Zurich Herald, 1923-08-23, Page 3atst}il"11 Md ert isementQ 1 PALE FACES AND
...,„,„.,90-..01A11,10170aN
to dlstr;bnte samples MO take ordure for
ktah"nlaea 1;0401otd epeotalty,, 10 rlak nig mono',
Honest propogitlon DiemPredocto Co„ Dept, le
Ont,,: '
Due Solely to Weak, Watery
Blood .--A Tonic is Needed.
1Lvlgxt Y'OXEN•—NOTEN Irlto i Alf Wear:
($ootcletl. Nine learn' egnorlapa raucdia9
e;es. BI canto. Dr. RsndaU, Truro,Nora Scotia
OSNTs .OSPORTUNIrY, ltiiAL 'HAIR !Me,
sen easily. Send ten cents Po lull samples.
inn proposition, nkeral commiesfan, borothy- Bair
Net Co., Unica), Building,` Montreal,
WASHINGTON HAND PRE$8.
'V iiAYrl AN reanaRR bolt ♦ TVM4meee-
l/ 'TON nand Press that will take 9 page} of
solpmns, Ions,` Wilson I'ubliehlag Co., Lid,. '111
/ddatdi• Bt. w 'Toronto.
WORN OUT NERVES
ixarnlaton,
Anaemia literally i'tllpoverished
blood—comes on so stealthily that it
Surnames and Their Origin
LORIMER
Variation—Lorrimer.'
Raola I Oleg l n --English,
Source --An occupation,
This family name is one which elates
from the days .of Norman domination
MAGI -URE
Vartatiensa-McClure, Ivlacleod,Mae.
Leod.
Racl el O r ig i n—Norse-Scottish.
Source ---•A• given name.
1t's hard to know whether to class'
in England. It was originally the this Highland Scottish name as Scot-
mere des:e1•iptio-n of oocupatioa, added tish,'Norwegian or Irish, because in
is often well advanced before its Pres- to a man's! given name, to dlstingusli
enee is recognized. Feelings of fatigue him from ether an of the .same .given
and discomfort are the earliest mani- name.-
feetations of the trouble and these are It is in this., manner that a very
seldomtaken seriously. Gradua .y large classification of modern family
small tasks become an effort and ex
STORIES OF WELL 11
KNOWN PEOPLE
J
Girl Designs Irish Stamps. sensitive to noise. The appetite is
The latest stamps; that have been is- tickle and indigestion often follbwe,
'slued by the Irish Free State, the four ' A condition of anaemia calls for a
pence and nine pence denominations, -tonic, one that will enrich the blood
have been from the design of kiss Mil and strengthen the nerves, ' and for
ertion causes the heart to palpitate
violently. The complexioa becomes
sallow or pale and there is loss of
weight. The nerves grow weak and
the victim displays irritability under
slight provocation and is extremely
kicent Girling, a Waterford girl of
twenty-one.
When Miss Girling was an art stu-
dent she qualified as a technical, in-
structor in the Irish Department of
Agriculture, ' as well as a certified
teacher under the Board of Education,
and pursued her own studies with such
success that she obtained a scholar-
ship in the Dublin School of Art.
Mies Girling's design has the merit'
of effective simplicity. On a back-
ground of shamrock is impaled a
shield containing the arms of all the
provinces, with "Ireland" in Gaelic
above and the value below. -
Not What She Wanted.
Speaking of the art of handling cos-
toaners•,-Lord Leverhulme told a good
story the other night. He said that a
certain greGer, after being absent
from his shop, 'asked his assistant
whether any customers had been in.
The reply was, "Yes, one. She wanted
(some apricot jam, but I told her we
hadn't any."
The grocer pointed out that the as-
eds,tant ought to have offered the lady
same other jam, and should always en-
deavor -to sell something similar to
what was asked for if he had not the
precise article.
The next time the grocer went out
he inquired of the assdsta>Lt when he
returned what had happened in his ab-
' s�enoe,.
The employee answered: "Mrs.
Tompkins has. been in and wanted a
tooth -brush. T told her we had not got
`any, but that we, had blacking -brushes
and scrubbingbrt15•hes: She toid me
she hadnever been so insulted in her
Ida."
