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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-9-24, Page 7g EA1)QY t1 Condition 71!at., Calls :fort a Rel> abie TQuic. Many woineu give so enuoh ,of their time to :the pares of their household that they neglect their own, beelth and, sometimes reach the verge. of ar preaak , down before they realize tbat their. Stealth `is chattered, Often the' heart 1 itatee violent! at pli let exertion 7? p y s ,. the stomach fails to digest -food anti discomfort follows, The nerves be - some weak and headachesgrow more frequent, The body grows weak 41 34 they are .,always depressed. ' This condition 'requires imm...i te;treat- ment with reatment'wath such a reliable' thole es Dr. .' Williams' PinkPill which enrich and build upthe, blood,carrying renewed ry g energy to every part of the body. The value of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills in a. rundown condition is proved by the following statement from Mss. Alexa McInnes, Bowsnian River, Man•, 'rho says;—"About a year ago I had axseri- ems ilruess which left nae very anaemic. • I was not able to get a_•ound to do my work; in fact'I could scarcely walk. I was troubi"ed with palpitation of the heart with the least, exertion. One day a friend advised rrie to try Dr. Wil- liams' Piak Pills as •they had done her much good. I followed this advice and took the pills for some weeks when .I felt as well as ever, I Slaveslice been able , to attend to all my household • duties. The dizziness and .palpitation` have left me and r'biess:the'day I tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They are lust the medicine: for tliosen who are weak and rundown." You can got thein pills from any dealer or by mail at bee. a box from Williams'The Dr. Y lMedicine Co'. Brock - vibe, Out. Kiss or Castor OH? • Customer (to little -girl)—"I'll give you a penny for a kiss." , n Little Girl—"Huh! I get more then. - that for taking castor oil," His Rook -Hewn Home. Seventeen years' labor on the part of a Spanish peasant bas resulted in !xis acquiring -a house carved out of a solid rock. It poetesses a balcony, gar- ret, and cellar. Ink stains can be removed by first washing the fabric with vinegar, and afterwards -with a solution or'* one tablespoonful of oxalie acid in five tablespconfuls of water, FOX LFAllM'11C The Breeding or'~ shyer: Foxes will get yon out of debt. It's a sound, interesting and profitable business.. We have cholee re- gistered. breeding stocllw.for -sale. loformatiou free. g1dor-Maepherson Fox Sates Co: 813 King 'Beet, Toronto - The verb-tlrst '0)4 l ; .you think of in connection>Wifili a soda. fountain is�:ice;• --ice erea bs, di'ink ,. diad great eolld` bleeps of 'ice to keep everything eget. Yet the; big modern counters' koop things cool without the aid of^' a single ounce of ice! •A small but anee.zingly. eftecient tee - tor and b. series' or pipes ---that es' all, and the result le the exact degree of coolness desired. Just' a simple apple cation ;of the well-known principle that the expansion, of gas- produces cold, and the Counter that relied on broken ice and -freezing salt promptly became. clunisy, messy, and out of date.!.• When you eat ice:: cream, you think y oti are eating frozen cream and cus tard, So yoti: are, butn exactly halt your portion is made of plain; ordinary air! Put ten gallons of custard into a modern freezer, and it isbeaten up, so thoroughly before it is. frozen that you take out twenty gallons of ice cream. When. you sip your orange or demon fruit drink, you probably imagine it is made of the juice of the fruit, As a matter of fact, the .hest part of the oranges and lemons is the peel! That contains the 'eesmntial oil which gives the flavour to the fruit, and it is this oil that is extracted and made into drinks. In some of the Cheaper flavors, the original fruit is absent., The chemist can make in his' laboratorya very pass- able imitation"- of any fruit in, the world, but naturally these synthetic essences are not so good and whole- some as the real thing. 0 Seeing the Joke. Visitor (to newlywed)—"Sd you are not'getting tired- of studio life, eh?" L?rtiata wife—r Good gracious no! It's most interesting. Jim paints, and I rook. ; Then the game 'is to • guess what the things are meant for." We supply carte' and pay expr se eharoes. We pay daily by express tnoney orders, wbAeli .can be cashed anywhere without any charge - To obtain the top trice, .