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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1914-07-17, Page 64 , TUMOR IN THE STOMACH terao*.m. -Curnp1eteIyRernoed. When She, Took "Fruit-a4iVes' NEWBURY, Oen., April 4th. xede. "Some years ago, I was sick in bed, ana thought I was going to die. I had e. growth in my etomach, which the ,doctors said was a Tumor and they said that the only thing to do was to go to the hospital and have the_ turnor'cut out. I dreaded an operation although both doctors said it was the only cure. I said. I would die heftirebeingoperated on. At this time, my mother in Alvinston sent nie some “Prait-a-tives" and induced me to try them as she had heard of another woman who had been cured of a similar growth in the stomach by taking "Fruit-a-tives”. • To please my mother, 1 begets to take "Fruit-a-tives' with the happy result that they cured me. I have not been to see a doctor since and my health is first class. I recommend "Pruit-a-tives" every timeI get a chance and I will be glad to have you publish this letteras some other woman may now be a sufferer from the same trouble and. "Fruit -a -Alves" will cure her" MRS. A. McDGNALD. see a box, 6 for $1.50, trial size, eac. At all dealers or serif on receipt of price By Fruit-a-tives lamited, Ottawa, _Sever0....Stomath. lieu* and Sick Headache euk/NotEatAnyihing Withotd Agonizing Pain My; health is better now than it has ,for years, ,and I owe it to Mile urn's Laxa-Liver Pills:—writes Miss .4.ose Doyle, Connaught, Ont., "I was or several, years troubled with severe iitomach trouble and sick headache. Fould not eat anything without agoniz- ing pain. My sick headaches were most ;violent, and I could not rest night or ,day. beeatne emaciated and thor- 'mighty ,despondent, and no medicine seemed to help inc until I took Mil - burn's Laxa-Liver Pills. In five months I was entirely cured." ;Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are without a doubt one of the best remedies on the Market to -day for all the troubles arising from the wrong action of the Liver. • ,You -Scan procure them 'from any druggist or general store. If they haven't them in stock send direct to The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Price, 25 cents per vial or 5 Vials for MOO. iron Pumps & pump Repairing I am prepared to furnis all kinds of Force and Lift Pumps and all sizes Piping, Pipe Fittings, etc. 6alvan- ized Steel Tanics and Water troughs Stancheans and Cattle Basins. ?he Price is .Bigh,t Also all kindsof pump repairingdone on short notice. For terms, etc., apply at Pump Factory, Goderich St, East, or at residence, North Main Street. J. F. Welsh, S eaforth Auto mobiles Overhauled and repaired Automobile accessories, oils, gasoline, gas tanks, tires, carbide, always in stock. Also washing automobiles. Lawn mowers sharpened Other machinery repairt on hand. SEAFORTH GARAGE SPARLING 8c W RICO Wilson Block - - Seaforth Monday, january5th ts the re-opening',day ot _ NORTHERN BUSINESS cOLLEGE Owen Sound Every Graduate Guaranteed a Pos- ition. 33 Successful years. Large Staff of Specialists Individual Instruction. Practical Department. Information Fre C. A. Fletrimg, F. C. A. Principal. G1 D. Fleming, Secretary. 2102-tf Mortgage Sale of lIouse and Lot, in Seafor h C'n,pr awl by virtu of the power of sale, eon, taj,ied i.eertato Nl111.:11 will he produoed at t'ie. time of sale, tle.rit will be clYcred for sale, by public suet:ion, by Thomas t!:- wu, auctioneer, at thOO):uniLrreicd hotel, rn the town _of Se7,forth,. on Satrirday, the j<tv of Aructist, 10-1.4, at .m. the foltowimchous. and lot : -Beintc :omposed of Lot No ,,o,in,:fartres .,euttre's survey, of vele c.f the said town of Se,,fth, eontairrin:z oti-,r-fdth of an aere of land, more or less. There is on the property, a good frame, house and there Ls eo d g,rdeo and hard,, and-iott avatar. Toe proper y k at present oeunpied by ft^,bert Dea -tie, The pr pe,-ty will be orf,red for erste strieet to ressrved hid. Terms: Ten per emit or the ptic..narie money to be paid On day of sale, the balame within two weeks thereafter. For fur- ther partieulirs ta J. M. MST, Vehdor's Solieitc,r.Seaforth ; Thos. BrownAtletion4er. Dated 6th.of July, 194, 24320- A Greatest 5,hort..51 ories No. ..14. LODGING