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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-09-05, Page 10• • TfIE 7, -. s Barn- Supplies i THE IJR9N EXPOSITOR ore figs From Our Hens! 'Spray Crepnoid, in the hen house to get rid of rtes. More eggs will be the' result. Very po' terfu1-- very low in cost. Also ideal as a cow spray. Half Gallon 90c Hangers for doors, latches, hoots and staples,1 hinges are itl ib►g derhand for the fall. l.oc k over these goods&prices i Hangers, per pair 1.85. ,I rack for same with nails,- per ails,per ft........ I2c- Square trolley hangers, •per pair..:....._.. ....$2. oo Track for same, per tt....,.2,St Latches, all steel, heavy....soc • Wash Tubs and Wringers Wash Tubs, galvanized, extra -heavy in weight, with easy handles. Price.......,.. $1.65 $1.75 $1.95 Wringers-. are steadily advancing in price. Prepare for the heavy clothes in the fall. Special Wringer... ....$5.50 • Our three coat blue and _white g aniteware stands the acids of pickling and the extreme heat equally well. Buy the best for satisfaction, a A. dills; Seaforth THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. BEAD OFFICE _SEAFOR.TH, ONT. OFFICER. J. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans.: Beechwood, Vice-Prosideri T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy: Treas. AGENTS _ 1 Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. $inclosey, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;' J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar -f moth, Brodhagen. ii ,GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN - • DIRECTORS illisaoa Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John; e, , nnewies, Brodhagef; Janes Evans; arechwood; M. MeEwen, Clinton; Jas. (: sunny, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, E: No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; •eorge McCartney, No. 3, Seaf oi4th. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: • 1L55- a. m. - For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. - #.J3 p• m. - For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine. Goderich. 11,08p. m. - For Clinton, 8.36 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 3,18 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South a.m. p.m. lingham, depart ... , 6.35 3.20 Seagrave . ..-•. • •6.50 3.36 Myth 7.04 3.48 Londesboro 7.13 3.56 Clinton, 7.33 4.15 Brueefield - • 8.08 4.33 Kippen 8.16 4.41 Hensall - 8.25 4.48 Exeter 8.40 5.01 Centralia 8.57 5.13 .. Going North a,m. London, arrive 10.05 London, depart 8.30 Centralia ..............9.35 Exeter 9.47 Hensel]. 9.59 Kippen ........ 10.06 ilrucefield 10.14 Clinton 10.30 Londesboro - 11.28 Blyth 11.37 Belgrave 11.50 Wingham, arrive 12.05 p.m. 5.15 4.40. 6.45 6.09 6.16 6.24 6.40 6.57 7.05 7.18 7.40 C. P. R. TIME TABL2 GUELPH , & G0DERICII BRANCH. TO - TRORONTO - a.m. 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 . 6.10 Guelph, arrive ........9.30 - 0.80 Walton 12.03 9,04 Blyth 12.16 9.18 Auburn ... 12.28 9.80 Goderich ... 12.' 9.55 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line f,,r Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in- termediate points AMATEURS We ;develop films and un- ish prints for amateurs in a dull, glossy or phero-' type\,f.nish. Bring your work to pro- fessionals. O. F. BUCK: r geocirt1i . Oat: eseessaseeeessesesssieesse 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 lesions 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 Iotion daily into the face, reek, arms and halide 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 surprige you. GIRLS! LEMON JUICE *IS A SKIN WHITENER How to make a creamy beauty lotioi for a few cents., The 'juice of two fre:n lemons straineci into a bottle containing three ounces o; orchard wIiite makes a whole quarter pint of the most 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 'voma>.i knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as frec?des, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. 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 fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face; 'neck, arms and hands. LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this beauty lotion oheaply for you -r face, neck, arms and hands. At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold ci•ea-un one can prepare a full quar- ter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of, two fresh lem- ons into a bottle contains g three ounces ' of orchard white. Care hould be taken to strain the juice thyro gh a fine cloth se no lemon pulp gets ire then this lo- tion will keep fresh for months. Ferry woman knows that lemon 'juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skM softener whitener and beautifier. 4, Just try at! 