The Huron Expositor, 1923-07-13, Page 3..,,m,,,,,,.''',V,
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„. tbreelindffan ' ,felieW,ed- in rePid Ogee. 4t,i)k Ott
ceseionnellting With that 'awning ne .rele..
e se tetellea off tili etoniall' WeldOert910,1
itl
,... fietOke endli dead t e Monti, ;We Wee os",
Ae ch \ fe l,- shale/8110_90C, gave the*O-Wals a.
•a'altunItitt; 'ilatisfaction. The Venice WOW dem
relieved •of their riders, fitted a 4 09: We
therit
et,
jt• lffon!i tab the head. 13,,,s0 4 ;fitlitnhekliiivii Atetion, the
eeb ent the new hair 4at nen titne ,h1 ,tbe 80-Per-lioOr
b*mpoo With 7 tiutherlatul titaa' finite, mak. 'Wernateb Were drowned
111leoner. 14 anobo luvivrOr iirdurect when, a
lyiefe teebeir. scow &elm, team limn .its mooring
iamb, Denial/it, Seaforths
nee 41:10 ?dad Avenue, this city,
A job in a factory is Mvedne
irest cure for society girls, suffering
/mom too strenuous a season. •el'ifiev
,.autbeek on life would do the society
eilapper a lot of good.—Kitchener Rees
eedr.
SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL
taTrim 'ONES
At the fitit sign of illness during
the hot weather give the little ones
33abY's Own Tablets or - in a few
tours he may be beyond aid. These
'Tablets will prevent summer coni -
'plaints if given occasionally to the
-well child and will promptly relieve
these troubles If they come on sud-
•elen/e. Baby's Own Tablets should
• slways be kept in every home where
-there are growing children. There is
no other medicine as good and the
mother has the guarantee of a goy-
eernrnent analyst that they are abso-
lutely safe. The Tablets are sold by
emedicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
There is one consolation. The
average stocks sold by the slick
:salesmen prove to be tax-free.—Mil-
sverton Sun.
'WEAK DIGESTION DUE TO POOR
BLOOD
Perfect Digestion will come if the
Blood is Made Rich and Red
There is no tonic for the stomach
that is not a tonic for every other
part of the body. But the stomach
edepends, as does every other organ,
on the blood for its energy.
There can be no perfect digestion
runless you have rich, red blood. This
is scientifically true. The way, then,
Ito tone up the stomach is to enrich
the blood.
Most stomach remedies try to di-
gest your food for you. How much
better it is to tone ujPthe stomach so
-that it will do its own Work, as nature
intended. There is no pleasure in
eating predigested food. Tone up
e••cur stomach, then your appetite and
digestion will soon be normal.
If your digestion is weak and your
blood thin, you need Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills to restore the strength
to your blood; in addition use
scare in the selection of your
diet and your stomach trouble will
soon pass _away. Mrs. Charles La -
'Rose, Fruitland, Ont., suffered severe-
ly, and tells what Dr, Williams' Pink
Tills: did for her. She says:—"I was
a terrible sufferer from stomach trou-
ble. The doctor called it nervous in -
:digestion.' Everything I ate distress-
ed me, and I hecame so weak and run-
down ,I could hardly walk. I had a
pain around my heart most of the
time, and I slept very poorly. was
afraid I would not get well, as the
elector's medicine was not helping nie.
In this serious condition Dr. Williams'
:Pink Pills were recommended and I
:decided to try them, and I can truth -
Sully say that they made me feel like
s new person. I will always give this
medicine a word of praise when I get
s chance for I think there is nothing
to be compared with it for dyspeptics,
-or any one weak, nervous or run -
:down."
