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Zurich Herald, 1920-03-04, Page 2PH BEST `1 OMC FOR, ItiERVOUS PEOPLE Increase Your Nervous Energy by Building Up the Blood With Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Nervous people who have not yet developed a disease that can be re- cognized and treated by tlf'e medical profession have the greatest trouble in finding' relief, Irritation, headache, sleeplessness, nervous indigesteon, all these discomforts make life miserable but are endured rather thau run a doctor's bill without hope of recovery. Every such sufferer should know the danger of such a condition to the ner- vous system. Nervous debility and even paralysis may result if the tone of the nerves is not restored by build- ing up the blood. As a tonic for the blood and nerves Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been used with the greatest success. They have a direct action on the blood and therefore enable it to carry to the nerves the -elements they need to fully restore their normal function—and .at the same time im- prove the general health. The bene- fits that follow the use of this medi- cine, is shown by the statement of Mrs. Jenny Marr, R.R. No, 3, Port Rowan, a well known school teacher, who.says:—"Some years ago I became greatly run down, and was in this condition for nearly a year. A doctor whom I called in said. I was suffering from complete nervous prostration. It would hardly be possible to tell all the symptoms of my"case, but anyone who has passed through a Nervous break- down will know What I suffered. As I did not seem •to improve under the doctor's treatment, I decided to try Dr. Williams" Pink Pills, and the de- cision was a fortunate one for me, as I soon found some relief through the use of the pills, and after taking eight boxes I was fully restored to health. To -day I am strong and hearty, with- out an ache or pain, and for my pre- sent physical condition I feel am in- dIebted to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and `can heartily recommend them to anyone suffering from nervous trou- bles." You can procure Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or they will be sent you by mail at 50 cents.a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing direct to The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ontario. Ships' Mascots. A correspondent of the London Morning Post, who has during the 'star seen service in the Grand Fleet, raises the question of the disposal of mascots in ships that have paid off. He draws a pathetic picture of the "nucleus crews" of mascots that have served their country and are now on their 'beam -ends. ' "Mascots of an kind," he writes, "are carried in H.M. ships. Gazelle and monkeys are the favorites out East, but goats and ibex are by no means unknown. In colder waters, however, the cat and dog are more in 059 an cv p&p .,.....mom-,,. "Papa Does It." How can I bring up my 'children to do right when their father does not do as he should?" asks many an anxi- ous mother. .'How can I teach them the evils of drunkenness, when he breaks the law to get whiskey?` How can I make them see the bad effects of smoking, when he always has a pipe in his mouth? How can I teach them politeness when he is a boor, or table manners, when his are outrage- ous? In short, how- can I teach them uprightness, when their father is without principle, unless at the same time I teach them disrespect of him?" It is a sad state of affairs when things come to each a pass ;n a home. One would almost feel like asking the mother why she ever married such an excuse for a than, were it not for the fact that we have so many mis- mated couples in our midst; were it not that every day girls are deceived by false show. Knowing this we can but feel sorrow .for the woman who must endure life with,,.� boor, and see miniatures of him graving up around her, whole she seems powerless to change. "Papa does it." How many moth- ers are told that when they correct a child for something radically wrong. And what shall the mother do ? Shall she cling to the old standard of ethics, never to hint to a child his father is anything short of perfect, and let him do the thing he should not, just because `papa" does? Or shall she make herself a new standard, and be brave enough to tell the child he must do what is right/even if she must tell him his father is doing wrong? Isn't the Iatter course the only right and just one? Why should children be allowed to come up with- out proper training because their father chooses to ignore the rules of right conduct? Why should they bel allowed to think wrong is right, simply because -their father doe., the 1 I wrong? Why should they be taught to think any man can do no wrong. even though that roan is their father? They are going to be terribly disillu sioned some day if they are given i this idea. Isn't it better" ter, start' them right ? No mother has I the right to refrain from giving her children a start to -1 wards the best, simply because