The Exeter Advocate, 1920-4-22, Page 7L
D
}16
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GOOD MEDICINE
FOR SPRING USE
Harsh Purgatives Should be
Avoided—A Tonic Will Re-
store Your Energy.
Not exactly :.ick but not feeling
quite well. That is the way thous-
ands of people feel in the spring. It
its a sign that the trying indoor life of
winter has left its r -ark upon you.
f:
Easily tired, appe"ite fickle, some-
times headaches eadacltes and a feeling of de .
(pression. Pimples or eruptions m:7
appear on the skin, or there may be
twinges of rheumatism or neuralgia,
:Any of these indicate that the blood
its out of order, and these symptoms
May easily develop into more serious
trouble.
Do not dose yourself with purge-
tives as so many people do, in the
;hope that you can put your blood
right, Purgatives gallop through the
system and weaken instead of giving
istrength. Any doctor will tell you
that this is true. What you need in
the spring is a tonic that will build
sup the blood and nerve. Dr. Wil-
dams' Pink Pills can do this speedily
laud surely. This medicine enriches
tthe blood, Blears the skin, irilroves
(the appetite and males tired, de-
pressed men, women and children
!bright, active and strong, As an ex.
ample of the vaiue of these :.Ifs • we
give the statement or Mrs. S. Mc-
3ui'nie, Tatatnagouche, N.S., who
says: ---"I have good reason to speak
tin the highest terms or Dr. Williams"
Pink Pills. I was badly run down,.
failing in weight, and suffering from
dizzy spells and weakness. In fact
zny condition was such that I was
hardly able to do ley housewbrl:, A
friend advised me to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills: and after using several
boxes there was a noticeable improve -
went. I continued using the pills for
some time longer and found that I
had fully regained my old time health
and strength and was able to do my
tisusework without feeling weak and
worn out tie I did before 1 begau us -
tag the pills." '
Dr. Williams' Piuk rills can be ob-
tained from any dexter in meilicire t,r
by mail at 50 cents a box t'i' six boles
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont,
He Told the Exact Truth.
Doctor (questioning an insurance
applicant)-••-"Anl now fell me what
d(f .you do for a living'."
• .applicant—"I stake money. sir,"
Doctor- "Yes. I know you make
money, but how do you make this
money?"
. pplicaut (somewhat peeved )—"I
'Mike money, sir."
Doctor (exasperate!' ) _,"'\atv, lis-
ten here. I know quite well you make
looney, but,,r; ccnfonnd you. tell me
slow yea maT 'the money?"
t Applicant. "I work in a mint."
Buy thrift stamps.
FOR SUMMER
SPORTS
II
No. 9435 — Ladies' and Misses!`
Sports Coat. Priee, 25 cents. . Cut
in one piece, Cut in 3 sizes; small,
34, 36; medium, 38, 40; large, 42, 44
ins, bust measure. Small size requires
23 yds. 30 ins. wide, or 2%5 yds. 40
ins. wide,
These patterns may be obtained
from your :]oval McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co.,. 70 Bond St,,
Toronto, Dept, W.
Secret of Snnoke Screens..
The secret of the smoke serous
used with such great success by the
British navy in the raids. on Ostend.
and Zeebrugge is definitely disclosed.
They were produced from an acid,
which has to be burned in the pre-
sence of a sufficient amount of water
vapor, othevwise the smoke produced,.
even over the seas, is liable to be
somewhat thin on a dry day. Com-
mander Brock, who sacrificed his life
in the assault on the German defences
at the Belgian ports, devised the plan
to feed the acid in a fine spray into
the funnel of a destroyer, where the
temperature was sufficient to vapor-
ize the acid, and the water vapor pre-
sent completed the formation of the
cloud.
The raven is the first bird mention-
ed by name ,in the Bible.
Quebec supplies 85 per cent. of the
world's supply of asbestos.
Using a cob to )vend a bole in a
grain bag is an expensive way to
save time.
One of the great advances in the
tractor game is the increased atten-
tion paid to the grade of, lubricating
oil supplied for particular purposes.
If ink and berry stains are placed
in buttermilk at once and the milk
changed a couple of tithes the stains
will all come out when washing in
the usual way.
