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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-07-04, Page 66 I iaaTRW 1f14"" CONI'ST'IPATZD CHILD Enough -Fd in the Ocean o Feed the Efltire World Helens npruit Laxattv'e" can't h'arne tenders little Stomach, Liver,, and Dowels. ` each nt ice —. VOW !at the tongue, mothdr- i If HCl, your tittle ones atomaeh, liner. . bowels . wed cleansing, at. tracer. hen peevish, eros, Mitten, doesn't ;ep, eat or act a ai .Ily, for is =ferver- a. stomach sour, breath bad; leas sore reale diarrhoea, full of cold, give a aapoonful of "California Syrup of y" gall& in a few j ira,,,alj,,:Ow flail, nst_Wade, , tgested food and ur bile gently ,moves out of ita little L nags without gripim alai you. have a ` All, playful chill again. Ask your uggi st for a bottle of ."California coup of Figs," which contains full =time fen bairies, child ren of all ages id for grown-ups. oa sol .del tee cla he. sta ab' -fol w sh re th th to th th I Y ` w o e - l • i , .w o yi . fi o i f t• i si a. g c - m f s f - - 1 1 ' • DR. F. J. R. FORSTER • Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat ' Graduate in Medicine, University o , 'Pronto. Late Assistant New York Ophthal- aei and Aural. Institute, Moorefield's ye and Golden Square Throat Hos- tQueen's tal London, Eng. A the I s , da in Wednesday rah e afo third W y Iote1, Seaforth, month from 10 a m. to 2 p.m. 3 Waterloo Street, South,, Stratford. ?hone 267- Stratford. - LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and gotary Public. Solicitor for the Do- riinion Bank. Office in rear of the Do-- zinion Bank, Seaforth. Money to Loan. _ J. M. BEST - Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. • PROUDFOOT,KILLORAN AND.. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- 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- dry College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases .of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern =principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever :a specialty. Office opposite lick's . Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All orders Ieft at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night .calls received:=at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary Colleges All "diseases of domestic animals treated. :Calls `promptly at- "tended,to end charges moderate. Vet- 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 Goderich. Specialist in Women's; and Children's diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders;; eye, ear, nose and throat. Consulation --:free . Office abo,ye Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 pan ' C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. ' 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- nry diseases of Men and women. • DR. J. W. -PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University. Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons sof Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office. doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, lensnll, Ontario. 2 Dr. F. J. BTJRROWS Office and residence. Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County Huron, of 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, Ontario. • C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and= gold medallist Trinity Medical College; member the. College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. ' of of of DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons Ontario; pass graduate courses Chicago Clinical School f Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital London, England, University ,. Hospital, London England. Office—Back of Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria Street, Seaforth. of in . B. 'R. HIG GINS Box 127, Clinton — Phone 100 Agent for The Huron and Erie Mortgage Corpor- ation and the Canada Trust Company. Commissioner H. C. J. 'Conveyancer, Vire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public, Government and Municipal Bonds bought and sold. Several good farms for sale. Wednesday..of each week at Brucef'ield. . - AUCTIONEERS. GARFIELD Mcj.VIICHAEL LicensedjAuctioneer for the County of tin, nn ' fia1as conducted in env nart of the county. Charges moderateand, satisfaction guaranteed. Address Sea - forth, R. R. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236, Seaforth. 