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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-11-05, Page 2= THE lidRONNEXPOSIT011 NOVEMBER 5, 1920, • ••••••••••••.•••••••••••••.•••-••••..-.4.411, # -A .!! - !!! Hunting Season. Cartridges for shot guns, 10 and 12 gauge, in stock. Extra sizes should be order- ed early. We have a special price for smokless car- tridges: 22 short . 35c box 22. long 40e box Thermos Bottles, one pint size . ... .. .. $1.85 Thermos Kits, quart bottles, lunch box and grip. . $9.00 Flashlights . . .$1.25 to $2.75 Camp Grills $1.75 Game Traps, 3 in 1 Oil, Cleaning Rods, Sharpening stones and. Knives. CHEMICAL CLOSETS We purchased some government Chemical Closets which we are able to offer reasonably; just the thing for Winter months $4.75. Oak Grained Fancy Chemical Closets$10.00 Sani-flush for cleaning porcelain closets, per can. . . .45c Rubber Door Mats, each $1.50 Rubber stair treads, save the wood and paint, each. . . 50c 50 1111/M11101111MMINIIMIII 1111011.111111.1111111=1111111111 GROW GLASS FLOWERS Perhaps, before very long, instead of bouquets of flowers being presented to our famous ladies upon occasions, of ceremony, it will become ;the 1 custom to present bouquets of glass. • Glass flowers for table decoration are becoming more and more 'popu- lar, for, while . the eiecessary bril- lianee of coloring can be embodied! , in these glass flowers, they do mit - 'fade as do real flowers, and there- fore do not' need renewing, unless a 1 breakage occurs. An extension to the use of glass bouquets is only a step. . Not only is glass extending its Use. from the decorative point of view, but it is also finding wider scope. The very latest use to which glass has been put is in ithe manufacture of baths of colored glass, which will harmonise -with the scheme of decor- ation favored in the bathroom. Dusthill Cedar Mops 4 Dozen Spring Clothes Pins 25c Axle Grease, 3 lb. pail 45c Buggy Whips 25c to $1.25 Halters $1.75 to' $1.90 Rubber lap rugs, goverment stock . $3.00 Toilet Clippers, Special $3.00 Butcher Knives, Sheffield goods 65c to $1.00 G. 4. Sills. Seafort 1111E IVIcKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO1r. 4' • HEAts OPPICE---SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS J. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans,Beechwood, Vice -President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. -AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. ginchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar - C. P. R. TINIE TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH TO TORONTO Goderich, leave Blyth Walton Guelph ea MANY HEADACHES' COME FROM THE NOSE That headaches are often due to troubles in the nose is well brought out by Dr. William Wilson in The Practitioner (Landon). They are caused by the closure of the mouths of the ducts that drain the sinuses or cavities in the bones ' of the head. These sinuses are situated in the upper jaw bones directly under the eyes, in the frontal bones, over and between the eyes; in the ethmoid and sphenoid bones, back of the nose and almost in the centre of the head. The sinuses are lined with mucous Membrane and normally are full of air which is changed as we breathe. But a cold in the head causes swelling of the mucous membranes of the nose and pharynx, arid the openings of the - ducts are thereby closed. Then the air in the sinuses is absorbed and a vacuum is produced. Sometimes the inflammation spreads to the lining of the sinuses and they discharge semi -purulent mucus into the nose and throat. If they be blocked they cannot discharge freely. The -result of either of these con- ditions is headache. Such_a headache is generally felt in the morning and passes away as the day wears on. The cure for these conditions is thet. freeing of, the entrance to the sinus, which is easily done through the nose by a specialist with -a bougie inserted through a silver tube. The physician generally touches them with a weak solution of nitrate of silver. Occasionally a slight opera- tion is necessary. BRANCH a.m. 6.20 6.58 7.12 948 FROM TORONTO. Toronto, leave Guelph, arrive p.m. 1.30 2.07 2.20 4.53 8.10 5.10 9.30 6.30 Walton 12.03 9.04 12.16 9.18 Auburn 12.28 9.30 Goderich 12.65 9.55 • Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in- termediate points. with, Brodhagen. Blyth DIRECTORS William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bennewies, B-rodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. 1,1tEwen, 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, Winghim and Kincardine. 5.53 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham, and Kincardine. Only 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. na-For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE MERE' IS ONLY ONE GENUINE ASPIRIN Going North a.m. London........ 