HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-02-25, Page 9paw -
A Prayer.
There is a prayer that evermore' as
sense
7'o' the Great Lord: of All,
From byre and stall,
from mart and noisy street,
Where tread the patient feet
Of cattle, sheep and horse --
rig -ie. vassals of man's force,—
From s'teobtootiled trap, from bondage
till life ends,
For a» wo suffer, make us, Lord,
amends'!
Forget us not in our humiliation;
The lowlier beings of Thine own orea-
tion.
Look down upon our anguish and ells-
tress,
Oh, Thou., -who made the Greater and
thei ese!
Forsake us not, Thine humble furry
r things. •
Forsake tis not, Thy feathered, folk
with "iviuge l
Loop down and see With what unheed
ed pains,
We'tread thepath of Death- for human
gains.' ".
Look down' and mark how long we
' 'agonize
Amidet coarse Jeers, and under meati=
ing eyes!
011, Thous who made each wood and
stream and mead,
• --For us as well as man, behold our need.
The stable, Lord, was sanotified by
• Thee; •
Forsake us notinour humility!
Great Lord of Life! Great God of all
creation!
Tlly creatures pray Thee, show Thy
salvation!
—E. Spaivel-Gayly in The Animal
World.
The Two Untamed.
You may conquer the plain with plough
and 'drain
And the forest with ate anti saw;
You may pierce the hills with powder -
drills • -
Andd shatter the mountain's- awe.
But there are 'two you will not. subdue,
Though you curb however you oat,
They will brave the test of your worst
and best—
The sea. and the heart of man.
The desert may yield ac a watered
field,
And the wind may grind your grain,
The rivers' might may be yoked :in
light
Or tug at a:factory chain.
Bat.musele nor mind these two than
bind •
By cunningest plot or plan,
They'shall have free pity to the Jtfdg-
rueihL Day—
The sea and the lieart of men.
You may nota their deeds and guess
at the Breeds
That govern their ebb and flow, ,
These are tales to' tell why their
stens swell,
Bet the secret you never wild know.
And, willing or loath, you must love
them beth,
Though Heaven alone may span
And fathom the breast of their deep
unrest—
The sea and. the heart of man.
Charles Wharton Stork in the
W "Forum."
Landscape Art.
Pass
Seine may, perhaps, think that en
intense atudy and love of nature is all
that is needed for the appreciation of
landscape painting; nothing, ho`i°ever,
could be further from the mark.
There are many Who delight in the
stuily of nature, who revel in a coun-
try walk, who are in raptures at the
sight of growing corn ` . . who
yet " are absolutely innocent of any
artistic enhotlon. For appreciation of
nature does not necessarily imply ap
precistin. of it as interpreted by art,
though as a:general .rule it may be said
that appreciation of nature so inter-
preted induces a .greater love of na-
ture in itself, 'There are others who
are solely impressed by nature's utili-
tarian side. I remember oncegoing
fora country walk with a highly Intel-
ligent. Swede, a passionate student ,of
anisic and a man with a very flhe
literary taste. ' We cafes I nross: a
splendid stretch of country, ,a
minent feature in the landscape being
a majestitb elle. To my aimoat hivolun-
Lary exclamation of pleasure at the
eight of this noble tree, my companion
. - simply remarked that he saw no good
in it;; it would not repay the trouble
of cutting down on account of its age
and certain malformations! He look-
ed at the tree from' the point of view
of bis father, a timber Merchant, and
in the same way others would .only
think in looking at a splendid field of
wheat.of the probable amount of its
yield. .. . 'Ar'tistic pleasure. must
be excited by the natural object itself,
its form and color, and though the re-
sponse to the appeal does not neces-
sarily depend
eces-sarily{depend on the capacity for look -
lug at nature :thriugh art, this un
doubtedly Is a eletriverful stimulant;
that is', the power of 'sympathizing
with what some -Treat artist has felt
in_regard to some landscape a portion
of whose I eruel, so to apeak, he las
extracted and placed on h15 canvas.—
Percy Moore Turner, in "TheApprecia-
tion of Painting."
