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The Huron Expositor, 1905-11-03, Page 7- I1 know h corn means )ig bills at way., you are are is a ave any 11.101.1115111MMON•••••411,1•Nall.••••110/00.000.1.4 . ool dents tions - office 'in the .Berlin Business ens nearly evety When a bright rse with us he is fa position. i-hool, splendidly lesually capable ated catalogue our students and Prhwipai. well dressed. 1 - it iri his !amine...eV; ba no business to tterapt, during tha jai as our tailoral u will require tO via ont new, Mel puff ourselves nei. have gained oUr ere not done on tile ;els, It costilis us. We gUarantee horonghly practical a get pleasure out Then there is a the weIl-dresaed leluaa 60. r ctvr There is all the r.lr- i erence in the world between eatina bis- cuits an d bir.cuk t eat- 1 ing. 0 n e Y eat a biscuit and not taste , but when you think of bis - t eating you thin a instantly of oone‘rg Perfection Cream Sodas - ICrisp. delicious and tasty. Absolutely and • dis t in ct I y , superior to any other make. 2 Say "Mooney's" to your grocer. mtnma. ! THEY ARE THE ARCH VW. N8 or THE, BIRD WORLD. trivo Speeles of the) Feathered Vagaa.- Ebondia x.list Side- by Side and Ply, Their! Trickle of Iniquity In Coma anon—tareeny For the Love of It. it is quite impossiblefor any one who has not sojourned in the "Land Of Regret," to appreciate the impor- tant part played by crows in the daily life of the Anglo-Indian. India with- out its crows is unthinkable; it could only be likened to *London without its fogs. Wherever human beings have their abodes there are raultitudes of corvidae to be found; for, the Indian crow is en inseparable appendage of town and village. Two species exist side by side in India, the great black-. bird known te Angle:Indiana as the corby and the smaller gray necked spe- . •cies. Both birds lead lives of aimless vagabondage; both are scoundrels of the most pronounced type; both are sinners, beyond redemption. Did the black crow exist alone it weuld be held up as the emblem of all that is evil and Mischievous. As things are, its Iniquities pale into insigniffeance be- side, those of its gray necked cousin. The very name of the latter bird is sufficient to raise the ire of the right- eous map. To call the arch villain of tthe bird' world "the splendid" is mere mockery of wordejerdon, the.famous Indian naturalist; "often regrets that -ftweareirewl. 11 VETERINARY such an inappropriate specific name! YORE GRIEVE, V. EL, honor graduate ofOutario Veterinaly College. All disease, of Domestic animals teeated. Calla promptly attended to and amass enoeterate. Veterinary Dentistry e specie.% y no and residence on Goderich street ono d oo at of Dr Sceit's office ,Seaforth. 11124 tT i HARBURN V. B.—Honorary g aduate of the r Ontario Veterinary College an Horanary mem- ber of the Itiedleal Association of the Ontario Veter- icaryCollege. Treats diseases of all domeatio weimale by the most modern principles Dentistry and Milk Parer a specialty. °Moe opposite Dicke Hotel, Main Street. Seafortb. .AP orders left et the hotel will reeeive"prompt attention. Night calls received at office. 1871-62 • LEGAL. should have been applied. to this spe- cies, for it tends to bring hato ridiculet among the unscientific the system of nomenclature." 'Tile Indian crow is able to utilize • Fern Pot of Silyer This 8 -inch Fern nit , is striking illustration of the unequalled values Diamond Hall can offer customers through having its own factories. The article is of first • quality silver plate in Colonial design of hand pierced effect. With a lining of rich -colored • green Tottery, it sells copplete for Se.00. And Diamond Hall would return the money if by any chance yoll were not satisfied. RYRIE.- BROS. 134-138 YONGE T. TORONTO e ONT. 11•11416•4111611611AVAINCIANNAW2912.1611~MSAANA ,• crews would devour the greater portion • of the meal. Their plan of caMpaign was simple and effective. They soon learned. the dog's feeding hour and as It drew near would take up a position on any convenient tree. The moment th re ho nd began to eat a CrOW most things. A Calcutta bird has e g 3'' li• , would swoop down fled peck viciously made itself fanious . for all tine by constructing a nest of the wires used at its tall. The dog would, of course, turn on the bird, and the others would to secure the corks of soda water hot- ,. s ties.. Bombay is very jealous of Cal- seize this opportunity to snatch away some of the food. The .process would cutta, and the crows, of course, ape th The Bombay birds de - be repeated untli theRmeal was over, betters ei r • t Crows tease and annoy wild ea mes 6 .1 termined not to be outdone by the JAMES L. KILI;.ORAN Barrieter, Solicitor, Notary PlibliO etc. Money to ban. In Sesforth Mondaye, Fridays and Satur- days. Lffiee open every week day. Over Picketers atom, Main etreet'Seaforth. 