The Wingham Advance, 1922-04-06, Page 3,•-•••••• -s."'''...,....-',"1" 1,''''',''',1'404'N' ','1!,'',1'1!,""•,,';`, "4','Mr'..i'c't 1, ..:- I'lt:,.'/...„ -.Al.
....4,,•,i4r,i1..-,,,',4Wii:i:i...,,!,,,,,,,,i:..,,,,,•.,...,,,,,,,•!,,,,,,,.-;,••.,,,,,,,:',..,,,,„!,5,,,.;1!1',,,,i,Ve,(!,!','.i,,":4T.,,,..:''V,''''','''' ''',:',. ' ' ' ."
.',.',.1'''i'l ";",'.'i.1- ".'0"..'1.....-".41'''r- . ,.,.'r '"'` ''.. ' ' ' '"'. • - -"' •
.,'',';',.4!',',..''',i.,7,.'",,',..,,,,,.,r,,..'",i,'.•,,,........,.,.. „.„,, ,, '4, '1'''''.',01..,', '.t.0 ;,'.•'.`, '1......,•, ,,,,,,,,,,,!'''',..- "!,'
. .. • . .
. .
se Hy rnore than Ohe Chip lately a wire
less Ines's:age has been seut out asking
for 'the advice of a doctor, and e,onie
• large ship ,carrying a surgeon has
e,
, flashed back directions, fer"eetting :a
broken limb or treating a patient da
gerously ill,'
Can anyone be more utterly forlorn
.then a siek satlpr On a 'ship "in ,mid -
ocean with. nobody to understand hie
sufferings or to know ,how, to ,a114yiatev
`N them? lItit hews, riovr comes of at'spe::'
eial wireless stafiion velicve medical
advice " Can be sought by a sh‘v a
thousand miles from land,and
mean a feeling °fee:info:1'i and security
tor ions of thermal:L(1,s- or s'eaTaring
men.: The Seamen'a Church Inetitulte
. of New York has established a wire-
niedidal etatiinn which will send
out `advice to any ship, no matter what
its nationality may be ; ,and if.the shin
' be out of range owing to its having
onlY a small wireles's apparatus, the
moSsage 'Will sent'on froin one ship
to another:
• '
,The ship seeking advice has, only to
send out the °all IcD11's it may be an
urgent mess,age asking how to set a -
broken limb, or it may be a request
teem hour to, hour ,Or from day to day
for . information in order to nurse a
man through oiue s.evere illness.
Ili order to make the SierViCe of real
value ,an cild law has been enforeed
which, requireS every stip to Carry a
medicine chest and..4 a firsteeici equip-
, merit, so that the advice sent'from the
medcal. stationcan' be e,eeTied
Suck a wonderful plan for healing
wiiieless will dpubtle,ss be followed
by other countries, so that, as, Dr. Wil-
son, tire medical director c,f the Insti-
tute, believe's; every seaman will be
able to receive without delay at least
thiestort of treatment and nursing that
the, mother of .a farnily in an isolated
Country spot IY',00.1:ilbo able to give.
s --
dr,
,
, +1'
•
{11'
4.,
7 -
els
AuldScotland..Abroad..
naitiye Scotelime,a who enters a
ereitantrant far from- his -hills .and
hee..ther iSs.almost Sure to he an anips-
. ing 1 ellow. Andra: kirkaidy, the Pro-
ifestsienal golf ..player,"who has passed
,tifty years, of his, life en the fathoms
slinks -at St. Andrew., Scatlarad,,.Onee
had to „spend a f,eW hours in Isond•on.
in ',,companyewith, three other „..5:Cat.s.
'The one thing that botheredthein, we
leaen• trpm hie book, Fifty Years: of
- ..•Golf, Wasqlie firlde of the sapper they Igteil-alitY it'S' the „fineist' potato' crop in
• 1
sent'County." ' ' ' ' - .
' • ate: ,'„_,...„, , it f
' 011-, ye::','' muttered Horace, that s
Pointing to ,..a, bright, attTlactilre-
, looking -----------rye, all right is, far as it goes: doctor,:blat.
''' be - • ', - ‘'
s
in therete, •• • toes' to .feed me hogs?" "
`Theyellemale, ye ,pay t,lerongli the• — '
nese pi.,Vint,Vraw Plice" staid., ,, ...,- - • A Dead' ,D -eat
r tillt Ben-ayens"; and 'Hugh ,Weire; so ' : rat, while on 'a,Visit tO•Anierica, be-
• ent.11uP,1at.le,olver, the reatall-Pant that c•Moe.”. d0. -4,l5"."' i6tete-AId;.iii, watelliPg...a
. . ., . • , . ,,..„ , ,
they effeeese;se nu„ irailf, et. what the :Yankee gmcriener: " After a While the
suPperl,nright.cett DaTie,Grantt.and met Leitewleg dialegne toolc,141;aee.: . •
Sirkeethatxs:eseined fair .we agreed; to Yank--7"Sonie fine vegetables here,
, , rie4e eating.there. Waiters eame and Pat!" •, -. ,
Pat—"Yes." • • . ' ' •
bellied us' off .With our ha:ts• and oter-
:
,Visitor—"Well m man '"do
Yeu like going, to SG11001;?"
