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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-02-10, Page 3> kdancioi 917 ' . 5EAFORTHf BRAI3CH, ' JONES, Manager. SAE TY DEPOSIT BOX SFOR-RENT',. HURON EXPOSITORof Tenerifre ► off the African swot, which are Wield to be equally se old, DISTRICT DdA'1 PER8 fr/ t 100. Bred sof teid. ,irin • the Meta need the »P LITTLE ones, WELL IN WINTER • Winter is a dangerous reason ler Abe little ones, The days are change- able—one bright, the next one cold .l6 stormy, that like mother is afraid Se take the children out for -the fresh sir and axeroise they need so much. ihn consequence they ane often coop - •ed up in overheated, badly ventilated rooms and are ,soon seized with colds or grippe. What is needed to keep the little ones well is Baby's Own Tablets. They will regulate the stomach and bowels .and drive out ceids and by their use the baby will Q. -.-Berne people claim that forest Ares have actually increased .the fur bearing animals.&it the fag north. Is this true? A, -'rhe nucleons Bay Qoefipauy de- clares such a theory empeaticallY un- true. They state that repeated •for- est fires have gone far to exti'nguieh for soul purposes the fur beating animals ouch as fox, ermine, fisher, and others in Northern On- tario which unlike the beaver and atu&erat are unable to take refuge from forest fires by entering the water, It is a curious fact that the ,marten In face • of- a foreat fire will climb a tree for eafety and usually of course falls victim. Oar'ada'e tui trade is decidedly menaced by the' present plague of forest fires. Q.—Is there any way of finding the aferest fire los;i. of Quebec Prov- i,me an 1T21? A.—According to the Provincial In able to get over the winter season Forester, Quebec Lost twelve 'hundred 5a perfect safety. The Tablets are square miles by fire last year. This sold by medicine dealers or by mail of course represents an eno•rmoua et 25 cents a box fr„•m The Dr. Wil- loss and it is the duty of ever citizen .fliams'' Medicine Oo., Brockville,. Ont. who enters the forests of Quebec to __-• join hands with the fire rangers in ,masking a repetition of such doss im- WHY IS ICE SLIPPERY? , possible in 1922. The great majority of fires doing such damage to one When we say that a surface le of Quebec's great resources were due "slippery” we mean that it offers to human •carelessness and the atti- tittle resistance to .motion along its tude of "don't ,care." surface: that, owing either to the Q.—.Is there any way of estimating mpoaition of the substance itself financially what a shade tree• dm good w iof ,@1 edgg, ti0 qutiI' 141giC `;ln yu p anrt}wull wb,e datll nit n0Yr X i Years old, . 0 and: rQade with gceasleg adwtratiop the Werke of the great anther i.e'kuew'per8QnallY. ' He wlro an5ia Aced toy. be. " Caleb. the office bop.":.rel'ates that P10kena heti a regular daY, once a• week when, he carie to .the elfice in Lennon . of "Alt the Year ROued." The'$oreuOOt ak each ocdastons, was quiet; but from midday there was a continual stream of callers to we him. Mr. Jaeiceoh'a Method of receiving therlt was to take their earls and insure them, with as Innocent an air as pos- sible; '1411 ace if Mr. Dickens is in." "Then," eayeMr. Jadkeon, "I ran up the lead -covered stairs, found if Aar. Dickens' decision was 'to• see or not to see,' and We asked, dr did not ask—as the caseemight be—the visitor to 'step tfiis way'." • •Mr. Jackson implies that some visitors were very persistent in their deterrntnatlon to see Boz, when he goes on to point out that the build- ing had three exits, "which, on more than one occasion, Mr. Dickens found very useful." - It was at the end of Match, 1850, that Dickens commenced the new twopenny weekly called "Household Words" (afterward "Aid the Year Round"), which • he planned should be a direct means of communication between himself and his readers, and, in addition, a means of collect Mg around him and encouraging the talent of the younger genesatlon. "Bleak House" was Dickens' firs - story to appear in Household Words. Another famous novel to be printed'in the new twopenny weekly was "Little Dorrlt," add the "Tale of Two Cities" was published In it after 1 Its change of name to "All the Year Round." en or to the presence of oiler or some condition in fronto berest encs usual character. During the su rag other ri lung agent on the sur- womb? Eas there been any court I campaigns in England many parents face; itt fiegenerates little friction when , decision establishing such a point? sympathetic