HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-01-19, Page 3rY4
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piffle or leave two mut your emitter
lit•Yeri`.',V0V-Y0i#114•Pr:'t� pi�
• hate tlie .....and,fasiiismit';::.ait tun 111
done see the. ba%%acitounk the
'is a *C. testate, titr4
iniej.tfoer narite as ewe.-
mutatak Theri cariY ott the terms Of
•
FARB TNT; BABY AGAINST
the williunder your lawyer's adviee.
,You,,,have rib' power ;to, alter the ar-
.rangelnents; you must follow the
will. W the widow wants, a larger
allowance, or the children• peed more
for their education, than is allewed
by the will, then you must make ap-
plication to the Judge. He mud
make all such decieiont e• and if any
dispute arises, or you do not know
what to do, you may apply to the
Judge fpr a direction. The expense
of this application will be borne by
the Estate. If you ad without ad-
• vice and. are successful • the estate
gets the benefit; if things Wee out
wrong, the damages'coine out of your
pocket, not out of the estate funds.
Therefore keep the assets in your
ewn hands, follow the will strictly,
and go to the Judge when in doubt.
COLDS "
To guard the Baby against colds'
nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab-
lets. The Tablets ere a Mild laxative'
that will keepethe little one's stomach
and bowels working reguleirly. It is a
recognized fact that where the stom-
ach and bowels are in good order that
colds not exist; that the health of
the little one will be good and that he
will thrive and be happy and god.
natured. The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cooly
a box from The Dr, Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
.If you can toss a match into's. clearing
And never give a thought to put it our.
Or drop your cigarette butt without
fearing,
That flames may kindle in the leaves
about,
If you cart knock the ashes from your
brier,Without a glance to see where they
may fall,
And later, find the forest all afire,
W here you have passed --with no one
near to call,
If yeti drive your auto through the
working,
And mat your stogie stub into the
slash,
Unmindful of the danger therein
lurking, '
Or homes or happiness that you may
smash;
If you can leave you- campfire while
'tis glowing,
No thought of industries that it May
blight,
Or of the billion saplings in the
growing,
Turned into charcoal ere the corning
night,
If you can start a fire beneath a
brush pile
When the wind is roaring like a
distant gun—
'Tem surely should be jailed without
a trial
And labelled as lunatic, my son.
NOW ENJOYING
PERFECT HEALTH
ME RECOMMENDS DOIiIrS
NET PILLS TO ALL HER FRIENDS
Mos Adeoda Mallen who Suffered
From Bad Kidneys Tells of the
Relief She Got.
St. Antoine Padon, Que., January
• (Special). ---"I suffered with a
very bad back and my kidneys. My
ease seemed to be particularly grave.
I bad used your Dodd's Kidney Pills
before, so decided to try some more.
Five boxes sufficed to restore me to
perfect health,"
The above statement is made hy
Miss A. L. Italien, a resident of this
place.
The relief that Miss Italien found
has cone to thousands of other Can-
adian women through the use of
Dodd's Kidney Pills. That shows
that the ache is caused by the Kidneys.
Por Dodds' Kidney Pills are purely
and simply a Kidney temedy. For
more than a quarter of a century
Dodd's Kidney Pills have,,,,been a
household remedy in 'thousands of
Canadian barites.
Ask your neighbors about Doed'a
Kidney Pills. • .
LAW AND COMMON SENSE
'Suppose now you have accepted
the office of executor fer some friend
who has died. There is resppnsibility
attached to it and some work, but
you have accepted. The' first thing
you must do is to, take,,charge, of the
4ead man's paper, • Au:mil:mt. books, im-
enrities, and,all those assets:40qt=
!night get lest or stole= If ariythifig
happerie to them you will be held re-
gionsible. So get busy: Dont' take
anybody else's; word for things; in-
vestigate personally; find out just
vibat the num left. Take . all vald-
Mile papers away; keep, them in your
D OD D'S //2
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' 187 ME P:101)
NERVOUS EXHAUSTION
The Only Sure Relief Is To Enrich
And Build Up The Blood.
