HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1912-3-14, Page 8• Titfaea►T, MAMA 14, Tse
District News.
Thursday. April 4, is the date of the
spring fair at Clinton.
James T. Jarrett has purchr.ed A.
Harve$S.ff0y's0. tltty-acre fern. near Kipp..
for
Garfield Buobauan, formerly of the
.teff of The Exeter Advocate. has
purchased The Weyburn !Erik.)
Herald.
A. L Case, late of Denfield, is the
Crew G. T. K.nt . Heiman, suc-
ceeding A. H. King, t who is appointed
agent at IogeRtoIL
Fred E. Hector, of Exeter, has re-
ceived the appointment of military in-
etruotor at Belleville, and has taken
up his residence them.
Key. Dr. Stewart, who has resigned
the pastorate of Willis Presbyterian
church. Clinton, intends to move to
Toronto, where the family will make
their home.
Joseph Hoggarth bee sold his resi-
dents) in Egwohdvllle to Mrs. Mode -
land, of Tuckereeith, and will move
to Seefortb. Tbeeelling price of the
property was $6W.
The 101t.ame farm belonging to
Daniel Denman oa the 12th 0000ewion
of Gley has beso @old to D. Neable, of
Elmer township. Mr. Denman pur-
poses wooing to the Wert.
The death of Herman Walper, of
Dashwood, is announced, at the early
age of twenty-four years. Deceased
was the son of Mr. and Mts. Louis
Wolper, end had been ill two years
with consumption.
Mn. Susanna Haberer, wife of
Jacob Hsherer, of Zurich, died Friday
night at Victoria hospital, Loudon..
after an operatiou. 8be was fifty
years
of andgand is survived by her
husband
eight children.
Miss Jean H•bkirk, formerly of
Brussels, was married at Esterhszy,
Seek., on Wednesday February 7th,
The groom was W. Walker, of Re-
gina, and Rev. Mr.Black, ofTantalluo,
was the ofticieting clergyman.
Word was received in Exeter last
week that Mrs. Walter White had
pwseed away at her dome in Hamiuta,
Mao, The deceased had been i11 for
several months. She wits a highly re-
spected resident of Stadia several
years ago.
Mr. and Mrs, ' Villiam Ivison, of
Kipper, on Tuesday of last week cel-
ebrated the fifty-fifth anniversary of
their wedding day. The grandchil-
dren presented Mies. Ivison with a
gold watch and chain and Mr. Ivieon
with a comfortable chair.
Neil Duncanson, a former well-
known resident of the 17th concession
of Grey township, died at the bone of
bis ear, John, at Rogersville, on Fri-
day, !March let. He was in his
seventy-ninth year. The remains
were brought to Brussels for burial,
The town of Wingham fs to have a
twenty -four-hour electric power ser•
vice after April 15th. Tho water and
electric light committee made a can-
vas@ of the town and was assured that
sufficient power would be used to
make the business a paying one from
the start.
After a 'three weeks' illness, Mrs.
Thos. Proctor passed to her reward
at bar home at Belgrave, on Friday,
March1st. She was fifty-five years
uI age. Deceased's maiden nave was
Rebecca Brandon, she being a daugh-
ter otthe late James Brandon, form-
erly a well-known resident of East
Wawanosh.
On Tueeday, February 27th, there
psseed away one of the old-time real-
deab of Beigeave locality, in the per-
son of James Wilkinson. Hie demise
followed a stroke of paralysis. The
damaged was a well-known farmer on
the 4th line of Morris before retiring
to live at Belgrave.
Mrs. Geo. Gannett, who died sud-
denly st ber home at Bluevale, was a
Dative of Turnberry, where she was
born in 1867. In 1 MB she wan married
to itis. Gannett and they settled on
the farm they had occupied ever since.
Besides her husband a family of four
girls and t,yo boys is left.
On Thursday afternoon, February
29th. • quiet wedding was solem-
nized at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.
G. Mitebell, of Molesworth, when
their daughter, Miss Retta, was
united in marriage to Martin Calder,
of Bright. Rev. Mr. Bell was the
officiating clergyman.
