The Huron Expositor, 1920-05-28, Page 2Ti HURONEXPOSITOR
MAY 28, 1920.
W .PERFECT
OJ...O&$tS
Give abundant heat for
111 wi* Pim- .
Because die New Pecfecdon Oil
Cook Stove has the Long Blue
erturas every
drop ear- Tx oda o1 into clean,
Intense heat, and dries itfpg f
�ectl against the utensil.. Meals
i s and heal instantly -- dependable
always-nosmokeor odor. 3,000,000 awes.
Cone is anytime and see a *mons:ration of'tlis
Long Brae Chineney Burner.
3 -Burner Perfection with oven ...$35.50
4 -Burner Perfection with oven ... $45.50
Tin Tea Kettles for oil stove 45e
Perfection Stove Wicks 40c
We have in stock a CARLOAD each of CEMENT,
LIME, SEWER PIPE and PREPARED PLASTER.
These are for the early buyers . at present prices, and we
might say Cement has made another advance last week.
Auto Coaster Waggons with hardwood box, steel axles,
roller bearings, large and strong, will carry 600 lbs.. $8.00
SPECIAL Wagon for younger children, size 11x20,
steel axles, iron wheels 6 inch, strong and easy run-
ning $2.00
G. A. i s Seaforth
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS
J. Connolly, Goderich, President
Jae. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
Alex. Leitch, R. R. No, 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinehley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Rrucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo Goderich; R. G. • Jar-
muth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
ljilliam Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bennewies, Brodhagen;James a
mea 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:
11 a. m. -=- For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
Ofi8 p. m, - For Clinton, Wingham,
• and Kincardine.
ii-ot fir. tri. -- Fgr CI}' tgfl gederich, Tablets
F
6.51 a. m. -For $tratferd, `GuelpIf,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and 1
Oiat weal Belley?ile and'eter.l
bora and parts ts ea
3.12 p, m. --For Stratford, Toronto,
! Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going North a.m. p.m.
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH
TO TORONTO
Goderich, leave
Blyth
Walton
Guelph
a.m.
6.20
6.58
7.12
9.48
FROM TORONTO
Toronto, leave 8.10
Guelph, arrive 9.80
Walton 12.03
Blyth 12.16
Auburn 1228
Goderich 12.55
Om.
1.30
2.07
2.20
4.53
5.10
6.80
9.04
9.18
9.30
9.55
Connections at Guelph Junction with
Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon-
don, Detroit,' and Chicago, and all in-
termediate pointe.
GENUINE ASPIRIN -41
HAS "BAYER CROSS"
London .............. 9.05
Centralia . , .......... 10.04
Exeter 10.18
Hensall 10.33
Kippen 10.38
Brucefield 10.47
Clinton 11.03
Londesboro 11.34
Blyth 11.43
Belgrave - 11.56
Wingham 12.11
Going South S.M.
Wingham 7.30
Belgrave 7.44
Blyth . 7.56
Londesboro 8.04
Clinton ........... 8.23
Brucefield 8.40
Kippen-.8.46
Hensall . 8.58
]Exeter 9.13
Centralia 9.27
London 10.40
4.45
5.50
6.02
6.14 ( 'Get genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
621 1 in a "Bayer" package, plainly -marked
6.29 with the safety "Bayer Cross."
6.45 The `Bayer Cross" is your only way
7.03 of knowing that you are getting genuine
7.0 Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for
7 23 i nineteen years and proved safe by mil
7.40 lions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds,
Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for
pm. Pain generally. Made in Canada.
3.20 Handy tin . boxes of 12 tablets -also
3.483.36 larger sized "Bayer" packages.
'Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
3.56 in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of
4.15 Monoacetieacidester of Salieylicacid.
4.82 While it is well known that Aspirin
4.40 means Bayer manufacture, to assist the
4.50 public against imitations, the Tablets of
5.05 Bayer Company, Ltd., will be ' stamped
6.15 with their general trade mark, the
6.15 "Bayer Croas:-
without
1
I`HE HURON EXPOSITOR
RHEUMATISM FOR
SEAFORTH, Friday, May 28, 1920.