Little ,1Vian (aged El.x)."—"Yes; but
I dc:n't like sta,ying ,there.'
On Friendly Terms. . •
Little Leitise WAS lc.st on the street
and was brought into the police sta-
tion.-- The officers ',tiled in every Way
to letiisa li,•er name. Finally one of the
officers said:, • ,
"Wlia.,t name does your mother call
your father?"
"Why," sail Louis e,v.ery' inn:o cently,
"she ,dori't call_ him any name, she
likes
• • .
Knew Something.'
A pos,tiniStrees in a village -was 'very
fond of tampering, with the parcels.
One day a by dame in with ,a large
piece of bride's cake, and said, "My'
sister sent this to you."
"Oh th.ank pot " said the voinan
"-Tell here' have a wealtnea:st fo•r
bride's cake."
, The bay eyed her coldly and said:
"She sent it to you to get the edge off
your appetite. afore she sends „away
the lioxee."
It 1 -las Rs Uses.
• An old Scetchwornam, much against
her will, was induced to sit ler her
picture, the first she had taken since
she was a girl in her teens., When
the photograph was handed to her She
failed to recognize herself. ...She
I
lltat daY, IIIIIPURITIE
the rea "w
sult of race hieli had beell SPRING
•
IS•hieWing. nothing 'eliont racing, and
feeling hound to justify his .eXistenee;
the inventive youth had, the following .
Better Than -Gold Mines, I
Peru heti many gold and ,eilVer.
DUE To .pooR 131.00D alinet, inrdia0 dePosite on:the
. ' • ieland,s; whieb, extend at latervale
41014 oue'thoustand miles of cciasit, are
4 44.4,41.4441.1.41) 11)1 inserted the , I
1,We regret to announce. the tleath A f,ronic Medi;cine a 3r;ECeSSity at Htiedrede 'Of of t,P•es' haira' C 0 kJ q. D 1,10 L'y EAT
ENOUGH ITEFP ALIVE
; I
T'S SIMPLY GRAND (C14$s';flecl Adv"tierne0f,o,
SAYS MRS ALLIsON •
00e., No other fee. A, mecseefer,,
•••• Ansf weeeeenp, END
AMA-DIAN SIATRIMONTeali P,Afleft.
1)apter _ . far iiiore,•v:alualilir. • • ,
ckt ',Liitoorn Ect 3;5P '),-es.te'rd'ay fterno on • . been exported, 0214 as ,teo pre,,,e,ar
ef tee' yea Berse,ren,ii Deee swift; the •- 1.hlb Set. BOIL price waa generally in the reighliort- " ,
SHEQC
s.
Dr. lliams' piniPills are an I that even' seabirds 'rave their value, , • •
heed of ten levee:de, n ten it 1; eyfdete
•
author of -the Weil Isnowa hynni 'The -
Ile,seate Hues, ef t•-,arlY W Year-round tpnic for the blood and
, and tliat the possession of a,' siren°
' • .
,. , , • nerves, 1 .
, .. „ . alile in the opring when the sy$tem
, Isrem the British Flan to the Chluese i loaqed wire tinpartti,es as a reeteit These guanio, depoits are sonietimee
„ the lower Stratum is as hard as linie-
-1o:eked-to the animals fertlie•designa 'rni.• e n ° 4 1 '
, , L. ...mere is ,no othet' seas,oe. waen d
TatellaS That Tell ales,. . . „ 1,sland is a encl., Ca 0 . •
ach Troubles. •Quifihty
d,ragan, the old states of tlie •wOrld of great dap h—elo deep, hi feet, that Steom
of th d QV life ,of" the whiter months.
TANLAC.
thought there meet be corne mistake.
"Is this me?"' she asked. • "Yes, mas•
da -m," said the photographer, "and it's
a speaking likeness,." • The old: lady
gazed at her counterfeit presentment
for a full minute in silence. "Awe:el!"
,she said resignedly, •"it's a humbihr
What Worried Horace.
