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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1920-08-12, Page 3. ' AUT ISH R ALB PRATES OLD � m s 7 P. , 1. HARD TASK OF COLONEL RONALD ,:irIl oRRS. New Governor of Jerusalem l row's Many Foreign • Languages. The Oleo of Governor of 3orns:tlemn, once occupied by Pontius Pilate, is now hold by Colonel Ronald Storrs, a graduate of (.'alrbridgo University and son of. the Dean of ltocherster Col- lege, England, From CIIasterhouec to Cambridge, their out to Egypt as a Government of- ficial: after sumo years, tranele tion front a Government official into a. Kitchener man; 'Oriental Secretary to the Iter dency in Cairo; prime mover in the ewic'eption and creation of an independent Arab kingdom; tilos then, to crown the rest, at 3S, .Governor of Jerusalem. Suolt is in short tlic car- eer of Ronald Storm. Seventeen years ago walking along to his tutor's; and to-d:ty, for exumple, in the course of itis duties riding out to inspect the final work ordered by flint for the com- pletion of some rock -cisterns, which were begun to supply this city with water but left unfinished by his pre-- deceeeor in office, Pontius I'll, to His task to -day ie one to test oll that there i, in a uta,l. Jet a:..leis 1:1 a city of diennlopa where, whatever may AUTO SPARE PARTS for' most mattes and models of ears. Your old ir1,, 1 or partsS replaced. Write or wire us describ- ing' w :'tt ;0',111 want, \\'e carr; tale largest and Anout complete stack in Canada of slightly triad or new parts and automobile e -tui uncut. We ship (1.0,]), • anywhere in c arida. Matta- factnry er refund in our motto. Shaves .illtth S 1 a s r ,rt t'aupply, 023431 TtuSes iu tat "k'c)ncnto, Oat. Two. Styles for the Small Woman wAewn W,""/ •eke r'vw, Paas the ..Good Along., nge If (Gooch Fortune brings a gilt to you while going on your way, A gift that cheers your very eoul and brightene tell your :day, Co forth end mike another malt Pin in a joyful song; De eoniatiling to make glad souls heart and pass the good along: If a glad smile should greet Your face when eetting forth at morn, A smile that speaks of friendship true, or of a love newborn, Full of the gratitude you feel for friend 1.p true end strong, Show frir iel..:esr to outer folks, and Pee that 0111110 a1ung, .. •ife„get;vcne says -e kindly' word When trtulles "flirt around, And when it scent 3 110 happiness in a dark world is found, Find out another eutiering soul, Whose luck has all gone wrong, Help hint to see the sun once more, and miss the word along. ro�iPip ? �n tit i . •” W. Cholera infantrm is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. It •is a trouble that comes on suddenly, especially during the summer months, and unless. Prompt action is taken the little nue may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets aro an ideal medicine in ward- ing off this trouble. T'he'y regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus prevent the dreaded summer complaints. They are an absalute" `3 ^�• +—'�' ''� -' safe medicine, being guaranteed to 6052 9562 contain neither opiates nor narcotics 2552 Mit es' Dress (suitable for • er other harmful drugs.. They cannot 00111" of the futnra, fur the moment small women; convertible collar; two I possibly do harm ---they always do 1,ioniet1 allyl Alab4" are paesinnttelYti .tyles of sleeve; with loose side pan -1 good. The Tablets aro sold by medi- divlthel, a to et -r 1t just petit b. ole or par..ets). l ace, SO cents. In eine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a t.:(.^f1 them and tt: try to entice. them 3 ::;;e. 14; to 20 yeui::,. Size 1(i re -{box final The i)1, ��'illiatita'' lvledicire to jein hill on that path is t-ltuklc::.