The Exeter Advocate, 1924-8-7, Page 7x
r.,
•
Reiredling„.andWonaierfid to Taste
The blended essence
of choice good things
grown in the tropic
sunshine of faraway,
lands---
oca•Cola!--of
course! --sealed in a
sterilized glass pack-
age that protects
its goodness and
purity.
Drink
Delicious and Refreshing
The Coca-Cola Company of Canada, Ltd.
Head Office: Toronto
Stocking Lakes in Jasper
Park.
To facilitate the stocking of the
lakes in Jasper National Park, a num-
ber of troughs were recently set up in
the basement of the Arministration
Building at Jasper, Alberta. They are
at present carrying Loch Leven trout
eggs, and further shipments of other
varieties will be furnished by the De-
partment of Marine and Fisheries
from time to time and the resultant
fry distributed in the waters of the
park.
Due to the Dots.
had been married but two
weeks, and her aviator husband was
employed as a sky -writer by an adver-
tising agency. The dinner was grow-
ing cold. Nervously she searched the
heavens; a shuddering sigh escaped
her trembling lips. The telephone bell
rang;
"Hello!" she answered, breathless-
ly.
"Hello, Mrs. James!" came the re-
ply. "This is the general manager of
the Sky's -the -Limit Advertising Com-
pany. Your husband had an unfortun-
ate mishap while at work this, after-
noon, and I fear that he will not be
home for dinner. His eyes were in
terrible shape."
"Oh—oh, dear!" creid Mrs. James,
faintly. "Isn't there anything that can
be done to cure him?"
"Well," responded the voice of the
general manager, "he ouglit to learn
by experience. This Is the third time
I've had to send him back twenty-five
miles to dot 'em."
Observing Cow.
The city girl boarding in the coun-
try spoke to the farmer about the
savage way in which the cow regarded
her.
"Well," said the farmer, "it must
be on account of that red waist you're
wearing."
"Dear me!" cried the girl. "Of
course I know it's terribly out of style,
but I had no idea a country cow would
notice it."
One wild flower on the stein is
worth two in the tonneau.
eve Mustard
/th all rn ats
Mustard neutralizes the richness of
fat foods and makes them easier to,
digest. Mustard enables you to enjoy
and assimilate food which otherwise
would burden the digestive organs.
1
Why Busy Women Want
W> RE
Busy women want SMP Enameled Ware
because it will bring food to the boil almost
twice as fast as all -metal utensils, and com-
pletes the cooking sooner. A woman can
wash SMP Enameled Ware utensils faster
than utensils that, have to be scrubbed
and scoured.
Three finishes: Pearl Ware, two coats of
pearly -grey enamel inside and out. Diamond
Ware, three coats, light blue and white out-
side, white lining. Crystal Ware, three
coats, pure white inside and out, with Royal
Blue edging.
TMESDCA
�c P NADA t
HEET METAL PRODUCTS Co FCAN
MONTREAL TORONTO WINNIPEG,_,
[nMONTON VANCOUVER CALGARY
Bargain.
With his unspent youth
Like a penny in his hand,
See him stand!
There's a look on his face
Like a child that comes
'1'o the market -place
After tops and drums.
With his youth—his youth
As a thing that he can spend—
See him run!
And what will he have tor
His bargain at the end
When it's done?
I have asked old men
With their empty purses,
I have heard the tale
Each one rehearses,
And on the last page
r1hey have all bought age.
They have all bought age.
When youth is spent
A penny at a fair,
The old men tell
Of the bargains there.
There was this and that
For a price and a wage.
But when they came away
They had all bought age.
--Louise Driscoll.
Smile.
You can smile with the use of only
thirteen facial muscles, while you
must use sixty-five muscles for a first-
class frown.
All the great influence, the magnet-
ism of compelling personality, the
pulling power of our individuality, the
pleasing force that Is within us, may
be used if we will tame our faces and
teach them to smile when a smile
counts, and that is much of the time.
Frowns discourage us. They make
us grip our purses lighter. They freeze
our confidence.
A smile is the greatest asset we can
have and it does not cost a ha'penny.
Can you wriggle your facial muscles
into that form of good looks called a
smile? If you can smile and do not,.
you are throwing away limitless pos-
sibilities and countless opportunities.
