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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-06-01, Page 3yt ovigE 'feel of li a pidonce at self/v icpi ; [Panicles to t�n0"w '1#9110Y hi the WOO than word[ all the effort *eared in acct, i fig the lap Inge. It i4 .reaesuring•topoaeeee a glroWing ba sccotwt wii{lcl IDtd entibl ti>t. eet the en ergefcies #It well as the bpport fifties ,0t Yon arra invited to open a cavus account at oor nearest kande. SEAFORTI BRANCH, • R. M.' JONES, Manager. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. Beautifies hair immedie seven Sutherland Stators' Compete Treat- ment contains a settle of air.FewtJl- leer. Ask for complete treatment at E, Umbach, Druggist, Seaforth. DIRECT CONNECTIONS TO OT- TAWA VIA CANADIAN NA- TIONAL RAILWAYS With the new train service ar- rangements which were put into effect May 13th, on the Iines of the Cana- dian National Railways, improved service is being operated between Seaforth, Toronto, Smith Falls and Ottawa. Trains leave Seaforth at 6.41 a.m, and 3.12 p.m., daily except Sunday, cohnecting at Toronto with 'The Capital City" leaving Toronto at 12.10 p.m. and the "Ottawa Ex- press" leaving Toronto at 10.30 p.m. Returning, excellent connection is made at Toronto with night train leaving Ottawa 10.30 p.m. Train leaving Toronto 6.50 a.m. and arrives at Seaforth at 10.55 a.m., daily, ex- cept Sunday. 2893-2 If one may believe the camera any change in Mr. Firpo's expression as the result of a prize fight will be an improvement.—Ottawa Journal. She Was Sick For Over Two Years Mrs. Goodwin Gives Her Experience • with Dodd's Kidney Pills. Nova Scotia lady After ,Suffering with a weak heart and" voasness for nearly three years,' turas to Doad's Kidney Pill. Mufgrave, N.S., May 29th (Special) "I cannot recommend Dodd's Kidney Pille enough." This enthusiastic statement is made by Mrs. Alex.Good- win, a well-known resident of this place. "For nearly three years I was run down, had a very weak heart and was so nervous that at times I would al- most faint away. Many people re- commended Dodd's Kidney Pills for any trouble. I found, after I lad tak- en two boxes, that they were doing roe good and after using six boxes I was completely relieved. I can now de a good day's work and scarcely ever feel.. tired." Mrs. Geodwin's trouts es were caus- ed by the elddneys. That's why she got •sobs prompt and Complete relief from Dodd's Kidney Pills, for they net wily on the kidneys. ' Ask your neighbors if Dodd's Kid- ney Pills do not help all forms of kidney disease. France isrogressing. Once she needed 1vire'ffnces to keep the Heinie beck, and now tha Poles alone are ntifiicient: Vancouver Sun. 'THE NEW MOTOR HIGHWAY the building of the new motor high- way thrc}nkb the Canadian Rockies toq d the, linking up of the great 8,000 melee _system, known as the ''Grand Circle Tour," [,(itis one more thrilling chapter to the romance of modern engineering, The . Be -Windermere Road • fa not only the first motor road across the Central Rockies but the connecting link in what is probably the most spectacular motor route in the world. For the past two years motorists in both the United States and Canada have awaited the comple- tion of this final arc. Now the great circle is complete and after June 30th motorists may travel across the Rockies from Banff via the Vermilion pans to the Windermere valley, pass- ing through Banff and Kootenay Na- tional parka and visiting the famous resorts, Banff, Lake Louise, the Val- ley of- the Ten Peaks and Moraine lake. Direct connections are made by the Columbia Valley road via Inver - mere, Cranbroo'k and Kingsgate, B.C., with Spokane and Seattle, Wash., Vancouver and Victoria, B, C., and Portland, Ore., and the Pacific Coast down to San Francisco and Los An- geles, Cal. The return trip of the tour is made via the Grand Canyon, Salt Lake City, Helena, Montana; the United States Yellowstone and Gla- cie]. National Parks to Paskan, Mon- tana; And over the International boundary via Coutts, Alta., touching Waterton Lakes National Park if de- sired, thence to Macleod or Leth- bridge and Calgary and back to Banff. FINE SPECIMENS OF BUFFALO HIDES Several fine specimens of buffalo hides and heads have recently been received by the Canadian National Packs branch, Department of the In- terior. These were secured from an- imals killed in Buffalo National park during. the winter and are of excel- lent quality. The robes, dressed, measure eight feet wide and twelve feet Iong and the hair is long and glossy. The manes on the heads are also exceptionally long, measuring from fourteen to sixteen inches. O. A. C. MEMORIAL HALL WILL COST 6100,000 Hon. Manning Doherty announces that the contract has been let for the erection of a memorial hall at the Ontario Agricultural College. This project has been under way for two or three years. It originated in a desire to suitably recognize the large number of graduates and un- dergraduates of the Ontario Agri- cultural College who served in the war. Inasmuch as it will not be com- pleted until nest year, it will serve the double purpose of a memorial hall and an observance of the semi- centennial_aneiveraary of the On- tario Agriculthral College, which, next year, completes fifty years of existence. The building is being financed by subscription from grad- uates, undergraduates and friends of the inetitnttjon, supplemented by a substantial government appropri- ation. Tenders were called for a year ago, but on account of the 'high cost,• the work was not proceeded with. The new building will cost well over $100,000. The new building will be of gray stone and will be Tudor -Gothic in -"i!'i�i'!