Growth of Canadian Dairying
Canada's dairy product, yielded ap-
proximately $250,000,000 in 1919, Of
this amount, about $655,000,000 -was re -
'calved for exports. These figures
;easily constitute a record for the
Canadian dairy industry. In 1910, the
total value was estimated at $100,-
000,000
100,000,000 and the exports amounted to
nearly $24,000,000. Although the pro-
fuction of most dairy products made a
.airy constant increase. during the
period of the war, the phenomenal re-
cord of 1919 must be attributed in
large measure to market conditions.
(In common with other food products,
rote prices of mill:, butter and cheese
rose rapidly owing to a world short-
etge. Then, too, the more rapid growth
)of urban centres as compared with
e rural poptilation has enlarged the
Meme market, without a correspond-
, 'flag increase in production, Further,
the shortage of labor on farms
throughout the war restricted in-
creased production materially, and
the comparatively rapid expansion of
the condensed and powdered milk
trade affected the cheese industry ad-
versely. Each of these factors tend-
ed to increase prices. Thus, in 1918,
the average price paid for cheese by
the Dairy Produce Commission was
23 cents, f.o.b., steamship, Montreal.
Although similar statistics are not
available for 1919, it is <probable that
the price exceeded. 27 cents. Buttery
prices also established new records,
the average price for all grades of
creamery, delivered at Montreal, was
58% cents in 1919. While the produc-
tion of cheese probably showed a
slight decline, the past. year can be
credited with a record production of
butter and, condensed and powdered.
milk.
Western Canada, especially the
Prairie Provinces, is rapidly increas-
ing its production of milk and butter.
At present, Ontario and Quebec easily
lead the other provinces, bat with a
more general realization of the need
for conserving soil fertility on the
prairies, dairying will progress pro-
digiously.
Modern, co-operative dairying is
less than fifty years old. Already it
has played an outstanding part in giv-
ing such countries. as Denmark and
New Zealand' economic independence.
It has been proved beyond peradven-
ture that no other branch of farming
surpasses it in maintaining and im-
proving soil fertility. However it
would be unreasonable to expect that
prices ' can long continue at the pre-
sent high levels. On the other hand,
labor conditions should steadily im-
prove and advances will• be made in
labor saving devices. It seems reason-
ably certain that dairying -le destined
to be an increasingly large economic
factor in the future' of Canada.
,. rrrn — . • .mr ' ... ^.' 'r un; ..wT--n57i �; • `�` '�..
Children. Should Never-
Drink
ever-
Drin . Tea or Coffee.
They are harmful tO §rowth and
development and have a particu-
larly bad effect on. the nervous
system.' of :fie child.
Give -Lb-4, children
and avoid tea and co > harm
.•../ P ..9',;,!� 4i:5 " Y.!*.Q".:.ti. hk�':c"1 ,.w.,ll!:=AC4G--r„ 421r:
The Poetry of Earth.
"The poetry of earth is never deed,"
said one who knew more about it titan'
most of us; and it is certain that the
beauty of the natural, world is as,
varied as It inexhaustible It is not
necessary to go far to seek the beauty,
to travel in strange countries, or to
explore wide waters. The most ap-
pealing and the mast exquisite loveli-
ness is all about us every day, throngs
in upon our senses, once, they are
awake to it, with a, delight` sutfleient
to obscure and banish the haunting
misery of life. And the loveliness' 1i
most abundant in common things.
The delicacy and the secret, creeping
growth of caseal weeds and insects,
the large and quiet drift of summer
clouds in the unfathomable sky, are
endless revelations of beauty, every-
where and at all times accessible.
Such ample and enduring pleasures.
are not confined to a small class or the
wealthy. The capitalist, with all his
millions, may not grasp them; the
poor laborer or the simple- child may
have au instinctive enjoyment of them
that money cannot buy or privilege
confer,
Yet how many, rich and poor alike,
and wise and simple, are completely
insensible to them. We pity the
grossly blind, whose eyes are obvious -
ler shut to the necessary vision of
even the common. things of life such
as are essential to our animal needs.
But we do not think of the far great-
er number whose spiritual vision is
sealed, so that they are utterly un-
conscious
nconscious of all those rich possibilities
of joy, which need only be seen to
make us happier and calmer and th re-
fore more profitable to ourselves and
to others. Hew many millions of men
and women there are who live in the
self -secluded isolation of Peter Bell:
A primrose by a river's brim
A •yellow primrose was to him,
And it was nothing more.
No doubt the poets can help us
greatly to the vision of the poetry of
earth, They can unseal our eyes and
help us to. use them, Best of all, they
can quicken the imagination behind
the eye.
