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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-08-08, Page 24 3E .HURON EXPOSITOR P 1 ,• emismitsionsmemumnsamesow ntilMe ilriwitlirOV, ". PAYS FOR ITSELF BY THE COAL . IT SAVES: MORE HEAT LESS COAL 'MOST DURABLE - MOST ECONOMICAL CASTS LEAST FOR REPAIRS. Have Your Old Furnace Over- hauled NOWT. Repairs Will be slow in coming at a. later date. Plumbing Fixtures Basin are more useful than .a `parlor, as convenient as a kitchen and as helpful to good health as a. doctor. We install good fixtures in the .' best mechanical manner as our,°years of experience insure you. Such as bath, Closet and G. A. Seaforth TflI McIILLOP MUTUAL; GIRLS WHITEN YOUR SKIN FIRE INSURANCE CO Y.•. :� ' WITH LEMON‘JUICE BEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. Me a•beauty lotion for a few cents to OFFICERS. er nove, tan, freckles, sallowness. 1. Connolly, Goderich, Pre idents _ . - 7 g. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President 'T':°':;, --;-T.011.3. .grocer has the lemons and any T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-'Treas. drug• store or toilet counter ,will supply AGENTS Ott with three ounces of orchard white • ,for a:,few cents. Squeeze the juice of trio fresh 1emoes into a bottle, then put in the orchard 'white and "shake dwell. This makes -tai quarter.pint. of the'`terp best lemon sk'1•whitener and complexion: beautifier known. Massage • thjs frac grant, creamy loon. .tiitlraily into the face, neck, arms and hendkandAtst see how freckles, • tan, •sallowitess; 'redness and roughness .disappear aid how smooth, soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless, and the beautiful results will surprise you. - - Alex. Leitch, R. -R. No. 1, ,Clinton; Schley. Seaforth; John. Murray:. B rucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; 1 W. 'eo, Goderich; 1, G. Jar- Y.muth, Brodhagen., . `' -_. e., • .DIRECTORS .r *WAD:Rim ,•'No 2,, Seaforth; John Aa'Vai $Brodha` ge James Kvana, . ..echvwood; M. McEwen, C1u' n; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D: F. McGregor, R. R No, 3, Seaforth; 3. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Sariock; Gorge filcCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. ' . T. R. TIME TABLE Tr ma Leave Seaforth is follows: ¢R� a... pa,„. For. Clinton,?Goderibh, Wingham and Kincgrdine. T Lai p.,i' - For Clinton;i,Wgham • t1 $ C ton, Goderich 4.86 a m: For Str :fob, • Guelph, ' nto, Orillia,.North ,Bay and. . t. . ,, poi tswest, Belidyille and Peter hero 'and amts 'east. - •i1,.18 ' .an. For Stratford, Toronto, -.,.M1Intiqal and points east." .14441tON, .$UUI N AND BRUCE • a.m. p.m, 6.35 310. 6.50 . 3i3.6 Myth'.vx'- . 7.04 3,48 - • Londesboro •• ..... ..,..4f .'....!,4,„7.13 .8.56 Citlnton,-.... , . .a, . 7.33 416 Brucefield , .,. .. _ .. 8.08 4.33 kuppin ,, A. .16 4.41 Iensall : ;-...'.�. x e 8.25 4.48 • Exeter ....,-;',14, . 8.40 "Fi.0l. Centralia :: f . 8.57 •• : '5.13- c ...err. Going l ortlt ...i. " p.m. London, arrive • . '.. 10.05 6.15 €sopdon, depart :. 8.30 Ctralia r x..9.3°5 Et.... 9.47 LEMONS WHITEN AND snea ....... 9,69 BEAUTIFY THE SKEN . KIPPen 10.06 Berncefield 10.14 Clinton 10.30 ,Make this beauty lotion cheaply' for Londesboro 11.28 your face, neck, arms and hands; /Myth, 11.37 Belgrave .At the cost of a small jar of ordinary Wingham, arrive cold cream one can prepare a full quar- ter pint of the mast wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezi g the juice of two fresh lane - ons into a bottle containing three on''iices of orchard white, Care should be' taken to • strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets fn, then this lo - 7 12 2.20 tion will keep fresh far months. Every Guelph - 9 48 4.53 -, ;woman knows that lemon juice is used FROM 'TORONTO to •bleach and remove' such blemishes as Toronto, leave 8 10 5.10 freckles, sallowness and tan and lis Guelph, arriv.: 9 30 'GAO the ideal skin softener whitener and. Walton 12.08' 9.04 beautifier. • Blyth 12.16 9.18• Just try it! Get three ounces of. Attune ..........,12.28 . 9.10 orchard -white at any drug store and Goderich ` ' 12 '; ' 9.55 two lemons from the grocer and make up Connections at G sIph,'unction with a. quarteipint of this sweetly fragrant . Main Line for Galt,- Wood k, Lon- lemon lotion and massage- it daily into don, Detroit, and Chicago, nd all in- the face, neck, arms' and hands. If is termediate points. marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. • c�ySrr- South v.Yia.6..Y ✓ Winghum, • cta3 t BaletaV,e 4.40, 5.45 5.5 6.09 6.16 6.24 6.40 6.57 7.06 718 7.40 1 The Phle "Big Three." THE HURON EXPOSITOR'. The• present craze for designating all sorts of combinations and enter- , prises in terries of numbers, with the adjective "big" prefixed, is by no August 8, 1,919. nieaus new. SEAFORT-T, Friday, 4 Ti tl' BALKAN CLOUD. • It Still tangs Heavy In Spite of the Peace' Treaty. - Seeds for possible future trouble are not confined to tlie- causes out- lined utlined thus far. -The Balkans, which furnished the . immediate cause of - the Great War, and which had: for years -before been a sort of simmer- ing volcano; are far from 'being in a settled state even yet. T -here is a standing feud between Serbians and Bulgarians, there is at least suspicion between Greeks and Serbs, there is: divergence of interest between `Rou- mania and. the other Balkan States and there is the acute difference be- tween Italy and her Slav neighbors over the east shore of the Adriatic and the Teutons, who dragged the whole world into war by refusing to arbitrate their quarrel with the Slays in the Balkans, are openly exulting over the Balkan controversy which t beautifully illust rat e4 and finely has, broken out between .Slays and 1 worded advertisement." "Yes," re - .Latins. The chief Serbian delegate plied the other. "1 can take a joke, to the Peace Conference declares that even when it's at my expense, . "Fiume -belongs, to us by every stand- one of, these blankety-blanked ard-by the ethnographic. Standard, • and by the economic standard. The ltalianization of .Fiume is very re- cent. Personally I can remember when Fiume was overwhelmingly Slavic. The introduction of the Ital- ians was promoted by the lilagyars as a political manoeuvre against the Croats. • The official Austrian -Hun- garian statistics for 1910 report 244,212 Italians and 15,687 Jugo *lays. But even those figures are misleading: They were compiled and published by the municipal authori- ties of Fiume, who had every reason to make Slavic strength in their city appear as slight aS possible. But -there are still two important points to be remembered. First, included in that 24,212 are Italianized Slays. In the second place, both Italian •and Magyar statisticians count the poi5u- lation of Fiume as if Susak were not properly included. Now Susak, which is divided= from so-called Fiume by only a -narrow canal, is as much -a part of real Fiume as Westmount is a part of real Montreal. In Susak .there are 11,796 Jugo-Slays as against 685 Italians. Therefore; in greater Fiume _there are altogether 277,393 Jugo-Slays as against 24,870 Italians. For economic' reasons it is a matter almost of life and death.for us. to have Fiume. With its fine rail connections this port serves the very heart: and, indeed, the whole.interior_ of the country. Look at the other ports which might be available to us. Ragusa is linked with the interior only by a narrow-gauge railway. Ogulin-Knin has no connection with _ -our capital. It is true that •Spalato -,is a good harbor which may be con- ••.netted with Belgrade. But eveia if -that railway is built, it will be a tre- mendously expensive task and one which cannot be accomplished for a long time. In short, Fiume is indis- pensable toeus. It is not indispens- able to Italy: If our trade had to pass through • an Italian Fiume,- Italy Would hold our • whole commerce in ' her hands. She could blockade us when she pleased. For us that would be a situation not to be borne." "Fiume may be - the same sort of powder magazine between Italy and the new Serbian Confederation that Alsace-Lorraine was between France and Germany for forty years. Moltke, so long ago as 1871, coin - td the phrase "Big Three" in allu- sion to the French fortresses of Strasbourg, Metz and Verdun. ,.With the Big Three in our posses- sion our safety is . assu," he said at the Versailles peace conference. 