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The Huron Expositor, 1920-04-23, Page 2r+ • y eieemumummor I .1 --or that are built tolthat The kind that save ab _last, work without the leapt amount of exertion. The EDl A is a hand washing mat me, with beautiful large cypius tub well corrugated, special Cut market and ball bearing,- the easiest hand: washer onthe niai k et . , • • • . • • • , , , • • . . , , . , . ,.. ♦ • . • • . . • , , • , • , . .$20.00 Special MAYTAG. Washing Machine for hand or gasoline engine, can be operated without throwing off a belt. A Bargain $20.00 HAL' TIME ELECTRIC Machine, washes and wrings at the same time. Takes up little room. Equip- ped witli specially good motor '.............. . .. $110.00 Hand Vacuum Washer for use in tub or pail, the Very thing for blankets . . $1. 50 Galvanized Tubs, extra heavy , . $1.85 to $2.50 Mop Stocks, all steel .. . . .:...... . ..... Wringers Scrub Brushes Step Ladders Carpet Whips Clothes Pins, spring snap, 4 dozen for 25d Cotton Gloves, per pair 25e 10c .$7.050 to $8.50 15c to 25c $2.00 to $2.75 20c s Tack Hammers EVERYTHING FOR SPRING HOUSECLEANING- G. OU SECLEANING- G. A. Sills, Seaforth TILE cKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO's. ° HEAD OJ: L' ICE--SEAr GATE, ONT. OFFICERS J. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President ce President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 187,' Seaforth; 3. W. 'leo, Goderich; R. G. Jar moth, 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, Hariock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 11 a. in. For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. 5.58 p. m. -- For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine:- 11.03 incardine:-11 03 p. axi. - For Clinton, Goderich. 6.51 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 3.12 p. m. -For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going North a.m. pm. London 9.05 4.45 Centralia 10.04 5.50 Exeter 10.18 6.02 Hensall ......... 10.33 6.14 Kippen .:............ 10.38 6.21' Brucefield 10.47 6.29 Clinton 11.03 6.45 Londesboro 11.84 7.031 Blyth ....... 11.43 7.10 Eelgrave 11.56 7.23 Wingham 12.11 7.40 Going South a.m. p.m. Wingham 7.30 2.20: Belgrave 7.44 3.36 Blyth 7.56 8.48 Londesboro 8.04 3.56' Clinton 8.23 4.15 Brucefield 8.40 4.32. �Fpen 8.46 .4.40 Hensall , 8.58 4.50 Exeter j 9.13 5.05 Centralia 9.27 5.15 London ......... . • 10.40 6.15 1 C. P. R. TIME TABL2 GUELPH & GODICH BRANCH: TO TRORONTO s.'za. pan. Goderich, leave 6 2O' 1.80 Blyth 6.58 2.07 Walton�s7 1,2 2.20 Guelph 9.4.8 4.58 FROM TORONTO Toronto, leave 8.10 5.10 Guelph, arriv.: 9 80 0.10 Walton -12.0E 9.04 Blyth 12.16 9.18 Auburn 12.28 9.10 Goderich 12."5 9.55 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Use for .Galt Woodstock, Loci - don, Detroit, and Chicago, andall in- termediate points. \ MERE IS ONLY ONE GENUINE ASPIRIN Only Tablets with "Bayer Craw; are Aspirin No others! 7i£ you don't see the "Bayer Cross" the tablets, refuse them --they are of Aspirin at all. Insist on genuine "Bayer TaMets of . pirin" plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer --Cross"-Aspirin prescrit ed by physicians for nineteen years and .proved .sa"fe .ITY :millions for. headache, Tooth- ache, 'Earache, Rheumatism, Lu;n.bago, LloIds, • Neuritis,- and fain getre4rally, laser tin boxes of 12. tablet -also larger `tlsayer" packages. - b,Iatte in Aslii'rin is ;the trade mark` (regisikred i•a Canada), .of Bayer Manufacture of 'tion vac i et cacr des sr t of rc . l' ' �a ]Ica r v c d. While it is well 'known that aspirin means Mayer manufacture, to assist -the public- against imitations, the Tablets .4f Bayer Company, Ltd., will he stamped Frith their genera1 trade- mark, 1.Lw "Layer Cross." WINNIPEG BRANDON REGINA SASKATOON TheWayfo the VVtsf DAILY SERVICE Lys. TORONTO (Union Station) 9.15 P.M. CALGARY EDMONTON VANCOUVER VICTORIA STANDARD TRANS -CONTINENTAL TRAIN EQUIPMENT THROUGH- OUT. INCLUDING NEW ALL -STEEL TOURIST SLEEPING CARS. Sun. Mon. Weal, Fri. -Canadian National ail the way. Tues. Thurs. Sat.