Horace NotsworthY, Morpeth, is
the champion grouch. • Ilia pastor said
tO„.113 2.111 day: •
-
'WeilaplOdilsace, You're a great grow-
ler and Complainer, but you certainly
can't growl: and .comPlain, , • this's year
about your potato eroP. Why;..nian,
they tell me that both in quantity, and
The Prussian eagle and the Gallic, and enriching, and every
blood is so much in neecnef purifying •holl'e, and ates back to -remote
dose ot these ,„perlocis long before the sight of a mart
for, their na•tional crests.
ifve'r thfe
cock: like the British pil1s. helps to enrich the blood; T.'" ;(1151111beci c°1111tles
•
strength and pride; but, new riations the spring ono feels weak and tired—'" •ati, ft
ra,tion have nested on tire islandte.
have also theft official cre.sts, or tO- -Dr. Williams' Pink Pills give strength. , Such enormous cptentities of guaeo
Would seem incredible to anyone wile
—Dr. Williams' Pink Pills" develop the has not seen the wonderful sight any
,tenrs',.and in nearly- every. Case we.'find
the choice 'h:as fallen on eome kind cif
These totems ' tell tales to the.„iii-
•terested c,belOwer.. In most instances
the figure chopenis aeelink with
past. It May be' sentithent Or 'Misr-
neSs whiehesways .the 0110106, but the
animal is there, The totenist.of a nee,
tion or state are of teneS:hoWn on their,
pc:Stage-Staines,. • '
The Canadian beaver and the ken-
garo O, of A.nstralla are, natepal teriengh.„,
but Canada Pais her triblite. to Senti-
ment by -else, adopting the maple:deaf.;
On .thestbanips ,o,f the lJnit,ed
the:re is a plituregallery illustrative
of national, history, front the ,buffalo
being hunted by the Red Man to the
selfnailidere, for prairie corn
Sealing old cod-fiShing f,ornied New-
fbiurdliunid? ar1y tratd,e, SO on...old:este
eoliony.,stamps we find the hair eeal,
on: another a aadfish. A Newfound-
land deg 'graces yet another stamp,
evid-ently a concession to s,entiment
rathier than a record Of trade. ,
''Japan's -stamps usually incline "to
bird Objects:, the osprey being a favor-
libe New Zealand inclines; in
thd.s, direction: • The ap•teryx is corn-
Mernorated on the postal issues. Many
of N.e.ve Zealand's great men haVelosen
"" 0.0ait ia re:eaten:able
enough to' find the strange feline of
the islands, imprinted on the stamtise
- Behind the' national ernblein..Of
• Republic of Guateniala,,,-*Ittch is the
tangent, a •tropFetaa„,hir,d of geergeo,us
ea,thers Olnde,hing tail -plumes, lies,
• small history -hook int itself. ''Ph„is.
one of ,the most interestng of bird En',
altikaugh the, black :Timis, of
Western Australia al•o 'ave stori
sh
In the spring the appetite is oftea poor
Wde ciatersOf ,the pa,rty, said, ge *hat' ":1 tP' get: ti%e bad' 1)Pta.;
coa,ts'; a string band eras play, Mg -fancy Yank•—"' oFkiee gtew' eabWge:
ectIlw,o,,M, en: and men were .chatting and hiea-,rt.. Matle si.'" grand
• mus,ic on a platforms:and, finely e,ses,s. w,- h, when cut m two, a5,144.4444
nd the
ea,ting and drhilting. for kidd•les!,"
Andra, Daviesaid to me, ``ye din Pat---"INgcnal,' But: it must have
Ina see a seeht like that hi §ts- Andrews. mig.1,4ty:',Iine one. But we ilfaye.
.-da,zziea my verra een.. Them's bon- sollie, fine vegetable, i4n :OA Irelland,
nie ' but the mendeot poor I. °lice' remembereeingthree m'en
SieePing on one beet!" -
:t
"'•TheY'ill.make us DayYantk—"Tiree men?" - '
, for coming• • - •
b" I said., cci,st us a bonnie • Pat --"sure!• Policemen!"
penny. afore we, get out." '
11 feet I wa,nted 440 410 out the nd • -era-
. • •• Revised Version,
theta, ,but the others *.stopped me; we A young Australian reporter was
had kindeef struggle, but at last we left in charge of the. news -room one
"'• all, eettled down. The bill of fare was. evening. Suddenly he Was conifronted
printe a language none of us could with to lant, an inexplicable cable
reade'a clgtlike thing it seemed to me from . Englan,d-
--aed :we had to let this" waiter brings 'It ran."Lincoln, f.5b• Dean Swift
what he liked We had three or four
, • ,
oeurs,e,e,,,but It was: more like picking
than eating; there,•were a small piece
of nam; e,oine pieces of chicken, cup
" of coffe,e and. a slice of bread. • Then
came the thunderbolt,I had been•Wilit.
ing for -7s. Gdeach!
an one bill?' asked the *alter.