You can get these Pills from any
/medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
FROM DULUTH
Dear Expositor:
Shortly after 3 p.m. on the 19th, a
:terrific storm of rain, almost of cy-
clonic proportions, accompanied by
fierce lightning and thunder, struck
thiChity and locality, lasting some 27
aninutes, with nearly an inch of rain-
anconcernedir commenced nibble
,,the Irmo. Later when this &Imply
returned, to Brandon. he was Met et
the depot by the Mayote'city
Prominent citizens and hundreds Of
Row *State
'deyel On the
heaveg�got 'Mae
'others., Braise bands were ,on hand, ,Akthtig. But d
'also conveyances of various , kinds, I MOW, parted an .
and it was said he literally was ear-. 'MY Nett fel). Wlee
ried up the streets to the city hall sed. raitt'e,
amidst the inutile of the Invade and , At that ttme.,
cheers from the delighted multitude. things that / dideh
them how, and Ch
the antwer west
Worked out, but n
Feet
That Friday af on, when. the,
rain seemed imminent, the very farm-
er who had proposed prayer for rain
in the Sabbath School, was standing
in large hay field, with winrow after
winrow of beautiful fresh green hay
stretching all around.him His heart
rose againat the thought of that per-
fect hay being drenched like tea -
leaves by one of California's deluges,
and he' stodd up en;the midst of the
hay and asked that it should be kept
back until that.bad,. been secured..
t e ea n ffeemed
4nd '01* tile bay..wAtArs' taPPfd At the hall all kinds of honprs were
men were caug t by a falling roof, '
o day. •
ROBERT DicNAUGHTON.
DtIluth, Minn., June 28, 1928.
over by the 'fart o the gale: Foer pid hint. be was Brandon's hero of
blown off a lime kiln storage pie*,
live being severely injured, and were
rushed to a local hospital. At 817
Garfield Avenue, this city, a huge
smokestack fell across' street car and
telephone wires, delaying traffic for
several hours. The aerial bridge and -
also Interstate, bridge between this
city and Superior were disabled for a
time.- The coast .guard wireless Sta-
tion on Park Point this city was blown
into a tangled and twisted mass of
steel wreckage that lee falling com-
pletely tied up phone,, light, pewee
'and street car service on the Point
for a time. Shade trees were up-
rooted, snapped off and blown down,
and broken tree limbs were much in
evidence in many places, littering the
thoroughfares, and the rain surely did
come down in twisting, driving sheets.
I was caught in it hue found refuge:
in a butcher shop, West 4th Street,
and where the lightning kept crack-
ing in on the mires. Shortly after the
atorm's cessation, I saw a Ford auto
parked on West Third Street, which,
with its two lady occupants, had a
narrow escape from a falling huge
shade tree which fell along side, two
feet closer, probably, might have told
a terrible tragedy. It .was a provi-
dental escape. Close by anothel: large
shade tree had snapped off some dist-
ance from the roots, falling and lean-
ing against the side of a house, ap-
parently no dornage done. A little
ever a half block further west, an -
ether large tree lay prostrate on the
street, and a block south another lied
fallen on a parked, unoccupied at the
time, auto. In Superior (it is across
the bay) the storm vented its fury;
buildings were unroofed, shade trees
blown down and damaged caused in
many other ways, but no one killed.
The rainfall Was worth milliona up
this way and surrounding territory.
Pastures, crops and vegetation were
withering and drying up, and forest
fires were again becoming menacing.
This rain, together with several cop-
ious ones since, has improved im-
mensely the former, checked and in
ninny cases completely pet out the
latter. There has,df late been some
rather freaky weather up this way.
One day or a few days blistering hot
and sultry, probably followed by a
day and Tight of light spring over-
coat weafffer. The other day it was
28, with freezing weather in New
Mtxico, 40 at Superior. It is 50 at
Duluth, 97 to 100 in some other parts
of this Republic, with many prostra-
tions and deaths from the hat in
Ohio and the city of Chicago. So re-
cently there has been all Med.; of
weather heeded out by the weather
department in this country. ,
I see where Lepirie, who was Adjut-
ant -General for Louis Riel during the
Rebellion in Manitoba in 1870, has -
died recently at St Boniface, Winni-
peg. aged 89. He was the president
of the court martial which condemned
Thomas Scott to death at Old Fort
Garry. In 1882 I was shown the spot
where the unfortunate Scott was shoe
and where he lay dying, moaning and
suffering in a rough board coffin ler
several hours, till, it is said, some one
out of mercy, ended his sufferings. It
was said his body never was found,
supposedely being thrown into the
Red River. John Watson, a stepson
of the late Hugh Mowbray, formerly
of the 8th 'concession, McKillop, was
one of Canada's volunteers, helping to
suppress this rebellion. I called on
him in 1882. He then held a re-
sponsible position with a wholesale
hardware house in Winnipeg. I also
called on his sister, Jane, at the same
time. She was married to a Provin-
cial Detective. 1 remember well bid-
ding her good-bye as she held their
baby -in her arms some forty-one
sitars ago. After the collapse of the
Rebellion in 1870, Riel and Lepine fled
to St. Paul, Minn., Lepine returning
in 1874, was tried and condemned to
death at Old Fort Garry, but later
reprieved. Riel, not satisfied, later in
1885, started another rebellion in the
Canadian Northweete but this time he
vias not so lucky as his nerk and body
later stretched the hempen cord at
Regina, Sask. During this Rebellion
there was severe fighting at Batoche,
where many of Canada's soldiers were
wounted, and quite a number killed.
