The Exeter Advocate, 1920-6-3, Page 3ANAEMIA ROBS ITS
VICTIMS BY STEALTH
Conditions of Thin Blood That
Could be Corrected Easily Are
Stealing the Health 'and Eller-
' gy of Many ?Olen and Women,
and Boys and Girls; •
Anaemia; which literally means
ibloodlessnees, is one of the most pre
;valent troubles -of the present day, If
:neglected it is apt to develop into per.
vicious anaemia, ane of the most hope.
less diseases. While anaemia attacks
'teen a.nd boys, it is more prevalent
!among young girls and women and for
!this reason every woman, particularly
every mother, should know how to re-
cognize the signs of this trouble which
makes it approach so -gradually and
:so stealthily that it is often far ad
vaned before the, nature of the
• trouble is noticed. One general sylnp-
'tonl of anaemia i;; pallor. The cheeks
gradually lose their color, and the lips
become pale or white. With this loss
of color there comes a tendency to
fatigue, a palpitation of the heart, and
'breathlessness after slight exertion,
�tftlt occasional headaches. In the
more severe cases fainting spells fre-
gnently occur.
1e ordinary anaeatic conditions, in-
cluding the auaemia that affects young
girls in their 'teens, Dr.Williams" Ptak
Pills are all the medicine required,
Fresh- air, sunlight and nourishing
'red will do the rest. Any woman or
`gill taking, 'Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills
tem tell by the growing redness of her
Fps that the pills are mal:a{ig her blood
ri,'h and red,
Miss • Mabel laaeiet•, Liverpool, N,S.,
Bays: ---"Before I began the use of Dr.
1i'ilifams' !'illk Pills I felt like a com-
plete wreck of my former self, My
Wood was thin and watery; I ataff�:re:l
from, faiet anti dizzy spells, and bad
itd\sdaehe,a aintoet every day, I was
taking doctor's nteaLleine, but it was
net helping me and at this time I was
learning my trade as a wiloress, and
w.is forced through my illness to give
up work. After reading an advertise -
meet of Dr. W illa>anea !'ink Pills one
day , derided to give the pills a trial..
Aster taking two bore I felt that I
was being benefitee, and continued
their use until I lyes fully restored to
health. The pith• certainly did won-
tl"rs for rue, and I menet recommend
then$ too highly."
The purpose of :Ur. Williams Pink
Pills ',a to build up the blood, They
dui this one thing .til they do it well:
'f"Iiey arts for this ie tson an invaluable
remedy in theetsee arising from bad
or deficient blood, as riteumntisnr,
neuralgia, after-effects of the grip and
tevers. atm mile are guaranteed to be
free from epiatee or any harmful
. drug, and cannot injure the, meat dela
este systems. You can get Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills through any dealer
in medicine,or by mail at 50 cents a
box of six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
Banjo at South Pole.
One can scarcely imagine a greater
contrast than playing a banjo in a
crowded meeting in the heart cf Lon-
elon, and giving a performance in the
joy atmosphere of the Arctic regions.
`At the hundredth lecture given sly Sir
,Ernest Shackleton, when he told the
'thrilling story of his last polar expedi-
ition, he introduced some of his old
colleagues, and insisted on the prcduc-
,tion of the old banjo which played so
great a part in keeping up the spirits
of the men who were marooned on
Elephant Island for a dreary four and
a half months.
At an informal gathering after the
$'lecture some of the old songs were
'sung and specimens .given of the int -
Imamate ditties that helped to pass
away the'time alfa, amuse the men the
$tale of whose fortitude and patience
is. Being listened to by thousands of
tpeople from the cushioned seats, of the
EPhilharmonic Hall in London,
Sir Ernest Shackleton tells his ad-
venture in simple, homely language,
,with a sense of humor .that is a relief
rto the thrilling story. The penguins,
Angie pictures, all uncanscious, of their
ondon audience, behave in their usual
amusing way; familiar to stay-at-home.
!people, who love to roam the world by
'tkte.help of more adventurous spirits. '
1
Human blood passes through the cir-
culatory system at" a rate of seven
miles an hour. -
Make Up Your Mind.
He might have been, something -he's
plenty of; brains,
And to labor he ,lan't ,avenetse
Yet 1'nt s•'orry to eay that the fact stili 1
rental=
I -Ie lias "never much coin in his purse.
He always considered just what lie
would 161
And would hope something better to 1
and;
But -the more that he thought, more
uncertain he grew,
And he never" could- make up his
• hind.
Quite often he might have got on the
flood tide,.
