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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-06-03, Page 3Looking Ahead. rhe affairs of life are .often disap- pointing, - They. 'hold ,Out to: u4, fond h( es, and we struggle and urge, only to find that the very strivings irritate ue by their scorning, and our • goal was merely a shadow. Somebody has said that "disappoint urents are life's glory." I doubt it. Bail he said they were 11fe's "dis'cip lime" I could have agreed•. They ee thinly teach us ,but they are her glorious unless a elan can control hi. self to that degree that if his air cast falls'he will at once seek to get so more substantial structure. What :can be clone when things are, not what they seem when mirages come -.and when our castles topple Blown? A man works night and day. for hie business; a student applies himself every' hour for his examine - Von; a another toils for her"child,, and flet in many of the'se' cages sttccesa l sews to be eternally delayed. Shall iive then give up in despair? Shall he bay: "I won't try any more"? Surely (tote Nothing in this world can lie des Toyed. Do you realize that? It c the changed in form and feature, but never banished. Life never dies, to never perishes, Bork is never lost. Only as a, grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies does it yield the harvest. Yes, even when it seeing a though every effort is useless i)bonld say: "I won't give up! I'Ll kee on. Success is round the corner." When things are drab and dismal when clouds and storms are o'er us and friends are few and life is runnin 'ow, viten you are snisund�eretood a alighted, it does seem as though Go had forgotten and Nature was betray- ing us. When you. feel this, depression of events, try saying to y*ureelf: "As I don't like the outlook, I'll try the up- • Look." The great thing is, don't let ;disap- polntments get on top of you. It is so easy to fall a prey: to. the outer forces whiohhold us down. Trust those in- ner,powers of yours which can exalt "when all around tumultuous seems." The thing which_ wins is faith—faith in God, in others, and in oneself. Appearances are apt to deceive. They make pretence, and we are read - fly duped. We grasp at shadows and miss the substance. "It is not as things appear ,that conquest comes, but as we learn to discriminate be- tween the realities and the spectres. that hope is born._ So, in our dealings with others, it is Well for us to know that we shall be led along the wrong road if we trust only to the things we See. Let us know that, the great spiritual forces, those facts we cannoteee, are the powerful agents' in exalting% - Never let ' disap- pointments sour or spoil. There are ever heights for us to climb, and a we get nearer the top so shall we live superior t0 the things that degrade and those who would rob us of our achievements. I 1 Di•GES1101 1,� III:1 Il Through the: Timely .Use of Dr. Williams' Pink: Pills. The urgent need of all who suffer from irdrgestion is a tonic to build up the blood Pin and `distress atter eat- ing -is the way the stomach shows it is ' too weak to perform the work nature v+rt intended it to do. New strength is 'i' -given weak stomachs by Dr. Williams' 1'e Pink Pills, because these Pills enrich me and purify the blood. This is the na- tural process of giving strength and •tone to the stomach and accounts for the speedy relief in stomach disorders that -follow the use of.these pill's. Proof of this: is. given by Mr., Wm. 11. Kelly, 216 Earl St,, Kingston, -Ont., who says: —"I cannot reconrmerit Dr. Williams' Pink Pills too: highly. I had been bothered with indigestion in a chronic form for almost ten years. Everything 1 would eat would turn sour. I felt ash though there was a big bald in my stomach all the time. I felt tired and weak and would often turn dizzy.: I an doctored :and tried many medicines,. spending many, many dollars, but to ve no avail. One day I heard a lady prate- ing Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I de- cided to try them, I am• more than s glad :I did, for soon I_ found relief, and after taking the pills for a couple of we months the .trouble disappeared, . and now, I cart -eat all kinds. of food, and have again my old time health and ' strength." I2, you will send your name and ad g tresis to The Dr, Williams' Medicine an Co. Brockville, Ont., a little book, "What to Eat and How to Eat," will be mailed to you prepaid:. This book containeinany useful health hints. You can get these pills through any medicine 'dealer or by mail at 60 Dents. a box frons The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville,, Ont. Fate