HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1932-06-03, Page 3Asthmapp��and Hay Fever
EYTI�EI OLD IIllIASraEDY
DeJ.D.KELL0663—.
REMED'f
NVCeONDitO PON V VAM At A fr.NDAND ntr-
MKDV PON TNTC DAVAO Arri.m. 1ON. ctnC1[-
t.V mtwKVO AND OveueolMtO t5SDTA'tet a.
K13
Wordwas received here $a Wed-
- ttesday
ed:-'rltesday, , last of the death in OOttawaa.
of Jaynes R. Forsyth, a former •res.
' dent of Blyth; and 'brother• Of Miss.
iApes Forsyth,' towi4 The late fie,
ceased was born in England s('veatyl-
.ilive years.. ago. He came to Canada
with his parents about : sixty-five
years ago . and first settled at Wrox-
- eter. 'hater the family•m'.ovedl•_�to
Michigan in 1882, and then became
• residents of Blyth in the. year 1887
-!when the elder Forsyth engaged in
Abe woollen mill (business. , The late
'deceased was married in 1886 to Miss
-.ennie Sanderson, of Wroxeter; and
''from this union three -sones survive
iiliobert, of Toronto; John, of Ottawa,
:and Dr, Carlyle, of Newark, N. J.-
:Myth Standard.
.Resigned.
The resignation of Miss Jetta
Mark, Principal of ?.Mussels Contin-
uation 'Sehbol, has •been received by
the board •tq take effect at the end
of the present school term. The many
friends of •Miss -Mark, will rgret her
,decision to leave town where she has
been a conscientious and efficient
teacher for the past three years.—
Brussels Post.
ase
25th Wedding Anniversary.
Congratulations were extended to
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hangy on May
-22nd, it- being the 25th anniversary
of their wedding. Among those who
spent' .the day with them were: Mr.
and Mrs. J. ' C. Richards, Stratford;
Mr. D. Fell and' Mrs. Wise, Sea -
forth; Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Cook and
'Mrs. Mason; Clinton; Mr. E. Coates
:and Mrs. Duncan, Listowel, and Mr.
TryMissMcFarlane's Favorite
Recipe for BiSIiIIITS
teaspoon salt 4 teaapoo$a sgic .,
2 cups pastry flour Bak;g`Poiv er
• (or 1% cups •2 tablespoons
bread flour) shortening
cup milk, or half milk and half water
Sift together flour, baking powder and
salt. Cut in the chilled shortening. Now
add the chilled liquid to make *oft
dough. 'roes dough onto a floured board
cad do not handle more than is neces.
sary. Roll or pat out with hands to about
344i inch thickness. Cut out with a floured
biscuit cutter. Place on slightly greased
pan or baking sheet and bake in hot oven
at 450° F. 1$ to 15 minutes..., . ,.
"For Light, Flaky
Bisciiits
use Magic
Baking Powder,"
.says Miss M. McFarlane,
dietitian of
iSt. Michael's Hospital,' •
Toronto
"T RECOMMEND
Magic be-
cause I know it is
pure, and free
from harmful in-
gredients."
Miss McFarlane's opinion• is
based on a thorough knowledge of
food chemistry, and on close study
of food effects upon the body. On
practical cooking experience, too.
Most dietitians in public insti-
tutions, like Miss McFarlane, use
Magic exclusively. Because it is
always uniform, dependable, and
gives consistently better baking
results. -.
And Magic is the favorite of
Canadian housewives. It outsells
all other baking powders combined.
You'll find Magic makes all your
baked, foods unusually light and
- tender... and gives you the same
perfect results every time.
•
Free Cook Book—When you bake
at home, the new Magic Cook Book will
give you dozers of recipes for delicious
baked foods. Write to Standard Brands
Ltd., Fraser Avenue and Liberty Street,
Toronto, Ont. •
"Cont,!es no alum.'!
This etdtBment on
every tin le our guar
ark tee t trot Ma die
Saking Powder le free
from alum or any
harmful • liiiirodibnt.
