The Huron Expositor, 1924-11-21, Page 3�i;
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� �. . - ". � P 0 8QXZS FOR R" "" , '�;� ' 'Fifty ' , r *ept, of farm�pg lands. A Frepch , arclittA
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�`- - CONSTIPATED C, LVRBN� you wouldn't have to try everything PALE ANAEMIC GIRLS ,
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.. ---�- . " just to land Onepaitcular trouble- � I I
I . �Iz C"nstiiation 7is ' one .of. the most When chaps come in here with Find New Health Througit The
,qommon ailments of childhood and blanket orders fOX work I do on e* Use of Dr. Williamal
. the'ehild. sufting- from it positively thing at a time and take the car out Pink - Pills. ,
I., i4annot- t;inve. , To keep the little one betWeen each job and see if I've caught I . --n— . . -
� well the bowels must be kept regular the trouble. I give some of lem some There must be no guesswork in the
4and the stomach, sweet. To �46 this mighty pleasant surprises. treatment of pale, anaelmic girls and
� nothing cam equal Baby's Own Tab- . - - children. It your daughter is languid,
They. are a mild but thorough � Us a pale, shallow complexion, is short
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I x tive; are pleasant to take and WHY HANDS "CHAP" AND� of -breath After slight exertion or on
*nd can -be given to the newborn babe . HOW going upstairs, if she has palpitation
- vith perfect safety, ' Thousands of TO CURB IEU, . ite, or a ten,
'y ,,*others'use no otlier.medic - lue for - I : �, , � I of the heark. a poor ap.peti
' . dency to faint, she has ariaernia-the
their little ones. but Baby's Own Tab- , .'l!ChaPpxng 10 SaYs,- Pr' -William Allen medical name for poverty of the blood.
;ets., they 'are sold by medietIie deal- Pusey, 9S Zl4e way the skin has of Any delay in treatment may leave her
Qrs or by mail -at 25 cents .g box from expressing its reaction to irritation, weak and sickly for the rest of her
'The -Dr. Williams., Medicine 'jQa.., and it occurs in winter for several life. Delay may even result in con�
, , Brockville, Out, .1 . reasons." The air in winter is dry, sumption, that mosthopeless of dis-
��011 � I 7! . I the skin glands are relatively inactive eases. When the blood is poor. and
--7"0— and the smaller amount of moisture'watery give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
. .,
� $200,006 PAID FOR NEW YORK produced with the increased dryness coupled with nourishing food and gen-
'I '� .- I , , of the air makes the moisture of the tle out-of-46or exercise. The new,
� - - .
. . 0PBRA.BOX skin evaporate quickly. . When ��, the life-giving blood which follows a fair
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moisture is tacking the skin becomes use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills stimu-
J Albert H. Gary, chairman of the inelastic, brittle and more easi,ly at- lates the nerves, increases the appe-
.� 'board of the United States Steel Cor- tacked by irritating substances than tite and brings the glow of health to
.
'' I . )oration,..has purchased Box 19 in the when the fat secretion of the glands pale cheeks, Mrs. W. E. Armour,
I Metropolitan Opera House, New York, is present in abundance. Havelock, Ont., says: -"My little girl
. -which was occupied by Henry Clay Frequent wetting'of the hands with got into a very poor' state of health.
Frick and his family for a number of Walter may be irritating and -when She was weak, very much run down
years before his death for what is soap is added even more of the skin and as the doctor did not seeem to do
ligaid to be a record price. Judge fat is- taken away from the surface. her any good, I thought I would try
Gray's box, which is in the lower tier
. . Therefore the soap and water should Dr. Williams, Pink Pills. After tak-
!carries with it one thirty-fifth share be used on hands that are chapped ing six boxes of the pills she got nice
- in the ownership of the building. The
I and easily irritated only in modera- and rosy and strong again. I would
I aale of the box was arranged with the tion, and when they are used the recommend Dr, Williams' Pink Pills
� .approval of the directors of the Met- hands should be dried immediately to anyone weak and rundown"
r ropolltan Opera and Real Estate Co., Afterward on a soft towel. You can get these pills throu'gh any
vbich has supervision of all the trans- Since the normal fat of the skin dealer in medicine or by mail postpaid
,V: fers. Although the purchase price tends to be lessened the deficiency at 50 cents a box from 'The Dr. Wil -
wag not given out,' it is said by Musi- may be supplied by putting on any liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
cal America -to be in the neighborhood soft ointment like cold cream Or vase-
, of $200,000. Mrs. Frick and her son line. During the winter season hands 0
and daughter have not resumed at- that tend to chap should be greased
I tendance at the opera since the death PROVEN SIRE SHOULD NOT BE
� twice each day. If chapping is al -
of Mr. Prick. Rather than lease the ready present the cold cream or vase- , SACRIFICED
�, lbox, Mrs. Frick had given theuse of hile should be put on thickly at night
it to friends. . - and lightly I once or twice during the It is a lamentable fact that many
� ow day. I sires that have later proven to be
. I Of course the eff ects of the dry air valuable breeders have 'had a
HAVE THE BEST ALWAYS may be controlled by wearing gloves limited period of usefulness to their
and by.'pr6tecting the face with a breed due to 'the fact that'they wtere
When buying a newspaper the same high collar orinuffler. disposed of before their breeding
I rulie should apply as when -buying ability became known. Early dis-
goods. You want the best for your ON posal is sometimes due to a dis-
I mroney. There is one "best" in Can-, EIGHTY PER CENT. ]FRENCH WAR inclination to risk the insecurity to
ada, and it should be in every home. I life and fimb entailed in keeping
,� , 'You should have your own local pa- ,1 RUINS ARE REBUILT aged breeding Animals around, but
per without doubt, but you should al- 'More often is due to the gradual
� j* bave, the Family, aerald�snd,w.eek- , . According to statements given out impotency, inadvisability of in -
J I
ly Star of,Monireal. It is undoubt_ bi'adthorliles'lin. France, approxinrati-' breeding and the lack of faciliitileit
.
