The Huron Expositor, 1920-11-12, Page 3EMBER I
k
, Ban
G.,..
CHILDREN
. for a child in
?s him to save.
f first thousand
all Branches,
STRICT
Kirkton
Zurich
Most, or practically alt of -
Fn comes from Western On-
rets, and much of it from the
in growing districts in the
The only reason suggest -
,he unsatisfactory condition,
: is that help shortage may
eeluded the possibility oe
tooking in .many . cases, - or
same shortage may have
in unusual number of the
,o thresh direct from the
hilt' -heit grain was not in
,onditien to eo into the bin.
,•eeult of the unusual nuns --
c arionds of wheat graded
aunt of toughness, or
el•ning n viii Iue proportion
ed e. aies, the dealers have
z a • e ,est of samples
ta4 t. ti:� a good grade. 'This
ex . expense to the dealer
€t ' : o the final purchaser,
greee. re will naturally be
i,= re the test proves the
cesatisfactory condi-
ang of one sample for
es=. , tet something like an
xtra ;. ark, and though a man
six : tunnies through the
one :.a e the number of cars
t'e tir e at. Toronto alone wilt
ient to neep one reran Lusy for
-e time every day of the week.
niter can molusk is locally
rte silkworm of the sea as it
fibre from which clothing and
can be made.
tease with a reversible side,
two addresses, has beer
for sh'pping clothing be-
ts owner and the laundry.
Greenland birch, the w orld'st
tree, grc-vs less than three
r. height, but often covers two
feet of ground.
mentor has patented an arti-
hristnias tree, made of wood
em be taken apart and stored
tly from year to year.
"DIAMOND DYES.
Dye right! Don't risk.
your material. Each pack-
age of "Diamond Dyes' con-
, . tains directions so simple
the any woman can
dsa toncl-dye a. new, rich,.
color into old garments,
draperies, coverings, every -
thin. whether wool, silk,
linen, cotton or mixed goods.
Buy "Diamond Dyes"—no
other kind—then perfect re-
1 silt= are guaranteed even if
you Lave never dved before.
Di nged;�t has "Diamond Dyer
el Color (. arcl"---16 rich colors
e, Stops 'lead Noises
i, in the ears, but is
o> the Ears, and in -
Nostrils. Has had a
Ga::e since _90'7.
4 Cmbach and Arthur
ratio.
the above druggists.
v airy «. rarer
Ave.. York City.
Price
$1.50
to
$2.25
The Giant
r . ro+*giy built bitit[`r for the frisky.
Lull! Weld be .' to how Y'94
�. s
)LER STAEFA
1C1~ ........SEAFORTU
STAFFA
NOVEMBER 12,1920.
Victory y Bond Interest
War Loan Coupons and Interest
Cheques maybe casleedor- deposited
at any of our branches.
Deposit your Victory Bond interest
in our Savings Department and
earn interest thereon,
THE DOMINION BANK
SEAFORTH BRANCH, R. M. JONES, 'Manager.
SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT.
ISE HURON EXPOSITOR 1 sprayed the neighbor's corn, three
dozen or ' more hills. It stopped
dying and bore corn.
"Next year the same thing started
in my corn. i noticed,a tassel (nett
to the infected patch) turning yet -
low. Curiosity made me examine it
DISTRICT RATTERS
`THE FALL WEATHER
HARD ON LITTLE ONES
Canadian fall weather is extremely
hard on little ones. One day is
warm and bright and the next wet
.and cold. These sudden changes
bring do colds, cramps and colic, and
unless baby's little stomach is kept
right the result may be serious.
