HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1926-08-12, Page 3WOMEN.OF
MOLE AGE
Need Rich, led Blood to Main -
taro Good Health. •
After passing the age of forty every
woman hoe reason to grow anxious
about her health. This tithe of trial,
with its attacks• of faintness and tits
of d•epretl+r;•ion, its often violent head-
aches and back pains Ls rightly dread.
ed by womeir, but if reasonable step's
are taken to safeguard the health, nu
r,•erioms ill.effects will arise. At this
turning point in life Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills have given a helping hand to
thousands of suffering women who
were flghting a hopeless battle against'
poor health and waning strength.
The very best help for any woman
of middle age is the health help given
by Dr. Williams' Pink Pille. These
pills reinforce the blood supply, en-
riching and purifying it, In doing this
they nourish the starved and over-
taxed nerves and give new strength
and vitality to the whole .system. By
this natural process Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills completely dispel all pains and
weakness, and a better, happier 'Condi-
tion of health and spirits arises.
Every woman of middle age should
take advantage now of the wonderful
health -help of Dr. Williams' Pink Pins.
They are sold by all medicine dealers
•or will be.,•sent by mail at 6.0 cents a
box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
He'll Land on Top.
No matter how little -he's getting;,
No matter how little he'e got,
If he wears a grin and trying to win—
He is doing a mighty lot!
No matter how humble his job is,
If he's striving to reach the crest,
The world has a prize for the fellow
who tvles•
—
The man who is doing his best!
To -day he may be at the bottom
Of the ladder to wealth and fame,
On the testiest rung, where he's bravely
• Gluilg,
In e•pito of the knocks --dead game.
But slowly he's gaining a i;oothold,
His, eyes on the uppermost round;
It's a hard climb, but he know in time
He will land—and be looking down!
The Yellow yho never surrenders,.
And is taking things as they come;
Who never says "quit" and exhibits
grit
When the whole world's looking glum;
The fellow who stays to the finish
That nothing can hinder or stop,
And who works like sin, is the chap
who'll win
And some day he'll land on top.
Needle -Making An Art.
It takes 7 men to make a single
needle. 1lach needle has to go through
twenty-two different processes before
it reaches its marketable form,
The trouble with a great many
young men who want to see life is
that they imagine none of it is worth
seeing by daylight.
r
ty
• •Ara a v x, t S,rN •f -
Wo aro satisfying hundreds
of shippers with our Dream
prices, tests, grades, daily
payments. We are paying to-
day: Special, 38o; No. 1, 84c;
No. 2, 81c. We pay Express
Charges. Ship us your Cream.
4 W,
-flr..Cs .
T ei cath a .t sh-
ness which makes them hold
their keen cutter,; edge en-
, der every Clangs.
. BIMONDS CANADA UAW co, ten.
MONTRWM.
• VANCOUVER, ST. JOHN, N.9...,,
TOr,ONTO Q _
Holland's Color.
The glory of Holland is its color.
Jdverytbing seems; to be painted up --
house - doors, barges, window - sills,
bricks (the best laid in the wooed),
all but tho blue eyee and flaxen hale
of the girls and children --so as finally
to give a mingled impression of e aiety
and repose such as no other country I
know seems even to try and ytelld. roe
many passing years this national
genius for color centred in the art of
painting, and the tradition is by no
means dead to -day. We have many
fine Dutob pictures in this country, but
it is necessary to go to Holland in or-
der to sere how the most . exquisite
things in their art flow from the daily
life of the people and are the expres-
sion of the ordered neatness of their
lives. It is •materlatl and over -precise?
Maybe, , . He -found that ho could
paint anything—from the human face
to a sheet of paper or a pot of basil --
and color it so divinely as to make
men's handiwork seem almost as good
as Nature's. Nothing was common to
such eaglets , . a 'man's house
might be his church, and its ante -room
glitter like a jewealed altar. Nor was
spirituality wanting to an art which,
in a liberal view of at, seeme the most
Christian in the world, There is no
more religious picture than Nicolas
Maes's Endless Prayer, and the por-
traits of Terburg and. Vermeer , . .
come little behind it in the power to
glorify the simple life and ennoble the
relined one, Dutch painting is no ceao-
bra•tion of poverty and dirt, as so Much
or ours• is. Ma.es's praying p•eanant is.
none the worse because she is "asking
a blessing" over a salmon cutlet, or
Holland because its. Broadland is a
neat and peopled countryside, while
ours ie a lonely and half -cultured
marsh; or Morland a greater artist
than Jan Steen, because the English-
man is a gloomy painter and the Dutch
a merry one. ---H. W. Maseinghain, in
The Nation (London).
