The Huron Expositor, 1919-08-22, Page 2a
-;‘," ;•••f.,
"ECONOMY"
URN
•
•4 TiE
149q1,111411111N11PrilMIEIMIA4‘h.‘".
PAYS FOR ITSELF
BY THE
COAL IT SAVES.
MOREHEAT
LESS COAL
MOSTDURABLE
MOST ECONOMICAL \
COSTS LEAST FOR REPAIRS.
Rave Your Old Furnace Over-
hauled NOW. Repairs will be
slow in coming at a later ,dato.
Plumbing Fixtures Such aes bath,
clost a.nd
Basin are more useful than a parlor, as convenient as a
kitchen and as helpful to good health as a doctor.
We install good fixtures in the best mechanical
manner as our years of experience insure you.
G. A. Sills,Seaforth
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL.
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS.
-1. Connolly, Goderich, President
ILL Evans, Beachwood, Vice-Preaideni
°T. E. Hays, Seatzth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
Alm Leitch, R. R. No. 1; Clinton; Ed.
Hinehley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brueefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. 1-ir-
mu*, Brodhagen.
•
GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR SKIN
1
HE HURON EXPOSITOR
THE WJEON EXPOSITOR
; SEAFORTH., Friday, August 22, 1914
Nix.:44.x.x.:44.4.440.4444)00.441
:I. A 'Chateau of
Dark Memo;ies
.04.1.44.04.1.4.04.+0,14004.:.:+1440:44‘
T. • GERMAIN-EN-LAYE, the
•scenof the peace negotiations
with •Austria, i described by
a correspondenr in the Man-
chester Guardian. We read:-
- "The decision (If the French Gov-
ernment to house the. Austrian dele-
gates in the old Chateau of. St. Ger-
main -ea -Lays pending the discus-
sion of, the terms of peace with
Austria-Hungary shows _discrimina-
tion as well as an element of poetie
Justice. •
"Those who visited Paris in the
'days before the war and made pil-
grimage to the ring of small towns
a-•Marly, Maisons, Lapete, St. .Ger-
main and Versailles -hold memories
of umbrageous avenues, royal forests
and lordly chateaus. In this district
f the splendor of the ancient regime
1 I still exists: The paved street of St.
I Germain, the noble houses of stone,
jeweled with exquisite windows and
delicate balconies, curious lamps and
• richly 'decorated interiors, speak elo-
quently of the entertainment and de-
light of the. eighteenth century aris-
tocrat. : Richmond and Hampton
Court are the English equivalents at
this aristocratic quarter. St. Germain
stands high above the Seine.
"It is a rare jewel in a setting of
old chestnut • trees. Below, the
sparklingriver describes . an Im-
mense Louvecienneo,
the former home of Mme. de POTIk•
padour, is nearby, but the famous
Pompe of Marly that disturbed her
rest with its clanking chains has
been replaced by a modern contriv-
ance. As one walked through The
streets making meatal notes of
architectural features, the import -
'mace of good taste in building mat-
ters made a forcible impression on.
the mind. There was a cycle repair
shop with a floreated ceiling. in the
WITH LEMON JUICE manner of Louis XV, and almoSt
every building now devoted to busi-
ness, contains substantial evidence of
former glory.
"If the streets and avenues are
charming, ,the aspect of the chateau
is grim and forbidding. , It is to
some extent reminiscent- of the
Bastille, but the buttressed walls
and giant articulations afford relief
to the sombre mural treatment. As
far back as the twelfth century $t.
Germain was a favorite summer
residence of the kings of France;
to -day it is an attractive resort for
Parisiens and it is a congenial cen-
tre for English residents. The cha-
teau owes its origin to a fortress
built on the ground by Louis le
Gros between the years 1108-1137
to command the River Seine. at 'this
point. A ,distinctive feature of the
assemblage of stone is the small
Gothic chapel, which was completed
in 1238 by Pierre de Montereau. The
visitor to the present chapel is de-
pressed by the dour expression of
the architecture, which makes a
striking contrast to the cheerful de-
sign of the other chateaus of the
period. St. Germain as it stands to-
day is .a product of the passion of
-Francis I for building.