, t "Yee, -that'll cle,", Sayers refill° d
It amounted to thirty shillings. "Just
• eboot, the cost of the single joerney to
•St, Andrews," said T. .• - '
• "Give Inc three •ethrillings, Davie,"
Sayers said to Grant, "and I'll pay for
yens- Supper.,"
"I•Te.," said Davie; "I'll gto ye a
Hugh said the same thing to rise, an•d-
I replied as Davie had clone. "It'll be
• a lesson to you to keep out 'of such
place," I added,
As' the waiter was helping Davie on
, with Iris coat', he neitieedethate there
were, no tips tor him Mr •thsif table„
-"Dent forget the waiter, please," he
sold, ••
Davie tarnou on avini withs„the most
solemn look I ever saw on a man,'a
face-, "Forget yo!". IiO Said. "I'll
never forget ye till mydyer' day; and
whel'e rhair I'll never forgive ye."
. ' . ounirnons.
Now frailewee geowing .thiege awake
• NI/liere beecheu w-cOds ,are Stirred;
• Presh'lesseo of life the flowers take
• When spring'e- low call is• heard-,
".1 Hepaticas in feery hoodet • •
Unicine thethisolvee from Steel); •
Tholigh. still Within the deoevey Woods
' Late •snoivdeliits vigil. ;keep,' '
Thessaxifrage and windflower glide
Into theliegeowy stress, • •
,While favored spets. Arbutus
Stloh, slair.ert'. loVeliness!
„
And„soeit * follew thick, and fast ,
The later fheseere of 'Spritz, ' •, -
Till one and all have heard ,the call
• That etife
if .you pannix54t Aure ,04.1 iIo�
try,o tirlaa Vitlitvt ycZ )isicq*, ,
Obit Roseate Dawn," and was, in fact,
in, 1-ncl1a .aisci the Far Eat -the tp
,
tenks chasten vary from bounding
tigers, to tartaise asleeP beneath assTheY , would baVe been the same
appetite, One, the stomach and aid
weak digestion, It is in the spring
•that poisons In the blood awl an out-
let in disfiguring Ipimples, eruptions
and WilliandS' Pink Pills
clear the skin becapie tlieY'-ge to the
root of the treuble in the blood. In
the spring anaemia rheumatism indi-
gestion, neuralgia, and many other
troubles are most persIstent because
Of. poor, weak blood, and it is at this
'time- when. all nature takes .ora new
life that the blood most seriously
needs •attention Seine people doee
•themeelves with purgatives at this
eealeone but these only further wealten
thentselves. A purgative merely gal-
lops through the system, emptying the
bowels, but does not help the blood.
On the other hand, Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills enrich the "titled 'which reaches
every nerve and, every organ in the
body, bring new strength. and vigor
to weak; ea,sily tired men, women and
children, Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
this spring—they *pn not disappoint
Sold by all medicine dealers or Sent
by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 by The br. Medi-
cine Co- Brockv•ille Ont.
, • hundred tons of fish, ansI, 00 it is "nob-
le- . •' able that one hundred million seabirds
"With All the Saints.,, • of different species!, but all voracious,
one of the•se islands presents in the
breeding eeason, The hid s gather
there in eountlests nuniberis, hatching
out "their eggs. in such cl a:se proximity
that, there is barely room to turn
round. -
Cormorants are the most numerous
speciee,. A recent OUSZTVer estimeted
that there were ten million -birds of this
species alone sitting upon -their eges,
in one Place at the one, time, TheY
would,' appear to feed in relays, 'one
"shift" taking care of the eggs whilst
the other is at sea.
,
It la aneamazing fact that, among
the te-ne of thousands of ne•sts, lid
bird s•eems, to make a mistake as to
which is- her OWIi. •
Gannets- and pelicans are also- very
numerous. It is quite a usual sight to
see • twenty thousand gannets busy
fishing at the same time, and -if the
story to well founded that these yore -
atom birds devour ten pouuds ot fish -a
day, it goes to prove theendlese pos-
sibilities of the oewan as- a etource of
food ,supplY for human bein•ge as; well
de'bird.s.
•
Thus oneeflock, such as the above,
may-clevour in the course of a, day one
f,eed' daY by day oil the oasts ot Peru,
• •"Certainly I ani not so foolish a as to very elemeetarY ;;'-;ii give the
.dou,bt the existeece of God," Rob Kerr Weight, of fish -consumed. The result-
deciai•ed: "The memory of ray parents' ing figure multiplied by the number of
live.s and pra-yers, would preventmydays, in a year staggers th;e lineal:31a_
. . . ; .
•doing that. And I havent forgotten tion.
their faith."• •- •
"Don't you think that part •
of their
faith in God se -ass -the result of -their Th
e Origin o1 Our amage
lifelong faithfulness to the; ahurch?"
