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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-12-26, Page 3e mug •ay, have now o -operation of erect will be at 10 all In seated • packages, Petite itlon. /ours. 444.4444.4 ee At The Age of 50 No doubt you' often think seriously of the coming years and how you will meet your personal oblige. tions. But have you thought how systematic saving �' help you to do so? ` • It is not too late to open a savings account at the age of 5O years.if deposit have not already done. so make thea first eposit of a reserve fund today in this Bank. 662 THE DOMINIQN BANK SEAFORTH BRANCH, , R. M. JONES, Manager. SAFETY DEPOSIT BO? ES FOR REM'. ISE HURON -EXPOSITOR DISTRICT MATTERS Our Cumberland` hunter having had a hunter's breakfast, is ready for a hunter's lunch about three hours lat- er. It begins with soup; and works its way down through fish, game, roast, two or three kinds of potatoes and other vegetables, pudding, sweets, DUBLIN fruit, tea or coffee, and probably (Too Late For Last Week.) whiskey or beer. As a rule the coffee is drunk anywhere but at the table," Notes. -St. Mary's Anglican church and the invariable custom is . to serve Sunday school gave an unique enter- it in the smallest cups. You may tainment Christmas tree and box have as many small cups as you like, social on Friday last in the opera hall. but apparently you cannot have a real An excellent programme of songs, large cup of coffee. Probably it is dialogues and recitations was given contrary. to the provisions _ of Dora, by the young folks.. Miss Mary Beale, Our hunter gets very little or no- thing to eat between luncheon and tea -time, though he may -have a drink or so, and an Englishman/ is more likely to do his serious drink- ing either- with his meals or , after theism than before them. Due to this fact he can absorb a considerable Miss Bessie Jordan and Mrs. Leo D. Fortune. sang solos and responded to encores. The programme was fol- lowed by Santa Claus appearing per- •sonally,,loaded with a tree and many good things for those who assisted in the Programme. John Brennan in - personated Santa Claus to perfectiomh. amount- of'' alcoholic beverages in Following the distribution of :Christ- the course of the day, and show ,no mas gifts, a box social was held, which 1 sign of it either contemporaneously caused much merriment, when boys or by . an early death. Tea -time is of nine or ten years of age purchased ; about •4 or 4.30, and is designed not the box of an elderly lady and when , as a real meal, but as something to the elder gentlemen succeeded in ' stay the stomach before dinner. There. -buying the box of a young lady. Mr. James Jones auctioned off the boxes, z is tea, withiscuits and several kinds of. cake. Ci arettes are lighted and. 'Rev.Mr. Roberts was chairman for I what is for many the pleasantest the evening. -Rev, Father McCardle ; half-hour r of the day begins. Women was presented, by the pupils . of the ' appear to smoke as generally as the separate school, with a suit case on men. It is not considered amazing if Tuesday last -A progressive euchre they should smoke a cigar. If a man will be herd -in the opera hall on the does not care for the cakes and tea evening of the 26th 'inst. All are he ' an find a substitute in a decanter. -welcome. Players must -te seated by . he huntet's dinner is likely to any one of the six good prizes. j indefinitely. Should it be broken off -untimely before ten, or should he A BOOMING PAPIER - I not feel particularly. "peckish," he can The Family Herald and Weekly Star return to the attack at supper time. of Montreal is more than booming Then if his appetite is still not sat - `this season; With • the big family .isfactorily abated he can take a sand - weekly is included a souvenir portrait with or the leg of a• chicken before of the Prince of Wales, size 16 x 22 going to bed, or perhaps a confidential inches. It is bringing the Family servant tiaill hide a lunch under his -Herald new readers by the thousands, pillow. The dinner is like the lunch, It is the best portrait of the Prince except that there are more courses, ever taken and will be a valued sou- the portions are larger, if the plates venir of his visit to Canada. ' The are larger, and there is likely to be Family Herald and Weekly Star costs a bottle of wine and liqueurs. After only $1.25 if. remitted for before 1st the dinner proper the thought crosses January. including the Prince's por- the mind of the hunter that hunting trait. It is the best value ever is dry work and a bottle of port %offered. is opened. The action is frequently, `plagiarized,:.: and the hunter and his LONDESBORQ ! friends .settle down to quench the 9 p. m, who `wish . to ompete for , begin at seven or eight, and continue (Too Late For Last Week.) Notes. -On Wednesday of last week Miss Evelyn Cartwright was united in -marriage to Mr. Harry Hunkins. The happy couple left on the afternoon -train for London and other points.