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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1926-11-11, Page 3i--- IllIEUMATIC ".F% .... • AND TEN BLOOD Liniitlents of No Avail ,— The Trouble Must be Treated Through the Blood, f The 'moot a rheumatic sui'ferer can 'hope for in rubbing something on the swollen, aci1ing joints is a little relief Awed all the while the trouble is •becom- ing Mom firmly rooted. It is now '"known that rheumatism IS rooted in the blood], and that as the trouble goers on the blood becomes. still further thin and watery. To get rid of el eumatism, . 'therefore, you roust go to the root of the trouble in the blood. That is why I Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved so beneficial when taken for this trou- ble. They make new, rich blood which expels the poisonous acid and the rheumatism disappears. There aro thousands of former rheumatic sufferers. in Canada, now well and strong, who thank Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that they are now free frons the aches and pains of this dreaded trou- ble. One of these is Mr. Robt. A. Smith, Mersey Point, N.S., who `says: —"Some years ago I was attacked with rheumatism, which grew so bad that I could not walk and had to go' to bed under the doctor's care. It is needless- to say that I underwent a great deal of suffering. The doctor's medicine did not seem to reach the trouble, so when I was advised, to try Dr. Willie -ma' Pink Pills I did so, and sifter taking them for some weeks 1 ryas able to get out of bed. I con- tinued using the pills and was soon able to work, and I. have not beeu ,troubled with rheumatism since. IIs other respectsalso I derived a great deal of benefit from these pills and I think them a wonderful remedy." Dr. Williams' Pink P11is are sold by all medicine dealers. os by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. My Mother. Your fourscore years I contemplate With only one regret.. It is that thirty of them passed Before we even mei;. Then comes a devastating thought .1 hate to dwell upon— lf I had known you all your life I could not be your son. And still that envied score and ten 'Can never cauls me tears, Far am I not Most blessed of men, 0 mother of Silty years. _--Clarer ce Hoyt Holmes. OrC Old hearts will .beat more quick- ly; old eyes tivill shine with happiness when YOU go home. And what a joy it will be for you, too, visiting the scenes of childhood days and meeting friends of other years! Make arrangements now to go home this Christmas on a liner of the Cunard or Anchor - Donaldson Canadian Service. The voyage will be an unfor- gettable pleasure. The ship's comfortable appointments and the courteous, intelligent inter- est taken by every member of the staff in your well-being make your journey a real joy. Christmas Sailings frorn Halifax ANTONIA—Dec. 13 to Plymouth, Cherbourg and London. . *LETITIA — Dec. 12 to Belfast, Liverpool and Glasgow. *Dec. 11 from St. John N.B. Ask your Steamship Agent for information or Write l; The Robert Reford Co., Limited Montreal, Toronto, 'Quebec, St. John, N.B., Halifax. AR MCO . DON.ALDSO CANADIAN SERVICE 183 Canada Leads Empire kx Silver Production. Canada has held the premier place within the mple r tis the- greatest pro- ducer of staves for the past two iia- ea•dee,. During the lest few yeses Canada has been the third largest pro- deeieg country in the :world, being (ma ranked only by Mexico mad the United States. Lest year (1925) third pleas was capture.ci. by Peru, Whose produc- tiorr; exceeded that of Canada by slight- ly over one end a half Million ounoes, The principal producing areas in Canada are, in order of their imeorts aloe, Ontario., British Columbia, and Yukon, Silver ores laevo also been found; in other parts of the Dominion, but the total production from these nests has been small.. The total re- corded prod.uctiou to the end of 1925 is 493 million fine ounces, last year's output beiu;g slightly in excess of. 20 million ounces. The market :price of silver fluctuates from day to day; the bigbes•t yearly averages• were reoorded on the Lend.ou market in 1853 and 1854 at $1.348, an in 1920 at $1.346. The lowest price was in 1915 at $0.519. The total market value piaoed on Canada's production during the years for which records are available (1887 to 1925), based on average mar- ket values from year to year was $319,- 82e,880. 