On Tuesday, 5th inst. Daniel
Messmer, a young man of Haytown-
ship, died very suddenly. e was
about as usual until the day of his
death, although not in very good
health for several weeks. Bloodipois-
outing is thought to he the cause of his
death. The deceased was in his
twenty-fourth year.
A pretty wedding was solemnized
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew
Finkheiner, of Orediton, on Wednes-
day. March 6th, when their daughter,
Misa Ruse, joined hand and Iselin
with Edward Fabner. The ceremony
was performed by
Rev. S. Baro in
the ['mecum of nearly one hundred
guests.
The death of Mrs. Charles Perkins
took plane at her home in Exeter on
Frkt.i evening, March tat. The de -
was seventy -timer yearn ..f age
and had been ailing for a number of
years. She was a Dative of Bniling-
ton, Dear Hamilton. After her mar-
riage to her late partner they came
to Usborne and resided there until
thirty-one years ago, when they
moved to Exeter. A family of seven
children survive.
He Was a "Leap Year Baby..'
I). Sproat, of Belarrave, who, is sev•
enty-six years old, on tbe 29th of Feb-
ruary celebrated his eighteenth birth-
day. The neighhnre gathered at his
place and presented hies with a cold -
ad cane.
Desth of Harold Steep. Cheese.
After a tedious Moes Harold Steep,
son of Mr. and Mrs. James Steep of
!)Baton, passed to the better world ou
Frld&y. March ltd.. The deceased was
fa bls thirty-serood year. About
thirteen years ego he went West and
fee .everai years he was engaged in
the elothiop bothers at Indian Head,
Reek. 1111e health falaog, he *@me
Name le Apia set 11 the bops that
�thw/world Meek bias. but he
swathe! away as
ahem statr@d. • was a great Mickey
and lacrosse player. and to have him
as one of their number was considered
by any team a great dsantmgs.
Wiegbam Wes@a. Severely i8ttr.e4.
Mrs. Bunts, wife of the J{.rrritocip•1 of
the Wlogbaw Bueinew 0el10pee, was
severely burned hast Thursday moro-
ns'. Mlle war emptying • p•o ot
sahes from the range. In giving the
aabee a throw her skirt buret into a
mass ot dames. It is surmised that
they were smouldering on the way
out. Mrs. Butes' screams ea/led the
n eighbor. to ber aid and the flames
were Dually extinguished, but practic-
ally all the clothing was burned from
her body. Dr. J. P. Kennedy was
called in and the patient was removed
to Wingba n hospital, where her in-
juries were deemed. The buroal are
very painful and serious.
A Close Call
E. M. Brokenabire and Miss Theo.
Hertleib, of Dashwood, bad an un-
pleasant experience while on their
way to Exeter a few day. ago. Just
after crofting the railway track on
the Lake road a runaway team came
res bebiud them. The horses areat-
ateu tar enough to pans one os each
side of the cutter, the tongue passing
between the beads of the occupant..
The whimetr•ees prevented the team
from going farther sod thee one of the
horses fell in Use snow while the other
fell portly on the single hone and
partly on the cutter. Strange to say,
neither of the occupants was injured
in aoy way, although Miss Hartleib'e
hat was destroyed and her fur cost
was badly damaged.
Wiagham Loses as Old Resident.
Death„ removed an old resident of
Wingham on Thursday, February
29th, in the person of Allen Galbraith,
who passed away in bis righty.sev-
*ntb year. The daceaced was • native
of Ireland and came to Canada when a
young mw eighteen years of age.
He settled in Durham county, where
be remained until fifty years ago,
when be moved to Howick township
and purchased a farm. He lived there
eighteen years and then went to
Wiugham to live. For several years
after moving to Wingham he was en-
gaged in the grocery business. He
was a member of the Orange Order
forsixty-eight years—a moor' equalled
by very few men. He is survived by his
widow, to whom he was married fifty-
five years ago, and a family of three
eons and two daughters.
Death of Ed. T. Holmes.
After an illness extending over four
months Ed. T. Holmes, formerly of
Clinton, died at St. Paul. Minn., on
Friday, March 1st, The deceased was
• native of Clinton and was connected
with The New Era for several years,
his father and brother being ite pub-
lishersat that time. About fifteen
years ago he was appointed assistant
Canadian immigration agent at St.
