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The Huron Expositor, 1919-04-25, Page 2ee 6. Open Hearth steel -'eliminates sulphur anti 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 rust -resisting than other fencing made of Bessemer while our price for " SpoDash " is higher than none. 6 wire fence, cash ................ , . 43e per rod 7 wire fence ........ 49c per rod 8 wire fence, even spaced....... ... 55c per rod 'Barbed wire ....................6.50 per,100 Angle iron. fence posts, 7 ft. long 650 Round fence posts .. »• 60c Red Devil pliers ..... 1.25 NCIN steel, Poultry Netting 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. " ;4.75 48 in. < < 6.10 60 in. ii ii ;i 7.60 HI HURON EXPOSITOR THE HURON EXPOSITOR SEAFORTH, Friday, April 25th, 1919 HIGHEST EGG RETURNS Secure These by Hatching Your Chicks Early, II Not every Fanner Should Pliuit an A pie Orchard --Only Those Who Understand the Business and Wish to Specialize- The Scall Orchard Is Usually Not Profitable. (Contributed by Ontario Department of a AgriQulture, Toronto.) HJ early hatched pullets are usually the best winter lays ers. Pullets •hatched during the first three weeks of April not only lay from two to three dozen more eggs during the year but lay many more eggs during the win- ter. The average pullet begins lay- ing at an age ofsix and one-half to seven months; the later hatched ones are slower to mature than those hatched early. To be sure your chickens will be hatched early an in- cubator is almost a necessity." The later the, hens begin to lay, generally the later they become broody. An incubator is a• machine and re- sponds to treatment the same as any other machine. It is not difficult to handle but it can not supply its own oil for heat or keep itself clean, nor yet can it supply the little chicks in - A. Sills, Seaforth THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE . CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. .DIRECTORY OFFICERS. Com.olily, Goderich, President Yobs. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -Presided T E Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS ,{,lex. 'Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hiachl©I', Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; I. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar mirth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS Tlliaral' Minn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bcnnowies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McETwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G. T. B. TIME TABLE Treble Leave Seaforth as follows: 10.55 a. m.. - For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. 18 p. m. - For Clinton, Winghain and Kincardine. 11.01 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich. 6.86 a. m. -For Stratford,. Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Believing, and Peter- boro and points east. 1.16 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 Belgrave 6.50 3.36 Myth 7.04 3.48 Londesboro ...... , . , 7.13 8.56 Clinton, 7.33 4.15 Brucef eld 8.08 4.33 Kippen 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 e. Going North a.m. p.m.. London, depart , 8.30 4.40 Centralia 9 35 5.45 Exeter 9.47 5.5q Hensall 9.59 6.09 Kippen , . 10.06 6.18 Brucefield : 10.14 6.24 Clinton 10.80 6.40 Londesboro 11.28 6.57 Blyth 11.87 7.06 Belgree a 11.50 7.181 Wingham, arrive .... , 12.05 7.40 "CASCARETS" WORK W E YOU SLIP For Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Sluggish `Liver and Bowgis-- Take 'Cascarets tonigift. Farrel Tongue, Bad Te te, Indiges=-- tion, Sallow Skin and MI' rahle Head- aches come from a to id liver and clogged. Dowels, which eli se your stom- ach to become Filledi kith 'undigested food, whish sours' aerments like ga.r- I Nage in a swill ' aThat's the first step to untold. isindigestion, foul gases, bad breab,ow skin, mental fears, everythiri is horrible and nauseating. A i c.scarct to -night will give your eonstitl ted bowels ,a thorough cleansing and. sfraighten you out by morning. They wor.k while you sleep- a 10 -cent box from your druggist will keep you feeling good for monthy. CASTOR 1A PInfantsand Waren. The Ki Yen Have was 8 tT s ht Bros thy ed,gnature of THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try itI Hair gets soft, fluffy and beautiful -Get a small bottle of Danderine. t` If you care for Iteavy hal ?, that glis- tens with; beauty end is i;diant with life; has San inconfLatrable /softness and is fluffy and lustrois, trr`,Danderine. Just one applilratior doubles the beauty of your hair, bbides it imme- dia ely dissolves` keve y particle of dandruff. You can 'ior lave nice heavy, grlthy hair, if you if �-a dandruff. This. destructive scurf rctie Lair of its