No preview available
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-04-12, Page 2I! • THE . HL O], Washing Machin F fl' � lc�.or�.rrr Sptitig ilOse , AFORTH, Friday, April - 12th, 1918 T H E heavy blankets are soon to be laid away and every .woman dreads the necessary wash- ing. With. a MAGNET WASHING MACHINE, its easy motion, large capacity and long-lasting tub, "ttie drudgery is.xeduced to nothing and house- cleaning loses half its dreariness. Every wqman is entitled to what comfort life can give and one of these is a AMagnet ash:er..•••.•.a..• 1 • • • •••••,•••••• Step- Ladders ................ ;ralvan z d ash 'T - bs... •• 1 at rhes•...t•...►•.•....•..••••.•••4•.••• ►*. 0•••••100 ` j{. O 25C , meal re`war prices. Scam BI'u t m P .•. +� $12 .•.•.R•e.f•.•s'•.i•N! .10 r"` 2.25 t .Z5 i • •' • PASTIME FOR HOGS The feed situation confronting the. swine groweii dural y the coming Sum- mer- is not altogether a bright one. Standard hog -feeds -Are not likely to be plentiful with high prices ruling.. Shorts and middlings, while fixed as to price show no.likelihood Of a surplus. Corn, for some months practically un- procurable and in any case too high in price to be considered, may be avail- able, but whether in reliably constant quantities remains to be seen. Barley will be high priced also and difficultly available in many localities. Oats, under ruling and probable future prices, should be used only for the milking sow and for weaned and growing pigs. Only in 'small quanti- ties uantities should- this feed enter into the fattening, ration. It has been , shown that with breeding stock, whether dur- ing winter or summer maintenaflce, cheap home grown f eeds, may lie large- ly utilized 'as an 'economy and that from- such feed practice best results may be obtained in. health and produc- tion. ' It hes been,. further, clearly, demonstrated thathome grown feeds for summer feeding may economically replace a considerable percentage of Caustic Soda in five pound. tins....... Carpet Sweepers .. . .••••••••••• **••. •s•# . At the Eicperimenital Farm, Brea- ' ••• .••• .....••.,•.....$1.00 don, it was shown by experiment big the summer, of 1916, that oats, �;. barley and wheat all stood pasturing Sani- Frush:, forclose owls, • per can.......... well.. These were sown on May 17th and pastured from July 5th until early. . • .. •...,.. •i..aS.0 in August Rape which was slightly injured by pasturing too early, sup- KIDNEYS Grin Pills have attained astounding. success in the rational treatment of Itheumatisif , Pains in the Back,, Swollen Joints, Urinary Troubles, etc: Here ie one instance--- • -'' .,, .... ,,,5c to 50c lied much needed pasturage when the Coat Hooks, per dozen � p Perfection 'oil stove wicks..........•..-...• 30o Vetches although slow of growth were . $ 1 50 Sweet clover, wens also late in Inatur- eCed:ar Mops • ,. ing and eaten only when no other feed I was available; • . cereal seeding had been eaten off. ' readily Viten' and stood pasturing well. •.•-..••••••'-•.•..•.•.•.•••.. at It night I stated hat beyond a Furniture Polish, per bottle....•...•...:..............mac e , comparison of these c ps from, the standpoint of palatability; recuperas ,Mop Sticks.... •.. •.000 1 ... : .•........• 020C - tive power, and ability to withstand .li 15C & -`Z5e data was available to show the cost ..•. i • ....• ....5•••••••.• •••••••••••• . trampling: and pasturing generally, no Cotton Gloves Stove Brushes ••.•.• ••••••••••••,. of ptoduction one "crop against the other: , 0 hes oro s a self feeder. was used to sultry a " supple - .........25c to With these, pasturep - Stove Blacking„ ........ •. •. • ............ - 5C to 1.5C men.t grain ration. Such practice int Shoe Brushes... • r ... •. • "• • • "' ..•. dictated that No more than where hand feeding was employed and that econ- .........:....35c omical grains were made at a cost of 5 cents per pound for grain and pas- t tare, employing feed prices then cur- , rent, : The method in general reduced the labour 6f ,feeding to the minimum. 1.35 to 2.25 At the Experimental Station, at Lacombe, where swipe, feeding enters :I largely into live stock operations, rape and alfalfa have proven most desir- able crops. As a result or the average of three tests, rape has shown -a slight superiority over alfalfa requiring _3.8 pounds meal fed supplementally as a-. gainst 3.83.. pounds in the case of al- falfa. Rape carried 1736.1 pounds of. pork per acre as against 1518.9 pounds' ..