2653-tf THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties of Huron "and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates can be made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth or The Expositor Office. Charges mod' erate and satisfaction guararteed. R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in all parts of the county. Seven years' ex- perience in 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. Sixty-five per cent. of the If Meet Were Fond offish OW that the seas are open. to the pursuits of peace, and the world is sorely in need of food, many problems of a n geography .are likely .to be ved in the course , of the quest for p sea rations. The ocean literally ;res • with food. The man who de - red that humanity is a race of rrizlg-catchers might have ' ever- ted the case, but that the sea ounds in food -fishes and fishes fit food. is well known. As soon as begin *o study the subject of can fisheries, however, we come up ort against the fact that what we ally know about the inhabitants of e sea• is startlingly limited. I Ulrike . not • so long: ago that the i shermen of the North Sea, believed at whales brought the herring in ward shallow water --a conclusion ey reached from the observation. ent- are Lr u ori q e e schools of herring at soh found in the vicinity of spouting hales. In 1906 there was a'failure, f t! e•herrin fisheries; and the fish omen blame .the situation on the. orwegiaiL. w,lialin,g vessels- operating n that region. Likewise, it is still a moot gifestion !tether' or not modern fishing meth - ds'. tenni ton deplete the supply, and fiether artificial propagation of sea rhes is a sufttcient counter -pleasure. A.iew years ago a British commission ineaaure{l the intensity of fishing Aerations, in the North- Sea. Trail - ng bottles were,set adrift, and. it was ound that more than half of them were . rec&ptared. , . In certain locali- tes they were captured at a .rate that ndicated 90 per cent. retaken' each season. .Marked fish yielded' largely imilerl results, and the conclusion was that a food -$ah of adult size had t least three to one odds against its etting through- the year uncaught. And yet there is so little race sut- ide in the ocean that even such in- nsiveefishing :probably has. no effect upon the available adult supply. >I"or rietance, the female turbot lays ,500,000, eggs a year, and the cod has 4,500,000 to her credit. The emale flounder Jaye 1,400,000, he ole 570,000, the haddock 450, 00, and the plaice 300.000,' The • oor herring must be content, with mea - re 31,000. Much remains to be learn about the migration habits of the world's `ood-fishes, Where do the salmon go after they leave the •rivers? Why does the eel, as discovered, sometime since by the `Danes, go far out to, sea, far to the south and west of the Irish coast,. to spawn, and. how do the -countless hordes of delicate el - 'ars find their way around the Brit- ish Isles and into the ' continental Innumerable are the ques- THE HURON{ 'EXPOSITOR __... -.o....rmoanow I benches that ran beside the oilcloth: AcirE covered tables, Wilsori'fgl owingthcni NERVOIIS I ; took his ;place before the last unoc., cupied tin plate' and ran his eyes over ' I tables.. and roma. Seventy men were .,, sT k. I already working with the . energy. •of ExH1 stokers as -they shovveled huge guano- AU ties of food .from the plates. ?inor an 1 instant aversion was strong upon him JULY 4,1919 ' 1 as he witnessed the ferocious assault - /l Treatments Proved Useless Until ' of the hungry. scores uponn.the hillocks kle Triad •FRUIT..kT1'VES . sof food that confronted them, and had , ; he not known that three times a day he must find himself where he now Isat he would '•h0,ve made but faint pre- tense of eating. But looking.at the tables .agent and more critically, much el.' his ' repugnance• vanished. The steaming pots:and pans gave' forth the odor of wholeSoh►e• food well cooked, the floor and, table .oilcloth were clean, and the cook patting up and down the aisle with a huge `iron ladle over his shoulder was featly aproned and not at all repellent. And knowing that he must strozgl . fortify his physical be - Mg against the cold and work of the morrow. W iisbn' made a `quick inven- tory of what was before him. M• MR. JAS. $. OELGA'rrY. R.R. No. 4.,Gilbert Plains; Man, "In the year 1910, I had Nervous m • as for w Prostration in its worst, reduced in weight from 170. pounds to 115' pounds. •,. The doctors had no Dope :of my • recovery, and every medicine I tried proved useless until a,friend induced rite to take "Fruit -a -fives''. . I began to mend. almost at one(); and after using this fruit medicine for 3 or 4 months, I was back to my normal state of health. I never had such good health for twenty years as I have enjoyed the past six years. We aree!ver without a box of `Fruit -a -tines' in the house". -JAS. S.'DELGATY. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, ttial size 25e. At all dealers or sent postpaid on receipt' of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa - women can wear only dresses of the stout class. Barbara of the Snows Continued from Page 7 the hill he went straight, to the office, threw the door open and inquired for the wattdng boss 'as he dropped his pack to the •floor. A tall, sinewy man arose from a bench saying that his naive was Flint and demanding the newcomer's bus- iness, and Stoddard as his reply hand - de him the card upon which- Findlay hal scribbled the hieroglyphics. Quick- ly the walking boss read the' lines rinaz •and turned from them to the one who ions like these -teat the future • rlll eveal to. the oceanographers, of a had brought them. "So you are ,.a tew day. , green road monkey, are you-?" he de - The .problem of life in the ocean is. founded with a 'woodsman's disrespect for all tenderfeet. Stoddard, not quite ane full of interest and pregnant with raluahte lessons for mankind. Even tt the bottom of the deepest trench in ttie abysmal region of the sea's bot- soni, were no ray of the sun ever penetrated, where. Stygtaii night is perpetual, where freezing ternpera- tures never -cease and -where incon- eivable pressures prevail, the rnir- p cis 9f life still goes on, Eerie creatures exist in these ut- termost depths. Here is a fish swim- ming ay with light -giving organs ranged in rows from. nose to tail, on port and starboard sides, a faiitaatic miniature of an ocean liner alight from stens to stern, gliding noiseless- ly through the perpetual night: There is another, with a vb-ell-defieed searchlight with_ which to ;explore the blackness around. Here ie ae breath- ing caricature of a meiiuiaid with. binocutars, . and there a creature whose eyes are upon the ends of long stalks reaching out froni the head like sunflowers from the ground. n An Obvious Rett rt. Once only, it is said,- dirt Sir P'a E, Smith lay_ himself open 4o a retort frgin a witness he was cross=examiu- zng- It was in the Divorce [Court, and the ratan in the witness -box was a nervous little elderly'rlerl. "Have you ever Veen married.?" began Sir Frederick. "Yes," stammered Ole clerk, "once." f • "Whom did. you marry!?" "A -a -woman, sir.", "Of course, of, course,!" sus Dped the future Lord Chancellor. "Did you ever hear of anyone marrying a Tuan?" "Yes, sir my sister diol!" Queen Vfctoriaat7 Maiden Name. Members of the royal families hare no surname; that is, no tit. roily name such as ordinary people are ,\'known by. There is a good dal of dis- cussion on the subject and Mr. Cok-- ayne, an authority, says the preYail- 1irig,:-idea'tthatktfletfainilyname of the House,, of Hanover, to which Queen Victoria belonged, was Guelph, may be dismissed as absurd, that having been the Christian name' of a. medie- val duke of Bavaria, whose sister, in 1040 married the .Marquis of Este, and it is from that couple that the House of Hanover descended. Hence d'Este comes nearest in being the maiden name of Queen f Victoria. c Hun Cigarettes. For some time past the cigarette in Germany has been growing thin- ner and thinner until at present the vreight of • tobacco is !?tttle greater than of paper. The pre-war cigarette in Germany, when said by the ounce, ran about 16 to the ounce. Since the early part of this year the cigarette has "fader" until it takes more than 33 to make an ounce. Wireless Telephone. Japan plans to install an exchange that will receive wireleee telephone- -calls from ships at sea and conuect the callers with land lines, • tinned doe WHAT TO ' DO WHEN TIRED When you get tired, take a rest. Do not make yourself go on doi lig some- thing when you 'really feel that you (Con Next Week) until directly udder the guns of the garrison. Not a sign front her mast- head or her decks to indicate whether she wari friend or foe, and' with. the utmost brando slie reached; the inner basin. Then, when another moment might have meant her destruction, she, unfurled the American flag.' 'It turned out to be the TTnitetd States ' g ivern- meet : 'ship Michigan with, General Sharman aboard. He knew of the ex- citement here and .1 believe • he- did what he did to see whit the gar- rison would do. I thoughty there should• have been a shot across her bows to make her declare. her position before she reached-harbgr. • The posting = of sentries along the 1 bank was continued afterethis incident, 1 I was with a company whieh. had a . post farther around the , lake banka than the present -Hotel Sunset, morning about daybreak a groundhog or some such little animal startled a sentry as it moved • along the bank, and the sentry shot at it. It did not alarm the garrison. only me and the ground hog. I don't know whether he • killed the -groundhog or not; but if so it must have been the only carsualty of the war. The townspeople ,were -prepared for ' flight at a moments notice. Like many others, I kept my team harness- i ed ready to move my family and some I of my household goods somewhere in- - land if the enemy came. have had enough.. 