The Seaforth News, 1923-03-29, Page 35
King George :tie.. -, �,..
Rbyalilos dolled; to I.lavel'incogilitoF TONI(' �
V4
STRENGTH
whenever they can do eo, to ese.pe
for a time from the artilitiai atmos-
phere to which they live, end from the.
rigid etiquette white always surrounds.
But apart from the pleasurable sense
of freedom royal personages can en.-
joy
n.joy when emancipated from the train -
mole
rain-mole,of their high position, it is only
by concealing their;iiientlty that they
can nlake,themselves acquainted with
many phases of life with :which it .is
necessary for then to be faiililiar',
Queen Mary, for example, has visi
ed from linhe to time the poorest qua
ters of London and .many other En
lish cities in the guise of a distri
visitor, her guide 011 several aceasiot
being the Bishop of London,
Pages might be filled with her e
p'eriences in.the pour quarters of Lo
cion. A clergyman who has worked fo
many years in the East -end reiiiarke
recently that there. were few disitri
visitors who knew the poorquarters
of London better them Queen Mary
and the number of persona she h
aided in their', dls+tr'ess 'will never' b
known outside the few through who
Her Majesty carries on these • chars
able works.
At the Old- Bailey.
The Ring bas had many interestin
adventures in disguise. On one oc
e usion he spent a whole day, at th
London Hospital as a medical student
o fact that only became known to th
hospital authorities several years.leter
He has spent the best part of a nigh
In a busy railway goods clearing yard
and fleas often listened to trials at th
OM Bailey in the public gallery,
On one occasion, ,as the King was
cooling out of Court, a boy standing
near him shouted out to his companion
"Why, I'm blowed 1f that gent stn'
the Prince of Wales!"
"Run and tell the gent that," ex
claimed his companion, "and 'e'll give
Ter 'arf a crown,"
But tee Preece, as he was then, had
driven off before the boy could reach
him,
The King and Queen have often tra-
velled abroad incognito, usually se the
Marl and Countess of Chester.
Ott one occasion a rather amusing
experience awaited them. A suite -of
rooms at an hotel tad been engaged
for them, but by some error the rooms
were booked in the names of Mr. and
Mrs. Chester.
Curiously enough, the proprietor of
the hotel had patrons of teat name
• who were very well-to-do, and he eon-
' eluded that they were the people who
Now is the Time to invigorate
Your System and Throw Off
Winter's Ills.
An unusually trying winter is almost
over, but the spring win: find many
Whose strength has been 'sappedand
systemns'uuderniined by winter colds,
influenza, pueuneenia or close confine.'
1- Ment indoors. Recovery from this eon-
r- I dition is often' slow, but it can be-has-
g- toned
e-has-g-Itened by the use of a true tonic niedi-
et cine, ,Strength andenergy can be re.
is staled; the m stoach toned up, head-
aches banished! and nervousness aver.
X- come through a fair use of Dr, Wil-
n- hams' Pink Pills. Tdtese pills have a
r direct action on the' blood, enriching
d and purifying it, thus bringing new
ct strength tp every organ and nerve in
tine body. In this way this medicine
, has brought new health to thousands
me of weak and despondent people,
e Among those who owe their present'
in health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is
t• Mrs: Clarence E, Misner, Chipman's
Brook, N.S„ who says:-"I-Ihad a very
severe attack of influenza, butafter
g the characteristic symptom of that
trouble had passed, I was left in a very
e weak and depressed Condition. I could
not keep on my feet far beef an hour at
o a time, and words can scarcely tell
how badly I did feel. I. had been tak-
ing the medicine my doctor gave nee,
but it was not helping me, and as I
bad used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills on
a former occasion with great benefit I
decided to try them again, I got half
a dozen boxes, and soon after begin-
ning their use I could feel my strength
' returning. By the time I had used up
my supply of pills, ray old-time'
strength had .come back, I could do
my housework and keep an\my feet all
day without feeling used up as form-
. eriy. I feel Ofiat thesa.piils have been
worth their weight in gold to pie; and
I strongly recommend them to other
weak, run down people:"
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine or by mail, post-
paid, at 50e a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Failure may be quite as important
as success in character -making.
