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The Exeter Advocate, 1923-2-8, Page 73 3 r d n is if ,d ld 1 - to to ly ill de ry ar, .re ng, ,d g Jt 18 ra fn 4• to •IS ignonel rlrty ting re- nosa t:iilyl� 1.011, 0 0 0 t The winter season is a hard one on the •baby. He is more or less confined to stuffy, badly ventilated rooms. It is so, often stormy that the mother doss tint get hiru outin the fresh air as often as she s+hould. He catches colds, which rack his little system; his stomach and bowels get out of order and he becomes peevish and Cross, To guard against this the mother should keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets la the house. They regulate the stomach • ' and bowels and break up colas They are sold by y medicine id e dealers or by mail. at 26 cents a box from The Dr. 'W#li'iams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ate. Why Do They Do It? The magi who beats his horso "to make him go" is, at the same time, do Ing something to himself of which he Is entirely unaware-. The man who so mistreats his horses has lowered him- self beneath that sof tare animal he has. misused. The boy who kicks a dog "to hear balm howl" is Braking a big mistake. At an early age he is allowing himself to be worse than any of the dumb, helpless, creatures that he takes such pleasure in ha.aming. This is the sort of boy -if not properly instructed in earlier years—who grows to be the Bran who heats his horse; aye, worse, he is the boy who grows to be the man who heats his wife and children, „Why do they do it?" So easy to asic!! Shall we not say, "How can wo stop it?" 'ahem ie a way, and it is not as difficult as one might think: When boys are very small the mothers and fathers should try to install in them a genuine love for animals, be- Mlnard's'Liniment for Rheume.tism. cause no one wisbies to barna a thing f he really loves.' When a serail boy Who has not been taught --one can usually tell by his treatment of aniniale—is vean abusing an animal, we should tel hem then, while he is hurting it, how to treat a dog, a cat, a horse; tell him, then, while ale remembers his deed, that a dog will not love him if lie kicks, it, pulls its •earns, or mistreats it in any 1 sable, who loves • the same dog --cif it I be a dog—he has just been hurting, end mark the love "and devotion of that animal to its benefactor. The average boy,deep drown his heart, likes animals. He will ;see the difference in treatment, and the dif- ferencein the doge response to kind- ness and cruelty; if the boy has any good, common senses he will doubtless begin to think, and the result will be a change in his treaturenrt of animals. Let us help emery boy's naturals lik- ing of animals grow into love, and a great deal of cruelty will be killed at its birth. .t. 44444.1+444•441.114+$+44.44+i44 64+44 4-11 f0 1-0-111 way. Then point out someone, if pee INDIGESTION, GAS,. UPSET STOMACH Instantly1 "Pape'sDiapepsin" Corrects Stomach. so 'Meals Digest The moment you eat a tablet of "Pape's Diapepsin" your indigestion is gene. No more distress from a sour, acid, upset stomach. No flatulence, heartburn, palpitation, or misery -mak ing gases. Correct your digestion for a few cents. Each package teed by druggist to overcome trouble, Advantage ofa School Boys' Band and How to Start One, By P. A. Tubbs,- a Superin- tendent of School Mesie. HEN r NERVES E Jfsrt&J713i9 1 ] The Right Thing to Do is to Take a Tonle for the Blood, e. When you become so exhausted of-. In starting a band, blase a call to a ter a day's work that you cannot sleep, who are interested. Then ay ou your or sleep a is • o re res you, s to look after your health. Failure to act at once means a steady drain on I your health reserve, which can result in but one thing—a nervous break- Pathe your feat wild warm Yater then rub wig with born- d wn, z niniment,: o ree s oea 0 { ode $i I., Do not wait for a breakdown. The Feet seal Sae,. for Mina.rd'a treatment is simple enough if you do i,tniment is King oY fain. not let your condition become too far �' advanced, The treatment is one re -I quiring an effective thole to enrich the , blood and feed the starved nervee.II The most effective tonic ktihyrn is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which act diredt-f, ly on the blood, and with propel' diet pause proved of the greatest benefit in l nervous troubles and all conditions due to impoverished blood. Mrs. Mary Hanson, Braeside, Ont„ has proved the I ue of Dr. William-' Pink Pills and scheme upon the blackboard, based upon what would be the proper ,Proportion of each instrurni at in a band ty of, ,fif players. Describe the instruments, manner of