Talks About Men. Into my room a strangercame, Coarse and rough and =a thing to hate, And I, half-friglnten•ed, inquired his. name, Said the with a Iaugh: "I'm known as Fate." "Oh, I answered, "well, you're the man Who blocks full many a well -laid plan. "You made a loafer of one I knew, At least be says that the fault is yours.. • You made a thief of another, who Now spends the years behind prison doors. There's many a pitiful thing of shame Who sits and sighe and reviles your name': "Yes, I get blamed for a lot of things," Said Fate, with a twinkle in his eye; "When men crust bear what their folly beings I'n the handles sort of an alibi. Harsh things of me may the failures thinly, But -I never have naked a man to drink. Midday Bell. Blue smocked peasants in Yvorne fields laden with heavy golden .sun shine have awaited the coming of this. N'onr. From gnarled and sinewy hands, heavy implements drop listlessly as the village clock peals midday from a weather-beaten' skyey belfry. Child- ren with their gay frocks.ii.nd'aunmesy Pienofores rush without ado into the road; through the wide open school door. Before the sonorous and welcome tones pealed through the mountain air, there Were bighted certain overtures preliminary to this noonday ceremony. The garde -police has been seen by a few to enter the narrow `church door, with its insoripticn: "ltegardez les cloches 'qui sont en taut,. words` of the full import of which, no one seems possessed. He has ascended the winding stairs, up which as a special treat some of the favored strangers and guests In the village ere sometimes taken to see the bells and hear their reverberating Beals, which exclude all else, when one is in the tower near them, The garde -police, for the moment a Swiss bellringer, arranges the cord so that as he leans heavily upon the rope the peal is already expected and par- tially felt by the children looking • through the window of the village: school. He gives the flrat mighty jerk of the rope which mends the wild 1.eehoes crashing' into the. s.ti'll :air; and floating over the mountain elopes, ar- resting the ears of wiled creatures in their invisible haunts and native habi- tats. All outdoors is now vibrating and pulsating ,with the rhythmic beat of twelve o'clock, the ringing 'of the long- est house or the day. Peasants and lit- tle school children mingle in the open air, ealob: wending his way to a humble home for the midday repast, and for . the hill and recreationwhich follows the sonorous ringing of the bell,'whtch now nepotists in its.toll, smiting the alr and tilling it with agitated waves from its vibrations. 'Bus. in a trice the fields are, deserted. The wind wanders away, The air is again very still and scarcely sighs over echoing vibration~., now lost, as they,. have floated .over the other side of the hills, Disappointed. "An," sighed' the serious -faced man, "how little we know of. the Suture, and what it has in store for us!" "That's true," his friend replied. "Little dict. I think, when some thirty years ago I carved my initials on the desk in the old country school, that I would some day grow: up end fail to become famous." , • "1 never have asked a roan to lie, I've' spilled his dream, . and I've spoil - his plait, You see, L5's my business on earth to try The moral courage of every man. I'm a. troublesome sort ofa chap to meet, But I've never suggested that man should cheat. "I bit men hard and I hurt at times 1 cause them trouble, 1 will agree, But the fellows who put their hands to crimes Don't get that sort of a jolt from rue. Men say I'm the cause of a lot of shame. But in most. of the (ewes I'm not to blame." —Edgar A. Guest. SOs "Riclhard,". said his father -In-law as he called the latter into the library and closed the door, "you have lived' with me now for more than four yeal•s," , "Yee; "In all that time I have never asked you a cent for board,". "No, sir," "In all your little family spats I have always, taken your part when it seemed to me that you were in ries right." "Always, sir" "1 have even paid some of your • bills," You have been very goad to me, she. "Then you will no doubt be quite willing to grant the little favor I am about to ask." • "Certainly, sir." "Thanks. T want you to tell your mother-in-law ghat those tickets for. tire. cabaret supper dance elle picked up in my room tills :morning must have accidentally fallen out of your pocket; and then' we'll call it square." II Would Raise. Age of Consent. English girls may marry legally at the age of 12, British-women'a clubs think this tar too young, antiare ask- ing parlianterst to