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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-10-22, Page 7of h of .1 d, 'n Lhe sal her w1 - shed girds on y, lease 'The•. City of'DRvid. The eito of the ancient "city of ,\evil":;has' been fouled. Prot It. A. S. • l ' calistel', deader'of "the joint expedi- i;ea to the IXoIyLand,sent out by"the 1 alesthte Dxyiloration Flints and the London Daily ,Telegraph, contributes to bat newaptiper an account of the discovery and -identification cf Mille, Beall Jerusalem, to which repeated re- feleences aro made in the Old Testa moat, • One''of the references is in Second Samuel, where we are told that David, after having occupied the etronghold of Zion, "built round about, from Mille and inward." In the First Bobk of Kings, however, we are told specifical- ly that it was,aolomon who built Mike, and in the twenty-seventh verse of the eleventh chapter the statement_ ie made; "Solomon built Millo. and ,repaired the breaches of the city of David his father," • Professor ' Macalister indicates the utmost precise correspondence of the litee'ary material with the arehaeologi- ca4 evidenos still in the ground. "We should find 0 forttees built, to fill a breach in the wall, and we have found it. That tower, ahould show signs of a later repair under stress of immin- ent danger, and it does. There should be a fortification • wall built ','inward noir the ,tower, and there is. There shouldbe no conspicuous fortification here earlier than the time of Solomon, andthere is not. Absolutely every- thing that we' know about Millo-ex- cept.the murder of Joash, which could leai'Uly be expected to leave recogniz- able traces—is reflected in the strut. • tares which have now passed under the reader's eye. In the absence , of inscriptions, none of which have come to light, I venture to say that these co- incidences constitute the strongest possible argument in favor of the claim that Mille has been discovered, ani a hitherto unsolved problem of the topography of Jerusalem In the 'early days of its history settled," Having made his discoveries;. Pro - fester Macalister is taking the unusual step of covering them up again with earth. It is not. practicable to remove what he has found for permanent shel- ter in museums, and hitter experience has :convinced him that to leave the stonework above ground would simply be inviting the fellaheen to make a stone quarry of it. Business First. If men and women went into busi- ness -as thoroughly as they ought to . go we should hear less of poor busi- ness, and more of better results. Half the people who go, into bust - nese never take the trouble to learn the copes. And then they wonder when things g� wrong. By learning the ropes. I don't mean. the ropes of any particular business, but of business routine and etiquette generally.• To be a good business man or woman the first essential is punc- tuality. Employers and cuctomers must be able to depend on you. It is no geed starting out with the idea that five minutes here and five min- utes there do not matter. They do. You cannot be too punctual. Secondly, you must leave your own private business at home when you take a situation. All your employer wants from you is your work, not your worries•, and 1f you let them obsess you, you are not playing fair. You are mild. to give your brain, and perhaps your fingers as well, for a certain time. Don't cheat by dreaming or fidgeting over outside affairs, You can't do two things at once. Theu, if yea want to be a good bust - nese man or woman you nmst work right through your Working hours, and not steal your employer's time to ans- wer- private telephone calls, to write private letters, or to read. Get it into your head that your time during your working hours belongs to your employer. Some people work, with their eye on the clock, Before the hour for lun- cheon or departure arrives you will fend them making elaborate prepare tions •to go out. They are more con- . corned about whether they will be in • time to squeeze fu a game of billiards or a vieit to to the hairdresser before. going home than about the letter their employer told them must catch a cer- tain train. c That is not ti}e way to make your job it. stepping -stone to higher posts. If, you award business In thla way, if that is the interpretation which you place on your duties, then