Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1922-08-11, Page 13. is xs Mil a.. 1 parkwan mu witQLE NUMBER 28521 Stewart Bros, IWO Not What You Pay, Men, But The Kind of Clothing that You Get For Your Money is What Really Counts. So called CHEAP Clothing is a drug on the market to -day. Hundreds of firms are still desperately striving to get rid of the balance of their war stocks of inferior and shody cloth with all the accompanying dissatisfaction of poor ware, fading, shabby appearance We have long since cleared our shelves of all war -time suits, and now invite you with con- fidence to come and see the New Suits, made from the new All -Wool Cloths, in colors that we guarantee absolutely. And the beauty of it all is you will get these New Suits of new Materials, made in New Styles at New Low Prices.—Better Suits for Less Money. Prices $15.00 to $35,00 e S cial Showingof P Men's Shirts $1.75 To have a really good dress shirt, made in patterns and quality above the ordinary and have it at a reason- able price, has been our ambition this fall. When you see our array of new fall shirts .yon will perceive at a glance that we have succeeded ad- mirably. PRICES $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00 New Styles in Men's Fall Hats The new Fall Hats are arriving in all the beauty of their autumn color- ings. Styles are very becoming this season. Any man can get a shape that will suit. And a word on qual- ity—the improvement in quality is wonderful. PRICE $3.50 TO $5.50 Work Clothes Department MEN'S OVERALLS AND SMOCKS Snag Proof Overalls and Smocks, made of heaviest weight cloth, gener- ouslycut and substantially made. Just a real good Overall. Price 1.95 MEN'S WORK SHIRTS Made of Blue Chambray, oxford shirting, black and white stripe, khaki. All cut with yoke, double stitched, full sized. 1 Price 1.25 Cotton sox 20c Pure fine wool 50c Cotton sox 25c Union sox 35c Stewart Bros., Seaforth :3t SEAFORTH, *AY, AUGUST 11, 11922. PARLIAMENTA'rt LETTER Ottawa, August 5h.—This has -been a .busy week in .Cabinet circles, with the Ministers 'back in the city .from various points and striving to dispose of many Of the problems which have been in treed of attention. Such important matters as the Wheat Board and the fuer" situation had, of course, been closely watched even though all members df the cabinet were not in Ottawa' during the whole time, so that when Canbinet Council was called for Tuesday everything was ready to go ahrd with the necessary detail, of ap ointments. The western provinc a should feel gratified over the action of the King Government in the matter of the Can- adian Wheat Board. When the mem- bers of Parliament from these prov- inces came to Ottawa asking that a board be appointed to regulate the marketing of this year's crop, they found the King Government more than willing to go as far as it could. toward granting their requests. The matter was placed in the hands of a committee largely compesed of farm- ers and on the report of that com- mittee the government acted. A Bill was passed providing that as soon as two or more of the prov- inces had passed certain enabling leg- islation, the Federal government would take the necessary steps to bring the Board into )>eiug. The Province of Alberta only passed its act toward the end of last week and the government has already taken action and named the board. Another matter, regarding this same question which should please the West, lies in the choice of per- sonnel for that board. ,The majority of the Western people, hi asking for the re -appointment of a board, also asked that if possible the govern- ment secure the services of James Stewart and F. W. Riddell, chairman and vice chairman respectively, of the 1919 board to handy• the busi- ness. The King government has tak- en those nominations and has asked both Mr. Stewart and Mr. Riddell if they will accept positiot: on the board. a r The coal situation, par teularly af- fecting Ontario in view the de- pendence of this Proving upon the anthracite supplies from the United States, has been one to a "e rise to considerable worry in the minds of consumers of all kinds. 