Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-06-24, Page 6le fil"N R. POESTER Ear, Nose and Throat in Medicine, University of .. Assistant New York Ophthal- LJe. d Aural Institute, Moorefield's mi Golden Square Throat Hos- 6, London, Eng At Mr. J. Ran- a Office, Seaforth, third Wednen- in each month from 11 a.m. to p.m. 58 Waterloo Street, South, tratford. Bhone 267, Stratford. s at, e ••• 7 xr'40s, saso , -04,0%!!)•$ ' •) „rs ,• 01 A, , CONSULTING ENGINEERS "James, Proctor & Redfern, Ltd. E. M. Proctor, B.A.,Sc., Manager 36 Toronto St_, Toronto, Can. Bridges. Pavement., Waterworks, Moral, age Systems. incinerators. Schools, Public Hans. Housing.. Ponterim. Aria - teatime, Litigation. Our Poco.-Ilnually paid out of the money wo save our silents MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO. Specialists in Health and Accident Insurance. Policies liberal and unrestricted. Over $1,000,000 paid in losses. Exceptional opportunities for local Agents. 904 ROYAL BANK BLDG, 2773-50 Toronto, Out. — JAMES McFADZEAN Agent for Hawick Mutual Insur- ance Company. Successor to John Harris, Walton. address BOX 1, BRUSSELS or PHONE 42. 2769x12 SUPERSTITIONS THAT WILL NOT DOWN. Superstitions in regard to the most familiar things, as 'well as the most unfamiliar, still linger, even in a scientific age like ours. What man of middle age cannot remember as a buy firmly believing that if he should touch a toad warts would grow on his fingers; that if he should drop a hair from a horae's tail into water it would becu,nie a water snake; that a cobweb would stop the bleeding of a wound; that a stiff with the sweat of a horse it will - - THOSE SUDDEN NOISES make a ve,aund which will not- stop • bleeding so long as life taste. The Do you start at sudden nolnes ? horse has a bone like a dog's tooth • Inst one or two doses of DR. MILES' in its heart. The man who wears NERVINE -81.20 will soothe the !nit - one of these about his nedk will never sled and everlitrained nerves. Cinema- . fe-el grief or sorrow. The tooth of a . yearling colt hung on the neck of a baby will assure painless teething. Sold in Seaforth by Guck's flesh, laid warm and raw B. UM1BACH, Plain., B. upon a snake bite, takes out the -- Gtare our use of raw poison. (o ini beef on a bad bruise.) An old cock, just before he dies, hots a few small, round, pale eggs; and if a poison snake should "sit or brood" on them breast bone in a gooey betokened a htg days, cockatrices _would be LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. cold winter? Every countryman be- h,An atched from them. aides. from the egg of an old cock, is a The cockatrice or basilisk, born heves some of these arid scores be- 1 'these superstitions are merely sur - fearsome creature. Ile slays snakes rivals of countless bel ., efs winch seem with his smell and his teeth, and slays i . Lc US 1110 Ll ridieuleus, but hi Ii all things that have life with liis ! acme once gravely accepted by every• J. M. BEST Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Ptreet. Seaforth. PROUDFOOT KTT.LORAN AND HOLMES • Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block. W Proudfoot, KC.. J. L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes. breath and his look. But he is over - body, even the most learned. HOW by the weasel, if the weasel farback they go ""1"`IY-k"ii 11".! 'has eaten of the herb rue. l'he iii»» his ''Natural y." writ atrit„ Ina d foot. tong and has V. lite Sputa. !Ian era, IS full of them. ten in the tirst century of the -Once our nation was full of cock - And all down the centuries, especi ' ati te," e rites eine old time chronicl- e:1y tic ough the tiftLeeit h and eix- te, -and iertam titan did destroy reer.th centuries, there erre ecir, s them by going up and down in glass, berks which gathered todl ad% Mitt,: way down Into cinthtct•Ilt11 it•II '°"" th°1r own faces, amt moil they Idund a pub- whereby their own shapes were SO re- VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ,tary 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 Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All orders left at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night calls received at the office , tilel - This Item is too much r ire. They (111.1 their Way ti hterature, it,l tirielsef,II!' of the '1,1,isturY f S",- ,pto.it.tes play, dottod t.ttroden ;tents Illtita to switirow, aitriougn eel'. examples of them. ;cc,. story confll'Illtst by the MOM. of Ilt•Mt art, .1 f L. w example,. drawn egy of lt.