Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 5 Aug 1915, p. 3

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WEAK, TiaED, DEPRESSED That i8 the Usual Condition of Per- seus Afflicted With Anaemia Anaemia is the medical term for poor watery blood. It may arise from a variety of causes, such as lack of exercise, hard study, improperly ven- tilated rooms or workshops, poor digestion, etc. The chief symptoms are extreme pallor of the face and gums, rapid breathing and palpita- tion of the heart after slight exertion, headaches, dizziness and a tendency to hysteria, swelling of the feet and limbs and a. distaste for food. All these symptoms may not be present, but any of them indicate anaemia which should be promptly treated with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These Pills make new, rich blood which stimulates and strengthens every or- gan and every part 6l the body. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have made thous- ands of anaemic people bright, active and strong. The following is one of the many cures. Mrs. Phillips, wife of Rev. W. E. Phillips, Princeton, Ont., says: "Some years ago, while living with my parents in England I fell a victim of anaemia. The usual compli- cations set in and soon I became but a shadow of my former self. My mother, who had been a former nurse of many years experience, tried all that her knowledge suggested; tonics of various kinds were tried, and three doctors did their best for me, but without avail, and a continued gradual decline and death was look- ed for. "Later my parents decided to join my brothers in Canada, and it was confidently expected that the ocean voyage, new climate and new condi- tions would cure me. For a time I did experience temporary benefit, but was soon as ill again as ever. I was literally bloodless, and the extreme pallor and generally hopeless appear- ance of my condition called forth many experiences of sympathy from friends whom we made in our new home in Acton, Ont. Later a friend urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and although in a condition where life seemed to have little to hope for I decided to do so. After using three boxes I began to mend. Continuing I begran to enjoy my food, slept almost normally, and began to have a fresh interest in life as I felt new blood once again running in my veins. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills brought about a complete care and I am to-day in robust health. My hus- band is rector of this parish and I have recommended the use of the Pills to a great-number of people with whom we have come into contact in the course of my husband's ministry, for we both know what Dr. W^illiams' Pink Pills can do." These Pills may be had from 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. PLANTS HAVE NERVOUS SYSTEM From what a man thinks he knows, subtract what his neighbors think he knows, and the remainder will prob- ably be about what he really does know. RESPOND TO EXTERNAL FORCES LIKE HUMAN BEINGS. Intoxiated by Alcohol, Stupified by Chloroform, Degeneration Through Laziness. A series of investigations made by Professor Jagadis Chunderf Bose, an Indian scientist, of Calcutta, has re- sulted in revelations of such far- reaching scientific importance that it may be doubted whether even this distinction now holds good. The bar- rier between the life-phenomena of plants and animals is thrown down. Even the commonest vegetable proves to be sensitive. Professor Bees has shown that plants have what may truthfully be called a nervous sys- tero â€" of a simple type, to be sure, [ hut still a nervous system. The dis- ! covery is of momentous interest. Psychology deals with consciousness; j but without nerves, without some means of receiving impressions of ! stoi ms and >unrhine, heat and cold, there can be no consciousness. Pro- i fessor Bose by no means holds that plants have anything like the intel- â-  ligence of animals, but he has cer- tainly demonstrated that they re- I spend to external forces, not as so many living machines, but as sen- tient organisms. By his extraordin- |ary methods of enquiry he proves that they are affected in a very hu- j man way when stimulated from with- ; out. TTiey are benumbed by cold in- j toxicated by alcohol, suffocated by i foul air, wearied by excessive work, stupified by anaesthetics, excited by I electric currents, stung by physical blows, exhilarated in