�1iIlls,l!Ilflllllllflill!Ilill(I!!'1111111'HI'IP°111i;ll!'�i'!!III Inn The 15,000 mile written 2• guarantee of the New Oakland Six engine assures definite per- formance. It is proof of Oakland dependability. •r Cheoros Bros. ?heNew Oakland 6-44 - 1 .Riiri,kGaf:°ki'iVi4. 49'x"`?..:. .Y7cSlAxkeF'.4U'^fi MJsefreGt.!#d'katlsG'AI•f!t�If.�1'5fi 001 ltd'°e eead° 'pitta Ilalt, tocing, eget Institute, ver OM the closed , tela, [toe age, When Hon. Mr, Doha j�N t14eteed the [feat sod, ,and the athicout body did the work of eircavattonfor the base- ment, There will be seating accom- reodation • for approximately 80,0, and the hall will he of great vale„ on a . large number of 'occasions when accommodation of this char- acteris required for the entire stu- dent body and outsiders., On the walls of the building will be per- petuated the names of the graduates and undergraduates who served in the Great War. IT HAS DONE WONDERS FOR ME MRS., W. H. ARMSTRONG OF 89 HORTON STREET, LONDON, ONT., FINDS DRECO THE IbEAL MEDICINE FOR REGU- LATING HER DIGESTIVE OR- GANS- Once the stomach gets out of, or- der, all the other organs of the di- gestive system become impaired. Gastritis, pains in the back, dizzi- ness and other distresses follow one upon the other. By toning and reg- ulating the stomach, Dreco, the fam- ous herbel remedy brings quick and lasting relief to all who suffer these ailments. That is what Mrs. Arm- strong discovered and tells you a- bout in the following statement: "No medicine I have ever taken gave me such quick relief as Dreco. I have been troubled by gas in the stomach after meals, heartburn and nausea. I often felt very dizzy and spots tloated before my eyes. I was constipated and had pains in my back user my kidneys. "Two bottles of Dreco have done wonders for me. never feel dizzy am free from backaches have a good appetite and everything agrees with me. My constipation has also been relieved. Dreeo gets my hearty approval." This is the time of year when the whole bodys needs a thorough house- cleaning, and thousands who have discovered the value of Dreco as a spring tonic and renovator, will avail themselves of its health giving prop- erties. Dreco is a new and scientific com- bination of herbal remedies, designed to correct such stomach disorders as gastritis, acid risings, sourness. It tones up torpid livers and acts, gently but firmly on the bowels. Dreco contains no mercury, pot- ash or habit forming drugs. Dreco is being specially introduced in Seaftrth by Chats. Aberhart, and is sold by a good druggist everywhere. WHY DO QUICKSANDS DRAW OBJECTS DOWN? Everyone who has been to the seashore is familiar with the sensa- tion which follows when one stands fro some little time on the wet sand, particularly that portion of it which is not tightly ,packed. At first, the foot makes only a slight impression on the sand. Then as the water com- mences to collect, the person sinks down, little by little, until the feet are covered as far as the ankles, and it takes a conscious effort to with- draw them from the casing of wet sand which surrounds them. Practically the same thing occurs in what we call "quicksands," al- though here the action is far more rapid because the, sand is more loosely packed and the weight of the water and the sand combine to pro- duce a sucking effect upon anything which presses down upon them. A person who blunders into one of the sands—a sort of natural trap for the unieary — involuntarily pressen down upon the sand under his feet in order to secure a purchase or a leverage. But the wet sands open under him, almost with the rapidity of water, and he sinks further and further, apparently sucked in by the sands,' but really falling through them by reason of his own weight. Probably the most dangerous sands of this kind in the world are the famous Goodwin Shoals, off the coast of England, where an entire fleet of 13 warships was once lost by sailing upon the shoals and being engulfed by the sand before they could return to the open water. BABY'S OWN TABLETS AN EXCELLENT REMEDY When the baby is ill—when he is constipated, has indigestion ; colds : colic or simple fever or any of the other many minor ills of little ones -- the mother. will find Baby's Own Tab- lets. an excellent remedy. 'They regu- late the stomach and bowels, thus banishing thelcause of most of the ills of childhood. Concerning them Mrs. E. D. Duguay, Thunder River, Que., enys:—"My baby was a great sufferer from colic and cried continu4l:y. I began giving him Baby's Own Tablets ani the relief was wonderful. I now always keep a supply of the Tablets in the house." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. TO C'O.OPERATE IN FOREST PROTECTION A meeting of the representatives of the provinces of Ontario and Quebec was recently held in the office of the Ottawa River Forest Protective, As- sociation, Limited, when plans were made for more effective methods of fire protection through the establish- ment of better co-operation between the two provinces in the protection of the territory adjacent to the provin- cial boundary line north of Timis- kaming_, Quebec. The anticipated gold rush to the township of Rouyn, Quebec, will prob- ably create an unusual fire hazard and effective methods for the protection of the district from fires will be put into effect for the season of 1923. The Ottawa River 'Forest Protective Association protects over thirty thou- sand square miles in northwestern Quebec and employs three hundred fire rangers with a system of forest t tic 1::-.atai, rot. ,:tA.,.4 sate[ e t]4,@ skint moi„ 8 IHahe iu�.« Onteelo, "Pe ee will be np pointed te,.aetilpil' tire rangers ]n ,the adnhietr forest protea tion 'laws to 949' and everything, poesible done to• -reduce fire losses to the [minimum, IQifdttl Pallet ?over PAINS IN TUE JOINTS Is An Indication That the Blood ' is Thin slid Watery. The -first sign of rheumatism is fre, quently a pain and swelling of one of the joints. If this is not treated through the bleed, which is the seat of the disease, the poison spreads, affect- ing other jointa and tissues—.some- times rheumatism attacks the heart and is fatal A remedy that has corrected many cases of rheumatism is Dr. Wiiliams' Pink Pills. These pills enrich and purify the blood -so' that the poisonous rheumatic matter is driven out of the system as nature intended. Miss Ger- ttie Donne, Washago, Ont., was at- tacked with rheumatism and found re- lief through Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. She says:—"About a year ago I was attacked by rheumatism and for two weeks was confined to my bed. The trouble was so painful, affecting the joints of my limbs so that I could not stand alone. Mother had a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the house and thought they might help me. I began taking them, and when 1 had taken these pills got a further supply, with the result that the rheumatism van- ished and I was a well girl. I may add that my mother and two of my sis- ters have also used the pills for var- ious ailments with equal success, and new we are never without them in the house." If you are suffering from any con- dition due to poor, watery blood, or weak nerves, begin taking Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills now, and note how sour strength and health will improve. You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail, at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, QUEEN MARY KEEPS GEMS IN PALACE STRONG ROOM Queen Mary's jewels have long beer, the envy of many of her wealthy subjects, and probably of most of the old world queens. What their full value is it is impossible to estimate. The gems given her when she was married are estimated to be worth more than 6500,000, and during the last thirty years on every birthday the king has added costly presents. During the visit of the king and queen to India several Indian princes modeethe queen many handsome gifts principally pearls. Diamonds, how- ever, are her favorite gems. Her jewels are kept in a strong room in Buckingham Palace, which was de- signed by the late King Edward VII. when he came to the throne. The shelves of this room are lined with white velvet and the jewels are so arranged that the queen can quick- ly obtain just the ornaments she means to wear for 81ty.,occasion. Smaller safes lately, have been placed in Windsor Castle, Balmoral and York Cottage to ensure the safe- ty of the queen's gems while she is at any of these plates. The keys are in the possession of the queen and arc only handed to the lady-in-wait- ing who is on duty when required. TIME TO SOW TENDER CROI'S The present is an exceptionally cool spring and very little growth bas been made by crops Which have been previously sown or planted, especially by those which require a warm atmosphere and soil for germ- ination and growth. In the case of peas, onions, cabbages and similar crops, which have been produced from species native to the temper - nth zone, the cold weather has nut been detrimental, but to beans, mel- ons, cucumbers and other natives of the tropical or sub -tropical zones, which unfortunately have been sown, the cold has really been disastrous. The seeds of tender plants are often sower too early in the season by those who are anxious to get a good stfrti with gardening opera- tions. , If the weather is fine and warm, success may result. If cool and wet failure. It is better to 'wait until mid May ever year to sow or to plant out tender crops than to suffer disappointment. Tender crops are usually short - season crops, germinating and ma- turing in three or four months at the outside. This is their natural period of growth. Why then sow or plant them at a„ time when germin- ation and growth will be retarded 1 The temperature and soil must be right. It will avail you nothing if your crops are in the ground five or sir: months. Th,• best growth and the hest yield will only be possible, and will only be pn“duced, when the conditions are ahs,lutely right. Don't be alaror,d because the season is advance,) and warm weath- er has not arrive,1 It may come tomorrow-. 