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The Huron Expositor, 1917-06-08, Page 2A well kept lawn reflects the housekeeper, just as clean clothes proclaim the tidy man. Keeping the grass down becomes a pleasure if the Tnower works properly. We have the famous Whitman and Barnes mowers, every blade of which is of oil tempered crucible steel, self sharpening, with easily adjusted knife plate. Their height of wheel and ball bearings make, gives them speed and makes the cutting a asv40 easy. This stock -was purchased -last fall and although frequent advances have been made since, we intend selling the Mowers at the old prices. k 3 nife mower, 14 in. cut 4 knife mower, t in . cut 4 knife mower, 14 in, cut, ball bearing $8.75 $6.00 $0.50 BEAT THE FLY By putting on Screen Doers and win- dows now. Our stock is complete in beautitully grained and well desigeed &Oen Doors, also 8 different sizes *of well made screen window, the use df Whitt/ makes summer heist and the absence of lies quite bearable. Screen Doors, complete witb hangers, catch and pun T.50 to 3.15 Screen Windows, all sizes tec to,6oc ) Lowe Bros. High Standard Paint i• If tinitt;EXV00141111fr FROM THE DOMINION CAPITAL • /MAIM BMW Pablfthfeat Terms of Subscript:lois-Mt am ad- dress * Canada or area Brite one six months 1504, thm, . To the United Sta , $2,00. These are the pa in once rates. Whenpaid in sr- rearst the rate is 60e. higher. SuPscribers who fail to receive The Expositor regulsely by mail will con - fez a favor by- ac sainting u4A of the from the cellar. Ile a3o has, great faith in vacant lot cultivation„ once the tottinto eans, old corsets, and other flowers of the city are Weeded tIB matter I have done a John Jones makes an acre. He burs for $72. Plough- scing , manuring, will 18 more. Total to put the crop in $88, and this allows nothing for his labor which is supposed to be a form of pleasure taken after a hard day's work in, the factory or else- where. John Jones gets no pay for fact at as eai 12to as Pasifilue_le. es. I- hoeing the potatoee and keeping bugs W' hen change of addre° s 18 "1.4 of them. All he gets le the exercise both. the old and new address shooki in the open eir and the potatoes. If he is in hick and escapes rot and frost, he will probably sell his potatoes for a dollar and a half a bag, food control having in the meanwhile brought the price of potatoes down with e rush. In the final reckoning J.ohn. Jones will be about $25 out on his potato experi- ment. me. Crothers and his more or Iess inegtoreniowusay thanthat.colleaguemut think f a b Sir Thomas 'White has 'another suk- rertiot NrieekNo itertigeorektesP`ttanil etethhuneseger pinches_ ttighinrixtbe.helott. words Judge Mc mete, of TImaks 50e. Itegal .Advertisin&100 " Nolfh Cape Briton surmises that the Preface. iwiertimoionsi ettrdeamd $811Int-"f4r ''''''''tts2183Awal""ilSertimmi-°1111) l*courasegthewdinbdulihteuittrerWt:tirbeiliitrotet°' protected ineh-$6 Paz' Yee& by a forty per, cent. tariff and eiteaP De ete •ADVERTISING RATES. lay Advertising Rateas - Made • on aulication. S y Ampettlet-One insertion 50e; three' 1* •‘__ stall $1.00. 'Fain* or Ate -al Baste for sale 50e, eaelt heettion for trio month of four inactions; 25e for each in- sertion. Mistiellauebus A f°1' Maintains its place as absolutely pure, dependable, true to color, and a cheap insurance against the weather. The Paint that lasts and pleases the eye. Our Linoleum Varnish preserves the -pattern b-riiht- ens the appearance and Shows no scratches orhee'l marks. Prinee. a pint • . •••• o o ..;•.• • sites** SILLS, Seafort -he Mallizoplikutuat Inguroine6' Co. : Sectforfit,Ont. DIRECTORY omens. L Connolly, Goderkil‘ Psoikkat Ju,NV111114 Beeeltwoodp VieeePtelded T. E. lisys, Seem*, SeesteTreas. AGEWTS Alex. Leitch, B. R. No.. 1, Clinton; Ed. ,:Senforth; vile; a. W. Teo, Gode , B. G.lareauta, Brodbitgen. ThillECT"S Wfilistre, Rifin.