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The Huron Expositor, 1922-10-06, Page 6mitis. trues 4t003N m but Mime inti drlvl - see setae* of used.. water, nm a 'qtr tone .fttaa S rift sad 0 mils Applyl be sal cheap oto . - Andy to J. le ItiSNl`l E886.tttt FOR SALE.--.NOSTO RALF OF loot 6. Conceal/us 2, Hulled, containing 50 . There are on the premises a good 0tha and bank barn 54.52 with a 12 tp, Ali fenced and tile drained Seeded to gryaa. Fivo miles from Sea - Pr*: 40 rode from school. For further 'tiotilaps ripply on Lot 6, or phone 15447, Sea- fortb. 'CHOMAS E. LIVINGST0 , 11. 2858 -If No. 2. Seator h. a; L . 0 nALE. mon ulna 84. _ _ tt 1 Lala 8 and 4, ++InetR'a Teboss, in assn state of adtivadsa stonena home and two beak barna with ata through : windmill and water p through the etable. win sea with or o ut trop and would separate either fame - For particulars apply R.R. Na8 Seaforth. 284143 EDWARD 284114 WARM FOR BALE.—FARM OF TWO BUN - .L Brod acre. ndloiatng the, Town ofue qS�ea- aituated s*ch000l. and Collegiate. Therein is a all theovforti able brick cottage with a cement kitchen: barn 100x56 with stone stabling underneath for 8 horses, 76 bead of cattle and 40 hags with steel [stanchions and water before all . tock; litter oarrier and feed carrier and two cement silos ilos; driving shed and plat- form ales- Watered by a rock well and windmill. The farm is til drained and in a high state of cultivation. The crop 1. ail to the ground—choice cloy I.,,m. Immedi- ate possession. Apply to 61. I+EA TON. k R 2. Seaforth. Out THE EXECUTORS 02"f ffE LATE ARCED - bald McGregor offer for sale Lot 15, claConcession, foil'ep'srofai assfarm nds.lhland iu n clow state of eulttvation and there are erected on the premises a good frame dwel- ling house, with kitchen attached: frame barn 78.64 with stone foundation. stabling underneath and cement flavin and water throughout. driving house, pig pen and ben hou.se. Also about ten wood bush. The property acres. well fenced end well drained and convenient to good markets, churches and schools. For further particulars apply to MISS LILLY .1. MrGREGOR, on the premises, or to 11. S. HAYS. Solicitor. Sea- fornth, Ont. 1OAR.M FOR SALE.—FOR SALE LOT 20. 11• Concession 6, McKillop. containing 100 acres, all cleared except 8 acres of hardwood bush. There are ' on the premises a bank barn with stoneand cement foundation, 46x62, with cement floors ; driving shed, 14:88 ; frame stable. 28x82, large gravel house, 7 rooms and kitchen. cement floors In cellar. Hard and soft water in kitchen: two acres of orchard. The farm is all wire fenced mad tile drained. Wel] et barn and aloe wall at the bush. This is a good fapn—ono of the best in McKillop. It i. situated 6 miles from the Town of Seaforth and one mile from school and church. Rural mall and phone. Wilt be sold on reasonable terms. For further particulars aPPIY on the he, or address R. R. No. 1, Seaforth. ROBERT A. HOGG. 2801-41 e CREAM WANTED CREAM Practical pinta on Nome Imp -.-The Water tiervte e B -Thal! F9xtuees -Uaya n aged Bele= of Drainage for Waste Water. (Contributed by enteric, Department Of Aprimeture, Tol'oato.) Ship by Express; send by oar cream drawers, or deliver your cream to the Seaforth Creamery. We are determined to give our Patrons better service than ever. Watch our prices, consistent with our accurate weights and tests, and consider the many advantages of hav- ing a thriving dairy industry in your district. Do not ship your Cream away to other Creameries ; we will guarantee yoti as good prices here and our very beet services. Write, or call in OUT cream drawers and we will send you cream cans. When in town, visit our. Creamery, which we want also to be your Creamery. We are mond of our plant. THE SEAFORTH CREAMERY CO. C. A. Barber, Manager. 2884-tf A plumbing system conslata of three main parts: Water service, filth tures, and waste pipes. The Water Service Pipes. The duty of these pipes is to con- vey, the water from the supply to the fixtures. They should be galva.