- The U. F. O. have organized a club her. We wish them every success. It has proved a success in other Places; why net here? -The carpen- ters are busy repairing the Methodist parsonage, which was -badly damaged by the wind storm. -Mr. and Mrs. Hiles are visiting friends in Michigan. -Don't forget the Christmas tree on -Christmas night in the church. A good programme has been prepared, and everyone welcome. -Rev. Mr. Sawyers will preach to the Sunday school scholars on Sunday, it being -white- gift Sunday. -Mr. Geo. Moon, who had most of the roof taken off his large barn, is putting steel roof- ing on. -Mr. John Bridger, who has_ been working for Mr. William Brig- ham for the past ten years, has been re-engaged for another year. hunter's thirst. This is no mean task, but to Englishmen the more difficult the ,problem the greater the determinatiop and ingenuity brought to bear upon it. In the end the hunter's thirst is assuaged "and he has acquired an appetite for his break- fast the next day. But in order that his cravings for food may not over- whelm him in his sleep he is likely to take a few "spots," not as whiskey. but as waters of Nepenthe, before finally consenting to go to bed, and permitting the game of the islands to roam unmolested until the horn . sounds the next day and heswallows it. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE A large part of one of Finland's iron ore fields lies under the sea. Kitchen dishes made of glass rein- forced with wire have been invented. Cuba is the greatest consumer of raisins among Spanish-American na- tions. A new mechanical blotter for book - ,keepers also copies entries in books • � for comparison, 1111 HUNTER'S BREAKFAST AND Holland's new salt mines already OTHER SNACKS are meeting about one-eighth of that Breakfast with the average English country's demands. falls upon the United States annually equals the water in ten Mississippi rivers. Syria, almost the only country cul- tivating pistachio nuts, produces about It 00,000 pounds a year. Snap fasteners like those on gloves, have been invented to- hold rugs on floors or tapstries on walls. gentleman is one of the four or five The ramp that p chief meals of the day, and. so he usually makes it a substantial .one, He begins the day about an hour or so before breakfast, when he is awak- ened by a servant, who enters with a tray containing a large pot of tea and rolls or toast. After drinking a few cups of tea, which is almost in- Variably good, and consuming two or three rolls, the pangs of awakened appetite force hien to leave his bed. Fe brings his hot water from the hall, shaves, baths and goes to the din- ing room. The English do not eat oranges or grape fruits as common- ly as would Americans or Canadians WHAT UNIVERSITY LIFE DOES *FOR A MAN In an address entitled "The Univers- ity of Utopia," delivered recently be- fore the University of Malta, Sir Archibald Garod, director of medical and are likely to begin the banquet studies at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, 'with a plate of oatmeal. If you are London, used 'the following words on la native of Cumberland you then pre- the value of training in a residential pare to have what is called "a hunter's university, such as exists in America breakfast." It probably acquired the and the British Isles: name when men would have a break- "Within her walls he enjoys a n fast on Tuesday and expected to hunt liberty such as he \has not known be - the rest of the week. with no other fore. It is well for him if he learns sustenances save what they could de- self-reliance, tempered by the sense of rive from the herbage of the forest. responsibility. Oth'erw-ise it may be After the porridge the pretended his lot to look back upon his student hunter eats a kipper or two or the days with regret for wasted oppor- side of a haddock. Warming