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Exeter Times, 1903-5-21, Page 4
The iMoisons 13ank :Incorporated hse Act of I'arliameut MO ) Heed Olnce,11do time Capital (all paid up) -- $3,500,00 1klesorvekund - - -- 92,260,00 88 Ilianehets In Ontario, t uobee, Alberta, British Columbia and Manitoba. EXETEIi.BRANCH Open Every Lawful Day front 10 a. m.. to 3 p. m.; except Saturdays, 10 a. tn. to 1 p. m. Farmers Sale Notes cashed or col - tented. Forms supplied on application. Drafts on :all points in the Dominion, Creat Britain and United States bought and sold at lowest rates of ex'hange, SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Deposits of $1.00 and upwards recety- ed. Interest compounded half yearly, and added to principal June 30th and Ef ember 31st. Deposits Receipts also is tiled and highest current rate of in Brest allowed, Advances make to farmers, stock dealers and business .men at lowest iatee and on Most favorable terns. Agents at Exeter for Dominion Government. OicKSGN & CARLING, N. D. HUR1 ON, SOLICITORS. MANAGER "Irl (4 titer forties Calendar for April, 1903 SUNDAT..... ,.... 5 12 19 MONDAY 6 13 20 TUESDAY AVEDNESDAY.. . THURSDAY....... FRIDAY SesTratDeX 1 s 15 2 9 16 3 10 17 4 11 .1S 21 22 23 24 2t 26 27 28 29 30 THURSDAY, MAY 21T1r x903. THE WEER".I_v PARIrIAMENT. The number of private bills• before Parliament this session is larger than ever before. This week' many .were :disppseil of. The !louse adjourned on Monday as a :mark of respect to 'the late Dona David Mills. .The Treadgold concessions were die - cussed. ,Mr. Casgrain moved an am endnnent to the motion to go into supply coudeimning the action of the g,overument in giving away valuable firapchises. It was shown that great injustice was imposed ion the miners of the bold fields, a nd that fraud End been practised in order to get the grant. The government declined td invest.tgate )the grave scandals .brought to its notice by Governor Congdon, of the Yukon. . Sir. Wilfrid Laurier. in answer to many questions from the - opposition ;benches, slated that :there Was no ';truth in Hon. Raymond Prefontaine'4 statement, that part of the patron - ;age of the Public Works Deport - raent ;would be handed over to the ellarinc and Fisheries Department. A resolution was passed favoring an increase in bonuses for, steel shipbuild ing from .two to three /per cent. . A motion by Hon. Wm. Patterson provided for many important changes irk the customs laws. It n!as shown that under the scr- called British' breference goods unado ix Germany and other countries have been admitted in large quantities to ,Canada with a. reduction of thirttty- three and one third per cent. in duty Hon. 'W ni. Patterson adneitAtedt that such conditions existed. :The atypointment of lion. Ray- mond Prefontaine to a' cabinet posi tion was .ventilated. Hon. A. P. Bro- deur. speaker of the Commons,: was appointed in sueteee'd Han. J. Israel Tarte, but a plot was .put on foot, in favor of Mr. Prefontaine and DTr, Brodeur was. thrown down' by his leader. HO., TO (GET, UP AIN APPETITE istase for food often follows. Grippe and fevers' and:is associated with a general weakness of the system. To impart a real zest iiro :food, and; give power to the stomach to digest and as- similate, no remedy can equal Ferro - zone. This is a new and startling dis- ,Covery. It strikes at the:root of dis- ease. and by removing the cause,cures quickly and permanently. Ferrozonte will quickly enable you to eat and di- gest 'anything. All druggists and medical dealers sell Ferrezone. THE DISTRTB [?'TION HILL. 