The Huron Expositor, 1920-01-30, Page 22
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NEPEINSET
NEPONSET PAROID ROOFING NAPONSET TWIN SHINGLES
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
JANUARY 30, 1920 1
1110
ERE is a shingle that meets every
1. requirement for roofing. homes. It is
thoroughly weather-proof, being made of the
same materials as the .famous I'aroid Roofing,
ifrIrrair
TWIN
Si=c -23 inches x 12,., inches
They are more attractive in appearance than
slateN, they are durable and fire -resisting; they
are easy to lay and most economical in price.
They are suitable for all residences. And
youhave your choice of two permanent colors.
RED or GREEN - Shute Surfaced
Ne Tot et Pcroid li'oofing is recorntended for farm buildings and factories.
Sold by Lumb'er and Hardware Dealers.
G. A. Sills, Seaforth
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE-,SEAFORTH, 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-
muth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
WjUiam 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, Harloek;
George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
i
G. TaR. R, TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
10.55 a, m. - For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
6.53 p. m. - 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.
6.16 p. m. -For Stratford, Toronto.
Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going North a.m. p.m.
London 9.05 4.45
Centralia 10.04 5.50
Exeter 10.18 6.02
Hensall 10.33 6.14
1Uppen 10.38 6.21
"`
Brucefield .. _ 10.47 6.29
Clinton.
11.03 6.45
Londesboro ddd 11.34 7.03
Blytb11.43 7.10
Belgrave 11.56 7.23
Wingham 12.11 7.40
Going South a.m. p.m.
Wingham .... 7.30 3.20
Belgra'e 7.44 / 3.36
Blyth 7.56 3.48
Londesbofo 8.04 3.56
Clinton 8.23 4.15
Brucefield 8.40 4.32
Kipper" 8.46. 4.40
Hensall t 8.58 _ 4.50
Exeter 9.13 5.05
Centralia 9.27 5.15
London .. 9000d....:• 10.40 6.15
C. P. R. TIME TABU
GUELPH & GODERICK- BRANCH.
TO TRORONTO
Goderich, leave
Blyth
Walton
Guelph
am. p.m.
6 20 1.80
6 58 2.07
Z 12 2.20
9 48 4.58
FROM TORONTO
,Toronto, leave 810
i Guelph, arriv. 9 80
Walton 12.08
Blyth 12.16
Auburn 12.28
Goderich. 12.'5
5.10
6.50
9.04
9.16
9.10
9.55
Connections at Guel� Joo�t�lc, sTith
Main Line for Gal
Lon-
don, Detroit, and Mien*, sadall in-
termediate points.
LIFT CORNS OR
CALLUSES OFF
Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or
callus off with fingers -
Don't suffer! /A tiny bottle of
Treezone costs but a few cents at any.
thig store. Apply a few drops on the
corns, calluses and "hard skin" on bot-
tom of feet, then lift them off. v
When Freezone removes corns from the
toes or calluses from the bottom of feet,
the skin beneath is left pink and healthy
rind never sore, tender or irritated.
vertj „
SUN. MON. TUE. WED. TRU. FRI. SAT.
2 3 4 5 6 7
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1J> Ll VANCOUVER
WINNIPEG
TORONTO'
ToronfoV�'[6 ncouver
BOt�l WPBy)
S - :moi'
TORONTO
IuNi0N aTAT1ONi
401alluneeolne SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5th, WWII
9.1.E P.M.
DAILY
MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT
Standard Sleeping, Dining, Tourist and
ColPartorr Car throughFirst-classCars. the Rockies.hs.
Sunday, Monday. Wednesday, ¢rtday
Canadian Rational all the way.
tue.day, Thursday, Saturday
'S, $ .11., Perth Bay, Cochrane and Cseadlan Natlesiat.
a Agents.
fewther
eElt£Rai. Information
PAS SER DEPARTMENTatieeal ,I ,
TORONTO
Toronto - Winnipeg
C..,pattant-Qblarsattoa library Can
-00 4rit,
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Viscount Jeilicoe Looks`'
Mild, But fie is Mighty
Pays Visit to Uoin nio
DMIRAL VISCOUNT JELLI-
COE, the great little British
seaman who commanded the
British fleet in the Battle of.
Jutland, arrived in Victoria on the
battle -cruiser New Zealand, to pay us
a visit.
When the war broke. out practi-
cally nobody outside the navy had
ever heard of Jellicoe. Everybody
now .could write a nice little essay
about his record in the big conflict;
but as to Jellicoe, the man, about all
the average Canadian knows about
hi -n is that he short, clean-shaven
and has a peculiar, close-lipped
mouth, which he keeps severely shut.
