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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1918-9-12, Page 7'Fox - outside or inside vvork this is the paint that gives satisfaction. PA1N19AT,� TO I,+T ' Insist on R-fimHay's: Pure Paint, tfecauee every gallon is tested for uniformity, elasticity and,; free flowing qualities. Ask any Ratneay dealer, or write rea fore Interesting i ook1ete and set aoettons. A, RAAISAY & SON .COMPANY efARFUt.S-op PALM'S ANA jAn11igififS'SIN'CE 1811 Throw,' 'MONTREAL .Vancouver. 414 tn�G7f til �i•111�1i �� ��4 For Sale by all Dealers 'A° WCL AppEN ing down even to the lowest. But eve have seen the utter .fallacy'of this argument, which was, fifty Years ago, AFTER THE WAR ? adoemed,nswer , t be so firm as to be un Finding His Soul. We have seen and proved that mere cheapness and freedom of trade have THE LIVES OF ALL 0 US. not made\the world a Heaven below,, as vias expected, so we must of neces- sity seek salvation elsewhere than tri' Already • 5 Ste s Are Bein TalcejL in that doetrine if'. we do not desire fur- p ther trouble. Abundance was good, the Old Land to Ensure THERE WILL BE MANY CHANGES 1 urolle-nayp the werldeethe trial;•�• t� we have undergone will 'net have'. all'f l ► i • licca in vtli l the College 0 a PAIN? ' NOT A BITI ' a Better ;World. (13y the Right Hon. Geo. N. Barnes, ings of both, M.P., Member o`f the British War 1tie saw, 'on the one hand, leisure Cabinet.) and great riches displayed and flaunt Can we? Yes, I certainly think we ed ostentatiously and irritatingly by can do this after the war. Of course, a small percentage, comparatively how, much so, depends..tremerydoualY speaking, of the population. On the on how the wag ends, and how far we other hand, we found masses of mis- call carry the spirit and good feeling erably poor folk,' -with slurps that were of brotherhood and comradeship which a disgrace to any civilized country. has begun to animate us; all during Vire shall—ave must of necessity— fire past four years of crisis: -make it clear that such a state of There will be many things to adjust, thingscan never again be tolerated many difficulties tot overcome, many in this land. awkward styles to surmount ere we We must see that every honest get the England we are wanting and worker and his family have a good hoping to see emerge after the days house, and where at all possible, a of peace come again. There will be piece of garden;. that .a man's wages the question of how far women are to are sufficient for his family's needs; continue in the new and often splen- that he is enabled to live a comfort did jobs they have taken up, for so able., and healthy life,, .with some many: of their jobs will then trench ehance, of finding his, soul and enjoy - on the posts that were to be kept vac- ing the existence God means him to ant—according' to solemn promises enjoy whilst he is on this erth. ,when the brave fellows joined up-, "Worthy of His -.Hire" for our fighting men on their return. The old system hardly gave a man: Master and Man• a chance. He was always afraid that There will be the questions, so urg- 'if he made any experiment; ,and left. ent• and important, of housing and the particular groove wherein he had education. There will be the serious been brought up, however much he (matter of haw far we are to • go on rebelled against the restrictions and producing our own food, instead of injustices of it, he might fall into a depending as much as we did years worse case still—that 'it might prove back on:outside producers. "out of the frying -pan into the fire. And, not least, of even a score more Moreover, we must remember that urgent items, will be the relatitmship we have to -clay quite a different sort which is to exist in future between of man in the workship and behind " the capitalists ,and the workers, be- the bench from that which we had tween employers and employed, be- fifty years b^ck Then the workmen tweed -the richer andr,the poorer parte of the communities in our big towns and country villages. 