HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1925-11-27, Page 3Tour valuables and
papers should be•
protected against
fire and theft. A
Safety Deposit Bas
in our local branch
provides security
and convenience. • •
Fnrotoz, iiIrorlas� farad .gam
snomey, ho snakes.. It n�
important that hZs savings skivuld
be thoroughly safeguarded.
Steady grave! k and progress
since 1871, together with con-
servative and experienced man-
agement, enable The Dominion
Bank to offer unexcelled security
fforthe custody of. savings,.
Depositors in our local branch are
afforded every banking facility which
our whole organization provides.
SEAFORTH BRANCH. - R. M. JONES, Manager.
Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent.
C °ILDREN LIKE To this may be added that cancer,
BABY'S OWN TA : LETS in its early stages, is not painful. It
ia
ecause They Are Tasteless and. rnassly which
r it has developed into a
pushes and eats
Are Easy to Take. e
° other structures that it becomes
One of the strongest painful. Cancer of such organs as
'or of any medicine for ohildrenf is containthe liver
tandk idoney nery nerves ansfor which
that it is so agreeable that the mother ma pain,
does not have to force it down the ing any pyp to large size without caus-
ittie one`s throat. ain.
Baby's Own Tablets have no drugCancer is not catching in any pro -
y the s -
taste, may be crushed to a powder if pe
r ¢continues; nse. The s"The incitnt ing cause
desired, and babies like them. They of cancer is some form of chronic :r• -
are perfectly safe for they contain ritation in practically all instances.
aro opiate or narcotic.' They sweeten At the site of the growth, for a con -
the stomach and remove the cause of 1 siderable `ime, there has been a
retfulnss. mechanical, chemical, • bacterial, cr
Mrs. Arthur Charlebois, Pawtucket, , other irritating condition which has,
R.I., says; "I have found Baby's Own lin some way, so disturbed the natur-
'Tablets to be a gentle laxative and a • al resisting and repairing function
safe remedy for stomach disorders : of the tissues that they have at last
in children. Our little boy had been given way and set out upon a career
given harsh cathartics but these tab- of unrestrained growth.
lets worked more effectively without "To prevent cancer, therefore, is
the severe griping. I can recom- to prevent the chronic irritation
mend them to all mothers of little which leads to it. One should be -
children." ware of the broken tooth, or dental
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by plate, which continually irritates the
medicine dealers or by mail at 25 tongue, cheek or gums; or the spec -
cents a box from The Dr. Williams tacles, which make the head sore
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. behind the ears, on the temple or
nose; of any sore which will not heal;
of the mole or wart that changes in
color, size, or appearance; of indiges-
tion which will not stop and cannot
be explained; of any unusual dis-
charge from any part of the body;
and of. any lump which does not go
away."
FATTENING TURKEYS FOR THE
CHRISTMAS 'MARKET
Don't confine your turkeys closely
an the fattening period. When the
time arrives for the process, which
should be four weeks before they
are required for table use, start
feeding gradually with mashes and
whole grain. Feed the mashes in
the morning and at mid-day and the By Driving the Poisonous Acid
whole grain in the evenings. The
reason for feeding the latter late in
the day is that if mash formed the Rheumatism attacks people when
evening meal the birds would be- the blood is thin and watery or
come very hungry before morning. charged up with impurities, thus set -
In giving this counsel Mr. A. G. Tay- ting up inflammation of the muscles
3or, poultry husbandman at the Ex- and joints. Cold, wet weather or
perimental Farm. Ottawa, says that sharp winds may start the pains, but
the mash should be made of equal the cause is rooted in the blood, and
parts of ground oats, barley meal, to get relief it must be treated
'cornmeal and wheat bran. Ground through the blood. As a blood build -
buckwheat can be used instead of the er and nerve tonic Dr. Williams' Pink
ground barley if desired. Pills are unsurpassed, and for that
The ground grains should be reason do not fail to give relief to
-nixed thoroughly before moistening rheumatic sufferers when given a
and the mash fed in a moist condi- fair trial. Among the rheumatic
tion, but only enough water or skim sufferers who have proved the great
milk being used to make ,the meal value of this medicine is Mr. N. M.
stick together and not become sticky Foley, Windsor, N. S., who says:—
or sloppy. Moisten the mash about "My trouble started with a bad cold,
two hours before' feeding. Whole corn the result of working in a heavy rain
is about the best grain for fattening I storm. From that it developed -into
abut only sufficient should be given rheumatism which badly crippled me
and kept me confined to bed for up-
wards of six months. The doctor
who treated me did not help me, and
every friend who called to see me had
something different to advise. Some
of these remedies I tried, but with
no better results. My legs were stiff
from the hips down, and every move
I made caused intense pain, and con-
stantly I was growing weaker. Then
a friend from Falmouth, who came
to see me, asked if I had tried Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. I had taken so
much medicine without benefit that I
was skepical and said so. My friend
however, had so much faith in the
pills that he got me a supply and to
please him I began taking them. I
had not been taking them long when
I began to feel a change for the bet-
ter, and I gladly got a further sup-
ply. Soon I was able to get out of
bed and walk around on crutches.
