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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-11-11, Page 64a e land TWOlet seine, U Nlieesit9 of -New 'York Chattiest; „N Moolrefold'a en Square At Mr J RRan- os- #.,dt' Eng. lyeaforth, third Wednes- Month from 11, am. to ::'Waterloo Street, South, hen,. 267, Stratford.T >SULTLNG ENGINEERS Proctor. & Redfern, Ltd. proctor, B.A.,SC., Manager • Toronto St., Toronto, Caa ;latilsis. Pavement!), Waterworks, rower e 6y.tet , Incinerator., alma*, i*• littallo Rano. ou (nae, Fusfotiee, Aral - Oar Foos U.uelb pati out of the money we neve our climate :b1ERCHANTS CASUALTY CO. ^Speei'alista in Health and Accident Insurance_ policies liberal and unrestricted. Over $1,000,000 paid in losses. $,xceptional opportunities for local Agents. 904 ROYAL BANK B D Ont. 978-60 JAMES McFADZEAN Agent for llowick Mutual Insur- ance Company. Successor to John Harris, Walton. address BOX 1, BRUSSELS or PHONE 42. 2769x12 LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public, Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do - On Bank, Seaforth. Money to lean. J. M. BEST Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs ewer Walker's Furniture Store, Main Itreet, Seaforth. PROUDFOOHT KILT ORAN AND tYfitrS(1Ql fayolle. From French Army Ranks To '•ecolue Great Qleger&l Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- lic. etc. Money to lend. _ In Seaforth W.Prondfoot, Kidd Block. of each week. aOffice d L. 'Killoran, B. E. Holmes. a•• ARSHAL I2Ml'ZRR FAYOLLE, who visited . t:aoada as head of a min- I" aim to thank the Dominion f. i ud to Fiance during the war, , i ni y the Vu;tulconiC saying t'_. - •r. u„lila knapsack con - ",i.. a w, - I's I i • n, for he serv- al ,t, the Franc., Pr,:.s1un w•ar of 1, o E it private au Id ler. He was a yenned bre flier -general, 61 years .11 is i., •; the .war broke out, but .,, c d immediately for ,.,, .,.-lir•: . ..I,nus in 11:,- lighting from the vo-n. t: r: t. takeuy part under Gen.- t';.-::. titan in the first French Offen-- s:te iu Lurrul uc. 11t• distinguished him, If by u b"Id stroke during the retreat from Morhange when he threw his artillery In front of the infantry and held up the advance of Nye enemy, and also by bis second check of the Germans at the Grand Courouue, uu August 4, 1914. ' He ,added to his laurels at Arras in the German race for the sea, and later, in 1916, at the battle of the Somme, where he commanded the fourth army. lu March, 1917, be was In the thick of the fighting at Ver- dun. In 1918 he was sent to Italy after the big Austrian successes, where VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office opposite -Dick's Hotel, Main Street. Seaforth. All orders left at the hotel will re - wive prompt attention. Night calls received at the office JOHN GRIEVE. V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calla promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Goderich. Specialist in Women's and Children's diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose and throat. Consulation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tueadaye•and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W. HARN. M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genie -Urin- ary diseases of men and women. DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; member of College of Physicians and Surgeons hof Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 rigors east of Post Office. Phone 56. geneall, Ontario. DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. - DR. C. MACKAY C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of. Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS • t:iuUottal Crop improvement Service.) "The isolation of country life is lt.couiing largely a myth. Any man 0110 has an automobile, and every I(vc farm fatuity has one, will not e: er feel lonely if he eau any day iu the year travel as many miles as Itis machine will make both winter .t:td summer. "Every community is entitled to passable roads at all times," says Mr. R. S. hider, president Canadian Steel & Wire Co. "The road which Is most satisfactory is undoubtedly built of reinforced concrete and one of its great features 1a that regardless of the weather, these roads can be kept open'with the snow plough and the dreaded January thaw or spring breakup will lose their terrors. "Every town and village ought CO have a co-operative arrangement with the farmers to keep the roads open 365 days in the year. Being snow- bound le a relic of the past.” Graduate of University of Toronto • . Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon - ,.:don, England. Office -Back of Do- itit?nien Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 6, Night calls answered from residence, Victoria street, Seaforth. AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN ,iceneed auctioneerfor the counties Huron and ?Ott Correapondence ylgciente for dale dates can be c by'dalling. up phone 97, Seaforth apltoi Office -Charges mod- aFtction guarantee& r It T. LIMIt, atietitelleld for the County Setaeit;,* dated to in_ali .. . <. Frww yl ars' are 3;tn, Si. MARSHAL FAYOLLE. his advice did much to tighten up the Italian lines. But Foch recalled him hurriedly to -France when the Germane came smashing through in the spring offensive. He was placed in command of the army of reserve and as such won his greatest vic- tory, that of the battle of Noyon Mondldier, In the summer of 1918 he was in command of a group of armies with • - standing the moat powerful German attacks, checking their advance to Paris and Amiens. The Americans fought under him at the Marne and with hirif-at the Argonne. It was this association with the A. E. F. which caused his choice by Marshal Foch as his representative to the convention of the American le- gion at Cleveland. Ohio, last fall. So this is his second trip to this con- tinent. A spectacular incident in his•ca- reer came in a strange way. As a private he -fought in the war of 1870 when France lost Alsace-Lorraine. As a full general in 1918, it was given him to ride at the head of a French army into liberated Stras- bourg, which represented the climax of France's triumph in the war. For a year then he was in com- mand of the French army of occupa- tion along the Rhine. It was just in February last that he was elevated to the proud rank of marshal of France. w of apse's, Guaranteed fiox, reathing, atop plumed ronchiel tnbee give, phis Pt R et sleep; contain* no ...vrmingg maria ; $1.00 at your drug,. 'L Tt'lal free* our agencies orwt'ite agietone, I49,-,$ing W., Toronto. • GOODi RECIPES Afterthought. One pint - of mice apple sauce, sweetened to taste; stir id the yolks of two eggs, well beaten. Bake fort - fifteen minuteee. cover with a mer- ingue made of two well beaten wthitea and one-half cep of powdered sugar. Return to the oven and brown. Brown Betty.l One cup of bread crumbs, eight sliced apples, one- half cup of molas- ses, one-half cup of cold water; but- ter a baking dish,' put a layer of crumbs, then a layer of apples, sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar and dot with bits of butter; repeat mrtil the dish is full; insert a knife in several places and pour in the water and molasa,•s. Set in a pan of hot water and hale, for forty-five min- utes. Serve hot ttith cream or hard sauce. Apple Ketchup. - 9Iax9 ok rningeef el'1 oil prXg 1 a: If lyase, etelee 47Ii.1terle 'Che death Wee elu 189i!neetk ,at Who' Ali>amia, in Sbutberae Rumpel. faucial liudjo, Whet' ole ted to. be the, eldest man itl the'werle. it *arae said that, hp . was 1$9 yarn a age. His faculties were unimpaired. .Ile left 200 deecendanta, EicsGovernor Piilsleury, of Minne- apolis, Minn., had diedln his home in. that city, ILe brad hel'ddarge interests in flour milling throughout the North- western States. J. J. Hill, ppresident of the Great Northern Railway a the United Stites, has sold the newspaper be b 5 owned in St. Paul, Minn: For many years he was one of the railway Mag- nates of this continent, (National Crop Improvement Service.) "Two of thegreatest enemies to every farm are bugs and weeds, but if you have a properly constructed fence, you can burn -out the weeds along the fence lines without damage and rid yourself of both- pests. Besides your fence is grounded wher- ever a steel post is usedand danger to your live stock from lightning is greatly reduced," says Mr. R. S. Rider, president, Canadian Steel & Wire Company.. "The use of steel fence posts has become so general during recent years that there is no longer any question but what they are the solu- tion of the fence post problem. "While the wooden fence poet still has many friends, it is usually not an economy because the labor in making that post and the compara- tively short life of the post, makes Bullheads and Catfish.. Familiar to every small boy is the catfish or "bullhead" of the ponds. It Is fond of muddy places, and can live in water too foul for any other kind of flab. In point of flavor it is hardly to be surpassed. Bullheads are nest -building fishes. They will lay their eggs in hollow places scooped out with their fine on the bottom of a pond, thereupon standing guard over them until they are hatched; but they prefer to do their nesting in the dark. In the lower Mississippi and its tributaries Is found a catfish which sometimes attains a weight of 100 pounds and a length of six feet. It is commonly known as the "yellow cat," and looks somewhat like a bullhead, but with a smaller head in proportion to its size. In color It is asilvery yellow; it is very good to eat, and there is quite a fishery for it with hook -and -line and with Qtiarter, pare :tad core twelve apples, put in a saucepan, cover with neater and let simmer, until soft; nearly all the wa:er should be evap- orated; rub through a sieve an51 add the following to ,:.ch quart of pulp; one cup of sugar, one teaspoon of cloves, one teaspoon of mustard, 2 teaspoons of cinnamon and add one tablespoon of salt, two cups of vine- gar and two grated onions. Bring the catchup to a hill and let simmer gently for one hour. Bottle, cork and seal. Apple and Cabbage Salad Shave cabbage !ane and soak for one lour in celery NI,' :•r, made by adding one teaspoon of celery salt to each quart of water. Ilrain and dry on a soft towel. Add an equal amount of apple cut into n:atchlike pieces, mix with boiled dressing. Apple and Banana Salad Slice bananas and roll in lemon juice and sugar, mix with an equal amount of sliced apples, serve with boiled dressing ,.r with mayonnaise dressing. Apples With Fried Onions. Peel onions and slice. Fry in fat until a rich brawn, drain on soft brown paper. Fry unpared quarters of apple in the fat left from he onions. Arrange apples in a border on a platter, fill centre with the fried onions and serve hot, it much cheaper to buy a steel poet of the proper size for the work re- quired of it. "The steel post when properly made, is heavily galvanized inside and out with an extra heavy coat of rustless sine below the ground line. "There is another economy and that le that you can drive the steel posts without digging the holes, and the bottom of the post automatically, spreads, making a wedge-shaped an- ehor to hold the post firmly in place. "The man who wishes to sell his fano would be wiae to replace his old ramshackle fence with a woven wire fabric on steel posts. It will enhance its value several thousand dollars and give it a look of thrift 'tch is worth good money." THE LAND WHERE CLOTHING IS BARRED. Fascinating stories of native life and character are recorded by the Rev. John Roscoe, the English mis- sionary, in "Twenty-five years in East Africa," whioh has just appear- ed in London. After passing through country af- ter country of semi -clothed batibar- ians, little removed from the wild animals around them, the people of Uganda greet the traveller as an agreeable surprise. They are "gen- tlefolk with the courtesy and man- ners of highly educated people." "The person of the King has even been regarded as most sacred," he says; "he was never allowed to walk outside his own endlosure, but was carried on the shoulders of chosen men. The shoulders of these men were sacrosanct, and no man, not even a friend; was allowed to place his hand upon them in a familiar manner; any breach of this rule was punished by a fine" e. • Surgical skill had reached a high standard, 'Wen whose stomachs had beers`ripped openwith the bowels pro- truding had had a piece of gourd shell placed inside to keep the atome ach in position, and the flesh was then stitched over it." Belief in ghosts was an important part of religion, because of the con- viction that they were able to help or harm the living. "The ghost world was no far-off land separated Brom this world," writes Mr. Roscoe, "but it was part and parcel of it; indeed, each garden was the playground ,of these unseen visitants, who in the moontide sun- shine might be heard rustling in the leaves of bhe trees." Instead of letters and telegrams, messages were conveyed rapidly by beat of drum. "'Dhere were literally several hun- dred different beats for drums," he says, "and each rhythm was known by the people, and conveyed a definite meaning to them, as the waves of sound do to the wireless telegraphist. The drum was thus equivalent to wireless telegraphy, carrying mes- sages far and wide as quickly as sound travels. In the case of any urgent call or claim it was the duty of the first person at a distance who (heard the nhythm to repeat the mes- sage, and thus in a few minutes a claim or call was carried hundreds of miles." "Even prisoners regarded escape as dishonorable. By bribing his ward- er a prisoner might get 'leave to visit friends on whom he could count for assistance in effecting his permanent release. 'But "not a single instance is known of the leniency of the guard having been abused by the non -re- turn of the prisoner." In the hills near Lave Victoria are found the Nilotic Kavirondo, the mystery of whose origin is still un- ravelled. 