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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-06-27, Page 2• f• ..• i; s . Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. - Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, le _ i Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; ' / f • I. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- muth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS ! , William Rims, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, ' Seechwood; M. McEwen,Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. MeGregor, R. R No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. • lee • • • • • , Ea 01L.,COOLFLOYES Give abundant heatfor MI Cooking Purpofses. • Because the New Perfection Oil Cook Stove has the Long ,Blue Chimney Burner which turns every drop of kerosene oil into dean, intense heat, and drives it full force, directly against the utensil. Meals are delicious. r Lights and beats instantly - dependable alwfirs-no smoke or odor. 3,000,0e0 masts. Conte in any tirne and see det1SOM,freediellti !like Long Blue Chimney Burner. • 2 -BURNER, WITH OVEN - $28 3 -BURNER, WITH OVEN ..... ..$35 • Screen Windows Adjustable to any size of window. All hardwood frames, covered with special rust proof 'painted wire. 40c to 90c. Screen Doors Complete with hinges, pull and catchy serv- iceable and neat in designs, various in patterns, at low cost. Price $2.00 to $4.25 re THE HURON EXPOSITOR SEAFORTII, FRIDAY. June 27th. Field and, Turnips Hoes with strong blade, well tempered, straight grained handles. Price 75c and 85c ALCOCK AND BROWN AND VICKERS-VIMY An expression of opinion ven- tured a , few days ago that the Atlantic would be flown before next Wednesday has been justified in mod sensational manner by Captain Alp* and. Lieut. Brown, though the machine to make the epoch -marking journey was the Vickers-Vimy, and not the. Handley -Page. But there is reason to believe that the Ilandley-Page will also make the crossing, al- though, of course, the event ,will net now cause such a sensation as it would if it had been accomplished only for the intervention of the i last week. In a few years people will King of Spain she, too, would have I not make much more fuss abeutbeen shot. The incident cannot be crossing the Atlantic in an airship ' flattering to American pride, since they Make about crossing it in it shows that Spain, which was Te - than a steamship It curious to note presenteing France in Belgium had. more influence with the Germans: than had the United, States, which was looking after .the affairs of Bri- tain. Ne _one could have done more than Brand Whitlock, the American • Minister at Brussels, but it appears that there was less disposition to of- fend the King of Spin at that time than President Wileoh. MIfe Thuliez was a school teacher near Lille when the German inva- sion began, and almost from the first very handy - do away with Hand Cultivators - ore backs, have removable teeth, take the place of a hoe. rice $1.25. keeps the flies off the cattle, makes f need- Creoid'ing easier for them with the result of bet- ter milk flow. Gallon can, Crenoid • • • • • • • •011 ••• 34 gallon cans, Crenoid 41 • • • ••• ••• 0-•• •.• Sprayer, specially strong sprayer • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • 0-0 0 Specially per gat -a file will ...s. • • • • • THE HURON EXPOSITOR to her, how profoundly her career has impressed her countrymen, and how determined they are that her murderers shall be brought to ac- count. We believe the sentiment with regard to the English nurse is hardly less• strong in, the United States. Few incidents. of the war, not even excluding, the sinking of the Lusitania, have been •felt so . deeply, and the more one learns ' of .her vrork the more heroic does she ppeer. In a recent issue of the •Revtus des Deux Mondes, one of tdith Cavell's companions tells of. the- means by which the wounded • British, French and Belgiansokliers were hidden and eventually passed on to Holland, on their way to join , their comrades. Louise Thuliez had I a very narrow escape from sharing the fate of the Englishwoman. and 1 4 JUNE 27, 1919 $1.25 .75 $1.00 even now that there is not one- tenth or even one-hundredth part the excitement over the unpar- alTed feat of Alcock . and Brown that was displayed when Hawker and Grieve "took off," Psychologists may explain why. One reason, believe, is that the successful effort lacked some of the 'dramatic set- tingsof the Hawker exploit The lit le incident of Hawker and Grieve as they rose in the air, slipping the was confronted with the problem of wheels from the under -body in or- aiding wounded French soldiers. who good quality lubricating oil, Rodgers Extra 45 Carborundum `stonts for mower knives, cuts,whal. not, 95c , a G. A. Sills Seaforth! McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COrir. 