318;826,880. In 1925 the production was valued at $13,815,742. The mines of Cobalt, South Lorrain, and Oodganda, all in the province of Ontario, are at present Canada's prin- cipal silver producers. Ontario's mines have contributed slightly over 863.3 million ounces to the accumu- lated total .of Canada's silver produe- tioe, of which only 1.8 million ounces were produced prior to- 1903, the yeas- of earof the dis•eovery of the Cobalt area. The average protection in Ontario for each of the past four years was 10.7 million ounces. Dividends paid. out to the end of 1925 by solver companies operating in northern Ontanrio amount- ed to approximately $92,000,000. Silver production in British Colum- bia and in Yukon is obtained from lead•zirlc ores. The present rate of production in British Columbia is about 8,500,400 ounces per annum; Yukon production last year was about 905,000, ounoes. There appears to bo every reason to believe that the pre- s,ent• rate of production of silver in Canada will be maintained for some years to come. The decline in pro- duction in Cobalt has been more than compensated by new discoveries and increased production from South Lor- rain and Gowganda, and • there •has also been an increase in the predate. don from British Columbia. Diabetes. Once upon" a time we saw a poster which read: "Why is food `important? Deem De we are food on legs!" We hope we ere more than just that, but the subject of food must give. us pause, although it is rather too much to say "Tell me what you eat and I will tell you what you are," yet any one in any part of the country to -day will tell you that if you eat too snitch sugar and starchy foods it will doubtless bring on diabetes. That IS exactly what happens when the body is not able to properly take care of the sugar and starch contained in the food we eat. What are we eating? "We are eat- ing more cereal products than any of our ancestors ever ate in the visit, ex- cept perhaps the ancient Egyptians, who were the grain -eaters of antiquity. "We are eating much more sugar than any one in the world ever ate before. One hundred years ago the average consumption of sugar per per- son was about eleven (11)' pounds in a year; to -day it is one hundred (100). pounds" ! During the war we ate less sugar—diabetes was reduced; after the war we increased our sugar and diabetes increased. The main cause of diabetes is wrong food—too niany sweets and starchy foods. No sugar in tea and coffee, no candy, no pastry, no iced cakes, none but milk puddings, no cereals—are some of the "don'ts" for those who, have a tendency to diabetes; use simple foods: milk, eggs, lean meat and fish, fruits and vegetables, bran muffins or brown bread.' This is the beet preventive—proper diet." Niepce, • ]mown as the father of photography, made his first camera from a cigar -box and lenses borrowed from his grandfather's solar micros- • cope. • Clocks that don't run aren't much use, except on a pair of stockings. Clean as Chill. ' 1, as Sal gold in lest rice everywhere . ' Sinew MtTAt. PROOU6?s Co, 'Lig= 21 insole �1 V atony t to .a, Me,, ll.Y "moor* wpoun C'+ti;tv, THE NIELTJNQ POT IN THE WEST Pick where you will in this• group and you will have difficulty in saying which of these girls comes of Russian, British •.os. original Canadian stook. They are typical of the Prairie Pro- vinces where all the nations of Europe come in sinal settle on the land. And when the next generation rises from` the effort and struggle of the first set- tlers, they are all of them pure Cana- dian. Their outlook, their- appearance, their speech are good British; the land has made them ever in its own image. Take for instance the young woman at th•e left. She is the daughter of a Russian immigrant who came here when sec was 12 years old. Another is a teacher from Manchester, Eng- land; two are the slaughters, of a Cana- dian editor and two others .are the clhildren of a Russian who came to Canada some years ago. Yet alt alike to -day are typical Canadians Morning Hymn. !BABY'S OWN TABLETS Ye mists • and exhalations, that now rise From hill or steaming lake, dusky or gray, Till the sun paint your fleecy skirts with gold, In honor to the world's great Author rise; Whether to deck with clouds the un- colored sky, Or wet the thirsty earth with falling showers, Rising or falling, still advance his praise. His praise, ye winds that from four quarters blow, Breathe soft or loud; and wave. your tops, ye pines, With every plant, M. sign of worship wave. Fountains; and ye that warble, as ye flow, . Melodious murmurs, warbling tune his ' praise ye birds That singing up to heaven -gate ascend, Bear on your wings and in your notes his praise. Ye that in waters glide, and ye that walk The earth, and stately tread, or lowly creep, Witness if I be silent, morn or even, To hill or valley, ' fountain or fresh shade, Made vocal by my song, and taught his praise. —Milton. "Paradise Lost." a al Just a Suggestion. "Jack broke his engagement with me to -night. He said his knee is hurting bim." "Well, why don't you try some other fellow's. knee?" Blind Watchmakers. Blind peo.p,le—those slake have been born blind — are exceedingly clever with their fingers., but It is not often that we hear of a watchmaker who wan born :blind. And yet there have been instances of the kind. A famous blind watchmakerlived at Holbeach, in Lincolnshire. Hie name was Rippin, and, although 'completely blind, he could take to pieces and put togethei again watehes of Most