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Zurich Herald, 1923-05-31, Page 7SMOKE j r '";,. s•_ .+tai Vic• t�.•t +!t,_' 7` �+•s•.;sr!ni�kT. t; _'': ���II ? I I I I 11 �,rY�s,•L43 a 1. it! tt<' Ise 10 h. at he' re e or - gist and Wel."'' yo� u 1. ?der they aurc+ �r.you roll your ow ask f r Oe 1-U �Da 6M4 (teen Zabel) •ate'-,.,,. Vv., nrr c e. kr..a. •,. Surnames and Their'Origin •O'HARA Variatfons—O'Hara, Racial Origin—Irish, source—A given name. • Sometimes .the change in spelling Between the real Irish form of a name and its Anglicized version is so great as to throw, you completely: •'off the track. _,O'Hara. is one of these names. Few persons would think of associat- ing it:wit1r the name which in the Gee - lift is spelled "O'h-Eadhradh." But you will note that when the two. "dh" eompounda+ are "pronounced". silently, as happens to be correct, and, that the diphthong "ea" takes more of the "a" than of the "e" sound, like. this:,:."O'hr(E)a(dh)ra(dd1); you see there really isn't much left to it but O'Hara. This clan name is derived from the. given name of "Eadradh." The O'Hara clan was'. settled in Kuighne. It was a branch•if the O'Carroils of Elyand. the clan must have come into exist,, ence aboutthetime of Brian Boru'.or a trifle later, for: in the clan record of ,, long line of chieftains, there ismen cloned iii. the year 1067 one ,"conaing 1013.-Eadradth," who was a l•e'eturer at Cionmaenoise. , Th•e O'Haras were. a strong clans until the time of Oliver Cromwell's invasion of Ireland. PAIN; AFTER' 'EATING Proof That the, Stomach is Weak and Needs Toning Ur." Generally;epeaking, a person in good health .can digest most foods.' If not, ,and there is pain after eating, the stomach has lost tone and is too weak to do its work. In that case your stem- ;acie. needs strengthening and the way to - do this is to build, upyour blood" :with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. There cannot be good digestion with- ent a sufficient supply of good red blood, and there is nothing better than )Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to renew and (enrich the blood'. That is ,why they have proved so successful in thousands of cases of indigestion. Mr.. D. J. Shave, Seikirk'Roaci, P.E.I., has proved the value of Dr. Williams'. Pink Pills in a severe case of indigestion and •re- lat9s his experience for the benefit of other suffere%s. He says:—"I suffered from indigestion ter a numbepof ytars. My .case was so bad that words fall to describe it. .111y appetite" twee gone, constipation was present, and my serves were all on edge. I could not sleep' well at night, and the world was e. dark spot 'to'me, I tried -'a number of remedies, but without any benefit. Then Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were re= commended, but without much faith, after so many failures, I decided to try 'them. After taking three boxes? no- ticed a change. for 'the better. Then I gat three boxes more, and• found I had et genuine remedy. I . continued the treatment, took moderate exercise, could take good plain food without suf- fering as formerly, and proved that these pills make good blood, and that this good blood will restore the stom- aeli • and nerves. Anyone suffering _from. stomach or nerve troubles will snake no .mistake in giving Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills a cair. trial;" You can get these • pills from any, Medicine dealer or by mail at 50cents ' a' box Pram The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co:, Brockville, Ont. The Suez Canal teak thirteen years to eonstauct. A new Canadian soprano has ap- peared in the person` of Miss Blanche Archambault of Montreal, who is gilt- ills conee%ts in the gestate Statea lShe sang recentlyy before a large audience- at e, Mass. Attractive Proposition li'or awil with all* round weekly: newspaper experience and $400 et $500; ; Aplily Dox 24, Wilson Mashing Co., Ltd., 78 -Adelaide Street West. HALLEY Variations—Hal ly, -O'Hal Iey,ftO'Hally, Holy; O'Haley, O'Haly. Racial Origin—Irish. �w Source—Given names: As