But, after all, it is our own imagine, -
tion and our own eyes that must be of
service to us. We must learn to give
our imagination rein. We must learn
to open our eyes and not let care and
trouble seal thele. "I aril a. man for
whom the visible world exists," said
Theophfle Gautier, Can you say it?
-THANKFUL MOTHERS
Once a mother has used Baby's Own
Tablets for her Iittle ones she would
use nothing else. The Tablets give
such results that the mother has noth-
ing but words of praise and thankfuI-
ness for them. Among the thousands
of -mothers throughout Canada who
praise the Tablets is Mrs. David A.
Anderson, Next/ Glasgow, N.S., who
writes:—"I have used Baby's Own
Tablets for my children and from my
experienee I would not be without
them. I would urge every other moth-
er to keep a box of the Tablets in the
house." The Tablets are a mild but
thorough laxative. which regulate the
bowels and sweeten the stomach;;
drive out constipation. and indigestion;
break up Golds and simple fevers and
make teething easy. They are sold
by medicine' dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
A Human Document.
It is expected that sailors and sav-
ages should be tattooed, and side-
show performers are often notable
examples of the art; but a French
coachman originated the most extra-
ordinary design ever worked on a hu-
man body. At the time of the Dreyfus
trial he had at least one. hundred and
twenty illustrations. of the case, in-
cluding portraits of the leading per
.sons connected. with it, tattooed on
himself. The tattooing took almost
two years. It almost seems that, when
he dies, he should be not buried but
filed.
1Niinard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend.
Dredged Up From Ocean's
Bed.
In the old days, when fishermen used
only nets or lines, the bottom of the
sea remained undisturbed. The com-
ing of the trawl has changed all that.
As most people are aware, the trawl
•is a kind of great purse, or bag net,
the jaws of which are made of timber
and iron. It is dragged over the bot-
tom of shallow seas, thereby captur-
ing the flat fish such as plaice, soles,
turbot, etc., which live in or near the
bottom.
But much besides fish comes' up in
the trawl.
A huge mammoth tusk drawn up on
the Dogger Bank proves that, at some
formes period, this was all dry land.
Many other bones and teeth of long
extinct animals are trawled up on the
Dogger, and sometimes pieces of am-
ber, which is fossilized' gum from
trees that grew onwhat is nowsea
bottom.
Clay . tobacco -pipes of queer shape
and great age have been found off the
Essex coast. On some of them young
oysters were growing.
We get history in the shape of glass
bottles of fashions so strange i and
ancient that their very origin is un-
known. Glass, heiiig pr'ctically im-
perishable, remains on the site of a
wreck long after the very, timbers
have dissolved away into nothingness.
Coles are never found, for they are so
small and so heavy that they sink
STHMA
If on have Asthma, don't.,
imagine that you must al-
ways suffer untold misery.
Relief quick, sure and sal
is guaranteed in even the
worst caves by using
TL NIP LETON '$
RAZ.IVIAH
cApsufLES
We
we Willosennd you e,
free sample of these cap-
sules. confide
n•6 that you
Will find them all We have
Claimed. Write to Tem-
sr1etons, 142 Sing St. W,.
Toronto,
Sold by reliable druggizts
eVerywlisre ter $1.04 a, boa.,
TEMPLETON'S
l'3E4EUMAT1C CAPSULES
For fifteen years the 'standard
specific for
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Gout
Sciatica, Lumbago, Neuralgia
Many doctors prozcribe them.
write to rempletoss, 10, Ging $t W:. Toronto. foe
PIM &mph. 344 by cck ak q daug6tets arerrenerofor
hilt per fox.
away into the mud or silt, and are
lost forever,
Off the Yorlrshire eoast it is come
mon to find pieces of coal in the trawl,
and sometimes fragments of jet. No-
dules of manganese often come up.
Manganese seems to be strewn over.
wide areas of the Sea bottom, and the
Challenger, on her great journey of
exploration, brought up large amounts
of this valuable metal from abysmal
depths in the Pacific,
Eventually it may pay to 01 up a
ship specially to dredge ]nangauese
froze the sea bed.
Spanish Flu
Claims Many Victims in Canada
and should be guarded against.
Mnard's 1 �
Is a Great Preventative. being one. of
the oldest remedies used. Minar'd's Lini-
ment has cured thousands of eases of
Grippe. Bronchitis, Sore Throat. Asthma
and similar diseases. It Is an Enemy to
Merlins. Thousands of bottles being used
,every day for sale by all druggists and
general dealers.
alIlAiifi'S I,IN1MBNT (`O., LIMLTIIA,
Yarmouth. NM.
r
Song of the Wires.
