The Huron Expositor, 1918-08-23, Page 20 MONT()
,
TIGUST 23, 1.918
e Fuel
Shortage
emphasizes the need of a furnace. just think of the times a
single room was too hot and the heat wasted. If you had a
central heating plant in your house, namely a furnace, this
waste could be utilized and distributed properly tol other
parts of the dwelling. We maintain a staff of wOrkmen
second to none,. We have had the most heating experience
in the county. We can absolutely guarantee a perfect work-
ing job for you if you
MIR
iNISTAL A
CE
PAYS FOR ITSELF
BY THE
COAL IT SAVESe
MORE HEAT
LESS COAL
MOST DURABLE
MOST ECONOMICAL
_COSTS LEAST FOR REPAIRS.
LET US SHOW YOU ITS --
STRONG INTERIOR POINTS
G.
A. SILLS, Seaforth
iiiismotinuomihromoolguawas""tomitts.
TheeKilop (alma
Fire insurance Co
,Efeadoffice: Seaforth,
DIRECTORY,
OFFICERS.
Connolly, Goderich, President
00101. Evans, Beechwood, Vice-Prosident
E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
Alex. Leitch, R. R. NO. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefielch ph,o3ae- 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderich.; R. G. Jar-
onuth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
William Rittn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
' Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Ev ,
)leechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; as.
contiolly, Gocleeich; In F. McGregor,
IL E. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
Gloorge McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
0.55 a. in. - For Clinton, Goderick,
Wingham and 'Kincardine.
P.5$ p. in. - For Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine.
11.03 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich.
6,36 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
.46 - For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and poiats east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South a.m.
-Ingham, depart 6.35
Tedgrave 6.50
Myth '7.04
Eiondesboro . .... 7.13
%Mama . .....
17.33
Brocedeld ...... 8.08
Xippen ..... .. 8.16
gensali 8.25
Exeter 8.40
Centralia ... 8.57
London, arrive io.e5
Ins -Going North a.m.
Feendon, depart 8.30
Centralia 9 35
Pheeter .... 9.47
flensall • . . .. • • •Slti 9.59
)1ippen ... . . 10.46
)5rucefield 10.14
Clinton . . . . .. 10.30
Londesboro 11.28
Piirth 11.37
Belgrave... . . 11.5,0
svimghtim, =Ivo 12.05
Pdso
3.20
3.36
3.48
3.56
4.15
4.33
4.41
4.48
5.01
5.13
6.15
p.m.
4.40
6.45
5.51
6.09
6.16
6.24
6.40
8.57
7.05
7.18
7.40
aatmaara-
C 'P. R. TIME TABLE
OUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
TO TORONTO
0..M. p.m.
tiodericla, leave ...... -6.40 1.36
/Myth ..... • • . • . ......7.18 2.141
Walton 00•11,0•04••••• -7.32 2.20
Guelph .......... . .... 9.38 4.30
FROM TORONTO
Toronto Inave, ..........7.40 3.10
Guelph, arrive ..........9.38 7.00
Walton .. . ..... .11.43 9.04
Myth ..011.60,11.11.• sla•aae•12.03 9•18
Auburn . .e. . • • *, • a. • 12.15 0.49.30
coodorich .. 9.53
Connostons at Guelph Junetioa with
Main Lino for Galt, Woodstock, Den -
don, Detroit, sad Chicago and all lie.
Isemedieto pot,
Iirig "SYRUP OF FIGNEr
TO. CONSTIPATED WIELD
Deilelans ITruit Lanatiee" met %awl
tender little Stomachs Liver
and Bowels.
•••=11.1•101111..••••••••
Mg Wit= avast:tor
Donk' At the toupeeiI�thT 11
ked, your little one's stentach, liver
and bowels need cleansing at once.
When peevish, cross, listless, d doesn't
sleep, at or act naturally, or is fever-
ish, stomach our breath had; i4s. sore!
throat, diarrhoea, full of ,001(1., give 6
teaepoonful of "California Syrup of
riga" and in a feiv hoursall the foul,
constipated waste, 'undigested food. and
sour bile igently moves out of its little
bowels without gripingz and you have a,
well, playful child again. Ask your
druggist for a bottle of "California,
Syrup of Pigs," which_ contains full
direetione for babies, children of a a,ges
and for grown-up.