Minard's Liniment used by Physicians,
There is one attempt in which fail-
ure is unforgivable—the attempt to
be funny.
Compelled Befief,•1
'So beautiful and • c i. lam iu it .
m g.a girl as
you should believe I win telling the,
truth!„
"I believe'every Word."'
April Pro rise..
April,. you've a comely name,
• Whet maybe its root?
Latiu'sm•ooth as cherry bark
Must have borne such fruit.
Who'd have thought "aperio"
Gave the sweet degree?
Open windows, open brooks,
Are its 'prophecy.
Open eyes to loveliness
Of the bridal spring,
In a midet of emerald
Shyly burgeoning,
Open. souls to greet the gifts
Of a heavenly hand,
Pouring glories without stint
O'er a radiant land.
Open bird throats, rending buds,
Add their jocund share;
With such lures: the open sloughs
We can surely dare;
Unafraid of sucking bogs
In the woodland lanes,
Traub we home with mired feet,
Proud of our campaigns.
"April, April," how it lilts
With the bubbling stream!
"April, April, thrushes call
Through the shower and gleam.
Winter, then, our open hearts
Shall no more annoy;
They shall greet the April dawn
With an answering joy.
—Eliot White,
Fiction as she is wrote—"She gave
him a black look and he turned white."
had engaged the rooms.
'WhenSuva their Majesties, with whose es and Their Origin'
identity he was quite familiar, arrived, ro
he rushed forward in despair to in-
form a member of their suite that he
had no rooms available; but a little ex-
planation seen put the proprietor at
Ids ease, and the names in his register
were quickly altered.
es -
L World's Fiercest Fish.
Which is the fiercest fish? The
shark is terrible enough, but he is a
lamb compared with a small fish that
'haunts the rivers of South America.
The pirhana, as it is called, does
.not grow much bigger than the perch
or roach of our waters, but it is pro-
vided with an enormous cavern, of a
mouth filled with long, dagger -like
teeth. Should an unwary ,traveller
stop to bathe his feet in a river he
will be attacked, first by a single fish,
slid then by a whole shoat If he does
not beat a hasty retreat he will be
• dragged under in a few moments by
scores of finny demons and devoured.
The pirhana is dreaded by all
beasts, for he is absolutely fearless
and will attack' any animal, no matter
'what its size. The shoal seems, to
know almost at once that one of their
number has found a quarry, for no
sooner is the victim attacked by a
single pirhana than the water is thick
with frenzied fish biting and tearing
as. though possessed with the fury of
1silling. The natives dread them snore
than the giant alligators that haunt
the some waters
Unsettled:
"His wife seems • neves' to settle
down,"
"Nor be to settle up"
A Bifeecated'Honeymoon..
•"Honey," said the ttobor'ed suitor,
"When we gats married you ain't
gwlne- to give up dat job you has
workin' for de wibdte leek, is you?
"But ain't 'we gwine to have. 110
hefeyni eon an' talea-trill on detrain
some wb ere?"
"One of us might go, honey. Bey
eine a thing hoiden' ole, but you's got
'sponei l)llitiea,".
DENTON
Variation—Denton.
Racial Origin—English.
Source—A place name.
You might suspect froiu the ending
of this family name that it hacl been.
at'iginaily the name of a place, used
first to indicate the place of residence
of some early bearer.
And so it was. "Is" is a better word,
for the town from which tenons name
cane in the vast majority of instances,
so far as the available records - indi-
cate, is still in existence. Deuton is
the name of a place in the county of
Buckingham, England.
The manner by which 1170 commu-
nity got its name, is a simple one.
