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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1926-01-07, Page 3You Cannot Sur as 111 GREEN TEA, itsluscious freshness & rich► strength xxaIs/ie it finer Onus any Gunpowder, Japan or Young Dyson. Sold every where. Asti for SALADA to-da74: The Loose Foot -Brace. W°! his gold -rimmed glasses, ex- pensive clothes and carefully polished ,,hoes, the Visitor from the city rather looked down on the old fisherman and his boat. He took a wide step into the middle 'of the boat to'avoid the none too Clean sidea, But his heavy step set the .boat rocking, and he took a second. unsteady step quickly forward, His foot caught a loose foot -brace, Which tripped, Mins, and he fell for- ward, striping hie face upon, a thwart, brealring hia-glasses. and causing his nose to bleed a little. After express- lug bis anger; with some violence, the ni.an noticed, the loose braoe, lying iu bhe bottom of the boat. "It's a stupid piece of business, he exclaimer., "to .l'av'e loose sticks like that in a boat!" "That's a pretty useful -'little pieoe of wood," said the old boatman calmly.. He had sprung .forward to help the fallen man, but he was. clearly offend- ed by his language and manner. "You"il find how good a tiring it is. 'when, you want to row yourself• any: where," "Every stick that's needed in a boat should 1,e firmly fastened," retorted the hart and-angvy-man.` "If that stick lied been solid," said "Leave it to Pink." Than wine cow -pony i a familial' figure in fiction; film and fact ; but in Mrs. Mary Roberts Rineharts recent• aocount of her participation in a roundup we are able to view him from• a new angle, that of a woman rider, new to his duties and hers:'^ At six o'clock they were off. "Uuderneath me" she records, "Pink moved sedately along. He had he air' of an old hand at 'ths business, and of being slightly bored at the pre litninaries, It was a fine morning; the sun warned -my beak, and Pink's deli: - rate tread was like;a rocking chair be- neath rue: • I yaWned. ' And then seine - how or other I was riding down a val ley with Irving, and Irving was glanc- ing right and lett for cattle, and Pink. was gathering himself together and getting ready. Ready for whet? ' " Wha-what am I to do?" I inquired in a thin.voice, "You just sit tight,", said • Irving coin fortably, "and let Pink do it. He knows. . Only watch him when he. whirls. Thats x11.' w • , The "whirling" did'' not come 'until- four.honrs later, when a bunch of'Cat- tle;were �to be headed off. In a secoriid Pink started for them, and their 'and there dirt I give such the boatman, "you might have toppled an exhibition of pulling leather as I clean overboard into the lake." hope not to give again. He whirled The man took his seat with an int-• and ducked;, he flew and leaped; and patient gesture, thrust out the oars, to his baek, helpleI clung' and, pray= swung them back and gave a vigorous. ed. And -he did the job. He rounded pull. His feet, having no brace, slid up that stampeding herd and pointed along the bottom of the boat; the man it where it should ,go.. And when it slipped from his seat and fell over Was over I let go the saddle -horn, took backWard. The boatman's boy, who my'.finsit breath in five minutes and had looked on with sympathy when the straightened my hat.' But the • worst man :first fell, now laughed outright, was. yet to come. It was in a dry and vets ti ld boatman grinned. • a creek bed. like a canyon. Pink slid e ie o oa an little.,` - • WAS FAMOUS •SPY "iVINDAMF X" . DURING WAR. Above is .Maxie; Coenegrachts, perhaps' the most famous and beautiful of all allied.spiee during t'he .great war, Certainly none were more daring. „Pule after:.time she outwitted .the Germans -until she became internationally ;fanilous, and'tieacie[i`tli'e Belgimenapfanasystem ystem behind the Ge1•men lines. I'+inalIy, planning one.gf: de "biggest sou s