The Huron Expositor, 1920-04-30, Page 6kY
Good Quality Tea, properly brewed,
takes away fatigue, and is absolutely
harmless, as a daily beverage - TRY
once, and you' It ¢ die
8696
er forsake its use.
CONSTIPATION
By the terns CONSTIPATION is meant either infrequent, difficult or in-
ottfilcient evacuation of the contents of the Lower Bowel.
The Symptoms are Headache, Dizztnees, Mental Sluggishness, Lack of
Concentration, Lassitude or a feeling of General indisposition, Bad Breath,
Coated Tongue, Loss of Appetite, Sallow Skin which may become dry and
rah and Pimples may appear. Sometimes there is Heart Palpitation,
HYsterlcal Spells and Nervous Exhaustion.
IT SCS IMPORTANT to treat Constipation proiestptly as this condition
gamerally leads to many serious disorders.
Careful judgment should be used in selecting a proper remedy; ordin-
ary
Cathartics and Laxatives have a weakening effect upon the system,
other Gripe and Purge and Mineral Oils, if taken several times a day may
retasecretion. of the gastric juice and also interfere with the obsorption
of food. HA.CKING'S KIDNEY AND LIVER PILLS form an ideal tonic—
laxative for Constipation and its evil results.
We give herewith the medicinal action of the ingredients of HACK-
ING/8 KIDNEY AND LIVER PILLS in order that you may form your own
opinion es to the value of this wonderful medicine.
CASCARA —Laxative, Cathartic, •with Intestinal Torpidity. This acts
Tonic to the Liver and Intestines, best when used in combination with
does not cause Griping or unpleasant other drugs and herbs.
symptoms, good for Chronic Const-- HYOSCYAMUS—Selpful to the
symptoms,pation when used in small and repeat= Kidneys, stops pain, soothes the
ed doses for a considerable period of Nerves, lessens irritability of the
time. Nerve Centres, For Functional Pal -
MAY APPLE --Useful in Fevers pitsttion, of the Heart, helpful to the
and Inflammations of almost every Mucus Membrane of the Kidneys and
type and for all disorders of the Liter Bowels. Chiefly employed to re -
and Spleen. For indigestion, jaunt here pain and to quiet Nervous ex -
dice, Piles, Constipation, Dropsy and citement.
Skin Eruptions,
foutaVERT'S ROOT—A Laxative
and Tonle, useful in Dyspepsia, Sault.
dice, Piles, Diarhoea, Dysentery,
Cholera. Corrects Liver Troubles,
Gives tone and vigor of action to the PEPPERMINT ---Useful in Flatuent
entire secretive apparatus of the sys- Colic to check Nausea and Colic. For,
tem. Also for Inflammation of the Spasmodic Paine of the Stomach and
1311sdder. Bowels, for Neuralgia and Rheuma-
GAMBOGE----Used in Obstinate tism, prevents griping and for gas on
Constipation and Dropsies attended the stomach. •..
These are the principal ingredients of Hacking's Kidney and Liver
pills, you wilt find that this combination will produce a healthy condition
of the Stomach, ]Giver, Kidneys and Bowels.
No other drugs or combination of drugs, oils, laxatives, pills or pur-
gatives will have such beneficial effect as HACKItNG'S KIDNEY AND' LIVER
PILLS, but you must be sure to get HACKING'S as no other kind will do.
Price 25e a box, 5 for $1.00. Sold by all dealers or by mail. Hacking's
Limited, Listowel,
CAPSICUM—Stimulant and Store -
ache, useful in Feeble and Languid
Digestion, Dyspepsia, Atonic Gout,
Colic and Cholera.
All This EXTRA
For You
Don't buy a bicycle just because it looks good. A
bright appearance often hides poor materials and work-
manship.
Buy a C. C. M. Bicycle.
The beauty of the C. C. M. is more than surface deep.
There are three coats of brilliant, waterproof enamel over
a coat of anti -rust. That means an enamel that will stand
wear and weather.
The smooth, highly -polished nickelling is over rust-
proof copper. That's why C. C. M. nickelling retains its
bright appearance and wears so long.
You don't always spin along smooth pavements. Some-
times you have to bump over ruts and cobble stones. So
the C. C. M. frame has the long, strong "Fishmouth" rein-
forcement at the joints. This makes a powerful frame
with a large margin of safety.
C•C•
� ydes
MASSEY : CLEVELAND --PERFECT
RED BIRD --COLUMBIA
This trade mark is
on the frame of every
C.C.M. Bicycle.
