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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-05-07, Page 6s - • o Ladies ! Anaemia This is a result the lack of the ordiziarY re ft corPsculeg in tile blood. The too frequent neglect Of this complaint, especially in the case of growipg girls and young . women, is fraught with the great- est danger. Poorness of the Blood -must lead to weakness of the bedy, general Debility and such a run own condition that the sufferer falls a prey to almost any epidemic disease — especially Influenza, Colda and La Gripe. Fainting, Palpitation' general disturbance of the bodily-, !functions, headaches hysteria, pale and sallow complexion, pallor ot the tongue and Ups-, puffiness nu-. eler the eyes and Heart Murmur are generally assoelated with An - amnia. Hackings Heart and Nerve Remedy Is the most reliable medicine to use. It will bring back the rosy cheeks and restore Vitality and Viger. Do not be discouraged and do not worry for you will only get worse; Place your confidence in 1 Hackings Heart and Nerve Remedy for it Is a complete tonic that will 'bring back the happiness, of good health that you so much desire. leity a feW boxes to -day. Price 50e a box, 6 for $2.50. • Sold by all dealers or by mail, postpaid. Backings Limited, Listowel. 333;3333,3•440434 I3.:* fi .44 4•Z; 4* 5 4 Is4 :4': 4: 4 4141434:4 4 4:441 4t4.1 4.44 44 41.4:•-3Z Popumr Princess. May .tijoys ;in Active Life; - Is an Cut -of -Doors Girl at, r..',,,,.7.VI_VirAll.1117X111.014•15r Awl ay iztri ,r..w ' T is announced that Princess 3 Mary, only daughter Waning George and .Queen Mary, will shortly tour the chief European capitals. She is young enough lead keen. eaough. to take 4 sphoolgirl's delight in the trip, for she ehares that...zest for enjoyment that made the Piince of Wa‘les so easy to enter- tain when he visited Canada. Indeed, brother and sister are much alike, and an Anaerican correspondent said not long ago that just as certainly as the 'prince is the most popular young man in the British Isles, the princess is the most _ popular girl. u She was a strenuous 'worker in •the war.. She was a Red Cross nurse and throughout the etruggle for three days a week she nursed wonnded soldiers at Devonshire House. - She is also an industrious and skilful • xteedlewoman, and she and her .friends at court made hundreds of garments of all kinds for the soldiers and for the poor. These gifts were sent anonymously, for .it was taken for granted that those for whom they were intended would not wear, them if they were aware of the royal bands that had been emplbyed, but would be more likely to frame them as mural decorations. Princess Mary, who used to be call- " ed Princess "May•when she was younger, will be 23 years old this year, eand in her brief life has been great-granddaughter, granddaughter and daughter of a reigning British monareh. She was born at York Cot- tage, Sandringham, and as she was in direct line for the throne the at- '1W11117.4;PN BIGGER CROPS FRom ETTER SEEDS •-• Sold byleading Merchants throughout Canada WFVTE FOP NEW A ILLUSTRATED CATALOG r StettE-ARItaseartgt -4-4w:41F04-.47.4-.0roirpHoustr" H.c.kko-akiw-ToqoNT40-iivpititraEG tztagrzrzegrinirso !.C.ELLOIC, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try It! Hair gets soft, fluffy and beautiful—Get a small bottle of Danderine. If yeti eare for heoxy hair Oat glis- tens witb: beauty and is radiant with life; has an incomparable softness and is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderinet Just one application deulles the beauty Of your hair,- besides it imme- diately dissolves every particle of ilandruff. You can not have nice heavy, healthy lair if you have dandruff. This destmetive scurf robs the hair of its • lustre, its strength. and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a fever- ishness and itching of the scalp; the lair roots famish, loosen and die; that the hair falls out fast. Surely get a mall bottle of Knowiton's Danderine from any drug store and, just try it. - WAS nests. Refreshes, Soothes, '• Ideals—Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy, If they Tire, Smart Itch, or •OUR Burn, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed or Granulated, use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult. At all Druggists in Canada. Write for Free Eye Book. Medea Company, ChiCago, U. S. L 3011814COUGHS Dr. DeVan's French Pills is reliable Regulating Pill for- Women. 