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Zurich Herald, 1926-05-06, Page 7A BLEMISHED 'What Ouf°Occans Hide,. Most of us think of is>aads• ae, piece are; but the 11•tleti la water, So they i of end ;>u�'a Cannot be Relieved by $a yesthey-tire muelr more tllazt' KILT MAN. MiDDLEToi't1, that,°'are,Vaelationa-K•lllMan, PhilMaar Kiel'.,Racial Orlg'in—En filth, and llinfmante • , rrhe'Y of course the nnc•.nverea • Source—A 1oca•llty. Surnames and Their Origin serinnits of vast mountaille, whose mare. Irritating' sores, Pimples eczema, t i 1 d t .the sea bot Racial OI I@in—En9iish, German ants tit rklettn•1 and other Sinn clisortiera ' cep side* s,ope own o 4 1 Dutch, ' are is afault Y name, which, as 'you are all signals of distress, telling that torn, writes a Member of the Amer1 , Source --.A .given name. alight suspect; ie derived from the Your blood is weals or Impure. You can Geographieai SoO1ety. name of a place. cannot 1 'Wc are apt to forget that beneath Here is a family name whieh 20Orte get rid of ecze2na and other' the swirling surface of the oceans of as though it might well have been de- The principal. tiueation for you, if skin troubles with ointments and out the -world" are concealed vast con - is from a word descriptive of an your Iianle happens to be Middleton, la yard ted in the bl because the troublelytinents very much dike 'those upon occupation. But it ie not: "which plane?" For It so happens that is rooted in the biood and, oat nbeg wh•ich animal life lives and flourishes, So far as its English development is there are place• called Middleton in removed by purifying and enriching Siippos'e the oceans to have gone dry concerned, it traces. back to the pre' Cumberland, Leicestershire, Stafford - and that we start out . by •meter -ear Norman period, and representr,� one o1 shire, S't'estmorelantl and, in fact, vir from Dieppe to explore the Atlantic, the old. Anglo-Saxon given names Welly every county* in England. We should . start cunning smoothly which managed to ourvive the Norman southern part •of England alone a etud•y down a gentle hill. into a '!vide, shallow donlinatton that powerful ipfieenee of the neap reveals no less than thirty over again. Among those who have valley --the Channel Valley—and so which affected, nomenclature as well eommurittes' bearing this name, thus benefited is liars. Chris. F. Idunl- as language and political d'evelopineat. It to not strange, tlierefor'e, that the I Cs stol• Alta. bvho says : - "i was for miles we should travel parail'ek The Anglo-Saxon farm of this given family lrarae of Middleton, indicating the blood. Dr, 'Williams' Pink Pills banish these troubles because they purify and build up the impoverished blood.. This has been proved o ter and troubled with eczema for years and with the valleys on the northern side— the cliffs o`fEngland, until on our right name was "Coelmund," the meaning of. that the original bearer came from a although I tried many remedies I did which was "shi roteotoz•." place of that name, is it rather wide - we should discern the range of mann- p P ' tains which the southern coast of. Ire- "Sp many English and German named .spread one. land would present to us, Then as we travelbal westward a not find pernxauent relief until I used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Whenever I did a little work • ny hands pained me greatly, especially my fingers . and (just as those ending in "er" are corn-. terminating in "man" or "man" are n crack marvellous _view would spi`ead itself really •compouds, of the word "clan" 'joints, which were swollen and MI, so that I could scarcelymove them. at our feet, for the ground between us Pounds of 'the ancient word "were" would be seen to shelve down into a which •also meant a "man") that this Finally as the result of a statement I, sort of,ending is one to which the read, I decided to, try Dr, •Williams' vast -count ' some' four 'miles below Pink Pillsand I had not been taking our car, . tongue naturally gravitates in pro - them very long when I found they In four or five hours we should be on mincing a given or a family