HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-02-28, Page 21-
'
4 Sap
Easy access to the bush, the price of sugar, preserves
etc., which show no signs, of declining rapidly, and
the fact that a man has on his own place ad asset vv.orth
working, his 4tigaf bush, all tend to induce larger
numbers to make syrup.
We have the supplies on hand, 9 bUckets spiles
augur tits and sap pans, at no increased prices over
last year. Buy or order now while the supply lasts.
Stable Brccans......
Stable Shovels....
Scoop Shovels...
Special sewed halter,
.... ..$1 10 to $1.25
... . .......$1.00 to $1.25
0 e 4 • t
1 75 o 52.25
• 'Ira . ••,_,S _
military pattern
Curry Combg... • • • 00 0 • • • • 0 0 0 0 • • • • • • 0 • 25c
... ...30c to 40c
Horse Brushes
e•aaa see**•11
Axle Grease, •Mica, 31b. tins...
• ••••,66•64•4tret be 435C
A.SILLS, Seaforth
THI McKILLOP MUTUAL I 10 CENT "CASCARETV,
FOR LIVER AND BOWELS
FIRE INSURANCE COT.
HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT.
DIRECTORY
OFFICERS.
Connolly, Goderich, 'President
las. Evans, Beeehwood, Vice-Prei3idest
r E. Hays, Seelerth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
4,10X. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
3inchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefidd, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yea Goderich; R. G. Jar-
ttnfla Brodlgen.
DIRECTORS
?Miami Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
h..unewies, Brodhagen; James Evane,
Seechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, Goderich; D. F. MoUregor,
a. r No. a, Seaferth;, J. G. Grieve,
o. 4 Walton; RobertFerria, Harlock;
Jeorge McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth aa follows:
- t0.55 a. in. - For Clinton, Goderick,
Wingham and Kincardine.
r1.0p. Foy Clinton. Win
imi:XineardMei e
11.01 --For Clinton; derien,
6.86 a. m. --For Stratford, Guelph,
- Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
poInW west, Belleville and Peter -
bora and points east.
tejara. - For Stratford, Toronto,
ILS"VL kn. !Una east,•
3,0NDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South
einigham, depart 6.35 3.20
Belgrave ..... . 6.50 3.36
Myth
Londesboro ...•
•
Cure Sick Headache, Con' stipatIon,
lillItousness Sour Sacts, Sad.
Breath-toCandy C hartles
No Rildctii how bad, y liver, stomach
or bowels; ho W nue your head ((ace,
how miserablele
' you re from. constipa-
tion; indigesti • ionsness and slug-
gish bowels-yvays get. relief win
Casearets. Thy mmediately elearise
aid regulate te toraaele remove the
sour, fermentin loocl and. foul gases;
take the excess le from the liver and
carry off the e stipated waste matter
and poison fr m the intestines, and
bowels.- A 10 -cent box from your drug
°-
oist will: keep your liver and bowels
clean; sitsMateh fovea and head clear for
months. They work while ,you
STOB
m4imOdrim6
Ed You' Havo
alga the
0181140W0
a.m. p.m. 1•
Clinton, . • • ...... •
Brumfield . ... . ...
Lippen
flensall
Exeter .........
Centralia .. . ...
' melon. arrive
Going North
eondon, depart
Lentralia . • ....... ...
Exeter
densall
&.ippon • • 6 • ..... •• V, 6
Brucefield .....
(„linton
Londesboro
Blyth
Belgrave
Wingham, arrive
SOUR, ACID STOMA614S,
GASES OR *DIGESTION
7.04 8.48 1
7.13 8.56
7.33 4.15
8.08 4.33
8.16 4.41
8.25 4.48 Time it! In five /minutes all stom-
8.40 5.01 ach distress, due ti acidity, will go.