� effly the greatest family and farm ly eighty per cent. of the houses de- for ki�ping two herd sires. Be the
paper on the continent and,at 0�e low stroyed during,the war had been re- causes what they may, the"fact re-
.
3price ?f Two Dollars it is a wonder . ful built by July of this year; ninety per mains that, in many cases, better
.
W 1)argIm. This year the Family Her_ cent. of the damaged canals had been use could be made of many of the
ald is giving to each subscriber a reconstructed; 80 per cent. of the outstanding sires in the tountry
chance to win as much as Five Thou- trenches used by the troops of both that meet with slaughter while still
sand Dollars cash, and each subscrib- armies had been filled in, and 80 per in prime breeding condition, says
er receives a large calendar with a cent. of the damaged factories had G. W. Muir, Animal Husbandman, of
tascinating picture that would adorn been put in operation, according to the The Dominion Experimental Farms.
any home. For thwe who secure new European division of the department With most classes of stock,
I dubseribets them ire some very hand- of Commerce. While to, a great ex- proper care, comfortable quarters,
�' some rewards, which are described in tent the repairing of damages done plenty of exercise, and due caution
a catalogue obtairifible free. in the regions was executed with gov- on the part of the attendants reduce
ernintant aid, nevertheless, much is due impotency in the animal and the
� .1111. to the energy and industry of private risk of attendants being,injured by
. individuals and owners. aged sires to a minimuni. Also in
NO CUSTOMERS WANTED Agricultural land has been reclaim- most classes of stock, the get of the
. �, .
41.
Lord Dewar provides the world with ea, populations had been retiirned to sire mature sufficierftly early to
�, -whisky and wit. Here, then, is a bit their original dwellings and manufac- enable -a fair estimate to be made
of his wit. It relates how two old turing and mining industries had been through the get, of the breedin�
1 �4 soldiers, noted for their love of the pat into operation. Since that time ability of the sire before the latter
ItIottle, put their savings together on reconstruction has gone forward at an has to be disposed of to avoid in-
oompleting their service and bought a !nereasingly rapid rate, and with noth- breeding. Such being the case, it
pqblic-house in suburbia. ing intervening tp interrupt the pres- would seem advisable for the
Their arrival was watched with in_ ent progress it may definitely be com- breeder to study -his breeding re-
terast by the community, and when pleted before the middle of 1925. sults closely and retain as long as
Ik QP( ning time had long gone past, and As an illustration of the improved be possible can those sires that show
the doors remained shut, one would-be conditions in the ten departments in- outstanding merit.
. customer volunteered to make inquir- eluded in the devastated regions, par- ,Co-operation with neighbors ..or
� --,,j, ies. ticular mention may -be made of the other breeders (where accredited
Striding up to the door he banged figures of increase in population and herd regulations will Allow) in such
� loudly with his fist, and was reward- of the statistics issued by official a way that sires may be exchanged
, I ed by a head appearing at one of the sources regarding the resumption of for a number of years and then be
, I lbedroom windows. activity in the various branches of used again in the original herd is
"VVhatcher want?" inquired the old industry. The pre-war population of one method that could be resorted
�� bioldier." the regions under consideration num- to on the part of the first owner of
,'When are you going to open?" bered 4,680,183, while at the close of a tried and proven sire. Another
"Open?" asked the man in astonish- the war, on November 11, 1916, this method that -should prove workable
iment. "We've bought it!" number had been reduced to 2,076,067. is for two parties conveniently
I � - On January 1, of the current year, the situated ' w1ho have valuable tried
population amounted to 4,263,677, or sires to exchange services for such
1of1ty 1.511 less than at the opening of their own an , imnls as are closely
.
