HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-07-18, Page 3t Fri
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/JULY 18, 9
Make Use of the M
It is entire unneccessary for you to _leave
-your work or lose. _valuable time to' make
a tip to the batik,
Bank withus by Mail lend your deposits
iu by money ordef or registered post and
the amounts wilt- be.-ackowleded and
placed to yruir credit upon receipt.
TIE DOMINION
522
SEAFORTdri BRANCH: R. M. JONES, Manager.
i1[1 111(03[ [ 11101 011110 [11th[11110 f1tl1M11I11111g111111liilifl[11ilUMt111tslMi[111111111111[ 10
DISTRICT MATTERS
HULLETT
School Report—The following is the
report of School Section No. 1, Hullett,
for June. Sr. IV. Hall Farnham,
Willie Livingston, Ross McGregor, Joe
Hugill. Senior Glazier,
Kathleen. Livingston, Ernie Dales, Don
Dale. Jr. III (a)—Mary Mann, Geo.
Glazier, Pearl Mero, Frank Fowler.
Jr. (41—Willie Wright., Walter
Dale, Gordon McMicha,e1. Sr. II—
Emma Mann, Gladys Freeman, Myrtle
Dale, Agnes Adams, Flossie, Mere,
Alym Dale, ‘Bob McMichael, Reggie
aVleMichael. Part II—Elmer Dele,
Agnes Wright, Wilfrid Freeman.
Stewart Dale Beatrice Adams. Primee
Promotions to Jr. IV -2 -Kathleen Liv-
nigaton, Wilfrid Glazier, Don Dale,
Ernie Dale, George Glazier To. Senior
Third, Mary Mann Pearl Mero, Frank
Fowler, rei.cornmencled..A. Farnham,
SUMMER COMPLAINTS
KILL LITTLE ONES
Ab the first sign of illness during
the hot wkather give the little ones
Baby's Ovirf Tablets or in a few 'hours
he may be beyond aid. These Tablets
prevetet summer complaints if
1.1
being sure that the bottom of
iioiler is filled with water, Take
o the fire and when slightly cool add
th beaten whites of three eggs. Turn
in o a pudding mold ind. chill and
serve very cold.
Bavarian. Creams,.—There is almost
en,dless variety in bavarian, creams,
and all that is necessary to make them
is gelatine, and sdrne, arhipped cream,
With summer berries' yeti. can make
TT:ii4do this soak about two tablespoens
of , granulated gelatine in a half: cup
of cold water for fifteen minutes. and
then roar over this a half cupe
boiling water to dissolve it. From
fresh berries prepare tee cups of juice
aad add. this with a half cup of sugar
to the gelatine. Place the dish in. cold
water and beat with an egg whip.
When it is cool place on. the ice and
then as it starts to thicken beat a
few minutes longer. Now add a half
pint of cream that has been. whipped.
Place whole berries in 'a fruit 'mold
or in individual eups and pour over
the mixture. gym thoroughly and
turn out -the nfeld or the cups and
serve with More whipped cream if
desired. Strawberries, bananas, rasp-
berries or Pineapple may be used in
this way, o
. NEWEST NOTES OF SpIENCEi
An aeroplane that actually Lifts its -
self from the eround with flapping
win.gs has been built by a French in -
A mail peuch has been invented that
its th frame of a bicycle and relieves
given occasionally to the well child letter earriersteshoulders of loads..
and will promptly relieve these trou- ; Olives are the longest lived fruit
bles if they come on, suddenly. Baby's trees, some in Syria hiving borne
Own Tablets should always be kept in . abuhdant crops for more 'than foe/.
every home where there are yoUng centuries.
children. There is no other medicine Harness to surround baby's ilegs
as good and the mother has the guar- and body and hold it secarely in a.
antee of a government analyst that ; chair has been patented by a wonta.n
tInCy are absolutely safe. The Tab- inventor.
lets are sold by medicine dealers or A patent has been granted a French
by mail at 25 cents a box from The : inventor for a process for drying and
Dr Williams' Medieine Co., Brockville,' bleaching seaweeds for packing pur-
TEN-MINUTE-DESSERTS .