'There was talk of an embargo beim placed in the United States againu the ship- ments of coal to Canada ani I this only served to make matters. `corse. Dur- ing the life of the War Measures Act previous governments 1.id been able to step in and nen., a F' el Controller who had arbitrary j.r.er over coal shipments to and frees Canada, but in the present Inst tare it was not thought best to appoiue a controller of fuel. The King Government, therefore taking(,,Vie neater in hand. has appointer ->A1;;" dui -ore Fuel Com- mittee which' will cork with the provinces and the muni,'ipalities and see that coal is secure•1 from across the line and also ad'i-e as to its distribution after it r•eeches Canada. C. A. Magrath, of tt'tawa, whose o irnl�et during as Fuel Controller the war years gave hint the experience with which to help greatly in the present situation, will work with Hon. W. C. Kennedy, Mini,,t•r of Railways and Fred McCourt_ ,•i Montreal, in advising the provi::'e, and rpunici- 1,alities as to their = ,metres of• coal. Conferences between this committee and the Ontario Gov,' nment have al- ready taken place and further steps are being worked nut to accure a plentiful supilly of cosi for residents of the Dominion. Canadians may fcei. with the ap- pointment of this c ns ittee, that the government has taken steps which will ensure, as far :,s possible, a plentiful supply of anthracite for all purposes. The matter has been in hand for some time and representa- tions are under way o hieh, it is ex- pected, will provide fer a sufficient supply of black diamonds being re- leased by the American authorities to take care of Camel:t's needs. The question of who will form the new Board of Manaement of the Canadian National Railways is still being seriously disco, -ed inside and outside of Cabinet circles. There has been much talk of the names of prob- able appointees to the board, hut while the government is probably pretty well decider) a- to who will form the new board. there are few, if any, outside of actual cabinet cir- cles who are "in the know." The Government has bad the matter un- der consideration fora long time and in a short time is ex; ected to be in a position to announce the new board. It is known, however. 'hat efforts are being made to seem the very best men for the work. « During the recess: of Parliament those ministers who have been able to get away from Ottawa for a short time are doing their best to get in touch with the activities of their de- partments. Hon. Charles Stewart, Minister of the interior, has been spending some time in the West; Hon. W. R. Motherwell, Minister of Agriculture, went through to the Pacific Coact and will shortly return to Ottawa after looking over condi- tions in that section of the country; Hon. J. H. King, Minister of Public Works, is familiarizing himself with conditions in the Maritime Provinces and going over the ground where var- ious public works are being asked for; Hon. James Rohh, Minister of Trade and Commerce, is looking in- to the activities of his Department Re -Built Threshing Engines One 22 H. 1'. Bell Traction Engine. One 20 H. P. White Traction Engine. One 20 H.P. Goodison Traction Engine One 20 H.P. Sawyer & Massey Trac- tion Engine. One 20 H. P. Waterous Traction Engine. One 16 H. P. Waterloo Traction Engine. One 19 H. P. New Hamburg Trac- tion Engine. One 16 11. P. Goodison Portable En- gine. All these Engines are rebuilt, thor- oughly overhauled and repainted. They are exceptionally good value, and we can make immediate delivery. TRACTORS Two 12-25 Waterloo Boy Tractors. Four 10-20 Reliable Tractors, SEPARATORS One 24x40 Separator with Straw Cutter. Four 24x40 Separators without Straw Cutter. Two 28x50 Separators without Straw Cutter. One 32x50 Separator without Straw Cutter. Immediate Delivery. The Robert Bell Engine & Thresher Co., Ltd. SEAFORTH, ONT. overseas and will return to Ottawa with a working knowledge of trade conditions abroad, and Hon. Jacques Bureau, Minister of Customs and Ex- cise, has started inspection trips of the more important customs ports throughout the Dominion. A great deal of "sprucing up" has taken place in many of the de- partments since the new government took office in December. One de- partment which shows the effect of the change particularly is the Post Office Department. where )Ion. Chas. Murphy has been administering a dose of business principles and busi- ness practice to a department which for years has been sadly neglected an<i in need of business administra- tion. The result is becoming ap- parent cubo to the man in the streot who is not usually particularly notic- ing in such matters. After years of somewhat lack- adaisical treatment, L} ministers who either neglected the department alto- gether or looked after it in a sort of half-hearted way-, the change is certainly for the better, and the whole country is benefitting, YES, WHY NOT TEA? Mr. M.F.idit<>r: . 