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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-07-23, Page 2R 2r, 'Red Star' Washing Machines Are made of clear cypress wood, cor- rugated inside, equipped with bevelled gears, ball bearing, solid cast bed as- suring smooth action. The 'work is made easy. 'The Malchine is thor- eoughly guaranteed to give satisfae tion or your money back. Price $20.00 Electric Machine with Wringer $120.00 Power Machine for gas engine.. $64.00 Wringers Wringers are necessary. They cut out half the heavy work but they must be good. The Crest Wringer has enclosed gears, individual springs and easy' clamp $7.50 Bicycle Wringer with ball bearings and 11 inch roll $8.50 Enamelled Wash Board .75c Wash Boilers '3- `r - �f, Hand made, both in extra heavy copper and tin, with copper bottom. Tin Boiler $6.00 Copper Boiler $8.50 O'Cedar, Mops with handle .... $1.75 Dushill Mop with removable cloth, complete with handle $1.50 SPECIAL OFFER, 4 DOZ. SPRING CLOTHES PINS FOR 25c G. A. Sills, Seaforth THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS J. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy: Treas, AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray, Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar- muth, Brod'hagen. DIRECTORS William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. '3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.... G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 11 a. m. - For Clinton, Goderich, • Wingham and Kincardine. 5.53 p. m. -- For Clinton, Wingham, and. Kincardine. 11.03 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich, • 6.51 a. zn.-For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 8.12 p. m. --For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. ' LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going North a.m. p.m. London- 9.05 4.45 ,Centralia 10.04 5.50, Get genuine "Bayer Tablets oi'.,Aspirin" Exeter 10.18 -6.02 'in a "Bayer" package, plainly t marked ' Hensall 10.33 6.14 with the safety "Bayer Cross." Kippen . .... . • 10.38 6.21 i The "Bayer ,Cross" is your only way Brucefield 10.47 B eld fi 6.29 of knowing that you are.gett'ng genuine Clinton 11.03 6.45 'Aspirin, prescribed by pitysicians for Londesboro 11.34 7.03 nineteen years and proved safe by mil - Blyth 11.43 7.10 lions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Belgrave 11.56 7,23 Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for Wingham: 12.11 7.40 Pain generally'. Made in Canada. Going South a.m. p.m. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets -also [Wingham 7.30 3.20 larger sized "Bayer" packages. Belgrave 7.44 3.36Aspirin is the trade mark (registered Blyth 7.56 3.48 in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of 8,04 3.56 Monoaceticacidester of Selicylicacid. 8.23415 -While it is well known that Aspirin 8.46 4..321 means Bayer manufacture, to- assist the 8.46 - 4,40 public against imitations, the Tablets of 50 f Bayer Company, Ltd,, will be stamped 9.13 8.58 , !.5, 05with their general trade inark, the e. y 9.27 5.15 Bayer Cross: 10.40 6.15 C. P. R. TIME TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH TO TORONTO a.m. p.m. Goderich, leave 6.20 1.80 Blyth 6.58 2.07 Walton 7.12 2.20 Guelph _ 9.48 4.53 • FROM TORONTO Toronto, leave 8.10 5.10 Guelph, arrive 9.30 6.30 Walton 12.03 9.04 Blyth .......... :▪ 12.169.18 'Auburn 12.28 '-•• 9.30 Goderich 12.55 9.55 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main- Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in- termediate points. GENUINE ASPIRIN HAS "BAYER CROSS" Tablets without "Bayer' Cross" are not Aspirin at all Londesboro Clinton Brucefield Kippen Hensel' Exeter Centralia London WE ARE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR WE INVITE HOUSEHOLDERS GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE SAMPLES OF THESE FINISHES. EVERY PRODUCT GUARANTEED FOR QUALITY AND SERVICE. 11. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT. THE HURON EXPOSITOR" ORANGE AND TOMATO JUICE FOR BABIES - Orange juice is not only a valuable antiscorbutic as an addition to the diet of bottle-fed babies, but recent experi- ments `have shown it topodsess many other virtues. The Journal of the American Association quotes the ex- periments of T. B. Osborne and L. B. Mendel, who have devoted them- selves especially to this study, as proving that orange juice contains the antineuritic and growth stimulating vitamin. Drs. A. 11. Bysfield and A. L. Dan- iels of the University of Iowa "have noted that in every case when the antiscorbutic dose of orange. juice (15 cubic centimeters) was increas- ed to 45 cubic centimeters a day to infants whose 'weight had remained stationary for 'a number of days, there was a marked stimulation of growth. A mere increase of food in- take of itself had no such