HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-11-16, Page 3Orders We p
111140Vni 111.
Paid Up 00000
Of -0400 ad SiValrala
your swipe ht tin Bult
it
s ,PO E1
4 ANci a R M JONES. Manager. a.
lined by a stair
and names fon-
of
einployhig.
positrons by thee
ailroad compan=y
ssft thatthan
d ha other post...
nerly leen helcb
dean c€ the Un--
s been appoint .
Un-
s.
ire' G the w
corded on fi=r;
student Move-.
=and consists of
ong student
relief )work
um c
FAERosE
,of -exe se make
i. Stud does not -
at sch l runless
on ti a that
at -of -d ors exec --
:erciselid over-�
kn. that . ngs orr
your y or girl
pale, ii ess anti
ckle a petite, i'
or sit still, you
health is much:
education, and
given to exercise.
fat the child does.
plenty of o-€---
ten oue of ever; -
nd takes a cafe,.
Willarns Piro
r re to the
the ap etite be-
ichiidrei
Maros
im
rybest tonic that
gilds build up the
nerves and assist
raced with rapier
Pink Piet
D. Lee
x or of
the Dr ` Willia
`flee Ont.
largest
s that
d its:
a g
IIFovens-
mai"
S BOA.
otenlyaloa
ick -me -up. Eer
eweomees, from British iGelumbia,are
all a little i1.pientto get over annd.
get on with the main business, find:
Purfleet a congenial 'spot. Its loss-
° tion, on the commanding heights over
looks the Thames and surrounding
country . 3, 0 r -
FIFTEEN YEARS SE
OF BABY'S OWN TABLETS
HUMBER".
School Report. -`--The following is the
i.eport of the School in section No.
Hihbere' for October. Names are
in order of merit: Sr. IV Pearl
reffry, Edna Brintnell. Sr.
Florence Vernier, Lloyd Venner. ter
jel—Mary McDougall, Gladys Wren,
"Nelson Howe,. Second Maims reeig, Wilson Bria ef, Wilbert Chap -
ALloyd Hoggarth. First—Eddie
ppel. Sr. liner—Girwood Me-
Iaig, Vera Treffry, Mae Brintnell. Jr.
r—F. Spriggs, Gordon Wright.
-- E. Norris, Teacher.
TUCKERSMITH.
School Report—The following is the
report of the school in `section No. 2
' uckersrni` , Results are based neon
examinations held during Septenber
and October. Names are in order of
ener t* Sr. IV—Willie Kyle, Ross
Chapman, Grace McGregor, Webster
'eNaughton. Sr. III Leonce Ca -
int and Olive Cooper, equal; Robt.
.YeNaughton, John Sinclair, Mary Me -
maid and Willie McLean equal. Jr.
I--'t#311'e Bell, Rosa McLean, Emer-
son Kyle, Dora Dalrymple, Fern Mc-
Lean, John Doig: Jr. II—Olive Work-
enan, Margaret Elgie, Grace Cooper,
Thousans of mothers keep a box of
Baby's Own Tablets is the house as
long as there are little ones about.
Among therm: is Mrs. Marcel D Lee'
Mance, Meinramcook West, N. B., who
t
caye:—"For the past fifteen years I
have never been without Baby's Own
Tablets. Whenever any of my child-
rete are ailing the Tablets promptly
relieve them. 'I have such faith in
them that I never hesitate in'recom-
mending ti'em to any of my friends
who have little ones in the home."
The tabletsare sold by medicine deal
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr.' Willierns'1Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ontario. .
CROP FEEDS.
The term "chop" or chop feeds" is
a general one used to denote a class
of feeds which_ are . essentially oat
products.. Mill feed, cattle feed, oat
feed, °rnoulee chop are common names
for these feeds used by the local grist
mill, while some of the larger mills
put out this product in quantities un -
Clarence McLean, Lyle Chapman, R. , der specific brand names, Certain
McGregor and Tena McNaughton, of these feeds consist • entirely of
equal.—Ws G. Strong, Teacher. crushed ,or ground oats, others con-
sist entirely, of the by-products of the
eat meal mill', (including oat hulls) i'
I while others contain a certain admix- .
