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The Huron Expositor, 1924-02-22, Page 3EOW W TO, GET TSE l?it unvi O 1 r � ssesiion o ;.the n She 9h91 1,° `t Eigh rbs f Pei* , a this ha a est n t Ly 7Es. ba Ie; f d tiout 'e- h„ erienco gra ; n 0t , uicessarY imrtnleih ely topaeks tea;: in air -tight i fetal lined ,04140.s. ,to pa evet la .nd goodnes:.of tiaf y'so' Is all air- lit package 99990991'r ,for the small _ is ,.cif ;tea `.� indaviduaJ. 91441141490;: , uIk. tea is' always )n- ;'erior :,:because. it is exposed -=to tear; , "SA.LADA" air-#? =•nlum Intim package is the Most :efficient way oft preserehig;,tea :known,., Ednionton, Alta. --A substantial in- orease in the vpp,Iunle of :dairy pro ducts. produced in Alberta. during,,the past" year; as 'compared With' 1922, is reported .ley. the provincial dairy' corn- anissioner. Value also shows a slight increase:•.; In 1923 there was produc- ed 17,760,00.0 pounds of creamery but - ''•ter, 1,850,000 pounds Of factory cheese, as compared with 15,417000 pound:and 931,992' pounds, respective- ly, in the preceding year. The value of production last year- was $22,975; D0Q, ;compared with $22,950,000 in the preceding year. The number of oreanreries in the provinces increased from 54 in 1922 to 75 in 1923, while the number' of cheese factories de- creased from fourteen to thirteen: doing �r1' at .- -Work fQr i'omen WHAT MRS VAILLANCQURT SAYS OF DODD'S:.KIDNEY"-PILLS She has suffrered from Rheumatism, Sciatica,^.. Gravel'_. and Baelktache,;and found relief in,I,iodd's Kidney Pills. Dill Siding, Ont., Februar18th.— (Special). One more tribute to the great .work Dodd's Kidney Pills are doing for the women of Canada comes from Mrs. Frank Vaillancourt, well knewn and highly respected here. "I have suffered for 14 years from e complication of kidney trouble* and lhave never , fotfnd any remedy that lhas done me as much good as your Dodd's; Kidney Pills have. There was a friend -of mine who was feelinng very tborly and I toldher of the good A Dodd's Kidney Pills did for me. She eased .three boxes and is feeling fine now." • .. ._ . ' Dodd's Kidney Pills are a kidney remedy. They relieve, isle work of the heart, by putting putting the kidneys ` in shape to';strain ail the impurities, out of the blood ``Fore: blood eai+ried-`to all parts of the, bedy ,means new health mol over the body.- �• r LARGE PLUMP SEED 'GIVES BEST YIELDS' `Different selections ofseed of •yari- ops classes of grain 'have been care- fully tested at the Ontario Agricul- tural . College for from '• six{' .to nine years. The 'average results show that'even one year's selection of seed grain has a marked influence oh the resulting crop: In every instance, the large plump seed gave :a greater yield of grain per acre than medium- sized, small plump, shrunken or brok- en seed. In the average of the six classes of grain, the largeplump sur- passed thesmall plump in yield of grain per acre by 19 per cent., and, fin the. average Of the three classes of grain, the plump seed' gave a yield over the shrunken seed of 20 per cent. It should be understood that equal numbers of seed were used in this eaperlment. The results through- out..:show that.a,large plump seed will. prod'uee a larger. more vigorous and 'ffiere productive ' plant than is pro- dueedfrom a small plump or or from ,shrunken seed.' - • TBE RHINELAND REPUBLIC The Rhine`'I' rid• Republic although set up by Ge man' Communism was idealized by the French and to a great extent protected by their bay- onets., France had: previously always shown marked : aversion from Con% mo'unism, and during the Russo-Polish -Wet she -assisted Poland in every way possible, not only financial -if Andeeithwith �glias of war but even by sending nch'officers and by sinking' Rus- tsidn transports laden with troops— stn act of war—Whilst the two eosin- tales oun- b es were listanfibly at peaces Yet Prance supported German Commun- ism iii. the Rhineland until it got a tstrong hold' there.. Last May right in the heart of '.the. Ruhr, at Gelsen- ldreheri; a few miles from Essen, the. elaifned''.0 ,.. miles ftlt'tlser.1 'mend, the; Co Ftha; golterat n • pane n, ,�t1e S'c .. •e Iy,: u n :� o. a B 'ail arts d m .t: Plante w re a'lr0WeW' S o *. t F still"lore ; .eirttes'•we ' co . 