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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1916-04-14, Page 60 How a u. c Pak hy Lydia Vegetable Tatmtona Rim--" I bad pal i• both Wee and when my periods cue I had to star at home from work and suf- fer a. long time. t Che day a woman came to our hou,e and welted' .:my i mother why I was suffering, Mother - _ told her that I suf- fered every month and she said, 'Why don't you buy a. bottle of Lydia E. han'avegetable Compound? My. mother bought it and the next nth was so well that 1 worked all the month without staying at home a day. I am health now and have told lots of tit. "---Miss CLARIGE MORIN, 1 Street, Taunton, Maas. Thousands of girls surfer in dente verY'month rather than consait a phy- sician. If girls who are troubled with panful or irregular peeiods, ba headache, ung -down - sort, Witting spells or indigestion would take Lydia E. Pine hum's Vegetable C m - Lund, a safe and pure remedy made from roots and herbs, much suffering might be avoid -ed. Write to Lydia E. Pinkbam- Mese Gan—Lynn, Masa. (eonfidential) for free she whitdt win eve helpful. CREAM WANTED 1'STORY OF A WEATHE VANE. We have our Creetnere now in ful. operation, and we want your p itron- age. Wa •are prepared to pay you the highest prieeefor your cream, pay you every two weeks. weigh, sample and: test each oen of great .carefully efti<lly ► and give you statement of the ewe: 'Wt also supply esu free of charge, and: give you an honest business deal. 'loin and see us or drop us a card for 'particulars The Seaforth Creamery seittofth 0 n Stratford, Ontnrio You Can Secures a- Posit—on if yoi tie a 'course with us. The de- solated upon us for trained help is *any tunes the number graduat- i. Students are entering each week. You, may enter at any time Write at once for our free catalog. I , A. McLachIan, Principal.; ats Wanted Seaforth Oatmeal Mill We are again on the market to buy any ci}uantity of good clean oats at the S afort h Oatmeal Bills for which the highest Bash rice will be paid. Walter Thompson & Son, Ltd. 3 Le h ,st .§503 bOOc••O anssesevassisa For information that'fill lead to the discovery or whereabouts of the person or persons suffering from Nervous Debility, Diseases of the Mouth and Throat, B'leod Poison, Skin Diseases, Bladder Troubles, Special Ailments, and Chronic or Complicated Complaints who can- not be cured at The Ontario Medi- cal Institute, 263-265 Yonge St.,. Toronto. Correspondence invited, Newt ' Was $o Weak Cavil Net o lip Stairs Witkout Help. Whan the heart biomes weak and not d its work properly the nerves Oteccane sestbreng and the whole system to go "ail to per.'} -When this happens you need a tanic °t build up both the heart and nerves, and Mil's Heart and Nerve I i his this for you, provid ng lo not let your case e rem tole long and allow it to become chronic. Mm Omnaqe lxwerchire, Port iCouignge, Que., writes: "Lash summer ;my hast and nerves were so bad I could step at aught, and my heart wean,. I ootdd, not go up stairs hos& My doctor said he could do oo nore for nee as ma: heart was dorapletely done. A cousin ot mine awe en one day rand toldr'methat 's Hit and Terve rills oved her completely. I kumediatey gave her 50 cents to bang toe a bon, and mute that day there is s box always on my sides. I am VOW and'nervesare apogee, Om when I was a little school girl.' I aurae with heart trouble to tom] lime No doctor ea.n beat tom." Milburn's 3 Nerve 4 b , $1425; for Baal l dedere; davit *n of price' The 'T.303b s t - _ Why a Grasahopp r Tops t , change n tondos If ,you e'er go to London a P lat of interest t 'ere you dbliabuildin know Esefige. here is a of that buil ;.;2. R aIse -rte -itt f ►r We. a env interesting r sshopp Bran ngland b is :old, wanted to get rid‘of. So sh tt up in a shawl slid" fold it der a bush in a fie rand 1 - to e ie"ualess some