-l", which "was built in rem sixteent h and se, erecertrii ccri !!! year ••°`.2e, having the name of a tory tt,toks. „tto., t.t.t.rtttt.t tit.. besiltek slam by a knight covered with iii 'mist familiar things, and ,i fee. et `"'"I'l... reeerd to fabulous ,i', -al ures;: If, in the cat, the long hairs grow - The gnat breathes a; the ear, ;in I mg about the mouth be cut away it i.es its ...mirage. Ti, keep a cal in - toil At lilt. littitc, slid it is usually fitVcrisit. If you vat off ones of goats doors. and so it the neighbors' ,„stet was ,,,,y faithfully ,I. h,,,,. reecketis and birds, cut off its ears; Ti.c• bite of )1 -mit: is deadly for trees ells cant:- it squill re to feel drops of (,,,i15 die if they liek. honey. Thier ram fall into their earholies, and they laud's, burned, pounded kind RI.1 1.1cfcr to remain umber cover rather ii.th lieticicl ;Melt, will cure baldness than risk getting caught in a shower It• i1101.1.1 of a goat will scour rust), The breath and smell of a cat de - ''i better than a tile. It has an stroys the lungs, and people why , ..itet. mej.eeie, p„,,,e, .a meee,e sleep with Lets on their beds certainly still fall into consumption. (Compare rebind in garlic Lises it-' iiLigliel is' ti„t if it ii, 1ii,t1„.i1 .n g„at.:s milk I that current belief that cats will sue c distil t the breath of babies and so still, JOHNa GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calla promptly at - :tended to and charges moderate. Vet- e rinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. all poisons generally, but it must be taken out while the toad is alive, a very difficult process, if it is to be efficacious. The stone may be warn. in a ring, and it bear watching, loe it will always change color in the presence of poison. Turning from the animal kingdom to the vegetable, we find that three or four leaves taken in wine each morning make those lean who were fut. Beans cause foolish and dreadful dreams. Frequent use of beans dulls the wits. If you rub a filbert upon the head of a boy who has eyvs of different colors the eyes eet ill grow alike in color. It is also good for the bite of scorpions. Amber warns of lerisen, for if one dip it into poison it makes a great shirking and changes into divers col- ors like the rainbow, and that immedi- ately. The chamelapii lives on air. "If the chameleon at any time sees ser- pent taking the tot' tool sunning him- self under some el ti,'e hit climbeth up into that tree acid settleth himself directly aver the serpent, then out of his mouth he casti•th a thread like a spider, at the end whereof hungeth a drop of poison as bright as a"ny pearl which, lighting epee the serpent, kilt - et It immediately." There is no end ice such !natter, fur although truth to stranger than tic- . tion, fiction at least, is Inure various and plentiful. \days: the Young America a New York froin Liverpool to San Fran - else% 18,800 miles, In ninety-six days; the Euterpe of Rockland (Me.) -.from New York to Calcutta, 12,500 miles, in seventy-eight days; the Richard I3usteed of Boston from Sydney, N. S., to Calcutta, ,800 miles, in forty-two days, and the barque Ocean. Telegraph of Boston home from Callao, 9,970 , in fifty-eight days. 