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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-02-20, Page 6IistaLittIeTired! fall II this Ring of a Nervous Breakdown How often do we hear people say "Oh, there's nothing the matter, just s little rundown, that's nil." This inay be the beginning of a. Ner- vous Breakdown and /nay soon be followed by Headache, pains in the region o the *hie, '.Weak Digestion and many -Otter" troubles, Hacking's Heart aid Nerve Remedy is 'almost sureto prevent N rrvous Monapee. It is just the right thing lltor' Nervous !Troubles of any kind. _ 'When'Whenyou "don't feel right," and tire you should not delay in taking wonder remedy, as it will bring Ely s the Vigor and. Vitality of Good 1'iskt6, that you so much desire. It drives`away Fear, Nervousness Despondency: and makes your sap more RestfUl and Satisfying; it a Tonic and gtrengthener to the eart, the Nerves, the Brain and the iody. Don't Worry and don't give up be- !tense e1 anse others medicines have failed to llelg you, buy a few boxes of Hack- ing's Heart and Nerve Remedy from 'your dealer to -day., and an improve - anent in your condition will quickly 4o1iow. Be sure that you get Hacking's, if your dealer does not keep it, we will gladly send it by mail. Price, 50c a box, 6 for $2.50. Hacking's Limit^d, Listowel, Ont. RAW FURS WANTED Highest cash prices paid for - Skunk, Raccoon and Mink •Enquiries promptly answered •R -OSS LIMITED MA1+itJACTURERS Established 16si LONDON - - ONT., f !IfA8l MET8" WOE WHILE YOU SLEEP Pdf 81cWc Headache, Sour Stomach, Sluggish Liver' and Bowels— Take Cascar'ets tonight. Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges- tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head- aches come from a torpid- liver and clogged bowels, which cause your atom- aeh to become filled with undigested food,whiohosours and ferments like gar- bage in a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery—indigestion, foul gases, bad breath, - yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and nauseating. A Oasearet to -night will give your constipated bowels a thorough cleansing and .straighten you out by morning. They workwhile you sleep— s 10 -cent box from your druggist will f eepyou feeling goon for monthr•1. SINCE -01870 STOP�J �oH DON'T WORRY ! Racking's Heart and Nerve Remedy is simply a wonderful preparation_ for Diseases of the Heart; drives out- Pain, utPain, Fear, Worry and the uncertain- ty that goes along with diseases of this most important organ. SLEEPLESSNESS de -vitalizes the whole bodily organ- ization and You Must Have Sleep in order to build up your health and strength. If the Nerves are all a tingle and jumpy, and the Brain is in a state of unrest through Overwork, Worry or some Functional Disorder, a restful sleep wilt be difficult to ob- tain. Do not dope yourself with "sleeping powders" or "heart depress- ents"—take Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy and a natural sleep will follow. HEADACILE is Nature's Signal of disharmonyin the human body. It may come from impoverished blood, overtaxed brain, loss of sleep. or it may be froth Con- gestion followed by Inflammation. No matter what the cause may be • Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy will help you. _ People who have been ailing - for years should not expect a Complete Cure in a few days but should per- sist in the treatment in order to ban- ish the underlying causes and to cor- rect the, evil conditions that bring about the trouble. You should be. Sure to get Iiaclrng's as no other kind will do. Be particular about your rediclpe, as YOUR health is important. Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy is sold by all first class druggists or by mail post paid. Price 50c a box. 6 boxes for $2.50. Backing's Limited, Listowel. Hon. Harry Mills Felt the Lure of 'Public Life Once Studied Philosop1y i .. ARR.Y MILLS, the Minister of Mines in Ontario's first Fanner Government, though English -born, is north Can- ada tempered; a bit materialistic in his everyday observations, if -it imay be .put that way. In other words. Mills is never sure of anything. That may be safely `set down as his most outstanding characteristic, and, cur- I iously enough, the one that brought kith, a majority of 1,513 in the re- cent elections in •a field of three. He never let up in his campaign and re- fused toconcedei us he was winning till the last working hour had expired. Self-made, with the unique record of literally; leaping from a transcon- tinental locomotive engineer's cab in- to the Ontario Cabinet, previously une known outside railway circles in his home city, he's a driver. at work over- looking loo gbets p k g no for -self-improvement or for more firmly establishing his own popularity. • He's forty4ve years of age, of Welsh parentage. Twenty-six ;.years ago he became identified with the Canadian Pacific Railway ih. the humble capacity of wiper, from which job he steadily gained promotion till he became locomotive engineer. All the time he was burning the midnight wick with an eye on bigger ar things. :HON. HARRY MALLS.. He Was studying philosophy and the lives of great Canadian and foreign leaders.: Mills was schooling himself' for politics and when the flood -tide in his fortunes came -he was ready to grab the helm and. steer his ship into the highseas of Ontario affairs. 