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The Huron Expositor, 1919-04-18, Page 2
2 ==FENCING } Opeit .Hearth steel eliminates sulphur and phosphorous the most dangerous elements to galvanizing and toughness. Our Invincible fence is guar- anteed to be made by the " Open. Hearth" process. It is tougher, purer and more rut -resisting than other fencing made while our price for " Spot Cash" is higher than none. i 6 wire fence, cash.. ... . .. .. ... ... . 43c per ro 7 wire fence • per rod = 49c 8 wire fence, even spaced 55c per rod ,. x �d = Barbed wire 6 50 per 100 ,:.� r� Angle iron fence posts, 7 ft. long r ul.. Lound fence posts .. • ...... • • • • • • .. • 60c Red Devil pliers 1.25 i of Bessemer steel THE HURON, EXPOSITOR sfEAFORTIL Friday, Apri. 18th, 1919 MIL -a NEWSPAPER SUED FOR MILLION DOLLARS Does it cost a million dollars to call Henry .Ford an anarc is?'" is the question asked by the Ne York Sun. It is dangerous to risk an nswer. off- hand' as . one of the grea est air'L'ays of legal talent gathered ogether in several years past is pr .paring to argue the matter before court in Macomb County, Michi an. The Chicago Tribune called h my Ford dan anarchist in an , edito*sal article • Poultry Netting 44:4, Keep the chickens in their place. It saves the garden and the temper of the housewife. • 24 in. netting, 50 yds. roll 3.40 -36 in. 48 in. 60. in • ct " 4,75 cc cc 6.10 7.60 G. A. Sills, Seaforth1 THE McKILLOP MUTUAL GIVE "SYRUP OF FIGS" FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. TO CONSTIPATED CHILD HEAD OFFICE_SEAFORTH, ONT. DIRECTORY OFFICERS. J. Connolly, Goderich, President jell. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -Presided T. E. *C -lays, Seafcrth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS ilex, Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- muth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS 'l illiarxi Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bc.nnewi es, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas, Connolly,.•` Goderich; D. F. M::Gregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,. No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G. T. R. TI14'IE TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: - .•.55 a. in. For Clinton; Goderick, Wingham and Kincardine. 2.53 p. m. -- For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine. MOS p. -- For Clinton, Goderich. 6.36 a. rn: For Stratford, Guelph, • Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro- and points east. .16 p.m. For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South a.m. p.m. Wingham, depart .... 6.35 3.20 Beigrave 6.50 3.36 Blyth 7.04. 8.48 Londesboro '7.13 3.66 Clinton,. .. • ....... 7.33 4.15 Brucefield 8.08 4.33 Kipppen 8.16 4.41 Hensall 8.25 4.48 Exeter .. 8.40 5.01 Centralia 8.57 - 5.13 London, arrive 10.05 6.15 3. - Going North a.m. London, depart 8.30 Centralia 9 A35 .Exeter .••••9.47 Hensall - 9.59 ° `;'ppen 10.06 Brucefield 10.14 Clinton - , ..; 10.30 Londesboro - 11.28 Blyth 11.37 Belgrave 11.50 Wingham, arrive 12.05 p,m. 4.40 5.45 5.6'd. 6.09 6.18 6.24 6.40 6.57 '7.05 7.18 7,40 published on June twenty-third, 1916, and Ford -is, now suing the Tribune for a million dollars. Thou h the a- mount of the claim will a ract most attention from the avera •e citizen, it does not loom so vastly be ore either Ford or the Tribune, for Mr. Ford •is one of the richest men inthe world, and the Tribune refers t itself as , the world's greatest newspa er. While i it is violating no secret o explain that the Tribune is " not U. e world's g;reateat newspaper npir •-leen thtte, . world's next greatest new paper, it is undoubtedly ' an extremel institution with plenty of affiliations, and to hand o lionollars to Mr. Ford 'emb crass -it financially, than he receipt of an ext wou d discomfit Mr. Ford. e Tribune's editorial w.. u on a despatch from Detr appeared in the paper the day, and which was to the, e Mr. Ford had announced t of his employees who enlist United States army for s How Tfl GET Rip nothing of standing 500 social revo- lutionists agonist the wall and shoot- ing them down. before breakfast, be- 11 cause of some amallepetty difference of opinion as to whether the railway OF RiffumATIsm