HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1922-8-3, Page 3YSR
GROWING O
- The Only Way is Through.
I
The only way out of a job Bill knew
AND GIRL& H .eve etlli
Need Rich, Red Blood to Keep
Up Health. and Strength..
It is a mistake to think that epee
-
Mia is only a girl's complaint. Girls:
probably show the effect ot weak,
watery blood more plainly than boys.
But many boys in their teens grow
thee and weedy, showing that they
have not enoughblood, or that it is
thin and watery. Let the boy in this
condition catch cold and he will lose
his strength and his health becomes
precarious. To overcome this trouble
give both, your weak boys and girls
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and see how
Soon good appetite returns and the
weak boy or languid girl becomes full
of activity and high spirits. Mrs. P.
Garvey, R.R. No. 5, Mono 'bulls, Ont.
tells what this medicine did for her
young son, She saps. --"Three years
ago, my little boy, who was then 11
years old, was very pale and weak, he
would take fainting spells and com-
plained of a pain about his heart. One
day a lady friend who noticed his run-
down, condition told me her daughter
had been Lea similar state and found
new health through Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. I therefore got a supply for my
boy, and by the time the first box was
used his appetite seemed better, and
by the time he bad taken haif a dozen
boxes everyone was surprised at the
change in his condition, he was such. a
fine, healtby looking boy. He had
grown tall and stout with no steal
O! his former run-down condition. I
believe Dr. Williams' .Pink Pills are
unexcelled for anyone weak and run
down."
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all medicine dealers or by mail at 50
cents a box or six bexes for $2,50 from
The Dr. Williams' Medieine Co„ Brock-
ville, Ont.
Mt..,
An English tank barge for trans
porting oil is steered by eectricity
and can be controlled from n• vessel
towing it.
tMinerd's Liniment for sato everywhere
ought of going aeound
Or tunneling under it, into the ground,
Or turning back; none of these would
do.
"The only way out of a job is through"
Said Bill; and --well, he proved that
he knew,
•
"Let's build a derrick and go over-
head,"
One said.
"The jolt is wrongly shoved on us;
It rightly belongs to the other cuss,
Let's slide right by and leave it flat." '
But Bill with a grin said "None of that'.
It isn't my job by rights, 'tis true.
11ut the surest way out of a jobb is
through"—
Whatever they put on Bill, he'd do,
Bill learned a lot that none other knew,
Gpg through.
Jobs hunted Blll up'and got in bis• way
Till it even affected the poor boy's
pay!
And the others said. "Just watch• that
duck—
Some, stupid fellows have all the Inca!"
But luck had never a thing to do
With Bill's •success, for the head guys
knew
Biii'e onl Way
y
tltrougbe.
out of a stunt was
Now they call him "Boss," tbose others
do;
And you
If you for your motto will take old
Bill's
.And use your several brains and wills
And look less oft at the office clock
Will Boon have boosted your personal
stock
Till the "luck" of Bill may be your
"luek" too.
Remember his came because he knew
"The best way out of a task is
through."
—Strickland Gillilau.
Considerate.
"Would you mind driving a little
slower, old man?"
"Not getting scared, are you,"
"Ole n0, nothing like tbat, but I'd
hate to take any unfair advantage of
my life insurance company,"
Surnames and Their Origin
SWINBURN,
Racial Origin ---English.
Source—A given name.
This is an English family name wide-
ly known, but one which might well
give you something to puzzle over in
its origin, or at leaat in one Of its
Origins, for it has two.
As you might see, if you went care-
fully over a map of Northern England,
there is a locality in Northumberland
which bears this name, and undoubted-
ly •in many instances the family name
came into being in the form "de Swin-
burn," ind4dating that the bearer had
come from this place.
The other origin is only revealed up-
on more painstaking research.