one shot and take care of at Shortly after a Isle boy w home from school As he the place he heard a grasshol ing in the field. H stopped to listen to it. Th n he ellx But just fis he e caugh sib` He let he �b3 Mother. taby and out flo be !way de - new was was ed with that this: One 'day, :too ago, a mother in font, a few moats e 'itQyi1 ong the will visit as the cupola at_ ing rom a- age cry eon - r. it Is I' 00 years d sits W- ide she wrapped downy un - t it there fl ><d 8x d it e s co passe aper c x 1110 zbed the fence to get it about to catch it the baby close by. hopper go and, taking the b arms, carried it home to h She took charge cf the brought: him up. lie turned a good, pious boy.Ce Was tided in doing w at he t right and in not doing what wrong. When a young men he we * t to feon- don and entered into busin ss ere. He was successful ip busine s ani1 be- came rich. He wag not onl' rich but great He was knighted n d is well known in English tustory as ' it T om- as Gresham. The, royal Esc ng© was built In honor- him. A nd .b bad the grasshopper pa as a we tber ane on the top of it in emory o the on. derful way in whi ,h when an fent itis life was saved by the giod provl dence of God.—Richard Newton in Bi• ble Models. g l 1 by ,rp- nent• over was t o his HIGH COST OF LI Things That Are ere Co - ` Used to 14 L'uxuRie No economist bas put mon on the fact that iif the co is higher how it is to a la because the average maxi is 'more comforts and ;luxuries, must cost more. before t plumbing and bathrloonis th missed some oneroia bills, not ready to thro the phi of the house. - ' 011 is cheaper for! light th ity, but people pay More fur light because they want service even at he higt Workmen by the tusands ographs, a form o enterta awn untila. ver few ye Even street cars' are rat thing, and the poorest ' fans many dollars evera year to,� ice, which has beeeme Indi Magazines are purchased no people who ten i+etrs ago subscribed for such a public1 Thousands of articles are every- department store, o merge pereentage are purcha� time or other by ! the ave earning fondly. Modern living does cos suredly, but it also, yields 11NG forts isle' • h pha t of 1irin€ ge e ten em uI1dini and e dins o wo ma but b u .eieetrics u tuo eru e bette er Duces ave hos + me ti nue rs a sera {new • dies pert this sere ispen abl vby an had e'c t ation � for s le w 'Ch_ ed at some age wage ino aS c ore.• .UBLE • BAD IR Yields to Shreveport, La.- $"toad ach trouble for y and weak Y could a. ; ay y walk work. My app - was would not digest, I weak and nervous. f 'i tamed dies without help. I I saw tised and tried it, and now trouble is coma etely well." E. L. Vinol is guaranteed to time tired, over -taxed andweakened of the stomach and bad Stag came std or do an my d waa vel any ys• to ad I sus the' erveS CHAS. ABERRART. Druggr t, Seatortl . THEY PUZZLED HURLEY. Terms In Which He Found It Difficult to Define His Bea f. Huxley once. wondered • hether his was a deist, an atiheist, an + gnostic, u pantheist, a materia list or a skeptic,' an idealist, a Chrii. n; an i' fidel or a freethinker. And he more he reflect. ed the deeper - his' obiem. What a swer will any one make? Dr. :fame C. Fernald in Isis ork "Synonyms ant tz his own belief, as- oIlows: "The deist admits the - e istenee o God, but denies ghat the Christian Scriptures are a revelation from Hiro:. The atheist denies )that ther as a Go '. The agnostic denies either hat We dd know or that we lean. kno ., whether there is a God. Tl a 1 epti a doubts di vine revelation. -'The infidel is an oppro'rious tern that might once almost hay been salt to be geographical; in Its r nge. Th. crusaders called all Moham ++ edaue in fidels and were s called y theitu it return. The word s consmo ly a;hp1iet to any decided op . anent of an accept ed religion "A freethinker la inclined or addict ed to free thinking 4 especial y one. wet rejects authority 9r tnspiri tion i>~i rc liion, A mater' list tate s interes only in the mates' or bod ly net Liss ties and comforts t life..: .