JOAN OF ARC IS THE SAINT OF
FRANCE
Not for many years has the canon-
'Ie,Otien by the Church of Bole 9f
a rew :sant attracted such attention
as the elevation to this rank of Joan
ofAre in Roane on, Sunday. The
Maid of Orleans -becomes the patron
saint of France, at a time when France
emerges shaken but confident from
the greatest war in history. It is
fitting that the warrior maid who
nearly five hundred years ago saved
her country should be thus exalted,
for during the war her name was
more on the lips and in the hearts
of the devout French people than any
other of their - great warriors in the
past, than any of their -saints who
have been canonized for centuries.
Joan would have been, canonized
long ago, perhaps, if there had not
been political difficulties. In the
days when England was a Roman
Catholic country the Pope could not
have proceeded with the process of
rehabilitating Joan without offence.
For centuries, .however, it has been
regarded as certain that Joan would
one day reach beatification, but only
in our own. times has the master
been resolutely taken up and pressed
forward.
The first step was made some
nineteen years after she had! been
burned at the stake, when Charles
VII entered Rouen, and in 'grati-
tude to the Maid appointed a com-
xnission to review and annul her
trial. Five years later, , the reign-
ing Pope appointed a commission
to perform the same task, in the name
of the Church, and to establish the
fact that Joan was actuated by the
loftiest motives and was- a being of
unblemished life. The evidence then
gathered was published and remains
.in the archives of the Vatican, but it
was not until 1869 that a petition was
made to Pope Pius IX to canonize
Joan. The request came from French
Bishops, but in such matters it is the
custom of the Church to move with•
extreme deliberation. 'New ecclesi-
astical commissions were appointed,
and the history of the case was re-
examined. k 1901 it was establish-
ed by the Congregation of Rites, that
Joan had not abjured her faith when
being -burned at the stake. In 1904,
Pius X issued a decree of heroicity.
It was then necessary as a further
step that there should be undoubted
proofs of three miracles wrought
Joan, and this proof was accepted in
1908.
The first of them was the instan-
taneous cure in 'Orleans of a Bene-
dictine, Sister Teresa, after a novena
made in honor of Joan. She had
suffered from ulcer of ,the stomach
for three years, and was at the point
of death. This was in 1900. The
second tomwas admitted v a
s the cure
of Sister Julie of the Sisters of
Providence in 1893, who was carried
to the church in Favrolles to invoke
Joan for ulcer of the breast. She
was cured the same day. The third
miracle happened in: Fruges. Sister
Jeanne Marie was afflicted with tuber-
culosis of the bones and her case pro-
nounced incurable, but on the fifth
day of her prayer to Joan she was
cured. Having accepted this evidence
Pope. Pius, in 1909, formally announc-
ed the beatification of the Maid of
Orleans. Another interval of ten
"Bayes Close" i years elapsed before thirteen Car -
are not Aspirin at all
,C�kaStycti.r,1. .•. .
N
C
WINNIPEG
BRANDON
REGINA
SASKATOON
"1'•
The.'Wayto thE Wes0
DAILY SERVICE
Lire. TORONTO (Union Station)
9.15 P.M.
CALGARY
EDMONTON
VANCOUVER
VICTORIA
STANDARD TRANS -CONTINENTAL TRAIN EQUIPMENT THROUGH-
OUT, INCLUDING NEW ALL -STEEL TOURIST SLEEPING CARS.
Sun. Mon. Wad. Fri. -Canadian National all the way.
Tues. Thurs. Sat.-Vla G.T., T. & N.O., Cochrane thence 0. N. Rya.
Tickets and full information from nearest Canadian National
Railways' Agent, C. A. ABERHART, Seaforth, Ont.
sr •ensial Passenger Department, Toronto.
load in western Canada available for farming or *liter purposes.
tadsatelal Department reroute and Winnipeg v.411 furnish lull partieisi. �s
ngaedlwr
dinals anti twenty-two Consultators
recorded their placet to Joan's can-
onization, and Pope Benedict XV ask-
ed for prayers that his decision might
be enlightened by the Holy Ghost.
On March 26, His Holiness announced
that his decision was in the affirma-
tive, and as an inevitable sequel, Joan
was canonized -on Sunday.
Whether one believes in miracles
or disbelieves it - must be admitted
that those accepted by the Church
of Rome in the course of an inquiry
into claim3 for canonization are sub-
jected to a long and severe scrutiny.
