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The Huron Expositor, 1920-07-30, Page 3JULY 30, 1920. n 1855 R'I'E $9,000,000 anches Bank' 1 red to render every assistance or farmers in financing their tA into your affairs with you and nut banking. IS DISTRICT - rys Kirkton Iensall Zurich C,nstipatisn isms --0-- When ConetiP0440n come Wirt! appenel The Colons set r h -smote. material, which i>s ex- eroely poisonous, the blood ck+cuisr !on comes in sufficiently close eon- ket with the waste to take Top these • b13omts by absorption and to didbrdb- Its them throughout the body. The cit is—the Liver becomes Slag • you become dull anti heavy, iliou&ness asserts itself, then spa Headache, Kidney and Bladder rouble, Indigestion, Appendicitis.. aid more evils besides. Sacking's Kidney and Liver Pills are highly recommended for Constipation Feld its Evil Results They are purely vegetable, do rat 14 e, Purge or Irritate,. and bsfng +ailet by producing a healthy ooaidi- tfon of the Stomefch, Liver, Kidne e and Bowels. Na =Mee what medicine you are: taking for a laxative it might flee Just as well to change off to Hacking's. i'l a coMbina.tion of9�} P'ep- permint, IIayepple and the other- Vegetable therVegeta ale Drugs Wined in these pills 'w l irroduee results to .be un- equalled by any others. They work beaartaful in Digestive Disorders, for Gas on the Stomach, for Spasmodic Pains in the Stomach and Bowels, and for fyspepsia and indigestion. Buy a tow boxes from your dealer to -day, but be absolutely sure you get Hacking's. Hacking's Remedies are sold in .a -forth by E. UMBACH, Phm.,, B. Imperial Polarine specified for your art of Recommendations, and you r Gasoline of uniform high quality. it operating costs are kept at a I Polarinc exclusively." s ts' costs in many which assures every moving he repair shop oaring surface e, power in the !cation to every suited to your. commendations lion cans, 12M- ers everywhere, and barrels. 'EllI. POLARINE A (Extra heavy body). irOTOR IF JULY 30, 1920. trarwailaNtosak ....$00~111010.1111.... ME HURON EXPOSITOR Fortunes Began by Saving The greatest . fortunes' have .been founded on the steady and -con. si8tent accumulation of savings. Deposit your savings with this Bank. THE 1 SEAFORTH BRANCH, R. M. JONES, Manager. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES. FOR RENT. r• SINGING IN THE BATHROOM ternoon and evening, and then the physicians put the kisses under a miscroscope Dr. Lawrason, Brown told the . State Medical Society re- cently what they had learned from the microscopic examination. And this should rejoice the hearts of lovers, for it proved that while morning kisses were polluted by germs of consumption, afternoon and evening kisses were harmless, the reason B- ing that- fresh. air and sunshine kill the' germs of disease that lurk upon the lips. Therefore, Dr. Lawrason Brown expressed the opinion- that it was a good thing for the human race that courting was usually done - at night and in the late afternoon. Nobody was rude enough to ask Cholera infantum is one of 'the the. question; but some of those pres- fatal ailments of childhood. - It is a entwondered . if the Saranac Lake trouble that comes on suddenly, doctciyrs might not be inclined to sub- -especially during the summer months stitutte in the afternoon and evening .and unless prompt action is taken experiments -something warmer and more responsive than a cold sterile the little one may soon be beyond dish. aid. Baby's Own Tablets are an i?'ealmedicine in warding off this trouble. They regulate the bowels, and sweeten the stomach and thus prevent the dreaded summer com- plaints. They are an absolute safe medicine, being ' guaranteed to con- tain neither opiates nor narcotics or other harmful drugs. They cannot possibly do harm they always do good. - IThe Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. An impulse that apparently is fa.. miliar to many people, to burst into song when in a bathroom, is explain- -ed by a British scientist as being an induced effect of the- music of run- ning water, which virtually sounds the pitch for the occupant of the tub. The resonance of the room encourages, the effort, giving an unaccustomed q rali9 yto the voice, says Popular Mechanics. In other rooms- the furn- ishings break up the vibrations and deaden the tone, making the contrast quite conspicuous. CHOLERA INFANTUM j NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE More than 3,000 domesticated ele- phants are maintained in Siam. To. develop electricity for the pro- duction of fertilizer a Norwegian en- gineer will tunnel a mountain in Sum- atra and divert the course of a river to create a waterfall. A plan has been formulated for the electrification of the state railways of Austria. A French scientist has found that eves the most delicate fruit can be kept fresh for a year lei thoroughly washing it and sealing it hermetically in jars filled with sterile water. Both the gas and air are so thor- oughly preheated