"This versatile monarch celebrated
here his nuptials with 'Claude, daugh-
ter of Louis XII. The architects, wile)
received instructions in all probabil-
ity direct from the king, employed
brick • for the building, which stands
to -day shorn of the spacious _gardens
which Du Cerceau shows, in the orig-
inal drawing, now in the British Mu-
seum. Louis XIV was born under.
the roof ,in 1638, 'amd.after the death
of 4e.nne_ of Austria returned hither
to escape the uncongenial atmosphere
and restrintions of Paris: HeAiad
no real affection for the place and
consta.ntly paid tribute to the merits
•of the old chateau at Versailles, fin-
ally resolving tolempley Mansard to
a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant 'design and erect the grandiosepalace.
The exiled James. II. found are asy-
lum here after the revolution of
1688, and from this year until ,his
death in 1701 numerous plots and
intrigues were hatched favoring a
./
Make a beauty lotion for a few cents to
remove tan, freckles, sallowness.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will supply
you with three ounces of orchard white
for a few cents. Squeeze the juice of
two fresh lemons into 'a bottle, then put
in the orchard. White and shake well.
This makes. a quarter pint of the very
best lemon skiu whitener and complexion
beautifier known. Massa?e this fra-
DIRECTORS 1 grant, creamy lotion daily into the face,
-Viilliam Ririn No: 2,- Seaforth; John neck, arms and hands and just see how
freckles, tan, sallowness, redness and
roughness disappear and how smooth,
soft and clear the skin becomes. Yes!
It is harmless, and. the beautiful results
will surprise you.
Bcnnewies, Brodhagen; James Evan.
-Seechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connelly, Goderieh; D. F. McGregor,
1{ No. 8, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
George McCartney. No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
MI.65 a. m. - For Clinton, Goderick,
Wingham and Kincardine.
OASp m. -- For Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine.
111.08 p. m. - For C '
linton Goderich.
6.86 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
1.16 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South
Wingham, depart ... •
Belgrave
Ilyth . ......
• Londesboro .....
.......
Brucefield
Lippen
Hensel], ,
Exeter
Centralia
11.M.
6.35
6.50
7.04
7.13
7.33
8.08
8.16
8.25
8.40
8.57
- Going North
London, arrive
London, depart
Centralia
Exeter 9.47
Hensall 9.59
itippen 10.06
Brucefield 10.14
Clinton 10.80
Londesboro 11.28
Myth ........ 11.87
Belgrave 11.50
Wingham, arrive 12.05
a.m.10.05
8.30
p.m.
3.20
3.36
3.48
3.56
4.15
4.33
4.43.
4.48
5.01
6.13
lemon lotion and massage it daily into
p.m. the face, neck, arms and hands.
6.16
GIRLS! LEMON JUICE
IS A SKIN WHITENER
How to make a creamy beauty' lotto'
for a few cents.
The juice of two fresa lemons strained
into a bottle containing three ounces al
orchard white makes a whole quartet
pint of the most remarkable lemon skin
beautifier at about the cost one must
pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold
creams. Care should be taken to strain
the lemon juice through a fine cloth so
no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion
will „keep fresh for months. Every
woman knows- that lemon juice is used
to bleach and remove such blemishes as
freckles, sallowness and tan and is
the ideal skin softener, whitener and
beautifier.
Just try it! Get three ounces of
orchard' white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make up
4.40
5.46
5.51
6.09
6.16
6.24
6.40
6.57
7.05
7.18
7.40
LEMONS WHITEN AND
second restoration.
,,,
'`Finally we come. to Napoleon 1.