-Cream must be tree from had flavors Arad contain not less than. 30 per cent. Batter Fat• Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For references—Heal1 ()Mee, Toronto, • Bank of Montreal, your real or local banker: Established for over thirty years. One Great Advantage. n e MIss Greene had spent' forty minutes trying to improve the tastes of her Young pupils in things • literary and dramatic. • "Now,, o boys," she said at the end of the lesson, "what is the name of the play I nave teen reading to you?" "'Hamlet; miss!" answered the class in, unison. "And who wrote this play?" was her next qud'stion. "Shakespeare," chorused the boys,. "Now, 'Willie," said Miss Greene to a boy who, she noticed, had not ansa wered with the rest, 'which would you rather be, Shakespeare .or Charlie Chaplain?" "(earlth Chaplin, miss!" was the un- expdi ted eniever. ' "Why, pray?" "'Cause he ain't dead, miss!" re- plied the young hopeful. A man without character is a work- man , a soldier without . without too�,s s , arms, a traveller without money. r Distemper. Inard a Liniment for m M P THE ECHA9 CORNER Making Your' Ad Frequency of insertion is of vital 1m-. portance in ativertiei: g. The most spectacular and ,thrilling news item is quickly out of` the 'public mind:- The. next day there is something else to divide or absorb beterest. The largest and most aetouzdiug, advertisement snakes hut a fleeting impression, To Blake a profitable impression in advertising, it, must -bekept up eon- tinuallyand be ever fresh' and new: To the new .advertiser his flint ad- vertisement is to him the most import- ant news item in. the Paper;that day. He is starting out on a business -getting undertaking of practically unlimited• possibilities. Naturally his personal interest in that advertisement is extra- ordinary. Verylikely he 'expects, an immediate. response ••in cares of the items -advertised :which he can credit to this publicity, and prove that the ad- vertisement has paid for itself. It would he a rare exception indeed 'vertising Known. it that were the case. If advertising { worked that waif- good merchant could in a few years make erough 1 money t'roru his' business to retire should he so desire. Put that is not the way advertising works.,` Advertleing has to earn' its place in public interest through continuity and frequency, and by interesting truthfua nese that inspires confidence. It takes time fora new store to acquire profit- able patronage. It, takes time for ad- vertising to produce profitable returns. It is no more-roasonable to expect the one than it le to expect the other'. It takes continuous, effort for the estab- lished store to hold its own and ad- vance. d-vance. It takes continuous insertions for advertising to hold public interest and increase it. You must have continuous insertions. to make your advertisements known. Rube ' Goldberg's Comic Strip - For the Children Uncle Wiggily comic strip. Freckles and H 1 s Friends comic strip. 3f1cle. Wiggily bed- time story. m Fairy tale. Color cut-out. For the Men Two pages or more of sports, Finanoiel page. Grille and live stook quotations,t "Wbat'e Trump in 1?oultry," Refile • page, Cartoons, pelf fes champions play St, Cbess and checkers problems. Bridge pro»leree. GO1f Champ ions Play 1t Re - d the Teierin Every Evening Latest News.. Best Features Cleverest Comics NE of the world's greatest newspapers is The Evening Telegram. It has more readers in Toronto than any other newspaper. Its Canadian and foreign news ser- vices are unsurpassed. Its edi- torials are courageous and stimu- lating. Every evening it spreads before its readers a veritable feast of enter— tainment --,magazine features for. anon, women, children and the whale family. Read Canada's brightest and cheeri- est newspaper every evening, Buy it at your news agent's or send in ydur subscription. Two cents a day, 50 cents a„month. The Evening TELE Oa To'r'onto, Ontario; Where i ndy Gump Dumb Dora's Adventures For.' the,, Women, Fashion pictures and news. • Recipes. Cornelia's column. • Society news. Tips to housewives. Club activities. For the Family. Dumb Dora comic strip. Rube. Goldberg comic strip. Serial stor'^y. Snort story. With.- the wits -- puzzles, etc, Flapper Fanny says. Auction -bridge : ser- vice. Latest world news. Gluyas Wi111ams' drawings, Iger"l for the Children; DOES IT PAY? Some people Say^that if You are a1 ways going to to right you are going to have a bad time of it. They alert. that it doe not i)aY in business. •or. Oda' life, because the world is steep4 ed in -sharp, praetiees and trade tries. 13uofness'men will say to • one :azt-1 other, in stri frog, a bargain, "1 only want to do the right Wing," and deep' Clown in the lives of us alt we believe it is best to do the right. ' Something tells us so. When we are taking a journey we',iike,to know we are on t#te right read. If we have something to do we are wishful to dolt correctly. 