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The Huron Expositor, 1923-02-09, Page 6was etaigtvntulating time t 1 Dad .'passed the whetter. 't catching a cold, wllea one at the beginning of last It was because I wee run VIOL Being run down 1 bud trouble. in getting rid of cold. I was a nervous wreck would wake up regularly mons - feeling that some terrib:e t alamity would take plates ,# it'peugk we were comfortably tiff, I felt sore my bust•' red was gtfybtg her lose everything. The chtl6gee worried we. If they nixie the least noise, 1 would get into a terrible temper. 1 would scold them fro that I am stere they hated me. I would be mol with myself after it was over and make up my :Med ,*ever to let it hu',pea again. I rraid go to bed at night and ;rid think and picture dread- ful. tkiags which night happen to me and my family. 1 -would lay awake for hours, sometimes until dajltgM, tmtii I was so weak that I could scarcely raise my head. I would waken next day just as Urea cis- when i laid down. After vet11e 1 get so that I didn't care what ban ened. The children annoyed toe and I wouldn't have eared if they had left roe fur geed. 1 felt that it was only a matter of time before I would lose my mind. 1 knew that nay symp- toms ccere due to a rut) down condition and that if 1 could cad get something to i,,uld me up, I aught be ail rip: t. 1 km•w that there wrist h.. seae . ,. ,,I ,emirs but most of them made su,'h fooksle , b,iiai ti t 1 was afraid of them. 1I ef,prning one day to run aeras:; a lotflot about Carnal, I was impre,;, e,l with the mode- rate 'ray this ln-,: nar:etion wit- de - Scribed, so 1 ni:,,le up my thrid 1 world try it. I did awl ted -•i I oat the imps:est .'.u.1 1.i1•h. •-t woman Baer e. 1 bav,•n't a care in the woi ld. lir:; ,':ed of runnir,t away from nu', my eh.ildren are now with rue all the titn,•. \1y husband te11,s no th::t my disposi- tion is as near un angel's r., any human being's ran he, but of course he is pre;udirrel. I don't believe I have a nerve in my body noC.'rrol is sold by your dtveyoit, anti if you can conscientiously say, afitar you have tried it, that it hasn't done you any good, return the empty bottle to hien and 1:e will refund your money. 6622 Sold by E. Umbach, Phm. B. 'Regal Quality" chicks aro hatched from arefaiiy selected eggs trona pure bred, hetayy laying stock. They grow to heavy Jay ti and profit payers. Hatched under Idaaleondit ions, they are vigorous and sturdy. Rotel Quality •' day-old chicks delivered to yaar`.p re as 'tot ion prepaid. N teety- seven per cant sure arrival guaranteed. Eleven standard breads. Haus,-,L Write for our Baby Chick Book. It sires many helpful BOOK bine on pose/try rising aad FREE it's absolutely free. CANADIAN CHICK HATCHERY Department 119. HAMILTON - ONTARIO HELP HELPLESS BLIND BABIES A Donrinioa Charter, without stock aubacription, was recently obtained forthe establishment in the city of Ottawa, of a Horne, Nursery, Hospit- al and Kindergarten, for the blind under six years of age, free to all from any province in the Dominion. So far nothing has been done for those 'poor unfortunates. According to reports received from the various Provincial authorities, there are et present nearly 250 in the Domino ps The late Sir Arthur Pearson, before bis death, chaimed that "Sunshine Home," at Chorley Wood, England, was "the only home in the Empire for Blind Babies." It is hoped short- ly to have the SECOND in Canada. To this end money is urgently requir- ed. Help us with your generous gift. Lest we forget; Do it now!" Cheques should be made payable to the Can- adian Blind Babies Home Association. Remittances will be promptly acknow- I ddreas J. F. McKINLEY, Treas- urer, or C. BLACKETT ROBINSON, Cor. -Sec., 188 Dufferin Read, Ottawa, 2872-10. WANTED Cream — Cream — Cream We want more Cream. The more cream we get the higher prices we can pay. Patronize om' Creamery and let us prove this fact to you - Remember, we Guarantee our weight and teat cermet. We are prepared to pay Cash for cream to any _patron wishing us to do so. Come in with your cream and see it weighed and tested and get your money. Creamery open Saturday nights un- til 9.80 p.m. daring winter months. The Seaforth Creamery Co. C. A. BARBER. ee . JUNK DEALER I will buy all kinds of Junk, Hideo .wool and Fowl. Will pay good pric WI. Apply to MAX WOLSB, Seaford, Ont. Phpne 178. eta ��e an +,ddl gtetalla kite- *dththr yearn ague* isaysMn stnt0 "sup brattierand I were astlrltfl¢sattle in east Taw,: lin those triage vole veto notquick to Accept a stranger's check, aad we had to take the caah along with us. We also earned along our branding iron, and put our boated ou the cattle as soon as wa bought then!. 