West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Jun 1922, p. 7

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Blanket touin"is a favorite sport among many a% the Eskimos. "Mother mother!" cried the little boy. "Come quick!‘ There‘s a man cuiside with a dead pig that sings." Not Far Wrong! \ litile London boy was visiting Sootland for the first time. One afterâ€" iw»on he suddenly left the hotel winâ€" dow in great excitement as a Highâ€" Inader came down the road, playing the bagpines. And, in the afterâ€"glow of your good days, w1t up some patient hearts still beatâ€" ing on their ways. Mo time Your #racious days, to see your hope sublime, Rejsicing that a widowed love of yore Had fashioned me a part of you for evermore. . nt wher, you win the song of human, praise »r righteous souls who wrought and now are gone, ’ ito Faith‘s Household add a precious years; | shut the eyes that shed not many tears t all the deepening shades of your own wee ild blind your vision to another‘s pain, ‘ v tendor quest and sure response restrain, bate the toil that you would nnder-‘ go hare through half a century of M p one, i as had only heard of human hapâ€" piness. nam 6 @xp.or Ra&ber W H Problem is to Control Speed of 4,000 Feet a Second and Assure Respiration. your firs bore FRENCH SCIENTIST saAYys3 IT‘S COMING. n a thousand roads your mercy nade so fleet. ur own sorrows; stopped the ready feet () JOURNEY TO MOON BY RADIUM ENERCGY ssion swift to bring and gentle ruth bestow. M i the fo‘lk undoved, and cheer { in all your length of fraitful ns her thirsty brink, your way you went, $ reless purpose and one sole conâ€" tent: If h h H Nem ire stream, whose silverâ€"bright ares® ver beat erly controlled, supplies all the r required for a voyage to the .__ Every known factor of the om is being studied by M. Esnâ€" elterie, who says: a projectile leaves the earth, goâ€" t least 4,000 feet a second, the ctile would never return, for, its speed diminishes under the ‘s attraction, it would soon pass f that influence. Save for the vy revealed by radium we possess mss Lélity for generating such Radium offers a power of 5,â€" mes that of the m}egate 'f-ol;’el mIchnames were used ped by all our high explosives.l Ages as surnames, in Physiological Difficulties, 'fore family names, as inting that such speed may be foday, hai beconte a: led, next is the problem of| On¢ might be pardone w alive in interplanetary spaces.| that this family nams iut.cs have taught us much in, surname bestowed upo ist decade. _ Once out of the ual or individuals as . attraction it is easy, of course,! kind of lives they led. > a machine going anywhereâ€": The theory, however moon or _ to Venusâ€"because good in the light of m s no resistance. !vesugatlon. This is n c appear physiological difficulâ€"! the family name con!d To My Mother. C is the generous heart that tâ€"born son and me â€"Eden Philipotts. regards time, would not 1 V spac(es,; trat this family name was at first a mufhui!\! surname bestowed upon some individâ€" first syllable, which would tend to) ing eve make the pronunciation of the "a" in | it. "laf" indistinct. ‘The change to Goodâ€"| "Gio liffe, therefore, is ‘not so great as it‘ which might seem upon first consideration.| Among The spelling Goodliffe, of course. is;brother due to the similarity of the more authâ€"| the 0s entic spelling to the combination ' chriosd "goodâ€"life." | of the | "Guthlaf" was a given name among the Angloâ€"Saxons, and by no means an uncommon one. Remember that the Angloâ€"Saxons did not give the "th" the sound that we do toâ€"day, though they had begun to approximate it. Reâ€" ll In view of the freedom with which | nicknames were used in the Middle | Ages as surnames, in the period beâ€" "fore family names, as we know them | toâ€"day, had become a general custom, one might be pardoned for assuming The theory, however, does not hn!df good in the light of more careful inâ€" vestigation. This is not to say that the family name could not or did not originate in this manner in certain in<|‘ stances. It means only that thereo is : another source, and one which, from! all the evidence available, appears to | account for the name in the greater| number of instances l' wal or individuals as a result of the kind of lives they led. Variationâ€"Goodlife. Racial Originâ€"English Sourceâ€"A given name. man. I have a big ever I want, and an Indigestion. I belie everybody who trie Tanlac is sold by Minard‘s Linimemt EeV 410 2?â€"@UCTY St., Montreal. "My appetite was so poor I had to force down the little 1 ara manage to eat but I had terrible Ccramping , pains, gas formed and pressed against my heart until it ptipitated terribly. 