No evidence in favor of miracles
would be accepted, of course, by those
who deny their existence, but once
admitting their possibility the evi-
dence - of the £hurch would appear
conclusive. The ablest minds in the
Hierarchyare injudgment, ment and is
� g ,its
said' that no- session of the United
States Supreme Court is more au-
gust. The Cardinals and Consultators
hear evidence presented by a repre-
sentative of those asking for the
canonization. In opposition is that
dignitary known as the "devil's advo-
cate," for even the church appears
to admit the right of the devil to a
day in court. It is the duty of this
functionary to argue against the hon-
or being granted, and to bring out
any weak spot in the character of
the candidate. From all such tests
of successive commissions extending
over several centuries Joan of Arc
has emerged triumphant.
So comes true Shakespeare's pro-
phecy uttered by the Dauphin of
France in King Henry VI: "But
Joan la Pucelle 'shall be France's
saint." As M. Jusserand observed
on the occasion of the dedication
of the Joan of Arc statue in New
York city a few years ago, there
was no greater miracle than the mir-
acle the Maid wrought in the spirit
of France. She changed France
from a decadent to a warrior nation.
Said Andrew Lang: "She was the
most perfect daughter of her church.
To her its sacraments were the very
Bread of Life; her conscience by fre-
quent confession, was -kept fair and
pure -as the lilies of Paradise. In a I
tragedy without parallel or prece-
dent the Flower of Chivalry died for.
France and the chivalry of France
had deserted her; she died by the
chivalry of England which shame-
fully entreated and destroyed her
while the most faithful of Christians
perished through the celestial science
and dull political hatred of priests
who impudently called themselves the
church. She came with powers and
with genius . which should . be the
marvel of the world while the. world
stands. - She redeemed a nation and
wrought such works as seemed to
her people, and well might seem,
miraculous."
gVER 16 YEARS
No 'Return Of The Trouble
SiAce Taking "Fruit -a -Bras"
108 CHURCH fkr, Mo RISAL.
"1 was a great sufferer from Rheu-
ntatismfor aver 16 years. I consulted
specialists; took medicine; used
lotion; but nothing did me good,
Then I began to use "Fruit -a -tires",
and in 15 days the pain was easier
and the Rheumatism. much better.
Gradually, "Fruit -,a -five" overcame
my Rheumatism; and now, for five
years, I have had no retarn,of the
trouble. I cordially recommend this
fruit medicine to all sufferers."
P. H. Me HUGH.
50e a box, •6 for $2.50, trial size 25e.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by
Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
FOOLISH TO TRY TO REMOVE
FRECK LES
Freckles car( be removed, but, as
the .Journal of the American Associa-
tion says, "the effect is only tempor-
ary at best, and usually not worth
the irritation and effort that it costs."
The method is to apply solutions of
mercuric chloride in a strength of
from 0.5 to 1 per cent., strictly under
medical supervision, for if one tries
to do it one's self she is likely to make
a nasty mess of her face. These
solutions produce an inflammation of
the skin which ends in the outer skin
peeling off, bringing the freckles with
it.;
The Journal of the American Medi-
cal Association says that the prescrip-
tion written by. Hebra and recom-
mended particularly for the removal
of frecgles, will not do the trick.
Wise women let their • freckles a-
lone.
THE REASON WHY
Why do we worry? We worry be-
cause we are able through a power
called self-consciousness to place our-
selves through our minds for the time
being. Either -back somewhere in
the; past without -carrying our physical
bodies with us; for if we could take
our bodies with use we would be in
the present again, and then worry is
i ibl t
mposse, or we use our unagii
na on
and project our bodies into the future
and if we -could we would again be in
the present. We worry over going to
have an operation - performed which
may or may not be dangerous, but
quite necessary. We may still think
we worry when the operation begins,
but as soon as -that occurs the time
becomes the present, and though, we
may fear, we cannot worry in the
present.
Why do my' teeth chatter? Your
teeth chatter because when you are
cold in a way that makes your teeth
chatter the little muscles which close
the jaw act in a , series of quick little
contractions which pull the jaw up,
and then let it fall by its own weight.
This is repeated many times and, as
the action is quick the chattering oc-
curs. It is a peculiar thing that this
occurs in spin of the will or brain,
when, as a matter of fact, ..these
muscles °'Which operate the jaw are
especially under the control of the
brain. The chattering is really a
spasm caused by the cold, and all
spasms act independent of the will,
Cold seems to ,act on the jaw muscles
a 'good deal like some poisops which
defile spasms.
