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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-11-02, Page 6THS 8 V A r Like a New Pew syn Mr& Hamilton. New Con Ind.—"from the dine I was eleven yeas old nntIl I was seven• teen I suffered each month so I had to be in bed. I had head- ache, backache and such pains 1 weuld cramp double every month. I did not know what it was to be easy a minute. My health was aIi run down and, the ''tee doctors did not db me any good. A neighbor told my' mother about Lydia ham's Vegetable Compound and 1 took it, - and',nuw _.I I. feel like a new I dont suffer any moreand I ser every mouth. Mrs.Mem' SiSouth 15th rh S t. .—_ When s 'remedy has lived for forty ,years, s. mly growing m popularity Land influence, and thousands upon `thousands of women declare they owe th ' health to it, is it not reasons - a Canadian Offeree in England.) wal_ sand silk . a e will no endure a mah whDail:o l scent whichcaen et- Vine 1 . ecif war to amass ' wealth. la it that for which our sons { have.ihed their{ ioodi" rs of approval ftem the crowd, which pressed -and jostled salxiut the wagon that didduty a! platform. The speaker was s Stocky Zan' with a clear voice and an incisive manner. I had come to Hyde Park to see. London. For on a Sunday afternoon H de Park is London hi little. It is it old fe en in neseeteltettie there iii organ on a _with ete y le take Mel. But London , of go in for .thatespeciea .ef.., ed ureic It prefers . the def €lamed• . Weak-minded concertinaisst, or the nodding vioinist or the cor.torting`tineishistlerst. And - the tin whistle makes the b road est ics of them' all. Up Edgeware series of street nen icians seem to make a living on, Saturdays, and an-' other up through .Camden town.- It is significant that the most audibly musical d striete are among. the peer - est. On Saturdays the shopping of the poor is done on these streets, and the burden of . a week's wages is too much for them,—to the profit of the street miisiciari, An incident of _characteristic in- terest amused me yesterday. From the ton of a Jetta mans mans hat blew, , A pedestrian _Oared..:it up and lowed down the street to return it. An old concertiraist who saw the accident suddenly jerked off his cap and th*ust;it with `his instrument out of sightbehind hiet back, holding out his hand most naturally .to the man with the extra hat, every tinge of efia. ,''t!s'.deei I tele or 0 pilo- :not: fopg was,a the j ast'the age of use- fulti `ss "Spl d v:, Oa . you colonials have done!" be said. ` '(Then there vrere Erglishmon who thought of is as "colonials!") because He liked army life, he said, t "gave a fellow so , much good' y picture1 sport." He had been at Lord's the a composite of the metropolis 1 in war time. To the Canadian it has day before and seen a game of base - that fascination of conflicting vari- ball between the Canadians' and the ousness which is peouliorljr London's, Americans. "A jolly game too.' The 1 hod followed the monster proces- pitching you know, was marvellous.' sion across the park towards the tri- Ile . came to Hyde Park every Sun- ditional foram of English free day, to listen to the band and `then_ speech 3ust inside of the Marble Arch, to stroll ever and hear the orator's, All the labor unions in the. London near the Marble Arch . area seemed to'be in the parade. The "Arilusing, you know; but of course were . gloriotIaly discordant, nothing ever conies of .it," bands . The banners were a riot.of color and I wondered if that wee quite ntru- defiant epigram. Sweating middle-. As I strolled toward, the gates aged men, bearing, banner -standards, Hyde Park Corner a :few, , riders were blowing brass instruments or just still cantering in Rotten Row. Seine - marching alongwith intense earnest- how the idea that just such faultless- ness, and women leading children by iy attired riders bad been eantering the hand or carrying ;babies in their down that soft, roadwe-- in just that armee formed the bulk of the parade, way for generations before I was a s. There were sone returned soldiers in, born, just as over -violent. orators had the procession, too. been declaiming at the other side of Marble Arch, rb sec -Ma se near th rnn crowdedintork a e the theywere �'ow tions, each around ,its particular struck me with on accentuated signi- spell-bidder, cheering each thz'ust at ficance. war-tinsie food profiteering. : An open carriage- drawn by two "Lord Rhordda the new Fooii Conte splendid horses was coming down troller has said that any individual the driveway just inside' the gates , , = Beside a beautiful lady sat a wound- ed Tommy in hospital blue. "The Ouches of Blankshire," I heard a passerby remark glancing at the carriage. "That's her son, who was vtounded in Mesopotamia." I passed