sunshine, de- pressed in the rain, and killed by pois- ons or violence. In a word, they are responsive or irresponsive under the same conditions and in the same man- ner as a human being, sometimes to a greater and sometimes to a lesser de- gree. No Dead Matter. Although he is a native of India, there is not a trace of Oriental mys- sticim in Dr. Bose, nor of that curious mixture of occultism and metaphysics which we associate with the East. It was soon after his ^aduation from Cambridge that Dr. Bose began the researches which have resultetl in giving an entirely new aspect to various phenomena associated with life. At first he was concerned, not with living things, but with inorganic matter â€" groas, dead, brute matter, as it used to be called. That was in the days when wireless telegraphy was still a dream, when Marconi was just beginning to experiment. If wireless telegraphy was to be- come a commercial reality, something better than this coherer was needed â€" something that was self-recovering, like a human eye. To discover that something involved a sturdy of the whole theory of coherer action. Why ICE CREAM (Good Enough for Babies) Give the chUdren all the Ice Cream they want. It is just the l(ind of nourishment they need during warm weather. It is much better than pastries and candies â€" if it's Ice Cream made as pure and in a sanitary plant like the City Dairy. We ship thousands of Ice Cream Bricks for con- sumption in the home and thousands of gallons of Bulk Ice Cream for consumption in the shops of discriminating dealers everywhere in Ontario. was it necessary to tap the glass tube containing the iron particles? To answer that question Dr. Bose began a painstaking investigation. He found that the iron particles of the coherer grew weary; they were ac- tually fatigued because of overstrain; they had to be revived, and a tap (a stimulus, in other words) revived them. That discovery prompted him to study over substances. Matter proved to strangely capricious. He examined it as a biologist examines a muscle or nerve â€" electrically. A piece of animal tissue that is dead reacts differently from a piece that is alive. There is an electric twitch when the living muscle or nerve is 1 excited, a twitch that can be seen ' with the aid of a galvanometer â€" a delicate detector of electric currents. A dead tissue, on the other hand, gives no response. Tested thus. Dr. Bose ; found matter curiously alive in a real i and not in a figurative sense. He froze metals, and they became torpid like an icy muscle; he poisoned them ' and then cured them; he narcotized I them and afterword revived them; he I pinched them, and they responded ; electrically like living flesh ; he sub- I jected them to ceaseless blows, and they grevt tired and irresponsive; he , allowed them to rest, and the ability ! to respond revived. He performed , hundreds of experiments which prov- ed inorganic matter is not dead. • First of all, Dr. Bose set about the J invention of new instrumentsâ€" de- \ vices of unprecedented sensitiveness. ; If plants are to lay bare their se- crets, they must be given the means ' of expressing themselves. In a broad sense, that is what Dr. Bose has done. His ingenious recorders are pens of : incredible lightness with which lilies i or cabbages may write down their im- i pressions of the outer world in a ; script that we can understand. Use i these instruments intelligently, and i vegetation, hitherto mute, will whis- ' per its story. Plants Sensitive. I Enabled to express itself, a plant is : found responsive to all the stimuli ' I that cause an animal muscle to con- i \ tract. A blow will make a muscle j I twitch; a plant will also twitch when | I struck. A prick or a cut will cause both vegetal and animal tissue to give , I either a mechanical or an electrical I I twitch. Pinch a cauliflower stalk I with tweezers, and a reflecting gal- ! , vanometer â€" a detector of currents ' ' which, in this instance, may be con- â-  j sidered an electrical substitute for a brain â€" can be made to move a beam of light many feet on a screen and thus to visualize the stalk's wincing 1 and recovery. j In order to show that there is a perfect analogy between beating ani- mal and beating plant tissues, Dr. I Bose subjects his plants to all the 'â- â-  test that biologists apply to animals, and few more that he himself con- ceives. A heart is slowed down by either, the biologists say ? "I, too, ; I