lustre, its strength • and its very life, and if, not overcome it Fi.cduces a fever- ishness and itching of tie scalp; the hair roots famish, lou.en end die; then the hair falls out fast. Surely get a small bottle of Iinowltc,n's Danderino from any drug Store and just try it. Yet'.: w.wb �4"• 124 IT Now sold in a new waxed 'board package -- a great improvement over the old lead package ild only in sealed packages 1 J The Double Track Route between MONTREAL, TORONTO, DETROIT & CHICAGO Unexcelled Dining Car Service. Sleeping ears 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 5V. R. Plant ...... Depot Agent GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN WITH LEMON JUICE Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to remove tan,, freckles, sallowness. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply you with three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Squeeze the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle, then put in the orchard white and shake well. This makes a quarter pint of the very best lemon skin whitener and complexion beautifier known. Massae this fra- grant, creamy lotion daily into the face, neck, arms and hands and just see how freckles, tan, sallowness, redness and roughness disappear and how smooth, soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless, and the beautiful results' will surprise you, side the eggs with good pure air un- less the room in which the incubator is placed has good air. ai The room in which the machine it run should be clean and well ven- tilated. If you can sleep In the room comfortably it is 'good enough. Us- ually a cellar is the best place be- oause the temperature is more even. and the machine is therefore easier to regulate as to heat. The incubator should be clean; especially is this true of the interior of the machine. It is advisable to brush out the ma- chine as clean as you can, then wash it out with water and soap and last- ly disinfect it. Perhaps one of the easiest materials to use is the com- mon tarry compo ads that are used about the stables,JuI �t Juspray or wash the machine thoro Iyeafter: each. hatch. It does not ake much time and saves .a, lot of trouble with the chicks. With some types of machines having cloth tops in the hatching chamber it is wise to remove the old cloth each season and replaceit with a new piece. Be sure and test the thermometer. Take it into a drug store and the druggist will test it for you along- side one of known accuracy. Many hatches are lost through bad ther- mometers. Get only clean eggs and of good size or set the kind of eggs you want the pullets to lay. Be sure your hands are clean when you turn the eggs. Oily or dirty hands lower the hateb. Do not keep the oil can in the same room as th incubator. When clicks hatch do not feed them befog they are at least forty- eight hours old. Should they pant inside the machine open thedoor a little. Give them plenty of air.- Prof. ir-Prof. W. R. Graham, 0, A. College, Guelph , AWF,U14 RAVAGES OF NARCJI'1i. DRUGS Little short of astounding is the report. of a special" committee ap- pointed )pointed by the Secretary of the Trc ii-- ury to investigate the use of narcotic drugs in the United States. It esti- mates that there are not fewer than 1,300,000 drug addicts in the country. How serious is the situation is revealed in New York City, where recently the police made a determined effort to stop the illicit. trade in col tine , morphine and heroin. The Health. Department thereupon had to open a special clinic where habitues of the • drug could be supplied - with their .favorite dope Otherwise the lunatic asylums of the city would have been overcrowded, It has been found that it isfatal if not danger- ous to abruptly deprive the drut- usersa of their rations, If cures are to be made they must be male gradu- ally, and in rcler to give the confessed fiends • the' necessary : supplies to soothe their quivering nerves and support their tottering reason, they Were treated at the •rate of one hun- dred- an hour. A special call for :more workers was issued, the doc- etors on hand being utterly unable to cope with the awful demand made upon them, It is to be -borne in mind that the 700 addicts treated by the New York. Health Department on Saturday were the sodden and helpless drug users who depended upon the illicit sellers for their daily supplies. There were not included those who had a supply •of the poisons on halrcl, or who were not so desperately in the clutch of the habit that they would face the publicity of appeal- ing to at clinic or those who have other sources for procuring the dope not known to the police. The situ- ation is not .worse in New York than in other parts of the country. =lccord- •ing to the •committee's report. The drug habit appears to have pene- trated every part of the conlmun- ity, and in proportion to population seems not rarer in isolated far m; many miles frofn a railway station than in the great cities. For in- stance, in one Kentucky "dry" county it was found that about two per cent. of the r tpulation were re- sorting to _ paregoeic- as a stimulant. In Jacksonville, Florida, out of a Population of 7,000 .there are 800 drug fiends. In this city there is a strict law compelling regristration, so that the statistics are correct, although it would be :rash to pre- sume that every drug user would register if he felt that', he could se- cure a supply of his favorite ha- sheesh `without registering. One point which the committee was 'expected to detejrmine was ACUTE NERVOUS EXAUSTION All Treatments Proved Useless Until He Tried "FRUIT-A-TIVES' D MR. JAS..S. DELGATY. R.R. No. 4. Gilbert Plains, Man, "In the year 1910, I had Nervous Prostration in its worst form ; was r(duced in weight from 170 pounds to 15 pounds. The doctors had no hope of my recovery, and every medicine I tried proved useless until afrieizd induced Die lo take "Fruit -a-1 res". 1 began to mend. a most at once ; and after using this fruit medicine for 3 or 4 months, I was back to my normal state of health. I. never had such good health for twenty }'ears as I have enjoyed the past six years. We are never withouli a box of `Frpit-a-tiveg' in the house", JAS.'S. DELGATY. 50c. a bol, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. At all dealers or dent postpaid on. receipt of price by Fruit -a - tires Lin;<itecl, Ottawa. flicting on this point. In the -larger cities the drug habit and the liquor habit were found to by gathering fresh victims side by side. In pro- hibition regions, on the other hand, a great consumption of patent medi- cines and drugs containing mor - (Rine was discovered, as in the ',Kentucky county mentioned. Prohi- bition advocates demand figures from those who insist that total prohibi- tion of liquor -Mil be attended by a great, increase in the demand for more deadly narcotics than alcohol. CC On the other hand it is argued that the drug traffic is so, susceptible of secret .dealings because of the highly concentrated nature of the drugs that a veritable army of detectives would be necessary to stamp: it out or to show to what an, extent its growth. has been contemporaneous and co -extensive with that• of prohibi- bition, ` The balance of probabilitywould seem to be on the side of the spread of the chug habit when the alcoholic habit is frustrated. Bird S. Coler, Commissioner of Charities, of New York, asserts that drug ad- diction is a natural consequence of . prohibitionl He .had ample oppor- tunity to investigate this phenom- enon when he was president of the North Carolina; Public Service Com- mission. The change then from "wet" to "dry" resulted - in a cal- amitous increase in the use of hare cotic drugs. In New York he has found that every restriction placed upon the sale of whiskey such, for instance as the inceased price, has resulted in a marked increase in the drug addicts treated in the city's hospital. One unlooked for result of the committee's investiga- tion was the discovery that _the worst of drug fiends were native- born Americans. The explanation tentatively put forward is that na- tive-born Americans are so highly organized, so brimful of energy that their nerves play out and they re- quire a narcotic. In other words, they are so full of pep that they find it necessary to be equally full of hop. --- The drugs most generally . used are cocaine, morphine and- heroin it is said. that cases are on record of a victim breaking the cocaine habit by sheer force of will, but A WONDERFUL CEVE l An enrii est scientist, the other day, gave his opinion that the most wonderful discovery of recent year, was the discovery of Zara -Dille. Just think! As soon as a thio layer of Zam-Buk is applied to a wound or a sore, such injury is insured against blood poison! Not one species of microbe has been found that Zam-Buk does not kill! Then again, As soon as Zain-Buk Is applied to a sore, or a cut, or to skin disease, it stops the smarting. That is why children are such friends of Zam-Buk. They care nothing for the science of the thing: All, they know is that Zam-Buk stops their pain. Mothers should never forget this, Again. As soon as Zam-Buk is applied to a wound or to a -dis- eased ,part, the cells beneath the skin's surface are so stimulated that new •heaIchy tissue is quickly formed. This forming of fresh tissue from below is Zaui Buk's secret of healing. The tissue thils formed is worked up to the surfac and literally casts off the diseased tissue above it. This is why Zam.