HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-04-14, Page 2ncing
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Our INVINCIBLE Fence is made in Canada from
ore to the finished product. It is more thoroughly
vanized, less brittle and possesses the greatest amount
tensile strength because of its open hearth man>ac-
?tfre.
6 wire fence
7 wire fence
8 wire fence, even space
9 wire fence, hog fence
Poultry Fenoe, in 10 rod rolls, 48 inches
Poultry Fence, in 10 rod rolls, 60 inches
Poultry Fence, extra heavy, 48 inches
Poultry Fence, extra heavy, 60 inches
SPOT CASH PRICES '
35 cents per rod
39 cents per rod
44 cents per rod
52 cents per rod
55c per rod
65c per rod
65c per rod
70c per rod
Full stock of Barbed Wire, Staples, Brace Wire,
Pliers and Mauls.
WE STOCK IT STEEL POSTS.
FISHING SUPPLIES
JLf?ef l ts!7ii: ,
Rods, Reels. -
Hooks, Lines,
Flies, Sinkers and
Artificial Bait.
Special Split Rod
at ..........$2.5O
Special Split Bamboo .. $5.25
Reels 25c to $5.00
Lines 5c to $1.25
Hooks, black, 3 for lc
FOOTBALLS
English made, hand -sew-
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Nothing Else is Aspirinsay"Bayer"
Warning! Unless you see name
"Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting
Aspirin at all. Why take chances?
Accept 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 handy tin boxes of 12 tab-
lets, and in bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
While it is well known that Aspirin
means Bayer manufacture, to assist the
public against imitations, the Tablets
of Bayer Company will be stamped
with their general, trade mark, the
"Bayer C'rosa."
You can use sweet milk, sour milk,
buttermilk or water with
EGGO
Bak1a
ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER'
Lc
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114
(Irti
Do You Want to Cut
Your Chore Time
in Half?
In the ordinary work of the farrn yon
must pump more than a ton of wales
day.
Why take the time and trouble to do
this work when the wind will do it for you
free.
A Toronto Windmill will cut your
chore time in half. Make money for you.
And I can recommend it as an efficient
worker. It needs little attention outside
an occasional oiling. And it costs noth-
ing to run.
And if you want a real water service,
with running water under pressure every-
where, you'll be interested in Toronto
Pumps and Toronto Water Systems.
Let me tell you about them.
Jas. G. Martin
SE4FO8'l'S - - ONTARIO
_CNYARIO WINC EN:in:1E 8, Pira 'a CC
SPPfi*!A,1.112H; +fWIT .10B
4100 aot.,deepaix aver it 1, al' ,re
Scent 4t new OPolting.Inepe au ted to
yyour talentn., fight on a Veytain
hope that a career Waite every
man. ...Every roan has a career ¢e-
re Will, or, at worst; every man
can and a niche in the social order
into which he can fit 'himself with
success.. , ,Anyone who had strayed
in youth to the wrong profession and
failed .night yet prove .bimalf an
immense success in another, and
these broad distinctions at the top
ramify downwards until the general
truth is equally applicable to all the
sub -divisions of business and even to
all the administrative alectiona of
particular firma,"'
Lord Beaverbrook thus advises
young men who have failed, or think
they have failed, in a chosen sphere
in life. In an article of high inspir-
ation values in The Sunday Express,
the noted Canadian -born British
journalist declares emphatically there
need be no such thing as failure no
long as a man has in no wise be-
smirched his reputation by dishon-
orable or criminal actions. His be-
lief is that there are a great many
"round pegs in square •holes" and
vice versa.
"If I had to choose one single and
celebrated instance of thin doctrine
I should •find it in the career of Lord
Reading.
"Lord Reading started his career
on the Stock Exchange, where he
failed utterly. No doubt experience
would have brought him a reasonable
measure of success; but it was equ-
ally clear that this was not the
sphere for :his pre-eminent abilities.
