HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-04-21, Page 3"
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SEAFORTH WAWA: !,,„„ • „
-i„Attor 0060t10# FOR0#1'.
l'HA PRICES RISINO
LL.has it that the labor '111000
and eral dissatisfaction in n4l$1
the largest tea prodnoing country hfl
the world, bale made 1:redaction so
expensive ,andffrhazardoue at a gen-
eral rise in prices may be expected
in the near future. •The ertintated
tonauroption this year will be Much
larger an ie crotpavailable,
ang Bd, and that this le of groat
use to the animals in helping tolPIa
In' frighten their enemiee, aside
the arching of the back and the
zpward positimi of •the tail enable,
them '6prig quiCkly in any 'di-
rection.
DIGESTIVE TROUBLES
CAUSE MUCH DISTRESS
Are Nearly Always Due to Thin,
•Or IChangIng A,ttire--"Does your Watery Blood.
•' fiancee, know much about antomo- Do not think that because your
hfles?' .., • ..,.,_i • , stomach is easily upset you are the
"Heavens, no. ,ohe t...". Ise it 1 victim of some serious malady. One
cooled my ear by stripping the gears." of the most common causes of indi-•
—Harvard Lampoon. •
gestiop is anameia, or thin, watery
She Must Have Shimmied.--Hairold blood. In fact it has became getter-
Fly.—"SO poor old Bill kicked the i ally recognized that healthy activity
bucket. Fell off a ,girl at a dance of the stomach is impossible unless
the blood Is rich and red.
and killed himself.
Benny Fly—"Uailatm-m. I always
told him that bare pack riding would
be the end of .him."—U. of T. Goblin,
A Quick -Thinking Race—A Jew and
a Scotchman, visiting Chester Cathed-
ral, suddenly discovered .that a service
had commenced and they were left
with no alternative but to take their
vents amongst the congregation. With
visions of the collection plate before
their eyes, they racked their 'brains
for some excuse Co make an unostenta-
tious eacape. At last, when'hope had
almost deserted them and the plate
was passing along the adjoining pew,
the Jew, conceiving a brilliant inspir-
ation threw up his arms and fainted.
The ecotehman, with a sigh of relief,
promptly carried him out. --,London
Gaiety.
NOTHING TO EQUAL
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been
found valuable in cases of indiges-
tion, nervous dyspepsia and stomach
weakness, just because 'they are a
blood builder ,and nerve tonic. The
rich, red blood following their use not
may imparts a healthy digestion, but
carries color to the cheeks and lips,
and gives vigor to the muacles. One
important point to remember is that
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain no
harmful drugs or opiates and are
thus to be preferred to preparations
that merely stimulate for a time. Be-
fore you begin worrying unnecessar-
ily about your state of health, try the
tonic treatment of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. You will be surprised to see
how rapidly your appetite returns and
your debilitated system revives. Miss
Sarah Farquhar, North Brookfield,
N.S., who has proved the value of
these pills in cases of this .kind says:
"For a long time I was a sufferer
from indigestion, which seemed to
carry with it a complication of .other
troubles. .Fvery meal brought misery
with it, as the eating was followed by
severe pains in the stomach, causing
that caused severe palpitation of the
heart and a smothering Sensation.
The result was that my general health
was seriously affected and the least
exertion would tire me out. I had
'taken much medicine, but did not get
more than temporary relief until I
began using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,
which I took for a considerable time,
with the result that I now enjoy every
meal and am no longer distressed
after eating. I find myself in every
way enjoying better health, .and
cheerfully recommend these pills to
similar sufferers."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills through any dealer in medicine
or by mail at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockvile,
Ont.
Mrs. Georges 'Lefebvre, St. Zenon,
Que., writes: "I do not think there
t4 is any other medicine to equal Baby's
Own Tablets for little ones. I have
used them for my baby and would use
nothing else." What Mrs. Lefebvre
says thousands of other mothers say.
They have found by trial that the
Tablets always do just what is claim-
ed for them. The Tablets are a mild
but thorough laxative which regulate
the bowels and sweeten the stomach
and thus banish indigestion, constipa-
tion, colds, colic, etc. They are sold
by medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
6
Wrong Again.—"Do you know what
day this is'John, dear?" she asked,
sweetly at the breakfast table.