41.•10m•NON.M.• HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTII, ONT. OFFICERS. I. Connolly, Goderich, President J. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treds. AGENTS G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 19.55 a. m. - For Clinton, Goderick, Wingham and Kincardine. 3.63 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine. 11.01 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. I.16 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Goin,g South a.M. p,m. Wingham, depart ... 6.36 3.20 BeIgrave 6.50 3.36 -Myth 7.04 3.48 Londesboro 7.13 3.56 Clinton, 7.33 4.15 Brucefield 8.08 4.33 Kippen 8.16 4.41 Herwall 8.25 4.48 Exeter 8.40 5.01 Centralia 8.57 5.13- London, arrive 10.05 6.15 ,o---- Going North a.m. , p.m. London, depart 8.30 4.40 Centralia 9 35 6.45 Exeter 9.47 5.5,1 Hensel' • 9.59 6.09 Kippen 10.06 6.16 Brucefield ...... 10.14 6.24 Clinton 10.80 6.40 Londesboro 11.28 6.57 Blyth 11.37 7.05 Belgrave 11.50 7.18 Wingham. arrive 12.05 7.40 C. P. R. TIME TABL2. GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TRORONTO a.m. p.m. Goderich, leave 6 20 1.30 Blyth 6 58 2.07 Walton 7 12 2.20 Guelph 9 48 4.53 FROM TORONTO Toronto, leave 8 10 5.10 Guelph, arrive 9 30 6.30 Walton 12.03 9.04 Blyth 12.16 9.18 Auburn .. .. . ...... .. 12.28 9.30 Goderich .......- .. . 12.'i 9.55 Con.nectiona at Guelph Junction with Main Line fior Galt Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit, and Ciicago, and all In- termediate points. . ._ THICK, GLOSSY HAIR - • FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try it! Hair gets soft, fluffy" a7a beautiful -Get a small bottle of Danderine. der that they might travel light, thrilled millions of people as no similar trifling. incident had thrilled them since the war ended. There Was also that remark , of Hawker about "beating the Yanks" that warmed the hearts of his Brit- ish fellow -subjects; and did not of- fend good sportsmen in the United States. Over there were millions "pulling" for Hawker and Grieve to beat their own flyers, for it was re - had been left behind in the great re- treat. Her first charges numbered six. Somehow . they had to be fed and tended and concealed from the Germans. It was easier at first when the Germans too, were on the march, but after the Marne, when the opposing armies fell into more or less permanent lines, the Germans began to scour the country in their possession for hidden enemies. Pia - cards were posted ordering that all alized that unless. Hawker and. Grieve won their chances of saving their lives were not much ,better than one hundred to one. Then came the wonderful rescue by the "Mary" and the English-speaking world felt that its capacity for ex- citement over flying had been tem- porarily exhausted. There was the additional incident that Commander Read of the American navy bad ered. • flown from Newfoundland to the ' So with Mlle. Thuliez and another Frenchwoman for guide the little band started off for the Dutch fron- tier. They traveled at night and hid by day, following a route where' they knew they would meet friends.; The Princess de Croy hid • them in her chateau, end here for the first time in six months some of them knew the luxury of sleeping in a bed. The princess then had therh photograph- ed for their false passports, and thus equipped they made their way through France and Belgium to Edith Cavell. The Englishwoman seemed to be known all 'over the in- vaded country as one who had means of helping the soldiers to escape if once they could reach her, and she did not .fail. Scores, perhaps hun- dreds, were sent to her by this un- derground railway, and by . her smuggled l'e.cross the Dutch. border to safeee4 When finally the Ger- mans seeured evidence against Edith Cavell, they were overjoyed, and the officers kept repeating, "At last! at last!" .showing that they had been long on her trail. . Thuliez was in Brussels on the day the arrests were made. She If you care for heavy hair th g1i® tens with beauty and is radi t with life; has an incomparable *softness and is fluffy and lustre , try D twine, hail Just one appli tion 4 uhles the beauty of your , b•esi s it imme- diately dissolves csvery particle Of dandruff. You can i.ot he nice heavy, healthy hair if you ave dandruff. T -his destructive scurf ro he hair of its lustre, its strength \1id its very life, and. if not overcome it produces a fever- ishness and itching of the scalp; the' hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair falls out fist. Surely get a small bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store and just try it. • GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN WITH LEMON MACE Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to sallowness. remove tan, freckles, Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet connter will siipply you 'with three ounces co* orchard white for a few eents. 