Jellicoe has nothing of the look of a
popular hero like Beatty and Beres-
ford and "Jacky" Fisher. His ap-
pearance suggests that his manage-
ment of a fleet would be on the lines
of efficiency only - no picturesque
stunts, simply business done in a
businesslike manner. Physically he
is the n i l v they
an n t� e navy, t y
say, barring the midshipman.
An American newspaperman who
saw a'good deal of the admiral dur-
ing the war describc;s Jellicoe this
way: "If he were not an admiral a
stranger would think him a rather -
successful lawyer -the sort of a law-
yer who would handle the real
estate business for maiden aunts and
handle it. well. If he were a doctor
he would be the kind to which rich.
aid fashionable families would grav-
itate. He certainly doesn't look the
part of `Hell -Fire Jack,' as he has
be called in the Britisl? navy. Ho
VISCOUNT JELLICOE. -
doesn't talk like it either. He doesn't
raise his voice no matter what hap-
pens. He doesn't swear -or at least
he only swears as much as is neces-
sary. He never places emphasis
anywhere. But he apparently gets
there anyhow. . In fact, he's a whale
on doing things." -
From another pretty good obser-
ver
bserver we are told: "Jellicoe is English
to his heels. His father was a naval
officer and the family is of Hamp-
shire- stock. The admiral is always
cool and serene. Nothing ever flur-
ries him. He never bullies dnyone,
and no one ever tries to bully him.
He aways seems to be in command
of the situation -and silently -whe-
ther the situation be at a dinner
table or a quarter-deck."
Three tines Jellicoe has dodged
death by a miracle, and the stories
of these escapes throw more light on
the little admiral than a couple of
columns of character study, Away
back in 1880 he was a lieutenant on
H. M. S. Monarch near Gibraltar.
One day in a heavy storm a Glasgow
steamer, the Ettrickdale, was strand-
ed near the Monarch, which had
gone out for target practice. All the
boats but one small one had been left
behind. When volunteers were called
to try a rescue of the crew of the
wrecked vessel Lieut.. Jellicoe was
the first to jump forward. With
seven seamed in the small'boat they
struck out. After a desperate strug-
gle their boat went down and they
were washed ashore more dead than
alive. They had done their best, and
they received medals from the British
Board of Trade.
Oil his next narrow shave he lost
this medal. This was in 1893, when
he was in command of the Victoria,
which was sunk by the Camperdown
during manoeuvres in the Mediter-
ranean. Jellicoe was in his bunk with
a sharp attack of fever. When the
crash carne he staggered on deck in
his pyjamas. He stood on the bridge
with flags in his hands ready to sig-
nal when he' was Bung into the
whirling waves. Too weak to do
much for himself, he would have
quickly sank but for a midshipman
who helped him. Admiral Jellicoe's
medal went down, with the rest of
his property, and when the Board of
Trade was informed of the loss he
was told that l,e could have another
medal by paying for it!
Admiral Jellicoe's third brush with
death occurred on land when he ac-
companied Admiral Seymour on his
attempt to relieve the Pekin Lega-
tions during the Boxer rebellion.
Finding themselves in. a hopeless
position, they decided to retreat to
Tientsin. They encountered cavalry,
and Captain Jellicoe, as he was then,
was . shbt through the lung while
leading his men in attack. But
though his wounde was dangerous
his grit pulled him through five ter-
rible days before they reach Tien-
tsin. .
The private life of Admiral Jelli-
eoe is a happy one. - He is married to
a very rich woman, the daughter
of Sir Charles Geyser, head 01 the
Clan lice of steamers.
AS YOU EAT
Corn and fig muffins. -Sift together
one cup yellow cornmeal, half a cup
,white flour, one tablespoon sugar, one
teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful bak-
ing powder. Add half a tablespoon
shortening, one weal beaten egg, three
quarters of a cup of .milk and half a
cup of dropped figs. Bake in muf-
fin pans.
Bread Pudding. -To one quart of
milk add one pint of bread crumbs,
one cupful of- molasses, a pinch of
salt, one cupful of raisins rolled in
flour, spices to taste. Bake for one
hour in a moderate oven.
Raisin Sandwiches. -Butter whole
wheat or graham bread on the loaf
and cut in thin slices. 'Cover with
raisins and nut meats chopped to-
gether.. Put together in sandwich
form. Serve with tea, milk or cocoa.
Dates may be added to the raisins in-
stead of nut meats if preferred.
Date Fritters. -Make an unsweet-
ened fritter batter. Add chopped
dates, and fry in the usual manner.