1 feit weak ana worn out all the time and became so dizzy that many times I could hardly stay on my feet. It seemed like I was going down to nothing in spite of everything I could do. "My first bottle of Tanlac convinced me it was the very thing I needed and‘ six bottles have me feeling like a new ; l > P Irasss‘ o te . "Tanlac rid me of about as bad a case of stomach trouble as a man ever had," saiq J. A. Deslauriers, 119 Beaud'ry St. Montrantk~ "Wun.s 1.‘ anl * ELECTRICIAN SAY$ _ HE ALMOST FELL HARDLY WoORK. YXXe4& 5_ ""CU" and Strong, He Says T‘lnh.c \_Vill Help You will find Grapeâ€"Nuts an ideal dish for breakfast or supperâ€"time. Ready to serve from the package, with cream or good milk. Order Grapeâ€"Nuts from your grocer today. Grapeâ€"Nutsâ€"that famous wheat and barley foodâ€"brings you all the natural goodness of the grains in perfected form, with a crispness and flavor that charm the appetite. GOODLIFFE Made by Canadian Postum Cereal Company, Limited ‘ & Dig appetite, eat whatâ€" and am entirely free from I believe Tanlac will help ho tries it." Surnames and Their Origin â€"«Nutsâ€"the Body Builder Relleves Neuralgta all good druggists Advt ever | Among others, a chieftain who was the | brother of the founder of "Seanlaoch," | the O‘Shanly clan, bore it. This "Giolâ€" ,'('hrlosd" or Gillchrist was the founder | of the MacGillechriest tne. P sc en oee s esd "‘admirer." _ As a matter of fact there‘ were no servants in old Ireland, with the exception, perhaps, at certain‘ periods, of slaves. The clan system developed loyal followers who served, their chiefs often in more or less of] a menial capacity, but this form of serâ€" | vice was considered an honor to be| sought after, and was not undertaken in a servile manner. There was nothâ€" ing even indirectly involuntary abouli it. which meant “Seréauf of ’ But both the Irish and the Scots ' also had a custom they oftert followed of namipg a child with a compound name, the meaning of which was "serâ€" vant ofâ€"â€"â€"" combined with the name of the great personage selected. Thus a child named after Saint Patrick was sometimes called just Patrick â€"and sometimes "Servantâ€"ofâ€"Patrick. It should be explained, however, that there is no true equivalent in Engllsh] for the prefix that they used. _ The nearest you can come to it is to say that it combined something of the meaning of "sorvant," "follower," and ho ibvant c clc y & 1 _ chriest. Racial Originâ€"Irish. Sourceâ€"A given name. It is the custom in this country, as it was in medieval England, to name a child after some ancestor, saint or proâ€" minent man. This was also a custom among the Gaels. "Giollchrlosd" was Variations â€" Gilichriest, MacGilleâ€" sn o o o eaet Ameitt‘y The ‘oldest operated mine in the world is in Sweden. It was working in A.D. 1225. The earkiest exa;nple of needlework known to exist dates back 3,500 years. In fact, the human eye is deceived by am optical iMusion, receiving a number of impressions as only one im pression. By adjustment, the flashes light up the movement of the machine at cerâ€" tain fixed intervals, and thus one hunâ€" dred revolutions per second appear as only a single revolution per second. of electric lamp which, when shone on, say, the swiftly operating nmeedle of a sewing machine, makes it appear as if that particular part of the maâ€" chine is dawdling at a snail‘s pace. ‘ Byitouaetheactualworkhgof high speed pistons and other engiâ€" neering parts can be observed, and this, of course, is a great advantage to engineers. ‘ The light of this strange lamp is' not continuous although it appears so to the human eye. Actually, it sends , out a constant series of flashes of | one millionth of a second duration. | wlusory effect of slowing down the apparent speed of a swift engine to a mere crawl. The device operates a tain kind of elactric tammn Jhiah LA s a s A wonderful invention called the ogcilloscope has set everyone talking about its peculiar possibitities. lticanewtpfliunco'whichhuau m oo 038 w I j " Watching it Work. explained, however GILCHRIST In more or less of but this form of serâ€" ed an honor to be was not undertaken a given name Christ." ’ Succeed in Producing Unbreakable Glass. ’ According to recent reports, a Boâ€" hemian inventor, after 13 years of [resoarch, has succeeded in producing | unbreakable glass. _ At a recent deâ€" | monstration, it is said, plates and vesâ€" se‘s of the material remained whole when thrown to the ground from a height of 12 feet. Meat was roasted on a thin