HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1926-12-16, Page 3TONIC THAT
'After Acute Diseases the Blood
Must be' Built Up Before
Recovery is Complete,
Fevers mad other acute diseases like
Cnnteutiaeot,
Money And fame and health alone
Are ni 1 voioiig'h for a man to. own,
rm..., healthy men are 'bvaxdl to sigh
Ansi nien of wealth go, frowning by,
And ono with .fame will play his hart
With a titoubled mi'l'l and a1 heavy
heart.
If these. tbre+" treesseres no joy pos.
seise,
How shall at man and hapei less?
Peumonaa and intiuenza, leave the Health comes first in she famous three,
But cripples dare smile, as we ta must.
• see.
Fame is sweet, ae we ale must own,
But the haa.ppieet licerts• are not wide.
ie. known
Money is good, when it's truly •calmed,'
But peau, with fortune is not con -
sensed,
lbr the. bravest and loveliest stcuie we
know
Have little of silver and geld to show.
patient, weak, with thin blood and tui'
strung nerves. The period of eon-
vallemence is often long and trying,
and years of poor health have fro-
quently followed so ilri,ef an illness as
an attack of influenza or pneumonia.
Much. of this sort of misery could
be avoided by taking steps to build.
up the blood so that it can cowry to
the nerves and other tissues of the
body the elements they need to re-
store their normal funotional active-
ties. To build up the blood and re -
acre it to its rich, health -giving vigor,
no other medicine can ecival Dr. Wil -
lianas' Pink Pills. From first to last
It is their mission to improve the
blood and thus restore good health
and vigor.
The value of these pills i'u conditions
described above is shown by the state-
ment of Mrs.. Rebecca O'13rien, Pem-
broke, Ont., who says•: --.,"In Nov,, 1923,
1 was stricken with pneumoziiti, and at
the time but little hope was held out
for my recovery. However, with the
best of caro I was able to walk about
after some months. But I did not re-
cover my strength, The doctor told
bee I was anaemic.. My appetite was
poor, I grew nervous and restless, I
was deathly pale and practically gave
up hope cf ever being strong again.
However, remembering that inmy
girlhood I had taken Dr, Williams'
Pink Pi11e with 'decided success, I de -
sided to try them again. 13y the time
1 had used two boxes there was no
doubt the pills were helping me. Con -
Uniting. their use .1 was soon able to
attend to my household duties. I con -
timed taking the pills, However, until
1 had used twelve boxes, by which
time 1 was enjoying bettor health than
at any time in the previous ten years,
In gratitude for what the pills have
(ions for me, I give this statement in
. the hope that it may point the way to
health to some other weak, despondent
vrom.au."
You can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cts. a
box from The Dr. Wiilitens' Medicine
Co,J.Brockville, Ont,
Love in Vain.
Te I•ove in vain is one of life's trage-
dies. So often it brings a train of dis-
astrous effects. Ambition is kiRied;
softeners become soured and embitter -
ea; life slumps into a joy eats exist-
ence,
The poet Cowley wrote:
".A mighty pain to love it is,
And :'tis a pain that love to miss;
But of all pain, the greatest pain
It is to love, but love in vain,"
Quite true; but why "love in vain
To that the reply may be given that if
a I'1 an loves a maid, and she cannot re -
tura bis love, that's "Dove in vain,"
with none to, b:eme. But wait a mo-
ment!
What would you say to anyone who
bought a grand piano and then could
not get it into the house? Or to some-
one who bought a hat without trying
iton. Or to a skater who got a duck-
big
uckth,g 'beca.us.e he failed first to -test the
See.?
You see the amoral? Those who suf-
fer from Ioving. in vain do so because
they took a risk—and hurt themselves.
I.crve is nearly aIwoys preceded by
"liking," and it can—and ought to be
--held in that stage until it is, diecov-
ered:--that the person liked is free to
be loved, and free to love in return.
Thenove has a chance. Not in every
case, of course, does the chance come•
off, but that the love -quest held hope,
or the reverse, would soon be appar-
ent, and a retreat could thus, be made
before the heart was 11•opeltesly in-
volved. A passing disappointment is
very different from a life tragedy.
