HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-10-03, Page 2•r
2
HE HURON EXPOSITOR
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
Part of Plant of Fro.t Wire Fence Co,, Hamilton. 22.000 sq. ft. of Paraid on these buildings
PAROID
ROOFING
Shingles are scarce, high in priceand uncertain of de-
livery;. Consider the genuine "Neponset. Paroid. " It is
usedn the largest factories and most expensive buildings.
We have a full stock in three weights. �«a` ;}ate
Canadian Brand s .. 2 75 per square
L ignt Neponset Parotid .3.5o per .squire
Heavy " cc ...... ...4.25 per square
Slate Coated, heavy ...:. ........ 4.5o per square
Neponset heavy twin Shingles 9,25 per square
'HAMM E R
Galvanized
Chaff Baskets,
heavy corru-
gated sides,
•double bottom,
rope handl,
1 bus. basket
*2.00 -
2 bushel basket $2.5o
LAWN
RAKES
for gathering leaves, will not
tear up grass, and extra wide,
85c
Extra Special
Steel, rrmmense
value, 75C.
Nickle
plated, steel
hammer, with
i mproved
handle I.2
Tack Ham -
mers ioc.
CARVING SEz S
and Butcher. Knives.
The Fall killing is
near, be prepared
with Sheffield knives
ISEAFORTH, Friday, Oct. 3, 1919.
at old prices,
75C
Carving pairs 2.00
50C t0
G. A. dills, Seafort
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL GIRLS! WHITEN YOURISKLN
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. WITH LEMON JUICE
HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS.
1. Connolly, Goderich, President
les, Evans, Beechwood, Vice -Presided
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
N
AGF.l�iTS
A1ex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar -
math, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
William R,inn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
ninnewies, Brodhagen; J ames Evan
Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
R. E No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No, 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
Goorge McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. It. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
1,4.55 a. m. - For Clinton, Goderick,
Wingham and Kincardine.
111,43 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine. Gocierich.
11.08 p. m. - For Clinton,
4.86 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
born and points east.
3.16 p.m. -- For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and points east.
,hONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South a.m. p.m
Wingharn, depart 6.35 3.20
Selgrave 6.50 3.36
Myth 7.04 8.48
Londesboro 7.13 8.56
Clinton, 7.334.15
Brucefield 8.08 r 4.33
Lippen . 8.16 4.41
Swan 8.25 4.48
Bxeter ........... 8.40 6.01
Centralia 8.57 5.13
Going North s.m. p.m.
London, arrive 10.05 6.15
London, depart 8.30 4.40
Centralia 9 85 5.45
Exeter 9.47 5.57
Henan 9.69 8.09_
Kippen ....,.rias10.01 6.16
Erucefield ..... , 10.14' 6.24
Clinton 10.30 6.40
Londesboro 11.28 6.57
Blyth .... . ....... . 11.87 7.05
Belgrave, , 11.60 . 17.18
Wingham, arrie, . , 12.05 7.40
Make a'beauty lotion for a few cents to
remove .;tan, freckles, sallowness.
FROM AN OLD McKILLOP
CORRESPONDENT..
Toronto, Sept. 20t1i, 1919.
Dear Expositor: -The outstanding
f r atures of events in Toronto this last
onth , have been the visit of the
rince of Wales, the visit of General
urrie who commanded the Canadian
al my in the war, and the. National
xhibition. In regard to the Prince,
t e reader can picture a you man
f twenty-five . -who does not look a
ay over twenty, with. light brown or
air hair, blue eyes and a somewhat
eak mouth, and a smilewhich did
i of wear or wash off when in To-
i,onto. No doubt, he would be a
(•entle and pleasant companion in a
rawing room or any other orderly
athering, but as a military coni-
nander, to use the language of the
treet, "nothing doing." Fortunately
e -is quite;.different from his relative,
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.
OTHER TABLETS NOT
ASPIRIN AT ALL
Only Tablets with -"Bayer Cross'
are Genuine Aspirin
If you don't see the "Bayer-Cross'r
on the tablets, you are not getting
Aspirin -only an acid imitation.
Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin's
are now made in e,anada by a Canadian!
Company. No German -interest what-
ever, all rights being, purchased from the
United States Government.