44 DON'T GET TOO MANY JOBS 'he war. In 3,139 out of 3,256 com- related to their own sires. Follow'-
I munes the -local administration has ing out these suggestions would ex -
been fully reorganized and the number tend the usefulness of a bull, for
The old mechanic says: Don't have I of public schools and post offices in instance, from the usual three or
too much fixed at one time, particu- these districts exceeds those of pre- four years to seven or eight years.
� larly if you're lookin' for the remedy war years, The greatest possibilities, how-
� to some trouble tbat's,likeIy to return Shortly before .the close of the war, ever, in- extending the period of
again. as is well known, a corporation was usefulness of proven sires are in
Here's the idea.- Suppose the car organized, known as the "Credit Na- getting the new breeder to ap-
3acks power. You go to the se e `e tional," whose purpose was to facilit- preciate the value of these proven
u P.J�
station and try to get it -fixed I e ate the repair of damages caused by sires and to buy them whenever
�b I
xnechanic who takes over the job Ila the war. possible in preference to the untried
.
� -you that it might be carbon, -' ght The company was formed by a young sire. Instances without num-
ves
it �ni s,
The too -little clearance izi the a -I group of the most important French ber could be quoted where money has
I � ft might -be - your carburetor Out of banks, with a capital of 100,000,000 been lost and years of breeding have
I adjustment or the brakes m y be francs, and its declared object was the been wasted, so far as improvement
4ragging. You know it's all p sible, payment in cash of compensation due of herds and flocks was concerned,
I and rather than have the blei to those who had suffered damages' through the use of untried sires that
altiother day you tell him to go a ad from the war and to arrange for the have proven misfits.
and tune up the whole business, even payment of interest on such Advances, On the other hand, many good
If it takes a -couple of days. Capftal required by the issue of in-
� I When you get the car back It's tetest bearing obligations in the form
AOt. You're trouble's gone. But of"bonds on which intqrest, redemp-
Vbat vras the brouble? tion and premium charges were guar-
There's the hitch. You're still in anteed by the state, the money for I . ,. �
lbo dark. The ndkt time the engine such payments being included in the
. M off its- track youlla either have French budget, UP to April 30, 1924, a 9 so
I r flounder about for a remedy or claimants had been paid 54,000,000,-
" VA,fe down to the'aevvice stAtion and 000 frares. Various methods of pay- 5 I obert M
. � I
� tell"em to go ever the *h6le shootin' ment were adopted. Some of the pay. _ a , , " - I
� ( Jilatth again. ' I I" ! th8ntsi Vera IIi in �'"44, Mine in , . a , I � I . L . U10M
i . Wow if'rou'd J116t; 0giy,-`:'ib twe ra- kind, others in governintant securities. . -
"Otirp asuppeee we staft *1th. a bet. '. J-44 jq , lot, of! thii."Yete'r the thtal -
'T, 1� ��. ,� �W, "a
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- isi hdjustnWixt of 4W ftA*ft6fbk Md' sitAte 210i Aft, redooized oftrAvrAweto re thyrourlo
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am*ffm !arm 04"YOWA, a '1144 � " " to 1%. P4 � I
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CRUTE - �, I ."'I - - ,
'S L ' ,
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t -i "
idea"is simple, bq I , Otis-
. .p
, .1
'R is b4i�ed O;xi,,�tli'l�r��tk"--",,.Priricip�p, that
.
the wor'kini. people flie.relves'are in,
.,,,
directly re.sponsiblo Td*,"the high cost
of -home building. in, A rance, and he
. . .r
has merely found tho'!way to redi4ce
,
e � normously the'exp4i , fag of skilled� la�
bor in cottage buil(ri�o,,,
He has- dravirn 144'," lans for five
I houses to be
different types W
entirely tonstructed, of. concrete. He
has built one of each, . .qf these types
of dwellings in wood. 4`-'�-'
This wooden house j.� in turn lined
,
with wood throughout,., thus forming
a huge mold'for the poncrqte to be
�
, poured into. When tlx�� matrix house
is raised with the aid .0 a crane the
.
.
walls of a finishedr 44'ottage remain
standin . I
19 I I I I
Such a house can. he, occupied with-
in four weeks after building is com-
menced. Knapp's pla,��, provide for
two rooms, each of w�ich is ten feet
,
wide and twelve feet long, and a kit-
chen, hall and cellar., The cost is
6,000 francs (about $0.60), of which
the owner of the'house-,has to pay but
1,200 francs in cash, the remainder
being advanced for him -'.by the French
. ,
government, which leiAs him this
money for one to thirty years at .A
low rate of interest, under what is
,
known as the "Loi Rfbpt" (the Ribot
law).