Most of those who "Iove in vain" have
been too rash—too premature, It's in-
spirieg to light ,fol• the attainable; a
tragedy to pursue the unattainable. So
look before you leap—into love!
'1
Clarinet.
Ile held en ebony clarinet.
Isq,,,white and taming hands;
His fl ugor s delicately met
"The silver of the keys;
His eyes beheld: unchaa-ted lands
lay undleenvere'd seas.
'Above a •proem and pointed be 7.rd
Hie face was thin and. sed;
He had the look of one who feared
Some vaguely dreadful thing;
And all the while his notes were glad
see siwali',ailrs on thawing.
—Thomas Kennedy.
Jumpers as worn by naval sailors
will in future have their V-shaped
openings altered in depth according to
.the total length of the garment; ot
present every jumper has an eleven -
inch opening.
FOR SA
Pair Polson Iron 'W'orks 22"x50" right
and left hand Brown "halve Engines,
coupled together, left..x 48" ply Wheel,
total 700 H.P., 84 Ii,.P.M. Also Cane.
'diet Westinghouse 55 IK,W, Direct
'Current Generator, 125 V, 440 Amp,
850 11.P.14I. lemming 210w. Open for
Inereeliun,
FIRSTBROt)K Bi.OS., Limited of glee.
288' Kine;t. M dot Toronto Z Ont, get
Yet there must he a way to the god
we seek,
A path to pesos for the strong and
week,
And it must be open for all to fare,
In spite of life's sorrows and days of
ears,
Por those who have suffered the most
the while
Look out on the world with the ten-
derest smile,
And those who have little of wealth to
boast
Are often the ones that we love the
alert.
So I fancy the joy which. men strive
to win
1s born of something which lies within,
A strain of coon -age no rare can break,
A love for beauty no thief can take.
For they are the happiest souls on
earth
'Giro gather the treasures: of gentle
worth,
The pride of neighbors, the faith ot
friends,
And .a mine at peace when the sun
(.ancon ds.
—Edgar A. Guest.
Bermuda -Blue.
If turquoise -stone were fluid
And if exquisite silence
Turned into the color
Of Bermuda's islands
There would not be a druid
And no Prosper•o's eyes
But that this were magic
Would quickly recognize.
It is not the Bermothees
But the ocean that Is vexed;
I•t is not only Shakespeare
Has Ariel for text.
Raleigh many times would please
Sweat Will with stories
Of these same Bermudas
And their colder -glories.
Lovely, the Bermudas;
Beyond turkls,
Sapphire and lazuli,
They can tell what blue is.
—Isabel Fiske Conant,
CHILDREN LIKE THEM
Baby's Own Tablets Are Effec-
tive and Easy to Give.
You do not have to coax and threat-
en to get the little ones to take Baby's
Own Tablets. The ease with which
they are given, as compared with
liquid medicines, will appeal to every
another. None is spilled or wasted;
you know just how big a close has
reached the little stomach. As a rem-
edy for the ills of childhood arising
from derangement of the stomach and
bowels they are most satisfactory.
Airs. Rose Veyer, Willimantic, Conn.,
says:—"I used Baby's Own Tablets in
the Canadian Northwest and found
them a wonderful medicine for child-
ren's troubles, especially indigestion
and constipation. I have also given
them to my children for simple fever
and the restlessness accompanying
teething and they always gave relief.
I can recommend Baby's Own Tablets
to all mothers,"
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers • or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
4--------•
"Actually !"
Recently one who had retired to the
country, after a busy and 'orawd'ed city
life, wrote of his first experience ot
gardening. He had bean particularIy
impressed by the friendliness of the
birds. They had watched him with
curiosity, perhaps, the said, thinking
he was a novice at the business and.
wondering at his frequent simile of
re,st. "During olio of these rests a
robin actually came and perched him-
self on my knee." That was, apparent-
ly the greatest surprise of alr. Aetual-
lyl The ma.n for Whose fellowship
thousands of People wonld have been
grateful, found unmeasured joy in a
robin'a friendly 1rnst.