8.57 5.18 No. indigestion, hea, tburn, sourness or
10.05 6.15 belching of Vas, or ietations of undi-
gested food, . diez ness, bloating, foul
a.rai p.m- breath or he el ache
8.80 4.40 Pape's Dia. -psi. is noted or its
.. 9.35 5,45 speed in regu ti g upset stomaehs.
947 5e Itis the surest, 'ckest stomach sweet -
9 . 5 6 . 09 ener in the whole world, and besides it
.59 .
10 16 is hairmless. Put an end to stomach
.06 6.
distress at once by getting a large fifta-
10.14 624
cent case of Pape's 'Diapepsin from any
1180 6A0 drug store. You realize in five ininutes
11.28 6." • how needless it is to suffer from indi-
11.87 7.05 gestion, dyspepsia or any stomach dis-
11.50 7.18 order caused by fermentation due to
12.05 7.40 excessive acids in stomach.
_
"Pape's Diapepsin" neutralizes iexces,
sive acid in stomach, relieving
it
'. dyspePsia, hea burn and
distress a once.
Being 1" obb
Of ur Cr - a Profits
CREAM waste is costing thousands of American dairy farmers
$20.60 ker cow Aer year/ Out-of-date and
inefficient cream separation methods
(such as the gravity system) is actually
robbing them of this much profit per ,
cow.
..,,,,matammemstamorni..,,,,imoorsonosearts,
Swedish dairy farmers have stopOd
all cream waste. Their farming
conditions have compelled them
to do so. Their leliezand forfier-
feel, wasfeless cream separa-
tion has produced the closest -
skimming, ea.siest - running
machine in world -the Viking.
We want to show you how to
Get All The Cam
With A
ox
the taceet aosselar machine in tete Artel oday-
Over One Phaion in Use/ At .t, en -hem -eh it is
lower'ea price, it is made of ths ve.re Onest ma-
teriaie-seientificaily construe:- d in eaeli and
every detaii. That vvily,Ifie tinaraniet, For
Lifetime!
WILLIAM Ti GRIEVE
WALTON ONTARIO
.*.areonalevat
rTTTTT
•
rS -
•••••ellla
1
4,
THE 11Vp3N,EXPOSITOit
S.EAFORTIls FRIDAY, Feb. 28, 1919.
.COAL BURNING CAPITAL'
English coal is
first in
the reign of Henry III., who granted
a charter to the citizens of Newcastle
entpowerterl4ni to dig it. t The
new fuel, however, did, not find great
favor with the cleanly ,heuseWivee of
that day, eyries ;to the fact that their
,homes We're not provided:with either
fireplace's pr ,e inuieys. Fires were
usually 'made_ n the middle of the
earthen floor, and the smoke found
its way as best'- couldthrough
a hole in the roof
The
•
The use enf chirnneys with , their
vertical shaft and. upward draught
was the outcome of the increasing
use of mat .as et But the ladles
of . the Period of Edward IV. found
that their coin lexions were suffer-
ing from the effects of the smoky
fumes emitted by the 'coal fires in
the badly ventilated rooms, and, they
prevailed- upon: his Majesty to issue
a law prohibiting the use of coal for
household purposes.
Their petition was supported by
the inhabitants of Lenthms who com-
plained that the use of coal instead
of wood and charcoal by the brew-
ers and dyers was a public nuisance.
The King .therefore issued a corn -
mission to try all who had offended
and to punish them by fine for their
first offence; and if guilty a second
time, their furnaces and kilns were
to be destroyed. The practice was
ultimately made a capital offence;
and a man was ried, condemned and
hanged for burning coal in London.
Later, when ehimneys were con-
structed to prod.ice not only the
draught to assi -t combustion with
the minimum waste of heat, but also
to discharge obnoxious and waste
gasses into the air at such a height
as te be non -injurious to the neigh-
borhood, then the law against the
use of coal fell into disuse, and
housewives eagerly demanded the
once despised fuel.
Coal inthe01(1 days was used for
etxraordinary purnoses. Sortie time
in the 17th century the mineral, we
are told, wes at Wigan Eturieusly
polished into tie appearance of
black marble and made into long
candlesticks, sug r boxes and spoons.
