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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1896-03-13, Page 3$1#500;00 S1,500.000. SEAFOUTIL f the United States. , available in all part* ivances made on sett red at highest eurren June and December. deposit. 'FARCE,; Agent. _.....— eviniwieneaaseseseranse et II - !1e+ yr 11 the r all Affec Q .e- Thr ` & z.t e. ... .. tps for fall wear r and negidge wear.. +of coats, umbrellas season. right pr es, " entire( 00t,— chla its cls or ' Ijai E1 FORTI t.tention to t d OoiEe Everythin rnal• School rf Principal. very realct, and Funeral Director 'office. • MARC 13, 1896. IMPORT NT NOTICES. minion and Provincial Lan er of theAssooiation of Untied , Ontario. 1388.52 TO LOAN-: To loan on fa ortgage, township funds. A AY, Treasurer, Tuokeremit 1462•tf i. MCKENNA, 1 40 4 Surveyor, Meru fAnd8urveyors, Du 1wNSHIP FUND property, first �to JAl+E3 MUR aeaII P. 0. O`fTALLION FOR 8 7 stallion, .• Wilde revenient of stock e J. BERRY, Henes ARM TO RENT.- ItVICE. — The standard be d Lee," will stand for the i his owner's stable in Hens 1. • 1457 - -To rent a 200 acre farm,. miles from Winham, with first-class buldln_ s, and well watered. It is all in pasture, and ie an =x- er farming or pasturtug eat e. ceilent obance for cit For particulars, appl TORN BEATTIE, on Court, County ♦eyancer, Land, Loan invested and to ; Ivens' store, Main et 300 Priva $ 500 rates o $ 700 borrow $1,000 pleted $1,500 within $2,500 S.1IAY 'VARY TO RENT. Lot 6, Conces acres, nearly all ole and 10 acres of fall class condition. Th house and three goo the back of the farm yarhere there is store= and poet office. Wil None but responsibl JAMES SNELL, C cession 6, Mullett. to Box 126, Wingham. 147 Ark •+f the Seoond Divisi ommiseioner, of Huron, and Ineuranee ABent. b' e. Office—Over ,Sharp eet, Seaforth. 1 funds to loan at low interest in sums to s re. Loans can be co and money advanc wo days. Apply to Barrister, &o., S eafor 125 To: rent for a term of 6 ye ion 7, Huilett, containing ed. There are 40 acres plo heat. The land is all in fl re Is a good bank barn, g wells. A creek .runs. thro It is near the village of Kinb blacksmith shop, school; chu be rented on reasonable ter parties need apply. Appl nstance P. 0., or on Lot 10, 147n f n- de it cd h. rs 00 ed t- od gh rn, ch s.' to on, 4 COUNTRY STOR country store' the post office sto stories, and dwellin and kitchen 14x22 veniences; store h driving shed. The separately to suit p as the proprietor Is apply to JOHN LE FOR SALE.—For• Bale, a : •d i the village of Blake, know as e ; frame building 40x22, wo attached : five rooms over et re, Rachel', with all necessary on• use 40x22, and good stabling nd shove will be sold in one lo or rchaser, and will be sold oh ap, in poor health. For particul' rs, LIE, Blake P. O. 147E 4 STO$ K FOR SALE. BULLS FOR SA .E.—The undersigned has for sale two thoroug • bred Durham Bulls, 18 months old. Ile also has • r sale White. Penned Seed .Oats. Apply on Lot 24, a nceeefon 8. Hibbert, or to JOHN FELL, Staffa P. 0 1470x4 +HOROUGHBR two Thoroug pedigree, one red one year old ve cheap. APply 0 address THOS. C D BULLS FOR SALE.—For sale bred Short Horn Bulls, registered. and the other white, and about superior animals, and will be sold Lot 30, Conoesion 5. Usborne, or DM0;4.E, Lumley P. 0. ` 1489 •tf -IMPORTED a .'AVY DRAUGHT STALLLION FOR SALE.—The 'ndersigned offers for -sale the Im- ported Olydesdal: Stallion, " Springfield Darn ey." This horse has +roved himself an excellent stock getter, and is a s sample of his breed. Will rent him out for the Season to good, reliable nan. Apply en Lot 16 Concession a, Tuokeremith, o ad• dress Kippen po;t office. If not sold or rented, will be travelled on the tout° as last season.—J. Mc. GREGOR. j 1473 '2. DIGS FOR S undersigne shires,has for sal also keep for ser chased from Mr. —•81 payable at t of returning if n DORRANCE, Lo forth P. 0. LE AND FOR SERVICE. The breeder of Large English erk- boars and sows in farrow. H: will `ce the stook boar Gladstone, pur- eore Green, of Fairview. Tt,rnls, e tinhe of service with the pHs liege emery, if booked $1.50. J = MES 26, ,Concession 6, McKillop, Sea - 146"•52 TOCK AND sale, six gr n50 up ; a few g. a number of go • short -horn Cows easy terns ; aI- Gate, grown fro 189—price 40e p also White Pala Prussian Blue grain and clean Ontario. Howthe Kidneys T They haye a tan nage oftheir own Kindeys cant talk, but if yo them rightly yon will ',hear They have a 1 nguage of their is how they peak to you; strain, ride far, walktoo m hard and res too little; the aches, and yo bead aches, all over. Oh ! yon say, -it's because I Now, this isn't', true. It's kidneys are tired. They can only do just so. • lifting, s