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. fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. AT YOUR SERVICE B. .,13.RICO-INS BOX 127, CLINTON i'hone 100 (formerly of Brucefield) -Agent for - The Huron & Erie Mortgage Corporation and the Canada Trust Company. Commissioner H.L. of d., Covey_ ances, Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public. Wednesday each week at Braedeld SE4FORTH, Friday , Sept, 5t Beautiful Love -Story of How Carve . Man Showed His farad Devotion for His Mate, 1.919 Glob, the cave man,.hurried, home • a througr The early dawn. Slung irons ,,;• his .shoulder 'were three large stones, and on his face was an anxious grin; WHAT THE. WORLD WAR COST At the door of the cave stood Bia, the }. cave woman, a scowl of wrath in her Ability to Meet It Consists in Court. try's face, anda large, knotty club. in her try's Productive :Pewee Exercised 1 hand'_ to the Limit. Grub gulped when . he saw her, and hastily set the etonee on the ;gonad. The altimate factor in war finance Grinning- sheepishly, he approached las not the dollar, but' w and struck her affectionately on the the dollar sine of the jaw, following the blow can buy --at the moment when it IS with a tug at her black hair. But necessary to use It /the. economic these blandishments were all lost on burden of a war is not bariale by eaPi- Bin, the starry -hearted, who fixed him tal, that is, thee stored ap savings in- vested In railroads, factories and i In the eye with the largest knot on - banks, but by the productive power of the club: • the country, engaged in unproductive "Rave a heart;, sweetie" --or wordea t consumption. For war is, waste, ob- to that effect -begged Grub serves the April La Revista. del M. . Ata the sound of his voice, . Bia broke do, _into prehistoric suuffie and removed ` . When estimating the financial abil- the club from her mate's eye. sty of a nation to make war a consid- "Where have you been?" she sniffed.-eration of her wealth does not tell the ' "I'll bet I know. I'll bet you've been story, just as a consideration of popu- over with those nasty, lowdown tree lation • which would give Russia the dwellers rolling bones till all hours, first place, -would be altogether false. with your wife and children waiting It is the ability a nation has to master ' for you and thinking you bad been and mobilize her dollars and send the tato the trenches and make them fight, that reveals her financial power as a military 'nation. Germany, with her long preparation, her autocratic goverment machinery, was able to conscript all production for war pur- poses, and mass her economictrength almost as speedily as she ma; sed her fighting men. Great Britain and the"United States, not being versed in the science of war did not understand this factor. The economic 'resources of these countries were not mobilized and massed 'all at once, but each government was forced to take over more and more of thesma- chinery of production as war needs became increasingly great. These two countries, with bulldog, but mistaken, determination, clung to the •slogan, "Business as usual," as long as it was possible to do so, The businessmen of those countries believed that so long as there was plenty of money in •circa lation every one would be able to turn to, buy government bonds and, thuya assist in the business of war: But this fallacy is akin to the common one of mistaking dollars for wealth. The coot of the war, as nearly as it can be sotimated in money, Shows the national debt which oath belligerent now carries ranges - from 4.6 per cent of the" national wealth (in Japan) to 80 per cent of the national wealth -(in Hungary). 'How these staggering lia- bilities are ;to be met is the problem for the festive; but the United States, with a debt amounting to 6 per cent' of her national wealth of $250,000,000,- 000, is fir the favored position undoubt- edly, facing unprecedented possibilities in eredit expansion. ' Threw but Seven, The quartermaster's department in Hoboken is .anything but( a place of joy. It _is where the effects of many thousands 'of -'doughboys who "went West" are sent for distribution.- Each pitiful package or bundle or box is checked . up and sent to the nearest relative. Occasionally, however, the solemnity of the situation as relieved by the laughter of some returned hero who comes to the depot to nripouinee that he is not dead .and to claim his precious belongings. The other day a bulgy negro appeared, wearing three gold chevrons and a wound stripe, laughing heartily at the thought of him being reported dead. As if' any old Hun could kill him ! He told a tale of terrible fighting` and suffering, all the time smiling cheerfully, and al- lowing as how he hoped his personal effects would be located. A small package, with his name on it, was at last fouard and opened for final check- ing. It Contained a wad of money and the tools which had helped to enrich the dark man -a pair of dice. There was much laughter, hearty