`No. 2,'13eafortb; Jobe Benriewies, hinge Evian, *�echwod; m Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. P. McGregor, R. R No. 3, Seitorth; L G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Ilarlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seafarth. ' saw pan. -Coder's' h ye 7.00 2.80 Math 747 8,07 -Walton 7,60 8.19 tkielph i 9.85 6.06 FROM TORONTO Toronto (Leave) 8.20 5.10 Guelph (arrive) 10.15 7.00 Walton 12.58 8.42 SY* 12.10 9.07 Auburn 1230 9.19 fiederich 12.45 9.45 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit and Chicago and all in- Intmediate.points. iron Pumps It pump Repairing an prepated to turns all ihnd of Parc .1 and I At Ittunps a3c1 a. lIsizes It P pe e c, Galvan- ,_ - Steel lanks nd Water troughs •ita e 3ns attle Basins. A, .0 a onecisat pump repairingdone on t. or I notice. For terms, etc., api iy at Pump Factory, Goderich St„ East, or at residence, North Main Streetj J. F. Weish,Seaforth C. P. R. TIME TABLE 41JELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TORONTO. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Treble Leave Seaforth as follows: 12.30 a.m. - For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. 0.19 p. - For Clinton, Wingham and Kimardine. 11.03 p,m • - For Clinton, Goderich '131 a. - Fee Stratford, Guelph, Tana* Os Ma, North Boy and points west, eville and Feta. - !Aro mad points *est. II. IS - For Stretford, Tema°, Montreal nod paints out. LONDON, HURON AND WUXI Smith %shwa, *put .. 0 0 • 4, • Oa. Loadoshore.. e•ee e• a a s b • ON, • • • et 0.0: *IOW • ontrant 04 4, ON 47.1 Under% ant9r6 ,reMeteth 410850 testes tt toottett foe • 'S..kr' aft 4.**6; Panesagse.. 11131. 034 1.84 1.13 TAO 3.38 re*1 L94 031 11.90 P, COULD NOT WORK COULD NOT SUER Many women ate keptine Arne of fear of deatb„ become meek; worn and smieenable and erne, nod* to attend to Si* soall,er.busirwisitjee, tile.,4110409011 liebal. To 14I nib niiihnereliftitnralcHeart , and lierviPilLs eve prodvt.lad per- ompiltroiet, Day, 204 joinsStreet Souta, annultous Ont., strites: "L'Imes so„ rott &lin With a nye heart I couistalt:evul sire* the lioar, nor' amid I sip -at night. 1 Vas so weeny -lick sometimes I lied to tiny in bed -alt liar as IWas.0 k. I used three and a half boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nerve PiUs and I aid* eared woman to -day, and as strolls ' as ateete could be. I am doing iny own Mimeo's*, even my •own washing. doctor or over two :years but got no -help wttit I used youipills. Milburt's Heart and Nerve Pills are U. per ban, 3 bares for $1.25, at all &den Or 111110ed (Brea Oa receipt of iffieriterres T. hisinuor Co., lasirrits, canirlse Ont. • . Sale, To Rent,,. Wanted, T.Asti 'F°;114 etc. eadv,hisertion, 2k. Lead - gostion toSineet the high cost offliving. YEARS and 5e pectin& Audi"' ail* fatk manufacture oftNutfterebelte *tad VMER.,*1.1. SEAPORT'', Friday, June 8th, 1917 FROM THE DOMINION CAPITAL. With ' city councils and boards tiri trade all over Canada clamoring for food control it would i appear that the chief problem of the Bortlen Govern- ment is to feed the poor/while giving them as little as possible to eat. Mr. Crothers has pointed out that there are "food re.gulations in exis- tertese and that be iii the repository, He has been send' out brisk little catechisms to the ar refiners etad each and has been geting back just what answers they were blamed well pleaeed to g4e. These are the food • regulations Mh.Crothers speaks about. They are Very much like the War •Measures Act -in existente-but not in force. - Three cabinet ministers are said to have drafted these regulations and it may convey some idea of the sym- pathy they felt for the people who have to bey thingtet0 eat to point out that one cabinet minister is a very rich manwho pays $900 a month for his room and board at the Chateau Laurier, another cabinet minister is in receipt of three fat salaries from the Dontinkm of Canada, and the third cabinet niinieter has just paid 12,000 for a new house in Ottawa. They know all about -the high cost of living -but it is the high cost of living at the public expense. • - In Addition .food regulations which tt Mr . Crothers relies but forbears to use, the Minis r of Labor is fruitf i in suggesting substitutes for food. .Soma tine ago he' recommended his two -volume blue book on the High • .Costof Living as a means of diverting one's mind from thirty-six cent steak and no coai in the cellar. It wee good reading, he said, and provided a la- byrinth of statistcs in which people could