The Haileyburian (1912-1957), 23 Jul 1925, p. 7

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ee AD i "NATURES ths. Signals That Everyone Should Take Seriously. Pain is one of Nature's warnings that something is wrong with the body. Indigestion, for instance, is character- ized hy pains in the stomach, and of- ten abou! the heart; rheumatism by sharp pa'as in the Himbs and joints; headaches <ré a sign that the nerves or stomach are out of order. In some ailments, such as anaemia, pain is not 60 prominent. In this case Nature's warning takes the form of pallor, breathlessness after slight exertion, palpitation of the heart, and loss of ap- "petite. Whatever form these warnings 'take, wise people will not ignore the fact that many diseases have their origin in poor blood, and that when the blood is enriched the trouble disap- pears. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are most helpful in such cases because they purify and build up the blood to its normal strength. In this way it tones up the nerves, restores the ap- petite and gives perfect health. Miss Hazel Berndt, of Arnprior, Ont., has proved the great value of thia-medicine and says:--'I am a young girl and have been working in a faetory for the past four years. For two years I had been in such poor health that at times I could not work. I was thin and pale, and troubled with headaches and fainting spells. I doctored nearly all this time, but it did not help me. My mother advised me to take Dr. Wil- Hams' Pink Pills, and afte: using them for a while I could notice an improve- ment in my condition. I used nine boxes and can truthfully say that my heal is restor€l. When I began tak- ind be pilis I weighed 97 pounds and now I weigh 114. I feel that lowe my good health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and hope other ailing people will give them a fair trial." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,; Brockville, Ont. See een - Long Words in Court. The inability of illiterate witnesses to understand the questions put to: Prehistoric SkulhFound Near . them often makes trobule for-the'court. \j-Experienced cross-examiners* learn to "simplify their Hnglish--to discard yo 3 4 ncle Turner,; me Cir of my life has been lost," said Bob Hampton refiectively. "What's happened to give you such a sudden grudge against. yourself, | Bob,?)'inqtired old Turner Gill: ey "A quotation that Tread: 'Count that day lost whose low descending sun views from thy hand no noble action done,' or something like that As I look back over my Hfe I cannot recall a single thing that is entitled to be called a noble act." "What is a noble act, Bob?" "Why I--I don't know. Something big and fine®{ suppose; saving a life, thwarting the schemes of a villain, en- dowing a college or a hospital--some- thing like that." "Um, Try to give your employer an honest: day's work for his money, do you, Bob?" "Oh, yes."" "Pay your bills when they're due?" "Of course." "Try to do the right thing by your children in the way of food, clothing, ex education, moral training, and 60 forth?" "Certainly." "Remember to praise your wife'a cooking occasionally--tell her what a good wife she is and giv@® meaning to your words by acting accordingly?" 'Zes;' d "Byer lend a hand to help a fellow traveler up a grade that's a little too stiff for his motor?" "Sometimes," "Dig up a dollar or two now and then to help the charitable arganiza- tions?" "T ndVer turn down such an appeal." "Well, Bob, I shouldn't worry much about those noble, actions if I were you. A rainbow is a beautiful sight, but a sky that is all rainbows would be ridiculous. A world that is populated altogether with heroes and geniuses. without any insignificant plodders like you and me to keep the wood chopped and such things would be very unsatis- factory place: The man who follows the path of duty as God gives him to! see it keeps his hands clean head clear, his heart warm~dnd soul in tune with his Maker has lived in vain." 1 his | Lake Galilee. | Excavations have been completed at | ™ TUPPER. no complicated. and automatic ma- chinery for the manufacture of such receptacles as barrels, tubs, cups and "~~ Surnames and Their cullaly birdlike airplane known as the Varlations--Taubmann. . .. >} "Taubes." ¢ Raclal Origin--English and. German. Source--An occupation. Tn ae PENROSE. - y In the middle agés, when there was | Racial Origin--Welsh.. vi Source--Geagraphical.. " e There are numerous and varied ex- planations offered for the origin of _ If you'd like a little better tea than you are using, please try "Red Rose" ; RED ROSE the like, these very necessary articles | this name, but none of them appear had to be made by hand, and no little| to stand the test