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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1914-06-12, Page 2• 0 ,RON (21$-ITOR .1=assatai.x-. 000080agossaggil- ••••••eareumme*444•41414•14A644.444.4.1•44smawatassaimum• for this tittle at the year. But by instM- ,SEAFORTH, IS4IDAY, ,rune le, 1914e ithg your furnace now yeti save Mojey , rpti 'halm no dire and mu t _ yOur honse. Tae work is finisiZei. More ra -ialy, and we can ;quote better piices be use of longar working days Put in your furnace maw. • ' aesse*g..14410.e.a*.i..5 Direct and Indirect Taaation The peblie T evenue of Great Britian. /0 raised principally by direct taxation. The revenue in Canada is traleedmainfea Zoe indirect taxation 9r a customs re - A bath room, closet and general plumb venue. We fremiently hear and read . leg is of great serviceduring the' hot of the manner in which the 'People of oaep ei-feather.: Nothing refreshas a person the British Isles are gr6rid (Own by ASH PIT More after he sweat and &hue of the 1 taxation. But elet ms ,see how it works day than a lunge in coolingbatii, A out. In Order to meet the ever increeee person will buy an expensive piece of ing public expenditure In England it brit -a -brae, purely ornamental, and has been fo•und necessary to make sub - think nothing of it, k but Oftentimes etantial increases to the existing tax witl deny theMeele'es the health and benefit of a battle end closet._ Call 1 on ineolnes. The new Schedule Willneease on ns oe drop us a -card. We Can give you the best pr;ces and the 1 that those' with incomes Of from 0,000 revolts of experience and good mechanics. te *7,500 per year will pa, approximate ely 4 1-5 'per cent.; f from $7,500 .to • $1000 approximateiea4 4.e5 per Cent.; from $12,500 eei $15,000, 13 245 per cent. • A zupertax .will ale) be levied imontin- comes of $15,000 and over amounting The hanger you re- quire for your sliding door roust be flexible easy running, a stay on and strong. The " Big 4 ", has these. features and a few m o r e: - galvanized boltee steel r 11 e r bearings, self adjust- ment s, simplicity, We gmaranteee each pair to carry a ton .... 90c per pair Solid hangers, all steel roller beiteleg • 75c per pair Steel track, extra heavy, double braced 7cper foot Your cement work can be finished properly vvitn a few inexpensiv-e tools. Trowels, MI steel with wood handle • 25c Levels complete with plumb glass • 7 5 c Mixing shovels:. •75C Use Hanover Portland cement a fresh car jut in G. A. Sills, Seaforth Sole Agents for Lowe Bros. Paint's, Chi-Namel, Moffat's Ranges, Eastlake Steel Shingles, Paroid Ready Roofing, Canadian Steel Woven Wire Fence, Pease Furnaces and Boilers, "Hot Point " Electrie. Supplies. New Idea Furnaces. IttroaTANT NOTIC)38. 1JIARII FOR SATE—For sale on Lot 1, Concession 4, Bullet. Containing 100 acres. convenient to school and Past Office. Terms reasonable. For further ridiculers appy to William McMichael, asaforth Post Office. :2366-tf Wand SALE.—Let 6, Concession 9, Tucker - X smith. containing 100 acres, about seven aores smiler bush. Tbe farm is well fenced and drained and in a good state of cultivation. Thereare on the prerniees a. good !mine house'balak barn, pig house, lien house, drive house and two good wells. -For terent arid particulars apply on the premises or -ad- dress MRS. MIN fdpOLOY, Egnion&ille 2356-tf ,WARM FOR SATIE—Being Lot 7, Concession 1 Townphip of Iiullett, containing 100 acresof -,talee land. on the premises are a large bank barn with stabling underneath, with cement floors abroughrut. New brick house with furnace in the cellar. Well fenced and under;Irained, be sold aerkeonabie as the owner wishe to give up fanning. For further information apply on the premises or iiresa Seaforth P. o., eiemvue J. CLARK. 239241 VIAllti FOR SALE—Lot 10, Concession 1, Stanley I? Township, one mile and a quarter south or Snitelled, on the London Road, one hundred acres, ninety cleared and ten acres of good bush, vvell limed and well drained, good brick house and good uarns with stone stabling underneath, Three never failing wells. a good orchard with over a' hundxed trees with good fruit, good driving shed, pie- pen and implement house. Terme to suit parch,aser. JOHN MURDOCK, Brueefleld. 