1 might touch on all, or on many, days. Then the workers were inex- of these .issues fraught with such perienced as to the greater aims; to - tremendous t;onseauences .for the Em- day they grasp them far better, whilst pire and our own islands, but natur-their education' and thought have ally time and space would forbid that. made them much more sensitive. So let me just say a word about one We. have to cope with this new of them—the outlook of the;workers state of the mass of people --a state and their future relations with their I, personally, am delighted to know is employers. there. For every upward, move by a 'the' political economists?of the' past man is a great gain not only for him - explained the processes, in chief, the production and distribution of wealth in the land. John Bright had, in- ''ihetorical terms glorified abundance and cheapness, which he said had re - suited in blessing every homey filter - cheapness was to be desired; but there remained better organization as a means of better diffusion of the bless - Girl's Wardrobe 1. ;p LIF' -1 YOUR, CORNB� OR CALLUSES OFF 0 c No bumbugl Apply few drops then Just lift theta away with finpere. ',�,�^-•O, .,p—p._. �«� q. -.a --O--0 d 41 q.. This new drugis Sea ether corn pound discovered by, a Cincinnati' c eemtst, It • le called freezone,.avid tai now ,:,be obtained in tiny•bot- ties •4s here' shown at very little cost from any' drug store. Just ask for freezone. .A,pply a drop qr two directly upon a tender coon or callus and, instantly the soreness disappears.. Shortly you will find the 'corn or callus so loose that you can lift it off, root and all, witlr the lingers. Not a twinge of pain, soreness or irritation;; not even the slightest smarting, either when applying freezoue or afterwards. This drug doesn't eat up the corn or callis, but shrivels them so they loosen and come right out. It is no humbug! nit works like a cliarm,'" For a "few emits you can get rid of every hard cora,' soft Cora or corn be- tween the toes, as • well as painful calluses on bottom' of your feet. It never disappoints" and never burns, bites or inflames. If your druggist hasn't any freeeoue yet, tell him to get a little bottle for you from his wholesale house. NEIGHBORS LAUGIHED3 _ AT 'HIM City, Man Going on Ii'ar'm Was Itidi titled For Keeping Accounts "Few farmers can tell at the end of a year exactly where they .stand fin- ancially," said e city man Who had recently purchased 'a farm, in refer- rings appreciatively to the Farmer's Account Book recently issued by the Commission of Conservation. ••`I think: I looked at fifty farms in ',parts of Ontario within 100 miles of 1,1 Toronto. The first question 1 asked .rte. `MOCsr,q This youthful frock is an essential in the college girl's wardrobe. It is in one piece from shoulder to hem. McCall Pattern ' leo. 8448, Misses' Dress. In .4 sizes, 14 to 20 years. Price, 20 cents. every man who'. wanted to sell • his fal•m was, `How much do you \make off' -your farm' every year?' and I don't think 'there were a dozen who' could tell. Probably that: was the reason many -of them wanted to sell. I' asked. the man who owned the farm I' bought, and he replied that lie had made all the money he had in,], the bank. That wasn't much infor- mcition; but I found out before buying Delightful to look at: and' easily other in' its treatment of neutral less you want "rusty" plants. T U QUESTION OF CANDY. Stili More': Conversation is Needed' in Canada. The people of the North American, icontiz e>,It ea5i1) outstrip ; all other peoples, it the world in their annual consumption, of candy, It is estimated that in the IJnited 'States alone half a billion dollars' worth of .candy is eaten every' year. Canacllihaa the! candy -eating habit in an equally' pronoun;ced degree. A noted physician has declared that sweetness Is to the taste what heauty is to the eYe and music to the ear. He says that more than one-half of all the foods in the world"have a, sweet taste, while only one-third possess a salty taste and one-tenth a bitter or sour ta:d;e ,, Fish 1gg:q That Grow - on Bushes. l5espite a big cut already effected In Herring' that flock along the coast the consumption of candy; in the Dom- of southern Alaska in vast "schools" inion further economy must be exer- lay' their eggs in bunches ik'very shal- cised by private individuals, and chile low water near the shore, attaching siren should be taught that in buying -.them to floating seaweecls or rocks. too much candy they are perhaps de, It is a 'habit' of which the native In- pyiving hungry . children of the bare diens take advantage, by throwing necessities of life. I quantities of brush into the water at jthe spawning season. Later, they GIRLSI LEMON JUICE ,collect the brush and 'scrape .:off the IS SKIN WHITENER fish eggs, .drying the latter in the sun for food, 'How to make a creamy beauty lotion for a few cents. The juice • of two , fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three the 'country, ounces of orchard)vblte makes a wliole that fire city was no place for a grow' - quarter