playing each, and the nature . of the part played: Telt wily a, boy slow .of movement and thought ehon'id not select a clarinet, which Is ,entrusted to •maob! the same work the violins, has in the orchestra; why a bay with pro- truding teeth .should not play an in- strument with a cup mouthpiece; why a euphonium player should be very musical, of fairly good size, of good lung capacity, etc. It is surprising hey quickly the boys will agree with the leader in assigning instruments., After the instruments are given out, ! each boy should have individual les- sons until he can produce a tone re- cognizable as to pitch anti: can play i the natural scale on his instrument, The group lessons should be given to 1 supplement the private lessons. Foil•owtng this, th:e brass and reed sections should be rehearsed separate- ly. This method of gradually increas- ing the size of the group until the full band is rehearsed keeps the interest at "white heat," and when the first full rehearsal is called every youngster is. in place willing to do his best, which is an ordeal for the teaches'. Private and group lessons are given after school hours, with band rehearsals twice • each week from 7 to 8. The boys are allowed to "blow"a little be- fore rehearsal, just as the symphony player is supposed to do before the concert. When the director takes his stand. the instruments are placed across the laps, all talking ceases and everybody ie ready to bear what the director may have to say. The director seldom plays except to illustrate. The boys are taught to follow the baton and never allowed to overblow. The bays' band is of more interest in the h,onies of the members than any other organization in the town. The leader is consulted oftener by parents in regard to the band work than he is asp teacher of other branches of school music. Most of the boys who are studying piano in the town derived their first interest in music through their band work. Boys will play in a band when no in- terest can be aroused in. the orchestra; however, that interest is apt to de- velop later in the musical ones. I be- lieve there is no other means as great as the band in creating an interest ou the part of ,the boy in all things musi- oal in his school. The boys are also reminded of the great advantage the syllable reader has in. playing a band instrlunent over the one who cannot sing by syllable. I have known several cases where boys have learned to sing by sealable in order that they might be able to play the band instrument tb e better. The music rehearsed is never trash, The last number played at the close of the rehearsal is usually a popular guaraa' stomach Drugs and Prohibition By Rev. Peter Bryce. "I believed MProhibition, absolute- ly, but lay faith is shaken," said a friend to me a few days ago. "The statement attributed to Judge Mur- phy," he continued, ' In a letter in a morning paper last week, seems to imake it clear that those deprived of theliquor are turning to drugs, and e results aro deplorable." Judge Emily Murphy, in her book, ,The Black Candle, in the chapter de- voted to "Prohibition and Drugs," makes it clear that she does not con- sider Prohibition to be the cause of Increased addiction in drugs. Sibs be- lieves it Is 'bad association and the ,urge of an illicit traffic seel1ug ,to profit by the sale of the habit-forming drugs that are the most potent causes )for the growth. of the evil." She fur - :tiler states.: "In most places those deprived of liquor seek substitutes' not in opium, cocaine or other allied drugs, • but in raisin jack, house -made wines, iamaica ginger, •paregoric, ess,enoes or :inaonshlne." Another argument ac- cording to Judge Murphy, why drugs cannot be said to be a substitute for drink is the fact that such a large per - tentage of drug addicts are in their 'teens. Many medical authorities confirm ,judge Murphy's statement. Joseph C. Doane, M,D., the Chief Resident Physi- clan of the Philadelphia General Hos- pital, states that from the testimony of their drug patients, there is no con- nection whatever between drug -dis- ease and the: inability to get liquor. The New York City Health Depart- •men•t, in the year 1919-20, asked 1,40'3' drug patients the cause of their ad- �diotion. Only 1 per cent. carne to it !from alcoholic indulgence. The Secre- tary of the Rhode Island State Board of Health says: "We fail to find among the applicants, for treatment any one formerly addicted to the free use of alcoholic -beverages." The City Health Officer of Jackson- ville, Florida, reports that from the histories of addicts registered, "it ap- pears that there Is no relation be- tween the habitual user of