should be national'or communal. How the gods must cry with rage that inen can be so mad. However any of our labor leaders failed to grasp the Bolshevik creed of blood, and presumed to condone the horrors committed by this mob of fanatical maniacs; `I cannot imagine. Rather pray heaven defend our old country from such a calamity. I have entered Ekaterinburg and heard the Bolshevisk shells hurele overhead, That is war; but, oh! the sight of the Cos- sacks pulling. the lumps of wood up "Fruit -Mins" Point the Way to -Quick Reilef VERON ., ONT. - "I suffered for a number of years with Rheumatism and severe Pains ire my Side and Back, caused by strains and heavy lifting. When r had given up hope of ever • out of. the well near where the Tsar being well again, it friend recon- was imprisoned, with an occasional mended `Fruit-a-tives' to me and grand duke mixed up with the timber. after using the first box I felt so Then the end of another poor piece much better that I continued to of flesh recognized as a grand duchess, t>ak© them •and now I am enjoying then another as the foreman at the J y g nearby iron works,and then a few the best of health, thanks to your workmen and workwomen, all murder - wonderful fruit medicine". ed just to prove the love for humanity. W. M. LAMPSON. 1 quite believe it was necessary to "Fruit-a-tives" aro sold by all destroy the old regime to execute the dealers at 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, Tsar and all his minions, but these trial size 25e.- or sent postpaid by swine whom sale call Bolsheviks are Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. -' mere bloodthirsty cut-throats who launder for the leve of itas some of wealthy., their proclamations show. :`Their reg- ' • willionaire 0 ime has destroyed more peasants and er a mil- was arhrase seriously uttered poor people in one year than did the 1 ould not which was swiftly made a joke it is Tsars in a hundred War is horrible, ny more that phrase "open covenants of but revolution is hellish. a million s based i it which • previous ' ect that at any ! dinthe rvice in Mexico, would lose theirjobs and that no support would be given their • families when they were way by the motor company. The opening sentence of the editorial wa as fol- lows: ol-lows: "If - Ford allfows this le of his shops to stand, he will reveal himself not merely as an ignorant idealist, but as an anarchist enemy • of the nation, which protect him in Ihis wealth." - The concludii g sen- © iicieus `Fruit Laxative" can't harm- tence.was, "Anywhere in Mexico tender little Stomach, Liver would be a good location for the and Bowels. Ford factories." -This last r mark is demonstrably' wrong, but it s not to that that 11Ir. Ford 'objects. He pro- tests against being called an anarch- ist, but even this he might perhaps e had Look at the tongue, 'mother! If coated,` your little one's stomach, .liver and bowels need cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless,- doesn't steep, eat or act naturally, or -is fever- ish, stomach sour, breath bad; has sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a _teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," .and in a few hours all the foul, :.constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile ,gently .moves; out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. Ask your druggist for a bottle of ; "Califgrnia Syrup of Figs," which. contains' full directions for babies, .cltihiren of all ages and. for grown-ups. , CAST • Rar Mints and Oidi&ell. The Yen NM mays Bought Bost t onattuae of I { 10 CENT ''CASCARETS" FOR LIVER AND BOWEL, have tolerated if the Tribu not waged, war upon him and its ideas from that day to this. On scores of occasions in the past couple of years, the Tribune' has at- tacked Henry Ford for hiscpacifist notions, and because he s ceeeded in having his son, Edsel, a yo ing and presumably well-nourished -man of: military age, exempted from active service on the ground that is pres- ence in the Ford Motor shop • was of national importance. It • fo 'ht Ford when -he was a Senator gal can- didate in Michigan and sha nelessly exulted in- his defeat. 