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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1929-03-22, Page 33 We e l C They saky convolre= az EaTiT1Ta, c1C wh nIlee =vans awl =awl tbile every - 940 SEA FORTH i:RANCH 18. M. Jones - Manager fif &&® 1ch Il airri kik IFll Neutralize Stomach Acidity, Prevent Food Fermentation. Stop Indigestion. "If those who suffer from indiges- tion, gas, wind, or flatulence, stomach acidity or sourness, gastric catarrh, heartburn, etc., would take a tea- spoonful of pure Bisurated Magnesia in half a glass of hot water immedi- ately after eating they would soon forget they were ever afflicted with stomach trouble, and doctors would have to look elsewhere for patients." In explanation of these words a well ]!mown New York physician stated that most forms of stomach troubles are due to stomach acidity and fer- amentation of the food contents of the stomach combined with an insufficient 'blood supply to the stomach. Hot -water increases the blood supply and 13isurated Magnesia, which can be -readily obtained at any reliable drug store, in either tablets or powder, in- stantly neutralizes the excessive stomach acid and stops food fermen- tation,,, the combination of the twa, therefore, being marvelously success- ful and decidedly preferable to the lase of artificial digestants, stimul- Ilants or medicines for indigestion. HOME CATCHES UP 'For nearly seventy years this coun- try witnessed the humiliating spec- tacle of a constant slinni)- in the per- centage of owned homes. This, in spite of our increased wealth, our material progress. ,Business and in- dustry growing by leaps and bounds, the home slowly shriveling and dis- appearing out of our thinking. Suddenly, in the past few years, the home has recovered. Mr. Hoover tells us that the floor space devoted to home increased twenty-five per cent. while the population was in- creasing only ten per cent. +Wa have built 3,500,000 new homes in the past seven years. Why this sudden change? The trouble was this: During those 7 years business and industry were being put on a machine basis. It was the age of mechanical development. The worker outside the home found working conditions growing constant- ly better; short hours to work, less fatigue, greater leisure, more pay in the envelope. But hone remained on a hand -work !basis. The worker in the home still swept with a broom, hung her butter in a well, made her own clothes, bak- ed her own bread, did her own clean- ing, bent over a washboard, scrubbed and scoured the livelong day. Is it any wonder she rebelled as the gap between her and those who toiled outside the home widened Is it any wonder she was willing to give up the home }test and go to a flat, an apartment, a 'hotel? These domiciles offered greater comfort and conveni- ence. And then Industry discovered the American Home—a vast, untouched, =tilled market. First came the vaecum sweeper. Then, in rapid suc- cession, the fireless cooker, the elec- tric sewing machine, gas and electric ranges, baker's bread "as good as �Q`, Lai po\jf,a POAF ° R6,0$.P rm- east, nioot per- manent metal roof- ing er- manentmetalrooff- ing gold. Cameo isn tbig it figs °&a mo°f low•cor rooff ffaar Barna,, Sheds. Romeo, Summer 'Council Made to Council t tandnrd' (mollify. Septi ridgo and rafter meas- urements emo-urements and Soma ant about our SPTECIAILSi�Mot WPM r] irgqe coot ©.timate lzloar gtivom. Sko &aded¢1a L:'RISST , a tete mother could make," the convenient washing machine, tiled and linoleum floors easy to keep clean, the me- chanical refrigerator—even the in- genious toaster that automatically keeps the toast from burning! And the radio to entertain and instruct the homemaker as she went about her work! But dad was perfectly comfortable in his fiat or apartment burrow. The fear of a furnace or the dread of a lawn made him perfectly content. So Industry put an oil burner in his furnace and an automatic heat regu- lator in control, and beckoning said to him: "Come and see. We have installed a janitor in your basement!" And when he balked at the lawn to be cut, Industry put into- his hands a throbbing motorized lawn mower that was fun to run, and no work at all! So in five years great hordes of families have rushed back to the de- tached house, the home of their fathers—the real American home. Why? Merely because Home has caught up with Industry in this, the mechanical age. It is no Ionger on a hand -work basis—it was out of fashion and bound to suffer as long as it remained so. The worker in the home now has the same dignity as any other worker in the world. Hats:lan 1 slmd WZie Reconnmend ::nem MR. AND MRS. C. KESLEY FINDS DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS VERY"' BENEFICIAL Ontario Lady Su:i'ered Very Much With Her Back and Kidneys. • Chatham, Ont., Mar. 21.