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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-01-27, Page 3i*plFs.'Nchar gnvn.r+r .k .n111, 7.47 Stat 9t Y 1 .P,,� ttv.>ois r V; tcaldi MEM teiv ' The au; u *count *ltd. you 11' x l it» S n]r3ng by mall 5EAFQI '$RA1 H5 , = rt , R. M; Jt)N .S, Manager. • aftrY DtrP01'il'1' BOXISTOR RENT. t_', .' • w .few breeders o-41ve'stock • who lave HURON.EXPOSITQR fsot—should have a good de* whit is ' number of drawers in it, ong or two of .'which are large cnotiglt to take .letter sized folders for ailing purpos- es. Palling this, or if the breeder ,has an olddesk that is without tibe drawera, a good fl14ng .cablset should be ;purchased with three or four 'large drawers. With this equipment and two or three dozen cardboard- folders at the tap for-head- DIsTRICr MATTERS ' Nire" WINTER HARD ON BABY - The winter season is a hard one on like baby., Re is more or leas confined to eituffy, lsadly ventilated rooms. It Is so often stormy that the mother does not .get him'eut in the fresh air as often as she should. He catches colds which rack his little system; his stomach and bowels get out of order and be becomes peevish and cross. To gaerd against this the mother should keep a bog of Baby's Own Tablets in the house. They regulate the stom- ach and bowels, and break up colds. They are sold by medicine dealers or b4' nail at 25 cents a :box from The Hr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. RIGHT ROYAL STREET having a apace rings, importdast letters can be pre- served and kept where they can be referred to at a moment's notice. A typewriter is a splendid adver- tiseanent for a breeder, as a nicely typed letter indicates that the sander is careful of 'hie reputation and is anxious to please his prospective customers. If a new machine is too costly, a rebuilt one can be obtained fmm a reliable firm and will likely give satisfaction. As. with any ma- chine it is advisable to buy a standard make. Any bright farm boy or girl can soon learn to run it, and with a little practise by simply taking a few notes, they- will be able to compose a very creditable letter. The experi- ence and knowledge of conducting 'farm business gained through answer - When Princess Mary is married and ing the correspondence will be one of the most valuable features of their settled at Chesterfield House, fn education. Of Bourse a typewriter is South Audley Street, she will #ind not essential, a well written letter in himself in a thoroughfare which flies pen and ink is all that is necessary, aniseed many ,members of Royal fam- ilies in the mast, though, in Most is a good advertisement. eases, under far less happy condi- Of more importance than the way tions, observes a correspondent. The in which letters are answered is the street was built in 1798, and in it promptness of the reply. An excel - lived in exile, Charles X. of France, lent method of guarding against neg- at the house numbered 72. In 1814 sect or forgetfulness, is to have one Loupe XVIII. was dwelling there, � drawer in which all letters are put while for the best part of a century immediately after they are received the representatives of the King of and read. Once or twice a week this Portugal lived at No. 74. In June, drawer should be emptied completely, 1820, Queen Caroline; the injured all letters requiring a reply answered Continent took up her residence at and all important ones filed away in No. 77, and from a balcony there she folders in the Tiling drawers or oab- was frequently compelled to bow to inet. Folders for different depart - a sympathetic .mob in the street be-' ments-of the farm operations may be low. In 1826 -1 -P L e ''f ` < ''•^s given appropriate headings and all i liviseg at Cambridge House in South letters relating to one department Audley Street, the mansion which was kept in the folder devoted to .it. Let - afterwards known as Curzon House, ters of no importance may well be the London 'home of Earl Howe's fam- ily destroyed at once. until 1876. For the breeder of registered stock, one folder that will require partdeu- lar attention is that devoted to pedi- grees and registrations. If there is one thing more than another that causes friction between buyers of registered animals and breeders who raise them, it is the failure to make transfers and forward registration papers promptliy. Neglect of this one important detail often loses a breeder as many old customers ae his adver- tising brings .him new ones. A note placed in his incoming letter drawer, after each sale is maile, will serve to remind 'him if he cannot attend to it exactly at the moment. The business side of the farm op- erations is one that few farmers can asord to neglect. Different men will develop various ways of doing it, but there art certain rules followed by all modern business organizations that may be used as a basis of 'any sys- tem.. A few of .the more simple ones are given above, and with these as a foundation a system may be built up to take care of all the needs of the farm as experience dictates. For instance some form of farm book- keeping is becoming recognized as an essential in good farm management, and a carefully kept correspondence is `--the 'first step in that direction. i•val the: ••.tauspylr 4494 a fepv .ii '0 •ai m di actor cf • 'thd , Offli t r 'Flumes • in 'Retrograd, ,$p tnfi * opera aktd',; GofCe1't` tti ftp rite&, S rtes. TTe Arought wotd .that' � spite a1T 'tie tailtaetic reports Lf cerreaponden#a :who ,• write, vividly- about Russ+ia' roM Part , •atbe $bvidt. Govsp� 'nl'Qnt is teetering, Russian