Is there anything- more trying in
warm weather „for housewife or When a girl in her teens becomes
cook . than the necissity of enveig peevesh, listless and dull, when nothing
to thilik of one or two interesting and ; seems to -.interest her and dainties do
; not tempt her appetite, You maY be
easy aeeserts every day of the week,
week .ia and week out. ' Perhaps in:certain that she needs more good blood
the winter time You solve the dessert than her system is provided with. Be-
probleth frequently with pie. Well, ih i fore long her pallid cheeks, frequent
summer, with the exception of the oc- I headaches,. and breathlessness , and
casiottal fruit or berry pie, this sort 1 h. eart palpitation will confirm that she
'of dessert is really too heavy to be : 15 anaemic. Many mothers as the re -
tempting. We want some sort of i stdt of theiritown girlhood experience
dessert that we can take from the ice- can. promptly detect the early signs of
I.iox. Something that is chilled if it ana.emia, and the eviseenother does not
es not frozen, and we want something wait for the tr uble to develop fur -
that we care Make quickly and some- ther, but at once ' res her daughter a
and
thing, moreever, that is so simple as
to be very easy to digest, for warm
days seem warmer when we have to.
contend with heavy, soggy desserts, a hold upon the system.
Out a their experience thousands
course math Dr. Wil
which renew the blood sup
banish anaemia before it has obtai
Quite- a family of desserts can .be
made frem cuetard. The custard may
be made well in advance Of the 'meal
when it is to be served and set a-
way in the refrigerator t6 cool. makes in the development or womanly
health. Every headache, every gaep
for breath that ,follows the slightest
exertion by the anaemic girl, every
pain. she suffers in her back and limbs
are reproaches if you.have not taken
the best steps to• give yeur weak girl
Separate the eggs and beat the vvhites new bloode-and the only sure way to
of mothers know that anaemia is the
sure rbad to worse ills. They know
the difference that good .red blood
Floating Island.—To make thie you
will need two cups- of milk; four eggs,
one-third cup of granulated sugar,
four tablesplains of powdered sugar,
a pinch of salt and a half teespoon Of
vanilla or other flavoring extracts.
aterY stiff and add the'eowdered sugar; do so is through, the us Of Dr. Wil -
making a meringue. Now pour the
xnilk into a wide sauce pan, and bring
to the steathing point. Now drop oa
the hot milk tablespoons of the mer-
ingue and allow 'the..,Weces of meringue
te poach. Take out with a peefarated
ladle and drain on a nlatter. Now mix
the granulated sugar, the Qzeg yolks
and the salt in the top of a double
boiler and. pour onto them the hot
milk in which the meringue was poach-
ed, beating all the time.' Set the top
in the bottom (if the double beiler and
let the mixture cook until it thickens,
If it separates immediately place the
dish ever cold water and beat brisk-
ly with \an egg beater. When this
cu.stard is cool pour into a dessert
Hams' Pink Pills.
New, rich red blood is infused into
the syatem by eetry dose of these pills.
From this new rich blood springe
good 'health, an increased aPpetite,
new energy, high spinits and perfect,
sieernanly develepmente Give your
daughter Dr. Williams' pink Pills, arid
take them yourself ea. note liche
proMptly their influence is felt in bet-
ter health.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine or by mail post-
paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'
gedicine Co., Brockville, Onty
HURON NOTES
dish or into individual dessert dishes _At &largely attended meeting 'of
and place tae raeringues -on the top the 'league and congregation in the
or place.a single piece of meringue on .League room of Ontario street Meth -
each dessert dish. Put into the re- odist church Clinton, on Monday even-
frigerater and chill lentil tithe to ing the pastor, Rev. J. A. Agnew, was
serae. If you like you put a dab presented iley the League members with
of itatit jelly or jam directly M the -2: handsoine gold-mounte-d umbrella
center -of each meringue just before and by the congregation with a purse
aervine. If you start this. when you of one hundred dollars. Mr. Ernest
are busy in the kitchen with some Livermore read the 'address_ presented
other coeking . you will jee able tet by the League, Mr. A. Leonard 'mak-
make it in a very little additional ing the presentation, and Dr. Thomp-
. With Tapiocit.—Here is a very easy
dessert that, calls for two. eggs, two
cups af milk, 4 half LIP of sugar.
so-nhead the cengregationat address,
Mit 0, Jervis making theipresentation.