5-a box. Sold at all Drug Stores, rot mailed to any address on. receipt of price. The Seobell Drug Co., St. Catth- urines, Ontario. PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN Restores Vim and Vitality; for Nerve and 13ra,in: inereases„,4'gray matter;" a Tontc—will build •-trittaup. $3 a box, or two for $5, at dru'g stores, or by mail on receipt of price. The &when Drug 'Co., St. Catharines, Ontario. James Watson • GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT REAL ESTATE .AND LOAN AGENT DEALER IN SEWING MACHINES. Four good houses for !ale, conveniently situated in the Town of Seaford'. Terms reasonable and possession • 'given promptly. Apply' at my Office for particulars. `-‘ • PRINCESS MARY. M33 • - : , 141E111/*ON EXPOSITOR= MILK THE ABSOLUTE E'SSENTIAL •141""nag',-,— Some interesting experiments WOMAN'S food recently made public by theseen- neeticut Agricultural Experiment Sta- most -irre was taken with her educa- tion,. Her governess was -Mile. Dus- sau, a highly accomplished woman, and it is believed that she has taught Princess Mary more than even the hard-working college girl acquires, besides a great many accomplish- ments and graces particularly desir- able in a princess. She had always a great taste for out of doors, and is a sportswoman. She is a keen rider and driver. Slid is an expert swim- mer like the Prince of -Wales. She plays crieket. She bowls and can wield a tennis racquet expertly, but it Is said that her golfing is sonie- taing that would delight the enemies or the throne. Canoeing is also a favorite pastime, and it is related that on one occasion the craft in which she Was sculling her chaperon. came into collision with a boat containing some Eton lads. One of them shout- ed out: "Say! Why didn't your moth- er teach you how to row before she let you out?"- There is difference of opinion as to the retort made by the princess. One, authority is that she replied: "Why didn't .your mother teach you manners?" While a more vivacious chronicler says she answer- ed: "Say! How do you get that way?" Princess Mary is a pretty girl, with fair hair and a beautiful pink and white complexion. She is of medium 'height and of somewhat athletic lis- someness of figure. Naturally a girl of her rank and with her personal charm has not reached her twenty- third year without her matrimonial career being speculated upon. - In 5a 191t was said that she was to be- come the wife of Prince Eric of Den- mark, -Who was then talked of as the future King of Poland. This was -de- nied. The war has greatly reduced the number of eligible royalty, which is probably a happy thing for Prin- cess Mary, and the probability seems to be that her husband will be a British subject. There can be no ques- tion that the British public would like to see Princess Mary follow the example of her cousin, Princess Pa- tricia., and become the wife of either a British peer- or a British commoner. ,Priecess Mary has been called upon to share the duties pf appear- ing at hnportant public functions with the Prince of Wales, who is, of course, in great demand and who cannot possibly make all the ap- pearances that are requested of him. His other brothers are rather young for this work, aad so Princess Mary is seen more frequently than has been the case with an English princess for many years at the opening ofshospi- tals, charity bazaars and similar gath- erings. Like her brother, she appears to derive a real pleasure from this -:ontact with the general public, and the pellople, on their part, delight to cheer her whenever they get the op- portunity. tion maim it clear that the casein ob- taitne7 the only from milk. is the. Mt- osvit, al o all the food elements andf one of vrhich. there ean be no substi- tute ' The Connecticut Agricultural Ex- periment 'Station has arrived at the -conclusion, derived from 0, long series of experiments, that neither men no; mice can thrive without the food ele- mentscontained in milk and absent fromethe vegetable esingdom. Albino rats were chosen as the chief subjects of experiment because their aiet was more easily controlled and observed under laboratory conditions than. that of larger animals. But we are assur- ed by Miss Edna Ferry, an expert of the Connecticut Station, that the re- sults of these experiments apply as definitely to human beings as to rodents. The rats were fed carefully bal- nced rations of the necessary food