`i ciulres i, yds.s-'i ]lle, wale. Width, 1- co., Brockville, Ont. - work. 214 yds Quite tailored and neat is hi„s £tra:lyah and Tact. this reek, with pleats at either side ` of the front, extending from yoke to It :s th;tt, however, to whlelt he 'them. Developed ill linr:n. chiefly cl ,toles himself; twice a week tt'G2— �'Iisses' Dress (w:th tic -on in the C,: vurnorete 1 11:t emetines of i) ,rque; two-piece skirt in two his favolet t "1'ru•Jertt ,: ielil” Sueeety, {lengths; with or without draped apron where 1''1, ech. 110110101 British. Alneri- tunic) Tisco 30 C'^..', In " sizes le cans, and Reties el toT.i.=t• 1..atlere end the Grand 1fufti, c c lit uei r'..cl Men of standing and others wllu are in any way prominent iii the life of the eity- are brought together, and in the course of debate about architectural' improvements or gardens or some other plain benefits, upon which they ell cannot but hold favorable and uni- form opinions, are Ied inevitably to see that they have in common a single eitisenship. As a Governor, i.i fine, his- motto is 'Unify and be friends." Fair and broad, Ile makes a- good re- presentative figure. His languages nee a great accomplishment; Freneh, German, Italian, Greek, Arabic, and (coming on) Hebrew. A line olassi- cist he never fails to get ill some early morning reading of Homer, Virgil, and the 0(11er great 111011. Fret Not! Takes a deal of grit and patience to go forward sometimes—yes! And we all have woes and troubles which afflict us more or lees,' Oft the winds are wild and fearful— there are storm clouds kov'ring near— But there's Iight above the shadows; soon the sunbeams will appear. We must ever keep a-going—ace the good and not forget That the best is just before us— brighter days—why should we fret? So you think you would change places with that other fellow—there? But perhaps he has some burdens which are more than those you bear. Tho' your folks may all be ailing and the cost of living high, And there is no honey waiting in the bark for by and by— Does, not clay to growl or grumble, lots of folks are worse off yet— Help .along some struggling neighbor and you'll be ashamed to fret! For if things were made easy along life's thoroughfare— Wo would soon grow proud and care- less, no ill at all to bear— Blight get lazy in the sunshine and for- get to think and pray If we didn't have some shadows mixed along with ev'ry day! Bear the meadow -lark a -singing while you are in debt! And he sings "Cheer up, old fellow! things will come out right— don't ight don't fret!" Cease your worry then, my brother, ' snake you sick unless you do— ,: who cares for flow'r and sparrow, will Himself take care of yen! Open up the memory pictures, Ii2Va i,�5r__t, 111ttiCii)aL1Uri 'sv,WeO , If you do your best and daily, ev'ry • burden you can sleet. 'Do the first thing that is waiting, be a pian, and don't forget Much depends on how one meete things! Pray and "hustle" ---do 1-' not fret! TO clean white paint dissolve a piece nt 4f ammonia about the size of a wain do half a pailful of water, and rub the paint carefully with a sponge. Dry With a clean soft duster. Secret of Longevity is Courageous ageous i? "ind. Half or more of the :senility in the. world may be traced to unresisting. " sizes, ' _ yielding to a fiction that years are the to 20 years, Size lo requires de.:, yds. 30 ins. wide; contrasting, le, vd. 36 measure of age; half of the aged fuel .ins. wide. Width, 1% yds. and women in the world. could be im- ,elves rn theins it upon The, c p:.�tterlls may h'i: obtained peached for bringing 1 from your local McCall dealer, or by consent the infirmities which; set from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., upon them the harks of decline. • In - Toronto, Dept. W. stead of dodging the scythe of Tina Niirtard's Liniment for sale everywhere they stand resignedly in the grim old reaper's path: He cannot be blamed fol cutting them down. No Substitute for Youth. The ^lsound constitution is not a; Nobody, so . far,has found; a ,real -essential as tire- courageous mind substitute for youth, although some Blany men and