It lies in a Norse given name of
which we of to -day might well be par-
doned for not knowing ---tile name of
' Svelnbjorn," the meaning of which
was "young bear" or "boy -bear,"
In the north of England, as well as
along the west coast of Scotland, the
Norse influence was at one time very
strong: In fact, numerous expeditions
of the Vikings left settlers in many
localities, thereby bringing as much in-
fluence upon the nomenclature of Eng-
land and Scotland as did the Danes.
The given name of "Sveihbjorn"
would naturally, within a few genera-
tions, be softened into au Anglo-Saxon
form, and then, following the period of
Norman dominance, come to the sur-
face finally as Swinburn.
The Optimistic Time of Life.
Youth is always optimistic. It is al-
ways picturing the Promised Land
ahead, Nature is a great diplomat.
She known she must hold up great in-
ducements to youth in order to hold
him to his task, to keep hien from get-
ting discouraged, giving up and turn-
ing back, to keep hire going oh, For
example, the youth In school cannot
see the use of all the things he has
learned. Much of it seems dry, dreary
drudgery to him. A similar thing Is
true of many things he has to perform.
He says "what's the use of all this?"
and but for this wonderful promise
ahead of ban, the bulletin boards ad-
vertising the great shows, the circuses
that are coming, the youth Cquld not
be held to his task. He would give
up.
What marvelous pictures of a borne
of his own. Nature throws up on the
youth's screenlest he forget and be-
come selfish, living only for himself,
saving only to gratify his own desires.
But . this fascinating home picture
makes him reconeiled to stick and dig
and save.--Suecess.
DAB N EY
Variation—Abney,
Racial Origin --French and Norman-
French.
Source --A locality.
There is something English -sound-
ing about both of these family names.
But you can't always go by the sound
of a name, nor yet by its evening. And
many names originating outside the
English tongue when transferred into
it so change in their spelling as to be
unrecognizable unless you trace them
back to their sources,
In France, in the department of Ber-
ry, there is a city called Aubigny. It
is the name of this city from which
these family names come. Unless you
search the records in the individual
cases there is no way of telling just
when the name came into the Eiglish
from the French. With the foregoing
spellings it seems fairly reasonable to
suppose that they did so some time
ago, for in later years the tendency
has been to preserve French spelling
rather more than has been the case
here. In some cases the name may
have come over in Norman times. In
others it may have been brought into
England by Huguenot refugees.
Originally, "D'Aubigny," it is quite
'clear that the name indicated the bear-
er has come from that place. In some
instances the prefixed "d" was incor-
porated in the name, giving the form
Dabney. In others it was dropped,
making the name Abney. The former
is more common than the latter.
CHOLERA INFANTUNI
Cholera infantum is one of the fatal
ailments et childhood. It is a trouble
that comes on suddenly, especially dur-
ing the summer months, and unless
prompt action is taken the little one
may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own
Tablets are an ideal medicine in ward-
ing off this trouble, The regulate the.
bowels and sweeten the stomach and
thus prevent the dreaded summer con -
plaints, They are au absolute safe
medicine, being guaranteed to contain
neither opiates nor narcotics or other
harmful drugs. They cannot possibly
do harm—tbey always do good, The
Tablets are sold by medicine dealers
or by snail at 25 oeuts a box from The
Dr. 'Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville,
rockvilla, Ont,
The Trysting Place.
When the day lowers and I can feel
My self-control grow weak,
A little closet hid away
I seek,
And if abut and bolt the door
On those I lave,
'Tie only ,I may be alone
With One above.
A little while with Him, and lo!
The tangle's straight.
Surely that little door for me
Is Heaven's' gate!
A little gate of heaven, I'm sure
That door must be,
For when I open it again
Heaven goes with mel
When Clouds "Speak."
Anyone who has observed a clear
sky being quickly obscured by clouds
must have wondered how such a state
of affairs, name about,
The water -vapor that is evaporated.
into the atmosphere manifests itself in
many other forms than rain, All the
clouds are due to it, for they are noth-
laag but aggregations of excessively
minute drops of water or crystals, of
ice, that have condensed out of the
air because the latter has become too
cool to retain them in the form of
water -vapor.
