HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-08-12, Page 6t.
* +�• 4 WOMEN' AS e;ltntutaLs.
r, l tN14 ss I throat
1 a*icine. UnivesaltY of
al New York Qphtbal-
ural Inbtitute, Moorefield's
•Golden Square Throat Soa-
enilon Eng. At Mr, J. Ran-
fdce Seafortb, third Wednes-
0a mouth 63 Waterloo Street, om I a South,
ul. Phone 267, Stratford.
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
aures, Proctor & Redfern, Ltd.
Ia.
M. Proctor, B_A„Sc„ Manager
86 Toronto St., Toronto, Can.
Bridge., Pavements. Waterworks. •e
„gs Systems, inemeraton•
Patina
�H Red Ings, Foetal., Arbi-
trations,
Fem:—Usnatly paid eat of
the mosey we save ear clients
MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO.
Specialiste inalur lth and Accident
ln
Policies
Over $11000 000• paid in unrestricted.
rlosses.
Exceptional opportunities for local
Agents.
904 ROYAL BANK BLDG.,
2778-50 Toronto, Ont.
JAMES McFADZEAN
Agent for Howick Mutual Insur-
ance Company. Successor to John
Harris, Walton.
address BOX 1. BRUSSF,LS
or PHONE 42. 2769x12
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister,
Notary Pulic. SolicitorConveyancer
forthe Do-
ank. Office in rear of the Do-
minion ion BBank. Seaforth. Money to
Man.
e
J. 14. BEST
Rerr,eter, Solicitor, Conveyancer
Mud Notary Public. Office npstaire
Itwer Walker's Furniture Store, Main
Street. Seaforth.
PROTJDFO i”1IF.S ORAN AND
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic. etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., d.
L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes.
"Cold to the Wad"
TB an acute attack of Nasal Cafeterh,
Those subleet to freuent "colds In the
Detective Expresses His Opinion of bead" will find that the use of HALL'S
Gangs and Crime. CATARRH adEDICINE will build up the
System cleanse the Blood- and render
The absence of women priaonere them less liable to colds- Repeated at-
. statIona has been so
to tacks of Apute Catarrh may lead to
noticuble in recent years that it has Chrome Catarrh.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE to
vauaed comment The few who are taken internally and seta turret the
L h tont thus rndut.ing the Inttamma
Lrought iu from time to time are Blood on the alumna Surfaces of tton8 a-
".a:•ged, for the most part, with such
VETERINARY
F. HARBURAI, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary Cctlege. Treats diseases of
all domestic animals by the most mod-
ern principles. Dentistry and Milk
Fever a specialty, Office opposite
Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth.
All orders left at the hotel will re-
ceive prompt attention. Night calla
aeceived at the office
restoring normal conditions,
pe ly crimes as gambling, dlsorderly Aux Druggists. Circulars free.
conduct and petty larceny. Thea has b'. J. Chaney & Co.. Toledo, ohto.
led students of crime to ask if the
part that wunueu eumethnes play In
crime bus not been exaggerated. I nestle wonK.
"Women" Bald a detective who has Susanne Langlen, of France, is
had ruuch experience with female uf- "MODERN" WOMAN RESPONS- now the woman tennis champion of
feeders, "were never fitted by 1u- 1BLE FOR ALL WORLD'S UN- t
The proposed trip to this country
bof een Queenpostponed.
Marie of Roumania !has
Mrs. Clara` Burnside of Indian-
apolis, Ind., is the only woman police
captain in the country.
The Talmadge sisters, famed film
stars, are the daughters of a Brook-
lyn policeman.
Miss Olive Chapman was the first
woman to pass the liar final examina-
tions in England. •
One of the first schools for girls
in Japan was opened bya❑ American
woman in Yokohama in 1871,
Marriages in Germany are now be-
ing recorded at the rate of 25.80 per
perft. per 1,000 of the population.
Thousands of women in Kansas
have put aside their household duties
and gone, to work in the fields.
Miss Jennie P. Musser has been
appointed collector of customs with
headquarters 01 Salt Lake City,
Utah.
Peek-a-boo waists and bare knees
are barred in the offices of the Chi-
cago, Burlington & Quincy railroad.
Features of golf, table pool and cro-
quet are include,( in new .outdoor
game.
JOHN GRIEVE, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin
ary College. All diseases of domestic
animals treated. Calls promptly at-
tended to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residence on Goderich street, one
door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea -
forth.
wfax..Att •�y wields over .man to
make hi her and coddle iter?
