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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1906-11-09, Page 9— FOR Ale and Porter AWARDED JOHN T ABATT I AT ST. LOUIS ELTBITION J904. aoly medal for Ale in Canada. a.eeeessenessankanoseassameseggewletal MR 9, M: I faiY9t., rethehettett. her feet ; eve otherwise nneeree a that are ab. ry woman in the leaet .o inapeet Our neW "Fall 'TY SHOES offer the already proved to the le demand for and salea excess of all ahem in eamo price all over 0 a pair, nd the Janes E. Troyer arid moved to Seaforth te o -r who has been there and while we regreee tizens we wieh thene their new home. ge. rented Ur. Troyer's Helen Swan, yeeo Catharines for some ned home. -Business t in our usually stir - the farmers being sa weather. We can't get the farmers who feed 00.10.....w.sasuaiNgema aayfield. , • le the timefor!tweatera. Iths, from 50e to $1.25 • men's. !.-e never had a better let, and z1ue. FA• Eisivelans, Bay - 2030e e and F. Gamine commenced the ent tile and cam nted.--On Sunday Rev. Mr. Hinde-, of preaches a special e Orange Order. -Ben Lorne King have ree the Northwest. --T. from Colorado where his son, James, who will typhoid fever. We learn that he is recove M -ward Elliott, accome niece, Miser Forwliel etown last week ate eerai of MrS. Elliott' parling.-Miss Maggie forth, is the guest a tr. H. McKay, of the incing • the first SOM."( 5er service in Trinity held on Sunday eye : Of morning, for the . This will certainly r for the clergYnnult the Ione, cold driYa - We extend congratue it McNeil on his sue -i the medal and junior et the recent Seafortli riees.-Mr. john Fraser ie Soo for a, tripeaeThe Young Britons wthi riends, celebrated No - having an oyster sup4 I. This- was followe• programme of maele, addresses. Later e% ed at the town half dance. -Chester Tip4 been at Goderich the Onpleting his trade se one to Hamilton. -15r. don, was a guest of !at weekeelgree was visiting [Mende week. Tassels. Bea.ttle, of Chesleye town. -Norman Mee spent the past three toba, arrived borne ort week.-- Uncle Dud - ' will be presented here on Monday eve ton XIcA.rter hew re -4 :arnoton and resumed ion in A. Strachan's rattan has got move premises* fornieriel Hableirk, millinete ccupy- the shop vaceor ton. -Wm. Sample, of and Anthony Sample, nttoba, attended the r fatb.er her last ,uella Ross was home ver Sunday. - Ufa returned rnissronerel a a very interesting address to large -Melville churelr last -"David r. and Jailer( resented in the towni esdey evening next nown impersonatere Boston. He comes of the I. 0. O. F. -The case a 'W114 Agricultural Sod': at the non -5�r y Sit4 on ToeSclaY and - week, and the. vied $650- and coetai he case is Mrs. Wrai rio, who was siege each of the Bast anch Societies for o her ankle fit hail on the first 5. About 20 wie--4 seia and Rol special gt. 1906 ON:; garouro Ev ry, !dome Needs this New, Discovery; . • . -e•-1.....-.__ ANCIENT Greece will always be remeinbered fOi. the fine typel-af manhood. supplied by the heroes of her battlefields and the athletes of 'her arenas,' but still more will these heroes and athletes themselves be' remembered, for the custom they bequeathed to later 'ages of healing sore and injured places on their bodies by the external application of some secret balm or salve. The Greek charioteers did not emerge from their mad races without some severe bruise or gaping 'wound; and to ano!nt each injury carefully with their favorite balm, was, an indispensable pt of the day's programme If we travel back in history we find that this external 4,‘rubbing " has prevailed right from the earliest times, and the only explanation cif its survival, ongitst so many changes in science seems to lie in the fact that it the external use of 'salves and balms is dictated to 'us by . Nature herself. Our own instinct tells us to rub a part that ,--..t.., hurts; and in Zam-Buk the ideal substance to apply to an injured or diseased surface is universally believed to have been found at last. It is a well-known fact that pre- parations, such as ointments, creams, salves, liniments and embrocation have hitherto been imperfect in :their action, and, moreover, they frequently contain quantities of rancid animal fat and mineral products of a harmful nature. Zam-Buk is free them any of these serious objections. It is made exclusively from herbal °Areas and esionces. Just as nature prompts you to it'll a Place Which