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. Consolation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays, S a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W. EARN. M.D.0 M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- airy diseases of men and women. ell ire, er its rnagni If tile cc, h,.,„i (1‘,. tbetil tee death.) SAILING RECoRDS BY FAST CLIPPERS • Much testimony has been offered et late to show t nal the New York Hipper ship Dreadnaught never made tic., it ealter oresages -,A toad is a IllallItcUS Y of vett cm I the null credited to her by eome writ If e low, and smells the ve•cctind frog," so an ancient writer infortned Cra—nine days, seventeen hours, fron ce eat- ands. hall usual e leeekens his reader, "I" the tight side Sandy Hook Lisiitship to Daunt's T. Tembarom (Continued from page 7) to turn his head and look; but he did not want to give himself away more entirely than was unavoidable, and, besides, instinct told him, that he might frighten Pearson, who looked frightened enough, in a neat and well. mannered way, already. Hullygee! how he wished he would go out of the rixn! But he did not. There were gently gliding footsteps of Pearson behind him, quiet movements which would have seemed stealthy if they had been a burglar's, soft removals of articles from one part of the room to another, delicate brushings, and almost noiseless fuldings. Now Pearson was near the bed, now he had opened a wardrobe, now he was looking into the steamer trunk, now he had stopped somewhere behind within a few yards of his chair. Why had he ceased moving? What was he looking at? What kept him quiet? Tembarom expected him to begin stirring mysteriously again; but he did not. Why did he not? There reigned in the room entire silence; no soft footfalls, no brushing, no folding. Was he doing nothing? Had he got hold of something which had given hint a fit? There had been no sound of a fall; but perhaps.even if en English valet had a fit, he'd have it so quietly and respectfully that wouldn't hear it. Tenibarom felt that lie must be looking at the back of his head, and he wondered what was the matter with it. Was his hair cut in a way so un -English that it haul paralyzed him? The back of Iii head began to creep under an investigation so prolonged. Nu round at all, no movement. _Tem- learom stealthily took nut hia watch -good old Waterbury he wasn't go- ing to part with -and began to watch the minute -hand. If nothing happened in three minutes he was ec ..ec,,c•ge cif weather In the fico I eicc'n r,..,,.. :, a ),,,,,,• ,i,,,1 ,,,,,,,, 6,,,IN,..: i.,_,(.1, 'Qu,,,,nsto,„ .,, list (her, is little a little st.ine whieth the Watt"' if it he 11-rott'n hiLltil, and the , esed of evidence or argunii•nt on that os •s•ii spit out cif its inocith if I! t esse! easilOt lie reheate,c1 unless toe cmestion, for Yee who know much of . .- ,..ee leaves wit') their poison. It is hipsal the ,.o. have ever believed :r, tattriFiClliy fright,,,A. fr,i, 5,,,,,,• In ti, is lirst removed. rOads.t infret ,..ar • th c teething eef ch.', ilia the famous chimer sailed that 0, a -1 cam t (Iron. cover safe to eat unwashed sage If t tcroad band be tieel tibccul thee leaveS ill consequence. If you put a ee•tirety gemt le and tame. , t here." in the ief the toad, he asserted, useful cf snakes and against DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; T.icentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident 'Medical staff at General Hospital. Montreal, 1914-1. , Office. 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56. Hensall, Ontario. fast. While thi y are at it, however, the sea sharps might :is well tell who knee et' a bcill he will bee nil e tccad Inii. a net S Part:hen oot anti bill"! ' did make the trans -A ti int le, 1)r it in a ccerntieldthere will be fie NON Oi•k-Liverpool ri,•i •ird, if Capt. Sant - T11:1- 3 u is cctin :ea best Phurtful tempests tit. i storms vets didn't. Downietisters are inclin- ball lc that thrusts its liedThere is a precious stone d us; to award the great distinction to neer, ect II water when .1 Mead the clipper, Red Jacket, built at Rock - a sit, pit or it t pear Iry alto: i';ittl against the bite i land, (Me.) in the fifties. The Red Jacket has a will attested record of thirteen days, one hour and twenty- tive minutes from Sandy Hook Light- Thip to Liverpool Pier head, and it is, not recalled that anything faster had been claimed fur a sailing vessel. It is related that the Collins line steamer, Which left New York a day