9.06 "Centralia 10.04 Exeter 10.18 Hensall 10.33 • Kipper" _ 10.28 Brucefield 10.47 Clinton ... . 11.03 Londesboro 11.34 Blyth 11.43 Belgrave - 11.56 Wingham 12.11 Going South Wingham • a • f, 0 0 0 • • • • 7.30 Belgrave ........ 7.44 Myth 7.56 Londesboro 8.04 .Clinton • 1“00000-00-••• • 8.23 'Brumfield - 8.40 _ Kippen 8.46 Hensall . - .-8.58 Exeter 9.13 Centralia . 9.27 London ............ 10.40 4.46 5.50 6.02 6.14 6.21 6.29 6.45 7.03 7.10 7.23 7.40 p.m. 3.20 3.36 3.48 3.56 4.16 4.32 4.40 4.60 .5.05 5.15 6.15 Tablets with "Bayer Cross", are.Aspirin-No others! If you don't se -c the "Bayer Cross" on the .tablets, refuse them -they are not Aspirin at all. Insigt on genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer Cross" -Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years and proved safe by million; for lleadache, Tooth ache, Earache,. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets -also larger "Bayer" packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada ) , of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeetieacidester of Sal icylieacid. e',Vhile it is well known that Aspirin moans Bayer mann facture, to assist the public: against i in ita lions, the. Tablets of Bayer Company, Lta., N.: ill- be stamped with their general trade inark, the "Bayer Cross." e- •••••••••111•11111•11 WE ARE E EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOP WE INVITE HOUSEHOLDERS GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE SAMPLES OF THESE FINISHES. EVERY PRODUCT GLIARANTEEO FOR QUALITY ANO SERVICE. H. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT. Vim! 111112111/111111Y CASTOR I A Par Wants and Children. 011 If Om Aim Bought -•••••••1•••• Rule, ihdresbes, Soothes; Beals -Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy, If theyTire, Smart, Itch, or Burn, if Sore, Irritated, UR ,Inflamed or Granulated, use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult. At all Druggists in Canada. Write for Free Eye Book. Marina Company, Maga, U. S. 1. IFARM WORK NOT FOR CONSUMPTIVES An experianaed saperiatendent of 'a sanatorium for consumptives in England. Dr. Jane Walker, of May- land, Suffolk, lectured recently at the Royal Institute- of Public Health on the training ef tuberculous sufferers. The London -correspondent of the Medical Record sends the following summary of her address: "Dr. Walker, speaking of those with the disease in its incipient form but -which had been arrested, was of the opinion that, provided a person was over 22, and the disease was ar- rested, it did not constitute much of a handicap. Indeed, she was not sure but that in some ways it was an ad- vantage, as it conferred a certain de- gree of immunity. There was no need for such persons to leave_ lucra- tive occupations -that is, if they took good care of themselves and did not lowes their vitality by an indiscreet mode of life. "Dr. Walker here made somewhat of a discussion by deprecating the value of the advice so frequently tendered to tuberculous individuals to leave their work in a town and seek some light occupation in the country. She declared that the light job in the country was a chimera, a figment of the brain. . Work in the country al- most invariably meant agricultural work, which implied the possession of a good deal of skill gained only by long experience, long hours, and arduous labor. Farming work, was certainly not appropriate for the great majority of consumptives. "The next class consisted of those whose disease was not arrested, but who as a rule d'id not suffer from the - malady in an acute stage, and who went through life with the germs of tuberculosis triore or less active in the system. Such persons were never quite well and yet sometimes lived to be fairly old and died from another disease.. Those thus afflicted should not be advised to do ordinarily in- dustrial work. However, according to the views of the speaker, founded on her own experience, the advice 'given. as to the kind of work to be done by this class of consumptives depended largely on temperament. If a person was of a cheerful, optimistic, placid temperament, he or she stood a much better chance than one of an irritable, worrying nature. "Character counted for a great deal in the tuberculous subject. Still, if a man over thirty, and -a skilled tex- tile worker, for instance, had a wife and family dependingupon him, let him continue at his occupation. If he changed he might obtain healthier work, but if he were unused to it and did not earn nearly so much money, he would worry and the mental strain might affect him more, adversely than his former less healthy employment." A VISIT TO THE ROYAL MINT A visit to the Royal Mint is inter- esting if only to see. the Royal Minters, who are a fine set of men with a greater proportion of hand- some heads among them than in any Other assembly that I remember. Not so long since I was led through the Royal