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The Huron Expositor, 1915-05-14, Page 6r TIT E. ITQ at. AILINU WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE .. Cl'�her Dis- tressing � t#ressin Symptoms . C ge of Life and How She Found Re lief. Belleville, Nova Scotia, Can. ---"'Three years ago I was suffering badly with. what the doctors called Change of Life. I was so bad that I.had to stay in bed. Some friends told me totakeLydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and it helped me from thq first. It is the only medicine I took that did help me and I recommend it. You don't know how thankful and grateful I am. I give you permission to publish what your good medicine has done forme. "—Mrs. SIMON DOUCETTE, Belleville, Yarmouth Co., Nova Scotia, Canada. Such warning syrhptoins as senses of anffocattion,hot flashes,headaches,back- aches,dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, .palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu- larities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and inquietude, and dizziness, are promptly heeded by intelligent wo- men who are approaching the period in life when woman's great change may be expected. Lydia I. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound invigorates and strengthens the female organisms and builds up the weak - lad nervous system. It has carried many women safely through this crisis. If you want special advice write to Lydia L nkham-Medicine Co. (confi- dential) Lynn, Mass: Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. MADE IN CANADA COLLARS. T'_ WILLIAMS: GREENE & VOME•CO., UMITID emu N, ONTARIO Constipation - al Mae of old age is not to be cured by harsh purge - byes; they rather aggravate the trouble. For a gentle, but sure laxative, use Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They stir up the liver, tone the nerves and freshen the stomach and bowels just like an internal bath. mans' best Mend. rrorn girls ood to old age, these little red health re- storers are an unfailing guidetoanactireliverand, a clean, healthy, normal stomach. Take a Chamberlain's Stomach Tabletat night and the sour stomach and fer- mentation, and the . headache, have a l l gone by morning. Alt druggists, or by mail from ChamherlaJn Medlcinl! Company, TOronta 12 •r * .rt6esee z r How Zam-Buk Cures Skin Diseases Assoon as applied, Zam-Buk penetrates right to the; very root of the disease and: kills the cause thereof. The rich herbal essences then so stimta- late the cells below•the surface that new healthy tissue is formed, which, as it grow,, forces out the diseased tissue. Zatni Bukcures from the bottom up. This is the reason that sores and skin diseases cured by Zam-Buk, do not return. Zam-Buk ` is entirely differ- ent from all other ointments. It does not contain harsh min- erals, or poisonous coloring matter. Nor does it contain coarse animal fats, which,in a short time, go rancid. _ - Zam- Buk will keep indefinitely. Many people have beencured by Zam-Bule after having suf- fered years and spent hundreds of dollarstryingvarious reme- dies in vain. If you suffer from any skin disease or injury, benefit by the experiences -of others. Try Zam-Buk first. Don't trouble with useless temedies. Zam-Buie is unequalled for eczema, piles, pimples, cuts, burns, bruises, cold sores, frost bites, chapped hands, and all skin diseases and injuries. We are so convinced that a trial of Zana-Buk will prove to you its superiority, that we will send you a FREE TRIAL box on receipt of this article, name of paper, and lc. stamp to pay return pos age. Address Zarn- Buk Co.,oronto. Ali Dray ist5: and Stores "salt Za .nuk at 50c, box 4 Sornething to Think About The venerable Dr.Carman,n ,the - r an d old man of the Methodist Church ..in Canada, who, although bearing the weightaP many years is mentally as vigorous as in hie early - life has a stinging letter in The Globe of a fear da•y s ago. It is as follows: ; -' Pre.ierui raying th`s r Il all to Bri- tons in the home lands; We' want more men, and we wart them now" the British Cabinet's loyal, trustful summons to faithful subjects of the Empire ail mond the globe 1 Anda why this call?' We are in a fierce struggle for life, on land end ssea. 4We are fight- ing for hs mean liberty, for the rights of strata r nations to enjoy their freedone, to govern thernseives', against the crush- ing Gerniaan. aggression. What hinders our ready and speedy possession of the mightiest' armaments, of the needed men, of the most effective equipments for the battlefields? Can it be. siblet Strong drink? booze? Where is British manhood, courage, loyalty? The nation hard pressed for its life, honor, its high seat of wealth and: power, and loll sac- rificed to +booze? I hate to hear Britons say it. I s.shiver in such a crisis o 'have ° them (think 1t sof any :number -,of reput- able men. And is not this a sorry business3 Britain, Imperial, world -encircling Bri- tain, palsied, helpless, stupified ;.by booze i And that despite the example, fhe implied entreaty of his Majesty:'tle King and the Royal , house. Lloyd George affirms three mighty foes, Ger- many, Austria, Britain's liquor, trade, the last The =greater.