FOR THE N1011 BY Robert Louis Stevenson ate • IROSEIRT Loins ' cry/lissom , st Twenty-four famous authors were asked recently to name the best short story in the English, lan- guage. the choice of Booth Tar- ldngton, Jack London, Alfred Henry Lewis and Richard Harding Davis was "A Locigiog For the Night," by Robert Louis Steyrson. assoseesssomsommos •klART I- was- late in November, 1450. The .snow fell over Paris with. rigorous, -relentless .persistenie. Sometimes the wiad .made a sally and scattered it in tylng-vortices; sometimes there. was a lulls and flake after flake descended out of the black. night air, silent, circuitous, izitermina- bre. . 41e cemeteiy of St. John bad taken its own share of the snow. The clock was hard on 10 when the patrol went by With halberds and a lantern, beat- ing their hands, and they eaw nothing auspicious about' the cemetery of St. jr.)hl: Yet there was ,a tlimall house, hack'ed up against the cemetery wall, Whiett - was still awake, and awake to evil purpOse, in that snoring district :There was not much' to betrayait from with- out, only a stream of warm vapor from the chimney top, a patch where the snow melted on the roof and a few law. obliterated footprintS atthe door: But within, behind the shuttered win- dows, Master Francis Vilion, the poet, and some of the tblevishi crew with whom he cOnsorted, were keeping the night alive and passing round the bot- tle. A great pile of living embers diffused a strong and ruddy glow from ethe arched chimney. Before this straddled Dom Nicolas, the Picardy monk, with his skirts picked up and his fat legs bared td the comfortable warmth. His --face had the beery, bruised appearance of the contlimal drinker's. On the right \Ilion and Guy Tabery Were -huddled together over a scrap of parchment. Villon making a ballad withal he was to call the "Ballad of lioaet Fish," and Tabery spluttering ediniration at his shoulder. The poet Was a rng of a Man, dark. little and lenn. with hollow cheeks- nnd thin, ntaealeeks. lie' eat•ried his four and7 twenty years tt ith feverish animation. Greed had ntade folds abut his eyes. fatal smiles had puckered his mouth. Tlw wolf and pig struggled together in • Ids face. It wee: nn eloquent. sharp, ugly, eorthly countenance. His hands were sum II- a nd prehensile, with fingers knotted like a cord, and they were con- tints:illy flickering in front of him in violent and expressive pantominad. As for Tabaey, a broad, complacept, admiring itnbecility brenthed from his squnsh nose: and slobbering lips. sHe had beconie a thief just as be might have become- the most decea of bur- gesses by the imperious chance that rules life lives of human geese and hu- man donkeys. . At the monlas .other Vaud Montigny and Thevenin Pensete played a game of chance. About the flrst there clung some flavor of good birth and training, as about a fallen angel. Something long, lithe and courtly in the person; something aquiline and darkling in the face. Thevenin, poor Asoul, was in great feather. lare had done a good .stroke of knavery that afternoon in the Faubourg St. Jacques, and ail night he had been gaining from Mon- tigny. "Doubles or quits'?" said Thevenin. Montigny nodded grimly. "Some may prefer to dine in state," wrote Villota, "on bread and cheese on silrer plate. Or, or—help me out, Guido!" Tabery giggled. "Or parsley on a -golden dish," scrile• bled the Peet The wind- was freshening -without It drove the.snow before It. The cold was growing sharper. "Can't you hear it rattle in the gib- bet?" said Villon. "They are all danc- ing the devil's jig on nothing up there. You may dance, my gallants. You'll be none the warmer. Whew, what a gust; Down went somebody just now! A medlar the fewer on the three leg- ged medlar tree! I Say, Dom Nicolas, It'll be cold tonight on the St. Denis road?" he asked. Tabery laughed immoderately _over the medlars. He had navea heard any- thing more lighthearted, and he held his sides and crowed. ' Vilion fetched hills a Sulip on thenose, which tanned his mirth into an attaCk of coughing. "Oh, stop that row," -said Vinous "and think of rimes to 'fish!' Looka at Montigny!" All three peered covertly at the gamester. He did not seem to be en- joying big luck. His moutldwas a lit- tle to a side, one