The Exeter Advocate, 1922-9-14, Page 3WORRIED WOMEN
NEED RICII BLOOD
If the Mood is Not Kept Pure
ealtli Will Break Down,
It is useless• to tell a hard working
Women to take life easily and not to
worry. To do so is, to ask the almost
impossible. But, at the same time, it
ie the duty of every woman to save
ber strength to meet any unusual de -
Mantis. It is a duty she owes herself
and family„ for her future health may
depend upon it.
. To guard against a complete break
down in health the blood must be kept
rich, red and pure. No other reediciza,e
does this so well as Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills. This medicine strengthens the
nerves, restores the appetlta and
keeps every organ Healthily toned up.
'Owen cannot always rest when they
abouid, but they enn keep their
strength by the occasional use of Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. Among those
who Have found benefit from this
medicine is Mrs. Cora Conrad, Broad
Cove, S., who says: "My system
was very much run dawn, and my
blood poor and watery. 1 suffered a
great Ileal from lhe«hdacltes and, Sizzle
;nese; my appetite was poor, and 1
tired easily. I decided to try Dr, Wil -
Banes' Pink Pills and have every reason
to be glad that I did so, Soon I felt
better, and under the continued we
of the pills the headaches and dizze
mess were gone, and my blood seenhed
in a better condition than before. For
this reason 1 recommend Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills,”
You can get Dr, Williams' Pink Pills
theough any dealer in medicine o' by
nail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.559 from The Dr. Williams' tledicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Sticks.
The l.oy—„STs, why can't \Ir, t~uth
;Tort spell his own panne?”
Sister n.. "I don't know, Tommy.
Wily?"
The I:oy-a-"I3ec ruse he cornea to 0
U, anti there be sticks."
g?Ilnsrd'a t,enlrnont for saes evaryvethe
Carry yeurself with n self-confnaient
,'air, and you will not only inspire
others with a belief in your strength,
but you will come to believe in it
yourself.
On the Seaboard..
The surf is poeuding on a white beach
leagues away,
A ridge of snow that rides and rides
Upon the shoreward moving tides
That roll from; half across the world
beyoudtho gray.
A distant surging nteaner trails be,r
smoke clouds far
Faint stain Won tele ntiAy rine
ora t outbound for province slim.
Or silver bay beneath the burning
tropic star.
Untiring seagulls dip and wheel in
graceful are,
White wings above the foam and
Spray
That swing acreas the seaboard day,
Until from main mysterious comes the
edging dark.
—Thomas J. Murray.
Weighing Liners,.
When yea are told that the largest
ship in the world has' a tonnage of
56,051, you realize that these figures
mean something enormous, but do not
%now how they are discovered or what
they really convey.
Tonnage is of two kinds—the gross
1 agister and the displacement, The
first zueana the cubic capacity of the
wrote of the interior ot the ebip's hull,
added to that of alt erections on desk,
but not including the space occupied
by machinery, This is calculated in
units of 100 cubic feet. Thus the gross
register of the 'White Star liner Ma-
jestic is 5,055,100 cubic feet.
The displacement o1' a, vessel is the
actual wei.g ;t, which is discovered la'
measuring the amount et water that
its hull displaces, °The hull under the
water is measured. and the amount c1
water which would occupy its, place 1
is calculated in cubic feet. The result
Is divided by flirty-five—or, in the
case of a ship measured In fresh
water. by thirty-six. Thus the tote
mage displaced is discovered,
This method was introduced h}r
Archime.tes, the Greek sele:dist. who
found le eit the amount ot water tits -
placed by a flcatinit object is equal to
its weight.
Electric Flatiron is Made in
Complete Sections.
1'eeltce that there was a demand
for an electric iron that could be
varied int weiget, an inventor has de-
veloped one made In sections, each of
which Is a complete putt with heating
element, sole and pressure plates, and
terminal pirs.
