The Exeter Advocate, 1923-4-26, Page 7TheTobacco of Quali
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Surnames and Their Origin
ARUNDEL
1Raclai Origin --English.
Source—A Iocalay.
It is a matter of fact that the num-
ber of English family names in the
.classification of those which have been
derived from the names of places is
,'limited only by the number of place
names which existed in England
through the period of family name for-
mation.
The name of virtualiy every etty,
town and hamlet at this period was
likely to be taken not by one but by
many individuals who moved away
from it to some other place. Or rather,
it was likely to have been conferred
upon them by their new neighbors, for
family names were more often a na-
;Itural growth than the result of de-
liberate adoption, and a family's neigh -
tors had more to say about the most
Lift Off with Fingers
Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little
"Freezone" on an aching corn, instant-
• Iy that corn stops hurting, thea shortly
you lift it right off with finpers. Truly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
"Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn. between the toes, and the cal-
luses, without soreness or irritation.
convenient designation than the mem-
bers of the family itself.
She—"How long ought it to take
you to teach me to skate?"
He—"I should say about all winter,
but 'I can teach a homely girl in half"
an hour."
HARTWELL
Racial Origin—English.
Source—A place name.
Hartwell is one of those family
names which Lave been taken from
place names, and it is to -day better
known, perhaps, as the former rather
than the latter,
In the period of family name forma-
tion, which in England lasted, roughly,
from the eleventh to about the elf-
teenth century, place names formed
one of the most usual sources from
which surnames grew. Family names,
of course, were seldom fromed by arbi-
trary adoption. They were the out-
growth of descriptive surnames con-
ferred upon an individual in an age
when populations tad become so large
that there were not enough names to
go around, and it was necessary to dis-
tinguish between two men of the same
given name. A most natural method
was to refer to the place frofn which
a man had come.
Hartwell was a village in Bucking-
thamshire. Its name meant "the well
of the deer."
France's Sherlock Holmes.
The best-known detective in France
et the present time is Edmond Bayle,
a chemist whose laboratory is in the
Palais de Justice in Paris.
He is chief of the technical bureau
of the Paris police department, and he
hes• met with such success that the
mere m,educated criminals look upon
'
hirehireas a dabbler i magic.
n
Dr. Bayle does not work on the
British Sherlock Holmes lines. He
pays no :attention to the personality or
psychology of the criminal, but con-
fines to material things.
His workshop is equipped in accord-
fence.
ccordance• with this, and the numerous
Pieces of apparatus are designed for
s'peolet purposes, such as examining
forged money, the detection of blood-
stains, and, in fact, the analysis of
anything and everything that is picked
up by those an the trail of a criminal.
In his records are registered the
names of over eight million persons
who have ever been involved in, crime
of any sort, and full particulars of any
one of them can be produced at a mo-
meat's notice.
This extraordinary man has a theory
that there is no crime that cannot be
detected, and that every criminal, how-
ever clever, leaves traces behind him.
Intensive Farming.
"How are you making out with that
abandoned farm you bought?"
"Fine! I sold the quarry rights to
one crowd, and rented the surface to
another as a golf course, Now if I
can lease the air to some wireless com-
pany I'll have about everything under
cultivation. Who says intensive farm-
ing doesn't pay?"
East or West
Eddy's Best
Insist on having
F..DDY'S l
•
Sa
THE TEST OF TIME FOR RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS
HAS PROVEN
tteil1E�U
A GOOD MEDICINE
FOR THE .SRINTIVE
Achievement.
Two travelers .halted on; a mountain
trail,
Blocked by great pyramidal era of
' snow.
"Beyond this .:point," said one, "no man
can go!
He who would ,climb those jutting taw-
ers must fail!
He would be flogged and frozen by the
gale;
Lightning would scorch him, polar
winds would blew;
Ana he would fall to icy caress below,
Bleeding beneath the cliffs he could
• not scale!.,,
But while one wanderer thus invoked
despair, .
The other dug his spikes deep in • the
soil,
And Mot on inch, by •steady, strain-
ing tail,
He mounted that precarious, rock-
strewn stair, .'
Bearing his fellow wail, "You are too
weak!"
He stood, triumphant, on a starry
peak!
Stanton A. Coblentz.