"What a Pityi"
fiord Balfour's health is not all his
bid fridnds would like it to be. He is
'far over eeveiity, , and the other day
„when "• he was expected at a little
luncheon party, we got a, note at the
last moment :regretting that he was
laid up in bed. It was only a few
4weeks ago I saw him playing a sturdy
game of tennis.
Lord Balfour=I may say he really
'did not want to be made a lord—is, now
definitely resigned from public life. As
everybody knows, he is Lord Robert
Cecil's cousin, and it is, some evidence
Df heredity that his long-time past an-
cestor was Prirae Minister to Queen
Elizabeth, and he himself rose to the
same high dignity. When he passes
ltway the title will not die, although
he'is� a, bachelor, for by special remain-
der when he was made a peer, the title
goes to his nephew, the son of his
brother, Mr. Gerald. Balfour.
Here is a story which Is, possibly not
true, but it is very characteristic of
"A. J: s" manner. When in New York
`the was shown the Woolworth Building.
iThe highest building in the world, sir,"
the was told. "Indeed,,"" said Balfour,
not at all excited. It accommodates
dive thous•oud people." "Does it?" he
remarked with bored casualness. "Yes,
Cdr, and it is ,fire -proof throughout."
Daifour affixed his pince-nez - slowly,
let his eye roam over the building and
then remarked,. "What -a pity!"
SUMMER HEAT
HARD ON BABY
No season of the year is so danger-
sus to the life of little ones as Is the
summer. The excessive heat throws rifle and whirled to plunge away. Like 1111E1 eV beat,
the little stomach out of order so a deer I bounded: To escape, to find a. state in which I was born, it has quicklybe_
that unless prompt aid is at tree to leap into -that was my only come necessary for the sons of the 1
hand the baby may be beyond all thought. A few rods down the slope Dien who wasted the woods and the a
human help before the mother realizes it' seemed a mile—I reached a pine waters to put in overhead sprinkling ;
he is ill. Summer is the season when with low branches, Like a squirrel I systemsinorder to grow their garden
diarrhoea, cholera infantum; dysentery, veretebles, while windmills and Irel-
and collo are most prevalent. Any of ran up it and straddling a high limb, •gation aro becoming common,
these troubles may prove deadly if gazed back.
In oily childiicod niy•fatl>er planted
not promptly treated. During the sum- I heard the crashing of brush, the
grain with the ,,sine certainty of liav-
mer mother's best friend is Baby's pound of soft jumps over to my left. inti a full crop, that he had of alter
Own Tablets. Tliey rel late . the Then l saw a big reel •.woofly steernate day and night:
bowels sweeten the stentach and keep plunge wildly down the slope and
"To -day the farmer on my land has
by medicine dealers or by mail a• 25 frightened .ste.r for a red
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
this purpose there is nothing can equal
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills
give the blood all those missing ele-
ments aeoess•ary to give strength to
the nerves, color to the cheeks, and
nourishment to starved organs and tis-
R.R. 2
tis-
sues, Miss Margaret J. Fraser,
u s, g
Thessalon, Ont., has proved the value
of this treatment., She says: "I was
very pale and weak. My blood was
poor and I wag very nervous. I lost
my appetite,. my feet and ankles were
swollen and I was in a very miserable
condition. A friend advised me to try
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I got two
boxes, and found before they were
finished that they were helping me, I
continued the pills until I had taken a
half dozen boxes, with the result that
I am now enjoying the test of health,
all symptoms having disappeared. 1
feel confident that what Dr..Williams'
Pink Pills did for me they will do for
others, 1f given a fair trial."
You can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
"Big Cinnamon Bear!"
Mr. Zane Grey, the writer, has had
some interesting experiences out of
doors. In Tales of Lonely Trails, he
tells this exciting and amusing story
of a bear hunt in which he took part
on a skittish horse:
When we topped a ridge the baying
of the hounds rang clear and full and
fierce. My horse stood straight up.
Then he plunged back and bolted down
the slope. His mouth. was like iron;
1 could neither hold nor turn him. He
was running away! No doubt he had
smelled the bear, He hurdled rocks,
leaped .. washes, slid down banks,
plunged over places that, made my
hair stand up stiff, and, worst of all,
he did not try to avoid brush or trees.
or cactus. Manzanita he tore right
through, leaving ' my coat in strips,
decorating our wake. I had to hold
on, to lie flat, to 'dodge and twist and
all the -time to watch for a place where
I could fall oft safely. ;
But I did not get a chance to fall off.