1904 !Calcutta corvidae. Accordingly one of with the same readiness thnt they wor- the former promptly built her nest of ry domestic animals. They mob every gold and silven spectacle frames stol- strange bfrd in much the stone way as en from Messrs. Lawrence & Mayo's• the London street arab makes fun of factory The value of • the . materials any person in unusual attire. used in the constructiou of this nest R. S.. HAYS! was estimated at £20. Bu crows Barrister, Solicitor. Conveyancer and Notary Public. appropriate things for which they cau saeitertorthe ThirainionB%nk• moe—in rem of have no possible use. They coramit ' Dominion Bank, Sectorth. Money to loan. 1235 larceny for the love of the thing. The T M. BEST, Baeristee, Solicitor, eenveyenoss Indian crow is the incarnate spirit of ej • Notary Public. Offices up nisi W ' mischief. The bird will wantonly tear Papet1 bookstore, Main Street, Seaforth, 013t2210. 1627 a- leaf! out of a book lying ,open on the table. My gardener, adds Mr. De- F.RtoCaugheDy'&61gloTmeelter, irarerbr, war, puts every morning fresh fiovvers 'Conveyancer, and Notsay Solicitor for the Can in the vases. This operation is per- tlisellank ot Commerce. Money to lend. Faunformed on the •veranda. One day the err sale. Office in BOOM Block, Main Street Seeforth. man was called away , from his work for a Icouple of minutes. During his reI je..1 Barrietero, Solicit ors, eto., Goderioh, Ontario. ahsenee a crOW swooped down and SUe- CKINSON AND °ARROW, - • E. L. DICKINSON. ceeded in taking a beakfil of towers 18531! 011ABLES GARBOW L. L. B. and breaking the vase in 'which they were placed. A retired colonel of my acquaintance who livein the Hima- layas is a very enthusiastic gardener, and tlite crows are the bane of his life. They root up his choicest seedlings, sever the heads of his most superb flowers from the stalk and. fly away with the little pieces of paper which he places in cleft sticks to mark where seed have been sown. But it is in towns that the iniquity -oF the crows readhes its maximum. Te Madras corvidae are a byword throughout the length and breadth of India. The hospital is their favorite playground. They are never se happy as when annoying the inmates. They 'know at once when a person is too ill to move. The consequence is that it has been found. necessary to have made for all the tables swire covers which protect articles placed at the bedside from the ravages of the "treble dated birds." I have seen a Madras 4row quietly helpingitselfto the contents of a basket which an old woman was carrying on her head. The bird was possessed of sufficient intelligence to refrain from alighting on the basket. Had it done so its presence would prob- ably have been detected. It flapped along just above the top of the basket, keeping pace with tb.e woman,; and. so, • unperceived by her, made a meal oft 1386 the contente. The knavish tricks of crows are by no means confined to hu - D RS. SCOTT man beings. As Colonel Cunningham PHYSICIANS AND BURGEONS, • tidily says, "Any animal pets are, of loaerich street, opposite It ethoeist ohnsobassafoste course, even more than inanimate ob- s DENTISTRY. H. J. HODGINS, DExTisT. • Graduate of Royal Cdriege of Dental Surgeons Ontario. SUCCOBBOr to Dr.; Twaddle. Oftlee-a-Ov A. Tames grocery store, Main street, Seaforth. 1975 of 01t DR. BEL -DEN, - DENTIST, TORONTO, Has removed from 419. Sherbourne St. to hie beau . ful new offices, 480 Young St, oppoeite -Carlton. St q 1816-13 MEDICAL, 4i• Dr. John McGinnis, Office and Realdenile—Viotoria Street BEAVORTH tenons 73 DR. H. HUGH ROSS, Graduate of -University pi Toronto Ftroulty of Medi' eine, member of College of Physiolana and Sur gen a of Ontario ; pass graduate courses Chicago I, !laical School, - lenge ; Royal Ophthahnic Hopi - r A , London, En land ; University College Hospital, ordon, Englan . Office—Over Greig & Stews/Pe t re, Main Street, Seaferth. `Phone No. 6. Night 'Answered from reeidence, Victotia street. 