HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-01-05, Page 2•
dy's Choice..
•-
a prose, Publisher.
Terms 0 Subscription. -To any ad-
dress in Canada or Great Britain, one
year $1.50 six months 750.,three
moriths 40c. To the United StateS,
aamaaaee one yenr, $2.00. These are the paid
in advance rates. When paid in ar-
"""""'" ream the rate is .50c. higher.
Subscribers who fail to receive The
fr ' a Expositor regularltt by mail will con
fer a favor by acquainting us of th
fact at as early a date as possible.
When change of i*ddress is desire
both the old and new address shottl
be given.
ADVERTISING RATES.
•
aw
Still maintains its re!u-
tation as the speed
saw on the imarke,
is easily fixed and its particular constructionmakes it
taster, clear the saw dttst and still retain the set. We bou , t
our stock early and offer a si ft saw, complete with hanc -s
andfile for....................... ......... . $3 0-'0
Monarch cross cut saw with handles and file..,... 54 I O
Sawsets.........-...................... ... ........ . 50c to 1
Files 6 and / inches..............................e.
... ....O. .......1,
Saw handles per pair... ..... . .. . .. ........... . .. . .....2
hopping axes handled; 2nd growth hickory guaranteed$1 5
Axe beads**** *************** a* o•al . **Al to $1•5
To
Axe • 4, -*****,we****. s** L • *-.*•
25c to5,
1111110111IIIIIIFINIA
A MEAT SAW is almost nec-
essary at this season when every-
ne is killing their own beef and
pork. We have a large stock pf
41iffetent lengths.. ..... .81 to • • •
Sank:Flub
an. WitterOiset pow41
preparation for removing the dis-
cdlorations from the closet bowl
No brush required. No odor create
It is made for and does only one pu
pose and that effectually. ..Ceeoeet,
•eir •1**•e***3 5c filer c
Q. A. SILLS, Seafort
rt
ARREINS101111111MINIIIIIL -
The MeKiiopilfutual HAD minEsTio
litre Insurance Go,
Bead SeafortkOnt
DIRECTORY - EIURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS
cuRE1fr.
to -day that cell come.
.0filcers:
3. B. McLean, Seatorth, President
1. Comeolly, tioderich, Vice -President
Thos. E. Hays, Seaforth, Sec-Treas.
IHrectors: D. F. McGregor, Seaforth;
Grieve, Winthrop; Wm. Rhin,
liaforth; John Bennewes, Dublin; J.
Beechwood A. MeRwen,
Drueefield ;J. B. McLean, ,Seafoth;
Connolly, ElodericheRobert Ferris,
narlock.
.4 eats: Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth W.
eney, Egmondville; J. W Yee,
41aohnaville, Alex Leitch, Hinton;
S. Jarinuth, Brodhagen.
Iron Pumps & pump
Repairi•rag
n prepai ed to fair .itS all K'nd of
Fare and e :tt Pumps a: el all sizes
1 P pe e c. Galvan-
teel Tamest nd Water troughs
Sta. c te ens attle Basins.
A, ea I ic indsof purap repairingdone
on or notice. For terms, etc.,
spr iy at Pump Factory, Goderich
St„ East, or at residence, North
Alain Street
J. F. Welsh qeafortii
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
WELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
. • TO TORONTO. Ze;
a.m. p.m.
Xkoderich Leave 7.00 2.30
ith 7.37 3.07
Wlton, 7.50 3.19
Guelph 9.35 5.05
FROM TORONTO
Mnonto (Leave) 8.20 5.10
Gelph. (arrive) 10.15 7.00
1W,slten 12.58 8.42
inyth 12.10 9.07
Auburn 12.30 9.19
ittioderich 12.45 9.45
Connections at Guelph Junction with
Alain Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon-
," Detroit and Chicago and all in-
termediate points.
G. T. R., TLME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as fatt's:
10.45 a.m. - For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
L20 p. m. - For Clinton and Goderich
11.18 p. - For Clinton, Wingham
and Kinardine.