Others spoke ,briefly, several musical
vanilla salt and three generous table- ant evening was spent. Mr. A. J.
spoons of tapioca. Soak the tapioea in McMurray presided.
the milk- for an hour or more and --Mr, •and Mrs. James Woods, East
then cook its a•double boiler for three- Wawanosh, received on Wecineeday of
quarters of an hour. Nowi miX the last week the personal effects of their
yolks of the eggs with the 'sugar and son, the late- Pte. -Russel Woeds, who
pinch of salt aed slowly add to- ehe was- killed in action about a year ago.
e hot milk and tapioca mixture. Set The belongiegs contained, among other
back dn the. etove and eCiele for ten articles, a Canadian cent ,iven. by the
minutee or until ib begins to thicken.. late Coma Joeeph Carterito Pte. Woods
Set the pan in a Ran of cold water as a good: hick piece On his last visit
and when alniost- cold add. the sfeffly
beaten whites of the two eggs. Flavor
with vanilla and. set in the refrigerator
and serve .very cold.
With Cornstarch.—Once in a while
a, cornstarch pudding is a good addi-
tion to year dietary. Ia is only when
. you resort. to CornstarcW'puddings too
often that they are tiresome. /Here is
a quick receipt that fe especially easY:
to"Bleith prior to going overseas. There
•
HURON .> ITOR
tuas . MaeQueen,'ja anxi us to re-
Cover a gold, watch. why was .pre-
sented to hi* - by his. fi fends while he
was editor of that paper. The watch
disappeared many years ago; it may
possibly have been left with • a watch-
maker for repairs, at any rate, M-isa
MacQueen would be -ery glad .indeed
to learn of its whereabouts.
RINGS OF SATURN.
lViysterious Circles Seem to Be Made
of Flimsy Stuff.
Nearly everyone, with' the excele-
tion of a few unusually earthbound
individuals, has felt at some time or
other a strong desire to gaze. at smile
ef the beauties and wonders of the
heavens through a telescolke and the
one object that ail of us wish to see,
if, perchaneee this desire is to be
gratified, is Saturn, whoee unusual
ring System has so far as we know
no counterpart in the sky, writes
Isabel M. Lewis in the Electrical
Experimenter.
AU the planets in the solar syStem
with the exception of the two inner-
ost, Mercury and Venus, are at-
tended by satelites but Saturn, alone,
has in addition to a large and impos-
ing family nine moons, three dis-
Una rings of great dimensions
of swarms of minute Particles re-
volving around, the planet.
Why -Saturn sh,oulde be the only
planet to possess such a system of
rings has not yet been explained in
an entirely satisfartory manner, de-
pending as it doe upon the manner
e entire solar sys-
agteed could not
have followed the oourse outlined by
the Nebular Hypothesis of Le Place.
The theory of thelarigin of the solar
system and every theory advanced to
explain the manner ie. which the so-
lar/ system :came into existence must
satisfactorily explain the cause of ,
this peculitr appendage of Saturn.