MANLEY.
(Tee Late for Last Week.) S ture of corn, barley, etc. They are
dotes.- -A number of people from extremely br,a ` Die n composition,
this vicinity went to`'see the aeroplane- The Comm ° Feeding Stuffs Act, i
ibat landed. in Mr. Garrow's field„ 'a- under the '.a stration of the De- 1
ems from the 'Maitiandbank eerie- partment of Vilma Revenue does not
may.—ate a number of the young require any registration of chop feeds
folk.e from this vicinity took .m the <elm. any. gu ranty.as oto th€e r_ -percent- i
time dauce,yq ail Seater* last �Tues- mages of pro p fat and fibre `Flow-
ht ` d .sport Iia' ing .,, .Tad a . YL ...
.tom _:.- -e`-. friends of Mrs.
,.Lau In o 1 .to near
... site` t`s ,, ::
ohn �z, of M op, and Mia,
an, Were married last
,ond are gong to`ve On the
entlya -purchased LLfroni:, Mr.
Ootighlin. Them mdiiy
rich them long. life and pros-
e ty.
The Victory. War Loan willl be used
to advance credits to Britain for pur-
'hoses here of farm products, muni -
pork, shire'?, etc. It will maintain our
rent high standard of agricultural
and industrial production and general
, prosperity. You can help by taking a
bond, if only for $50.
ever, wthe
titillated ;
on Act" l has es-
>. surd o quality for '
certain in . products . a td f`it st ,,of
ecl s �
ates
;it. Chop, �'�� ....�, - - .:e ` " el
one or more„ Inds more or l ss ; y
rr .-
-groom. ,;�izd_��r�p�;n. t. ,. „ ...h�..
10 pelt cex rt.grin,§not less Stan.:
two (2) ',Peree,more
than ten (1) Per cent. of crude fib-
re." All chop feeds not carrying a
guaranty as to nutritive value (irin-
aurum percentages .of protein and fat
and maximum percentages of fibre)
ought to confon to this- established
standard or be considered adulterated.
Theespondent.. of the Division
of Ch .. istry during the pant year
has c fined `malty complaints re-
gording these chop feeds. In certain
cases it was ste the feed was re-
fused by all cheeses of stock end only
eaten with reptgeanctef after being mix-
ed with bran , o' x:midillings. In other
cases, persistency in feeding the ma-
terial 'resulted. in the death of swine,
calves and poultry,. apparently partly.
from' starvatieu and 'partly from di-
gestive disorders brought on by the
low nutritive- valtue of the feed and
its coarse, 1 ous nature.
A few.seiaples of, these feeds ` re-
pecting which compints had been
made, were colle! ted, in Ontario, Que-
bec and British Columbia, and sub-
. netted to analysis`•in the Experimental
Farm laboratory. ,
While it is not claimed that these.
analysis ,were typical of chop feed as
sold generally tehrehghout the Domin-
ion, it is highly .significant that not one
of the seven samples examined. con-
tain the ,.niinimuin percentage of pro-
tein, required -by the.. standard 'that
they were all eXcs �eedingly low in fat
and that they with- one exception
contained an excess of fibre ,three of
them over. 20-"pbr-ceizt" 'Taken as a
series thee'::. were of extremely low
feeding value and ieveral of them
Were - practiceally' worthless:
These f 1 . Winged in price from
$20"to'e35 15eileit In'a few of them
-there was aitiriiikling.eof corn, but
in the majority o 'hem the proportion
of meal was vrgmsall, they were all
coarse and fibrous, .indicating that
they had been largely made from light
oats or containedO'heav=' admixture -of
oat hulls, billwaste and other worth-
less offal. Some of them contained '.of
number of weed seeds, f r
straw, etc. There is no 'under that
stock refusedethem. Indeed it is well
nigh impossible to imagine how thee'
could. be used profitable, if purchased
at any price..
Ground or- crushed oats from good
quality grain retake a nutritiousd feed—es I
though for 3otuig P
hulls should be sifted out. While not
a high protein conceptrate� it possess-
es many excellent qualities as a basis
of -the ,meal•'portietl of the ration Of
all the cereals, oats the most
read-
ily and successfully grown throughout
Canada, ' and there is noreason
why
the Progressive farmer with foresight
should not be independent of these
purchased chop feeds. With a grain
grinding mill on the farm, there should
be little necessityto buy chop.
