The Huron Expositor, 1919-08-01, Page 211d
t.
PUMPS
auletisesemmeeeleeleismemeemleitelsells
TILE HURON EXPoSITOR
SEAPORTIL Friday, 'August 1 1919.
The dry .season has finished the
old wooden pump. R,eplace it
now with one of our. Anti -freezing,
quick action, iron pumps, strongly
made,, with well balanced handle,
and ample spout,
Complete with cylinder an 4 ft'
of pipe. Price
13.00 to 20.00
Preserving Season
Granite Spoons 20c to 25c
Wire Cann.ng Racks Si
A' FOOD CHOPPER
can be used
for making
jelly, grind-
ing peppers
for pickling
and a doz-
en other us-
es. PriceTi
$2.75 to $3.50 gl
Strainer & Masher 40c
VVire Strainers 16, 25c
GALVANIZED - PAILS
are a household
necessity. We -
have all sizes,
50c to 75c
Special hand-
made galvanized pails
85c to $1
Special Value in Monkey
Wrenches 95c
•
TILE lifclilLtOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO1C.
Connolly, Goderich, President
,Jes. Evans, Beachwood, Vice-Presideri.
T. E. Hays, Seaftzth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
Alex. Leitch, R. R. 'No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, SeafOrth; John Murray,
math, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
No. 2, Seaforth; Joen
eechwooci; McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
-Connolly, ef-,oderich; D. F. MzGregor,
NO. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
'George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
Trains:Leave Seaforth as follows:
16.55 a. m. - For Clinton -5 Goderich,
and Kincardine.
11.08 p. - For Clinton, Goddrich.
6.86 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west. Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
le p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and paints east.
LONION, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South a.m.
Wingham, depart 6,35
lielgrave 6.50
Londesboro 7.13
Clinton, 7.33
Brucefield 8.08
Zippen. 8.16
Flensall 8.25
Exeter 8.40
3.20
3.36
3.48
4.56
4.15
4.33
4.48
5.01
, - Going North a.m. p.m.
London, arrive 10.05 6.15
Centralia 9 36 5.45
Exeter - 9.47 5.57
Kansan 9.59 6.09
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
GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
'TO TRORONTO
7 12 2.20
7ROIK TORONTO
9 30 C.80
12.03 9.04
'oodstock, Lon -
and all in -
World Must Do Something
For Prostrate ROUMalliay
-Declares Take,Jonesets
HE statement was made re-
cently by the well-known
Rurea.nian statesman, Mr.
ditions preyailing in his country. It
not only sets forth, in. the most -forc-
ible way, the dire needs of Roumania,
needs -which aught to be met at the
eitrliese possible ltnoment, but inci-
dentally helps to la realization, still
much needed in. certain quarters, of
• what the war hall meant and means.
The impression. that "all is over ex-.
cept the shouting" and a certain.
moderate amount of clearing up,
',which may well be left to a chosen
fewl paid to do the work, is far too
prevalent. "The war," as Mr, Lloyd
George remarked recently, "is not
over," and all who had a hand in it
should have. a hand also in repairing
its ravages.
The necessity for this is well illus -
Roumania, needssatthe present time,
are of the mbst fundamental char-
acter. She lacks almost everything
that can be iinagined, for 'she has
been stripped- of almost everything
that can Airt imagined by Germany;
but she needs, mast, of all, food and
clothing. At the pasent moment, as
Mr. Jonescu explains, the country is
practically without bread, and al -
GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN .
• VItp.11 LEMON JUICE'
make a beauty lotion for a tem/cents to
remove' tan, freckles, sallowness.
•
•
Your grocer has the lemons- and any
Idru 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, thew, put
in the orchard. ;white and shake well.
This makes a quarter pin't Of 'the iely
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, rednesi and'
roughness disappear and how t:inooth,
soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes!.
It is harmless, .and 'the beautiful results
will surprise 'you.
IF YOUR CHILD IS CROSS-, .
FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED
Look, Mother! If tongue Is coated,
cleanse little bowels with "Cali-
, fornia §yrup of Figs."
Mothers can rest ea0y after giving
"California, Syrup of Ffes," beeause in
sour bile and ferment ng food. gently
moves out of the'sbowe , and you have
Sick children ni.‘edn!t be, 'coaxed to
take this harmlesa firuit laxative."
_Millions of mothers t4ep it handy be.
Cause :they know its titian -on the stom-
ach, liver and bowels is prompt and sure.
Ask your druggist for a bottle. of
"Californie, Syrup of Figs," which con. -
tains directions for babies, children of
all ages and for growp-ups.
•
GIRLS! LEMON JUICE
IS A SKIN WHITENER
How to make a creamy beauty lotice
for a few cents.
