The Huron Expositor, 1930-08-15, Page 3Si
}
wy
7lE�7t�ls`
9$
$Sr
11"
fb
Ott
It
i.'R HONE0S PAIS
aVT,aboa+aad *h'a have gond •a 1'on>;
t71rne eb .reel ;t}; •ray pChang n 't w'ela
iPrefpaare dur the t ay'.wh n' thews luels
'brea'k's' hY r e#tixpg, a..'colmlet 'of x�ew
lug boo zults. Tho 'chances• are
than must•. may ma1+*e\ it impoesihle to
'ae'nladei the -out vi#hout strwei+ng the
thread or ''breakingthe holt.
IlrOliEP CHILDREN WELL
DURING HOT WEATHER
•
Every nether knows how fatal the
bet sumtmem moans: are to small ahtI
'dren. 'Cholera, infantnm, diarrhoea,
d'ylsentry, colic and stomachtroubles
are rife ,at tins time and, a pre-
eines little life is lost :only after a
few hours' illness. • The mother wino
keeps Baby's Own Tablets in the
house feels safe. The .occasional use,
of the Tablets prevent stomach and
bowel troubles, or if trouble comes
suddenly—as it generally does --the
'Tablets will bring .the baby -.safely
through. They are sold. by medicine
;dealers or by mail at Z5 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
GREYHOUND RACED WITH
WOODEN LEG
A greyhound that recently dislo-
cated its neck resumed racing after
receiving manipulative surgical treat-
ment at the Royal Veterinary College
of England.
This is only one, of the a1I azing
Cures accomplished . by veterinary
surgeons. Dogs have been provided
with artifrci al limits and false teeth,
while all the latest; dishoveries in
medical science are available for an -
lanais, including radium treatment,.
ultraviolet rays, and X-rays.
Even rejuvenating operations are
performed. In one case a sixteen -
year -old dog was brought to the col-
lege decrepit and hardly 'able to walk.
He is now back in his prime, pulling
at the leash with youthful vigor.
Instead of setting broken limbs in
tplaster of Paris, massage is used in
fracture, so that the limb does not
stiffen.
Another common .operation is the
removal of foreign bodies from the
stomachs of dogs. The record is
probably held by an Alsatian puppy
from whose storna,ch were recovered
67 nails of various sizes, two screws,
three bolts with nuts, one 'bolt, six-
teen brads, one stud, a piece of steel
eLri11, and a piece of coal, the whole
weighing fifteen ounces.
THE WORRY SAVER
Mother spent a few weeks every
auinmer visiting relatives. The family
managed to "get along" somehow,
but it wasn't easy. Mather started to
telephone home every so often to ask
about things and to offer suggestions.
3t certainly helped matters and re-
lieved Dad's mind of a lot of worry!
ANOTHER FATAL TRIANGLE
AND THE ELECTRIC CHAIR
While we think of the Snyder -Gray
case as the mrost shocking and sordid
of modern murders, another upon
whioh the curtain of the electric chair
is about to fall in New Jersey has
many points of similarity with it. In
both there were the unwanted . bus -
rbh hex is
fpr, Ikja'ttne, "rya
dl bretl�e
�a by aj1^ the neoups..and sailMt
is ]tile ietg)a! pxh44 ', o' t of w'h�em
called • her by''.,her fust Paine, and fre-
quexitly t orted t4' Tier ,place Sshe vias.
Wroth e.ellyentleg'ger.ihut one could always,,
get ar d'rin'k 'there;' .fpartie'ularly if ''he
carried a battle Wirth•Tins..• The piano
'900.41.0 rattle away iItito the%snxail hours
and t'het radiie and" .grankbphone voneld
add 'to tixe hilairiby ef hundreds of
ncoeasions, none of them any too Sob-
er. .
Occasionally there would be .a fight,
encl. the neighbors' 'generall'y raised
sufpeir"cilioue eyebrows at 'Hattie, but
not one sof. them thought 'there was
any real ;vice in her even if -she was
as: devoid of morays vs a 'kitten. Mit-
tie was not paxtieulaxly attractive.
She was older than most of the men
who come into contact with her, and
while 'none .of them fell in love with
her the consensus was that she was a
real good fellow. ISO, things had run
along for years until last Fall when
a bronzed young Marine named Les-
ter Underdown returned from Nicar-
agua or some other wild country and
formed the sociable habit of dropping
in on. Hattie. Presently it became
generally undersbolod that things be-
tween Lester and Hattie were not as
they had been between Hattie and a
'snore of others. I,t seemed, somehow,
to be real. •They were lovers. Les-
ter was .givpen,,a key to the place and
his buddies gradually ceased to josh
him about it. Suddenly with the vio-
lence of a shell there was projected
into this 'shabby. idyll, the news that
Hattie's husband was coming home.
