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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-4-16, Page 5P L 1Gjl, 19013, SPRING' AND SUMMER FASH- IONS Flower effects are the chief is ilnctions of the sheer summer fabrics, The Louisine silks have acquired such softness and grace that they are ex• tensiyely used for the all-round sum- mer gown and the Rabutai and Tok- io varietiesexhibit an embroidered elaboration that makes them appro- priate for dressy wear. Taffetas are now procurable in a soft, restless quolity, The chiffons approach the silks in wearing quality, being much heavier than their predecessors. Canvas is assuming great import- ance in the realm of spring frocks and coats, it is used as cloth with strap pings, stitnhings, etc. Basket -weave cotton cheviots, mad- ras and mercerized cottons offer mod- ish suggestions for the shirt waist suits, and the smartest shirtwaists are made of mercer zed fabrics, such as vesting, cheviot, linen and canvas. Nearly every gown, whether made of a soft woollen or a sheer wash fab- ric, is charecterized.by shirring. The realm of lace continues. Soft amid filmy Tenerriffe and Mexican laces are the novelties of the season. The new braids, which will be used in profusion, are soft and pliable and well suited to forming designs on the gown, and the new buttons, glistening with colored stones and enamel, are examples of the highest art of the jeweller. Crediton FOR SALE. -The undersigned has a large quantity of extra choice Itect Clover, Alsike, Alfalfa and Timothy seed for sale at reasonable prices. This seed was specially selected for seeding purposes. CHAS. ZwicxE/t, Crediton, EARLY CLOSING, - The business men of the village of Crediton, beg to notify the public that they will close their respective places of business, henceforth on Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings at 6 o'clock p, In., commencing Monday, April 13th, 1003. BRIEFS. -.Season is somewhat delay- ed owing to brokenness of weather. - Mrs. Chas. Switzer has returned from her visit to her parents at Parkhill.- Mrs. (Rev.) I%nowles spent two or three days in London last week re- turning Saturday with her nephew and niece, Frank and Hazel Gibson.- The Anniversary services in the Meth- odist church on Sunday were a decided success, the church was filled at all three services. In the morning Rev. George Baker took as his text "Look- ing unto Jesus" Heb. 12:2 and applied it most appropriately. In the after- noon Dr, Anderson's illustrated ad- dress on the "Heart" fairly captivated the immense congregation and in the evening Rev. Baker preached a pow- erful and practical sermon upon the "Sabbath School Teachers' Reward". The singing which was specially ren- dered upon all three occasions was of a high order. The entertainment on Monday evening was without doubt the best ever sheld in the history of the church; addresses from Reys. Hutton, Damm, and Baker were brief, racy and practical. A program con- sisting of recitations, solos, dialogues, motion exercises, etc• was splendidly rendered by school and other talent. The solos given,by the Misses Ella Beaver, Peart Baker, Emma Lewis,- Beulah ewis,Beulah Beaver deserve special and honorable mention. Although the church was taxed to its utmost re- seating canacity there being two rows of chairs in the aisles yet the atten- was sittiply perfect and. the order never better. Proceeds in collections amounting tosum of $30.00, $14 over last year. -Easter has come and gone soon the boys and girls will be at school again, Have a good time boys• while the holidays last. -Mr. Robert Walker and wife spent Easter visiting friends in London and Ingersoll. -Miss Salonic rienian goes home to Dash- wood for a brief visit. -Some young young people are reported as having attended a reputed card party it is said disappointment prevailed as all who were asked did not materialize Card playing. is not congenial or healthy for church members. Cough- ing spells are frequently indulged in by many this grippy season. - Tenor singers are scarce in this village but it wouldn't be so bad if the songsters of this part of music only could be de- pended upon. En quit ere: suggestion tether them to the' ?est. -Wesley Dixon and wife are an addition to the population to our village. BRIEFS. -Easter day was fittingly celebrated in the Evangelical church, last Sunday. In the morning special sermons were given, and the evening service was largely musical. Easter anthems' and special hymns were sung, and the congregations were both large. -Quite a number of Reverend gentlemen have arrived here this past week, prior to going to Dashwood, where they are attending the Con- ference of the Evangelical Associa- tion. --Miss Lena Williams returned to London, after spending Easter with her parents. -Miss Martin, from Hamilton, returned home after visit- ing relatives and friends here for a few class.