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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-01-13, Page 6_1. -19 THE HURON EXPOSITOR JANUARY 13 191)5 REAL IkST.6.1% FOR SAD3 LosTa • riAMMS FOR SATM -Rare balrgaiWi in -farms in L; JD the Townehlea of Mullett, Morrie, and Wawa- naile Cautity of Huron. Ingnire eat „once. WM CAMPBELL, Biyth, Ont. 171441 1 « DAYS CONTINUALLY LOST BY BEING A tlY ONE wishing te htereir sell Winnipeg nItY peoperty or hum haute in the Province of FRITTERED AWAY IN SLLE•NCE. Manitoba or the -Tereitories,' youCicorreepontlenoe _ with us is solicited, and full- information given. Resets eallon or addrees IIAREek LANDSBOROUGH No. 627 Main street, Winnipeg,Maniotoba. 188641 I. THE VALUE OP EVERY MINUTi LESS thou $5,000 will buy Lot 38. Concession ' Meltillopi This farm contains 100 acres of , good /arid, era or. it a bank barn 64x64 feet, with 8 feet etone stabling. Aieo a good 8 -roomed brick house oeehettcl good water, &o It la eix mds from Seiffotih and IS miles horn Conatance post office Possession given at once. Apply to WM. tt. BLANSHARD or E. HINCHLEY, Seaforth. 192541 1Ti ARbl FOR SALE. -For sele, Lot 21, London Road Stanlev, coutaining 100 wires, P3 Saes eteared, the haleme is good hardwood timber. The fared is well uuderdrainod and well fenced, and in good condition in every partioulere This le an ex- cellent fern), no better in the township. It is tive ilea tram Clinton and 11 Miles from Brut:3611dd ill be sold on reasonaole terms as the proprietor is in the implemerit badness. Apply to F. TOML/NSON, Blucelleld. 192141 raESIB,ABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE. -For sale! in Harpurhey, a comfratable brick cottage, with kitchen and woodshed attacked. Hard eoft wear. Ale° 2 SOIV8 of land, on which are the choicest varieties of ea ands et trete. It is a most desirable property for any person wanting a-com- tortable home. Apply on tha pretniseet or address Seaforth P. 0. JOHN MoDONOGH. 191741 MIABlii FOR SLR. -In the township of Usborne, _U in Let, is, Cloneession 2, coo:elating of i he best 100 sores of land In the tovrtiship, well fenced and in good state of- cultivation. Good brick hone° and frame barn, convenient to *nehryol, church and' market, being only 2 sidles from Exeter. For fur- ther particulars applite el): C. it elfNES,,Yereter, Or THOS. HIGGINS, exeatore of th estate ol eft 1. B1giina, deceiasd, or to MIAMIAN & drANARY4 8o) otters, feeder. • HOUSE AND LOTS FOR SALL--,For _ bre*, hotels and 2 lote hi fleatortis. Oe 101 fares I on North brain Street and the other en West WIC - Um Sheet. The 'house la a coinfortehlii brick. massif and ecintainat bedrooms. *deg sil- ting roost and kitchen, with good cellar underthe whole house. Kard.and sots water in the house. There is also a good stable and driving shed. All kinds of fruit on the lot. 'Apply ter I. L. ALLAN, Iiondee_boro, or to C. W. ATKINSON, Seaforth. 1906x4t1 1110KAUTIFUL FARM FOR Silage -For sale cheap, le that beautiful faint in the townshipof MAK. lop, known as "The Itaples," slanted One ant a half miles north of Sordorth. Tie lairri °Ottani one hundred earn of the choicest leo& There is t beak bun, I /rge frame holm, with "beantlfill large roonne.geod weter, a creek running through the farm. flood orcharcLand vineymgd, all under •luf• elation and well drained. pie lituatien is excel- lent, nearsiountry 'Cheat and. nese Collegiate In- stitute. It is an ideal country home.. Immedlete possession. epalith WM. GontieoeK, Reaforth. . 192441 HANDSOME NEW RESIDENCE FOR SAL-- tfew two story frame house, 'cement block foundation, contain' }arlor, sittleg rootn, dining room, kitchen with bard and soft water and other codveniencese feta bedrooms with closets bath. room and halls, eleotrio wires throughout and heat- ed by furnace. Cellar with cement floors. cistern, coal bins, fruit shelves and outelde °titmice. The 'house is modem in design and Is finished with - hardwood ird bat a yenned], 12 feet wide. It is t built on one of the finest lots In town and will to t sold reasonably,. Apply to HARRY EDGE, Sea- orde, Ontario. 