- nlzed iron of first-Claae quality, and the size for the house Is %-inch. except the one that conuecta the hot water holler to the kitchen range or furnace, which is ee-inch fn ,tae. Pipe is bought by the foot in small quantities and by the 100 feet in large quantities, and the price for galvanised iron pipe at the preemie time is 10 cents per foot for the 34 -tach, and 12 cents for the 3i -Inch. The amount required for a house 18 about 120 feet, but it varied with the size of the house and the layout, particularly the location of the bath- room in relation to the kitchen, also whether soft water is on tap as well as hard water. Sections of pipe are Joined together by threaded coup - PRESTON PORTABLE GARAGES AND COTTAGES in several designs, eslgnd, also Steel Truss Barns and Implement Sheds, all sizes. For farther particulars write The Metal Shingle & Siding Co. Preston. liege and red lead or a special paste is used on the threaded parts to turn- The man, too, had evidently make the joints tight and preserve gone through a fierce fight, as the threads from rusting and becom- attested by his clothes. Yet the Ing permanently set. The water la ground nearby gave no trace of a these pipes is usually under 30 to 50 conflict. pounds pressure, and all joints must Obviously the murder had been be positively water -tight, particular- committed at another spot and the ly so if the pipes are laid under hodies carried to where they were floors- found. They were laid out as by Test the Pipes for Leaks an undertaker. The minister's glasses Atter they are installed and before were found on his nose at just the quently by Dr. Rainsford. Under Oa ey are covered up ether under correct angle. The woman's hair his rectorship and the sound finan- DOUBLE MURDER HAS BAFFLED THE POLICE Not since *he Elwell mystery has new York had such a murder sensa- tion as that of which Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs, James Mills were the victims. The crime was com- mitted on the outskirts of the town of New Brunswick, New Jersey, not far from New York, and the'day after it was discovered detectives and swarms of New York newspaper reporters and investigators flocked to the scene. But two weeks have elapsed and little has been discovered, though at first sight it seemed that, the crime was one that would be speedily solved. Some time in the night of Thursday, September 14th, or early on Friday morning, the bodies of Hall and Mrs. Mills were discovered lying in a patch of golden rod in a field a little distance from the town. The woman had been shot through the head, the pistol being so close that her face was scorched by the powder. The man had been shot in the back. There had evidently been a terrible battle, for the wo- man's face was scratched and torn as by finger nails, and her clothing in Ate matt thatgnight li action on waw a • l`J1 at all 1!}ilp7tl ljp' _ id eaplait Adta VODOWA ground tllatl- he tilt: 1111fa1'ts'i%. the need" • f spiritual ; Another aigiiiiicant feet bodies were placed on the 4004, line . betvv it two counties the murderepdente - tielievltig ' that; this might,; eempllcate matters for the authorities and apparently it has had Uritt effect, for after two weeks only.,' one arrest has been mads —that of the girl witness who found the bodies. The case is an amazing one, in that on the surface the motive seemed plain, and .the prob- able murderers or inciters of the murderers were indicated. Yet underneath it has baffled all the efforts of the police and the news- paper investigators. RAINSFORD WRITES OF PIERPOINT MORGAN William S. Rainsford, that brilliant Irish clergyman, who will be remem- bered, no doubt, by many readers who knew him when he was at St. James' Cathedral, has written an account of his career of which one of the most interesting chapters concerns the late J. Pierpont Morgan. From Toronto, Rev. Dr. Rainsford went to St. George's, New York, of iwhich congregation Mr. Morgan was senior warden, The two men were inti- mately associated for thirty years, and it is probable that Mr. Rainsford was on closer personal terms with the millionaire than any other man. On only one occasion - was their affectionate intercourse interrupted, and the incident is described elo- floors or in partitions, and before had been brushed bask, and her they are covered up for good, the clothing folded so that the rents did water should be turned on under not show, while her limbs were good pressure and a thorough test arranged as though for burial. Near made for leaks, not only at the joints her were found several letters, in but all along the pipe line, as a her own handwriting. The contents small hole or split would cause a ser- i of these the authorities have given Mus leak. out only in part. One of them is as Be sure the man operating the follows:— threading tool knows his job and •Darling Boy: does It properly- It is very essential "I love you most when you love that the water pipes be located safe ale as you did