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The Huron Expositor, 1919-09-19, Page 6ISIT . P M - 9, } DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Mediicine. University d Toronto. Fate Assietart.New York t nhthat- nw and Anneal Institute. Moorefield's 'Rye and Golden Srtirre Throat Hos- nitn s. T,ondon. Eng. At the Queen's Rotel, fipaforth. third Wednesday in enth mnnth (rain 1d a in. to 2 tam. hats* -lop Street- South. Stratford. Phone 287 Stratford. • • LEGAL R. S. RAYS. "ftareleeer .knurlier. f*nnvevann P id Nnts•r e Pr'hlic gnlirttor for the Do- win;nn Rema. (fines in rear of the Do- minion Bank. Seaforth. - Money to loan. J. M, BEST Raerteeer.. orecoitor. r''onvevaneer and N;" -f-1 vv. Piie- 011;eA unctai1's over W Tt-n,-'c viurniture Store, Main Street. Seaforth. . PROTTDF OOT. KTT,T,ORAN AND . . COOICE 'Barristers, Solicitors. Nntaries Pt•c. Money to nit lend . In n S eafo rth 'Vlnn�atPa � week. Officein "Kidd Block. W Prnndfnot, LC.. J. L. Killoran, H. J. D. Cooke. VETERINARY F. ITAREURN,,V. S. Honer graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College., end honorary member of the Medical Ascocia.tinn of the Ontario Veterinary College Treats diseases n$ ail domestic= enimels by the moat rind - ern nrincihles. Dentistry nwi. lt/T;tk Freer a sneeialty. Office opposite Dick's TTntel. Mein street Se -forth. All orders Teft e:t -the hotel will re- ceive nromnt aftention. Night calls received at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. S- llonnr graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary Cnllece. All diseases of domestic animals treated_ Calls promptly- at- tended to and ehar'res moderate VPt- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Gederieh street. one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMAN&. Ostennh:;tic Physician of Goderich. Soecialist in Women's and Children's diseases. reheu natisre, acute, chronic and nervous disorders: eye, ear, nose and throat. r'`onsizlation free. Office above Urnback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesday§ and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W; HARN, M.D.C,M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- are- diseases of men and women. DR. T. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill TTnivereity. 't+tontreel: Member oOntairio: Lic Cotler•: of P Physicians of Medical 1 of Conn- ell .of C ennda Post-Gradnate Member of `kes.iJent .staff of General hospital, 7Tontreel. 1914-15! Office, -2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56 Hensall, Ontario. Dr. F. J. BURROWS . Office and residence. Goderich street past of the Methodist church. Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott. graduate of Victoria and College rsf Physicions and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity -University. and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. DR, H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario: , ass graduate courses in G'hicagn clinical School. of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital London, England. University Hospital. London England. Office—Back of Dominion ank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria Street, Seaforth. B. R. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton — Phone 100 Agent for The Huron and Erie Mortgage Corpor- ation and the Canada Trust Company. Commissioner H. C. J. Conveyancer; Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public, Go eernment and Municipal Bonds bought and sold. Several good ferries for sale. Wednesday of each • week. at Brucefield. AUCTIONEERS. GARFIELD MCMICHAEL Licensed Auctioneer for the County ff of Huron. Sales conducted in any part of the county. Charge:; moderate and satisfaction gngrantee oi. Address Sea- . forth. R. R. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236, ; Seaforth. 2653-tf THOMAS BROWN Lieensed auetinneetafor the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale -dates can be made,-bv calling un nhone 97, Seaforth ff or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- erate and satisfaction guaranteed, R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Hurns. Sales attended to in all parts of the county. Seven nears' ex- perience in Manitoba and Sdiskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 175 r 11. Eceter, Centralia P. O. R. R. No. 1. .Orders left at The Huron Expositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at- tended. tin ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN There are ` over 10,000 university women in America,, Miss Jean Hamilton, general secre- tary of the National League of Wo- men Workers' ` in New York, propose to teach the 15,000 members of -the National- league how to play. Less than one per cent. of the total number of women in India are educated, but