Paul, Minn., and three years later he
was placed in full charge of the
agency there. Some of his duties
were to attend to State fairs, visit
schools and make exhibits of Canadian
products, and he was largely ioatu-
tnental in persuadiog many of the
United States residents to Battle in
the Canadian West. He was well
known all oyer tbe Western States.
He was forty-seven years of age and is
survived by his widow and one son
and one daughter. Robert Holmes. of
Toronto, ie a brother of the deceased.
A Simple Treatment that
Will Make Hair Grow
Now Sold in Canada.
Every up-to-date woman should
have radiant hair.
There are thousands of women with
harsh, faded, characterless hair, who
do but try to improve it.
In England and Paris women take
pride in having beautiful hair. Every
Cantu:Rau woman can have lustrous
and luxuriant hair by using Salvia,
the Great American E3age Hair Tonic.
Every reader of The Signal can have
an attractive head of hair in a few
weeks by using Salvia.
Dunlop sells a large bottle for 50
centa and guarantees it to banish
dandruff, stop falliog hair and itch-
ing in ten days or money
bac
Salvia is • beautiful, pleasant, non -
sticky hair tonic.
Re -presented It.
Hen' is a story M' Fenimore Cooper.
He gave a copy of his i&t st work to a
friend, inscribing oat the fly -leaf the
words, "To John Blank, with the
author's affection and esteem. A few
months later Cooper came upon this
same took at a second-hand dealer's.
He bought it and sent it. hack to hie
friend with a second inscription :
"This volume, purchased at a
second-hand shop. is re -presented
to John Blank, with renewed affec-
tloo and reiterated expressions of es-
teem."
CURRENT LITERATURE.
MARCH CANADA MONTHLY.—Hohert
W. Ohawhers leads the March Mime of
Canada Monthly wish the tint ine.tsll-
nem• of• stein! entitled "Ilse Dream
Girl," In which • pretty girl, a roving
fieberman and • scarlet ibis mimed
Snlouro0 and imported from Egypt
play the leading parts. and get
thoroughly entangled In the net ot
circumstance. Mr. Chambers' stories
are on the top of the tide just now.
and this is one of the best of them.
The romanns of the sealing industry
has been little exploited, and 0. L
Armstrong, of Victoria, lo "Sealing
and Sandy Mariann" sings to light
many dtcturrsque incidents of a dar-
ing and dangerous ocrupation. J. P.
Macke,.Uie chronicles more adventure.
of "Spinal Magionia, Processional
Runner," at a snowshoe meet. Auhrey
Fullerton tells bow the surveyor, and
markers are determining the bound-
ary Ilne between Alaska and the
Yekon--sll except • thirty mile stretch
north of Mount tit. Elia., which no-
body abort of a wild goat could man-
age to elfish. H. M. Rghert matinees
his serial, •• Witb Aviator $o. 6." Nae
Harris Anson in "Whew Annie Me-
Drtegell was Young" tells a doxy of
idoliser dry. at (b.lg•ry before the
railway reuse. and how a lase woman
stood off a hand of dyeable tedious.
Ears H. Bir shall recounts • canoe trip
THE BIGITAle : GOD&RICH ONTARIO
taken by two girls 'On • little Rive,"
and K. D. Kates Bates in ••Arlstobulu.
lifteudeee'wee the
his Old dr
c ootinue. the
Fbreooe Randal
!Maumee. of a
the titin of "With
another of
stories. "Kit"
• Pack," and
writes rury-
omce under
o Guy."
A Steen r.
We call the suttee of all news.
paper readers in td n and distliet
to the fact that we made special
artsteg�oeuta with The Weekly Mallrod Bmgre. of Toronto, to combine
with our paper •t a popular bargain
pries We here offer The Weekly
Mail and Bmplte and The Sigma . the
two together. for octet at the low
rate of $1.004 w ioei.tle~free • large
portrait of the Right Hoa. R. L Bor-
len, 1d z 24 locket. which will be sent
postpaid to every subscriber who takes
advantage of the proposition.
The Weekly Mall_ and Empire is
conceded to be a great, home and fire-
side pas of the beet published
in the inion —while ours, covering
as it doer all the Ioo.J news. and ad
vocating the best interests of this im-
portant dierriet, will beet verve all
residents within the horizon of our cir-
culatiou.
