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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-05-23, Page 2Paint THE HURON EXPOSITOR SEAFORTH, FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1919. ion, En By EMATIN 6 S • EXPOSITOR MAY 2, 919 and Keep It Up. Paint: protects. Paint pleases the eye. Paint preserves the health. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL • FINISH FOR THE WALLS OF YOUR HOUSE A Paint -ready to use -easy to apply - giving beautiful tints and colors. Has all the soft, beautiful, useful effects that -are so popular today -with the latest collars in decorations. May be used on old or new walls, on plaster, concrete, burlap, metal, etc. Durable, - • WASHABLE- e easily clean sed -not easily;marred. Ask us for Color Cards and for facts about all LOWE BROTHERS PAINTS and VARNISHES . They are what you want. G. A. Sills, Seaforth THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. DIRECTORY OFFICERS. J,' Connolly, Goderich, President ha. DAMS, Beechwood, Vice -Presider T. E. Hays, Seaf c.rth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. l inehtese Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth, 1. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- muth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS ?Riili;a, Rinn, No. 2, . Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. I. No. 8, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth., G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 111.55 a. m. For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. 1.511 p. ni. -- For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine, 11.08 p, m. - For Clinton, Goderich. 6.86 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 8.16 p.m. -- For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South a.m. p.m. yilinghani, depart 6.35 3.20 Belgraave . 6.50 3.36 Blyth 7.04 3.48 Londesboro 7.13 3.56 Clinton, . 7.33 4.15 Brucefield 8.08 4.33 1ppen Y 8.16 4.41 Hensel ,, .. . 8.25 4.4a Exeter: 8.40 5.01 Centralia: 8.57 , 5.13 Lond(o�n. arrive 10.05 10.05 6.15 i:.r.�. Gong North a.m. p.m. London depart . 8.30 4.40 0811t>< ..............9.35 ' 5.46 Exeter . _ 9,47 5.5e 9.69 6.09 10.06 6.16 10.14 $.24 Hensel( Kippen. Brucefiek Clinton . , . , ........ 10.80 Lender boyo 11.28 Blyth 11.87 Belgrave - .. 11.50 Wingham. arrive 12.05 6.40 6.57 7.05 7.18 7.40 C. P. R. TIME TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TRORONTO a.rn. p.m. Goderich, leave 6 20 1.30 Blyth 6 58 2.07 Walton 712 2.20 Guelph .. 9 48 4.53 FROM TORONTO Toronto, leave ....=...8.10 Guelph, arrive 9 30 Walton Blyth Auburn 5.10 6.30 12.03 9.04 12.16 9.18 12.28_ 9.30 Goderich .....12."5 9.55 Coniieetiona3 at Guelph Junction with Main Line, for Gait, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in- termediate points. (FAKES OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS\FALLING Save- your Hair! Get a small bottle of Danderine right nova -Also stops itching - scalp. 'GODERICH A Big Boom. --The Goderich Signal of last week says: The town has been buzzing with excitement the last day or two over the prospect of an, in- dustrial boom such as few had even dreamed of in connection with gode- ich---a prospect which if realized will make a busy city here on the shore of Lake Huron For some time past there had been rumors of the taking of op- tione on properties along the lake shore in the south part of the town and south of the town limits, in Goderich township. Within the past week these rumors took more definite shape, and on Wednesday night of last week a special meeting, of the towrt a council Was held at which an explan- , ation of all the excitement was given. Mr. 13. H. McCreath:. a Goderich "old boy" who for some years has been on l the business staff of The Toronto Star, met the council and submitted pro- posals on behalf of a company which is to be ineoporated as the Lake I' Huron. Steel Corporation, with an . authorized capital of fifteen million dollars and a plant at Goderich for the making of high -carbon steel by electric , process. The ores are to be brought ) dew from Lakes Superior and Michi- gan to the ore docks to be built south of .the C. P. R. prpoerty at the water front. This will necessitate large harbor works, the project being to continue the -southwest break -water farther to the south and to dredge out l the inner harbor to a depth of twenty- l four; feet. In addition. to the steel Works, companies manufacturing auto- mobiles, automobile parts and trucks, tractors, etc., are expected to locate here. As these articles are at present nearly all imported into Canada, the project means the building up of new Canadian industries: A large housing scheme will be necessary to provide accommodations for the employees of the : various plants, who are expected to number 4,000 at the end of two yeaasa The. (Provincial Govetrnment has already been approached in con- nection with a plan for the erection of 500 houses under the Housing Act