1 During the war, acid imitations werei
sold ae, Aspirin in pill boxes and various
other containers: The "Bayer 'Cross"
your only way of knowing that you are
getting genuine Aspirin, proved safe by,
millions for Ileadache, Neuralgia, Colds;
Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and foe
Pain generally. •
Bandy tin boxes of > 12 tablets-alsd
larger -Sized `Bayer" packages can 136
had at drug stores.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registers •
in Canada). of -Bayer Manufacture o
Monoaceticacidcster of Salicylicacid..
the Kaiser. At any rate everything
possible wasone to show him honor.
and respect- teen here. Gen. Currie
kvhen here, stayed. 'at Casa Loma, the
home of Sir Henry I'ejlat. Sir Henry
isf a military man and it has been said
that birds of a feather flock together.
The Currie family, of which the Gen-
e'al is an honored member, belong to
ikliddlesex County, and, he claims to
be of Irish and Scottish ancestry, and
from the salary which has been now
set apart for him it• can he `safely
said that he will nev6r •come to want-.
We hope he will live long to enjoy
his honors and wealth.
The Exhibition was the same 'old
thing with • some added attractions.
The midway attractions were nearly
all from Coney Island, N. Y, and
were more interesting than usual. The
attendance for the thirteen days was
over ,1,200,000. Between admissions -
and rent •of booths. etc., the manage-
ment raked in a mighty big sum of
money. Those citizens who had rooms
to let entered into a conspiracy • to
charge a dollar a night for each
visitor, but it partly fell through.
While some visitors paid their dollar,
others had very good beds for half
that-- sum.
my next letter I will refer to the
referencluip and soldier's gratuities as
these things appear here. -3. J. I.
BASIS OF EI:I'R_ESSION
"ONCE. IN A BLUE MOON"
The expression "once in a blue
moon," meaning that occurrences are
so widely separated by time as to al-
most never recur, -is not merely. a
figure of speech.. It has a basis of
astronomical fact. The phenomenon
has been twice observed in both Italy
and Austria and once in England.
There is no available reeotd of it hav-
ing been noticed in America.
A blue sun has been recorded only
once., That was in August, 1883, in
Jaya. A day or two before there
was a very. violent eruption of a large
volcano about one hundred • 'nines
from Batavia. The eruption ended
with an explosion in which a range
of mountains were destroyed, a vast
cavity being left in Its place, more
than one thotisand feet deep ..at one
point. Billions of tons of rock, mud
and dust were thrown high in the air
and the sun was - obscure:I over a
large area. At Batavia the darkness
became so _deep that street lamps
had to be lighted in the middle of
the forenoon. That condition pre-
vailed until tower:I sunset. The vol-
canic cloud began 'to clear away, leav-
ing the sun. visible. Instead, however,
of it being red, as it usually is when
viewed through a smoke cloud, it ap-
peared as a magnificent deep blue disk,
remaining that color until it .sank be-
low the horizon. The phenomenon was
seen by everyone within thirty or
forty degrees of the equator. -Kansas
City Star.
IF ► l R Regis, Relresbes, Soothes;
"' Heals --Keep your Eyes
a ' Strong and Healthy, If
. , ea t they Tire, Smart, Itch, or
�':i.R ' Burn, if Sore, Irritated,
Inflamed or Granulated,
use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult.
At all Druggists in Canada. Write for Free
Eye Book. Murine Company. Chicago, U. S. A.
in cooking,
Miss Anne Martin is -seeking the-
Republican
heRepublican nomination for United
States senator from Nevada.
1
In t e recent primary elections held
iii iparticipated ,
in. Atlanta Ga, women1 p
for the first time.
Women workers in France now av-
erage about two dollars a day while
before the war they were earning
less than forty .cents a day.
. Miss Elsie V. Mann, a pretty sten-
ographer, has the honor of being '
president of the newly formed Nation-
al Leather efinpany, a $30,000,000 cor-
poration.
In all the seventeen years she has a
•
been president of the state board in
Pretty Prairie, Kansas, Mrs. Elizabeth 1
Demarest has never had a• loss or i
employed a lawyer.
'Mas. Curie, the co -discover of rad- i
ium. has been elected a professor of
radiology a Warsaw university.
Smoking is a popular habit among
the women in Siberia.
Practically all the crops in Serbia '
this year have been harvested by wo-
men.
In Idaho, wee en hold thirty-five
of the forty-one school superintend-
encies, and 21 counties have women
treasurers. ,
• Women are forbidden to enter the
Asiatic town of Maiwatchi, ori the
borders of Russia.
