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The Huron Expositor, 1917-09-14, Page 3
,•1•r - Soap -Lifebuoy tti togs all need Lifebuoy. , if you mea to keep them Little cuts and scratches. she contact with others. at removed if you We* tithe gives Cannothurttb in gas bath, in ember the" wbo use C ' antiseptjc odor Wishes quid . seer At All . .i4R, LT TOKOTQ • .Canada 15111 of ucceSs 1917 'N.Trgti Ontario Attractions ►eluding Military and other DAILY two Speed Events Daily 7 Rates Ak. • foratton from the Secretary A. M. Bunt ° Secretary 1 ns : in Ontario East of n Ontario add 50c 5 bot. 11.4 4 bot. 3.25 r.. ..r...c 3 bot. 6.76 Case 522.06' 6 bet. 12.00 bot. 0.00' ". - • . ; 3 bot" 7:00 (Case 324.00 bei _,. 6 bot. 13 00 4 bet. 9.5fle 3 bot. 7.76 ( Case $25.x° 6 boots`. 1s:3 0 ..,.,.••• ....• �3 bot. to n Wen . tr .n Quirt Oval ..,.�...,..., 1 gal. 0.00 • 14 gal. L00 A WKI EZY. ed Gods. t' Case. 6 btu. 4 btu. 3 btu.. x9.25: ee.ee $4.00 38.26 9.725 550 4.25 3.50 10.50 0.00 4.50 3.75 11.06. 8.25 4:75 3.00 ... t ''.00 7.00 5.O0 4.00 12 5(r 7.25 3:25 4.25 ID, i to Quart Orval Flasks. gat. 2 gar. 1 gal. 34 gals 0.00 38.50'54.5G 32.50 22.00 9:50 5.00 2.75 23.00 10.00 5.50 3.00 25.00 ;10.50 5.76 3.26 30.00 12.50 - 0.75 3.50 w;1�Ss3Eir Case $18.00 6 bot. 1#,00 ......:4 bot. 7.50 3 bot. 0.00 Case $10.00 <.... . l 6 bot .1050 «..,...:.�.1 4 bot. 7.75 3 bot. 6.2'5 Cash $22.40 6 qts. 12.00 • .• :. 4 qts. 9.00 ......... 3 tits. 7.00 (cart Oval Flaar • <....... L 1 gal. 33.-03 3 gal. 4.50 .....:...f 1 gel. $9.00 gat. 5.00 r. . Ass quer., rted orders are 0.1 Liz: 'MEAL ed EME 1 , *ill* liIIIISl * combo; Harvesting in central Alberta , Ill further " advanced than for any prev- ious reyious seasonefor ten years. Yield of grain below average, but superior in izali lr' cl Bpi sh Columbia•-Agassiz; August dry and hot. Grain- medium crop. no damage from rain in stooks root crops and pastures badly need moie- T D mture. Sumineriand; Apples Ten per 1s cent more than last year and of best Is quality. Grain not well filled. Ser- ious' water shortage. Invermere: C Good second cuts of alfalfa and clover under grain irrigation;h roots and corn. have made good growtSidney; All: T.ie or O® Dollar- and Up da ze�vla harvested in excellent weather; yield ®paid not heavy; forage crogs roots and littered � � �� sl potatoes will be light; apples and oth- = IS er orchard fruit below average, pas - pi tures very short and rain s=uch needlit - A GE BANK l stablishad 387E Moon* $13.000 ,000 RAL SPANKING BUSINESS TRANSA Savings Department 1 SEAFORT'h BRANOI e 1 . i11l. JONES, Manager. .sissomxisiiiinomrsuntsoloomisonsuissimisstistsviunissanasissio 411e Wilton Expositor DISTRICT MATTERS GREY. Two Serious Fires. --The fine bank' IUrn. of ex -Reeve Eraser, • of Grey township, was struck by lightning and ;entirelydestroyed, together with the driving shed. In the structure which :bras 48 by 65 feet, were the crops :from five Cres of barley, six acres of '`wheat, thirty loads ofhay, together "-faith implements- and some pigs. The wilding was insured in the Elma Mu- ual Insurance Company for $1, 00.. like amount of insurance was car-• died on the contents < The brick resi- dence on the farm of John Kirkconnell. In Lye 16th concessron of Grey, was ,es;reyed by fine fro'n a spark from a • tehen ,stove. Most of the contents were saved. The preperty was insured n l> the Ylowick Mutual Company, $800 an the house and $200 on the contents the former amount would not be half Yost of new home- to replace the one 'bathed. Mr. JCirkconnell and family ire living in a house that was vacant *cross the concession belonging to A. • VWlop• BLYTH. Notes . The farmers in this section ;..ave nearly al: thcrr grain harvested in the barns and the barns are nearly -sir full.. Besees a number of them Have stacks outside. There is no doubt that the present crop4s the'liest that has beenharvested in this seetion in years. The threshers are now nsity engaged.. -A couple of neer anachines have been brought into this eection. The farmer• has the satis- faction