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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-6-17, Page 3Be4 Kind to Your :Car. lie kind to yourauto-don't force it alaate Whenever, you're couseieus haat some- r tl i,ig is wrong; Don't Swear at ea engine that etarte i in 'Comes, Through the Tonic •Blood -Making Qualities of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. to got hot, It's water, that's lacking, as likely afs. not. Derat :fumble around, as it were, in the ` dark, In alae life of almost every girl there The motor, remember,, depends at the comes a time when weakness' attacks spark, her. The strain upon her blood supply The gas and`-t)he oil that ou give It becomes too great, and there follows —and mere; heada'ehes and back eekee, loss of "aIl- The water that cools it ae znentiouedpetite,'. attacks pf dizziness, 'meat pal- pitation and constant weariness and at telnlency to a declines " All these 'symptoms may not be present in any particular case, but the presence of any otie of ahem shows the .necessity for prompt treatment. And there is ho, other treatment -so sure and so speedy as that through the blood -mak- ing qualities of Dr, ' .iliiasn& Pink Pill Th WEAK GIRLS N GAIN STRENGTH before. Don't .rash at'tand l e' balls • that else rugged d steep, '(Ise second, far better proceed at a sheep= Than strain universals and beat-110es and clutch; The tins tthat you lose in the olimb is.n't mueb• Be kind to your car if you:wa]nt it to s. ey are the' one thing needed to maintain the health of growing girls last, and women of mature years. You'll: shorten its life if you drive it Here is a bit of positive proof of the too fast; value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in Attention to details, though seemingly oases of this kind. Miss Clara Fraser, small, Thessalea, Ont., has been brought back Will make for more pleasure in driv- to health and strength .through the ing, That's all; timely use of this medicine; and gives :Harold S. Osborne. eitpression of her gratitude as follows: --- ____ —"I feel it a duty ate well;: as a plea- Top o'':the Hill. sure to tell you what Dr. V(rill oma' Slow climbing? Well, that doesn't Phak '.Pillaehave done for me. They matter, have restored me to health, if, indeed, If you still can sea the goal.: they did not save my life.' I was suf- A step at ateme, means progress; tering greatly from anaemia. I lost Climbing isgood for the souL flesh, and always felt tired and ner- vous. At last I grew so weak I had to When you strive for heights'far above remain in bed. The doctor did not • you, - seem to hell' me any and I was grow It isn't so much the speed ing' weaker, and my heart was bother - That counts; it's courage, and dogged ing me,: At last a Mend who called to Determination you need.-; see me said -•she lied. read of "a similar ' case restored by.;Drr' Williams' Pink , The pathwayaboutyou grows rocky, Pals' and urged me to try them, I felt You're ill and weary and spent; helpless but decided to take her ad - You've almost succumbed to the giants vice,, so my mother got me a supply of Of fear and discouragement. the pills anti.. L began taldng them. 'It was not long` before I began to find But rise up agarol- ]aver onward! benefit from the use ofn-ttle pills, and You can make it if you but will, in less than two months my health was And oh, the glory of gaining, restored. In fact I was in better At last, the top of the hill. health thanI bad ever enjoyed before.. Fla NI: Thomas.1I• strongly recommend •Dr. Williams' nee-- Pink Pills, to .all who' are weak and, The Historian's "Art w run 1 feel sure they i11 not be disappoihted " -- '' Look where you ;will in the field' of you can get these pills from any modern .monographs, and it is easy to medicine 'dealer or by -Mali at 50c a find unassociated facts piled high -es box from The -Dr. Williams' Medicine the: roofs of libraries. . . It wer- -Co., Brockville, Ont, mere humanity to relieve them bif their loneliness. After they had been schooled in this :work, which, believe ' me someone must do, and that right Big Game. promptly -our advanced students of his- A, stranger, visiting the United. tory and of historical method wouldStates, felt into the hands of an Ameri- be ready to go en if it 'ere only after -can : who was aotfve in "showing' his