'W'omen like todress in a correct fas- hion, melt want to play aright; all are anxious' that the coming generation should be right. Yet- you sent hear the question ask- ed; ''Does it pay to be honest?" The thing most people stumble over in this world is money. In itself money is never wrong; we make It wrong by applying it to the wrong use. Long years ago it was said that "The love of . money is the root of all evil," If you come' to consider it, most of the trouble in the world is caused through money being abused or by a deep crav- ing for it. People either have too much or too little. Never believe'the man who says: "I don't live for money;' I don't came for it." Ile is not true to himself. Either he has sufficient or he is certain of a free and easy life, Too many pleasant things and experiences can be obtained by money for any of us to despise it. We all want it. ` If we haven'tit we do all we •can to get it; if we have it we r desire more. And, of course, there is nothing wrong in endeavoring to get it. The wrong 'creeps inwhen s t we want mole than our share, and in order to get it adopt means which are unworthy. It is that sort of selfish practice that .makes men say: "To -day you can't be honest." Then there are, for instance, speech and sport ,and love. Does it always 'pay to be right there? Lying is preval- ent. Sport is damaged by an un- healthy professionalism. Divorces sometimes make a laughing -stock of love matters. Often it does seem as though Truth is ever on the scaffold, Wrong for ever on the throrier- Then. one remembers that there is "God within the shadows," A man may gain all the world by his wrong -doing, but he is a fool all the same. At the last the thing that will matter is whether we have done right: not our smartness or. gonial. standing. Unhappy endings to life are causedby the recollection of fraud and deceit,and .the.game.is not worth the candle. Let .no one persuade you otherwise that, finally, truth and good- ness and virtue must win. It is better seemingly to lose with right than ap- peal' to win with the coward. We must be as One who never turned his back but marched breast forward, Never doubted clouds would break, Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph, Held we fall to rise, are battled to fight better, Sleep to wake.. Where the Gold Goes. The world's output of gold is enor- mous. Thirty-five years ago it was lit- tle more than twenty millions a year; now it is over one hundred millions. Even so there it not enough to go round. The reasons for this are the quantity of the precious metal used in arts and crafts, and the even larger quantities hoarded and lost. Jewellers are the heaviest con- sumers. Every year they work, up nearly a hundred and fifty tons of gold, scarcely an ounce of which is ever re- coveied. Gold leaf absorbs huge amounts—in Britain alone some forty thousand ounces a year. Vast quanti- ties of gold are used for plating caner metals and for ornamenting Tottery, But China and India are the worst offenders. A form of piety in India is to re -gild the dome of some religious building. Such an operation often ab- sorbs $50,000 worth of gold. Not long ago an Indian rajah used seventeen thousand sovereigns to form centres to each minute pane in the windows of his palace. Between two and three millions steel- ing in.gold vanish yearly in India, and quite as much in China. This is all buried, and as a rule the owner dies'I without revealing the secret of his hid- ing -place, so that the goldis lost for ever, Quieter Aeroplanes. A new resarch, now yielding signifi- cant though secret results, aims to silence the propellers as well tie the engines of aeroplanes. Whop en aero•engino is silondod the noise at the whirlingair-screw, pre- viously drowned by the tear of the ma - tor, becomes penetrating and fal'rreaeh- ing. The first stop, takers recently, wed, to experiment With piopollere having n number of eemell blades instead of two large anon. The nolse-redustiee flute resulted was tpprocial)le, The new 1,hase deals with: the shape eie Well tie the size of the bltade& 1 r'e lr?it� d tests, oloeely giititeled, now elide, that 1»' the adoption of teettal'il etit'vee the SSreW holed Onix:be further ltieeeeed, Dltlit tlltiae are truly, bat the Importance o1 the geteiit'le great, i$on 4 grey h is ed.yv : 4ory W U! liyeg'aIQrse her , o xla ll la'ii 'ii,9Wvai � .dbQree . 4t 1e Switzerland, Wee -recently Nixed sued for.