Unpleasant recollections of ,previous
memory lapses flashed through John's
mind. He would not be caught this
"Why, of course, my love! Flow
time.
-could I possibly forget that this is
our wedding anniversary?" he said,
with gentle reproof.
"No, it isn't. That is three months
ahead," she responded coldly. "This
is the day on whic'h you promised to
take the afternoon off from the office
and beat the rugs." — Vancouver
Province.
BRITISH ADMIRAL IS FULL OF
DOUBT
If it is not a jeremiad that Ad-
miral of the Fleet Lord Wester-
Wemyss utters in an article in the
Nineteenth .Century upon tfle, work
of the Washington Conferemw 11is
a note of doubt. ,He seems (to t ke
to heart Great Britain's loss oglti-
•mand of the sea, and if there refanY
compensations they seem riebulo a to
him. "It is impossible," 'he says "to
shut 'one's eyes to the fact that flit -
01
of its strongest driving power, an
that the voice of Great Britain in
the councils of the nations will no
longer carry the same weights as
heretofore. That voice has lost
much of its authority, and with it
much of its prestige." Admiral
Wemyss thinks that the shattering
of the tradition that •Britannia ruled
the waves lis "truly a paradoxical
result of the greatest victory ever
won—won, as must always be the
case with England, through her
navy." Thus he reasons in terms of
sea power only, casting no glance
in the direction of Sir Douglas
Haig's drive final Amiens to Mons,
of which Marshal Foch said over the
casket of the unknown British sol-
dier at Boulogne: "The annals of
history tem no more glorious story
than that'of those 110 days of cease-
i.ess offensive fighting which was
done by the British army and
brought the war to a close."
If the army had failed Great
Britain in the supreme crisis of the
war, the achievement of the navy,
great as it was, would. not have
saved the empire. What Admiral
Wentyas writes about the Washing- "During the last hundred years a
ton conference must be read in the great change has come over the in -
light of his loyalty to .his own ser- habitants of the North American
vice. He atilt thinks that, "though C,ontinent unnoticed by the casual
temporarily obscured by financial European observer. Inanigration of
considerations!' command of the sea an infinity of races, Latin, Teutonic,
"imaat again be. recognized as the Slav, Scandinavian, Celtic, has Pro -
essential oondition of the existence diced its natural results, a popu-
of the empire." The .admission is 1 dation which is no longer Anglo -
made that Great Britain has se- Saxon."
cured a respite from the financial More than one American writer of
burden of a competitive building British descent has told the plain
programme and that a stable naval truth about the matter, pointing out
policy for a term of years is iasred, \ the graduai decline of "Anglo-Saxon"
bat the attainment of friendship sentiment in America. In the West -
With the United States is regarded
as no More than hope. The Ad-
miral takea'Aeo seriously the vapor -
hues of the 741fitiaitritish press in
Ameriert, Mot ,the Near York Times.
His vieWe about the project of the
melting pnt etplartted his doubt of
American friodehbi OW future:—
CHOICE OF ROUTES TO
WESTERN CANADA
The Canadian National Railway in
addition to providing unexcelled ser-
viee between Eastern and Western
Canada, offers patrons optionalroutes.
You may trivet westward via the
• Port Arthur -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-
viranments continuously. A train
leaves Toronto (Grand Trunk Rail-
way) at 8.46 p.m., carrying Standard
Sleeping Car to Winnipeg via North
Bay, Cobalt and Cochrane daily, and
through tourist sleeping ear Toronto
to Winnipeg on Tuesdays, Thursdays
Saturdays and Sundays.
"The National," a solid through
train, leaves Toronto for Winnipeg
at 10.35 pm. every Monday, Wednes-
day and Friday via Sudbury and Port
Arthur with Standard and Tourist
sleeping cars, coaches, colonist car,
• and dining -car aervice.
Get full particulars, - reservations,
etc., from Local Agent or nearest
Agent of the Canadian National
Grand Trunk Railways..
ish policy will henceforth be depri
WHY DOES A CAT'S HAIR RISE
ON END WHEN IT PREPARES
TO FIGHT?