-Canade, hands this liquor business over to the Methodists. All right, if partisan . Methodists al- ways voted straight. But !or a great public measure' like' this, there are Pres- byterian, Anglican, " and other 'voters as well. Why not divide up the res- ponsibility' and the measureless honor I do not favor this °Methodist monopoly of ail the glory. FRECKLES NOW I8 THE TIME TO GET RID OF THESE UGLY SPOTS of fhere's no longer the slightest need eeling ashamed of your freckles, the prescription othine - - dduble strength --is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get -an ounce of othine —double strength ---from any druggist and apply allittle of it night and morn- ing and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have;begun. todisap- pear. While the lighter. ones have van- ished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to asks, for tlze double strength othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. News Notes —James Stewart Tepper, eldest son of Sir Charles Tupper, died b a .hos- pital at Oxford, England, oa Saturday, after several . weeks' illness. He was in his 64th year. - -Mr. John Wallace, a prdminent far- mer and for several years a member oa the Minto Township Council, died at Palmerston on Friday after an ill- ness of ;some duration. - Parsnips that -had sprouted caused the death of Mrs. Effie Andrews, (wife of George Andrews, of Aylmer, a few days ago. She -partook of the parsnips for sky r; was .taken ill dh rtly .after- wards land died at midnight. Parsnip eaters •ssdhould bear this in mind. —Mr. George W. Grant, of Winnipeg, picked 'a large boq•aet of fresh yellow tulips in his garden on the 29th of April. This is quite -an early date for this beautiful flower to reach such a stage of beauty and perfection, in Win- nipeg. —According to the annual report of the Department of Agriculture, for 1914, there were 15,000 sheep on Manitoba farms last year. This numberrepresent- ed a 33 per cent. increase in twelve months. It is believed that the number will be increased to probably 100,000 Ln 1915.. --Sgnire William Patrick, one of -the pioneers of the London district, and for many years one of (the ,most prom- inent men _ of 'Ilderton, Ont., died ,at the -residence of his daughter, .Mrs. A.•Nev- in, Wharncliffe road, West London. He was born in 0.822, and Iliad been for .70 years ' an Orangeman. Lieutenant G. A. Coldwell of the 12th Brandon Horse, son of Horn.- Geo. R. Cold -ell, Minister of Ec}ucation for Manitdba,is reported as laving been killed in t e battle of Ypres.{Iibn. Geo. R. Coldwe 1, father of the deceased Lieutenant, was a eon of the late W. E. CoIdwell, of Hallett, near Constance,-', Huron County., —A message from Right Hon. ;Lewis Harcourt, Secretary of State for the Colonies, has been received by the .Gov- ernment at Ottawa, in regard to the celebration of the King's birthday. The cable states : 'It is his -Majesty's whish that on this occasion of his Majesty's birthday this year flags should be flown, but no dinners, aeviews, salutes or 'oth- er celebrations should take- place." —Announcement of the letting of the largest cement " contractever awarded by thegovernment in Canada will, it is understood, be male in a Lew ;,days Jay the minister oaf railways. The amount. is for 2,500,000 barrels, and this enor- moue quantity of cement "is required for the building of the Welland canal It is understood the Canada Cement company, will probably get the contract. —One of Woadstock';s oldest citizens. Mrs. C. E. Carryer, died, on Sunday, at the age of seventy-eight.. She was ,Por many years a member of the . teaching staff . of the Woodstock public schools, and also, taught in a • umber of ;the schools in the county. She was a •sis- ter of 'tthe late C. qr. ,Love of the Mas!