1890 DR. F. J. BURROWS, Met and Reeideuee—Goderich street, east of the. Methodist ohurce• a TatelPHONS No. 46. Groner for the County of Karon. & MacKAY, J. 0.300TT, geeduate Victoria end Ann Arbor, and jects, subject to their attentions, and negeoes Coroner for County of Huron. , constantly liable to have their • food .,d medalist Trinity Medical Ccliage. Kanner purloined and tlaeir lives rendered a C- liaolIAY, honor graduate . Trinity University, Joilege of PhyaloiCna and Surgeons, ontatitto burden by persistent and ingenious per- secution." I once . possessed a grey- hound which used to be fed in the gars den. A man had to stand over tbe dog while it was feeding; otherwise the member Ontario College of Phyelciaus see unless in wholly inaccessible places are ‘,1••••••2 AUCTIONEERS. SOMAS BROWN, Licensed Auctioneer for the Counties of Huron and eerie. Orders left at A. M. campbelre implement wareroome, Boatmen, or Tett Exposdok Office, will receive prompt &ekes Mon. atisfection guaranteed or no charge. 1708 -if ex es G. MeMICHAEL, lieeneed auctioneer foe can be given for absence.— London 1 negnsh Setuerntitions. AtIglawlish, in Devonshire, England, they ring the church bell during a thunderstorrd to scare away the light- ning. Lancashire agricultural labor- ers creditecertain of their fellows With power to cast good and evil spells. At Dunstable men carry a live snail in a pill box to ward off tootheche, eat ev steetlearthWorms as a cure for Peen - dice and fried mouse for whooping ,cough and cherish all the old supersti- tious as to the dead whieh made Mer- rie England sad. Sudden Want of Information. Tommy—Ma, lend. me a lead pencil. Mother—I just left pen and Ink on the table for you. What do you want with a pencil? -Tomlny—I want to write to the editor of the paper to ask him what'll take ink stains out of the par- lor carpet. Think much and often. speak little end_ write less.—Woman's Life. •, , Do your Share. A little thought will show you how vastly your own happiness depends on the way other pe_ople bear themselves towaxell you. ,Turn the idea around and remember that just so much are you adding to the pjeasure or the misery of other people's days. And this is the half of the matter which you can con- trol.—George S. Merriam. Distil:rioting Suspicion. "Do you enjoy your wife's teas and eeceptions ?" "No," answered Mr. Cumrox, "to be candid, I do not. I can't help harbor- ing a suspicion that if 1 didn't happen to be her husband Urs. Cumrox wouide't consider me of sufficient so- cial consequence to be invited." Tact. -- George- (nervously)—I'd like ever so' much to marry you, Kitty, but I don't( know how to propose. Kitty (promptly and practically) — That's all right, George. You've finished with me; now go to papa. Woman's Virtual Angle. "Have you eyes in the back of your head?" asked, a country "magistrate of a woman, and tile woman promptly replied that she had. She was perfect- ly right. Take any average man end any average wdman, question them as to the dress and deportment of the peo- ple. in any aesembly where they were together, and you will, find that the woman has seen more than the man, for woman has been compelled to en- large the angle of her vision and to see all around her hat without shifting an eye. From an early age instinct tells the girl,, and convention seals /the instinct, that she must not look directly at the man in the, street therefore .the hon- Ost woman walks through London look- ing straight ahead. The direct look at the stranger, is forbidden, yet human curiosity compels, so develops and en- larges that angle of vision, for no. wo- man will deliberately blind herself, and therefore by , continual exercise those calm conventional eyes that look to the horizon and the infinite have trained themselves to see the world out of the corners—obliquely. — London Chronicle. The Better, Pre county of Huron. Salem attended to in any e WaY part el the county at moderate rates, and eatisfaetioe euarenteed. Orders left at the Seaforth post oftlee ..er on Lot 2, Concession 2, Hallett, will receive i ...onapt attention. a-0 1 2-tf 1 IJCTIONEERING.—B. S. Phillips, Lioeneed VI. Auctioneer for the counties of Huron and earth, Being a praotioal farmer and thoroughly endeistanding the valise of farm stook and impl& manta, pieces me in a better position to realize good prices. Charges mmleratei. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay. All orders left at Hernia poet office or et Lot 28, Coneestsion 2, nay, Nen be promptly attended to, 1709-tt Reduction Sale We purpose disposing of or business, in Seaforth and are giving Special Prices on all lines. Knechtel & McKenzie Furniture Dealers and Undertakers. SEAFORTH. MARRIAGE - LICENSES ISSUED AT TEE KUHN EXPOSITOR OFFICE SEAFORTH, ONTARIO. NO WITNESSES REQUIRED The tissues of the throat a e inflamed and i r r,itate d; you cough, and there ,is more irrita- tion—more coughing. You take a cough mixture aiid it eases the irritation—for a while. You take Prrs EMULSIO and it cures the cold. _ Trliat's what is necessary. ItSoothes the throat because it reduces the irritation; cures the cold because it drives out the inflammation; builds up the weakened tissues because it nourishes them back to their natural strength. That's how Scott's Emulsion deals with a sore throat, a cough, a cold, or bronchitis. WE'LL SEND YOU A SAMPLE FREE. SCOTT & BOWNE, c472.721,t... Expected. Landlady—The coffee, I am sorry to say, is eximusted, Mr. Smith. Mr. Smith—Ah, yes, poor thing, I was ex- pecting that. I've noticed that for some time it hasn't been strong. ' Arms and the Man. Winkle—Count Duello is a daring flwordsman. Twinkle—Yes; he ran through a cool million without any trouble. Be Ready For the Opportunity. People are apt to think that, though their actual lives are poor and sel•f centered and such as they are half ashamed of, if soine great crisis arose they would be able to gather up their halting will and raise themselves to its ' height. Yes, no doubt. Only life's sternest,calls never come in any such _fashion. Things don't arrange themselves for us to gather up our fee- ble will and settle with our souls that we will be heroes. They come hardly and sharply, testing not what We have resolved to be, but simply what we are. We have a sort of feeling that it is the opportunity that makes the man. Not so. The opportunity only shows him for what he is, and the spirit of prompt duty, of quick, instinctive loy- alty to right under whatever tempta- tion may ever come, may be cultivated and grow to the very capacity for her- oism even in life's lowliest place and poorest work. One Way. Cholly —I can't live' without your daughter!' Mr. Cashbag—Oh, yes, you can. Work never killed. anybarly yet. A WALK IN THE. WOODS. S.77, suit their particular fancy. These peo- ple 'will tell you, "Oh, I don't know anything about painting, but I' know what I like," whieh Is their way of say- ing, "If I don't like it right off I don't cote to be bothered to like it at all," Such an attitude of mind cuts one off from growth and development for It is as Much. as to say, "I am very well satisfied with myself and. quite indifferent to the experiences and feel- ings of other men," Yet it is just -this feeling and, experience of another man which a picture gives us. If you con- sider a moment you will understand why. The world itself is a vast pano- rama, and from it the painter selects his subject—not the copy of it exactly, shice it would be Impossible for him to do this even if he tried. How could he represent, for example, each blade of grass, each leaf upon a tree? So what he does le to represent the subject as be sees it, as it appeals to his -sym- pathy or interest, and If twelve arilets painted the same landscape the result would be twelve different pictures, dif- fering according to the way in which each man had been impressed by the scene—in fact, according to his sepa- rate point of view or separate•edy of seeing it, influenced by his individual experience and feeling.—Charles II. Cof- fin in St. Nicholas. Inmermon Says It's One of the Secrets For Dodging Old Age. Few men know how to take a walk.' The qualifications of a professor are endurance, plain clothes, old shoes, an -eye for nature, good humor, vast curi- osity, good speech, good. silence and nothing toe much. If a man tells me that be has an intense love of nature, T know, of course, that be has none'. Good observers have the manners. ot trees end animals, their patient good sense, and if they add words 'tis only when words are better than silence. But a loud singer or a story teller or a vain talker profanes the river and the foeest and is nothing like so good. com- pany as a dog. When Nero advertised for a new lux- eiry a walk in the wcrods should. have been offered. 