nostril nearly shut • and the other much inflated. The black dog was on his hack, as people say, in terrifying nursery metaphor, and he breathed hard under the grew - some latirden. There was brief and fatal move- ment among the gamesters. Theiround was completed, and Thevenin was just (Tuning his mouth to clairr another victory -when Montigny leaped up -swift. ae an adder and stabbed _him to the heart. Teh blow took effect befdae he had time to utter a cry,- before had time to erove. A tremor or two convulsed his fframe. His hands open- ed a.nd ...luta, his heelrattled* on the floor, than his head rolled .baeltevard BOOTA TARKINGTON ,e over one summer. wiro 'eyes wane open, and Thevenln Pensete's _spirit had returned to him wbo made it . Everyone sprang to his feet, but the business. was over in twalwos. "My God!". said Tabarv and he _began to ?prey in Eatin. Vilion broke out into hysterical . - laughter. He came a; step forward and ducked a ridiculous -bow at neve- nln and laughed Still louder. hrhen he, sat down suddenly ali of a heap upon • a stool and continued laughing bitterly as. though he would shake himself to pieces. :e Montigny recovered his composure first. - - - "Let's see what he has about him," he remar ed, and he plaited the dead man's p kets with, a practiced band and divid d the money into four equal portions kn the table. "There's for you," he said. -. • The monk received his share with a deep sigh, and a single stealthy glance at the dead-Thevenin, who was begin. ning to -sink into himself and topple sideways off the chair. , "Were all in for it," cried Villon, _swallowing his mirth. "It's a hanging job ,for every man Jack of us that's here—not to speak of those who aren't". Then be pocketed his share of the spoil and executed a 'shuffle with his feet as If to restore the circulation. Tabery was the, last to help himself. He made a dash at the money and re- tired to the other end of the room. Moutigny stuck Thevenin upright in the (their and drew out the dagger, which was followed by a jet of blood. "fornfellowg had better be moving," he said as he wiped the blade on •his victina'S doublet , "I think we had," returned Vilion, with a gulp. "D— his fat head!" he broke out. "It sticks in my throat like phlegm. What right has a man to have red hair when he Is dead?" ,And be fell all of a heap again upon the staiii and fairly covered his face with his hands. Montigny and Dom Nicolas laughed aloud, even Tabery feebly chiming in. "Cry baby!" Said the monk. alwayg said -he was it -woman," added Montigny with a, sneer. "Sit up, can't you?" he Went on, giving another shake to the murdered body. "Tread outzthat fire, Nick!" But Nick was better employed. He was quietly taking Villon's purse as the poet sat limp and trembling on the stool where he had been making a a1 - lad not three minutes before:- Montig- ny and Tabery dumbly demanded a share of the booty, which the tnonk silently promised as he passed the lit- tle bags into the bosom of his goivn. In many ways an artistic:nature unfits a man for practicalrexistencea No sooner had the theft been accom- plished- than Vilion shook himself jumped to bis feet- and began helping to scatter and extinguish the embers. Meanwhile Montigny opened the door and cautiously peered into the street. The coast was clear. There was no meddlesome patrol- in sight. Still it was judged wiser to slip out severally„ andaVillon was the first by general con- sent to issue forth. _ The wind had triumphed and swept all the clouds from heaven. Only a few vapors as thin as moonlight_ fleet- ed rapidly across the stars. It was • bitter cold, and by a common optical effect, things seemed almost more defi- nite than in tbe broadest daylight. VII - Ion cursed his.iiirtune. Would it .were still snowing! • Now, wh.erever he went he left an indelible trail. . Two things preoccupied him as he went, the aspect of theagallows at Montfaucon- in this bright, windy phase of tbe night's existence, for one, and for another, the look of the dead man -with his bald head and garland of red curie. Both struck cold upon his heart, and he kept quickening his pace as if be could escape frotn unpleasant thouOts by meredfleatness of Riot. Suddenly he saw a long way before him a black clump and a couple of lan- terns. The clump was in motion, and the lanterus swung as though milled by men welking. It was q patrol. Just Qn his. left hand therestood a great hotel, with some turrets and a large porch before the door. it was dark inside after the glimmer of the snowy streets, and he was groping for- ward with outspread hands when he etutubled'over some substance whach Bad Blood-"----4-- is the direct and inevitable result of irregular or constipated bowels and clogged -up kidneys. and skin. The undigested food and other waste mat- ter which is allowed to accumulate poisons the blood and the whole system. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills aer directly on the bowels, regulating t,fe-e----en the kidneys, giving them, c., strength to properly filter the '1 ,d ---and on the skin, opening up t..e prircs. For pure blood and good LiLIA take Dr. liorse*es rtdiaint Root Pars offered an Indescrihable Mixture of re- sistancea, hard and soft, firm and loose., His 'heart gave a leap and he sprang two steps back and stared dreadfully IA the obstacle. Then he gave a little laugh of relief. It was only a woman, and sbe dead. He knelt be- side her to ennke sure Wen this latter point. She wa.s freezing cold ind' rigid like a stick, A:little ragged finery fluttered in tha wind about her hair, and her cheeks had been heavily rouged that seeder ofternoon. Eler pock- ets were quite empty, but in her stock- inglanderneath the'gaiter Wien found two of the 'small coins that went by the name of white. it Was little enough, but it was always something, and the poet was movtd with a deep sense of pathos that she should have 'died be- fore she bad spent her money. - While these thoughts were paesing through his mind he was feeling half mechanically for his purse. Suddenly - his heart stopped beating. A. feeling of cold scales passed Up the back of his legs and a Old blow seemed to fall upon his scalp. ie stood petrified for a moment; then, he felt again with one feverish Movement; then his loss burst upon him Be cursed. Re threw the two whites into the street. Be shook his fist at heaven. He: stamp. ed and was not horrified to find him- self trampling the poor corpse. Then he began rapidly to retrace his steles toward the house beside the cemetery. He had forgotten all fear of the patrol, which was long gone by at any rates, and had no idea but that Of his lost purse.- It was in vain that he looked right and left upon the &LOW. Nothing was to be seen. He iad not dropped it in the streets. Had it fallen in the - house? He would have liked dearly to go in and see, but the Idea of the grisly occupant unmanned' him, and be saw besides as he drew near that their ef- forts to put out the fire had been un- successful. On the contrary, it had broken- luto a blaze, and a changeful light played in the chinka of door and window tied revived his terror for the authoritlei and Paris gibbet Ile returned to the hotel wall -the porch and groped about upon the snow for the money he bad thrown away in his childish -passion. But he could only find one white; the other had probably struck 'sideways and sunk deeply in. With a single white in his pocket all his ,projeets for a rous- ing night in some wild tavern vanish. ed utterly away. And It was not only pleasure that fled intighing from his grasp; positive disBomfort, positive pain, attacked him as he stood ruefully before tiurporch. HIS perspiration had dried upon him, and although the wind had now fallen a binding frost was setting In stronger with every hour, and he felt benumbed and sick at heart. What was to be done? Late as was the hour, 'improbable as was suc- cess; he would try the house of his adopted father, the chaplain of St. Be noit He ran there all the way and knock. - ed timidly. There was no answer. He knocked again and again, taking heart with every stroke, and at last steps were heard approaelaing from within. -A barred wicket fell open In thd iron studded door ,and emitted a gush of yellow light. • "Hold up your face to the wicket," said the Chaplain from within. "It's only me," whimpered Whom. - "Oh, it's only you. is it?"ereturned the chaplain, and he cursed him with foul, unpriestly oaths for di§turbing hfm at such an hour and bade him be off to hell where he came from. "My