A loud , clamoring from the hounds
close behind drove .Dry horse frantic.
Before he had only run; now he flew!
He left me 'hanging in the thick bran-
ches of a juniper, from which I drop-
ped, blind and breathless and stunned.
Disengaging myself from the broken
and hanging branches, I staggered
aside, rifle in hand, trying to recover
breath and wits. Then in that nerve-
less and shaken condition I heard the
breaking of twigs and the thud of soft
steps right above me, Peering up with.
my half -blinded eyes, I saw a huge red
furry ,animal half obscured by brush.
A shock came over me; I felt a gush
of hot brood that seemed to turn to
toe. 'Big cinnamon bear!" I whis-
pered hoarsely.
Instinctively I cocked and leveled
the rifle, and, though I could not clear-
ly see the red animal bearing down
the slope, I fired. Then followed a
roaring crash, a, terrible breaking on-
slaught Upon the brush, and the huge
red mass flashed down toward me.
I worked the lever of the rifle, but I
did not work it far enough down; the
next cartridge jammed. I tried again.
names came .into being throughout the
twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth cen- land in that form,
furies. "Lucid" wa's a son of 01ave, a bro-
Often such a descriptive appellation 'titer of 'lelagnus, the last king of Man;
would, through 'common usage, develop for Fairly early in the Christian era the
into a family name during the first Vikings' lead conquered and established
generation so that in. the minds, ofr
dense• it is each one of them.
Degiuing as the old Nors,ey given
name of "Leoid," it became the name
of two Highland clans -as Macleod, was
taken to Ireland, where it became,Ma
elute, aid was brought back to Scot -
speakers the name would designate f theinselyes a,•long the western coast
the man directly, and Ito reference ! of England and Scotland. Hismicas-
to his calling be lost .sight of, Some_ I try traced back through six genera -
times, it would not be until the second 'tions to Harald the Black, who was
or third generations that ibis almost king of the Norsemen about the time
intangible change would take place. the Normans invaded England.
One vital factor in the stabilization! There: are two branches of the clan
of names was the; fact that so often he founded, the Macleods, er, if you
the sons followed the same occupation choose to call them ea, the two clans.
as the father under the social and in- One of these is known in Gaelic as
dustriai conditions• of feudal days. "S1ol T ormod" (Clan Norman, or Nor -
In anda
In its earlier and descriptive form ,m nso n) the other as Siol Tor-
the name of Lorrimer, or Lorimer, ap quil" (Thu kildeon), though in English
pears . as• "le Larymer,"' the "le" be -
of
are .referred to as the Macleods
ing the, same as the modern Prenclr •af Harris and the Macleods of Lewis.
"le," and meaning "the." Even at a After the defeat at the Battle of
very early period, however, its use ori Worcester, certain of the Macleods of
omission appears to have .been op- Harris, fled to the north of. Ireland,
tionaL with the speaker. It was, of wgere the tendency was to pronounce
oourse, entirely dropped, as soon as the final "d•" in their name as an "r,"
the name became a family name. The i thus giving "Macl•eor," or Madam. In
"lorymer" was one who niade bits I this, form the name returned to Gal -
for horses. lovway in tkr•e seventeenth cent:dry.
In • vain;, The terrible crashing of that the fruit trues. aro killed outright.
brush appeared right upon me. For an . "The The even temperature and the
instant that seemed an age I stood riv' •rains every three or four days which
eted to the spot; my blood seemed we knew in childhood are things of the
congealed,` my heart was choking me, past. Summer in these days means
and my bongos was pasted to the roof to scorch for weeks at a stretch with
of my mouth. '.Chen I - dropped the
In Search of- "Limits".
Some years ago, Professor: Dewar,
by boiling liquid hydrogen in a
vacuum, reached a temperature within
about 50 degrees of absolute zero. This
temperature, described aa that at
which the heat energy of matter abso-
lutely disappeared, is no leas than 490
degrees below zero Fahrenheit.