1liills' draining field for politics wan in the uniona and brotherhoods of western railwayimein and in fraternal lodges. In : these ._societies . he took such active and sustained interest that he invariably stepped up through the'chairs and eventually wielded/the gavel. His nett . personal try-otit of - his capay was on the school board of Fort William, of which he was chairman when 'elected to the Legis- lature, ,{ Thereis no doubt Mills' rise to Ministerial honors was more rapid than he himself ever hoped for, but the opportunities for successfully con- testing this last election with a solid city labor and railwaymen's vote be- hind him were too tempting to be. overlooked. The Hon. Harry Hills has no rose - strewn pathway ahead of him, even if he' has brought distinct honor to Fort William riding. He happens to represent a constituency that is long on neither frills nor .political Trump- ery; he must pro' a himself as big as the position he has. been elevated to. In many respects, Fort William. rid- ing Is the most exacting task -master for a parliamentary representative in the province. Some idea of the cos- mopolitan aspect of its people may be gained when it is stated that no less than twenty-seven dialects are spoken within its- borders. The whole of Mills' constituency is yawning for development, a new country demanding roads, bridges, and means of access to its/ farming and mineral belts overnight. Its po- tentialities, so its people believe, have too long been neglected an over- looked by the Government. They will look to Mills to materially change things. That will be quite a task be- cause it has always been difficult to make eastern representatives see rea- son for spending millions in the de- velopment of what they have erron- eously looked upon as "the frozen north." Mills, however, may be able to do this very things, and if he does, his solidarity in Fort William .district will be firmly established. • Hon. Harry Mills' wife is a native of Grey country, a splendid woman who has done much to increase his popularity and prestige. They have five children. 3','rshinig, Changed Church. Gen. Pershing was understood to be a Presbyterian, but, according to published reports, he has lately be- e Isle ronflrnted as member of the Protesuint Episcopal Church. The Living Church, an organ of the faith, states that the confirmation. service took place in France and was con- ducted by Be. Rev. Charles H. Brent, Bishop of Western New York. Cambric. Cambric was first introduced into England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth. It is said that the first piece imported was presented to the Queen to make a ruff for her neck. 6,4 66 '' , . being called the Fairy `Godmother to Has Stuff of Modern Hero ; the Kosciusko squadron of the Amer- ican aviators on the Polish front, She Stuck to Ideals Through recently presented to time 5,000 - 1 francs Which they , will' use to . pur- e..«Z«t ....«. �, . ww.r ... ,... , n man's clubs, for'the-drat time in the history of the better film movement NTARIO'S new - Minister . of in this country, will sit in, judgment Labor and Health, t�.ough no on the merits of a film before re- toilers. in the ranks of the } commendin'g it to its membership, in-. toilers, may be treasured and ! stead of accepting a list issued by not found wanting in many of the I st tO l claimed that Japanes women, ,-attributes of the manly man., ` are much more efficient than Japanese Throughout his life, and it has ,been men at telegraph operators. Experi- an active one, filled to the brim with ments disclosed facts that a Japanese work, work, work, he' has never lost woman could .be taught the. rudiments Faith in his destiny. That destiny of telegraphy in two months -when may not have been •as exalted in his ordinarily it takes two years ft, teach view as the. stars in their courses a` man the same .thing. Mrs. Jessie B. Bacon, better known have -borne him, yet it stood high, as the AIfalfa Queen of the world, and the goal comes as no. great sur- owns a 6,000 acre ranch near Gothen . r ,where burg, Neb., shespends her itis him g hisd � •era. To� �amt rieto P s as he expresses it, one of his good summers. An idea of the'incoine that fortunes which he has found, have Alfalfa Queen enjoys may be gained come to him �thrott h unexpected from the fact that off 300 acres of g p her land last summer she cleared channels. That may be, but the nevi-, $20,000. gator ever had his eye for certain Miss Joanna C. Mackie, of the ob- channels. Walter Rollo never lost servatory staff' at Harvard univers- sight of the gleam, and ace .where ity, has discovered a new star, but it is too faint to be seen with the naked he now stands! eye. The e dsjust discovery emadethe cis v • He was always constant to his y' ideals. He worked at broom -making, 35th -of its kind in the history of which brought poorer wages than astronomy and the nineteenth to the • most trades, but that did not discour- credit of the Harvard observatory. age him; Full of grit, he held.an and Besides receiving a, great income on, striving for better things for the from the crown lands, Queen Wilhel- Years of Dull,. Hard Work : chase f d and winter clothing. The eveland 'Federation of W workers. He tells you he is .no book- worm; newspapers and labor liter- ature have the greatest thrill for him; yet he never mad*. such a god of them that he could not worship at other shrines, but that worship, which brought with it recreation, helped to broaden and fit him for leadership and the days when he was to be found in the seats of the mighty. When younger, in Hamilton., he took to baseball, and, as every- , HON. WALTER l OLLO. body knows, a few seasons on the ball field go quite a way toward acquiring soundness of wind and limb and clearness of mind. As time passed, the new Minister, Scottish clear through, joined the Kiltie regi- ment being formed in Hazleton, and worked his way to color -sergeant. It stands to reason, further, that a man cannot go• thatlar in the militia With- out having engrafted in him prompt- ness in times of, action and obedience to orders. Add to these qualities an optimistic outlook of life end its problems from the' labor viewpoint, and it need not surprise the electors at large that the Hon. Walter Rollo's friends and supporters are vain enough to believe that he surely will fill the bill •as Minister of Labor and Health to the province's satisfaction.. As for his :beliefs, they are well known to the Independent _ Labor party, of which he is president, and those who have followed his career. It can be said that Mr. Rollo has both the faith and the works on his per- son for their accoplishment, insofar as one man, althou bigger in men- tal `stature than mo t, can aid to that end: In this regard his friends say he has almost .the prophetic vision, for some years ago he saw and .fore- told not a few labor reforms which are now being gradually worked out to the workers' benefit. • Mr. Rollo's association with the Board of Education has helped to fill him out in the public sense. His ap- pointment as a trustee was, he says, something he had longed for, but had little hope of securing, but good fortune was- again his friend and down the unexpected channel he sailed. Had he not been named Labor Minister, he could have made a respectable "stab" at the post of Minister of Education. He was years on the Hamilton Board; he was no rampageous iconoclast; he sought but the children's good, and was in- strumental in introducing a number of useful changes in school manage- ment.—Toronto Star Weekly. The Travellers' Palm,. All the early explorers in Mada- gascar spoke with enthusiasm of one tree in particular which was common • and of such strange appearance that it formed quite a feature of many ' parts of the islands. This afterward became"well-known as the Travellers' • Palm, though it is not a real palm at all. The leaves are spread out at . the top of the trunk like a huge open fan. They are bright green shining leaves and usually 12 feet long and the fan being held aloft -ona leafless stein some 20 feet high forms a strik- ing object. But the use which has given the tree- its name lies in the quantity of pure water which is held in the large sheath at the base of the ' leaf -stalk. This can be tapped from beneath and a draft of wholesome water obtained at will. It is thus a boon to travellers wherever it grows and thus earns its name. Four mirrors distribute the light • evenly and prevent glare in a new gas headlight for automobiles of Eng- lish invention. You Granulated Eyelids: rEyes- inflamed by expo- sure to ass. Dad and Mind yesquickly lievedby Murine rirdicctcdr. No Stnsrting, Just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggists or by mail 60c per Bottle. For Beck 11 to Eye free write tris Marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Good for Neb. Old- Nebuchadnezzar, they tell, Ate grass like a dumb animell; When he struck a thistle It made the king whistle; But he beat out the h. c. of I. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN The town council of Coburg, Canada; is perhaps the first in_that country to pass a resolution for the levying of the poll tax . on women over twenty- one years old not otherwise assessed and who are eligible to vote. The Duchess De Talleyrand, form- erly Anna Gould, of New York, is mina of Holland is immensely wealthy in her own right. Much of her in- come is expended in erecting public buildings, hospitals, theaters, music halls, gymnasiums and baths—besides laying out parks which the poor and rich enjoy alike. An amateur boxing tournament, run -under the sole managemitt of wo- men, was staged in New York re- cently and was run with as much skill and efficiency as could have been ac- complished by men. The matches were ' staged for the entertainment of wounded soldiers and wealthy wo- men war workers were managers of the affair. David Harum Continued from Page 7 said EiTohn, laughing. "He once told me rather an amusing thing about a young woman's running off with one of his horses." "Did he tell you that? Really? I wonder what you must have thought of • me'?" 'Something of what Mr. Harum did. I fancy," said John. . "What was that?" "Pardon me," was the reply,, "but I have been snubbed once this morn- ing. " ornin • ." She gave a little laugh. `1V1r. Harum- and I are great 'neet- ups,' as he says. Is 'neetups' a nice words ?" she asked, looking at her companion. "I should think- so if I were in Mr. Harum's place," said John. "It means `cronies; I believe, in his dictionary." . They had come Street terminates which follows the to the north and foot of it to the to where Freeland in'tthe Lake Road, border of the lake winds around the south - and west. "Why!" exclaimed Miss Clara, "there :comes David. I haven't seen him this summer." They halted ' and David • drew up, winding' the reins about the whipstock and pulling off hisbuckskin glove. "How do you do, 112r. Harum?" said the girl, putting her hand in his. "How 'air ye, Miss Claricy? Glad to see ye agin," he said. "I'm settin' up a little ev'ry day now, an' you don't look. as if you was off your feed much, eh'?" "No," she replied, laughing, "Im in what you call pretty fair condition, I think." "Wa'al, I reckon," he said, looking at her smiling face with the frankest admiration. "Guess you come out a little finer ev'ry season, don't ye? IHsrd work to keep ye ouo' the `free- fer-all' class, I guess. How's all the folks?" "Nicely, thanks," she replied. "That's right," said David. • "How .is Mrs. Bixbee," she inquired. "Wa'al," said David with a grin, "I ben a little down in the mouth lately 'bout Polly—seems to be fallin' away some—don't weigh much more 'n I do, I guess;" but Miss Clara only laughed at this gloomy report. "How is my horse Kirby-?" she asked. "Wa'al, the ole bag -o' -bones is breathin' yet," said David, chuckling, "but he's putty well wore out—has to lean up agin the shed to whicker. Guess I'll have to sell ye .another - putty soon now. Still, what the's is left of him 's 's good 's ever 't will be, a.n' I'll send him up in 'the morn - in'." He looked from Miss Clara to John, whose salutation he had acs knowledge& with the briefest of nods: "How'd you ketch him," he asked, indicating our friend with a motion of his head. "Had to go after him with a four -quart measure, didn't ye? or did he let ye corner hint?" "Mr. Euston caught him for me," she said, laughing, but coloring per- ceptibly, while John's face view very red. "I think I will run on and join My sister and Mr. Lenox can drive home with you. Good bye, Mr. Har - um. I shall be 'glad to have Kirby whenever it is convenient. We shall" ba glad to see you at Lakelawn," she said to John cordially, "whenever you can come;" and taking her prayer book and hymnal from him she sped away. ° "Look at her git over the ground," said David, turning to watch her while John got into the buggy. "Ain't that a gait?" "She is a charming girl," said John as old Jinni started off. "She's the one I told you`ab'out that run off with my Koss," remarked David, "an' I alwus look after him fer her in the winter." "Yes, I know," said John. "She was laughing about it to -day and saying that you and she were great friends." "She was, was she?" said David, highly pleased. "Yes, sir, that's the girl, an', scat my ! if Iwas thirty years younger she c'd run off with me jest as easy ---an' I dunno but what she could anyway," he added. "Charming girl," repeated John rather thoughtfully. "Wa'al," said