193141 -VIRST CLASS EIGHTY -ACRE FARM FOR SALE .r -Being West part of Lots -1 and 2, Concese- Ion 2, L. R. IL, Tnekersmitti. Good concrete, 11 roomed house, 40x28t with kitchen, woodshed and buggy home atinelted. There is a new bank barn 13846, with wing exteuding to the south, 24 feet. Also brick arched roothouse, 40 feet hug, under gangway' All buildings in geod repair. Orchard coretides two and a halt Boras bt choice winter fruit.' There are two never faifiog wells 5 (scree of bush. This ft= lain goqd state of cultivation, well fenced and underdrained, situated 2 miles from the village of Heneall For turther particulara apnlef to THOMAS-REMICK, Hensel!, Ontario. 18964t — MIAMI( FOR BALE. -Lot 11, "Conoession 6, Hun je lett, containing 100 acres of land. all cleared. and in fine condition. 11 10 at present all seeded to grass and in lifOssl shape either roe hay, pestute or mopping. There is a comfortable frame house with summer kitchen attaehed, two barns, one 34 x 50 feet and the other 30 x 50 feet, anil.ether out 'ABM - lags. This farm is situated nine miles from Sea - forth, seven and one half miles from Clinton and just one mile and a quarter from the village of itinburn, where there are two general stores, two blaekemith shops, post aloe and &tool. This farm le eel] situated and wilt be sold °beep as the pro- prietor is AUX1011S to eell. Fer farther particular* apply to R. S. HAYS, B trrieter, Senforth, oron the premixes.: WILLIAM LE11011, 4:instance, Ont. 19054f . VARK FOR SALE -Foe sale on reasonable tiirms r the farm of the anderelgeed on the North Gravel road, McKlIlopa male north of &Worth. Itecontaine 175 stores all cleared except about ten norm 11 18 well under draleed. well fenced and in a high state of ointivati :n. -There ifs a floe two storey bra* house, bank barns and other necessary outbuildings. There is a flowing spring close to the buildings. A large or hard of choice fruit and about two acres of a vinery. Thls is one of the ehoicest farms in Huron and there is not a foot of waste land on itle is all seeded to grafts except about 60 sores, There are ten acres 'sown to fall wheat and the fail plowing done.Apply to the pro- prietor, Sertforth. ROBERT ooyemooK. 1920. Annual Meeting. •` t:: • 11101011 The animal meeting et tne eicsallop Mutual Fire Insurance Company will be hellein the Town Hall, Seaforth, on Friday, January 20111, 1905, at one o'clock p. m. Bueinese of the meeting : to receive directors' and auditors' reports and Bleanoisl state. men a the appointing of three directors and other busineee for tbe goed and welfare ef the compeny. The retiring officers are .Tehn Watt,Harloek, George Dale, Clinton, James Connolly. Porters' Hill, who are elligible for reeeleotion, J. B. MoLRAN, THOMAS E. HAYS, President. Secretary. 1934.2 If You Wantto Buy a Farm Business or residence, consult us or our agents before making a selection. We have e. large list of properties, many of them are extri good value at the price asked. We can save you time, money and worry if you will allow ne to assist you in making a selection. Let us know you wants, or 'get our cetalogue-it crests you nothing.1 ITHE INTERCOLONIAL REALTY OCYY, LIMITED, - London, Canada. •It, S. HAYS, Agent, Seaforth B. S. PHILLIPS Agent, Hensali. 19O7 -a2 VI Magic Rum CitdTbs The best remedy known for 'chasing a cough or void out of the syetetn. Hun- drede of people know this. and that ie the reason it ie so popular. Once tried always used. Price -25c and ale a bottle. • (let it from 1 V. YEAR Druggiet e SE AYORTH. Day Lost Pty SOIAV Reckoning in a Wia- • telly Voyage Aroitiid the World tire nIshee .1.reanlier With Illustration Foe '-'1"owertul Sermon From the. Text r - “Whatsoever Thy Hand Findeth to Do, Do It With Thy Hight." - Entered ea:coedit) o et, of Parini re o ( ads., in the year isee, oy lieu remit. aetno bowl. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. $.