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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-04-27, Page 341 Wee Ails DON'T negleat'tD: p your Victory Bond Coupons when ,� payment is dUO. , AVy .branch of this bank will cash them-4.or deposit them to your credit in a savings account where duly will earn money for you by accumulating interest. OANI8k BANK sw • SEAFORTH BRANCH, R. M. JONES, Manager. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. 1 y , Don't rub the head. By so doing you rub out the new hair roots. 'Shampoo with 7 Sutherland Slaters' Scalp Cleaner. Make lather before applying to hair. Ends Dandruff. E- 'Umbach, Druggist, Seaforth, PORTABLE PUMPS STOP B. C. FIRES Portable gasoline pumps for forest protection purposes have demonstrat- 'ed'their'wortb to such an extent that many of the logging operators in British Columbia are purchasing them in addition to the fire fighting equip- ment required by law. The "Logger" realizes that an in- vestment of this nature constitutes a good form of insurance. He appre- ciates that even though his "Don- keys" are well equipped with fire fighting implements, to handle fires .occurring in the immediate vicinity of a "machine"; yet he has always to be ready for -the„ fire starting a- way from this equipment. Portable gasoline pumps with the necessary complement of hose, lo- cated at strategic points on an oper- ation, can be carried quickly and with- out difficulty to fires originating be- yond the reach of the steam pump on the "Donkey." BE SAYS HE CAN NOW DO HIS WORK QUEBEC MAN USED DODD'S KID- NEY PILLS Mr. Aubin States that they have made Him well and that his Kidneys are Without Pain. St. Nicholas Station, Quebec, April 23rd. (Special). Gaudias Aubin, a well known and respected resident here is a sure friend of Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. He has tried them and found them good. "I am now very well and my kid- neys are without pain," Mr. Austin states, "Since the time I started taking Dodd's Kidney Pills I have not had any more pain and I have been able to get to my work." That Mr. Aubin's trouble camp from the Kidneys is evidenced by the relief he got from Dodd's Kidney Pine,. They are purely and simply a Kidney remedy. They heal and strengthen the kidneys and put them in shape to strain all the impurities out of the blood. It is easy to see hew neglecting them may be the caues of serious illness. Rheumatism, Dropsy, Urin- ary Troubles, Diabetes and Heart Dis- ease are some of the penalties that fellow neglecting the call of sick kidneys. Sound kidneys means pure blood. Pure blood means good health. Ask your neighbor if Dodd's Kid- ney Pills are not the best remedy for sick kidneys. FARMER WINS CASE AGAINST MACHINE CO.' A case of considerable interest to the farmers was finally disposed of at Osgoode Hall a few days ago. The Renfrew Machinery Company, of Renfrew, sold to J. A. Arnott, of Grey County, in the spring of 1919, a tractor for use on the farm. The tractor was guaranteed to work sat- isfactorily, and if not the. Company would make it do so or replace it with anc-ther tractor. The tractor did not work satisfactorily, not having suf- ficient power, and unsatisfactory in other ways. Mr. Arnott, having paid for the tractor in full, sued the com- pany for damages, the company not having made it work satisfactorily and refusing to replace it with a new tractor. The action was tried at the assizes at Orangeville last November before Mr. Justice Logie and judg- ment was given for the plaintiff for $760 damages and costs of the action. Against this judgment, the company appealed. The appeal was heard at 'Osgoode Hall and was dismissed. The Company will therefore have to pay Mr. Arnott $750 daml3ges,i costs of the action and costs of the appeal. FACTS ABOUT CANADA Dawson, Yukon Territory. — Three thousand miles over snow and ice is the remarkably mushing record with a dog team, being made by Corporal Paisley, of the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police, according to advices from Rampart House of Porcupine River, in the Arctic. Corporal Paisley, who is in charge of the police post at Rampart, is still mushing, and will cr:mplete the 3,000 miles by the time snow disappears this month. During the winter he has made three round trips between Rampart and Fort Yukon, each totalling 500 miles, one trip to Lepierre House, and several to Old Crow, and now he is travelling across the Arctic Divide, en route to Herschel island, where he will spend next summer. Winnipeg, Man. — Almost three times the number of passengers were brought to Winnipeg and the prairies from the Old Country by Canadian Pacific Railway during the fest three weeks of March, compared with Feb- ruary, according to an announcement of the passenger department here. From March lst to 20th, 1,170 pas - sengers arrived in Winnipeg on route to prairie centres, while in February there were only 996, and in January 2p6. Since the first of the year there hada been 2,653 passengers brought to the three prairie provinces and British Columbia. Ottawa, Ont.