Add have ridden to power and
wealth; ,
But he never felt able at once to de-
cide
That the damp wouldn't injure his
• health, •
If Fortune would knack at h+,s door he
would wait,
To her becks and her smiles he was
blind,;
If he opened or followed awes always
too late,
For he never could make up his
iniud.
So Ire's plunging along, and he's al-
ways in doubt
'Whether this plan or that is the
thing;
But the chances that come never lin-
ger about,
Being birds that are strong on the
wing,
He's provided with salt for each alga
tire tail,
And to drop it he's almost metaled;
But it's certain and sure that he al-
ways must fail, e
Since he never can make up his
mind,
Towers For Airships.
How will airships be anchored?
General Maitland, the Admiralty
senior airship officer, who took part
In the IL34's Atlantic crossing, re-
cently gave the following explanation,
says a London .newspaper.
"We Maize that in time," he .said, "an
airship arriving, say, from New York
at ail English terminus, will conte over
a single mast under her own power,
drop tt coupling, and be connected up
by rine or two men on the ground to
the coupling inside the mast. Then
the airship will he pulled down by a
which to the top of the mast, and the
passengers will go down the utast in a
lift,"
Steel towers are now being con-
structed from which it will be possible
to supply airships moored to them
with fuel, water, gas, and goods; and
crew and passengers also will be able
to go aboard from the towers. The
completed mooring -tower will be
about 150it, high, and will be built of
steel lattice -Work.
It is being furnished with a revolt',
ing head. To this the airship will be
closely moored, bow on, and floating
clear of the ground, the vessel will be
able to swing round in accordance
with the direction of the wind. •
An airship making for the tower
will send out a wireless message an-
nouncing her intention, From the
tower head a wire cable will be drop-
ped to the ground and there picked up
by a man who will enter a small car
and drive away some 300yds. A second
cable, weighted with sandbags, will be
dropped from the airship when a
ground signal has indicated the point
at which it will be picked up, and the
two cables will be coupled.
The airship will then be hauled in,
assisting where necessary with her
own power, and when she has been
moored it will be possible to uncouple
the cables and rewind them. The air-
ship will be released automatically
from the mooring tower by mechanism
controlled by one man, so that from
first to last, apart from those en board,
not more than three men will be need-
ed to bring a dirigible to port and
send her out again.
At Night,
The little stars, like armies,
Are softly passing by—
Marching with a noiseless step
tip and down the sky—
Who spoke of sheep and shepherding
Little sheep like these,
Who leap and laugh, and laugh and
leap
Round the old. Moon's knees? •
"There's Mare in all his glory,
Orion in his might,
Sirius with his flashing sword
And his shield ,of light—
Who•spoke of`gentle 'shepherding
`
And looked on such a eight?
i5't• s.-.+. .Sas'7 ,.4?.r.:''u 3•. C•:3,162{>;;.; `=a,!,c , :>nF•. „1:F,:. -.`+u:. •,.*na±vr�;�
For your br,,alcfast
cm
ready- ®-eat od. that rests
but little and is .ill 'of -thy
sound; a.ourish cleat of wheat....
seetreatteleetiteraira
and mal -Led barley. ,'
'• nV 1 1F
APPetizing
Econ.,
n
Grocers Everywhere!
her !
;,-t: "t^.. ..E,. ..i,%.,, 164.. t'. �,�'.:Y ,.S:..i:it„`$,,..:P'+. •<t,+sr: -r--e 7:
rti
Happiness.
There's joy la the song of, the robin
that rests on the twig of the tree,
Andthere's joy be the bane -saes of sum-
iner,`and'a thrill in the roar of the
Oh, the peace and the gladness -we're
seeking are clothed in- all manner
of dreres
And some in the laugi:ttereet children
'may coma to their dream of, success.
There's joy in the sn'tfle of a comrade,
and'joy in the blue of the sky,
Who lives in the suasliitie of Weed -
ship has joy that no money can IJny'.
There is peace to be found in the val-
leys sad calm In the shelter of trees,
And millions of people -are happy in
claiming such pleasures as these,
The man that is proud of his children
owns more than the man with his
gold,
And he that has chummed with the
songbirds has found a delight he can
bold;
There are millions of ways to be hap-
py, too many by far to recall,
And who -lives but for gold and for sil-
ver has chosen the poorest of all.
A MOTHER'S Ana
Onee a mother has used. Baby's Own
Tablets for her little ones she le al-
ways happy to recommend them to
others. Her advice, given after a
careful trial, can be readily followed
with"assured good result's, The Tab-
lets are a mild but thorough laxative
which never fail to regulate . the
bowels and sweeten the stomach.
