The Huron Expositor, 1919-11-07, Page 2D
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
D
NOVEMBER 7, 1919.;
Some Articles
You Forget some articles we stock
Some prie es that will interest you.
Black Leather Halter, large size $1.75
Russet L eather Halter, double
sewed -1 i- , inch , .. , ..'. ll, go
Lanterns, large font, guaranteed
in a wind . .. • . -1.35
Razors, new English Sheffield steel 3.00
Razor Straps, leather 5oc to 1.25
Razor Straps, cushion style 75c to 1.5o
Leather Brushes "Rubberset" ...75c
Coal Scuttles- ......... ........1.25
DustPans................,2OC
O'Cedar Mops
Foot Scrapers
Buck Saws .. .....
Caustic Soda, 5 lb. can..
Gillett's Lye.........:..
Nickled Plated Tea Pots.
Roasting Pans ........
Door ,Locks, per set....
Tool Grinders ..
Leather Mitts, one ringer
Leather Mitts, lined
Meat Saws .....
Canada Ranges...
...I 65 to 2.25
...50Cto2.00
.......Sac
.425 to 5.25
50C to 75c
...75c to 1.7o.
•90CtO200
$93 to $10o-
11,14100
A. Sills_ Seafort
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FREE FROM DANDRUFF.
FIRE INSURANCE COT.
THICI , GLOSSY HA]
HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS
J. Connolly, 'Goderich; President
Jas. Evans,. Beechwood, :Tice -President
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clint =n; E3.'
Hinchley, Seaforth; ' Jett' Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar -
math,. Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
William Rinn, No. 2, Seafort:i; John
Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans,
t -eechwood; M, McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
R. R. No, 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlack;
George McCart ey, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth a , f ollcws :
10.55 a. in, - For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kin: a: etre .
5.53 p. m. - For Clint'i::, Wingharn
and Kincardine.
11.03 p. m. - For Clinton.. Goderich,
6.36 a. m. -For Strati es d, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
boro and points cr.Ct.
6.16 p. m. -For Stratfur d, Toronto :
Montreal and points east.
LONHON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South a.m. p.m.
Londeshoro 7.13. 3.56
Clinton 7.33 4.15
Brucefield 8.08 4.33
Kippen 8.16 4.41
Hensal:l 8.25 4.48
Exeter 8.40 5.01
Centralia 8.57 5.13
Wingham, depart 6.35 3:20
Belgrave 6.50 3.36
Blyth ss 7.04 3.48
Going North a.m.
London, arrive ...... 10.55
London, depart 8.30
Centralia ... 9.35
Exeter ......'9.47
Hensafl s 9.59
Kippen,10.06
Erucefieli 10.14
Clinton 10:30
Londesboro 11.28
Blyth 11.37
Belgrave . 11.50
Wingham, arrive 12.05
p.m.
6.15.
4.40sold as Aspirin in .pill boxes and various
r other containers. But now you can get
h 57 genuine Aspirin, plainly stamped with
C.09 the safety "Bayer. Cross," -Aspirin
6.1G proved safe by millions for _E,adache,
6.24 Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lum-
6.40 bago, Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally.
6.57 s Bandy tin boxes of 12 tablets -also
7.05 larger "Myer" packages.
7.1b Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
7 40 in Canada.), of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of • Salicylicacid,
Girls! Try ItI Hair gets sbft, fluffy and
beautiful -Get a small bottle
of Danderine.
If you care for heavy hair that. glis-
tens with beauty and. is radians, with
life; has an incomparable softness .and
is fluffy and lustrous, try 1'anderiiic',
Just one application, doubles. the
beauty of your lia,ir, besides it .imme-
diately dissolves every particle of
dandruff. You can not have nice heavy,
healthy hair if you have dandruff, TbiE.
destructive scurf robs the hair of its
lustre, its strena h and. its very life;
and if not overcome it produces a fever-
ishness and itching of the scalp; the
hair roots famish, loosen and die; th..r.
the hair falls out fast. Surely get. . a
srrrall bottle of Knowlton's Danderiue
from any drug store and just try it.
•
THERE IS ONLY ONE
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets Nvith `.gayer Cross"
are Aspirin -No others I
DAY EQ
If you don't see the "Bayer Cross"
on the tablets, refuse them -they are
not Aspirin at all.