ooping; straining or retarded heir action; The "heart has puma them faster than they c filter is overtaxed and They cry for assistance i toms that follow. • There is dull headao in various parts of, the b urine, h gh collred urine, p the eyes swelling of the leg other co ditionti that go witl orders. Why' o the kidneys thus troubles n language so plain mistaka la? So th You may be warned you hee the warnings? If so, on will use Doan's Nothing starts the kidney quickly.' R member " Doan original ki ey pill, the kidney . i11; and the pill y full con f de ea to cure you SEED GRAIN FOR SALE. For nd young Short -Horn Bulls, from od sound young working le ries ; d steers and milch cows ; also a few and Heifers, which I will s = 11 on a quantity of Black Tar = rian seed imported from Scotia d in r bushel, or 35c in ten bushes lots ; d and Banner Oats at 30o ; else, este at 60c per bushel, all good nd pure. DAVID MILNE, ' thee, 470 BO = • S FOR SERVICE. lei nAMWORTH ,:OAR FOR SERV10E.—The j sfgned will keep for eprviee, at the Bru Cheese Factory a thoroughbred Tamworth with registered ;digree: Terms, $1 ; paya time of service bia pprrlIvil a of returning if , gory. HUGH M.0ARTNE , Brucefield. 14 a d n't treat fro them. wn, and this ou ch, yc nd m eca uo sac edthe b >uld • iter betel.. es n the ma e, ba kac dy, s►a1d ffin a nder- efield Boar, le • at aces- 5-tf UCTION SALE. . TI1RESGRVE• AUCTION SALE OF y STOCK. r. Thomas Brown has be -etruetod by Mr, a eery R. Henderson to sell b lie auction on Lo 23, Concession 4, township Iiillop, on Mond -y, March 18th, at 1 o'clock p. m., - sharp, the follow ng valuable property : Hor: s.-1 driving horse 8 a ears old ; 'mare 6 years cld, 'n foal to Crystal City ; 1 mare 11 years old, in foal to Crystal City ;1 lily rising 2 years old, sired by Stone Clover: Cattle. Five cows in calf, 1 newly calved cow,1 fat heifer 3 steers rising 2 years old, 3 • eifers rising 2 years of • , 4 yearling calves, 1 'suokin,_ calf, 12- goodewes e nth lamb, 1 ram, 1 brood so with litter at foot, an 6 pigs 3 months old. Also , gaan- tity of first -plass hay and about 6 tons of stra in the Barn, all of ohne • will be sold without res: rve, ae the proprietor . as rented bis farm for a erm of }ears. Terms •f Sale.—Hay and straw, c :h ; all sums of $5 and nder, cash ; over that amo nt nine months' credit itt be given on furnishing a, proved joint notes. A d scount o1 8 per cent. per annum will be allowe • .for cash on all credit a iounts. HENRY R. Ha NDERSON, Proprietor ; THOMAS BROWN, Audi neer. 1473-2 ARM n, in - pub. f Mc - Id ell as int Hi e." .Os n F stoop 'or work too am back. you ache ired ons, BO your and the ting has ood into it. The clogged. • y symp- e, pains g of the ss under d all the ey dis- on their o be nu - e. Will ney Pills, rking so +It is the reliable an place . r sale by 1 . 11 $EA.VRTH OARRIA The est B aggies an My stem of Carr ages is very co made, under our ,own supervision. h es, when you ea eap, if not ohea itside towns. up rival towns i do better' at ho ed. - I factory -to de bugg at home, and as ct brought in from o{ money in building) own, when you ear me and be tonin All kinds of blas and satisfactorily A full stock of + latest stylee, whie :smithing and r one. utters on the 1 will be Bold the ■ Lewis Mc SEAFORTI E ORKS, Wagons THE Au RON EX The St That Makes Mer. Rev. Char es H. Parkhurt, D. D., in the Ladies' Hom Journal for February, gives ! some forcibl epigrams. He says I have watohect a; good 'many brooding hens, but I never saw one facilitate the. hatching process by pecking the shell. The chick the inside will get out if he is worth' it. - , , More men are in: ured b3, having things made easy f r them than by . having their path beset 'th difficulties,for it encourages them to stn themselves on cireuniata gce8, whereas their supreme reliance needs to be on their own personal stuff. The less a young man talks about luck an 1 untowarness of circumstances, and the coq ettiahnees of popular' . favor, and the lik , the be iter for him and for the world t� wh ch he owes himself. Every man will ,have all the power he earns, and the power that he has will tell, not because people like. it or like h'm, but because it is power. - Personal re8sure can no more be hooted down, or v + tad down, or argued out ot ett- istence, th can the. push of the wind er the pull of he moon, If you weigh a ton 3 ou will ex rt a ton's pressure. There is . robably such a. thing as genius, although inety-nine hundredths of it is doubtless t . e name which lazy people give to the resu is which others l have earned by hard work in those hours when the lazy people the selves were either sleeping or ' wishing th - y could gain it without toiling for it. There is acuity en :ugh in almost any- body to be ome a gen us if :only all that fac- ulty were 1 mped. We are ore likely to find a good destiny by going a oot than b' riding. The wor d cares very , little for experts, and the co ree of everts is only infinitesim- ally deter ined by them. Sowing : till antedates reaping, and the amount so ed deterniines retty closely the size of the harvest. j; Empty urns in Octobe are the logical,: sequence o empty furrow in the spring. The youn man may as we 1 understand that there are o gratuities in this life, and that success is ever reached ";across lots." plea) ; all hand on' tbuy foreign get better made r than the work . by spend your and injure your ie. Call and eve pairing promptly eet material and ip. nald, 1430 TTNRESERV AUCTION SALE OF FARM L STOCK A D IMPLEMENTS.—Mr. J. F . Brine has been lustr cted by Mr. David Dorranc., towelI by public aucti n, on Lot 29, Concession 1, •' eKillop, on Tuesday, M ch 17, 1896, at 1 o'clock p.n . sharp, the following v 'able property, viz,: Hor es -One span of aged m res. Cattle—Six cows sup • • sed to be in calf to a horoughbred bull, and near calving ; 4 yearling calx s, 3 steers rising 2 years Imple- rnente—One lu ber wagon, one pair bobslo gin, one jumper, 1 cutt r, 1 buggy, 1 sulky rake, 1 roller, 1 gang plow, 1 w oden plow, 1 seullter, 1 c Itivator, 1 pair iron harr ws, 1 wagon rack, -1 tenni • g Mill, 1 corn marker, 1 et double harness, 1 set si gle' har- twee, 1 string o belle, 1 leather fly net, grai • cradles, scythes, forks, hales, saws, 2 milk cans, •sled and dishes, one chu n, 3 ladders, 100 hens and roosters, and other artic es tuo numerous to mention All the above will be and without reserve, as the , roprietor has sold his far •• - Terms of Sale—All sums of $5 and cinder, cash ; • ver that amount 9 months' rodit will be given on fu nishing approved joint note:. A dis- count of five a nts on the dollar will be al owed for cash on all er dit amounts. DAVID DO RANCE,'' proprietor ; J In BRINE, auctioneer. 1472-3 TNRESER1 l.J Farm S and Houeehol William McCI • La elie, to eel adjoining Sea 1896, at 12 o'o able propert ED AUCTION SALE', 0 oak, High Bred Horsed, I Furniture.—Messrs. J. P. y have been instrueted by M by public auction on his orth, on WEDNESDAY, M ck, noon, sharp, the none ,. : HORSES.—One span o horses, 2 broo mares by old Clear Grit, o on March 28'h, sire of foal, Tarentum ; mare rising 6 ; 1 carriage mare rising n ; gelding rising 4; 1 carriage mare rising 4 ; gelding, risin' 2, by Young Sidney 1 gelding rising 2, by Young Sidney ; 1 yearl titer foal, by arentum—all the above your have dams by old Clear Grit ; 1 brown mar bred by A. I. Moore, Pennsylvania, dam :20;, by Ha"py Medium, sire Albert H., Wilkes ; 1 ro dster stallion, Tarentum, ri Grey Stone, b Iutwood, dam by Hambrin sister, Diversi n, got a mark of 2:191 at 4 y a fell brother Prince Ellwood, a mark of veers old. BATTLE.—Eleven cows, sem others will ca ve before the 10th of April rising 4, near y fat ; 1 steer rising 3 ; 3 ate 2; 1 heifer ri ing 2; 1 yearling steer ; 1 t bred Berkshire boar, 10 months' old, and 1;t bred Berkshi e sow, both registered ; also hens and son e pure bred 1Jronze turkeys. MENTS, Ete. One Brantford binder, 3 gen pose plows, 1 gang plow, 1 Strader spade Patterson bi • der in good working order for clover or gra n ; 1 Massey inower, I pea ha broad tooth o Itivator, 2 lumber wagons, 1 sleighs, 1 wh 'eibarrow, 1 fanning mill,Clint new ; 1 grin. stone, 1 steel land roller, 1 se new ; 1 8 -ho : e power, abo t 30 rods of wov 1 -top buggy, eather `top ; 4 road cart, 1 cart, 1 track :sulky, 1 cutter1 trotting sleig punier, 1 s gar kettle, toughs for H=ate mixing feed, also about 10 ns of hay in t and 10 tons •f straw, a few iundred bushels m nips, Garro . and ango ds ; also a qu household fu each as spad —There will viousty sold, excellent I: under cultiv= ne'.v bank 1 heath ; sten, in;; shed, els, This excetle has a half m vonneetien. Iv be sold TERMS.—Al amount 8 m• approved jo annum will For terms premises or LAPSLIE, P CLOY, Auct. FARM, iplements rine and Thomas arny, just RCH 18, ing vain - working e to foal 1 driving carriage 1 driving are and 1 ng road - g horses rising 4, Camille, by Red ing 4, by. his fail ars old ;24 at 5 calved,. 