influence on the rate of gain." Thus in giving plenty of orange - ,juice to infants one is administering at least two beneficial adjuvants to the diet. , This is true also of tomato juice, first urged by Dr. A. F. Hess, of New York. The great beauty about this is that it can be dried or canned with- out losing its potency in . vitamin. Tomato juice is not only anti -scorbutic but rich in thh other vitamins. In short, it captains all ..the qualities that make it one of the most valuable additions to the diet of infants and growing children. YOU CAN MAKE'JAM WITH.LESS SUGAR BY ALLOWING IT TO BOIL LONGER Making jam is even more of a luxury than canning. In fact, it can be classed among the delicacies. But there. is one eeray of looking at it. It is good for the kiddies, who if they - can't get their "sweeties" at home on a bit of bread and butter will crave for cheap stuff from the eandy store. Jams from all the fruits are usually made with one pound of sugar to one pound of fruit. Then it doesn't ,have to cook quite 'so long. But with sugar so expensive, domestic science experts are telling us that it can be made with one pound . of fruit to three-quarters of a pound of sugar, when it must cook at least half an hour. • One of the best tests for con- sistency .is, after it has boiled for half an hour, to put a little on a saucer and place on the ice or in a coel place. Then, draw the finger through it and if it crinkles, then it is cooked sufficiently to set. Pour into hot sterilized jars 'and when set over night cover the tops with paraffin and set away in a dry cool place. Jam mixtures are very tempting and sometimes the most delicious taste can be secured by combining the various kinds of fruits. When this is done, the, same method is followed, of one pound of fuit to three-quarters of a pound of sugar and `cooked for the sine length of time. Rhubarb and strawberry mixture is delicious. A lovely conserve can be made by combining pineapple and strawberries, while raspberries, red currants and cherries are equally good. Another good conserve is made with'a combination -of pears, green gages and apples. \IOVING A WHOLE TOWN TO A NEW SITE The thriving little town of Hibbing is being bodily moved to a new site a mile away. Situated in the heart of the iron district of Minnesota and surrounded by huge chasms and -ore pits the town, must make way for ex- tensive mining operations by the United States Steel Corporation. There are valuable ore deposits under the buildings and streets. All frame buildings in good condition already have been transferred to the new site, arld brick buildings are now being inred. Structures that are in poor co edition are being torn down: About eighty dwellings, twelve frame build- ings and eight brick business blocks are to be. moved. Forty thousand yards of wood paving block will be taken up and laid down in the streets of the new location. Lamp posts, electric light poles and wires, ,hy- drats, fire alarm boxes and trees on the boulevards will all go from the old town to the new. The moving has been done by steam log 'rollers and tanks of the cater- pillar type. These seem to be the most satisfactory means, although andother small buildings garages have teen moved. with tractors. Among buildings erected by the United Staten. Steel Corporation in the new Iocationi r 5 hospitaland a '350 000 ere �y3 0,000 p $ , hotel. A new power plant, including, a municipal heating system, is nearly completed at an estimated cost of $1,000,000 and before many months a modern, town will have been made of the old mining settlement. HE MIGHT HAVE OWNED ALL REGINA To camp for one night on the actual site of one of the `most thriving cities of .the Canadian West; to have the opportunity to claim practically all the ground now occupied'by that city and then to , move away to another location only to see engineers come along a week later and locate the capital of the Province of, Saskatche- wan on the very ground upon which he had pitched his tent -such has, been one of the many experiences in the life of Captain William White who has recently been named as the temporary chairman of the Canadian Board of Commerce. Captain White was born in Hamil- ton and in early boyhood developed all the ambition esupposed to be char- acteristic of native sons of that city. f He went West wh the West Was . young and in the cou se of his travels came one evening t the site of the present city of Regina. It wasn't much of a sight at that, but the cap- tain was tired, so, pitching his tent he rolled himself in his blankets and ; slept. During the night the coyotes howled around the tent and the next morning, after a glance around the country, Captain White decided that any man 'who would select that spot JULY 23, 1920. HER CASE SEND HOPELESS' But "Fruit-a-tires"'Brought Health and Strength 29 ST. Rosa ST., MONTREAL. "' ger am writing you to tell you that I owe my tiff to "Fruit -a -rives". This medicine relieved Me when I had •-' given up hope of ever being well. I was a terrible sufferer from Dyspepsia -had suffered for years; and nothing I took did me any good. I read about "Fruit -a -tines" and tried them. After taking a.few boxes, of thiswonderful medicine made fromt fruit juices, I am now entirely well" Madame ROSINA F`OISIZ. 