CHO
INFANTE
Cholera infant= is one of the fatal
ailments of childhood. It is a trouble
that comes on suddenly, especially dur-
ing the summer months, and unless
prompt action is taken the little one
may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own
Tablets are an ideal medicine in ward-
ing off this trouble. They regulate the
bowels and sweeten the stomach and
thus prevent the dreaded summer com-
plaints. They are an absolute safe
medicine, being guaranteed to contain
neither opiates nor narcotics or other
harmful drugs. They cannot possibly
do harm—They always do good. The
Tablets are sold by medicine dealers
or by mail at 25 cents a box from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville,
rockville, Ont.
The First Vaccinators.
Although vaccination is indissolubly
linked with the name of Jenner, there
its ample evidence that it was pra.c-
tieed by farriers and others in the
rural districts of England long 1 eforo
his day.
l.t was common knowledge amongst
these people that an attack of cowpox
immunized the sufferer against:small-
pox, and it was quite usual for farm
workers to infect themselves and their
children with the former complaint to
protect them against the latter.
Indeed•, twenty-two years before Dr.
Jenner made his, first vassination a
farmer named Benjamin Jeaty, of
Downsh.ay, England, openly advocated
the piactice; but, not being a medical
man, he Was laughed at for his pains.
Plane Types Reduced.
Standard types of army aircraft have
been reduced from 15 to 5.
•
The British Museum contains books
inn:Abed on oyster shells, bricks,
titles, bones, ivory, lean, iron, copper,
sheepskin, wood, and pain leaves.
ACTS WAVED
Alen and" • women wanted In unrepresented territories
chill sales ability and good Community standing to
rt present n most extensive ranee of knitted goods
cold (lroot from manufacturer Dresses, sport sults,
sweaters, battling sults, silk lingerie, hosiery, under.
wear and woolens, equal to the highest grade ,n-
ported lines. All linea mads eomptatcly in our own
factory 'from raw materials," Lineal commission;
bonus eystom; soiling outfit ,upplled. Pleasing and
prurdabie: sailotaotion guaranteed. Our repreoo_nta-
ittvee make good and stay with us. Write for Dill
partleulars at ones.
aSITISt' KNITWEAR COMPANY.
SI'n000, Ontario.
•
TOURIST CAM
Touajet Camps and,liefreshment Booths along the highways and roads
of Oatallk are now inspected by•the Denertment of Health and each pro-
prietor who maintains his premises and the necessary equipment in a
Sanitary manner is granted an Approval Sign.
When you are motoring, look .for this sign:
II
MOTOR. TOURIST CAMP
b APPRt)VED
Ontario Department of Health
11 will help you to locate wester afire to drink and proper ticcolnmoda-
tion for rest and camping.
Away from holme, you cannot afford to take chances with your food
and drink. An attack of typhoid Sever following the use of infected water
or milk or swimming in a polluted etrearn will •certainly spoil the effect of
the happiest hel!day, •
. Milk: "Iineer your Milkman" -wit least try to secure pasteurized
milk. The next best is m,ilk that is milked clean anti kept clean and coke,
• Meat. 'Buy meat kept ole ire. "I' MI WO1,11iln.'t thIll k of eating "hot dogs"
which has been bested and rothe !ted for a week, If you were home—then
insist on having your welters taken off- the ice end boiled fresh Or yott.
