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The Huron Expositor, 1929-02-22, Page 36 _. u ,., a �I 11 '':;i , r 1 SM1 . r.c, .,nl + . AMtit '.Y«. ,+ �{ :v. ,.�,,rK.-, .k vr'ti ✓• - h:.'-, y_ _. 4 .: X.;; ': - ,T ,�,�:.... I •w• ,,, ,:IWF,rk.r ..-r-.--:..,».3r..,s ... :.'W' :xa. ""�'.,.2_ ,_� ...a:.:�.,...,.a ,,,.., - -. _. ��__ •..,_ .. K, :� ..,.-1-111 - „.r r M r .. a,:. : hn 1 .. :.;., fi, r' •,� . W r.. Y' 5 i m .. . - 1. . s , . _ .',,,r, ,,. „ rye. en 4.,. ,:•I'6 a -. ,^'. (; . N,,. ...... .... _<- .�: ,:. ,,. . v. � .. 4ec .�%., l� 'ki,�;. � , : �y;� t. >, N•� , "f ,: , i , .. rt .'"v yi; r- 1 ,..:. ...'..l_,i.:. ,,,,. ,,. ,� ...,,. ,.,. Tit . ..irF'r � � .., d ,.�' t x ^{, � � r r r•, :�:,<,1.X.,.I+J�a�.,....,a.,_w.��:..�_� ti�°,...�(,_,�'1��,.,�:..F�,,.,.,,.x.�.�'.,J, r�4`�..`a�i1"�k�yln'?�cl;�;'�,ar�'lrr��'�•stt�"fi�ia�;..�1L;ys...nl, �.,a<`,f.r:,,.1,,7, c�.._;x�,,4z��� ' t1 `" , : fh ,y. it .-0 1�` 11 ' �f ;I rd� gy , yp fl { . , f1: .: " , , ��; '..; ,,I 11' I r. n Y1 IIr',r ,4t'r:°'tF ,,"r } f F f�# kJz a i ..Aj I; 1� Q Q I . M,�y , I , X '' ``. ,T,: rn- f s o, OWN Ile r 9 ts9 F,1 ,;p ') Q Fe C7 A 1A u v 1.909 , Ail N �' I I W ;o D "-m^ra.. , 1 A + .-a. IIhh I L A 11 11 1 BUSAES 7 1 . , .. : R B UI3]7.l� ess ]erne] the cQ7Tli'P peiCcL]zil. wh busies 1 llcI�n�.mt&ed "icy T B znk. T1 �1 HD� I SIEAIFORTIHI R. RE Jones - WES 70&hd wkh NOT hek TOT Years ONTARIO ]LADY FOUND RELIEF IN DODD'S KIDNEY -PILLS Mrs. L lEssery Says They Have Been A Wonderful Help tc Her. Alvinston•, Ont., Feb. 21. -('Special) Right to the point is tho statement Mrs, I. Essery, R. R. No. 7, Alvinston, snakes with regard to DodWs' Kidney Pills. "I have used DoWs Kidney Pills and found them splendid. I had been troubled with my back for several ears but now it is este all right y q ugh and, feels fine." Dod Fs Kidney Pills purify the blood and pure blood carried) to all parts of the 'body means new health and in- creased energy all over the body. D}odd's Kidney Pills are an excellent tonic, and now is the opportune time to take' them. During the long, weary winter months the system 'becomes weakened and gets in a run-down con- dition. Dodds Kidney Pills work with Nature by encouraging and assisting the kidneys -to cast out everything impure or diseased. Obtained from Druggists every- where, or The Doddls Medicine Co., ]laid., Toronto 2, Ont. SIMPLE PIETY AND FAITH CHARACTiRIISTIICS OF KING An interesting comment on the •re- Aigior of King George is offered by 1e,. W. Wilson, a British journalist resident in the United States. Writ- ing in The Christian (Herald (Nese Stork) Mr. Wilson commends the Tnon- arch for his simple devotion and piety. "That King George was well brougl - up goes' w'ith'out saying. Arcl:- Cbishops baptized him, confirmed "him, married him, anointed' him. Of course the goes to Church. Of course he risks 'his life by standing bareheaded be- fore the cenotaph in Whitehall. As a marl; of consideration for the many sr .