The Huron Expositor, 1917-02-09, Page 6•
3Y
I
meneemedeme -atm.
timeeem.-
eeit -•
etie
THE IIITRON EXPOSITOR
A TREATI
on the
Nor
FREE
t ti,16 yo
lrny of tbod s
aiktin orses and
tretthem.
KEIVEMILit'S
SPAVIN CURE
are ond reliable remedy. Itwill
ems Ringbone, Splint, and other bony
enlargements. It is a.Tso a reliable re-
medy for Ctribek_. Sprains, Bruises, Cuts
and Lameness. It does the work safely
id at meet expe.nse.
Mr. Cart Anderson, Grand Vrairie
Cityi-Alta., write;: "Please send rue a -
copy of your Treatise on: the Horse. I
bave used Kendall's spaviu
Cure for swellings, galls,
and all kindsof lameness,
also end it a success."
Irdzsdairs Spavin Cure is
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' at your local
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AS
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Each "Pape's Diapepsin" digests 300C
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Time itt in five minutes all stom-
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POLITICAL MOVE WON
SPANISH KING.
HAT took place in SPaint
the ' other day, wben
Count de Romanones
Placed his resignation as
Premier in the hands of the King,
and the King, almost immediately,
requested him to remain in ()Dice, Is
[ilia another phase of, what has been
happening in Spiain for the last five
i years. It was I 41 November, 1912,
that the Liberal Premier Canalejas,
well known as 11.4 earnest reformer,
was assassinatein the streets of
Madrid, and the King outraged, all
political traditiop. by calling upon an-
other Liberal, in the person of Count
de Romanones, to take over the pre-
miership. The system of "alternat-
ing parties," so dear to the heart of
Sagasta, was set aside, for the first
time since its establishment by the
great statesman from. Torrecilla de
Cameros, and the King made a bid
for liberty of action as significant as
it was far-reaching in its effects-.
Since that time incident has f 01 -
lowed incident, each one showing
that the King had no intention of
giving way on the points he had
gained. He has manifested a desire
t6 take a broad and liberal *Jew on
many cotes -floes; to break new
ound, as it Were, on many issues,
,between. himself and his people;
to depart from tradition, and fear-
lessly to advocate change wherever
change promised to be beneficial.
Conservative Spain was constant -1Y
ree.eiving shocks. It would open its
Big Snap
ie
rive and seta quarter acres of
e_hoice rick soil adjoieing Goderleb,
town, twenty minutes walk from the
square wi a splendid fruit orchard
and small frame buildings: Must
be sold at once and can be bought fax
less team $1,000. This is a Real bar-
gain. No better spot on earth for
garden truck or, poultry farm. If you
want it apply today for part:knits=
inurtediate possession. given. We are
jiluron's largest teal estate dealexa.
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1- 1 soma= ONT •
THICK, GLOSSY NAIR
rem FROM DANDRUFF
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of Danderinm
If you care for heavy hair that glis-
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life; has au incomparable softness and
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'Just oue application doubles the
beauty of your hair, besides It imme-
diately dissolves every particle of
dandraff. You an not- have nice
heavy, healthy 'hair if you have
dandruff. This destructive scurf robs!
the hair of its lustre, its strength and
its very life, aud if not overcome it
produces a feverishness and itching of
the scalp; the hair roots famish,
loosee and die; then the hair falls out
fasten Serely get a 25 -cent bottle of
Knowiton's Danderine from any drug
store eee. jure, try it-
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4
C0110 NOT SWEEP
BACK WAS SO SORE.
Women are coming to understand that
weak, lame and aching backs from which
ithey suffer so much excruciating 'pain
tend agony are due to wrong action of the
.kidneys.
011 the first sign of any weakness in
the back Doan's Kidney Pills should be
taken
Mrs. L. GottallaW,, 683 Manning Ave.,
Toronto, Ont., writer "I take great
pleasure in writing you, stating the bene- where many other,persons of ner sex
fit I have received by using Doan's Kid- are engaged upon similar errands.
ney Pills. About three years ago I was Many women are flitting or standing
terribly afflicted with lame back, and i about, as the case may be. Through
was so bad I could not even 4:weep the 1 the maze of skirts the lady whom
floor. I was advised to use Doan's rid- you are accorapanying, that is, are
ney Pits, aed before I had used one box folloWing threads her -way. 'with
on their store, of nervous energYs Sol-
diers frora cities or factory districts,
. ; /or examele, are ,fati more likely to
I begrime victims of shell -shock than
men from the farms or the country.