• ••...4s WIRE DOOR MATS save the carpet, are indistructible, easily cleaned, do not hold the dirt. Special price.... " Ono Side Pill Gave Relief" -Plessis . lle, Ont. " suffered from Kidney Trouble for several years, and tried numerous reme- dies .and prescriptions without perman- ent relief, my case being chronic. I decided to try Gin Phis; • « oue single pill gave me great relief. , I have now taken four boxes of Gin Pills and find myself completely. cured. l'o more bad huanouir-increase in weight dear !lyes -fresh colour• --more strength and vigour. This,is what Giro. Pills have done for me." Hd PowIS IiERBi;RT. Gin Pilin scil for 50c a box or b boxes for 52.50 at all good dealers. Sample free if youtAte to National Drug; & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited,-. Toronto; or to IJ• S. address, Ns - Drut - Co., Inc., 202 Main Sc., Buffalo., N.Y. De G. ILLS,Seafort ec.1 EW J t Ll a i pais in Shoulders m Ileacto oe: Seaforth, O Fire ht su 7 once Co PIN 11N1 HEAD DIRECTORY, LIVER BOTHERED HER. OFFICERS. Connolly, Goderich, President L J. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President `. E. Hays, Seaferth, Secy.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Jrueefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth.; J. W. Yeo, Goderieb; R. G. Jar- enuth, Brodhagen. , - DIRECTORS William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth John C.niewies, Brodhagen; James Evans. Beechwood; M. MCEwen, Clinton; Jas. nnolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. tti No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G: T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: .55 a. m. - For Clinton, f*oderick, Wingham old Tincardi . 6.53 p. m. --- For Clinton, Wingaxn and Cineardine. 111.03 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich. W. i a, rn.: For f Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter - hope and 'points. east. 1.16 p.m.. - For Stratford, Toronto( Montreal and points east. four years with pains in my head and pains in my shoulders which I alwar thought were causen by working outsid. in the sun on the farm. People told me that it was my livei bothering me, -BO I bought three vis.h of Milburn's Laxn,Liver Pills, and found that the were doing me good am well and strong. I am very thank. ful to you for my recovery." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are specific, for all troubles arising from. s morbid stele of the liver, •so keep :11 active by the use of these easy -acting non -irritating little pills, Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c. 'vial at all dealers or mailed ditect receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. . • CARRIAGE FOR SALE. Two seated Gladstone, natural wod, as good as new' and easy running, eel& fortable family pg. Apply eit Tits Expositor Office, iSesforth. 257841 LONDON, HURON AND BRUM SUFfERED WITH Going South a.m. 7.04 Lonentboro 7.13 Clinton, 7.33 Exeter 8.40 London, arrive 10.05 Going North London, depart 8.30 icippen. 10.06 Bruefeld 10.14 C.dinton 10.30 Londe.sboro 11.28 Belgenve 11.50 Sirillghatn, arrive 12.05 8.20 3.36 3.48 3.56 4.15 4.33 4.41 4.48 5.01 5.13 6.15 4.49 5.45 6.09 6.16 6.24 6.40 6.57 7.05 7.18 GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TORONTO sem. pen. plyth 7.18 2.14 FROM TORONTO Blyth . 9.18 Auburn 12.15 ea:et 9.30 *On Line ..fte Galt, Woodstoete Las - non, Detroit, and Chicago and all In- temediate patine HACKING COUGH COULD NOT SLEEP AT NIGHT. The constant hacking cough that sticks te you in spite of everything you have done to relieve it, is a source of danger. The longer the tough stays, the more serious menace it is to your health. It is easy to check a cough at the out- set with tor., Wood's Norway Pine SYrum If you have let it run though, it takes a while lobger to cure, but Dr. Wood's Norway Pine. Syrup will cure it even theneiSter other remedies have failed. Mr. J. Henry Landry, South River, Burgeois, N.S., writes:- received such great benefit from Dr. Wood',s Norway Pine Syrup that I cannot help expressing my thanks: I suffered with a hacking cough for over a month, and could, not sleep at night. I used many kinds of remedic-s, but they didn't do me any good, until I used 'Dr. Wood's,' and found great relief rightvfrom the start. I wily used two bottles, and was com- pletely cured. I will never be without it as long as I live." There are a number of substitutek on the market for Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, so when you ask for it see that it is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trcegthe trade mark; priee 25c. and 50c., and that it beam the neme, The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited„ Toronto, Ont. with alfalfa. - The findings at Laconibt would war- rant the recommendation of alfalfa" for early pasture with a block 'of rape to supply., green food for hogs when. they attain •considerable• size. Where alfalfa may be successfully grown,, "the swine grower would be well ad-- v.