At a subsequ nt period, it is re-
corded that a d nner was given, in
the town served upon dishes made
of -coal, at which the guests, after -
consuming the viands, proceeded to
amuse t-hemselvcs by consuming the
plates, which they piled on a fire.
WHY KITCJLENER NEVER
- MA RIED `
It appears tlia 'after all there was
a love'- romance in the life of Lord
Kitchener, the details, of which are
now made publiel for what reason it
is not quite clear. Why the great
soldier atever inarried was for a long
time a common topic of gossip, and
at various times his name was coupled
;with that ef, sense famous beauty, now
an American girl,' now an Irahwoman
whose Fenian the pri ciples were supposed
11.
to
to be e only o staele the union.
Others asserted t at ,Kitchener was a
wornan-hater. The theme recently in-
spired Miss Mallorie Benton Cooke
t-. ,,ivailte, a rem rkably impudent
story of the rov iti.: 17"-"A-ner 1
was suPPOedt.',', iiive kindled in the
we of a member of the War Cab-
inet, who happened to be alto a
German spy. To Kitchener's &tea=
like bearing in this adventure the
authoress attributr his death on
the Hampshire. - he real story of
Kitchener's heart affair disposes of
all the various legends that his
aloofness from warnen's society, has
given rise to 1
Mies Carolineutchison was the
object of his affec ions, and the fact
has been known or some Years to
those most intienate with Kitchener.
Miss Hutchison is: said to have ex-
erted a more powerful influence
over him than a y othen man or
woman. He was ever too busy to
think of her com ort, to write her
notes, or to pay her frequent visits
when they were in the city together.
In her he found n inspiration for
his patriotism, and it is said that on
only one occasion did she seek to
dissuade him from the path of duty.
This was when he told her that he
.
was about to vis t Russia. .
Hutchison said tha she had a pre-
sentiment that sh 'fiat see
him again, and begged him not to -
go. Kitchener replied that he was
going at the request of the Czar, and
could not ignore so plain a duty.
After the destruction of the Hamp-
shire Miss Hutchison refused to be-
lieve that he hero was really dead,
and the belief that he was some -where
a prisoner in Germany sustained her
until her own death sortie time later.
Kitchener and : Miss Hutchison
-islet when they were boy and girl, he
two or three yeare the elder. The
Kitchener family lived in ICensington
and their near neighbors were Mrs.
Robinson and Miss' Lucy Hutchison,
two, sisters, ladies 4f wealth and dis-
tinction who made their home to-
gether. Mrs. Robinson was a widow
and her only son iad died when in
his 'teens. Youn Kitchener was
about the same 'age as the lad whose
death had almost broken the
mother's heart, and. Mrs. Robinson
and her sister came to entertain a
great affection for the paling sol-
dier. Their home: became a second
home to him, and the two sisters
like mothers, Miss' Caroline Hutchi-
son was_ a nidee of: these ladies. She
was born at Peterhead on Deeside,
her father being Alexander Hutchi-
son, a geptierxian of independent
means. Miss Hutchison was a beau-
tiful Scotch girl, as intelligent as
she • was - eharmingi and her aunts
eventually pertuaded her parents to
permit Caroline to make her home
, with them. They devised to her fall
their property, the value of which was
very freat
It was in Mrs. Robinson's home
that Kitchener and Miss Hutchison
became acquainted. They were pals
and confidants befere they were
lovers, and indeed the record does
not say that they ever were betroth-
ed, although their eventual union
was never doubted by the friends
who knew them both. It happened
however, that Mrs Robinson
brought home a neglected child who
had the :whoonsing cough and •she
contracted the aise4se. To people
of middle years the whooping cough
laves" Point the Way
to iloirok Rellet
- VERONA, ONT.