.lied• In Cud•'
d�4wt�,m3.alo N.�Fun„�.,rr,a.NeJ �:
al,
sprs
and: Mrs. J. R. 1M'c ee : and daub -
'torso
b -
tors, Dorothy and Helen, of Blyth.--
,1Wingham. Advance -Timer..
Improving-
IMr. E; Lowry, proprietor of the
Central 'Motel, who suffered a par-
alytie Stro ce on '14tothday of last week
and. who was in a very critical con-
dition, ts- considerably improved al-
though still confined to his; bed.---lEsa
eter TunesA.dvecate.
Crediton Pastor Accepts Call to-
Fullarton.
, Rev. H. W. `Hagelstein, of Credi-
ton, has received and accepted an in-
vitation td become the ,pastor of the
Fi#;llarton United circuit succeeding,
Rely. A. E. Menzies. Mr. 'Hagelstein
had been the pastor of the Crediton
charge for the past three years and
has made many friends both at
'Crediton and in the community. --Ex •
eter Times -Advocate.
Storm Causes Runaway.
'During the severe storm Monday
of `last week, a four horse team of
horses driven by Mr. Wna. Westlake
of Usborne, ran away and part of the
harness was .broken. Mx. Westlake
was using the team on the cultivator
and had just unhitched when they
'became frightened of. ,the. storm and
the driver lost control, the team run-
ning, into a gdte post. On an ad -
'joining farm a team .of horsies be-
longing to Mr. Albert Etherington
also ran away.—Exeter Times -Advo-
cate.
Death of Miss Sheppard. y'
• ,Following an illness •of- about a
month's duration, the death occurred
in the Township of Colborne last
week of Miss Catherine Sheppard.”
Miss Sheppard was born on the farm
on which she had been a life-long res-
ident, she being one of a family of
eight of the late,) George Sheppard
and Elizabeth Jane Pentland. De-
ceased is survived by one brother,
Samuela SI' eppard, and two sisters,
Miss Mary Jane Sheppard, at home,
and Mrs. Samuel Treleaven, of Dun-
gannon.—Clinton News -Record.
Visited County Home•
,
The choir of the Clinton'Presby°-
terian church ivisited the Huron Cour,.
ty Home on Friday evening, present-
ing a...nice program, which was much
enjoyed "by the residents. A short
play was given, some readings and
musical numbers, all of which were
much enjoyed, but perhaps the most
popular numbers were the bagpipe
selections by the Mutch brothers. .It
was a bright and lively program and
at its conclusion a treat, "of candies
and oranges was distributed. Rev.
Dr. Dougan occupied the chair dur-
ing the program --Clinton. News -Re-
cord. • '
Death' of George Anderson
The death of George Anderson, for
several years a resident of the vil-
lage, occurred at the home of his
brother, Archie Anderson, on the
13th concession of West Wawanosh
on Tuesday, May 24th. Mr. Ander-
son, who had been living alone, suf-
fered a severe heart attack some
weeks ago and was removed to the
home of Mrs. McEvers. On Monday
the day previous to his death, he
was removed to his brother's home
and expired suddenly Tuesday morn-
ing. The funeral service e was held
Thursday at two o'clock atthe resi-
dence of his brother, Mr. Archie An-
-derson. Interment was made in St.
Helen's cemetery. — Lueknow Senti-
nel.
Exchange of .Pastorates.
An exchange of pastorates has been
mutually arranged between Lucknow
and Dorchester, Rev. R. W. Craw go-
ing to Dorchester and Rev. 8, T.
Tucker coming to Lueknow United
'Church. Dorchester is a village in
Middlesex county about twelve miles
from London and the pastoral charge
is considered one of the best in the
London 'Conference.—Lucknow Sent-
inel.
Blue Water Proxy Throws Up
Sponge
The Blue Water Highway Associa-
tion, through its president, Col. C. S.
Woodrow, of -Sarnia, has written
towns and cities along the route that
the association has thrown up the
sponge and will cease to exist. The
letter was sent out a weele ago and
has been published elsewhere. In his
recent tour of places along the route
'Col. Woodrow received encouraging
promises of assistance at Goderich
and other places, but rude jolts at
Southampton and Owen Sound, which
places have withdrawn their financial
assistance.--Goderich Star.