name. were helping me. I then got a dozen the floor of the Atlantic. Naturally, as Anglo-Saxon speecb. boxes, and before they were all gone Stopping the ear and looking back emerged finally through the overlazyer every trace of the trouble had disap- we should see vast mountains. standing Of the Norman tongue, there wag• a peered, Had I known of Dr. Williams' out against the -skyline—Mount Ire- tendency to spell this name as it was Pink Pills earlier I might have been land and Mount England, :and the con- Pronounced, and it became Kallman in - spared the suffering I endured, and tin'elit—Mountain Europe. stead of Coelrliund. he doubled -saved the money spent for other treat- There is. a prevalent notion that the 'n" termination, where found, indi ments that did not relieve me. I hope floor of the Atlantic is more or fess some other sufferer will benefit by my flat. This le not so.. experience." If we steer our car south we shall If your blood is out of order begin soon see on the horizon v'as't noun- taking Dr. Williams' Pin Pills to -day tains, higher than any we Have seen, and' note their speedy ' beneficial re- rising from the undulating 'country sults. Sold by medicine dealers or about us. sent by mail at 50"cents a box,by Writ St. Helena and Ascension, to our ing The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., vision to -day but ,'little islands, will Brockville, Ont, stand revealed as the tips , of vast mountain ranges, so steep as to defy A> -Song of Hope. even a modern car and combarable to the vast ranges of the Himalayas.. • "These Things Shall Be!" If we turn and travel north until we • John Addington Symonds -vas a man reach the nortliern.Atlaltic we shall of very high ideals. He died in 1893 see yet another vast range -of moun- at the age of fifty-three. He lived tains—the ming Edward VII. range, - much in Italy and is one of the great• onlyrecently discovered by ocean- est authorities on art, aa well as both hraphers, and so high that their sum- Itelian and English literature,. mita if .a little higher, .would have been islands and probably inhabited. These things, shall be a loftier raee by the human race! Than e'er the world hath:. known - +s ---- _\i'ith flaellen le of freedom in. their souls A MEDICINE THAT e And light of knowledge in their eyes. All, MOTHERS 'PRAISE They elutil be gentle, brave, and, strong. • To spill no drop of blood, but dare All that may plant man's' lordship firm Baby 'S Own Tablets Banish -' On earth, and fire, and sea.; and. air. Babyhood and Childhood •,Nation with nation, land with, land, Ailments.Unarmed shall live r.as comrades - free; In every heart endbrain 'shall -throb "I have used Baby's Own Tablets In The pulse of one fraternity.. my home fo the east fifteen years and I believe tbe good health my children Mian shall love main with heart as pure -enjoy is due entirely to this medicine. And fervent as the young -eyed joys The Tablets are helpful at teething Who chant their heavenly psalms be- tiiue; relieve colds and are always fore beneficial in the minor ailments of God's fade' with undiscord'ant noise. little ones. I have recommended Baby's Own Tablets to other mothers .New arts shall bloom of loftier mould, whoseexperience with them has been Anal mightier music thrill the skies., as satisfactory as my own." And every life 'shall be a stung Baby's Own Tablets do one thing When all the earth is paradise. only, but they do it well. They act as Gives a gentle laxative which thoroughly When .Thread Out. regulates the bowels and sweeten the When using a sewing machine and the stomach, thus banishing constipation and -indigestion; colds and simple spool of thread of some special color fevers and turn the cross, sickly baby gives out with area a few more inches into a well, happy, laughing child. to be sewed, tie the end of the colored Baby's Own Tablets are sold by thread onto any other spool of thread, medicine dealers or direct by mail at and sew sIawly and careftiily. With 25 cents a box from The Dr. 