Suffered for a number ofyears
wit 1 -Rheutnalison-and severe' Pains
in y Side and Bapt, 'caused by
stranis and heavy lifting. -
hen1 had givep-up hope of ever
bei • g well again, a friend Teem -
me • ded Truit-a-tives' to me and
afte using the first box so
mu h :better that I continued -to
tak them ; and now I am enjoying
the best of health, thanks to ,your
won erful fruit medicine".
W. M. LAMPSON.
ruiteetives" are sold-' by all
dealers at 50c. a 'box, 6 for $2.50,.
trial size 25e.- or sent postpaid by
Fruit-asfives Limited, Ottawa.
is a niesst dangerous malady and MTS.
RobinSon became an invalid for life.
-
some of her organs having become
compl
too,
eat n
by he
appar
inson
must
afthrs
from
juieS
crippl
ly paralyzed. Her mind,
mime effected, and she would
thing that .was not given her
young niece. It soon became
rit that as long as Mrs. Rob -
should live her niece Caroline
be her chief nurse. Not long
ards the other sister was thrown
r horse and received spinal in-
-which made her a bed -ridden
for the ‚rest of her life.
The doors :had closed upon Caro-
line utchison. Her duty was to
remai with her helpless aunts as
longs they lived. Her career was
hence orth to be in that house in
Kensington. Kitchener's career was
cast in Egypt and India and in other
parts of the world. It Was impos-
sible jn the circumstances that, they
shour marry; equally impossible,
becau e of their deep affection,' that
they houhl chosiase other mates
And this is why Kitchener lived ahd
died al achtslOr. In later years when
Miss iutchon was freed from the
care i f her aunts and inherited their
prope y she was noted for her
philan hropies; and -became the found-
er of the "K. of K. Empire Associ-
ation,' whichdid noble service in the
war. When She died a couple of years
ago,_ i was found that most of her
great fortune had been distributed in
charit es, and particularly ae the var-
ious c usekegiven birth to by the war.
'Short befirre Kitchener set forth on
his la t voyage he suggested that Miss
Huta son should destroy the letters
he ha written her, numbering. sev-
eralundretlet all of which she had
lovingly treseryed. This was done,
a.nd haif a -Aezen only survive as sad
in's f a great love and asreat
sorrow
p;
greaMy bOrnet, ,
•
GIRL RULER. OF LUXEMBURG
Not the t attractive of Six beau-
'ro sister4:Ms Princess Char-
lotte Of t emburt and Nassau, who,
in consequence of the abdication' of
her elder sister,' s Princess Marie
Adelaide, has beeome grand duchess of
this tiny, but historic principality, and
assumed its oaken crown. That the
new grand duchess has her full share
lin
eoks that run in her fa -
of t•isis•Ova be - , ÷ps;
ih herelatest portrait elotnienne eeeei. t
ifies. wenty-two years of age, she es'
gay al d democratic in her manners
She ha however, a far greater meets-
ure of good common sense than her
depose elder sister who, naturally
wilful, had been thoroughly spoiled
by certain :of her relatives and mem-
bers of hereritourage before she came
to the rone, and she has many ster-
ling , qa Wes. During the war, she
was a ievoted nurse to the wounded
in the unicipal hospital of what is
now he: capital.
In Oc ober last, her engagement was
announ ed to Prince Felix -of Bourbon -
Parma, younger brother of the Em-
press of Austria. Probably the person
least phased by this news was the
former aiser Wilhelm, who persist-
ently p secuted the Grand Duchy of
.Luxemb rg. from the outbreak of the
war, an had set his heart on annex-
ing it to Germany. For Prince Felix of
o r o -Parma, like his brother,
P 'bete, to whom the Austrian
emperor
letter,
from th
at -Ger
was the
months
day and
her mot
ganza a
_ '
as regent' This was merely a contin-
uation of office, for during the previ-
ous four years the grand duke had
been incapacitated by mental and
thysicial paralysis, the burden of
iittite affairs thus falling entirely up-
on the shoulders of his consort. '
The Kaiser did his best to persuade
the Grand Duchess Marie A.delatde- to
marry his son Joachim, but the for-
mer ruler of Luxesriburg refused, de-
claring, to the all highest's consider-'
able. annoyeuce, that kilie would far
rather enter a nunnery
The next three sisters in succes-
sion tto the throne is Hilda, 21, who ,
is an invalid. Then comes.Antoinette,
In August last it was announced that
she had become engaged to Crown
Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, who is
30 years her senior and has an un-
savory reputation throughout Europe.
