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The Huron Expositor, 1919-10-31, Page 21- tt; hart t .rte. '11° ' 4tu� .ems a>st ZOO 1e. 8. and 20 inch oven THE. HURON EXPOSITOR Moffat'sCanada1 Range continues to lead in point of sales, in its construction, and in the satisfaction it produces. It is absolutely guaranteed as a baker,, a fuel saver, and the heaviest .steel range ,in the m arke't. Complete with, high closet, hackle plated copper reservoir, polished top, thermoir.,eter, ... • .... I 00 00.' Moffat's City Queen, 18 in. oven, high closet and tank 64.00 Moffat's Bon Chet, high shelf and reservoir:.. ,. - .5 2.00 Full line of Heaters for Coal • • 14.00 to 25. 00 Coal Oil Heaters are the recognized fall fuel .savers -hey can be carried from one room to another, and- giv e no smoke and supply ample heat. New Perfection'heater in black $700 New Perfection heater, nickled 58.25 McClary's Graniteware on Sale ' We have purchasea a quantity of McClary's Graniteware in white and grey, slightly, dam- aged, which we are selling at greatly reduced prices. - Pails, kettles, cups, spoons, mugs, sauce pans, chamber pails, tea pots, at prices worth buying. - Bargains for the early. A. s Seaforth THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COY. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS L. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice=President T_ E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. • AGENTS Alex. Leiteh,,R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- muth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS . William Rinn, leo. 2, Seaforth; John- 1Sennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. • G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 10.55 a. m. - Fol. Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine.. 5.53 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham ands Kincardine. 11.03 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich. 6.36 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and 0 o points west, Belleville and Peter- horo and points east: 6.16 p. m. For Stratford, Toronto. Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South a.m. p.m. Londesboro 7.13 3«56 Clinton 7.33 4.15 Brucefild 8.08 4.33 Kippen 8.16 Hensel' 8.23 Exeter. 8.40 Centralia - 8.57 Wingham, depart6.35 Belgrave 6.50 Blyth 7.04 Going North - a.m.. p.m. London, arrive 10.55 6.15 London, depart 8.30 4.40 Centralia 9.35 5 45 Exeter 9.47 5.57 Hensel' 9.59 C.09 Kippen - 10.06 6.16 Brucefield - 10.14 6.24 Clinton 10.30 6.40 Londesboro 11.28 6.57 Blyth 11.37 7.05 Belgrave 11.50 7.18 Wingham, arrive 12.05 7.40 ' `CASCA RETh" WORK :SMILE YOU ST.FRp For Sick 'Headache, Sour Stomach Slyggish Liver arid Bowels=•`- Take Cascarets tonight. 1 Fiincect Tongue, Bad Taste, ndi� tion, Sallow Skin and ili.;era;;, e `Head- aches come from a torpid ver and clogged bowels, which cause yur stom- ach to become filled with - , . digesbeed. food, which sours and fermen s like gar- bage •in a swill. barrel. The a the first step to untold xniseryia--indiiestion; foul gases, bad :breath, yeow , _ -in, menta fears, everything that is F orrible anti o -night will give your constipated t wt s a thorough cleansing and straight • . you out las morning. They work .. _ e you sleep - a 10 -cent box from your druggist wil:' keep you feeling good for montles. . nauseating. A Clascarlet OTHER TABLETS NOT ASPIRIN AT ALL Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross" are Genuine Aspirin 4.41 If you don't see the "Bayer Cross'' 4,48 on the tablets, you are not gettiiig 5.01 Aspirin --only an acid imitation. - 5.1:3 : Genuine "Bayer Tablets , of 'Aspirin" 3.20 • are now mae in Canada by a Canadian 3.36 Company. No German interest what - 3 48 ever, all rights being purchased from the United States Government. During the war, acid imitations were sold as Aspirin ;n pill boxes and various other containers. The "Bayer Cross" is your only way of knowing that you are getting genuine Aspirin, proved safe by millions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets -also larger sized "Bayer" packages can - be had at drug stores. - Aspirin is the 'trade nark (registered in Canada) , of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Saiicy=licacid. Its ASSAM quality. gives it ° that rich flavor Sold only in sealed packages. • THE- HURON EXPOSITOR 14'reneh inventor's motor for slnaIl boats. Invented by Minnesota mann, a new