WQtQr., ,S Lott}'e Yourdrinit,#ng water at;Approved Camps aid Itefresh-
ntent loons; they ,have Sat ender c+t-:it. es
• EtthIne There, , o ve4,tx of fik'lfe places to srvini. Bathe only in
weal whir; i is free i oit c4.4, niii.ation, Mafa•ty First! A little mishap
in any of the abo'i t n1tty Meet dolt/ease, PreYentiom its the best plan far
motor tOttris$B—'get in. cttlateit against tvpbol. 1 'e'er be. re you start oft
�
Year nrotr� holiday, to V eo le supplied .tints Or tee of Ontario residents
by the be sarbiidiit of Health.
tlh,
W.:,....,w,..�at�evNn.�aW,+.Mr•,:�.r�,�..�.rfi.�.th,.,�.tw�Y6�ew,,.,k�+.v.
LIVING EARTH I:
E ,.118
SS
That Was When Only Microaconk Orglalnislrns Existed.
1
widit
-
•
The upper sketch shows the eight -armed cattlefish or octopus. The
lower sketch shows the ten -armed cuttlefish eta• squid capturing a fish. The
cuttlefish are anolluses and represent the greatest development of the back -
boneless forms of life.
Secrets of Science.
By David Dietz.
The first great stop in the evolution
of life upon the earth was the origin
of life.
The second great step was the divi-
sion of the first microscopic globules
of living matterinto the two classes,
plant and animals.
But both the firat plants and the
first animals were one -celled organ-.
isms.
The third great step was the de-
velopment of many -celled autism's and
plants.
An organism which we find on the
earth to -day gives us a •,eleed to how
this happened and lead us to believe
that there was a half -way step between
one -celled and.,inany-celled organisms.
In canals and streams we find a
microsoopic organism which has been
named the "volvox." It looks like a
little green ball.
In reality it is a colony of one -celled
animals all living together.
All the microscopic cells forming
volvox are alike.
But there are other colonies of or-
ganisms which show different kinds
of Delis. Here we have a division of
labor, as it were. This probably
marks the beginning of the many-
celled animals and plants.
To -day we find microscopic Many-
celled animals and plants. Therefore.
we may assume that for millions of
years all life was mier000pic.
The earth was teeming with life but
it looked Lifeless.
Gradually, as time went on, organ-
ism increased in size.
Gradually more complex forms of
life evolved. All of them, however,
were backboneless animals.
They included sponges, jellyfish, and
round and fiat worms.
All of these are very inactive forms
of life. Sponges are entirely fixed,
growing on one spot just as planta do.
Jellyfish are only feeble swimmers.
at the mercy of tides and currents.
The sea worms are only feeble
crawlers.
Only one form of backboneless ani-
mal has developed any great power of
locomotion in alt the millions of years
from the time of their first appearance
upon earth up to the present.
This is the squid.
I The squid has a spindle -shaped body
enclosed in a muscular fold known as
the mantle. There is a space between
the body and the mantle known as the
mantle cavity.
The squid moves backward by draw-
ing water into the cavity through a
funnel just below the head and expell-
ing it again violently by a muscular
contraction of the mantle.
Thgnext great step in evolution was
then evelopment of the . •'back -boned
aniinal. The first one was the fish.
All These it Own.
I own the memory of whispering trees
Which gossip in the wind at early
dawn;
A roving cloud's swift shadow on the
leas,
And petals like soft snow adrift the
lawn.
•
And mine the spectral cry of wild, slay
loon,
The gulls like silver foam upon the
bar;
And scented purple desks beneath a
MOOD.
Shining and crescent like a scimitar.
I call these mine: the rocks firm -set
and cool
Where barnacles and shaggy sea.
weeds are,
Token of vagrant tides; this shadowy
pool
Which mirrors back the radiance of
a star.
Mine is the clamor in the thunder's roll
Tossed as by might of Titans from
on high,
Mine is the splendor as the lightning
scroll
Cleaves a swift pathway in the riven
sky.
I own the -dreaming haze on distant
hills,
The long pale pathway of a wind-
ing lane,
The nodding .cowslips, fern and daf-
fodils,
The magic curtain of a summer rain.
Mine is the • steal of freshly furrowed
earth,
The gleam of sunlight on a running
brook;
Mine is the wonder of each spring's
new birth,
The autumn fields and grain within
the stook.
