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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1926-11-26, Page 3r.{ Your valuables and papers should be protected against fire and theft. A Safety Deposit Box in our local branch provides security and convenience. EVERY successful business enterprise takes care to build- up an adequate reserve fund for use in emergency, The wisest financial brains of the,.,. country realize the, importance of this policy. Have yap a fund to draw upon in case of need? The regular sav- ing of small amounts will, in a short time,; establish a reserve large enough to afford you adequate protection against emergency. This bank offers every convenience to its savings depositors. veryt�:1� and Warm .0oriorriical for 101 < hings For Baby THE BANK SEAFORTH BRANCH. - R. M, JONES, Manager. Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent. a 1 , ry p a BOW TO RELIEVE CHILDREN'S COLDS Avoid Serious Results by Using Babys' Own Tablets. When child shows the first symp- toms of a cold, such as sneezing, red- ness of the eyes, clogged or running nose, prompt measures for relief may avert serious results. Mothers should always have on hand some simple, safe and effective remedy for imme- diate use. Baby's- Own Tablets act ruickly, contain no opiates or narcotics, are taste•:e.•, and harmless. Mrs. Joseph Cadie.•x Holyoke, Mass.. says:—"I hay- ::ed Baby's Own Tablets for nry children and find them a very sat- isfactory medicine. When my little boy had a cold 1 gave him the Tab- lets at night and he was well next day. I give them to the children for constipation and they always do gond. I think Baby's Own Tablets are much easier to give a child than liquid medicine. I recommend the Tablets to all mothers who have small chil- dren and believe they should always be kept on hand." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all medicine dealers or will be sent by mail at 971 cents a box from The D». Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 'OAT OF TAN iS THE POPULAR GARB Do people take as much pride as they once did in showing off their annually acquired outdoor complex- ions? To get violently sunburned was once considered the most obvious way of demonstrating to friends at home that one had been off for a va- cation, hut so large a part of the pop- ulation nowadays manages in one way or another to get well tanned before the September sun crosses the line that there is no longer much distinc- tion in it. One even hears of sunburn that conies out of a bottle, and pos- sibly this is the most durable sort, not being in the least dependent on actinic rays. It should have its ad- vantages also, for those who hate be- ing out of fashion yet find unpleasant or even painful the normal method of acquiring an impressive coat of tan. What with golf, tennis and bathing i,eauties, these are hard days for in- door people, and they may he excused for bluffing through as well as they San. Actinic rays are having a tremend- ous vogue just now, says the Spring- field Republican, although America has not yet gone so far as Germany's "Nature Cult," earnest disciples of which have •justbeen mobbed in Swit- zerland and deported from that de- corous country in garments not only contributed to them but forced upon their relpctant limbs. Switzerland is a splendid sun -parlor for tourists from gray and foggy lands, but it has to draw the line somewhere. Fashions come and go, in regard to sunshine as in regard to everything else. In a stray number of an American mag- azine for young people published nearly 60 years ago was discovered an earnest bit of propaganda in the in the form of story about two child- ren, brother and sister, who hacl al- ways been anaemic, sickly, afdlcted with colds until a wise doctor with rad- ical ideas got their parents to enclose+ a playground where could disport themselves unclothed all day in the :sunshine. • This was evidently heretical doc- trine in the middle part of the 19th century, but America was then so pre- dominantly agriculture that the need for more sunshine was probably not acutely felt. No farmer's boy "with cheek of tan" and "upturned panta- loons" as Whittier described him could 'have needed more actinic rays than /he absorbed in the potato patch, the ,corn dell, and the meadow. Good weather for making hay was perfect- ly splendid for sunburn. It was oth- erwise in towns and cities, of cburse, and no doubt there were mslny fam- ilies like the one described in the story, living an irrdoo'E• life in village houses heavily shaded by old Ohms or maples and curtained against solar rays that might fade carpets and Wall paper. Even so, the boys of the, family, would suppose. would find, compensation at the old swim ming bole, for if swimming was then nei- ther the craze nor the fine art that it has since become, it was a normal activity of boyhood. and was cultivat- ed even in snite of parental prohibi- tions. But the girls in sucks fssrnily' •toric i •e1l have missed them place in the Sun. Row much they -were ham. ed lid so shadowy a life it may be Im oslaible to stay:' presumably that deporrdor to nab** conititi'i'tlOit n +on'dieir z• get: roua table Might .. Q IT is traditional with this Store to supply the clothing needs of every member of the family. And baby has been by no means forgotten in the selection of our great Winter Stock. If you have a baby in your home or wish to give something to a baby in another home, then come here and see - what delightful things we have. French Embroidered Infants' Dresses. . $1.25-$1.50 Silk Bootees 65c Silk Rugs $2.75 Wool Bootees 35c to $1.50 Baby Pillows, Madiera $1.00 to $1.50 Bibs (Fancy) Rattles 25c to 50c Comb and Brush 85c to $1.00 50c Silk Veils 50c Mitts 50c to 60c Carriage Covers, Shawls $2.25 Knitted Bonnets $1.00 Angora Bonnets $2.25 Knitted Jackets $1.25 to $2.25 Wrapping Shawls $2.00 to $3.85 Stockings, Cashmere 45c to 85c Silk and Wool Stockings 55c to 65c White Toques 50c to 65c Rubber Pants 35c to 50c Baby's Coats, White Bear Cloth ..,$4.50 to $4.90 violet rays. By the end of the 19th century sunshine was in much greater favor. Baseball had come in during the sixties, tennis and track athletics in the eighties. More people were living in towns and cities and the need for getting out of doors, which does not worry a nation of farmers, was coming to be felt. The vacation habit was growing, too, and for indoor people a vacation meant almost as a matter of course living an indoor life of which a coat of tan, whether desired or not, was the