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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1914-05-29, Page 2.agiNSIDINdattiMaciatatudeanuallaidiallal_lie.......*N62491661M4116018NONSINIMENAMI4VM Don t ro the F It's a nuisance with which you hae not to put up. Our screen doors and windows beautifully finished in dark oak, panelled and ornamental, successfully restrain the fly and make hot days and nights comfortable. Get a door or win- dow right now. The comfort costs no more. Screen doors complete with hinges...b.-314o $2.25 Screens to fit any window................. to 50c Summer-tiMe makes washing burdensome. Wooden tubs tall apart unless filled with water an added burden. Why not inves-4 in a galvanized tub. No rust; no staves; no hoops; no water to keep them filled. fo $I,1L5 Hand made boilers in tin and copper, Srong- er heavier and more lasting than factory ones. Price.... ... : . .......$2.50 to $4.50 The "Champion" high speed washing machine delights dozens: of homes. Easy working large cypress tub with high speed Til MAY 29 191* tilarrait4.41:0440/4.010 %mg expolit -SEA,FORTIle F MAT 29) 191.4,:- . - . AS We Expected , It is a general belief that ..1-1en. George E. Parise „in aPPoleateil Ilitgb. Commissioner temporarily until. a per- manent man es ne,medo The ',above is by the Ottawa cones- pondent of' tire Toronto News, whonis 'esualie Pretty well 'versed in 'Govern- ; resent 1 eecrets. This ,is exactly, in line with the prod1etioni of The Expositor, scene 1liew ,weeks ago. 'Mr. Perley is ihe .41Nellera1 t U.tiat7 man a the Borden GeV: - eminent. He !is the warm personal ;friend and the chief private adviser cifeefr. Borden. Mr, Perley goee to Lon-. don to take it -he High Commiesionership thmperarly. He wial keep the seatwarm !for Mr. Borden until after the next general election: when the Premier will %Wetly Step down from peliticai lite and have hiniselfl appointed Canadian High Commissioner and Ur. Parley mae remain in London- in the eapacity of Mr. Borden's. assistant or chief! ad- viser. .But what le of mimes greater 1 Importseicg to tbe people, Bton. Robert Rogers will be gr.:. Borden's seccessor Re Prime etenisber a °made,. Of course the ifUll intention of this soherne de - rids unary ith4 Conservative Party be - mg returned to power at( the next el- ections and we are araid that, enless the real tax payers -wake up (the Can- adian Northern Railway and what it: represents and the other )3ig Interests will ensure this undersirabie result. err. Rogereew4tild be much more aeceptable to the tdiah Mr. Borden. Ile can play the nee better. An evening every week and your lawn can be ept like a , velvet carpet. - Our mowers are especially ,easy running and long lasting. The blades are the finest steel and are constructed with the , idea of_not wearing loose... ... ...:.......$3.50. to $11.00 G. A. Sills, Seaforth Sole Agents for Lowe Bros. Paints, Chi-Namel, Moffat's Ranges, Eastlake Steel Shingles, Paroid Ready Roofing, Canadian Steel Woven Wire Fence, Pease Furnaces and Boilers, Hot Point" Electric Supplies. New Idea Furnaces. 1 IMPORTANT NOTICES 1 f. — • • 12ARhi FOR SAVE—For Sale on Lett 1, Oonceesion r4 Hullet. Containing 109 acme, convenient to school- arid Post dale. Terms reasonable. For furdter nartioulare apiary to William McMichael, Worth Net Office. 728054f el FOR; SALE.—Let 6, Concession 9, Tacker. mith, eontaining 100 acres, aboin seven acres under bush. The farm is well fanged and drained and In a good state of cultivation. There are on the premises a good fraeae house, bank barn, pig house, hen house, drive house and two good wells. For terms and particulars apply on the premiees or ad- dgess MRS. JOIN McCLOY, EgniondvilIe P.O. amen -- -- VARA' FOR SATZ—Being Lot 7, Concession 1 Se Township of Thillete, containing' 100 aoresof choice land. on the premises are a large bank barn with stadia( underneath, with cement floors through: ut. New brick house with furnace in the cellar,. Well fenced and under drainer', will be sold ireaeonable as the melee wishes to give up farming. For further information apply on the premisee or address Seaforth P. O., .MELVIN .1. CLARIC. 239341 FURIE FOR SALE—Lot 10, Concession 1, Staoley Township, one mile and a quarter south ot Brumfield, on the London Read, one hundred acres, ninats, cleared and Len acres of good bush, well fenced arid well drained, good brick house and good oarns with stone stabling underneath. Three never failing wells, a good orchard with over a hundred trees with good fruit, good driviog shed, pig pen and implement house. Tering to suit purchaser. JOHN MURDOCK, Brucefield. 