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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-9-1, Page 7I'i PLICITY: THE KEYNOTE OF SUMMER LIFE OF COTTAGE COLONIES .IN EVANGELINE LAND Ft1GN,AND DRY AT LOS' TLD Qat tAl.NA4 DAVIN Nova Booth's wealth of woods and water -ways lends itself niest agree- ably to summer cottage life and draws greater numbers of sojourner$ each suaalmer. The many -miles -long bays flooded aed then laid baro by the shift- ing tides, have a unique charm and male ideal bathing beaches -••-beaches that are a huge delight to Ititidies.. Suultuer ac coultttedtitions of Evange- line. Land do not run to vast hotels, although there are a number of fine large ones, tbo greater number of visa tors live in comfortable country -side betels and boarding houses and cot- tage eolcniee. Fleet ;anomie the latter stands the 1Zedgemaltcuge . Rod d: Gua Club, lo• catPd cn the shore of Lake Kedgenta- Rooge, oat the end of thirty Hailes of peed meter road w'hieh begins at Lie - toile A: raim:1; Royal. Kedgerna- koe,re f4 In the heart ot: a wild, rich F,;,t;.rtleg country. Here the fisherman may enjoy excellent As/ling.—mut here the Ranter may bag the bilge t of 13 ,Niel:\ The t ebtns are rhotic 11t efe n, be. nnedr.rn in egaipment, fftte l situ fkreel »cls and running water. g. ;era! a tub houee i nil that a ccuutay club rht;+uld be. Other well luttown and popular cabin eta:wiles are found at North 'West Arlo. RURAL,. SUMMER HOTEL OVERLOOKING LAKE, AT H EBRO N ' IW ClISF,.OIC IU(K:ItI Only in Rare Vases.:Does Back- ache Man Kidney Ttouhle, Every muscle in the body acme.* con stantiy a supply of rich red blood in proportion to the workit does. The rlusc_es of the back are under a, heavy strain and have but nate rest. When Good Waiter. "How old was the wall that fell on mer said the Iris:man to the pollee - the bloed is tutu they took nourish- man who was carry -tee hien on the anent, and the result is a sensation of ambulance to the hospital, pain in .those muselea. Some peopla "Oh, I should ,say about eighty think pain in the back means kidney years," answered the poiie?nane ry trouble, but the best medical autbori,Tngt uiy luck;," said 'at "ionly ties agree that bael;ache seldoznz or arrived from Ireland yesterday, and never has anything to do with the kid- it waited all that time for me." neva. Organic kidney •diseaso may hare progressed to 'a critical point Regular Clean -tip. Iwithout developing a pain in the back. should always lead the sufferer to look redecorated. to the condition of tela blood. It will "I've 311st finished the drawing - be found lad Inlcst caeca that the use of room," sate the torewan; "what shall Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to Janata up we do nextT' the blood tt'i11 stop the sensation of "'You can do the dining -room on gain in the ill -nourished miracles of ''`hlursday," sold :1:rs, Ir'ewrieb. the back. How nuncio better it Ls to 'i'hat shalt ire da in tine 1t»terinn, try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the madam?" blend than to give way to unreason -1 ''Oh, paper that, tool'" able alarm about your kidneys. If you suspect your kidneys, any doctor can A Fashion Critic. Leake tests in ten minutes that will Tlae et- glel sreadi:.g ber llalida s get your tears at rest, or telt you the in they coltntry, was com>?laining to elle worst, But la any event to be per farmer about the savage' way the bull tectly healthy yell must keep the blood ' regarded her. ' Wolf."' said the farm - In good condition, and for tail purpose r er, "it Must be on account of t1.t red uo other nnaedieil;e can equal Dr. Wil- waist you're wearta g." lams' Ptak Pills. "pear tnei" ';std the girl, "Or You can get these pills through any course, 1 lino it awfully cut of fate dealer In Medielne, or by mail nt, uO Inion, but I had no Ne n cc'ua.try bull ols a box or six boxes for n2.5Q ; would notice it." frons The Dr. 1i'i111aIaIs' Medicine (;o., i This being the case, pain in the back Mats, Newrich was !laving her house Broot,.,vllle, Ont What He Warted, .IL wan cut whit bra best girl, aril c tis they etreiled into the reatatut a�.:l,t ear Iia! fac, Annapolis Royal, Evan- golf, squaw:h and cregtlet grounds are Tricks AnArchitect kys t t p tried o put on an T o ills ererc ver geline Beach, Milford, Port borne