Zurich Herald, 1925-10-29, Page 3DYE1NC TO
ALL THE
LATEST
SHADES
in either wearing
apparel Or'' house:
hold furnishings.
Prompt service,
carriage charges
paid one way.
Our Mail Order
Department is glad
to answer questions.
KER'S
DYE WORKS LIMITED
CLEANERSOYERS
hoick temper and .Ifo . selereliance, a.
enSers wrltti thQs9e aheed alwais
isemi,bewiide.red. You mtty,smile.�•.a
thfa,•'iittt tb le s tact that, of.tl ose Wito
• $1Ye themseivee but a •few .deecfl dq to
take. • their tickets and catch their
train, nine out of ten have long, deli-
! cats hands, with smell filbert`nalls. I
should say they have no temper at all,
and are very g•eiierous. But they've;
no "mien,"
"Claw" hands I don't like, The
baeks of these are broad, but the fin -1
sere are. short, thin, and: draw to-
gether fan -shape. Fite nails are long,
but very narrow. This 'is the mean,
miserly, selfish type, with a bent to-
' wards dishonesty, A Ivan like tb;is
Would show no loyalty to'a friend, and Mount Logan, the highest' peau in This -gift of gold; •
his conscience 'would be a minus Canada, which rises to a .height of And b.gp id two 'souls with voids that
quantity. over .19,000 feet.could withhold
An interesting study heeds. Faces The Canadian 'Alpine Club e• xpedi- re nte's,•' On and flow.
can be masked and eentrolled, butplied over all rib-
t1on, which trium
hands tell the truth. .Put it to the settees and (reached the. summit of Bruise Sorrow's heel,
• The TerOnta Hospital for Ineiirg lo,t in
,anftlaticii with Onllevuo rind Allied ttaagitafi,.
NaW York City, Pact & throe soon' Conroe
ng
of • Training to you'+Vemen. hwealutas_
rC9dtrcd education, and desfrqus of bocorning
nurses. Thla Hospital Ilse adiptpd:tilo eight. `
hour system. Tho pupil receive unitorrns of.
the School, a maeolhik ellowaneo and traveling
exposer to and from NOP York. `For further
Information apply to Ma Superintemlont,
.a'
r �reo�'GIQnd;
And grateg in Greelt within the
, der" thing
These words I conned,
Through dent and soar;
"ln sllihnter and in wiete
Far,
Here and Beyond."
Ring.
p't tomb'' ]: louald a
len-
, Near and
Oh,- Grecian maiden, more than hero.
Secrets Of the Snows.
he,
Who loved thee so,
This summer has witnessed one of And slipped upon they finger deli -
the greatest exploits of mountaineer- eately,
ing ever recorded—the conquest of song Years ago#.
Tell -Tale Hands.
The work of a booking -clerk at a
busy station, where there is a continu-
ous stream of ticket -taking passengers
is terribly monotonous. I really„ think
]'. should have been comp gilled to
change my occupation had not�a friend
recommended me to try—as a sort of
sanity -saving sideline—to get interest-
ed in the hands of those who came for
tickets•. By hands I don't mean the
palms, but .the finger-tips, fingers, and
knuckles.
It saved me. If you came to my
"window," and laid yoti hand on the
ledge before you spoke, I Could tell
your charaotei'.
Stubby .finger-tips, ' with the 'nails
'very short and red, and the knuckles
bunched up like hillocks, are sure
takens of a nasty, cruel, tyrannical
character.
• When I see a thick, podgy, red hand
ion the ledge 'I know that I shall -hear
a jovial voice asking for a ticket, and
that I have a friendly°soul,' of cheery
manner, to deal with; As likely as net
he'll make some Inu orous remark and
'laugh at it himself more than ,I do.
:His is the happy-go-lucky type, that
lives for to -day, and lets tomorrow go
hang. If such a man makes a success
of life it's more by accident than by ef-
fort. Everyone likes him, however,
and he has no enemies but himself.
of long hands there are two types--
the
ypes—the delicate and the strong. The fin-
gers .of the latter are straight, with
the knuckles hardly showing. The
'nails are square and seem over -large.
I call this the "business" hand. It de-
notes success, self-reliance, initiative,
and brain power.
Long, delicate hands indicate a
WE WANT CHtJRNING
test on anyone whose character you Mount Logan, originally consisted of tooted Death,
And now despond'
In anawering echo of immortal breath
Unaging bond,
Norv:Doom' can mar!
"In Winter, and in Summer, Near and
,Tar,
Here, and Beyond."
—Eric Clough Taylor:
really know.'
We supply cans and pay express
, charges. We pay. daily by express
money orders, which can be cashed
anywhere without any charge.
To obtain the top price, Cream
Must be free from bad flavors and
Contain not less than 80 per cent,
Butter Fat.
Bowes Company Limited
Toronto
For references—Head Office, Toronto,
Bank of Montreal, or your local banker.
Established for over thirty years..
Sentence Sermons.
The Fatal Mistake—Of many a busi-
ness man is+that he does not grow as
fast as his bi slness.,.
--Of most politicians is their failure
to •see farther than the next election.
— 0f youth is its inability, to appre-
ciate the value of mature experience.
—0f many marriages is the attempt
to build a permanent home on a tem-
porary infatuation.
—Of most liars is that they : do not
have a perfect memory.
— Of many promoters• is the fact
that. they make their proposition
sound too good.
—In training children in the right
way is in not going that way our-
selves.