2 steers'' re rinsing, oro; igh orough. bot 76 IM LE. ral spurt arrow, 1 cu ting vest r, 1 air oh n make, scales, n wire, reeking , 1 root and for e Minn of tur- ntit~ of niture and a dumber of small articles s, shovels, soythes, etc. THE FARM. leo be sold on day o! sale, if . ot pre - the farm, which contains 100 Cres of d, well drained, well fenced and all tion ; there is a good brick ho se and arn, 60x70, with good stablin. under - pig pen and hen house and go • d driv- a good orchard and plenty o .water t farm adjoins the town of Seaf • rth end le race track on it ; the only rack in. ith the town. The above will • ositive• as the proprietor is going ou . West. sums of $5 and under, cash ; o rer that nths' credit will be given on to nishing nt notes. A discount of 7 per ee rt. per e allowed for cash on credit a omits. od particulars of farm apply on the o the proprietor, Seaforth P.Q. THOS. oprietor ; J. P. BRINE and W . Me- oneers 1 72 -td' UN Eli OATH. The olio ing testi. mony 1 rtes. flargaret Patter on, iven under oath 'b for W. F. Wal- ker, o ry Public, marks the most won- derful cur in the his- tory o an medicine: "Fo s years I afflic d tism a d� gra in t times I a much pain from violent he doe order to stop same, and upo th physician, I had a numb r p extracted, without deriving y a " In May, 1894, I had a pa aly the left side of y body • this was the total loss of sight of he 1e t e both ears, violent headaches sev great' weakness. I became tal do any work about the hose, safe to be left alone on account of and general weakness. "I consulted fo diferenf attended me, and they tol would do what the could, never become well gain. "About two months'. ago medicine being put up by M M.P., of this city, and now kn Cure, and am now taking the such medicine. or seven as badly ith rheuma- vere neural - head. At •ered very es, and in advice of a my tenth vantage. is stroke in followed by e, beading of re fits, and y unable to nd was not y (lis z£nes8 clans, who that they at I would • • ph m tit it be: • n using the S.:. Ryckman, rwn as Kootenay fou th bottle of "Before I finishedthe firsbbott e I noticed a great improvement in my von • ` ion. I have now received the use of my eye: ight, the nee of my hearing, and the use •f y limbs and body, the headache has compl tel disappeared, and - my strength has co ,a• e • ack almost completely, and, in fact, tho gh 2 years Old, I feel almost a new woman. -. • Ma caret Patterson, 91 Vine Street, H, •' •n, Ont, SEAFOR HANDLE H I will do all kinds of T rni short notice, and I will d. it can be done. I will pay a No. 1 White Ash. Give me JOHN KLEI , .eaforlth. RK ( SiTO1 ,. COLD W ATHER HOGPEN It Is Cheap, E411y Made and ThorO22ghly W m" and Snug. A Minneso correspondent of The Rural New Y rker has built a hgpen which he cons ders the model for a re- gion where the winters are cold. le1e de- scribes it as fo lows : for• a he ena c aInbuildingOgs, p 8 few days since I bit upon a plan gvhich I have never s en described elsec4here. The walls are ode by tacking ta ' felt, well lapped, o each side of thej by 4 studding. Ove the paper are nails, inch boards of a oh p grade, as close together as practicable, thus making a de d air space in the w 11. The roof is tre ed i'i the same way, and both walls a roof are shingled utside, over the , bards. The side Wall are only S> fee high, and the roof bas only a very m Berate Y Lawman. ails Menai Ana w.. A Dave neem $ Mead Mau bit few D Agnew's Curs ger the Dear:. The w le trend of present day liv- ing ix 4 the . direction of 'the 'grave. . Where ur fathers lived so that they might p long life, th people sof the present day live so hat they may shorten It. It is all hurry, butiry, aane= the 'result in that -a large perde}� a8 the ! men- and women on the stage of. life to -day, are ove'r'working what at any t1m , and under any circumstan- ces,' Is he hardest worked organ of the Ibod —the heart.- So long as people will persist In this method, the best thing they can do is to keep a remedy like Dr. Agne'w's Cure for the Heart ,close by. This - remedy is a heart re- medy oily, but Is a,linost miraculous, in its effects. In all case's of organic' or sympathetic heart ' disease relief is secured II within thirty • minutes, and there are scores and humdreds of peo- ple in Canada who testify that had It not been for the . prompt use of this medicine they avould have been in their graves to -day, - Sold by ],. V. Fear and Lumsden & Wilson. • Church Entertainment vs• Church Ministry. Dr. Ian Maclaren, the famous English preacher and writer, recently remt.rked on the mistaken idea which many churches seem to fold—that if they can only get the people td come and sit in the pews, they have successfully solved the problem of popular 'attendance, no matter - what - the people cgme for, or how much the religious service May be diluted. What do full sit- tings and hundreds turned away amount to, e asked if they do not' get the gospel of hrist fter they come ? Upon this the Mid-Con,tiiient remarks : " That is the question hat is our idea of a church ser- vice ? at do we give the people after we get the there ? Is it their entertainment we are a ter ? And shall an evening of song be ;ponsidered