Flesherton Advance, 29 Sep 1926, p. 3

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llDSE PW.. m "is ^ood tea * TEA SoTBames and Their Origin GALBRAJTH Variation â€" Galbreth. Racial Originâ€" Scottieh. Source â€" A given name. At the p«>rl(Kl when the filana wtre Ht the helg-ht Scott lati of tb«ir I power the CJ«Jbr«Jth formed a very Im- EXPLORERS LOST FOR SIX YEARS .«* â-  "^ Wtien expIoTATB leaT4> tlMlr natlTe tured br * tribe of saragea wbo h*A â- horea for lUt>«-lnM>wn parts of tbe killed their carrtera, aad inad« th*m world, tb«re la no knowtec If tbey wlU | i>ritioD«rs. oT«r reiturn. - I An ezpadlUon succeeded In ranaom- Some disappear utterly; but there ! lug them with presents of glaaa beads. "mac," Indicating followers or (I«a- ceodanta of the person named. But _ a« baa been the case with so many are casea where they hare been glTen looking glaases, and aimllar arUcle« Scottish and Irish clan najnes. the pre- dear to the hearu of savagee; and , ^^ "»* droppedd as auperfluoas after they were ultimately restored to cItUV I ""* translation of the name Into Eng- aatlon and their frieiiids. | "^^ "^ ^^^ generations. The fur-trappers of Hudscm Bay atiU I T*^ strongholdad of thte branch of tell the atory of "Lucky Moore," «m» be j '^ Macdooalda . were Macrthaanlsh came to be caMed. He was a hunter*"^ Drumore, and prior to 1600 they and prospector who was twice report- ^*^ the island of Gigha for tbe Mac- CANNON. Variations â€" O'Cannon. Racial Origin â€" Iriah. Source â€" A nickname. It is remurkaL>:e lu how many In- stances a mere obvious gue«s gtrea you the exuet origin of a faanlly uame i portajR division of that most Intluen- ' and la bow many tiiis »ery obvloue tlBl cJes, (lie Ma^douiiilds, NortB and guess l*>aiis you totally astray. Kuow- I South. ling that the family iiomt> of Cunnon The UhuMc deelgnatlou of this Is Irish, you would, of oourwe, distrust braiK-h of the Mar.donalde was the obvious. Naiurally tr would not , "ChlaJiu a' Bhreattanoaich," or "des- come from the Kii^jllat word "cauuon." I oeodants of the Uritons." but they j liiiitead. it coiueB froui the Iri?h clan ! took as a family name tho given name 'or Ht-pt name of "O'Ceaanflonnuin." M [ of their chieftain, who played en Im-jyou droi) out Lha "f" in thie, wlUch is • portant part lu the natiouai affairs of | infected into silence, and slCDplify the | ScotJiBJKi -about the time of Jamaa I., I three diphthou«s. you h»ve a pronua- j "GaJbralcb," of Baldemock. | elation roughly- like "Ot^aujilnau." | Of course, in the earlier us* o< this Then siur through tliut middle syllab'je nojne tt waa regularly preflzed by the i and you arrive at "O'Cann'an," or The Christian Scleore Churches tn Toronto curdlaMy invite you to hear by Radio a Free Lecture Krom Massey .Musi<' Hall, on Cbrisiian Scienoe, entitled 1 "CHRISTIAN SCIENCF,: THE WAY TO THE TRUE KINGDOM" Sunday Afternoon, Sept. 26, at 3.00 thaip. Stetion C.K.C.L., 357 (R'l'able and Maxlmite BatUry Co.) By (Jharles I. Ohrenstein, C.S.B., of Syracuse, N.Y. A member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Charoit, The F^rst Church sf Chriat, Scientist, Boston. Maaa. up for dead, yet have returned or been Cound after an absence of many years. Take the case of the heroic mis- sionary ezploirer, David LlTingstone, for ln«tantie. He Tanished in tho uar knows intertor of Africa, and whea mor9 -than six years had elapsed wltli- oufltews of him, he was mourned as dead. Yet after all that time SUnley found him allre and well at U}ljl, on Lake Tanganyika, which is almost lu the centre of the co«ntry. A little while later Stanley himself disappeared, together with three other white men and 363 natlye porters. The expedition set out from the east ooasi of Africa in November, 1874, and when nearly three years had elapsed ^without tidings, the worst y as feared But on August 4, 1877, Stanley turn- ed up unezt>eotedIy at Boma, on the west coast, having maovhed by devi- j OU9 ways right across the continent â€" | a loumey of over 7,000 miles â€" through ' territory the major portion of which ' had never before been visited by ! white men. I The terrible Journey had cost the ' lives of his three European companl- j ons, an^ of his 353 porters only 115 had survived. Captured by Savages. .A. few years ago a native, bearing a letter, arrived at a settlement near the mouth of the Fly River in New Guinea, the huge island north of Aus- tralia. To