glass plate over an open ’firp at a temperature of 750 degrees F. Tin was melted in a glass pot, and nails were driven in a piece of hardâ€" wood, using a piece of glass for a hammer. Only 2 per cent. oTiKpopulntion of Kingston, Jamaica, are white. "I hear, sir, your wife has a new son. How ridiculous!" The European visit;;_,;xpoke in fluent Japanese something to this efâ€" fect: One day he had occasion to go to felicitate a Japanese colleague of his on the arrival of a new baby. _ Two Japanese words, very similar in sound and spelling, have very difâ€" ferent meanings. One means "ridiculâ€" ous," and the other "splendid." A visitor to Tokyo was proud of his linguisitic attamments, but he did not fully appreciate the importance of the difference between the two words, He mixed them up most fatally, a.sJ the following instance will tell. Nothing can equal Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets as a medicine for little ones. They are a laxative, mild but thorough in action, and never fail to relieve constlâ€" pation, colic, colds and simple fevers. Once a mother has used them she will use nothing else. Concerning them Mrs. Saluste Pelletier, St. Damas des Aulaines, Que.. writes:â€""I always keep a box of Baby‘s Own Tablets in the house. They are the best mediâ€" cine I know of for little ones and I would not be without them." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockvllle,I Ont A GOOD MEDICINE â€"â€" FOR THE BABY; "There‘s a to worse." are dragging them under, and keep on going from bad hatched is to say, ‘once a thief always a thief.‘ Reâ€" spectable people who draw away from the unfortunate and declare there is no hope for them are doing much to makeprofessional criminals. Once a person starts in the wrong direction there are plenty to help keep him goâ€" ing. The worst thing about it is the feeling of hopelessâ€" ness that seizes so many first offenders; in place of bracing up for a new start, they yield to the forces that "The blackest lie ever A Little Knowledâ€"ge. ht 99 At the present rate of i pan will have a populat 215,000 persons in 1928. vne ormitish cruiser, and as "Charlie‘" he did Tokio with his bluejacket pals. The only recognition his visit to Japâ€" anese shores elicited was his presentaâ€" tion to the Empress and an informsl‘ reception at the Belgian Embassy for members of the Belgoâ€"Japanese Socâ€" He is "CJ the British nown. son of King Albert of the Belgians, was known generally in Tokio. Prince Charles, who is eighteen years old, is a midshipman in the British Navy The British battle cruiser Renown, which brought the Prince of Wales to Japan, brought also a Prince of anâ€" other royal family of Europe. But she had almost arrived off the Yokaâ€" hama breakwater before the presellcei on board of Prince Charles, second | it is Finally, there is the queer belief that a red rose will not bloom over a grave until the person who planted In Germany the custom still pre~1' vails of girls carrying a rosebud inji the breast to ensure the fidelity of| their loyers, and in most European | countries rose leaves are used to dfia-f cover which, out of many lovers, is the true one. I curl and die To get good luck in any undertakâ€" ing which concerns itself with love, rose leaves shpn_tld be thrown on the If in a garden a white rose blooma' in late autumn, the belief is wideâ€"| spread that some member of the! household will shortly dieâ€"a maid i.nl her teens, for choice. Eelgiap?rince Visits Japan. charmed dayâ€"a secret wfiwhâ€" b;xvt; f:w have ever discoveredâ€"the rose has a heart of gold. _ The Syrians take the rose as their emblem of immortality, and in China it is planted over gravesâ€"â€"a custom which is also favored to some extenti im this country. | It is probable that a greater amount of love has attached itself to the rose, England‘s national floral emblem, than to any other flower. ‘ money orpoers. When ordering goods by mail send a Dominion Express Money Order. l Water exists in three statesâ€"solid, liquid, and gas. Solid is icoâ€"liquid we all know. Water vapor is always being formed, but it forms most readâ€" ily when the water is at a temperaâ€" ture of 212 deg. Fahrenheitâ€"in other words, when it is boiling. In a ketâ€" tleful of boiling water, water vapor is being formed so quickly that it has to force its way out, and it "elbows its way" so unceremoniously that it makes the sides and top of the kettle vibrate. The air vibrates in sympâ€" athy, and the air waves pass to your ears. Then you say the kettle is singâ€" ing to s tion a box, or six boxes for Vtiér.go._-from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., â€" Brockâ€" ville, Ont. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents ‘ime. Then one day a friend who came to see me said, "Here‘s some Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills; just the thing to put you on your feet again." I took them and then got six boxes more and soon could feel they were helping me. By the time the last box was empty 1 was doing my work again and feeling fine, and I had gained in weight. My health has since continued good, and I give the credit to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills." ’only reason for this is that the blood has been impoverished by the ravage lol the disease through which the vicâ€" ; tim has passed. Strength and full activity will not retura until the blood | has been restored to its normal condiâ€" tion. The blood can be enriched and purified quickly and surely by Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills. To enrich the blood and strengthen the nerves is the whole mission of these pills, and thousands have found them beneficial after disâ€" ' ease has left them weak and run down. Among those who have proved the |value of these pills in cases of this kind is Mr. Charles A. Turner, lightâ€" keeper, Thrum Cap light station. N.S., who says:â€"â€""In Jan., 1917, I took a severe cold which I neglected until it developed into pneumonia, which conâ€" fined me to bed for some weeks. When I was able to get up and sit around the house, I found that I was not regaining my usual strength; in fact I seemed to be growing weaker and was reduced almost to a skeleton. I took an emulsion, but it did not help I" In almost every case the victims of 14 grippe, influenza, fevers and conâ€" | tagious troubles, are left weak, ailing and despondent after the disease itâ€" | self has disappeared. They do not pick ‘up strength as they ought, and remain |tired, listless and discouraged. The The same thing that enables us all sing makes the kettle singâ€"vibraâ€" LINGERING WEAKNESS . FOLLOWING DISEASE Due to the Fact That the Blood Has Become Thin and Watery. 188VE No. .When the Kettle Sings. ‘Chsrlit_e" to his messmates on now to service on the Reâ€" wish murmured as --th:; : Rose Lore. increase, Jaâ€" on a certain Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 100 â€"Druggiste, Aspirt lotholndcmnrt(mrdl nada) of Ba M fact f N = mtle:dd-ur of I‘lle'y.ile‘d:.‘ ;Mlo ?(:l!:".ll 'k:o:v- _.fl::.: ::::_-2: ::.:- u:::r manufacture, to assint ublic agatast tm tations, th ‘wbiete a yer Comy will be stamped with thoir goneral frade mark. n Bavet Acrgeqe t ui TORONTO Africa has 30,000 miles of railway. A friendship that makes the least noise is often the most useful, for which reason I prefer a prudent friend to a zealous one.â€"Addison. oys C Nor â€"PirC , Hayer . when: you buy Aspliin, Unless you see the name "Bayer‘" on tablets, you are not getâ€" ting Aspirin at all. Accept only an "unbroken package" of *‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Preserves Fruit. The invention is claimed in Austraâ€" lia of a chemical solution for treating some fruits to enable them to be stored for long periods without refrigeration. WARNING! â€" Say Spherical Electric Fan Throws Air Radially. | Unlike the ordinary electric fan, a fan, spherical in form, recently patâ€" ented, is so designed that it throws the air radially from it in every dire:-‘ tion. This is macde possible by a conâ€" struction of the fan blades so that the ’ air is drawn in from above and below the fan, and then thrown out again in a radial stream of the width of lhef blades. Minard‘s Liniment ior sale everywhere Cleat the goru of impurities by daily use of Cuticura Soap and occaâ€" sional touches of Cuticura Ointment as needed to soften, soothe and heal. They are ideal for the toilet as is also Cuticura Talcum for powdering and perfuming the skin. ; Iflolflmb“u Address; ‘:'lm-h. ited, 346 St. Paul St., W., Montreal. everyâ€" c 25¢. Ointment 25 and 60¢. Taleum 2c. #&n Soap shaves without mug. The Burmeseâ€"especially the women â€"seem never to talk together exropt with constant ripples of laughter, and the children are a joy. Like the high born Manchu girl among the Chinese, the well bred Burmese girl is of the most delicate porcelain, almost too dainty and frail to handle, and some of the small maidens who have been put forward to present bouquest to the Prince heave been the loveliest little dreams dolls imaginable. It is a good road, this road to Mandalay.al London Times. | and after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointâ€" ment