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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1921-11-17, Page 3STERN REMINDERS OF RETUMATISIVI The Trouble Must be Treated Through the Blood. Every rheumatic sufferer should realize that rheumatism is rooted in the bleed and that to get rid of it It must be.' treated through the blood, The ol'4 belief that rheumatism 'wets caused 'ey'co1d, damp weather, is now. exploded. Such weather conditions may start the pains, but it Is net the cause. Liniments and outward appli- cations may give temporary relief, but that is all they can do because they de net -reach its sources in the blood. Tlile sufferer from rheumatism who experi- ments with .outward applications is only wasting time and money in de- pending upon such treatment; the trouble still remains, and It is all the time becoming more 'firmly. rooted. Treat this disease through the blood and you will soon find relief. Dr. Wil - Heins' Pink Pills act directly on im- pure weak blood; they purify and strengthen it, and so act on the cause of the rheumatism. Mr, P, J. :-Mac- Pherson, R.R. No. 5, Cardigan, P,E.I., says: "About three years. ago I was attacked with rheummatism. I began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and soon the trouble disappeared and I am in better health than before. I also know of an old. lady acquaintance who was badly crippled with rheu- matism in her arms and legs, and who suffered very much. She, too, took Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and is now able to do her housework. . I tell you this in the hope it may be of benefit to some other sufferer." 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, Ont. The men Who try to do something and fail, are infinitely better than those who try to do nothing and sue- ce,ed•.—Lloyd Jones. British Leaders ers Appeal. for League. A public; letter sigeed by Premier Lloyd George; Herbert Asquith, Lord Grey, Lord Robert Cecil, John Robert Clynee and Sir Hubert Gough, repro- t,enting' nearly Al] political, faction's,, snakes a srtirrring appeai for funds to carry on the work Oaf the League of Nations Union, says a London dee- Patch. It says that without consider- able donations the league remit cur - tan many of its activities. The ap- peal is for'aimilllan pounds, os' "just the cos't for .maintaining one "capital ship for a year." aeate The latter goes on to say that the world will but rally to the League of Nations a substantial reduction in armaments will be possible, We shall' save the million pounds many times over in taxation, to say nothing of what we will gain in security and hap piness, Substitute for Tea. The active principle of tea is "thein,e," That of ooffee is .caffeine. But caf- feine and Moine are exactly the same thing. This agreeably stimulating alkaloid N found in other plants one of which grow wild and plentifully in the South Atlantic States, where it is called "yaupon," or sometimes "Christmas - berry tree." The Indians brewed a beverage. from the leaves of the yaupon long be- fore the first white man landed on this continente and during the Civil War it was used as a substitute for tea by people in the South. The U.S. Government Plant Bureau it experimenting with it, in the belief that the leaves, when properly cured after the manner of tea., will fuenish a palatable cup at a much less cost. 111 In the Island of Rhodes honey is still - a factor in the Marriage rites. -After the wedding the husband -dips his finger in honey and traces a cross over the doorway of his home before the bride enters. Meanwhile the spec- tators' cry out to the bride, "Be al- ways good and sweet as is th'is',honey," Minard's Liniment for Distemper Surnames and Their Origin FREEMONT Racial Origin—Norman-French. Source -A locality. There are two versions as to what the real meaning of the name of Free - moat is, but virtually all authorities are agreed that the family name, as such, is but an English development of the place name of Fremont in • France. Whether this -place was , nsmed "franc-mont" •("free -mount") is a mat- ter that is open • to debate with the Chances somewhat in favor of the former argument as fitting in better with what is known of the motives and habits of early European popula- tions in the development o•f their. place names. In any event the name was brought to England in the Norman invasion and settlement in that country. This period of English history was responsible for the p development of manyfamily a y names. The Norman Army was gathered together from all parts of Northern France, with the re- sult that in such a gathering of in- dividau1s from different communities • surnames referring to the place from which the individual had come natural- ly proved the easiest method of dis- tinguishing him from other men of the sante given name. DENNISON Variations—Dennisson, Dennis, Denis, Denison. Racial Origin—English. Source—A given name. There is really little about this family name that requires explana- tion, except, perhaps, the ` given name from which it is derived, that of Denis or Dennis. • One of the Latin, and more ancient- ly