everybody's 'amazement the let- ter was found to have been written by a Danish ezplorer named Peterson who, four years previously, had start- ed with three companions to explore the unknown interior of the island, and had long been given up for dead. They had, it appeared, been cap- ed lost In the frozen vastee of North ern Canada. Tet he ttMmed up alive and well after disappeartng for seven months, and then again for eWyen months. When, however, he disappeared a third time, and in a bUzzard, wblle guiding an expedition along the shorea of the Polar Sea, ererybody thought it was all 0Te4- with him. An Eskimo Chief. Nearly six years elapsed. Then aa inspector ot what was at that time the North-Weet Mounted Poillce, in the course of a Journey of 1,800 miles across the frosen land which stretches along the coast from Hudson Bay to Alaska, came upon a tribe of Eskimo who acknowledged- a white man as their chief. The white m-an was none other than Lucky Moor*. He had, he explained, been found by an Eskimo hunter when on the point of death from cold and starvation, and had remained with the tribe ever since, not daring to run the risk of reaching the settlements, on account of one of his feet having been ampu- tated owing to frost-bite. The stirring story of Arctic explora- tion abounds with similar incidents. The Canadian explorer, Stefansson. and two companions, were given up for dead when their ship was crashed- by the ice and sunk. Two years later they were found in Banlts Land, a large island in the Arc- tic Ocean. They had subsisted main- ly on seal meat. donalds. simply Cuanon. Aiul iliie i« Just about the way the name has l><M»>!ne Angli- cized through slmpHflcatlon of both the Gaelic spei'ling and [>roaunctatlou. The name ctxmes from th«> nickname of "t^eanaiflonuan," meaning "fair- haired, and vvhich was the sobriquet given to a chieftain by tJje name of ♦Plachra," who was the founder of the sept. The territory of the O'Can- uona from medieval times was -that around Orgiall. Qassificd AdvertbemenU. Q RATIS (UTTLE FRIEND) TO ^' either sex; mailed in plain en- velope. Pari s Specialty Co., Montreal. 1 ADIES WANTED TO DO PLAIN â- ^-^ and light sewiny at home, vrtwle or spare time. Good pay. Work sent any distance, charges paid. S«t<l casting from Australia in mid-aur.-<mer. ! stamp for particulars. NatiomU Mann* Be satiafled to enjoy the good pro- facturjng Co., Montreal, grams from nearer atations most of n =s the time. j Pitied tho Laund 2. Oon't be diaappointedd if an occa- Ten Good Rules for Broad- cast Listeners. The following ten rules for radio broadcast listeners have been evolved by Dr. Alfred N. Ooldsmlth, well-known radio eng^ineer. The rules themselves are aa follows: 1. Don't try to hear ordinary broad those In Real Lifeâ€" â€" The happiest people are who are doing honest work. â€" The luckiest people are those who have a work they can respect. --The finest homes are those fur- nished with love, not luxuries. -The most beautiful woman is the one making herself most useful. â-  â€" XVie average employer Is a pretty •Jepe^ndable fellow when treated right. The villain Is partly good and the â- o is partly bad. â€" The story does not end with the redding scene. , 'â- â€¢ Makes a Difference. "I don't know what it is, doctor," said the invalid, "but I feel I shall never puU through." "Nonsein&e. nonsense," answered the doctor. "Why. your case is absolute- ly the same as an illness I had years ago. yet look at me- .strong and hearty as ever." "Yes." was the reply, in a very hope- le«<i voice, "but 1 expect you hod a good doctor." l-k , * Perfect Protection With Every Roll Every roll of Prince Ed- ward Brand Fox Netting opens out as a 160 foot long wall of perfect pro- tection for your foxes. "Prince EMward" does not bag nor aag and has 10% more meshes than any other brand of fox netting. Write or wire for delivered prices. U.,^!.^.^. Summaralde tiolmans p. e. |,|,nj Special Ontario Agents W. H. C. Ruthven, J. M. McGltllvray Alllston Prlcevllle Very Long Ago! There have been very few poets who so delicately could touch the pathetic striii:;s of the harp of poesy as Eugene FieM. He certainly wrote mainly for children, but there is a depth and sin- cerity about these things which make them very acceptable to their elders. 