of knowing that he -has a good- erop of No. 1 grain for which he is pure to get a good price. ---The rate of 'taxation for the year 1917 was- struck • at the last Council, meeting at 30 mills o' the dollar. This -ss the highest irate yet. Blyth's voters' list is now onrpleted and in the hands ' of the Brunswick August weather too wet well says, :.t is a remarkable combm- dof persons Thelist contains entitled. to vote at Daunts and warm: for best crop yields. Wheat ation��of "symmetry and picturesque- d t below average• potatoes go ness• • �ipal and elections t4 the Legslture. Part two contains the names of 69 persons entitled to vote at municipal *elections only. Although the - list is comnplete, there has been such ' a utnge in the ac_. both for the Do - Minden and local Houses, that it will be of very little use at the time of a general election . --There were fewer farmers from this section in. attend- ansee at the Toronto Exhibition this year than any year before, owing to the fact that they are so far behind 'with their work. ed. A FAMOUS LANDMARK. EGENT HOUSE, Trinity Col- lege, Dublin, whey, the and Mrs. A.A. Bacon of Minneapolis, and Mrs. Edward. Greensides, of At- wood are sury 'ring sisters -All were present at the fuenral with the' excep- tion of Mrs. Bacon, who was detained through illness, The deceased was greatly beloved by her home circle and the community generally on ac- count ' of her.-kitdly deed.; generous spirit, hespitd'llty and her willingness to help everybody needing • her sym- pathy and aid. She. will be greatly missed and will long be remembered. Irish Convention held its first session, le -one of the landmarks of the city of Dublin, al- though.only those who know the Irish capital well, and have entered into its life activities, will 'recognize it by that name. To the casual visitor, Regent House will be. remem- bered as the gateway of Trinity Col- lege, the famous Palladian facade of which, with its blue clock and its pigeons, " faces on to College Green. If the'casual visitor to Dublin re - A MARVELLOUS MEDICINE membered little else of Trinity, he FOR LITTLE .ONES would surely remember: the high, massive iron railings on the ' low granite wall; the ,great iron gates swung open, and beyond them the tunnel -like gatewair leading under Regent Howe into-�"-the cobble -paved quadrangle. beyond: Regent House has been the scene of many interesting -'meetings. Vogt of the university societies still meet there, and thousands of Trinity men, the world over, recall, with mixed feelings, the written or viva voee ex - Mrs . Delvina Pelltier, Ste. Perpetue Que., write- 'I have much peasure in stating that Baby's"Own ° Tablets have been a -marvelloils medicine in the ease ,of. my baby.' have been using t'ie. Tablets for four years and•don't think there is anything to equal them. In using the Tablets the mother- has the guarantee of a government " ana- lyze na-ly:, i;nat they do not contain one par- ticle of opiates op other harmful drug --they cannot possibly do harm-; iheY amination. held within its walla. Cer- always do good. The Tablets are tainly, the Irish Convention could not sola toy medicine dealers or 'hy' mail" , have met on more historic ground. at 25c a box from The, Dr. Williams' E If the members, in, moments of re- Medicine Co ., Brockuille, Ont:. 1 laxation, look out of the windows facing west, College Green lies. im- mediately belieath them, with the CANADA'S CROPS. well-known statute of Henry Grattan The Census and Statkstics.' Office in the foreground; and beyond, the issued the following "special report. on length of Dame street, with the no- t':ca condition .of °fwd crops through- torious statue of King 1"tVWilliam, in' out Canada, on September .4th, as the garb of a 'Roman emperor, lead - compiled from telegrams' despatched ing an imaginary host towarda,� the, at the end of August. .1 heights of Bork Hill. Then, o n the Atlantic Provinces -In Prince Ed- ' right, is the subject of"the whole ward Island the hay crap was heavier matter,. namely; the old Irish