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Flesherton Advance, 11 Aug 1921, p. 7

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A WOMAN'S RIGHT TO GOOD HEALTH Most Troubles Afflicting Women Are Dae to Poor Blood. To every woman belongs the right to enjoy a healthy, active life; yet nine cut of ten suffer from some form 3f bloodlessness. That is why one sees on every side pale, thin cheeks, dull eyes and drooping figures sure sigiM of headaches, weak backs, ach- ing limbs and uncertain health. All weak women should win the right to be well by refreshing their weary bodies with the new. rich, red blood that promptly transforms them into healthy attractive women. This new, red blood Is supplied by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which reaches every organ and every nerve in the body. Through the use of these pills thousands of wo- men have found benefit when suffering from anaemia, indigestion, general weakness and those ailments from which women alone suffer. Among the many women who tell of the good Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done them is Mrs. L. Hicks, Round Hill. N.S., who says: "I became very much run down in health; my blood seemed weak and watery, my strength failed, and I was so easily tired that my work was a burden. I had often rea? about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and decided to try them, and I can truly say that after using three boxes I found my- self gaining, and my old-time energy and vitality was restored. Out of my own experience I can strongly recom- mend this medicine." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Piils through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Value of Forests. Canada to one of the greatest forest countries of the world. Much of our Canadian soil is unsuited to farming, but is capable cf growing magnificent timber. Our forests provide work which maintains half a million people. They give work, too, for our sailors and railway men and furnish business for our merchants and bankers. All citizens can assist in taking care of car forests and, particularly in pro- tecting them against fire. A pert >n enjays a rub-down after a hard day's work; so does a horse. Dodging the Festive Dog. Japan has her rulM of the road, act phra:-:ed as are cur own, but very much to the point. The rules are '.-.- suel in English also, for the use cf Briti.-h tqurists. The first rule reads: "At the ri=e of the haul of the policeman, step rapidly; do net pass him by, or othe.-- wise d : .~respect him." The second: "When a passenger of the foct hove in sight, tootle tlie horn trumpet to him melodiously at first. If he still obstacle your passage, tootle him with vigour and express by Tord cf mouth the warning. Hi. Hi!" The third is touci-ing: "Beware of the wandering horse that he .-;ha'l not take fright aa you pass him by. Do net explode the exhaust box at t:m. Go soothingly by or stop by the road- side until he pass away." The fourth also has its pathcs: "Give big space to the feetive dog that makes sport in the roadway. Avoid entanglement of the dog with your wheel spokes." Here is an awful warning against skidding: "Go soothingly over the grease-mud; for there luras the skid- demon. Press the brake cf the foot as you roll around the cornens to save the collapse." AUTO REPAIR PARTS for nwst rrat.es ami ir.cHels of cars. Your old. forcken or worn-out p:irt replaced. U'rlte or \vli-e u ile:icri!>- ins what you wu;. l. We carry the htrfreKt and uiot -<.:n:,;e:e atomic ia Canada of slight): tised or new p;.rt and automobile c.iu.Mi.ent. We ship CO.U. anywhere in Canada. Satis- factory rr refund in full our motto. Sha:Vj Aoto Siivaga Pir. Supply, 823-331 Duff-Tin 8:.. Taroato, Oat. Progress in Moving & Mountain of Copper. One cf the grc.-.tect feats ever at- temrtei in met::! raining Is now being carried out in the United State.-. At BLsbee. iu the State of Arizona, there "is a hill known as Sacramento Hill, which is composed cf copper ore and contains an immense amount of! valuable metal. American mining ex-! i pens have set tl:emse!v53 the ta^k cf '. ! digging away the whole of this hill in j BAYS SLEEPS ALL EIGHT LONG NOW The Orphan. Ycung Pcet "What do ycu think cf :y latest brain child? 