1.51 a. m. - For Stratford, Guelph,
2.0.48 . m. - For linton, Goderich
oronto Orillia North Bay and
pn'its et,. Belleville and Peter -
hero and points east.
0.21 p. - For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and points east,
122 p. rn. - For Stratford, Guelph
and Toronto.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
North
- on depart ...
Passenger
Lin. p.m.
8.30 4.40
ad • ...•.,.. • • 9.35
7- este* •• • 0 111..0 9.47 5.57
5.45
..111 ..., • 6.0-• iv. 960 6.09
Dpen .... 6,0-4-O 60 10.06 6.16
efield.. . AV • 4IF • • 10.24 6.24
_ ...........„e_ fro 30 care
e, -.. 11.18 6.57
grave• • • ... .,,,, 1L40 7.18
khain, =rive • • 11.54 7.46
South Passe er
Nils:wham, depa_rt .. 6.35 ng 8.2i.
Seltrave. • . • • 4 4 .• 6.50 8.36
131Yth • 0 • • • • • • • 0 7.04 8.48
.ndesboro. - .. 7.13
teii rti . ... • ‘.... 7.33
- ...
neat.... a *
•
I
t•a 8.31
"4'A at,•• 8.34
8.61
.1,015 * 9.03
sendee,":14;‘...
8.56
4.15
4.33
4.41
4.43 r
LO1
LIS
ILK
That grand old re
Blood .Bittefs, has been
for over forty years and
out any .fear ,of centredi
is not another medicine
ar
sure of all disturbances
Mrs. S. Turpin, Colbo
"I am writing to say ti
your Burdock Blood Bitt
period I suffered with iIndige_stion, and
me any relief,
bought several
our druggist,
estly say I can
want with
edy, Iturdock
011 the market
we claim, with-
oni that there
on the market
with it for the
f the stomach.
e, Ont., writes:
at I have used
For a long
nothing I took ever gav
only for a short time.
bottles of B. B. B. fro
Mr. Griffis, and can hoti
eat or drink anything
experiencing any bad a ter -effects.
fmay say that it is the cinly medicine
ever got any relief from'
Burdock Blood Bitters s manufactured
only by ThE T. Meer, Co., Limited,
Toronto. Ont.
CREAM W
have our Creame
ration, and we -wa
We are prepare
highest pieties for y
vim every wo weeks,
and test eachcan of c
and giv stateraent
We al supply can f
and Five you an holiest
r in and see us or dro
particulars
1tie eaforth C
Se aforth
TED.
nova in fed
tyour patrOn
to pay you
ur cream, pay
eigh, sample
earn carefujty
of the same
ee of char
business de
us a card for
camery
Had Pneunonia
DR, WOO 'S
NORWAY PIN SYRUP
CURED HM.
WINI.0111110fIniffstees
liCerstes is an early symptom ef pneu-
monia. It is at first I frequent and
bcidlig, and is accompanied with a little
tough, colorless ectpectoration, which
oon, however, becomes More copious
and of a rusty red colo, Ithe lungs be -
00122e congested and the bronchial tubes
filled with phlegm making t hard for the
sufferer to brethe. Males are more coni.
manly attacked than females, and a
previous attack seems to give a special:
liability to another.
On the first sign of a cold or cough you
should get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Nor-
way Pine Syrup and thus prevent the
cold from developing into some serious
/wag trouble.
Mrs. E. Charles, Noth. Toronto, Ont.,
writes: rTwo years ago my husband had
a very bad attack of pneumonia, and the
doctors said he waS getting consumption.
A friend came in to see me and told me
to get Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup.
I got three bottles. and they seemed to
quite clear his cheSt of the phlegm, and
aow he is fine =d well.
I shall never be without it in the
house as it is a very valuable medicine"
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is vat
up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees
the trade nsark ; price 25c, and 50a,
The genuine is irranufactured only by
rise T. Mamie/ Co.,narriin, Toronto,
Ont.
