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The Huron Expositor, 1919-10-24, Page 2
oast Cz12a, and 20 inch oven THE SON EXPOSITOR THE HURON EXPOSITOR Ellis Parker Butler, who -wrote an American classic called "Pigs is M�ffat's Canada I SEpFORTH Range _ continues to lead in point of safes, in its construction, and in the satisfaction it produces. It is absolutely guaranteed as a baker, a fuel saver and the heaviest steel range • in the market, , Complete with high -closet, Anickle plated copper reservoir, polished top, thermometer, - ... I0O 00. Moffat's City Queen, i8 in. oven, high closet -and tank 64.00 Moffat's Bon Chef, high shelf and reservoir...............52.0© Full line of Heaters for Coal a. I4.00 to 25.00 O Coal Oil Heaters are the recognized fall fuel savers -they can be carried from one room to another, and gime` no - smoke and supply ample heat. New Perfection heater in black $7,00 New Perfection heater, nickled $S.25 McClary's Graniteware on Sale We -h -ave purchased a quantity of McClary's Graniteware in white and grey, slightly dam- aged, which we are selling at greatly reduced prices. - Pails, kettles, cups, spoons, mugs, sauce pans, chamber pails, tea pots,- at.prices worth buying. Bargains for the early. A. Sills e .orf THE McKILLOP MUTUAL END STOMACH TROUBLE, FIRE INSURANCE COGASES OR DYSPEPSIA HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTII, ONT. OFFICERS J. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- anuth, Brodhagen. DIRECTORS William Rinn, No. 2 Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J., G. Grieve, No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Ilarlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 10.55 a. m. - For Clinton, +a•oderich, Wingham and Kincardine. 5.53 p, m. --- For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine. 11.03 p. nit. For £linten, Goderich. Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross" 6.36 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 6.16 p. in. -For Stratford, Toronto Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South a.m. pan. "Papes Diapepsin" makes sick, sour, gassy stomachs surely feel fine in five minutes. If what you . just ate is sourin . on your stomach or lies like a Iu p of lead, or you bele gas and e: date sour, undigested fo i d, or have : feeling of dizziness, hearth rn, fullnes nausea, bad taste in mout and sto ' 'ach-head- ache, you can get r- ief in e minutes by neutralizing acidi P .' an end to such stomach distress : now `. y getting a large fifty -cent case of e's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any .stom• 1 ach disorder caused by food fermentation due to excessive acid in stomach. HOW YOU .CAN TELL GENUINE ASPIRIN Londesboro 7.13 3.56 Clinton 7.33 4.15 Brueefield 8.08 4.33 Kippen 8.16 4.41 Hensall .. 8.25 4.48 Exeter 8.40 5.01 Centralia . 8.57 5.13 Wingham, depart 6.35 3.20 Belgrave 6.50 3.36 Blyth 7.04 3.48 Going North a.m. • p.m. London, arrive • 10.55 6.15 London, depart - 8.30 4.40 Centralia 9.35 5 45. Exeter 9.47 5.57 Hensall 9.59 6.09 Kippen 10.06 6.16 Brucefield 10.14 6.24 Clinton.... ..... 10.30 6.40 Londesboro ...... 11.28 6,57 Blyth ......... , 11.37 7.06 Belgrave. 11.50 7.18 Wingham,arrive 12.05 7.40 are Aspirin -No others! If you don't see the `Bayer Cross" on the tablets, refuse them -they are not Aspirin at all. - There is only one Aspirin, that marked with the "Bayer Cross" all • other tab- lets are only acid imitations. Look for the `Bayer Cross"! Then it is real Aspirin, for which there is no substitute.' .Aspirin is not German but is made in Canada by Canadians, and is owned by a Canadian Company, all rights being purchased from the U. S. Government. Genuine l "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" have been proved safe by, millions for Pair}, Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu- matism, Lumbago, Neuritis. Hancly tin boxes of 12 tablets -also larger "Bayer" packages, can be had at any drug. store. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) ofc Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. t -'M"` • Pigs,' aider the delusion obviously that it was not a rabbit but a guinea Friday, Oct. 24th, 1919. , pig that held the record in this re - 1 sped.THE VISIT OF THE PRINCE' _ The Prince of Wales' visit to Can- ada .is about to end. The thousands whe have seen him want to, see him again. He `has . certainly won the. hearts of. all Canada. The Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal with characteristic enterprise have se- cured a real life -like portrait of the Prince, 16 x 22 inches, that should be in every Canadian home. It is a very. pleasing portrait and bears a copy of the Prince's aujoreraph. The Fancily Herald sends a ._opy of this portrait free to all Family Herald subscribers for 1920. The subscription price of that great family paper is .