these few are making big strides to form plans to educate all the women. Miss H. L. Wilcox, bacteriologist of the New York Board. of wealth labora- tory, is working to develop a strong • diptheria toxin. The women of India are making pleas to the British,xhouse of lords to have them grant woman suffrage in their country. ` Mrs. George Bass, chairman of the women's bureau of the Democratic na- tional committee, just back froma tour of the country, claims that wo- men of the United States will elect the next President. Women. workers employed on punch presses in the Underwood typewriter plant at Hartford. Ct., are demanding that they be granted an Increase in wages. After five years of experience with - policewomen, Pittsburg has decided that they are now an indispensable adjunct to the police department. HURON NOTES —On Thursday last, after an'illness, extending over several months, Mrs.. Charles Helyer passed away at, her home in Clinton. The deceased evas the adopted daughter of Mr, David Tiplady and moved to Clinton with her parents when a very young girl,. In 1882 she married the late Henry Porter of Clinton, who died in 1889. There were three children of this mar- riage: Mrs. E. Stanlake, of Exeter, D. H. Porter, of the Earle Pub. Co., Montreal, and J. Henry Porter, who was drowned at Goderich in 1908. about seven years ago she was mar- ried to Mr. Charles Helyer. Until her health failed about a year ago Mrs. Helyer was a very active worker in women's societies of. the church, be- ing a member of Wesley church Ladies' Aid, and also in the Patriotic Society. But of late she was .missed from her usual place in all these activities. It was thought in the early summer that she was regaining her strength but it was not for long. —Mrs. Hugh Oke passed to her reward on Sunday last at 'the home of her son-in-law, Mr. William Hig- gins in Exeter. The deceased had at- tained the age, of eighty-one years, three months and four days. About two years ago she suffered a stroke of paralysis and since that time has geen gradually declining. Her maiden name was Mary Ann Wilson. She was born in Ireland and came to Can- ada when a young -_girl settling at a MB Rests, Refreshes, Soothes, .E.. Beals --Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy. If ;► c'J, 2w they Tire, Smart, Itch', or OUR Burn, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed or Granulated use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult At all Druggists in Canada. Write for Free Eye Boal•._ _Marine Company, Chicago, LS. A. SINGE 1870 30 STo?S COUGH GENUINE ASPIRIN HAS "BAYER CROSS" Tablets without ` "Bayer' Cross" are not Aspirin at all Get genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" in a "Ijay er" package, plainly marked with the safety "Barr Cross,' . - Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" are now made in Canaria by a• Canadian Company. • No German interest- what- ever, all ri.rh t:, fining purchased from the United States Government. During the war, acid imitations" were sold a:.Aspirin in pill boxes and varinus other -containers. The "Bayer Cross" is your only way of knowing that you are getting genuine Aspirin, proved safe by millions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, .Neuritis, and for Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets—also larger sized "Bayer" packages can be' had at drug stores. .Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) , of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaccticactdeste QI ,•alicylicaeia. NOW RAISES 600 CHICKEN After Being -Relieved of Or- ganic Trouble by Lydia E. Pinkham's' Vegetable Compound. Oregon, Ill.-" I took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound for an or- ganic trouble which pulled me down un- til I could not put my foot to the floor and could scarcely do my work, and as I live on a small farm and raise six 'hundred chickens every year it made it very bald forme. "I saw the Com- pound advertised in our Paper, and tried it. It has restored my health s� I can do all my work and I am so grateful that I, am recommend- ing it to my friends."