Display Advertising Rates - Mad
known on application.
Stray Animals. -One insertion 50c
three insertions, $1.00.
Farms o Real Estate for sale 50c
each insert
insertions;
sertion.
Sale, To R
etc., each i
ers, Notice
ion for one month of four
25c for ach subsequent in I
iscellan ous Articles for 1.
nt„ W nted, Lost, Fdtuid;
sierti 250. Loeal Read-
, etc., 10c per line per in-
sertion. No notice less than 25e. Card
of Thinks 50c. Legal Advertising 10
and 5c per line. Auction Sales, $2 fo
one insertion and $3 for two insertion
Prof 1 Cards not exceeding on
r year.
Dreadful Ptant;- The Time Until He
Toot "FRUITeATIVES".
•,
History of Peace Talk
During the Great War
Britain Always Firm
EW mo ern statesmen have
sh arn a greater talent for
say ng things the wrong
wat t an Chancellor von
13ethroanne oll reg Hisi classic ee-
mark ahou '-th "scrap of paper" is
the best ex mp e of his ability to
put his cou try in tlie wrong in the
eyes of the woilld. His recent bom-
bastic speecb in connection with Ger-
many's offer of lp.eae was ahnost as
bad. Even if 1e had come forward
with terms thatl were at all satisfac-
tory- to the Allis, his manner of pre-
senting thein would have made the
world suspidieu of the Hun designs.
The action Of t e T.eutonie powers
was only import i nt as the firs. defin-
ite statemetlt ddresed. from one
fide to the othe on, the question of
ending the Stru glee The references
to peaee that h ve been made' since
the cothmeneem nt ofil the war are in-
teresting at this lambent.
Britain's first definite avowal on
the question of peace was given at
the Lord Marolt banquet on Novem-
ber 9, 1914 wh n Itreraier Aquith,
in outlining the warsituatiommade
his fartious Sta raeut: "Thire is
going to be a 10 g War, but there is
with RhoOtaasin and severe Pains in
Sick anel RaWfroin strainsand hleavy
"Vinifferedior a number of tears
VeronateOnte Nov. lith, 14,15.
.:, }UPSON '
lifting.,
#
When I. had given up hope °rover
lying well again, 0, friend redbmmended
'Fruit-atties I!. to me and after Sni:
thefirsi bo.t. I:#11 so much better that
I continued to ke them., and 3i.`ove, 1
am enjoying the best of heath, thanks
to year remedy '%
W. M. LAMPSON.
If you -who are reading this- have
any Kidney or Bladder Trouble, or
suffer with Ithettmatism or Pain In 'The
Beek or Stomach Trouble -give "Fruit-
a-tivee afa3rtl, This wonderful fruit
medicine will dro you a, world of geod,
as it cures whext everything else fails.
50c. a box, 6 ter $250, trial size, 25e,
.At dealers or sent postpaid on reeeipt
of price by t7ruit-a-tives
Ottawa.
MII•EN
rime aceounts wiiich Ji.
Standing for ex lyears.,
largeet American - con
raitted nearly $ 0,00
home office this yar,
loan companies actu
drug in the mene' mar
ly have ,their obligatio
charged. Money et 6
abundance. Repro enta
bond-purehsing liouse
York, Beston, Cle olan
Chicago are biddiug
and civic securities, e
thirty and forty 1 yea
bearing five per cOnt- i
bring a premium Which
this interest cost, whe
are fafroraible. Thai reta
sale fall business has b
Propolltions of other y
imporils from the. Ifni
shoes, boots, clothing,
goods have been treto.e
sale of automobiles alo
a feature Of thetrade
;fabulous sum&
we been °lit -
One a the
erns bee 1'6-
,000 to the
he atOrtgav
113? report a,
ket, so lame-
s been dis-
er cent. is ill
Ives of many
from New
Toledo, and
r municipal
pecially the
obligations
terest. Many.
even reduces
e conditions
1 and whole -
en out of all
ars, and -the
d. States of
and leather
dons. The
e constitutes
itemising into
"GOOD OLD DAS" DISPB-TD.