'Dhese Nilotiq people are nude and think clothing indecent. "When a Christian mission was started among them," he says, "and some youths who had been staying at a boarding-house went home wearing clothes, then• parents scolded them for doing so, and told them they were to put their clothes away until they went back to school, and not to bring disgrace upon their village by wear- ing them." TWENTY YEARS AGO Their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York had completed their tour of Canada and had sailed front Halifax, N. S., on the royal yacht Ophir for St. John's, Nfld. Stern measures were being taken in Cape Colony to stamlp out disaf- fection. The rebels were being dealt with under inertial law. Canadian scouts attacked at night a Boer laager near Ballmoral. The Boers were surprised and scattered, losing camp equipment. It was reported at Klerksdorp, Transvaal, that Col. Byng's column had arrived bringing in 36 prisoners attd 325 refugees, Colonel Byng is now Lord Byng, Governor-General of Canada, .Mr, W. E. H. Massey, a prominent mantifacturer of Toronto,_egias criti- cally ill and his physicians held out no hope of recovery. The Rt. Hon„Sir Charles Tupper had sailed on the S. S. Tunisian from England for Canada. The Hon. A. G. Blair was the guest at a banquet given in St, John, N.B. Ile predicted a bright future for St. John, Mr. Blair was Minister of Railways in the Liberal Government and later chairman of the Board of Railway Commissioners. Ile died sev- eral years ago: The death was announced at King- ston, Ont, of the Rev. Kenneth Mac- Lennan, a retired minister of the Presbyterian Church, who had filled charges at Dundas,,Peterborough and Whitby. The death at the age of 82 years of Archibald MoOallum, of Maitland, N. S., was announced. He had been one of the leading shipbuilders of Nova Scotia. It was announced that the erection Of blast furnaces wailed shortly be commenced at North Sydney, Cape Breton, N, S. flthe work has been ir- operation for many years, • The census returns received from the North-West Te rltonies gave the population of that' part of the Do, minion as 189,999 whites and I0,000 Indians. The better part of the ter- ritories is now intended within the boundaries of Alberta and Saskatche- wan. The death was announced in Win- nipeg of Nicholas Flood Davin, for many pears the representative in the House of Commons of Aseinmboia. He was a brilliant man and had dis- tinguished himself at the Bar and in literature tae was born in Ireland Animals With hour Horns. It is nothing out of the ordinary to see an animal without horns, so they excite little curiosity in this re- spect. Likewise, two horns get little more notice, while the single horn of the Indian rhinoceros is well enough known to distinguish that animal from the%wo-hraed African species. But when mention is made of a four or six -horned creature, everybody immediately become sus- picious and asks what the Joke is. Nevertheless there are such animals found in certain parts of Asia. Principal among these is the four - horned chouka, a small antelope of India, its name being derived from the native work chouk, meaning leap. Its front pair of horps are. short and placed just above the eyes, while the larger ones are in the us - dal position higher on the head. The length of the upper. berths is about three or four inches';• though the lower ones rarely exceed• an inch, and no special use for them has ever been discovered. The Chouka is a beautiful little • ith it b i ht bay back creature w e r g rims. contrasted with the gray -white of the under part, beneath which are the Aluminium. • lithe legs that enable it to make the A plan is under consideration for high,bounds for which it is noted. the construction of a plant op the An adult chouka rarely exceeds western coast of India. to produce twenty Inches in height at the about 2,500 tons a year of aluminum shoulders. from bauxite by the use of electric- In their wild state all sheep were sty. It is proposed to geneitate about furnished with a pair of horns, but 20,000 kilowatts by the construction the number never eteeeded two until of a large reservoir to collect and some curious specimens,we're die - store the annual rainfall and the 'covered' in several isolated sections flow of .a small stream, with a head of Asia. These species had from .four of about 1,700 feet, Conelderable to six horns, the upper set being the quantities of aluminum are new lame—ate—the other two being grad- being imported for the mafufactnre 'uated with the smallest ones just of cooking and other utensils, and - abate& the eyes, 'Curiouale enough, it --10 thought that there olill beet the deo lower seta always curve up' (good marltet- for the: product and de- Ward, as do the horns of our da Wind tit tilt power Ben ted h r anMatilda' r s nesB C:•a eed "u v► ' - - Benet tamboo lisO laden "found eat. A.:CalifOratis the inventor of -6c tri•• fir • retttfibre conte cl r kiftt 4b ww of tobacco front a pites'71'y” G tatkoad' imVit . 