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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-08-10, Page 3viha they e tun .T'r 3sr uuFi,C 'Weett. days Chet nerpy sow sat seer 1y sucked thetips Of pencils and into nee for ikon and rote do of the ettsld Bulgarian the e ice. men to ut the stress oft nple. It forced the anti= to abandon their contro einthe rest' ofthe lin the unpleasant front their men from leaking reaspondence. school of f • • ' , a the whzteee joke on Wei. Y'ankee mks" STORY OF, THE STAB 7efet go yrs y st your ate of health — the of your blood. you arrive at the top of the breams artd diatre ciur heart palpitate : -violentlytt • have a pain in your sidel ►s you even have to stops bad with is trembling and Sys too exhausted to go f- #lam g These are n silts ef anaemia. AS soffla as Mood becomes 'impovmislied or the staircase bermes an in- of torture. When this ill so e ut for work; your blood is. anti yOur nerves eibausted- e lose the; joy of an Ipeeing the iway for a further town and deme. In this tone osy ons ' man save go't.-. ast put new, new,*.h, red blood ine E vein welhOut farther bmlld utt your health anew. Tei • nor:,. rich blood give l3t`.W Pills a fair trial, and 'the ve you new; vitality, Boot: and the poorer -to resist and eff disc.. For more than a "ton � favdrite medlehee lutir use t h'}:"i' the world and ode mawth :dgofw lent women bright, and .. . an get Drrirtliams Pink pme • any dealer 'medicine Eby 50 cents a ,box or six boxy 50 from The Dr. W4ms? ie Can Brockville, Ont. a pebble to s moods moist— YE USE !' V� sy a, Ts ME IN CANADA ,o e,anti- confectio ti- °on e . o If the cave :h, appetite, usly. soothe th this wel- meat OUR T r�.samossiti Wok a it BRANCH; R. M. -JONES,' "leaner. as r ���i� ���������t�l�1�t�11�11�11ta�1�11�lyRMlt1�l11�I1M �ItU��t� so 3 -Expositor misTRier MATTERS HULLETT Death of James Carlevright.—On Slily 24, Mr. Tames Cartwright„ one Hullev s . pioneers, passed away at the age of 85 gears. Mr. -Cartwright was born in Chinguacousy township moved, when- a young man, with parents, . t a Ashfield, where he the early part of his life.Fifty years -ago, he with his wife and foal family, came to the 9th con - mien. of Hullett, then a dense for - where he hewed for himself and any a home on the farm where his son Jam, now resides. ,Mr. Cart- wright was a quiet man taking no. ac- tive pant • in public affairs but giv- ing, his time and thoughts to his home and family. He was a good neigh- bor, ei staunch Liberal, and when younger took a keen. interest in the political affairs of the community. It is several years since he retired from active' far life owing' to declining health.. He was a charter .member of the Canadian Order of Forresters at In Chiba, women act as peanut L<ndesboro. That he was much loved 'sorters. by . chose who knew him intimately women suffrage has been indorsed' wasevidenced by the may beaut fu3 by the Arkan§a.s Federation of Labor, dove sent by friends. He leaves Miss Grace Hainby is `postmistress o mourn his loss one sister, Mrs. H. of the Georgia , houe e of represent - +l easar, Dungannon; his wife, three , sons and Lwo daughters: John of Lon- atives • dsboro and James and Amos of Elul- Japanese women of wealth have le Mrs, Argent of Clinton, and new designs` for their kimonas drawn 4 f Auburn The fun each year. negro landlord owns and twenty ,houses. There stores of which seven are operated by colored men. est of them au' is one of and represent a volume amounting to more than finally . rents about are ` nine owned and The larg- these seven of ' b'tisiness $11,000 an - KEEP CHILDREN WELL D G HOT WEATHER w - Every mother knows how fatal the summer months are to small chil- dren.,Cholera infantiun, diarrhoea,. dysentry , and. stomach /troubles are rife at this time and often a precious "little life is lost- after only a few hours.' illness. The mother , who keeps. Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The .occasional use of the Tablets. prevents stomach . and bowels troubles or if trouble comes suddenly—as it generally does—the Tablets will - bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine l dealers - or by mai. at 25 cents .a box from The Dr. Williams.' Medicine Co, Brockville, Ontario.::. , . WOMEN'S ACTIVITIES Andrew, o - Statistics show that more sightless eral was held from his late residence Linen than women marry in the United on July 26th, the bearers being his Slates. sons and ,grandsons_ Those from a Miss wise Maurel is z�ow develop - Mr. attending the funeral were: ing a well -paying copper mine m d Mrs R Higgins, of Port i- , and Albert; Mrs .John. Cartwright, Strat-OColorado. Miss uray, CoMailer :Virginia. is acting as a ford; Mrs.Richardson and Miss Rich- railroad ticket seller at Glassboro, ardssoe, Stratford; Violet Argent, Eve elyn and Orrin Cartwright, grand- New Jersey. advantage. For in this publication. Women. are employed in the ma- raining over two years, there was. children, of London, and Mrs. Jack chine shops of the Wheeling (W • disclosed the entire programme of Richardson of Stratford. Va.) Traction Company. German propaganda in France. The The women of Southwest Kansas Gazette was absolutely the oply are canning . tumbleweeds and Rus- means of public information about sian thistles for greens. what was wing on open to the In Great Britain there is no voca- French inhabiiama of the invaded tion in which women are not engaged region,. Everything else was cut of and doing well. from them. And The Gazette told Mrs. Marg J. Whitney who is now therm many things they wanted.tis s knew. It printed tate names o French soldiers who had been made prisoners or ;who had been wounded. It published the'- official wear tiara, besides giving a. certain. amount of local news.. Hence the French eagerly read it. But -throughout the German. aim. aim was to take advantage of thus getting a printed .pa.ge into the hands of French readers, in. order to endeavor to create among them an opinion about the war and its thp'edh [sib, -£ one 1 .19 yearr t tile- Amt VifeAUM to=. be Aqua Breed . �., gave men t with>". iueb an --.d i) 1 li Shit.- - - Way,. John . PiiiourAlof Denver, Colorado•,.:hits given to the. Womn°s e State Auxiliary of ;the National Gnaws 'Owl sore 'tract of landon which art growing perms,` cherries, peaches and aPpiea in order, that the' boys of the militia, may.: hs e. their fill of fruit as fast as it rit . Among the score of women who hold English titles are several. who have been successful in writing. Among the most prominent are the Countess of FCroraartieand the Vis- eountesa Woies&eY, , both of : whom have contrila!ted several works on gardeningh have proved of tre- anenduous v� now that the coun'Lay is turning to serious efforts toward avoiding a food shortage. THE "MAD" FRENCH NEVER CQNQUE�. are a crazy naiad" was s the angry ex - elan of a. Germ colonel to. the French- weman *It, when] he was.lodgieg pact ani' the of Prance now emulated.. by the -ntly retreating Hin- denburg. The - incident is recorded by two Itch physicians, who o went to the invaded territory as soon, as it was free, for the Pnr� of bearing aid to the victims of German mal- treatment, and, incidentally, of piecing together all the evidence they could find about the state of mind of the invading army. They write of their experiences in The de Paris. The colonel in question made his remark just after the French had rejected the tricky peace offer of Germany last Decem- ber. When the pitiful remnants of, the French population in the occu- pied territory heard of this a thrill of joy ran ' from village to vi.Ikage. "We have refused to negotiate for peace; that shows that we are the stronger!" But to the German colonel, discever- ing that the French had not yet had "enough of war," it was a sign that they had gone mad. It is well known that the Germane in. the invaded French provinces pub- lished three or- four tines a week a - newspaper, The Gazette des Arden- nes. Our French doctors were for- tunate enough to find a complete file of it. They studied it to excellent • it K,009 'LANGUAGES SPOKEN IN WORLD How many men, if asked how many languages