Still taking the pills I used in all sev-
enteen boxes, by which time I was a
well man and at work every day.
Now I always keep a box of Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills in the house and if
I feet an ache or pain I take them,
and always with good results. I be-
lieve I would still be a bed -ridden
cripple but for these pills, and I shall
always praise and recommend them."
You can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
RHEUMATIC PEOPLE
NOW FIND RELIEF
From the System.
that the birds will clean up nicely be-
fore going to roost. and if the wea-
ther is not cold extra care should be
taken. Provide fresh water and grit
in abundance concludes Mr. Taylor in
his remarks on the subject.
CANCERS LAN BE PREVENTED
AND MANY ARE EASILY
CURED
Dr. Charles J. Childe says that the
universal use of the knowledge we
now have about cancer would reduce
the present toll by one-half among
women and one-third among men. To
get rid of the other half, or two-
thirds, according to the sex concern-
ed, we must have more facts. We
must know more about what cancer
is, what causes it, and what cures it.
But if the laboratories never found
any cures or bacterial causes, or any-
thing else, we would get rid of al-
most half the cancer if the people
would only wake up.'
For instance cancer of the skin can
he diagnosed and cured in practically
'every instance. Yet a good many
thousand people die from skin can-
cer every year. I am sure the aver-
age man thinks of skin cancer as in-
curable. If he hears of some case of
skin cancer that has died, he feels
that nothing could have been done,
and when, on the other hand, he hears
of skin cancer that has been cured,
he marvels at the unexpected blesa-
ing.
Cancer of the skin should not
cause anxiety or fear.; : Still less
should it cause a person to refuse to
investigate, to deny diagnosis, and to
say, "0, it's nothing but a touch of
salt rheum." Being right in sight, it
is easily diagnosed. Being superfi-
cial, it. is easily and successfully
treated.
"The American Society for the
Control of Cancer," says: "All can-
cers always start in a small way."
At first they ,are miniature cancers.
They grow slowly and insidiously..
Not only is a cancer small to begin
with, but it appears to .be a distinct-
ly local disorder. It is not a consti-
tutional or a blood disease. In its
early stages the cancer does not af-
fect the general health."
0
MEMPHIS MURDER IS A CURI-
OUS TRIANGLE
Another of those problems in social
geometry, the well known triangle has
been solved by the death of one, a
charge of murder against a second
and detention of the third as a ma-
terial witness in Memphis, Tenn. This
U' IN
n y®Utt
EYES
Valolosgme eleaning RofresMfl ft
Iallsll.
est 01
gig '3s oolge ¢mer,
reason this caro, as '+'?Ir:oi'tad is lite
vns$eaaap Done. woo* fete
There was the Mariried- iso hash
;after another woman, an the prour.
uer•lected wife 'at ,home. ' There was.
the shooting of this odd w rn au '!n thta
ease by somebody presumed tobe the
Wronged wife, There wase :no• wit-
nesses, so far as tire. State will be
able to prove„ though the- husband, by
his o(Nn admisaiatn, was on the spot a
fell' 1, .natal after the fatal shot had
been fires
The foundation for the fa(ta1 ro-
Mance was laid last year when Mrs.
Mary Lee Scott was divorced from
her husband, Fletcher Scott, and
given $5,00() a year alimony. She
took a smart apartment and sum-
moned to her aid Dr. James Felton
Farmer, agel thirty, who had quite
a reputation as a "welder of broken
romances." Dr. Farmer found the
young woman a charmirzrg ° compan-
ion, and she responded cordially to
the treatment which had for its
object the forgetting of her former
husband who was at the time on a
honeymoon with his third wife. Dr.