5 r.0 alai! betokens the perfection' of': the; WA Famous for 50 years, Salada ,never.;. varies the excellence of its quality,. hind 'the iron gate of an enclosure t without interruption the eight-day he still cries the hours during the clock would run down first. -Toledo eight, se that the people in the houses Blade. near the Church of St. Ethelddeda, Five specimens of the laughing , which dates aback to , the thirteenth kingfisher have a}rrlved at the zoo. century, can hear. This is the only lt'they can find anything to laugh at place where the old custom still sur- just at present, they must be clever vires. - birds -+London Opinion. CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM :1 serapeIt's a pretty good idea to will the ; Gen. Wood's. suggestion that the malting fools of them Kingston ent• 'a fortune to one child, No use: Filipinos be taught esti and order s�}} I ought to be limited to the Filipinos— a11.�. Syracuse Herald. So many people are busy being un- emplpyed that it is extremely hard to get any work done.-Bos'boeeTran- Standard. In spite of the fashion decree from Pattie, there is not much evidence hereabouts that as' the Jaya shorten the skirts lengthen.-H'axr Ilton Her- ald. , Political candidates as well as others should never propose to a girl over the telephone. She may say yes. Journal. And, she may be the wrong girl.- Kitchener Record. - A Detroit girl who was married over the telephone has been granted a di- NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE vorce. Evidently she got the wrong number.-Orillie Packet. Knives have been invented to be The only way to ensure everlasting abtached to cultivators to cut off peace is for the world to decide not weeds, tc have another war until the last one Using French machinery, a phos - is paid for. -Punch. phorous factory will be established in An Ottawa• man celebrated his Brasil. Swedish interests are extending the telephone systems of Poland on an extensive scale. Compressed air cylinders control the descent of a person using a new individual fire esoape to lower himself from a building. • To achieve disarment, build battle- Silverware can be burnished by a ships by popular subscription.- machine invented by a Swiss in much Cheyenne Tribune. less than the time required for hand T. Swindle is the name of a candi-work by expert workers. date in North Simeoe, But what's in I For delivering bricks a motor truck a name? -Guelph Mercury..;has been designed with a body that Just when England seems to have travels in euch a way as to unload its the Irish question settled, some Irish- I contents neatly piled. man asks another questions-Ameri- ! Tape abtachmenta for the ankles. can Lumberman. fastened together with a spring, have If the brethren want to find out if ' been invented by an English woman a man has the making of a good Ito afford exercise for the lege. deacon in him they should. hide be- Using electric tanning machines, bind the kitchen door on the night he what is claimed to be the largest and puts up the etove pipe -London Ad- vertiser. ' Despi' a the unemployment, the savings banks of the country are holding their deposits' well, which proves that on the average the thrifty workers are holding their jobs. -Shoe Everybody_ knows that in Canada there are more Ternpletca's Rheumatic Capsules Sold than aft other Rheumatic Remedies, eoyribinied for Iltheu. inatie8Yy ' NkUrlfil5,. Neu algia, lteaatia#i Luitibago, etc. near them, Ihtoatdrtig irfalieI8 titeta. • Write for free trial tri 'te m'ipleton. Torontoq Such has been the advance of med- ical science that a Paris physician, operating on an elephant for an ab- scess, was able to kill bhe elephant. - Toronto Mail and Empire. One reason for the pt)pulaa+ity of golf is that It is aomebhing' people are not obliged to do. -Sioux City 106th birthday cleaning up the yard. And it wasn't -his father who ordered him to do it, either. -Ottawa Journal. The cards in some hotel rooms reading, "Have you. left anything?" should be changed to "Have you any- thing left?" -Burlington News. LONDON'S NIGHT CRIER A� party of tourists from the U. S. seeing old England' were walking down Holborn when they heard a man's voice from the darkness: - "Twelve o^Week-twelve o'clock," They walked on chuckling and one of them was heard to say, "Drunk again." But the tourists missed one of the choicest bits of that romantic neighborhood -the night crier. There is only one left in London. Ile is Harry Dykes, watchman in Ely place, where the chambers of Sir George Lewis and other celebrated seliciters and barristers are located. From be - DON'T DO THiS! LEONAlO EMI OIL RELIEVES DEAFNESS and STOPS•HEADNOISES. Simply Rub it Back of the Ears and Insert in Nostrils. Proof of One. cess Mll be give by tine desgglxt. MADE IN CANADA ARTIER 11188 60„ 88185 Ago %, Tarbnlo AM tenamd, lot, MIt.,18614561, t. Y. CITY ii kt 1. UMBAS 'Segovia most up-to-date tannery in South America has been put in operation in Brazil. An automatic,: cash register invent- ed by a Boston man for street care, makes change when cerins of larger value than the regular fare are and Leather Reporter. dropped 'into it. As a suitable opponent of Mr. Bel-' Belgian interests are planning to ley in Quebec, page Mr. Ache.