- sey-Harris Company, who died in To- ronto, a few weeks ago: —Rev. Dr. Chowan, General. Sr:perin- tendent of the Methodist Church of Canada, is leaving for Great Britain on Jane 5th, Where he will •address the various Meth dist conferences of Eng- land and .reran& He will epeak at the Primitive Methodist Conference on June ldth and the Irish Conference Jane 18. Later he will address the United Metoo- dist Conference at Exeter, and will speak on several occasions before the Wesleyan Conference at Birmingham. —The Department of Agriculture. at Ottawa, will shortly begin to turn over to the province the money to ee ex- pended this year under the Agricultural Instruction Act. Mr. C. C, James, who had charge oft, he campaign for in- creased production, has completed that work and is engaged in the administra- tion of the Agricultural Instruction Aet, sander- which $900,000 will be distribut- ed arnong the provinces this year. The money is paid out from time to time by arrangement with 'the provinces to be applied 'under a definite programme in ;tape case of each province. t ' —An order -in -could% has been passed by ; the 'Ottawa Government, prohibit, Ing the e�port ofP grain, Cour and fore i age Sto ''tithe United States, except it le ed ford c to to be used otnesti co2'asumpt � n9 an& a certificate tothis effect must be given at the 'port of exit. ,This i3• simply an;extenslon of the previous or- der issued some ,time ago tinaa ship- ments of Canadian' foodstuffs may ;be made only to the countries of the allies' and those neutral countries ,from which there would be no doubt of Abe enertn countries obtaining these. supplies ea ported from Canada. --Twoia �b'ugtti3"° ms haps of a n sty na- ture oceurec on Sunday on a stretch of road to the south of the town' of Sim eoe. In one case the occupa=nts were thrown into a ditch. and in the other tono. to=viet s ed u� h victims were tch +� top a barbed -Wire fence. The buggiesr Were both wrecked, and the horses belted. FrankShearer, tar mer. ar r ha.rlotteville � aC 9 Dunt Su:1- :et of11sC aldent the Norfolk day School Aesotiiatian sustained ` a broken leg, and his wife and child tvaelved- severe shaking Mrs. •William ,Adams and her two ,children were pitched into a barbed-wire fence, and one child received injuries which will result in permanent scars. I -The . present war is. now costing per dayac- rea't twin$10,508,000 t� Bri . cdrding to the statement ref the Chan- celer of tthe Exchequer. If the . war lasts a year Brltain'ss bill " wj31 be t1 : ��, 9 ouooar, � can ,really estimate ethe Magnitude ofthis a2noeu ti Wha. t good h might be done in the worldwit this = rnsrny e if used for" Chrietiaanizing, civil - i zlngand commercial purposes, ses 9whereas than h woP h verye � e t Ili mu 'war forw i Wasted, Bat for the , waste of both life end 2X1�may _one we thank the . Kaiser and his cultured cohorts. When we co t the expenditure . of take into ac un p other nations engaged tie oathin he � war, who is there that comPu to the wicked waste;- —Only at rare intervals how comes • an announcement of the torpedoing of a British or Frepeb merchant vessel by a Germansubmarine. The British navy bee ;seemingly got its bull -dog grip upon the submarine renaee, and occasionally an untersebwot though g ma 3co#e, the t atal damage affe cted b : them steadily declines. In February eight British eig vessels were torpedoed,, l seven. 1 only A rl in y . tsi$i-eon p ryry 9 in J� Between ApI'Il 12th and 30th not a was sunk h the singe --British- vessel_ . �• �' �ines outside the North Sea, That F,t►�3tiiar end of the ,grand spells thee defini#.e {rdestro ing" British corn - scheme for y nierce. a —John Goodison, founder of the thresher works of . that name in Sarnia,' and w ioee name is familiar among ;the farmers. of Canada, died sit hid home in that town Thursdag° evening after an e Illness of only a few mutes. r. AY. 1 44 19 Goodies was in his 66th year, ;Isaias ban in Wicklow, Ireland, and moving r Tee; his ren farm n. ea with parents oe Town o Ca�rad � +onto, and later � p. When aman be enteredbtsinese in Strears ago be e est -ttf2'e g �atl2ro Tom` �' y -on � totook a mit with coma �ar�2ia andp the Sarnia Agricultural Soiarty, and a year later pubed the plant, found- ing ri the orlon G:' `nt thresher. 'orke He had been Reeve of Sarnia, l and, repo resented . nted that t€YWit in the las ton County Vsooncil contlnuowly for four- teen. years, —W. H, James, l ittchell, has pure e farmbelonging to chased .the I.Q r Thomas P. Barri deed, of .p'uilar-- ton, for 66,060. 