hands are blue to the wrist," pleaded Vilion; "my feet Elie dead and full of twine's; my nose aches with the sharp air; the cold lies at my heart. I may be dead before morning,. Only this once, father, ,end, before God, I will never ask again!" "You should,have,come earlier," said the e-ccleslastic coolly, "Mixing men require a lesson now and then." He shut the wicket and retired deliberate- ly into the interior -of the house. Vilion was beside himself. He beat upon the door with his hands and feet and shouted hoarsely after the chap- lain. A door shut in the interior, faintly audible to the poet down long pas- sages. .He passed _hiS hand over his mouth with an oath. And then the humor of the situation struck him, and he !neighed and looked lightly up to heaven, where,the stars seemed trebe winking over his discomfiture. What was to be done? -It looked very like a night in the frosty streets. The idea of the dead i woman popped into his imagination and gave him a hearty fright; what had happened to her in the early night might very well Itappen to him before morning. Ile passed all his chances nnder re- view,' turning the white between his thumb and forefinger. Unfortunately he eels on bad termswith some old friends- who would once have taken pity on hire iu such a plight. He had lampooned them in verses; -he had beaten and cheated them, and yet now,' when he was id so close a pinch, he thought there was at least one who might perhaps relent. Itwas a chance. It wets worth trying at least, and he would' go .-aud see. liel:passed a corner wbere not so long ihtfore a woman and her child had been devoured by wolves. Efe remem- bered his mother telling him the story and pointing out the spot while he was yet 'a eltild. Ills mother! If he only knew where she lived he might make SUM, at lease of shelter. He deter- minecl he. would inquire upon the mor- row—nay, he would go and see her, too. poor ahl girl! So thinking, he ar- rived at his destination—his last hope for tbe night. The house was quite dark, like its ueighbors, and yet after a few teps be heard a movement overhead, a door opening arid, a• cautious. veice asking s-vho was there. ,,The met named Wm - self in a loud whisper- and waited, not AST AI rat Mats aalbssi lhe la Violin Atm Boas's tha Signature of Withoat shine trepidation, the result. Net' hade he to watt long. A windew wasimddenly opened and a pailful of slops splashed down upon the doorstep. Vilion. had not been unprepared for something of tbe sort and had put him- sellf as ranch in shelter as the nature of the porch admitted, bit for all. that he was deplorably drenched _bellow the waist. His hose began to freeze al- Inaat at once. Death from cold an.d exposure stared him in the. face. He remembered he was of phtinsical tend- ency, and began coughing tentatively: But the gravity of the danger steadied. his nerves, lie stopped a few hundred yards from the door where he had been BO rudely used and reflected withhis finger to .his nose. He could see only one way of getting a lodging and that was to take it He had nOticed a house not far away which looked as if It might. be easily broken into, and thither lie betiihit himself promptly, entertaining himself on the way with the idea of a room still hot, with a ta- ble still loaded -with the remains of -supper, where he might pass the feast of the black hours and . whence fee should issue on thee morrow with an armful, of valuable plate. Be even considered on what viands and what wines be should prefer,' and as he was calling the roll of his fairorite dainties roast fish presented itself to. his mind with an odd mixture of amusement . and horror. "I shall never finish- that ballad," he thought to himself, and then, with an- other shudder at.the recollectionaOh. d— his fat head!" he repeated fer- vently and spat upon the snow. PART 11. MD house in question looked dark lit first sight, but as Vilion made a preliminary inspection • In search ,of the handiest point of attack a little twinkle 'Of light caught his eye from behind a curtained window. "The devil!" be thought. "people awake! Some student or some saint. confound the crew! Can't they get drunk and lie in bed snoring like their neighbors? What's the good of cur- few and poor devils. of bell ringers jun3pinget a rope's end in bell towers? What's the use of day if people sit up all night? The gripes to them!" He grinned as be saw wheae his logic was leading him. "Every man to hi -busi- ness after all," added be, "and if they're awake, by the Lord, 1 may come by a supper honestly for once and rhInt the &mil." Continued Next Week. 411•••••••••111.141.6.; Manitoba a.nd'Northwest Notes —Swift Current, Sask„ w's formally advanced to:the city status on July 8. Governor Brown and Preznier Scott be- ing among those attending the te.rql: monies. 