The Exeter Advocate, 1922-4-27, Page 7UNSIGHTLY PIMPLES
AND FACE ERUPTIONS
1<n the Spring Most People Need
a Tonle Medicine..
One of the surest signs that the
blood is out of order is the pimples,
unsightly eruptions and eczema that
come frequently with the change from
'winter to spring. These prove that
the long indoor life or wetter has had
Int effect upon the blood, and that a
tonic medicine is needed to put it
right. Indeed, there are few people
who do • not need a tonic 'at thfe sea.
eon. Bad blood does not merely show
itself; in disfiguring, eruptions.. To this
same condition is due attacks of rheu-
ntatisin anti lumbago; the sharp stab-
bine pains of sciatica and neuralgia;;
poor appetite and a desire to avoid
exertion. You cannot get rid of these
troubles by the use of purgative ureda
clues—you need a tonic, aud a tonic,
only, and among all medicines there
is none can. equal Dr. Williams' Fink
Pillsfor their tonic. blood improving,
nave -restoring powers. Every dose
tef this medicine heips make new, rich
blood which drives out lmpuritiee.
+stimulates every organ and bringa a
feeling of new health and energy to
we*, tired, ailing men, women and
children, If you .are out of sorts give
this medicine a trial and see how
'quickly it will restore the appetite,
revive drooping spirits and fh11 your
veins with new, heatlth•giving blood.
You can get thee Pills from any
medicine deafer or by mail at 50 cents
it boa: or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Wiiltants' Aledicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
A Nasty One.
Young Papley the mluor peet)
tiethaliy c:hrry a uctebook to jot down
:thy ideas, but I forgot It today.'
She ---"Would a visiting; card be too
larger
Perpetual pushing and ass tarnnye
will put a difficulty out: of countenance
and make a Set:111111R in possibility give
waye.Teremy Cel:ier. 1
Mlnard's Linlment for sale everywhere
Trish Free State Stamps.
The Irish Free State has already be,
gun to issue postage stamps. with iugh
its existence is only provisional. `lo
anxious was the Dublin Cabinet to see
Itself in prfut that, whit the 1lerrnis,
stall. of the British postofi ce, it beget).
the issuance, of Free State. stamps
within a few weeks after the conclu-
sion of the Angleterlsh treaty. So far
the Irish stamps consist merely of a
Mello superscription on the current
issues. of Great Britain, but g distirf .
tine Irish issue is promised soon and
designs for the different values are
already being considered by the Fee
State Postinastee General.
The first Irish stamps were put on
sale at the Dublin poslofce nu Febru-
ary 17. Thele are fifteen varieties,
running from half -penny to the 10
shilling. The inscription in Gaelic is
"Rialtas Sealadach nah Eireann," or,
in plain English, "Irish Provisional
Government," and the date 1922 is
surcharged at the bottom of the
stamps.
The Irish postmaster obliges stamp
collectors by leaving estalilietted at
Dublin a philatelic department, meagre
collectors may obtain all the Irish
latexes they eau afford to buy.
All that is known definitely ot` the
forthcoming distinctive issue of Irish.
staPips is that they will bear tb,e
Gaelic inscription "Saoretat uahEir-
eanu," whteit means "The Irish Free
State."
Carrying it To Far
"Now, Robert, tell Cue what an ett-
gineer is," said the teaeher.
"lie is a titan that work an engine,"
replied Robert.
"Correet:" cafe the teacher. "Now
Wiliam. can yen tell like wlistt a pion-
eer is?"
"Yes, sir," answered William, "he's
a roan that works a piano."
MONEY ORDERS,
Domivalou Express Money Orders are
en sale in five thousand oglees
tlhreugbont Cataatt%
ic6loiu never epees her doors to
those who are not willing to pay the
price of atlntisSI011. There are tui bar -
gales at her counters, no short cut
to her goal, 'Tay the price or leav
the goals," is her motto.
Surnames and Their Orkm.
I-IENNESSY j w",wriation in their Gaelic prouuncia-
tion.
Variation--MacHennessy.
Racial Ortpin--Irish,
Source --Given name.
The name of Henneeey aloeslt't look
as though it canto from the same
source as Maginnis, or MacCainell, or
Augus --but it does.
Among the Gaels of Ireland, and
those who nt an early period crossed
over to Scotland and settled among
the Highlands, the given name of
"Aongus' (from "eon," excellent, and.
"gus," strength) was a popular one,
and as a rc alt it Las elven rise to
several clan navies and a still greater
number tit family names In both conn•
tries.