Princess Antoinette is nineteen. The
remaining two Priacesees, Elizabeth
and 'Sophie( who have not yet put
iessomujoamaa.
•
FEBRUARY 28, 1919
Cain RESERVE
ee BRANCHES IN CANA .0A
A General Banking Business Tran.
CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT
BANK MONEY ORDERS
SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMEN1
Interest /mowed at highest Current Rate
2 a I
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT
Bruceiteld St. Marys Kirkton
Exeter Clinton Hensall Zurich
their hair up, would have to succeed
to the crown under the regency of
their mother.
The new Grand Duchess of leuxend-
burg will rule over a community
numbering' some quartet of a minim.
persons. She will be possessed of vir-
tually autocratic sovereignty, for the
small legislative body is in session for_
only four monthe in the year and has
hardly any Towers of restraint upon
the monatele Moreover, there '19 a
great fortune 'to be included, worth
sdine $50, 000,000, which is hers by
every right, and makes her quite in-
dependent of tlie civil list of $40,000
odd. This fortune was amassed for
the most part by the dukes of Nassgu
when they were driven into exile in
Austria, through the prosperity of
Monaco's 'forerunner, Wiesbaden.
_once the gambler's paracliee, and
other places of a miller nature. Be-
sides this, the rulers of Nassau,
through the extinction of several
members of their family, becarae
heirs to various considerable sums
from time to time. This fortune- of
the house of Nassau is invested well,
for the most part in large estates in-
cluding mines, distilleries and indus-
fries of all kinds.
The real eiknificance of the little
revolutions whieh have taken place in
Lt&xemburg is not dynastic but eco-
nbillie The abdication of the Grand
Duchess Marie Adelaide is symbolical.
The German sympathies she had mani-
fested during the war had made her
unpopular with her own people and un-
acceptable to France. Her going is not
k a sign of any abatement of Luxent-
i-burg's desire for continual' existence as
an independent state --the accession a
Princess Charlotte is clear dispreof of
that -but it does mean that aegreat
change -over in the economic policy of
Luxeenburg is to be one of the out-
! comes of Germany's war.
ILuxemburg, with its quarter of a
million population, foimed part of the
German customs union. This, so 'far as
treaty provisions were cohcerned, re-
mained the case until only a few days
ago. Contending in the Luxemburg'
chamber that the dissolution of the
Auence the virtual abrogation of the
'railway treaty by Germany's act of
invasion, M. Renten, minister of "state,
recently insisted that only the wes-
tern powers needed to be considered
in relation to the economic .future of ,
the grand &idly: 'Indeed, he went
farther and said that association with
either France or Belgium was desii-
able. The key to the situation is to
lie found in the fact that the chief
industries of Luiemburg having to
do w:th iron and iron ore, the economic
interests of the little state are close-
1-- linked with Lorraine/ the trans-
., „ .9
addressed his famous peace
•as not only been. pro -Ally
beginning, but fought again -
any as an artillery officer in
the Bel ,ian army. No date has yet
been se for the marriage of the new
grand dachess.
She i the second of the six d•aagh-
ters of the Grand Duke William of
Luxernb irg ,and Nassau, who died in
Februar , 1912. The eldest of these
royal d imsels-all of wohse names
end wi -h Wilhelmina -Marie Ade-
laide, w ie abdicated so recently, was
crowned on February 25, 1912. She
• seventeen,eand only three
hart of her eighteenth birth -
majority. In the meantime,
er, formerly Princess Of Bra-
d Infanta of Portugal, acted
4441.40:011•401
Zam- are soothing and healing
power " Zam-?3uk has beett our
housel old balm for fourteen years,
and NC -ra could not do withed
says , George A. Kilburn. of Swan.