—There was an in- crease of 51 per cent. in the immi- gration into, Canada for February just passed, over the corresponding month of last year. The total immigration for the month was 3,290, as compared with 2,183 for February, 1922. From Britain there came 1,358, compared with 609 a year ago; from the United States 722, compared with 1,078 a year ago; and from "other countries," 1,212 as compared with 586 a year ago. For the eleven months ended with February there has been a de- cline from 84,451 for the period dos- ing with February, 1922, to. 66,1:19 for the corresponding period closing atthe end of last month. Quebec, Que.—The number of for- est rangers engaged in the work of n f rest control, n of with the object of pre- venting fires in the vicinity of the borders of Quebec and Ontario, will be tripled during the coming season, according to a statement made by the provincial minister df lands and for- ests. It is anticipated that a similar protection will be afforded the forests on the Quebec -Maine line. Halifax, N. S.—Upwards of 200 boys most of thein between the ages of' twelve and fifteen: on their way to farms in the Canadian West, landed here recently. These boys were brought out under the auspices of various societies interested in child welfare work. Toronto, Ont.—The Armenian Re- lief Association of Canada has pur- chased a farm of 135 acres near Georgetown, Ont., and will bring nut to it in May the first of 50 Armenian boys, who will be trained in farming and fruit growing. Another party of 50 will be brought out in September, f friends of the Armenians suppty the needed funds. All the boys are orphans whose parents were killed by the Turks. Quebec, Que.—A decree has been issued by the provincial government closing the forests of the Province of Quebec from April 1st to Novem- ber 15th of the present year. The closing of the forests is a measure of precaution taken by the government against forest fires, Those wishing to go into the forests during that period will have to secure a permit. Ottawa, Ont.—A silver tag attach- ed to the dorsal fin of a salmon be- fore its release after the eggs have been removed at the Dominion gov- ernment hatcheries is one of the methods resorted to by the fisheries department for tracing life history of the fish. A reward of $1 is paid by the department for the return of sil- ver tags that are being attached to the Atlantic salmon, with some scales from the side of the fish, and par- ticulars regarding their length, weight and place of recapture. , Montreal, Que.—An invitation has been extended by Japanese chambers of commerce for a delegation of Can- adian manufacturers and producers to visit Japan next fall, according to a statement made by C. Howard Smith, president of the Howard Smith paper mills. It is quite possible that this invitation will he accepted by many of the members of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association and a party farmed to go to Japan either next year or next. . Toronto, Ont.—That some 80 new freighters, most of them built in Great Britain, would be added to the fleets of the companies operating on the lower lakes was the evidence of II. B. Clark, secretary treasurer of the Matthews Steamship Company, before the royal commission investi- gating the lake freight rates. Dur- ing the last year`the lake steamship companies moved an enormous vol- ume of grain from the head of the lakes to the seaboard and it is antici- pated that the movement in 1923 will he equally as -large. Halifax, N. S.