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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-04-07, Page 3f•
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11"
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Take the Sitf.rCotuie
wHEN You cannot goo the thne'to gta to thc bulk the
recitoe money. don't riekloaring it in
Forward the money byre .040001 null to
The amount will 'be "OW *Shod to
end you will receive iminedhite echnowledg•
by mail is safe. simple anii ionvenient.
TKO
11,
so
SEAFORTH BRANCH„ , • R. M. JONES, Manager.
LIM& DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT.
IFHE HURON EiPOSITOR
DISTRICT mArrzna
KEEP BABY ViELI;
IN THE SPRING
Mothers who have little ones In the
tome find the Spring a time of great
anxiety. At this season conditions
make it necessary to keep the baby
indoors. He is often confined to over-
' 'heated and badly ventilated rooms and
catches cold which rack his whole
syetem. To guard against this a box
of Baby's Own Tablets should be
kept in the house and an pteasional
dose given the baby to \keep his
stomach and bowels working regular-
ly.This will prevent colds; constipa-
tion or colic, and keep baby well. The
Tablets are sold by medicine dealers
or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. WilliamsMedicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
RICHEST GIRL IN ENGLAND TO
!MARRY MAN WHO DOESN'T
NEED THE MONEY
The richest girl in England has
just .become engaged to be married,
but Romance, who wed the Princess
Mary to a fabulously rich viscount
instead of a pauper prince, remains,
if not' asleep, at least drowsing,
Miss Edwina Ashley, who had the
!honor of having had King Edwarl
as a godfather, is not to rnarry a
poor chauffeur or even a bankrupt
scion of decayed royalty.
On the contrary, the very high-
born young man whom she will wed
also is extremely rich.
He is a ;British lord, now on the
staff of the Prince of Wales in India,
where Miss Ashley, herself, is visit-
ing the Viceroy and Lady Reading.
Lord Louis Mountbatten, the
fiance, is, in spite of the fact that
he is a lord, a handsome, upstanding
youngster, full of pep and initiative
—else he would not be upon the
prince's staff. The Prince of Wales
alert beyond the average himself
and inclined to be investigative of
all matters, conventional and other-
wise, selected for himself all the
younger members of his staff. and,
as might be said in the United
States, chose no dead ones.
It is a really a tremendous fortune
which this lucky youth will marry,
and one which is, itself, tinged with
the glorious glamor of romance,
touched as all romance should be, to
be quite perfect, with the shadowy
brush of tragedy.
The fortune which Miss Edwina
Ashley inherits is that of her grand-
father, Sir Ernest Cassell. This
amazing man, dead only a short
time, became during the war, one of
the great conflict's most pathetic
figures.
At the time of its beginning he
was respected by everyone in Eng-
land, he had been one of King Ed-
ward's closest' friends up to the very
moment of his death, he was a privy
councillor and it is now known that
he was loyal to the Union Jack to
the last drop of his blood—but he
Thad been born a German, and, al-
though he had lived almost all his
life in England, and there had built
op his tremendous fortune, the sus-
picion of the ignorant and ruthless
fell upon him.
This was the second dreadful blow
to strike him, the first having been
the death, in spite of everything
that modern science could accom-
plish, of his adored daughter. The
love between them had been literally
wonderful.
flhe died of tuberculosis in a eot-
tage built especially for her on high
seaside cliffs, and after her death,
so great was his love for her, Sir
Ernest Cassell had this cottage taken
down and precisely re -erected in the
garden of his home ,fit Moulton Pad-
dock, Newmarket, where he spent
'hours- of each day, mourning for his
lost daughter, and where he met most
of the agony which grew out of the
' violent suspicions of his British my, -
shy which spread so widely, 'shortly
after the outbreak of the war, but
lied positively no foundation and
which finally unquestionably caused
this death.
He left his entire fortune to his'
grand -daughter whose engagement
now has been announced.
