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Zurich Herald, 1926-04-01, Page 7Mqw it 1ED FEB* ► : IN SPRINGTIME Not Sick, But •,Not Up to the. Mark—You Need the Help of That Sterling Tonle, Dr. Wa- llows' Pink al-liaws''Pink Pills—They Give New Vitality. with tide passing of winter many people feel weak; depressed and easily tired, The body lacks the vital force and energy pure blood alone can give. In a word, while not exactly sick, the indoor life, of winter has left. its mark untin them. A blood -building, nerve- •reetoring tonne- ie needed to give re- newed. health and energy. Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills aria an all -year-round' blood builder and nerve tonic, but are especia+liy useful in the spring. Every dose helps to make .new, rich, red blood, and with this new blood return- ing stremgtb, c1ieerftilnees and `"good Health • quickly follow, " if .you are pale, easily tired, or breathless at the least exertion, if Your complexion is poor or you are troubled with eib1 les or eruptions, Pr. Williams' Pink Pills aro just what you need to put you right. If you have twinges of rheumat;4sm, are subject to headaches and backaches if you are irritable and nervous, if your sleep does not refresh you, or your appetite poor, ' yr,u need the treatment Dr. Wililams' Pink, Pills alone can 'give— you freed the new blood, new strength and new energy this, medicine always brings. Mrs. Emma Fraser, Thessalon, Ont., says:—"Two years ago my ner- vous system was in such a condition that life seemed a burden. I could neither work, eat or sleep well. I tried several medicines, but did not get any relief. Indeed my condition seemed to be growing worse. Then, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills 'were brought to illy attention and I decided to try them. After using a few boxes there was no room to doubt that they were • helping me. 1 continued their use un- til I had taken eight boxes, when I was completely restored to health, and I have not any time since had a symptom of the trouble. When 1 be- gan the use of the pills I weighed only 96 pounds, while under their use with my renewed health I now weigh 125 pounds. 1 feel it imiosaibie 40 praise Dr. Williams' Pink Pills too bag? ly." Keep Your System Toned Up, Try Dr. Williams' Piek Pills for anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, indi- gestiou or nervousness. Take them as a tonic if you are not in the best physical condition and cultivate a re- slstance that 'wild keep you well and a•trong. You can get these pills y .through any medicine dealer' or by mail at 50e a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine eo., Brockville,, Ont. The So ig-SPara'ow. Like the rusty can cocked` over niy gri:ndstene Dripping its silvery drops, the $4)0g - Sparrow .sings, A. spray. of .holes out of his frail throat flows Over the fallow world, Loudly lie silage. And the fine rain of the sun drills in the air ' Riddling his branch with light, though along the ground Shadows are rising on their knees to hear Earth turn towards darkness with a most solemn sound. Yet all to -night his voice will vibrate on, His echo shake the heavens until in showers Like loosened petals the white stars rain down. To -morrow we'll be finding the first flowers. --Schuyler ,Jackson, in The New Re- public. One Man Feeds Fifty. A boy of sixteen should tie given as, rnuoh food as a person who' is doing fairly vigorous outdoor work, such as . gardening, while a girl of thirteen • may easily require more food than her mother or even her father does. Even if you are what . 1e cabled a small eater the amount of food needed to keep you going for a year is con= siderable, in • tbat period you will eat 1201b. of meat and fish, 37S1b. of bread - stuffs, including other grains 'such as rice andoatea m 1, a similar r amount of Potatoes, vegetables, and fruit, be- sides some 201b. of butter and cheese, Added to these will be rations"of tea, sugar, mustary, pepper, salt, and so an. When you remember that there are some one thousand six hundred mil- lion people in the world, the athount of food required to feed them all is colossal. Yet a hundred million peo- ple produce it all. These plough and cultivate fields, orchards, and gardens, reap or gather their .crops, milk the cows, make the butter and cheese, and catch the fish. The case may be cited of one Ameri- can family consisting of a father, his four sons, 'a nephew, and a son-in-law. They run a large farm near Menno, in South Dakota. In 1924 these seven men produced, by their own labor, 20,- 000 bushels of wheat, besides keeping and -feeding nearly one hundred head of cattle. The record of fishermen Is even more wonderful than that of farmers. Europe and the United States between them require mare• than five million tons of fish yearly, while the total number of men employed in the fisher- ies of these countries is under a mil- lion. illion.So each man is •responsible Per catching five tons of fish yearly. The British record is better than that, for fewer than 100,000 men take between them 958,000 tons• of