-Yla G.T., T. & N.O., Ooehrane thence 0. N. Rya. Tickets and full information from nearest Canadian National Railways' Agent, C. A. ABERRART,, Seaforth, Ont. K �iiaiia►`st Passenger Department, Tonna. - Induatrfo is rtosat Torsats and wlenlasj trill furnish full pailfeefers ressrri1ag land le Western Canada available for farming or ether purposes. Canadian NatnR1w2qs R TIE HURON EXPOSITOR KEEPING FOOD COOL WITHOUT THE USE OF 'ICE HILDLEss. As the weather grows warmer and , ice slips into the ranks of commodities' that march under the banner of H. C_ • L•, the -question of how to keep the refrigerator. full .this summer be- ginli to worry the already sadly per- plexed head of the ` Welly. But 'if yoou, are handy with tools you can -build an iceless ice box at a trifling cost, and the cost of operating will be nothing, Here is the way it is done: A Wooden frame is made with , dl■ mansions 42a46x14 ,.1#iehea and is covered with .screen wire, preferably the restless_ kind. The ; door made to fit closely and mounted 9n brass hinges, can be fastened with a wooden latch. The bottom is fitted solid, but the top should be covered with settee wire, Adjustable shelves can be made of solid wood -or straps_ or sheets of galvanized metal. Shelyes. made of goultry netting on light wooden ames, are probably` the most desir- a able. These shelves can rest on side braces placed at desired intervals. A bread -making pan, 14x16 inches, is placed on the top and the frame rests in a 17x1$ inch pan. All of the woodwork, the shelves and the pans should receive two coats of white paint and one or two coats of white enamel. This makes an at- tractive surface and one that can be easily kept clean. The screen wire also may receive two coats of enamel, which -will prevent it from rusting. A cover of eanton flannel, burlap or duck is made to fit the frame.: If canton flannel is used, the smooth side should be out. It will require about three yards of material.. This cover is buttoned around the top of the* frame and drawn down. the side on which. the door is not hinged, using buggy hooks and eyes or large -headed tacks and eyelets worked in the ma - eerier On the front side arrange the- hooks on top .of the door instead of on the frame, and also fasten the cover down the latch side of the door, allowing a wide hem of the material to overlap the place where the door closes. The door can then be opened without unbuttoning - the. cover. The bottom of the cover should extend down into the lower pap. Four double strips which taper to eight' or ten inches an width, are sewed to the upper part ' of the cover. These strips form wicks that dip over into the pan. Operation of the refrigerator is as simple as its construction. The low- ering of temperature inside the re- frigerator depends upon the evapora tion of water. To change water from a liquid to a vapor, or to bring about evaporation, requires heat. As evaporation takes place heat is, taken from the inside of the refrigerator, thereby. lowering the temperature of the inside and contents. The upper pan is kept filled. with water. The water is drawn by capil- lary attraction through the wicks and saturates the cover. Capillary action starts more readily if the cover is first dampened by dipping it into water or throwing water upon it with the hand. The greater the rate of evaporation the lower;the temperature which can be secured. Under ideal conditions the temperature "has been known to be •reduced. to 50 degrees Fahrenheit. Obviously, weather con- ditions have a lot to do with this refrigerator. A warm, dry day, with a slight wind, if possible blowing on the cover, produces the. best results in maintaining coolness of contents. BROODINESS CHECK TO HEAVY EGG YIELD • On farms devoted to egg production it is the hen's exclusive business to produce this product in the greatest numbers and as continuously as pos- sible. It is her manager's duty to see that she is equipped with every facility toward this end and that her activities are - not allowed to lag, Where poultry is raised on any sort of a scale the hen is not- held respon- sible for rearing next season's flock of pullets. It is far more economical to perform this work by artifipial means, with the aid of incubators and brooders. _ In consequence the hen is denied any participation in the futherance of her species, save the laying of the egg, and any inclination toward such maternal ambitions must be promptly discouraged. In other words, broodiness -that desire to hatch a setting of eggs -must be stopped. It is most natural for a hen to be- comebro od . Even v e Y nt h so-called non - setting varieties, such as the leg - horns, become -broody, though not so frequently nor so persistently