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Zurich Herald, 1926-07-08, Page 3ire.te,••, xi" -. NEED NEW BLDOD Which Can be Rad Through the Use of Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills. Nature intended every girl to be happy, active and healthy, Yet too many of them find their lives eaddened by `suffering. nearly always hasauee their blood is to blame. All those with colorless cheeks, dull skins and luster- less eyes are In.•this Condition, because Ii they have not enough red :blood In their veins to keep them well and in i the chasm of health. They suffer from I depressing weariness and periodical I ' headaches;. Dark lines form under their eye, their heart. palpitates vio- lently after the slightest exertion, and they are often attacked with fainting icpells, These are only a few of the miseries• of bloodlessness. When the blood becomes thin and watery it can be enriched through the use of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills and the troubles that conte front poor blood disappear. In almost every neighborhood you will find some formerly ailing girl who has a good word to say for this medicine; .Among them there is Miss Ida M. Withrow, Hardwood Lands, N.S., who l says:—"Dr. Williams' Pink Pails did d more for me than all the other Instil - eine I took, and I cannot praise them. 0 Gipsies The or gjn •.oi' the olpsies sarilong ehreinied in..ilnystery and ie Atli' the subject of .eruliese ,and abstruse cont- teoversy, That they canoe from India is, however, generally accepted. In India they inhabited the'marsh•landa of the Indus and were known as Atte. The that record of :migration .of this tribe appears in the shah Name of Firdusi, who tell* ns that during the ilfth century of our .era the Persian morfarch,•Beh+ranx Gour, received from the Mararajalr of Xndia the royal gift of twelve thousand musicians <ft both' sexes,' known as Lurie or Jetts, Ilow long they staid in Persia is uncertain; probably several hundred years, going from there to &rzn,eella where they so - jemmied a longer .time. By 1100 they had penetrated the Byzantine Empire and were epreatling northward into. Wallachia,, Moldova and I•Xurtga'ry. The appearance of Gipsies in I,lurope is first; noted by chroniclers. in the fif- teerzth century, when "a peculiar race of wandering, wastrel, ragamuffin vag a -bonds" arrived in Germany, about 1417. They traveled In hurdles, each led by a count on horseback, or by a "Lord of Lesser Egypt" Gipsies arrived in England at a somewhat laterperiod, enjoying' a marked degree of toleration at first. Henry VIII. promulgated a aw against them in which they are eeeribed as "an outlandish people, calling themselves Ogyptians, using no raft nor feat of merchandise, who having come intothis realm, and gone from shire to shire, in great company," There are many historical evidences to believe that Gipsies have been in America from nearly the first days of its settlement. Many Gipsies were banished to the Colonial plantation's, and many old-world families and tribes came voluntarily In later yearsseeking ore elbow room. The United States,r anada and South America have today probmably as large a Gipsy population as is to be found in all of Europe. ' The name "Gipsy" originated in the pretense of these wanderers to being gyptians. They are also known as Zigeuners" in Germany, "Czigany" in winery, "Tsigan" in Rumania and Zingari in Italy. These different rms o,C the ;earns root are supposedbe derived very significantly from ie Persian word' tchengan, denoting usicians, dancers.—Joseph E1lner .i too highly. When I began the use of these pills I was In a terribly run down condition, very thin and very pale. My appetite was gone, and I had a tired, worn out •feeling all the bane. Doctors medicine did not seem to improve my condition' and I was getting greatly discouraged when a friend advised me to give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a trial; After some urging I decided to do go, in After 'taking six boxes I felt like a C new person. I gained weight, had a good dolor, and an Improved appetite, in•d the constantly tired feeling that had made me so miserable was gone. I took a few boxes . more before I stop- E • ped, and by that time I had heves felt " so well in my life. I shall