Nervous exhaustion is the cause ',f
headaches and dizziness, and it is due,
almost always, to conditions of im-
poverished blood. Tablets and pow-
ders for headaches should never be
taken; they cannet possibly reach the
root of the trouble, and are often most
harmful. All that is needed to bring
relief is a tonic that will enrich and
ptrify the blood, and the very best
tonic for this purpose ie Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. These pills have a direct
action on the blood, and in this way
the headaches, dizziness and other bad
symptoms rapidly disappear. Mr.
Mark F. Taylor, Granby, Que., tells
what this medicine done for him. He
says: "I had severe headaches which
would be accompanied by vomiting
srells. These would last for two or
three days at a time. I would take
one of these s.ells every three or four
weeks, and it is almost impossible to
describe the misery they caused me. I
tried a number of medicines without
getting relief, until one day my moth-
er brought me six boxes of Dr. Wil -
lima' Pink Pills. When they were
used 1 was feeling much better, and I
got a further supply, and under the
centinued treatment every ayntpeom
of the trouble disappeared. I cannot
speak too highly of this medicine for
it certainly has done wonders. forme."
You on get ,these ppls, through 'any
intdieine dealei or by mail at 50. cents
a, ox or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM
There, little tax, don't you cry.
You'll be a big one by and by.—Mani.
toba Free Prnss.
When in .doubt some people don't
vote, but that is doubtful policy.—
Kincardine Review.
There were flappers in grandmoth-
er's days, but they called them "torn
boys."—Kingston Standard.
According to a preitem, a British
miner has been feud "who will recite
eighty poems straightoff." But not
to us.—Halifax Herald.
The farmer will not be content until
he can make as much from the same
investment of capital and labor as any
other producer.—Owen Sound Sun -
Times.
A real orator can electrify an audi-
ence but it takes a real man to electri-
fy our railways.—Kincardine Review.
• A NATIONAL INSTITUTION
A journal that for over fifty years
has grown in public esteem until it
has acquired the largest number of
readers of any journal in the coun-
try in' which it is published may
without exaggeration be said to have
grown into a national institution.
By the testimony of its readers, by
the testimmiy of the press of Canada,
hy the testimony Of vast numbers of
the..thinking population and by the
admission of capable jetirnalists and
other onlookers,in other countries,
The,Family Herald of Montrea4 bas-
ed on.its enormous army of readers,
on its indelogndence and on its devo-
tion to l the welfare of the country',
has come to be regarded as one of
the National assets of .the Dominion.
For the 'yeas 1923 the publishers
of The Fatally Herald and Weekly
Star promise their readers better
value than ever in the past, with more
valued contributors and more i.esourc-
es in all departments. The plans in-
volve heavy outlay for new features,
but the subscription price Will remain
at $2.00 per year, the extra expendi-
ture • being undertaken in absolute
faith, upheld by the confidence and
practical co-operation of More than
half a readers.
The New Year has opened with a
rush of subscriptions that has smash-
ed all previous .records. judging by
the. stacks of subtcription order's that
at times have threatened. to choke
the great -Montreal Post Ofilee, It
would appear that half of Canada had
selected The Family Herald arid
Weekly Stet as the best all round
journal for 1923.
toed cousin. ..Priamials,Xeletteqt
geeeec,:vhe iveddipg tqlahlg place ,s/„.
Athena ,
The yoitag CroWit":•Prioseoe 'has,
,goir given terthete a little hive at •
Bucharest,, thus eMiverting Qtteeti
Marie of Roumania. foto mb 5 graP•4-,
mother, and :mooring .thlt 000°000.104
to the Roumanian throne, In the thiril
• generation. was largely owing; to
the impendlag. hirthAt thio little, hay
,•
CHOWN PRINCE CARLOS.
that Queen, Marie abandoned the
visit to America which she had In-
tended to make this fall. It was for
the sante reason, too, that the long
delayed coronation a King Ferdi-
nand, and Queen Marie, which was
to have taken place last September,
was postponed until the spring.