Greek, names for the god of ;'vise was "Di0nysius;" and this Romans car= ried it as a given name into the Celtic provinces of North-western Europe, which they conquered. It- became a Christian name, and even when the Roman Empire fell before the con- quests of the Teutonic tribes it sur- vived, to appear in changed 'form in the new languages wnich sprang up in what is now France through the combination of the original Celtic with the Romanand finally the Teutonic blood. The change was great. It had simply become P Y shortened t� o Denis. s. ;It was• taken to England by the Nor- mans. The form Dennis is a later Eng- lish development. The family name, of course, Was originally a surname denoting the parentage o•f the persons who bore it, and as there were many by the name of Denis in English, the 'surname "Dennisson" naturally sprang up in unrelated cases. Are you, stepping on the brake or the accelerator? The food you eat does make a difference. Heavy, starchy foods often • do slow down body and mind—often steal the energy that be- longs to the day's work. ' Grape -Nuts is a go- ahead food. It contains the perfected nourishment of Nature's best grains. It includes all those elements needed to nourish body and brain. It is easy to digest. It gives energy without taking energy,. How about your breakfast or lunch—does it give, or take? • Grape -Huts is sweet, crisp, delightful to the taste, and is an ideal source of power for :a busy and difficult day, \()`f' ihu ,s y'i lti Il ti �l{lll lJ Once a mother; has used Baby's town Tablets for tier tittle ones 'she would not be without the'n. The '1 )bleu' are a perfect home reInedy, TheY regulate the bowels ancl.. stomach; strive out*constipation and indigestion; bleak up colds and ; simple fever and stake baby healthy and happy, Con- cerning them, Mrs: Nobe A Pie,. Ecuiii Sectini, N.S., writes —"I have found I3aby's Own Tablets of great benefit. for my children and I would not be without them." The Tablets airs sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.., Brockville, Ont. A Railroad Safety Device. The chief mechanical engineer of an English railroad hers recently per fected.and put into operation a device which serves the double purpose of providing - railway carriages with a buffing •appliance and an interlocking arrangement which will maintain the alignment of a train and prevent the telescoping of the carriages. ' The buf- fers are designed with working and re- serve stroke springs' of five tons and fifteen tons each, giving an ordinary resistance of twenty tons per buffer. Should the impact be still greater, the bolts which resist the springs are de- signed to break away at about fifty tons pressure per . buffer and the cor- rugated fenders, to become engaged; These fenders are designed not oniyto prevent vehicles mounting each other, but also to preserve the alignment•anr2 absorb the .shock. .: His Hearing Restored. The invisible ear drum invented by. A. O. Leonard, which is a miniature megaphone, Sitting inside the ear en- tirely out of sight, - is restoring the hearing of hundreds of people in New York City. Mr. Leonard invented this drum to relieve himself of deafness and head noises, and it does this so successfully that no one could- tell he is a deaf man. It is effective when deafness is caused by catarrh, or by perforated, or wholly destroyed natur- al drums. A request for information to A. O. Leonard, Suite 437, 70 Fifth, Avenue, New York City, will be given a prompt reply. advt._ A Clock for Aircraft. The Air Service of the U.S. Wai- De partnient has developed a new and peculiar kind of clock,, to be carried on airplanes. It is "built like°a watch,", having a "watch movement.: and is wound by electricity, being connected with' a small storage: batttery. Hitherto it has been found -difficult ,te get a clock to do satisfactory work on a plane. The 'vibration made the timepiece unreliable, and its accuracy was further affected by. changes , of. temperature with altitude. The new • clock, thanks, to certain "compensation" arrangements, keeps good time at any temperature from 90. below zero to 150 above, and vibra- tion does not bother it. Tests made by the Bureau of Standards have given it a full ind.orsenent. A Fool There Was and— He struck match to see if the gasoline tank was empty. It wasn't. He patted a strange dog on the head to see if the critter was affectionate. It wasn't. He tried to see if he could beat a train to the crossing. He couldn't. He touched a wire to see i1! it was charged. It was. He took a drink of bootleg liquor to see if it had any wood alcohol in it. It did. (Loud shouting and great acclaim by chorus of undertakers), "Eve, Oh!" The temper of the teacher who was presiding over the _ drowsy class was approaching the enol of its, tether. The youngsters were so exasperatingly cheeky that their instructress tremb- Ied with righteous anger. The Iesson was about the history of machines. They had .touched upon Edison a:n,d his voice -reproducer. The boys, however, despite the lesson's. in- teresting theme, were lethargic and lazy. "Now, then," the teacher asked, im- patiently, "front