to know what to do and how to do it, when. the oc, casion arises,"' In presenting the Medals he said it gave him -very great pleasure to perforin such a duty,and 4' lie congratulated both of the boys on I. their splendid papers, confessing him- self that it was necessary for him to look up some of the questions on the ' examination papers to find out the cor- rect answer. -He emphasised that fire prevention easily comes within the purvey of the Scouts' Motto—"lee Pre- pared." Patrol Leaders. A' very successful Patrol Leaders' Conference has just concluded in Ham- ilton. So much good was accomplished that it was unanimously decided to hold 'more of them. This is a step' which 'might well" be taken by other cities and towns. In the Patrol Lead- er youliave the leader of the gang; he is responsible for the progress, well being, in fact nearly everything per- taining .tothe gang, and whether the whole Troop is efficient or not rests very largely upon :• him. Boy leader- ship is the goal towards which we .must strive more and more, and con- ferences are very helpful to this end. Oantping• There are many little hints with re- gard to. Camping which, if remember- ed, will make all:- the difference' .he tween` a profitable and an unpleasant time. In camping you must not forget the ground sheet. It is more important to have one under you than to have half a dozen blankets over you. As a substitute for the approved ground sheet you might have a piece of table oil cloth, a large rain coat, or a. heavy pieceof. canvas: Be careful • of ex- posure too' suddenly to the sun;s, rays. A sun bath is an excellent thing, but the way to take it in small quanti- ties at a ti neenntll finally you'eair'al- most With immunity'expose your whole body (not: the head) ,for several hours together and benefit froth it. If you should get wet end suffer from the' cold there is. nothing better than a good rub down- with a rough. towel. ' Be particular in not having the tent flap closed entirely: Fresh air is one of the things you have gone to Camp • to enjoy, and it is good night' and day. In the daytime give the; tent and its contents an airing—oat everything. Don't overfeed or over drink, and whatever else you don't do remember that 'at meal times your behavior should not be any more disorderly than it would be at home; and don't • forget Grace. Hiking. Numerous reports have come to hand respecting individual and party hikes being taken or planned. There is nothing -more exhilarating than a well planned Hike, It should be well plan- ned—boots, feet, stockings, packs, dis- tance to be travelled each day, the objectives -these and many, •other de- tails enter into the make up of a pro- fitable Hike. Then having . done all this, and at last you are on the road, try plenty of singing, and be sure and have: your note book at hand so. as to make,. notes of everything of interest, and otherwise, that is seen and felt. March along, march along, singing all the while, ' Shouting out a rousing song, as we reel off mile on mile. -, March along, march along, spirits never fail, • When, again we are on Stir way, on 'the good old open trail. • Why Worry? Worry never yet has made Life's pathway any, clearer, °- Only brought the jagged stones Just a little nearer. Worry never yet has helped .,To climb the roelts ahead, Only made the climb the worse For weary feet to -tread. Worry never yet has tried To make the dark seem fair, But makes so much of whatshe sees She doubles all that's. there. Although Waterloo oo. and 'Charing Cross Stations, London, are only a few hundred yards apart, a heavy loco - Motive had to travel 100 miles, by way of Guildford, Redhill, and Tun- bridge Wells, to get from one termi-. nus to the other. 13y Government orders, ,no more than 100,000 eeuls Mee' be taken from he Behring Strait in any one year. things- that create dims() and end in t Sentence Sermons. ` I Will Not Allow---Bittereess, le rob me of my faith in men. •• —Suspicion to steal away my faith. .in men: —Envy to spoil my enjoyment of what I can afford, ' Gossips,;:e to tempt ine into mud slinging. —Any mob to do • thy ,f'binking for me. Criticism to frighten rue from the ' performance of duty.' 6.