the mission of the gospel ? Or, in 1 imit tion of the King Nebuchadnezzar sh.11 we give the people " the sound of the coijnet, u-te, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dul- cimer, a d all kinds of music," with a " ten minute address. " apologetically sandwiched in among he classical and artistic " rendi- ti ns ?" r, is it an evening's intellectual 'en ertaiiiment—the discussion of questions of literal re and art or civic problems and sociology Or shall we '" reach the masses " b3; taking to the low plane of vivid sensa- tionalisin nd waggery in the pulpit ? It is not altogether difficult to get an audience. But getting an audience is not an' end in it- self and can never be the seal of one's minis- try. The, question is what does the peach= er do ! wlIith the audience after he gets it ? Are th pleople giving their attendance for that ahl is not bread, and their eager lis- teningfo that which satisfiethnot s IVE AaL TO PERFECT IIEA.LTI 3. g to or er on cheap as it ood pri a for a call add see, 1460-tf To. Farmers Several kinds of wire fen he market, none of which ha °factory ; but in planing beto CHAMPION STAY we do so confidently, believin coine all of the objections against wire fences in the pas. any desired number of galvan at a suitable distance apart; u • oil two half-inch half -round steel bars of the wires, with groove bet the wires, and bolted with fo firnily together and preventin ing up or down. It le also ar of heat and cold in expandin wires are thoroughly control] the fence can be kept taut at All we ask is an examinatio are satisfied you will deoide it lectured by EDWARD LIT Dublin P. R. B. SCOTT, Se for the sale of Oo ship rights. - 8 ha e pr e y. IRE th tha . I zed ' een bo th ung: an' d b. 11 se of i has fo anada. e been pl • van entir u our FENCE, . t we have over - have been raised is composed of teel wires, placed hich are placed one on eaob side to fit tightly on to holding them wires from slid - d that the actions contracting the tighteners, and one of the year. merits, and we • o equal. Manu- ced on ly sat- nt rg warm pitch, so th in the midd alley, 4 feet ter, with fo side, the b in size. warm and d feature is t are placed i made so t used in wi second sash maining sit best of vent two advant ges : The light an .a are. both 4dmitted where n ing as light as da' le low, resulting i the least possible i<rm a building wo' r' many of your re e lighting will se CO., t. th, Is agent and Town - 1459 Karn Organ Comp What we say f Our success d monstratee done on a fair, eq re basis, an There's a reason for us co greatest share of t de, Neve eo complete u it 1 now. No at the prices we n and will ; choice of so fine a line of 1 square or upright ianee, or 1 organs. All new organs nd pianos w of seven years. What can be ore liberal, Bale than to buy a HAAN. 1429 & Piano ny. true, and nows it. that businees oan be be suocesAful. gettilig the hat our mastery been her concern oan sell one oan give yen the ruments Ss ours, in ✓ church or parlor ranted for the term o• re induoive, more ney, CUSTOM S get the same don at the New cessios 9, McKi lop. Terms LOCKHART, Ma er. WING, Cut ea m Sawing eon ill, lot 32, con - le. JAMES 1472-4 bt, nee South American Kidney ei cure. Ph r vt.rae-e man or woman, cannot trifle' nth that slight pain ' in the back t a t may be thought 'only a re- sult of cold. More than likely it is the ,,fa. ning n,ote that li-Adney trouble has talicen hold of the system'. It 13 simply amazing the extent to -vs h ch kidney disease is common in Canada. The leen e man will , take time by the foreloc , and in using Scutt' ..arrierfean Kidney Cure drive the disea.se freni tunatel if it IS too late to do this, thl'i With t4 -,e worst case, of kidney dit--.,,,e ea. It 41 another instanoe of doing rnly one th ng. but doing it well. South ela.I ' , but no other remedy can meet tt its carn ground. Sold y I. V. Fear and Lumsden & Wilson., • Never Gave Up. Fran is Willard is making a journey throu the South. She writes to the Unio Signal. "In Nashville I had , the honor f a call from Miss Jane Thomas', a woman of independent means and noble hara , er, who is in her 96th year, and who M.' he goes en the street cars by herself declals she ' feels as young as she did at for mtles, makes bridal pincushions thati ex- haust itewelve papers of pins, makes famous rag abllies for the little ones, and has a fame 'in all this region •for her intelligence and ngenuity. She is a devoted white- ribbo Sr, and attributes her life-long good healt 1 and bright spirits to the fact that she nerer thinks of herself." Timor, RECTXR AND CURATE. CONY ' NIENT PIG t the height above e is only about 9 Wide, runs through r 8 by 10 feet pen Iding being 24 • is construction y bui