SEND ALL ORDERS TO OFFIOE
OF THIS PAPER.
TM Worm Turned.
"William,” said Mrs. Peckham,
atet•nly, "did you ever stop to think
that some one might steal me when
you were away?'
"Well." responded the poor hus-
band, with a faraway look, i was a
little alarmed when a home thief was
prowling through the parts hast
week."
Mrs. Peckhen stiffened up haughtily.
"A horse thief, eh r
"Yes. 1 hewed that he carried off
two or three nags from this district"
And then Peckhen made a bee -line
for the club.
ANOTHER CONVERT
To the Growing Belief That Dodd'. Kid-
ney Pills Will Cure Any Form
of Kidney Disease.
Edohbridge, Sask., March 11.-i8pe-
cial)—tfam D Vickar, a well-known
resident of this place, is another mo-
ven to the growing belief that Dodd's
Kidney Pills will cure any form of
kidney disease. Here's the reason he
giver :
"I suffered for three years from
lumbago which developed from a cold.
I had other symptoms Whet led me to
believe my kidneys were the canoe of
the trouble. My heart would ache.
I was always tired and nervous. I
had a bitter taste in the mornings,
was often dizzy and always thirsty.
A doctor attended me but did not help
ore much. It was one box of Dodd's
Kidney Pi11e that fixed me up."
PRIZES FOR ESSAYS
ON HIGHWAY.
Papers oat Good !toads to Stir Interest in
Canada'. Great Problem.
New Westminster, B. C., March 11.
—In order to stimulate interest In
Rood road• throughout Canada, W. J.
Kerr, president of the Canadian High-
way Association, is offering three
valuable medals, for the best essay on
What Good Roads Mean to Canada."
The competition for these medals is to
be confined to boys and girls under
eighteen years of age, and no distinc-
tion is to be made between the sexes.
Women have long since taken a place
in literature equal to that occupied by
men, Mr. Kerr believes, and a contest
in which girls will compete against
boys will be more interesting to all
concerned than one in which separate
prizes are given.
The competition will be open to
students in all parts of Canada and
there will be no hard and fast rules aa
to the length of the essay submitted,
although articles of 600 to 800 words
will be preferred. The well-known
newspaper rule that writing newt be
on one side of the paper only will be
strictly enforced.
Competitors will be required to deal
with facts as well as with theories in
the preparing of their papers, and all
essays must be in the hands of the
[secretary, P. W. Luce, 014 Columbia
street, New Westminster, on or before
Mev 15.
The fire prize will be a .olid gold
medal bearing on the obverse a rept o -
duction of a part of the Canadian
highway, encircled by the word'',
"Canadian Highway Association,
1912." On the revere* the name of
the winner will be engraved, follpwed
by the word., "First Prize Winner
Canadian Highway Aa•ociation Kathy
Competition." The second and third
mazes will be the same as the gold
medal, but will be of silver gilt and of
silver. In addition a silver souvenir
pin will be given every competitor
whom essay attain* a certain .taadard
of merit.
In discussing the proposition to
interest all young people in good
roads by means of this competition
1[r. Kerr pointed out that it Was im-
perative that the gospel of gond made
should he preached to the boys and
girls, because it is while the Wad is
n a formative stage that imp.nii.s
are lasting and bigots .arils aloeped•
• By interesting the yob people
of Canada in thepeopo•itle. to nub►
lush a Comedian highway 1*l $gtW�s, wi i
teach from Alberni, B. C., to
N. 8.," says Mr. Kerr, "1 expose' to
create wide interest in this movement.
I realise that omit we have the f. .
t• and sympathy et the polite es
large the soccer ofr Ml iss
assured. Get the youbiter
rated and willing to t �*ammo
that is for the public good and 11 b
only a question of tune until swam
crowns our efforts. i should like
every school master and wheel ads -
toms In Oa.ada to osJl the mums.
et kb er her pupils to the offer 1 OM
makiatt sod to give them all possible
anistenee in preparing them flet
the writing of thee* essays, either
by Rung them oom bions on web
auhHigh�way.enTb.Buildf.g f Road
Famous Road Hulldsse, Marty and
Modern Road Building, er loads a. a
Country's Asset..