hurts, so'in Earii-Buk she provides you wit1;1 a herbal balm With which to rub; or to apply to a. out, bruise, injury, or diseased surface, Zsati-Buk is so refined, that, unlike other ointments, it can be absorbed by the skin, Ib is also highly antiseptic-killS disease, germs and prevents blood poisoning, suppurating and festering., Eczema, scalp sores, blood poisoning, face blemishes, bruises, rash and indeed, all forms of Skin disease are overcome and healed by Zam-Buk. To the woman inAhe home it is invaluable, being, because of its purity, so admirable for household use and for children's delicate skins. . , Testimony as to Zam-Buk's Healing mPower . woen Mr. Alf. S. Clark, of Cavendish Street, London, Ont., says :-" I got ray hands very severely burned. The burns were so deep that as 1 plied my shovel at my work the blood actually ran down the tancile. The agony. I suffered you may well imagine, I tried several different kinds of salves but the burns were too severe for these preparations to heal. "I obtained a supply of Zarn-Buk and the very first application gave me ease. This pleased me, you may guess, but as I applied the balm each da,y I was more and more pleased with the effect. The pain wasrelleved completely. "I had often heard of Zam-Buk, but thought before 1 triedit that it was similar to the ordinary salves you see advertised. In a very shot time Zam-Buis healed my burns completely." What Zani-Buk should be used for. ze.m-nuk heals and cures cuts. bruises, burns, scalds, sprains, stiffness, weak anieles,swollen joints, bad legs, blind and bleeding piles, running sores, eezeraa, ulcers, pimples, boils, rash, raw chapped hands, scalp irritations, sore heads, barber's rash., raw chin after shaving, sore throat and chest, chilblains, cold sores, festering sores, poisoned wounds, and other diaeased,irdured, and inflamed or irritated conditions of the skin. Rubbed well into the art s affected, Zara-Buk gives great relief from neuralgia, candle, sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, chestand back pains and colds. A box may be obtained of any druggist at 50c. per box or from Zara-Bul Co., Toronto, for price 6 boxes for The proprietors wish every reader to give Zanelruk a free test. Send this coupon and a ono cent stamp to Zato-Buic Ce., Colborne St., Toronto, and they will post you a dainty sample box. 2„.y& 1•W tatta "I want you to see that the 'Maple Leaf'is on the next pair of rubbers you buy." -Wireless from " the old woman who lived in a shoat' Buy a pair and you'll be so pleas- antly surprised you'll tell the good -news to your friends. Made of finest grade of Para gum, which makes the toughed, most waterproof rubbers in exigence. Truly astonishing Wear. resisters. And yet so light and neat. %;v1.4 t,d; • IfiA'11""-, F ie• PA' „talc Teo .ietehat- ar Ornament t o he H1322a.., Popular taste no longer clings to deeply 'carved, highly ornamental ranges./ People now want rich, yet simple, elegance. . That is the way 1 make my new Grand Peninsular Range. The "Grand Peninsular is easy to keep clean,. because there are' no deep carvings to collect the ddst and dirt. The design is simple but very effective. No fuss or frills. ugt snooth surfaces which take a beautiful btight polish. '1'1i icki1cd castings are detachable' and c4n be lifted ati H -.out loosening a bolt, when the range is to be Lc or cleaned. A 71 4, 99 the ALL -STEEL OVEN—the THERMOMETER c'ef i -2 extra large GRATE BARS --and a dozen other time- , . cwsverlinces-that are cxclu.,ive INI:!). my GRAND Have yuur dealer show .you all thcse points. 42 h.deit CLARE BROS. & CO., LIMITED - PRESTON, ONT. SEAFORTH AGENTS: CHESNEY & SMILEY. Sieeer• hiliefeee- heeeterier "THE JOURNEY OF LIFE" TRUST IN MATERIAL POSSESSIONS NOT BEST EQUIPMENT. THE CALL TO WORLD SERVICE Wort( For the Lord Is Insistent, Inas- much as One May Not Boast of Having Other Time Than the Pres- ent to Do It in -None Know What a Day or an Hour May Bring Forth. Entered according to Act of Parliament of Can- ada, in the year ma by Frederick Diver, To- ronto, at the Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa. Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 28. -In this sermon the preacher Shows the folly of trusting in a continuance of material blessings as a --means of happiness. • The text is Proverbs xxvid, 1, "Boast not thyself of to-eriorrow, for thou knowest not What a, day, may bring forth." One of the most impressive pictures I have ever seen was one entitled "The journey of Life. , It depicted • a row- boat being pulled 'out to a shep in the offing. A large family with their household goods , were In the boat. In the stern were ithe gray-haired grand- father and grandmother. Like the great picture of Napoleon leaving France, these two old folks were earn- estly seanniag the receding shore. Their lives were nearly ended, and Itheir thought e were In the past.. They were living entirely In the sweet mem- ' ories of the days that were gone. At the feet of the old folks their grand- elle:hen were playing with their. toys. Like two little kittens, they did not seert to care wnat was happening. Their thought world had not ,ret been enterecl. Just beyond two young lov- ers were pligniting their troth. They were walking for a litiete while in the ; cloudlands. They were sipping for a • short time the sweet nectar from the flowers which bloom only for a daY during the mating of the birds. But at the prow of the boat _stood the strong man of the world, with his wife by his side. His eye had an eagle • 'glance. His brow rested on his hand. He 'seemed to be looking into the dim -future, at his home which was yet to be built in a foreign land, at the vision- ary fields which were yet to be tilled and -at the fortune which he was yet to make. The picture was suggestive to my mind of that momentoue jour- ney' which we call the voyage of life. • Not all of us reach the stage typified bythe grandparents. Some come to the end of the journey in the period of ohildhood, some in youth, some in ma- 1• ture life. It is very =uncertain, but it is well In our early years if we plan care- fully for the future instead of spending • the time in idle dreamizig or in pleas- ure. The foundations of our career , are laid earlier than some of us im- agine, and, whether that career be long • or short, those • fonndaftions should be laid well. These plans are very different from the presumptuous boasting cendemned • In my text. Here Ring Solomon de- scribes the lazy man, the indolent man, • the procrastinating man, the man who is giving free license to his evil pao- Gioia-a the man who is blinding his eyes •A Wooaa's Phosphodino, The Great English. Remedy, Tones and invigorates the whole nervoue system, makes new' lood in old Veins. Cures Nero sus Debility, Mental and Brain, Wcreriff Dm- Vendenew, SeXuat Weakneos, .13ndasiorza, Elper- mmtorritcra, and Effects_ of Abuse or Exegeses. Price $1 per bOX, six for One Will please,six will cure. Sold by all ruggists or eaalledin Vain pkg. on receipt of rice. New pairlip he maaect.free. The IV Pao/Moine Co. Tortmt01 Orst iformerly Windoor) Farm Wanted. inY companion. "The quicksands are catching you. Come on!" But oome on I ooukl not. In a minute or two the wheels had sunk a third of the way to the hubs. The horse could not pull the load. It eves no time for argu- ment, We leaped out of the wagon and plunged into the water, clothes and all. Then every hand took hoia of a wheel and began to lift -and pus% and We just saved the wagon and the horse. "Ah," I said to myaelf as 3 came dripping out of th.e. water, "how like the deceptloe Influence of the quieksande are evil habits! When 'we first drive up ,to them they look so harmless and innocent, but no sooner do we allow these evil habits to grasp us than, like the dingerous quicksands, they will creep up to the ankle, then to the knee, then to the hip and then to the heart, Then the more we strug- ee the deeper We will sink and the more helpless we wall -become." " My friend, -what 4,r1ght have you to * say that the evil habit which is work- ing such dangerous havoc .in your life nOW will be more easy to eradicate to- morrow? If it is difficult -to chain a tittle cubas he snarls in your ha,nd and bits and scratches and tears your bleeding flesh to get away, will it be easier to tome and eage the Bengal tiger after he has gained his strength and his claws have growl as sharp as rapiers and his jaws iia -the vigor of a steel trap? If the Alpine climber ls so btnumber by the cold that his eyes become heavy with sleep, will that oold cease to continue its deadly worit when he lies down to slumber and the Whistling winds cover his shivering flesh with a soft glint of snow? I see now three travelers lost upon the western prairie. A biting blizzard is Cutting through their clothing like a knife. One of these travelers, physi- cally weaker than his companions, be- comes exhausted. Drowsily he falls to the ground and goes to sleep. Hie two friends jerk him up and begin to Pained him and to rub the cold snow upon the frozen fledh. "Oh," he says, "let me sleep! Let me sleep just a lit- tle wbila and then I will go with you." "No," they say; "YOU must not sleep, If you do It Will be the sleep of death. Every minute this cold will benumb you More and more. You must walk. _You mist throw off this lethargy or yeu will die." 