60e. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25e. At all dealers or send postpaid by Fruit-a-tivea Limited, Ottawa. a' as the site of a future city must have something wrong with his mental equipment. Consequently he moved on, although he had originally in- tended to take up land in that imme- diate vicinity having received a friendly tip that the . future queen city of the plains would be located there. 'Thirty miles or so' away he came to, a spot that pleased him and promptly took up a farm site. One week later Regina was born on the identical spot on which his tent had been pitched. In their wake came land speculators by the score 'and in a very few days there were signs of abundant life in the new town. Thus it was that the new chairman of the Board of Com- merce lost his greatest opportunity of becoming a western land king. In the course of his career Captain White has practised law in the North-west Territories and in British Columbia; also he- saw service in the Rjel rebellion when he held the rank of major. In the late war he went overseas and spent thirty -months in the service, retiring with the rank of captain, which he now holds. In politics Captain White is a Liberal Unionist; he repsesented *Regina in the North-west Council from 1883 to 1886, was five years in the Yukon, was made Crown prosecutor for Eastern Assiniboia from 1887 to 1897 and in 1890 he contested Revelstoke, B. C., but was defeated. . As secretary of the Board of Com- inerce he has done good work, and while his appointment to the chair- manship is recognized as being but temporary, it is generally felt that the functions of the Board will be well performed during his occupancy of the chief office. WHEN CANNING 'TRY THESE RECIPES 'From neo until the end of the summer the average housekeeper will 'consider - that she and her kitchen range must .endure close, companion- ship if a good larder set up and over- flowing with canned foods into be her happiness for the coining winter. "Eat what you can, and what you can't -can," used, in the day when everything was plentiful, to be a pop- ular saying, but now it is a case of "can what you can, 'and if there is any left, eat it." To many housekeepers the canning and jaming of fruit, may seem an ex- trevagance with sugar still up in the heights. But if you don't have can- ned fruit in your own cupboard, you may have to buy it during the win- ter when it will be more expensive than ever. So to do with less canned `fruit, should be the economical wornan'g idea in setting up her summer can- nery. As we have already given rules for correct canning, we will follow them . now with a few recipes of fruits and vegetables which will soon be plentiful enough to "put down." Canned Cherries. -Wash nice firm, ripe fruit. Remove pits. Pack in hot sterilized jars. Make a syrup 'of 1 cup gar; 1 cup water (to each 1 SUFFERED FIVE YEARS Finally Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Paris Ont. -"For five years I suf- fered from pains caused by displace- ment of my organs and in my back. All of this time I was unfit for work and was taking different medicines that I thought were good. I saw the advertise- ment in the papers of Lydia E. Pihk- ham's Vegetable Compound and took it faithfully. • I am now in perfect health and do all my own work. I recommend it to others, and give you permission to publish this letter in your little books and in the newspapers as a testimonial. " -Mrs. D. CAsSADY, Box 461, ParisOnt. Why women will continue to suffer so long is more than we can understand, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound! For forty years it has been the stand- ard remedy for female ills, and has re- stored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ail- ments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi- dential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will - be opened,- read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. quart.) Place rubbers land covers in position but do not seal tight, and rook in a rack in boiler, for 20 min- 1 totes. Boiling water in boiler must come three quarters up on jar. Cook sour cherries thirty minutes. Re- move move from boiler, tighten covers and when cool wrap in paper and keep in a cool place. Canned Red, Currants. -Wash cur- rents and drain, Pick from .the stems. Pack firmly in hot sterilized jars and fill with a syrup made of one cup sugar to three-quartes