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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1926-01-29, Page 3st, cor.;',••",••ro,°';'''Ir'•.. • • ••••.• "I: • •'• 'r • ' • •;;;''" 111 „ • •„cF.•,1,,,,i 22444;4 „,„ 3 • `,1,1 , • . • 5/3 44 '• 410., 0, 33 ti 1133 3112 I d f ' ," 0 o; , , • 01 i• I• ' . 6 3 3 : • • I ' ' !4:: • ‘., '...fi . . 13 3. s 4.; p ,101.4 '31 elessonesses.'S • . 11 A ',#•• , lie •••116 S41: .4 s 133 s!" o 44,3, . • . .• 3' 16 ;14 • „ j: '', It'. •* 1)' :';'• . , 11 4 4 . ' ", , 0 ,•:. ,••1S ' ij1"01;iiv•drci AO ...s.,%. IN" ''''' . • -' ..,r kr; f91.;oliq ''J,u 0 4tpk1 o '401••;" ' -'ada• ,,.. • e'r.s.h4d cikaeWsi*'4 110*::'".' '13; .. ' "Wes' - OkiltY,04(1/1.glit4f•440:" tWinig,4g.0 i*Utv..404A1111(131ir.slOrn4 'Meal .or .-..4lex setMnp,tinvte AP;etleia :•,tlie: diglitY: < ,c'rof 4teitiOn;:frein.4the•,/alk110.- „brain . f 311 6 0 • 2,2 • , 6 • ..ANAEMIA SHOWS IN VARYING SYMPTOMS - and • /tales 'DiSitPfsear'I^Iyiften; the Blond •46,1,101t -Vi. - • IVIr-,-:.- u-ie Idoid IiRthin'efe6, argar of the -body suffers. So aneemiaalitiftS'i inyifldjestion, ntrensitees and3,..head- ee as :Nell' as in loss of 'color and . strength, „ Vlany -symptoms ,develop wilicV:to. the patient stwgesto widely .different diseases and so cause qnuch neediess apprehension. The qinck- :sness 'with whiCh a supPly of rich red blood will drive away all these pains 'SW aches-. is shoivn by the result of ;treatment with such a reliable blood - building tonic as Dr. Williams' Pink Fills. , The value of this medicine is, fully proved by the experience of &iss, Alice Sandberg, Ogema, Sask., who pays:—"I ,can speak with the lhighest praise of Dr. Williams* Pink Piliss far to this medicine 1 -'ewe my -present good health. Last winter I P became run-dsywn,'was pale and sick- .ly looking. My back ached..and I hed fi severe pains in the- stomach. At h 4imes my head ached and I would feel rnizy. I tried various medicines but they did not help me. A friend ad- vised me to try Dr. ,Williams' Pink Pills, and I can scarcely say how glad am that I acted on this advice. I bad not been taking the pills very. long when I felt a .change for the. better. Dalby day, I became strong- er. The headaches( backaches, stom- s etch troubles and dizziness disappear- ed and I wag -again enjoying good health. You may be sure I shall ever bave a good word to say for Dr: Wil- liams' 'Pink Pills. If you need a blood -building tonic begin taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to -day. Sold by all medicine dealers sor sent by mail at 50 cents a box by -writing The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. iie 13 I • -as Pl?1,00tita0; two 0,o Towno 2,13 os4 tot rre tU2 401.: isfi with thedisenvery' rind',,rearandera• held 1113 'the 'Oe - n ntsr'sok. Urges binge at':Ha-el r.00k;' R#hfah0n!ao On hearing' a knock ovVi'openOthe deorss nd tbree arnzd a4 masked menrns ed in. They oi*i ditim int) asro0n1,A10; searched the houote. ' Some jewellery and moneY were 'tik044.3,, subsequently tre90#04,,,,RP.:4 had nUgeged Grens antieintdaft*thatilleV:04046 J4r11,2FVotiohletitliw the,, house the Ire'erMen, Wh0<wore masks, stopped t elver arid told tbe ;driversto go into the owner's yard. The three men entered ,the house,: and the other two remained with the driver. when the men returned -they all entered the car and drove to'Dublin. A playful kitten started an outbreak of fire in a dwelling -house near Muck - Halt, North West Donegal, and the building was burned to the ground. _The kitten caught its -tail in the handba of a lighted oil lamp which was on a •table in tbe ,kitchen, and, dragging the lamp behind it, ran through a past of the houie in which-sa quantity Of straw was lying. The, flames of the Egrnited....stravoi solef'spriad and it a sticint time the house was -in flames and an. Aged woman; the only occu- ant, only succeeded in making her escape with. a few belongings. The awes obtained such a 'grip on the ousethat the tennant was compelled to stand by and helplessly watch^ her home being gutted. The unfortunate kitten paid, to the full for its playful- ness for it lost, its life in the flames. 4 s. , • 4" ' 3 o r ., .6 0 ' Nii• It 3P ,0‘• :8i 0 ran li 0noth3:e, si 4 e Ii-ntl: iaSI:ht14;:° si. loo ,tiday he re „ / n: a OP; - ngli 0 ;:i,„ !Med en a o",' , , ;ere : sptiOr haryostr's4441 t„ 0: :2,.;444..040-4.41. ttlei 0011XPurnpeantt. 'A'. . F Us. of ‘1114" r4 Wei. threatened with feed;'.. ,,, ,. shortage. 4;t1' ;.1''' 3. D • TATES rsis•. , PUSS ON THE PAY ROLL' ' ' *0 _sBairrme itnhgehlt.947.1.01‘, ' A nuinber of ter4144!.'' :'?;''4-1.11:11444‘44;'' ' r3 e finds greq. Per -T011.' 