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 Skinwhitener 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 thebeautiful results will surprise you. TAKES OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS FALUN Save your Hair! Get a small bottle of Danderine right now --Also stops itching scalri. Thin, brittle, colorless Old 'Scraggy hair rip mute evidence of „ a neglected scalp;i of dandruff -that aieful 'scurf. There is nothing so dEStilletiVe to the h4r as dandruff. It kobs the hair and its very a feverish - p, which if !hair roots to hen the hair falls out fast. A littler Danderine to- night -now ---any time -frill surely save your bair. Get a small bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from anydrag store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if. you will just try a little Dan- derine. Save your hair! Try it! of its lustre, its strength life; eventually produei ness and itching of the not remedied cause§. the &mink loosen and 44 .1414 V- 44( • 4411•10001400•14•4•4 -- OhiirenTC FOR nacitirs CA SAIND_Ft A I concealed soldiers should be . iinme- diately surrendered, and when any were found those suspected of har- boring them were severely punished. In a vacant house lay one. wounded English soldier, and here were con- cealed the six Frenchmen. The search for them was relentless and it was decided that if they were not soon moved they would be discov- Azores, thence to Portugal, ond thence to England, completing the trans-Atlantic flight in a heavier- than-air madhine. So when with little flourish of trumpets Alcock and Brown made the greatest flight in history they find the world in no condition to appreciate immediately the tremendous character of their victory. There was nothing "fluky" about their achievement. What sort of luck there was with regard to weather was against them, and, as was said of Hawker and Grieve, might be appropriately said of Al- cock and Brown: they were well qualified to succeed. Whatever was possible for flying men was possible for them. • Alcodk is said to have spent 5,000 hours in the air, pre -b - ably an unequalled record unless • it might be shared by Captain Roy N. Francis, of the American Air Ser- vice. While he was instructor at Eastchurch for two years after the autumn. of 1914, Alcock spent nearly 3,000 hours in the air. After that he served a Year `at the Dardanelles where he won his right to use the title "ace if a word so much mis- i was taken in the house of Philip used and so tediously repeated was any pleasure to him., As already an- nounced -and the reiteration gives, pleasure -Alcock is an Englishman born, at Manchester in 1892, a pow- erful six-footer, fair and ruddy slow of speech like an Englishman rather shunning society events, and with an iron. nerve. His great strength of hand and wrist probably saved the ship from wreck in the weather conditions that prevailed in Newfoundland when the great "hop' was made. Lieutenant Arthur Whitten Brown the navigator, who ought to share equally with Alcock the honor of the crdssing, though, like Mackenzie Grieve, he does not so bravely catch the public eye, is one of the best qualified navigators in aeronautics. He is an American citizen, accord- ing to ihe New York World, and carried a Stars and Stripes as .a mascot in the Vickers-Vimy, which recalls the coincidence., that an- other American flag was carried at the other Vimy. He is described as the antithesis of Alcock, being a head shorter, dark, although with greying hair as a result of his ex- perience in a German prison camp slim and boyish. He has a crippled left foot as a souvenir of being brought to earth ; by a German anti-aircraft gun at Bapaume. He is an American, we say, or rather is doomed to be an American from now on, although he was born in Glasgow in 1886. His parents were Americans, his father having been associated witn George Westing- house in the, In anufacture of the automatic engine, and having gone to England upon business connected therewith. The British Westinghouse Company is now owned by the Vickers. These are the heroes. The ma- chine they Used, like the Sopwith of Hawker and Grieve, operated by a Rolls Royce engine, or • rather by two of them. Hawker depended on one. Like the Handley -Page the Vickers Vimy machine was built for bombing, and it ought to be noted that Alcock was the first aviator to attack Constantinople, and holds the war record for the longest bombing raid. But the Vickers Vimy is a small machine compared with the Handley Page, having a wing -spread of 67 feet, as compared with the 46 feet 6 inches of the little Sopwith, and the wing area is less than 1,400 square feet, The machine was designed to reduce air resistance; both upper • and lower planes are of the same length and tell feet apart. One paticular ad- vantage of the machine is said •to be its perfect balance. It will al- most fly itself once it gets started. The seating arrangements were such that Alcock and Brown could take turns at the wheel if they so de- sired. On the whole it has proved a great advertisement for Vickers Vimy needing no advertisement. 