loading machine handles hay or straw, • either loose or in bundles, equally well. SEAFORTII, Friday, Oct. 31st, 1.919 HOW THE TANKS CAME INTO BEING Secretary: for War Winston Church- ill; testifying - before the Royal Com- mission on Awards to Inventors, de- clared that it was irnpossible to say "that this - or that roan invented the tan k,. the caterpillar monster that broke through the enemy's wire eh- tangleinents, - and its progeny, the whippet (British) and the baby (French), that''chased retreating Ger- mans and poured machine. gun fire into them. But when iVlr. Churchill spoke of • eighteen types of land ships from which models were: constructed by the Government he did not mean that all of these 'designs .dealt with the tank .idea. The caterpillar trac- tor, a farm implement invented by "Uncle" Ben Holt, of California, was finally adopted as the motive power and basis .of the war tank. Colonel I. C. Welborn, Director of the Tank Corps of the United States Army made the following statement in December, 1918, says the New - York Times, about' the evolution of the machine which the British first used at Delville Wood on September 15th 1916, in the' Battle of the Somme. For several years prior to the world - war 'the authorities of the British Army had been endeavoring to create some machine highly de- structive in its fighting capacity, and at the same time affording maximum protection to human life The Halt Manufacturing • Company makers of the Holt farm tractor, were giving a. tractor delnonstra- tion in one of the large " • Ger roan cities about 1913. A representative of the British Government, who happened to see the' exhibit, con- ceived the idea that the caterpillar tractor might be employed in pr•e- pelling a huge steel fighting ma- chine which • would astable a moving fort to negotiate the steepest hills and to move • over difficult' ' gi.'ound iwpossible " of passage •by any - other vehicle. .This freer immediately brought the traPor to the 'attention of General (then Colonel) E. D. Swinton, of. the British Army, who also realized the effective use to /which the • caterpillar tractor could be -put. It. is a fair conclusion that the tank was born of the tactical prob- lems of the Great War, perhaps after the first Battle of the Marne, when trench fighting began and • open warfare was brought to a sud- den stop. Never before had defences bristled so densely with wire entan- • glements. •Open warfare, a. ! ording to Field Marshall Haig, was resinned in some degree in the Battle of the Somme, but it was not until Sir Julien Byng made his surprise at- tache on . the German line before Calnbrai in the autumn of 1917, that tanks were employed in force and without artillery preparation. Then the trench -system was broken up for a time. and there - was open warfare on a front of several miles. Open warfare had been planned' by both the French and British Gen- eral Staffs long before the Ameri- cans entered '.the ware but, there' was no practical test until the British were ready to... assemble a large number of tanks to lead the infan- try into. action. General Swinton may not have blazed the way for the adoption of ° the tank, but until now his claim has not been publicly disputed.. Any- one who has read his book of war stories, "The Green Curve," in which his inventive mind played lambently about scientific tactics, showing that battles :might be won by new and curious devices, cannot fail to be impressed by General Swinton's account of '• how the tank was projected into "the Great - War. He has . been' quoted aa saying ,that if the idea of- the tanks had been ac- cepted earlier in , the struggle, and they had been manufactured by thousands, victory • Would net have been long deferred.- But could the secret have been - kept during. the period of construction, transporta- tion ransports-tion and assembling? It was only by representing the machines as motor tanks to be used for supplying water to the troops in Egypt, and by guarding the factory field with cordons of sentries, that the'- true mission of the monsters was hidden. It was even necessary - to fool the mechanics who -Were building the superstructures. The time came _when holes had to be punched into the "tank" for guns to look through, and it was then ex- plained that snowplows were to be fitted into the apertures and that the completed motors were going to the Russian front. Accordingly, a Petrograd address . was