she is€ afraid, they will learn to think disre-! spectfully of their father. If he is not worthy of respect they will quickly learn it. Indeed, the worn?:r who takes this course is not fully shoulder-' ing her responsibilities, It is her duty to teach her children the things right thinking people demand of them, even if she must tell then the brutal truth of her own this -marriage.' Some time the children are to go predominance. r tinto the world and learn what is de-' "H.M.S. Emperor of India, second mended of true men and women. flagship of the First Battle Squadron, What will they think then of the had two mascots that will always live mother who failed to do her duty? In their minds she In the affection of the shipis company will be on a par —Candy and Ginger. Candy was a with the father she taught them to bulldog, essentially a flag -officer's dog, respect. But if she has trained them and was only seen in the AdmiraI's cabin or on the quarter deck. At the first sound of the band he was up in one bound on deck, and tore round joyously with the men at drill. He had an unpleasant temper, but this was hardly to be wondered at in a `salt -horse.' Ginger was the most aright they will have only Iove and pity for her, for they will understand at what a cost'she taught them. Child training Drs not just for the day. It is for the future—the eternal future. The mother's one thought should be not "What is easiest for me now?" but "What will be best for human of cats and the idol of the my child -fifty years from now?" mess decks. The men made her a small hammock, which was slung How 1 blade Money. every evening, and there was no more I live on a farm quite a distance fascinating sight than to see Ginger from town, and as father is always jump ,into it when the men were piped down.' " busy attending to farm work, and as mother. is still busier with housework, e The earl is the onlyI nearly always had to make the trip p precious stone which does not require cutting or to town in our little auto, to make the necessary purchases, other aids to bring out its beauty. On the way to town one Saturday Artterloa,s &"ionser Dog, n•omertles lElooe on DOG DISEASES and Now to Peed Efailed Free to.ana Ad- dress by the Author, Clay Glover Co., Sue, 118 West 31st Street New York, Sac selling at the, same old -price Set. toted boor litre sugar Cane Treacle. Vice it regularly. Toed it to your Cows, Pigs, Horses, Sheep rad watch them tae on weight. sprinkle it over irtrew, oiii Ziay, and III miter fodder. st Keeps Stock Healthy Builds Flesh Faster cows Give More Milli It auto down moat of fe*5ing. & ible cozitiitioaer a,t d.mt:44e41Y renew:AU. cost, 3ga,pe of mire ett.e+arcane+ uzclaertia. :Say it by the barrel. Obtained from all firrrt-class des110 f, Fiend lax voiding circel.eara a.n1t ,rlctl. Cane Holo Co., of Canada, Limited 11$ St Paul at, West, Montreal, Quer morning I stopped at a neighbor's • place a few minutes. • While there I "heard her exclaim: "For pity's sake! ' I will have to go to town to -day, and I have so much work to do that I don't see how in,,the world I can spare the time." Right then and there I had a great . idea. I asked her what she needed lin town, telling her that I would do her shopping for her. She was much pleased, and insisted upon paying me for my trouble. I refused to take pay, but told her of my idea. She thought it was good, So, as soon as I had attended to my purchases I returned by the neigh bor's house, and then went home with our own goods. Then I drove to ;:each farm house within a radius :Of • ten miles, and expla}'nett to eadh pros- pective client that if she was too buesy , to go to town, I would go and do the purchasing for her. I charged, noth- ing less then, twenty-five cents, no matter how small the order, as I could not afford to go by oat -of -thee way places iron lase, Sometimes 1 lnaile a$ melt as $1 from one client on a trip, the amount depending upon the weight of the purchases. As the farms here are connected by telephone, I never had to go by a farm to see what was wanted—I merely took the order by phone, then delivered the goods. From that time on, I had all the commissions I could attend to. I hired a girl in my place to help mother out when I was not at home. Besides • the commlission from each orient, as sooner -my busi- ness was well established, merchants began to allow me good commissions on the big orders I brought them. I transact all sorts of errands, and I am busy from morningtil night. I make• good money at ,a 11 seasons, but during the busy season I average, clear of expenses, about ;$ .5 a week. And during the few idle hours I had last spring and sumn...eri allised a garden of my own. From this I cleared $45, besides a lotief canned J tomatoes.