It is a far greater power than the
vote: Is :she more beautiful thou her
grandmother?, More guileful?
Or is it just; that men are getting
tame?
•
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Five Wisconsin cities now employ
policewomen.
Thousands of factory girls in Eng-
land are leaving the mills for do-
•
he world.
Stine• or nature Cur a criminal career REST, SAYS "GRANDPA!'
in tate suns° that men urs. That is
one reason yuu do not. hear of wo-', These humorous articles by Mr.
wen climbing fire escapes, forcing Clark and others on the "modern"
chairs and windows, and breaklug in- young husband and wife—the Larne,
to safes and requires
a certaiboletin
1t is amount domesticated husband who washes
).,b tr hgand g ..ectal° nto ;fishes, gets steals and performs other
strength successful
and agility. i man to
in- a succr•ssrul criminal oust pus- rtutirs hitherto regarded as the share
iia a certaiu amount or athlete ubil- of wooden'—denonstrate very thor-
,ty I uu;:ht add. it sometimes takers ''ughly the uiereasingly,popular point
,our.t-,• to enter a pin,•,• that is of view in respect to the gravest
.I range, dark and that t:.ti be 00- t'-rlumlty of the age, to wit, the so -
i -.1 -ii d
o-
t. ;pod such work is ret ulsive to tall,' "emancipation" of women.
•u sen. Aro the woolen of to -day dodging
•- LW tet imagine, however. that l heir responsibilities? Are they fail -
wine n du nut enter noon l.ves of ing tobear their share of the econ-
-'une. I'll in that they du nut omit. burden? Are they becoming,
IeI;uw criminal pants us extensively it a word, slackers?
mol, yet in a sense we hale wo- What share of the present world
hi -n thieves and burglars Just as we unrest can be traced to the illustrious
.t:, v,• dose of the opposite stn. They
MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteophatic Physician of Goderich.
Specialist in Women's and Children's
diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
and throat. Consulation free. Office
above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth,
Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a,m. till 1 p.m
C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M.
425 Richmond Street, London, Ont.,
Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin-
ary diseases of men and women.
DR. J. W. PECK
Graduate of Faculty of Medicine
McGill University, Montreal; member
of College of Physicians and Surgeons
of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun-
cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member
of Resident Medical staff of General
Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2
doors east of Post Office. Phone 56.
Hensall, Ontario.
work. however, in au enlir,ay differ-
-tit manner. There is u class 01 wo-
man c•rlinival that we call u 'trim -
Mrs. Pankhurst, and to the ter enema
r.-ni•it °lame .lira. Pankhurst possi-
b'e?
To get ri.eht down to brass tacks,
tiler.' She is usually well dressed, v -hat is the significance of these bake
good looking, and affable. (ler sett- ; ••,„I:e laundries, grocery shops that
Malty is separating her victim from 1 urvey not only groceries but all the
his money. She has Various methods rt .0 -rued goods that once were home -
of dot¢g this. She may rub him in a ,,un.t,•, and butcher shops which stock
taxi, or in u flat, or borrow money, ,,,I0 15..11 but prepared meats, meat
from trim under muffle false pretence el + I.ickles delicacies of every sort
only a few years ago were
1•. -tared in the name kitchen?
Net only in cities but in small
t•,wrd, the laundry wagon calling
from dour to door for groat sacks of
ashisg is a cot -union sight.
In every black of shops, there is at
,me cake bakery, where a
t•\c{nit business is dune in cakes.
4., and biscuits.
Now, thirty years ag•i, the must
rate sort of excuse was requir-
e•t for .- "beugilt” cake. A respect-
•i,le w .,man would as soon have put
i :jilted meal before her family as
i.+, sent them with a cake that was
n , holo, -malt... These matters were
points ,.f homer with the h:,uewife
of thirty years ago.
They d••it with the butcher and
grocer only for the raw materials.
d their own meats,
They prepared T y p I
cakes. pies. To buy a pickle or pre-
serve was undreamed of. As for
laundry, the word laundry, for then,
meant the place to which the men-
fo1!:s' collars and !sidled shirts were
_ent v, obtain that glossy finish. Mon-
day was a day when every backyard
flaunted its banners of domesticity.
Te -day, they have men in to polish
a few yards of floor; women in to
scrub and clean.
S ensetimes, one acquainted with
former days is forced to wonder
what a large percentage of modern
women do with themselves.
_Thirty years ag'o, the man did a
day's work to finance the home. The
v:uman did a day's work managing
the home.