In Seotlanrd there was the "Claim
Aon{lats (DI.elnnes?, which name
will be discussed in a later article. In
Ireland there were the "MacAon-
giutis" (Maginnis), whose name al-
ready lies been explained, and also the
"Alac:Aongusa" (MacHennessy), a
branch of the Clan Colgan.
It is from the last nailed, of coulee,
that the name Hennersp has been de-
rived.
As you might guess from the forego-
ing information there has been a great
deal of confusion in Anglicizing the
various forms of these clan names,
which, in the Gaelic, are separate and
distinct in spelling, though they are
all derived from the :sae given name
(from a different chieftain in each in-
stanea) and tough the e is little
FORBES
Variation Fordyce.
Racial Origin—Scottish,
Source—A locality.
Forbes is the name et one of the
Highland clang ot Scotland. But
though the name of a "Joint de
Forbes" Cts chief of the clan appears lu
e charter of as early a date as 123G,
the name is Gaelic, and not Norman.
The Norman form appears in that re-!
cord. apparently, as tlteet•eeutt of the
rather powerful Norman Influences
which were developing in those days
in the court of the Seottlea king.
It is another one of those Highland
names w ti are 1 ch rti tlorived not from the
given name of an early chieftain, but
from the territory held by the clan.
The Gaelic style of the elan name is
"Na Falrt.leisicll," the second word of
the combination being considerably
closer to the pronunciation Forbes
than might be imagined by one not
familiar with the Gaelic spelling.
That the clan name was not Mac-.
Alaster is apparently but an aecident
et fate, for the chieftain credited with
founding the clan was named Alexand-
er. His period Is given as between.
1180 and 1222 A.D., and according to
Scottish historians was the son of
"Ocheameher," as Irish. chieftain who
crossed over and settled in the High-
lands.
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
ALWAYS HOME
L � � IN THE
Once a mother hass used baby's 'Own
Tablets for her little ones she always
keelni a supply on hand, for the first
trial cenvinces her there is nothing
to equal them in keeping children well.
The Tablets .are a mild but thorough
laxative winch tegulatea the bowels
and sweeten the stomach, thus driving
out constipation and indigestion, caldts
and simple fevers and making teethe
tea easier. Coneerulug them Mrs.
Saluste Pelletier, St, Dumas, Que.,
writes: ---"I have used Baby's Own
Tablets for the past ten years and am
never without them in the house. They
have always given the greatest sates-
faetton and I .can gladly recommend
them to all mothers of little ones."
The `l'ablete are solei by medicine deal-
iera or direot by mail at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, le, Qni,
To Him Who Plants a Tree.
Perhaps our God has soxnewtihere glade
a thing
More beautiful to see
Than a majestic tree;
But it Ile has, I think it g;rowe
In heaven, by the stream that flows
Where whiter souls than ours do sing.
The Birth of the Daffodil.
The slender fingers of the rain
Reached down through masa and
mold
And woke the bulb asleep•witbin
Its rough brown blanket's fold;
The elm 'eame out and warmed thu
sprout,
That like a finger white
Was groping in the clouds of e -reit
To find the kindly light,
The south wind blew aeross the fields,
A troubadour of Airing,
And piped a little tune that set
The branches- whispering.
It rafted loose the tissue sheath
That held the bud until
Arrayed, behold! in cloth of gold,
Appeared the daffodil.
—Minna Irving.
"Take Your Seats for Cairo."
"Cairo in the rear; Calcutta for-
ward."
This sort of ery now may soon be -
rte familiar to travellers by air, for
a new kind of aerial trailer has been
invented by Air. Fokker, wwha desegned
the aeroplane which beard his name.
His invention renders possible an
aerial train, sections of which may be
slipped and can glide to earth with
safety at any suitable placeon the
route of the tourney.
`phare will be no need for the whole
aeroplane traatn to land at each acv
Wiio p plants a tree, he is .alcln to God, station on a long trip, and considerable
Ithis impatient age time may be saved in this way.
Experiments are being carried out
to demoustrate the possibility of
ropianes picking up packages from
ound which in full. Right. The
a is have been glade with tins of
petrol. A. kind of grappling -hook,
Where quick returns engage
The fevered service of the crowd.
In reverent wisdom he iu hewed
And hides his purpose in tate clod.
The blessed mann that plants a long-
lived tree
That shall grow nobly on
When he is dead and gone,
Ile seams to inc to love his kind
Withtrue sincerity of mind,
Ile seems to love his fellow yet to be.
with an automatic spring attachment
at the end, has been used, and the fuel
lzas been lifted frcm the ground to the
aahine without ae ident.