in. two after the Red Jacket, arrived in Liverpool one Sunday afternoon mid brought the news that the Yankee clipper was jus: astern. Those were s000ting days in the clipper service, and there was as much interest in the performance of fast ships as there is now in any'aither time records, big money often la4ing, wagered on sailing contests. When the news spread a- long the Liverpool harbor front the people rushed in thousands tel the docks, and every pier was black with spectators awaiting the advent of the new sea racor. Outside the port tugs had offered to tow the clipper, but the ship was going so fast that they couldn't keep the hausers taut, and so had to give it up. The Red Jacket swept into the Mersey with every- thing drawing, presenting a spectacle that brought cheers front the assem- bled multitudes. Then, as tugs came alongside to dock her, the ship's mas- ter gave all hands a thrill they least expected -he ignored the tugs, and, throwing the Red Jacket up into the wind, actually backed her alongside the pier while the crew took in sail with a celerity that seemed like ma- gic to the spectators. The Red Jac kit was a ship of about 2,500 tons, old measurement, had a very long floor, like a Penobscot River lumber - man's batteau, and could carry a tre- mendous spread, and also point high. She carried as figurehead the image of the Indian Chief, Red Jacket, ar- tistically carved front a log of pump- kin pines She prospered finely in the clipper service, was later sold to Eng- lish account and sailed in the Austral - (20$69') ian trade, and at last accounts, after years of carrying lumber from the St. Lawrence to the United King- dom, was dismantled and used as a coal hulk at Malta. In some records the Dreadnought is e rolitett with a run of thirteen clay, and eight hours from New York to Liverpool, and it is well authen- ticated that she ran from Honolulu to New Bedford, . 13,470 miles, in eighty-two days. She was built at Newburyport, Hass., in 1858 by W•m. Currier and James T. Townsend to the order of Governor E. D. Morgan, Captain Samuels of Brooklyn-, her first master, and others. Her fame was as wide as the seas, and she soon acquired the name of a racer - "the wild ship of the Atlantic," sail- ors used to call her. She carried on her foresail a fiery red cross, by which she was easily identified at sea She was 200 feet between per - DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderirli street , east of the Methodist chursh.Sraforth ?hone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. Popular Stallions LORD M A NSF IELD Imp. 1215671 (16303/ Vol. 29, B. C.. S. B. Passed Enrolment NO. 1734 Form 1 Will stand for the improtement of stock this season, as follows: Monday.- Will leave he own stable. Beech- wood. and co to John Murray's. McKillop. . for noon'. thence to Allen to. . etos ion, for Imo hour ; then to his own stable . North he way of 6th con: 'sawn for night. Toestlay.--13: Peter liinclaaY.a. lull at George Vanderburg', for noon. then Dullestfor noon ; thence to Owen Flynn',. real, to Jam. McMillan',. Gth concession. fits night. Wednesday.- To Wm. Anderson O. t:oderieh Township, for night. WednestiaS.-• McKillop, for noon ; then to his own stable sy wry of Jewel's Corners and Renmiller to far night_ Thorsday.. -To Dominion liotel, • w. Did'', for noon i then by way of Maitland Dublin, for noon I teen to Joseph Atkinson's, ••.n. esion to Iltilmesville at Harry Sweet's. Hibbert. for night Friday.- 'r. Martin Cur- for nit -ht. Thursday. -11y way of 16th eon. tires, 11St miles east of Seaforth, for noon . cession to A . Ti".- neentra. for noon: then be then to hia own stable for night. Saturday.- way of /lupin Pond -to Perry & Cameron's To Jnmes Flannigan's. Logan, for noon ; then carriage Shop. Clinton. for night Friday.- - to his own stable, where he will remain until South by way of the London Road to his the following Monday morning. own ..table. Brucefield, for noon : then west Terms. -To insure a foal, $13. 11; miles and south Vi., miles to John James Evans. Proprietor end Manager, Mortlork*A f...