Moreover he was not merely• coming
home on leave. He was coming home
to stay. -
To Hattie in meant the end of her
love affair and the end of the love life
she loved, for her husband, while not
particularly keen about her, was a
dour man' in his clips, and it was in-
credible _that( he would permit his
home to be a general hangout for
amatory and bibulous marines. An-
other woman „might have sought di-
vorce. Still another might have in-
duced her lover to run away with her.
But neither idea, apparently, entered
Hattie's s'hall'ow little pate. She and
her lover talked it over, not altogether
soberly, and between them sketched
the .outlines of a plot, which had as
its main object that Robert Evans
should not come home. Afterwards
Underdown confided in a couple of
his buddies, and they decided for the
honor of the service to stand by him
arudl see that right was done. So, -en
a certain night the three of thenrwent
into hiding at a place where Evans
and Robert Albert Duffy, a friend,
mlusrt pass, and at a signal from Un-
derdown ,bh'ey discharged a volley of
rifle bullets into ;them. Both men fell
and the marines then rushed in and
finished the job.
They returned to the Evans' house
and 'Hlalttie ran forward and threw her
arms about Underdown's neck, crying,
"It's a good job, and I'm glad it's ov-
er!" That night the three marines
with nice delicacy esoorted her to the
home of her brother, and the next
day she led police to the spot where
the bodies of her husband and his
friend were found. The first police
investigation suggested that the two
had murdered ea'eh other, but further
examination showed discrepancies in
this theory. Suspicion naturally turn-
ed toward Hattie and Underdown, and
it was not long before the police had
sufficient evidence to arrest them and
:ar?kt.1.4* t?CdP Mould rat ids:
Natnt,r'all7 igmou h i 7th e4'
niarineSeWere lead: Chmvaleeni They
proinetly tiered elft 'a evidence x '4;0the ;l..ers, were E and guilty of i'irst
degree retarder. fHait9.e,r?;;:her eon3'7emne
ed, cell wailed agaanst' fate • and. ,bhe;
iinkind'nes's.of miens; Nohlia, she: said'
hadbrought her to her present plagir't.
She fblam d the three maarines, r•ILd1S,=
calimin'ately: Like Ruth Srnyd'er an4
Judd Gray the two condemined lover
have ruofbhine but hate to express for
eatl3,-otthex.l After 'convietion they,
were placed `side by side in a closed
ear and driven from the court house
to a prison. 'They ,stared straight
ahead, never once speaking to each
other. Underdown new -admits inti-
macy with the woman but denies that
he ever loved her. The woman will
go to her death friendless„ Her own
family Chas east her toff, and of the
jolly crowd of which she formed the
centre near Lakeihurst not ane haws
come forward to s'band beside her.
Hattie Evans, unless there is a last
moment intervention, will be the third
woman ever to suffer the death pen-
alty in New Jersey, and the first to
be electrocuted. Upon the jury that
convicted her were .four women. It
remained in deliberation all night,+
'baffled as to just whet share of re-
sponsibility should be borne by Un-
derdown. That Hattie was the prime
mover in the conspiracy nobody seem-
ed to doubt from the beginning.
REPARTEE
Father Healey, an Trish priest and
famous for his wit, was one day be-
ing shown through the home of one
of his newly rich neighbors. Entering
the library filled with books, the
neighbor with a sweep of his hand
said, "Ah! these are my friends,
Father Healey."
Healey picked up one of the books
and examined it carefully. Then be
turned to the gentleman and said,
"Yes, and 1 am glad to see that you
are not one of those people who cut
their friends."
The late Sam Davis, Editor of the
Carson Appeal, was known as the or-
acle of the Nevada Sagebrush. Once
he was instructed by the San Fran-
cisco Examiner to meet Mane. Sarah
Bernhardt at Remo and bring her ov-
er the mountains of California on her
first tour of the Western slope. Davis
was a most likeable person. The
great French"actress 'became so fond
of him that thereafter she declined to
be interviewed by any other news-
paperman during her sojourn on the
coast. If she had anything to say for
publication, he said it for her. The day
came when the train bearing her priv-
ate car was about to start back East.