Children Crir
FOR nineiiin
CASTORIA
TABCARETS" WORK
WHILE YOU STAMP
re Sick Headache, sour, Stomach,
Sluggish Liver and Bowels -
Take Cascarets tonight.
IruWea Tongue, Bad Taste, l'adiges-
time, Sallow Skin ,and Miserable Head-
aches come from a torpid liver and
clogged bowels, which cause your stom-
ach become - filled with undigested
food, which our and ferments like gar-
bage In a, swill barrel. That's the first
step to untold misery -indigestion, foul
gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental
fears, everything that is horrible and
nauseating. A Cosoaret to -night will
give your constipated bowels a thorOugh
cleansing and etraighten you out by
rooming. They work while you sleep -
a 10 -cent box from your druggist will
keep you, ffeeling goed for menthe.
'END STOMACH TROUBLE,
OASES OR DYSPEPSIA
"Pape's Diapepsin" makes sick, sour,
gassy, stomachs surely feel fine
in five minutes.
If what you just ate is souring on
your storaach or lies like a lump of
lead., or you belch gets and eructate
our, undigested food, or have a feeling
of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea,
bad taste in inouth and stomach -head.
ache, you can get relief in five minutes
y neutralizing acidity. Put an end to
such stontacji distress now by getting a
large fifty -cent case of Pape's Diapepsin
frora any drug store. You realize .fu
five minutes how needless it Is to seer
from indigestion, dyspepsia or eny stone
ach disorder caused by food fermentation
due to excessive acid in etomach.
-----......--e-
SEAFORrill,
Friday August 23, 191.8
?*
-Cjtil+tDXTIOFI Lti Atli:lid-A.
Ontbreak of Trouble Dray Be Expecte
led at Any Time.
For many month.s we halite had
messages from Rome and I4uriela
end: even 1 from Aresterdann travel-
lers' taleand stories by neutrals
friendly to ourselves, eneoutaging
the notion that Austria was likely
soon ta break. The constitution of
the AustriaHungarian Empire, with
ti
i
its mixtme of reluctant SII9.1f6 and
nnwilling talians, not to go deeper
in poinnto the situnbering ele-
ments of discontent, have suggested
that .some'day or ether thereewouldi
be juterna
The food -scarc-
ity has often been exaggerated, but,
1
its effect has been epmulatie .
It is not only that disa,ppoi3. talent
has followed. disappointment. Grant-
ed that the eonditions somewhat im-
proved, theke would be the fact that
the people living under *straightened
conolitiona so long -would he less able.
to barreductions whieh might not
be so severe as those they had en-
dured before.
The agreement with Ukrainia and
the virtual conquest of Roumania
raised high hopes in the enemy mum -
tries. Now it le certain tkat for this
year at least that expeatancy was ill-
founded. The accounts of riots in
Vienna and elsewhere; the disclo-
sates in prisoners' letters of depres-
sion and the spread- on Boishevikisie
with the, return of prisoners from
Russia May all be symptoms of a
big chane. Yet, we have so often
been led to believe that the awaken-
ing was near and there has been
after disturbance a return to appar-
ent treat unity and obedienoe, that
aomethin like indifference has come
to be felt over this sort of news.
It is declared., however, that be-
hind the newspaper reports there
are now selid facts. These m4tY be
summed up in • the sentence that
Austria was never before so eerioes-
ly affected by her conditions.' The
situation, therefore, should be watch-
ed closely. It may develop cenekly,
or it may not develop at all. 'lb use
the words uttered by a statesman
who should be in a position to gauge
the matter, "Anything may haPPen,
or nothing may happen." ' That
*mantis like a platitude, put anony-
mously into cold print, but coming
from the source it does, it has great
weight.
The alarming state of the feed
situation in Vienna ie deserihed in
a 'despatch to the Berlin Tagehlatt
Irian its Vienna correepondentr who
says:
"The daily rations per head al173
fixed at approximately three imams
of bread and flour anastitateff, one
C411:0440,, of %neat, less thana quantal;
OU11043 of fat, two and a halt ounces
Of lootatoes,.threerquarbers ot an.
image of Jana and a gamier of
Owe- of, war coffee „ 'mantas the
-total daily allowance seises. and
three-inarters ouneee."