with the cause expressed comparatively smooth bodies pass I A. --In New York State the court' their partisanship by naming their over it. Looking at the matter in established d record by handing down daughters" Faith" and "Hope," as this light we see that the "alipperl- ! a verdicrof 4500 each for destruction ( expressive of their aspirations in re- cess" of ice is due solely to its even of a tree by a construction company. spect to the female voting crusade. polished surface, which is a species In this case an arbitrary value was Business women resented female of non-conductor for the energy of ; placed en the tree by means of its names of the "fluffy" type, as prob- friction. • . diameter, as for instance, $2 per ably Indicative of the character of This, in turn, is because of the . inch. That is, .5 tree eighteen inches I their possessors, and several women fact that the particles of water in diamgter would be worth $36. ! In the commercial world have aelec!- 'whichemake up the ice are held to- i There is a second method which takes i„d such names for their eons as gibber very evenly, for, even if the in an arbitrary value per square inch 1 ••Cecil,” "Sydney," or "B'rancis in surface of the ice is not perfectly I of basal area taken at breast 'height I the case of a girl "Frances," level and smooth, the individual or four and a half feet from the One woman who had been highly bumps present are even more breach- ground. In M•assachusettes the us- erous footing, by reason of the addi- [nal figure used in this caseis one tional force of gravity which their dollar in which case a tree having a inclining sides accentuate. The basal area of 254 square inches would strong even surface of a sheet of be considered worth $254, the latter ace, • therefore, partakes very much figure ' however is generally regarded of the nature of a polished .ballepom as being far too high. floor, save for the fact that the lack__-�- of trictiou is snore .-apparent,.,-and I that, unless one wears spikes or CURRtNT WIT AND WISDOM other friction -producing appliances, it is practically impossible to main- 'pain a footing. ,In skating, however, the metal surface of the skates ie as smooth as possible, so as to get the full benefit of the contact be- tween the steel and the Ice, while the sides of the blades are ground to a knife-edge so that they will previde the necessary grip for the strokes of the legs. Novelty In Babies' Ntunes. Nomenclature Is taking a fresh turn in British homes, where there exists an lne inatlon to discard the old and long -accepted names for babies, and teadopt titles of an un- She Would Not Be Without Them Mrs. Funk Tells . Other - Women About Dodd's Kidney Pills. She Suffered Terribly anti Was so Bad She could Not Do Her -Housework What Dodd's Kidney Pills Did For Her. Winkler, Man., February 6th. (Spe- dia1.)—+Just how Dodd'a 'Kidney Pills have made a reputation as suffering women's best friend is again shown in the case of Mns. J. J. Funk, a well known and highly respected resident of this place. Let her tell her story 531 her own words: "I auffered for years 'from kidney trouble, female weairness and slerv- \ oueness," Mrs. Funk says. "I was eo bad I could not do my':houeework, ( I suffered terribly but after using 1 Dodd's Kidney Pills I feel much bet - 'I can do mylhousework again and I 'II keep on using Dodd's Kidney Pi until I am entirely well. am well satisfied with what Do 'e Kidney Pills have done so far.' E body who suffers should try them: I would .not be without Dodd's Kidney Pills." Ask your nhei.ghbors df Dodd's Kid- ney Pills are not the greatest of all kidney remedies. successful in a deal over South Afri- can securities commemorated the event by bestowing the name of "Dia- mond" upon her daughter; and an- other, who had been assoelated with several surveys of mountainous re- gions, desired a title recalling her ex- piolte to be given her baby. Etna and Vesuvius were too fiery. Everest too reminiscent of somnolence and'Hili- maniaro too suggestive of slktughter; Increased means and increased lei- , so she struck the happy medium, sure are the two civilizers of man.— I and "Andes," which, if possessing a Benjamin Disraeli. cadence of Scottish Ilit, will remind It is certain that one's dollars go • the fond parent of an early ascent to e never ver a good deal farther than they did a year or two ago. But do they seem to go any slower?