'One day we bought a little bunch of yeartntgec Pinus t widow. slid among theta was a motherless calf that had heea raised as a put. ""We pennei the yearlings in the lady's cowpete, and when we began the work of hr;utding, l pulled off my coat and hung it on a corner uf. the rail fence in the inside pocket of my coat was a leather bill book that contained pT5O in ten and twenty - &liar hills. While we were busy at our work, the pet calf pulled the bill took out of my pocket, and in some way got it open' before we discovered him, be had swallowed the entire $750 and was chewing on the bill book. "Of course there was nothing or us to do except to kill the calf. This we did, and in its stctnacb we found the mutilated money, but in the whole lot there was not a soap larger than a postage stamp. We took the sticky mass of paper and spread it out on a wagon sheet, and sunned it until it was perfectly dry. Then we took it to the nearest poet office, and sent it to Washington. The Treasury- Depart- t:,rrtt redeemed $'SO of the money " EXPLOSIVE EFFECTS OF h-RENZING We know that the ancients use! water to help them to ttoarry work. When it was desired to split off a hue, block o1 granite, such for in. sunset as ('1-•opatra's Needle, drill }n Its were bored in a long line, and ie.to these were dnecn plugs of wood which were soaked with water. The -aturated wood expanded. with the result that the block split aw rev. Some fete wtut,•rs ago s somewhat similar feat was achieved at the P.ubislaw granite quarries near Abe -- de en Scotland, only on this occasion the expansive power of greet cold was made ase of Water, an we all know, expands greatly when turned into ice. At Rubislaw a great block of stone had been drilled ready for splitting when the idea struck the foreman that Na- ture might aid in attaining the de- sired abject. !.Cate t was poured into cath of the drill holes, and left 'o freeze. At the time !Isere was twenty degrees of frost, and within trio days the big block was burst In two. In similar fashion frost has been made use of to burst old shells which it was desired to scrap. They were filled with water, the holes were plug- ged up, and the rases left out in sero temperature. Without further trouble the desired results were ob. Lamed. THE HUMAN FACTORY Ila Motive Power is Rick, Red Blood_ Thehuman body is the busiest fac- tory in the world. There is no eight- hour day. no slack season, no holidays, no cessation of its labor at any time. Day and night work is carried on in the workshop of your body and it never ceases until the engin—your heart—stops forever. The factory of your body has its motive power without which it would cease at once. That power is rich,red, healthy blood, which keeps your whole system efficient and which drives away all disease that may attack it. Often, however, the blood begins to fail and becomes thin and poor. It be - cornea loaded with waste and charged with poisons. Then it is that your bodily workshop goes wrong; your physical machinery becomes dis- crganized and you fail ill. You be- come anaemic, perhaps the nerves break down, or you begin to suffer from indigestion, neuralgia, general debility, with pains in the hack, head or side. In this condition of blood- lessness Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are just what you need. Their one mis- sion is to make rich, red blood which brings health and energy to every fart of the body. Mr. Raymond Web - ler, Welland, Ont., tells what these pills did for him as follows:—"My blood was thin and watery, and I was in a badly run down condition. Pim- pies broke out on my body which caused me much discomfort. I would catch cold easily, which aggravated my condition. My brother advised me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and after taking about eight boxes I felt that I was again a well man. 1 have since recommended the pills with good results to others." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. BULGARIA WANTS AN AMERICAN QUEEN Bulgaria's peasant Premier has ex- pressed the wish that King Boris should marry. an American girl, and it may be that in a short time the American field will be surveyed for likely candidates. In Bulgaria the throne is not "broad based upon the people's will. It is in a precarious condition. Ex -King Ferdinand, fath- er of Boris, was given just twenty- four hours to abdicate and leave the country, and if Boris were to marry into one of the farmer or reigning European dynasties it is feared that. wntilrl produce political eomplicn- t.ie.ns which would reculi. in a demar.ri flint the monarchy- Ire abolished al- together. Democrney is much to the fore in Bulgaria as a ronsequence of the war, and the deluded Bulgarians still regard the United Staten as the most democratic of countries. They believe that a princess chosen from 'gam1:14iliati"lt shin oil the C4DAtitut 4 ,snare pert of the ' Mon- erotty thpirg,.eeauld be no attempts to encroach upon the rights of the peo- ple. Ina dentalty it is assumed that the American gal would be'fantasti- cally rich and this is an important consideration for the Bulgarians to- day. Commenting upon the prospect of the Icing of Bulgaria choosing an Americaq for his queen, Mr. F'r'eder- ick Cunliffe Owen, C.B.E., remarks in the New York Times that only one American woman has ever been called upon to share a throne, and has been rtetived with sovereign honors at some of the principal Monarchical courts of Europe. This was Miss Alice Heine, of New Orleans, who be- came the wife of the reigning Prince Albert of Monaco. The marriage took place in 1881, but after fourteen years the Prince had it dissolved. The Princess still retains her title but is no longer accorded the honors due to sovereignty or even royalty. The former Mrs. William Leeds was mar- ried arried to a Greek prince, and not long ago her son married Princess Xenia, of the Royal House of Romanoff, but neither the former Mrs. Leeds nor ber son is ever likely to sit on a throne. F or many centuries it was the in- variable custom of royalty to deem marriages with anyone not of royal rank as not legal bond. The chil- dren of such unions were specifical- ly de -barred from inheriting, and reigning monarch were considered free to have a morganatic wife and also a queen, the progeny of the lat- e, r inheriting title and estates. It wise Peter the Great who put his fent through this convention by mar- rying a kitchen wench of notorious n et ee -dents, and raising her to the tine uo a. Catharine the Creat. Later ,t.. Napoleon upset several royal iteditiens when he proclaimed him - Emperor, married a cresile, who was cr. w:tied Empress, and set up res /Tethers and sortie of his gen- e rely ■s kings. Nevertheless, whet his youngest heti her, Joachim, mar - tad Miss Elizabeth Patterson, of l:alttmore, he haul the French Gov- ernment decline to recognize the union as legal, since it had been made without bit sanction. Queen Victoria's views concern- ing the marriage., of royalty with commonalty- changed decidedly In the course of her lung reign. She refused to recognize the wife of her favorite uncle, the Duke of Sussex. although she came of a titled family. She created her Ruches of Inver- ness, but denied her the statue of. a royal Duchess of Sussex. Similarly, s he de'c'lined fo receive at court the wife of her first cousin, the Duke of Cambridge, who had been Miss Fare - brother, a distinguished Duplin ac- tress, and to the e nd of her days the Duke's wife was known as Mrs. Fits - George. a name borne aLsu by their children. However, Queen Victoria permitted the marriage of her daughter to the Marquis of Lorne, who, though the son of the Duke of Argyle, was a commoner in the eves of the law at the time of his mar- riage. Later on she gave her ap- proval to the marriage of her grand- daughter, the eldest daughter of Ed- ward, then Princes of Wales, to Lord Fife, and had the marriage solem- nized in her presence. No other royal house was ever so tolerant of marriages between its members and persons of less rank as that of Britain Ip the past fifty years. But in other parts of Europe it required a great war to shatter old prejudices. More than a score of ccntinental monarchies were over- thrown in the course of the straggle. Their members have since married persons of who before would never have been considered eligible. They have, in fact, married the men and girls of their choice, and monarchical and political corssiderations have been absent. If King Boris marries an American girl nobody will regard it as a more daring experiment than anyone else makes who marries an American girl. The average man's idea of the way to revise the Bank Act is to make it easier for the citizen to get credit and to make it harder for the bank to collect.—Manitoba Free Press. We're not the only pebbles on the beach. France has begun the electri- fication of 5.000 miles of railway and Italy is doing the same with her state- owned railways.