graduation, after the :fateful docto'r's new; acquaintance . the • scene and h coin tr . i ec ural wonders of t e t t degree, to the: further.: taskeof making aroh t _t .,,� y l new collections of fact, which they Untortuiiately fhe'American.gave way would.then instinctively view in their too often ,to boastfulness regarding 'connection with the known. circum- these wonders and disparaged too con - stances of the age in which they .hap- 'ftdentiy the attractions of Europa pend. Thus, perhaps thrix only, will Finally the other felt that he must put - the spirit and the practice of synthess a stop to that sort of thing; so• he ask: be bred. ed'•suddenl-y, "Have you heard of the If this change should be sacoessftil DeadSea?" ly brought about, there would no long- "Of course -I have" said the Ameri- er be any pailful question of hierarchy can. among historians -.alba. specialist would "Well, my have the same alairit as the national historian, would use ilia same power, display the same art, and pees from the ranks of artisans to the ranks, of art este, making • cameos as much to be `A prized as- great canvases . dr heroic statues. Until this; happens . history. will cease to baa part of literature, and that le but another way of saying that it•will lows He influence in the world, its monographs prove about'as' vital asethe specimensin a museum. We have used the wrong words in speaking of our art and. craft: History must be revealed, not recorded, con- ceived before it #s -'written, ; and we must all in our several degrees be seers, not clerks._ Tt le a high, calling and should not be belittled. 13tates- men ate guided and formed by what. we write, patriots stimulated, tyrants checked. Reform and progress, char- ity and freedom . of belief; the dreams of artists and the fancies of poets, have at once their _record and their souroe with utn :We mast n.ot suffer ourselves to fall dull and pedantic,. es must not 1005 our visions or cease to epeak-°the large words of inspiration and guld•anoe.--Woodrow Wilson, from: a .paper on "'the Variety and Unity of history." The Coyrt Is Overruled. A ` certain -judge has, a'`six-yearo1d niece of whom he is very proud. The other day she came to him with a seri- ou&'air and said: "Uncle Robert, If a man had. a peacock lied it went into an- other man's yard and laid aeregg, who would the egg belong to?" Tlie judge smiled indulgently and re- plied:. 'Why, the egg would belong;; to themanwho owned the peacock, but he could be prosecuted'for trespassing if he went on the other's property to get it" 'The child seemed very much in- terested in the explanation, but when it was over she obateved agreeably.: " "Uncle, did it ver Deem:.to you that l e peacock couldn't lay an egg?" Chicken, Anyhow. -Bobbie's sister had bobbed her lir and eenow` was carrying her comb arotind with her. Bobbie was vexed one evening; and said, "Nothing but old liens carry their combs, aabund with -t`hem: , ;,t ; y...w dives �ss trap ttsii than the N' ODA i ci y 0 man who is aywfiy!s bcetipied with avoiding anything ;that eau dioturb his traaiquillity; father shot its" ii iMN1•NNI-OC HOTEL On ane of the Islands of the Georgian.B,u• OPEN JUNE 24th, 1928•,, L`f9hing — Tennis- -- owling: -- Dancing ;filth class. In every respect. Excellent cuisine. Ideally situated. 'nigh altitude. Daily steamers from Midland. Direct' connection from Toronto.., Write for Booklet and terms. Capt. 7, irALCOTAIs0IV, Midland, Ont, 77 suenneenengrailasele ' i came over on the A ne b or -Donaldson liner • • This psi ty of' clear-eyed Brit sh,tioys e me A h boats to dooic at Quelpecthis season, The boys: are from the famous Quarrier's Home in Bridge -o -Weir, Scotland. All of them are keen to get to work in Canada. "Letitia," one of the first Enchanted Waters. Response to Music. Here and; there, jn the region where The musical person is the one who I live, one comes upon little enchant- gets the real thrill out of the music he ed lagoons. Some of them are open hears., - We have known a person to pools embosomed in the woods and are be enraptured by a Bach flgune and bathed in'sun'tigbt for the greater part 'still not know the difference between of -each day; and on the bright spring one theme name•and another. The es- and summer. mornings all• the inhabit= i seittial in being musical is to have the ants `of.the waters who are lovers of receptivity, the response to the thrill haat and -light gather at the eurfaoe of that the composer had in creating the work. But to he musical is not going to make a person a. musioian—don't for- hand the tall, smooth, columnar trunks get that: To lee a real musician one of cypresses tower upward, from the must have the background of a mus¢ - still water, which isclear brown, like cal nature and then have superimposed wine, and free front aquatic growths, on that the details mentioned early in so that one may paddle for a mile or the article; just -as, to be a botanical perhaps several miles in and out ami4 artist, another De Longpre, for ba- the trees. w • stance, one -nlust know the botanical These are itis most beautiful of the structure; the history --and then see lagoons. Over head the feethery cyp- it all with the soul of the artist. rens foliage makes a not that shuts One need not°stay away from con - out mu h of the light; and everywhere, certs•"because, of not knowing the dry high and low, on living boughs and on bones of music nor because, not know- dead stubs and branches- under them, ing these, he thinks he is not musical. swing the long banners of Spanish The test of the, latter is the impress` moss—a gray, ghostly witchery cloth- made on one by the musk. e. ing the trees and covering their gay • If one has his greatest enjoyment in greenness .from view. theasliding and pounding "jazz," he is E1 little .cove of a lagoon which we still in .the. days of tom-toms and -Warn- found one spring morningbot long' ago pun.. But if one gets a thrill from was a combination of these two types.. »good music, even though not under - The lower part of it was open and sun- standing its construction, he should ny,,and a carpet of vivid green duck. give this eide:of,his nature all chance. weed, broken here and there by round for enjoyment and expansion„•and net or oblong clear spaces, covered its sure take the modeet ground of "not being facie; but farther away, toward the up- musical.. per reaeti•es`of the cove, the moss -ban- nered cypresses came down into the water. • . . Fora time'. we stood oil the bank -.and' watched the`sun- I worshipper$ in and 'about the open water before lie --black, shiny terra- pins; errapins; • . huge mottled bullfrogs, singers• -of - wonderful evening Chola, uses. . . At frequent intervals. swift shadows slid across the sunny face of the pool as night herons and Louisiana herons swept silently over- head. . . . They are dream-like, mysterious, and beautiful, these en- chanted waters of the cypress woods. —Herbert Ravenel Sass, in "Advent tua•ee in Green Places.” the secluded lakes to bask in the sun's rays. In other• cases the lagoon is it self a partof the fox -est. On , every • Near Sighted. Mother --"Why, Jimmie, why are you going to bed with your new glasses On?" • Jimmie --"Why, .muvver, I want to see my dreams," !► Remains Of ;a : city that flourished about 500 B.C. have been discovered near. Moscow, Russia, Real Opportunities in the Veterinary Profession If you desire a profession you (sh.ould consider what the field of Veterinary Science has to offer. .Gradu- ates have splendid opportunities for auecessfui career: - Tll.e live stock industry is the corner -atone of agri- cultural development and the veterinary profession is , its .greatest safeguard. Session Begins October lst, 1926 Nett° for bulletin and calendar to 0, D. MoO5,ray, D -V ,aa, Principal, L ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE - GUELPH ONTARIO Affiliated with University of Toronto. tinder Ontario Dent,. or,. Agriculture. Romtbn s. b a.nTIN, Minister.• 1 High School Boards and Beards of •Educaion • Are authorized by law to establish INDUSTRIAL TECHNICAL AND ART SCHOOLS _:-LNith the approval of the Minister pf Education. DAY AND EVENINGCLASSES • may be conducted In 'accordance with the .regulations Issued the Department of' Education. THEORETICAL .AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION. Is given in various traded; The riohools.and classes ate under the dlrectlon`of AN ADVISORY CO'(VIMrtTEE. Application .for attendance .should be made' to tho Principal of the eseesa•-;l ,c school AL SURJEC'i9 MANUAL TRAINING, HOUfiEHOLD COMMERCIAL r _ - , 8CiENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND i•IORTICULTURE