-E';ons of his Roman Catholic isu'b- jects be. has been received in audience by the Pope. With Queen Mary he is not less attentive to the ,Salvation A' -'m y. "How can a king be sincere ,when his faith is imposed upon him? By Ibis accession oath, King George has solemnly to swear that he_ is a `faith- ful Protestant,' and until he swears, be does, not receive the crown. Indeed, -the law does not end' there. Separ- ated by the River Tweed, England and Scotland have each an establish -1 ,ed church. The law requires that north of the Tweed the king be- of- ,iiciaily a Presbyterian, while south of the Tweed he is officially an Episco- palian. His belief in bishops, thus de- �s upon whether be happens Ito be residing at Windsor or Balmoral. "For some years this quiet monarch wasOvershadowed, first his father d by and then 'by his son. In their resist- ance to jazz, to bobbed hair, and to absurdities of dress, and in their rigid boycott of divorce and scandal, the King and Queen were unpopular with the smart set and a subject of smiles among others. It was said that Queen Mary had no conv tion and that King George was oder her tutelage. 'he court was humdrum. It was the ]Pr-znce, of Wales and later the Duchess of York in whom the worlds was in- +tergestedl. "But, gradually a somewhat differ- -2nt estimate of the sovereigns began to -pervade the nation and the world. The'King was confrontedby an extra- ordinary series of crises. Yet through all these difficulties and, dangers, the 1'dfing and Queen' continued their 'throne, sympathetic, 'assiduous, tact- ful and imperturbable. They began. to Is trusted, and, confidence develop. •e4 into affection.. . "Of the millions of words published, ,about King ,George, I cannot pretend to =ve seemeverything. Nor has mwnddg' �er➢•se. But I have a fairly ecord of his career, and I s z P one positive hint alone, at any nes in 'print, of the clue to his int rthrmise personal itzffuence. Some years 11:. as lt..,, . , , ,la,a� , i1D • �av v and^ Dyu 1.„ 7II 14 -' -, i 4 .. I .. 0 k 1 0 i a I n A'' �o r'lt'rn � `< in $ ti 9 9 A .. �" �d0 r� . , I,! t `� ' ' tioaa I'ate'a'boroa� i',$ savtz#444 y I. R 0iA I Naruu found tnizd i -. obtaini' c t l 9 It7 � : � �$m�ad. t'lx�t the 0d� 'ffiq�88� ,. have been; 14J4 s Iia �':' . . tlaay 9r Gf agar. so1/=ty-oik. Y== dna one �iwlb. w -I. ,. a , 1 Therahas just died at l[;a.neaatc�, a tis l e . of ' `} nn �1 � e � � ne ty rs �.'hona 9 e e, �8.og�•xa, who hada b eivaployed' at tli doting Furniture Factory, thedrer • fo seventy-six years. He worked at tis, bench as a woo&turner right up t'' a �ilj�j,�Ti'�cC11a his death. His, son. has been forty c�flc�c� • nine years in the same factory, ane his grandson' nearly twenty years, S accounts alre KIS BAOT amy ?@e 4� Seve:nn Out of Tena Are Victims ]Enol N BANK �RlSwi , A lazin 6i1<R lief I3rinAlg Swift, Amazing ll8e➢teff with 13BANcCE Renewed Vital Force. RkI! ageir so 4 "No one knows better than I, the horrow of joyless drays 'and, sleeplese rights, There have been times when I felt hopeless and helpless " --and ago he allowed it to be stated' that, when my weakness caused me, the as a boy, he had promised his mother most intense humiliation. Only those to readtthe Bible every day, and that who have gone through such tortures he had kept the promise. That is the can possibly realize my great satis- source of wisdom that has never faction when Dr, Southworth's URA - failed, him. TAB'S brought me quick relied. URA - "If King 'George v had been a TABS are truly wonderful, and I give Bourbon, living at Versailles, every them full praise." Such amazing evi- courtier would have witnessed) these dlence serves as convincing proof of devotions. But in London there is a the power of URATABS •to relieve home within the palace which is as those distressing ailments so often, a private as any