POI. ISMS
• ACI. PURPOSES
"Makes old' like NeW"
CAPO,
CLEANSER
For Painted Woodwork, Walls,
Enamelware, Windows, etc.
The Cane folie cs. Ltd„ Hariitofrk,
I [SS 1NORK
Bt�T•ERAESUL15
,'o -I si`oRM wiAtoo s
E, f• o i PAYFOR rf1EMS£LYE'.S
Cbp 'i , i Stop Fuel Wnste, nnucc Wide
Comfort with. Storm. Windows Low
FreOht•Pa, gu inc rc,dy}laxed;
T list and
toty. gunrantced, Free prce
list nhd ensy tnenquring than.
'c Ii AILtDAY taM mss`' HAMILTON
".�"""''"`slerP US IVO
POULTRY, GAM E,EGGS,
• BUTTE R AND FEATHERS
Ro m
!t,'YE R 0 p "
E 1JYA A
%ftp •itchy, b prieo.r 7I' tt'artintea
1htintJor a week ah;¢dd
R.p i�iUlL1 La Co.' UHy�ltE
„3.13 39.13zr.srtcti rt etre. w Ttiotr't •.eat
FIGHTING FOR -
BABY'S HEALTH
Is the Constant. Care. of Every
Young Mother.
The young mother has a constant
care in looking after the welfare of
her little ones. Childhood ailments
come on so suddenly—sometimes with-
out a minute's warning—the mother
may have a verysick baby on *her
hands before help can be obtained.
That is unless she has a remedy in the
House which she can safely give the
baby for any of the many minar ail-
ments of babyhood and childhood.
Such a remedy is found in Baby's
Own Tablets. Thousands of mdthers
throughout the country always keep
a box of the Tablets on hand and they
proclaim them to. be .without an equal
for sweetening baby's stomach;'
regulating hisbowels, and thus driv-
ing out . constipation' wed indigestion,
colds and simple fevers, and making
the dreaded teething period easy.
Baby's Own Tablets are an absolute-
ly safe remedy. They are guaranteed
to be free from opiates or any other
narcotic drug which are so harmful to
the future welfare of the baby. Moth-
ers, if you value the life of your little
ones give him Baby's .Own Tablets
when he is ill, or, better still, give him
an occasional close of the Tablets to
ward off illness. The Tablets are sold
by medicine dealers or will be sent to
any address, post paid, at 25 cents a
box by addressing The Dr. Williams'
MedicineCo., Brockville, Ont.
*
Not What She Expected.
She had noticed the huskiness in
his voice, and the nervous Manner in
which he fidgeted in hie chair told her
a lot. She knew what was coming.
"Clara," he said, and hie throat
seemed dry and parched,, "would you
--that is, could you—do you think you
"Go on, George, she murmured en
cohragingly,: "I am listening."
"Would you--•er-do you think you
could—get me a drink of water? I'In
as dry as. a bone."
Lucky Man.
They were resting between . the
danoes and he was pointing out to her
the various local celebrities.
- 'That's old Grove's daughter," he
said, indicating a tail sulky looking
woman on the shady side of 30. "She's
going to be married:"
"Indeed!" said his partner. "Who's
the lucky man?"
"Old Grove,"
j 4
I'• Total is Generous.
The midsionary meeting *as over
and the various) amounts contributed
by the members of the church had
bean, as. usual, Otte of the -most popular
features.
On the way home little Jane said to
her mother: "What a kind pian Mr.
Toted must be. He gave ever eo mtitcli
more than anybody else!"
eight members, but two of them had
to abandon the attempt because of
frost -bite and general exhaustion be-
fore a•ttaindng their goal.
Almost incredible hardships were
suffered by the,eonquerers of Mount
Logan, who spent forty-four days, en-
tirely on ice in getting to the summit
and back again: Each man of the.
party had to pack about seventy
pounds over two hundred miles of
ridge and glacier. Dangerous storms
were encountered, especially on the
return journey, and only the most
heroic efforts avercted loss of life..,
On the last lap of .the ascent, when'
the pairti' reached what they 'believed
to be the highest point of the moon-
tain, they found yet another peak'
towering above them. To attain this
they had to descend a thousand feet
into a valley between the two peaks
before again beginning to climb.
This final' peak was heart -breaking,
work, as the party had to make pro-
gress up a steep snow and lee slope,
terminating in a knife -area that led
to the summit. The temperature when
they gained the top was four degrees
below zero.
Nothing Serious.
Rife Iudutaiice Agent --"What did
you. grandparent die of?"
Cautious One - "I don't rightly
know, but It wasn't anything serious."
After a winter spent in the warmth
of the • kitch'en, the parrot had been
restored to the bosom of his family tri
the dining room. He showed only a
scant interest,in the first Meal he was
called upon to witness, until the bell
was rung for the second course, and
theft his eyes lightened intei�ligently.
"Aw,", he croaked balefully, "let 'em
flag- again!"
u e bui:d-.
lighthouse There are only, two h
. ;g
Y
;i
ers in l;ngland. "
Ask for Minard'b and talo do other.
J
Not Much Thought.
"Clothes is about the only thing
that- young lady think& about."
'"My word! She never struck me as
being as thoughtless as that."
Eclipse.
You have seen the black shadow
Rushing over the sky,
You have stood on a bare bill
And watched the fierce light die;
You do not see the slower shadow,
The darkness that takes toll
Of clean strength and burnished.
beauty,
Creeping over a soul.
—Loretta Roche.
