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Port Perry Star, 17 Jul 1924, p. 3

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© Successtul herolc dying, mettle of a true ted 1s' he Who" fn duty fights a good Nght and it 'may be inthe haste upon its errands, and often we "think how fortunate the othefs, how plagtied we are; by the cruelty of fate's invidious distinction. cause we are ignorant of other lives that we imagine a unversal happiness round about our idividual distress. It 18 better for ourselves, as for, the rest, to find some altruism.tbat shall prove us "Joldiers of the common good" and gervan'd® of the race. public schools in Torofito are now without a phonograph. Some of them vg three or four, purchased by the} theriselves. er to do quick and amazingly effective © work in getting the children to grasp the idea of the difference between music of real beauty and distinction and commonplace popular tunes. ~~ Placing a-record on the machine the ~ teacher shows how quickly the child- rén sense the recurring tune and uns narrative being played. : Young children eense with amazing celerity the idea. of musical fancies: . Fhe take to Pras Tums wim do There Is practically no school in Toronto without at leest one teacher 1 to teach music along "progressive lines through 'the use. of | 'the phonograph; * And teachers are also assisted in teaching history or other subjects. Suppose Shakespeare is being studied ' in some certain period. A list of Shakesperean songs A is immediately available tg brighten the work, give it character and stamp tn the wemory. And there are Jaco. : songs to study in the sturdy Jaco- d Juss... M lie n intellect : jussay contest just referred to, another 'of thi "RAPDY | prisoners, it it 1s only be- And flavoriot-every period | and father". = surp! what clearness of some children show. In this also for, she ting the prisons over records of the is found that most of the ers of to-day were unfortunate having lost their-patents or in hav- flowed | to treat them disre- looking "Uncle Robert" Spero, a well- own thropist. who = devotes: much of his time to work among un- fortunate children and; to inculcatin among all children a sense of fili obligation. The occasion; the first of TEETHING TROUBLES worry and anxiety to most mothers. The little ones become cross; peevish; thelr Iittle stomach becomes deranged and constipation and colic séts in. To make the teething period easy on baby sweet and regular. This can be done by the use of Baby's Own Tablets--the {dealtlaxstive for little ones, The Tab: lets are a sure relief for all the minor ailments 'of childhood such ns consti 'enable the teach«| pation, --colig, indigestion, colds and - simple fevers. They always do good --never harm. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 26 cents a box from: The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. Brockville, Ont. mt ee es The Needles. Beneath the swiftly flying clouds The needles of the rain Are busy in the garden beds And woods and flelds again. Their countless lender silver points Bo bright In and thin and clean, @o flashing in and out among The leaves and grasses green. ~ They make the dahlia's big rosettes, And deftly stitch away Upon the morning-glory's pink And azure bonnets gay. And on the goldenrod they tuck The yellow plumes in place, And sew the little amber beads On ferns of emerald lace. . ~Minna Irving. I 3 a thirteen-| atten school gir evidently had gtigations before pre- 'Baby's teething time is a time of| the stomach and bowels must he kept|' iis 331] % 1 ( ha, as i Mi dren at school education. (7) in the habit of regular; ) Sec that they avoid all cl y ga es ess in life. (9) See your dren the open air. It is better, ae " Let - eh a limousine. (10 your children fen that ra which they win in gchool, or any act of courage or un- selfishness . they may perform will bring great happiness to father and mother and put the family name on a higher plane of honor. Do not fi vi the future of this country depends upon how your boys and girls are trained to-day, not on how you were trained when you were children. "Foo Firmly Hed For That. Wifie--"Ha, ha!" They say Sam Peters got.in a scrap with his wife and bit her thumb." bite her thumb." Wifie--"But they say he did." Hubby--"Ng, he'd never get from under it enough for that." - ln Summer Time. When you are twenty years, they say, 'You must learn to be wise; But how.can you remember this When there are machere]l skips? How can you think of all they say Of duty being good, When there are humming-birds and sun And orchids In 'the wood? --Weir Vernon. adi ---- Business despatched is business well done, but business hurried is business ill done. gt at church and Sunday] | Hubby=-"Nothing to it -- he:didn't Romance of a Great Woman. . Now that the centenary of the birth of Lord Kelvin, the scientist and in- ventor, is about to be celebrated, it is interesting to recall that Mrs. Ramsay A gambler neve: MacDonald, the