always feel 11 very grateful to Dr. Williams' Pink . " Pills and strongly recommend them fo to those who are run down." Ito You can get these pills from your, ti druggist, or by mail at 50 tents a box m from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Lovely Air. When you go to country or seaside ne you probably pay a 'compliment to the. ca fresh, pure air. But, if you were -the p1 father of an inquisitive child, what •wou.ld you be able to tell if about. air? I Country air is purest, because trees, i e, plants and flowers absorb carbonic sed acid from the air and ,return pure oxyatvee gen to it. A sufluner• day may be very hot, but an in this country the air is usually from tw ten to twelve degrees cooler than the body temperaure. . The greater purity of air after a rtli thunderstorm with lightning is be .ree cause the latter produces nitric acid, fro whi8h destroys the noxious gases in go the air. the Air is never `still," and cannot be ! I seen. Subjected to great pressure at vie a low ternperatiire, it can be turned in- • ass to a liquid, the Introducto "The Gipsy. Pattera.n...• It's Cooler Near the Sun. The predicted summer treat wave ed have no terrors for anyone wh n afford to take a trip in an aer ane! If the heat wave began this month th the shade temperature well int e 70's, an ascent of about 6,00' fee Uhl bring the thermometer down t ar freezing -point, ' If that were not a sufficient "cooler, other mite up would produce ten o elite degrees of frost. The reason whyit is cooler in- th even thoughou are going toward e sun, is that the sun'srays go di t to earth and are flung ,upward m the earth... Thus, the higher yo the fainter tieconres the strength o se reflected rays, f the predicted 'heat wave—in the inity of 90 in the shade—does not ert itself until July, it would mean ending four miles to feel the ef- ts of zero. A nice cool air, with the rmometer at 41 degrees, could be ountered at a height of 6,000 or 0 feet. omething very. refreshing could be aiued at height of three miles iu gust—twenty degrees of frost! ether one wants cooler weather ot, depends, of course, on what one -been used to in the matter of eli- te. ,Anyone newly home from a residence in India or Egypt might, er at the mere thought of the mometer in the thirties, and would er to bask.in the "cool" 80 in the e at ground level. n the other hand, an Arctic ex- er home from a two or three ' expedition in the neighborhood he North .Pole, would have to go ix or seven miles to get anything II the temperature he has been used At this height there would be a perature of sixty degrees below o- 0 t 0 r e s• s u f or even a solid. ase fee Thousands of fire rangers are on the the job this month protecting the forest en•c against human recklessness. Ease the 7,00 ranger's job all'you can, Make yours ! s self his ally! f obt Au What makes Iife worth living is .I Wh that the unexpected so often happens. I or n has 'ma long ,spiv ther ' Pref shad O plor ' years of t ups like to. !tem 'zero. tched Their Sketches on Bones .aud Cervern Paintings found on the roof of the Altanrira Cave In Northern Spain ase shown in the sketch. The paintings, representing a bison and a galloping boar, are believed to have been the work of Cro-Magnards who lived 25,000 Steers ago. • Secrets of Science. By David Dietz. True, man probably made his first appearance in South' Asia or North Africa 25,000 years ago, It is thought that he appeared upon They even tried their hand at scalp - territory which has since sunk below ture, making little statuettes out of sea -level due to movements of the. Ivory and soapstone. earth's crust and is now covered by About 12,000 years ago a new type the Mediterranean Sea. of man known aur. the Azilian made his Anthropologists find two distinct appearance. races in the fossil remains of this Then about 10,000 years ago the period. greatest change came. Up until tillsOne race has been named the Oro- time implements were all of rough They were artists. Rude sketches. which they made are found on the walls of -caverns of the period and scratched on bones found in the cav- erns. lvlagnards. The. Oro-Magnards were stone. Hence this foregoing period of 1 tall men, about six feet tall, broad foreheads and prominent noses. with . which we have written has been