West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 26 Jul 1923, p. 3

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Td & frou it the cows would not stand still iong enough to 5& milked. The farmer looked at his watch and replied: "Wait about hal an tour, till supper time. The fites will all be in the dining room theu and you can milk in peace." Start & heaven of your own right io your «#=s beart Strategy. A tramp stopped at a farmr‘touse one evening and asked for a job in return for a night‘s lodging and meals. The farmer put him to milking the cows, but a few moments later the tramp reâ€" ported that the files were so bad that the cows would not stand still long Hiy Wifeâ€"*"You wear your old ones. Can‘t you see, your new silk suspendâ€" ers exactiy matched my dinner gown and I‘ve made a bodice of them?" Found a Use for Them. [ Mr. Pesterâ€""Where are my new ' silk suspenders? I can‘t find them anyâ€"| where! F | Hiy Wifeâ€"*"You wear your old ones. | MARCONL INVENTS NEW RADIO DEVICE 3 REVOLUTIONIZE PREâ€" SENT METHCDS. doss Communication to Caster, Cheaper and Longâ€" er by Process Recently Evolved. it sn n ving on air! Living on Air. "living on atr" will not, in uture, be so impossible as it is comes about, and the s its main supply of ferâ€" m the atmosphere, we shall say with perfect truth that ip that the huge nitrate :th America cannot last toe period, and that the n have to #earch elseâ€" ate with which to ferâ€" st, chemists and scitenâ€" trics have been secking 1od of manufacturing a wellâ€"known fact that urrounds us is mainly oxygen and nitrogen, ©" is also a compound e two elements. Scienâ€" ; a process by means of ‘o gases will be separâ€" tmosphere and made to rm nitrates in large > methed, to be a comâ€" , would have to be exâ€" Â¥mé ng ils t * mee . i4 ind s made a great ctails of the inâ€" available but it i has succeeded iges up to disâ€" not only with a mnount of power 1 much cheaper expert is conâ€" on holds great ure of wireless. . "it should be ver 1,000 miles vo kilowatts or er,. and with a ie transmitting of a new wave. )'f;,/f,'%!""f_;",’ J 6 lfi“ ) l\ 1 aratus is simiâ€" sent, with only d the special enrng of costs, ion of disturbâ€" devised a new onize present legraphy â€" has ‘onli, who just om an experiâ€" ht, Electra, off U SHAG i. telegraphed T equatorial ondon, with n ordinary I 1 a party of y means of have been n by radio . rapid and been sent ntal plant Marconi is ard to inâ€" ed, this ofâ€" w developâ€" re 12 @8 n ve nmuniâ€" i from region is bad, e said, wave H i ‘ "I cannot yet state that the lamp | can cure pyorrhoea in all stages," he | told the writtr, "but it is certainly the \ most effective deterrent 1 know. One ! patient, aged fifty, was suffering from |pyorrhoea, and I regarded him as a ‘hopeless case. The patient was anxiâ€" | ous to retain his teeth, so I decided to try the lamp. 1 It is certain, bowever, that some of the names in the variations mentioned )m not always of Irish origin. Raleigh, for instance, is traced by some to the old French given name of "Relat." Thore can be little doubt that in some i cases Radley is derived from the name of a locality in Staffordshire. ‘ There is a place called Ridiey in Kent | also. In additicn there is good eviâ€" | dence that Reiliy and Rielly are someâ€" Itime»s but modern developments from | the place name of "Reuilly" in France, | for in the medieval English records it is found in the form "de Ruhilie." "What!" exclaimed Bittler, also a married man, "Come now! What do you mean by comparatively little?" perfection ourselves unless we earnâ€" estly seek to carry our fellowmen along with us.