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The Huron Expositor, 1922-01-27, Page 6tri. Of t,1 erg Vetiver -5i Dental , fl London, t t • Yl�lhOtt Id, QFat ,. i ,t, , aIf W@dn day and Saturday.rorn oil :k $.110 p m. - 231442 D$. F. J. R. FORSTER eye Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in. Medicine, University of Taranto. Lata Assistant New York Opbtbgl- and ,Aural Institute, Moorefield's and Golden Square Throat Hee- ls, London, Eng. At office in Scott oek, over Umbach'a Drug Store leaseforth, third Wednesday in each . ',APS ant is able to tarry, alolld •tIM, rimae, the weight of its 'oWit body. Neither horse or Tian can Carry a 'Orden heavier than their own weight:, An unladen bee can' fly 40 miles en ltaur, while one laden with ;honey r..:a . E' Pa.ereth,,. 1'd i:eea an A;lour The bee is almost helpless, when it eietnee from its cell, but in two weeks it iefull erowu, and ran do a full' day's work.• Its first days are put is about the hive learning houseeeep- A French beekeeper made a• teat ' which satisfied him that the sense of direction is' more finely developed in the been than in the pigeon. He took a dozen pigeons and a dozen bees a- bout eight miles from his garden and there released them. To recognize the •bees he dusted them with flour, and had a friend stationed near the hive and well in view of the dove- cote. The first bee arrived home ex- actly 15 seconds before the first pigeon, and their companions follow- ed in due order. The robin is the last bird to go to bed at night. Aeuording to one who 'las made the etatter a study, ants as weather ?ruphets afford new testimony to tie cleverness of these small animals. When you go ou.t on a spring morn- ing and find the ants busily engaged in clearing out their nests and drag- ging the sand and bits of earth to the surface you may be sure that no natter how cloudy it is, there will be no rain that day, and the probabili- Gas are for several days of good weather. If however, you see the ants about the middle of a spring or summer afternoon hurrying back :o the nest, and a sentinel trotting out in every direction, looking up strag- glers and urging them to go 'home as soon as they can get there, you may figure on rain that afternoon ar night, When the last of the wanderers is found the picket hurries in, and the nest is securely sealed from the in- side to keep out the water. It is seldom that ants are taken by sur- prise by the approach of a shower. Tile banana and potato are almost identical in chemical composition, An East African tree flourishes a fibrous bark that weaves into excel- lent cloth. Scientists declare that city air con- tains fourteen times as many mi- crobes as coentry air. saositb from 11 a.m. to 8 pin. Waterloo Street South, Stratford. Pisan 267, Stratford. CONSULTING ENGINEERS James, Proctor & Redfern, Ltd. E. M. Proctor, 13.A.,Sc., Hanger 30 Toronto St.. Toronto, Caa. lrfdps, Pavement.. water,rock.,drw.r MO Systems, laclaaratere. Schools. Pathe Hatt, H.q.ing,. Factories. Arbi- trations. Lttisatioh. Our Fan rysoalb /*aid int d the mini w* save drat sil®b MERCHANTS CASUALTY 00. Specialists in Health and Accident Insurance. Policies liberal and unrestricted. Over $1,000,000 paid in losses. 6zoeptional opportunities for local Agents. 904 ROYAL BANK BLDG.. 1778-50 Toronto, Ont. LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Der minion Bank. Office in rear of the De- aatzdon Bank, Seaforth. Money to roan. w BEST & BEST Barsleters, Solicitors, Convey- aneers and Notaries Public, Etc. Office in the Edge Building, opposite The Expositor Office. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND HOLMES Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- iie. etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth en Monday of each ' week. Office in Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K,C., J. L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes. VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and bonorary 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 Paver a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. All orders left at the hotel will re- urdve prompt attention. Night calla 4wsived at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- .sry College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- dhIfnery Dentistry a specialty. Office end residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Goderich. ��ppaecp���list in Women's and Children's leases, reheamatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose and throat. Consulation free. Office above Umback'a Drug store, Seaforth, taesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W. HARD/ M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont, Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases of men and women. DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine cGilI University, Montreal; member .of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General 'Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, 'Hensel', Ontario. DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street' wast of the Methodist church, Seaforth Phone 46. Coroner for the County of 'rHbroa DR. C. MACKAY C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; 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 ia Chicago Clinical . School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, Eu' gland; University Hospital, Lon- d4t1, Engldnd..Ofrce--.Back of Do - Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, t calls answered from residence, street, Seaforth, AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN Idoeneed auctioneer for the counties lion and Perth. Correspondence eats for sale dates can be by, calling up phone 97, Seaforth a e Ezpoeftar Offie'e: Chrg€e mod - and eatisf!actibn guaranteed, ll T. L'CHLER bd eiiiitioneer, for the County BBideit•attended to in all Om ty!'Seven years* et. l)kitit/Oba and Sao tafake- f otlahle. l'hoae,44a. 1a!t This S*WS, D IY THE LONG ARM OF THIS R. N. W. M. P. Every little while the pages of the newspapers are brightened by the re- cital of some romance of the Far North that contains all the elements of imagination and seerns too won- derful to be true. Occasionally, as a grim variant, a tragedy of the frozen wilds intrudes itself upon the public. They read, comment, and forget. Hardly one in a thousand stops to give a thought to the men who are most vitally concerned in these outcroppings of _human nature on the edge of the Arctic—the Royal Northwest Mounted. •"^t it is to the Mounted Police t'har thi 1..se is in- variably entrusted os praise or blame, punishment or acquittal. Five Eskimos have been murdered as the result of an astounding tangle of romance, such as no ether part of the world could provide. An Eski- mo whose wife had 'bees "annexed" by a trader went to look for a wife whome the trader might marry in order that the Eskimo woman night return to him. ' He found such a wo- man, but as there was the trifling in- cubus of a husband already- existing', �e shot the latter, in order to make everything' plain sailing. He was himself shot, and after that it seems to have developed into a general kill - g all round culxnrinating in Rhe strangling of a poor little four-year- old girl who 'bad been orphaned un the proceedings. Now the Mounted Police are out for the entire gang, who have disappeared. It may be weeks, .it may be months, or it may be years, but the North- West Mounted will get those Eski- mos in the end. Men may die in the rigors of the hunt, others may suc- ceed those now in command, but the order has gone forth, and the North- West Mounted never fails. If one dies, another carries on .his mission until it is achieved and the indict- ment filled. The annual report from the Commissioner, filed every year at Ottawa, contains the material for a hundred novels more thrilling and more sensational' than any evolved by the ' imagination of the professional novelist. These men work in silence, amid the great silences of the frozen north. They are the visible and ipractical em- bodiment of the law, of that imiele- ment of justice which guarantees peace and equal rights to all under the British flag. Their arm is long, but untiring. It stretches forth to seize the evildoer, to right the wrong- ed, and to uphold peace. Meanwhile, those of us whose lives are cast in less strenuous places read the mere details of such a .tragedy, voice a brief comment, and 'go our way. The Mort}. -West Mounted .goes its way, too, but always in silence and alone. It is perhaps the most efficient, de- voted, and self-effacing .service the Eml=ire knows to -day. THE WOMAN DOCTOR IN INDIA A few pioneer women doctors years ago journeyed east to •India and there fought the good fight against pre- judiceand custom which has resulted in the establishment of a woman's medical service fox India, and inde- seribable-benoflt to the secluded Hin- du and and Mohammedan women of that country. It was in 1913 ,that the Women's Medical Service first came into existence. Under its aus- pices qualified women of either Brit- ish or •Indian nationality are selected for the Service and (posted as sur- geons, or physicians, to ,the Dnfferin Hospitals ,aE: over India. Nowadays women doctors who en- ter,* tridienAtavice.are selected by a Special enftStiee. The pay ti snot tit the ani state as that offered to atilt lot RAZ- is Gi r or to ' lie Attars normal breath etq *nucgpr, si'p,g+ In the Bron tuate.f% MOO of quiet itleepreoatathe g drug ..1.60.atyear dmfi, 'Prig,* free at'paxagencies orwriidt. 