HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-05-09, Page 3THB nerves are fed by
the blood. Poor blood
means starved nerve tis-
sue, insomnia, irritability
and depression.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
will enrich your blood
stream and rebuild your
over-worked nerves. Miss
Josephine M. Martin, of
Kitchener, Ontario, testi-
fies to this :
•'I suffered from a nervous
breakdown," she writes. "I
had terrible sick headaches,
dizziness; felt very weak and
could not sleep; had no appe-
tite. I felt always as if some-
thing terrible were going to
happen. After taking other
treatment without success, on
W illiams' P advice,
pili and nnow
all . these symptoms are gone,
and I am strong and happy
agate"
Buy Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills now at your druggist's
or any dealer in medicine or
by mail, 50 cents, postpaid,.
from the Dr. Williams Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ontario.
s29
PENS-is,111,4g
HOUSEHOLD HAIAEt
IN 54 COUNTRIES
A Bird of the Hills
A fisherman on a moorland stream
sees a blaalc bird suddenly start up every leather Unruffled.fi u reading matter towing in from the
sharp metallic notes,p fly swiftly find i him—throughout
in outhgthe l olengthun ry y of the best ted tater were out out, , ,Even
from nowhere, loud, chi paring a few y hyll nd of
no Nodi a of these magazines and
above the water until it vanishes the Pennines, is are produced by Amo
round a bend In the'etream, If a berland, Westmoreland; a cans and primarily for the people at
:
novice in bird -]oro, be probably dis• shire, by -the rears of Yorkshire, up t%e United States. ;Even when goes•
misses it as. a blackbird, and thinks and down the Derbyshire dales. Ile tions of general interest are dealt
no more about .it; but a diseriminat• Is at tame among the mountains of with, or subjects of particular im•
ing eye would note, even when on Wales and in the 'border Marche$ of parlance to the British F) particular
die
-
the wing, its shorter' tail and stock- Herefordshire and Shropshire. The cussed ,the point of view is American,
ter appearance, True, one of its Clear-eyed streams amid the Cote -
It is this continued Americanization
country names, "water-out,el," sug- wields know him also, and he adorn` Of is this that; 11 not offset in some
hu,"Ede ousel cock so
black. of Mendip's limestone coombes,—E, W, way,Cneat' raise, vexing and imporoant
hue," and in Somerset both dipper and Henry; in "The Nineteenth Century. problems in the future, If the Na -
blackbird are called "coney," a good tional Council of Education can find
Shakespearean adjective which means ways and means of changing this
"black." But the two are not very New Alphabet in condition it will perform a splendid
closely relatede the one being a thrush, public service,
and the other a member of a distinct Turkey Confusing ,. --
family, the Cinclldae: Nor is the dip
A lightful tawny -brown and his back Adoption of Latin Charac��+
� PUZZLE
per really black, for his head is'a de -
him will Show you that he sports a
PHONETIC SPELI:ING.
neat, white shirt -front, below which
a cinnamon cummerbund, usually
brighter in the male than in the fe-
male, partly enelreles his lower breast.
Pennant, as appears from one - of
Gilbert White's letters to •him, con-
fused the dipper with the ring -ousel,
but, although this bird also wears a
patch of white on his throat, he is
really a thrush, while the dipper is
closer kin to dunnock and wren
Wren -like, indeed, he is in shape, and
in some of his habits;,both have the
trick of cocking the tail up and bob-
bing the body up and down, and it is
this amusing trick of curtsying or
".dipping" that gives the dipper his
name. He resembles the wren, too,
in his ceaseless activity; both are
ever prying and peering, the wren in
hedgerow and brake and often at the
water's edge, but the dipper in and
out of and under the water..