The forms of clouds are endless and
ever-changing, but there are certain
Characteristics whdch allow them to be
grouped roughly into several classes.
There are the thin feathery lines a:Iid
bands comm sly called "mares tails,"
floating nearly five miles high,
Somewhat lower are the "speckled,"
"'mackerel," and "dappled" cloud et -
feats.
. Lower still, about a mile high, we
see great rolling nlassee of clouds
the ordinary domed "woolpaek" clouds
of the summer sky. They are the dark
clouds with the silver linin;, The
"woolpack" cloud is due to moisture
carried upwards by ascending aircur
rents which have been warmed by con-
tact with the ground. Here we have
also the heavy grey ragged pail ---the
raincloud.
The gigantic "thundercloud" may
sometimes grow until it becomes three
miles deep from summit to base! It
is simply a den, e rain -cloud, which is
the source of heavy iulnmex showers.
Often it is accompanied by storms of
thunder and lightning. The latter is
caused by the discharge of the elee-
trleity that has accumulated upon the
raindrops in the cloud, the former be-
ing the audible effect of the discharge,
Light travels about a million times
faster than sound, and therefore we
see the lightning before we bear the
thunder; both are, ot course, actually
simultaneous,
R. W. T.
Sentence Sermons.
A. mule can not pull while he is kick-
ing and he can, not kick while he is
pulling. Neither can you.
God will not look you over for dip-
lomas and medals but for scars.
Some Pocks make their joys more
Incidents and their sorrows great
evante.
What we are not up on we are gener-
ally down on.
The only motto some people seem
to have is "If something ain't wrong,
'taint right."
If some sermons were as broad as
they are long we would all be better
off.
You can't own any more than you
are worth.
Some people grow with responsi-
bility; others swell.
Some people are absolutely punctual
in being late.
The more we pa'ssss the more we
are possessed by our possessions.
' H. M. Stansifer.
Few things arernore foolish than
hating.
b
w `"''.,
tbekt. 4h
seet.v7• 41.446,4
In the
open or in the office,
this food helps
EXPLORERS and hunters have taken Grape -
Nuts as one of their principal foods—because
Grape -Nuts contains much nourishment in
small bulk.
Office workersfind that a breakfast or lunch of
•.Grape -Nuts, is much better for them than a heavy,
starchy Meal—because Grape -Nuts- digests easily
and wholesomely.
The richness and, crispness of. Grape -Nuts,, that
splendid wheat -and -barley food, have a wonderful
charm: for the taste.
An order to your grocer today ..will bring this
splendid food to you. Ready to eat from the pack-
age—add a little cream or milk in the dish:
`° e -Nuts THE BODY BUILDER
"There's u Reason"
Cereal Ltd.,( ±
Made by Canadian PostumCere Co.,, Windsor, Ontario
MIJNN AND WIFE
NOW ENJOYING
-
BEST OF HEALTH
Toronto Couple, After Putting
Tarlac to the Test, Declare
it Restored Them Both to
Splendid Condition.
"My wife and I put Teniae to the
test and we both think it is a wandea'-
ful medicine," said Edward Munn, of
123 Rose Ave., Toronto, Ont.
"For three years I was in a generals
run-down condition from atoma.eh ten -
late and indigestion. The little I ate
would cause gas, to form so badly I
was miserable neest of the time. I
was troubled continually with consti-
pation and frequent dizzy sipeals made
me feel like I would fall if I stooped
over. I was always, having headaches
and towards the last I got so weak 1
was fagged out all the time.
"I hadn't gotten far on Tan;rae be -
fere I knew I was getting better and
now I feel fine in. every way. My wife
was badly run down, too; and Tantae
was just as effective i,n her case, We
are now enjoying excellent health sad
are glad to recommend Tanliio tar it
Certainly does the work."
Tarlac is sold by all good druggists.
Advt.