'Tis one of the secrets for dodging old age, for nature makes a like impression on age as 031 youth. Then I recommend it to people who are growing old- against their will. A man in that precliclament, if he stands before a mirror or among young peo- ple, is made quite too senSible of the fact; but the forest awakes in him the same feeling it did when he was a boy, ..and he May draw a moral from the fact that 'tis the old trees that have all • the beauty and grandeur. I admire the taste which makes the avenue 'to a house, were the house never so small, through a wood; besides the beauty, it has a positive effect on manners, as it disposes the Tied of the inhabitant and of his gueite to the -deference due to each. Soine English reformers. thought the cattle made all this wide space necessary betweenhouse and house and that if there were 110 cows to pasture less land would suffice. But a cow does/Sot need so much land as the owner's eyes require between hien and his neighbor.—Italph Waldo Em- erson in Atlantic. Better Than a Shoehorn. "Here is something 1 learned from 'an Englishman 1 met, while at a friend's house," said a lawyer. "The house was in the suburbs, and. we syere occupying the same room. I found I had forgotten to bring a shoehoril and asked the Englishman if be had one. 'No, I haven't,' he said. 'Why don't you use a towel?' 'A towel?' I replied. • 'Yes, a towel. Here, let me show you. • Take a corner of the towel, so; lay the point in. the heel of your shoe, so; put yoursfoot in as far as it .will go, right on top of the towel. Now, grab the towel and pull up on it See how easy your .foot slides in? It's better thaii shoehorn.'" Pairing In Parliament. The custom of pairing is quite un- -known to the torms,,of parliament it- • self. Any mention of it within either chamber would be, altogether out of order, lint there is a pleasant fiction that it is a purely private arrangement to be made at the discretion of those concerned. This istrue enough to a limited extent and- for a short time, but pairing on any great party division cannot be lightly carried out, and a member who desires to pair at such a time will find that this can only be done safely through the whips and not ,at all unless some really goad reason ISINISPONAS0Vaistaltansr.-, • As the Child Saw It. A New York tenement house child who had spent a happy day in the home of a settlement worker describes the visit in the following letteesaccord- ing to Charities: , "Miss — lives In .a big beautiful house. There are three floors and iota of rooms. I shotild think it would be hard for them to find easel other, there are so many rooms. It is not so hard to find each -other when you live in part of ono'floor. The floors were hard and shiny, with little pieces of carpet on them. No piece was -big enough to cover a whole rooin." SEEING A PICTURE. An Insurance Story. They tell this story down on Wall street: The executive officer of a great insurance_ company, happening one day to meet a friend in the street, found Iluself violentlY upbraided be- cause his company refused to invest In the bonds of an enterprise with which his friend was connected. The insurknce man stood it a. raw minutes, then said. carelessly, as if be were ordering a box of a new brande of cigars, "011, well, send. me up a mil- lion and a half of them."—World's Work. Try to Look at It Through tit e T:yeti of the Artiort Who Painte-.1 1., The first necessity for the pro;ior gee- ing of a picture is to try to , see it througho the eyes of the arti.st -who painted it. This is not a usual meth- od, Generally people look only through their own eyes and like or dislike a pic- ture Recording ag it does or does not 11111111IIMAIIIIIMMIS '171,„ Ceetee UNSHRINI, UNDERWEAR • Underwear that is sewn together is never satisfactory or comfertable—seams chafe the body and rip after every second washing. Ceetee Underwear is not cut out of a roll of cloth, but every garment is widetied and narrowed on the machine to the shape of the limbs or body. Does away with all rough, galling seams. Is made of the finest Australian wool f rone two and three ply yam. Your Dealer will re- place any Ceetee Garment that shrinks Made at Galt, Canada, by The C. TURNBULL CO.. Limited, and sold by all reliable retailers. Poor, but Polite. "Want some money, do ye?" slid the kind old lady. "Now, I wonder ef ye deserve ht. What would you do with a penny ef 1 gev it to ye?" "Lady," replied the polite beggar, "yer kindness would touch me so dat I'd buy a postal card wid de money an' write yer a note o' thanks." A Leghorn. City Niece—eVhat kind of a chicken Is that, Uncle Josh? Uncle Josh—That is ft Leghorn. City Niece—How stupid of mei. Of course I ought to have no- ticed the horns on his legs. Tire Midnight Promenade. She—Henry! Ile—Huh? She—Just im- agine baby is one of those sick friends you, sit up all night with. Blessed is he who has foued his work. Let him ask no other blessed- eess.