constituents* proteins, fats, carbohy- -drates and salts. The proportions of these food elements welOilmost ex- actly the same as in milk, but the protein used was derived frcmi wheat Amin The result in every case was to stunt growth or to stop it alto- gether. When one-third of the wheat protein was replaced by an equivaleht amount in the form of meat, Ogs or milk the animals grew at a normal rate. Milk and eggs were slightly more efficient asbodybuilders than meat When protein from corn was used alone the effect was even worse than with the exclusive wheat diet. The animal last weight rapidly .and died almost as soon as if no food were eaten at all. When some aminoacid was added to the corn protein life was Maintained but growth still remstined RECOVERY 'Shows. Remarkable Curative Power of Lydia -E. Pink - halves Vegetab Compound. . Ohesley, Ont.— "Before using Lydia E. Pineham's Vegetable Compound I was a total wreck. I had terrible pains in zny sides and Was not regular. Finally I got so weak I could not go up stairs without stopping to rest half way up the steps. I tried two doctors but they did me no good. I saw your medicine advertised in the newspapers and i thought I would give t a trial. j took four bottles of the Vegetable Compound and was restored to health. I am mar- ried, am the mother' of two children, and do all me housework, milk eight cows, and do a hired man's work and enjoy the best of health. I also found Vegetable Compound n great help for my weak back before my babies were born. ' I recommend it to all my friends who are in need of .medicine, and you may print this letter if you wish."— HENRY Jenks, R. R. No. 4, Ches- n ar o. It hardly seeras possible that there is a woman in this country who will con- tinue to sniffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkhait's Vegetable Compound a trial after all the evidence that is continually being published, proving beyond contra,- diction that this grand old xnedieineems relieved more suffering among women -than any other medicine in the world. backward. It required the addition of e er o e casein .froni milk or cheese to bring the unhappy rat back to normal de- KingLog - • velopment. Miss -Ferry illustrated the upshot of, one experiment in terms of human -life, A rate was kept stunted for 'about a fifth of its life on vegetable protein and then casein was added to the diet. Within a few months it was as large as any normal rat. "Calling a man's span of .life seventy years the case would be somewhat like that of a boy kept as a healthy infant in arms until fourteen years of age, weighing perhaps sixteen or twenty pounds, and.wha, by a change in diet when fourteen years old, attained a man's size aid weight at the age of twenty-one." - The butter fat in milk is also of high importance. If a young rat is fed with a normal ration except° that all fat supplied' corn -es from lard or vegetable oils it -will grow normally for about eighty days and • thereafter declines in weight,asuffee from sore eyes, and eventually ;die. A small amount of butter fat added to the diet restores health and permits gain in weight to, contihue. Many children in the famine -stricken regions .of Europe have been observed -to suf- fee from ulcers on the eyeball. It was learned that they had been fed on bread and skim mille Asesoon as they were given whole milk or cod-liver oil their eyes began to recover and most of them were eaved from blind- ness. For adult rats and men, how- ever, butter fat does not seem so in- dispensable. Milk contains all the needed food elements in due proportion and is the only food Which does so. 'Milk sugar has the same food value as cane sugar. Milk protein is as good as meat protein, and milk is far cheaper than meat in proportion to the portein supplied. • Mille fat, as can be seen from the price of butter, is_ one of, the most highly valued fats. Milk also contains valuable mineral salts which are inadequately supplied by • most foods. Finally milk contains all three of the "vitamines" which are essential to growth; the fat-soluble vitamine; the water-soluble vitamine and the vitamine which prevents scurvy. • "Civilization," says the Connecticut Report, "follows the cow." • ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN The average salary received by women and miners` working in 'Texas mercantile. establishments'telephone exchanges, laundries. and factories is between $12 and $13 a week. Miss Susie B. Siger' of Waco, Tex., his the distinction ofbeini the first woman deputy district cle k Of the United -Stites district court in the Western district. Septlets were born to the wife of Jesus Lopez, a private in the Mexi- can army at Montezuma, Mexico. The • arrivals are three girls and four boys, weighing about two pounds apiece, and each perfectly developed in every respect, A girl in her early twenties, Dr. J. L. Crossley -Batt, officer' of the Order of the British Empire, Bachelor of arts and doctor of science, is investi- tigating Canadian trade possibilities on a special mission, for the British Government. .