As the locomotive 'bell was ringing,
she put her hands upon his shoulders,
kissed him upon either cheek, and
then squarely upon the mouth, re-
marking as she did so, "The right
cheek for the Carson Appeal, the left
for the Examiner, the lips, my friend,
for yourself."
"Mladam," said 'Davis, without the
slightest sign of bashfulness, "I also
represent the Associated Press, which
serves 380 gapers west of the Missis-
sippi River."
Harvard men are probably all
familiar with this anecdote. President
Charles W. Eliot was taking Edward
Everett Hale to a Harvard -Yale foot-
ball game. "Where are you going, Mr.
Eliot?" inquired a passersby.
"To yell 'with Hale," replied Dr.
Eliot.
4
IT'S WISE TO
CHOOSE A SIX
From first cost
to re -sale value
it's wise to choose this Six!
IT'S wise and economical to choose a
Chevrolet Six! For the new Chev-
rolet is a six -cylinder car—with all the
advantages of greater smoothness,
comfort, speed and hill -climbing'
power which nothing less than six
cylinders can give. Yet, priced as low
as $635 at the factory, Chevrolet Six
is actually one of the lowest -priced cars
you can buy! And this great Six costs
no more for gas --costs no more fot
oil — costs no more for tires — costs
no more for upkeep than any other
.ear on the road today.
The Sport Roadster : - $7I5
The Coupe - - - 740
The Coach 750
The Super Sport Roadster 795
(Six wire weels standard)
In addition to giving you smoother,
faster performance now, Chevrolet's
modern features—such as low suspen-
sion, longer wheelbase, lengthwise -
mounted springs, new Fisher Bodies,
plush upholstery and smart appoint-
- assure higher re -sale value
or your car when you come to turn
it in.
Come in and see us— today — for a
road demonstration. Ask about the
General Motors Owner Service Policy,
the most complete service policy in the
industry—and the G.M.A.C., General
Motors' own deferred payment plan.
ROADSTER or PHAETON The Club Sedan
T1,e Sport Coupe
The Sedan
°635
• $810
- 840
870
, The Sport Sedan 940
(Sex wire wheels standard)
Prices 41 factory, Oshawa. Taxes, bumpers and spare tire extra. A complete
line of Commercial Cars and Trucks from $485 up.
EVROLET SIX
DUNLOP MOOT
v(e
E. W. FAWM
Seaforth, Ont, Mitchell. Ont.
i
ki
1.
U
c•11aan
1T'S CANADIAN
thi t a
. �'
in
the .fi'o e
s x fi a •a
Y. Y
riety to choose froom, the io'v'est
plus service; shake shopping h;axe.` s
isfactory, pleasant and*try
profitable
DELIGHTFUL
NEW
Summer
Dresses
VeryCloselyPriced
VALUES UP TO $6.50
Finest quality dresses of
Piques, Prints, Batistes, el-
\aborate style. Sold every-
where up to $6.50. Guaran-
teed color fast dyes; newest
styles. You will want to
select several at
$3.79
VALUES UP TO $4.50
Dimities, Lawns, Piques.
Batistes. This lot is just to
hand, bought at enormous
reductions and are passed
on to you. You will be am,
azed when you see this rack
of beautiful summer dre$ses.
Regular $4.00 to $4.50.
$2.69
FINE CREPE DRESSES
Excellent quality, Pink.
White, Yellow, Blue, Mauve
All this season's newest
styles.
$6.95
{
Men's
With Abiding Appearance
$18.00 to 35.00
You must see the attractive New Suits we have just re-
ceived. Beautiful blue hair line stripes, fancy Dublin
Twist, Hard Finished Worsteads; Dressy Blue Serges; smooth
grey worsteds, all made and trimmed up to the standard
always demanded by this store.
Blue with white or light
blue stripes, single or double
breasted ; well lined a n d
carefully tailored. Sizes 35
to 44.
PRICES:
$24.50, $29.50
Dublin Twisted fancy
Tweeds in the new tan,
brown, sand or blue mix-
tures; made in special sizes
for young m2n's wear.
PRICES:
$18.00, $24.50
Blue Serges, guaranteed genuine Indigo Dye, fine twil-
led, handsome style', pleasing shades of blue. Double or
single breast. Sizes 34 to 48.
Prices $24.50, $29.00, $35.00
Grey Serge in light, medium or dark grey, the best
wearing suit made; easily kept clean and always lookF.
dressy. Sizes 36 to 48.