44s Ring W., Tern* , Sold by E. Umback. In Walterr by W. G. Neal. istY''t the i of thin: tesepidblen b 1 a Mks4: iatlxad of the # lir tun a Mere Men" Istirt}cai fs heir. .Slat doesnot pprematurely i 41 • from a petfeptly teeny sea l}tr .t. all retain the. ,hair on,•hil'h gna vn`7tia :bos4i}r for his ;entire }3 pie jest .as he neta}ns the nails 18 -Jit„` fingers and. tees, but the prevate of baldness, even in aeny Young Ms ;and ire enormous ins. crease has tfoinilier}zed the eye to such a degrb;;that one lis come to look upon the affection as the natural consequerree at...having, reached :mat- urity. Any forM4 the varieties of dand- ruff if persisting for -a nunilter'of years will inevitably lead to• the hoes of hair. • ” It may .he well to• recall that the growth of hair is first seen in fetal life about the third month, appearing as papillary elevations in the skin in which thehair growth is tq appear later. In atrophy of the hair cense,' on which baldness may depend, a similar phenomenon is observed. From this it .would seem that the old atrophied a to cecome regenerated must be ,tn the stage of embryo and con anti With the law of develop- ment. This- is. obviously so, for the young 'hairs that _emerge from the papillae are .light and downy and to 'all appearances resemble the hair on an infant's head. Later these hairs become stronger in growth and larger in calibre entil they approximate the texture and Color of the surrounding hairs. members of the men's Indy Medical Service. • On the other hand, the wo- men's work is not so strenuous, and they are provided with furnished quarters. A first class .passage to India is allowed, and, provided It does not interfere in any way with official duties, private practice is permitted after a Period -of from six months to two years in the country. These eiret months must he spent in gaining ex- perience of complaints and diseases peculiar to India and in learning the language. A month's privilege leave on full pay is granted yearly, and 2 months' leave on half pay for every year of service after three years' work. Salary varies according to the size of the hospital to which the medical woman is posted. her experience and administrative ability. The amount obtainable from private practice varies also, and may be anything fioni $500 to $5,000 a year. STIMULATE BULBS TO GROW NEW HAIR The idea of curing baldness. by in- jecting a serum under the akin to where it will stimulate the 'hair bulbs is set forth in the Indianapolis Medi- cal Journal by Dr. Edward Percy Robinson, of New York. This serum he usi�s iy e "complex product of the elements of the sebaceous glands of the scalp, which cholesterin in an oleaginous base." Dr. Rol inson writes that he :lis- csvered its effect upon the hair by accident ween treating a woman fir unsighty depressions on the region of the temples. After a series of experiment- lasting over a year, he began using it, and he now reports gratifying results, showing several photographs "before and after." After describing some specimen cases. Dr. Robinson goes on to ex• paned his theory of baldness: "In man," he says, "and in all ani n,els .having hair, the shedding of the hair is continuous. A hair abut to be cast cff becomes loosened from its papilla and the cortical portian breaks up into a brush -like nines. Phis old hair is then pushed out by the growth of a new hdir whish ar set from the region of the former oapilla. By a process of ,proliferation of the external root sheath a bud grows downward and from this bud a new heir with its sheaths and connective tissues is developed. "It must be evident that nature has provided a standard length to which a hair may attain, and have it fall when this length has been reach- ed, otherwise the animal would be smothered in its own 'hair. "It must have been further .pro- vided that the cell from which the hair had fallen should reproduce an- other hair, otherwise the animal would become bald. In• the wild and natural life of the animal such „'viiia;_ a a 0 ed is eo io th co su no an pr gr 1 ed he nes in we gr in Tie fir In THE TRAIL OF THE WHITE MULE There is a wooded section not far from the nation's capital which was once a favorite ground for the good old southern sport of coon hunting. So of e of the peeele thereabouts have been known to pay as high as $160 for a coon dog of good repu- tation. In tewse parts you .might slap a man's. child and get away with it, but if you kick his