Queen Elizabeth, of Belgium, is 43
years of age and is one of the most
talented of royal women.
Women in England and France have
taken up book binding in a serious
manner.
The efficient police _work done by
women in England during the war, has
been the means of many of them be-
ing retained in their jobs.
There are in'r women than men
doing fine professional work in book-
binding, illuminating, etc.
• Florence Finch Kelly, after passing
through the door of the Kansas uni-
versity, began newspaper work: in To-
peka, from there to Chicago; and from
there to New York City, where -she
l found _the- place and work she: likes
best as book review editor of one of
the city's largest and most influential
newspapers.
Financier, philanthropist, business
woman, club woman, artist, ship own-
er, .oil magnate and farmer is Mrs. C.
P. Adams, of Dallas, TeX., who has
achieved more financial and business
success than perhaps any other one
woman in America.
Women in the countries sending del-
egates to the international labor con-
ference to be held in Washington,
D. C. next month, are endeavoring to
have one of the governmental appoin-
tees chosen from the ranks of women.
Each governmern may name two rep-
resentatives, in addition to the one
accredited to capital and one to labor.
One of the cleverest feminine opera--
tors
pera=tors iraWall:street is Miss Helen Hos-
ted, -who fotsook the classroom for the
stock market and • in , very short time
made a success of it. She now man-
ages the woman's department of one
of New York's largest brokerage
houses.
Miss Mary Potter of New York, pio-;
neer woman - lawyer and suffragist.
urges the women voters of America
to interest themselves in the whole
problem of the high cost of living.
Germany's first woman mayor is
Frau Schuchardt, the wife of a sa-
loon -keeper, who has just been elect-
ed to the executive chair in Stein-
berg.
The women of Turkey now defy tra-
ditions and go about the streets with
their faces uncovered and walk with
men,
-Ida Rubinstein, a Russian dancer,
has the distinction of being the first
woman to fly over the Alps. She re-
cently made the trip from Venice to
Paris in an aeroplane piloted by an
Italian.
Southern women who raise poultry
and learning through clubs organized
by the department of agriculture and
the state colleges to market their
products co-operatively a d in 1918
disposed of more th • if a million
eggs. through this ethod.
It is expected that over 5,000 woe
men physicians of the United, States
will be in attendance at the interna-
tional conference of women physicians
to- be held next month in New York
city.
One of the reasons attributed to the
extraordinary increase in the con-
sumption of cigarettes is the increase
of smoking among women, a fad that
appears to be gaining more and more
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Through the death of -her husband
Major Herbert Wilson, Lady Sarah
Wilson 'becomes the wealthiest peer-
ess in England.
London tramgirls have been de-
moboliced to make room for the glen
who have returnedt from khaki to
civilian life.
The weekly minimum wage for do-
mestic servants in Oregon is $11.61.
Mrs. Flora W. Hoffman•, who start -
ted in business in Kansas City as own-
er of a bay shop, is now director of
sales policy for a large New York
firm at a salary of $'15,00Q a year.
The Pennsylvania railroad employ-
ed women in fifty=nine occupations in
July of this year.
Fifty thousand women 'were placed
in war emergency jobs in Philadel-
phia and vicinity during the period
of the war.
It is claimed that women clubs with
equal training do the same work as
men and just as efficiently.
When a Siberian bride enters- her
husband's home for the first time• -she
must be prepared to show her skill
1(/
Baking Always In Sight
TITE clear glass door is only one of the
modern features of this dependable
range. Its baking qualities you know.
The . cooking top will take the boiler either
across or lengthwise, making it easy .to cook
the regular dinner on wash -day:
Grates work smoothly. Hot water reservoir is enamel,
and may removed for cleaning. A dependable ther-
mometer takes all guess -work out of baking. No other
range will quite satisfy you once you see the Pandora.
McQaIys Pandora
Sold by Henry Edge
•
OCTOf ER 3, 1919
1
Don't let the Sugar scatcity alarm you when you
can buy
Pure Honey
Marmalade, 4 lb.
Marmalade, 2 lb.
Marmalade, 1 lb.
Raspberry jam, 4? lb.
Strawberry jam, 4 lb.