141e got his will so far as the first two were concerned, but; failed as re- gards the third, luckily for. Prance, and the world at large. To -day we .find the newspapers using the phrase Big Three to desig- nate three individuals-Clelnenceau, Lloyd George and Wilson, and three affiliated trade unions --those repre- senting the railwaymen, miners and transport workers, -=- Pearson's W eekly. Ile Knew the Facts. "My dear sir," said the friendly old gentleman to another man who was sinning •grimly as he read an automobile advertisement in a .saga- zine, "pardon ine, but you seem to get some amu4nnient out of • that IRLSI LEMON JUNE .IS A SKIN WHITENER How to, make -a creamy beauty lotion fo a few cents. The juice of- two fren lemons strained Into. a bottle Containing'three ounces ce oroliterl white .makes at whole quarter: pinte•of the most remarkable lemon skin beautifier at about;, the cost one must Ta; for a small jar of the ordinarg'cold -creams. Care s could be taken to strain the" --lemon jure through a fjne cloth so "'no lemon prep gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every Woman; knows -that lemoli juice is used to Mach and remove such blemishes as free es, sallowness, and tan and :is the. ideal skin softener, whitener and heautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly frasr ant kmon lotion and massage 4t daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. 11.60 12.05 C. P. It TIME TA.BL2 GUELPH: & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TRORONTO a.m. p.m. Goderich, leave 6 20 1.30 Blyth 6 58 2.07 Walton FARMS FOR SALE FARMS.FOR SALE 1 have some choice farms for sale in the Townships of Usborne and Hibbert, ail well 1ui1t and improved, on easy terms of payment.. THOMAS CAMERON, Woodham, Ont 2655-tf FOR SALE War -time Husbands. ;{i/ Some cul:ious facts are revealei1 in the British Registrar -General's re- port of births, marriages and .deaths in 1917. Whereas most of the marriages used to take place -in July, August and September, the favorite months now are October, November and De- cember. Widows remarried in great numbers. Although • young war - widows affected the figeires; it is Blear tll'at the war was not wholly respons- ible, for the- total begaee increase in 1912.. Widowers, .tA ff ,• en in- creasing tendency'' to j tattsecend wives. The yoongefit bacb,,nlpr ..to> `it rry was fifteen; and the yeungest•:'spin- ster fourteen. No fewer than twep,ty- nin1e meleennierried'at thetage of six- teen, azo x'889 at tlie% age et•'seven- teen, two; of the latter, marrying e idows ,, .Twenty-six spinsters mar- ried at •the age of fifteen,. one of theni to a widower; '187 women 'were sixteen when. they married, 'and of 1,200 ;tnar1 rung at. seventeen Fears, fifteen marc led widowers. , The earliest second marriage e we of malts at thel age of nineteet, and three' widows remarried at the age of eighteen. Of thirty-nine inen harrying when they were turned eithty only one, aged -eighty-one, had never tasted the joys of matriinoniel• bliss previously, •the - rest ` being widowers; but out of nine women marrying beyond that age two were spinters. `The widest Mian to be mar-. ried was a 'widower of ninety-two, and the two oldest women were aged eighty-five, one a widow and one a spinster. -Tit -Bits. Ancient PerfiAmese The first nation to learn the secret of aromatic substances was Persia. The priests of Egypt were the only people who studied science at that time, • and Egyptian per- fumes achieved great celebrity. es- pedially those made in Alexandria. 