•
And mine the mystery of a velvet
night
Across whose sky a far-flung jeweled
zone
Archeej the heavens, scintillant, with
light.
These tnemnories aro mine—all these
• I own.
—Mary Chase Witherbee, in Christian
Science Monitor,
Plane to Carry One Hundred.
Au airplane that will carry 100 pas,
stingers is being built
is
The railway sleepers in Central!
Africa are made of metal, because the i
ants would very quickly destroy wo;,ti-
en sie4pers,
Minard'e Liniment for Carps orifi Warts
•
High Birth.
High birth is a thing which I never
knew any one to disparage except
those who had it not; and I never
Imew any one to make a boast of it
who had anything else to be proud of,
--Bishop Warburton.
DESTROYS
FlimMos hem
,.,...P.,..„..... ...,,
Driftwood.
Each stick and spar and b'i..ttored ketal,
That comes to rest upon the ehere,
Holds prisoned ghosts of other bays
and chimes. -
From far off seas, and scenes of war
and death,
From barque and brigantine and tro-
pic isle, -
They bear strange memories
Of youth and 'life and leve and gallant
deed',
Those restless ghosts,
Within their bleached and sato-encrust
ed walls,
Await the torch to set them free
To rise in iridescent flame
And join the storied romance of the
sea,
—Herbert Greer Freugh.
Tetanus.
Lockjaw is something we have all
feared since the days when as swall
children we were warned to tell moth-
er every time we ran a rusty nail into
our root. And -the fright the whole
family got if any one cut his hand be-
tween the thumb and first finger!
We are stili anxious when .a little
feet has a rusty nail run into it. Why?
Because we are afraid of what may
happen—meaning p•oisorsiag of the
whole system and perhaps death. We
have particular reason to fear any
wound which has touched any culti-
vated soil or road dust. The chief rea-
son for our fear is that the spore of
tetanus, or the germ causing Iockjaw,
might have entered with the soil --or
dust in which manure was present at
same time. This is true, too, of any
Injuries from fireworke, firearms, etc.
When, therefore, any one 1n your
family is suffering from a wound into
which there is the slfghtest chance
that this germ of lockjaw may have
entered, take no chances—ask the
doctor to use tetanus anti -toxin, which
is a sure preventive. Tetanus anti-
toxin is supplied free for use of per-
sons living in the Province by the De-
partment of Health of Ontario.
Keep.,Minard's Liniment handy.
Wise Egg Layers.
Little Reggie, having had an egg put
before him far breakfast, said: "Mam-
ma, where did you get this egg?"
"From grandma's chickens," his
mother answered.
"Well," said Reggie, "how do gran-
ny's chicken know the size of our egg-
cups?"
British Thrifty.
Before the war, there were only 400,-
1 000 holders of English government
1 securities altogether. To -day 14,000
new holsters of government securities
i are being registered every week, which
equals about 700,000 new subscribers
1 per annum.—Thrift Magazine,
PSORIASIS,
ECZEMA
j and Other Skin Troubles
yield to this new, scientific skin treat-
ment. It is a combination treatment
of ointment for external use and tab-
lets for purifying the blood. In the
ointment, the active ingredients of
•SOREISIA are combined with an oint-
ment base that. is readily absorbed into
the third and fourth layers of the skin
with gentle rubbing. It is in these
under layers of the skin that the dis-
ease germs work. Thus, SOREMA at-
tacks skin troubles at their source.
50RI'MA
the New Skin Remedy
is the discovery of a Canadian Drug-
gist of thirty-five years' experience,
who was, for fourteen years. a sufferer
from Psoriasis, After all the usual
treatments (including X-ray) had fail-
ed he began experimenting with vari-
ous combinations of drugs used in
cases of Chronic Skin Diseases and de-
veloped a formula with which he
FREED HIS SKIN of the DISEASE
SOREMA hes, since, been used with
equal success in a large number of
long-standing cases of Psoriasis; Ecze-
ma, etc. Numbers of enthusiastic
users testify to its amazing results.
SOREMA is sold at your Druggist's or
write us direct. Sorema Ointment,
$1.00 per box; Sorema Blood Alterative
Tablets, 75c per box.