- The Misses Robson and atcBean sae spending their Easter holidays at their homes in Clinton Itching Skin Distress by day and night - That's the complaint of those who are so unfortunate as to be afflicted with Eczema or Salt alt Rheum -and out - weed applications do not cute. They can't. The source of the trouble is in the •blood --make that pure and this scal- ing, cabing, burning, itching skin disease will 'disappear. "t was taken with an itching on my .arms which ),roved very disagreeable, Y ,concluded it was salt rheum and bought a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. In two days wafter I began talon; it I felt better and it was not long before I was cured. Have • .never had any skin disease since." Mos. .IDA E. \Venn, Cove Point, Md. Rood's Sarsaparilla "gids the blood of all impurities and •tures alt eruptions. T Like the running brook, the red blood that flows through the veins has to come from somewhere, The springs of red blood are found in the soft core banes called the marrow and some say red blood also comes from the spleen, Healthy bone Healthy )narrow and healthy spleen are full of fat, - Scott's Emulsion makes new blood by feeding the bone marrow and the spleen with the richest of all fats, the pure cod liver oil. For pale school girls' and invalids and for all whose blood is thin and pale, Scott's Emulsion is a pleasant and rich blood food. It not only feeds the blood -making organs but gives them strength to do their proper work. • Send for free sample. SCOTT & DOWN7~T, Chemists, Ontario. Sec and St.00 • all druggists. l7d/er" Wild Forest respectively.- ens -Claude Bluest, and family are visiti ins friends in Forest, this week.- Miss Clara Wentzel, who has been engaged in Exeter- for the.past few mouths, re- turned h mie 4t:t.week-Garnet Bak- er er front London, was the guest of Miss Vivian Beaver, over Easter. - eta Henry Stanley met witli an accident in the i.nsh last week He was aiding his company in felling trees and while doing ro a large limb fell on him and bruised i•inl severely. -ere. Edgar Bak- er went i o Blenheim to -day (Thur sday) where he will be engaged on the farm. -me. Dail Kilpatrick who has been in Detroit over winter returned home and intends staying, here over tbo summer season. I.GSRI NII 6.PI ,OL i�l.11s` Engines Came Together With Awful Crash and interlocked. Four Trainmen Killed Outright and. An- other i an.Posaibly Fatally Burt - Several Passengers Slightly Injured - Trains Were Running 20 and45 Niles an Sour Respectively -Great Damage to honing Stook and Traffic Blocked. Halifax, N.S. April 13. -As the result of train orders being disre- garded, another terrible accident, the second within a few months, on the eastern section of the I.G.R., ocour- red at 11.30 o'clock on Saturday night, two miles west of W ind r Junction, The eastbound fast freight No. 75 for collided, heed; on, with the fast C.P.R. train Ido. 26, known as the Atlantic Express, westbound, and resulted in the death of four trainmen, and the probably fatal. injury of another, and the plight injury of half -a -dozen others, doing great damage to the roliing stock, and blocking traffic over the road. The dead are: William mall, driver No. 26. Michael Oakley, firemen No. 26. Albert Thorpe„ brakeman No, 75.. Edward Hill, fireman No. 75. Seriously injured: Nelson Cope- land, driver No. 75, and Angus Mc- Crady, a tramp, who was stealing a ride on the fast express. The passengers slightly injured were: Dr. Miller, Halifax, )read cut; jt G. Comeau, Halifax, head cut; A. E. Harding and John Belly, pasta) clerks, bruised about back. The express messengers were also slightly bruised. Where the Crash Came. The freight train was made up of 75 cars, and drawn by ono of the bag mogul engines, pulled out of 1Richmond station at 9.20 o'clock. The train was in charge of Conduc- tor Haines and Driver Copeland, and had orders to stop an Windsor Junc- tion, so as to allow the express to pass. The train, which was travel- ing at twenty miles an hour speed, passed the Junction, and the conduc- tor, who ,was looking after the mid- dle section` of the train, jumped on the top of the cars, and