BEAUTIFTTHE SKIN who converted the place into a
school for cavalry officers, and
after his deposition it was used for
a time as a military prison. During
the reign of the third Napoleon agi-
tation was rife concerning the restor-
ation of the old chateaus, with the
consequence that Pierrefonds was re-
paired by Viollet le Duc, and St. Ger-
main underwentecomplete restoration
on •the lines of the original plans be-
tween the years 1862-1908. Apart
from the general character of heavi-
ness, the architecture of the chateau
has considerable merit. There, are
features recalling the fantasies of
Chambord, combined with others of
pure Italian oFigin. There is a
courtyard of irregular shape, in
some respects a legacy from the
earlier fortress. The steep pavilion
t
root of the period tr conspicuous by
its abgence, balurades, terraces
and cupolas of graceful shape, com-
bined with. massive chimney -stacks,
usurping the place of traditional
features. To the Austrian dele-
gates fresh from the fantastic lines
of 'Viennese architeeture, the place
will be in the nature •of a court -
home, and under the circumstances
its selection has a subtle meaning. ,
"Two peace treaties were signed
there - the treaty between Charles
IX and the Hugenots and the
treaty between France and Bra,nden-
burg in 1679." 1
i:Make this beauty lotion cheaply for
your face, neck, arms and hands.
'At the cost of a small jar of ordinary
cold cream one can prepare a. full•quar-
ter pint of the most wonderful lemon
C. P. R. TIME TABL2 skin softener and complexion beautifier,
GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. by squeezing the juice of two fresh lem-
TO TRORONTO ons into a bottle containing three ounces
a.m. P.m. of orchard white. Care should be taken
Goderich, leave 6 20 1.80- to strain the juice through a fine cloth
Blyth 6 58 2.07 BO no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo -
Walton 7 12 2.20 tion will keep fresh for months. Every
Guelph 9 48 4.53 woman knows that lemon juice is used
FROM TORONTO to bleach and remove such blemishes as
Toronto, leave 8.10 5.10 freckles, sallowness and tan and
Guelph, a.rriva 9 30 C.80 the ideal skin softener whitener and
Walton 12.03 - 9.04 beautifier. a , I
Blyth 12.16 9.18 Just try It! -,Get three ounces of
Auburn 12.28 9.80 orchard white aany drug store and
Goderich 12.' ) 9.55 two lemons from the grocer and make up
Connection a at Guelph Junction with a quarter pipt of this sweetly fragrant
Main Line for Glilt, Woodstock, Lon- lemon lotion and massage it ,daily into
don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in- the face, neck, arms and hands. • It is
termediate points. marveloue to smoother rough, red hands.
.._ _ .,________ ___.
FARMS FOR SALE
FARMS FOR SALE
r. have some choice farms. for sale in the
Townships of Ut.borne and Hibbert, all well
built and improwd, on easy terms of payment -
THOMAS CAMERON, Woodham. Ont.
2658 -ti
FOR SALE.
House and half acre of land in ths
village of Egmontiville. The property
is situated on Centre Street, close to
1ARM FOR SALE.-EDING LOTS 16 AND
17 on the 4tb- ronces•-•ien of Hibbert con-
taining 150 acre• with all necessary buifdings,
convier4 to schoc•ls and churches of all _den -
mations With telephone and rural route; 2)43
miles from Dublin marhet. This is a - splendid
property and will be sold to wind up the
estate of the late William McLellan. For
further particulars art/lv to .ANDREW Mc- •
LELLAN, Dubl:n P. O., R. R. 2. 2690-tf
Good Manners. , •
FARM FOR SALE ! The Earl e Chesterfield's last
____ words =were chaaaeteristi : " i
ye
Lot 33, Concession 6, McKillop, 100 acres Dayrolles a Chair!" Dayrolies was a
the Presbyterian church and is knowsore's cultivation of
friend who had called to make his
bush,the rest in a high statg of i
as the Purcell property. good, corn- 6 mi 1 es fyom. Seafortb. 2 miles from Con- customary inqunies about the earl's
fortable house, good shed, good well tshts.enpc%L.L.es.ramil.s.._ fdrom school. There ar on
go seven roomed house, learge - health and bad arrived just before
and cement cistern. -All kinds of f ai
%AI' bank barn 9-42t.76,° all Page wire fences ! the latter's death.
trees, strawborrice, raspberries,pmieoll uenderdrained. There are forty a:rnecsi,
currant bushes. This Is a conaeipro-ali t 1( gi 1 1 d, 5 aeres bush and the balance seed- •
own. There are two big springs one ! . Heat of the Sun.