ett,, tn. al ifii' +amebas 'and that artiste are given 'firat',prefereilee ipxlrtiole. tie declared that artiste were tekipg advantage et .the laNfede perri}itted them, hnd were going Out of beaten Pathe. Ile' felts that Rusp1sn art,. as encouraged by the Suvigt-- govern- ment,:would express the .natidnal spirit better than ever before. The only hitch seems to be that paste used for sticking on moustaches and other forms .of makeup stir the theatre is almost impossible to get. inRussia: Evidently actors have to grow their own. Chaliapin was born 1n 1871, the son of a humble Shoemaker ha the Government of Kazan: He kat fol- lowed his father's trade, MO later became a mepibef of the church choir 1u the small provincial' town where his' parents lived. Then, 'much against the will of bis father, he Joined the group of 'Arta Russian singers grho in the early nineties sang their' way to face from the Painted barges of 'the Volga. While sitting on the veranda of his country house, which overlooks the Volga near Tver, a great Rus- sian prince heard thg Little Russians singing the songs of the Volga in chorus to the rhythmic movement of their barge poles, and being struck by the voice of young Ch$Uapin, he stopped the barge. In those days it • was quite sufficient for a Russian 'noble -to wave his hand tiom a river bank to stop a thousand barges. He invited the young man idto the house and at his command Chaliapin sang the Volga sons. "ChallaPin of Kazan." came the answer. "You will be Chaltapin of the universe," was the prince's comment. In 1894 ChallaPin joined the Vlatka Light Opera Company, and - the following year proceeded to Tiflis, in• the Caucasus. In 1895, thanks to the Influence of Prince X, he succeeded In obtaining a hearing from M. Mamontev, a. Moscow mer- chant, who mad`e a bobby of art. Recognizing the great posstbilitles in Chaliapin, Mamontev arranged for him tq appear at NOM -Novgorod at the All -World Exhibition of 1896. There Chaliapin created such a sen- sation that in 11197 Mamontev financed a series of special operatic performances at Moscow exclusively for his benefit. From that time on his fame was assured. Many spurious accounts were re- ceived in this country of his death at the hands of the Bolshevists, but thanks to his art, the Soviet revo- lution made little or no difference to his position. During the Tsarist regime Chalia- pin was not always in good favor Politically. At the Bear restaurant at Petrograd in 1895, in a rash moment of enthusiasm, he rose from the' supper table and gave his audience a beautifully rendered cycle of revolutionary and prison songs.. The incident endeared him to the hearts of the masses, but the Tsar Nicholas refused to receive him at court and would not attend the opera when Chaliapin was singing. A few seasons later `Nicholas entertained the Shah of Persia, and his guest i expressed a desire to hear Chaliapin so thai the Tsar was obliged to visit the opera. As ft happened, "A Life li for the Tsar" was then running, and Chaltapin was playing the part of the savior of the first Romanov. When he heard that Nicholas was Present he was overjoyed, altd as soon as the -curtain rose be fell on his knees, and Bang the national an- them. -The heart of Nicholas melted. He sent for Chaliapin to come to the royal box, embraced him and for- gave him. Under the present regime Chaliapin has, of course, been com- pelled by circumstances to bold him- self aloof from all politics. Today, in Red Russia, he is simply an artist and Soviet Russia enjoys his sing- ing no doubt just as muck as did Tsarist Russia. Here is a story told about the first record' he made for the gramo- phone. He was paid a cheque for 5,,1,000 on account of royalties. The time, was two o'clock In the morn- ing. He immediately organized a night drive from Moscow into the woods, where there was a fashion- able night restaurant. A11 connected with the record -making were given a sumptuous repast. Then the waiter was asked for the He Gained Twenty Pound, gin a Year That's Why This Mao Praises Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr.. Carl Boutelier of Mason's Point alter Four Year's Suffering Took the Advice of a Friend and Used Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mason's Point, }Treat of St. Mar- garet's Bay, N. S , January 23rd. ($peciial.)—"When I started to use 111odd'e Kidney Pilch I Ass twenty- three years old and weighed 105 lbs. Ia one year I gained 20 lbs." This is the statement of Mr. Carl Boute- lier, a well known and highly respect- ed resident of this place. I.t is 'one more addition to the great mass of .evidence that Dodd's Kidney Pills are the greatest of all kidney remedies. "I was laid up for four .years with lackey trouble." Mr. Boutelier states farther: "One day a friend advised me to use Dodd's Kidney Pills and I =lade up my mind to give them a trial. I used just aix boxes in all. The road to health lies through the kidneys.. Ifthey are kept strong and well all the impurities are strained out of the blood.. But if they are weak and out of order the impurities stay in' the blood and disease is sure to .result.. Ask your neighbors if Dodd's Kid- ney Pills do not make strong healthy kidneys.. BUSIN, ISS METHODS AND LIVESTOCK The number of farmers raising stock to sell for breeding. purposes is steadily increasing, not as rapidly as would seem desirable, but every year sees -an addition to the ranks of new breeders, particularly in the smaller classes of stock as hogs, sheep and goats. Is there any means 'by which the number can be more vapidly