Most of us have wondered at the
Curious "singing" of the telegraph and
telephone wires often heard along
quiet country roads. It is suggested
by one authority that the noises are
due to vibrations transmitted to the
wires by, the posts, which receive
them from tate earth, and that they
are the result of earth vibrations iden-
tical with those that the seismograph,
or earthquake detector, records.
The song of the wires, it is said, is
the song of the barometer; if it ix
low, a change iu the weather may
come in two days; if sharp, it may be
immediate.
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order. They are payable everywhere.
His Understudy.
As the motor -bus rattled and roared
on its way, the small and solemn
youngster stared unflinchingly at the
old gentleman who sat opposite him.
Presently his relentless gaze began
to make its victim uncomfortable, and,
thinking to create. a diversion, he
winked at the small boy,
But he felt even more embarrassed
when the youngster turned to his
young and pretty mother, and said, in
shrill, clear tones:
"Mamma, wink at that man!"
About thirty-five speeies of birch
are known.
When baking bread or calve set a
pais of hot water in the oven. The
steam moderates the oven, prevents
hard crust and lessens dangers of
burning:
f
i
4
•t
GRUMPY?
If Constipated, Bilious or
Headachy, take
"Cascarets"
Brain foggy? Blue devils got you?
Don't stay sick, bilious, headachy, con-
stipated. Remove the liver and bowel
poison which is keeping your head
dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath
bad and stomach sour. Why not spend
a few cents for a box of Cascarets and
enjoy the nicest, gentlest laxative -
cathartic you ever experienced? Cas
carets never gripe, sicken or incon-
venience one like Salts, Oil, Calomel
or hal h Pills. They work while you
sleep.
dtliabicb!i-fidiieer' mpg Remedies
Book on
DOG, DISEASES
Maileand * e t a~'eeat
Mailed I--x'ee d liY" 3-
dre5's by tlio Aptitea.
H. filar Glover Co., Inc.
118 West 81st Street
, New Torii;,
orismcoxjatiS
E D. 7.
ISSUE No. 16—'20.
Lost Hisself.
An old colored woman met a young-
er friend whose husband was in the
rmy, sed the following conversation
ensued:
"An" hab yo' heard rum Jim lately?"
"Yds. les had a lettah yestuddyt."
"An' whale is lie nowt?
`Weil, ah don't know jey zaetly.
His lettah. says hes somewhere in
France, butshe kain't tell es' whale"
"Ah knew itl Ah knew it! Alt for
yo' all de time dat fool niggah 'ud go
ober dere an'git hisself lost."
Helping auffeu,
A salesman was the shoChwing arn elderly
lady the virtues of the car he sells.
He made many turns, and at the pro-
per times extended his arm as a turn-
ing signal.
The old lady watched the proceed-
ing for some time, Then she craned
her neck and looked at the sky.
"Mister"" she said sternly, tappin
him on the should, '"you luto
your driving, It,doner't look likesttend rant
nohow, but it it should. 1'11 let you
know."
dak for Minaret's ana tato no other,
Debtor Sat On.
Poorpaye---"I've brought that last
pair of trousers to be reseated, You
I:now I sit a lot,"
Tabor—"Yea, and perhaps you've
brought the bill to be receipted, too.
You know I've 'stood a lot."
Buy Thrift Stamps.
SATISFYING
R:IL a
�F
FROM LU 4BAGO
Sloan's Liniment baa the
puncta that relieves
rheumatic twinges
Th=s ttiasentlt giving, cn. ye,tian-
scattering circulation -stimulating rem-
cdy penetrates without rubbing right
to the aching spot and brings quick
relief, surely, cleanly, A wonderful
help for external pains, sprains,
strains, stiffness, headache, lumbago,
bruises,
Get your bottle today --costs little,
means much. Ask your druggist for
it by name. Keep it handy for the
whole family. Made in Canada. Thu
big bottle is economy.
Sue., 700.,. $1.10
"SYRUP OF FIGS"
CHILD'S LAXATIVE
Look at tongues Remove poi-
sons from little stomach,
liver and bowels
C -P Aar erttsercents..
'A 8tM asieND POR SALM.
TTALii SP:CTION I{AR102 LAND,
virgin soil. surrounding land under
cultivation, near Battioford. Sask,. Char.