>iot:: paying her taxes, evieich :aztlguntetl .to a small sem A gendat.me eliMbed to the hamlet' to arrestthe widow unlcea she agreed` to pay, He was asked into the -henget, Where he was ,given .a g`;aas : of wine 'while the widow collected her 'belong lugs before going to prLson« utter, •to tbee astonlshlnent of the gezzilariue, ha found the ;widow in the garden with a Cow, a pig, a deg and Some chlekens,. .rea-a• joun. :. "Asdy for therChe is norboeyiiy Ia the house to look after: the .aalimals while I am; away I" thou htTvyould take them” with me, and 1 hope you will help me," the wid- ow explained with a smile; The officer refueled and returned alone to Aigle, where the widow was sentenced in • default to, twerye hours'. imprisonment. Some days later the. widow entered' the prison with her empty baskets, stating that, having p sold her produce in the local market and not wanting to payfor a night'e lodging, she had came to "suffer" her entente, The amuse(i, warderspl aa ce d the "wid- ow in a cell, and next morning, after a hearty breakfast, she left for her home after thanking the warders for their hospitality, SUMMER COMPLAINTS 1 1 1 r ONES KILL LITTLE ONES `At the first sign of ilinese during the hot weather give the little ones Baby's Own Tablets or in a few hours he may be beyond -aid. These Tablets will pre- vent summer complaints if given oc- casionally to the well child, and will promptly relieve these troubles if they come on suddenly. Baby's Own Tab- lets should always be kept in every home where there are young children. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has, the guarantee of a government analyst that they are.ebae- lately safe. They are sola by all drug gists or will be mailed on receipt of price, 25 dents per box, by. The Dr, Wil• Hams' Medicine Co„ Brae/Tine, Ont. A. little booklet, "Care of the Baby in Health and Sickness," will be sent free to any mother on request. Youth Means Success --If You Don't Waste Your Youth! "Look at that boy wasting his. youth!" These warn the words of Cho head of a big business concern when a young, "dead -and -alive" clerk strolled by as if he were walking in his sieep, "A boy who wastes money," went on this famous business man, "may learn wisdom and make mere money. But a boy who wastes his youth will learn wisdom` only :whey he is making money for others.," You have youth, and there is a future ahead of you. But if your future is go- ing to mean merely en cagy time and pleasure at any price, it will 'bo gone before you realize, it, All the young met around yeu want to get on in life. Yet many of them *are not doing so. Nor will they, twtil• their desire to succ©ed isi sutfloiontby strong to impel them to make the big effort, which alone can bring oast>ose, The grim fact romainS, however, that if the nothing.but-plesatiro follows could see what fled a few years • shoed of them, if they: could realise the pen- alty of to -day's waited 'opportunities, they would be impatient new to begin the big fight: Only a man in whom the flew of en.. thusiasm have died can fully under. stand how well worth while is any saorihce made by a youth 'for the tette of his career, You needn't lad "brainy," A rltoere trier can win, too, dust put year beet Into everything you do, and you Will gradually release your etorbe of energy which will help you to "get thole)" every time. Rely upon yourself. Your youth it a gilt-edged speculation, Decide what you went to be, then concentrate on it, Don't tatter your energies. Go forward stop by tet to. wards the big goal. It will mean hard went;, There will be buffetings, sot -basks, But it it part of the game of lite, Just parry en steadily. Your Youth will ees nen through, A Father Who Was a Hero. In the year 1798 a young barrister, M. de . Loizerelles, name under entail.. cion for some act and was arrested and sent to the St. Irazamo, priege, .Ono day, while the young ILgb's father teas visiting in the prieoh, utas= severs -from Robespierre arrived with a net of the prisoners to be taken away for trial. Young Lolaerollee ivas asleep, The father, with Nthe heroic' wish to sacrifice himself and save hie son, anewerod to his son's name -end was taken before the trititintil, Tho clerk of the tribunal noticed the disparity in the glee olid ohahged twonteetwo to sr' ty=otlo ettii cilia toll= glinted- the name ' ranoit fon ,?filth, The fatheritt ones tellt to the itsafltlld w thetit trial. Mk far 'tilinardle and Melte ng other, iinreiild who with their Lens to go to l?lton inuet bb tii'tspered to enter the hoyeImagd')xi'tlotioell'' et birth,. to blast li tho Milting list et this. i`atuoiis h 1, Meat is mot digeStibio whoa boiled, iuost iiirtt'itiotia whoa 1't3adt4d, Ap. yp . y;ire lrfd'=y,24. The ORANGE PEKOE is extra,good. PPcern You Sheuld Know. content, It is said that Robert Greene died at the age of thirty-two of a surfeit of Pickled herrings and Rhenish wine, He was one of the wild ,get wlp laid the foundations of our drama, and perhaps; his last work, "A Great'•s Worth of Wit Bought With .a Million of Repentance," .shows signs of the repentance of which it speaks. Ile this 'curious work he eeferred •to Shakespeare as "an upstart crow beautified with our feathers," and it is certain that Shakespeare borrowed the plot of "The Winter's Tale" from Greene's "Triumph of Time." Though Greene died so young, he left a great mass trf work behind him,. but his fame may rest perhaps most securely onthe