1 word came that the .n. At one time. e rfe ct io 1 of , un se ac oP This • Tsounds hto •ate S en ro but it as. really only the soundest of enemy had left Chicago, en says London answers. Goderich. At another time it was giv- eoxnmon s se,, y shown that fatigue is "en out that a number of vessels had Experiment has caused byapoison which is generated left Port Huron for Goderich. The news spread like wild -fire.' As I wa in the blood - by exertion. er '' hi that we do breaks down acquainted with places along the lake- Ev yt ng lake- tissue—that 'is to say, it uses up some shore- where an • attempt might be tics of ,:the myriad cells which go to make up the . body,' and these broken down cells are waste matter and have to be eliminated from the body. ' All the work inside us is controlled by the -nerves, and these are more or less like the insulated wire that is used for electric bells, and the nervois rim- ulse resembles the current that passes through and does the work. Fatigue increases the resistance of the nerve to the passage of the . im- pulse, • this being one of the kindly Efforts of Mother Nature to shut out messages from the outside world so that we may rest _ and sleep and re- cuperate by getting rid of the poisin- ous products of work. But as the resistance of the' nerve increases, so do the messages in sharp- ness and clearness; we get too tired to .be keenly alert and accurate, we grow too tired even to care overmuch, and this is the state of mind which leads. directly to accidents and spoiled work: It actually doesn't pay to work ,in this state; it does not prove worth while either to master or man. What is the use of .keeping a workman at work beyond his fatigue limit if he succeeds only in•spoiling his job, dam- aging himself, or smashing the ma- chine ? There •is a rhythm that runs right through the world in everything we do, a kind of swing that enables us to keep going when once we have started, so long as ice don't get out of time. It. is the same thing that enables a man to go on for 60 years at the office "en- joying life, and then when he breaks the swing and retires to what he calls a well=earnedleisure, he promptly dies of a broken ;rhythm So, if we keep work and rest going in their pr, r swing and if the time of rest is s Wicieiit to get rid' of the" poisons of fatigue, then we can go on for- an indefinite period. ...ate But we do not allow time for the poison to be eliminated; eve store it up and it decreases our nerve quickness, impairs our . juclginent and finally re- sults in a breakdown of one kind or another. When the body calls for rest it is economy to give it. Flogging the tir- ed horse merely stores up more fatigue poison and makes things much worse in the long run. So if you are tired, take a rest! THE BATTLE OF GODERICH, 1866 . ertain whether he was, or not, never- r_hc,€ss assented. ' rl:ank greenhorn? Again the ap- plicant. acquiesced silently. ",'hat's your name?" - "Wilsona" Flint threw down the card. "Then, Wilson, 'nog along behind me with your pack. Just like the old mars - to begin shoving tenderfeet on ire when tgond men are begging for jobs," he gruinbied. Rapidly- he led his charge to the men's quarters in the bunk- hoi se and three' the door wide. The interior was, about •fifty feet long by half as wide,• flanked by a double row of wooden, box -like bunks in front of which ran the long benches or ."deacon seats" of all camps. A huge, heater stoad in the center of the place, from which ran stout cords to the bunks and over which were thrown the un- used clothing of the absent inmates. The air of the room was humid and strong with the smell of drying ._gar- ments • and stale tobacco smoke. Flint turned upon his follower. 1 "That is your bunk next to the -door. Throw your pack on it. It is too late tc do• anything to -night, but don't be afraid that I _ '.von't start you early enough in , the , morning'. And. I'll make you a wager, that to-lnor=rowt night you'll be the tiredest bluejay that Findlay ever sent me to turn into a woodpecker. So. get a good night's sleep and to the devil with you." He slain -met' the door and stalked back to the office, and. Wilson seating him- self upon a • bench awaitel whatever might befall him with the dull in- cliJterence.• of helplessness. 