raise the age of con- sent to 1e, while othera`•fix 18 as the minimum marriageable' age, WE BUY FLEECE WOOL OL Harris Abattoir. Co., Limited Strachan Ave., Toronto BOYS INVADE CUNARDER Among, the movements in the interests of boys such as the"Big Brother" movement, the most recent is a "Boy's Week," which was recently instituted in Montreal, - Among the various activities were entertainments and instructional programs for the boys throughout the weak, such as trips to local points of interest, visite to local factorles, and industrial plants of various ,kinds. Although living in Montreal, one of the largest ports on the con- tinent, thousands have never seen an ocean linea•. - This picture shows a large party,of High Scheel Sado at the con- cluslon of, an exploration tour of the Cunarder Aiaunia, which was the first Cunard ship` to arrive and leave Mont- real this season. After exploring the Alaunia from the bridge to the engine -room, the boys were entertained at tea In +the cabin quarters, -SEA-CS ORPIONS EIGHT FEET LONG They Flourished on Earth of Ancient Life. This sketch shows the artist's conception of life on the sea bottom in the paleezoic or era of ancient life. Giant scorpions and trilobites were the chief forms. Secrets of Science.. water dried up. That meant that By David Dietz, plants anal animals left out of water The: Era: of Ancient Life or the But gradually ego. Geologists Relieve it lasted, for about 200,000,000 years..arsyears..Out of water. So we Bedlam] plants The geologist divides the era up into I evolving first, followed by scorpions a number ofperiods rnd gives,each a that could exist out of water. many-ayllabied name: But though we ibe next period is ca,hed the De• find these names hard tp pronounce, vonlan. In this we find the third great we must remember that the.advance Invasion of the land. Amphibious, an - of science is only possible because. of cestors of the present frogs, newts and the scientist's habit of c1ioeeifying and salamanders, made their appearance labelling everything, in this age. Paleozoic Era began 400•;000,000 years mals evolvedd esame that were able and tui e able to exist The first period is: knownas the By now land plants had a good start Cambrian period, The fossils in the and soon we rind dense vegetatioe.. rocks tell us that in this period the covering the earth. This ushered in. oceans were teeming with. life, al- the two periods known as the Mississi- though no true fish had appeared,. There' were also big crawling things upon the sea -floor. The chief class of these were called trilobites. They looked like the little woodlice found in forests to -day, except that they slime covered the marshy areas, The grew to a length of two Peet or more. amphibiansbegan to increase in site. lgant'c sea -scorpions ,ome types attained the size of pre- r Innen,and the Pennsylvanian period. During then, great tree ferns and the like, flourished. Many of their bad 1 stems or trunks a hundred Leet high. j Thick tangles of mosses and green HEALTHY CHILDREN ALWAYS SLEEP WELL If Baby Does Not Enjoy Re- freshing Sleep He is Far From Well. The healthy child sleeps well and during his waking Hours is never cross but always happy and laughing, It is only the sickly child that is cross an peevish. Mothers, if your children d not sleep well; if they are cross and cry a great deal, give them Baby' Own Tablets and they will soon be well and happy again. Baby's Own ,Tablets are a mild bu thorough laxative whieh regulate the bowels, •sweeten the stomach; banish .constipation, colic•aud indigestion and promote healthful sleep.' They are abso lutely guaranteed free from opiates 8112 niay be given to the new-born babe with perfect safety. You can obtain Baby's Own Tablets through any medicine dealer at 25 cents a box, or by mail, post Paid, from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, A New Ending, Tommy, very sleepy, was saying his prayers, "Now I lay me down to sleep, 1 pray the Lord my soul to keep—keep---" "If," his mother prompted, "If be hollers,let him go, eeny, weeny, miney mo!" • DR SE "his good tea" TEA Van 76...,yp ,{��liBa6�OMabRli'I -l7{{/�/7•{!