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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1928-10-12, Page 34,44,'4!,41 RemaieneN la see t mair 1 eleeeit-a-tives" benefits women suffer - fag et the charge a life. "twee ed to p to bed because of tbo to le elmerness, earn ,and Weeknes" writee Wrne 0111141m_ cadie Pequetvelie ue g, megtim 4Fruitra4i'vee' _pre ,a 'f4,,Sodsead mo au4.Acw sink.* vookeet beam. 4verY vt.traat.,in shouro,itisPow in"- , aveRite tl,PS erifeesteartivere and lbheY *Pula surely eet the wonderful, AA, het!rdrcif,!" 'Try it.. Yourrodealer IMP tills :Wonderful fruit 'medicine— .20e. andi'80c. a box. os a ao ee-tee wee PRINCE, ON TOUR, KEEPS IN . 'TOUCH WITH LONDON It is part of the duties of the Prince of Wales staff who are with ram on his present tour with his Imo - her to keep him es closely in touch with home as possible. The general rule when the Prince is on a tour is that he must always be kept within cable and wireless com- munication of home, Wherever he may, be. In order that this may be done, a staff of wireless telephone and tele- graph operators, with four electrical engineers, accompany the Prince when he goes on a tour. ' When the Prince journeys to any place Where there is no wireless, tele- graph or telephone station, a field telephone if the distance is not too great, is laid between it and the near- est cable station. Failing that, the Prince would be kept in wireless touch 'with the near- est cable depot, where a temporary wireless station is set up and left in barge of two operators. This service of keeping the Prince in touch with 'home has always form- ed one of the biggest items in the ex- penses of his tours. During the pres- ent tour, -which is, not an official one, the expense of keeping in touch with /some will come entirely out of the Prime's own pocket. - The Duke of Gleucester will share the benefits of this service when the Prince is with, him, but he will not contribute toward the expense of it for the reason that if the Prams were mot making the tour with his brother there would be no need for a special service for keeping the duke in touch with home. The Prince's staff at home will be Dousy throughout his tour arranging the details of hie engagements at ihome after his tour. The staff norm- ally is able to complet these arrange- ments on their own authority, but occasions arise when they have to seek the Prince's instruction by letter or ker cable if the matter is specially urgent. Arrangements are made when the Prince is on tour to have his mail de- livered to him as speedily as possible waerever he may be. But se the Prince rarely stays more than a few days, and often only 'a day, at one place les mail sometimes keeps following him, but does not reach him for weeks. ' During his Indian tour the Prince en one occasion did not see his mail for four weeks. It was during that period that he received IV cable word of his sister's engagement to Lord Laseelles. The chief London daily and week- Ily papers are sent to the Prihce by eeolt 411.0 letter 141-' fi for 'QC 711410*: • • 0O,4‘se 1940.:` Igoetr.2 •,_;_ije- will, tbuseforei je.14% orlee TIOTO details of tlwe TX–IxOeff. , elVe to be 704 tente4,140; *tee tieia PlizLee' Whams Itr bi:,'tosi'd 400' t' "sraltor thieS Aeleanel use obast fsare h -ehne. totneter- (ea age) had to Ii ie leleatl*letter by every Mail te' Qu .eiar Vietoeia. It would be twctaely difeoult to poke 'rave pres!erot ewer to • the throne observe mich reaa ' lai;1710.40. .g yeryo4y ' te ho* sU " ASPle been meal, bit it is ener in large' etlerin es a rule that it is done preemie', To snake a bras' mash first wiah out 'e bucket with boiling wa- ter, then pour in the quantity of water required, say, three pints, and stir in 3 pounds of bran. Cover and leave it for two or three hours or more if not required for immediate use. A mash requires hours to cool off and is often given to a sick horse or cow too hot, and is refused, when it would have been taken if properly prepared and fed when warm instead of scalding hot. The addition of a tablespoonful of stet to the ordinary mash can be recommended to keep driven parasites and promote diges- tion, but should not be a part of the sick animals diet unless specially ord- ered. hera rviaz ARE YOU AFRAID OF YOUR MEALS? Proof That the Stomach is Weal and Needs Toning Up. Are you