a matter of feet, there are two clans and two family names here. But there has been a good bit of •confusion between the two is-. the Anglicized forms of the names, and it is' best, per- haps, to stretch a point and for the sake of convenience regard- them as variations of each other. . The forms. Halley, Haley, O'Halley and O'Hally are in most cases names founded on. the clan. name of the "O'h- Ailehe,'•' who were a branch of the O'I£enedys of Ormond, and descend- ants of the famous i`Qormac Cas." Their territory was •the ancient "Tee- the: Fearalt" ("County of the Hardy Men's), . .The -forms Hely, Haley, O'Haly and O'Haley are more usually founded up- on the elan name of the "O'h-Algaith," a. derivative from th,e given name of "Algach" (the meaning of which was "noble" or "courageous").' This clan, 'like the Cosgraves.• slid the O'Hogans, was a branch' of the old O'Brien clan, through that 'same chieftain, ,'.. "Cos- graela, whose' namewas perpetuated in the elan and .family -name of" Cos- grave." Boys in London Strive to Enter King's Choir. Fifty London boys. -between ten and fourteen years :old'came to the Chapel Royal,' St. James, recently, to have their voices tested by the King's' or- ganist and choirmaster, each hoping to be the one of the two to be chosen to fillvacanciesinn the King's choir. Competition is keen•,for with the privilege of singing`befere the royal family and the court goes a term . of general education: at the City of Lan- don School. , Some ' of the choir boys comefrom wealthy families. but as there is no favoritism in the choosing, the only test•bding voice quality, there are always several parents :who, par- ticularly ar•ticularly appregiate the educational side of .the matter; The boys wear scarlet and gold. uni for -ins;-- and their duties, especially when the court is --in London, .are- con- siderable. : At 10 o'Clock on Sundays they assemble in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace, ate11.15 they go to St. James's Cathedral, when there is a full service for the. King's general household. At 12:30 conies the service in Queen Alexandra's private chapel in Marlbor,ough"Haus e. Memorial ,of Hochelaga. The ,Department ° of the Interior, Canadian National Parke -Branch, has made arrangements with the authcri- tiee of McGill TJniversity, Montreal, to erect a monument and memorial tab- let within the,: university grounds, near the entrance in Sherbrooke Street, to eeminemormte the existence' of the ancient fortified Indian village of Hochelaga. The - quaint sketch of Hochelaga, published by Ramusio and reproduced in the works sof. Champlain, together with Cartier's entertaining description of the village! has ''n}ade I•iochelaga one of the out -standing points in the romance of Canadian his tory, During the au!tuinn of 153.5'`Car tier, accompanied` by a varied retinue, was received with great honor by the, Iroquois and later Champlain yisited the abandoned site. Tire' village con- tained fifty large houses, lodging sev- eral fanilles who subsisted by cultiva- tion and fishings The abandonment of the village by the'Iroquels is attributed to the hostile attacks of the neighbor ing Algonquin tribes, A. small boy was sitting' on his father's 'Alec watching his mother as she painfully went through the'very delicate , operation of doing her hair in that most becoming wave effect. "No waves for you]N a," said the in - fent philosopher' as lie fondly polish- ed his .parbnt's bald head. "You're ail beach." taMl.tard's Liniment for sale ovehywliere gichest Spot on Earth. The greatest gold aline in the world is ,at Tiinmins,,r: 500 p ileac north of Toroato, " ' Thirteen years .ago an outcropping pf rock.lay unknown in the heart of a" Wild bugle country, A man came"strugt ding through the liusb, his' balOatings, packed on his back. He saw the rock.. "Gold!" he muttered. The man' was a young prospector named Ben Hollinger. To -day the Bol- linger mine covers more than 4 14 acres; below its surface run 45 miles of tunneler and an electric railway sys- tem; its great mills roar