women of weak consti- tution have lived to an atd.vanced age surgical experiments are restoring assertedto the mind dominating and sustaining to places that are not too muck have been successful in restoring vi- vented, fre- tality and youthful spirits,. Youth, af- the body. Calm temperament is the ti ter all, is a state of mind as well lis a. greatest factor in longevity. Tho Pete -- span of years. Men and woolen are mon who regards himself a borrower not old at sixty; they aro not "old at of time must worry over an iiclebtecT- seventy, and when eighty is reached itess , which does not exist, which could K AT,> atrr~rW AZ„ SUMMER ASTHMA HA Il- �r,n vV Il, •sleepless nights, constant sneezing, streaming eyes, wheezy breathing:--- 1 a RAZ 't - brings relief, Put up in cap- sules, easily swallowed.'' -Sold by reliable druggists for a dollar, Ask our agents or send card for free sample to Templeton's, 142 King St. W., Toronto. Trout Fish s h Canada. More benefit is derived from recrea- tion ill the open country than from any .o'ther form of amusement and fishing 1S 011e of the happiest met meet health u' giving of pastime:.. Suniar is fish- ing time, and Canada lets I11I.'.11 cow Mime and rivers where there is abun- dance of fish of all varieties to tempt the angler. Trout fishing is amongst the moot popular fortes of this sport. To fish successfully for trout his habits must. be known, His habits in one part of the country will be dif- ferent from the habits of his brothers in the lakes and streams of other di£- fereat sections of the country, The trout loves clear swift running stream:, whether large or small, the bottoms of which ere filled with boutd- ere and gravel. He is wont to slide under the overhanging banks of the streams and under and along fallen trees in deep holes made by these ob- structions of the current. It is oar- iteularly advantageous to look for trout among tee ftlst moving rapids, or in the e idies along the banks. The trout feeds largely o:1 insects. Ile is a lively forager ur food, and he is of- ten seen chasing the email minnows clueingthe ]]fiddle of the day, ted now and then loaning' 111 the air for black files and moths, Ilei likes plenty of exygen, a11(1 delights in the white -cap- ped foaming watt'ra below a fall in the strealu. E.also, B.C., is the headquarters for trout fishers on the upper Kootenay Iake. holiday matters who are visit. big beautiful Banff may catch excel- lent trout in the Bow River. Splendid trout fishing may he had at Nipigon, Ontario, and in the rivers and lakes alnong the " Laurentian Mountains, Quebec; in fact there is trout fishing es; be had - in nearly, all. Canadian waters of any great•extent. But those who are -seeking a big haul should go many of diem refuse to be shelved. not be established In any court 02 law, One's outlook upon life is likely to de- and every one who has signed such a termiue 'wether one is to continue bond ought to repudiate it and win the real living or go to seed. Yoara ago commendation of all courageoussouk men retired at forty or fifty and were Here are a few facts which are cont - not worth much to their communities ,1110]1de(1 to the consideration of all after that. Now a man stays in the those who measure life in years; Sir harness, alternating work and piny. So, in reality, 110 never grows old in spirit, regardless of an accumulation of many years when birthdays conte. Old age is something of a habit. It is easy enough to acquire if one seeks it but if youth is desired one may have Isaac Newton lived to an age of eighty- three and gave prtof 02 his intellect- ual vigor to his dying day. Walter Savage Landor wrote his "Illlaginary Conversations at eighty-five and lived seven years after, John Wesley sway- ed multitudes with his eloquence up it, and forget about the birthdays, to the age of eighty-eight; 'Washing- ton Irving worked at his "Life of Idiotic Advice, Washington" in his