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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1890-06-27, Page 6THE HURON EXPOSITOTI, VONIMIONMINNANZIN•• - - - Gaieties. -It was Michelet who said that "woman is the pelt of a man's life." It may have been noticed, too, that some young men are not half so fresh after Meer get a wife, -An Ohio minister, at the close of some remarks in his own church, said: " We will now hear frem our colored brother." The visitor addressed, before entering upon his subject, said: "Iy brother is mistaken; I am not colored. I was born black." -" _Papa" she cried, quite breathless- ly, as she took off her bonnet, "is not my &roes a beauty? See the pretty fig- ures on it." "I've noticed," said her pa, as he smoothed with his hand her tresses," that pretty figures seem to be attached to all your dresses." -Woman (to tramp.) Want some- thing to eat, eh? Well, here is some cold hash. Tramp -But I haven't got &tithing to eat it with. Woman -just keep on a little further and you will find a fork in the road. -Elderly gentleman-" I want a wig. Something that will match my own hair." Hair -dresser -a I can't accomo- date you, sir." " How is that?" "You haven't hair enough left for a sample." -He had got one foot in. Boston Girl-" Reginold, dear, do you know that one of your trouser legs is two inches shorter than the other ? ' Brother -Yes, Amelia, it is the result of my first step in literature. I sold a poem to -day. -Why waste energy in kicking a man when he is down? Go after the man clitnbing above you. --Simeral-" That adage, Marry in haste and repent at leisure,' is all bosh." Maddox-" Why?" "Because married men have no leisure.", -Customer-This is vegetable soup. I ordered chicken. Waiter (examining the soup)-Dat's so, sir; my mistake. I thought dem celery tops was feathers. - Charming Widow- And what are you doing now --days ?" He-" Oh, amusing myself, looking out for number one. And yQu?" "Looking out for number two." - First Physician -"Did old Coupon's case yield to your treatment ?" Second Physician-" It did. I treated it six months and it yielded something like $1,000." A Vanishing River. A sudden thaw in spring is a common enough cause of the swelling and over- flow of rivers, but few people have ex- perience of waat might be called "magic rivers," which disappear almost as sud- denly as they are born. One such,ho w - ever, is described by W. H. Mallock in his account of Cyprus, " entitled "In an Enchanted Island :" On a certain evening their was a suc- cession of thunder showers, and then, all the night,a heavy and ceaseless down- pour. " This," said my host, in the morning, "ought to bring down the river." I asked what he meant by this, and he answered that the river below us was rarely anything more than a dry bed of pebbles, just as it was now. But generally once -sometimes three times -in the year,it would suddenly fill with water, flow for an hour or two, and again become dry and silent. I felt that the sight must be curious, and wished that I might he able to witness it. -About four o'clock in the afternoon a servant came to my bedroom, and asked me to go into the garden. There I found my -host with an opera -glass, standing on the bank. "Look !" exclaimed he pointing; it is corning. Listen! you can hear it." I listened and looked. I at last caught a sound, faint and uncertain, as leaves rustling in a dream. Then, suddenly, far away on the plain, I saw something flash, like the head of a pointed spear. Graduaaly this prolonged itself into a slim, shining line, which presently took a curve. For a time its course was straight; then it curved again. In ten minutes, over the brown sur- face of the fields the water had stretched itself like along, silvery snake, and the sound I had heard,growing every instant more distinct, eaplained itself to the ear as the voice of the stirred pebbles. The river channel skirted the bottom of the garden, and thus, as the flood went by, we had every opportunity of observing it. It pushed itself forward, headed by a mass of bubbles and scum; it split itself into fierce rivulets, which a mo- ment later were_ drowned in the body of the stream; it gurgled against banks ; it circled into transitory whirlpools. Gradually, as we watched, its