There are many excellent feeds on
the market, the price of which is more
or less in accord with their nutritiv-e
value. These should be bought, n lit
ra-
ther than clow' feeds,eedsto and f driers. At
the home grown
the best, chop is but a low-grade feed.
If necessity occasions the purchase of
the chop, careful examinatiott of the
Proffered feed is important; unless
finely ground those containing an ex-
cess of hull can be readily distinguish-
ed by the experienced farmer.
IPPS.
The following from a Vancouver,
B. C., pacer of a reeve date h4, re-
ference to a former .I(pi en old boy,
Col. Me ,I€ •die, son o the late Robt.
McMcrdie, who resided on the Lon-
don ;road, eolith of the villiiee for
many years: "British Columbia,
where railwaymen have been doing
Mich wonders of construction for a
generation past, has sent More than
its quota to . the 'Canadian Railway
Troops. Such inen as Gen. Stewart,
vol. Angus l Macdoniaell, Col. J B. ii.
MacDonald, and others, whose work
in France has been so brilliant. are all
familiar to British Columbians. 'Here
in this centre of Canadian Railway
Troops one feels at . home at once,
for men from British Columbia are
net on evert hand. The` commandant
of the depot,. Lieut. -Col. S. P. Mc-
ordie, D. S, O., who Went to France
tateith Col. Davis and the 54th'Battal-
ion, and was decorated for disting
ed services on the :battlefield., is an
-fold time British Columbian, known to
all who were in Prince Rupert in its
eves of construction. 'I:be second in
itommand, Captain Gahm. Cruick
#shanks, -M .G., 'also. * ..veteran of the
fighting forces fromtGanada, who won
distinction in the`.feld is fro Ross-
i and Trail, where as a mining
man
Lie was for years active in developing
Canada's Pacific Province. - Capt• C.
B. Garland, adjutant of the depot now
S'as formerly adjutant of the 158th
Battalion -raised in' Vancouver ,and
vhielt came over a year agoCapt.
aidanc1 is a Vancouver lawyer, with
f wide circle of friends in that city,
nd formerly with the firm of Bowser,
teid & Wallbridge. Capt. IC,err, sen -
or medical offieer of the depot made.
5 ancouver,his home for years, though.
etter known in the railway construe-
` tion camps in many parts of British
Columbia. He, too, has seen service
at the front. Captain Hardman, de-
pot quartermaster, was With the en-
gineering departmenteif e G. P. R.
at Revelstoke for years before enlist -
/ng , His commission came to him on
the field, as he went over to France
in the ranks, like thousands of other
splendid British Colurttbians . New
estminster people will be pleased to
know that Captain Hinchcliffe, one of
the chaplains of the depot, is Canon
Ilinchcliffe they knew and revered in
Itace times. Then Chilliwaek sends
the depot sergeant -major, Carey, who
came over to France with a battalion
raised early in the war. So it goes
- all through the depot and in the ranks
are many men who have done their
bit in a fighting unit vete through
wounds er other causes are no 'longer
acceptable for those services and still
are able to help and have no thought
or wish of giving up till this business
is finished. No wonder, then, that
Fall
erately Price
—
Tome end Seg Them The Prettiest Coats You Ever Sic
All Becoming Style it is possible to put in a Coat is to be found in these Beauttful Gar
ments, You nay choose here from a Magnificent Array of Styles with the assurr
ante that you are getting the greatest amount of Goat Comfort and
Stthsfaction for the leastpossible moneys All Sizes.
New
Neckwear
THE New - Neckwear we
' are showing ' s attract-
ing unusual attention, and is
there any wonder. They are
the daintiest novelties that we,
have ever shown in colors to
match any gown --in a host
of delightful designs and fab-
rics. Stop at the Collar De-
partn'en'c and see them. We --
are sure you will like them.
Prices X10 to '645
Price
25c to S2
Good Uiiderwear f n r the
u be
thatshould ur�.is
e
��-y+ �Kq �. one, � a.
