The Exeter Advocate, 1917-5-24, Page 3STRENUOUS WORK
.SOON TELLS ON YOU
13u iness Men and Bread` 7inners.
the Victims of Nervous
Exhaustion.
When worry is added to overwork
men s,00ll become the victims of ner-
vous exhaustion — neurasthenia — the
''doctor calls it. Some have no reserve
strength in their systems to bear the
strain; othersovertax what strength
they have. If you find that you are
nervous and not sure of yourself, that
you sleep badly, and wake up tired and
aching, your nerves are out of order.
' Other siguls are inability to take pro-
per interest in your work; your appe-
tite is fickle; your back feels weak,
and you are greatly depres,sod in spir-
its. One or more of these signs mean
that you •should take prompt steps to
atop mischief by nourishing the nerves
with the food they thrive on, namely
the rich red blood made by Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills. These pills have
Cured thousands of cases of nervous
;tlsorders, inioluding nervous pros,tya
tion, neuralgia, St. 'Vitus deuce and
partial paralysis:; Here is an example;
Mr; P. H. Callan, a well 1u1!own bud. -
nese pian in Coleman, PEI, says:
"I owe' my present health, if not life
iteelf, to Di-, Williams' Pink Pills. I
hadalways been an active man, and
when T began to run down in health
paid little attention to it as I t1iough°t
it only a temporary weakness. As
time pawed, however, I found myself
growing worse, and consulted a doctor,
who said that I was not only badly
run down, but that my. nervous system
was badly shattered. I lost flesh, my
appetite was poor, I slept badly and
notwithstanding the doctor's treatment
grew so weak that I had to leave my
business and was confined to the
house. Time went on and I was stead-
ily, growing weaker, and my friends
were all greatly alarmed for my con-
dition. In this condition I was strong-
ly recommended to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills, and as the doctor's medi-
cine was not helping me I decided to
do so. By the time I had used three
boxes I could tell that they were help-
ing me. When I had taken eight boxes
of the pills I felt able to attend to my
business again, and people were sur-
prised to see me out. I continued the
use of the pills until I had taken twelve
boxes, by which time I was feeling as
well as ever 1 did, and was being con-
gratulated by all my friends on my
full. restoration to health. I feed now
that if I had used Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills at the outset I would not only
have saved, much money spent in doc-
tor's bills, but would have had renewed
. health sooner. - I cannot speak too
highly of this medicine, and would
recommend it to every man who feels
weak, nervous or run down,"
111"`• Yon can get these pills through any
medicine dealer, or by mali at 60 cents
a box, or six boxes for $2.50, from,The
Die " Williams' Medicine Co., Brook-
ville, Ont.
VE�IIAT, NO .BURGLARS!
I:Iow Criminals Have Won Distinction
on the Battlefields."
It's an ill wind that brings good to
no one. One unforeseen result of the
long-drawn-out conflict has been a
large drop in the population of our
prisons. Onlythe other day Dart-
moor, one of the most famous of our
convict prisons, says an " English
writer, was converted to another use;
and most gaols in all parts of Great
Britain are experiencing an unusual
dearth of guests.
This is not due to any wholesome re
formation on the part of our burglars,
pickpockets, and other criminals. One
great cause is the fact that most able-
bodied professional criminals are in
the Army, where those opportunities
for the ,exercise of their profession are
restricted.
Police supervision has been so much
simplified by National Registration
and the Conscription Acts that even
those criminals at large know how
difficult a "get -away" would be. Also,
the Defence of the Realm Act has put
a spoke in the wheel of those cosmo-
politan thieves who in normal times
find a happy hunting -ground in this
country.
The Army has offered 'a career to
many mon who have drifted into a life
of crime, and scores of . them have
"made good." One burglar won the l
" V.C., and another man was awarded
the Russian Cross of St. George:
Thin contemporary history of the
Canadian Expeditionary Yyerce
spend by the Canadian Government, is
ofieiai.
r
S f� tore,
klopn t : •y "eHt;oaM unity
Sroueioos voWMa.i.
u rani d' t -:w I,V,rT.?f•b44"".M
DLCTAtis
�<�LOMN60�' LQIZ.D ia. Jbli 5%ROOK 7SNT
!
(sta. 1tA%
"RP.)
PbTAraAa6c AT Aldi Booshi,issi
l's -9
TWO SERYiCEAILE
DESIGNS
33righten The Corner
where you are by eating a
food that does not clog the
fiver or develop poisons in
the colon. Cut out_heavy
meats and starchy potatoes
and eat Shredded Wheat
Biscuit with berries or
other fruits. Try this diet
for a few days and see how
much better you feel. The
whole wheat' grain made
digestible by steam -cooking,
shredding and baking.