• Your druggist gladly will give you the
genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" be:.
cause genuine .Aspirin now is made by
Canadians and owned by a Canadian.
Company.
There is not a cent's wort)). of German
interest in Aspirin, all rights being pur-
chased from the U. S..Governnient.
During the war, acid imitations were
Fresh, rich, full -flavored tea
-the same every time.
(?)
OSE
TEAis good
Sold olry in sealed packages
2
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
SEAFORTH, Friday, Nov. 7th, 1919.
IS TOBBACCO ON THE
REFORMER'S LIST?
- It has been asserted and denied
.bat, -,having made the world safe for
democracy by establishing• prohtion
wherever it :can be establishe the
friends of democracy will next make
it safer by abolishing tobacca. Denials
aro not over-convicing in face of the
fact that - there exist anti -tobacco
societies in many parts of the world.
It is true that ' most of them exist
nominally for' the purpose of prevent-
ing young people smoking: Few open-
ly admit that their ultimate • object
is • to put the clamps on smoking by
people of any age and in any place.
But should they succeed in having to-
bacco banned for minors they 'are
likely to continue the work. The
original temperance societies did .not
aim' at absolute prohibition. They
sought to correct over indulgence; it
was dri}nkness rather than drinking
that they aimed at. They took one
step at a time, and from one victory
passed on to another -until they have
made the United States an' alcoholic
Sahara -officially --and promise to
perform a smiler service for Can-
ada. They are even active in Eng-
land, and in France and Russia have
scored victories in the abolition, if.
even temporary, of the sale of ab-
sinthe and vodka. There is no ques-
tion that their goal is a world with-
out alcoholic drinks.
Ten years ago it would have
seemed incredible- that in 1919 the
United States would be dry; and
with this in mind, one • ought not too
hastily to declare that the world
will ever be .without tobacco. At the
same " time there is this difference,
that whereas in the decade before
the war there was a gradual diminu-
tion in the amount of alcoholic liq-
uor consumed, or if not in the bulk
then in the amount consumed by the
average drinker. the contrary is true
with regard to tobacco, More people
smoke now then ever before. •Blore
women smoke. Time was when.
there was hardly a hotel so fashion-
able that a woman dared smoke a
cigarette in the dining room. To -day
few .are so unfashionable as to open-
ly object. The war has made hun-
dreds of thousands of smokers, mil-
lions of smokers, if that number re-
mained, and it has made the kind of
smoker that the anti-nicotinists hold
in most abhorrence, namely, the
smokers of cigarettes. On the other
hand, twenty years ago everyone
smoked on the rear platforms of
street cars who cared . to smoke
there. Now the rear platforms of
street cars in the larger tides are
no longer smoking rooms. In some
cities, Havana, for instance, . the
motormen smoke, but of course to-
bacco is one of the industries of
Cuba, and. any d effort to lessen its
consumpthenoseould be fiercely resent-
ed.
The USA :'f tctba;co is opposed en
the same green/1s as alcohol,. It is
te hijurious to the health,
objectionable ;'i non-sn.ol:.-r.. and
waste of money. It is not. alleged
that under the influence one cern-
nits crinis _. although the oppon-
ents of sreek.ng do not hesitate
:a; that the •use of tobacco we:d.-
ens the intellect and blunts the
senses. '.4 writer. in the Ra ft:=,y
tiurgical Jc,::r nail, ouotcd in the - Ne-e
York Sum says: "Tc' the non-sr.-ma--
cm
on-s )a -
cm who S eS ,n the use of tobaccJ
Filthy, silly and injurious methene of
wasting vidueble time, it (smokiae)
is quite different. His senses flu•.•e
er tic•) busted and enable hirn
to aiem'ecia`e the vast difference be-
tween his cevn ability to enter int.,
the keener perceptions of life ant
that of his tobacco -saturated asso-
ciate. • The' smoker should absent
himself freem the society of respect-
able n4' -siriok:.ng individuals while
conducting his filthy perfori ancee."
These be hard words, my masters,
but they are in common use an_caig
those who have their eyes set upon
tobacco as the object of the next'
great- moral convulsion of the world.
As on the effects of alcohol, scient-
ists differ with regard to tobacco._
An eminent authority speaking in.