volume seemed to diminish, and in an hour's time there was only a trickling rill, over which a child five years old might have stepped. One Man's Idea of Getting On. It is knowledge, faithfulness, and in- dustry that make sucsess possible. A young man of twenty, who was educated_ in a public school, was talking to the writer about a friend a year younger then himself, who did not like the business he was engaged in though he had been in the same office four pairs. He said something like this: "1 tell him that he ehould have left it the first week if he did not like it; he should not have wasted his time. He ought to be ready now to go right ahead, but, instead, he will have to begin at the bottom in some other office. He says I did not stay where I began; that 'ye changed my business. So I have, but each time I've got intoat better kiosi- tion. I was only an office boy at first, and there was no chance there, so I just kept my eyes open, and made a change aa soon aitI could. So I kept on learn- ing as much as 1 cculd in each place, but not settling down where I saw there was no chance. He is getting now, after four years, just what he got the first week -four dollars. "I've been watching the boys who were in my class in school. Most of us had been promoted from class to class from the primary. The other day I saw one of them driving a garbage cart. Why ! I could hardly believe my eyes. • Another is in Yale College; another is a street -car driver ; one is a house pain- ter, but he looks very poor -I do not think he has work all the time. He always talks about being "lucky." Another fellow just knocks about getting. odd jobs. They are just the same now that they were in school. The fellows who are dragging now dragged through Ixawantm. Original and only reliable. Beware of poor imitations. school. We all had the same chance, the same teachers. The fellows who were behind the class, and kept our class percentage down, are filling posi- tions where wages are small and the chances to get higher are next to none." The young man whose convereation we have reported left school at fifteen, and is now connected with a telephone company, and is one of the best students in the electrical department of Pratt's Institute in Brooklyn, where he is found every evening. His " luck " consiets in his determination to know all there is to learn in his speeial line, and of eourse he will succeed. -Christian Union, Just What Was Wanted Dr. Atnelia EdWards 9ays that the inhabitante of the East have a childlike and bland manner of offering any eort of worthless article for sale, protesting, meanwhile, that it is a veritable treasure of antiquity. One man, at Esneh, brought her a coin wkich he declared he had found under the mounde outside the town but which bore the familiar profile ofGeorge IV. It had evidently not occurred to the would be seller that the coin could tell its own history. An- other man offered the sale of a glass but- ton, of English make, and protested that he himself had found it on a mummy, in a certain tomb. Still an- other was self convicted of falsehood in the following amusing manner: A man came to my tent one day, bearing a string of more than doubtful scarabs, all veritable " anteekahs," of course, and all backed up by undeniable pedigrees. "No, no, bring me no more an- teekahs," I said gravely ; "they are all old and worn out, and they cost much money. Have you no imitation scarabs, new and serviceable, that one might wear without the fear of breaking them ?" " These are imitations, 0 Sitt !" was the ready answer. "But you told me a moment ago they were genuine anteekahs !" "That was because I thought the Sitt wanted to buy anteekahs, said, quite shamelessly. "See, now," said I, " if you are cap- able of selling me new things for old,how can I be sure you would not sell me old things for new ?" To this he replied by declaring that he had made the scarab himself. Then, fearing I should not believe him, he drew for me an asp, an ibis, and some other hieroglyphic forms, with tolerable dexterity. 