anti Smith's Cove. cottages are run in connection with The lines Hetet at 1?igby. the Bay l lew Hotel at Yarn mouth ani! The Gainsborough at Hub- bards. whale ('amp Acadia for girls, located at I3ebrou, a short live miles from Yarmouth. and :llilerclif•ae Camp for boys at NVeylu uttll' are old eat;tai• lfalnett talstitutione. These resort:; are either in or chase to farming centre and guests are fel on tine fresh dairy and gardetl pro- ducts. liaatit(ng. boating and fishing are the principal pastime.. Tennis, provided at most resorts. Then there On us. E P , . t r+. e lovely historio country in„ hind tf lt,,k. When they were to be is always explored. One cannot travel In the construction of any large tented at a Miele, a waiter ai ervachea p tautid:nh tthere ofieetivcnevn to the t .eta. many miles in any direction without T , spots 1.s a ilietoric interest. Dere eye has t., be con.<idored the arc:.iteet • "\Sill mendieur ?:ave a le cart«. er passing 1 t t f ewho hot �ws his 1..a;nless takes int° teblo thele?" he a ke:1. the painter finds inspiration for new z vases• the -writer for songs and view eettein !Melees t f the eye. Thug, "Both," eaid the yo' :g man, ''ar, l sts,,ries• the tired business man and for exsat$al'tin, a dinlnn r,, Ic:ti4 a vie weary teacher find balm anti streegtla be Matt- ea le: is higher b: t»c•crev. inn for mind and hotly, anti the busy ;, the Viet' of its euette4sIve pee Vous ore s • fe from city perils,'• .All Vf hiatal we eall Pers;,('tire ie. of the came l rler •'=rten that hie Weenier iy s-rtaung, ter" a } disport themselves in daisy fields or cause. ii.a. ioi . \V: na' 1'.o ohjeets et Henry had atter:Alta (twine the (are - o the red mud flats that at high tide equal eihal :ire t•t:�teerneal the more des - taut year. Very £regaatn3l the tetl(in arty glorious bathing beeches. tont ,an,, (took; mailer. A n;tl:tight er called hila Henry by ani=toile, until railroad track: Feems to meet at a she became prcvul.ed at hcreelt and -a T "' �"'"""" fl mint In tl a li t z c 111 the 1' 'in , *nether peace and rent while her live- , not plenty of eranvy on tem." ale Wender. ra4ta-ilg• One autumn ifttte Ce, r ' t .r r;1 .. ° .,,; , WELL Surnames and Their Origin KF E CHILI' RE N AIRING HOT WEATHER R'I iu a FiNLAY, Vnriations--Findlay, Findley. Ileclal Oriels-•-Scattieh (Celtic). Source—A given name. family taken C,COtIl'al1 falalh} names, tdht 11 as a class, du not punnet those of Ireland In one respect. They are not ovPr- wlzt*lulinaly (•eltle, either in language or in the method of formation. And there are reasons for this. In the first place, the blood of Scot- land is far trout being overwhelmingly Celtic. At the time of the Roman do- mination of•ilritaiu, the country north of the great -wall which merited the northern limits of the empire's gov- ernment was inhabited by the Picts, a race more similar to the Cymric brancli of the Celtic race, like the Welsh, the Cornishmen and the Bre- tons. About the third and fourth cen- turies of the Christian era the Gaelic Celts of Ireland came over from aster and settled themselves in the High- lands. Then, 'when the Anglo-Saxons invaded England, they cut well north into the lowlands. Norman and then English conquest and occupation fol- lowed on a large scale before sur- names became true family names. Hence there were influences of many races at work. The name of Finlay, however, is truly Celtic. Originally, its form as a given name was Fionnlaoch, a com- pound of "fionn," meaning "white," and "laocb," meaning "fighter," or i"soldier. " When it first became a family or clan name, of course, it was ceadanit of." but in the course of time flair; lets been dropped, autl the name Chas developed variously into the mo - (tern forms to he found in tial.: c9unttry ' BANNERMAN Racial ONgln—Scottish, also English. Source—A title. Tanis family name is not Gaelic, though those with whom it originated in Scotland were numbered among the Gaelic clans of the Highlands. The 13annernnaus constitute an im- t portant division of the (Ilan Forbes. and tradition bas it that in the days of Malcolm IV. or William the Lion, s made standard-bearer to the king, and one of the chieftains of this clan was that for several generations the office and honor were hereditary. In the same manner the title descriptive of it became