lose sight of their troubles. MT. CT0theTS1 latest suggestion is that people work more and eat less. By eating less they will leave more • free food for the 'Profiteera to ship a- broad and by working more they Will 11S3712• less time •to eat. Work is a great blessing. It keeps people from brooding. When people get to brood- ing they are liable te think about food and rush out and ruin themselves with ham and eggs. One of the most hor- rible sights Mr. Crothers can ; con- ceive is. an otherwise respectable citi- zen lurching about the streets Under. the influence of porter house steak. belts from the libuited States Would not be allowed in. There would be a large sale. Every citizen. of Canada drawing $1,200 a year or less would necessarily purchase one. No family could be without one. In fact every raember of the family would have to wear one instead of taking their meals The hunger belt, Judge ' McKenzie points out, would differ from other beltseby reason of the large number of holes it would have. Ordinary belts have only six or eight holes, but the hunger belt would have holes all the way round, so that desperate patriots wouldn't need to surrender to fimane until their Waist line bad entirely dis- appeared under pressen. Then when the last hole was reached, they could eat the belt. They could- eat it raw if they liked, but it would probably taste better and would certainly be a good deal tenderer boiled. t - The hunger belt is a good idea, but the Government is supposed to have even brighter ones. • Along the line of thrift people are asked to .save their hiccoughs and stop picking their teeth. A great deal of food is wasted this way. Talking of food reminds me of a story they're telling about a gnat philanthropist who is in the confidence of the Borden Government'. The great philanthropist not only raises prayers to Heaven, but raises prices to the skies. • The other day he Met Nor- cross, the steamship man, in the lobby • of the Chateau Laurier, and laid his hand in a fatherly way on that gentle- man's shoulder. "I hope, Mr, Norcross," he said, • "that you are doing your bit for your • country." "Yes" Norcross replied, "Pm pay- ing you forty-six cents a pound for • bacon" • As Minister of Labor the last thing Mro. Crothers wants to see is the lab- oring man suffering from a debauch Of boiled potatoes or any orgy of fried onions, or anythinglike that. When Archy McCoig visited Mr. Crotherst home town the other day one of the CREAM WANTED. .voters complained that he couldn't af- ford potatoes. He was using turnips We lative our Creamery now in full instead -turnips at three for thirty operation, and we want your patron- cents and poor at that. From these facts it would appear that Mr. Croth- ers' moral reform work is weaning the people from the use of food and the consequent ills of indigestion, flat- ulence and torpid livers, is getting a- long fairly well. The Minister of Labor is not with- out hope that the laboring man can be taught to do without food alto- gether. It is true that Paddy tried the same trick on his donkey and that thepoor thing died jun when he was getting used to it, but Mr. Croth- i ers believes that at this point patriot- ism will step in and sustain the work- ing man though he may be deprived of more substantial nourishment. It is a question of the spirit, not of the stomach. age. We are prepared to pay you the highest prices for your cream, pay you every two weeks, a cigh, sample and test each can of cream carefully and give you statement of the same. We also supply cans free of charge. and give you an honest business deal. Call in and see us or drop us a card for particulars. 