as the heavier breeds. If left to her own de- vices the hen would steal her nest, Iay fifteen to eighteen eggs in it, -hen proceed to hatch them. The hen's egg production is not a regular sequence of so much_ daily nourishment converted into so much eggemaking material, though that is the airs of the breeder of high -pro- ducing poultry. The egg cells, of which there are many hundred in a well -matured, normal hen, are form- ed in series or clusters, each series being developed or retarded in ac- cordance with the hen's general health and her ability to consume sufficient quantities of correctly balanced ra- tions. When a hen has laid a series of eggs a rest period follows. The dura tion of this '.rest period varies widely with individuals, just as the number of - eggs in a series varies. There may be a dozen egg cells in a aeries or five dozen.. The rest period may consume five days or five weeks. Both factors are influenced by the manage- ment of the hens. In' the spring and summer months the rest periods are usually accent - Dr. DeVan's French Pills A. .rellable,Regulating P111 for Women. mailed to any at on receipt ce pt of -price, The S cobell Drug Co., St. Oath- #Flne, , Ontario. r PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN Restores Vim and Vitality; for Nerve and Brain; increases "gray matter;'' Tanis--wil"1 build you up, $3 a "box;. or two for $5, at .drug stores, or by mail on receipt of ptice. The Scobell Drag Co., St. CutharLi,n, Ontario. EN Please. Read This Letter And' See. What Normal Health - Will Do For You. • Berwick, Ont. --"I had organic trou- ble, and after taking Lydia. E. Pink-. ham's'Vegetable Compound and -Blood Medicine all my troubles passed away. I was made strong and well and have been ever since. Now we have a fine baby boy six months Old, and 1 know that 1 would _not have this baby ncl would still be suffering if it had not and myself been for .our remres. My husband f 84 to your remedies ate wot th : their weight in gold, and I recommend-. them to my friends. One of my aunts, is taking them now." - Mee. NAPOLEON LAvIGNE, Berwick, Ontario, Canada. Among the virtues of Lydia E. Pink- hain's Vegetable Compound is its abil- ito to correct sterility in many cases. This fact is well established as evi- denced by the above letter and hundreds of others we have published in these columns. In many other homes, once childless, there are now children because of the fact that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Co m p o u n d makes women normal, healthy and strong. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinicham's Vegetable Com- -pound will help you, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. partied by broodiness. Leastways, . there is an inclination toward broodi- ness. Whether . or not --it becomes a fixed state is up to the poultryman. If he interrupts the hen, if be dis- courages this broody inclination at the 'very beginning) the hen will soon abandon the desire to sit, following which another series of eggs will be de eloped. • Failure to discourage -broodiness is probably the most potent cause - for the low rate of egg production in the majority of flocks: The broody hen eats and drinks very litle and takes practically no exercise. Xn con- sequence,. she soon becomes thin and emaciated, and we are apt to marvel how she sustains life at all. She could not survive if it were not for' her ability to draw upon her in- ternal storehouse for sustenance. It is the depreciation of- this store of energy that causes her egg -producing organs tobecome contracted and dormant and in the same inactive, shrunken condition that we find ,in the immature pullet or in the fowl. that is passing through the molt. , The hen reverts to this impover- ished .state in an astonishingly short space of time. Then, with all things favorable, from four to six weeks. are Locomotor Ataxia Yields to Pho sphonol TREATMENT The remarkable efficacy of this ad- vanced scientific method of treat- ment is demonstrated in the case of a patient who secured a box of Phos- phinol less than a month ago. This ease was o_f a man 54 years old, who had been afflicted with' locomotor ataxia for more than four years. He came shuffling into a drug store on his cane which announced his en- trance as he plainly- labored to a chair. This man told the old sad story of a fortune wasted in "doctor- ing'! and "cures," trying to regain health. After only three days treat- ment, . this same man came back a different man: He was able to walk unaided for the first time in more than a year. His eyes spoke the gratitude his tongue could not ex- press. For the paste week -this man has been working in his store. He was able to scrub the floor unaided. He does not need his cane any more. His step .in walking is almost brisk. At the rate of his remarkable im- provement m- provement this man should be entirely well within a short time. His name and address will be given to any one interested on application. This is only one of many dreaded ailments which have .yielded to Phosphonoi. Sid at all good drug stores. Prices $3.0 a box, or 2 for 0.00• Don't wase your money in cheap remedies. Get one worth while. Annommempeopmors The Real Story of Porcupine's Rches An illustrated booklet, telling in an interesting way the real facts ;+pout ,Ontario's great gold producing district, will Le sent free on request. Writ. for your copy , a-aey Hoer L. OI'0703.4.5 Bantuu sx vv. a of Hamilton B14g. TORONTOa, required to bring her back into lay- ing. If conditions are not favorable, for example, if the weather is very hot or if she is not fed stimulating rations or if she was never but an indifferent layer at best, - the chances, are she will not resume laying until next season. Instead, -it is highly probable that she will enter the molt. From now until the middle of June is the season of heaviest egg produc- tion, after which the egg yield will fall off `very rapidly if the poultryman is not watchful in respect to broody hens. There should be a hard and fast rule to go over all the nests every evening and remove therefrom any fowls that show signs of broodiness. Inexperienced persons 'may reason that it seems unnecessary to make this a daily task and that to go- over the nest once a week or every few days will answer the same purpose, but such is not the case. A hen re- moved from the nest on the first day of her inclination to sit is very much easier to - discourage than when she has ben permitted to indulge her fancy or a.week or more. She s rather indifferent snout the. matter at first and• can be diverted With little effort; whereas, at the end of a week the notion is a confirmed" habit -a firm resolve, lodged cross- wise in her mind 'and clinched on the inside, from which it is a tedious job 1 to break, her. Everyone who has raised chickens- has probably observed the tenacity and stubbornness of a setting hen.` Her will power is almost unconquerable. ' There - are many ways of diseourag- Ing broodiness, but, remembering that the real reason for so doing is to induce further -egg production, any practice or method that subjects the hen, to cruelty or privation -will only defeat the idea' and should not be tolerated. The old-fashioned ideas of inflicting some form of punii,hment on. the un - offending biddy because she responded to a natural impulse were all wrong. Aside from humane reasons, to half starve or ill treat fowls by keeping them from feed or water only invites further loss in eggs, since these cus- toms are sure to bring about the very condition that should be avoided -the reversion of the egg organs to a dor- mant state. Where birds -are kept in small flocks, 'a good plan • is to build a coop With a slatted bottom at the end of the roosting compartment, having it well ventilated and easy ,f access. An Ordinary packing case may be con- verted into a broody -hen coop. Re- move the bottom and replace it with slats; mount the box on legs that will keep it about six inches off the floor; then construct a simple wire netting - covered frame for a lid. ' _ ` As the clucks are taken from the nests they are placed in this coop,' They are unable to squat in a com- fortable position, due to their legs 1 protuding through the openings be- tween the slats; currents of air under them are disconcerting; they have no sense of privacy, or security; hence two or three days of thisharmless pillory usually disgusts them with the idea of wanting to hatch a brood and when• released they are only too anxious to rejoin their companions in the laying house. - It is understood of course that food and water are kept before them dur- ing their confinement and that they. are not to be treated as prisoners, but as hospital inmates. However troublesome, it may be to remove the