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SES' Ql Til OiRANCRr • R. M. JONES, Manager.
SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT.
r
!Don't rob the head. By so doing
rub out the new hair roots.
tupoe .with 7 Sutherland Sisters'
p Cleatier. Make lather before
lying to hair. Ends Dandruff. E.
mbacb, Druggist, Seaforth.
1
SPEAKING UP
The hall was crowded, and the wo-
tan speaker was waxing eloquent
Yes," she cried, ' emphatically,
"Women have been misjudged for
ages. They have suffered in a thou-
sand. ways." Here she paused to give
iter audience time to consider this
;momentous statement.
"There is one way in which they
;)lever suffered and never will," said
a meek little man front the back of
the crowd.
The lecturer gave him a frigid
Gook. "And in what way is that?"
the enquired.
"In silence!" replied the man as he
sank into his seat.—Tit-Bite.
The lowest priced tea is not the
cheapest. Ai pound of "SALADA"
yields more cups to the pound, and
so much more satisfaction than ord-
inary tea, that it is really the most
gconomical to use.
LIVING THROUGH FIRE
Nature devises amazing ways of
enabling her children to survive ex-
traordinary harships. None of her
jnventions has more wonderful pow-
ers of endurance than the seed by
means of which plant life is carried
son.
You may subject certain seeds for
bours to a temperature of 100 de-
grees below freezing point, you may
heat them until they are hot enough
to burn your hand, yet they will not
lose their vitality.
In America huge fires sometimes
rage through the forests, destroying
,Wile after mile of giant trees. Where
the fire has passed there remain
atothing apparently but charred
stumps and flame -scarred, smoulder-
ing soil. Yet within a few months
the whole district will be green with
the first leaves of tiny seedling trees.
When tests were made recently to
aliscover the heat at ground -level
during a forest fire, it was found
that it was from 1,000 to 1,500 de-
grees Fahrenheit. The fires move so
Inickly that this intense heat lasts
Dilly for a minute or less at any spot.
Various tree seeds were then tried
to see what they could resist. It
'was found that fir cones could with-
stand a temperature of 1,200 de-
grees Fahrenheit for eight minutes
-without losing their vitality.
arUARD THE BABY
AGAINST COLDS
'lio guard the baby against colds
nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab-
lets. The Tablets are a mild laxative
that will keep the little one's stomach
and bowels working regularly. It is a
recognized fact that where the stom-
ach and bowels are in good order
that colds will not exist; that the
health of the little one will be good
and that he will thrive and be happy.
'The Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box
from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
.Brockville, Ont.
CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM
Some of us are anxious to earn
money and more of us are merely
anxious to get it.—Maryville Demo-
crat.
The cost of Ontario auto licenses is
expected to increase. Somebody's al-
ways taking the joy out of life.—Bor-
der Cities Star.
Dallas, Texas, reports a horse run-
ning away. Probably saw another
one and took fright at the strange
spectacle:—Kingston Standard.
Eveh a fool, when he holdeth his
-peace, is counted wise; and he that
ahutteth his lips is esteemed a Than
of understanding.—Prey. 17:28.
There is some music you cant some
Von won't, some you shouldn't and
Best of all Fly Killers 10c
per Packet at all Druggists,
Grocers and General Stores
•
some you must listen too -•Sir Hugh
Allen
3f Mussolini is bound to be a new
Napoleon, be should not forget the
Waterloo and St. Helena episodes in
the great man's career. — Hamilton
Herald.
Before we rely upon Alberta coal
let's make sure that the mines and
operators there don't act as the hard
Boal people did in the United States.
—Kincardine Review.
There are 800,000 young men in
this country who have never been to
work at all, because there has never
been any for them since they left
school.—Mr. Frank Bramley.
One fatal truth of - the swimming
season is this: Too often, when one
finds he must swim it is too late to
learn.—Lafayette Journal and Cour-
ier.
UNREFRESHING SLEEP
if You Are Tired O- ut When You
Arise in the .Morning
Read This. •
The woman who is tired out, who
aches all over when she arises in the
morning, who feels depressed most of
the time, needs just the help that Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills can give her—
new blood and strong nerves.
The number of disorders that are
caused by thin blood is amazing and
most women are careless about the
condition of their blood. Quickly the
nerves are affected and the patient
becomes irritable, worries over trifles,
does not sleep as well as formerly and
is not refreshed by rest. There may
be stomach trouble and headache.
This is a condition that calls for Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills.
Give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair
trial and the first sign of new life will
be noticed in your appetite. You will
be hungry by meal, time. As the
blood becomes enriched it feeds and
soothes the irritated nerves, sleep be-
comes sounder and more refreshing,
your worries become less, your work
lighter. These are some of the things
that these tonic pills do. Try them for
any trouble caused by thin blood.