Over t.000 C.C.M. Ser-
vice Stations in Can-
ada." Look for this sign.
are also easier -riding.
The special construction of the driv-
ing parts gives the direct drive that
makes the C. C. M. a joy to ride!
And the new Hercules Positive Drive
Brake—the Coaster Brake without a
side arm—is included without extra
charge. The C, C. M. dealer is waiting
to show you these EXTRA - value
bicycles. Call =without delay.
90% Made in Canada -100% Value.
Canada Cycle & Motor Co., Limited
WESTON, ONTARIO
Montreal Toronto Winnipeg Vancouver
110
THE HRO$ EXPQSITOR
THE REASN WHY
The reason we cannot do this al-
ways is because when we walk natur-
ally, the steps taken 'by our right and
left feet are not of equal length. This
difference in the lengtlh of the steps is
due to the fact that our legs are never
exactly the same leiigth. Wethink
of thein° generally as of the same
length, but they are not, and this will-,
be proven if' you meas 'e them accu-
rately, Now then, the longer of' the
legs will alwa take- a longer step
than the shorter one, and so, if our
eyes are shut we walk in circles, un-
less we have something to „guide use
When we walk with our eyes open i
we are able to overcome the tendency
to walk in circles, becauseour eyes
help the brain to direct the legs on a
straight course. Another reason which
affects the matter is that our eyes
are very necessary in keeping our
bodies balanced on our feet, and it is
very difficult to learn to keep the
body balanced with the eyes closed.
Now, when our eyes are closed and
you attempt to walk in a straight line
your body balance from one side to the
other, and this fact coupled with
the first reason given, makes your
course irregular. But, say. you, the
man on the tight rope has his eyes
bandaged and he walks a very straight
line. Yes; but remember that he has
&_straight tight rope to guide him, and
all he needs is to maintain his bal-
ance. One can learn to walk in a
straight line with the eyes closed, but
it takes a good deal of practice, as
you will learn if you try.
What makes a match light when we
strike it?
The match lights when we rub it
along a rough substance, because the
rubbing produces sufficient heat on
the end of the match to set fire to
the head aswe call it, which is made
of/ chemicals that light more easily
than the stick of wood, which is the
rest of the match. The fire burns long
enough to set fire to the wooden part
part of the match.
To explain this more fully, let me
say this. Rub your fingers quickly
along
your r coat sleeve or along gthe
seat of your trousers, long a favorite
place for mens t6 strike matches, pre-
tending that your f n'ger is a match.
You find the end of your finger be-
comes warm don't you? Not warns
enough to set yoifr finger on fire, of
course, but if you had the same com-
binations of chemicals on the end of
your- finger that there is on the match
you would set the chemicals afire and
this would burn your finger, just as
it sets fire to the wooden part of the
match. should .strive to produce a straight
It took a great many years to dis- figure and this she cannot do when
wearing high heels.
Why is it that the woman, with fat
face and th heavy neck so often
chooses a tight coiffure ? She thinks
it is smart and so it may be, but it
makes her face and neck look much
fatter than they need look. Likewise
the tight toque accentuates the breadth
of the neck and face. Abetter selec-
tion is a hat with a moderate brim
Beware of the choker collar. Some
stout woman seem to think that it
makes the neck look longer, but this
is not always the case. A bare neck
is usually the stout woman's best
seiectioi,,
Lift off Corns!
Doesn't hurt a bit and Freezone
costs only a few cents. -
With yoitr fingers- You can lift off
any hard corn, soft corn, or corn between
the toes, and the hard skin calluses from
bottom of feet.
A tiny bottle of "Freezone" costs Tittle
at any drug store; apply a few drops
upon the corn or callus. Instantly it
stops hurting, then shortly you lift that
bothersome corn or callus right off,
and all, without one bit of pain or sore-
ness, Truly! No humbug!
your evening frocks as so many stout
women do. These - shimmering form
-hugging fabrics do, certainly make a
slender' woman look slenderer, but they
only accentuate the rotundity of the
stout woman's figure. Your best selec-
tion is some soft clinging material,
such as one of the crepe silks. Prefer
a fabric 'with a dull finish as satins
and knitted silk fabrics produce high-
lights that draw attetion to tate size.
Certain light brown shades such as
beige, toast, and the new blonde are
fashionable, but they are not for you.
To be sure stripes accentifate the
length of line, but a striking stripe
is a poor selection simply because it
calls attention to your figure. A ma-
n figure
icuo
showingan inconspicuous teniala
that runs up ad down is a good selct-
ion. There are some hair striped ma-
terialsselection that are excellent
for suits or one piece street. rocks.