`eed - in retaining a small block for swine feeding purposes. Failing al- falfa, clover will give almost equally good results. With neither of the le- gurnes available, results .at Lacombe indicate that cereal pasture second only to the legumes, is to be obtained by`the :p:se of a heavy seeding (3 bush- els peracre of. oats and barley, or wheat, oats and barley. , ' Any one of the pastures above men- tioned should be followed ,by rape seed- ed early in June, preferably m dr:lls 27 inches apart. At Lacombe the results of the uze of self -feeders versus hand -feeding on pasture, while not sufficiently verified by repeated experiment, Would indicate that where hogs are fed to a finish the self-feeding method shows most economical gains. • It has been proven where corn is the principal grain used, Self-feeding is more economical than hand feeding. That this is also the 'case where mixed grains, wheat by- products and feeding concentrates are used, is indicate I - by the results at Ottawa, Lacomb Brandon and else- where on. the E perirnental Farms System. - At the Experimental Station at 'Lethbridge excellent results have been obtained from alfalfa and peas, the hogs being allowed eccess to both crops et the ,sarn a time. Here, - of course alfalfa . is -one of the most de- pendable crops grown. conditions be- ing in all respects suited to its cul - tore. - . While much evidence is, therefore, at hand, to show that ' holds first place as a h must be remembered that 1 tions of Canada this crop grown. at all, in many othe is unreliable in the extreme, and that even under more or less favorable soil and climatic conditioiis for one rease on or another it cannot always be re- li upon. For reliability and wide cult ral possibilities and from the stare point of palatability, producing pow and resistance to pasturing, red clover should receive emphasis equal to, if not' greater than, that given al- falfa. - In conclusion, high priced grain and meal for hogs must be replaced, as far as possible during the coming summer. Pastures'as -discussed, from a home grown, palatable, easily avail- able food, that isi harvested without labour. The self -f eder combines w with pasturing, a d for .growing an finishing hogs is eculiarly worthy of attention' Buri fig I bout scarcity. falfa possibly pasture, it many sec - cannot be s that it SOLDIERS SUFFERING FROM TRENCH FEET. c . A ."knitter for the Soldiers" would like to have explained 'what is meant by the phrase "trench feet," so often encountered in letters from the front and in stories about the war particu- larly in, the Winter raentlas, her idea being maybe -that by some dexterous alteration of purl and plain knitting socks could be made that would either prevent or CUM the disease. It is not so simply treated, and, is in.deed one of the most disabling hardships -our men have to:undergo._ It was far worse the first year of the war dere ` spurt.' ' Blood circulation ' anil rnuscul r lactiorl ate tans intimately -associated and ' not only is the cir- culation benefitted by muscular :lee- tivvty, but the ,muscular tissue' is strengthened- and improved by , a better circulation. When people stand on their feet for any consid- erable period without moving about, even if it is not in a wet trench, the tendency is for the blood to 'stag- nate and eventually snake ' the feet tender, and perhaps lead to a malady quite as chronic as that to which our 'soldiers. are subject. . Flat feet often result from an .en- forced standing, position which does not give 'exercise to the leg muscles, Cieke, waiters and the now extinct balie nder were' frequent victims • of thi affliction,. - although most of them. could Neve `avoided it had they known the Proper steps to take. Their idea was, however, that they had taken too many" steps, and if . it were suggested that because their feet were extremely sore at night they should walk home - in- stead nstead of taking a street car, the idea would seem t4 have emanated from a Bolshevik, `:Nevertheless this is the cure for incipient fiat foot, "and the tenderness of foot to which many persons far from the front? line trenches are martyr. The main idea is to give' exercise to.the leg, to restore the; circulation, and not to rest the foot, Pers ns - addicted to dancing are not t often troubled with sore feetdue totheir own mis- takes, but of course it must remain a "question for - each one to decide according no. his own conscience whether it is; better to have sores feet as a result • one's own inac- tivity, or as a.iesult of a partner's misplaced agility..