1 —The body of Mar)o, *le, McIntyre-, ,the two -year -Old daughter of .k.M. Mc- Intyre, barrister, Saskatoon, was -found -floating lathe river by the ferryman at :Osier. (The 'body had been searched for since June .1.7th, when the child disappeared from her home on the riverbank. —The people of Brandon, hn.-7e car- , ried a by-law to permit the street tars to run in hat city on Sunday. The by-law was Carried by twenty-five votes over the requisitemajority; of two-thirds of 'the total .vute cast—A very small portion of th-ose qualified went to the booths. —On ;the sixth of July, the Winnipeg Free Press received a sample of1Mie- quis wheat, 'grown on the farm of u. (A. aleOulloeglf, north of Stoughtcd, Sask. The wheat is 30 inches. high., with long well shaped heads and in full bloom. The field contains 114 acres and was planted April 24th, —Fire totally destroyed. the Peter Wiebe flour mill and -Ike National de- vator at Langha,m, Sask. The loss On the flour mill is estimated at i,35,000 ,with $5,000 'insurance on the building The elevator loss is $5,000. 1.300 bush -f ela Of wheat were destroyed with the mill and 490 with the elevator. The cause of the fire is unknow.a. ' —Factor Fleming, of tha Hudson's Bay Company's service, Fort McPher- son, arrived. in Edmonton, recently trona Athabasca Landing; after a leer- ney of 1838 miles _from the shores- of the Arctic ocean. Mr. Fleguringbrought with him a consignment of furs col- lected at -AFort McPherson, Fort Good Hope and. Fort -Separation. valued at $284,000. —Another of the old timers of Por -t - age la Prairie; passed away on June 30thl, in the person of Mrs. Mary Ad - arils, wife of George Adams, at the family residence, -three miles east .of Portage la Prairie, -at the age of 78 years.. The, deceased had only been ill" a few days. The late Mrs. Adam' -tame' to the Portage 4;listr1ct, with her hu-. bad, 54 years ago, anol for nine years resided at High 'Bluff, afterwards re- :noving to their" present home, east of - the eitY, where they have resided for forty-five years. —Mr. Wallace W,. Hampton was d: -iv - Ing his tearri and p was crose-Ang the ,main line at the croselng west of tbe station at Miartfachl, Seek, when he was caught by a fast running train. Bath horses vere killed and the wa- igOn s.;:nashed.11Mr. Hampton was taken on board the train to Moose Jaw. One leg was brolden and the side of ids head was badly cut and bruised. Both his hands wdre cat and it is feared intealnal injuries were Ireceived. gr. Harnpton is one -of the best known men Jand one of the largest farmers of the district and is also la rancher. He has been a ;member de the municipal council for four years and is highly respect- ed. The horses and waggon • were thrown about fifty yards. • , —Edenonton is the 'largest „envier fox market In the. world. Yark Factory, whach comprises the tefritory *est of Lake Superior, north. of the interna- tional boundary, and east of the Rocky Mountains, is the world's standard for fur -bearing animals. And Ecirrontan be- hig the central or *assembling point for the most prolific part of this district, beeetnes the centre of far activity. These may to the unitiatede aeorr bald statements, but they are fully recog- nized as correct by those who have been and still are activela engaged" in ithla fur •businesti3. This in no small -de-- • gree accounts for the inauguration throughout the province of the fox ranching Industry, Which for a few . 