-Buk cures are permanent. Only the ether day Mrs. Hector McDonald, of Oyster Ponds, N.S., wrote to_ the Zara-Buk Company and told them what Zam-Buk hard done for her. She said that for over a year her hands were covered with eczema. Doctor's treatment did her no mod and the numerous salves and blood purifiers she tried also proved useless. Then Zara -Bull was recommended. Treatment with this wonderful balmy soon brought a decided Improvement and perse- verance resulted in a complete cure. To -day, after several months, there lraa been no return of the disease. whether the use of harmful drugs A11 druggiets sell Zs.m-Buk at 60e. box, or send this advertisement and ets,,mp (for return postage) to Zam-Bark Co., Toronto, for free trial would be likely to be increase' when ,national prohibition camp into effect. The evidence appeared ', to be con - there is no such record with heroin. This is an: opium prepartion, three and a half times the strength- o morphine, Naturally -enough it was invented in Germany, where it was hailed by the herr professors are being free from the baleful effects of morphine. In that coun- try its sale in under the strictest control, so that Germany herself has suffered little from the diaboli- cal discovery of her chemists. The commission reported that very rare- ly wee a drinker a drug user. One habit seemed to extinugish the other. Men graduate from whiskey to cocaine, but never from cocaine to whiskey. Once they have experienced the "kick" of the real dope, alcohol becomes' dnsipid iii coinparisonr. It has been admitted that many cases of drug addiction are the result of doc- tors ignorantly or good-naturedly. ad- ministering morphine to ease pain, thus fatally exchanging a normal pain or ache for a soul-destroying crav- ing. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Miss A. E. Marty is Toronto's first woman public school insepector. She is • a suffragist and believes in the equality of sexes. No compensation will be paid young Widows by the Pennsylvania compen- sation board if there is a liklihood of their remarrying. There is now before the Pennsyly- vania legislature a bill to increase the amount of mother' pensions. Miss Jeanette Leister, of Pueblo, Col., who has been appointed a rail- way mail clerk, hopes tobe the first woman in the United States assigned to a regular run in the service. Over 10,000 school teachers in Penn- sylvania receive a minimum salary of $315 a year, their monthly average being $51. - In the state of Washington most of the female workers are working in laundries and dye works, Eleven million women may vote for President in at least nineteen states in 1920. The minimum wage provision adopt ed by the Washington industrial wel- fare commission - prescribes that no female over-the.age of eighteen years engeged in any occupation, trade or industry shall be employed at a week- ly wage rate of less than $13.20. Queen. Marie, of Roumania, expects to visit the United States soon to thank Americans for the aid they have given her people. New York state forbids women in the core rooms of foundries, to lift more than 25 pounds. j The republic of Uruguay.recently enacted a law requiring the managers of all stores, shops, pharmacies, fac- tories, workshops and other establish- ments or places where women are employed, to supply chairs for the use of female employees whenever the work permits. MINTS ON COOLING MILK Three Essentials in Cooling Ex- plained. .slake That Spring on Your Farms :a Profit Question - It Should Be Enlarged, Cleaned Out Well and (.'ribbed In an Efficient Way. tContrihnted by Ontario Deportment of Agriculture. Toronto.) ACTERIA in larger or smeller numbers are always present in freshly drawn milli. At temperatures between GO deg. F. and 98 deg. F. (blood heat) they grow and multiply rapidly, causing 'the milk to become quietly spoiled. As the temperature fallrt below 60 deg. 9., the bacteria become lees active, the changes caused by them are less marked, so the milk keeps sweet and in good condition for a longer time. Growth of bacteria in milk in 24 I.ou'ts (130,000 per c.c. when freshly drawl)): Bacteria Per C.C. (20 drops) • after 24 hours. 