increased? One way that is available to all who are at present engaged in the work and who hope to . snake a livelihood from the sale of their breeding animals, is the' a- doption of more businesslike meth - ode yn making their sales. A first essential in making sales of mny kind is. to let possible .purehas- era know that you have something to sell, then to give them all the in- formation about it that you can, and this latter point is 'where many breed- ers fail. They upend money adver- tilfsng, which is necessary nn meeting the first requiette, and then they neg- lect to answer .proanuptly,tlie'lnquiries that come in, or they Merely qnqte the price they have planed on their ..animal without giving any- destrip: 'tion .ef' it Even men that are IMO" greseI' a is other departments of tbsif -Fame operations are neglectful in at - .tending to their correspondence and 'it is largely because. they lack eon- ren9ences illi' kindling it Letters sitti kept ia. a drawer all jued - lter, and are frequently, forgotten fair, aegatial. days ‘st,.evan ° weeks. -.faint/or r Wore US an smutty GUARD YOUR HEALTH You Can Do This By Keeping the Blood Rich and Red. It is' useless to tell a hardworking woman to take life easily and not to worry. Every woman at the bead of a home; -every girl in ogees, shops and factories is subjected to more or less worry. These worries cannot be avoided. But it is `the duty of every woman and every ,girl to save her strength as much as possible, and to build up her system to meet unusual These are not sale coats, or old styles, they are high-grade garments of the very best overcoat-: ings, well lined and made throughout. To these we have added our , entire stock. You can now, buy any overcoat in our store, many_ of which' • sold for $35, $40 and $45, $22, regular price. Special price Specials -:- Note and Compare Prices- Snagproof Overalls Boys' Black Worsted $1.95 Stockings With good full sized bib or in the pant style, in black, blue and white stripe, or cottonade in the heaviest weights. All sizes. $1.95 These are bought specially for school wear. They are ribbed and guaranteed fast black. All sizes. 75c to $1. Penman's and York Knit, good heavy wool fleece in fawn shades, elastic cuff; guaranteed for warmth and wear. All sizes. 79c. Here is a Real Special in Heather Mixture; will not soil easily; has storm collar, elastic cuff, well made and good weight. All sizes. $2.75 demands. Her future health depends bill, which totaled only half the upon it. -To guard against a- break- 1 amount of the cheque. So the down the blood must be kept rich, red 1 guests were enjoined to call for more and pure. To keep the blood in this and more. But still the bill was ' condition Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will be found most useful. They strength- en the nerves, restore the appetite and bring the glow of health to pallid cheeks, and renewed energy -to list- less people Women cannot always not high enough. When it reached £800 Chaliapin staked the waiter the price of several mirrors and candel- abra in the hall, and led the others in smashing them up until all but £25 of the cheque had been spent. rest when they should. but they can The £25 he gave to the waiter. keep up their strength through ,• the occasional use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. This is shown by the case of Mrs. .Minnie 'Swick, residing near Sdmcoe, Ont., who says: " A few .years ago I was in a deplorable state' of health. My blood was weak and watery and'the.circulation. poor. My appetite was poor and what food I did take distressed me. I was not able to do fry housework, and often my nights* were sleepless, and head- ache and backache added to my mis- ery. I was finally persuaded to drop other medicines and take Dr. Wil- liam -0- Pink Pills. This I did, and After taking the pills for a couple of monithe I could do my housework with ease, eat well, slept well and had gamed in weight. Frani my own ex- ptirlenee I'' cannot praise ,t'heae pills "top �'blyr i . You dim getDr. Williams' Pink Pills frons any dealer In medicine, or b mail at 50P tents 'a box,- or six y 9 bbrim for ?1 60 fi+blin Tire Dr. Wil.' -of correspondease at.diland there are llama' Medlelne 'Tito,, I3ibakville, Oiit.' r• Llama and Alpaca. The llama and alpaca are efien- sively domesticated in South Amer- ica. A relative of theirs, the vicuna, smaller in size. Is a wild animal, na- tive to the high plateaus of the Andes. The vicuna hasbeen hunted almost to the point of extermination by the Indians, and before long it is likely to become an extinct species. Its fine silky wool, of a tawny color, is woven into very attractive ponchos, and rugs made of its skin are much sought as bed coverings. Vicuna rugs occasionally find their way to the United States, where they fetch high prices, usually s four, and In Bolivia sell at 150 to 250 bolivlanos. A boiiviano is about 38 cents. Boys' Fleece Lined Stanfield's Underwear Underwear --65c $1.75 Made of the same weight and quality as the Men's—just as Strong and Warm. All sizes. 65c. Red Label quality, soft, white, comfortable and warm. There is nothing better. Last year's price, :3.25. All sizes. A grasshopper's ears are Just 'be- low its knees. Made with yoke, guesseted seams. All colors. Heaviest cloths, extra quality. All sizes. $1.29 Boys' Suits - - $7.50 Regular $10.00 to $13.00 Attractive colors, all good styles; well lined; bloomers with new fasteners substantially made. Sizes 24 to 35. STEWART BROS., SEAFOR .Women unable to read or write are prohibited from voting in Hungary.