9n The 'local polico forces .Tears didpeln- ed ;kty the, Fxeneh treopa� and the Gama :roan •soldie'ra were net .., allowed interfere.' ';'At . same places the hires men were the ole agents,- for.'the maintenance. via order, While the French troops stood quietly. by ap- pearing to enjoy the' fun... The Pari- sian Government had, sent_. an oder iii• their • soldiers', "not to interfere with the will of : the people nor to peripit. the German soldiers to 'at- tempt the restoration of order."Those who. sought the protection of the French Coninnand were told by Col. Cochet, (the; French . delegate at Treves) : "You must' obey the orders of the .Separatists; as abuses,' will not be put down until the' population has made cpmplete submission„ to the , w government:" This. method of is -supported' by France .is in direct, violation, of",the Treaty - of Versailles. It.:'i�s no -wonder that the •Gerhaane incline '.towards; revolution without caring Much who will be their leader or :what form of government they will have, so long as . they can free 'themselves' from a situation' which is nothing less than a sort of slavery. '• Many of the ' civil authorities whos resisted were arrested and expelled. President Ebert sand Chancellor Stressman ' annotinced that up to September 26th no less than 18.0,000 persons had been deported and mord than 100 killed. ` Can the Allies sub= mit, to this?. Surely they must pro- test against it all. That Germany must meet her obligations we all ad- mit, but she must not be annihilated by France. Nor should it be permit- ted that France alone- should receive reparations. All • the allied countries fought and won; but so long. ' as France remains in the Ruhr, nothing can be obtained from Germany. Ger- many was defeated"by the allies, but these have no desire to celebrate their victory by brutality and unnec- essary force. What we need is prac- tical wisdom, intellectual power and moral force. Paris, of course, seeing Germany itt such straits, belives that the Ruhr district is now ripe for self govern- ment. But the Versailles treaty Aloes not. permit, France or any other na- tion to destroy the political and ecpn- omic organization of Europe.: France evidently supposes that the Rhine - lenders, when freed from the fetters Of a United Germany, will work for her in.the Ruhr. This is a mad pol- icy. They have permitted the emis- saries of Soviet to cot ie and go free- ly in the Rhineland, • inciting the i{t- habitants to rebellion. Such a policy is like that of a man who•' sets fire to his neighbor's house and then pre- vents the firemen from extinguishing the flames, with -the result that not only his own house but the whole city is ;destroyed through his foglish eon - duet. Germany adopted a similar policy in Russia and Russia collapsed in 1917. Russia in her turn dissem- inated the same ideas in Germany and. Germany lost - the . war. Has France not yet leaned the lessen? Undoubtedly she will reap what she has sown., .But this so-called Rhine- Iand Republic has not been recogniz- ed by any country outside of France. France does well to recognize it, as a man. may, acknowledge .his illegiti- mate child. The state of affairs in the Rhine- land Republic at the present time is Appalling. -Pillage and. bloodshed seem to be the order of the day.. At Coblenz, the capital of the new state, frivolous women frequent the seat of government and noisy orgies are held amidst fearful disorder. The leaders of the new government admit that they cannot control their forces. At the lme time Germany is boiling in the melting pot. 'Fuel is supplied by the Separatists, the Rhineland re- publicakts, the Imperialists, the Bav- arians and the ,Unionists, while the unfortunate, people, condemned to starvation in consequence have taken .up arises in self.defence and are kill- ing each other in despair. Some want a Republica -other an Empire and the integrity and unity of their country, *idle . some desire a Bolshevist, re- gime and, some a Bavarian Kingdom. Diverse as these parties may be all , are agreed on two main points: (1).. Dissatisfaction with the Berlin ' overnment; (2) The desire to save. the4 ' Fatherland, To fulfil this lat- ter hope they ardently desire a leader —no, matter who. The wish for re- turn Of the Kaiser is felt strongly by S CTS s• ~, rRenteMner that the 'previous is not a 114 us;, i is ►e trade valva of tkle tar 'elect bacon lrog,- '!' t Po not depend anti lye :on loea'l cozmlaent on the,:qualitx;of your.?boits,' .4 Request that •:bhe purchase p your to :hogs be inadey' on a graded beefs. Po not accept: ,a• margin ever 'the prevailing quotations on a flat basis; such a •b d is sure indication that yeti have .good. hogs. The shipper `who will not buy' your hogs grade will be pleased to handle them for you when marked. This 'enables the drover to havethem graded separate from, the load; Ask to see the Government grading°eer- tificate, it is