01 Now you believe?" he asked, in triumph. "1 see that you can make birds and snakes,?' I replied, "but that neither proves that you can cut scarabs, nor that these scarabs are new." "Nay, Sitt," he protested, I made them with these hands. I *made them but the other day. By Allah! They cannot be newer." Here Talhamy interposed. "In that case," he said, "they are too new,, and will creek before a month is over. The Sitt would do better to buy aome which are well seasoned." Our honest fellah touched his brow and breast. "Now in strict truth, 0 Dragoman !" he said with an air of the most engag- ing candor, 'these scarabs were made at the time of the inundation. They are thoroughly seasoned. If they crack,you shall denounce me to the governor and I will eat stick for them." Nothing could convinee him that he was not performing a praiseworthy act - tion in protesting that the things were whatever I wished to consider them. Oxen Ahead. A farmer and his son were marking out a field into " lands " preliminary to plowing it during an interval of pleas- ant weather not long ago, and the Spec- tator, then enjoying a short suburban furlough, was an interested observer of the operation. The team attached to the plow was a mettlesome pair of black mares of trotting blood, and were now as frisky as colts after their , winter of comparative leisure. It NS as in vain that the son who held the reins, ,tried to make the ateeds go at a reasonable pace for plowing. Be might have suceeeded had he brought them to a halt every few feet. But he was young, and wanted the job to progress fast, so while he held the reins with all. his strength and his father held the plow with grim desperation, the team kept gaining momentum and were soon sweeping up the steep side -hill at a gait that was no longer a walk. The stiff sod Was ripped as by a lightning -stroke, and rolled over and over several feet from the • furrow. I anticipated trouble, for I knew' 'Con- necticut hills were " rock-ribbed" and plated like a modern war ressel., ; Soon came the climax to the plowing -at -a -trot, The plow struck a rib of granite- " snap" went the beam in two -driver and team nearly plunged on tbeirinoaes, and the old farmer stood aghast in the furrow holding the disabled implement. Patience, temper, and -half a day were lost while trying to make a new beam or borrow a plow. This led me to a new appreciation of oxen, and it chanced that I had been set down in an easy-going, primitive com- munity, where, though only thirty miles from the city, the slow beasts of draught which answered for the ancient civilization were still , popular. The sight of these " slow -but -sere " work- ers, with their reetful, cadeneed motion. wavelike, even -paced, seetned be take not a little of the fever of city life out of ine as I watched them. So, while I ac- knowledged that the trotting -horse and the steam-engine have their uses, I also was convinced that the ox -team, which is older than the pyramids, is not yet obsolete. How nicely one could skin the soil off of rock and bowlder with the oxen! How easily they would out -plow the team of trotters in the rocky field ! And as for steam plows -go West! New England rocks are not their congeners. -Spectator in C. U. Some Dear Girls. How much money does -a young wo- man need for her comfortable adequate support? Is the problem Referee J. Alfred Davenport has found it neeessary to solve in a case involing the expenses of a New York girl who is a "ward in chancery." The actual cost of support- ing a girl depeeds upon the girl and her resources. She is endowed by nature with adaptability, and, given two hun- dred dollars or two thousand a year,will manage in some way best known to her- W self, to live and be reasonebly happy, ary with $200 a year. Colonel Fellow's daughter spends $200 a year for athletics alone; pretty Miss Fanny Pryor has an allowance of $60 a month, every penny of whichahe devotes to the purchase of new apparatus for her private gymnas- ium or special instruction in physical culture. Rumor has it that the sweet and gentle Miss Helen Gould has $2,000 for pocket money alone, out of which sweets, scent, notions, reading matter, music, stamps and alms are provided for, A noted beauty, who lives on Madison avenue, pays $1,112 every year for massage treatments, Turkish baths, shampoos and hair trimming. These are not extravagant notions, but absol- utely requisite for bodily health and personal comfort. Each of Sir George M. Pullman's pretty