—
As no cruel thing can be done with-
out character being thrust a degree
backward towards barbarism, so no
kind thing can be done without char-
acter being moved a degree forward
towards perfection.—Herbert Spencer.
and trip sure -
11ERVOt1S DEPRESSION
t-,
W. fty J People Are Low Spirited
and Depressed.
Nearly all women and most men suf-
fer at times from fits of depression
and low spirits. Everything seems a
burden; then come periods of nervous
irritability, headaches and weariness.
People who suffer this way lack vital-
ity ,because their blood is poor and
nerves are starved in consequence.
The only way the nerves can be
reached is through the blood. By en-
riching the blood with Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills the starved nerves are sup-
plied with just the elements they need.
This is proved by the experience of
Mrs. J. E. Dadson, 12th Ave. East,
Vancouver, B.0 who says:—' -'About
r
three' years ago I became very weak
and nervous. I had pains in my side
and back, and also suffered from fre-
quent
IOineti e!
y not- this . time?
53 nt
The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it 1 'a
Industrial H3 iene in Ontario' Classified. Advertisements
Ontario is the only province in Caa- —
ads wh eh has a Division of Industrial power. Wo chow she war. Students sell work
Hygiene organized in the Department seers through corse, Easy. eOgcti9a chase
g Schools, Toronto, 1 orty-two moor wog,
of Health, for the purpose of promot-
ing the health of industrial workers.
The main objective of the Division is A coxless IN PRACTICAL ELECTRICAL
the prevention of general sickness; r ab eatdntn u in sour spare time a6 home wall
enable yon to earn i bis angary or go lata business
the special objeotive, the prevention for youreelr. write for free tratning book. nurgoss
of those diseases which, arising out of Hloctr1eaL Comtruns, Dept. N. Crawford St.. Toronto:
working condition, are called "oc-
cupational diseases."
Now it is impossible to know how
much wastage in Ontario industry is
caused by sickness, because there is
as yet little health supervision and
few adequate records of lost time. But
such data as exists shows that in On-
tario lost time from sickness amounts
to at least double lost time from ac-
cidents.
As regards disease traceable to a
man's occupation, the records of the
;Division cover 472 cases followed up
during the last 4 years, The rate for your soldiers on the Sabbath day?"
lead poisoning in Ontario in 1925 is "Oh, that's all right, ma," replied
higher than that which was consider- the young hopeful, this Is the•Salva-
ed alarming in England 25 years ago. tion Army!'
This alone shows the need for a sys-
tematic and rigorous attempt to guard
the health of our workers. As.a basis
for this, a few cardinal facts need to
be grasped:
Fhero is a close connection be-
tween the health of the worker and
the economic prosperity of the coun-
try.
A worker's health is inevitably af-
fected by his working conditions.
Many diseases among workers can
be traced to risks, such as poison,
dust, etc., associated with their occu-
pains in the back of my head potion.
and neck. I was hardly able to do any- On all points of industrial health, in -
thing about the house. I would wake formation can be obtained, both by em -
with a start in the night and my heart
would flutter so that 11. almost choked
me. I tried much doctor's medicine
but it did me no permanent good. One
day I read about Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills' and decided to give them a trial.
These pills produced su^-h a beneficial
ehange in a short time that I kept tak-
ing.them until I . had ' used a dozen
b a B this time there was such
an iinprovement in my condition that
frieida would ask me .what I was tak-
ing; and` of Bourse 1 was only too
pleased to tell them it was Dr. Wil
-
1TowCAltn wm rNl2 UISCIdEAslis nMtNi�a
LEARN ELECTRICITY.
SILVER FOXES.
$00-e$µ' nnsenURMMAN FUR FAIA'.1.
1 1 'r sv arERSIDE, P.E.I..
Being Nice to Father.
"So you are going, to buy your father
onl ya 50 -cent birthday present?"
"Yes, but you see I have to ask him
for the money."
The Right Army.
"Tommy," saki the careful mother, •
"do I actually see you playing with
hams' Pink Pills. I am now feeling
like a new person and amdoing my
own housework. We would not now
be without Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in
the house."
You can get these pills from your
druggist, oi• by mail at 50 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
Change the Name.
• "Can I • change my . name
Ina?"
"What on earth for, dear?"
"Because pa says he'll' give me a
good hiding when he gets home from
the office to -day, as sure as my name's
John."
to -day,
Minard's Liniment for Distemper.
Surnames and Their Origin
FRASER.
.Variations—Frazer, Frasier, Frazier.
Racial OrIgin—Norman-French.
Source—A locality.
This is another of the new High-
land clan names which, though borne
by Celtic familfes, trace back to an
origin in Normandy.
All of these clan names were form-
ed in the same way, by knights and
nobles from the army of William the
Cth soils of such follow
onqueroor e r,
ers, who, either to Strengthen the for-
eign relations of the conqueror, or be-
cause they were not satisfied with the
spoils of war which fell to their lot hi
conquered England, sought their for-
tunes in the north at the court of the the northern limits of the empire's
Scottish king. government :was inhabited by the
They were, as might be expected, Picts,•a:ra•ce more similar to the Sym -
men with reputations as mighty fight- ric branch of the Celtic race, like the
ers, and as they were independent of j Welsh, the Cornishmen ,and the Bre-
blood relationship °with the factions t tons. About the third and fourth cen-
around the throne they were, of Curies of the Christian era the Gaelic t.
course, welcome additions always to ' Celts'of Irelandcame over from Ulster
the royal Scottish' organization, ' and settled themselves in the High -
But the .T asers, like the others,' lands. Then, when the Anglo-Saxons
quickly, formed" alliances by marriage,' invaded England they cut •well north
and adapting themselves to the cus-' intothe lowlands. Norman and then
toms of the Gaels swot' a•eceiving' English conquest and occupation fon
grants of land in the Highlands, rapid -1 lowwed on a large scale before sur-
ly assumed leadership of existingnames became true fancily names,
ce ere were i nfl u many
feudal power. was hereditary and des-
criptive.
