HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-02-25, Page 2`:. Wire Fencing
The approach of Spring means Fencing. You
need the fence. We have the STOCK on hand.
Our PRICES are right. We can supply at once.
6 Wire, No. 9 wire throughout, 531/2e. rd. Spot Cash
Wire, No. 9 wire throughout, 61c. rd. Spot Cash
8 Wire, No. 9, even space, .. • ...68c rd., Spot Cash
9 Wire, No. 9, 50 inches high ...84c rd., Spot Cash
SPOT CASH means SPOT CASH
Staples, Brace Wire, Barbed Wire; Fence Tools
on hand also.
(1. A. Sill s,Seaf'orth
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE SEAFORTB, 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.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar-
mntk, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
1V�111am Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
]iennewiea, Brodhagen; James Evans,
leechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
IL R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, ilarlock;
George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. B- TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
11 a. m. - For Clinton. Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
1.53 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.
1.12 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
Clinton 11.03
Londeaboro 11.34
Blyth 11.43
Sulgrave 11.56
Wingham 12.11
Going South a.m.
Wingham 7.30
Belgrave 7.44
Blyth 7.56
Londeaboro 8.04
Clinton 8.23
Brucefield 8.40
Kippen 8.46
Hen 8.88
Exeter 9.13
Centralia 9.27
London 10.40
4.45
611 you 4:'11 t See the "Rave(r 10(4•'
6.14 cr.1L,• tabiete rte teem -1 hey are
6.14 \-pr n 1..1 ail.
6.21 "Bayer 'I'.tblrl< r.
1111,e 1 "Bayer
the s 1fet,'
by
C. P. R. TiME TABLE
GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH
TO TORONTO
amt.
Goderich, leave 6.20
Blyth 6.68
Walton 7.12
Guelph 9.48 4.53 , ; .s. , i, -d 011 at ex 1,• 1 10., '
FROM TORONTO 111„15 in Canada and Ili„ t I, .i
I t hal It is s,•Lltoni a,I, ,aha, 1, ,
Toronto, leave 8.10 5.10 II,,,..,; ,,,,,1,•I 75 Ib.. 111 e• lee. 0011:1 5
th) FO S
Log rops
U'..
4fkf 1fa �,Kti^�V `,
'rllil'�+� eY >4i7'+'Yt�ra ( �yjl
T$L tSURO N Emmen*
•a 1 �', aluot 1.11--1'fnlfl.
:ala c,,,t h.,...
.tn1 ll it IL iia
1,1, .,,.1 , 11
1a rs n a ..u,., 1:,I r.
.11 111,•
.i..1, .1 nl al II„- 1:1,..-,.,.1
-,sr.1 by w h1.-'1
I. .,' AA 1111 .1 11,101: 11,1, 11 of
,,11.111 1S „t
aI,
he 5., of 11.to1.11,'
,, 1. w 111.
_1:.:1,1
11111
1ug:1 11*'
011 �.... ::ton, 1
1d 1
.. n,. 1,,,. 1,'.I, 1,,1i_, n 1.,11 1
1,
111 11 1: u
gr. a1 1 ,.
11:.111 the t of
•_t., work rn^.41: ,1
.,.,, ,.tall tele 111, 1'I., .I
11unr1 a Iar,eI, 11,.,1 1,111' '
p.m. �, ut, wluir 111 p.l clue 1118 ,
1.30
2.07 `•"1.11111 in the roil.
220; 11 11.1s been found 5)
Guelph, arr ve •
Walton 12.03 9.04
Blyth 12.16 9.18
Auburn 12.28 9.30
Goderich 12.55 9.66
Connections at Guelph Junction with
Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon-
don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in-
termediate pointy
THERE IS ONLY ONE
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets with "Sayer Cross"
are Aspirin -No others!
6.29
6.45
7.03 1
7.10
7.23!
7.40
P•m-1
3.201
91.36
3.48 1
8.66 ,
4.16
4.32•
4.40
4.50
5.05
6.15
6.15
•1:
1, .11.1.
\i..
WE ARE
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS
FO R
WE INVITE HOUSEHOLDERS
GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE
SAMPLES OF THESE FINISHES.
EVERY PRODUCT GUARANTEED
FOR QUALITY AND SERVICE.
H. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT.
When you pay 30 cents for a
half -pound package of Red Rose
Tea(Crimson Label) you get ex-
--actly the same - tea for which
you formerly paid 35 cents a
package. -Quality in Red Rose
'Irea is. the first consideration..
CASTOR I A 1
Pee Mods sad f9d en& GIRLS! HAVE THiCK,
*'1 1. Hays Bought
aispo tlir
Children Ory
FOR "FLETCHER`S
'ASTORIA
SOFT, HEAVY HAIR
f1 ole-+. 110E oyer, c.111 he fed 10 140.11:
tare at a notch rel!ler It ,'i; s. 1\ 11011
h„g": ale led on (1101U1. :11011e 11,-.)'
hall„ t 11101111atn 111„Ir 01:51.1, '-., It,
rapid gaa1115 score 1 11.1111 111ll,t
be led. 1I is 0' 1,11,111 a gond 11"10)
to lu• 011;11 tug 1,111: 01a111 lu hogs „0
pa -tun• evt•n w'h1 n'
lux•lnaut The .,'lulnit 0: grain fed
will of ruurst depend to a lag g,' en-
Ir,tll all the 1lss., 1,1 f1,1.,g„ , flea used
it, wrll ae the I11: 111 wI.1:•1, the 111,0
are to be lintsht-d The a11.nl Inn?,
he uure001'd as. Ili, 11ntsleng .,rage ,.
reached A bout 1 11.. of 511111 1, :1
good allowance t„ r,cnn 11111 T1,10
can 55 1111 011 gt:,.Iunlll lntul 4 1.1
Ib,. are bring I1'1.
of all forage , pop, ;Jfelra 1, the
most aultabl,• wht.;, i1 1.,,1 L„ grown
with a rcaw, nabL•,'t-:rid'' 1 .0111111.
11 provide, ,tarn Da>u that con-
111111ta to b,, x01, ,, i,.ni t elghoul the
season. New :,'dml> of alfalfa
.nu,l be pastured eat el allt. hue aftet
u good Mand la esla bel: it„d (morn 10
to 20 shoats play he pastured on an
:acre. providing they al. receiving a
:au'ly hell grown ration
Next to alfalfa. :ape I, the best
111500 crop for .iwlur. Because of
11.0 ease with whirl: It ma) tx, groan
Ili many section: it la a inure valu-
able crop than alL,!la. It may be
-own in drills 2S inelee apart at the
rate of 2 lbs. per acre. ur sown broad-
cast. Pigs should 1101 be turned on
'e until it to about 10 to 14 inches
in height, and when it is fairly well
eaten off should be given a chance
to grow up again by having some
other pasture on which the hogs ran
be turned for a time. Next to rape,
clover is possibly the beat pasture or
coiling crop. The growth is not so
luxuriant as either rape ur alfalfa.
nor does it cover as long a feeding
period. Clover should be used where
several plots are being pastured al-
ternately. Red clover is most com-
monly used, but recently sweet clover
is rapidly demonstrating it: value as
a pasture crop for hogs.
Other pasture crops such as peas,
rye, oats, vetches and turnips are of
less value and do not give good
enough results to warrant their use
except where it Is impossible to use
the more highly recommended crops.
Rye may be advisable in cases where
a particularly early pa±cure is de-
sired.
.A good arrangement of pasture
:rope le secured when alfalfa 1s pas-
tured first, and when It is eaten off
fairly well, a plot of red clover or
sweet clover can be pastured. The
alfalfa may then be allowed to grow
up for hay and a field of rape sown
to be pastured later, when the'clover
Is done. Rape sown at diffe-ent in-
tervals can be used alone, but gives
slightly inferior gains compared to
the use of deferent pasture crops. It
has been found by experiments car-
ried on at widely distributed experi-
ment stations, that the use of pas-
ture or soiling crops in feeding hogs
enables the feeder to secure gains at
from 20 to 30 per cent. less cost than
where grain feeding alone to finish
the hogs on pasture its use is prac-
ticed. When it is not desired to fin-
ish the hogs on pasture its use is still
valuable because of the healthy,
thrifty condition it induces in the
growtng hogs, thus making them
much more likely feeder's than when
they are raised wllhout green feeds.