pint of the most rerharkable . in boy, but theyhad not'.cansitlted lemon skin beautifier at about the cost $ one must pay for a small : jar of the Tommy. It rained during the first long I day in the new home, and Tommy', ordinary cold creams. Care should be forced to remain indoors, made re- taken to strain the lemon juice through pea ted a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, boated trips to. the windows to Iool• r then this lotion will keep fresh for nut. months. Every woman knows that Why isn't anyone passing?" he lemon juice is used to bleach and re -'l! asked his mother again and again. move such blemishes as freckles, sal-! When is some one going`by7 No one l is going by now, either. I want to go lowness and tan and is the ideal skirt softener, whitener and beautifier: back,"he concluded firmly. Just' try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make Aug.$ 1894. up a quarter pint of this sweetly frag-- St. Isidore, P. Q., Aug. rant lemon lotion and massage it daily nIinard's Liniment Co., Limited. into the face, neck, arms' and hands. Gentlemen,—1 have frequently used _ MINARD'S ,L1NLMENT and also -pre- German �'s Diplomatic Blunders scribe, it, for•nay patients always with y 1 the most gratifying results, and I con-' From first to last Germany's diplo- Sider it the best ::,all-round Liniment macy has blundered. To the twelfth extant. hour it scornfully :believed that Brit-1Yours truly„ ain would not fight. It counted on g DR.. JOS. AUG. SIROIS. ohtea weakness and'political dissen-1 siorrs° It assured itself that we were i decadent, :: It' insulted us with •a pro-. posal to betray our ally—France. It; There is generally a difference of -mistook the temper of the French' front 3 to 7 cents per pound in the people and underestimated both the price paid for well -fleshed fowl as forces of. Russia and -the rate at which compared. with lean, unfinished stock they could be mobilized early in the just off the range. war. It was insensible as to the vigor of small nationalities and their `IYLinard'e Liniment Cures Burns, rto, passion for freedom, splendidly evinc-' ed by Belgium .and ,Serbia_. .And -rt - Beans.should never be hoed or cal - has stumbled from ,orae error to an- tivated when the vines are, wet, un- NAs BEN`; cANA Rs rAVORI,TE YEAST FOR' MORE THAN StirYEt RS` rr'�r+Y,c pa i16�11' comp Nrtri1_. htiN+ QPRONTQ,rpc!L. fialuara'y, T inintent Curee Dendru Urbane. To"inmy, in. his third year, moved to His parents thought' his *,lace that he lead quite a snug sum made is this- new. undergarment of. States.. In spite of its vast and thor-. in the bank simple-. construction. MrOall Pat - reit system of espionage, its as-' •Oat SALE "When we took up farming, all the "tern No. 8441, Ladies' Undergarment• tounding acquisition of facts and opin- WELL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER neighbors watched everything we did, ; In 5 sizes, 34 to 42 bust. Price, 20 ions in other lands it has failed' to and iob printing r lana I n Eastteern Ontario. Insurance carried $1 and many of them thought we'were' cents. McCall Transfer Design No. penetrate to the spirit of their poo- Ira :forn Puboa on ng quCoick kLsale Toronto. 9. crazy. Now these are the ones who 577. Price, 10 cents. pies. The mailed fist has been too r doing' These :;patterns may be obtained heavily'mailed for the fringes to foal eiET LT NEtwsPAPER FOR BALI, , come over. to see how we are ►� thin When some of the neigh from. your. local McCall dealer, or the pulse of other countries. rrance will sell $2.000. Worth double Minard's nestrnent for sale everywhere. A Hand Book For Dairymen Report No. 10 of the Canadian Re- cord of Performance for.Pure-bred Dairy Cattle constitutes a ligand book that that --dairymen can hardly do without. It contains the rules and regulations governing the records of performance; the standards for reg istration; the records of performance of all pure-bred dairy cattle in the , country convenient summaries of re- ports exact details of the records achieved and the addresses of the owners; a record of'the cows that' have produced sufficient mills and fat to qualify, but have failed to freshen within fifteen months after•the com- mencement"of the test; a list of bulls open. to registration and an index to owners. The whole forms a valuable and concise book of ddiry records that can be had free on application to the Publications Branch, Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. , MONEY ORDERS. Remit by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or,stolen you get your money back. in New Ontario. Owner going to a e" were uneducated; they had not the hours would drop in at the week -end from the 1lcCnll Co., 70 Bond St., knowledge nor the aspiration for and see my wife and •myself entering Toronto, Dept. W. higher things that they have .nowa- up our farm accounts. they went away and joked about: it' for 20 miles ppigfA INSTANT. poST(g' PoS'IiaM, CEREAL Motu t CcmP.V: /10.4.011‘,113 - KIWI, Car, Ordennalallent . a l< t1 � .