ClILbflOof INDIGESTION
LOST 30 POUNDS
THEN GAINED 35
Veteran Real Estate Broker of
Toronto Tells cif Remarkable
Restoration by Tanlac,
• James Burns, 20 St. Albans Street,
is still another znan of prominence in
'Toronto to speak out in behalf of -Tan -
lac. Mr. Burns is now seventy-three
years of age, but says:
"No one takes me for seventy-three
now, and'I feel every bit as active as
I did forty years ago.
"Before taking Tanlac my weight Travelling by air from. London to
fell off from one hundred and sixty to
one hundred and thirty pounds, and
I had begun to feel the hand of 'Old
Father Time' laying heavily on me. I -.. .
seldom ate mere than one meal a day
and that caused me hours of misery.
Nights I would pace the floor `too ner-
vous to sleep, and many days I felt
too worn-out to dress and go out any-
where.
"I don't believe I could have ever
pulled up to where I am now if it
hadn't been for Tanlac. It bas restored
my health completely and built me up
to one hundred and sixty-five pounds.
Tanlac is the best investment I ever
made."
Tanlac is for sale by all good drug-
gists. Over 35 million bottles sold.
British boys will be sent. across to
Australia at the rate of 500 a month
if a scheme of emigration, recently
launched by the Australian Govern-
ment proves successful.
Nothing Is more common in child-
hood hoed than. indigestion, Nothing is
more dangerous to proper growth,
more weakening to the constitution or
more likely to pave the way to danger-
ous disease. Fully nine -tenths of all
the minor ills of childhood have their
root in indigestion. There is no medi-
cine for little ones to equal Baby's
Own Tablets in relieving this trouble.
They have proved of benefit in thous-
ands of homes. Concerning them Mrs.
Jos. Lunette, Immaculate Conception,
Que., writes: "My baby was a great
sufferer from indigestion, but the Tab-
lets soon set her right and now I would
not be without them," Baby's Own
Tablets are sold by medicine dealers
or by mail at 25 cents a box from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
Do Not Use Harsh Purgatives—
. A Tonic is All You Need.
Not sick—but not feeling quite well.
That is the way most people feel in the
spring. Easily tired, appetite fickle,
sometimes headaches and a feeling of
depression. Pimples or eruptions may
appear on the skin, or there may be
twinges of rheumatism or neuralgia.
Any of these indicate that the blood
is out of order—that the indoor life of
winter has left its mark upon you and
may easily develop into more serious
trouble.
Do not dose yourself with purgatives,
as many people do, in the hope that
you can put your blood rigiht. Purga-
tives gallop through the system and
weaken instead of giving strength.
Any doctor will tell you this is true.
What you need in the spring is a tonic
that will enrich the blood and build
up the nerves. Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills do this speedily and surely. Every
dose of this medicine helps to enrich
the blood, which clears the skin,
strengthens the appetite and makes
tired, depressed men, women and
children active and strong. Miss b. L.
MCEachron, Nairn, N.B., says;—"I
have been in the habit of taking Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills in the spring and
they keep me in the best of health. 1
think it is entirely due to the use of
these pills that I always have such
good ih eaith."
Sold by all medicine dealers or by
mail at 50c a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont.
-48. positive Remedy for Acute, Chronic and 1!'Iuscular Rheu-
matism in all its various forms.
COUNTLESS GRATEFUL TESTIMONIALS and Repeat Orders
received during past 25 years.
DOBSON'S NEW LIFE P Th11 DAY is not an expieiilnent but the
product of a quarter century of study and research. Pleasan
dc
to take. Does not upset the stomach. No harmful drugs.
1)0
NOT BE • PREJUDICED. Dobson's New Life Remedy wi]
give you a new 1tase on life by freeing you us f stating' ThouSaTi
that Sate
of enthusiastic customers have written
years of failure. With other medicines, electric belts, etc., • the;
were cured' by Dobson's New Life Remedy.
One bottle for One Dollar. Six bottles for Five Dollars.
Dobson
Illtut latmetig tramping
rd Went Adelaide $t„ Toronto
Canada
� lg�«1 �'-, •sy �k :$.�"�aS`1 yy , t�Nx"�'�d3.�'. at, �F.�; ., r"t'_C"�':%
Bread 2,500 Years Old.