• Mrs. John B. Casserly of San Fran- cisco, appointed as director of wom- an's relations for the United States, Iwill have general supervision over army hostess houses and will promote co-operation between the army and t the women of the country. I• In Denmark a housemaid is paid about fifty kroner a month -in addi- tion to her board and lodging, while I a cook receives at least eighty kroner. In normal times these wages are said to be equivalent in Denmark to the same nuraber of American dollars in I the United' States. ' I• Woman's participation in the organ- ized labor movement is not of recent date. Fifty years ago, hi 1870, the National Labor Union- Congress at Cincinnati was attended by women, who were recognized as delegates, , permitted to offer resolutions and make addresses. About the eimplest device yet in - • Children ersr , ven ted for converting an ordinary I bicycle into a motorcycle consists of a tank and motor to be mbunted on the CASTORiA handle -bars and drive the front wheel, • ease •of a guilty conscience made 1 Kezar 'tremble in spite of his best efforts. "Mend 'em over, man! Business to: day Shall be done in a hurry." Kezar did not go to him proraptly, . therefore Kavanagh stepped forward and snatched the cheeks from the old , man's unwilling hand. -"You old , kangaroo," snapped the master, jocose- ly, "you jump hard enough on your good le'g after money that's coming in! Don't be too slow when it's a case of -money going out, not on a day like this!" When he sat down at his table he was taking more interest in the dis- posal of the tails of his frock -coat than in the' details of 'business. With- out scrutinizing the cheeks, he serawl- ed the countersign letters across the Signature of Abner Kezar mid left the scattered checks to be gathered Up by the old man, who hastily scrabbled them together under the 'glistening : eyes of the geandson. _ A locomotive whistle , squawked. staccato blasts. It was the down - train's half-hour warning4 1 40 Kavanagh turned his attention wholly to his final preearations• "Slip me the check," advised Don- I ald. "It's safe. He isn't looking. I want to get back to Wallin." He flicked the paper from the withered hand which held it forth; he hastily jammed it into hie (coat poeket, "Mr. Kavanagh he called, "if it wasn't for a business deal I have on, I'd wait and help give yOU a send-off -at the train." • "I can do well without any send, off, and I'm glad to note that you put business ahead of foolishness, boy! On, your way!" "j hope you'll have a fine journey, sir! And, if it comes into your mind, • I wish. you'd present my respectful : regards to Miss Clare." "There!" growled young Kezar in his grandfather's ear, after Kavanagh had expressed himself cordially, "that ! shows that I knew how to operate! So don't worry any more about mer • Continued from Page 7 ! He hurried out( mounted his horse, and. galloped away. get down the drive? Fthe place for athagtirbue,:ter than anybody else! II Ip* Old X. K. boss a logging-ereve an at his heels, carrying a heavy valise, A few moments later, with Dumphy _ John Kavanagh stepped to the door of , his house and stopped there, looking Kezar's tone was truculent and the . clown• the hill• toward the railroad' little priest blinked, not understand- station. Along the lane there were ing this heat. The young man him- • scattered groups, and the little plat - self was not exactly sure what these 1 form at the station was pretty well new emotions of his were. A sullen I crowded. s , resentment was stirring in him direct - "A nosey pack, that's the style of ed against what he felt mustbe the I 1 I em in this village," said Kavanagh new personality of this girl. to the priest at his side. He spoke So the three of them -marched into I irritably. "Look at 'ern! Underfoot the big room where