To -day, the man still does his day's
work; but because the woman has to
have the sultpo;t of the butcher. gro-
cer, baker, laundry and cleaners of
various kinds, the mean has to earn
-o much more money to pay for the
release of his wife from baking, pre-
serving, washing and cleaning.
Yet wt' wonder whither thrift has
fled, and why all the unrest? Is it,
perhaps. because a large part of the
feminine half of the community are
slacl,;ng on the job, and producing
next to nothing?
Those who think otherwise will pro-
duce the argument that this laziness
of women means employment for
thousands of preservers, bakers,
laundry -workers. It simply means
that thousands of workers are em-
ployed on work these women should
be doing, instead of at necessary
work. Hence the unbalance. Hence
the industrial unrest.
Of course, thousands of women can
be spared to work in offices and fac-
tories at men's jobs, when they need
do so little in the home!
But—they have the vote! They
need freedom from domestic drud-
gery in order to study affairs and
vote intelligently. Women"s votes
will he cast in favor of every freak
or sentimental piece of reform that
i; advanced: for example, prohibi-
tion. No wonder there is unrest,
with women throwing still more of
'he burden of the home upon the
,man's earning power, and at the same
time voting far all kinds of disturb-
ing reform.
But it is, after all, man's fault.
There is something weak-kneed about
the modern man. He doesn't have to
eat canned gooda and store cakes if
he doesn't want to. He doesn't have
to permit the washing to be done at
and then decamp. If she Is not ar-
rested oftener it Is because her vic-
tim swallws his toss rather than let
it be known that he was robbed or
duped. Such wooden have obtained
at time unheard or sums Cron their
victims, but the victinta occasionally
squeal. and then tate thief is exposed.
'A few yearn ago when the city
was 0Y, -i rue with gangs, silly young
wuon'n 1,41 .,,der their spells and
x. tempt••'l to follow their for -
tom's. Ev, r)slangster had his 'moll,'
and she became his 'arum toter.' 11
there was trouble at a gang sunlit hie
and guns were brought into. ploy,
the gunmen, after finishing their
work, transferred their weapons to
their girls. The latter tucked the
guns securely away in their muffs,
and when the police frisked the
gangsters after theshooting they
Pound nothing.
The were sot long,
however, in learning about the trick,
and 10 those days many foolish
young girls found themselves in po-
lice stations wlilt serious charges
against them.
"Thleves to -day have their girls
who assist them in their criminal
operations. They employ these girls
as lookouts or decays, or in any man-
ner that may help them. These wo-
men they sometimes send out to seek
information, and many a young man
has innocently given them informa-
tion which is later turned to good
account by the thieves. A young man
with a responsible position meets a
grotty girl in a cabaret or in a dance
hall. They meet again. She gains
his confidence, and learns all about
the habits of his employer. If his
employer's place is robbed, he at-
taches no blame to his pretty friend.
He dries not know that she is an
associate of professional criminals.
"Women of this stamp are no bet-
ter than their male consorts. 1f such
women do not fall into the police
❑,t oftener it is because they carry
on their operations in a careful man-
ner. Long before the trail gets hot
they have dropped out of sight."
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the Methodist church, Seaforth
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DR. C. MACKAY
C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
the College of Physicians and Sur-
geons of Ontario.
DR. H. HUGH ROSS -
Graduate of University of Toronto
Faculty of Medicine, member of Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario. pass graduate courses in
A Queue for Buttons!
'Phe muddle in Russia exasperates
even the marvellously patient people
who have been accustomed for cen-
turies to the most exaggerated forms
or officialism, Captain McCullagh
writes in "A Prisoner of the Meds."
"One man told me that if lie lost
a button off his trousers he would
have first of all to get a permit from
the '}louse Committee.'
"Then he would have to bring
that permit to a commisar. 'Then he
would have to go to a Government
department, which would give him
an order on a Government store.
Then he would wait all day in a
queue outside that Government
store, only- to find, when his turn
came, ilia; it had given out alt its
button's, and that he would have to
go to a similar store at the other end
of the town and wait all' day in a
germ,' there.
"A button in the offertory is con-
sequently a source of unmitigated
joy to the impecunious Russian and
Polish -priests, for a whole plateful
of the paper -money- and postage
;tamps which are given liberally by
the faithful would not huy as much
as a packet of cigarettes."
lie often told the Bolshevists that
if n Government like that were estab-
lished in Britain thor,workers them-
selves or their wives would sweep it
away in twenty-four hours. the laundry. He earns the money.