Mint by the Deputy lylaster himself, who did what was possible, above .the din of minting, to instruct me in its rnysteries; but I recollect little save two crystal facts. One was that the men had. not; only fine heads, and for the most part fine hair and meustaches, but a fine frank bearing; and the others that there are ma- chines in this place which are prac- tically human. The linotype had, hitherto seemed to me, who have seen little in thistwa.y, the most drastically capable of all -metal intelligences; but I don't know that it is really in ad- vance of the gently reasonable crea- tures here, that turn out hundreds of threepenny pieces a minute, and are ANOTHER 'VICTIM OF RHEUMATISM Entirely Well After Six Weeks' Treatment With "FRUIT.A-TIVES" MR. AMEDEE GARCEAU 82 Hickory St., Ottawa, Ont. "I was for many years a victim of that terrible disease, Rheumatism. In 1913, I was laid up for four months with Rheumatism in the joints of the knees, hips and shoulders and was prevented from following my work, that of Electrician. I_ tried many remedies and was under the care of a physician; but nothing did me any good. Then I began to take 'Fruit-a-tives' and in a week I was easier, and. in six weeksl was so well I went to work again. I look upon this fruit medicine, 'Fruit-a-tives', as simply marvellous in the cure of Rheumatism, and strongly advise everyone suffering with Rheta matisra to give 'Fruit-a-tives' a trial." AMEDEE GARCEAU. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial sizei25c. At all dealers or Gent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Ont, to reel in. The other day two strangers wan- dered casually into a shoemaker's shop in Ottawa, and when they left carried .with them a little over three thousand dollars of the shoemaker's money in exchange for a perfectly nice chunk of "jeweler's *gold.' They say that there is no possible com- plaint against the metal as brass. It is good brass, but as gold it is a frost. The same (fay in Miontreal the courts of justice were engaged in salving the wounds of a three-card monte with. a total stranger -who had seen him first. And there are large 1 numbers of people -who have traded off Victory Bonds for the common stock of the Consolidated Corporation for the extraction- of Sunshine from Cucumbers -and- allied industries. The sucker is a foolish fish. He swims up streams, catches some sort e of disease and dies. If he were not so prolific he would become extinct. But he never will. 'Nature designed a goed fertilizer when she...built the sucker. The human variety is like- wise prolific and, likewise vacuous. Strip one and. another sidles up, eyes and pockets bulging, waiting -for the wallop that will add to his education perhaps, but leave the next in line serenely unimpressed. It is extremely wrong to do unkind things to these people. It is not only wicked; it ion't sporting; it's too easy. The wonder is, not that so many of them are nipped; the wonder is that any of them come to the end of their days retaining anything but their epi- dermis. The ways of the sucker, afloat or ashlars, is past comprehen- sion. equally willing to turn out shillings, half-crowns and sovereigns; while there is a strange sprawling monster also here whose life is spent in count- ing pennies into bags, and who can safely be left to do this with perfect accuracy all day longwhich is more than any aeeotintant, however char- tered could be. But how the Royal Mint managed to supply England with sufficient coins before machinery came in I can- not imagine. There are astonishing contrasts in the. machines too! for while one of them will brutally and noisily bite thick strips of bronze as though they were biscuits, another in almost complete silence is weighing coins with the. utmost delicacy, some score to the minute, and discarding into separate compartments any that are the faintest trifle too light or too heavy, and not a soul near it to interfere. A visit to the Royal Mint is so like a dip into the Arabian Night that anyone may be pardoned for bringing away only hazy impressions. You see the whole thing exactly as in the stories, not only the Eastern "Aladdin," but the European"Tinder Box," where the soldier passed from the room filled with coppers to the room filled with silver, and from the room filled with silver, to the room filled with gold. The only thing that you do not see at the Mint is the room filled with paper notes; but that is no loss. Who wants paper? Metal is the stuff. So far as my memory serves me, we entered first a room packed with ingots. Have you ever seen an ingot? There is something in the very word that brings romance about you. In- gots and doubloons and pieces of eight. Well, here are ingots; great lumps of silver and bronze piled on trestles to be wheeled into the fur- nace room. And then the. furnace room, with its glowing fires and its cauldrons of