ThieBe. . rations may be supple-
mented by reeourse to seceet. chan-
nels and hYthe payraent of . ezorhi-
tent prices, the correapeadmil de-
clares. Per eccaniple, Deur nine be
aihriiirtd by Ighlring the,-egiets**t_
tiCan $4.40 to $5 a IsCrnend; 1ip&t at
grog* to *7, and*Ofseih*th' at
#3.60 a pound. Mali at the middle-
class restaurants cost $3.56.
Facts About the Moan.
The apparent size and brightness
of the moon depends upon its near-
ness to the earth, and the biggest
and brightest full moon we have en-
joyed this century was that of Jan-
uuary, 1912;which came as near to
the earth as any moon can ever'
come about 221,620 miles, that is
to say. For another moon to rival
that we Must wait until 1930.
The greatest distanc,e the moon'
can ever recede from the earth is
252,83.0 miles; -when, of course, she
appears smaller and dimmer.
The phonies of the moon, sines she
shines by reflected stinlight, depends
upon the continually changing posi-
tion -with regard to the earth. It is
because° of this that the horns ed the
crescent 10310031 in its first _quarter al-
ways point to the left, while in the
last quarter the position is reversed,
the horns then pointing to the right.
She always turns the same face to
(use so that what the other fade looks
like we do not know. Thos probabil-
ity is, however, that it dote not dif-
fer materially- ia appearance from
the one we are acquainted with, for
the moon is a cold, dead world, a
huge mass a burnt oat stag.
Being destitute et either water or
air it 1a, of mune, quite ineapable of
susWning any sort of outman or vege-
table life.
The so-called "man In the moon"
is really a group of extinctvolcartoes,.
some of them. more than, twenty thou.?,
sand feet high.
The moon exerts comparatively lit-
tle direct imiluenee on the earth, ex-
cept innetar as regards the tides,
which are due almost entirely to its
attraction. Its reflected beet is al -
Meet 'negligible, being somewhere
about 1,00 times less than that
of the sun.; while the light of the
full moon, notwithstanding its ap-
parent brightness to the sun's light,
iz as 1 th 618,000.--Suffo1k Gazette.
RIGHT OF ANGARY.
iwa,*•
A Lesson In Derivation Apropos of
the Dutch Ship Seizure.
In the romance of words or the
picturesqueness of their origin few
are found more attractive than the
word angary, which has come to the
front in connection with the seizure
of Dutch ships. When, to -day, one
svealos of the "right of angary," ex
Lex angaria, or Jus angartae, or the
"Droit d'angarie" of the French, one
is simply employing a modified form
of the Greek work aggareia, adapted
from the Persian, and, in its turn,
obtained from. a Babylonian expres-
sioh. It referred to the office of an
agga'ros or royal courier, an office
first established, as far as records go,
in the days of the Persian Cyius the
Great, 550 years before the Chrisfian.
era. The aggaros Of those times has
his "King's Mess( oder," attached to
tbe Foreign Office;twhose duty it is
to carry despatches of a confidential
nature to for eignlcourts. The Per -
• couriers, like ehe King's Messen-
ger of foymer days, were mounted,
and constituted a land of royal pos-
tal ystem. They] were called upon
to carry the imperial desp-atch.es to
distant parts of the _Persian Empire.
Cana --to , this Woman aftei
Taking Lydia E.-rinkhana's
Vegetable Compound to
Restore Her Health
'
Ellensburg, Wash. -" After I was
married I was not well for a long time
and a good deal of
elle Wife was not
able to go about.
Our greatest desire
was to have a child
, in our home and one
day my 'husband
came back from,
town with a bottle
of, Lydia E. Fink.
ham's Vegetable
Compound and
wanted me to try it.
It brought relief
from noy troubles.
I improved ill health so -I could do my
bouseWork; we non't eve a little one, all
of which I owe to dta E. Pinkluun'a
Vegetable Gompo dd'oo- Mrs. O. S.
JOIFISSON, R. No. 8, Ellensburg, Wash.
There are women ervdrywhere who
Ion; for children in theirhomes yet are
denied this happiness on account of
some functional disorder which In most
cases vtould readily Yield to. Lydia E.
FinkboNs Vegetable Compound. .
Suds women should riot give up hops
until they have .given this Wenderfur
medicine a trial, and for spocisi advice
write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicitle Co.,
I.yan, Mass. Tbe result of 40 you's
experience is at your eerviee.
1119111111112.017k
:
but salt. The leavenflLg and baking
of the bread was a later-'deeel pnuint.