coon dog it is a case of fight or run. And now most of those expeneive ceon dogs are getting fat and stiff in the joints from lack of use, and .the coon hunters are all disgrun- sled. Tne reason is not any short- age ef coons, either. The reason is that every little branch and gully which the coons uee is now the `home of a moonshine still, and ityou .blun- der into a still suddenly and at night with a gun in yeur .hand you are more likely to .encounter a charge of In some sparsely settled sections not too far from the great thirsty cities there is almost a still in every bush. Not long ago a posse was formed to chase a murderer through the woods of Virginia, near Washington, and it is said that in sixteen miles of travel they uncover- ed seventy-seven stills. Usually the owners were not at hand. One of them was seen, however. He was sitting on a hilltop not far from his still. •,A large flock of turkey buz- zards was circling around over the still, attracted as buzzards are. by the odor of the mash, The man had a repeating lege-power rifle and he was shooting the buzzards as they flew over him in ordee that they might not betray the location. "And he wasn't missin' none, either," said a member of the posse in rgeounting the episode. The posse decided not to arrest the man. They couldn't prove .that he owned the still, anyway, The stills are multiplying at an astounding rate. No doubt ever since prohibition there &aye been many &tills, both for private supply and for commercial purposes, in all -parts of the United State_s, but the great development of this hrfant in- dustry is in the AliMalachisil Moun- tains and their immediate vicinity. As every reader of romance knows, it is in the mountain regions that the art of converting corn into liquor in secrecy has long been practiced. The mountain men all know bow to do it. Before probibition there was a little still hidden away sornewheee in al - meat every mountain neighborhood. Its owner, at some personal risk, saved perhaps 50 cents on each gal- lon of liquor he made by evading the revenue tax. At best he made a pre- carious living. Theriscanie prohibition and moon- shine suddenly jumped from 9, dollar or two a galeon to ten or twenty a gallon. The result was inevitable. Create an opportunity to make money and that opportunity will be esed to the full; nor will a, spice of danger in the least interfere with the proceeding, Especially in this true of the mottntain men. They are adventurous fellows, they are used to breaking laws where liquor is concerned, they are eecustomed to the use of fieearme and they .hav a sort of clan loyalty which makes it very hard for a stranger to work among them. Not only coon bunters, but many others Whose businees takes them into ,the spareely settlei sections!, have' found this out. The work of all setts of gOvernment field of- cers as been crippled by the sus - Vicious attitude. of the natives. Thus I the Biological Servey, in iM work of trapping predatory animals, finds that its first and most difficult task in a given region ie to convince the natives that the trappers are not looking for stills. The. stills seem to have first mul- tiplied within the moutain sections and then to have slowly crept down bito the ralley.e near the cities. There have always been a few moonshine Mills in the 'Bine Ridge .Mountaine near Wathington, but now there are tett in the woods 'along the Potomac River fot every one that was hidden in the,mountain ten Years ago. The men who operate tfitese eNlls are, for the meet part, of the isonntain type, b Itsseems 'to be literally true that the Mountaineer of notnanee lias come down FOUR his Wooded heiglots, bring. itig his . art 'of ,liquar-nukhist 'with And in comi ',down physically be . has 'One up IlYand 114 iall at lean hawitAitisedS secklets_man 8" 1/080/43 preepenous Allen With 0 loth There at qrmore as of p bile/1.1140V the Wi14 Ule It tR them, f,,Thett ate ban-lif'the'Aaltir' Salaglt t!eague to. a. Phan Those are, rials; of course, ,, tut- the police 2rheY intik*efiuei. ptlyt ntxeat b r tleg gerg, but in the wild, rural nets oarr hoods, where White Mule is made, the local' officers are seldom host 5e. In fact, it is not unusual to find the sheriff a part owner of a still and the local storekeeper" supplying the en - gar for a share of the Profit, and in some cases -ev i, the preacher has been known to partake of the labor" arid. the profits of the venture. Iti a word, the whole neighborhood . is pretty sure to, be in cahoots, and the way of- the stranger there is apt to be hard Perhaps next this infant industry swill 'have its lobby in, Washington and will co-operate with the Anti - Saloon. League for legislation to pre- vent theimportation of liquor. White Mule is one hundred per cent. Ameri- can, eo it mush be geed, WIT AND WISDOM - Now *kat China has an open door, she needs a bouncer.