2844 FAR4, FOR SALE--Beiog Lot 0 Concession 17, Orey townehip, containing 100 acres more or less, on the premises. is 4 large two storey brick house, 'bank bat n with stone stealing, driving house pig pen, et., all comparatively new, the farm is -a eretolaes farm being in a good state of culeivation, isall cleared except .1 acres of bahiwood bush, it ie -well drained also well fenced arid is situated li miles tom Welton where there is a good market, school eleurchee. C.' I", R. station ete. For further partieulare apply to or address, Mrs. DOleA, Mad D. ZEAN, Brussele P. 0.. . . - .28138x12-tf ! -- IYSIRABLE PROPERTY pea , SALE—For sale in Harpurhey, a good property with a laege house with eight roome, hard and soft water in the kitchen, a goad cellar under the 'whole house, which contains a goad ciatern, the buildings are in 'good repair. Also a large garden, fruit trees and a lot of small inelt. Aelarge stable, henhouse and pig pep. Will be sold on easy terms. For particulars apply 2893-tf 1 to R. S;HAYS, Barrieter, Seaforth, . ARM F. . SALE—Lot 20, Concession 5n , Maion on the roe el Roed, 2 wiles and a half north bf Seaforth. One leindred acres, all cleared but --e4ibimt two acres. Well fenced and in a good etate Of ettiejeation., About 0144 acree in grass, Good • trame houee, two gond barns, with atone stabling under -moth, Plenty of never.failin,g water. Rural LaU Delivers, and Rural Telepliqne. A good bearing orchard. Easy terms of payment.- Apply on the premises or address JOHN eteMILLAN,,284e0a4fo:trfth • P0. • - "VA -RM FOR SALE—Lot 9, Concession 8, Stanley, ile containing 100 acres, 00 acres cleared. the nal- ance in good hardwood oosh. The WM is well fenced and well underdrained and in a first class etate of cultivation. There is 4 drat classfmeneh 'use with furnace,' hard And soft water in the house. One barn 50x58; 1 shed 26x52; 1 horse stable and drive house esere, eu on stone foundations. Alsb good wells; 1 at the house and 1 at the barn, Water he the barn. The farm is sit-mited 1 mile from e,ohool ; 7.1 miles from Brumfield ; si miles from leippen ,• 6 ntilee from Henson ; 0 miles from Sea - forth and Clinton. • Reason for sellitg wishing to retire. For farther particulers apply on the pre- mises or to ROBEIIT MORRISON, Brucefield, Ont. 2420x8 lUfARM FOR SALE --The north heelf of IAA 28 and 11.: 29, first Oonceesion of McEntee') and Lot '28 on the 2rid Cenoessioo nI ElleilloP, containg 200 acres . all in one rderow, _clearly all cleared and in a high state of cultivation. There is a bank barn 564.00 feet, with sea.bling- to accomodate 85 heap- of stook, fad and litter carrier all through the stables, ewo cement silos 16x36 and a large cement water tank, water pipes through all the stables; -implement house 30x36, good brick reeiderce. This farm leer: deo on the Corporation of Seaforth, it is tine of the choicest and best equipped farms in -the County of Huron and will be sold on taketerms of payment as the proprietor is anxious -to ream. Apply on the pren-ises or address Seaford' P. 0., ROBERT GAR ROW 239041 (1001) FARM FOR SALE—For sale Lot 2, Con. 4, Xi Mlle% containing 100 acres. There ere on the premisCs a good brick house, kitchen and wood shed with good cellar and hard and sett watere There is also a good frame barn 60 x 01 with stone foundation and stabling underneath and another barn 24 k b4 not raised on foundation and Implement shed all in good repair. There ift also a`good,bearing orchard and twe. good never failing wells. The farm well undetdramed imd welt fenced and in a high state of° cultivation with five sores of buil. The farm in well situated; a miles from Seaforth near the boundary betweon Hallett and Moleillop with -tele- phone and rural mail deliverer. , Terms reaeonable. For hardier partioulars app.y on the premises or ad. dose WM. WILSON, SetifoetheOnt., R. F. D. No. 1. 