seventy-ninth year. Browning was nearly eighty before he ceased to write; Tennyson com- posed "Crossing the Bar" at eighty- three; Victor Hugo did muck of his work after he was seventy-five; when he was eighty-three Voltaire com- posed his tragedy "Irene." Jones, who was suffering from neur- algia, went to the dentist to have some teeth extracted. The dentist, after looking at his teeth, said- -Have you had advice before about these teeth?" "Yes," replies] Jones. "I went to the chemist last night." "And what idiotic thing did the chemist advise you to do?" "To conte to you," was the rejoin- der. The number of officers and men in the British navy to -day - is 136,000, compared with 151,000 in 1914-1915. Ordinary? Just an ordinary woman, just an or- dinary man, And a child so ordinary that on him there seems a ban. But what mysteries lie hidden— Further prying is forbidden— When we call them ordinary—miss we not the Blaster plan? A table drink right in place ? to pocket health to turn disagrees. a that sof ease fits in tea or coffee K p of m -oo'..1 value make the natural to when Gla kilo an1 o) just tea r A rich flavor,.. economy superior Instant Postum bevera•e or coffee *zu Th I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00, I treat- ed him with $1.00 worth of `,IINARD'S LINIMIEJNT and sold him for $`x5,00. Profit on Liniment, $54.00. MOISE D?:I1IOSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. Phillippe, Quo. Is Your Writing Small? It has been said that ninety persons ont of each hundred have literary am- bitions. If you are of the ninety, then your ambitions may be realized, if your handwriting is naturally very small! It is extraordinary, and seems to be something more than a mere coinci- dence, that literary geniuses—practi- cally all of them --write exceeding small. Thackeray's writing was extremely neat, but so small that it could hardly be read. Dickens' penmanship was of t11e minute order, too, That, and his pre- dilection for writing with blue ink on blue paper, with much interlining, made his "copy" a trial to decipher. Captain Marryat's handwriting was so fine that it was said that when the compositor rested from his work Ile was obliged to stick a pin where he left off in order to be able to find the place again. Charlotte Bronte's writing was so fine that it appeared to have been traced with a needle. The salvo "small" rule obtains among the majority of present-day writers. Thomas Hardy and Kipling are instances. The moral seems to be that he who writes "small" has it in hint to write "big" stuff. Incidentally, it may be noted that poets, from Byron onwards, scrawl! The born poet, it is claimed, could not write small or straight, if he tried! Jap English. Japanese laundry circular—"Con- traryto the opposite company, we most cleanly and carefully wash our Customers with possible cheap prices, as follows: Ladies 2 thole per hundred; gentlemen 11A dols per hundred." ED, 7w ISSUE No 32—'20. rrgROM o}J spa_ E &THErg Could Afford Their, Visitor. (looking at portraits) — "What a lot of aneeritors you've got." Newr'eh'---"That s dead right, I didn't rant so welly, but Sarah insist- ed,,, Couldn't Trust Herself, "Margaret, where is your little sis- ter?" "I just hurried away front her, , mother,'cause I felt s.ule I was goin" Classified Advertisements. z'cnt Le.X.21 r 11I011:1:1n Foxes. 11.• ed Bros 13-othwell, Ont.. t1KOL, Sk1Al2].S 1'4'C)ItTHH TWO l R dollar", at sixty -dye cents. Ili r* itan Lippert, Kitchener. Wr'TIrin—S I OBT O'roXIZBs, iLlitcJ.li ONrl; TO x+14 t. 1.•.Eiaustizvf9 JI words. Get real money if yo110 stories are snappy. 'Write t4bv1rt Store Umget. 1i Columbine Are.. Toronto. i•' .n.ra,11 warri'.r .iJ 4Ynau:17 -Sall :{] LA ;I Ks Fort �VV In i 11 n0: c;; in Training' Schoc l: votary with out ,'1 two t ,or ':011(50 to grad ual.;--.oxeoll (,t ,';'I tttnity Write 1120,! ]'lair.. C'ht•.:lt', , Illinois, t'. ..1. to (- nth (.'iricn ;" kicasT,it:a, i" 91 1'sast The Hot:se Want. to lose my temperature." Raspberry Jam. Pickle Manufacturer—"People don't want tonuw.) cell in ketchup, : o we (1(1410020 out the seeds." 