Almost like a coat is the blouse of
this costume with its tiny vest -like
front and largo side pockets. The G
development of the costume is in plain
jersey` cloth with trimming of checked
Jersey in green and white. It is a
splendid model foo the all-important
sports costume. McCall Patterns No.
7806, Ladies' Blouse, in 5 sixes; 34
to 42 bust; and No. 7781, Ladies' Four-
Gored Skirt, 39 -inch length, in 5 size's;
22 to 30 waist. Prices, 20 cents each.
Serviceability for playtime and style
for Sunday -school are happily com-
bined in the designing of this little
suit. ` White linen with dark blue
collar and pocket laps will be a cool
and practical development, smacking
of the navy, while in khaki it will have
quite a military air. McCall Pattern
No. 7720, Boy's Sues, in 4 sizes; 2 to
8 years. Price, 15 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCalI Co., 70 Bond St.
Toronto, Dept. W.
•
THANKFUL MOTHERS
Mothers who have once used Baby's
Own Tablets for their little ones are
always , strong in their praise of"'this
medicine. Among them is Mrs. Mar-
celle Boudreau, Mizonette, N.B., who
writes: "Baby's Own Tablets are the
best medicine I know of for little ones.
I am very thankful•for what they have
done for my children." The Tablets.
regulate the bowels and stomach; cure
constipation and indigestion; break up
colds and simple fevers; in fact they
cure all the minor ills of little one&'
They are sold by medicine dealers Or
by mail at 25 cents a box .from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
FLOWERS NOW OR FRFJIT LATER
Every Fruit Blossom Should Be Left
on the Trees to Develop.
In spite of careful husbanding of all
our agricultural resources, some of
them may go to waste through de-
plorable thoughtlessness. Theselling
of fruit blossoms on street corners
may bring joy to winter -weary city
dwellers; but it will also interfere
with fruit production later on when
we most need apples, pears and
peaches for their food value.
The blossom season lasts but a few
weeks each spring, and the flowers are
exceedingly short-lived, so that they
make butan evanescent decoration at
best. There are plenty of other flow-
ers, a host of joyoue little folk of the
spring woods, which are equal in
charm to any florist's offering, and
which may be plucked without harm-
ful results. Provided that their roots
are left in'the ground they will come
up another year with greater vim than.
ever. And for large!' sprays and
bank, effects the dogwood and the 1i -
lac will grow all the better after se-
lective cutting of their blooms. Have
seg such a wealth• to choose from,
there is no excuse for marring the
harvest by picking fruit blossoms
now.
After all they can best be,,kenjoyed.
by visiting the orchard itself and
bringing back a Memory of its per-
fection of colon Lind perfume which
will long outlive a few expatriated
sprays of wilted blossoms, d
Made in Canada
MY ONLY REGRET.
To the Youth of My Native Land.
By Chas. M. Bice, Denver, Colo.
Age bangs with it contentment and
gladness, if the life has been well
spent in doing good to others. That
is what we are here for, and there
can be no consciousness so high and
exalted as than which prompts to self
sacrifice in behalf of a superb prin-
ciple, or to help our fellowmen, which
is the same thing.
To -day democracy trembles in the
balance, having been ruthlessly assail-
ed by a half -civilized autocrat, bent on
its extinction and the triumph of de
spotism in its place.
My only regret is that age prevents
the immolation of all my physica
powers upon the altar of my country
in this supreme crisis.
The country needs you and me. in
this hour of her extreme peril. Would
to God that the body was as young
and vigorous as the mind to take up
the burden of overthrowing insolent
ff
When youth ispall gone, when the
fires that hove men to vocational sue -
ceps are banked by time and the mo-
notonies of life, when 'deep, wrinkles
and white hairs, notify the world that
one is passing, the greatest of all
happiness is the ability to honestly
pray: "Father, I thank Thee, that af-
ter all my years in the harness, I. have
still some little capacity and oppor-
tunity to' serve .my fellowmen."
The greatest of all aline is service.
It not thyself first, but thy brothers.
It is not your career' but the world's.
Not for yourself alone should your
youth, your energy, your ambition, be
made to count, but , for man every-
where, Service!
The great- men of money, like
!.Rockefeller and Carnegie, are anxiou
the last moment to make thea
money serve mankind. The greate
linen, like Edison and Pasteur, labo
night and day with thought that thei
helpfulness may mean world progress
The writers -of things that live, th
s'elentists and inventors, from whose
restless brains spring great truths an
designs that mean human comfor
and happiness, work that humanity
neley move upward, Service.