cup of water to a one -quart sealer. Wipe the rim of the jar with a clean dry cloth Cook in rack in boiler for 10 mina es and finish as for cherries. Canned Raspberries. -These ..are canned the same as red currants with the same portions of sugar and water to the quart jar, but cook in the boiler for just eight minutes. Oanned Blueberries. -Three-quar- ters cup sugar to % cup water for 1 quart sealer. Cook the same length of time as, for raspberries. Black- berries are canned in the same way. Canned Gooseberries. -One cup sugar to :i'4 cup water for 1 quart sealer. Continue same as other fruits but cook for 15 minutes. Canned Onions. -Peel small onions, blanch in boiling water for five min- utes (using cheesecloth or wire drain- er), then dip in cold water one min- ute. Pack in hot sterilized jars. Add one teaspoon salt to each quart jar and fill to overflowing with boiling water. Wipe rim with clean, dry cloth. Place sterilized rubber and cover in position but do not seal. Place jars in rack in boiling -water. Cook 20 minutes each day for three .succes- sive days. Seal tight, wrap in paper to keep from the light. • Canned Carrots, These are pre- pared in the same Way, allowing the same length of time for blanching and cooking. In cleaning it is well to use a stiff scrubbing brush to. remove the tender skin of the very young carrots. Canned Beets. -Cook small young tender beets in kettle for 15 to 20. minutes or until they skin easily. Plunge in cold water, remove skins and then pack in hot sterilized jars, adding one teaspoon salt and two tablespoons vinegar to each quart jar. Fill each jar to overflowing with. boil- ing water. Wipe the rim with a clean dry cloth. Place sterilized rubber and cover in position but do not seal Place jars in .rack in boiler in boiling water and cook for 30 minutes for one day only. Remove from. boiler, seal, etc. • Canned Beans. Wash and string fresh picked beans, leave whole or cut in inch pieces as tired. Blanch in bailing water in cheesecloth from two to five minutes. Plunge in cold water for -one minute and pack in hot'stdrilized.jars, using teaspoon salt to one quart sealer. Continue and cook as for carrots for three succes- sive days. Canned, Peas. -Shell fresh picked peas,and blanch for three minutes in boiling water. Dip in cold water one minute and then pack in hot jars. -To each quart and one teaspoon halt and one tablespoon lemon juice (to neu- tralize the acids.) Fill to overflow- ing with boiling water and proceed Incorporated in 1855 CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,000,000 Over 120 Branches The Mojsons Bank BUSINESS SERVICE Many of our customers who started in, a small way, have now a well established business through the assistance and co-operation of this Bank over a period of years. Open an account in this Bank -where your interest will `be faithfully looked after by experienced officers. The Manager is always accessible. BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield Sj. Marys 1£irkton Exeter Clinton Bengali Zurich AMIN improvements? Yet they are by no means all that stand to the credit of Lord Fisher. He devised the systeth of nucleus crews for war- ships, whereby a ship would always have its complement of brains aboard and could send its extra man power wherever it was needed, or take the crude, raw article and fit it into position instantly. But, perhaps the greatest stroke of all, whereby the strength of the British fleet was kept in the North Sea, was in carry- ing out Nelson's old maxim that your battleground should be your drill ground. Of course, the Entente with France was necessary before this revoluntionary change in naval strategy could be achieved, but the Entente might have been in exist- ence and the British fleet scattered all over the sevetn seas had the navy been without a man like Fisher. One does not like to imagine the Great War breaking out, the German navy at Kiel and the British ships stationed all over the Mediterranean, the China Sea, and the Pacific, as had been the immemorial; praCti e before Fisher became First Sea tori. We shall not weary our eas ly wearied readers -with a recital of the various posts held, by Lord Fisher, but shall merely mention that he was British delegate to the Peace Conference at The Hague in 1891, on which occasion, he made a speech that shocked most of his hearers. He said:* "There is no such thing as humane war. War should be made- as hellish and as direct''in effect as possible. There is no excuse for it otherwise. When you have to wring a chicken's neck, all you think about is wringing it quickly. You don't give the chicken inter- vals for rest and refreshment." This, however, does not imply any ap- proval of a policy . of `frightfulness." What F'sher thought of the submar- ine, years before It was supposed to have any great possibilities of