daughters has an allowance of $3,000 and their accounts are always overdrawn. When Mrs. Snell.MeCrea-Green was little Allie Snell, of Chicago, she had the rent of a white stone house in Ada street, opposite the Snell mansion, to pay her candy and millinery bills, and Miss Doane, daughter of J. W. Doane, the wholesale grocery prince of the Windy r City, is allowed $3,000 for her clothes, and never has enough money in June to pay her traveling expenses to the family country house in Connecticut. When Amelie Rives was paid for "The Quick or the. Dead ?" she "got some- thing to wear," to use her own words, and the India silk night gowns, the crepe de cline dresses, the cloth uits and opera wraps and the model Worth toilet thut she had longed for all through her girlhood were purchased, together with the silk stockings, pretty boots and a few pieces of inexpensive jewelry, amounting in all to about $6,000. All the facts mentioned refer to the sweet, simple, womanly girls under the guid- ance and judgment of sensible, forceful mothers. Building. Be careful how you build. Let noth- ing go to form your character that will not make it better and stronger. Let each brick be an honest one, and let it be laid carefully, with an honest pur- pose to make of yourself a good, noble man or woman. If already poor mater- ial has entered into your character, seek divine help to remove it. Get out every bad piece, every worthless habit. You cannot aford to have only an ordinary, much less a weak, character. While building see that you build of first-class material. You can build but one char- acter in a lifetime, and it is to be yours for eternity e so make it the very best possible. But no character can be built of the best material unless we go to the Bible for it, nor built in the best way unless under the direction of •Jesus the Master -builder. Gathering your mater- ial from the word of God, laying every portion with the trowel of prayer and under the direction of Jesus, the great Master, your character will be one that will stand all trials, pass all tests, and remain through eternity well worth the lifetime it tbielt to build it. -Lightning struck the powder house of the Aebestoa company at Black Lake, Quebec, Wednesday, causing a great explosion and a loss of about $40,000. JOHN DORSEY'S CARRIAGE WORKS, 'SEAFORTH. JOHN DORSEY has now on hand a number of first class BUGGIES, which will be sold VERY CHEAP. These vehicles are of my own menu - fecture, are made from the very best materials, -of the beat workmanship and are guaranteed to give satisfaction. They wear longer, run easier and look better than the factory made buggies, and as they do not cost any more are the cheapest in the end. Also a nunther of first class COURTLAND CARTS, which are the nobbiest thing in the trade. See them. PLOW REPAIRS. I also keep on hand the following repairs for plows Hendry and Monroe's 3, 13 and 16. Hendry's No. 4, 9 and 10. Nlassey's No. 13. Seegmiller's No. 10, 26, 28 and 40. Also gang plow points for the dif• ferent makes. Farmers, when you require anything in hie line, call and see me. Horse -shoeing, Repairing and General Black smithing attended to as usual, 116E4,13 JOHN DORSEY, Seaforth. M. R. Counter, 9 EAFORTH, Has just added to his already mammoth stock a fine assortment of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Spectacles, Albums, Plush Goods, Fancy China, Pipes, etc., all of which having beenbought away down, will be sold for The Next 30 Days -AT JUST ABOUT - WHOLESALE PRICES. We are agents for and always keep on hand a stock from the following American Watch Manu- factories : Waltham, Elgin, Rockford, Aurora, Illinois, Hampden, Spring -field, Columbus, (N. Y. standard), Trenton, New Haven, Waterbury, &c. Also the bestanakes in English and Swiss. Our assortment of American, English and Can- adian Jewelry is now !al-0.er than ever, and con- sists of the newest and latest designs. Silverware in abundance from the following neted makers : Simpson, Hall, Miller 6z: Co., of New York and Montreal ; Reed & Barton, of Taunton, Mass.; Meriden Britannia, of Meriden, Conn., and .Hamilton, Ont., all of which a3re No. 1. The work department is complete in all its branches. Goods sold emzraved free of charge. Always a pleasure to show goods. Give us a call. . R. Counter Mr. Calvin Brice's beautiful yellow haired daughter could not keep herself in bon bons, driving gloves and station - MANAGER. FURNACES. . Jumz 27, 1890, FURNACES. Leading Coal and Wood Burning Furnaces. GARNET COAL FURNACE sizes -5. 