—. C. t-- Far Fetched Book Titles. As fa: as book making is concerned there is much in a name, and many a novel has owed its success to a curiosity provoking titre: Neverthe- less some great novelists have taken but little trouble in the matter. "Wav- erley," Jane Eyre," Nicholas 'Neekle- by," "Middlemarch," "Tyin Jones"—, tie -name a few examples at random— offer no special attraction to catch the attention of possible readers. None of Thackeray's or Dickens's •titles are of an alluring or particularly sugges- tive turn, save perhaps "Vanity. Pair," "Tho Mystery of Edwin Drood," and "A Tale cf Two Cities." Some other novelists have devoted special care and thought to o the inven- tion of attractive titles. Willie Col- lins was much exerciser about the naming of the book known to fame as "The Woman in White." ;The 'story was finished, and part of it was al- ready in type for serial publication be- fore a name had beenefound "Literally at the eleventh hear," said Collins himself long afte • r "1 thought of `.The Womn in ti i various quarters this was docla ad to be a vile melodramatic title 'net would ruin the book. Among the very few friends who encouraged me the first and foremost was Char:es Dickens. 'Are you, too, disappointed?' I said to him. 'Nothing of the sort, Wilkie. A better title there can not be!' "-a verdict which the reacting public was not slow to indorse. "No Name," "Af ter Dark," "'Miss or Mrs." "The Haunt- ed Hotel," and the like, ' have all prove:l alluring enough to hesitating readers. George Eliot's Utica are mostly or the straightforward, pedestrian.oyder. but she is said to Lae e.had great trouble in fixing on cne for the book finally named -"The Mill on the Floss." Hawthorne, with his natural instinct for the picturesque, and the suggeso tive, found titles which were not only attractive, but full of suggestion What could be better than "The. Scar let Letter," "The House of the Seven Gables" and the "Marble Faun?" Of recent years novelists have vied wih one another in the invention of LET "DANDERINE" SAVE YOUR clAiR Hurry! A few cents stops hair falling and doubles its, beauty sek. , LL A little "Danderine" cools, cleanses and makes the feverish, itchy scalp soft and pliable; then this stimula- ting tonid penetrates to the famished hair roots, revitalizing and inalgorat- ing every hair in the head, thus atop - ,ping the hair falling out, getting thin, scraggly or fading, After a few applications of "Blonde:• ine" you seldom find a fallen hair or a particle of dandruff, besides every hair show,, more life, vigor, bright- ness, color and thickness. A few cents buys a bottle of de- lightful "Danderine" at may drag or toilet eounter. *far fetched mines, intended to be ar- resting and enticing, but whioli are often merely "conceited," In the old sense of the word, and strained, But for titles which are full of quaint eon- oeits we must go back to the earlier day of our literature. The romancers of Elizabethan days revelled in fan- tastic titles, which were doubtless en- ticing enough to the limited reading public of that day, Painter's "Palace of Pleasure" is a type of maw book titlesesimilarly constructed. Crossing the Bar. Sunset and evening star, And one clear call for me! And may there be no, moaning of the bar, When I put out to sea. But such a tide as moving seems ' asleep Too full for sound and foam, .When that which drew from out the boundless ,deep Turns home again. Twilight and evening bell, And after that the dark! And may there be uo sadness of fare- well, When I embark; For tho' from out our bourne of Time and Place The flood may bear me far, I hope to see my Pilot face to face When I have crossed the bar. —Tennyson, Buy' Savings 'Stamps.. BABY'S OWN TABLETS ALWAYS IN THE HOME Once a mother has used Baby's Own Tablets for her little ones she always keeps a supply on hand, for the first trial convinces her there is nothing to equal them in keeping children well. The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach, thus driving out constipation and indigestion, colds and simple fevers and making teeth- ing easier. Concerning them, Mrs, Saluste Pelletier, 9t. Dumas, Que., writes:—"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for the past ten years and am never without them in the house, They have always given the greatest satis- faction and I can gladly recommend them to .,.all mothers of little ones." ;The Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or direct by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Where the Smiths Come From., An old lady, in London for the first time in her life, saw a glaring sign on the front of a high building, which read: ' "The Smith Manufacturing Company." "Lawks a mercy," she remarked to her nephew, "I've heard of Smiths all my life, but I never knew where they made 'ern." 'e Flower pot stains may be, removed from the window sill with wood ashes. 0717., i; z ere A� es -r.;, - J. A. Sirt-+nero Limited, Toronto • Succe,lsfuii Since 1x56 -1113 easy to make claims for seeds—itis another t'-, n3 to' be able to substantiate there. We aro emphatically able to •ria`our claims good be- cause our record for "seeds that grow" has. gone unbrol:enfor 64years. Fri- seeds, bulbs,. plants cf ail kinds, trust Simmers' goods. THEY G \0 Y1Tl. lirri: