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Zurich Herald, 1926-12-02, Page 3NEGLECTED ANAEMIA- , LVtayo>��s n�rv' "*S 1.�1 J(t Procession. nes ,. auu u ti it ,-. - - ald 1004,1031,, Lord Neural' , GOh tribS ort Ili TTCada t0 a Tp47ine•---1''t1- e'ic:vt of I.nnd.on,' ware inducted into of, rich the mod by Taking Ur nee wide the customary old World care, V:R.rlatione—.Qolanson, .Collett, Colet• imonie 1, A. feature - of the p esres'to11 Racial Origin --Norman-French, Williams' Pink ]Fills was u pee It of coati passenger prl$Ira A 0lveia -- .. name. fi'n sport, 1be Wonderful oompandei .gt In their early teens it A sluite cora- erreeenee, Ca'me'l, Wyr'e-clreevers, neve is ungther group of family anon for girls to outgrow their 'Wh,eeiwrigb.tfi, lr'edx-lnalce•i',;, Ioarriara,, names de'lv'ed from the giiv.en raaane strength, and mothers should carefully H n]eee and Paviors 'being conveyarl of Nicholas, only' this time more in ac - watch the health of their daughters at threugb the streets• in passenger ye- eor.dance with Norman than Anglo Miff time, for it le when strength le lease of the past and vreatont from' Saxon cugteim. napped by rapid E>iewt:h that anaemia sea" cllalrs and pack borsee to the Even before .the Normans invaded dev'elop's. The first signs may be no- Patteet modele of British ent.oneobiles• and conquered England the given tired by peevishness, langour and sae alrpdaned the latter including the flame ef ",Crile," or "Cohn" was vopu- be~adaehee, The face glows Hale, rnerahine flown by Sir Alan Cobbam lar and widespread, among them. They breatlileesness and palpitation follow, j fromTloaldon to Australia and bank.had formed this naive as' a diminutive with low spirits.) Another striking pageant represent".' of Nicholas, the ne•me of the famous At the first symptom of anaemia ed the Laudon. are bagade of to -any saint who was archbishop of Myra in mothers should aet at once. Neglect -1 and the' famous memos water -meat, its the fourth oenturY, and who already ed anaemia often. leads to decline, but' predecessors, the"lusty, ablewbodied had become the patron saint of child - if you wise that your daughter's blood gne.men" of the ancient city. The dig- ren' is enriched there need be no cameo for , cover', in Henefoadshire is, announced ! Inoidentaily, this tendency aanong anxiety. The finest blood enricherof a eeel attached to an ancient deem i the peoylcr of Europe in the early Mid, ever discovered is Dr. Williams' Pink meet which wife used by Dick Whit d'le Ages, to take a single given name Pills. 'rine pure, red blood created by tington, who 500 Years ago held the and split it up Into all sorts of diminai these pills will quickly banish all signsoiiloe to whichlades' has s•wa tives and variations was not due en - of anaemia. They will build up your errehealth and ensure her a robust girlhood. Give your daughter. a .course of Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills now. Make her strong like thousands of girls who have been rescued from the clutches of anaemia by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Here is a bit of proof. Miss Mary Venditti, Catawount, N33.,_ says:-- "Three years ago while attending a convent, I studied very hard to gradu- ate. The result was I became very nervous and got so thin and pale myteachers thought they would have to send me home. I took different kinds of medicine which my parents sent me, but my condition remained unchanged. At last one of my teachers gave me a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I had hardly finished it when I could feel am improvement in my condition. I continued the use of the pills for some time longer, and I can hardly tell all the good they did me. I gained In strength and weight, and the color re- turned to my cheeks, and at the end of the term I graduated. I never fail. to recommend Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills to my friends and acquaintances when a tonic is needed."You can get these pills from your 'druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., fieri spiritual desire in the worker; that it is . . . like thought, without truth