started to- wards the front of the train to as- certain why the driver had disobey - cd the orders. Before he had gone' very far. the express train, which was an hour and a half late, and running at the rate of 45 miles an hour, hove in sight, and, in an in- stant, the trains came together with. a frightful crash, the impact of which could be heard two miles dis- tant, • The engines locked together on the rails, and stood {here, a mass of twisted metal. The postal, bag- gage, second-class cars shot ahead, and rolled down the bank and .partly into the lake. The pas- sengers and clerks scrambled out through the windows of the up -turn. - ed cars. There is water on each slide of the track, and two of the cars loft the rails, one of them rolling down the bank and becoming partly submerged. 1Valting For the Inevitable. All the Junction knew as soon as the freight passed that an accident could not be averted, and they wait- ed for the • crash. Word was tele- graphed to Halifax, and a relief train, with doctors, was sent out from Halifax. All the dead and in- jured were br ught toHalifax. Ilhe road is so badly blocked that the twenty, pAssetlgers had to hr , enneat -.�.'•Fi.44114>1 Uaaaiofl'g =t1' nerstesnr the lake to the eastern side, so as to connectwith the train, Disregard of orders is eaid to be al'orte rosponsible for the accident. The accident is one of the most dis- astrous that ever occurred on this end of the road, and the wonder is that more lives were not lost. All the mails were dumped in the lake, but recovered, badly damaged, Driver Miall was ono oe the oldest employes of the road, ha having seen 300 years' service. Coroner Hawkins will begin the inquest to -.day. G.T.R. Switol.man )titled, Toronto, April 1.3.-lliichael Chris. tie, a, Grand Trunk ltaillvay swltell Yvan, was almost instantly killed while at work a little after 10 o'- clock on Saturday night. Christie was engaged near the foot of Bath- urst in attending to the operations of a shunting engine, which was making up the fast freight for the east. Just how the accident h'apPen- ed is not known, Ottawa, April 18. -The statement of revenue and expenditure for the nine months of the current fiscal year, issued by the Department of Fi- Hance, shows a considerable growth in both, as comparecl with the cor- responding nine months of 1902. The revenue increased from '$41,358,818 to $46,597,241, while the ordinary' expenditure endzture xnci cased from $30,911,- 135 to $31,668,085. The statment shows a nominal decrease of $4,000,- 000 in capital expenditure, chiefly in public works, railways and iron and steel bounties. Revenue Has Iporeased. Fell on Circular Saw. Toronto, April 13. -On Good Fri- day, Bryan McGinty, 'while engaged in cutting wood with a. circular saw, on the farm of William Beeler, near Malvern, Scarboro Township, receiv- ed eceived fatal injuries, from falling upon the saw. While forcing the wood against the saw, the framework gave way, precipitating -McGinty on the saw, lacerating his body from the thigh up through the right lung. His injuries terminated fatally. Brutal Assault. Hamilton, April 13. -Louis Kerr, a Burnsville butcher, was brutally beaten on Saturday night. His face was kicked and pounded until his own mother would scarcely know him.. He had to be taken to the City Ilospital. Charles Poag was arrest- ed by Detectives Coulter and Miller, and charged with the offence. MAY CALL OUT TROOPS. 43rd Regiment and Governor -General's Fcotguards Notified to Be Ready For Strike Duty. Ottawa, April 13. -The command- ing ofacers of the 43rd Regiment and Governor -General's Foot Guards have been notified, and, in turn, have sent notification to officers commanding companies, to be ready to turn out at an hour's notice, to proceed, 200 strong, to I3awkesbury, if needed, t assist the civil authorities in quelling 'disturbance at the scene of the saw mill strike in Hawkesbury. Will Act as Commission. Ottawa, April 13a -Rev. Dr. Elliott S. Rowe of Victoria has consented t o act with Chief Justice Ilunter as a commissioner to enquire into the in- dustrialdisturbance in British Co- lumbia. •The principal use of the inquiry will be to ascertain to what extent disturbances are fomented in the province by labor leaders from the United States. KENNEDY FREED BY JUDGE.. . cense. nor refielt uiu° Wirt t"a-•iatxotguil lis could with a rifle. I do net know hosnab e, hilt he., has a short man, and 1 ant trying to identify lzim„" PUNISHMENT WAS SWIFT. Negro Murderer Shotot to, Death Allier fl uti Cring. Shreveport, .Ala,, •Aperil 13.