of comparison with ekill was required on the part of the, the laws established by the develop- 'his | doled cut. "prior" and "preyious" for "before" the cave near Lake Gali "and "subsequently" for 'after." Simul-! skull approximating that o taneous" is another word, frequently | derthal type in Europe was recently ; wherein Nean artisans who turned them out. _As industry was organized in those days these men were skilled crafts- men, not incomparable with the gold and silversmiths of to-day, and their gutlds or associations ranked high in the social and business life of the com- munities in which they lived. Just as the occupation of "cupper," or maker of cups, has given us the modern fam!iy name of Cooper (which, incidentally, has nothing to do with the modern trade of barrel making), so the "tubber," or maker of tubs, has given us the modern family name of Tupper. Quite typical of difference in the ten- dencies of speech development in Ger- many and Wngland is the variation in the forms of this same family name as found in the two countries. In both German and English speech the ter- minations "er" and "man" were quite common. But the English tended to the nrore frequent use of the former, and the German of the latter. Other- wise the German word which was ap- plied to English form might have been "Pupman" and the German "Tauber." It should be noted that this German name has nothing to do with the pe- ment of family names t{n general, with the exception of one. | Penrose is the name of what is to- day a mere hamlet near Land's End, _{n Cornwall, though there are indica- 'tions that in medieval and early mod- ern times it wes a more important TEA 'is The same good tea good tea' for 30 years. Try it! The Feast of Youth. Midsummer Day, June 24th, while it QVITS--EMIURURY PERMANENTLY srorreD, by Tre 7 Hemedy. . Slumple hone treatment, place than it ts fone ley ao {e now the Church Festival of the Na-|s5 years' success, tholieands testimonials, Write at | Srowth of modern citles as over- tivity of St. John the Baptist, was kept | °%° for free book. Trench's Remedies Linited, Dept. shadowed the prominence of many lo- c 2 | ¥, 70 Adelaide Kast, Toronto, Canada, (Cut this out.) calities which were prominent land- marks in olden times. There is a Penrose family Hving in Penrose to-day with large estates which have been in the possesion of the family since the fifteenth century, a time at which the formation of fa- mily names, though well under way, had been by no means completed. Na- turally this particular family took its name from the place, in the form "de Penrose." But undoubtedly the name, in the same form, sprang up in other parts of the country in the case of former residents of Penrose, who may or may not have been related to the owners of the estates, but who used "de Penrose' 'as a distinguishing name in the sehse of "from" Penrose rather than "of" in its possessive meaning. "Water, water everywhere, Nor any drop to drink." These words Of the Ancient Mariner must have recurred many times to the men and women who traveled the _ broad and briny Atlantic in the days of sailing vessels when the voyage lasted for many weeks and drinking water was carefillly treasured and sparingly This experience of priva- tion doubtless remained in. their mem- |ory when later they pushed on to the "»Ontario bush and helps to explain why the site chosen for the log cabin was variably convenient to an abundant ipply of pure water. An the year 1925, were it not for the gtivities of the health authorities in this province, we who live in cities, in ytowns or on the farm might also~quote the old lines, but during the last few years our health authorities have test- contain not less than 30 per cent Established for over thirty years, convenient, but to be used with care! discovered. A number of other bones ies and used to the fullest advantage i "and only when it is certain that the witness understands its meaning. In a murder case, a negro was asked if two 'shots were simultaneous--a matter of prime importance. He answered promptly and decidedly: "Yas, boss, dat's it--'zackly simul- taneous." ; : Then, to further- emphasize his statement, he added in another form a repetition-of what he supposed it to mean: = a "ZAppety-zip! Plung! --- Dat's how dey come, boss--one right arter de od- der!" é More rarely, it is not the echoed words of the lawyer's questions but the original language of an uneducated witness with a taste *for long words that creates trouble, or mirth or both. Such a witness is also often a color- ed person. Only a short time ago an industrious and respectable laundress whose worthless husband had abused her was forced to appeal for protec- tion to the law. But in the very begin- ning of her testimony she surprised and somewhat puzzled tke court by re peated complaints of incompatibility. "What do you mean by incompatibi- lity?" she was asked. 