It isbelieved that bales of mer -
Ilse could be treated inthe same..
way.
Above his grave the ~ling shall flush"
TELLS DYSPEPTICS
WHATD
T EAT
E
and fahle,
TLe seasons come and go
And storms shall drive and blow;'.
t ,un and rain that from his tomb
ace his name, renew the bloom
d glory of the monument be made.
'twit's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia
Most Northerly Smelter in
Canada.
At Anyox, British Columbia. on Ob.
servation Inlet, tho Granby Conseil.
dated Mining,and Smelting Co. Is
taunt t
1 u the early ar coltatt• io
p pct o
Y fa
u
st.cingal dant on Fails Creek, a tribe -
'try of the Inlet, to supplement its
present water ni panettt
u1
p1Y. This
company has a. large copper mining
azul relining plant Located at this point.
probably the farthe. t north of any im-
portant development in Canada, and
employing at preseet 030 hands. It
leas an output of two and one-half mil-
lion pounds of copper monthly, prac-
tically all of which is exported. The
company has already developed 10,800
horse -power on Falls Creek, and the
new dam, to cwt. approximately $350,-
000, will considerable' augment this.
Something Unusual,
Hostees----Well 'Tommie when you
get 'tome you can tell your mother for
me thatyou aro the net behaved boy
at table I ever mut."
Tommie- -"Thank you, ma'am, but I
I'd rather not."
Hostess---••Ratlher not! Aud why.
pray?"
Tommie ---"She'd think I wits 111,
ma'am, and send for the doctor,"
Lead pencils had not changed in de-
sign for a hundred years.
Some stars are sore mote that it
takes 40,000 years for their light to
reach this earth.
The Boy Who Started to Town
With a Hundred Dollars
The advice they gave him for getting
on in the world was simple and familiar
enough " Keep what you have, and
build on it. Be careful what you do and
it will grow into more."
It's a safe rule—with money or. health,
but a good many overlook the rule with
• health, until they have lost what they had.
Then it's hard to get a new supply.
Postum is a splendid help in.sav-
ing health from the very common
losses through. the drug elements
of tea and coffee—whose effects on
the nervous system any doctor can
tell you.
Thousands of people who think
itwise to be as careful of their
health as they are of their dol-
' lar's are Users of Postum. They
find this famous cereal ' beverage
a delightful drink, with any meal,
o'turn for Health -
and it's free from any disturbing
element.
You can begin. with Postum to-
day, with an order to your grocer.
The road -to health is a good road
for anybody to follow. "Save what
you have, and build on it," is sound
policy for everybody.
Postum comes in two forms: Instant Postum
(in tins) made instantly in the cup by the addition
of boiling water. Postum Cereal(in packages of
larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the
drink while the meal is being prepared) made by
boiling for -20 minutes. Sold by; all grocers.
`There's a Reason"
Male by Canadian Postum Cereal .Co., Limited, Windsor, Ont.
•
sit
Avoid Indigestion, Sour Acid Stomach,;
Heartburn, Gas On Stomach, Etc.
Innis, eetsan and practically all forms
of stein:telt trouble, say me.itcai auth-
oritiee. are due nine times out of feu
to cad eseea,a of hydrochloric aeld In
the stomach. Chronic "anid stomach"
Is exceedingly dangerous and sufferers
sleetel do either one of twe things,
Either they can go on a limited and
often lr.a rceabltdiet avoiding foods
1
that disagree with theta, that irritate
the stomach and lead to excess acid
secretion a • t e i
t h can eat as they
Y
ple:sse in reason and make it a pray
tiee to counteract the effect of the
harmful acid and prevent the tonna.
tion of gas, sourness or premature
fermentation by the use of a little
liisnra.ted Magnesia at tiheir meals.
There le probably no better, safer or
more reliable stomach antiacid than
Bisurated Magnesia and it is widely
used for this purpose. It has no direct
action an the stomach and is not a di-
gestent. But a teaspoonful of the
powder or a couple of Sive grain tab•
lots taken in a little water with th the
food will neutralize the excess acidity
which may be present and prevent its
further formation. This removes the
whole cause ot the trouble and the
meal digests naturally and healthfully
without need of pepsin pais or arti-
ficial tligestents.
Get a few ounees of Bisurate'I Mag-
nesia from any reliable druggist. Ask
for either powder or tablets. It never
comes as a liquid,, milk or citrate and
in the bisurated form is not a laxative.