And trust is a lovely thing: It is
not the least gift of a :garden, It is
a comradeship that call be cultivated.:
The bin ds willdonne and be our friends,
'ewe invite them, and turn the minim
WOLF TOTEM • POLE AT PRINCE RUPERT
his totem pole, which now startle at Prince Rloert, B,C., fore
ie 1
n r y belonged to a Nlciltga Chief, nonce. ;Daulc, and. stood inshei~ront of his lodge, at Gitlakdamix, on the Upper Naas River,
In Northern British Columbia,
The carved figures Been on the top of the pole
represent the principal actors in legends describing
the origin of the family crests. The owner of the
totem pale belonged to the "Wolf Glen."
The principal legend which explains how the
wolf was adopted for the family crest is as follows;
One day, long years ago, a great lava eruption
took place, at Gitwunsilkqu on the Upper Naas
River. The molten mase pushed the waters of the
river back across the valley; to the mountain -side
and formed a great lava plain, which extended
from the head waters of the Ksh'luich to the
c'anyon, at Gwinaha, The fiery flow overwhelmed'
villages and fishing hamlets in its path, and the
People tied to the surrounding hills. Among these
fugitives was an Iridian cnief named Gum-lu-
gidis, the ancestor of the owner of the pole.
Gum-lu-gidis fled, with his family, to the highe
lands of the ,Shkamal River where they camped..
Night after night they had no rest, but were dis-
turbed by weird sounds and voices accompanied
by the beating of tomtoms. At length the Chief
and some of his braves determined to set out and
discover where the sounds came from The legend
describes how they foundthemselves in the abode
of "Luluks". Spirits of the Dead, where they
beheld many strange things. Escaping from
these haunted regions, Gum-1u-gidis, overcome i,y
fear, again took up his flight, this time across the
Grease Trail to the Skeena River, leaving the
Naas, with its terrors, far behind. When the
winter snows had melted and the ice had left the
river, Gum-lu-gidis and his companions travelled
down the Skeena River, in dugouts made from
cottonwood trees, until they reached the island of
Khern, now known as Bolen Island, on which
Prince Rupert is situated. Not very long after
they had settled at Khern, Gum-lu-gidis'' rest was
once more disturbed, this time by the nightly
howls of wolves which seemed to be calling Gum-
In-gidis by his name. The old fear overcame him
once more, for he thought the spirits of the lava
had again found him out. After the howling hada`
continued for two nights, the old Chief determined
to meet his fate. Dressed in his ceremonial:
dancing robes, with face painted and his long hair
tied in a knot, after the manner of the warriors of
his tribe, he set out alone from the camp armed
with his Chief's tomahawk, set with abalone shell.
Following the direction from which the sounds
proceeded, Gum-lu-gidis came face to face with
a large white wolf. Raising his tomahawk pre-
pared to defend himself he noticed the animal
was in great pain andunaware of his approach, as
it was trying in vain to dislodge a sharp piece of
deer's bone which had pierced its jaw. Gun-lu-
gidis said to the wolf "Brother, do me no basin
and I will remove the bone which otherwise will
cause your death." After Gum-lu-gidis had re-
moved the bone, the wolf became very friendly,
and each time the Chief. went out hunting, the
white wolf killed a deer for him; thus supplying
him and his family with food.
So, the legend states, Gum-lu-gidis adopted the
white wolf for his "Ayoulcs" (crest) and in his
ceremonial dances always wore a white wolf
skin robe.
After some years of peace, Gum-lu-gidis became
homesick, and he returned to the Naas, for he
Ionged to fish once more in the waters of the
Kshliich, where the "hanginwezueh" (white
salmon) spawn.
Snow Helps Harvests.
If you live in a town, it cau be as-
sumed that you don't like snow. It so
soon becomes slush. But in the coun-
try a winter without several good falls
of snow would be a calamity to food
growers.
Snow is a manure. It holds a large
proportion of valuable earbonie acid
and fertilizes the soil A f
armor, farm-
ing on scientific lines, makes a'low-
ance for that when he dresses his land
with artificial manures. It saves him
money.
Further, germinated seeds which
would be killed by severe frosts are
quite eels when covered with snow.
The latter acts in exactly the same
way as a woollen blanket. Wool is
warm because pits millions of inter-
stices held warm air; snow is warm
for the same reason.