â€"Prof. J. C. Shairp. ||_Al of the foregoing variations are |traceable to an Irish source, though |a few of them also may have originâ€"| | ated from other sources in some cases. | _ There were several branches of the Clan O‘Reilly in Ireland, or, as the| | Irish speHing has it, "O‘Ragheallaigh" ; or "O‘Radheolaigh." The four princiâ€"‘ | pal ones were in Dublin, Down, Letrim | ‘and Wexford. History traces this anâ€" clent surname back to a period just' ‘ prior to 1014 A.D., when the new clan was formed from the still more anâ€"‘ | clent O‘Rourk clan. This "Ragheoâ€"‘ | Jach" or "Radhecilach" concerning the ‘spelling of whese name there was some confusion, was slain, according |to historical record, in the great batâ€" | tle with the Danes at Clontarf, in that| . year. | A Common Experience. "It is a fact," said Stittier, "that my wife is able to dress on comparatively little money." MONEY ORDERS. Remit by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or stolen you get your money back. "I mean on little compared with what she thinks she ought to tave." "In two days he returned. The teeth were much firmer, and the gums in an infinitely healthier conditton. It has still to be shown whether the treatment can cure advanced pyorâ€" rhoea, but I think there is no doubt that with accurate technique it can cure the earlier stages of pyorrhoea." The vital parts of the lamp are two short rods of tungsten metal, about the thickness of a lead pencil, and a quartz lens. Eloctric current is conâ€" veyed to the rods, and the violet rays are collected and concentrated. They are focused on the part to be treated until the sphere of light becomes & mere speck. \ Curing Dental Diseases by Xâ€"Ray. A lamp of simple construction which ean focus viclet rays to the merest speck of intense light is being used with effect against pyorrhocea germs, which die off under the treatment in millions in little more than four minâ€" utes. Pyorrhoea is the most prevalent and destructive dental discase. The device is known as the Pashler tungsten lamp. It is the invention of Mr. F. Forbes, of West Kensington, and is installed in the surgeries of a number of prominent dentists, one of whom is Mr. R. Hodgson, a dental conâ€" sultant at the Royal Waterloo Hospiâ€" tal. O‘REILLY Varlations â€" Reilly, Rielly, O‘Rielly, Riley, Ryley, Reyley, O‘Rahilly, Raâ€" hilly, Radley, Ridley, Reille, Raleigh. Racial Originâ€"irish. Sourceâ€"Given name. We cannct make progress towards #alptin Ekx‘ por 1 packot ;‘.l y l F Appaare d d e o :A S 20% $ Surnames and Their Origin GUT PLYG oo ue ceatrestn snn ) . cumdan s an h tm ie | _ Natural changes of spelling ane reâ€" sponsible for the variations of toâ€"day, the forms Geddes and Getty being abâ€" | breviations. _cation of those derived from given hames. The origin, however, is not | obvious for two reasons. In the first | place, the given name from which they are dorived is no longer a common one, though it was quite popular in the middle ages. In the second place a ‘considerable change in spelling has helped to conceal the source. | _ The given name is Gideon. | _ Courage, of course, was regarded as the prime virtue in the rather tumultâ€" ‘uous period in which family names beâ€" gan to form, and it was quite logical that those given names in the Ol4 Tesiament which were aseociated with this virtue became very popular in _England, as elsowhere. |_ The formation of these family names | was not at first a conucolous process. A man would be referved to as "Ralph, Gideon‘s son" to distinguish him from other Ralphs in the community. Perâ€" haps his son would be known as , "Gideon," Ralph‘s son," while the third generation _ would develop another , "Ralph, Gideon‘s son," perhaps in this goneration to lose its purely descripâ€" tive meaning and be adopted as a reâ€". gular family to be passed on to sucâ€" \ceeding gemerations. ‘ Farmer‘s Wifeâ€""Zeke, wuz thet th? tinâ€"peddler wot stopped in front o‘ th‘ house jist then ?" Farmerâ€""Nawâ€"one o‘ them danged Fords We may not fill pulpits, but each of us lives some kind of sermon every day. Here is a group of family names which belong to that primary classifiâ€" GEDDES Variationâ€"Cetty, Geddeson. Racial Originâ€"English. Source A given name. £ +9 Only the Tin Lizzie IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMER TIME f If you roll your | ‘own. _ ask for DEeDENS FINGE CUT (droon labelp «: SUMMER COMPLAINTS / KILL LITTLE ONES ' Lord Macaulay got $100,000 for his colossal "History of England," the demand for which was so great that the vans carrying it from the publishâ€" ing oflice blocked the street. Lamarâ€" tine got $200,000 also for his history, . Victor Hugo $80,000 for "Les Miserâ€" ables," and Daudet cracked the record with $200,000 for "Sapho." | Even poets have made money. Tom | Mcore asked and got $40,000 for "Lalla <Rookh," and Tennyson for many years made $20,000 a year. A profiteer bought a luxurious counâ€" try home and set about making it even more luxurious. Money of course was no object. One of his plans was to Lave a fishpond containing eels. "But you can‘t keep eels in a pond," suggested his neighbor, to whom he had confided his idea. They have to go down to the sea every year, you know." At the first sign of illiness during the hot weather give the little ones Baby‘s Own Tablets or in a few hours he m: g be beyond aid. These Tablets will preâ€" vent summer complaints if given ocâ€" casionally to the well child and will promptly relieve these troubles if they come on suddenly. Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets should always be kept in every home where there are growing childâ€" ren. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guarantee of a government analyst that they are absolutely safe. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ‘"Well, I won‘t have ‘em, then!" exâ€" claimed the profiteer. "I always takes the missus and the kids every year, but I ain‘t going to take no eels." She (sweetly)â€""Well, why don‘t you lengthen it, dear?" Her Intuition. He, savagely (attempting to start car)â€""This selfâ€"starter won‘t work! There is a short circuit somewhere." If you are doing good ;vork, don‘t worry; somebody will find it out. Winston Churchill was reported to| get $40,000 down for the life of his | father, Lord Randolf Churchill, and| Lord Morley got a cheque for $50,000 | for his "Life of Gladstone." Rudyard | Kipling has often been paid as much | as a quarter a word for a short story. ; It is said that Hall Caine parted with | the rights of "The Christian" for $43,â€" 500, and it is certain that Marie Corelâ€"| lia has got at least as much for a' novel. Golden Words. Huge sums of money have been paid in recent years for the memoirs of cerâ€" tain celebrated people. But this is not an innovation in the literary world. They ane cach temporarily allotted a fie‘d but part of the produce has to be given to their masters, who, of coume have full command of all their services, When the slaves die, the field, and anything elso they may posâ€" sess, goes mot to their children, but to their masters. You may buy a slave on the Okarâ€" ango River, the currency for the purâ€" pose being cattle. More than half tke peopie in this primitive district are slaves. The proâ€" portion is kept up by the fact that the children of all slaves are siaves themâ€" selves, having no chance of release. Every kraal owner, chief, and headsâ€" man has his slaves, who may legally be beaten if they rebel, and who spend their lives without any vestige of inâ€" dependence. Civilized people often call themâ€" selves "slaves," but they have no conâ€" cept‘ion of what real slavery is. They probably imagine, also, that slavery in the old eense is wiped out. It is not. Britain at this moment is tryng to put down slavery on the Okavango River, in Southâ€"West Africa, and the chicfs have been notified that she does not tolerate their system. What the Little Eels Missed. ;Rbee:lnflflt‘r'tzrny .call t.hem~ileAK DIGBTION "Whyâ€"er," Said Tommy, with some hesitation, "whyâ€"erâ€"why, me father and ma mother was both married on the same day." The wrong road never brings you to the right place. ; Ordinary iron rubbed withâ€" magnetite will acquire magnetism and will pick up a needle. Steel through which an eloctric current has passed will also become magnetised. Bars of steel are formed into the familar horseshoe shape in order to hold the magnetism better. Strange Coincidence. "Now, Tommy," said the teacher, "give me an example of a coincidence." Get a bottle at your druggist‘s today. Regular for Horse 1 reaimentâ€"Refined for Human use. DR. B. J. KENDALL COMPANY, Enosburg Falls, Vt., U.S.A. During the war an American officer made an enormous horseshoe magnet from two big cannon and some steel rails. It was suggested that it might be used to influence the compasses of enemy ships venturing near the coast, but the idea was not adopted. ‘_ Most stomach