� its a roil factor in. the present` public service program.. t Theres N®Was±e, it Saves Fuel and Sugar, and if Is al -ways ready. Not least, it is D and it Sttisfie�,s., Try � S THE WHIRLIGIG OF WAR. around. But ' at the end of last year when I could standup and tell them ''len Who Have Sprung into Promin- what the farm had cost,' what we got C ence in Great Struggle. hack, and our. net.profit, they became! The whirligig of war has wrou ;ht interested, and now some of ;them -are strange revolutions in the lives of keeping close tab on their incomes', many men,' says a London newspaper. and expenditures. !Four, years ago Sir Eric Geddes was "On the other hand, thele are farm- `absor;bed in his work as deputy gener ors -and they are the most successful ` ill manager of the North-Eastern Rail - self, but for Society in general, for ones—who keep accounts: as they'; way, little dreaming that Sgon he was his cli'strict, and for the nation as a should. If farming is run as a busi-i to;blossoln ` into major -general, -vice whole. ness, it should be run.in_a business-: admiral, and ruler of Britain's Navy. Labor and-' Capital, too, must work like way. But you've got to.; And l tis; brother,, Sir .Auckland, who together in union, and there must be show farmers that it to their . ad- to -day -is our Minister of National Ser a fair share of all the good things vantage to keep, accounts., -They've-vice, was peacefully delivering lec- which are the outcome of the corn- got to be shown that `they can't keep tures on anatomy a the McGill T7ni- bination. ' The workman must have a accounts in their heads. They may t versity, Montreal. say in the management of the busi-say that they haven't time to keep' Sir Albert Stanley, President of the. ness for which he works day by day,' book; but if they would only start, Board of,,Trade, was happy in his work they would `find that it takes only of reorganizing London's underground about half an hour a '. eek to itemize railways. ` Lord Rhondda was busy the memos made during the week. amassing riches from his South Wales capse they all affect his well-being "They also should keep . track of colleries, without a thought of war or and his/ contentment of mind their living expenses. For instance, office: Lord Beaverbrook was a little- ' "All Men Should Brothers Be." the hours of labor, the conditions en vironing it, the holidays, the profits. All these concern hint intimately, be And it is, after all, on the contented state of employees that the prosperity and triumphs of any business or work- shop depend. For discontented and grumbling workers never do their e t; theynever trouble muchto best; oas whether their labor is.of the highest type or not. The new recognitions, the. new phases , and relationships, which must soon come betwen all em- ployers and employees, will turn out as much to the ultimate advantage of the former as of the latter, you may be sure. ,- Lastly, if we make the world bet- ter, we should never forget that we all are nicmbers of a great brother- hood, that we are all parts of an inter- dependent whole, There must be a nobler spirit of comradeship, of help- full feeling, of kindly, practical synir- pathy,,than there was before the war, In all men and women who are really trying to. do their best to help on our land, how.ver lowly or humble May be their 'dot or their efforts, we must recognize true brothers and sis- ters, and be ever ready to hold out a helping hand, to give an encouraging a ho e t appreciation static to sr w n n s o of. their work. We must also be more practical in our. `religions life; there must be the true soul of the Master animating and proving us, If these things are the outcome of. the awful struggle if we take half a dozen eggs for a known member, of Parliament, with. meal, they are charged against never a dream of coronets and the household expenses. If we dig up King's Ministry; \ and Lords North - a peck of'potatoes, they are charged cliffe and R.othermere were absorbed up; if we cut ten cents' worth of let- in the vast businesses they control. tuce, it