t$t the sniolse and sulphur of produced g as are rely consumed and a hater flame obtained for glass plants. in a 'heater design The invention of a - Chicago woman, a telephone with a receiver for each ear and a transmitter, all mounted in one unit, is said to be fifty per cent. more efficient than ordinary instru- ments. Closely imitating leather one, suit cases made of metal have been design- ed that are claimed to be more dur- able and sanitary, as they can be thoroughly washed both inside and out. . First suggested more than 200 years ago, the plan of building a canal to give Paris direct communication with the English channel at Dieppe again is receiving serious consideration. To tear up asphalt paving between street car rails a California man has invented a sort of scoop that can be mounted in front of a car into which the asphalt is almost automatically loaded. . Of French invention is an automatic server for restaurants in. which food is displayed in a circular glass cover- ed cabinet that is turned until the desired object. reaches a coin operat- ed 'opening. A patent has been granted a De- troit inventor for a captive baloon that is inflated with air heated by an electric heater carried in its basket and connected with a current supply on the ground, CINCINNATUS Once I met a young fellow whose name I shall conceal, but who, in this story, may be known as John Emery Jackson. He was one of those fel- lows who use a great deal of slang and who spend almost all they earn in order to be "togged out" in the latest style. If he happened ,to be in a small town, John Emery always found that "things are too. sdow in this burg." He had the habit of looking for work. That meant that John Emery seldom held a job for more than a Month. But when I knew him, he was employed as a draughtsman in a mining company's office. The work for him was not suitable, because the hous were Ho long and the pay was r chafed under such "punk" conditions and would say almost everyday: "I'm goin' to pull outof this hole just as soon. as I can land a real job. What's the use of . a fellow stickin' around here all his life?" His opportunity came at last. So one day he, announced boastfully to the boys: "Well lads, I'm pulling my freight out of here in two weeks. I've landed a real job. I'm going to get twice as much- money as I get here, and- instead of working my head off for eight hours 1411 work six." So, at last the two week came to an end, and John Emery "floated" down to the -Big. City. The boys all wished him well, but were glad in reality to be rid of him. Almost everyone had forgotten John in a very short time. But one day, after the lapse of a month or 'so, a telegram was received by a lad named Steve. The message, read as follows: "For Goodness' sake send me fifty bucks or I go to jail.—John Emery' Jackson." Steve went to the. telegraph office, took a pad,. John wrote the following reply: Emery Jackson: "Go i o jail.— Steve." - The last time I saw John Emery, he looked as if he had gone to jail all right. He. was out of a job; he had an unkept appearance, wore dirty shabby clothes, and betrayed by every move that he was down and out. C09P,E IN LIVE STOCK' Alt Classes More • or Less Liable to This Trouble. The Cause of Goitre Not yet Well Understood --Simple Treatment Is suggested ---Summer Dairy Hints. (Contributed by Ontario Department of . Agriculture. Toronto.) OITRE, or Bronchocele, is an enlarged condition of the BETTER NOT CHANGE LEFT-HANDERS If a child be naturally left handed, it should be allowed to remain so, for an attempt to train. it to right-handed- ness may easily result in making it mentally inferior. Dr. H. Griesbach emphasizes this in ,•an article in the Deutsche Medzin,ische Wochenschrift (Berlin), explaining that in left-hand- ed persons the speech centre is in the right hemisphere of the brain instead of in the left hemisphere, as is the case in' right-handed persons. The result of persistent efforts to make them right-handed may be a speech centre thatis not predominant- ly situated on either side, which con- dition .Griesbach says interferes with the differentiation of the hemispheres throughout childhood and adolescence. He says that once the unilateral hemisphere differentiation is complete as it is in adults, a re-education from left to right or from right to left- handedness will do no harm to the brain. KISSES DANGEROUS ONLY IN IN MORNING At Saranac Lake, N. Y., where they treat so many consumptives, the physicians have been experimenting with kisses. The _ subject, naturally, was a pretty girl. But, as she had a bad case of tuberculosis, the doctors did not permit her to kiss a man, but selected as her partners in the oscula- tion so -me unresponsive sterile dishes. She kissed the dishes morning, af- With a membership of approxi- mately 125,000, the Automobile Asso- ciationin England est E European represented in ownership of cars, light cars and motorcycles. thyroid,gland, which consists of two lobes situated one on