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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1923-09-13, Page 7DO YOU SLEEP SOUNDLY? Classified Advertisements i1.1'l:lt IrU7LNa•—NUJ: L^NMIYU;d 41 Y. t11A11X IanokloU.. -..ilea peps' ext .inane rannhlnt "nos; 8i conic., ))r e?esii, Truro• Nos aeos. t WAaN}NCrON fANb•I'RES& y y 1 hat a hNt )lt1-,stet we •mei- 1 'A Sp T049.11418 Press ilii Will fake p+aot o! columns, Whites S Nlasht+t Co.. l,11.0..... IS !no0. • In seeking elee+ps many people make keens st. w.,: Tomato serious mistal.es. The first ie that they "try to get to (— else')." This is one of the vcreeereesrt ways. Sleep often •coineei when it is not sought, and perhaps even when it !s undesirable, as m church (luring a dull ernte)> Isere are a -few eimpie and, harmless The Father Who Is Not Loved or Respected A FIFE COMPLEXION Can Be' Had Through Keeping the Blood Rieh and Pure, A girl's complexion is something Imot^e than a tnatter of concern to her sanity. 1t is an indication et the state of hor'health. Pallor in a growing girl means a thinning of the blood. Brim- , done mean; impurities In the blood, Mothers should he watchful of their daughters' com'pl'exions end see to it that these signs are correeted—not helps to heelthy sleep;- When a girl in her teens' becomes The first is deep and, full breathing, , One of the bitterest things in many pale and',sallow, e.i>ecially if, at the I1lave kxaown people to objeotaud say; a nun's life has been the discovery same time, site shows an :inclination .' that deep and full breathing le a euro after he has made ;a fortune, that he to tire easily, a listiesenese and inat-', for so many things -such as worry hoe lose his hold upon his boys, 1 tention to her work or studies, she and nerves, as well as consumption. I have been in homes. where the re - needs Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, a tonic' and poor circulation -that it'caano.t lateans between. father ad Sons were which directly and specifically cu- be a good cure for any one; but surely s!o attained and formal that tine latter rects the condition from which she is the ,more trouble's any one practice would no more think of making aeon- suffering. A chemical analysis of the can oure at the 08090 time, the more ficiant oR their father than they, would: blood o: such a girl would show It to important • and valuable that practice'•of a stranger. I be deficient In just the elements that must be. The mother le sometimes' response Dr, Williams' Pink Pills can supply, Fighting Insomnia. ibis for this, unfortunate state of af- , les the physical signs are plain, The If we have a tool that can perforin fairs. I Imo* mothers who have de -.:•girl with- a bad complexion, or who only one function, it is less valuable iiberately Prejudiced their 0helclren I suffers from occasional headaches, than a• teal which can perform twenty ag,ains+t their father. They .seem to who is easily tired' and breathless ra- tale ttan iece king may be compared to poison the la0 j(94100110 Or 7young ' people'do all s mindseY can , ing Dr. Wilhams'ter alight nf'ink Pills , should aatnonee. with a piece of machinery which can agalm him to unlet mine their lave A. be employed foe a number of different ,good appetite, sparkling eyes and 0088. • and respect; for 'bim•• Sometimes this rosy cheeks follow the fair use of this But the deep and full breathing is done by speaking elighthigly of the imedicine: father Perhaps 'he is not moth of a I • You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pillst not be strained; it muet be ao i- ^d the mother will' throughany dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box from 'The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. g to a rhythm. A certain num of "beets," for instance, may be criticize hie methods before these, and ren foe the inhaldng, a certain num- find fault with him regarding his way ber for the Molding in of the breath, r of financing the family. Or she will. a certain arrear for the exhaling, and magnify every weakness and 'mer - a ceatain number for rest before the faction of hie character, make him ap- next inhaling. pear weak and contemptible 1n their Then there are mental helps, In a eyes', book published •some years ago, en Thiene are multitudes of maU'ora bitl'ed "The Mystery of sleep>" the who, while they have no en+tention.of author pointed out how, during sloop, injuring the father in the children's the parrts of u,s' of which we ane net Tegtarcl', unconsoiowedy do 'so by the oone.olorus (it is not accurate to call methode they adapt to oontrol them. them unconscious parts') are at work. Just as many ignorant people will A striking theory is that we never frighten small children by'teReng them that they will call in,.a big policeman to arrest them and put them in jail, thousands of )nothegs will encourage dear of the father by malting tem be- lieve he is cruel and hard, and that he will punish them