Zurich Herald, 1929-05-16, Page 3enYini
cc110
T ! RS. FRED. PENNY,
d �.0 R.R. No. 4, Nota
wich, Ont., suffered from
anaemia for over three
years. Though taking
medicine all that time,
nothing helped her till
she. began Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills.
"I had no appetite", she
writes. "I could not sleep.
My blood almost turned iyu
water. I was weak and my
Heart would palpitate violent-
ly. I am thankful to say that
in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I
found the relief I sought. My
color returned, my appetite
improved, my weight in-
creased fifteen pounds, and
it was not long till I could
perform my work with ease."
If you are weak and easily
tired, subject to headaches,
are pale, without appetite,
and your work seems a bur-
den, do not delay. Start treat-
ment at once by buying a box
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills at
your medicine dealer's or by
mail at 50 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont. s-27
D& liana
NM. ar,. LS
"A HOUSEHOLD NAME
IN 54 COUNTRIES'
up to the neck in the disastrous air*
Left' ande nets G OIN EV R ' WAY!
torr •of the French High Command---
fthe effeneive ,at all costs and In any
situation—which entailed over
half
It appears quite clearly from
statistics publiellecl by, fierbert D. Baby t3 OWIl Tablets Banish France's casualties and nearly lost
Cbamherlain, of Ohio State University; Babyhood and Childhood her the War, Gradual, through the
in "Tho journal of fierediiy" (Wash -War years, he unlearned •it; and se
ington) that lefthandodness ie inherit- A�ilnerits, siowiY' climber to that we,�d1el'ful
ed. A medicine that all mothers praise equipoise between patience ani' auda-
"From families in which one or both —one good in every way—elle that city, which an signally triumpbetl in
of the parents are left-handed we get will quickly banish the Ittioor ills of 1318."
a percentage of 17.34 per cent. of the bad hoed and ebildhood is the medi- "Many of the world's great sea
children lett-handed, while in famil- nine to keep In the medicine chest; diets," points out the pally Telegraph,
les in which neither of the parents are to always have' on hand in ease of "have been blemished by an ambition
left-handed only 24 per cent. of the emergency. Such a medicine is to play the role of the conqueror, Not
Children are left•ihanded. If left- Baby's Own Tablets—they are Help so the General who, before his last
handedness is not inherited we would ful at all times, They are a mild summer campaign, publicly asked for
not find over 5 per '..ent. of the ehil- but thorough laxative which by re- the prayers of the children of France,
dren left-handed in any of these farms- gulating the bowels and stomach
les, regardless of the handedness of banish colds and simple fevers; cor-
their parents. It is very evident that rest constiplation and indigestion; re -
there is some sex influence manifest- lieve colic and diarrhoea and make
ed in the inheritance of left-handed- .the cutting - f teeth easy.
nese as shown by the larger number of Thousands of mothers use no other
left-handed boys In this population. medicine for their little ones Among
It. is also apparently transmitted dif-
ferently where the father is left-hand-
ed, as note the small number of left-
handed girls in these families. There
can be no doubt that the trait is In-
herited. Siemens presents'twenty-
one cases of apparent identical twins
in which one was left-handed and 'the
other right-handed, and cites this as
evidence that left-handedness is not
an hereditary factor. The probable
explanation of this is mirror imaging,
so often found in identical twins, or
it may possibly be the parental posi-
tion of the right-handed twin, which
would prevent it from devkloping into
a left -banded one."
DON'T READ THIS
Dear Mick,—Oi have lost yer ad-
dress, and as Oi can't find it, will ye
send it on to me as soon as possible,
if not sooner. 01 want to tell ye that.
poor Uncle Dan doled very suddint
after a long and serious illness. He
laid for many days quiet and spache-
less all the toime asking for water
with a little whiskey. The• doctor tells
me he doied through illness, but,
Mickey, me bhoy, between ourselves,
stoppage of the heart was the cause
of his death. He was eighty-five
years of age last March, all but fifteen
months, and had he lived till now' he
would have been dead a fortnight, Oi
would beg of ye not to break the seal
of this letter until two or three days
after ye have read it, by which toime
ye will be more prepared Por the sor-
rowful news.—With love, from Pat.
No wonder Smarts Mowers are
so popular! Tiley cut so easily
end with such litile"pueh:
efakriolond'Wonkmowl* Quon rn'eI
AT EVERY, HARDWARE STORE ::
?