Customs.,
Dr.„ Parker asked, •• ,' The "best mai". Is an essential 1ee-
"1 am not:prepared to answer that.: tine in all our mar -Oa -gag, and can be,
traced basis to the days op "therriage.
by capture,! when the "beat man."-wai
the comrade. celled upon by the bride-
green:tete assist in the catching of his
bridge • -
The-"honeyrtmert" wag not alweys,it
pleasure trip 'etscit nita*; , Originally
it was a rapid' flight oif the neerlyeedr-
ried doupfe to eicapelthe sv-.1a.,th of -an
outraged. father. There is doebt
that, the bride andzbridegreons-deemed
it -advisable t�keep out cithisSway'fo'r
at keit a Month; te allewlInfistat his
voivis- Of vengeance' tOcool •dOWn:
--
Ph1 'et:site-in of ''giVing -Presents to
'bridesmaids originated, in. -a 'ferm . of
ton., - The inide'S friends- Went
throegb 'the forth of:. preventing the
bricleOetUrisand.-hiss-friende from tak-
ing her from Iterhome, a Meek battle
,engued!, eath- party rielting the other
with sweetmeats; and this waS finally
settled by thehrldiegeciom making Pre -
Sento to all the girls..
The custom of throwing an ,soid Shoe
after the departing cOu.ple' is another
'link with' the leak, but -writers on the
histery of marriage disagree as, to:its
,. According to one, eview it
originated in the "marriage. by cap-
ture" Clay% when, dnring a fight. at the
'h
bride's ouses the nearest thingS that
'acne handy were thrown. Another
expla,nation is, that it was a symbolic
act on the part of the bride's father,
signifying' that he renounced all
authoT,Ity daughter.
The throwing of rice was symbolic
of abundancea.n
,d fertility, and clearly
expressed. the hope that the bride
woad nye in plenty.
The wedding cake, still „ent by the
bride, is Dee ,of ,the oldeet marriage
eustoms. The taking of 'food or drink
tqgether by, the bride and bridegreem
was always the principal,. and Some-
tiMet lab Only, ceremony aiming print!,
oaconut-palrit, Fancy 'rune ',:riot in
some perstageestagrips. andinationat em,
bletieg;'' buti'trdesed--baCk, there Is 1 -
ways 'reason behirel•the Choice!: L the
totem we may 'read the past. -
PRIN
The , Spring, ;or a.niciety, to
mothers' who have little (thee, in the
lsoMeb- CanditimiSi niakeit necessary'
te 'keep the baby, indoors. He le often
eonfiiied•Ao-Ovetheated, ' badly venti-
lated: rooms and catches colds- Whiele
_reek his' whole' system. To -guard
against this a box' of Baby's OWii Tab-
lets should be kept in the -house and
an, esccasionial.dos•e, given the 'baby to,
keel his stomach end.Vowels working
wherever , they were. believe that,
nliespirittial life grew out 'of their.
,:paraldnal relationthip -with God.; And
it, is the personal relationship that I
cl•alm for Myself, Timeseare,changed
no*. Many of the„ custems...and,metth-
ode of ;the;‘•chureli, are .obsolete and
inadequate, and feel that it is poor
buginess tee uS e. them." '
tans interested in the position' you
take," De Parker said. ;. "Waal: or-
ganization- seems to you better -fitted
than, the drivel" 65: meet the need of
te-day?" •
e "1 .thought I made it clear; that. I
belieVe in a personal relationship With
• "Staely that is one .0;. the founda-
gion stones of the 'cliurce! De Yob.
meant thateytel 'believe yeti. thus, achieve
such. a relationship better outside the
church than in it?'' • '
"CertainlY 'quite as well." The young
. .
peeve* funds, ;man Seemed. a trifle nettled, •
regularly. '.This -
"What I am trytng, to understand,"'
cone-tine:the% or colic • and keep babY
Dr. Parker continued, • "is, ,why. you
'Well. The Tableti areCtold' medt,
-box from 'The Dr. 'Medicine'
25,' cents a hold' such an attitude. Surely you
don't 'take the sanie, positiOns toward'
eine d-ealersr by matt at
bligineses you • never would ignore
-do's , ' • • •
butSiness men's' clubs and conferences
It's net the man who knows. 't1-4 and other means- c6 -operating " 'You
wouldn't take • the S,aine ground M;
s•cience and refue,e, to nieet other news
most that has the most ,bo say.. •
Surnames and Their Origin
POMEROY
Varlations—Pornmery, Lap,ommeraye,
:tkppleyad, Applegarth. e
Racial Origin--NormateFrencle '--
SOUrCC—A 'local ity.
Pomeroy is a family name belo-rig
to that group which originated ae des-
criptive- of the lo,cality in or near
which the original bearere of the nem%
Itetheane "apple yard."