Surnames and Their Origin
HEBER
Racial Origin --English.
Source—A place name.
'Dough one of the first Milesian
Kings of Ireland, hack some 1,700
years or so B.C., was named Heber, it
would be drawing a very long bow to
attempt to connect the modern family
tame of Ileber with this ancient Gae-
lic chieftain.
As a matter of fact, our family name
of Heber is not of Gaelic origin at all,
but is the development of an Anglo-
Saxon place name.
Up in the north of England Is a
place called Haybergh, wither to -day,
if we were naming it, we might eall
"Iledgeton," for the two names are
synonymove.
And like other place names, it was
often used in the Middle Ages as a
personal surname, indicating that a
person had come from that place. In
some twelfth; century records there is
en entry of the name of one "Ernu1-
phtis de Haybergh" and from 'that
time on the name is clearly traceable
1n its various changed form's. From
"Haybergh" it became "Helbire" (the
"gth having been silent), then "Het-
ber" and finally "Hever."
K1NNAIRD
Variations—Kinnard, Nlnalyd,
Rac is l Origin—Scottish,
Source—A place name.
Isere is one of those family names
which is Scottish In origin, but the
bearers of
which
re not necessarily,
originally of Scottish bleed, or at
least not necessarily of Gaelle blood,
Kinuaird, you see, was a place name
In th
e middle ages. ses. it was a barony
establislied by one Radulphus. Rufus
(Radulphus the Red), r., Norman chief-
tain who got a grant to the territory;
from King William the Lion.
Historically, of course, the fancily
name is best known as the surname of
the family, which this Radulphus
founded.
• But it does not follow by any means
that all or even a majority of the peo-
ple who to -day bear this surname are
descendants of this . name Radulphus
or any branch of his family,
It was most natural, of course, for
members of the nobility to take as
their family name the names of the
territories over'which they held sway..
But commoners as well took the
names of places from which they had
come, or with which they were in any
special way connected.
„.,,-
Two in Family
Are Restore'
By Tanlac:
One of the qutstaaidieg features of
Taniac is that very often several mem-
bers of the same family are restored
to health by it. Thousands of suob
cases are on record and it isnow the
family medicine in countless boons
throughout the V. S., Canada, Mexico
and Cuba. Mrs. Bert Hewer, 103 East
Ave., North Haniltou, Ont., says;
'My health was so broken down that
I was unable to do my housework, but
Taulac built rue up wonderfully and
1 Row feel fine, My son and daughter
also took Tanlac with good results•.
baa call it our family medicine.'"
There is not a single portion of the
body that is not benefited by the help-
ful actioe- of Ta nlae. 13y enabling the
stomach and other vital organs to per-
form,
erform their functions properly, the
I whole system is nourished, purified
and strengthened. Get a bottle tc-day
tit any good druggist.
�..-..,.-fir,...,,•......
Why Black for Mourning?
The custom of wearing bleak as a
sign of mourning originated, with
Anne, the wife of Charl(s VIII., et.
France, who, at the death et her bus -
band. surrounded her coat -of -arms
with black, and woreltalaek in token
of her widowhood. This was then in
I direct opposition to the tweet enota,m,.
: which was to wear white as the s~yril-
' bol ot mourning. The raayu.l rasion
was adopted, and has ever since re-
mained,
A NEW CHAMPLAIN MONUMENT
Which is to be erected at Ortllia, Ontario. It is the work of Vernon Mareb,
€Tax lenglishnian. The monument measure., twelve feet, and the pedestal,
-chitin is eighteen feat, will give it a lie total gift of thirty feet.
