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The Huron Expositor, 1920-06-04, Page 2Wire Screen- ing in an widths from 18 in. to 36 in. Fly Swats that kill but do not break. Price 10 ets. Window Screens Fz - in hardwood, well -finished. Extend: from 22 to 44 inches. Price 45 to 95c. Screen Doors Design asper cut, with panel and varnished finish, 3 feet by 7 feet ...........$5.O0 Special offer of 3 feetby 7 feet and 2 feet by 6 feet 10 inch doors, in various de- signs $3.50 Common Doors in 3 by 7 foot size - $2.25 To get mors"milk. from your! cows Spray them !Witty with Creonoid be. toobjectionable to files.orThe cowscoCreonoid I then stand more' quietly and yield. mora milk. etinoid in stables, barns. hen houses and hog pen, tq, get aid et am sectUse pesCrts. - Half gal. size, 90c. One gal. size, $1.50 Cattle Sprayers with glass font $1.15 Axle Grease, -3 lb. tins .. 45c Cotton Gloves, per pair .. 25c Mop- Sticks 356 Door Mats, coca, $1.75 and ........$2.75 0' Cedar Mops with handle $1.75 Auto Polish ...50c and 75e Lowe's Auto Paint, per quart ° • ` $2.40 G. A. Sills, Seafort THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FILE INSURANCE CO'Yi . HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS 7. Connolly, Goderich, President /as. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Leitch, 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, No. 2, Seaforth; John Eennewies, 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: 11 a. m. - For Clinton, Goderich, Wingharn and Kincardine. 5.53 p. m. -- For Clinton, Wingham, and Kincardine. 11.03 p. m, - For Clinton, Goderich, 6.51 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 8.12 p. m. -For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going North a.m. p.m. London 9.05 Centralia 10.04 Exeter ® 10.18 Hensall 10.33 Kippen 10.38 Brucefield 10.47 0. Clinton. 11.03 Londesboro 11.34 Blyth 11.43 Belgrave ....•........ • 1..56 Wingharn 12.11 Going South a.m. Wingham 7.30 Blyth ve 7.44 7.56 Lond(4orn 8.04 Clhitoii 8,23 Bruceaeld ... s.... 8.40 Kippen 4 ............. 8.46 Hensali . .. 8.58 - Exeter..:. a 9.13 Centralia . 9.27 London 10.40 4.45 5.50 6.02 6.14 6.21 6.29 6.45 7.03 7.10 7.23 7.40 p.m. 3.20 8.36 3.48 3.56 4.15 4.32 4.40 4.50 5.05 5.15 C. P. R. TIME TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH TO TORONTO Goderich, leave Blyth Walton Guelph a.m. p.m. 6.20 1.30 6.58 2,07 7.12 2.20 9.48 4.53 FROM TORONTO Toronto, leave 8.10 Guelph, arrive 9.30 Walton .. 12.03 Blyth -12.16. Auburn .. 12.28 Goderich - 12.55 5.10 6.80 9.04 9.18 9.30 9.55 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line for Galt, Woodstock ra- don, Detroit, and Chicago, and a termediate points. HOW YOU CAN TELL GENLJINE ASPIRIN Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross" are Aspirin --No others! There is only one Aspirin, that marked with the "Bayer Cross" -all .other tab- lets are only acid imitations. Genuine "Bayer TabI'ets of Aspirin" have been prescribed by physicians for nineteen years and proved safe by mil- lions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis. `Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets --also larger "Bayer" packages, can be had at any drug store. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicaeid. While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped with their general trade mark, the 6.15 "Bayer Cross." Is Your Mouth Tender? Are Your Gums Sore or Bleeding? Are Your Teeth Loosening? If so, you have "Riggs" Disease, -Pyorrhea, K Trench Mouths arid you need Riggs Remecly. lor Riggs Disease Why suffer when you can easily treat~ yourself in the comfort And privacy of your own home -by this sure, safe and painless method, ghich will give you -immediate relief f Write RIGGS REMEDY COMPANY, Limited Pyorrhea Specialists 144 Carlton Street, Toronto, Oat. la a SEAFORTH, Friday, June 4th, 1920. inside of :tho• grain of wheat. When this has begin done, we have pure white flour. In making 'graham 'flour every part of ,the grafieif wheatis, left in the and ground up finely.- Many p _" e think that `graham flour is from a special grain called gra- but this is not true. It is said ;ahem bread is not so good for amuse it ..centaine the outside c =_ ing of the: wheat grain or bran rich is composed of almost pure silica, the same substance of which glass is made, and cannot, therefore, be good for us. Whole wheat flour is made from the whole grain of wheat from, which outside covering or, bran has been separated". • :It contains everything but -the bran and is, therefore, the most nutritious flour made. - The grain of wheat has several coverings of bran coats, the outer one of which is the one composed of silica, and which is not vfaluable as food. Un- derneath this husk are found the in- ner bran coats, which contain the gluten. Gluten is a dark substance containing the flesh -forming pr nitro- genous elements, which are' valuable muscle building. The inside or heart of the grain . of wheat consists of cells filled with starch, a fine white Mealy powder which has little value as food, but is a great heat producer. Sometimes; in making whole wheat flour, the heart of the grain► i also removed, making pure gluten flour. The • name whole wheat for flour is not accurate, therefore, for graham flour is made of the whole, wheat gain while whole- wheat flour is made of only certain parts of the grain . of wheat. What