hereditary also, and the cus- tomary designation of this branch o1 the Clan Forbes. Later, in the political shifting Of power in those tumultuous days, the sept lost the honor of bearing the king's standard, but the name by this time had become permanently estab- lished, and was not dropped. All of the Bannermans, however, are not Scottish. The name itself is Eng lisb, and there is evidence that it sprang up in many sections of mediev- al England, among the followers ot the various earls and overlords, first as a title descriptive of office, but rapidly becoming a family name under the in- fluence of the hereditary nature of the to -day. preceded by "Mac," meaning "des- office. The World's Most Inaccess- ible Oil Well. An oil well that can be reached only by swinging in a rope sling operated from a stiff -leg derrick at the -top of a 107 -ft. cliff, was recently completed at Point Firmin, California The well located on a narrow ledge of tide land, and at the bottom of the cliff. The ledge is so narrovv that, at high (tide, the water rises to within a foot lot the rig. Despite the fact that all 1ao n z (a n e. a l said to him: I clples ?f optics that apply to arcltittee. "1 ata roomy, (leorgo. but I t,aan't l ture are bared upon illusion. 1:now wliy 1 always hail you Henry The aliments understoo:1 this sort "I guees I know," „aid George. seri- of thine wonderfully well. Tette, for ously. "I'we get on henry's shirt and . instance. that iatt:ona 1';trtlnenon of lain pants and .his dhues:' MRS. SMITH SUFFERED AFTER. EVERY MEAL. Toronto Woman Says Since. Taking T a n l a c Ali Her Troubles Have Disappeared.. "Before I had taken half a bottle of Tanlae I began to straighten right up and .now I feel just fine." evict Mrs. O. E. Snaith, 163 Yarmouth lead, Toron- to, Ont "I was' told that I had high blood pressure, but whatever my troubles were they began to disappear when I got Tanlac and plow I haven't a trace of ani of therm. For one thing, I suf. fered from indigestion something a,w- ftl. After eating, the gas from my un - d geated food wcu:d press tap into my eheet until nay heart fluttered fright- fully and at times I actually tlaougbt it 'meld stop beating. My head ached terribly at times and I got t•,> dizzy I couldn't stand up. 'My kidneys ,ti -•o bothered me and. : my beef; tzncl '-egs hurt constantly. 51y le„ ,3 hurt worse while lying'dct:r. eed nights I couldn't sleep any to emelt of, cu that I elways felt area :mil went out. - "But all. Illy tr,.ubl:a are roe now. niy tlige: tt'rt is jurat perfect awl I never bav e a headache or tunny set:1 any more, Even /la ;se pains have ciza- ap tae:tred frton n:y back and 1' ea Fri so th rona ft:r :ay gd a pF rte, that 1 ,int :Cant to prtf:;e ^aanl's^'d:l Tanlac i + ',t+:ti i, 1e.:J!i.g theziege •e ever; .ter,. Acv. .very :note, i Athetn^. Its superb coltunnn look as hot summer months are to small child-; theyaz,:, inclined toward one another; D. ('holes infantuln, diarrhoea, What 'elience Tepee. 1 ef.L zona apb In .1., t.tlit•n . p '711 ,;'itlt!Irs°:i :• a feral, met t a t:1d termer. .r. .,1 h'tt' j',^t is 'e t l ::;a" ll.e t,nr,: , of "1.a . ;. f. r„ .id t., t': fewer. er . ..Iona y u a .-e'n n: y of lite D: ria Hirt i )t . i;c ti. t ... "Te,,. T .4“, ."•,t 3" ^.:- nlfan. The eat et..fie. tiet'tively', end Men - ' ?. - w . ?,ti'i;,l. science le to vP .Ilo;t'riil . !Luer i Minard's Liniment f'or sate everywhere Revenge fel .Inc° at isr(+:1., t:. to Lae imr sed on all i u;1ne',s c�+n: t';•t^.:a oI�etrat lr„ in Manite' a tv 111 ex. ee_i ai .- 250 250 Atli► that year. ecce :;ins to eee i- Ever mother! how fatal the • • , verti' .ii and penile!, but in reality tlyeentry, colla ,and stomach troubles are rife at this tune and often a pre- cious little lite is lost after only a tow t hours' illness. The mother who keeps Baby's Own Tablets In the !louse feels safe. The occasional use of the Tab- lets prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if the trouble comes sud- denly—ns it generally does—the Tab- lets win bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. 'Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Power of Radium. The "gamma" rays from radium are so powerful that they will pene- trate virtually every known substance. To human flesh or other lige tissue they are very destructive. • It is