HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-01-20, Page 2to ib clear clear out our SKATES before stock tea-
areoffering a substantial reduction on, ail kinds.
of Pucks, sticks and Straps.
SEASONABLE GOODS
Boilers, 7 gallon $1.75
Shovels 65c to $1.00
made Baskets, 2 bushels $2.00
tulles Racks
§1c
Hareshide Mitts, not split 1.50 to $1.75
Washing Machines, Red Star . $19.50
gaiters, special sewed $1.00
Chemical Closets
Special Strong Padlock 45c
Geo. A. Sills & Sons
-the.right
sweet tekste!
Roll that fragrant smoke across
your tongue—close your eyes.
D'yer get that flavor of real
sun -cured tobacco-- the right
taste of sweet Virginia leaf?
It's ripened into every strand
of the golden leaf by tare sun
of ol' Virginny.
P. M.'s a man's smoke.
PHILIP
CIGARETTES
NAVY CUT___
10 for 15 25for55
No. 12
Depend 42111. the CanVon of Yourifens
laying is the rams profitable. To ;1=ml-our pullets and lint, laying through the winter period
eartfeerEng WODEHOUSE POULTRY INVIGORATOR NOW.
adottran taPreaticid am Production it uts as a splendid teak and will make nmb, benittu birds.
Msourfactstred by WODEHOUSE INVIGORATOR LIMITED, HAMILTON, ONT.
Sidd and guaranteed tin
K UMBACH, SHAFORTIL ONT.
14/1STR
SMOKING
PWG MaS
2;%ood
7ohacco"
1,111E man who smokes
I Master Mason KNOWS
the flavor of good tobacco.
He demands the big Master
Mason plug, because to the
last pipeful it gives him the
best for the least meney.
WORU1•$ WO
its '14.
sek.m.s.‘ vsse.4•0,ehift.
th
ittr • `Ntridn' n7f • f. "
•
icily Fox Destreau
Great Value. •11
Often during the Aliiirfl
k POWs Of
early spring the wslirlatdiendn MS With
a loud, sharp bark tWferent &WM_
that of a dog- Wita
the foxna cry could e'er ,
TI
fee the ,ptlier. edettate
The treason for all this meta
clamor is that the fox's among
eon is at band, Many a Ilene; ,b
between suitors takers place at
Wm. The vixen site by to wate
progress of the struggle; then.
the light is decided, she trots
with the victor, whilst the vonq
ed rival dlinks off lick taw wo
The "earth." which will soon be
nursery for a thriving family
wooly eubs, is often a rabbit -
enlarged and Improved by the
labors of fox and vixen. Sonet
it is a cranny in the rocks.
la is curious to notice hOw
suca a tierce marauder as the
can live in perfect harmony wi
calmly of rabbits, which formbb1t, the
Ple article of his diet. It he m
his "earth" in a bank occupied
rabbits, be will never harm an
his tiny neighbors. This does
mean that he strikes rabbit off
menu. He brings in rabbits as o
as before, but he gets them f
Nome distant warren.
Vett Tak g '"Fnift-a-tives"
aatatie The Foils Fruit Medicine
eda
it the • P.O. Hex 128, Panaseosto, N.S.
when "I snared with Rheumatism for
away five years, having Use badly at tunee
utak- I was unable to gat up.
tuldg• I tried Medicines I aaw advertised,
the
fat and was treated by doctors but the
bole, Itheltrnatisna always came back..
joint In 1916, I ss in an advertisement
imes that "FraiNkses"-would stop 1311.came•
gee and tooka, box, and got relief;
even
fox then took "Oren -a -Ryes" right along
th a for about six,Mouths and I have
sta- never felt mratheumatism since".
ekes J'OliN E. GUIL,DERSON,
by
y of , 50o a box; $ eg.$2.50, trial size 25o.
not...10454#0*resent postpaid by
415
his Pruit-a-tives LiMited, Ottawa.
nen-
roe
This is all the more !surprising
wheu we consider that the fox is
of the limiest of hunters. He eel
chases his game, preferring to 11
wait and capture it with .a al
bound. Sometimes, like his roue
the stoats and weasels, he Casein
his victim by a series of w
"stunts." He will roll on his b
or make comic springs into the
Brer rabbit is amused and curt
He watches the game, not realiz
until it is too late that the en
tainer requires payment in kind
his performance.