of th•e was, she ws•s bctrayed,•ar- reryted, and subjected ,to;cruelty;and indignities. She is starting life anew; with her h'usbandissWhe- was also takenepi✓ saner and wounded led during the' warsat'Oe'sfi;�syille.' - - Oh Mother! What Can I Do? ��� 13o'w many times a clay do your �fird *Tie babies ask you that question? And i l I PC how often are you able to suggest some " interesting game for them to Now; Known That This Trouble 'Must be' Treated Through' the Blood. and scrambled down into it, and be- ' "If you'd put that brace you kicked tween its high, uinclimbable banks we Thr most sz-;-rheumatic sufferer- can osid•e in thein cleats at your feet, you'd moved along. hope for in rubbing sdinetbing on the 1l' have some comfort Co your rowing and' And there, without, warning, we ,tender, aching point is as„ttle relief make some progress," said the boat- came upon an enormous buil. He look- No lotion ofalivaieent ever did er ever man. ed as large as . a locomotive, and he can do more than this. •The rheumatic The shamed man now heeded the was barring the way; with his wives poison' is s'oote•d in the blood.. To.,get- old boatman, put th.e brace in the and children. The moment he saw me rid: it youmust treat it through- the cleats that suited the length' of his 'he iowei'e•d Wheatland began to paw blood. Any doctor will tell you that legs. Now he had a firm support for,the ground! - I attempted to turn Pink this is true. • If 'you' want "something his feet, and he could throw his weightround , hut he refused to turn. In- that will go right to; 'the' root' of the safely; upon his oars. stead he.:tried. to make for the crea- troubfe in the blood, take Da. Williams' it -.is so with. many of the laws of tare, and -it pawed the ground again Pink Pills... 'Piro whole missions. of this life. Moving about In our ignorance 'an stared at me with red and horrible medidine is to petrify -and -enrich the and foolish impatience,- they trip us ''eyes,. I motstenecl my lips and spoke blood, and when they do this all blood up. Hurt and angry, we cry out' to i,t in a snt'all, faint voice. troubles, , including rheumatism d's-' • why they "Go on!" I said. "Get along there!" appear. Among th seewho ha;ve'pro ed' 'play, some amusing occupation for a rainy day? if you'd like always to have a practical, helpful suggestion -r them, read this snappy new fea- ture. against . them and wronger .exist. But when We 'recover our bal. "Just ail' incl, nearer!" said the bull, the value of Ter. Williams' Pink Pills is Once, obs�e>•ve life's rifles and put in effect: "Jut .an inch!" Mrs:, Annie 1,t`right, W,00lchester, Alla;, , these ;laws in their plates. . we find in 1 "Irving!' i calledfeebly; but he did who says; I, 'was a sufferer from rhea t them:'the very,, power by which real not heart and Pink was tugging it the mat"=m for six, yeasts, arl•d durmg most ,progress is made. "But as for me, my, bit, and the .cows had set up a kind or of that time my life was:one of nl'!Sery. feet Were a.anost gone uiy steps had -melancholy cliarus. I tried Other tae- I tried several doctors, anti mxuy sero-' well-nigh slipped," says 'the Psalmist title; I spoke gently and kindly. edies recommended, but rieier'got hi the Seventy-third Psalni- 'Phis "Ga along!" I, said', ~,•°TNiee old "fel.. }pore than temporary relief. -The' trou- verse and the whole Psalm is a com- low! Go along like a good boy!" hl•e seemed.to affect_niy,whoie system men•tary upon this experience.of the I even whistled—it had no ap•preci- and I was ,badly ruu:down and suffered man with the loose foot -brace. able effect on the. bull, but Pink took from headaches a1• wsil. Finaily.':1' was s na an vias tett h' a v set o r r, i iarius Pink. Pills LEEthe cr• eature tn-tautly threw up hips and through ,]rose I°found coniiilete .tail anal' ,started ,off' . Somue� Teti+*,min- relief and to -day l' feel like a new utes Iater I rode up out of the'creek 'pera:on. Veen, therefore 'strongly re- lied, driving my monster and hie ]7 Wiliam', Pink ,I?'11 t harem before me. And Irving, wait- anyone suffering ae I -did front this ing on; the bank, -surveyed lily catch1trouble."