-The day lost by solar reckoning in a Westerly veya.ge, around the • world° furnishes the preaeher in this sermon With an, illustratina by which, as he shows, 'slaye are continually being lost in the voyage of life; Lext, Ec- clesiastes ix., 10, "Whatsoever thy hand flndeth to do, do it with: ••thy might:" There: is aelkenee of loss of which want tb speak Lo you to -day. At the begtiming of a new year ite4 iS rinl- propeed uPop, us with Solemn import, Looking backward. over the year 'that is, gone, hoer sad is the thought of our lost days! Ilays there have been ixt Which we might have • done work for God which we have suffered to pass away * fa idleness. Days which can never .-be reealled Which • WO shave frittered away uselessly. We all know the old adage -1 that "Mule is money,". We are all ready to *grant taokn this axiom is true. eef a man has no regard 1 or the time of other men," Wrote Ilorace Greeley, !'why should he have for their moheya What is the difference betweeestealing a man's hour and stealing hie $5? There arc many men to whore each hoer of the business day is worth more than $5."--- But, tough time. meterie moeiey. to most of US", time should mean more, than that. 'u is a sacred trust coman tted ffto us, for the right use of taliich' we shall have to give- accoun-t. enciugh is the portion We can de- vote to our Master's ,serviee. 11 we Waste it ii(4- -defraud God. We waste- these clays simply by wasting here e minute and there a .nunute.. • _This thought was brought home to me in my tour amend the' world. Ine 1893 my father and I left our homes. in, the east and star Led on our journey. We followed the course of the setting sun, We trav- eled from New York to , Pittsburg, from tPitteburg to Chicago, ft-Oin Cbicago to • St. Louis, from St. Louis. to 'Denver, and them to San Francisco. We eigzagged- up and down; but always keptpusheng. tp- ward 'the west. At San kept - we set sail for the Sandwich Islands. Then we went on to Samoa. Soma' times we would, stop two or three days .in• a town; sometimes. a full week: It took us seven long months to encircle . the - globe. Ench day, as a ride, was for us not twenty-four hove, but twenty-four hours aind ten Or fifteeri or even thirty nanutes long.; Of -course you grasp my mean - Ing We were lengthening our days, becal4S0 we were traveling ' westward. How! were we to straighten Out our calendar? This was the- way we did it. One night we went to bed ,on Wednesday. The next morning when we awoke it was Friday: There„in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, we lost a full day, How did that -day disappear? As 1 eat .-thaa-Feidaer morning, af- ter Thursday was dropped out of my calendar, I said, to myself, "Yes, yes. This is the way many days aro lost for Christ in our great journey of life. These it is a few minutas wasted for Chrlst in the morning. There it is a feWaninutes. wasted at noon or at eventide or at night,: These few initiates do not seem to amount to inach et the- time, but in t-14 aggregate they- make up whole days, weeks, months and perhaps whuic years of Waeted • time that iriight have been spent in service for the 1, aster. "- Ho; Many days that might have been j,riveit to Christ have we lost? How Io we lose them? First, by not, S.arting the work ef each day promatly and energetically ae ,we ought to do, by oversleeping bathe niornieg or by dawdling through our dressiag, by lingering too long at - the breakfast table, by yawning and stretching, and idly building air castlesin bed after the rising bell* has meg, by ignoring the "get up" call, Which King Solomon in the sixth c;hapter of Proverbs pounds up- on every bedroom , door when she call's: "How long wilt thou sleep,- 0 sluggard? When wilt thou arise out of thy; sleep? Yet .a little sleep, a little. Oumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep. So shall thy pOverty conic a one that traveleth and thy want ai3 an armed man." Lord -Wil- mingtoe once declared that the cause of "the failure Or the famous English, statesman, the Duke of New- castle, 'was that he never started the day's Ns-ork on Lime. "He loses half an houe every morning. and eins af- ter it dux, ingethe whole' day without being able to overtake it." :Panay men aria women are wasting precious days that -might be u,sed for. christ by not gettinz up on time !Mk Only, a Trifling