This wealth of which he gave so
freely to the nation which he Unques-
tionably loved, in the course of its
battle with the nation in which by
chance he had been born. was so tre-
mendous, that despite such expendi-
tures for patriotic purposes en no
other single resident made, the for-
tune which Wan Ashley inherited
When he died of a broken hea
incanted to more than 4,000,000 Br4t
tiritepounds, which, roughly, is. not
ninh tless than 520,000,000.
ti *hose devotion to her
in 'hie dot hours was oo
to have won this tribute
n, simPle, modest, cultur-
us and 'mem h-
is tit. 1n.vtab1e
In !her
After be fell under fie suspicions
now admitted to have been cruelly
Unjust, She was with hn constantly
in the home to which be retired and
from which he 'never ventured, al-
though he contiaued to the very end
to Conduct the vast business enter-
prises which be had built up, and
epent most of her days in reading to
him from the newspapers of the
.world. This she was ipeguliarly com-
petent to do, for she speaks English,
French, Italian, German, Swedish and
Dutch.
HOT FORMALDEHYDE FOR
TREATING SEED
Many potato growerk are inter-
ested in the hot formaldehyde
method of treating potgto seed be-
cause it saves time, is less poisonous
than corrosive sublimate, does not
corrode metals, and is effective for
both scab and rhizoctonia.
The solution is made by mixing
twls pints of 40 per cent. formalde-
hyde to 30 gallons of water. This
is heated to a temperature between
118 degreesy. to 122 degrees F. The
potatoes are dipped in the solution
for two minutes and then dumped
in a pile and covered with a canvas
cover of sacks for one hour. They
can then be dried or cut and planted
immediately. Formaldehyde when
used without heating will not con-
trol rhizoctonia and requires one and
a half hours soaking for best results
in control of scab.
SCIATICA FOR YEARS
BUT IS WELL AGAIN
WHY C. LACHANCE RECOM-
MENDS DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS.
Quebec Man Relieved of Long Suffer-
ing Shouts Praises of Dodd's
Kidney Pills.
ogee. It
that
Sod
on cattle
lielg
suck
ell, per -
UV. been
„sweet clover
death in
• „
Ofal0.1,''sMie same open -
fed, stifferent,ly, :havenet ' „alt.
similarly 'performed on
hone by ill stfects.
• 'rho exact stare of the celsonotte
fetor associated with the soonstp,
and the Planner in **it it orodow
harmful effect in mettle efict to mune
their death; hair not yet bee n &tin-
itely, determined, and any opinions
expressed att tive - present. time; are
based on practical observations. In
fact, a large amount of intense study,
investigation iind research Will be
necessary to obtain reliable conclu•
stens regarding the possible dangers.
incidental to the feeding a mouldy
sweet clover ensilage, or as to
whether sweet clerer, eut at certain
stages and under certain conditions,
develops harmful properties as bi-
!age.
In the meantime, sufficient evi-
dence is at hand to justify warning
farmers against the feeding of moul-
dy 'ensilage to live stock in order to
avoid losses, and under no circum-
stances should operations, including
dehorning and castoration, be per-
formed on cattle which are being
fed on sweet clover ensilage if it
appears mouldy. Such animals
seems to develop marked vascular
changess which produce a tendency
to internal hemorrhage, resulting
in de at h.—Dr. MeGilvray, 0 ntai o
Veterinary College.
Petite Vallee, Gaspe Co., Quebec,
April 3rd. (Special.)—Mr. Charles
Lachance, a well known resident here
is shouting the praises of Dodd's
Kidney Pills..
"I had spiatica and rheumatism,"
Mr. Lachance states. "My trouble
staited from a cold. I perspired free -
with the least exertion. My Jimbs
swelled.
"Then came the sciatica and rheu-
matjsrn and for five years I was a
sufferer.
"I took six boxes of Dodd's Kidney
Pills. Now my health has come back
and I tell everyone who suffers from
sciatica, rheumatism or Kidney
trouble to 'use Dodd's Kidney Pills."
Dodd's Kidney Pills act directly on
the kidneys. They put the kidneys
in condition to strain the uric acid
out of the blood. Without uric acid
in the blood there can be no rheuma-
tism :or sciatica.
Ask your neighbors if Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills do not make healthy
kidneys.