alcoholic liquor and the drug addict" The Medical Committee of the Ki- wanis Club, Vancouver, states: "Prac- tically all observers state that there seems to be no special connection be- tween the use of alcohol and the use of drugs. There is no evidence to show that the suppression of the use of al- cohol•inere•ases to any appreciable ex- teut the addiction to drugs, as drug addict& are rarely alcoholics." Cora Frances Stoddard in her Pre- liminary Study on the relation be- tween prohibition and drug addicts says: "of 1,169 patients treated at the New York Narcotic Relief Station in one week (April 10-16, 1919), most of them were mere youths, nearly one- third of them are not out of their 'teens. One boy began at the age of thirteen." These youths tire doubt- less animated by a. morbid desire to imitate what they believe to be the habits of the underworld and gunmen. Dr. C. M. Crawford, the Ontario Hos- pital, Whitby, says: "Morphine and co.calue are responsible for certain type of mental disorder. There lies been no increase so far as we can de- termine in eitli!er morphine addiction or cocaine addiction since prohibition came into effect." Dr. G. H. Kirby, Medical Director of the New York State Hospitals, says: "Since prohibition has conte into ef- fect alcoholic mental disorders have practically disappeared, amid further, morphine and cocaine addiction have not increased at all." He bases his statement on many thousands of cases,. If other causes have not shaken my friend's, faith in prohibition, there is evidently no cause for the foundation of his faitbr being shaken by the facts regarding the drug traffio. MONEY ORDERS. Send a Dominion Express Ttioaey Order. They are payable everYW1?ere, ° Irish people, who eat large cjuanti- ties of potatoes, never suer from gout. Dragon -fines can catch up `other Iii-' sects' travelling at over forty miles Classz led ..A,dvertis cats.. s"l� wr�>arren-aer.n. `� ZrX.P VST(N ri+D. WE 1t .• ;i 11 i trtleb -t"o knit men's woBA4jod for us at home, either with by hand. ' $aerial stamp and envelope for .nformatlon. 'TbJ l`al Wholesale Diatributins C:G.., D1 cripple. Can. • an hour! s •ITX3Alti CLQ'iFER, ,H3i Rffi ' I :,annual. Write. for' yorr;iation, D. Fraser, R -ER: il. Iiderre Ontario. Footsore? va says:—"I was taken ill with what doc- tors whorn I consulted called neural- gia of the tissues of the system, I was a complete wreck from constant pains in my body and limbs, dizzy headaches, fainting spells and consti- pation. So intense was the pain that at times it caused vomiting and I would have to go to bed for two or three days, only to get up eo dizzy and so weak that I oouid not cross the bedroom without aid, and while these spells lasted I could keep nothing on my stomach. I doctored for almost a year, but with no beneficial results. Finally the last doctor who attended me said medicine would not benefit rne. I must have perfect rest, and spend most of my time in the open air. He gave me very poor encouragement. Knowing that the mother of four child- ren could not spend all her time in How Backache and Poriodic idleness, I told my husband I was through with' doctors and was going Pains Yield to Lydia B. Pink. to try some other remedies. I got one, but after taking it for a month found no benefit. Then I decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and at the end of two weeks I found these were what I needed. With nerves worn thread- bare from all the suffering of the past, I continued the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for three months and by this time I was able to do most of my own housework. In fact I soon felt well and was able to do any kind of work without feeling tired. Since that time I have continued to do all my own work and have had no return of the dreadful pain I suffered. before. I have recommended the pine in many cases and have always seen good re- sults from their use.". You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by assail at 60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, M Bard's Liniment The Family Medicine Cheat, • BED -To -LAY Baele i [ lvtd a, i-� 000kcssaX . good. incl >}a42s - eltob. DavThI A, Ashworth„ r)enflej4, n • SELTINLI SALE 1 xi F ]TING QF ALL KINDS, 14E need, pullegys, saws, sable. dpi • eti , shipped subiebt t9 appr5vdvat at S a ' ed 1 pYork rioea+ in ewoora ao Ports `Sa14ia o t ?5 onr "•!!lois anist`Iiw 'tenser Dot latatsdliid RS ANDESON TELES WOME song or ballad of the better Class, given as a piece of pie might be given at the close of the meal. This popular - number so dearly loved by the boys is always looked forward to, and if the rehearsal is drawing to a close