Don't wear high heels if you are
very heavy. You can't ,help but look
uncomfortable. The high heel tends
to pitch the figure forward, increasing
the apparent size of the bust and the
figure below the waist at the back.
As much as possible the heavy woman
cover the combination of chemicals
of which the head -- of the match is
made. ,Before that discovery was made
it was far from easy to light the light
in the evenings as it- is now. It must
have been a serious thing to let the
fire go out in the furnace in those
days.
Where do tears come from?
Tears are not made only when we
cry. They seem to come oily when
you cry, because it is then that they
spill over. A little part of you is
making tears all the time, and your
eyes are constantly washing them-
selves inethem. You have often no-
ticed how ,you wink every few sec-
onds? You have often tried to keep
from winking—to see how long' you
could -keep from winking. Boys and
girls often do that, and when you
keep from winking what seems a long
time, you notice how your eyes ache
and feel very dry just before you
have to let them wink in spite of how
hard you try not to, and just when
you think you are going to. - I will
tell you just what winking does for
the eyes. All of the time your eyes
are open the front, or the part you'.
see things with, is exposed to the dust
and dirt that fills the air at all times,
although we cannot always see the
dust. ...The wind too is constantly
making then- dry. But have you ever
noticed that although you never wash
the inside of the front of the eye, or
pupil, it is always clears?' Well it is
because your eye washes itself every
time you wink. I will tell you how
this is done. Up above each eye, in
side, of course, there is a little gland
called the tear -gland. `This gland is
busy all the time you are awake
making teats. As soon as the front
of your eye become dry, or if a par-
ticle of dust or anything else strikes
it, the nerves you have there tell the
brain, and alnioet at once the eyelid
comes down; with a tear inside of it,
and so washes - the front of your eye
clean again. It does its work per-
fectly and as often as necessary.
There ig always a tear ready to be
used in this way.
Where do the tears go?
Let me show you. Look right downs
here at the inner corner of my eye-
lid, where you •will see a little hole
That is where the tears get out of the
eye, when they have. washed your eye-
ball clean. Where do they go then.
Did you ever notice how soon after
you cry .you -have to blow your nose?
The reason for that is that when
the tears go through the little hole
they run down into the nose. This
making of tears and Oinking goes on
all the time while you are awake, and
after they wash .your eye off they go
on out through this little hole. But
when you cry you make more tears
come than you need, so many, in fact,
that they cannot all get away through
this little hole, and as there is no
place else for them to go, and as -
there is, n,p place to keep them inside
the eye, they simply spil themselves
right over the edge of your lower eye
lid and run down your cheek.
DONTS FOR STOUT WOMEN
D,on't be inveigled into wearing the
too short skirt. On the other hand,
don't think that by wearing your skirt
excessively long you produce sufficient
s length of line to make up for thie lack
of, smartness that the very long skirt
usually possesses. The very Iong skirt
must be scant to be smart .and the
stout womaeshould avoid scantness as
much as too great brevity. For the
street skirt the skirt should be of
ankle length with enough width so
that it will not ride up when you are
seated. For the afternoon or evening
frock it may be longer.
Don't select snakelike fabrics for
•
NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE
An electrical method has been de-
veloped for extracting the water from
crude petroleum.
For home consumption Great Brit-
ain .imports about 30,000,000 pounds
of coffee annually:
One of France's most noted aviators
has built a passenger carrying plane
with two decks, the upper for twelve
first-class passengers and the lower
for sixteen second-class.
The present annual consumption of
oil and oil products throughout the
world is estimated at 70,300,000 tons.
of which the United States uses about
40,000,000 tons.
The Swedish state railways are
equipping their stock with air brakes
invented in Germany, but manufac-
tured in Sweden after depending up-
on hand braking for years.
An envelope' moistener patented by
a Seattle inventor consists of a piece
of sponge inserted in a spiral metal
coil that is held by two rings from
the back of the user's fingers.
An English society that aims to de-
velop the senses of touch and observa-
tion requires blindfolded students to
examine models with one hand and
make drawings - of them . with • the
other.
ACTIVITIESOFWOMEN
Of the 2,000,000 excess females in
England more than 1,000,000 are be-
tween the ages of _twenty and sixty.
In the United States there are now
eleven women members of state leg-
islatures in five different states.