Pheasants, ducks, chickens, ge
and turkeys all flnd their way to his
larder, for he is a great poacher.
Once he has made his kill, the fox
seizes his prey by the neck, and with
one jerk flings it over his shoulder.
Then he trots -off with the swag on
his back.
Away in the "earth" the vixen is
waiting for him with her litter of
eubs. As soon as they are big enough
to eat meat, they keep their father
busy. They have huge appetites, and
even a plump goose does not go far
amongst the family.
Sometimes, if you approach the
"earth" quietly, you may see the
vixen at play with her boisterous
youngsters. She rolls them over with
her paws, lies on her back, and
allows them to "scrag" her.
All through the, summer they
pend a peaceful time. Then one
Member morning they are aroused
by all kinds of fearsome noises in-
side the • covert. Hounds crash
through the undergrowth, giving
tongue as they bustle some young
ster from his hiding -place. Cub -hunt -
Ing has begun; the families must be
broken up and the cubs made to
shift for themselves.
Later, when autumn has thinned
the hedges, hunting begins in earn-
est. One day the fox finds that t
entrances to his hoose has been bloc
ed. His slumbers are interrupted
the cries of the huntsman urging
his pack. Then suddenly hounds a,p
pear. Hustled frova his hiding-plac
the fox steals out of the woo
"Go-o-o-ne away," comes a CU
"Ta -a -a," goes the horn, and imme-
diately the pack is on his trail.
There a a long and gallant ru
during which he twists and turn
and uses a hundred artifices to to
his pursuers. Then the hounds a
upon him, and in a few seconds h
poaching days are at an end.
Otte
dont WOMAN WHO RULES LENIN
e in Pretty little Olga Gorokoff, the
ogle wonderful woman behind Lenin, is
fus,
ear:person \them Lenin obeys and the
the real ruler of Russia, the only
„.,,r,_ person with more power in her little
"''''' hands than the Czar ever exercised.
OUS. She has been called the femal Res-
in.. putin, the RessiateJoan of Arc, the
ter! woman Napelemt, the female Ivan
or the Terrible.
One of the few persons who knows
ese, of Olga from her intimate friends
says she is a puzzle at first to mo
people who have come into cont
with her, but once one has spoke
with her she is explained.
First of all, Olga Gorokoff is a r
hot C,ommunist. , She is really a fan
atic on Comm.unism. When she talk
about it to her supporters she rave
about it, flinging her arms wide wit
her dark oval face lit up with th
fire of her enthusiasm -
When she is net talking Commun
ism she talks very little, unless wit
' Lenin. He is deeply in love with her
and she with him. Between them
they keep Russia in their hands; an
Olga is the more powerful of th
two.
Olga has had a sad life. She was
born in central Russia, her parent
being agriculturalists and not too
well off. When the first revolutio
, broke out she Was driven with them
1 out of her home, and her father and
, another both died one winter from
exposure. She never forgot that. The
Royalist troops were responsible' for
her parents' d'eatts. Be' life since
as been one long revenge on any-
thing royalist or opposing her idea
of democracy.
She was a nsemiber of one of the
R.
usman women s battalions during
he i the war. Rising to the bommand of
Colonel she begarete assert her power
bY : over the women...under her.
ce! : She preachid Ihe doctrine of So-
cialism throughout the ranks. When
e, Lenin rose swiftly to power she
d. Marched to Petrograd with her bat-
: italion, saw Lenin and told him that
she was at his service with all her
femal soldiers, From that moment
eshioevea.nd Lenin have worked hand in
s, 1
11
re I Lenin badly wants to marry her,
but she has refused him several
Is 1
times. She says that must be
free to work for the Communist re-
public. She will not be hampered by
household affairs. So Lenin and she
remain friends to the outside world
—lovers to each other. She 'is the
only woman who can manage him.
She is the only woman who has gain-
ed her way against his wishes; and
' generally she has been right in her
penetration of the future, as Lenin
has had to acknowledge.
During the recent split between
Trotsky and Lenin the former was
about to use force to push Lenin off
the presidential chair, but Olga dis-
covered the plot. She walked into
Trotsky's office in 'Moscow and faeed
him at 'his desk
i "What do you want, Olga?" he
e , gied. "I thought you were a ghost. '
Row did yon come here?"
She stood looking at him with her
dark eyes—eyes which have quelled
the rebellion in hard men of the
army. Blowy she drew -a revolver
yfrom her coat pocket and laid it on
the desk in front of Trotaky.