there were in the world. could give anything like- an accurate answer? The average man's know-. past `''6 ears of age, wok every ledge or ability to speak languages day mending flags ' in Somerville, rarely exceeds two besides his .native mass. tongue. The Emperor Francis Jos- The . New York water department :eph,when visiting a Red Gross hospi- is considering the advisability of en - 1 spoke v{th the patients in their playing women as junior .draughts- own languages which showed that men. . the aged Emperor tie be master of six Over 1,000,000 gone ni nthe Unit - It may appear strange, but it is . ed States have signed pledges to ec- nevertheless: true that there are over onomize is the use of foodstuffs. 4000 languages spoken. by mankind, Wives of United States army of - while the number of dialects exceeds this. There are more than. sixty vo- bularies in Brazil, and in Mexico the Nahua is bt'okeup into some 700 dialects. - There- are hundreds in Borneo, while inAtraila. there is no classifying the complexities. Let us assume that fifty dialects on an aver - fivers have been prohibited. from Apart Pe this was clever joining their husbands now on duty 1 concealed or only ensinuated; a in France. was bold-faced ani. open. A gr Although she is past -73 years of many significant extracts from age, Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, the Gazette are brought together, wi famous French actress,is now plan- the appropriate comment, by the ning aiiotlier World tour. h physicians. • Miss Jennie. Seller" of Greenwich, • The . whole was 0320 mere gigantic age, belong to - each language, and we Vt . , will take' her ,brother's place - as may . of German, ingenuity mid - Have the colossal total of a quarter a special delivery* -bey when he is sited. To no other conquerors wow of a million linguistic abilities. is • A cent` hence, the probability that •therewill be only four lang- ertiaees imac>rtancee lthe •a new- er Europe may px and more Straightforlward. German ianguage,Imperiel English may reign alo'ie over the- North A:inerizan .cern tinent, and a more businesslike Span- ish -rill be used in- Smith A.ni.eriear States while Uussia may take on some more rich Slavonic dialect,which will. blend the -races of Eastern. Eur- ope and Central' Asia into a harnion.- ions federation:. So- that in future these four langea will enter into w`ii.at may be a never-ending competi- tion. THE ;T CARGO OF . SLAVES Perhaps the most "interesting col- our of negroes in America to -day is to be found in the State' of Alabama about three miles •from the heart of Mobile, Here in a little 'town called Plateau lives a group of nine weath- erbeaten, grizzled o called away to the -colors. ' •h probably have occurred even to at- -Miss Jane G. Dodge,. instructor in ; to sway the opinions of a lies- English at. Vassar college, has been gle to whom" their very presence vvas appointed . a professor in -the Uni- !- a instant outrage, Yet nothing. is versify of California. •i too hard for German efficiency. So Miss Alene garden was the only : the Gazette des Ardennes set to woman successful in passing the bar work, haat of all, to poison the minds examination among 30 other appli- r of the French against the English. cants recently held. at Atlanta, Ga. • It recalled the ancient wars between Miss Alice Bosserman,... assistant France and England. It eveu\wrote, county agriculturist of Berks connia, in bad French, verses celebrating Pa., is teaching the women of, her Jea.