After that ceremony bas taken
place, both the King and Queen will
feel themselves more free to travel,
and It has indeed been rumored that
Ferdinand was considering the pos-
sibility of abdicating in favor of the
Crown Prince, and of withdrawing to
Switzerland, where he has recently
purchased a very handsome castle
and large estate.
Altbbngh the Roumanian Crown
Prince's sister was married almost at
the same time to the Crown Prince of
Greece, the weddffig taking place at
Bucharest, no intimation has been re-
ceived as yet of the imminence of any
happy, event, or of the prospect of
her presenting her husband with a
son and heir to the Hellenic crown.
Avoiding Lily Embarge.
A new sad curious industry, lt is
predicted, Is soon .to be born in Van-
couver, B. 0., because -of .the embargo
placed this year by the. United States
department of agriculture, on all Jap-
anese nursery stock .packed In Jap-
anese soil. This decree was intended
to stop the importation from the is-
land of Formosa of Illy bulbs, ordi-
narily brought into this country at
the rate of $20,000,000 wdrth a year.
But the trade. will not be suspended,
nurserymen of Vancouver declare.
The bulb tramc will be deflected north-
ward to this seaport, just above the
boundary; and here the bulbs will be
removed from the soil in which they
crossed the Pacific. They will then
he repacked in Canadian loam, and
so. free from "Japanese soil," will be
qualified for entrance into the United
Slates.—Popular Mechanics Magazine
Oxygen Device Tested.
Because of the possible disastrous
failure of an airman's oxygen supply
apparatus at great altitudes, the
United States bureau of standards has
devised a rellahle method of testing
the equipment 'In the hiluirut9ry. All
the conditions of high-altitude flights
are accurately reproduced. says Pop,
ular Mechanics Magazine in en illus.
trated article appearing in its July ta-
me. Decreased pressure is obtained
by inctosink the equipment in a beg'
Pr connected to an air pump,
Auto Wheelbarrows.
AMA wbeelbarrowa, designed by a
contracting firm are really =tuatara
dumping trucks with a new arrange-
ment 01 their parts. The machine is
built on a light truck shank,, with
the driver's seat at the rear, back of
the wheels. The engine is placed be-
tween the front and rear wheels, and
• the hopper Is in front of the engine,
directly over the front wheels. The
dumping mechanism ia operated by
r'ineans Of a lever. These machines
have a much greater capacity than
the ordinary wheelbarrow and have
• proved economical of both time and
, tabor.
Temple for Monkeys.
In Benares there has been for
many years a temple fr monkeys,
and it is one of the most costly
buildings there. • The followers of
Brahma hold this animal sacred, and
worship it aa a deity.
Women seem to be devlded into two
Manses now—the high -brow and the
low-neek.—Itingston Standard.
44;404
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he 0; 0
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iftl
sie
-viett1P. . firat.,;
liun brattriri. oOludiAlfe9.01/T1*
Whieb,aeeraeti peelitettarouse but .you
lixe , o 1,e0, and her Was
can. t.neViiie .79011 PeoPlie• Pam -
/1). 09.1 bmteirle-tic4;1;15rairoOpietd baeitnr2rin
jewels she" Wore en the eveneug:en
µesti* , This iii.eine,ef the feettiree
-that makes the rethbery remerfth
that a .,Wornan ahOuld wear hun4reds
of thousands , ef .dOliars' worth of
Jewelry at a quiet 'little party of b,alf
a dozen people. Another .remark-
able feature is pyovided by the, fact
that the crime appear e to have been
extemporeneoms. thought of 'Whale;
five minutes befoee it was carried
into effect..A third amazing feature
is that the robbers took only three
or four minutes to strip their victim,
and that se rushed back to her
astounded friends • perhaps five.
minutes after she had left them.
One member of the party, Paul
W. Englehardt, an1l• he shont
dee_ler, has given a detailed account
of the party. which werth relating,
since in many details it appears to
he typical of the kind of parties that
prevail in American ,eitivs since the
Volstead Act has come into force.