It is an olcl.neme Illeg,land, being
tra.ceable back te the, days. of Nornian
dominance, in which, • together with
the period following it, most of the
English fareilg names developed into
such. from. mere descriptive phrases.
Tire original form of the name, 05
IS found in the old records., is "de la,
P-ommeraye" ('at the Appleyard"),
but the Seronized version appeared
quite early,/ at first in. the f?den of
"Atte Appleyard;" and later with the
prefix eliminated.
Ponimet-Y, of course, • la 'elniply a
variation 'froth' Pomeroy 111. the devel-
opment of the :spelling fisini. "Peru-
ineraYe,'' ,
While Pemerey sanie instances
le' inore reoently inmorted from
reliance, the-.. more usual forth of the;
name tre exfsting'iti that totustry to-
day- is La penuneyer. •
• There hes heen difference 10
the ItlaiititUtt" whichthe true French'
and the, AnglieFreueli.:fainily nanies
hay•e, deVelLoped. • In many, ease% they
40e. almost...identical.
di/erotica In' trend, exefept' in. the, large
elestel, faintly :names) '•.forthed •fifem
diminutives Of giren tames, has been
alto diVuMing -et alk,ppeti,x4a 4n,
'W'hile.the'Vreteelt,.theisighsslnevping the
-Wel the la er le. , merelY the,esttigljeiz,ed, teralS. ' *Mord' S LitSitn'thl.;fth*.tougiht at6lde . • iSSLIE NO
g
NiacSler NE • -
Variationse-MacSweeney. McSweeney,
Sweeney, eMeSwiilSini PAPoSyliegan,
Sweeny, McSwiney, SwIney, ;Svvy-
oey, Swain, Swayne, Sweney. ;
Racial Osigin—lri.sh. -
Source—A given 'name.
• , • •
There is little denbt that 111 many
asses there has, bean a confusiert be-
tleeen this group of • Irish snynames,
and the Scottish faraily names of the
lylacQiteen-MeteSiveYn. efa,ss, fat .1116
given names froni which the gretips-
have been developed are. quite shut:
ef seince 00 to make yo,urself familiar
with thir"elleceyeriers. How. then can
Vou think thee Rob Xerr all by hine
sell is going to became master of the
great epiritual mysterieS? St Paul,
who knew business as well aS allY
'man who ever ltved, told his people
-that- tbey must learn; to apprehend cer-,
-tain things 'With all ethe saints.' In
;other words, no man could apprehend
all of:them by himself. You have al-
ready, intimated that • the thing that
has held you Steady hae, been, not
yotir own experience, bet that of yeur
Parents. ,Supposo ,You had not had
such parents? How Ear -s•ien.ila your
own experieece have carried you?"
Thera we silence for a moment
Then rtho old Minister held out his
The Irish given name is "Suible hand, "Come and. Join yonr father's
-People, Rob. Thore. are estate
lima.," and beicings to that fairy -
name thase which, ineidentally, is, al- and we need their help,"
.niost as large; eitterig.the Teutonic as
This Sad World,
the Celtic Dena, It means literally the
spirit, or apparition of the s.trawberry He--"iarling, why -are yeti so sed•?"
plant. The Scottish name was ."Sue • She (gulping down a sob)—"Oli,
bhpc." It Was, 'however, frene ,en- dearest, I was sers-1 thinking this will
tirely different seuree, being in reality be bur last evening together until 10-
111,0170W DI 1," '
'Write it, M yoUr heart that .e'Yery
day is the, besteday of the year.—
Enierson.
"Aodh Aerachen.," brother or "Donal
ant-Togdhamh," one of. the O'Neill Tile cells,103.01i t you oan
'prince% end a brOther of a "Suible Eureish the- power that ewe The Con:-
whe cros-ged over te. Scot:lend
ant 'eSttablisilied himself there .and,i'S
,oriridited with'being the forth:der of the
1--111e0Latighlarts 0 that cetintog:
; weee 'general :diyialons: of the
SNI-ireSWitileY tiltbnitelY„ .pne
In.i.Faria,d, Another ithed the name Of
"l‘fae$nPAlkallealgliei let-Teal:Ole" (the
Mec,Swineys! of the eikx0"),,?.; Another
was in. Banagli.-) end still anotlieteat
but the Gaelic rendering of the Norse
and Danish name "S'sveyn."
' The MacSnitheneaighe" 'elan Ire-
land was a :bran& of' the moie,.an-
cient O'Neil's, of Tyrone, through one
vietion that you ean't peralerze
whatever ability irg1.2. 'hat"e,
If yet:twill take the ,troeible to uttlidY
and thifike you will einseestionelbaY
vi.tt felleves, Yoe
tlit'6W 'Yottreelf peer 'Joh,
virliateVer retudy alt Yee s-ee aird
heer, 'Nagy, •6.11e, a 614,11,06 to tivs
yoUte peeMetiSeicti-' fteed" net- genen'elly'
Castlereeree in Cork, 4 honit emcees's, for sthesese will Seek
,• The' Variatiettel bf, ttib natit)e. i10' you Barton 'Hepburn
Overcome and She Now En-
• joys perfect Health.