must experiment with either," de- ' cides the doctor. He places his plant | in a chamber, and blows in some ether vapor mixed with air. The plant re- cords its exaltation. It has been af- fected just as if it were human. Stronger ether vapor is admitted. The leaflets slow down just as does a heart under the influence of an an- esthetic. Will the leaflets stop alto- gether if too much ether vapor is poured into its chamber ? The heart will, we know. The doctor tests the plant. For a minute or two the leaf- lets waver uncertainly; then they stop â€" the plant is quite still. Fresh air is blown into the chamber, and the effect is magical. Very slowly I the leaflet begins to move, and once more the record is traced on the glass plate, weakly and uncertain at first, but gathering strength as the plant drinks in each new whiff of armos- pheric oxygen. Chloroform has an even more pro- nounced effect than either. If a slight excess is administered, the leaflets stop altogether. The leaflet may ! even be killed. Sometimes it takes I as long as half an hour to revive a telegraph-plant that has been thor- oughly chloroformed. Think for a moment of the signifi- cance of these experiments. We have been taught to believe that automat- ically pulsating tissues draw their energy from within, and to call this energy "vital force." If a beating leaf can be arrested amf^ started again simply by controlling external forces, it is evidently absurd to explain its apparent automotic action by mean? of an internal vital force. Dr. Bose offers a new and more plausible the- ory, one that accounts for all spon- taneous movements by the action of external forces only. .\ plant is the plaything of light, electricity, wind, and rain â€" of all nature's forces. Like the currents, drugs, and gases em- ployed in Dr. Bose's experimeats these natural forces act as stimuli. We must imagine the little mole- cules of which plants are constructed, Wot only storing" up all this energy as if it were water received by a vessel, but as receiving much more than they can store. "Like water, the e.x- cess energy bubbles over, as it were, and produces the pulsations that hav« seemed so inexplicable. No. 8965. line and to be gathered at the waist- line on cords. Sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20 ' years. Size 18 requires 4 yards 36- inch material, with 5 4 yards narrow lace for ruffles. I Patterns, 15 cents each, can be pur- chased at your own Ladies' Home Journal Pattern dealer, or from the , Home Pattern Company, 183- A : George Street, Toronto, Ontario. Advice to Dyspeptics WeU Worth FoUowing In the case of dyspepsia, the appe- tite is variable. Sometimes it is raven- ous, again it is often very poor. For this condition there is but one sure remedy â€" Dr. Hamilton's Pills â€" which cure quickly and thoroughly. Sufferers find marked benefit in a day, and as time goes on improve- ment continues. No other medicine will strengthen the stomach and di- gestive organs like Dr. Hamilton's Pills. They supply the materials and assistance necessary to convert every- thing eaten into nourishment, into muscle, fibre, and energy with which to build up the run-down system. Why not cure your dyspepisia now? Get Dr. Hamilton's Pills to-day, 25c. per box at all dealers. the front. On one of these visits in Warsaw he is said to have gone to a restaurant where vodka and wine were secretly sold. Here he found in a private room carousing several of- ficers who should have been at the front. He ordered their arrest, and that night presided over a court- martial which condemned them to die on the morrow. With his own hands he tore their shoulder straps from their uniforms. "You have disgraced your uni- forms ; prepare to die," he said. On the following morning he sent for them. "I have suspended your sentence," he said. "Go to your positions at the front and each of you return with the cross of St. George, or do not re- turn at all." Punishes by Death. When the 10th army corps was cut up on the Grodno front in East Prus- sia the grand duke sent for the gen- eral in command, and is said to have struck him across his face and torn off his shoulder straps. At the time the Germans started their now famous drive from Cracow, Gen. Radko Dimitrieff, the celebrated Bulgarian soldier, was in command of the Russian forces opposing this ad- vance. It is said that to supply the troops in the Carpathians am- munition had been