Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1918-07-05, Page 60 Q BAKES OFF DANDRUFF . HAIR, STOPS -FALLING leave your Hale Get a email bottie of Danderine right nowerAlso stops itching scalp. Ishii?, brittle, colorless and tieraggy Lair as mute evidence of a neglecter/ pealp; of dandruff—that awful scurt There is nothing so destinctive .to the hair OS dandruff. It robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and ita very life; eventually producing a feverish- ness and ibehing of the map, -whieli if snot remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die ---then, the hair falls out fast. A little Danderine to- night—now-eany time --will surely save your hair. _ Get a small bottle of' Knowlton's Danderjne from. any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots ef it if you will just try a little Dan- elerine. Save your hair! Try iti LEGAL Barrister, SolicitoF,Conveyancer and Notary Public. SohcitOr far the Do- minion Bank. Ofilce in rear of the Do- minion Bank,, Seaforth. Money to Barrieter, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs ever Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub - lie, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth en Monday of each week. Office in Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario IVeterinary College. Treats diseases of • domest'e animals by the most mod- e= principles. Dentistry and Milk Fev- hi a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All or- ders left at the hotel will receive prompt attention. Night calls receiv- sod at the office:. JOHN GRIEVE, V.S. • Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases ol domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tiladed to and charges Moderate. Vet - 'wintry Dentistry tt spedialty. Office and aesidence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. tie Physician q Gadsricit. in women's and cblidrears rixeuraatism, acute; chronic and nervous disorders; eye ear, nose Ind throat. Consultation free. Office in the Royal Hotel, Seaforth, Tues- days and Fridays, 8 a.m. 1 10:m. 425 aid:mond Street, London, Onto Specialist, Iliirgery and Genito-iirin- arY dileases of men and women. Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR • Phyaician and Surgeon Office an& residence, Main Street, Phone 70 • Hensa Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member Of College of Physicians and Surgeons - ell of Canada; Post -Graduate Member Of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 - doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Email, Ontario. Office and residence, Goderich street bast of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Corober for the County of. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and' Surgeons, of Ontario. t C. Mackay, honor gra. cluata- of Trin- ity University, and geld medallist of !Trinity Medical College. member of iho College of Phyaicians 'and Surgeons Of Ontario. Graduate of University of To Into Faculty of Medicine, m -ember of 1 lege of Physicians and Surgeonsk of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, Ragland, University Hospital, London, England. Office—Back of Dominion jaak, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night nos answered from residence, Vic- toria street, Seaforth --5` AUCTIONEERS. THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties 'of Huron and Perth. Cerrespondece arrangements for sale dates can be raade by calling up Phone 97, Seaforth, or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- erate and satisfaction guaranteed, R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County Of Huron. Sales attended to in all parts of the county. Seven. years' ex- perience in Manitoba and Saskatch'e- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 175r11, Exeter, Gentralia P.O., R. R. No. 1, Orders left at The Huron Ex- positor -Office, Seafortia promptly at- tended to. Fanni 'Arctic Explorer, Completes.Another Trip NUD RASMUSSEN' is on his way back frota Greenland, after having met with suc- cess in his polar exploration. According to a cable meesageeeceiv- ed from M, I. Nyeboe, the Danish explorer carried out his expedition and reached Ds Longs Fiord. The message stated that Rasmussen -erne -1i - ped the great fiords, but foend traces .of former huraan occupancy; that he found no game and encoun.- tered bed conditions generally. With the message came the news of the death of Dr. -Thorild Wulff, Swedish botanist, and a Greenlaader in the far north. Both were members of the R.asmussen expedition. Rasmussea is the secretary of the Cape York committee, the assoola- tion of Danish business men toad scientists who eetablished in 1910 the scieneifie and trading station at North, Stan Bay, to the members of w17.410*Illitfieet*Ocker Land expedition sent 00 hy the American Miuseunt weite in bee& for many courtesies mu went to the Smith Sound reghtee with. the purpose of erming the ice and glinting. PearyiXiid- where he Was to make geogreallical an4 ethnographical observations, Ile waS accompanied by Lange _Koch, a poling Danish geologist wiAh training -la the maPping °and sketching of land fea- Reaching Narth, Star Bay J1140. 