— Mrs. D. M. ALTERS, R. R. 4, Oregon, I11. Only women who have suffered the tor- tures of such troubles and have dragged along from day to day call realize the relief which this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, brought to Mrs. Alters. Women - everywhere in Mrs. Alters' condition should profit by her recom- mendation and . if there are any com- plications a write Lydia E. Pinkham's l�ieclicine Co.; Lynn, Mass., for advice. The result of their 40 years experience is at your service. Hampton where she was married to Mr. Hugh Oke, who predeceased her several years 'ago. After their mar- riage they moved to the farm, south of Centralia: owned at present by Mr. Will Oke. From there they moved to the London Road north of Exeter, and later moved near Seaforth, finally re- tiring and moving to Exeter. Two sons and three daughters' survive:— William and" Andrew, of Seaforth; Mrs. Joseph Hawkins, of Exeter; Mrs. William Higgins, of Clinton and- Miss Lida, of Seaforth. —In the case against Dr. Metcalfe, of Bayfield, for violation of the Med- dical Act by= practising in Ontario without a license, Police Magistrate Reid gave judgment last week, con- victing the defendant, of a breach of the Act and imposing a fine of $25 and costs. The evidence disclosed that Dr. Metcalfe,. after treating a case. sent a statement of charges to the Oxttario Workman's Compensation Board, This the magistrate held to be a bill Or account .showing hope of reward.. Council for the 'prosecution stated that the Ontario Medical Coun- cil did not desire to be in any way unfair to Dr. Metcalfe, but insisted that he take out a certificate under either the Ontario or the Dominion Medical Council; that he is a• resident of Bayfield for much of the time, and his practising is said to keep any other doctor from settling in Bayfield. The doctor's ability is undoubted, an'l he could easily become qualified and take out a certificate to practise in Ontario. —There Massed away at her home, ninth concession; Grey township, on Sunday, August 24th, a most estimable and highly esteemed woman in rhe pet on "of Mrs, John K. Baker. Her maiden- name was Selena A. Snell, daughter of the late, James Snell, Exeter. She was born in the tow ship of Bidclulph, Middlesex County, July 18th, 1855,- and was consequentl sixty-four years of age and had pass- ed the fortieth 'year of wedded liF being married to her nobereft pa ner in 1879. Of no one nay the wor in proverbs be more fitly applied: "Her ' children rise up and call her blessed, her husband also, and e of. m- � rt - ds z he, praiseth her." A noble mother she was and- also ever active\in Christian work.- Last winter, in spite of a set back from influenza and consequent weakness which followed, from which in fact she never completely recover- ed. Mrs. Baker knitted for the sol- diers overseas -no less than eighteen pairs • of socks. Practically all her life the subject of this notice was a consistent member of -the Methodist Church. She was organist in. Centralia church for some time and for eighteen years served in the same. capacity at I-lenfryn. She was also active in the Ladies' ies' Aid, W. M. S., and as a Sun- day school teacher and will be great- ly missed, If her place at church was vacant everyone knew there was a good and sufficient cause. Except it could not be helped Mrs. Baker could always be counted on to be present and do her part. It was her invari- able custom for many years to bring flowers to Union church to add to the attractiveness of the service. Inter- ment was made in Brussels cemetery. A long concourse followed the casket to the silent city of the dead. The pallbearers were A, Boyd, H. Speiran, H. Richmond, James Denman, Edward -Collis and Samuel Wilton. Mrs. Baker is survived - by her husband, four sons. Wilbur, of Granton, and Garfield, Chester and Selwyn, of Grey township,' and a daughter, Mrs. J. A. Speiran, of Grey. Percy and Mrs._ Luke Speiran are deceased. i Nothing for Him to Do but Hand Out Ticket. Now He Makes Plaintive Appeal. for Rule by Which He Can Tell a Min - later From Ordinary Run of Mankind. "Sky pilots ! Whe-e-w !" whistled the ticket agent of a Missouri town the other day; so the story goes. "Well, it seems to .me thgre are just ten times as many as there used to be in. this neck of the woods, and I tell you some of ' the guys who come up here to this windcn sayin' they're Ministers and asking for half -fare tickets look more like ballyhoo men at a street fair or circus than sky pilots. "The trouble is when a fellow comes up here to the window and says `I'm a preaeher,' there ain't any rules laid down for me to go by to tell him from a professional crook, or moll buzzer, or „a right reverend, and so I have to hand aut the ticket. "The other .night I was talking to my wife about it,. and we hit on a scheme, and .when I went down to work next inorning I had the family Bible tucked under my' arm, and when a sporty -looking old chap, puffing a cigarette, with a plaid suit and a neck- tie at you,' tie so loud it screaming was e gY cable up to the window, and says 'min- ister's ticket to Kansas City, please,' I said respectful like' Please excuse me, sir, but will you please tell me who wrote the second book of St. Paul's Epistle to the Gala- tians?' "He smiled at me friendly, ands olid pretty quick, 'Why Paul, of course. Now get busy with a ticket.' `Nope,' ; sr4d I, just as cold as you please, looking him hard in the eyes. `You're dead wrong there. Paul didn't do any such thing, and nobody else ever wrote