out into Piccadilly musing on the ' strange contrasts of Hyde Park. 1'1101118jfl (111'1111111 ,111 rtie to eu e 4 believe that = 4T s sr a�- of convicted of makiaig unrighteous great merit if yoe twant special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkbam Medicine ine Co. (confidential), Lynn, ss. Your letter will be opened, read: sand answered by womana and held in strict confidence. GRA TRUNr.'s-VgrAr Highlands of Ontario Canada SHE HOME OF THE RED DEEB AND THE MOOSE. OPEN SEASONS DEER—November lst to November 15th, inclusive. profits on foods will be properly dealt with," shouted the orator on the wagon. "Then we demand as the first step in that program the im- mediate arrest of the old Food Con- troller." " 'Ere, `ere!' clamored the crowd. It was a good-natured crowd` but it was in earnest. .On all sides other crowds were . cheering similar senti- ments froin ,orators just as eloquent. It was a .convincing display of the feeling of labor towards the profiteer: One group was being addressed by an officer in. khaki. By dint -of much elbowing I got within hearing . It was a cultured voice that reached my ear, but the audience was not as sympathetic. This was not an anti - profiteering much apparently. "What T ask you, my friends,' said MOOSE November lst to November /5th,. inclusive. In some of the Northern Districts of Ontario, in- cluding Timagami, the open sea- son is from November lst to November 30th,. inclusive. In that part of the Province of Ontario lying north of the Canadian Gov- ernment Railway from the Que- bec to the Manitoba boundary; the open seasor_ for moose is from October 10th to November 30th., Write for copy of `playgrounds --thee 'lianas 'of Fish and. Game,"gives: Game Laws, Hunting Regulations, ete., ta G. S. Horning, Union Station, TOS ionto, Ont.! W. SOMERi'ILLE. Tows Amt ., PLANT Depot Ater �r PAIMS SHOT THIROUGH • .HEART. realize bs ambition, work a burde your siren; usledor corn pal fan; its blood-en.rt ive energy to the value sharpens permanent v ou are ran down, overworked or lack stre lip set Scott's Emulsion "seem& Arts a LONDON STREET MUSICIANS. Fngland is a musciai country. From the youngsters and the happy 'couples who saunter along` the streets singing at the 'top of their voices, through the afternoon tea ooloists to the stars of ' the, concert plan-rm., there is a prevailing idea of music which has not yet reached Canada It is this love of music that ser -ds into the streets a riot of oral and in- the speaer, "is to oppose a .m.easur.a strwnental melody and dissonance in which is sure to prove . disastrous search of the loose penry Some few Home Rule is not . what Ireland strive to give value, but most of the wants. And I will tell you why!" street musicians trust ,to their caco- There was an uproar from the phonies and the pathetic futility of their efforts tt do the whee.'.'ing for them. Close to Piccadilly Circus some- times stand a couple of pseudo - musicians whose efforts are so blatant- ly- unnatural and affected that it is a marvel they make a living in such a busy thoroughfare. Both have cul- tivated a vacancy of face that would qualify them for an asylum without medical examination. One, blind, pulls in and out at a concertina, his head thrown back in the way of the sightless the other, the soloist drooping until he seems to be upheld only by a sort .of instinctive obstin- acy of feeble muscles, stares steadily at the sidewalk. I could see 'the ac - toned the insteunientresad. the :O ve- ment."of•the sinueers lips. bet passing within two feet of them.I herr only the faintest murmur, Around ` Oxford. Circus an : old couple wanders close to the curb, keeping to the little side streets where there is nothing to t distract from their appeal. She is a fat, busky creature whose only apparent .deficiency for the earning of an hon- est living is a pair of opaque glasses and a miserable , attempt to bring sweet sounds from .a guitar and a sideling mouth. Even her . voice is husky- and strong. But the appeal rests with the thin, humble old man =not so very eld either—who meek- ly picks his way along a few paces behind her, adding • his squeaking voice .in a modest way. It is the pity of his helplessness with -such a wife that draws what contributions come their way. One could imagine 'her banging himover the head with her guitar after a bad day's business . Lavender selling is a profession in London, and the manner of it is for the merchant . to seetIe herself before your door, shrieking beside shaded hand that which purports to be. music., Often the sellers are Italians—prob- ably to give to the enterprise an at- mosphere of foreignness and to relieve themselves of the necessity of adding intelligibility of their noise. I have crowd. It was plain that there were