severely for every little mishap •or misdeed of which she rest oomplstely.. We awe always work- ing, if not on th,e conscious plane, then on the subcomsroious Or the super - conscious. plane. We awe aware o1 work on the muss enter plane, "except for -a good deal of Lee internal work—as of digestion, andthreatens to inform him. &o on; but we are little aware of the This is very unfair to the father, for chemical work that .gees on within us. Nine -tenths of our thinking is sub- con3cic•te. - It might almost be said that we press a certain button and tine thinking is done for uei ' During sleep some part of our mind is working; and it ie best for us not to try 'to stop work altogether, but to direct the minae to do. the work that will help ourselves and, esthete. meet. Se it may be the most' effective plan to direct the ,subconscious mind, first, to think of something restfuj4 and to concentrate on that, and then to doing trseful work in helping .others- who, are In difficulties. Otherwise the mind may roan about at random, and we may not get really healthy sleep. We should tell our subconscious' mind what it be to do during sleep. The Diet Cure. Then there is thediet cure for They will constantly „nag and find sleeplessness; and here the important fault, awl never think of praising their matter is not what we have just be - children oa expneseng any apprecia- fore we want le ga to sleep. The im- portant thing is to get the blood pure and to get the circulation rigght. This is nota matter of the last meal we take in the day; et may require weeks and weeks, of sensible diet to 'get the whole systm -clean. Often sleeplessness is accompanied by cold feet. The .eoldness- is due to clogging of the bloodetream; slid this clogging is usually caused by wrong foods and d•r•inks. When once the blood - becomes pure and clean 'end strong, we are three-quaatern of the way towards healthy sleep. it .robshim of his most precious pee- session—the love, admiration, and re- aped of his children. I1 helps to build a barrier between him and Ms child- ren, a .prejudice which may last a life- time aulL deprive him and.them of muchpossible happiness, To know :that his children love hint dearly and want to be with him, .that they are al-. ways delighted -to ;have hint at home, to have bem join them in their play, is a great,compensation to him for the emote -aces he makes. for them, It is. a most unfortunate thing for a child to look upon , els father as a cruel taskmasterinsgtead of a com- panion, to dread meeting hint because he always expects. criticism or scold- ing from him instead of sympathy, and campan!enship. Unfortunately some fathers encourage this feeling. Any Old Bones? most of us have a dim idea that bones are of, some value, Bone meal is one' of the most valu- able of fertilizers.. It is good for fruit trees, roses, potatoes, and moot vege- tables, for it. 'contains both phosphate of lime` and ammonia. But bones. produoe other valuable materials besides fertilizer, Treated in a sort of steam tank celled a "di- gester," they give 1arge:.quantities of fat and glue. Bones, fresh from the butcher's shop give twelve per cent. Of fat, whichis used principally for malting soap. As for the glue, this is treated so that it is divided into two different qualities, the flnar of which becomes' gelatine and is the basis • of table jel- lies, - The glue made from bones' is put up In a dried state, and before'use mist be mixed with a little water and heated. ton of their work, even when they do dt weal. ` A father should regaled the confiden- tial relation between •himself and his son as one of the most precious things in life, and. should never take chances of forfeiting it. It costs a-ometieleg to keep ,it, but it is worth the price, I have never known e. boy to go very fan• wrong who regarded his father and mother as his best friends, and kept oto secrets from them. -0. S. lblarden. Would. Signal Mars by Flashing Light. Dr. A. M. Low, an English inventor, believes. it possible to get into com- munication with Mars by means of light signalling. 'There are several known chemical means of producing a -light screen' of sufficient size which would last long enough to be natioed by the Martians, if such exist," he said. "I think a suitable -screen could be set out on a high altitude by airplanes, to eliminate as far as possible the effect of air and clouds, which combine to make' diffi- cult any observation of the earth •it- selE." Dr, Low considers wireless waves Surnames and Their Origin LOCISYEAR LARDNER Variations—Lockyer, Lockman, Locke,' Variations—Lardiner. Loockerman, Racial'Origin-English, also Dutch. Source -An occupation Racial Origin --English,. Source—An occupation. Lardner is by no means' an infre- lueimt lamely Warta, though prohabdy Looleeear, Lockyer, ' Lockman and it to least widely known when it has .a, Locke nee all only different farms of "Ring" in front of it. the sumo fam:dy ware, which