A Case of Dis
ehantmen
ee Lending End
th Vew.
Professor H. E. rd ck, who has
delved deep into t e- fasts and plillo-
sophy of history, days that "there
have never been a ey go ' -d old times."
IThis may be, fro e a niversal or
recial or even a i•tion1 point of
View, a :very satisft cto theory. As
ie. people we are Lille ei to . subscribe
tp it. The world it .'.re is willing
to subscribe to ft. :t e individual
• who has crossed 'he 11 of thirty-.
ftve has another o inio , asserts the
Indianapolie News Wi h him there
have been "good Id ti es" and no
statement te the ontr ry will con-
vlace him that he s wr ng and Pro-
fessor Fosdick is T ght.
In the "good ol, ti „" whatever
was was better. 'o -da, the harass
, ed man of business and 4f affairs, en-
vied though he r..y be, tolls in the
crowded eV and ighs ror the farin
) where his boyho d ai4l.
his youth
two-ereye=its thatTheir h who Is rich
were those when e wa PPPoleoert. years
he
man. who is poor t -day 4Lnd who was
melt yesterday livies bus happiest
hours in, retrospect on. he married
matt covertly stea s a lance back-
ward at his care -fee d ys of single;
blessedness and th eon rmed bath-
elor, gazing at sone faded photo-
graph, longs for tb day when rom-
ance danced gaily at his elbow,
touched hixn and passed him by.
With women. it i the me. Stor
ed in the chamber of • heir hearts,
fragrant with the perf me . of the
lavender of yesterdy, a e "the good
old times." And 411 of ue long for
the Old Music, the Id bi oks, the old
play, the old dishe T ey were ail
better in "the good old times." In
a word, we view the pas with- pleas-
u able longing and soro1wful regret.
We need to be -onIr th rty-five or
thereabouts to reai1ze th t Professor
Fosdick is either v ry young or very
wrong. Not even wi 1 thel poets agree
with him. They 11 pl4eed. a halo
of glory about the "day4 gone by."
There was Riley, for i tance, sing-
ing of the vanished yea si
When life was like a st ry holding
neither sob nor si h,.
In. the ggoolndeby.
extolden glory of the days
• Pact, history, phtfosop iy are ali
Ivery well in th,eir -Way alM in. their
place, and, in a measur no doubt,
isoinewhat comforting au4t encourag-
ing, but when theyi coin into con
flict with the senti ent hat the in-
dividual, regardless of station; for-
tune, or sex, casts ound his past
they count for naug t. Everybody's
Old times were "the good old times."
•ii•••••••••9100006
States, to evacuate the invada'
partments of :France and.. all of
Belgium. except Antwerp, and to
negotiate wih, Great Britain re-
garding the possession of AntWerp.
Poland would be 'declared outonoint
ons, the invaded provinces of Russia.
would Us restred, and Serbia's in-
deffendence wottlii be guaranteed. On
the other hand: the "freedom of the
sena" would have to be guaranteed
and speeial privileges granted to
German commerce. In case of a re-
fusal of these terms, according to
the report, Germany was determiaed
upon a war of extermination.
Great Britain's answer throngll
Sir Edward Grey_ liras decisve.
Throughout •the ec ie.! months of
1916 talk of peace became more
pronounced in germany. In April
Lord Robert Ceeil in replYing tO a
request for an, authoritatiire answer
to Chancellor van. Beth:mann-1101i-
weg's speech,S-410: "Nothing in any
of the •Chancllor's public speeches
cart ever form -iithe basis of peace
overtures NA ore, he makesin
neeneente of Ortory. ever de-
etve* or 15 ,s';*U-Alis`411tendfid tia 'obtin
Ihe least attantiOn from the Allies,
Neter 40 Prospeou.