stenciled on the side of each. "tank:" In the end the giant creepers. ready for their guns, were spirited' on board ships for France to make their debut at Delville Wood. A- Sweedish law repuires that wood alcohol be - colored so that it can be distinguished. from grain alcohol in- stantly. A new tr .nsforne>. for ringing elec- tric bells 'can be screwed into a light socket, carrying a lamp on its outer end. Por teaching' rile shooting a cros bow' equipped with a rifle s,ocs, trig- ger and sights:has been 7n,Terl;,e;1 in Japan. To enable a hammer to, be used as a hatchet an inventor has patented' a blade to be attched to its head with plates. A - South African mine develops 160 horsepower from the fall of water i piped into the workings for various '- other uses. . An inventor has patented a holder. for safety razor blades.'to crake them - useful for other than their intended purposes. . All of Switzerland's gJaceries are perceptibly receding, a notable one 1 having shrunk more than 1,000 feet , in a decade. Several films can be developed at the same time in recently invented tanks, designed chiefly for amateur photographers. Colombia produces an average of 30,000 troy ounces of platin(um annual- ly, practically all of it frdin one dis- trict. An aquarium that forks the base of an electric tablelamp has been patented in the United States by a Japanese inventor. • In a new shipyard at, Belfast all Company vessels will be built en the electric welding principle instead of by rivet- ing and, calking., To print advertisements on roads an inventor has patented a rubber stamp to_ surround an automobile tire and take paint from a tack. Several new deposits of coal, from which it is estimated that 40,000,000 tops can he extracted, have been dis- covered in Northern Chile. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE Japan hatches about 80,000 000 sal- mon eggs annually at. its sixty fish • hatcheries.. - r Suitably shaped rolls fort* the head on rivets in a new machine for rivet- ing trunks. Coal deposits that have been dis- covered in Iceland are estimated to contain 180,000,000 tons. ` New in the musical instrument line 1 is a whistle with two tubes that is I played like a slide trombone. An Englishman has invented a ma- chine to enable a singer to hear his own voice as an audience, hears it. An inventor has patented an electric surgical needle that can be adjusted at any length from its handle. Explosions of a mixture° of hydro.- f gen and oxygen are used to drive a BORN WINDOW$ &D0025 M. t;,! f�IZL' S to suit pour ljarsis7histueafroarnpteriedce. opearn8trrl;itt,c4.y,, Will, glass. SafC & - L.is� LDI. Cut down fad c$10,,i .ow7. bills. Insure wintez - comfort. - The 41ALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited HAMILTON ` FACTORY DISTRIBUTORS CANAD, FS I 1 A recently invented cross -cut saw for large log timber is , operated by a gasoline motor, mounted on a frame, one end 'of which is rested on. a log. An English inventor's telephone for use in mining or where etplosive=,gases -or liquids are present. is clainied • to be. explosion and flame proof. For - finishing a concrete roadway a steel roller with a concave face and Weighing a° tonnwh ch (can be -handled by two or three rneJi, has been in- vented. An arc light carbon of French - in- vention consists of a solid rod' within a hollow cylinder, the arc formed at' the end being. rotated by a magnetic coil. • A mold has been invented for form- ing concrete posts in holes in the ground, rnechanicisn o^crated by a crank mixing the concrete as the mold is fiilled. A Frenchman is the inventor of a ,' rubber stopper :with flexible projec- tion to be folded down around the neck of a bottle to afford additional secur- ity.. • a Niddle Age r Women, Are Here Told the Best Remedy for Their Troubles. ` Freemont, 0.-"I was pastiing'through the critical period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all the symptoms incident to that change-- heat flashes, nervousness, and was,*a general run down condition, - so it was hard for -me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink - * ham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as the best remedy for my troables,which it surely proved to be. 1 feel better and stronger in every way since takingit, and the annoying symptoms have disap- pearn"-Mrs. ] L. GODDffi4, 925 Napoleon St., F1 remota„ Ohio. North Haven, Conn. -,--"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound restored my health after everything else had failed when passing through Change of life. There is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms." -,3flrs. FLOBEN E Lista A,Box 107, North Haven, Conn. OCTOBER 31, 1919 • is iSsaei. '' °•sol.. f1,9,AA '� ri iters ; :--- .a r,:',; e.