'Thus these two friends drag him round. and round all night until morning breaks and safety is theirs. In this beriambing way our evil habfts affect us. -We say: "To- morrow we yin change. Now, just one more glass, One more carousal." But each intoxicating cup, each debauch, each yiekling to sin, renders -us more and more helpless to fight sin. My brother, It. you do not conquer your evil habits to -day you will not conquer them to -morrow. If you cannot put out a spark to -day you cannot quencb the great oonflagration. If you do not step on the smouldering fuse you cannot. snuff out a gunpowder magazine after the explosive has reached it, Now Is the time for you to get your emancipa- tion from that destroying, debasing, evil habit - now, now, now! Oh; the importance of that infinite word inowi, But this gospel motto gives a seatlf- ingrebuke to -the visionary seeker aftet happiness as well as to those who d'rowsily mutter to their sins and evil habits, 'Oh, let me rest upon my bed of sin a little while longer, and then 1 shall bestir myself and do wheal ought to do." It bitterly denounces those fault finders who always repine at the present and have their eyes focused upon the dubious blessings of the fu- ture. Yet sorrie people never see a beautiful sailboat unless it is shining on the edge of a distant horizon, nor a happy home unless it belongs to a neighbor, nor smell a sweet perfume unless it is wafted to them from the visionary gardenh whieh shall bloom five oi ten years' hence. The journey of alfe might be compar- ed to a. summer camping trip. There is an old provel which says, "You never know peop e aright unless you 'eat wlth them at the morning break- fast table." lilut I tell you that. the breakfast table may prove deceptive in reference to your ae,quatntance's true characteristime qput a camping trip - never. There the true nature of a man or a woman oan be read by all as an open book. Now, on an average camp- ing trip some people are like bees - they can find honey wherever they may fly. They are like song birds - they can sing; no matter where you place them. They are like sunbeams - they will sparkle and dance, no mat- ter whether they are up in. the moun- tains or down in the valleys,. Every- thing they eat is the most appetizing of. all foods. Every person they meet Is a kind person. No travelers pass them upon- the road but they stop to chat and joke with them, Their beds .of pine needles are the softest. The water that leaps out of the brooks is the purest. The sunsets and the sun- rises are the most glorious, They laugh and play and make merry every day of their lives. And during all of their next winterhs work they never tire of telling the pleasing incidents of the past summer's trip. , But, though all the members of your camping party pass over the same roads and meet the same difficulties, there is nearly always one member who does nothing- but grumble. Like an owl who never sees well unless the darkness envelops him, this fault find- er sees nothing but midnight. He is al- ways droning a diirge, He grumbles at the heat and grumbles at the cold. NoW, mark you, my friend, these PeoPla of a camping party breathe exactly the same air, drink the same water, meet the same people, camp under the same trees, and yet four of them will find nothing but blessings and -the fifth nothing but troubles. Such Is the greater journey called life. There al- ways are pleasure -finders on the jour- ney. There are grurnblers there too. Now, my fault-finding friend, if you find to -day filled with troubles you 'will also find the burdens of to -morrow awaiting you when you awake In your bed. The joys anti the happiness of life are not to be decided by what a man has, but by the condition of his own heart. If you do not learn to be happy to -day and if you persistently postprone your happiness you will be miserable as long as you live, and there Is ne exception to the rule. If you are not happy in