'Same changes 1trppobed In th'e Rc- '.'dietrabution hill are as fellows : memicappapa, " I suffered terribly and was ex- tremely weak for 12 years. The doctors said my blood was all turning to water. At last I tried Ayer's Sarsaparillas and was soon feeling all right again. Mrs. J. W. Fiala, Hadlyme, Ct. ti No matter log you long have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine you can take for purifying and en- riching the blood. Don't doubt it, put your whole trust in it, throw away everything el w. $1.006 bottle. Altdreisis:s. Ask font doctor what he thinks of Ay6t'S sarsaparilla. He knouts ail about this grand F. old faintly medicine. rollow his advice and 41.01111n be Satisfied. J. 0, Arm Co., Lowell, Mars. y; astentegestateleeezelesesteetemepo in '-lntario---Cardwell and .D'otliwell are to be wiped. out.; Leede ' and • Clrenvilie, Brace, itliddleeux, 1)Illrizaeu \ ietoritt ,Lennox and gton, and Hastings counties melt dose one member•, making in all a reduction of nine :seat".°;. Mutate bete anotlioa slnember given to it, whilst •tiro members are teivento New Ontario,- making Ontario,making three glia~ t:oust.ituencies,`wtnd leaving the required reduction of six seats. in Nova ;!Scotia, I'ieion loses one member, and Richmond and . Vic- toria, Cape 'Breton conslitutincies, ern united. ' In New Brunswick. Halbert and Icings axe united. ;1n 1,rineo ••Edward lslkt'nd, Prin,e' loses on =amber, mbetr, Quebee is not yet given out. CURES PAIN IN THE BACK Makes life miserable for many .Can it be cured? Yes, in night, Nor 1 t kk t tomin comp gives a come e now ou in, ,t.he back, because it is strong'ere more penetrating,. More highly pain subduing than any other remedy ex- tant. One drop of Nerviline has more power over pain than five drops of any other remedy, and it is true strength you want when you've got, pain./rour money back if it is uoteo. Druggists sell Nerviline. CONSERVATIVES PRO,UE: • OF THEIR LEADER Conservatives 'may wall feel proud of tbei.r leader, Mr. R. L. ;Borden. The quiet, unassumingg person, who two years ego, took upon himself the di-, raction of the policy :of the opposi- tion, has justified the fondest hopes of his friends. Two sessions were pawed in gaining an experience which. its now making itself folt in Parliament. No stronger roan than)Mr. Borden Accu pies a :,oat in the Commons. Ile liras forced the Liberal party to take": a standing in their fiscal- policy and con peilecl them to: put themselves on re- cord as apposed to a,lil;an involving the protection of the industries and labor of thi.s country. Mr. Borden has :one policy for all Canadians and. this position has won for him a repu tat ion for consistent y which is bound to bear fruit. Ile does not stoop to smart tricks of . the demagogue but relies on real ability to carry him over rough places. In Montreal, where Mr. Borden recently addressed a large and highly representative gathering of the city's leading men, his name is on every tongue. The people of our com- mercial metropolis are now ready to accept the Conservative leader as one of the great men concerned with Can- ada's destiny. They feel that :in his hands pur interests would be .closely guarded and administered in an uns impeachable manner. The great elon- servative party has chosen well and al ready the "swing to victory" is much, in evidence under its leaders well bal- anced direction. "The flowing tide is with sisal - KEEP THE BALANCE UP It has-been thuthfully said that any disturbance of the even balance of health causes serious trouble. Nobody can be too careful to keep this balance up. When ...people begin to lose appe- tite, or to get tired easily the least Im- prudence \brings on sickness, .weak- ness, or debility. The system needs a tonic, creves it and should not be de- nied it ; and the best tonic o1 ,which we have any knowledge is Hood's Sar- saparilla. What (this medicine :has done in keeping heal:hy people healthy in keeping up the even 'balance of health, gives it the same distinction as a presentative that it enjoyes as a cure.Its early use has illustrated the wisdom of the old saying that' a stit eh in time saves nine. Take hood's for appetite, strength and endurance. FARMERS' INSTITJJTE CONViENTIO ;N The annual convention of the Farm ens' Institute • Workers of A,mer'tcti will be held at the .Parliament Build- ings, in Toronto, the last week in June. • This convention will be attended by heads of the Farmers' Istituto sys-- teams tri the different States of she Union, and ;by Supertutendent