other Englishm'an''s handicap to those in middle life. castle. It is in ,that home where the Overworked, sluggish Kidneys, King and Queen 'breakfast alone that Bladdler Weakness and Prostate Gland the Bible is read. It is He who sees Trouble 'bring on so many distressing in secret that rewards openly, ailments which so often lead to ser - "If KingGeorge V had retained his ious diseasre.R that every sufferer from joy in service, his senile, his tender- Lameness, Pains, in back and, down mess to children, and, in a word, his through groins, scanty but frequent character, it is because day 'by day urination, "Getting -up -Nights," Ner- the world around him was excluded vous Irritability and Lack of Force - from a realm within him over which should try the amazing ,value of Dr. there has reigned Another than he." Southworth's URATABS at once! Any good druggist will supply you on c a guarantee of satisfaction or money THE MIRACLE OF NIAGARA hack. HARNESSED INTO SERVITUDE RELIGIOUS HATREDS FLAME IN The Rt. Hon. Tom Shaw, one of INDIA England's Labor M.P.'s who visited Canada this summer, took ,back with We Chrisuem. if without vain-elory Win a vivid impression of Niagara we may rum':.er ou*self among them, Falls, (more aypreciative than that of are incliner) tr view with a cortain meet Canadians to whom the great tolerance, if not alarm, uth.>r re - spectacle is commonplace. ligious bodie7, such for instance as "Thosre who have seen• the cruel, the M'oham'medans and 'Hindus, and ferocious awful rush of the waters of even -rend missionaries to persuade Niagara can never forget the sight," them of their fundamental errors. But he has written in one of the British events of the past few days have cal - papers, "I know nothing in nature led attention to the fact that they which produces such an effect of take their religious beliefs a good ruthless power as the foaming, boil- deal more, seriously than Baptists or ing waters. Yet man, a puny little 13oman Catholics. At least'Christians biped without feathers, slower and for some few hundreds of years, have weaker than other animals, harnesses not killed those who differ from them the waters as he saddles a horse, and on theological points. No such wan - actually goes behind' the blinding fall ing zeal is to be discovered in India and laughs, in the beard of Niagara "'here 'Hindus and Pathans have been himself. at each others throats and have cheer - "It is an eerie feeling that another fully killed' and 'been killed because 1ekv inches would) give one over to ono party holds to the principles of the weary monster. Yet man, on a salvation laid down by Mahomet and Frail plank, s'tand's safely behind the the other to the theories of Siva, mrtain of death. Nay more, hu -n- Vishnu and Brahma. In Bombay ireds of miles away town and country there have been bloody riots which mansion and lonely farm are lighted troops have been called upon to sup - )y the tremendous fluid force whose' press. Apparently the trouble has ;laws have been cut and whose now dried down, but nobody can say strength has 'been' tamed to minister when the flame of religious hatred will to the deLsires of man." break out again. Indeed! the possi- bility of India being rent by a re- ligiousr war is not remote. Don't Be k S lzve To IIImdigestio ]1 Super -Acidity of the Stomach Need- lessly Spoils the ]Eating Pleasures of Thousands. Thousands of people suffer