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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-8-13, Page 3• aWe supply cans and pay express charges, We pay daily by express Morley orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. , To obtain the top price, Cream west be free from had flavors and contain not leas than 30 per cent Batter Fat,' Bo ve i Company Limited, Toronto �E�� fl�ALTH FOR S�EI�IN W4 Aching Lacks and Tired Limbs Need Not be Endured. Too many women endure .suffering that casts a'sliadoty over bale her ex- istenee,. Aching back, tired.limbs, at- 'tacks of faintness, splitting heetenelree need not be it part et a woman's lite. Snell trials indicate plainly that the blood le thin arid watery and that the sufferer needs, the ,bele ,of a real • tonic such as Dr. Williams'' Pink Pills. Suf- ,fering women wile have . used ,this medicine . speak of it in the highest terms, ,Among talose, who- have been thus helped is. Mrs. Ada L, Harman, Virden, Man., who writes:—"Follow- lag the birth of a •still -born .child a few years ago, I had a very seriouS time. ' I was so weak for months that I could not walk across . the room without • a. feeling of faintness. I had scarcely strength enough to stand up, and when dressing would have to sit down two or three times.: My face and lips were colorless, I had ;no apeietite and life did, not seem worth living.. A friend urged ane to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pillsand I got six boxes. Before they were all gone I felt improved, My appetite was returning, color was corn- ing into my face, and I was visibly. stronger. I continued taking ,the pill's' and fully regained- my. former good. health. I consider Ds. Williams' Pink Pills ablessing to weak women, and hope my experience will induce some other: sufferer to try them." • EX -PRESIDENT OPENS COURSE Chief Justice W, H, Taft; ex -President of the United States, replying to the speech of welcome at the Opening of the new 6,000 -yard championship golf course at the Mtinoir Richelieu, Murray Pay, Quebec, jest prior to teeing off with; a:170 -yard drive, Mr. Taft complimented W. H. Coverdale, President of the Canada Steamship Lines, Limited, • on his Company's enterprise in creating one.of the finest •golf courses in Denten], Canada, set among•some of the finest scenery in et part of the Dominion. Play Safe. Poems That Aren't True. "Bet your life I don't," said the How , many wh, have. recited "The chatty drummer to the other "man in Wreck of the 'Hesperus," ,possibly the the smnokee. "I was in Windsorwhen bess't-known .ballad in our literature, they had that last dose of smallpox know that tb:e"famous ship, instead of and.,1 don'tallow any child of mine td being loot with all hands, actually re - go to school Until he fs 'vaccinated, I turned' to poet with no more serious say if a scratch on the aria will pre- damage than a broken bowsprit? vent a fellow getting that, why I'm for Maritime records for the .year 1839 it. The day I arrived, another .chap record a great .storm on December and myselfbumped up against aman 15th, : hen, among. twenty other ves- .: , w who was, just coming down with it. seas, the Hesperus :was driven into Boa - You can -get the e pills from an Y Vheiilfoun J d out about it � tonh as a bit Baur ar .soft is difficult is t as t ambient m icin1 ut ed a dealer,or ail m atc e bei. direct `f by60 cents upset and figured that I was about ten for Longfe'klvw's entry in his diary two from :The Dr, Williams? years old when I was last vaccinated; days • later: „ Medicine C• o., Brookville, Ont. the chap with me hadn't been done at "News of shipwrecks, Horrible. Off all because his father didn't believe In the coast., Twenty Twenty bodies washed When in Doubt. it. I escaped justwith the old scar., ashore off Gloucester, one female be "What does one do' when all the rent He came down about a week later, and ing lashed -to a piece of wreck." He is taken away from one, when life has had a hard "time to come thorough. then mentions details regarding the grown ,trivial, stunted, and narrow?" That's enough for me—vaccination's Hesperus., and -concludes:' "I must This question is asked by a character all right. . 