It seems• impossible that bread could
survive for nearly 2,500 years, and yet
that is the age of a loaf dug up not
long ago. -
The disrcoverywas made by a French
explorer in Syria, and he estimated
that the loaf was baked in the year
560 B.O. In the shape of a bun, it was
in excellent condition and was wrap-
ped in a cloth in a. tightly -sealed: tomb.
Other ancient loaves' have been
found at Pompeii, in Italy. Unearthed
in a well-preserved oven, they were,
slightly charred but the baker's `name ;
was read quite easily: , •
Not
asily -
Not so old as these: but still getting
on in years, is a loaf which is pre-
served at Ambaston, in Derbyshire. It
is over 700 years old. and was origin-
ally given to the Soar family with a
grant of land made to them by King
John:.
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominlou ExpreS's Money
Order. Five Dollars costs three cents.
Economy.
Wide—"John, since you say we must
economize, I have decided not to get
Josephine a new hat this winter, but
to .let tier .have mine."
Hub—"And you?"
Wife—"Oh, I must have a new one,
of course;"
Classified Advertisement r
49
i Amateur Plays, Sitetchea, ¥tonologgelp
A.TALOG OF PROFESSIONAL AND
1t nstrel Jokes, Recitations, Make -Up.
Goods, etc. Fitzgerald Publishing Corp..
Dept. W, 18 Vesey Street, New York."
etzrAzus Ari» 1317Per,x';Es.
elkl A T 1 .A PANNING MILLI,
t.J Chatham Isle; -'gators, Thermometer$
aunty Manson Campbell. Chatham, Ont.
AMIES WANTDD—TQ lap Pir,�}.):1ij
.,41 and light sewing at home, whole or
Spare time; good pay; work sent any
distar ce; charges Paid. Send stamp for
particulars.. National Manufacturing
Co., Montreal.
New York in twelve hours is prophe.
lied by Major-General Sir W. S.
Brancker, Director of Civil Aviation.
Population of Palestine.
Palestine has a total population of
757,182, according to the figures of the
census of three months' ago. Ten per
Dent. of the people in Palestine are
given as Christian, 11 per cent. as Jews,
and '79 per cent. as Mohammedans.
The figures for Christians and Jews
are regarded as about correct, but
there was such strong opposition to
the census on the part of the Moham-
medans that their number probably is
considerably under -estimated.
In two cities only is there a prepon-
derant Jewish population, Jerusalem
and Tiberias. In former, out of a total
of 62,000, 34,000 are descended from
Abraham and the balance are about
equally divided between the followers
of Jesus and the prophet of Mecca.
It 1s interesting to note that Bethle-
hem is the only town in the 'land in
which Christians predominate, Here
there are 5,838 of this faith, 818
Mohammedans and two Jews. Naz-
areth lhas a population of 7,424 of
which roughly two-thirds• are Chris-
tian, one-third Moslem, and only 53
Jews. The principal seaport, Jaffa,
has about 47,000 people, of whom there
are 20,000 each, of Jews' and Moham
medans, and about '7,000 Christians
The other large centres of population
are very largely 112ohammeclan.
The Palestine Weekly, a Zionist or-
gan, claims that according to Roman
figures this country has supported a
population of 7,000,000, but when one
considers that the area of Palestine
is about equal to that of Vermont and
that it has, about an equal amount of
arable land, one questions seriously
whether, with the highest development
of her natural resources, it will be
possible for Palestine ever to support
a greatly augmented population. Ver-
mont, in 1920, counted 352,428 people
within the state.
Britain can speak by telephone to
France, Belgium, Switzerland, and
Holland. In America the range of the
long-distance' phone is ove • 4,000
miles.
The Disturbing: Element.
Maloney; Jr.—"What's an "amicable
Settlement, Pa?"
Maloney, Sr.—"A town where there's
no Orish, Oi suppose, sonny,"
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere
Minard's Liniment used by Physicians.
The New Testament was divided
into verses by Robert Stevens, a print-
er, in 1551.
Anfonioals Plonoer Tlog Ft,emediea
.Book on
DOG DISEASES
;Jul How to Feed
Mailed ?free to any A4 -
dress by the Author.
33. Clay Glover Clo., nc.
127 'West 24th Street
New York, tJ.S.A.
111!!11IIIII
'II!IIIa
'111!!1
Stops Backaches
at once -so comforting
A tiring day on your feet.