handshakes and back slapping, when the soldier was handed the money and the African golf outfit, which only threw seven. - New York Sun. Bedouin Bards. The descriptive power and fidelity: of Arabic poetry in setting fortis both the life of the people and the scenery of the clime are remarkable. It con- jures up visions of tawny brows,. flow- ing beards, soft, eyes, picturesque tur- bans, pawing - chargers,, and patient dromedaries. We seem to be there. It is the land of the date tree and the .fountain,the ostrich and the gi- raffe, the tent and the caravan. It Is the home of the simoon and the mi- rage. It is the world of the desert and the stars. Hospitality waves her torch through the night to win the [wanderer to be a guest. The very picture, embodiment, breath, blaze, of all this is in the lyrics of the Bedouin bards. The richness ,of their language, and something of the character of the people who use it, are shown in the fact that it has 80 names for honey, 500 for the lion, and a thousand for the sword I -William Russell Alger. !Take No.. Chances. The following interesting bit of iii - formation is from Safety Engineering: "Not every one understands how inflammable and explosive chlorate of ttotash is. One man learned in a peculiar manner. He was - carrying chlorate of potash tablets in a sivall bottle in his coat pocket; the cork. presumably became loosened and fell out. Entering a street car, he knocked the ashes from his pipe, as he sup- posed, and put it in his pock"et. In a few moments there were spurts of blue flame, and the tablets 'went off.' For a time the man was in danger , of being mistaken for an enemy alien,, carrying bombs. The mystery of the • explosion was solved liy finding small: •particles of glass- wedged in the cloth- ing around ,where the'bottie had been. Other than the shock to his own semis ;aid those of the passenger% the oaeyr damage was to his eillihaiv Welt„ugce burned ba ."_ run over by a glacier, and the best ichthyosaurus stew you ever saw go - leg to waste. 0! ' Boo ! Hoo 1" Breaking into loud, paleolithic sobs, Bia once more brought the club to bear upon, her sproi1 e's pithecanthropic map. Glob was . grieved and her re- proaches made 'kiln feel guilty, so he knocked her down apologeticcaily , and confessed that she was right. He had been -rolling bones with Sweek, the tree dweller. - "Yes," howled Bia. "I know it. I knew you were rolling bones. A fine thing for a man with a family to gamble .away •all his good -shells- and stones and even skins, when the chil- dren have hardly a whole fig leaf to their names, and the meat is so low that unless you scare, up a dinosaur this very day we shall starve. Fine go- ings on for a. Maw with a family that needs to be saving his strength to go out 'and get meat for them .and fig leaves and skins to keep them warm!" Glub. w a's -repentant. -idle," he he said. "I know it, was wrong la gamble -very, very wrong -- hut see what I won from Sweek, the tree dweller. See the three hollow stones filled with dinosaur meat and Adam's apples. Wale ! What do you think of your Glnb now?" Bla, in the transports of her joy flung the club into the cave. and flung herself upon Glub's neck, choking - him violently. "My own Mills!" stie cried. "Come into the cave and have breakfast." Moral: There Is nothing new un- der the sun. -Detroit Free Press. E • Observed Father's Wish. Thackeray's daughter, Lady Ritchie, the widow of Sir Richmond Ritchie, died recently 'at the age of eighty-two. She - had endeared herself to a wide r,alalie by her delightful reminiscences of her father and of the other famous Victorians among'ham her early life was spent. - If ns a novelist elle achieved no popular success she *as incomparable In relating anecdotes of the sort that illuminate, about the many remarkable men and women whom she had known latimately. , It is much' to be regretted that, in obedience to Thackeray's dy- ing wisb, she was precluded from writing her father's "Life. Ritchie's "Thackeray" would have ranked with Lockhart's "Scott." Lady Ritchie's charming introductions to the biographical edition of "Thacke- ray'.' tantalize without satisfying his ;levotees. The reader wants more, --- Living Ate. R eco rd i rj g Tree Cx rowt h. Botanists of the Carnegie institu- tion keep an interesting record of the growth 9f treetrunkt, with their daily and seasonal - changes of shape, by means of a new apparatus called the "deedrograph,"; It has two forms, each using as a supporting belt a series of wooden blocks hinged to- gether and fastened around the tree. In one form o the instrument, plung- ers, supporting an encircling wire at their outer ends, touch the trunk at selected point:, and any movement, of a plunger eis transmitted Ty the wire to a recording 'Pen on t - revolv- ing cylinder. ° In the other form, a y oke carrying onr contacts surrounds the tree, the v.riation in the