•• with ppi-Oval. ,You can get these pills from- any "'Made quite a pie.. uii,' said. he, . -`, medicine dealer; or by .mail •at 50 cents "Took a little time," I said easily. 'a'box froth The Dr.• Wiiliania' Medi "That creep bed's, <t poor place work." SAVED BABY'S it as.a ig l d 1 at him. And d i i t t Y D 41' 11 Pi 1 P 11 .I1l''d,ie3elfret] Tranchemontagn,,e, St. Michel. des Saintes, Que., writes: - "Baby's Own Tablets are an -excellent medicine. They saved my baby's iifE and can highly recommend them to all niiithers." Mrs. Tranchemnn tagne�sr experienlee is that of thous- ands el other mothers who have test- ed the';worth of Baby's Owe Tablets. The ableM are 0 Sure and safe meal - Cite for little ones and }lever fail .to regulate, the bowels and stomach, thus relieving all the.min�or,ills from .which children suffer. They are Said by nmdisire dealers or by mail at 25 cts. a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Viollrn's Music. Gently—sof Cly-- As 'Eire breath of a babe. e NoWV-like the ripple of brooklet, Siippiug, gilrgling, OVeistiny pebbles. Dawn sky—a rosy hue, Vilr'ating wings :of butterflies Resting on sweet fl'ow'ers. A thrush's lulilrtby. DDailkty touch Of a mother's hand. Beau'y:._.love. .joy. _. Gotl's,'•gi.,ft to us. --Modestha Bianca Nailer. ' •Life; Span of Bedbugs. nonage can live a long time with. Mit a .peal. One expert teenier kept r'evefial"alive in a bottle for a' year without food. When a Husbtand, Wants. A 'fidgety ratan can wait for hips wife on the' :street (lorne1' 0' hundred yea;1•e in, ii 'o tl mutes. for Fanning Mille Q��� ikr1.Wire �: Zine Screens s for Chatham or any other hind of Mill. i epali's for Chatham 111011- bators. Free ,look on Grain Cleat ing MANSON CAMPBELL Chatham - grit. reeteesteieviimer commend r. r•n z r s o a to cute Co., Brockville, Ont. • • Just a Cowboy. I understand he la a Knight of the Garter. "No' lie doesn't wear them any more." ,, _-- Gas, biliouisness, heartburn, dyspepsia, and similiar itla i11,iob trouble you if yeti take SSinel'as Syrup. Any drug store. A. hew'' iiroakfite lead s? eetilai t Ong about 50 per cents apple and there- maincler.'*kvheat, ,is beim, put • on the merket by.:} °biQ iv Sceti)1. 0pnecrn. Minard's Liniment for frost•b res, Failure is only postponed success so long as courage "coaches" ambition. No one clan batter,down.the roe.<s; it's the. eternhl pot tidi11g away of the surf,. that changes the ahote line. The habit A Stfenuous Baby. Bal»- elephants, •as circus -goers know ' them, are such amiable and engaging• infants that it iseintenesting and sur. Mining to view one in a quite different asliect. Mr. Wynant Hubbard, ,while secdring wild animals in Africa, foie zoos and "menageries, had a nearly fatal encounter with a lively Sixyear-. old'; , had killed one elephant," be re - cantle, "and tis ,lying calls •had• sum- moned another, 0 beantiful• specimen, six: orMsevele' years ole, in 'perfect; health. The only way. you 'can catch oust of ,Mese beast's, alive is ,fo•e sante one.te grab, Win by -.his tiny tail .and twL,5t, it while the natters j>lulp on 11in1,. iobping .;big ropes emptied. a.11 fourof his legs. , I WaS 1:he• One wire) jnlnped r and grabbed this '61131)11a nt ',13Y the tail. , Ire started jinni l'1 ig, t ,vieting; sh.iking•aiisl hieking, belts tu get rine... ti .was like the man who, grabbed :,lire bear by. ilia tail• • 1 had to .told on. 1 w.ebt -spin- ning about in the air, bumping against his Jarde, bounced. up in the air` like a rubber ball every time he kicked' at nve; and toteinge ronnd''"g'eetvelly like )t tey..bdllcoii 4451',, gale, l 'Owed my lifetto hevnig 1 stiong-slip tt,• "l+ia,allyls ,the natives ;g0,_j1114beet