12118-bf WARM FOR SALE—Being Lot 6 Concession 17, ALGrey township, oontaining 100 acre § more or less, on the premises is a large twO storey briek house, bank barn with stone stooling, driving house Vig pen, etc., all comparatively new, the farm is a lattelass farm being in a. good state of cultivation, kali cleared except 4 acres of harawond bush, it is well drained also well fenced and is situated 11 miles torn Walton, where there is agood Inarket, school churches, C. P. R. station etc. For further particulare apply to or address, Mrs. DORA. Mo?AD. IRAN, 13russel8 P. 0. 2368x12-tf JIMMIII.••••••• • YIESTRABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE—For sale 15 iu Ilarpurhey, a good property with a large house with eight C00111F4 herd and soft water in the kitchen, *good Cellar under the whole house, which contains a good cistern, the buildings are in good repair. Also a large garden, fruit trees and a lot of email fruit. A large atable, henhouse and pig' 'pen. Witt be sold on easy terms. For particulars apply to R. S. HAYS, Barrister, Seaforth. 2899-tf 1,r1o, ARM FOR SALE—Lot 26, Concession 6, McKillop .1.7 on the Gravel Road, 2 ogles and a half north calBeaforth. One hundred hereto all cleared but •about two acres, Well fenced and in a good state of cultivation. About thirty acres in grass. Good frame house, two good barns, with atone stabling underneath. Plenty of never failing water. Rural Nail Delivery and Rural Telephone. A good bearing orchard. Easy terms of paymert. Apply on the remises or address JOHN MeMILLAN, Seaforth P. 0. • 2404-tf WARM FOR SALE—L4t 9,F,Concessio6 a, Stanley, L' (=tabling 100 acres,90 acres cle4eti, the bal. *nee in good hardwood oush. The farm is well famed and well unclerdrained and in a first class ttate of cultivation. There is ft first class frame h ,use with furnace, hard and soft eater in the house. One barn Shan; 1 abed 2&x59; 1 horse stable and drive house 26s51, all on stone foundations. Alm 2 good wells, 1 at the house and 1 at the barn, water • in the barn. The farm ie situated t mile from cahoot; Ri miles from Brucefield ; 3. miles from Eippen; 6 miles from Bensall ; 9 miles from Sea - forth and Clinton, Reason for seIlitg : wishing to retire. • For further partici:lure apply on the pre- mises or to ROBERT atORRISON, Brucefield. Ont.' wee: VIARal FOR SALE—For Sale Lotria Concession 7. I Kippen Road, Tuckersinith, containing 100 acres, BO -acres cleared all of which is in flrst-elass eate of cultivation, well undercirained and well termed, the balance of thefarm in good h hardwood timber. There are two acres of orchard. On the place are two good bank barns on stone foundations -one born is 40 x 60 and the other is 40 x 56 feet; also large pig house. There is als agood frame house. There axe two 'good wells, one at tha house und-erie at tha barn. This is one of the best farms in Tuakersmith. It., is situated on the Rippen road, 8miles south of Seaforth, two miles from church /Mad one and a quarter miles from school. Posses- sion given ebony time. For further particulars rip- ely on the premises or address WM and MATTHEW hOOTT,Proprietorie Egroondrille P. 0. • 2372.tf 000 FARIS PORSAT,R—Por sale Lot 2, Con. 4, Hullett; containing 100 mires. There are on the premisea a good briok house, kitchen and wood Aed with gtact .cellar and hard and soft wateri Thete is also a good frame barn 56 x with stone Calculation and stabling underneath and another barn 4 x 54 not raised on foundationand Iroplement sited all in good repair There is alsoegood:bearing orobard and two good never failing wells.The farm a well undenitained and well fenced and in a high state of cultivation v ith eve acres of bush. The farm le well Atilated, 'amilas from Seaforth near the boundary Utiveoe Huriett and BleKillop with tele- phone and rural -mail dellvory. Terme reasonable. For further particulars arley on the premises or ad- dress MI. Wri,S011, Seaforth, Ont., R. P. D. No. 1. 