Paris to the Society of 1ily,giene upon
"Tobacco and the Child" said a short'
time ago:
"There is no doubt that the physi-
cian regards tobacco as a poison,
but since its action upon the organ-
ism is neither dramatic nor specific;
like that of alcohol, the poisonous.
effect is freely denied by smokers,
who always find another cause for
the symptoms of which they com-
plain, and generally declare that for
thein the privation of tobacco would
be impossible. One may count the
number of nicotinized individuals who,
have sufficient energy to give up
their passion. In any case it is in-
contestable that the 'noxious action
of tobacco is the more pronounced
according to the youth of the body.
Now, at ' this moment, if children
work like men,'so too do they drink
and smoke like men. The first Of
these acts is often conditioned by the
second. It would therefore be an ad--
vantage
d-vantage for hygiene if the measures
taken, to prohibit the use of alcohol
were extended to tobacco, and that it
were forbidden to sell it to children
under 18."
He offered a resolution to the
effect that the society deplored the
use of tobacco, especially by the
young, and branded it as a dangerous'
poison. However, another scientist,
equally learned, declared .that much
was to be said in favor of tobacco,
and that enough was not knmosvn on
the subject to justify the body in
pronouncing against it. 'This view
was upheld by the president, and
the matter dropped. Anti -tobaccon-
ists contend that nicotine is a poison
and prove it by its fatal effects upon
guinea pigs. Smokers allege that the
toxic qualities of nicotine are des-
troyed by the fire in the pipe or the
cigarette and can point to men who
have reached a -hale old age after
having smoked for sixty or seventy
years. Quite lately an English in-
vestigator caused a solution of nico-
tine to flow_ through the hearts- of
animals and reported that "the work
done by the heart can be increased
by nicotine stimulation. This is in
part nervous and part reuscular in
origin." So the smokers are not
without scientific sanction, -a-naid:•
from their own experiences, which
proves tobacco to be a blessing rather
than a curse to the race. • This , fact
in itself, however, will not save' =to
bacco in the dread day o#' reckoning,
HURON NOTES
-Silver Corners cheese factory ,at
Moncrieff, Grey township, have sold
September snake of cheese to the Swift
Canadian Company. There were
22,208 pounds for which the neat sum=
of.'$5,793.31 were received. The price
was 26 and 261A, cents. In . addition
2,706 pounds of cut cheese were sold
to patrons and others. September was
a splendid month as is evidenced by
the above.
-Mr. E. Pattison is in receipt of a
couple of medals, one a very Handsome
inedal cif solid gold, about the size of
silver half Mar, from the Presby-
terian church,- Brucefield, the other,
also of gold from the Council of
Statnley town Mr. Pattison was
in 'charge of the station at lyrucefield
when he enlisted, so Stanley township
counted him a citizen and the Bruce -
field congregation counted him as one
of their number.
-On. Wednesday evening .of last
week a very enthusiastic gathering
was held in the Township Kali, Varna,
when the council presented medals to
the boys who served their country in
the late war. There was a good pro-
gramme of music, songs, etc., presided
lay local talent, and addresses by Mr.
W. H. Johnson, of Kippen, Rev. D.
Johnston, of Varna, and Capt. S. E.
McKegney, rector of St. Paul's church,
Clinton, a veteran of the war, who re-
counted some of his .experiences while
in the trenches, Forty medals were
given, a crams with three bars for the
boys who -had served in France, the
medal containing the name of the re-
cipient and also of the doners, the
Council of Stanley Township.
-Miss Mary Ann Watkins daughter
of the late Joseph Watkins, of the
Base Line, . Hullett, passed away on
Monday after but a eauple of day's
illness. The deceased. had not been
in the best of health for a year or
more but her conditions was not con-
sidered serious and she was- going
about until within a day or so of her
death. Indeed, she was up on Satur-
day. On Sunday she did not get up
but said she 'felt better than she -had
the day before. But on Monday the
end came suddenly and unexpectedly.
The deceased had spent all her life
in the community and she was highly
esteemed by those who knew her best.
She -is survived ,by two brothers and
two sisters.