1 am glad Mr. C:ovenlock has turn- ed his big guns on the Teapot. and that you have set the kettle boiling on the "old hearthstone." Tea and coffee are in the sante Blass of narcotics as the death -dealing poppy, only less in potency and im- mediate destructiveness. They all excite nervous action, deaden the sensibilities, pervert the taste. par- alize the nerve centres, affect the stomach and create sympathetic heart trouble by gas, and while ap- parently giving energy, soothing the mind and relieving the pain, they are deceiving and subtlely wooing their victims to wreck and ruin, While tea and coffee are both nar- cotizing stimulants. if used in the natural and without cream and su- gar, they might not he so hurtful. One of the mostdelicious cups of tea T ever drank, vias served me by a Japanese. He put a very tiny coil of tea leaf into a cup, then poured on boiling water, let it stand half a minute, then said, Drink. I looked round for the sugar and cream, mentally saying I shan't like this. Ito smilingly said, "No sugar, no cream," The cup only held four dessert spoonsful, but a few sips and my taste was entranced,' he delicious flavor stole away my objections and have often been tempted to think, if I could he served with such a delic- ious cup I might be tempted to go back to tea drinking. But as Tea is manufactured, sold and served up, for the most part. it is made injurious by the coloring mat- ter, and it may be by certain drugs to e.nalave the drinker to certain blends—just. the same as tobacco is drugged to enslave the user to use certain brands. if it were not for the flavor given by the sugar and cream, few would acquire the taste and cut them ont, and I wonder if most drinkers would not give it up in ten days. A woman just told me she was a bundle of nerves, irritable, constantly out of temper, touch and tone, but could not understand why, because she had no appetite and was a very small eater. tAt sight I saw she was a tea -toper, constipated, and all the fat eaten up by the constant acidity of the stomach. So T baited my hook with discretion and got her to tell me what she ate and drank. Well, she couldn't each much of anything. If It was not for the tea she would have to give up. She was very temperate with that, as she only drank three cups at each meal and one and a half at morning and after- noon 'tea, vJlth something light, re- freshment/, like home-made cake or bought biscuits. She had to have her tea very strong; she didn't like dish water like some people served it up, and piping hot, too. She kept the teapot on the back of the stove all day and often had 'to get up and have a couple of cups at night to put her to sleep. When I explained to her that her lack of hunger waa dueto eating between meals, and her constipation, sour stomach, nervous irritability, i11 temper, leanness of flesh and sleep- lessness were all due to the teapot, she immediately cut my acquaintance and turned up her nose at an angle of 45 degrees north. On some persons they act as a restringent; with others, as a cathar- tic, Both affect the stomach and deaden its sensibilities. Put a piece of raw tender meat into a bottle and cover with strong tea for '12 hours and you will find the outside pretty well tanned. They affect the stomach the sante way, though Nature is pretty hard to tan and hard to kill. One person will drink tea or coffee and get violently ill for several days from nervous or billious sick head- ache- This will be repeated once or more every two weeks, and in many cases for years. They pose as martyrs upon whom the "Dear Lord has laid his loving hand to afflict them for their good," and they bear the chastening as from the Lord and account themselves saints, preparing for "the rapture." On the other hand, their neighbor indulges in a sip of beer or whiskey and gets sick and spews round just as they do, but he is drunk, though not a bit worse than the tea and cof- fee topers, but the poor beggar, he has got to go to the "hot place," while they go where the wicked cease from troubling, and the teapot never comes. Do you miss your accustomed cup of tea or coffee? Do you get head - allies and feel nervous and irritable if you miss it? If so, you are just like the whiskey drinker, dope taker and tobacco user—a victim of your 1V • hau•e nu right to make our- selves sick, a burden upon others, and cast a gloom over the home because of our ill -temper and make ourselves inefficient ity our food, drink or dope. It is a sin. These bodies are re• deemed at infinite cost. They are made to be tht' dwelling place of the Tri-une God, and must not be defiled on peril of physicall and spiritual loss. To get the best out of our lives, tee mus! put the best into eu• stom ac•hs. I know Holy 1}:rit. says, "Aa a man thinketh in his heart, so is he," is true, but it is also true: That as a man feels in his stomach so he will be. I'he questions which each role must settle for himself and herself is: Ain 1 going to live to eat. and drink; or, Am 1 going to eat and drink to live? Ani i going to master the Teapot, or shall the Teapot master me? As a rule, nothing hurts till the hurt can't he healed. .1, THOMAS WILH1DE. MIDDLE