to -day, not physically, from frost, and therefore it is bigbly but prayerfully. There isn't a man advisable to keep them away from who can make me smile. As you the outside wall of the house or said to -day, our hearts are as true stable, 1f possible. It is particularly imperative to as steel. I am not fretting. I keep the pipes connecting the hot know there are girls with shapely water boiler to the kitchen range or hodies, but Ido not care what they furnace fire box from freezing, as a have. I have the greatest of all stoppage in this line would causes blessings—a noble man's deep, true blow-out upon the Bre being started and eternal love. My heart is his, in the morning, and serious loss of my life is his, all that I have is his. life or property would likely occur, I Poor as my body is, scrawny my and lastly it is very poor economy ! skin may be, but I am his forever." to install anything less than the .It has been ascertained that the highest quality of galvanized pipe, letters were not written by the mur- never use wrought iron pipe for dered woman to her husband. The water, galvanized always. theory seems to be that they were Plumbing Fixtures. - written to the dead clergyman. These comprise the kitchen sink, Rev. Mr. Hall was the rector of laundry tubs, bathtub, lavatory sink, 1 the fashionable New Brunswick and closet. There is a considerable church of St. John the Evangelist. variety in the style dna quality of He was married, his wife being a these articles, and naturally a large range in prices. You should insist on a good quality of enamel coating on the fixtures, this is very important. The standard dimension of some of church, and herself its choir leader. these fixtures are as follows:— , She and the clergyman were thrown Kitchen sink, 20 x 30 inches. This much together. Spiteful people sink should have a back, and one had hinted that perhaps some guilty drain board, at least, of ward or bonds had united them, but the tooman's husband, when the matter was mentioned to him, was speedily convinced by his pastor that the rumors were scandalous and un- founded. It is not known whether Mrs. Hall was suspicious, or hat been communicated with. Since the murder both Mrs. Hall and Mr. Mills have expressed unbounded confi- cured in a shape either for side wall dente- in the dead couple. Mrs. or corner installation. In the instal- Hall, at first said that she supposed lation of a closet insist on a stop- the object of the crime was robbery, cock on the feed pipe to the tank, but the only evidence on this point so that if the tank needs repairing . is that the minister's watch is the water can be turned off just be- missing. low the tank. Any standard type is The farm on which the bodies were satisfactory. found is owned by "Willie" Stevens, The cost of a standard outfit is a weak-minded brother of Mrs. Hall, woman older than he, who was in the prime of life, and exit -tensely wealthy. Mrs. Mills was the wife of James Mills, sexton of the enamelled iron should be presided tor, two are better. The sink should be located at the most convenient height above the floor for the women: using it; not too low, else undue stoop- ing has to be endured. A 5 -foot bathe tub 1s the standard size. It should' be placed far enough from the wall to make easy cleaning around it pos- sible The lavatory sink may be 80.. about as follows: Lavatory sink, complete witb trimmings, $24.50.l Close t comp ie,, i Kitchen l 36 00 e ... sink, 20 x 30 inches, with bibbs and' trap,i23.35. Laundry tubs i55.00., Bathtub, 4 l or 6 feet, $66.60, or total of $204.35. The cost of the soil pipe, water pipe and connections including labor for instaling them' and the fixtures is about $195, mak- ing a total of about $400.00. or A Drainage System. This part of the plumbing system consists of the soil pipe or stack that extends from the sewer up through the house and out beyond the roof. All the wastes drain into this pipe and by it are carried to the sewage disposal system. Each fixture is con- nected to this main drain by a smaller pipe having a, trap to keep bad odors from coming back from the sewer. The stack is '4 -inch cast-iron pipe made in 5 -foot sections, and the joints are caulked with oakum and lead. The other pipes are .2 inch and 11/2 ineb, either iron or lead. Installingthis part of this work, also the water service pipes, is commonly known as "roughing In.' Space will not permit of further treatment of the subject. Write the Department of Physics, G. A. C., Guelph, for advice, and for a copy of Bulletin 267, "Farm Water Supply and Sewage Disposal,"— AGENTS: It. R. Graham, O. A. College, Guelph. WILLIAM T. GRIEVE, Walton. Phone 14-234. Also agent for Chicago Auto Oil Windmills. THE McKILLOP MUTUAL WIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE---SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS: J. Connolly, Goderich - - Presidsat Jas. Evans, lieechwood vice-president T. E. Hays, Seaforth - Secy-Treas. Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Binchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 187, Se ; J. W. Yeo Goderich; R. a. Jar - tenth, Brod'bagen. DIRECTORS: 410, am Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth- Iohn Benaewles, Br!odhagon; James Itvau, leek; .Geo. MbCartliey, No. 8, Seafolttk, IRypbodtWilleteren,Clinton; Jae. i y Dederick; D E. McGregor, i It. -No. gs Seallertb J: G. (mere, No, 4, iW Itont Sabot .h>rsriia Heli. Few gardeners realize the Import- ance of pulverizing the soil as deeply as it Is ploughed. No matter how per- fectly the surface is prepared, if the soil is coarse and lumpybelow, the planta will not thrive. Large air spaces in the soil are a detriment, bur a large number of very small air spaces in the soil are a benefit, • In Tibet, it is not unusual for a woman to marry three or four hus- bands. cial policy of the vestry, under Mr. Morgan, St, George's had grown to be perhaps the largest, as well as the wealthiest, Episcopal parish in the United States, It had ceased to be wholly a fashionable church. Many workingmen were regular at- tendants, and I)r. Rainsford desired to increase the membership of the vestry, so that this important ele- ment might be adequately represent- ed. He frequently discussed the mat- ter with Mr. Morgan, but the latter said nothing, which meant that he was unconvinced, and the rector hesitated to bring the matter before the vestry until he and his chief parishioneer agreed upon it. What was his amazement one evening when presiding at a vestry meeting, to see Mr. Morgan rise with the announcement that he had a motion for which he desired a seconder, and which he thought should be accepted without discussion. He then pro- ceeded to read the motion, which was to the effect that the vestry should be reduced from eight mem- bers and twee wardens to six mem- ber's and two wardens. Rainsford was dumfounded, and insisted that his senior warden should give the reasons for this proposal. Morgan ex- plained teat he was getting on in years. It was necessary in the in- terests of the vestry that frequently he should assemble the vestrymen in his study to discuss important mat- ters. Ile agreed with the rector's ambition to democratize the church, but he did not want the vestry de- mocratized. It should be composed of gentlemen whom he could invite to his study. The motion was obviously in- tended to head off the rector's plan for increasing the number of vestry- men, and especially by including in it some horny -handed sons of toil. Rainsford rose to the challenge and made an address to the vestry in which he insisted that the motion, if passed, would tend to wreck the church, and that the membership should be increased rather than re- duced, So strongly did he put the case that Mr. Morgan could not get a seconder for his motion. He was even opposed by one of the vestry- men who was at that time under great financial obligations to him. It was a tragic moment for the old money king, but he doggedly refused So lack- ingtowithdraw his motion. a seconder, the contrary motion was put and carried by a vote of seven to one. Then .Morgan got to his feet and said: "Rector, I will never sit in this vestry again." The others sat in silence as he walked out. It seemed as if the chief pillar of the church had been removed. The next day Dr. Rains- ford received his resignation, with the request that it be submitted to the vestry at once, A few days later, as was the rec- tor's weekly custom, he went to the Morgan residence for breakfast. The financier was grumpy, and the talk centred on the weather. The next week he went again, and on this occasion Morgan asked if the resig- nation had been placed before the vestry. Rainsford said that it had not, nor would it be. When he became rector he had told Morgan that he was a radical and intended to democratize the church as far as possible, and Morgan' had given his promise to stand by -him. In the matter of increasing the vestry he was merely carrying out his avowed intention. He