S. 8. "Manitoulin" to C'hll at
Goderich.
Announcement has been -made that
the passenger steamer "Manitoulin"
will commence a week -end -service
from Windsor to Goderich and Kin-
cardine, comhnencing . July 9th and
extending' 'until August 29th. The
boat will leave Windsor at 5 p.m.
each 'Saturday, arriving at Goderich
early Sunday, m'ornin>a and departing
Sunday, night ere the return trip from
Kincardine. -, Sarnia also is a port
of 'rail.--Goderich Star. •
Work Commenced At Presbyterian
Church.
Work was started by Westbrook &
Harrison on Monday morning at the
Presbyterian lehurch, where an ex-
tensive contract will be completed this
summer. "Everything has been re-
moved front. the basement and the
partitions and floors are being torn
out. Several sub -contracts have been
awarded: W. H. Doak, cement; W.
Phillips, masonry ; Dave Munro,
painting.--Goderich Star.
Not the Season For Bass.
When Game Warden W. Ga McLean
discovered Calvin Sm -lith, of near
Stratford; in possession of a number
of black bass, secured in the Mait-
land River by the use of hook and
y
u.�dliJb
•1aa'i .4/4119,4
ghee- count ie l ergot
was 'mad4 more 'ji a %strate
Reid begat , utli #tad eoapnItted
previous ofl'nces irf this nature.--
*044lh 00 04 • ;
Injured in A.utonnobile Crash.
Mrs. B. Z. Smith. wife of the man-
ager of the Dominion Road Machin-
ery Co is In Alexandra hespitat with
a (broken, right arm, the result of an
eatomobile accident on ''wlednesday
morning. 'Mr. and Mfrs. Smith were
driving en the Blue Water Highway
when their carr struck Ifortte loose
gravel on the approach to a narrow
bridge a few miles north of Bayfield
and 'before 1Mx. 'Smith could get 'it
straightened away the. car struck the
bridge.-- (Goderich Signal.
Alf. Tebbtitt Retires. -
A change }n -the firm of Alf. Teb-
butt & Son, hardware dealers, West
street, is announced this week. Mr.
Alf. Tebbutt retires and the business
will be conducted in future' by his
'Son, 'Mr. Gordon Tebbutt, who is well
arid favorably known to the, people
of Goderich and vicinity.--Goderich
'Signal.
• Will of John S. Bedford Stands.
The will of the late John S. Beds
ford, of Goderich, will be probated
as it stands. Judge Costello Thurs-
day afternoon dismissed the caveat
entered by John Stephen Bedford, Jr.,
and Gladys Bedford Allard against
the will of I their father, which had
been entered for probate by the ex-
ecutor, F. R. barrow. Under the will
Mrs. Mary Bowler, who was house-
keeper for the late John S. 'Bedford,
for some years, is to receive $2,000,
a diamond ring and a radio. Mrs.
Allard, the late Mr. Bedford's daugh-
ter, rece'iv'es $1,000 and the residue
is equally divided between the two
sons, John -and Kenneth Bedford. rt
is estimated that the estate is worth
about $20,000. It was alleged by
those who brought the action that
undue influence had been used lv
Mrs. Bowler and that deceased ws
not in a testamentary capacity when
the will was made. The action com-
menced before Judge T. M. Costello
in Surrogate Court on Monday. J.
C. Makins, K,C., of Stratford, 'ap-
peared for the contestants, and Frank
Donnelly for F. R. Darrow, the ex-
ecutor, and Mrs. Bowler. Several
witnesses were heard on (Mor Say and
an adjournment was made to Thurs-
day. morning when further evidence,..
was heard. Thursday afternoon;
Judge Costello halted., the proceed-
ings, declaring that he had heard
enough to be convinced that the will
was lawfully executed and should be
,probated., as it, stood. The action was
dismissed, with costs to be paid by
the contestants of the will:—Goderich
Signal.