daily For the good things they eat or else are slaves to their disordered' stom- achs -living on disagreeable diet, a - 'raid to eat the things they like for 'ear of pain to follow. Yet good, iealthy; painless{ digestion is easy for most folks, for nine• -tenth-, of all stomach misery is caused by merely an excess of acid, in the stomach. And i little P,isurated Magnesia, taken im- nediately after eating, will instantly neutralize' this acid, stop food feT- nentation, prevent' gas and sourness s'o that what you eat will digest just is nature intended it should. You :an enjoy your next meal -and ev- ery meal -if you wiJl get .from the Beare st dru'g store a package of Bis- arated Magnesia -either tablets or powder. 'Give it a real trial and you may soon be eating hearty meals of those foo4 which now disagree with you, without the slightest fear of gtomaeb trouble. THAT'S A COLD WORTH? The price of a common cold has been adjudged at £50' by the First Chamber of the ,Seine 'Pribunal, which awarded that sum to M. •Gautron, who sued his employer for damages arises Ing from a cold caught in 1913. ]Fishing by )Electricity, 'Mectrieity is being used to catch fish in partes of Germany. One cop- per cable io laid -at the bottom of the water to he fished, and the other held near the surface by floats. An electric eurreot passeb thriough the eables, and nil this fish int their neigh, bor'ih,ob& do pat nlreslsly eleetr4mted. Tenn Utz iii One Room Men a landlord aglmd for po o- sdon of a 20.0 4 'pt Drayton Park, Mghtbur?, lie t(gd' tch6WaSiotrats that the roolft ruptsr z&a" d fest by 18 fes. It wast occial4mu" � a llusrl)azd and wife and eight chft,i�r a. The Pathans, warriors from the north of India, and descendants of the tribes that once ruled and ravaged ;he country, have established a con- =iderable colony in Bombay, drawn ;hither by the cotton industry in which most of the operatives and lab- hrers are Hindus. The two races do ,iot get on ,very well as a rule, and where they live side. by side in any �qual'ity of numbers the Pathans, who are notable fig'h'ting men, dominate the scene. 'In Bombay they are in a minority. One dray not long ago the rumor aprang up and, spread like veild fire that. the Pathans, in orderper- - Form a rite' of their savage religion, had slain du ch captured and s1 n a Hindu child -s an offering to their deity. Even distant Canadians know enough about, the Mohammedan religion to be aware that no such practice was ever coun- tenanced by it, the Hindus 'being much more likely to have their altars smoke with, the incense of a human sacrifice. But the story wag believed just like recurring tale's of ritual murder on th•e part of Jeww are believed by those who know nothing about the Jewish religion, and, the rioting broke out. One of the plagues of India is its warring sects, which, 'added to the caste system, might make a philoso- pher'believe that it would be impos- sible to govern. the country. It is hardly less than a miracle that Great 6Ece ]SOX 11 C ookiee' CiR 2 cap butter-, 2 -ps oluG; 536 -Po Funt8 lXioaaS; Z e e 2 I oppw oobalcinr ponder--¢ Slav , I as to is 1 a;A =Jai= apped loptiotoal) mrim taco douda fm o Dia dala tea k ®oe{m3,Sa ae mao dee lase- spit a cu a�9mll9 V& e'en d® a arms.',. A ia�. P V4 yucca, dt4�•-"1 b . TO, i Do . %' >F. t Or. bo. th is b ts a a s' , wh � M 9 rel a . C 1 no vol bn wi sus I thr cla tho 0 the dhi out -mal as con is Je cou see mer of t bred of see ca Ara the ceiv land tied rem Zero to t by was that puni on t of t pl'e have sees spea with thou looti co them and hold fs• 1 is iwp�tr�hj, s'tnR .