Home Rulers in that audience! `Be- cause," continued the cultured voice. rising above the hubbub, "because it has been proved toy }be not practicable." That was too much. for one "Irish- man in the crowd. He was a soldier in khaki, top, but a' Tommy Ile liter- ally fought way to the impro- vised platform.. The chairman, 'a fighting Irishman, in every line of his features, rose in protest. "I ask flim fair play!" he roared. "This is our_ n ,eetiing . This is our- platform, ur- platform . , Let Lord. Willoughnby pr - ceed. Well give our opp chance afterwards!" But the crowd's sympathies were with tbe.:Tommy. • "Let the private soldier have his sayt" shouted some one above the uproar. "Give liim a chance" "Two minutes then!" snapped the chairman, giving in, after a whisper- ed consultation 'with the titled' major. "I've shed my blood en the battle - 'fields of Flanders!" bellowed the Tommy stimulated by the dramatic elements cif the situation and his Irish patriotism as he was boosted on to the platform by the crowd. "rni as good an Irishman as Lord• Wile loughby, I am!" The crowd grew tumultuous. Here were two Irish- men, one an officer bearing - a title, the other a humble private who, had been wounded in France, opposed to each other on the -same platform Any attempt to squelch that Tommy was out of the questiqn. To an audience of Horne Rulers such action would be too smybolic, Tht, meeting was being taken over by ofhe Horne. Rule ele- ment. The chairman's face was a study of supressed temper, but he was wise. The Tommy had .spoken for five minutes without advancing any argu- ments for Home Rule other than his service in France, - when I' left the battleground of propagandists for a .legs windy section of the park. Ring road, in the neighborhood of theband stand; was thronged with the non- controversial, who had corn to Hyde Park to rest their brains and refresh their bodies, not to engage in mental battles. Almost ; every type ,to . be seen in the Lor -don streets may be seen in Bing road on • a Sunday aftere noon. Here ;you will see how wa£ has dealt with the teeming. life o London. These smartly=dressed young *omen, healthy and happy youth, would have a had to put up with 'clothes toc shabby , for Ring road three years ago. The munitions fae tories have raised them from poverty to comparative wealth, and the cloth- ing stores have swallowed a large slice of their earnings. This quietly 'I?heut ods of people go about their dailyxr week,,en the verge of death and Yett d4 know it. e Evto� in a while a pain will M * h gh -4heheart but little at - tion laid to it at the time, and it is Only vin -/evident shock comies..that fthe heart is the weakness v apparent. There is only one cure for the weak t and that is Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. - Mr. H. A. Young, 83 Hayter St., Toronto, Ont., writes:—"I used to have sharia pains shoot through my heart steered from shortness of breath, and was so nervous I could not sleep at night, A friend advised . me to . try Millurn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and after ea a box I foundgreat relief. Three boxes completely cured me." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50c. per box at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by dealers, T. Mil= burn Co,, Linitted„ Toronto, Ont. Watson James W atson General Insurance Agent Real arae and Loan Agent Deale r in Sewing Machines.. horses for sale, Situated in the firth. Terms and possession givegriniaPtI7 apply at my office for particulars ASTOR 1 A or woo old mates. SII lavl Always opstand KIDNEYS' SO BAD WOULD FAINT AWAY num WAY FIR TWO YEARS. .wbe save never been troubled R rvu m�dney trouble do not know the suffering and misery which those Afflicted tuidergo. and quick The dal! pains, sharp pains, twinges, all point! to the fact that the kidneys requtwre attention. Doan's Kidney nits are a specific for all kidney troubles. Mrs. Albert Williams, Edam, Saak., writes:"I have the greatest pleasure in telling you what Doan's Kidney Pills did for me. Ten years ago I was au bad with my kidneys that I would faint away . and could not stand to do anything. ,I had been that way for two years, and bad done all I could, but did not get any fbetter until one day some one put a little book in our door, and I saw how another young girl had suffered. like I was then, so I thought I would try them, and I am glad to say that after taking four boxes I have never hadthesame. thing again.Thanks to "Doan's.." } When asking for "Doan's Pills see t you get the oblong grey box with he trade mark of a "Maple Leaf." lee 50c put up by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. - dressed woman sitting with her hus- band on a benchundeY the trees would 'have beenriding out into