de- structiveness, wasexpressed at the as for canned beans and carrots, ' same time. He said: If I catch any Stewed Gooseberries. -Stewed fresh in, tune of war, I'll string their gooseberries are delicious when pre- crews up to my yardarm." Neve -- pared in the following way: Combine theless, Fisher had an admiration three cupfuls of gooseberries, one and for Von Tirpitz and in 1916, on the one-fourth cupfuls of water, and one occasion of the German's -retirement, cupful of sugar. When soft, add two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch moisten- ed in two tablespoos of water. Cook five minutes longer, and it is ready to serve Serve hot or cold as de- sired, with cream, or use it sauce for cottage pudding. as a GREAT NAVAL GENIUS WAS LORD FISHER Anyone who desires to prove that Admiral John Arbuthnot Fisher won the Great War will find considerable data to assist himfand we think that any dispassionate investigator who examined all the evidence would con- clude that had Lord Fisher not lived, the British navy could -not have play- ed the decisive yart it did play. It is agreed that without the navy the war would soon have been lost, and un- doubtedly the British navy was more the creation of "Jacky" Fisher than of any other man. One ventures up- on more debatable ground whennex- pressing the opinion that the war would have been permitted to re- main First° Sea Lord, and that his counsel was worth the counsel of a half dozen Winston Churchills. we But the two men, both of powerful, dominating personality, fought, one as First Sea Lord and the other as Lord of the Admiralty. Fisher dropped out. So did Churchill, to be replaced by Balfour, but Fisher was not recalled. He was instead given a post as chairman of the Board of Naval Inventions, although there was a great popular demand that he should be reinstated, and . given the authority in the navy that Kitch- ener had in the army. Lord Fisher was one of the most picturesque characters the British navy has bad since Nelson. He be- gan without friend or influence, and by sheer force of intellect and will advanced to the highest position of all, the position which is the inspira- tion of every officer in the service. He grew up in a rough school, and learned to take and give hard knocks. One gathers that he was not an easy roan to work with; but he had sufficient brain power to have little need of collaboration, and some of the most important re- forms that he brought about *ere the result of struggles into which he entered single handed. The dread- nought was Fisher's idea; so was the battle cruiser. He did not in- vent the turbine engine, but it was due to his persistent advocacy that it was generally adopted in the navy. It was also his idea to use the water- tuble boiler; that is to say, to have the fire where the water was, and the water where the fire was, an improvement that made it possible to get up steam in a ship in, twenty minutes, instead of seven ,hours. To use oil as fuel weds also Fisher'% Idea. Did any other naval expert ever invent or adapt so many important wrote him this 'amazing letter: "Dear Old Tirps:-We are both in the same boat. What a time we've been colleagues, old boy! However, we did you in the eye over the battle cruisers, and I know you'se said you'll never forgive me for it when bang! wene the Blucher and Von Spee and all his host. Cheer up, old chap! Say, 'Resur- gam.' You're the one German sailor who understands war. Kill your en- emy without being Jkilled yourself. I don't blame youi for the submarine business. I'd have done the ' same myself, only our idiots in England wouldn't believe me when I told 'em. Well, so long. Yours till hell freezes, Fisher." A short time ago Lord Fisher is- sued his remitiscences which he called "Memories and Records," one of the most extraordinary books of the sort written in a, generation. On the whole it was an indiscretion, since it made the frankest comments and criticism on his contemporaries. Nevertheless, it served to give the public a complete picture of Fisher as a man who never explained,, never argued, and never apologized. 'He added: "These are the secrets _of a happy life." Lord Fisher was most bitterly attacked and belit led by the Northcliffe press, and his ee instalment after the quarrel with Churchill was blocked /by North- cliffe,a. fact that the British public will ave to weigh when reckning its indebtedness to Lord Northcliffe. We do not know that the attacks bothered Fisher very much. He knew that he was the father of the modern British navy, and he knew _that all the world admired the fruit of his mind. NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE Ecuador is planning an aerial mail service linking three cities and a rnili- tart' aviation school. Horse drawn, a machine has been invented that gathers loose stones from reads with dragging