If he had any strength cif character,
Revising French Language. he could direct how much of it could
The official revision of the French he used to relieve household duties.
language, which is in the hands of Thrift requires some character. A
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; the French Academy, has recently man can put his money in the bank,
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, made great progress, and the first or he can invest it in an ornamental
a
T. Tembarorll
Pott to nu ham -lin 'to'itt Tb lt;filLtr
°Thank you,'sir," ea)n
IiiaOmaster went heels to •the
library smiling genially,. and Surat'
stood still a moment or ao gazing .at
the door he closed behind him.
Be sure the village, and finally cir-
cles not made up of eottagers, heard
of this howsoever mysteriously. Mies
Alicia was not aware that the inci-
dent had occurred. She could not
help observing, however, that tit_
nuannera•of the servants of the house-
hold curiously improved; alto, when
hrough the village, that
foreheads -were touched without omis-
sion and the curtseys of playing chil-
dren were prompt. When she drop-
ped into a cottage, housewives
polished off the seats of chaira vigor-
ously before offering them, • and
symptoms and needs were explained
with a respectfully fluency whioh at
times almost suggestedthat she
might be relied on to use influence.
I'm afraid 1 have done the village
people injulitice," she said leniently to
Tembarom. "I used to think them so
disrespectful and unappreciative. I
dare say it was ‘becauee •I was so
troubled myself. I'm afraid one's
own troubles do sometimes make one
unfair."
"Well, yours are over," said Tem-
barom. "And so are nine as long
as you stay by nae."
Never had Miss Alie;ia been to Lon-
don. She had remained as was de-
manded of her ,by her duty to dear
papa, at Roweroft, which was in
Somersetshire, She ,had only dream-
ed of London, and had had fifty-five
years of dreaming. She had read of
great functions, and seen pictures of
some of them in the illustrated pa-
pers. She had loyally endeavored to
follow at a distance the doings of tier
Majesty,—she always spoke of Queen
Victoria reverentially as "her Ma-
jesty,"—she rejoiced when a prince
or a princess was born or christened
or married, and believed that a 'draw-
ing -room' was the must awe-inspiring
brilliant and important function in
the civilized world, scarcely second to
Parliament. London—no one but
herself or an elderly gentlewoman of
her type could have told any one the
nature of her thoughts of London.
Let, therefore, those of vivid im-
agination make an effort to depict to
themselves the effect produced upon
her mind by Tembarom's casually
suggesting at breakfast one morning
that he thought it might be rather a
(Continued from page 7) ,
whatever as far as I have. heard."
"That's all right." Mr. Temple
Barholm had put his hands int° his
pockets, and stood looking nun -com-
mittal in a steady sort of way.
"There's something I want the lot of
you 10 get on to -right away. Miss
Temple Barholm is going to stay
here. She's gut to have everything
just as she want- it. She's got to be
pleased. She's the lady of the house.
See?"
"I'm the one that would express
it—quick," said Tembarom. "She
wouldn't have thin, to get
in
first. I
just wanted to stake sure I shouldn't
have to do it, The other fellows are
under you. You've got a head on
your shoulders, I guess. It's up to
England; University Hospital, Lon- volunv, ending at the letter H, and wife.
don, England. Office—Back of Do- forming half of the.eighth edition or I am convinced that if the women
pinion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, the dictionary, has not been com- turned in and did their share of work
Night calla answered from residence, pletad. Some 24,000 to 20.000 words an thoroughly and conscientiously
Victoria street, Seaforth. have now hr'en r,w•is,•,l since IR70, as their grandmothers did, in one
,hat is, in forty -tiro• gears. M. Dou- year, thrift would he restored to the
AUC`I'IONEERS ole. who presided ov,a• .he sitting of : community-, money would be saved
THOMAS BROWN the academy at which this result was ' and industry restored to proper econ-
-
Licensed au tioneer for the counties a,utounced, states that it is hoped to emir balance; and the unrest and
of Huron and' Perth. Correspondence conclude the present edition about feverish disarray of these tines would
Yvan menta for sale dates can be 1000, or eighty-six yenta from the vanish entirely away.
--- ails b date at which th"- work began.— , What new power is this that the
made by calling up phohe 97,Seaforth ytanrhea:er Guardian.
or The Expositor Office. Charges mod•
*rate and satisfaction guaranteed,
R. T. LUKER
Licensed auctioneer for the County
Of Huron. Sales attended to in all
5,arts of the county. Seven years' ex-
q)erience in Manitoba and Saskatche-
itt. Terms reasonable. Phone No.
8:,i 11 .Exeter, Centralia P. 0., R.