Eight days is ,the actual time re-
quired to build these houses, the pric-
es of which include the services of
twenty workmen required to set up
the wooden mold and the use of the
mold itself. Three weeks is required
to purge the new building of damp-
'ness. .
Twenty such houses have been
successfully erected at Troyes. Each,
it is said, would cost no less than
25,000 francs if built according to the
n ed in France in
constructing concrete buildings.
.
0
PENCIL FAMINE SOON; CEDAR
WOODS DWINDLE
�
How many times a day, do you hear
"Who's got a pencil?" On this con-
tinent they are made at the rate of a
billion a year, yet they seem to be
absent when most , needed. With
schools open again t1here.,)vill be a new
demand. - ., .,�� _.,� 7- -
The user of a pencil gives little
thought to its origin and the amount
of wood used in the manufacture, yet
pencils form. quite a drain on forest
resources. You do not h -ave to go to
.
a lurnber yard to buy wood. You buy
it in furniture stores, book stores and
stationem
Pencils, according to Arthur New-
ton Puck, in 'Vanishing Forests," re-
quire such an amount of wood that
eastern red cedar and juniper have
become scarce and a hunt is on for
other suitable species.
Pencil manufacture is a fastidious
operation, using only the finest heart
wood of the evergreen cedar. It seems
a curious.waste. The writing quali-
ties of a pencil are in no way improv-
ed by the character of the'wood, yet
the trade demands not only good col-
or and soft texture, but even the
presence of a delicate cedar odor. -
. To make a wooden pencil the manu-
facture -r first cuts out a board or slat
about 7 inches long, the width of half
a dozen pencils. and as thick as one-
half a pencil diameter. With a spe-
cial machine he then shapes it into six
semi -rounded or semi -hexagonal see -
tions -and groores one side ready for
4.11
the "lead." The "lead" is inserted,
the halves glued together, and the
pencil finished at some more conveni-
ent period.
--*I-
The phrase about hitting below the
belt is surely a litile out of date. For
those who go about as I do, with
,their e�yes open, have come to the con-
clusion that belts are worn very much
lower than they used to be. And I
doubt if there be any vulnerable part
left below the belt. -Mr. Baldwin.
$500,000 DISCOVERED IN HOUSE
OF WOMAN THOUGHT TO BE
POOR
Recently, at Gravesend, England,
two policemen with deft fingers, cbos-
en for the task because they had bad
experience in banks, devoted several
hours to the mere task of counting
the money found hidden, lying loose-
ly about or hung in bags on closet
hooks, in the house of an old woman,
long believed by her neighbors, in
spite of bygone days of generosity
apparently beyond her means, to have
become almost if not actually an ab-
ject pauper through losses by bad in-
vestments. .
I The total sum thus discovered has
not 'been announced, -but it is Semi-
officially said to exceed one hundred
thousand pounds, which would be close
upon $600,00 cash. Besides this
4ctual,eash, bank boo)m indicated the
existence of large sums on deposit.
Bestides these treasures in the house
wheli" the old wol has be�an re -
ng been found helpless
in Ji6d by So pollee, there ve" b#V
and' tr6rOw fell of fiA 416% , i of br,
*gne '6 VII aith,vw, , her 'MiRblid"
tiover AV. ier dramW evepi ift tat.
f4lo. �The "6ms of, 06 hdwfi,Sbr�
�
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I,Mli�i,`�� "'.,,11�4 T.1'111' ,;,;.,�.�,�,If "���,,�,��,�ll;�,.,�Ill,l),,,�l,,,�,.",..
li" 1"'�,�' ,""I". V.,.'io ,. ,'.',',',f,�� �V'fi� � 0.,'1,0(',�,,�,J�J? �,, `,V� , ",'-�,[,�, ,,,F.,�,���,,,!,�,,,�%,��,,,,�..I � ,
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1. -j1-11 sb�--.
[ J� ( � �
7))
1�
D i A.
� t -1
)
-f
,
Carrie Blanchartfs,00er
wa `7 want you to try POBWM for thirty 48". 1
U 9SM
upo out on your test by giving you
0 supply. I
FOF,t seems to we that It would be a w1se plan for
msothers,jarticulma think of thig test in con,
nection th the ttoof their families,
"Will You send me your name and addressl
Tell ine which Mud you prefer-lustant Postuin
or Postont Cereal (the kfud you boil). IT See that
You get the first week's supply right away."
FREE—MAIL THIS COUPON NOW I
I
Canadian Posturn Cereal Co., Ltd.
45 Front St. East� Toronto, Oat.
I want to make a thirty -day test of Postunt.