'Williams' care the knot will pees through all the •lliedieine Co.. Brockville, Ont machine openings except the eye of Mrs. H. -Oakes, Sarnia, Ont., says: the needle, so that practically every bit of the tread can be utilized. If ten inches of thread -remains and it is tied as soon ae it comes air the spool, one eat do about five inches snore sew- ing. 'Cross Crossings Cautiously. -To avoid that run-down feeling, cross crossings: cautiously, urges David Van Schanck, vice-president of the Na- tional Safety Couneil. 1 Pie I° al s a ici7C Aolear head, bright eyes, an alert mind, a 'Body full of healthful vigor' •-- ou can have them allveyclay r y c a.. if you are e a normal being and' keep your system clear of clogging poisons. How? A spoonful of Sal . Lithofos in a gxass of water dailyy, before breetldest arlci at bed-. time`: Home Refrigerator to Make -Its Own Ice A clever invention, by which the or- dinary household wil'l be able to have its own refrigerating plant and pro- duce its own ice at a cost of 'a few peace per day, bes just been placed on the London market. A Press Tepre- sentativ'e was shown a handsome white enameled cabinet fitted with shelves like the usual refrigerator. On, one side was a tier of small troughs -which block lace could be made. All the machinery necessary is con- tained in a 'small compartment, partly in and partly outside -the cabinet. There are no levers., switches, valbevs or n1achrnery to be watched, One handle starts the necessary flow of Water and turns on the heat, which 1' raised h electricty, or oil maybe a sed a ectgas y Y, > whichever may be most •convenient and economical. The cooling appar- atus is made of welded steel, contain- ing compounds of liquid and gases hermetically sealed. The generation of cold is by the evaporation of liquid ammonia, and -curiously enough, to the unitiate;d, heat is used, tt� commence with, to raise the strozlg liquid ammonia in the apparatus. The, heat transforms the liquid into gas. This. later condenses into liquid again after which hydrogen is introduced to balance the high pres- sure evaporation. It is this evapora- tion which causes 'tile generation of intense 'c01•d. The invention le the work of two Swedish students, Platen and Mun- ters, who sold the patent tights to one of their countrymen., Who has, in turn, disposed of the American rights for a large emir. Modern fashions are responsileio for the fart that much 'fess sewing cotton is being s•o1'd, as both frocks and' att- der'wear call for mach fewer stit.clies. Nor is it very difficult to see, in the ]Ig'bt of English history, how so many different place's came to bear this name. Mien the Saxons• came to Eng- land and drove the Britons before them into \Tales, Cornwall and Scat - land, they came, not in 'a great united army of conquest, as aid the Norman host, but in small bands for the most part, each clan operating separateely. It was some hundred years or More before they began to mil with one an- other to any .great extent. It was moat .natural that nearly every one of these clans should name the central town in cater a German developrnent, while the territory in whieh it settled Mid - the form Kleiman comas, from Holland;: dleton. "Some say it's only the old birds who go in for 'face lifting.' Here's one only eighteen }'ears old 'who's had her'a lifted hundred's of times, and with -no ill effect." • "Cupid, R.A." The man who fell in love with the girl•,on a poster, and, after tracing the model from Europe to America, Poland her already married, has reason to feel disgruntled with Cupid,•who, when he has turned artist before, llas usual- ly arranged things better. There .is the happier ease of Carl Haag, one Queen 'Victorians favorite painters. He was looking through the photograph album of a London friend, and suddenly came across the picture understand Iran? We need only turn of a girl whose face fascinated him to the Bible to learh the truth about greatly. Haag obtained her address man. In the first chapter of Genesis and a letter of introduction to her we read, "God created man lu his own father, which .he utilized at the first i.mage,'in the Image of God created he opp'ortunity., him;" and that Gocl gave man do - Acquaintance only