makes me want to stretch? The necessity or desire to stretch comes to us because certain parts of the body are not receiving the proper amount of blood circulation and it is these parts that we stretch at such times. If you have ever been to a bail game you know, of course, that it has became customary for the crowd, no matter how large, to stretch its legs and arms during the last half of the seventh inning. In.fact, that has come to be a fixture at ball games and is universally 'known as the `stretch , ins ning. Now,it is not so much the re- sult of a desire to eticourage the home team as the natural following out of nature's laws that originally- started this practice. The'end of the seventh inning ata ball game generally means that the crowd has been sitting quit still for the greater part of an hou and a half, just long enough for th circulation to become poor in parts o the body, and the custom of stretch' ing at a ball game thus comes from the necessity of getting a little more speed into the action of the heart to. increase the blood. supply. In other words, the stretching con stitutes a mild form of exercise. You will notice that ball players do not stretch themselves in the last half of the seventh inning. They are getting enough exercise without that. It is natural, however, for us to stretch as we wake up from sleep after having lain quietly in one position for one or more hours. It is nature's way of causing the heart to work faster. POCH TELLS HOW THE WAR WAS WON "I won the war by stroking my pipe," said Marshal Foch in the course of a recent talk with, a T'reneh. liourne alist. He meant to say that in the mood induced .by tobacco he was able` to . work out those problems of strategy that eventually resulted in the German . defeat. But he meant also that having arrived at certain definite conclusions the 'fact that his plans did not go smooth), from the start did not agitate him. He smoked his pipe patiently and waited for the tide to turn. History is.likely to rate, Foch even, more highly as a strategist than the present generation. We are too close to the problems he , had to solve to appreciate their magnitude. No other general in all history had so many men at his command. No other" general was ever' confronted with such a huge and formidable enemy. To no other great general did the moral quality of warfare ever appear so important as it did to Foch. War to Foch was not an exact science or a branch of industry. He does not believes, as the Germans were taught to - believe after the Franco-Prussian war, that a warn can be decided wholly by means of plans carefully made long in advance. Besides being a cdnflict between. men's bodies, war, to Foch, is also a conflict between the souls of the op- posing nations. He would .not sub- 'scribe to the cynical doctrine of Nap- oleon. that God is on the side of the heavier battalions. Foch believes that knowledge, reasoning, the great- est tactical and strategical qualities, however necessary they are, are no-, thing if character is lacking. In a recent work entitled, "Poch as a MVrilit>ary 'Wr•+c r. (11-ts:rlez recalls that on the occasion of a re- treat, Ney was attacked by artillery on his flank and faced his columns to the right and cried to Jomini, who begged him to 'get back to first principles: "I don't care anything for your accursed strategy. I know only one - thing. I never turn my back to cannon." The words were heroic, but the action' was foolish, as Ney was soon to realize. It would' not be for Foch, the greatest living strategist, to show contempt for strategy. One cannot defy circum- stances. But if in. order to produce good results character needs to be supplemented by knowledge and reason, they in their turn, according to Foch, are conditioned b r two ab- stractions from the realm of morals; - duty and discipline, and the worship, more or less exclusive, which is rend- ered to them. Thus, . says the writer, Foch re- stores to war that nobility and that high idealism which it had lost in the hands of the Germans: He sub- jects force to the great principles of ever -living morality. Ideas, accord- ing to him, .have once more tri- umphed over matter. Foch, too, might say that he won the war by never for a moment doubting that he would win it. He had no faith in the policy of attrition and obvious- ly does not agree with Haig, who thinks that the campaigns of 1915, 1916 and 1917 were responsible for the victory of 1918. A war of attri-' tion is a war that wears out both armies and can give no final result, he says. In the long period of dead- lock, according to Poincare, Foch never wavered in his confidence of eventual victory. He wrote again and again to the President using such phrases as; "Victory represents mitral superiority ox; the part of the con- queror and moral depression on the part of the conquered," and . "To will m4e, strongly and more persistently than the enemy is the supreme re- source." He often recalled a saying of 'Frederick the Great's; "The more. obstinate will. win. That is tlii'e whole secret of success." After the armistice Foch 'said: "The wax was won by faith." To Andre de Maricourt, another French writer, who has had several interviews with Foch, the Marshal said that from the age of seventeen he thought of re- 'venge. That -was after he had seen the Germans in Metz, and he added: "You know very well that when a man of ordinary capacity