HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-09-02, Page 61
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ttA, tti Medicine; University of
at New ''York Ophthal-
Jpatitute, Moorefield's
den Square Throat goo-
On,Eng. At ear. J.. Ran-
a esaforth third Wednes-
each month from 11 a -m, to
, 6g;. Waterloo Street, South,
Ord. Phone 267, Stratford.
C GANGES IN SPAIN
Nation Has formed Liking for
Outdoor Sports.
BIG OCEAN LINERS CARRY
GARDENERS '
j Most Atlantic l&nere carry several
gar'lenars. M ti: rtr liners carry an
enormous nun:ber of palms. Hun-
dreds of these are used to decorate
the saloons at:d corridors. Then
there is a pleas ,nt place like a ver-
anda which is called the tea.gereen,
where one Sit". au:ungst bay tre=s and
War Started the Movement, and Ira
Many ships have trellis work, with
ivy rand other creepers trained over
nee
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
Mmes, Proctor & Redfern, Ltd -
E. M. Proctor, B-A.,Sc., Manager
86 Toronto St., Toronto, Can.
adduce. Pavement°, Waterworks, Schools.
sewer-
165
e L
.155 Eh/steam, Inelnerators,
'..;Public Ha1L,. Housings, Factorise. Arbi-
trations. Lttteatton. _
Our Fen:—Ueuall paidout nnanta
the mousy we save
MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO.
Specialists in Health and Accident
Insurance.
Policies liberal and unrestricted.
Over $1,000,000tpaidein for losses.
Exceptional opp
ocal
Agents.
904 ROYAL BANK BLDG.,
2773-50 Toronto, Ont.
JAMES McFADZEAN
Agent for Howick Mutual
toInsur-
ance Company.
Harris. Walton.
address BOX 1, BRUSSELS
or PHONE 42. 2769x12
s
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and
Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do-
lpinion Bank. Office in rear of the Do-
minion Bank. Seaforth. Money to
Man.
J. M. BEST
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
beer Walker's Furniture Store, Main
Street. Seaforth.
PROUDFOOT. KT1.1.ORAN AND
HOLMES
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K -C., J.
L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
all domestic animal$ by the most mod-
ern principles. Dentistry and Milk
Fever a specialty. Office opposite
Dick's Hotel', Main Street, Seafortb.
All orders left at the hotel will re-
ceive prompt attention. Night calls
received at the office
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.
Popularity Does Not Seem to
Have Greatly Abated With
Advent of Peace.
While the war was absorbing the at-
e -won of the English, spurt in gen-
eral and polo and horse racing hi par-
tleuhir took refuge iu Spain under the
!detection of King Alfonso. It seems
that the conning of peace and the re-
turn of the sport to Eugiaud and
France has not found the Spaniards
i, inning to let go of their new outdoor
a rouut pi ishtnettts. Anther, they have
gur.e in fee mere of them. A writer In
the London Dane Mail, acting as c'or-
'respendenr tm Made -lel, says:
"'rhe clueuun is dornued. Also the
semioriental system she represented.
"The death -warrant was signed
when the senoritas of Madrid took to
phnytug tennis and golf, to skiing in
the Sierra and to traveling in a side-
car.
"thence also the collapse of the car-
nival as it used to be. it Is an anti-
quated survival of tine days when Lad
could meet lass without the duenna at
only one short season to the year, and
the mask was fondly supposed to con-
ceal identity.
"In addition to taking up more and
more all the sport's familiar elsewhere,
the Madrilene ladles have one of their
own; a sort of racquets played to a
jeuele-puume (peiota) court, but
without the basketwork cestus. They
use tennis rackets and the courts are
always full.
"Lately they have begun to steer
their own cars, tau, though that sport
Is not encouraged for them by the
reckless speeds permitted in big
Spaniel. mhos.
"A glance et any leading Madrid pa -
leer will show whither young male
Spain is teeding. Nut only are golf
courses arising outside all of tine resi-
dential cities, but other exotic's like
polo are increasingly popular with the
gilt-edged youth. Madrid, Itarceloan
and other centers hum with, motor
traffic, and big sidecar outfits are ell
over the place,
"In one thing young Spain appears
not to he clittnging—tine modesty of
her daughters and the abstemiousness
of her soils. A few days ago I made
a round of all the amusement places
in Seville, beginning with a sort of
musical costume play (the very tune-
ful 'Song of Forgetfulness') at a thea-
ter at 5:30 p. m. and ending at 1 a.
m. in a workman's dance ball. The
play was described as 'Vermouth,' but
the refreshment's sold were chocolate
and—cold water!