Bankers 'and managers of mert-
gage loan companies in the Canadian
West report better collections and a
Ittore healthy tone in business • than
'Western Canada hag ever enjoyed. 1 -
member of the Toronto cleaning
house said that more raortgages had,
been paid off more old accounts set-
tled, and more actual cash deposited
in the banks west of the lakes in
C.,Tiada than at any time since the
Red River valley was settled. The
great farm implement houses, some
of them with headquarters in the
State, have collected 90 per cent.
of their indebtedness this fall, and
-.01.010101.0110=
VON.BET1,OLWEG.
nothing in a long struggle to depress
us, or in what has happened. . Our
enemy has tried three objectives -
Paris, Wereal, arid Calais -and has
been beffied n all.
"Thet is net enough. We !shall
not sheathe the eword, which we
have eat lightly drawn, until Bel-
gium has recovered More than she
has sacrificed; - until France is ade-
quately: secured against penace;
until tte rightS of the sthaller
nation ities haVe been placed upon
an_ una$sailable foundation, and until
the mi;tary oMination of Primate
is finaldes oyed. "
For * year fruinors of peace issued
at regn r iatervals from •enemy
sources ;and while no definite • pro-
posals Were Made Premier Asquith
on theIbue hand, and Imperial Chan.
eelor Die yen Bettimann-Hollweg
on the :'other, issued Statemente in
December, 191.5. The Premier of
Britainannounced in the Hauge of
, Commons that: ; "If proposals of a
'seious elearaceri for a general peace
are put! forward by the enemy Gov-
ernineas, either :directly or indirect-
ly, or through a iseutral power, they '
will ill be discnseed by the Allied
'Govern ents." • .. 1
Dr i Ani Bththartn-liollweg ad-
dressing! the Reichstag at the same
timeati4di 'If our enemies make
ce proposals. Compatible with
rman'SI digeity and safety, then '
e shllalways be ready to difteuss
em."
In NoVeraber, 1915, the question
Of peace againarose in. the British
ouse of Cominons and Sir Edward
s
rey, at er stating thatp Great Bri-
in's ition! in the war is fixed
by her !Wincewith Japan, France
and Rusea, the ' Foreign Seenetary
proceeded: "In oilir view the condi.-
pions of ipeaee maiiit tuifil those laid
down byt the Prime Minister of Nov.
S, 1914. It is verii desfirable that it.
should 4:. unidrstOod- enee and for
1 that hie is the determination of
e Goye • 1,1 eat, Collectively and in-
vidually, and: of the nation."
In Deeembea of the same year
°ugh ;he aeny of The Hague
O Kaiser made an. attempt to enlist
sympathies of President Wilison
L n suing for peac. Germany, at
t tim, was Willing to offer,.
*gh tiiie iPet ottkei_Viditeeit
: i ; i ' •
•
LL
Scores of -men at the front
havewritten home to friends
and relations asking for Zam.
Buk. They need it to applyito
chapped hands, cold cack, frost
bites, chilblains. cold sores, stiff
)14-Itts, and other similar ailments
lncidental to trench life. These
Ilments, although not seri ou s
nough to unfit a man for duty,
ause him endless pain, and the
oldier who is supplied with Zatn-
uk will be saved much unneces-
ery suffering, Nothing stops pain
like Zam-Buk nothing draws out
the soreness and heals so quickly.
For hands, sorerand blistered after
french-diggin, Zam-Buk is slen-
did, and applications of Zam-Buk
to the feet before long marches
Will prevent the feet from becom-
ing sore and blistered. The letters
below illustrate the soldier's need
and appreciation of Zant-Buk.
Private J. R. Smith of the "Prin-
ess Pats" writes: "Tellmy friends,
if they want to help me, to send
ZntBuk."