Cuban Pudding. --One cup molasses,
one- teaspoon ginger, one ,teaspoon
soda, two -third cup of ,boiling water,
one and a half cupfuls flodr. Dis-
solve the soda in the boiling water,
mix ingredients and steam one and
e half hours . without uncovering.
Date Bread. -One and one-half cup-
fuls white flour, one and a half cup-
fuls graham flour or whole-wheat
meal, three teaspoonfuls baking' pow-
der, one tablespoonful of sugar, one
package dates, cut fine; milk to mois-
ten about one and three-quarter .cup-
fuls. Mix ton,;,' to dry ingredients,
add dates and then the milk, and
bake about 'forty-five minutes in a
slow open. Raisins may be substi-
tuted. -
Lima Bean and Tomato Soup. To
a pit of
strained tomato ojuice
add
two cupfuls of Lima beans, boiled
till soft and put through a strainer.
Season well, with a little beef ex-
tract, added if convenient.
Lima Beans and Bacon. -Soak a
quarter to a half cup of Lima beans
until.soft and full of water. Then
boil till tender. Put them in a shal-
low dish with seasoning of pepper
and salt, anti spread with a quarter
pf a pound of sliced bacon. Brown
in the oven.
Rice Fritters. -Fritters can be
made of rice, hominy or other cereals
and eaten with fruit sauce or maple
syrup, Rich rice fritters are made
of two cupfuls of boiled rice, a gill
of cream, two eggs two tablespoons
of cornstarch and a teaspoon of bak-
ing powder. Milk can be. used in-
stead of cream., and hominy can be
substituted for rice.
U. S. A. TO THE RESCUE
Out of America, the new thing -
and generally in the shape of a crus-
ade. The newest is "a movement for
the world-wide abolition of the cigar-
ette," launched, according to the story,
by the New York Presbyterian church.
One is always a little doubtful ,how
far such enterprises are the result
of reforming zeal and how far they
are a mere journalistic invention. For
however little America may intend to
meddle with certain other aspects of
the world's affairs, some of her own
publicity agents - seem desperately
anxious to persuade us that she is
Magnificently ready to act as hot
gospeller to th s universe -a sort of
moral Monroe Doctrine forthe world
at large seems to be the ideal, with
a symbolical Stars and Stripes flut-
tering' gaily over the best -behaved
protectorate that ever was. At any
rate, there is plenty of campaigning
ground for a fine, fat crusade in the
"world-wide abolition of the cigarette,"
He is a well-established foe, in spite
ot the fact that he was not even a
name within many living memories.
But we are quite ready to be • cured
of hini; we do smoke too many cigar-
ettes and he is no real friend to
health or pocket. Fortunately Amer-
ica is in a particularly favorable posi-
tion for coming to the rescue. All
but a tithe of the cigarettes smoked
in this country are made from tobacco
grown in America, at least if their
labels may be believed: The -plan of
campaign is simple: let America. stop
growing that tobacco. Our reforma-
tion will be complete and automatic.
THE REASON WHY
Why do we get a bump instead of
a dent when we knock our heads ?-
When you knock your head against
a sharp corner or if someone hits you
on the head with anything with a
sham edge, you do receive a dent in
your head, but it does not last. . In
other words, the head has one of the
qualities of a rubber ball. You can
press your finger against the sides of
the rubber ball and push it in, but
when you take your finger off the ball
resumes it shape. Just so with your
head -it resumes its shape after a
blow.
After doing this, however, a bump -
or lump is formed. I will endeavor to
tell you how the bump is formed or
rather what causes it to form. You
cannot knock your head against any-
thing that is harder than your head
without causing some injury to the
parts which received the bump. Now,
what happens then is just what hap-
pens to any other part of your body
when it is injured, whether as a result
of a bump, a cut or aN'bee or mos-
quito sting.
As soon as the injury occurs the
brain starts the repair crew to work.
The result is that- first a great sup-
ply of blood is rushed to the injured
part with the result that the blood
vessels are filled up and .extended 1
with blood. Certain parts of the blood
cells find their way through the walls
of the blood vessels at the part of
the injury and other fluids from the 1
body are piled up there, so to speak,
to form a congestion. This piling
up or congestion rdistends the skin
and raises the bump. On the head
where the layer of muscular structure
is thinner and where there is less
space between the bones of the skull
and the outside skin, the bump will
. be larger and more noticeable, be-
•
Dye Old, Faded -
Dress Materia
"Diamond Dyes" Make Shabby Apparel
Stylish and New -So Easy Too.
Don't worry about perfect results.
Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give
a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric,
whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed
goods, -dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts,
children's coats, -draperies,-everythingi
A Direction Book is in package.
To match any material, have dealer
show you "Diamond Dye" Color Cardt
cause a good deal of blood and other
fluids are piled up in a comparatively
small space, and so the skin gets
pushed out farther to accommodate
'this great congestion, whereas in
other parts of the body the bump
may be quite as large but not so notice-
able.
SNOW STUFF
In a handful of snow there might
be 20,000 crystals, and not one of
them bo mike.
Sleet is now which, in its passage
to the earth, has passed through a
layer of warmer air, and become par-
tially melted.
Snow early or late, according to
whether the summer Was short and
soon over or extended to the autumn.
A short, early summer means that the
earth cools more quickly.
Ground which is covered with snow
very rarely falls below freezing point,
although the Mr may be fiften to twen-
ty degrees colder. 'This is because
snow is a very bad conductor of heat
-it holds the heat in the ground and
stops its radiation.
The reference in the Psalms: "He
giveth snow like wool," is not to the
fact that snow and wool are alike
in appearance, but to the warmth of
each.-
• - Snow s warm because air is held
in its minute crystal interstices. No
heat escapes from anything covered
with snow.n
S ow'
is, literally, a valu-
able manure, and nourishes the earth
with its carbonic acid which pene-
trates slowly into the soil and it is
thus f ly absorbed.
Final , snow is ruinous ; to shoe,
leather, ecause. it warms theg leather,
opens it, and then penetrates.
NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE
One of the newer English automo-
biles has a five -cylinder, air cooled
engine,
In all of Peru's 700,006 square miles
of territory there -are only about 1,700
miles of railroad. "
Layers of steel, asphalt, asbestos
felt and a waterproofing eompound
make up a new roofing material.
Japanese educators are planning the
establishment of a wild life experi-
ment station on a large scale.
So their owner will not lose either
while travelling, an inventor has hing-
ed together a hair brush and comb.
France is planning to build for ex-
hibition purposes the largest hall in
the world, covering about 18%. acres.
Attachments enable a motor driven
scrubbing machine -for household use
to be used to polish hardwood floors.
The tank and outlets of a century
old street sprinkler in `Bombay have
been mciunted on a modern motor
truck.
An inventor has concentrated ink,
packing it in tubes, from which it is
squeezed and mixed with water for
use.
Venezuela has established an ex-
periment, station of agriculture and
forestry, with a garden of acclimati-
zation.
Spring silencers have been invented
to elimate the clicking sound of over-
head valves on automobile engines.
Extensive harbor plans for Genoa,
Italy, look to the expenditue of nearly
$58,000,000 in the next twenty years.
Harness has been invented to pre-
vent conductors of the open type of
street cars being knocked from run-
ning boards.
An Englishman has patented ap-
paratus to steer vessels by pumping
jets of water out of -either side of their
sterns.
In one end of a new library table
is built a writing desk that is opened
by raising a hinged section of the
table top.
British scientists, who have been
planning an airplane dash to the South
Pole, have set next June for making
the attempt.
For the convenience -of smokers an
ash receiver resembling a watch case
that can be carried in a pocket has
been invented.
Of French invention is a practical
typewriter small enough to be car-
ried in a coat pocket and operated
while held in the hand.
When the handle of a bag invented
by a New York man for women starts
to slip from a user's wrist it is auto-
matically tightened. -
With the completion of large elec-
trical sea water evaporating plants
Norway will soon be free of the nec-
essity of importing salt.
Peanuts are salted in the shell by
a new process which consists of soak-
ing them in brine and then placing
them in a pressure tank.
Probably the largest private elec-
tric plant in the United 'Kingdom will
be erected to furnish power for a
new coal mine' in Wales.
A current interrupter operated by
clockwork has been invented to pre-
vent electric heating of power cur-
rents being used for lighting.
One of Chile's rivers will be harn-
essed to provide 30,000 horsepower
at a hydro electric plant and three
smaller plants are planned.
An inventor has patented a simple
boiler and condenser to enable auto-
mobile owners to get their own dis-
tilIed water at trifling cost.
The largest vessel ever built on
the Strait of Magellan recently was
launched by a Chilean company, a
wooden schooner of 900 tons.
Sheet zinc is being rolled sufficient-
ly light to be used as a substitute
for sheathing paper in lining houses
and as easily applied.
Of the world's annual production
of nearly 400,000,000 pounds of cork-
wood, Portugal produces about forty-
five per cent. and Spain thirty per
cent.
A. new- lamp intended to supply
lights for smokers burns a fuel that
also clears of tobacco siiioke the air
in a room in which it is used.