1Ir. I ord did not remain - dumb all this ti ne. He fought back at the Tribune and at considerable expense compli d a re- cord of the Tribune in relatio to the present War for the purpose f Prov- . ing that the newspaper was pro - German Since the United entered the war the Tribune been pro -German, but bef event it certainly had no r congratulate itself upon it pionship of the cause of th States has not re that ason to chanr- Alli es, in comparison with other prominent American papers. But if on€ had to make a choice between the record of the Tribune and the record of Henry Ford from 1914 until the present, one would gine a verdict in1Ir Ford's favor if one happened to be a Ger- man, and in no other circumstances. Shortly after the appearrnce of the article referred to, Mr., Ford's Cure Side Headache, Constipation, attorneys entered suit in Chicago. Biliousness, Sour Sttmach, Bacl The Tribune, in its answer urged wreath---Cancly gathartic. the 'seriousness of the MexicLn situ- ation, the general attitude of Henry - ' Ford to military . preparerineas, - and 7o odds how bad yitr• liver, storrarL the duty • ;vhich the Tribune as a of ti.cwoIs; how n,ucl your head ac;,i -. national newspaper owed its 'eaders how miserablo you pe from coristipa• to eominent on Ford's actions. It andsgestion, biliou rrrci s and : iai also declared that it. publish d the- eish Bowe s-..- ou al*aye ge repel wit'. report thea, Ford was to di. charge the Mace where we started, My hick Oeetearets. ; They 'fhinei iately ele'uti5.. l h'ie volunteering errdo e.e.5 lii ' UU`; '-`' tlij som6 •".L. has arrivedat last zaal regulatte the 'tomcod), renro've th': faith, from. wljich we .assure 3 that rcnir, f•er-meziting food aiul. foul ;ase-:; ed, or tele the excess 14k from the liver anti curry c•t the coisl.ipated waste matter acrd poison -irnri€t t1IL intestines towel•. A. 10,cciit box from your drat„ giA will keep' ;your liver and bowci.- clean; stomach sweet and Bead clear for. months, They work ,While you sli'cp• peace openly arrived at," from Pre- sident Wilson. Because of the •ab- cial c of clearly-phrasedfli o. sc,n e statements issued frequently all kinds of wild rumors are set afloat. One other surprising similarity be- tween Tsarism and the - Bolstevik. Tshe'y both try to destroy the intel- lectual elements of their country They have made aetiegular onslaught on Then they are denied. Indeed, de- 1 all the educational institutions in the nials appear to be the main pub- country. I have so far not seen a licity output of the Peace Confer- single •1'e educatlrinal, 'institution ';from ence to date. We believe that this constant _stream ' of aa-sertions and denials is responsible for the fact that keenly one finds here and there intel- ligent people who doubt that the Bol- shevists are as black as they are painted:. They find the charges against the Bolshevists incredible,. and having been unable to sift the real from the imaginary with regard to the reports of the Peace Conference- believe it equally hopeless to get a clear under- standing of. what has . been going. on in Russia. This frame of mind can be under= stood; but now and then there appear stories of Russian conditions that are absolutely authentic as much to be relief upon as official statements: Such is a letter frons Lieut. Col John Ward, treasurer of the General Federation of Trade Unions, to W. A. Appleton, secretary of that organization. Lieut. Col. Ward is known as the "navvies" M. P. and is at Omsk in command of a labor battalion from the Middle- sex Regiment. Previously he saw service -.at Hong Kong, and his; con- duct -while an the Tynclareus, which met with a mishap off the Cape on the voyage to Hong Kong, when he ordered the famous Birkenhead drill, will ever be remembered. Col Ward's letter appears in Reynold's newspaper, a seopy of which has been, )farjwair , �1 to The Mail and Empire by a reader, who desires that it be republished. It is plain enough that .Col. ~Ward cannot be regarded n an agent of the capitalist or the aristo- cratic classes paid. to slander Bolsh- evism. He is a workingman, honored and trusted by millions of Bri4rsh Trades' Unionists, and he speaks of the Bolshevists at first hand. If there were no other evidence than that sup- plied by' Col. Ward, the indictment would be sufficiently damning. He