in its '1 llablou mightthat rho suopeetname. fromom i.ginallY the Srsthad original use was but descriptive of the sye callings of 1•tg first bearers. • someth'iug to die with the word. "lard." In many cases when you svr,'peot Lockyeror de really not a "true" them things" lake this about a family name of tine name; it is a changed spelling, you are wrong. Bet in this case you of Loekyer. The "lockyerr" of the would be night. Tleere is, a connection. Meddle Ages in. England was, as you In feet the name is founded upon it. might opine, a locksmith, as was also But the trade or occupation through the "Locicneen," the twoforms of the which the .connection was made is 110 word being interchangeable, with the longer - referred to es It was en the former, .perhaps in wider use. Originally this name, like all others which have beep derived from trades, wee + preceded by a "le" (meaning "the") under the influence of the spelling's') was a sueciJic kind of swine - French tongue of the Normans. But herd. riigs occupation was, that of fat - even before such namee logit their des- teeing Of "tamdeni•ng" pegs for the oriptive sense, and virtually always. market or for the (tables, of they feudal loads. He had to be a good bit of a forester, for he took his herds• fate the waode to fatten them upon acorns and nuts, ane very often be also held a commission as' a forest warden from Iris overlord. Originally, of course, the name was descriptive of the individual's occu- pation, and in the old xecoa-de you will find many entries of such names as "Hugo le Lardi-ner" and "Roger le Lardner." When Tin Catches Cold. You would scarcely suspect a metal such as tin of being able to catch cold,' but it can dose for all that. In coun- tries like Northern Russia all sorts of utensils are apt to become useless in winter time, A tiny greyish spot makes the ap- pearance on the 'Surfaceofthe tin. It grows in size, and then others appear. In course of time the metal crumbles into a dark -colored powder. Some • years ago a whole shipload of blocks of tin, stored in the - Customs House of Petrograd during the winter, was found the following spring to have crumbled Into dust. What really happens is that the cold causes tin to change tram one of its forme to another. Tin is often found in mines in the grey powder form which is quite useless. When it is heated it . turns.. into a ` well-known shiny metal, but under the influence of cold it niay return tette other form. Finger prints of criminals are sent by telegraph all over Italy by a simple invention, involving the use of from 300 to 400 numbered squares. Salamanders, small creatures not unlike newts, have been made to change their sex by alternately feed- ing and starving them. Common sense i's not a common thing. . Keep Minard's Liniment in the house, Undernourished, No Doubt, "My Reggie looks . as. if. he's hall starved! "Living on his wit% 1 hear." Middle Ages at the time when tamely names were formed, In medieval England the "larduer" -or "lardinex" (for you will find both afterward, the "le" was dropped. The family name of Lockman, how- ever, le sometimes a contraction of them of Lockerman, which is not Eng- lish alt' all, but Dutch, the true form being "Looclierman." And though this Tamely name also is based upon an occupation, 1t le not the same from which the Englisch nameshave de- veloped. The "ioockerm'au" among the Dutch was a man who raised or dealt In leeks. A GOOD MEDICINE FOR THE BABY Nothing can .equal Baby's Own Tab- lets as a medicine for little ones; They are a laxative; mild but thorough in action, and never fall to relieve con- stipation, colic, colds and simple fevers. Once a mother has used them she will use nothing else. Concerning them Mrs. Satiate Pelletier, St. Damns des Auulaines, Que., writes; -1`I always keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house. They are the beset 'medi- cine I know of for little ones and " I would not be without them.' The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mailat250 a box from' The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Visitor—"Dear me! Fanny your'be- ing called Robert Burns— why, that's a very well -kn'ow'n name." Native—"Nae loot it is; I've been blacksmith in the place for nigh on forty years:" MONEY ORDERS. Remit by Dominion Express Money Order, If lost or stolen you get your money back. h The worker bee lives six months, the drone four months, and the female bee four years. Stores About Well -Known People Royalty Gets a Diploma. When' the Wharton School of Busi- ness ad -ministration at the Universd•ty of Pennsylvania held its' graduating exercises this -summermany foreign students received. diplomas e,nd none showed more pride in the hard .won bit of she:Melee! than a scion of Oi•ien- ttul royalty, Vara Virakorn- who is a cousin of •the King of Siam, By veryancient tradition the bust haps of when he fleet came and entered a motor -salon, -to look iron caused by the