'rhe Englehardts were friends of
Mrs. Schoellkopf, and when she
arrived in New York arrangements
overe made for some slight enter-
teinment Common friends, the
Manns, planned to give a New Year's
eve party, and the Englehairdts a
New Year's Day party. The • day
before New Year's Mrs. Schoellpopf
phoned to say that the New Year's
eve party would take place at tho
apartments of Frank Barrett Car-
man, a friend of hers, who was
unable to leave the heuse. The
Englehardts, not knowing Carman,
desired to drop out, hut on belles.,
assured that everybody woulffbi
congenial they went.
The party assembled about three
o'clock in the afternoon and, accord-
ing to this witness, "someone sug-
gested a game of poker to while
away the time." Then came a fine
dInner, after which the poker game
was renewed. About this time it
occurred to the unnamed humorist of
the bunch to say: "This looks like a
dry party," and Carman. as host, was
invited to produce rare liquors in cop-
ious quantities and at a high rate of
speed. Be excused himself on the
ground that he had no liquor, but he
said he thought he knew who had
some. Going to the,.hall he shouted,
"Marshall!" and aa, li door opened in
the apartment below' asked,"Have
you any Scotch?" The answer was
favorable, and shortly this man Mar-
shall appeared with a bottle of Scotch.
He was introduced to -the guests and
then there was a discasition about the
price. Mr. Marshall wanted $14, and
somebody else vouchsafed that $10
would be all 'right. Yfiten Marshall
was paid he noticed a vacant seat at
the poker table. and asked if he might
Pley•
He took Mrs. Schoellkopf's place
and played, the lady seeming to find
sufficient pleasure in admiring his
good looks, upon which she comment-
ed publicly. Then Marshall volun-
teered to get another bottle, which he
did, and the poker continued. How-
ever it was noticed that the game be-
gan to interfere with the uninterrupt-
ed flow of liquor, and poker was a-
bandoned. Carmen was the heaviest
loser, he being out $120, for which he
gave a cheque. It was suggested that
since he was a strangerethough un-
doubtedly an affable and praiseworthy
one to everyone but Carman, Car-
man should accept hie cheque. , Then
the party began to dance. Marshall
suggested that it would be a fine idea
to have a little wine, with which to
welcome the new year, and, this pro-
posal proving congenial, he went back
to his apartment and returned with
a bottle of wine and some glasses on
a tray. The dancing was kept up
until. one o'clock, and then Mrs.
Schoellkopf announced rather abrupt-
ly that she was going, and left the
apartment while the others were lel-
surely preparing to say good -night.
In, only a few minutes she returned
with her clothing disarranged and
her arms and hands bleeding. She
"r•
,A
XTURE
LT& STEED
Rs r POSE
RES RILIV
Sold in Seaforth by E. UMBACTI
er
110,9 ivf ef10,104 4
• ee
irs
'V;i2t/i: 09, iyen.rrileTtle!:
'handbag 004. 1 pnjW
to me•
tiftei"theY 0.0u, h.:,
they doyarted,
0 ft!,'
ben eseaped!li are all
FARMERS'. WOOD LOT IS LIKELY
tVo sumat
Usually qMte contented with his lot
is the .farmer's' sop or the hired Dian;
who, throughout the day of teaming,
chopping, ehoring or other winter
Work., can look forward to a comfort-
able seat by the stove and later a
warm bed,.due to a plentiful supply
of fuel, wisely used, in the farmhouse
woodshed. Not ten in any hundred
of real farm -loving farmer workers
would prefer to haul coal from the
railroad while there is a poseibility
of teaming sled -length loads of wood
from the bush to the door -yard, with
an old-time sawing bee in prospect,
and assurance of a generous pile of
stove -length chunks to provide him
with work for his splitting axe in pre-
paring next winter's fuel supply. '
One of the most important pleas-
ures for the stabilizing irt' farming in
thi, country is the maintaining LA a
profit -producing wood -lot on the home
fa' in. With twenty or more acres of
good healthy forest to fall back on
wi ter employment and fur keep-
ing the erne fires burning, the farm -
of 100 or more acres in Canada
who can make a go of the remainder
of his acreage need not cal/ anj, man
u ride.