1 TANLAC STRAIGHTENED KIM RIGHT UP. Editor "I'm afraid our msgazir.e \ccording to preliminary estimates | sixteen years and recovering wiu bg anable to adoft itr Not New to Him. the geld production from the mines of '*'' c Northern Ontario will amount to ap- rorty mi - ica cubic ? ar:is of mater prcximately Jl.350,000 during the month of June, as compared with $1,- 300.CCO in May and Sl.084.343 in April. The production fcr the quarter !a! wl;! have lo fce removed, and it is expected to recover from it twentv- five Mi^on tans of copper ore, which wil1 ^- e '- d a tHoasand million poaads any-unted to arcund $3.734,345 and is cf P ure metal - Already the miners are tb highest quantit^ in fne history cf at work - nd over five ro ; "' : cubic " du e FT 2rni!ton Man Says He Now Feels As Well As He Ever Did in H>s Life. "Here's a flrm adverting shirts , "Before I was half through my flrst witncut buttons," said his wife. bo " J<? Tantac I began to straighteu. "Xcthing new about that." replied r: S ht Declared Robert Davis. 1 her husband. "I've been wearing them for years." mining in Ontario. It is expect- i" ards iaTe been du e awa y- Seven j ed that gold production in the nest nu ee steam shovels are employed far) quarter Trill eve^ exceed the=e figures ' t " le P u n>cse. and fifteen locomotives "I can see the tips of your ears, J. \V. Broach, a farmer at Boharm! naul tbe m2 terial away as it it dug dearie." Sask., has developed a strain cf fall wheat which be claims wiH revolu- tionize the growing of fall wheat in Western Canada. He aas experiment- ed with the new cereal for three out. The digging goes on at three dif- ferent -eve's sixty, forty-five, and thirty-five feet la height and sixteen miles cf railway connect these with years. The mature strain has a red- tne waste d m ? ? where the material dish appearance, similar to Marquis. is stcre '-l ready for crushing and the : long steps?' "Well, what of itr "Is that aa accident cr are ears com- ing back gradually?" A Scout is Thrifty. Tenderfcct "Wny do ycu take such He Ate It All! "Crop failures?" asked the old- timer. "Yes. I've seen a few in my day. In 1854 the corn crop was almost noth- ing. We cooked some for dinner, and my father ate fourteen acres of corn at one meal." Hope He Found It When the bell rang the other day little Johnnie went to the door. Soon he returned alone. "Who was it?" asked the mother. "Oh. it was Just a man looking for the wrong place," was the reply. and gives promise of an exceptionally extraction of the metal, heavy yield from the 25 acres he hag when tne work is finished there wil! that way." un-ier crop this year. , be no bil1 - Dut in its P !ac t* P>ts. Canada's hat. cap and fur industry one a Quarter cf a mile deep and the for the year 1919 accounted for a total otner less - production valued at $20,790.000, of which fur and fur-lined goods amount- ed to $2,800,000. Cloth caps were pro- duced to the value of $3,700. ut)0. The total capital invested in the industry amounted to J14.553.S14; the number , of establishments 208; ana wages paid ' First Class "I save shoe leather The Missing Embieir. y St.. Hamilton, Ont., a valued employee of the Wood-Alexander hard- : ware store. "For abcu' ?'x months before taking I Tanlac I bad been in a badly run-dowa condition. At times I had no appetite at all and then sometimes I cculd ear heartily, but suffered terribly after- wards from indigestion. "I was nervous and restless, never elept we!!, and many a night I rolled and tossed nearly all night long and is the morning felt ;o stiff in my joints it was gome time before I felt like moving at all. I suffered a great deal from constipation and was sub- I ject to splitting headaches. "But Tanlac helped me right from SUMMER HEAT HARD ON BABY At the fishing docks of a large sea- port town the rather remarkable coin- the start and now I iave simply a ravenous appetite and everything cidence was noticed of three steam- a