280,000 1,170.000 24,600,000 Tem)), held. 40 di?g. F. 50 deg. 11, 00 deg. I' The above table shows how- low temperatures check bacterial multi- plication in milk. This is the scien- tific fact upon which the practice of lrlilk cooling is founded. In practice a dairyman should bear in mind three things in connection with the cooling of milk. First cool milk with as little delay as pos- . i ible after it conies from the cow. Second --cool milk to as low a tem- perature as possible, say somewhere between 40 deg. Y. and EY: deg. F. Third -cool milk with as little con- tamination as possible from outside sources, such "as dust, dirty utensils, water splashings, etc. If these three points wereeeegulariy attended to by all dairies a marked improvement in the general quality of our milk sup- plies Would be noticeable right away. The quickest way to cool milk is to run it over some form of tubular or surface cooler, pail by pail, im mediately it is drawn from the cow. In this way milk may- be rapidly cooled to within two or three degrees of the temperature of the water used. The objections to " this method are ilio extra work involved in washing the cooler twice a day, the difficulty of keeping it properly clean, and the clanger of contaminating the milk with dust, barn odours, etc., unless the cooler is used in a clean and separate milk room. The other alternative is to place the cans of milk in:a tank of running Bold water at the earliest opportunity, or in an insulated tank of water into which some chopped -up ice is thrown. If the milk is stirred once every ten minutes during the first hour, cool- ing will take place more rapidly than where milk is left unstirred. If cold runnine water is not available ail sunimer, enough ice should be put up' during the winter to ensure the milk Mein; brought to a sufficiently low temperature during the warmer portions of the year. The importance of prompt and thoroegli cooling of milk is still in- suffcirngy appreciated by many milk prodn.•ers. There is no cheaper and ropier method by which milk- qual- ity may be improved. -T. H. Lund, 13.5'..1., 0. A. College, Guelph. APRIL 25,{11 1919 INCOR,! RI 1855 MOLSONS •• 1 CAPITAL .AND RESERVE, $6,800,000 • • • • OVER 100 BRANCHES THROUGH° i=T CAN ADA • • • A General Banking Business Transacted. • l CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT y BANK MONEY ORDERS i . . •Interest allowed at highest Current Rate SAVINGS BANK DEPART'MENT BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT • • • . Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich Brucefield St. Marys liirkton iw _ ...yea Wt.. , te 'cess *1111/is)0fasasi_. A Saethe sur ace and allitawa Matterof ,� �r;; ,,,.�.,.` . ; � a i• yam--�en:Ff.:a-en tau 1 .e Otte- eleatee,„,,,iniettea-Z4h k ete -Ina ;eine nen `7.11�Qu ole it' to your o %fl community to keep your home in perfect condition Iaint is a ---- preserJat'iJe Zitinee r Which Rouse raminates QOMBWIIEls'E ;n "Every' 1-3 community" i$ a home wliich- always smiles at -y u. it is always a little more cheerful looking•tijan the others, brighter, b' te{ :kept, and -well painted. Inside that house lives a good citizen and a good n_eiol-.lbor. His house is so inviting that it is like a hand stretched out to you You are bound to feel glad that its owner lives neat- you. 1 r » TED /opure Otite L sl L,NGLISY>i Tt ib pure Patna Somewhere else in "Every -community" stands another .oust. Its owner has become discouraged. He has quit trying.e his lost his ambition and gradually has accepted his fate as a down -and - outer. You know that this is so, because his h ouse says so. It is dingy, beginning to crack and sag, and is unpainted. Its owner is not a good citizen. He has not done' his share. His house stands out Iike a "sore thumb." It robs a whole neighborhood of legitimate real estate value. Buyers of new houses avoid its neighborhood. BRAN DIZAivi -11E Pi CO ERSC2,014 1.4046er,i./J. H/Ujr/,7C LT../4NM 791.616Td WINNIPC9 -P, D1CIH[ MAT CALGARY 6oMbMTON VANCOUVER T. G. SCOTT SEAFORTH The Greatest Name lin Good v -Land t//hdJ))) JU.1CY " U1T { CHEWI•F G0:261114-' VI, riff Pith i/OibrEASPc': ISO .U" The largest - selling gum in the world nat- urally has to have a package worthy of its contents, So look for in the sealed Package that keeps all bf its goodness in. That's why The Flavour Lasts! Tit Scl the E €i, H: was April. abseil n! don, 1 Annie Hog len, a Ralph Leahy Dan rd Ruby'. 'Laren Ch s nxe `( Nic of tin, ',1 McLa's Hogg nim. THE 1 Tle to Tab et the and i of eon any bi: cernni Eel RI believe finest ever u would - .keep are so >✓rlazl a Wiliian Ont. In lob Shanrlon. Buklz S laer holm months Dear lit All ttjroi All throe For no dreams we miss We 'e TkriSs flower Daytime Deas jlitt Two littl Two latt3 Two litt• How nuj One 1itti Sweet` Fn And an them, Till the:. IA� Fivena have sea increjasl A ibiI Nort worn n tiof$f ing lod on a Wom Ontario turbir; ince. erow4l t of baby listen. . t tem Of of livini The 1 Annette ney or = triet ha Stags Wi to outn*in Silty: centl'y Stret '. cstore t isi(f j boar., they I in tions. Priem Cretan learned pinched coiffUre hats I tlj Par$iru Germ * ompan arid ;fig M=' s. oideSt n States. is still paper r Mrs. Cal;) redujeed is ir,. p she to redo Deieg bers of ince in Island, decided' fedoras The Princes made b tional which interest Invi and der arise if der the the was