Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-05-16, Page 6urn "111TEUP or FIGS" TO CONSTIPATED CHILD ado10101.11•••...M.1.111 0. lie 10 US- °Fruit Laxative" can% herrn tender little Stomach, Livia and BOW111111, aka ist the tongue, Mother -I , If boated, your little one's stomach, liver tutd. bowels need cleansing at we. When peaviele crows listlese, doesn't aloft) oat or act naturally, or is fever - fah, stomach flOttr, breath bade bass sore. throat, diarrhosa, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the. foul, constipated waste, undigested, food and eour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a swell, playful child. again. Ask your druggist for a bottle of "California 'Syrup of Figs," which containe full Prectione for babies, children of all ages and for grown-up. DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Thread Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late Assistant New York Ophtlud- mei and Aural Institute, Moorefiekl's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. At die Queen's Hotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday in each month from 10 a in. to 2 pm. 83 Waterloo Street South, Stratford. Phone 267 Stratfo;c1. tia,Boal Assassins Dead, But History Remembers Their Infamous Records eeaCeteasanetteieiefeieieadeieaaee•CeadeCeaslne AMONG those names which must survive the war and -rerciain forever as a part of tits history and character, four maybe selected from that list of 150 German subinari* commanders killed or captured by our naval forces which was recently made pub- lic. To them, says the London Daily Telegraph, is insured such an im- mortality as perhaps a German naval officer° may desire. First in that category comes the man who placed .,, upon submarine warfare its crown of supreme achievement, who fixed for- ever its character and repute by the torpedolag of the Lusitania, He was Kaptain-Lieutenant Schwieger, com- manding U-20, and later U-88. He had entered the navy in 1903, and reached, therefore, the sumrait ots his career, the greatest murder the' world has known, before he was 35; It was only le November last year that a mine in. the North Sea put an end to his memories. and to his pur- poses. It now appears that his supreme LEGAL - deed was not of his own initiating; E. S. HAYS. he was selected by his superiors as a Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and suitable officer to carry out a plan Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do sd _devised and prepared as a part of the minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do'dit- deliberate policy of the German Ad- roinion Bank, Seaford). Meney to miralty—that is to say, of the Ger- loan. man Government. According to the evidence w ic s ava a e, s suc- cess appalled him rather than other- wise; the world's outcry of horror was audible even in Berlin, and upon his return there he showed himself littlee–possibly by order ,of his sue J. M. BEST Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over NiTalker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND.. COOKE Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- lic, etc. Money to lend. In -Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block.; W. Proudfoot, K.C., J. L. Killoran, H. J, D. Cooke. VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of all domestie animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street_ Seaforth. All orders left at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night calls received at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of -domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vetia- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of' Godelieh. Specialist in Women's andeChildren's diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nese and throat. ConsuIation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. fill 1 pan C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London; Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases of men and women. DR. J. W. PECK r Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Herman, Ontario. Dr. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS. - Gradtiate of University of Toronto Fecultw of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital London, VInglancl, University Hospital, London Eegland. Office—Back of Dominion mkrik, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered frosss residence, Vic- toria Street, Seaforth. -B. R. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton — Phone 100 Agent for Ilse Huron and Erie Mortgage Corpoe- ation and the Canada Trust Company. Commissioner H. C. J. Conveyancer, Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public, Government and Municipal Bonds bought and sold, Several goo farms for sale. Wednesday of each Week at Brucefield. AUCTIONEERS. !GARFIELD McMICHAEL Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales chnducted in any part of the county. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. Address Sea - forth, R. R. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236, Seaforth. 