—Orillia Packet. Kincardine man says that when cats start caterwauling on his back fence at the dead of night he is like a cer- tain bask—his rest as jm,paireda— fortune. Sir P'raneln Burdand. Sir Henry Lucy tells a number of good stories about Sir Francis Bur - nand, who succeeded Tom Taylor as editor of Punch. Burnand gave the Kincardine Review. most anxious care to his editor .' In spite of all that is said against , duties, although never to the extent him, we still think that the worst of submerging his natural humor. thing about Vilhja'hlmur Stefansson ; Burnand,s humor was as spontan- is his front name.—Hamilton Herald. 1 eoue as it was inexhaustible. "I re - At this time of the year one has a member talking with him amid the good deal of sympathy with the boy I crush at the Foreign Office on a 1 who defined darkness as a blind negro Birthday night," says Sir Henry 1 in a dark veils; at midnight, looking 1 Lucy. "A be -starred and be -ribbon - for a black oat.—Edmonton Tournal. ed gueet carte up and warmly greet- ed him. With a Puzzled look he did not reciprocate the recognition. "Ab,' Bald the stranger, 'I see you don't know me from Adam.' 'My dear fel- low,' replied Frank, 'I didn't know Adam.' " One time Burnand appear- , before the income tax commis - DO YOU FEEL WEAK ' AND RUN DOWN? In This Condition a Tonic Medi- cleisis to protest against what ne re Medi- cine is Needed. I rented as a too liberal estimate of • his income. In reply to aearchie in- quiries he was a little hazy about 1 particulars. "Surely," said the presid- ing commissioner, born and bred a ma'tr'of business, "you must keep books." "No, indeed," said Burnand. i• "I don't keep books. I write 'em." Burnand .retired in his seventieth year. He had written over 120 plays and some of them were profitable, the nerves areempoverished,sbut he had spent aa' lavishly as lie the com le on 'becomes .pale or waxy, had earned, and so found himself in t'her'e is no animation;, bat teem, Xt I difficulties in his old age. • worry and ,mental depression. (Fa- tigue is a constant symptom. No particular organs being affected, you must look for relief to the blood. As It circulates, through every part of the body, any improvement in the condition of the blood as quickly felt throughout the entire system. In cases of this kind a tonic-nedicine is what is needed and Dr., Williams' Pink Pills are recognized as a valu- able tonic because of their direct so - tier} an the blood and through•'the blood on the nerves, giving tone to the system generally and restoring vigor. Where the system is run down "Who wrote that?" the master de - the value of this medicine is shown manded sharply. There was dead by the statement of Mrs. Gregory J. silence for a moment, and then a Murphy, Lower Ship Harbor East,email, thin, studious --looking boy in N. 'S., who says: "About a year ago spectacles rose' and replled, "Please, I was completely run down. I was sir: I think it was Shelley." so nervous and weak that I could scarcely do my housework, and the least exertion left me breathless and A Japanese firm will make an at- tired out. A 'neighbor advised Dr. tempt to raft timber from British Williams' Pink Pills, and so much Columbia to Japan. The raft will be good did they do me I feel quite like of the Davis type, with a superatrue- a different woman. .L hope some ture of piled logs strongly laced. other suffering woman may benefit Twenty years ago a raft made the by ,try experience." journey from San Francisco to China, Dr.Winkling' Pink ,Filly can be favored by exceptional weather. Ceded 'male ale ee sham thirty feet do ' had through:", any medicine dealer, or The condition of .being "run down" is one that doctors do not recognizeun as a disease. But those who are r down in health 'know that it is not a fancied •affliction. The expression "run down" applied to health means a condition in which the bodily functions are enfeebled. Appg'tdte fails; •the digestion is im- paired, your uire: Tho\isands of Yards of Most ioauliful Wasb Goo Silks, Embroideries and Lace Goods Awa ;FASHION'S PRETTIEST COLORS AND PATTERNS IN GUARANTEED WASH GOODS. • You will probably enjoy this , springs' showing of Wash goods more than any you have ever seen. - The new weaves, patterns and colorings are the most fascinat- ing we -have ever shown. This is no ordinary display, it includes the very newest wash materials, many of which are appearing for the first time this season.., We want every woman to see the new ideas that have done so much to popularize wash ma- terials. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ON FORESTRY (By-Oanadian .Forestry Aasoclation.) .