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The Huron Expositor, 1920-09-17, Page 3ISSX. 511/t morrerimmishommemisit 000,000 CHILDEEN ;`:t for a chili in nes him to save, al first thousand it ali Branches. YITRIG'r Kirkton ll Zurich ritario d Sciences thane las October 4th -1LENDAR ViRITE e r s rar 2 X1111111111111111 g at $100 per share 6 Preferred Stock, bonus of Common ger your purchase is DO this investment neral, regular income he Preferred Stock tunity through the k to participate in of a well established Canadian industry. ircular fully describ- T ent.. CURITIBS 26 KING ST: e. LONDON. ENG. 1111,tills )lElf111111111111!1111111111111111111111111 'en a tiny le bottom ystal dis-- — o OF 1JF ar brings :ness to r cold) --- i A ec5111Carkiit9.- t 'SEPTEMBER P �jJi j�� TEE -Yi.rlild il.fY1.�1�1•�1.1,�•�i I!•111Y�il�iO.r1i �•1..'i,.1�.11MUY•� 0��..� s/�1F.l1/� Use,of Your ...I Have you good pasture gag to w ? so, increase your herd and make use of it. This Bank makes a special biotin* a loans to farmers. {=hare a talk with ow local manaer. - THE SEAFPRTH BRANCH, • R. 1Vt• 343m, Manager. SAFETY pEposry BOXES FOR RENT. ; SAL': tDA BUYS HUGE WAREHOUSE- 3n 'ebruary " the.: ,SALAD& 'TEA MAMA -NY willsteettiy the mag. 711804_ new being at.the comer of :Et. Lawrence. Le Royer and St. "Jean Baptiste Streets, Montreal, that build - Aug at pretest 0000104w SALADA tat St. Pahl andice treats :and •�xectedf= by -��� �'�- l'egra ; ago, .haying -for sometime been in - :adequate for their business. Other CSALADA: warehouser are situated at Toronto 'and Boston. WHY Do BIRDS SLEEP WITH' THEIR HEADS UNDER THEIR WING? Anyone who has attempted to go to sleep is broad -daylight, or with a bright light beating down upon their eyes, has learned mat closing the .eyelids is of little avail. The rays eif light penetrate the thin covering (of skin and, acting upon the nerves which lead to the brain, make ,deep -impossible unless bodily fatigiue is :sufficient to overcome this handicap. It is precisely the same with birds `They, too, desire darkness and priv- ;acy. As they retire much earlier than human beings, they have acquir- ed the habit of tucking their heads "under the most convenient covering, their wings. The arrangement of their nostril's and the way in which they breathe prevents them from be Ting smothered and their feathers ef- fectually shade their eyes from all the surrounding light, thus permitting. them to secure a sound and: uninter- rupted sleep—an. essential to complete. rest and health of birds, as well as =the great majority of other living :things. - WHEN EABY IS CROSS 4Mothers, when your baby is cross— wmen °he. cries a great deal andi no ount of attention or petting cheers him—something is the matter. It is not the nature of little ones to be cross and peevish—the well child is a. happy child, - Give him a dose of 713aby's 'Own: "Tablets and he will soon be well again. The Tablets _are a mild '-but thorough—laxative which regulate the 'bowels and stomach; banish constipation and indigestion; break up -cold's and simple fevers and relive the other- -minor ills of -little «ones. Concerning them Mrs. Oscar Bedard; Ste. Sophie, Que., writes:- -"Baby's Osen'Tablets are an excellent remedy for constipation. They re- lieved my little one ' when nothing else would ands I can strongly recom- mend them to all mothers." The 'Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from 'The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., .Brockville, Ont. - - THE REASON WHY How did men learn to talk? --Talk- ing and the words used came \nte be- ing through the desire of men to communicate with each other. Be- fore words became known and used man talked to those about him by the use of signs, gestures and other movements of the body. Even to- day when men meet who cannot talk the same language they will be seen trying to come to an understanding by the use of signs and gestures and generally with fair results. The need of more signs and gestures to express a constantly increasing num- ber of objects and thoughts led to the introduction of sound or combine ation of sounds made with the vocal cords to accompany certain signs and gestures. In this way man eventually developed a very considerable faculty- for 'expressing himself. Sign 'by sign, gesture by gesture and sound by sound language was slowly de- veloped. A man would be trying to •explain something to another by sign .or gesture and to make