Men satering from shell -shock
are always unwounded. "No ease of
shell -shook is ever found to occur in
a soldier who has a wound, no mat- •
ter hew trivial," a,y0 a. British medi-
cal report, appears that the
rending of the flesh by a bullet or
fragment of 'shrapnel acts as a sort.
of safety valve against shelf -shock,
localizing in the injury the destruc-
tive force that otherwise is spent on
the nervous system.
"Here is a descriptioa of the typi-
cal case: A shell exploded In the
vicinity of a poldier. He is un-
wounded, but violently shaken, per-
haps knocked over or buried. He
loses his senses -for a varying period,
and his nervous system, having suf-
fered. a yiolent shalting, is no longer
what it was. He starts at the least
h
end more* people with chest and
throat troubles have tried to cure
them by pouring cough syrups,
lung tonics and the like into their
.stomachs. All a mistake! The
Peps way is different.
Peps are tablets made up of Pine
extracts and medicinal essences,
which when put into the Mouth
turn into healing vapors. These
are breathed down direct to the
lungs, throat and bronchial tubes
— not swallowed down to the
stomach, which is not ailing. Try
a 50c. box of Peps for your cold,
your cough, bronchitis or asthma.
All druggists and stores or
Co., Toronto, will supply
Peps
ltell=12•110
terest on the way?" What the Nomad
wishes to know is, what does polite-
ness require that a man shall do
under such circunista
sake -of his obligati°
whom he -IS accompa.
jostle and displace al
who cross his path? Or does the
obligation to -treat all WOM011 "with
courtesy excuse him for letting this
lady pass out of his reach?
The question is really the old one
whether a man's paramount duty of
courtesy is te the 'individual. woman
-or to the entire sex..The two obliges
times not infrequeotly conflict. You
are seated in a car' by the side of the
lady hora you' a e accompanying,
You. ar her moan r. Everything on
earth I supposed !to yield to that
con.sid ration. You ape in conversa-
tion w th her, and she expects you
to kee up the conversation. All the
seats in the car are occupied. Enter
now a woman of gentle mien, who
stands in front of or near you. Now,
what are you going to do? Give up
your seat out of politeness to the
lady who is standing, or keep it out
of consideration to the lady whom
you are escerting? Most men's in-
clination is . to give up the seat and
stand. But that is not the feminine
idea of the man's duty. The cavalier
is not all women's cavalier, but a
particular woro.an's cavalier. Try it
and see if it does not turn out that
way.
ces? For the
to the lady
Ying, must he
'other women
COtINT 1)E ItOMANONES.
papers of a morning and discover,
for instance, that Senor Azcarate,
the -
leader of the 'Republican Party, had
Visited the royal palace; had been
graclOwsly received by the King, and
had conferred with him on 'matters
relating to the Institute of Social
Refers, of which the Republican
leader was president. The King was
constantly doing thil kind of thing.
Indeed, he Iost no opportunity of
improving the relations between .the
Crown and all parties in the eountrg-
Iti such more liberal aims the King
has olways had the support of. Count
de. Romanones. Count de Roma -
mines has always given the impres-
sion of standing for a greater Politi-
cal freedom; for a strong opposition,
as far as such opposition has been
possible, to all that is contained in
the phrase "making elections," and
to that widespread system of intri-
gue, which still permeates to a great
exteut every phase of Spanish poli-
tics, When, therefore, he was lately
brought face to lace with one of the
worst instances of such intrigue
which recent years have afforded, he
acted aidth precisely that political
wisdom which bas come to be expect -
d of him, whilst he received from
the King just that support which the
continuance of the policy which
Ring Alfonso has followed for the
East four years would require. For
some time past, Count de Romanones
Nadi been subjected to the most
violent attacks from the Germano-
phile press..It had accused him, not
only of strong partiality to the
Allies, but, after the manner of such
attacks, of being financially interest-
ed in commercial companies trading
with the Allies. Popular Ny inpathy,
however, was wholly with the Prime '
Minister, and Count de Romanones,
with all the ability of a master hand,
seized upon the only method by
which the views of the Ring could be
made clear. He resigned. For a few
hours the country waited on tiptoe,
and then came the King's decision.