-C. M. Flatt in O. A. C. Review.
IPoultry (tilling Improves the Plock.
Poultry calling demonstrations In
I Prince Edward I.Slend show that 1n
the first year (191 4) the number of
live birds culled was about 45 per
cent; in the third year only about
21 per cent. had to be culled, owing
to the good effect of grading up.
2t pays to show That you Were hens
A 35-tentbottle of "Denderine" wee
not only rid your scalp of destructive
dandruff and :top failing hair, but im
mediately crier hair seems tw-ire as
abtmdant. and 10 wpndror• ^]Haar Tet
"s Dandetino" rave vnur hair. Hare loth
of long. henry hair, radiant with life
m•1 beauty
Chat -will lay well. The pen of prise
winning layers al a recent contest to
Ottawa was sold tor about three
times the price ,if just ordinarily
good laying bird= Get really good
layers; then test and select
Live Stork Notes.
Promptly remove from the dairy
nerd any animal s,spected of being
In bad health, and reject her milk.
The bands of milkers should be
earefnlly washed with soap and wat-
er and dried on a clean towel before
uaBktns. Dirty bands mean foul
malt_
FEBRUARY 25, 1921.
1. i•
THEIEMISERY
DE 4ft-HEALTU
Three Years of Suffering Quickly
Relieved by "IAUIT-A-TIVES"
t{4, GASPARRD DUBORD
159 Avenue Pius IXMontreal,
"For three years, I w a terrible
sa frrer from Dyspepsia and My -general
health was very bad- I coasul!rd a
physician and tookhis medicine and
faithfully carried out his instructions;
tut I did not improve and finsai:y the
doctor told me 1 coald not be rated
At this time, a friend advised me
to try Traita-tied and 1 did so.
After taking two bores of '1'ra.t-o-
tires', I was greatly relicvr,l ; and
gradually this marvelous fl uit
medicine made me completely eel!.
My digestion and general l:,'altil
are splendid --ail of which I owe to
"Fruit -roves".
GASP ARD DUBORO.
To. a box,G for V.50, trial sine, 2.5e.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by
Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont.
•
in off the front stelae the articles he
had ordered to he delivered. The po-
lice were notified, an entrance was
forced. Smithers was found murder-
ed. 'The burglar ala'n 'ad been cut
and under the fallen leaden weight
was found a pad of cloth and the
cartridge unex"ltjded. A strong box
had been rifled. Whoever had done
the business' ',vas no novice. There
was not a finger -print to be found,
the work h wing obviously bee done
in gloves. The only clue for the po-
lice to woeli en was a small dark
lantern, a child's tov without a doubt,
which had been left contemptuously
behind by 'he burglars.
"Scotland yn-d went to work on the
case. With only the child's -lantern
to work on as a clue to the murder
mystery the problem became at first
mere drudgery. A tedious round of
manufacturers and toy -shops follow-
ed, to determine if possible. where
the lantern was bought. In this
search team -work was everything,
individual cleverness availed nothing.
Finally it seemed probable that the
lantern was such as a mother in one
of many tenements distrieta in Lon,
don would buy for a seven-year-old
child to play with.
"Another council was held and a
simple plan devised as the next phase
of the hunt. A detective who had a
seven-year-old son was assigned to
an exceedingly easy task. He was
told to allow his boy 1., play with
the lantern in the streets of the quar-
ter from which it may have come and
to see what happened. For a week
nothing at all happened and father
and son were asked to do the same
in the adieinin• die riot. Here the
simple d,•vire hrou•rht ne better re-
ults, and again tIsy were assigned
'new territory This happened sev-
eral times. until ft began to look as
though nothing at all would come of
PLAYTHING AS A CLUE
in an intensely interesting article
on the detertiye methods of different
countries, in the Strand Magazine,
Joseph Gollomb relates the following
exploit of Scotland Yard in bringing
two murderers to justice. The story
of this case is just another illustra-
te!' of the doggedness and patience
with which the great British detective
organization works.