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.
HURON NOTES
—Mr. R. G. Thompson has been ap-
pointed Clerk of Goderich township
to succeed the late A. Cantelon.
— The registration in the Exeter
High School for the new term has
gone over the top. The Board have
found it necessary to ,add a sixth
room and have engaged Miss Hale,
of Gananoque, as the sixth teacher.
There has been a re -arranging of the
school which is now over crowded,
and the basement of the public lib-
rary has been secured for the prim-
ary room, taught by Miss Taylor.
—A quiet but pretty wedding took
place in the Trivitt Memorial church,
Exeter, on Wednesday morning, when
Miss Ada Belle, second daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Case, of Exeter,
became the bride of Mr. Elgin W.
Rowcliffe, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Rowcliffe,. of the London Road, north.
Rev. A. A. Trumper performed the
cerenfony in the presence of immedi-
ate relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Row-
cliffe left on the morning train on a
short honeymoon.
—Eighty -pound steel rails will be
laid on the Huron and Bruce section
of the Canadian National Railways
lite between Denfield and Centralia,
a distance of sixteen miles in the
course of a few days. The road
from Hyde Park Junction to Denfield
is already laid with the 80( -pound
rails, and it is expected that the road,
as far as Centralia will be newly
equipped before cold weather sets in.
Efforts will be made on the part of
the maintenance of way department
to lay the heavy rails as far as Wing -
ham before the fall of 1924. When
completed the heavier engines will be
able to. run over this line.
— Hundreds of acres of what has
been almost waste land will be re-
claimed for agricultural purposes by
the dredging of the Aux Sauble River
from Grand Bend to Port Frank. Al-
ready three miles of the work is com-
pleted and it is expected that the
wok will he completed this fall. The
salfeme which has been undertaken
by the Canada Sand Co., will cost
thousands of dollars. The river will
run from five to twelve feet deep. The
dredging of the Aux Sauble will he
a boost for that district. It will have
two outlets to Lake Huron, making it
a sort of canal about 150 feet wide
and with a level clay bottq,n. Ex-
tensive boating can he carried on
from Grand Bend to Port Frank
down the river, and the banks of the
river, with all its natural resources
of trees and shrubbery, will provide
one of the most ideal summer camp
locations in the province. The rest
will he 'shared -by the surrounding
townships. The Canada Sdnd Co.
and the Government will hear twenty
per cent.
—One of the aged residents of Us -
he.fdtliS
leen Good Cd
Came map tzc
of old agq urn jn the A
Terone, Irelan, d she Camp to
rthe: age of thirteen years, sot
¢t in York County, where site nisy
lied Mr. Washburn, and aopn after:
they came to Blanshard Township,
fapidng there for some years before
moving to Usborne 'Township. De-
ceased was a mostestimable woman
and highly respected by all who knew
her during her long residence of 70
years in the neighborhood of Kirk -
ton She was a member pf the Eng-
lish church, and when able regular
in her attendance at the church ser-
vices. Her husband died twenty-four
years ago. She is survived by five
sons and two daughters—Allan, of
Comber; Robert, of Harriston; Geo.,
Los Angeles, Cal.; Thomas,' of Us -
borne; Frankof Guelph; Mrs. Col -
will, of )l ensall, and Miss S. J., of
Toronto.
CURING AND KEEPING ONIONS
FOR HOME USE
Upon proper' curing depends to a
great extent the keeping qualities of
onions, and it is safe to state that
unless there is uniformity in the ma-
turity of the crop all the bulbs can-
not be properly cured to keep for
any length of time. When the onion
tops begin to lop oyer and wither,
this is a sign that the bulbs have
reached the extent o their develop-
ment. However, all the plants may
not, as is often the case, ripen off
themselves, but an occasional one
stand erect in the patch. Where
plants show this characterit is nec-
essary to bend the tops down so as
to hasten the ripening process. There
are several common causes to which
uneveness may be attributed; land
that has been recently broken up
from sod, very moist soil, and where
greln manure has been used in large
quantities.
The tops of the plants being from
half to two-thirds withered, the bulbs
should be pulled and left on the
ground to complete withering, or if
weather conditions are unfavorable
it is better to remove the crop to an
open shed where the bulbs can be
spread thinly, on the floor to dry; or
if slatted trays are available the dry-
ing process can be carried out much
more satisfactorily, because of the
freedom of air circulation. The tops
should be removed when the onions
are thoroughly dry, which will re-
quire about two weeks time to ac-
complish. When drying has been
completed remove the tops, using a
knife,and cut at least a half inch
from the bulbs.
It has been found that if pulling is
delayed after the onions are ready
and wet weather occurs, the bulbs
are liable to start second growth,
which means a heavy loss, because
once started, it is impossible to checl5,
their development in any way.