"After dinner I went to a popular
music hall where Spanish dances are
exhibited, then to a cheaper ball (en-
trance fee about 5 cents), and finally
to the dance hall. The only alcoholic
refreshment I saw consumed was a
glass which I ordered myself in order
to see if one could get it at all. I have
wandered about tine workingmen's
queeters of Madrid, Barcelona and Se-
ville, and at night about the Albutein
of Granada, but I have yet to see a
drunken man, still less au intoxicated
woman.
"1 know that a great deal of wine
is consumed on occasions, such as bap-
tisms, but the 'hotel crawl' Is as little
an amusement of young Spain ns Is
the bcersonking which characterized
prewar Germany."
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. EARN. 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 Gonads: Poet -Graduate Member
'of Resident Medical staff of General
Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2
doors east of Post Office. Phone 56.
Hensel, Ontario.
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
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. Office—Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 6,
Night calls answered from residence,
Victoria street, Seaforth.
AUCTIONEERS
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for the counties
Of Huron and' Perth. Correspondence
arrangements for sale dates can be
made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth
or The Expositor Office. Charges mod•
'trate and satisfaction guaranteed.
R:.T,-i aim
Isittensetl auctioneer for the County
don gales attended to in _all
sf of the .do; tate. Seven years' cor-
ed in, ]l$a tuba and Sasltatebe-
T tt 5. 'i' ; ppable. Phone No.
itralia P. 0., R.
't it at The.Huron
Seedort'h, promptly
ether shrubs planted in little tuna.
it.
Cut flowers for table dee,ration
have to be provided by the ship's
gardeners. On both sides of the At-
lantic a great quantity of out flow-
ers are taken on board at the begin-
ning of the voyage. They are placed
in cold storage, whence a supply for
the tables is taken as it is wanted.
Several tons' of fresh vegetables
are stored away in a chilled room,
and these also are taken out as they
are required.
Why We Yawn.
There are two unfailing signs of
fatigue, says Dr. llnnlford Russ, the
home office factory inspector for Lon-
don. England. When the mind is tired
people gape, and when the body is
tired they fidget. There is an idea that
gaping is "catching," but this is only
true If many people are tired together.
Ducror Ross lets watched children in
London schools, and he finds that dur-
ing the morning if one gapes the oth-
ers do not follow suit, but towards the
dud of the afternoon, when Ota gapes
the others do the same. When In In-
dia Doctor Fuss stood one morning on
the staircase of the viceregal palace at
Calcites and w'atebecl leen and women
going up and due n past a statue of a
yawning man. Nn1ANly gaped. That
night there was a hall nt the pnhtce;
and et five o'clock in the ntornlug Doc-
tor Loss again et,,ud by' the stnl'ue and
watched the people going hone Ev-
eryone gaped, and this tens sinsnl'�: be-
cause They were fatigued; whet' they
yr ro fresh, they multi pines the yawn-
-Rig figure with immunity.
This From a School Teacher.
They were strolling along the banks
of White river toward Ravenswood,
two girls from southern 11111181111, who
are attending n local preparatory
school for teachers. They' were ad-
miring the row of odd little cottages
and the summer Inhabitants, when one,
of the girls remarked: "I tumid just
lore to Ilve out here. heel would like a
more exclusive spot." The other girl
agreed she would just love to live
Ihere• but said • "T we ni,l want II cul
lige where the other's ain't
uianapnits News.
atm Deet G�q4" "The Guifty'MItst
Pay," and 't'7.!he Right Will Prevail."
The Parade 404 formed inside the
Majestic Thosi'e, 'Dallas' m'illiou-
dollar shosehouse. It covered a,
loop of six blocks and a bledk
wide. The procession had its moral
effect upon Dallas. Police blotters
have . been practically clear of
vagrants and loafers and gamblers.
The Klan admits that one of its
functions will be to improve the
morals of every community in which
it operates. Recently it kidnapped
a elan named Ringers and, threaten-
ing him with death, took hint to a
lonely place on the outskirts of the
town. He was stripped, tied to a
post and flogged. Then he was
covered with tar and rolled in
feathers. Afterwards he was thlawn
into an automobile, carried baelt to
. town and dumped out on the most
prominent street corner, his sole
garment being the tar and feathers.