"He therefore brake badly away
and entered at the Bar, where his in-
tellect secured him a reputation and
an income, especially in commercial
oases, which left his competitors di-
vided between admiration and an-
noyance. in a single year he made
40,000 pounds. The peg :had found
the round •hole. Ills eminence pro-
cured him the Attorney -Generalship.
Yet with all his ability and his per-
sonal popularity he was not a. real
success in the House of Commons.
Parliamentary warfare was not his
aptitude. tSo he became Lord Chief
Justice. His great personal charac-
ter and reputation gave Lord Read-
ing in his new position a certain re-
putation as a great Lord Chief.
"From my own limited experience
I do not agree. I had to watch close-
ly a certain case he was trying, and
I did not think Lord Reading was a
great judge. He failed to carry the
jury with him ; the final Court of
Appeal ordered a new trial, which
resulted in the reversal of the judg-
ment. Such a thing might happen
to any judge, but a strong one would
have put a prompt end to proceed-
ings which were obviously vexatious
and entailed great cost by the de-
lay on defendants, who •had obvious-
ly been dragged improperly into the
action.
But his real opportunity came
with his mission to the United States
during the war. No ambassador
had ever achieved such popularity
and influence or brought back such
rich sheaves with him. As a diplo-
matist, a man of law, and a man of
business, he shone supreme. Once
more, since his days at the commer-
cial bar, he had found the real field
for his talents."
TRACTOR DRIVERS
AND MECHANICS
Earn Very Big Pay.
$5.00-$15.00 per day. Huge demand
every Spring and Summer. Learn
this work for only $25-$50, at the big
HEMPHILL AUTO GAS TRACTOR
SCHOOL, 163 King St. West, To-
ronto. Write at once for particulars.
2834-tf
DODGING LIONS IN THE :MOVIES
It looks terrific to see the movie
actor clinging, apparently terror-
stricken, to the top of a door while
Brutus, the lion, springs at the seat
of his trousetrs. Bu that is because
you don't know Brutus. That clumsy
animal can never make his first jump
successfully. He can be relied upon
for two attempts, hat at the third
leap, when Brutus does go over the
top the- comedian won't be there.
He will have stept aside on a litle
platform constructed at one side of
the door. When Brutus comes sail-
ing over, snarling anal raging, he will
go in a straight line, as all lions do,
and the •ntost the comedian will get
is a bang or a swleh of an arrgry
tail in his eye. Then before Brutus
gathers himself to spring back again,
the comedian will 'have disappeared
for good and all. "See how easy it
is?" facetiously queries William
Steckler, familiarly .known as 'Curly,'
who is the chief animal trainer of
the Universal City menageries. "You
couid do the same thing."
"That is w.hy they don't pay very
high sallarves to actors who work
with ikons. To a brave man—and
they can't use cowards at all—lions'
are just a part of the day's work. In
case of a mishap, the director, will
contend that it was the .man's fault
for not s•emenbering what he had
been told about that particular lion."
For the lion, unlike the tiger or the
panther, can be depended upon to do
certain things. When you see the
animal dashing through the 'hallways
of 'houses, chasing the actors,
scrambling into the bathtub and even
into bed, and yet find later that the
actors appear safe and sound in a
new film you are •apt to wonder how
they escaped to play again. Is it done
by •trickery? you ask. It is not, says
MT. Steckler. There are not half
as many tricks as you think; "the
blase public is more apt to be fooled
the other way --to suspect a double
exposure when looking at the real
thing."
The answer, he says, is a knowl-
edge of 'lion temperament. Each big
cat is a separate personality, and the
trainer's safety, as well as that of
the actors, depends upon .his knowl-
ege of what the brute will do. TJhe
non had a Singia track anind, and
may be fat robed to wait true to form;
!huts - the jumping lion
treated to show the may
ber-
alike -of !bis feetiitgs by an 000tuaismal `
•
"Fruit a44jxes„ Brought Her
Health and Strength
624CnsorLAiN S•e., Moursg4
"For 8 years, I suffered constantly
from Kidney Disewe and .Liver Trouble,
My health was miserable and, nothing
in the way of ordinary medicine did
me any good.