Stooping, lifting, running up
and downstairs— does your
backfeeltied inpainft knots?
Apply Sloan's to those sore,
tired muscles, '! ]at warm,
penetrating glow brings im-
mediate comfort. Almost
before you realize it the pain
and stiffness are gone.
Wherever congestion causes
pain—use Sloe n's. Sloan's is
protection against pain. All
druggists carry it.
)!fade rn Canada
Scalia Liniment -kills paint
For rheumatism; bruises,strains,chost colds
ISSUE No. 16—'23.
Keep Stomach and Rowels Right
By giving baby the harmless, purely
vegetable, infants' andchildren'erezulator.
1411i ViliGL 1.113 SYRUP
brings astonishing, gratifying results
in making baby's stomaph digest
food and bowels move as
they should at teething
time. Guaranteed free
from narcotics, opi-
ates, alcobol andall
harmful itigredi..
ents. Safe and
satisfactory.
At Ail
Druggist-
Cuticura Heals
Face Disfigured
With Itchy Eczema
"Eczema broke out in watery pim-
ples on my face and head. Later
my cheeks and head be-
came so badthat they
were covered with large
scales. The itching arid
burning were so severe
that I could not sleep at
night. My face was badly
disfigured. Ml. hairbecame
dry and lifeless and fell out so that
I had to have it cut off close to my
scalp.
" A friend advised me to try Cott.
cora Soap and Ointment so I pur-
chased some, and after using two
cakes of Cuticura Soap and two
boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was
healed." (Signed) 'Mrs. Elmer King,
Box 278, Jackson St., Oxford, Nova
Scotia.
Make Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum your daily toiletpreparations.
8amp1eEachneebyMail. Address: "L aasAixel-
ited, 344 at. Pani St„ w./ Montreal." Sols every-
where. Soap25e. Ointment25and50c. Telcnm25e.
'Cuticura Soap shaves without muc.
Enliven Your Eyes
through the daily use of
Murine. The alluriegsparkle of
youth
w! ki hqbleygorreceuduslaedeyfs
less.. Usedsafelyfor many years.
Sold by druggists everywhere.
.f ` -
a �.
--a
foR youR EYES
*..5`�.,.ilFttn'7..a".� t +fid."_• .-JM�x:yK
For the Kidneys
Kidney troubles are frequently
caused by badly digested food
which overtaxes these organs to
eliminate theirritantacidsforzned.
Help your stomach to properly
digest the food by taking 15 to
30 drops of Extract of Roots, sold
as Mother Seigers Curative Syrup,
and your kidney disorder will
promptly disappear. Get the
genuine. 50c. and $1.00 bottles.
T
11
MEAD H E?
Bathe the forehead with Minard's
and inhale freely. It gives quick
relief for every ache.
THEYTEII TIIEIR
NEIGHBORS
Worsen Tell Each Other How They
Were Helped by Lydia E. Pink-
ham's
inkhalo's Vegetable Compound.
Woodbridge, Ont.—" I took Lydia F3_
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for fe-
male troubles. I would have headaches,.
backaches, pains between my shoul-
ders and under my shoulder blades and
dragging down feelings on each side.
II was sometimes unable to do my -
work and felt very badly. My mother-
in-
CoIaw told me about thVeetable
mpound and I got someeright away.
It has done mo more good than any
other medicine I ever took and I rec-
ommend it to my neighbors. You are
quite welcome to use this letter as a
testimonial if you think it will help some
poor sufferer."—Mrs. EDGAR SI (MONS,
R. R. 2, Vlroodbridge, Ont.
In nearly every neighborhood in every
town and city in this country there are
women who have been helped by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in
the treatment of ailments peculiar to
their sex, and they take pleasure in
passing the good word along to other
women. Therefore, if you are troubled
in this way,whynotgive Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial.
This famous remedy, the medicinal
ingredients of which are derived from
roots and herbs, has for forty years
proved its value m such cases. Women
everywhere bear willing testimony to
the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink-
bam's Vegetable Compound. 0
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 la. tho .trade marls (registered 1, Canada) a Bayer Sianu'Caeture or Mono-
aceticacldester of Sailaylleacld, while ii is won known that Aspirin mcano Bayer
manufacture, to assist the pubile against Imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Cecnpa•.Y
will be stamped with their general trade marl >, the "Byer Cross."