$1.25 a year, big value in itself, but with the Prince's portrait certainly is the greatest value ever offered. The Fam- ily Herald and Weekly Star will be kept busy booking orders, .as the de- mand has set in with a rush. People who are not -subscribers to the Family Herald and Weekly Star, have no idea of the treat they are missing. RABBIT IN DEMAND FOR FLESH AND FUR A fnovement is observation in the United States to page the rabbit in an effort to compete with .the high price of foodstuffs. Twenty years a- go there was a tremendous boom in many parts of the continent includ- ing Canada, to put the Belgian hare on the market. As most people are aware, the Belgian hare is a -rabbit of a brownish red color, weighing ten pounds or more, bPed primarily for grace of outline, and richness of col- oring, and secondly, as a substitute for beef and other meats. In Cali- fornia the Belgian hare boom must have reminded old timers of the boom in 1849. Everybody took to 'breed- ing Belgian hares. The climate was eminently suitable, for the hares could remain outdoors the year round. • - Tremendous prices were paid for breeding stock. Several' hundred dollars were freely handed over for a prize buck. There were innumerable shows. Then the boom collapsed. It was found that :to breed successfully required • much skill and attention. This discour- aged those who had rushed into the business without any particular aptitude: or training for it. In those days, too, meats were cheap, and there was practically no demand for rabbit skins on the part of the Buntings. The • new rabbit boom is causes as much by the insatiable demand for cheap fur as for cheaper food. At the recent New York sales tremendous numbers of rabbit skins were sold. A few years ago, when wild animal furs were more abun- dant, or when the demand for them was smaller, there was no market for the 'rabbit skin. It is not -a strong skin; it tears easily. Two years of not too careful use would make a rabbit skin coat not worth- the moth balls that preserved it from one season to another. In those days when one bought a fur coat .he, - or rather she, expected it to last for the best part of a lifetime. Now, since styles have seized upon furs as they formerly seized upon -silks,ladies ladies get tired of a particular fur coat in a season or two. Durability has no greater attraction for them than piety. They want change, and if a abbit skin coat will only look smart or a year, it will be held to have given service. Its cheapness is an- ther advantage, for a rabbit skin oat can be bought for from $65 o $150. Ermine and seal are no longer available except for those of great wealth, and - every year finds mink nd otter and beaver and other furs hat once were as common as the ld fashioned buffalo robes, becoming ore scarce. This '"has Eled to the ad- ance in price and fashion of such urs as muskrat, skunk, _ cat and abbit. The muskrat when dyed and clipped, looks very much like seal t a distance of a hundred yards bout seveno'clock last evening, and nder the name of Hudson seal sells or several hundred dpllars a suit. ere is also another difference • not Bible to the naked eye. A genuine wilskin coat would . last almost a i etime or even longer if it hap- ened to be a short and merry one; muskrat coat will last about half s long. As observed, a rabbit 'skin at may last almost as long as a a ebbit that lives next door to a rrier. It is to be noted, too, as ederick J. Haskin points out in the i'ttsb urg Gazette -Tinges, that the kin of the American rabbit is too ender for use asdcoats and it is only European rabbit skin that can thus employed. The tanning of rabbit skins is a and new American industry, and result of the war. With the great r -producing _countries, Russia and anada, engaged in the war, they re practically sealed as . sources supply. This suggested to a Bel - an in the United States that use ght . be made of: tanned rabbit ns as trimmings. In Belgium he d been long familiar with the ocess, and so he hired a barn in w Jersey, advertised for rabbit ns and set to work. In 1915 he said to have made $250,000. This ar he is advertising for 10,000,000 es. As pointed out, the- .rabbit, like several other domestic ari- ls, is useful both for its pelt and food. The flesh is delicate and urishing, and "with the prices of k and beef at their present alti- es, there is a greater demand for bit flesh than can be supplied. 1 e rabbits are extremely prolific, everybody konws, except Mr: 1 r f 0 c t a a0 m v r a u Th vi if a co r t Fr s te be r b a fu we of gi mi ski ha pr Ne ski is. ye hid un ma as no por tud rab Th as ORM WINDOWS &DOORS qI71~s to suit your openings. Fiueal with glass. Safe da - livery guaranteed. Write for Price Lit Eel. Cut down fuel -7 -� bills. Insure winter comfort. The HALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited HAtifl. oM FACTORY DISTRIBUTORS CANNA DA These domestic rabbits, whether Duth, Belgian, Siberian, Lop Ear, English or Flemish, are not to be confounded with the true English hare, even though some of thein are called hares. Nor is it tobe suppos- ed that their names• are derived from the countries ' of their • origin. If the .Belgian hare ever saw Bel- gium, tWere is not much chance at least that the Siberian ever Saw Siberia, All these varieties and a dozen more have been bred, some of them for eentures, some for only" short times as domestic pets for. show purposes. The smallest and prettiest, perhaps, is