The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1932-04-14, Page 7*
WHEN GASTRIC JUICES
FAIL TO FLOW
Master Nell Hodgc-rt, three-year-
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Hodgert, of Tuckersnrith, had the
misfortune recently to break hjs leg
while playing in the bam.
Oi EXETER TIME5-ADV0CATE wiwa, .wm urn,
* You know how badly an engine runs
'■when it gets clogged up. It’s the
fame with your body when your
gastric—or digestive—juices fail to
glow. Your food, instead of being
^assimilated by your system, simply
^collects and stagnates jnside you,
producing harmful acid poisons, Wlmt
•you need then is a tonic—-Nature’s
Hiiwn tonic—Nature’s six mineral salts.
You get all these six salts in
lyrusehen Sults, and each one of them
,has an action of its own. Together,
they stimulate and tune up the bodily
functions from a number of different
.jingles, The first effect of those salts is
to promote the flow of thq saliva and
-im> aivaken the appetite. The next
5|ftJS>|tion occurs in the stomach, where
the digestive juices are encouraged to
pour out and act upon the food. Again
in the intestinal tract certain of these
salts promote a further ilow of these
■vital juices which deal with partly
■ digested food and prepare it finally
for absorption into the system.
So you see there is no mystery about
IJKxuschen. ' It works on purely scion*
• tific and well-known principles. Prove
,it for yourself.
SHOWER FOR BRIDE-TO-BE
About twenty-five girl friends- of
Miss Lillian Blundell surprised her
at her home jn St Marys and show
ered
ly.
her with gifts of silver recent'
MRS PETER McCALLUM
highly respected resident of
severe fit-
hei’visited
week.
Miss Doris
during the
GREENWAY
(Too late for last week)
Mr, Dean Brown and Russell have
beep, suffering from a
iacl< of the flu.
Mrs. Russell Pollock
father in Fordwich last
• Miss Etta Ulens and
Hicks exchanged visits
holidays.
'Miss Topping spent the holiday at
her home in London.
Miss ether,head has returned from
h visit with friends in Dorchester.
•Mr. R, English is spending this
Week with friends in Detroit.
1 Mr. and. Mrs. Elson have moved
?nto W. T. Ulens house.
Mr. A. Roniphf is recovering from
jthe flu.
M'r. Thompson, Mrs. Leask and
Miss Mai’ion Leask, of Oshawa, were
guests of Mr. J. Laurie and Miss
Leask during the hojidays.
■Mr. J. W. 'Smithers visited his
brother Mr. Albert Smithers who
Jias been suffering from arthritis.
After many discouraging happen
ings the young people of the Unit
ed Church put on their' play last
i^E&ursday night. Even at the last sflhiute their bad lucki seemed to
hold for one member of the cast,
Russell Brown, was taken ill. How
ever Mr. Dawson Woodburn came to
the rescue and filled in most ac
ceptably to the satisfaction of "both
cast and audience. Every one who
was . present reports it was a splen
did play and splendidly presented.
Every one was so good, it is impos
sible to single out any one actor as
being the best. The young people
appreciate the time and effort spent
by Mr. W. Young and Mrs. Good
hand, in conducting the practice.
The proceeds amounted to $2'5.00,
which was very good considering all
the illness, bad roads, bad weather
and genuine bad times.
Next Sunday afternoon Rev. S. J.
Mathers will preach on the question
•“Has God Planned Our Lives?”
A
Blanshard passed away recently in
the person of Mrs, Peter McCallum,
at the home of Mrs. Simon Rae, of
Downje. Deceased was among the
early settjors, of Blanshard, being
born in Whitby on the farm which
is now the site of the Ontario La
des’ College. In 1882 she was
tied to her late husband who
deceased her in the year 1909,
Mr. Rutherford, of Woodham,
ducted the service with interment
in Mitchell Road cemetery.
mar-
pro-
Rev.