Peach jam, 411?s.1
Plum. jam, 4 lbs. j
Best Goods
Self
Service
Lowest Prices
•
N
The fall is an ideal time- to day 'painting, Call and
see our stock of Paints t rock bottom prices. The
price will surprise you 4nd the quality is guaranteed.
Raw Linse d Oil also in stock.
Lubricating Oils
Polarine, finest quality, per at.
Cup Grease (10 lb. ►ail) _ - -
Machine Oil (castor) per gal.
85c
$2.75
45c
-
ONO
•
BIM
AIN
OWN MAW
-
25c
98c
50c
30c
115
1.16
90c
90c
The stimulating and tiourishing drink in cool weather
risCocoa -
Fry's (large)
Cowan's (large)
Cowan's (small)
-
28c
28c
15c
nited Farmers Co-operative Co.
PHONE 117LIMITED
every day.
Miss Emily Fornum, chief of a di-
vision in the department of commerce,
tivill have the job of supervising the
correspondence of the 70,000 census
takers engaged next year to Count
Uncle Sam's folk.
Japan has over 130,000 spinning mill
operators, of which over 100,000 are
women and about 5,00 being girls
under fourteen years old.
Two nineteen year old girls are
walking from Dallas, Tex., to New..
York for a forfeit of $1,000.
Night work for women is forbidden
in Italy. The women in that country
also are included in the system of
state insurance for accident and death
and enjoy the right to their own
earnings and to the disposal of their
own property.
Miss Chizu Taskamori, a teacher in
the Hirashima School for Girls, in
Tokio, Japan, is now in this country
for the purpose of learning American
ways for cooking, which she will teach
to her pupils on her return to Japan.
It is estimated that the number of
women in the United States who do
their own housewotk is over 19,000,-
000.
Parker's Will Do It
By cleaning or dyeing. -restore any - articles
to their former appearance and return
them to you, good as new.
Send anything from household draperies
down to the finest of delicate' fabrics. We
pay postage or express charges one way.
When you think of
Cleaning or. . yeing
Think of Parker's
_Parcels may be sent Post or Ex-
press. We pay carriage one way
on all orders.
Advice upon Cleaning or Dyeing
any article will be promptly giv-
en upon request. -
Parker's Dye Works
Cleaners and Dyers Limited
791 Yonge St., Toronto
4
gc a package
before the war
cc a package
durLn the war
�c a package
NOW
THE FLAVOUR LASTS
50 DOES THE PRICE!
•
R. M. 3O1
siEssimem
ISE lit
DS
(Too L
Notes. -Qi
2ttended BI;
Rev. M.tilt
-the erv1C'e
here last Su
lar. ,a:iyee
-Miss D. 131
land frienl-
insafewW':
Braitwaite "
last week
Lethbridge,
E. Mani lel
Patterson, of
here on Sure
chased the lig
will move t
-Mrs. '1.'::_,
Riley's term
Br ,haei sly
friends.
BABY'S O\
Mothers,
child is fisc;'.
well at
deal; is ccs
bowels and
right, give la
-they have :
thousands 01
the Tablets
son's Sidin'
used Baby's
found thein
ones and
then." The,
thorough la
teed to cont
that is why
never harm.
cine dealers
box from Th
Co:, Brock -ell
THE REF
The issue
paign is elea
Liberty Le•
which is leas
toration of t
the slogan.
all four clue
erendum C'n
the rause r;
on its bann
'NOT 7 17
It should 1
Liberty Lead;
of whom are
citizens, hies
and eommer
'They assert
temperance,
see the bar
the old days
stand for 1e'
regard as
It is not n'
sincerity of
be taken fo
present the
the anti -prof
which they c
as the "irre
liquor party
of the nn.r°e
rnands shout
They .ask.
we should ,
of the arta
Aet has beet.
province.
pointed out
saving. to the
less have the
in the critic
have still t.
tion there h'
duction in
meets for al
20,:337 in
1918; whil
enness w hi
were only
one knows
what an ad
ing the sa
-anti decer15
ner" in toe
of theI: past
the streets
The Liber
beneficent
make way
that in the
for the. sale
but :only- fo
stronger liq
ernment rii i=
aria Tenip
ed to provi
as the later
dum ballot
amendment
League, T
people of ll
recognize
have it, an
It is desi
no misun_d
the adverts
League, t.
referendum
antoxicatir
why are th
not satisfies
obtainable
The fact is
zn€ire alcoh
elating an
sufficient
characterisw`
lier ,;
6