rees witfl me Prfect!y. I never trawlers lying berthed side by side, aave a headache or a pa:n of aay kind. their names being respectively Rcse. Shamrock, and Thistle. What a pity tiat Wales ie not re- presented." remarked a visitor. "That 1Ute a h **^? y an <i f <* ; as wel1 ** l ever * ld in m * lite - Tanlac wil1 a!wa - vs * et a eood word fpom me '" _ . . * soU b7 IeaJ5n S druggists No season cf the year is so danger- would have completed tee ccinct e T erywhe Adr. amounted to $4.145.462. A total of 4.176 people were employed In the to- os to the life of little ones as is the dence." dustry. summer. The excessive heat throws "Don't worry about that, guv'nor. ' Mottoes and Bits of Wisdom. Plans are in progress for the forma- the little stomach out of order so whom the re- 'i expect there's Your Best Friend. A young man may have many friends, but he will find none so stead- fast, so constant, so ready to respond to his war.'-, so capable of poshing him ahead as a little leather-covered book with the name of a bank on it cover. Sir Thomas Llpton. a leak in one of them." Obliging Salesman. The woman shopper looked Universal Solvent. "Now." said the professor of chemis- try, "under wtat combination Is gold most quickly released?" The student pondered a moment. "I knew sir," he answered. "Marriage." replied the old sait. tlon of a mode! town for tubercular quickly that unless prompt aid IB at mark was addressed returned soldiers on a 7.000-acre tract hand the baby may be beyond al! of land near Kamioops. B.C. Inspec- human help before the mother realizes tion has already been made of the te is ill. Summer is the season when land and If the report Is adopted at diarrhoea, cholera infanturn. dyseatry The woman shopper looked and the coming session of parliament. an d coilc are most prevalent. Any one looked, but seemed to be unable to work wiil be commenced in the spring f these troubles may prove deadly if find anything to satisfy her. The of 1922. ! not properly treated. During the sum- obliging clerk pulled down box after The Triangle Chemical Company mer ">e mothers' best friend is Baby's box In an attempt to make a sale, needed than a gr->j.: stock of know- are arranging with the city of New Owa Tablets. They regulate the Finally the woman picked up her ledge. Westminster. B.C.. for a lease of all bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep gloves and parasol and observed: * the waterfront comprised in the In- baby healthy. The Tablets are sold by "I don't think I'll buy anything to- ; Minard's Liniment for saie ever^vhera dlan reserve on the North Arm. It is rnedicice dealers or by mall at 25 day. I'm sorry to have troubled you. the Intention of this flrm to erect a C et8 a box from The Dr. Williams' but the fact is I was just looking for Tbe steady drcp bores the stone. Many tiaiec it happens that we get what we want when we are even net aware cf it. A good example is worth more than scores of theoretic doctrines. Love of the work that is to be done, makes i! easitr Practical -ense very ofun is rnora Co.. Brockville. Ont. M'nard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia Oculists have fouixl that a peculiar form cf eye-strain is due to pers-cns .-<... .Xng while lyir..g down. Surnames and Their Origin LINDSAY Variation Lindsey. Racial Origin Normm-French. Source A clan name. To classify the family name of Lind- say as Norman-French origin, when it . fs Scottish. an<! to call it a clan name though the Lindsays were neither Uuelic nor Highlanders. demands some excuse and explanation. It happened during the reign of King Malcolm Ceann-mor ("Big Head") of Scotland, which extended from before to many years after the Norman invasion of England In the years immediately following the first victories of William the Con- queror, many Anglo-Saxon warriors and chieftains sought their fortunes anew in Scotland. Malcolm welcomed them. Later dissatisfied with the re- wards William had granted or with- held, also sought the service of a more genorous overlord. And Malcolm wel- comed them also. The Lindsays were among the lat- ter