1916, they- NOW that it Imo tioritreis- ticable he org,aniee, the ,e over the ice with any reason& peet of safe return that, yean: Reine.e. they established themoilvea at the trading 'station add **Wed thor. 191647,. LoteeivaaafalOW 1-$16. the Danmark, the seeped relief, ship of the drocker Land expedition, ar- rived at North Star Ray, having on board as passenger the Swedish bo - tartan, Thorild Wulff. The Danmark North. Star Bay, and refnained there during the itiatertef 1916-1917. Early; in April. 1017, Rasmussent Koch, and Wulff, attended by a large number of Eskimo* arab- their sledges and dog teams, started north- ward to fulfil the original objects of Rasmussen's expedition.' At Etah they ' met Donald B. MacMillan, . leader of the Creeker Land expedi- tion, just before he started on his journey to Findlay Land. Rasmussen's plan was outlined to Dr. Edmund Otis Hovey, of the ficiene tine staff of the American Museum (who headed the third expedition sent to the relief of the Crocker Land party, an.d who, as he was sledging' eouthward, met Rasmussen at Norte Star Bay), as follows: Rasmussen; Koch, and Wulff were to go on the Basin and Ken,nedy Chaneallo Fort Conger; then across tee the Greeniand side and map the coast northward as far as it -was practicable ,to travel, at the same time searhhing Tor any indi- cations of ancient occupation of the extreme part of. Greenland by Eski- mos, Dr. Wulff and hie drieer, Hen- drik Olsen, a Greenlander, -were to be left on ehe south side of Peary.Fiord (Peary Channel), while Rasmussen and Koch, with their Eskimos, ad- vanced into- Pearyland. On, his re- turn from Pearyland Rasmussen was to pick up Wulff, and the whole par- ty, abandoning every item of super- tidous baggage, were to make a da..sh southward over the ice to Norte Star Bay or some other convenient place wbere they could spend the winter of 1917-1:918 if they were too late to get out in 1917. The cablegram just received from the Cape York coMinitteelgiVes 'the iaformation that Riamessen's enter- prise wa,s sitecessfully carried out as far as the first great fiord from Peary Fiord, but that Da Wulff aad his as- sociate were overtaken by SOMe acci- dent or perhaps lost on the journey southward. Maxim Gorky StandiOnt _ As Very Unusual Figure 'Among the Strange Slays ' T is said that Russia's changes ef' -the last decades and during the war have been Gorky'e changes. But, if repose be -truh, he has anticipated Russia's next transition. A Socialist and an ardent Bolshevik, he has shaken the Bolshevist dust inom his feet while the leaders of the, Russian proletariat are still in pow- ee, and has deeounced their policy in the language of a man to whom disalusionment has come like a reve- lation. To -day we are .face to face with the Gorky evolved by the revo- lution, a man bearing little or no re- serablance to the writer who used te smock us with revolting elierae- grotind life, . Gorky, or "t e Bitter," Is ellereiY • peeedonyni. He. was born in a dyer's humble home, at Nishni-Noh- kov, and was brought up eas an or - Phan by his' Maternal grandfather, a religious mise . He became a, tramp and helper to a ook on a Volga boat. He baked bread in a noleame cellar. He watdered ith the vagabonds whose ehrorticle he was to become. He tru.dged through. the -Cesucasue, labored in rallwey yards, and herded with the fierce, half:tamed gypsies mAidi Goma*. and Tartars of his stories. He became so much at home with these wastrels of civilization that he felt uneasy and estranged anion' "intelligent peo- ple." Yet he eeretly longed for goodness and uty. He had not yea leowever, eached the point where he could ay his hand oh the social enemy an say: "I have you: nailed down. me shall no longer blind me to the ruthl" After he be- gan the delleer of his massage he had still to lea a how to analyze In those daysi'Russiaes watchword was "The People." The Russian de- sired to free ti t only ; hemself but the people as a ra se. The young men of the better cla s went ,ferth to ,live with the peasant y, to Igitnize them into • secret re °lull° aty groups known as- "The Ill of; the People." But ,Siberia, swallowed I hundreds of the iyoung reformers, OW the, doors of the prisons SchlUseelberg and SS. Peter and Paul wefe thing wide open to admit hundreds, naore. Gorky, himself of the eoplee helped Rus- .sia, asitime went on, tof see the faces of the masses' de with' courage suede glowing