- . MOTHERS PRAISE . than it has been since, note because its cure is . speedier, . but because through bitter ex el ience the ao1- niers have learned to take better care of their feet. It has been ex- plained to them why they have trench feet, and in many cases a lite precaution will keep0 them free from : the i lalady. Unfortun ately in Kane districts no • precau- tions whateevr would seem to be 'A -evil feet so' far as the matter can be grasped by a. layman, are ceased standiag in a cold, wet trepeln with. ehe water- just 'degree or so above freezing point If the soldier gould cencentrate his mind on his feet; if, in short, he were' in' the trench for the purpose of guard- ing himself against trench feet in-. stead of watching for the Hun, he would be as successful in tile One purpose as the ether. The point is that all his faculties I must be -con- centrated upon the *visible :enemy. His feet get cold, and gradually the water , soaks through. . his boots. After 2 while they become numb, and he has no. longer the sensation that his feet are blocks of ice, hut that he has no feet at all. Later on when he emerges frorn the' trench, he hes the feelings in his • feet that burning. pain ethat is almost insup- portable. WhMi his feet are in this condition, he cannot place any weight upori the& Ho can hardly bear that tliey should be tonched. There is nothingefor him to clZ. but to rso to the hospital. He has ac- quired trench feet. Early in the war Sir William Os- ier called. attention to the fact that the Canadian lumbermen, working sometimes waist deep in. snow all day and- later on, in the course of the "drive" having nothing but wet feet for weeks at. a time, never ex- perienced tren.ch feet, ,The reaSon is that the lumbermen:are active. They are "on -the jump," and thii keeps the, circulation of the body, includ- ing the feet, ia a healthy stete. If the feet get cold they ere not cold for long; if they get wet they kee wakm, and consequently- lumber- jacks know no more altqat trench feet than about housemaid's . knee. The whole point -is that the sol- diers remain stationary, and know, as Masefield says, "the Misery of the soaking trench." If the soldiers could mareb. about the trench, even if they were always sloshing in icy water, there woutd not be much trehch feet trouble. So long as the leg muscles can get exercised it 's ndt to important that there sho late friction under feta. 24 everyone knows who has. read aboet it too recently .to" have for- gotten, the blood is pumped from the • heart through the arteries to all parts of the body, but returns to the heart through the veins, and against the force -of gravity. This it does Very largely as a result of muscular contraction. Each time that a miescle contracts the veins are emptied of blood, and then when the contraction ' is relaxed the blood flows more* freely through the veins, on the same Principle exac• tly as when a hose is pinched after the PL ItifELLOUS the way ZantsBuk . relieves the burning and irritation of eczema," writes Miss at. Gallant, of - St. Nicholas, P.M.' "For a year suffered with this disease, and tried all kinds of remedies, but nething helped me until I used .Zam-Buk. The continued use of this lArbal balm has completely cured me. " Although it is now two years since this eure was effected, theee has been no return of the disease:" Zara-Buk ie equally good for ringworm, scan) sores„ pirnples, boils, teething rash, "barber's rash," ulcers, old sores, abscesses, bad legs, blood -poisoning, piles, cuts, burns, scalds and bruises. Ail dealers or Zatn-Buk Co., Toronto. BABY'S OWN TABLETS ones to be w,j,e11--thousands of moth- ers have learned the secret of reev- ing them well. They have found by experience that an occasional dose of sickness, or if sickness coulee 'on sud- denly the Tablets will promptly give relief'. Theset mothers have nothing. ...but praise for the TanIeta Among them is Mrs.); Gustaye Lord, St. Per - been. using 'Baby's Own Tablets for nig little ones for a number of years and have found them a perfect medi- cine. They a'egulate the bowels; etomvoinitingt• in