THE NEW-DORN SOLDIER.
With ,Apologies to the Author of
°`,"
Where dict you
Our comeBabyfrom, soldier
deux?
Out of a business house into here.
Where did you get your aim so true?
From a school of musketry I ca
through.
Where did you get your athiet
chest?
Ask the drill -sergeant; he knows be
How do.you carry that hefty pack?
Expanding my chest, :I broadened n
back.
Why did you join the infantry?
r I'
nm little more than a kid, you see.
r r And how did you get your cheerf.
air ?
i. ( I'm British. No ,more to be 'said,
e l y
there?
d drove ; Once More.,
mamen,+n
Young man, never before in the
world was the opportunity so greati�so
clear for the investment of your cap-
ital --youth, energy, high purpose -in
Inman service, On one side is civiliz
atioe: upon the other, barbarism with
reversion to the beast. This is the is-
sue. Shall public service be the living
and working' for liberty, equality and
progress ? Or, shall 'public service in
the work of slaves that would fasten
on humanity a reversion under which
"might is right,'•': liberty a silly dream,
and equality doled out by the bloody
sword of autocrats?
The only true Service is work for
the Fatherhood of God and the Bro-
therhood of man!
l The young Canadian who shoulders
a rifle to -day, or takes his place be-
hind a ship's gun, has writ before him
high' in the skies, Service for Human-
ity!. It is his mission.
It is his chance for living worth
while, for happiness and true nobility.
It is doubtful if,•he will ever again
find open to him such an investment,
wherein the capital required is not
money, nor power, nor pull, but solely
genuine manhood.
Youth of free Canada! free born in
martyr's blood and mother's sacrifice,
shrivel not up in your personal affairs,
but rally round the flag of your coun-
try.
Strike, that humanity shall, under
God, have a new birth of freedom, and
that government of the people , shall
not perish from the earth!
I fear that many, far too many, do
not realize the danger that menaces
our liberties and threaten all that we
hold dear and sacred in this world,
otherwise there would be a more
hearty response to the call for help
than has yet been made.
Young men of Canada, what capital
for a life career have you, and what
is your aim? You have: youth,
health, ambition, and these are fine
possessions, if not essentials. You;
get them from your Maker, and good
home environments. They are bor-
rowed capital which you can pay back
only by devoting yourself to high
ideals and giving the very best that
i is in you. You lack experience? You
will get that as you Jive and work
along. Sometimes, ydii will get it. in
tears, failures, disappointments and
scars, but it will be the greatest part
of your equipment if you take right
.a—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
b ANY CORN LIFTS OUT,
01 DOESN'T HURT A BIT !
1
I No foolishness!r
Lift your corns
Iand calluses off with fingers
Q —It's like magic!
—o—o--o—o—o—o—o—o—o•—o—o—o i
Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or
ny kind of a corn, can harmlessly be
fted right -out with the fingers if you
pply upon the --corn a few drops of
reezone, says a Cincinnati authority.
For little cost one can get a small
bottle of freezone at any drug store,
which will positively rid one's feet of
every -corn or callus without pain.
This simple drug dries the moment
is applied and does not even irri-
ate the 'surrounding skin while ap-
lying it or afterwards,
This announcement will interest
many of our readers. If -your drug
ist hasn't any freezone tell him to
rely get a small bottle for you from
I s wholesale drug house.
advantage of it, as it comes to you, 1i
and you can borrow even this part of
your life capital by studying and 1 f
adopting the experience of others.
•
•
In asking your aim, we do not seek
to know•whether you are eager to be-
come a banker, a merchant, a states-
man or a tradesman, as these avoca-
tions appertain only to personal for - fit
tunes and caprices. The little man:
with a restricted career, so to speak,
small wheel on which you as a unit,
among billions of other units, will go
"round and round," and be at once .g
useless and forgotten when you fall Su
off; but there is a higher better and hi
more legitimate aim, by striving for
which you pay off the borrowed capital
of your early manhood, and you help
to work out the Creator's purpose and
reach true greatness.
r,.
ere e>lieii =?sem; iii+
NO SLEEP
LAST
Yft a fir wife
was the cans
change t
and 1 !
"There's f
`
S i41 ,
eT
ccs:<- ' •••.t
FARMS FOR SOLDIERS.
New Zealand Plan for Returned Sol-
diers Working Well.
Mr. W. F. Massey, the New Zealand
Premier, reports that so far 250 re-
turned soldiers had been settled on
the land in New Zealand under the
Government scheme to provide 5,000
of her fighting men with a new start
in life.