ding, but tel e sky ight windo the roof. The f at double windo ter, while in su an be removed,. a raised so as to lation. These win si building ti walls naay building- at coUrse so ve the plan o The illus the buildin sides of the If lit be des yards face may be use and an elle a single ro These 1 Three Reeleslastlei Dave Rath. Sloth's. Cordial Words la Paler of Itx. Agnew's Catarrhal. Powder. . One of the most cordial endorse. merit of. the curative powers of Dr. Ag-new's Catarrhal Powder haat come from the Etishop of Toronto. But he lhas -not stood alone in his pralse of this snedicine. He was folloWed by mien Ike the Rev. John Langtry and Cnret., falling into line with the Gwyn e, assisiant pastor a St. i'-et- er's hurch, Hamilton, has been Otic: of the -latest to endorse this wonderful catarr , and is the current panacea for Bnekw The by grain are w meal where chased -in Let us stud buokwheat shown in t TABLE SRO IN ONE HOTS 01' W ration gives a cle and yards attac building face east red to have all the outh, the same co y along the north of pens south of EST. t e floor et. An e C.311 - each p2 feet n ores a eculiar s, which axles are a be srterythe d the re- edure the ows have sunshine ec ed, the et the a warm cost. ' Of 18 no be dors, but t em r ide eld. t eat Byproducts as roducts of the b 11 worthy of study er this food stuff c the nutrients co bran and shorts. e following table : WINTER CARE- OF FARM H ?RSE$. Sive Hay at Night, Other Food Morning and Noon. The best winter . care for far horses has long been a study ev'th m t, and. in its Pursuit I have invest: ated t e meth - oda of many stables. I go nay boat hints from the superintendents of t e stables in New York where ,the horse 'used: by the various express comp hies re kept. The horse has no large st mac like the launch of ruminants'; hence bulky feed, like bay and grass, must be ta en grad- ually—that is, a portion must be taken and digested before more can b - taken - to advantage. To distend the s omach with hay,, especially dusty hay, is to taut the horse into ,the worst possi le condi- tion for fast or hard `work. N tiling so predisposes to heaves or broke Wind as to stuff a -horse with hay and then work him hard, though why it is I have never been able to determine; yet that is a fact I have proved by wide' observation. To best meet the conditions, then, I feed such an amount of hay at night as ex- perience shows will be eaten Glean, bet fore morning. If any horse has any left in the morning, it is taken out,: and the mangers are brushed clean. Clain is then fed and again at•noon,' but no more hay is fed until night. By this means the horses call eat and digest the necessary amount of hay whilelthey are quiet in their stalls, but while! at work during the day th y are not iicon'ven- ienced by having he stomach isteiided with it. After se eral years' tial I am convinced that h rses keep healthier and in better con ition, at less expense for grain, by thi method of feeding than by the old fa hioned way of cortin - nal stuffing with h 7. The best arranged stables have the hay manger Made with a rack bottom; through which' any dirt or dust that may be mixed with the hay will drop tote floor. When thus con- structed, thegain manger is made sep- arately and se arranged with; slats or wire netting that the horse cannot easily move bis head';to one side aid slabber oats on the floor. With a little intelli- gent care in the management there is no reason why the fare horse should not be the healthiest and the loijgest lived horse we have.—Ho ee World. `G THE DIGESTIBLE N RED FOUNDS OF TH EAT AND BUOICWHEA Carb Pounds. Pound Wheat bran , 12.6 44.1 I regard ably ot s On th oth ,buck heat is ver eleme meal • corn i of he d west. ens and truction g south e, with e alley. ed. kwheat y stock - h be par- te price. ained in This is TRTMENTS BYPHOD- s. Fat. 2.9 13.2 pure buckwheat hulls as much as good w pat chaff. r hand, that portion of the ernel just inside the bull building al to oil- s high as rich in proteio. (muscl ts) d fat; almost eq n the former and about thei latter. —Breeder's iGazette. A. Famous. Horse. Here isla picture .of Pilot odium, the great trotting sire that br thed his last at Battle Creek, Mich.1 early in January. ge was the sire of 4 animals of both sekea that could gcl, heir mile in 2 :30 or !less. Five of thel were pa - was one of the fastest. The history ofil this horse artakes of romance, it a ho se'a history 4 n ever do PILOT MEDIUM. farm of lexander Davison o Williams- burg, Pa. When a colt, h met with an accide t that crippled hi . Besides that his wner characteriz him as a scrub in blood. yer of attle Creek,' W lter Clark, bought un for $175. It sj said that afterw Mr. Clark refu ell $65,000 