remedies try to digest your food for you. How much better it is to tone up the stomach so that it will do its own work, as nature inâ€" tended. There is no pleasure in eatâ€" ‘ing predigested food. Tone up your _stomach, then your appetite and diâ€" | gestion will scon be normal. TREATMENT The Chinese discovered this fact and invented the compass. They used it for land journeys only, and were guided by the south point of the needle. As early as the seventh cenâ€" tury the Japaneso mounted compasces on wheeled vehicles, which they called "southâ€"pointing carts." ue Large quantities of loadstone, or magnetite are found in all parts of the world. A rod of this substance pointed at each end and suspended will set itâ€" self to a north and south position. Ancient writers spoke of a mysteriâ€" ous "stone" possessing, among other remarkabe properties, the power to "draw to it the allâ€"conquering iron." A common superstition at one time was that magnetic mountains caused ships to fall to pleces by drawing from them their iron nails. _¢ _ Forall external hurtsand pains «for all muscular troubles. Kendall‘s Spavin Treatment makes good. KENASTON, Sask., Docember 8th, 1021 *‘Piense send ins one copy of flour TREATISE OX THB HORSK. 1 have used your Rendali‘s Spavin Cure for over @leven years and found it ana of the best liniments I have ever used for all kinds of sores, . ¢Signed) M. ZEMAN." Mysteries of Magnetism. We know fhat a imagnet attracts iron, but no one knows the reason. You can get these Pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. KENDALL‘S me. In this serious condition Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills were recommended and I decided to try them, and I can| truthfully say that they made me feel like a new person. I will always give: this medicine a word of praise when I get a chance for 1 think there is | nothing to be compared with it for, dyspeptics, or any one weak, nervous | or rundown." | Ml.ard‘s Linimen\t for sals everywhere If your digestion is weak and your blood thin, you need Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to restore the strength to your blood; in addition use care in the selection of your diet and your stomach trouble will soon pass away. Mrs. Charles La Rose, Fruitland, Ont., suffered severely, and tells what Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills did for her. She says:â€""I was a terrible sufferer from stomach trouble. Tht doctor called it nervous indigestion. Everything I ate distressed me, and I became so weak and rundown I could hardly waik. I had a pain around my heart most of the time, and I slept very poorly. I was afrald 1 would not get well, as the doctor‘s medicine was not helping There can be no perfect digestion urless you have rich, red blood. This is scientifically true. The way, then, to tone up the stomach is to enrich the blood. Perfect Digestion Will Come the Blood is Made Rich and There is no tonic for the stomach‘ that is not a tonic for every other part | of the body. But the stomach deâ€"‘ pends, as does every other organ, on | the blood for its energy. | A Honeymoon Willie Bee‘s idea of a honeymoon. DUE TO POOR BLOOD I8s§VE No. 29â€"‘23. SPAVIN |_"Yes," said the young bride wisely, | "that‘s the trouble with these farmers. | They are so anxious to get their eggs {sold that they take them off the nest | too soon." Take care that the face which looks out from your mirror in the morning is a pleasant face. You may not see it again all day, but others will. "Those eggs are dreadfully small," she said critically as the shopkeeper served her. Couldn‘t Swindle Her. Young Mrs. Newlywed went out shopping determined that the grocer should not take advantage of her youth and inexperience. "I know, madam," he answered. "But that‘s the kind the farmer brings me. They are only just in fresh from the country this morning." "What sort of a noise annoys an oysâ€" ter? A noisy noise annoys an oyster." "The old cold scold sold a school coalâ€"scuttle." "When a twister atwisting will twist him a twist, For twisting of his twist he three times doth intwist; But, if one of the twines of the twist do untwist, The twine that untwisteth, untwisteth the twist. "In