.ever Look k.
ar.. ' : t , q
a �{t
G
't I
of � � 1
Q e the l.a,. massages flint f'ar MANE
Sinal gibbons left, for young people.' T"t•
-a a tIte excelleut bit of advice „raver s
leis"e back." lie r.ai ... `� 3�.,n--e ONE
i eaid that, no matter
wl;at timer age. ellen area begin w
leek backward they are getting old. At the trot sign of Metes during',
He never allowed himself to Took • the loon:. leoanter give ones
bac;.: he was ;always; ta> the Wt. loolz• • Babyet Own Tablets or In a few bcurs
What One of the nest Known Tray
ler* in Canada Says.
'Now I am going to give you nn
solieited testimonial as they Fray to thea
patent mettletne advertising. Heretofore •
1 have had a. profound I!c,ntempt tors
Patent medicin .y, particularly s a•eal➢„d
liniments. .1 er2:wp,s tido is < a,. t., the
reason that l have been t4-.ei mite
a sturdy constitati ,n mei have I er
Peen ill a day in my We. • one clay 24•:t
t..ip afts r 1 heart day i trzernp cn 11;n
IV
-. Ate r4rtal, t a>ta;>lrta c.d s, ct;1•
1�t5a • ane a4ay 1, :, i 4c c( ➢r31,' lit,,' tt
1:41.14 w24.o it:a a tar had n:...* Il,irg wr 'nm
with hint •,la Y •s119', 1 , ap:.,, nae: i rather
2 .i -74r rivinly '+ he gr ° !Mlle `- ly ;
1 nstll talo ll t rn• wan roma, ilrtm .•aat 1
feet ti, f144f a,1 1 •°,itl at7," tT
lautnPr l;er. ";till In s al[• c ne s: lth :i
ba1141c I.r T41n'nr1'x zeta sx'Qx
tau -7', l➢ -lis• a nae' tet' 1,;riao +its ty.,p l sri'41. .
a. few minutes a. to ..unci Feu eau bit
the pas^Id 1 all * n ,
aStRaa„fila 1''I:*Nh i?,. Jo;'!NS 51,
mnta'o;al.
Classified Advertisements It
-,
\,V4�aecdre '0uert? A:I. DIJ;S SJITI-f
'our/ryes oW eUans. ra ge-Z'ita1, St,�i Cath
arines, Ont.
r ADIES—Do rolrRpp OW'''T 23 f',
znent tits any ING macch$ne $2 b0:i butionho e.
$8: duty free: agents wanted. E. STF.-,
F'Ii2 SON. 22 Qulney Street, Chicago,
46D.NTS WeaaTZD.
HOLE OR PART Tiede,, TO SELL
our complete line of electric ilx-
tures and appliances from our catalogue,
Liberal commission, W. 1'. Earle lee -
trio stately Co., :.284 St, Olzair Ave., Tor-
onto.
I' So v 03' 1922 O'FE1i.S
1... Ci:.IaTIc Xr-t or"ortun:tty to ear
from ten to fifty ,lo?lars weekly :sit
our eme or personal greeting cards;
there sill be a b g demand this year;
whole or spare time 'May be devoted to
the work: samples free; write for fall
details. Carlton Publishing Co.. Dept,
325 SPadirna Ave.. Toronto,
iktN ti'4 s DFR31'L VsiI T, Es AND
Co4orr3sas.!nptea free--•C,eorgc.towib
»filen AT lis. Ont.
ENS WANTED WANTE ALIVE 2.3 CENTS
l t p"und, APhnit Lewis, C66 Dandas
. Torort', Crt.
lo"D''tb''xL) AGF, p"1i; .p ON
• tRoad
:)
re -r Clinton:, r spring sZend
buiblings, good orchard and fences Per
terms and further particulars apply to:
G A. 1. I' ielren5en it Co., Eiarristers,
&e. Louden 1'4Q:a Ela;, .. T40344333. (ant
lere
newspaper
be attractive. Sol
Wilson Publishing
e St. W. Peer antra.