-pau'tl.eist accepts the doctrine of pan heisir ' A idealist idealizes or seeks : n ideal. o ideal conditions. A 'Chris Ian. on. whose profession and life ou.form t the teaching and example f Christ. "Pantheism is the doctrin + that: Go and the universe are ideutia.l.j`- I!t co trasts with atheism as the os eve d uial and with agnosticism is the do, Matta doubt of tlee existe # ce of ,Go it opposes that fcbrn of d : isin hit denies the divine #mrnaneu e area sep Grates God from the world. ' Keeping a Lamp Cd Once in two menials 1 s wicks from. the btirnersa an in soda water. In minutes 1 take t them with an old,i dry. 1 lag the -wi about hem out oothbru chs strati an. parate the boil the - or fttee and.' e;lea ' rinse l ht .t e ik U�1 le THE N re sroom ire hair qur head e4ommend. all I"93" Hair c. ]ti es awe dandruff, makes tis hair !.gloosy without treas- M ss, steps the falling out and, pr mete a a healthy growth. So lee shale at. Rexall Drug at rias; 60 . aarci $I.O6 hordes. C.., Williams Oruggt Seaforth ,4t F • ri f Cc E ti tnewr pliable. Th (pot tee hot) til 'all disc Drains `wipe sene, adding each lamp• give a beauty' is no ;rear •Tnsy win oe w111te anti the lamps with suds let stand awhile un- gs have vanished. fil an los but and refill with hero• a teaspoonful of salt to Lamps treated this way ul bright light and there an explosion. Sing Di erent Songs. "Pa, you g bass in the choir, don't you?"' askedBobby Smithers. "Yes, niy s _u" replied Smithers. "And ma sings soprano?" "That s right" 11j there's one tiling 1 don't un•. n ." e Is it " "Mr Tomkin: says you sing mighty !big in publ'lc end mighty small e home.' a "w Ideist; he New Chauffeur Era, Old ntle " _ ? `(eeigeighienew chauf- feur) offeur)--- sum, is I can write to last 1 ploy r for your dere r'r Chau ur--1 and sorry to say, sir; eac of the ast t « o gentlemen 1 have b withed , a my service,-- do Punch. "Myi ed the "Thea a taller ed ,ilio other p Brow thoughl Yon m' Judge. pillow star h 're s s goo r, as tile. you de ood Reason: Is awfully bard," remark ars:er. uff;d with feathers fro ," explained the confirm e helped bimself "ata an oft i Mistaken. ick to town again? were a farmer. Green the roma .mistake I' did. Fro tfii Ship's Well. An Old la "y en board a vessel served two ailora pumping up. _wa to wash th dks, and, the being ;pear, she accosted limn t8. f lows: "Well, tai taro, so you've got a aboard, eh?'l "Yes ma'am; always carry one, the po itg tarn.. "Well, th is clever. It's so mu better than . he testy sea water, wut Ii alwa 's d' lik so.' F4te pf a Duchess. We nave lied excellent morals draw from the sujbstantial waist of the V nus of; Milo for the admonition of a e fashionable • otjnan. But what can we say- alpout he 'Duchess de Mazarl who 4. Du -al ells us in "Shadows • f Old P Sris") "d ed in 1775 from tlg i t lacing, alth.ug she had posed for statue of V nu ?" "The doct "So?}' "Yet first now he • ha went." " "I call th The best ,Eronblos anE be cured by Epcactly So: r knows 1 hate camphor. he made me sniff it, an prescribed it as a lin t rabbling it in." gay to live is to cast awe cof tent'lons, which ciinn fretting, that ski u • isease of yours frons healing :rms! When a sore b oon}es ' radio it is because the e Kra !mill of germs ;not only o the !surf ce skin, but 1n the undo lyinlg ,,its : ue$, -and thele must e rea4hed nd destroyed before t e skin dis ase can be permanent y cured. T do this you Must use an ointment that has etrong germi dal 'prop a °ties as well as unusu 1 powers 1 penetration. Zarn-Bu has both 0rdinay ointments, ' when a plied, never get farther than t • e surface -Skin, owing to the ani fate and miiheral ingredients fro which th y ; compose , Zam-Bu being co p' sed only f he dial., e :epees, o such . r rad..nattir I tear 'i ' Or . Orating i t> tha iti :t`li .e -sable, de tatog p. an_ t oroughiy thea el .. . mores,- Then the he : l- ing, - e, Os ef': Zarn.Buk act tip + n • the OSS11 - ' n such a*.nmanner th t the p ,• the ofly ne • , h the lie h. This i 'a�pidrl volops, u til the diseased Parts e entirely ep d by new heal + y tissue an ur skin disease is pe manenti cu 'ed. Per of sires, ulcers, abscess and Bbl.. ,-p/oisozninlg Zam-Buk equally .:•ood; also for burns, cu s bruisss� d all akin injuries. A druggist 50c. box, $ for $1.25, p,ost, fr for pries from Zara - Co., Toron EXPOSIT(} The Great Battle of Mercy Won by Florence Nightingale. WORK OF THE GREAT PION She Changed tho Military Fii plial From a Shambles Into a Life Imo= Ing Station and Became the Mather of Modern Nursing Methods. Florence Nightingale, whose death occurredin1911 at the advanced age. of ninety, was a revolutionist in the most splendid sense of that termo She it- was who revolutionized nursing to that extent 'that she may be considered as the mother of that profession. Previous to her entrance into : the field the sickq were the victims- of callous ignorance and grasping in. difference, but Florence Nightingale in- troduced the trained, skilled and gentle ,hospital nurse, district nurse and mili- tary nurse of today. Certainly to few women—and to few men—has it been given to serve their fellows so splendidly and so elle live- ly. Florence Nightingale found ao4 In military hospitals; she Brea or- der and all that order implies. After the battle of alma, the Crimean war, the military hospi I at Scutari was like a dirty shambles. Wounded men died in hundreds in the midst of squalor and vermin. Crowds of poisonous flies bueze,d cease essly above the sick; medical supplies were inadequate; proper food could nbt be bad;' there were no arrangements for washing or sanitation. The plight' of the wounded soldiers, bended together in this hotbed. of ,pew fence, was worse thaa if they ha been left upon the battlefield. "Are ;there not devoted women among you," ?wrote Ruisell, the famous war correspondent of the London Times, "able and' will- ing to go iyortb and administer to the sick and suffering soldiers in the east in the hoz-vitals at Scutari? Are noise 'of the da ghters of England at this hour- of ne d ready for such a work of mercy?" This app 1 was answered almost in- stantly. S die y Herbert was then at the bead .of the war office, and when the authorities - began to betaumdated by lettere !from'teennen or all classes anrions to -respond to the call Mrd Her- bert's tbo ,ghts at once turned to the lady who was in his opinion the one woman capable ot organizing and tak- ing aking out to the Crimea a staff' of nurses. The wora i was Florence Nightiisple. Miss Nightingale was thirty-four at the time, and from her childhoi she had devoted herself to the study of hospital ntirsing and hospital aaanage ment. In 1849 she had enrolled herself as a volunteer nurse at the__ first train- ing school I for sick nurses established inmodern times—the Deaconess Insti- tution at aiserworth, on the Rhine. When the .war broke out there was no woman in all England letter fitted than Florence Nightingale to give to England's ;soldiers comfort and relief. Mr. Herbert wrote to Miss Niightiu,-. gale and alked her if she would On out and superaise the whole thing.; His letter crossed one from her, for on the same day Florence Nightingale had written to the war office offering her services in the hospital at Scutari. The offer showed splendid courage. Within a' week of' making her resole, Miss Nightingale had her Brat contin- gent of nurses in marching order. She had selected thirty-eight nurses to se - company her, and they arrived at Scutari on the day before the battle of Inkerman. And without a moment's loss of