2415xtf MURIA FOR SATZ—For sale Lot 3, Concession 8, ,X.' Ef. R. 8.. 'ruckersmith, contain 100 ,a.cres. usi There are on the premises a trame.ban barn 40x65 with etabling underneath, frame ho 22x32, the house is on a stone foundation and there is a good lament cellar under the *hole hotted with good altoberi and woodshed and good outbuildings at the barn. The 1 arm is all tile underdrained and well lanced and the land is in a good state of cultivation and clear from all noxious weeds. There Is a never telling well at the house and a spring creek runs across( one corner at the back end of thelfarm. There we SO acres seeded to grass and the =balance has plowing done. There is also a7splendid bearing young orchard of an acre and a halt, containing wale, pear, cherrie trees, etc. Terms reason. . For f particulars apply oa the premises tor address 30 FORTUNE, Seaforth P. 0. 311.-t - fleEfOUSANDS er -of farmers and horsemeu. hawe saved money by using Kendall'a Spa - 111 for Spavins, Curb, Ringbone. Splint, Bony Growths and Lameness from 2nany other _causes. It keeps borses working. Id.$1 bottle may save a horse for yon. ° Get a bottle the next time you are in town. Sold by druggists everywhere, $1 a bottle 6 for $5, also ask for a copy of our book "ATreatise teethe Horse' —or write to Dr. B. J. KENDALL COMPANY Enasbnret Falls, Vermont SD 1011111111111116MEMBEI Here's A Friend Indeed Constipacsn Isthe bane of cdd age--712arsh cathartics aggra- vate, avoid them and use Chain- berlainS Tablets,.the mildest and gentlest othrziatives—best far th• vomnr. tba ailtidla tried and the old. 25e. battle—Drirgriets and Deafen, es* -42a11.• 4 eleakailielleakebee _Unita oci.sommollgamokErisionallin. PERRIN S 1:0,iry Cream Sodas Bvery one of them must be good, enough to uphold our I:reputation. There are twoekinde--the dainty s Fancy Thin' and the Infegular" Dairy Ceeane Sodas. • In sealed packages at sk, eo and es cents at your grocer's. Every package guarante44, - Send sec„ in coin or stamps and your grocer's 'name for the Perrin saute:11e package" of eouie of the other laereites Biscuit -Dainties.' le Ivo Look for the rerrin Trade liark on every padkege. D. S. PERRIN 14. COMPANY LIMITED LONDON, •CANADA 1.11911rillrimiL agolimiiiammirsmeamme, on large inebtnes to 12 4-5 per cent•., an told. The death duties on e.4tates ,of • over $300,004 to also increased and the maximum, a.pplying to very 'large es- tates, has been increased freer' 15 to 20 per oent. This looks prette steep fro rra Re Gene- dian point of view, but is it? Of emu's° we pay, else, but be the indirect method: For the oaks o argement let -as figure out, if we can, what :taxation the $5,000 income would be- sabJected to - in a, 'Canadizen!City Ruch as %Toronto. Allow- ing. that the recipient of alie income of $5,000 per annum in Toronto 15 11. householder, the ,woald .finst be plucked for a Pun .approximating $75.00 as an income tax. Next we will take half the • total income es a fair division for • living expenses, Ainniuding all foods, cloths, tn feet all the. necessities and luxuries that the family eljoys. From this We' will take half, or $1,250, as representing the sum which such •a, family win expend in, a year's time on dutiable'. goods, wearing, apparel, foods, all sorts • And kinds of luxuries and recessities that • for some reason or other we tperehese, of foreign growtte or foreign xnanafactere. We will set the average duty' ;down at 20 per cent., which would be conservative, thus we arrive ata tax of $250.