'Comrade," she said, "I see through 1
our sehemes as easily- as I entered
your office. Here is my @meat to
Suffering Gone
fieea;Si fief: 74149-‘
;11;
hatobir:rtTrielinwittillOS
heat "the repeat ed the „ ,
She • dreO0 ha* to Lexie Gni ee:.
ported that Tmtaky would stot be
aggressive any More' .8be watt right
again. Trotsky was too weak to Idll
himself, and kis plotting etopped be-
cause he 'feared Olga.
Though she is paseionately beautt.
fie, Olga Gorokoff does not rely up-
on her woman's charms to subdue her
enemies. She is as cold as fee 'when
dealing with thode who are opposed
to her or Lenin. Time after time
she has been sent to barracks whom
the officers have found the Red
troops were showing signs of weak-
enLeintin has never ceased to admire
this young vroman from th moment
e first saw her. She controls hira
as she would a child.
Time after time them who are in
close touch with this semi -Jew dic-
tator have seen him cease his wild
outbursts when she enters the roora
and turn to her with the devotion of
a HeYeatish.terriltly jealous of losing ter
aid and companionship, and within
the rat few months of his acquaint-
ance with her he caused at least four
young officers in the Red Army to be
executed on pretences of having been
disloyal. Their real crime was that
they had looked on Olga with tender
eyes.
How long will Olga Gorokoff's
mysterious, uncanny power last? The
best Students of Russian affairs be-
lieve It will last as long as Lenin is
master; after that Olga may forsake
bim, for even above Lenin she loves
power, and her "minsion" is to "save
Russia."
h e stands to -day the only two-
.
at in the world with power to
et sway a nation. And she is just over
n /thirty years of age!
ed
- RHYME OF A VAGRANT
,e wander with the day breeze,
h And sleep 'Death the vast blue sky,
e ; I steal when I am hungry,
And drink. when I ant dry,
For Fez just a restless rover,
h Who has made the world my 'home;
, I know no laws nor virtues,
But I leave the, babes alone.
e For there's something in a kiddie's
smile
That sort of touches me,
And makes me wish that allthe world
Just lived in infancy.
n It sort of kindles in ray blood
Something sweet and mild,
Oh, never in my life time
Have I harmed a little child.
And always ra keep going,
And with
A Sealskin .Chureh.
The world's queerest church was
discovered not long ago by a mis-
sionary in the Arctic. It stands on
Blacklead Island, Cumberland Sound,
and is. constructed entirely of seal-
skins.
Wood and other building material
not being available, the missionary
responsible for its erection sewed the
skins together and stretched them
over whalebone "girders."
Another Eskimo missionary built
a church of snow, with seats, altar,
and pulpit complete. Fle stated that
his snow -built edifice was warmer
than most starches he had visited 1
ngland.
Among cathedrals, probably th
moat curious is to be found in
Uganda. Viewed from a distance, It
looks like a giant haystack, but at
close quarters it is Been to be built
of grass and mud. It seats four
thousatni persons.
Disappearing Languages,
Nowhere In America has there
been such a diversity of Indian lan-
guages as on the Pacific coast But
these languages are now rapidly dis-
appearing. Several of - -them, are
known only by five or six and others
only by twenty or thirty living Per -
eons, and scarcely a year mama
without , or even la-
guage, ceasing to .exist through the
death of the last individual able to
speak It. Efforts are being made to
record all these languages for the
aake Of the light they throw on the
ancient history of the Pacific coast.
Honey Crop In B. 0.
The British Columbia honey crop
of 1921 amounts to 309,074 pounds,
a gain of 33 per cent, over last year's
crop, according to slatisties Mauled
by W. J. Sheppard provincial apiar-
ist. Thie, however, is below the re -
mord es of 1919, vrhich was
344,580 pounds. At 29 cents whole -
mile the current crop le worth -88 L-
1181. Aplarlea inereased during the
year from 1,986 to 2072,.and hives
from 9,527 to 10.320.
A Wise Woman.
Baehelor—"Well, old man, one
thing I notiee about you since you've
been married; you alwaye have but.
tone on your olothe."
Shenediets-"Yeer Dolly taught me
hot, to sew 'ern on before wel been
toilieried_e week."
.16
After " for ale volvtie
ge
*SS'
She is Enthusiastic
Dante Edmond Roy Singing the
Praises of Dodd's Kidney Pills
For Six Years She Was Trembled
With Pains and Aches 'Bat -Found
the Relief She Looked For • fn
Dodd's 'Kidney p1118.