LTS
iRTION bore. new and us .d, sfeagh •ed
F+;bjeet to approval At lowest -noes In
Canada. Writ ;::titling t o.. 110 X:,:it
i• St.. Ta,rcmnto. ono
big forwerd. to sometiaing better teen he may he i,eyond at.1. Throe Tablets l , ,ti .,< .w. - -
had ever coma' to Inn Its tile) pact. will prevent summer codas Lilies if
Any one w;.e forms the habit or given ,ta ea: ionally to the well ellild
;salting back, et living in the past, 411d will promptly relieve these trou• a
regret fi that1 1 I d l or tiles i :hey conte on suddenlyBaby's'
n he
utt one t ,
hadn't clone that, will never. account. Own Tablets elteuld always be kept in
ll h melt in the present: and Lis fie every et me, where there are young
ture will be like his present, chiidi, ... There Is no other medicine
Another bit of adviee from Cardinal
Gibbons to young leen was: "Expect
great things of yourself.”
What we expeet is what comes to
us, if wo expect it with enough inten-
sity, and struggle intelligently enougb
and persistently enough to realize the
thing we want.
When you expect great things of
yourself you prepare for great things; Little John was sent alone to the
you have faith that they are coming barber shop for a haircut.
to you, aid you get ready for them. The barber, in his joking Way, a•
There is a mental law at work that (mired what kind of a haircut he wish -
draws to you the thing you expect and e;i, and then pointed to the man, In the
Work for, If you don't expect any -chair. "Do you want one like this
thing unusual, anything but the or- , nine is getting?"
Binary experiences of ordinary mor.: "No sir," the little fellow returned
talc, you will get nothing extraordiu- after he had looked at the man. "If
ary, nothing unusual, nothing greet; you have to cut it like somebody's
for always the thing you expect, the just cut it like .my dad's, with a little
thing you hold in mind is what will • holo in the middle,"
come to you whether you like :t or t"'
noL Success,
as peel ane the mother 'ins tfie guar
anitc*ta of a government analyst that
they ere absolutely safe. The Tablets I
are read by medicine dealers or by
etre
at 25 cents a box from The Dr. ++
[t"illiams' Medicine Co., Broekville.l
Ont.
Loyal to Oad.
t Pay your out-of-town accounts by
A Marital Obligation. i Dominion. Express Money Order, Five
"I must say these biscuits are fine!" Dollars costs three cents.
exclaimed the young husband,
"However could you say those were
fine biscuits?" whispered his mother
as the fair bride went to get more old fashioned family album?"
from the kitchen. Rocker—"Passports, thumb prints
"I didn't say they were fine, moth-
er," replied the young man; "I merely
said I must say so."
MONEY ORDERS..
The Substitute.
Knicker—What has succeeded the
The right breakfast
makes the day's work easy
HEAVY,; starchy foods slow
down both body and mind.
Grape -Nuts speeds them up
for the day's work.
This wholesome, healthful
cereal food is made from prime
wheat and malted barley,
baked for 20 hours to insure
easy digestion and perfect as-
similation.
A11'the nutritive and mineral
elements of the grains, which
Nature needs to` feed the'tis-
sues, glands, bone and blood,
are retained in Grape -Nuts.
Weight for weight, there is
more actual nourishment in
Grape -Nuts than ii roast beef.
A Dominion Government an-
alysis shows that Grape -buts
contains 1799 calories to the
pound, whereas a rib roast of
beef as ' purchased (with its
20% of refuse) is known to
contain but. 1110 calories to the
pound.
Delicious Grape-Nutsis
most economical, too, affording
more breakfasts in less bulk:
than any other cereal food.
Sold by grocers everywhere
UtS
-TIE BODY BUILDER
"There s a Reason"
Made by Canadian PostumCereal Co., Ltd.
Windsor, Ontario
and motorists' cards."
*Hoard's Liniment Relieves Neuralg:'s
Settlers Thronging to British
Columbia.
The plow has become t1:ie rival of
the buzz -saw in British Columbia.