pert, with no breaks 011 front, and
the land is in a good piped to barnyard an in the other 'te;1 to I Alex4ider Paromet of the Frenech
fence,mitse anc.1 toont(bi nearthe
tPh7Asthethewaaspri: • - Academy of Science estimates that
is in the orchard house and line. the temperature of the centreof state of cultiva ''fiet.11},a hydraulic ram pum i
tion. - This is a nice property for it. t'
cetired farmer and the taxes are lighi I ere no waste land. There 1. a 18 17,000 degrees centri ada.9 ar
For particulars apply on the premises graded . and ' ,e1 ef lane from tbe road to Mina
or to John Rankin, Seaforth.
2584..ti the huildingsg.ra%Apin
DORRANCE, seafort- it. - MRS. ,4 i LI
liag.E.I., E___0,682 degrees Fahrenheit. gr -
-- -
.,,,'' ...t f,,
a.
al
Continental Countries
Have Strict Libel Laws.
SomeSeem Very Stupid
le!:40144444444,44:4eRe:4444•44:44.644.0
LTHOUGH the artist and the
author cannot carry on -their
profesion exactly -as they
like In this country, they
need have little fear of impnisonment.
In some continental countries libel
laws are exceptionally strict, and the
writer and the caricattfrist! are often
arrested and senteneed tol terms of
impisopment. •
• . Some. years ago a soldier -named.
Adolph Wagner, while serving a'
sentence in the military prison at
Haile, Passed his time in drawing,
and one of his sketches was a, cari-
eatute of the. monarch of the Huns.
When thiswas_ brought! before the
authorities he was charged with
libellihg his •empefor, and was'
brought before a judge, who sentenc-
ed him to throe and 'a half years' im-
imprisonment.,
An Alsatian artist, Hand, • was,
once condeinned by the High Court -
of Leipzig to one year's imprison-
ment for sedition in connection.with ,
caricatures in a nursery book. He
seized the opportunity of regaining
freedom which presented itself -and
fled to France, where -he decided to
remain rather than surrender to the
- malevolent German authorities.
An artist, in • Russia illustrated a
book of fairy-tales, and the authori- I
ties ordered the whole edition of the
book. to be confiscated and destroyed
because one of the pictures portrayed
the assassination of an emperor. The
artist, indignant, saved a few copies
of the work, and gistributed them
among his friends. Information of
bis action in this respect reached the
authorities, and for this he was sen-
tenced to a term of imprisonment.
Some time before the war Dr.
Erich Zepler and A. err Karl Schmidt,
two Berlin journalists, were each
sentenced in the criminal courts to
six weeks' detention in a fortress
for libelling the Crown Prince of
Gel -Many -by comparing him to a
,'sentimental 'flapper' of the • high
Dobility." The incriminating article
was a burlesque of the Crown
Prince's farewell order to his Danzig
regiment, and it took the forth of an
effusive farewell letter from a "flap-
: kr" to the other girls at a boarding
school.
• The Berlin authorities, in pursu-
ance of the law concerning insults to
the German Monarch, ordered the
confiscation of Mr. Upton Sinclair's
hook entitled "The Industrial
public," while the late Mr. George
Griffith did not please the Russian
CovernMent when he .wrote "The
Angel of the Revolution." The sit-
uation in the story was far from fiat -
teeing tee the administration of the
Tsar, and 114 author learned, after
the, book hal been -confiscated and
destroyed by he police of Petrograd,
that if he were found in Russia he
neigirt have considerable difficulty
in getting back to England. He did'
not, however,- afford the authorities a
chance of detaining him. •
Nicholas Morosoff, the author of
important. researches in. .chemical
and physical science, was condemned.
to imprisorinent in a Russian fort-
ress for one-year for having written
and published a little. book of poems
which the Government considered a
danger to the country. It is interest-
ing to know that in 188.1 Morosoff
was condemned to penal servitude for
life for spreading socialistic ideas by
means of his books. He spent four
years in the ill-fame.d fortress of
Saints Peter and Paul, and for
tWenty-one -years his,was cruelly in-
carcerated in the • 'sone sacks" -of
the terrible Schluseilhere.