confirmed the at- minion over all thing; . Reasoning traction ,which proved nluttial, and from this true basis will disclose to within a year of his first sight of the you, and to all who seek salvation, that photo the couple were married, 'everything proceeding from •God must A picture by G. F. Watts, that of be God -like, good, complete, and per- Miss erMiss Virginia Pattie, as she then was, fact. The real man, the man of God's is also said to have led to wedding creating, must forever manifest all the bells. Viscount Easton fail in love eternal, spiritual qualities of his with the winsome face on the canvas, Maker, and can never be deprived of and he, too, found that the Fates were this rich inheritance. on his side. Then the natural conclusion from the correct view of Man Is that he is 15 to 30 drops of Seigel'sSyrup relieves nllforms spiritual, because he is the reliection of indigestion acid dyspepsia. You'll swear br it of his Father, Mother, Spirit: Man is once you have tried it. Any drugstore' intelligent, beoau ee the one Mind,'G•od, is supreme and eternal. Man reflects healthe happiness, and harmony, be- caus'e•he is tbe infinite expression of Soul or substance, which does not sin, suffer, Or cause discord of any kind. Bible Foundation of Christian Science Teaching WI 444444 4 W .Oki The Floor of the Sea. , The floor is of sand, like the mountain drift; And the pearl -shells spangle the flinty .snow; From 'coral -rocks the sea•plants aft Their bows, where tidies nor billows flow; The water is calm and still below, • For the winds and waves are absent there: ' And the sands are bright as the stare. that glow In the motionless fields of upper TRAwnr:11RY. Pr.ANTs•-"ItkeLI;OGG's PRE - air . . . Ci 2lncR," "Dr. Burrill," "Senator Dunlap," There, with a light and e'aay motion, rartron's Beauty, • "rocomoke," "Glen Mary." A.1 The fan -coral sweep's through the clear deep sea; . And the yellow and scarlet tufts of ocean Are bending, like corn on the up- land. ]ea• Then far below in the peaceful sea, The purple mullet and goldfish rove, Where the waters murmur tranquilly Through the bending twigs of the carai-grove. Classified Advertisements. • LECTRXO MOTORS SOUGHT AND 5014), Di,Iton, Frederick Bt., Toronto. 11331/1;11, --IF IT'S MADE os' nonnren, ws have it. Write us and mention our 10501{1. .amara Supply Co., Dept. w, Box 2709, `tontreal. MALE HELP WANTED. la0 INTO nus7NEss FOR YOURSELF. 200 per ' cent. to 200 per cent. protlt painting autos by our process, Removes old paint -puts on beautiful lustrous Snub in a few hours, Rig turnover. Paint own ear, Free instructions. Write Importers, 1014 Ding Batt, rramllton, Ont. STRAWBERRY PLANTS. —J. G. Percival The lecture on Christian Science given in Massey Music Hall, Toronto, Use hiinard's Liniment in the stables. last Sunday afternoon, and radio cast from station C.K.C.L. as advertised in A Difference. tll.ese columns last week, reached a Little Johnny was just learning to large audience. read, and punctuation marks meant The lecturer, Mrs. Nelvia E. Ritchie, very little in. bis young life. His fatdi- C.S., of Sewickley, Pa., a member of er was within earsbot, and overheard the Christian Science Board of Lec- the little chap reading aloud, slowly, tureship, said in part: "This is a warm doughnut"—then a In the Bible we are taught to work, pause for breath—"step on it." watch, and pray, and Jesus said, "The On investigation, the sentence works that I do shall he do also." To proved to be: "This is a worm. Do work out the problems of life accord- not step on it," ing to divine law and to be able to prove our way step by step, we must The happiest people are those who understand not only the law, but the are too busy to notice it. divine Principle from which all real law emanates'. Christian Selence seemereaseneaeszza teaches that the fundamental Prin.