4 1931�W��� is- on ,. ..
ally, Your health is
kiP made_ thoughtfully-andq :with
-
the body and: upon its purity a 4i fit your comfort' de-
pends . Every good kind °is here in every size 'for man,
woman and child and at the lowest consistent price.
Overcoats and Suits
for Men who care
Don't boy y ordinary clothes when
!pa can get an improvement
for the same price.
THERE never was a season wren it
was so necessary`; to exercise the
greatest care in buying clothing.
The scarcity of wool, the uncertainty
of dyes, and the high cost of labor is
responsible for putting some'. very un-
reliable clothing on the rorket.
With our customary foresight we
purchased our present stock .months
ago when conditions were better and
prices lower,
You, tenefit two -fold by buying here_
—you get the very best materjals :ob-
tainable and you pay less for them.
Overcoats
Men's OVer9oats,•........ $10 to $624
Ooys' Overcoats...... $2.75 to $12
1 ,
men Suits'
=Serges, blue or biack....,.$13 to' $23
Worsteds, all colors....—$1:0 to $2
Tweeds, all colakEs, $7.25 to $2
Boys' Suits
Serges, blue.........
Worsteds, all colors...
Tweeds, all colors.... _.
$4.50'ta $9
.. • • $4 t.c $10
$4 to $7.50
Butter, Wool
and
Eggs Wanted
Women s
Suits
HER
jE is one thing cer-
tain— there never were
dressier, prettier or more be.
coming Suits than we are
showing this Saila All that
is new is featured here in a
charming array. We cannot
give descriptions here but we
want you to see these modish
garments, Come i and try
them an. You will like them
Price.....
$15 to X30
Ready -0 to Wear Garnients
dor Children
E HAVE CHILDREN'S GARMENTS IfOR
Tv EVERY NEED. --Presses
,
a s karts -Harte
s s Coats'
t every we, for,playi for h r Sundai,
Y
3U Will find them ere i
n sarsfyin variety
oty and eco-
nomical
prices, It does not pay to make them when
you can huy i het ready-made so -Wella-
• �a
.e..rq.+e1m
Men's andB4ys11'urnishings
his store has always -been the Leaing
.ruirnishinf Store.. Larder .Mocks to elmose
from and the best brands at Lowest Prices
'WHETHER you adhere closely to the very newest
WV styles, follow the extreme, fashions or dress con=
:
servatively, it .makes no difference at this store. You
can best satisfy your ideas here. The unusually large
stock we carry is justitiediby the immense business we
do. New stocks are constantly coming and going.
Always Up.to-Date we show the very latest and ap-
proved styles in every department AT T H E MOST
REASONABLE PRICES.
Stewart Bros
SEAFORTII
Work Clothes for
Men and Boys
11 will pay to buy Rork Clothes
here. ad over the proms be-
low. the quatity is certain
Overalls
pea body's •a a • • • . ►.••04*. tr a.. •..,i.a$i0
Snag -+1 roof.•.....•sY. *it* 4,0* it Ai** ii►a' y .�
Relance•..,.,..,.. •s- .s o..s +ri a ase# bi +�$ 0
Acme.....
Pants
Reabody's.. •..„..,....• it ..s.
Stripe C¢�o,tttona .
Blue St ipe.... .. ...... .. is ..
•a.
•.••,'2000
ia•i _*...®.$ 7
*.a 5
Work Shirts
Black & white double front 76c'
Light olorsE�......,
Black and white sttipeaa.i.itass
as {•'•+ • •11Cit,aif.,
Sox
Cotton............ sea*.,;
Union.
Wool Fiat
Wool Fin ibbed.......
Wool Heavy
0.0 ilk. *sip i..s
,.....,6*o„
sltgi,itis •lsif.
a 0,0..*0.;..
Hats
,a.. •.*..
c.a#..0 a.. .444)
50c tip
Sho.,p. Caps.... ...#•.a -e7 -ass. rr15c to -,
Felts wide
Handkerchiefs .o.....1 ♦,if 6lEbfl Jto
Mitts and Gloves
Cotton .4,.,.,,s.,a.ss ,.f...:s
15e O.
Leatheto $2
1