The juice of tWo freat lemons strained
into a bottle containing three ounces oi
orchard, white inikes a_ whole quarter
Pint of the rnort3 remarkable lemon skin
beautifier at about the' cost one must
pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold
creams. Care should be taken to strain
the lemon juice through a fine cloth so
no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion
will keep fresh for months. Every
woman knows that lemon juice is used
bleach and remove such blemishes as
freckles, sallowness and tan • and is
the ideal skin softener, whitener and
Just try it! Get three ounces- of
orchard white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grdcer and make tep
a quarter pint- of this sweetly fragrant
lemon lotion and. massage it daily into
the face, neck, arms and. hands.
LOT 85
lug 100
a bank
e house,
1 good
barn
and
R.
Gr
WHAT Sii0:010i tit*IXE WITH
PROFIJEERS
discuesing the prafiteera through
-the daily *press 'that great farmer
writer, Peter McArthur says: Is there
anYone left Canada who does
not 'believe that we were all
equally interested in the war? If there
is let him read once more the adver-
tisements and patriotic literature with
whieh the country was floeded during
the war. If the War had been last -all
would have been lost. Each man
should do _his part to the uttermost
of his strength „and n4t count the
cost. And that kind propaganda
was right -right to the last syllable.
-But now see hoW thing4: have worked
out, Our soldiers fought the war and -
saved civilization, and With great fer-
vor our industrial leaders. supplied the
Over fifty thousand Cakadians gave
their lives in the great War and many,.
many mere were wounded. Although
it is impossible to get statistics on the
subject am confinced. that More
than fifty thousand of those who stiY-
ed at home increase& their Wealth bY
thousands of dollars and some increas-
ed it even by millions. Twist that
fact and turn it any .way you like
and you can't make it decent enoagh
to look at. We had a win -the -war
campaigA, We should now have .a pay -
the -debt campaign. While the, win -
took men who aeemed fit fer fighting,
stripped them nalied, exarain.ed them
carefully and if theyfwere fit they were
forced to go and fight. As a patter.
of the Most elementary justice we
should take earerk man 'who is able
to. pay something towards the ex-
anse of the war-, strip his business
affairs 'to the skin, and if be is able
to pay 'make him pay. We should at
least make him •give up his war loot.
•
There is nothi#g indirect about my
views regarding war profits. Such
profits should be transferred ta the
treasury either voluntarily or by force
before the stench of them becomes
top noThome.
I know what the answer will be
without Waiting for anyone to come
back at me. Sucla a acheme would
disturb business and frighten capital.
Oli, the poor timid thing! One of lthe
most unpleasant things about the
average capitalist is the way he pro-
tects selfishness by, parading. his cow-
ardice. If you do anything to bring
him within bounds or if you do not let
him lave his OVVII way about every-
thing he will be afraid to'invest. And
the amazing thing is that he gets
away with that pitiful, paltry bluff
and is hoping to get away with it, now.
If you stop to think for a moment
you -will realize what a bellow bluilf
this is. At the present time there ,is
no known country where capital has
things so much, its own way as it has
in Canada. Though there will be a lot
of howling if anything. is started that
looks like the dealing -of justice to
capital we can go quite a weys be-
fore we make Canada less attfractive
to capitalists ' than Europe or even
the United State is just now% Capital
must seek investment, or the capitalist
will hae forced to live on his principal
and that is a thing inconceivably hate-
ful to him. He will aecept a paltry
one per cent. before he will do that
If capital is really as cowardly as it
professes to be we should have no real
teouble ire ,scaring the profiteers.. inte
a state of proper penitence. Rue I
am afraid that , a ampaign of educa-
tion will be heeded to make the public
realize how disgustine this war pre-
fiteterin(e reeily ie When I think that
selvee, to money -making when the'r
fellcre: citizens were offering their livite
by the thousand to check the oncoining
not really then. but re -incarnated
Mb:esters of the primordial slime. I
have no scheme for making a perfect
world. In fact I can see no justifica-
tion for a man with such a scheme
'except that be knows the Creator's
planafor runnine: the world or has a
better one. As yet I have failed to
find anyone who qualifies on either
account. What I believe in is a benevo-
lent opportunism: which will move one
step at a time. Just now we need to
take juat one step and a kick. Let
us jolt 'the profiteer and then jolt
him again before he has a chance to
get his halo readjusted. Let us deal
with his'avealth before it has had time
to become respectable. Possibly -the
money that Nould ba put in the
treasnry by making the profiteer dis-
gorge' would not go very far towards
paying our war debt, but it would
make the coUntry more wholesome.