your legel privilege. The official tag insures, an individ; use grade. One of the hest lads received at the Toronto .stock Yards feet week was from Midddlemiss. In a load of seventy-three, there' were; forty-one selects; .eighteen. thick smooths; and fourteen heavies. ) The `best load Of the week receiv- ed direct at the plants was from Fer- gus. Out of a load , of forty-eight there were twenty-six selects;.' twelve thiek smooths; three shops; one feed- er, and two No. 2 sows. t'k'h1L';14bndI t' ' ic�`it1CY Li'Ver '1•i Sto• c ach cine 2tt+ i t C(vRI'l'ISe '. ,� pq r• NERVOUS INDIGES'ION Some of Its Causes. and . How r..3 - lief: May Be Obtained. Many people suffer from nervous in- digestion. The commonest causes are worry, over -work, lack of exercise, -or a general run down condition of the system It is a disease of the nerves rather than 'of the digestive organs, and is corrected by giving needed nourishment to the nervous' system and building up the blood. The treatment consists largely in rest, recreation and the use, of a true tonic such as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. In addition, the patient should follow a careful diet, and avoid coffee and• stimulants, these being.unsuitable for nervous people. As one's nerves rely for nourishment upon the blood, the latter must be built up and made rich and pure, which is just what Dr. Wil- liams\ Pink Pills do. If there is loss of weight and pallor; Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are especially helpful. Mrs. Adolphus Villeneuve, R. R. No.. 2, Apple Hill, tells as follows how she obtained relief: "I was so bad with nervous indigestion .that I could not digest anything,I took, and as a con- sequence was a great sufferer. I doc- tored for four months, but seemed to be getting worse instead of better. I lost strength to such an extent that I could .hardly go .about. Then my mother came to see me and urged me to try„Dr, Williams' Pink=Pills, and I followed her advice and got a supply at once. After taking a few boxes 'I felt my strength returning, and I con- tinued •their.use, until at the end of a few months I could eat anything I de- sired, had regained my old time health and. strength, and was in every way a well woman. I am so thankful for what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did for me that I always advise their use when any of my friends are run down or ailing.” You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50c a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, -Ont. DRURY AND ' E% -MINISTERS HAVE "BROADENED OUT'* Up in the new Ontario legislature, opened just a week or so ago, sit on the right of the speaker a row of new ministers. And on the other side, inconcpicuously, sit all that are left of those who formerly held these seats of the government, the surviv- ors of the late Drury cabinet, the in- teresting Farmer -Labor cabinet, who during their .four years, of office at- tracted so much attention and grous- ed so much controversy. Hon. E. C. Drury, the Farmer premier, not only lost power but fail- ed to gain .a seat. Missing also are the faces of his former mi inters, Mills, Grant, Rollo, Smith afid Car- michael, all of them defeated last June in the upheaval Which swept the United Farmers of Ontario' from po-' litical power and brought the Con- servatives' in on the crest of the Wave. Ofe the Drury government, these ministere survived and may be seen on a little group on the left of the speaker; Manning Doherty, W. E. Raney, H. C. Nixon, F. C. Biggs and Beniah %Bowman. So that except for the fact that the above five still hold seats in the leg- islature under the leadership of. Man- ning Doherty, they may, be said to have retired from public life. Cer- tainly they have retired from power. What effect had their four years of office on their lives and, on their pri- vate careers? Did they resume :the latter where they left off when, they were so dramatically called unex- pectedly to office in 1919, or have they, changed; their course?' The answer to the llst£er clue:Won is: They have and they haven't, Some of them are • as they Were, Others are following new�°� ppaths, . When the DruriNtibitust Was form- ed in 1919 eight of the Mem ers, in chiding the Prem; r, Ware bones -fide fariiiers. - f the other tee, one, ze;iieral, wake hbj' olwt Ra> elr vNho became scan, as a lamer; acid t4:0; xis �' title,' a hro ills an eft"> a. . Aso d•,•Its Vie, 'itch we to an le investment `1- Drub* Is` groat' ei'ty' oleic . of t Mr;' Pohex t,eet" , 5 one,•`of the fog farmers who ha '.indeed ceased; to one., n lies'' ,' ' de flunk, .