writes under date of November 29th, in part as follows: I have been fighting, struggling, working in this illimitable and revo- lution -torn land without a word from England for nearly four months. Some addle -paced coon still- sends all our letters to Hong King where -the author- ities delay them as long as they dare. Then a stray ship starts for Vladivo- stok, and then they go to Where I was but only, come as a last resort tor the place where we are now. But "pack all your troubles in your old kit -bag" is the motto foie a good soldier. And so we trudge along aver these weary wastes until we have arrived at a Point nearly` 5,000 miles inland from VI 123 Fresh rich, full -flavored tea --the sante every time Sold only in sealed packages The Double Track Route between MONTREAL,:, TORONTO, DETROIT & CHICAGO Unexcelled Dining Car Service. Sleeping cars on night trains and Parlor Cars on principal day trains.. Full information from any Grand Trunk Ticket Agent or C. E. Horning, ' District Passenger Agent, Toronto, W. Somerville Town Agent W. R. Plant ...... Depot Agent WW▪ I LAW NNW 4.0 was lam 1 ea Ian Pogik 706 as �!!1i!$gl3illll!!il!!!!lltg°' Stratford, Ont.... Is recognized as one of the most reliable Commercial Schools in Canada. The instructors are experienced and the Coursed are up-to-date. Graduates are placed in positions and they meet with success. Students may enter at any time. write at once for free catalogue D. A. MCLACHLAN- PRIX(' the report was 'not well foum at'. least that the men who enl steel ----- if any of them did enlist -did net lose their jobs when: they returned from Mexico. These pleas were be- ing considt:red when the For,l at- torneys abruptly dismissed the ac- tion iii the Chicago court, and in- stituted a similar action in Wayne County, Michigan, Thy I}istinly showed that they wanted the case tried in an atmosphere that was at least nior•e favorable to Henry Ford than the atmosphere of a Chicago county might have been. Naturally the Tribune lawye}s ob- jected to any such change of venue. and made a vigorous and successful protest on the ground that there were more than 50 000 Hien or the Ford payroll. in Wayne Count , and also that his pamphlet in which the Tribune • was - accused o pro - Germanism had, been widely cir- culated there. Stn a shift was made to Macomb County, which, wl ile • in Michigan, may be expected o' be more open-minded with regard to Henry Ford In. switching from Chicago to Michigan, the Told at- torneys introduced an. eleme t of humor into the suit, for instead of ib ane oilers -uoys, and f the were could ed a rally t 4 ,,54 �i o tth e would their . bringing action against the . T they sued for the million three young Jews, former new who had become news dealer _were the distributing agents 500 copies of the Tribune that sold in Detroit. These agents not among them have satis claim for $2,000, and `;were natt greatly agitated at the prospe M being convicted, and being in de • J Henry Ford for 500 years, ' Tribune announced that. o • accept the gadge of 1, it , behalf and so the be' .natio of SOME RF ' . e 'is on.analMal For the love of Allah, never more talk of the glories of revolution. I am in it here. Friend strikes down hila he thinks his foe and finds the dead man his brother. Princes, peasants, plutocrats, workmen, rich, and poor, go down together in one welter - of blood and dirt, The Bolshevik.thinks - ...AL PACTS ABO IT It i� - BOLSHEVISM . - tri+: ,e died tful if even in thei most ,,real ti e of the war the newspaper- reading -public was so badly .served by +"brte'spondents as it is being served hl 41i1!f mu • by the army of hi hl aid and i y -pg y efficient writers who. are in Pars. Be- ing unable to report the news, the cor- respondents re port their personal feelings and opinions, for if ever there 1 Ezpczis# Blithers say Lest for c 4A--; dten's Inhriee and 'skim tronbir3 1.