-- s. .Myears, wife ...Aline Matthews, aged 45 bxi e of Frank Matthews, a well-known civil engineer, was 11' ta11y merdered in her bed earl y lest, and her daughter, Aline, aged 10, was fatally wounded. An axe was the instru- ment used in both eases. Ed. Porter, a negro, strongly suspected of the crime, was ,shot to death by two pollee sorgeants, while attempting to escape. He had been run .down at a point about, five miles from Shreve- port. Although thea; were fifteen persons in the house, no one heard any noise or outcry. ;sirs. ltfatthews was almost hacked to pieces. Blood- hounds were sot on the trail, but lest the scent, but .a railroad engineer noticed the negro covered with blood, and notified the police. Shot a 't'on:un and ,.utckle<1. Huntingdon, L. 1,, April 13. -Pas- chal Latour, a negro farmhand, em ployed by Saslo Salsto, art Italian, at South Dix Mills, shot and killed Mrs. Salsto, and then suicided. The woman.. was 45 years of age, and La- tour 30. l'igittine. was 'vigorous, Washington, April 13, -- United States Consul Maxwell, at Santo Do- Mingo City, has cabled the State Department unilor Saturday's date, that the insurgents hstd been driven into that city on the 9th instant, and that their batteries and infantry had then checked the advance of the Government forces. The firing con- tinued throughout the day and until the following morning. The Consul adds that missiles were flying over the city as the cablegram was being written. Russia's Version. London, April 13. -The Times' cor- respondent at Pekin telegraphs that the evacuation by Russia of Niu- Chwang and the second section. of Manchuria is delayed, according to the Russian version, because the Chinese Taotai has not yet arrived, and formal restoration is, therefore, impossible. Bulgarian Situation. Sofia, Bulgaria, April 13. -The War Minister has started for the frontier to perfect measures to ,pre- vent Bulgarian bands from entering Turkey. Further reinforcements have been sent to ties frontier in case of necessity. Martial law will be pro- claimed in the ICostendil (Bulgaria) district. The Petrick District Revolt. Salonica, European Turkey, April 13. -The inhabitants of some of the villages in Petrich District have re• of volted, and 350 Turkish troops have Was Justified in Shooting -Sullivan Will Recover. Detroit, April 13. -After listening to the testimony of several eye -wit- nesses of the riot between employes of the Canadian bridge Works of Walkervilie and non-union men, at the foot of Joseph Canipau avenue, Thursday evening, Justice Whalen re- fused to issue a warrant against George J. Kennedy and ordered the man liberated. Kennedy is the man who shot Michael Sullivan during the riot. It was shown that he did not shoot until he was exhausted and in great fear of his own life. In fact, unbiased men swore that they would have shot long before Kennedy did, if they were placed in his posi- tion. Sullivan will recover, the Em- ergency Hospital authorities say. Ante-)rortem Testimony, George Boak, an engineer in the employ' of the Canadian Bridge • •Company, in Walkervine, Saturday Morning called upon Magistrate Bartlet in Windsor and gave infer - Mallon to be used in case any acii dent should befall him. "A few days ago/' said Boak, "this note was dropped at my door," The note reacts: "Take a Warning in time and stay away from the bridge works. Save trouble for yourself and others." Beak has retained his position with tho company, and has not been in any way connected with the strike. "Friday a man from across the river called upon me," continued the .euatnac:- 'err Dizzy Then your liver isn't acting well. You suffer from bilious- ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act directly on the liver. For 60 years they have been the Standard Family Pill. Small doses cure. ,,tl dra+&�lgts. e Want your mouetaohd or board a beautiful brawn or rich black f Tat®n a•a e BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers 65 57s. or 005416Ta 66 R. P. HAs,. A CO.. NAo,u, had an engagement with insurgents, Reinforcements have left for the scene of action. `ate -,,;,„a-. ,. ,... .. sevens „�•,.' t -vim ex. KILL OR CURE Billing the nerve doesn't cure the toothache; it merely stops the pain by destroying vitality. The pain can also be stopped by decapitation. Cathartics do not cure Constipation -they give temporary relief; but they weaken the bowels and really make the trouble worse. What DOES Cure is a Gentle Laxative of a Tonic Character litommox.4 TA LETS Are