'years has been carried on by private persons and4 in a fmore or lees desultory Ntaiy but whieh is aseuming large pro- port10116 itait gives premise of develop- ing into, ;one of the most ineportant ine destrial branches of the province. e 1.. y 17, 1914 When Yen Siffet Dusters - From Your Back YOUR WA% MUST BE WRONG Many women work da ter day With, an excruciating, pain e back, and really do not know that thedneys are the source of this pain. When the e that !kartsstto, ache you may be the kidneys are not working properly, and the only way possible to make a complete cure is to take "time by the forelock" and get rid of all these aches and pains by using that old and thor- P.E.I., writes:—"I suffered. from back- prrKedulY sty °..ughlYDer()AieNd n„ PILLS Mrs. John Power, Peake Statio ache for -three years, and I tried all'kinds of medicine but got no relief.. I was so bad at times I would not be able to walk. A -friend told me to try YOUr D08,11,18 . y Pills so I got five boxes, and before I had Aree boxes used I was nearly welL I used the other two, and 'I can say your noan's Kidney Pills cured me: Had it not been for theta 1 would be suilering Ya" dney PIU� are 50 ants per hoz or 3 for $145 st pll, dealers or mailed lirect Bit receipt of Pfied by' The Wpm Co., 4P4ted1 Torputo, Ont. When ordains'4ect3Oecf "Dian'." 111.111111/4 Public Notice. .11,1=1.1100. Mr. A. P. Joynti Licensed anction- eer for the Comity of Huron is now in' a posation to conduct auction - sales, sa isfaction guaranteed, oharges rea- so able. For terms, eteapply to -Sea- fdrth P. 0. or phone 12 on 2&30.1.1 . . , The warmer weather necessiates the using of lighter driving rugs. Never before have we been able to assemble so many different knee rugs for your inspection suitable for buggy Or auto. Cool, neat, patterns in gray, brcAvn and mixed color's, from $1!oo to $1.75 Stable Sheets On a hot day poor horse will appre- ciatelone ol. our cool sheets. As blankets are a vere important part of ouy business our prices are in reach of all. Fancy checked stable sh:e e t s bound with surcingles $2.25, $2.5o $3. oo. Without surcingies 90c $ . 15 $ .5o and $2.00 - BRODERICK'S Itarntso Store Onnesite Commercial Hot& Seaforth Harness Thinks Valises Notice to Be/Ty-Pi eke Notice is hereby given, that anyone trespetaing on the property of the undereicnecl, on Conceeeion Tookiirsmithfor berry picking or othewlse, be proseennted. Mrs, HUGH J. GRIENT. 2430-8 he Spring Styles ••••••°••••• Weil:lave the New Spring Suitings for Men, in 1.11. the popular weaves and s-hade. The New Blues,- Browns, Greys and Checks are here for your iz*pettion. We guarantee or cpths.and we guarantee our Aake. Your suit—scill always it soa and ihey alw tw ar. saseesseseseeses D. BRIGHT, & SFAFOR I Li 114 -101 • II - • **I: an. to 1 teeteent Pots, Pans and Dishes! Panshine really has no equal in the kitchen. You s ould not trust to hot water' and soap to reiriove grease. and an traces of the last meal's coolfecry. It isn't safe. Use Parish -in —it make, pots clean and sweet, tin like s ver, paint like new. g. awl catittst. two olo ate tealtits ea" is a pure white powder with no disagreeable -amen Sold in Large OAt all Sifter Top Tins, CGrocers e 111 111 1111 VI II II MI P-45 6 Meat May Be Injuri u and Is Expensive Some pegple may eatkots of meat I T i I in- jury to their health, but it's hard on their p‘ckets. Others should avoid meat aimost entirely, yet they eat it daily—these payinlotbilteatth and pi4rsei Either class will 'benefit by eating les !Ilea .;-• ,-...,- and more Kellogg's Toasted Cern Flakes. It gives,much more,noutis' limed thancost in meat, is infinitely niiire easy to digett-j-contie- quengy better for jou. Ask for It's the oligina,L 10 cents per packag 6. leatiatt *woe Rom sin Col Vs* lied TateriM Doss' Sara ar 4 4 3 511 4-25 Ri Special ary Dist Illigtko immt Visom of Ago Co -Toner Mai lizeteeredi fay Medi! WS* of I Gradua racultar lege of 1 bstio; Pa Lice ot Hero sale eda Phone 4 Office. .0 _eon gila ihicen -et Hum farmer The vain Waimea ii.ze �t1 SAW= t oromptly attended 40 Pt G-uelp Goderich.. ADART.171.. • Blyth 3filverton.„: T.Anwood J Guelph.... Guelph Jet Tom Toronto_ efuelpt Guelph. Moira Linwood J NNIverton., Walton.. Blyth..... 'aoderieb.. Conne , eotione nt Torrdetock otermedia lirains le 10.45 atm 1.20p m 618 pm 11. 3 p.m ihla DI 21p m 82 pni LON London, d ()entrails, Zieter, Ippen Brucelleicl, Clinton, trendeohor el; gisVe, 80 fithain, Winghsin, BeigraVe„ trty, — Londrfsho Clinton, — ieei1eId Viten? • liens04, ieatrJi Xxeter ; Ts91130h, L