'write a ballad. upon .this:' in "Wages oe Sin, by Lucas Melet. "We commercial men -and of course A. couple of weeks later, he makes The answer given is: "After a time one it's just the same thing with my wife this entry. "I have broken ground in a lights > a candle called Patience and and kiddies, too, when they go away new, field Y namely, btultiadsy• beginning guides one's footsteps by that" from home. -can't afford to take .a with The Wreckof the Hes erus' on Amidp dreary days that is a splendid chance. I think any man:is .mighty, tli,e•reef of Norman's Woe, in the -great light to have, for it will shine when foolish who walks into danger which storm a fortnight ago. I shall send it to every other light is extinguished. It will mean being sick for -six or eight' some newspaper. I have a great n. note a our highest wisdom to have, that lamp weeks? worry and anxiety; to. say note' of working upon i _the"people's feelings," always elean and burning. Many a ing of doctor Mlle, hospitals and 1 An alm'ost equally famous poem is dark path and obscure, turning will be nursese so, that's why I take a shot :Charrles KingsIey's. "Three Fishers." revealed by Patience: of typhoid vaccine every? years They The story so .graphically grapliically.told was the When,we are in a corner or hemmed talk of the soldiers not getting typhoids resultof a fit oflow spirits on the part in by all manner of obstacles, we need diiming' the war ' (and it is true, of of a tired parson. Hope as well as Patience. To lose course), but I'm judging from my own ,„„ Kingsley was very keen on social re - hope when everything seems. against experience. Soxiietimes• on the roadI farm and was regarded in his day as is to be 1 the slough of despair. have had to drink milk and water ani rather. a dangerous type of clerical Patience may become exhausted. It places whichwere proved later to be Socialist. Thus; when he went to may be tried to ivts' last stand; but real nests of typhoid and I haven't had ; preacb, in a West -end church he great - Hope need never bairn out. Sometimes a day's .sic"knees, while three or -four ; l offened `the ane Y umbent and did not It may filcker andspdutter and burn tow times other travellers took the fever I escape a public protest.' "He retutned for a moment, but Faith relights. it. If and were off for six weeks or more; to Eversley Vicarage late that night, Faith failed,,:Love would do the re- this meant' that my dose of. vaccine hut instead of going to bed he paced lighting. : Raved me in money alone'' six or seven ; about his garden. • The next morning Look backeover your past and •you~ hundred•,•dollars E he recited` to his wife the beautiful will discover that we are always being "That vaccine isn't made for noth- 1ine,s: "Three fishers went sailing out helped in this -way. whenatrength is ing, but the money the he ' govern ment into the west." • i 'failing, Patience,nce Hope, Faith or aves e os on'it (it's ail free, Yon know)The story of the boy Felicia Heni•ans 'conies along and woos us back to mean, a real service to the people." ' calls. "Oas'abianca," who "stood on the health and activity. They are never Protection, safe and sure, may be "burning deck". of the .French flagship far away from any of us., had against diphtheria, •scarlet fever, 'Orient and was involved in the 'explo However complex may be the maze, typ'iioitl fever and smallpox. Tested sion of its powder magazine in the Bat there is a way out: The exit has. toproducts .distributed free within the tee of the Nile, is not well authenti be sonsidere•d, certainly for. it is I' province . by Ontario Department of .oarted. There inay have been such a never self -revealed. .It may be you .are''lI.Health, Spadina House, Toronto, ' boy, bat seeing that he perished with out of the maze before you realize ,its, That often happens. But ddn't oom-1 plain -if in your effort to get through! you carne up againsta barrier Audi .find the.way has a blind end. Go back cheerfully and try again. Keep up a good .heart, laugh at your 'impossibili ties, and say: "It shall be.done." That is a. wonderful tonic. Don't Rye in a 4og if you can pos- sibly be out of -it. Try your hardest • to see daylight. • Things' have their, true proportion's in the light. But never. caiuplain and never blame 'any one except yourself. • Whilst everyone' affects land influences everyone else, no oneeeise is to blame for our mistakes. Wlien you are doubtful what to do, just be advised never to look down. Look up, the sky, the stars above, Will whisper to thee of His changeless - love. We are not . just as specks on the ocean of life, drifting