- —Intolerance to blind al e to t1�. fact that other men are also sincero Dangerous Ozone. Ozone is really oxygen--nc' the el• - (Hilary oxygen we breathe, bet an in- tensified .form of it. Ilepcet what ovy• gen will do, ozone will dowith greater power. yresh air, containing plenty of oxygen, is good fbr'ins; how much better, then, is "ozonized" air? Nevertheless, oh account of its potency only 'very little.'ozonershould be present in the air we 'breathe,': Wner'e oxygen merely makes 'fire pose, Bible, ozone causes exceeetve eoriea- ` giation; -many things thatare ordin- arily incombustible burn in it rubber rots c , "burns" in It in a- few seinutes,' land so ;do` the soft'tissues of thus passages, lungs, and eyes. Even In the freshest air of the sea coast or mountain top the pzone pre sent is infinitesimal, not enough to be smelled, though the odor of seaweed is, often mistaken for it,. It is formed naturally' by the action'' of the sun's: ultraviolet rays on the upper atmosphere, but it is .. 'absent- from the air of -big cities because,;dw ' ing to its' aptivity, it destroys or "burns up" all, sorts of organic matter lik%' dust and soot, and is itself used up in-` doing so. , This characteristic activity of ozone, i combined with the"fact that its action leaves behind only,pure, harmless oxy- gen, makes it at once a powerful, and a "safe" disinfectant. ' It is manufactured, eldetrically,•on a large scale for use in the arts, as well as for cleansing wounds,. ventilating meeting -houses' and zoos, and keeping fresh the water in aquariums. By its use, too, the water supplies'" of such towns as' Lille a `Ond I:en,ngrecl axe ster- ilized. zone was first noticed 'in 1785_ by du Marvin, Fifty odd years ilater, Schonbein, the. friend of our great Caraday, found that the smell was due to a special gas formed from the"ail'" by the electric discharge. He it was who named the • gas " , "ozone.meaning ;'the smelling stiff." : a UNSURPASSED E CHILDHOOD AILMENTS Mrs.'- Howard •' King, R.R. No. 5, Truro, N.S., says :—"I am the mother of four children and have always used Baby's. Own Tablets when any of them needed a medicine and I -can recom- mend the Tablets as being unsurpass- ed for childhood ailments." Thous- ands of other mothers agree with Mrs. Kingas to the merits' of the Tablets. There are thousands of homes through- out Canada' wherd the Tablets are-al- ways real-ways kept on hand in readiness' for the least sign of any of the minor ail- ments which afflict little ones. Baby's Own Tablets never fail to regulate 'the stomach and bowels, thus they bahish "constipation and indigestion; ' break up -colds and simple fevers; relieve colic • and bring the baby through that dreaded teething period •in safety. The Tablets never do harm—always -good —as they are guaranteed absolutely free from any injurious drugs, They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Wil- liams' Medicine. Co., Brockville,; Ont. Made Rich by Rain. When one speaks of.'weather making a place richand populous, one's first thought is naturally of health and plea- sure leasure resorts where blue skies sand sun- shine are usual and rain scarce. But there are many places that owe their success to bad weather: Dufftown, in Banffshire, possesses no fewer than seven large distilleries and is famous for the fine quality of its whiskey, Ret Dufftown is one of the wettest places in Scotland. The average rainfalh,must be some- thing like fifty inches a year, or much more than double that of London. Now; the quality of whiskey depends largely upon the water used rn the distilleries, and probably Dufftown's big rainfall gives the water supply needed for the production of the finest type of spirit. Manchester and • its neighboring cities have a damp, atmosphere th'at is particularly adapted to the .,spinning of cotton, and these places would be in a fix if the rainfall were suddenly halved. For similar climatic reasons Belfast has become the world's centre of the linen trade. Belfast has 231 rainy days out of 365, and this Suits both the growth of flax and its manu- facture. For Every III—Minard•s Liniment. 1� PER P1(0 -�*► afie int h lb YACM1W41(Aillt '1'MiNI'.1w7°tG ) he T�bac'c� "Quality Still Blowing Hard. n Two young lawyers, both trying to make reputations as orators, happened to be, Pitted against each other in ar- gument. Both spoke at great length, and in closing the second 'speaker re- marked that he was sorry to find his colleague on the wrong side, for there was every reason why they should agree. "We were brought up together, ; we studied together, and we were born on the same day." "Did I understand you to say that youwereborn on the same day?" ask- ed the judge. "Yes," came the prompt reply. "On the very same day?" "Yes, sir." "Then it must have been a very windy day:" 1, 4,emarkabie results are claimed for a new glass recently tested