0t ti*;40400iMloga.r4, ‘ 140"#144* d l'a: '''' „‘=gare of the est*. Scottish' Estifrog,51.4 ;, ,040„; t:ol!461,:sties, i?f rx , ,eds, whieh sh0.7. ?11,1w4c1#s4141gliX#e farni ca a her," keeps us a Innebuilt especially int 1,4E-14,4P.1t ok40111i; :, • • ' - ' them in her Yaid;s:,•:v,L,.. -'• i!',:Mqualta'4104"''',talitiinuin wage,but there Sixteen hundred; and eigiStY-0#0: . iiinit " to their piece -work earn- white crosses of 460, ready to mark. Ings, which take the form of.rats and the resting plicesistsunknown Ameris me. o . .0 •I 4 can army 'dead, inSfrance, will bear' ' .The four -footed railway servants skis legend;iilfsoiOsrest in honored are employed at the company's sack glory an American Soldier known bnt depot at Trent, to which rats and Mice to God." The epitaph was selected by' are attracted by the -"shakings" from the battle inoinifeents commission, the grain sacks which come in for re- headed 'by General Pershing, and has pair. been approved by SOO, etary Davis. It is admitted at Trent that the fel- Facing water lanise and a great. ine laborer is worthy of his milk. But ly increased fire 'hazard, the city of puss would not have been popular in Bangor, Me„ bas _appealeth to have the factory projected by a Scotchman the coast guard otter Ossipe sent minted David Hatton. He invented a from• Boston to break up ice in. -the maehine- for spinning sewing thread, Penobscot ,jiver. This, it is hoped, Which was,, worked by a miniature may resulCin flfe release of a =Ss treadmill to be drive -n by mice. of anchor iee above the bridges that. Hatton calculated that each mouse has played hoe .with the city's wa-' would ,yield a clear profit Of six shil- ter works. • The seriousness of the Tinge a Year, and planned to employ situation, officials say, has not been Ofithient animals to secure an annual equalled sine 1901. income of over 2,000 pounds. His in- Knowingsdeath near an eighty -year vention came to nothing, but it may old citizen of co, Me., got out his still be seen by the curious in the Fife- best suit th ot et- day, laboriously shire town of Dunfermline, where it wrote on a' shee of paper: "These has been preserved. are my grave c hes," placed the pa- per on top of he neatly folded gar - A FARMER'S ACCOUNT BOOK ments, and thez went -back to his bed, never to rise again. Neighbors, who had looked in On him from time to' time, found him dead, and when the undertaker arrived he was surprised to discover the clothes and' the in- scription on a chair in the front room. Deer hunting in Massachusetts has been a disappointment to hunters this season. Game wardens report there are probably more deer in the covers than in any other recent year, but they estimate that the number killed is perhaps not more than half the total of other recent seasons. This condition is laid mainly to lack of snow and consequent difficulty in tracking. A warden estimated that with better conditions 600 deer would have been taken in Western Massa- chusetts. A wedding tangle at Carnegie, Okla., has led to a plea for annul- ment of marriage. Assmanof seven- ty-six married a 14 -year-old girl, having told the seventy-eight year old Justice that their ages were sixty- eight and twenty-one. Thus the bridegroom became his own stepson and the son-in-law of his own son-in- law. The girl became the mother-in- law of her step -mother, the mother- in-law of her father, and the wife oof her stepmother's father, because sh:' was the stepdaughter of the daugh- ter of the bridegroom. Charged with smuggling into th. United States, unset diamonds, a Jewish diamond merchant and a ship's cook are held in the New York courts 13 W11i'1 4s or: 0;11'...otiV 0.'r. 31,49 3 04' .33, 33 ;fp, .0 I • 1 NY „, • • sisZn'T- 'non'P o-- _ IRELAN,D A one and a half pound turnip was 'recently found in the heart of some 'butter sold by a country woman to a butter merchant, in Aughnacloy, (Co. Tyronne.) The turnip was ingenious- ly concealed and the woman had been paid and departed before the discovery -was made. An oil -carrying ship `tif special de- sign it being built in Belfast ship yards. The vessel Will be 315 feet long, with a gross tonnage of about 2,500, and it is intended to lay it down immediately in the firm's new yard in Musgrave Channel, which is the only yard in Belfast that is well supplied with work. This is the first order -which has been placed in Belfast for a considerable time. Belfast shipyards have had a very poor Year. Tbeir combined output of new tonnage during the past twelve months was only 57,899 tons—about -half he amount produced in 1924. The only yard