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The Huron Expositor, 1929-06-28, Page 3;a P, apts14.0 't o43. Zaggtabrl; yig-444," f4, 0414'4 441111:4314,4, 1.,11 yog, vgint IDun" ^ u4G« oSoothamSalve This God Oe aa' ,'t014 . azum&' s+-4' 'fir s tlze ,perms :01, 40 are owaolmg the' s-- 4nd $vieUl3r clears' the 44n etir;ery gaace roll gamma; &iltatelf ts,: r @ COcra@pros' >mmtlrmausc Utt y.Q, 4u 4 not, V='...2% .11¢or =Ina awe Ihm000 ass " a- aline Oya. 2 m Aso arot ontika , Joao@ r �" OP= t®1Xtm0@-a-@dyne II+fimmll4C D wo galla rcffou,tgi your MAI Don't ]Blame the ap en--PSIBrolpie our hens should learn ha . „ eunuch brick- layers receive for laying bricks?" asks the Houghton Line. Judging from the price charged for "Strictly fresh" it looks as though they had done so loud ago,—Christian Science Moni- tor. Another Dumb Dora—The- girl who thought the Black Prince was the son of Old King Cole.—Judge. Love's .Ecstasy lIe gave her ev- erything he had before marriage and they still owe for it.--Bramdon Sun. Dust and—Most New Year's reso- lutions are like ashes. They are not Voeing carried out. — Fredericton Gleaner. Dangerous Advice—A doctor says that a girl can usually hear better with the right ear that the left.—So always get on the right side of her .before proposing.—St. Thomas Times - Journal. DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR LITTLE ONES At no time of life is delay or neg- lect more serious than at childhood. 'The ills of little ones comes quickly and unless the mother is prompt in administering treatment a precious little life may be snuffed out almost 'before the mother realizes the baby is ill. The prudent mother always keeps something in . the medicine .chest as a safeguard against the sud- den illness of her little ones. Thou- sands of mothers have found through .experience, that there is no other ;medicine to equal Baby's Own Tab- lets and that is why they always keep a box of the Tablets on hand—why they always feel safe with the Tab- lets. Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which by regulat- ing the bowels and stomach banish constipation and indigestion; break -up colds and simple fevers and pro- mote healthy natural sleep. Con- cerning them, Mrs. Isaac Sonia, St. -Eugene, Ont., writes:—"I have been easing Baby's Own Tablets ever since 'baby was a month old and have found that they reach the spot and do more good than any other medicine I have ever tried. I always keep the Tab- lets in the house and would advise all other mothers to do so." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by snail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, ^Ont. 4 sl+�7t':1}k RY� J . ulBdQ 1�t tlPOW' q* 984 AQP:' ` PKN011r de to *motto' tl>ua orda Kam and ,a aa: was In 2920 ala mad', to Obleozo whew a1AQ,,. r1'met a Um, l4illi rmI?'ra,soro o �vaottl lv'iitm with Wiln1 i ]Litud4trO:4 gabinet Tanker. She glad perrZraded',I.1i stroma ti insure his lIa $7,00 tit . hflar veVA . now wznaded 0,P>a.lyv, at4,Qh9 gaid,pt the trial ,to hay? . undalrroraa mari'd4sre4 so that they CM 9,v111Q,akt the 5171101;a4nce mma4r y. 4 PA-m=1t =Mod ed I argi Patrick was hAre ice $100 to do the actual killing. said, "They gave a G4 u plteco og, ]lead pia - and II killed him in his own home. Mrs. Frazer wag; with ane, P(drs. Classier was mit- side in her car. I called her in and she said, 'Let's load him in the car and take him somewhere.' II put on his overcoat and carried the body to the car. We drove for some time and then threw the body in an alley." Mrs. Frazer corroborated this story when the body was found it was at first supposed that Lindstrom had been killed in .a motor car. But Captain 'Dennis Carroll, who was early on the scene noted that the soles of Lindstrom's shoes were not even damp, though it had been rain- ing heavily. He suspected murder and arrests were swiftly made. kers. Frazer and