a second book to those Ga- latians, for there ain't any such book,' and I thought I had finished him. "But, mind you, he just sort of look- ed ooked at me sad -like for a minute like he felt sorry for me, and then he reared back and said in a voice just like be was praying: 'Sir, I am a minister of the holy gospel, whether or not this finite thing called mind tricks me. in reference to the number Of books Writ- ten rit ten by the blessed saint, Paul. I teach the philosophy of rational, thought so as to co-ordinate with the elucidation of internal forces upon the outward or extraneous matter whihh operate in opposition to the complete domination of the purely physical to the intellec- tual -'=--the soul, 'some call it—and that the elevation of the spiritual retards the development of disease and error on this terrestrial planet on which we live and move and have our being.' "I looked at him a minute, and then I said out loud, 'Well„ I be dogged !' For I was thinking all the time to myself how a ten -dollar -a -week ticket man was ever going to get wise tct a line of talk like that even with a Bible in his hand. And' I handed out the ticket."— Kansas Cfty`Star. Quaint Island. Elmley, one of England's oddest little islands, though only 48 miles from London, is a parish where roads, shops, lamps, telephones, motor cars, publi }; houses and postoffices are un- known. The island, which lies off the Isle of Sheppey, Sent, has an area of about 2,000 acres, and Is the property of Oxford university. The Inhabitants are mostly shepherds of large flocks of sheep. The oldest man of the village is in his seventieth year. Ele has yet to see a motor car. The school and church. are the two chief landmarks on the island. The rea- son they were built in such a sparsely populated spot is that in winter it is almost impossible to leave' the island, as thesferry which runs to and from the island is dangerous. A novel method of obtaining the services of the ferryman, who lives opposite to the island, is the ' open- ing of the white door of a hut facing the shore. At night a lighted candle held aloft serves the purpose of the open door. Stonewall's Plan. As an American troopship pulled away from a New York dock on its journey to France, Stonewall Jackson and Welcome Brown hung over the forward rail and looked with solemn faces down into the choppy waters of the Atlantic.- "What tlantic.-"What you'all gwine to do, Stone- wall, if one of dem pow'ful mean tor- pedoes smash into dis here boat?" Stonewall remained silent for a minute, then he turned. a sober face toward his brother in sorrow. "What I gwine to do? Listen, Welcome, my ole mammy done tole me dat dere nebber wuz but one man dat eber walked on de water an.' got away wid it= -but of one ob dem chas- ers ever smash into dis boat—say, Welcome, Ah'm goin' to be de second one."—John E. Scroggins, U. S. N., in Judge. Rats Cause Losses. Losses from rats in cities are enor- mous.- In 1908 the biological survey made a careful study of rat infesta- ons in two cities, Washington and I itimore, with the result that actual losses of produce and other property amounting annually to $400,000 and $700,000 respectively, were revealed. These sums are nearly in ratio to the, populations. The Woman's Municipal league of Boston recently announeed that losses from rats in that city amounted to $1,350,000 each year. Losses in Pittsburgh, Pa., have been estimated at over $1,000,000 a year. CASTOR IA Par intuits and + 'en. 14 Mt You lwaB of ACTIVITIES . OF ' W ,,MEN The average woman office clerk in London gets a salary of from $5 to $7 a week, while girls ,running ele- vators earn ori an average of $7 a week. The Chilean government has confer- red the medal of merit on Mrs. Mary Kimball Braden, wife of Wm. Braden, a mining engineer, for her work on behalf of Chili in\ the United .States. More than 1,000 Chicago women are availing themselves of the training offered by the health department's training school for home and public health nursing. Miss Miyorke Kobashi, proprietor and editor of the Fujin Shuho, the women's weekly published in Tokio, Japan, will visit the United States for a. three year stay for the purpose of investigating the courses in journalism in the leading American universities. Miss Vera D. Pickett of Arkansas City, Kan._ holds an unique position, She styles herself as "harvest employ- ment helper" and she is credited with. being the only woman in the United States at present engaged in such an occupation. Her duties consist of finding harvest hands and taking them in her automobile to . the scene.