"In a halfasleepresidential section
of East London there is a neglected
three-storey private dwelling with
heavy shutters and doors,inconspicu-
oux and unattractive. It was just
the kind of house for which an old
man. who called himself Smithers,
had been looking. For twenty years
he had been accumulating money by
buying all kinds of objects and no
questions asked. He could drive a
shrewd bargain, and his business as-
sociates usually accedeel to his terms,
though not without matey a curseand
often more or less impressive threats.
Smithers did not mind the former;
but as he grew more and more rich,
he worried about the threats. He
knew his customers. So he tried to
hide his riches, lived penuriously,
whined about every penny, and from
assuming the miser he with the years
became one. Fear of being murder-
ed and robbed drove him from his
business to a retreat. The house by
reason of its inconspicuousness and
strong doors and windows attracted
him and he bought it.
"He secured every possible entrance
into the house with bars and double
locks, and, with an expensive knowl-
edge of burglar alarms, he had his
home wired so that nobody could
touch a door -knob, window -sash, or
grating without setting an electric
bell ringing. In addition, he arrang-
ed it so that if anyone detected the
wiring and cut, the loosened "wire,
dragged down by a leaden weight.
would fall on a"cartridge, and, ex-
ploding it, would give as effective
notice of danger' as the electric bell.
He lived by himself, received no one.
and attracted as little attention as
he could.
"Nevertheless, one day tradesmen
began to wonder why he did` not take
Saying it Quickly. -A quiet way o
-.Am it wick towua" 1711 te send
"mums."
.w,kbk 7H')
ABLE TO DO
HER WORK
After Long Suffering Mrs.
Peasey Restored to Health
by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Toronto, Ont.-" I suffered with
irregular menstruation, 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 1
seemed to be
smothering. I was
in this condition
for two or three
years and could
not sem to work. I tried all kinds
of medicines and had been treated by
physicians but received no benefit. I
found one of your booklets and felt
i ruined to try Lydia F_ Pinkham's
Vegetable Compount i received the
leer resl,its from it and. now 1 keep
hoose and go out to work and am like
a r ,. ,.omen. 1 have recommended
'.Mable Compound td my
friend, and if these facts will help
some re's,r scoman use them as yott
pica.«• Mrs. J. F. Pttassv, 387 King
tit., Toronto, Ontario.
If you ere one of these women do
r"t suffer for four or five years as
1'.ir.i. Peasey did, but profit by her
experience and be restored to health.
it.
INCORPORATED 18561
Capital and Reserve $9,000,000
Over 130 Branches
The Molsons y ani
There is no safer or surer %%l�ay of safeguarding
your surplus money than pl9cing it in a savings
account with The Molsoits Banks.
111
III
I
Why not begin to -day 't
BRANCIHES IN THIS DISTRICT: q t
Brucefield, St. Marys, Kirkton
Exeter, Clinton, Hensel!, Zurich.
11.1
STOMACH IN ORDER!
NO INDIGESTION,
GAS, SOURNESS
"But with the doggedness of the
rare, S•'nti-nd Yard hung on to the
trail if trail it was. Then one day
a little boy ref the quarter edged up
to the lwlieenrvn's son looked sharp-
ly al the lantern with which the
youngster wes languidly playing, and
set llp a wail: -
"'I want my lantern'.'
""Taint your lantern!' the dctee-
tive'y son retorted, inditrnantly.
"'Yes it is I know it is!'
"The detective came forward.
•1'5 n• your cure?' he asked, gently.
"'Because my son has had it for
early' weeks, you know.'
""Ere, I'll prove it's mine,' the
strange boy exit]. 'When my wick
burned out I cut off a little piece of
my sister's flannel petticoat for a new
wick.'
"The detective opened the lantern
and examining the wick found it to
he of flannel as the boy had said.
"'We'll have to ask your mother
about this.' Ole detective said. 'If
you're telling the truth you shall
have your lantern back.'
"The three went to the boy's
mother, a widow, who kept lodgers.
The woman, honest and hard-working,
confirmed her son's claim. The de-
tective kept his word, returned the
lantern, but questioning the widow
further. found out that the boy miss-
ed the lantern at about the same time
that two of her lodgers had left with-
out paying their bills. One had told
her that he was an electrician, the
other a plumber's apprentice, and
she remembered seeing tools of their
trade, or what she thought were
such, in their room.