6, 7 and 8 -Steel Radiators, portable. or brick set. n four 1 Wellington, Grey and Bruce; ; Gorse NOWII-. Passenger. Mixed. Ethel... - . .. 2.51 r. a. 9,31 Pas. 8.38 P.N. ' Brussel* 8.08 9.46 9.20 Bluevale 8.21 10.00 9.60 Wingham.... 3.30 10.10 11.10 Goma Sorra- Passenger. Mixed. Wingham.... - 6.39 A .N.11.10 A. M. 7.25 P. x ,Bluevale .. .. 6.48 11.22 7.66 Brussels 7.02* 11.46 8.65 Ethel.... .. .... 7.14 12.00 9.31 London, Huron and Bruce. GOING NORTH- Passenger. London, depart 7.55a.m. 4.36P3s Exeter 9.16 6.67 9.28 6.09 9.34 8.17 9.42 6.26 0:00 6.4 10.19 7.03 Blyth. . 10.28 7,12 Belgrave 10,42 7.27 Wingharn arrive 11.00 7.46 GOING SOUTH- Passenger. Wingham, depart 8.501.1r Belgrave 7.05 4.00 Blyth... - ... . ..... . . 7.18 4.16 Londesboro...... .... 7.26 4.25 Clinton 7.65 4.45 Brucefield 8.15 .6.04 8.24 5.12 8.32 5.19 8,50 6.33 . Hensall. .. THE ATLANTIC WOOD BLeld ANING IUPPen- .FURNACE in two sizesL-Nos. 43 and. 53. No. 43 - °intim-- - ...... ' - Londesboro Brueefl -.. takes wood 43 inches long, and No. 53 takes wood 53 inches long; Steel Radiators,iportable or brick set, has an EXTRA HEAVY FIRE BOX; is the inost POWERFUL HEATER, Economical, Strong, Durable Wood Furnace made.. These furnaces are put up under the supervision of a mechanic with an experience of 25 years in the f,:r- nace business, and -are gUaranteed to give good satisfaction every time. ESTIMATES FURNISITED. Kidd' s Hardware & Stove House, MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH. Kippen.. ....... Hensall Exeter Grand Trunk Railway, Trainsleave Seaforth and Clinton follows: GOING Witter- SEAPORTEC. Passenger .. .. 1.03 P. an Passenger... .. 9.10 P. 14. Mixed Train.. ...... 9.20 A. M. Mixed Train 6.15 P. M. GOING BAST - Passenger. .. 7.59 a. la, Passenger 2.43 p. M. Mixed Train,. 5.30 P Id. Freight Train.. .. 4.30 P. M. station CLINTON 1.20 le x 9.27P. 10.05 A.N. 6.40 7.43A. 2.25 P. 4.65 P. la 3.30r. Wall Papers, WINDOW SHADES, Baby Carriages, CARPET FELT, CHEAP THIS WEEK AT- Papst's Bookstore. Headquarters for Sporting goods, new' and second - hand Bicycles, Croquet, Foot Balls, Base Ball Goods, Lacrosse Sticks, Lawn Ten- nis, &c., at Papst's Bookstore, SEAFORTH. ALLAN LINE ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS, CHEAP EXCURSIONS TO EUROPE MONTREAL OR QUEBEC, TO DERRY OR LIVERPOOL. FIRST CABIN, $46, Single, $95 Return. RATES $46, 850 and V60 Single. $95, 8100 and $115 Return. according to location of Staterooms. Above rates do not apply to SS. PARISIAN, or June voyage of SARDINIAN. NO CATTLE CARRIED. INTERMEDIATE, $30. Return, $60. Steerage at lowest rates. Apply to H. & A.. ALLAN, Montreal, or C. BETHUNE or A. STRONG, Seaforth. 1108-52 Removed I Removed G- EJ 0 EJw.1\1- 0-, SEAFORTH, The Old Establisned Butebel has reraoved to sew premisee immediately opposite his Old Stand, Main Street, Seaforth, where he will be pleased to meet all his old patrons and as many • new ones as may see fit to favor him with their , patronage. grRemember the place, oetween Henderson' !Tamen Shop, and McIntyre s Shoe Store, Main Street, Seaford). 898 GEORGE EWING. Planing Mill,Lumber Yard AND -SAW MILL IN CONNECTION The subscriber would beg to call attention to the large stock of, dressed and undressed lumber which he alwaS-s keeps on hand, at the vPry lowest prices. Bill Stuffcut to any order on ShOrt Notice. Good Cedar cut into timber or posts. A good stoc4( of Hemlock Logs at Saw Mill, Lot 29, Concession 16, Grey, which will be cut to any order on shortest notice. Lumber delivered at reasonable rates when desired Orders by mail promptly tilled. Address BROOD-AGRI,: P. 0. Charles Querengesser, 1105 Concession 8, Logan 1 G. N. W. Telegraph Co. ESTABLISIIED 40 YEARS. Direct duplicate Wires to all principal points; offices everywhere; prompt and reliable service; connects with Western Union Telegraph Com- pany to all parts of United States, and Ns ith cables to all parts of the world; money orders by telegraph; use the best. CANADIAN EXPRESS CO. Offices at all railroad points; forward mer- chandise, money and packages of every.descrip- tion : collect notes, drafts; accounts, &c. Re- mitters of money enured against loss, and the charge for transmission is very low. Produce for merchandise requiring protection from heat or cold, will have our best attention. 