passed at the last session of the Leg- islature, and a private company is to be formed to build the other 500 dwell- ings. The Steel Corporation will join with the municipality in providing the security required under the Housing Act, the Government advancing the money. Another important feature of the proposition is the inclusion within the town limits of that portion tri Goderich township west of the -G. Thin, brittle, colorless and ieraggy• hair is *lite evidence of a neglected scalp; of =dandrufeethat awful scurf. T. R. line and as far south as Policy's /Mere 'as nothing so destructive td' the hair fee dandsaiff. It robs the hair sideroad. The township council will of its lustre, its. strength and its. very be approached immediately with re - life; eveaptuallye producing a feverish- gard to the proposed annexation. ness and3tcahing of the scalp, whieh if South ,Street is to be widened from Britannia road south, and sewers, sidewalks and other improvements will be constructed on the local im- pro ement plan. The present water intake pipe at the harbor will have to Get a small bottle of Knowlton'as be removed and some new plan of Danderjne from any drug store. You water supply- for the town will have to surely can have beautiful hair and lots ' be ;devised. To furnish twenty-five 1 of it if _will just try a little. Dan- 1 thousand electric horsepower, the derine. hair! Try it!, Provincial Hydro Commission may have to build an• entirely new line from Niagara. The price of power deliver- ed here will be reduced to $19 or $20, and of course the town generally will benefit from this reduction. Options have - been secured an one thousand acres of land in the locality indicted, and as they fall due they are to, ba taken up by the company. Some of the property has already~ been pur- chased outright. It is understood that the men behind this mammoth project are steel: men from Pittsburg and Newark and motor car manufacturers from Detroit. Their navies have not yet been made public. Mr McCreath states also that he has interested To- ronto men in a big summer resort pro- ject, for which four hundred acres orth of the town, including Mensetung park and two hundred acres of the Fleming property, have been secured. A large hotel is to be erected, with golf links, tennis courts, bowling greens, cottages, etc. Another side issue is said to be the purchase of the Hotel Bedford, and Mr. McCreath has also become the owner .of. The Gode- rich Star, which will be taken over in a few weeks from the present owners, Messrs. Vanatter & Naftel. The Steel Corporation asks exemption from general taxation for ten years and a fixed assessment of $50,000 for school ,tax; the house (not the land) involved in the housing project to be assessed at fifty per cent. of their value. At a meeting of the Board of Trade ex- ecutive Thursday morning arrange- ments were made for a deputation to proceed to Ottawa next week to inter- view the Minister of ,Public Works with regard to the harbor improve- ments. It is hoped to have other mun- icipalities in Western Ontario, as far as London and Guelph, represented on this deputation. The industrial com- mittee of the Board of Trade has been working with Mr. McCreath on this project for some months, and Messrs. C. L. Moore, J. W. Craigie, T. H. Mitchell, Thomas Gundry and F. Woollcombe have been doing quiet but effective work in securing the property required for the purpose of the comp- any. On the top of all this Mr. Moore says he has another good, sized propos- ition for Goderich Which ;is pretty nearly ready to be sprung. - not remedied shrink, loose+ falls out sfa; night-no%v- your hair.'; uses the hair roots to and dlhen the hair A little Danderine oto' any tinge-- will surely save you Save your 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. Massage 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. "CASCARETS" WORK WEELE YOU SLEEP For Sick' Headache, Sour Stomach, Sluggish Liver and Bowels - Take Cascarets .tonight. Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Imd1ges- tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable\ Head- aches col e from a torpitt liver " d clogged bowels, which cause your _ t om- ach to become filled, with unydigested food, which sours and ferments like gar- bage in a ,swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery. ix digestion, foul gases, bad. breath, y-elloye skin, mental fears, everything that Is horrible and nauseating. A Oasoaret to -night will give your constipated bbwe1s a thorough cleansing and .straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep - a 10 -cent box from your druggist wi12 keep youfeeling good for m,on€hs. Children Cry FOR i°tl EtUER S CASTORIA its ASSAM quality gives it that rich flavor ost TEAis gooiei Sold only in sealed packages i PEACE TERMS IIP GERMANY HAD WON Those who can find anything to laugh at in this war should laugh now. This' is the time. Germany's leaders, with few exceptions, are