FINLAY.
Variations—Findlay, Findley.
Racial Origin—Scottish (Celtic).
Source -A given name.
Scottish family names, taken as a
class, do not parallel those of Ireland
in one respect. They acre not over-
;whelmingly Celtic, either in language
or in the method of formation. And
there are i`easons for this.
In the first .place, the blood of Scot-
land ie far from being overwhelming-
ly Celtic. At the time of the Roman
domination of Britain the country
north of the great wall which marked
ployers and employees, from the De-
partnient of Health of Ontario, Spa-
dina House, Toronto.
—
-0-
Seize Your Chances.
Can you hear her? Opportunity is
knocking at your door.
If you do not rise and greet her, she
will go and come no more.
Greet her gladly --she is 1•aden with
the chances that you need;
Seize her swiftly -for she'll prove her-
self a friend to you indeed. •
Vacillation, foe to progress, may just
whisper in your ear,
"Wait awhile and see what happens—
better chances may be near."
Heed it not, the foolish warning; take
the good that comes to -clay;
Let not worthless fears assail you;
seize your chances while you
may.
Here's the ladder, try to climb it, do
not at the low rung stop;
Other folks may be before you, but
"there's room still at the top."
Standing still will not avail you; let
your watchword be, "Advance";
If you fail to climb this moment, you
may never have the chance,
Life is full of glorious offers you need
only reach and •,take--
Perseverance, resolution, all the hard
tasks easy make.
If you'd reach the highest summit, you
must start at once to climb,
Helped by grit, and faith, and pa-
tience; seize your chances
every time.
•
clans and gathered around them clan I Hen th encu of
organizations which they strove to races at .work.
make more powerful. The names of Finlay, however, is
The Frames are found first settled truly Celtic. Originally its form as a
in
Tweedale t d itin.g the 'reign of Male given, tante was 15ionnlaooh, a conn
colti'i ICT.; They, got their foothold hi pound of "fconn," meaning "'white,"
the Highlands through marriages into and "leach," meaning "fighter," or
families of the Orkneys and Calthness "soldier:" When it first became a
chieftains; faintly name, of course, it was pre -
The original Norinan formof the ceded Iv "Mac;" meaning 'descendant
name was Ode • F'risell" : or "Trasell," of," but in the course of time this has
andsimply denoted o'Veilord
iip
of been dropped ed a -id the
name
bee de-
a place of that name in Normandy, be- veloped' variously into the modern
iug a family name only in the sense forms to be found in •this country •to-
thiat it was hereditary because the clays
I ,)
—,lice Wise.
The Vatican, the residence of the
Pope, finds employment for a staff of
2,000 persons.
GENUINE ASPIRIN
PROVED. SAFE
Take without Fear as Told
in "Bayer" Package
thil•ess you see the ''Bayer Cross."
on package or on tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer 'Tablets of.
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians over twenty-
five years for
'Colds l•Teedache
Neuritic Lumbago
Toothache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pella Pain
;i
h Unbroken“Bayer"
package cra
a
con-
tains
provensdlt'ectione. Bandy boxes
of twelve tablets cost fen, cents. Drug-
gists also sell bottles of 24 and 1011.
IN
NIGHT
MORNING &
KEEP YOUR EYES,
r1 EAP+T CLEAR. AND HEALTH?
;i ra t'ak'e 1711. 25 EVE CAFE EOOK• Mn[UO Co•CatCA60.17,14
T
OOTHACHE
Bathe ' the face with
Minard's in water and
place a piece of cotton
wool, saturated with
Minard's, in the cavity.
ABLE TO DO
HOUSWOK NOW
Sick a Year. Got Great Ben-
efit from Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Bloomington, N. S.—"I took Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for
pains and backache, also for nervous-
ness, sick headaches and sleeplessness.
1 was troubled in this way for over a
year, and a friend told me about the
Vegetable Compound and induced me to
take it. I must say I have received
great benefit from it and am able to do
my housework now. I recommend the
Vegetable Compound myself and alt
willing for you to use this letter as a
testimonal."—Mrs. WILLIAM MORSE,
Bloomington, Annapolis County, N. S.
Do you know that in a recent canvass
among women users of the Vegetable
Compound over 220,000 replies were re-
ceived. To the question, "Have you
received benefit by taking this medi-
cine?" 98 per cent. replied "Yes."
This means that 98 out of every 100
women are in better health because
they have given this medicine a fair
trial.
Mrs. Morse is simply another case of
a woman receiving "great benefit."
Women suffering from the troubles so
common to their sex should listen to
what other women sy who have expe-
rienced the same sufferings and found
relief. Give this dependable medicine a
chance—and at once. It is sold at all
drug stores.
Business Girls
Like Cuticura
Because it keeps ,the complexion
clear, the hands soft and the hair, live
and glossy. The Soap, used daily,
cleanses and purl fies,while the Oint-
ment soothes and heals. Cuticura
Talcum is an ideal toilet powder.
Saritple Each Free by yt&Ii Addrepe Canadian
ncpot' '43tnniloaae, %td, Montreal.” Price, Boit!.