a humble hoane you would never be happy ia a, palace. If you are not happy as a clerk you will not be happy a.s an employer. If you are not happy as a young /girl you will not be happy as a woman. This living in the joys of the future Is all nonsense. It is the will-o'-the-wisp guiding its deluded followers, not into the "gardens of the gods," but into the quagmires and the swamPS, where ev- ery step you take will make you sink deeper and deeper into the mud of the it -slough of the despond." H— But this gospel motto is also a, brake. It would put the.00nservaaiYe hand up- on the shoulder' of the optimist earl say: "Brother, be a little careful aooe trusting too much to yew futore -; Is thine. ,. This' coming- twilight may be thy last eventide. Perhaps the moon Which will arise to -night will shine through the open window and touch thine ashen cheek as the at- tendants are prepariag thy body for the burial. To-enorrosie may -come to thy neighbor, but this day may usher In for thee an endless and. uncbanging eternity." Let me read for yea again, the .sentence, "Boast not thyself of to- morrow, for thoe knowest not what a day may bring forth." These .woreli aro a timely warning io those who are slowly, yet surely, allow- ing the fatal ca1s. of an. evil habit to intwine about them -timely because these poor deluded victims seem to be going to their destruction with wide open- eyes, as an ox to the slaughter. But somehow they feel that, no matter how deep their feet may be sinking 1 to the quicksands or h eiv thick t slimy seeweeds may be wrapping thein - selves about the swimmer's body, yet they can come safe to land and break loose from their evil habits whenever they will. Now, my friend, I would tell you that art evil habit instead of grow- ing weaker with age grows stronger. If an evil habit has you in a tiglit clutch to -day it will have you in a. tighter vise to -morrow. It is folly for a man • to eay, "I will break away from this evil habit to-roorrow." If you cannot break away from that evil habit to- day you cannot to -morrow. If you are not wiliing to break away from an evil habit to -day, in all probability you will be weaker still to -morrow. The law of the increasing moral -weakness of the wrongdoer and the increasing strength of an .evil habit is irrevocable. A man becomes more and. mote help- less in the grip of an evil habit, ,just as In the clutch of the quicksand. am glad used that illustration. It is one that you will heel if you have ever been. caught in those treacherous depths. I t4member sonte time ago when driving through the western country we came to a rather wide oreek. I was about to drive through it when the gentleman with whom I was riding tiorld, "Walt; let me test it." He took ofei his shoes and stockings and started for the other side. "Come, on!" he cried, "It is shallow all through." siho-ok the reins as a, signal to the horse, and he started. He went only a few steps and then stopped, frightened. No sooner did he stop than the wheels of the wagon begat'. to sink. mconis on! Come on!" cried not*taire your assets ton blot Alt your future, days may not be flooded with sunshine." It Is always well for elelp te be ballasted before it sets sail from harbor. And yet some men, be- cause they have raade a success in the past, ;think success will alwa,ys °be theirs. Therefore they live up to the last cent of their income and. have their pr,operties mortgaged eip to the full limit and buy their stocks epon a mar., gin, and when the wheel of., forteune turns a. little the superstructure goes down With a crash. Now, my ferother. In order to have a happy 111tUTO „*011 must be like Joseph, the Prime Minister of 'Egypt. In your. seven ,yea,rs of pros- perity you ratist prepare for your seven years of want. Though bright days will come, dark days of adversity will also surely be yours. Thie feet is well illustrated by the life insura,nee business. Some evare ago was talking with one of the lead- ing insurane,e superintendents of Chi- cago. He said: -"I suppose you think that my chief obJeet is to get people to carry all the Insurance That is a great mistake dome aents make. I always say to my agents: Men, do not persuade your people to ta.ke any more insurance than they can carry. A man should always be eible to make his pa,yments If you persuade a man to pay too targe a premium within a few years sickness and troulalee may come to his home. The man may be thrown