'The/gloom without thickened and the lights from the cook's shanty f'ickered pale across the snow. From out of the woods came scattered groups of snowy men, axes, saws, and cant -hooks upon their shoulders, close- ly followed by heavy horses drag - vino; log chains that clanked behind their heels. Boisterously the men entered the room with stampings and soundings "slaps of their mittens a- gainst their thighs. and then having thrown caps and hand coverings a- side they soused their faces .noisily in the water of the corner sink. From the passageway the cook's horn sound- ed its sharp command, and rapidly the men passed into the adjoining 'build- ing and ranged themselves on long ACI`IVITIES OF WOMEN Admiral Jellicoe, of ' the British Navy is- being accompaXiied by his wife, Lady Jellicoe, on L his trip a- round the world. The Anglican synod of ;Cana , by a large majority, refused td admit wom- en as delegates, l: uban GIRLS! LEMON JUICE IS A SKIN WHITENER How to make a creamy beauty latioo for a few cents. • The juice of two fre ,a It=mons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quartet pint .of the most remarkable lemon. skin beautifier at abMust the cost. one ust pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain ° the lemonjuice though_ juith ougli a fine cloth so no lemon pulp get in, then this lotion will !.cep fresh for months,- Every Woman knows that lemon juice is Used to bleach and remove ;sued' blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. -Just try it! Get rthree ounces of' 'orchard white at any i drug ,store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and,na{.}ei.it daily Into the face. neck, arms and hands. made to land, I started out in the nigh with John Campbell to warn the set- tlers along the lake shore. They in turned warned other residents along the Bayfield ' road. Aboutthis time horsemen were put on duty between Goderich and Bayfield, and infantry- men with rifles tramped along the d to meet the enemy a Not Get a Packd, and Realize what an infusion of Really Pure Fine Tea Tastes like ISM AIM - - VIM .s ... -- Amor ... 410. 31101.0 ass° Mixed 0- Never Sold in Bulk Black, Green or all, of them had rifles. It was report- ed that one of the recruits had joined the company as it marthed along, his only weapon being a pitchfork' ,' Some bf the people went through experiences like those of the refugees in Europe, and the few survivors of those times know how to feel for the • war sufferers. One-man took his edw and his bed, hoisted his bed on his back and led the cow to the highlands f C !borne township. Another d.man between Goderich and Bayfield, made a supply of pancakes by way of an "iron ration," and took these with him to the safe shelter of a hollow log.` One farmer buried his new stove, his most treasured possession, lest it be broken by the invaders. Many others buried their valuables. But after all this little war of 1866 got through without much strife, though it served to show that the men of Huron county were lovers of peaCe• When 'the great'war came, their sons and grandsons showed ' in a greater• way that they were ,still lovers peace and foes of autocracy. Nor will _ they be lacking in the future at any time of testing. • Bayfield roe • Sunsliine FURNACE easy to manage; a furnace that is N of fuel; a furnace that - will heat your home comfortably. This is the proposition we offer in the Sunshine. McClary's heating experts will plan a heating sys- tem for you without charge --a heating system that they guarantee will heat your home comfortably. If youwantto be sure of COMFORT; if• you want a durable, honestly built furnace, well installed, put the problem up to us. 9 Ask about the LITTLE DRAFT- MAN that turns on the drafts and regulates them automatically. LEMONS WHITEN AND et BEAUTIFY THE Ski. Make this 'beauty lotion cheaply fog your; face, neck, arms and hands, At the cost of small jar. of ordinary cold ;ereann one min prepares. full tical-. t ter pint • of the _most wonderful lento* skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lea.• ons into a: bottle containing three ounce* of orchar& hhite. Careoshould be takes o. to strain the juice thr ugh a fine el otic so no lenion pulp gets in, then this lo- tion .. will keep' fresh for months. Every woman knows that _.lemon juice Is its to bleach ' and- remove such blemishes ea freckles, sallowness and tan and is theideal akin -softener whitener and beautifier. Just " try It!, Get three ounees of orchard white at any drug store Ana two lemons from the grocer and makeup a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant. lemon . lotion and massage it daily int the face, neck, arms and hands. It 1* marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. S • For Sale by - HENRY EDGE, SEAFORTH Notwithstanding the bloodless char- acter of the Fenian Raid, as compared with the terrible struggle that has just closed in . Europe, there was really more excitement in Goderich and sur- rounding country in 1866 than there was in 1914. There °was