My happiest memories of the dip-
per are 'linked with the swirling,
tumbling streams of the moors and
mountains; it is these that he loves
most, and among them he is seen at
his best. I saw a pair swimming and
diving in the Tummel at Pitlochry on ---4---.
a day of dismal and continuous down-
pour, depressing to us, but to them
supremely enjoyable. If you are as
happy in or under water as out of It,
it matters little what the weather may
be And there was a morning in
lonely kestrel, but there was the dill Americanization of Canada 1
per, dlvinix' headlong oft :R boulder ante Toronto Globe (Lib): The Ao• i
the spate, and emerging qn the on• Minion of Canada would be much bet..
polite bank unpertgrued and with ter of it at least 09 per Gent. of the
Many small pleasure craft closely
resemble In size and appearance the
boats used by rum-runners.—I3.ear
Admiral F. C. Billard..
•r
BOYD'S
YCYCLES
tip' LOWER PRICES
fires, Coaster Brakes.
WheelsCyclo, m ters,TubesSadd es.
Equipment and parts of 135 -
cycles. You can buy your sup•
• pr cce�ss .. Catalogue f�lesalE
free.
T. ts, 6i4�1®& e��19i® 376Notre
MONTREAL
t.OV.
..�...
Care for Four !rands
By Daily Use or
4
in11cnra Soap
Heal Radlett and Irritations
ev
ith Cutieura Ointment
Names of Many Well -Known
Cities Are Altered
Constal nple.—As result Tur-
key's
ur
key's adoption of the Latin alphabe,
the ability of the average Turk has
fallen to a rating somewhere in the
neighborhood of minus -zero on the
basis of grade school classifications.
When the Government ordered' all
shop and office signs " ee changed to
new Latin letters the official spelling
dictionary had not been issued. The.
only principle on which the people
could go upon was phonetics, and the
result was that many signs bear Turk-
ish versions of Engli `t Words, writ-
ten in ways that would bring tears to
the eyes of the last also-ran in a spell-
ing bee.
Phonetic Spelling.
Over the door of a physician will ap-
pear a sign bearing the word "Dok-
doru," or "Dogtor." Apartment was
spelled variously "Apartamani" or
"Apartman," while club appeared as
"ICulupu" or "Glubu."
All, however, soon will be changed.
The official dictionary 1'as been is-
sued, and Government officers are
marching through all the streets in
towns throughout the nation tearing
down misspelled sign and instruct -
March when snow had moulded the ing owners in the correc. spelling.
abrupt peaks of Capel Curie to Meanwhile, the langu. gs commis -
smooth, sweeping curves; we saw no stoners fixed the spelling of the names
birds above the snow line except a of the The chief4 ` theovinces of
changes arethat Stam-
houl, the Turkish name for Constan-
ttnople, must be written Istambul;
Angora becomes Ankara; Brusa be -
List or ••wanted. Inventions"comes Burso; Trebizond turns into
and Full Intl.rmation Sent Free�Trabzon; Alalia into Antalia; and
on Request.
THE RAMSAY Co., Dept. W. a Smyrna into Izmir.
273 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont. Foreign names will be left in their
foreign spelling except when they con-
tain letters not in the new Turkish
alpheeet.
One of the greatest puzzles to the
careful parent is1to know just what
medicine to give the little ones.
When the child falls ill with griping
pains; is seized with cold or fever,
refuses food or vomits what he has
taken, when he cries a great deal and
cannot get the sleep so necessary to
the growing child, the parent is in a
quandry. What is to be done on such
occasions? As often as not there is
not a suitable medicine in the house.
The puzzle is what to give him to set
him right quickly.
it is to meet such emergencies that
Baby's Own Tablets were designed.
These pleasant little Tablets quickly
reduce fever, break up colds, relieve
constipation and indigestion and allay
teething pains, They quiet the nerves
and promote restful health -restoring
sleep, SThey are guaranteed absolute-
ly harmless and safe for even the
youngest and most delicate baby.
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr, Williams
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
T
OVA breeder, are bred for high ego
production. White, Brom, and
r 5,IELeahom, Barred and Wbi,e Rock,,
R.' L Reda, Ancona, Black DUabaea.
Ea Orpington`, Whim Wyandotte. no
and up. 1D0;'o Ike delhcry guaranteed.
Write today for FREE CUICK DOOM
SCiiWFt1I R'S lASflJERY
226 Northampton
Buffalo, N.Y.
r o.t H75, SILIDGEBunG. 01,7%... CAN.