fish., I! you put the value of fish as low as $90 a ton, each British flsberman brings in about $850 wrath of food yearly, or .as much fish as- is consumed by fifty peo ple. Storage Battery Fan. A new type of portable electric fan carries its own current supply. A small electric battery fits in the han- dle and drives the motor. The Newer Silage Crop A WEALTH of valuable in- formation regarding the newerbSilage Crops is contain- ed in Bulletin No. 50, "Silage Sunflower, Corn, Sweet Clover and 'other Silages," recently issued by the Department of Agriculturo, Ottawa. . The Bulletin is a dietinet contri- bution to our knowledge of. silages other than corn, which may be grown in districts where corn cannot be profit- ably raised, or where corn borer prevails. Recent publications include "Silage," "Poultry. Feeds and Feeding," "Cultivation of the Apple in Canada," and "List of Five Hundred Publications". Cheek off those desired an this form and return, without postage to Publications Branch, Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa Name R.R. No Post Office Province ' E18 reelinA Blue Everything seem all wrong and you' don't care much whether school keepsor not? Probably all you need is.a little Sal Lithofos. It gently eliminates waste products that clog the system, causing Glee pression and a train of minor but intensely dis- agreeable physical ailments. Easily pre- pared and pleasant tri take, having a sparkling fresh- ness superior to mineral waters. Alto a recognized specific for the treatment of rheu gnats and gouty conditions, 'At t all drug stores: Three sizes. Pre- scribed by doctors. for over 20 Years. The «$er'esoeni Sa,:nt Laxative •lie Wingate Chemical to I itniteel, Montreal. o Guess Work r-, with , ee,a: 44 f / 1 DYEINQ fOle TINTlNQ IF you use DYES Same kind of dye Professional Dyers use, Fast and 13eautifol Colors. For'Dyeing'and Tinting all materials with the SAME dye. No chance of mistakes. "r ` DOL.L Sed an cm typaekage ands cents for Rag Doll and Helpful Hints on Home Dyeing. Johnson -Richardson Limited Dept. 2 Montreal Demand for Birth Certificates Steadily. Increases. There are more—babies born in March 1n Ontario than in any other single month of the year. Our .ea popu- lation -yearly .by about y lation is increased Y 72,000 births within the province;. or to be exact, 71,150 births were men- tered during 1925. Are all births registered? Ninety out of every one •hlhndred, it is esti- fleeted, are now, registered within the till the betted', brighter days come time set by law (30 days). To rests- ,along, a box of Baby's Own Tablets should be kept in the house and as Alchemy. ometirlyes my lily eo Sordid tieeine, So blank and colorless, devoid of dreams; • That like the grains of eland in eyelet' tahell•s, ' It seems it, too, must irk the place wherein it dwells. • Then through tb,e bourn, monotonous and gray, There comes adventures, quickening and gay; The provers love of friends, the gain • of right The surging forth of. all the heart's pure might, And, as the oysterto a pearl has turned the eared, The alchemy of Truth showes tree, sure eloe° at hand —Mary Chase Witherbee In The Monitor f ,. ::'` CO WEATHER DANGEROUS TO BABY logniOnowle On Account of the Very Sudden Changes in Temperature. • Our Canadian March weather—one day bright, but sloppy, the next blus- tery and cold—ls extremely Iiard on children. Conditions make it neees- si little • r to keepthe t ay forthemohte ones indoors. They are often con- fined to overheated, badly ventilated rooms and catch colds which rack their whole system. To guard against these colds and to keep the baby well ter later means a great•deal of trouble in securing signatures to a declara- tion, etc. The time to regieter is when the child is born and the person held responsible by law is the parent. So great is the demand for certifl- catee that the record office is one of the busiest spots in the government I thus relieve colds and simple fevers buildings; 4,000 applications are be -1 and keep baby fit. The Tablets are ing received every month, whereas sold by 'medicine dealers or by mail at formerly they rarely exceeded one- 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' tenth of that number. •Passports for Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. occasional dose given the baby to keep his stomach 'sweet and his bowels working regularly. • Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which never fail to regulate the stomach and bowels and travel outside of Canada, insurance, soldiers' pensions, mothers' allow- ances, marriage licenses, etc., are ar- ranged for now, only upon record of birth which is accepted as proof of citizenship and age. There have been sone recent changes in the schedule of prices for certificates which now reads: 50 cents for search and $1.00 additional for each copy of certificate required. If you should want to' know Whether your own birth is registered, or wish to secure information regarding re- gistration of a birth, marriage or death occurring within Ontario, write to the Division of Vital