Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1922-09-29, Page 22: VTT ALL :.TGENERATED,„ .OTR ARE STRO NOLY ' 1V ADE,,TOUBLE1= T�•�a LARGE'' OPENING FOR ROITGH GTCOMPLETE f IPE TE $4 and 4,54 vas Al i6tieranf nsurt1Aii"dnar ':tlDgr01111 .112t1C.INCIIifiigAil ` f''Smmostt8C7C:mcisme. 1-4.se amsraltmmmumt emolowia minis move WIRE FENCING Wire Fencing is increasing in price every week, along with steel gouda of similar nature. We have a number of bundles of 8 -wire, even T \ spaced fence, in • roU to dispose of at spring price, 44c a rod, cash auto Strap Razors OMPLETE WITH STRAP AND 3 BLADES 1.00 Each O'Cedar Mops Make yours work with the fall mud easier. An O' CEDAR MOP does it, as illustrated, $1.25 4 oz. bottle O'Cedar Polish, 25c 12 oz. bottle O'Cedar Polish 50c Geo. A. Sills & Sons SPIRIN UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all 9 Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy 'Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin Is the trade rnark (registered In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono- aceticaeidestor of aallcylleneld. While It is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company will be stamped with their general trade mark, the "Bayer Croea." WESTERN IL, ITY THEWESTERN ONTARIO UNIVERSITY) LONDON To Every Father and Mother This is the era of progress. The call for trained men and women to carry forward in Medicine, Science, Engineering and Fine Arts is stronger than ever before. If you would help your children make the most of their lives you should give them the best education you can afford. A university education is talc -ir;L essential for our future leaders. A college stands at your door with open gates ready to give them complete courses in Medicine, Arts and Public Health, Admission is by Junior Matricula' tion except for special or nurses courses, and the fees are so low that any one may attend. a Western University degrees are universally recognized. For information apply to DR. 4i. P. R. NEViLLE Registrar London. Ontario 1f %S , el Ili I' 4 7 I, ark 1 t TJ gaabars 150 Practical Rims for :Uouliag Witb the Junior' Rog Begin With the Mother --Wean When Eight Weeks Old-.-A-Good Latiou Suggested — Winter ieeeding and Quarters. (Contributed by Ontario Department of Agriculture. Toronto ) Liberal feeding on a well-balanced ration salted to the needs of the sow prevtoua to the birth of the young Is very essential if the Ilttle pigs are to be worth rearing and the sow In condition to supply ample, milk for them. With the sow well' uourished and given opportunity for exercise, she Is the beat equipped individual to undertake the task of rearing a Utter. After the little pigs arrive, every- thing should be done for their com- fort and safety If they are to succeed as feeders. Clean, light pens; dry yard ur grass lot; abundant sunshine and a well fed mutber, usually mean success to the Ilttle pigs. When the young learn to feed at four weeks, `nuvisiu:i ahould be made whereby they can feed at a small trough In au enclosure away from the sow. Small quantities of sweet skimmilk to which wheat shorts have been mix- ed should be fed lo small quantities and often, feeding a little less than the pigs will actually take. Pigs that have been feeding from the trough for two weeks or more can be weaned without a very Serious setback. The lunger the pigs can remain with the ono the better it is for them, but ouch practice Is not always profitable, so It is usual to wean the pigs when tbvy are eight weeks old. Since pigs are hunting the ground surface or rooting for morsels of food, It is good pracliee 10 encourage such by scat- teriag plump grain on the Door of the pen or yard. This causes the pig to take the exercise necessary to thrift. Treatment at Weaning Age. When the pigs have reached the weaning age of eight weeks, they should be completely separated from the sow. It le better to remove the BOK' and leave the young pigs in the pen that they have been used to for a week, that their troubles may not ail come at once. When the pigs have quite forgotten their mother, an ideal home for them Is a colony house situated in an alfalfa, red clover, rape or blue grass pasture yard, Where will, r, 0 wallow hole and shade ary amply supplied. if the young pigs must be kept in the plg- gery.time everything should be done 1,1 provide dryne1., protection from ins,.rts, a Iia ing tttnperature, ample room, el.auliness, comfort, sunshine :Ind a ration suited to theft needs. Urero feeds should fora, a fair per- cefltuge. of the total ration for pigs whether