—Kitchener Record. These cold winter mornings are ex- cellent for late sleeping. In this re- spect they are much like spring, sum- mer and autumn molnings.—Kansas City Star. People can get accustomed to any- thing, and the next generation, inher- iting conditions like these, will think them normal.—San Francisco Chron- icle. The two richest men in the world retake motor oars and sell the gas for them, but the people maintain the emergency hospitals.—Charleston Ga- zette. Dr. Nicholas Miraculous Butler, of Columbia declares that journalism is a vice. The doctor has been reading some of our contemporaries.— Min-neapolis Journal TURKEY AND THE PRiCE OF TEA The recent political disturbances in Turkey caused great uneasiness in tea circles the world over, in view of the possible serious developments in India,—the greatest tea producing country. India has a great Moslem population, which looks upon the Sul- tan of Turkey/ as the spirituaa} head of their religion, and therefore were opposed to British policy towards Turkey. In view of the serious dis- ntrirrs which might never, and the oars-rt.aint.y of the siltint ion generally, ter prices have tisen to the highest leveIs ever leached. e'onibined with this. it. is dstimated there will be an P0,000,000 lb. shortage in production this year. Everywhere higher prices art looked for, as esnditinns are far from satisfactory in the tea trade as yet. I n7i.,'a: J,n ,f/Nei,: aur.tn. settees tf�k bieh wiles i�,$rs ax►uwret'd u arS she ahoae follelf t, } soldier ofsoold Y'n ywillbeM freely extent, ed Duke of York who will mat* r.ouly Elisabeth Bowes Lyon. These sgarrtaages and' that of Princess Patricia- of Connaught to a contmottar indicate that the time its past hen British royalty will choose its trustee at foreign courts, and in- creases the hope and the belief that the Prince of Wake will wed a Brit- ish girl when the. time comes for him to take a wife. So far Scotland has been favored above England in this matter. Lord Lorne married Prin- cess Louise, four daughter of Queen Victoria. He came of an old Argylahire hoose. The Earl of Fife married Princess Louise Victoria, eldest daughter of King Edward. Ludy Elizabeth Bowes -Lyon ie a Scotch girl, and Captain Rasmaay, husband of the Princess Patricia, ie also • Scotcbmau, Lady Elisabeth is twenty-two years old. The Duk of York is twenty- seven. Me is described as a brunette with a faintly tinged complexion and an admirable Azure. She and the Prince have known each ether al- most from childhood and it ie said that they met first at a children's pasty. According to popular) rumor the Prince proposed three times. The first bine it hi said, was when they were dancing at Princeaa Mary's wedding, which sill strike the aver.- age ve►age person as being an extremely unconventional, not to say awkward moment. As a proper rebuke the young man was refused. He next chose a moment when they were golfing, and was again rejected. Then ha came to the intelligent eoneln- ston that the time to propose to I,ady Elisabeth was when she way not doing something else at the mo- ment. teo he seized an opportunity after they had had tea together, aad this time won the answer he sought Lord Strathmore, the father of Lady Elisabeth, vouches for the statement that the young people settled the affair for themselves without parental advice or assistance on either side. He mays that the Prince is a fine fellow, and that they will comply with the Queen's wishes end become man and wife within road 11* )eon.,,; is not wealthy es greet fatal mneb' :of the fortune el • thei e having ppaspged to • another bransb. Lady Sttabbmore was a member Of the ducal house of Portland. liter sono fought in the war and one of them, a captain in the Black Watch, W148 killed. Lady Elizabeth was a war worker, but in tbid 'respect was net digerent from ,post of the other fine girls in England and Scotland. The Duke of York himself was in the navy, and wee on board one of the ships in the Battle of Jutland. Later he transferred to the flying force and is a skilled aviator. As a royal Prince, he is, of course, precluded from following any other occupa- tion` than that of arms. Otherwise, it ie believed that he would make a successful man of business. When the Prince of Wates was aboard on hie travels mueh of the work that would otherwise have devolved on him was discharged by kis younger brother. He was especially happy in the numerous addresses he delivered before business bodies, addressee that were the result of hie study of busi- ness and economic conditions. Like the Prince od Wales he ie fond of sport. He rides to hounds, plays is 1o14 !moi of ouapoyt a sores nsP of futpr4 lutabsnd' has • co tepple,c0eArt,'Ura goIR.e,1i ilbiabetb'e enseatrai°'bome is` la Caatie, ,ithmurtal*d by S4nksp ease, One of bier anceetore was a floatage to England' for the renew' of dames I. , Anothpp!