is charged up. ' Farmers. - And no less dramatic have been the would think that was foolish, and revolutions in the lives of soldiers to -day a are "household S Il e6 d perhaps it is for a farmer;.but we do whose am Y it in order to see how much cheaper words." Sir Douglas Haig was known it is to live in the country than in the in the Army as a clever soldier, but city; for we live in Toronto during the to the outside world he was unknown. y' Sir 'William Robertson had risen from winter.' "Another thing every farmer should private of Lancers to major -general, do is to have a plan of his farm,show- but outside the Arany he was only leg every field—not necessarily an known to a small, circle of frleads. elaborate blue -print, but a rough And Sir Henry 'Wilson, his successor sketch. He then Can sit down and can as Military Chief of Britain's Armies, plan his crops for four or five years was a modest, painstaking ,'soldier, of ahead, marking each field on his dia- whoin the' world had hardly even gram with the'ciop to be' grown each heard. Major-General ,F3yng, the hero year." of Vimy and Gambrel, was low on the list of major -generals after twenty-six There a1•cl l$00,000 Jews in the fight- years' service. And Generals Allenby ' Sal- ing forces of the Allies, and five in the and Horne, .Crencliar Sykes, mond, and many another who has British army have won the Victoria 'achieved fame, 'were 'unknown names Cross. to the worldoutsidethe Array. The time for "tipping" black ma- , berry `canes (if you want new' plants Our disSatisxactton -tvith any other 'to set or sell) le athiend. When the solution is the blazing evidence of:ire- nev growth bends over near the mortality, -Emerson. rich dar - granlyd, .each tip should be buried a Fond Lover:—If I were l few inches iii, the soil and held: bi, ing, would you love me more than you place with a, stone,' peg, oar heap of tto? net-We11, I might not love dirt, Next spring nearly every' tip will- have taken root; the n4W pinata can then be severed from the parent vrhich has for four 'eal'r►l devastated canes/and:lr Biedl w'bereirer desired. Al�r st t: College Sports Abandoned College sports in the United States Will be practically abandoned this fall. In Canada they were abandon- ed at the beginning of the war in 1014. There are few students left to play games on this continent or in any of. the Allied countries. The colleges are heart and soul in this 'war, and only the work essential to "getting the main thing over" will be tolerated. They are bending all energies to that effort. Everybody interested in sports should get the college boys' idea. It will make for the healthfulness of sport. Not everybody can enter the army. But there are other oppor- tunities. Food conservation and production aro calling for able-bodied men. Enlist for the harvest, Every pound of food saved means helping the Bmpiie s irll4fei, maintarci'a satiaiment llatategas ereturaleela. Perhits Flo, Mother (reading 4a 0,14Q)1 ' e'And yeti any more, but I would look for-, where the naught' fairies danead Warts to our i�ding dmy with n great* nothing ever greasy deal more inipeataence their Ido ata Child: "Did they dance over the pre ant top et Una* Ilea -tee Bead nis.Ort'a?" c/o447 Wilso that amount Amply J. Fi.. m rubltehina Co.. Limited. Toronto. 32'tSCELL rr.0TIE ( ANCEB.. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC.. j internal and external. cured with- out natn by our home treatment• Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited. Collingswood Ont. PAIN l gator Don't Suffer Pain--: Buy Hirst's and to prepared against snacks of rtlea- matrsm, lumbago, neuralgia, sprains and all similar painful ailments. Fur over 40 years a family friend. Don`t experiment -- try }first's—at dealers, or write us. MR MR5T REMEDY COMPANY. Hamilton, Can,aa .m RIR$T'S Family Salve, (50r). e 6/ MEET'S Pectoral Syrup afliore- hound-and Elecatnpane, (35r1 BOTTLE 001117 -CUT -01.11i4 A Shoe Boll Capped _ oc - or urn •'=rnnTfaAtivo tJ 5".SAY"n►r:_ !ill redree thein and leave no blertshesi tbpe Iiraene®a promptly, Does not bitsr• or move the hair and'borne cats bd }wc _ e A ird r 0 ii beide 11veK�d. pCkll e o ked 2,3 de A e A,I38ORi tt4E, 1R.e,1'e mfeAkind.,tiar.,,eppt ` imont toe IJofts Fruited: Strsf;,Sw flu e, Nttfieordvein Isre fMtn sad 1rn mnteilpn. Pride U 2l A $stile at dhlga IA' et deUrered. WiN tell yes toaee 11 pes write. d i.' d b tttlAA n S1E� sits D , (� n I,, 'p. '�. I3 .:.uroa a. ars pro t , e t*baertlue trail A onalic j><- cart. sat:de. it 'tensd5. , k31. 1. 1EtSli l 56---' 1st.