All sways most be by
the earns of the writer and a s4.4.
monkb&Woolyby permit. or �sdye,
• weeksdththat the eseeposithmahat
writer is under eighteen years d
41110 -
IIU11011-170!•ADDUCTS
AND PRIGS.
SGinnie. �
Seem the Dart ef the
Brawn of loimeries.
The following ioterestlog article
wail written for The Beeforth Szpusi-
tur by Bey L IJrwraaoe, ea .rte etu-
d.at albs Uwiver.ity of Toronto and
k& .oat of Joseph Durraoce, of MoKil
Its a bark resomatils published by the
Indus-
t of Aviation*, entitled
Wise f�19910," arm Berme
ge eliatisties
whish neo or at least eeltht to be of
togreatm to everm & .pecialllllyregent,
asile.g etbsr et fold
tiros sit ad market iodises. and
cth aha lrovl.@e.6atW mrtefgy{es of all the counties
Thsrtattatisticsare gives in agorv-
Rate, hot to pin their full signiticanc e
it, is .setwry to 000sider the position
of owe mousay relative tr the others.
Let u@ therefore consider the position
which the county of Huron bolds its
this Province. '!tile is the sixth !erg•
est county, having 797,779 acres of &--
sewed laud, and of this acreage 84.04
per scot is cleared. Thus we pee that
,D the should -re of the farmers avid
MI slams' of people In Huron aouoty
falls the reepoosibiiity of canng for
and working to the beet advantage
one of the iargest and tidest areas of
lend in the Province.
Its order W see bow the people of
tbie county are shouldering tbe re-
sponsibility it is necessary to make a
close study of the figures quoted fcr
field crops and also the prevailing
market price. First of all comes fall
wheat Huron stands fourth in the
number of acres sown wish 38,344,
seventh in the total oumher of bushels
grown with 974,090, but thirty-third its
the number of nuwhels grown per acre
with an average of 34.1. This last
statement may seem surprising, but
what 1s far mune sur pricing is the fact
that Huron was fifty-second ur lowest
in the market price with 84.1 cents per
bushmL This was :9 8 cents per
bushel lower than the price received
in NIpisaiog, which stood first Nat-
urally the Ruestton arises, what is the
COMBO 1 I. it that the wheat grown in
Huron ie of an inferior quality or are
the producers hoodwinked by the
dealers Y
As regards barley much the same
condition exists. Huron had 30,898
ante. *own with this grain, giving a
total production of 1,144,316 bushels or
ad average of 37.1 bushels per acre.
But what shout the price obtained for-
t his
orthis fleet -clangs grain i• The average price
realised by the farmers was 49.5 cents
per bushel. 518 cents lower than the
highest and 1.4 cents above the lowest,
and thus was forced to take fourth
last place. When the farmers of
Huron county study the figures here
preeeotd surely they will realize
what a great opportunity they
allowed to pass wbeo oo the 21st of
September last they chose to represent
them in the Dominion Parliament
MOO belonging to a party strictly op-
posed to reciprocity.
And thus figures wirht be shown
WEAK LUNGS
CURED
Could Not Walk 100 Yards.
Seattle Maa Pays Hi=t Tribute
to Morriscy's No. 10 Lens Tonic.
SEATTLE. WASH.. Feb. 10. 1110.
'I was • complete physical wreck.
and went to Chatham to M Father
Morrtscy regarding say health. A11 my
friends wore furs I had consumption.
and In raft 1 woo almost positive of
It mreelf. I was .o than and weak that
I could not walk 10e yards wlthnut sit-
ting down t• rest Two months and a
halt from the dots I commenced taking
Dr. Morrison's No. 10 prescription I
was able to 5S to work in the hayfield
and the tdlowteg winter 1 worked In
the lumber wood& I cannot ay too
mach for info treatment. as I know he
saved my life. W I o.natdered his
death a personal toss. Thank fortune
his formula. were )eft behind for the
. Ick and suffering. and as a 'monument
to his great Hf. - week.'
C. welLrd Tartar.
The above pre•crtptl.a tir not a "Curs-
• or ase called Us•tsei sodicIne. Dr.