-{r CAN YOU SOLVE THiS? ciple, the first and only Cause, is God. In the Bible we read, in -Genesis. "And I F 3S FLAG God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good." Does it not therefore follow that the law gov- erning God's perfect creation must, of necessity, be exact, unfailing good? Christian Science makes clear to us that God is "the same yesterday, and to -day, and forever." It also makes clear to us the availability of this changeless God who is infinite good, this' first Cause who is the maker, sus- tainer, and ruler of the universe, for- ever the same, bestowing all good up- on His perfect, spiritual creation. Now, -the -question is, How may we Should Easter Be 'Fixed? Since the opening of this century Easter Sunday has fallen six times in March and twenty times in April, and the question constantly arises wheth- er it would not be advisable to select a convenient Sunday -preferably the second in April-- and 1-'t Easter fail on that day every year, just as Chrlstnias falls on December 25tb. The controversy on this subject started as early as the close of the second century of the Christian era, and if the present generation, after seventeen centuries of argument and controversy adopts the fixed Easter, neither 1 rc1 nor laity will lay them- selves open to the charge of having rioted with unseemly haste; Mineral's Liniment king of Pain. Future of Brazil, The Germans, . irritated at being. blocked from the League of Nations by Brazil's tiction, have'aeluded scornfully to that country tis ct "jugie." There is now an immense quantity of jungle within] its,lueendiu'ies, but a German geographer, Professor Pencil, 'predicts that Brazil will one day" be the most populous country in the world. .lie says that the great Amazonian .repub- lic can sustain a population of 1,200,- 000,000, almost as many people as tllero are in the whole world to -day. He believes that eventually .Africa and South America will contain more than pelf the people of the globe. For ever fifty years it has been a standard household remedy for sprains, br:uisos, rheumatic pains or muscular lameness from any cause. Generous tubs for 25 cents. Sold Everywhere, or by trail from Chamberlain 112edicine Co., Toronto , Co., Toronto, Ontario. Promise. On a soaked feuce-post a little blue - backed bird, Opening her sweet throat, has stirred A million nntsic-ripples in the air That curl and circle everywhere. They break not shallow at my ear, But quiver far within. Warm days are near! --Max Eastman, in "March." a The Travellers' Tree•, The above letters --hen properly arranged spell the name of a late President. Everyone sending in the correct solution will be awarded a beautiful lot 20x100 feet Free and Clear of All Encumbrances, in a sec- tion now open to colonization in New Jersey. Answer puzzle and mail to -day. This Offer Expires July 15. Beware of Imitators! We are the originators of this advertising plan, Maxim Development Corporation Is West 40th Street New York Dept. 1200 perfect bearers; no mating required. 100 plants, $1.25; 800, 50.00; 1,000, 07.00. ' l'rogressivo" iverbearing' Strawberries, 20 plants, $1.00; 100, 02.75. "Cuth- bert" Raspberries, 25 bushes. 51,00; 100, 53.00. Delivered, charges prepaid. Cash with ordeh. Healthy Plants, splendid roots, Irest dug, well packed. t•om- SIete cultural instructions supplied. Advertisement appears but. once. Shipping all through May. Order from this advertisement, mention paper. Lorne C. Wilson, Aylmer, Ontario. Although it costs thousands of pounds to maintain Fulham Palace, • the Bishop of London's residence, only about two rooms are used by the Bila - op for his personal needsr 7 AndreWS9Pill-KS ` �� ;eOPT TACH L JNSTANTb'' Temporary Fillings • • - which Last a Long Time. SOLD EVERYWHERE . age Q,l•+,ma. S. Wright 01 Co,, halted, Distributor,, Tamara ARTS. Apply Minard's freely and often. Also splendid for corns and bunions, ane44nnam".4n„e.n40.,,wmu.110nmu.,.rusIT Keeping Fit ! A Matter of Habit Good Health Is `Withhi. 