The tariff we have with us always
and we can fight out that argument
through the centuries, but the Profiteer
of the great war, with his slimy "effic-
iency," is a present-day monstrosity
and we must deal with, him at once or
our children will be ebliged to take
the dust of his children as they pass
in their high-powered cats. At the
-present time we are prosecuting the
alacker who evaded Military service,
but the ghoul who fattened on war
conditions is allowed to disoort himself
in luxurious ease. I Wonder if the
Liberal .convention at Ottawa will
have enough militant Liberalism to
attack this matter in a way will
really mean business. hope so.
Western Newspaper Union
M. TAKE JONESCU.
on'e of the most fertile coun-
tries in the world and one which, in
grain, there is kittle prospect of her
.supplyingr her own needs in thie re-
Speet forP another eighteen months.
Almost the 'whole of herlast harvest
was taken by Gei'many •and Austria,
whilst la0c of cattle, lack of tools,•
'and, abo all,- lack of seed have
'prevented the propor sowing of tile
land this- spring. so that not more
than one-half °I the ,:usual -area is
down in grain..
4s for clothing, Mr. Jonesc-u de-
clarres that the situation- is indesdria-
able. "There is," he said, "an abso-
lute 'lack of shoes, and one is con-
tinually meeting wealthy people in
fags. and - tatters, for there is no
clOthing to be had for love or
money." In nothing, however, is the
hard Pass to which Roumania is re-
duced more clearly shown than in
the fact that, althougla'an exception-
ally well -wooded country, the people,
during. the past winter, endured ter- ,
rible hardships from cold, owing to
lack of fuel. This' lack was due, hot
to any failure in the supplies of fuel,
but entirely to the breakdown of the
railway system. Geritany, as Mr.
Jonescu explained, took or destroyed
fourzfilths pf the railway engines,,
thus adopting the ,most effective
means of crippling the whole com-
merpiar and economic life “A the
country. •
When •it is remembered that Rou-
mania represents only a very small
part of the teriFitory similarly affect-
ed; •that even mere urgenecries for
help are coming from Jugo-Slavia,
from Tzecho-Slovakia, from Poland
and Armenia, to say nothing -of the
ivast unknown want Which Is yet to
be made known -and dealt with in'
Russia; when all this is realized; as
it must. be realized, it is seen that
the call to those who have, to meet
the needs •of those who have not is
even more Argent than' eVer, and
,that the time for Patriotic economy
and generous giving is by no means
past.
'pion SALE. -ONE HUNDRED ACRpS CON-
' sisting of Lot 27, Concession 8, Tucker.
smith, Huron county; close to school and
church; 5' miles to Seaforth, Clinton and
Brucefleld • On fine gravel roads. Eighty acrei
cleared; t'wetity acres of bush and pasture;
three hundred hard maples ; &agar camp;
spring, no PLunping for stock, 7 acres of .
orchard, ten roomed brick house, furnatice,
telephone, large barn stabling underneath,
shed, Pig Pen, drivehouse, beautiful yard;
evergreen., shade trees, TERMtl3ERRY,
•
The Chamelon.
A general belief is that the chame-
leon changes its color In accordance
with its surroundings. Some experi-
ments throw.doubt on this view. The
color changes seem to be regulated
by light, temperature, excitement,
etc. Thus one placed id sunlight so
that only one side ,was exposed to
the rays of the min became dark
.brown on this side and pale brown -
.mettled with green on the other.
Placed in a dark box and kept at a
temperature of 730 degrees Fahren-
heit, another emerged a brilliant
green. Another specimen in a dark
box at 500 degrees Fahrenheit as-
sumed a uniform salty -gray color.
AUGUST 1,
HURON NOTES,
-Nursing Sister Kate Scott, daugh-
ter of Postmaster Scott, of Clinton,
arrived borne last week after spending
two or three years nursing in *the
military hospitals in England and
France. Miss Scott looks well aftet
her experiences. She is at present
with her parents at their susmner
cottage at Bayfield.
-Joseph Smelteer, of Whitechurch, -
was fatally injured on Monday last.
He was drawing in hayo when the
horses became frightened *a-nd evident-
ly while attempting to control them he
was trampled upon and received in-
juries so severe that he died in a few
hours. He was in,his sixty-third year..
Besides his wife, he leaves two sisters,
Mrs. Webster, of West Wawanosh,
A Pearl is built up in layers, like and Mrs. Irwin, of Ashfield. The
an onion. The layers are very hard, funeral was held to Wingham ceme-
tery on Wednesday afternoon.
-Mr. Clifford Elliott, Dundas street
Hamilton, ani formerly of Bluevale,
met with a very painful accident early
Bros brick ye! e when 111S r" tit foot
was caught in the rollers pulling it off
and crushing the leg so that it had to
be amputated just; below the knee.
