HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1922-6-1, Page 3TUATIRENT
This 'Trouble Can Only be Got
JIM of by Enriching the Blood.
In no disease does the blood become
thin. so rapidly as in rhetnatisro. Not
only does. it become thin, but it is
loaded with rheumatic poisons. Wale
out proper treatment these poisons in-
creaee, the general health is under-
mined. the inflamed Joints swell, and
are very painful, and often the sue
terer becomes crippled.
Dr. WilliamsPink Pills build, up
the bleed and enable it to cast out the
thematic poisons with the natural
eeeretlens of the body, thus driving
out the pains and benefitting the gen-
eral health. Sound proof of these
statements is offered by Mrs. George
StanIV, Sparta, Ont., who says:—
For u number of years I was troubled
with raeumatism, whieli at times was
very painted. My general health was
aleo affected, and I could scarcely
drag myself around, 1 ilea been doe -
tering a good deal, but nid not get any
better, until. Can day my daughter
brought me a bon or Dr. Williams"
Pink Pills. By the time these were
used 1 could notice a slight improve-
ment and I continued taking the Pills
until 1bad used about a dozen boxes,
by wbieli time I felt like a new person
and looked line one. I could do MY
work with ease, and have since enjoy -
e1 the be of beanie. 1 haVe Sine()
recommended Dr. ',Williams' Pink Pills
to several others who received the
rams benefit as myself:'
The beat time to begin taking Dr.
Williams' Pink Pala Is the moment
you feel the least bit out of sorts. The
sooner you do so the sooner you will
regain your old time energy. You can
get (hese pills through any medicine
dealer or by mail post paid at 60 cents
a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Willianen Medicine Co., Broen-
ville. Out.
Visible Sound.
lam eompapy i3 seriously considering,
server told of hearing the explosion of
4 distant gun at the precise instant
when the moving light bond readied
Ids feet,
These also are believed to have been
visible sound waves. Di either ease,
gun or volcano, an explosion gives rise
to a steadily expanding "Shell" of con-
densa,tiou in the air, which, followed
by a shell of rarefaction, spreads out
frozu the t a speed Qfa lit-
tle more than 1,000 feet a second.
Under favoring circumstances we may
see it in enztline. When it reaches our
ears the vibration it imparts to our
ear theme enables us to hear the ex-
plosion,
The spreading spherical shell in the
air is made visible by its effect upon
the paths of light rays coining to our
eyes. We say that air is invisible,
but it is not always ea necessarily.
Everybody ban seen air shimmering
over a not stove or other heated ear -
face.
The spreading shell may be aptly
compared to a soap bubble in process
of blowing, and the iffiaeldrig are"
to the eireular outline of the bubble.
Diner on English Railroad
Electrically Equipped,
Inaugurating a new (leverage, the
"Copyright Law" of the Northwest Indians
That a "eoPYright •law," very similar ite, weadth to meet the oceasion.
to that in force among the civilized} These preparations usually began a
nations of the world, existed among) year in advance; in some eases s.9 long OF Was'
the primitive Indiane.. of nerthern Brit- } a time as three yettee was spent in pre -
the white man tame, is a remarkable" the .preepective owner called in the 11/Iontreal Woman Was On
.--..
SAYS SHE HAD
ACTUAL DREAD
ish Columbia and Alaska long before. liminaries, While this was ;going on,
filet which a writer discovered re -I arti t of th trib man fa the -
center while traveling through the tinetive lass whose wages were very
northern wildeeness region of British"! high. To the artist the prospective
Columbia company with William owner related all the traditions of each
Beynon, of the Canadian ethnological! figore and crest he wished carved.
reeeareb. 'Phe strange thing is that} The artist then starteca to work, spend -
though Touch has been written of log sometimes menthe -on the intricate
totem poles, and some pictures of designs necessary. His work was
them shown, the existence of eopyai made highly difficult because he must
right has been entirely overlocked.: not in any way duplicate any carving
In fact, the meaning of these polesaalready in existerice in the region -
and the strange -ceremonies attaehingt This rule was eery rigidly enforced,
to them, have never been made knownmarking the first workings or the
to the general reading Siblie. • copyright law in North America.
Herewith is given for the first time;
the story of how these primitive peo-
ples of North America instituted a
copyright law -atone exacter the same
lines as followed by the white men to-
day.