The origin of these rocess $ is a
matter of spectilatione but sb much.
ill - certain; that ; biking preee ed the
leavening of the bread' that c uses It -
to 'rise; also that the i origin 1 form
of the bread was not tere tea , but a
kind of thin, flat cake like t e Mat-
zoths, .or unleavened dbread 1of the
Jews, or the tortillas of the Mexi-
. cans. Lite these, it :was p obably
roasted upon intensely heat d Oat
stones, .
With the discoveryf the leaven
ii.
the flat eike increased i height until
• it assumed the form o our I af.
. ..-----e--1-
A Penciller Ilrynt. .
"Plants and ,, ailinals," says
Science, "both hhora developed pines
as a,meens of pretectichi agains their
enemies, but it 1$ rare 'indeed ' lied
a plant with spines- bele* •,e ound.
. The all Sao common Sawbrier f the
Southern Milted liltd 'Melo° *0 ine 'of
the few Planta thus provided. , The
stems aboViiegroUnd-are apiny to keep
off grazikg 'animals,but the u der -
ground, starchy -tubers are , ar 1 ored
densely With- Spinet( . ,apparent1 de-
: veloped as -a protection againat p ca-
ries -the wild pigs stilt found 1 the
, Bouthwest. , The se.wbrier, is no be-
yond the original range .of the wild
pigs, but . its underground . a mor
comes lute.; use..as. a Prote tion
aga,inf3t the elotoestiented lingeo the
Aweording to Xenophon, there must
Itaie 'been snouriers held in readiness
at certain stages along the routes of
the empire. They .travelied dun and
night, wildin all weathers. They were
provided with horse rehisle mach
the same vtaY as thelifonY express of
the west during thepioneer days of
tae United Stetes.; _The ReinOs
adopted the P;e"iiiiirriketens foi main-
teitileg ceinnenialeatiene with the out-
lying postsof empire. Under the Ro-
man system, however, the supply of
horeee and their maintenence was
made compulsory, and the Emperors
alone had the power to grant exemp-
tions from this duty. The object of
these stern measures was to prevent
innerroptkm of this vita/ *service.
In the course of tithe the word
W8 apPlind-4trthe syettem of einP1051-
ing heavy transport vehicles on the
onreus publiees and also to the mil -
mats by which they were. drawn:
Hence the word angariare, originally
derived Irma the system of employ-
ing courier, came to signify the en-
ibree,d ' use ef animals or things • In
the Servite of the state, or acoxispatle
any A parallel devekspts'
a this _latter Meaning seen
in thin Preeteli weld corvee, �r lotoed
labor for the toinatruation et .144*.
*a713, artdiree *00 the Oho. ithe„ Sol
paraent or nompeneenion was a
Inter diegelopinent.
In mediaeval Latin, the ,Weire16..8B-
gas* and annaetare came into use,
while the nliak derlytaltihah anger
-
este and. niplinel agar
*liC93 arkilaai *,,oaalt
,and, b0C00.*V
, •
•
a.
IMI'd or elflingeenlinetlint
blesome or -.math:kis thitychilekted by
_ _
a lordeot teuant-the cent having
• been supplied ler Bemoan I*, under
,which the weed was dead as man-
-
pulsory service scatted either by a
gavernnietot or by a. "lord." Gradual -
angary erept into international
1216nn ald "right ot angary" was un-
der/stood to mean the seizure of pro-
perty ny belligerents under strew of
necessity and having riegeerd to due
compensation, . Belligerente, in fact,
could appropriate any property, wker-
ever found, ireorder to carry on War,
or to prevent: eeizure by the enemy
for the same purpose. Many abuses
crept in and have given rise to litiga-
tion in the higher coertsof various
manstries. ConeeeuentlY the P'eaen
Convention on The Hague, in 1819,
tried to meet the need for regulating
rights of angary, and adopted provi-
sions whereby railway plants, tele-
graphs, telephones, -"steasners and
other ships," thougii belonging to
companies or private persons, may be
seized for military purposes, but
must be paid for loss or damage.
old world."
'Stitioite Words,
... _
"Seeden nwpre 45,re ut the yorg
wuz sweerey and eeLiite es
No,- Ur*, does. net kapden to
Esperanto. It is; according t
musical cietib, noeis Many ama
singers "fender." the first two 1
of "The Lielt 'Chord."