Creels man and representatives of the Insti- 'tute system in his Province. Amon~ those who wilt be present will be, W. C. Lal ta, Superintendent of the Insti- ttue system of Indiana ;R. F. Taft, Pro lessor Horticulture at the Michigan Agricultural Collage; Professor•E ey', of Cornell ; Superintendent Atmos, of Mis,iippi .Institute system; john gee:eaten, who is the connection link between the ...United Sta•tc4s 'Depart- ment of Agriculture and the Farmers Institute system of the different Stat- ers, and A. C. True, Director:; of;tr;x-- periment Stations in the :United Stat es. • This will be one of the most impor- tant .meetings, from' na agricultural stance -point ever held in Ontario, las representatives of each State and Pro- vince on the continent will bring the 'combined experience of all the. so- lution of the problem of how to make the Institute system most helpful to the progressive farmer. Sup. Cr•eelinan, who is Secretary of the Convention has invited the mem hers of his staff for the purpose of as- similating ideas which may - be made us:i of by them in the next season's campaign. One day will he devoted to 'Women's Institutes, and .Misses Rose, +Maddoo'kls and A gnes ,Smith will be the.priinei- pal speakers on this -occasion. TL1NRERNCY O6' CatTARR JS .TO SPREAD. Just aalight matter at first,ancl be- causr, sii;4hl:, neg,,lac Led ;.hut the sexed sown brings forth a. dangerous ha•rve- et,. Consumption, :which is the harvest of death. Better spend a. fete momen- ts each day inhaling Catarrliozone, an aromatic antiseptic that relieves at once, clears the nnsal passages,and re- stores lost sense of taste and r'Gmeill The immediate effect of Ctaarrhozone is .trnalgi xaItee pre leapt and ef:fiaie-n1:. Cure is certain and permanent: if you use Cala rrhozone Price fyil. Serial size, 25e, at druggists. or Poison 4Sle Go,, Xingston, Ont. " X. ,1 d ;0 k EB TIME S, MA Y 2iSt 14)03, David Davis, United Stta.tes tezta;to of 111dlloir;, speaking of what a news- paper does for a oommunity, nt�uh' nu address that remains ever green in the memories of itewtapuper neon., lie li said. "very year every local paper gives front 50U to 5,000 free tines for the benv fie of tlac.;camnzunity inwhich it is located. No other' agency ean or �valtl d (:this. The editor in proper, tion 'lo his means does more thtna any other elan, end in all fairness knttn with man, he ought to be:sup- ;tprted-not because you" ltapepti to like hint ur adbtire'kis tv;ritiuig but ebeauso a peal paper is Is the bast investment a jtommunity can make, It• may not be t:rpwded with great <• thoughts but fin:tnciaUy it is. fo more benefie than both preacher end teach- er. To -day, editors do more for less Tay than :any other luau on earn;: The Parkhill post, a bright and en- terprising Conservative •joux;nal re - . c1 in that village, states that the general opinoin is that North i\iiddle.sex is doomed, - and that the north corner of 'iUSeGillivray ancli,tLte Kent county line will be 'the limits I of about as unwiolding and homely a ehaped constituency as we amid. : be dumped into. • Our contemporary asks 'Why should .the Gover'nmentt laugh at North Ontario and its fan'taectlid shape if ,West Middlesex is to include this district? The Post adds'that'W. S Calvert, C. S. Il;y.man, and D. Ms:. Cogan, the three Liberral members now representing London and Middle :sex have their own .11idcs to look (,tf: ter, and Xiamen, beim; chairman off the committee on the bill, is going to ltnake no trove which will -make Lon don any riskier a seat than it is at present.. There have been heavy losses to the Liberal party in Ontario in the past few years. Mackenzie, Fraser, Lister Mowat, Mills and other parliamentar ians have gone from the political stage to the quiet grave; Edward Blake has gone from. Canadian politic,, to those of the ;old land ; 'Landergkiin and Itto- Mullen have reaped the reward of party devotion in being placed in the resting place of the' Senate. Of the old ,guard, Sir Richard ,C trtwight re- mans, but he appears to have passed the