5a Oi tt i. 25 and c. Talcum 25d.
faidir 2 . n nen bD ,
Cuticu Stick 25c.
ra nevem
.4„tl
• ISSUE No. 43--0286
IMI
1
791 YON.GE ST.
TORONTO
la
hoick temper and .Ifo . selereliance, a.
enSers wrltti thQs9e aheed alwais
isemi,bewiide.red. You mtty,smile.�•.a
thfa,•'iittt tb le s tact that, of.tl ose Wito
• $1Ye themseivee but a •few .deecfl dq to
take. • their tickets and catch their
train, nine out of ten have long, deli-
! cats hands, with smell filbert`nalls. I
should say they have no temper at all,
and are very g•eiierous. But they've;
no "mien,"
"Claw" hands I don't like, The
baeks of these are broad, but the fin -1
sere are. short, thin, and: draw to-
gether fan -shape. Fite nails are long,
but very narrow. This 'is the mean,
miserly, selfish type, with a bent to-
' wards dishonesty, A Ivan like tb;is
Would show no loyalty to'a friend, and Mount Logan, the highest' peau in This -gift of gold; •
his conscience 'would be a minus Canada, which rises to a .height of And b.gp id two 'souls with voids that
quantity. over .19,000 feet.could withhold
An interesting study heeds. Faces The Canadian 'Alpine Club e• xpedi- re nte's,•' On and flow.
can be masked and eentrolled, butplied over all rib-
t1on, which trium
hands tell the truth. .Put it to the settees and (reached the. summit of Bruise Sorrow's heel,
• The TerOnta Hospital for Ineiirg lo,t in
,anftlaticii with Onllevuo rind Allied ttaagitafi,.
NaW York City, Pact & throe soon' Conroe
ng
of • Training to you'+Vemen. hwealutas_
rC9dtrcd education, and desfrqus of bocorning
nurses. Thla Hospital Ilse adiptpd:tilo eight. `
hour system. Tho pupil receive unitorrns of.
the School, a maeolhik ellowaneo and traveling
exposer to and from NOP York. `For further
Information apply to Ma Superintemlont,
.a'
r �reo�'GIQnd;
And grateg in Greelt within the
, der" thing
These words I conned,
Through dent and soar;
"ln sllihnter and in wiete
Far,
Here and Beyond."
Ring.
p't tomb'' ]: louald a
len-
, Near and
Oh,- Grecian maiden, more than hero.
Secrets Of the Snows.
he,
Who loved thee so,
This summer has witnessed one of And slipped upon they finger deli -
the greatest exploits of mountaineer- eately,
ing ever recorded—the conquest of song Years ago#.
Tell -Tale Hands.
The work of a booking -clerk at a
busy station, where there is a continu-
ous stream of ticket -taking passengers
is terribly monotonous. I really„ think
]'. should have been comp gilled to
change my occupation had not�a friend
recommended me to try—as a sort of
sanity -saving sideline—to get interest-
ed in the hands of those who came for
tickets•. By hands I don't mean the
palms, but .the finger-tips, fingers, and
knuckles.
It saved me. If you came to my
"window," and laid yoti hand on the
ledge before you spoke, I Could tell
your charaotei'.
Stubby .finger-tips, ' with the 'nails
'very short and red, and the knuckles
bunched up like hillocks, are sure
takens of a nasty, cruel, tyrannical
character.
• When I see a thick, podgy, red hand
ion the ledge 'I know that I shall -hear
a jovial voice asking for a ticket, and
that I have a friendly°soul,' of cheery
manner, to deal with; As likely as net
he'll make some Inu orous remark and
'laugh at it himself more than ,I do.
:His is the happy-go-lucky type, that
lives for to -day, and lets tomorrow go
hang. If such a man makes a success
of life it's more by accident than by ef-
fort. Everyone likes him, however,
and he has no enemies but himself.
of long hands there are two types--
the
ypes—the delicate and the strong. The fin-
gers .of the latter are straight, with
the knuckles hardly showing. The
'nails are square and seem over -large.
I call this the "business" hand. It de-
notes success, self-reliance, initiative,
and brain power.
Long, delicate hands indicate a
WE WANT CHtJRNING
test on anyone whose character you Mount Logan, originally consisted of tooted Death,
And now despond'
In anawering echo of immortal breath
Unaging bond,
Norv:Doom' can mar!
"In Winter, and in Summer, Near and
,Tar,
Here, and Beyond."
—Eric Clough Taylor:
really know.'
We supply cans and pay express
, charges. We pay. daily by express
money orders, which can be cashed
anywhere without any charge.
To obtain the top price, Cream
Must be free from bad flavors and
Contain not less than 80 per cent,
Butter Fat.
Bowes Company Limited
Toronto
For references—Head Office, Toronto,
Bank of Montreal, or your local banker.
Established for over thirty years..
Sentence Sermons.
The Fatal Mistake—Of many a busi-
ness man is+that he does not grow as
fast as his bi slness.,.
--Of most politicians is their failure
to •see farther than the next election.
— 0f youth is its inability, to appre-
ciate the value of mature experience.
—0f many marriages is the attempt
to build a permanent home on a tem-
porary infatuation.
—Of most liars is that they : do not
have a perfect memory.
— Of many promoters• is the fact
that. they make their proposition
sound too good.
—In training children in the right
way is in not going that way our-
selves.
POI. ISMS
• ACI. PURPOSES
"Makes old' like NeW"
CAPO,
CLEANSER
For Painted Woodwork, Walls,
Enamelware, Windows, etc.