out of his work temporarily. Then he drops his Insurance and he will never take it up • again. Then that action not only hurts the man, but also the life insurance business ." • And yet in many ways there are thoushads of men making the same mistake as does the man who overinsures. These men bank too neeloh upori the prosperities of the 'future. Therefore they lose their all 'when these prosperities fait I never think of a man's future but as a kaleidoscope.N 'Neu rem.er when as a little boy your mother bought you one for a Christmas poesont. You went to the window and 111 ted the lit- tle apparatus to your eye and looked through it. All the brightly colored pieces of ease at the other end formed *themselves into most fantastic shapes. You etu-died them long and carefully, "Beautiful, beautiful!" you said. "Why, see rainbows and towers and mea- dows and farmhouses?' Then your sis- ter aaid, "Charley, turn it" You turn- ed the kaleidoscope, and all the glasses jingled. Then you looked again and said: "Why sister, all the pictures are different. Look and see. How did this all happen?" Then you turned It again, and there were otb.er eombina- tions of colors. Wonderful are the changes of a koleidosc,ope, yet not more strange than will be the changes In your future. The fact that you have a $5,000 income this , year dhes not prove you will have even a, thous- and dollars next. Because you are in good health now do not think that your lungs will be stout next week. The fact that you are riding upon the wave of prosperity to -day does not prove that the flood tide will not ebb away. Do not bank too much upon the temporal successes of the future. Do not count too surely on a long earthly life. Be- cause you are living in a paittee on "Easy street" do not epend your time planning what you will do in your gardens for next summer. Your future is all surrounded by fogs and mists. Within twenty-four hours your whole life may be changed, '"Boast not thy- self of to -morrow, for thou knowest not what a day may bring .forth.". If it is necessary to be careful with our earthly opportunities, how peewit more is it essential for us to be careful of our heavenly opportunities! war- rant that there is not among us all one who intends to ultimately refuse the offer of eternal salvation. But this is such a busy world. It is filled with such. belay people. The engagements of life press themselves upon us with such overwhelming numbers that we are apt to postpone the greatest of all questions -the eternal destiny of out immortal souls. We intend to take the matter up. to -morrow or the day after to -morrow, but someho-w that to -mor- row never comes. Now, my brother, 3 want to drive this question home:, Will you here and nove make up your mina What you will do with Jesus -will yon make up your mind to -day? Remem- ber, to-mOrrow may be too late, Tot then the time may have CODat3 When Jesao will have decided what he will do with you. Do you not realize that I may be the last gospel messenger. who shall ever he able to present to you the pleadings of Christ for your salvation? You h life may go just as quickly as did old Dr. How.a.rd's of Pittsburg. He seemed t be in perfect health. He was writing a sermon. He rose from his study desli and stepped Into the next room. Before the ink was dry upon the paper his spir- it had taken flight Time is fleeting. The decision has been made. But, what- ever that decision is, remember it is a decision. for this day and not for to- morrow's sun, "Boast not thyself of to -morrow, for thou knowest not what a. day may bring forth." 0 God, may this day be the day of decision to many souls! - ,I=V,r1..I.n01VGAD t.t• f to all the magnifteent oppOrtunities cf self: "I know I am not ;doing as I the glorious present as he eays to hien- For sale ar exchange 640 acres of winter wheat ought to do. But what is the d-ffer- land in Alberta. Level open preirie. Less than ence? Rome was not built in a day. 8 miles to G. T. P. and miles to C. P. R. Will ex- A life IS not spanned by the short aores of broken or stony land on the whole section. 