called the Old Stone Age, or to use the scien Their skulls give evidence that their tiffs name, the Paleolithic Age. brain capacities exceeded in size the Now starts the New Stone or Neo - average of to -day. lintels Age, This is the period offpolish- The second type Is known as the ed atone Implements.Grimaldi man and seems to have been From now on, man polished his im- a negroid type. Many fossils of this period cannot be positively identified as belonging to either race. Very likely there may have been many other races at the time. plements with -care. Arrow heads are found. There are also axe heads so constructed as to -be fastened to handles. At this time the start of agriculture and the do Neanderthal. man was driven out of also made mastication of animals was his caverns by these new types which Six thousand years ago man learned took possession of the earth. ' to make Implements of copper. These new races werehonters. They • Three thousand years ago he first made rough implements otit of stone. learned the use of iron. Fixing the Blame. Mrs. Knogg—"Oh, dear! Why did I ever marry you?" Her Husband—"Don't blame me. 1 did my best to run out on you." Meaning of Mink tore. We of the present think of ".minia- ture 'as something small, particularly a small portrait. But this word, ac- cording to the Mentor, is the same virtually, as the more uncommon "nriniate," which means "of a red color," and "minium" which is the name of a real mineral. Tracing the word "miniature" back we find that it means not small portrait, but a "red portrait" from an Italian word, which •comes from the Latin miniare, mean- ing to "rubricate' 'or to paint in minium, red lead. (The Latin name The ancient Hebrew did not know; f the elephant; but Solomon imported ' ivory: n m or red lead probably was of Spanish or Iberian origin). The name "minia- ture" was first applied to the orna- uental capitals which decorated old anus•cripts. Later the word took on the Connota- tien of "small" -just how is uncertain, but it may have been wthrouglr some associatitm with the Latin minor, minimus, snide means small, or less, I So, from meaning a red portrait, and then from being the name of ornahaent- ttl letters, "miniature" has coarse to be Iapplied to small pictures and portraits 1 in general. A Snicker From Sydney. George --•-"Did you sound the family WE BUY FLEECE WOOL Harris' Abattoir Co,, .Limited Strachan Ave., Toronto e eta- • • Do You Want To Cat Ahead? COME TO THE O.A.C. and LEARN THE BUSINESS OF OF=TC DATE FARMING Up.to-Date Farming is a real business—a profession,: it requites know- ledge, it needs training, but It pays. Come to the.O.A.C, and join the f=reshman etas in September. We will send you the College Calendar containing full particulars if. you say so. Write to -day. ONTT,RIO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE Guelph • Ontario .1. 13, Reynolds, M.A., A. M. Porter, B.S.A, L.Stevenson, S president. Flee1strr . l Flee a Extension. SIXTEEN YEARS USE OF BABY'S OWN TABLETS Has Shown One Mother There Nothing to Equal Them. A constant use of Baby's Own T Iets for their children has proven thousands of mothers that they without an equal for babyhood a childhood ailments. One another, ItI C. Rr. Jackson, R,R.1, Gilford, 0 writes:—"}Tile have used Baby's 0 Tablets ever since our first baby w born sixteen years ago. We ha seven healthy children and the Ta lets is the" only medicine they ceived in their early years. Our ba is one and a half years oid, is walk! and talking and weighs 25 pound Baby's Own Tablets is the only me clue he has ever had." Baby's Own Tablets are guarante to be absolutely safe for even the ne born babe. They are free from oplat and narcotics; act as a .gentle lax tive on the stomach and bowels and thus relieve constipation -and indiges- tion; break up Colds and simple fevers and make baby healthy and strong. fou can get Baby's Own Table from your druggist or direct by ma at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Wi liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. John,;;--�- of Mutton, pone a14 liam perfected by the Nog of *Dotard. and the Mustard sho • oh should be'bold to give the "best offset - u AJiiiii.iys be maxed 20 minutes before the meal. digestion as Some Rooms in the Houses. The very