HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1922-12-21, Page 3them you .can buy bread like it,
ready baked?
,rCOUNT the raisins— at
.est eight big, luzn
�n ) 17R
tender fruit -meats to the
slice.
4!
Taste it --see 1101V the ra-�
sin flavor permeate$ the:
bread,
No need to bake at horse
when we've arranged with
bakers in almost every town
and city to bake this full
fruited raisin bread.
just 'phone and they'll de-
liver it— all ready to sur-
prise the family tonight.
It comes from master hal&
ors' modern livens M your
city. And it's made with
Sun -Maid Raisins.
That's another reason for its
superiority. A rare con:,_nnr'
en
of a:utritlaue osteal and fruit--
Moth good and goad for yon, e
you should serve it at least Hulce
a week,
Use Sun -Maid Raisins also is
puddings, cakes and cookies. Yoe
may be oOered other brandsthat
you knew less well than Sun=
/Yields, but the kind,you want !'s
the kind you know Is good. In-
eist, therefore, on San -Maid
brand, They Cost no more thaza
ordinary r::isius.
Mail coupon for free book of
tested Sun -Mai:' recipes.
SUN -MAID RAISINS
- The Supreme Bread Raisin.
Sura -Maid Raisin Growers
Marnbarahip 1L,000
Fresno, California
ri IIOW IMMIt�4 ser mow am mom ono ammo arm wax*
milis
CUT THIS OUT AND SEENI T_
ISun -Maier Raisin Growers,
IDept. N-333-12, Pavane, California
Please send me copy of your inti boob,
"Recipes with Raisins."
1 NAME....-........—.........---.-----.. ,-......
1 STREET..........-.........---...--.--....—.-.-...—.....
IGrit" -.---.,.------,»,,,PROVINCE--..,..- -- -..
Providing for the Future
BY RIEV, PETER. BRYCE
About a year ago I received a. letter
from a man in the city, who, atter out-
lining his qualif•cations, .for matri-
mony, stated he would Iilte to musty a
widow with a furnished house, as be
was boarding, and just go in and "hang
up his hitt, as it were," and make him -
Self at home and look after her and
the house. He added as a postscript
to his letter, "The•Lord will provide,"
evidently with the desire to impress
me with his piety.
In the matter of providing for the
futtime their aro some who say unc-
tio'usly "The Lord will provide." Some
appear to be sincere, and to belierve it
would manifest a lack of trust in God
to "Take thought for the morrow."
Others, I fear, are like the man of the
letter with pretentious to faith in God
which are of doubtful value.
I find no warrant in the revelation
of God for believing that we need
make no provision for the future. All
that we know of the Great Provider
would indicate that Ile expects all up-
on whom responsibility rests, to dis-
charge that responsibility to the full-
est possible extent.
It is apparent to all wlio have know-
ledge of family life in Canada that
many mean have tailed to appreciate
the importance of providing in an ade-
quate manner for the incidence of
death and its consequent effect upon
those dependent on them. Clergymen
all over the country have been again
and again brought face • to face with
the tragedy of the death of afather
in early -manhood leaving a family
without financial resources.
The man with a family anti in re-
ceipt of a .small wage finds • it most dif-
ficult to do more than provide for the
barest necessities in the present, and
the whole problem witk very many is
aggravated by pea+iods of depression,
bringingin their une,nipioyment with
consequent debt and general, d2scour
ageitiemt.
RoyalOntario Museum
1153 Bloor St. Weat, .Near Avenue Road
Largest•permanent erhibitioon in, Canada.
Xrohaeology, 'Geology, Mineralogy, Pal-
aeontology, zoology. Open daily, 10 a,m.
to F m.. Sunday, 2 to G p.m." Bloor,
Belt 1ne, Dupont and Avenue ltd. cars.
When in Toronto visit the
.00ARSE SALT
- L A N; D.'SALT
BuJk Cttrlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
O. J. CLIFF TORONTO
America's pioneer Dog Semedier
Book on
DOG DISEASES
and How to ifeed
Mailed Free to any Ad -
dread by the Author.
H. Clay .Glover Co., Tap,.
129 West 24th Street
• sTew''Fork„U.S.A.
Sir Herbert Samuel
Who faces' a huge task in Palestine,
where, according to Bishop Maolnnee,
of Jerusalem, now in Canada, galena
medans and Christlass are joining
forces to oppose the high-handed pQli;-
ties of the Zionists.
A Bit Added.
r
.o tau as a little } g
i r t e soot.... r
1
Than -•the fellows in his shop;
And he Stayed a little larger
When the whistle ordered "stop!"
