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The Huron Expositor, 1919-02-21, Page 3A Y 21, BA ,oe ,actt d It Rat tia7: triton Zurich YR S a LE. all acre of land in the Dries ille. The property Centre Street, close to Ln church and is known property. Good, come good shed, good wan ern. All kinds of fry rries, raspoerries, and This Is a corner pro - breaks on front, and good state of cultivat- e nice property for a and the taxes are light. apply on the premise* kin, Seaforth. 2584 -it OTrAVIA Ottawa tontreal MN, St. John INNON.Charlottelown 311 tamps n Bni1ling VannonYer er &Ming, Edmonton Railing, Regina r Chambers, Winnipeg m, Fort Wi1lrn, Oat. Street, London, Out. memo Strip -et, Toronto loris Museum, Ottawa [rates Street, Montreal iii= Street, St. John Hollis Street, Halifax wilding, Charlottetown Igt Committee... :quire no postage. 37 [II the sealed Package goodness reserved. ur lasts! URE l's in took atest 45 * s „ta 51 --aee ae/1 FEBRUARY Special Banking Facilities Sp At every branch of this Bank a general banking business is conducted. Deposits are accepted, Loans made and Letters of Credit issued. Drafts on foreign banks sold or the money transferred direct by us. Bills of Exchange, Sale Notes, Collections, etc., looked after and collected. Make use of the facilities offered by this Bank for the advancement of your business and personal interests. Tug - • SEAFORTH BRANCH: R. M. JONES, Manager. TITCKERSMrrH In Merrioriam.—In laving, memory of our dear parents, Ileplzba. Wright who died February 14th, 1895, and -John C. Allan, who died September 17th, 1906. Those precious to our hearts are gone, Their yokes we loved are still, The place made vacant in our home, Can never more be filled. Though our places on earth is empty. And you .come to us no more, When we meet again dear parents, Death and parting will be o'er. The Father in His wisdom called, The boom his love had given; And though in earth their body lies, Their soul is safe in heaven. —children HIBBERT Notes.—Mr. Eldon Southby is in a London hospital very sick with pneu- inonia.—Miss Bella Smale, who has an attack of nervous trouble, is ex- pected home this week, accompanied by her nurse, who will have to stay with her for a few weeks.—Mr. A. Fisher, ()f Brandon, who got has dis- eharge early in December, is visiting relatives in this vicinity and. at the home of his mother here. — We are sorry to report that Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith, intend moving in with Mr, George Henry, and will sell his farm on concession 7. They were kind neighbors and will be missed by many friends. WINTER HARD ON BABY The winter season is a hard one on the baby. He is more or less confined to stuffy, badly ventilated rooms. It is so often stormy that the mother does not get him out in the fresh air as often as she should. He catches cold which racks his little system; his stomach and bowels -get out of order and he becomes peevish and cross. To guard against this the mother should keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house. They regulate the stomach and bowels and break up colda. They are sold by 'medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., 'Brockville, Ont. *NIP WINGHAM Notes.—An informal meeting of clergymen of the town and the mem- bers of the Town Council was held in the Council Chamber, when the ctuest- tion of erecting a suitable memorial to Wingham's fallen soldiers was dis- cussed. It was decided to ask the co- operation of neighboring municipali- ties, and Reeve Isbister and Councillor Fells were appointed a committee to interview the neighboring councils, It was also decided to postpone the hold- ing of a public meeting for the present —Mrs. Libby, who died at her home in Clinton on Monday after a short illness, was the mother of F. J. Libby of the knitting factory here . —Mrs . Margaret Shaw, who fell and broke her hip, died in the hospital on Monday in her 71st year She was for many years a resident of Brussels and Grey township.—Lance Corporal Horace Buttery, who recently returned from overseas, has taken a position as clerk in the discharge department at Lon- don. —J .A MacLean has a large staff of workmen busy this week harvesting the ice crop. The ice is of a very good quality. DUBLIN In Memoriam.—In memory of Mrs. James Jordan, who died at her home in Dublin on Saturday,- February 8th, 1919: The parting hour ales, how soon It comes, ere life seems well begun. My busy heart and hand still find, So many things they would have done. God calls, lay the burden down, And hasten to the beckoning crown, Dear partner of my wedded life, Companion of my joys and tears, Farewell I leave our little flock, To God and thee for coming years, For them. my life was gladly spent, On. them my dying look is bent. Poor darlings, how I fain, would clasp You to my- yearning heart so warm, And hasten to our heavenly home, Away from sin and harm. Farewell, weep not, beegood and true, A mother's love will watch o'er yku. And you, my children, you who. weep, Around your mother's dying bed, Fear not the morrow, it will bring, A blessing on each little head. Your Father's stay and solace be, And leave the rest to God and me. His loving hand in helpless, years, Will for you every need previde, And you, when age hat set its set, Upon :His brow, stay by sate, Nor let your foot' from duty etraay, God's blessing linger oil' your Way. Sow 'when the cross seems herd to 4.. beare Submissive lift your trustful eyes; Remember that your mallet's prayer Ascends for you beyond the Wen Farewell, dear hearts, be strong and true, The Crown awaits both me and you. ILT. THIS IS AN AGE OF WEAK NERVES. Men and Women Alike Suffer From This Serious Ailment. 