•
• remelt,
TEA SHORTAGE MEANS HIGHER
PRICES
During the war, teas reached a
very high level of cost largely owing
to shortage of shipping. In 1919 and
1920, greatly increased production and
unlimited shipping resulted in enor-
mous quantities of tea reaching every
market in the world, and a consequent
fall in cost ensued. So serious did
the situation became in India, Ceylon
and Java that the various growers
agreed to decrease their output dur-
ing 19.21, by 20 per cent. This agree-
ment was kept and the world is now
faced by a shortage of tea, which has
resulted in the market climbing week
by week for the last eighteen months
until it has now reached a level fully
15 cents a pound over that of October,
1920.
WARNING AGAINST MOULDY
ENSILAGE
Recently considerable sickness and
losses have been reported among cat-
tle being fed on ensilage. In some
instances only a few animals have
hcen affected on a particular farm,
but in a few cases the losses have
been serious, as one farmer is known
to have lost 17 animals out of a
herd of fifty cattle. The frequency
and peculiarity of these losses has,
led the department to have investi-
gations and experiments made to de-
termine the cause. The staff of the
Ontario Veterinary College have
been in elose touch with veterinary
surgeons throughout the province,
and reliable information obtained as
to the prevailing circumstances
where cattle have died. In all
cases investigation has revealed the
fact that the losses have occurred
among cattle fed extensively on
sweet clover ensilage which had be-
come ;mouldy. Samples of the en-
silage were shipped to the Veterinary
College, and experiments conducted
clearly indicated that mouldly sweet
clover ensilage was harmful to
cattle.
From observations and informae
tion, ,available at the present time,
it would appear that the .harm is
confihed to sweet clover ensilage
which had become mouldy, and that
continued feeding of it is liable to
cause death. It 'is an interesting
fact that young cattle under three
years of age are the one which suf-
fer afloat severely and succumb the
quickest. In illustration of this,
'the ease mentioned where in a herd
of ISO cattle, the 17 Which died were
allpeeing cattle, 'under two years of
age, and in good condition. No sick -
nese had been ',resent in the therd un-
til after the feeding of the ensilage
conaineficed, atidtheloises occurred
within .4 fa* week.. Apparently
matte. cattle vier -four item of age
are able to withstand the ill effects
better thaw yeOng
continued feeding of donaged meow
clover eilliloge Oak be hareitul
It has got to be that more notice
is taken of one of Lloyd's George's
periods of calm than of his crises.—
Calgary Herald.
Care should be taken in speaking
of a "steel dividend" that the words
are not accidentally reversed.—Guelph
Mercury.
SHE FOUND RELIEF
AFTER FIVE YEARS
An Ex -Service Man Tells How
• Wife Found New Health.
Brightenedower Bolin
and Chia gaskets.
The 'Boxes Must Be Strong sad our.
able --The .$911 Should Be Kept
Blebsnd'Well Watered — Hints
en Arrangement et Plants.
(Contribatad be Ontario Department of
Ageteeiture, Toronto.)
Window boxes Should be made
strong and durishle, Etta box should
be nine or ten Inches wide at top,
and bottom, swim or eight inches
deep inside measelrements, of a suit-
able length to At the window, not
over tour feet in length, made of
one-lneb dressed. lumber, and when
tiniehed, 'painted s, dull green color.
Half-inch holes Should be bored
about six' inches apart through the
bottom of the box for drainage pur-
poses. Verandah boxes should be
'about the some uieasrt meas.
large iron screw eye, er iron staple,
should be put at each tup, outside
(front) corner -of the window boxes.
A strong piece ot wire should be
attached to these long eneugh to at-
tach to an,other screw eNe or staple
placed in the window trame about a
foot highet up than tee of box, so'
that the box can be fastened securely
In position. Boxes and barrels may
t; made more artistarid rustic
looking by - nailing mess and fungi
covered bark, of native trees, on the
outside. This not only adds to their
attractiveness but also m'Ips to keep
the plants moist and cool at the
roots in summer time The bark
from Basswood. Elm, c; lir or Birch
trees will be found suitable. By the
exercise of a little tale and orig-
inality, very pretty 1 ,,xe, can be
made at slight cost. \!.;m1ali boxes
and rustic stands eau ho made in
something the same One of
the prettiest rustic rd I have
ever seen was made frt,n; the lower
half of a sugar barrel, t. inforeed by
a thickness of half-inch board nailed
on the bottom of the barrel outside
to strenthen it, with three-quarter
inch holes bored throi...;ti for drain-
age purposes.