The Cane folie cs. Ltd„ Hariitofrk,
I [SS 1NORK
Bt�T•ERAESUL15
,'o -I si`oRM wiAtoo s
E, f• o i PAYFOR rf1EMS£LYE'.S
Cbp 'i , i Stop Fuel Wnste, nnucc Wide
Comfort with. Storm. Windows Low
FreOht•Pa, gu inc rc,dy}laxed;
T list and
toty. gunrantced, Free prce
list nhd ensy tnenquring than.
'c Ii AILtDAY taM mss`' HAMILTON
".�"""''"`slerP US IVO
POULTRY, GAM E,EGGS,
• BUTTE R AND FEATHERS
Ro m
!t,'YE R 0 p "
E 1JYA A
%ftp •itchy, b prieo.r 7I' tt'artintea
1htintJor a week ah;¢dd
R.p i�iUlL1 La Co.' UHy�ltE
„3.13 39.13zr.srtcti rt etre. w Ttiotr't •.eat
FIGHTING FOR -
BABY'S HEALTH
Is the Constant. Care. of Every
Young Mother.
The young mother has a constant
care in looking after the welfare of
her little ones. Childhood ailments
come on so suddenly—sometimes with-
out a minute's warning—the mother
may have a verysick baby on *her
hands before help can be obtained.
That is unless she has a remedy in the
House which she can safely give the
baby for any of the many minar ail-
ments of babyhood and childhood.
Such a remedy is found in Baby's
Own Tablets. Thousands of mdthers
throughout the country always keep
a box of the Tablets on hand and they
proclaim them to. be .without an equal
for sweetening baby's stomach;'
regulating hisbowels, and thus driv-
ing out . constipation' wed indigestion,
colds and simple fevers, and making
the dreaded teething period easy.
Baby's Own Tablets are an absolute-
ly safe remedy. They are guaranteed
to be free from opiates or any other
narcotic drug which are so harmful to
the future welfare of the baby. Moth-
ers, if you value the life of your little
ones give him Baby's .Own Tablets
when he is ill, or, better still, give him
an occasional close of the Tablets to
ward off illness. The Tablets are sold
by medicine dealers or will be sent to
any address, post paid, at 25 cents a
box by addressing The Dr. Williams'
MedicineCo., Brockville, Ont.
*
Not What She Expected.
She had noticed the huskiness in
his voice, and the nervous Manner in
which he fidgeted in hie chair told her
a lot. She knew what was coming.
"Clara," he said, and hie throat
seemed dry and parched,, "would you
--that is, could you—do you think you
"Go on, George, she murmured en
cohragingly,: "I am listening."
"Would you--•er-do you think you
could—get me a drink of water? I'In
as dry as. a bone."
Lucky Man.
They were resting between . the
danoes and he was pointing out to her
the various local celebrities.
- 'That's old Grove's daughter," he
said, indicating a tail sulky looking
woman on the shady side of 30. "She's
going to be married:"
"Indeed!" said his partner. "Who's
the lucky man?"
"Old Grove,"
j 4
I'• Total is Generous.
The midsionary meeting *as over
and the various) amounts contributed
by the members of the church had
bean, as. usual, Otte of the -most popular
features.
On the way home little Jane said to
her mother: "What a kind pian Mr.
Toted must be. He gave ever eo mtitcli
more than anybody else!"
eight members, but two of them had
to abandon the attempt because of
frost -bite and general exhaustion be-
fore a•ttaindng their goal.
Almost incredible hardships were
suffered by the,eonquerers of Mount
Logan, who spent forty-four days, en-
tirely on ice in getting to the summit
and back again: Each man of the.
party had to pack about seventy
pounds over two hundred miles of
ridge and glacier. Dangerous storms
were encountered, especially on the
return journey, and only the most
heroic efforts avercted loss of life..,
On the last lap of .the ascent, when'
the pairti' reached what they 'believed
to be the highest point of the moon-
tain, they found yet another peak'
towering above them. To attain this
they had to descend a thousand feet
into a valley between the two peaks
before again beginning to climb.
This final' peak was heart -breaking,
work, as the party had to make pro-
gress up a steep snow and lee slope,
terminating in a knife -area that led
to the summit. The temperature when
they gained the top was four degrees
below zero.
Nothing Serious.
Rife Iudutaiice Agent --"What did
you. grandparent die of?"
Cautious One - "I don't rightly
know, but It wasn't anything serious."
After a winter spent in the warmth
of the • kitch'en, the parrot had been
restored to the bosom of his family tri
the dining room. He showed only a
scant interest,in the first Meal he was
called upon to witness, until the bell
was rung for the second course, and
theft his eyes lightened intei�ligently.
"Aw,", he croaked balefully, "let 'em
flag- again!"
u e bui:d-.
lighthouse There are only, two h
. ;g
Y
;i
ers in l;ngland. "
Ask for Minard'b and talo do other.
J
Not Much Thought.
"Clothes is about the only thing
that- young lady think& about."
'"My word! She never struck me as
being as thoughtless as that."
Eclipse.
You have seen the black shadow
Rushing over the sky,
You have stood on a bare bill
And watched the fierce light die;
You do not see the slower shadow,
The darkness that takes toll
Of clean strength and burnished.
beauty,
Creeping over a soul.
—Loretta Roche.
—
As no cruel thing can be done with-
out character being thrust a degree
backward towards barbarism, so no
kind thing can be done without char-
acter being moved a degree forward
towards perfection.—Herbert Spencer.
and trip sure -
11ERVOt1S DEPRESSION
t-,
W. fty J People Are Low Spirited
and Depressed.