inevitable result. Timid elderly folk might cling to the shade of hotel piazzas, but the young people romp- ed and built sand castles, or played games or swam in costumes of • ever increasing brevity so that they came hack in September as brown as In- dians, a reproach and an object les- son to their paleface neighbors until the glory faded. Early in the 20th century, however, sunshine got a hard blow from the theories of Major Woodruff, who as a medical officer had been stationed in the Philip- pines and was led by his studies of tropical sunshine and its effects on white sojourners in the tropics to the starting hypothesis that the great enemy of the Nordic race is an excess of sunshine. Bleached by the cold fogs of the Baltic lands, to the inclement climate of which he owes his physical -prow- ess and his unique mental gifts, the blond .Nordic through the ages has! always been migrating to the tempt- ing sunny lands of the south, con- quering their puny inhabitants, and creating new civilizations, only to perish from"the slow destruction of his nerve cells by actinic rays against which his blond skin with its defi- cient pigmentation gives no adequate protection. It was an ingenious theory, and it may have confirmed a good many old-fashioned folk in their distrust of wanton exposure to the sun, but it was presently offset by new bio -chemical discoveries in regard to vitamins and the role of ultra -violet rays in preventing rick- ets. Whatever may become of the Nordic race, blonde seems to fear the sun no more than brunettes, and a Summer tan which would once have seemed startling to pallid city dwel- ers i9 now a September common - p lace. With a little care it can be ept until snow flies as a visible sym- ,01 of ruddy health. After all, sun- hine can be found even at home. k a • SCIATIC • SUFFERING Comes Because the Nerves Are Starved for Better Blood. There are excellent reasons why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved beneficial in the most severe cases of sciatica, neuralgia and other com- plaints in that group known as dis- orders of the nerves. Each of these complaints exist because the blood is thin and watery, and the nerves are thus literally starving for the nour- ishment rich red blood supplies them. Any increase, therefore, in the rich- ness of the blood speedily and bene- ficially acts upon the nerves and the torturing pains of sciatica and neu- ralgia disappear. It is because of their specific action on the blood, thus feeding the starved nervus that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been so successful in the treatment of these troubles. As proof of this we give the case of Mrs. P. N. Bezanson, South Alton, N. S., who says:—"Two years ago I was attacked with scia- tica and neuralgia in my hack and leg. The pain was so severe that I could not walk. Even to move caused me agony, and I had to go to hed. The doctor called in was not able to do mord than deaden the pain, and I had been in bed for six weeks when my grandmother carne to see me and strongly urged me to give Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills a trial. She said she had had a similar attack and it was these pills that had restored her to health. I at once got a supply and had only used four boxes when I found great relief. Gladly I kept on taking the pills, and soon after found myself as well as ever I had been. Gratitude for what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did for me makes me urge others similarly afflicted to try diem." You an get these pills from your druggist or by mail at 60 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • 9 � If you have difficulty in driving small tacks into the wall put them in- to a piece of thin cardboard an inch or to apart, drive them in, then pull of ' $ .Siurdboat'd. Mens Winter Underwear There is one department in which this store is so outstand- ingly superior that you can hard- ly afford in your own self inter- est to go elsewhere to buy Un- derwear. We have all the lines that are nationally popular, because of superior make and long wear. No matter what weight in union, fleece lined or heavy ribbed un- derwear, we have it. Come in and see. OVERCOATS IMPRESSIVELY GOOD COMFORT is usually the first co - sideration of a wise overcoat buyer. Of course, fit, style, color and gen- eral appearance are also essential ; but comfort, coupled with good wear which means quality, are absolutely necessary, and these must be at a reasonable price. When we tell you frankly that we have, in most in- stances, had our coats specially lined to give them the necessary warmth without weight; that the finished coats are really beautiful; that you get comfort, wear and appearance at very special prices, d=on't you think this store a pretty good store to buy your Overcoat? PRICES $15.00 to $38.00 Special in Men's Work Clothing Work Sweaters $L75 Work Sox, good 50c Sox for rubbers....85c to $1.50 Lined Smocks $3,75 Work Mitts 50c to $L50 Overalls $1.95 to $2.25 Heavy Pants $4.00 to $7.75 Sheep lined Smocks, extra make $13.00 Women's Dresses Just how attractively beauti- ful these New Dresses are is not possible to an advertisement. You must come in and see them. Dresses for house wear, for street wear, for special occa- sions, for evening wear. It mat- ters not, we can show you a dress that will suit your purpose, ap- peal strongly to your sense of good taste and at the same time not cost you very much either. PRICES $5.00 to $35.00 COATS Men's and Boys' Wint er Caps These Caps, made with the new Kling -Klose band, fit in and stay snug to the forehead and Ears. The bands are interlined with a very fine leather, making them windproof. They are made from the same cloth as our fine overcoats. These are the best winter caps we have had, and will insure real protection. PRICES $100 to $1x95 ULTRA FASHIONABLE These lovely New Coats portray- ing the very latest tendencies of the present season's styles—their inter- esting departure from ordinary types—their spirit of individuality and difference—and most particular- ly the superior workmanship and their general becomingness have placed them in a class by themselves unrivalled a n d unexcelled. And what is just as important, the prices asked for these coats are very reas- onable and well within the reach of any pocketbook. Come in and see these new arrivals in our coat de- partment. You will like them. PRICES $15.00 to $35.00 SPECIAI, SEMI-ANNUAL Millinery Clearance Sale ALL TRIMMED HATS ONE-THIRD OFF ALL UNTRIMMED HATS ° Half Price TEWART BROS., Sea