ere provided lot In the Courses of Sttidy In Pkuhlic, separate, Continuation and High $ohools, Collegiate lnetitutes, Vooatienal Schools and Departments. Co 'les of the Regulations Issued by the Minister of EdueatIon may be Obtained from the Deputy Minister, Parliament Buildings, "Toronto. • by Should Have Known Better. The Man Outside -"Two orchestra seats, please." Tile •Man Inside "Wrong place, brother. We don't -sell seats here. This is the box office." THE ONLY EDICINE BABY HAS HAD Is What Thousands of Mothers 'Say of Baby's Own Tablets. Once another has used Baby's Own Tablets for her little ones, she wiN use nothing else. Experience teaches her that they are without an equalafor re- lieving baby of any of the many minor ailments which afflict him at one time or another. The Tablets never fail to be' of benefit -they cannot possibly do harm as they are guaranteed to be free from all injurious drugs. Concerning Baby's' Own Tablets Mrs. Russell 11111-, Norwood, Ont., says;—"I shall always have a good word to say for Baby's Own Tablets. I have given them to our baby girl. In fact they are the only medicine She has ever had and I am proud to say that she took second prize at our baby show. She is eleven months old and weighs 22 pounds. No mother whose child is peevish or ailing will make a mistake in giving it Baby's Own Tablets." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or direct by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. "Rule, Britannia.".. As a lyric poet however, though not negligible, James Thomson is incon- spicuous. Yet curiosly, it- is by a single couplet in a single and not otherwise remarkable lyric that he be- camepart of the common conscious- ness of the whole nation; and more curiously etill, this couplet, which has been on all men't lips for nearly two hundred years, is seldom associated With his name, and even his author- ship of it has been questioned, and cannot lie said to be demonstrably car- 100 Miles Per gallon of Gas on the taro. . New Single Harley-Davidson Motor - On August 1, 1740, a fete was given cycle. Less than one cent per mile to by Frederick, Prince of Wales, at C13f- operate. Write for catalogue and den. For it a masque on the "subject Prices. of King Alfred was commanded; the Walter Andrews, music for it was written by Arne, and, 346 1(onge St. the libretto was produced in collabora The. White Sea -Gull. The white`sea-gull, the wild sea-gu11i- A joyful bird is he, #All its allotted length of days As .he lies like a cradled thing at rest The flower ripens in its place, In the arms of a. sunny sea! 1 Ripens and fades, and falls, and bath `rhe little waves rock to and fro; no toil, And the white gull lies asleep; Fast -rooted in the Sruit fu 1 soli. As the .fisher's boat, with breeze and —Tennyson. ,lode Goes merrily over the deep. The ship, with her fair sells set, goes by; And her people stand to note How the sea -gull sits an the rocking waves, As still as an anchored boat. The sea is fresh, the sea is fair, And the sky calm overhead; And the sea -gull lies on the•deep, deep sea, Like a king in his royal bed! —Mary Howitt.: . Brotherhood. I plaided nes'turtiums I thought for my pleasure Joy for my home Golden aunareasure. I found I was sharing Each day of the honey With a wee humming bird And bees bright and sunny, I, as their hostese Followed along Huni.ming with them A bit of a song. The bees working below Aud the birdlinsg above Thought not to straggle, To grasp nor to shove No even to visit A flower with a guest, . But seeing it occupied Furthered the quest. How humbly I patterned My miniature neighbors Accepting so kindly 'Phase unpiauned favors. The very next time I plant snares for the sun I shall plant for many instead of for one. Nofriendship ere gave me Full meausre of good As did this., speaking plain Of the true brotherhood. —Flora Lawrence Myers. Use Minard's Liniment In the stables. From "The Lotus Eaters." Lo! in the middle of the wood The folded leaf is wooed from out the bud With winds' upon the branch, and there Grows green and broad, and, takes no e care, Sun -steeped at noon, andin the moon Nightly dew -fed; and turning yellow Falls and floats adown the air. Lo! sweetened with the summer light The full -juiced apple, waxing over - mellow, - Drops' in a silent autumn night. Epitaph Upon