Count de Romanones retained the
premiership, and his entire Cabinet
stayed with him. The next move in
the march of events, fraught with
much more significance than appears
en the surface, 'kr ".:11 be awaited with
interest.
BETWEEN TWO STOOLS.
Problems in Manners Faced by
Mere Man.
There is an evil under the sun, in.
connection with. the proceedings of
good and gentle ladies, of which the
Nomad has been the victim, and of
which he desires, with the fullest re -
sped and consideration, to complain.
It is this: You accompany a lady
on a shopping tour, or, let us say,
"Just while I buy two or three little
things." 7he lady enters a store,
War Functions of Opposition'.
"How far does the fact that the
nation is at war, and. fighting for its
whole future, affect the constitution -
el duty of His Majesty's Opposition.?
We suggest that thin grave fact af-
fects only some of the methods of
the Opposition, not its essential:
principles of action. It is not at all
the duty of the Opposition, though
the Tapers and Tadpoles of politics
are apt to thin so, to try to turn
out the Government to lower its
credit in. the country, or to obstruct
its acts. Except at thoge points at
which the Opposition considers the
Government policy to he seriously
in the wrong, and about which the
Opposition proclaims an alternative
policy of its own, it is the duty of
the Opposition—as Wellington and
Peel, Russell and Gladstone repeat-
edly explained—loyally to support
the Go-vernment; and 'to mainta.in its
authority. Only when the Opposi-
tion considers that the Government
is failing not merely to take the
right course, but failing also to take
the course desired by the electorate,
is the Opposition warranted in at-
tacking the very existence of a gov-
ernment which has ceased, as it is
claimed, to be carrying out the
popular will. Now, with regard to
the energetic emiduct of the war, the
Front Opposition Beech has no dis-
agreement with the Government, and
it does not pretend that. the Govern-
raent is not carrying out the wishes.
of the great majority of the nation.
it has therefore, on the main subject
of the day, no ground for difference',
no ,justification for. any action tend-
ing to weaken the Governmett, least
of all for seeking to turn the Gor-,‘
ernment out of office. Moreamer, so
tar as the administration relates to
military or naval affairs, and even
to the relations with our Allies or
our opponents in. the war, it is prac-
tically impossible to criticize pub-
licly any mistakes or shortcomings
without imperilling °national inter-
est. Thus, over a large part of the
field of action, war suspends the
critical function of the Opposition,
and puts upon it the patriotic duty
of strengthening, instead of oppos-
ing the Government."—From "The
New Statesman."
1 sound, he cannot sleep, he as Pa ns
in the head, and his hands are slight-
ly tremulous.
"Some men., on recovering from
uneOnsciousuess, are found to have
loot the use of special senses, Bight,
hearing, or speech. This Is a purely
• functional- loss, and recoveries may
occur at any time, weeks or months
later, in a way suggesting that the
age of miracles is not yet past, But
the fact remains that a great many
never recover, while others only im-
prove under the most painstaking
treatment.
"Itypnotisat la occasionally su.c-
cessful, and rather good results are
• being obtained in other cases by sini-
ply placing the patient under chloro-
forin. A man who had been deaf and
durab for three months was . placed
under light anaesthette. During the
struggling stage various incoherent
sounds proceeded from his lips, and
finally these crystalized into words
and the patient continued able to
use his voice when he came out of
hits anaesthetic sleep.
"Quite a number of cases have
been similarly treated with chloro-
form, the theory being that some
great nervous shock is needed to
cure a condition that has been orig-
inally caused by a shock., and that
has been kept in being by the raan's
feeling a helplessness."
In addition. there are many men
wile nave never been subjected to
sudden violent contact with the ex-
ploding. of a shell or mine, but who
have brokea down under the steady
day-by-day strain of the trenches
and the booming of the guns,
"In a mainly urbanized popula-
tion like the British," says the re-
port # "many are on the verge of
nenresthenia — that le, possess a
nervous system whose energy is soon
exhausted, and war acts as the im-
mediate prompt exciting cause to
tumble them over."