� � 0 _ �ad>3riai xld' 0. aaaflm[tt for or �• 0 asp, of ter arp0a ,1414 in, bilin saa sy is 1"tk fu ,: , .. Jot only .4V eir a h 'bits dlf7,' �lrut th,ai,r e� i� exe�tt. Thew w oma 'tr t'n p ial iL�Ja O t Fr$ ro � � i7, 34 in oub AA •; h 4 Q *h,16 , a tloce' � da st �i , by aTtdert' rasa, afely -be iietplli 'iia eazsanyr aeras tela as as friond, Z�l addition to thi ohammadans avid c Hindus, othv igious bodieo of', India are tit Sikhs Pa t� sees r dd�hi •�D•,,,, sts x J i hxistians, Hebrews and Arnimisti a non of which appeayr to have beer! in. ved in the, rioting." The Hindus with 216,734;586 are ore numerous thawall the rest eom• ed•, followed by the Moliammedam wit 68,735,233 according to the con, of 1921. he 'fths with about ��e��re��� Moll one-third! -billion), might, be a'O oll •-with the. 'Mohammedans, ugh they have a Bible of their owl Thur are warriors and despise caste system of the Hinders. Buck sm, which once nourished through. India, is decaving, and survives my in Burma and the sect known the Jains. From, the point of the noisseur the most interesting sect that of the Parsees. what the Jew have been in different European n'tries at various' times, the Par- s are in India. They are the chants, the bankers, the patrons he arts. They are rvery much in- . The name itself is a derivitive Persia from which country the Par- s fled' in the eighth century to es - pe the persecutions of the Moslem bs who were then over-ranning country. They were kindly re- ed: by the Indians when they ed' near Bombay and so they set - down! •there, and there they have ained ever since. he founder of their religion was aster, and the belief goes back he days of Jerusalem's conquest Nebuchadnezzar, when Zoroaster a boy of 12. The Parsees believe the soul is immortal and that one will be a future of rewards and shmrents based upon conduct up - his earth. The sun is the symbol heir faith and in a Bombay tem - there is a fire which is said, to been kept alive since the Par - arrived in India. Generally king, the Parsees get along well both Hindus and Mohammedans, gh, of course, when riots and ng break out they are apt to be neprcu-s isnzfi?erersy. ?The Parsee selves are not prone to +violence, are among the staunchest up - Ts of the British regime. STARVATION PERIOD FOR I CHICKS Experimental work carried on at ' the Poultry Division, Experimental I Farm,, Ottawa, to &_Hermine the ' amount of 'time that should elapse between the completion of the hatch and the giving of first fled, has shown some interesting result~. An experiment carried on during 1925 gave rather indi'finite results, I but showed no greater mortality on feeding after twenty-four or thirty- I six hour periods• than, when the birds were starved for a longerr time. A continuation of this experiment during 1926 showed the greatest gain in weight up to ,three woks of age to be made Shy chicks fr•.d twenty-four hours after the coniplotion of the I gni ns Th i • The weight ght r, ns decreased gradually until forty-eight hours af- I ter which point dee i -ase in weight 1 gain's was more mat ked. Mortality was equal for all lots excepting the last fed in 'which lotthere was a slight increase. This expe'rime'nt was again con- tinued