ex- pressing their horror at the con- ditions of peace, They say this is not peace but an indefinite con- tinuation of the war. They as- sure themselves and others that the terms are impossible, and that they will merely make , certain a great German war of revenge in the fu- ture instead of ushering in an era of brotherhoods. It is interesting to contrast these lamentations with the exaltations of two or three years ago and read what Germany's spokes- men declared would be the terms in- flicted upon the Allies when the Central Powers had triumphed. There was no fear then expressed that the seeds of a future war would be sown; there was no apprehension' that France would be undertaking another war of revanche. Of course„ these were the views expressed by the Junkers. and the army leaders. What the present outfit of supposed democrats would have proposed in the way of peace terms can only be s "FRUIT- '.TIVES" Brought Quick tin Permanent Relief MIR. P. H. MCHUGH 108 fehurch Street, Montreal. December 10th, 1917. "Iwas a great sufferer from Rheum- shrsmfor over z6 years, I consulted specialists, took medicines, used. lotions ; blut nothing did me good. Then, II began to use "Fruit-a- tives" ; an, in 15 days, the pain was , easier an the Rheumatism was better. raduaally, "Fruit -a -fives" overcame 3 y Rheumatism; and now, for five years, 1 have had no return of the troiible. Also, I had severe ' Eczema !and Constipation, and "Fruit-a-tes" relieved me of these oomph nt * ; , and gave me a good appetite ; and in every way restored me to health". ' P. H. McHUGII. 50o. a .box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25o. At dealer or sent post paid on receipt of price 'by Prnit-a-tivea Limited, Ottawa, Ont. r conjecturs4, and since there were no democrats `ii Germany worth speak- ing of unt l Germany had been thor- oughly d eated, we can only sup- pose that if Eibert, Schiedemann and Erzb ger had been in control of affairs d were making a .German peace it ould have been just such a peace cls tate Kaiser would have desired. . Indeed, we have Erzberger's views on record, and the Herr Matthias is one of the loudest objectors to the allies' con itions, he declared in 1914 for sovereignty over Belgium, posses- sion of the Channel Islands, the mines of ~Alsace-Lorriane and the founding Qf a German Empire in Africa. "Germany, in the first place, can- not tolera .te the presence on her frontiers Of so-called neutral states insufficiently strong to preserve their neutrality, or which do not want to remain neutral," said Erzberger. "Her second aim must be to free herself from the insupportable lead- ing string of England on all. ques- tions of v 'orld policy. In the : third. place, she; must . break /hp the Rus- sian colossus. Consequently, Ger- many must have sovereignty not only over Belgium but the French coast from Dunt irlr to Boulonge, and pos- session of ; the Channel Islands. She must also ;take the mines in French Lorraine aEnd create an African Ger- man Empiee by annexing the Belgian and French. Congos,, British Nigeria, Dahomey and the French West Coast. "In fixing indemnities, the actual capacity bf a state at the moment should not be considered. Besides a large immediate payment, annual instalments spread over a long period coi+ald be arranged. France would be helped in making them by decreasing her budget of naval and military appropriations, the reduc- tion to be imposed in the peace treaty being such as would enable her to send substantial sums to Ger- many. Indemnities should provide for the repayment of the full costs of the war,; and the damages of war, notably in East Prussia; the re- demption of all Germany's public debt and the creation of a vast fund for incapacitated soldiers." William Hohenzollern frequently gave his ideas of what sort of peace would be satisfactory to Germany, and his uitterances may be used against him when he is brought oto trial by the allies. His memorable first reference to the British army NERV. PROSTRATION May be Overcoine by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound -This Letter Proves It. West Philadelphia, Pa. -"During the thirty years 1 have been married, I have been in bad health and had several at- tacks of nervous prostration until it seemed as ' if the organs in my whole body were worn out_. I was finally persuaded to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Corn - pound and it niade a well woman of me. I can now de all my housework and advise all ailing women to try Lydia E. `Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound and I *X11 guarantee they will derive great benefit from it." --,Mrs. FRANK FITZGERALD, 25 N. slat Street, West Philadelphia, Pa. There are thotasands of women every- where in Mrs.. 