GERMAN WRITER SAYS ALLIES'
TERMS GOOD BASIS FOR '
TREATY.
ORE than most Germans
Maximilian Harden has
the habit of seeing
straight and far. He
is not afraid to face present truth or
look the inevitable future in the face.
It is not surprisillgmtherefore, that
An the reply of tha,ilaillited Powers to,
,
President 'Wilson he sees the basis
of a possible understanding, though
we may marvel not a little that he is
permitted to publish in his paper,
The Zukunft, Views directly opposed
to the general German opinion and
to the imperial policy as officially
proclaimed. Of the Entente note in
which the objects of the war were
set forth Harden says:
"An understanding seems possible
on the general principles of the note.
Freedom, justice, civilization, peac'e
--that is what all who return from
the trenches are willing to develop,
as well as the reduction -of militar-
ism. Rude words do not ring long.
"A greater obstacle is the terri-
torial question, and our enemies
rightly consider their claims small
as eompared with those of the people
who want to eat up Belgium, South -
ABOUT SHELL SHOCK„ ,
Some Facts Regarding Peculiar
Form of Casualty.
It has been found that cases of
shell -shock are far more common M
the British armies than among thelm
Frelicor Germans, while in the
Balkan and Turkish armies it is
compaxatively rare. This is probably
due to the fact that British armies
contain. a larger proportion of men
whose manner of living or whose oc-
cupationr have made large inroads
•aaall••===•••••
10 CENT 'CASCARETS"
IF BILIOUS OR COSTIVE
amaladmmlfwimpravaei
For Sidle Headache, Sour Stomach,
• Sluggish Liver and BoWels--They
work while you sleep.
there was A great improvement, and
amazing speed. What she (toes with •
I eoistrost:.Tket letwveil°be drawn
bacit " e
say,
lv
Doan's Kiclney Pills are put up in an
back was completely -cured. I highly oe
hillIlt ven.turewnto
reneentnend 'Doan's' for lame
oblong grey .b9x, the trade_mark is _ * 1 But one thing is certain, it is im-
possible for a man to keep up with
Maple Leaf, so accept no other. '
her unless he knocks persons of the
Price 50c..per box, 3 boxes for $1. ' 25,
opposite sex to right and left; and
at all dealers, or nrailed direct on receipt
of prim by prEce T. mrtanistN c.a.. being a man, that is precisely what
he cannot do. The result is that you
Iimitreen; Toronto, Ont. , fs" fall far behind the lady whom you
eiyhetio'rtiering, direct specifrDosu.!
i are Sapposed to be accompanying;
_ you lose sight of her altogether; and
_
ffbyeha,neeeeecoynonustuioccniteewdinh herer-
establityingth
at the side of some counter where
she is making her purchase, she says
coolly to you, "Why, what became of
you? Didinou fin.deome pleasant in-
-
dr�nCrj
FOR FLETCHER'S
C ASTI/PIA
Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges-
tion, SallowiSkin and Miserable Head-
aches come from a torpid liver and
clogged bowels, which cause your
stomach to become filled with undi-
gested food, which sours and ferments
like garbage in a swill barrel. That's
• the first step to untold misery—hada
gestion, fetil gases, bad breath, yellow
skin mental fears, everything that is
horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret
to -night will give your constipated
bowels a thorough cleansing and
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep—a 10 -cent box
from your druggist will keep you feel-
ing good for months.
....a...,
vrhieli at the' time was considered
unsatistactorn, but which his grand-
son regarded as a work of Cour-
-
ageous wiedoinSP
This,is not the way the Generals
and. Admirals talk. The rainfall
Writers, the newepa.pers, all the
;Mixes we are accustomed to hear
coining out of Germany reject the
terms of the Entente note as insol-
ent, as putting impossible humilia-
tions upon Gernsa,ny. "We will
make answer with our sword" is the
text of most of the comment. Hardee.
actually puts himself in the enemy's
place and points out that the remak-
ing of the map as proposed by the
IA lies cannot seem to them so very
extreme when they consider that
they deal -With Powers that want to
"eat up" Belgium, a good deal of
aFrance and Russia, besides - Serbia
and Roumania. Peace parleys are
begun in that spirit.