in. London. This allows the' health -giving ultra- violet ltraviolet- rays of sunlight to -pass,' so that patients may derive the full benefit of sunshine treatment with- out going out of doors. Classified Advertisements SALES ORGANIZER WANTED. AIME FLAVORING EXTRACT nousa. .selling direct to homes. Want, bright energetic man or woman as sales organiser in each county. Right party can easily make. $30 s creek. Craig Bros., Desk B., Niagara Falls, Ont.. ., STlUMA'! Spread-Minard's o A n brown paper ' and apply to the throat. A 1 s o inhale. Qu i c k relief assured. Her Social Secretary. Hilda—"Now, mother, try to remem- ber what 'I want you to do: If Harry combs, telephone Jack that. I can't meat him because I've to keep gota n appointment with George." -Q- Keep Minard's .Lrniment in the House. Inmates of British prisons entitled to have library bOoks have been known to ask for text books onhigher mathe- matics and advanced science. IIIHNEYOu Flew Eyes But you din Promoted Clean, Beall byCondit ion QUER El lSUaeMarine Eye Remedy Night and Morning." Becp your Eyes Clean, Clear and MeaitisJi Write for Free Eye Care,Book. =In si Eczema On Hands For Two Years C iticur aHe� Healed " For about two years I suffered. with eczema on my hands. It started with small scales and then turned to a rash and was very sore and red. It itched terribly at times and kept spreading until my fin- gers were covered with it. .I could not put my hands in water nor do any work. x did not get niuch sleep at night on account of the irritation. " I used ; other remedies without much success. I saw. Cuticura Soap and Ointment advertised and sent for a' free sample. After using it I purchased more and in a month's time I was completely benled." (Signed) Lawrence Chauvin, West Chazy, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1924. Make Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment your every -day toilet prepa- rations and have a clear, sweet skin, soft smooth hands, and a healthy scalp with good hair. Cuticura Tal- cum is unexcelled in purity. Sample Each Pree by Mae•. Addrfoe Canadian Depot: otenbouse, Ltd, Montreal. Price, Soap 25e. Ointment 25 and O0c. Talcum 25,. SW. Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c,. Improve Your TO EXPECTANT Appearance MOTHERS More Phosphate if you want your complexion to Near, eyes to brighten, and skin to become soft and smooth. Thin, nerve -exhausted people grow strong on Bitro-Phosphate and drug gists guarantee it. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East, Toronto, Ont. 'Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Headache Neuralgia Colds.. Lumbago Toothache 'Neuritis Rheumatism Acte t only "Bayer" package, which contains proven directions, Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggiste. Ao+'lrin 'Is they Mite 'fnark (reglatered h Canaria) of payer i,itnuThcturC et riosoaretie- ecideotre or Saligylicticiti (Act r1 t:,ltc;rllc Acid, "A, S. e."), While it to Weil keouti that .M1riirili nieces Bever nllittuencteeii, to iipidst the pubild n5aindt linitettoes. the tablets if Bovet COn4lny' will be pumped 'With .titch general trail() stark, the "3iaror Cross," Pain Letter from Mrs. Ayars Tells How Lydia E. Pinkhaan's Vegetable Compound Helped Her Helped Spring Valley, Sask.--"I took the Vegetable Compound before my last confinement, when I got' to feeling so badly that I could not sleep night', m back ached.sb across my hips, and I. could hardly do my work during the day. I never had such an easy confinement and this is my sixth baby. Iread about Lydia B. 'Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound in the `Farmer's Telegram ' and wrote you for one of your books. Wei have no druggist in our town, but I saw your medicine in T. Eaton's cataloguer I am a farmer's wife, so have all krndd of work to do inside and outside the house. My baby is a nice healthy girl who weighed ;nine pounds at birth. I am feeling fine after putting in a large, garden since baby carne. (She is as good as she can be.) Yours is the best~ Medicine' for women, and I have told about it and even written to my friends about it." --•• • Mrs. Atatn 7 E. AYAIze, Spring' Valley, Sask, Lydia E. 1,nkham's Vegetable Com= pound is an excellent imedicine for ex- peetant mothers, and should be taken during the entire period It has a gen- eral effect to strengthen and tone up the entire system so that Y it may work in every reaped as nature intends. All Tr_ligx stn sell this dependable Medicine.. a trial, Give t i al Y o Int UE No. 28----14,