Storing the bulbs away for winter
in a frost proof dark -room where the
air can be kept dry and the tempera-
ture maintained around 40 degrees F.
are also as important as any of the
former mentioned operations. After
the crop has been carefully cleaned,
selected and thoroughly dried the
bulbs may be placed in slatted crates
whichfican be piled up in tiers. A
very convenient size of crate is six
inches deep by 14 inches wide by 28
inches long, all inside measurements.
LATEST NOTES OF SCIENCE
To enable players to acquire ac-
curacy by practice a tennis court laid
out in numbered squares has been
designed.
English publishers are reducing the
weight of books from 30 to 40 per
cena. by using paper made from es-
parto grass.
'An air space in the bottom prevents
anything being cooked in a new al-
uminum kettle burning and sticking
to the metal.
Abandoned nearly 60 years ago, the
black coal mines of the South Harz
district of Germany are being oper-
ated again.
Used 'in connection with a vernier
scale, a new steel tape can give
measurements of the circumference
of round objects in thousandths of
an inch.
An automatic feed operated by a
spring has been developed in South
Africa for doing the same work with
rock drills that usually is done by
hand.
Economy is claimed for a new au-
tomatic electric heating attachment
for household faucets as current is
employed only to heat water actually
used.
After experimenting with paint
and other materials, Paris is con-
sidering building its street crossing
of red stone to make them more
conspicuous.
POPE MAY MAKE A SAiNT OF
HENRY Vi., Oi.D ENGLISH
KING WAS VERY PIOUS
When King George and Queen
Mary visited His Holiness at the
Vatican, during their recent stay in
Rome, they learned with intense in-
terest from Cardinal Gasquet that
preliminary steps have been taken
for the beatification of the King's
predecessor on the throne of England,
Henry VI. That monarch was a
truly pious man, and one argument
urged that he deserves the prayers
and blessings of the faithful is that
he founded Eton and King's Colleges,
Cambridge.
The proceedings looking to this
beatification began as far hack as
the reign of Henry VII., who en-
deavored to obtain the formal can-
onization of Henry VI. from Popes
Innocent ViiI., Alexander VI. and
Julius II., supporting his plea with
meas 1
�thA .ai
n V st
xeptl'q!e a xr of � �
dged ,tThe q ` on `thorea
ncl le
p p that famous 'llo-
Man pie dee+at it. was too
eye ;ensive''to hav! + re Sams , one
saint in his fa*, But cardinal
Gasquet, who hahtitten a little
book on "The 'Reil Life of King
Henry VI."(to he fished in the
autumn), insists was not the
real reason, which' o be found in
Henry VII.'s death d the subse-
quent Reformatiol'A:.: I en as late as
1528 the English amtassadore raised
the question at the 'Hely Sea.
According to. the'`liiatorian Poly-
dore Vergil, who we* under Henry
VIII., no soon had . Plenty VI. died
in 1471 than his throb first at Chert-
sey and then at 'Windsor (whither
his body was remgyed), began to
be celebrated for numerous mir-
acles." A historical. 'Chart of Henry
VIiI.'s reign, now in the English
Cdllege in Rome, also alludes to
them.
Yorkshire men in particular re-
garded Henry VI. as a saint, and
in 1473 Dean Alexander, his former
private secretary, placed his statue
on the choir screen of York Minster,
where, despite Edward IV.'s disap-
proval, the populace did reverence
to the martyred monarch. Similar
statues were erected at Durham and
Ripon, as well as in East Anglia.
Harpersfield, an Elizabethan histor-
ian of the Anglican church, has a
whole chapter about "the miracles of
King Henry V." in which he mentions
the votive offerings at Windsor from
the persons cured.
ANOTHER DRAMA FOR THE OLD
BAIL A-. (i':"'
London's famous $ Eajl+
bout to unroll anq df' e=, o
list of tragecliestii o
time have attracted' Q Id;tvl at-
tention to the Londgji'Lce court.
Marie Marguerite Fahrip, is to he
tried for the murder;of'her husband,
Ali Kernel Fahmy Bey,,WNhom shle shot
to death in the Savoy Hotel 'early
one morning some weeks ago. The
victim was an Egyptian millionaire,
twenty-two years old. His wifelfor.
merly Marie Lorena, a Frier': ' :Milan
of notorious reputation anllt'r, luring
beauty, is ten years oider,;;.�y had
been married only seven moitl;s, and
it is a fair guess that they'` were
intoxicated, or at least the youthful
groom was intoxicated, when they
got married. Shallow -pa ted squan-
derer and rioter that he was, it is'
difficult to imagine him as so corn-
pletely void of understanding that he
would choose for his wife a woman
of such infamous antecedents, with
whom he had lived unmarried for
some time. The presumption is that
Marie tricked him into the union.