heat of the insect's over a selection of luxurious carts. At body1 • last he picked out the moat expensive The invention will be od great use one to scientists, who hithertohavebeen "I will have half a doeen of these, battled in their work when very tiny said the B'ey calmly, andcontinued his measurements were needed, shopping, making purchases on the" Ask for Minard's and take no other. some scale now and then, Measuring 'Things You Can not See. We are accustomed to hearing of measurements of tremendous dis- tances such as those between the .earth and some of the stars, which main into thousands' of billions et miles. But what do you' think of measuring accurately bhe 500,000,000th part of an inch? Tile most accurate of ordinary in- struments can measure •the 500,000, - 000th part of a mile, which is less than three 10,000ths of an inch.. To mea- sure the 500,000,000th pert of an inch au instrument must be 50,000 ,times more delicate; yet it has, been done. The appdianoe used is nothing like the tuning' circuit of a wireless valve set. You know that if you turn the, knob of the condenser the wave -length is altered. We can make a condenser by placing two plates of metal one above the other with an ,air space be •tween them. If the tuning circuit is a delicate one, an almost infinitesimal bending of one of the plates will make a differ - 'mice In the'wave-length. It is easy to calculate how much beading causes any given differenece. The measuring appliance employs a condenser of this kind., by means of which the •tiny distances mentioned can be measured with ease. If a half -•I inch bar of steel is placed in a vice II and connected 'with the api .ratus, the distetice it sags when a iiy settles up- on it is instantly and accurately re- corded on a dial. If a ffy walks on a piece of iron the pointer records how the whole mass quivers, under its weight, and it will TlieToIaccoof Qua. Ey Impatient Spider—el wish Miss Mu tet would hurry up; I'ni tired of sitting on this tuffet all day! In the last ten years, 4,000 men and *omen have been killed in accidents in London streets, and over 100,000 have been injured. America's Pioneer Dog Remedies Books on DOG DISEASES raid now to Peed �Iancd Prco to any Address by the Author. N. CLAY GLOVER a0„ Inc, 125 West 24th Street Now Yora, U.S.A. to Paris: even measure the expansion -of"the e And here Is a good story told by him. A French policeman stopped a imbued with a deadly poison, no in - Although some kinds of fungus are nest activities of royal personshavesect or bird ever fallsa victim to them, Perfect °vaporization and exact proportioning of gasoline and, air are claimed for a newcarburetor. two seater and, hailing the chauffeur, asked him for his permit to d rive 'in been limited to, the narrow but not Paris. The roan put his hand in his unfruitful fields of imposing taxes or+pocket; but, as he was about to pro - receipting for the contei>ts of the duce the necessary papers, Monsieur privy purse voted them by their ador- ing sebj'ects. Common revert has it that, Siamese royalty bas also kept up a herd of white :elephants, to bet off its excess energy. Whether Virakorn will stick to the good .old days • when he gets. back to Bangkok, or branch out for himself in same new line, has not been indicated. It may well, be that the Siamese mon- arch has a good many musks to keep up,' and that the young graduate's thorough acquaintance with American methods in commerce, industry and finance will not prove unacceptable to less preotloal, as they travel in curves, his exalted uncle.. making et difficult to gauge tinge target. He holds it ludicrous to expect to find the Martians' life similar to our own. Cars by the Dozen, of France to Faris. Your general ap- "Sonne years ago we thought that The Bey of Tunis, who is now on an pearan00 told ane that you were Dog- animate and plants worethe only official visit to Paris, is well-known as else; yoer hair had beenclearlylest things which liver'," he said, "but now ; . tellerof good stories, and figures out by a barbew of the South of we know there is Me ie everything. I hem -el lf .cis the hero, o • perhaps the France. 1 put these indications to• have never seen anything yet which. victim, of many a'truee one. Themost geth•er, and—I saw your name 011 your was not alive. - amusing of those about himself is per- luggage!" "The Martians might be able to see by heat waves, A email difference iii en our playeleal makeup would. revaiution- . Cr®C22r®'y ize Our world grid ideas of living. If we were born with eyes leaving only slightly different lenses to normal we would see the air around us full of life and our bath water a mass of hor- rible looking creatures." . Dr, Low disagrees with those who aysert the Martians are more ad- 1'Agent stopped him. "It is all right," he said, with a smile. "I only wanted to see your -per- mit if you hadn't got it!" Sherlock -Holmes Methods. A joke was played