"Den," in the speech of the Anglo,
Saxon, had a slightly different mean-
ing from that which now is connmoniy
ascribed to it. In the days before the
coming of the Normans it indicated a
deeiressed section of ground or valley.
Naturally, each places were likely to
be wooded and to become the refuge
of animals; hence the modern, frequent
figurative meaning of the word. Den-
ton simply meant the "town in the val-
ley." I
FARNHAM
Variations—Farnum, Farnam.
Racial Orie in—English.
Here is another family namo whiold
is simply the development of a sur-
name indicating originally that the
person bearing it had conte from the
place r'efetreg'te.. I •
The place name, like the surname, is
spelled Farnham, and it 1s located ilii 11
Surrey, England.
The name rattier clearly reveals the 1 a
method by which it originated, and the to
fact that it is a combination of purely ; 1
Anglo-Saxon words. The latter fact , d
indicates, aside from historical re -1 a
cord, that it was anestabllshed cone! s
niuuity before the coming to England 1
of William bee Conqueror and his Noe -1 h
hall hosts,
"Pearn" In the speech of the Anglo-
Saxons means "fern," being In facttho
parent word o1' 0ur modern English
word "ham," as has been explained in
other articles of ibis series', is an ele-
ment frequently found. in English
place' names, Indicating ;a village, a
word which is obsolete in the language
to -day except in the form of one of its
diminutives, "hamlet." Farnham, there-
fore, bear's, literally the poetic name of
"the village of ferns.'
'Ione Job is Your Key,
"I' will never get ahead here. There
r8_ nobody here that cares a continent-
al whether I get en or net, It doesn't
make any difference, how hard I work
or how I do my work, nobody pays
any attention."
Now; I often hear remarks like that.
Employees: say, "What's the use? I
don't propose to wear my life' out for
nothing. I am 'just going to do enough
to draw my salary. I will look for
mthing better.
„ o"
¢y friend, .do you realize that 'that
Something better waiting for you de -
.pends on how well you earl do your
work where -ycu are right now? Your
present job' is the key that will open
the door 10 the' pbaee above you, and
the door is net likely to open until
yon open it Success doors don't open
themselves. They don't open very i
easily. -0,.S. Marden.
SPRING; WEATHER
HARD
ON BABY
The Canadian Spring weather—one
.day mild and bright; the next raw and
blustery, is extremely hard on .the
baby. Conditions' are such that the
mother cannot take the little one out
far the fresh air so much to be de-
sired. He is confined to the house,
overheated.which is. often overheated. and badly
Ventilated. He catches cold; his
little stomach and bowels became die -
.ordered, and the mother soon has a
Sick baby to look after. Ta prevent
this an occasional dose of Baby's Own
Tablets shouldbe given. They regu-
late the stomach and bowels, ohms pre
venting or relieving colds, singlefevers, colic or any other of the many
minor ills of childhood, The Tablets are
sled by medicine dealers or by mail at
25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont.
Owing to lack of fuel and capital,
20,000 miles of railway under the
Russian Soviet has been dosed.MONEY ORDERS.
It is always safe to send a Dominion
Express Money Order, Five Dollars
costs three cents.
The highest trees have the most
pointed leaves,
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere
Forest Fires:
The season of forest fire danger is
approaching and the forest services,
federal and provincial, and forest pro-
tective associations, are making pre-
parations to combat this great de-
stroyer of forest wealth. Everything
that modern science has devised will
be used in the campaign—patrols,
lookout stations, telephones, tele-
graphs and heliographs, portable
pumps, gasoline trucks, power boats,
railway speeders, and aeroplanes.
These aro all valuable aids,, but the
great engine for fighting forest fires
rs public opinion.