Amongst the latter are a number of
Winnipeg boys. On the third day's
fighting, Col. French, a noted Can-
adian military officer, fell shot dead.
I got acquainted in Duluth in 18R9
with Joseph Campbell, one of the
Winnipeg boys fighting at this place.
He told me that one day when he
fighting was fierce and the leaden
messengers of death were singing,
be lay down and took refuge behind
the body of a deed horse. Every once
in a while he would hear ,a bullet
go plunk into the horse's body. In
Brandon, M871., I had got acquainted
with a promising young Englishmen,
who shortly was going to he married
to e nearby farmer's daughter. With
his teem he went to tote government,
supplies and troops. One day they
had an engagement with half-breeds
and Indievis. WWII his rifle he stood
up, blazing away. When advised to
seseee' , ,•;',1A •
NO LONGER
• BEDRIDDEN
London woman recovers from pro-
- tracted and painful rheumatic at.
tack—gives all the credit to Dreco,
the famous health builder.
The plight of Mrs. Minnie E. Heth-
erington, of 322 Eleanor Street, Lon-
don, Ont., is best described in her own
brief words: "I couldn't even turn
over in bed, much less walk." So
severe was the pain she suffered that
two weeks before Christmas she took
to her bed and there remained, help-
less, until the splendid healing pro -
pestles of Dreco came to her aid.
Many people, men and women, are
martyrs to this painful ailment--
rheumatism—usually caused by ira-
prrper functioning of the kidneys and
other digestive organs and it is to
help just such people as these that
Mrs. Hetherington makes her state-
ment.
Says Mrs. Hetherington: "Just be-
fore Christmas I caught a terribl3
ccld that settled in my kidneys. My
hands, feet and limbs became very
sure and began to swell with rheum-
atism, until suffering agonies of pain
I took to my bed, The pain and stiff-
ness was so severe that I couldn't
even turn over. I as very nervous
and couldn't sleep and had no appe•
tite. Constipation also added to my
sufferings and all the medicine I tried
gave no relief.
"My daughter, however, heard of
the wonderful help other people were
getting from Dreco and brought a
bottle home for me. That was only
a week and a half ago. Now, I ani
able to walk, a thing I haven't done
for two months. I am feeling like a
new woman. My bowels are regular,
I sleep soundly and have a gond ap-
petite. The pains in my limbs have
almost gone as has the swelling. I
unhesitatingly recommend Dreco to
anyone suffering as I did."
Dreco has been the source of relief
for thousands of similar sufferers. It
is prepared from nature's own herbs,
roots, bark and leaves and acts in a
natural way. By its toning and re-
gulating properties it speedily des-
perses the noxious gasses and poison-
ous acids that cause biliousness,
rheumatism and other distressing ail-
ments, building the whole system up
to a fine, healthy vigor. No one need
suffer the awful pangs of rheumatism
when Dreco will give them such re-
markable relief.
Dreco is pleasant to take and con-
tains no mercury, potash or habit-
forming drugs.
Dreco is being specially introduced
in Seaforth by Charles Aberhart, and
is sold by a gond druggist every-
where.
SEVEN YEARS
There is a new crop springing tun
all over Canada. Will it be good or
had? That depends largely upon
weather conditions. As 1 consider I
am in the possession of the key to the
clouds, I am very anxious to nass it
on to others. Perhaps the best way
to do this, and at the same time to
give some idea of how to use it, will
be to give the last Seven Years of my
own experience, though I might well
make it fourteen.