• agriculture, in they: ury govern-. ;slept, - nt, he �eame, indeed �t. raxght irtdm the farm from hi 'fine fa d near ?fatten.�n,where'bis:forebears h lvd for four generations. Not that he was a "h'ayseed" in any:. sense 6f5•i;he word—it is a well known fact -that. Mr. Doherty, both' in the last and the ,,,present legislatures, gap, hold his own against all core,, be they Liberal or Conservative, as the sreartest-looking ami' best dressedman "in the House.. He was also credited with being ex- tremely well-to-do. He still keeps his farm, but he has ceased to be a farmer, and has .be- come a city man with an office down- town, away up in a,'bigii building, that is. worthy of a bank president or the head of a railroad One of those stately', subdued, mahogany furnished offices where the visitor takes his hat' Off as if he were in church, and speaks in whispers for fear of disturbing; the god of high finance. Mr. Doherty is';partner in a firm of investment bankers which was formed a few months after the defeat of the late government.. He is also presi- dent of an insurance company. H is a director of the new mortgage end real estate firm of whieb Mr. Drury is president. He has other business interests as well. In addition he is a director of -the United Farmers Co- operative Company and leader in the legislature of the survivors of the late government .er; b'e. So that in effect he has ceased a farmer, or, rather,: he is now class of one of those city men R. J. Fleming or Sir ,Henry Pellatt, who runs a farm as a. sideline hobby. As a matter of fact, M herty„ Who is now. -he owner home, in Toronto, was thinking chiefly of his two boys when he decided settle down there. The elder at- tending the University of T. and the other is at school. to be in the like or Mr. Da. of a to is orpnto Peter Smith, who. was provincial treasurer in the Drury: government, is another farmer who has become a city .man. Formerly he was proprie- tor of .the splendid Cloverbar stock farm near Stratford. Now he has sold his. farm, become a member and secretary-treasuer of a gime. manu- facturing glass and mirrors which has factories in Stratford, Toronto and Montreal. He has settled, down in Brantford. - His transition from farming to manufacturing has been made gradu- ally. When he first came to Toronto to help govern the province of Ontario he leased 'his farm. Shortly after- wards he sold. his fine herd of Hol- steins. He took a house in Stratford and moved his family there. Then some little time ago he sold his farm itself. So that now Peter Smith is one of the business magnates of the city into which he used personallyj to drive in with his milk and cream a�§ a farmer magnate -who was not above doing the farm routine., Mr. Smith has not os> eased to be a farmer but a legisla:: For at the last election South Perth did not re-elect him. F. C. Biggs, who' was Minister of Public Works and Highways, is back in the House as a private. member. He has not 'ceased to be a farmer. His estate of 400 acres up at Chris - tie's Corners, near Dundas, is still his prime interest. Its management is a big task even for the man who showed himself capable r of handling the roadbuilding of the roads of the province, but Mr. Biggs has enough energy left over to "broaden out" also, like his leader, Mr• Drury, by acquiring business interests is well. Shortly after the defeat of the government' in June last., Mr. Biggs bought a substantial holding'in. a firm manufacturing overalls and shirts. He'llecame a director in the company, which has a factoryin Brantford and another in Waterloo,. and employs over 200 hands, W. E. Raney Is one of the former Drury ministers who hes taken up his career exactly where he left off. After four turbulent year as attor- ney -general in which he was the 'storm centre of the government and the driving power behind the enforce- ment of the Ontario Temperance Act, he has. gone back to the 'ccbmparative quietude of his law practice. Mr. Raney was offered but refused the leadership of his party inthe legis- lature. However, he is still a mem- ber sitting in opposition to' the Con- servative party, and no .doubt his surplus energies- will find an outlet in many a tilt with the foes of his four years of power before the ses- sion grows, much older, especially, as seems likely, if there is any' 'attempt to bring about a referendum on the O.T.A. Other former ministers who have gone back to their pre -political' inter- ests, to all intents and purposes as t�iey left them in 1919, are Messrs. Zlfixon, Grant, Bowman, and 'rCarmich- aeL Two of