•
FAMOUS' COOKS OF FRANCE.'
Catherine de Medici favored the art
of cookery; and her long reign was
fertile in splendid repasts. Her chef,
by name; Berini, of Italian national-
ity, was a specialist in sauces; but it
tvas noticed as a curious coincidence
that whenever the queen and the cook
laid their heads together some of the
guests died suddenly afterward, not,
however, of indigestion. • In felt, the
cooks of this period were accused of
having acted an infamous part during
domestic discussions. Although Gon-
thier and Berini had achieved fame
with their sauces, the popularity of
the latter really dates ,from the age of
Louis XIV, when, also, that important
culinary axiom, to the effect that
sauces, like playing cards, should be
seen conly by candle light, was first
enunciated. The reign of Louis XIV
was, indeed, the grand and even
gigantic era of the- culinary art, and
toward its close was invariably written
on the menu beside that of his patron,
and the latter was proud of it. Thus
both their merits were combined, and
some of the most illustrious names
were found in the cookery books side
by side with the dishes which they
had patronized or invented'. This cus-
tom is still maintained at sone of the
princely iables of Russia. It is re-
• markable that at about the ame time
the culinary art frourished a the Eng-
lish court. Queen Anne was very fond
of gopd living and did not- disdain
personally to consult herl4hef; while
she had a gourmet of a game doctor,
,who used to descend to the larder and
report to her upon the weight of birds,
the quality of joints, etc
Epicures noticed with distress that
during the regency of the Duke of
Orleans, who acted as such duribg the
minority of Louis XV, the gastro-
nomic science remained stationary.
This they attributed to the fact of
the regent admitting his mistresses to
the royal table, whereby the genius of
cooks were let do-wn to concocting the
syrupy essences demanded by , these
sybarites. However, owing to the
progress of chemistry and the exclu-
sion of Aspasia, there was great im-
provement in the reign of Louis XV,
during which puddings and beef
steaks' were taken from the code of
this country. The " king himself was
an amateur chef and, with the Prince
de Domkes, was fond of making quin-
tessential stews in silver pans. Eng-
lish royalty has never amused itself
in this fashiOn, but there was once a
real live peer who cookedfor a living.
When. Lord Ashton succeeded to the
title in 1761 he was chef to a general
officer in London and his rank was
not discovered for some months, dur-
ing Which he continued to cook as
•
AUGUST 22, 1919
Best ,Goods
•
Self Service
••••=111•1111.1111,,
Specials for
Soap Chips, perlb.
Gold Dust •
Ammonia f.
Blue. •
"Toro" tablets
Pearline . . •
Starch, per lb.
Lux
•
•
yormsrommingarmoolor
Lowest Price
ash Day
16c
2 for 25c
9c
• 5c
. 5c
6c
12c
12c
Paint!
Paint!
White, inside and out, per gaL
' Other colours, per gal. •
Barn, red, per gal. • .
" Barn, other colours
, Raw Lin eed Oil on hand
3.25
3.05
1.80
2.00
Farmers and others Briiig your 'eggs to us. Our
price this' week (subject to market change) is 47c cash.
A fresh stock of groceries always on hEnd. Join the
'modern movement o co-operation and watch it grow.
Union brings strength. All others have unions why
not farmers?
United Farmer CO=operative.
'Distributing Warehouse No. lasIBOTD
1., Seaforth
Keep your store the busiest in town and watch us grow.
2 operating in ,Cobourg
0
PHONE 117
We now have No.
usual. But when his Master became
acquainted with this true version of
High Life Below Stairs, he, "in re-
gard to his cook's present dignity,"
says the Annual Register, could not
think of employing him any longer in
that station, but ' very generously
raised a subscription for his support.