for him putting a value of 00,000 on him. I well might be, sin e Pilot Me- 4ium a sire made Mr. lark rich. Mr. 01 kept Pilot Med-u till the horse . Perhaps it starte a hoodoo when he refused the offer of 65,000. About fella. The United States gricultura depart meat finds that alfa a does fai tt wel better in the we t an southwest Crimr son clover seem to be the subs itute la the northern an eastern states. Some o the agricultural department's Rugg° tions as to growing and feeding alfalf are these : Alfalfa does not attain Maturity untill the third or fourth year ;I therefore dre not sow it expecting to get the best re -e sults in less than that time. For a hay crop sow 20 to 30 pon de of seed per acre. - For a crop of seed sow 14 t 18 pon s per acre. molter Do not plant alfalfa in The roots go down deeper th n those the fruit trees, and the latter will m no growth, if indeed they are not '1 ed by the alfalfa. ; or sheep on alfalfa, as they are liabl i It is not safe to pasture eithei c bloat when it is fed green. Feed t em the hay or practice Roiling. There is no better or cheaper wa of growing hogs than to pasture the 033. alfalfa. One acre will furnish pasta age for from 10 to 20 hogs per season. Horses can be pastured -on alfalfa. There is no better hay for work animals or for young, rowing stock. Cook's Cotton Root Costpued Manufactured h y The Cook Co., Windsor, Ont., and Detroit, Mich., is the only knowisaafe, reliable monthly medicine on which ladies can depend in "the hour and time of need." Every lady who reads this is requested to inclose two post- age stamps, with her address, for CMI 0 nd f particulars which we will end by return media plain. sealed An old physician, as years con- *nued practice treating diseases of Women, has charge of the office, and an be consulted by letter or in rson., Address our main office i THE COOK COMPANY, 1 Room 3—No. 253 Woodward Ave., I Detroit, Mich. Ur Cook's Cotton Root Compound ;is sold by all responsible wholesale jand retail druggists in the Dominion teofCanada and 'United States for One Dollar per box. This t me of year the thri heti root oods—turnips, potat s, carrots! )1, beets to feed hie stock ah a change, Tom th dry hay and corn. i ty farmer J. S. Roberts, Graduate of Detroit Optical Institute o Chicago almic College, is prepared to fit all defects of Vision Astigmatism, Hyperraetro- pia, Myopia. Prestyopia or any compound defect. S er Fattening. Well grow steers probahly on - With this tla y will ta from 15 t 20 pounds o gr in. If ensilage has the grain fo r parts co - one part bats and one Part ran by w ht. The taaan- gels /nay Welk be used ri small quanti- ties as aie appetizer fro 11 time to time, and the isteers should laave access to some dry fodder, prefe ably the olover hay, thongh the corn fcidder, clover and timothy may be alternated with Food effect. Care should be taken to bring the steers up to their full feed gradnal-' ly, so that their appetites will always be keen. They should have each day all tExhecyhwaniglie.eat up clean and no morea— —It may be true that you lhave been coughingl for many mouths, per aps years, nut befor believi:tgLoui:elf in urable try once. F r sale by druggists and The Key THE —For that tickling eensaticn in your throat t a 10 cent. box of " Id int " Cough Lozenges : They will allay the i itation at Medicin Co, 395 Yonge Street. ing ordinary comm n at a countenbecaum IntnIligent people up the idea of buy - they liee well with them. It may be that only. one eye is lirought into use, while tbe other may be so Drug Store and have them tested. Does the print blur or do the eyes tire when reading ? Do the eyes ache ? no the eyes water ? Are they pore or inflamed 2 These Symptoms point to defects in the refraction, or the muscles of the eyes and can be perfectly cor- reotencig you have headache ? Eye strain muses more headaches than all other causes combined. Thous- ands of people are suffering who do not realize that eye drain is the cause. All these cases can be cured with glasses that are made to correct the error in the The eyes of children should be carefully tested. In many eases the defect in the eyes is shown by various symptoms, such as inability to see figures on & blackboard, holdiug the book close to the eyns, blurring of letters, crossed eyes or eyes turning in, blinking, watering of the eyes and particularly head- ache. In many cams the child is occused of being dull or stupid, when the fault to in the sight, an1d4 0537 be corrected with glassee. If you are wearing glasses of disease, you will be recommended to the physician that are not satisfactory, bring them to me. li ease at once for treatment. Our direct connections -will save you time and money for all points; Canadian North West Via Toronto or Chicago, • British 'Columbia and California Our rates are the lowest. We have them bo suit everybody and PULLMAN TOUR- IST CARS for your accoMmodation. Call for farther information. Station G. T. R. Ticket Office. Train Service at Seafortii. Grand Trunk Railway. Trains leave geaferth 'sad Clinton stations ae Rome Wm—, BRAFORTR. CLINTON. 