'Reserved originally for religious ' rites, perfumes subsequently became FARM FOR SALE. -BEING LQTS 16 AND of Current use atnong the wealthy 17 on the 9th concession of Hibberterx,- classes. During banquets they were tainirtg 150 acres -with all necessary l'uildings, ' -diffused through the halls and were convient to ecl.00ls and c urebes of allouburned in •n- refusion. The ISraelites omations with telephone and rural route; 2 ; p miles from Dublin market. This is a splendid r during their sojourn in Egypt adopt - property and will be sold to wind up the 1 ed the use:- of aromatic • substances estate of the lute„ William McLellan. For primarily for religious purposes and further particular: 'fapply °to ANDREW LELLAN, Dublin P. 0., R.- R. 2, 261.10-t afterwards for personal usage. The Jews were fond of 'cosmetics and even used them to part the face, All these perfumes were extracted • from -essences of trees and various 'plants. . The Greeks, who lobed ele- gance, were especially addictedto the . use.. of perfumes, and they taught 'their tlleir secrets and usage to -the- R.o- , loans. The latter in the days of their Ei decadence went so far as to scentthe coats of their dogs. - In the Middle Ages the`. Arabs,, Venetians, Genoese, and Florentines became famous fdr the preparation of sweet-smelling essences. --=-- Tit - i Bits. House and half acre of land in the ! • FA..RM FOR SALE village of Egreondville, The property ALot 333, Concession 6 w °18 situated on Cense Street,. close t4 ♦ Mcl�il]op, lt;o Acres the Presbyterian church and is know as . the Purcell , property. Good. cptn- fortable house, -`good sheds good well and cement eis earn. Ali kinds .of trees, strawberries, raspberries, and currant bushes. ,This is a corner fxrcr peril with no breaks on front, and the land is in a good state of cultiva• •" 'tion . This is a ni ^e property for a retired farmer and the taxes are Egli: Por particulars apply on the. prepiises ' or to John Rankin, Se ortb. 2584 -ti of the best clay land in Illiefill109, 6 acres of buss; the rest in 'a high state of cultivatfan i 5 • miles from Seaforthr-, 2 miles from Con- stance,- 1'4 miles from school. There' are in the premixes, a good e' ven roomed house, large bank barn 64x76;•= fill -Page wire fences and well underdrained. There are forty acres ploughed, 6 acre: bush -and the balance seed- ed down.. There are two big springs, one piped to barnyard and in the other a dam with a hydraulic ram .pumping the water to the battle and to the barn. As the spring is to ti}e orchard and near the house and line fence, there is no waste land. There is a graded and gravelled lana from the road to thebuildings, Apply to MRS, SAMUEL y� tORRANtnE, Seaforth. 2627-t2 • 1 own cars." No Such ",fbitiz. "Andwe can sell you this car on easy 'payments," • said the agent, pleasant.y. "My friend," replied the prospect, "Ile expression 'easy pay- ments' belongs to the same category that Other• well known db, '7ionnil'ese dem .isirv'." - AUGUST 8, 1919ireT HOW ANOTHER PRINCE VISITED AMERICA When the Prince of Wales visits the United States next month he will be the, guest of President Wilson in Washington. In New York he will remain aboard the British warship, leaving it for whatever social func- tions he attends. It had been report- ed that he would be the guest os rile Vanderbilts or the Goelets, and the decision to only stay at the White House will put an end to a fierce social rivalry that has been going on since his visit was first announced. Probably Edward Albert will snend only a few days iii the United States, whereas his father, Albert Edward, was there for a month, and in that time was able to -See much of the country, and meet many of the cele- brities. The former Prince of Wales stood on American soil for the first time on September 17th, 1860, at Niagara Falls, wishing to get his last view of them from the American side, but his official visit began three days later when he landed in Detroit. So densely were the streets peeked that the Prince, or Baron Renfrew, as he called himself for the visit., had to' enter his hotel by a side deor; and one spectator remarked that there could have been no greater curiosity Manifested if the distinguished visitor had been George Washington come to life again, From Detroit, the royal party went ' to Chicago, where some . 