Man's mind is not so constituted
that he Is able to comprehend space or
infinity, and to the average person.
these words, mean little, if anything. -
Yet in regard to positive science we
are now reaching points which, like.
that of the intense cold mentioned, are
absolutes so far as terrestrial exist-
ence is concerned.
At the same time that Professor De-
war was experimenting . with liquid
hydrogen, other men of science, such
Horizona.
Ter&. steres: gone to .grass. He felt as.
'hough
The clover and the daisies under
", stood
•By what negleot they had been al-
"' iowed;to grow. •
Well, thinking about an orchard did
no good.
And then he gathered back to him the
dream:
Next year it would be different — no
more need
Of hiring help or some one
•.` team;
No more of seeing then acres
need.
else's
go to
Almost before we know it summer's
hare,
Andgrase, to be of any use at all,
as• Moissan and Acheson, were expert- Has. to be mown. The wheat is in the
menting with eleetric furnaces in - ear;
TieTobac�af Qua1iy
V2 LB '1.
and in packages
asseewszaeralwis
Would Quiet Him no Doubt.
"Listen to that fellow out there rais-
ing Cain! He says I've got plenty of
haotah and won't give him any."
"Well, if you want to stop the row,
why don't you give him a drink?"
Three sets of claws of different
sizes enable a new hammer to pull a
nail from; any angle.
The a ansattott's STronosz Dog .emedies
which temperatures • as high as 7,000 patient cow keeps munching in "
degreesFahrenheit were obtained•.
her stall; Booms en
Under such heat nickel and platinum
burn like wax, and even the best fire-
brick is consumed, leaving no trace
behind it. Yet science has•not yet
yeached the absolute of heat, and it is.
not 'known what that temperature
would be.
By the use of wave -lengths of light,
the scientist can now measure accu-
rately to the seventy -millionth part of
an inch. The mechanism, which le
very complicated, shows a , startling
difference . between two standards.
made in the same mould.
As for size, theoretically speaking,
there is no limit one way or the other.
But in the Iaboratory man has succeed-
ed in discovering the dimensions of.
the atom, which is now known to be
about one -thirty -millionth of an inch
in diameter.
Yet even the atom is built up of
electrons. These we believe to be the
smallest particles which can or do
exist.
Why Climates Change.
"The wanton cutting of timber is
responsible for the radical change in
the climate of the United States, says
Gene Stratton -Porter, the famous
American author.
"With the cutting of our timber has,
come •a change in our climate; weeks'
of drought in summer and destructive
cyclonic windstorms, winters alter-
nating from a condition so open as to
freeze prematurely forced fruit and
grain, and winters so stringently told
�•,,:- DOG DISEASES
Barns have been eaten empty of their
hay and Sow to reed
Mailed Free to any Ad -
Next year, perhaps . Neat year , t dress by the Alathey.
Y3 cls d�lovss. ao tne"
'138... , est .m t-4: Street
Leslie• Nelson Jennings 1 New Yorke U.S.A.
,be'R find a way.
A "
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a • •Daminian Express Money
Order.! Five Dollars costs: three cents,
Identification.
As anmeans of identification a Eu-
ropean s'oieatist has combined X-ray
photographs of persons' fingers with
their fingerprints..
Keep: Mlnard's Liniment in tho house,
Prevents Accidents.
An automatise locking device has
been invented for street manhole
covers to prevent accidents due to
them being displaced by vehicles.
A 'great many oxeye daisies went to
seed last month. The outlook for an
improved crop for next year is good.
Hawaii is a country of rainbows.
Scarcely twenty-four hours pass with-
out
ith
out one or more of the celestial arches
appearing above Honolulu.
baby healthy, The Tablets Mire sold disappear. I had rnrstaken a wild d,
cinnamon
bear!
no , more idea whether he will get a
paying yield from the wheat, cern and
potatoes that he puts into the ground;
than he lies as to whether the next
l
cyclone will blow itis. house into the
lake or pass a few yards on the other*
side' of it."
Radio for Jap isles.
Japan, is working out a plan to link
her various islands by radio.
A. hurdy-gurdy in London has bion
soured into a "radio barrel organ."