deli- cate ccnstruetion with the greatest ease, encs in quicker time thou most watchmakers who have the advantage of good- eyesight. -1)•n one occasion some o•f the tiny wlasteZ and screws used in hie trade we're stolen from him•, but the thief was captured with th•e'propeaty on his person, and Pippin identified them by Wash, A. IBa•rnstaple watch and clock maker brought up his blind Son to his trade,. and on more than one occasion he de- tected faults in timepieces which ether tradesmen had felled to discover. Candidates for marriage are now stamped in Turkey. Each person de- siring a marriage licence must under- go a medical examination, and to pre- vent any transfer of the permit the carni of the applicant is stamped with a number corresponding to that on the permit. Physicians Use Minaret's Lishit-tient. E OF GREAT VALUE To All Mothers Having Young, Children in the Home. I No other medicine is of such aid to mothers of youn.g children as is Baby's Own Tablets. The Te:blets are the very best medicine a mother can give her little ones during the dreaded teething time because they regulate the stomach and bowels and thus drive out consti- pation and indigestion; prevent colic and diarrhoea and break up colds and simple fevers. Concerning Baby's Own Tabiets, Mrs. John A. Patterson, Scotch Vil- lage, N.S., says:—"I have six children, and all the medicine they ever get is Baby's Own Tablets. I would use noth- ing else for them and can strongly re- commend the Tablets to a•51 other mothers." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' i edicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Talc and Soapstone Produc- tion Higher. • According .to statistics issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, there was an appreciable advance in the production of talc and soapstone in Canada during 1925. Shipments total- led 14,474 tone valued - at $205,835 in 1925 as against 11,332 tons at $154,480 in 1924. The Ontario production of talc was obtained frons deposits in Hastings County. Practically all of the Quebec shipments- consisted of soapstone blocks for use in lining the alkali re- covery furnaces of sulphate (kraft) pulp mills. A small tonnage of ground talc was shipped from a de- posit at -Wolf Creek, Victoria Mining Division, British Columbia. After Shaving—Minard's Liniment. Pitt's Love Letters. The love letters of William Pitt, the elder, the first Lord Chatham, are soon to be published. Pitt's private correspondence has been almost un- known to the public, though many bril- liant epistles and some of historic im- portance are included. They have been retrieved now from 'the Pitts maaius•cri'pts in the record office, edited by Ethel Ashton Edwards, and are soon to be issued in book form. We cannot hear a sound if it has less than about thirty or more than 40,000 vibrations a second. Health Partnership and the Individual's Responsibility. Industrial Hygiene means promo- tion of the health of industrial work - ars. This necessitates the most pre,e- tical co-operation between the two great groups concerned, the employ- ers, who are- responsible for health conditions in the plant, and the em- ployees, who are responsible for health eunditions in the homes, and, more important stile, for their pen pri- vate health habits. The benefits to health resulting from good working conditions (such as adequate light ventilation andtemperatureand facili- ties for nourishment and eleanIineas) are enormousip minimized• if not entire- ly counteracted unless• the individual employee is a partner in the health campaign, Is convinced of the import- ance mportence of such factors., and tales to ob- tain them in his home. Health can not be imposed on anyone; to some extent each man must be a self- starter. Broadly speaking the health tactors which axe the individual's private res sponsibility are housing or seeming ar- rangements, food~ sleep and persoual hygiene. The importance of these things cannot be over emphasized—if bad, they can shatter the strongest physique; if good, they can conserve and strengthen the moat delicate. The Problem is similar for men and women but most difficult for women who are i apt to be hampered by small means. It is for this reason that the Depart- ; ment of Health brought out the well- known book on the subject—"Health Confessions of Businees Women," a book by business women themselves for business women, covering all the personal factors which bear on health. It may be had on application to the Division of Industrial Hygiene, On- tario Department of Health, Spadina House, Toronto. Over 12,000 have al- reaxly been requisitioned, but a limit- ed supply is still available. How Much Do You Spend in Heating Your Attic? 