1 <ince knew all the birds that came .And nested in our orchard trees; For every flower I had a name. My friends were woodchucks, toads, and bees. 1 knew where thrived in yonder glen What plants would soothe a stone- bruised toe: Oh. I was very learned then; But that was very long ago. I knew a spot upon the hiil Where checker-berries could be found : I knew the rushes near the mill Where pickerel lay that weighed a pound. I knew the wood (the very tree) Where lived the poaching, saucy crow. And all the woods and crows knew me; But that was very long ago. I know it's folly to complain Of whatsoe'er the fates decree; Yet, were not wishes all in vain. I tell you what my wish should be: I'd wish to be a boy again, Back with the friends I used know ; For I was. oh. so happy than; But that was very long ago! Advent of Autumn. When fall's first early frosts subdue the ground. And paint with artist's fingers all the trees; '"~ Unfurl bright golden banners to the breeze; And scatter leaves o'er every vale and mound ; Tho goldenrod bedecks the byway* 'round ; A stray, brown bee roves o'er its yst low seas; Then silence falls In magic mysteries. As Simimer'a skies in Autumn's haie are drowned. And 'neath the murky mirage o'er the river. The wildling asters in profusion grow; The yellow catkins nod brown heads and quiver. Just as they did this time a year ago. There stirs a breeze; the aspens dance and shiver; The buttonwoods and maples murmur low. Roee E. de Ribcowsky. * English Girls Tune Pianos. WORK WORN PEOPLE' Find New Health by Improving Their Blood. If you feel run down, it means that yonr blood is thin and watery, that your vitality is low. You do not sleep well and are tired whon you rise in the morning. You find no pleasure in your meals and are listless and dispirited a* your work. You have no energy to enjoy yourself. Thousands of men are run down by anxieties of work. Thousands of wo- slonal disobliging storm interferes with your Summer radio evening. â€" â€" } There are many Una concerts coming. You can't expect to find a pearl in every oyster, nor to receive a record- breaking concert every night. 3. If you want louder signals, lue a larger aerial, more tubes, higher plate voltage, more sensitive loud speakers and more careful tickler and receiver adjustment. 4. A pleasant signal filling a mod- erate size room should be enough to give satisfaction. Musically, such a signal Is ideal. It is not worth while producing signals which deafen the neighbors. It Is wasteful to insist on tremendous signals which are general- ly less pleasant than moderate sig- nals, particularly during the Summer. 5. If your local station comes in too loud and drowns others out, a smaller I A litUe girl bad Just been limteoiat \ to a description of heaven. "And do the angels all wear whits^ I mnounyr' she inquired. I "Yea. dear." replied her motiier. j The chilli thought for a momeot, i than aluB said thougbtfuii^y: I "'Whait a big waalilug tlieiy must iiavs up there." men are broken down by their hcuae- hold toll, with tired limbs and aching aerial will help in tuning him out. with backs, thousands ot girls are pale, list- [ a small condenser connected between less and without attraction. It ail ' aerial and ground. Or a simple wave CanadianPtanSooJt bi c»-op«r«tion with C«n«ii>n Arrhittols oajgiu of moderate priced luinn an pub- lished in the MtcLon BuUden' Guide. Detailed informetiun on plennintf, jildiiitf, fllmi&Jlilw. decorating nnd iraj- detunu. Profuiely illujtraid An ideal reference booit Send 15 cents for a copy- [MacLcan BuUdcn' Guide ». Adelalei St. W.. Tureiito. Ont. means the same thing â€" thin and wat;- ery blood, vitality run down, anaemia, poor appetite, palpitating heart, short breath. Do not submit to this. Get new blood and with it new vitality. There le no difflculty in doing this. Dr. Wil- Mama' Pink Pills build up and enrich the blood, which brings with it new health and vitality. The man, woman or girl who lakes Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is never run down. Their friends notice how energetic they are. what a j fine appetite they have and how much they enjoy life. Yorn can get these pills through any .Medicine Co.. Brockvllle, Ont. Girls have alrecidy invaded the realm of the piano tuner in England, and mere man must look to his laur- els. There is said to be a lack of ef- ficient. weU-trained tuners in England, and .thousands of pianos remain silent and untuned for want of proper atten- j dealer in~i^edicine. or by mail at 50 '**'°- I cents a box from The