�e " d'Arc for having driven the territory how to prepare fruit prop- Enid out of France. How she erly. must suffer, "panzvre Jeanne," at the The, Ohio Supreme Court recently -• thought of the: ancient enemy again handed dosiaii a decision which keeps on French soil! This was stupid ,Miss Rosa Moriarity in the position enough, but worse was to foI'low. The •df deputy clerk of the Elyria conn- f wench mere to be shown the fatal ' error of their ways. They, hoped to cils. win back Alsace and Lorraine by per- sisting large. in the war. The thing was i States - n ed U l company fit -in in the impossible, but even supposing the •maintains a' school -in salesmanship lost provinces could be serurPd. at 'for women in which they are trained What a price it would be! Much `to sell pianos. more than they were worth. the The Central tabor union: of Omaha leaders of the Government at Paris is opposing any attempt to .repeal the , were on the wrong tack. Irstea�I of ld men and wo- law recently passed by the legislature hate between Ger'na.ny and Fra.ace men, the remnant of the last cargo which gives' partial suffrage to Ne- there ought to be affection and co- operation — even an "alliance." of slaves brought to American soil braska women. from the coast of Africa. The Jane Boland Sutherland of New "France could be and should be the youngest- is entering his 76th year, York through the British recruiting intelligent financial partner of a the oldest is not less than 110; -while officer in that city, has offered to populous and laboring Germany: To- jngt a few years ago one of their raise a regiment of woman ambul- gether they could make themselves number died who had seen more than ante drivers for .service in France. masters of the world and put an >nd 140 years. 1 In many of the large factories in to war." Of such - was the amazing They were brought to America in the vicinity of-Bndgepert, Ct.,where folly of this German Gazette mobileh- rhe Summer of 1859. In 1865 their shells and eartridtges are being man` ed to witch the conquered I' -•en;:b. For the next neeeeered, milling machines, lathes, Our investigating doctors were at emancipation came • operated .pains to ask right and - left what had few years they were buffeted about- drills and planes' ate being p been the effect upon French readers by changing without any woman in of this coixataiit patter of German in- fortunes by women. settled homes. Over 200 young in- trigue The replies would be «s - One of them wiser than the rest phis are acting as. special messengers to the missionaries or True- saw duties 'con- . con- Moura gi saw the dangers of their unsettled for the Red Cross. e tar: Said Madame Larrey, in her ir, homes, list of carrying `bandages atad the wine -shop f of recruits in motor "There ‘o as net need of .transporting1 taking pains to discover ;that they' ' travelling : were , liein their wicsi- I ss Orpha J • •Moss„ ed paper. That books like lucidity North, . passenger agent of . • Ciuea�'o- instead_of lt�c�'• Western and Than Pad c hues, has rbi t It .lE`,raarae seems a mad nation to an annual pass on twenty the dit pts ated Germans, to other railroads and covers the whole nation. condition. - Nat owning- the _ they could be turned out at anysrtnge e and hiring themselves . to masters in.:h ' of laborers they might again be carried off into slavery, perhaps to Cuba or Porte Rico, for they learned that slavery stall existed. there. With such in- oeutive behind them they selected , a tract of laud. just "outside Mobile ,on Three Mile Creek, and began the Purchase of homes. - about Pla- teau, one goes over and he is struck with the appropri- ateness of the setting in which the African colon is to be found. About �?t00n is owned by ne- 'one. hft�,i�t8. --'"- ,.. ,. groes-; and, of `the pidtp vccup by them; at latest Ivey feat is. 0•►4- by their own. people. The largeit single holding of land among them th • its betw` 5i3 and 60 atcred�► . Ano ar � peopl a ,ebe `al+pears to have attained, in her work. throult srifices_ and her .heroie IVlrs Mar3r Y . Wood, bead of the . endurance. t®., a pitch of, spiritual ex- bureau. of information of th? (tae� d a7tation. mai Bergson mal, an lt'ederation of Women's Clubs, hhaa' adc `b o►re the French Academy answered over a half union clues a He said; "Frsace hoe tions since she took charge of :the been fur the wboLe World,' is t bureau twelve years ago. rible 'etkels, a z adet° of`' cout a of The Medical " omen's Club ; of '5n�- ar resignation, awl,* to 'ax- ing' oto° France apieates as • 1115' that women . iloctars be a�dmRued in a� to places on :ti medical staffs of - lofty . ma.