number. At that time they bore a surname descriptive of the lo- cality from which they had come in Normandy. "Do Lim^say." In the course of time this 1-us become Liud- say. The family wen for itself, through grants of the Scottish court, lands which though not in the Highlands bordered on them. Throughout sub- sequent history they played a large part in the wars and confederations of the Highlands. They adopted the cus- toms and manners of the clans, bore the same weapons as the Gaels. evolved a dress and a tartan similar to those of the Highlanders, and so in the course of time have come to be re- garded, let us say. as sort of honorary Highlanders, if not Highlanders by blood. It was a Lindsay, indeed, who was first colonel of the famous Black Watch Regiment of Highlanders. CHATTERTON Variations Chatsworth. Chetvwood. Chatham. Chadsey. Racial Origin Anglo-Saxon. Source A place name. This is a group of family names which has been derived from place names, which, though not the same, are al! of the same character. The basic element in these names is the ancient Anglo-Saxon word for ' cottago. or hut. which was "cyte" or "cete" (the pronunciation of the An- ' glo-Saxon "c" was always like "k." for. as a matter of fact, there was no "k" in the Anglo-Saxon alphabet). This was the usual word denoting "nous" or "dwelling." the ancient equivalent of the modern word "house" being reserved for buildings of a more pretentious or public na- ture. The place name of Chattertcn. or mere properly "Chadderton." from which th- family name was descrip- tively derived, was compounded from the Anglo-Saxon "cete-doir-dun." and signified "the fortified dwelling in the wood." Chatham is the name of a town in Kei:t. It is compounded of "cyte" or "cete" and "ham." the latter signify- ing a village. Chatsworth is a compound of "cete" and "worth." At the period when family names were formed this word had come to mean any farmstead. But thv compound of the place name had occurred long before, when the word still preserved its literal meaning of a "warded" or inclosed place. Her.ce the place name meant not a farm cot- ; t.ipe. but a cottage in an iaclosure. Usually the inclosure was a wooded place. Chatwood was a place name signify- ing a cottage in the wood and Chad- sey a dwelling near the sea. plant for manufacturing muriatic acid. sulphuric acid, superphosphate and a full line of chemical fertilizers. A test shipment of two carloads of horses is being made to Port of Spain. Trinidad, by Alberta livestock com- m!loner Carlyie. These horses are ted an lnv!slble to be used for ordinary working pur- o , cours<? aa e ,, ho poe and are costing between $40, p araU<> i wa , s separaled bv a few and *4o per head in Alberta. If this , humlrej f M ir _ P a caavon ; mav so shipment proves successful. Professor r(?nect a -ound to cauM ' k w be ' du . :lclpat a heavy movement tlnct i y heard again anj again in a 1 long-dying series cf repetitions. Freaks of Sound. If. when the air \s still, ycu stand near a high wall and speak a word loudly, it will come back to you as :! It is. a friend." "Oh. that's ail right. It was no trouble at all. I assure you." the clerk answered. "In fact. If you thi^k ycur friend might be In any of :he frw re- maining boxes. I'll open them, too!" Not So Down in the Mouth. Joe "Did you get much relief when you went to tbe ue:rU: "" Jim "Yes: T^-.r dentist wasn't home." Allowing Plenty of Time. If the reflecting wails are irregular. le repetitions, instead of being dis- Although the ban upon the importa- tion of Canadian cattle into Great. Bri- tain has hot yet been removed. tb x- linct to the ear _ win be mere JumbleJ station of cattle from the port of and UQlntem g ible reverberations. This Montreal to showing an activity that is ni::lceabte in ce -tain caverns. has not been seen for many years. Since navigation opened this year Prof. %V. J. Humphreys, an eminent physicist, describes a curious pheno- there have been carried from the port menon whlch he ca -; 3 aa .. acoust j oa , ,.6 1 4 cattle and 1.SS4 sheep. It Doesn't Matter. "It doesn't really matter -nothing mirage," sounds uttered at a distance on the surface of the earth seeming to come from high in the air. Such an uplifting of sound (corresponding to the uplifting of a landscape by .1 vi~- Indications cf Trouble. Johnny "Did Mcses have dypsep- sia like what you've, got?" Dad "Hew oa earth do I know? An old lady, with great bu^le and Why do you ask su-.