—The steamer Petrel, formerly a government craft, is being fitted out here for a cruise of gold locations, and will start north as soon as supplies°are taken aboard. The expedition is 'being backed by Montreal interests for the purpose of determining whether gold exists in commercial quantities or not in the Labrador fields; 'and the findings of the expedition will largely determine the activities in that field this year. Toronto, Ont,—If a recommenda- tion passed by the fish and game com- mittee is carried into iaw, non-resi- dents will be barred from trapping in Ontarto. The committee recom- mends that permits he issued only to naturalized Canadian citizens. It was also recommended that there be a closed season for one year on beav- er and otter south of. the French and Mattawa rivers. To the north and west of these rivers the season is to he from January lst to March 31st. Regina, Sask.—Saskatchewan now stands first in the world in regard to the number of rural telephones per capita, with a telephone for every Mated that the ati ' 'j4tb0 « 0Y0I')lt =tar has .11A00,0 r inj,,s in Oro' baa tel�ep)!once,' wi lk stouu heath- ers, 'While Viral cgaspapdess in the puoehtea have invested $15,090,000 wit�yy 68,000 sublicribere. • IB THEME A BABY IN .YOUR HOME ? Is there a baby or young ,children in your home? If there is you should not be without a box of Baby's Owe Tablets. Childhood ailments come quickly and means should always be at band to promptly fight them. Baby's Own Tablets are the ideal home remedy. They regulate the bowels; sweeten the stomach; banish couetipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers -1n fact they relieve all the minor ills of lit- tle ones. Concerning them Mrs. Moise Cadptte, Makamik Quebec, writes: "Baby's Own Tablets are the best remedy in the world for lit- tle ones. My baby suffered terribly from indigestion and vomiting, but the Tablets soon set her right and now shwa is in perfect health." The Tablets Iite sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville Ont. BOOTS, TEA AND WHISKEY The Orillia cket notes the dis emery of an accou or v rious pro- visions purchased in 1 he year of confedration. They incl d a pair of boots at 75c, a pound f tea at $1 00, and a half -pound tea at 45 cents. That a pound of tea should cost more than a pair of boots seems rather strange to us at the present time, but it is doubtless explained by tate difficulties of transportation dur- ing that period. Boots were a home product. More than half a century earlier, in the Gazette and Oracle of 1799, advertisements appear which quote the price of tea in Toronto at 19s, per pound for Hyson, 14s. for Sou- chong, and 8s. for Bohea. Even if the New York shilling of sevenpence halfpenny was meant, these prices wr•uld range from $1.20 up to $2.85 per pound. But beverages were not all priced accordingly. Even in the Orillia ac- count of 1867, there was itemized a half -gallon of whiskey at Ole, It was sold as a matter of course along with "other groceries." Times have changed when the price of whiskey at a Government Dispensary is to -day $4.25 per quart. In the "good old days" 75c would buy a' pair of boots, three-quarters of a pound of tea, or five pints of whiskey, No doubt it lay between the boots and the whiskey as to which gave the must ''kick" for the money. TO AVOID PAINS OF RHEUMATISM This Trouble is Located -in the Blood, and Relief Comes Through Better Blood. Rheumatism comes with thin, im- pure blood, and can only be driven out of the system by enriching and puri- fying the blood. The chief symptom of rheumatism is pain. The must successful treat- ment is the one that quickly banishes this disagreeable symptom. Many rheumatic people suffer pains that could be avoided by building up the blood. The value of Dr. Williams' hink Pills in rheumatic troubles is proven by the testimony of Mrs. A. Bryson, Arthur; Ont, who says:—"I war so used up with rheumatism In my shoulders and neck that I could riot turn in bed without the help of my husband, and the pain at times was almost unbearable. I took doc- tors' medicine which did me little or rro good. Then I began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and have since been free from rheumatism. I can rlso recommend the pills to young mothers, as in my own case I found they are unexcelled. I may al"v-o add that I recommended Dr, SVilliams' Pink Pills to a neighbor who took fainting spells at the change of life, and who cuuld not walk any distance. She .took the pills for nearly three rnoiiths and they made her a strong well woman." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills from any dealer in medicine or ry- mail at iOe a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Firilian girls usually marry at the age of fifteen years, The new queen of Siam was form- erly a ballet dancer. Burmese girls cannot enter so- ciety unless they wear ear plugs. The Women's City Club of Boston now has a membership of 5,000. Widows outnumber widowers by more than two to one in the United States. Delaware now has two women law- yers, the first in the history of the state. More than 10,000 tons of talcum powder were used by American wo- men last year. A skilled Serbian housewife will not offer the same dish twice within a month. Women in clerical occupations al- most trebled in the decade between 1910 and 1920. Mrs, Gertrude H. Tracy has been electeek a director of a national bank in Harrisburg, Pa. During the last ten years woman employees of automobile factories in- creased 1,408 per cent. individual vanity butter cases are extremely popular with woman res- taurant patrons in Berlin. Ninety-five per cent. of the hotel accommodations are chosen directly or indirectly by women. Maria Verone, leading woman at- torney in France, is head of. the suf- frage movement in that country, It is claimed that. American women travel four times as much as women of any other nationality. oently',wwfkte e;r• .owls, ION% wi(llp '• bx Mince Mexls'd'O] denbo 0, a Ow* Of the late czar. has opened. n $oris an tea room in New York: The Kamelfa a.'national organiza- tion of women founded on lines of the Ku Klux Klan, will be launched soon in the South. Britain's youngest chemist is a girl, Miss Helene Stewart, and she owns and manages by herself a drag store. She is just past 21 years old. A year ago Miss Agnes Macneill was en obscure,copntry school teach- er, while to -day 'she ranks as the only woman member of the Canadian' Parliament. Mrs. W. W. Hamilton, formerly a nurse in Washington, was elected to the Montana legislature on a ticket promising lower taxes, economical state government and conscientious voting -on all questions. Miss Elsie Hardin still works at her typewriter in the courthouse in Breckenridge, Tex., although she has recently become one of the wealth- iest. women in the state. She owns land upon which a gusher of oil was recently discovered. Because of the fact that the con- gregation was made up almost en- tirely of women, young women were called upon to act as ushers, take up the collections and read announce- ments at a recent Lenten service in Saint Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond, Va. The fact that her family is wealthy does not hinder Miss Elizabeth Den- nison, of Springfield, Mass., in her pursuit of practical factory experi- ence. Miss Dennison is a student at Antioch College and spends every. al- ternate five-week period in a Dayton (O.) factory as a worker at the bench, Something new in art for women has been developed by Miss Florence V Canner). a n. She is a former o student of the School of Industrial Art, and is the only woman in the country who has turned her artistic training to the designing of dollhouse furniture along beautiful and aesthetic lines. A weekly newspaper for women, written and edited by women, has been started in Clarksville, Alias., with Miss Minnie Brewer, daughter of former Governor Brewer, as the editor-in-chief. The newspaper, which is named the Woman Voter, is de- voted to legislation fur women and to improvement in educational facili- ties. SEEDING NEW MEADOWS One of the interesting and success- ful features of. the Illustration Sta- tion work is the comparison between heavy and light seeding of timothy tura clovers. When ,making surveys Of many farms in each county when Illustration Stations are located it war found that most farmers wen• not sowing sufficient seed to give best results. To illustrate the advantage of heavier seeding, particularly with clover, on each station a small por- tion of the field is sow11 to the usual amount used in the neighborhood which is from two to four pounds of clover and eight to ten pounds of timothy, and the larger portion of the field sown with a mixture of clover and timothy amounting to 20 pounds per acre. Every illustration showed the heavier seeding to give the heaviest crops of hay. The dif- ference in growth is so noticeable that farmers passing can see the line between the two lots to a foot. On several stations the clovers on the light seeded portions were winte,• killed, while the heavy growth form- ed a protection tI the roots and us- ually withstood the severest winter and spring frosts. Several operators report one quarter to one third more hay on the heavier seeding and have a much better chance for a second crop of hay or seed the same .season. When seeding sandy or clay, Ioams sow eight pounds of Common Red Clover; two pounds alsike and ton pounds of timothy per