1916
This is one of the two year: in
which I suffered really staggering
disappointment. Yet when the year
NV11F completed, I do not know that
any of the other years were more
racfiant with light on thP subject
1 was at this time living in Califor-
nia.. Every year while I was there
we had good seed -time rains, and 1018
was no exception. The crops were
doing well until it came time for the
grain to fill out to plumpness. The
precious "latter rains" were Int -tell
needed.
Yet in our little Sunday School no
one prnposed prayer on the subject,
and I felt my hands tied unless there
should be something of a community
interest and desire.
One. day I met a prominent farmer.
"Mr. A." I asked, "don't you want
rain?"
"Yes, we peed the rain now," he
answered.
"Now, Mr. A., you know r am ready
to ls'sd s prayer meeting for rain but
1 cannot act unless the community
is wil.h nut. If you really want ram,
ask your three farmer neighbora to
come to the Sabbath School next: Sal, -
bath, and we will unite for the ram
on the Rainbow Covenant., and you
know we shall -get it."
"All right," he said.
I knew that Mr. A. believed in the
power of p;ayer, aad went to Sabbath
School fully expecting to hold a little
service far the rain. What was my
ndly
411
„
Or
etueantiene an 4.
t,
kthatYng; etad g'r1444i4s*1-1"."
tom
or the wheat, etAl# b*# relikW*
OlAon.
,
c bay, e felt V111.'0104 "AO :eltleeitO emeoeeh •
tseaniadats, op. rolayOetr u9ned11:8:14:heandzed egg's, :144; ill e ,-;11
vote that Ton, oven oboist xii*:IninItteVPover As
afttehernnoeoxtu feertue
in the act of •-•-;1!'
clouds, and
t fall. The
red away, and
iter week passe
od than hem, Whit* the eggs, Weth Mate
were some
now. I know
arty see that
beautifully
,my way.
IM
u44
1840,14.0,014
V A' r*13*40e
, .
That prayer was promptly answered.'-,.„,_
Fact No, 2.
But the covenant prayer about the
wheat was not forgotten. Following
that Friday, two or three weeks of
uncommonly cool weather were sent,
also a Met or two of heavy mist
rolled up from somewhere, and so,
without rain, the wheat wan filled out
to a perfect sample.
Fact No. 3.
That was the first year of really
high prices. What with the good
crop, and the high prices, and the sale
of about 96 head of cattle, one of our
Sunday School families was able that
year to clear off a long-standing and
growing mortgage of 310,000. One
good crop can mean eo much. Is it
not worth while to look carefully at
the Rainbow Covenant and the power
it gives?
ANNIE ROSS.
Strasburg, Sask., June 21, 1923.
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Mrs. Stanley Baldwin, wife of the
British premier, runs a school for ser-
vant girls,
Miscondinct by a husband is suffi-
cient ground for an English woman
to win a divorce decree.
As Lieutenant of Wolves Duchess
d'Uzes may now hunt wolves all over
France without special authorization.
Lillian Gish, the motion picture ac-
tress, was made member of the
Dalian Fascisti while in that country
recently.
In New York city there is scarcely
a bank of note that does not have
a woman's department. managed by
a woman.
Mrs. Frank M. Jones, active presi-
dent of a large lumber company in
Tacoma, Wash., has just passed her
7Fth birthday.
A failure un the stage, Miss Mary
E. JoneS, of Norwich. Ct., is winning
huge success in the cake baking
business.
It is estimated that more than 50
per cent. of the depusits in uptown
banks in New York city are in wo-
men's accounts.
Miss Helen B. Innes is a successful
heating and ventilating engineer itt
New York city, where she handles
let ge contracts.
Mrs. Susie L. Way. the first and
only woman Mayor in Oklahoma,
says she considers her greatest te-
sponsibility that of making liciakyll
safe'for its boys and girls.
THE COOK'S BEST
Whitefish Worty
Fillet the fish, that is remove the
skin and the bone; place the fillets in
an earthen dish and raver with olive
oil and lemon juice and a sprinkle of'
salt. Leave the fish itt this overnight.