you will never get any further •than the foot rung of the ladder of success. Indeed, the odds may be agalust you hanging on even there, Why the Tender of a Loco - r. ) �a• ,dl, l Y Tfi� pLL LATEST SHADES in . either wearing apparel or house- hold furnishings. Prompt • service, carriage charges paid one way. Our Mail. Order Department is glad to answer questions. DYE WORKS LIMITED ERS& CL�'A6� House in the Chilterns. I a" I should like to enter Your ancient home— Not as a.vleitor, But ns an 'unseen ghost that need not make conversation, -I And is 'free to go where it wills and ob- serve slowly, Softly, Ilrore softly than a burglar. I should not steal. year' gold, But certain other, thinge I would innate my own end never part from. T would Lake the ieleurellness Of the fielde'.:green undulations Around. the path to your house— Leisurely as the sus•ving skirts 01 your aneestrasees when they curt sied. And I would keep for my own ' The startled eyes and the 1lnpigltsmile Of your great-aunt six years old Painted byCosway or Galneborough in the ha11- With curly crazy quivering And one shoulder stuck out of her" dress. I Would open the closed oak drawers Forgotten in your grandmother's room, And lake the feel of the cambric . sleeves And the little shreds, of stitchery Folded away since eighteen -seventy, And my hands would never be harsh Or clumsy again. I would pass beyond the house, Always unseen, , And take alio smelt of warming apri- 0051 On thb south .wall, quite near the gruelsmell Of"the pigstyes, where they blend Enchantingly' together, And keep them for a pomander In streets that smell of petrol. —Camilla Doyle. Notions Worth Noting. Of two people using the same tea one makes a deliciout breevS the other tea not fit to drink, yet both have usedt boiling water. The first uses. 'water freshly boiling; the other has had the lce`tie on the fire for an hour, and has boiled all the air out of the water, leaving it flat and dead. Poking a fire. seems a simple busi- ness, usiness, yet there is a right and wrong wily of doing` it. Tho wrong way 18 to pound the coals. from above, the right to push the poker in underneath, and by clearing out the burnt ashes leave room for a draught of air to pass through the fire, so allowing it to burn brightly. When packing to leave home a wo- man always puts boots and shoes and all heavy objects at the bottom of the trunk, and the lighter articles on top. This is the right way to pack, and if men followed the same example there would be fewer cracked shirt faoute. and creased sults at a journey's end. Most people ,treat 0 out finger by wrapping round it a piece of soft rag. This is a mistaken idea, for, the .rag encourages bieedigg. If the cutis a bad one the blood' supply should be stopped by tying something tightly around the joint below: the but. When a door sticks, the average man puts his shoulder against it and, tries to force it open. This may or may not prove successful, but surely the simplest way of managing the Job is first to ascertain the offending spot, when comparatively light pressure will probably do_ the trick, motive is So Called. Strictly speaking, this word is a corrtiptfonof "attender.". Long before the days of railways, ships In -Harbor; and rivers were waited ou by smaller craft, which brought 'them their sup- plies and so on. And even to -day we' speak of passengers being taken out to, :a ship by tender—the attender of the larger vessel So'in the early days of railways the engine was attended by a smell wagon • to carry its coal and Wates, and this was the origin. of the modern tender. Describing Sun's Heat. aehe sun gives out as much heat in a ; eeeu' -time as the burning of sixty Beatbe would If .composed entirely of aD hlaeite'coal, Hair lV Violin Bows. The hair in violin bows is obtafued fhom white horees,•the best supplies coming from Siberia. Heroin, a preparation of opium, is a powerful drug obtained from the white poppy. WE WANT CHURNING We supply cans and pay express charges. We pay daily by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. To •obtain the top l.rice, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not less than 30 per cent Butter Fat. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For references—Head OlRce, Toronto,. Bank of Montreal, or your local banker. Established for over thirty years. POLISHES •FOR e. "Makes old like New" CA,P CLEANSER For Painted Woodwork, Wage; Enamelware, Windows, etc. The eaoo Polish,,,. Ltd...ndmltten FIGHTING. FORBAH 9 HEALTH Is the Constant Care of Every Young Mother. The young mother has a constant ears in looking after the welfare of .her little ones. Childhood ailments come on so suddenly+ -sometimes with- out a minute's warning—the 'mother may have a very sick baby on her bands before help can be obtained. That is unless she has a remedy in the house which she can safely give the baby for any of the many }ninon ail- ments of babyhood and childhood. Such a resned3' is found- in `Baby's Own Tablets. Thousands of mothers throughout the country always, keep a box of the Tablets on hand and they proclaim them to be without an equal for sweetening baby's stomach;' regulating 111s bowells,• and thus driv- ing out oo»stipation and indigestion, colds and simple fevers, and Braking the dreaded teething period easy. Baby's Own Tablets are an absolute- ly -safe remedy. They are guaranteed to bo free from opiates or any other narcotic drug which awe so' harmful to the future welfare -of the baby. Moth- ers, •if you value the life of your little ones give him Baby's. Own Tablets when be is 111, or, better still, give him an occasional dose of the Tablets to ward off illness. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers:or will be sent to any address, post paid, at 25 omits a box by addressing The Di'. Williams' MedicineCo., Brockville, Ont. ,n-$TOTtIi!r WINDOWS J tP t° , P.4YFOR ThVAIMPES' �obti4' sior ruse Waste; smart Winter. Comfort with storm Wlndaws. Low rend • lased; , f•rngIn raid" ranter Y e /r t mate n decry mehantted. Free pn<c r ,y 1,m1 and ea mb,arin Chart.' easy r 6 �• _ -,.. n AWE/AY "„*si "HAMILTON .^SH1P us vOu2, [W, GAME,EGGS, . BUTTE RdAND FEATHERS, 'POO'S 'WEBUY ALL -YEAR ROUND - lii•iie today /brpreees-We shiaranteo then for a week ahead • P. PpuLIN & COo y KITED 3639 Bor,oaow coo Mm•hat - Cleelevet NURSES Tem .Toronto Ilospital far Incurables, In ofeilation with Bellevue and 511104. Neoattele, Now, York 0115 -,offers .0 three years' Coarse of 'amnia to youg0, women, haVlas - rho required 'cilucntio0, and doslr0u,, 01 b00amjOO num. iiosoital. line adopted rho cloht- oUrr Wetom. The pupils receive uniforms' of tile School, a monthly allowance and trovallild ekoenas. to' and from .New York.`. For farther. ,Information: apply to ileo 8uperinto' dent. Ireland Forbidden Lap Dogs in Olden Times. Doge figure largely in the lore of all Minis; says ✓Jhe'Vanceuver Province%;' There is a legend that relates how lap dogs went to Ireland. In the begin- nipg • Britain seems ta have had a monopolyof tiny 'dogs, while Ireland was without them. And it was forbid- den to give or Hell a tiny dog to an Irishman. But as it happened,*an English law decreed that a er1minal should be given to the man he had wronger, so .a 'clever Irishman succeeded in getting. a tiny lap dog to "`injure" him. The ruse succeeded, and the dog was taken to Ireland, where all the kings foungh among themselves far possession of her until, she brought about peace by producing a large litter ofpuppies. A most extraordinary law concern- ing dogs was current in England in the days of Edward I. July those people living a considerable distance from the forests were allowed to keep large dogs, for fear they might form into hunting packs. A dog cauge was used and only dogs that could squeeze through this were allowed within a ten -mile radius.. In thaPie clays dogs were so valuable that finds were often ( paid in them, Another astounding law was passed in the reign of Edward III., when -it was decreed that only "gentlemanly dogs"- were allowed to wander Lon - d'on's streets alone or at night. Others were liable to a fine of forty pence. Industrial Hygiene in Ontario. Ontario Is the only province in Can- ada which has a Division of Industrial Hygiene organized in the Department of Ilealth, for the purpose of promot- ing the health of industrial workers. The train objective of the Division is tbe prevention of` general sickness; the special objective, theprevention of` those diseases which, arising out of working conditions, are called 'oc- cupational diseases." Now it is impossible to know how much wastage in Ontario industry is caused by sickness, bceause there is. as yet little *health supervision