Please send me. without cost or obligation,
the first week's supply of -
INSTANT POSTUM 0 ,Check which
� POSTETM CEREAL 0 you prefer
NaMe..-—---
Stz,eet-.---.-
CJ1ty.--Prov--
1 2871
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Instant Posturn, the hot,� fu.lt�bodied '- .1� -/-
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drink which is friendly to all Delfigh- " ":� , r, - � ,,, "� "
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ful and wholesome at any, Urne, it. Is � , ,V,
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your club and on the train. For,those I I . ,
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Take advantake of Carrie Blanchard'i ,,.'I . r 1� 11
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Canadian Posturn ' Cereal Co., Limited ` " ,., I
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Head Office: 45 Front St. East, Toronto I - I ,�
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Factory: Windsor ,Ontaric, � � .1 � 1,
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I - QV* YOU know h" many children do not like the tute of =Mr Tza know ho 'th .
�p like t, have the itain'. drl,k..'� the 1
4"'�. for them to have a Aot drink I VrOwnlow you know, too; how goOd, :'%- ' I
childirm loss Make Instant Postuin for thel wiing hot nA& imtei boiling waterl They%
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Instant P.Il like the taste immediately I Amd they will get the fb 4etnents of, wheat, p1m
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ly ler not at all furnished, but a fine ets of considerable size. Being un- ed, but great quantities of the fingst
old grand piano in the drawing room wrapped money was found to be the underw—, bedding and napery were
evidently had been in constant use, core of every one of them. The discovered neatly folded and laid
although the neighbors, during a doz- treasury notes found ranged through away in trunks and bags, where evi-
en years, bad not heard loud playing all the denominations from the ten- dently it had been for years un -
on it. Soft playing might have been shillings of war time to the 100 touched.
carried on without their knowledge. pounds denomination which seem so Although the officers at once re -
Miss Agnes Ramsay Clarke,,the re- unpretentious to, the American, but moved to the police station all the
cluse, was seen lying on the ground which, in spite of this, are worth money which the first search re-
in her garden recently by a neighbor close to $500 each. vealed, they left men to guard the
who went to her and helped her into One meat dish contained little residence night and day, until a
her house. The good Samaritan was packages which, being unwrapped minute search ran be made if the
not invited to stay, and had not ex- revealed silver coins to the amount sick woman at the hospital does not
pected to be. Miss Clarke had not of almost $500. A search of other recover consciousness, which the medi-
extended hospitality to any living dishes gave up hundreds of golden cal men predict will be the case.
creature except cats for many years. sovereigns and half sovereigns. Some There is mystery, now that investi-
Later, when no further sight or sound of these were wrapped in 100 -pound gations have been set on foot, as to
of her was noted, came the notification bank notes. A fat package of bank the source of all this wealth. None
of the police, which led them to enter notes exclusively of the 100 -pound de- of her townspeople dreamed that the
the residence where they found its nomination was wrapped in an old woman was now rich, although years
owner very ill, virtually speechless, in handkerchief. This torn bit of cloth ago she and her mot -her had been well -
a bed. She had no compartions, in the ble little fortune to-do. In fact, she had been regarded
closely curtained and absolutely un- worth probably as much as the house as the poverty-stricken last leaf upon
lighted structure, save the numerous in which it was discovered. a family tree long since begun to fall
e uncannily as Very quickly the searching police into decay.
they retreated backward from the dL,,overed that they must regard Miss Clarke, well past middle age,
flashlights carried by the officers. nothing as rubbish unworthy of care- never has been known as a miser, for,
The condition of Miss Clarke was NI investigation. An old bag, much 'while she had received no friends re -
declared to be serious by a medical worn and broken, being opened dis- cently, fifteen or more years ago she
man, who at once was called and gorged hundreds of sovereigns ' and nerously to local
against the sick woman's feeble half sovereigns, with some silver charities, her donations invariably be -
gestured protests, and she was re- money. In this bag, too, old fashion- ing in cash. Before the beginning of
moved to a hospital where she quickly ed jewelry, not appraised, but evi- the Great War she had seemed com-
lapsed into complete unconscittusness, dently of value, was found. fortably, hut not lavishly, supplied
the police establishing a guard over The police estimate that the gold with money, but had been somewhat
the residence and, the following morn- and silver piate fount] in the almost of a recluse; after it began she be-
ing, examining it. wholly unfurnished house will be ap- came an absolute hermit, a fact which
This examination soon became a praised. when experts see it, as be- neighbors att.Hbuted to the circum -
minute search by mien utterly amazed ing worth at least 100,000 pounds. stance that she was the daughter of
even awe stricken, for almost at once But of anything but money, a German woman whom her father,
money in considerable sums was dis- and ancient finery, the residencieweins-' an English army officer, met in Ber-
covered. This consisted of gold and tains virtually,nothing except the old, lin long ago, when he was stationed
silver coins, almost every one w'P- old letters, the piano I have mention- there in connection with the British
ped in a bank note, hidden in the ed, a bed and a few chairs. The embarsy.