2,115xtf iARr FOR SALX—For sale Lot 3, Concession 3, S.. Tuckersmith, contain100 acres. There are on the premises a frame:hank bark 40x65 with/A.01h* underneath, frarne house 22,02, the house is on a, stone foundation and there is a good oment cellar under the -whole house with good sitchen and Woodshed anst good outbuildings at the barn. The tam is all tile underdrained and 'well fenced and the land is in agood ktate of cultivation and delete= slerteeleuteweeelet. There lea never tailing well at the houseand a spring +neer runs across one corner at the baek end dfthefarnu There - -Italia soret• seeded to grass and the balance Atari #lcwing. done. There is also -seeplendle hearing young orchard of an acre and a half, containing apple, pear, plum, cherrie trees, etc- Terms reason. able. For further parbisulars apply on the 'premises adUltesk JOHN FOIbTUNE, Seaforth r. O. 811.tr It's cheaper to raise coils than to buy holies. But it's cosily if you lose the colts. Keep a hottl e of Kendall's Spavin Cure handy. For thirty-five years has proved it the safe, reliable remedy for spavin, splint, curb, ring- bone, bony growths and lameness from many causes. is sold by druggasts everywhere at $1 a hottlee6 bottles for $5. Get .a free copy a - our book "A Treatise on the Horse" at your druggist's or write us. 85 Dr. B. J. #ENDALL CO., Enosbure Falls, VG Quit Dosing Your. Children with strong Cathartics— Chamberlain's Tablets are most effective in regular. ting stomach troubles and con- stipation for the little folk—one tablet. going to bed means a simny face in the morning. Pleasant to take, they never fail. 25c: a bottle. Druggists and, dealers' or by -mail. - 2-- Chamberlain Medicine Co. Toronto. 4 _— moltten lair eleeeeee. li:eeee, fffigiNZW432....eleete ERRIN "Fancy Thin" DAIRY CREAM SODAS are somewhat .different from the usual soda: biscuit—Smaller . and daintier—perhaps yetell like them better. If you don't You'll. find die regular "Dairy Creams" to be the very best soda biscuits you have ever. tasted. Packed and sealed at the bakery in packages that preserve their freshness—and sell at 5c, .10c, and 25.c. "Every package guar- anteed". Vie will pend yon 'the “Perrinee Sample Package" 1.;r74. name . mpsa package. . e of our dyeoluriciogusrofac;s y 'Look ler thy biscuits, for 10c in coin: or. . .xr 1 PERRIN & COMPAIVr LastiTED cAiktiLDA. : LONDON . aeiameseeemeae ' Th e Duty of Temperance Advocates The Christian ' -Gdardian, as most people knose, is the recognized officia1 organ of the Methodist Church in Canada. In no iseise is it a political jonrnal. _ In fact when ' it has dealt with politics, -more particularly Pro- vincial polities, we have always felt, of late years/ at any rate, that its -soft, side was usually 'turned. towards the Conservative party. This being the case, it is with all the greater pleasure we quasi -eta opinion as to the attitude of the two political parties towards the so - called liquor or temperancle question at the present time and the dety-of the tempera.nce people at the foithcoming electiere The Guardian sa,vs : . "The Conservative party stands for law enforcement and the further use of the local option provision in the Liquor License Act, but Conservatives do net believe in and. willnet grant any -radical temliperance legisition, unless they are compelled to do 'so by. the people. The Iteforin party stands clearlya and definitely for the immedi- ate abolition of all bar and chile li- censes, leaving all the shop present ii- rten see). n tact, butto bed eal t wi thby lo eel vote, a majority of voters to rule eith- er for or against the license. Now this is not all the temperance people have been asking for and it is not all thet the Provincial Legislation could do in the matter; hut it does include 'two very important demands Ontarip Tem- pevance men have been makingfoe a, decade or more. 'Under such circum- stanbes the man who puts temperance v - beep e party seems to us to - have a pretty clear course marked out as to ho his svote should be cast, Mr. Rowell's policy with reference 'to the 1.:quor question should appeal strong- ly tceeveiy temperance man, not be- cause it ie Air. Roweil's policy, but so far as it gkeee it represents the temper- ance policy of Ontario for years past. To reprobate this policy new would. seeds to come dangerously near to de- claring previous declarations insincere We would not try to be a conscience for any man, bet as the matter looks to us, in a. straigbt contest between a Conservative who stands by his party policy on the liquor question,: and a Refornier who stands by his party - policy on the same -issue the ardent and honest temperance Veter does not seem to have much ground to