- Add to tnis the above ,mentioned income tax of $75, and we heye a grand total of as compared with the Englishman's $210. Of ,course, taitch figures can , only be approximate, but at the -same time they tgive at least same indication of what indirect taxation meania And as It. is with the larger incomes the pro- portionate difference is if any thin.e more striking when we come to compare the smaller incomes of the wirer' people. • The Canadian Senate At the conference which; laid the foundation. of /the Dominion; there was a conflict ,of opinion, as to whether the Senate should be elected, as the Canadian Upper House hadeeeen up to the 'union of the Provincese'or a body appointed by the Crown. Mie defects of -the elective system were manifest the Legislative eCouncil of Canada,, and some jof the • Maritime Provinces also, had had some experience of the evils -which occasionally resulted from havieg two elected bodies, each' claiming to represent ehe people, when conflict arose between thein; they lead had no recent 'object les,sen from which they Could learn than at appointed upper hovse may, at times, prove as obstr iet- ive as though it had keen elected di - really by the people. The Fathers of Confederation, with the British House of Lords before them art a n-odelethere- fore, -decided that -the members of the Senate shoeld be appointed by the. Crinkei and bold 'effiee ' for life-. At the beginning, the appointnients were made from •the members of the .old:Leglislative Council. There were • mere Co ancilors than positions and. there wad a wait- ing net from which, as vacancies oc- cured, appointments were made. Thas the defects of .the eystem were not ap- parent in ,thev efily yegis of the Con- federation; it *0 only when the get of the old legislative co-uncilare was ex- heusted and the Goverament of tire' day had o free choice that the -upper chamber began to aesume what Sas been regarded as a. partisan character. At the end of the first seven years, when the Conservative Government was driven from power and Mr. Mackenzie formed his Cabinet, he found the Sen- • ate a decidedly Conservative body. It was exasperating to the Liberals, freph from the people and with an over- whelming majority in the Lower Houee, to find ,the Conservative enemy en- trenched le the impregnable 'citadel -of the . Senate. Then for the ft/St time, the upper chamber found itself assailed as an "irresponsible body, obstruclinie the will of the people" and characterized as "a political "efeedalen Asylum for discarded politicians whb had been dee bauched bY the Government of theiday," and as . House of Refuge for the Emile, worn-out and rejected support— ers of a discredited party," There were then, as now, demands for the abolition or refer/7141on of the Upper Chamber; but then, ras now, demandgrew less insistent as the older Senators -passed away and ;their places were filled by stalwart supporters of the tGovernment of the day.—George Clarke Holland, in The Canaelan Magazine fgt. May. AMINCEr Editorial Notes and CoMmento Col. Hughes is spending ten and a half million ,dollars on the militia- this 'year, and isaY\S it oughteto be seventeen millions. NS *doubt he will spend seven- teei millidnandit year' if atilt 1t offiee. Nobody can letop him. Nothing can stop him but the ballot box. • t , • • • 0 • • The 'Weekly Sun points out an Im- portant and eome'vehat eignificleot fea- ture of the Mackenzie and efann aid which •Ilasjust been passed le the teo- minion rarliamant. . The Government gualeib.tees $0.000,000 of bonds, whieb are to :yield. $42,0000100 in the' market. Mckenzie and Mame; or the Canadian Northern, or iefackenzie and Made! Limi- ted, or the system or whatever Is tbe 'moving e tity, has $58,000,000 of se- curities which are to be Itsaleeble, when :the Government's guarantee becomes ef- fective. 'She hundred millions s�' derived Is to be used to pay a debt to, the bank of- over twenty-one millio,ns, and twenty even millions are to be &Peeled 'to the purchase sif rolling stock. The balance, subject to further reductions. , willbe available to complete the. road essamerenieseraimeinesiessowein and make leome emprovements on the erairies. No matter what happens,. the bank is to be paid, ,ter. Meighen stated that in clear terns, and .the tetymen.e may be made but of the proceeds of the guaranteed (bonds The banks must be saved AO matter who &tee goes hungry. • • • 0 * • "II make arty living from lumber, Snd e very. poor living too at the present time, when we 'are wiling- sortie kinds , of dressed lumber in Toronto, for $21 a thousand, While it 'cots WO much to put loge on the ice, -so sald Senator Edwarde in the Senate.! Tbliecconfessiole of Senator Edwezds making a "very poor living," is tbe most exquisite bit of humor we have heard, since, as it is well keo:wn, the Senator as one of the richevet rflen In Canada end he has 'made his .monep ott of lumber, . • * Vile George W. 