The women of Downers Grove, 111.,
`beast of having 'had the first Ameri-
can Legion auxii'aty in the country.
'i'n; r umber of—women wege earn-
ers in the United Sates has increased
•
RAW FURS
WANTED
Highest cash prices
paid for
Skunk, Raccoon -
and Mink -
Enquiries promptly
answered
ROSS LIMITED
MANUFACTURERS
Established 1685
Iifty I er cent. during the last ten
year.
In the United States the average
weight of adult females is 110 pounds-
and the height five feet four inches.
Mrs. Olive Scott Gabriel is cosi
sidered the : ,shrewdest woman poli-
tician in New York city. She is also
an able lawyer. -
During the period of the war,
French women kept 800 soldiers' hos-
pitals in operation with 700 beds car-
ed ,for 780,379 men.
Women workers in Kansa& will,
under the terms of a recently enacted/
law, receive a minimum pay of $11.
weekly for au eight.hour day. •.
For the first time in the' history of
k'rpncet W9m n will b` &floored 0 99m -
pate in the higheet French examina-
tion in philosophy and philology.
Mrse ]Elizabeth Whilling, of Reehes.
ter, England, who last year swam
sixteen miles in the Medway, t will
this year try to swim the English
channel,
France is taking up seriously the
problem of her 2,000,000 marriage-
able girls, who as a result of the
war's losses can never hope to have
husbands.
Lady Surma D'Mar Shimun, the
onry,woman ambassador in the world,
has arrived at London, where she will
represent the Assyrian tribe as
plenipotentiary. -
Fifty per cent. of the girl war
workers in Washington, D. C., - are
undereating because of the high price
of food in lunch rooms, boarding
houses and groceries.
Mrs. Douglas. Robinson, sister of
the late Colonel Theodore Roosevelt,
has accepted the appointment as hon-
orary editor of the Woman's Roosevelt
Memorial Bulletin, published by the
Woman's Roosevelt Memorial Associ-
ation 1n NewYotk
city.
The Rider of 'the
King Log .. ,
Continued from Page '1
He no longer felt like raving. He
looked at hex' for a long time. He
began to understand that this coni-
radely person who had so constantly
laughed her --way with him through
all their adventures in, intimacy had
been covering shallowness with that
laugh. Her very naivete 'in feeling
secure because -she was the pet of an
old man gave hint better understand-
ing of her nature than he had secur-
ed in all the weeks past. It was
plain to him that he had a child on
his hands, to protect from her own
rash blunderheadedness.
"Do you begin to realize what a
mess this is?" he demanded, controll-
ing his temper,
"I suppose it is what you say it is!
You know better than L Perhaps if
you're so sorry we'd better say nothing
and---"
"Say nothing! Things like this get
into the newspapers. Our names are
on record in that special license." -
"Horace never reads anything, only
the market news."
"Oh, damnation! Wake up! I hope
your husband is as good and as reas-
onable a man as you say he is."
"You'll find him just as I say.
There can be a divorce and—"
"We'll not discuss that point, Mrs.
Sturtevant! Will your kindly put on
your hat? We're going 'to start on
our wedding journey."
She confrontedehis gaze, understood
the new • meaning in his eyes, rose
from her knees, and went to the dress-
er where her hat lay.
"A wedding journey!" she ventur-
ed to suggest, after a long silence. She
was adjusting her veil.
"Yes, to Ohama,"'he said dryly.
CHAPTER V
Although Abner Kezar entertains frond
hopes regarding the disposal of John
Kavanagh's daughter, Donaad Kezar
has questionable ideas in regard to
the immediate use of Kavapagh's
money.
That June morning was truly all
that a June morning ought to be; it
breathed the spirit of promise. Rob-
ins and roses and puffs of breeze and
the earliest butterflies were doing their
cheering bits at the open windows of
Kavanagh's house.
The old man felt the spirit of prom-
ise; he was looking forward to some-
thing ivith honest ardor.
Dumphy prepared himself to be val-
et, taking the same meticulous care
of his person as when he prepared to
make short -cake or waffles. He scrub-
bed his hands and arms with sand -soap
and put on a polish with a rough tow-
el. Being fair and plump, Dumphy
looked clean enough to handle a bride's
trousseau,
"Ye'll ' do," said "Old X.K." "but
mind ye, carefully, man!"
And Dumphy brought forth the sa-
cred garments, and even the robins
stopped hunting for worms and perch-
ed by the windows to see.