Netuly all forest fires are caused by
uman carelessness, therefore when
ublic opinion sets itself solidly
gainst this carelessness, and holds it
be a crime against the nation, a
arge part of the cause of fires will
ieappear. Patriotic citizens can do
great service for Canada by being
crupulously careful with their own
se of fire when in the woods and by
elping to build up, whether they live
in the city or the county,, a body of
public opinion about fires which will
deter the careless and strengthen the
hands of those who protect the forests,
In proportion to its size a fly walks
thirty-five times as 'fast as a human
being,
Tho Arctic Ocean is said to be et-
ting,warnhei', with the result that ice-
bergs are getting scarcer and herrings:
are being found in the: old seal -fishing
grounds.
� � T
I IT/� r.. C
II /
/w
Its
h"hw
'ems
The way to satisfaction, comfort and
health through Instant Postum, has
becomea world-wide way.
This famous table beverage which
has stood the test of twenty five years,
fills every requirement of taste for a
hot and invigorating' mealtime drink.
Unlike tea or coffee, Instant Posture
riStag1t
Y
Tu
jy A BEVERAGE
de d d Ifo opt saris of Whe
3 t WI pdmn or Molaas
. •slum comet Corripen
'-•'.��+., B,mr Cnrtemex.0 SA
10 505[11101MM
contains, nothing that can irritate
nerves or disturb digestion. Even the
children may safely enjoy it •
Wouldn't it be well for you to avoid
the harm which so many have found
in tea and coffee? You canprotect
health whilepleasingtasto,with whole -
spine, satisfying instant Postun'r.
At your Grocer's in
sealed, air -tight tins
s
A denorous'samplo an of Instant -Poston -4
sent.,
sent; po it paid, for 40 in stamps. Write:
Canadian Poston -1 .Cereal Co., l.imit'ed, 45 Front St., P„ Toronto.
z y; FOR. HEALTH
"There's a .Reason"
Factory: Windsor, •Ontario
HAPPY MOTHER
PRAISES TANLAC
Mrs. Cooper Declares It Re
• stored Health: of Delicate
Daughter—Gained 11
Pounds.
"Six months ago Tarlac brought ro
bust health to my daughter Stella, wh
is seventeen, and I wish I eouid'tei
every mother what a wonderful, treat
•
0
$4;a ,�q`. l kor r u}tn,eatlnlr tn-
1•,S;t-4JC-.1-0N44rldp41.444,,c<a4.+14 +4,1
t
gfi
t
.
.A.l\'cr
"1011 11 fib
UUi. all' ;ri \i�','1 [is
pp eAR>3'ti .uni liY.
1pnn O-,-1 lir gr as„s I lr ”
i• LY 11 ,o uanhP e t•au
.Gn,
B• l , 1
.care,
%;For „egnr:fottEl}r, tl,llitir +�{o llo '.
CiaOr),etonm; Ontezie
l" ti ATOO t 3' mu' tri 11 v- ri1al.:r111
•1',,r f ens 'hi °' 1 101,8, J,,. 1'limo lue.rr.
For f'J1Ubgisil 1VGa oh' 1?atitoant tadi.�l otllt'.a wF lito Amer.
- ., 101 oto"� e.• n6 'Welt,
Or ' Constipated:
Bowels , P.1 1 C1,0 V1..14 runt GREAT'
e''inuAl
4s<•44 HOry.w++N+44� i4acde
ut t.
• �•,,}_ecoq 4Hi�4
ment it is," declared .Mrs, 'Lillian
Cooper, 24 Santer St., Toronto, Ont,
'Two years ago Stella hegan losing
ground. Har,cheolcs faded, elle was
dreadfully'' un -down, and se thin she
wee just a frame. Her nerves were so
excited I feared I would have to take
her out of school, for while doing her
lessons she could hardly !seep still and ; candy.
4 3!' r, "{Z rt :.^ a, '1l clerttx,X
• Clean your bowels: heel line' ' - e - r;.<.,
When you feel sick, dizzy, upseri
Ij P
7".7:'71*--'''''''"""
. erece;h Sieg es;lrog.'7
when your head is dull or .aoring,, or,
your stomach is •emir or gassy,• just •'
take one or two Casearets to relieve
constipation. No griping -nicest laxn•
five-cathartic en eerte for grown -lips
and ebildren. 10e'a box. 'taste like
at times .couldn't write at all. Her
I,�TI
appetite was so poor .elle scarcely ate , ie capital of the Bank of England
enough to sustain life, and her sleep
Was so restless she was always tired
and worn cut.