1111 • <! l Mei; f; }I altlllahire : it "!tIlse This is the car; that 38,000happy o <ers have given them:tough:am:I, tumbler acid test of real automobile `owners''we r An automobile on the road for 18 months in constant, every -day use by an owcer to be a desgmer's_theory. Itbecomes----eithera--great automobile success; r. Or it becomes a `great 'automobile failure. Multiply one model by .38,000 and give each one of !these 38,000 auto- mobiles day in • and. day out rough and tumble road wear, and if this car suds; up and delivers, it has be- come one of the rare great; auto- mobile successes. And that is the Maxwell success today that is exactly the `Acid Test" that the Maxwell has, passed through, and that is:why the Maxwell is the most talked. about automobile that is built today. The Maxwell automobile) toada one of the very few great automobile successes the world has ever `kaiown And- this is the car we urge you to see. This is the car that you owe it to yourself to see. We want to tell you about itv hill climbing triumphs. We want to tell you about its speed end endurance records. We want to show you and add. up for you every One of its new features. . Read This List of • Expensive Features. The 1915 Maxwell Has These Features An PURE STREAMLINE BODY . A large, roomy, beautiful body, fitted with deep, . comfortable upholstering, ample leg. room, adjustable front seat and the best four- teen -coat, hand -painted ' and striped finish. All Maxwell bodies are constructed of prem�ed: steel, mounted on a steel -channel sectitned frame, offering the greatest possible strength with minimum weight. SPRING SUSPENSION Without a doubt you will find the Maxwa11 the easiest riding, light' car made. . With its arnialy sufficient wheel base, and semi -elliptic front springs aiid three-quarter elliptic rear springs built of the very best of spring steels, 'the Ma*well cushions its passengers from all the Jars and bumps iof rough roads. It Is- so comfortable and easy' riding that you will remark the difference on your' first ride. THE POWERFUL' MAXWELL MOTOR The most powerful, durable motor of its size made._ Ample power to negotiate any road, mud, sand or hill—always at your com- mand. Almost troubleproof, every part ac- cessible, and wthat is more, It is a motor of genuine economy. More miles per gallon, day in and day out, than you would believe possible if one were to tell you. The Max- well motor stands to -day one .of the very best in dependable efficiency. any ers. DOUBLE SHELL RADIATOR A beautiful, troubleproof, highly efficient radiator. Every part but the shell constructed of 14,;h -grade copper. It will not corrode and leak; Protected against breakage by a heavy pressed steel shell and special shock - absorbing devices on each side of the frame that protects itagainst the many strains and twists of the car. THE STEEI UNei GEAR Irreversible worm and gear, the only safe steering device. Maxwell uses a gear instead of a sector. This makes adjustment very simple, as you have merely to turn the gear i one-quarter way and you have a nriw sur:. face,- just as good as a compete new steer- ing unit BRAKES TIWI! HOLD AND LAST One square inch of surfae- e braking to every twelve pounds of weight. That's more than most any other car gives to -day. Maxwell brakes are thotougltiy dependable; enclosed and protected from dust and dirt, and have specisl anti -rattling devices. Maxwell brakes are very easy to handle. The slightest pressure of the foot and your car comes to a dead stop. The Maxwell Company's truer -;�-. Service 3x .� . antee of 'rrto Max—w—e' flOwners No other automobile is backed by a more reliable service than that guaranteed every Maxwell owner. Scores of Ma ell dealers in eve i country are always ready to give expert advice—to make adjustments and to supply newpart of 1'P :� parts at reasonable prices. This splendid Maxwell Dealers Service Organization is perfected and completed by the great Maxwell ice Station in Windsor, and factories of the Maxwell Motor Company in Octroi I.I. S. � Ont. The main offices ave replacementparts t, A., are within comparatively short distance of many points in delivery' of to Canadian Maxwell dealers ers and owners. M well Service is one of the great as Canada. This in itself means enjoyed by -Maxwell owners. Order Maxwell from us now, andi- - when you want it The 7 i.2 % increase in Canadian + deL. �! `'ice oar he �,t r\ give you your car—not an excuse o dehv "�ai�'® F.O.B. +'iectrier Windsor Starter - "EVERY ROAD IS A MAXWELL ROAD'''- GEO. C. BELL, Wright's Garage & Aut Livery sEAimiiit.1 21-9' Phone IT C ndsor Btarter a, igliwerinzat the inks a tess eg'eazcr A - Dery tile; wee, place beird soae ahoy Stein robes id go at three mach boxej etiaul mesa SOe deals Torii •