1 41e Seaforth Creamery Seaford' Ontario WHOOPING COUGI? The Infant's Most Dangerous Disease. Whooping Cough, although specially a disease of childhood, is by no means con fined to that period but may occur at any time of life. It is one of the most dangerous diseases of infancy, and yearly causes more deaths than scarlet fever, typhoid or diphtheria, and is more common in female than in male children. Whooping Cough starts with sneezing, watering of the eyes, irritation of the throat, feverishness and cough. The coughing attacks occur frequently but are generally more severe at night. On the first sign of a "whoop," Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup should be pcirainistered, and weeks of suffering prevented, as it helps to clear the bron- chial tubes of the collected mucous and phlegm. Mrs. Nellie Barley, AroherstNN.S., writes: "I have much pleasure in saying that there is no cough syrup like Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. My little girl took whooping cough from a little girl who has since died with it. I tried lots of things but found 'Dr. Wood's' to give the greatest relief. It helped ber to raise the phlegm, and she is now Weft-. My young 'Mother is also taking die cough, and I am getting `Dr. Won"? to wk: Dr, WasiVs Norway Fine *rep is put ev in yelbew wrapperP pine tram the tsade-erweir; Ow lie. Nei *Mei Refuse substrtneira • Manufactared wig * TAN T. Mae I *van Co.. lemenete, Totouto. Ont. • The Minister of Labor's suggestion that the laboring man. work -more and eat less is highly practical because wages have risen only two per cent. and food has risen fifty per cent. It is a simple matter of subtraction to prove that if the working man eats forty-eight per cent. less food than he did two years and a half ago his two per cent. raise in wages will just cover .the bill. This leaves nothing for clothes, fuel, doctors' bills, rent and postage stamps, but it does bridge the gap between wages and the price of food. It is a masterpiece of close figuring and Mr. Crothers could never have done it if he hadn't been a school teacher many years ago, and fond of mathematics. • • The Minister of Labor, though a lawyer and not a horny -handed son ot toil, is full of this kind of feeling. for the masses. More work and less eating. The more work the less eat- ing. Firially a day comes when it is all •work and no eating. Q.E.D. The food problera is solved. Even at that some people will grouch about the high. cost of living. To meet such objec- tions the government is said to con- template conscription Premier Bor- den having pledged the ceamtry to it when he was in England. If that is the case those finding it too expensive to live in Canada will be at liberty to die at a dollar ten a day somewhere in France. The Minister of Labor is among those who believe that a good crop can be raised in the back yard withet subsoil of cinders, builder's sand and clay Children Or • FOR MOM CASTADRIA ----eROSS, SICKLY- BABIES. Sickly babies -those who are cross and fretful; whoee little stomach and bowels are tit %der; who suffer :from cons.tipet indigestion,eolds or ploy other of the minor ills of little ones, ciur be promptly cured by Baby's Own Tablets. Concerning them Mrs. Jean Paradis, SetBruno, Que., writes: "My baby was very lll and vomited all his food. He was cross and cried night and day and nothing helped him till I began using ,Baby's Own Tablets. They soon set him right and now he is a fat, healthy boy." The Tablets are sold by -medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wile 'slams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. . samaroollmammomausis Seekhighino, Que., May 8r&, ISM For seven years, 1 suffered tong* from Severe Headaches aadisdirest` I had belching gas front thlestontach, bitter Stiff veould canto virt into my mouth niter eating, whileet *heel had asesesand vontifint, and dir° Coustipatien. IeithoaeyeraI doctors and wrote to'n tpecislist in Stefan" but witimmetbsnelt. Itriiiminnyremedier but twitting did me Toed. ,Ffettite, Mead advised "Fruit -a -them". 1 took this grand fruit 'medicine and it raade sae we& 1 ana giatedfid to "Fruit -a - *Ives 'It, and to everyone who has mise- rable Meth :with Cmattipstionand potion and Bad oinscb 1 say take Prait'a-itireg "t andyea will getwouts. AUDIRT vARNTR. 