con-
TROUBLE IN HENS ALL
“Young men with Jons are not al
lowed to wear out the sidewalk's of
Hensail without paying for the priv
ilege. Owen Geiger is reeve of that
village and he has an eye for reven
ue. But ten young men did not pay
the $3.00 poll tax in 1931, so- they
were summoned! before Justice of
the Peace G. C. Petty by village Con
stable George Hudson. All paid up
except one, The exception was Ro
bert Robison, Jr., whose father is a
member of I-Iensall -council. Robin
son, Sir. advised his son not to pay
the poll tax because the council had
not appointed a collector to pay it
to. This oversight of the court, if
it is an oversight, had no weight
with Magistrate Reid, who mulcted
Robison junior for the $13.00 tax and
in addition $'5.50 court costs. The
case was heard, on March 30th and
accused was given until April 2nd
to dig up the $8/50, which is a con
siderable sum of -money these
days.’’—Goderich Star
SOME OF US REMEMBER
The bustle
Hour sermons
Sweet Adeline
Side Whiskers
Goal oil lamps
The A Harrow
Corduroy roads
Percussion caps
Bird Cage Hats
'Tom Thumb golf
The York shilling
Mary’s little lamb
The 20-cent piece
Waxed moustaches
The teacher’s strap "
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Little Annie Rooney „„
Good. Queen Victoria
The old folks at home
Two little girls in blue
Driving a yoke of oxen
The home-made jumper
The little old brass rail
The old horse and cutter
The little log schoolhouse
The leg-o’-mutton sleeves
The candle with snuffers
A Calithumpian procession
joint political meeting
narrow gauge railway
days the minister called
days of muddy main street.
J
)
The
When women wore rats in their hair
Sold everywhere in
— 25 c and 75c red pkgs.CARTER’S JL^PILIS
AGENTS
kUSBORNE & HIBBERT MUTUAL " FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
’ Head Office, Farquhar, Ont.
■•President FRANK McCONNELL
We-Pres. ANGUS SINCLAIR
DIRECTORS
J. T. ALLISON, SAM’L NORRIS
' SIMON DOW, WILLIAM BROCK.
1 ..JOHN ESSERY, Centralia, Agent
for Usborne and Biddulph
•'OLIVER HARRIS, Munro, Agent
<or Filbert, Fullarton and Logan
W. A. TURNBULL
Secretary-Treasurer
Box 295, Exeter, Ontario
GLADMAN & STANBURY
Solicitors, Exeter
Stephen Council
The Council of the Township' of
Stephen convened at the Town I-Iayl,
Crediton, on Monday, April 4, 19,3-2,
at 1 p.m. All members were pres
ent with the exception of Mr.
ward Gill. The minutes of the
Vious meeting were read and
proved.
Moved by Mr.
onded by Mr. E.
following orders
Sheets be paid:
Hay Stationery Company, station
ery $3.25; John Howald, error in
dog tax, $2.00; Alex Dietrich, kill
ing and burying dog $1.00.
Bruce Mitchell, road 1SB $3.80;
Bruce Mitchejl, road 1, $2.80; S.
White, road 3, $4.2|5; George Hirt-
zel, road 4, $1.50; Frank King, rd.
5, $1.95; Robert Gower, road 7, $7.-
97; William Schwartz, road 8, $5;
Joseph Wilds, road 10, $4.3i5; Jos.
Regier, road 11, $11.3 6; Isaiah Tet
reau road 14, $4.80; Henry Palmer
road 27, $6.50; James Gardner, rd.
16, $43.75; total $98.03.
The council adjourned
again at the Town Hall,
on May 2nd A. D., 1932,
Henry Eilbor, Clerk
Ed-
pre-
ap-
sec_H. Beaver and
Lamport: That the
and Foremen’s Pay
to meet
Crediton,
at 1 p.m.
Pains Around Her Heart.
Shortness of Breath
Mrs. H. Warren, 107 Ferguson Ave. N.( Hamilton.
Ont., writes:—“For some time I had pains around
my heart. I was so short of breath I could hardly
go up stairs, and could not get any sleep at night.
A friend had told me About Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills, so I thought I would give them a trial.
I am thankful I did for after taking three boxes I
felt like a different person; can sleep soundly all
night, and do all my own work tiow»" „ » ,
Sold at all drug and general stores, or mailed direct
on receipt of price by The T. Milbum Co., Ltd.,
Toronto. Ont
*■
. PQDKS
EDWARDSBURG
#
in
* *
CLINTON MAYOR DIES
SUDDENLY
* *
* *
this spring has been our
* * *
About the busiest place
public library.