or action without righteoueuess. —;A. Clutton -Brock, in "The Ultimate I3elief," osede�cl. This see1 shows 'Whittington) tirely to the natural inelisiation to. as a "citizen and mercer" and "re form nick -names, but in large mea- sure was Clue to, that same dearth of sufficient names, that go around which, intensified as populations became larger, finally grew into the formation of family names. The family of Collins', when it is not traceable to Irish sources, is simply the modern form of "Colin's eon," as also is the family name of Collinson. The Normans quite frequently form- ed diminutives of given names by the endings "et" and "ot," and it is from Lames so formed that the . family ceiver-general" for Great Britain unr der E4w'aael Plantagenet. Beauty in O ur,Work. We do not know that when a man makes anything he ought to make .it beautiful for the sake of doing so, and that when a man buys anything he ought to demand beauty in it, for the eako of that beauty. We think Of beauty, .if we think of it at all, as a mere source of pleasure; and there- fore it means to us ornament added to things, for which we -can pay extra if we choose. As we do not value the aesthetic activity ]n ourselves, so we do not value it, do not even recognize it or the lack of it, in the work ef others. The artist, of whatever kind, is a n:an so much aware of the beauty of the universe that he must impart the same beauty to whatever he makes. ki•e has exercised his aesthetic activity in the discovery of beauty in the uni- verse before he exercises it in impart- ing beauty to that which he makes. And we should know, also, that work without beauty means unsatis- Brockville, Ont. .A Dog That's Lost. You may have scattered bounty With your right hand and your left; Yea may have sat beside the sick, And wept with the bereft; You may have cheered the weary on, And helped some one doubt -tossed; But have you ever found a home FoT a wistful dog that's lost? —Claire Tower Allen. Her Own Fault. The train was about to start when the door of a coiupartmeut aontainiug a solitary commercial traveler was clung epee and a young woman enter- ed.and dropped:into a corner seat. _After a while the traveler said, po- litely: -"Excuse me, miss, but---" IS THERE A BABY IN YOUR HOME? Ts there a baby or young children in your home? If there is you should not be without a box of Baby's Own Tablets. Childhood ailments come quickly and means should always be at hand to -promptly fight them. Baby's Own Tablets are the ideal home remedy. They regulate the bowels; sweeten. the stomach; banish consti- pation and indigestion; . break up colds and simple fevers—in fact°they relieve "If you speak or annoy me I'll call all the minor ills of little ones. Con - the conductor " snapped the girl. evening them Mrs. Moise Culotte, Ma - Tho train rolled on, and after a lengthy patine the young man made an- other attempt to speak, but again the girl threatened to give the alarm. , At fast the train slowed up at a sta- tion and the traveler rose to his feet. "I don't care whether you dike it or not," he said, "hut I want that bag of strawberries you've been sitting on for the .last six- miles." •Few Wild Animals in Japan. No poisonous reptiles and few wild animals are to he noted in Japan. 7/144.14,441, /l1llf; l//tl+( �.�4up gqi,•ty1/14,ft i♦ 111 1'r�ree .}ree' Government Pamphlet - etVeals HOW TOGET MORE MONEY FROM HOGS Bow W avoid breeding short, thick pigs, and how to develop those of a suitable bacon type; how to feed a cow to prevent her devour- ing her litter; methods of breeding to be avoided; how to get two good litters a year; bow to pick the best brood aowe—these are just a few of the helpful facts contained in the free pamphlet Breeding and Feed- ing the Market Bog" issued by the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. I1 will pay you to get it. 