The offence of lingers was the
alleged mistreatment of his former
`wife, who had married fifteen
months before the assault upon thm.
KU KLUX KLAN VIG1LANTS i In the smaller towns of the South
TERRORIZE THE SOUTH • the Klan parades nightly, terrifying
the negroea and working some sort
more than Ku Klux Klan of reformation in undesirable char-
Oncesp:cede terror in the Southern States octads, who usually get out of town,
and the authorities are either unable
heading- for some community where
on unwilling to suppress it. Men the Klan is not active. To find
are tarred and feathered, women are these communities in the South is
driven out of town, and offences becoming more and more difficult,
against society, which the law does for the order is spreading like a
nut recognize as grimes, are severely , disease, and over wide areas is
punished. In the old days the sole
establishing itself as the only
victims of the Klan were negroes. authority.
The association was formed in order
that the negroes, newly emancipated
and exuberant in their freedom, aright
be taught that the white mann re-
mained his master. The Klan suc-
ceeded in terrifying the negroes, and
there are these who say it rendered
a valuable service to the white race. I
Later un it became the medium
through ,avhich private grudges were
paid off and a cloak for violence and
n dis-
rnbbery. This led to it being
bandied at the order of Gen. Nathan .
Lledford Forest, who was the Wizard
of the Klan. Recently it has been re-
vived in several Sauthern States. and
it is Fetid has a secret membership ,
oven in the North.
It is difficult to understand the
reason for its existence, though the
officers ii their advertisements
prate loudly about Americanism.
Apparently they do nut believe that
the existing laws are sufficient for
the needs of, the community or that
the police are. numerous enough.
Therefore, it has undertaken to
punish those who do not satisfac-
torily represent 100 'per cent. red-
blooded, two-fisted, out and out
Americanism. If a white man is
considered too friendly with the
negroes, he is tarred and feathered.
If a woman is suspected of loose con- !
duct, she, too, is castigated. A negro
tell boy, accused of intimacy with
a white woman, was branded with
the dread letters, K. K. K., on his
forehead. The Klan, in fact, aspires
to are a sort of vigilance committee,
operating without regard to the law
of the land. It is judge and jury. It
does not encourage its victims to
make a defence, but explains this on
the ground that it never takes action
until it is absolutely sure of the facts,
a course which is satisfactory to its
members, but not to those who run
foul of its unknown rules and regula-
tions.
Sometimes outrages ascribed to
the Klan are denied by it. Some-
times it openly acknowledges its
lawless arts. Not long ago Fell
Beaumont, Texas, Dr. J. S. Paul and
R. F. Scott, a war veteran, were
tarred and feathered. The charge
was that they had been concerned
in performing an illegal operation.
The local Klan did not deny the
act, but defended it. Then the
Wizard of the national order, Col.
William J. Simmons, published a
sensational statement in which he
repudiated the local branch and
declared that he would give the
names of the ruffians involved in
the attack to the police. Whether
he did so is not known. Nobody
has been arrested, but both the vic-
tims have been warned to leave
town. Scott has gone, but Paul
remains, and whenever he appears
on the street, is accompanied by
nn armed bodyguard. In fifty-seven
cases of lawless acts committed by
the Klan in a short period, only one
arrest has been made. This means,
of course, that the police believe the
members to be influential politically.
Since they appear only when masked
and garbed fantastically it is impos-
sible to be certain of the identity of
the Klansmen. In these circum-
stances the police move cautiously.
Dallas was treated to a sensa-
tional parade not long ago. On
Saturday night, when the streets
en ere crowded, the lights were sud-
denly switched off, and then down
the chief street appeared a caval-
cade of horsemen. There were
hundreds of then, horses and riders
covered by some white material.
The leader bare a fiery cross, the
symbol of the organization, and
other banners were carried, such as,.
"The Invisible Empire," "Here To.
day, Here Yesterday, White Suprem-
acy, Here Forever," "100 Per Cent.
Americanism," "Pure Womanhood,"
"Dallas Must Be Clean," "All Pure
white," "For Our Mothers," "For Our
Sisters," "For Our Daughters," "Par-
asites Must Go," "Gamblers . Must
Go," "Grafters Go," "Our Little
Girls must be Protected," "Degener-
Sweden Given Prized Relic.
The general's e eller an,rn hr (les -
revue Adolphus, king of see nL•o. when
1re ons killed nl the holt le of r-nlzen
Ut 1632. has been presented In the
Sentelinavinn government by lite Aus-
trian government in rerngnl:icn of
charity to Austria. The insig',ln was
taken from his body by sohtters of
the Austrian guard and has been In
a military museum ever since.