chains. The antennae masts at two new' Jap- anese radio stations consist of re- inforced concrete poles 660 feet high. An. attachment for holders of rolls of wrapping paper prints advertise- 1 ments on the paper as it is unrolled. I With a new kitchen utensil revolv- ing toothed knives cut stringy tissues in tough meat and make it 'more tender. Both the top and bottom brackets in a new carbon holder for arc lights in projecting lanterns can be adjusted horizontally as well as Xertically to maintain perfect alignment, An English fire department is test- ing a new fire escape by which per- sons are lowered in a- basket from a tower raised against a building in- stead of being carried down ladders. , To safeguard street cars should their poles slip off while crossing railroad tracks a wire guard has been invented that carries current and im- Hacking's Remedies sold parts it to the loose trolley wheels. Seaforth by E. UMBACH, Phut, Stomach Disorders There ere no remedies or med- icines so affective for the treatment for the various ;Stoanar. Disorders as Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy and Hacking's Kidney and Liver Pills. This we kno-w, .from the experience we have had from thew ,preparations and from the know- ledge we have of the axion and medicinal - effete of the different drugs and herbs that go into the compoisition of these two vonderful remedies: The Ae peti'te may be either exag- gerated, creverted, diminished or en- irely lost, they -e prep'arati,ons wilt restore it. The ser lition may be either Acute or ' `hron c or the Nerves supplying ;a : stomach may be defective or tl:ara may be Gas on. th Stomach due to FenoenItjation or position of Foods; no matter what the trouTe may Ibe this treat- ment will tone up t,ue organs of the entire system and bring track the: glorious good health. that you so much desire. Pain after Earn;;, Vomiting, Grad ual Lose of Flesh and Atrengh, Dyspepsia and Aneemia are some of the Sysn r4 oins :;f Slonrach Disorders tliat qui'0k:'i'y el. r l )kar when you use. Hackiug``c. tv '. -ckw,r `.o effect a cure, however re ,ji . i • as essential as thee a Y o� R :. ad anone wli �t ie* right �' has 'been 'Cline ,s • any length of time -Oki - - '(i to be cum' in a f.-1-, ;. , ; .. ;axes Zvi Hack. i:asr;': '':C.‘:41'.• Remedy and 3 n,' :. { and Liver PtJi , d 5 =. .. roe l trial. Be sure to ee, Hacking's Seaforth by Remedies are sold in: E. UMBACH, Phut., B. Granulated Eyelids,: Your Eyes inflamed by expo- sure taiga. But and bind' - dby Ey s LeksedJust Eye Comfort. At Your Druggists or by mail 60c per Bottle. For Beek of the Eye free write ha Muri■e Lye Remedy Co., C6icape. SINCE 1870 1!� ISJU STOPSCOUGH EV,IDENOE Of Success of Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy and Hacking's Kidney and Liver Pills Wm. Fullerton, R. R. 1, Listowel: "1 doe'tored for eight years far Stomach Trouble and Pains . al thrfougih my 'body. got no relief until I used 1-acking's Heart and Nerve Remedy which fixed use up all right. I used Hacking's Kidney and Liver Ps is along withthe Remedy.'' Mrs. H. Hinchcliffe, Wingham: was on the point of a complete Nervous Breakdown, could not sleep or plan my hoold duties, suffer- ed uffered with my Heart ane% my Nerves and (Doctors could do little for me. Atter taking the first box of Hack- ings Heart mid Nerve Re edy I improved so much in health that 1 continued with a 6 lbox treatment and am moble 'to return to my work with renewed vigor." - Mr. Richard Jones, Doon, Ont.: "I harve had Pains under my Heart for some time and tried till sorts of remedies ankl have been to four dif- ferent doctors and coly14 get no re- lief. 1 took one box of Hacking's Heart and Nerve remedy and feat very much better. r took another' box and have been able to work again. Before I took your remedy 1 could not work for weeks at a time, the pain was so great." These are out, a few of the many telpiimontals that come to us volun- tarily and I am sure that you too will get beneficial results if T -will but give thein a fair trial. Buy them from your dealer. lusiist on Hack- ing's. acking's. t are in HED II 1 July kteat; r nights; ones. I • cholera of preci The mo guard t they cot No othu nether Baby's the boa casiona 'will pre the tri' will bar by medi eents a Median THESI BANN Gly Liston the outs Loren; worth a wireless time of Imagi "live" .n through delivere, door! the boy Loren board when re the big at Arlir a more Roy All the lini signals, ports, 1 game 1 The handle there a to the out a li ed to eeive h Youn the ex, denser, Listowi B1 • Cana in the Cana lock al Cans lover X6,000 - Cam sat+ Ca fishers+ Can( of its Mon grain Ont as a titer, schen Can in the Bay Can kno fee Ca' eleva eapac Tor large: ance area. C. is th its e Ca scope Al gran Hay expo ee be sof Brea the met ()the wit can Ain the co thea Ito at tin ste wit sin. d 0