'itzgereld's condition, suffering from tiervoueness, backache, headaches, and other symptoms of • a functional derangement. It was s grateful spirit for health restoredwhieh led her to write this letter so that other women may benefit from her experience and find health ae she has done. For anggestiong in regard toyour con- dition write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Masa The result of their 4o years experh nce is at your service. is worth recalling. He, in an order issued in Belgium tohis command- ers said, "It is my royal and im- perial command that you concen- trate your energies for the immedi- ate present on one single purpose- that , is that you address all your skill and all the valor of my soldiers to exterminate first the treacherous English, and walk over General French's contemptible little army," The word exterminate is worth noting. On . Christmas, 1914, in a speech at German general head- quarters, the ex -All Highest said, "We say as once the Great Elector a did, 'Down with all enemies of Ger- many, Amen."' Addressing troops starting for the front he remarked, "Remember that the German people are the chosen of God. On me as German Emperor, the spirit of God has descended; I am His weapon, His sword, . and His Vice -Regent. Woe to the disobedient.Death to cowards and unbelievers!" In March 1915, Rudolph Martin, former Minister of the Interior declared that Germany would demand', an indemnity of froom thirty to thirty-seven billion dol- lars, absorb Belgium and ` her Congo colony, cut off a slice of France, hand over Serbia to Austria, and give Egypt and the Suez Canal to Turkey. Six great German assoc- iations representing far1iers, mer chants, mechanics and manufactur- ers urged the necessity of annexing Belgium and seizing all the coal and iron mines of France, A peti- tion from the "intellectuals"- num- bering nearly 1,500 professors, jud- ges, _schoolmasters they all said that there must be no mistaken efforts at conciliating, France. For the sake of Germany's existence it was nec(is- sary to weaken France, bot)( econom- ically and politically. It also de- manded that the Allies should pay the full costs of the war, "and pro- vide for the renewal and- further de- velopments of armaments." It insist- ed that the most important business undertakings of France should be transferred to German ownership, France to recompense the owners, and add, "A peace that has not these results will render new strug- gles inevitable. at an early /date, but with the chances much less favorable to Germany." ' The unspeakable Bernstorff is also on record with a well thought out programme of peace to be forced upon the defeated Allies. He pro- posed to slice off more than a quar- tet of France, with a population of some 15,000,000 to demolish all French fortresses, to make France give Germany absolute free entry to her markets without any correspond- ing favor, to make France surrender all her colonies; to make a tremend- ous surrender of machine guns, can- non and horses, besides a thumping indemnity, and last to make France enter into an alliance with Germany for twenty-fiive years. This undoubt- edly is the time and place to laugh. J<care 'traits. There have been found in the Phillippines two fruits entirely un- knowti to Europe and even to Amer- ica. One of these is the durian, which grows on a lofty tree some- what: resembling an elm, is,.about as large as a cocoanut, has a shiny shell and contains a creamy pulp which combines sonde of the flavor of deli- cious custard with those of a fine cheese. American : soldiers in the Philippines have dubbed the durian the "vegetable limburger." The other. rare fruit is the man.gosteen, but the exquisitely flavored liquid it contains has not yet been success- fully preserved for shipping. .Had 200 Portraits. Guzman Blanco, late President of Venezuela, • whose daughter married the Due de Morny, and who died a few years ago in Paris, not only had his portrait painted about 200 times, but erected about a dozen statues to himself, writing with his own hand their fulsome inscriptions and invar- iably calling himself in gigantic capi- tals "The Illustrious American, Paci- ficator and Regenerator of the United States of Venezuela." - Christmas Babies. In many ,parts of England there is a superstition that boys born on Christmas Day should be brought up to enter the church and girls should become nurses. Costume In Australia. The primitive Australian gentle- man has one notable advantage over his more- civilized brethren. Dress- nmakers' bills do not bother him. The, explanh;tion is simple; hie .womenfolk wear no clothes at all. Neither does he. So the tailor never calls upon him for the settlement of his little bill. This simplifies the problems of life greatly. Cut out the clothing; pick up your own subsistence from day to day -fat grubs from decayed tree trunks will supply it at a pinch --- and thin anxieties of exittnce are re- duced to a minimum. For fashion's sake, it is the mis- t ono among native Australians to rutulong and deep gashes in the skin of chest. and stomach, rubbing earth into them to prevent quick healing. Thus most decorative scars are pre- served. This applies to both sexes. The Caen paint their bodies in fearsome patterns for ceremonial occasions. One, More Guess. A Superintendent of schools was trying- _int; t o teach a class of. boys the composition of sentences, and said: "If 1 a ek you, 'What have I in my Dosch?' you must not answer 'Chalk,' lee compose a complete sentence, soh as, 'You have a piece of chalk in • ,.ui- hand.' 