Petits Mechins, Matane Co., Que.,
January 18141. (Special.)—Rejoicing
that she is again in good health at -
ter six years of suffenng, Dame Ed-
mond Roy- of this place is singing the
praises of Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"You ean tell everyone," saye Dame
Roy, «that the pain in my side has
disappeared and that my strength
has come back"
"I suffered for six years," she con-
tinues, "I' was also troubled vrith
rheematiam, crams -in the musces,
backache and headache. I took only
eight boees of Dodd's Kidney Pills."
The reason that Dame Roy got each
prompt help from Doda's Kidney
Pint is that every one of her troy-
bles is a symptom ot Kidney ttouble.
Dodd's Kidney Pills are pointy and
eimply A kidney eestey. They
titrengthen the kidaeye to, de their
full work of straining the initntritidat
„ (
tit ef tlet blood.
tiTy otts aeigkbeBi about Ma",
a g ee
I'll do to fellow mortals
Like they would do to me,
When God made grown-up people
Hehadn'
0 0,
But still / think there's good in Him,
For He made the children, too.
Wolf Point, Montana,
Norman L. Bliss.
MEN WHO OUTRUN HORSES
In the days of the "Wild and
Woolly West," plainsmen and travel-
lers by overlane wagons held to the
belief that long journeys could be
made more speedily by num afoot
.than by horseback. In the U. S.
army the impression, is general that
the infantry can outstravel the cav-
alry, on long, grinding marches, but
to Santo Domingo Indians of New
Mexico belongs the credit of chasing
wild horses over the ranges of hills
until the animals are exhausted and
submit to capture.
No Marthen runners have ever been
recruited from this tribe of Pueblo
Indians, for the wonderful power of
endurance of the runners of the
tribe are little known outside of the
district immediately surrounding
their village.
These runners of the Santo Domin-
go come from a rase of fleet -footed
anceetors. Like all tribes of Ameri-
can Indians, they have accepted the
means of travelling best suited to
the country where they Sive. The
Sioux of the Dakotas are horsemsen.
The Santo Doraingos have been walks
era and runners always. Their
physique shears the result of genera-
tions of footmen. Great chests, al-
ways. Their physique shows the re-
sult of generations of footmen. Great
chests, almost abnormal in develop-
inent, slope downward to slender
waites, while sizsueory calves ;Proclaim
the strength to hold to a hard trail.
Usually their ohasea of the bands
of wild horses owned by tlietribe are
matters of necessity. The enormous
stretchee of broken country where
the :horses graze, and the untamed
spirits of the animas many of which
have not bean touched by men in
their several years ef existence in the
kills, make it necessary to wear the
creatures out and run them down.
• THE SUPPORT On' THE
HAPSBURGS. ,
An official denial has been issued
by the Britis'h Government of the
widely -circulated report to the effect
that Great Brae% would undertake
rn e a suitable allovrance, es-
timated at from $60,000 to $100 000
a year, for the maintenance of Ex -
Emperor Charles,- with his consort
and his sixihildren on the Islands a
Matleria
England has reatetured the ta-
payers that no portion of the imposes
Which they are paying with so much
difficulty stall be divertecifor the WM
of the. Hosbirrg *tiles.
IR is true, however, that England
is Making itrettegemente for their wel-
fre in' a utotirMitemY ninnies But Aft
' rtrpose that the fends needed"sludi
heist ' Airait
le
ha 11LVA., to Vie, fel* ite .
. levidoid by Cedars Sitthelda,
Mtge,
by Ratemda end by Pe
th
• ft hffiffidithelliStat ef „
'1C,-;4',41;14, PS,
'1441"4' ''''',A‘4,4`404,4410°41 "7". 41"1'4.544i5V. ^OW l'ilie^i4V4 r'4V41."1:'4.""h°141'.
• ueroitii6
ateitei Patis-UP
Over 128
A FARM RUN ON A WS*
squire that every member of the
pastier. That the earning from mine
duct be allotted to eaffit znembeas Then good
dioatea that these earnings shan't' go 242,„.,,,, „ele011 thelr'e
Sage account with lite Hoidens Bank lifie
each one ambitious to make his product Ray: Pepe,
by Med accepted.