Nearly all women and most men suf-
fer at times from fits of depression
and low spirits. Everything seems a
burden; then come periods of nervous
irritability, headaches and weariness.
People who suffer this way lack vital-
ity ,because their blood is poor and
nerves are starved in consequence.
The only way the nerves can be
reached is through the blood. By en-
riching the blood with Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills the starved nerves are sup-
plied with just the elements they need.
This is proved by the experience of
Mrs. J. E. Dadson, 12th Ave. East,
Vancouver, B.0 who says:—' -'About
r
three' years ago I became very weak
and nervous. I had pains in my side
and back, and also suffered from fre-
quent
IOineti e!
y not- this . time?
53 nt
The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it 1 'a
Industrial H3 iene in Ontario' Classified. Advertisements
Ontario is the only province in Caa- —
ads wh eh has a Division of Industrial power. Wo chow she war. Students sell work
Hygiene organized in the Department seers through corse, Easy. eOgcti9a chase
g Schools, Toronto, 1 orty-two moor wog,
of Health, for the purpose of promot-
ing the health of industrial workers.
The main objective of the Division is A coxless IN PRACTICAL ELECTRICAL
the prevention of general sickness; r ab eatdntn u in sour spare time a6 home wall
enable yon to earn i bis angary or go lata business
the special objeotive, the prevention for youreelr. write for free tratning book. nurgoss
of those diseases which, arising out of Hloctr1eaL Comtruns, Dept. N. Crawford St.. Toronto:
working condition, are called "oc-
cupational diseases."
Now it is impossible to know how
much wastage in Ontario industry is
caused by sickness, because there is
as yet little health supervision and
few adequate records of lost time. But
such data as exists shows that in On-
tario lost time from sickness amounts
to at least double lost time from ac-
cidents.
As regards disease traceable to a
man's occupation, the records of the
;Division cover 472 cases followed up
during the last 4 years, The rate for your soldiers on the Sabbath day?"
lead poisoning in Ontario in 1925 is "Oh, that's all right, ma," replied
higher than that which was consider- the young hopeful, this Is the•Salva-
ed alarming in England 25 years ago. tion Army!'
This alone shows the need for a sys-
tematic and rigorous attempt to guard
the health of our workers. As.a basis
for this, a few cardinal facts need to
be grasped:
Fhero is a close connection be-
tween the health of the worker and
the economic prosperity of the coun-
try.
A worker's health is inevitably af-
fected by his working conditions.
Many diseases among workers can
be traced to risks, such as poison,
dust, etc., associated with their occu-
pains in the back of my head potion.
and neck. I was hardly able to do any- On all points of industrial health, in -
thing about the house. I would wake formation can be obtained, both by em -
with a start in the night and my heart
would flutter so that 11. almost choked
me. I tried much doctor's medicine
but it did me no permanent good. One
day I read about Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills' and decided to give them a trial.
These pills produced su^-h a beneficial
ehange in a short time that I kept tak-
ing.them until I . had ' used a dozen
b a B this time there was such
an iinprovement in my condition that
frieida would ask me .what I was tak-
ing; and` of Bourse 1 was only too
pleased to tell them it was Dr. Wil
-
1TowCAltn wm rNl2 UISCIdEAslis nMtNi�a
LEARN ELECTRICITY.
SILVER FOXES.
$00-e$µ' nnsenURMMAN FUR FAIA'.1.
1 1 'r sv arERSIDE, P.E.I..
Being Nice to Father.
"So you are going, to buy your father
onl ya 50 -cent birthday present?"
"Yes, but you see I have to ask him
for the money."
The Right Army.
"Tommy," saki the careful mother, •
"do I actually see you playing with
hams' Pink Pills. I am now feeling
like a new person and amdoing my
own housework. We would not now
be without Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in
the house."
You can get these pills from your
druggist, oi• by mail at 50 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
Change the Name.
• "Can I • change my . name
Ina?"
"What on earth for, dear?"
"Because pa says he'll' give me a
good hiding when he gets home from
the office to -day, as sure as my name's
John."
to -day,
Minard's Liniment for Distemper.
Surnames and Their Origin
FRASER.
.Variations—Frazer, Frasier, Frazier.
Racial OrIgin—Norman-French.
Source—A locality.
This is another of the new High-
land clan names which, though borne
by Celtic familfes, trace back to an
origin in Normandy.
All of these clan names were form-
ed in the same way, by knights and
nobles from the army of William the
Cth soils of such follow
onqueroor e r,
ers, who, either to Strengthen the for-
eign relations of the conqueror, or be-
cause they were not satisfied with the
spoils of war which fell to their lot hi
conquered England, sought their for-
tunes in the north at the court of the the northern limits of the empire's
Scottish king. government :was inhabited by the
They were, as might be expected, Picts,•a:ra•ce more similar to the Sym -
men with reputations as mighty fight- ric branch of the Celtic race, like the
ers, and as they were independent of j Welsh, the Cornishmen ,and the Bre-
blood relationship °with the factions t tons. About the third and fourth cen-
around the throne they were, of Curies of the Christian era the Gaelic t.
course, welcome additions always to ' Celts'of Irelandcame over from Ulster
the royal Scottish' organization, ' and settled themselves in the High -
But the .T asers, like the others,' lands. Then, when the Anglo-Saxons
quickly, formed" alliances by marriage,' invaded England they cut •well north
and adapting themselves to the cus-' intothe lowlands. Norman and then
toms of the Gaels swot' a•eceiving' English conquest and occupation fon
grants of land in the Highlands, rapid -1 lowwed on a large scale before sur-
ly assumed leadership of existingnames became true fancily names,
ce ere were i nfl u many
feudal power. was hereditary and des-
criptive.