boiling metal and its handsome, brawny fire -worshippers. Here everything is hot and liable to splutter,- and the men must ;protect not only their eyes but their hands, so that every one has vast gloves. To anybody thinking of taking up mint- ing as a home pastime I would say that the first thing to do with metal from which coins are. to_ be made is to turn it into bars. These bars begin at, say two feet six long and barely or.e inch thick, and a series of machines then take. them thati• by the time they are finished with they are some yards long and. of the thick- ness of whatever coin they propose to be. It is then that they are fed into the machine which stamps out the discs corresponding to the circumfer- ence of the desired coins;and then these discs are gently but firmly crushed between the two dies apper- taining to those coins. Nothing could be simpler -now. Yet only by immense thought and engineering in the past has this simplicity come asbtiollu.t. But I suppose that in a cen- tury's time minting will be simpler THE SUCKER IS A FOLLISH FISH No doubt it is very wicked to run confidence games, to sell gold bricks, to work the Spanish prisoner trick, the three-card monte layout or any of the thousand and one venerable but still effective methods of getting between a prospective victim and, his roll. But when one reads the news- papers one is sometimes filled with wonder that more of us are not pursuing these lucrative means of gaining a livelihood. The streams are so very, very full of suckers. Mankind has stumbled but a short distance along the path of wisdom where his intercourse with his fellow -man is concerned. Every few minutes since Esau made a bad bargain with Jacob -and probably long before that -someone has been getting himself done up by someone else. But his neighbor never learns by his misfortun'es. 'When bis turn comes he gleefully swallows the bait and then raises a mighty splashing when the fisherman begins THE REASON WHY As a matter of fact plants and trees do grow downward as well as up. There is a part of each called the root whose business it is to grow down and take certain things necessary to the life of the tree out of the ground. But the part we see above the groun is the part we generally think of w n we think of plants or trees. The tree or plant, in order to 'ow properly and eventually produce flow- ers and perfect seeds, must hav sun- shine and carbonic acid gas, and.it is the business of the leaves and other parts above the ground to get these out of the air for the good of the plant or tree. So they start to grow toward the sun. It.is easy to prove how a plant will turn toward the light. Take notice of the plants in the flower pots at home. Set one of them on the window sill- inside the window where the sun..4an shine on it and notice how 'quicRy quitthe leaves and branches will be b nt oyer against the window plane. urn it completely around then, so ,that the plant leans away from the unlight, and watch it for a day or two. Before long you will find that it has not only straight- ened itself completely out, but started to lean toward the- window glass so as to get as near the sun as- poasible. Most plants, if kept where the sunlight cannot touch them, will die. The sun- light is a necessary part of their lives. Is yawning infectious? Yawning is infectious to the extent that other habits are. The desire to yawn which comes to us when we see someone else do so, comes under the heading of suggestion. The power of suggestion is greater than many of us realize. We are 'great imitators of each other. When. one of us is down- hearted we are apt to become happy and glad simply by being with other people who are happy and glad. If enough people one at a time tell a perfectly well man that he looks sick, he will actually feel ill, provided he does not suspect a game is being played on him. So a good actor carries his audience with him. He can make them laugh or try almost at will, and if he yawns, his audience will begin yawning. Often, however, there is no acting connected with the yawning of the first person. Then the yawn is caus- ed because the person is not sending enough good air into the lungs for purifying the blood, and the yawn is only nature's -way of Making us take an exceptionally deep breath of air in at one time. This lack of sufficient good air in the lungs may not be due to the poor breathing, but to the amount of bad air in the room. In such cases it is quite likely that other people in the room yawn when one of them starts -it because they all begin to feel the need of more 1 • Incorporated 1855 The M.olsons Ban Capital and Reserve $9,000,000 Over 130 Branches BEFORE CROPS ARE SOLD Farmers needing money while waiting to market crops or stock are invited to consult with the Manager at any of THE MOLSONS BANK Branches. Savings Departments 'at all Branches. BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield St. Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Hensel Zurich good air at nbout the same time. Now when you rub your cold blue Why does cold make our hands hands'together, you start the circular - blue '-Your hands appear blue when tion going again, and that brings the cold because the veins which are the red blood into the arteries, giving' near the surface are filled with impure you the healthy red color again. When blood which is purplish in color. Your ' you 'run hard you get red in the hands become cold because there is ot sufficient circulation of warm ted , face because you are causing an un- ustial amount of red blood to fow blood going on to keep them -earni through your whole body by your The blood in circulating through voar violent exercise. Some people with body sends warm red brood thrmign the arteries, and this in return to the heart through the lunge by way of the veins. The veins carry only ne- ed up blood when the arteries ere through with it. Its color is a pur- plish blue. an extraortmary amount ofcirculat tion are red in the face all the tiine This is because of the presence of ar great deal of blood in the arteries Or because the waltz of their arteries- - are so much thinner than others that. the red blood showthrough more easily. When your hands are blue it means that circulation of good red blood has practically stopped -the red blood is not flowing from the heart through the arteries in sufficient quantity and there is no color in the arteries, as the blood from the arteries has pra.c- • ticall gone into the veins. The ems ..are full of purplish blue blood, and" this makes the hands look blue, because there are a great many veins in the hands close to the surface. Why do I get red in the faee?- 6 SINCE ai1870 30N811COUGHS , ,SEig WOE .i•••••••••••• 'The .0 Von, can be /Ise of ea, mild in.stantl erweeten =teed anid can with pe -Mrs. A1 writes: grea -xegui and Ilia Tablets __ -orby The .13rockv. 1 T. FR 1 DON'T DO THIS Leonard Ear Oil Relievs Deafness, Stops Head Noises It is not put in the ears, but is Rubbed in Back of the Ears, and in- serted in the Nostrils. Has had a Successful sale since 1907. For Sale in Reaforth, Ont., Canada by E. Umbach and Arthur Sales Company, Toronto, Ontario. Proof of Success will he given by the above druggists. THIS SIGNATURE ON YELLOW BOX AND ON BOTTLE. Manufacturer 70 Fifth Ave., New York City. The distinctive Red Rose flavor, aroma and full strength is found in every Red Rose Carton. Never sold in bulk. d e Women should takewarning from such symptoms as heat flashes, shortness of breath, excessive nervousness, irritability, and. the blues which indicate the approach of the inevitable "Change " that comes to all women. nearing middle age. We have published. vol- umes of proof that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound is the greatest aid women can have during this trying period. Read About These Two Women: Fremont, 0,-" 1'was passing through the critical period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all the symp- toms incident to that change -heat flashes, nervouness, and wag in a gensral run-down condition, so it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pinkkam's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as the best remedy for my troubles, which it surely proved to be. I feel bet-. ter and stronger in every way since taking it, and the au- inying symptoms have disappcared."-Mrs. M. GODDXN, 925 Napoleon St., Fremont, Ohio. Urbana, During Change of Life, In addition to its annoying syMptoms 1 had an attack a grippe which lasted all winter and left me in a weakened con itiont.01: fw bit at times that 1 would never be well again. I read of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and what it did for women passing through the Change of Life, so I m.y doctor 1 would try it. 1 soon began to gain in strength and the annoying symptoms disappeared and your Vege- table Compound has made me a well, strong woman so 1 do all my own houswork. 1 cannot recommend Lydia E. Pbakham's Vegetable Compound too highly to women passing through the Change of Life." - Mrs. FRANK id,XMON, 1316 South Orchade Street, Urbana, 111. Women Everywhere Depend 'Upon Dear E What I am n j know and by front children cry out holiday took gatheri 60,000 laenevol ly. Th catiadre have t of the of the were Annie Bird, Bonnie Left Poor. end I lastly t which i .excelea -accomp half a it. Ther 'field f 'local h zervati are Hi tions tio pre Ther 'over rnerce milts monst Masse the G ter in 1 fear kept i reader what Comm pie of I w of yo per there port 'Voron year forme that perso 'Lauri aedd. said, are not 1 it is -that yo day 'how the e liars .aerta -wo woo corn thos and of died wou is ail tilij _net ARP --deeplaeme Va.*, i.dia E. Pt Vegetable Compo ly the bac sorn tlt ter tra ag lo a Pe we ra ke