-ii a question?" hustle, hurried into a wayside railway Johnny "Well, cur Sunday school station. teacher says the Lori gave Moses two Trotting hurriedly from bookir.g-of- tablets.' flee to waiting-rccm, and from there to the porter's room, she at last found an official of the line having a <;:? ' snooze. She shook the mm till he awoke. ar.d then inquired excitedly: "When is the next traiu due"" The porter rubbed his <?yt?. and re- plied: "In an hour and f -r:y m -.utes. ma'am." "Thank you!" replied the rid lady. "I am so l.id ;hu: I au: n, : t.o late TL C* 1 A 1 does." is the motto 1 saw recentlv in ual mirage mav occur when a stra- * nose Having OICK Animals a house, acd it set me to thinking, turn of warm air at the surface i* over- Why should we make much ada about ' laid by cooler air. The sound travels things that we cannot prevent or faster at t!:e top. and so appears to . help? Why not receive the blows and ccme from aloft. knocks passively insteail of being so A b.illoonist can often hear the wrought up all the time that we get earth-echo cf his own voice when he the double effect of these unfortunate cannot, by shouting, gain the attention happenings, both physically and men- of people standing on the ground be- , tally? | low him. It is because he at an alti- Why are we so chargrined and morti- ; tude cf 1.500 feet, perhaps is in a re- fled when we thir.k we haven't done grion of silence, whereas they are im- ourselves justice on some occasion mersed in a flood of sound. presiding at a meeting, or tilling a 1 o, place in an entertainment program. ' Prosoects in Alaska for instance and public attention li.is rrospecw in rtiaSKa. been attracted to us in ar.v w*j? Whv A:aska ***** fca * fewer i 1 * ^ *" do we make ourselves ... mUorable j a 1900 ' but slno * tU<? over conviction that we have not ap- , territ ^ uas "'**>* ^rown rapidly when busir.es? was dull in the s?:a :.-; SHOULD USE EVERYWK' . - Bruisefl s ; ? in the ! If coffee, which is known to contain caffeine, disturbs your health and comfort- drink INSTANT POSTUM "There's a Reason" peared at our best? It doesn't really matter, does it? It is not of vital im- portance, and should we allow the lit- tle things cf life, the little pin-pricks and annoyances, the little perplexi- ties which disturb little minds, to throw us off our balance, to spoil our happiness and peace of mind? No, a thousand times nol Whatever hap- pens, it isn't of half so much import- ance as we probably think. The main thing Is to keep our poise under the little trials. If we are cheerful and optimistic, they will soon be forgotten by us and others. When Is a Man Less Than a Man? When he makes a vow he fails to keep; When without sowing he would reap: When he would rather beg. borrow, or steal Than work to earn an honest meal; When he delights to stir up strife Or values 1 onor less than life: When he insults fallen foe. Or at a woman alms a blow. it is expected that the records cf 1921 will show unusual progress. The gov- ernment railway from Sewarrl to Fair- gold mining are going on. and so are the fisheries. A pulp mill fciv been built, and a number cf new iudusirios like reindeer raising, have been st.iri- ed. There is plenty of room, for 54.S:*;' people in an ami larger tha:: Ontario make only a sprinkling. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk C IT lots TORONTO SALT WORKS X CLlfP TORONTO Miss Flora Boyko Tells How Cuticura Healed Her Pimples "Vv fice ws very itchy at first. and alter that it wcs covered with pimples that disngured "it badly. The piir.ples were > ~ ") hard and red and they were , ^. f small, and they were scat- tered al! ever mv face ar.d were so itchy I had to scratch '".