IJAMESSMART PLANT. i':
BROCKVltlt011
Publicity
G.G., in the Nation and Atbenaeum
(London). The trade of a publicity
agent is apparently a lucrative one.
The trained eye can detect in the
columns of newspapers and maga-
zines much that is apparently news
but is really advertisement. The
sale C. E. Montague recorded that
during the War many things that
ecoid Have been regarded as "unsport-
ing" at the beginning became the re-
gular practice later on. A similar
deterioration seems to have taken
place in this matter of self -advertise-
ment. Much that would have been re-
garded as and ungentlemanly by
fathersbecome the
common
gross
seems to have
usage of to -day.
.ed Rose Orange Pekoe Tea is truly econo i al, A'
half pound makes almost as,many, cups as a full p, nd
of cheap tea costing $0c to- �0c, 00
and when the victory was won took is
his triumnbs modestly and almost:RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOEi.s'extra good..
meekly. Ave atque vale. The per -
feet knight of a noble cause is dead, even be sufficient; the .very fields of
and the whole world springs to a last Artois and La Fere Cbampenoise
salute."
respected the bowed head alone an -
"Crowned
praise him. Or shall his silence be
m t "Crowned with honor, fame, and the
them is Mrs..3. H. Bromley, West- respect of the whole world, Ferdinand k specteging grief? If so, then let
Meath, w Ont., alio writes:—"I have finch has passed to his rest," says the Bossuet's words spoken over the cata-
four children and whenever any of Glasgow Herald, "For him, tbe latest faique of the Prince de Conde be re -
them are ill. I always use Baby's and not the least In greatness of membered: et voila que dans son
Own Tablets and Have found them ' France's departed Mareehals, slow: silence son nom mem' .nous °mime."
good in every way. I would not be shall the oraison funebre be most
without the Ta' a and would also
like your little brooklet Care of the
Baby in Health and Sickness.' "
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, OnL.
As England Sees
Passing of Foch
It Was Given to Him to Save
the Allied. Cause and He
Saved It
GREATEST SOLDIER
"In his own medium lie was a
genius of the first order. English-
men of the war generation will never
forget the debt they owe to his genius.
And in military history his place as
the war -winner among war -winners is
definitely assured."—Daily News.
NOT A VOID AS USUAL
Reggie—"I have a terrible cold in
my head, Miss Sharpe."
Miss Sharpe—"You are to be con-
gratulated taht the void isnot so com-
plete as usual, Mr. Sapp."
Finds Rainbow
Is a Circle !
worthily framed?
"His merits and achievements as a
General of France and as Commander -
in -Chief and leader of the congregated
armies of the Allies to victory would
seem to call for the breadth and the
weigbt of Miltonic vowels. Or shall
a few words of simple eulogy suffice,
such as any cbild in Picardy. and
Artois can understand? With such
the great Commander would himself
be most pleased, for lie, the `foremost
Captain of his time; was also
'as the greatest only are,
In his simplicity sublime'
"A brief recital of his deeds might
"Marshal Foch is the second figure
of tbe World War. The first is, and
always will be, the 'Unknown Soldier.'
And perhaps it is the fairest comment-
ary on Foch, as soldier, that he will
always remain second to this myriad
unknown."—Birmingham Post.
"There can be little doubt that Mar-
sbal Foch was the greatest soldier of
the war. The theories which he held
and preached in' time of peace were
justified in practice, and all that, .as
Professor of the Ecole de Guerre, he
had urged on the young soldier prov-
ed
rowed to be the essential doctrine in
modern warfare," says the Yorkshire
Post, and all the tributes to his mem-
ory bear testimony that of the great
military figures be stands out pre-
eminent.
This admission does not lessen the
British regard and appreciation of the
late Lord Haig, but when the "unified
command" was agreed to, the fact
that Foch was made the head of the
combined forces gave him first place
in his lifetime, and it is not likely to
be taken from him by historians now
that ire Is dead. As the Times says:
The Inevitable Commander
"It was Foch, the Frenchman, who
was the ordained ,the inevitable com-
mander. The German break -through
was the German undoing. It er-
mobilized the trench -imprisoned
armies it had gone near to shattering,.
and it freed trench -ridden minds.