Cold HAS been the Lullaby Song of Many si Victim to their Last Long Sleep. A liough should be loosened as spee ily as possible, and all irrita- tionc rUayed. before it settles in the lungs,. Once settled there Bron- chitisland Consumption may follow. I DR. WOOD'S NOR6WAY PINE SYRUP is just the remedy you require. The virtues of the Norway Pine and Wild Cherry Bark, with other standard pectoral Herbs and Balsams, are skilfully combined to produce a reliable., safe and effectual remedy for all forms Of Coughs and Colds. Mr. N. D. Macdonald, Whycoco- magh, N.S. writes :-." I think. it my duty to let people know what great good Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup did for me. I had a bad Cold, which settled in my chest, and 1 could get nothieg to cure it till 1 tried Dr. Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrup. The first bottle helped me wonderfully, and -the third one cured me. Price 25 cents per bottle. Soaps Containing Injurious Chemicals Eat Dirt but they also Destroy Clothes You've probably used soap thfit cleane4 your clothes quickly but have found out afterwards that it had destroyed thein. Sunii• p is guaranteed to be absolutely pure, containing no 'ingredient that will. injure the daintiest fabric. It washes equally well in hard or 'oft water without boiling or hard rubbing. Follow the directions on the package and you will have a more successful wash with less labor. Your dealer is authorized to refund the purchase money to anyone finding- cause for complaint. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO 1003 • The Sunlight Maids admire the resUlts after wishing the Sunlight way ing the/work of the dayop timennd systematically and promptly meet- ing all demands- as they came up for settlement. . This warning against. the wast•ed minutee Of the early morning ie far more necessary -than some of us,have heretofore supposed. when wewaste the early minutes of the mornieg we waste the very beet minutes of the whole day. The old proverb says: "Beauty sleep is always taken bee efore 12 o'clock at night. Every hour of sleep_ before _midnight • is worth two token in bed after that :time." Along aseactly ,the same line of thought I•.say, "Every hour of owork done before 9 or 19 o'clock in the morning is 'worth at eleast two hours of work after 12 o'elock . Doom" There is something about the ozone of the early atmosPhere.. something about the exhilaration of the' early morniag, that arouses uS and fires 'us ancl. driveus on and clarifies our brains, se that we can accomplish at least double the work in, one half. hour then than. -in any half hour' of the afternoon or evening. "Early, to bed and early to ried makes • a man healthy, wealthy and wise' has just as maph truth tacked- on to the last injenction as On to the first. How -do we diminish, our service for Crist by lost days? By not improving he fragments of time that be sc-attered about us during the day's awork; by not utilizing those extra few -minutes here and there to fit ourselves intelligeetly by reading ana study 491' the week God. has given Ale to do, by supposing that Clod will let us interpret • the passage, "Ask, and ye shall receive; seek, azid ye shall- find; knock, and it shallebe opened to you," when our lipare dumb; when our feet are palsied and know nothing about the. right • path§ to tread., when our heeds are helpless in their stupidi- ties. Can the blind lead the blind? Can something come from nothing? Can the little child run and leap like a ,faw unless- she has been first • taught to eeeep and to walk? We smest have intelligence in elie direction of our life or -else all our work will go for naught. What would you think if one summer day I ,should walk upon the captain's bridge off.a steamee and say; "Cap- tain, I would lake to take charge of this steamer. •1,11auld thc helmsman obey my command?" "Where would • you take the ship?" '".ro I would answer.. "Do you know any- thing about tee laws of navigation?" -"Then I cannot let you take command. You khow' not the law of the compass. The great surface of the sea is the same everywhere. ateu, have no guideposts, as on the merlin- tain sides.