hesi- tate." SIMIEIMOVIESIIIMIUDA101119156.110121 Banish the Bar Mit. Villie McClung the well known and popular author of Winnipeg is takinganactive interest inthe pend- ing provincial cam pa igie, in Manitoba, In an address before the Social Service. !Council, Carberry, Manitoba, a few nights ags- she made out a strong ease for the banish the bar policy and female suffrage, both of which are being opposed by the Roblin govern- ment, in IVIanitaba. as they are being opposed by the Whitney government in Ontario. As Mrs. McClung's re- marks apply to Ontario as -well as to Manitoba, they will be interesting to our readers. , Mrs. McClung said that Women were tired of being simply the chief 'workers in all kinds of charaties and wanted. a chance to get at the roots of great evils, that made the charity work necessary. Instead of trying to help the wrecks made by mtemper- • ance, they wanted to strike a blew at the trade which produces the wrecks. Toward that 'end they asked for the most potent thing they knew, the suffrage; but the present election act 'of Manitoba 'classed women with idiots, lunatics, criminals. or Indians) and said trey shoUld not vote. They had asked Seir Rodmond Boblin for the vote, and he had told them that neither his mother nor his wife wanted to vote, so they, the rest of the women of Manitoba, could not have the vote. MTS. McClung thee reviewed the his- tory of the etiffrege movenaent in Manitoba, and the efforts made by the friends of the movement in the legis- lature to secure an act incorporating the frabehise for Women and told how those efforts had been fustrated by lthe Premier hiniself, who had doclated that a vote cast by one of his followers in favor of the resolution) would be a 'vote taken as expeessing want of con•4 fldence in himselfi, "1 do believe 'with all my heart," declared Mrs. McClung, " that when he did that he struck a blow at something -deeper 'than even woman suffrage. He struck a the very principal of representative I•grivernment, for no one man shotild •sodominate a body of men elected to represent the people a,ndprelient them voting for what some • of them are ,known te,believe in." - Speaking on i.;lie relation of the sub- Jject of woman suffrage to the tempera • ance quetition in Maintriba, Mrs:. ete, Clung said: "I believethat the proper thing to .do now is, to -get-banish-the- -bar, or a referendum onthat as soon • is pcisrible. I am perfectlyasitified that there lies the next Step =for nate take. We bellefeothat the majority 1 • r i , should ruleeand We think that it is Sininently rresht and fair to mit flue question before- the )electeas.of Mani- toba. If they: say they want the bar. we must go on with 0411' work of edu- cation until they change their minds. If they eay.that they do nOtanant the bar, as I 'earnestly believe they: will, and I think 1 know the public eenti- ment Of the provinincefaarlywelt then the bar will go. Weknow that if the women had the vote there wo Id be tlt no doubt about the result. Th,t is why the Mauer train° oppose , s $o strenuously.. All liquor men believe that women's place is the home. They are afraid, of our votes. Our -propa- ganda for theternperance questa n in b mahitobaiineti nose is clear.. I Hove that the next -great step is to return the Li his alpar t y to power. , _ liOw is that 1 plain eoughe " (Loud Cheer -se) altegtasellooleMyritlyiyallie Of Intereat to Poultrymen • Department of _Agriculture Odom% fifitY 20th, 1i14 Dear • Sir I am enclosing ere - with a copy of leaflet of the F0 ltry iavision of this Department. - It deals with a matter which is of ;special importance to the public at, this tiroe, when the poultry- breeding seam* is drawing to a close. From now on, l the male birds are of no value telent the flock, and but few are of suffl worth to vvarrant being kept ver until another season. In fact, their presence in the flock, biter June lst, is decidedly harmful; they produce no revenue, they consume much food, and they contribete• materially to the enormous loss charged back to farniers and others, through the sale of bad and partially incubated eggs. The prices quoted for roosters now much higher than they will later in the summer. From e standpoint therefore, the 'preset decidedly the most opportune t for their disposal. It may -also be of interest to y readers to learn that I have been in- formed that the poultry dealers in the larger Canadian markets, in order 1 to assist inethe hnprovement of the Can- adian egg trade, have agreed to con- tinue to pay during thelast week lin May, the present high prices quoted for male birds. 