would do nothing to help Morgan break hie word. Then he left. He came again to breakfast, furter allusion to who spends his time in following the fire reels or in hanging around the hose stations. The farm house was supposed to have been unoccu- pied but examina- tion for a eon o g tion showed that it time,ad had human tenants only a short while before the murder. Willie made some curious remarks to a fireman friend of his the day before the murder, which later were interpreted to mean that he knew what was about to happen, but it is understood that he has satisfied the police that he has no criminal knowledge of the affair., So far as is known the murdered pair had no enemies, no domestic troubles, and nothing on their per- sons at the time of the tragedy that would have made them worth the attention of a robber. The poliµ, theory is that two persons were in- volved in the crime, one a woman who tore Mrs. Mills' face and clothes, and the other a man who fired the shots. The shrieks of a woman were heard in the night coming from the locality in which the crime was committed. Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills proceeded to the spot separ- ately, and whether they met there by accident or by appointment is a matter of speculation. The fact that Mrs. Mills carried a bundle of letters with her, or some bundle wrapped up in paper, and that only a few letters were found adds to the mystery. On the night of the murder the . Send for free bode giving full partic- ulars artly uiars of Trench's world-famous prep- aratlonforEpa6� 14p8e7� and Fits—ofmpte borne treatment. Over AO ar.•'saeoosa, Teeathonials froth annals OftbewwOprri�d_l,` over 1000 in ono,yo°0' Wrtfe atoncoft TREIOCN•5 REMEDIC5 'LIiJIITED 2607 illeJaen Cham e0s, 70A eta:deSh.E.. Toronto, Untlatto !Ri , t}iex leriaan Prote�eytan luieCh that Reink i #1w1i1• plilgit, but Myer lit '�?olyd. ot clriyieiam. Iris lntense''1'ep ifox' t e' offices and ordinances Or the cb ureh restraieed him. Three fuels in'their associgtiofi,the crust of Ire• serve and arroganne, of the million- aire broke, and perhaps feeling him- self ,in danger of hell fire, he clung des alringly to the rector, who soothed him as best he could. His affection for Rainsford was proved by the fact that he set aside a trust Bund for him, built him a house, and when Mrs. Rainsford was criti- cally ill, Merg&n, who at that time was carrying ion his shoulders a heavier burden than any other man in the United States, with the ex- ception of the President, found time to catry flowers- to the hospital and wait outside her door until the nurse allowed him to enter.and place the flowers on her bed. FLiP WITH FIGURES Some years ago the London Lan- cet cited a remarkable casein which extraordinary ability in arithmetic calculation was associated With gen- eral mental inferiority if not actual insanity. The patient was completely blind and was able to make elaborate cal- culations such as the square root of any number running into four figures in an average of four seconds, and the square root of any number run- ning into six figures in six seconds. These are mere trifles, however, compared with the following: He was asked how many grains of corn there would be in any one of sixty-four boxes with one in the first, two in the second, four in the third, eight in the fourth and so on in suc- cession. He gave the answers for the fourteenth (8,192), for the 18th (131,072), and the twenty-fourth (8,388,608) instantaneously, and he gave the figures for the forty-eighth box (140,737,488,355,328) in six sec- onds. Further, on the request to give the total in all the boxes up to and in- cluding the sixty-fourth, he furnished the correct 'answer (18,446,744,073,- 709,551,615) 18,446,744,073,- 709; 51,615) in forty-five seconds. 56aia.266 4,,8)rQtN r,ALR.; CURRENT WIT AND WiSDOM A "holy" war! Was there ever a greater travesty of the word?' -Ham- ilton Spectator. Another need of the times is a fancy fly that will delight fish as it delights fishermen.—Rochester Times -U nion, There is all the difference between being cold and being coaled.—King- ston Standard. Man did not make the laws of music he only found them out.—Charles Kingsley. A noiseless pistol has been. invented. Now a man can be shot and imagine he's dying of old age.—London Ad- vertiser. The world is moving so rapidly to- day that you have to run as fast as you can to stay where you are,—Hali- fax Herald. Never work before breakfast. If you have to work before breakfast get your breakfast first. Josh Bil- lings. Henry Ford may close down, but he won't shut up. — Brockville Re- corder. "Coal Shortening," news headline. To be followed by coal longing.