There is a interesting law known
as- "Roche's Law," however, named
from its investigator, that states that
no satellite of a planet can exist in -
'tact within, 2 44 times the radium of
the planet.' T. his limit is spoken of
as "Rochees Limit" and applying it
to the planet Saturn fall within this
limit. It does not necessarily follow
from this that the minute particles
of which the rings .are composed are
the ahatteted remains of one small
satellite btit rather that they are the
material from which a satellite might
have been formed were it not so close
to the planet.- Within "Roche's leim-
it" the mutifal attraction: of the var-
ious partieles for each other that
would tend, eventually to gather them
lift° one body is overcome by tidal
forces that arise from such close
proximity° to the huge planet. The
'stress and strain of such forces is
so great that no grouping of par-
ticles can take place. This explains,
possibly, . why the rings continue to
exist in their present coedition. The
total mass ot the rings is known to
be very small, for they do not dis-
tu b the motions of any of the nearer
smaller satellites, though •tiny
as, six hundred miles in dia-
eter is only thirty-one thoasand
outer .ring.
An interesting observation wees
made! a year br so ago of the pas-
sage of the rings of the planet be -
light lof the star was diminished to
one-fdurth ' of its normal brightness
when ehe rings passed` before it, at
no time was its light entirely, eclips-
ed by stay of the particles. It was
competed thet if the diameters iof
any of the individual particles had
/ amounted to as. much as three or
four milee the star would have been
temporarily eclipsed. etia upper limit
for the size of the moonlets was thus
obtained: The average diameter of
the partieles is probably much less
then three miles.'
of the origin of t
tem which it is no
an
was also his watch which had been
dented, and a letter free. a Clinton.
lady, enclosed in which were snap-
shot photos of Mr. and Mrs. Gidley.
This had been punctured, no doubt,
by the hulled which caused Pte.
Woods' death.
—The Goderich. Signal Of last week
says: A.mong the visitore in town last
Mix four tablespoons of cornstarch week were Mrs: Emily MacQueen and
with three tablespoons of granalated her daughter Miss Ethel N. MacQueen.
e.uga.r iii a double boiler and add Ito of Saginaw, Michigan. Miss Mac -
this twa cups of scalded -milk, st g Qu who is a. granddaughter of
e7
tultil it thickens. Now cDok for a If the f under of The Signal, the late
Germany Spurned Freedom.
Before the 'war, says Prof. Wil -
Stearns Davis, who contributes
two new chapters of his historical
study of "The Roots of the Wee: to
the Century,—before the war—
"This people of Germany was ad-
mittedly one of the predominant
units of the human race. In .almost
every ford, of cultural achievement
it had either isurpassed or crowded
the other leaders hard. Music, art,
philosophy, theology, the sciences,
whether applied or theoretical — it
competed or triumphed in all. But
in one great form of hinnan endeav-
or the Germans, had not triumphed,
they had never played their due part
in the human struggle for political
liberty. It is possible to find his-
torical reasons for tine in the failure
of the medieval empire and the fric-
tion between the multifarious petty
•
princes. .But the fact remained.
Britain had written very many chap-
ters fa the 'Golden Book` of Liberty;
so had the city republics of• medieval
Italy, the mountain cantons of Swit-
zerland, and the stout biiirgher-com-
munities of Holland and Flanders.
Even in France under the absolute
monarchy the memory of the medie-
val 'States -General' had nevier been
forgotten, and was to revive m'agical-
ly in that year of wonder, 1789. -.Ger-
many had adcied no chapters. to the -
story. • Her heroes had been either
valorous paladins and princes like
Frederick Barbarosa, or scholars and
master -theologians like Martin Lu -
ether. The numerous 'free cities' of
her later Middle Ages had been. free
•• only as respected the control of some.
outside elector or duke. Within they
had usually been governed by a
'clans, with little enough share at
No Ice' Age.
One often hears of "the glacial
period" or "the ice age" of the earth,
but serietly speaking, this expres-
sion is not correct. It is now estab-
lished beyond all reasonable • doubt
that this planet has experienced not
One, but a great many, glaeial per-
iods. Evidence has been•found which
proves that the latest or Pleistocene,
glacial epoch had several important
spbdivisions and that all of the pres-
ent' continents have experienced gla-
cial epochs at different ages. Great
ice sheets were formed at • different
periods back to the Proeerozoic age,
that is, the age of the Oldest known
sedimentary rocks,, a great many
million years ago.