it more clear would make a sound or combination of sounds to, put more expression in- to his efforts. Finally the other man would understand what was meant and he would tell so''me one else, us- ing the same signs, gestures and sounds. Later on it would develop that to express thus any certain thought, act or the name of thing, ell -of the people in the community would make this same combination of sounds, signs and 'gestures to express the same thing. Finally the gesture and signs would be dropped- and it .was found that people understood perfectly what was meant when only the sound- or combination of `sound -was produced. That made a word:. All the other words were made in the same way, one at a time, until we had enough words to express all •the ordinary things and the combina- tion of words became a language. The children learned the language by hearing their parents talk it, and -that is how men learned; to talk. How did shaking the head mean- "No"?—The origin of this method of indicating "No" is found in the re- sult of the mother's efforts in the animal kingdom - of trying to feed her young. A mother animal would be trying to get her young to accept -the food She brought them and tried to put it. in their mouths., Perhaps, •hoW ever, the young animal had,,had auf tient food ,or did `not - fancthe :kind sof food offered. • The natural ,thing toe:din twitter the circumstances 4.ordd be to, close the mouth tight and slake the head from side to side to prevent the mother from` forcing .the food oto the mouth, Thus we get to .eiored lips and the shaking the head from side "to aide to mean "No." ,In other words, that kind of a way of saying "No" came from an effort to say "I don't --want any." The idea of nodding to mean "Yes" comes from the opposite of the ac- Edon which, as • just described, indi- sates a. "No." When - the young animal was anx- ious to accept - the offered} food, it made an effort to get at the food quickly. Hence, the pushing forward of the head and the .open mouth (al- ways more or less opened when you - nod to indicate "Yes") and an expres- sion of gladness. - You will notice if you See anyone nod the head to indi- cate "Yes" that the lips are open rather than closed, andthat there is I always a smile or an indication of a mile to accompany it. , In other Words, the nod to mean "Yes" is only another way 'of saying "I shall be. pleated." - WHY DO KNOTS APPEAR IN BOARDS? All trees are formed` of three parts —the roots, the parent stem or trunk and the branches. When 'the -trees are cut up into lumber, the first of these parts is useless, and is general- ly left in the 'ground to be later salvaged -for' other purposes. The branches of the tree are also of com- paratively little use from the stand- point of lumber, but the trunk pro- duces a number of valuable planks in proportion to its diameter. In spite of the fact that the branches have- been lopped• off, they leave their mark upon . the parent stem in the shape of hard, round or oval spots, which we call "knots." Each of " these knots shows where the limb of the tree was- growing, because the limb had its beginning in the heart of the trunk, dra its sustenance directly from the c tral source of supply. The hard- ness of the, knots is because more strength is required at the base of a limb than further out, for it must be strong enough to ,support not it- self, but also the i' smaller limbs which spring from it.' For the same reason, "knots" are 'usually full of sap, and burn with a snap and crackle, which is foreign to the sur- rounding wood. THE TREASURE - OF GOOD ,HEALTH Easily Maintained Through the Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. - • There is not a nook or corner in Canada, in the cities, the towns, the `villages, on the farms and in the mines and lumber camps, where Dr. Williams' Pink Pills - have not been used, and) from one end of the coup- - try to -the other they have brought back to bread -winners, their wives and families the splendid treasure! of t newhealth and gth ea strength. You have only to. ask your neigh - hors, _and they can tell you of some rheumatic or nerve -shattered man, -� some suffering woman, ailing youth:. or anaemic girl who owes present health and strength to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. For, more than a quarter of a century . these pills have been known not only • in Canada, but throughout all the world, as a reliable tonic, blood -making medicine. The wonderful success of Dr. Wil- liams! Pink Pills is due to the fact that they go right to the root of the disease in the- blood, and - by making the vital fluid rich and red- strengthen every organ and every nerve, thus driving out disease and pain, ' and making weak, despondent people bright, abtive and strong. ' Mr. W. T. Johnson, one of the best known and most highly esteemed men in Lunen - burg county, N. S., says:—"I am, a Provincial Land Surveyor and, am ex- posed for the greater part of the year to very hard -Work travelling through the forests by day and camping out by night, lands I find the only thing - that will .keep me up to the mark is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. When I leave. home for a trip in the woods I am as interested in having my supply of pills as provisions, and on such occa- sions, I take them regularly. The . result is I am always fit. I never take cold, and can digest all kinds of food such as we have to put up with hastily cooked`, in the woods. Having proved the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, as a tonic and health build- er, I am never` without them, •and I lose no opportunity in-reconunending them to weak people whom I meet." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills should be kept in every home, and their occa- sional use will keep the - blood pure and, ward off illness. You can get these pills through any medicine deal- er, or by mail at 50 cents a box or 6 boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Wil- liams' medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. hi' STEW'S.SELL A LASS -1 MAIL OR PIAMMYOUtt, ORDERS 1 WE PREPAY CARRIAGE all Friday and Saturday . t Se24th pand 25th Stewart giros. Will present to Feminine Seaforth and Vicinity a Lavish Conception of all that the Metropolitan Style Centres term Correct. matt av- our preparations ar.ations for this fashion event justifies '- p p , us in saying......_ rt will be d�- erent from the ordinary, even different from anywe have held:. , ave in the pas To a the observer of Fashions there will besugges- tion a distinctive at ... sphere a sugges tion of exclusiveness which will impress you with the ides, that after all you 'can warts. always do better at Ste Y � Millinery of Surpassing Beauty Featuring the newest creations and LatestDesigns of the hour.. t WOMEN who are desirous of knrwing what the world of fashion will wear this fall, and seeing the new- est ideas exemplified, will de - live a world of pleasure from our Millinery display on the opening days. A wonderful- ly charming collection of new ideas in Fall Hats await your approval. We wish to spec- ially invite every woman in this vicinity- to be present at this the greatest openings we have ever had. Prices Reasonable Suits and Coats dor Fa Wear The most attractive designs ever assembled at moderate prices. M An Extraordinary Display of Women's Dresses Beautiful beyond description are the new fall dresses. The largest as well. as the best display' it` has ever been our privilege to offer awaits you here. Serge, silk, silk crepe, Taffeta, Pail- .ette, Charmuese, Poplin trimmed, with beads, embroidery, Braid, Silk, Satin, buttons, - etc. - Come and see them they are glorious. Prices $10 to $50 For. - the benefit of Sumner Visitors we have decided to accept ordersin.our Millinery Department from now on. - t this magnificent dispi of COATS and Evill be featured a beau ~of °:e very Newest Styles comprising the latest crea- tions of the foremost Cana- dian and American designs There are dozens of models, each with a different ex- pression of distinguished ,style, reflecting the exclus- iveness that -aiways charac- terizes . ar ic-terizes this store. Come as often as you wish. Prices $25 to $5 I4, Exclusive, Attractive Altogether Charming Dress 00s - T � HIS fall the weaver's art has vied with nature herself in the creation of pleasing shades andcolor combina- tions which are presented in such charming array in Dress Goods Depart- ment, Silks, Satins, Georgette Cr and Crepe -de -Chane, Broadcloths, e- lours, Gaberdines, Serges, Poplins. and Tweeds, in ali the Autumnal shades, in- cluding plum, prune,rgreen, navy, bur- gundy, brown, tan, sky and black. - While the prices—as is always the case —are a little lower at,Stewarts. Stewart Bros. Seaforth For - the benefit of Summer visitors we have decided to accept orders in our Millinery Department from now on.