NAME-—
ADDRESS.
Th* CANADA STARCH CO., Limited, MONTREAL
Send me copy of “Condo'e Frlie Recipe*'1
I eocfeoe t*c. for mailing.
EDITORIAL FonniostDutitimis
the most healthful food by foremost dietitian*.
The bean market is full cliawley bosses,
********
Of course the consumer pays the taxes—when he can.
****** **
Those new expenses are giving our pocketbook a headache,
* *
town
• * *
In regard to the new taxes that are so much to the fore these
days, there’s nothing for it hut paying them.
* * * * * * * *
And now the new moon started housekeeping away in the
north and lying flat on its back. This spring its just one jabber-
whoolzed thing after another.
** ****** -e,
Last fall we insisted that the government should undertake
certain obligations. We are now finding out that the government
did certain things for which we are expected to pay, The govern
ment is just ourselves.
********
COMFORT IN THIS
While prices for all commodities that most of us have to
are low and the financial sledding for a good many is really
ficult, it is well to remember-that the foundations of financial
professional success usually are laid in the days of adversity,
•
sell
dif-
and
*******
“W’en fawtha paiped the pa’lah
You couldn’t see ’ini fawr paist;
Dawbin1 it ’eah and dawbing it theya
Paist 'an paipah everywheya
Mawniaw was stuck the ceiling.
' The kids wuh stuck the floah -
You nevah saw a family so stuck hup
* * * * * * *
WAKING UP
Folks are waking up in some particulars. One evidence that
the sleep that followed the drunken orgy of finance of the fatal
twenties is passing in the way in which folk are talking business.
For instance we are hearing less of “world conditions” when fi
nances are being discussed,
is seldom mentioned.
befoa.”
*
Even our old friend “the depression’’
* « * « *
in the British House of Commons,
Mr. Chamlberlain, Chancellor of the Exchequer, had this to say in
respect to the hard times that are now the lot of the world: “I feel
confident that the 'people of this country are not going to jepordize
what has been so hardly won by any premature relaxation of their
efforts.” Wise words these. There is still a great deal of cheap
optimism abroad, a form of light effervescence that leads, some folk
to talk about good times being right at hand. ’ All such
misleading.
The average
woods. The Dr.
heeded just now.
* • *
Speaking the other day
business of this country is not yet out
Coue school of financial doctors should
talk is
of the
not be
THE GINGERBREAD DID IT
That the railroads of this country are in a bad wajr is
lines run with
that the pas-
when it comes
stated. It is said that a great anany of the feeding
an unprofitably small number of passengers, and
senger service on the mainlines are not satisfactory
■to profits. The same is said of steamboat traffic.
Careful observers openly assert that the railways and steam
boats are where they are financially simply because they over-did
it when it came to providing luxuries for a certain class of travel
ing public. • .Some traveling railway coaches
came to be travelling palaces. Little wonder a
like this simply could not make such costly .but
methods a paying prosposition.
When it came to general trading things were
lady would phone to the storekeeper for a spool of
package of yeast cakes and expect the dealer to use a five hundred
(dollar outfit in giving immediate delivery, meanwhile meekly
thanking his lucky stars that her ladyship did not insist that the
.spool was the wrong
very sorry that she
luxuries should not
them. At their best
and steamboats
young country
non-productive
no better,
thread or for a
number and demand a second trip, she being
had made the mistake. Folk who demand
complain when they are asked to pay for
luxuries do little hut invite trouble-.
❖* «
O VERGOVERNED ?
Serious thought is being given to our present method of con
ducting public business. No doubt present scarcity of money is
hurrying- up considerably .what a great many thoughtful "men have
had in their minds for sometime.
Folk who think in this way tell us that we should abolish our
It is alleged that the average county official has
Where we now have three
county councils.
. not enough to do to keep him warm.
Jails with their expensive- staffs, folk who think in this way, con
tend that wo .can very well get along with one. Where we have
three treasurers and three clerks and three engineers and
three bailiffs and three head constables we can, it is asserted, very
well get on with one. And so on all the way' through with our
county officialdom. It is believed, too, that where we now have
three judges we can get on very nicely with one. It is further
• pointed out that the county councils themselves have very little
to do, that the meetings of these bodies are largely midsummer
and midwinter otuings for which the participants are handsomely
paid.