ceaselessly; and $1;000,000 in gold leavest its. re- finery every mouth The Hollinger mine has become the greatest In the world. li'or ttivo years it has been running- neck and neck with its nearest rival, the great New Madderfontein of the Rand, South Af- rica. Tee ni'ost recent figures how- ever, show that while the output of the. Transvaal mine has declined, the Hol- linger is forging ahead. What does the world's. richest trea- sure chest look like? To be truthful, it 1a41ts like anything on earth but a gold mine. It looks like aboiler fac- tory, or a pork -packing plant, or any- thing unromantie. ' Hollinger 'produced. $12,000,000 in 1922. This year it is planned to mill 7,000 tons of ore per day, instead of 4,300, the present daily average. Yet ;for years to riome Hollinger will 'be using only a fraction of the' mine's re-: sources. . Hollinger at present employs 2,300' men, -of varum 1,300 work underground. They are arranged in three shifts. For eight hours. a day they work in a cavern of gold; and novel. see it, for the greatest .•gold mine in the world displays no yellow, metal until the r'e- ;finery has done its work. WOULD NOT E. WI�'HOOT BABY'S OXY TABLETS - Once a mother has used Baby's Own Tablets for her Ueda ones she would not be without them, • They are the ideal home remedy for the baby; be- •Ing guaranteed to be absolutely free from opiates or other harmful drugs. They are a gentle but thorough laxa- tive and have been proyed of the great- est aid in cases of constipation, indi+ ges•tion, colic, colds and simple fevers. Concerning them Mrs. Ernest Gagne, Beausetour, Que., writes: "I have used Baby's Own. Tablets far constipation and colic and have found them so suc- cessful that I would not be without them. -I would strongly recommend every mother to keep,, a box in the house." The Tablets are sold by medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 .cents a box from The Dr. Williams" Medicine Co.,' Brockville, Ont. • Fine Specimens of Buffalo Hides. Several fine speciments of buffalo hides and heads have recently been re- •cgived by the Canadian: National Parks branch, Department of the Interior, Ottawa. These were secured from ani- mals killed in`. :Buffalo National Park during the winter and are of excellent quality, The robes, dressed, measure eight feet wide and twelve feet long and the hair le long and glossy. The. manes on the heads • are also exoep- tionally, long, measuring from four- teen to sixteen inches. MONEY ORDERS. Pay your out-of-town accounts by Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars costs three center Easy Curtain Pole. An implement has been patented which enables a person to arrange :cur- tains on a pale -while standing on a floor and: then, toraise the pole to its place. Silver Foxes in Great. Britain.. The only fox farm in Great Britain is located near Alnes's, Cromarty Firth, Ross -shire, Scotland.' .The climate is suitable and the "first six have in- creased to 60. NOT SICK ONCE IN FOUR YEARS NOW SmithDeclares Healthll, Oa r� Has Been Perfect Since Tan, �a Ended Stomach Trouble. 'Tor ten years hardly a day passed that I didn't Suffer from stomach trou- ble, but I toq.k Tanlac four years ago and haven't had a sick day since," is the- eiiarltabie- statement made re- cently.`'by Mrs.Timmer Smith, 85 Mc- Gee ,St., Toronto, Ont. Th'e little I managdd to eat .Simply- tortured lie with Rains in the pit of. my , stomach, and .08 pressed around my heart, causing it to skip beats. un- til I: thought It would stop altogether, I was as nervous as a witch, and lost so much sleep that I was dark and eWoll n under-niy eyes. I wae so weak and run down I. could hardly walk a block or do . my housework, and was almost in despair, "Tanlac; certainly wsl:s a godsend in restoring me to such perfect health, and ?.think it's the greatest medicine ever made. Nearly everybodyelse on McGee. Street seems to have used the treatment, and are praising it too." Tanlac is for sale: by all good drug- gists, Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. , The Afternoon Tea