Ther. e is nothing to equal Baby's
Own Tablets in, keeping the little
,ones well. They sweeten the stom-
ach, regulate *the bowels, break up
.colds and make baby thrive. The
Tablets .are sold by medicine de_2ers
or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
I found some `worm. dint'; also , a
greenish: worm new to me. I forth-
with gave it a dose of kerosene emul-
sion. I marked the stalk. At the
sametime a few other hills looked
yellowish. I sprayed them, using
the same fluid, and applying it with
a common sprinkling can, taking
cafe to hold it high so that the emul-
sion would run into the joints and
tassels. No more stalks died, and
the marked stalk produced a good
ear of corn. The trouble, did not
appear the next summer.
"I was in Ohio in August, 1919. My
brother asked me about the corn bor-
er. I had not noticed much about it
in the papers, bot I told him of our
garden. He said, `I guess you have it.
If you can cure it, it is worth a for-
tune."`No,' I said, 'the remedy is
nothing but kerosene emulsion.'
"I wrote to the Department of
Agriculture, and received a bulletin
containing pictures of the European
corn, borer, and a borer in ' alcohol.
I am convinced -that it is the same
as the ' insect in our garden, which
the kerosene emulsion, destroyed."
HURON NOTES
—The Brussels Pgst of last week
says: Last Friday Miss Turnbull,
Brussels North, brought The Post a
fine sample of Wolf River apples,
one of; which weighed one pound and
-two ounces and measured 14 inches.
There .were several pounders. Mr.
Turnbull's orchard has done well this
year while so many others have
,comparatively little fruit.
—The Goderich Township Telephone
Commissioners and a few subscribers
met Mr. Francis Dagger, a telephone
expert. appointed by the Ontario
Railway and Municipal Board, in the
town. hall, Clinton, .on Tuesday and
laid before him the circumstances re-
garding the increase in the telephone
rates. Mr. O. Ginn, chairman of the
-commission, presented the matter, ex-
. plaining that the rate was being in-
creased from $54.70 to $62.50, the
first instalment being raised from
$17.20 to $25.00, the balance to be
paid, in five equal instalments of
$8.90, the allowance for maintenance
being raised from $2 to $6. After
}rearing the commissioners Mr. Dag-
ger agreed that the system was be-
ing run as economically as possible
at the present rate of labor, etc., and
the advance in rates' was approved.
Mrs. Innes, wife of the lath
Alexander Innes, who passed away in
Clinton on Sunday week, died on Fri-
day after a ftnight's illness, there
being less tharn a week's difference
in the time of their passing. Mrs.
Innes was a daughter of the late
Nahum Avery, of the London Road,
but was the last member of her fam-
ily with the exception of one brother,
. John Avery, who :lives in Alberta.
After her marriage Mrs. Innes re-
sided in Stanley Township until about
eight years ago when they left the
farm and moved into Clinton. She
was taken ill about two weeks be-
fore her death and when her husband
died was too ill to realize it and she
rapidly sank until the end came. Two
'sons, John, on the homestead, and
Harold, of Toronto, and one daugh-
ter, Mrs. Roy Cantelon, of Goderich
township, all of whom were with her
,during her last illness, survive.
NEWEST NOTES ' OF SCIENCE
The provincial government of Man-
chooria is encouraging the production
of cotton through local agencies in
direct contact with the farmers.
A box -like shield has been patented
to protect the faces of locomotive en-
gineers obliged to lean out of their
cab windows in stormy weather.
Marseilles is planning to build two
subways with a total length" of seven
miles to solve the transportation
problem for its 800,0.00.. residents.
With a new davit one man can re-
lease a+lifeboat from a ship, step into
it anti\.lower it on an even keell to the
water by handling a single rope.
A British engineer has developed a
method for saving the lokoe due ,to
•
PILLS ARE PERILOUS
Purgative pills are among the "best
sellers" in drug stores, says the
..Journal of the American Medical As-
sociation. But it adds that they lead
all other purgatives as creators of
the cathartic habit. They are a con-
venient form' of administering nasty
medicine occasionally, but are never
to be taken habitually.