'Now, what have I on ..,y feat `" The boys got it mixed and c-=clIed out, "Boots." "Wrong; you •,:e ('n'i listened." "Socks," ventured _not hc-r blunderer. "Worse and • ,,rse; try again." A pupil raised his convinced that the right arti- •ic' had not yet been named: "Corns, r," he exclaimed, triumphantly. The Deutschland. The submarine Deutschland sailed ,site Kiel, Germany, June 10, 1916, end arrived at Baltimore • July 10. It •• ee the first trans-Atlantic voyage by a submarine. She left Baltimore on. her ret u rn trip August 1 and was re - [eel tel ass arriving at Bremen August I i. Love the Weed. The greatest smokers are the peo- ple- 01 Holland, where seven poundal of tobacco a head of the population is consumed aannualiy, moisoNs BA KIK 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 Bt. Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich 1 resists tsar •!J,'!4,faii19.s11iltit,AS4tis feWorfamayanwal FARM FOR SALE • Lot 88, Concession al, McKillop, 100 acres et the best clsty laud in McKillop, 6 aures of bush, the rest in a high state of cultivation 6 miles from Seaforth, 2 miles from Con- stance, V/, miles from school. There are .n the premises, a good seven roomed house, large bank barn 64x76, all Page wire fences and well nnderdrained. There are forty acrd ploughed, 5 acres bash and the balance seed- ed down. There are• two big spring, one piped 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 in the orchard and near the house and line fence. there is no waste land. There is s graded and gravelled lane from the road to the buildings. Apply to MSS. SAMUEL DORRANCE, Seaforth. 2627-11 FOR SALE. House and half acre of land in the village of Egrondville.. The property is situated on Centre Street, close to the Presbyterian church and is know* as the Purcell property, Good, com- fortable house, good shed, good well and cement cistern. Ail kinds of frill trees, strawberries, raspberries, am currant bushes. This is a corner pro. perty with no breaks on front, and the land is in a good state of cultiva- tion This is a nice property for it retired farmer and the taxes are light. For particulars apply on the premises or to John Rankin, Seaforth, 2584-tf 0111 a. - 1111 n e. In May w -5.s. Cost $4.04 In June Cost $4.05 War Savings Stamps sen is i► nsght whirs sver this sign 4 44aplays ii. And you can inv€st it in sea r t:ds a safe and profitable as veil; herti by cap- italists. Twenty-five cents saved each week can be made to eatn 41r'2 %L rnie=•este by a very simple plan. - Thrift Stamps cot t o-enty-live cern each. Sixteen of the;. -e when exchang- ed for a . War Savings Si nun become a - 4112 % interest -hearing s car .ty for which the Government - pay you $5.00 in 1924. in other words, if you lendthe Govern- menu the $4.04 odd yeas€ have saved by thus easy means, the Dover gent w'1l pay it back to you WITH AN ADDI- TIONAL DOLLAR five years: -.torn now. And you become an investor in the sus est of all securities -a .Government Bond. Cstructanada needs the small savings of her pepPje ,to finance the work of rin- ioni Make Your Savings Serve Yon ° a> Serve -Your Country-lavest Them 1 War Savings Stamps. Al three blrsnds- 1 sealed tin air -tight packages. Zan, to find - it is on sale everywhere. 8 Look for, ask for, be sure to get WRIGLEY'S The Greatest IVime in Goody -Land a IDLE SPEARH/ T PERFECT GUM TIME .410i vrt .07 4.4 vaMuAr SEALED TIGHT DOUBLEM1NT ,allvF�v.t=azte/o Mr' RIGHT GLf:Y'S it JUICY Fci UIT g 'I . (.}i E W 1' G GI1M a t '! ))BigTa_.!rn tryst srratrivI rr ,•rrr`i,ri,s;Live/11,4;i; Ili ! 1 I� � r'i t:ti 11✓^,�iA.1 ��' /11,4;i' l!ADS iN CANaDA. z WOI3 L] Once Own. T, would ti lets are! rata drive ou break u make be (renaming a Benne S found 11 benefit not . be are sold . mail at wmiani Ont. totes Monday Minnie South B ing, folic been ill had. been Her hush predecea `The lab innny in last Non± of her b Sr. The Bend on is in lhet half h€i August. places every T months of Zurich their alt chants ti half Boli Wedneed holiday, in Aute] Wednd holiday i June 5tl Coles, tl branch -o iA town received into the Mrs. IL shipped 1 and left best win Mr. and horse. (Ti Notes. vas helc' day, M' Several took . the They sa Graham' tete gi Mrs. J entitled, much aj Ross, to pare Refillo motor does n If a f 7rioney ification church ehure if he. news; tally this th chi le the the. chris mem. Society to the (held Miss mere girls meant the. women: the f• BIG WI the l Cana doubt for all espec judgin ing t stabl that t animals firm a posit() head week a co numbe in on head. are f the f respo. great Evi Navin faros. dernar