"The men we are settling --in this
way," he said, "fall into six classes.
First, the man who wants to breed
sheep and requires a large area of
country -perhaps up to 5,000 acres
Then comes the dairy farmer with,
say, 200 acres for 50 cows, which : we
will even buy for him if necessary;
the grower of wheat or another crop,
100 acres; the fruit grower, 20 acres;
the poultry farmer, with ten acres,
near a city; and, last, the incapacitat-
ed man, who wants an acre or two in
the suburbs on which he can earn
something to augment his pension.
"Of course we have not Crown land
for all these people, and in some cases
purchased we have hased land for them
p e up
to £30 an acre. They pay 5 per cent.
interest for the money we advance,
and in ten years' time they are given
a 'free title' to the land, which they
may then .dispose of as they wish. The
only condition we make is that the
men must have been born in New Zea-
land and have served in either the
British army or the Navy. The scheme
is not confined to Inn who Have been
fighting with the N4W Zealand
forces."
I Wonder.
Do ,Cishes`use'the liquid tones
!The world so highly praises??
Could their speak dryly ? And do bees
Converse in honeyed phrases?
That Dodd's Kidney Pills Cur
Rheurnatisln,
Harold D. Bertram Had Inflammator
Rheumatism and One Box of Dodd'
Kidney PIIIs Cleared It, Out of HI
System.
Southampton, Ont., May .14th- (Spe
sial)—That rheumatism is caused b
disordered kidneys and that Dodd'
Kidney Pills will cure it is agai
proved by the case of Harold D. Bert
ram, a young man well and favorabl
known' here, He had infiammator
rheumatism for two months, Dodd'
Kidney Pills cured him.
"The doctor said my trouble starte
with the grippe," Mr. Bertram states
"My hands and feet were badly swol
len and the doctor did not seem to b
doing me any good. My grandmother
Mrs, G. Grasser, advised me to tak
Dodd's Kidney Pills. I took one' bo.
of them and I haven't been bothered
since. I am clear• of the rheumatism."
That Mr. Bertram's trouble came
from his kidneys is shown by his other
symptoms. He had stiffness in the
joints, was tired and nervous, and
there were flaShes of light before his
eyes. He hada dragging sensation
across the loins, was always thirsty
and felt 'heavy and sleepy after meals.
Rheumatism is caused by uric acid
in the blood. -Cured kidneys strain the
uric acid out of the blood. Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills cure the lddneys.
Freddy Is Right.
The teacher's last question was
meant to be a scientific power.
"What is that which pervades all
space ?" she said, "which no wallor
door or other substance can shut out?"
No one had an answer ready but
Freddy Sharpe.
"The smell of onions, miss," he said
promptly.
>J1inard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend.
He Always Had.
The "sporting" son of wealthy par-
ents was offered -a-. job by an old friend
of his father.
"How much will you pay nie?•' he
asked.
"All you are worth," said the friend.
T9'which ho replied with business-
like brevity:
"No, thank you. I can do better
than that."
I cured a horse of the Mange with
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERS.
Dalhousie.
I cured a horse, badly torn by a
pitch fork, with MINARD'S LIN-
IMENT.
St. Peter's, C. 13. EDW. LINLIEF.
I cured a horse of a bad swelling by
MINARD'S LINIMENT._:
Bathurst, N. 13. THOS. W. PAYNE.
Busy Idleness.
Doing; things' that are not worth
while is a pernicious form of idleness.'i
Xeep Minard's Liniment in the house.
Knew His. Business.
Mrs. Smith hired a Chinese' servant,
and tried to teach him how to receive
calling cards..„. She let herself out the
front Boar, and when the new ser
vanteanswered her ring she gave him
pelf card .'
\The next day two ladies came to
visit Mrs. Smith, When they pre-
sented their cards, the alert China-
man hastily compared them vrith Mrs.
Smith's 'card, and remarked as he
Closed the door:
"Tickets no good; you can'
in."
ay.,
'
A.
„,t,
R
ees" 'F�t
SIC 1Np,
til 4 J
y
n
d"
e
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41
in�'�btT
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ii.
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!Yp�a�
rl
r1:1CN/UL Bmal
�.. Ip
Itg ,v sarocTwe
m,e,cae
owr4rsoae
met
'aGI ,14 f1''A{rtunPO
�'rSbI,� pJ'
p,
41:7‘1;9
y� W of
is
don
Bingle
this,
horse
oC
e enemy.
was
s
R
-
ing
composition,
-' limbs
' Ask
. train
- Rion?