-This week William Taylor, ninth
line, of Morris, disposed of his well
bred roadster, known as. the Rozell
mare, to his neighbor, Duncan Laid-
law, at a good price. To prove that
she' is a fine animal, her late owner
exhibited her fourteen times at fail
fairs and captured fourteen red tick-
ets.- Mr. Taylor has replaced Topsy
by a dandy carriage .rare formerly
owned by William Cruikshanks, of
Wingham. Her record is eighteen
first prizes for this seasen. It looks
as if Mr. T. won't he satisfied with,
anything outside of the best. He
0111101111111116
es
t.
•
RAWFURS
WANTED
Highest cash prices
paid for
Skunk, Raccoon
and Mink
Enquiries promptly
answered
ROSS 1.t1V1imp)
MANUFACTURERSI
Established 1885
LONDON - - ONT.
1
..:
bought from J. H. Galbraith, the well
known horseman, Brussels.
-There passed away at the family
residence, lot 9, concession 11, Hullett,
on Saturday last, Charlotte Dempsey,
beloved wife of Mr. William Jenkins.
Deceased was born in Goderich town-
ship seventy-eight years ago and
twenty-four years later was married
to her now bereft husband. In religion
she was Methodist and a member of
that church at Londesboro. She
leaves, besides her husband, a family
of four, namely: Mrs. James, Gran -
brook; Mrs. John Watkins, Clinton;
Miss Lottie and John at home. Be-
sides her immediate family she leaves
two brothers, Mr. William Dempsey,
Mullett, and Mr. John Dempsey, Clin-
ton. The funeral took ,place ,at the
house at 1.30 p. m. followed by inter-
ment in Clinton cemetery.
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
The establishment of an institu-
tion for medical research in Belgium
is one of the ambitions of' Queen
Elizabeth,
-Mrs. Alice M. French of Indian-
apolis, .Ind., has been re-elected Na-
tional War Mother of the American
War Mothers. -
• The first woman to receive a degree
from any Canadian university were
Queen Mary and the Countess of
Aberdeen.
A bill has been introduced in the'
United States senate which provides
that women government workers shall
be paid equal wages with the men.
In Sweden women have always been
eligible for all the offices for which
they vote.
Denver, Col,, possesses the distinc-
tion of having the only woman dog
catcher in the world. She is Mrs.
Laura Dittrich, deputy pound mistress
of the city dog, pound.
England's youngest and probably
the prettiest woman owner of race
horses, Mrs: Lisle Lysaght, intends
to pay her first visit to America in
the near future.
The frame of a mop patented by a
woman inventor is U-shaped and made
of resilient ' metal, causing the fabric
portion to spread over a considerable
area as it is used.
Five hundred Armenian women em-
ployed by the American Red Cross
have built one hundred miles of stone
roads _and reconstructed several steel
bridges in Mesopotamia in the last
four months.
WOMAN'S NERVES
MADE STRONG'
By Lydia E. Pinkham''4
Vegetable Compound.
Winona, Minn. -"I suffered formor .
than a year from nervousness, and was
so bad I could not,.
I I rest a.t nicht._..,
wouldlieawa-ean;
get so nervous r,
would have to get.'
up and walk around
and in the rnornin
=would be all tiire
out. I read about.
y„ Lydia E.1'inkhana'ea
! y `'Y
'Vegetable Ccrn-
t .;% ound and thought;
would try it. My'
.�., nervousness s °ono.
left t mF�. I slee
well and feel ;zee in the morning an,:
able to do my work. I gladly reco=m-
mend Lydia E. f'inl:bam's Vegetable.,
Compound : to aisle weals nerves..
strong. "-- Mrs. A 1.Ja aT St L�rzE, 6O3.
Olmstead St., Winona, Minn.
}Iow often do we hear the expressiort,
among women, "7 am so nervous, I can-
not sleep," or "it seems as though L
should fly." Such women should profits.
by Mrs. Sultze's `experience and give.
this famous root and herb remedy,
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cor--
po", .
Forundfortyatrialyears it has been overcom-
ing such serious conditions as displace-
ments, inflammation, ulceration, irreg-
ularities,
rregularities, periodic pains, backache, diz-
ziness, and nervous prostration or
women, and is now considered the stow.
dard remedy for such ailment3.
r
e•; •:u JP'rt•7 `at r.w .,'lin. U:..1✓,� n •
riCCLAPY•S
WCIaiys Pandora
4 well known as to have become a
ba Canadian institution is this grand .
working Pandora.