than anticipated.. Pests have reduced Houses Of parliament. now occupied wheat 20 per cent. below average. by the Bank of Ireland. Quite apart from its momentous present -time as - .Other grains are' full =crop. Pota- sociatons, this building is easily the toes, except for a few blighted areas, most striking object to be seed from should yield above average. A full time western windows of Regent crop of roots,.vegetables and .corn . ` House. It : was the work of Hoe Jif- 7n Nova Scotia all crops made excell- ent growth- Labor scarce, haying hundred years to complete but it is slow, but hay being stared in good : generally recognized as one of the condition. Flax ripening nicely, hem most beautiful ° one-story classical fair growth, considerable rust. In Ne buildings in the world. As one writer an 'oats _ As to the general view, from this ing down. with late blight, reducing i side of Regent ; Kouse,. it is one of crop prospects to about '60 per cent.se of average yields. Roots promise much going and`coming. -The outside well. Very heavy hay crop. Pas- ; cars still swing - round the front of tures good. Trinity, out of Grafton street, or back the other way; whilst all the Quebec.-Rimouski. abundant yield of hay; grain and potatoes have fine trams in. Dublin seem. to and their small way, sooner or later. through College appearance; plums good, apples rteeni. If, however, one crosses to and a month late. Lennoxville: Con the other side of the room, and looks siderable hay not cut and' much grain out through the windows facing east, ripe but in bad shape through ex- the scene is indeed a changed one. cessive rainfall. Cape Bodge: Hay In College Green all is the hurry and crop heaviest in years, but not yet bustle of a great city. In, the fam- all in and . quality not good owing to ous cobble -paved quadrangle of Trio- frequent rains.. All grain much be- ity, which Iles behind Regent House, low normal from same cause. Silage all pis academic calm. They say in corn and potatoes poor, apples . only Dublin that you may always know a almost completed and grain crops -.are Fellow. of Trinity by his walk. It is half a crop. an exaggeration, of course; but, like Ontario-Ottajwa: Harvesting is most exaggerations, it has in it an giving a air . very yield; potatoes, ' element of truth. Certainly those roots and korn are doing well; pas- who walk much across thecobble- tures are short. Peterborough; . stones of Trinity find there is a cer- Wheat, barley and oats yielding high; . tain "nice and mincing step" which grain -extra good sample; mangolds, gets- over the ground most easily. turnips and potatoes doing well; corn, But to return to 'the view: It is crop;p a grateful view at all times. In sum - large acreage and heavy as - tures good; apple crop light. Ostia- mer, however, when the trees are in leaf, and the daisies on the grass wa: Yield of 'wheat and oats above av- • patches insist upon showing• them- erage . Lodged oats decreased crop selves,lawn mowers or no lawn and double labor, otherwise a record mowers, it is specially good to see. To the right is the Examination Ball, with its "Armada" organ and chan--• delier, And, beyond, the famous lib- rary mee of the four which, under the Copyright Act, is entitled to re- - ceive a copy of every volume pub- lished -in the United Kingdom. On, the left are the .chapel, the printing house, and the dining hall, with its high oak paneling; its pulpit, froze which once preached the famous Bishop Berkeley; and its long rows - of oil paintings of famous Irishmen and benefactors of thy' college. Di- reetly opposite .the gateway, where the cobblestones definitely give way to the grass of Library Square, is the beautiful 'Campanile, erected in 1853 by Lord John George Beresford, Archbishop of .Armagh and chancel- lor of the university. It is chiefly BAYFIELD. Breezese-Mrs. A H. Tulloch and ,daughters, Erma and Vera, of Sault Ste, Marie Ont.., have returned to Coder eh after ;.tending a couple of weeks with the lady's sister Mrs. T. R. Weston. Miss Florence John- *ton, after spending the past three months with her sister, Mrs. E. R. Weston, has returnedhome to God- rich.