fed as a soiling crop or as pasture. The following mixed grain ration has proven very satisfactory: Wheat middlings 25 pounds, shorts 26 pounds, finely ground oats 50 pounds, 011 cake meal 5 pounds, meat meal 3 pounds. Pigs eight weeks old will require a pound or more per day. The quantity required for each day should he set apart and soaked for twelve hours or more, using no more water than is required for the soak - Ing process. When ready to feed use five pounds of skimmilk to each pound of steal. Feed sweet skim - milk until the pigs are well weaned, then change to sour skimmilk and continue to use such as long as possible. Handling Them at Three Months. After the pigs are three months old, buttermilk can be used instead of skimmilk with equal advantage. A change in the grain ration is also desirable at this age, and le most easily provided by adding a more fattening grain to the mixture already suggested for the eight weeks' old pig. The following is very sat- isfactory: Corn or barley 26 pounds, shorts 60 pounds, wheat middlings 25 pounds, finely ground oats 50 pounds, oil cake meal 8 pounds. Soaking to soften and thereby in- crease digestibility ehould be prac- ticed. The corn or barley portions of the ration should be increased grad- ually after the fourth month has passed to give the pig an opportunity to fatten during the last two months of its life should it be designed for tee block. If intended for breeding purposes the feeding Is practically the same up to the fifth month. "The Intended for breeding purpose" stock should be developed on a ration carrying more bone and muscle form- ing material than the standard fat- tening rations. More alfalfa, red - clover, sweet clover, rape or blue grass should be used. Winter Needing. The success attained at pig feed- ing in the winter depends to a great- er extent upon the skill of the feeder than does summer feeding when wea- ther conditions are favorable. Com- fortable quarters which may be un- der the strawstack or in an elaborate pen, some place that is dry and will stay dry, is the first necessity. A well balanced ration suited to win- ter conditions in that it will supply in So far as possible something to take the place of grass and clover and "on the soil" conditions. Roots and sods are the most easily supplied substitutes. Room for exercise, and lnducement,to take such by scatter- ing whole grain in the litter or feed- ing ear corn are advised. The well supplied conditioner box is much more necessary during the winter than it is when the pigs are running on the land. Dampness Is the great trouble to overcome. In the modern piggery this is accomplished by abundant glass space in the roof and wall, and elevated platform for sleeting quar- ters, and ventilators to ch ry away damp foul air. The Pig will keep It- self cleaner than any other domeatio animal If given freedom to do so.— L. Stevenson, Sec., Dept. of Agricul- ture, Toronto. Mies Jennie Matzke of Depere: is the champion We beeper of Berme,. is k'. Okun hf �F9m! � �� y �,�� •� Rxpxopg vlrD dit ', we el* b t.4410 Fe erR,i;a0hayyly kgR►ed the ,tlm,#:ol ee*tS,e utentlinl req. ed,uot to vale. fest,party, with whom at that time they ali�uing; at their detention in risen ,would s ug Rellei ` rst� I F fu' "a'tIvesfl . opinion against t a Palrliatnelptary i the Fruit Medicine 1 were fighting a seriea of stiff electoral ba Indtgestlog,' Wdak atla or I Cottles,llins protested etrongly against partial digestion of foodDige, la oone of • a policy of tame surrender, declaring the most serious of present-day that he for one would not aubmf to complaints -.-•because it is responsible be taken, and would devote all his for. many serious troubles. •;energies to rousing a spirit of resist Those who suffer with Indigession, I once in the country. He proved as almost invariably are troubled with good as his word. Working almost single-handed he toured Ireland from end to end, infusing a new spirit into the Volunteers,, and eidlfufl . using the passions crated by the conscrip- tion' threat to enrol Sinn Fein re- cruits by tens of thousands: To this task Collins brought not only en- thusiasm and persuasiveness but or- ganizing gifts of a very rare kind. When at last it was decided to re- lease the German plot prisoners they found that Ireland, while still willing to give the policy of passive, resist- ance a trial, had now in reserve strongly mobilized forces which were determined that if passive methods THE CAREER OF A NATIONAL broke down the "activists" would have HERO, a chance of stepping into the breach. Michael