WHY DOES LIGHTNING STRIKE
SOME OBJE('TS AND NOT
OTI I EItS?
While the pranks of lightning alien
sear to be little more than the vaga-
•ies of a storm, governed by no de-
finite rules and subject to no natural
boundaries, examination of lightning
and its effects sleeve that it follows
the same line �'f conduct as does
all other electricity—selecting the
line of least re-istance in attempt-
ing to attain its object, which is to
pass dawn into the body of the earth.
It is for this reason that a light-
ning rod, made "f metal and an ex-
cellent conductor of electricity will
prevent lightaring from striking a
house which is made of brick or
wood, and is therefore not so good
a conductor. 'frees, projecting a
considerable distance above the
earth, are struck when the ground
about them will he ;uninjured, simply
because the tree a -mats the lightning
to attain its end. Of course, if there
are metal object., nearby, the light-
ning strikes these in preference to
the wooden or stone projections on
account of the relative conductivity
of the different substances, but ,in
general, lightning is likely to hit any-
thing which stools a good distance
shove the surface of the earth and
which offers a passible path toward
the ground. In other words, light-
ning is essentially lazy, and anything
that will help it in its journey is in-
stantly made use of.
an area of atillinOninfatelfs 40• kilo-
meters long by 20 'diameters wade.
If, he .'goes on to ear, ' GOrniagy had
possessed 4,000 tons of this Material
and, say, 850 !Planes proiperly equip,
pad' for spraying, our entire first
(American) army would. have been
annihilated in from ten to twelve
hours." •
New York 'city has a woman -
yera' assoeittion.
What Causes Gas
On the Stomach?
It is caused by fermenting, sour
waste matter in the intestines. This
old, foul matter.should he thoroughly
cleaned out with simple buckthorn
bark, glycerine, etc.. as mixed in Ad-
ler-i-ka. This ants on BOTH upper
end lower bowel, removing old ac-
cumulated matter you never thought
was in your system. Adler -i -lea re-
lieves ANY CASE gas on the stom-
ach. EXCELLENT for sour stom-
ach and chronic constipation. Guards
against appendicitis. E. Umbaeh,
Druggist. . .
sable, w i l tng even the Rapidan
onlYthe nobles might
wear. • Now, the fur that we .salt
sea otter, and the Indians "Knhtlanr"
is worth its weight in''platinum or
palladium; for in the four great fur
markets of the world --St. Louis Lon-
don, New York and Montreal—not
r o
half a dozen pelts were offs ed f r
SEA OTTER THE WORLD'S RAR• sale during 1920.
EST FUR, RUSSIAN SABLE '
BRINGS $100 AN INCH
The famous Oanadian writer,
Agnes C. Laut, who has hunted and
fished and trapped herself in far
corners of the north and knows the
country thoroughly, has written a ':
book which is a mine of information
for fur buyers and fur wearers, as
well as for those interested in the
romlantic and business side of the
fur trade. It is called "The Fur
Trade of America." One reads of fur
hearers who wear fortunes on their
backs. There is the Russian sable,
that small weasel, whose fur sells at
$100 an inch. A blind mink kitten
the size of one's hand will bring a
higher price than a two-year-old
Holstein heifer among mink farmers
w•ho are raising mink for the mark-
et. One silver fox firm cleaned up
$225,000 before the scoffing neighbors
around about even knew it had paid
expenses. It was only when the fox
farmers 'had bloated the deposits of
the local bank out of all recognition
that the secret leaked out. Miss
I,aut tells of mink and marten coats
that retail at $30,000 apiece, where
every matched pelt is as valuable as
a liamond, and casually mentions
pure blooded, registered silver fortes
which sell at $35,000 apiece among
the fur farmers as well they may,
since every cub begotten by these
princes among the fur bearers wears
a pelt worth $2,000. The pelt of a
blue fox may bring $300. A cross
fox, which, like the black or silver
fox, is only a calor variation of the
red fox, is worth $200; a white for
$70, and the best red for $50. Fox
skins, we learn, are dyed so well now
that it is almost impossible to tell
the real fur front the dyed. The test
is to look at the skin itself. In a
dyed slpecimen the skin is yellow, and
111 a natural pelt it is white.