and there is no sign of the popular number some one is sure to ask, "Don't we get any pte to -night?" and the -pie is surely passed. Rice paper is not made from the rice plant, but from the pith of a tree growing in Formosa. t t � +�: last•. Are you fagged and foggy when you wake up in the morning? "There's a Reason." Tea and coffee are known to affect many people that way. Often, too, these bev- erages cause nervousness, sleeplessness and severe headache. "There's a Reason. Instant Postural,, made from choice, roasted wheat, is a delightful mealtime -beverage free from any element of harm. • Try it for awhile, instead of tea or coffee, and let the Sunshine in. .4t Your Grocer's in See>r14ed, Air=tlight'Tins tr n8tant I► geoervus sample tin of !taint 15p#4414"�Theiev'S a Reason" sent, postpaid, for lo in stamps. Wtitett Factory; Windsor, Ontario Limited. 45 Front St.,'"' Canadian Postum Cereal Compenp,� I.ItSa E. , Toronto, The sea covers three-fourths. of the earth's surface, or a total area of about 145 million square miles. "Cascarets" lOc For Sluggish Liver or Constipated. Bowels 2 Wdyy g4*4i.4144+Mt+4++4+4t++M444+444+ii+4?+44044 4h Clean your bowels! Feel fine! When you feel sick, dizzy, upset, when your head is dull or aching, or your stomach is sour or gassy, just take one 'or two Casoarets to relieve constipation. No griping—nicest laxa- tive -cathartic on earth for grown-ups and children. 10c a box. 'taste like candy. The. Drawback "len glad you don't like candy any better then you do." "1 'spect I would only I get frill too quick." • ham's Vegetable Compound Leslie, Sask.—" For about a year 1 was troubled with a distressing down - bearing pain before and during the pc-. riods, and from terrible headaches and backache. I hated to go to a doctor;, and as I knew several women who had taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound with good results, I finally bought some and toolc four bottles of it, I certainly do recommend it to every woman with troubles like mine. I feel fine now and hope to be able to keep your medicine on hand at all times, as •no woman ought to be without it in the house." —Mrs. OSCAR A. ANDERSON; Box 15, Leslie, Sask. Mrs. Kelsey Adds Her Testiilleriy Copenhagen, N. Y. — "1 read your advertisement in the papers. and m husband induced me to take Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to get relief from pains and weakness. I wan so weak that I could not walk at times_ Now I can do my housework and, help my husband out doors, too. I am *shin for you to publish this letter if you thin], it will he)pp others."—Mrs. HERBERT' KELSEY, R.F.D., Copenhagen, N. k, Sick and ailing women everywhere in the Dominion shoiild try Lydia, E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound before they give up hope of recovery. 0 Flax Seed for Canada. On account of th,e standstill of the Rae industry in Ireland, ah . iurves%iga- tioa is being. made with a view to growing flax in Canada. Man was :ptiainl5 intended to work; else why when he asked for (butter did nature give him a cow? The word "stentorian" comes from the name of a Grecian herald named Stentar, whose voice, according to legend, was as loud as that of fifty men shouting together. !laitay rd's Liniment for Neuralgia.. ISSUE No. 5—'22. Sana q DOG DISEASES - and. aloe- to rood Mailed Free to any .Aa. dr¢, a by the AfatizOe >;r. u Giavo ' 419.44.0. 128 weat 24th tatreet New York U. .A. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS. C. J. CLIFF • TORONTO Gear Your Cooplesion With Cuticura Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water to free the pores of impurities and follow with a gentle application of Cuticura Ointment to soothe arrd heal. They are ideal for the toilet, as le also Cuticura Talcum for poor": dering and perfuming. A�ege25a Ointteeat25 rnd5Rc Taiearl5e. Sold 'throtghoutthelaominion cantdianDepoit L�r yma,n,., Uteited, 344 St. Peel t., W., Montreal.. 'Cuticuia Soap shaVeswithout rang. • Chest colds -broken! Inflamed membranes. congestion, oppressive pain.Apply Sloais to chest and throat.lt scatters congestion —your cold is gone! Sloan's Liniment —kills pain, !Wade in Candia ,UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy "Bayer" boxes Of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100 -Druggists. Aspirin Is the trade ,nark (registered In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of 'M o ace 1oaeldeei.er,ol Salit.e ll Oacld. �V lite St 1, well hno n'that A,pirir- nze�n5 1?a rc ln s+nntacture, tc.u.aslat the public e atnst ifnit,tigtie, rho hl is bt kta'S"rf•(, �mr14 will be stanived,witli their coneral. trade raarir, the " ayer. Cross:"