one of the many sufferers who dread meal time? Hungry, and yet afraid to eat, because of the pains and discomforts that follow. When the stomach i§ out of order the whole system suffers, and as the blood becomes thin and watery it becomes increasingly difficult to correct the digestive disorder. There is no tonic for the stomach that is not a tonic for the 'whole body; thus a blood -building tonic such as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, not only relieves indigestion, but adds to the general strength. Mr. D. J. Shaw, Selkirk Road, P.E.I., has proved the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in a severe case of indiges- tion and relates his experience for the benefit of other sufferers. He says:—"I suffered) from indigestion for a number of years. My case was so bad that words fail to describe it. My appetite was gone, constipation was present, and my nerves were all on edge. I could not sleep well at night, and the world was a dark spat for me. 1 tried a number of reme- dies, but without any benefit. Then Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were recom- mended, but without much faith, after so many failures, I decided to try them. After taking three boxes I noticed a change for the better. Then I got three boxes more and found I had a genuine remedy. I continued the treatment, took moderate exercise, could take food without suffer- ing as- ly, and proved that these pills make good blood, and that this good blood will restore the stom- ach and nerves. Anyone suffering from stomach or nerve troubles will make no mistake in giving Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills a fair trial." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or will be sent by mail at 50 cents a box by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Write to -day for a copy of the free booklet, "What to Eat and How to Eat." BOOK LOVERS' CORNER (By Jane Holtby) Strange Fugitive.—Canadians are deeply interested in the advance 44r,",r4 ^74, AIL RON „EX -II -Y.14 j 777744,-, • •• s• ...en ...• • • , viroa s<44 gq"katg'. ,t4rbitlrhit trlittOrltkqi Aleleldoletro# 'but. a'.40.' wool4 Wielt boxlms000 reeelklealre eale erfa •feaersie Ilivrtfeerenottentehee;anete•re4egt4n. biTladere' fig 1Dretttr,i*vateVtlefftreeea.' la in a lureber yard, lease his' jobaand after a vats isearele. fer egeeelser beComee: a ooge 4 Vb.p daily life of e, bootleggers, ie 'deedetade gee• tu all its ernelid ike Well ite. More glit teltee aseeeetee -Bet Neast'' does it all sax tele•Wre eould•forgiee Much if this boistfeeiger -"got" anywhere, if he 130v-44 thy Problems for himself or tnr, anyone else; but What little char- acter he has certainly does not pro - gross. HIS egotism is absurd. In speak- ing to a friend he says, "It's funny the way you see your mother from a different ;angle' years after,. isret it? I mean I got an idea my mother was something like I was." "Like you?" "Yeah. She was rather wonderful in her way." Efe develops a maudlin sentiment for this dead mother, but the only effect tt has on his life or actions is to cause him to erect a showy monu- ment over her grave. It restrains 'him from nothing. There is no love in the life of Harry Trotter. Hie leaves his wife merely because he is "fed up." He means to return but lacks! initia- tive necessary to make tkis decision. His ,"affairs" are of the most sordid kind and his 'standard for judging women seems to be their legs. In speaking of .his rwife; "Vera, with her legs, wonderful Vera." Realism, so greatly lauded, is here in full measure for us. Crude de- tails we are not spared; "in the office he took off his coat and vest, scratched himself under the right armpit, slip- ped his suspenders over his shoulders, lit a cigarette, then taking the book by Edgar Wallace, he made himself comfortable." "Strange Fugitive" may be called an epic of bootlegging, only epic sug- gests something noble, and there is none of the element in the treatment or in the subject. The title is so promising that when that promise is never fulfilled the disappointment is great. This book is published by Charles Scrihners, 264 pages; $2.50. ea Frfienda 44... • ••.