Try this plan and eat what you want
at your next meal and see if this
isn't the best advice you ever had on
"what to eat."
Cooking Meals by Sun's
Heat.
You b'e only to put your hand on
a stone on a. bright sunny day to
realize how much heat there is in the
sun's rays. Collect these rays by
means of a lens' focus them to a point
on a piece of paper, and it is not long
before a hole is burned.
If we could collect and use this heat
we should have a vast source of power
that would Dost nothing.
Dr. C. G. Abbot, a British scientist
who has been experimenting in this
direction for some time, uses a. series
of mirrors which are so curved that
they focus the sera's rays like lenses.
A olockwarrk mechanism turns them
so that- they follow the sun. as it
move•,e across the sky.
The hot rays are directed on to a
boiler coated with dull black paint,
this color being usell because it soaks
in heat. The boiler is filled not with
water, but with oil, which can absorb
a far greater amount of heat and re-
taaii it for a longer time.
Last summer Dr. Abbot aid the
whole of his cooking by solar heat.
Pipes from a holler. al!Iowed the hot
oil to circulate around oven and so
long did the oil retain its heat that
lie"' Was able to cook alt evelffn neat
even if the afternoon bad`bec' .Cloudy.
The solar oven. IS only a beginning.
If we can cook fornd in this way we
can use the heat to do the thousand
and tine things that are now done by
us with coal and other fuels. '
Winter Fishing.
Lake Winnipeg nipeg is expected to pro;
duce immix' of 1,500,000 yio!un�de of
whdteiisll this season, iti addition to a
large catch of pickerel, lack -fish. and
tulibee. The coarser fish are excep
tionally plentiful this+ season. Lakes
Manitoba.a+nd St. Martin are also be-
ing extensively fished.'
ISSUE. No. 16—'22.
AMR EFEC WAS Claraaif ed Advertisements
, ANAAIAN I.A•TRImcgm11:. TAPER.
woRsETu N *f t�
v 46c No other fee. A. Mec:reem
N trRtharIr, Ot*L.
ii Wool, MADE INTO I37,... NS.EPS ,,A,% *
reasonable prices. Yarns. Pure
wool, chiefly grey seconds, fifty cents per
pound. Postage :extra. :Sweater yarns.
TORONTO WOMAN SAYS six bexutlfui colors, seventy-ttve cents..
eI7 ty Samples free. Georgetown Woolleat
SHE WAS LEFT ALMOST ililiis. C3eorSetowri, Otttaxla.
HELPLESS..
Digestion Ruined and Nerves
Shattered She Could Find
No Relief. Taniac Again
Proves Merit.
"I stave all the faith, la the world in
Tanlac for it has certainly been a joy
anal blessing to nee," declared Mise.
Robert Dawson, 571 Church St, Toron-
to, Out.
"Tllo flu a year ago is wltat broke
my health down," she stated. "I bad
pneumonia following the flu and was
down in bed seven weeks and was left
almost a wreck. For some time I was
uuabte to get around as I was so weak
I was almost helpless. My appetite
was gone, my nerves were almost shat-
tered and my whole system seemed to
be disordered. I suffered from head-
aches and dizzy spells, couldn't sleep
well and just seemed to be troubled
in one way and another all the time.
"But I'm so glad I gave Tanlae a
trial for it was just the thing I needed.
My appetite retarded and my nerves
quieted down and by the time I tinisit-
ed my sixth bottle i was in just splen-
did health. Ta:ninn is a grand utedl-
Ego. It certainly prtrvt'd to be a
tend tit need' in my case."
Tanlae is sold by all good draagtsps.
'neetivt.
FOR
the prevention of pains
after eating, flatulence,
lteadaches,biliousnesa,con• \+6.
atipation and other disagree- ti
able farms of
INDIGESTION
no remedy is so justly famed
Mother Seigeles Syrup, the t
stomach and livertonicwith
50 years' reputation.
ttICITHER 2'ne
5EWEI 5 SYRUP.
Yarmouth, Na., :tlai'eh
Mr. doe.eph I.r ll:lne, Seeret ry of
the Athletic Ao seetation, wwho were the
Cltamptons for leee of the Soule Shore
League and Western Nova Scotia Ba' -0
Bath states
that during the bt
mmtr
tits boyo used 5I1N ARD'S LINI3IENT
with very beneficial results, for sore
muscle bruise an s
s s d sprains.
It 13
p
considered by the players the bast,
albite liniment on the market. • Lvery
team should be supplied with this r
celebrated remedy. Her Mother's Faith in Lycia E.