on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle by a French taxicab drivlr recently. The mangy had driven the world-famous creator of "Sherlock Holmes" from the station to the hotel, and when he received his fare he said,, "Marc!,; M. Conan Doyle." "Why, how do you know niy name?" asked Sir Arthur. "Well, sir, I have seen iu the papers that you were coming from the South ' Gives Out Sur rise og . Facts "If any in my family were sick with stomach trouble at run-down condi- tion, I would rather have one bottle of Tan1'ac than all the other remedies vanoed Ulan'earthings. "I£ they were, put together," is the positive state - they would have' found some means rent of 11'; A, Barrowcliff, 8 Lecomo- ere this of communicating with use' he! tive St., Hamilton, Ont., well-known said. yardman for the Grand Trunk Rail- •road. The only trouble with „ the heiBht "My wife's health was restored by of fashion" is having to weal: it a' the Tanlac treatment in such short or. long time after the "height" i hes der it was astonishing, for' she suffer ed so terribly with nervousness, head• aches, sleeplessness and ,loss of ap- petite that I thought she would break down completely. She went meal af- ter mealy without, eating,' and was so changed. "•Story -books for blind children con - tate pictureswhich the little 'Women in Egypt are appealing for in > p the onesmar- linger over Movingly with their a law to be :passed raising eco or rs o fingers riag g f gi 1 t sixteen fearfully weak the care of our five children and the housework was more than she could do. "After her first few doses of Tanlac my wife was like an entirely different person; and hasn't had a sick spell Mime she quit taking the medicine six months ago. Tanlac has certainly been a blessing in our house, and we are glad to recommend It." Tanlac is for sale by all good drug- gists, Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills are Nature's own remedy for constipation, for sale everywhere: Attractive Proposition For mea with all round weekly cewspaper experience and 3404 or 3500. Apply Box 24, Wilson Publishing Co.. Ltd., 73 Adelaide Street West In the Stable Minard's is the best remedy for Cuts, Sprains, Swellings, Colic, Distemper, Coughs. :UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all g g p 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 bymillions. for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets -Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. mew., is the trade marls ('agiatered in. Canada) of Bayer liaaufaeture of Mono noetleOeldester or. s,ticyttcaeld, Rhile it is well )mown that Aspirin means Bayer manu1eatore, to assist thepulmo against imitations, the Tablets of. Bitter OsmPOnt will be stamped with their genernl trade mark, the "Bayer Cross."• . Why They Fluked. These are culled from a collection of recent schoolboy howlers.: "A grass widow is the wife of a dead vegetarian" "Ooeauica le than continent which contains no land." "Parallel lines are the same des. tance ell the way and do not meet =- less you bend them." "Louie XVI. was gelatined during' the French Revolution." "Palsy is a kind of new writer's. dance." "Letters in sloping print are hy- sterics," U4r s INE F4)14 YOUR EYES Refreshes Tired Eyes WrlreMurine Co Chlcogo forEyeCereBoot: Shampoo With Cuticura And HaveHealthyair Regular shampoos with Cuticura Soap will keep the scalp clean and healthy. Before shampooing touch spots of dandruff and itching, if any, With Cuticura Ointment. A clean, healthy scalp means good hair. Soap 25c, Ointment 28 and 50c. Talcum 25e. Sold throughout theDomimon.Canadian Depot, Lyman, Limited, 3415t, Paul St., W. Montreal. 1, 'Caticura Soap shaves without muga MR& DAVIS NERVOUS WRECK T ellgWomenHowShe Was Restored to Perfect Health by Lydia E. °inkham's Vegetable Compound Winnipeg, Man.—" I cannot speak too highly of what Lydia E. Pinkitam'e Vegetable Com- pound has done for me, I was a nervous wreck and I just had to force myself to do my work. Even the'. soundofineown chil- dren playing made me feel as if Imust scream if they did not get away from me. I could not even speak right to my husband. The doctois ea he could do nothing for me. My hus- band's mother advised rite to take the Vegetable Compound and I started it at once. I was able to do my work once more and it was a pleasure,' not a burs daft. Now I have a fine bouncing baby' and am able to nurse her and enjoy ddd- ing . my work. I cannot help recom- mending Such ecom-mendingSucha medicine, and any one seeing me before I took it, and seeing' me now, can see what it does for me. r am only too leased for you'to'use my testimonial.'Mrs. EMILY-DAvls,: 721 McGee Street, Winnipeg; Man. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text - Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women will be sent you free upon request. Write to the Lydia E. Pinkhanl Medicine Co., Gobourg, Ont. This book contains valuable information,. o ISSUE No, 37—'23.