And the Journal ridicules the com-
pound
ompound pills many of which have been
abolished from the pharmacopoeia
because they contain far too many
drugs, some as many as ten. Even
the pills called "A, S and B" (aloin,
strychnine and belladonna) it says are
an absurd combinat'on because of the
far different Spee is with which the
three ingredients act. The aloin
(made from- aloes) have been proved
by experiment to be quite -as effective
as when combined with the strychnine
and belladonna.
The official "compound cathartic
pills" are objectionable because they
are poisonous, and every now and then
a doctor is called, to treat a patient
suffering from calomel poisoning - due
to these pills taken for the benefit
of the patient's liver. And the."vege-
table cathartic pills," in which there
is no calomel contain too many in-
gredients.
SPRAY FOR CONTROL OF THE
CORN BORER
Writing front Essex County, Mass.,
to the Breeder's Gazette, Chicago,
Arthur Berber describes his method
of overcoming the European Corn
Borer, which consists of spraying
with kerosene emulsion when traces
of the borer become apparent in. the
growing corn. He says: "Two years
ago last Summer a new thing' ap-
peared in our garden, which is
owned by four persons. The sweet
earn in a patch adjoining mine be-
gan dying at the top. The owner
tried spraying with arsenate of lead,
which (lid no good. When half of
the corn was past saving 1 had left
'over a quantity' of kerosene emulsion
which I had used on potatoes. I
scrapping old automobiles by builc
up the worn parts by- electric de-
position,
With an average annual production
of -$60,000,000 for several years, the
world is 'gradually increasing the
number of diamonds that are mined
each year.
WRY ANAEMIA PREVAILS
The . Strenuous Conditions of Life
To -day Are Responsible.
Mothers who remark that girls to-,
day are more prone to anaemia than
the girls of a generation ago, should
look back at the surroundings in
which they and their companions
lived; They would easily see the
reason in life's altered circumstan-
ces to -day. -.
Now the school -girl's life is more
strenuous; her more numerous stu- I
dies .are .a severe tax upon her
strength. Also, girls enter business
soon after leaving school—at an ,
age when they most need rest and
outdoor life. Their womanly de-
velopment is hampered by the stress
of working hours, hurried and often
scanty meals. Girls are more liable
to bloodlessness to -day, but there is i
this consolation that, whereas doc-
tors formerly regarded anaemia as
often incurable, the cures are now
counted in tens of thousands. Such
medicines as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills ►
have restored to good health thou -1 of weak anaemic girls and
women, simply because they contain •
the 'elements necessary- to make
new, rich, red blood which means
good health and vitality.
When your daughter's strength
fails and pallor, breathlessness --and 1
backache disclose- her anaemic con-
dition, remember that you can make
her well and assure her healthy de-
.velopinent by giving . her Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills to make good red
blood. Remember, too, that for wo-
men of all ages Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills are especiallly helpful in the
many ailments that result from wat-
ery blood. They make women and
girls well and keep them well. This
is amply proved by the case of Miss
Eva MacKinnon, Glammis, Ont., who
says: "As a school girl I grew very.
pale and would take dizzy spells and
sometimes vomiting. My condition
was such that I was not able to at-
tend school regularly, and my moth-
er was very much worried abort -my
condition. Finalily - she decided to
give_me Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and
I took these for a considerable time,
gradually gaining strength until I
was perfectly well. It is some years
since I took the pills and I have en-
joyed the best of health, and I am
certain pale, sickly girls will find
new health if they give Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills a fair trial,"
You can procure Dr. Williams Pink
Pills through any dealer in medicine
or they will be sent you by mail at
50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50
by writing direct to The Dr. Will-
iams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
mow m
STEW'ART'S SELL IT FOR LESS
MAIL OR PHONE YOUR ORDERS
WE PREPAY THE CARRIAGE
•
SCORES OF NEW FALL COATS VERY MODERATELY
PRICED
1
Come and See Them. --The Prettiest Coats You Ever Saw
ALL THE BECOMING STYLE IT -IS POSSIBLE TO PUT IN A COAT IS TO BE FOUND IN THESE
BEAUTIFUL GARMENTS. YOU MAY CHOOSE HERE FROM A MAGNIFICENT ARRAY OF
STYLES WITH THE ASSURANCE THAT YOU ARE GETTING THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF COAT
COMFORT AND SATISFACTION FOR THE. LEAST POSSIBLE MONEY. ...ALL SIZES.