taken from the army of Dimitrieff, so that his troops had only forty rounds of small arm ammunition for each man. A gen- eral commanding an army corps re- fused to obey an order of Gen. Dim- itrieff on the ground that he did not have enough ammunition. The re- sult was the capture of 75,000 Rus- sian soldiers. Immediately the grand duke went to Galicia to preside over the court-martial which tried and condemned to death the general who had disobeyed orders. While the imperial leader does not actually work out the war plans of the Russian army he does influence the general ideas that control Rus- | sian strategy. It is even said that the ultra-conservative and defensive ! tendencies of Gen. Dussky led finally to a breach between him and the grand duke which caused the general's re- tirement from the command of the armies in Poland. This story is merely a rumor. The official statement is that Gen. Russ- ky was suffering from an incurable disease and could not longer bear the great strain of his work. Gen. Russ- ky is said to be a scholar. He is a small man, wears glasses, and cer- tainly looks more like a scholar than a soldier. IS USED BY THE BEST BAKERS AND CATERERS EVERYWHERE, ALSO BY CHEFS IN THE LARGE HOTELS; AND ON DINING CARS. STEAMSHIPS, ETC E.W.GILLEn COMPANY LIMITED TOROMTO. ONT. WrNNlPCO MONTWBAL Around the foundations of most of British forts are broad, circular gal- leries, well ventilated, and fitted with electric light. They are called "lis- tening galleries," because, in times of siege, they are guarded by relays of expert listeners, who keep their ears pricked up for the pick and shovel of the enemy. Hliijira'a Ualmmt Car«a IMpIitliariJk At a height of two thousand feet- all aeroplanes look ver>' much alike, and troops would be liable to fire at their own machines when they pass- ed overhead, were they not all de- corated with an emblem to proclaim their nationality. I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured him with $1.00 worth of MIN.\RD'S LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. Profit on Liniment, $54. MOISE DEROSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. Phillippe, Que. RULES GENERAI^ WITH IRON HAND GRAND DUKE NICHOLAS IS A STRICT DISCIPLINARI.\N. Rough Military Discipline for Men of Hich Rank Pleases . the Soldiers. The Grand Duke Nicholas is the most powerful and beloved figure in Russia to-day. | Strong of will, determined of pur- pose, the grand duke has not the re- putation of being a ma« of enormous intellectual ability; nor does he pre- tend to make the plans that govern the movements of Russian armies. He is surrounded by men of military training and ability whose superior- ity in their own lines he is the first , to recognize. One of his most important duties i is to sit at general headquarters and [ keep order among his various gen- ' erals, whose views are often discord- ant, to see that plans determined upon by the general staff are carried â- â-  out, even by those who oppose them. His high position in the imperial family enables him to treat even gen- erals with rough military discipline 1 which alone can maintain order among the temperamental Slavs. The stern manner with which the grand I duke treats officers of high standing. j who have failed in their duty has en- ! deared him to the rank and file of ; the army, for the Russian soldier in I this war has felt the heavy hand of I his superiors and likes to know that ' these same men are subject to the 1 same discipline. I Severe on Vodka. I Many are the stories current about \ the grand duke's disciplinary methods. ; He favored, at the beginning cf the i war, the prohibition of the sale of i vodka, and he has been particularly ! severe with those officers who have ' broken the rule and preferred the j pleasures of revelry to the harsh j duties and dangers of the firing line. I Nicholas frequently makes unex- pected visits to cities in Poland near Q ^i^ ^ A Absolutely WUre Painless No cutting, no plas- ters or pads to press the sore spot ^% I Putnam's Extractor ^lO â-  makes the corn go without pain. Takes out the itlng overnight. Never falls â€"leaves no scar. Get a 25c. bottle of Putnam's Corn Extractor to-day. ire Corns I Guns with a bore of twelve inches or more can only fire ninety full charges. They are then considered to be worn out, and have to be sent to the foundry to have a new core in« serted. Klaard'B Uaimeat Ourua Cold*. Bta .A.ctors