—(Special) --Thousands of women who seemed destined to a life of frequent suffer- ing have been entirely freed from their ailments by using Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. Mrs. Charles Kesiey, 126 Wellington St. E., Chatham, writes: "I have suffered very much with my back and kidneys. I hardly had any rest until I tried your Dodd's Kidney Pills. I can honestly say I felt a different woman after I had taken one box; but I continued with them. The doctor said after my examination, that my kidneys were in good form. My husband also uses Dodd's Kidney Pills. His work calls for a lot of stooping and he always feels fine after taking them. They seem to strengthen his back and put new life into him. You are at liberty to pub- Iish this letter. My recommendation might be the means of benefitting others." SHOCKING MURDER BY COAL POLICE One of the most horrible murders of recent times was the killing of John Barcoski, a Pennsylvania miner and farmer, his slayers being police- men in the employ df the Pittsburg Coal Company, the largest bitumin- ous producers in the world. By the laws of the state of. Pennsylvania coal and iron companies have the right to maintain private police forces to protect their property and the men employed by them. This law has been at the bottom of many a tale of horror coming from the coal and iron mines, particularly in times of industrial conflict when the) ?poljice have been accused of clubbing and murdering strikers and raping their wives and daughters. It is generally recognized that the time has come for this system to be abolished and bills to this end are pending in the Pennsylvania legislature. Obviously it is the duty of state and federal governments to do whatever policing is necessary. It is essentially a func- tion of government and not one to be delegated to private companies who have private interests to serve. The -offence for which Barcoski and his friend John S. is iggins found themselves in the hands of the police was one of liquor law violation. Prob- ably they were selling liquor. Some say that the charge was framed by the police. In any event when the policemen, Harold P. Watts and Frank Slapigas went to arrest them there was a fight. Barcoski is said to have drawn a knife, inflicting a wound on the shoulder of one of the policemen. His resistance was feeble and instant, ly subdued, for a revolver was .mb- mitted as evidence with the trigger guard bent, as a result of having r•raahed down on Eareoski°s skull. Half senseless he and Wiggins were dragged to the police barracks, which was in charge of Lieutenant Walter J. Lyster. Upon hearing what had hap- ( !renes,, Laster is said to have remark - 110.1 clotkti%n ttDfD"' F� and ivae,4 e. to meet tP death, , 14t ed by warts, :who ' kicked Ill rooms' rte noes. Watts had severed swatches inflict- ed by tiarcoskib knife ' whhiwai, rho ar- rest was being; made and it was to bifid these up that the company% doctor was summon This was Dr. J. M. Patterson, After he had dress- ed the scratches he was told that there was a Mean in eanother room of the barracks who might 'be looked at. Barcoski was then lying on the !door in a pool of his own blood. Lyster tried to rouse him by a kick in the side. He was only half conscious but was dragged to a chair, and Lyster took a heavy strap, doubled it, and resumed the beating. The dying man was helpless, and could offer no re- sistance. They desisted, however, while the doctor dressed his wounds. warned the police that if theyshr He found some broken ribs and warned the police that if they con- tinued to beat the man he would die. But they seemed to want some in- formation from him and resumed the atrocious attack. They would ask a question, and when an answer was not forthcoming, would strike and kick him again. His ears were twist - ted until they bled. His nose already broken, was twisted and pulled. The police then asked Higgins to sign a statement that they had prepared and he said: "You can write a statement that I killed seventy-five men and I'll sign it before I'll go through the torture this man has endured." Barcoski did not survive the beating and when he died there had to be an investigatio not some kind, especially since his friends had seen him in the hands of the policemen a few hours before, in good condition except for the blow on the head with the re- volver. A county detective collected evidence which included a set of brass knucklessaid to have been used on the man. The coroner who conducted the autopsy reported that the farmer - miner was beaten and bruised from head to foot, The breast bone was broken. The nose was broken. There were wounds on the head and scalp The legs and arms were bruised and swollen. The hands were thrice the normal size because of blows which he had tried to ward off his face. Death was due to shock and heinmor- hage. A grand jury has found the three men guilty of murder. But we cannot hold out any hope that they will be hanged. Tere have been sim- ilar atrocities in the past, but convic- tions have been few, and when they have been made the punishment has usually been a trifling fine paid. nn doubt by the companies that employ ed the police. We presume that the third degree has been more generally employed by police in the employ of private cor- porations than by an yother holy in