china in the kitchen cupboard. Here piano is an especially fine and valu- Tbi.s German blood evidently made
were several hundred pounds in Eng- able instrument and in perfect condi- 'her feel, during the great war, a sort
lisb money. . tion and tune. of pariah among her English acquaint -
That at once justified the authon- Only enough linen to serve her ances (she had long since ceased to
ties in a minute sear& of the whole own meager needs was found unpack- have close friends) and after hostili-
premises, because, having taken them ties reached the stage of internation-
over, they were responsible for such a] hatreds she rarely spoke to anyone
valuables as might be in them. This and her donations to charity ceased.
search, not yet completed, at once It was believed that her modest for -
revealed more money, lots of it, hid- tune had been wiped out by war
den in the most unusual places. changes.
For example, thousands of pounds ;1 I . I I I � Mi." Clarke is a woman of great
in packages containing gold and silver culture and is known to have travelled
coins, each wrapped up in a bank I very extensively in her earlier years.
note, were discovered hanging by the � . I .1 . ��� ". I I The cats, of which there were sevell
strings which bound them to almost discovered in the house, were Almost
every closet hook in the whole house. I famished, but seemed M wish to guard
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Drawers wer,6 found to have bank . their mistress against disturbance �63r
notes underneath the pape-La with I strangers. They contested every sfa'p
which they were lined. In other lit- - the police r6ade tovvara Net room aiw
tle bags gold a -ad silver coins were When fin'alO ftreed' t4 give w*
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stored awak. Now and then the mon-- snafled aft tkey, beat a 916* and i�; l��
Iftin `� .
oton�v of actual money Wag varied by i0oftlit r0r�af Up the &ttirt ,
d* digeovery of savino certifitates, I th6 attic. h it not U, 0,WA 1 I -
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'R is b4i�ed O;xi,,�tli'l�r��tk"--",,.Priricip�p, that
.
the wor'kini. people flie.relves'are in,
.,,,
directly re.sponsiblo Td*,"the high cost
of -home building. in, A rance, and he
. . .r
has merely found tho'!way to redi4ce
,
e � normously the'exp4i , fag of skilled� la�
bor in cottage buil(ri�o,,,
He has- dravirn 144'," lans for five
I houses to be
different types W
entirely tonstructed, of. concrete. He
has built one of each, . .qf these types
of dwellings in wood. 4`-'�-'
This wooden house j.� in turn lined
,
with wood throughout,., thus forming
a huge mold'for the poncrqte to be
�
, poured into. When tlx�� matrix house
is raised with the aid .0 a crane the
.
.
walls of a finishedr 44'ottage remain
standin . I
19 I I I I
Such a house can. he, occupied with-
in four weeks after building is com-
menced. Knapp's pla,��, provide for
two rooms, each of w�ich is ten feet
,
wide and twelve feet long, and a kit-
chen, hall and cellar., The cost is
6,000 francs (about $0.60), of which
the owner of the'house-,has to pay but
1,200 francs in cash, the remainder
being advanced for him -'.by the French
. ,
government, which leiAs him this
money for one to thirty years at .A
low rate of interest, under what is
,
known as the "Loi Rfbpt" (the Ribot
law).
Eight days is ,the actual time re-
quired to build these houses, the pric-
es of which include the services of
twenty workmen required to set up
the wooden mold and the use of the
mold itself. Three weeks is required
to purge the new building of damp-
'ness. .
Twenty such houses have been
successfully erected at Troyes. Each,
it is said, would cost no less than
25,000 francs if built according to the
n ed in France in
constructing concrete buildings.
.
0
PENCIL FAMINE SOON; CEDAR
WOODS DWINDLE
�
How many times a day, do you hear
"Who's got a pencil?" On this con-
tinent they are made at the rate of a
billion a year, yet they seem to be
absent when most , needed. With
schools open again t1here.,)vill be a new
demand. - ., .,�� _.,� 7- -
The user of a pencil gives little
thought to its origin and the amount
of wood used in the manufacture, yet
pencils form. quite a drain on forest
resources. You do not h -ave to go to
.
a lurnber yard to buy wood. You buy
it in furniture stores, book stores and
stationem
Pencils, according to Arthur New-
ton Puck, in 'Vanishing Forests," re-
quire such an amount of wood that
eastern red cedar and juniper have
become scarce and a hunt is on for
other suitable species.
Pencil manufacture is a fastidious
operation, using only the finest heart
wood of the evergreen cedar. It seems
a curious.waste. The writing quali-
ties of a pencil are in no way improv-
ed by the character of the'wood, yet
the trade demands not only good col-
or and soft texture, but even the
presence of a delicate cedar odor. -
. To make a wooden pencil the manu-
facture -r first cuts out a board or slat
about 7 inches long, the width of half
a dozen pencils. and as thick as one-
half a pencil diameter. With a spe-
cial machine he then shapes it into six
semi -rounded or semi -hexagonal see -
tions -and groores one side ready for
4.11
the "lead." The "lead" is inserted,
the halves glued together, and the
pencil finished at some more conveni-
ent period.