** and I could set sleep. "These bo'.he::d rr.e cear'.y a year before I used Cuticura Scap and Oint- ment and when I Sad used r.ve cak? of Cuticura Soap and r.ve boxes Cuticura Ointrr.er.t I was healew Signed \iiss Flora M. Be- kc 1 . Gardenton. Man.. Dec. 26, 1913. Having obtained a cletr h. hy slue by the use ;f Cut:cura. ' ~ .: clear by using the Soap for - purposes, assisted by touches of Ointment as needed. Do not fail to include the exquis:t=ly scented Cuti- cura Talcum in your toi'et prepara- tions. Splendid after bathing. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and SOc. <-ld ,. Limited. Si Pui St.. MoMtoML cura 5op hT without mug. A laugrh is sunshine in any house, but a silly, simpering laugh is only H tallow-candle imitation of the sunlijrhr. Hitching your wagon to a star is all right, but you've got to watoh the earth to see if there's a g\>ed road ahead. The driver of an automobile should keep a sharp lockout ahead, but re- member tl-at there may be a man close behind. The Wrong Department. In an English town, the town hall provides office-room for several public officials, among them the police-sur- geon, to whom candidates for the force go for medical examination. The other day a muscular you-.g fel- low presented himself at the surgeon's office. He was told to strip to the waist. "Wtafs thatr said the ma:i. "Strip!" repeated the doctor, sharp- ly. He complied, and wa sured. punched, and pounded. "Skip over that chair, geon. The man did so. and barke;! his ! shine. He was getting indignant. plen*r Dot : Book on OCC DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed V-"- to any -A- dress bv tha Author. K. C'.iv (Hover Co., t. . 11$ WM list StrMt N'w York. T.9.A. SUFFERING OF YOUNG WOMEN This Letter Tells How It May be Overcome All Mothers Interested. ASPIRIN OniV is Genuine doctor, sharp- was duly mea- 1 LA/ nded. A^*V/ ," said the sur- ! /J (J Warning' Take no i-l: Toronto, Ont. " I have suffered sir.ca I was a school girl with pain in my Y:t sideapdwithcramps. || growing: worse each year until I was all run down . I was so b;ul at times that 1 was unlit for work. I tried several doc- tors and patent medicines, but was only relieved for a short time. Some of tha doctors wanted to pcrt'ona an operation, bus my father objected. Finally 1 leiirnovl through my mother of Lydia E. Piuk- ham's Vegetable Compound, and how thankful 1 am that I tnovl it. I am ''"' relieved from pain and er.ianvs. and. substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tab- feel as if it has saved mv life. You "Knee" back; touch the floor! Now j lets ef Aspirin.' I'nless you see the may use my letter to bell o:her run round and let me test your heart j name "Bayer" cr package cr on tab- women as I am glad to recommend the lets vou are not Retting Aspirla at all. i niedicine."_MBs. H. A. GOODMAN, 14 Rnabvala AVB Tnnint.iv and wind." said the surgeon. The candidate exploded. in every Bayer package are d, rations Those are troubled as Mrs. "I'm hanged if 1 will I" he roared. ; for Colds. Headache. Neuralgia. Rhevi- Coc .,i :uan was s hould imiediatelv'seek ' " "I'd rather stay single." j matism. Earacho. Toothache. Lumba- res;onlt ion to halth by taking lydia He had strayed into the wrong room, j go and for Pair.. Handy tia boxe< of . PiukhaaTs Vegetable Compound. The registrar's office was on the other ; twelve tablets cost few ce'its. Drue- T' ose who need special advice may side of the corridor. 1 gists also sell large ;v..:kagt>>. M*t1e write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. MONEY ORDERS. I (roci^'.f-^u in ^ iiniiuui, t'i r .,vtr .YIHUU* _ When oi-aerlng g,x>d S by mail send if.u-uu, of Mouoaceticaci 1; :er cf m ** hd<1 '" StnCt confi<i * nc *- j a Dominion Express Money Order. | Salic7llcacid. | ISSUE No. 31 '2:. s also e!l large" package; Miule write to Lyaia t. rinKnam Meaicme 1,0. ; .:,Hdu Aspirin is the trade rr.aik (^njidential). Lynn Mass. These letters u. e -^,i i,, r-ir...hi> ,>f r-vtf- Var w "' bt? opened, read ana answerec by * , \? " ed in ' .ir.,uni, in l ..\e; ataatt- . .1 , -.- ,._j-_ _

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