anywhere. We have a work to do, and we are related to a "Divinity :,that ehapes our ends, rough hew them how we may." So, trust thea St r of the Morning, for as certain as night follows, ' the day dent which recalls a famous episode in production of that .most valuable drug, that star wild guide 'you- through pa the life'bf Lord Beaconsfield. quinine By organising the Govern= Not."Going' Just Now. "Why is it we never hearh " t e Watch in the Rhine" any more?" "It's in hock." Minaret's Liniment for Aches and Pains .ibis father itis difficult. to spay who told the story, and it is certain that the poetess draws very largely on hoe sen timental imagination. ' One of the most flagrant crises of a poet Letting imagination ignore facts is furnished by Oliver : Goldsmith, whose "Deserted Village' is one of the most beautiful poems in the language. The poet anticipated criticism' in his dedication of the poem: to Sir Joshua Reynolds.: "I know you will object, and indeed several of onr, best and wisest friends concur in the opinion, that the depopulation it deplores is nowhere to lie seen and` the disorders It laments are only to be. found 1n tete poet's imagin alma" , MOVIE.MAKING ..IN CANADIAN ROCKIES ' i 4ie' buhn naI4d lot may nxovinseg• trpicturesetat rianthd Z'agzi a trifle behind the T7nited Siete tjiere is at least one particular in 'which .ilinericnn, producers are beeozn ing more and niQme dependent upon the Iionlinion for WoDroper product$on of their super -films, And that pavticula le•—ecenery. Thor WV haze their stare, the mechanical contrivances•, their expea once - and their wealth, .but during th ;last few Years. they have leareed,tha for sheer beauty Of scenery and ,,sple dorof "settings, the Canadian Paeifi Rocky Mountains are unsurpassabl That this • discovery wale: made at a is due mainly to one, Mr, Ernest. She man. Two or three' years agd it occurred to Mr. Shipman (who -has irroduee some notable pictures in his time) that there were certain spats in the Rock Mountains, such ae Banff`, Lake Louis Emerald. Lake and their .enviirro which were, on account of their singu- lar ing lar beauty, admirably adapted. to the production of northern dramas. So<he morel -Jailed his forces, placed his 'be.. loved megaphone securely under his arm, and .ethbarked for the Rocky h cuntaiiis•. Here, 'with Henry MacRae directing, he proceeded to'film "The Foreigner" near the shores of Lake Louise, with the magnificent mountains for a back ro and and, d for stage,tone ne ofthe most 'exquisite spots on earth. The result was that, not only did he "pro duce a splendid picture, but that the Rockies sprang into .instant popularity as a setting. for northern dramas. Since. then scores of other "super - films" have • been produced and many villains, have paid the penalty of their foul deeds; many'modest maidens have yielded to the wooing of strong, silent men; m,auy dauntless heroes have faced. the nameless terrors of the Alaskan wilds, on the peaceful shores. of Emerald Lake and the innocent highway between Banff and Windlear- mere, Notable Pictures Screened. The First Vaccinators: Although vaccination le, indissolubly linked with the mlante or Jenner,, there is arxiplinevidenee that it was practised by In...Mere, and othere in the sural districts' of Iileglan,d long before 1iis. el ay. I It w.ae; e0Ininon knowledge '•eanoxrgat ° these people that an thick of ,cowpox a ininiunized the •surfer. er .again.s�t. smaJ1- pox, and it was tt.suai for farm workers to infect themselves and their children. "' with the former complaint to protect them against the latter.' Indeed, twenty-two years before Dr. r Jenner made his first vaccination a farmer named nienaptiu Testy, of it , Downshay, openly adYooated the prac- - tics; but, net being.a medioai.man, he was laughed at for his pains, �' Japanese .VieGardens on e, ' Plan of Paintings, 11 Japanese look upon a ga�•den as a Ship picture, beautifully designed and framed,. mucli as the Occidental looks. upon a painting, Professor Takutna d Tono, landscape apchitect of Waseca University,. Japans told Seattle on a lecture tour of the TTnited .States. Y "Cur Japanese gardens are entirely ' different „groin. gardens in any other u- Dart of the world," Mr. Tono said. "In all Western nations the garden is con-; sidered a collection of rare and beauti- ful plants, flowers, 'shrubs and trees, rather than the picture for which the Japanese