Ste. Agathe has no especial con-
tour as a village; when Nature dump-
ed down an apronful of ledges and
boulders and hillocks beside Tulandic
Falls she plainly did not intend that
man should come along and spoil the
general effect checker -hoard lay-
out of houses. Men took the hint and
builded accordingly as they found flat
places and enough soil in which to dig
a cellar. Therefore the little houses
are scattered,.aaround, and thrusting
up from them are a few cardnal ponts,
here itemized:
On one commanding hillock, the
mansion of John Xavier Kavanagh,
with its log -walled ell; the inansiori for
show and for the women-folks—when
there were women -folks; the +ill for
John Kavanagh's own contentment.
At the other end of the village, on
- another commanding hillock, the par-
ish church and the cottage of Father
Pierre Laflame, and, on the slope be-
yond, the high cross above the graves.
In the middle of a little huddle of
stores the barren hulk of the tavern
with its gambrel roof and weather-
beaten sides speckled with dirty win-
dows.
A little drab railroad- station, with
a battered bumper beside it, yawning
at a drunken angle and narking the
end of the lazy, rusty -railed branch
line.
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0, 1920.
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At the foot of John Kavanagh's hill- I
ock, the only, brick -walled building in
the village—John Kavanagh's head
office. To one who -understood, its viv- ;
id red suggested what it was—then'
heart of the village; the money which I
flowed out of its doors was the life-
blood of the place.
Within, Abner Kezar had his face
to his figures and his back to the June
morning, Perhaps because he had so
persistently turned his back to the sun
all his' life it had come About that his
shoulders were permanently warped,
But those shoulders beret ' daily and
persistently above the business of J. ohn
Kavanagh.
He was a man of `figures. As to
eash, accounts, stumpage right, leases,
pay -totals, or anything else of the
amort, Kavanagh's unvarying reply wag,
'Abner knows!" The Kavanagh checks
were made out and signed by Kezar;
unquestioningly Kavanagh counter-
signed them, scrawling with indelible
pencil, after he had licked its point
these letters across the signature of"
the man of figures, "O.K., X.K.''
To "what extent Abner Kezar back-
ed his grandson, Donald Kezar, in the
young man's various adventures on
both sides of the border, was' not
known outside the two persons chief-
ly concerned. But anybody -,who ever "0ASG'A$ZTS" WORK
saw Abner Kezar in the presence of
his grandson would not doubt that the -
backing would be to the last dollar of o
the grandfathe'r's capital if need ar- I For Sick Headache, Sour Stomach,
ose.
.A long time back John Kavanagh,
inclined to judge men largely by his
outdoor standard, and 'not troubling
himself about subtler qualities and
"sinuosities of character, had bulwark-
ed
ulwark ed the grandfatherly faith by stamp-
ing Donald with most emphatic ap-
proval. '
"There's the boy foil you, Abner!
Fine, upstanding, regular! . Hew tall
is he?"
"Six feet one and- a half, John!" He
rose on his hale leg and tried to set
back his warped shoulders. "He takes
back—he takes back! And you re-
member that his grandmother was a
tall woman."
"Yes, and I almost wonder how you
captured her. But, for that -natter,
I have known a cat to cuddle a crippled
,chicken!" The master did not choose
-polite phrases when he conversed with
hies inari of business in private. ' "He's
the kind of boy I'd like to have for my
own,,'
STEELE,
BRIGGS'
SEEDS
=,
446.1
BIGGER
CROPS
FpoM
BETTER
SEEDS
SOLD BY i. an N6 MERCHANTS
T iRRoU611011 • CANADA _
WRITE FOR NEW CATALOG
4.0
_STEELE,BR1GGS SEED C° M�Tig'
CAAtA40,4'SGR£ATESTSEED HOUSE
-}{t 4 L't'.t»4• ,T-0RQt;`l0,= WINNIPEG
WHILE YOU SLEEP
The little gray eyes ofothe man of
business stole cautious side -glance at
the lord of the -Toban; then, as if to
gives himself more confidence, Kezar
climbed onto his high stool and sat
there, his elbows 'resting on the desk,
his free hands held apart and rubbing
thumbs and fore -fingers Kavanagh
was sprawling in his big chair by the
window. Clare Kavanagh passed out-
side galloping her black horse.
"Ah, and there's the girl!" said
"Old X.K."
Abner Kezar wished he dared say
it! In his passionate hopes for the
future - of the grandson who had so
well redeemed the Kezar manhood
from ith physical set -back in the case
of the dwarfed grandfather he almost
dared to tell John Kavanagh how he
might have such a boy for his own.