Hanging Baskets.
Wire hanging bash. t, lined with
green moss or sphago.,ai moss are
very effective, especiallt. for a sunny
Position. The clay bit.-kets dry out
very quickly and are Letter suited
for a shady position tIttr; a sunny
one.
Soil.
The soil for wind,,,v boxes must
be rich in fertilizers t he best re-
. sults areto be obta.;•;1. It is a
HIS good plan to put an ,hch in depth
of well rotted barnytt,t manure, or
dry cow manure, near the bottom of
, each box, before !Min,: it up with the
"I wish to testify," says Mr. R. A. prepared soil. About an inch in
F. Hughes, of Hamilton, Ont.. "as to depth of soil may de placed in the
the efficiency of your Dr. Williams' bottom of the box hist, and the fer-
Pink Pills for the following reasons: tilizers named spread over It, or
"When I returned home in May, about half a pound ;,: bone Iteat may
1919, after nearly five years absence be used as a Sebst,-Its for the first
named fertilizers. These ft rtiltzers
will holp sostain td.trit growth late
in the season whet, the soil 1,, be-
come exhatisted. ied 'part satd, one
Through war worries, loneliness and Part leaf tomti! tlt..;ek soil trete the
other factors contributed through my bush) zit.' st,..en to eight Parts of
unavoidable absence, her health had light hll,' 11,0•11 1111Xed, bIt 1 WO
'Parts of ; ither or the fertilizers nam-
ed a.ddetiwill make a good ,;t1 for
window box,* aortic stands, itc
The best time to ti:1 window taixes
is when they are to te• placed in posi-
tion toward 1111 of May er ; arty
in Juno. 11 1 nay be set in
position and well ,red, before they
on limy service, my wife had chang-
ed from a healthy, robust woman, to
one whose life was a burden and ord-
inary duties almost impossible.
}tern steadily undergoing what I
might describe as an undermining
process, for years. •
"1 was fully aware from her letters
that I would _not find her the same
woman, butrehome, , when 1 ached I
was terribly shocked to find her in
the condition she was m. Her •healthy
are filled with set! te plants, tuff
mho* had changed. She seemed blood -
are heavy and rheit r't to set ih posi-
less and her Skill was sallow. She
was weak and listless,' and with diffi- m1 d''' '-
Arrangement of i'lauts.
cults .moved about the house. She
hardly ever moved out of the house Tall growitie tits shrm1.1 be
placed at ;le bac]; .• thc box re ,,rest
as she became so short of breath and
feared she would fall during one of the windewoess plauts andtrail-
ing pltmts should • '1 be put around
her dizzy spells, which she said were
the front and end: tt: the box. Any
becoming* 'more frequent.
space between rloc•• in the centre of
'The day I arrived holm* I visited
the box should be 1e •d with nu diem
our doctor, who is an old friend, and,
height plants. I - a good plan to
later through his rlv, consulted
first the box .:y level full with
with another physician of this city.
Everything was done that could be twith soil. tl" '1 the Pla"i'; 0"
the 5111'100, wle, they are to be
done, and many medicine, wore pre- planted tiredly. It doing this the
scribed and faithfully taken. these
Plants c;10 he ch.,. ;1 about and re
were of no avail I trusted that time
arranged, and a ,•./01. idea of the
111,14,-iine,„:\7,tl,dlisynffibt•ieen iirrangentenat'
t nd t tect desired can
" be obtainod bit • finally planting
them. Fur color t 11. et, for instance,
too much of any et.. color, especially
the heavier col,- should not be
placed in any en,' part of the box,
whether of dw.trt er tall plants, as
there would not iteui be a proper
balance of etiior something that
would detract trto t the effect con-
siderably. By seind•ng the plants on
the surface of the soil before plant-
ing as mentioned, .tuy change requir-
ed can be easily made. Use bright
colored plants neItaly whether of
foliage or tin,and if possible.
make use of good sited plants. Boxes
filled as described at the time of
setting &It. will de :such better than
boxes filled indoor.: early in the sea-
son. Boxes filled very early indoors,
often get shabby as soon as tleey are
set out, and sometietes become posi-
tively unsightly herore the summer
season is half ()vet'
s •
course of five years. After twelve_
months, conditions had become worse.