If so, she was adequately punish-
ed.
unished. According to the testimony of
Said Enany, an Anglo-Egyptian, who
acted as secretary to the young
Egyptian,' not a day passed without
a quarrel between the two. Filmy
was furious because his wife had de-
ceived him as to her age, and be-
cause he found her not nearly so
beautiful and interesting as he had
expected. The woman was jealous
of younger women who were pur-
suing her handsome husband, who
was most generous with them.
Fahmy was also jealous, for he be-
lieved that his wife was quite cap-
able of resuming her old evil prac-
tices among men who found her still
attractive. There was no decency
in their quarrels. They squabbled
before waiters. They made scenes in
restaurants. They fought with their
fists. The young husband was of
frail physique, and the wife had an
even chance in a fight with him.
Sometithes she appeared in the hotel
dining -room with a black eye. As
often he appeared with a scratched
face or a swollen nose. Their life, as
one writer says, was a series of mu-
tual hidings.
Each had threatened to kill the
other, and the probability is that
if Marie had not killed her husband
he would have killed her some time
or other. A few days before the
murder their fiercest quarrel broke
out. The woman, who had been un-
der treatment by specialists in
gynecology, told her husband that
she was going tib Paris for an oper-
ation. He said she could get as
good treatment in London, and that
if she insisted upon going to Paris
she would go without a cent of his
money. Perhaps he feared she was
off on some escapade. The secre-
tary saw them at lunch, and all
through that meal they kept up their
wrangle. The conductor of the
Savoy orchestra approached and
begged that Madame would choose
a selection. She refused, saying:—
"My husband has sworn to murder
me in twenty-four hours." In the
afternoon the womnn went shopping
with the secretary, buying clothes
she would need in Paris. When she
returned, the husband changed his
tactics. He pleaded with his wife
not to humiliate him by leaving.
She remained obdurate, and at 1.45
a.m., went to her room, locking the
door in her husband's face.
Some time later he must have
been admitted, and the quarrel burst
forth with increased fury. At. 2.30
the night porter was making his
rounds when Fahmy ran out of a
room crying, "See what she has
done to me," exhibiting a livid mark
under his eye. His wife was trying
to drag him back. The porter ad-
monished them not a create a dis-
thrhance, and ordered them hack
to their rooms. Hs had hardly
reached the end of the corridor when
he heard three shots ring out In
quick succession. The man had once
more sought to escape from the
rooms and the woman had fired
three bullets into his body. The last
one had pierced his brain, and as
he lay dying, it is said that she
ilh*t s 8t of
Iuppoee .bit �
en to 1te>iatM
'AreanoO ex 44;
leitefid,, ...:
Her comae) ill'spy { o get her,
off or have the .charge of ,.Murder re-„
duced, relying upon the plea of pelf -
defence. It will be eaey to shot
that her husband attacked her ftp:? egzit
quently, heat her and horribly lith t, this
suited and humiliated her. On the banged. There;
other hand, it will be quite as easy between her crime 40 '1
to show that she was guilty of the Thompson, for %nstalMe,
How to make your
skin fresh and clear
Palin and olive oils
—nothing else—give
nature's green color
to Palmolive Soap
Made in Canada
•
•
Every woman passe's as pretty if only
her skin is fresh, smooth and young. It
is within the power of every woman to
possess this attraction to make her
complexion as beautiful as she longs
for it to be.
The secret? Cleopatra knew and
practiced it in the days of ancient Egypt.
She observed a daily ceremonious
cleansing. The cleansers she used were
the same you may have today, Palm
and Olive oila
These beautifying oils are scientifi-
cally blended infamous Palmolive Soap.
They give it mildness, wonderful sooth-
ing qualities, profuse, creamy and re-
freshing lather.
Cleansing with Palmolive is a beauty
treatment in itself. No woman should
say her skin is too sensitive to use soap
until she has tried Palmolive.
The attractive green cake, the natural
color of the oils, is within the reach of
every one who appreciates that clean-
liness is the greatest beautifier.
You can buy Palmolive Soap at all
first class dealers.
VolumeProduce 254ent
oC
Quality Ja► -
1592
i5'he
,rd��il irV
Wernitallf1
CANADA,'Lirnited
has authorized a
Weekly Purchase Plan
by which
$
is all you need to pay
down for a
•5a
Car, Truck or Tractor
When the weekly payments, together
with interest, equals one-third the
price of the model you desire we make
delivery. The balance can be paid in
forty-eight weekly or twelve monthly
equal instalments.
Ask us about the Ford Weekly
Purchase Plqn.
J. F. DALY, COOK BROS.,
Seaforth, Ont. Hensall, Ont.
LORD MOTOR COMPANY�OP,CANADA; LIMITED, 'ORD, ONTARIO
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