—Cer1y10.- -sft This extra amount ef digestive fluid dis- solvean extra amount ef fRod. This is where the extra gain comes in. C'yeVt-dale St^et. Food is the "salt, pepper and gravy" that makes the animal's "mouth water." It is equally good for Horses, Sheep and Heee FEEDINO 1°1%07-s In ordinary feeding the steer consunies about ofjits ordinary feed, the balance is un- digested or wasted. This :undigested balance can be made to give % to 1 lbextra gain per day, and at a profit,ty adding the "salt, pepper, and gravy" to its food to anak.e, it "testy." - You like these on your own food; why not the enimal. Like ourselves , the anlinal longs for "tasty" meal. It starts the "mouth watering" before eat- ing, and the stomach ails with digestive fluids • to thoroughly dissolve the food. - eft - Nothing 'nitwit -us in it andcan, stop feeding itswithout harmful effects. Human being3 can take it with benefit. We take it every day,. We know its centents. It is made clean. If not satisfied yeur money will be cheerfully refunded by the dealer. TRY HERCULES POULTRY FOOD CLYD1tSDAL1I STOCIC FOOD CO., Limited TORONTO, Viscount Wolseley's Career. Viscount Wolseley, who on June 4 celebrated his seventy-second birthday, has served in four regiments, 12th, 8 Oth, 84th and 90th, has been through ten campaigns, from Burmah, 185, to the Nile, 1385, has been ten times men- tioned in despatches, thrice thanked by Parliament, and pd'esesses eight Orders, nine war medaie and thirteen clasps: From the post he occupied in the Cri- mea to the Comillander-in-Chief he has held no fewer than 22 "Staff Service" appointments, and is colonel of the Royal Horse Guards and colonel -in -chief of the 18th Royal Irish Regiment. _ HAS TRIUMPHED OVER AND VANQUISHED CONSUMPTION Had Galloping Consumption Twolve Years Ago—Lives Today Through Using Psychine. is twelve years ago since Psychine cured MO of galloping consumption. I caught the cold work- ing as fireman on the C.P.R., The doctors said there was no hope forme. 1 had Night Sweats, Chills and Fever, and frequently coughed pieces of vsy ItingS. 1 was fast sinking away. Was advised to try Psychine and two months treatment put me rigbt on my feet agaio. Have had no return of lung trouble since Psychine saved me. To -day 1 work on ray farm near here. 1 am six feet tall and weigh over 175 pounds. Use my testimonial and photo if you so desire." Aug. 27th, '04., A. E. IVIUSSFOR D. A !Rare Butterfly. The British Museum has in its col- lection a rare butterfly which was ob- tained In a remarkable manner. On a steamship bound for SydnelY, N, S. W., several men were shooting at a mark With a revolver. As one of them Wes about. to fire he noticed a butterfly hovering over the ship. He shot at it, and brought it to the deck, consider- ably mangled. The insect was so beau- tiful that the pieces were collected and sent to an English entomologist, The butterfly proved to be of a species en. - tires, unknown to the scientific world. A Li -Fe For a Edgar Wallace of London set a trap In his room for a mouse. After he had gone to sleep the trap snapped and he awoke to find the room rapidly filling with gas from a burner that he had left halt turned en. He turned off the gas and then opened the trap andreleased the monse—e, life for n, Hit Objection. De Style—What is it you don't like about :Mites Coltirluet? Gunbusta.---Other felloves' arms. Get Rid of That Cough Bekre i he run rrer (Twee. ne Fyrep eer elute Ceephe, rareerese, Berrebitie, and broat end Lungs ----4111.