the Best Tonic -Laxative ever put upon the Market 25 Adult Doae.r 25 Cant: OPINION of LEADING PHYSICIANS I limy' e>xalnirtr,el Str•rsng's Pilekotie, and have preset ibed trill my practice with satisfactory results A. b2. PIP; ER, M. U Onl'ontl; Price $1.00. For sale ivy druggists or by mail on receipt of price. W. T. STRONG. Manufacturing Chemist. London, Ontario. C 1,E TON r � a r• d n epl� ristinu dna Glioppin Dono rro otill We aregiv il.gexcellel•1t sa- tisfaction in 4lour since re- modelling our mill Dry Soft Wood Wanted N. SWEITZER. spring. price5 D N C V r-Ao A E O LAN D 4 • 4, ..OR SALE iiC.RE terms, tha very debiiabIgres doutal property 'The Reaper gawestead sheeted Lumber,Onal All kinds of tIelkor Pine, either in the rough or dressed as you wish. A few of Hay Spring Prices. Coal at bins , .S6.00 Coiled Spring Wire pee• c we. ,...$2.8U Dry fiernlock Burn Boards at $15 50 per M, Dry Hemlock Jointing and Scant- ling at $15.50 per M. No. 1 B. C. Shingles at 80c per hunch Cheaper grade ,68c per bunch SPECIAL 1 inch )Hemlock ....gfilnt.S0 per M. 1 inch Pine : t2. SO per M. It will pay you to write or call and see ine before you buy. A. J. Clatworthy's Lumber Yard, Granton. EXETER "MillsIanina We wish to announce to the public that we have a large stock of dry lumber, an hand for building purpos- es, It is here you don't have to wait. 1 in. Hemlock at $15.00 per 1000 feet. B, C. red cedar Shingles, at 72c., per bunch. Doors, Sash and all kinds of House Furnishings con- stantly in stock, No claptrap, bklt straight business at the old establish- ment. 28 years experience. ROSS TAYLOR EXETER, ONT. Farm Implements The season for be ginning for spring work is here and you aro looking for the best machinery. We handle the DeerinBinders, Mow- ers, Rakes, Drills, Cultivators and Disc Harrows, which are Manufactured in Hamil- ton and Chicago. Repairs for above Machines always on hand. r -a -A entt fo f the Cyclone e V ven Wire Fence Co. Call and see the wire, and get prices. We also handle the k[cKie Buggy, of PIatteville. CALL AND GET PRICES. Amos Townsend 1 Door South of Farmers' Store. CAR LOAD OF on Lot No. cu, smith of ilurarx Street, Exeter: Thereis brtiickldwelling, also thie necessary outhouses, The house is in geed rie pit and has 9 rooms.. I'he lot contains an acre of land and is excellent) aciapted for gardfln ing or fruit growing. There is a plentiful sup - ]y of bard and soft water, The rt ro is sup- ply cu r u Co date and the torula easy, for particulars AP. , ply to oxcitsox set O Miotic barristers Exeter or to A. 1C. ,loom)), Itow P. O., Poona, 1,,.i. A., proprietor. BUGGIE Do you Wanta Buggy We have the ;finest: stook in town INSURANCE, All the latest styles, in the It<a'kves i,RNEST I'.:I,LJOT, a Agen for the Weareit y Asern/NOS CoM• seer, of Toronto; also for the Pationx Fins NsUnaNCle COMPANY, of London, Eniiand; and draamerce INsunaxvice Cest aNY, 01 Ero MEDICAL X11. 1 Bt4U , �NNt X 1. �' P1 • r A D. S, Graduate V,otw'ilk ,,, ••xeity office and residence. ucmin,on Labora- tory, Exeter. DICKSON & CARLING, Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, Conveyancers, Commissioners, Solicitors for the irlolsons Bank, Etc. Money to Loan atlowest rates of interest. OFFICE :-higIbT STEBET, EXETER. s. R osneni0, n. s. . L, E, DICKSON W. GLADMAN (Successor to Elliott & Gladman) Barrister, Solicitor, tlotary Public, Conveyancer, Etc. Money to loan on Farm and village properties at Lowest rates of interest OFFICE MAIN STREET EXETER FRED ELLIOTT BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC, Money to Loan. OFFICE -(Formerly Elliott and Gladman,) MAIN STREET, EXETER. DENTAL H.1iIN MAN, L. D. S. AND DR. A. R. KINSMAN, L. D. S. D. D. S., Honor Graduate of Toronto University, Dentist. Teeth extracted without pain or' bad after effects, Office in Fan. son's block. West side of Main treet,= Exeter" fONEY TO LOAN Wo have unlimited private funds for invest ment upon farm or village property at lowes rates of interest. DICKSON & CARLING Exeter. riONEY TO LOAN. 1 have a large amount of private funds loan on farm a1:cl tWage i,clerticr atItw of interest. F, W. GLADMAN, Barrister Main St. Exeter. D.A. ANDERSON, (D D. S. L.0.S. DENTIST. Honor Graduate of the Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons o i Ontario,with honors Also Postgrauate of Chicago School of Prosthetic Dentistry (with honorable mention. Everything known to the Dental Profession done in this office. Bridge work. crowns, al- Inminum, gold and vulcanite plates all done in the neatest manner possible. A perfectly harmless anaesthetic used for painless extrac- tion. Office one door south of Carling ;Bro's store Exeter. Ont. The undersigned will have a car load of Buggies arrive on the first of April, and if you want a Buggy, call at the McCormick shop before you buy. These Buggies are finished in different colors, and are extra grades. Don't forget the stand, Mc Cormick shop. He BROWN Agent at Exeter, Ont. 50 YEARS° EXPERIENCE w You may not be able to get enough coal or wood to keep you warm this winter but you can dress warm in our OVERCOATS Suits that fit and suit the pocket. W. . J O 1! 