They always do good -they cannot
possibly do harm even to the youngest
babe. Concerning them Mrs. P. La -
forest, St, Nazaire, Que., writes: --
"For three months my baby was con-
stipated and cried continually. On
the advice of a friend I gave him
Baby's Own Tablets and now at the
age of five months he is perfectly well
and weighs twenty pounds, I ani de-
lighted to be able to advise other
mothers, to use them." The Tablets
are sold by medicine dealers or by
mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
'Williams Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
The Earth's Crust.
Interesting facts concerning the
ea'rth's crust were disclosed by Colonel
Sir Sydney Burrard recently,
"Isostasy” is the particular science
which deals with the structure of the
earth, and Sir Sidney told how all
mountains and heights standing above
sea Ievel are compensated by deficien-
cies of matter underlying them below
sea level, and that all oceans and sur-
face hollows dipping below sea, level
are compensated by excesses of mat-
ter underlying them in the cruet. -
There is considerable evidence in
favor of the view that the cou'ditioir•of
isostasy exists throughout the earthly
crust. Apparently, in a region where
an extra load of rock is accumulated,
the underlying crust increases in den-
sity, and wherever rock is removed or
eroded, the crust beneath .increases in
density. -
"SYRUP OF FIGS"
CHILD'S LAXATIVE
Look' at tongue! Remove poi.
.sons from little stomach,
liver and bowels
Accept "California Syrup of Figs
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 -
ten love its delicious fruity taste. .Full
directions for child's dose on each•,bot.
tie.* Give it without fear.
Mother! . You must say "California.'
Real Trade Secrets.
There are at least two trade secrets
which have been so Jealously guarded
that. -they have'remained close secrets
for hundreds of years, and may never`,
be known• to the world at large. 'One
is the Chinese method of making the
bright and brilliant :color known as
vermillion, or Chinese red, andthe
other is a Turkish secret—the' inlay-
ing of -The hardest •steel with gold or
silver.
Among the Chinese and Tuks1raS
two secrets are guarded well, Ap-
prentices, before they are taken for
either trade, are compelled to swear
an iron -clad oath to reveal nothing of
what paeses in the workshop. They.
must also belong to fgmilies' of high;
stranding, must pay; a Iarge' '`tient• 6Y-
money as a guarantee, and mast fur-
nish certifioetes of good characte}'
and honesty. Theso secrets have been
handed clownfaithfully from One, gene
.ration to another t for hundreds, ai±=
Years, •
Nearly all accordions are made in.
Paris,
NEURITIS
So many have Neuritis,
that painful. paralyzing
inflaxama-tton of the
nerves. Doilotsuffer an-
other day. If you are a
victim. try
lihetunatie
apsu es
Nothing else ; brings relief
eo quickly and eq. surely.
piietona 1142 Sing St
W'., Toronto.
For sale at reliable drug-
gists for fS 1.04. a box -
ASTHMA
Ttempieton's RAZ -MAH Cap-
sules are guaranteed to relieve
AS'I•H MA. Don't suffer an-
other day.
Writo T,e:ripletons,142 ;Xing St.
W,, Toronto, for ireesample,
Reliable druggists sell -ate= at
161.04 a box.
English Bay Road, Stanley
Park, B. C.
Vancouver would be famous if It
had only the attraction of "Stanley
Park," was the opinion of an English
tourist who had circled the globe.
That peerless playground of 1,000
acres of virgin forest, with many acres
of priceless waterfront and over six
miles of marine panorama of park
foreshore, is the greatest municipal
park on the continent, It is fringed
by English Bay which abounds with
mirrored reflections of forest trees
and birds of every shade and plumage
bank on the surface. No bulwarks or
ccean wall mars the beauty, no roar-
ing billows disturb tranquility, but
there is all the beauty and majesty
and novelty of its placid surface with
a soft calling of the waves.
Tao park is picturesque with its
magnificent firs and cedars, and is
largely in its natural state, yet with
touches of the conventional in that it
is encircled by a perfect motor toad
which affords the pleasure of enjoying''
the innumerable points of interest in •
this wonderland. The unique bril-
liancy of the exquisite scenery in the
distance where mountains of grace
and stateliness form a group of peaks,
grey and green and rose-colored, call
ono again and again by their enchant-
ment. Down ti.eir pine -clad slopes,
sylvan streantlets wind their way. A.
variety cf enormous trees, spreading
their branches on the green lawns,
greet the eye, creeping ivy decorates
the base of thee.° giants of the forest.