with st engthi With truer - views and the wer self-expres- e'en called to his aid, e changed ea conditions changed. jolned the effort to remedy the s dal order, but the Russian, ref neer s usual fete, the prison. ln. 1 ee he appeared in America to collect Money for the ,revolutioelary ea se.. „Retutning to Eutop'0, he Vire on the island of • Capri In virtual eatie until 1916, when he returne no people are always foremost in his thoughts, hey are the back- ground of Russia He sees the com- ing of a new ord r, when the people will have won th ir rights and SSA -- en theraselves free from sacial dis- abilities. His later work is perhaps philosophee aad an artist, Iiia art bail saffered through his Socialism. Rus- sians there are who would. rather ex- change his. newer gospel for hia bi- and the cross sections of Ruseben civilization, peculiarly his own, with which: they were not familiar nal:it he' intreduced them. But the sub- merged reek ha uothing cam - mon with the m sion of the Gorky ot the hour. Reflecting Power of Wall -Papers. The surface brightness of walls or ceilings lighted. by daylight or arti- ficial light is now determined direct- ly by. an apparatus for measuring. illumination, kaown as the "help- phane lumeter." Tests of various wall papers in roome lit by tungste,n lamps showed,. that a. eurfa,ce brightness of 0.3 foot-eanadleit is usually neces- sary to give the room a cheerful ap- pearance. Ligeht blue, dark red, deep green), and' vpry deep blue walh paper.; showed eurface brightness varying from 0.3 foot-candles'epr the first mentioned ta 0.05 foot-candles for the leaf raeneloned, with corre- sponding reflecting powers varying from 40 per cent to 4.5 per cent. An ETnusu Sabbath. . In Heligoland he Sabbath begins at six 'clock on Satur lay evening, when the church pais ere rung, and ceases. on the following -"' The Period -as Seen by "The New The world 'has recently been wit- ness to a mew trial' of the Victorians —ore famous writer attacking, an- other defending them. "The New Statesman" ceught the -significance of this drama and. submitted these observations: Mr. Chesterton, in hia "Short History . of England," has been saying: "The most im ortant thing that happened ii2 the ictorien time was that nothing h pened. The very fuss that was ma e about inner modi- fications brings i to relief the rigid- ity With which t e main limps of.. so - dal life were left as they weire at the French Revolutio . We talk of the French Revolutioa as something that changed the world, but its most im- portant relation ne England is that it did not change I Eagland." Compare this -With what Lord Mor- ley writes of tii same age in his "It wee an epo of hearts uplift- ed !with hope, an tirainfi active with sober and manly heason fOr the com- mon good. New truths were welcolifie ed in. free mina% and free minds were diaarmed. were set afloat right reasons. learned to care other." NVItich of these New Statesman." Fresh principles d supported by the e standards of am - Ind purer. Men Mors for one an - pictures, asks "The is the true -one? It d %Orley is right Ai flaYing that the Vietorian era "Men learned to, care more tor one another." Mr. Chesterton can. hardly be right lit say- ing that "nothing happened" dari g two stateinents ire capable in se e measure of being recanciled. T Victorian era, So far as it is for JOY =hong the dngels. In so fa however, as it regarded itself as th last perfect chapter in the history cif civilization it is (if we may. be a - lowed to mix our 'metaphors a little a whited Sepulchre, Oil Which lt imposeible to Write en epitaph o praise. I The Victoria era wee a great be ginning but a bad entl. Men ma have learned to care More for one aniether, but they .did not learn te .ieny great extent to put their care for one another into practic.e in th national life. They stid issue a ukas toj persons guilty of esttreme cruelty to! their fellows: "Thus far ehalt them go and no further." They dig not see that it is net enough not to , be actively cruel to a man; one hese to go beyond this, and be actively fair and evea generou,s to him. The Victorian, "The New Sbatess Mall" Ando, is an object of abhor- rence to 'Maly people ,beeause, while he was always desirous of a ittaxia mum of weed for himself, he was nettally content with a minimum, of good tor other People. That, pers haps, is only huraaa nature. Rises* Under German Heel. The Doleheviki heve talked of des- perate resistance and have issued Proclamations min/toning the people toefight and destroy as they retreated, But the people haenettone n.either and the Boisheviki have formally sauce tioned the terms of peace. Their me tions of arinsfare lake' thoee they hold of istatecraft. No disarmed proletaa riat, however, intelligent, can arbiel trate with, German autocracy, and nol