this tendency of the rays to destroy tissue, says the United States Bureau of Standards, that makes them valuable in the treatment of cancer and for certain other surgical pur- poses. For while both healthy and diseased tissues are attacked by the rays, their destructive effect upon dis- eased tissues is much greater and more rapid. Thus if the patient is treated for exactly the right length of time the diseased tissue will be destroyed while the healthy tissue is not much injured. Obviously, to accomplish a satisfac- tory result the surgeon must exercise material and workmen had to be low- the highest degree of skill and must ered and hoisted from above by means employ, the radium with utmost can; of the derrick and sling, the well was tion. completed without a mishap. This re- There is always clanger to the lab- mains still the only way to reach the oratory worker in dealing with this formidable substance unless the most careful precautions are taken, and un- der no circumstances should any per- son be continually exposed to its rays. MONEY ORDERS. Dominion Express Money Orders are well. More faraners die from • being re- tired than from being tired. PhotogTaphy is eighty-two years old this month, the secret of the first pictures, those of Daguerre, .having on sale in five thousand offices been disclosed in 1839. throughout Canada. f x ��,� - - °•~ Worry. n.- The thing called worry, if you please, is quite a dangerous disease, so dodge it fully if you can and thereby be a lucky man. wt7 foot build's st;th t/FL 4, axial= nourishment w-ith no burden to the - -w ^ tion is secured. from that2a 1011u.S food. 'm, Gtr ape.N iLll•tne',l. The nutriment of wheat pi aakted. la rie�=, f ^On�g which Gra e":Nli. t is roe de, a'h $tt'a�1C273d triv!, o d$elidht s . the taste. 44l6s'PJ 9 errs ez T•-.o- ••••«,"' h • Sold. 1 For worry, if it gets control, will make you pay a heavy toll. Just let it once get into power and you'll re- gret it every hour. There's nothing like, the worry i11 that's out to conquer and to 'kill, It takes the joy of life away and quickly turns the hair to grey. It kills goad humor quells the grin, and places frowns where sullies• have been. So reader, if you'd be in luck, when worry comes be wise, and duck. When patching'a roof, put on a pair of. rubbers. May save a bad fall. A pian is like a his over- head : - E head expense goes on all the time, but he himself selci a; gv as at full ea- ParljtY. so Inns it that, if they were contIuueai meet they would at the height of about a mile. Tall columns nut,:t be made with a considerable bulge. If their outer lines were straight they would lock shrunk In the middle. In the coteries of the Parthenon this bulge ameunits to three-quarters of an. inch. The long lines of the beans which surmounts :a row of coiumus would ap- pear to sag if they were straight. To satisfy the eye ---Le., to look straight— the}• must be curved. The stories of a. building, to look ot equal height, must increase in height as they go up. On one famous temple in the Orient there is an inscription with its letters arranged vertically; but to make the letters appear cf equal size they are increased in size progressively toward the top. The ancient cathedralh scattered over Europe are full of such expedi- ents of illusion, and from those sources our modern architects have acquired many of the hints on which their own designs are based. Hand -Gun Riveter Has Wonderful Power. During the war, the Germans had a gun that did actually fire a projectile 75 miles.. Up to the present that has been considered the very limit pos- sible in long-range weapons. But there is no limit to modern progress, and a new development in this line has in- spired the inventor and others to claim a possible range for a projectile of 300 miles. The new principle has been embodied, asyet, only in a de- vice resembling the ordinary hand- gun riveting machine- In place of the hammer of the riveter, steel slugs are dropped into the barrel of the ma trine, which is charged with .some special smokeless explosive, and fires these slugs .into a steel plate 3 in. thick. Tests of this machine were made in New York by engineers of re- pute, and their report of the results, if it came ' from any other source, would sound like a paradox. Per in- stance, in spite of the enormous