1 In cheaply built houses the attic floor is frequently omitted. It is a proven fact that warm air will pass through a p1e•stered ceiling almost as readily as through a register, and many cold houses have been made warn with the same or even a less amount of fuel by laying a floor of matched boards in the attic. Cases have been reported where the cost of doing this has been met in a Bingle season by the saving in coal. Roof insulation is the answer to the problem. TORONTO HAIRDRESSING ACADEMY CHOWS YOV HOW d.., n.. tannin, far SF,In. ",w Welt ler S..YNt d.reN01n, ..slat esus," 13 A.. School• M:RU. 1 ONT. tOt A.enu. Rud. TORONTO 6, ONT. Dandruff Rub M'nerd's into the scalp four tines a week. It stops falling hair. Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism Colds Headache Pain Neuralgia ummassmonmenem DOES NOT 'AFFECT THE HEART Accept o "Bayer" package which contains ,prover direc''fflolts. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 1(0-- Drnggieta, Aspirin ie "tbo trade mark (saalaierr.•A ie Canada) of Bayer !tfannfacicree of Monolcettlt- scidestec of i5alle'flcacld (Acetyl Salicylic ,Acid, "A. S. AJ"). tvhilc it Is melt kelWa Vet Assists melee Bayer aanetattere, to wisint the politic against lcnitattona, the Tablet*, 1St Bayer Coiepany will 14 strayed With their stattral .,ride laatk, tar "Payer .,Toil." Classified Advertisements. REMNANTS. Q LBS, $2; 5 LBS. PATCHES, $1.50. A. McCreary, Chatham, Ontario. BOYS! B oYS OF 12 TO 14 YEARS, wishing to make $20.00 before Christmas, write to Robert Horton, 97 Withrow A.ve., Toronto. STUDENT NURSES WANTED. NASSAU HOSPITAL, MINEOLA,. Jel Long 'stead, Registered Train- ing School. 40 minutes from New York 'City. 2 years, 4 months course. Com- plete tnaining. Well qualified instruc- to,ns. Three weeks' vacation annually. One year high school or equiva5eni; re- quired. After preliminary term an allowance of $25 a month besides uni- forms and books given. Class entering In January. Address Priecipat of the School of Nursing, Nassau Hospital, Mineola, Long Island. Balaclava Trumpet Sounds Again. Over a thousand instrumentalists played in the Massed Bands at 'the Aldershot Tattoo. It was interesting to note at times how near to orchestral tone the military band can arrive on occasions. The clarinet runs resemb- led the strings both in fluency and. brightness. It is a notable fact that the trumpet•call for the enacting of the charge of the Light Brigade at this, tattoo was sounded on the very same trumpet which was used at Bala- clava. P1ari.rAr 1Yom Last word in builders' aid. Practic`al, up-to-date suggestions on planning, building, furnishing, decorating and gardening. Pro ruse ly1llustrated, tend scores of actual doilar..saving sug- gestions. Send 25 cents for current issue. MacLean Builders' Guide 144 Adelalda St.• w.. Toronto, Ont, PAINS ALL OVER B1II)Y Two More Cases of Feminine Ill- ness Relieved by Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Campotind. Barrington, N. S..—"I had terrible feelings, headaches, back and side aches and pains all over my body. I would have to go to bed every month and nothing would do lie good. niv -husband and my father did my work for me as I have two children and we have quite a big place. I read it the paper about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and then got a little book about it through the mail and my husband sent to Eaton's and got me a bottle, and then we sot more from the store. I am feeling fine now and do all my work and am I able to go out around more. "tell my friends it is Lydia E. Pin1tham' s Veg- etable Comp!ound that makes me feet SO well. "—Mrs. VICTOR RICI'IARDSON, Barrington, Nova Scotia. D ill Pains in Back St. Thomas, Ont.,— "I took four bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and found great re- lief from the dull, heavy' pams in the small of my back and the weakness from which I suffered for five years after my boy was born. After taking the Vegetable Compound and using Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash I am feeling better than I have for the past seven years, and advise my friends to take it."—Mrs.F.J0RNsoN, 49 Moore Street, St. Thomas, Ont. Ci CUTICURA HEALS U'CHY ECZEMA Started Witha Rash-, Then Broke Out in Blisters. Lost Sleep, My daughter suffered with ec- zema for about a month. It started first with a rash and then . broke out in blisters. It itched and burned a great deal, and she lost consider- able sleep at night on account of it. "We began using CuticuraSoap and Ointment and after a few appli- cations the itching and burning sensation stopped. We continued the treatment and In two weeks she was completely healed." (Signed) Mrs. Peter MacDonald, R. R. 1, Proton Sta., Ont., Sept. 29, 1925. Make Cuticura Soap en ; Oint- ment your every -day toilet prepa- rations and have a east, sweet shin, soft, smooth .hands, and a healthy scalp with geed hair, Ceti - cure Talcumnis unexcelled in pnrity. s,.npts vaak Ira by .Rail. A3ireen Cann+lian iir,att 'StettltosM, WA, sae 4tenl." Prl re, °.cep' "Ja ,r merit 2b nntl ids. 1 SfretP. "Caticurn Shaving :del( 25e, *•••••4**- .a. ...•••••••••..-.... .....-.....w'9,,,s r )4.1•1.) E