'Lisa the form below. " The Grading and Marking of Eggs" Another helpful pamphlet. Tells tate law relative to grading, inspect- ing, shipping of eggs. etc. Every poultry farmer should get this. There are over Ave hundred free government pamphlets on all the diCerent branches of farming. Write for the list of these publica- tions. fill In and mail this clip POST FREE to PUBLICATIONS "MANCH Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ontario. Please, send toe free pamphlets On together with list of ell free tom - Oats. Nemo, Poet Ogee IF,1t. Me 1'ro'Inre gR+9� kamik, Que., writes: "Baby's Own Tab- lets are the best remedy in the world for little ones. My baby suffered ter- ribly from indigestion and vomiting, but the Tablets soon set her right and now site is in perfect health." `The Tablets are soid•by medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Sunrise and. Sunset. I'll tell you how the sun rose,— A ribbon at a time. The steeples swam in amethyst, The news like squirrels ran. The hills untied their bonnets, The bobolinks begun. Then I said softly to myself, "That must have been the sun!" But how he set, I kiiow not. There seemed a pvrpie stile Which little yellow boys and girls Were climbing all the while. ' WHY DON'T WE HELP? 1 By Florence Jones Badley .J I sat at my window one oold winter day, watching a -fiock of tiny brown birds hunting their dinner—or very likely it was breakfastfor fogad• wane pretty scarce then. The little fellows flew from one tail weed to another, from one bush to an- other, hunting for some tiny seed or dry red berry that might have been left from some former breakfasts. Sometimes a 'berry was found, drop- ped in the snow, and it was greedily picked up, and I shivered as I thought of the icy morsel going down thewarm little throats. My own breakfast had been worm, still I grumbled a bit be- cause the coffee, was not quite hot enough. But the tiny feathered lunch- er never grumbled—just twittered his. " e tiianks for every seed, every berry Upset stomach sluggishliver, and acid condi- tion cause bad brcath. Seigel's Syrup gets at tho found. cause. Try it and have a wholesome breath. At -last there seemed to be not a Any drugstore. seed or berry left, and away they all Something New. flew to see what could be found else- where. Such a scanty meal divided Mistress (to maid from the country) among so 'many was not very satisfy- —"Don't you like to cook with gas?" ing, you know. Cook --"Yes, ma'am, I think it's wc11- 1 felt a throb of pity as I watched derful. Why, the fire hasn't gone out them in their search, then something since 1 came a week ago!" said t- me "Wily didn't you help them }' — — Ilames'cif C*'llett mid to on, let eame down KE►.;LEHER.. Var►atlotr- Kciir r, O'Kelleher, Radial Origin—Irish, source A given .name, Every time you see the family 'name of Keller, don't lump at the conel'ueton that it ie German. Nine times out of ten it would be, But the tenth time it would be bleb, and a variation of the surni m' of O'Keileher or Kelleher. The last is the most venial form in abich the name is found' to -day. It is, of course, .sial Anglicised rendering of the true Irish fafraily or clan name, v.thleh is "O'Cedleechalr," a colnbina- tio'a which looks quite difficult to the English -trained eye, and even still more difficult as you try to analyze it. But "e" is adeva.ys, pronoatncel like "It" be Gaelic (providing it isu't silent) and in this name the diphthongs all have a short vowel sound than is pret- ty much the same. The ""ch" is mere- ly en aspirate, an "h" in short; so that "Kelleher" becomes an exact English rendering of the pronunciation. T11e "Q'Cedleachalr" clan is an old one the stronghold of which was in Munster. Its, founder was a 'chieftain named "Celleaeher" (the given name meaning "wise"), who was anephew of the famous High -King, Brian Boru, who first established laws governing theadoption ef family names among the Irish, though the custom of using them dates from many centuries prior to hie time. Till when they reached the other side, A dominie in gray Put gently up the evening barsAnd led the flock away. -Emily Dickinson, Coll'e'cted Poems. Her Choice. "Now," said the bridegroom to the bride, when they returned from their honeymoon trip, "let us have a clear understanding before we settle downe lowance, just so often slid the little, to married litre. Are you the president liners come for ilt. And sometimes