< leitors to IaVor NeOellal Park, which is Catiaeasetearg,* and finest national elaygroiund situated in, the heart of the Roelty Mountains, 'have a • (splendid oeportunity of' Studying the habits of void animals. For Tasper tional Park is a game sanctuary htt the finest sense of the ware and gene and hunting dogs are forbidden withi ito boundaries. It is of interest'to obterve the manner fit which the animals.recogs nize this. Though it is opiy compara- tively few' ream since this great sanc- tuary was set aside, the ,shy deer and tamountain oheep are tto-losiger shy: the Nails ands UtoWia h00t0,31arqicco visitom to village and to fa tat at; 60 tWAirtiolWi•at. ts to iporeselos b leitpo,, end tulle& , • ' 264.Akt'lt WI . Alto dolUouStatten ;0 ou2„, have come to regard man as their friend instead of as their enemy. Now it is a daily event to have one or more bears visit the Lodge groundsen search of the titbits which they know tourists love to feed to them. Nor is it unusual for a golfer playing over the magnificent comae course which has been laid out its tha Athabasca Valley, to meet a bear at the turn of the fairway, or to find a shy deer vioqing him with interest as be gets downs tonne up bis putt on one or another of the greens. , A short time age, ot was estimated that ntaitt h 1opuIatiofl of this ,31)0 soars natl nal park was over 10,000, with atoqutl amber of deer, White the -br.arsaremitober it thou. ete t de Zaid ere teed dedial ana met of egto,d. And rinettetice`e, him tub h40 dtvl*t4 a the for onga4 to le moon - firmed t to tlio Mittimyt te. • Eliza For Common, by 0. Douglas, published by Hodder & Stoughton, Ltd. London, England, distributed in Canada by their agents, the Musson Book Co., Ltd., 340 pages; $2.00. Os Douglas is always delighteue We chose this novel, as all her prev- ious ones, feeling that we really know her people. They are always inter- esting, never dull and as Mrs. Lear- memd, one of the characters, says: •"I never saw a house like this; there's always something exciting happen The family of a devoted, - idealis- tic clergyman live at Blinkbonny (such a silly name for a house, thought Eliza), in Glasgow hi the -winter, and at a charming farm in summer. "Winter in Glasgow is rather like a tunnel. We crawl through it to the sunshine at the other end." Eliza, the only daughter, called Elijah by her irrepressible young brothers, rebels over her name. "I'm going to be Lisa." "Dear me," says her father, "must you be Liza for best • and Eliza for common." Be- tween her and her elder bother, Jim, a young Oxford student and writer, there is a very strong bond and Eliza% eager reachitig out for new experiences and happiness is largely gratified through this brother and his friends. "Weiat do you want of life, Eliza?" "Just about a hundred mil- lion things." Eliza wins her way as easily to our hearts as she does to those of her future mother-in-law and her friend, the latter who says, "My dear, I con- sider you a lucky woman. I like this Eliza. .To talk in flowers, she kr a larkspur. She might easily have bee -n a Dorothy Perkins." The young brothers are great fun. There is absorbing young Geordie, who said, "Hedgehogs are a lot nicer than most people." In a description of hini--"don't y©u love his angry little face? I'm eonvinced that though he goes through life appar- ently in a passion, he is really the gentlest of God's creatures." We see less of Bob, who is' always in a scramble with Geordie. Mr. and Mrs. Laidlaw are dears. She does lament. "Twenty-five years and I haven't changed you in the Nast. I think the one thing I've managed to teach you is to turn back the study rug when you go to bed. In everything that matters you've kept to your own. way." We are rather glad he has as it is such a gentle, philosophical path. "Walter," there was a note of panic in her voice, -"is that all life is—a forget- ting ? "A forgetting — a sleep? What dyes it matter, Allie?We know that when we wake we shall be sat- isfied." BEEF PRICES SINCE 1920 The course of beef prices slime 1920 is especially interesting. Native beef steers averaged 22 per cent. higher at Chicago 1922-1927 than in 1921. an 1921 good westeen steer beef averaged 15.8 cents per pound in New York, and 18.3 cents during 1922-1,927, or 3 per cent. higher. A general advance in the rvalue of by- produeto enabled fat mitts to coin- mand higher prices avid permitted dressed beaf to be sold at a., relatilses ly Santa edvance in prir.e. Good car - cask beef ot Winnipeg averaged 12.4 rent in 1921 and 12.8 cents &ming 1922-1927. The Jamie avedo Vat plat:see t rathei . fictitious lova fit Toronto durWj 101,, IA 16.8 orate Itox tlitoao ordom.4 %NAM The stage isJiset, le p©f is " New ---gashions." Tille cufr mins pad on Cie 'Loveliest Scene © Gorrgeoss Creations IoxFJ Attfire 0 ashion whims «DI the minute. Daring newness as dictated by m ven-y quarteg. of the Style Realm. A. vivid colon° dis- play — so new in materria_s — so mama in style det `Is—Coats, DTesses, MillilineTy — de- note all fie Ia.1111 sis© chum—youthful— vi- -- vacious—adon-able. A style h©w Tespilentient- with beauty © a-8ZZ newness. YOE.I1 ETZ Speci- e:1y invited t® this wonderfd display ol en- thusing in -lea -est. We invite you to come ex- pecting pc es 110WW than you heTetofor.e have been pE,7hg .20T ga.Tmermts © such outstoilding distinctive beauty. Come i any day. Coee 150C t© \40ytfDO Dr $L75 to $37050 rt Sea fo rt • 44 4.1e 4,4014.WA41 er Winnipeg 1 cent, wider Chan norm- al. Otherwise Toronto prices during ! 1922-192e, averaging 15.2 cents, would have shown practically the °same relationehip to 1921 prices as I 'occurred in the case of Winnipeg. Argentine chilled hindquarters, artificially stimulated in price dur- ing part of the year, averaged 15.3 cents per pound at London in 1921, as compared with 13.3 cents during 1922 to 1927. In 1921 they were a half cent below good western sides Otirant. „ at New York, and three cents lower during the next six years. The New York market differential therefore widened by not less than 2.5 cents per pound during 1922-1927. The United States tariff on dressed beef is 3 cents per pound, and Argentine beef can be landed in New York as cheaply as in London. It is of in- terest to note that the differential in 1927 averaged not less than 4.2 cents per pound. Had it not been for the embargo on the Argentine beef be- cause of the foot and mouth disease in that country, domestic cattlemen in all probability would have faced keen competition from Argentrae in the Atlantic seaboard markets during 1927.—Louis G. Connor, Armour's Live Stock Bureau. KRUPP FAILED TO SELL CANNON TO NAPOLEON 11111 Ten years ago the name of Krupp, the great German armament -manu- facturer of Essen, made Frenchmen grit their teeth. To -day the animosi- ties of the World War are so far for- gotten that a French review, L'Enrope Nouvelk, can make a huge joke out of one of the most eurions business letters ever 'written, says "The Liv- ing Age.° It is dated April 28, Oa• Nut bu- foes! the Fmanco-lhuroluu iFer, end was sent by Priterhielt founder of the igrupp itaiueziOu Nagoluot 114 0.werop, *1 It 'Pppub. Kruppa own handwriting, the letter runs as follows: "Encouraged by the interest which your august majesty has been kind enough to show in a humble manu- facturer like myself, as well as by the happy results of your great efforts and sacrifices, I ask begging you to deign to accept the gift of the il- lustrated booklet which I am taking the liberty of sending under separate cover. It contains a series of en- gravings of the newest products of my f actories. "I trust that the last four pages ie particular, describing the cast steel cannon for which I have received or - dere from several European govern- ments, will hold your majesty's at- tention for a moment at least, and thus justify my temerity in writing this letter. With sentiments of pro- found respeet, and high admiration I remain, , ism majestyle very humble a n d co ent servant, Friedrich Krupp." No Krupp =MOT( were ordered by the emperor of the French. Eighteen months letter, the GAMMA edam boaceed by Krop's ortillevy, oweic4 across Northwest Franco to Pavia untt dragged the last Napolesq from ide throne. Irma cows cum5 • Dorn worm any rooto about your co= losiug Vocal. al& betam% all Sleek elm -Witco, to elm Atte etd,, M.!) trata,st2W ttatuq trfogrt normal they will begin rumination again and chew their cud, so there in no use attempting to supply these wiels an artificial one such as a greasy rag. It does the cow no good, and we are of the opinion that a greasy dish rag is not a very appetizing things for a beast to chew. the Pemnsinent Zetrat fog items, E-Housee, Sheds LOVirininirsialloost.,commais to elceets-.4ary dad of tor Ilay.t.pavasontalt...leakaptito ilunkiso..,e petganc&,,, Vetata ghts etel- ;Ili IV :ta. •,attg. G tqui6t4a, EaStOgi gagar4t14e011 tfp elensear