Walks through the park reveal pic-
turesque retreats where the aroma of
nature in all her bewilderment of
luxuriant gro vth, sweetens the out-of-
doors.
The "Lions," the "Sleeping Beauty,"
"Siwash Rock," the grave of the Indian
Princess Poetess, Pauline Johnson,
who cast over the lovely surroundings
a gracious mantle of romance, are
some of the points of interest.—C.G.
•
_ a
Sand is Guinea Baby's Cradle.
An infant in Guinea is usually buried
in
sand up to its waist whenever the
mother is busy, and this is the only
cradle. it ever knows. The little Lapp,
on the other hand, fares most luxuri-
ously in its mother's shoe. These Lapp
shoes are big affairs of skin stuffed
with. soft moss', and can be hung on a
peg or tree branch safely out of the
way. The Chinese baby is tied to the
back of an older child, who goes about
its play quite ignoring its. burden.
Keep Your H8aIth
• TO -NIGHT TRY
MinartPs LinimflI
'for that Cold and Tired Feeling.
Get Well, Keep Well,
Kill Spanish Flu
by using the OLD RELIABLE.
MIN ARD'S LINIMENV CO., LIM1'ITED)
Yarmouth, N.S.
Edison's First Studio.
Edison's first studio was called the
"Black Maria," It was, an oblong
wooden structure and had a movable
roof. The roof could be raised and
lowered at will. . The studio building was "i�ainted
black both inside and out. Instead of
beautiful scenery for a background,
only the bare black walls, made a uni-
form back far all productions.
-The entire structure was set on a
pivot so that it could be swung round
to face the sun, which was the only
available light.
As one lamp lights another nor grow
less, so nobleness enl.indleth nobleness.
-=Lowell. -
emeriewe P.ioneer ?log 733moalss
1 Soot on •
mein n
4t1:* «-u wr ,, U x coo
?flailed I i'ee toYany Ad-
drede by•the Author.
3t. clay Mover Co., atom
118 Weet 81st Street
.,,New York, U.S.A..
yp �
C /1
1j
!
f 4)
3Cog Ors.
r Eb. 7, ISSUi No. 42.•—'20.
1tg: 1-47:11EY
Not What She Meant.
He (after the proposal):• "Why are
yon crying, ;clearest? .Are you not hap-.
py to know 1 love you?"
She; "Oh, no, dear, it's not that.
I am crying from pure joy. Mother
has altvaya told me that I was such
an idiot that I wouldn't get even a .don-
key fur a sweetheart, and now I've got
one, after ail!" -
Good Example.
A little Ontario girl who had a ban-
tam was disappointed at the smallness
of the first egg laid by the bird. Her
ideal egg was that of the ostrich, a
specimen of wlilch lay on the table in
the parlor. One day the ostrich egg
was missing from its accustomed
place. After a prolonge;i search it
was found near the bantam's nest,
and on It was written these words:
"Something like this, please, Keep
on trying."
A Poultry Problem.
`"Tell me"—'twas a question addressed.
To a maid 'farmeretting•--.
"Should este say of a hen on a nest
That it's sitting
Or setting?"
But a shake of her pretty, fair head
Was her way of replying:
"Tell ate, when it cockles," she said,
"Is it laying
Or lying?"
MONEY ORDERS.
Dominion Express Money Orders are
on sale in rive thousand offices
throughout Canada,
Firm "Demobilizes" Top,
coats.
The swagger cut of the British army
officer's regulation overcoat nral.est
possible the nta.n'tenanee by a Scottish
dyeing establishment of a arvice that
is proving increasingly popular with
doinobiiized officers. On receiving an
array overcoat through the parcel post
the firm, removes all military insignia,
and dyes it.
Ask for Minard's and take no other.
Auto Grocery Store.
The standardized travelling stores
recently seen cn the streets of many
communities in the U.S. middle 'West
represent one of the most promising
of the many attemets now being made
to force down the price of foodstuffs.
Tho big trucks are being sold by a cen-
tral corporation to operate throughout
the country, Paying nothing for rent,
heat, and light, and little for the few
essentials, these operators can afford
to sell meat and groceries at close to
wholesale price,
---- �—_
Buy Thrift Stamps.
Anoint i twis With
Sooting Cuticura
First bathe with Cuticura Soap and
hot water. These super -creamy
emollients not only soothe, but in
most cases heal annoying rashes,
irritaxions, eczemas, etc. Nothing
so insures a clear skin and good hair
as making Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment your every -day toilet prepa-
rations.