what was the first talking machine made?" Tho class pricked up its oars. Here was a chance to shine. For two seconds forty minds sought for sonte- thing brainy. Then a shuffling of feet at the back, and a voice: "Please, miss, a rib!" • If the Cap Fits. "I never go; to church," said the m liljwiaire. "I guess you've noticed that, bishop?" "Yes, I have noticed it," replied the 'bishop, gravely. "I suppose you wonder why I never go to church, don't you?" the million, Aire pursued, "Well, I'll tell you why. There are so many hypocrites there," "Oh, don't let -that keep you away," retorted the bishop, with a smile. "There is always room for one more." Wonderful! gent • ye c r teal Sister has one as lives ill when it's reline to tell comes out and says 'Cuckoo!' Mrs Casey --"Birds are intelli- an •a c i 'sin anything. My` a slosh, and the tointe 11 as many tainted as the toime is," Mrs.Brannigan--"Itow wonderful!" Mrs. Casey—"It isy itidade. And the Most wonderful part of it all ls, it's time a waoricn bird." 0 OP FROM liERE &THERE Page Vivi( Long Spaces. • "What do you work at, my poor man?„ "At intervals, lady," Something Missing. She --"You are a perfect dear!" Ho ---"Not perfect darling—you have my heart!" The River's Sed. X--"Tliey tell me the river is very 'owe, Y -"Yes, it's ,so low it's couflned to ids bed." 17So .,.:Rose. M. Br Gained-, .2 . In. •Four Declares It's Simply Astonish- ing To See The Wonderful Benefits She Has Derived From Tanlac ,--- Says. Ter- rible Headaches Have Dis- appeared.. is-appeared.• "It'sounds unreasonable, but I have actually gained 20 pounds in less than a month's time by taking Tanlac, and the wonderful benefit I have derived Looks Like It. from the use of this medicine is simp- Jimtnie—"Father; what is an e}:co_ ly astonishing," said Mrs, Rose M, vation?" Brown, 111 Third Street, Manchester, leather—"An excavation is a place N.H. from which dirt has been taken." "Why, I am so happy to be relieved "Isbaby's face one, father?" of my troubles I: can really never praise this medicine enough. Up to — "I wish;" said the editor's wife Force of Habit, the time I began taking Tan!ae, 1 suf- fered for something over two years , with a very bad form of stomach trau- that you were.not so absent-minded." hie. "What's wrong now, my dear'?" "My appetite : was so "Why, when our hostess asked you poor I could if you would have some more pudding scarcely eat a thing. Mydith gas You replied that awing to 'the would be so badly bloated with gas tremen- dous pressure on your space you were sometimes I was almost afraid to go to bed for fear I would actually smoth- compelled to decline." A Reason. Elsie, aged four, refused to talk back when her brother teased her. Her mother said: "It was very nice of you not to answer back, as you some- times do." "Course, I'se nice," said Elsie- "And, anyway, I had my mouth full of pins and couldn't," His Ideas. Youth—"I sent you some sugges- tions telling you 'how to make your paper more interesting. Have you Carried out any of my ideas?" .:Editor --"Did you meet the office - boy with the waste paper basket, as you came upstairs?" - Yoiith—"Yes; I did." Editor—"Well, he was carrying out your ideas." MONEY ORDERS. Send a Dominion Express - Money Order. Five. Dollars costs three cents. Ventilation In. Mines. By an English invention ventilation r ^rifles is .ineasured by the changes ire. loi,stance oY a n-electricaily'heated lees ear which the air passes. — - _ The happy -man has a double chance of beim gooey; the same: rule ap- plies •to, children. cascarets" To -Night For Liver, Bowels You're bilious! You are headachy, constipated, your eyes burn, skin is yellow; your stomach is sour, gassy; upset. No wonder you feel miserable. You need a thorough physic -with "Cascarets" to -night to cleanse the stomach -of our, fermenting food and foul asses • take the t e excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated poison in the bowels: Get a 10 -cent box now and let "Cascarets" 'straighten you out by morning. Anierioais Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on ' DOG DISEASES and Row to Feed Mailed free to any Ad- dress by the Author. 8, Clay Clover, Co., Ino. 118 West 81st Street New 'York, 1:I.S.A. Try a Bottle To -day DR. 1WINARD, Inventor of the Celebrated MINARD'S LINIMENT er. I felt tired and warn out most of the time and became terribly discour- aged over my condition. I often had such violent headaches I wasunable to be out of bed for two or three days ata stretch. 