2653-tf THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the comities of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sate dates can be made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth or The Expositor Office, Charges mod- erate and satisfaction guaranteed. 4••••••••••••••• R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in all parts of the -county. Seven years' ex- periertee i'll Manitoba and Saskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 175 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. 0. R. R. No. 1. Orders left at The Huron Expositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at- tended. /periors. Even hit reward was stealth- ily conferred; it took the form of the Order of the House of Hohenzollern, the Kaiser's personal decoration. ' SCHWIEGER. U-20 finished obscurely; she Strand- ed in a fog on the Danish coest in November, 1916, and was bloWn up by her own crew. A year .later Schwieger, now in command of U-88, was groping submerged through a minefield in company with another U-boat. The crew of the second sub- marine suddenly heard an explosion and felt the jar of it in their own vessel. They tried with their special signaling devices to get into com- munication with U-88, but failed, and she never returned to her base. The officer who sank the Belgian Prince on July 31, 1917, collected her crew on the deck of hib sub- marine and then submerged. was KapitaneLieutenant Paul Wagenfuhr, commanding U-44. He was a little older than Schweiger, having entered the. service in 1900; the quality of his work and his 'successes had ben recognized by the Order of ihe End Eagle (Roter Adler) and die Hoban- zollern _Order with Swords; bus, a swift retribution was at hand. While returning from the Very cruise dur- ing which he sank the Belgian Prince he encounted a ship which could fight back. A British destroyer saw him on the surface, headed for him at top speed, and meanwhile opened fire with every gun that Would bear. The Submarine was obviously hit at once, for she failed to submerge in time, and the destroyer succeeded in ramming. It is claimed in Germany or Kant - tan -Lieutenant Rudolf Schneider, of U-87, that he sank his Majesty's ship Formidable and destroyed altogether 130,000 tons of merchant shipp:ng; the claims do not -specify the numner (if defenceless lives that were de- stroyed with the tonnage. One of the vessels sunk was the steamship Ara- bic. Although at this time, Germany had not arrogated to berself the right to sink all vessels at sight, Ole Arabic was torpedoed and sunk with- out any warning. There were some 400 souls on board at the time, bet, thanks to the admirable discipliaie which prevailed, only about one-tenth of this number was lost. In October of 1917 Schneider -was washed over- boerd from the decks of his craft and drowned, and upon- her next cruise the submarine met a British patrol boat in the Irish Sea, and was destroyed. It was Christmas Day; she saw her enemy in time and Sub- -merged to escape. The patrol boat, one of those anti-submarine ships, went to work according to the rules of this new warfare. The great depth charges were let go over and around -the spot Where 15-87 had vanishetil; their terrific explosions, transmitting themselves undiminished th rough the incompressible medium. of the water, tore her delicate electric me- chanisra to pieces and forced her to the sarface. The guns above were waiting, but there was little need for them, for the patrol boat bore down on her at racing speed, rammed her amidships with a stem like an axe - head and cut her in half. She sank, CASTOR sTapoli IA hiIth bad You Nava Always Bought Beat* the %Pears of r- IIPONTOR Oitsbleg on sect air; n.o survivors same to the surface, ' The officer Who torpedoed the Sus - rex in March of 1916 was Oberleut- nant-zur See Herbert Pustkuchen, tommanding 1131,20. He was Younger than the Others mentioned above, having entered the navy only' in 1908, but he i had had time, in his brief service, to earn for himself the Iron Cross of the.Firat 'Class and the Order of the House of Hohenzollern of the Third glass. He afterward was gtsien command of the UI3-66 and was lost to his Country in Jane, 1917, when a trawler- sighthd <the Jumping wires of a partially submerged stib- natidne, which was proceeding at four or tlee knotsr! The trawler immedi- ately headed. for the subm.arine, whieh disappeared below the surface of the wate . A depth bomb was dropped and found its mark, for a series of .e var explosions followed, one in partic lar causing an upheaval • three times the height of the others. In the meanwhile Other trawier9 had joined in the frail/and had dropped depth bomb Charges. Then there was a great s1l4nce; not a sound was heard by the eager listeners on the trawlers, birt a mass of oil on the surface bore witness to the fact that the submarine had met the doom that she richly deserved. These are but four in that long and girolainrist of names that shall endure unf rgotten as long as the war is rem nabered. To them there has yet to e added that other list, the names ,pf the submarine core- manders—sUch as he who Talc the hospital ship Llandovery Ca •Ile and murdered the Canadian nitates; and ing. For al of them the fame reify the men. in lie boat—who are yet liv- sought is secure. 