Statistics, Depart- ment of Health of Ontario, Spadina House, Toronto. Badly digested food, acidity of the stomach, and sluggish liver cause headaches. Seigel'sryruri will remove these causes. Any drug store. Quite Colorful "I want to tell you how I got this black eye." "Your story doesn't lack color." An Ancient Singing Society. There flourishes in England to -day a society which Is the oldest musical' organization in the world; but few outsiders have ever heard of its per- formances or are even aware of its; existence. This is the . Madrigal Society, founded in 1741. As its name implies, Its object has been always to cultivate a liking for madriagal singing, and in an un- broken line of historical meetings, it has been able to do so. An Interesting reference regarding this old' association is to be found 1n the worke of Sir George Grove, who gives the quaint rules fornied in 1748, in his big musical history. He tells that there were only sixteen members at first, and that the admission fee was eight ;shillings, and .the annual fee five shillings. ,In the early days of such societies practices and meetings were held in coffee houses and taverna; the music of the time was studied purely for its own sake—in the spirit, no doubt, of those for whom the great Elizabethan nadrigallats„ Wilbye, Weekles and 1Byrd, Gibbons and Morley, composed. The original home of the Madrigal Society was at the Twelve Bells Tav- ern. City of London, but it migrated In 1748 to the Queen's Arm's, Newgate Street; where' new rules were enacted. One of them read: 'That all musical performances shall cease at half an hour after ten o'clock, unless the members shall be cheerfully incited to sing catches, in which case they may be indulged half an. hour, but no longer." •-- i1 Several plants., inoluding the mi. Mose, are stated to show distinct signs of muscular contraction on being struck. This is said to point out that plants have a sense of feeling. Railway carriages reserved for peo- ple who are Suffering from a cold le one novel suggestion for preventing the spread' of infection. iViinewd's 'Liniment used by physicians.• Fire Wcod. Oak logs will warm you well If they're old and dry; Larch logs of pine 'woods smell, But the sparks w111 fly; Beech logs for Christmas time, Yew logs heat you well; "Scotch" logs it is a crime For anyone to sell Birch logs nil burn too fast, Chestnut soiree at all; Hawthorne logs are good to last If cut Iu the fall. Cedar loge `will burn Mke wax, You should burn them green', Pim logs like smouldering flax, No Sanies to be seen; . Pear 1. ge and apple logs, They,wi1k scent your room;' Cherry logs across the dogs Smell like flowers in bloom; But ash logs all smooth and grey Burn then green or old, ' Buy up all that -coins your way, They're worth their weight in gold. Minard's. Llnrment for colds. assesseaa—Sa The Last Question. . A well-known author was- vainly en- deavoring to write when he was re- peatedly interrupted by his six-year- old .son. "If you ask Pie one more question,' 'the harassed writer at last declared, "I will go out and drown my- self." • "Fathe;i, came the small voice, "may I come out and see you do it?" ' 30:a T4, wI eJ 40001 aa 4,44 44, ummodyealli The Borrowed Book. After a time the poet searched the table fors a. book he had left there. His visitor explained that a neighbor had come in and borrowed it. "She said you bad se many books, you wouldn't miss it," added the speaker. Down came Whittler's hand upon his knee in the fashion so well known to his intimates; for his hands might have been called almost another fea- ture, such emphasis did they give to bis expression. "I was in the midst of reading it my- self," lie retorted. "I wish she had taken something else to amuse her; she won't care for it; I could have helped her out better in a book. But she is satisfied." And late infectious laugh was echoed by his hearer. For Whittier never forgot how pre- cious books bad been to him in his childhood and early youth; and how be had hungered for them. And now that he had them in abundance, he so gladly shared them with his friends that these had the habit of coming in and, if he happened to be away, of helping themselves to whatever they wanted to barrow; so that the poet would ofter search about for a book that he himself wished to lend and, not finding it, would remark resigned- ly that he guessed somebody had come in and taken it.—Frances Campbell Sparhawk, in "Whittier at Close Range." Nuts for the Million. The world's 'largest ,walnut grove, 850 acres in one unbroken stretch in the Upper San Fernando Valley of California, has been bought by a Los Angeles syndicate for upward of $1,- 000,000. E• v CUTS, BURNS, BRUISES, and all Ir- ritations of the Skin, instantly respond to the firet application of TISIT. Banishes that itching soreness at once, and continued 'use effects sure relief, especially of Babies' Skin Rashes. Send Postal Note of fifty cents and a trial pot will be mailed at onoe. Tilsit Mfg. Co., Bain Ave., Toronto Warner's Used For Fifteen Years In One Family No better recommendation for the medicinal value of this 50 year old herbal remedy could be asked than this. "Your remedies have been used in our family for about 15 years. We are never without a bottle of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy in our home. It is a wond•erfui medicine for diseases of the kidneys and laver." (Name on request). If you have pains in the back or other symptoms of kidney trouble, you should lose no time in going to your drug- gist to get a bottle of War- ner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy and taking it as per (j-. directions. • Sold by all druggists. Price $1.25 per bottle. Warner's Safe Remedies Co., Toronto, Ontario. 