Iaatrick were given life sentences. The judge offered to give Mrs. Cassler the same sentence if she would plead guilty. She conferred a moment with her counsel, who then announced, "My client, knowing the consequences, refuses to plead guilty, She was found guilty and sentenced to hang. On the .very day set for the execution, a stay of proceedings was granted. A court of appeal held that she was entitled to a new trial. In prison, Patrick repudiated his con- fession, and then came the luckiest stroke of all for Mrs. Sassier. Mrs. Frazer died and the witnesses against her were thus removed. The state decided that conviction was impos- sible and she was released. After more than two years in prison she went immediately to the home of her sister. She had heard that Cassler intended to divorce her and marry Miss Cameola Soutar, his housekeeper, who was also a pro- fessional roller skater. She was a young woman said to have come from a good family but had been driven out because of moral lapses. Miss Soutar was a girl of considerable im- pudent charm and that she had not entirely exhausted her capacity for indiscretion is indicated by the fact that while she was engaged to Cassler she was also engaged to Chester Johnson, her skating partner. It was Johnson, by the way, who pointed to the identification of Miss Soutar when the finding of an unknown body was reported by the police. It was Mr. Cassler who was the first to accuse his wife of the crime. He had ample reason, for shortly after her release from prison she entered the Cassler home and gave Miss Soutar a severe beating, afterwards throwing her out ,of the house. This incident did not end the friendship of Miss Soutar and Cassler and news came to Mrs. Cassler that they had been seen in each other's company. - She sent a message to Miss Soutar asking her to call, and Miss Soutar told a friend, Gladys Shaw, that she intended to do so be- cause they were some of her clothes still at the Cassler place. She was seen to enter the Cassler .home. Later on two women, one of them identified as Mrs. Cassler, were seen to leave it, enter a motor car and drive away. Three days later Miss Soutar's body was found in a swamp on the out- skirts of Hebron, a bullet through her heart. Her shoes were removed, a fact that has particularly interested detectives because Mrs. Cassler was convicted of another murder because of the testimony of another pair of shoes. Mrs. Cassler has denied every- thing she is accused of. Her only emotion was displayed when her young son was arrested as a material witness. 61 I m 1! SUPPOSEfy MURDERESS SLAYS SECOND VICTIM It has been a favorite contention with those of us who disapprove of aeapital punishment that the pers3n who commits one murder does not ,commit a second. There are records to the contrary, of course, •but it is true of 99 per cent. of all known and convicted murderers. A notable ex- ception has just come to light in Chi- cago where a woman convicted of e'ne murder and snatched from the ga?lows almost at the last moment is accused of having committed a sec- ond murder within a month after icer release from prison. The supposed :double murderess is Mrs. Catherine Cassler, described as stocky and gen- erous of physique with an iron nerve. She is 43 years old and has been mar - Tied at least three times. The first murder for which she was convicted -was a sordid, brutal killing of a man for his insurance money. The sec :nd -for which She is now under arrest is a crime of passion. She is sail to 'Lave shot and killed the woman who wv:.s her husband's housekeeper dur- ing the time of her incarceration, and whin he was to have marfied when he secured a divorce from Mrs. Cas- sler. The accused woman was raised on an Indiana farm, and after awhile got Herself married to a husband about -whom details are lacking. It is pre- sumed that he either died or escaped. 