/W7W A Word on Paving -Stone Plants. During the last few years the flag- stone path has come into favor. It is a charming addition to any garden, and waren edged with box or low -flow- ering plants, and the cracks between ,its• stones are filled with low -growing flowers, it is in reality a garden 9n it- self. Many as+ticles appear in the magazines concerning the proper plants for use between the flagstones. The authors usually do not think of the practical conditions, and `merely give a long 14et of low -growing. plants, As a result, people keep putting In their walks such plants as forget-me- nots, primroses, English daisies and California poppies, and wonder wby the flowers do not bloom nor the plants thrive. If a beautiful yellow primrose is growing between the stones of a walk, and someone comes along and steps on it, the plant is ruined. The petals are delicate, the stem is brtttle, the leaves are crisp. The same is true with the other plants named. No plants should be planted in walks which cannot stand the printery use of a walk—to be stepped on, One should keep one's primroses and forget-me-nots for the front rows of the border, where they bloom and th r ve, spreading all over the mellow brick edging, and shining brightly in the shade of a moist wall. The list of plants fit for flagstone planting ie in reality very short. Only one plant which can easily be pro- cured is able to withstand constant treading. This is phlox sublata, the common creeping phlox iu rose and d white. There are other suitable plants ° but they are uncommon and expensive, s Love. The night has a thousand eyes Ansi the Day but one; t Yet the light of the bright world dies With the dying run. The mind has a thousaud eyes, And the heart but one; Yet the light of a whole life dies I When love is done. • Minard's Liniment King of Pain. Wordless. The sun sets in a harbor 0( waters lit like flame, But one must see a sunset For,words are not the same, -Charles A. 'Wagner Wasted. After working a week, the new hired man notified the farmer that he was quitting.• "What's the trouble?" the farmer he qulrecl. "When I came here." replied the tired man, "you promised the a steady ob." "Well, haven't you got It?" "No, There are four bourn every uigist from tan to two o'clock Isbell1 lout have a thing to do but fool away There were also g S U the sent day donkeys. n by time sleeeping, On se ocean floor. These attained . len th of I a g eight or nine feet. Large insects, Pour winged creatures" Then came an earth movement like dragon Ries but with wing spalls which elevated the land and increased of two feet, also appeared. the rate of flow to the rivers,. This Then came a "revolution" in the his - ushered in the nezt period, which tory of the earth. A great ice age sat - geologists call the Ordovician, tied down on earth, This is known tie True fish, with backbones, made the Silurian period. their appearance in this era. Bryan The great forest disappeared. Their to the contrary, those fish were the remains constitute the coal deposits earliest ancestors of man. which we dig up to -day. Time reptitee, In the next pea'1od, the Silurian, we back -boned but. cold-blooded animals findthe plants slowly apr•ea,ding out of which can live entirely rtway train the water and for the first time findinga water, began to appear, foothold on lend. The Silurian period Tile Era of Ancient Life was at an was one of great aridity and shallow end. De you get aonsaties of pressure on the heart? Don't tifrightened n g Seigel'st Syrupheart r w ill trouble—it's itis Any drugstore. Cooking by Pressing Buttons. The Flying Scotsman (running be- tween London and Edinburgh) has -re- cently had installed in it a complete electrical kitchen. The electricity la supplied by means of a dynamo run by the notion of fire train, Cooping by pressing buttons enables the kit Chen to occupy the minimum of space. Horses like delicacies. Carrot4, ap- ples or lumps of sugar bring obe- dience quicker than harsh words or whips. Never tease horses, It is bad for their dispositions, To Clean Aluminum. A good way to clean'aluminuni ves- sels in which has bean cooked natmeal, rice or any food hard to remove, is to use a squall corncob. The cob should be thoroughly matured and not very large. It will be found just rough enough to catch and take off toe par- ticles of food but will, not scratch the aluminum as nasty cleaning prepara- tions do, Tank Speed Limited: In future army tanks ir; the Alder- shot district must: not exceed 4-6 miles an hour. Use: Mdnard's Liniment in thestables, —Bourdillon. Silk In Philppines. Silk vulture promises to become an important industry in the Philippines. BABY CHICKS AT BARGAIN PRICES You can get highest 5aeIlty Chloka rn June frgm Canaer a largest brooders of Trnantw,tod Bred -to -Lay Poultry at, rook - bottom Islaea. Barron Strain White Leghorns June 1-12,per 100,515; Afterhise 14,$12.50 0.11.0. Barred Rooks Juno 1-12, pot 100,$18; Aker June 14, $15 Send a card for 'Free Illustrated Catalogue, OAK RIDGE FARM Dept. D. PORT CRLDiT, ONT. 6J P NS. Mix ISI Ina rd's with swee nil. Spread