—Washington Post It was natural that Sir Lomer should Gouin to the new governisent. —Brantford Expositor. The Liberals were returned to power over three weeks ago, and• we 'haven't been annexed yet.—London Advertise r. Ring out, wild bells, one of the most depressing years in recent his- tory. Ring in, let us hope, a happier one.—Hamiltan Herald. Suffragists in Constantinoplelave formed several dubs. Besides riding, Princess Mary, of England, dearly loves dancing. -England has a large engineering works, managed entirely by Worneo. Kentucky has 46 women clergy- men and fourteen lawyers. The admission of women ' to the bar in the Province of Quebec is be- ing bitterly opposed. A wonsan of 25 has fewer chances of living to be 50 than a man of the same age. The women coolers who coal the ships in Japan carry their babies en their .back while working. One of the largest storage bon and moving van concerns in Ne York city is managed by a woman. Any mother giving birth to a chi on the island of Miyajima, Japan, exiled for 30 days. Women working in the fields o Tibet adjourn every half hour to in- dulge in some barley beer. ,Girl workers in London go in for athletic sports to a far greater extent than American iHolland has three women members of parliament, one in the first cham- ber and two in the second chamber. A number of women are seeking nominations as delegaees to *he corn- ing constitutional convention in Mis- Mrs. Mary Freed, fi;ret woman mag istrate in Atlantie Oily, N. J. shy; ehe cariry a gun when she take office. The first woman to be eleeted the Canadian Parliameat is Mis Agnes McPhail, daughter of a farm er at Ceyloe, Ontario. people inhabiting a section of Britin North Borneo, are dominated by wo- men priests. Mrs. Cora Van Norden Coppinger, claimed to Ise . the most deeorated women in the A. E. F., bas opened beauty salon in New York city. The wedding of Princess Mare 0 Englauel . will cost 01.50,000 and wil be the costliest of its kind since th t`. Money., at 3% Doubles itself in Money8 0 'Doubles at � Itself > an . l� r mom OMB MI OW Mg Man OMR MR mom mom me U your money ia now earnhtg only 8% why nos reetaveet it in a firrit.elase security where 'your littera% return win be 150 per eent. lucre than et. The 8% eenverdble debenturee ot The Mount Bend note) Company. lidnote8. oarsrtrilf bona of SO% cannon name. offer Buell lta 01190k - eiend for, descriptive circular. "RS King -Street West, Toronto. Deer Siren Please Spend me a copy of the circular detiokblug the 8% goavertilde Debentures of The Mount Royet Hotel Company, IWine& and oblige. Name In half Full address • ION SINN Mil INN Mal MN NMI Gill =NI anti Mo. reel If your oven is slow to heat you will find Egg -0 just as slow to act—its double action insures leavening with a slow or hot oven. EGG -0 Baking Powder ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER id and with sleds Saul baggage to any The usual contract of a Berlin stage favorite contains a clause to the ef- fect that ehe will reeeive a vacation of four weeks with full pay, and six Among the party of English aston- omer'S to obserle the total eclipse of the sun next 'September will be one woman, Mrs. 11. S. Joues, whose duty it will be, to watch the clock during the eolipise. Mrs. Mary E. Edvrards, an Ohio woman, who was the firat missionary sent out by the Congregational Wo- men of Ameriea, is still living in South Africa, at the age of 90 years and with a ,minel still keen and active. Aniong the etudents enrolled at the s University of Akre', Ohio, there are ten married women. One of these to women has four children, and an- other a son attendisg the engineer- ' ing school at the same university. wedding of King George. A proposition to admit women to the TOWIl Scientific school at th 'University of Pennsylvania has been voted down by the trustees. Mine. Van Karnebeck, wife ef the Netherlands delegate to the arms conference, comes from one of the oldest families of Dutch nobility. IMIne. Brea, the first woman doctor in France, has just died at the age of 86 in the workhouse after racti Since January tst, 1921, Mile. Hebe considered one of the most beautiful women in France, has received more than 1,700 (proposals of marriage. A scere of Irish peasant girls, all skilled needle vsorkers, will make the bridal lace outfit to be worn by Prin- cess Mary at her coming v7eddin FARMS FOR SALE r2000 FARM FOR SALE ON EASY terms, being Lot 8, Concesaion 2, Stan- ley, composed of 100 acres of