$ 1., °Meta left at The Huron
Office, Seaforthima
4
F.ylwren to.
t??peranto, the only one of all the
ms n;; so-called universal languages
that shows any atgna of survival,
was invented by Dr, Zamenhof dur-
ing fifteen years' captivity in a Pol-
ish Driaon.
Women bookmakers • are making
their appeatance at the English race
trades.
1);:t, ,t >t V rt•'�5 '�A,f l rr,Vt,
pRiNEY16 New otEny
raeS
Ai '7,;„: But you can pronate a
,-+�, t -J clean. feaClty Condition
Vtj§ GR Ul Merin Eye Remedy
Night and Morning."
Raney ynnisey sdexo, C'ear n'lA ffIr".v.
Write for Piro t'e,, Carr 14,:,,,-.
RutesEyeacmadyCo"BEsafOttoS€te'.C,,. zoo
IRRITATED AND ANNOYED
Are you irritated and annoyed by
trifles I—Jost one or two doses of DR.
MILES' NERVI
NE$1.
20 will soothe
over -strained nerves.
' t
the irritated and eve
n
Guaranteed Sate and Sure.
Sold in Seaforth by
E. UMBACH, Phm., B.
iP.
every tette 4 tii%esa
'31E1 3E3 11.
is the true flavour of the perfectly preserved
leaf. This unique flavour has won for Salads
the largest sale of any tea in American 9882
good "stunt" for them to run up to
London. By mere good fortune she
escaped .droping the egg she had
p -stand.
iLsoNs
at
taken from the e
just g W
"London!" she said. 'Ohl"
"Pearson thinks it would be a first
rate idea," he explained. "I -guess
he thinks that if he can get me into
the swell clothing stores he can fix
me up as I ought to be fixed, if -I'm
not going to disgrace him. I should
hate to disgrace Pearson. Then he
can see his girl, too, and I want hien
to see his girl."
"Ia—Pearson—engaged?" she ask-
ed; but the thought which was re-
peating itself aloud to her was
"London( Landon!"
"He calls it 'keeping company,' or
'walking out,'" Temibarom answered.
"She's a nice girl, and he's dead
stuck on her. Will,you go with me,
Miss Alicia?"
"Dear Mr, Temple Barholm," she
fluttered, "to visit London would be
a privilege I never dreamed it would
be my great fortune to enjoy—never."
"Good business!" he ejaculated de-
lightedly. "That's luck for me. It
gave me the blues—what I saw of it.
But if you are with me, I'll bet it'll be
as different as afternoon tea was af-
ter I got hold of you. When shall we
start? To -morrow?"
Her sixteen -year-old blush repeat-
ed itself.
"I feel so sorry. It seems almost
undignified to mention it, but—I fear
I should not look smart enough for
London. My wardrobe is so very
limited. I mustn't; she added with
a sweet effort at humor, "do the new
Mr, Temple Barholm discredit by
looking unfashionable.
He was more delighted than before.
"Say," he broke out, "I'll tell you
what we'll do; we'll go together and
buyeverythingr tbing 'suitable'' in sight.ht-
The pair of us'll come back here as
suitable as Burrill and Pearson. We'll
paint the town red,"
(Continued next week)
Kill them all, and the
germs too. 10c a packet
at Druggists, Grocers
and General Stores.
DO
THIS:
�; pip • ,
EAS. VI
RELIEVES DEAFNESS and
8Ti)PS HEAD NOISES_ Simply
Rub it Back of the Ears and
Insert in Nostrils. Proof of suc-
cess will ba given by the dram/Klett
MADE IN CANADA
OMR 5313110.. Sales Ags!ds, Toronto
S 0. ttscani, tar„ Mu, 70 511 Ave., N. V. Cllr
For Sale by
E.
UMBACH,Seaforth
i
CIMACDONALD'S "BRIER" has become
a Canadian institution. Smoked by the
men who made history. In the bush, on the
trail, in mining camps, prospectors' huts, factory
yards, on trains, steamships, in the luxurious
homes and downtown clubs of our Canadian
cities—Macdonald's has always been recognized
as the smoke.
CI MACDONALD'S CUT " BRIER "—the same tobacco
but in new form—maintains every Macdonald tradition since
1858, and gives to smokers --more tobacco for the money.
,i 7'/ C4: P cco, -arida (e:Q f/d fL
t4d13� u:r?
1- =aiaed
ft rs� W
if t.3
tMMe r.Y•' a
404/it'
F4 7 r•.--�'ap;yv
leTf �ra t _•ih£i \'��t '4t✓ t1':?tiy 11 V�,?r'''?
01