Just now ,with coal prices providing
a difficult problem for all but the rich
in towns and villages the owners of
farm wood lots are apt to go, if
anything, too strong in the harvesting
of a fuel wood crop that has been
more or less neglected when coal was
cheaper and farm products generally
selling at high prices. This neglect
or the wood lot in years or too great
prosperity, or to put it more kindly,
while the farmers were too busily
engaged in producing for the needs
ef the war, included failure to re-
nitve wood that was over -ripe and
allowisig live stock the run of the
acreage, primarily intended for the
growing of timber. Perhaps, taking
farms in general, the chief of the
causes of decay of the farm wood lot
is this practice of pasturing the for-
est growth. It has been shown in
many experiments that the live stock
and forest will not prosper if raised.
Propping of the seedling trees pro-
duces bare spots which later grow up
in grass, and once a sod is formed
the. larger trees cease to make satis-
fectory progress, to say nothing of
the fact that there is nothing left to
take their place when they are re-
mcved for lumber or cordwood.
"A. little care given each year to
fire protection, proper thinning and
utilizing of the timber, would nearly
double the yield from the overags
wood -lot," says Assistant Superin-
tendent FL D. MacCharles, of the
Dominion Government Experiment
Station, Lennoxville, Quebec, who in a
recent article adds: :Instead of
slashing half-grown trees of the use-
ful marketable varieties for home re-
quirements, if the less valuable vari-
eties, windfalls and trees showing
!Rings of insect damage and rot were
used the remaining trees would make
more rapid growth."
• This year more than ever, before
are the better trees in the farm
wood -lot in danger of being sacri-
ficed for fuel, when often a little more
growth would make them valuable
timber. On the other hand, many a
f arm bush will benefit from the prun-
ing it gets as a result of high coal
prices.
AIM FOR OUR PRICES OS
,WESTERNCORPI OATS,
FLOURS -FEED, ETC,
I (cag,hiroro"Ict,641WAV'slgilge"
CHARLES& MCROSTIE
IBM r•IP•IF BUltDING TORONTO
vt.IONC A"
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.!;asuah.twila • 1,'„ g.
ettpres. ortriAtt' am is t,
'why iii"a‘being like that **dist
target' 1 usedIti Ifeawsksat night'tit
, forlornly& at a lime wondering why del$fljm
0
there Were 30 untay =motif= grrlSitz b0ttZe't�bI
the world and, I was sti hideous. I' nieney.
go
For Sale by E. Umbacb, Pim B.
that the amu failed to attain its nate
ural size.
Those who lean,,towai'els this ex-
planation of tho withered arm of the
Hohenzollern also seein it a reason
for the hatred which Wilhelm had
i'or his mother and, -through her,
for • the English in general—a hato
which was first demonstrated in hie
virtual imprisonment of the queer.
dowagers on after he had ascended
the throne and whichtater ..ul-
minated in the launching. of the
World War.
According to another version of
affair, the deformity dates from the
birth of the emperor, and is ascribed
to the ignorance or inexpertness of
the attending physician, while still
another theory is that the withered
arm was a natural deformity due to
no particular cause.
Only a very few persons know
which of these versions—if any—is
ccrrect, and the true solution of' the
mystery may never be revealed un-
less the former kaiser sees fit to do
so.
Meanwhile,.however, it is no secret
that the former emperor's left arm
is four inches shorter than his right
and that it ends in malformed hand
with only rudimentary fingers.
The left arm is also so difficult to
move that Wilhelm has to lift the
hand with his right, even to place it
on the hilt of his sword or in the
breast of his coat, where he casually
carries it when out of the saddle. At
the table, it is stated, he makes use
of a combined knife and fork which
slide into each other, but, strange to
relate, he has acquired a remark-
able dexterity in playing the piano,
using both hands for this entertain-
ment, of which he is extremely fond.