50,000 citi- zens turned out to do the Prince honor, and =where 'about the same number sought to entertain him. So exhausted was the young; man by the hospitality. ,of the Chicago -folks . that on the train for. St Louis he had a temporary breakdown. A stop was made accordingly at Dwight's Station, -where there was good -scoot- and in the course of a short may. the Prince bagged a number of qui and rabbits. His host as Mr. Spencer, said of the guests, "The party dress roughly and walk about the village-,, smoking pipes in the most demo- cratic style." An unpleasant i'nci- -dent occ for one d enter :a =.,. appe,axed' a I f you, Nei,{ casein!' I hive .been ;a'tenant-of. yours t and have ,e -Worn that you -shall not set- footnlin y land.'' So the jour- ney, was •tesurieed in such, -.p, °way as to avoid, 'aiching . the property of this former Englishman. F/6171- St. Louis the J --Prince. went to Cin'einnati and attended p great balle but it is recorded that :the thrifty . or forgetful Cincinnatians having neg- lected to provide a fsuppexathe rq,yal visitor left at 12.36. On.,: this oc- casion, the' Prince havin 'announced his . desi cee'to have the e?cond dance with gigs .Groesbeck e "L a beautiful young lady' `who hade,gone to the ball devoid of any jewels. her mother re- moved her own jewgla and asked her daughter. to ..eat them. The yoang lady 'd:ecl.sArd. however, and . danced with •the4-ince arrayed yed onlll - in her own bet and her severely simple attire. „.`frond Cincinnati the Prince went -Iv way of Pittsburg and Har- eii urs to Washington, taking up his r ;deice at the White House, where he remained for five days. He visit- ed the tomb of Washington at Maunt Vernon, and many an editorial art- icle was written on the text of the young , heir to the British Crown standing bareheaded at the foot of the coin of the man who had wrested the thirteen colonies;: from the Empire he was one day to reign over. .- After he left Washington, Presi- dent Buchanan wrote to Queen Vic- toria: "In our domestic circle he has won all hearts. His free and ingenious intercourse with - myself evinces both a kind heart and a good understanding.'' From Wash-' ington the Prince went to Baltimore, then to Philadelphia, where he heard Adelina Patti sing, and was so de- lightede that he asked - that she be presented to him, and then on to New York. He was met by Mayor Wood, and drove to his quarters in the Fifth Avenue e Hotel, through a throng of half a million people. Here again there were rnagn.ificencent balls and receptions arranged .for him, and probably he never had a busier week in his life, what with listening -to addresses, planting • trees, visiting various institutions • and - seeing points -of historic inter- est, . The .great ball held at the Academy of Music' was the greatest social function in the history of New York society, and there were 3,000 invitations: So great was- the crush that the flooring gave way, and twb people were slightly hurt. - A rather untoward incident oc- d at Dwight's Station, the party . were about to house, ,w d said, Best Goods Self Service Lowest Prices . •Q°J, DaintiesforSund aintieslp,t5unday Dinner - Jello (R spberry, Strawberry)I2c Olives (Muffed) 18c Olives (Ciubhouse) 2Oc Olives (Manzanilla) .. 25c Oranges , 50c and 70c Sardine . . . 