He was removed to the city hospital
but with sufficient skill one layer af-
ter another may be removed or
"peeled." SometitheS a pearl that
apoears dull, spotted or imperfect in
shape, when peeled,yields g -em of
the finest lustre and consequently of '
great value. Dull, rough pearls,
bought for a few dollars, are Some-
tixnes sold for many hundreds of
dollars after -having been peeled,
Best Goods
antern a amp Supplies
Lamp Glass (med.)
Large
BtFners, large .
Medium
13c
14c
12c
Mat es
•
Lantern Glass
Square
Tall
Wick, yd.
40c
1111111.110..110,
RICE
13
- •1
1- c
eliance Rie, Japan,
Tapioca 16e
All Rice is advancing in price -buy now
!while price is low
8c
Have you tried our Cheese ?
36c
Lowest price possible
Our Grofast Calf ineal makes the calves pusli 1
ahead. Have you,tried it ? Per sack
•
Leave your orcler 'With us for Paints. We sell a special
guaranteed brand at a real saving price.
United Fa
Dist
mers Co-operative Co.
LIMITED PHONE 117
ibuting Warehouse No. 1., Seaforth
Keep your store the busiest in town and watch us grow. We now have No.
2 operating in Cobourg
where he is resting fairly well. He
the third. son of Samuel Elliott,
formerly of Elliott Bros , Bluevale, and
moved to 1-11unilton abont two years
ago. He had just -returned from visi+-
ing his uncle Mrs, Charles Elliott,
Bluevale, over'the home week.
-Mr. Percy Mollard, who is em-
, ployed with, Messrs. Dunsford. Bros.,
of Exeter., narrowly escaped serious
injury one day last week when he fell.
backward off a load of hay, lighting
failry on hiS head on the hard ground.
He was stunned for a time but has
now fully recovered. He was lucky
that he escaped so easily as it is sur-
prising that his neck was not broken.
-An event of pleasant interest to
Goderich people took place at London
on Saturday last when Miss Eva Ause-
brook, daughter of Mr. Thomas Ause-
brook Goderich, 'was wedded to Dr.
L. E. Bolster, of Barrie. The cere-
mony was performed at 2;30 o'clock
p.m. at Centennial Methodist church
by Rev. J, E. Hohnes. 'Thoqe present
included the bride's father, Dr. and
Mrs. A. C. Hunter and Mrs. •Ce Gar -
Clinton. The groom return' ed some
time ago from ove
attached to the
Corps. The frie
tend their hearty felicitations and good
wishes.
seas where he Was
yal Army Medical
as of the bride in
Marlatr,v $pecific
Reinovesr
Qall Stones
24 likrurs
NeverrFailing Remedy for
Apppndicitis
Indigestion, Stomach Disorders,
Appendicitis and Kidney Stones
are often canned by Gall Stones,
and mislead people until those
bad attacks of Gall Stone Colic
appear. Not one in ten Gall
stone sufferers leniews what is
ethe trouble. Marlatt's Specific
will cure withont pc,:'n or oper-
ation.
For sale at all druggists.
Recommended by E. Mnbach
Druggist, SeaLrth, Ont
The Greatest Name
In- Goody Air Land
SPEARMINT
THE PERFECT G UM
ouromomormi
JUICY FRUIT
Wiry
VCEWING GUM
MADE
ift
- CANADA
SEALED TIGHT IWT RIGHT
sturinii
ME 11
rs
ore
weather ';
the year.
era infari
come witi
medicine ,
promptly
quently
passed be:
lets shoul
bause aria
ren. An -
lets wili
troubles,
der4y the
are sold
liame' Me
TRANS
The Ref:'
from the
mately se
voyage te
the first
Christhp
Palos, Spa
in the San:
The Am
the first
Atlantic -
tween
arrived al
1819, one
days, befe
The stes
crossed tht
-to New Y
The Dre
est and r
clipper shi
the Civil 1
voyage in
The Ana
fifteen hen
of Herta,
Captain
Brown, in'
St, Joim's
14th, C0111
twelve mil
None of
war in, a
mind that
China exp
that what
hot entith
able, the
tenient
alueate, an
about Chi
feard to
than if a
hone the ,
.tation. and
the germ
teed& to
inevitable -
If and wi
xrdlitary
ed _to den
the - rights
given. her
. there may
will laagh
it does ne
It is tin
inay make
Chinese b
the Colin(
mentions <
plea. pro
Awe Gel
:many in.
of brigan
tau, whi
world wa
Mai 'Li
After Lt.
the wer-el
tle
ope, even,
of tile
the balaii
v.Tho can,
have beei
tions for
as we an
to de OitT
The ell
and ie le_
statestnee
vented ha
is that .2e
an. ally 1
China mi
Allied ser
Japan pt.
tum wil7J