Above all, it liberated the aggressive
genuis of Foch. He was the man for
his opportunity. It was given to him
so save the Allied cause, and he saved
it.
"What soldier could ask a more
magnificent epitaph? No soldier of his
day had a higher intellectual concep-
tion of the conduct of war. His
ppractice, like his teaching, was
Model—from the classic mould of the
Latin mind—of logic and of fervour.
He not only believed in the "im-
ponderables' ah the arbiters of war:
He embodied them—the will, the self-
confidence, the passionate conceutra
tion upon mastery of the enemy com-
mander's mind. Tbey were felt
throughout his own command. They
were felt, as German memoirs have
testified, among the enemy.
"The doctrine of the attack at all
cost had some crudu practitioners
and some disastrous illustrations. It
Was susceptible of modification by
mud barbed wire, ooncrete, and ma-
No pot of gold rests at the end of
the rainbow, for the airmail has prov-
ed the :meterological phenomenon to
be a perfect circle instead of an are.
'Many flyers have seen this pheno-
menon when flying above the clouds
with the sun at their backs.
Minard's Liniment relieves pain.
Husband: "I say, ,lice—d'you
know where the deuce my shaving -
brush is?" Wife: "Oh, my dear -I'm
so sorry. I used it yesterday to
enamel over the bath. You'll find it
in a jampot of turpentine down in the
scullery!" .
They haven't the Daughters of the
Revolution in Mexico, but we fancy
the mother must live clown there
somewhere.
•;.. OF�,UfNF
PNItt@I�5
pv t4 ont44,
Av
due tea Acid•
INDIGESTION
ACID STOMACH
HEARTBU0.N
HEADACHE
SASES•NAUSEA
t
Sick stomachs, sctfr stomachs and
indigestion usually mean excess acid.
The stomach nerves are t over-stimu•
luted. Too much acid makes the stom-
ach and intestines sour.'
Alkali kills acid instantly. The best
form is Phillips' Milk of 'Magnesia, be-
cause one ' harmless, tasteless 'lose
neutralizes Many times its volume in
acid. Since its invention, ti0 years
ago, it liar rename!. the standard
Rig ph}'sicians ev rylvhere;
ci
MInard's Liniment—good for tired feet
Lips that touch ° lici uorhave to be
diplomatic.—Dallas News.
•
A QUICK WAY TO END
BABY'S UPSET SPELLS
"Like other young mothers, 1 wor-
ried every time Baby cried," says a
Syracuse, N.Y., won,an. ``Several
times when she was upset or consti-
pated,
onsti
pated, I tried castor oil but she
couldn't retain it. Our doctor told
me to try Fletcber's Castoria because
it is harmless and babies like it. That
ended my worries and I've used it
since for all my children." Castoria
never fails to delight mothers by the
quick way it ends those upsets of
babies and children, s'ach as colic,
constipation, colds, etc. That's the
reason for its tremendous sale anis
popularity. Like all good things, it's
imitated, but genuine Castoria—the
purely -vegetable" product — always
bears the Fletcber signature.
chine -guns. But there has been in
military history no clearer, no more
consistent, and, in the end, no more
triumphant exponent of the weight of
moral fetors
in battle
e soldier
of genius, the smplechivairous
gentleman whose memory France and
England proudly and sadly salute and
honor to -day,"
"Foch Is no more," says the Morn-
ing Post. "The greatest Frenchman est
of this age has passed away --n
in an age of great mon; all age that
knew great discoverers, inventors,
authors, artists; an age essentially
great in itself that saw France rise
again from the bitterness of utter de -
beat. Foch was greatest because
most needed in France's dant hour,
Take a spoonful in water and your greatest because heturneddarkness
into abounding light.
unhappy condition will probably end "A soldier all through, he was also
in five know whattto+do. en you will always a student;" comments tbe Daily
Crude and harm -
may
"deeply read ,continually
ful methods will Hover appeal to you. ,testing theories, though teem. alive
Go prove this for your own sake.eIt to what no theory can give. One of
tray save a great many disagreeable his greatest qualities was his power
hoBrs. ' to learn from his mistakes..
Be sure, to get the genuine Phillips Error of offensive 8t all Costs
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physis
clans for 50 years hi correcting excess "At the outset of tate War be was
acids, • Eath bottle contains full direr- ----- -'
tions --ally drugstore. ISSUE No. 19—'2
SHIP TOUR ECM
gip
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