Twenty Thousand Years
In Sing Sing Prison
Lewis E. Lawes has been warden
of Sing Sing penitentiary for twelve
years, which is a record that stamps
him immediately as a remarkable
man since the tenure of many of his
predecessors is to be reckoned in
months instead of years. In that time
he has become the best-known peno-
logist in the United States with a
reputation which has spread- to other
lands. The fruit of his . experience
with criminals and his reflections •up-
on crime, gathered not only in Sing
Sing but in other, prisons and re-
formatories, are to be found in his
recently lY published Twenty
Thousand,
Years in Sing Sing. For the most
part the book is written in a lively,
popular (vein which makes it easy,
reading; but there are plenty of sta-
tistics far those who have a taste
for them, and, there is plenty of sob-
er thinking. In general the book is
a .condemnation of the present sys-
temof treating criminals. At the,
time the book was written Warden
Lawes had put 150 men and one wo-
man to death, or at least had been
legally responsible for their execu-
tion. That record has, no doubt,
been lengthened since. As a result
of it he is absolutely opposed to capi-
tal punishment. In fact, Warden
Lewis is a civilized person and not
a wooden -headed official.
But he is far from being a senti-
mentalist, arid' is sufficiently hard-
boiled. His predecessor in office was
Thomas Mott Osborne, whose ad-
ministration was, in the end, a fail-
ure, yet he did Sing Sing the great
kindness 'of interesting the public
in it. Mr. Osborne was a sentimen-
talist. He was so easy going that the
prisoners, to a great extent, -took the
management of the Penitentiary out,
of his hands. Warden Lewis believes
in penitentiaries.''. He does not weep
over his charges who, number about
2,500; nor does ,he spoil them with
kindness. But he does not believe
that any man is wholly bad. He
does, nevertheless, believe that the
penitentiary is obviously the place
for criminals, and that they can be
made letter men when they emerge
than when they entered. • Perhaps
the chief criticism he has to make
of the general system is that the
punishment should not fit the crime,
but rather the criminal. Some men
would be quite fit to return to civil
life after a couple of years' imprison-
ment/while others -convicted of the
same crime might require twenty
years before they could safely be
given their liberty.
He :believes in discipline not only
because without discipline if would
be impossible to run such an insti-
tuition as a prison, but because
Skin Loveliness
Easy' to Have. Famous
Vegetable Pills Better
than Creams '
Miss E. `1'. has proved it. She says:
''Carter's Little Liver Pills will do more
to keep the complexion clear than all
the face creams I have used."
PURELY VEGETABLE, a gentle,
effective tonic to both liver and bowels,
Dr. Carter's s Little Liver Piles are with-
out equal for correcting Constipation,
Acidity, Biliousness Headaches and In-
digestion. 25c. & 75c. red pkgs., every-
where, , Ask for Carter's by NAME.
thelp
se►eietf' at die ns •= f their innnieo
anent. ,Tx 1 i , of the cure,
Warden Irayyv'ems to the it
P actiOattly `' , �l the *mates.
curable, a l�laensBes at length som
of the mere 'nottOr}Rus characters who
have; passed ttirOgh- his hands. For,
instance, Two in 'Cro ley, the
undersized *Ai til Who -..•defied' the Neer
York police court, was -a peeeuliaaV
vicious murderer. 'But he might liavu
been an unusually clever arohitectf,
had he reeeivedt .the proper home;;
training, there is' • little doubt that.
to -day he might -have ,a useful,. t
member • of soicietyi "Reversing fife
ryiew, one sees ltarles 'Chapin, et;
of the most capable newspaper edi-
t rs in the United States, ending itii;�.
life in 'Sing Sing for the murder of
this wife, 011e:, does not need to,
speculate . about .the possibility of
Chapin's usefulness; that hail been;
amply demonstrated. 'So far as the
protection of society is" concerned,
Chapin could have been released
safely after a couple of years'.incar-
ceration.