Rite. Mr. Gordon Selfridge, the Chicago merchant who invaded and conquered Laudon, is revisiting the United States-, and :touches on some piquant con- trasts, between his native and adopted countries. He has the advantage of a double 'standard of comparison, of see- ing the British through American eyes. To. an. interviewer " he lays amusing emphasis on an English social rite, of-, ternoon tea, which is the subject of mild derision an the part of visitors to the tight little island—until .they succumb to it. Mr. Selfridge thinks that if Americans would similarly re- lax in the middle of the: -afternoon's work 'tb:ey.-would gain a poise and calm they really need and lose none of their famous "pep." When he opened his departmental store on Oxford Street thirteen`yeers ago it was the custom of his salespeople to snatch tea as best they could. Instead of dis- couraging it he accepted it as a na- tional institution, and gave a tea inter- val to each of his 3,000 employees, and "since everybody else in the country does, it, no time or business was lost." He -is quoted further:, "Tea is brought around at matinees and movies, on railway trains and boats. Lords, and cemmonerss pause for it la parliament. You caiu of en- ter any ,office, editorial den, public library, factory. or shop in Great. Bri- tain, ' between four- or five without stumbling aver cups and tea things." ivlr.` Sev1ridge confessed that; person ally, he, diAnot like ,tea, but he likes what it' sialitis for --a friendly getting together, a relaxing pausein the day's work, a" slowing down of the Alneii- • can's relentless push, not to a point of becomingless• active, but more bal- anced. The Ame,i;can has; a break- !' down at 50, he added, but the English- man was , swinging a wicked: golf club a!t 65. Afternoon tea has become a social function on this side of the Atlantic, ;but it has not seriously penetrated the market place. After all, it is not the tea hour that gives .the Briton poise. and calm. Itis merely one expression of his unhurried habits and ways of living and of looking at life. Before work slows down in offices, factories and shops on this continent in the presence, of the tea -cups, there will have to be a radical change in the mental as well as the physical habits of the business community. %ltw+lw R«palydina l eouty. -w at ts' your ides. of a Wonted' "tiro.. MUM? V 'a - MUM? iVfplit she be fair or dark? ?short 1�1i? ,len or t'o t? T teN! oll- or • slender e . u a>ei c . tamer' differ. A Chinese belle must ba fat, have srxla 1, eyes, share `Pete, ,high. cheeks, and feet which are, ,only' a few include long., In the Labrador Winds no woman is bautifu'l who has not black teeth and white hair. Some nations squeeze the h ads e1 children between boards to inalce thein while °there prefer the shape of a sugar -loaf as the highest type of beauty. It is a funny old world, islet it? Miami's Liniment used by Physicians, A Dear Friend. Angus—",I hear yer freend Donald has inaarrit a third wife." Sandy—"Ay, Donald's an expensive freentb; two wreaths and three pres ents ill 14 years." Gardens Need Sun. A vegetable garden, to be a sueoesn, must have Sun at leaat part of the day. Our' Free gooldet of Engravings 1s- yours fon the asking. It gives particulars of how You oan..obtetn The Finset Instrument The" World Produces. AT • FACTORY .• PRICE Cosh or Credit. 10 daps' free trial la Your ecru homt, imperial Phonograph Corp, Dept. K., Owon' Sound, Ont. Estabneited. 