fact they are good for all the little ailmenta of dill& hood." The Tablets axe sold by medicine dealers or by Mail at 25 costa a box from The Dr, Williams Medicine CO.1 BrOckville, Ont. Every - mo er wishes her little HOW KAISER MAKES PROFIT After having called the Kaiser a inur- may appear in the nature of climax to call hirn a grafter, or even a profiteer; but the interests of truth f ons into a bottle containing three ounces make. the demand. Emper6r Willie/1 of orchard white. Care shbuld be taken. is probably the greatest profiteer that 'te; has been. developed in the war. If he tion will keep fresh for months, Every is alive when. it ends he will have a - woman rnows thet lemon juice is used massed one of the greatest privatgfe to *Wail). and remove such blemishes as fortunes in the world as a result 1 98 trItANCH4S IN CANADA A General Banking Business Transacted. CIRCtrLAR LETTERS OF CREDIT . -BANK MONEY ORDERS ' SAVINGS -BANK DPARTMENT - Interest allowed at highest Current Rate. BRANCHEi IN THIS DISTRICT: Brucefield St Marys Kirkton 1, Exeter Clinton Heiman Zurich Milne ernment, bribed certain French. marks to invest he tuelted it aw newspapers to make attacks upon in Krupp shares'. It may he thin Germany, hinting at war in tile the Kr.upps did not Min to shares near future. , These fulminationseetheir tremendous profits with duly copied in the..Krupp organs in Kaiser. It may be, that they figunet Germany., were used tg prove that that they pould well afford to make - France meant mischief and that the him an equal partnen In any ev German Government must irterea it would have amounted to the sa its purchase Of cannon and ,munit thing t The Kaiser had the power tibas, in which the nfrueps . had' dement' a. share of the plunder, a practically a monopoly. But in or- he has been piling it up /ever sine den to kill off whatever conipetitien at a greet rate. If the war should: there might be on the part of other end witte, the in -Meer on the thronee German -munition werkers, ; the he will become, by virtue of hist ,Krupps bribed Varioue German offl- great weenie. more than ever cials to- give them. advance mforma- owner of fshe German Empire. If tibn so ihat they might undersell ebould end with WS overthrote, their rivals. It was a 1110St Sordid, weeild still he possesssion of if sensatienal story, and the full of the greatest prinate fortunes revelations would have shaken Ger- the world. In eith.er event he ma*, but again the German Gov- anebbvious purpose in inerea.sing ernreent blocked a full enquiry, at pr4fits, . After he is hanged, the order of .the Kaiser. A Coln- private fortune ought to be AU mission of ;Enquiry was constituted, hated in France and Belgium al was the right of the Reichstag, for persons . ors Papers, as was the "., missACTIKatenr.m24214..Sete°erieF Wg- ° irNpug '• b t it Vas given tio power to send right of the KaiSer to „determine. ' agent of the war savings Lampe' 18 easy to keep s ret such matters The new Hungarian fternehine as theetfortune of : the Kaiser. He front bill anfranchisea Women inherited 112,500,000 - from hts It was -shown- ehat -the KruPns, m the. same limits as men- ' The 'clubwomen of Idaho are U 'annual saleS k to the 'German Get:- trEegaYistisiteigarpe' eret4RaPile7wasnetyt.7senwerien lin, grandfather. As King of Pruisia he has a civil list of $4,250,-000 a year. Besides that he. is the great- butehere on the Oakland, Antioch Gitls have replaced all the pea est landowner in. the: kingdom For , Probably 2500 women aretnow meny years past it . is said!, that ' : induetry in. 'Germany since the ‘• Women workers in the Urge e BEAUTIFY THE SKIN *to work from eleven houre to thi Make this beauty lotion cheaply fer The authorities in Gerrnamy ara your face, neck, arins and hands. ing steps to provide work for all eV At the eest of a. small jar of ortinaey eold cream one can prepare a full quar- ter pint of the most wonderful lemma, skin softener and complexion betaitiller, by, squeezing the juice of two fresh tem - the struggle.' The fact -that Genbany will be ruined will not affect him, except that his own winnings win. stand out* in bolder relief. It is not now suggested that the Keiser has I two lemons from the grocer and make up breught on the war in order that he a tweeter pint of -this sweetly -fragrant might beceme the richest .marseira Ger- lemon lotion and massage it daily into many; but if his private, flirtune is the fact, meek, arms and hands. It is increasing at the vete, say, of a mil- marvelous to smoothen rough, red