1n Al.': case, however, you have an npporinity to sow your tender crops. TOS coming week should generally 1 regarded as the one in which to ,,.•w and to plant out tender crops in Southern and Central Ontario. a, •i those who n w do this will in all I, obability have a greater measure ni ,access than those who have already .-wed the sends. Plants of a 11.mb,r nature usually grow quicker morin"rs; a check to growth which is ,ustained for a few days is very harmful. Cold weather may not only check growth after germinat.i,m. Inst actually stop the 1*ncess of germination with the result that the ,•FIs, or whatwere seeds, before t.h- process started, rot in the soil. Thi; is evidenced by the many failures which are exper- ienced with such crops as corn and beans, which are =„on too early and in a ton wet Soil. Aim to sow at Ileo right time, so rtAd ny dl shite date to ; eow by the 114". gosveiilels by any 59thr belie ,- ttort, The moon will probably be thy- a*metoday as it wee, tbie timb:.laet. year, but the season ip about three weeks' lake. " Why is this article 'Mlle .to 'Sow. Tender Plants" written? Begapaa_a¢ different and widely separated p rte,, of Ontario one place, 120 miles north of the other, two men aowed beans during the last week of April: A week later on the eighth of May, a fairly heavy snowfall occurred at both places, and since that time the temperature has been invariably cool and .- unsatisfactory for the gr wth of the crop in question. Tlfese cases are blkt two out of hun- dreds where without the shadow of a doubt many of the crops will have to be renown. The tender crops which may now be sown or be planted out are beans of all kinds ; cucumbers, melons, corn, tomatoes peppers, egg plants, okra, squash, including the vegetable morrow and pumpkins. Care should be taken to provide a means of pro- tection for a few nights in ease of frosts which are likely to occur. An- other and equally important precau- tier. this year would be to choose early maturing varieties of all your tender crops. That is varieties which ripen in the shortest time. This is an abnormal year so far. Who can tell but that it will be abnormal all through? There may be late frosts during early summer and early frosts during the autumn. Then again the autumn may be fine and warm and free from frosts. Take no chances. Set out crops which will mature quickly, so that in case the growing period is short you will have at least a reasonable .assurance of success. An Economic Factories-'µ ore, Buildings For new buildings or re -roofing the old ones BIRD'S PAROID is the most economical roof; that money can buy, riot only in first cost but be- cause of the number of years' protection that it , will give. The base`of BIRD'S PAROID ie a rag felt which is thoroughly saturated and coated with asphalt, the best weather and waterproofing material known. The surfacing of grey talc, or natural - crushed slate, red or green, makes it attxact}ve and fire -safe. Come in and let us show Au wilt[, BIRD'S PAROID is the best roofing for your build- ings. Made by BIRD & SON, LIMITED, Hamilton, Ontario Sold in Seaforth by G. A: Sills Sc Soils Pvim, and New oils —afghan: eite—ifirkt eadiire's gveeir dale to Pakolivs.ap. Made From The' Mildest Cleansers Palmolive contains palm and Olive oils. These oils were the cosmetic cigaase s used by Cleopatra and kept her -sin fresh, smooth and youthful. Today their scientific combination hi Palmolive produces the Most ,perfect of all facial cleansers. Science has discovered nothing finer, milder or more beaeficiat for the toilet than Palm and Olive Dila, Artful applications of rouge and pow- der may lend your skin the appearance of smooth freshness. But unless yon cleanse the pores thoroughly everyday with soap and water, blackheads, pimples ami other blemishes are sure to result Some persons imagine that soap -is Tao hush for the face. They siionld try Path- ' olive. Its mild, smooth,. 'creatity laltkrt when messaged 'hits the, -akin, cleanses-- without the slightest irritation. Yon can buy Palmolive Soap at ag fiat -class dealers. • Made M Cwirb Vaiame akid l#icitatey Piarbaie 25Wout a 1 c • Find Out All About the Assured Savings Plan OF THE myna{oN'rMuO SAVINGS OFFICE Head OM15 Queer's Park Avenue ?bro l& Branches at Hamilton, Ottawa, St. Catharines, Woodstock, Seaforth, Walkerton, St. Mary's, Pembroke, Owen Sound. Newmarket and Aylmer. Send this coupon today i'ROViNCE OF ONTARIO SAVINGS OFFICE SEA FORTH, .ONTARIO Please !send Inc booklet explaining the Assured Savings Plan. Name 34 Address