- of activities. Women delegates to the Internation- al Socialist conference, in session at Luzerne, Switzerland, have decided to call an international strike of working women in the event of future declara- tions ofwar and general mobilization.. Laura A. Cauble, deputy commis- sioner of public markets, has charge of the distribution p lans and forma- tion of the volunteer organization in the approaching sale of army provi- DR1tRE:D 1855 MOLSCNS CAPITAL AND RESERVE $8,800,000 rOVER .200 BRANCHES The Molsons Bank offers you a -safe and convenient depositary for your money, and allows you interest on same. The use of cheques obviates carrying sums of money when paying accounts. Moreover such payments cannot be disputed. OVER 100 BRANCHES throughout Canada give the best pos- sible attention to the banking require- ments of any Molsons Bank customers, BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield St. Marys E:irkton Exeter. Clinton Hensall Zurich 111 cions in New ° York city. Although 7 years of age and a grandmother, Mrs. Ellen A. Copp is enrolled in the -present summer session at the Univer ity of Wisconsin :pursu- ing studies in sociology and eugenics, with a view o securing the degree of doctor of phil sophy. She already has five college d grees and is the author of several books. Mrs. Leonrd Wood. is honorary president and Mrs. John Hays Ham- mond preside` t of the board of direc- tors of an association recently formed to purchase e .birthplace of former President 1 Theodore Roosevelt sevet as a center of citizenship activities for Am- ericans. One of the most noted examples, of the new school of women artists is the Sculptress, Miss Belle Kinney, whose impressive monument to the women of 'the Southern Confederacy soon will be placed in the capitals of ten Southern states. Women are to be admitted to the proposed degree of commerce at Lon- don university on the same terms ass - meii They be eligible for the de - >gree of bachelor of commerce after a normal course of three years and will be able to proceed to the de ree of master of commerce after a practie able experience of at least two years. Baking Always In Sight , TI clear glass door is only one ofthe modem features of this dependable range. Its baking qualities you know. The cooking top will take the boiler eittrtr across or lengthwise, making it easy to cook the regular dinner on wash -day.. Grates work smoothly. Hot water reseryoir is enamel; and may be removed for cleaning. A dependable ther- mometer takes all guess -work out of baking. No other range will quite satisfy you once you see the Pandora. MCIaiy Pandora Sold * Henry Edge r .,,.��'� � ..`�,. s.. .� -,{.-a . '� a`..f •ay ��'��t !_'ate .x ti�i Cz 'ails.1 iois Doctors Say It' Is a Menace in Any and ' } 11 Forms IVE ounces of alcohol will kill a full- grown healthy man within ten hours. Taken in smaller but; repeated doses alcohol lets him liveJonge> 'but gets him in the end. All alcoholic beverages are -poison, slow or swift. - Medical. science has established that alcohol is a poison and a narcotic chemically related to ether and chloroform, and not a stimulant. A man was once brought out of ethef who had taken eigh,t, ounces, and a man was once brought out of chloroform who L taken 221/2 ounces, but no man ever reviv- ed who swallowed five ounces of alcohol at a single dose. 'The unconsciousness or coma produced by alcohol if not broken within ten or twelve hours is followed by practically certain death. Alcohol as medicine ha copoeia by the American been expelled from the American Pharma- edical Association. : 2.516 alcohol in Beer Makes it oison THE beer of the ballot; contains 2.51 % alcohol by weight—over twice .!as strong as the beer of the Ontario Temperance Act (2.50 Proof = Spirits). The Beer of the Ballot is intoxicating. Three glasses cf the Beer of the Ballot contains as much alcohol as a glass of whiskey, - When you are asked are you in favor of beer containing 2.51% alco- hol by weight—in shops, mars, or anywhere else, vote "Nor mP011!°TII Save yourself, save your family, save your country for the destiny God intended unhandicapped by "booze." Be careful—mark your ballot after each question with an X under the column headed "No," or your vote will be lost to Temperance, .rnittntario a er JOHN MACDONALD; Chairman. Trta,rurer. A. DUNLAP, ANDREWS. GRANT. Z t,t-C.tairmall ar•.1 S 'crrtt.ry, (1001 Excelsior Life Bldg., Toronto.) IWO — AMA Ala ima ,.0 Sealona 0.11 410..4 EP' flinillli (Cor "But i' wo:adehminaidsy0114 kinanI cofsorieout o—andyouato would his keep you 1. can Will you " Glad i thing e i% `•; of a for mp hThead betcaty before d h sioback'cvly= a' and purl secur" tionson train He the Lonlei e he had pa of the •x before hi. waxen le ferns del slender n his boo ening sots f carpet hi way and cessantiy.' been abo' supines thernselve cubs; res from loft chipmunk and part bands of running 1 and leavl flags alof bounds dense tha But when threaded and flame: CVS 1ndige are off and ilk bad :at' aPpea Stone the tri will: c anon, For. Recoi A Sal ON.