1 - ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN At a cost of about 0,000,000 Japan will build a tunnel more than three miles long under a portion of the Shimonoseld strait to link to the main- land two towns now served by ferry- boats. Wind shields have been invented -that can be mounted on the back of the front seat of an automobile to prevent the drafts caused by the us- ual shields inconveniencing persons on • the .back seat. To be connected with a piano or organ keyboard, a Swedish musician has invented, eleetrical apparatus that transcribes 'music as it is composed of upon wax ribbon, from . which .it can be copied. For filing! sheet music so that it can be found easily, an itidex tab on which a title and composer's name can be written and that can be attached to a single folio or' several, has been pat- ented The British board of trade has es- tablisfied a pational institute for train- ing seed testers, that British seed hereafter may be tested at home in- stead of aending it to Switzerland • as heretofore. Misa Belle Norton, recently sworn in as a deputy sheriff in New York city, is the first woman to hold this responsible office in New York. She will have eharge of all the woman prisoners. i• A new ferm letter printing machine ' cuts paper fed from rolls into the proper sizes, uses, colors of ink 'when desired and autolatically changes the names and addresses for each letter produced. • To make the sight gauge of a sta- tionary engine readable from a dis- tance a German inventor has equipped a gauge with an arrow, the point of Wtich follows the rise 'and fall of water . m the glass tube. • For making tents, wagon covers and other articles of- heavy fabrics a motor driven sewing machine has been . developed' that makes 'two parallel ; rows of lock stitching at a rate of ' 1,800 stitches a minute. British engineers have built over the River Tigris at Bagdad a bridge to withstand . the heaviest traffic, yet ; which automatically meets the rise ' and fall of the river and can withstand severe floods. For polishing metal, a machine has been invented that does the work with a belt which passes at high speed over a pulley made up of an iron hub fitted with 2'25, leather blades to give it a cushion effect. ; To keep the feet of outdoor workere , warm electrically wired insoles have been patented, which can be placed in any shoes into which sockets for con- necting with sources of electric cur- rent have been installed. . To double the capacity of a freight car for automobiles, a Kansan has in- vented a deck that, when loaded, is lifted by pistons operated by an elec- trically driven pump so more automo- biles can be loaded under it. ; Women sewing machine operators in the United States now number over 200,000. t Mrs, Allan McKay Bryant is prob- ably the only woman. in the country who follows the profession of a deep sea diver. I Fat women are considered to be ; beautiful by the Turks,. I During the period of the. war over ' 1,000,000 women were employed in the British munitioe plants. ; A large percentage of the people ! employed in the manufacture of ser- ums and vaccines are women. , .; The pay of the yeowomen. in the i United States Navy has been reduced ' to $30 per month. ' - Wowen clerks and stenographers 'employed in Norway receive from $53.6.0 to $60.30 a month-. The vote of women defeated John B. Lennon,candiclate for mayor of Bloom- ington, Ill., who ran on the labor party. ticket. . . On ctober 1St of last year,. there • were 1 1,296 women employed by the railroadsof the Eastern, Southern and Western Territory. Mrs. Ernest P. Bicknell, who is in charge of the Red Cross Bureau in. Par* has been decorated by the queen of Belgiusn for distinguished servce. A recent ievestigation in New York city §hors that the medium earnings for 16,215 women in 237 factories was betWeen $12 and $12.50, while that for 16,666 -women in 180 factories in the *whole State was between $10.50 and $11, Alien women residing in New York city now number over 300,000. . The wages of women in Oregon are regalated by a state law. , • Over 12 per cent. of the workers in the : mines in , France during the last year were, we -men. Over 500 women residents of Massa- cb.utette hold physician's licenses. Mrs. Maggie S. M. Hathaway, of Helena, Mont., runs a 60 acre farm without the aid of men's labor. The percentage of. arriages among i college bred women, is about the same as in other clases and the number of children to each marriage is .nearly the same. Women are employed as oilers on several of the steamers rums* out of Tacoina, Wish 1 Women time workbrs in England are paid on the avelige of $6.08 per week. The Iowa State highway department employs several wom n in their draft- ing department. . ! Over 500;000 wome will act as farm ' managers during the present year. Miss Hannah J. Patterson of Penn. - - sylvania, has been a pointed as assist- ant to