it or the vice-president of this house - puzzled me how to feed so many, but Bold?" at last I dipped down into my corn "I watt to be neither president nor i vice-president," she answered. ""1 chops, my kaffie cern, which they will be content with a subordinate seemed to like very -read , and more bones had to be kept ready. And now 1: know what I am going to do next year. I am going to save all the melon seeds that we have; dry them thee A practical inn is the upholsterer; oughly and putt them_ away for the he's always getting down to brass birds' dinners and breakfasts. Many • tacks. kinds of seeds can be used• this way, Let's all do it. Let's' all save seeds; crumbs, scraps of bread, meet, from our .t'ab:•es, -and• scatter therm, like seeds of kindness, where they will do good. I am going to ---will ton? Familiar With Royalties. Dora (dumb).—"That author must hold a very high social position." He --"Why do you think so?" Dora—"I heal liim say he had be- come familiar with royalties at last." He --''Science says man started from a single cell." She—""Most of 'em should be taken back to one." After Shaving—Mlnard'e Liniment. Secret. I have a very special dream, Fragile and star -white, That I keep carefully packed away From other people's sight. Once I very foolishly Wore it -out to dine,— I was rather proud, you see, To think the dream. was mine, instead of wasting your time pitying Little larger than a man's watch, a them"? Why didn't you?" 11"w&ype of thermometer works with ' "Help them? But what can I do a special metal spring, and indicates to help?" was my first thought. Then all degrees of temperature from 10 I knew. I decided. that every day 1 degrees below zero to 180 degrees would save thecrumbs that always above, gather on table and dishes—every A lie ?End's to make ability liability. meat scrap, everything that a bird can eat with a relish. This I did, and with it I served a nice piece of suet for dessert, hanging it by a stout string to a limb of a tree near by. Another day I hung a sena bone with a good serving of n1•cat on it, and' it is a question as to whether the birds that found it or 1 who had given it to them, enjoyed it the most. Such a twittering, such a scrambling from one side to the other as there was•! I wished with all niy heart that I could understand bird language so I could know-111st what they were say-. ing. From crumbs to neat, from meat to crumbs they flew, until at last the meal was consumed and away they flew with happy twitters. The next morning there was a sur- prise for me: For 'there 'were not only the birds who came for brakfast yes- terday, but nearly as cany again, and as I watched, they still came from 111 directions. I almost 11ei'd my breath in amazement. Where did the others, -come from? How did they know .about the food put out for them? Surely, surely there must have been some way of com- munication between them, for it just did not happen, but how can they tell one another of such things? Well, I really got myself into deep waters, for as T increased my food a1- position" "What. position is that, my dear?" "Treasurer." SOUR STOMACH Dr. Franklin's DIOESTIN Strengthenfs the Stomach, relieves and prevents Dyspepsia, Inddgeetion, Heart• . burn Biliousness, Nausea, Flatulence, ,.- rhea allother troubles Mother Eagle --- "Children!' Yoe cIea ed bti and er °stomach and come• right in out of that? stir! The caused by clisord'ereti Dowels, Buy at your drug store or idea of playing up there where all Mail fifty cents to bur address, those airplanes aro!