Its. slow percolation as it melte keeps
the soil "open." And it kills—partly
by suffocation and partly by poisoning
—millions of insects harboring in the
ground. It is curious, too, that el -
though snow does not hurt wheat, it
kills many varieties of weeds.
Minardos Liniment for Dietempe'.
Mother.
M is the nri'llion things • she gave me;
O means that 'cobra's only growing old;
T•ie for the tears she's shed to save
ate;
H is for her heart of purest gold;
E is for those eyes with lovelight
shining;
It meals. s'lght, for right she'll tuiwnye
be,
Put (from .1111 together they spell
Mother,
A word that means the. world to me.
The average roan can jump only
from our table Into songs, .tti out once the length of his body, but
a lioim can jmimp two or three tames
A
makeefi
single
pair
of elephant tusks will is length.
keys for between "" `""
thirty and forty pianos.
The—mouth of a•full-grown whale,
when wide open, measures 12 feet by
18 feet.
Sdinc inside stories don't deserve to.,
in the West.
,Rancher—"We don't need a tele-
phone. Our neighbors have ane.,,
Co.iler—"Where do they live?"
Rancher—"About 40 miI•es due east."
Silk furnishes the longest continu-
ous fibre known. One cocoon has been
known to yield nearly three-fourths of
a mile.
The :beet Tree of the Wok ---,1 Classified Advertisements.
The Coin D vinatiorn.
rotwe a number of coins in a hat,
and ask that one •eons be rernovea,
marked, and passed around for ideate
fetation, When this has beendone roe
qu•eet crsiz bad in band,
and presuelsperbiono.santod aagauitrrt>yt his lite fora•
head, for a few seoonde. 'Ilea the
coin is put back In the hat with t•ite
atherri,
With your eyes blindfolded, and
your head turned away, you may then
reach is the hat, and bring tont the
chosen coin, mysteriously finding it
from among the others!
The at,ecret: When the win is passed
around and helm by one person, It lao-
comes quite warm. All the other eoins
la the hat will be cold, so you Can
easily discover th•o chosen one.
Badly digested food, acidity of the stomach, end
sluggish liver cause headaches. Seisel'sSyrap
will remove these causes. Any drug store,
Metaphor.
Solidity, indeed, becomes the ben
Of him that writeth things divine to
men:
But must I needs want sol4dness, be-
cause
By metaphors I speak? Were not
God's Sawa,
His Gospel -laws, in olden time held
forth
By types, shadows anti metaphors?
Yet loath
Will any sober man be to find fault
With thein, lest he be found for to
assault
The highest 'wisdom!
Bunyan.
Keep Minard's Liniment In the house.
If You Can See-
-The good in another man's religion
there is sorno good in yours.
--Your own faults as easily as you
see your neighbor'% you. ere 2121 excep-
tion..
--Tile way to improve matters you
have a perfect right to enprass eaiti-
cisms,
--A boy going to the devil without
a shudder there's something wrong.
—A goad book without wanting to
read a while you're not educated.
—Sonne good le every person you are
mere to enjoy lite.
-Yourself as others see you it isn't I
going to increase your Ifappine'ss.
Forest Values.
At the gates of tate forest, the sur-
prised man of the world is forced to
leave his city estimates• of great and
small, vise and foolish. The knap-
sack of custom falls off his back with
the first step he makes into these pre-
einots, . . Here we find notate to
be the circumstance which dwarfs
every other circumstance, and judges
like a gots all men that come to her.
We have crept out of our close and
crowded hoboes into the night and
morning, and we sae what majestic
beauties daily wrap us in their bosom.
—Emerson,
Vigilance Saves Lives,
When passing trucks or eornrnartial
vehicles watch out far possible child-
ren catching a ride,
AatS Like a FIISsee
bra lekevg Gelds
That's why so many people boy
"Buckley's" to cad Coughs, )3ron-
obitis and all Throat, Chest and
Tang troublca. Ii' instant, pleasant
guaranteed. You'll note its unique
powers in the very first dose -and
there are 40 dosed in a 75 -cent bottle t
Ask your druggist for "i uckley's".