'Ponder, Conservative member for a N'evr Brunswick tonstitue ency, Struck the truth very mecte bore accurately' than he generalle% doetteethen he said that 'ninety per cent. df the Judges of ,Canada are paid eettore In Salaries then ,they earned in private • ere.ctice at the Bar. Fifty per cent of the judges, he added, are not- re- quired to work as hard as they did when practising barristers. and atill new appointments- are continually be- ing ma -de peed the ealaries increased, and the erg on the part of the Judges 10 for more, more. * *. W. MeMeNanght, who for eight 'years, represented o Toronto coinstite- ency in. the Legislatere and wile it is universally admitted, was One of the ablest and most industrious represent- atives end did more for the .city, than all its other representatives putItogeth- er, was timed down in .the COTIVellti011, 'Kr. Mark Iri,sh, a, gullet Nobody, who secceeded in manipulating' the Cone vendee in ,hls owneinteresti. It is not always the ma•n who dqes the most th omen • the people, who gets to !the top in politics. Trickery is often more powerful than Ability or fitnees for the positien. • • PIte Toronto Star makes oietea. 'strong case agaanst the Whitney Government when it says: - The case is. that of et progressive element In Ontario, seeking for leadership. !She present Government has -had the opportunity to accept the leadership and bas thtrown it awaS. at has refused to refoem, the mode of as- sessment and taxation, or oven' to alio* municipalities to -encourage enterprise and discourage speculation. at has re- fused to appoint a Minister of Labor. It has refused to deal with unernmoy- inent by a system of labor exchanges. It has refused, to inquire into the cendition of coentry gfe and the cauees of reral ,depoptuatloe. It 'has, I:ails:id' to abolish the les.r, end it has taken no measures to carry out Sir lames Whit- ney 'a promise to legislate on the treat- ing system. It has rejected • a very ihoderate proecsal extending to married women the franchise now enjoyed by widows and epinstera ' LOPEICIMISOIMMIEGIIMOMISMIRSZEMINIES1- • Wh at libout Father ? This is the way the First . Page Writer in Saturday Night sizes up the situation We have ,duly celebrated "Mother's Day." We have worn flowers; we have hadonemerous 'special services in the churches. Indeed,. weehave honor- ed mother ,as she well deserves to he temored. But how about father? The old man has been passed up without a Word. He has kbeen dig.ging along usual, getting. ,the neeessery together for the three meals and, the houserent, not to iepeak of the gas bIll and the electric'. light, and he is now in the 'processof fighting out his next winter's coal account, together with Maud's hew dress and the old lady's hew boots„ but never ,a word about him. Is it not time that we handed father a few bouquets? Between the euffragettes•and mother's dans we wig- soon forget that the old man is i7art and parcel of the household economy. Even the dog has his day, but poor father gets nothing but the bills, and a chilly reception when he comes home a trifle late for d1nner/1Se foe a father's day, or at least an afternoon. , • CINIMOUNISE66/0118112■301R1201/1 Tile !Jain Thomas Strachan of Grey .AS mentioned in The Expositor , last week, Mr. Thomas Strachan one of the • pioneers of Grey Tovhiship, ',and a one - ' time prominent public man (in thesountY !departed this life, on Wednesday jrnorn- big, May .27th, .at the age of 83 gears and nine- months. He had lf,een in fait - big health ,for the past, Y the end was notamexpected an Was born in the Peels Argyllshire, Scotland, and as the old- est of seven children. His father died in 1845 and .43. couple of years' later Strachan and family, decided to come to ,Ceoada. tOp (-arrival they, lived fer a year at gen and then rented. farrn ,Puslinch/townsbip Where they air so that Mr. Strach- of