the country in a motor. car three sum- mers ago on such an afternoon ofs this. But a slump in certain lines trade, no less than petrol restrictions and the enlistment of chauffeurs, has curtailed motoring, for pleasure. This girl in widow's weeds listening with grave face to the strains of the Symphony Pathetique was smiling into the eyes of her husband, home on leave from the trenches, this time last summer. Anti everywhere he the shifting spectacle is symbolized the great fact that has worked these changes. Men in khaki, stalwart and abounding with health; men in blue, variously bandag- ed or minus a leg or .arras, hobbling on crutches, or being wheeled in ,bath chairs; nurses in their natty"uniforms; girls in the khaki National Service suits in which they drive . motor cars, work in offices. or till the un- dermanned farms. Potent in their symbolism, too, are the maple leaf badges of Canada, the Stetson hats, of Australia and New Zealand, the color- ed tunic of a Belgian or a French officer. that catch the eye as this uni- form throng passes down Ring road. I dropped into a seat beside a port - never yet caught a consecutive tune or a word of English in their clamor, but they car. drown the clangor of a pass- ing `line, of military lorries without strain. Like the . Christmas 'chorister they will stop in the middle of a note' to pick up a coin and resume any- where that comes into their head. The Christmas carollers are merely temporarily converted beggars of the ordinary kind, Probably during the rest of the year , they sell• jumpy things o on the Strand or flowers . on Piccadilly Circus, or seek pennies by opening taxi -doors. Their :music is 'certainly no outpouring an recogni- tion. of the season. Of course, there are hurdy-gurdies: But the street piano is an insignifi- cant feature of musical begging in London. It is too hetet work drag- ging these things about, and there are toe many restrictions on it to tempt anyone from the less heavily capi- talized music to be extorted from a dilapitated voice and a wheezy con- certina. Most of the exclusive squares—those, cool, verdant breath- ing spots scattered about the city and faced by the homes of the wealthy— have notices forbidding street pianos. The itinerant pianoentails an add- ed expense. Forced from the busier corners, it has to be hitched to the tiny coster donkey to cover the ground. Out in the suburbs this mouse -colored pocket edition of a beast of burden dozes* between the Children Cry FOR FLETCHER S A Cbildrea Ory FSA 1''$ CAsTOR:irl • I1 c 11lll� decrepitude gone, but his cupidity was unrewarded. It bowed, how- ever, what an art is the mvision of music for the mob. rie systeni'for use in its official pbar-1 to Tromsoe, orway, es no macopoeia, sired Worn hall bearings can be repaired by truing up the ban races and using larger balls. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE A French surgeon claims to have in - A { A German motor sleigh has exceed- ed a speed of 60 miles an hour. A baggage carter to be mounted over the hood of an automobile is a It Hove . y A stool that folds compactly and forms a cane has been granted a Brit- ish patent. Clamps have been invented to fasten the cover of ars ironing board in a few 1 seconds. Great Britain has adopted the met - I This year, as never before, every quart of Canada's fruit crop should be used to the very best advantage. Though it all ripens within four montes, it can be made to supply every table, every day in the year, at moderate cost. Canning and preserving, done at home at the 1 of the Artie Circle. It has been found that the ferment*- ing power of yeast is . increased brief exposure 'tat ozone. Artesian well drillers in Argentine vented a method for planting eye- discovered a rich deposit of copper brows and eyelashes. A novelty in the motor vehicle line is a motorcycle limousine that carries three persons. Neary 3,000 loaves of bread a day are turned out by an electric oven in a Toronto bakery. A carriage has been invented to sup- port one end of a large saw so that one man. can handle it. Telephone lines -are to be extended where none was known to exist. Virginia has the largest vinegar faee tory it the United States, operated ato most entirely by electric power, e invented n n toA wire clip has been i hold the handle of an idle brush out of the paint in a can and keep it clean. A tree, the leaves of which yield ao oil from which camphor can be =a traded, has been discovered in Ausa tralia. Help to Save Canads Fruit Crop' i7 Practical ThrIJ Suggesffon time when each fruit is cheapest, provide in delicious and economical form the daily fruit so necessary in a wholesome diet. Fruit put upat harm is much cheaper than that which you buy, anthe slight increase in its cost, due to the