- exploit 25,000,000 acres of oil land and Kitchener Record. shale deposists, in Eathonia and to Mr, S. Stevens, an authority on build a pipe line from them to the wasps, declares that these insects Baltic. cannot sting if the breath is held- Two electric generating stations The trouble, of course, is`to get them Will be built in Morocco at a cost of to hold their breath at the critical $500,000 to supply Fez with power. moment. -Punch. 'Metal anchoring straps have been Calling a man a liar is the last word invented to prevent automobiles move in 'wasted talk. If he is a liar he ing and being damaged when shipped already knows it and you are spring- in railroad cars. ing old stuff on him. If he isn't one, Recent experiments in the mann- you are and he has found you out,- facture of sulphuric acid from Beaz- Cynthea Democrat. ilian pyrites have given the most A doctor declares that the best way satisfactory results. to lie when sleeping is on the right The relative volume of insecticides side. Now it only remains for a poi- is measured mechanically by a device itician to tell us which way to lie ,invented by a United States govern - when waking. -London Opinion. ment scientist. "What kind of a fellow is Sinks?" Coal has been found in every Aus- "Well, he is one of those fellows who tralian State, the deposist of New always grab the stool when there is South Wales and Queensland being a piano to he moved "-Ex. the largest and best. According to a weekly paper, a So weigihted that it rights itself' if man could carry a million pounds if upset,, a new stamp and envelope the money was in hundred pound 'moistener cannot spill its water on notes. We mention this so that -our an office desk. readers may he prepared for any em- Wheat is grown in Japan alinedex- ergency.-Passing Shaw. elusively as a -winter crop, largely on There comes aedime do the life of upland rice fields between crops of every nazi when he wishes somebody that grain. would To teach semaphore signaling a de - pleasure it.-+Harrhisisburgand Telegraph.safely vice has been invented that moves Another thing wecar haveget yet the the arms of a human figure into the pleasure to see is a woman sweeping (correct positions as a button is turn - up cigar ashes from the rug, smiling( ed to show the corresponding_lettexs- like the lady in the vacuum cleaner ads, -Kansas Oity Star, Sleeping outdoors is said is said to make one beautiful. A glance at the average hdbo proves it. -St. John's Press. Harry Lander has arrived to make his farewell tour. litany happy re- turns. -Providence Tribune. San Francisco started to hang Are buckle and now talks of fining him $500 for mixing his drinks. -Brock- ville Recorder. If Premier Meighen is opposed in bis own riding by a womap candidate, will he -be so unchivalrous as to pub- licly beat iter? -Brantford Expositor. Ft is dangerous for any girl to throw herself at a man, however elig- ible he may be," asserts a lady writer in a weekly journal. But where„ is the danger if,Jte is a good catch? - Passing Show. The man who sits up nights hating bis neighbors will find the morning that his neighbors have beat him to it, --Owen Sound Sun -Times. - It is estimated that orle man in every sixteen promises his future wife to give up smoking on the day he is married. On the day following, of course, he pleases himself. --Passing 611757 M. y son will be unable Io aetettd school to -day, as 'hs has just shaved himself for the flint time." --North- eastern Cauldron. On the road to normalcy we 'have lost ,barrage, oamouflaage, terrain and meticulous. But we:hede found agen- da.•-(P.hiladelAtia North Maierlean. Most men state (loilg setrnone, but if they were gieeti a thaneo hi' Calk t: OTHER TABLETS NOT ASPIRIN AT ALL, Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross" are Genuine Aspirin If you don't see the "Bayer Cross" on the tablets, you are not getting Aspirin -only an acid imitation. The "Hager Cross is youronly way of,knowing that you are getting genuine Aspirin, „prescribed by physicians. for over nineteen years and proved safe by million° for Headache, Neuralgia, Colda, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for &'ain generally. Made la Canada. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets -also larger sized "Bayer" packages can be had at drug stores. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of Monoseeticapidester of Salleylicaoid. While - it la well known that As hrin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the 'piddle 'against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped With their, general 4rade mark, the "?!layer -Crone, •