� anises - trees, Lady Glamis,• was btjsped to death as a witch on Cats Etle ' •$311, Edinburgh, in the sixteenth' century. A third was slain in the Jacobite rebelliop. Glamis Castle hes Trite its share of dark legends. One is to the effect that there is a secret :ohm which nobody is permitted to enter save the Lord, lis heir and the steward. As each -bets oomea if age his father takes him -into ; is hlolod curdling the ober and then smfolda the fatuity sextet. -It .ler "believed that at one time there wee an heir iniirpt of mind and Daly And of atrium* aP9ea rMs k. Pda . Bred a groat many year, .inures .kept to a single room aad nobody was permitted to see hint; WS probably conatf Wtes the tessilQ skeleton el the Roue of BW'atha salts - --47-7741"" s 100 her ! iAa the .end the i (�. a t,e- K..a. 0 * . o Bold In Saeforth by 1•e uarium..$ 0' NA[ I ONA-LLI'S CROWN 2f.254 B LAC K CHEWING, n'lr v,. "EVERYBODY'S EAR" 2162 COMBINED 120._- coMMODsrtgs �fR°4 /0 80_ tilGHER than in 60_ 1914 40_ 200 O LlCfIT and FUEL 13U 11.Q I't'v1 G MATER:AL f101.1$E Fee NIStiiiG Ala FURNITURE 01151N6 riprip RENT I/47 NIGHER til3l'1 in 19.14 HIGHER than in 191* h20_ _ 100- 80 + // GO_ tr-LIL 40 - TOURING CARS PRICE 041914 $650 - 20_ PRICE TODAY $445 _Zo_While other commodities have gone up 37 to 16 % _ o overi914 prices, the FORD TOURING CAR bas drop % .31A BELOW 0 — -20 X40 Everybody's Business THE Ford Motor Company has made a genuine attempt to give the public automobile transportation at a price within the reach of all. It has carried out the ideals of the inventor of the Ford car, Henry Ford, and has placed the Fard Motor Company in the position of perforating a public service to the people of Canada. it has definitely made Ford products a national institution -._being such, the Ford Motor Cun>,pany believes it is justified in telling the public it serves how the present low price of Ford Cars can lie maintained in 1923. How the Present Lew Price of Ford Car Can Bc Pirc,iah.hined ixa 1923 We are absolutely frank with the public when we say that the present low pricers are not justified by present production but only by the production it as hoped will result (rent! them. - Fhe present low prices for Ford Caro are based on maximum production only. To -day's iu;a.rc-t on steel and other raw material that goes into the manufacture of Ford Cars will not warrant these prices except at peak production. Ford prices must go up unless they are justified by increased production. Everybody's Business The Ford Car is Everybody's Car—the Ford busi- ness is everybody's business. You and your neighbor, and his neighbor are all vitally affected by the price of Ford Cars. If you are at all concerned about buying a Ford this year, malcc it your business to let the Ford Com- pany know about it. You Can Set the Price Fill in the memorandum below and mail direct to the Ford Dealer whose name appears below. This merely signifies your intention to buy a. Ford Car and obligates you in do manner to buy. The Ford Company must know how many cars are wanted in 1928 in order to maintain the present prices. You can help if you art at once. FORD MOTOR COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED - FORD, ONTARIO a. ,ej Fill in and mall at once to— J. F. DALY,'Seaforth, -Ont. Date 1 understand that Mr. Ford and the Ford Motor Company have reduced the price of Ford Cara to a point never before conceived to be possible, and that these txi^,s are not justified by the present volume of business, but that they have to bring about a larger volume of business to justify these prices. While I am not immediately prepared to buy a car, I will venni a _.........about ............................ and as I desire to get it nr these reduced prices, this will aid horitc you to inform the Foal Motor Company that I intend to buy a Ford unless something unforeseen hapm.-ne and .,o n Ivnnring this information so that the Ford Motor Company may proceed and manufaci are ,I'. i.: ,'r ,I n,ug t he ee mt,r that I may have prompt delivery at time I desire it. NAME. ADDRESS 328 i'i: id35e a fa v