- The fleet thing you would do would be to get the ship of its course. It would take us perhaps days or weeks to regain our course, or perhaps we would never 'be able to do so. We might land in Chine, as a clisIonest captain made the pilgrim fathers land on the cold, bleak New England shores when they had set sail for the southern lends. No mat- ter how good a man's purpose may lee• if he knows not the laws of navi- g-aLion he cannot guide his boat to the right harbor." We lutist; have intelligent° to fit ourselves for the duties of life. How do JD OA ccessful men get thet necessary intelligence? will tell YOU. it is by improving the few mo- ments, the few stray moments of the day and. the evening, which, as sac- red fragments, crowd around them. Young man; be careful about the few mai:fleets' which you have been wasting each day. Guard those extra moments for ihtelligent study. Look out for that wasted half hour during the midday Meal. Look • out for the time you ha,ve been accustom - e4 to spend every morning and even, ink in the str6et car on your way to ! business looking idly around or try- ing to pass it away in reading the advertisements or the sporting . columns in the daily newspapers. Look out for that half hour which you fool aWAy in your room beforee you turn in for the night. A gigan- tic work of intellectual growth an be done if only the fcw wasted mo- ments of each day are gathered up for .close application to ebooks. One day Philip of Maxedone father of Alexandee the Great, waif talking to ' Dionysius, the Son of Dionysius, the great general of Syracuse. He said to the son: "I do not believe your . father could have ever written. the -odes and tragedies attributed to his I pot during his busy military life." ' "My father,the eon replied, "wrote ! those masterpieces during tke time ! you and I have wasted at our table ' in feasting." Young man, better im- prove your stray- (moments as did ; •laonysius the Great than fritter thent away as most folks are doing, with their heel pressed against the ch a lice of as u les . Better conse- crate whole days in We's journey to making yourself better and truer than to drop them into usele,ssness, as .we lost our Thursday in the . smooth waters of the Pacific in our ' journey around the world. eugg But, though many minutes, whkch in the aggregate are lint to many days,. are lost to the service of Christ on account of yur own how many are lost t Christ by rea- son,- of people whol seem to have .nothing to- do themailves and who seem to fbe possessed- with the idea that we have nothing to do? Alas, how many mornings there have been when we arose with clear minds and hearta, anxious for stu dy t These th oughts, like a great flock of flying doves, seemed ready to roost on our study desk. Then ,ideas came not as solitary scouts, but marshaled in great armies, ready to wheeltiei.line to attaak at our com- mand, Then horror seemed to palsy our figemrs. The doorbell rang. In came a, threatening nomad ready to ineamp • upon our premises for the next two hours. Thongh a "squat- ter," he came not empty handed. He had piled upon his back all the gos- sip land* the "small talk" of the neighborhood: He had- great cara- .vans halted in your front yard, with all the scandals and I -the lbesoll- ed reputations of the homes he had been lately pestering. And he talks and he balks until he drives away all our ideas. and all 'our desire for work and all our ambition, and he -leaves in has •wake a wrecked day. **, precious . moments hereafter? ' we not: always feel that -10 reality time does not belong , to us? it be- longs, in the higher, nobler and puts - Or sense, to them Whom we are sent t� serve and to the great* God, who Will demand at the. judgment an at- ecOrUnatwinagy.for. every moment we frit- -ter. This thought flashed upou me as sat upon the deck of the steamship Alameda, trying to figure outatow lost that day. If instead of follow- ing the eetting sun I had been going toward the east X would not have - lost a day'', hut gained an extra day;' if -instead of going from' N*NI; York