� perso ty; and flaw various military branches and that 'wor Wheel for Prance `a, for they be givenequal pay and ealual . like '. ;' Fra b esrilt psi' rack with the `men &oil' � biases 1� i'Arc." sus:"ciir is i 5* pew it a oneisword, silo cite s. 13.3 or Phone Your Or era il1.Y esseereemeseeesseseeesse fitful Wash Materials 1 For New Summer Frocks Attractively Priced There are Three Leading, Corsets "Nemo" "Crompton" and - �q "Bias and they are all to be had at this store 1 i HERE is no figure that cannot be gracefully, comfortably and - healthfully flitted from these three leaders in corsets. Every point and improvement that tends to- ward corset perfection finds careful expressi pn in our well assorted stock. Corsets good corsets— has always been -a notable feature of this store. If bet- ter corsets were .made we would have them. Price 50c to $5 New S for Men Made- to Measure -22.00 to - 35.00 NOTWITHSTAN'DING t h e unprecedented � ad- vances in Worsteds, Tweeds and Serge , th summer finds us prepared to give you suitsof the very highest standard.pure wool cloths of guaranteed ana- line dyes, at Very Reasonable Prices and weguarantee every suit we make to be a perfect fit, trimmed with the very best linings, cai_vasses and pocketings, substantially sewn and practically huilt to give you the maximum of good wear and genet al sat- isfaction. Leave your order now. Prke $22 to X35 More Stylish. New Wash Goods 1 WITH all the beauty and brightness of the new summer colorings, With vivid stripes, limitless checks, attrac- t tive paisleys, enchanting floral designs, dashing sport spots plain colors the new wash goods and stripes and ..harming , display awaits you. The most magnificent offering of fash- ionable materials it has ever been our pleasure to present. You must see them. Below are a few numbers ;that are at- tracting particular attention. in rl es �every 1 wanted; colorSportptsan� p combinations. P,r i ce Silk Etamine 20c to 51 per '-yard the newest and best wash material ever introduced, in all colors, fancy and plana Price 75c a yard. Reception Voile Delightful floral, paisley and striped patterns in black, white and colors, 36 to 40 inches wide. Price 40c to 45c a yard. Silk the queen of wash fabrics,in pink and Debutante slice blue. Price 75c a yard, Fairy Silk Marquisette in delightful and varied colorings and Poral de- signs. Price 75c to 51.25 a yard. IrishPoplin for suitings, in white, rose or pale blue and navy, 3 6 inches wide at 65c a yard Plain lVoiles black and white in t stripes d yard. checks, in a variety of width 25 Indian Head plain white, in the very best quality at 20c to 25c a yard. Holly Batiste a delightful fabric with new floral de- t signs, 30 inches wide, at 20c a yard. Cotton Repp in pink, sky, tan, white, grey. Extra good value at 20c to 25c a yard. Kindergarten Cloths Anderson's best (quality ;for children's clothes, 22c a yd, Glateas in all colors and varying widths of stripes, 3o ainches wide at 20c to 30c a yard. Crepes in many new designs, stripes and colors,' beauti- fully finished at 15c a yard. 1 Checks with dainty rose bud inserts, and color �� guaranteed at 15c a yard. inha ms all that is new, attractive and reliable. An- derson's guaranteed cloths at 15c a yard. Prints famous and reliable prints in a hundred new pat- terns at 12/c to 20c a yard, Stramer paw imf Ntiemas !mu Men's Fnruishings The Newest Ideas— The Lowest Prices. U R Furnishing Department i5 always showing the new things first. If it is something new it is here. Quality first is our constant aim. You buy here with the assurance of getting the greatest value and a guar- antee of the correctness of style. HATS—The new wide rim felt and stiff hats art here in all the new shades and shapes. Price 51 to 52.50. SHIRTS—For fine wear, in black and white and calors, in new fancy designs, sizes t4 to tf 11e Price 75c to 51.75. TIES—Silk or knitted ties, in new tints, savoring of summer, beautifully designed and carefully made. Price 25c to SOC. During July and August this store will close Wednesday at 12:30 Better, Wool Stewart end 1 S Eggs Panted SEAFORTII