-Mrs. od-rich.: Mrs. (Capt.) Alex. Brown, of Owen Sound, has beea visiting her iaugbter, Mrs. Juin Parker, the just two weeks. Mrs. 11. W .Erwin spent Tuesday " in London . Mrs . 'Clark, whose husband was killed in crap • Barley average crop; root 'action in May -last,. left on Tuesday � crops good; corn fair. Hyde Park: with her family for London, where Wheat yielding 25 bushels to the acre; hospital. The family she will undergo an operation in the oats in stook, grain light; barley, will be put ?n grain small, corn late Children's Home until her recov ,cry . - -Miss Evelyn Pollock who has been spending her vacation under'the parental roof, left -on Friday last for •Bancroft to take charge' of- her school. 1(er sister, Mrs. -Brownlee arornpan- led her and will spend a few Meeks with her ,-Mrs . H. W W. Erwin is vis- iting her daughter, Mrs. E. A. Sand- er, in Kitchener. ---Mr. -J. MacEwen, wife and tete children and Mr. J. Barton and war' of Godcr:ch were the l' guests of Mrs. arton's parents Mr. :trio Mrs ..leen Falconer. over the hof .adry. BRUSSELS. Death of Mrs. Wilton. -Peacefully •and suddenIy last *Friday morning came the closing out of life to a well l.nown and highly esteemed resident in the preson of Mrs . Samuel Wilton, and may not mature; potatoes and.. roots good. Large acreage of fall wheat will be sown if possible. Petrolea: Ideal harvest weather; all grain crops har- vested except ten per cent. of oats. Best season for _ years.. Increased Acreage being sown to fall wheat. - Manitoba_Brandon : Div weather has continued , throughout August. Cutting domp1eted, threshing, begun. Yield better than was feared. and quality excellent.. Franklin: Condi- tions much improved during month. Wheat will yield very fair• g•ood sam- ple. Oats and barley a little light. THE HURON EXP: SI rOR arts Sell it for Less 4 No damage by. frost. Harrowby: remembeiied by Trinity men by sea- Wheat harvest well along, 15 bushels son of `the -tact that the great bell per acre. Oats and _barley 40 per hung within it is tolled on 'examine, - cent cut for feed, will thresh 25 bush- tion mornings. Behind' the library is els; potatoes 30 per cent. of average. .the Fellows' Garden, and beyond it Saakatehewan --- Rosthern: .Most the famous College Park. These are wheat will grade 1 and 2. Yield 20 not included in the view from Regent 30 bushels: Scott: Wheat will House, but it may be ventured that Flora street. She had conversed with trobably average -16 bushels, barley many of the delegates will find their the Fellows into, her husband a fe win unipseisteorvu p her husband a few minutes previous 30, oats 30 to 45 . Sufficient laborers way, now and again, into the park, to Els going to the sir re and was ap- for immediate requirements at $4.per and be invited patently asby well as she had been for. day. More help wanted for thresh- their garden. several weeks. Heart trouble was ing. the immediate cause of her de she funeral-wa.s Feld at 9 :A. 01. in. St. ;The church, on Monday, and wag It d Fathers Fallon f St Augustine Miss Ryan sang an appropriate solo. good average, if no a was made in the Roman although the previous dry weather jaguar), roar, but nver prr, whale Interment me catholic cemetery, Brussels. Deceas- ed's permanently reduced average over a all the other species of the i`elidae, maiden name was Mary A. Long, considerable area. With. the excep- with normally constructed hyoids, belies. a daugh ,fir of the late Mr. and tion of a number of destructive hail- purr but "never roar, and among these • Mrs. John Long. llth concession. of storm there has been no damage to are the cheetah and puma. Grey, she being born there. Mrs. Wil- crops by frost. Harvest opera - ton was in her 56th year. Thirty- tions are now general; in the lighter ; Woman in Munitions.' three years ago she was united in- ! districts 50 to 75 per cent. of grain # Of the 500 different processes in, marriage to her now bereaved