each side of the windpipe. in the re- gion of the throat, and connected by an isthmus. Animals of the, different classes, of all ages, are liable to this condition, but we wish to discuss the trouble when appearing at, or shortly after,. birth. Each of the said lobes is ovoid, and consists of minute vesicles sur- rounded by a plexus of minute blood vessels., The gland.: has no duet, but is plentifully supplied with blood vessefe, and secretes an albuminous fluid, which becomes. absorbed. The function of this gland is net well understood. The lobes can be felt in an animal of any age by careful nianipulation,, and, as stated, are li- able to become enlarged (either one or both 'lobes) at any age. In some cases, especially in lambs and calves, it is of abnoreaal size at birth. This is more- frequently noticed in lambs than in any other class of stock, and sometimes the enlargement is . so great that respiration is interfered with, the young animal is weak and unthrifty and not infrequently dies. It is worthy of note that in foetal life the gland is quite large, but nor- mally. becomes reduced before birth. The cause of -enlargement is not well understood. Some claim that the condition in the young animal is the result of insufficient nourishment for the dam during the period of gesta- tion. Others claim - that it is caused by the pregnant animal consuming water too highly impregnated with lime. Symptoms—The symptoms cannot readily be mistaken. Either or both lobes are' enlarged, sometimes •at birth and sometimes not until a var- iable time after birth. If both lobes are enlarged a well -marked, movable lump_ will be noticed at each side of the throat, there not appearing to be any connection between the two, but appearing, both to sight and rhanipu- lation, as two separate lumps. If but one lobe be enlarged, of course' one side appears normal. These enlarge- ments are not sore to the touch, and in Most cases do not apparently inter- fere with the health of the animal, but in some cases, especially in lambs, they interfere with respiration and strength. Treatment—In many cases treat- ment is not necessary, as the glands gradually become reduced without it, but treatment is wise in other cases, and in. all cases hastens reduction. It consists in rubbing well once daily with an ointment made of 2 drams each of iodide of potassium and iodine mixed with' 2 oz. vaseline, or other ointment or liquid containing a large percen"tage of iodine or one of its compounds.—Dr. J. H. Reed, O. A. College, Guelph. A MOTHER'S TRIALS Care of Home and Childern Often Causes a -Breakdown. The woman •air home, deep in house- hold duties and the cares of mother- hood, needs occasional help to keep her in good health. The demands upon a mother's health are many and severe. Her own health trials and her children's welfare exact heavy tolls, while hurried meals, broken rest and much indoor living tend to weak- en her constitution. No wonder that the woman at home is often indis- posed through weakness, headaches, backaches and nervousness. Too 4nany women have grown to accept these visitations as a part of the lot of motherhood. But many and varied as her health troubles are, the cause is simple and relief at hand. When well, it is the woman'sgod- brood that keens her well; when e must make her blood rich ,to renew her health. The nursing mother more than any other , woman in the world needs rich blood and plenty of it. There is one way to get this 'good blood so necessary to perfect health, and that is through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills make new blood, and throughaoh their use thousands of weak, wives and mothers have been Zf aadde bright, cheerful and strong. ou are ailing, easily tired or depressed, it is, a duty youowe yourself and give Dr.- Williams' your,family to Pink Pills a fair trial. What this medicine has done for others it will surely do for .you. You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50c a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine! Co., Brockville, O Summer Dairy Notes. I realize that the majority of dairy farmers do not need reminders as to what they should do in ordinary prac- tice, but mankind tends to slackness. Most men need a wife to give occa- sional prods in order to keep them up to the mark. These notes are given with the same good intention that a wife "just tells her husband" -1e - cause she is interested in him. Failing pastures should be supple- mented with grain, meal or green feed in the stable. The hot dry t*ea- ther of June means short feed for July and August;• this means small milk and cream cheques, or a small amount of butter to sell. By the size of the milk or cream cheque we may know the value of our herd, but not the value of individual cows, which latter can be known only by testing each cow in the herd, with scales and fat test. . Next to feed in importance, comes salt and water. Without plenty of these, cows cannot milk well. Salt aids digestion and gives