John Kavanagh quillpigs in a back -lot carrot - stood erect, rece sing the met touthes l patch. Why ain't they all about their from the reverent hands of his wan 1 l'atell. own business?" He took off the silk • Dumphy. ,• hat which he had gingerly adjusted Clese cbserver, Dr. Archaleus before the .mirror. March, plug -hat in the hock of his arm. was superintetding the tytig of 1 "It's to 'do you. a bit of honor,' t I explained Doctor March. "Romeo he scare. Shank asked me about it and I told "Damn a dicky'' barked Kavanagh, 1 twisting his neck, chin held high. i him it u'ould show respect." "Ye did, did ye. Ye're a meddling Then he lowered 1118 gaze Upon his' blackguard! I don't expect a pote to visitors'. ' "Your pardon foe thet . , , know anything, but I thought you word, F 0 ather Pierre, and th4 top ; had .a little common sense of your the morning and the smiles of the ownI'm of a mind not to take you angels for ye! But ye see me doing i ' .i along, for fear you'll be getting me penance because of the unholy j 1 oy 1 ipto norse serapes," have always got out of a flannel shirt! "I'll take part of the blame, if And, as 1 Trearit; nobody *ev,)r got ' I blame there is," put in the little to be a saint by taking his comfort. priest, deprecatingly. "I teld Basil Ye're well come, and we'll soon be , L'Abbe and a few others that you gone. Look ye, Dumphy! That . e would not be offended if they as - not -a, snubbing -warp ye're handlingrsembled toj bid you God -speed. 1 "Puff it up) man! Puff it up!" ' ! told them that to comfort them; they direeted the doctor. "Not so tight!" were a bit afraid," "Sure, and I never helped to tog a "Then I'll not nut the lie into a dude before," grumbled, Dumphy. • good priest's mouth!" He hesitated "It isn't Me sre're calling a dude, a little while Suddenly he gave the . is it?" demanded the master. silk hat into the keeping of Dumpily. "No, sir! Net when. I'm .standing "See that ye mind it well! If ye wit'n the reach of yer pry, like I'm rough it I'll give ye ten whanngs standing now, sir!" He finished his with a bind -chain, man!" ped back. - - task as hastily as possible and step - "I'll not carry it! 1 "lever had me , s Kavanagh surveyed himself at full handon one!" wailed 7umphy."It's in your hand now, you fool! length as best he could,. three mirrors 1 If you leave your hand off it I'll make were stacked one on top of the other' 1 you wear it on your head to the sta- "Abner, it's a hame should not against the log Wall. #• tion. And after that they% laugh you sye I out of the Toban!" That remark af- know for orce in your life the glory I forded indirect but illuminating coni - of wearing a tail coat! * But, with your ment on the state of John Kavanagh's up-and-down legs, ye'd be everlaeting- own mind in regard to that head -gear ly steiming on the tails,".ehe aided, as a display in the Toban; also his • with brutal disregard ,of his factor's feelings. ' "Ye ean lrebelliousness ook at me arid in the matter of a\ p _see how well le feel. Even the pain crowd to ee him off. of the. tunk of their damn' popple has one since I put on these clothes. Who is the old spider who sits in the middle of their web in. New York? "But you're riot going to walk down barheaded!" protested the doctor. "Fhave a good thatch on my head," said the old man, scrulibeg up -his mane. "But you' better keep the Oh yes! Old IVIerthorn! I could put On , On your old bald pate for one foot ahead of Vother and say a fear the sun will hatch it" word to him, me 'with these duds on! Therefore "Old X. K." walked, to And Donald! I'm sorry now, boy, the train uncovered-. "It's too hot to - that I didn't think of you to take day for that kind of a hat," he lied along, if you'd Weir a tail coat with to the priest. "Anyway, I'll get us - me. Ye'd look as grand as any of ed to wearing it when I'm down where • 'em down there, for ye have the they don't know me so well. Ay -oh, build!" "I'd do 'most. anything to please Father Pierre, it's all so that she won't you; sir, but I reckon I'd balk at that be ashamed of the old man. We'll mind our manners and do our best!" kind of a suit. Oh, it's all right for ff you, sir! I didn t mean it that Way! The grandfather looked relieved when Donald assumed a tone . of deference. "It's due to .Miss Clare to show her all honors. 