He worked a little harder
And he talked a little leer;.
He seemed hut little hurried
Arid he showed but little stress,
k'or every little movement
His efficiency expressed.
Thus his envelope grew just
A. little thicker tan the rest.
He saved a little money'
In a hundred little ways;
He banked a little extra
When he got a little ""raise."
A. little "working morel"
Took his little "leisure" time;
He wrought each little part of it
With patlerce most sublime,
Now it's very little wonder
That he murmurs with a smile,
As be s�eo s his little bank book:
""Are the little thingn worth while?"
Douglas Fir.
On account of its strength: and the
size in which it cn be obtained Doug-
las fir of British Columbia. is consider-
ed as Canada's finest wood Zor struc-
tural purposes although it has many
other uses The tree reaches heights
exceeding no feet and diametors
above seven or eight feet although. its
size is muck below th:s on an average
in the interior part of British, Colum-
bia, It is an important timber for
structural purposes, for the produc-
tion of lumber, railway ties; Plies,
mine timbers, wood block paving and
many other purposes.
A WOMAN'S RIGiff
TO GOOD HEALTH
"We Know Him!"
A white cedleortellx .odiceTis4ted
part of renrtisal Chita into witch ea the a��f
best of his kno deedge nee whites' hila- t ryrtt iP 4414(2-'10r ofW R
sdo�ry had. erv�xr t?"��1- Cfsrthe�t`-
61g a big cro•ead of 24(5f7�esse rowed lti311
jai cane 4f' 1i1�!towtill, ltd to x 11 � �, REQUIRE PAZ{DJ S 7o TX`l
to thein from the New'Tertaeaent in for us at, honme. eittor wit xaiya*
Cbdnne e. Ii'e read the stto'ry of ,7e'sniS's' $lontt; een4 ib9ed r ' "hwd�ic a ilgrfian KhoIs
iiealiug a blind man sad alto of his- as,Ie Dts, Co., De t. A. prsllter* opt
b old.% a Tame Frail. Th la he read of
Oassified Advo i ntr
im i £tTe**
II
sol3s! ,�tuont orp t9, 1l "e e4ta
t at tilt.' t e n, trot*
Ig4DTTtil O AT' MMOi
hien fIk seho Ie }iGFfi
It Can be Hers if She Keeps Her
Blood in Good Condition.
To every woman belongs the right to
enjoy a healthy active: life, Yet nine
out of ten suffer, ofteu in silence: from
}splitting headaches, torturing back-.
aches or some other of the many evils
that follow anaemia or bloddleasness.
That is why one sees so many wo-
men with pale, thin cheeks, dull eyes
and drooping figure—a11 signs that the
blood is tut of order, These women
should win the right to be well by re-
freshing their bodes with the,. nese',
rich blood of dearth that so promptly i
transforms thein into healthy, attrac-
tive women.
There is no other medicine can sup'
ply this rich, red blood so speedily one
go surely as Dr, Williams' Pink Pills.
Through this medicine thousands of
tired, suffering women have found
new health. Por example, lkfrs. E.
Lane, Parts.. Ont., says: --"A few years
ago. I was in a. badly run down condi t
tion. My appetite was poor, r fell off
in t andi
'weight, , could with d iilculty do
My housework, Nothing I took seemed
to do um any good until a neigltbc r ad-
vised ups to try I)r. 'dreams' Pink;
Pills. I had only talon a few boxes of
the pills when I began to feel stronger'
and I continued using them until I bad
taken ten boxes, whom I telt as well as
ever I did, and had regained ally lost 1
weight. My busband and children "
leave also used the pills with good re-
sults, earl i wild advise anyone who
is rundown to give them a fair trial."
You can get these pills through. any
dealer in medicine or by anal post-
paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
e2.50 from The Dr. Williams' ,Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
I spent three years on. the west
coast of Newfoundland and I observed
there in certain families an arrange-
ment whereby a boy, when he reach-
ed the age of eighteen or twenty
years, proceeded to lay the toundation
of a house, spending his savings in do-
ing so, and melt year adding to the
foundation until the house was erected.
and he had a house of his own to
which to take his bride. The same
thing, perhaps, could notbe done here,
but the principle is sound for applica-
tion anywhere. The young man who
carntemplates matrimony, and most
young men hope to have a home,
should begin early to prepare for it.
The young man who can present his
bride with an insurance policy, or elks,.
lex to the home he has acquired, has,
shown in a practical way his love and
his capacity for the responsibilities
that belong to the married state.
Youth is the time to lay foundations,
physically, mentally and vocationally.