He is obviously mistaken about
France. She will not be put off with
suave gestures or fine words. Her
lost provinces roust be restored. But
when the other terms of the Allies
are held to be not impossible, as
'worth considering if freedom, jus-
tice, civilization, and peace are the
ends sought, it will not be long be-
fore Alsace and Lorraine'are brought
within the field of discuspione There
are compelling reasons far a change
of opinion and purpose in. Germany.
I Harden does not epeak of them, but
he speaks because of thein. No Ger-
mao would seek to discover a pos-
sible basis of understanding in the
Entente terms if Germany were not
conscious of defeat, for the terms
themselves proclaim her defeat. They
dispel her dreams, put an end to her
ambition to be the master of Europe,
they demand the relinquishment of
all she has won by arms after forty
years of intense preparation. Ac-
cepting such terms she will rattle the
sabre no more.
MAX :HAetDEN
ern France, Belfort; Poland, Cour-
land, Serbia, Roumania, even Vene-
tia and Egypt. ei
"The great difficulty will be Al-
sace, but I have. reason to believe
that the peace possibilities will not
be smashed on the walls of Stress -
burg. Niue -tenths of the French
nation do not wish to challenge Ger-
maxiy's revengefulness and would be
satisfied with a beau geste on Ger-
many's part.
"It is a pity that the heads of the
Central Powers failed ' to say on
what reasonable terms' they were
ready to end the war and arrange to
live- at peace with the rest of human-
ity. Now we see impossible terms
stated and the people gnashing their
teeth. Remember this: the great
Frederick also signed a '3eace treaty
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR1A
Maxim. Gun.
One of the Maxim guns, says Sir
Hiram, was designed to fire a shell
weighing about a pound. These
shelld were, of course, expensive,
costing about $1.60 each. On a de-
monstration of the gun before Li
Hung Chang it fired 400 of the
shells, costing about $650, in one
minute. The old Chinese statesman,
011 being told the cost of the shell,
said, "This gun fires altogether too
fast for China." The King of Den-
mark's comment was, "That gun
would bankrupt my little kingdom
in about two hours."
Drafting the Drones.
A wealth recruitment committee
will be headed by a ehairraan in the
role of Lord Derby. As the states-
manlike originator of this scheme
logically remarks, "It was appro-
priate that a representative of
wealth should have been charged
with the task of appealing for men;
and it will be no less desirable that
a representative of men should be
the directive spirit in an appeal for
wealth." Local committees would
evolve from the. central committee:
"following the precedent of • the
Derby .committees, on which no mall
eligible for military service was al-
lowed to act, the membership of the
Wealth Recruitment Committee will
be conthied to workingmen, and. pre-
ferably to mean earning- not more
til art thirty shillings a week. Each
member will have a list of twenty-
four. persons on- whom to call with
full particulars as to their wealth;
to these will previously have been
sent a letter explaining the greatness
of the national need and asking how
much they are willing to sacrifice."
Attested surplus incomes will be
ranged in groups, the test being
those of over 190,000 pounds a )ear.
saiSZEigal
•
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Made in one grade only—the highest
TO INVESTORS
THOSE WHO, FROM TIME TO TIME, HAVE
FUNDS REQUIRING INVESTMENT
MAY PURCHASE AT PAR
DOMINION OF CANADA DEBENTURE STOCK
11.
IN SUMS OF $SOO, OR ANY MULTIPLE THEREOF
Principal repayable 1st October, 191.6.
Interest payable half -yearly, ist April and 1st October by
cheque (free of exchange at any chartered Bank in Canada) at
the rate of Eve per cent per annum from the date of purchase.
Holders of this stock will have the privilege of surrendering
at par and accrued interest, as the equivalent of eash, in pay-
ment of any allotment made under any future war loan issue in
Canada other t1ai an issue of Treasury Ms or other like short
date security.
Proceeds of this stock are for war purposes only.
A commission of one-quarter of one per cent will be allowed
to recognized bond and stock brokers on allotments made in
respect of applications for this stock which bear their at3.112R.
For application forms apply to the Deputy Miriater of
Finance, Ottawa.
DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE, OTTAWA
OCTOBER 7th, 1915.
Fs,
N.,
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Look a
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a teaspoo
Figs," and
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b.nve a er.e
your14
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