'No heart for anything' is the cry of thousands of men and women who might be made well and strong by the new, rich red blood Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually make, *Miseryday and night -is the lot of hosts of men and women who are to- day the victims of weak nert4s. Thin, pale, drawn fades ,and dejected atti- tude tell a sad talerfor nervous weak- ness mean a being tortured by morbid thoughts and unaccountable fits of de- pression. These sufferers are pain- fully sensitive and easily agitated by some chance remark. Sleeplessness robs them of energy and strength; their eyes are sunken and their limbs tremble; appetite is poor and memory often fails, This nervous exhaustion is one of the most serious- evils affect- ing men and women of to -day., The only way to- bring back sound, vigor- ous health is to feed the starved nerve, which are clamoring for new, rich blood. This new blood can be had through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which fact accounts for the thousands of cures of nervous dis- eases brought about by this powerful blood builder and nerve restorer. Through a fair use of this medicine thousands of despondent people have been made bright, active and strong, among these is Miss Bibiane Chiasson, South Beach, Qua, who says:—"I am a teacher by profession, and 'probably due to the close confinement and ardu- ous nature of my duties I beasone much run down and • suffered from extreme nervouiness. The least noise , would startle me, and my heart would ,The result is thatas the air enters I beat violently. Indeed my condition them., the cylinders become lighter and was an unhappy one. I had often lighter, until finally the buoyancy heard .ef--Di Williams' Pink Pills as a cure for nervoug troubles and decided to give them a fair trial. I am happy to say that this medicine completely restored -my health, and Ican confid- recovery Will go the daring, and .even the live,a of men, await the salvage companies Even Ships vvithont a ton of cargo In their hulls worth salvaging, are bringing fabulous prices today. If the Lousitania, could be raised, the ship alone would bring five millions at Liverpool. ee Expert braias are deviSing methods of salvage whieh prewar salvage com- panies had never dreamed of. New diving suits are among the most startling of the new device. A few years goittook more than aver- age physical fitness and far more than average daring for a diver to go down 30 fathoms, or 180 feet. Some two years ago 'United States navy divers from the Brooklyn yard startled the world by going down a little over 50 fathoms, or 300 feete to recover an American submarine which had gone to the bottom- off Honolulu. Now comes news, however, of a new diving suit which will permit a diver to go down 1,000 feet without danger.It is a suit. of heavy armor, of. manganese bronze and fitted with ball- bearing joints. It is not only strong enough to withstand the terrific „water pressure of 1,000 feet, but it carries a compressed air tank,. built on the back of the armor, which furnishes the diver with air stifficient for four hours. Consequently, it ,is not necessary to pump ale down to him and as he works under ordinary atmospheric pressure, he feels no all effects, no matter -at what depth he works. Other methods of equally startling novelty are to be use. Already, experiments have been made with huge cylinders designed for raising. sunken ships in a tideless sea.. There being no natural means of lift, it is necessary to use buoyancy. Work- ing on this principle, the cylinders are used where there is no tide and no current. Divers descend beforehand, as usual, to make careful examination of the hull, to find out to what extent it has been damaged and to discover what parts of the .hull' cannot stand the pres- sure of applied buoyancy. Then the huge iron- cylinders are towed out ftorn the nearest dockyard and, having been filled with water, are sunk -close to the wreck one or more on each side, and at the bottom are lash- ed by divers firmly to the wrecks by steel cables. An enormous pump then drives the water from the cylinders and allows air to 'enter In its place. overcomes the dead weight of the wreck and gradually the cylinders rise to the surface; bringing the wreck with them. Success has already attended this ently recommend it to all suffering .use of buoyancy cYlinders, not only from nervous treubles." with smaller craft, such as sunken submarine and destroyers, but fre- Dr. Williams' -Pink Pills are sold by quently with big ships as well. all dealers in medicine, or may be had Of course, in tidal waters the prob- lem is an easier one, Fall use is made of the natural rising and falling of the waters, the wrecks being moved by stages aledg the ,bottom until they have been gotten close enough inshore so that atalow tide they are exposed VARNA . and salvage men may get at their In Memoriam.