-..As a school teacher I have been recently asked the question why a tree should ever die. Can you an- swer this for me? A.—Theoretically a tree should never die for while the old central part of the trunk may decay, this is ol". little moment so long as new lay- ers are regularly put on at the cir- cumference. 'Phe ,growth of .a tree Is entirely in the cambiumlayerat the our edge and not at the heist. The fact is, of course, that trees euesemb always to external causes. Insect, fungus diseases, fires, exees- eive *old or drought, are factors that limit the Aettual life of trees. The Redwood trees on the California The Boy Was Right. One of our great public schools had a 'headmaster whose name was Bird. So tempting a target was hard for the boys to resist. Once on com- ing Into the classroom the master found his class gazing with such pro- found gravity either at their desks or at the ceiling that he looked round for symptoms of trouble. Sure enough, on the blackboard was writ- ten the quotation -- I "Hail to thee, blithe spirit— Bird thou never wert." Raft for Japan. dlaatteter, -'kayo • attained an age al by ,mall at 50 cera a box or six filers throe Amami to font thousand boxes for $250 from The Dr. Wil- yoays, lilterd are woo 1940 971 Mke prisms' iJddibtne 410., Brockville, Ont. a �. Women unable to read or write are prohibited from voting In Hungary. Special Showing of Small Check Ginghtms Mill ends, shall 'becks, stripes & plain, in all col r., 27 in. wide, at per y,lyd, special price ......25" New Gingham- in a big array of medium and small checks 'in very latest colors, poi yard.........35c •1 ss; A Gopiptoi3 OF NEW DRESS AND $iLK • Use Pictorial Patterns • for your • Spring Sewing. Absolute Guarantee for a Perfect Fit. The last word in Corret Styles No where will you find practical demonstrations of lightful possibilitiescolor eff and weaves in the new dvesI, goods and silks. You will stand in admiration as you review our display un- folding as it does the story Of the very latest ideas for the com- ing spring and summer. We 'have searched diligently and carefully to accumulate the greatest dress goods display ever shown in Seaforth. Row well we have succeeded you shall be the judge. Come early while' the stocks are com- plete. For Girls' Dresses Extra Wrapperette 39c 'these are mill ends bought at a great reduction. in plaids, and small checks in colors, especially adapted for school wear. �� 36 inches wide. Special.. The New - Linoleums for Spring are here. There is an exceptionally attractive array of pleasing patterns and delightful color schemes in both light and dark shades. The new floral and block patterns are particularly enticing, while the imitations of hardwood flooring are perfect. We carry all widths. Come in and see for yourself. Big Reductions in Furs For Men and Women There never will be a time for years to come when furs will be reduced as low as we will have them during the next two weeks. Men's fur coats, women's furs and fur lined coats will be cleared at prices never equalled before. We will save you one-quarter to one-half on every fur you buy. Come and see these bar- gains before you buy. Every fur we sell carries our personal guarantee. Men's Good Underwear Good in every sense of the word, good in quality, in make, in fit, in wearing abil- ity and in reputation, be- cause we sell only the very best and tested makes, and the price, considering the quality is always the lowest. Price .79c to $2.50 Men's Winter Caps Warm, comfortable, strong becoming and economical. What more could you desire in a cap when you know the price is the lowest possible. Price .87c to $2.00 Men's Spring Suitings Made to Measure We were fortunate in pur- chasing our new Suitings for spring earlier than us- ual. It gives us the advant- ag eof showing the new suitings earlier. But more important than this, 1 we bought at the new reduced prices and selected from cloths of guaranteed colors. This is important to you because we have hundreds of stylish cloths here from which we can make you a perfect fitting suit, guaran- tee the suit to positively keep its color, and we will do this at PRICE $45.00 Men's Work Mitts From the heaviest lined horsehide to the unlined •choring mitt, we have a complete range in every size and weight of all the reliable materials. Prices ....$75c to $1.50 Men's Odd Working Vests We have one hundred men's working vests, made of remnants of tweed, serges and wor- steds, well lined, good pockets, strongly sewn, all sizes, 33 to 46. Price ', $2 to $2.50 STEWART BROS., SEAFORTH� is