The past tense has been used
throughout, fon though an odd totem
pole may still be raised among some,
of the very primitive tribes, the -cus-
tom has peattically passed, through
the natives' intercourse with the white
To be the owner of a totem pole man. In feet, the Canadian govern -
was a sign of social position, rank, merit has stopped the natives improv -
wealth, and power. Every native erisbing themselves by sieh eere-
above the slave class -aspired to raise menials, which have been commonly
one some day. In the erection of the known among white men as
Great Northern Northern Railway Coe in Eng' pole a great lemma aT wealth bad to Welles," though their eignincance has
land, has equipped the kitchen of one be lavished; the more wealth lavished, been entirely lost upoa the egotistical
of its dining care with electrical cook- the greater the owner's standing in
ing apparatus. Power for the ap- the community.
paratus is furnished by two genera -When a native decided he would
tore, which are belt -driven from tbe fbe and is fenuly,
ive totem 'pole,
axles of the truelts, eaoh having a rat- and aennetimes, in. the ease of a great
ing of 6 nw. In the kitchen, across
one end, is the main limning range
and roasting oven, with a steaming
Mil above it, while evel' the latt4.; a WONDERFUL BRIDGES
white raan, for the meat part too eon-
temptuous of the native to inquire
closely into his doings.
So, soon the Indians who first in-
trodueed the law of copyright will
chief, the whole clan, set about gather- cease to need it,
grill and a. hot-water tank are locat-
e& A boiling range baying four hot
plates, two 10 -gal. boiling pans far OF MODERN WORLD
vegetahles, and a ash fryer, are also
included in the installation, which ha3
yielded such satisfactory results that THE LAST WORD IN EN-
similarequipatept for other trains. GINEERING FEATS.
pliC;e7antecnf a theistsltireanegilealli14)nfe: CHILDHOOD AILWIENT
thin luminous rings which, when
eruptitn is in pregrete, are eometimes The ail:rants cbildbood—cousta
seen to rush cut gird up from the pauen, indigestion, colic. colds, etc,
eneter awl abeeppeerfl spave. They ran be quietly banished througb, tiro
have igen oho:rye:I on Mount \Testi-, use of Baby's Own Tablets. They are
tilt; ae ',nee en Monet Etre. !a mild but thorouga laxative which he
En -da sueeeaeive ling fellows im-d sternly regulate the bowels and sweet-
me-alately upon an eeniesion, ami there en the stomach. They are guaranteed
ai oins to Le n a aleubt tit the feet that to contain no harmful drugs and can ,
the ag, "ars' r. mad waves made be given to the youngeee baby with
perfect safety. Concerning them Mrs.
Durieg the war eleervatien was Ire- Mettle Lepage. Ste. Beatrin Que.,
ereay reper.c.i el' mysteriou curved writes: ---"Baby's Own Tablets were of
bande of light eel shade that sweet great help to my baby. TIM' regi
aeries the sky or over the greund near, lilted her bowels and stomach and
maces where cannon were being fired.: made her plump and well." The Tab
-
They weze described as reaembling the lets are eold by mealcine denote or by
concentric ripples produced by drop- mail at ane a box from The Dr, Wil'
ving a pebble into water, One :do- Hams' Medicine Co., Brie:twine, Ont.
•
Thweight it will have to carry. The
eir Origin
HyDE.
Two Decks forTraffic on the
Great Structure That Will
Span the Hudson River.
In various parts of the world—in
Australia, Canada, and the United,
States.—plana are going ahead for the
construction of four masaivo bridges
whielo when completed, will be among
the greatest engineering feats in his -
ter'.
Most wenderful of ,all is the struc-
ture to be erected over the Hudson.
River at New York. It will be 6,660 ft.
long, or over 700 ft, longer than the
famous Brooklyn Suepension Briage,
and over 1,000 ft, longer than the
Forth cantilever bridge in Scotland.
The great skill that will be required
in the construction ef the new bridge
may be judged from the tremendous
Surnames an cantina span Will bo 3,240 feet in
length, and there will be two decks
for traffic.
On the upper deek-220 feet in
width—will be a roadway with a ear
on either side end outside this
will be two footways each 17 feet
broad. The lower bridge will have
ten lines of railway track.
• From the standpoint of actual
length the Australian bridge, which, is
to be erected over Sydney Harbor be-
tween Dawe's Point and Miison's
Point, is the next in importance.
'Unlike that over the Hudson. River,
I the bridge will be a single decker with
four lines of railway', a road 35 feet
wide, a motor -ear road 18 feet wide,
I and a 15 foot pathway for pedestaians.
I The central span will be 1,600 feet in
length.
Longer Than Quebec Bridge.
CLAYBURN
-Parini Origin—English.
Source --A locality.
Most of the Clayhurne and (lei -
bones in Canada Will be inclined to
quarrel with the statement that this
is an •Englith family name. They
maintain that it is Irish. "
In this they are not exactly correzt.