BRANCHES IN THIS DL9TRICP;
Betteefield St. Marys Written
Exeter Clinton Haman Steads
11113:111211,,1111111111'
Empire.
This sounds all very well and rea-
sonable, especially when the fact is
borne in mind that the four Govern-
ments called upon to furnish the a-
mount have confiscated, MI the pro-
perty of the Hapsburgs, and espec-
ially of the Emperor and Empress,
that lay within their borders. •
Charles .had extensive estates in
Bohemia and In ,Crotia, in Galacla and
in Transylvania all of which have
been appropiated by the national
treasuries of Warsaw, Prague, Bel-
grade and Bucharest.
But the Hapsburgs are the objects
of so much hatred in Jueo-.31 in
Czeeho--Sloyakia and in Transylvania
by reason of the oppresive methods
of government of the Hapsburg twin
monarchies that public feeling against
contributing anything to their sup-
port will be very pronounced and will
become through their various Legis-
latures a subject of difficulty to their
respective Departments of Finance.
It may be remembered that when
the first Napoleon was consigned to
Elba, in 1814, a very generous civil
list was guaranteed to him by -the
Allied Powers, which was to be paid
in the maim by France, with the
assistance of her Allies. According
to Lord Roseberry and to other thor-
oughly impartial writers about the
closing years of the great Corsican's
career the real reason why he ,broke
sse' •
his parole and left Elba in an en-
deavor to recover the throne of
Franec was becauee not a single cent
of the civil list had been paid by the
French treasury and 'both he and his
large household at Pisrtoe.Ferrodo" had
been reduced almost to their last
cent and were confronted by sheer
starvation.
Portugal only undertakes the cus-
tody of Charles of Hapsburg and ef
ex -Empress . Zita at Maderia. has
declined . all pecuniary responsibility
for theip maintenance -
Hungary cannot be called upon to -
pay, since she was forced- to de-
throne Charles and expel him from
her territory against the will of her
people. Austhia is. virtually bank-
rupt. But the burden of expense
rests an the shoulders of the four
states in question, le only one of
which, namely Poland, is there any
trace of sympathy left for the Haps-
burgs.
Euless Great Britain uses the •
strongest kind of pressure to eons-
pel esch of these four States to
furnish its quota the story of the
first Napoleon will be retreated, and
Charles of Hapsburg, with his wife
and children, will be driven by
want to have recourse, like Napoleon
and his Hundred Days, to some des-
perate coup which can end only' te
disaster
+Se
iro
Nothing Else is Aspirin—say "Bayer"
Warning? Unless you see mune
"Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting
Aspviri: at all. Why take chances?
A pt only an unbroken "Bayer"
package which contains directions
worked out by physicians during 21
years and proved safe by millions for
Colds, Headache, Earache, Toothache,
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lum-
bago, and Pain. Made in Canada.
All druggists sell Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin in bandy tin boxes of 12 tab-
lets, and in bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture ef.,
Monoaceticacidester of Salicylieacid.
While it is well known that Aspirin
means Bayer manufacture, to ambit the
public against imitations, the Tablets.
of Bayer Company will be stamped
with their general trade mark, the
"Bayer Cross."
"Oh, It's Good to Hear Your
Voice!"
T HE night wind rattled thesensh as she sat on the bed in her
drab hall bed -room. Lonely, discouraged, she seemed to
have lost her grip of things in the big unfriendly city. And
then — the telephone jingled imperatively. A cheery yoke
called up the stairway, "Miss Jackson, your mother's -calling en
Long Distances."
How many of us realize what tbat means to the girl in the little
hall bed-Moin eating her heart out with loneliness 2—to the boy
at College or school plugging in a half-hearted way to make
good in "exame"?—to the shy school girl surrounded by strasge
faces ?—to the traveler deprived of home and dear ones?
Why don't you call her or him to -night?
She needs the encouragment that only your Voice will give. He
needs a helpful word, doubly welcome because it comes from
you. A Long Distance chat will give them a new outlook ell
life—timulte them to new efforts—help them to make good.
Their faces will glow vsith the light of a new courage, and, "it's
good to heist^ your voice" will be ThIlfdie tO Your ears!
Station-t-StatIon service with low Evening and Night after $30,
has brogght Long Distance within the
retch a every one. After 8.110 P.M. Bar
the rate. At tnidnight theYbe-
Statitirtation rates are about half
moo 4 one-guluter the day rain.
se!
0.1110
0,e,i1vt:,6PAM•