acre. in some cares it is advisable to sow two lbs. of alfalfa in addiuon. On heavy clay that is liable to be damp or on light, acidy sand sow eight pounds of al=ike; two 01 Red Clover and ten of timothy per acre. On black muck ,,r peaty snit :ow eight pounds of alsike, two pound:. of Red Clover, eight pounds of timothy and two pounds of Red Top per acre. For a nurse crop em peaty sell, al- ways sow barley. WHY ARE THERFE MORE BALD MEN THAN WOMEN? Baldness, or i'nss of hair, is usual- ly caused by lark of care for the hair or scalp. Although the majority of people do not realize it, it is as rfecessary for the hair to have suffi- cient air and good circulation of Or blood as it is for the lungs. Both must "breathe" and both must he supplied with blood to carry off im- purities and provide food. In the case of the hair, the blood is, of course supplied through the tiny veins which are siniated around the roots of the hair, and any tight band around the upper portion of the head will cut off this circulation and cause the hair todi , and fall out, The constrnetien of men's hats is such that they pr,..,s rather tightly upon the forehead and the bulging portion of the heal at the rear, thus impeding free cireuiatinn of blood --a condition with which a woman does not have to contend, "n account of the fact that they me:u' hats which fit less snugly. Again, a woman's hat, is so constructed that it permits of free circulation of air between the hat and the scalp. The connection between a man's hat and his bald- ness is clear from the fact that thorn are but few men who are entirely bald. Most of them have a fringe around the pars and the lower por- tion of the hack of the head, parts which are not covered by their hate. Another cause which contribntrs much to the diffnrenee in baldness be- tween the sexes is the care which women take of their hair, when com- pared to the casual manner in whleh mer: apply a hairbrush once or twice a day. a TO0 . O00LLAn {„OCTA TMTrgpT .IaIY-MIME CLMTe TO-P.Y sae TMe `-OM.Anp10M eD iu OTHER COMMOOI T'of--1-1=r IoW—.MO nEAL12L M.. 0. 110,0 ""Fence FP00 "T, .0. .0P crteAsa m vM:ee Aa.eo. 4wseaa eon 0 OTMCI® W. 0 .l AND FUMCMA9e IAOW�p0.0MIT TO 0La OVwHT•Tv Oa MAIMTAIMEQ ,a„ „� IOMP VOUMIM0 CARS—.. ; N „0 0n.1MM ..11 P011064—.—..L, ,n. o.a1 - ►IIPpUO _ - ,m, orMelan..-. - ,.,arms.L*0 0110. - MMCµLAM[OVa ORO- — aanl711. Ina Iso ca _ l.aa leo NLE - ' 005MOm :UT MOT. K' Mee wu.no..1q,aww[a 1.4T. FUEL .MO LION M.-�-- 1,,,, l� '1111.111-01.10 M.TLMI.t. .2 uaa wnM0M1MP.= ,.laceusMLP0e6 Ini m .L1- ODMM MAKE• ERTAW AT TOTTHt RICES Runabout $405 Touring $445 Coupe $895 Sedan 1785 Chassis 134E lisi irODAY you can ,get, more of Ford Equipmeti for a dollar than in 1914. Almost all other con ddi ties today showy a marked increase over 1914 prices. This means that a man whether he be a farmer, manu- facturer or other producer, can buy Ford Equipment at a greatly reduced price while he receives a healthy increase for his products over 1914 prices. This is in face of the fact that the tendency of prices•on all commodities is to increase. Therefore, the present prices of Ford Cars, which are the lowest in the history of the company, cannot be guaranteed. The only way you can make sure of them is to Buy Now. Terms if you wish. COOK BROS., HENSALL, ONT. J. F. DALY, SEAFORTH, ONT. FORD MOTOR COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, FORD, ONTARIO '_'� r� � sic r�ih� ,' t� ;1-.-.°.�..-f�` •c:='�*- �`�',' 1 . •ej T<: :ice - �4°; `1 () i G�tc. fir. • �:. ..'S .dS' iii/►'` >< e�1(/le 1.►. ..t ,. r,. 1 r•' is g i ..Y-: f+`s. -+r- er (1 ()I _e {' «. q: /:r.'s " • '•'r�'>., 4� i ' ( 'r; er�:•-:"' : v ,o `yi_a 1!ll .,r, jam► i+ ate NEVER before has there been such a wide -spread appreciation cif the better type of home decoration. We cater to this demand with a range of Wall Papers which should satisfy the most critical. They represent the most authentic drsigns in fine wall decorations. Among the showing will be f nand a splendid assortment of BOXER papers— all 2,14' inches wider than the old type of Wall Paper, giving the pronounced advantage of fewer seams and cotting less because of greater covering surface. .A visit to our Wall Paper department will result in a satisfactory solution of any decorating problem. You will find us painstaking in hel you select, from papers of more -there ordinary merit, the patterns specially suited to the rooms you purpose decor- ating this Spring. BUY NOW WHILE STOCK IS COMPLETE `W .4LL • PA e tier veld 8ifightejh o ,e5'