during 1928. In this case the greatest gain was made by the birds ' fed sixty hours after hatching follow- ed by those fed'' seventy-two, twenty- four, forty and nin•otr•-six hours af- ter hatching respectively. Mortality was equal and greatest for the birds fed forty and seventy-two hours af- ter hatching with those fed sixty and ninety-six hours next in order. There was no -mortality amongst those 'birds fed twenty-four hours after hatching. In no ca's'e did the birds starved ung til ninety-six hours• after hatch com- pare favorably with the earlier fed lots. The results obtained to date would seem to indicate that chicks may be , fed as early as twenty-four hours af- ter hatching with no harmful results , either upon weight gains or mortal- ' ity, It is just possible, however, that theme is a happy.medium in the neigh- i boyhood of from thirty4 x to forty- eight hours after hatching. These re- ; sults seem, to indicate that, the fact ,i that chicks will go as long as one , hundred) hours or more before recedv- i ing their first feed is to be looked ; upon more✓ as a fortunate circum- stance which permits of shipping orv- - er groat distances rather than the , best ,anethodl of busban , `Z!i LONDON'S 82,000,008 1" J,LAntttt�lt>�7P I rT^ne fins -4t fruit and -VoSwbabls spas✓- I bale i% thin world, that a 8:14taffi 1&1 V'40 mlIearncl rome'n'tly bV' tho Q e% A:it I a toot of M,000;000, e r '��ir"aaa' a, diem.. , I I'll ,. 1 rt 1�rd4! � � %. 96Yb `1'rfA ' �ia1� - h 1 % tho q�yy q� Hoinaa �' S" rrl�. '+dq±�`'l:e 4 .. nt ' ' ov Lada A. Nome . � , , ,".. w l&et., . growing outv4' of i while le dastrilRtation, and WOE"- s 1 the y Corporation Qra3}tit?A3 4pf LuAdoR,,bouaU mout t far a ' t hisome960;00QD, I. To -day theaer;aa'lot dlrO 'vo^%Pa 1,500 g tons of produce a day.vast izWovq- � ments have been✓wade anal' al old difficulties of hecess have be= s' thorro .ghly coiwiderled, The total ar< aa. of r > oad•`w'&ys surrounding the , market, part of which will be used as "lay bye," will b about 2a/,s scree-, Providing accommodation for between , four and five hundred; vehicles at .one time. The gross extension is,about 98,220'. feet on the ground floor andt upwards of 101,000 feet in the basement. @trim campleted the market will have a to- tal warehouse frontage to the streets of '2,000 feet, and the aggregate frontage of the warehouses and, stands will exceed one and, a half miles. Some of the chief items in the to- tal capital expended are: the free- hold, £183,855; leasehold, £299,822; Property for the extension, £235,931; and rebuilding, £161,828. The total capital sum, namely, £2,000,000, is se- curRd on the rates, which may 'bq drawn up to threepence in the pound, but when the market is operating fully it is anticipated that the rates will no longer be called, upon. OBVIOUS I An elderly man approached one of the attendants in the travelling men- agerie. "Can you tell me what that hump on the camel's back is - for?" he ask- ed. The keeper scratched his ear. "What it's for?" he murmured. "Yes; what use has it?" "Well, its pretty useful, sir. The olda c mel wouldn't be much use with- out it, you know." "But why not?" "Why not!" exclaimed the keeper in surprise. "Well, you don't supposepeople would' pay to see 'im if 'e Iadn•'t got an 'ump, do you?" -c MR. BARON'S SECRET The generosity of Mr. Bernhard ', Baron, the tobacco millionaire, is well known, -but