Indeed, Miss Laut tells a sad story
of a fur buyer who had been years in
the business. One of his customers
finally offered him as a present his
choice of two sealskin coats. One
was made of- Alaskan seal and the
other of clipped and dyed muskrat,
and the difference in value between
the' two was several thousand dollars.
After the most careful examination
he chose the muskrat, and never learn-
ed until months afterwards that he
had lost thousand's of dollars by his
choice. Moreover, Miss Laut makes
plain that it is the humbler fur bear-
ers who add, year in and year out,
most to the wealth of the country.
In the old days boy trappers received
from S cents to 14 cents apiece for
the pelts of muskrats, which they
used to trap. In 1920, muskrat sold
as high as $7 a pelt, and although
prices have dropped since then, near-
ly every river and stream and pond in
America can be made an everyday
gold mine for those farmers' boys
who take up trapping in their spare
time.
Ten trillion muskrat skins have
been taken in America in a year.
Clipped and dyed, these are sold as
Hudson seal and are only surpassed
by the real Alaskan' seal. The other
two money makers of the fur trade
are the rabbit and skunk. Nearly
fifty million rabbit pelts come into the
fur markets every year. In its nat-
ural state rabbit is the poor man's
fur. When it comes out of the dye -
works as seal, ermine and lynx, it also
becomes the portion of the rich. Rab-
bit and cat fur can be stroked flat
i 1 t d' t' unlike the
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
The women of Java are being
taught western theories of equality
vdth men.
Nearly 3,000;000 acres of farm
land in Texas are operated by wo-
men.
Incompatshility is given as the
cause of half of the divorces in
Switzerland.
England leads the world in divorc-
es, one being granted every seven
and a half minutes.
Frames has 59 sporting clubs for
:,omen with n total membership of
more than 6 500.
WIPING OUT ARMIES BY
RAINING POISON
Are civilized nations at war pre-
pared to adopt weapons that will en-
able them to wipe out an army of a
million men in a few hours or to
annihilrtc whole cities? The editor
of the Scientific American expresses
his belief that the world at large is
not ready to go the Germans several
points better in disregard of the hu-
manitarian laws of war. All poison -
gas warfare would be declared unlaw-
ful, he thinks by international agree-
ment of some sort. Unless something
of this kind is done the next war, he
believes, will make the last one "rest-
ful, by comparison," and will "wipe
out mankind at a rate which will turn
many a flourishing capital into a
deserted village." Itle writes:
"'Mr. Chairman, the chemical -war-
fare service has discovered a liquid
approximately three drops of which,
when applied to any part of the skin,
will cause a man's death. Much
smaller amounts than this, or even
vapors from the liquid, cause very
severe, slow-healingeburns.' '
"If the reader applies to the gov-
ernment printing office at Wash-
ington, he can get therefrom a copy
of the 'hearings at the third session
of the house naval affairs commit-
tee,' and he will find there that the
words above quoted form 'part of a
statement by Mr. Bradner, chief of
research of the chemical warfare
service. Mr. Bradner goes on to re-
mind the committee that the world -
war showed it to be possible for an
airplane to fly Within a hundred feet
of enemy troops and machine gun
thein with impunity; and he goes on
to state that if,`instead of carrying
machine guns, the attacking planes
were equipped to ear* a tank of this
liquid (Lewisite) for discharge from
nozzles similar to the ordinary street.
sprinkler, it would fall like rain, kill-
ing everything in its path.
"Then he becomes more specific
and tells ue that erne plane carrying
two tons of the liquid, could cover
a stretch of country 100 feet wide by
seven miles long in one trip, and that
it could spray donee enough of the
liquid gas to kill every man in that
area simply by the action of the gas
upon; the akin. Then, •a little later, he
becomes even more speeifie and tells
bs that during the Argonne offensive;
n a mos any tree ton;
ermine, which they so often imitate,
and which has a grain and always
lies in the same direction. The un-
hasting skunk, whose motto is "don't
hurry, others will," is another money
maker for the farmers' boy. The fur
is graded in accordance with the
stripe. Pure black skunk brought, in
1920, in New York, $9.20; one with
the broad, white stripe down the
back, $5.90, while a narrow stripe
of one which only came to the shoul-
ders brought proportionately more.
No staple in the world has risen
so in value as fur, During the war
times some pelts jumped from 90
cents to $90 in six years, and from
10 cents to $7, from $200 tri $1,800.