— Washington Post. The loss of life following the wake of the motor car is appaling.—Orillia Packet. We sometimes think that there are no mere aggravating people on earth than the people who do the right thing at the wrbng moment.—Halifax Herald. When a man is doing something he knows he cannot afford to do, he can always prove that it is somebody else's fault.—Kingston Standard. Even in the matrimonial market there is a fine distinction between a bargain and a remnant.—Duluth Herald!' from buy- ing a man The law preventsY ing a lottery ticket, but it permits him to purchaser' cantaloupes. Why the discrimination?—Cincinnati En- quirer. As he goes about his work of rat- ioning the lumps, we trust that Mr. Hoover will remember that it's coal this time, and not sugar.—Columbia Record. "Nothing is so indispensable to the aspirant for camera honors as big eyes," writes a prominent moving picture. director. The big head will come later.—Life. Every time a multi -millionaire dies some one seems to arise to claim he wasn't sane when he made his will. The poor, presumably, died in pos- session of their faculties—and nothing much else.—Manitoba Free Press. The time you save by travelling in an automobile is usually wasted in looking for a parking place.—Kitch- ener Record. A pipeless furnace is now on the market; but wouldn't a coalless one be more enthusiastically acclaimed? —Hamilton Herald. The hope that Pete Fuel would make good the shortcomings of Ann Thracite seems to have gone aglim- mering—Brantford Expositor. but there Was no the matter, nor any private conversa- tion between the estrangled, friends. Then came the day 'when Morgan was sailing for England: Rainsford went down to the ship to say good-bye, which was a violation .of his custom on these occasions, Ile sa'Q' Mr. Mor- gan on the deck surrounded by a crowd of friends? "At- the seine in- stant," he write, "he saw' one and, coining .out of the group, signed to me to follow hitt. ' Nh'made for his' UR/NEYouCaelnat» New es Did te a f tp teannH a u 6yCo dPromills, Y®rth Et/%V A/thten Eyo sing. WDi 04v '1`1l8at and Morning.'• Hem your fbree Coal, Clear and Heslop Write for Ptee Eve Care Book. IN4rIeeesefit41adf Co..924410hio Slr,teehlc0IS 1t(4e'114.65,i4.4. 4 IN`'lA /f StiAPEO toot NO SEAMS • With Never a Wrinkle ra5as0N6D ANKLE Never ! Mercury Stockings fit when they're new— and fit after they're washed. That's because they're knit to fit—not stretched into shape. As long as you wear them there are no maddening little wrinkles! No ugly wiggly sesta up the back! No wrinkles or seams to chafe the feet. . Mercury Stockings are fully fashioned in the knitting. There are no seams— not even in the feet. Washing does not change their shape. It is knit in. ♦ ands Cashes ee reaforand newest Fall amides heathers Wi ter. Silks in all pattern& fur Hosiery mer curyiS lL8N.w0SN AND CHILDREN FOUR MSf4 WOMENAAND CNILDR ENa 602 -fir--zr-- s INDEPENDENCE THE DOMINION GOVERNMENT ANNUITIES SYSTEM° affords an unequalled opportunity for the investment of small or large amounts for the purchase of an annuity of from $S0 'to $5,000 a year for life, to begin immediately or at any future age desired, and to be paid in monthly or quarterly instal- ments. Annuities may be purchased on a single life, or on the lives of two persons jointly. After contract issues, no restriction as to residence. Employers may purchase for their employees—School Boards for their teachers—Congregations for their Ministers. Cannot be seized or levied upon. No medicgl examination required. Free from Dominion Income Tax. SECURITY'-THE'DOMINION OF CANADA Descriptive booklet may be obtained by applying to the Postmaster or by writing, postage free, to S. T. Bastedo, 'ties Ottawa. ' tenders t Dominion Government Annuities, Superintendent P enn When writing, kindly state sex, and age or ages last birthday. 1." The Question of Price Price seems the main consideration --dint it is well to remember that some clothes are dear at any price, how- ever low. . "Clothes of Quality" are a positive proof that Correct Styles, !Fine .Fabrics and First-class Tailoring can he ebo bafaed at reasonable prices. Before you buy your new Suit, give us a call and look over our Samples and Styles. We can save you dollars pd give you real value. Suits $20 Up, at t0Mv Wardrobe" Main St., Seaforth