not all of his philanthropic actions are noised abroad. Mr. Bar- 1 on's family were always trying to i persuade him to build a new house , for himself, in which he could live in proper style. For a long time he re- sisted. ,Finally he consented, and built himself a house in a grand) man- ner at Brighton. But -hen it was finished he refused to live in it. He declared, he would rather present it as a convalescent home to his work- 1 sins. And such it now is. 3 -i -,�70 e L ? ., . ��� ­_ F n I 'l ' '�' I �pI tt'•� I _,__ ,." I �, i � ' P E �,AL S, .. , f' I,-' " "'!��, � ,, I I ,'yZ.' t�{.�4 . it k x is T,S !fy' t 4, S A 1 I . I a '' , I ON I +i„ , '�' I 1'�� , '' I ,,.. �u. 1 a •;I ,k, �; 7 a. .. J✓ ,�C A. H vl �, '', r � r , , � d ,, �,��'',;­..,�­­­;­ + , x F'%t I' ��� " I n , t \r r �, d 5 r � �' , ", r r i t r d N' ��i 1 nr J ,, Y !• G 1 r .11, 1. � n k ;H t r { ! t c f 1�{ } 4 ! k da y 1 4 f )� 1 yt rh y f � r �T f , G Y. K.3 `S�t '. I t. w ld 9 r [ L r '�{T S f t� t a.. ;.f:; �,,.�§IJ.. aYk',ad tly_It.l"r+r 'J:.,.:. 1,I I I � I I -u •, iv': 'li, n d 47,J�,.MK'.§`e.,l, !q -r ii E�?°ry, Y d , j',. -1,11, � I ii^' r.•.; r .1 'ARh ,;1 Flt 7 r i ! ».4`N�^kJ^.'{ .. �., - � �"l' `:�`�;'_ 1, - -0 , �..: I N�","` .1'Vf. "c: ' ,yiRKIr;;'r ie, rii j.re l," .�.j1j�% %� 1i I ,,, ':.)''li.. V ",_ I � , X,�, 1, � . �'.. :. 1�'� -, �k' .. ... Y „f �G ­ 11 I - ­ �,� 11 tc s -a .'K�l _,� . . . . y.. :U!" ' . ;tet a. d u i � , ;�. i �'. ", 1-i r �. 1,1�.��11�!� ­�, , r t{ � r' r .h n' k t n l , , .- { -;,, ,,, - - '� � 1 N ,d,�f' . II I�R , , , , , , r h't+,}t'u+,.•rk,.{7k,,ri•.•,f,�pk'li'ir, pi�� r1,� I't P,. ,. }ri'Y( irk,.. ,4:.•k . I ��,,­­­, I , � � ... ... ... ... ­ , ;.� I I � . .. ¢ ;,s �! , h r,b , x I . .. �. � - q ,:,- "� tp , ._.: "I" �.111'� I i a. s {r,. Fe +rrFrrj f a. # _: 1, °ipiw '':i4' l da �>' , . ... ... �� : ' . x,.... c 'Et F:r r`i'1!`hi t sin 4p,r" i ,t {N.:} r 2, ',8 ',• 1 'nM HM1 } Tx�":, . :- � !.11 I ,, Wedu - I I ;4 . :}r , � "I � . . ,� I is tti b. a F 'a .�,. . �66 t� . r t h', M1�'rny11 You -'are ` c ," Iia viw to I � is De�.orr�stl��t�c�', :of � ,, ti I' rr , a f 1q� :' } ]Foumdatma Germ1.a in our Corset Narm - A trained fl irrn;;:: the Nemo,I Hy IFa,shi(in institute; New York, l demonstrate and exhibit tho 1.new corsets, Brassieres a Colrselettes. There is a gar-,' meat for every figure, and:.; you cannot get better that Nemo values anywhere. Come in and get a corset to suit your particular' fag ' lire. New 0 he , " '� it I M) _� �' i'� . N F • ��'.' � 2 I(� abrics For those who would do their Spring and. Sum- mer sewing now, we are showing early delivery of Spring's most advanced colons and designs. Pat- , for every taste; colors for every combination, and material for every occasion. . WOOL IFAMMS New wool ca'sha made 4 specially for sport suits, in plain solid colors orr checks, in (Fawn, ]Light I " `,- ]Slue and Light Green; , - A2 tithe 'd - =RING THE DUKE'S STAMMER S nUI e, pure I *�" wool. r`r ;r; People who have known' from per- gDI.10e, So Yard y. son'al experience the annoyance of a u - u a ' ,tanner will welcome the news that r = '- :he Duke of York has :been cured' of _ - : I ;he impeddment which used to be not- FANCY ������ 1 - ._ h, ceable in his speech. The cure was aaQa -_:; effected by Mr. Lionel Logue, a young A beautiful range of F�� -= '.:_ I � kustralian of Harley -Street, who ab�a Jacket✓ n➢ew fancy Crepes, all '7 �, - a�s3 pecializes in the treatment of speech iefects. :Fearing that his stammer ;: the latest deSII1S and F ` night affect the success of his tour a� Wanted �'OlOTrS. YOIA Will ase ,'. .:..,, n Australia last year, the. Duke con- - be dell�hted W1th these alters Mr. Logue, and' daily for some '`; nonths the Duke and the specialist attractive fabrics; One 1``°" net and concentrated on correcting yard Wide, .