HER IMPROVEMENT
WAS REMARKABLE
Weak and RIM—Down—Restored
by Dr: Williams' Pizik Pills:
"Two years ago," says Mrs,
Wright, Secretan, Sask., "I was' very
much run-down in. health. I suffered
from indigestion, sick' headaches and
sleepless nights. Faint spells Would
often come over me and.1 would have
to Ile down •tillthe faintuese passed
away. I was so short of breath that I
could not walk any distance or do any-
thing that required muck exertion,
without feeling completely used up.
As .I was constantly glowing: weaker,
d consulted- a 'doctor `who told me I
was anaemic and needed building up.
I took several ;bottles of tonic he gave
me, but the help I got from it was only
temporary. At this stage;I decided: to
try, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which I
had used in girlhood with mueh bene-
fit. It was not long after I began
usfug tihem that I knew I had at last
found the rightmedicine. I :think :I"
took• altogether some fifteen ,boxes,.
and the improvement was remarkable
as I was feeling as well as evert had.
been, and my good health has con-
tinued to this day. I had also been
troubled at times with rheumatism,
and this as well as my other troubles
disappeared. I have since reconnnend;,
ed Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to neigh -
bora who have used them with .equally,
good results." ' All weak, anaemic women and girls
should follow the example. of Mrs.
Wright, and give these pills a fair
trial.' New health and new strength is
sure to follow. You can get the pills
from your druggist, or by mail at 50
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont.
The Touch of God.
Down :amid the fi3lds crusted white
'with snow, -
Where the ramp mists hang, and the
chill winds blow,
And scarcely a gleam from the sky,
breaks through,
And: you'd think that never et daisy
grew, --
I :felt the: sun and I knew the sod
Was but awaiting the touch of God.
Down where the blues of solitude fall,
.fail,
And the curtain of loneliness hangs
o'er • all,
And scarcely a glad, brave light shines
tiprough, `
'And you'd think that a happiness never
grew, es
I felt a presence beside Ole stand
And I touched' a hand that had 'touched
God's hand.
Do you get a sensation of pressureonthe heart?,
Don't he frightened it's hot heart trouble -it's
indigestion, Seigel's Syrup will fig it. Any
drugstore.
Let Everything Go By.
• An Indian chief had, just bought a
new ear, and after careful instructions,
driven away in it. An hour later lie
returned, battered up and drenched to
the skin. -
"M.e buy new car—old oneheap no
good;" he grunted:
1I start off in car. See trees rush
at me.
"I turnout and let trees go by.
"Then see houses rush at Inc.
"I turn cut and let houses go by,
Soon I see brijige rush sat me. I. turn
out to let bridge go by---and•"Wham' "
The worldisbetter and brighter
than when I was a boy.—Mr. Will
Thorne.; M.P.
Junior scales.
Ir
Rath fou !.of• music, i
ut was t al tislc and wished
to take piano lessons, but her -mother
thought she was -too young. "I night
begin with junior 'scales," urged the
little girl. "With what?" asked her
mother, greatly perplexed._- "Oh,.mdnor
scales,' corrected Ruth.' ',yurelyl am
big enough to learn to ploy" minor
scales."
li►��'
Croup
and Whooping
Oh Mother! What Can I Do?
Idow .many times a day do -your
babies :ask you that question? And
how often are you able to suggest
some interesting game for them to
play, some amusing occupation for a
rainy day? If you'd like always to
havea practical, helpful suggestion
for them. read Chia snappy new fea-
ture.
HONORED BY INDIAN TRIBE •
Here is a photograph of Robert Randolph Bruce, new Lieutenant -Govern-
or o1 the province of British. Columbia, being appointed as a chief of the
Stoney Indians. The governor Wee -given a puff at the Pipe of Peace and
seemed to enjoy R.
EARTH IS 'ALWAYS CHANGING
-
Everla tiaig Hills Exist Only in the Language of the Poets.
hese formations of granite rock exposed on a bill -side in the Mourne
Mountable., Ireland, show how the hills are worn away by the elements. The
formations sketched here are known by the picturesque title of "The Castles
of lelvvitar•."
Secrets of Science.
•
13y David Dietz,
The earth as we 'know 11 to -day Is
far different from the earth as pic-
tured by geologists at the close of the
formative period.