time that lady in chieatand her staff set to work to cleanse the Augean Stable which they found waiting for them at the great barrack hospital. In a short time the place was entire- ly renovated. Everything was scrubbed, old clothes were burned, a kitchen and laundry were established, and the place became a comfortable, well organized hospital. `Florence ,Nightingale super- intended everything. She worked ss bard at the routine and organlzing as at the nursing itself. At all hours of the day and night she would walk 'silently, lamp in hand, through the wards, giving a word of comfort here or instruction there. She saved the lives literally of hundreds. Wounde1 men, so horribly mangled that doctors gave them no hope, and other nuurres could not bring thea t - selves to touch them, 'were saved from death by pie tireless care of tlsis one wonderful' woman. The men worshiped the very s sadow of this "lady with the lamp" The supreme womanliness of th work of Miss Nightingale made her tate idol of the Englisk people. Three mea- archs paid their teibt;tte to her. Re. toemberedj by royalty she Was not for gotten by, the people. epi her return, : shattered ' in :health. from Scutari, $250,000 was prated to her by a. grateful illation. She used it all tpr the founding of the Nightingale Trai*- ing HomeFor Nurses at l Tho hospital, ngland, which is praetit the parent of modern training !hones ithroughout the woi d, just as Florence Nightingale was the mother of an prs- ent day nurses..• i i' i ng Diwii: _..- Redd—He started out with k $6,000 automobile • Greene ; •And what car is he It now? "A street car." Liked Variety. Judge --'leo two of the ..wiWesSes tan the same story. Lawyer -1 arranged it that way, your honor. I didn't want the trial to,be too monotonous 4or yct. However mean your life is, meet it and live It, not shun It and call it bad names. Obildren Orwr f' FOR FLETCH R'S CASTORAA 1 1 1 TEIE BEAUTY OF SUNLIGHT is that every garment washed with it bears the im ttess of purity a purity begotten of sweet, Clea sing oils, and maintainedby absolute clean- liness in manufacture; a purity exalted by the co-operation of workers united for the purpose; aurity demonstrated bythe "$5,000 guarantee" whish rests upon every bar of SUNLIGHT SOAR 5c. A substitute for Sunlight is not as good and never can be. Insist upon the .genurse-•—Sunlight. Soap. The name Lever on a Soap is a guarantee of Purity and xceilenee. 11 LEVER BROS., LI TORONTO l Peint the sT 'Fit of neighborhood improvement very a _ • The ad bright co ors of spring have reiiacc 1 the somber 'hues of 'n . Grass is green ow, rs are springing into bloom. Nature is providing a! beautifill setting. Is 'your house in $" ar- rnony- or do the fresh -looking surroundings only serve to emphasize its dullness? Does it complete the picture —is it well painted? Now's the time of all times to dress up your home in fresh, new colors. The first essential in home improvement is goad paint, and the paint that you can depend upon to be good is You take no chances, you know exactly what the contents of every can of "High Standard" will do. Forty years of experience and count- less exposure testa have made this knowledge definite. ' Chemical analysis of the raw mater- iais and thorough machine mixing insure a uniform product. You get In ` High Standard" a paint that works easier, and spreads farther than, cheaper paints—ea paint that hides better and protects better the surface of your bnii-dine a paint that does not fade, that hokis tight to the sur- face in perfectly protecting coats—that faits only by gradual wear and leaves a good surface for repainting It actually dost! ,less to use this better paint and get its perfect protection. It goes so much far- ther—and it lasts so ranch longer on the building that its use is true economy, Ask us for an ate on your paint requiremen Sole Agent