and actresses never act Uy» gether in China. They play in sepa- rate companies of their own. FARM FOR RENT. IF LOOKLSO FO?. A » ARM. CONdULI me. I have orer Two Buodrvd on mf Vet, located in tht* beet eectione of Ott* tarin .4" elie* IT TT Pawfon. Bramptoo. AOXHTS WAJTTXS. A German Mistake. Speaking of the means by which the Kaiser and his War Lords seek to hoodwink his own people as well as other nations, Dr. Miller says:â€" "Their lying has not even been self- consistent. To the multitude Britain is represented as a warlike power leagued with others as warlike as her- self to ruin Germany. To those who have adopted the Prussian faith Brit- ain is represented as decadent, sunk in luxury and exhausted, every mem- ber of whose empire, India first of all, will throw off her hated yoke as soon as she is attacked. The contra- diction between these two representa- tions must sooner or later become ob- vious even to Germans." Klsartf's Unlmaat Coxaa Qarffvt la Cows You Can Be Brave. When you cannot be happy you can be brave. There are things no- body can enjoy, especially aches, pains, disappointments, unkindnesses. and things of that sort. Nobody ex- pects that you boys and girls can be just as happy over your troubles as you are over your blessings. But that does not excuse you for fretting and whimpering just as soon as things go xnTong. If you cannot be happy you can be brave. Miaard'a Liniment Cnrea OUMmper. ' ^M. week. Huuae to house canvoAsinff. ' Wonderful seller*. Either sex. Cralge Brothers, N(a««ra Falls. Ont. NEWSPAPCRS FOR SALE. PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale In good Ontario towns. The most useful and Interesting of all businesses. Full Information oo application to Wilson Publlshlnit Com- pany. T3 West Adelaide St.. Toronto. FARMS FOR SALE. PARMS FOR SALE IN THE r County of Norfolk. Good choice. Prices ranging from $30,00 to $100.00 per acre. Terras reasonable. Apply R. W Bartmann. Lynedoch, Ont, â-  pooa rom »au. RED. OR KLACK .VND WHITB Cocker Spaniel puppies. Mates 1 120. femiUes »15. .\lredales, males $26, I females $15. St. Bernards, males $30. These are the best breeds for C;inada. .^11 pedigreed stock. Suitable for chil- dren or guard for the home. F. B. ' Stewart. Oakworlh Kennels. St. Nicholas Huilding, Montreal, MISCELLANEOUS. CA.VCER. TUMORS, LUMPS. BTC, Internal an>. external. cure<l wltll- cut rain by our aome tr»atment, .'^^f't* Bs before too late. Pr, Bellmai. Medical Co.. Limited. Colllngwood. Oct- ^^ DIRK'S RED MITE KILLER One application KILLS all Mites and pre\ent» their reui>l>earance during the season. Keeps fowls free from body lice. Makes scal.v legs bright and clean* ' Keeps lard, pastrv and sweets free from I ants. Bedbugs will give mi trouble I where used. Write to-day for special ' trial pnoe, booklet fn-iv XarabaU k XarshaU, iriagara FaUs, Ost. One day two laborers were discuss- ing the w-isdom of the present gener- ation. Said one: "We be wiser than our fathers was. and they was wiser than their father was." The second one, after pondering a while and gaz- ing at his companion, replied: "Well. Garge. what a fule thy grandfather must a' been." I^rmatHM-- "AmtncM* Snndsnl 4 Cvel< MsniM Motoc" v.>(!». * C>li'»4«r, i: ij r» H P Hi^r^rK quAl> 1> Sli»nf 3p«r«ti«n Nj vitrulon. Conintt â-  Kr â- ^• ';n*ft MoK't Ctrfni1»* E>tr*io*ly »•"' fc>rf».'r « per ;*»«. »l iim <r*rMrt rmdinf Soti bui'.dfn CirmlVK »n <si4tM. 00^. l_ooK the Slsn- TORONTO. We want an Agent in evory to>A/n. 4. Do You Know Thia? The middle verse of the Bible is the eighth verse of the 118th Psalm. The twenty-first verse of the seventh chapter of Eira contains all the let- ters in the alphabet except the letter "j." The longest verse is the ninth verse of the eighth chapter of Esther. The shortest verse is the ninth verse of the eleventh chapter of St. John. One way to improve the memory is to assume for a moment that you have everything you want ED. 6. ISSUE 3Z-'n. "Oversfern" V Bo ttom Motor Boat Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in Ontario. Letk^h 15 Ft., Beajn 3 Ft. 9 In., Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. .VNT MOTOR FITS. fipectflcatlon No. 2B giving engine prices en request. Get our tiuotatlon* ^n_"Xhe Penetang Line" Commercial and Pleasure Laumches. Row boats and Canoes. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO, LIMITED, PENETANG, CA>I. .. . ^

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