the directorof the colleted of national defence. .Miss Patterson di- rected the. work of 11.8,000 units of the • woman's committee �f the council dur- ing the war. Miss Loretta, whowas chief' yeo- woman during the ar, has resigned her job as head of ,000 yeomen, not to get mbre pay or hother job, but to do hostess work in: ranee. Increase of wages and shortening of the working hours f 400 women ern- t ployed inhotelsfeatures of the ruling of the Manitoba,(Canada) mini- mum wage hoard. The minimum wage is $12.50 per week i A petition askin for the punish- ment of the Germ a responsible for the deportation of ,Women from Lille. Roubaix and Tourdoing in the spring of 1916 handed to is signed 133r 15,00 e peace conference Far the first tti in the history of the American Phar aceutical associa- tion women are eipected to take a prominent part int the association's a-nnual convention to be held hi New York city in Augu4t next. The goverrimenU schools in Great Britain have done Much in testing the availability of woMen for new kinds of work, carrying on experiments in this line which it would be difficult for a private firm to Undertake. Among the more important recon- struction problems those concern- ing women in indIstry. Already the United States government and state and local municipelities have estab- lished agencies to deal with condi- tions of labor, including standards of working conditions wages, hours, em- ployment and training. Mrs. Norman Whiteside, wee for some tirne has been inactive in sUffrage circles, has issued a statement to the effect that her investigations . show that, the America& aboring woman is in greater need of a champion than the women of Belgium. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE The first cottori ginning plant in 'Zululand recently began operations. South Dakota ledi the states for wild hay last year, harvesting 3,282,000 tons. One city in Elngland waters its streets entirely with electric sprin- kling wagon.s. Hinged rear feet on a new straight chair permit it to be used much like a rocking chair. ; Discveries of aleposts of tale, or soapstone, have given a new industry to South Africa., liquid soap is being packed in easily For the conveence of travelers punctured -capsules. • - The oil fields of Algeria will be ex- ploited' by ae conipany that is being formed in Francis An inventor hes mounted a cutter for railroad railer on a turntable for use in crowded shops. After failing many times Italian en- gineers have suCcessfully bored an artesian well in 'tripoli. The deadly phesgen.e las has been found valuable kir bleaching sand for use in making fine glass. c. Japan is utilizfrg the crater of an extinct volcano ;in which are many hot springs as al sanitarium. To permit softeeoal to be used in hard coal base bUrner stoves ia the purpoae of a nede attachment. India is reyiving its ancient indus- try of building wooden ships, using timber from its vast forests. A recently invented kerosene torch for. thawing coad frozen in ears is powerful enough to weld metals. The smallest dinown bird is a Cen- tral American humming bird that is about as large as a blue bottle fly. A new current regulating attach- ment for any iricandescent lamp gives it a range of twelve diffeeent intens- ities. Fibers used in 'textiles an,d cordage have been extlacted by a Frenchman from the water hyacinth of Indo- China. 1 Detecting the presence of gasoline fumes in sewdrs is the purpose of a new lamp _which normally burns hy- drogen. Experiment e in Japan with the cult- tivation of fie* have obtained the best results when ,lBelgian seed has been used. , An inventoa has patented a boom with a resilient handle with the idea that it will last longer and be easier to use. I. • The first breviery in the Society Islands has been built, mainly with materials 4s1 equipment front the United Stati.ps. Among the new tractor farm imple- ments is one that dOes the work of a plow, disk, harrow and pulverizer in one operatiOn. Spain is Stad-ying its extensive de- posits of peat with a view of utilizing them for the production of, gas and electrieity. , A recendy designed bed for automo- LEMONT WHITEN AND t BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands. At the cist of a small jar of ordinary cold'cream one can prepare a full quar- ter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeeziag the juice of two fresh lem- ons into a ttle containing three eunces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain tie juice through 'a fine clotb. so no leme4 pulp gets in, then this lo- tion will k p fresh for months. Every woman kn that lemon juice is used to. bleach a d remove such. blemishes as freckles, llowness and tan and is the ideal akin softener whitener and beautifier. s Just try Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter int of this {sweetly fragrant lemon lotio and masdage it daily into the face, n ck, arms and hernia. It is marvelous smoothen rough, Fed hands. _ layeeseeeesessise bile tourists consists of a rope boand, s DrATGTH FOR canvas sill on which the cushions of nil '411 Ta.A.Y 16, 1919 a car are