Where did all the water in ,the
oceans come from? No; it did `not
come from the rivers which empty
themselves into the oceans, because
the oceans were there before the
rivers existed, Part of it comes from
the rivers now, but only a little in
comparison to all the water there is
in the ocean. I will try to tell your
simply how all the water got into
the ocean.
There was a time when there was
no water on the earth at all. That
was when the earth was red hot, just
as it is to -day on the inside, and at
that time all the water we have to-
TNIS WOMAN'S
MISERY
Ended by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. Re-
markable Recovery of
Mrs. Church,
Smiths Falls, Ont.- "I suffered with
falling of my organs, pains around my
heart and in bowels and down my legs,
neuralgia in my face and head, and that
terrible sinking feeling. I felt that I
could not live and would fix my house in
order every night so there would be no
trouble if I dropped off in the night.
My husband went to the druggist to get
the best remedy he had and he gave
him Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetableCom-
pound. I took six bottles and felt a lot
better. I will always recommend the
Vegetable Compound, and you can use
these facts as a testimonial- Mrs.
J. 0. CHURCH, Box 846, Smiths Falls,
Ont.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It maybe
used with perfect confidence by women
who_ suffer from nervous prostration,
displacements inflammation, ulcera-
tion, irregularhtiee, periodic wins, back-
ache, bearing -down feeling, flatulency,
indigestion and dizziness. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the
standard remedy for female ills.
If there are any complications about
.which you need advice writs in con-
fidence toLydia E. Pinkham Msdicine
Co., Lynn, Maas.
•
day was up in the air in the form of
gases. Strange as it may seem to
you, if you take two gases, one call-
ed hydrogen and the other oxygen,
and mix them the right way, they will
turn into water, and if you had the
right kind of chemical apparatus -you
could take water and turn, it into
these 'gases again. When, theny the
earth was still all red hot, all of our
water was up in the air in the form
of these two gases. Then, later on,
when the amount of heat on the earth
was just right to make these gases
mix together, the water came down
out of the air in great 'quantities, and
there was so much of it that it com-
pletely covered the whole earth and
no land was visible. Later on, for
various reasons, mountains were
thrown up on the .earth's surface by
great earthquakes, and every time a
mountain or a high -place was formed
there had to be a hole or- low place
some place else, and the water ran
into these low places, and stayed
there, - and that uncovered more of the
land, because .there wasn't enough
water to fill all the holes and cover
the land too, and that is what makes
our continents and islands .and all of
the land we see. There is now about
three times as much earth covered
with water as there is land. Of
course, the sun is always picking up
Water through what is called evapo-
ration, which means that it is taken
into the air in the form of gases.
Later it comes down again ins the
form of rain. and falls into, the oceans
or on the land, where it sinks in,
finally finding a stream or river, and
sooner or later gets back into the
ocean again.
Why don't the water in the ocean
sink in? This is due to the fact that
there is a kind of substance at the
bottom of the ocean which the water
cannot penetrate, in spite of the tre-
mendous pressure which the great
body of deep water exerts. In all
places where the bottom of the ocean
has a covering which water cam sink
into it does so, but there are such a
few places where this is possible by
comparison,that the amount that gets
out that way is not noticeable. This
water, if it can keep on going, will
eventually reach the inside of the
earth, `where it is red hot, and is
turned into steam.
Where -does the water in the ocean
go to at low tide? To get to the
answer of this you must know some-
thing about the tides. The tide is
caused by - the pull of the moon on;
the waters in the ocean. The moon
revolves about the earth once each
month and has the ability to draw up
the waters in the ocean toward it,
as we have seen in our study of the
tides.
Now, when it is high tide in one
place it is low tide in another. The
moon does not make more water, but
only pulls it toward it from side to
side. When it is low 'tide where we
are the water has simply moved as
a body toward the _place where it is
high tide.
The tides act as a good deal like a
seesaw, except that they move from
side to side instead of up and down.
When one end of the seesaw goes
up the other end goes down, and
when the down end comes up the
other end goes down. So the an
swer to your question really is that
at Iow tide the water which made it
high tide a few hours before has gone
to some place where it is at that mo-
ment high tide.
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Tokio tramways now employ women
T as conductors. _ -
New Toric city has- more than 80,-
000 organized working women.
The Woman's City Club of Wash-
ington, D. C., now hasmore than
3,200 members.
Sixty-five per cent. of the primary
school grades in Russia are taught by
women.