1.iri1,1r{itive Friend -"And what do you do with theseeds?" Pickle k\la'iufa tit er --' i'ut 112E 1 in raspberry jam. 1lane 3 it 1041. natural like." MONEY QRD. ERS. Dominion Express Blowy Orders are on sale in five thousand offices throughout Canada. Vreafer 1, Nothing like sba'rrpeos^:ith Cuticf ra.-Soap and hot c n.. c^de:I k'y tca.he.^, crCud• tura C) . t, .-. to opt cion,iv df and Rob- ing to keep the scalp and Iwir healthy. They -are f 1 for all toilet uses. la the moraug eh for nCui]tura Soap, After shavinn h bathing and ore t'nclti cysts of dandrtuff or ul - a c 1 e,;ch. CutIcura Oint- ment. Theo. bathe free, hand and scalp with Cutcura Soap and rot water. Seals lac Ct'ir,taaeat 23, Baa Sok.• Sold throughout: h s 'ominion. Canadian Depat: Imogene, Limited. Se. Paull St., Mone eal. 23"Cutkare Soap eleaysa evit$tor1t Stu.;, E OTHER!, "California Syrup of Figs" Child's Best LaxaLive Accept "California" Syrup of Visa 1 only—look tor the name California on the package, then you are sure your? child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stern- I ach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say "Cali- fornia." The houee I went is stucco htti galow, Built towards t11' nset s golden glow, A cool verandah rcachieg all around, With stets of stone that rise front grassy ground. A library secluded in a w ng, It, qur'intly 1ea.de!i wb_,lows hung to swing, A sieel l' , ft:ieit, and bedrooms pink end ba -.e. A living iia'n i11 ,il.';....e' and creamy 3aa ... The holismI t, . ; to c 1 bungalow, Built lc. >,a11L1( the sun:et S gehicn gioyr, • 2, Ask for Mtrn and n •d take 110 ether. Although only, t',•:, 1.-,',:i1,..4 of the !'+.ips re over 1 ,i ( I l' .. inheight, th; re art;o dozens es• r ) 0r r1•.a_r:s .....,.c:_, ._,_�J9 feet. � f 1, . i3i' li ei ,..T CLOTI1 o -t,..-.. n,P+. Tri t� }1 :T a A s..'at.c .r'»aa a frit "Danderine" save your. £: '.r and double �7 y It beauty y,t '5 011, girls, such lin abundance of thick, heavy, invigorated flair; a per - fent. 11110 8 of wavy, silky hnir, glorious- ly fluffy, bright and so 'easy to manage. Just moisten a cloth with a little "i)atlderinc" and carefully draw it. through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; this magically re- moves an dirt, excess oil and grease, but your hair is not left brittle, dry, stringy or faded, but charmingly soft, with glossy. golden glean), and tender lights. The youthful glints, tints and "Danderine" is a tonic beautifier. Besides doubling the beauty of the flair at once, it cheek: dandruff and stops falling flair. Get delightful Dan- derine for few cents at :01y drug or toilet counter and use it as a dressing and invigorator as told on bottle, �c 5 .".mono g Eioneer Dog Dontodies /took on DOG DISEASES as,ow to 2'ae(1 Mailed Free to, any Ad- dress by the Author. St. Clay Mover Co., Sao. it's West Slat Street . New York, U.B.A , ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" The name "Bayer" identifies the contains proper directions for Oolt1,ti,1 'only genuine Aspirin, ---the Aspirin Headache, Toothache, Thomas), Ne114 prescribedby physicians for over nine- ralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, New teen years and now made in Canada. tie, Joint Pains, and Pain general.` Always buy en unbroken ackage Tin boxes of 12 tablets Dost bti(i of "Bayer Tablets of .Aspirin" which a few cents. Larger "Bayer" paohagel;t There is only one ?ispir%a.-,."Bayer",..Yo'aI mast ear "Bare* c o x p Aspirin is the trade marts (registered In coeds) of Mayer lieni' >;1).1at o, 5111(icactdrstor of Satncylloacid. WW1.. it is 411 lu owti Oat ,,AAPoj kYT-Qlliii , N manutacturo, to assist theb_..t.banst abibati Mayor C owiltbstamrad wipe thoir gOsnrfrtrade }terk,•l1C "ly4rCrob r