1160 W. SOMERVILLE, Agent. THE BIC.: MILLS, SEAFt..RTH. The above mills have now been thoroughly built upon the complete HUNGARIAN ROLLER PROCESS. The Mill and Storehouse Buildings have been greatly enlarged, and new machinery applied throughout. THE LATEST IMPROVED ROLLS -AND- Flour Dressing Machines From the best Manufacturing Firms have been put in, and everything necessary added to enable her to turn out flour SECOND TO NONE In the Dominien. The facilit.es for receiving grain from farmers and for elevating and shipping have also (leen extensively improved. Grain can now ir taken from farmers' wagons, weighed, and loaded into oars at the rate of 700 bushels per hour, by the work of two men. A LARGE: FEED STONE -FOR----- OUSTOIV1 CHOPPING Has been put in, and the necessarY machinery for handling chop and coarse grains. A good shed has been erected, 8o that wagone can be unloaded and reloaded under cover. WHEAT EXCHANGES Promptly attended to., and FIRST-CLASS ROLLER FLOUR GUARANTEED. TISTOM EJEJD Chopped satisfactorily and without delay. ROLLER FLOUR, BRAN, SHORTS, And all kinds of CHOPPED FEED Constantly on hand. Highest Market Price Paid in Cash for any Quantity of Wheat. APPLE BARRELS -AND- FINE, COARSE AND LAND SALT FOR SALE. Only first-class and obliging men will be kepi attend custcmers. The liberal patronge of armers and general trade respectfully solicited. A. W. OGILVIE & CO., • PROPRIETORS he Most Snecessful Remedy ever disco wed, as it Is certain in its effects and does not blister. Read proof below. (MALL'S SPANN CURE OFFICE OF Queens A. SNYDER, Ibrsanaurt Cr..EvELAND BAT .4.ND TROTTING BEND HORSE% OBLidwo D, ILL., Nov. 20, 1888. ot. B. J. KENDALL CO. Dear Sirs: I have always purchased your Keg alPs Spada Cure by the half dozen hettles, rould lilts prices in larger quantity. I think IV no of the best liniments on earth. r have usedi a my stables for three yews.. Yours truly, Crux. A. 8NTDP2a. (ENDALL'S SPAWN CURE BROOELT/C, N. Y., November 3, 1938. tr. B. X. KENDALL CO. Dear Sirs :1 desire to give yen testimonial of in ood opinion of your Eendall's Spavin Cure. I hal sed It tor Lameness, Stiff Joints azt 'paving, and 1 have found it a sure cure, I eor4 Up recommend it to allhorsemen. Yourstruly,_ A. IL GILBERT. 'tanager Troy Laundry Stablei (UDALL'S SPAVIN CURE I3A/PP, WINTON Cowin', Onto, Dec. 19, ISM en. B. J. KENDALL Co Gents: I feel it my duty to say what / have dos rith your Kendall's Spavin Cure. I have cure wenty-ilve horses that had SpnvIng, ten 4 tins Boum, nine afflicted with Big Head an even of Big Jaw. Since I have had one of yo* ooks and followed the directions. I have neve )6N. ease of any kind. Yours truly, AM:1mm TURNER, Horse Doctoi KENDALL'S SPANN - CURE Price ill per bottle, or six bottles for $5. All Drug ists havelt or calk get it for you, er it will be sea 3 any address on receipt of price by the propri 3rs. Ds. B. J. KENDALL CO., Erroaburgh Falls, Vt t OLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS The Great English Prescription CuresWeakness,Spermatorrhe Emissions, Impotency and all diseases caused by self-abuse or indiscretion. One package 81, eirypizsiAii $6, by mail. Write for firms pamphlet. EUREKA CIIRMiCAL Co., Detroit, Mich. For sale by LUMSDEN & WILSON, Chemists & Druggists, Seaforth, Ont. OTEM -or-- 4.1111Nis HEALTIf 01\TT_A_MO Mutual Live Stock i INSURANCE CO. Head Office: Seaforth. THE ONLY Live Stock Insurance Company in Ontario having a Government Deposit and being duly licensed by the same. Are now carrying on the businese of Live Stock insur- ance and solicit the patronageof the importers and breeders of the Province. For further particulars address JOHN AVERY, Sec.-Treas. 