aid, . Motorboats equipped 'with moWing papyrus for manufactare into paper pulp by a plant in Zululand. By the use of a new motor driven machine old concrete sidewalks and roadways can be cruslied so the mater- rial can be used in new ones. Using only bamboo, Dutch engineers have built 11. bridge in Java more than 100 feet long and' With a central span of inore than 60 feet. P4aeily adjuSted redueing Valves have been invented to permit Mgh pressure fire hydrants to he used for t Enna f raillery pressure s re 0 0 A patent has been granted the Span- ish inventor of a process for utilizing banana fiber 'instead of hemp and jute in textiles and cordage. ' A- crib for babies has been invented that folds so compactly that it can be. carried about and used by touriets in an automohile or hotel role& Engliah scientists have decided that passing electricity through freshly cut timber makes it more resistant again- st decay and fungous growths. On the principle of the old fashion- ed bullet xriold is a mold for recasting on an iron handle the head of it lead hammer that has been battered. Practically all the equipment for wireless stations that are to be erect- ed in remote parts of China will be carried to the sites by aeroplanes. A recently designed motbr scraper to' build roads or clear them of snow has -two small scrapers in front of the fore wheels to give theni good trac- tion. A dive to a depth of 262 feet intlie sea by a Greek eponge fisherman is believed to be the world's record for a man unprotected by diving appara- tus, Using a single rear wheel for steer- ing, a self-propelled threshing ma- chine has been designed, supplied with power by a 40 horsepower ker- osene engine. A Spanish engineer has invented a straw compound fuel which is claimed toaelmrs.veadvantages over coal when used in locomotives and agricultural ti:to Adjustable frames to fit heating radiators has been invented. whiehcan be covered with any desired material to exclude dust from the radiator crev- ices. Though French scientists have con- structed the world's meet powerful electro-rnagnet it is expensive to operate that its use is limited to lab- oratories. . Geological survey estimates of 345,- 500,000 barrels for petroleum mar- keted in the United States last year indicate, the. establishment of a new high record. Experts are investigating Sweden's 4um shale deposits for the govern- ment in the hope of obtaining illumi- nating oil, sulphur and other products therefrom. Carbonator, storage tank,: cooler, dispensing faucets and rack for glasses are eombined in a new .place saving device for places in which bev- erages are sold. Seaweed is being used in England as a binding material in concrete building blocks made of crushed, slag and other heretofore neglected 'miner- al products. The stand for a new electric flat- iron automatically dieconnecte the current when the iron is placed upon it, the current flow being resumed as the iron is lifted. According to a British scientist who investigated 78 families, including more than 3,000 individuals, left handedness is inherited, &ten through several generations. A Chicago man is the inventor of partable apparatus for lifting patients from hospital cots without disturbing them and moving them from room to room when necessary. Official 'finvestigation and experi- ments in Spain have shown the soil of Andalusia to be adapted to cotton raising and that extensive swamps e.an be reclaimed and utilized. For removing feathers from poultry I an electrically operated machine has been invented. that pulls them out be- tween rollers, vacuum apparatus gathering them into a receptacle. An English inventor's cardboard substitute is made lsy inserting a lay- er of sawdust between tw6 sheets of paper and binding them with an ad- hesive -material and pressure. A new pulley that permits gradual smooth starting of machinery without transmitting shocks from a kasoline engine has spokes which are resilient and bend when subject -to sudden pulls. The government of Formosa is plan- ning. the establishment of one of the greatest hydro -electric plants in the far east, capable of supplying' 130,- 000 hoesepower and serving the en- tire island. A Minnesota inventor's blizzard fence to protect railroads has panels which are slid up posts to keep pace with the increasingdepth of snow by the force of storms or the jarring of pass- ing trains. Both visible and audible warning signals are given the latter electrical- ly, by a new English device whenthe eireulation of water in the jackets of an internalcombustion engine falls below normal. HURON NOTES —Early last Saturdais molding, Thelma Elizabeth, the active and only child of Lorne and Mrs. Nichol, 5th line of Morris, was called away to the Good Shepherd. Four weeks ago she was operated on for appendicitis and was doing nicely when pneumonia set in. She was three years and ten days old and will be. greatly missed in the home. The funeral task place on Monday afternoon to Brussels ceme- tery, Rev. A. J. Mann, Brussels, assist- ed by Rev. Mr. Boyle, Belgrave, con- ducted the service. --Monday is said to have