FLAH PRODUCTS, LIMITED
1104 BAY ST. . TORONTO
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toot tache Rheumatism
OE NOT O A Alt FEC .Y. THE HEAR
7171
.sea Ott-„ ft r77 aciziE
which contains proven directions.
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
"Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
.mean la the trade tnark ("rgtstsred Sri Ormatln) of isayer.Manufacture of !,monose tt^-
rehlester O0 Salleyiicaald (Acetyl Salicylic Acid, "d, S. A.") 'While It is ran 1• suit
that Aapirin walla Sayer manufacture, to agstot the p)nbllc realest tmtfetiotia, the 7'ei,ltt:t
of t1ai i.•>+ Ceiupt ny will he atetepta with their Senoral trees ratte, the alasenr Gras°'
The fiat
Sep to
a feces"
40.1w0+4•14.•wccw.awuau
iiflulot.t. Sohooi and employ,.
meat Hepar-trnentu b.S.TO
started thousands on the
road to success.
You too may succeed.
Take your first step by
writing Dept. "5" for • a
copy of our oatedogue
to -day,
1ZLLaOT"rY//J
� GC'%•Jri'
Yorage and Alexander Sts,, Toronto
Frank!
A man who wanted to reprove a boy
for remaining at the table toe Song,
said:
"Now, you see that when I have fin-
ished emoting, I alvraye leave the tablet."
"Yes, sir," said the bey; adding, un-
der his breath "and that is about all
you do leavei"
•
One of those writers who forever
use the phrase "as clean as a whistle"
ought to see a small boy pull one out
of a sticky pocket.
Real economy is not s'avin money
sat all; real economy is spending
money wisely.---Wardesaw Mi'rne, M,?,
M.B115PlailBoole
Handsomely illustrated with plane of
moderate priced homes by Canadiae Ar-
chitects. MacLean isuilders'
Gine will help you to decide
on the type of home, exterior
` finish, materials, interior Ar-
rangement and decoration.
Send 25c for a copy.
J a MacLean Etuiidera'G. tele
MEW A 544 Adelaide St WWest.
Serono. anL
CORNS
Remove the hard flesh and apply
MInard's freely and often. Also
splendid for bunions.
1
RAOEIOW(
PAINS RELIEVEfl
Woman Suffered Nearly a Tear.,
Lydia E. Piamisbam's Vegetable
Compound Brought Her Health
Moose Jaw, Sask.—"I am going to
try to tell ,you what Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound has done
for me. I suffered very badly with
dragging -down pains and inflamma-
tion, also pains in my right side over
my hip and down my whole side into
my leg. I had it nearly a year when
I went to a doctor and he said I
would have to have =operation. But
my mother . said to take Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as it
saved her life years before. I took
two bottles and I found I was better
so I kept on taking it and also used
Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash.
I have had two more children since
then and am perfectly well. I used
to have to lie down two or three
times a day, and now I do all my
housework without trouble. I al-
ways keep the Vegetable Compound
in the house as I find a dose now and
then helps me. I am willing for you
to use this letter any way you see fit
and I will answerletters. If I can help
any other woman I'd he only too glad
to try. "—Mrs. ESTHER ROUGHTO17,
712 Athabasca W., Moose Jew, Sas-
katchewan.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is a dependable medicine
for all women.
For saleby druggist; everywhere. 0
11
anaeess
r'ri •-��.
Relieve Irritations,
ry
By Using Lig/tiara •
Ititathe that of ected refs ffer.'':
with Cuticura Soap Brod hot water,
dry without rubbing, then ttup.ly
C:aticura O nttt:•tint. Por eczenmata
mashes, irclairge, • -irritations, etc..
they are weralerad. 'Hee Ct ietua;
Seel deify to keep t w)ur 4f In cleat,
Esouile Ee n- r es 1%10, A;1',',,, t_r e'i:an
mut ei 5 v e, m;tt •are trr1 ri ;,,.; i'
t):nt 1•1,: t ane m •r ..sy
i..utkora :ihasrt,,, :;t..s, 25c. 1
1: $IJrr..No. 32—' -,al,