—In loving memory woands to patch them. Thereafter, of Lela May Fester, whose little spir- with their hulls patehed, they are it ook its flight to the better world pumped out, floated and towed into the on February 11th, 1918, aged 5 years nearest dockyard. and 5 months: Another discovery whteh is revolu- tionizing ork is. tt- "And the streets of the city shall be ' ery of a gas to salvage wcouriteraetheliscov the gases full of hays and girls, playing in the nt "5. generated by certain forms of rotting streets ereof.--Zach. 8, cargo. Salvage men have lost their "Oh what dyou think the angels say" "lives through being overcome by the o Said the children upl in Heaven; accumulation of gases in the hold of a "There's a dear little girl coming honae sunken ship, owing to the decomposi- to-day, by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ontario. tion of vegetable matter by the action , of sea waten, by the decay of meat, She's almost ready to fly away, etc. The gases %arising from grain give From the earth we used to -live in. a deal of, tieuble. Grain under sea Let's go and open the gates of pearl— water deveaops sulphuretted hydro - Open them wide for the new little girl!" gen, which causes semiblindness and violent sickness, and' turns every Said the children 'up' in Heaven? thing a leaden color.' A chemist has, howeven made an extraordinary "God wanted her here where His little diseovery during the war, which kills ones meet," Said the children tip in Heaven; these gases immediately, and salvage men are now- 'able to carry on "She shalt play wita us in the golden their work freely as soon as the pres- street, ence of the gases has been discovered She has grown too fair, she has goyn and the rotting cargoes have been too sweet, sprayed with this preparation. For the earth We used to live in. She needed the sunshine this dear little Much has already been written .on thegirl, work which has been done to date by the nritieh admiralty's salvage de - That gilds this side of the gates of pearl," partment in the recovery of sunk - Said the children up in Heaven; en ships, since October, 1915 ,some 400 ships of over 1,200 tons "So -the King called down from the each have been salvaged and taken angel's dome;" to repairing yards, where they have Said the children up in Heaven; been re -fitted and put into corn - "My little darling, arise and- come, mission. Many a ship which the To the place prepared in the Father's Germans sunk is now plowing the home, seas as a result of the skill and The home any children live in,' daring of the admiralty's salvage Let's go and wet& the gates of pearl, men. Ready to welcome the new little girl," I Salvage under private auspices af- Said- the children up in Heaven; ter the declaration of peace, however is expected to' outshine in daring "Far down on the earth do you hear even the most brilliant of the ad, them weep," . miralty's feats. In the great hidden Said. the children' up in Heaven; treasure hunt rivalry between salvage "For the dear little girl has gone firms is expected completely to asleep; I eclipse the very biggest undertakings of the past. Mammoth fortunes will The shadows fall as the night clouds be dug up from the bottom of the seas and the salvage workers will share in the spoil. Divers who of late years have been earning anywhere from $25 to $500 a week while working on a big and risky job, will easily out- strip -their previous records. So keen will be the competition for experi- enced men that expert diveys will command their awn prices. sweep, O'er the earth we used to live in. But we'll go and open the gates of pearl; why do they weep for their dear little girl ?" Said the children up in heaven. "Fly with her quickly, 0 angels dear," Said the children up in heaven; "See! She is conning, look there, look there! At the jasper light on her golden hair, Where the veiling clouds are riven. 0, hush, hush, hush! all the swift wing furl, For the King himself, at the gates of pearl, Is tilting her hand, clear Aired little And leading her into heaven. —A Friend vittAiurn Priti'sbA May that hoitilities are ended, look Rai the greatest treastire hunt in hiatotY. ComPardes are already being organ- ized here to recover from the bed 'of the ocean a large part of the enor- mous treasure which naval operations have sent down. "Wealth beyond the dreams of ava- rice" awaits them. One officer esti- mates that the ocean lanes from Brit- ain to India alone are strewn with lost sips '-Werth more than half a bilIin dollars. Specie, gold, and pre- cious stones, silks, coppen lead, wool, quicksilver and oils—all the countless Many romantic tales have already been told of. the expedients resorted to by ships salvagers, but in the next three or four years they will all be beaten. It is probable that except for salvage operations close in under the coasts of England, the great 'treasure hunt