, Potatoee. •
-The steno ,erin of.* potato is the
that was attached_ to the vine; the
posite end is the seed end. The seed e
might be called the top of the pot
and the stem end the -bottom.' The -13n
at the seed end swell and grow larst.
en.
be
a
eur
nes
His Threat.
"He must be a perfect savage."
'Why?"
"He threatens his wife with his cluip
when they have a difference."
,•Self -Imposed Exile
Germany's plans for "p
•penetration" In Roumania have gott
ahead very rapidly sinice the sign
ink of the treaty of peaee. A.ceordte
to advices from an authoritativ
source in Roumania, the resumptio
of rairway traffic with the distrie
occupied by the. Central. Powers was
followed by a great inrush of Ger-
:man merhants, polititiens and :in-
triguers/ Within a few , weeks the
ptiehing and overbearing Germans
had &Some so meiett in evidenee ;in
jaesn that .the Royal P4a.mi1y, Includ-
ing.' the King. and Qtreen and the
Crown Prince, felt comAelled leane
the eity. The Royal Benny is now
living what a,ratomte to self-irapos-
ed exile in the remote, frontier v,11-
lageof Rims: Here; in Ithe depths of
the 1,0arnathian forestg.• the !RoYal
,enonily ,iseiivittei, in ani -old nting
lediteAff
,iig Perdtnan4»s
,
Origin of Bread Unknown.
The origin: of wheat is lost in
hoary antiquity. Even the original
home of the cereal }Amite of which
bread is being :meek) es not known,
all the reseadebes and hypotheses
notwithstandiag. Where wheat,
spelt, rye, barley, oats, buckwheat;
etc., first offered man their grainy
ears for food is an unsolved problem.
But that originally bread was not
roasted or baked, as moderns prepare
it, but eaten as _dough or Paste, may
be inferred from its relation with the
word "broth," both Of these words
being derived from the root "breo-
wan," "brunt to brew. In all proba-
bility it was originalle ;the boiled
coarse meal -with nothing added to If
ORO011salalloslaviatiOal
CIGARETT
BUR
Men who smoke know how pain-
ful a burn ,of this knit' can be,
aust smear on A, little Zam-Buk
and it win give you no more
trouble. Even a little burn, if
neglected, may develop into a eery
sore place, as Mr. J. A. Sa.vard; of
Doecet, Que., found. Ile says:
"1 burned qne of my fingers with
a cigarette. 1 applied some oint-
ment and thought it would be all
right, hut instead of getting better
it got worse, until the sore covered
the entire top of my hand. I suf-
fered such pain that I co-uld not
sleep, and tried everything I eould
think of but could not cure it.
'Finally a friend recommended
Zara-Buk, which gave me wonder-
ful relief, and the .continued use of
it completely healed the sore."
For cnts, blisters, rash, eczema,
ulcers, blood -poisoning and piles
Zarn-Buk is equally good. .All
deanes 50c box.
bin"WhI1e Meat.
A group of retailgrocers in Van-
couver, B.C., recently gond.ucted a
campaign of advertising to educate
the public to th,e desirability of using
whale meat.
Mee In Iro;e1.. asks.
The Man in the Iran task mysti-
fied all Europe for many years; and
.s still the Subjrct 0i coestdera.ble
coinance and -legend, but in our great
industrice neon in iron masks -aro not
at all online= In the procces of
arc -welding inia masks are necessary
toprotect operatois from the terrific
et
at auel dazzling light, The -electric
Are i5 about the hottest _thine in the
ebtee world and also as- bright as
the. S1131 itself. The..temperature Of
Ito are is approximately 3,500 deg.
Centigrade, and as the heat is con-
fined to a comparatively small space
elreetly in contact with the are the
light therefrom_ is blinding.
To'- Complete the Illusion.
Shc-No, you are' too poor. If I
washed dishes fora man it. might
make him. look upon me- as a ser-
vant.
He Oh, no; you'd have to break
&bent to do that.
• IN A GERMAN CELL
Dr. Beland tells of a dauntless Scot
in a prison ha the heart of Berlin, who
ushering in the New Year of 1916,
poured forth defiance to his enemies
in the national song, "Rule Britannia."
Kaiser, Lucifer, lord_of God!
Proudly perched. on throne supreme,
Hordes unnumbered at thy nod
Smite the earth with frightful rod,
Working out thy world-wide dream.
Safe within thy serried lines
Thou bast sent thy brutal§ forth,
Breathing poison, plaiting mines,
Murdering as hate dedlines,
Counting life as nothing worth.