broody hens every day, positively it must be done if eggs are to be secured in large numbers during the summer months: It is Bart of the general scheme of intensive progres- sive poultry culture --equally as im- portant as artificial incubation and brooding, -Many relatives and friends lin Grey locality learned with ..deep re- gret of the sudden and tragic death of Andrew . M. Hislop, of Arcola, Sask., on March 15th. On the above date a terrific blizzard, swept the west- ern provinces. Mr, Hislop had gone to town early in the day and in the afternoon left for home, a few miles out, but finding he was going to be unable to reach his own house he drove to a neighbor's, unhitched his horses from the cutter, and put them in the stable and then, with startling suddness, dropped dead. He was in his 60th year, born on the 15th con- cession of Grey township, being the second son of the late James and Mrs. Hislop and in the Fall of 1882 he went to Moose Mountain district where he continued to reside till the time of his death, Deceased was an ex- tensive farmer and by diligent atten- tion to business acquired -a valuable estateorganizing He toothekPresbyte r da prominent part r - in kation of Arcola and building of till fine church, which is an ornament to the town. Mr. Hislop was much in- terested in public affairs, and for many years and at the time of his demise held a seat in the council of the munic- ipality of proem, Without ostenta- tion Or show he was noted for the liberality of his donations to all worthy objects and his kindness and generosity towards those who were less fortunate than he. The funeral service was held in the Presbyte ian church on the 1$th ult, ; vemf `' wreaths were placed en the Casket one by the Session of Whid1l deeeasecf was.. for nulnyears a member; one by the Board Management; one by the Le '' Aid and others from rr' teen and friends. He is sure oe five brothers, John H., yr - alvei Or Albert and James,n .anon; Wm, of Winnipeg, .-.renis , and Thos►t Niargare* .aid three sisters, Miss ro'-' .,., Arcola; Miss Bella, To- ...lid astd Miss Mabel, who is a nurse 4loapital in St. Johnsburg, Ver- ao at. Deceased also leaves a number ,r cousins, well known residents, E \v mo regret the sudden outgoing of a fine spirited, big hearted man•like Mr, Hislop, He was unmarried. lbROPB 3Qarr.QraCCrU r i APRIL - Incorporated in 155 CAPITAL ,AND RESERVE $9,000,000 Over 120 Branches The Molsons Bank The saving habit like all other good habits is the result of resolution and practice. - By depositing regularly ayportion of your earnings in THE MOLSONS BAND the saving habit is soon acquired. Your money grows by the addition of the interest Whinh we pa atcurrent r s o 'savings an de.. deposits. It is safe, and can be saes n b k p s drawn upon When really needed. - Avoid careless spending by opening a savings account with us, BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT' Brucefield St. Marys Kirkton Exeter - Clinton - Bewail Zurich Carmote FLOOR VARNISH i` o r Q UALITY anti S ERVICE DON'T put down the old carpet again. Make Rover into a rug and stain and varnish the border of your ream with C a rmote. YOU WILL LIKE IT cCR SALE BY H, Edge, Seaforth Other benefits: to teeth, breath. aPFetite. nerves. That's a good deal: to: get Or 5 Gadd rill('.1 1al sues. y,j �4.! C f V. ii11?ltl �� titian �'' � L t„tl,tr•rr.trrtryrJ */ .1...5 7 sts: Have amour Cleaning Done ByExperts Clothing, household draperies, linen Arid delicate fabrics can be cleaned and i:nade to look as fresh and bright as when first bought. Cleaning and Dieing Is Properly Done at Parker's it makes no difference where ,poi live; parcels can be sent in by mail or express. The same care:and attention is given the work as though you lived in town. We will be pleased to advise you on any question regarding cleaning or dyeing. Write us. PARKER'S DYE WORKS: Limited CLEANERS and DYERS 791 Yong. Street - Toronto as Ileal pen afte the is all a oug guar othe be perf Thr and and situp Mot ones keep and the Aular lets Dr, Ont. ro Willy look 'Why that or loo on Qua w blue vire the retie.. the refl "13 in t the_ and duce "glom `how, tion that at as the iya late air oth rain; to t eour in, i into rive are "nue cove rain» ther stay. par who re ` gro bac and sink it s or c and'. fund coil gro to and eart But: ever aga' Thi bee tho gen it coin Will if the the poi wi not the it. Se