II, Bose, x8 I utherford Ave., H'amiIton,
FOR BALs
NATELL i;,QUII PXre I`I.EWSPAPE*
r and lob printing plant in Easters
Ontario, Insurance carried 31.500. WW
Wo for (1,200 on quick sale, Bos ft..
ilson Tultlislting Co., Ltd.,, Toronto.
FE:i'F3,LttEi.
SSTEVlrtls! • Cfx P.LTTk1 T>;r..IITIL..
e icer +wvilt par you, Write for pile@L.
�t RIF' XOUii„ EMPTZ BAGS—SUGAR.
iti7 flour, brake- saoks to Stevens. Hight.
est prices. Geo, Stevens, 364 Mark St.
Peterbora. tt
BCBOOL Ta&OHERS
- COOL TEACHERS—MAKE REAI
7 money in, spare time—send post
card to Ratepayer Publishing Co.,
Columbine, Tt.ronto.
aor;t` ELM WANT,T•.D..
a.e OFT ELM WANTED. 2 IN. AND
thicker, shipped green from saw.
Do not sell until you communicate with
us. ICeenan Bros. Limited, Owen Sound,
Qnt,
WOOD A SEs.
IF 'YOUILt E A. CAB Pelt SAI416
write me. Geo. Stevens, 364 1liark
Street, Peterboro.
SOAP IRQ2l.
F XQLi
AVE A I'II1F, AND IlAVIC
a car or more of scrap iron I will
come and mote you where it lays. Geo.
Stevens. 364 Mark Street, I'eterboro,
zust pmrarr>rovi;R
1CANCP.It. TtledOite, 1,UMPS, ETC.,
VJ Internet and external. cured without
pain by our tome treatment. Si'rtte tkri
before too late Dr, Bollman 3Sed1'
Co., 3,11nited, Catlingweod, Ont,
1,659,000 women are now doing
what was formerly regardedas men's
work.
LET "DANDER1NE:>
BEAUTIFY. HAIR
Mist Have ass of long,:
;thick, ,gleamy hair
Let "Danderine" save your hair and.
double its beauty. You can have lots
of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair.
Don't let it stay lifeless, thin, scraggly
or fading. Bring back its color, vigor
and vitality.
Get a 35 -cent bottle or delightful
"Danderine" at any drug or toilet
counter to freshen your scalp; check
dandruff and failing hair. Your hair
needs this stimulating tonic, then its
life, color, brightness and abundance
will return—Hurry!
Accept "California Syrup of Ieigs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most
harmless laxative or physic for the
little.stomach, liver and bowels. Child-
ren love its delicious fruity taste. Full
directions for child's dose on each bot-
tle. Give it without fear.
Mother! You must say "California."
Luca Hair Is Usually
:Thick and Healthy
Start him right if you wish him to have
thick, healthy hair through life. Regular
shampoos with Cuticura Soap will keep
his scalp clean and healthy. Before
shampooing touch spots of dandruff and
itching, if any. with Cuticura Ointment,
A clean, healthy scalp mesas good hair.
Sean 26e, Ointment 23 and 50e. Sold
th oughouttheDominion. CanadianI)epott
Lt�y,n�mans, Limited. St. Paul SL, Montreal.
affi 'Cutioura Soap shaves without mug.
•
ONLY TABLETS MARKED
"BAYER" ARE AS PIRI� !
Not Aspiriii . at All without the "Bayer Cross's
For Colds, Pain, Irditit,.^.che, Neural- package whioh contains# complete al-
ma-, Toothache, Earache, and or rections. Then you are getting real
Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Neu- Aspirin—the genuine Aspirin pre-
ritis, take Aspirin Marked with the scribed by physicians for over map -
name ".Bayer" .or you• are not taking teen years. Now made in Cang.cln;;
.Aspirin at all. Handy tin boxes containing 1L tate;
Accept only "Bayer Tablets • of lets cost but a few cents. Druggibts
Aspirin" in an unbroken "Bayer" also sell larger "Bayer' packages.
Theme' is only one Aolsiriu--."Bayer" °€'on must say "Bayer"
Aspirin is tho trademark (registered to Canada) of 73ayer lranufaeture of Efono-
eeeticactdester;of Saticyll caeta. while it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer
manufacture, to. assist the public against lmitp,tions, the Tablets of Bayer Company
will be stamped with .their general trade murk, the "'Sayer Cross"