Hurricanes to Order.
Wave you ever wondered how the
varieties of weather --raid, fog, and
wind—that one sees on. the movie
screen are produced? If artists and
photographers waited for real weather
such as they required to occur, a lot of
valuable time would be wasted.
The simplest solution is to make
your owl1 weather, so that you can
turn on just the type you want.
Three appliances are used. The
first is the rainmaker, which looks
like a lightly -made fire -engine. It is
provided with a lattice -work tower en
the tap of whtciu stands an operator
who, by opening or closing taps, can
produce either .fine or heavy rain.
The rain is directed towards the air
current mado by the wind meehine,
and by varying the strength of the
"wind," the "rain" can be made to fall
or in ` driving gently wild v ng squalls.
The wind -maker is nothing more
than an engine with a large propeller
mounted on a motor -lorry. By regu-
lating the speed you can have a gentle
breeze that will just ruffle the hero-
ine's curls, or a hurricane which tears
leaves and branches off the trees and
buffets- the players as severely as a
real storm.
The fog machine, also mounted on a
lorry, contains a number of metal noz-
zles with. regulating valves. Through
them a harmless wiete gas is liberated
insuch quantities as may be necessary,
MONEY ORDERS.
The safe way to send money by mail
is by Dominion Express Money Order.
Our Inheritance.
"I myself am good fortune," said
Walt. Whitman. Why shouldn't we all
say the same? Wey shouldn't we be
and have good fortune when we are
the children, the heirs of the Creator
of the universe? e Why shouldn't we
hold up our heads? Why shouldn't
we be independent; why shouldn't the
heirs to such a stupendous inheritance.
think well of themselves?
The heir of an earthly Monarch
holds up his head; tleinks he is some-
body; feels proud of hiss inheritance.
But :think of what the humblest hu-
man being las inherited in compari
eon—.a11 of the good things of the uni-
verse!. He has not" only inherited the
earth, but he has inherited the heav-
ens, the sun, the moon, the stars. He
has inherited the principles of love, of
truth, of beauty, of sublimity, of
power—everything that is worth while,
everything that is good for him. We
are all blessed with this great inherit-
ance. -0. S. Marden.
A Difficult Task,
A couple of elderly merchants, in the
course of an: altercation touching some
business matter, ea far forgot their
dignity es' to threaten each other with
bodily violence, the first deelaring his
intention to pull the other's ears.
Tee threatened one was so !.Hdlg-
nant that he confided in a tbird mer-
chant, to whom be repeated the threat,
a,ddirg:.
"If he tries. it, he will have ids bands
fun."
And he wonderedl why his friend
smiled.
Tripoli has no rivers and rain sel-
dom falls,
O, alePherson,
Furniture Dealer, Undortaker,
Armstrong, B.C.
Minard's Liniment Co„ Ltd.
Yarmoutle N,S,:
Dear Sirs, ---Since the Mart of base- OFINTEREST
ball season we have been Hindered
with sore muscles, sprained ankles,
etc„ but just as soon as we started"
using Minard's Liniment our troubles
ended, Every baseball player should
keep a bottle of your liniment handy. Nurse Recommended Use of
Yours truly, W. E. McPherson.
Secretary of Armstrong HighSchool Lydia E+ Pixikhani's Vege'
Baseball Team. table Cornpound
Classified' Advertisement*
W'EJ;] zoo NEWSP4.PER vi'4N2A,
t.
WE HAVE A CASH Pi�..c.a,etS)Jl
for a weekly newspaper in On-
tario. Price must be attractive. Seng
full information to Wilson Publishing
Co., Ltd., 73 Adelaide Vit. W„ Toronto.
BELTING FOR SALE
rIIHEEASHIRE BELTS AND SOC -
A TION hose, new and used, shipped
subject to approval at lowest prices in
Canada. Yorit Felting Co., 115 York
St., 'Toronto. Ont.
Ventilation.