rooms, quiet, soot, unci tered, had a memorable chane whi no mere catalogue of their content couid ever suggest, Net the cha of ancientness, for this had been re jetted, . Just as the family itself w not eccentric, so there was not an ar quaint corner in their house. Y individuality triumphed even over t' black walnut which at this • period h• formidably sup•esseded mahogany, Th family assembly room may have lacked actual beauty, but it bad comfort an dignity it expressed the sane, reason able, truly liberal temperament. And only an irreconcilable aesthete could have called the "spare chamber" an ugly room, in spite of the high -peaked bedstead, and the towering bureau with ponderous' marble etabs, and olwmsily superflutaue black walnut tas- sel vitt was not ugly because iia• ep- poin:tmesits were eo exquisitely eon - tidered, its tone so unmistakable; and because blue -birds lrerohed perpetually upon he pink -and -lilac flowered wall Paper in such delicately paradisal fas- hion. And through the windows on summer evenings you heard the frogs ging me•odtiy from the river, and ! honeysuckle poured heavy fragrance ale night long. From the juvenile point of view, however, the consummately desirable spot in the house was a tiny room, al- most a cicset, which juted out from that bright, orderly attic with which one associates a alightly dusty- scent of drying sage and mullein. Here one looked. out upon a thoroughly familiar prospect that at this height seemed dizzily enchanting; and one spent hours searching for the nameless secret pearl of books that was bound to lie hidden among discarded school- books ,a generation old, little volumes of rhymed sentiments, with gaily gar- landed covers, magi-.zines of the Go- deys Lady's Book variety, with bril- liant prints of ladies in ample azure skirts and flowing crimson mantles, with bright checks, triangular fore- i heads, and black curls. If there was a more interesting re- treat than this, it was that combine- siCK ! pboll of ofRca uncle eh rm as rt: et. ha had The d i Light. Be not much trouble4 about maety things, Year often bath no' whit of substance In it, And lives but just a minute; Mile from the very scow the wheat blade springs; And light be Meese flower '.hat burst in full leaf from the dark- est ark est hour; Asd' he who made the night, Made too, the flowery sweetmeat of the light. Be it thy ;task through lain goad grace to .win it. --,A,Mce Gary. Those who find fault with worthy things are captious without being To carry on its work the Canadian Red Cross needs the help of your steady membership. Keep It renewed, BICYCLE BARGAINS New and a tightly used, $10 upwards. TransoartatIon prepaid. Write for Pride List. PEERLESS BICYCLE woR1Ce 163 Dundas Street Wast, Toronto and sore muscles are quickly relieved by a few applications of Minard's. studio, and workshop In the unused building across the road, where a much Ioved member of the fatality, . practised law, dis- charged the not too exacting duties of ' -- - ED EIGHT ":ONTHS is a town office or so, and assembled the I ingenious, tools of an unrememberable 1 number of crafts. Here one found a ab- library and documents; blueprints and to I pencils, rulers and compasses, all the are paraphernalia of draughtsmanehfp; nd 1 tripod, cameras, and the dark agencies re.1 of photograph development; paints, nt., I brushes, and canvases; tools foe carv- wn i ing and carpentry; . . . and a as . nrusIral i.nstrument or two. And one ve would also come upon a book of log- b- aritlams, a sextant, aud-binoculars; for re- this lover of wood and river was by moved by an even deeper love for sea ng and ships, for sea -lore and sailor -lora. s. His keen far vision could fully test it- self only on vast stretches of ocean; his body adapted itself most naturally ed to the motions of a ship in a storm.