mi li. • Iivaa till %n w lien;. last go;.Tlley tieti< 11'in1. Stilt water, n1atlrx''•of, al' tea111iaonfiil o f tir,clinai'y salt- itt 'o1ie••thit d of Ott ,lain. ,blot of water; is the beat thing fol' tc}}eansing the teeth, according to' Sri Ilarr.ry Ifaldwln, sur von-de/11:18i; to the Icing. of persistence is the habit of Vidto1'y, - I erber't auffn,an, Minard's Liniment relieves headache. I've put the mitre. from the baby's bed here on the floor. You can turn somersaults and practice falling clown. to your heart's content. Minard's Liniment.for sore throat. Our Remarkable Brains. • The brain is a curious organ. It is almost insensible to pain, . for one thing, and it is much levee subject to die:Nies than the rest of the body is. Even when- there is' - definite brain trouble, it is often impossible to de- tect in the brain 'tissue any alteration of substance. It is also very difficult td satin:net the brain by intellectual w ork.. provided the other organs are iu a healthybondition. E mall}, ' the brain does its stork oil. Ott exceedingly sinall amount of sustenance. Sir Arthur Keith, the British surgeon, has put the fact very graphically by say- ing that the ,energy contained iu an ounce of sugar would be' nou.gh to pro- duce one of Shakeaspearee plays if it should find its Way 'to a brain as gifted as Shakespeare's was. • Three Crops a Year. Three crops of corn are obtained from the sante field in one year on oei't,aln alluvial lands of •elle Philippine lslan-do. FREE ALADDIN LAMP -Fri'FIr641-, Berns 94% air, 6% coal Equels gas or .eleetrlclty, Write for our'Illtls• trat:ed Descriptive Oirtrrlare, .also Our SpeciFil 90 Daye Offer of Frye Ilauaape to laouselrolderii and local dealers. Locel agents desired for our saleable elleclerltles• ` ud l..1' TiEs " ivy mporlum, Phone Kittgsdate 5531 '' 842 YQNPE ST.,, TORONTO 'EASY TRICKS A Forced Choice A pack of cards is • handed to : a spectator with the request that he count them, dealing them in a neat heap on the table. He is next to deal the cards into four heaps. He selects one of the heaps and the trickster tells him the name of the card which is uppermost on that 'heap. This effective trick requires no skill - in •fact, the spectator does most of the work. The performer, at the beginning, notices which card is fourth from. the top. When the cards are counted, the order of the cards in the pack is reversed and this card Comes fourth from the bottom. Wheel' the cards are dealt into four heaps, it is an easy matter for the trickster - to observe on which heap the card which was fourth frofi the.bottom falls. He asks the spec- tator to select any two of the heaps. It one of these includes the selected card, well and good. If it dogs not he says: "Now ,select one of the other, reinaining, heaps," If this is the. one he desires, the trick is all but completed. If it does not, • he says "Only one heap remains"— and completes: the trick: This stunt of "forcing a choice" is very useful in many tricks of magic. (Clip this out and paste it, with other of the series, it a sol:pppgolc.) a- .Minard's Liniment for Grippe. • `Wedding Rings of Old of Agate and Iron, While sentiment leas demanded that wedding rings should be made of the most precious and durable of metals,' vtves t ' an of the aarci•ent Romans some- times wore hands of iron as a token of ownership or fidelity, and some of the earliest rings were of agate. Since platinum has superaeded gold in value, rings ofthis metal are' common. Gold rings were wornby the Egyp- tians as early as• 2000 B.C., but they had fro matrimonial significance. The symbols indicated orthodoxy in the households of the early Christians, and finger rings were first used as' seals to identify papers. In America, rings were not always Popular. The Puritans believed that they were too suggestive of charms. Among insects the most intelligent are those of the ant tribe, while next to