[Signed) JOSBPII L. Lel3LANC, t Mann's Vegetable Compound
T S TF.ZERUi A VITheAbazrat IN YOVit
# town? You can earn $25.Q0 daily. We
teach you. Write Chief Instructor.
Canada Vulcanizer. London. Ont.
ARTICLES Paha sex,r
jL Z;i J1I:1 its' SUPPLZT;S.- .s eaves
► s..eno'I'Ei and Jumbo hives... and
furnisbings, honey extractors. pumps,,
engines and storage tanks: a complete
stork of beekeeping requirements- send
for our cataloglhe. Hale Brothers .Com.:
pany, . Ltd., Manufacturers, Brentford,
oat.
BELTING FOR SALE
AI.L KINDS OP VIIW AND Imambelting. pulleys. caws, vable,bose,packing,
sto„ shipped subiect to approval at lowest
prices
YORK. Canada, 1 TARO TTO
America's Pions' Dos i teneaiies
Bok on
DOG DISEASES
and How to''Peed
tailed Free to any' A4 -
dress by the Author.
$.
Oety Glover 00..140,
12a West Moth Street,
New York, TI,S. A.
COARSE SALT
LAN O LT
Bitik Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
J, CLIFF TORONTO
ACHES A1VD�
PAINS
SLOAN'S GETS 'EN e
VOID the misery of racking 1 hide,
Have a bottle of Sloan's I.il:i«
sent bandy and apply thea
you first feel the ache or pain..
It quickly eases the pain and sende
a feeling of warmth throu,,h the
aching part . Sl an'S t nd 44
u'jm,'out raw' ping.
Fine, too, for rheumatism, nehr
£ciatia;, sprains and strains. sofa - -„
lame bank and sore muscles.
For forty years pain's eaem,r..i.4
your neighbor.
At all druggists -35e, 70c,
Made in Czn ids.
n i men�yi �i if;
• '*' �.�.Itt '
YDUNQ
MOTItR
NOW STRONG
Sec'y Y. A. A. Led Her To Try It
SCALES ONHEAD
Also Eruptions on Face.
Very Disfiguring.
"My trouble began with small
patches of scales upon my scalp
which spread and covered
the top of my head. My
hair became dry and life-
less and fell out. Soon
the trouble appeared in
circles on my face. The
eruptions on my -face were
very disfiguring.
"A friend advised Cuticura Soap
and Ointment. I sent for a free sam-
ple which helped me, to I bought
more, andafter using one box of
Ointment, together with the Soap,
I was healed." (Signed) George
Brett, Jr., Pullman, Wash.
Give Cuticura Soap, Ointmentand
Talcum the care of your skin.
liampleaachrreebrxsu..Addreee: "Lymaae,ttm-
Hed, 344 Bt. Pail et., R,Montre,J.' sold every-
where. Soap24e. Ointment26nndS0o. Tnlcom26c.
feisfi'"Cuecura Soap shaves without mug.
Kenosha, Wisconsin. --"I cannot say
enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
pound. My mother
had great faith in it
as she lead taken so
much of it and when
I had trouble after
my baby was born
she gave it to me.
It helped me so much
more than anything
else had done that I
advise all women
with female trouble
to give it a fair trial
and I am sure they twill feel as I do
about .it.—Mrs. FRED. P. HANssrr, 562
Symmonds St, Kenosha, Wisconsin.
A medicine that has been in use nearly
fifty years and that receives the praise
and commendation of mothers and
grandmothers is worth your considers-
tion.
If you are suffering from troubles
that sometimes follow child -birth bear
in mind that Lydia E. Pinkham'sVege-
table Compound is awoman's medicine.
It is especitroubleally adapted to correct such
s.
The letters we publish ought to con-
vince you; ask some of your women
friends or neighbors they know its
worth. You will, too, if you give it a
fair trial.
WARNING! Say "Bayer" when ' you buy Aspirin.
Unless you see the name `Bayer" on tablets, you are
not getting Aspirin at all. Why take chances?
Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablet, of
Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians during 22 years .and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Handy "Bayer" boxe's of 12 tablets ---Also `intoes of 24 dna 100-•-Druge sts.
*apirin is the trade Maria (registered in Canada) of Bayer Kiat otacture of Mono-
aeeticacidester of salicylicacid. White it is well lrnown that Aspirin means Parer
manufacture, to assist the public against Imitations, the Tablets or Bayer Company
will be stamped with 'their genertll trade mark, the ''Bayer Cross."
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