• one hour : then to his own Beochwood, Ont.. stable for night. Satorday.- South 21s, mites, Pod east I', miles to Rolwrt Eirie's, for noon: COL. GRAHAM then by way of the Mill Road to his own (12103) APProtml Enrolment No. 1370 Form Al Will stand for the improvement of stock this season, as follows : Monday. May 0th. --At noon will leave his ,,inn stable in Egmondville and go north along the gravel road to Grieves' bridge, then west to Joseph McFarlane's. for night 'I oestlay. Will go west 03, milns to the }tinhorn Road i then nroth to Bert Steven - ,011.,1 for moon i then wiot 8.% miles and south I . i to Andrew Flynn., for night. 'vsoin.ilay.-- - Will proceed 1,, Mil. south Wit) stand for the improvement of stock nod toot t", mil. to Malrolm TitontgomerY'a this re,..In to follows : for noon : then east to his own stable for mii,,,,,,,. Win i,,,, hi, i„,,,, ,,,,,,iiie. Lot night Thursday. South 2., mi. es ; then most ., Concession 7, kt e l( Ilion. ' and proceed to two miles and rineshalf to Peter Mayor's. i.e forth at the Royal Hotel. for noon ; then for noon : then north live mile. to John eenth to John McElroy's. Tuckerstnith. for Lone's. for nieht. Friday. West to the night. Tuesday.---liast to .1.eph Nagle's, North Gravel Fond rind south to his own for noon : then to Dublin at the Dominion dddy, where he will remain until Monday Hotel for night. Wed n. -lay .. To Joseph ' • f non • then to W. Flannis INVOLUCRE 121451 (82966) Passed Enrolment No. aii4 Form travel the follow ing route this season: Monday. Will leave his own stable. Bruce fi- eldti p , anroceed west to Varna at Sher- lock Keys', for tutor:: then north into God, rich 'fleet:ship to the Baytield concession and ',sit to A. A. Welsh's, for night. Tuseilay.- ' ssahle for night. The above route will he enntinued through- out the season, health and weather per- mitting. Terms. -To insure, El 5.0n. William Berry. Proprietor. Passed Enrolment No. 5464 Form 1 Pure Bred Pei -Aaron Stallion MARSHALL GUEDO 8091 Terms to irsti re n foot- itt3 to...talon G for Dominick Reynolds, 'Proprietor end lilanerer• To Peter II for The Premium Clydesdale Stallion 'MACON'S SON • own 'tt his own stable for night. 'rirlay. To Henry Puerman's. Logan, for mein then to Z. Milton's. Int I. coneionion 1st_ Inean ft,, night Saturday To Andrew Patricks for noon ; thence to his men stable -there he will remain until the following Alondny ramming. Terms SI to insure, payable January 1. 11.21 All accidents to mares at risk of ov roe:, • J. Murray. Man.: Jon. Brewster. Prop, The Real Flavour of the genuine0GREEN" Vez,, is in every packet of -J... LAIN' GREEN TEA ' Superior to the best Japans, Gunpowder or Young Hyson. Sample Free—Salada, Toronto. going to turn round. One -two - three -and the silence made it seem fifteen. He returned his Waterbury to his pocket and tufned round. Pearson was not dead. He was 'standing quite still and resigned, waiting. It was his business to wait, not tel intrude or disturb, and having rut everything in order and done all he could do, he was waiting for fur- ther commands -in some suspense,. it must be admitted. "Hello!" exclaimed Tembarom, in- voluntarily. "Shall I get your bath ready, sir?" inquired Pearson. "Do you like it hut or cold, sir?" Tembarum drew a relieved breath. Ile hadn't dropped dead and he hadn't had a fit, and here 'was one of the things a man did when he valeted you -he got your bath ready. A hasty recollection of the much -used, paint- ameared tin bath on the fourth floor of Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house sprzn- up before hint, Everybody had to use it in turn, and you waited hours for the chance to make a dash into it. No one stood still and wait- ed fifteen minutes until you got good and ready to tell him he could go and turn on the water. Gee whizz! Being relieved himself, he relieved I Pearson -by telling him he might "fix it" fur him, and that he would have het water. "Very good, sir. Thank you, sir," said Pearson, and silently left the rQont. Then Tembarom got up from his chair and began to walk 'about rather restlessly. A new alarm seized him. Dal Pearson expect to wash him or ,1fipro Enrolment No 1272 Form At Terms to ireure S15. Motels, Wi'l leave his own stable. Bruce - rid nod west I.,the second coneeto.ion ci Stool., then n hrth to John Ilutchnwl's, fei noon then north and coot to Ed. Glenn. .1 . for r.ight. 1 ortiiinc Ito way of Bau- r oei•born tii Varna et the Temperanie Hotel DR. C. MACKAY is tho reehen line to Arthor illeChneheS 11 en by way of the Hayfield Road fie- night. WMITIP.411,. tv M.