Should we not as naturally think of
youth as the time to lay foundations•
financially for the future home, and
wife and, children? I wish every young
man, for instance, were expected to.
purchase insurance, endowment or
life, when his age makes possible a
low rate.
Many men and women in middle life
to -day would, if endowment policies.
were coming due, have occasion to
bless those who had urged such a plan
upon' them. The widrow with an in
cone would have grateful memories, of
the one who had provided for her.need
beyond the period of his life. Sorrow
and loss endured by great numbers of
women and children might have been
avoided if ordinary measures of pre-
caution for the future had been taken
bylhe young men of t le last genera -
ti on.
enera-tion" .
I am fest a real estate agent nor am
I an insurance agent! The sugges-
tions made have the ordinary man of
limited means in view and they appear.
the beast available. _ If there as -e bet-
ter meatus within the reach of such a
main wt'ereby he may safeguard the
tat -threat his family, let them be made
known.
My hope is that an increesning num-
ber of the younger men, though living
In a'spendthrift age, -an age which
lives up to and indeed beyond its in-
come, . may appreciate the necessity
and value of 'providing'as ftiliy and, as
wisely as"possible for the future.
Equal to the Occasion.
"Will you ' buy this pair of kitten %
your' riverence?" asked Pat. "Sure,
and they're rale Catholic kittens."
,"Now then, Pat," said the padre, i -e.
provingtiy, "only yesterday I heard you
tell a clergyman ibiey were Protestant
kittens•." '
"Boded, sir;' replied .Pat; "but
they've ]pad their eyes opened in the
night!"
Mexxicane. eat salt`"with orangee.
GUARD TE BABY
AGAINST -SCOLDS
his healing lepers, like e lepers that TOR MALffi.
crowded the, atreets of the town; C ORD WOOD i31.AB WOOD. O„ 1;
lots', Reid ilio*„ Bothwell, Ontario..
whereupon. the faces of the people
lighted iso. �ATlshnue.Areher.
""Oh, we know laiml" they crud, "He 11,1
, ATItICULATION CLASS N4NF
fathers have tele us about him He years of success send for Catalogue,
Yc B
know where his is, buried, His, grave ,
is here; we will show it to you, teach- arOalag.
dr. When the great plague came the °HOICE SILVFixt BLACIt. FOX ,%
set left us; but he would not leave u V Fups. adults- Reid isros„ iiot ell,
He gave tie surae ge th".tige oat of a erirario.
bottle, We took the thine and were
better, We had babies; .they were
blind. He washed their eyes and nude ' -» FLT
them well; they could: see. Oh, we -LJ care. cuilays, wows, cebta nosh,
etc , whippa aubaeot to approval at low.
itai3OVat' him very well! He haai oaten .«t t:ricra lei +�rintidat. 7Cork its#;#seat Erie..
walked down our streets and spoken• 126 Yost St.. T000eto,.
o us alter' we were little,"
"No, that could n:: be!" said the col
",
I ha Lar,
811 Y far
rt r, lie i ed a lanai
i� .
from here. lie beleuged to a different.
netionelily."
"No, sir," they insisted "you are nils
taken. I3e was right hers. Come and
we will chow you the grave!"
Ile went and saw the grave and its
inscription, whilah wee in Diagliish, Ile
ooked up the history of the town and.
learned that the man whom the peo-
ple bad spoken of WAS 8 British oelun-
Leer, g F4uug doctor Nat/ had just• oora- a _ T}
p etsd his medial Course, who had The horse has no eyebrows,
sono up the Yangtse River six bun- ----
died males and, breaking fate the eeu- FARMERS'
d? f ® � ' '
tral and northerly interior, had settled. a R
in the Iittle town. The plague at last
had taken his life,
And away out there years after
when the people heard the words ii
about Chr; t they called out: ""li e
Inter, hila! He lived here! We knew
l:;ixn weal!"
n;sed t:0 live Here. Our mothers two forrnfng— students a c6pter.# for Aii
$radea teachers' certificate*; twenty-tivi
Iived in,a ,purge 4lowxt t tilde` W Cauadien CorreaponCence College 507
ile iris. 'Toronto Onto Deal. W.
To guard the baby against colds
nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab-
lets. The Tablets are a mild laxative
that will keep the little one's stomach
and bowels working regularly. It is a
recognized fact that where the stom-
ach and bowels aro in good order that
colds will not exist; that the health of
the little one will be good and that he
will thrive and be happy. The Tablets
are sold by medicine dealers or by
mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
—
The Emotional Cabbage.
Do plants and vegetables experience
the same emotions that are felt by
humia.n beings? Scientists are begin-
ning to think that they do.