Lake, an.
For eczema and skin troubles of
all kinds Zam-Buk has no equal;
also for old sore's, ulcers, abscesses,
boils, p mples, blood-poisoeing, piles, _
cuts, turns, bruises and ecaldx
All dealers or Zam-I3uk Co., To.
Tonto. 50e. boxe 8 for $1.25.
fer cf the' iron eee •
eace-Lorraine to France is Of vital
importance to Luxemburg, and the re-
versal of her economic policy follows
as a coneequence.
One of the sinevtiable effects (4 the
remapping Of Europe will be a. re-
grouping of the iron and steel inter-
ests. It is eetimated that Germany's
output of iron ore will be reduced by;
7,000,000 or 8,000000 tons per aremm
by ihe restoration of France of, her
lost provinces This is exclusive of the
output of Luxemburg or of that region
including the mining district o the
Saar whose fate is still in the bal nee.
The dominant position M the iro4 and -
steel industry of the continent ispass-
ing over to France as one of the ruits
of her sacrificeA year or two ago
the iron and steel interests of GerMany
were demanding the annexation of
the rich mineral fields of France. •
What is actually happening may be
ironical, but also, it is just.
NEWEST N• OTES OF SCIENCE I
Cuba imports from 5,000,000 to 6,-
000,000 eggs a year, almost all'of them
from the United States.
Transoms can be raised and lowered
like a window shade with a device an
Oregon inventor hae patented.
•
• - FARM FOR 'SALE
Lbt 38, Concession 6, McKillop,. 100 =ICS
of the beet clay land in McKillop, 6 are of
bush, the rat in a high state of cultivation.;
5 miles from Sesforth, 2 miles ^from Con-
stance, 14 miles from school. There are op
the premises, a good seven roomed house; large
bank barn 64x76, all Page wire fences and
well underdrained. There are forty acres
ploughed, 5 acres bush and the balance seed-
ed down. There are two big spring*, one
piped to barnyard and In the other -dam
with a hydraulic ram mingling the water to
the house and to the barn. As the spring
is in the orchard and' near the house and line
fence, there h no waste Iand. There h a
graded and gravelled lane front tbe road to
the buildings. Apply to MS, SAMUEL
DORRANCE, Seaforth. 2627-tf
The first school of practcal forestry
in Scotland recently was inaugurated, -
in Perthshire.
Harness to suspend a basket from
a fruit picker's shoulders and leave
both hands free has been invented.
A hydroelectric plant 120 miles from
the city provides Madrid with it elec.
trieity for lights and tower.
Waterproof electric flashlights to be
attached to life preserves for night use
are a recent invention. .
What are known as Chinese almond
cakes are made from tie -flour of the
edible kernel of a -variety of peas.
The safety razor principje is em-
ployed in a new desk knife, a new
blade replacing, one that has become
dull. •
Interest has been revived in the
Azores in the cultivation of sweet po-,
tatoee•for Use in distilling aleolual
An inventor has bralight out a bar-
ber' e chair, complete with foot rest,
that can be folded flat for carrying.
Spain annually plants about 19.800
acres in peanuts and raises more of
them than any other European country
Natural fingdr, thumb and wrist mo-
tions are claimed by the inventor of a
new artifical hand that has 60 parts.
A mixtiere of iron fibres, sand and
cement is being used experimentally
in France as a tot &eosins for high-
ways.
A magneto has been invented that is
capable of alteration for use with
seven different types of aeroplane
motors.
A newspaper in a Brawilian town
2;000 miles from the mouth of the
Amazon, gets all its telegraphic news
by wireless.
A new self starter -for light auto-
mobiles tarns the motors with com-
pressed air and also can be used to
' inflate tires.
-
e
0.11.•••••••••••.,
FOR SALE.
House and half al• of land in
village of Egmondvile The property
is situated on Centre • it4treet, close ba
tbe Presbyterian church and is knows
as the Purcell property. Good, mine
fortable house, god lied, good well
and cement cistern. All kinds of fruit
trees, . strawberries, ;pee/tiles,-
currant bushesnee le a corner pro.m
pfrty with me break on ,front, and
the land is in a goo e ate of cult**.
tion. This is a nia roperty for it
zetired farmer and tie axes are light.
For particulars apple -a the prennsea
or to John_ Rankin, 'See -forth. 25844
,
' • -
,
-
fit ArriXED TO A V47Za ------
5.41inP4la.*ZIERTIFICATE AIM
SIJKIJECT-170 THE CONEHTIONS
PRINTED THEREON
Read -
the Figures
1Notice how the cost -and the -
gash yalne-7-of, t4e stainp ad -
vanes eaai inOnth"nniii: on the
1St day of January, 1924, the
Dominion of Canada is pledged
to flay: $5.00 for each W.S.S.
iimitmom
ee
••=4,--.. • - -•
•
-
4L!'
The Greatest Name
In Good Y -Land
iri.iirk,.4-.1.1......,--,,-.757131, 1
1 -T,,,Lm -39711 1
- / lir' _,-14.147/1Aroi/k117;74.-1
frj
VilliG
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(Too'
Notes. -M
successful
last. There
and bidding
prices were
;. man left he,
home . near 1
third son of
• severely lac
eye, which r
e
lose Mr
bag of rolled
The owner ce
his hotisa---
present visit]
in Toronto.
The
largest -
selling gum
n the world nal-
urally has to have
- a packate worthy
of. itS t011tetitse
So look for
WRIGLEYS
in the sealed Package that -
keeps all of Its gooduets
'Mars why
The Flavour Lasts!
* 6.,7410**4" •
Terrible
lowing despa
to the Wirmir
with sincere -
and friends h
ily. Dr. Ma<
ew of Mr. Da
his raother b
Miss Bertha
despatch says
old, eon of D
town, was bui
ing when gas
tempted to lig
father, who is
lama seen oa
the house in
Clothesnil
Mrs; Mack es
without- injury
at ei ht o'clo
to ii» the
brea a -s
cut with gas
the Arta The
off the stove
the kitcheia
tinguished thf
taken to*
aid Was ren
Dr. Mack ie 1
precarious cot
the exposure
Preererkr
Krueger has
concessions Ha
son et Mr. Joh
has4nce puie
Josega Gesell°
duril March
ehas the r
Zuri ef Mr.
move to this vi
reside. It is
aid and familA
Owner. Mr•
chased the ter
-.village, owlet
late F. Hess,
possession.
Death of 3
passed away
at his home in
in his tist y
victim* a that
tient, and at
j,est eare
no a-atil. He
nr anal about
Vas eenfined
teliei'ed him.
-who led an e
made many ay
and wright
uffeinng with
had strott
,
merit taking,
ents, Ifft. and
thisvillager:,
the Blind Lull
R. Steinbach,
Mra, "E. Hab
A iNdalie L
rst steps to
library for Zu
attended fl305
when The Zu
sociation was
Management
bets, viz.: Dr
A. J. McK
Dahme, J. Pr
Gazebo, Rev.
Meyer and A.
officers were t
President, A
Treasurer, -Mt
Librarian wit
or her service
CHEAPER. A
, Pup., ei
linat may
probleti of
more a -SU -lent
has jtest bee]
Oliver alit.Zii
E. C Weisge
Thrisi�l wiff
War �arLui
that a aubst
found is mad
qualification.
Weisgerber s
all previous
have tailed;
nounceinent
mark and ti
statement
froin a thous
bus experts'
Exhaustive
on with airp
mobiles, true
ernment sun(