The music box contains a radio re-
ceiving set •with a bond speaker, sur -
Moi inted by a small aerial, The out-
•
One meal a day was the custom of
the Greek patricians; the soldiers and
plebeians had two; only the riffraff
of the 'population had three, and the
Greek patricians were the healthiest
of the population, and lived the long-
est. The moral is obvious—if yot
'rit to apply it.
The wheelwright has a good motto
for .public speakers to reinomber
"The longer tho spoke tho' bigger the
tire."
Ask 1'
r Mlrtard's and take no other.
Would Get 'Em Soon ,Enough.
Female Orator (fiercely) : When
will woman get man's wages'?
Mr. Meek'ton (in audlenoe) She'll fit is novel enough to attract crowds
get Paine Saturday night, P:i' listeners. -
Attractive Proposition
For man with all round weekly
newspaper experience end $400
or $500. Apply Box 24, Wilmon
Publishing Co., Ltd. 73 Adelaide
Street West.
RacKLy
EATMinard's counteracts
ii��aa t h e inflammation,
eases and heals the skin.
UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you
are not getting Aspirin at all
Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Sayer Tablets of
Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians d`rillg 22 years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pahl, Pain
Handy "Bauer" boxes of 12 tablets ---Also bottles of i4; and 100 ---Druggists.
ilrntrIit is tttn trod' n,nrle frnglsternd in Cannciet of Payer \lsnufaeture of Mono-
ncetioartdester of Salln flesskd. While it, Is wen 'known that Aspirin moans i•;aycr
runnteteture, to tiaelet the public altaine imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Compaur
will ,be stamped with their general trade mark. the Bayer 'Crone,"
In the Furrows.
From the cool and dark -lipped furrows
breathes a dim delight
Through tee woodland's purple plum-
age to the diamond night
Aureoles of joy encircle every blade
of grass
Where the dew -fed creatures silent
and enraptured pass.
And the restless ploughman pauses,
turns, and, wondering,
Deep beneath his rustic habit finds
himself a king.
—George William Russell.
Exactly how a bird soars is not a
determined fact.
URIN Tota CannotToy
New Eyes
But you can Promote a
Clean"lieailbyConditiolr
VOIJR ycUnMurine Eye Remedy
, w Night and Morning."
Ueep your Eyes Clean, Clear and Alealthy.
Write for Free Eye Care Book.
Marisa Eye ¢omedY Co.,9 Leal Ohio.Stleal, Mom
. 1VIm
Use Cuticura Talcum
Daily For The Skin
After a bath with Cuticura Soar
and warm water Cuticura Talcum is
soothing, cooling and refreshing.
If the skin is red, rough or irritated
anoint with Cuticura Ointment to
soothe and heal. They are ideal for
all toilet uses.
Soap210. 4lntmeot25nnd58c. Talcum25c. Sold
broughouttheDorninion. CanadianDepott
ana, limltad. 3.1.4 St. Pail St., W.. Montreal.
Cuticura Soap shaven without mug.
WEA1RUN DOWN
AND AILR(G
Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Coin.
p®and Brought Relief Whel'n
Other Medicines Failed
Port Mann, B. C.—"I took Lydia Z
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound became
I was tired and Tufa
down. I had heeele
aches and no appppee
tite and was troubled
for two years with
sleeplessness. 1 tried
nutny medicines, but
nothing did me any
real good. While A
was living in Wash-
ington I was reconl-
mendedbyastrangsir
to take Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound. T am stronger and feel
fano since then and am able to do my'
housework. I ani willing for you to
use these facts as a testimonial."—Mrs.
J. C. Gnnnvns, Port Mann, 8. C.
Feels New Life and Strength
Keene,N. H. --"I was weak and runt
down and had backache and all sorts
troubles which women have. I fonts
reat relief when taking Lydia E. Pink*ham's Vegetable Compound and I ala(►
used Lydia ;G. Pinkharn s Sanativ
Wash. I am able to do my work and fee
new life and strength from the Vegeta*
ble Compound. I am doing all 1 can tti
advertise • it."-- Mrs. A. F. I AMMOND,
72 Carpenter Street, Ireene, N,Ea
Sick and ailing women everywhe
in the Dominion should try I.trdia,
Pinkharn's Vegetable'CompoUrld.
l$SUE No. 32 '- 3.