Farmer and Mrs. Scott began to be
seen frequently in each other's com-
pany. They took motor drives to-
gether. They visited the night
clubs. They were together on what
are called "wild parties." Naturally
gossip busied itself with them. Even-
tually news of what was taking place
reached the ears of Mrs. Farmer, a
rather proud and haughty woman
some years older than her fascinating
husband. Last New Year's, the doc-
tor said he made a full confession to
his wife. He told her that he loved
Mrs. Scott and that he did not love
his wife. What she said or what
change took place in their relations
after this has not been disclosed.
The doctor, at any rate, did not
mend his ways. He continued to be
with Mrs. Scott as much as possible.
He declares that he did not on that
account neglect his wife. Their
house is in her name. She has a
limousine, a cook, a negro maid, and
several thousand dollars worth of
diamonds which may be regarded
either as testimony of his former re-
gard for her or as the price he paid
to appease his conscience. Two weeks
ago 1%rrs. Scott and Dr. Farmer re-
turned to Memphis from a motoring
trip through the State. Half an
hour before they reached Memphis in
the early afternoon Mrs. Scott tele-
phoned
for maid telling her when she
would arrive and asking her to get
some provisions in. Thus it happen-
ed that when Farmer drove Mrs.
Scott to her apartment it was empty,
the maid being out as instructed. Mrs.
Scott stepped out of the car and ran
up a flight of stairs leading to her
suite. The doctor manouevred his
car to a driveway in the rear of the
home and took some ten minutes, he
says, to remove some luggage belong-
ing to Mrs. Scott. He then entered
the room carrying 14Irs. Scott's fur
coat and her week end bag.
He found her lying face downward
with a pool of blood spreading over
the carpet from beneath her body.
Mrs. Scott was dead, with a bullet
in the region of her heart. It had
been fired from behind. Farmer
swears that he heard no shots. The
floor above was deserted that day.
Nobody has been found who heard
shots but the police found three other
bullets embedded in the furniture.
The doctor rushed out of the apart-
ment and drove at high speed to his
home. There he found the maid and
his little four-year-old son. He was
told that his wife had gone down
town. He re-entered his car and
speeded to the office of a friend to
whom he gasped out his story: The
friend called up police headquarters
and handed the receiver to Dr. Farm-
er.
"Is my wife clown there?" he de-
manded.
"What do you mean—is your wife
down here?" was the reply.
Then Farmer told the police to ,.
hurry to Mrs. Scott's apartment as
she had been shot. An hour later
he went to the apartment again and
was placed under arrest. Detectives
had visited his home but Mrs. Far-
mer was absent. "She's gone," said
the little boy. "She took the big
pistol under her coat and hasn't
come back yet."
At headquarters, Dr. Farmer con-
fessed
his relations with Mrs. Scott.
"I have been a Lothario, a rounder
and went the pace—and now the
price must be paid," he said. He
denied that he had seen his wife
at the Scott apartment. He said
he could not imagine how his wife
could know they were returning when
they did. They were expected only
by the maid to whom Mrs. Scott had
telephoned. Later in the afternoon,
Mrs. Farmer, accompanied by a law-
yer went to police headquarters and
the woman was arrested. She would
make no statement and her lawyer in-
sisted that she he not questioned. Dr.
Farmer was detained as a material
witness /and his first request was to
telephone for a lawyer to defend his
wife. He was told that she already
had a lawyer, he expressed his grat-
ification and says that he will epend
his last dollar in her defence if it is
necessary. He continues to visit her
assiduously, for he is out on bail, hut
it is said that the visits are not at ..
the request of his wife. The police
have found the revolver that Mrs.
Farmer took from her bungalow that
fateful afternoon and are convinced
bhat the bullet that slew Mrs. Scott
was fired from it. But in the ab-
sence of any eye witnesses they are
ready to admit defeat. Their theory
is that Mrs. Farmer was hiding in the
apartment when Mrs. Scott entered
and that the husband was a witness
to what happened. But if he refuses
to speak—.
Five long years will be spent in
the Parkhead Reformatory by a Gov-
an boy for stealing one yard of elec-
tric wire and eight yards of rope from
a farmer.
Always The r t Christmas Store
eady ` a ith a r` n w t�ck
Of Christmas
Gifts
con amica1, Practical Unusual
ensib
EA
EA
hop
LY
In the Day
LY
I the Week
EARLY
In the Mi filth
op
I b This Stor
If yo i can
ut
1
Sha! €Ix
In Seaforth
a,
s" ; yway
Our recent Big Stock Reducing Sale has so effectually reduced our stock that we are in the
happy posits -on of being able to buy a bright new stock for Christmas selling. Everything
will be fresh, bristling with newness and delightfully different.