concen- trates all his faculties and all his force on a single object he must ob- tain •it, but for this, these essentials are necessary: To be strong he must be objective and never subjective. I. mean that in order to act he must never lose himself in impressions. The facts alone count and we must stick to the facts." It was after this that he made the remark about smoking his pipe. He said that thetask Was a difficult one, for the Gerihans had a superb army and professional sol- diers • of the first order. But there was no Moltke the Elder. "The lat- ter would never have been so im- prudent as to make war without first trying to neutralize Russia. Or if he had had to swallow the pill all the same, I promise yon that he would have conducted the war very differ- ently." People had often asked him, he said, if he expected a long war, and he said: "I know nothing about that. It wasn't my business. The future never belongs to men and it is a loss- of time and thought and so ofenergy to diagnose it to the de- triment of the needs of the moment." To,Foch the evils of each day were sufficient. He .handled each day's problems as they arose, never for .a moment doubting what the end would be. He- Willed victory, but he had to know how to handle the forces at his command: He was dealing with hu- man Beings and not with chessmen. He had to camouflage to his soldiers. He had to get them to do the same thing they - had been doing, and ' at which they had been beaten, to a different tune. He had to make the army believe he was trying something else when he was but repeating the old thing undste a new guise. Foch is a deeply religious man. He says: "Without claiming the intervention of a miracle, I say that when at a mmom- ent in history a clear view is given WO Ile Tried ''FRUIT-A-11VES" rse Wonderful Fiwt Medicine NIR. FRANK HALL. Wyevale, Ontario: "For some two years, I was a sufferer from Chronic Constipation and DYsPePs4. I tried every remedy heard of without it ay success, until the wife of a local merchant reco,mmende4 'Flirt -a -boles'. I procured a box of 'Fruit-a-tives' and began the treatment, and my condition commenced to improve immediately. The Dyspepsia ceased to be the burden of my life as it had been, and 1 was freed of Constipation. I feel that I owe a great- debt to Trait-atives' for the benefit I derived from them."; FRANK HALL. 50c. a box, 6 -for $2.50, trial size 25o. At all dealers or sent postpaid by. Fruit -a -tires - Limited. Ottawa. Ont, to a man and he find later that that clear view has determined movements of enormous consequences in the con- duct of a formidable war --then I hold that that clear view, which I .thinly I had at the Marne, on the Yser and ozr the 26th of March, 1918, comes from a providential force in the hands of which one is an instrument, and that the victorious decision descends from on high, from a will that is superior and divine." _ THE REASON WHY Why can we think of only one thing ata time? If you are asking the question intelligently, you must know that to think means to concentrate, and in that sense we can only think of one thing at a time, because it takes all of that part of the brain which is used for thinking for just one thing. To 'give close attention to any once subject znleans to turn the entire brain force practically in one direction. To let other things pass through the mind at the same time may appear not to interfere with the one thought, but they do, and our conclusions suffer accordingly. You can be doing something with one part of your body, while' engaged in thinking of one thing, but only such things as are more or less mechanical as the result of ;iabit, such as walk- ing, or moving the -arms -things which the parts' have done so • often that ac- tual attention by the brain is not absolutely essential. Take for iu- .stance, the fact that a man in deep thought on one subject will some- times walk' up and down the room or along the sidewalk. He can do this walking and still think concentratedly, but if he stubs his toe 'on the leg of a chair or on a rough place in the walk, his thought is broken, because the brain immediately takes itself out of the thought land pays its attention oto the toe that was stubbed. What is the difference between gra- ham flour and whole Wheat? Graham flour from which graham bread is baked is made from unbolted flour. The process of bolting flour, consists briefly in taking out of it all but the AS NO PAIN NOW What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Did for Mrs. Peasey of London. - London, Ont. -"I suffered with per. iodic pains, was weak and run down, could not eat and had headaches. The worst symptoms were dragging down pains so bad I sometimes thought I would go crazy and I seemed to be smothering. ' I was in this condition for two or three years and could not seem to work. I tried all kinds of remedies and had been treated by physicians, but received no benefit. I found one of your booklets and felt inclined to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I received the best results from it, and now I keep house and go out to work and am like a new woman: I have rec- ommended your Vegetable Compound` to my friends, and if these facts will help Some poor woman use them as you please.' -Mrs. J. F. PEASEY, 200 Rec- tory Street, London Ont. The reason women write such letters to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. and