` he defect. �rlCe,�� o�� , An Also Ran. NEW CREPIE NEIVTS The bookmaker vas paying out on he last race of an unfortunate day. These beautiful cloths are the very newest col - ie had been hard hit, and he was ione'st enough to confess he had only ors and patterns, in all the most ®ulna° shades11, h D p p .30 in cash to pay liabilities nearer and combinations; One yard Wide. "The question is," he said, "'ow am q Price, a (I : 41 goin' to do it' " 11 Pay og4 iar alphabetical orck;r" , ,` suggested a sttftboriarQ voice. And La r t was agreed. He was instantly sur- •ound'ed' by men who declared their lames were Anstruther, Andersson, A]- Q 0 � � � ; !` 1"' i ison Abel and n . n o until the he, m one Q`. 0 `- " Ir >egan to go pretty quickly. 'Ere," .shouted an agitated voice , rim somewhere in the struggling o 'A -car, "where do I come in-?" a "You'll get it all right --perhaps," - ���/%� '' •eplied th•e flustered bookmaker. LVvst� 2�ie Sheer Tying IFr��Iif `What's your name, any'ow?"t "I Salmon." "Salm-on," repeated the bookmaker Guaranteed ,, '''t ,r,• scornfully. "You don't 'ave an earth- y. If it 'ad been 'Add'ock you might � Ill addition t0 being '' ave been in the first three." =,ll . made of the very find I ' est ]Egyptian cotton 'y. Good-bye, Grog! ` t - t h e S e wonderrfUJllly �� 1 ,";r Will there soon be a time where popular fabrics are , `, ;rog is no longer known aboard war- made in new and ex- ' 'Ii ships? In some ships scarcely twen- I elusive patterns and :y -five per cent. of the men entitled the {. s attractive colorings r �' o grog ration take it, yet in Nel- ron's dray rum was, probably the sail- 8- • that a r e positively y ' hr's most esteemed perquisite. guarasnteed )snot t® tilt What is the reason for this abstin- :ice? The Navy rum is just as s ' fade. New spider 'F11Teb 5 ; `fruity" as of yore; a full-blooded � r r r n pattern floral desigrrns `r reverage with a "big kick." The fact the i' and ¢°OiYn spots I ;hat ratings who do not take the •ation get threepence a dray from the . e inches 'monde. Course in No. ., Orniralty may provide one reason ' , 439 s Price and gee thealrn< >ut the main cause is probably be- �,� , + -ause Navy, men are of a superior ;ype to those of even a. few years Price, 52L, Yar& ' ' r iy' Igo. The ceremony of drawing the daily , �tl k. si1p; 41 tum ration, takes p➢silo at six 'belle- denten o'clock. After a 'bugle is , xrt., pounded, the rum is, prrod'uced in a 701is11e,d, brassub0und tub iL'e'Ari$g tliare %� RT t� .111 ).,:., oval and pious indtriptiou, "The Mng. ,,,5TL � j y','.,I�, sod Iale'ss slim." 1�m�a5llg tlnoe �Arr- /'� 4', Fp', snt at thle�.yissue „�are "Jftck ,y�y,,,,Dpiot " aaJ'iitm.'rray' ' rrtlG �df a b �,y y Ili`�'14` ' • 09MuA=+11 iltlJ,`�,�]N%.1M1 k ih> f4laip'Sl CYW7J�JaKVII�, Ji'dj,OD %..,.11 I , S;'� tr ;het• reoor, and the' 14aalilrag amass ` a q it ei rwasp, who bring a r?sot�;�ttalo , . , ::. , «„M1': , s , „ ... Yt,1 ' ry + a dram, the ratio, r'+' Y I n + is ,, r, o i"' ,'{ f : ! ,l: i