Slave self -glorious, slave of force,
Seeking rule from pole to pole,
Riding Satan's sulphur horse,
Murderer wanton -take thy curse -2 -
Madman, thou host lost thy soul!
Body -killer, but no more-- '
Limited thy hellish. role,
Safe from thee the real core,
Locked secure the spirit's door
Leading to the freeman's soul.
.,
Hest thou heard of Scotland brave,
Cultured Scotland bleeding white,
Bleeding freedom's cause to save,
Beating back the German slave -
Scotland ever for the right?
Million -guarded Berlin brute,
. Show thy. courage -start or oal.
\Hast thou seen its heather root? -
Song and psalm with honor's fruit -
Hest thou seen a Scottish soul?
Hearken! Slave of, Satan, hark!
Lo, a Scot in lonely sell,
In the calm of midnight dark,
Fearing not a single spark,
Scorns thee and thy hungry hell.
Grasping hard the ,iron bars,
He who crossed. the North Sea waves
1 Sings the New Year to the stars,
Sings -defiance to the -wars- '
"Brito.ra never shall be slaves!"
-,-,-Grant WOW
CAPITAL AND RESERVE -48,800,000
98 BRANCHESJIN CANADA
LA General Banldng Business Transacted.
CIRCULAR Lie.trEKS OF .CREDIT
BANK. MONEY ORDERS
SAVLNGS BANK DEPARTMENT
. Interest allowed at highest Current Rate.
BRANCHES IN THIS DFTRICT:
Brucefield $t. Marys Kirkton
Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich
MORTGAGE SALE
Of Desirable Dwelling HOU5.13 in Seafortkl.
Under and by virtue of the power centamed,
in a -certain mortgage, which will be pro-
duced at the time. of sale, there will be offer-
ed tor sale by public auction, en Saturctes.
the 24th day of August, 1918, at the hour of
2 o'clock in the afternoon, at Dick's tfotel,
Seaforth, by Thomas Brown, Esq., Auctioneer,
tjie following Property, namely: Lot umber
Twenty -One (21), on, thi west side of Ealit
William Street, .in Coleman's Survey, of part -
:of the said Town of Seafortb, There is -erect-
ed on the property a 13A brick dwelling house,
with frame kitchen and 'wood shed attached
.and a splendid opportunity isoffered to any
Persondesiring to secure a comfortable. resi-
donee. Terms of Sale -Ten (10. pet cent. of
the phrase° • money to be paid down at the
time of sale, balance to be paid within thirty
(80) days thereafter, when the purchaser *fa
entitled to a conveyance free from encum-
brances. The property will be sold subject to
the existing monthly tellecy. Further partia.
niers and conditions of sale will be made
known on the day of sale and .can be had in
the meantime from the undersigned. Dated
-a.t Seaforth, Ontario, this 6th day of August,
1918. B. S. BAYS, Vendor's 8011Citerl Th014
Brown, Auctioneer. • 2648-8
FARM FOR SALE
For sale Lot 29, Concession 3, Lai.'
S., Tuckersmith,Containing 100 acres.
her are on the premises a goOd
flume house, two barns and frame
stable 75 feet long, chment doer ho
cattle stable; hog pen, two wells, The
land is in a good state of ctdtivationi
well drained arid fenced. Large apple
orchard; also all kinds of swat fruits;
six sock& good hardwood-1MA. fall
plowing done. This farm is situated
miles east of the village of 13rueb,
held and 5 snilea from town of Sea -
forth oh Mill Road. School acroaa
coarser from farm, For further vit.(
ticulars apply an the. prendess
address Michael Whitmore, Brue'refield
R. No 1, or Phone 5 on 14% Seas;
forth Central. 26184f
•
A Simple
Proposition
Here is the McClary
Sunshine Furnace
proposition.
Mcelary's heating engin-
eers will give yott advice
and estimates of cost of
correct heating plant ft*.
Wheii you purchase a $sw
shine Furnace, Iticaaryss
engineers will provide
proper plans for ins
it the Me,Cla.ry way byt
which they VIII guarantee
satisfactory results.