A room cannot be properly vend -
toted without a certain amousit of
draft. If you have sufficient clotleiag
to keep you warm and comfortable
you can have. opposite 'windows open
without danger of catching cold.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia!
Following His Lead.
"Hello, Ramie, back form Paris?"
"Yes—that is to say, back from
Paree."
"Ale And how is Mrs. Ilarree?"
Aw=toe'* Tions it Dog 211rma4 iM
Book en
DOG DISEASES
and How to Feed
i . Mailed Frthe Author.
ee to any A414,,y231404
*CsyU ht�
S#set
New York. 'CAA,
,41101.101811.0.1111110100.0161.0110001111
COARSE SALT
LAN D.SAL '
Bulb Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
0, J, CLIFF TORONTO
TO WOMEN
Fresh Water Spring in Ocean.
A frestt water spring which comes
from the bed of the sea with sufficient
force to be distinguishable from the
salt water which surrounds it Is one
of the .curiosities which may be wit-
nessed at this tlme of the year off
Elbury Cove, Torbay, England.
The real source of the phenomenon
bas nevem' been boosted but it is sur-
mised that the accumulated rainfall
somewhere 1i shore createspressure
sufficiently strong to force an outlet on
the ocean floor one hundred yards
from shore.
The difference in color is, marked
enough so'tikat the fresh water can be
told from the salt from the beach and
yachts, have been able to refill their
water oasis from the supply of fresh
water which let absolutely untainted:
Plane Truth.
Mose--")is here flying bwsineS0 am
a mighty ole venture,"
Rastus—"Haw come you say slat?"
Mose—"Didn't de parson say dot
Ecau sold h.ie. 'heirship' to' Jacob?""
ISSUE No. 30--'22.
CUTICURA HEALS
LARGE ERUPTIONS
On Face, Sore and Disfiguring.
In Blotches and Burned,
"Small pimple like eruptions came
first on my face. They were sore and
disfiguring, and were also large and
red. They festered and came to a
bead, and they were in blotches and
burned.
"I had these on my face for about
a month before I used Cuticura Soap
and Ointment. I could feel the pim-
pies getting better after a few days'
treatment, and I used one cake of
Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuti-
cure Ointment when I was healed."
(Signed) Miss Florence Thayer,
Wright, Quebec.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal-
cum promote and maintain skin pu-
rity, skin "comfort and skin health
often when all else fails.
(Sample Seat Free by Mall. Address: "Lymans,Eim-
LW, 544 Bt. Peal Bt., W., Moatreal." Sold every-
where. Soap25a Ointment 26 end50c. Talcum 26c.
ERN"' Cuticura Soap shaves without mug.
BathwelI, Ontario.—"I was weald
and run down, had no appetite and
was nervous. The
nurse who toolc
care of me told mei
to try Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vega.
table Compound,
and now I amgets
ting strong. 1 rec-
ommend your medi-
cine to my friends,:
and you may use.
my testimonlai"--e
Mts. D. T enevELLi
R. R. No. 2, Bothe
well, Ontario.
The reason why Lydia E. Pinta
tam's Vegetable Compound is so
successful in overcoming woman's ills
is because it contains the tonic,
strengthening properties of good old-
fashioned roots and herbs, which act
on the female organism. Women
from all parts of the country are
continually testifying to its strength-
ening, beneficial influence, and as it
contains no narcotics nor harmful
drugs it is a safe medicine foe
women.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text
Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to
Women" will be sent you free upon
request. Write to The LydiaE.
Pinkhem Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.,
Q
UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you
are not getting 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 Cot
Colds Headache. Rheunnatisnm
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Handy "Bayer" boxes o 12 tablets—.Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggietee
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in. Canada) of Bayer. Manufacture of Maned
aeetieaciclester •o Salleylicacid. While it is well known that. Aspirin moans Baye k
manufacture, to assist the, public against imitations the Tablets of Baynr Co:rtpan
will, be stamped. with their general trade mark, the "Bayer Cross,"
w
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