twisting the twine that untwisteth between, He twirls with is twister the two in a twine; Then twice havng twisted the twines of the twine, He twitcheth the twine he had twined in twain. The twain that in twining before in the twine, As twines were intwisted he now doth untwine; ‘Twixt the twain intertwisting a twine more between He, twirl Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians "A skunk jumped over a stump into a skunk hole." There are some twisters which it is quite impossible for the tongue to reâ€" peat rapidly without a fall, such as: "Give Jim Giles‘ gilt gig whip." "Thrice six thick thistle sticke @rusp straight through the throbbing Bathe with plenty of Cuticura Soap and hot water to cleanse and purify. Dry lightly and apply Cuticura Oint» ment to soothe and heal, Soap25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Telcam25¢. Sold throughout theDominion. Canadian Depot: Lymans, Limited, 344 St. Panl St., W., Montreal. a‘Cuticun Soap shaves without mug. Cuticura Heals Rashes America‘s Ploncer Doz Remedi®s UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting 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 Colds Headache Rheumatism ; Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"Also bottles of 24 and 100â€"â€" bmu_uu.‘ Aspirin is the trade mark (registored !n Canada) of Bayer ManufActure of MONOâ€" Aceticacidester of Eaileylicacid, â€" While it is we!l known that Aspirin meane Bayer manufacture, to @sslst the ‘;.-.n.nc agoinst !mitations, the Ta#lets of #yn Company will be stemped with their general trage mark, 10e "Bayer Cresa‘ rirling his twister, makes a twist of the twing." Aspien: DOG DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Adâ€" dress by the Author. . clu7 Glover Co., Ina 129 West 24th Atreoet New York, U.8.A. MOTHER OF REMEMBER "When you clean the parlor, Mary, be very careful of this beautiful rug. It is very old." Mrs. Blake was exceedingly fond and proud of the valuable Pergian rug that lay upon her parlor floor. When she engaged a new maid she brought the girl into the room and, pointing to the rug, said: West St. John, N. B.â€""I was in a gencral runâ€"down condition following the birth of my twin boys. I had a great deal of inflammation, with pains and weakness. Finalli' mz doctor recomâ€" mended Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comlpaund. He said that your medicine would be the only thing to build me up, I am sure he is right, for I am feeling much better and am gaining in weight, havuz‘ Yone down to ninetyâ€"three Eoun was in bed for over amonth, ut am 1‘2) vain now, _ I have recome» mended the Vegetable Compound to my friends and give you permission to use l;zy letter,"â€"Mrs. Euaseg A. Ripoun®, Rodney St., West St. John, N. i. There are many women who find their houschold duties almost unbearable owâ€" ing to some weakness or derangement, The trouble may be slight, yet cause such mnomg symptoms as drapring pains, weakness and a runâ€"down fecling. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound is a sglendid medicine for such conditions. It has in many cases relioved those symptoms by removing the cause of them. Mrs. Ritchie‘s experience is but one of many. Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegâ€" etable Compound Relieved Her of Inflammation and Great Weakness You might be interested in reading Mrs. Pinkham‘s Private Textâ€"Book upon the *‘ Ailments of Women.‘"‘ You can Eet a copy free by writing the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Cobourg, Ontario "I can see it is ma‘am," replied the maid sympathetically; "but I dare say we can make it last you the winter if we‘re careful." 3 RINE /C JBE SUN.WIND.DUST 6.CINDERS W Attractive Proposition For man with all round weekly Bewspaper experience and $400 or $500. Apply Box 24, Wilsoa Publishing Co. Ltd., 73 Adelaidea Street West. MENDED & SOLD BY DRUGGISTS & OPZICIAN® o as t A 22 t P c on P 4* I yOR Â¥AEZ EYE CAE BOOK MURKINE ©0. cuicaoOusAl E HAVE AN ENQUIBY FOR a WaASNINGâ€" TON Mand Press that will take 8 pages of A Maid‘s idea of a Rug. WASHINGTON HAND PRESS, TWIN BOVYS KFL «i\ Ad W #2 folpih #"

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