'Reach Of Who Observe This Healthful Habit There is a very g•,od reason why so many people find themselves subject to listlessness, headaches, biliousness and weakened vitality. They have failed to acquire that healthful habit of regular daily bowel evacuation, With the result that they find themselves victims of •constipation. Modern living conditions tend to decrease the amount of natural lubri- cant in the intestines, snaking regular easy elimination of the bowel contents difficult. Linder such circumstances poisons from the waste matter that remains behind, are picked up by the blood and absorbed by the system, result— undermining the general health and vitality. Nujdl, the scientific internal lubri- cant augments nature's lubricant, and makes elimination safe and easy. 1\'ii9ol softens the waste matter and permits thorough and regular elimina- tion, without overtaxing the intestinal muscles. Nfijol is not a laxative, and may be taken for any length of time without ill effects. At all druggists. Old Remedy Relieves Kidney Trouble. The travelers' tree is a paint, so A Grateful User Tells of Wis Thank - called because the traveler can get i fulness for Warner's. cool water to drink by tapping the! -..._.,...._ base of the lent stalk. Wonderful reeulis have been 011tain- ed in combating -Rainey trouble by fol- lowing certain rules of diet. and the PAIN -BALM Use of Warner's Safe Kidney cud Liver Remedy, n preparation on the market nearly 50 years, - A grateful user writes: "Tour nlo.l.• cine is a ntirac'e to me. My weight was reduced from 157 to 114 pcuntis when I left the hospital in despair. 1 began to use Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy and at once 1001- nxenced to improve. Now everyone Is saying to me that I look better than over. Lavery word I have written is true and I can prove it by hundreds who !oiew of my condition.” Warner's Safe Kidney _ and Liver 'Remedy is Made from herbs and has boon sold for nearly 50 years, a Irue indicationof its worth, yj Ga bottle -da. Saloetby all clruggtoyistr. 1''itc ;1,25 per bottle. Wa r'ner e Safe Remedies I lint tTIs'A 5thet s el fl , i et wn aOlin eiGialbi"a CHAMBERLAIN'S YourJaeorite old LINIMENT is note being offered in TUBE FORM Better than before! Easy to apply! Its well-known soothing, Healing and penetrating qualities have been inten- sified in the new, compact form. She Aired Them. "Noi'air, did I not: tell you to air these blankets'? Why . are they still damp?" "It was raining when °1 aired them."' rJ TO WOMEN DF iIDDLE ACE Mrs. 'Vilson's Experience a Guide to Women Passing through the Change of Life Hamilton, Ontario.- "I have taken several bottles of Lydia E.Pinkham'a Vegetable G o m - pound and I can- not speak too highly of it as I was at the Change of Life and was all run-down and had no appetite. I was very weak and sick, and the pains in my back were so bad I. could hardlymove. I get very sad at times and thought I bad not a friend on earth. I did not care if I lived or died. I was very nervous, too and did not go out very much. A friend advised me to try a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve. etatble Compound, so L did. l: am a farmer's wife, and al- ways worked hard until lately, and was in bed for two months. I began to feel like a new woman after the first bottle and I recommend it with great success also Lydia E. Pink. ham's Liver Pills. I am willing to answer letters from women asking about your medicines, as I cannot speak too highly of them." -Mrs. EMMA WILSON, 471 Wilson Street, Hamilton, Ontario. Sold by druggists everywhere. o CUTICURA HEALS ECZEM IN RASH On Scalp later on Limbs, Caused Much Suffering. n1 Matt eczema which made Its apptarancc an my scalp in a rash. It itched terribly acrd wher.1 scrat.b- cd it, blisters broke cot. Eater the eczema broke out on my limbs, which weir bedle swollen and vela red. it kept lyre eveake ,at night and caused much pail and suffering. When I washed or went near the hot stove it was very painful, "I read an advertisereeat for Cuticura 'Seep and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased 111(4e 'SitOl 10 tWO Or three n1,01IthS Iwas completely healed." 1Sined Mrs. Emma C. Gibson, P. 1. I3ox 71, Island Pond, Vt., Pct. 2u, 1025. lase Cuticura for all toiletpurposes. sena kaon rag br3l.,1. Address rkule, 555 Depot; Stenhtmee td.,Montreal " Prior, Bong 20r, 0,rtow:ItI:5 and M. 2 nlcum 25c. :t"' Cuticura Shaving ratioir 25e, .i,..w x1.,:1_..00... _ +x,..,* tin ISIItiE bra. 18•-'26,