will not get under way before next spring. It is expected then to centre for a time in. the North sea— "the North sea is the, centre of every- . thing in this war!" The North sea is a shallow puddle eta as soon as the mine fierdS which caner it have been swept up it ought to „be dotted ,with salvage outfits. I have seen an admiralty map eof the wrecks in the North sea. Wrc4s are marked -in little red dots upon the maps and they cover the North sea like the freckles on a farmer boy's face. Sweeping up the mine 'fields in the North sea will not be a week -end job, however, and it will be late in the spring before the North Sea will be safe for workers to work in. Even then they will be armed with machine guns to sink wandering mines. Prob- ably ships crossing the North sea will be armed with machine guns for twenty years. I have heard more than one naval officer declare that he commodities into whose production. doesn't expect to live to see, the old went the sweat of men and into whose North sea free of mines. • . . Stewart's Sell it for Lesi I -Mali orThone Your Orders We Or -pay Carria UNINIMIONLONMh ow is the to do :the. Summer Sewing We never were as well prepared to care for your requirements Thousands of yards of most beautiful wash goods, dress goods, silks, embroideries and lace,goods await you. p • Fashion's Prettiest Colors and Patterns in Guaranteed Wash Goods, You will probably enjoy this springs' showing of wash goods more than any you have ever seen. The new weaves, patterns and colorings are the most fascinating we have ever shown. This is no ordinary display, it includesThevery newest wash mat- erials, many of which are appear— ing for the first time this season. We want every woman to see the new ideas ,that have done so much to popularize wash materia is Men's Odd Pants It jour suit needs an odd paii of pantsto help it finish out the season, we have just what you. want, made of tweed, worsted, sergeswell finisheFl, iiroperly triMmed and carefully cut. rice $2.00 to $5.00 41•11•1111M•1111111.0111i :=7; CITT .CY 'OM 44" GOODS A Gorgeous .Showing - of New Dress Goods and Silks No where will you find such practical demonstrations of de— lightful possibilities 'color effects and weaves in the new dress goods and silks. You will stand in admiraeon as you review out displiy unfolding as it does the story of the very latest ideas for the coming spring and summer. We have searched diligently and carefully to accumulate the greatest dress goods display ever shown in Seatorth. How well we have succeeded you shall be the judge. Come_ early while the stocks are complete: USE Pictorial Patterns for Your Spring Sewing Absolute Guarantee for A Perfect Fit The Last WordCorrec Style heNewLinoleumsfor Spring Are Here There is an exceptionally attractive array of pleas- ing patterns and delightful e.olor schemes in both light and dark shades. " The new floral and patterns are particularly enti'.ing, 'while the irnita- tions of hardwqod flooring are perfect. We carry all' widths. Come in and see for yourself. • Men's Good • Underwear Good in every sense of the word, good in quality, in make, in fit, in wearing ability and in reputation, because we sell only the very best and test- ed makes, and the price, con- sidering the quality is always the lowest. Price...... to $3 Men's Winter Caps `Wiftm, comfortable,. stron, becoriiing and eConotiical. *fiat*Ore could you desiire in a cap when you kt:low, the ptice.is tte lowist 'possible. Price ....50C to $1.56 Men's -1-eli-a-bEe eV:0%N • . This store- is headquarters.. forPeabody's, Snag Proof, and Big B overalls and - smocks. 1 here are no 'Wet! ter garments than t si made anywhere, they', you the linitf of :68 wear and' fit cotnforlab and retain their stiafie. Peke' $1.25 to $2.15 • Big 4 .,•. r‘ Reductionsin u for Men and Women There never will be a time for years to come when furs will be reduced at lowas we'he th,44: during the next two weeks. Men's .fur coats, woMe en's furs and fur lined coats will be cleared at prices never equalled before.- We will save you one-clu44-: to one-half on every ,far you buy. Come and see.t these bargains before you buy. Every fur we' silt carries our personal guat antee. Thetilt* spring Suitings Thr Men's Made - to- Measure Suits Att. Here We were,fortundle in ptirchas- our new Suitings for .spring earlier than usual. It gives us the advantage of showing the new Suitings .earlier. But more impprtant than this, we bought betore the ,aJvance in prices and succeeded in get- ting our stocks selected. from cloths of guaranteed colors. Th:s is important to you be- cause we have hundreds of stylish cloths hire ,troin which we can make you a perfect fit'-- tmg. suit, g'iltir4litie the suit to positively • keep ' its, color, ad 'wb Will do this at very reasonable Matt $15 to $36 Men's Work Mitts From the heaviest find& horse hide to the. unliA{) Charing mitt, we have a complete range in 'ey between weight of a reliable materialg. • , Prices.... 50c td $1:5 Men's Odd Workint Vests • We' hire one Kiii. men's wpifringveiti of renii)atitk serges and! stiOgrir, sewn; a aU SiteS, I -to 'WOOL WA ATT -3" wart ros. SEAFORT1I VOOL VA/IT z