the United States. The police have sought to justify themselves on the ground that they were dealing for the most part with brutal foreigners who understood no language but that of violence. Sufficiently beaten or terrorized they would give information leading to the arrest of criminals. Otherwise they would no nothing. be- ing congenitally and historical) r op posed to all law enforcement. Their activities have embittered every strike in Pennsylvania in the Fast 50 years, and it was largely on a•:ccount of their Iawlessness and ferocity that the Pennsylvania state police were called into existence. The Bara•oski case will probably be remembared as the crowning outrage that abolished private police forces in the state. EXPERIENCE A young man, or a young woman, graduating from school or college is told by prospective employere: "You'll have to start at the bottom and get experience before you can fill an executive position. Learn the job yourself before you try to boss others." The same advice might he given to all girls who marry: "Even if you can afford it, don't try to keep a maid for a year. Learn the job yourself before you try to boss another." For several reasons: First, every woman—and every man, too, for that matter—should know 'how to cook. Second, homemaking is to -day an adventure—an education in color, in mechanics, in chemistry, in economics; in history and geography, too, if you choose so to make it. The price of a maid for a year, invested in modern household equipment, will run a home so completely and easily that perhaps the maid will never be wanted. Third, the !woman who knows— really knows—how to run her own house will seldom have a real servant problem, because she will have sym- pathy and an understanding of just how much one pair of hands can ac- complish in housework. We recommend this practical school of applied home economics. The brain was not designed prim- arily es a utilitarian organ, but as one to give man enjoyment of life.— Sir Arthur Keith. Of the making of fool laws there would seem to 'bet no end. Texas now proposes 'a measure to prohibit high heels.. —Petezfboro Examiner. D©9t SagfferProf Cr �L No matter what remedies you have tried or what anyone has told you—piles can be eliminated without an operation or expensive treatment... NATURE'S PILE REMEDY has healed thousands of stubborn cases for over 20 rears. by removing She cause of the disease. Get a bort from your druggist today and watch it work its magic upon you. Money back if not successful. PRLIE = ED? .a11•..a...a4 4,64.444•44"..". iltuurs OiciDd-2* Eda® .4 young in an's rvn®dlelt, with peak lapels A new two -button style, with witch lapels ILi>ke most of the beater clothiers throughout America, we always con- sider it a great occasion whew we receive a new assorttnmennit of clothes from Society (:gauged!. For SocietyRranndl, as you know, is the foremost style - house in the country — and none off us can really tell what the season's ssnarttestt clothes will lbs like until we see what Society Iltranndl has to oilier 1 We're never disappointed, either. Every new selection off Society Ct rand is full of originnallniries and nTranovaiirnolmse Especially this Spring! CCDwur new show- ing off Society 11: rand suits and topcoats has euceedledl the erpeetetiorms oiT every- ©M'bile Sped) Re Bloomer, Rayon elas- tic; will wash or boil; one-quarter inch wide. Special 6 YARDS, 115© Stamped PEow SInpe Extra good quality white cotton, stamped with clever designs ; nicely hemstitched; full size. S1P'ECIIA , loo Snik IHJ© c 41 fuv®zritdo .`society IB3mlar gepcomitt e. Society itrantere fame= college sty&s • one onne nnn this store. New shades—new fabrics—new refinements of sunt. Little addled touches of hand -tailoring that nobody ever thought of }beffore! And the valine 7 Bonn for what you. are asked to pay is greater than we iulmagiumedl possible. We don't often nnDdlunllge in !rush suujper- Ilatiives as these — buut when you seg the clothes tthermselves youn911IL unndler- sttannd.. Why not some in, now, sumcil take ycwnazr pick while ounr selection is complete? *Whelln yonn do we predict that you'll, be as entahunsiaistie ars we are! Rezdy b WC u1,Il» b 435.3© Monarch trand Si Hose in natural, neu- tral. Flesh and Rachelle shades; run stop, lisle heel and toe ; good wear- ers. PRICE, 71c The I/ L g Feature in our iilft&ry Style that has made our New Hats an instantaneous success; Style that embodies the smartness of this season's latest impor- tations; Style that expresses the modern mode, and Style that is rarely found in Hats that are so reasonably priced. We specially invite every lady to see these new creations of artistic Millinery. t Come ran l See the New Sprin, Coats for air eta ][f you would see the newest cloths, the most popular shades and the latest styles in Women's Coats, visit our Wo- men's Ready -to -Wear Department. WeQ have made extra preparation for this Spring's dis- play. You simply can- not afford to miss this beautiful collection. Prrices Norco @snulno adamant name A. W. Mangan IECHATIINcl T, DRUG SI®IR.IE ti