Saddle. made thelr ,home -untiI 'coming to Grey township in the • Fail of 1854. Five • hundred acree. of . land were taken un on the ehird and fourth coneessionie and these by industry and thrift were transformed frem bush farMs to •weli tilled field e and several of them are stilt in posSesskia of th'el Strachan fami- lies. The isebjedt of this notice lived on lot three, continuously ap to the time of his demise. an 1857 Mr. iStrachan elected as his bride Mies Flora- Came- ron, of the yillage of Brussels and through the passing /ears she loyally and, successfully did her duty as wife1 and mother And proved hereelf a reat helpmate. ,The first; Municipal Council of Grey, had Mr., Steadied SD a. member and after doing duty as Collector of taxes was ,elected to''.the Rekve'seehale and itt ,all eerved .the township eplene didey for s score of years. By fassociatr ion with the County Couticillhe be erne well known aheleiras later elevated t the Warden' chair for Huron Count. rfr all of, these offices he showed ability, faithfulnese, fairness and economy and made many ,frierids In the discharge of his duty. While ever loyal to the Presbyterian Church, in .which he Wats tun Elder from the formation of Melville church, Bruseela up to this death, he woe broad minded and charitable to. all other denominations and wa..s ever ready to .sild in the advancement or the -Master'e kingdom ie cher& and Sabbath cliool_evork and-le:sayer meet. Lege. Fo yearlie. was Ifteeeident o the Ili)* Caimida .131b1e Societe' . and wale eauallS zealot's in the temperaece- cauSe geed as re **dent of the mune ideal drgapieatiot was et, tewer Of 13 trength. Pew Men were better ac- quainted ,with the Word of God than Straehet.te ,and ,one •of his chief 'de- lights was to converseepti its preeepte and promisee. itt the East Huron Farm? ers' Institute he eat en the Preel%'s chair fo „years. Whatever Me d found to do he .did it with ileis and his name will be cherished many on account of bis integrity and untiring' Mors for the good of both old and young. No one, until recent f Yeats would have guessed his age as he was so well ireserved and enjoyed so large ,a. degree a health, Of hie father's 'family' the only i-ervivor ialefes, James Fergason, ,of Britssels, and pen- • can Tay:or, el the mune' place, who Si a half brother, Mrs. ,Stracha,n and lsix childeen iservive. To 'etre. Stracban, Whose haletS hes been precarioes for the welt feve years, and. members of the family the deep etytnpathy of _. many friends is extended. Mr. strachpyi be greatly Mimed both at bones and abroad and the hope ris expressed that not a feW will arise up to put on the arznour helms lead down and figlit for the eighties faithfully( as he did. 'While thoroughly Canadian, after his sojourn here for about 167 'years, he never love interest in .the land of his birth and could reel:1,10W and write In the Gaelic 'Ovate, with ease. The; -remains were laid to relit isa Brussels cemetery. The funeral was very largely Attended. The followirtg old ',Mende were privileg- ed -to act as pailbearers:—A. Simpson, W. Mosesi Wm. and Alex. Bryans, Alex, Stewart and ;Wm. Gannett. r 9 4 4241414C1 Nerefs'Notes • . - —Spew fell in Se Johns, 'New Bruns- wick, on Jene 3rd. -Essly in the more-. Ins the ground Was euite white. —Serialleox le falling off. In ;Wintipeal, but measles caaes are on the increase. While no eases of the former were dis- covered over tae weeSeend, the inspect- ors found 23 new' eases of meesles. There are, over 800' ewe now placarded or in the hospitals. —Saskathen will have an extra hoer of daylight after S'enday night at mid- night, June 1st, according .to the dic- tum orthe council evho have passed a bylaw to this effect. All the public add private institutions nye 'the railway have gone on record' that they will adopt the eew time. The belaw -calls for the saving of 'an hour of daylight from Apell[ 1 to September., 30 in future y ears. —W. 13, Weir, a well-known _farmer, of West Nisseuri *Township, living on the first concession, near Devizes, was trampled to •ileath one day last week, by a herd cifesteers which, he went to water on aziothel Wm, about a mile distant from MS home place. His son Benjamin left home with him early in the day, and called to see a neighbor, while bis father eatel he would water the cattle and look over the other farm. When he did sot rejoin hid on, the latter supposed he had gone to a barn - raising, and drove there to find him. He was not there, and his son, with neighbors, mule a. search of the grazing farm. Whenfound, about 5 o'clock,life was practically extinct. 