SCHOOL EXAMINATIONS The following students have suc- cessfully passed in the eight subjects for complete entrance to Normal: First Class Honors in 8 subjects -- Ross MacGregor; in 6 .subjects—John Archibald, John Macintosh; in 5 sub- jects, Arthur Ament, Harold O'Brien; in 4 subjects --Bruce Klopp, Mac Pollock; in 3 subjects—Minnie Wheat- ley, Scott Ferguson, Velma Ilaist, Webster McNaughton (one "sup."), Nettie Pepper; in 2 subjects—Elva Staples, Eileen Toward, Hall Farn- ham, Harvey Bristow, Fred Jackson, Maria Hills; in one subject—Janet Griev e. Pads Noxa Weiland, Grave Crosier, Claresce Lea The following atudent6 . easeful but have a "Sup." in x jest—Thelma Johnston, Grath Lean, Mary McBrien, Russell ? George Aberbart, • Mepdugh, aa Surerus Laura RRoss,aret�Webater McMat�1F Frank Cudmore. The following students have two, "sups."—Margaret Grieve; 4 "aupsl4' —Margaret .Alexander. The following students have passed on all, the subjects of the Middle. School' on which they wrote: First class honors in 2 subjects. -4. Robert Moore, Ronald MacKay; int one subject—Scott Puff, Bessie. Broadfoot, Clifford Clarke, Mario* MacLean, Donald Kerslake. Pass—Earl Smith, Gladys Holland;~ Wilhelmia Chesney, Islay Crawford; Freda Talbot, Eileen Flannery, Henry, Brockenahire. The 'following students have ono "sups''" — Gordon Waller, Herman Speare, Lillian Knox, Marjorie Me- Cuaig, • Gilcriat Livingstone Lu Marriott, Kathryn Connolly, F;lu(• Florence - Welsh. The following students have two "sups."—Angus Robertson, Clarence - Munn. Junior Matriculation. The following students have passed: on the four extra subjects and thus have complete Junior Matriculation. —Ross MacGregor, Harold O'Brien, Arthur Ament, Bruce Klopp, Halt Farnham, Maria Hills, Ralph Weiland (1 sup in Entrance to Normal) ; in. 3 subjects—John Maclntosh, Web- ster McNaughton, George Aberhert, John Archibald; in 2 subjects—Fred Jackson, Harvey Bristow. The certificates are now at Mr. DeLacey's office, ese LOWER SCHOOL RESULTS FOR t SOUTH HURON PUBLIC AND SEPARATE SCHOOL PUPILS The first figure indicates the num- ber of subjects passed; second figure number of honor obtained. Dashwood School—E, M. Guenther 6 (hon. 3), John Guenther 5 (hon. 3), Ferrol liartleib 12 (hon. 5),.Alic Hoff- man 11 (hon. 3), Percy Kleinstives 12 (hon. 2), Warren Patterson 4 (hon. 11, Keith Taylor 4 (hon. 1), Lorne Tiernan 8 thon. 5), Mervyn Tiernan 4 (hon. 2). Separate School, Mount • Carmelo Gertrude Carey 8 (hon. 3), Joseph Carey 2, Thomas Hall 6 (hon. 3), El- ' len Houlahan 7 (hon, 1), Kathleen McKeever 2 (hon, 1), Bertha Morris- sey 1. I No. 10, Stephen—Helen hapten 3. No. 1, Stephen—Elgin Hodgins 4 1h 1 ). Winchelsea School—Mildred Bell 3 than. 11, Jessie Brooks 2 Morris - $rooks 4 (hon. 1), Ewart Cornish 4 (hon. 3), Reginald Delbridge 6 (hon. 1 ), Luella Guwur 7, lfarry Gregory'l (hon. 21, Harold Hern 8 (hon, 2), Thomas Heywood 7 (hon. 4), Wesley Heywood 5 (han. 5), Garnet Johns 3 (hon, 1), Tennyson Johns 7 (hon. 2), Walter .Johns 4 than. 2), Mervin Johnston 4 (hon. 1), Isabelle McCul- lagh 4 (hon. 11, Norman Routley 6' (brit 1 3. Zurich School—Certificate, w. ^e distributed before honors were copied. Only number of subjects passed cop- ied: Edmund Bedard 5, Gerald Be- dard 5, Theodore Reichert 4, Eleanor Ducharrne 4. Greta Forrest 8, Dorotr•y Fritz 4, Newell Geiger ti, Milton Hey 2, Muriel Howald 8, Herbert Kaib- fleish 6, Dennis O'Brien 6, Winnie Ortwein 3, Marguerite Prang 6, Veola Prang 8, Grace Manson 4, Lylyad Martin 7, Edgar McBride 1, Frank McClinchey 1, Madeline Meidinger 2, Ortha Melick 3, Nora Rau 1, Margery Richardson 2, Gertrude Schilby 4, Clifford Talbot 8. No. 3, Stanley—Public school grad- uation, Gordon Elliott. Ferguson & Company Always Something New in Men's and Boys' Ready -to -Wear Sumpter Goods to clear at special prices—Men's flannel trousers, worth $7,50, at $5.50 Men's Balbriggan Combination, reg. ular $2.00 line. Special price $1.68 Men's Balbriggan Underwear, the best quality at special a garment 68c Just received a good assortment of Men's Blue and Grey Suite- some- thing real choice and priced right for quick sale. Men's Overalls in all sizes Kitchener Brand $1.95 Big Jumbo $2.00 Big "8" $1.65 Boys' Wash Suits of good material and assorted colors. Worth $1.50 a suit, to clear at $1.00 Boys' Blouses, print and gingham; good assortment. While they last $L04 Boys' Porous Knit Combinations, reg- ular price $1.00. While they last at 55c Hosiery—Many fine lines in Men's and Boys' in all colors, in Cash- mere, Lisle, Silk or Silk and Wool. Something worth seeing. Men's Smocks, extra valve at $2,w Boys' Overalls, in all sizes up to 82. Specially priced ...$1.10' 110•11P.1111•0 Ferguson & Company - - Seaforth `".:t'..In ,+i;?r, aS;hru-,SjntzC