late wife of the Prime plenty of physical! yap. She was, 8s a matter of fact, Minister, was a relative of the great Lord Kelvin's niece. This is one of the facts mentioned in "Mrs. Ramsay MacDonald," by Lucy Herbert. Margaret Ethel Gladstone, which was Mrs. MacDonald's maiden name, , Was born in 'London .n 1870. Her fore- bears were, like those of her husband, of very humble origin, and of the same _ nationality--Scottish. They were da mask weavers and lived in Kelso, and . by dint of study and perseverance they raised themselves, From very early years Mrs. Mac- Donald wae Interested in scientific .questions, which she seemed able to master with Mtle effort. It was in June, 1895, that Mrs. Mac- Donald, first met her futuré husband. Their views on life were similar--they were both striving after the better- ment of their fellow men and women: Within a few months they were en- vember in the-follewing year. --- - "The bride did not want to be \ 'dressed up,' " the authoress says. "She wore a soft grey dress and changed into an old frock to go away in. It was not unlike her." Once, while staying with Lord Kel vin, the future Mrs. MacDonald wrote: "It gives one rather a common- sense or scientific way of looking at things to stay with Uncle Willlam. You begin to feel that everything has |e reason and that that reason may be found out; and that things should not de slurred over or left to chance when you can direct them by taking a little | more trouble and using a little | thought." Mrs. MacDoncid, never learned of the high position which her husband | achieved, for che died in 1911, | ieee eee Army blankets, surgical bandages, i and even carpets are sometimes made, 'to a certain extent, of peat fibre. The , same substance is also used for filling . mattresses in public institutions, Some men never: find the key, to success, because they don't look in the right place--inside their own minds. i Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism. Touring Canadians Royally Entertained: cr ve " } E o and their British itinerary | A sun-kist flower by the gaged, and they were married in No-| The limes are stirred with, melody spray, Ey You walk in loveliness, July, 4 * © © high, : ; anguid heads of poppies sway. | Too It your hours of beauty fly, | Your: stars: are .night-flowers in the . : Your hot sun giids the grain by. dey. | You walk in loveliness, July-- Too swift your hours of beauty fly. ] ~--H: H. eel Yet July. A white cloud-sall in a sea of blue "Mid the splendors of the day, Alan drenched with the diamond 4 LA And the air with new-mown hay; A lazy brook through a green vale * flowing And 'never-a breese astir, ide blow: ing; _ A swallow's wing awhir,-- This ds July of the bountiful heat, wheat. NERYOUS DEPRESSION Why People Are Low Spirited and Depressed. Nearly all women and most men suf- for at times from fits of depression and low spirits. Everything seems a bur den; then come periods of nervous Ir- ritability, 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 cal 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.C., who says:--""About. three years ago I became very weak and nervous. I had pains in my side and back, and also suffered from fre. quent pains in the back of my head and neck. I was hardly able to do anything about the house. I would wake with a start in the night and my heart would flutter so that it al. most choked me, I tried much doc: tor's medicine but it did me no per- manent good. One day I read about Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills and decided to give them a trial. These pills pro: duced such a beneficial change in a short time that I kept taking thém un- til I had used a dozen boxes, By this time there was such an improvement in my condition that friends would ask me what I was. taking, and of course I was only too pleased to tell them fit was Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I am now feeling like a new person and am doing my own housework. We would not-now be without Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the house." You can get these pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Willlams" Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont. rere eel Something to Love. When yer as lonesome as lonesome kin be, Git something t' love. It only th' hard things of life you kin soe, Git something t' love, If all things around you seem empty and cold, You feel pessimistic and wrinkled an' lol, Don't worry an' grumble an' cuss round an' scold, Git something .t' love, Whether it's children or chickens or trees, Git something t' love. Or horses or women: or yellow-back "© bees, Git something t' Jove. Don't clogé your heart up to Nature and things, : The world sometimes grumbles, but mostly it sings, Jus' take my tip, man, an' see what it brings; + Git something t' love. : 2 --John BH. Hazzard, ee Founded by Saxon King. A memorial to Walter Hines Page, la distinguished Américan ambassador, was recen! England. unveiled. at. Pickering, ering