Two Danish companies are plan-
regular passenger
ning to establish a
and - mail airplane service between
Copenhagen. and Warnemunde, Ger-
many. '
A two -row cultivator for farmers,
adjustable for width and that can be
either .tractor or horsedrawn, has
been invented by an Illinois man.
Belgium's first experiment with the
electrification oft its railroads will be
made early in the year with the line
from Brussels to Antwerp.
An alloy has been perfected from
which can be made protecting tubes
for pryometers used in testing the
temperature of molten brass and
bronze.
Believing that brief periods of rest
are followed by more rapid growth,
a Danish scientist forces plants by
Incorporated in 1855
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,000,000
Over 120 _Branches
The Mols�ns
ank
BUSINESS SERVICE
Many of ourr customers who started in a small way, - have now
a well established business through the assistance and co-operation of
this Bank over a period of years,
•
Open an account in this Bank where your interest will be
faithfully looked after by experienced officers.
The Manager is always accessible.
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT -
Brucefield St. Marys Kirktou
Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich
administering chloroform to them.
An inventor has combined a broiler
and griddle, one side Tieing ribbed and
the other flat.
Tests in Europe have shown that
pans made of tantalum outwear those
made of steel or gold.
A portable electric transformer has
been invented for heating rivets as
they are to be used.
spend about
New Zealandplans to
p
$2,500,000 - in the development of its
water power resources.
A device to spray clothes with a
soap solution has beeninvented to
make home ,washing easier.
Electric traction has been applied
to one of Spain's most important min-
eral carrying railroads.
A new hand stamp resembles a
rocking blotter and presses ink from
° a pad through a metal stencil.
Concrete buoys which weigh five
tons a piece yet float have been built
for tise in Jamaican harbors.
A toaster that toasts all sides of
two pieces of brea-d over a gas burn-
ner at once has been invented._
Hollow concrete telegraph poles,
built up around bases of wood and
steel, are a European invention.
A fibre board base for ink bottles
to prevent them upsetting has been
patented by a Kansas inventor.
Prominent Minister Endorses -
cn's Heart and Nerve Remedy .
Was almost a Nervous Wreck from Overwork; this won-
derful remedy brought. back his old time Vigor and Vital-
ity. Read the story of a Great Medicine, in three letters. $100 in cash
will be paid to anyone who can prove that these letters are not genuine_
The name of Minister will be given to anyone who doubts these remarkable
statements.
Here is Lotter Number Ono
"Please send me one box of HACKING'S HEART and NERVE REM-
EDY, I am suffering from a bad attack and have been unable to fill my
pulpit for three months, doctors say that it may be six months or more be-
fore I am well again. " ,I used to be able to hold my large congregation from
start to finish, now, 1 can scarcely hold my own thougjtts.
My Heart Action is bad and I am subject to Paintings and Dizziness,
and am very despondent, I hope that your remedy will help me." -
We sent on the one box of Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy and
11 days Iter we receive this letter.
• Letter Number Two
"Please send me 6 bo4ies of Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy. 1
have used the box you sent me and I feel that it has already helped me.
My head is clearer and the pain that has followed the preration of my
sermons has been greatly relieved and I feel that with proper treatment- 1
will again be restored to my old-time vigor.
I am so pleased with the success of your remedy that I km giving part
of it -to some j my friends."
'Row comes the proof in letter number three, a few weeks later.
1 • Letter Number Three
"'Having used your medicine,Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy for a
few weeks for Neurasthenia (Nervous Breakdown) I have become as a new
man. For five months I have suffered from Sleepletssness, Nervous Chills,
Fainting Spells, Severe- Headaches and I could not place my mind on the
preparation of my sermons. To -day, my old ambition and strength is re-
newed• -thanks to the use of your remedy, which. I am. pleased to Teem,.mend to anyone suffering from Nervous Discusses."
This testimontial comes voluntarily front one whose reputation is un-
assailable and is given for the sole purpose of helping others. The above
statements are true -or as near to the truth "as the men of Benjamin
could throw a stone" Jud. 20 18.
If YOU are broken down in health from any cause whatever we will
guarantee 'that a six box treatment of RAC1!NG'8 HEART AND NERVE
REMEDY will make a wonderful improvement in your health, but you must
be sure to get HACKING',S. ' Price 50e a box, 6 boxes for $2.50. Sold by
all dealers, or by mail. Hacking's Limited, Listowel.
The longest
tasting benefit,
the greatest
satisfaction for
Your sweet
tooth.
WRIGLEYSS
in the sealed
packages.
Air -tight and
iMPUritY=proof. .
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