Gut into small pieces and fry in hat-
ter. Serve with tomato sauce. When
making the batter add a little olive
oil, this will help to make the liatt1•`'
crisp when fried.
Eggs a I.a Martin
Make sufficient cr. am sauce for
your requirements. Put one table.
si.00nful Into the bottom of an earth -
ell' cup (fire -proof 1 breakup one egg
on top of this, then cio er the egg with
two tablespoonfuls cream sauce.
Sprinkle a little grated cheese 00 top,
Bake in a hot oven from 5 to 8 min-
utes. One dash of naprica when
serving.
Mutton a La i)auee
Take one neck of mutton, one-ltalf
pint of bread crumbs, one teaspoonful
of herbs mixed, salt and pepper to
taste. Dry the neck and make a goe-
ke" under the fat portion. Make n
stuffing of the bread crumbs, the hcr;.
and the seasoning, add spoonful of
butter to the stuffing. Put this into
the pocket and scw iip the pocket
Place in a pan, add a pint of water,
let cook for about two hours. Serve
with brown sauce nm!" from the wa-
ter in the pan. Si -1 0 with cooked
rice or macaroni.
Caramel Cast a rtl Pudding
Melt six tablespoonfuls of sugar
over the fire in an Man saucepan mita
browned into a thick syrup. Pour
one tablespoonful into the bottom of
each custard cup. Take three eggs,
four tablespoonfuls of sugar, one pint
of milk. heat the egg and the Aug ir
together, add the milkput the cep,
into a roasting pan half full nf wa-
ter. Bake in a nioderote oven.
Baked Haddock Pisane
Place a thin layer of spinach, gar-
lic and anchovies all chopped up to-
per
month
maimed and invested in safe bonds from
age 30 to 60, interest beingreinvested,
accumulates
$49,772.06
Our Partial Payment Flan for Buying Bonds is
excellently fitted for such a scheme. Through it ie
provided the necessary incentive to carry out a sys-
tematic programme of saving a determined portion of
your income 'each month and investing it in safe
bonds. The contract into which you enter with us
is just sufficiently stimulating to create and maintain
the desire to continue buying high grade government,
municipal and corporation bonds. The availability
at all times of funds so invested is an attractive fea-
ture of this plan.
Many investors—both large and small—have
found in Buying Bonds on the Partial Payment Plan
the solution to many of their financial problems. We
suggest that you mail the coupon below for full
particulars.
I Please send me copy of booklet
Z-II8"Buying Bonds on the Partied
Amiliusjarvis eica
Payment Plan"
Eatabl os had /VI
Ottawa 293 Hay St. Montreall 1 Address
New York Toronto London
Our Provinces' by 'the Sea
see:knee
40%16 -.41, -ie
<55
c
Few countries in the world;
offer a greater Variety of scenery;
or better travelling facilities than
the Dominion of Canada. Cana-
dians. If for no other reason than
110 Improvement of their general
educationshould see and know
Canada first, while the globi•-;
trotter will also flnd much to in.,1
terest him. Varied and easily ac-,
cessible are the diversions for the,
sunit1t.1 tourist in the Maritime'
PrOVinri, Now Brunswiek. Nova;
Scotia and Prince Edward Island.,
!tore one gets the salt tang of the,
sea as well as the ozone of moon
tains. moor and lake. The climate
is ideal. Every opportunity for
hooting, bathing and fishing is'
afforded. Golf is a popular sport,
and gond hotel accommodation Is,
plentiful.
The rugged south shore of
Nova Scotia offers a choice be-
tween fashionable sea -side resorts
and quiet little fishing villages.
The Bras d'Or Lakes of Cap..
Breton are almost an exact replica
of the famous English Lake Dis-
trict
Prince Edward Inland Is alt
idyllic garden where the best ot
surf bathing, boating and fishing
are available. New Brunswick
forests are filled with game, her
rivers teem with fish, and delight-
ful summering spots line Fundy's
shore and the Bale de Chalour.
Canadian National Railways op-
erate a network of lines serving
the choicest parts of these Maris
time Provinces.
"1•!•.4.`'i,14 • • 4,1
.!
eee ,..• peikiitie'kkq