,
Itrack?
f
up
mail
Order.
is
displays
lYainard's
of
vived.
this
in
-
Mr, W. Beach'
Daily Mail,
French
hour was
to plough
our heavy
The
a barbed-wire
::Granulated
,
•
yesYeRemedY•
Your Druggist's
5alveinTubes25c.ForBcokoftheEyefrecask
Druggists or Murine
Newspaper
In Belgium
worked
p
are moelded.
for Winard'i
Those
Old Lady—Conductor,
stop before
Conductor
Old Lady—What!
Conductor—no—oh,
the embankment.
MONEY
THE safe
is by Dominion
Chinese
A certain flower
white at night
a red
Liniment
The tanning
the new South
With the aid
circus
A circus
summer
motor. cars.
His
guns
headland
''
50c
old
up
from
Furrow.
Thomas, in
writes: "I
farmer, who
leading out
a fallow well
and in sight
of
barrier."
the Lone
watched fl
even at
his grey
in front
of the
his furrow
Eyelids,/
by expo-
and 6iind
by {duris3
,Dims/Just
a At
Murine Eye
Chicsjo
are be-
macho
` artifici '
as
other,
did the
the sta-
ma'am.
it on the
chased it
money by
Money
in China
but
is one
the
to be re-
that
country
Eyes inflamed
sure toSun, :Dust
quickly relieved
NoSmartin
Eve Comfort,
per Bottle.
fyc liemedy eo,,
Legs.
newspapers
into a papier
which
Foolish
Ran
and take no
Questions.
why
we came to
over a pig,
Was
no; we
ORDERS
way to send
Express
Flower.
growing
or in the shade,
color in the sunlight.
used by Fhssici:ans.
of ostrich skins
African industries.
of motor trucks
cu r s caravan is
has announced
it will tom- the
XEWSPAFFIELS FOR BALE
PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB
1 Offices for ' sale in good Ontario
towns. The most useful and interesting
of all businesses. Full in1ormattori- on
application to Wilson Publishing Com-
pany, 73 Adelaide St.. Toronto.
3ISCELLANEOtrs•
n ICYCLES,' NEW AND SECOND'
1..) Hand, $12.00 up. Send for special
price :iiit. varsity Cycle works, 413
Spadina Ave., Toronto.
CI gNCER, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC:.
'11‘,./ internal and external, cured 'with-
ithout pain by our home treatment. Writs
out
us before too late. Dr, Eellman Medical
Co., Limited. Colling-wood. Ont.
When buying your )Paseo
insist on having an
"OTTO HIG!L"
PIANO ACTION
ZN
America's
Pioneer
Dog Remedies
BOOK ON
DOG DISEASES
And How to Feed
.!fade! free to any address In
the Author
H. CLAY CLOVER CO., Inc.
118 West 3l st Street, New York
,411:* KINGSTON
fu ONTARIO
ARTS
MEDICINE EDUCATION
APPLIED SCIENCE
Mining, Chemical Civil, l4rechanical end
l l.cctrical l,ngi neering.
HOME STUDY
Arte Course by correspondence. Deg ee
with one year's attendance.
Summer School Navigation School
July cind August December to April
15 CEO. Y. CHOWN, Rogistrnr
cense -L
a big knee like this, but your horse
may have a bunch or bruise on iiia
ankle, hock, stifle, knee ox throat,
zTh
.s:i irVAt ' , RI ° it;
Purely !indult—tie poisonous coloring
,Antiseptic --Stops blood -poison
Soothing -Ends pain and smarting, etc.
Pure—Best for baity's rtshes.
Dealt ell sores,
50e. log,, .All Drugglels and Storm
�zs
Fi: 1t{fie°i$`tiy ._..
will clean it oil without !artist up
the horse. No blister, no }Lair
gone. Concentrated—only a few
drops required at en application. $2 per
boftic dcpvcred, neecrihr. } nur ca'e for ppecial [tictrudtiona
Slut Book 8 ivi roc A,BSOT'PB NE, JR„ the ani1-
ep,tle linitirnt for mankind. redrer, Patntu{ 3r Clnnte:
Pnlarred gland{, b'Vrns, nrnises, Varicose Velna,; rlllyf
T'alnand inflatsmclon. PriceS14ndCO, abatridatitrup,ziata,
ordenvernil
e,l
11
, !', t NB; F D t„ tills t.vmans, Meg., Mono eal, Bare,
ilhaorbhia and lrbiolblnc, .Yr,.:arr:made Ia Canada,
ED. 7. ISSUE 26---'14.