1.211104.211.0.24110.44:15.T'M,+mW.m24.Y .n.6onwv<Y • Self o Poisoning Ince easmgIy Common Modern Living Habits Pro- mote Self - Poisoning --- Thousands are Victims The average man or woman does not enjoy consistent good health. Loss of appetite, headaches, biliousness and a lack of enthusiasm for either work or play are constant complaints. Scientists have ascertained that such a condition ie usually caused by self- poisoning resulting from constipation. Due to modern living habits, the natural secretion which promotes regu- lar elimination by softening the bowel contents, is often deficient—especially among middle-aged people. The poison from waste matter remaining in the systems of people thus affected is the insidious enemy of good health. Such people need Nujol, because Neje/ softens the waste matter and permits thorough and regular bowel elimination without overtaxing g the intestinal muscles. It helps Nature help you. Ask your druggist for Thujol to-day— and remember, look for the name "Nujol" in recd on both bottle label and package. BUILD THE NEW HOME From one of the attractive de» sigus illustrated in the MacLean Builders' Guide, Eaah issue con- tains several plans of moderate priced homes designed by Cana- dian Architects. Also interesting artigles on furnishing, deeorating and gardening. Send 20c. Mao - Lean Building Reports, Ltd., 34.4 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. The spread of an ai:batrosss's wings is 14 times the width from beck to front while the spread of the swallow's wings le only four times the width. Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache . Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions• Randy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Aspirin is the trade 'taark ''reetstercd in Carman) 0! Bayer :Ctanutnctere of tionnacclle- uwidenter af;lialleylicnctd cerexyt salicylic Acid, "A. S. A."). While ,ll Ir malt knoaO xhtit Aspirin' tnenu5 Bayer titanofnatnta, to assist the public against'lt tttatthn i, the 1ttt s at tia,lser Comylmy will le Istemycd tvite theb;.,liefQrel 'l GOlIRE A LADY who tried everything In vain and at Ind dtaame:ad a safe, almpie and rapid Remedy mill now malt particulars to sufferers. Send Addreaa, don't send damps. to Ailoo May,' Peitsier VIA* Y, Windsor, Ont. Andrews9Pluils rropToO ACHE�� Temporary Pilling, - • • which Last a Long Time. SOLD EVe ERYWHERE Prm` adarmaa S. Wright & Co., Lic,iud, DirtribWor,, 'Meant* AFTER SHAVING Dilute Minard's one-half with cream or sweet oil and apply to the face. Very soothing and refreshing. 10.19.".ti11020/>y...1a.., DOCTOR AVISED OPERATWN FOR RS, PEF*1 She Escaped It by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound Windsor, Ont. — "After the birth of my first baby I was very much run- down in health and the doctor said I must have an operation as I wag suffering from a displacement. A friend wanted me to try your medi- eine—Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound—and I took it steadily for a year. During this time I was carry- ing my second baby and I felt real well all the time and did not have a hard coihfinenient. I feel sure the Vegetable Compound did me a lot of good, and all my people do, too. One sister in Leamington, Ontario, takes it, and both sisters praise it.as a good medicine. I ant more than pleased with the result." — Mrs. W. PENN, Windsor, Ontario. Mrs. Corbin Relieved from Pain Stewiacke, N. S. — "I had pains across my back and in my side for two years after my first baby was born. My mother had taken Lydia E. Pink- hatn's Vegetable Compound and I read about it in the papers, so I tried it and the pains all left me. I have a family of three children ttgigvv, and the medicine helped me dufi"ng the months before they were born. I rec- ommend it to my friends."—Mrs. CARY W. CORBIN, Main Street. Stew- iacke, Nova Scotia. -- 0 Ciitkeura Loveliness A Priceless Heritage For generations mothers have been using Codeine Preparations for all toilet purposes and have been teaching their daughters that daily use of them produces clear, smooth skin and healthy hair. They find the Soap pure and cleansing, the Ointment soothing and healing, should any irritations arise, aria! the Talcum an ideal toilet powder. Samptn Bactt Frao by MAIL Address Canadian 1)epat: "Stallone, I,td, Montreal,^ Price, Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 250. WV- Cuticure Sharing Stkk 2Sc. issue No. 1.3—'0.