In addition, thanks to long prao-
tice and a very light type of gun,
Wilhelm Hohenzollern early attain-
ed great skill with a rifle and shot-
gun, often stating that he yielded
precedence tri no one in the empire
in this accomplishment, despite—
and here would follow the shrug and
the half -smile with which the former
emperor always indicated any refer-
ence to a .deformity which he did not
care to discuss directly.
In addition to the malformed from
another inherited or early acquired
affliction which is regarded by many
as being at least partly responsible
for his sudden and irrepressible fits
of temper and his obstinacy when
crossed.
This is a malady of the ear, which
gave rise to great pain in the ear-
drum, despite the repeated attempts
of the leading physicians of Europe
to cure it.
About all that is known of this
affliction is that it grows worse in
cold or wet weather and, prior to the
dethronement of the emperor, it was
a by -word in Berlin circles that:
"Tt isn't'eeise to approach the All
Highest until the weather is warm
and dry."
Physicians disagree as to the char-
acter of this ailment and Wilhelm
'himself has never been alarmed
about it, in spite of the fact that it
caused him considerable pain at
times. At any rate, it was not vis-
ible to the public eye, as was his
withered arm, and, therefore, the
vanity of the German emperor made
him feel that the tatter was by far
the greater trouble.
THE KAISER'S WITHERED ARM
Ever since the early Wee when
Wilhelm II., former emperor of Ger-
many, first came into international
prominence, the world at large has
speculated upon the secret which lies
concealed behind the withered arm
of the kaiser—a deformity which the
former emperor attempted to conceal
from the public by always having his
official photographs taken from the
right side, or, if the camera was in
front of him, by placing the arm in
as inconspicuous a position as pos-
sible. •
Many chroniclers of current ris..
tory have attempted to explain the
reason for the deformity, but none
of them have been able to produce
the proofs essential to a definite
statement,
The most generally credited story
la that the mother of the German
emperor—daughter of Queen Vic-
toria of England—insisted upon rid-
ing horseback against, the express
wishes of her court physician and ,
also insisted upon taking Prince Wil-
helm with her on the horse.
One day, according to this report,
the queen's horse, stumbled and
threw the prince heavily to the
ground, injuring his left aide and
paralyzing some of the 'nerves so
Noah took all kinds of animals into
the ark, but he was wise enough not
to take all kinds of people in. --Cleve-
land Commercial.
55J*5 1T510
ta •
•il
• '
Chew your food
well, then use
WRIGLEY'S to
aid digestion.
It also keeps
the teeth clean,
breath sweet,
appetite keen.
The Great Canat6an
Sweetmeat
D36
FOR
BETTER
DIGESTION
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How
Garage sales
are increased
by Long Diskasee
Some quotations/row recant
reports:
"We use Long Distance
extensively to call up
prospects and sell."
"We use Long Distance to
all our sub -agents, tokeep
in touch with sakes."
"We depend on Long Dis-
tance to sell our yokel, -
Laing service."
"We order parts in the
morning by Long Distance
and get them in the after-
noon.
"We put 'Use the Bell to
Sell' stickers on all price
lists and sales literature
we send out."
"Ask us about our FREE
LONG DISTANCE SER-
VICE on new parts," a
Motor Sales Co. writes
out-of-town garages.
We can tell you how to
apply Long Distance to
almost may business
Miss L. M. McCormack
Manager
Rerrt reraphona is •
Long Diolanoe Station
101.10.10Mir
1:131115181E-111.-E&I—ERINCI-7-- 0,
The Question of Price
Price seems tke main consideration—but it is Well to
remember that some clothes are dear at say price, how-
ever low.
"Clothes of Quality" are a positive proof that Correa
Styles, Fine Fabrics and First-class Tailoring can be eb.
tained at reasonable prices.
• Before you buy your new Suit, give tut a cell and took
over our Samples and Styles. We can save you dollars as4
give you real value.
Suits $20 Up
"My Wardrobe" Main St, Seaforth
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