power developed by the explosive that makes possible a penetrability that drives a steel slug into a boiler plate, there is practically .no recoil to the gun, and no more noise than the click of a typewriter. Apart from its possibilities as a gun, it has been tested, with highly ehcouraging results, as an underwater riveter. A diver, at a depth' of 35 ft., shot a slug through a plate of steel. % in. thick. Means to Stay. Little Madge was excited. A baby brother had arrived on the scene. She spread the good news, and among others told the gardener. "The question is," said the old man, "is the new baby going to stay?" "Oh, yes, he means to stay," said Madge; "be's got his; things off." fdinard's LinimentRelieves Neuratala Her Order A woman on her llast railway trip notleca the communleaat1en cord over- head, so she gave it a pull With herr umbrella. The whistle sounded, the brake.; w ere put on, and the train be- gan to elaclten its speed. Pre,,cntiy the guard appeared tend asked, "Who pulled the cord? "1 dia." replied the woman. meekly.' "Well, what do you want?" "Some ham sandwiches and a cup of ten, please." "Milk," manufactured from chopped; oats, ground peanuts and a little water, is said to resemble the cream I fest product of the cow. NOTI-IING TO EQUAL MateMatem. t't n1.t t G 4y al' ) elal g ever: ate: t frera the t"a t t•at,: ;alien Takathat ata t ,..r4a.i: tete •t :s ehtat,- 000. For Sprains and Bruises. The first thing to do when you have t an iniury is to apply Minard's famousr, Linimefit. It is antiseptic, soothing, healing. and gives quick relief. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlota TORONTO SALT WORKS 0• 4. at,,IFF • TORONTO Arnerieele Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on DUD DISEASES and Howto Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by tho Author. 19t.• lay Glover Co.,-2aoe 119 West list• Street New York, U.S.A. ASPRN "Bayer" only is Genuine Warning! Take no chances .with substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tab- lets of Aspirin." Unless you see the name""Bayer" on package or on. tab- Iets you are not getting Aspirin at all. In every Bayer package are directions for .Colds, Ileaadache, Neuralgia, Rheu= mutism, Earache, Toothache, Lumba- go and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- gists also self larger packages. Made in Canada.`Asp irin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Wrenn - facture of Monoaceticaciclester of 5a1foxliracfd, a. Cuticura is Just RI :' t For Baby's Ten& Skin Bathe him with Cuticura Soap and warm water. Dry gently and if any s+„-3 of red- ness, roughness irritatao, or rash as p - ent anoint with Cuticurn C`.;.tnaE to soften, soothe and heat Finally ,ally du t ,u n few grains of t'ha fragrant. delicately tae'- icated Cuticura Talcum. Soap25c. Oiatmeot25and50a. Yakut 2 c S :l throughouttheDominion, Canadian » c t: !Amens, Limited. 344 St. Paul St., W.. htoatterii. `Cuticura Soap abaaae without rsug. 00 ALL MY HOUSE WORK Before I took Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound I could hardly get ab3ut, Cobourg, Ont.—" For many years I have had trouble with my nerves and have been in a general run down con- dition for some time. I could not do my work half df the time because of the trouble with my monthly sickness. I was told of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound by friends and advised to try it. It has done me good, and I strongly recommend it. Since I have taken it I have been able to do all my own work, and I also know friends who have found it good. You can use these facts as a testimonial.”—Mrs. ELLEN FLATTERS, Box 761, Cobourg, Ont. Why will womencontinue to suffer so long is more than we can understand, when they can find health in Lydia E. ,Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? Forforty years this good old fash- ioned root and herb remedy. which eontains no narcotics or harmful drugs, has been the standard remedy for fe- male ills and bas restored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displace- ments, inflammation, ulceration, irreg., ularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. n, (confi- et ale tial Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be ,opened read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. ISSUE No. 35_r21.