1 Yonis Faithfully J 01IN BRIGHT. Live Stank Commissioner are be 18 ut The bellowing is the leaflet referred to by Mr. 'Bright: Eggs which have been fertilized constitute the greatest portion of t e inferior stock which, when exatnined, proves unfit for food. It is not nec- essary that these shall have remained - for a time under-a:broody hen, a tern- peratare of seventy d egrees being, in itself, sufficient to cause the germ to connnence to -grow. If the heat s constant the development of the chi le - will continue, but if it cease% or le in putrefactioreat oncesetS in, and the egg becomes bad. On the other hand, Infertile eggs which are free from the active germ cell, do net, under ordinary 'conditions, deteriorate seriously. • Few farmers seem to realize these facts, and consequentl'y very- few, make any effort to insure fertilitY. Theampeession prevaites among many, ahem the flock is essential to the production shots where chaffering is carried to peddlers, its opera-hoases, its that, the preeen ce of tht male bird of a maximum number of eggs This assumption has been proven, time ancl time again, to be absolutely without foundation . Farmers and others selling eggs foe market, are recommended to kill off • or dispose ot the male birds after he: breedins season-- As a result of their! remainine 'with the flock after June 1st, Oanadian farmers loose each year at least a million dollars, through the! peesence of partially incubated eggs 1 in the produce which is marketed. ! The fact that the best trade in many ' cities in Canada now offers the prem- ium of from one to floe cents per doz- en, for non -fertilized eggs, suggests an additional financierl eonsiderateon which but few can afford to overlook. 11•••••••••100.4.,.. oyster ehell bark louse is threatening marry orchards. The tent caterpillar is also much in evidenae In York- en other counties to the east Small freiti have COITIC throe& the winter with comparatively little Injary, and pre- sent proepects are good. _ Fodder Sapplies.—Durlfig the past seven years the Tamers a Ontario have -learnt to make 'their suppnes go' farther than formerly. Hay. and the grains are Wont fed Searingle, .ibe coarser iroddere belies much more large. .ly utilized. 'The quantity a shay on hand in most -quarters IS said. to be sufficient for emer,gencles. Sprirefl Sowing—The eel' was in a. splendid condition for a. Seed bed in the latter part oL April, even =heavy elays, having been well puliserized by the Severe frosts whieh occured dur-e, ing the winter. Farmers who got on the land to sow earl/ were well, ad- vanced, and some through evnen re- terne were. made, saaaaangoamw.gratainalsco What Th'e_Iliforilen.Thbak Perhaps one a the most Significant' resolutionnever passed ly anindepende ent Wide uaeuppgrt tivg "abolish the bar" policy ,of Mr N Wi, Rowell, K. C., vias that Relented, Jest week, by, the 'Woman' e Wissionary Society • of the London, ConCerence, of the Methodist Church. It Marks the first time for a missionary, society to put its etamie o approyal on, the Liberal temperance polity, and the ifect that theleader among 'Methodist woreear, regoaless ol leanings, ananimoiesle carried the resoletben was !taken as an evidenc of the influence they will exert. Tehei resolution was spoken to by. several delegatesdand there .was hotta dissent- ing voice, the entire Convention ;doing -to emphasize their senthrient Mrs gay R. eritorniey, who was a visitor to tens convention, was invited to sneak, and Raid that Christian women had been praying for - years- for a leader, and one had been raised up in -Mr. Rowell. She created a preound impression when.' she added, "and God pity the Christean, 4:eoh1e of Ontario If they faillai measure . ap .to the ;felt extent of their respell: oibility." • ' r Impressions of Cuba.. (Ilya' cerrespondent.) The Cubans may not have learned xi- Lich ifrorn the United 'States, 'but, they have at leasst learned the value of cleane limes. All over the island drainage( sys- tems, water supplies, and the whole machinery of public hygiene have been carefully studied; Havana Inowadays is lashed as faultlessly. as Paris or Ber- lin; and Cuba, frostless land of per - petite' June, where the therrriorneeer rarely fells below 