60c. a box, 6 ter $2.50, trial else, 25e. desairn or seat poste:441os receipt of oriels by Mutt a.tiveareineited. Ottawa. A BILLION DOLLARS The large sum represented by the term "a billion dollars," now being so frequently used in the war finauc- ing .of this and other countries, is il- lustrated by a statement recently made before the class in international trade and commercial georgraphy in the educational department of the Na- tional City Bank of New, York. "In these discussions of interna- tional trade," said the lecturer, "in which we must talk in terms of mil- lions and billions, it will. be im- portant that we get clearly in mind the relative value of these two great measures of quantity; The Treas- ury experts .vral count 4,000 silver dollars in an hour and keep it up all day long, but that is their limit. Working eight hours a day, then, an expert counter of coins will count 32,000 silver dollars in a day, but how long will it take him, at that rate, to count' a million dollars? Thirty-one days. "But that is only the beginning of the measurement of great figures, for if this same man were to go on counting silver dollars at the same rate of speed for ten years he would find that he ba'd only counted one hundred million of then i and that to count a billion dollars would re- quire 102 years of steady work at the rate of eight hours a day every working day of the 102 years. So when I begin to talk to you of bil- lions of dollars in the measurement. of 011r commerce or that of the world please remember that a bil- lion is a thousand times as much as a million. "Another illustration of the large number represented by the ternv"bil- lion" is found in the fact that one billion silver dollars laid down in a line, each coin touching its neighbor preceding and following it, would foitu a line sufficient to stretch practically around the world, the exact number of silver dollars re- quiring to form a continuous line equal to the earth's circumference at the- equator being 1,052,000,000 . "It is only within a comparatively recent date that the United States became a billion dollar country. I Speaker Reed coined this phrase; • "The United States has become a billion dollar country," when some- body complained of the fact that a certain Congress of wihch he was then Speaker, had apportioned over a billion dollars for Government ex- penses, durieg its two years of ex- istence, b it no single year now passes in which appropriations do not exceed a billion dollars. "It was only in ree2 that exports of domes:ac raerchandise from the United States ;first crossed the bil- lion dollar line. By 1911 they ex- ceeded two billions, in the calendar year 1914, were three billions, In g them look glossy. Do not pack eggs that are cracked, for they wilf-probably become broken before they =will the market and soil a number -44-eether eggs. Pack the eggs according to size, placing the large eggs in one ease and the en:all ones in another. Mso eort them gs to color, separating the brown eggs from the hits eggs. Candle all eggs before sending them to market so that stale eggs eggs with blood rings, checks, whif; rots, black rots, mouldy eggs, eggs in which incubation has begun, etc., will not be nut upon the market ollowmg are five rules which might well be followed by all farmers and poutrymen in handling their potiltry and eggs: 1. Keep the nests clean; provide one nest for every four hens. 2. Gather the eggs twice 8. Keep the eggs in a cool, dry room or cellar. 4. Market the eggs at least twice a week. 5. Sell, kill Or confine all reale birds as soon as the hatching season is over. aisamariaramaisoffaiffmrgY • CITY OF BEAUTIFUL SMELLS. One of the greatest problems with which the British have had to deal in the East has been that of sanitation and their chief trouble has been the conservatien, of the native popula- tion. How that was overcome in Mesopotamia was described the other day by a returned sanitary officer. Somewhere in the pleasant, land of Mesopotamia the town of Asher bad endured for centuries beside the river Tigris. It is not a large ton • nor even a celebrated one, but life there was placid even if it was not fashionable. Town life threughout the East has always been interesting, passably happy and fatally unsanitary. It is only the irruption of disturbing west- erners that alters the conservative tradition of years, and leads to the abolition of little habits that flour- ished when the prophet (upon whese name be blessings) was sail a young , man.. On the other hand there is at (ince a -marked drop in the annual death rate when'the new customs are at length established. In A-ugust, 1915, the women ef Asher