Time was a few years ago when lum-
bering overshadowed all other indus-
tries in the province. The prosperity
of the province depends largely upon
it.
It is still a basic industry. The saw-
mill has decimated the once magnifi-
cent forests eif the United States. IThe
vast.virgin woods of British Columbia
offer the lumberman the most profit-
able field on the American continent.
By wrecking the industry in Russia,
the greatest lumbering nation in the
Eastern Hemisphere, the war gave re-
newed importauce.to the Pacific slope
of Canada. Not in history has there
•been such a ,demand for lumber as
arose for home building in devastated'
Europe after the war. In the years
following the armistice the export
lumber trade of the province has.
broken all records.
But this is also a record era for set-
tlement. For the first time the influx
of homeseekers into British Columbia
has rivaled that of the prairie pro-
vinces. The farmer has followed the
lumberjacks, . Where forests stood are
1 golden grain fields.
How agriculture has gained on lum-
bering is shown by recent statistics
of the British Columbia Manufacturers
Association. According to ' these fig-
ures the volume of business of basic
industries in' the province last year
was: Lumber, $64,970;000; agriculture,
$60,065,000; mining, $23,066,641 fish-
ing, $22,329,000; other induslries,
000;060.
t>-
Cavicature is one of the ,C.l:nldeat
forms of art. •
ISSUE No. 36—'22.
CUTICURA HEALS
SCALPROUBLE
On Child. Broke Out In Pimples.
Head Scaly, Used Te Itch,
" When my little girl was two
years old she had a severe. case of
scalp t:oubiewhich broke
out on her head in pim-
ples. When fine pimples
came off her head was
scaly and used to itch so
that she was -always
scratching.
"I tried all /rinds of
remedies butinvain. 1 sent for a free
sample of Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment which helped her. 1 bought
more and after two weeks she was
completely healed." (Signed) Mrs.
Lillian Fortier, 104 UnitSt., Pray.
idence, R. I., Feb. 11, 1921.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment andTal-
cum mean you need for every -day
toilet and nursery purposes.
8anptaEachPr ebyMafl. Address•"t LSai-
tred, SS! 8t. Paul 8t., W,,Montreal." Sold every-
where. Soap26c.OIntraont26and60e. TalcanaGc.
IIIWCaticara Soap shown without mug.
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Milli: (' tr1Pts
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. J. \r+'. Ir F TORONTO
on
DCO DISEASES
td Flew to lac@3
Menai i'ree to ant, .114 -
dress by the Aa„err:
a. =Ay ozosar conl;na
;25 West 240 :1rcot
New York. ILL&
WONQERFUI
THE WAY IT
HELPED ti
So Writes Mrs. Lemmr'y of
Brockville, Ontario, Regard-
ing Lydia E Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Brockville, Ontario.—"I took Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
for weabnc a and
female disorders. i
was so weak at
times that I could
Sot stand up. I
bate been this way
!for nearly three
!years and the dif-
11I9 erent Ineeleines I
had taken had not
done ;lie any good.
I found one of your
little books in my
door ono day and
thought I would give it 't trial. I
am now on my fifth bottle and it Is
wonderful the way it ba: helped me.
I am feeling much better, have no
weak spells and can do all my -work
now. I am recommending your
Vegetable Compound to all I know
and yon can use my testimonial to
help other women. `—Mrs. CASEY
LEsIEItY. 176 Abbott St, Brockville,
Ontario..
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound is a medicine for women's ail-
ments and has a. record of nearly fifty
years behina it.
111
1
UNLESS you see the name "Bayer” on tablets, • you
are not getting Aspirin at all
Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets cif
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.
Aspirinis the trade mart. (registered In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono-
tacutioacidester of Salicylicacid.. While it is welt known that Aapirin means. Bayer
man:feeture, to -: assist .the public against_ imitations,.the Tablets of Bayer Company.
Will be Stamped' with their general trade mark, the • 'Bayer Croce.