Dr. Williams' The profession is said to offer ex- ceiptional opportunities for the edu- cated girl. The course of Instruction in England lasts for aljout two years, and the pay is said to be about ten | pounds a week, with opportunity to travel to all parts of the country. The tuning classes at the Music Trade School are full and a waiting list is reported. A large percentage of the enti^nts are women. THOUSANDS OF THANKFUL MOTHERS Strongly Recommend Baby's Own Tablets to Their Friends. An Out and Out Red. Mrs. Plymouth-Rock â€" "You advise me to have nothing to do with her I then â€" her tendencies are very Bol- Once a mother has used Baby's Own ' shevlstic?" to A Prayer. God, feed me understanding Bit, by curious bl*. So that my tiny soul Shall not be surfeited With wonder. • â€"A. M. SuUIvaa. Fiicl.'i paV iujt as much* attention ~to the coui'.F«i.! of the wise as the wise pay to the words of fools. Tablets for her little ones she would use nothing else. The Tablets give such reeults that the mother has noth- ing but words ot praise for them. .\mong the thousands of mothers throughout Canada who praise the Tablets is Mrs. David A. .\nderson. New Glasgow. N.S.. who writes:â€" "I have used Baby's Own Tablets for my children, and from my experience I would not be without them. I would urge every other mother ot young children to keep a box of the Tablets in the house." Baby's Own Tableta are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the boweJe and sweeiten the stomach; driv« out constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevM^ and make teething easy. They are soki by medicine dealers or by mall at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williama' Medicine Co.. Brockvllle. Ont. Fancy. GoodPicMe Recipcj # Muatard Pickles â€" Chow-chowâ€" India Pickiraâ€" Sour l»lckl«»- M Dutch Pickletâ€" ReU»h«a and Catsup. Our Recipe Book givea f splendid redpca for making all of them. I Wr/f* for » eofy-mmiUd Wtf. I Colman-Kccn (Canada) Umltad. Dept. iif lOM AmlierM St, Montreal A gentleman having led a company of children beyond their usual Jour- ney, they began to be weary, and [Jointly- cried to. him to carry them; which, because cf tlieir muhltude. he could not do. but told them he would provide them horses to ride on. Then cutting little wands out of the hedge as nags for them, and a great stake as a gelding for himself, thus mount- ed, fancy put metal Into their legs, sad they came cheerfully home. -Thomas jollier (1642). Mrs. Buff-Orpingtonâ€" "Decidedly so, my dearâ€" she's an out and out Rhode Island Red." trap may do the trick. And If all mea- sures to get rid of the local station faU. why not enjoy his concerts? He is working hard for you and it is no- body's fault that you are so close to him that you are bound to hear him. Broadcast stations have to be closer to some people than to others. 6. In selecting your evening's pro- gram try for the higher powered broad- casting stations. They were designed to give better Summertime service, and you will, generally find that they do. 7. A little patience in learning to handle your receiver yields rich re- turns in r '.tisf action from fine signals. Remember, that "Rome wasn't built In a day," and keep on getting more and more failiar with your set and how it works. 8. It is a good idea to road the radio column of a newspaper or a good radio magazine or two. It heilps you to know how your set works and keeps you up- to-date in radio. Information of this sort Is an aid In getting the concerts loud and clear. 9. Ask your music dealer for advice; he can probably tell you what you want to know, and will be glad to do so. The manufacturer of your set is also willing to heJp .vou get the desired resu'.ts from its use. 10. Do not throw away the direction sheets or booklet that came with your set and with the tubes. Read all such material carefully now aud then, and fol'.ow the suggestions which are given. The dircL'tion sheets answer moflt of the questions which have been puzzling you and preventing you from getting the best out of your set. After 5having Rub the face with Minard'a mixed with sweet oil. Very soothing to the skin. THIS MOTHER GLAD DAUGHTER IS WELL IHrs. Parks Tells How Lydia L PiDkiuun's Vegetable Gimpound Restored Her Danghter's Health fill Fairness. Certainly, the fair way is the heat, though it be something the further about. . . . Constraint is for extremi- ties, when all ways else shall fail. But In the general, fairness has prefer- metit. If you grant, the other may cupply the desire; yet this does the j like and purchaseth love. â€" Owen Felit- hani. in "Resolves." 