strive„apanesc gardens are more nri.turalistic than architectural." Among the most notable pictures screened.. entirely or in part, with the Rockies for a background,• are "Back to God'e• Country," "The River's End," "The Alaskan," "Empty Bands," "The Sky Pilot," . "Glengarry Schooldays," "The Man from Glengarry," "The Val- ley of Silent Men," "Frivolous Sal," "S:trongheart"' and "The Foreigner." The chances are that those who gaze in silent admiration on the forbidding beauty of Alaska, the hills + of Shasta or the still Sierras, are, in reality, gaz- ing at something far nearer home, not nearly, . soforleelet ng and infinitely more beautiful -the- Racy Mountains themselves' •.So the United. States may have her r Hd and her )ly of the industry, but now that. the value of the Rockies as a place' where people May shoot the rapids, kill each other, make love, win fortunes and indulge in the other pleasant pastimes peculiar' to moviedoni, has been realized, it is to be hoped that Canada's•p•esiti,on in the. rearm of the silent drama will shortly become more prominent than it has - been in the past, The Rockies are now easily access- ible, there are hotels: at some of the most attractive points, 'the light, at- mosphere and other conditions are good, and there is no reason in the world why they should noteeventually become a veritable "Hollywood of the Hills." Stories About Well -Known People Quiet Heroism. Sir David Praia, until recently ,director General Sir . George Higginson, who of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. celebrated his ninety-ninth birthday re- The medal specially marks Sir Gently, was office the hero of an Incl- David's work in connection with the fiance. and hope to viotbry end joy. The General was taking his wife, ' inent's cinchona plantations, which an who was•jnet.recovering from a severe illness, to Bournenouth. • At Win- ch:esrter he called• a porter and gave nually yield vast quantities of, quinine,. Graphite In Greenland. , The' world's richest deposits of graphite, sufficient for large seats min- ban some order. The man executed it, saved countless lives. - 1 g for ten 'years,' were recently die= and then swung the door to. The Gen- '' . A Duty .Performed. covered in Greenland. 'eral's fngereewere caught in it, but he Novelists as well as• prophets, ft ap- The royal yacht Alexandra, former - made no comment,` though, he must pears, lack honor in their own country. is, belonging to King Edward, has now have been suffering the most excruei- At least Sir James, Barrie does: In been sold and will be usedfor pleasure 'ating pain. But not until he had lire Meteories and Adventures., Sir Arthur trips to Norway. rived at his destination, and had seen Conan Doyle• tells •of the tolerant but his wife safely installed in her hotel, en—enthusiasticoattitude that Sir James' did he have his hand seen to. ` oldneighbors at, l 1rriemuir adopted. Quiet heroism like this seems to bea toward him. chraracteristc of our race. Another'; - "leirriemuir folk conld by no means , good example of it was provided. dur-und�ers•tand Barrie's. success and look- ing the daylight raid of June 13th, 1917.' ed upon their great .son as an Inez - The Shoreditch County Court was sit- plicabie phenomenon. They were ac- ting at the time, and• though bombs tually aware, however, that tourists were falling all round, and one of them were arriving from all parts to see the made a big hole'n the ceiling, the pro-lace,On account of Barrie's booker:• p ;eeedings uiotitinued. ( " 'I suppose you have read them; I "If we are to die, let use dielin brave said to the wife of the Pocal hotel nian. Englishmen 'should," observed Judge "o'Aye, I've read tb•ente and steep, Cliuer, and' a girl who was fa the wit- steep, weary, veerk it was,' said she." b,eseeboa declare•d her readiness to con •A Titid Typist Now, Untie if no one fainted, Counsel then ` e Yp Week by wbek resumed has cross-examination. thatcome; ober of one dnoth er aer areeiber of tale Bre The Quinine King. tisk aristocracy has gone into the "For the applicati•en of botany to the l world of business, Lady Constance development of the raw materials of1 I cwaivt:, easter of the Countess of Car - the L`lnipire," the Society of Arts has lisle, is, the latest: • She has turned ed he bas brought ;thisdrug within reach of •every part of the world has, thereby WE WANT CHURNING for referellcos-TXead Office, Toronto, Bank of lefontreai, or your local banker. titlili hed for over tlfirtY years. ,, awerded the Albert Medal for 1925 to stenographer and typist: Romance of Opals. The news that a valuable black opal has been found by a "n:oodier" in Queensland will ,probably leave un- moved most people in this country. Yet there is romance behind the brief ea- r auacement. n1'auncement. The black opal is one of the costliest of, gems, as it is also one of the most elusive. This is being exploited to -clay hymen, mostly Chinese, termed Hood lers," who rake over the heaps of de- bris from old abandoned workings in search of opals thrown away through not being seen. 