"Then followed another series of
weary searches by the men of Scot-
land Yard: searches among young
plumbers and among electricians; in
the underworld for two young fellows
answering to the descriptions the
widow gave; in the files of criminal
records in Scotland Yard; in more
expensive lodging -houses and 01 dance
resorts. Nothing short of a big or-
ganization imbued with team -work
and bulldog perseverance could ,have
accomplished that search. But at
last two young men were found whom
the widow, unknown tb them, identi-
fied as her former lodgers.
"The police had as yet nothing
more serious against them than un-
paid bills. So they secretly kept
them under observation. It was
thus they learned that the young men
were fond of target -shooting with a
revolver at trees in the country.
The bullets extracted from the trees
proved to be of the same exception-
ally large size as that found in the
murdered miser's brain.
"Tactfully, patiently, a corps of de-
tectives searched into the past of
the two men, each finding out some
seemingly unimportant item. But
the whole v. -as becoming a net into
which one day the two men found
themselves inextricably fast on the
charge of the murder and robbery of
Smithers.
"How fast they were caught they
did .not know until the trial. Then
the smaller of the two defendants,
suddenly losing courage, cried out
that he would turn King's evidence
against his accomplice. Before he
could blurt out another word the
other leaped at his throat and almost
succeeded in killing him before they
could be separated.
"'I'B stand a free man and watch
you hang, you-!" the little man
=sobbed. 'Listen to pie, my Lord! If
you promise to let me go free-'
"But he was gently informed that
the case for the Crown needed no
kelp from Trim --as it proved."
"Palm's Dinlmpsin" lira proven it still
the 'surest relief for Indigestion, Ganes
Flatulence, Heart horn, 1ournesa, For
mentation or Stontarh Diet rrsx txutud
by aridity. A few tablets gine ulmns
inmled ul1,' relief and shortly
the etiena"h is corrected no you. ern eat
favorite Gads without foe r. Large ,woe
e,r;W only few eints at drug shoo
Millions helped annually.
LEONARD
EAR Oil
RELIEVES DEA FNESS and
STOPS HEAD NOISES. Simply
Rab it Back of ilio- Ear.a and
Insert in Noetri!n. e-nf n f nut --
wee eat b. g;-cn 5, ,t.e drnggi,1-
MADE IN CANADA
ARTHUR SALES t:U., Saes Agents, Iterate
L
5, ',wawa. 1st., gfro, ID :ah 5-m-, It V. Car
For Sale by E. UM.EACH, Seefortli.
CASTOR IA
Far Infant. and ObU ren.
TRH Mad You Rau® Always Bop
Bears the e I
=.t O'ry
t" A I' 4 `' �i I A
•ofINIMIOBBIB,sneoeat :s -rests.- - - ,.,•v��.��
From Gfhroi.; l e Leacher
A Horsepower 1iar)1;; Strap
These two articles are made hors chrome
leather, the strongest, toughest leather kmrw'o
They will not harden with sweat or water. They
have gat strength and wearing qualities the:
wit aloe's than please you. May we show you
our fins selection of halters and harness a
M. BRODERICK, Seaforth.
F. O'BRIEN & SON. Staffs.
R. A. SADDLER, Striffa.
enatellte
$50 to $5,000
A YEAR FOR LIFE
A
WNW GOVERNMENT ANNUITY PROMS
-No better life investment available
-N. better security obtainable
--Cannot be seized or levied upon for any cause
-Will be replaced if lost, stolen or destroyed
-Not affected by trade depravoa
--Owe from Dominion Incore. Tax
-fin mindin:a examination required
/swam over the age of 5 years resident or domiciled in di
Any twe tams may purchase jointly.
Employersy purchase for their employees --school boards for
the teachera--congregations for their ministers.
to your notma.tQ: er write, p,'atage frec
of Aoaratiea, Ottawa, for new booklet mol other
State ass sed age lest birthday.
to S T B•.tedo, S1tper-
form.tion deiced.
CREAN � ST
FLOUR
i
/
er °. a(•.'Lt a ;h'�'ese!zat0
1*1.1 tell
V 011 can also make
beautiful light cakes
and bread of wonderful
whiteness and flavor
with Cream of th e W es t
Floor.
Maple Leaf Milling Co., Limited
2t010afe', Wianip.. Brandon. Halifax