101 ees- SHE WAS CONDEMNED • WITH EDITH CAVELL Britain's solemn salute to the body of Edith Cavell shows how profound is the sense of national indebtedness taucq, 'a heroic Brussels architect, who had been one of Miss Cavell's most devoted. assistants, and who paid for his patriotism with his life. Thirty-five persons were arrested and separately questioned. Not knowing what the others had said, and altern- - ately coaxed and threatened by their interrogators, some of them made confessions or let slip unguarded re- marks. Whether they were any deliberate traitors is not known and will remain uncertain until the offi- cial documents in the case are pro- duced . At any rate evidence enough for the Germans was gathered. On October llth, 1915, Mile. Thuliez heard the. sentence of death pro- nounced on herself, Edith Cavell, Philip Baucq, Louis Severin, apothe- cary, and the Countess de Belleville. Baucq tried to s,peak. "No use," he was told. "it is too late." She then said to Edith Cavell, "Will you not ask for mercy?" "No," answered Miss Cavell, "it would be useless. •.There is nothing to be done. I am an Englishwoman." Louis Thuliez that night was con- fined alone, and though she asked to be put with Miss Cavell this was denied her. In the morning she asked the officer of the guard about the English nurse. He hesitated a moment and then. said. "She is at the Ko•mrn dantur " The French teacher understood immediately that her comrade had been executed She expected the same fate every moment. But her sister had arrived in the city and had made an .appeal to the Marquis 'de Villalobar, Spain's representative. He telegraphed the King of Spain, and a message from the King to von Bissing, the German Govenor-General, arrived only a few hours before the heroic French- woman was to be shot. Her troubles were by no means over, for she was taken back to Cambrai, there to be tried for her activities on behalf of the French soldiers. She *as again sentenced. to death. but in view of the King of Spain's message the sentence was commuted to Bite im- prisonment. So as 'a prisoner she remained until the armistice was signed. Then with a number of other brave women, one of them the Prin- cess de Croy, and another the C01131- ess de Belleville, she was released and sent back to Lillie. Mlle. Thu- liez says that after the trial in Brus- sels a notice containing the names, of the ten convicted persons was pla- carded on the walls. The first five were sentenced to death. Her name was among them. The grim announce- ment concluded: "The sentence a- gainst Baucq and Cavell has already been carried out." NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE A sort of miniature typewriter has been invented for marking linen. There are caterpillars in Australia • more than six inches in length. Brackets for window shades, adjus- able horizontally, have been patented. Th ts manufacture of fire briek has begun in an experimental way in Uru- guay. • Apparatus has been invented to Best Goods Self Service N11011000110100••••00•100100•1104014•1•104.1141 F. O. Pure Paris Green 70c a lb Gets the Bugs • , Arsenate of Lead er lb. 45c. 5 lbs. for $2 ig Stock of Paints Corning I=11110440 e redeem coupons for White Naphtha Soap. When you get them, bring them in. Car of Flour and Feed Arrived • Get it quick ---we need more room in our storehouse United Farmers Co-operative C LIMITED Distributing Warehouse No. 1., Seaforth give invalids electric light baths while lyine,, in bed. More cases of illness and deaths are caused by malaria than by any other disease in India. Designed for apartments, a new folding bed resembles a handsome li- brary table when closed. About 60 per cent. of China's exten- sive production of coal comes from five northern provinces. Suction created, by an air pump holds glassware firmly in place in a new machine for etching it. Textiles made of paper yarn in Etig- land are appearing in a variety of easily waterproofed fabric. A Missourian is the inventor of a seed planting attachment that can be added to any farm cultivator. South Africa has more than 3g,000,- 000 sheep, producing annually more than 170,000,000 pounds of wool. The bowl of a new medicine spoon has a hinged cover to retain its con- tents, • easily lifted When, desired. Danish engineers and machinery, employed by Siamese capital, have built a large cement plant near Bangkok. • The cue ball is shot out of a spring gun instead of being propelled with a cue in a new form of billiards. 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