the Dutch rab- bit, with its black, blue, fawn or greybody and ears, its white collar, breast and feet and the white blaze down the face. The largest' is the Flemish giant, weighing twenty OCTOBER 24, 1919 pounds. ;Then there is the French f rabbit, with its snowy white, fleecy TN wortiAN wool, and the English lop ear, which cannot jump high enough to get itsil ears off the ground.4 Most boys, we suppose, have kept one or another - when they kept pigeons. But it• is not to be expected that the boys will aid in the effort to popularize rabbit flesh and rabbit skins, the boy's idea AN being that all rabbits ought to die, if at all,' through hardening of the arteries, and be " buried with pomp and affection in a flower bed. SAVED FO Penn `Claryx Pandora • 'I' is every woman's right to have the best kitchen equipment that can be had. The Pandora saves trouble,. • saves work, and gives a woman the joy of baking things just as she wants them. It is a woman's choice. Let us show you the smoothly working grates, the clear oven door, the fine ther- mometer; Let us explain why the oven is so evenly heated. You want the best for your kitchen. Then see the Pandora. Sold by Henry Edge By fakig Lydia E. Pinkham'' Vegetable Compound, mpound, One of Thousands of Such Cases. Bieck River Falls, Viie.--"As Lydia E. Pinkhani's Vc.fret ;o fit-7i1xound 1.aV&.1 pre from an o1,ei'atson, x cannot enough in !:raise {7f it Isin -,extt.from Sti Iseicireiblesand z.iy sole hurt me so 1 could licrdiyue u from my bed, and was unable to do my. housework, I had the best doctors in Eau Claire and they wanted me to have an operation, but LydiaE. Pinkham'a Vegetable Ccrnpound cured me so I did not need the operation, and I am tellin all my friends about it." -=-Mrs. A. BINZEa, Black River Fall's, Wis. It is just such experiences as that of Mrs. Boner that has trade this famous root and herb remedy a household word from ocean to ocean. Any woman who suffer& from inflammation, ulceration, displacements, backache, nervousness, irregularities orthe blues" should not rest until she has given it a trial, and for special advice write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Business'Proposition for Farmers E want you to size up Delco -Light ats you would a new farm hand before: you hired him. Will Delco -Light do a good day's work on the farm every .day? Will it cost much to keep? Will it earn .money for you? Will you get along pleasantly with it? Qver 75,000 Delco -Light users have answered these questions for themselves and for you. Delco -Light gives them all the electric light and power they need. As a result-- They esult-They do chores before daylight or after dark, because house and barns are well lighted. They have stopped working sni machines by hand -milking machin churn, separator, grind -stone, washin machine, fanning mill, ' water -pump They have running water wherever is • needed. They no longer hampe then (selves . with a lamp or lantern whip working. There are no lamp to clean and 1311. - The ironing is don by electricity. All this means time saved for every member of the farm family. It means more time spent atmoney-mak- ing work. On some farms it means doing .away with hired help. And the money- nowspent for coal oil will operate Delco - Light. rour times as much light from a gallon of coal oil is the record of Delco -Light over oil lamps. A few 4, cents a day for all the :electric light and power you can use.. , i all e, g r s e BESIDE ALL THIS, Delco -tight gives you the wonderful comfort and pleasure of electric light _in the home. Floods of clear, bright light at the pressing of a button. .No matches; no danger. Lots of light. Pleasant evenings; happy, mother and children. You can't know the t'utold benefits of electricity until you try- it. r. Delco -Light users know all these thins. They have ; ritten us letters telling us. We quote from some of these letters. We have printed 'sor ti ,f them in a little folder. Illustrated ith photographs. We want you to get this 1-ook and read it. It will open your eyes 'io tke possibilities for greater profit and !ire -ter comfort on the farm. Write your nearest distributor for a free copy. • (a) DELCO-LIGHT has made it possible for us to Ifo without one rsn, whose wages and keep amounted to $50.00 -he would cost us more now. By operating the above mentioned appliances Mrs. Peck has been so relieved from her ordinary household duties that she is able to spend a great deal of her time helping to care for; the milk, and we are- now aple to do all of our own ▪ work, which has solved the hired help problem. for us, and securing help nowadays is the farmers' greatest problem. Where there is a boy on the farm he looks after Delco -Light. A few min- utes each week is all the attention it needs. Note these exclusive features of Delco -Light construction. They insure .care -free, long-lasting service for you. It s direct -connected. ''here are no belts to slip, break or be replaced. It is self cranking. Pressing down on a lever starts the engine and it stops automat- ically when the batteries are charged. • It is air-cooled. There is no water to carry, to freeze, or