to San Franciseo eancl N4v1 f/..ealall.d had lfeen travtiling from London through the Suez (aerial to Austra- lia, instead of having, Met a 'Mums- • day e 1 would hew had two Thurs- days' one- week . it mat aired !loth, ing on , our voyage whica csoiirsis we took, but in the voyage of life it • matters a great deal. They who take the "star in the csist" 5 their guide in the journey (yr )ife, who follow Christ, who are '1.c'11 by him, have no lioifset. days. In this life they have in, ,finite delights and in the end easrnal ,1•• In which direetion are you Saili TP4? ,! are you going away fiLoni tho havisn' of peacb? Are you 'and 1. teavelitig- away from God'? 'Are we folioa the "setting sum'' Where we have our "lost days," or are we leading toward tbe "star of the east," where w -have 'one "found days?- ' Are we sailing from God at. a point e where we shall orash° upon tbv rocks of sin, or are wet sailing toward the harbor- of peace, where •Nre Shan meet all our dear ones with Oblast? But perhaps, after all, the caption of my sermon is . a inislending one. Ther% is truly no "lost day" in a man's life. Every day is yet to be a -"foued day." All days will be "found days" ,at the judgment seat eief 'Christ, where they shall testifa for eternal salvation or Our eternal cone denenation, May *11 our days be days whieh shill .be blessed by con- secration to „ the 'service of the Mas- ter, and may ale day -be the best .01 all']'found days," for it le here and- now.i decidink our destiny! Oh, for the golden sunrise of that millennial dawn, where sin and evil days have forever passed awayt 1 How many errands of mercy and pressing duties 'in the homm. have been ruined in -the busy housewif 's. life by a prolonged visit, of one these "daughters of iniquity" cal the "destroyers of time!" They cr cise your husbands and your Children. They find. fault with ' the ar- rangements of your homes. trhey And 4 fault with your dressmakers, • nd they try to steal your cooks. ey find fault with everything, yet they stay 'on. They are respectable thieves of your time, who cannot be landed in jail, but they are a bigger nuis- 1 ance to- you than if they. Stole he meat out of your ice chest or he bread and cake from your curiboa. ds. Ah, these destroyers of time! . How many precious moments, which in the aggregate have amounted. to preciOus days of work, have been lost for as in the iourney of life, with its vital o pportun Ries, through thei r unwel- come visits! Well uteete Oliver Wen- dell Holmes in reference to such as -these: Shun such as lounge theoughl 'after- noons fult eves And, on. thy dial write, "Beware thieves." Felon of minutes, 'never Leri Then‘nygoii:rtsa st(e)ftreasures oi Pick my left pocket din le, rait spare the golden time. God• says: . "Work, work, work! Work, for the night cenneth when no nian can work." That, means we must fight against those- who would waste mir precious monients as well as against our own slothful natures, end of an warnings for 'busy nese I think this one of the most import- ant. %1h4 -re there is one busy nian who would voluntarily waste his time there are ten lazy fellows who are , ready to waste it for him. Look out thatthese despised "nomads" may not ruin eny more of' aour days tot' usefulness. - In heathen mythology there lived a god by the name of Balthus. His mother', Frigge, wanted to make aim immortal. She demanded from the stoet.':4, tilt' trees, from fire and water and all metals and reptiles and birds and poisons, an ()fah that they never would 'kill him. These all gaxe a willing oath. Then the weds,. 1W 1 i PV - t 0 la Balder \yes iminertal, be - :ea to - strike him with sworde, 'ars, battleaxes and darts, but hey harmed himelot. At last one of 'he gods picked up a piece of enistle- nie. He threw it at Baldur. The litt1e. twig pierced the skin and the 4 !Wart:: and Balder dropped a eorpse, . Ilene- of these visits of the ,"destroYa -as of time" may seem to he harm- less. But are they? Like the despis- ed mistletoe of heathen mythology, they may be fatal for whole days, whole months and years, that should 'lave been used in service of the Master. ' Would Cod we might one and all fight relentlessly . against these "de- stroyers of tinice•' - Yost cannot afford to give away what- is not your own. Your tinie belongs not, to you, but t 0 another. "Go avith me to a con- vert this afternoon," said one sales- man to another. who was employed in a large warehouee. - "I cannot go this afteenoon." as the answer. "My -time is not. my own; it belongs to another." 