"How -do you know it was a stork
and not an angel that brought your
little brother?" "Well, I heard
daddy complaining about the size of
the bill, and angels don't have bills!"
kowd
CANADA ENJOYS A SPLENDID
RECORD OF SAFETY IN AIRiRAVEL•
HAZARDS ARE REDUCED TO -THE
MINIMUM BY RIGID REGULATIONS
CAREFULLY ENFORCED — MOST
CANADIAN AVIATORS PREFER
' IMPERIAL OIL PRODUCTS
i.SO MARKED IS THIS PREFERENCE
THAT IMPERIAL PRODUCTS ARE
USEDagik MILE'S
FON. EVERY FLOWN
t YOI.1R CAR•TOO,WILL BE BETTER
WITH
The finest tea you can bury --Red Rose Orange ,Pekoe.
Made from juicy, voIe leaves—three days in
bud. Every package
RED, ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra. good_
Australian Development
London Financial News: The an-
nual value of the output of Australian
factories amounts to about £400,000,-
000.
400,000;000. But, though certain idealists aim
at the clouds of making Australia en-
tirely self-contained, the majority of
tho peop`e realize that the great un-
developed rural and mineral resources
are a menace to Australia's territorial
integrity, And, however keen some
people new be to ?levelop their sec-
ondary iniastries (out of a sense of
national pride of good economy),
agricultural and pastoral expansion
must remain their primary consider-
ation, until the Commonwealth has a
population sufficiently large to ensure
her strategic safety.
Duke of Norfolk
Assumes Estate
Minard's Liniment prevents Flu.
The "I'm Alone"
Halifax Herald (Cons.) : The simple
truth, of course, Is that this is a
British affair; that despite all- the
vocalizing of the "extreme autono-
mists," it would be monstrous to sug-
gest anything else. The "extreme
autonomists" may "play at counsel-
lors and kings" in the press, on the
hustings and on the floors of Parlia-
ment, but when a ship of British. regis-
try (for Canada is British) is sunk
by shell -fire, it becomes the business
of British statesmanship and British
diplomacy.
Heir of the Howards on Com-
ing of Age Take His Place
as Premier Duke of
England
With the coming of age on Slay 3
of the Duke of Norfolk, who is the
premier Duke and Earl of England, a
gleam from a historic rhe titlesast is d
on the life of to -day.
of
the sixteenth Duke of Norfolk and the
family name, Howard, recall a thou-
sand years of British history. A youth
of 21 is Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Arun-
del, Surrey and Norfolk, Baron Fitza-
lan, Clun, Oswaldestre and Maltrav-
ers, Bari Marshal and Hereditary
Marshal of England, Premier Duke
andremier Earl of England. Be-
sides, he is chief heir to "the blood
of all the Howards."
The young Duke has held his titles
since 1927. Being a minor, however,
he could not assume legal control of
his vast properties, landed and per-
sonal. His age would have prevented
him, also, from exercising the chief
duties of an Earl Marshal, if fate had
brought a new King to the throne of
England. First among the duties of
an Earl Marshal are those pertaining
to the direction of a coronation, with
all its traditional and colorful cere-
monies. The father of the present
Duke was Earl Marshal at the corona-
tions of King Edward VII and King
George V. Had the Prince of Wales
•ascended the throne during the minor-
ity of the young Duke, his uncle, Vis-
count Fitzalan, would have officiated
as Earl Marshal.
According to Burke's Peerage, the
"ducal and illustrious Howards" (of
whom the Duke of Norfolk is chief)
"stand, next to the blood royal, at
the head of the peerage of England,"
It is said that the first Howard (or
Hereward) of note lived in the reign
of Icing Edgar, a century before the
Norman Conquest.' For centuries the
Howards have played prominent parts
in the drama of English history. They
have fought in all wars from the Wars
of the Roses to the World War, and
have distinguished themselves in the
Church, in statecraft, in art, in litera-
ture anti in science. They have been
Dukes of Norfolk since 1483. Sir
Esme Howard, a kinsman of the Duke,
is now British Ambassador to the
United States.