handa. lion dollars a week while, s the war freckles sallowness and tan and is the sidn eoftener *atelier and beautifier Juet try Get three ounces -of oreherd white at any drug store and lasts, it is plain that he has a strong personal interest for continuing the war, and that the saerifice-of the lives of a few hundred th.ousand of his subjects will not be allowed to inter- fere with MS plans for „securing a Wilhelm .14. several ways of mak- ing money (Mt of the war but 'it is his holdings of Krupp stock' that have made nim theadchest man in GerrnanY in the past three years. .The profits of the rigreat concern at Essen have been fibulpus. They, were *prodigious before Viewer began; they have been record-breaking. deer since. The nanies of the shareholders in the Ktupn -busi- nes have never been publicly announ- ced, but it has been said on excellent authority that after Bertha Krupp, the Kaiser is the chief stockholders. All efforts made before the war on the part of German Socialists tei ptrobe into the Inrupp affairs were blocked, either at the Kaiser's orders or with his sanetion. Some sixteen years ago when Vorwaerts directed an attack againit the owner of the plant, Fred- erich. A. Krupp,laccusing him of the mese frightful immorality the Kaiser nut the ban on the exposure and fore- bade:the scandal being aired in eburt. Destint that he was it is plain that he had to .yield to Kriipp, for the latter could, no doubt, have made disclosures concerning the real ovinership of the Krupp* stock that would have been When Frederieh ICrUpp died, leav- ing bis , business to Bertha Krupp, he was by far the richest . man in Germany. He had an income ef $5,000,000 '(disclosed), while tlie next wealthiest German. admitted - to an Income of . only about one-fourth of this amonnt 4 year or twol be- fore the war the Krupp publicity to convey the impression that i the campaign in. American newsp Pets Krupp fornme has been built up by honest industry alone. There , ere touching ! stories about the ori 'nal Fretderieh, who establiehed his forge at Esssen in 1810. The- wn. then was smaller than Brantford. Now it is moreelike Pittsbueg, and tion are almost wholly due, tol the expansion or the Krapp werks. From a' simple blacksinith 'shop Krupp has grown. -until, it is- a prop- erty of vast mines:, steateships, :rail- roads, coke ovens, tremendous ' ore bodies, newspapere, and, it has been hinted, Goverments as well. , Five years ago about 80,000. people were working, one y, fer the Krupps, and a good manY secret employees. . P number is now emplo It all made a fine facts not mentioned on ore were its rhaps twice that ed.. story, but the were still mere interesting, ana some of them were brought to tight .es 2, result of leharges 'made 'by Laebknecht, dna the Socialist newspaper Vervraerte. en between the ageS of 1-6 and -70. Hundreds of women have up for admission to the nuries' train* camp to be established at Vassar c The housing of all the workMg men in 'Oriole Sanfs munition plants under the direct suPervision of Mis Marry Van Meek. Women conductors working on Banerian. railways are dereandingeth4 theYebe allowed to wear -trouseeee eteacl of skirts. Miss Patsy Reese a Sierra 'California, walked over 200 Mil register as a student in the liniar of California. Miss Sue Dorsey, who has. j made assistant paymaster in the ed States navy, keepe track of ov 1500 officers and assigns, them to various ships. tte names Those warki one or Inerf Rob Sadit 'Taylor, Ct EdvrintTstyl lers for thie Hot Sr. tendance . Death of Margaret E Arthur Stea the home el art. Hibber in ner 77th father ,to Car -matte sixty years Stewart in! a family Bank of ST 'Gerrie, Mrs' Jaw, Mrs. - Stewart circle of the ohl. 1, in the famil of the Oats avito wan severe inin risiting 4.6 "Bless the girl! She never follets to keep me wen Atticked with WRIGLEYS Notes late -John I has been V, for the, ete ceease of Mr. Alex. delivery hi tie, Xtvho Friende ret to he place -In 11 Mrs. La number oi of tne pet ititarestecr recently Stothers. Huron Co eordance on Horse, -with the Geos tonsistien Cruickalie suitable t Death a Frank fast we el enthusia his parer ed harat this beisi whicli turned nership their sifS. he 7-ems:I -youth 6 ,of these several out a last ierinter Sehool School Be w portere being .a mittee Domini the Ro being- ther once an I Grirns leen' le only Teeth. breath. ant- tite and digestion all benefit from it. Thirst ,, away.' Pluck refuter's bY its magic aid; After every meal MADE IN CANADA The Fla retteaterazetee. see