'On the face of it this sounds rather like looking for needles in haystacks. Yet many noodiers, it is asserted, earn good money. ' • Lincoln Was Resigned. Even. Abe Lincoln, though never noted for -his beauty, had some pride in his,.a,ppearance• One day, the story is told, while going down the street, he met a roan wwhio looked him over closely and drew a gun on him. "Stranger," the moa eald, "I swore that if I ever met an,0ne homelier than I was, I would shoot him on sight" "Brother," drawled Abe, "If I'm home- lier than you, I reckon you might as welt" World's Biggest Bluff. The island of Formosa in the south Pacific possesses• the highest sea oliffs lo the world. The total yield of_ poi•ntoes in 1924 in Canada is estimated at 56,648,000 cwt. from 561,628 aures, as, compared with 55,497,000. cwt. from 560;942 acres in 1923. Woodland covering • 15,000 acres near. Stettin, Germany, has been burn- ed down as the resu;t of sonisane carelessly throwing down a lighted eigarette, •i Ocean Rich in Minerals. The total amount of • any of theele• mentis occurring in the entire ocean is stupendous, says "Thrift M agazin . r Iodine exists in sea water only to the extent of about two parts per million, yet the entire ocean contains some 60,000,000,000 tons of iodine, valued at present prices a' $540,000,000,0.00,000. Bromine is also obtained in a limited way from the mother liquor left after the crystallization of salt from sea water. A gallon of sea water contains ap- proximately a quarter of a pound of salt, and since the average density of rock salt is 2.24 times that of water, the entire ocean, if dried up, would yield approximately four and a half cubic miles of salt.. CHILDREN DEEP CHILDREN WELL DURING Ha WEIMER Every mother knows how fatal the hot summer months are to small child- ren. Cholera infantum, diarrhoea, dysentery, colic and stomach troubles• are rife at this time and often a pre- cious little life is lost after only a few hours illness. .The mother who keeps Baby's' Own Tablet§' in the house feels safe.' The -occasional use of the Tab- lets prevent st omac hand bowel trou- bles., or if trouble comes suddenly wit generally does—the Tablets will bring the baby safely through. They are sold byrrre � ' ' dlcme dealersor by mail . at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Safe From Criticism. "`I was afraid my sermon last Sunday would annoy some of my people, but it didn't," said the vicar. "What was your subject?" asked his friend. " `The Duplicity of the Average'Man,' and I spoke pretty • plainly." "You coul•dntt tread on any corns that way. Every man considers him- self above the average." Minard's Liniment for Corns and Warts Same Eggs. • Upton Sinclair was condemning, in Los Angeles, the extortions of the mid- dleman. "In pre-war days," he said, "the middleman sold us eggs for thirty cents, a dozen. Now he makes. us pay ninety cents a dozen. And the worst if it is"— Mr. Sinclair gave a grim laugh. "They're the same eggs.' Buddhas InePearl. Miniature Burriiais are inserted into oysters in China to make pearl Bud. dhas. Wells have now to be driven to a depth of over 220 feet under London to reach water. A century ago the pressure of undergroend water was sufficient to bring water to the sur- face wherever a boring was made. +tried in ri wkctisr. m (Ain -TIGHT) T) `,`r fly it) II 11111 I I 1 IIi 11lIt The Tobctcco orQuality Superstitions ns of Alaskan Eskimo. Alaskan Eskimos . have established ideols of astronomy, :slays Lionel Tra- vis, trader, who spent many years with. the northern naitives. They call the Great. Dipper a herd of caribou spread out for mutual protection, with a long single fila• of leaders. The Wang -trier stars of Cassdopeia are three stones supporting an all lamp. The Pleiades are