Then 1 started to use •`Fruit-otivea"
and the effect was remarkable. All
the pains, Ilea lac;,es, Indigestion
and Constipation were, relieved and
once more I was well.
All who suffer from such troubles
should take "Fruit a lives"
Madam Hint t! I UAS FOISY.
50c a box, 6 for 'JO trial size 25c.
At dealers or scut postpaid by
Fruit-a-tives Limi0,1, Ottawa.
leap, but a running lion will never
do so, and if your movie director's
idea of comedy is that you be chased
by a roaring, snarling brute, it is
much safer to be followed by one
who keeps his four paws on the
ground than one who goes sailing
through the air after you when the
trap-door doeen't work.
How does the trainer know which
kind of lion it is? Mr. Steckler ex-
plains in the Illustrated World (Chi-
cago). :
Such attributes run in families, like
i edheadedness and twine in :humans.
If a lion comes from jumping stock
it will.jump, but if its ancestors were
always heavy-footed neither will this
lion differ,
Exits? You can be assured that
here is one thing in which expense is
not considered. There are plenty of
them in eaeh set. Behind each stands
an attendant with a pistol, ready to
open or shut the door on an in-
stant's notice. Every bit of the sup-
posed reom or forest is heavily en-
closed with a high iron railing, and
not an inch of canvas scenery is left
unprotected.
"Where is the camera man hero
who grinds out the picture? you
ask. He is the one person who is
at all tunes safe and sound in his
own little cozy :armoured (house; be-
tween the bars of which his camera
lens are fitted. It may be mere in
regard for the camera than the man
but it works out just the same.
People who work with lions get
callious. They lose their first ner-
vousness when they learn they can
depend upon the mental processes of
the beasts. On the rare occasions
when accidents do happen, it is with
new animals whose temperament has
rot been sufficiently studied.
Do the lions have all their teeth
and claws?.They certainly have, and
dentists take good care that they
keep all the -grinders which nature
gave them. A toothless lion, like a
toothless human, would be inclined
to a storry temper and would soon
die of indigestion. As for claws, it
would take four men a whole day to
file off Leo's, and !inside of a week
they would be as sharp as eyes, be-
cause Leo would use all his spare
time sharpening them again. Until
he had them sharp the would be a
most .miserable animal, as his food
would go slipping and sliding all over
the cage for lack of prongs to hold
with.
An instance of a lion's single-track
mind is his habit of running in a
straight line, as a rule, when urged
from the rear by the keepers with
their_ blank cartridges and prongs
and certainty of this trait enables
the director to inject some puite au-
thentic excitement into the film. Says
Mr. Steckler:
Sometimes a beginner—'a girl—is
seated at a fypewriter, let us say,
near the door. Sht is not thinking
of lions, or she would shake so she
would spoil the film. She does not
dream they are ''anywhere near her.
Suddenly a trap dood is opened on
the other side of the doorway.
Balm! right past her dashes •s lion,
pointedly urged from behind. He
COULD HARDLY
STAND AT TIMES
Hips, Back and Legs Would
Have That Tired Ache
Everett, Washington. -" For several
years I have had trouble with the lowest
part of my back and
my hips and my legs
would ache with that
tired ache. I could
hardly stand on my
feet at times. I was
always able to do my
work aithough I did
not feel good. I saw
Lydia E. Pinkbam's
Vegetable Com-
ppoou�d everttiserrand
havingheard several
praise it I decided to
try ht, T feel first-rate at the present
hire It has done wonders for me and
I keep it in the house' right along. -I
always recommend it to others who are
sick and ailing." -Mrs. J. M. Summer,
4032 High St., Everett, Washington.
To do any kind of work, or to pia3r for
that matter, is next to impossible if you
are suffering fromsome form of female
trouble. It may cause your back or your
lege M ache, it rusty make you nervous
and irritable. 'Thu may be able to keep
np and around, butybu dont feel good.
Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com-
pound is a medicine for women. his
d
y adapted to relieve the Cause
o the trouble mid then these annoying
aches and !tile good" feeThasis
t ion this *many, row -
1:0a i sy not give to n& isl I. -*ow .
tori Iter iiut of bet `'neat,
1006" to d'Ai, +tluvwai
�r1t""llid' :114, Ai, alP'I even
totie t ; ohe $ts a re has.
this. OVA 'abject An ,'view sued• ie'
making a wild dash, to gap, thee
The whole:, idea ie- keep out o +tile'
lion's way.
When you see. me wrestling on the
floor with Ethel the lioness, who is a
husky two-year-old, you are naturally
worried for my safety. You needn't
be. Ethel is a `good" lioness, and,
what is more to the point, she knows
and Ickes me. When Ethel was a
little thing she and several other
cubs used to run around my farm-
house like kittens, and on cold even-
ings the family would take the cubs
to bed with them. The baby lions
were brought up on milik, vegetables
and cooked meat, which accounts for
their nice dispositions, and, in fact,
Ethel 'keeps her claws drawn in like
a lady most of the time when she
stops to remember.
There is doubtless a great difference
In lions just as among people. There
are multderers, liars and thieves a-
mong them, just like humans, but
good and 'bad lions -have this in com-
mon—they both go .mad .at the sight
and taste of blood.
The great thing Is never to let
then find out that human beings
have -blood, and that is why the
study of their mental processes is
the very cornerstone of success in
handling then: for motion pictures.'
My lion—a troupe of fourteen
nine ,males and five females --are the
most highly trained animals in the
business. That means as much as
you can train a lion. They are con-
tinually being rented by other film
companies for from one hundred dol-
lars a day up, principally up. Be-
sides this a chaperon in the guise of
a trainer goes with every lion—eal-
ary extra. The lions' trainers get
about $150 a week, if they are any
good, so one can see that it pays Ito
learn cat nature better than it does
to study 'Greek.
As an incident of how the unex-
pected—the fool mistake of the other
fellow—is to blame for all serious
accidents with lions, what ,happened
recently to a leading lady and man is
typical.
The stars of the picture were to
be pursued by lions in the jungle.
Of course, the lions were let out of
a trap door camouflaged with
bushes. The stars were supposed to
have quite a start, and the lions were
being urged from behind until they
were wild to get out and run. The
man in charge of the trap-door be-
came nervous and opened it a mo-
ment too soon, so that the beasts
were let loose just as the two actors
were abreast of them.
There was only one thing to do—
fall flat on their faces and let the
frantic animals race over them. The
leading lady was thinly clad, so the
leading man, who wore stout khaki
threw himself 'over her and very
bravely shielded her with his body.
Now, lions are like cats—when ex-
cited they run with their claws part-
ly out. • The leading .man's uniform
was torn to ribbons, as if it had been
cheesecloth, and the •leading lady's
shoulder, which happened to be ex-
posed, was laid bare to the bone.
The lions hadn't even seen them.
All they had done was run over them
at top speed. This incident goes to
show that the public is wrong in
thinking that actors take no risks
when playing with lions. They do,
and the movie fans see the real
thing."
CHOICE OF ROUTES TO
WESTERN CANADA
The Canadian National Railway in
addition to providing unexcelled ser-
vice between Eastern and Western
Canada offers patrons optional routes.
You may travel westward via the
Port Arthun,Fort William route, re-
turning the northern route via Coch-
rane and North Bay, or vice versa.
This means that you are in new en-
vironments continuously. • A train
leaves Toronto (Grand Trunk Rail-
way) at $.45 p.m., carrying Standard
Sleeping 'Car to Winnipeg via North
Bay, iC,obalt and Cochrane daily, and
through tourist sleeping car Toronto
to Winnipeg on Tuesdays, Thursdays,
Saturdays and Sundays.