Sepper G. T. Webster, 2nd Floid
cs... Canadin, Engineers, writes
on can have no idea how much
te aenreciate Zam-Buk out here.
splendidirsas, et
c.,,for sores, cuts, bruise,
in
Shoeing- Smith McIllwraitk, of
the 2n4 Argyle and Sutherland
iighlanders, writes from France
"I have used Zam-Buk for 14 years
in the British Army in South Afria.
India and France, and have never
1 lound its equal. There is no fear
01 blood-poioning from cuts or
scratches if Zara-Buk is applied.
1:d u
he tr:imoublreeoiIt." isthatZ am-Buk Is too
.earce out herre-our frien48 should
6
Trtis applies to you, so be
(Sre to include a few boxes of
iZamuk in your next parcel
to tite'Ieh-ontl, All druggists 50c,
icloatt-Bu3fokCo.,
r, $L25',;erordInrm
o.ti'
.Z
ert
•
Meatless Days in.
A million pounds,or 5,000,000,
could be saved in a ortnight if
Veryone in. England wou d agree to
o without meat on one day each
Week, says the newest appeal to the
public to cut down their meat con-
- fium.ption made by the National War
Savings Committe. Last Seinember
a Board of Trade commilmit , making
le
a similar appeal for econ my, urged.
the public to agree to o e meatless
day eacb week,. but epparently if has
fallen on deaf•ears.
At present higit peiees e civilian
Population of Greet Britai now eats
about 50'0,000 pounds woIfth of meat
every day, eat -cording: to figures &tin-
ned by the war saiiing committee,
rhicia finds that this Is the to the
habit of eating leteat-bf, mutto.,
pork, or baeon-twol or three times
i 4
day.
"nceesive meat eating is a bad
habit
,
" adds the con:onitte• "Nothing
so radical as going Without meat of
I' arny kind for a whole day;is needed.
reeple who eat meatS twiee a day
should cut down the meat eaten, tak-
ing more fish, dried beans,' peas, ete.
and cheese, and thoe who eat fish
d several kinds of mea at lama
nd dinner should have o 'y fish or
One variety of meat"
Those not engaeed in physical toil
are especially urged to out down
their eonsumption of meat.
Keynote to Russian Soul.
A Russian does not Understand
What you mean whoa yott speak to
im of Odin or Jove Or irpoval. He
iles and shakes hiS head. It is
• mething he cannot; eon eive-this
d of unbending justice nd black -
f wning wrath. HO Bn1slan soul
h!as been stunned eenturi s ago by
e tremendous thought that God is
ve. It can receive no other im-
pession of this single asitct of the
• Everlasting God -that He oyes, that
B,`e is Love itself.
'Even when he gos to war with
the Germane, vrhona Le feels in. his
Out to be the enemies of love, be
has no hate in his heart, I ave talk-
ed to Englishmen and Ainericahs 111
Russia who have been* the Galician.
trenches and they all tell me that you
c4nnot get a Russian 0o1dier to hate.
While he is chargin, while he is
killing, yes, perhaps; 1 but when he
comes back with his priscinerh, no
Begives the captured German his
het bit of chocolate, malaes 1-1-1m- a
cup of coffee, and donS not resent
tbie German's contenaptuOns com-
fitint that the eoffee is of a bad qual-
ity and IS bitter without anger:. no,
he pats the German's ?baa, strokes
lain arm, smiles at him, end *ays 'You
are all right, aonie-4aroli Begbie,
in the December Atlantie.
Children Ory
FOR FLE1CHER1
CASf&OR1A
4111111611Y
oeememeenietelseasese**4
FOR
'LIVERISIINESS
USE •
, - miLitutops
1LAXA-LIVER PILLS
THEY NEVER FAIL. To DO GOOD.
.
Mrs. J. Shellswoi , Halifax,
eaili
*rits: 'I take iil ure in. writing you
concerningthe great value 1 have re-
ceived by using your Milburn's Laa-
laver pills for a sluggish liver. When my
liver got bad I would hdve severe head-
aches, but after using aecouple of vials
of yotir pills I have bot bee.n bothered
with the headaches aty- more."