Prices $24.50, $29.00, $35.00
STEWART BROS., Seaforth
ANNUAL RECORD OF ROYAL
CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE
FILLED WITH THRILLERS
Few novels or movie thrillers crowd
more breathless adventure, sobs,
laughter and tragedy into their pages
or reels, than does a prosaic, blue
paper -bound volume issued yearly by
the Canadian government.
It is the annual report of the Royal
Canadian Mounted. Ponce, probably
the most famous body of constabulary
in the worldy and it runs a gamut of
truth which is stranger than fiction,
from stark, unalleviated horror to
grotesque comedy.
At ane end of the scale, the tradi-
tional activities of the scarlet -and -
gold clad Mounties are recounted in
such extracts as the following:
"A strange case of murder and sui-
cide occurred at Aneroid, "Saskatche-
wan, on December 3rd. A man, in-
fatuated with a .girl who threw him
over for another suitor, forced him-
self into the roam, exploded a stick
of dynamite and all three Were kill-
ed."
At the ether end of stile scale are
Sergit. Wight's difficulties in taking
the, tennis of an Eskimo settleniient.
of 27 'haeoppe,
",Was) unable to gat correct age
,and terehltege et thk hbn," the
otilceti' r iitinfd?s. "Sonde roi+osrlie • claimthree or tent men as sthaffather of
their children, and in one case, four sentenced
women claimed to be the mother of merit.
one child. Finally, I Mound that none
of them was the mother, who had dis-
appeared; but that each of them had
adapted the child in turn."
Swinging back to the note of trag-
edy once more, the report tells of an
Eskimo boy who was killed and partly
devoured by a pack of half-starved
husky dogs,, near Chesterfield Inlet,
within the Arctic circle. The animals
are so scarce and est valuable in the
region that the natives refuse to kill
them, even though they are often a
menace to human life.
The itlereasing awe in which the
natives of the northland hold the
power and the law of the white marl,
is illustrated in the report of Inspecc-
tor C. D. La Nauze of Albany Post,
James Bay, who was commissioned to
arrest and try Sandy Metat, an In-
dian ",bad man," accused of a serious
offense against a yibun:g girl. La
Nauze was specially commissioned as
a magistrate. to deal with the case.
Metat boasted that he would never
be arrested, threatening death to all
who attempted to capture him. La
Nauze strode into the Indyan council
chamber.
' "Metat is a fool," he said. "He dare
not kill me; and even if he did, an-
other officer would ,come in my place
and another, and attoath t until Metat
was captured 'raid hanged." !12etat
rendered without a:_Waggle, and wan
to six months'
imprison -
CLEANING
m•prison-
CLEANING FURNITURE
When cleaning white enamel furni-
ture be careful to remove all surface
dust. When soiled wash with tepid
water and a pure soap, then rinse off
and dry. Avoid the use of alkaline
substance, too much friction when
washing, and too much .moisture. If
the enamel becomes discolored, a lit-
tle whitening dissolved in water and
rubbed on gently will help to restore
its whiteness. Polish by rubbing with
a chamois leather; furniture cream
is rarely necessary.
Upholstered Furniture.
It is very important to keep this
well brushed, or better still, to re-
move all dust from it With a vacuum
cleaner. Pay particular attention
when brushing to folds in the mater-
ial and round,buttons. If dust is al-
drowed to remain in corners it will at-
tract and harbor moths At spring-
cleaning tune upholstered furniture
may be beaten if no vaeaumr cleaner
is available. This s7lvotald she dolts in
threhipen air, if ipos'slble, and with a
flat cane' beater., and. then a rbeush ne-
ed to remove suifeeer dna.
If the material is stafIcd it m+asr be
rubbed over with .a� '1rtt1e„trrent bra's.
or sot u@al, .a els t duster being
uteri, and, then a trash take it of )
Benzine may be used to remove any
stains.
To Remove Bruises.
Wet the part with warm water and
cover with ten or twelve thicknesses
of moistened brown paper. Then ap-
ply a hot flatiron until the paper is
dry. The steam should cause the
compressed part of the wood to swell
and rise to its original level. A good
polish will be necessary after this
treatment.
1
cl;
Each pailwill` '' (lies ittil a,
every''day tai tkilre i; ,•
3.;110"8.
pads ;n r-
10 CENTS
at btug;110” C!cciti,
tat
s,
Ryyr�vllh
I2