`ClyITIOrit'S side to,Rd to the Parr Line, then south to Wm. Lister', for noon I then Wtiltow Me- kimiaic•s. "Ind concession. of Stanley, fir the richt Thu rolot, To the Town Line, then I t Nipper; and smith to George Glenn's. for 1•011: then by way of the London Road to his own stable. Itrutefleld, for night. Friday c. Mackay honor greduete of Trio- :i,Y'and gold medallist of Trinity Medical C,011egV: member of the College of Physicians and Sur- , geons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, England. Office -Back of Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night calls answered from residence, Victoria street, Seaforth. AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties • 4/ Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates can be made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth or The Expositor Office. Charges mod. *rate and satisfaction guaranteed. R. T. LUKER Licensed auctioneer for the County Of OCOIOL Sales attended to in all of the conay. Seven years' ex- . sl in Manitoba and Baskatche- er'clis reasonable. Phone No. Exeter, Centralia P. 0, R. Orders left at 'Tlie ffuron- tor ViBee, Seaforth, promptly :1/4k • ese'd e. , se, e• 1"• eAS e '0) WassterstseyslIsites, Tr Geortte McCartney'', Mill Road. for noon: then to MrAtiarn't side and. anti north to the 2nd winewision H. R. S.. Toekersmith. then vest to Jam. Carnoehnn't, for night. Sat- urday. West by Tiroloiforit's bridge, then moth to the IS ill Road. to 111, own stable wilcoo Inc will remain until the followin' M, oil:, morning. It. Ti. Murdock. Proprietor and Manager. The Deitililie Premium Horne MAKWIR,t (Imp.) No. 10279 Passed Enrolment No, 3267 Form 1 Will stand for the improvement. of stock this senson an follows: .„ Monday. • Will leave tria own stable. Strafe. and go west to Richard Sellers's. for noon I south to the Cromarty Line, then rent to hia own stable for night. Tuesday.. Will leave II' own stable at noon and cm arotth to Bollantyne'a, ilsborne boundary. for niyht. Wednesday.- South to the Thames Rand and went to the Elirorille Line and south to Elimville to Joshua Johns'. for noon; then eolith and east to William Renck's, for night. Thorsday.-Snuth to the 10th conemsion and east three miles and north to William Thompson. Jr.'s, lot 6, Concession 9, for noon: then north to the Kirktm Line and west to Taylor'a Hotel, Kirkton, for night. Fridny.;--North tn Mount Pleasant at Janus, Pridham for noon : then town and 'north to John Hamilton's, for night. Sattirday.-North to the 7th conc.. Mon and west to the Centre Roadand nonth t hia own stable. whore he will remain annall_t he 'flittering Monday moraine. John ilivinsetorin enon 0.114retor land Manager. v7[(74 tiii)t EMPEROR McKINNEY [16531 Arnroved Enrolment No, 4073 Form Al The Standard Tired Trotting Stallion will amt for the improvement of stock this --n-en rat his own stable, Lot '8. Concession 1, Tockersmith. Mares from a distance will I,e met port nf the won. Terms. --To insure. S13.00. Charles Riley, Proprietor. The Parr Bred Clydesdale Stallion GOLDEN GUINEA (207061 Enrolment No, 1.271 Approved Form 1 Will stand for the improvement of stock thin nenson. an follows: Tuesday. Will leave his own stable. Huron Poach three miles west nf Senforth, and go In Commercial lintel. CI intnn, for noon; Item wav of lloron Road and Holroceville I., ()sear Tebet Fs. for night. Wednesday.- lty way of Msit land Concession to John Purst's, for noon then to Bentnillor and Huron Rood In Wilmot Herseken', for night Thnrolay..