"I was in a badly run down condi-
tion ancl needed something to build me
Cuafbatra. Ont.
1110 MZ1T $,10,Q3 TO SOO Q9 Pate DAY
vulcanizing. Be iridePend0Yit: Wei
teach yOp. W,rite or partieurarst... cidet
Xnetreeter, Canada Vurearazer, .L,ersiere.
On • - • -
"'SO
and.' sewing: at home, W11.01.0 oi-
spare time' s'ood paYe w i'Ii sent any'111.4
eharLl'es paid. Send sLarnr, for
parPieulare, National, ld Llf e 621'.1
CO213)2 rty. 'Montreal. •
,
WOOL EDITO BLATIKETs
via:moo-Lae prieee, 7011) 14 reur.s
,t
wool, chiellY greY eecoade,ftfty (..“2131•1P0'
pound. Postage extra. Sweeier 'yame,
six beautifol eolers, eevenir.y-tive centr.
Se.ropleo free. - Geortret•OWLI WO 0101
Miffs, Georgetown, Ontario,
toreir.gea EAT,,,SI
Id, dTaiapro-Veilto e *us
panrlc b
he right medicine for znet, said Mre 11114..01i1PERS, birerci
• ti
STIIQTrt and Teinbe hivee and,
W. I -I. Allison, 68 Melbourne :Ave., farnisnings, honey • extractors, pumps,.
epos iiljpst eit,-V, i storage tanks; a C011),17,1C,t9 ,
:0°Inety°'22,Ornta.nil felt 'tired anti drowsy P'anY,
I wee in miserable health tor 9, • ;or''''Otti). Cutt:trofVei,1S 1-1:.criztal3eiTtejletPs. cc.', V
Ltd., Manufacturers, laranteerd, . '
11 the time. I never felt like gettiug 1:,S).at' • ---- '
P in the morning, and my epPetite • BELTING* FOR SALE •
—
as so poor I barely managed' to , eat .,.
fees. KINDs oil' rici)SiVAete'D‘pacing,t3.
ticsa3 •
Dough to keep me up. Idaeys days I I:citing, PUlleys. saws, caeohom
ouldn't do my housework, and the 'tee PPed "-°eet t° aPP" vat at 1°viel '
east exertion left me • completely tired illseVcirt"a9.agal•dRa"ElitTeD,ItTleCe130°Nrelsrolr C'''' .44
ut was away .below my normal e.
,
•
Weight, and my wretched health war- •--e0.1? geinge if,ycu c•annot walk,
ied me not a little, ' • •
Well, it surely was a delight to me e„,e,„e_e_seseemasese„,,, e
when I noticed a; great improvement'
Araeriorea 710rieee DOA' Zonletl,,15
•
• my appetite after taking. my first
w,o bottles, of Melee and I saw then -
that it was a 'wonderful motlicine.
m perfectly wel). now, can eat any-
hing want, nothing hurts me, aud ;
feel strong end well all the time.
an do my housework without a bit of'
'rouble. Tanlac is simply grand." I54144.41y .4
Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. ' issesseeeer,,,esesseessee
—Advt. ,
/3001.-: on
DOG DISEASES
and HQ17V to Feed
Mailed Free io any Ad.
dresa by the Author,
410 canT'si,loves Cp., sec,
121) ),,rest 24t0 Street
New York,
The Puzzled Wile. . ,
Mr. G•oodman (showing -his :wife`
reinid his orienting house) --• "And
these are the, day books,"• ,
Mrs., Goodman—"Yea. `Show me the
nigihit books."
Me: Goodman (nresItilisd) -- -The
night hooks?"
1VIrs. Goodman -- "Yee; those that
You have to work over at night and.
that keep yen' down here until two wise yeti get the . '
o'clock in the morning."
' Spaalloh
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Express Money
Order, Five Dollars -costs three centg.
OARSE SALT
AN A L T
. Bulk Co,rlots
- TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. J., CLIFF TORONTO
Health Saving Reminee,r
Don't Wait
• Did You Ever?
A minister, with two lovely girls,
steed enttineeti 'by the beantie$ of a
"flowing streente A fisherman hiappette
ing by, and this:Staking the ininister'S
oeouphtien said, • ""ICetchin' Man, olds
"I am a &her of meitS' ansvreeed
the preacher with dignity:
"Well," refilled the fisherman, with',
an admirifieglance'at the: girls; "yon
sure have the right kind of bait."