Progress was maintained during the
reign of Louis XVI, and just prior to.
the outbreak of the revolution the
culinary art rose to a great height
with such chefs as Mezelier, Jouvent
and Beauvilliers. The very first res-
taurant *as started by the last named
in the Rue de Richelieu in 1782 Dur-
ing the Terror the celebrated Parisian
cooks managed to conceal themselves
-none fortned food for the guillotine,
at least -and after the more pressing
danger was over they emerged to pre-
pare contemptuously the highly sea -
soiled dishes demanded by members
of the directory. Under the consulate
and the empire the art of cooking,
thanks to the labors of Beauvilliers,
Belaine, Wiatier and other artists,
made new and remarkable improve-
ments. Beauvillier's restaurant then
attained European celebrity. and dur-
ing the occupation of Paris in 1814
am] 1815 the former chef to the Count
of Provence, afterward Louis XVIII,
entertained everybody of note. But
the bloated bills at the restaurant of
Beauvilliers furnished even the rich-
est princes with a bad quarter of an
hour.
htarlatr,s $pecific
Removes
Qa11Siones
24 flours
THE .
Never -Failing Remedy for
Appendicitis
Indigestion, StOmach Disorders,.
Appendicitis and,Ridney Stones
are often caused hy Gall Stones,
and mislead people until those
bad attacks of Gall Stone Colic
appear. Not one in ten Gall
Stone Sufferers knows what is
the trouble. Ilfcrlai-t's Specific
will cure withoen rn cr oper-
ation.
For sale at all druggists,
'Recommended by E. Umbach
Druggist, Seaftzth, Ont
J. W. MARI.ATT &CO
581 ONTARIO ST, TORONTO ONT:
. . .•, . „ , . _ - -
1
•.•
e/z/VZ/Z/X/Zr 4
,...„ e.
...:-
,.7.
.f1:. •
.=. :
-..-::.
*.:
.1:.
THE
Cm7imoriormummummoutunannsio
P OVRIGLEYS 4
JAI CY FRUIT
a....., ...1...........iimmulir
,,, .:HEVVING GUM 1
• TO
/
RIGan
,
1LJi
DOUBLE
The iongest-,..
fasting bens
the great
satisfaction I
your sweet
tooth.
WRIGLM
in the seals
packages.
Air -tight a
impurity -pr
SEALED TIGHT
KEPT RIGHT
Made
in
Canada
The
Flavour
Lasts *
•
•
•
•]
AUG1
0
rim nu,
I
(Too I,
Notes. -T1
holding an
Ernest Ada
20th. A g
preparoi
ceeds will
Hall fund
big friends
Maines, of
mother, Mr1
Brigham is
past month
Brunsden a
been visitin
-Mrs. You
ing the lak-e
land is homl-
Mrs \Valise
visiting Mr
loge -
GUAM BA
The sumn
dangerous
plaints of t
cholera infs.
dysentry, co
ten. little
the mother
mother mus
vent' these
come on su'
other medic
mothers d
Baby's Own
the stornach.
solutely safe
ers or by m
The Dr Willi
ville, Ont.
. WHAT B
Despite all
said about
is and the
dioloyed to re
sIerrorism an
known with
definiteness
ate land. To
itative state
has come a.
infrequently
Bolsheviki
of a governn
--organ of Bo
that the rep
shed coming
work of the
that it was •
Lenine and
v.ould co,
the soviet g
the world's
influence.
In- qearin._
Russia. it
ment-any
have got re
its advoea.te•
John' A. E
'service. Mr
Omsk, the
ern.ment, an,
of studying
territories
Eastern Ru
-captured by
His story, a
-der, rapine,
-ed with wan
ty, is -cleari
-only its adv
handle Bois
and largely
proof of • atr
• As an. ex
of the rule
cites the oce
vember, 191
looting the
ganized a gc
which they
leader with
without the
man, woina
being oppos
diately all
arrested aro"
rnittee. Mr.
"The jus
councilmen
-that is, th
to escape -
known. to
were susne
were 41k:a
executed.
d e ni241
wer.
The sa.m-:,
Ossa, a city
2,000 person
gan, a town
zens were It
execution; ar
either of th-
sons were
knows how
ed to cruel -
which exec
vist Manner
merciful"
Mr..Embr.
vidual eases
beau in
plan. of his
'witness the
men of tliei
as hostages
drown, of
because the
Bolshevism.
Tined up th
6