But while Warden Lawes believes
that every criminal is reclaimable,
that .most of them are capable _of
discharging the duties of decent
citizens, and that practically all
of them are kept in prison too long,
he has no romantic views about
them. Speaking • generally, they are,
ignorant and untrained. Three-
quarters of them are unskilled in
mechanics or trade. The same pro-
portion (has had previous institu-
tional experience; that is to say, three
out of four have been in the hand's,
of the police before. Only three out
of a hundred ever were members of
any lays' club or similar organiza-
tion that is 'the respectable alterna-
tive to the gangs which fascinate
youth. Only one out of a hundred
was ever connected witha church or-
ganization, Persozlsbetween the ag-
es of 15 and 30 constitute 73 per
cent. of American criminals, yet only
50 per cent. of the American popula-
tion. Three out of every four men
who enter SingSing never return. In
other words,, they may be assumed
to have made good in the world,
at least negatively.
Warden Lawes does not doubt that
most criminals are made in the
homes or the lack of homes, and
that those who are not thus pre-
pared for subsequent careers of
crime are made by their outside as-
sociations as growing boys. 'If there
is to be any great change in the pro-
portion of ',criminals to the total
population there must be tree
mendously increased attention paid
to juvenile education. He believes
also in the theory of probation, and
points out that few probationers re-
turn to crime. One reason for the
present crime wave; or rather for the
development of gangsters and gun-
men, is undoubtedly prohibition. It
has turned an enormously profitable
business into the hands of criminals.
It has increased the cost of living
and set new standards for ptens of
thousandsof people. A .man who
has never done a stroke of honest
work in his life finds that he car/
earn $200 a week as a beer runner.
When competition in beer running
becomes too keen he turns to crime
so that he can continue to wear
silk shirts and drive a car and keep
a pretty lady. Altogether it is a tre-
mendous problem which he states
and whose partial solution die at-
tempts.
A mother was discussing with her
daughter the qualities of men. "Oh,''
st(rid the daughter impatiently, ate
entlY, "but
t
they have no self-control!" . "All the
better," replied the mother. "If they
had there would be a great many
more spinsters."
Then Came the Dandelion!
(March winds blew; April rains fell
and—then came the dandelion. It is
the Spring parade of "greens" which
invades our markets -every year.
There are thirty-nine varieties in all,
everything from A to W (artichoke
to watercress). The one accracting
the most attention and getting the
most applause and praise at the
present moment is the dandelion.
One green enthusiast wrote: "T1'
dandelions disfigure your garden, cut
'em :and eat 'em." This is a sound
bit of advice especially at this time
of the year when dandelions are
young and tender and when our
lawns need manicuring. /There is
nothing which tastes quite as good
as the first mess of dandelion greens.
They have a flavor which is half -
pungent and half-rbitter; only epi,
cures describe it *ell. 'T,io:i of
course they have -_'hidden ° qualities,
minerals and n•itan:ins, whir;' are bet-
ter known and never mentioned s::ice
some •people have queer quirks about
eating foods which are good for
them. And greens always fall in
that classification.
There are different ways of serv-
ing dandelions. Some like them hot;
some like them cold. The wonder
child John Henry who_ rose up in bed
a few days after birth and called for
a slab of bacon and a pot of greens
was right about combinations of flav-
ors.
Dandelions and Bacon.
1 pound dandelions Salt and pepper
3 strips bacon 1 cup water
Put blanohed dandelions in deep
kettle; add minced bacon and season-
ings. Add water, cover and simmer
gently until tender.
Dandelions are delicious in salads
or wilted. For salads they may be
used with other greens or vegetables.
Cold Dandelion Salad.
1 pounds dandelions
1 cup French dressing
1 clove garlic.
(Rub the mixing bawl with garlic,
add the cleaned, chilled dandelions,
pour over the French dressing and
toss until leaves are well covered.
Serve alone or in combination as fol
lows:
?Dandelions with quartered hard -
cooked eggs.
Dandelions and sliced tomatoes.
Dandelions, cucumber and minc'e`d'
celery.
Dandelions, romaine and minced
A:h_df.'f'dk .xsV:uni�„:J
People
of
Seaforth
and
of
Huron
County"
do Read
The
Expositor
.along Wit..