on brown paper and apply to parts injured. Soothes anis steals rapidly. Cooking -Spring Fruits. Spring fruits are always very acid and require quite a lot of sweetening to make them palatable when cooked. The following method shows that the fruit may he made sufficiently sweet without the use of a large quantity of sugar. Prepare the fruit and sprinkle some sugar and a tiny pinch of salt over it, adding no water. Allow it to stand in a bask for quite three hours, four 1f possible, At the end of the specified time the fruit will he ready: for cook- ing. The sugar will have extracted the juico from the fruit, which will be soaking in a good thick syrup. Allow to, cook gently until tender. The resulting dish will be cue of which none of the flavor is lost, Banish The Blues 'By Observing Nature's Basic Rule Those who suffer from despondency, listlessness and headaches can usually trace the cause of these conditions to constipation. They are frequently brought -about by overwork, nervous strain lack of outdoor exercise or sleep, or improper food, but more frequently by the non- observance of nature's 'basic rule— regular thorough bowel elimination, arlrindare spick d from waste by the lood aer left nti absorbed by the system, weakening the nerves and lowering the vitality. Najod, the scientific internal lubri- cant, corrects constipation in nature's own way by augmenting the supply of nal, tire's lubricant. Najd by softening the waste matter thus permits tiroroubh and regular elimination without overtaxing the. intestinal muscles. It is gentle, safe and natural in its action, and can be taken for any length of time without any, ill effect. Ask your druggist for Bided today and remember—leak for the name "Arujed" in red on both bottle, label and package. FRCS DISFIGURED BV PIMPLES Large, Hardand Red, Itched and Burned, Healed by Cuticura,. " I was troubled with pimples that broke out on my forehead. They were large, hard and red, and soon scattered over my face disfiguring it. The pimples festered and itched and burned causing me to scratch, which made them worse. The trouble lasted about two months. "I read an advertisement for Cuti- cure Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. After using it I purchased more and now I am com- pletely healed." (Signed) Miss Anna Molnar, R. F. D. 5, Box 55, Toledo, Ohio, Sept. 8, 1925. Clear the pores of impurities by daily use of Cuticura Soap, with touches of Cuticura Ointment as needed to soothe and heal. Cuticura Talcum is fragrant and refreahing.. Semple Sash Fres by Mat Aldresn -C Radian. Depot; Steabonsa Ltd, Moetreer!' Prl ea Sonp 26, Ointment 26. end 60c. Talcum Pec, gfer" Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. WOMAN COULD HARDLY WALK Mrs. Horn Tells how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health Hamilton,ont.--"I have taken Lydia P. Pinkham's Vegetable. Compound and would not be , Without it now. I had a female trouble so badly I could hardly walk and 1 was all run- down and could hardly get around to do my house- work. I would be in bed titre e.or four days at a time. I was told by •h"driend to try your -Vegetable Compound. 1 dict anti by the time 1"took two bottles I was beginning to get around again. I tool; ten bottles in all, and now 1 am ell right sogain al's1 doing my own work. I have six grown-ups to work for, so I have .plenty le do. 1 also used Lydia F. Pinkham's Sanative Wash, and I think it is good. Butt owe my heal th to the Vegetable Compound, and.2 think if more of it was used women would be better off. I would not be without it if it cost mach more." -- Mrs. NELLIE ore."--Mrs.-NELI,IEHORN 28 St. Matthews Avenue, Hamilton, Ontario. 1)0 you feel broken down, nervone and weak somet ngs? Lydia 11 Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound is excel- lent to take at such a time. It always helps, and if taken regularly and per•- a atently, will relieve this condition, o:_ ISSUE No. 23—'26, Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds ; Headache : . N�111Iti5 Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache cache Rheumatism rDoEs N T AFFECT .. HEART ro Acce t only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Handy `Bayer" loxes of 12 'tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin 1e the trade mark (registered In Canada) of Buyer.. Manufacture ' of Monoacetie. actn:star of Salleyllenctd (Acetyl Snlleyllc Acid, "L S. i."1. While it is well 'known tact Aspirin mennv5ayer manufacture. to waist the public against lmltotione, the Tablets' et Bayor ,Company will be stamped with their. general trade mark, iss Aayer arose,"