them' rankk wasps. Bees come some way lower down the scale. Every elish from "hors dceuvres" to de'ssert,'`;inc:uding the ices; served at dinner: -in a London hotel recently, tams from Canada. COUGHS and COLDS Are Just The Beginning ©ONT GAMBLE with YOU HEALTH TO HIND THE END STOPTHIM Music Engenders ideals, It is never too late to learn to' ap- predate music. But without doubt the best time is in youth. It is dur- ing• Youth that the tastes are farmed. If the children are developed for the ldghter order of .desires: that .ii thh way they wil .grow up. It is -never Wise to mish a ohild. The idealistic home is the hompe where the parents keep their minds steadfastly an the beautiful tillage of life. If the parents are God-fearing, beauty - loving, patriotic, generous, sacrificing souls, the children are more apt to be that,way, whereas if they are vulgar, selfish individuals, it is more likely that the children will tend in that direction. And so it is with music. Begin young, show the way, love the art let the little oaks hear lovely music, and that is how they will developpi in ma- turity. If you begin early enoa& and Persist long enough we shah succeed in making Canada a mere 'desirable place to live in. Music and musicians and music iov- ing people are a . great asset to any community, Music engenders ideals. Ideals are what we need more and more in this young country: A Profit Four Ways, Some people snake ehieken-raising pay; others find it a losing venture, But hardly any one of whom we have heard ever did so well with them as the boy, Dawkins by name, of whom the Cleveland Plain Dealer tells. Some one asited his father whether chickens really paid. ' "They pay my sou," said the old man. "1 bought him the chickens; I supply the feed; I buy the eggs froth. hint, and he eats them." ifiti® utas Cannot tt +' New Eyes sot you can Promote 3 FOR Cisan,Ueallbyeendiitten Use Murine Eye Remedy Wight and Morning." Ileep your )Eyes Clean, dear any Wealthy. Write for Free Eye�Care Book. Enrico Eye lieinedy Co..$ Cosi Otis 5dreat, Chicese ��flit E sI -14A US' •POULTinGAME ,EGGS, BUTTE RA1VD FEATI1gRa S -WE BUY ALLYeare ROUND Write iodayfbrpricesTwe guarantee them for 'a.week ahead P. POULIN &CO:,LIMITED Established over ea, Years 1 339Bonsetours Marhet.- Montreal 6• . TAYLOR-. FORD ES Tree Pruners GUARANTEED For every purpose in the orchard, cutting limbs up to it inches. Handles - 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 feet. Your iiaidware Dealer knows tits quality Our descriptive circular sent to any address on request. TAYLOR-FORBES COMPANY, LIMITED GUELPH, ONT. RECOMMENDED • BY DOCTORS Many doctors consider Minard's the best Liniment made and re- commend its use for many ills. Proved: safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for ,Colds rain Headache Neuralgia Neuritis • Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART +.ccs t O l '`Baser" parka -, which contains proven directions. hardy "Bayer" boxes of 12. tablets Aleo bottles of 24 and 100 --Druggists. Alpleln !a the teade mark (regtdtetod in 'bewails') of Yinyet• Mssnfacture of 111'enotteatte- aclAeSter *1 t(Aiteyllr•setd (&cetrr Salicylic held, "A. 12. A."). While It 'l5 well known brat A'spirht Wallamay'!r lnanufaoture, to a5atst the public ageing italtatftns, tho'rablatti dt Xisyer Cassell will be stoma! with Wit gInerat trade stale tas 13 7e' d k'c," •/ I Disfi.. to 1n .Pi pies Healed By Cuticura 114 9..• Daily use of Cuticura Soap. es- sisted by Cuticura Ointment when required, not only soothes and heals unsightly and annoying Alms pies and irritations ota neck aitd face, but tends to prevent such con- ditions, Nothing purer, more ero- nonileal or more satisfactory than these fragrant emollients. ggr.mplr 1,01% 5roobi. Niall. /Warps Canadian bapot st4ahOtne, td, 4CoatiPN. Price, soar MO. Ointment 21 wad 510• Tstourn PEr. 1100.."Cubaurer Sh Stich 186`u No, 4•-16. .4., 11