* is herbal --fl poisonous ,�fUcral colorin v, It is antisoptic-prev ents cuts and burns taking the wrong way. It is soothing -ends pain quickly. - ' It heals every time. Just as good .for grown- ups. ' Sold at all store• 'and druggists. Vladivostok to Ekaterinburg that has not been the scene of bloody conflict. Every cadet (i.e., young schoolboy) that the Bolsheviks could lay their hands-on has been killed, even where they were the sons of well-to-do peas- ants. Sometimes they were lined up and shot in hundreds. In one batch, as at Irkutsk, the oldest was sixteen. It appears that the German agents have told the poor -ignorant Russian workman that the only way in which he can keep ; the country in his own hand is to destroy every educated man in it. The work is being done thoroughly wherever the Bolshevik rules. The German idea is that if every intellectual elan and boy is killed the conquest of Russia by German kultur is certain Let us hope that this diabolical boomerang will come home" to ,the inhuman villains who started it. - -MORALE. 1 Explanai ion: Given' of the Much -used Word. Toward the close of the war a new word Vegan to come to the front in all discussions of the struggle. The word was "morale."" The term is dis- cussed by William Ernest Hocking in the Atlantic Monthly. Pointing out that -"it is seldom pb sisal force that decides a long war," he says: "P,eelia,ps the simplest way of ex- plainiilg the meaning of morale is to say that what 'condition' Is to the athlete's body, morale is to the mind. Morale is condition; good morale is good condition of the inner man: it is the state- of will in which you can get most from the machinery, deliver blows with the greatest effect, take blows with the least depression, and hold out for the longest time. Tt- is both fighting power and staying pow- er, and strength to resist the mental infections which fear, discourage- ment and fatigue bring with -them- such as eagerness for any kind of peace if only it gives momentary re- lief, or the irritability that sees large the detects in one's own side until they seem more important than the need of defeating the enemy. And it is the perpetual ability to come back. "Froin this it follows that good morale is not the same as good spirits or enthusiasm. It is anything but the cheerful optimism of early morning, or the tendency to be jubilant at every victory. It has nothing in com- mon with the emotionalism dwelt on - by psychologists of the 'crowd,' It is hardly to be discovered in the early stages of war. Its most searching test is found in the questidn, How doee war-Wearineep a e t yoi ? "No 0110 going from America to Europe in the last year could fail to notice .she wide difference between tilt) minds. of nations long at war and that ot a nation just entering. Over there, 'crowd -psychology' had spent itself. There was lithe flag waving; the common purveyors of musle were not everywhere playing (or- allowed to play) the national airs. If, in some Parisian cinema, the 'Marseil- laise' was given, nobody stood or sang. The reports of atrocities rous- ed little visible anger or even talk -- they were taken- for granted. In short, the simpler emotions had beer! worn out, or rather, had resolved themselves into clear connections be, tweeir knowledge and action. The people had found the mental gait that can he held indefinitely: Even a great advance finds them on their guard against too much joy. As the news from the ,second victory of the Marne begins to come in, we find tis despatch : " `Paris refrains from exultation.' 44'And in the trenek, es the same is true i.:;;ven gi'v'er• degree. All the bravaolid: larSion of war are gone, othe nervous revulsion; and l i9i sir places a grimly reliable re- 11i;otirce of energy held in instant, al- most mechanical readiness to do what is necessary. The hazards which it is useless to speculate about, the miseries, delays, tediums, casualties, have lost their exclamatory value and have fallen into the sullen routine of the day's work. Here it is that mo- rale begins to show in its more vital dimensions. Here the substantial dif- ferences between man and man, and between side and side, begin to sp- pear as they can never appear in • training camp." APRIL 18, 1919 INCORPORATED 1855 MQL,SONS BANG CAPITAL AND RESERVE, $8,800,000 OVER 100 BRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA A General Banking Business Transacted. CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Interest allowed at highest Current Rate BRANCHES- IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield St. Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Heneall Zurich OID COUGHf` a COUGHERJ'i ouohirtg Spreads Disease 1 SINCE te7o I6LO 30 DRORf-STOPJ' COUGHJ• UAIZ THIS T-OIt CHILDREN FARM FOR SALE Lo 83, Concession 6, McKillop, 100 acres of th best clay land in McKillop, 6 acres of bush, the rest in a high state of cultivation; 5 •. les from Seaforth, 2 -miles from Con- stan.e, 11/.i miles from school. There are en the • remises, a good seven roomed house, large bank barn 64x76. all Page wire fences and well underdrained. There are forty' acres plo hed, 6 acres bush and the balance seed- ed • own. There are two big springs, one pip to' barnyard and in the other a dam with 'a --hydraulic ram pumping the water to the house and to the barn, As the spring is i the orchard and near tae house and line fent . there is no waste hand. There is , a gra d and gravelled lane from the road to the buildings. Apply to MRS. SAMUEL DO ' RANCE, Seaforth. FARMERS Look! Listen! I have for sale 3 splendid driving' horses, 1 black, 1 bay, 1 chestnut all heavy colts and work hors -es, second- hand engines from 1 �/z horse poi er up to= 16 horse power. Any engine may he tried thoroughly before being paid and some extra values in 4��, 6 an8 horse power, 2 second hand De Laval cream separators in Al condition, 1 a - small size, also 6 and 7 foot Maswy- Harris and Deering binders, drills and cultivators. Plently of time given to pay for all second hand machines. R. C: Henderson AGENT 1 CASTOR I A Nor Infarcti and Children. lMa Iia YIN Have Alm Bou Beall we Sign►CpYe 07' OSHAWA-3" RTAIN LIGHT We will sena you a pair of bevel glass Oshawa curtain lights mounted on mohair or Ford top material. All you need to do is to remove . the back of your present top and attach the rear we',send and your car will have that distinct- ive appearance. We have made thou- sands of these lights and an give Jou any design for any make of car. - Write us. Motorists should write us . about new . tops, dust hoods, slip covers, spring - covers, - engine Mood covers, cusl ions, side curtains, a:utom - bi•le and carriage paint - g, in aluminun and brass castings, bus h in g s, nickel and brass plating, new curtain lights, . any design for any car, automobile tires and accessories chains, etc. Everything for the motorist. Round Design for Ford Cars $9.0O Baal Design J,rChe-rolet Cars .$10.50 3 SEND MONEY ORDER -tiw-a. Brass Fo1ndiy OSH-HAWA, OT. r Economical - Because It Covers More -akVEN if this paint were sold at a price half as high again as any other -it would sill be the economical paint to use on your house. In sheer covering capacity it has no equal. A gallon of it goes so far that you'll buy less of it and yet do more with it. €i'/,pureit#te "ENGLISHpAllier • {iir,,nd»nfs:G•,• 30% PureVirs.,..eims I00y Pure Paint This paint is guaranteed to possess - a its important basis the above formula whichwe insc ibe on every can. The result of such a formula is all that you could ask zfi brilliance of color and in proper "body", --a paint which gives a fine lasting finish, excelling ali others in "cover- ing capacity" and in durability, Paint with -H "Eng- lish" Paint -and your house is protected for years, where a coat of ordinary paint will last but a few months. hsbetiQr to PAINT than REPAIR, T. G. SCOTT SEAFORTH OPIAINDFIA' EN DIMS CM �wwsrrr.•i. rflWnwAI awMMeN eaisrd? "846.414�rnt6[e •ea 4A'V a as at i:r - e.�ei�r.�. IbtarilriiVERtt Se the Mull Farn ingst leen GGlazi Man Pear Mich Jr. Ague' Free Fer gie ll Eine Free Stew Ross. WEL Mr. write Baby' utely are li baby be u moth - Own again simpl: minor. are s nail Wilily, Ont. An ing is 'buns forme Bayfie years ton, n are This f sig numb2. the G than than ni socks ton, f born Irela ter of lyle. Roust born four d ton 1 in a s of tically Wewo tawa and sa presen years land years, settledi they li ',moved' Ontai while gloved Nome Schmid Hous :o none She ha in nine hiller wh that e• This w ed of erated burned sews a rem' life in Of her J. H. Virden Sask., ent in Bayfiel sister, field, s the ag. er at gare has h en, at land Will g sold hi - Street,' months -T line, .a proper nest a the Mi two hu will be poses. house. Moody'' 11SeKi1l- Davids ;5,500. 15th. LeoM will ab where -Cl Bros,. c to new full ri