and few adequate records of lost time. But such data as exists, shows that in On - tarso 'lost time front sickness amounts to" at least double dost time from ac- cidents. As regards disease traceable to a man's occupation, the records of the Division cover 472 cases followed up duringthe last 4 years. The rate for lead poisoning_ in Ontario in 1925 is higher than that which was consider- ' ed alarming in England' 25 years ago. Tbis .alono allows• the need foo' a•sys- teratic and rigorous attempt to guard the health of our workers. Aa a basis for this, a few cardinal facts need to be grasped: :Phare ` is a close` ,connection be- tween the health of the worker'. and - the econonbic prosperity of the neon- try. A worker's health is ,inevitably af- fected by his working conditions. Many diseases among workers can be traced. to Melte, such as poison, dust, _etc. associateii with their oecu- pation. • On all points of industrial Health, in. forntationcan be obtained, both by em- ployers and employees, from the De.. partmont of Health of Ontario, Spa diva House, Toronto. Ways that are dark—Railroad tun Cut Rates. "Are the charges low at your bar- ber's?" "Cut rates." Bone -Black -Substitute, A eubstitute for bone -black has been developed after sixteen years of re- search. Clocks Without Hands. A new type of clock with a;square dial and-. no hands is tieing tested at Waterloo and other London terminal stations. The time is 'indicated by figures on two small panels; instead' of by hands pointing to numerals on. a rotind dial, A new panel fs let dawn automatically as' each minute passes, and the house are changed the sante way. The clock, which is driven by electricity, is con- tp•olled by a. master clock of the, or- deyary type• It is easier to read the figures than kande ata distancce, and for that rea- son the timepiece ia, particularly suit- ed to railway etatiors. On the new clock the time appears just as it does in the time -tables. Thus," at 12 30, all that you see are the figures 12.30. Poems ought not to be written just to say that one is happy or sad, but to make that happiness or Sadness cheering or consoling to one's fellow men. It is the spirit in which it is done that makes work noble or ignoble. Ask for Minard'a and take no other. AEI VOUS bit itESS ON Why People Are Low Spirited. and. Depressed. Nearly allwotrien and most men 0u1 - Per 'at times from fits of depression and low.apirits, Everything seems a burden; titers Come periods of nervous irritability, headaches and weariness. People who suffer this way lack vital- ity because their blood is poor and nerves' are starved in cousequence. The only way the nerves can be reached is through the blood. By en- riching the blood' with Dm. 'ts illiame' Pink Pills the starved nerves are sup- plied with just the elements they need. This is proved by the experience of Mrs. J. E. Dadson, 12th Ave. East, Vancouver, B.O., who says:—"About three years ago I: became very weak and nervous, 111ad pains in my side and back, and also suffered from, fre- pen•tpains in the back of my ?lead end neck, I was hardly able to do any- thing about the house. I would wake with a, start in the night and nay heart would flutter so that it almost choked me. I tried much doctor's medicine but it did me no permanent good. One day I read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and decided to give them a trial. These pills produced such a beneficial change in a short time that 2 kept tak- ing them until I" had used a dozen boxes. By this time there was such an improvement in my condition that friends would. ask me .what I was'tak- ing, and of course I was only too pleased to tell them. It was Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pills. I am now feeling,' like a new person and am doing my own housework. We would not now be without Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the house." You can get these pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont. • Clever Chickens. Little Reggie, havinghad an egg put before hint for breakfast, asked: 'Mamma, where did you get thie egg?" "Frons grandma's chickens,' his mother answered. "Well," said Reggie, "how do gran- ny's-chlckens know tbe size of our egg -cups?" Minard's Liniment for Distemper. FAMOUS SOPRANO IN MONTREAL. This is Miss Rosa;Ponselle, famous soprano pf the' Metropolitan