tell their friends how they are helped is that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound has brought health and happiness into their lives. Freed from their illness they want to pass the good news along to other suffering women that they also may be relieved. If there are any complicationsd not understand write to 1 ham TREATMENTS FOR- IVY POISONING "The summer season is. the period when poisonous :plants flourish and extend their, noxious effects, hence it is timely to send out the usual warn ing about ivy and sumac poisoning,' says the Journal of the American Medical Association. The commonest of these plants are -the poison ivy and the poison. sumac, both _members of the Rhus family, which are found in all parts of the Canada, except the arid plains and in the mountainous districts of - more ' f`more' than 6,000 feet elevation.. They are plentiful in city- parks, along country roads, even • in the badly kept back yards of city houses and in all waste places. Their poisonous prin- ciple is an acid resin, called toxicoden- drol, of which as small a quantity as one -thousandth of a milligram is enough to raise a weal or blister where it touches the skin. It is 'generally believed that susceptible persons need not even be topched by it, but that sitting or walk ng:inn close prgqxxamity to the plant is enough :te✓, cadse the poisoning.,. There is, however; soma doubt about this, as the • poisonous •resin is not volatile, but of • this .. it would be difficult -to convince those who have, suffered without knowingly touching it. It is a fact that clothing or other articles may convey the poison long. after having been in contact with lir and it is virtually certain that some of € the worst cases of poisoning come from` the smoke of burning plants. Again, it is doubtful if any one is entirely immune, al- though many persons believe they are, The present writer, for example, sat for an hour on a mass of poison ivy while eating to picnic lunch - and did not know it until an eminent botanist called his attention to the character of the couch on which he had been) re- clining. But he suffered no ill ef- fects. The symptoms do not as a rule man ifest themselves for several days. Many drugs have been recommended as cures. Washes of acetate of lead were formerly the popular treatment, for the irritant substance is precipitat- ed by this; but, as the Journal of the American Association points out, this is a dangerous treatment, for the pre- cipitated poison must be removed in some way, - and many persons are susceptible to lead poisoning that may be worse than that of the ivy. Scrub- bing with soap and hot water has been, advocated widely but unless this be" au.. . roe Illy and liberally it will merely�ve'the•• poison and spread it more widely over the skin. The same is true of 'alcoholic lotions. The treatment most highly,thought of is that with a _ hot solution of permanganate of potash, which ac- tually destroys the poison. This will discolor the skin, but lemon juice will remove the stains. But, after all, if we can eradicate yellow fever by destroying mosquie toes, we ought to be- able to eradicate dia E.Pink- , poison! ivy and. sumac, at any rate from the neighborhood of inhabited, Medicine Co., Lynn, lviass. places. Y 2 $ 920. 3U Incorporates in 1055 CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,040,000 Over 120 Branches SAVING BUILDS CHARAC ER, -Start to Save Systematic- saving strengthens character by inducing self-denial and creating independence. . The easiest- method of saving is by depositing a certain portion -of your earnings regularly in THE MOLSONS BANK. With the addition of interest at current rates a substantial sum is soon acquire Small accounts receive the same attention as larger ones, of nient courteous service to all. BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield St. - Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Hensall - Zurich • Western Universit London,. Ontario &4rts and Sciences Summer School July 5th to August 13th FOR INFORMATION AND CALENDAR WRITE - K. P. R. NEVILLE, Registrar 111 S Pi • IDE. s THE ONGEST BRACE Made in Canada Thousands of workingmen are choosing Guaranteed King Tiger Suspenders if because of their exceptional comfort sand strength. l Canadian made from sold,' army leather trimmings; heavy elastin web; reinforced back; steel sup= port in cast off; double stitched at #u points. - a�ENT Also SIZES FOR TALL'. ad tyy S AT. A`l.l. DEALER* Medi [s Carta by THE KING SUSPENDER A NECKWEAR 00. TORONTO. nit S > sk 41 After n hearty meal, Yon' avoid that ° CO: Child hior., ii •ailm.enl of the throng" lets. bhorou:r e dep towels 'hey tinder from o Concerti Bontot, ern ple Tablets When itonstip by mea cents Medi= AC New Women Vices. The i ber tas be New Baring the wo Engl lextensi imerma The '.efeatc :age of twenty Miss tar of. a bred than h Thot now e Several ;of Fro Twee Empre heemoi fished ar a ifotrr tit .ow pi xeeentl Bpain. The f the ongre apendi: Twe Congri 'ittsbi selves' nail I - drop po the hi In Ienplo; righty rnents ran av In. >; Annie: roan, *hen. ntea MrS *labor trepan yeah im vex toilet bY they It Work proiea Pot t the •e tusba water Pow Other benefits: to teeth, breath, aPPetite, nerves. That's a good deal t get for 5 cents! Seateci Tighj-Kept - ®ems_ yp{� T e� .`■ R.J� f l P . 4 e't�l�a ••Ln..�e.� - ful�gJrtt.ilr 1, y ) -0 „' �. , rurerairidtran.rrllj Lasts