meridian of his strength, and is seldom heard from the public plat- form., even in the throes of a general election campaig n. His dream of "Free Trade has not been realized, and he holds an official position under a protectionist regitme and at the same time "hlods his peace" against the "iniquity" of a tariff, he so fre-' denounced. These melt were. a tower of strength to the Liberal party on the platform ; new men are coming on the scene. PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND HIGIi SCHOOL EXAMINATION. The different examinations will oom nrence on the dates given below. H. S'. Entrance, 24th June,8.45 a,mi at Godorich, Exeter, Zurich Bayfield, Hansell, Dungannon,, St. Helens, and Crediton for West Huron; and at Clinton,Seaforth, Wingham, Brussels, Wroxeter and,Irordwich and Blyth, for East Huron. Junior Leaving Part LIr Senior Leaving, Matriculation, Pais and Honor, ;Cannmerciai Diploma and Commercial Specialist Examinat',itons, June 29th, at Goderich, Exeter; Clin- ton, Seaforth, Brussels and Wingham !;Applications for,Entnance'must be sent to the The/lector On or before Jun lst. The fee is kir, 'to be paid '24 of June. mmtn Abblieation for Junior Leaving, Son for Leaving and Matriculation high School Formis 7(I, III, IV) musk 1bu to the Inspector beforo`May <<4th, ac- dompanied by 'the necessary fee. No application can be received by the In- spector after that date. Applications forms may be obtained from P. S. In- spectors or )Principals of Collegiate Institutes. Those who intend to write at any examination centre in the Western In spectoral Division of Huron must send their application, giving name in Cull to J. EIsgin Tom, 1...I'. S. , Godericdi, and those who intend to write in the Eastern Division to D. Robb, I. 1?. H )3russels. Books containing writing or draw- ing are not to be presented as in for- mer years at the.Entrance examilna. tions. Oa,ndidates will be supplied with paper and ink by presiding examiners but they must bring heir own 1pe:ns, rulers lead pencils; etc. Teacher.a are earnestly urged to use their influence not :Cc -let candidates who are 'not properly grour>,ded ,on the work, come up for examination, Memo :-Entrance Examination be - gine June 24th, at 8.45 a. in. Junior Matriculation, District Certificates and ,C'olm'wex+eial Diploma, Part Il:, June 29th, 8.45 a. m. Junior Leaving Part. 1I, Senior Leaving, 'Honor Ma- triculation and oGmmercial Specialis- ts, July 2nd, 8.45 a. en. a;( Rain and sweat have ao effect on harness treated with Eureka Har- ness 011. It re- dste the don p. keeps the tenth- ` er soft and pl1- r able.titchc 5 s do not break. No tough sur- face to chafe and cut The harece* not only keeps looking hien new, but wears :mice as long by the use of tecka fj V Barges, OIL Sold etteerywhere in cant- on sizes. Undo by imperial 011 Company, • k YAP AN ARCTIC MAL Getting 011111)er eqr Sten and. i)ait M wx the Volar Ice Sheet. Dogs were unhitched and fastened, ail usual, and then each et the ]shires climbed over the ice foot with his snow knife and disappeared behind the para. pot, where the other two were already cutting snow blocks. I fastened my dogs,got out their ration of pemmican, cut it up and fed them, standing by With while in hand to see that there teas no bullying, and that each dog got his Share, Then I unpacked the Booker, 011 ettxl and kitchen box, passing then!. up the ice foot as high as I could reach. 1 did not Wait for the completion of the Igloo to commence my preparations for supper, but with a few strokes of the Epade excavated a niche in the snow - bank, put the cooker in out of the wind, tilled the lamp with oil and the boiler !with ice; placed a few snow block's around it for still better shelter and lighted up. By the time the igloo was completed I had enough water melted tor our tea, and supper was entirely ready by the time my men had fed the dogs, and they lost no time in freeing their clothing of snow and joining me in the igloo. Still lees time was con - turned in putting away the tea and bis- cuit and pemmican, and less again in falling off to dreamless slumber.