The continents are not bare track,
but almost everywhere are' covered
with layers of lodge materials of vari-
The dust of the earth;'
For water is one of the chief des-
tructive forces in this first set. Its
nlienibers include the atmosphere,
winds, cold, frost, rain, rivers, lakes,
oceans, and the tides.
These forces wear away the land
and, as we shall see later, create the
secondary rocks out of the debris of
the pr'imar'y rocks.
ous sorts—soil, clay, sand and gravel.
If these forces alone were at work,
1f we d'ig below this loose material, they would wear away the land until
which geologists have christened the it stretched in flat plains from ocean
rock mantle, we do not always- find, to ocean. The material which they
the primary or fire -hardened rocks.
Frequently we find -rooks of entirely
different composition. We find rock
for•- • tions of various kinds oSourrhag
Iii
Cough
Guard your children
from . the dangers of
winter weather. Check
their first' cough- with
Buckley's "Modified"
Mixtl:ire. Pleasant to
'take and brings instant
relief..:,
Buckley's Mixture
"trong" or "Modified
like a flash on aa
porafoup'aiicl 'Whooping
sough Wilms affection
f t1 t, •- chest and
K„p bottle '
ekettriful at
810sze s Rs:'
CKL
'"t fro ig„ Fr ,gifi „
oy
,415c-f0$dee
,PP'Glotted,
1424ior nto
2
wear away. le deposited ho the oceans.
13ut-their work is counteracted by, a
ts'
second se, of forces. Thdset tends
in 1• vers or strath. Such farmnlloms to elevate the land and to Create hills
could not have resulted from the cool -
be
mountains. They also tend to'
I lower the ocean floors.
I
fn of lavas, an. h
r as d other causes had
I�
g t ca sea ad to
be found to explain. them. Geologists As a result of tress opposing sets of
call these the secondary rocks, forces, the earth has had a constantly
Geologists now beilevo that the con- changing aurface throughout its his -
Canadian Plan Book.
1t 00 -operation with. Canadian
Architects designs of moderate
pr'1oed lames are published in the -
MacLean Builders' Guide. . Detail-
ed information on planning, build-
ing, furnishing, decorating and
gardening,' Profusely 1 iu�traied.
An.; ideal reference book. Send
200 for at copy. MacLean Building
Reports, Ltd., 344 Adelaide St.
West, Toronto,
(Miens which existed at the close of tory.
the formative period --great continents Geologists believe that the cantle-
of granite rocks protruding above the ents and oceans have always occupied
'oeeans---endured only momentarily their present relative positions. But
Immediately it great variety of when the continents were low, the
agents set to work Lo cause change.
These same causes have been at work
throughout .the history of the earth
anxd ale still at work.
waters flooded great sections of them.
With changes in the size and height
of the land, geologists believe there
have been great changes in the, ell -
Here on tilts string an apple you sue,
Get a:big. bite, bring the apple to tae.
Here in, the center we'll find, a eurprise,
A very fine fortune for two little - eyes.
(Core the apple, and roll the fortune
ftp in the hollow).
FIGHTING FOR
I
BABY'S HEALTH
OSE
isgood tea"
EA
%.i� i . oci d �, .31,5
va c1J � vxVZa good.
$19.95
y�.
Canadian Made bit Cana-
dian Climate. Double wail,
Capper not Water heating
system. Sensitive Automatic
regulator. Hatches strong.
healthy- chicks. Write for
P11101, Circular tom
J.B.Mackenalc, Georgetown.Oat.�
AMT Etc
Fortune. aro made from simple ideas. Send
for list of inventions wanted, our "Patoat Pro-
tection" booklet and megrims"The Thinker"
SHIPMAN & CO. -THE OLD ROLta5LE FmM
RZOISTERICO AITOVINCYB. OTTAWA. CAN.
Is the Constant Care of Every
Young Mother... -
The young mother has a constant
,care in looking after the welfare of
her little ones:: Childhood ailments
come on so.euddenly—sometimes with-
out a -minute's warning—the mother
may have a very sick baby on her
hands 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 minor
ailments' of babyhood and childhood.