INFANTUM
C OLERA
Cholera Infantum is one of the fatal
ailments of childhood. It is a trouble
that comes on suddenly, especially
during the summer months, and unless
prompt action is taken the little one
may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own
Tablets are an ideal medicine in ward-
ing off this trouble. They regulate
the bowels and sweeten the stomach
and thus prevent all the dreaded sum-
mer complaints. Concerning them
Mrs. Fred Rose, South Bay, Ont.,
says:—"I feel Baby's Own Tablets
saved the life of our baby when she
had cholera infanturn and I would not
be without them." The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers or by mail
at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Indians Talk to Birds.
In the Siskiyou Mountains of Cali-
fornia forest rangers report the dis-
covery of a tribe of Indians who com-
municate with one another only by
whistling and who can talk to birds,
says "The Popular Science Monthly."
Pearls Are Made n Layers.
Pearls consist of layers of delicate
material, enclosing some foreign par-
ticle usually a parasite.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Pain.
"Gen." for Short.
A man travelling in the United
States, meeting a little Negro boy, in-
quired his name.
" "Gen,' sal," was the reply.
''' Jen'? That's a girl's name, isn't
it?"
"Ali spells it wif a G, not a J, sal."
"Oh, possibly an abbreviation of
'General,' " said the tourist,
"No, sah; 'tain't zackly dat," was
the reply. "Mali s•ho-'nough name am
'Genesis xxx., 33, So shall my right-
eousness answer for me in time to
come' Washington Carter, but dey jest
calls me 'Gen' for short.
THE CAUSE OF SICKNESS
Almost Always Due to Weak
and Impoverished Blood.
Apart from accident or .illness due
to infection, almost all ill -health arises
from one or two reasons. The mistake
that people make is in not realizing
that both of these have the same cause
at the root, namely poor blood. Either
bloodlessness or some other trouble of
the nerves will be found to be the
reason for almost every ailment. If
you are pale, suffering from head-
aches, or breathlessness, with palpi-
tation of the heart, poor appetite and
weak digestion, the cause is almost
always poor blood. Il you have ner-
vous headaches, neuralgia, sciatica
and other nerve pains, the cause is
exhausted nerves. But run down
nerves are also a result of poor blood,
so that the two chief causes of illness
rare one and the same.
If your health is poor; if you are
pale, nervous or dyspeptic, you should
give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair
trial. These pills act directly on the
blood, and by enriching it give new
strength to worn out nerves. Men
and women alike greatly benefit
through the use of this medicine. If
you are weak or ailing, give Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills a fair trial and you
will be pleased with the beneficial re-
sults that will speedily follow.
Il your dealer does not keep these
pills you can get them by mail at 50
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
The Same.
Office Boy—"Sorry I wasn't here
yesterday—I had to help bury my
grandmother."
The Boss—"I knew you were crack-
ed on baseball—but I didn't think
football would get you, too."
A Telescope Needed.
Simpkins, who considered himself a
humorist, sent a selection of his orig-
inal joke,s to a newspaper. He re-
ceived the following reply:
"Dear Sir: Your jokes rececived.
Some we have seen before; the others
we haven't seen yet."
Surnames and Their Origin
THWAITE.
Variations — Thornthwaite, Limeth-
walte, Rownthwaite, Brathwalte,
Crossthwalte, Cornthwaite, Goldth-
walte.
Racial Origin—English.
Source—A locality.
Here is a group 'of family names
based upon a word which has all but
disappeared from our modern voca-
bularies. There are really more of
them titan are listed in the foregoing
variations, but they are met with rath-
er rarely,. and those we have listed
here are sufficient to show. the man-
ner in which such names were formed.
"Thwaite," in the ancient north
English speech, meant a felled place;
that is, a spot in the woods which had
been cleared of trees: The• word is
apparently of 'Norse origin. It is
found quite frequently in " the old
Norse records, and its use among the
Anglo-Saxons seems to have been con-
fined to Cumberland and the northern
sections, where there were Norwegian
settlements and Norse influence.
Originally the name was. simply .a
phrase denoting place of residence.