W. K. Buckley, Limited,
142 Mutual. St., Toronto a
teatx'rLittk .
Acis like a flask—
s single sip proves it ti¢a
Dissolve two "BAYER TABLETS OF ASPIRIN" ill
four tablespoonfuls of water and gargle •thoroughly.
Swallow .some of the solution. Don't
rinse the mouth. Repeat gargle every
two hours if necessary.
This is an effective gai`gle proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians.
Acte t only "Bayer"
iacl kaj e:. Look for
the "Bayer Cross."
Handy "Bayer" boxed of 12 tablet's. ,Also bottles of 24 and 100•--•1)reggi+;ta.
disputa in thn trait mark (registered in Canada) of 11nyer lianuaarturn of Monoaertle-
acidester of SalIevlicraeld (Acetyl Sultana.'.cid, "A, 5. A."). 'While it iq doll l:nosrn
thea` Ae,tmlfinesas Ikr,er, manufacture, to assist the public against finite Nona, tnO'1',h7-tt
01: dryer Coau'auY will be etarepcd With their i;oneral weds Inuit, the "Boor 'Cro,S,"
Fa-
TOAVSILI JS
and
SORE
THROAT
•
REMNANTS.
LIIS., $2. LBS. F:+3,TCi E I.
1,60, McCaa:elry, Chatham"
Ontario,
SILVER FOXES,
SILVER FOXES, $1:OO—,.,$54'10;
Larges, Summerside,
----We offer stead
employmezit and
pay weekly to 8011 our complete and
exclusive lines of guaranteed quality,
whole root, fresh dug -to -order trees
and plants Attractive , illustrated
samples and full co-operation, a
money -making opportunity.
Luka Brothers l' urseriee. Montreali
Converse,
'Do set on the rooks, to muse o'er flood
and fell,
To ellow1y traoe theforest's shady
scene,
Where things that own not inn's do-
minion. dvc'•eli.,
And mortal foot bath neer or rarely
been;
To elemb the trackless mountain all
Wieeen,
With the wild flock that never needs a
feed;
Alone o'er steeps and foa,tning fa'ii
to lean; -
This is not solitude; 'tis bat to hold
Converse with nature's charms, and
view her stores unroll'd,
--Byron,
Goethe studied the Persian Iangt.age
at the age of sixty-five.
Plcnj'7 r .Jfonr& r
Last word in builders' said. Practical
up-to-ddak suggestions on planning
building, ibrmshing, decorating and
durdencng, Profusely illustrated
aid scores of actual dollar,saving sag
'gestions. Send 25 cents for
sssnenf is4ue.
MacLean 3lu1k s-^ Q ld
2 t4 Adaluide Sr, m'l.,
inrnnto, Ont.
,:;:;
Rheumatism.
Massage with Minard's. It relieves
the stiffness, eases the pain,
DRAGG/NR-DOWN
PAINS REUEVED
Woman Suffered Nearly a Year.
Lydia E. Piskha is 1/eget-able
Compound Brought Her Health
Moose Jaw, Sask. —"1 amoing to
try to tell yon what Lydia E. Pink-
harn.'s Vegetable Compound has done
for me. 1 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 an 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 keit on taking it and also used
Lydia a,, Pinkham's Sanative Wash.
I have load 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 1 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 answerlettors, i?i can help
any other woman I'd be only too glad
to try. "---Mrs. +'STHER, HOUGHTON,
712 Athabasca W., Moose Jaw, Sas-
katchewan.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is a dependable medicine
for all women.
For sale by druggists everywhere. 0
Cuticura Baths
Best For Children
Teach your children to use Cuti.
cura Soap because it is best for
their tender takins. Assisted by oc-
casional application; of Cuticnra
Ointment to first signs of irritation
or dandruff it keeps the skin and
sea1p clean and healthy. Cuticura
Talcum is cooling and soothing.
Samlpme 2ss1, 2re, br Matt Address. Canadian
,,i,,yrn to eatasuse, Y.td,. Mont ^,a:t" Price, $eai,
(, rr...nt. IS and Ser. re! rte, 85e,
Cuthn,ea Shaving Stith Int.
ISSLi b, -ao, '50 '25,