to his tunities, or even with remorse for time 'work, he next attacks a dish contain- ill -spent. University methods afford xng a poached egg, several rashers of more scopefor individual tempera- bacon, and a large, real sausage. He meats and bents than do school meth - may eat his potatoes with this dish ods. Within defined limits the stu- or he may prefer to have them with dent is free to select the line of study the pork pie that follows. The pork for which he has most aptitude and pie may be either hot or cold and inclination. Minds of all shapes and ;jellied. It has a -thick crust, and as : calibres are no longer forced into the it is a great favorite with hunters, same mould, and individuality has fair perhaps half a pound may be consum- play, fed. The meal is now practically at "I for- one, believe that an early an end, save for a sago pudding, ' a age the process of `taking the no - ,quart f tea, some crackers . and - sense oat of him,' to which a boy is cheese, marmalade and a trifling pot subjected at 'school, is, if not carried Of ale. The hunter then rises from too far, a beneficial one. It is a rough the table able and ready to stalk a and ready training in citizenship and mountain. That- ie saves stag or scale a m many a man from incurringi something different from the break- ' the stigma of the prig or bore. But fast of the maid at Liverpool, who !the `nonsense' should onljbe scotched, asked Mr. Christy,- "Do you know not killed, for disciplined by school 'what my breakfast contains of?" experience, it develops in later life "What?" said Mr. Christy. ' into healthyindependence, otginality ' "It 'contains of two raw eggs." or even genius." t THE HURON ErP0SITOR II11I111IIII1111111111111IN1111111111111t1mIti IiHI1111IliiiiB111111illilllll iliHillli1111IIiIIIIIImmilumiilltililllilipil mi1iumi11111I iii m11i Iltlu11111[initi 1t11lllmmililitilf!{ii1111 111110 NMI WM WWI 1111111 POW WWI - _ WI i IWO 111111 WWI 1011 11011 WIM 111111 Ott 1111 _ - - i i WWI 4111111 Nam WWI - OW i _ OwlOW OWi MitWIN - OW - WW mom i OW imm WWIOW WM - WM SWI ttm owe tom mon amm OW c wtom it stilt msti Imo i 001 O. - 0103WEIamme WWI WO IWO mom - MIEW mom Mom OW - WWI WWI i WI WI WWI IN _ WW1 - WW - mpt mtp - END ONE Wit IWO i WIN 10111 /111 WE OW 4/1 Mit /11 WOW 1•111 OW OW WO imp IuhI11I111 111111111111%. 1111111 ■ 11111111 • 111 2nn11111111111a11In11111u1uN`IIIIIu111 llnitu111iu111M111111inn1f1ni1111i11iilliluulli1n111111113111111111111111u11111i11111101111111111t11111MIMIIIIMII11111iIIIIII 11IIIMM1111llll111 1111i1111M1 _- WWI IOW OPM WI - - - IWO 0111 i i NW 0110111111 Wmp WW _ - _ _ - mot _ • c - 1.11 1111111 MIN _ NNE • MON 11111111 ■ 11111111 low men own two - ameawe mow woo imm omm pmt amt Not mio _ _ 180. 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PEOPLE IN THE UNIVERSE, [�, •1111 .._ _.,.:_ ,_.<µ,.,..,,.... HAVE REASON TORE THANKFUL FOR THE PAST YEAR OF PEACE, PROSPERITY AND HAPPINESS, AND HAVE THE GREATEST ASSURANCE OF A CONTINUATION OF THESE ATTRIBUTES SO NEC- - ESSARY TO THE COMFORT ANI{ SECURITY OF THE HUMAN RACE. THE TERRIBLE CATASTROPHES THAT HAVE 'AFFLICTED SO MANY UNHAPPY COUN- TRIES HAVE NOT VISITED US. OUR FEW IN- TERNAL LABOR DISRUPTIONS HAVE BEEN SHORT DIVED AND AICABLY SETTLED. THE CLOUDS OF PESTILENCE AND FAMINE THAT ARE THREATENING EUROPE HAVE BEEN DRIVEN .FROM CANADIAN SHORES BY THE WARM SUN- SHINE OF' PROSPERITY. THE WHEELS OF IN- DUSTRY AND PRODU.CTION ARE SINGING MER- RILY AND PLENTY IS AT EVERY HAND. THE WOUNDS OF THE WAR ARE HEALING RA 'IDLY, THOUGH, ALAS, WITH SOME, IT HAS LEFT ITS LASTING SCAR., WE CANADIANS ARE IN - A UNIQUE POSI- TION TO REALLY APPRECIATE THE VALISE OF THE GREAT ,CHRISTMAS BENEDICTION, "PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TOWARDS. MEN." AND SO STANDING ON THE THRESHOLD Off' A NEW YEAR, WE CONFIDENTLY EXTEND TO - EVERYBODY,, CUSTOMERS AND NON -CUSTOM- ERS,- FELLOW MERCHANTS AND COMPETITORS, A HAPPY .NEW YEAR Then let us pray that come it may, As' come it - will for a' that, When man to man the world o'er Shall Brothers be . for a' that, - STEWART BROS. 0 Illi, Mat a tott 1111 1111 Ott 11.11. ..r 41.0 1.81 110. IMS tint WM mmt MIN 11.1 111 1111 11110 N In/ 111.1 as /1111 1/11 }1j i1a pia 11 1.11 HIM P PAW ii .1111111 AVM WON lit MIN AMP - WNW ANW alm mmt WWI _ IMP _ SIM 1111 s WIN OWN MEM ENE WOE IOW MOM _ 1110 Mom Inn IBM NNW _ SOOMIS- 1111. 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