--111 AO. PSYCHINE is pronounced SieliCEEN* For seW by all druggists at $e.00 per bottle.. For further adyice or information write or call at Dr. T. Ass Simard, Limited, 179 Khig St. West, Toronto, Canada.1 TRIAL BOTTLE FREE vNifryErAkaLE SICILIA avaAgepoorzwesi e ewe Dr Word's Forway Colds, Sere Threet, all Diseases of the Wherever there are sickly people with weak hearts and deranged nerves, Milburnia Heart and Nerve Pills will be found an effectual wedicine They restore enfeebled, enervated, exhausted, de- vlailzed or overeworked men and women to ,vigor- ous health ',Tar' Spring Medicine. !. As a spring medloine Bur -deck Blood Bittern has no equal it tones ao the system and removes al impurities from tba blood, and' takes away that tip ed, weary feeling so prevalent in thespring ir Is it trueyOu want to look oldP Then keep your gray hair. if not„ then use Hall's Hair Renewer, and have all the dark, rich color of early life restored to your hair.' '3711%.i.kerlYsito2ii 112101111111212.1111211.12 Suddenly Attacked. Children ism often attacked suddenly by' painfu and dangerous collo, Crampe,Dlarrhoes, Dyeentery, 2ho1era Morbus, Cholera Infautee., etc Dr Fowl- er's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt and sure cure, which should always be kept in the house For Choler& Morbus, Cholera infantum, Campo, Colle,Dis,rrhoes,Dyrientery and Summer Complaint, Dr Fowler's Extract of Wild Otrawberry is a prom safe and sure cure that has been &popular feve for nearly 60 years The Markman who aims at the whole target will seldom hit the centre. The Forest City Business and Shorth,and College, London, specializes along every line of Business and Shorthand work. Has succeeded in satisfying both the student and business men employing the graduates. Has the largest attendance of any school in the West. - Catalogue for a postal. School term—Sept. till June inclusive. j. W. WESTERVELT. Y. M. C. A. Bldg.. Principal. LONDON, ONT. ....n..o•.•••••••••••m•••••••••••••••••-.n... Learn Dressmaking by Mali Learn Dressmokirg Ty mail. „Learn at heme how to cut, fit and put tegether everything in Drone:raking, without tieing paper pate. ru 1 will rand for trial, free of ohargP, to any part of Canada, the Elite Tailor System and first lefe on consistivg of bow to cut a perfect waiet and sleeve for any lady. SyeteM Must be rt turned to Behed. tili- damaged 48 houre after receiving course of testicle taught in frtur 2 to 10 weeks to be paid by cash or inetalment plan. Gold Medal 8t. Lcais 1904 aire. Wm. Sanders Dreee.outting school. Stratford, Ont., Carieda. SPIIOIAL NOTICE.—I will personally teach classes this complete mail eourse, on the let and 3rd Monday of each month in Stratford only, laet Close commencing Deo - ember 4th. All wishing to learn at ,school write or see me at my °Mee, Market Place, toppoolte City Ball, on Saturdays only. Boarding found for e trail eel S. 1 guarantee 'to give the same satisfaction by mail in your own borne as at subool FOR SALE. PLOWS FOR BALE,—For sale two grade cows due lee to ealve in December. Apply to JAS. 8021- HELEN R. Vin I—SON Pupil of Mr. ,A, S. Vogt. RIWILLE, lot 31, eonoeesion 4, mcKillop. • ' 197(3x2 r EICESTER SIIEEP AND SHORTHORN CATTL LI FOR SALB.—The u der,Igned has for Bale sev end thoroughbred Leicester Sbeep and Durban Cattle of both sexee. Address Egmondville la 0. o Apply at farm, Mill Road, Tuckeremith. ROBEPe CHARTERS & SONS. • 13724 SHORTIIORNS FOR BALE.—A few Grandly bred Scotch Shorthorn Bulls With registered pedi- grees, 810 21 months, Prices from $60 to $90, if taken Boon, also cows and heifere at about the same prices, also i few Berkehire Bowe four months' old DAVID MILNE, Ethel, Ont, 15324! CeillORTHORNS FOR BALE.—The undersigned 0 has for estie on Lot 18, Concession 2, Hay, a J number of up4o-date thoroughbred Shorthorn bulls, they are of the low set blocky type, dark red in color and of choice breeding. They are 431 eft- • fide for registration and will be sold reasonably, JOHN ELDER, liensall P. O. 1948-1f EGiSTERED STOCit FOR SALE.—Tbe under- eigned offers for sale on Lot e7, Ckfnceesion 8, ibbert township, one yearliug Clyde filly, one two- year -obi Clyde stallion, three young Shorthorn tulle, also a few Berkshire pige of both sexes. The .above stock are eligible for registration in the Nat. ionellitock Records. Prices rearonible considering quality, Wilton welame. DAVID Steda• 1 P, 0. 1070-1f — se-•••••••••••••••....*.• Piano, emanate! theorv Pupils prepared for eon. mervatoxy exeminations. Terms :a -Plano -47.00 for 22 lessons, Theory—$4 for 22 ketone. For other in- formation apply at D. 13 Wile ee and Co's afflict or at J. A. Wilson's reeldence, ATM street, Seafereh. 19624f L UMBER, LAT H. and SilitlfaLES GIEDAR POSTS "mu. sem amine N. CLUFF & SONS LUMBER YARD and PLANING mut SEAFORTH.