11 • 11 Lot el Con 4 • I will eat and drink a,nd be erry, change for well ina'prov.ed 100 or 160 acres in Huron bridge of twenty-four hours. Thi, day Tuckersmith, or Item Brueefteld P. 0. and to -morrow I will do as I oug coun 3.For 11111 2028-4 A. A. WATT, Real Estate Agent. do." "Ah," says the neat 'Wag, "t • eeie t to day rimmastalalla ur octor Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, but— why go to 'all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and therrof having hisprescription filled, when you can step into any drug store m Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S 'CURE for a quarter. Why pay two to five dollars when a twenty-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you as uickly ? • Why hot do as hundreds of thousands of Canadians have done for the past thirty-four years: let SHILOH be your doc- tor whenever a Cough or Cold appears. SHILOH will cure you, and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you have a Cough or Cold cure it with HIL • P 44,A#. 16 Mr. si~ageWir//al You cannot possibly have a better Cocoa than A damns drink and a sustaining food. Fragrant,- nutritious and economical. This excellent Cocoa maintains the system in robust health., and enables it 'to resist winter Annie Gold. Sow by Grocers and Storekeep in 1 and,i-lb Tins. • AP. ow PATTERN 3E" Ms is the best apron pattm% ver offered, and it is Boraethirsg !very lady needs. Y4nt cannot. raii to be pleased with this one, 1,m1 all new subscribers to THE NOME JOURNAL. will receive one free. This is a prize pattern, all sizes froni 32 to 42 ineLes bust. TIM amen JounbrAl. is a toe, beautifully Ulusttated maga- zine for women and girls, full of bright, interestin Serial aud shortratorlea, anil well edited departments on fancy work, household, hints of great- value, health and beauty, -etiquette, conking, flowers, boys' and glrls'page, fashions, wit and hum er, etc. Et is being improved with every Issue. It would be 'heap at 41.00 per year, pain order to introduce Our magsaine to =dorsi we send Tun nellE JOVIMAL e, full year and t,he apron pattern for nly5e. Address; DINOVDATIoN DZIOT FIE HO ME JOURNAL TORONTO, CANADA. dt0. 0E1n inn,n,,.....,,, mi IV - N RELIABLE but, throughout United States and Camila to k ilk NTED . °ntribtaretlego4 advertise our goodA, tacking UP show eardi feemancleisad. bvrokirtiseglitang roda.attliorc°. n&,rmtatellus:loPnlaoeg:r:laat:8; 690 a month and expanses es.so a de y. Steady enunoy• meat to good reliable =en. We lay out your 'work for you. No ea-perk:sae needed. Write Lr particulars. ' 8ALU8 MEDICINAL 00,. London. Ontario, Canada Farmer 4ci.o.43.. We want all your Poultry, a:ivc or dressed, and will pay iho HIGHEST PRICES far it Y -our Polar um 3 • lu iieliveredlut r 3' Seaforth-Buyer, (Mester Mollann. Clinton Little, dethou Island. Xovember Oth -Buyer, 1. A. Ford. Dublm-Buyer aflBlyth November Bth-Buyer McMillan & Co. Ilensall-Buyer wanted. PLAVZLLES, Limited,' London, Ont. Jethou Island is by far the smallest of the Channel Islands and boasts the distin.ctiOn of being the smallest inhab- ited island. in Europe, having, indeed, only one dwelling house upon it It has a population of seven souls. It has ne road or pathway or post. At the last census more than half the population of the island was absent, having gone to Guernsey market with the butter and cream from the jethou cows. The weather being bad, the visitors had to stay at Guernsey during the census time. Heir or Heiress? When he learned that he was the father of a fine infant, a Tunbridge' Wells resident hurried to a, local news- paper office to have a birth notice In- serted. In his excitement, however, he had not stopped to find out whether it was a boy or girl, and had to return • to his home to ascertain the sex. Would Shakespeare Assent? "What is his occupation?" asked Mr. Paul Taylor at Marylebone police court. "He is a poet," was the reply. "That is a man's amusement, not his occupation," was the magisterial pro. nounceraent. Big Remark, "I won't do any more work for that man Hopkins." "Why?" , "Well, he passed. 00E08 remark I ill not like." "Did he? What was it?" "He said, 'Brown, you won't be want - 04 after this week." tu3 Me Kid You Bavo Mays Bo PA. ..••••••••••••...a FOR SALE' 11.11, Tewn and Villege Property — Write for list. A. A. WATT, Real Estate Agent, 202541 Bruc,efleld, Ontario. MILBUlt Heart, and Nerve Pi --Z., .A.re a pecifie tor alt dlseass n'..nd - orders ar1.4ng from condi- goo of the heart or nervesystem, t.eh I as Palpitation of the I Preetratioo, Nervotemorde f ne-s,FantonaInzey•Spelle, I eta They are especially ben I E I Women trou,b1W. with 1 E stinqation.• I- I _ .P-iee 60 cents per box, or 3 for Si, - 1 1 AU -dealers, or I Tens T. UTEMURN CO., 1.011t1T110. i Toronto,Oee. } _