is"one of the old: | est towns in Yorkshire, its foundation, 270 years before the Christian era, be: ing ascribed to the British king Peric- Bng- | jurus.. According to a local tradition Lach. Lo- its name is. derived. from the finding will [prison of Richard IIL. after his. deposi: ticn, and Elizabeth during the relgn fof her sister, Queen Mary, - 7 thelr ax |. It 1s always safe. to send Dominion |. ss Money Orden. ; Express Money fyi ae friend 14 kes 'With slender. spears the corn grows | Month of wild roses, and berries and | -- Albert Durrant. Watson. | in the body.of a pike a ring which the | $1 king had dropped into the River Cos- The Castle of Pickering was the| Where wild hees flit from spray to [19 MeGll cause of Tanlac, the treatment Jas proved. of such great benefit: "After all Tanlac has done for me, "leaid Mr, Mongeau, "I just-feel praising it to everybody. Eight years of muscular rheumatism had 'just about made a cripple of me. I got to where I simply had to limp around on a cane. My nerves became affected, my sleep unsound and I felt completes ly knocked out. "Six bottles of Tanlac, taken eight months ago, made a new man of me and I have had no further trouble with rheumatism, or my health, since. My nerves are steady as a die, I sleep fine land feel the same way. Anyone want, ing to know of me what Tanlac will do, just phone me here at the hotel." Tanlac 18 for sale by all good drug: million bottles sold. EASY TRICKS 'The Ring And Block TT ---- ny Te] A coin, a harness ring and a block of wood are used in this little illusion. A piece of paper-- wrapping paper--is also used but the spectators do not know how important this is. The hirness ring and the block of wood are placed on the paper. The coin is then marked and is placed some distance away, also on the paper. The block of wood is placed on the harness ring and the two are placed on the coin. The fnevitable magic word issal and the block of wood is lifted. The coin has vanished. The block Is replaced, another magic word Is said and both block and ring are lifted. The coin reappears, The harness ring is about as big . as a half dollar. The opening of the ring is very neatly covered with paper-~the same wrapping paper mentioned as being so essential. The block of wood should be about the size of the ring, so that the two can be lifted together without awk- wardness. When the Fing fasts on the paper, the fact that it is pre pared cannot be seen--except by careful inspection of the ring, be- cause the paper matches perfectly. The secret being known, the opera. tion of the trick will be easily un- derstood. (Clip this nut and paste it, with other of the gerice in n zevapbook.) Minard's Liniment Relleves Pain. Buffalo Milk Rich. Milk of the Indian Buffalo is said to be richer than that of the European COW. gists; Accept no substitute. Over 40 1 Tanlac Vegetable For Constipation. Made and Recommended by the Manufacturers of Tanlac. Many-Eyed Insects. Some insects are liberally provided with eyes. In general, they have two kinds--simple and compound. Simple eyes are like our own, though less ef- ficient, while compound eyes are com: posed of numerous facets or lenses, Most people know how difficult it is to catch. the common house-fly.. This is not surprising. when one realizes that a fly's eye possesses 4,000 facets. Consequently there is not much that is out of its line of vision. The dragon fiy's .eye has 12,000 facets, and the Mordella. beetle"s eye is made up of no fewer than 25,000. While the compound eyes never exs ceed two, the singic eyes vary in nume ber - from one to eighteen or twenty, They are situated In groups on each - side of the head. Spiders and scorplons have both single and compound eyes, thou they appear to derive little benefit -- In. the trans-Atlantic service, firsts class passengers pay the cost of the trip; the profits are made by carrying large numbers of third-class passen- gers, A Eee --" Classified. Advertisements ANTED----MAN TO OPERATH local Auto Supply Branch. Ap- ply Canadian. Auto Shops, Box 154, Niagara Falls, Ont. ep EYES ; 0lesome Cleansing Rofroshing Look Younger Care-worn, nerve-exhausted women need Bitro-Phosphate, a pure organic phosphate dispensed by druggists that New York and Paris physicians pre- scribe to increase weight and strength and to revive youthful looks and feels ings. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co. 26 Front St. East, Toronto, Ont. EE Merit begets confidence. Confidence begets enthusiasm, and enthusiasm can conquer the world. Among the scientific exhibits at Wembley is a microphone which en- ables you to hear a fly walking. T0 EXPECTANT A from Mrs, Smith Tells How ia E. Pinkham's V Compound Helped Her" Trenton, Ont.--*'1 am writing to you in regard to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege: table Compound. MOTHERS Stiff Joints Limber up with Minard's Liniment Leading athletes uee it. RIEL

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