Mrs. Lena D. Sulzer is manager of
the savings department of a Saint
Louis (Mo.) Trust Company.
Mrs. Minnie Grinstead, the joniy,
woman member of the Kansas legisla-
ture, is a Baptist minister,
In the days of the Pharaochs some
of the most sacred religious offices
were held by women.
There is a bill before the Canadian
parliament, which if passed, will giye
the provincea their own divorce courts.
Kentucy Club Women raised and ex-
pended $22,000 in the fight for legisla-
tion to carry the illiteracy campaign.
The female population of New South
Wales is fast nearing that of the
males; and the latter are . now only
19,000 in. excess of the females.
In Russia a wife is required under
Iaw to support her husband if she is
able to do so, and he is unable to
work and in need of her support.
Lady Astor has been selected to
represent the British Government at
the International - Woinan Suffrage
Alliance congress to be held in Geneva
in June.
Moscow, Russia, has only ane wo-
man's tclub and its membership is
very small, due probably to the fact
that in Russia the segregation of
sexes is a rarity.
Miss Ellen Mary Cassatt, of Phila-
delphia, will• act as one of the three
American delegates to the Interna-
tional Girl Scout conference to be
held in London during July.
-Last Saturday afternoon there
was Iaid to rest in Brussels cemetery
Margaret Garvin, relict -of the late
Joseph Smith, 6th. line, who passed
away thee -Wednesday previous, at the
advanced age of nearly eighty-nine
years. Rev. Mr. Hawkins, Blyth, con-
ducted the service on account of the
ill health of Rev. H. Smith, Brussels.
Mrs. Smith had been confined to bed
for some time owing to weakness of
body but had been a very hearty
woman in her earlier years. She
made her home with her son,- David,
on lot 20, 6th line, which was the old
homestead. Interment was made in
the family plot Brussels cemetery:
The pallbearers were Robert, John
and William Smith, Alex. McIntosh,
William and D. Crawford, Deceased
was born in County Armagh, Ireland,
and came to Canada when about 18
years of age. She was married to
her late partner at Hamilton on Nov.
20th, 1852, by Rev. Mr. Geddis, and
the young couple went to the Morris
! homestead about fifty-nine years ago.
Incorporatied in 1855
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,000,000
Over 120 Branches -
TheM�ison Bank
The saving habit
Iike all- other good habits is the result of resolution and practice,.
By depositing regularly a portion of your earnings THE
MOLSONS BANK, the saving habit is soon acquired.
Your money grows by the addition trf the interest which_ we pay
at current rates on` `savings bank deposits. It is safe, and can be
drawn upon when really needed.
Avoid careless spending by opening a ,savings mount with us.
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT
Brucefield St. Marys Kirkton
Exeter Clinton, Hensall. Zurich
WE ARC
Exc LUS IVE AG ENTS
FOR
WE INVITE HOUSEHOLDERS
GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE
SAMPLES OF THESE FINISt1ES.
EVERY PRODUCT GUARANTEED
FOR QUALITY AND SERVICE.
H. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT.
TIGE
SUS D 1E ID RS
THE STRONGEST BRACE
Made in Canada!
Thousands of workingmen are choosing
Guaranteed King Tiger Suspenders
because of their exceptional comfort
and strength.
Canadian made from solid, army
leather trimmings;; heavy elastic
web; reinforced back; steel sup-
port in east off; double stitched at
all points.
LARGE SIZES FOR {FALL MEN!
Also made , crosa back style,
Al' ALL DEALERS
Mads In Canada by
THE {GING SUSPENDER £ -
NECKWEAR CO.
TORONTO.
This INsi
sea
mg patr
h year eaarimme.
err'
r
till "11
1e��1
Western University
'London, Ontario
eArts and Sciences
Summer School
July 5th to August 13th
Fplr iNFORMATION AND CALENDAR WRITE
K. P. R. NEVILLE, Reeirtrara
"T always buy tools
heaii tite GOLDMER
trade mirk"
1
=°COL.DMEDAL"
Tools' always
give satisf action.
Made of finest
materials and
put together by competent
workmen, they fast a lifetime
with proper care.
You'll Iike "COLD MEDAL"
Tools and other lines, because
of their superior quality. Ask
for thein by name.
All Sensible Formers
Insist Upon "Gold
Medal" Harvest
Tools
For Sale at
rst class Hardware Stres.
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