1Worrlscy pro@srfbed ft fcr 44 rears and
it erred Momeamds alter ether Melon
failed. •
Pries -•aloe elms. $Ss; Large else
ler per battl .-at your augurs or
Father Yurrtsq Kralicta. Os.. Limited.
Montreal .M
Sold and guarantee° w (ioderich by
F. J. Butland.
for ell the crop., but it wi1M to 1
psemet only • few mete. he NW
ooa&ttsa,, peas ..d Ma,..l
.rood third In the ss' alt rttesee of
oats sown with Mita &Hese, tat in
the total yield slid deet la the &verses
y1*Y with 418 bushels per acre.
However , Hurou could tot maintain
these high positions loos, for she falls
to flftb lest place fu the 1pat•kd ppetliaoe
with only 31 cents par bnshsl, rti{ah
wee 15 0 coots lower then the him►
W it restart to peas Huron .tped �ouet6
in number of acres sewn and In the hotel
prt•ducewn, bur fell to forty-first In
the aver•ege yield with only 17.6
Meisel. per acre. This statement
may appear startling. but wheat we
consider that the market price was
76.8 cents per bushel, the third lowest
of any county. the startlinguees of
Um first statement is somewhat dim-
inished. to 1&1U Huron had 128,550
acres seeded with hay and clover.
giving a total production of .15,961
toes or an average of 1.118 per acre.
In the flet two numbers she occupied
second place. but it is worthy of note
that when .he received a market price
of $e 1113 to -'i• ton, standing eighth last
in the 52 counties, she occupied her
hfRbe«t p11eirioo in any column ou the
page devoted to market prices.
After studying these fact.., and oth-
ers of the sane nature might!' he
cooly:, it will be evident that while
Huron county is one of the largest and
one of the foremost in the number of
acres sown and total number of bus-
hels or tone produced, yet she does
not realise the highest market priee.
Surely something need correcting.
Are throe low market prices due to an
interior gustilys•f •-ruin or is it the
dis.auoe from gu..d .markets, and if
eitter of these is not right they what
is the csuse of his condition of •.t14irs?
sure y it rannot he the di-taare from
good utarkets, for Nipiepis•g and Sud-
bury realize on the average the high -
„However,
However, there is one column where
Hugon d .ea .occupy her proper posi-
tion in booth columns. In 1910 Huron
sold more horse; than any other
county and in realizing an average
price of $152 per head stood first She
still had on hand 33,164, or about five
times as many as were sold. and these
wets valued at $140 per head. And
here another question arises. The
horses sold were $12 per head mere
than those kept sod this would make
it appear as if Huron were selling off
her beet horses and keeping those of
an inferior type. It is to be hoped
that this is not the cane, for if it is it
means that Huron will lose its reputa-
tion of having the beat hones iu the
Province, and good reputations ought
not to be lost.
A Western Ontario Awakening.
London Advertiser.
A spirit of unrest is stirring the
farming counties of Western Ontario.
Throughout the whole section there is
s rattling of dry bones. a ebakieg off
of somnolent, 'let-well-enough-dlone"
ideals, and an awakening to the val ue
of Lusiness principles as applied to
fermi ng.
An Advertiser representative in his
traaels through this section found
these evidences on every hand. Pub-
licity associations are trying to stop
the drain to the cities, which ben so
long depleted the rural districts, and
are counteracting the allure of the
West by presenting the neglected op-
portunities neater home. The dog tn.
"Stay in Ontario," is being shouted
abroad with all the power of printer's
ink, and the call is backed up by an
imposing array of facts and reasons.
In some parts American farmers are
flocking in to t'ike the place of those
who saw their visions in the cities or
in the West. They are cooperating
with the native-born in making West-
ern Ontario the teal Garden of Can-
ada. Although these new arrivals are
sot coming in anythiog like the num-
hers which would have been •rtracted
had the passage of the reciprocity
pact thrown open the markets' of the
American cities to the farmers of On-
tario, there is still a steady stream of
immigration. Even with the more re-
stricted market, the relatively low
value of land (which would have in-
creased under reciprocity), snakes it
profitable for them to leave their
homes in Indiana, Ohio and Illinois to
come across the border. They can
sell their high-priced farms, made
high-priced by the market of 9(1,111,10,-
000, and buy an equal amount of
;Noisily fertile land in Ontario for les.
tbau one-half the price they received
over the line.