hos- . has been out. Threshing will be munition work, upon which `women band, The surviving. children are, general latter part of next week. No are eugaged, in England, two-thirds Mrs. W. T. Coleman, St• =1~llomas, ' front yet; all cereals will grade higher had never been performed by a wo- Misses Alice. Kathleen and Marguer-' than usual; roots and live stock in man previously to a year ago. ite at home and Joseph of the Stand- . excellent condition. Lethbridget Har- ard Bank. Midland. John died on the vest well advanced iii southern Al - 14th of June, 1914 Messrs. John Berta; yields generally are somewhat Irene, of Brussels, and .Josenh Long, lighter than anticipated. Oats and ltrf Grey are brothers of the deceased. ; storms. No -frosts recorded. La- ; , • mise . �A,iberta--The Alberta Department About Felines. of Apiculture reports that crops have R. 1. Pocock,. superintendent of greatly improved aon account of gen- the London Zoo, explains that those conducted by Revds. eral rains, frequent showers and fav-. feiidae .or oat family that have an and Dean, the latter:o .. • orable weather conditions. It is note elastic ligament between the eera- being an old friend of the family estimated that , the yields will be a tohyal and the upper elements of the t tittle better, 8uspenssorium (lion, tiger, leopard i Children Ori FOR REM111.11. C A s co EtA Friday and Saturda) Sept. 21st and 22nd Stewart Bros. Will Present to Feminine Seaforth and Vicinity a Lavish Conception f a that the Metropolitan Style Centres tern correct e wish to lay special emphasis on the extensiveness 01 thepre- paratio-n we have /made for OUR BIG FALL DISPLAY, The unquestionable recognition of this store as the leading style Millinery Of Surpassing Beauty Featuring the Newest Creations and Latest Designs of the hour. WOWEN wh-. are desirous of knowing what the world of fashion will wear this fall, . an4 seeing the new- est ew-est ideas exemplified, will de- rive a. world of pleasure from our Millinery Display on the opening days. A wonderful- • ly charming collectlan of new ideas in Fall Hats await your approval. We wish to speci- ally invite every woman ire this vicinity to be present at this the greatest openings we have ever had. Prices Reasonable authority of the County ham inspir- ed us to reach the highest possible results. Grand as all past style shows have been, none will eor pare with this, either from the standpoint of newness or variety. Stunning New Fali Coats and Suits The Most Attractive De ins ever Assembled at Moderate Prices la II MA fd IMMO MU 2.141111111, Women's Suits Made - to - Measure $25 to $35 In the tailoring department, too, we have made special pre- paration. N (AN er were tbere so many exclusive suit ends as, sembled in Seaforth. Grey, green, brown, navyre tan, black andP lum are the leading col- ors. - They are here in all their beauty and attraetiveness. The new fall style plates and books are here direct from New York We can reproduce any style you like and guarantee a per- fect fit. Leave your measure earl©. Price early. $21 tc $35 IN this magnificent display of COATS and SUITS will be featured a beautiful display of the Very Newst Styles comprising the .lafest crea- tions of the foremost Cana- dian and American design, There are dozens of models, each with 'a different expres- siont distinguished style,, refecting t h e exclusiveness that always characterizes this store , Come as often as you wish. PRICES $15 to $35 Exclusive, Attractive, Altogether Charming Dress Goods Butter, . Wool and Eggs Wanted This fall the weaver's art •h vied with nature herself in the creation of pleasing shades andcolor combi-nations which are presented in such charm ing array in our Dress Goods Department, Broadcloths, veil - ours, gaberdines, Berges, pop- lins, worsteds, and tweeds, in all the new autumnal shades, including plum, prune, Reet, green,navy, Burgundy, brown, tan, sky and black. While the prices as is always- the case-- are a little lower at e`a t Stewart Bros SEAFORTH iiiimpilimmirhAstemommaa Eggs 4