60 degrees or rises above 90 degrees, where the tradewinds play with daily refreshment, and where I the climate, during' the winter months ils a gnat healer or, bronchial' trembles, is at last beginning to realize that its old and sinster repatation asa fever den was due to no natural causes, bat. eimPly to the foller and ignorance of man, and that its present' position with the tecond lowest' death -rate in tho world is much more representative ot its real merits. It has its cathedrals and. its dungeons, its ihuddle of darken- ed streets, its narrow- pavements where- on the battle of tele wall le daily fought out, its cafe e that l sometimes tern down their light* but never -seem to close their doors, and where at alkehours you can be served with aova•ried and delec- table meal, out 'of doors or on the roof, with the blueblack waters of -bhe bay lemeath. It hes its central, indispen- sable; palm -fringed avenue and its fash- ionable aftermaan driveway, skirting the Oult of 'Mexico. It has its counfry-club and its golf -links, its carnivals- and festivals, its sparkling suberb `of Veda - do, tete contrasts or electric street -cars, btalock wagons, And auto -mobiles, ite Ontario Crops The fol:owing etaternent regarding cro'p conditions in the province, based on the returns oe correspondents sent in on .or about gay ),43, has been is- sued by tbe Ontario Department of Agriculture :- . Fall :Wheat—In the April crop bullee- in, which was based on statements of correspondents reporting on the first day of that month, fall veneat prosPects were said -to be encouraging, as the crop had come -through the winter practicelly unscathed. April, however proved 'to be a most teying time for the young wheat, and it sufferer' se- verely from the formation of ice and (from "heaving." The •area plowed. Ury this 'Swing 'will not be re.latively great, as fermers have preferred to drill barley or Other spring grains in the bare spate, rather than lose the grass ehat Was iseeded down With the fall wheate Olcseer-zAs t the ease off fall wheat, clover 'fields are very variable in ale- peerance. Thies crop also suffered. more or lees from the testing vvpather of the early part a April) which caused) considerable heaving, especially in low and pOorly drained itt.tations, anhou,gh some correepondents report the eield.s as looking well. on: rolling and weil-. drained lands. •- Milstefete-eThis mem has not come through the Winter quite eso well as clover a There is a strong desire ex - ?linseed (by correspondents for a hardier variety • a alfalfa, suitable for _ !the climate -ef' this province, and Prof. 0. A. Zaeitz Is hopeful thall -he will be able to xneet Whim need soon. • Fruit'. -The low and suatained dips in the temper-Op:re at times during the evinter cansed MUCh anxiety among -growers a peaches and other tender !fruits, and he results hen Shown that tha hey d reason Ifor their fears., in ;nearly every peach section the fruit ilserels basTe been More or lees rfrozen back. sorrxe cae-es isr the 'Niagara Aistriet 'the lots will be almott complete, while In. Eiresex, 1Cent and Larnbtore the injury has been lighter. One- corres-• porident points mai the fact that early Arai:ties have atcaped better .thaa the IaterSorte. However, 'there has been comparatively no root freezing, and - leer 'great peach indestry -at the most eis likely to suffer but one season'sloss in beating. 'On the other haba, appleB, *ars, cherries and .plume are very promising asto blossom, but the pres- almost Irish Ifinish, its peopled fultter- ing balcoele.s, and, above all, and per- meating all, its high-pitched clanging noises. All this the average visitor, es- pecially a he isifrom the United States and has lied few !appor tunities for con- tact with an alien environment, finds <eminently eatisFying. But the real des- tiny dr Havanna, if It means to become one of the permanent winter resorts ei)f the West Indies, es to develop some- thing on the lines of anothir Mown Carlo. CIVIINIMINIMIna!