Glass oven door; tested thermometer; an ovens)
so evenly heated that even the beginner cant
bake well with it. Grates work smoothly;
reservoir is enameled and may be removest
for cleaning.
There is a lifetime of satisfaction in the -
Pandora. 14P. -
Sold-
Sold by Henry: Edge
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sit•...... Vhis
Look at The Tractor
The sensible thing to do when you buy a tractor,
is to look at the tractor as a farm proposition.
You want a tractor to do farm work.
The more work it does the better you'll like it.
The less it_ costs to operate, the better you'll
like it.
If it is a strong, sturdy, loyal piece of machinery,
you'll value it.
And if you get all these things in a tractor, you
expect to pay a fair price for it.
That's why we want you to come and look at
the Moline -Universal.
At once you'Il be able to seg the difference.
We won't have to tell you that the Moline Universal is
a superior tractor. It shows its breeding in its build.
TESTIMONIALS
"I broke 160 acres and used only one quart of fresh water
daily4'-T, J. Polley, Calgary
:`I threshed 70,000 bushels of grain with a 22 -in. separator
and had no trouble." -O. D. Cook, Mirror, Alta.nE
"In every respect the Moline exceeded all expectations.
Without any previous experience two boys ploughed nearly
120 acres of land in 3 weeks." -J, D. McAra, Calgary.
It plows fast and well. You sit on the seat of the izn-
pleme t, Tractor and plow are like one machine -
back and turn short. Lay -out and finish without horses.
Disc and harrow, reap and mow. Do belt work. These
are things which we can prove to you in demonstration
or from other farmers' experience,
We will show you the economy of the Moline Tractor.
Costs less for fuel and oil because of the high-grade
Moline motor. Costs much less for the day's work, be-
cause you will stop the Moline Motor whenever the
tractor stops. The Moline starts easily with its electric
self-starter. -
Repair and replacement casts are reduced to the nsinunum--long life
is assured -because of high-grade Moline construction. Perfected
four -cylinder motor, Hyatt roller bearings, gears running in oil, all
moving parts enclosed, motor away from the dust and dirt. You
can't get Moline quality in any other tractor.
Now is the time to decide on a tractor. A tractor bought now will
speed up every harvest operation and mean hundreds of dollars in
next year's crop. Come in and see us.
We shall be pleased to demonstrate
the Moline Universal Tractor at actual
farm work to anyone interested.
ALLEN & ALLEN,B1yth, Ont.
Canadian Distributors--Wiliys-Overland Limited
Toronto
Made by Moline Plow Co., Moline, Iit
isrm
School
the sch •
'No. 13,
-=-Dever.
470, Jin;,.
Pearl B
Jr; III
Cowan
ham Ke.
0 (ab)
-fiord Ha
son and
Charlie
ilian
Bowes
Pr. A -
Beatrice
Teacher.
"GUARD
The F
'of the
warm,
unless th
little one
may ban
Tablets
prev entire
act as a
bowels a
An occasi
ar if it
prompt 11
ly reiiev:
by medic'
cents a
Medicine
It is a
tion in t
You neve
can safes
pinion on
a Compan
not bound
You are
shine of i
folks in
everyday
vvri. town
picking tI
some defy
to attain
`1920 wil
for Youth'
are -snore
year. One
will he ('
glorious st
and valor:
New . Sul
ceive: ,
1. The
-sues in 19
2, All
,sues.
3. The
for 1920.
All the
where in
States.
THE 'I
887 Comm
New Su
Oe.
Paris is
enntres ar
and luxur
Furs and
autumn fl
(dresses al
materials
magniftcen
Velvet i
tailor -mad
hats, tram
patent lea
Brown vel
tete de ne
bat. Kid
worn with
perforated
There are
collar, ani
may have
".has a blac
:are all 0
shave style
The oth
•ata tea pt
-was tcio of
.er bore wi
and looke(
but if lon
a fashion,
or their Vie
of tva,k.rt
'not neon
wear eh. r
the ealee
=cis,
str
1 ee-; '>a9
by h...'
ev._
=ati:
- ..ati17:.t
n the v
in these c1=
parent in:
Coats
straight in
the feet.
slim WO"
of the she
• ed, drape
worn roui
nr cloak u
•'deep band
satin,, the
:lug a Ove