1 Opposite Yost Office, Exeter 0009000 .• waosoceseeeasecos OUR MOTTO "NIGH GRADE WORK ONir' CENTRAL TRADE MARKS DESIGNS' COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may puickls a8oertair our Opinion free whether an invention is prof ably patentable. Commnnicn. tions strictly ccnadential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Old vat agency for securing�patents. Patents tatsn through Munn & Co, receive special notice, without onarge, lathe Scientific Rinerical, .Ahandsomeiy illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, $8 a year • four months, $1. Sold byail nowsdealers. MUNN & cp.s6iBroadway, New Yllrk Branch Otilco. Gib F St„ Wasle:naton. D. C. STRATFORD, ONT. yi Cur graduates readily secure good -4 0 positions because our high grade train- S 0 ing prepared them to render first-class e 41) services. Business men want first-class 0 0 workers and have no time to waste up- ep 0 on the other kind. Commence a course A to now and be ready for a position in the 0 fall. Write for handsome catalogue. 0 W. J. ELLIOTT, 0 Principal ®00040e600e690011000 ;; Si****** DR. . r CRA i ' Late SIN. est. No. x Clarence -square, corner Spading avenue, Toronto, Canada, treats Chronic diseases, and makes a specialty of Skin Diseases, as Pimples, Ulcers, Etc. PRIVATE DISEASES as Impotency, Sterility, Vari- cocele, Nervous Debility, etc., (the result of youthful folly and excess,) Gleet and Stricture of Long Stand- ing, treated by galvanism, the only method without pain and all bad after effects. Diseases Of Woinen-Painful, profuse or suppressed menstruation, Ulceration, leucorrhoea and all displacements of the womb. OPFIOE Hotrns-0 a, m. to 8 'p. m. Sunday 1 to 8 p. m. colon's. Our prices are low as can be foon for first-class rnatcrial and Werkznan ship, BEFORE X QTJ War Of11,L. FIND $EE -U , J F I Two Doors South Taw* Hall, A Happy and Prosperous New Year Is what we all expeet and ciesire. Begin by making the home bright and cheerful, and if your family are musical, you cannot. add to the brightnfss and cheer of hone m ore than by piacing in it a Piano or (Igen.' It will not only add cheer to the home but will help e our children to take their proper place in the social and business ator]d when your aid is withdrawn frcnz them. Sewing Machines In Sewing Machin es we carry a. Iarge and varied stock of the very best makes, also needless and repairs for all machines; Sheet and Book music Hymn Books, Bibles, &c, always in stock. Call and see us. Our terms are the best, 8. ar Vin. Wt1�T OT1111.5 SAY 1 10 of Worthington's Canad ian Stock Tonic. James Leask, breeder and feeder of the sweepstake fat cattle at Provincial Winter Fair 1901 and 1902, says : Dear Sir: - I have fed your Stock Tonle to cattle and like it very much. It mak- es them thrive well and put on flesh more rapidly. I think it is the best Tonic I have fed to horses. We are also feeding it to our hens this winter and they are laying better than they have done for a long time, It pays to feed it. Yours truly, JAMES LEASE, Greenbank P. 0., Feby, 23, 1903. Dear Sir: - I had a mare stocked in both legs, WORTHINGTON'S STOCK FOOD took it down completely and put her in good condition. It has done my cows good, Think it is a good thing and can recommend it. B. OHIIRCHILL, "DazrymanV Clinton, Jany, 17th, 1903. Purify your• animals' blood before turning them on the grass. They will surprise you in the fall. 10 ib. box, 200 feeds, 50c. ; 50 ib. sack $2.00. The Worthington Drug Go., GUELPH, olti T. For Sale and Guaranteed by: Carling Bros, 'Exeter; Cook & Son Hensall; E. Schmidt, Lucan. "An Ounce of Prevention, is Worth a Pound of Cure." Why not cure that cough of yours now ? Do not let it go on and get worse. A bottle of one of our own Cough Medicines will cure you. We, carry a large as- sortment of Cough Medicines Cough Lozenges Act wisely and get some of our remedies. Bi(0407-1-0.4g's Dttig gtoie