'Do you mean that the only trouble between-you and Jonas was incompatibility of temper?" "Ninkuppatibility; dat's just what I said," she assented. "We been muih'id three years, judge. De fust year dere wasn't no ninkumpatibility at all. De nex' year Jonas began ninkumpattin', but tw'an't more'n I could stan'. But dis year, judge,--and dis las' month in perticlar, judge,--he's tuk to nimkum- Pattin' wid his boots an' de fiahwood an' sech, and so I's here." ae Might Have Been Better. MacTavish had been invited to spend an evening at a friend's house listening to a wireless programme, At its conclusion the host said, "Well, Mac, what could a Scotsman desire better than that? Singing, instrumen- talists, a talk on bluebottles, opera, news and dance music--all for noth- ing." "Aye," said MacTavish, "but we did- na have any acrobats." - ', SY 4 The British Museum library con- tains about 3,000,000 volumes; thirty employees are constant'y engaged in dusting them. te WE WANT CHURNING CREAM We eupply cans ond yay express charges. We pay dally by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and Butter Fat Bowes Company Limited, Toronto - For references--Head Office, Toronio, |" Bank of Montreal, or your locai banker, every means' of protecting and purify- ing water--with the result that we can { _ 7 ton whereof the skull is a part. Others tng: Water eonllee. Te aaa are remains cf extinct animals, effort has earned for Ontario the en- The Mousterian character of the rviable reputation of showing one of deposits is confirmed by comparison | the lowest death rates from typhoid with earlier types. Two sections in the fever in the world; while only a few cave, showing prehistoric stratifica-| years ago over fifty men and women tions, are being left visible, especially OUt of every hundred thousand resi- in yiew of the proposed internaticnal sien Gy So stil Seb Low ices Cleves cui ty. } phoid, mow we lose only two (22 congress next spring, : }from this cause. The greatest factor The Taungs skull recently discover-'jin this Immense saving of Hves hag !have ben found. Some of them are human, and may belong to the skele- missing link betareen ape and-man, in the opinion of Sir Arthur Keith, the , for free bottle and instructions for tak- well-known anthropologist, Writing in | ing of sample to the "Provincial La- the current issue of Nature, "he de-; boratories" in the centre nearest your sci-bes the claim that the skull is the! RO ee mere naan, Kingston, missing link as preposterous, and de-'+ orth Bay, Fort Willlam, Owen pe ae | Peterboro and Sault Ste. Marie. Cleves it to be that of a young anthro-| ination is free for citizens of the Pro- po:t ape in the fourth year of its! vince. " growth. It shows so many points of | RED HOT JULY DAYS HARD ON THE BABY July -- The month ot oppressive heat; red hot days and eweltering nights; is extremely hard on little ones. Diarrhoea, dysentery, colic and cholera infantum carry off thousands of precious little lives every summer. The mother must be constantly on her guard to prevent these troubles, or if they come on suddenly to fight them. No other medicine is of such aid to mothers during the hot summer as is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels and stomach, and an oc- casional dose given to the well child will prevent summer complaint, or if the trouble does come on suddenly will banish it. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 26 cénts a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. EE "Keep to the Left" At Sea. ~ Ships at sea have a "language" of their own when they. wish to converse with or signal to one another. Nearly as a holiday for thousands of years! before the Christian Era. The modern | observances, most of them now pass-! ing into oblivion, are a curious inter-| | mingling of old heathen and more re-| cent Christian beliefs. | In the Middle Ages Midsummer Eve | was the festival of the young men and maidens, On this day they gathered | flowers and plants, such as yervain, | rue, and St. John's wort, which were | believed to possess magical properties. | At midnight the young men went out! to collect fern seed, those tiny spores | which were supposed to have the pro- perty of making the picker invisible. St. John's Eve was the great night of the year for bonfires, which, accord-, ing to some authorities, should be writ-! ten "bonefires." It was the custom on! this particular night to build three. separate frres--one of clean wood, one, of bones, and one of wood and bones | mixed. The lastavas called St. John's