guerilla warfare tan be maintainedl against milliens of organized and victorious soldiers of the present day. We hake the examples of Belgium and Serbia; a citei resists an invation and le burned; a dietrtet shows a tendency to rebel and its ableebodied" men are. lined up exist sinit or driven away to work as convicts in enemy' fieldnand factories; the populations I of cities are disarmod., their leading men held as .h.oetages, and punitive tributes levied upon them. The Rue - terms the better classes, to be rid of their deadly fraternal enemy, are likely to weleotne domination for the time being, hoping for the day of -de- liverance; and the peasant may see no farther than the wants of to -day. There will be desperate men, of course; so there were in France in 11871, in Bulgaria before 1878, in Po- land and in Alsace-Lorrainia. But it will niet be neeessaey for ah artuy of and Lenine think the Germans will do, Ia territory which the enemer tually oecuplee, the railway Linea. strategic military pointe, and the principal cities will be garrisoned, and sufficient mobile forces will ac- company them to chase away attack- ing guerilla bands and to proceed on visits to villages which defy subjec- tion.—Fred Moore, in Asia Magazine. Ce to Republic or Manarchy? That a stable government will not easily be established in Chined goes without saying, The' political chaos will not end with the fiasco created by' Gen. Chang famous at- tempt te resuscitate the Manchu dynasty dead for six years. What will be China's ultimate form of gov- ernment no one can tell. Such in- fluential men as Tuau Hsu. doubt see in a constitutional mon- archy the best form of government for China, but even. they realize that the Manchu dynasty cannot be re- stored, Where then, shall they look for the imperial Welber? On the other hand, Sun Yat -Sen and his southern associates believe in out- and-out republicanism, which will nisver be accepted by the n.orthern leaders. To an unbiased observer. would. seem. that China's only hope for re-' habilitation lay in mutual coneessions on the part of the radical south and the Conservative north, thus fiading a coramon ground upon which to estab- ka,mi, in Review of Reviews. Living In Berlin. Butter is selling in Berlin at $2.26 a pound, sugar at 56 cents a pound, bam and bacon, at $2.11, a pound, and. ivory soap at five bars for $1.12. AIRPLANE ACCIDENTS. Fear Is Rarely Experienced In A.etual The loss of 1Pligife inhtsairplane Work in war is so heavy that it is important to dirainish to the utmost the acci- dents which occur during trebling, which is coeting so many Sapaneee, beginners so dearly. The first step, obviously, is to find out what are the causes of accidents. In a London medical journal an analysis has just been made of the causes of accidents its the ease a .9,000 flights involving 4,000 hours' flying, by the students •of an airplane school. Out of tbe 9,000 flights there were 58 crasbes, or one in every ,155 flights. A crass' is defined ae such an accident as in- volves the remaval of the airplane to wprkshops for repair or rebuilding. In the 58 crashes, 16 airmen were in- jures', Which is equivalent- to one pupil injured in 560 flights. Almost all the accidents voere due to error of judgment. This was the ease in 40 cases out ot 58. Then catne seven cases, in which the fliers lost their - head, &lir cases of brain fatigue, one 'of airplane defett; and, four 'ire -which:: the cause was' unavoidable. Uhder the, headinge "fear" and "phygical but we rely absolutely on the iiiimiitable flavOr and quahty to make you a permanent custo We,will even offer to give this first trial fr you will drop us a postalto Torontko. 111ness"--etwo causes of airplane ac- detente-a:there are no cases. It seems that fear is rarely experienced in actual flights, the mind being too much oecupied and coucentrated. Fear is seldom experienced in a. de- gree sufficient to disturb flying. "Many, however, confess to a sense of danger lurking' somewhere at the bisek of the head, but say that it rarely, if ever, asserts itself." As to phytical illness, cold and fatigue sometimes produce faintness or stu- por. There have been faintings from high altitudes or wounds. Two pupils guttered in the air from attacks of mieilasia. One had an epileptic fit —Vile New East. Petrogieid's Scourge. 