David, "1 don't know as much ibout girls as I do about some things; my experience bain't laid much in that line, but I wouldn't like to take a contract to match her on any limit. T guess," he added soft- ly, "that the consideration in that deal 'd have to be 'love an' affection.' Git up old lady," he exclaimed, and drew the whip along old Jinny's back like a caress. The mare quickened her pace, and in a few minutes they drove into the barn. - -CHAPTER XXXIV "Where you ben ?" asked Mrs. Bix- bee of her brother as. the three sat at the one o'clock dinner, "I see you drivin' o$ somewhere,-," "Ben up to the Lake Road to 'Lizer Howe's," replied. David. "He's got a hose 't I've some notion o' buyin':" "Ain't the' week -days enough," she asked, "to do, your horse-tradin' in " h ut breakin'the tt oSabbath?" S b David -threw back hishead and low- 1 ered a stalk of the last asparagus of the year into his mouth. , "Some o' the best deals T ever made," he said, "was made oh a Sun- day. Hain't you never heard- the 1 sayin', 'The better the day, the bet- 1 ter the deal'?" "Wa'al," declared Mrs. Bixbee, "the' can't be no blessin' o on money that's made in that way, an! yot''d•,be better off without it." "I sumo," remarked her brother, "but Deakin Perkins might ask a blessin' on a hose trade, but j never heard of it's bein' done, an.' I don't know jest how the deakin 'd- put it; it'd be two fer the deakin an' one fer the other feller, though, some- how, you c'n bet." "Humph!" she ejaculated, "I guess nobody ever did; an' I shed think you had money enough an' horses enough an' time enough to keep out, o' that bus'nis on Sunday, anyhow." "Wa'al, wa'al," said David, "mebbe; I'Il swear off before long, an' anyway' the' wa'n't no blessin' "needed on this trade, fer if you'll ask. 'Lizer he'll tell ye the' wa'n't none made. 'Lizer 's o' your way o' thinkin' ,on the subjict." . "That's to his credit, anyway," she asserted. "Jes' so," observed her brother; "Ive gen'ally noticed that folks who was of your way o' think -in' never made no mistakes. an' 'Lizer 's a very consistent believer;" whereupon he laughed in a way to arouse both Mrs. Bixbee's curiosity and suspicion. 14I don't see anythin' in that to laugh at," she declared. "He, he, he, he!" chuckled David. "Wa'al, you may 's well tell it one time 's another. That's the way," she said, turning to John with a smile 'trembling on her lips, "'t he picks at me the hull time." "I've noticed: it," said John. "It's shameful," "I do it hully fer her good," as- serted David with a grin. "If . it wa'n't, fer me she'd git in time as 'narrer as them seven-day Babtists over to Peeble—they call 'em the 'narrer 'Babtists.' You've heard on 'ern, hain't you, Polly?" "No," she said, without looking up from her plate, "I never heard on 'elm, an' I don't much believe you ever -did neither." "What!" exclaimed David. "You lived here goin' on seventy year an' never heard on 'ern?" \ FEBRUARY 20, 1920. � �e: Good Quality Tea, op properly brewed; takes &way fatigue, and is absolutely harmless, as a daily beverage • TRY 8676 once, and you II never forsake its use. "David ` d Varumt, she cried „`"I I i nt within ten year---" - "Hold on," he protested, "don't throw that teacup. I didn't say you was, I only said you was goin' on— an' about them people over to Peeble, they've got the name of the `narrer Babtists' because they're so narrer in their views that fourteen on 'em c'n it, side an' side, in a buggy." This astonishing statement elicited a laugh even from Aunt Polly, but presently she said: "Wa'al, I'm glad you found one pian that would sten' you off on Sun- day:* "Yes'm," said her brother, "Lizer jest your kind. .1 knew 't he'd hurt his foot, an' prob'ly couldn't go to meetin', an sure enough, he was settin' on the stoop, an' I drove in an' pulled up in the lane alongside. We said good mornin' an' all that, an' I ast after the folks an' how his foot ,was gettin' 'long, an' so on, an' fin'ly I says, I see your boy dlivin' a boss the other day that looked a little—fin the middle e' the road—as if he might match one I've got, an' I thought I'd - drive up this mt>rnin' an' see if we couldn't git up a dicker.' Wa'al, .he ,give a kind of a hitch in his chair as if his foot hurt him, an' then he says, `I guess I can't deal with ye to- day. I don't never do no bus'nis ot? Sunday,' he says. "'I've heard you was putty pertie- ler,' I says, 'but I'm putty busy jest about now, an' I thought that mebbe once in a way, an' seein' that you couldn't go to meetin' anyway, an' that I've come quite a ways an' don't know when I c'n see you agin, an' so on, that mebbe you'd think, under all the circumstances, the' wouldn't be no great harm in't—long 's I don't