I was comvu? healed." (Signed) C. V. Randa! , Granada, Colorado, Feb. 11, 1921. and my forehead was disfigured. I tried different remedies which did no s(::d. I sent for a free sample of uticura Soap and Ointment which For Several Months, Festered and Itched. Cuticura Healed. D0 SmE Nce . EWe Heg . TeRCE down to the waist; but the costume of the great mass of the people of both sexesâ€"the white jacketlike garment above and bright colored petticoat skirt belowâ€"is eminently picturesque and graceful. . It is astonishing also how far down one goes in the social seale before reaching the point where,‘ _at least on holidays, the skirt is not of silk, and it is this almost universal use of silk in every imaginable shade l of the tenderest blues and greens, pinks and apricot and maize, that gives the Burmese crowd its distincâ€" | tive appearance. The gay, small turâ€" bans of the men and the coiled black hair of the women, always with a bright spray of flowers, and often richly jewe‘led, are both becoming and ‘ attractive headdresses. J PIMPLES ON FAGE AND SHOULDERS greater "I was affected with pimples on y face and showlders for several o_ndu._ They festered and itched Earache Colds T.he Road to Mandalay * Lumbago Pain, Pain voves of 12 table(sâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 100â€"Drugyiste, e mark Arokintered in SemeAaL ce aa l 2 0C "Bayer" when Neuralgia | Continuailly publishing showing what | Lygia_,!';“. l‘fin"dnm hl:f done fl:r"omen. | man m cas un is e e | nindl cmfeagg _2 C 1O 1C TT 1909 OE WHged, | and whether you work or not Mrs. | Guimann‘s letter should interest you. | _ Many women get into a weak, nervous | run down condition because of ailments they often have. Such women should : hkeLydilE.Pinkbnm'lVegetaueCon- f nund at the first sign of trouble. Good health is necessary and this splendid medicine will help you to keep it, MB eP w : wedidrsirmdvdse oi chclls Asi oc â€"Mre. L. A. GUIMANN, Union Village, Vermont. This is only one of such letters we are eontinually publishing showing what s [ Classified Advertiser .nts O B _ 3 _ C ARCIEZ TRs u0e U Wok nine hours a day in a steam laundry, I cannot say too much in favor of your medicine, 1 trust all sick and suffering women will take it. It hasbeon two years ain‘«‘sel u')ok‘it and I am strong and well.** wal with 6 Ihad S ‘ for v adve + pape S ing L_\'di Te Veg @8 poun “ * it wa I tool * all. B Umon Village, Vt.â€"*"I was weal: and nervous and all runâ€"down. 1 couid not walk across the floor without resting and Ihad beon that way for weeks. I saw your advertisement in the T: paper and after tai;~ ing one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkbam‘s Now Works Nine Hours a Day.â€"â€" pIrIn WOMAN T00 WEAK TO WALH Union Village, Vt True wisdom lies in gatherin, precious things out of each hour goes by.â€"Emily 8. Boulton. queen, ns 0 00 nmemmmmmmmmmes ALL KINDS OF NEW AND USED belting, pulieys, saws, cable,hose,packing, etc., shipped subject to approval at lowâ€" est prices in Canada. vn&x BEBLTING CO., 116 YORK STRRET, TORONTO. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Restored Her Strengih ines, Ont "_ay 0j [‘ ANTED POR TRainino -‘1Vh “flomkl in l;har':‘oi’:‘rnd:no"of ohns onn-uy‘. y Suporinâ€" tendent, Homewood Sanitarium, Guelph. Mereinindi rbinendifiendeisniaahadindicieaii.. T mE CaME TTE TOR V Â¥Y good education to train as nurres. 'Apply\\\’ellnndu Hospital 8t. Catharâ€" nas #iwa mamees â€" uLC OO eK Nunsus WANTED 4 School in Ahanm. erates ijntopcs""VUOnd! carburetor; genâ€" erates intense gas light; quick ‘sales Vapolite Co., Ayr. Ontario seeemmmemess.. . _ 2 C who uol n PIPone light with sensatio erates intense gas P vo es > â€" L0 M 3 Mmmmmmmmmmmes MEN«A\'E waxr REPRELENTAâ€" Al TIVES in every city and town in Canada 1o sell automobile stop signals; positive] y brevents meciderts every car OWNOr a proxnang. _ 2CCCCME, ev mptea se o i id 2. CCf & nro.’:«-l. casy to sell; big fl:l. Write for particulars and a, proposition . Canadian Auto Bhops, BOoX 154, Niagar Palls, Ontario rennindiiinaiediiaiiies: Lead Chek ... NOTHING TO EQUAL ~ America‘s Plioncer Dog Remedies MAZING ENâ€" ANTEDâ€"YOUNG LADIES OW# EmnIP on Areroum ts e i TR kerosens Neuritis will not BELTING For sals AGENTS WANTECL NURSES WANMTED. ns c l2 es G INVENTION ; MAKIS3 ne lamps fhe 8 times more sensational carburetar‘ wan. Vegectable Comâ€" round I felt the good t was doing me and I toolk: seven more in all. Before I finished I was able to work swarm without their gathering the agents , P. O as it â€"»am wey

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