'Ten years ago she became the bride •of Truman Cassler. Five years later she was' married by a man named John Manion, who said that he went through the ceremony under threats of death. Learning that she had already been married by Cassler, he aan away and is now presumably in biding. After this misfortune Mrs. Cassler returned to Hebron, Ia., and joined the W.C.T.U. She became a singularly effective worker against the bootleggers and speakeasies in the district and routed out most of them. She was on the point of being given WIT AND WISDOM And Windsor on the Ganges --Bra- zil, according to the Toronto Mail and Empire, fronts on the Pacific Ocean If Brazil fronts on the Pacific, Toron- to is a thriving port on the shore of Lake Superior.—Border Cities Star. Until we learn the use of living words we shall continue to be wax- works inhabited by gramophones.— Mr. Walter de la mare. A man would probably be about as successful in choosing his wife's hats as she is in choosing neckties for him. —Kitchener ,Record. The eternal feminine: Dressing as she does because it is stylish; taking full credit because it happens also to be sensible,—Portlaild Express. Ati the end of a day's ®voxes, relieve tmervonno tension Wove eating. Wrigiey'o wflIlIl refresh and tone you up—so that you're iready to enjoy your food. Then, after meals, Wrigley'o helps digestion, cleanses the teeth, we eovec di traced of eating err smmokinng — oweetenns ¢he hm2atln. The Type of Ckwthes You Would Never Expect. to buy at these 'prices ort ds Screw tweed s Twi& No dfsp_ay we have evdrr offffell-ed[ egu.sI1s arm value— fiaz selectivity ® thfld1Ilmlg mppean ance---thin w©im - erfflll surrnmer showing a_ men's new style olliIltso lues, Greps Sands, S'rowns 'lue Stripes Fanep Checks That Arm Concect Th ose resseo are :..,_cry Atrctiv thmetive Sftyk l Jai "�S Pfc e, New drr sses, the small-tes. and most popular e 7ects off the season. We be - eve E.11e values ch,liillenge competition. Look at these woad erff aIlll g ,rrmentsq thelia ne what :© prrnce tickets they call -Ty. i,k,4 lika.4r.aL ** sffia4' ilActiti atmbg sae. a 8,'L=- 3448 Mas 8; Lh'*',•rer�S,@,a�t,1t 81544 .lilS`���n�4a:t�agrdr4a'8r a�ra::: ���saa�>s�s�s , ACUA*StttOggJ34pgi, ga83.wrc4m x15834!4: t :!• .: rrptr�aes+sara,143gM& °-1,,6143434'44gY`ose,h?�1 1 rt�'9P hitt.a arrYr $Ja, 80 p� 3441 1,P 11,4 r '‘faVtiii 11 r :.14.44,1 3431_f A41434 39154.18 4334 45 04818444*******' 83434343344383434483441434; 11 18 * r ®} * 11 1 r r r 41 R 8 ; 43444M18444144*3448434 , 84841494*4944444,,�, rr388814tl41144854}; 343444334988449r AY,t I41X8a14AX*§ta4nl3i14a34 1448844*44134$4rrr8, 4•1484984W114111444.1*_ ..,g 888394 a4413ABNMr.t 338889934934 448434344, "3434443344 33 JI8144419444 •:msy4rerr' ,3L, *4449114^3. :•'3, 94340 isr;,' t p r, k 431!4 ,x 1111 X 8 1 4Pa399 A14a11A5; v.4***. 34834443; /. 1m4494 .n.r1rXIX, 4343 8483.. .r41rr44,, 3114343443434. . •9*M4ze4nifx= .4343441111311833: F3a731. 3 14143434!♦ 313, 44434.441ar34a'. 434341ID 4CLi11134Ylt;; 1 4 r■■ r r 34 r r ie Ira 4.1 1y344i♦t u r i443443fi8.34 1 KIN: 84834*mal^ I Itca, A X 110 34 4 !r Irrrgrr8441. .444.418434344348: q■ 34 . 4 34 8,34 4 I.4r1Ira Ali a aliC'` 8^41ri;34w p IV iss 1.r■r16 3a34'.ra er�r14��34341E*14NItpalb 1'4 4PAAM* • P Society Brand Me En, e irRyes2Siites $250009 $30.009 $35c0O IarveRous new cco:ors. Latest p ittc rias —e x dhnsgnv ffabli-4cs9 allRly gEZTe nteedl pure botany Wool. You cannot get better than the best. When etterr cilothes E.Te nude we will sellll them. Attractive - Vies that Assure .b ig Savings Fancy Tricichine kichine o Fes`i . i._.ks Pisa Crepes Si: k , i ME ;tern what occasion b ©n w©anldl cor!' -e tfy &us lam,you wfL: and. yours requirement geneT- ousily fined I erre ata p '3 ke y©ua will be deRIlgt[ c dl with. Peach, Yellow Pink, Orange White, Pose lue, Green 19) PRNCES Ni End Sideline Fie Encil S l apes hazy $3 fit Kg 475