'Tour betties of Tanlac completely restored my health and anyone can see at a glance the wonderful change that has' taken place in any condition. I have a splendid appetite now and the stomach trouble has entirely disap- peared. I can eat just anything I want without ever feeling a sign of Misunderstood. When: quite a small boy, a famous composer was invited to play at a big social function. He selected a piece which contained several long and im- pressive rests. During one of these rests an old lady in the company leaned forward, patted him on the shoulder, and said: "Play us something you know, dear!" Minard's Liniment for target in Cows. Tennis, badminton, and rowing are claimed ' as the best athletic exercises e s 1-1 It 01,3 frne MRS. ROSE M. aeOWN indigestion.. The best of all, I am never bothered any nee. o with head- aches and this was the gre-:test relief of all. I want to tell everybody what this medicine has done ram me," Tanlac is sold by leading druggists everywhere. Adv. for girls. Co., Montreal. Missing a Call. Many a man ie out in the back yard bemoaning his luck when fortune knocks at the front do r. If our bodies were empty of air the pressure of the atmosphere surround- ing us would crush us- to pulp. • LSSGiSmec t iib@ etLioexiienta3. AL1I::S WANTED—;L' ii° PLAIN .eL.I and light sewing al home, whole or spare time; good pay; wu.t> eat any distance; charges paid. time stamp for particulars. National 131anuieeturing COARSE SALT LAND ALT Bulk Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO 40 00 000000 00er J9p Fulness After Eating If you have fulness after meals, a bad taste in your mouth in the morning, fur on the tongue, flat- ulence after meals and no appe- tite, take Mother Seigel's Syrup. It will cleanY our tongue, r ue renew 0 your appetite, give you relish for food and the power to digest it g thoroughly and easily. Sold in 50c. and $1.00 bottles at drug 1 stores. 4-021 OOc.. 006^a000.:=.000":">. QQM'.. yISE, SLOAN'S TO LITTLE aches grow into big pains unless warded off by an applica- tion of Sloan's. Rheumatism, neuralgia, stiffjoints, lame back won't fight long against Sloan's Liniment. For more than forty years Sloan's Liniment has helped thousands, the ; world over. You won't be an excepNo - tion.' It certainly does produce results. It penetrates without rubbing. Keep PAN this old famil friend alwai s handl , NOW for instant use. Ask your neighbor.) 1 At all druggists -35c, ids, $1.40. PLAYER PIANO FOR SALE. ELL PLAYER PIANO IN GOOD LP condition, with a targe number of music rolls, for sale at a bargain. L. Costello, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. BELTING FOR SALE ALL BINDS OF NEW AND USED belting, pulleys saws, c,ab1c hose packing, etc., shipped subject to app r Eil at lowest prices in Canada. YORK BELTING CO., 115 YORK, STREET, TORONTO. Mother! Clean Child's 'Bowels With California Fig Syrup Even a sick child tovee the "fruity" " tas#ie of "California Fig Syrup," If tl;b little tongue is coated,or if yourchild is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold, Or has colic, give a teaspoonful to cleanse the liver and bowels. In a few hour% you can see for yourself how thorn ugh- ly it works •all the constipation paison, sour bile and waste out cf the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers keep "California Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea- spoonful to -day saves a sick child to- morrow. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" or you may get an imitation fig syrup. Made in Canada. Unime Else is Aspirin—say "Bayer" • Warning! Unless you see' name "Ba.yer•' on tablets, yell are not get- ting Aspirin at all, Why take chances? Accept only an unbroken "Bayer". package which contains directions worked out by physicians during 21 years and proved safe by millions for Colds, Headache, eltirache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Itlteumatisitl, Neuritis, Luma liege, - and Pain,' Made in Canada, All druggists sell Rayer Tablets of Aspirin in handy tilt boxes of 12 tab• lets, and in bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Layer Manufacture et 1Vtonoa•ceticaeid.ester of Salicylicacid, While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tub• lets of Bayer Company will be stamp. ed with their general trade ivark, the "Bayer Cross." What Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Did for Mrs. Baker and Mrs. Kiever. Vancouver, B.C.—"I am pleased to say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done me a lot of good. I can now walk about without the aid. of a support and feel real strong again.. A nurse advised me to take the Vegetable Compound and itis certainly helping me. It seems like Heaven to be relieved after months of paha"— MRS. ain,"•—MRs. H. W. BARER 387.4 10th Ave. West, Vancouver, B.C. Albert Co., ]V'. B.—"I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's medicines and they have done me a lot of good. Since than I have been able to do my house- work and I have a lot of work to do as we live on a farm. Seeing your adver- tisement in the papers was what made me think of v.riting to you. I hope this may he' h some one else.' -- Mets. Wer. I'.•. Iturvan Upper Neva Morton, Albert Co., N. B. The reason women write such letters to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. and tell their friends how they aro helped is that Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vege- table Compound has brought health and happiness into their lives. Treed from their illness they want to lepase the good news along to other suffering women that they also may be relieved. If there are any complications you do not understand write to Lydia E. Pink- ham Medicine Co., 1 min. Mass. ISSUt r:o.4R1--'2t.