--*I-
The phrase about hitting below the
belt is surely a litile out of date. For
those who go about as I do, with
,their e�yes open, have come to the con-
clusion that belts are worn very much
lower than they used to be. And I
doubt if there be any vulnerable part
left below the belt. -Mr. Baldwin.
$500,000 DISCOVERED IN HOUSE
OF WOMAN THOUGHT TO BE
POOR
Recently, at Gravesend, England,
two policemen with deft fingers, cbos-
en for the task because they had bad
experience in banks, devoted several
hours to the mere task of counting
the money found hidden, lying loose-
ly about or hung in bags on closet
hooks, in the house of an old woman,
long believed by her neighbors, in
spite of bygone days of generosity
apparently beyond her means, to have
become almost if not actually an ab-
ject pauper through losses by bad in-
vestments. .
I The total sum thus discovered has
not 'been announced, -but it is Semi-
officially said to exceed one hundred
thousand pounds, which would be close
upon $600,00 cash. Besides this
4ctual,eash, bank boo)m indicated the
existence of large sums on deposit.
Bestides these treasures in the house
wheli" the old wol has be�an re -
ng been found helpless
in Ji6d by So pollee, there ve" b#V
and' tr6rOw fell of fiA 416% , i of br,
*gne '6 VII aith,vw, , her 'MiRblid"
tiover AV. ier dramW evepi ift tat.
f4lo. �The "6ms of, 06 hdwfi,Sbr�
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Carrie Blanchartfs,00er
wa `7 want you to try POBWM for thirty 48". 1
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upo out on your test by giving you
0 supply. I
FOF,t seems to we that It would be a w1se plan for
msothers,jarticulma think of thig test in con,
nection th the ttoof their families,
"Will You send me your name and addressl
Tell ine which Mud you prefer-lustant Postuin
or Postont Cereal (the kfud you boil). IT See that
You get the first week's supply right away."
FREE—MAIL THIS COUPON NOW I
I
Canadian Posturn Cereal Co., Ltd.
45 Front St. East� Toronto, Oat.
I want to make a thirty -day test of Postunt.
Please send me. without cost or obligation,
the first week's supply of -
INSTANT POSTUM 0 ,Check which
� POSTETM CEREAL 0 you prefer
NaMe..-—---
Stz,eet-.---.-
CJ1ty.--Prov--
1 2871
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Instant Posturn, the hot,� fu.lt�bodied '- .1� -/-
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drink which is friendly to all Delfigh- " ":� , r, - � ,,, "� "
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ful and wholesome at any, Urne, it. Is � , ,V,
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your club and on the train. For,those I I . ,
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made by boiling for twenty'rainutes;1 . � � � .,��
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Take advantake of Carrie Blanchard'i ,,.'I . r 1� 11
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offer. Send the coupon. � ,,� . 1.
4 I �.
Canadian Posturn ' Cereal Co., Limited ` " ,., I
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Head Office: 45 Front St. East, Toronto I - I ,�
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Factory: Windsor ,Ontaric, � � .1 � 1,
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I - QV* YOU know h" many children do not like the tute of =Mr Tza know ho 'th .
�p like t, have the itain'. drl,k..'� the 1
4"'�. for them to have a Aot drink I VrOwnlow you know, too; how goOd, :'%- ' I
childirm loss Make Instant Postuin for thel wiing hot nA& imtei boiling waterl They%
4
Instant P.Il like the taste immediately I Amd they will get the fb 4etnents of, wheat, p1m
0040 wit',' at"I the nourishment of milk. In a h.t drink that is e.=otUJW ani so easy to =Mae f
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ly ler not at all furnished, but a fine ets of considerable size. Being un- ed, but great quantities of the fingst
old grand piano in the drawing room wrapped money was found to be the underw—, bedding and napery were
evidently had been in constant use, core of every one of them. The discovered neatly folded and laid
although the neighbors, during a doz- treasury notes found ranged through away in trunks and bags, where evi-
en years, bad not heard loud playing all the denominations from the ten- dently it had been for years un -
on it. Soft playing might have been shillings of war time to the 100 touched.
carried on without their knowledge. pounds denomination which seem so Although the officers at once re -
Miss Agnes Ramsay Clarke,,the re- unpretentious to, the American, but moved to the police station all the
cluse, was seen lying on the ground which, in spite of this, are worth money which the first search re-
in her garden recently by a neighbor close to $500 each. vealed, they left men to guard the
who went to her and helped her into One meat dish contained little residence night and day, until a
her house. The good Samaritan was packages which, being unwrapped minute search ran be made if the
not invited to stay, and had not ex- revealed silver coins to the amount sick woman at the hospital does not
pected to be. Miss Clarke had not of almost $500. A search of other recover consciousness, which the medi-
extended hospitality to any living dishes gave up hundreds of golden cal men predict will be the case.