Such a remedy is found in Baby's
Own Tablets. Thousand& 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; regu-
lating his bowels andthus driving out
constipation and indigestion, colds and
simple fevers, and making the dreaded
teething period easy,
Baby's Own Tablets are an absolute-
ly safe remedy. Theyare guaranteed
to be free from opiates or any other
narcotic drug which are so harmful to
the -future welfare of the baby. Moth-
ers, if you- value the life of your little
ones give hire Baby's Own Tablets
whoa he le ill, 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 addrese, post paid, at 25 cents a
box byya r
dd esaing The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Spring Dance.
tip from-73•dolent' sleep the eyes of
the flowers to wake,
Over their faces each dawn cloudlets
of spring water shake.
Denizens all of the mead now with
new vim. •are flood,,
That were its foot not secured,
I
nto(Gibbsdatag the cypress would break.
—From the Turkish of :liesihi (1512)
nci)
Nowadays everyone•looks down upon
the woman who does not wort:. -.-Mrs.
Stan:ey Baldwin.
These forces .Otte be, divided into mate.
sets of opposing forces. There were not always groat zones'
The first set telhds to continuously starting with frigid one at the equator.
wear away the land. There le geological evidence to
Che poet • ,w -bo speaks of the `ever- prove that for long periods the 011
lasting hills" is drawing meet liber- mate wee Very temperate at the poles.,
ally
upon potleic license.
And tit four periods in the earth's
The old Biblical writer, who wrote history—the so-called glacial ages, the
the Rook of Job, had a better under- polar fields of ice extended' far down
standing of the situation, when ,he into what is now the temperate zone.
wiote s Neet .article—The Work. of the At -
"The waters wear away the stones;- mospiter e,
Boon to Musicians.•,,
_Alter seven -years of patient experi-
lent, a young -musician has invented
all ingenious pedal device that; makes'
it Possible: 'for a to tliciall to turn
pages of music wit out taking his
Band frons the instrument he is play-
Ing.
All that is necessary Is to step on
the pedal .that -actuates an arrange-
ment of levers that to it the page of
the music automatically. '
The device can be applied to a piano
as well as to a music stand, and can
be adjusted to turn the pages of a
book at any height, Safi a writer in
"Popular . Science," When, idle it
bolds the Pages flat and firmly on the
rack.
Baldness •limy be due to bad teeth,
according to anewmedical theory.
Minard's Liniment for colds.
All Tired Out -::–Feel
Miserable, Generally?
If you feel out of sorts, your kidneys
and -liver are not. acting niatually..
Don't delay but go to' your druggist
and get a bottle of. Warner's' Safe Hid-
mey anti Liver .Remedy
and take according
to directions. In a
short time •you should
notice the benefit from
this remedy merle from
herbs and other bene-
ficial ingredients. Used
for over 50 years by
millions in all parts. of
the world. For your el
health's sake take care
of your kidneys anti
Sold by all druggists. P ice $1,55.
.Dor bottle, • Warmer's Safe Remedies
Co., Toronto, Ontario
Yes! it Real0
Dog's itop
iCOugh
1
1
An Age-old Ceremony.
A ceremonial 400 years old figured at
the installation in Westminster Abbey
of its dean, Dr. William Foxley Norris.
A medieval procession conducted him
Into the cathedral to read one of the
lessons of the day. An address was
presented and replied to in Latin.
Most impressive of all was when Di
Norris told a,parable from the pulpit.
One densely foggy day, when he was
dean of York Minster, he had groped
his way up to' that cathedral hardly
able to see the road. '"My door led
into a lofty vestibule," he said, "where
all was.dark as night. Again I groped
my way, and opened the door leading
into the cathedral. To my amaze-
ment, the interior was flooded with
brilliant sunshine. Pb lantern tower
was high up out of the' fog. I need not
interpret my parable. . . I pray
to -day that not only in the immediate
Problems of the puzzling life of this
great city, but far and wide, wherever
temporary darkness reigns throughout
the Empire and throughout the world,
this abbey shall stand like that lan-
tern tower, bringing the light of heav-
en to pierce the world's darkest shad-
owe.'"
Minard's Liniment used by physicians.
Black Butterflies.
Black butterflies come floating down
From many a chimney pot in town.
h their in blue and old:
Iwsrtei wings g
How gladly then would I be told,
That Emily had lit the fire.
How often too would I inquire, •
If Emily had lit the fire.
Robert L. Key.