• -Ti the 7th eoncession. Goderich Township to Fred Pickgrd's, for noon then to William Voddri en, Telephone Road, for night. Friday. By way nf Telephone Road to Fred Penner's, for noon: then tn his own atable, 'Huron Road.- for night, where he will remain until the following Tuesday morning. C. W. Nott. Proprietor. Tho Pare Beal Clydesdale Stallion RANTIN ROBIN Na. 21665 Pawned Enrolment No. 5607 Form 1 Will stand for the improvement of Mock thin sermon at his own stable, (sot 24, eJra- remnion 4. MeKillop, except Saturday afters. noon from one to els o'clock, when he will be et the Royal Hotel Stables, Seaforth. Terms. --612 to Suture. Perry Smith. Proprietor and Managed. to stand round' and hand him soap and towels and things while he weal - ed himself. If it was supposed that you hadn't the strength to turn. the faucets yourself, it might be supposed you. didn't have the energy to use a flesh brush and towels. Did valeting in- clude a kind of shampoo all over? "I couldn't stand for that," he said. "I'd have to tell him there'd been no Turkish baths in mine, and I'm not trained up to them. When I've got on to this kind of thing a bit more, I'll make him understand what rni not in for; but, I don't want to scare the life out tif him right off. He looks like a gob(' little fellow." But Pearson's duties as valet did not apparently include giving him his bath by sheer physical force. He was deft, calin, amenable. He led Tembarom down the corridor to the bath -room, revealed to him stores of sumptuous bath -robes and towels, hot and cold water faucets, sprays, and tonic essences, lie forgot noth- ing and, having prepared all, mutely vanished and returned to the bed- room to wait -and gaze in troubled wonder at the speckled tweed cuta- way. There was an appalling pos- sibility -he was aware that he was entirely ignorant of American cus- toms --that tweed was the fashionable home evening wear in the States. Tembarom, returning. from his bath much refreshed after a warns plunge 'and a cold showtr, evidently felt that as a costume it was all that could be desired. (Continued next week.) pendiculars, 217 feet on deck, 40 feet beam. 26 deep depth of hold; gross tonnage, 1,943; net, 1,227. Strictly speaking, she was only a half clip- per, but her unusual beam gave her the ability to stand up under a press of sail that would send a full clipper plowing under. She was lost on July 4th, 1869, while on a voyage from Liverpool to San Francisco, be- ing piled up on Cape Penas, to the northeastward of Tierra del Fuego. At that time she was commanded by Captain Mayhew. The ship Andre* Jackson of Boa- - ton sailed from New York to San Francisco in eighty days and four hours; the Norman Light of Boston home from San Francisco in seventy-six days and eight hours; the North Wind of New :York from England to Port Philip head, Aus- tralia, 12,500 miles, in seventy-six . art COSt5 You NOthillg Usually you pay for comfort and style. But not in Goodyear Cord Tires. The comfort from resiliency of these fine tires is a bonus. On the basis oS. mileage alone they cost less to use. The savingin car -depreciation, the saving, in gasoline, the easier riding, are all clear, profit to you. Ask any motorist who uses Goodyear Cords if you want to know what real comfort is. Look over the cars which have been run thousands of miles on Goodyear Cords and note their good mechanical condition. Inquire regarding Goodyear Cord . Tire mileage for economy's sake. Note the tremendous in- crease in sales of these tires—because they cost less to use. Certainly truck -owners are not much influenced by comfort or looks in buying tires. But Goodyear C,ords dominate the pneumatic truck tire field. That's because both truck and tires cost less in the end. Com All-weather Tread Tires Are All -wheel Tires. Over 4,000 Goodyear Dealers in Canada. The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company of Canada, Limited CO TIRES e ' 6Ssikauktit,St5.. te1illtdkif Vs : ;St:sit. "A. 41*i *pti:Akiak, N`‘'-'1'4 A ,15.414+4'r14`.14""M`firi,404rel,g},r'Pe46(L, lAfskAti"it t 4t4e4t.144410, 4fIALAV/Y, , 4 fi /te,), ' sc 4/4