Opera, New York, photographed at Windsor Station, just before tshe left Montreal by Canadian Pacific train, after giving her first Canadian concert in His Majesty's_ Theatre, Montreal. Miss Panatella is. perhaps the greatest dramatic soprano now on the stage, although site is yet well under thirty years of age. Her sister, Carmela Ponselle, is also a star in the New York Metropolitan Ylouse. THEE CATS' CORNER Illustrations In Illustratimis have . strong attention value, For that reason alone they be- come important in advertising,. This importance iglaca'eased when the illustration can be matte a picture of the merclltudise offered. The power of the illustration becomes still greater when the picture combines the merchandise with a means of using it, ow any advantage to be gained from having the merchandise. Such a pic- ture is the utast effective illustrating that can be done in ach'ertieeng. While pictures have great power power good, they also have great for harm in advertising, A' picture may create unfavorable thonglits 111 - Stead of favorable ones. Such 'a pic- ture is much better not used in an ad- vertisement, Cuts for, advertisements nlnst be chosen with care. Attention value of a ptcture is not of itself reasm. enough tor using a cut. Unless the Picture will strengthen the' message , Advertising. S®etie! e, t, y not this tine? The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it 1 The "Get There Spirit! The unsuccessful person continually speaks of what he could and would do, —if only such and, such a thing would happen! So assured iohe in hisboast that to others it seems that if only the oppor- tunity presented iself he would do wonders. Yet it is not actually the lack of chance or luck which keeps the ma- terity of people in the background. It is something far different. And the best thing to do to discover that "something" Is to examine. ,the lives of those who have got there—those who have become successful. Looking at their 'early days very closely, you will find first of all that they were not content to stand still waiting for a golden opportunity to present itself. Neither did any good fairy come to wave her wand over their future careers,` Instead of this, instead of spending their time assur- ing their friends what they would do if they had so and so to aid them,they Just got down to work. This, then, is the secret of their success. They set to work to realize their ambitions. They worked hard and long for their present standing— which did not Come by leaps and bounds, In many cases', it came only after long toil. Does this truth dismay you; that if you want a suocess in any shape or form you must first of all be prepared to work for it? It should not do so if you set your mind upon a successful Issue ?rein the struggle. If your future well-being is not worth some trouble, it is not worth having. The fact that whatever comes most easy to your hands is invariably not great valued, proves this. It is the apparently unattainable, when at-. rained, that seems always best. So it is plain that if you wish to see• cure a success, you will not obtain it without some pains. And having made up your mind.tbateit is worth pains, drop wishing and set to wou•k upon the task. Keep at it regardless of obstac- les, and you, too, will get there! Where Tears Come From. Near our eye is a gland the business of which la perpetually to allow the escape of a sort of secretion_ • In the ordinary way this fluid passes Inside our eyelid, is brushedover the eye every time we blink, so keeping oar eyes bright and free from the specks of dust which w :uld otherwise cause us Intense irritation. It is final-' 1y passed away through tiny chaunelaf Into the nose. Under, however, either the physical irritation caused by, say, a speck of dust in the eye, or some mental emo• tion whether of pain or joy, more liquid is sometimes released than will Pass away in the ordhaa17 fashion, the tiny channels will' overflow, and we shall be crying. it Is this overflow that we call tears, Feather Has 1,000,PG0 Parts. A feather, one of the world's most Perfect structures, has been growing perfect far possibly a million years. A single pinion from an eagle's wing has nearly a million different' parts. The whole wing is a sell that strikes the wind firmly yet elastically, not letting the air through the web, and yet not being