— w- Olivia Howard Dunbar. es a'1 Minard's Liniment for Burns, Father of the Seahorse. One of the most remarkable egg lil- ts cubators known in Nature is, that of 11 the small seahorse, the water creature 1- that gets its name from it remark- abI•e resemblance to the "horse" used as a knight in the game of ebese, both resembling the head end the slhoulders of a horse. Sentence Serio ns. We Get Fent Little---Satisfaction-out of money that is bought at the• cost c conscience. ---Pleasure out of the happiness tha makes other people unhappy, —Enjoyment out of life if our child- ren are a disappointment. ---Free advice that has mull cash value. --Interference when we start out to make fools of ourselves. ---Sympathy after we start pitying ourselves. --Encouragement in attacking some sin that is highly profitable. The seahorse father somehow opens up a little pouch somewhat like that of the kangaroo and •the female lays her t eggs in this pouch. Then the old man seahorse travels around with ;these eggs at the end of his body until he finds they have hatched. Then the old fellow opens. the pouch and gout come several hundred :little sealaorse•s, perfectly formed, yet so mall that they can be seen only with the aid of a magnifying glass. - ]t is just as easy to form a good habit as it is a bad one. And it is just as hard to break a good habit as a bad one. So get the good ones, and keep them; Wi;Baan McKinley. fteinard's Liniment for all pains. Large 'Foreign Elements in U.S. More than 36,000,000 of the inhabit- ants of the United States are of for- eign birth or parentage. Let every dawn of nrornini be to you as the beginning of life, and every etting sun be to you as its close; then t every one of these short lives leave s record of some kindly thing done for others, some goodly strength and knowledge gained for yourself," -.--John Ruskin. regarding our marriage?" Georgette --dyes, and father sound- ed perfectly awful," Has kluge Practice.. One doctor at Damen, in the north of Australia, has 'a practice covering ate area teri times the size of . Great Britain. le it YOUR OWN Sai'n monoy—end not 11 'every week, Sari fruit tract, flowerinp shrubs, shade trees, hedging, root and etwergrcot. outfit' furnished. oid, establish. ed firm het an attractive proposition for matt 'or Woollen of good standing and energetic. E. D. SMttH a SoNs, IuhlrTEb, Winona, -. Ontario Marriage of Moslem women to Christians is forbidden in a bill now {'before the Turkish,National Assembly for passage, New single cylinder Harley.Daviclson Motorcycle, has jufft soma World's lie- i cord for endurance. Less than one cent per mile to operate, and over 100 milds per gallon of gas. $97 eas11, lra!- ante $20 per month, Price ,$293. wALTER ANDREWS, Ltd. 346 Yonge SL for onto After Taking Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound Could Do All Her Work and Gained in Weight Melfort, Saskatchewan. - "I had inward troubles, headaches and severe pains in my back and sides, I was so sick generally that I could not sit up and I was in bed most of the time for eight months. An aunt came•,toevisit and help me as I was unable to attend to my baby and ;4 could not do my work. She told me to try Lydia E. Pinkha m's Vege- table Compound, and after taking two bottles I could get up and dress my- self. I also took Lydia E. Pinkham'e Blood Medicine. When I first took the medicine I only�weighed seventy- eight pomade. Now I weigh twice as much. If I get out of sorts or weary and can't sleep i always take another bottle of the Vegetable Compound. • I find it wonderfully good for fe- male troubles, and have recom- mended it to my neighbors. I will be only too glad to answer any letters I receive asking about it.' ---Mrs. WILLIAM RITCIIE, }fox 486, Melfort, Saskatchewan. c Face .badly Broken Out With Pimples Cuticura Healed "My face was so badly broken out with pimples that it was actually disfigured. They first started with a few blackheads on the sides of my fact:, and festered. The pimples spread to my forehead, chin and neck "I'hcy itched and burned so that Todd hardly rest. They Ionized so aadly that 1 was ashamed to be seen in public. The trouble lasted about three years. "1 read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment so purchased some. I used about two boxes of Cuticura Ointnaeet and four cakes of Soap arid wee healed." (Signed) Mrs. John Kelly, Rt, 3, Baa City, ldich„ Nov. 5, 1925. Nothing so insures a healthy, clear complexion„ soft, smooth hands and glossy, luxuriant hair tis Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti- cure 0intmetit when necessary. easels ;lath 'Free br hinil h 11r s= Osumi'hri DOM Stenhouse, Led., afoatrent Pea., Snag Se• ,i em ent, a swot the. .f, m `Vb. C.utiaura 3hayseur 13SU h.