first class land well drained and In good 'hate of cultivotion ; 1 12 tteri. fall wheat, acme eeeded to grass, remainder ploughed read, for spring seed - e ing. One4salf mile to school, good bank bonn, large Inwleanent house, hen house. Dig house and good dwelling house. For Purifier Partindaro wiTlY to JOHN B. HYDE, My - Den. 9822.2 The latest style among French wo- men is that of Saving their faces bronzed, the shades varying from a darp tan fo a beautiful soft apricot .More than 1,000,000 Oatholis wo- men. are enrolled for social services in eleven nationals twelve state, 91 diocesan and 990 local societies. Every year is leap year ht Himia, one of the little islands of the Greek archipelago, for the girls there ex- encise the right to propose to the ,Gladya Roy, Ong of the most daring of woman byers, is out to establish 41 record as a sky junsper and will at- tempt a 17,000 -toot .paranute leap from a 'plane. Twenty Kentucky Women ,listed their occupations in the last censor; ee draymen, teamsters and expeesernen, 65 as commercial. travellers and 182 ' as railroad laherien 'Rather than, lose the opportunity to secure the mueh eoveted I/ issued weeks 'at half pay, "in event of for excellency hi erthletics, fourteen .students retteltblioi!siitd ten sillier e diatemee 2% -beton. "Otiting to the Shol4tige-Of homes in ettograd, the erne thriving . capitol Russia, women how act as pontent pARMS FOR 'SALE. -100 ACRES, WEST . half Lot 82, east hat! LA 88 on the nth Conceseion of Mcgellop. On this land ther ' drilled well with windmill. water in house and barn. Lot 88, Concession 8, B roomed house, barn 60.470, driving and hen house ! and part of Lots 28 and 29 on (ith Conces- sion, a brick house, 8 rooms, aamrner kitchen ;41667dridilt:ird'el;'.7A1110 ;Me in good condi:on and will' sell any wart of them- Aordi to CHARLES J. DOLMAGE, IL It. No. I, Seaforth. Phone 4-287 2822,2 VAILM FOR, SALE. --LOT 18, CONCESSION • house, large bank barn, frame stables, hog and hen berme, drive berme, weber& five acres bush, geld of fall wheat. ell Dloutrldne done, three miles from Dublin, rural .malt and telephone. If not sold privately Were filet of Maroh, will be sold by,public auction et the clearing male of A. It. Oliver. Easy terms of payment F menthes to A. .tieLELLAS. or THODAS CAMERON, Auctioneer, Rex 154, Exeter. VIE EXECUTORS OF THE LATE -"ARUM. bald McGregor offer for. sale Lot 16, flash C'fn—Jr.irlsInslinand0 elute state or saltlentlean and there ars erected on the premises a good -frame duel; home. Also ;tbout ten acres of gwod wood bosh. The aroperty wenifeneed and well datirted and convenient to good markets, -churches and whoole. Far further particulars fortth. tint. apply to MISS =Or kre=.E001/.2700174ithe premises or ta 11. S. EATS, Sandbar, Sea - WARD -Felt SALIE—OADD OF TWO HON- ••' dyed sores tultoining NM Town of Sea - forth, sonosifsaly Wasted to all churches schoolt sad Oolludata There Is a comfort. able brick endears with • a sealant kitchen: born 100z56 .tirbft atone stabling underneath for 6 hos". 78 lona of cattle and 40 hew with steel: eliatinsom sad 'mew before an stook: inane eerier and feed earlier and tWo, content iejleit: Milan snot mid pli* town /legal. 'watered by a rook well end' Rtto h drafted. and 1:1 it high state oft oalleratkia. Ms. ttiOD HORSE AILMENTS of many kinds quickly remedied with DOUGLAS' EGYPTIAN LINIMENT STOPS BLEEDING INSTANTLY. PREVENTS BLOOD POISONING. CURES THRUSH, FISTULA. SPRAINS AND 11RITISES. The best ail around Uniraent for the stalde as well as for household use. KEEP IT RANDY. At all Dealers and DruggIsta. 'Manufactured only by DOUGLAS & CO., NAPANFX, Ont. TENDERS WANTED Tenders for 4,he construction of the jekn- Eton and Irvine Extension Drain. open and tile worgona, rec.sived till Saturday, February 4th, 1922, when tenders 'will be opened at the Carnegie Library- Nall, at 11 o'clock BM. Plans and epecification. may be see* at the Cierk'e office, Lat 86, Concession 8, Me- l/Holy 'Mori:Isidro. A marked cheque for um et ecangract price The lowest er else ten110, not neeesaarilY Parties 'tendering to idgn sal agreement • with security bo complete eontroct according to speenleation. Land dredge preferred. 2823-2 TORN MeNAII. McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COT. HEAD OFFICE--SEAPORTH, ONT. J. Connelly, Goderin - President Jae. Evans, Beechwood vice-president T. E. Hays, Seaforth - SeeY-Trans- Brucefield, phone 6 on 187, Seep/ilk; William Rinn, No. 2, SeaforthL Jahn Bennevries, Brodhagen: dames Evans, dock; Goo. MeCartney,-No. 8., Seaforth. Beeehwood,• Molivise, Clinton; des. Connolly. Ooderloh; D. IF. McGregor, No. 4 When' Robert Perris, Her - tie di