1/4 • Weir was 67 years old, and had resided practical- ly all his life 'in Middlesex. —Mike_ Jenkins called at Winnipeg, (me day lest week on his way from Nelson, British Columbia, to Halifax, Nova Scotia, .lie is on a self imposed walking expedition. He made the 800 miles from Nelson, to ;Winnipeg, in less than a month. He expecte to make the trip from Winnipeg, to Halifax, in less than two months. He believes :he could do it in faster time, but he pleas skim- ping off at the, principal towns and cities along the route and earning some money to keep him in provisiona. He • wgi carry only, a pair of blankets ane sample the simple life by sleeping lb the open air. Jenkin e will follow the route of the C. P. R. until he hes founded Lake Superior. Then 'he will etrike off on the Ontario highway, steering straight for Ottawa, his home town. There he expects to spend a couple of days, proceeding then to the Atlantic. coast. He is making the walk, Just for love oT adventure. When he gete to _Halifax, which is about 2,S00 miles from 'Winnipeg, Jenkins expects to take a, train back to Ottawa. la addition to being the twelicler of a dog whip 171 the ,H.udson Bay district, Jen- kins has been a mounted policeman in the Yukon, and has knocked aboat in nearly every out-of-the-way corner! af the Domihion. NERVOili CHILDREN The Pro • Dan • able Us Often Really $t. Vitue ce 1— 'Do 'Not Neglect It, •imim r Many a child has been called awk- ward, has been punished isa scheel for not' keeping !still or f'or droppingthirene when the -trouble was really St. Vitas dance. Thee disease' xna,y appear at any age; but is most common between the ages of six and fourteen years. It is caused be ,thin blood which' • falls to carry sufficient nourestiment to the nerves, and the child beco'rnee restless and twitching of the musciee and jerk- ing of the limbs and body follow,In, severe cases the child is enable to'holel anything or feed tself.St :Vitus dance 15 cdred by building up the blood. .Tbe meat successful treatment is to remove the child feorn all mental excitement, stmeeschool Work and give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The,se Pilis"renew the blood eupPlY, strengthen the nerves, and re- • Ettore the child to perfect .health. Here is proof of their power to cure, Mrs. Geo. A. MacDonald, Harrington, N. 5., Pao's: "AO sou was attacked by St. Vitus dance; at. the outset his nurse - les would twitch and his step wm weak and jerky. We called in a doctor wile treated him, but notwithstanding he continued to grow worse and at last grew- „so bad that he could not hold a cup be his hand, while his head constantly twitched, end his speed)! 15e - came rather indistinct. At this junc- ture I saw In a paper. the cure rof a boy from eimilar trouble through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. We 'at once sent: for a supply, and in few weeks After be began thelr use ,there was emesiderable improvemenee and It was mot long after this before he was ,completly cured, and hasnever had eenseenptommf ,the trouble abide. • am convinced that there is mo medictnel like Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for - the cure of $t. Vitus dance. • • If yoer dealer does not kee- Dr. Williams' Pink ,Pilks yoe scan get theme by mall At 60 cents a box or ex boxes for $2.50 ISY writing The Dr. WiuIi4ns' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ontario. - smatar A Father Soliloquyewre The Family's Future 1'They are enjoying themselves now, and I shall see to it that they shall always enjoy, !themselves. 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