Some extraordinary discoveries have
been made, and it has been proved
that even the humble cabbage las feel-
ings. t is also knowt that roses ex-
perience a rise in temperature after
they have been pruned.
Experts declare that there is no
emotion, however delicate, which can-
not be felt by plants.
The Japanese have always recog-
nized this feature in plants. They be
Lieve that love and hatred are both ex-
peseenced by flowers Every pant and
vegetable hue its own, hhtaracter, we
are told,.
• Science has still much to learn in j
this direction, but it may be that be -1
fore long we shall know everything '
that goes on :in the plant "mind."
BELTING FOR SALE
MONEY ORDERS.
Send .a Dominion Express Money
Order. Five Dollars costs three cents,
"Knocking Wood",for Luck.
Whey does a. person' '"knock wood"
whenever he does not want his luck to
desert him?
The custom its believed to originate
from an old Denise myth.
According to 'the reseed an old
Danish sea captain, just before start-
ing ona voyage, would always tap on
the side athis drip, and then stand in
alennce and listen icor a fent miniutes.
Hie belief Was that as there were so
many millions, of thee. kind in tine tini-
bers of tiiie whip, the elves of the wood
would come out and bless the sirup and ,
ensnire it a safe. return.
Other Daniell skippers followed this
p,raCtiice, and, strangely enough, at
least so we are told, the. vessels so
submitted teethes -quaint ritual seemed
to acgtare immileity from the •perils of
the sea.
As a result the superstition became
a custom which has lived to t1to pre-
sent day.
MInard's Liniment for Garget in Cows.
Britain's Oldest Road.
One of the world's meat famous,
thoroughfares is Watling Street, ,
which runs from Wel:borough, near
Dover, to Wroxeter, fa Shropshire, an
important plaice in F.untan days,
Part of tl'is road is now the scene of
a great modern eng[neariug feat for it
is being widened and remade.
'Watling Street, which passes
through Canterbury, London, St.. Al-
bans, Dunstable, Toweester, and Wel-
tington, was made by the Itomans.1
The original name was Via Vitolliani,
but when the Saxons came to Britain
they renamed it atter ono of their
heroes, Waetla. This person was a
god who was said to live in the mass
62 stars known as the Milky Way,
which, was also called Watling Street"
by the Saxons.
How well the old Roman road was
placed; can be judged by the fact that
when the London and North Western
Railway was being built, modern ea-
gineors could find no better route, and
laid their line alongside it.
Funny Signs.
A. dentist placed over his doorway
a business sign which read: "Teeth
extractedwith great pain"
This was something life the butch-
er's sign whiclh ran: "Beef is very
high; our prices are the same"; and
tee grocer's: "Don't go elsewhere to
bebb
ro ea3.us.
Try
Baby Carriage Motor.
A motor whreel for baby carriages
that an Eng]istman bee invented also
enables an attendant to ride by stand-
ing on a. low platform.
PNEUMONIA
and other Lung Diseases
Claims many',Victims in Canada and
should be guarded against.
MINARD'S LINIMENT
is a great preventative, being one of
the oldest remedies used. Minard's
Liniment has relieved thousands of
cases of Grippe, Bronchitis, Sore
Throat, Asthma and kindred' diseases.
It is an enemy to germs. Thousands of
bottles being used every day. For sale
by all druggists and general dealers.
Minard's Liniment Co., Ltd., Yar-
mouth, N.S.
4 daily . trains via the Santa Fe.
Pullmans via Grand Canyon Park,
also to Southern Arizona.
' Fred Harvey meals "all the way."
May T send you our picture
Folders?
T. T. riendr't,,, Gen. Agent
Santa We Railway
404 Free Tress was.. Detroit, linoh.
Plumes Matu'6847
Grand Canyon Line
ISSUE No. 50-'22.
Broken Glass.
The eateet way to gather up broken
g'la.ss is to wipe it up with a wet wool-
en rug. will* should then be wrapped
in ralmar axrd thrown arway.
Mlnard'e Liniment for Distemper.
Saved Hand labor,
Operated by couipresssed air, a ma-
chine hag been invented to rub down
tiro palet on automobile bodies anti
save much Baud labor.
Poor Consolation.
Quartermaster•—"Siie'11 steady up a
bit, sir, once sire's round the Lizard,"
Passenger—"Oh, e -good. Is It
very far to tee Lizard?"
Quartermaster --"Oh, no. 'Bout thir-
teen hour.;."
During its lifetime the sturgeon
lays about 7,000,000 eggs.