still held to the old Mesopo- tamian habit of slinging all their slops and dirt jai) the street outside the front door. Centuries of custom had inured them to the fearful smell. of their streets, and it had never oc- curred to them that any syetem of sanitation at all would ever be nee- cessary in Asher. The sensitive nose of British troops was offended by the scent that was Asher, and by ar- rangement- vvith the medical-a.uthori- ties the Asher sanitary staff was in- itiated. Great movements spring from snaall beginnings. The first staff was four native sweepers and six native don- key boys complete with donkeys. In- cinerators of the ordinary "camp pat - 4.....,. were built in open spaces m vex - 1915 three and a half billions and in 1916 nearly five and a half bil- lions. The money in circtdatihn in the United States first crossed the billion dollar line in 1881, but was two billions in 1900, three billions in 1908, four billions in 1915, and fi*5,415,006,000 on May 1, 1917." impegausimmumommair PORK PRICES -PAST AND PRESENT. ) The city consumer Is often misled about the farmer's excess profits. Friend Jones drops into the corner groe,ery and buys a pound of bactin, paper 'included, and asks the price\ The clerk, after he has tied up thei parcel, tells him it is thiry-five cents. Usually tbe.re is an ounce or two over the pound, and the bill amomrta to fifty cents. Friend Jones, to say the least, is in an unwholesome frame of mind. Those farmers'are ildnnteg 08 alive and no mistake, is his final de- cision. "It certainly is a great zais- take to educate the farmers. They 'mow too much already!" Friend tionei thhiks of' the good. old da not' so long ago, when he purchased ee pounds of meat for °fifty cents. Ahi but there's another side to the question, Possibiy two sides. The farmer isn't getting rich any 'faster to -day than he was decade ago. In fact the thirty-five cent bacon pur- chased at the corner grocery brought the farmer abort twenty- cents. This • is one side of tne question. Labor and feed have each to receive their • share of attention. When Friend chased three pounds of pork for fifty cents, Farmer Brown was paying • twenty dollars a month for labor in- stead of forty. Farmer Brown grew most of his feed in those days. What he bought cost twenty dollars a ton. To -day he buys more feed because labor is dear and pay S forty-eight dol- lars a ton for it: rl'he .point is that the present high pork prices affect the farmer less than the city man is aware of. We credit him with receiving large pro- fits. His opportunities to make money in the pork business to -day are not much better than they were a decade ago. Where the farmer is making a good profit is on his byproducts. He ean market his skim -milk, his waste grain, his garbage, etc., to better ad- vantage than ever before. WEI!. HOW TO GRADE EC -GS. Immediately after the eggs are gath- ered, they chould be graded and sort- ed. Take out all eggs in any way dirty. The egg with a dirty shell is one of the most objectional factors of the egg industry. Its contents may be fresh and the egg itself may be large, but the dirt on the shell con- signs it at once to the "seconds" and it will bring a lowered price in all mar -I kets. Dirty -shelled eggs do not store I well and are therefore not available! for holding when the surplus Aro- duction is greatest. Often they scarce- ly pay the expense of marketing. Do not wash dirty eggs and send them to market for different forms of mold may result from packing the eggs damp. Washing also gives them the apearance of stale eggs by mak- Gin rills banish backache, no in ater how severe. The effect, understpud, 15 not- VI numb the pain, but Gin Pies go right to tite source of 1.1;1 tro1.71o, the Kidneys, restoring 1:".:.e 7,377,rat functions of these orgare, end vie I the blood purified, one.. i-tfiam=ttioa. allayed, the pains dies...pear rer manen.tiy. FORT Other indications that the kidne7.; a -s not purifying the blood stream perly are frequent headach.en, dello .1.; in the urine, touches 01" f.eumitibn. -to name but a few syeaptome-ter every case calls for Gin •-3111s. tOc. a box, or 6 boxes for f42.V.) drr.ggists. r=ple free if you write to National Drug & Cher:Acid Cd., of Canada, Liraitaa Toronto, Ont. tr. S. Address-NA-DET/410, 202 Ih.Tain St., Buffalo, N.Y. 111 a if the -days of the glory of th Khalifs ,had returned. No eaPenrie was spared - the government was prodigiouitin the public favors they. bestowed. \Corrugated iron bias for the eollection of refuge were estab- lished in preminent places and the People were ;iirotul To make - use of these new and imposing modern ims provemente. The incinerator% that had established in the town attrae flies in their millions and as diseases apreaders were looked with disfavor by the Britieli the eld incincre.tors were done away with and six huge and magnificent niteia ones built upon an open space heyond the town, and daily allrefuse is car- ried to them. To -day the sardtsent staff comprises no leas than don- key boys and doulteys, 't3iMe fia sweeper*. and a -proud stdmi staff. • The people have taken bus wets of the town, and %house- tion as a hohlay and are proud holders were bidden to keep their own - it is becoming refuse in a basket, which Wah called through all Asia Minor and YeaoPo- „for once a daiikeby the donkey boys 1 tamia, Arabs talk over it in tbeirbirk At first the people of Ashar held that tents, other towns are envious, for it they were being put mime and op= shows the advance of. eivilizatiteeet pressed. Why should the streets bee heralded by cresol and chloride kept clean? Why should tune be!' lime. wasted in handling our _baskets of dirt? " It was then that a netv factor en- . bared the scene. The eanelary people, use a new and potent. disinfeettanti with a powerful -aromatic scent. One i day news ran round the bazaar that the soldiery and the sanitary people' had entered the home place of one 'Hassan and had emptied his cesspool fpr him with a special engine - charging nothing for the service, mark you, and bad further spread sweet scents and great fragrance of , balm and InyrLh There was doubt why Hassan, who was an ill-favored and recalcitrant chizen should be thus signalled out fbr special honor, and local feeling - ran high. Women at the market said they had better houses, larger cess- pools and more powerful smells than had Hassan i and rivalry ran high as the local populace competed for the services and the delecable pe.lumes of the sanitary steff. • A mighty popular movement for better sanitation shook the city and "the widows Of Ashes! were loud in their wail." The houses and streets were swept and garnished, sweet smelling disinfeeants in pleasing lines of pink and white were strewed lavishly in the very streets them- selves by the British, and it was as Sc 11001 .A.Di best s mate Ross; Second Teacher, The C May 28 Lug we Revisio heldi land ensta gion 5. as place o Jo half Word W* • een as F. half 4 ourn" Yela d a silent o'cl clerk as sat commu nectio 6, • Weir, tone •G9 443 cowl The gain o and APPLIANCE *UST Now attentionitistni”, _ ilittbout knife, Danger Old-fashioned galling, slippi fere mail ordernetbods are byU wonderful lust -man of allot who bas devoted vears dy. The marvelous new gan give.s instant retendOn, rest ana sec others have failed. It prevents restores every part toits natural soon as it is used, and old style thrown away. Egan's "Clurstrue is to aSsist nature to close the opening in the est time known without an operation small cost. Testimonials from men, woiten parents. Notlihig eomacated. No incoa ence or loss of time, but just a nattual retentive method. It costs you nothing to inIPpI Delays may be dangerous. Ni3yr is the make yourself physically fit for your ds Tear off coupon now. *Igiad• in Canada J. Y. EGA, SPECIALIST, Will youths below. Free demonstration sad ova** tic's of samples. 4i.sk =kw -tea office WV room. Note dates. One day ordy-Juae 23rd ' Saturday (All day and night) Clinton -Normandie Hotel Clothes stay white you treat them rig use (10M FORT SOA osiksielaLARGESTSALE in CAN When you pay the price of first quality sugar, why rot be su-„t cu get it? There is one brand in Canada which has no second quality -that's the old reliable Redpath- aLetRiadpatit Sweeten it." 2 anel 5 lb. Cartoaa-- Sle, 20, SO and 100 lb. Made one inde Bu 'Mon ly o men Claa There live evid it b and e7n. Fox: oe 'are snii Ros Da aTh