•2 ae- !, • s- LYDIA E.PINKH VEGETABLE COMP as the great. r 1; - for LYDIA E.'111KHAM MEDICINE CO. t? HW. BSS.. ft HE Boiler doesn't crowd the din er oft the Pandora on wash -days. You can set the boiler either way, across or lengthwise of thetop. .):1Thereis no guess -work baking either. The oven. 1 has a Mass door which keeps the baking in full view. The thermometer tells whether the oven is hot enough or not. The oven, as you must have heard, is very evenly heated. This dependable range _has easy -working grates; porcela[.-r enameled reservoir, which may be removed for cl .anin . , The Pandora is the sdrt of range you have always wants -see Feer. i ., ' P, el- .u. '. .. • ' �{ .• . w Sold by Henry be. ai l4 ►•s♦bIl..v .i▪ s'is', i dia } • .js e.4 4;; •:•i't* 4...•,r :... ti v �v $L. am IN, aiwe C?, Abis ft.( Y Can't Fr in nyg • oline Results r actor° If you want a good tractor -and you need the best tractor -don't watch _ the price -ticket. Look at the tractor. You'll be able to pick out the good tractor, just the same as you can pick out a good horse. That's wh we want you to see the Moline - Universal Tractor. - When you iloi you'll see its superiorities. - you'll see why farmers have proved four thing§ about the Moline -Universal Tractor. 1. One-man control. 2. It will do more wok. 3. It costs less to operate keep up. 4. it lasts tl ager. The reason lies in struction. I We shat be leased to demonstrate to 1 a work to anyone interested. and Moline con - u a. The Moline is designed correctly It is a one• -ratan `out fit you sit on the seat of the implementwhere you always sat. You can back up with any implement attached. You can turn short. You can culfivcic. You have ample steady power for any work-in the fwd or on the belt. The high-grade Moline motor is sparing with fuel and oil. It costs less' money to plow an acre with a Moline. In addition you have an - easy starting engine, electrioa.11y governed, which - can be stopped and started when you please. Electric starter. The careful Moline construction does away with most repairs and replacem ts. Motor is up away fr ern. the dust. All moving parts are endo d. Gears run in oil, Hyatt Roller Bearings. Every one of these things means. longer life in the Moline. When you see the Moline Tractor work - when you know that more farmers operate Meknes than any other make -you will begin. to realize the -tremendous earitinti you r cf the Moline. You need a Moline on your farm. You need it now. - All we want you t6 do is to come in and • •'the tractor.. We'll let it ;ell itself. The wiliys-Overland Ltd. West Toronto, Ont. Dear, Sirs :- . Our ;!Moline -Universal Tractor has saved tis at least 2 men and 10 horses. It can be operated and maintained for less than it costs to keep 3 or 4 hos acne. (Signed) ,Steenerson Bros. 1'reeceville, cask. ir. the Moline Univ ersalTraet r t actual farm ALLEN & ALIEN, Myth, Ont. Canadian Distributors: Willys-Overland, Ltd., West Toronto Nt` r1[%{i1 X17. ,i5 5, �4 1 :• Marie Jy h.e Plow Co.,, Mol i e, lr see ' NOTHIi FARA This a] Fettypiec •cd in his a The • -crease , ;by everyl :a moisten ing to -da fits, need :ways and •can be be out o sorganized to effect tl pr -bon of t aorganized that these -ing in the tion, are ether decli ocent issue Asinelal air 'Ontar sof spceehe ization, the gradu aims and isay is a' n Tapers ra play. adver eiers to buil. lizera, buil paint, flo etc., direct sivarters •the local ;country to sextremely can, in th by this IT beyond that it farmers sof the for] son the pro :try- towns Their inte arable. .If in their towns will then farmi rieighborho less profita slepreciate people. esp ecmploymen than they it is no er farmer vell tinue to ca. 'sinless he * to a town 'his smaller can readily 'sine things -on his fa sesities -which he In -tee obtain are as EP, the farmei (lents, and community properous prosperous towns mea the farmer their ppera (which' are lated to inc - the very ev trade froin depreciatin farm, and 'of their o tells us ti means nat. should pon they are big cities 'While they tions of a unfair to t the same t action that injuries to country as interest a