•6111•41•11PRINIGINNIMPAMOVA. Held Back By Deadly Anaemia Thousands of Growing Girls Yearly Fall Into a Hopeless Decline 1Th e People are the long run leornfort Soap also HEISER yOur painting, is an inveistment or an expense depends on what paint you'buy. Don4t Buy paint that bas to be prepared by band. in that case you pay extrAfor painter's time in mixing. Don't buy -cheap paints, even though ready mixed. You get just what you pay for—an inferior paint and hifedor risults. Lowe Brothers ("High Standard" Liquid Paint Gives Bait Ritsults. Coats itifie more by the gallon but very much less far, the jolt because it h thoroughly machine -made and has skill, experience and <ea reputation behind it, and therefore does more work. PAINT INFORMATION on exterior painting—interior deccastin--efoera--- woodwork—etae,--•at our store. Color Combinations Fere. 285 For. Sale by G. A. Sills Seaforth. Anaemia—the dociorle name for -blood- lessness—holds back many girls from the path to brieht, healthy wotnan- hood. At that all-impertant tithe when 'their veins :should be full of rich, .red • anaemia, creeping on them-steal- thly, robs them of sparkling eyes and ele,ar skin. They become languid and exhausted at elle least exertion, their backs. ache, their hearts palpitate Violently, appetibe fails, and their corn- tilexion change to a pasty yellow,- or they become deathly whlte, No medicine ‘, ever ',offered the public has bestowed Ouch important benefits. upon anaemic girls as Dr. lerilliems' Pink Pills. They bullet:up the body anew by( making the rich, red blood that gives ,splendid health, bright eyee, a, clear complexion arid womanly :brightness. Here is an instance out of many recorded thouse an. Miss Delina Arsenault, Urban'. ville, I". E. Li' says: "I *suffered from atattack Of steraemis. which my. friends 'feared at one time would prove fatal. I , grew thinner every day, had dark circles around my eyes, could i.ot sleep well at night •and *got up in the morn- ing feeling tired and -depressed. su ef- ared 'Beverly from headaches and paing in the back and limbs.' ..t; had to leave echool, and was enable to do any work around the house. had ale appetite - and E'requeintly vomited whatl dide eat. 1 was under a doctor's care for eight months, 'but was ;growing worse and worse; and was ahnost tin despair, when a friend advised me to give Dr, 'Willi - wine' Pink Pills a trial. ;Anxious to get 'welt I decided to - do so. (Alter taking te Over [boxes 1 foand a, good improve- ment, allict 1 continued taking thePits entil 1 had used nine boxes, whemil was ;again etnioyingepeefect healthaand X !found on weighing myaeif that 1 had gained ;seventeen pounds. I have . since enjoyed fperfect health, for which have to thank Dr. I'irilliamte Pink Pills,. 'and strongly advise all other ailing - earls to igive thie medicine a fair krial." .Every girl •afflicted - with anaemia, every woman who auffers from back- aches. and .aidoeches, and .the other emiseries that afflict+ her sex can se - pare new health and strength through • fair lase of Dr. Williams' 'Pink Pills.: Soldby all medicine dealers or by mail .at 50 cents: a,.box or six boxes fEier- frorn fl'he Dr. -13itilliams' Medicine a t '4' Ape •gig the San „Jona. epaske .0.,,Prockville, Ontt , s renmans Underwear is actually knit to lank— knit with/neaten-iced prem. - =zee. sion to fit the varying types of _________ • men, womea and children— knit to retain its ehapeliness. When you buy PentriaaS underwear you can be sure of its lasting, smooth - fitting qualifies. No. -95 natural wool garment is a great favorite-- sk to ece it. 4.1 Loofa for the trademark/ ere 98 13..•••••••••••••40.... ••••••••••.111:•.••••am...... .1.1.••••& IIM!•1•••••••1•101,.••••••*1.1 Inomm. .41.4ssamsammaza..a.a.MI.N. Ur.* • 3 7 •affey...S1,7tri.M -Nate • A A Father's Soliloquy No.. 'Daddy's Little Girl" "She's the picture of her mother the first time we met. The .same eyes, the same -hair, the same complexion, the same figure, the same in every way. ,rin very gid indeed that 1 took out that London Life Ikdovr- ment Policy in her favor and payable on her eighteenth Birthday:. I only regr4 that I didn't take out a larger one—rd never have‘ missed an extra hundred or two a year. llowevero the profits are far in excess of the estimate, and it will make a. 'very handsome birthday, gift for Daddy's litth That's one thing about The London Life worth remembering— It performs better than it promises. A reliable, economically - managed company—no wonder people say that its policies are as 'Good as Gold." The London Life surance Compan LONDONo CANADA J D. ginchley,, Agent,. Seaforth' the, tfor, eclot -red' mire net trini _test the sepA ing] Pose Por vvel tow cioe the for whe fetfele Jere nod 21011J, int pec isayj van' tow the- lot the tea the. eft este Ho 1,1, • P.