gem -like poems scat- tered about his writings, Sweet are the thoughts that savour of content, The quiet mind is richer than a grown. Sweetaro the, nights, in careless slum- ber spent, The poor estate scorns Fortune's angry frown. Such sweet content, such minds, such. sleep, such bliss, Beggars eujoy, wbeu princes oft do miss. The homely noun that harbours quiet rest, The 'cottage that affords no pride, nor care, The mean that 'groes with country music beet, The sweet consort of Mirth and music's fare; Obscured life eets down a type of bliss, f1 naiad content Math crown, and king - dem is. Mayoress of London shook hands until her right one was blistered; and now she wants handahakelesa recap- tion; She will prmbab y syxneathezq with the boy who was asloed to pre-. Mit a bouquet to a distinguished pex- soilage, Pll give her the bouquet," he said, "is alic'll. promise pot to kiss "Make old like New" 1 DEALSLVR CREAKY The Oapo Pollohoe, Ltd:, Hamilton Strom' Nerves Ptu'e organic plion)hate, known to most druggists es B_tro Phosphate, is what nerve-oYi ost€d, tirod•out people must have to -regain nerve tros and esisrgy, That's why= it'ta guaranteed, Prise $x per Aga, Arrow Chemical Co,, sg 13'_mitt St. East, Toronto, Out, Don't W it 'till you get slnk, iso Minerti'A — the great preventative, 1 tapseseamessasS Classified Advertisements INCOMPARABLE SILVER FOXES, owasr mIaces, monestr' etre sere Latero About our irortune Noundero, - *JAW' mon Per L'etta, dummer,i4e. krincc r4dw+tot lotamt. Somewhat In poubt. " h - to -day, t n r " :been opting t ay, s rae g x ,ryes-,' "Shot anything?" "I don't know -yet -4"m 'waiting kora the rest of the party to get into camp so that we can call the roll," When at full strength, the Pars police force numbers 9,059 men, FOR YOUR EYES Refreshes Tired Eyes WolteMutine Co.,Chicago,forEycCareBook ITCHY P1MPLES RSL OVER FACE _Bothered Over A Year. Cuticura Healed. " I was bothered with pimples for over a year. They were hard and small and scaled over and were scattered all over my face. The pimples itched causing me to scratch and my face was disfigured. "I tried other remedies but with- out success. I,sent for a free sam- ple of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after using it I got relief. I purchased more and in about two months I was completely healed." (Signed) Miss Kathleen Menzies, Northumberland St., Whitney, N. B., January 2, 1925. Use Cuticura for every -day toilet purposes. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. Sample Sa.h sty by Ma Address' Canadian ^Depot: 'Stenhouc,, Ste krontret" price, Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 60c. T.leum 26c. Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. OCTOR AViSEI AN OPERATION Read Alberta Woman's Ex- perience with Lydia E. Pink= ham's Vegetable Compound t Provost, Alberta.—" Perhaps you will remember sending me one of your books a year ago. I was in a bad condition and would suffer awful pains at times and could not do anything. The doctor said I could not have children unless I went under an operation. I read testi- monials of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound in the papers and afriend recommended me to take it. After tak- ing three bottles I became much better and now I have a bonny baby girl four months old. I do my housework and help a little with the chores. I recom- mend the Vegetable Compound to Ivy friends and ram willing for you to use this testimonial letter. "— Mrs. A. A. ADAMS, Box 54, Provost, Alberta. Pains in Left Side Lachine, Quebec.—"I took Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound be- cause I suffered with pains in my left side and back and with weakness and other troubles women so often have. I was this way about six months. I saw the Vegetable Compound advertised in the `Montreal Standard,' and I have taken four bottles of it. I was a very sick woman and I feel so much better I would not be without it. I also use Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I recommend the medicines to my friend and I am willing for you to use my let- ter as a testimonial. "—Mrs. lid.W. Rosa,,," 580 Notre Dame St., Lachine, Quebec. Proved safe by millions and prescribed by phy 'inns for Heartache Neuralgia Colds Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis ' Rheumatis m Accord "S .n.f. oka er which contains proven directions, Handy "Bayer" boxee i>a4 la : tablets Also bottles of 2d and 1(0, --:Druggists. eetten is the 'trade mast (r ,tool 1A (enadn) of 13ay5r iitangfat5Ul'u of h';otlottaatte 5 acldestsr of ,ltcylleaeid (l. ctt't SSalleylk Jisitl, "A. s. 4.,"). Whiie It is nonan lettotvn that Aspirin menu:r Mayer mantrfaotere, *a ssslat the public z,gA1n5t lmltatiens, tiff t'itOlets tit nar•or Cor;•;fey will bo stamped With t)tt* geserai ttnus mntk, the "Mcto' Crass."