pay ever no money, at cetery,' 1 says. "'No,' he says, shakin' his head in a sort o' mournful way, `I'm glad to see ye, an' I'm sorry you've took all that trouble fer nuthin', but my con- scienee won't allow me,' he says, `to do no bus'nis on Sunday.' "`Wa'al,' 1 says, `I don't ask no m.an to go agin his conscience, but it wouldn't be no very glarin' transgres- sion on your part, would it, if I was to go up to the barn ail alone by Myself an' look at the hose?' 1 e'd see," continued Mr. Harum, "that his face kind o' brightened up at that, but he took his time 'to answer. `Wa'al,' he says fin'ly, `I don't want to lay down no, law fer you, an if you don't see no harm; int, I guess the' ain't nuthin' to prevent ye.' So a I got down an' started fer the barn, h he, he wen anbel—when I d a, got b ou � about - a rod he hollered after me, 'He's in the end stall,' he says. "Wa'ai,", the narrator propeede4, 1 "I looked the critter over an' made up my mina -about what he was wuth to me, an' Went back an' got in, an' drove into the yard, an' turned 'round, an' drew up aginlongside the stoop p. 'Lizer looked up at me in an a .skin' kind of a way, but he didn't say any-' thin.' "I s'pose,' I says, 'that you wouldn't want me to say anything) more to ye, an' I may 's well jog along back.' " `Wa'al,' he says, 41 can't very well help hearin' ye, kin I, if you got any- thin' to say?' - " `Wa'al,' I says, 'the hoes ain't exac'ly what I expected to• find, nor jest what I'm lookin' fer; but ,1 dent say I wouldn't 'a' made a deal with ye if the price had ben right, an' it hadn't ben Sunday.' 1 reckon," said David with a wink at John, "that that there foot o' his'nmust 'a' give him an extry twinge the way, he wriggled 1 in. his chair; but I couldn't break his lockjaw yit. So I gathered up the lines an' took out the whip, an' made all the motions to go, an' then I kind. o' stopped an' says, `I don't want you to go agin your princ'ples nor the law an' gosp'l on. my account, but the' can't be no harm in s'posin' a - case, can the'?' No, he allowed that s'posin' wa'n't jest the same' as do - in'. Wa'al,' says I, 'now s'posin' I'd come up here yestidy as I have to -day, an' looked your lhoss _overs an' said to you, 'What price do you put" tin him ?" what do you s'pose you'd 'a' t said?' - " Wa'al,' he said, 'puttin' it that way; I ,-'pose I'd. 'a' said one -seventy.' " `Yes,' I says, 'an' then agin, if -I'd said tkat he wa'n't wuth that money to me, not bein' jest what I' wanted --an' so he ain't—but that Pd- - give one forty, cash, what do you s'pose you'd 'a'. said?' - "'Wa'al,' he says, givin' a -hitch, 'of course I don't know jest what I. would have said; but I guess,' he says, `'t I'd 'a' said if you'll make it one fifty you c'n have the hogs' 'Wel, now,' I says, 's'posin' I was to send Dick Larrabee up here in the moinin' with the money, what de you s'pose you'd do?' "I s'pose I d let him go,' says 'Lizer. i (Continued next week.) . Cm."'%Isimpurr EAREF�rdDealers in this � distri& and 'have: formed_ an `estimate of the number of cars we will require to meet the needs of this territory. TWe cannot get enough cars to fill that stimate because there are not enough cars being made. to fill all dealers' estimates throughout. Canada. Thi number of cars we can get depends upon the number of orders we send in and the early date at which we send them in, as the Ford Slipping Department foliows the principle, First , Come first Served." t Cars ordered now will not- be delivered until March, anddeliver- ies will be uncertain throughout the year. If you do not want to wait for summer or autumn delivery, come in and reserve your car by signing an order. _,today. J. F. Daly • Dealer Cook Bros. Dealers 157 Seaforth Hensali DR. Eye, -Graduate Toronto. ate As zeal and A and. Oils, Lox Hotel, Sea each moat Waterl phone 267 Barrister 'Notate' Pt eninion Ban mtinion. Baa 1. Barrist i and. Nota over Walk+ Street, Set stet . 1 l onda Bioe 'Horan F. Honor l ars: Colieg€ the Medical 'Veterinary *11 doniestii print Fever a Dick's "Hot ordersrec ceive pro el iiveed at D; :b DR. GE Osteopha Specialist ; -diseases, re and nervosa and throat; above Umbo Tuesdays as C. J.' 6 Richt Specialist, l a.diseases Graduate' McGill Unit of College of Ontario; ,oil of Cana of Resident Hospital, 1VJ doors east; Hensall, Or Dr € ace and e t of the Phone 46. Huron. D,> J. G. Se& College of Ann Arbor lege \of Ph Ontario. C. Macke ity Univers Trinity M the Colleg Aeons of 0 Dl Graduate Faculty of lege :of PI Ontario; Chicago Royal Op England, England, Bunk, Seal Calls ansa toria Stree Box 12' The Huron ation and Commissio Fire and '4 Goy Bonds bout farts for Week at T1 T Licensed of Hen arrsn g erne made y cl or The erate and