4That typhus should be reported on the %crease in. Petrograd is not s r - prising to the Lancet (Londo ), which reminds one that typinis aa long been prevalent, mildly- at least, in Petrograd. Now, however, ' with the Gavernment disorganized, refu- gees crowding in, and a general banakdown in sanitation agencies of Rassia, naturally- typhus will come back, concluded thie journal. Yet it need not: i"With sanitation typhus fever gradually disappeered from Britain and• more ,advanced countries; prac- tically, exanthematic typhus in Eng- land mhy be said to be an. extinet disease. But it is otherwise in Russia, and particularly in Petro- grad, where personal and doniestic hygiene is little practiced, When per- sonal un.cleanliness, infestation by lien, overcrowding, and other buena tau conditions are aggravated by ehortage of food and other necessar- ies, as- well as by the withdra,wal of skilled medical and sanitary super- vision, it ifi little wonder that a dis- ease like exanthematic typhus has been able to increase and multiply. In the absence of a competent and responsible health authority to en- force appropriate preventive meas- ures, including the isolation of the sick in aospital and destruction o't body vermin, the present epidemic "There is, therefore, the ' dismal prospect immediately before the Bi pp.,:opie of Petrograd. that there ventable if the teachings of Modem medicine are followed." Se China's Graeae From the Nintr. China stands to gain far moire than she raight Jose hy the war. The bat- li ance is almost wholly la he tavern In it are to be reckoned her ope oe release from the staggering endea. strictions that keep her import dutiso at an unprofitaisle level, restoration of sovereignty oVer territorial come- sions wrested tram her in he greet - est haurs of weakness, more g neroos co-operation in developing h r net - ural resaurces, and a more Iced.* liguarantee of her democracy dad leer Participation. , in the war Om China a double leverage for 'the at - tali -meat of the last named et •theiwi - potential benefits. It will operate both internally and externall 'recent Monarchical restore Gen. Chang Hsun served to e size the lack of cohesion thatIt ens China within. It was f I by continued ruinblings of s utile secession, which; persisted up to moment of declaring war many. At any tiine China mig t hairs burst into the flame of a civ 1 attire -- between the radical south nd th* reactionary north. The faci g et se national enemy ehould be, a ale, this internal diseension and tier ting China's ,quarrelieg p.a.% shoulder to shoulder. Tee extern safeguard of the Chinese dezeocrac resides, of couree, in the be levalen In protection assured by the fa fly of alied nations,—Carroll K. licchener, in Review of Reviews, Millions Starving Alreade Deaths from tarvation s,re estimated h the 'United Food Administ tion at 4;75 since the war b gala, as COM'ar 4,360,000 killedi by iightteigt teal do xi Cure 13 namessmemeneleftelle • please help the Royal Ahe Force by going out to pull Flax. Yo may ivork in the fields right near your home tow The local Flax Mill 11411 take' you to work and bring you home each day without cost to you. lin no branch Their spiendi letter to his p five days -be sacrifice. it "If the every 11111. ikk Of *ink of may hav I go th; mums c that sort you get a "Keep the sh that's the 0' WAME.:ysTo. Yon oan of active Service is heroic ked as among our aviators. spirit is well revealed in a nts written by an aviator Joe he made the supreme F.S in part: ews ever reaches you, oner or later reaches We R. F. C, men never eath; the only thing we the effect 'our passing on our dear ones. So if mai way, don't let dear 'wear black, and all f nonsense. Dad, don't upset. Keep the show w going, smile and carry on," 1. Many boys and girls are earn $4.00 or too young to enlist to "keep -the t4tow go- ing" hut an opportunity is offerirtg to be of service now :the flax -growers wind help, and the Organization of Resources Com- - mittee are behind a moveMent to Save the fibre for making the cloth for aerOplane wings, of which the allied arrnieS are in very uigent need. Boys and girlf, young men and *omen, and even old 'len, TRay enlist their services for this work.i For The convenience of -the workers, autOmdbiles will be -provided to take t,hem to the- fields and back. Six strong boys giving attention to the work should be capable o an acre of flai a day, and as tl,t offered wage is $15.00 an acre (which is t e recog- nized rate of the Flax -growers' Associa-, tion) this means an average of $2450 a day, to the lads. GIRLS BOYS over 15, you can earn from $1.50 oveir 15, you can earn from $1.50 to $3.00 a day pulling flax. to $3.00 a day pulling flax. ork for the Local Flax Mill, the address. of which is given below. elp Is Wanted At Once (or these reasons: Flax Is used' to make the wings of aero- planes. The grade of flax depends upon its being pulled at the right -time. If the flax is -over ripe its quality deteriorates. ORGANIZATION OF RESOURCES COMMITTEE, PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, TORONTO Apply, at once, for employment in this neighborhood to Dash*ood Flax Cos,; Creditor), liicholson & Hodgins; Shipka write four ist Pe butik of I co Ain Ad I Akort a fes eour move Sic take lam lax