„s the day I bought the first
bottle of Tanlac, lily daughter has
geenedl eleven pounds, eats heartily,
sleeps soundly, and her studies are
like play, The Tanlac treatment is
grand, and I believeit slbould be in
every home;"
Tandac is for sale by all good dr^thg-
g els, Over 85 million battles sold,
8,s.�.m,.v..upv.aga—:+mi..«.nu�•.uo..,..a,,34
HOW to Purify
the Blood
"Fifteen to thirty drops of Extract 1
of Root, commonly called Mother l
Seigel's Curative Syrup, may be
•s taken in water with meals and at ,g.
° bedtime, for indigestion, consti- °
palion and bad blood. Persist-
ence in this treatment will give
permanent relief in nearly every
case." Get the genuine at
druggists, 50c. and $1.00 bottles.
rJ,aw.nnm...nn=--n,,5n*toi ...�.,m, .. t*
IE! MOVE
CHILD'S BOW A
"California Fig Syrup" is
Child's Best Laxative
i is $72,500,000.
Refreshes7 as y Lyes
\1Uhen Your Eyes fool Dull i
and Heavy; use Marine..•'11 In,.
i stantlYi lOVecthacTlredFeeling
—Makes -them Clear, Briefer and
Sparkling, Harmless. Sold and
Recommended by All Druggists.
fan yeas EYES smwassestut
i��
Heal Skin Troubles
Cufiaira
If you are troubled with pimples,
blackheads, redness, Toughness,
itching and burning, which disfig-
ure your complexion and skin, Cuti-
aura Soap and Ointment will do
much to help you. Always include
the Cuticura Talcum in your toilet
preparations.
Surp25c. Oiatmeat25and 50e. Takum25e. Sold
throughout theDominion. CsnadianDepot:
mug Limited 344 St. Peen S ., W., Meagan.
Cu icu a Soto shavro 'thout map
1''i 11 1111.
II „I
Hurry Mother! .A teaspoonful of
"California Fig Syrup" now will tli•or-
ouglily clean the little bowels and in it
few !hours you have tt well, playful
child again. Even if cross, feverish,
bilious, constipates or full 'of cold,
children love its "fruity" taste, and
mothers can rest easy because it never'
fails to work all the souring food and
nasty, bile regent out of the stonnen.
and bowels without griping or upset-
ting the child.
Tell your druggist you want only the
genuine "California Fig Syrup" which
has directions for babies and children
of all ages printed on bottle. Mother.
You must say "California." Refuse
any imitation.
Why Are Negroes Black?
There have been many theories a
to why there should be black, white
yellow, and red people in the world
It has even been asserted that Adam
was black.
The latest theory 'regarding th
color of the skin is,tlhat it turns en
tirely upon the question of salt. The
writer of an ingenious book brings to-
gether a mass of evidence to show
that the darker the race the more it
lacks salt as an item of diet.
It seems that in'some parts of
Africa salt is such a luxury that the
Negroes suck rock salt; as we would
confectionery. They describe a rieh
man as one who eats salt with his
meals.
• The author of the salt theory states
that each Briton eats about sixteen
pounds of salt every year'. In India,
however, salt is taxed, and the aver-
age consumption per head may not be.
more than three or four pounds. As
everybody knouts, the natives of India,
although they would resent being
called "black neon," are certainly slot
white.
It is` remarkable how: wide is the
difference in cotnplexion, say, between
the natives of Samoa and those of.
New Britain. Anthropologists would
say they were of different races, and
probably they aro, but it seems that
"access to salt" is the cause of the
difference between the blacks and the
light browns!