Miss Laut writes of the fisher, that
big, black weasel which can run down
the fox on the ground and catch the
marten in the trees, and who is the
only animal except the black bear
that has a chane against the deadly
quills of the porcupine and can feed
upon it safely. The lynx, the dog,
tine wildcat, and the wolf have all
tried and died.
Expert dyers and dressers receive
high salaries. Even a good sorter of
fur receives -$6,500 for three months'!
work. Miss Laut tells of one firm
which sacrificed twenty thousand
muskrat pelts in one experiment in
order to get the tint of the ,dye ex-
actly right, and one hundred thou-
sand rabbit skins in another trial.
Now it is dyeing half a million musk-
rat pelts and eighteen million rabbit
skins every day.
The fur of the north is worth
more than all the gold -there. Since
1E67, when the United States paid
some $7,000,000 for Alaska—Seward's
Folly, it was called—over $80,000,000
worth of furs, up to 1918 have come
STOP THE PAW ' j
Blasipphe, Neuralgia, Rheumatic,
Aehei Salado and ovarian P,gine. PILIN or two Dli. MILES' ANTI -PAIN PILIiO,.
and the pain is gone. Guaranteed Sete
anld'Sure. Price 30e.
Sold in Seaforth by
E, UM*BACH, Phtn., B.
ftge
stroking
imnalialzaleiroWAtea
TIME after time the
test shown above
was repeated with
,�!\c the same result. Valet AutoStrop Razor
blades used over 30 days made good. They
had been stropped regularly. That meant
comfortable, smooth shaves. Ordinary, un -
stropped blades, used only 5 days, failed.
That meant they would "pull" and scrape
in shaving.
VALET
Auto-StropRazor
—sharpens itself -
It is made to strop itself. A fresh keen
edge in ten seconds, morning after morn-
ing! Quick, easy, convenient. A year of
smooth, cool shaves from the package of
blades that comes with each set.
$5.00 for Razor, Strop and Twelve
Blades in an assortment of cases.
Fancy Sets up to $16.50.
AUTOSTROP SAFETY RAZOR CO., Limited, Toronto, Canada
from that northern possession. In
fact, it was fur that first put Alaska
on the mate of the world. In 1741
Titus Bering's castaways were mar-
ooned on a little island in the sea
which afterwards bore • has name.
There they found the beaches alive
with strange round-iheaded, aquatic
animals, which they named sea Beav-
er. Starving with cold and hunger,
they clubbed these to death by the
hundred,and ate their flesh, and made
blankets and coats of their pelt's.
When at last they won their way
back to the coast of Asia, wise sly
Chinese merchbhnts paid them their
'weight in silver for the new fur.--
soft
ur=soft as silk, lustrous as 1' t, and
the entire first American army of a durable as sole leather. Adteravarde
million and a quarter men occupied in Russia it brought its weight in
las
Pain is an Indication
of interference with the normal functions of the body. it
is a sign of trouble, and if allowed to continue, causes itself
still further disorders.
Common
Sense and
humanity agree
that relief from
pain should be
the first step in
the treatment
of any disease which is present. Headache, Neuralgia.
Rheumatic, Backache, Sciatic and Ovarian Paine, ONE
or TWO
Dr. Miles' Anti -Pain Pills
and the pain is gone. Guaranteed Safe and Sure. Price 30c.
DR .MALES'
e.ANT
Pa. in, Pill s.
HEADACNES AND RNUEMA37C
Sold in Seaforth by
E. UMBACH, Phm., B.
IMP
To Reach the
High -Class
Trade
Long Distance puts Business on a Personal
—and therefore more Profitable—Basis.
se VERY kind of you to notify me by Long Distance of
this sale of gowns. I expect to he in town to -morrow,
and will call and ask for you, personally."
Out-of-town women show astmng tendency to trade where they feel they
are known. Get one of tltenr to visit yodr store,—and soon your's will
become one of " her " stores.
No letter or advertisement will convey to them the kind of welcome
you can extend by Long Distance. Bemuse you are talking, the
invitation becomes more unconventional. It suggests the friendly
relation you would like to see established. • Distance does indeed seem
to "lend enchantment" to opportunities offered in such a personal way.
The method of presentation is three-quarters
of any sale—what yore say, and how you say
it. The customers are right at your elbow. 4w' 4' Every Bel
Don't call on them—call them up. It will «,, o Telephone
not be the telephone's fault if you don't 'sell ® c "` F• is
Lonn
'them. �` "w""cc` : Sisfa