tone to a cow's system. An average cow re- quires about one ounce of salt daily. Water is the great carrier of nature's supplies of plant and animal feed. A cow in full flow .of milk will drink from ten to twenty gallons of water daily. Needless to say the water should be pure. .Cooling milk and cream on the farm is perhaps next in importance. Milk for the condensery, cheesery, or for city trade, 'should be -cooled to be- low 70 degs. as soon as possible after, milking—to a lower temperature if at all possible. Some firms will not accept milk at a temperature above' 66 degs. F. andprefer it -below 60 degs. Plenty of cold water, or pref- erably ice -water for cooling milk is needed. ,Where water is scarce it may be used for watering stock after cooling the milk, if the cooling tank be kept clean. A milk cooler is a great convenience where there is a good supply of cold water under pressure. Cooling cream is much more easily done, because there is -only about ten to fifteen per cent. the bulk to cool, as compared with milk. Immediately after separating the fresh cream should be placed in cold water .and allowed to remain there until the cream pail is needed for the next lot. Empty into the cream can, wash and repeat the operation twice a day. This will insure good, sweet cream, for butterniaking or for any other pur- pose. We need better -cream for the makieg of fine butter in Ontario. Everybody should give Ontario butter a boostupward in quality.—Prof, 1i.. H. Dean, O. A. Cellege, Guelph. i Resembling a soldering iron, a gas heated tool has been invented for cut- ting glass. ,STEWART'S SELL IT FOR LESS I MAIL OR PHONE YOUR ORDERS 1• WE PREPAY CARRIAGE SPECIAL SHOWING OF WARM -WEATHER GOODS For Man, Woman or Child THIS STORE, TRUE TO' ITS REPUTATION HAS MADE EVERY EFFORT TO MAKE -AMPLE PROVISION FOR YOUR WARM WEATHER NEEDS. COME HERE WITH A CONFIDENCE THAT WE ,W I L L SHOW YOU THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF THE MOST RELIABLE GOODS AT THE VERY LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. New Summer Wash Goods Our stock of WASH GOODS this season is a re- velation in cotton goods manufacture. There is nothing more beautiful than these dainty Wash Fabrics. The many entirely new ideas, the variety and exquisite color' schemes offer everyone untold possibilities for summer clothes for women and chil- dren. The striking feature however is that our Wash Goods will positively stand suds and sun. Don't miss this big display and remember that the PRICES- ARE ALWAYS LOWEST AT STEWARTS'. Pretty New Waists. Only the best and most select materials are em- ployed in making these new waists. All the little, but important distinctive features that help to make a waist beautiful are attractively brought out, to the end that in these stunning ,odels you have richness and beauty at very moderate prices. Price $1.25 to $7.50 Boys Dressy Clothes 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 the general good appearance of the suits. The new suits have arrived. You will be delighted -with their beauty and well finished appear- ance and the price will be equally satisfactory. PRICE ......... $5.00 to $15 i Peabody's Overalls $2,75 e i' Dress Goods, Silks and Trimmings If you would be correctly and economically gown- ed owned this Summer, you must visit our Dress Good Department and inspect our stocks. You may choose with . absolute certainty from this matchless array, knowing that every piece is correct and de- pendable. This store supremacy in this department is -generally acknowledged by women _ who know. This season more than ever we are very proud of our dress goods department and take a special pleasure in showing the goods. Call and see them to -day. Prices lower than you will expect to pay. New Corset Models The appearance of your new gown will be greatly improved if it has for a foundation one of Cromp- ton 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- fit. Price $1.50 to $ 5 Ready in the Men's Store ---Season's Nobbiest .. Suits. ,1 THE ADVANTAGE WE DERIVED BY ORD- ERING OUR MEN'S SUITS EARLY LAST FALL IS CLEARLY DEM(fNSTRATED IN THE BEAUTIFUL LINE ' OF NEW GUARANTEED WORSTED SUITS WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED. WE SAID GUARANTEED and khat means a great deal in this time .of substitution and increased prices in linings and pocketings, etc., etc. WE• REPEAT GUARANTEED because we bought only suits made of reliable guaranteed cloths and we hand you over a positive guarantee with every suit we sell, but we also give you the additional advantage of buying your suits at very reasonable prices. Sizes 33 to 46......$10 to $45 New Shirts for the Hot Days There is a wealth of beauty in the Shirts. Plain or fancy patterns in black and white or - colored ef- fects. All guaranteed -to wash and year to your entire satisfaction. Price $1.50 to $4.25 This Store will close Wednesday afternoon at 12,30. 4 Stewart Bros. Seaforth 1 This Store will close Wednesday afternoon at .12.30. N.