them, H. C. Milton and Beniah Bowman, the former provin- cial secretary, and minister. of lands, forests and mines, respectively, carne straight from ; their farms, on which they 'have spent the wintetts at the beginning of this session th"take the seats which they retained at the, last election. Mr. Nixon, who, was the youngest member of th eory cab. inset and non' at he age 'Of •$3 finds himself an ex -minister, li ea , on the fame hear the village of `aeorge, ;e h �e thea homte n� 0 F` at Niel ext of .the ifetttl a pe 6 Pp se ' �..3 Ford i 1lacb ca s'.a coani#lete rtcck•o#'t?e,uar ,. )ictal i'art''whlch are, in every identical With the original pari>ie your Gar. and d etdoe a-ardinat. P4140,1y adclt euerq others "^ Lsitery Ford?pate anl'ev. y Ford-*.ervice operation is:chatged. fter, at;a standard• IoW sans. ;' You meed- not li,F0 ln, be- ceese you Will not be overcltarged4 And so, no matter, where you bee your Ford or where re use it, there is al- ways a Ford' Service Station my 0.' give you expert and immediate serve*, 41% of an Genuine Ford Parts are sold far 15 cents or less. 35%q of all Genuine Ford Parts aresold for 10 cents or lees. The blue and white sign identifies the Authorized Ford Service Stations. • century. , MreBowman has a 100 acre farm at Long Bay on Manitoulin Is- land. R. H. Grant, who was minister of education under Premier Drury, and Col. Dougall 'Carmichael, who was a minister without portfolio and mem- ber of the Hydro -Electric Power Com- mission, are back on .their farms un- trameled even by the possession of a seat in the legislature, for both suf- fered defeat in the last election. Pro- bably Mr. Grant is not ill pleased at being back in seclusion after his po- litical adventure. Ms service as ,a minister was largely a ,matter f duty with him. He did not seek of- fice and was probably glad when he had no longer to carry its burdens. Once, shortly after coming to Toron- to, he told an interviewer: "They must take me as I am, and, if they do not like me, I can go back to the plow.' On another occasion he said: "I was born a farmer, am a farmer and am nothing else. My farm has been my principal attraction and com- fort, despite the other activities of my life." So Mr. Grant is back at Hazeldean in Carleton County. Those who learned to like the quiet, digni- fied, sincere man while he was in the Ontario Legislature will be sorry to hear that his health since his retire- ment has been not of the best. Col. Carmichael, like his colleague Grant, is • probably not sorry to be back home.. Just as he left his farm to go overseas and win • without fuss a D.S.O. and. an M.C., and then , re- turn to his farm, so equally without fuss did, he undergo his four :years as a minister and equally quietly did lie return at the end to his farm in Col- lingwood township, Grey County. 'Cot Carmichael had the temperament' which takes life as it comes, and he : • has the farming instincts' of his $e: bridean forebears. If fate' ordains that he shall spend the rest of'hi:; career with his cows and his crops; he will probably be satisfied. At least he will -have the knowledge that- he , had two glorious "hours" of crowded. life. - The 'war and the farmers! gov ernment gave him two . amazing inter lodes. s • ing tores NE bargain does ,not make a year's economy. It's the constant saving at the DOMINION STORE that beats the High Cost of Living. You always save at the red front store, because it's one of the 300 in Canada's largest grocery organiza- tion. Our great size enables us to buy for less -- this helps us to sell for less. Note these,low prices: EXTRA SPECIAL BLEND TEA 59, lb. SELECT BL -END TEA - 75c lb. - - - - - SPECIAL RICHMELLO TEA lb. - - - - GOLDEN TIP TEA lb. DOMINION MATCHES 3 boxes for - - - CLARK'S TOMATO SOUP, tin - - - -29c -11C HARVEST or i:AYSIDE - 24$ CHERRIES, No. 2 tin PURE GOLD ICING 25e 2 for E snnr Own1 EAYSIDE GREEN GAS 16 PLUMS, in heavy syrup $A'N LOMBA:' ,, �C PLYSIUMES, in heavy syrup SPECIAL .LEND COFFEE, lb. - - - MANZANILLA OLIVES °No. 5 (plain), 2 for - • CORNFALI{ES 3 pkts. for - - ayind r:;rans': BAYSIDE PEACHES in heavy syrup - - AYSIDE ARTLETT PEARS, in heavy syrup WHITE SATIN FLOUR 24 fibs., WHITE SATIN FLOUR 7 lbs. WHITE SATIN FLOUR 3 lbs. DOMINION BAKING . P8W I ER, 1 -ib. tin- - is 29c 15c 1 CfOICE COOKING FIGS � c 3 lbs. - - -4/e,0,1 - MOUNTAIN CREST -2 5C PEAS or CORN,,2 fOr a t ROLLED OATS ° 6 lbs. for LUX pkt. - - COTTAGE PULLS (4 to 6 lbs.), per lb. PICNIC HAMS (not over 7 lbs.), lb. COOKED HAM COOKING ONION'S 4 lbs. - - - sY -79c 89c - 39c - 25c -25c -23c 23c -11x. - 21c - 19c - 47c it 'rs