-Com- mender lumber. Com- mander Robert E. Peary in Outing. •.a Speed of the Pulse. The rate of pelsatlon depends entire- ly, on the movements of the heart, each beat representing a contraction of the left ventricle. The norinal pulse of the adult male varies from sixty to eighty beats in the .minute. The range of the individual variation is, however, very great. The range in females is even greater, some having a pulse rate of over eighty, others less than six=ty, the majority showing a higher rate than males. In children the rate is more frequent: At birth, 128 to 144; first year, 120 to 1.30; at sixteen years, ninety. In old age the pulse is usually above seventy two, but often also between fifty and sixty. The pulse rate' is higher in short than tall persons and also varies some- what with the time of day, independent of meals and movement, diminishing in the forenoon, rising in the afternoon, sinklng during the night and rising in the morning. Habitual pulse rates be- low fifty-six and as low as forty-six have been observed in healthy adults, but they are rare exceptions. We know, of no case on record of a healthy pulse so loev as thirty. His Hot Bath. "I had a law partner once in Missis- sippi,". said a southern lawyer, "who began to feel The effects of long years of hard work at his profession, and he !was advised by his physician to go to the Arkansas hot springs and take the baths. The day of his arrival an at- tendant shut him up in tt bathroom hnd, giving him a thermometer, told hito let the hot water run until it ha reached a certain temperature and then to shut it off. - "The old fellow had more clear grit than any man I ever knew. When the attendant went back an hour later, my partner was standing up in a tub of boiling hot water." The .skin was fair- ly cooked off his feet, but he voeved he wouldn't get out until the specified temperature had been registered. He ,was holding the thermometer up ill front of his face instead of putting if in the water." ikotas: EleQu onoes •es," concluded the medical racon- teur, "she became insane through ex- cessive dancing." "One might say she was hopping mad, I suppose!" gurgled the cheerful idiot. A Trying hioaneat. She was a nice little cousin from the country, and she had come to a deet luncheon given' by some swell friends, says a New York paper. She was hav- ing a beautiful time and chatting away merrily when the salad course came on, and the butler passed a small cream cheese. It was on a doily placed on a flat plate, and a silver knife lay by it. The country cousin was busy talking, and without an instant's hesitation she took the plate, cheese and all, and set it down by her o'vn salad plate. The butler' gave n deco ousiy r pressed start of horror, the other guests began to talk very fast and the little cousin, suddenly appreciating what she had done, turned scarlet and sat and gazed at that cheese in dumb,agony and wished she could die then and there. But the hostess, who sat by her, said, gently putting the action to the word: "Do let me cut you a piece of the cheese." ,and then the plate was passed on, end everybody began to breathe once more. But the cousin didn't speak again for ten minutes. g i Utes. A Heaven on Earth. The ancient mogul buildings in the palace of the kings of Delhi are mar- vels of beau TwoL of these- the e leiwan-i-am, or hall of public audience, aad the .Diwan-l-kllas, or hall of pri- vate audience -were built by the Em - salaam Shah Jalian about two and a pelf centuries ago, when the mogul style of architecture bad reached its most decorative period. The smaller of the two, the Diwan-1-kbas, is fa- mous for its jewel-like finish, and it is round the walls of this apartment that the Persian inscription runs, "If there Is a heaven on earth, it is this." The larger hall contains the, greatmogul throne. Both buildings are of marble Inlaid with designs in precious stones. DUMAS AND HIS BAREEER: Origin of the Practice of Speevalrol.