This was, of course, at a muck later
period than that of the introduction
of the word itself into the Saxon
speech, and accbrdingly as the Anglo-
Saxon or Norman form was used the
name was "atte Thwalte," or "de la
Thwaite." The variations, are but the'
development of original efforts to des-
cribe specifically the kind of
"thwaites" ator in which people lived.
Thus a "thornthwaite" would be a
clearing in which thorny plants were
growing. A "brathwaite" was a
"broad"'one, a "cros.sthwaite' 'one in
which a cross had been erected,' a
171 + "goldthwaite" one in which yellow
flowers grew, and so on.
O'CONNOR.
Variations—Connor, Conor, Conners,
O'Conor, Conyers.
Racial Origin—Irish.
Source—A given name.
In the days when Ireland led all Eur-
ope as the centre of Christian culture
and vigor, following the barbarian in-
vasions of the decaying Roman em-
pire; the days when the Irish kings,
under the single Ieadership of their
"Ard-Righ," or "High -King," present-
ed a united front to the Viking and
the Saxon; when England was yet a
land of numerous and antagonistic
Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, largely pagan;
long before the Norman conquest of
England and the countries following
it saw the first growth of family
names in that country; the name of
O'Connor was already a family name
in Ireland. It was the name of the
kings of Connaught, who were des'
tended from the famous "Hui Niall"
or O'Neill line, which gave ancient and
medieval Ireland so many of its mon-
ar•chs,.
If the ancient rule were adhered to,
the modern families of the O'Connor
group would spell their names "Hui
Conohobbhair, but it would not be
pronounced so very muck unlike
"O:Connor," except for the injection
of slurred -like gutterals and aspirants.
Asa given name."Oonchobbar" means
"the ;helping warrior." The King
Conchob:bar 'en, whom the O'Connor
faniilies are founded died in the year
937A.D.
But' it must always be remembered
that all who bear this, name are not
necessarily descendants of the king.
The majority undoubtedly are des-
cendants of followers of his banner.
This rule holds good for all Irish
names except those which took theil-
'origin from the given names, or sobri-
quets of chieftains and kings,
Fine, brisk flavor! Best. of all in the
ORANGE PEKOE QUAiUTY
Making Drums Talk.
Expertinents are now being made
with the object of adapting the Ash-
anti drum -language to the conveyance
of messages In English, especially for
the use of Boy Scouts.
Ashanti is a tone language. The
drummers have two drums—a "male"
and a "female" --set in different tones,
and on them they can reproduce, not
only the number of syllables in a
word, but the arbitrary toe -quality as-
signed to each when spoken. The re-
sult is a kind of musical speech.. The
drums are "talking."
But the same system could obvious-
ly not be applied to English, so an at-
tempt is being made to work out an
adaptation of the drum -talk to the
Morse code. After trying various
plans, the most promising method has
been found to be the use (ignoring
the tones) of spacing only, eaelr dot
or dash being represented by two
beats.
The drums Cary a mile or more, and
in very favorable circumstances they
can be heard as far as three miles.
Messages can be sent hundreds. of
miles in a remarkably short time.
"'Tomas a Famous Victory."
"It is a great day for England," said
William IV. as he lay on his death -bed
on June 18th, 1837, and listened to the
guns firing for the anniversary of the
Battle of Waterloo.
The Battle of Waterloo was fought
by eighty thousand French and two
hundred and fifty guns, against sixty-
seven thousand English, Hanoverians,
and Belgians, assisted by a large num-
ber of Prussians, who came in at the
last moment.
The British casualties on the field
were fourteen hundred men killed and
nearly five thousand wounded. Four
thousand of the allied forces were
killed, and the total number of their
wounded was twenty-two thousand.
At the time it was considered a very
dear victory; but it is, perhaps, one of
the most famous and important of all
tune. It has gone down into the glori-
ous history o1 our country, carrying
with it an ever -living memory of our
great countryman—Wellington.
Dl et.
Diet is an important word these
days, a word that perhaps more than
any other is supposed by many young
women to hold the secret of health. A
physician has this to say on the sub-
ject: "As for diet, the average girl is
apt to make one of two mistakes. One
is a tendency to overindulge in
sweets, without sufficient physical
exercise to burn up the excess food
fuel. The other is to starve the body
for the sake of being overthin. A
slim, muscular figure is an asset; a
body starved down to the point of
low resistance is aliability."