"It's the life for a girl up here,
even if not the place for a girl, Abner.
Goi, save her from a cane -licking
du "
Kezar almost said it! Why not his
grandson for a son-in-law? John Ka,'v-
anagh needed such a one.
"She's going away next week to a
place where it's a thousand dollars a
minute for making her into a fine la-
dy, Abner.It's her due."
"But that gives the dudes a chance D� Fdpp
at her, John!" G
Sluggish Liver and Bowes--
Take Gascarets tonight.
Vii keit Tongue, Bad. Taste, Indiges-
tion,
ndite
tion, Sallow Skin and. Miserable ,Heade
aches come from. a torpid• liver and
clogged bowels, which cause your stom-
ach to become filled with. undigested
food, which sours and ferments like gar-
bage in a swill barrel. That's thefrst
step to untold misery ---indigestion, foul
gases, bad breath, yellow- skin, uncut -a€
fears, everything that is horrible and
nauseating. A Case,ret to -night will
give your constipated bowels a. thorough
cleansing and: straighten you out by
morning They work while you sleep—
s 10-eent box from your druggist will/
keep you feeling good. for months.
i .
Oranulalei Eyelids.
our Eyes inflamed by exp
sure to Sm. Dist and Mid
Eyesqguieliisrikiy relievedbyse
Eyeileaedy. NoSmss►rting,
just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggists or by mail 60c per Bottle.
For cook el !be Eye free write 1:143Murine Cys Reedy Co., Chicago,
E
Dr. DeVan's French Pills
A reliable Regulating _ Pill for Women.
$5 a box. Sold at all Drug Stores, o
mailed to - any address on receipt of
price. The Seobeli Drug Co., St, €'atk-
urtnea;, Ontario.
PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN
Restores Vim and Vitality; for Nerve
and Brain;; increases "gray matter;"
Tonic—will build you up. 43 a box, or
two for $5, at drug stores, or by -nail
On receipt of price, The Scobell Drug
Co., St. Catharines-,„ Ontario.
, ye er a There was something like a wail -
ofoice. disappointment in the high-pitched
v
"Ay, she may pick one, and yet 11
trust to the Kavanagh good sense in I Skit't, AIso a Coat
-
I"Diamond Dyes" Make Shabby Apparel
Just Like'New—So Easy!
her."
"It's dangeraus to let a girl take
too many chances on the future, John.
Even as you are worrying about your
da.ugher : "
"I'm not worrying,"
"But 1' am worrying about my grand-
son," stated Kezar, not daring to look
at the master, but - desperate enough
to hazard something in the 'way of
approach to the subject. "A wife can
make or she can spoil!"
(Continued next week.)
Don't worry about perfect results.
Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give
a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric.
whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed -
goods, --dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts,
children's coats, draperies,--everythiug1
1 A Direction Book is in package.
• To match any material, have' dealer
show you "Diatmont/ Dye's Color Card.
DR.
Eye,
1
Gradual
Toronto.
Late As
mei and
Eye and
vitals, Lo
Hotel, Se
-each monWaterl
Phone 267
Barristei
Notary Pt,
minion Ban
sa ni an Ba
loan.
Barrister
and Notar
over Walko
Street, Sea
PROUDI
Barrister
etc. M
en Monday
Kidd Bloc1
Killoran
F.
Honor gr
ary College
the Medical
Veterinary
sell domestic
ern princip
Fever a f
Dick's Hot(
orders
neive prong
received at t
JOH
Honor ;grr
miry College.
animals tre
tended to a
*riflery Den
and reside*
door east o
forth.
DR. GE'
Osteophati
Specialist in
diseases, rel-
and nervous:
and throat.
above timbal
Tuesdays arl
C. J.
42-5 Richir
Specialist,
ary diseases
_ D
Graduate
McGill Univ
of College d
of Ontario;
ail of Cana(
of Resident
M
doors east
ensaIl, On
Dr,
Office and
east of the l
Phone 46. (
Huron.
DRS.
3. G. Scot
College of
.Ann Arbor
lege of Ph
Ontario. -
G. Macke
sty Univers
Trinity €e
the Col e
-eons of
Graduate
Faculty of
lege of lr'h
Ontario; - S
Chicago C
Royal Opti
'England, U
England.
Bank, Seal
toria Stree,
Calls ansvcj
T
Licensed
of Huron
errangeme
made by
arThe E
trate an
Licensed
of Huron,
Parts of t
I z . ce
Wan. T
175 r1I,
No. I.