in which there has been nor- mal activity during the year was a new yard on the Musgrave Channel, 'which has been pretty fully employed, and as a matter of fact when the keel of the oil tanker was placed at No. 14 - slip, all the six berths in the yard were occupied. An octogenarian who lives alone in the mountainous country along the Monoghan harder reported to the Ole- -gher police that he had' been robbed by two armed and masked men. The -pair knocked at this door and seized lira When he opened it They tore pen a vest he was wearing, and from MARVELLOUS VALUE. Reports from all provinces indicate that the Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal at One Dollar a year is sweeping the country. The reduction in the price of the Family Herald from $2 to $1 a year makes that great weekly journal more than ever the marvel of the newspaper World. The Publishbrs have announc- ed that notwithstanding the change in price, every feature will not only be maintained, but improvements will fallow. ' When one considers the huge vol- ume, wide 'variety and high quality of the reading matter in each issue of the Family Herald, one wonders how it can be produced at the price. it is a complete farm journal, a family gazine and weekly newspaper—all th ee in ne at a cost of less than two cen a week. Fo this winter's reading there is no better combination than your local paper and the Family Herald and Weekly Star. Subscriptions may be left at The Huron Expositor Office, Seaforth. LOWERING FEED COSTS Feed costs are not determined whol- ly by the amount of the different food materials consumed. The initial cost of such materials is probably of equal importance. In endeavors to lower the cost of feeding, one source of saving too fre- quently lost sight of is the wise use of annual hay crops. Such crops are not for seasons when the regular mea- ctows promise to yield abundantly, but can be used with considerable financi- al advantage where either hay or grain crops fall below the mark in the spring or early' summer months. During the past five years a -large number of grasses and clovers, suit- able for annual hays, 'have been plant- ed, both alone and in combination, at the Central Experimental Farm at Ottawa. ,Some valuable data have been secured as to the possibility of using such crops to safeguard against winter shortage of feed. 'Von 'of it')jL ;eentlite • )the energy pro- ' &acing element In foal '33 ,ItIs4dLLncioup fiver diiietted• -Clicret the chit; , drea as snitch its lbw Want. ',ED1AI0S130 U I CANA0/1. ",1211?(:[1 C r) • moNrprAt '6•1 44•4 •••• ‘•,,, lIfirIF ' ir111'7••••liF, • '4'"Wr"". 4• 34 ' 2. 1 4.4 %33 "Sn 32 /339 39 The Dominion Experimental Farms Systena has published an extremely simple farmer's account book, design- ed to last a complete year, To "keep" it needs 'no special knowledge of ac- counting; simply the ability to write and adds and a record of all transac- tions might be made in an hour a week. A fent plain directions as to making entries, some aids to taking inventories, a, table of silo capacities and a gestation table, are given on the insides of the cover. In the book itself are pages for the entry of receipts and expenditures (both of which may be seen at a glance on the same page) relative to cattle, horses, sheep, swine, poultry, crops and labor; and there is also am- ple space for miscellaneous items. There is a page for .amounts owed to and by the farm, end forms on which may be made inventories of land arid buildings, of live stock, of feed and supplies, and of machinery. Fol -row- ing is a page on which may be filled out a summary of the year's business, together with the few directions nec- essary to filling it out intelligently at the end o, the year. Further, for the farmer's information there is a table in Jich to enter acreage and yield of cro , and one in which to keep a live stock service record. Send for one now and record your transactions from the beginning of 1926. It is obtainable from the Pub- lications Branch of the Department of Agriculture, Ottawt, at a nominal in ....0 when thoo- be placed on letters of application. $10.000 and $5,000 bail respectiv charge of ten cenThe cookwas aro-st cents. No postage need I George Washington arrived in port, according to customs agent, they A PERFECT MEDICINE found $10,000 worth ,,f unset diam- !onds when they sesorched his quer- coNE,91 ters. Questioned by 'he agents, the , man, it was said, oleo'aed that the package of diamond,: had been given to him in Antwerp for delivery to the dealer in New York lie was to have met him at Madison avenue and Ninety-ninth