The truth is that most of the Clai-
!mimes and Clayburns in Canada are
Irishelaut their lime is not, though it
has been known in Ireland since the
twelfth or thirteenth eentury.
This name, which as often
pro-
nouneed in England as though it were
spelled "Clebburn" or "Clebbern," was
originally a piece name, and the local-
ity was the seat of a lordship estab-
lished in Westmoreland in Anglo-Nor-
man times. The spelling then was
"Cliburne," and it later became "Cle-
borne," from -which evolved the form
Claiborne and finally Clayburn. And
strangely enough, this latest 'spelling
indicates better than the others, quite
by accident it must be believed, the
original meaning of the place name,
if you remember that in this case
the "burn" means a stream of water,
and not that painful result of too 'close
association with fire. "Clegg" was
the Anglo-Saxon word for "sticky
earth," that is to nay, "lay."
An Alan de Cleburne, apparently,
settled in Ireland as early as 1200
A.D., and the name has flourished in
that country, as well as in England',
ever since.
Variations — Hide, Ide, Hithereve,
alitherceve.
Racial
Source—A locality, also xi title.
None of the family names in this
group have anything to do with our
modern word "hide" -which means a
skin. They are developments of an-
other old. Teutonic word which was
variously spelled by the Anglo-Saxons
and the Anglo -Normans, later, "hyde,"
"hythe," "Intim" and sometimes "hide."
It really bad two meaningei or If
you prefer to put it that way there
were really two separate words. One
of them indicated a smell farm, speci-
fically a farm of the size which one
man could plow in one day. The
other, which was used principally, but
not exclusively, in the maritime sense,
meant a haven or harbor.
In addition there is a town in
Cheshire, the history of which dates
back to before the Norman period,
called Hyde.
Here then, you have three sources
of the foregoing surnames. A study
of the most usual courses of develop-
ment in family name formation would
indicate that all of them, with the
exception. of Hithereve and Ilithereeve
'came in most instances from the name
of the town, and at first were used to
show that an individual had 'come
from that place or was identified with
it in some way.
But there is no doubt about the
two forms of Inith-ereeve. The "bite -
reeve" could only have been (literally)
the harbor -sheriff. We would speak
of eat port warden to -day.
Feed the body well
Right food. for the body is ,
more important than right
fuel for the engine.
is a scieliafic food,containin.g all
the nutriment of wheat and malt-
ed barley. raxte.Nuts digests•
easily and knickly, builds, towa.rd.
. 11health and strength —= and is
delightful in flavor an4 crispness
•
"TheitN! a Reason Lr GraPCJIlitS
While not to be compared 'with
either of these structures the bridge
to be erected over the Detroit River
between Detroit and Windsor will be
none the less remarkable. It will have
two decks. The upper deck will have
two 28 foot roadways, two 7 foot side-
walks, and a double trolley line; while
the lower deck will be devoted to four
railway lines.
About 3,703 feet in length, with a
main suspended span cat 1,893 feet, the
bridge will be over 400 feet longer
than the Quebec bridge, the famous
structure, the hoisting of whose cen-
tral span was aceempenied by two
disasters involving ' a total g.10,95 of
eighty-eight lives.
Last, but 21,0 least, is the new sesp-
pension bridge to be built -seross the
Delaware River. It win connect the
cities of Philadelphia and Camden, It
is to cost more than twenty-five mil-
lion dollars., and will have a central
span of 1,750 feet. Roadways, tram-
ways, and pathways are to be in -
eluded. A total of 33,000 tons of
metal will be required, whereas a
earibilever bridge would' have needed
47,000 tons.
Wheo these liritigee are erected—
and that at Philadelphia -win take five
years to complete, or eight years less
than the famous Brooklyn structure'
--Britain will be eutelassed in the
motter of great bridge -'building feats,
says an English writer. It is hoped,
however, that the armament firms de-
prived of work under the disarma-
ment scheme will turn their attention
to the matter, and proposals have al-
ready been put forward for various
bridgets---one over the Tay; another
at Berwick -on -Tweed; two OM the
Thames, one between Barnes- and Kew
ana one at Richmond; and one over
the Severn.
As for remarkable bridges, the
United. States still leads the way with
the one at Chleago. This works ex-
actly like a lift, the -central span be -
Many
^.•
ing raised straightwhen a silt has
to pass.
The Runcoin b
is in the nature
wey, the passe
across in a remarkable eage-like con-
trivanee.
up P
Classified Advertisement,
C01.IPLD WANT I30ABD, FARM Oi
mountains, give particulars. HoE
ISO, Wilson Publishing Co„, Ltd., 13
Adelaide St. W., Toronto.