been the largest pig day in theirdstory of Ex- eter. Certain it is that mare money was paid out than in any one day pre- vious. The price was a record also $21.50 beig. paid. In all 330 hogs THE DAYS WORK .04 Depelids Upon Good Blood to Nourish the Body Weak People Need a Tonic, One Which Acts Directly Upon the Blood and that Does Not Weaken the Body by Useless Purging There are thousands of people throughc•iit Canada who are without ambition or strength to do their day's work and who are always tired out, have but little appetite and a poor digestion. They cannot get a re- freshing night's sleep and are sub- ject to headaches, backaches and ner- vousness, because' their blood is im- pure. To men ..,and women in this crdition Dr. Williams' Pink Pills give quick relief and permanent cure because of their direct action on the blood, which they build up to its nor- mal strength. As the blood becomes rich and red it strengthens. the Imes - cies, tones up the nerves, makes the stortikeh capable of digesting food, and repairs the wastes caused by worry or work. In a word, the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills means res- toration to perfect health. BLOOD TURNED TO WATER Miss Jessie McLean, Trenton, N. S., says:—"I was as weak as it was pos- sible for any one to be, and yet be able to go about. My blood seemed to have turned almost to water. was pale, the /east exertion would leave me breathless, and when 1 went up stairs I would have to stop and rest on the way. I often had severe headaches, and at times my heart would palpitate alarmingly. A good friend urged me to try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills and I have reason to be grateful that I took the advice. Soon after beginning the use of the Pills I began to get stronger and by the time I had taken seven boxes I felt that ,1 was again enjoying good health. I think Dr. Williams:. Pink Pills are a. blessing to weak girls and I shall always warmly recommend them." . RHEUMATIC PAINS The sufferer from rheumatism who experiments with outward applica- tions is onlysi-wasting valuable time and good money in depending upon. such treatment the trouble still re- mains, and is all the time becoming most firmly rooted—harder to cure when the proper treatment is applied. Treat this disease through the blood and you will soon be rid of the pains and tortures. As a, cure for rheumatism Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are unequalled. They act directly on the impure, weak blood; they purify e.nd strengthen it, and so root out the cause of rheumatism. Mr. D. Lewis postmaster at Escuminac, N. B., says: "I was attacked with rheumatism which settled in my elbow, shoulder and knee joints, and at times caused inc great suffering. The trouble was partieularly seVere last spring and I decided to try Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. After taking the Pills for some time the rheumatic pains and stiff- ness in the joints disappeared and 1 have not had any return of the trouble." A GOOD DIGESTION Mrs. William. Dale, Midland, Ont. says:—"I suffered for a long time from a severe form of indigestion, and had doctored so much without benefit that I had all but given up hope of getting. better. EverWsing ate caused me intense pain and\ some days I did not touch a thing but a ctiP of cold water, and even that tressed me. As a result was very much ,run down, and slept so poorly that 1 dreaded night coming on. 1 was continually taking medicine, but was actually growing worse instead of better. Having often read the . cures made by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills 'I finally decided to give there a trial. have had great cause to bless this decision, fot by the. tirne 1 had used a couple of boxes there Virns no doubt the pills were helping -me, and in less tune than I had antieipated the 'pills bad cured me, and I was again enjoying not only good diges- tion, but better health in every way than before." ALWAYS FEELS FIT The wonderful success of, Dr. Wil - limns' Pink Pills is due to the fact that they go right to the root of the disease in the blood, and by making the vital fluid rich and. red strength- en every organ and every nerve, thus driving out disease and pain, .and making 'weak, despondent people bright, active and strong. Mr. W. T. Johnston, one of the beet known and most highly esteemed Men in Lunen - burg County, N. S. says:—"I am a Provincial Land Surveyor, and am exposed the greater part of the year to very hard work travelling through the forests by day and camping out by night, and find the only thing by night, and 1 find the only thing that will keep me up to the mark is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, When I leave home for a trip in the woods I am as interested in. having my supply of pills as provisions, and on such oc- casions I take them_ regularly. The result that I am always fit. I never take cold, and can digest all kinds of food such as we have to put up with hastily cooked in the -woods. Having proved the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a tonic and health builder, I