,They rear eyes
advertlsements,4'u,
pages every week (h:
-The Expositor ..is m+ 0 s
column bigger tbau y ut1 e
cal paper), because tie news
advertisements in The Expositor
are a vital part of their ca u i
ity lives. The local 'news Iel!e
them what their neighbors and'
their 'community are doing; keeji
them posted on the things that are
of greatest everyday interest' to . -
the'rn. The advertisements . tell.
them who sells the best merchan-
dise and where to buy e c onomlc.
ally.
Your advertisement in The Ex-
positor will be read by all the peo-
ple who trade in the local markets,
the only people you care to_ reach.
If youradvertisement doesn't•'ap-
pear in the leading home weekly,
people naturally will conclude that
you-• have nothingworthwhile_ to..
offer them. '
Think It Over.
The
° A
Huron
Exp�sit�r
McLean Bros., Publishers
Seaforth, Ontario
celery.
Dandelions, chicory and chopped
olives.
Dandelions, escarole and chives,
chopped..
Wilted Dandelion Greens.
Wash -greens thoroughly and shake
until dry. Fry minced bacon until
crisp and•then remove pieces of ba-
con. Add lemon juice or 'vinegar
to
the hot 'bacon fat and heatquickly.
Pour over' greens which' have been
seasoned and mixed with bacon. Toss
Iightiy until blended.
If. you prefer you can serve plain
cowked dandelions with a bit of corn
bread and baton./
Plain Cooked Dandelions.
Drain boiled dandelions, shake over
fire to dry, season with salt and pep-
per, vinegar and oil.'
Corn Bread with Bacon:
This is exactly the corn (bread to
go with the greens.
2 eggs
14 cup sugar -
1 cup milk
4 cup all -bran
1 cup corn meal
% cup flour
14 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder.
1/4,.pound bacon (diced).
,Beat eggs slightly; add sugar and
mix well. Add'milkand all -bran. Let
soak. Sift dry ingredients and add
to first mixture. Peer into greased
pan and sprinkle with diced bacon.
sske in (400 deg. F.) oven for 20
minutes. Remove and place under
low broiled three minutes to brown
bacon. -
Yield: 16 small pieces.
Greatest of Bankers
Looks Like Artie;
It is a curious fact we have noted
in Englishmen more than in other
races that they so often look quite
different from what they are. John
Galsworthy looks like a lawyer;
Conan )Doyle looked like a wholesale
merchant; H. G. Wells resembles a
shipping magnate, and Montagu Nor-
mlan looks like an artist or a refined
'pirate or something. We believe that
he looks very mulch like the late
Edmund E.. Sheppard, of Saturday
Night. He wears a wide 'brimmed
hat, a coat with a cape, a soft co' lar
iIY,A"in 1 ., Ii.u:.f Yui:.Y
and a flowing bow 'tie. In fact he
dresses and looks like anything in
the world but the governor of the
Bank of England. There is also some-
thing ?mildly conspiratorial about his
sudden flittings • hither and yon,
sometimes on an airplane, sometimes
on an ocean steamer from which he
d'iselm(barks not along the gangway
but down a rope ladder swung over
the side. Such playa are generally to
avoid newspapermen; from whom he
successfully conceals any feelings of
deep respect and ardent affection that
he may entertain. It is only fair to
say that he docs not eschew inter-
viewers any more than he does the
general public -with- whom •his eon-
tacts are always the briefest and
shyest. In a sense he is a recluse.
This may be . becausehe is a•
bachelor but it is likelier that he is a
bachelor because he is a recluse. He
has some points of resemblance to
the elder Morgan, at least in his love
of art. The things he is most inter-
ested in are pictures and panellings
and MUG ie and birds. He has a house
in London and an ancestral home in
Much Hadham, both of therm dense-
ly populated . . . uncommunica-
tive servants who protect him from
the enthusiastic uninvited visitor. He
has his own small circle of friends
wholrni he occasionally entertains bus
hei is unknown in society. No fash-
ionable hostess has ever been able to
produce him at a dinner party and
films become famou.s. It may be that
he is too busy for such functions;
is also probable that he has no taste
for them for we have observed that
even the busiest men find time to in-
chilge their own private tastes. That,
maybe, is what keeps them' so busy.