Prices 2 5 to $65
� $ � :r
Women's
Dresses
Have .you ever taken the
time to examine the won-
derful variety of stylish
ready-to-wear Dresses we
have in our store—if you
have not, ask to see there,
You will be surprised just
how good and how 'stylish
they are.
PRICES
$lOto .$40
Women's
Suits
There is ole thing certain
—there never were dres-
sier, prettier, or more be-
coming Suits than we are
showing this Fall. . All
that is new is featured
here in a charming array.
We cannot give descrip-
tions here but we want
you to see these modish
garments. Cone in and
try them on. You will
like them.
PRICES
$20 -to $45
•
THREE BIG SPECIALS
Boys' Worsted School
Hose 69c
Black ribbed wool and cotton mix-
ture,
ixture, just the thing for school;
strong, sturdy knit. All sizes. "
Special Price 69c
Men's Fleece Lined
- Underwear 95c
Penman's and York Knit fleece-
lined underwear in plain and dark
stripe heavy wool, sanitary fleece,
well trimmed. All sizes. Regular
prices $1,25 to $1.50.
Special Price 95c •
Women's Odd Pieces . of
Fur $6,95 -
Manchurian Wolf, Marmot, Op-
posum, Paw Persian in Muffs, Collars
and Rffs. All good clean stock in
good styles:- Clearing the lot at
Special Price $6.95
Men's and Boys
Overcoats
'Very Reasonably Priced
t\
Wherever one of . our Overcoats
are worn they bear silent testimony
to the good taste and good judgment
of the wearer. In addition to their
exceedingly good appearance there
is a quality in both the cloth and
make that gives you: a continuation
of that good looks for years of con-
stant wear. Come in and see them.
You will be delighted with the coats
and the price, too.
MEN'S COATS
$20b0 to $45.00
BOYS' COATS
$50Oto $22.00
='9
Furnishings for
Men and Boys.
THIS STORE HAS ALWAYS BEEN THE
LEADING FURNISHING . STORE. LARGER
STOCKS TO CHOOSE FROM AND THE
BEST BRANDS AT THE LOWEST PRICES.
Whether you adhere closely to the very newest
styles, follow the extreme fashions or dress conserv-
atively, it makes no difference at this store. You
can best satisfy your ideas here. The unusually
large stock we carry is justified by the immense
business we do. New stocks are constantly coming
and going.. Always up-to-date we show the very
latest and approved styles in every department—AT
THE MOST REASONABLE PRICES.
.
Work Clothes
For. Men and Boys
It Will Pay to Buy Work -Clothes
Here, Read over the prices be-
low. The quality is certain,
Overalls
Peabods , .. $2.75
Snag -Proof , ...... • $2.75
Big B .. `...... , . .$2.05
Acme .1..14.4•., . ••••
Pants
Kant-Tear ... , •. , ... , ..$L25
Pants
Peabody's . $2.75
Stripe Cottonade ,$2.75
Black . $2.25
1,,,41,1.
Work Shirts
. Black and White double -
front ... $1.50 to $1.75
Light Colors . ; ...... $1 to $1.75
Black and white stripe., $1 to $1.75
Sox
Cotton ...,.,,.,25c
Union
Wool Flat Knit ..
Wool Fine Ribbed . .
Mitts and
Wool, heavy
Cotton` ...... , . , . , .
Leather ,.,,,,,,.,.
..
,35c
,.....,,..$1.04
Gloves
... , ..50c to 1
..,,..25cto3c
....50c to $2
Stewart Bros.
Seaforth
i