broken. It enormously- increases the bird's power of soaring in the air, and yet how little it adds to weight. of the advertisement—help create in the minds of the readers a favorable) oponion of merchandise or eerviee,and be an influence in securing favorable action -it should pot be used. Atten- tion 'secured for an advertisement through a picture at the expense of favorable opinion for the thing adver- tised and the advertiser, had better not have been secured. Pictures are by no means necessary for attention value. Much highlylsac- cessfnl advertising has been done, and is done,, without illustrations. A. Pus' advertisement can be made e type e a : picture itself—impelling attention power put into it:—by: right use of type styles, setting of headlines, and artis- tic balance of type :and white space. Don't let illustration difficulties keep you from advertising. In. this, as small other factors' of good adven'- tisirig, this newspaper is ready to ren- der you most helpful and profitable service. • GENUINE ASPIRIN PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told In "Bayer" Package Unless you sea the "Bayer Crosse on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin proved "sateby millions and Prescribed byphysicians over twenty, five years for . Colds SLeatlache Neuritis "liirmbago Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia . Pain, Pain Each unbroken "Bayer" package con• tains proven directions.: Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few,aeiite, Drugg, gists also Sell bottfes oT24 acid 100. Classified Advertisements `yr14wCAlt1)' \W'itITINo aniCBllAalia AAntiif0 re power,' we show We 505, Stueento aoll work before through Course. Baer, eaootivo, Shaw 8choois, Toronto, .1^01'Y -two 'nlaor west, LEARN ELECTRICITY, .`003600 IN mien eceee 8010Tm1AI. on,lnoerine In ;your spewtime nt home w;n enable YOU to earn p hla salary Or 8o tutu 'btminasa for yoUtoolf. White- for tree training book. Dantean Metrical 00011,0, Dont, N. -Cranford 50„ 0000010. 811860 FOXES. $p.L oo- 0) 00sr1Msnr•.ns1b1i,,n1.10.0, " Rejuvenating Silk. A ,process by which worn out sills can be restored to its original state is reported to have been`descoeered by a Young Japanese scientist who was re- cently graduated from the Uyeda Seri- culture School. The process still re- mains a secret, but it is believed to have groat commercial possibilities. Dresses made entirely of feather are being shown in Paris. They 'are in black, white, and rich colors. NIGHT fo' " MORNING KEEP YOUR EYES, -LEAN CLEAR- AND HEALTH -1d jru:a roe .nee ata cna0 0a0F• MUM. ca.eamenea024 TOOTHACHE Bathe the face with Mlnard's 1n water and place apiece of cotton wool, saturated with, Minard's, in the cavity. ABLE TODO OKI Sick a Year. Got Great Ben. efit from Lydia E. Pinkhasn's Vegetable Compound Bloomington, N. S. -"I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for pains and backache, also for nervous- ness, sick headaches and sleeplessness. I, was troubled m this way for over a year, and a friend told me about the 'Vegetable Compound and induced me to take it. I must say I have received greatbenefit from it and am able to do my housework now. I recommend the Vegetable Compound myself and am willing for you Louse this letter as a testimonal. —Mrs. WILLIAM: MOM, Bloomington, Annapolis County, N. S. Do you know that in a recent canvass among women users of the Vegetable Compound over 220,000 replies were re- ceived. To the question, "Have you received benefit by taking this medi- cine?" 98 per cent. replied "Yes." This means that 98 out of every 100 women are in better health because they have given this medicine a fair trial, Mrs. Morse is simply another case of a woman receiving great benefit" Women suffering from the troubles so common to their sex should listen to what other women say who have expe- rienced the same Bufferin s and found relief. Give this dependable medicine a chance—and at once. It sold at all drug stores. 0 Because it keeps the complexion clear, the hands soft and the hair live and glossy, The Soap, used daily, cleanses and purifies ,while the 0 int-- mens soothes and heals. Cucienra Telcuin is -an ideal toilet powder. Sample Baoltrree by Lien.' Add sen 5 dine n01ot 'EitahOu e 7 td. Monte 7.' once, Bonn. YEe. Ointment 28 gad 000. 001own Ree . Cuticurn Shaving Stick 25c., ISSUE No. 43—'25. 4 1