"The ;National," a solid through
train, leaves Toronto for Winnipeg
at 10.3:5 pan. every Monday, Wednes-
day and Friday via Sudbury and Port
Arthur with )standard and Tourist
sleeping cars, coaches, colonist car
and dining car service.
Get full particulars, reservations,
etc., from Local Agent or nearest
Agent of .the ;Canadian National
Grand Trunk Railways.
And Just When it Had Become Se-
cond Nature—`If the styles keep on
growing more extreme we will not be
able to call the girls "skirts" any
more. --Edmonton Journal,
This Bird is Married—Some girls
marry for love, some for money and
some so they can borrow their bus -
bands' handkerchiefs when they have
bad colds—Fredericton, N. B., Mail.
More Than Enough.
From the Boston Transcript.
"I don't see why you should' tkick.
You got half a million with your
wife—wasn't that enough?"
"Oh, the money was enough, but
the wife was too much."
Pessimism paralyzes potential
power; prevents prosperity's peace-
ful progress. IPoshl Pessimist! 'Per-
iahl—Kingston Standard.
The tlmited States made the world
safe for democracy and sent democ-
racy the bill.—Kincardine Review.
Diplomatic.
From the London rp eekly Telegraph,
A shopkeeper had in 'his employ' a
man so lazy as to be utterly worth-
less.
One day, his patience exhausted, he
discharged Qum.
"Will yrou give me a cibarecter?"
asked the lazy one.
The erelayer .sat down to write a
nork-torranittal letter. Bis effort re-
sulted ars follows:
"The bearer elf this Mier has work-
ed. fir ane oneweek, and I nm satis-
fied."
INCORIP•t3
Capital Paid. Up \ $4,000.000: R `
Over 12$ or
A FARM RUN ON A BITS;
requires that every member of the,
g some Parti
Partner. That the carnia from tF.ic.
duct be allotted to each member. Thep good a
dioates that these earnings swum go to 'swell 'Eller,
rings account with The M•olsons Bank. This will nnaCe,
each one ambitious to make his •product pay. Deposita
by mai- accepted.
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT:
Brucefleld St. Marys Eirkton
Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich
"alto $5,11o,00e
(.5ititin5ittlqatd
TORONTO
The Only Hotel of its Kind in Canada
Centrally situated, close to shops and theatres.
• Fireproof. Home comfort and hotel conven-
ience. Finest cuisine. Cosy tea room open
till midnight. Single room, with bath, $2.60
double room, with birth, $4.00. Breakfast,
60c. to 76c. Luncheon, 65c. Dinner, $1.00.
Free taxi service from trail and bo to Take
Meek and White Ti,uma,. Write for booklet
240 JARVIS STREET . - TORONTO, ONT.
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V
,7A
This Way to
Broader arkets
Right at your elbow is your Long Distance telephone.
With it, you can talk with any of 12,000,000 telephones
in Canada and the United States.
"dear the Way !" Long Distance seems to say—here's
an important message! The customer is favorably im-
pressed before he knows what the message is about.
And Long Distance gives you the right of way into
every man's office. He can ignore your advertising,
your letter, or even your traveller, but"ignore a Long
Distance call? Instinctively he reaches for the tele-
phone!
Keep down selling expense. "Use the Bell to Sell."
Station -to -Station rates are lower than Person -to
Person rates. After 8.80 p.m. they are about half the
day rate.
.Every Bell Telephone is
a Long Distance Station
Battery and Radiator
Repairing,
No matter what shape your battery or Radi-
otor is in, We can repair it as good as new by
our improved method. Bring in your leaky
radiotcrs, All cartage charges paid one way
and all work bears the well known EPPS
"• Square Deal " Guarantee.
Exchange your old storage battery on one
of our new 18 month guaranteed " EPPS"
Battery.
Our new 3 -TON International Truck will
take care of jour hauling problems.
E. H, EPPS & SON
Phone Clinton 626'R 14 VARNA