Most of us are farailiar with the
way in which a eat prepares for
battle, •arohing 110 back, placing its
feet closer together ,and manpulat-
ing the muscles of the skin in such
a ,manner that every hair stands
erect and She tail appears to be
several times Its normal size. Some
• persons who have made a study of
cats claim that this involuntary at -
'etude is principally due to a de-
sire to -oleasse the skin and point to
the fact that cats will often do much
the same thing when they axe
Stretching or bathing themselves.
„ 'BO it appears, far more probable
` %Wing of the hair is & net,.
eMpleyed to make the
.appear larger and more
le Ahab Whert its hair is
, •
1 is hoe/
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Kellogg's Jungleland Moving Pic-
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ern States particularly the infinity
of races" makes itself felt in public
discussions about relations with
Great Britain. "It is to be hoped,"
says Admiral Wemyss with obvious
misgivings, "that it is not It vain
lure of an eventual Anglo-American
is -
alliance ',Minch has eaus
X7[1E
CORN FLAKES
.2
Also makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN. cooked and krumbled
card our treaty with Japan for the
Four -Power act." He regrets the
abandonmenof the Anglo -Japanese
treaty, which he thinks had its ad-
vantages for both Great Britain and
Japan. "Without her obligations to
Great Britain, Japan," says Admiral
WersYss, "urged by her restless am-
bition would have gone much fur-
ther ,in China than she has done."
That is to say,the British alliance
had a restraining effect on Japan.
Will the Four -Power Pact restrain
her?
"If Japan should not be content
with the new conditions," says the
Admiral, "the Four-Povrer pact will,
it is feared, be of little assistance in
solving the problem of the Pacific."
He ,goes on M say:
"Wlhat is this problem?It 10 the
future of China, and it is one
which no treaty, no arrangement, 00
pact, can hope finally to solve: it
contains too many possibilities be-
yond human control to allow of the
immediate settlement of the fate
of that huge, chaotic conglomeration
of humanity known as China."
The writer imagines the cry of
"Asia for the Asiatical" and the na-
tions of the East turning to Japan
as their leader, but this is to leave
out of the reckoning China's slum-
bering inatinot of nationality and
her wonderful powers of absorption.
NUNEYOUCainotilny
New Eyes
But you tan Promote a
Venn. neaneycetrinse
ouctEYEZVZhigd'agrztf,
nee rearEyeseleao, mar and Illeamy.
Write for FresEve Care Book.
Oohs Eva Roach' toad Cast Olio Strad. Melia
TOASTED
CORN
FLAKE
-
gee "wwink
444610mi-wok"'
Cr4"4141%0ToRroNtAKE Ca
10.41.
"The check to Japan's rising naval
power is, after the surrender of Bri-
tain's naval supremacy, the most
striking feature of the conference,"
says Admiral Wernyss.
It is curious that he should Over-
look the security obtained by Japan
in the for -Sleet -ions agreement, over
v.-hich American naval officers shake
their heads. They would hardly
hare the British Admiral's conclu-
sion that the United States "emerged
from the conference eonscioue of
having gained the substance of all
they desire," for "they leave rid
themselves of a vast and ruinous
ehipbulding programme without
giving up the object for which it
was projected, they have secured a
general ration of naval strength
which leaves them free from arudety
in all quarters, and they have at-
tained an et/wilily with the Brat
naval power with a minimum effcat.7 J1,
None of the great sea Foam= is ed.
tirely satisfied with the results Of '
the conference. By its fruits it vs
be judged. Without commend**•
there would have been no nand
holiday and no tentative solution 4 ,
the Pacific problem.
"Cold In the Head"
is an acute attack of Nasal Catarrlia
Those subject to netesent "oolds in th
head" will find that the use of n
CATARRH MEDICINE will build up
System, cleanse the Blood and rend
them less Dame to colds. Repeated,
tacks of Acute Catarrh may lead
Chronic Catarrh.names CATARRH Tirreritemre w
taken Internally and acts through
Stood on the Mucous Surfaces of the
tem, thus reducing the Infle1111110,101.1
restorl?gitriernall conditions. •3,
Allsesta.mouton) free. :t
F.J. C linty & Co.. Toledo, BAIN ,
,if4t
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