So scarce Is salt in Tahiti that Cap-
tain Cook, the great navigator, de-
scribed how salt water was a royal
drink, taken with great solemnity, a
sip at.a time, oil ceremonial occasions,.
The writer finds, however, that people
who live near the sea in that part of
the world tend to grow lighter in
complexion,
causes the pain.
Mato at Canada
Sloan's if iaimerat-kills juin!
For rheumatism, bruises,strains, chest colds
esiiscaniaceisrsalloceisni.
s c..,
Adam
e
ISSUB• No. 18—'25.
Ili
'j
Iih fill III IIII!6
dor Rheumatism.
Quiarellefi
The quickness, the sureness
with which Sloan's brings re,
lief has made it the standard
remedy for rheumatic pain,
Apply Sloan's to that
sore, stiff joint or aching'.
muscle. The pain that has
seemed so unbearable disap-
pears with amazing rapidity.
Sloan's breaks up the inflam-
mation behind nest rheu-
matic pain. It goes to the
source of the trouble. It
scatters the congestion that
Ijl
it
,0. 1538511 S'i1
`
� ABCs
�':
. and HoW10,xread
n..e lid Free..td: any Ad
tn'esa by the Autho},
rx. inlay Gi 0 r tio�,,0,0:
11.'SI
20 sefedl a¢ lr. fdtrp�ail
"Sems'1a i V14
Croup.
Pled theneck with flannel,
maturated- with hot, •rlt'inard's
Liniment. - It penetrates, it
}.'uothos, 1t r@la.ros the muscles,
011,ars. the passages,: brings •
-
bar {`easy breathing,
• '';•••'. Minatd's; ..
, .Pni11i7,ell@,
The-FamllyMeilicliie Chest
r- �nttra.
INDIGESTION, GAS, .
UPSET STOMACH.
Instantly! t`Pape'sl]iapepsiil"
Corrects Stomach so
Meals Digest
.4++ r.•ri1..11,1...
The moment you eat a tablet of
"Pape''s Diapep in" your indigestion is
gone.. No mere distress Prom a sour,
acid, upset stomach. No fiatulence,
heartburn, palpitation, or misery -malt-
ing gases. Correct your digestion for
a few cents. Earn package guaranteed
by . druggist to overcome stomach
trouble.
TO EXPELTA T
A Letter from Mrs. Smith Teles flow
. Lydia E. Pinllham's Vegetable
Compound Helped Her
Trenton, Ont.—" I am writing to you
in regard to Lydia E. Pinkhaon s Vege-
table Compound. I
would not bo with.
out it. I have taken
it before each of my
children was born
and afterwards and
find it a great help,
Before my first baby
s was born I had short-
ness of breath and
iringing in my ears,
I felt as if I would
never pull through.
One day a friend of
my husband told h'm what the Vegeta-
b e Compound had done for bis wife and
advised him to teke a bottle home for
me. After the fopgrth bottle I woe a
different woman. I have four children
now, and I always find the Vegetable
Compound a great help as it seems to
make confinement easter. I recammeppd�
it to my friends."—Mrs. FRIED H.
SMITE', John St., Trenton, Ont.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound is an excellent medicine for ex-
pectant mothers, and should be taken
during the entireperiod. It has a gen-
eral effect to strengthen and tone up the > .
entire system, so that it may work in
every respect effectually as nature in-
tended, Thousands of women testify
to this fact,
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 "Buyer" boxes of 12 tablets—,Also bottles of 24 and 100 --Druggists.
Aenlrin is the trade mark (registered III Galindo) of $aye!•- iranufaarnl o 'Mona-
aoatloanidestor of aa]icyiloaotd. While it is well Itnoh-n that Attnirla- m nus DA Vet'
manufacture, to /valet the pobue attainst imltntona. the Tablets of:neyor Cbinpa 0
Rin. be etamrsod with their general Traria m/rh, the 'rage, 000880,"