Soso 25c, Ointment 25 and SOc. Sold
throughout theDonvmien. CanadianDepot:
L��yym, n,, Limited, St, Petit St., Montreal.
Cutieura Soap shaves without mug,
Classified Advertisements..
S Tk1VD:,is' c0111;PLrs'.E' FERTIL1ZEE
pay you, Georgi►. Stevens.
Peterborough, Ontario.
Pax cabs
o FaL. n4idi.aoo?QpoUrnIlPtqtEtU plsaNanleW1BLEFo=asAPteD*
,Onao: Iniurancsried $1,600. Will
Wftcon
i•ubltstiinx Co:. Ltd.. Toronto.
SOFT >�L W41t D. OFT I L3f WANT"LU, 2 IN. AND
thicker, shipped green from eaves,
Do not sell until you eomrAun cate wills
us, Keenan :Oros, Limited, Owen Sound„
Ont,
&6.DTES ,WYe172'11D.
T ADZES WAI' Tisa.) TO DO PLAIN
J..1 and light sewing at home. whale Lox.
spare time; good pay, work sent any dis-
tance. charges Paid. Send stamp for
Particulars. National Manufacturing
Co.. Montreal.
2,,3 61NT•NG BQUOOL 'OB sztrusEi3,
D 1llGIZTBP.ED TRAINING SCHOOL
Al, for Nurses: St. Bllzabeth Ioopitai.
204 South Broad Street, Elizabeth. New
Jersey. Complete course. ?Monthly al-
lowancet first year0 00, seeond $10.00.
third 515.00. Address: Superintendent.
1L'srSCF.,“...4 l PVI.
ft »" QICR, 7.'Lla10.1i3. Lt191t'B. L^TC
L/ internal and external. cured without
Eatore}too hit* mDMsdtcM
co, Limited- Retlingwond, Ont,.
Antipodes island, not tar from New
Zealand, was thus named because it 11:
directly opposite to London.
Minard's Liniment for Sala everywhere
Coffee sold for $20 a pound when
first introduced into England about the
middle of the seventeenth century.
GIRLS! DRAW A
MOIST CLOTH
'THROUGH HAIR.
I.:et "Danderine" save your
hair and doufile
its beauty
Oh, girls, such an abundance of
thick, heavy, invigorated hair; a per -
feet mass of wavy, silky hair, glorious-
ly fluffy, bright and so easy to man-
age.
Just moisten a cloth wit's a _i.tti t
"Danderine" and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time; this magically re-
moves all dirt, excess oil and grease,
but your hair is not left brittle, dry,
stringy or faded but charmingly soft,
with glossy, golden gleams and tender
lights. The youthful glints, tints and
color are again in your hair.
"Danderine" is a tonic -beautifier.
Besides doubling the beauty of the
hair at once, it .checks dandruff and
stops falling hair, Get delightful
Danderine for a few cents at any drug
or toilet counter and use it as a dress-
ing and invigorator as told on bottle.
• How to Purine
the Mood A-
"'Fifteen to thirty drops of ,
Extract of Roots, commonly
called Mother, Seigel's Curative
Syrup, may be taken in water
with meals and at bedtime, for
the cure of indigestion, consti-
pation and bad blood. Persist- ,
once in this treatment will effect
a cure in nearly every case:'
Get the ;genuine at
r3ruggists,
ola TABLES MA-Kto
"BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN
Not.:Aspirin at A11 without thea•"Bayer Cross'
fUe/puzeine
•
u--.4.zeiyeAzad
lagat.
mamma
DAyez
�skum.wS� Ci CaiG\\ \1 `1\ \�5 ��\�\\ \\
The narn:e `Bayer" identifies: the contains propef' directions for 'Colds,
only genuine Aspirin;—the .Aspirin Headache, °Toothache, Earache'
Tett,
prescribed by physicians' for over nine- ralgia, Liunbago, Rheumatism,Neitri-
teen years • and now made in Canada. tis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally..:
Always buy an unbroken ackage •-Tin boxes Of,'xg tablets cost lick `
o£
"Bayer Tabl to 01 Aspirin which, a• few cents. 'arc "Bti' ern padcagast
iel' only one .Aspirzu—i Rayer -'T- 'on muni say "Bayer" r'
Aspirin is the trade rr'ati% (registered 111 etlnavaa) of Sayer Manufacture 04 Mono-
acettcacldester of Saltayneactd. While it is wall known that rocas klaver
4uufactur0, to assist the pub!lo agalestimttatlous, the 't'ablets of Bayer (et4i13ny,
*ill be rstatnped with their; gexaorai trade .mark, the "Payer 'Cross,"