1164 THE. HAY TOWNSHTP Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance Company._ Acpurely Farmers' Company. Live Stock also insured when in the fields or on the road in charge of owner or servant. Also manufacturer of the Improved Surprise Washer AND WRINGER MACHINES. Agen for TOMBSTONES and the WATSON COMPANY'S iMPL TV11\1"11'S_ iirRDERTAKING promptly attended to a moderate rates. G. HOLTZMAN, Zurich., 1119, PEN NYUYAL WAFERS used monfhjyby over 10.000 ladies; are safe, pieasan sure in effect; a lady's greatest frien at home or abroad; $1 per box by mall or from. druggist. Sealed particulars 2c stamp. Address EUREKA CHEMICAL L, DETROIT, MICR. Sold by LTIMSDEN & WILSON, Chemists and Druggist; Seaforth Ont, 1121-D2 Rheumatism. 1154-52.j 0 CD 0 I cp 0 1 -11. -Cg z P a -a • 0 1.ril 0 -1-E bq CD P CD P al° 1-16 P cD 1-1- Pj P2. 0 (D CD ii•N 141 0 1- 1-31-bagi-1 C.2 0 It CD 0 cio, a4 CD Ip pa P 0 o a • usi c -P• f:J CD 471 Cf2 „ED° is act p ct- -- 1:744:1 CD CD CD Ft" CD P.a CD ONIB set Halsted 8c Scott, )3.A_1\TICM1R.S, Josephine street, Winghara,Ont J. A. HALSTED, Mount Forest. J. W. SCOTT, Listowel. Deposits received and Interest al, lowed. Moner advanced to Farmers and Bu nese Men, On long or short time, on endorsed notes 04 collateral security. Sale notes bought at a lair valuation. Money remitted to all parts of Canada at reasonable charges. Special Attention given to collecting Notes and Accounts. Agents in Canada -The Merchants - Bank of Canada. Office hours -From 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. A. E. SMI2H, Agent. 1164-52 THE FARMERS/ Banking House, SPCM,T3E3_ (In connection with the Bank of Montreal.) LOGAN lk CO., BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENTS. Now in heir own premises on Market Silva Seaforth, opposite A. Strong's offioe. General Banking Business done, drafts isiled and earthed. Interest allowed on deposits. MONEY TO LEND On good notes or mortgagee. JOHN WEIR. WM. LOGAN. 1058 ALan, Mae Star and Inmau United States &Royal Mail Atlantic Steamships. Cabins, $50 to 5100; Retun, 8100 to tr/00, Intermediate, $30, return ie. Steerage, .041, return $40. All classes of passage to and 1r4 's all points in Great Britiain to any point 1 Canada. If you are sending for your friends d not fail to secure one of our prepaid tickets - dear through and avoid all trouble, Canadian Pacific Railway and Steamship Tickets to all points. Special rates to laarritobit and Pacific Coast points. Through sleeper/ secured free. Best connection to all point/k1 the United States, Australia and China. Reid agency for the best stock and mutual insurance companies. Money loaned on all classes of security at lowest rates of interest. No trouble to give inforrnation. Real estate and Immo" 0 ee-MARKET ST. Ticket, Steamboat, And Telezraph Oftlee.-MAIN I. A. STRONG, "The ' Agent, 1 ARAFOIM/14 SUNS .-------- Mies nixv.hi vr.03 ,, Al 471Tittehe Taiii bor ten t i.isistbibtanhnueeetateldeoi nivirfirvfav faaextidurr 1:hieryt Beals s;:rii 43heinpisve areStudhadhggegve:.anrini,Ineol nidhsvt .°1;:yhaultt:rsh: uhe:oeyee:dusilis:(1ill ta rt aslitinot3itallaciknerwEirsbai-en:addhcAseta:. and- aewineccirtk$Sis li: eli.f3htyoleilart: 1 pehtoeberrsr:onstuahierillifr! itents. For Berne the Preside' B. sauger, the whole dl 43gaxeaearnsauVitirvi.teilmi dlyirEgteadrattil -White lion When thi throwing as mistakable , - she room. terI of The4 Miss Sanger writing y7ptetieriskn friendani yfet, 1 and passes t wer herself Otweh rse.rwise SI Sanger, whs : th.e desired ' so that ther Then the; stilecerbetaegrgng yiri tells the gis sts:ace,or -1 us,..7 a rheumatis to the requ whole histo by which Miss Sange ----)rwd Acco for her rhe in "yea" or 16 ter, and in White Ho "Mrs. 11 she is ver but there charity, etp A signa to -day be in the Uni quarters of through th gathers up the office a between t Halford's aDEIVe113. It is za more about any one exc ford, and f the opening one besides president's She is th woman, a Mrs. Ha r faience. was born yoars ago. dianapolis was there a fifteen she school, and the follow was traffic read, met and the yo study type She wrote -taking cour Miller'of MillerAL El a stenogrop and was th Harrison w dency, the other s his work; ation Mr. Tison ho there until dent gave h traveled a additio stenograph a "Oultured :111CotaCvnirt'u:obTfee° Thes s ill; sion 2. Jo hotel, Dahl O the roll, cession 4 ; supporters -clerk the siesnice":;i°1 eitxdit8 ion 9; Mr east sio14;eelktenerrataiaellotlik8;41: 11! ro2r; ez i hoe ,°:e°ii Alex: iletnet II:coil a lecna'n tle concession 80n, north Downey, o ed revised