Milkmen's Lahin-Liv Pills clean away
all waste and poionous matter from the
system, and prevent well as cure all
complaints arising from a liver which has
become inaetiVe. '
ilur's 1,axa-Livr Pills are 25e. a
via, or 5 vials for $1.O0, at all dealers, or
mailed direct on receipt
pt of price by
TR'S fr• MII.J311P-W CO., Lnarrn, Toronto,,
Ont.
Beechwoo
An Open Letter
My Customers and the Public
thank you very uoh for tita*
enerouis aupport =copied to Wye bt"
burgnese so far rhte year, and
to Woven you that I tint prepaneal
tti pay the aigheet pace in Nash ea.
trade fm. an the poultry die-Usnet
• Beeelswood alive until Itie Mkt
weather, every ThurtAay. "We *art
• well Akkind with groceries ,
alma and rubbers and, dry gooilla
all goods osually kept in a Viseral
tore, Well bought 1-5 half *0144
values in these lines. I-- would atAte
renAand those th debted -that it bah**
!MOM ey and a neel deal ofit to bistei
*oak now and ask the to pay sio
• PrOWAY a poteible All aetihannn
are :ready
• Youra BoPaat tfullYs
f 17 HOL AND
d.
APIMIL-VarciNEAlealailiNailin*WWMPHIMAMMIFIlitMe
filimy women with dsfigure# eiplexitas
neer i.teern to think that they need an oei itionai els
ineas well as outside.. Yet ntatet, ot eine low.
'‘,...7:''
,........................„.......„4,,,,,,....„
.......,.
_,_:„..„,,wei,. &Ai Jr dreadful beadachesamd hili;rt sae.. „iiii:Es because
thelliver becomes sluggish. and waste :tentr accumulates
which Nature cannot remove wiatoir ."..aali.•7))..,.. rite be2t
' . :7.:1::::"'
bating ellOwe itself in spotty, and sieen npiter aims -
:tee.
5 •.';' ee 4,4 -; _
''.:.! 1 ' •• ' If 1:
•
$
the
ber
tiro
lone
. tt
Ma
Sr.
Yea
1
remedy is Chamberlein's Stomach and Liver TableI
ttimulate the ht ter to healthy activity, remove fernieet sten.
ently cleanse the taemseb and bowels and tone tbe ithele
igestive systene Sure, safe iind reliable. Take ooe at
night and you feel bright and stinny` in the morning. Get
Chamberlain's toay-elruggiste 25c., or by mail from
Channberiein Medicine ComAany. Toronto
Tr
0
New
Issue
of the
anuary
16
Tuesday
Copy for the next Telephone Directory
closes onthe above date! '
ji. Order your telephone now, so that
your name wid bein the new issue!
tr Report changes required to our Local
Manager to -day.
11 The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada.
A
osurrameasseeeesiniesta.
axle to Measure
StlitS
Overcoats
T HAS ALWAYS been our aim and ambitio
give our customers the best pogsible satisfaction
in :he tailoring business. Our sum- ;..nd ovOrcoats
are made in a high-clas. careful Malgtner Theii have
earned their reputation from the wa) they are tailored
as well as from the pure materials fruit) which tgey are
made. The quality has always been a prime f. or in
our tailoring, and always win be.
•-•
In spite of the fact that owing to the war, witish
woollens have advanced greatly in peke and tailors all (waif Can
ada have been compelled to raise prices, we will owitinue toi make
worthy made tu *Leasure clothes at a priu; that is wit in the
ange of every man.
and we never had a finer rat& Cpring and; Sum-
mer materials. Distinctive patterns and shades of tich, fas4
logs, also all the plain shades. ! Fairies to please youngt men, 1
middle aged men ,and old men. It do c4,4 no:, matter whethOr you
are a style enthusiaet or just appelate quality, tailoring and
value. We know that we can give you atisfction. Come:in and
examine these new materials.
z
_Let Us Be iOu
D. Br
S()