- ing In Theater TLelrettd. The pxaetIce of speculating in these ter tickets, strange as it may appear,. was started by the elder Dumas. He patronized .a Paris barber named Por cher, and one day this worthy while. shaving the novelist arcked him why he did not sell the tickets given him by the managers • of the theaters where Ws plays were produced. "To whom could I sell thele,?" asked the author of the "Three Musketeers," "Why, to me, if yotit"like," replied Por- cher, "And what would you do with them? asked Dumas. "That's my business," replied the barber, contin- uliag to lather the bronzed face of the famous story teller. "But I give you tickets whenever you ask for them," said Dumas. "All! One or two are not sufficient for my pur- pose," respouded Porcher. "I must have all your tickets, wed every day too." And you will pay for them?" said the dramatist. "Cash," was the simple yet practical reply. Dumas at that •moment was very badly in need of money, so he at once concluded the bargain. Porcher, who shortly after this gave up shaving and cutting hair, made similar bargains ;with other authors and quickly became rich. The Difference. He was a man who was sziak1ng $50 a Week and ;was having luncheon with his fiancee in an uptown restaurant, The lady ordered chicken salad, fol. lowed by black coffee and wafers. • The man, who could have afforded every- thing on the bill and not felt a hole in his' pocketbook, had consomme and Little Neck clams and drank water. Irhe waiter got 10 cents. A clerk who was kept busy earning his salary of $18 took lets sweetheart to an expensive seaside resort. It took twenty; minutes to decide what they Wanted to eat. Finally the order came, heaped -high upon a Iarge tray. At the lady's place the waiter de- posited roast beef, mashed potatoes, chicken croquettes, with peas, a salad of Iettuce and potatoes and a cup of coffee. The man, wondering how he could get a winter overcoat, ate a porter- house steak, with mushrooms, fried potatoes, green corn and coffee. For dessert they had ice cream and fancy cakes, with more coffee. The :waiter got a quarter. John Y. to the Front. "I lntd lxsasn abroad for three years," said the judge, "and, as the people in npy, native town labored under the idea that I was a man of some consequence, they welcomed me home with a brass banda and a dinner. I was about to re- ply to the address of welcome when the village cooper approached me ,with ex- tended hand and said: "So you've got back home, eh? Say, judge, -,when you went away I was do. ing all my own work and had my shop in the woodshed; now I've turned a hoss barn into a cooper shop and am bossing two journeymen and making fifty barrels a week. Don't forget to say that while you've been wasting your time in Europe John Y. Higgins has come right to the front at home.' "My little speech to my fellow towns- men didn't arouse much enthusiasm," said the judge, "and that cooper was to biame for it. He simply wilted me." .9. document relating to the sale, of land, dated 1592 and signed by Guy Fawkes, was recently told in London for $505. 'Attends en au 'tromp voyage shoulb nrvor fall cut.-Cbicngo; New& 8 OUR MOTTO "HIGH GRADE WORK Dirt CENTRAL STRATFORD, ONT. {g • ur graduates readily secure gccd p positions because our high grade train- t ing prepared them to render first -glass services. Business men want first-class e 5workers and haveno time to waste vp- Q e on the other kind. Commence a .:ourae a now and be ready for a position in the 2 kg, fall. Write for handsome catalogue. ,fI l cm ase 4? 0 • W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal ! Ista0©tibti:6SasecoD& sloe SICIM1t©edt3E1Ois Portland Cement �']I5 E RA VE ,fust received a quan- tity of the best grade of Port- land cement which we are selling ab $2.6ig per barrel, Cloth sacks to be returned free. can he httd nt either Centralia or Exeter Storehouses. WO— L WANE T • { 5:100 lbs. c f wool wanted for which th&' highest.?1ti.t•ket uric:•; will he paid in cash at.Cent raliV d Exeter :,tore• !hoses. ,1j0 o SBL Me , ,.. -arm t s age --r. °a0ddaam as s1 .: �".