20 years. For Fascinating Eyes liaise the use' of Marine a dailyhabit. This ref'resh'ing eye lotion soon makes eyes clear, redlant, beautiful! Harmless. Enjoyable, Suld by all druggists. for, your EYESM .;. sa'a Pioneer. Dog Remedies r"'•. ' Boot- on DOG DISEASES and How to Feed ' Mailed 17'r•ee to any Ad- dress 'by the Author. if29OlayWtest'24Gloverth Co., Ino. 1 New York, U.S.A. • A cold roast iras an. appetizing east when served with, theae delicious olives. Chopped up in a salad,•they add a new piquant .flavor. Imported direct froin Spain for the Canadian People. Every olive perfect. Every variety At all Grocers Insist on ,Mcl .1 REN'S 1)1'VINC%BLI Mct,AntNS calm JD, iiainiiton and wlrasecee Cuticura eautthes Skm Hay and Hands ll9ake Cutictira Soap, Ointmeht and Talctim your every -day toilet preps,- rations and watch your slain; bait and hands improve. Tito Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal and the Talcum to powder and perfume. Stip 25c. Oites etet 25 ens Sc, Talcam 25c. Sold outtheDomintoa,Canad]anDe ott through Limited, 344.Si. Pail Si., W., Moairenl, 1i Cinictira.Soap a'Itattes without mug. "Frites" Galvanized Copper -bearing "Metallic" Shingles F!re, Lightning,••Rust. and Storm Proof - Metallic Roofs 'shed clean Rain Water Send Postal Card for Folder"E" The Metallic Roofing Co. Limited 404 1194 King St. W., Toronto - o ,• fled v*rthr�mrn • .rax»xu : to edttusli1pa to Irglta es tM raA 4 p4 AwAI y wr Pila4e �ospite, Ct�bar 1tt�p� wN 4 ere tart Id.F441 OtOgli ` 'WOO )� aawk,. the Viorlda` of Oanadaa Oelr.l tux taw Jena:wen and, oau sraalwl pjzty day pope ut (nos return trips grow We his. money orePll, talnite .ton basso. corn, bends, .etc., l addittoa .to amoral talon. bawled, Oucceoe Iteaa testate, Illerlhelet. Ont. �OLge1'4110 tier snnu 00434, OP -arum svocit of thirty heed, Prole 5 enty Rebore tit:. .. XV iaszd Gnat Audi, North: ilfagnetawan, Tarry Sound,, Out Tire man who "hasn't time" hasn'it. enough ability or hasn't enough in -s: terest, -or-- Easy running Flowers that cut razoi4ilre ASmarts )lower wilt keep' your lawn trial aide. neck Thoreagh y reliable, o6sohdeor quarereFeed. Ai your hard ware dealers. - JAMES SMART PLANT • /l) BROCKVILLE ONT. FOR SPRAINS, CUTS, BRUISES, SWELLINGS • Use the Old Reliable. Keep Kendall's always in the barn. A strained muscle, a sprung tendon, a jolt or a knock .demands immediate attention. A few hours' delay will result in a long lameness—perhaps in the loss of the horse. Kendall's Spavin Treatment has saved more horseflesh than all the other known eremedies. Under the name of Kendall's Spavin Cure, it is the forty -year-old standby of horsemen, farmers and veterinarians. Get a bottle of Kendall's today. Ask, too, for the Free Book or write for 11 to DR. B. J. KENDALL, COMPANY, ENOSBURG FALLS, Vt., U.S.A. 4 MSeBUDGE HAROLY STAND Tells How Lydia E.Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound Restored' Her Health River Desert, Que.-"I used to have a severe pain in my side, I would be un- able to walk fast andcould not stand for any length of time to do my ironing or washing, but I 'would have to ' lie down to get relief from the pain. I had this for about two years, then a friend told me to try Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound as she had had good results. I certainly got good results from it, too, as the last time I had a sore side was last May and I have not had it since. I am also glad of. having food nursing for my baby, and I think it is your medicine that helped. nee in this way."—Mrs. L. V. BUDGE, River Desert, uebec. If you are suffering from the tortures of a displacement, irregularities, back- ache, headaches, nervousness, or a, paha in the side you should lose no time in trying Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Wo - Men "will be sent you free upon request. Write for it;:to the Lydia J. Pinkham Medicine Co Cobourg Ontario. This book contains' valuable information that every woman should know. 0 amts Fe same also Grad.Canyon Natio Pot Mona and New Maxim el Fr 8 Z8 N all the way F. T. Hendry, Gen. Agent A. T. d`c S: F, Ry. ' 404 .Free Press thig., Detroit, Mich. Phone: Main 6847 SAY BAYER" when you buy. Insist Unless you see the name "Bayer" en pack e or on tablet's you are not get- ting tthe genuine Bayer product pica scribed by physicians over twenty three years and proved safe by millions ISSUE No. 2i—'22. for heada4Yhe, colds, toothache, earaeho, neuralgia, lumbago, rilienrnetiem, near. Itis, and for pain in general. Accept only "Bayer" paeldtgo watch contain* proper directions, Handy' boas twelve tablets ceSt few cents, Drib- gists' also sell' bottles of 24 laid t'40. e 1