distances between the contacts caused by any change in theetree's, girth being indi- cated on the recording drum. Her Offering. The elder sister had married a gro- cer and was well pleased with her choice.. But not so her eighteen -year- old sister. She was taking great pains to impress the family with her ambitions for- a husband. "He'll have to be a college graduate, a successful man In some big business and every handsome,; she ended. ' The -elder sister smiled placidly. "And what charms," she asked bland- ly, "have you to offer for all these de- mands?" -Indianapolis .News. ' Pineapple Fiber for Cloth. • The pineapple, curious as it may ap- pear to people in the occident who know jt only as an. article of food, AS ta`eii in China for making cloth. At least, its - leaves are so used. The leaf fiber; after being extracted )by a simple process, is first made into thread. The thread is then spooled and run on bobbins. Old-fashioned na- tive looms next handle the thread, colt- yerting it into a serviceable cloth. fest: Goods SeEf Service Lo' • FLOUR We, handle two special brands ---Cream. of the west and Quaker ---ass your friends about them Shorts, Bran, Feed Flour and Oil -cake always in stock NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE Apparatus has been invented for manufactring sulphur dioxide gas on shipboard and pumping it to all parts of a vessel to extinguish fires or for fumigation. That substances as inflarnable as oily waste ared�`cetton. can be ijg ; tree by sparks developed from radio. tet i he Pickling Season is Now on Try its for pure pices at rock bottom prices Vinegar; cider, white wine, per gal, r 40c Farmers ' and others while in town next week for the Fair, call and see your store ---the first of its kind in Ontario. We - cans pply You with a fullline of fresh Groceries and to ha e. a shipment of specially priced Peaches next week. • We- now have hour stores in business, Seaforth,- Toronto, Cobourg, a d Warren. It's to you to g, up make the Seaforth t e leading one. United Fara ersCo-operative- Co. LIMITED PHONE 117._ - pstributing Warehouse No. 1,, Seaforth Kiep your store the bnsie t in town and watch us grow. '4e now have No 2 operating - in Cobourg - •egraphy has been demonstrated by a French scientist. Among recently designed beds that alsoserve other purposes are some ithat can be converted into double settees, porch swings, window seat or reclining- chairs, The tread of an English inventor's automobile tire contains numerous • small pieces of steel, -so inserted in the rubber that the latter does not touch the ground. A large amusement park company succeeded in eliminating glare from its concrete sidewalks by spraying them with a mixture of ereesote and a dark green mineral dye. -John Clegg has sold his fifty acre farm, lot 42, concession -7, East Wa- wanosh, to James Van Camp for the sum of $3,500. He will get possession on October 15th. Mr. Van Camp will also take a good share of Mr, Clegg's crop. z Mr. and Mrs, Clegg will pur- chase a home in one of the neighbor- ing villages and take at rest from active feria life. LIFT- camas OR CALLUSES OFF Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers 5c a package before the war r cc a package dur ng the war Cc a package NOW THE FL�VOUIR LASTS SO DOES ?H: PRICE! Don't - suffer! 'A tiny bottle of 'reezone coats but a few cents at any .rug store. Apply a few drops on the corns, calluses and ".hard akin" on tot- -torn of feet, then lift them off. s When Freezone removes corns from °the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, the slijn beneath is left pink acid healthy end' never " fore,ender" pr irritated. Every hot sum children. hoes, :dy troubles I often a after ons mother lets in, th easionai stomach trouble, ally does ; baby safe by medic' cents a b Medicine (To Breezes Windsor, preached d.ay -eveni oa, sery ur yea 'his fanri' arrived ho He is the who' have - -tagers their hon joy the 'This se.a. popular place bei tions bein 'been pure building s and 'fami1 day and h *Lodge fo Gregor h While wo "house, Mo 'his ankle. troit, pre Sunday Woods, G left for C the eolie attend B are to ha our dark so decide. Tuesday ' ;las been coroner procured. field Agr- these day, hibition t Wednesda tober 1s contests cert in t the dates Bayfield London ..F are Dianna nesday, S. Monday off quietly the sports: Tuesday, in charge Bervie, j of Kinear were at T BUILDS Truly: a: exhibit of Ways in t Canadian ron.to. T ing, and dome, eo draperies, to the w rangemen permits o view the The fri landscape` with the conneetin -signifiean exhibit of; a nation. Three s are Gump map of shown i tames d by the "tine gr the land bane? of No bet plan coul onstrate are now mane gent Northern continent gamated -further d system the Don vineial genious is to eT continen and Viet: the pr!s brought' prove telling tional R they re A rt' rustle beautiful which do