�rSq.`a"-0`�.Y.+ir:l'1,'y^+,'.;iE±,"T � t Y•t: ,r'1s' . ..1: 6i4 `' a. t� � ..^; 0 eanl'r¢21¢ c11t¢1s -oo; glia 'y'-I-2t•Qi?$' i' O Ie3 nob gagq oog. ,t� osod -tad Ji,I060 ao4isatl 1711:: I117t rtpoo•9 44 ailu1 sl 31 ph; °spaool eo told oqa no este galgtl&ua not nos o; oaodze eonm ealoq enaq ul P7os Sou s1 sI Arco sol;Ioq eels-euo u1 da cud sl vomit) 'USriawanN, JO.11d031.0'X l�g .til.itr'ialLI/ ao nI q ryid:D .� aAa ao a M UH,11 1g0 SI RHO2b.. MAIL osm1u1gf 011. .m!X g1'Xa SSo'1pim ssau ItlI'ezd'tprerGtpe'uaeisrinos'itou LlagOT -1?drgstuo;;I Jo j �CpaY Iona; j lady r. .,r :l ...wiwr. ....v.oezp ,v1604,,,,, tliF441 If t -pI ®CDwit'ig33D ' l'ep i, des. algild3OWW.�`.li�,lnldp J3lf j;3I1 SllMIONS9Apliq 8501x' -Tl jIsetiViloll$a iq SAOUIa4 3 fLINNO18 aH: J4fl Jo siatocupuusqusAulgulp Wff El aapuepoo, if anne.il w -s�ao1alollle�claadajgn}a8a�'' u,nuuumq,umw.°J, imlmpuuou,11v W¢nnl,e114nIN¢ 111111 1111111111111111111 ill 1„11111111tll1,l, 1„ 1111111„111„1IIII„IIII1111 ne11111ugn,n¢uuanuinu,Alun,,,I,Illllilllll,l,l„1„IeplL14.10essom_ 1' -, :'''Y1:M`.1'r':=�h+ ltS''-�'.: tlt- iYa^:4111t.1K,tiN71�:$, a•.. N:..r.FC •` :him Imple f ail 1 -We are agents for the celebrated Maxwell Binders, Mowers, Rakes, Bay Loaders, Etc Also the. Wilkinson Plows and Straw Cutters, and Fleury Plows and Grinders. Toronto Air Motor Windmills Binder Twine in season,. l3lc. ggie , o Waggoi-as ® and o Cutters, We are agents for the McLaughlin Cutters. and Buggies and for the Chatham Wagons. A Full Line of Sewing Machines, Washing Machines and Wringers.,. S E” One Door South of the Central IIotel. D R• ®� ■ H e 5"-s A 9 Late oS�ing�St. West.. No. i Clarence -square, corner Spadina avenue p. Toronto, Canada, treats Chronic diseases, and make s a specialty of Skin Diseases, as Pimples, Ulcers, Etc. PRIVATE DISEASES as Impotency, Sterility. Va ri- cocele, Nervous Debility, etc., (the .result of youthf uI folly and excess,) Gleet and Stricture ot Long Stan d- ing, treated by galvanism, the only method witho ut pain and all bad after` effects. Diseases of Women -Painful, profuse or suppressed menstruation, ulceration, leucorrhoea and all displacements of the womb. OFFICE HOURS -9 a, m. to 8 p. nt. Sunday 1 to 3 p. nt. C EDI di O'1'® 64�:e Milis OristM aaa Gnopping ALL THE USEF UL Branches are taught in the F. C. Bi. COLLEGE. Our students are not guaranteed nice jobs, but after al Donc F1 V1�� tI ; course in Ibis Oollege it will be (lnU L No Trouble for Them to 'Holds Any Position. We aid them, if possible to obtain ingexcellent sa- employment, but we first equip ,therm to maintain the high reputation this[• flour since re -school has acquired. J. W. W'ESTERVELT, Principal.. Wearegiv tisfaction in modelling our mill Dry Sof: Wood Wanted H. 9,v t �TlissEstbi London, Huron and Bruce. GOING NORTlt— Passenger. London depart S.16 A, M. 4.40 r. M. Centralia i 5,1 6 60 Exotor 9.3C 6.0 Beneall 9.44 6,16 Tit1tP en 9.50 6.25' Brucefield . , 9.68 6,33 ti Clinton 10.15 6.55 Wingham arrive 11.10 8.00 GOING saurs— Passenger Wingham, depart6,63 A. sr. 3.151'. M Clintru 7.47 4.25 T3ruoefield 8.05 4.49 Kippen .► .15 4.b7 Hansall22 �, b 02 Exoter 8.85 5.10 Centralia . 8.46 6.26 London ,arrive 9.37• 6.12 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &0. Anyone sending a stretch and descrItltton may quickly ascertatr our opinion free w6hether nm Invention is prol ably patentable. Communion• tions strictly cm,ldennai. Handbook on Patents vont free. Oidest agency for scouring patents. Patents tat.en through Minn & Co. receive' apccial nottcc, wikhout enema, fu the ��e� !lie otem it A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cit• eulation of any sdientiac Journal. Terme, $a a year tt pp,four moths,. $L Sold by all newtd ealers. • iYIUNN &C or361Broadway, NCW Yal'k Branch Otttee. 625 L' St., wnat:!ngten. T.). C. , .tee '",.'r eiee .1 gee ;7.5' c7�i:rah ? w ,t ,.. Cure a Cold in One Take Laxative Browito .ninth ad s. Seven Million boxes sold in pest 12 months. This signature `.• i yCures Grip iin Two Days. ebb every -w"Ir'„'+ box 25c.-