The buying power of this store gives us a selling advantage that should be of extreme inter-
est to you. Your Christmas money will go farther here. You can remember more friends pn
the same amount of money and buy better presents, too. The whole store has been rearranged
for special display and easy, prompt service, and is brimfull of happy suggestions that will
make handsome remembrances and not cost too much either.
MEN'S TIES
The very newest in color and
pattern, in Silk, Crepes or Knit -
,ed Ties. Fore -in Hands, Bows
or Hook -ons.
25c to $1.25
MEN'S GLOVES
In Mocha, Suede, Cape, Kid
or Wool, in Brown, Tan or
Grey; Fownes, Perrins, Acme,
Storeys; all the very best
makes. Sizes 7 to 10x/2.
Prices up to $2050
MEN'S MUFFLERS
Fancy knitted or cashmere
Mufflers in plain colors or the
new checks. There are a num-
ber of real new mufflers this
season. We have them.
/Traces 50i: to um
MEN'S HOSE
Everything that is new in
Hosiery—Lisle, Wool, Silk and
Wool or all silk; in fancy pat-
terns and new colorings and
weaves.
Price 50c to $1,50
MEN'S
HANOKE i' CHIEFS
A gift always sure to please;
in Silk, Linen or Lawn, plain or
fancy. In a very attractive as-
sortment.
Price 10c to $1A0
MEN'S SHI'" TS
English Broadcloths in all the
lew shades. These are excel-
lent qualities and full eras®
sizes. Prices
Other Shirts $1 � f to $
best makes. n c
LOUNGING ROBES
The gift of gifts in numer-
fancy de -
could be
nus colorings and
signs. No present
more acceptable.
WOMEN'S GLOVES
Fancy- Cuff
Chanuosette
Fancy Cuff
Silk
Fancy Cuff
Kid
Lined
Gloves
$1]a00 to $1o25
$11.50 to $2.75
$3.55 to $3675'.:
$11.50 to $2.75
SILK SCARFS
Kn itted
Sca rf-
Fancy
Crepe
SLOG to $4.50
$3.00 to $4050
SEE THE NEW COLORS
PARCELS FO i' MAILING
All parcels for mailing to friends at a distance
will be boxed and tied already for mailing, free of
charge. Presents selected now will be put aside un-
til Christmas if you so desire.
RACES GARTERS
ARM is:ANDS
In fancy boxes, excellent gifts
for dad or the lad. A big range
to choose from.
Prices 25c to 75c
SWEATER COATS
k,
Nothing more useful or
iressy than a good Sweater
Coat for pian or boy. Come
in and look them over.
Price $t95 to $6.56
•
WOMEN'S
HANDKERCHIEFS
Silk
Crepe
Boxed
Handkercleiefs
Fancy Colored
Handkerchiefs.
to 50c
25c to $1.50
5c to 25c
Infante' Depart lent
Et'ERYTRING FOR BABY
Rattles 50c
Wool Bootees 50c to 85c
Silk Bootees 75c
Silk Rug $3.50
$1.00
Coat. Hangers 35c to 75c
Comb and Brush Set 85e
An Endless Line of Novelties
Dresses
tf:
S9i
RI :;EON CRAFT
NOVELTIES
Fancy rosettes, Coat Hangers,
Satchel Bags, Fancy Garters,
Powder Puff Bag, Flowers.
HOSIERY
Silk Hose—every wanted col-
or, style and QQ�� 5 to $Qp 25
quality aD ` �(LLo
Italian Glove Tee �g to rp 75
Silk Hose.. r o
Silk and Wool ui to �®
(new colors 1 .. dDD o
Cashmere, hest English and
Cana.nakedian 75c to ao2o00
TABLE LINENS
Beautiful imported Setts,
Moth and napkins to match—
sett $15.00 to $35.00
Table ('laths, all sizes, new
patterns $3.75 to $15.04
Napkins, dozen $5.00 to $10.04
Lunch Setts $6.00 to $7.50
Bridge Setts ....$.L00 to $8.75
TOTOWELS
paiiren Towelse$�of�® to a7o5®
oh
BtITowels 50c to $5e
(boxed), e
set ` ° 100
to
Bath Mats $1 050 to enl"'tra®®
BE DSP EARS AND
ii
LANKETS
Plain and Fancy $3 to
Bedspreads aDa�!
Blankets (Fancyto
Bed Covers), each
Wool
�y
Wool Blankets, all weights and
sizes._ ..SPECIAL VALUES