The late and fifteenth Duke served
in the South African War, and was
also Postmaster -General of England.
By his first marriage he had a son,
who bore the courtesy title of Bari
of .Arundel and Surrey and who died
unmarried. The Duke later married
the Baroness Harries, holder of one
of the few titles in the British peer-
age, which are heritable in the female
line, If she dieS before her son, the
:Duke, her title will be merged with
those of the Dukedom.
Classified Advertisements
RABBIT.
np1GREJSD CHINCHILLA IRB--
B1TS, fine dark s,tc,ck, all ages, 12
to $6. Breeding stools registered.'Riff
Orpington hatching eggs, 15, $3. Y. Tay
Gardner, Prineville, Ont.
BA13Y CRICKS. WB HATCH
1 four varieties, price 90 up.
V‘ ite for free catalogue, A. H. Switzer,
Uranton, Ontario.
YNTERNATION$L MovrEs
LST EQUIPMENT, LATEST METH-
ODS. uniform return load prises.
All goods Insured. We move you when
you want to move. Make your enquiries
now. Pioneer distance movers. Agents
in principal cities of eastern States and
Canada. 13111 The Mover, Hamilton and
Toronto.
CANADA'S f.3ESr"1
it isn't possib1eioball
abetter lawii vuower
Churn SPIAir''n
Smartts `lowers have
proved their superiority
w.herevergrass is 8rovm
Easy i'unnin*,keen-
cutting and absolutely
vueranteed.
Asa VGUR HARDWARE MAN
\ JAMES SMART FLANS'
>t, BROCKVILLE ONf. yy
For influenza
The Linmient that Relieves All
Ailments.
Nhen your
Children Ciy
for It
Baby has little upsets at times. All
your care cannot prevent them. But
you can be prepared. Then you can
do what any experienced nurse would
do—what most physicians would tell
you to do—give a few drops of plain
Castoria. No sooner done than Baby
is soothed; relief is just a matter of
moments. Yet you have eased your
child without use of a single doubt-
ful drug; Castoria is vegetable. So
It's safe to use as often as an infant
has any little pain you cannot pat
away. And it's always ready for the
crueler pangs of colic, or constipation,
or diarrhea; effective, too, for older
children. Twenty-five million bottles
were bought last year.
"How much should others tell
their daughters?" asl 1 a preacher.
Not much, say We, if they don't want
to display their Ignorance.—Border
Cities Star.
Wouldn't it have been great had we
but known in time that all that was
needed to win the World War was
the right brand of cigarettes? --Marlon
Star.
ISSUE No, 1$_—'29,
6yrlwnrs _..
p�ILLIPS
QvMAGN�
4
dduuetoAcd
INDIGESTION
gCIO STOMAL
HeARTGURN
g NAUSEA
"A GREAT
TUNIC;" SAYS
MRS. RUSSELL
After Taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
Fenwick; Ont. --"I am taking Lydia
E. Pinlchanes Vegeound
table
hthe Change
of Life for nervous
feelings; .toss of ap-,
petite and to gain -
strength. It is a
great tome and Z
have taken a dozen.
bottles of it. It was'
recommended to
me by a friend and
now 1 recommend'
it to all women for
such troubles as
come at this time:: .
-Wins. W. V. RussBLL, R. R. Hoa 5; ;
Fenwick, Ontario.
pgesh10�
What most people call indigestion
is usually excess acid in the stomach.
The food has soured. The instant
remedy is an alkali which neutralizes
acids. But don't use crude helps. Use
what your doctor would advise.
The best help is Phillips' Milk of
Magnesia. For he 50 years since its
invention it has remained standard
with physicians. You will find nothing
else so quick in its effect, so harmless,
so efficient.
One tasteless spoonful in water nen«
traiizes many times its volume in aside
The results are immediate, with no
bad after effects. Once you learn this
fact, you will never deal with excel fi
acid in the crude ways. Go .learn-,
now --why this method is supreme.
Be euro to get the genuine PhIIlipaa
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by J�bYsi-
c]ans for 50 years in correcting excess
acids. Each bottle contains full direr•
tions --any drugstore.