Fire. In those superstitious days the be- lief was widespread that upon the eve of St. John's Day the souls of the living left their bodies during sleep and tra- velled away to visit the spot where, in the fullness of time, they should! finally abandon their earthly tenement. | Another belief was that the souls of | all who were doomed to die during -the | ensuing year came at midnight on St. John's Eve and knocked upon the church door. Those who sat up, fast- | ing, in the church porch were supposed to be privileged to see these spirits. -| In order to dream, each of her true The Glory of Trees. But the glory of trees is more than their gifts; "Tis a beautiful wonder of life that lifts, From a wrinkled seed in an earth- bound clod, A column, an arch God, A pillar of power, a dome of delight, A shrine of song, and a joy of sight! --Henry Van Dyke. in the temple of a a As It May Happen. To show little Johnny that he could not add feet and yards together with- out changing the yards to feet, she asked him the question: "If I add five eats to ten dogs, what will I get?" To which Johnny answered, "One h--| of RIN a fight" ron jse y ff / EYES i yj IRRITATED B \ SUN. WIND.DUST 6.CINDERS RECOMMENDED G SOLD BY DRUGGISTS 6 OPTICIANS WRITE FON FREE EYZ CAKE BOOK MUAINE €O. CHICAGONSA OH! MY BACK! Massage with Minard's and feel the pain disappear, love, young girls used to make "dumb" | cakes on Midsummer Pye. it took | three maidens to make a cake, and| while it was being prepared and baged | not one word had to be spoken. The | cake, when made, was broken Into | three, and a piece put under the pil- low of each of the makers. | Making a Pest Pay. The prickly pear {s not popular in Australia. Wherever it grows the land 4s yseless, and there are over fifty mil- ; all lstesmera-carry a Wireless in- _Stallation, but, in addition, every yes- ed in Africa by Prof. Dart is not that been the- protection of drinking water. | sel ot this type is provided with a) "stay put." : Protect your water supply. Write steam whistle or siren, a mechanically} acres of land eve to be abandoned to| operated fog-horn, and a bell. | Sailing ships are obliged to Dayo! _ both a méchanical fog-horn and a bell! 'before they are allowet to enter or, 'leave a pert. | | When ships pass one another at sea , certain ceremonies are observed. Thus, | {a merehant vessel meeting a warship| Hon nores of Jt {nm New South Wales | Pant Queensland. Worse, it "doesn't | About a million more! So far all atemyts to stamp out the pest have failed, and a really large- scale effort to this end would, it is es-) timated, cost $1,250,000,000, or even} more. - Byen ihen there could be no} certainty cf ilnal success. | When {t was discovered that power 1 {t every year. | | affinity with the African gorilla and / chimpanzee, he says, that there cannot | be a moment's hesitation in placing; the skull in this group. : a | Their Tea Always Ready. | Tea drinking is a constant occupa- tion for a Dhibetan. In every tent | and in every house the tea kettle-is always on the fire. The laws of hos-| pitality bind all to present tea to their | guests, and every Tibetan carries with him a wooden bowl of Himalayan! maple byway of a tea cup. Diplomacy. Little Guest (saying good-bye)-- "T've had the most lovely time I've ever had." Hostess--"Oh, Bobbie, you don't say 807" Little Guest--'Yes, I always do say 60." a The Great City. "Where the city of the healthiest fath- er stands, Where the city of the mother stands, There the great city stands." ----Walt. Whitman, best bodied gee An engine fer fire Sighting, espe. cially in forests, has Leen constructed as a side car of a mutacyele, Practice Makes Perfect. Percival--'Do you love me better than you did sweeties?" Philippa--O, much better! You see, every experience I have adds to my technique. any of your former ----~o--__--- Making Dull Days Bright. Umbrellas are now being sold in brighter colors than ever; scarlet and emerald are both favorite shades. Handles are also being adorned with china beads. death, ae - dhe Don Cossack choir of Russian officers gather at the Cenotaph in Lon- don te lay a wreath in token of their respect and friendship, unbroken in | {s expected to dip her flag in salute, a alcohol could be riatilled from the pear ; courtesy acknowledged by the naval! there was a glimmer of hope. But the | commander in a similar manner.