a Young Soldier. - He gave us all he never had Wife, children, comrades myriad;; And all we have we cannot give To make those unborn pleasures live. —S. Foster Damon. tion by Thomson and •-Mallet, his friend, contemporary, and ooninatriOt, who then held a salaried post in the Prince's household. , One of the songs in it became, at onceand by common epontatineous instinct,, the national an- them. The chorus ending of its stan- zas' ran: Rule, Britannia, nils the waves; Britons never will be slaves. Misquoted as they usually (like so many famous phrases) are, the words have, from then •snail now, been known, it may be said., by ovary man, 'woman and child in England. Such universal and prolonged currency is, to be sure, no hull -mark ' of logh poetry; yet fete of our poets' can put sock a feather in their Icap. ' • For the authorship of this' couplet there is.: no direct and unimpeaohable evidence. Mallet was in some respects a feebler Thomson, and wrote very like him The barticular song in ques- tion .ntay have been a joint prodttet, Bat en a review of the internal evi- dence and of the argumeiite :that have been brought forward 'oh both sides; there seems sufficient reason to asetgn the eons to ri•homson'e pelt. --J, W. Mackail, in ,"Studies In English ?oats.' Minard`s Liniment King of Pain. Ltd. Toronto 7J4J;,7 icii, imetiky 047115 Sai Lithofos has been pre- scribed by leading physi- cians as an invaluable spe- cific for -tile treatment of Indigestion Constipation Disorders of the Stomach arid. Kidneys Rheumatic and Gouty Conditions A palatable,effervescent,' sailnepreearationo£Lithia and Sodium Phosphate highly beneficial and re- medial in the case of dis- orders mentioned. At an 2)ruglists—Throe sizes Classified Advertisements. 1111.1/Eft 1'014E11, u(]' BOI,ESADE. IidneE9, SVito rDSIDA V l' Canada, Swedes Show Thrift. The Swedish people are rapidly learning .the wane of thrift, saint "Thrift Magazine. The savings bank of that country hold $148 for every in habitant and postal savings baulte which now number 3,60d, -e had an lar crease of 6 per cent. in deposits last year. Corks can be made airtight and watertight by immersing them in oat for five minutes before using, ;rs Flesh Wounds. Apply Minard's freely. It removes all the poison and allows the wound to heal quickly THJS MOTHER QLAO DAUCHTER 13 WELL Mrs. Parks Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Daughter's Health Toronto, Ontario. -- "My daughter is 16 now and has been an invalid l ver since she was -:six months old and has been com- pelled to remain out of school the greater part of the time.We have tried different kinds of medicine but none helper her much.. I had taken Lydia E. K _ Pinkham's Vege- table Compotind when I was run-down, and it had helped me so mus 1 that I thought it might help her at this time: She has gained ever since she began taking it. She attends school every day now and goes skating, and does other out- of-door sports. I recommend this medicine to any one who is run-down and nervoue and weak."—Mrs.PAxgs, 106 Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a dependable medicine for young women's troubles. For sale by druggists everywhere. 0 tit cur.., f� @ticuraSoap MEDICINAL&TOIL.T Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache . Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism, DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART 1 .ccs t oil (`Bayer" package which contains proveli lir ctiozl : Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—••D'tuggists, ran t4 fht! trade... mark (registered In Canada) et tityer. Mgtlurnetiiro eP nano:teefir- acid aeidegter of i9allcyIfcarid, (Acetyl ss11Cy1ic Acid, "A. S. A."). While it is tell knovaa that..a:lrin nlcant Mayor rnnnulacthra, to haslet Thl public -Against itnitttist o hs Tablets of Iiayor ootoiutsy tpilr be hl:anfped With their �genbral trade marks tn4 'lanai Croua, Best For The Skin Because it cicatrises, invigore aies and preserves the skin, scalp and hair. Used daily, assisted by Cutiou ra Ointment w h e ti required, zt prevents pore-eloggizig, pzrtiplt n, 'black.•• hMeyad.s,and otlece annoying irritations, sktvie 'Saab rat, by Mail, .a,hireas f ata•ti'ea Depot;Sttn)eest,tt&, ateutccai:'PPr, t%, Soap. 26e. f ,nttaaet 26 and 10e. '7.n corn ISS X191! CutiruraSiinvintf Stick 26s. 1SSUtw o.