FINLAY.
Variations—Findlay, Findley.
Racial Origin—Scottish (Celtic).
Source -A given name.
Scottish family names, taken as a
class, do not parallel those of Ireland
in one respect. They acre not over-
;whelmingly Celtic, either in language
or in the method of formation. And
there are i`easons for this.
In the first .place, the blood of Scot-
land ie far from being overwhelming-
ly Celtic. At the time of the Roman
domination of Britain the country
north of the great wall which marked
ployers and employees, from the De-
partnient of Health of Ontario, Spa-
dina House, Toronto.
—
-0-
Seize Your Chances.
Can you hear her? Opportunity is
knocking at your door.
If you do not rise and greet her, she
will go and come no more.
Greet her gladly --she is 1•aden with
the chances that you need;
Seize her swiftly -for she'll prove her-
self a friend to you indeed. •
Vacillation, foe to progress, may just
whisper in your ear,
"Wait awhile and see what happens—
better chances may be near."
Heed it not, the foolish warning; take
the good that comes to -clay;
Let not worthless fears assail you;
seize your chances while you
may.
Here's the ladder, try to climb it, do
not at the low rung stop;
Other folks may be before you, but
"there's room still at the top."
Standing still will not avail you; let
your watchword be, "Advance";
If you fail to climb this moment, you
may never have the chance,
Life is full of glorious offers you need
only reach and •,take--
Perseverance, resolution, all the hard
tasks easy make.
If you'd reach the highest summit, you
must start at once to climb,
Helped by grit, and faith, and pa-
tience; seize your chances
every time.
•
clans and gathered around them clan I Hen th encu of
organizations which they strove to races at .work.
make more powerful. The names of Finlay, however, is
The Frames are found first settled truly Celtic. Originally its form as a
in
Tweedale t d itin.g the 'reign of Male given, tante was 15ionnlaooh, a conn
colti'i ICT.; They, got their foothold hi pound of "fconn," meaning "'white,"
the Highlands through marriages into and "leach," meaning "fighter," or
families of the Orkneys and Calthness "soldier:" When it first became a
chieftains; faintly name, of course, it was pre -
The original Norinan formof the ceded Iv "Mac;" meaning 'descendant
name was Ode • F'risell" : or "Trasell," of," but in the course of time this has
andsimply denoted o'Veilord
iip
of been dropped ed a -id the
name
bee de-
a place of that name in Normandy, be- veloped' variously into the modern
iug a family name only in the sense forms to be found in •this country •to-
thiat it was hereditary because the clays
I ,)
—,lice Wise.
The Vatican, the residence of the
Pope, finds employment for a staff of
2,000 persons.
GENUINE ASPIRIN
PROVED. SAFE
Take without Fear as Told
in "Bayer" Package
thil•ess you see the ''Bayer Cross."
on package or on tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer 'Tablets of.
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians over twenty-
five years for
'Colds l•Teedache
Neuritic Lumbago
Toothache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pella Pain
;i
h Unbroken“Bayer"
package cra
a
con-
tains
provensdlt'ectione. Bandy boxes
of twelve tablets cost fen, cents. Drug-
gists also sell bottles of 24 and 1011.
IN
NIGHT
MORNING &
KEEP YOUR EYES,
r1 EAP+T CLEAR. AND HEALTH?
;i ra t'ak'e 1711. 25 EVE CAFE EOOK• Mn[UO Co•CatCA60.17,14
T
OOTHACHE
Bathe ' the face with
Minard's in water and
place a piece of cotton
wool, saturated with
Minard's, in the cavity.
ABLE TO DO
HOUSWOK NOW
Sick a Year. Got Great Ben-
efit from Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Bloomington, N. S.—"I took Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for
pains and backache, also for nervous-
ness, sick headaches and sleeplessness.
1 was troubled in this way for over a
year, and a friend told me about the
Vegetable Compound and induced me to
take it. I must say I have received
great benefit from it and am able to do
my housework now. I recommend the
Vegetable Compound myself and alt
willing for you to use this letter as a
testimonal."—Mrs. WILLIAM MORSE,
Bloomington, Annapolis County, N. S.
Do you know that in a recent canvass
among women users of the Vegetable
Compound over 220,000 replies were re-
ceived. To the question, "Have you
received benefit by taking this medi-
cine?" 98 per cent. replied "Yes."
This means that 98 out of every 100
women are in better health because
they have given this medicine a fair
trial.
Mrs. Morse is simply another case of
a woman receiving "great benefit."
Women suffering from the troubles so
common to their sex should listen to
what other women sy who have expe-
rienced the same sufferings and found
relief. Give this dependable medicine a
chance—and at once. It is sold at all
drug stores.
Business Girls
Like Cuticura
Because it keeps ,the complexion
clear, the hands soft and the hair, live
and glossy. The Soap, used daily,
cleanses and purl fies,while the Oint-
ment soothes and heals. Cuticura
Talcum is an ideal toilet powder.
Saritple Each Free by yt&Ii Addrepe Canadian
ncpot' '43tnniloaae, %td, Montreal.” Price, Boit!.
5a Oi tt i. 25 and c. Talcum 25d.
faidir 2 . n nen bD ,
Cuticu Stick 25c.
ra nevem
.4„tl
• ISSUE No. 43--0286
IMI