Tnen I decidod 00 change of air, gave
tip my po4ition in the city and moved
to the country. Even this did not do
any good 1 think it added to her
depression.
"One day a friend visited 11, and as
a result of their 'conversation my wife
Ina& up her mind to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills.
'I had not much faith in what I
did, but procured three boxes. This
happened nine monthA, ago. I was
surprised to hear my wife say, after
about the tenth day, 'I believe these
pills are doing me good.' A week or
so after that I certainly believed they
were, for I saw color returning to
her cheeks and the sallow, unhealthy
color disappearing. The pills were
certainly doing what you claim they
will do, and of her own free will she
continued them for about three
months. At the end of this time she
seemed quite a different woman. Life
was worth living. The listlessness
had 'gone and she could walk up the
steep hill, which le half a mile long,
leading to our house, without the
slightest inconvenience. - At this
stage she discontinued the pills and
she is just as well now as ever she
was.
"Now sir, I want to say ti have
every faith in Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, as I bare had proof, and 1 be-
lieve that what tkis medicine did for
my wife, it can do for others."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink
Pill,* from any medicine dealer or by
marl at 50 exerts a box, or six boxes
12.50 from The Dr. Williams'
MOM:* Co., Brockville, OM.
Care of Boxes.
Window boxes, etc.. require cop
ious and frequt nt waterings every
day, or at least every second day,
especially during het weather. The
soil should be well soaked with water
when watering the boxes. Toward
the end of the gpa ,,on, in July and
August, some liquid fertilizer may
be seven the plants.—The late Wm.
Hunt, 0. A. College. Guelph.
E. G. Bennett, of Missouri, says:
"When you sell grain you wholesale
the fertility of your soil; when you
sell butter -fat you retail water, feed
and sunshine."
There's two sides to every question
--my aide mid else wroag
don Advertiser.
Ntulo
in
Canada.
r
With every style you get complete, detailed instructions for knitting—the exact
number and kind of stitches, the precise kind and color of yarn, to use—all stated
in clear, concise language, so that you are bound to be successful If you follow the
instructions. If you want Dame Fashion's "last word" in knit styles you need
this Monarch Book No. 8.
All the yarns recommended for the styles in this book are the famous, high-
quality, Canadian -made,
Here's a book that full of the
very newest and moat stunning
stylesin hand-knit garments—
all especially designed by bur
own designers in accorda,nee with
the latest tendencies of Fashion
. and introducing many novel ef-
fects by the use of novelty yanks.
NARCH NEY
Besides our well-known Monarch Floss, bown,
Dove And Butterfly Yarns, this book illustresss
some beautiful new yarns we have r,-_,ently de-
veloped, including Monarch Starlite, Kurly, Silver-
Alpaka and Art Silk. These new yams pro -
;lace the most pleasing effecta and are the same reliable
quality sa our older established yarns.
Just till in the coupon, enclose it with 25 cents in stamps.
or Postal Nut, had maii it 4, w and we will .end you
this big new style hook by return mad.
Mail Us This
Iffil
THE MONARCH KNITTING CO. LIMITED
DUNNVILLE, ST. CATHARINES AND ST. THOMAS, ONT.
Also Manufacturers of
Monarch•Knit Hosiery, Sweater Coats, Etc.
•
Calf for
HIL1P
5'
The Monarch Knitting Co., Limited,
Dunnville, Ont.
I enclose 25 cents, for which please send rne
"Hand Knitting" (Monarch Style Book No. 8).
Name
Street or R.R.
Prov
P.O.
L
1
(Exlieitor, Seaforth)- j
NAVY CUT mo
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