4 "Po -whom?" "To my employer." The following Sabbath, afternoon the same salesman said to the clerk, "Come and go riding with me this afternoon.'' '`I cannot," said the other. "My time is not my own; it belongs to another.." "To whom.?" "'Ia.) God, who said, 'Re- member the Sabbath day to keep ite holla1 P Will YOU and 1 waste our of Led ti - of • tenghtto which thy of ate silver right -it holds my He Ban First Ttoesometiwe. I William T. Huckett, one ofthe ! oldest locomotive engineers of • the :counery, was interred at ICansees City; Mo., on Christmas Day. Mr4. 'Huelett -brought the first locomotiveto I4nsas City. Previous to his are rival in. Kansas City Me was a, resi- dent pf .0anada, being the first engi- neer to .run a locomotive in _Toronto: The Ontario, Siincoe and Huron Railroad- VMS completed'in 1851. Its stockholders and directors were mostly Englishmen and Canadians, and he ran the Landy Elgin the first locomotive 'built in Toronto. The 'Flock Muter. It is easier toprevent the diseases of sheep than to mire them, and it is easier to cure them ie the first stages than after they are thoroughly es- tablished. The flockmaster• should be alert ,and observing, ready for every emergency,. quick of thought and prompt of action, making the "st:teh 10 time." -Wool Markets and Sheep. A Guaranteed Cure tor Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or pro- truding Piles. - Druggists refund money if Pazo Ointment fails to oure any ease, no matter of how long standing, in from, 6 to 14 days. First application gives' ease and rest. 511c. If your druggist hasn't it, send 50e. in stan.xpe and it will lye forwarded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co., • St. Louis, Mo., 1930-6 m. , —Son. George P. Graham, Provin- ; tie.' Secretary, eon tinues to re- ceive flattering evidences 'of wide popularity in the Provance. 1 London Lodge, 18, A. 0. U. W., of " London Ontario, yesterday forward- ed to him, through H. A. Stephenson M. D., Master Wlricman, - and J. -B. Stephens, Recorder, a resolution which wasnadopted at- the last meet- - ing of the lodge, on motion of Fore- man Moore' and P. M. Hutton, offer- ing* their hearty congratulations to Mr. Graham, who is a peat Grand Master Workman, on beiag called to the Cabinet. The, Lodge hopes that he ina.y long be spared, to- preside over his new department and ie con- vinced that .11on. G. W. Ross made no mistake in taking Xi. Graham. into the. Cabinet, if the sermizes that gentleman has done for the A. 0. U. W., presage for anything, as they • feel sure they will. NIERS Of ELETRLIT Used for Purilying F1or The New Pr( cess Makes Bread and Pastry 'Apter, ST geter, Whiter an More Wholoome—Womer of Canada Deligawd What is Elietrieity? nobody Knowst ,not even Edison. What does it do everybody knoist4. It runs street tit4rs—telephones—auto- mobiles, furnishes light eat -power ---detects and. 46 eats disease -enables the doctors to see elear 'through a man; Performs all sorts ti)f wonders —not least of is acting as Nature's Arest Purifier because when the world's dust, dirt and'disease gerins have been, taken': up by!the air, and hahg over the earth in clouds- 1) - electAeity shots ts lightning through the clouds _ 7 -flash !-booth !-rumble! -2-down comes the rain, the atmos- phere is purified and we exclaim -"how nice nd fresh the air is since that thunder sto I" / / Electricity in the FloOr Mill. , Something like that but 'minus the thunder and. lightning, —siIently—ifwiftly---surely - / electricity per orrns its miracle in the "RoS-alIfo-usea °Id" mill—the only mill in the, Dominion of Canada where glee- tricity, is used for putifying purposes. 