Itrinte45 virArrimio.
Ul1$D8 AVANT -41D FOR TRAINING
School in charge, of graduate of
Johns Hopkins Kospital, PPly
Superin-
tendent, liornewood Sanitarium, Goeinh-
Verge of Breakdown But w4.112,m13—zmaii.E.
W
Eats Anything Now, and errant:Nu. 6gTI) PsBSONS TO Ggit;
Nervousness is Gone, Too. made yield $25 to 460 per week; WU..
"Tanlae Is wonderful. It has simple
made me feel like a different person," BELTING FOR SALE
said airs. Wm. Allen, 1515 Wellington ALL KINDS Or NKW AND 17SED
St., Verdun, Montreal, Quebec. belting, pulleys, saws. eable,hose.peskinir.
"For five years I never knew what etatapfiaiafeid'egetetit tolprtniat 176.
it was to be free from stomach trouble CO., Ile; "ZiSiRkngi'lliED'i?, TORONTO.
and finally was on the verge of a break-
down, I actually dreaded for meal- Wood May Become Important
as Fuel.
In view of the threatened difficulty
in obtaining coal in the near future,
rated booltlet and particulars sent %or
3c stamp. Toronto Supply Co.. Cutustoek
time to come as I knew no matter how
careful I was about mar diet 1 would
be sure to suffer afterwarde.
Tantae bee Just changed things all
round for me. For a long time I had the question ot the value of wood sal a
been going without any breantast alto- fuel agaAn becomes 1/114)"t44t^ Ae.
,ataier and now eet tie to the morn., cording to the Forest Products Laboaet
ing So hungry ea; eat -bacon or most tortes of the Department of the In-
terior, Canada, the main considente
anything else want and enjoy ft. I
Mils in selecting wood for fuel are Its
have gotten over the xiervoueeess, too,
and aiu ahie sleep night hang weight and dryness. Poured for pound,
without wahttig up ones ami get up all wood*. equally dry, have alaout the
mornings feeling thoroughly refrestted, same heating value. A °gr.(' of dry
1 am still taking Tarlac and improving •bartlevood, such as birch, lane approxe
steadfly. In taet, It just news that mately the same heating value DA a
every dose increases my strength and
energy."
Tanlae is sold by all good druggists.
ton of coal, but in the ease of
woods, as ae much as two cords would, In
some instances necessary to get the
Advt. same amount of beat.
MONEY ORDERS,
Rubberized Paper. The safe way to senawa_ney by man
torAuntZnIrrueslishellralnbteheen ntlitnietreoais t cbhy:tiao"d117Tl)re: .:10ounreyainQnrcidts.erd*
ridge over ,the merse.y. paper. It is claimed that the intro- million people.
ef sitspensitai rage
ngers being -carried duction of even very small quantities
of rubber into the raw material re-
sults in the produetion of extraordin-
ary toughnessandstrength-
Mlnard's Liniment Relieves Nottra,1014
Nurses War Memorial Fund.
Canadian nurses from coast to coast
are raising funds to erect a monument
at the Capital in commemoration of
Canadiau Nursing Slaters who lost
their lives durhag the Great War. On-
tario nurses are requested to send
their contributions either ludividuallY
or through Gaor local association to
the Provincial Seeretary-Treasurer of
the Fund, Miss Holland, 410 Sher -
bourne St., Toronto,
When the Brakes Are of
First Importance.
In the West, logging canape are
mostly situated in the hills, and the
heavy loads of logs have to be hauled
out, always downhill. Often that helps
to mate the hauling easy. but some-
times the grades are so steep that it
makes
It teo easy—so easy that it en-
Vtils difficulty. Indeed, in these in-
stances the term hauling is a, mis-
nomer, for that implies pulling the
load, and the operation actually con-
sists in pushing against the load in-
stead of pulling it. Two and a half
miles of specially constructed track
is used at one western logging camp
for transporting heavy loads on a
large motor truck down a. very steep
grade. The truck is six -wheeled, and
has powerful brakes on its four rear
wheels. These brakes are controlled
exclusively by one man, while another
takes care of the driving and steering.
Millard's Liniment for sale everywhere
Simcoe County Municipal
Forest.
Work was begun this ening in plant-
ing up the area M Vespra. township,
Shneoe county, Ontario, which the
county council has acquired for a
municipal forest. It will take several
years to plant up the whole area of
eight hundred acres but the work will
proceed year by year till it is done. It
is possible that a nursery to grow part
of the planting stock required will be
started an the site.