FOR SALE 137
irlpory. Edge
a
Aegean habits ef that
once started sop]
savings accoi
a thrttt campaign to.1
We allow interest on savir
per annum. added to prim
DiSTWCT-
Vint ift'siren -Itteard- Of Age
aimust meettng of the Wes
*-6,1 Agriculture Was heh
.71ou.Monday lent with:
sentatioa and the fouovin
were appointed: PresidencW
'co -president, William Mc
• seetetarz-Treasurer, Jon*
uclitors, John Dustow an
ers. The folloWnes._ ari
r ves to the board; Fron
!Irtgallrm Agrieniteral Society
Mallough; Ashfield, Mr. Fer
'West Wawanosh, J. Thompsonl
awanosh, John Guiespie• ,; wing
Andrew Currie; Myth, Aifrei
cem Hulled, William Lyon- Gode;
*h township, George Tebbutt;
tome, Clarence austow; Goderiet
town, Girvin and J. E. Tom:
e ' h Industrial Exhibition, W. TJ
itABY'S GREAT DANGER
DURING HOT WEATHER
Me ones die during the hot
Ian at any other Vane of the
arrhoea, dyaentry, cholera
and stoma& troubles come
woxiling, and when a medicine
band tot give promptly the
day too frequently means that
has passed beyond aid.
Own Tablets should alWaya be
bones where there are young
An occasional dose
prevent stom
es, or if these trou
y-ibe Oroini* 1se of
14 cure he halm The Tab -
8 Add hse Inedidue dealers or
at 25 ;cents a box Nom Th
Mims' Medicine Co, Brock
wine, Ontario.
aludrees skeiter.-The Signal of. of, hist we sap: "A.
ial 'meeting a the Children& Aid
the County of Huron was held in
ituma inry room on menday last.
for the consideration
which needed attention
tion a the holiday ses0011-
London
St, John, N.B.
Furnace
Toronto „Montreal • Winnipeg
Calgary Hamilisk Edmonton
Vancouver. -
Saskatoon
\ Six
reasons
1 -Steadies nerves
2 -Allays thirst
3 -Aids aPPetite
4 -Helps digestion
5 -Keeps teeth clean
6 -Its economical
trs a
good
• friend:,
Kee P the soldiers and
sailors supplied!
MADe IN
CANADA
EitnearisaitSaicatima ottotsmat
11i VR1G EN" '5
utvagrey
lepy_gr.,41.11)toltaff,
771Eit„,0'1111RIA,*5 rS• 7/ 441.
•
96
Chew it after every meal
Tbe Flavour Lasts!
ifftre.
eft With representatives
Society to consider whit
the property were likely to
the presadent, secretam,
nenent and Mesdames Carrie,
and. Young were appointed as
committee, altd when the, warden
in town the property wilt be visited
*A inspected. The long list of cases
*tseding special consideration w
and these rt.4 -IT any nt
their cenditie
ty
up in.
thew*eebl
Oarn the : Conditio
hildraft_ even
Huron are 61
to grow UP WO
lives. Removal from sue,
and wretched examples
such eases the only possible hope
prove -milt for the children, ana
w Shelter will give the long-de-
aeilities for making such &am,
Some letters from wards of the
were read and rePerts giv"
Which showed most .gratifYinK ,
ptrovement and brighten the often
4seenor aspects of the work. Tho
S0ci0:17 hop ee that when the fall se
trt, opens the meetings may be v
/sagely attended by those af our c
isens of both sexes and all classes who
soparently do not realize i*e import -
1C0 of the work."'
IIREADWUFFS MADE W11�OU1
WHEAT
There is no hardskip in doing
kint whet, it is only an inconvenient
Pad with corn -meal that can be
100 Per cent, in niuffins, conn
on bread; oate. either
terve:reit oats (rolled'
or oatmeal; potatoes in -
to be used in breads eithe
nil of potato flour or =she
and rice our to furnish tb
*can of sponge cake and pa
er -alone or mixed with
erej oats, or barley), it Stx
sacrifice far the he
nut her family on a
tion for the sununer time
mean some thought,-epsrLI
t and readjustment, ,
IliixtUree and partial stabsti
Pt ria real -difficulty. th
must have some glutinous ma
ria). to act en, and yeast bops
!ill require from 50 to 70 per cent.
whLeat, but it is no Wek at aU
t• powder breads, pflf3fXi
witk only one-third
and that is reducing the cora
CIa. requirement one-half,
or those who want to be.real P
Who want to keep morre t
tet f the law and. to, volur,
ad dangerous ser
ere neW &Waring
01 s which call
The danger
ety that alwayn eta