'When the grinders — separators -4- sifters--air-filtOns, have ground and re- ground - purifilid and repurified the "011.11111 flour again and again, all down through theseven floor. of the big "Royal House- hold" nill until it is nearer perfectioa than flour ever was heihre-eleetricity says— "I can do nore than that " and send- ing its naysterions eharge of Electrified Air through the flour, removes the last, least traoe of impurity—gives it new life and greater energy—rnakes a flour that is pure enough, sweet enough, , White enough, to be yorthy the natite and fame of "Royal Household "—the flour ihat ia more delielous--more healthful—more satisfying than any other flour in the -the flour that makes the bread and pastry used on the tables of Royalty— the our that thousandS of Canadian women are now using tOmake better- bread—better pastry than they ever - made before. Every day hundreds of testimonials, are coming to the Ogilvie Flour Mi. Co. Montrea1,. frern women who are using Royal Household. Eton; &mold- ing to the "Royal Household recipes and say they are delighted with it. The recipes will be sent free for the asking —ask for them- "FLOURFAX." 111.10114Awar: 1,0 Label That .,..••••••111.111••••••••••••11.111.011.. his Iribel is the best protection against ill-fifting, 13a6ily made &thing. I t is found enly on the lama's Suits & Overcoats :the reliability and uniform excellence el e FROG- RE85 " Clothing, make this 10bz.1 mean so muz,h to judos of quality. Mosuat # • r\f)CP‘!•81-3 Said by Leading Clothiers Throughou Canada. r Progress &Old Ciothig may be had from Greig eif. Stewart, Mb - •The great rule ot - h.- 1 I Keep the bowels regular. And the &cat- riled/eine 1 Ayer's Pills. T....on' mug, 3.a.1....-.*rao.. Want your *oustache or beard abauttifuibi a or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Ina,or ameniesem re. e rateeee ome =ant% 0,43,1* r MILBURN'S Heart and Nerve Pills. Are a specifie for all heart awl nerve troubles. Here are some of the spiv - toms. Any one of them should be a warning for you to attend to it im- mediately. Don't delay. Serious break- down of the system may follow, if you do: Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dizzi. ness, Palpitation of the Heart, Shortness of Breath, Rush of Blood to the Head, Smothering and Sinking Spells, Faint and Weak Spells, Spasm, or Pain through the Heart; Cold, Clammy Hands end Feet. There may be many minor symp- toms of heart and nerve trouble, but these are the chief ones. Milburn's. Heart and Nerve Pills will dispel all these symptoms from the system. Price 50 cents per box, or 8 for $1.25. WEAK SPELLS CURED. Mrs. L. Dorey, Hernford, N.S., writes as as. follows :—" 1 was troubled with dizziness, weak spells and fluttering of the heart, procured a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and they did me so much good that 1 got twOmore boxes, and after gashing them I watt completdi cured. I must say that 1 coot realm. fnend them too highly. .1e 1-11L1'7701' er,eizeise School. you intend sending your boy or girl to business colleigp, why not chdose the best college in the land? It _ cost --no more. , it he Forest City Business and Shorthand College has beerwstablished over 19 years, and has increased its patiktuage every year. , .svery department is m charge of a graduated expert teaalier, and the facilities, appliances, systems and courses are Oe most approved in the world. The rooms 'are large, airy and comfortable and the scbol is located in tbe prettiest part of London. tuelents may enter any time during term. Booklet free. ' jp7/0 Westervelt. Princip1, Y.t .C.A. BuHdthg, London, , . - wwwww.w.ww JOUR NEW STOREt t STRONG BLOOKJ antaleferatessmaremmgr... inter Is Here. Perhaps iv came before you were ready for it. But we - did your looking ahead. As a consequence, we - have on hand everything that can be procured, from the best manufacturers. Heavy Suiting, Flea.vy Underwear, Overcoating, Mitts,' Gloves, Gaps. etc.. in addition to these we have a full line of up-to-date urnishings and Hats. We mate clothing that - 1UTY-1_31S3a., TS 1511.1 ZITS IEC M-"MMIsS +++++++++++++++ HT BRa 1MA/78 TiRES, ,IFOR TB -