1Oc Argo corn starch s llc To finish a perfect meal, a cup of our Tea, green, black; or rnixed, bfib; The pickling season is now on. Vinegar (whit! wine) 40c. Vinega(r (cider) 40c Try us for pricesl, and quality in spices, peppers, etc. 11, We expect a car of Four and Feed Take yours off the car. Feed is likely = to be scarce [and Oar. We still have some e - "Sampson" left at the old price Your Notes are ready at the Dominion Bank Call and get them, please. United Far D;tstrll Keep your atce th15 bud Co-�perative Co. LIMITED - PHONE 117 cruse No. 1., Seaforth and watch us grow. 2- We now have. No. ° Cobourg AiMI Q -At' bth Loi t:E • b: 1' eurred when the Prince was driving through Madison. Square a day or so later., • An Englishman, named Ed- ward Moncane rushed to the side of the royal carriage and shouted: "Who ,are you? I can whip you, anyway. You will never be King of England if you live a hundred 3 the owner i ears." He later explained to a magistrate that he had come over from a steamboat on. which he worked `tto see what sort of boy the Americans were making fools of themselves over." Again, when the Prince was leaving New York for A Ibanv, an Irishman yelled, "All? 'sure an' he's toile an' may he never cane back!" an insult that so en- raged a gentleman named Morrow, who Was standing nearby that he "knocked him for a good." Passing n through Albany, the Prince of Wales' reached Boston, where he rnet Long- fellow. Holmes, Emerson and other famous Americans. At Bunker Hill he exchanged autographs with Ralph Farnham, sole survivor of the famous battle, and who remarked that "He I wished to show the boy that he bore rio anger for old times." The party left Portland on the homeward voyage but encountered such rough weather that the hero was several days over- due before she male port, causing great anxiety in England, and intensi- fying the enthusiasm with which the beloved Prince was welcomed back. Mar1ait Spedfic Remwec 1!jali $fones: 1111 24 Hours • THE Never -Failing Reunify for Appendicifjs Indigestion, Stomach Disorders, Appendicitis and Kidney Stones are often caused by Gall Stones, aid mislead people until those bad attacks of G a:1 Stone Colic • appear. Not one in ten. Gail Stone Sufferers knows what is the trouble. Mariatt's Specific will cure withc- :: 1, :si or oper- ation, Far sale at all druggists. Recommended. by E. Umbach Druggist, SeaLrth, Ont mARLATr eat) 58t ONTARIO ST, T0'10)1114 ONT. r Lir Baled air- tight and • impurity -proof, in„ the wax - wrapped, safety Packages. - Be sure to at WRIGLEyS i it because Iss n_ P_ re in quality. Made in Canada The Elavour Last H1� (Too L Notes. --1 next muni Carter's. good atten spent a fe Mary's fri Campbell Lucknow f Blyth, sPen: Lyon.. -•-M1 spent last W- Brigha Star City, this week. -1 week with - Young is a her sister, of Ingerso''I Geddes. 1 EE? CHI D1 Every mi hot' suinnrte children. • hoes, dysE troubles ar often ii after only mother vs- b( lets in the casional us stomach ar trouble eon' ally does -4 baby safely by medicine cents a bol Medicine C MOl s. By pleadi seecond deg> life imp Areber.Gilla to be rung horrible cif r against her: - , �R:.fin Art the evidenc Put out of a score or r and with a as animate vii iers, the seventeeth victims wei •and friend orf Ott Ol.d and her ob pence of o -me Corin., as G•il1i��.t's named Are mai-rie�d a passed aw eircumsta1 J suspicia suppoed t band sand ttin of his` Mrs. Gil on the cola take a cert: guarante far- the pi es money viw and -receive the tient whose life deed. if for give o entering tl Gilligan W and. it is not in the On, the otl i11a.few that mach age mindk estabiishm ceding her The State: in a suni however, esc, the 431,..÷.3 fts Ho rtford pa.tients.. ted tlia lost only of the o ate, q,e t o It a der, for no pantie ly to lira; petted i rete onl, heti, fo tivc lild ti tr...sting a.iici then tart' into' When. th did on in Winds to tjie f a lg': curiivarl.at,e was arse.. -cut terribidele Among i'bund, - s Gilligan, $500 he into the Gilligan. inde .an rove