to boil away. There is only one place to pus oil, There are no grease cups. A simple mixing valve regulates the fuel supply. There is .no complicated carburetor. Ball and roller bearings cut down friction and increase efficiency. - Thick -plate batteries are long lasting. You can see that on every point Delco - Light is a good business proposition -that it .pays for itself. It does a lot of work for you. It saves you time. It gives you time for money -making work. It costs little to operate. It iseasy to look after. (b) Delco -Light saves us every day about one hour doing the chores around thefarm- this would mean for my son and I` about 730 hours a year at 30c, per hour, which is, figuring very lbw, about $219.00 saved. (c) The time and labor saved every week over the old way is as follows: Cream Separator.... • 6 hours • w Washing Ivlaclxine... 5 " Flat -iron 2 Pumping water est Vacuum Cleaner4, Power Stand on Pan Mill and various things2' 4' 41 Total 25 :" per week (d) I save about 2 hours a week on the 'washing, and 7 hours a week on separating. It saves one man about 4 hours to clip my team. -Oa churning it saves my wife 3 hours . a week. It saves.about 30 minutes on grind- ing our sausage per hundred pounds. (e) We figure. 'that it has saved us in way - of labor for pumping and milking not less than $1,200.00 during the two years. TIxe plant requires very little attention and only about S2.004per month for fuel. We could almost afford to buy a new one each year and still be ahead on labor and satisfaction, "aside from the adve.ntages of having the lights, of which we have 50 in the house• and barns. (f) I Light my residence, a house of fourteen rooms and one of five, my garage, two barns and a workshop. I operate an automatic water pump, maintaining a pressure of 40 pounds for the entire water supply of the place, including hose for watering the garden. We have a %I -horse power Delco -Light Power Stand, which is used for churning and working the butter, turning the grindstone and running the washing machine, I expect toattachit later to the cream separator. (g) This plant is paying for itself in several different ' ways. The fuel saving alone amounts to about $460.00 per year, as follows: Where we formerly used 55 gallons of gasoline per week, at 25c. per gallon ($13,75) to operate the milking machine and pump alone, we now use 35 gallons of kerosene per week at 14e. per gallon ($4.90), which is a net saving of $8.85- per week, or $460,20 per year. s Also, in addition to this, we are lighting four houses, horse barn and cow barn and doing the washing and ironing. Another instance of saving is that we save the time of one maxi (4 hours a day) handling lanterns alone in our cow barn. We figure this a saving of 30c. per hour, making $1,20 per day, $36.00 per month, or $432.00 per year. (h) "I consider my purchase of a Defeo - Light plant one of tie best improvements I have made on my farm." DTJNCAN MARSHALL, Minister of Agriculture, Alberta, Canada (i) The plant has not given us a bit of trouble, there had been no repairs to date and the operating cost has been less than $2.00 per month. (j) -Any child can run it and it beats any of your coal -oil lamps for light and safety. Before acquiring a Delco -Light I could not rest good at night for fear of children lighting a match and thereby possibly setting fire to something. Now I sleep like a log because all that is necessary for.the children to do is to press the button and the light is there, and a most excellent light at that. It is much cheaper than Coal -oil and no danger of upsetting a lamp, Thomas McMillan R.R. No. 2 Seaforth, Ontario Electrical Systems Ltd., Toronto, Ont. . Distributors `•_..._ �.1a....�... The Domestic Engineering ayton, -Ohio .111akers of Delco -Light :Products' Dl THE FAQ Canadia hard on l azid brigls These sud cramps a little stun may be si equal Ba the little stomach, upcolds Tablets a or by mai Dr. Willie Ont. So says need of a comes alo In paint gasoline e air comps: ean from = aint, T -f paint, hole near underneat and gauge the top happen. packed co child's ex Its adva numerous finish, no tension po but not 1 in about by ordna riery ousne however, oring of perchance the windo LATEST One Canadi Toren The Can continental Vancouver Toronto, type of ste equipment, twenty sue -every pain the safety This mode antitelpsco sign to th the exeepti ed in. leat Electric berths, up with berth this class been ins aisles of ing latup. light may` curtains, a eengers wI Phospho readily se passenger light or r darknes' A safet device for 'berth. whic of the up use. Sepa vided so t berths wil.' the lower. - The kits range, fac and locker their food.' special att convenienc electric th can be so ternperatu ing overhe Thus as. daily servi lines betw eouver, is the yery 1 for second' enjoy' a tr comfort at CO The Complete Electric Light and Power Plant 4 or Farms. ILLUST Probabl; which tfie that -of bu Associatio produced The Sph =. "The fil bead wind' coral, As open grate +ing upa wasteful Meat there scene is s process waste is "Then what eau coal, scient from eae of amnion ed, and a >: sulphate is • aiilpl to 1 per ton oil to