"Did the doctor know what you
'Seemed to have had a orettY ac-
curate idea. He asked for ten d.ol-
lairs and I had eleven dollars."'
11
111
Stewart's Sell it for Less 1 Mali or Phone Your Orders We prepay arra
Special -Showing. 0
Wairb. Weather Goo
litiossiasessi
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Yr0 10-1•
GOODS
For Man Woman or Child
THIS STORE, true to its reputation
has made every effort to make
ample provision for your warm weath-
er needs,
Come here with a confidence tha
we will show you the largest assort -
mint of the most reliable goods at the
very lowest possible prices. -
New Summer Wash Dress Goods, Silks and
Trimmings
Goods
Gb
AUR stock of WAS ODS this season is a re-
velatio in cotton goOds manufacture. The e is
nothing mor6' beautiful than these dairityWash Fa ries.
The rnauy entirely new ideas, the variety and exq isite
colbr schemes offer everyone untold possibilitie for .
summer clothes for women and children. The s rik-
ing feature however is that our Wash Goods will osi-
tively stand suds and sun. Don't miss this big display
and remember that the Prices are alw ys
Lowest at. Siewarts'.
'Pretty ,
New Waists
Only the best and most select
materials are employed in
Making these new waists'. All
the littlef but important dis.
tinctive features that help to
Make. a waist beautiful are at-
tractively, brought out, to the
end that' in these stunning
models you have richness and
beauty at very moderate prices
Price $1.25 -to $6
Dressy Clothes
for Boys
Many New Styles
in Norfolk ,Designs
The Norfolk has come. back
this year stronger than ever,
and with it many ideas in
pleats, belts, etc., all of which
add materially to-trie gen' eral
-good appearance of the suits.
The new suits have arrived.
Vou will be delighted with
their beauty arid well finished
appearande and the price will
be equally satisfactory.
Priq. to $15
Overalls & Smocks
When working clothes are re-
uired this store stands at the
icl
top of the ladder. Peabodys',
Big 'WI Snag Proof and
M.C.K. ill the reliable work-
ing brands are here.
TF you would be correctly and economically gowned
I this- summ6r, you Must visit our Dress Goods De-
partment and inspect the new stocks. You may choose
with absolute certainty from this matchless array,
knowing that every piece is neW, correct and depend-
able. This stores supremacy in this deliartmenf is
generally acknowledged by women who know. This
season more than ever _We are very proud of our dreis
Qoods department and take a special plea,sure show -
Mg the goOds. Call and see them to -day. Prices
lower than you will expect to pay.
SO1 ECIAL
C4ildreri's Si* Lisle Hose
Sizes_ 41 to only, in black, sky pink
and white. Made of very best quality
full sizes, uaranteed the very best
value.
Special Price 29c
New
Corset Models
The appearance of your new
gown will be greatly improvett---
of CroMpton's Corsets. You
will never know real comfort
until you wear a. Crompton.
Our large and well assorted'
stock gives you the very great
advantage of assuring you,an
absolute perfect tit.
Prilce $1 to $5
Rady in the Men s Store
--Season's Nobbiest Suits
The adliantage we derived by ord+
ering our Men's Suits early last fail
is clearly demonstrated in the
heautifil line of new GuaraRteed
Worsted. Suits we have j'ust
ceived.
We sitid. Guaranteed' and that means a,
great deal in this
time of extiteme scarcity of wool, unreliable -logwood
dyes and inreaAd prices in Filings and pocketings,
becauSe We
We repeat Guaranteed
3 'bought only
suits made Oi reliable guaranteed cloths and '‘ve ha,nd
you over a positive guarantee with every suit we sell,
but we also give you the additional advantage of buy-
ing your suits at veiy reasonable Sm. -
to $35
prices. Sites 33 to
-New Shirts'for the Hot Days
There is a wealth of,beauty in the Shirts. Plain. or fancy patterns
bla\ck and white. or colored effects, All guaranteed to 'wash and wmr to your
Your _
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