Meanwhile for every Aram ic•n who
settles on Ontario land there is a ('an-
adian who goes to the West or to the
cities in search of the opportunities
which clear-sighted foreigners find on
Um land which be abandoned. it ie
time :be Ontario farmer realized mote
clearly the advantages be has.
Making Records at Horne
a great feature of the
Edison
Pt��
a he ability to` make and reproduce your own records
in your own home --the soap and stories of eve
ry
!amber of your family and as your friends—in addi-
tion to all of the greatest entertainment of eeer7iiiiia
Wok what that means! The Mime
6e in.trumeet that
fie. reasesayw•y.6eammeof
Amway parity d westnsn of !silage
boon became Nexactly suited _e�vmders b�oemef weed I.
it pleys both l .. $taadard��
the lear-wla 1641... Amberol
Ram*l because it has the mappiin
reproducing-polat that does sot
st=ates or wear the records, sad hats
breve•—gives you this great home -
remedies haters Mires/ Aad this
taste/edit/Wet the **sure of emus(
a 111.1 e MINIM instrument.
Myles are regularly
ra sipped ala make seconds at home.
Ramsillair egaligeset for styles not
Sit espializazin be Purchased at
slight cost.
Whew yeti gebeyeer Edison dealer
to pick out year/diem Phono
be sere to ask about this oe-
recording feature, aad to get record-
ing equipment with the instrument
you buy.
Timehow diatom afrerrwfen. Gob 515 stare* sad
1 aaeeaIMssootonra
levo ha@e hdetet iretf itit�Ya tttjade d an
�_a�r1 fists Besse ,grow.
tyriee.s .ea. Oerwalteowda,ees.to
,.eearea.r, rr
les IJkesii. A.esse.
Orsmee, N. J., U 3. A.
A .swaps- Min lase nomographs sed &WEI ve be feud et
JAMES F. THOMSON'S MUSIC Si'ORi•:
Here's
a bargain
for you!
This Guaranteed
2.000 pound capacity
Scale with ever y
up -Mote im rove -
men t, for only $25.00.
You still begin to
. eve money the day
you order an
YLMER
Wagon & Stock
Three -Wheel. SCALE
Government Certificate of absolute accuracy goer
FREE with every Aylmer Scale, even at the bargain price
of $25. "We the freight" and warrant you satisfac-
tion or refunyd our money.
This Sale is most solidly constructed. Mill special offer give;
with Jessup toot steel bearings throughout; you the chance to own as
has bag wheels, roomy platform, kept In
place by FOUR Meeks (Instead of the usual
tyro), stoat meet fender on platform to pro,.
test the loam and a fifth lever to ml» /mese
strata em the beam. WII( last • lifetime
and wets aeeurately up to pne ton. even
If It stea& on uneven ground. Easy to
strees place r t0 place and Ont -clan in
Per'easer only =LAO, height paid to
year neaosst station and Government C•rti-
ftsto erly . qt rO.t to your order
absolutely modern scaly,
built of the very best
material. You need this
scale to weigh whatever
you buy or sell. You ca,i
have it to test in an
way you like. Send it
be& and get your money
back if it isn't all and
more than we say it is.
Ay 'ik S Co.., Aylmer Opt
Ont.
•
A MINUTE'S TIME
and a two -cent stamp is all it will cost yon
to get our big, beautiful Catalogue of every-
ehiag that L Se
good In Seeds, Mats, Fruits,
Impismants, Bee Supplies, Poultry Supplies,
eta
it smut= .a musk that is geed nus swot tdl
sen here. sed Ills 1t, and M)se ter reer.alt.
We have Undo' lig poem of the Wet and ben
ba.ea*Mma th 0sess of the Wkd. World. .n+
Saleable
wde gramtba Ris' w oak
.d seder
Oben et CiYlekla
a.dssa. I k & flee SeedCo.,oLimltede
T1s Plow* iamb in the Wool& Dept 41 t ' , Ont
11
"A delieaep that appeals to one's sense of
refinement"—so declares a Lady who is
partial to McCormick's Devon
Cream Biscuits.
There are about 50 of these delicious
tidbits to the pound—you71 like
them the name McCormick is a
guarantee of that.