1620. Transformation. A walnut tree upon a hill. For many a Bea.son grew. And watched the eagles upward soar -And vanish in the blue. â€" It envied all the birds that built Among its branches high. And murmured to the passing breeze, "Would that I, too, could fly." * It tugged and pulled In every gale Against the roots that bound Its graceful trunk and'waving boughs So firmly to the ground. j And ever lifted up Its top i Through storm or sunlight clear. 1 A little nearer to the- stars j And clouds from year to year. i Men came one day and felled the tree, : And sawed it into thin. Smooth, fragrant pieces, finely grained As wood for vioMn. And wrought them in an aeroplane j To c<>ur8e the boundless sky; , "Now." sighed ti;e walnut joyously, | "Behold: at last 1 fly.' â€"Minus Irving. incomplete. | Husband â€" "H'm: Funnv pudding.' thi<»." Wifeâ€" ^"Yee. dear. That's as far ae ' I got with the recipe when the radio â-  broke down." Rub your scalp vyith Minard'a Liniment He Gets Most Out of Life â€" â€" Who si)oiis no happiness he has by envying that which he has noL â€" Who lets the other fellow get mad first. â€" Who finds his greatest pleasures in tlie simple pleasures. â€"Who works conteutedly for one wife and some little children. â€" Who laughs himself out of difll- cultiew instead of fighting his way out. â€" Who forgets his pay in the joy of the work he does. â€" Who gives every other man the benefit of the dcjibt. Toronto, Ontario. â€" "Mjr daaghter is 16 now and has been an mvalid ever since she was six months old and has been com- pelled to remain out of school the greater part of the time. We have tried diflf ere n t kinds of medicine, but none helped her much. I had taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound when I was run-down, and it had helped me so much that I thought it might help her at this time. She has fCained ever since she began taking; it. She attends school every day now and goes skating, and does other out- of-door sports. I recommend this medicine to any one who is run-down •nd nervous and weak . " - Mrs. Parks. 106 Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a dependable medicine for young women's troubles. For sale by druggists every whor*. Q A reputation should be lived up to and not on. ] Minard'a Liniment rallevss stlfTnea^ Elxtra Money This Fall in spare or full time taking orders for"Imperia'. Art" Xmas Greeting Cards. $100 easi'y eameo in a month. Liberal cimmis.iion. Sample book free. BRITISH CANADIAN U WelMogtan SI. W<it. . Torsnto PALCO.SEEL •nstfintly aen}^ nil p;in.-r t.rc^. tlow Iraki, valve leaks, without mkiog t-.re« off rim. PALCOSEEL inakts tiret puncture proof. A ntw •cieritific prpj>artiion that youin.iec* intoiaiKr tubes. ccMti the w^Hs witli a acTri* liquid and %r-m\% inttantiy •nd permaoetitty. punctures, leaks. lc*ky valv'e« and poroua ptac?s. the minute they o»cur. Oua.-«nteed b^rnilmtov«Ivrorinne>tnbe. TNCRBASE8 MILEAOS hy kreping ycur tire at normal pressure. Drive asm»nv n»'> ki you wapr into • PALCOSKT^T. trcetfd tit* »rnt i: wcnMrak. AGENTS $590 a IVf^nth Easy We v.'ant agcntrt and dittritnitortevervwher* todemonitrare and srl! PAICOSKSl- to car- owrcrw. 0».r««es. Service St -titans Get pa% tJcolar^ cf unuaraimon-v in*ttir.g propo^ibor. P,A.lAM»vr« A €0.f «l*iiandrl«. Ont, FACE WOULD Hard, Red Pimples Broke Out. Cuticura Heals. " My trouble wms caoiaed by elid- ing apples. My face began lo break out ^vitb pimples tV.a; were bard and red at first and then festered and scaVd over. "I'h^y jprejiJ fti, over my fuce ma'xing it very aovK. After the scales came oft my lacr woulJ bvirn and amart terribly. " I used everything I could think of without any benefit. A frie;id rccomtrended Cutici'.rm Soap and Ointment so I purchased some, and in four week* I was heiiled. after using two cakes of Soar and one box of Oirfmer.t." tSigtird) Mra. Edit^ B:owT., 37 Fortriev PI., Bane. Vt.. atTfU 24, J9i5. Rely on Cuti^tva Soap, Oinirneni and Talc-jm so keep your jkin clear. aMMl* Each Frw by Kai^ Atldr*-** CaoAdiftn n<i><>; -StakraMi t«4. Haatiwl.- Mm. e<>i,i< ».•â-  tjir tjug,,! & »nd i»-. Talcum Sc. WtSF" Ci>ta.:'j<it StMTiat, Stick 2B*. ISSUE Nc. 39>-'2C J

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