011110 TAW— - It is sold on a guarantee by all druggists. It mires Incipient Consumption- and is the best Clough bud GroUF cum For sale by L V. FEAR, Seaforth. Wellin.gton, Grey and BruCe GOIN NORTH—, Ethel Bluerale I JUST A WORD ITARNESS 'Live Stock Points. A swine breeder says that when a sew • it is a sign she wants animal food. The hog is naturally omnivorous feeding on animal as well as vegetable food. If he owner of the sova, that wants to eat up her young will go tci a slaughter boas° and get a quantity of beef; liver and offal and feed it to her, she will gorge her fill on it and sOon lose her appetite for fresh meat. After she is tired of the blood and offal then give her a few bran mashes, with la'little oilmeal, but no corn for a day or two. The Chicago Coliseum will be reedy for business May 1, and consequently thereafter Chicalo can have all the agri- cultural and liv stock shows it waists, The firtit horse allow in the Coliseum will Come Deist 4111, sets at shredde rest the question of Whet er d fodder will kill horse. He eays for three months he has fed 26 h ad of horties and colts on a little cern and , oats ahd all the shredded fodder they could et away with, and he never oaw anima s do better on timothy hay and grain. He paid 5 cents per shock tie get the co n cut and shocked and 10 cents per ,sh k to get it shredded. The man who has a large mare, 1 rely and w th good kitee action, should eeed Passenger. Mixed. 3.18 11.43 9.45 3.27 9.57 10.10 8.37 10.07 11.20 Passenger. Mixed. 6.84 ILEA 806 6.50 1119 9.00 London, 11m -on and Bruce. GOLin NORTH— BMW -Ryer. 9.22 6.00 10.29 7.14 7.57 4,53 9.06 4.58 We are giving 'the best value in har- ness ever offered in Seaforth, made by skilled workmen, and only first-class material used. Repairing promptly attended to. Bring along your old collars and we will make them work. Light harness a specialty. tie he up alone a few days andf and water her well. F'eed the lane ilk mean time. The eive's udder will egin to be o uncomfortable. that she will be glad t admit the lanab. Turn it in with her after a couole lof days or so. NO —ISS ED AT— EAFOR H, ONTAR O. WITNE SES REQ IRED M. BRODERICK, Corner Main and John Sts., Seaforth. M. Robertson Leading Undertaker SEAFORTH, ONT. Undertaking warerooms op- posite A. Catdno's Confection- ery Store ; Residence, 116 North Main St. In connection with the under- taking business, a cabinet shop will be conducted for Furniture Repairing. LOW PRICES AND Prompt Attention A feature of Both 13ranches. • The BicKillop Mutual. Fire Insurance Company. FARM AND ISOLATED Towt4 PROPERTY ONLY INSURED Geo. Watt,. President, Harlock " James Broadfoot, Vtee•President. Seaforth P. 01; W. A.. Shannon Seoy-Treas., Seaforth P. inn Alachua idurdie, inspector of Looting. Soolorth P. 0. Jas. Broadfoot, Serdorth; Alex. Gardiner, Lead= bury; George Dale, Seaforth; Thomas E. Hays, Clinton; Thomos Fraser, Brumfield ; John 13. Mc- Lean, Kippen. - AGENTIL Thos. Mellen% Matlock ; Robt. McMillen, Seaforth James Cumming, Egniondville ; George Mantle and - John C. tiorrisokaudiors. Patties desirous to earn Insurauces or trans- act other businees will be promptly attended to on application to any of the above nilloers„ addressed tO their respective post affiees. • FOR TVVENTY-S1X YEARS DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOKSBEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. ')l00laVd_ CZ rim tin WANTED Earnest men and women to circulate " The Sword of Isiain or Suf- fering Armenia," a thrilling book. Graphic account of tbe Eastern Question, the Turk, Armenian and Mohammedanism with its horrible massacres, Num- erous startling illustrations taken on the spot, 448 pages, only $1.90. Send 130e for canvassing book. Agents make 815 to 350 weekly. TFIE BRADLEY GARRETRON 100.. Limited, Toronto, Ont. 1470-52 MI aM eig 4D MP Z0-3 %4P 1-11-4 r4). owl c) Q ofl pi o trni ti co 5 z PLA 0 0 .}11,54 P. KEATING contractor and Builder, Seaforth, DEALER IN Lumber and Shingles. Good Ifembeli Lumber always on hand- Parties wanting lumber don't need to go 20 or 25 miles when they cau get it as cheap at home, and better lumber. 1443941 law P:o rit 1411 *kir Pa3 Mr JOSEPH C. MORRISON, Councillor, Beachwood JOHN 13, monalsow, clink, Winthrop P. 0. DAVID M. ROSS, Treasurer. irtnibrop P. O. ItrA7Co.11ABVILDAN8P01411.11.11"LLASD.,BiallwrSanitarymtilinspec$0. r, Lean loade