These same advocates of getting rid of unecessary wheels in
the machinery of government, contend that the number of mem
bers of parliament, both provincial and federal, could well >be re
duced by at least, one third.
- h ■Of course when this mutter is mentioned there ig a great deal
of lip-pursing and pooh poohing, and it will-never-doing among
the big wigs and the offcialdom who believe their nests feathered
.till the funeral director gives them and all their works the clos-1”
ure. The agitators allege that they get no satisfactory answer
when they ftsk what county officials do to earn such handsome sal
aries. Nor is the response at all'gratifying, we are informed, when
returns are asked regarding the officials of and the members of
the provincial and dominion governments. Those who think id
this way remind us that officials have been dismissed by the hun
dreds in some quarters without the slowing down of any worth*
While activity by one whit. This encourages, the alleged reform
ers to ask if the axe may not bo still further wielded in the publie
interest
CROWN
BRAND
CORN SYRUP .
NEW LEGISLATION WILL SAVE
HURON COUNTY $14,000
By reason of the new legislation
affecting old age pensions, by which
the municipalities share is reduced
to 10 per cent., the County of Huron
will save about $14,000 a year on
this. item. There also will be a pay
ment coming of $10,000 as the
amendment to the act is made re
troactive to August 1, 1931. Inas
much as most inmates of the county
house of refuge are pensioners, near
ly all of their money going to the
county for their upkeep, the cost of
that institution is now practically
nil and the old age pension bill
cut to a minimum.
MRS. ELIZABETH TRUEMNER
PASSES
is
born on June
and was unit-
the late Mr.
27, 187'5, and
There passed away at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Louis A.
Prang, at Zurich, Mrs. Elizabeth Ot
to, relict of the late Wilhelm Truem
ner, on Wednesday, March 30, 1932,
aged 85 years, 9 months and 27
days. Deceased was
3, 1846 in Germany,
ed in marriage to
Truemner on March
7 years later Mr, Truemner through
an accident met death. Four years
later Mrs. Truemner, with her two
little daughters decided to immigrate
to 'America, and finally landing at
Zurich, where she was a resident
tijl the time of hei* death. Surviving’
are her two daughters, Mrs. L. A.
Prang, of town, and Miss Elizabeth
Tuemner, of Detroit. Also one sis
ter and one brother survive living
in Germany, and one brother in
New York city. The remains were
laid quietly to rest in the Lutheran
cemetery on Saturday afternoon,
with Rev. E. Turkheim, the depart
ed’s pastor officiating.
Residents of Clinton and vicinity
were shocked to learn of the death
of Mayor S. S. Cooper which oc'curr-
ed at his home on Tuesday, April
5th. Mr. Cooper had been confined
to the home a month or more andi
for some days was not able to bb
out of bed. The town Nag flew at
half-mast -jn respect to the town's
chief executive officer. (The late
Mr. Cooper was born in Ireland and
when twenty years of age came to
Canada, He built and operated a
planing mill in Clinton. His wif&-
formerly Margaret Hana predeeeasr-
ed him four years ago. One daughter
survives.
YOUNG LAD PASSES
Mr. and Mrs. John Snider, of
Brucefield have the sympathy of
many friends, in the loss of their son
Harry which occurred in Scott Mem
orial Hospital, Seaforth. Harry had
been aijing for several days and wan
taken to the hospital where he un
derwent an operation for appendi
citis from which he never fully re
covered. Harry was a general fa
vorite and will be greatly missed
by his chums, his sorrowing parents
his brother and three sisters. The
funeral took place to Baird’s ceme
tery the service being conducted by
Rev. Mr. Dugan assisted fey Rev. W.
A. Bremner. Among the many
flowers and wreaths there was one -
from the choir and Circle of St. An
drew's United Church, London; Sun
day School class; congregation and
choir of Clinton Presbyterian
church; choir of Kincardine Presby
terian Church, the Metropolitan
Stores, London and the Superinten
dent and Nurses of (Scott Memorial
Hospital, Seaforth.
openly