| Liners are generally "tramps," while when one liner meets}the expense of cutting and crusting. | S 0 D | [Scalp Of Dandruff {another the junior captain dips Bis | house-flag first. If the weather is foggy, and visi-' teen gallons of power atcohol per ton, | | bility is poor, it ls obvious that ships which makes dirtillation a commercial | lem their way across the high Beas | !must "talk"--and talk loudly. Bo long! {as a steamer is moving forward the | [law of the ocean demands that she! i shall send cut a long blest on her siren every two minutes to give notice of | her presence in foggy or heavy weath-| er. Should she stop her engines the jlong blast must cease, being substi- ; tuted by two loud wails every two minutes with an interval of one sacond)| between each. The siren is stopped altogether immediately the anchor is dropped, and the presence of a moored | Steamer is known by the clamour of} her bell orce a minute. Every vessel that is propelled me- chanicaily is supposed to give way to} the sailing ship, and the lotter has a special code of signals to indicate her presence, One blast from a fog-horn every minute means that a sailing ves- sel is moving. with the wind to port! (her left side). Two blasts a minute | indicate that the wind is on the other, beam. | When fishing, trawlers have lights, one above the other, attached to their! masts, while tugs towing other craft! carry two lights in the same way. A ship at anchor puts out her side lights, | takes down her masthead light, and, substitutes a "riding light," which' swings from about three-quarter way | up the foremast. a Experienced. A littla boy was a guest with his parents at a wedding. In a joking way: he was asked what kind of wedding he meant to have when he grew up. "'m never going to get married," he replied, with emphasis. "Why not?" he was asked. "Because I've lived with married people too long." ' er ~ Fifteen old Etonians are in the present British Gov rnment. This famous school is represented in the House of Commons by 1°2 M.P.'s who were educated at Eto. . i Keep Minard's Ltniment In the House, oe ti liad . ES He F SN return was only-a gallon and a half per | \. saluted by ton, and this was-too small to cover! Cuticura Clears The Now, however, a method has been discovered which gives a yield of four- proposition. It is hoped that by this method power alcohol can be provided for fame time the great acreage waste be cleared for settlers. t retetealy Strib For Every Hil--MIinara® tiniment. now Some Shot. Mike, the new night watchman at the university, had-Observed someone using the big telescope. Just then a star fell. "Well," feller js sure a crack shot. soliloquized Mike, "that ee aie What we suspect often affects our conduct more than what we know. SPIRIN Say "'Bayer"' - Insist! Unless you see the 'Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer prod- uct proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years, Safe Whichcontains proven directions Accept only a Bayer package | dy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets |. Jes of 24 and 100--Druggiste } Aspirin is tbe trade mack (registered in Osneda) of Bayer Manufacture of | ter Of Salleyiicacid, | the whole Australia and at the! | Regular shampoos with Cuticura Soap, preceded by light applications of Cuti- cura Ointment, do much to cleanse the scalp of dandruff and promote a healthy condition necessary to producing thick hair, Cuticura Soap and Ointment are ideal for every-day tollet uses meeting every want of the skin and scalp, i Bample Each Pree by Mall Depot: "Btenhouse, Ltd, Mon' tho | 'MISERABLE AND ~ ALWAYS IN PAIN | Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- | ble Compound a Dependable Help for Mothers Port Greville, Nova Scotia.--"I took your medicine for a terrible pain in m side and for weakness and headaches. seemed to bloat all over, too, and my feet and hands were the worst. I am the mother of four children and I am hursing my baby--the first one of four I could nurse. -1 took Lydia I. Pink- | ham's Vegetable Compound before the | baby's birth, s0 you can see how much it helped me. cannot praise it too highly for what it has done for me. I | took all kinds of rnedicine, but the Veg- etable Compound is the only one that has helped me for any length of time. | I recommend it to any one with troubles like mine and you may use my letter fora testizaonial,"~-Mrs.RoneRT MCCULLeY, Port Greville, Nova Scotia. Before andafterchild-birth the mother | will find Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Corapound a blessing. Many, many letters are received giy- ing the sanje sort of experience as ig given m this letter. Not only is the mother benefited, but these good resulta pass on to the child, No harmful drugs ere used in the preparation of this medicine--just roots | and herbs---and it can be taken in safety by the nurzing mother. 98 cut of every J60 wornen reported benefit from its use jn a recent canvass among wo1cn users of this medicine. C ISSUE No. 29--'25, Se,

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