the chance that Goderich itself might be an ob- jective of the invaders and warlike preparations were made accordingly. The men of Huron rallied to the call in the same manner as their boys did when the greater call came front the Motherland neatly half a century lat- er. - When peace was proclaimed in 1866, the Government took steps to organize the militia, and drill sheds and armor- ies were built and companies organ- ized for drilling. But now the sheds have been dismantled or -have disap- peared. The companies are extinct these many years, and little remains butthe memory' of those stirring. times. I have seen the "last man" of the Royal George and the "last man" of the Battle of Waterloo. Soon I suppose, someone will be pointed out as the last rnan of the Battle of Gode- rich. For abotit six weeks after the °com- • mencement of hostilities in 1866, busi- ness of all kinds in Goderich and its surroundings was at a standstill. I well remember when I donned the badge of home guard and night and day tramped up and down to the har- bor, where trouble might first have been expected if the invader reached our shores. The garrison consisted of an artillery company, a rifle company) and an _infantry company, and these were reinforced by the "fighting Irish- men" from Goderich township and the adjoining country. They came 'rush- ing in at the first call, prepared to take their stand with. the defenders. I suppose some of them had guns of their own—I do not remember all , the classes of weapons—but they were prepared to fight anyway. The Hand bakery, opposite the pre- sent Park House, was taken over as the guard -room,• and rifle pits were constructed along the lake -bank, op- , posite the residence now occupied by G. M. Elliott. The pits had men sta- tioned to them at all times, night and day. Down below on the docks, bar- rels of salt were utilized to make a • "battery," and every precaution of de- fense was taken. The Huron boys meant business. They were all ready to shoot, when the look -outs announced that a steam- er had been .sighted on the lake. Ex- citement prevailed, and the men of -the garrison at the harbor and the riflemen on the bank prepared for ac- tion. The vessel loomed larger and headed for the harbor. On she came, • , i, +'.:hSlis..:. > fnt" rr•; . a it. x'11 !di Your Boy Nc'erds These Long -Wearing .• Stockings You can't prevent him from being hard on stockings when out for a traxnp, or at the "swimming—hole." But you can get him stockings made to stand such treatment— that will save you considerable mending—Buster Brown Stockings, We had your boy in mind whenwe designed these stockings. The boy who will play hard.' We knit them from extra long yarn with a two-ply leg and three-ply heel and toe. The operators whoknit these stockings have had years of special training in, knitting Buster Brown good looks and durability into hosiery. For good: looks are knitted into Buster Brown Stockings. They're neat and well-fitting—they present a gentlemanly appear- ance at all times. Your boy will be proud of them. Get these durable stockings for him. They cost less because they wear longer --and they require less mending. Ask your dealer for "Buster Brown" durable hosiery. Sold everywhere. The Chipman -Holton Knitting Co., Limited Hamilton, Ont.—Mills also at Welland BUSTER BROWN'S - SISTER'S STOCKING Buster Brown's Sister's Stock- ing for the girls is a splendid looking stocking at a moderate price. A two -thread English mercerized Lisle stocking, tit is shaped to fit and wears very well indeed. Colors—Black, Leither Shade Tan, Pink, Blue a\white. b` mow MOP l T HA- 11111111/1 (Con the do carrying band wh counter, t a show Stoddard corner of and stood his temp' wildly, dard hada lege 4 de ative, irr tell more than any • had failed tions that -had not niest stor be was the woods country fessed az: and wiles come a tumble 1 'Star' piu half pityi rernemb er had b sympathy;; Billy at cent livin through heard hi tarried hi the prese ed ereatu But th one and oozed fro away win Bi ly's e boles - thr Billy had in the pa ly at hi chances of a ree would ha upon eat as well blotter a e was perience Obviously town ho a well. screened a matter time Pam looked in hills were stretched water s of that lay safe upon ear go with a aria. 0 and the dure the the lot 0 wrung t bound w that onee tirelessne while en him who endlessly' less woo andside ones wit night b the bitte At th made gu that Joh little rec was hiri that ma time, Fi and mus he tnigh And fear summaril his apeec an earne' each sent felt that weaken `I as he en vision. applicant ferent lis now sat with eye N Told c suffer Health. cure iIaLLE Nervi weakn hent, famous' E. Pink tbousa ex erie 1 co -ot•ri kh sugges. The r at your