Self- Poisoning
increasingly
Common
Modern Living Habits.Pro.-
mote
ro.
mote Self . Poisoning—
Thousands are Victims
The average pian or woman does not
enjoy consistent good health. Loss of -
apppetite, headaches, biliousness and a
lack of enthusiasm for either work or
play are constant complaints.
Scientists hese.. ascertained that such
a condition is usually caused by self-
poisoning resulting from constipation.
Due to modern living habits, the
natural secretion which promotes regu-
lar elimination by softening the bowel
contents, is often deficient—especially
among middle-aged people, The poison
from 'waste matter remaining in the
systems of people thus affected is the
insidious enemy of good health.
Such people need No(jol, because
Nap/ softens the waste natter and
permits thorough and regular bowel
elimination without overtaacing the
intestinal tnuscles. It helps Nature
help you.
Ask your druggist for Nujol to-day—
and retnentber, look for the name
"Nejol" in regi on both bottle label
'and package.
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians •for
Colds Headache ,Neuritis , Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
• Accept only `'Bayer package
which contains proven direct o
Handy "Bayer" boxes of. 12 tablets
Also,bottles of 24 and 100 --Druggists.
tsptrin 'is the trade mar& (Mastered In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of hbo,toacetlr-. •
oldester of Snlleynaaelil Acetyl Salicylic Acid, 'A. 9.' A...1. While it Is well (mown
that depltlo means Bayer, manufacture, to assist the :public against imitation, the Tablets.
01 -Bayer Company will he -stamped with their general trade wacky. tks 11B?Yer Cross,"
AGENTS WANTED.
rdes for best Cu tom.Made Clothei
in Canada. Highest commissions.
•
INDIAN
WANTED—One reliable man in every.
town,mer ant referred to' take
REX TAILORING CO. Ltd.
TORONTO 2•.
WANTED
CAR STORE
Formerly ueed in front of Tobacconist
Store. Must be In good condition.
State price and where can be seen. -,
H. WATKINS
73 W. Adelaide St. Toronto
Brush turkeys, natives of Australia,
are 'fully clothed in feathers when
they hatch out of the egg, and can fly
within an hour of their birth.
S.TOPTOO
toi
:��'� dr s'PluuS
` �AA�Y
Temporary Fillings -- which
Last tong Ti... 15C
SOLD EVERYWHERE .
Normo amaw, Wriest « Co, maw, Distributor', Toronto
KE
ORSEMEN
There is no better friend
In the stable than Mtnard'g
Spleudld for swains., swell-
ing, stiffness..,
STRATFOR
ON
Restored to Health byLydia
E. Pinkhaan's Vegetable
Compound •
Stratford, Ontario. — "After my
filet baby was born I started to work
on the tenth day and did a big wash-.
ing on the twelfth day. Being so
young (I was married at 19) I didbio
know what was the matter, so let it
go until I. was all run-down, weak
and nervous, and had a bad dieplace-
ment. For nearly two years I could
not sleep and I would always complain
of having 'not a head -ache, but
brain -ache.' My mother is taking
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound during the Change of Life and
she recommended it to me. After
taking two bottles I began to get a
little sleep and to feel batter and I
have never left. off since then, except
for aboutthreontontiis. I can safely
say I have taken thirty bottles since
my second baby was born. I think
it makes child -birth easier as I had
terrible pains with my first three
children and very few with my fourth
as 1 was so much stronger.' I am
now able to do my work alone but
I am still taking the Vegetable alone,
as Tam nursing baby. "—Mrs.
OTTER PAUL, 49 Cherry Street, Strat-
ford, Ontario.
i1 you are suffering from any weak-
ness which causes such symptoms
as pains in the side and back and
nervosus feehngbsieve LydiaE. a Pinlc-
ham'Vegetable Compound trial
now,
Caltkkura Takkulra
cis a delicately .medicated, anti-
septic, deodorizing powder ideal for
both children and adults. It is
cooling and refreshing and imparts
a' pleasing fragrance leaving the
skin sweet and wholesome.
Sample Saab Tres 1/Y Ptn,l.. Add ass Canadian
Depot:.,"fitotheuse, JAI, Montreal." Pelee, Soap
26a. Ointment 25 and fie . talcum Ibc,
Mgr '.` Cuticula Shaving. Stich 2ac..
ISSUE No. 9—'26.