teams of dogs pursuing a polar bear. The new moon is either wet or dry by its curves. If the curve is' capable ofof h ding a Harpoon line wet and stormy weather Is due, so Eskimo hunters remain in the igloos. Should the curve_permit the lariat to slide off, the oven hurry forth to seek game. The Eskimos also maintain supersti- tions upeistitions about eclipses and falling stars all of which apparently control the weather, ice conditions, thee abundance of game or fur bearers. Naffs Given Better Hold: Packing cases coming from Europe have been found fastened together with tenpenny nails that have spiral flutes in the sides to afford a better grip on the wood. The grooves also decrease the likelihood of splitting the board and help in driving the nail straight. a It is usually the case that we are neither so happy nor so unhappy as WE) imagine ourselves. Od P e c Bitro-Phosphite feeds the nerves and old people need it to make them feel and look younger. It's the one best nerve builder for weak, nerve -ex- hausted men and women and that is. why we guarantee it. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East, Toronto, Ont. A ! A I LETES Minard's is wonderful for the rub -down. Takes out the stiffness, soothes the bruises. A Rejoinder. Leonard Bacon, who wee one of the. best-known. theologians in. New Eng- land a half century ago, was attending a conference, and some assertions he made in. hds address were vehemently` objected to by a member of the opposi- tion. pposition. "Why," he expoetuiate•d, "I never. heard of such a thing in all my life." "Mr. Moderator," rejoined Bacon calmly, "I can not allow my opponent's ignorance, however vast, to offset my knowledge, however entail." iy> r� z Vov" EYES Refreshes Tired Eyes L Write MurineCo.,Chicago, forEyeCare13ook FAG.E. AS DISFIGURED With Pinples. Terribly . Cu1icira Healed. " My trouble began with black- heads and pimples on my face. The pimples were large, hard and very red, and some of them, festered, They were terribly itchy causing me to scratch and the right side of my face was disfigured. The ir- ritation kept me awake, and my face was a sight. • ` I read an advertisement for Cu. ticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased more and before long I saw a wonderful change. 1 continued the treatment and now I am healed." (Signed), Miss Louise MacDonald, Box 172, Mary St., Newcastle, N. B. Use Cuticnra to clear your skin. sample- Hach Free by Mail. Address lanadian Depot: •Btenhonge, Ltd, Montreal," P,,ce, Soap 25c. ointment 26 and 50c. Talcum 26c, Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. TIRED OOT ALL THE TIME Nerves Gave Little Rest Relieved by Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound Proved safe by millionsand prescribed by physicians for Headache Neuralgia Colds Lumbago g g Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism Accept only "$dyer" package winch contains proven directions. bandy "Bayer" boxes of 12, tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. .Asisitht trade mark (registered In Canada) ,of .diaper Manufacture oisohotteetio, tateesta $Altviln€td (Motel stalest;€ ,net,;, .A:. S, a,")title It 1$ wen known Aeitirin turns ttar€r mann aalure, to eaglet the tilibfis,agaiWhile lmltatfoit , the Tablets ofsIlayer iompaay wan, be atanipei with, their solicit; trade alurk, the "liay®t CJte$,P' Harrowsmith, On tario. —"I took your medicine before my baby was born and ggig@ g$Bi it was a great help 11;1& a to me as 1 was very poorlynntil I started to take it. I just felt as though I was tired out.alI the time and would talce weal:, fainting spells. My nerves would bother me until 1 could get little rest, day or night. I was told by a friend to take Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vege- table Compound, and I only took a few bottles and it helped me wonderfully. I would recommend it to any woman. I am doingg what I can to publish this good, medicine. I lend that little book: you sent met) any onoI can help. You an with the greatest o.f'pleasure use my name in regard to the Vegetable Compound if it will serve to help others.". --MRs. autvis Y MILLIGAN, R, R. No. 2, Harrowsmith, Ontario. In a recent canvass of purchasers d Lydia E. 'Pirikhaffes Vegetable Come pound over 100,000 replies were received and 08 out of every 1:00 said they had been helped by its use. This medicine p is tor, safe byall druggists. . ISSUE No. 5.4--g2h