9I'd have gone and been glad. But I'll be on hand with my best word when she comes home!" "The right talk, boy! The right talk!" In his joy of anticipation, seeing that the mirrors 'gave compli- mentary evidence of the excellence of his apparel, he warmed a bit to the young man. "Yes, she's coming home! I don't know what's in he' mind, boy! There may be soraething big there. But you're a lad who can be big in her eyes when she Comes back here, if you mind your ways and look your best. What was the talk between us, Abner, years ago? rforgetl But no matter. -She is good enough for the best of 'em, but she shall make her own pick! I cantrust her good sense." • • Kezar patted his grandson's arm. "The IC,avanagh in her won't let her be fooled, John! And She doesn't for- get her friennds, any more than you do. She will be glad to be back here!" "There'll be merrymakings, I promise ye that! Abner, I order you now to send for a brass band against the -day of or coining home. That is, if I have any money left in the bank after I put my mark on those • checks.'" Ile pointed to The papers in his . agent's hand, and his sudden refer- ence and its suggestiveness in the sins. 330 NUN 7, 1420. • Used In Niillions ' w .Tea-i-wPois Daily Its Intrinsic goodness in Tea Quality makes it the most Economical in Use at 33, a -• 5 81571 „ extra astonishment. •"Do you mean. to tell me you know °about it?" In Miss Tell's mind there was only one "he" and only one topic for the mouth of world speech at that moment. Clare Kavanagh, in her anxiety, lied only one thought of her own. "How, in, the name of mercy and. the angels, did you ever come' to know anything about it?" demanded,. Miss Tell. "My Bob didn't get here till a few moments ago. You ask me where he is? Why, even my Bob doesn't know that. What do you know?" . "I'm afraid I didn't _understand," faltered Clare, the red in her cheeks. "I thought you came to tell me that CHAPTER- VI John Kavanagh, on his journey of discovery, finds a woman grown from a child; and he is sure that he has found joy, love and peace. A telegram apprised Clare that her father would be present at. her grad- uation. It was merely curt. notifica- tion and gave her no hint as to when he would arrive. In spite of her best efforts at control of her feelings, she was conscious of a twinge of irrita- te/I. She felt that she would. like to inspect him before he appeared hi, the select atmosphere pf Manor Verona; it came nigh being anxious determination to head him off. • Therefore, the girl's mood was not that of fond anticipation while she waited in her room on the forenoon of the great day. In upon her came rushing Miss "Hurry -and" Tell, a sort of composite of an exclamation - point and a bomb with sizzling fuse attached. Miss Kavanagh knew perfectly well that only exceptional cireumstaeces had brought • Miss Tell as a caller. Naturally, fears suggested it must be as avant-conrier of the impossible John. Kavanagh, blunderingly asking for a daughter in the select purlieus of Manor Verona. Clare's heart sank and her soul sighed! "Where is he?" she asked, appre- hensively. Miss Tell s eyes and mouth had been opened' to their widest- extent,' but she did manage to exhibit a little (Continued next week.) DyeOld, Faded Dress Materia "Diamond Dyes" Make Shabby Apparel Stylish and New—Se Ease, Tete Don't worry worry about perfect multi! Ilse "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric. whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed -goods,--dresses , blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, draperies,—everythingt A Dixection Book is in package. To match any materna, have dealer; show you "Diaiinond II on Coles Card. THE STRONGEST BRACg • Made in Canada! Thousands of workingmen are choosing Guaranteed King Tiger Suspenders because of their exceptional comfort and strength. 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HO fl orderg • oeive Droll received at - 'Honor *TT CoUeg sauna% tended to azinary p and reside floor ea.stl forth. DR. Osteoph Specialist diseases, e end nervy and three above 1.1m1 Tuesdays s 425 Mel Speciaii Airy diseasf Graduat McGill tin of Cone e �f Onta eli a cam Of Resider Hospital, I deers east Rensalt, 11 Office an east of the Phone 46. Huron. - DRS J. G. $ci College oi Mn Arl:fo lege of P Ontario. C. Mad fter Unive Trinity Al the Collej geons of Gradual 'acuity- lege of Chicago Royal 00 England, 1 England. ISartk, Sei Calls ans, toria Stre License of Tfurop arrange= Inade by or The E erste ant a LieenSi nuro lie.rts of Parlance Iran. n 175 r 11, E.No. 1