creature except cats for many years. sovereigns and half sovereigns. Some There is mystery, now that investi-
Later, when no further sight or sound of these were wrapped in 100 -pound gations have been set on foot, as to
of her was noted, came the notification bank notes. A fat package of bank the source of all this wealth. None
of the police, which led them to enter notes exclusively of the 100 -pound de- of her townspeople dreamed that the
the residence where they found its nomination was wrapped in an old woman was now rich, although years
owner very ill, virtually speechless, in handkerchief. This torn bit of cloth ago she and her mot -her had been well -
a bed. She had no compartions, in the ble little fortune to-do. In fact, she had been regarded
closely curtained and absolutely un- worth probably as much as the house as the poverty-stricken last leaf upon
lighted structure, save the numerous in which it was discovered. a family tree long since begun to fall
e uncannily as Very quickly the searching police into decay.
they retreated backward from the dL,,overed that they must regard Miss Clarke, well past middle age,
flashlights carried by the officers. nothing as rubbish unworthy of care- never has been known as a miser, for,
The condition of Miss Clarke was NI investigation. An old bag, much 'while she had received no friends re -
declared to be serious by a medical worn and broken, being opened dis- cently, fifteen or more years ago she
man, who at once was called and gorged hundreds of sovereigns ' and nerously to local
against the sick woman's feeble half sovereigns, with some silver charities, her donations invariably be -
gestured protests, and she was re- money. In this bag, too, old fashion- ing in cash. Before the beginning of
moved to a hospital where she quickly ed jewelry, not appraised, but evi- the Great War she had seemed com-
lapsed into complete unconscittusness, dently of value, was found. fortably, hut not lavishly, supplied
the police establishing a guard over The police estimate that the gold with money, but had been somewhat
the residence and, the following morn- and silver piate fount] in the almost of a recluse; after it began she be-
ing, examining it. wholly unfurnished house will be ap- came an absolute hermit, a fact which
This examination soon became a praised. when experts see it, as be- neighbors att.Hbuted to the circum -
minute search by mien utterly amazed ing worth at least 100,000 pounds. stance that she was the daughter of
even awe stricken, for almost at once But of anything but money, a German woman whom her father,
money in considerable sums was dis- and ancient finery, the residencieweins-' an English army officer, met in Ber-
covered. This consisted of gold and tains virtually,nothing except the old, lin long ago, when he was stationed
silver coins, almost every one w'P- old letters, the piano I have mention- there in connection with the British
ped in a bank note, hidden in the ed, a bed and a few chairs. The embarsy.
china in the kitchen cupboard. Here piano is an especially fine and valu- Tbi.s German blood evidently made
were several hundred pounds in Eng- able instrument and in perfect condi- 'her feel, during the great war, a sort
lisb money. . tion and tune. of pariah among her English acquaint -
That at once justified the authon- Only enough linen to serve her ances (she had long since ceased to
ties in a minute sear& of the whole own meager needs was found unpack- have close friends) and after hostili-
premises, because, having taken them ties reached the stage of internation-
over, they were responsible for such a] hatreds she rarely spoke to anyone
valuables as might be in them. This and her donations to charity ceased.
search, not yet completed, at once It was believed that her modest for -
revealed more money, lots of it, hid- tune had been wiped out by war
den in the most unusual places. changes.
For example, thousands of pounds ;1 I . I I I � Mi." Clarke is a woman of great
in packages containing gold and silver culture and is known to have travelled
coins, each wrapped up in a bank I very extensively in her earlier years.
note, were discovered hanging by the � . I .1 . ��� ". I I The cats, of which there were sevell
strings which bound them to almost discovered in the house, were Almost
every closet hook in the whole house. I famished, but seemed M wish to guard
� I , .
Drawers wer,6 found to have bank . their mistress against disturbance �63r
notes underneath the pape-La with I strangers. They contested every sfa'p
which they were lined. In other lit- - the police r6ade tovvara Net room aiw
tle bags gold a -ad silver coins were When fin'alO ftreed' t4 give w*
. 0
stored awak. Now and then the mon-- snafled aft tkey, beat a 916* and i�; l��
Iftin `� .
oton�v of actual money Wag varied by i0oftlit r0r�af Up the &ttirt ,
d* digeovery of savino certifitates, I th6 attic. h it not U, 0,WA 1 I -
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a cies of Xavternv�mt securities e , oxt"OMW4 'fi, my ''
MIX Nke �the American Libelfty - . rem9p 79=101 Ui#MW .�, 6. ".
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