The monument foe Rear Admiral
Robert E. Peary is a huge stone
sphere on which the continents of the
earth are outlined. At the, North
Pole is set a bronze star, symbol both
of his discovery and, as 'some one has
suggested, of "the star of Linton-
qifered win." His epitaph is his own
favorite quotation from the Latin -
1 will find a way or make cane. .
Have Good Hair
and Clean Scalp
Free from dandruff and itch-
ing. It's easy. On retiring rub
spots of dandtuff and itching with
Cuticura Ointment, gettingOint-
ment well on scalp. Nextmorning
shampoo with Cuticura Soap and
hot water. Rinse withtepid water.
Soap2Se. diatatent25103(k.Yakma25e. Sold
throughoutthellommion. CanadianDepot:
Lirop_as. Limited, 344 St. Paul b., W. Montreal.
ElCuticurri Soap shaves withoit num
ISSUE No. 21—'22.
a man in the hour of his
need ftuds that he has been so busy
making money that he has forgotten
to make any friends,
Eleetrie cap -lamps are now being
made for the use d miners, the =-
rent being supplied from an =Mau -
later strapped on the wearer's boo
STOMACH TROUBLES
ARE DUE TO ACIDITY
Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief For
Acid indigestion.
• ache and inability to retain food are
So-ealled stomach troubles, such as
indigestion, gas, sourness, stomach -
144) ENJOY
in probably nine cases out of ten, pERErriat
simply evieenhe that excessive secre-
tion of acid is taking place In the HEALTH
stomach, causing the formation of gas
and acid Indigestion.
Gas distends the stomach and causes
that full, oppressive, burning feeling
ti k. • h rtbu n wine
7 •
COARSE SALT
LAN OSALT
Bulk Carlota
TORONTO SALT WORKS
O. 4. CLIFF TORONTQ
Those Having Sick Animals
SHOULD USE
(local for all throat and chest disease!,
Distemper. (largo Sprains. Bruises,
ns
cone. Mange, Spari. Runnqin Sores.
et'., ete. Should always »e in the stable.
—gra, D F.V W I KIM.
•
some mes noon as heartburn r
the acid irritates and inflames the
delicate ithing of the stomach. The
trouble lies entirely in the excess de-
lt or sooretion o2 Od
Every Woman's
Read Mrs. Cassady's
Experience
Paris, Ontario.— For lave years I
To stop or prevent this souring na suffered With p51115 in my back and
the food contents of the stomach and from other troubles*
to neutralize the acid, and make it women often have.
bland and harmless, a teaspoonful ot All of this time
was unfit for work
and was taking the
different medicines
that I thought were
good. I saw the
advertisement in
the papers of Lydia. -
E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound and
have taken it faith-
fully. I am now in.
good health and do all my own work.
I recommend it to others and give
yon permission to publish tbis letter
an your little books and inthe news-
papers as a testimonial."—Man Th
CASSADY, Box 461, Paris, Ontario.
This medicine which helped Mrs.
Cassady so much is worthy of your
confidence. If you are troubled with,
such ailments as displacements, In-
flammation, irregularities, or other
forms of female -weakness you sbould
give it a trial now.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text -
Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to
Women" will be sent to you free
upon request. Write to The Lydia E.
Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
This book contain -9 valuable inter -
elation.
Bisurated magnesia, a good and effec-
tive coneetor of aoid stomach, should
be taken in a quarter of a glass of hot
or cold water after eating or when-
ever gas, sourness or acidity is felt.
ThIS sweetens the stomach and neu-
tralizes the acidity in a few moments
and is a perfectly harmless and inex-
pensive remedy to use.
An antfacid, such as Bisurated Mag-
nesia, which can be obtained from any
druggist in either powder or tablet
form, enables the stomach to do its
work rlroperly without the aid of
artificial digestents. Magnesia comes
in several forms, so be certain to ask
for and take only Bisurated Magnesia,
which is especially prepared for the
above purpose.
Pioneer Dog Eleznedies
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
K Clay Glover Co, Ina,
129 West 24th Street
New York, U.S.A.,
WARNING! Say. "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not get-
ting Aspirin at all. Accept only an "unbroken package" of
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose
worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by
millions for 4,
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets --..Also bottles of 24 and. 100 --Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono.
aceildicidester ef Salicylicacid. While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer
manufacture, to assist thelmblio azalast imitations, the Tablets of Bayer compae'y
will bo stamped with their general trade Mark, the "Beier Cross."
4
4
4
1
1
1
•
4
4
1
' ea4ipeittea,
•