Diamonds feel much colder to the
tongue than paste or glass,
For Nervous
Headaches
TS THE RELIEF from head.
ache or neuralgic pains
worth one cent to your That's
alt it costs for an application of
"Vaseline" Mentholated Jelly.
With the first indication of a
headache rub a small amount
of it gently on the forehead and
temples. So convenient, effec-
tive and economical'
CEi:SRERo JOR MaNTI ACTt7nING
face .1PANY
fa -.ttdatodl
1380 Chabot Ave. Montreal
Vaseline
Trade Mark
'1 F9CkTptiLLY
�?L.ATEb
IUTICURA.HEALS
ITCHY PIMPLE$
Face inflamed and nd ,Disfig-
ured,
sfigured, Lost Rest at Night.
"My face broke out with hard, red
pimples which festered and scaled
over. They were in
blotches and itched and
burned so badly that I
had to scratch them, and
any face was inflatned
and disfigured. I lost
rest at night on account
of the irritation.
"I saw an advertisement for Guts-
tura. Soap and Ointment and sent
for a free sample, which relieved me.
I bought more, and after using four
Ares of Cuticura Soap and two
boxes of Ointment I was -healed, in
about three weeks." (Signed) Miss
Juliette Ortiz, Box 1018, San Diego,
Calif., Feb. 7, 1921.
Use Cuticurafor all toiletpurposes..
5smpieEeohrreeh MIQ. Address•"Lsmsna,Ltm-
Sled, a5 St. Veld St., W., Stoutreel," Sold evert-
whore. Soap26o. Oinament26and60e. i`alemn26c.
AStr'CiaticuraSoapahaveawithoutmus.
SENT FREE
cit file tefiowing may be hied treat
on application, to the
Publications Branch
Department of Agriculture
Ottawa, Canada.
Alfalfa growing in Eastern Canada,
Crop Rotation for Central and Easter*
Gonadal.
"Potato, The, Its Cultivation and Varied
" ties.
The All -Yeas Hog Cabin.
`Tice Feeding of Sheep,
Keeping Dairy Herd Records -
Why and How to Use Mllk,
Why and How to Use Cottage Cheese.
Winter Egg Production..
Poultry Keeping in Town and Counters
The Farmer's Poultry House.
Simple Methods for the Storage of Ica
Dehorh Your Commercial Cattle,
4Dressing and Cutting Lamb Carcasses.
'Bovine Tuberculcsis.
tFeeds for Wintering and Winter Fat1
toning of Beef Cattle in Easterfl
Canada.
1New varieties and Selections of Grain,,
The Root Vegetables Act, 1922,
'illustration Community Work in Duns
dao County, Ontario.
'The Winter Finishing of Steers in,
Western Quebec.
Report of the Division of Horticulture,
Dominion Experimental Farms, 1921.;
Report of the Poultry Division, Domini
Farms, 192.1.
Ion Experimentalm ,
List of 300 Available .Publications.
Name
Post Office
Ei.R. No. Province
(No postage required).
FARMER'S WIFE
REGAINS HEALTH
Gives Credit to Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
Pork River, Manitoba.—"I saw in
the newspapers where Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound was doing
so much good to women, and as I
needed something I began to take it.
I used to be very sic but I am not
now. I live on a farm in the home-
stead district andwe have to do all
our own work. I 'tell all the women,
I see what Lydia E. Pink -haul's Vege-
table Compound does for me. I think
it saves me from going to a doctor
and is the best medicine women can
take."—Mas. War. Cox)LTAS, Fork
River, Manitoba.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is a medicine for the ail-
ments peculiar to women. It is pre-
pared from medicinal plants, witbi
care and accuracy. It can be taken.
by women of any age.
Women make a serious mistake is
allowing themselves to become to
weak and nervous that it is well-nigh
impossible for them to attend to their
necessary household duties.
Such symptoms as pains and irreg.
ularities, ala -gone feelings, backache,
headache, hot flashes, nervousness,
with a general run-down condition,
indicate some form of female trouble.
The Vegetable Compound has
brought relief to thousands of women
suffering from such ailments. Let it
help you.
HORSES COUGBING9 VSE
Spohn's Distemper Compound
to break it up and get them back in condition. Thirty
years'' use has mad! S QT•IN'S' indispensable in treating
Coughs and Colds, Iinuenza and Distemper with their re-
sulting complications,
e-
sulting-complications, and all diseases 02 the throat,' nose
and lungs. Acts marvelously as. preventive; acts equally;
well as euro. Sold in two 2raes at all drag si iris,
X51 0ialki TrEnreAr. COMPANY, G'OSirnw, a tTD£d.1tA
7
•a