strept, nod had deliver- ed a skimilar parkog• to him two months' ago. Government officials said that the diamonol were only part of about $40,000 wosr.h of gems which had been brought to this country on the George Washington to be smug- gled past the custom,: agents. Latter Day Saint,: will assemble in huge numbers in Min, Arizona, next year, for the dedication of a huge temple which has been erected there. Church authorities belies that fully 25,000 adherents of' the Mormon faith will take part in the ceremonies. The structure, to cost ms,re titan $600,000, will be completed shout January lst. For some time the outer temple will be kept open for nubile inspection, but after dedication it Willbe closed to -all but Mormons and even they must come -recommended by officers of the church before heing permitted tn enter. The inner temple will be a shrine never revealed to the public. It is known, however, ilia some of the best artists in the country have helped in the decorations Large paint- ings will depict Joseph Sinith preach- ing to the Indians and tile scene at St. George, Utah, when the entire Shivwit tribe was baptzed. FOR LITTLE Baby's Own Tablets Should be in Every Rome Where There Are Children. The perfect medicine for little ones is found in Baby's Own Tablets. They aressi, gentle but thorough laxafiv- whicH regulate the bowel, sweeten the stomach; drive out constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers and promote healthful refreshing sleep. It is impossible for Baby's Own Tablets to harm even the new-born babe, as they are absolute- ly guaranteed free from opiates or any other injurious drug. Concerning the Tablets, Mrs. Alex. J. Perry, Atlantic, N. S., writes:—'41 always keep Baby's Own Tablets in the house for the children, as I have found them a perfect medicine for little ones." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. STRANGE ACCIDENT TO REFEREE They had an unprecedented acci- dent in professional hockey in the east last week. During a match in the Mount Roy- al Arena, Montreal, between OttaWa and the Candiens, the referee, Lou Marsh, of Toronto, newspaper wet -a, athlete and soldier, hurt himself very baIdtli.was in the second period, and We pate was very fast. Marsh tried to get ont of' the way of a Canadien payr, when one of his skates slip ped and, he went davrn on the ice, face foward. His nionlentus shot him in- to the fence with terrific force. Fortunately he had the presence of mind, as he explained afterwards, to twist himself about, so that be struok the woed with his shoulder instead of -with his' head. gad he done the latter, he probably would have broken his neck, for he weighs in the neighborhebd of 200 P°ultedsii Awas, lie dislocated his, colioul. iltiOoindt•ftirettd.Pgreat tril r4:41, o;f4 vn, 6 ;',It's • • , • r '.:42t11 3';32) 334 4:942 3212433, 1- d 3933 "s store Clothes, --far the at:* -, =;•- • best and mark ita$POCIOY I,„ Sgpiof •cjilatity, blue, bue° and w withoutbib; dinxiSle sttJ All sites to N. Price $1:. veralls • ; 511 , V.1t • 0 •4 . 3131 • 4 rU - 4 r,,,44.144 "11 ;• Smocks... Shirts..... Sox........... MittS la * II 411 To match above Overalls, cut with full szes,' good length sleeves, double stitehed; strong, terials. All sizes. Price $1.95 an „ 43.1: 2o,r,24 , ••••” s cost' Men's strong, comfortable Work Shirts, made -of' best wearing materials, double stitched; made with a sure to fit, good length in body and sleeves. Mac black and white stripes, pin checks, military patterns. Price $1. Work Sox that will wear and feel comfortable, in pure wool, in sand mixture and grey, light or dark, and blue and. white stripe. Price 50c and -7 Heavy Sox in extra weight for wearing with rubbers, in black, with tie strings and tassels at top; extra good. Price $1.25 A special lined choring Mitt Made with one finger sepal:, ate; good lining. The mitt is made of split horsehide, pliable, and excellent wearer. Price 60c $1 &1.50 Women's Wool Cashmere and Silk &Wool Hose Ten dozen hose for quick selling, made of the best qualities and reg- ular $1 to $1.50 value. All sizes and shades. Clearing Price 59c The Greatest Men's Overcoat Value of the year 20 Overcoats At $12.75 Here is an Overcoat Bargain you will not see again for many a day. They are all this year's overcoats, the odd and broken lines that we are going to clear regardless of' their cost Every color and style is represented. Come early and get first choice. PRICE $12.7 Stewart Bros., -= • 301 3333 • 3L' 3339& 11 "1139 4 4. 4.; 401 • •.•••••••,.•,.., ••• 3311 = •77' .624,1 .4.A. , "4,r• k '44(3 .63 •74, 32. soS., 1,3 331 1 M. '3333-