A Ial3anese. wooer prept s hia
sweetheart a ,befutiyifffilt
way Of eilitaniediV-,totterit.
Powder and Perfume
With Caticura Takum
An exquisitely scented, antiseptic
powder. Gives quick relief in sun-
burned or irritated skins, olrergornes
heavy perspiration, and pnparts 2
delicate, lasting fragrance, leaving
• the skin sweet and' Wholeabeec.
satipx5s. Oinboest2SandSlie. TalcuaaSc. Sold
throughout thellorhinion.Cau'adianDepotz.
4.,ymang. Lulea, 344 St Peet St., W., Mitmtre0.
flilCuticurs 30uP ribirtstrwithbut tuttV,
uS•
At the first sign of it. Its Healleg ,
Qtianties are Amazing. THE
OLD RELIABLE.
NURSE THINKS
• _
NOTHI110 BETTER
Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vege-
table CompoundAdvised for
' all Women in Poor Health
Toronto, Ontario.—"I took Lydia
E. leinkham's' Vegetable ' Compound
' for years and it is the einlY patent
'• medicine I ever recOnenend. • I ate' si '
' merge and if' I find., a woman is 'JO
' poor health 1 always tell her to -take
it. Although 7011 know that doctors
and nurses. do not Use patent medt-
eines I must say that I think there
• is nothing better than, your Vegetalalei
'Compound. When I first took id
many years ago, I was so tired when
I got *up in the morning that I coul• d
not, eat, and when I event 'to Ded i
was too tired to sleep. My mother,
1 in-law told me that Lydia E. Pinks
hani's Vegetable Corapound 'was IusR
' what I -wanted so I tried it and only
took •two bottles when I felt better,:
Since then. I have found that there
f is nothing that makes- me feel scn
well, for it seems to build my system.
riga up. I don't know any otire
medicine that hal done so much fo
1 women."—.Mas. W. H. PAith.ER, "Ig -
Wellesley Ave., Toronto, Ontario, .
• Women testify again. and again,
that they•have been helped 133- Lydlei
E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compoun.di
"after ether medicines have failed.'
It has been, tried far mearly fifty,
years and not found Wanting.
It you are suffering from arty et
the various ailments which aCCOttl-
pauy female v-ealtness try Lydia Rs
Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound,.
-
tive people, and this is still the case 1 '''''' 4 ,,
in many parts of the world to•day, . , i s
e
; ':
llillearsti's Liniment prevents Spanish Flu , .,
I .,
,
Never in ind • •others' ingratitude.!
Shine on, 0, noble Soill. "It never
troubles the sun the,t e•cate ,d • biz
rays fe1,1;witle'•esid vain into ntorrabefal
space and, araly a small 1)40141 00 eles re..
fleeting 3,9.anet" ...„
IDIMN DISTURB
youR SLEEP? .,
544, •
'le' ("Ate eftese leave tended to re- heed 'et thiS 'artiele are,' of Seleise, I 1
I -1E pain and torture of rhells
. matisrn can be quid:1,y relieved
' by an apylica.tion ot Sloan's
Liniment. It brings warmth, ease and
comfort ad lets you sleep soundly.
, 1.A.11;31:tsetrhael,-;,ewiethobloattilleil.14tantizity, and
yeurecighbor.
ei ria;tolirsi,osrityi,ffyiceairnstspiartin,sdeale:itiini,ey.:47bacAkss:
apply when you feel the fiiet, twinge.
Al' ali daiggists--35c, 100 $1..-10,
excd, acilit::;,,.;,..21::::seles, • sPfains and
It'e Splendid to take the pale but ot
, lqade in C erica,
t"!.!le -'".,.. .,.'''
, 4,-.., ,,,,,,,:,
Nilo% '
'wow
'
;
„
•
• ,
it411 Woie;•itu,11:14, .14 • ix a . ,
WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you bny Aspirin,
• 'Unless you see the narne "Bayer" on tablets, you; are
not gettino. 'Aspirin at alt.'„ Why take chances? '
• Accept onry an "unbroken package." of "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by
physicians during 22 years and proved safc by millions for
CoidS Headache Rheumatism r '
TOotliache vettralgia Neuritis
,
Earache Lutriiiago' .eninl Pa -ill ,
ilandy "Bayet" boxes of 15 tablets---Alse'bottleg of r1,11.4 vrti—DTIngtett.
.ArplrIn 1r. the treee next (,registered 10 Cetatda) 51 litaret. Unthescture. 00 leeees
ecetteesitiotar et sanceeleaela. Wens le is stall known that Aeptris weeattts Bnyeux
Inannfetiute, saiat ,the public agalnat iraltatiena, the 11.7414,gio IlflAaribr CO0P4140 I
1/e steested with melt geuetal 1t4/15 14141141 ine eISayer teeees
'