„ Dr. Franklin Laboratorieis Toronto phyetciana Use Minard a Liniment, **tat %lir 9.,0x Wt,ow.f.yArOr •ei +rA'.e,t+t.t•w+,r ro•.r v,.rr about ft,nr tiros as "atitotig as a M n e 0114l4 11140,1.6140 r.X00.01.Vi 12046414y I. 14110 OIttPa ti , . L. Urr •vef tioria But when the people saw it They stared and then they smiled, They shrugged and loudly wbispered: "The dear, old, foolish child!" So now 1 have it stored away From bland and stupid eyes; I keep it safe, you understand, Till they have grown more wise. ---Doris Nanette Peel. Classified Advertisements. REMNANTS. QLBS„ $2, 5 LBS. PATCHES, $1.50. A. McCreary, Ciliithazn, Ontario. F( ARM WANTED FRAM OWNER. Describe, state price. C. Herbert, 1019 Des Carrieres, Montreal. On the Contrary. A man whose aredit was at a low ebb called on his tailor to try on a new suit he had ordered, and on doing so found that the cloth, fit—everything, in fact—was perfect. He turned to the tailor and said, in a pleased tone: "The suit is fine—very creditable in - dead." "Oh, no," said the tai'for. "Cash only." The Solution. Husband—"Isn't supper ready yet?' Wife—"No, dear." "Well, 1'11 step over to the restaura ant." "Wait just five minutes." "Will it be ready then?" "No, but then I'll go with you," Too often the mark a person wishes to make in the world is the dollar mark. If you have anything good to sell, talk it up er you won't Don't Neglect Bronchial Colds Pneumonia, "Flu" and other danger- ous maladies develop from common colds. To prevent trouble take Buckley's Mixture. It quickly relieves the Cough and removes the cause. Diderent from old-fashioned syrups. It's a ecientiiio combination of proven virtues. Sold by all druggists and guaranteed. W. K. Buckley, Limited, 1.42 Mutual St., Toronto 2 sae' 'm°llcil"kr3 Aces lice a fash— single sip proves it or Co/cis Z Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds . Neuralgia Pain Neuritis Heada.che Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART pritlliliiig of granulate WARNING! Beware of C terfe is There is only one genuine "ASPIRIN" tablet. 11 a tab- let is offered as "A'tSPI121N" and is not stamped with the. "Bayer Cross"—reftmr: it with =tempt—it isnot"A SPIRT, N" at all! Don't take chalices ! Acctrslt only "Bayer" TAckav wilik1i contains proven directions. Hanel, "Mayer" lose+ of ]2 t.ableti .Also betties of '21 and 100--Th•uggiets. Aspirin ie the trade murk (reeristerodiIn Cc ram al oflaB,.Seri Item tlo19 is 'l 1 see as o eeldeetcr of ;;altositencld (Atatrl Fiat c• ofabuyarrCompany''tttilrbo tits ntea thptLeir amerdlitetra rrark lV u "Boer groza." g ;z , , Pour on rich intik P/cmf 7 r Bomar Last word. in builders' aid. _Practical, up-to-datc sugs,,stions on planning, building, furnaslting, decorating and gardening. Profusely illustrated, .and scores of actual dbi.cu.saving sug- i ' •gestions. .Send 25 cents for ,purrent issue. ' MacLean, Builders? Guide 114 Adelaide, et. W., Toronto, Ont. In the Stable Minard's is invaluable for, strains, bruises, cuts, swellings. Tial WOMAN NOW WELL Her Suffering Relieved and 1 Health Restored by Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Toronto, Ontario.— "I am certainly very grateful for the benefit I have re- ceived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable C-ompound, a'so the Sanative Wash and the Liver Pills. In the early spring I was suffering so much from loss of blood that 1 thought I would never be any better as doctor's medicine relieved me only�fur the tine being. I saw the Vegetable Compound advertised in the 'Toronto Star,' and I find the Vegetable Com- ound Tablets the best for me. I have been taking them since Spring, and I intend keeping them by me all the time. After reading your Pri- vate Text -Book I saw it was neces- sary to use Lydia E. Pinkham's San- ative Wash, and I can safely say I feel a different woman. My friends remark how well I look. I am a very busy woman, but I am ready at all times to boost your medicines." -- Mrs. CIIARLF.S tiIIFFIN, 949 Lands- downe Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. You may be having an experience similar to Mrs. Gif%n's and will be interested to know what she did. Every sick woman can feel confident that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help her since we are told that it does help 98 out of every 100 women who take it. Sold by druggists everywhere. a Cuticura Talcum Is Unexcelled in Purity Its delicately medicate.;, antiseptic properties makeitideal for daily use. leaf a rub ret by MattAdareea Ceinn$lan ilepal: 'Strnbouse, La, Montreal" Frio), Soap 16c,.4intrnrnt11 and 60c, Tnlcam 010. Cnticure Shaving Stick 25c. ISSUE No. 43---'2d., barr.y 'cowl. liiayc11+"30''4)0 etaltea wit,it :t neeeco, n,e -I t7vtasn of U1/4,0401'e. 4114