am never without them and I lose no opportunity 'in recemmend- ing them to weak people I meet!). SKIN TROUBLE CURED Mrs. W. Ritchie, Parldoeg, Sask. says:—"Two years ago I was attack- ed with eczema on my hands. I tried almost everything that was advised, but as the trouble was growing worse I consulted a doctor and took his treatment for some time with no bet- te.r results. By this time my hands Were a mass of some and I began to despair of finding a titre. A feiend strongly aadvised me to try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills, and I decided to do so. After using _two boxes, I could . see an improvement and got a full- ther supply. I used altogether eight boxes, by which time every trace of the ecezema had disappeared and there has been not single symptom of the trouble since that time. I gladly recommend Dr. Wiliam' Pink Pills for troubles of this Idnd." Dr. Villains' Pink Pills sh.oulde be kept in every home and their occa- sional use will keep the blood pure and ward off illness! You ean get these pills, through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50e a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. I - Now a Complete Truck LTEREAFTER Ford II. One -Ton Trucks may be bought complete with bodies and cabs, ready for the road: The'body as well as the chassis will be. planned to give Ford service. This will insure the utmost efficiency from the Ford Truck; give the purchaser Ford value m every part of his truck; produce better bodies at lower prices. Two types of Truck bodies, the Stake and the Express! will outclass other trucks in every (or in the lead) sun ready for prompt delivery. They ha-ve oak floors, sills seasoned hickory and specia designed forgings and castings. The construction at every point provides for -rough usage such as every truck is bound to get. Both bodies have closed cabs to protect the driver. 1,2) These cabs have sliding windows and two-way, doubi ventilating windshields. Call and learn what it will cost to use these complete.tnicks in your business. Look them over carefully. See how they be kept in stock, set up, painted detail. 8aftiessig- 'Price (Chassis only) Standard Ford ladies $750 f.o.b. Ford. Ont. oatra. 9,4 our Prices I, Cook Bros, 'JF . Dealers . Hensall . • Dealer . Seaforth • FARM FOR SALE e were ship It took five decks to eat sa Concession 6; M109017,6100 act.; accommodate them i -Early 'in the , af the oast clay land itMc morning the teams began to arrive ' tutiesthefrest ig a high state oeculturation; in town and the procession at! etanc.e, liletnaliileseaffreerthm .scloorelesfrom CM - and along statiori street waiting their i the premises, a good seven roomed he There are an use, huge turn to -unload reached for several i- ha nbanreleartret:41,allrePe:ge !twrire fortyfencea and blocks The largest load. by one far-' Ploughed, 5 acres Dash and the baiajeedcre mer was brought by williamt Essery. i vivelfertno. _ There Are two big springs, ono It consisttd of twelve hogs weighing i with a hyhdraulierdrartd inthe othera water,dam t the house and to the barn, A5 ethiprint: 2,310 pounds for which he received a i ifsie. in the le orchard and near the house and line cheque for $496.65. Mr. 1. Armstrong en was the shipper and it is estimated .1 graded and esavieledwrille -rd. tr e_eraroad la t: he signed off a small fortune during riiiiirldicr.seitafTgrt. to MRS. SAMUEL 2627-tf the day. FOR SALE. House and half acre of land in the village of Egrnondville. The prowl"' is situated on Centre Street, close te tbe Presbyterian church and is kneel' as the Purcell property. Good, come fortable house, good shed; good wail and cement cistern. All kinds of fruit trees, strawberries, raspberries, and currant bushes. This is a corner pr*s. perty with no breaks on front, suid the land is in a good state 4)f tion. This is a nice property tr retired farmer and the taxes are For particulars apply on the premuI or to John Rankin' Seaforth, 258441 (( the 01 , at the "Th said a to Ala here," Stoug "Th towee aw-h Alan- c Bu -ducked It was wind, ina,W seen almost "It's "It's li 15th, n "T right.' The Alan h thinkin to won "And ing up stared word he rep the na "It up, wa "Tell was th Burr again. tained demand Martha The ed sud which, infuria off for back to let him. to mak turned " Watel board ti went ba Work •had bee filled dn shore. captain'l .fstoughts leave th of forty vaguely had bee Alan fir If be lu recollect humored to late d dueed know M sir?" "/triols repeated -man fro was not know B much in "Will minuets As the s itated, Corvet I His *let somewhe truth is a Marl 3 tain—if vet." eitid moved a Alan 1 Old Buri found hi house. The , "That th, "Yee, I his cloth and that The St the who .Ian's la their co more tie but it we in Burr he uleft I to Alan that woe mused. "You A "Ben ever see "Only "But yo saw Bu "That they did vet had ing thro "And "Sure. like that Alan would n by the old Burr mediatel that he was Co inite res only the Corvet which ha Mr. She Some on min Co Proper a Alan a Mast switchin ears all by a w On the secured roughne had bee additio block an now steel reverber