higher' price of sugar, is small compared with the mounting col of other foods. Successful preserving and canning are by no means difficult, either, if you are careful to boil every- thing, verything, and use In Canadian homes, for the last Sixty Y REDPATH sugar has been the standby for preserving. It is always absolutely pure, and can be depended upon to do everything that sugar can do to ensure success. Buy it, according to the quantity you need, in or 5 lb. Cartons, or in 10, 20, 50 or 100 lb. Bags. "Let Redpath Sweeten It" 32 LIMITED, .o MONTR ALs F Why does Canada wise Money by Selling Bords? or twentyyears,as the case may be. B 4NDS are issued payable in ten over ten or twenty e d willspread money be It means that repayment of the m n yP by , years instead of being raised taxation to meet current expenditures. . on To raise by taxation all the money as fast as it is needed to carry Canada's share in gthe war, would be an unbearable burden upon winning the people. It wou-d mean that more than a !million dollars a day would have to be 1 raised right now. But to raise money by selling Canada's Victory Bonds means that those of the next generation who will benefit ' by the sacrifices this generation is xnsking; who will share in the freedom this generation pis fighting for and largely paying for—will also pay their share. * * And when . you buy Canada's Victory Bonds you- snake a first-class 'business in- vestment in a securitythat is absolutely � safe, likely to enhance in value after the war, and bearing a good rate of interest. You help the country by keeping open the British market for Canadian products and this helps the general welfare in which .you share. * * * And again, every Canadian who buys a Victory Bond. becomes a financial partner or backer- of Canada in the war. When you buy a Canada Victory Bond yoix give a personal pledge that you are going to help to win the war. . Every man and woma n in Canada, can help to win the war bye buying an ttda's Victory Bonds. And Canada wa is the personal, individual interest and. co- Aera- tion of every man and woman in ., the country. The buying of Vicory Bonds by the whole people unites them in a deterinatiou to win the war. Every purchase of Canada's Victory Bonds is a blow for freedom against the tyranny of German Kultur. Every bond . sold is a new guarantee that Canada is in the war to the finish, until victory is with the Allies and the world has been made safe to live in. Every bond you buy is a new pledge that Canada will remain true to herself, the Empire, the Allies and to freedom's cause. So it is both patriotic and good busi., ness to Buy Canada's Vicfory Bonds Issued by Canada's Victory Loan Committee in co-operation with the : Minister of Finance of the Dominion of Canada. Ar R. S. HAYS.'. Barrister, Solicitor,Co Votary Public. Solicitor bion Bank. Office in r reene»on Bank, Seaforth, . M. BES l.' Barrister, Solicitor, And Notary Public. 0 ever Walker's Purn tursr :meet, Seaforth, PROUDFOOT, KILLO COOK. Barristers, Solicitors, etc.' Money to lend. Monday of each w Kidd Block W .- Proudf Dion; H. J. D, F. UARBURN graduate of urge, and hono ical Association erary College. Tr /omestic animals by inciples. Dentistry eialtys Office o , Main Street, S oars left at the hotel prompt attention. Nigh st the office: JOHN GRIEVE,, Honor graduate of On any College. All daseas treated. Cans wed to and charges Mary Dentistry a sod residence on Goderi door east of Dr. Scott fro MEDICA GLANF ieian, Etc. tveity of Toro rience, Brucefield, DE. GEORGE H osteopathic Physic 1st in women's des, rheumatism, sad nervous disorders and throat. Conaultat€ an the Royal Hot iE, lays andFridays, 8 . W. HARM, 11 425 Riebmond Strut, Specialist, Surgery and: sr bseases of men and:. Dr. ALEI ANDEI Physician and St Office and Residence, Moat 70 DR. .W.V. Graduate of Pacutyr Mon GisB University, of College of Physicians of Ontario;Licentiate of en of Canada; Post -Gra f Resident Medical St Hospital, Montreal, 191 doors east of Post Off Hewett, Ontario. DR. F. 3. BUR Office and residence, bast of the Methodist ch'.., Phone 46. Coroner for Huron. DRS. SCOTT J. G. Scott, graduate College of Physicians pm Arbor, and mentb{ eg n Fhyyicians and Ontarip, -C, Mackay, honor pre ity' University, and gol Trinity Medical €lolleg the College of Physician, of Ontario. E ' DR. H. HUGH graduate of Univ' atmlty of Medicine, tr lege of Physicians am Ontario; pass gradua' iiicago Clinical Schot Via% Ophthalmic laird Mardi tJnit'erslty Ht Mand, Orrice—Back Bemk, Seaforth. Phots CaRs answered from brim street, Seafor. AUCTIONS: ' THOMAS BR Lie'used auctioneer el Huron and Perth. SIE qe€ita for sale llhng up Phc me The zxpoaitor Oi seat* Rad satlea ctioa R. T. Ammon* sa Inas a vitt ilia l , ba *IL Terms 1 o�w