This romantic figure is the sub-
ject of a sketch in the New York
Times Magazine by Kathleen. Wood-
ward. She tells us that Norman took
to banking. naturally for it has been
a faund.ly business for generations.
His father :was a banker and his
father before him was a director of
the Bank of England. His mother's
father, Sir Mark Collet, was, a gov-
ernor of the 'bank. Further back
his people were connected with
banking and business in the City of
London. Montagu himself, after an
education in ' Eton and Cambridge,
became a bank clerk, later served
in the South African War., and was
awarded a D.S.O. In 1907, at the
age of 35, he was made a director
of the Bank of England, and in the
early years of the war retired from
his private activities as member of
the banking firm of Brown., Shipley
and Co., to give his whole time to
the affairs of the 'bank. In 1920 he
was elected .governor, and has been
re-elected every two years since, an
unprecedented honor, for ancient tra-
dition had always insisted that one
term as governor was honor enough
for any man.
But it was with no sycophantic
desire to honer Mr. Norman that
the directors kept on re-electing
him. It was because they realized
that nobody else had such, a grasp
of'international affairs at the be-
ginning of the reconstruction period,
which has continued ,to this day
and is likely to continue for many
years to come. Re . had -to make a
Special study of these problems and
since they have not been settled,
64i66m.,QiR<nlk.t , .li�,..tiu n 1'v, •.lu«VNrte:A., w.:SLu„xhidH'rri �L"...
he continues to study them. What
was considered to be the greatest
stroke in his career was in 1925
when he and Winston Churchill
were able to get Great Britain back
on the gold basis. Later events
have suggested that this was a
blunder of the .gravest kind for last
'September the nation was forced off
this basis,' and there is no im-
mediate sign of her regaining it.
That (Messrs. Norman and Churchill
did the right thing at the wrong
time is generally admitted.
To 'point to this error of judg-
ment, if such it be, is merely to
contrast it with his nntaible .aehievoe-
,nrentn. -Sao' wden, no .• airorshi.pper of •
wealth as all the world knows, said
when Chancellor of the Exchequer:
"I never hear uninformed remarks
about the callousness of internation-
al finance 'but. I think of the in'jus'-
tice 'done through ignorance to a man
of the high and unselfish motives
of the governor of the Bank of Eng-
land . . . To hint more than to
any statesman in Europe is the
credit due for the partial restora-
tion of the economic condition of
Europe in the, last fewv years," If
he performed th' tremendeus
achievement then it,* because of
the power lois position ve him, and
it is interesting to note that it was
not the government that appointed
him to it, but a little group of Eng-
lisih hankers and business .men ,who
are the directors of this extraordin-
ary institution, the Bank of England,
which lends money only to govern-
ments and other banks, whose Iaws
are laid down far it not by partik- -
ments but by its own directors, which
is a party of the government and yet
stitutions to which it 'bears • some
points of resemblance, 't. Paul's
Cathedral, and the roast beef of old
England.
Lost UgIy Fat
Her Husband says she Looks
Five Years Younger!
There is a certain weight at which
every woman looks her loveliest= -not
skinny underweight nor pendulous
overweight, but normal weight. We
find artists, doctors; theatrical pro-
ducers (and husbands 1) all agreed
upon this point. Read what this
woman of 29 says about it:—
" Having heard •from a friend of
mine that she had lost considerable
weight since taking Kruschen Salta,
I started using them in July last, when
I weighed 177 lbs. I have lost weight
steadily since then, and am now 150
lbs. --my normal weight. Moreover, I
feel 'brighter and more energetic in
every way. My age is 29. My husband
is a very severe critic. He says I look
five years younger. There is no other
reason for my loss of weight except
Kruschen, as I do not take any par-
ticular diet."—Mrs. S. R.
Taken every morning, Kruschen
efl'ects a perfectly natural clearance of
undigested food substances and all
excessive watery waste matter. Unless
this wastage is regularly expelled,
Nature will eventually store it up out
of the way in the, form of ugly fate:
t>:
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