The sale way to send money by mail
is by Dominion Express Money Order.
fi
Nothing But Praise.
"I have nothing but raise for the
new vicar," said a member of the con-
gregation to the verger, after the
morning service.
"So I observed when the plate was
taken round," said the verger.
Say "Bayer" - Insist!
For Pain Headache
Neuralgia Rheumatism
Lumbago Colds
Accept only a
Bayer package
which contains proven directions
Handy `Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100 --Druggists
dspirin Is the trade nark (registered in
Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono-
aceticaeldeater of Ballcylleacrd
Feet .Sore'
Rub well with Minard's. It
relieves inflammation, soothes
and heals.
In the Dog Days.
July is usually considered to be the
wort est month of the year all over
the Northern Hemisphere, and its heat
led to an old Roman superstition,
which has left its mark on our own
speech,
Warm weather is not always too
healthy, and July in Rome was Ire•
quently a month of epidemics and high
mortality. The Romans connected
this with the rising and setting of the
star Canicula—the Little Dog—in coin-
cidence with the sun, and talked of
the period of July 8rd to August lith
as the Dog Days.
The Little Dog no longer rises with
the sun during this period, but the
name of the Dog Days and something
of their sinister reputation still per.
slot. Even in modern Britain, magis-
trates have been known to order dogs
in towns to be muzzled about the be-
ginning of July.
Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism.
A Long Chase.
A negro boy, a regular visitor to a
certain library, was noticed by the at-
tendant always to take the same book,
open it eagerly at the same place, and
then laugh heartily.
The attendant's curriosity being
aroused, he followed the Negro boy
one day and saw him open the book.
Glancing over his shoulder, he noticed
the picture of a small boy being
chased by a snorting bull.
The attendant was about to ask
what there was to laugh at, when the
Negro chuckled:
"Golly, 'e ain't taught 'im yet!"
When you are right you can afford
to keep your temper. When you are
wrong you can't afford to lose it.
ENE
Keeps EYES
Clear, Bright and Beautiful
WriteMurine Co.,Chlcago,ferEyeCareBook
TROUBLED N'IiH
ITCHY PIMPLES
Scattered Over Face.
Cuticura Healed.
" My face was full of blackheads
which later became little pimples.
They were scattered
overmyfaceand itched
and burned, and when
I scratched them they
became worse and left
scars. I was troubled
with ti em for about
three or four months
when I read an advertisement for
Cuticura Soap and Ointment and
sent for a free sample. It helped me
so I purchased more, and DOW I
am completely healed." (Signed)
Miss Esther L. Ba11, Manitou
Beach, Michigan.
Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes.
Bamplo EachEre. by Matt. Addres, Canadian
Depot- "eutices, E. O. Eos 2616, Montreal."
Prete Soap26e. Ointment 26 and 60e. Talcum/6c.
Try our now Shaving Stick.
MOTHER OF
LARCE FAMILY
Recommends Lydia E. Pink.
ham's Vegetable Compound
to Other Mothers
Hemford, N. S.—"I am the mother
of four children and I was so weak alter
any last baby came that I could not do
my work and suffered for months until
a friend induced me to try Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Since
taking the Vegetable Compound my
weakness has left me and the pain us
my back has gone. I tell all my friends
who are troubled with female weakness
to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, for I think it is the best
medicine ever sold. You may advertise
my letter."—Mrs. GEORGE I. Ca0ue E
Hemford, N. S.
My First Child
Glen Allen, Alabama.—"I have beeea
greatly benefited by taking Lydia B.
Pinkham's Vegetable Cgmpound for
bearing -down feelings and pains. I was
troubled in this way for nearly four
years following the birth of my first.
child, and at times could hardly stand on:
my feet, A neighbor recommended the
Vegetable Compound to and after I had
taken doctor's medicines without much
benefit. It has relieved my pains and
gives me strength. I recommend it and
give you permission to use my testi-
monial letter."—Mrs. IDA RYE, Glerq
Allen, Alabama.
Women who suffer should write to the
Lydia. E.Pinkham Medicine Co.,Cobour ,
Ontario, for a free copy of Ldia E.
Pinkham's Private Text-B.'iok upon
," Ailments Peculiar to Women." o
ISSUE Nc.