Collins e•as born in 1891 in As was generally expected, Dublin the district of Roscarbery, West Cork, Castle's campaign of repression de - where his father held a small farm. stroyed the hope of success by peace - At an early age ho obtained an ap- ful agitation. Sinn Fein was declar- pointment as a boy -copyist in the ed an unlawful association; Dail Eire - British Civil Service, and took up his ann was suppressed and its members duties in London. His departure sent to gaol without charge or trial. from his native country did not mean Collins, who had' been returned for a loss of touch with its affairs. De- Cork constituency and appointed Dail barred from acticc participation in Minister of Finance, had a very nar- politics, Irishmen in the Civil Service row escape in one of the raids made had thrown themselves with extra- with the object of seizing Sinn Fein's warchest. The house inlar- or•dinary enthusiawn into the work of court Street in which contributionto the Gaelic League, which was then the Republican Loan were dealt with an organization aL,ulutelyy_ outside was surrounded by military and po- politica, and on this accourif was look- lice, but Collins by a break -neck dash ed upon with little favor by the lead- across the troops dodged his pursuers ers of the Nowhere was sthih t v,liltkhusiasmyst ung -party. and managed to get clbar away. er than amongst London Irishmen, The guerilla operations which fol - and Collins becanu a member of the lowed the failure of the orthodox Sinn League, attended language classes, Fein policy were made possible large - took part in debate., was a popular ly by the exertions of Collins in re- figure at ceilidhs, :,nd won distinction modelling the Volunteers. Contrary by his prowess a= ;t hurler. to the popular idea both in Ireland A man of his ;u•tive and enterpris- and England, Collins did not take ing mind could nut submit easily to much part in the actual fighting, the red -tape routine prescribed for though no man ran greater risks. He minor officials in Government depart- was made Chief of the Intelligene- ments. After a =hurt experience Col- Department, which in his hands be- lins resigned from the Civil Service came the most formidable weapon the Republicans possessed. The most se - and obtained a I,e;t in a London crit orders of G.H.Q. and Dublin stockbroker's offs. where he laid the Castle were not safe from Sin Fein foundation of theknowledge of fin- agents, and time after time their ela- anec which brout•Itt him so rapidly borate spy system enabled the I.R.A., to the front iner ly days of Dail though confronted,with forces super - Eireann. No l lenger restrained by for in numbers and infinitely better official iti,nr hr began to take equipped, to concentrate in over-! up politicsties in earnest. Like most young Irishmen elle had been influ- enced by the Ga. lie League, he sup- ported the Sfm: Fein movement, which at that pound aimed at coun- tering British policy in Ireland by a scheme of passive resistance. But he also came under the spell of the Fen- ian tradition and was admitted a member of the Irish Republican Bro- therhood, an organization which, af- ter remaining moribund for more than a generation, had sprung again into life as a result of the arming of the Ulster Volunteers. Collins returned to Ireland soon af- ter the declaration of war with Ger- many. In his letter of resignation he is said to have informed his employ- ers that he was going to fight for his country, an announcement hailed by them as an encouraging proof of Irish solidarity with Great Britain. But the army in which Collins en- rolled was that of the Irish Volun- teers, who had broken with Redmond, and under the leadership of Padraic Pearse were laying their plans for the Easter rebellion of 1916. Collins fought in the rising as a private, es- caped uninjured, and was shipped off as a prisoner to Frongoch. He was released in 1917, and on returning to Dublin was appointed secretary of the Prisoners' Dependents Fund, a post in which his remarkable organiz- ing powers speedily attracted the at- tention of the Sinn Fein leaders. His real chance came with the decision of the Government to break down opposition to the Irish Conscription ,Act of 1918 by the wholesale arrest Rheumatism, Palpitation of the Heart. Sleeplessness and e.,cessive Nervousness, "Fruit-a-tives" will always relieve Indigestion hem .° these tablets strengthen the -40mach muscles, increase the flow of the digestive juices and correct I'. esti pation,witioh usually aocompan•• , I ndigestion. 50c a box, 6 -for 1.'2.50, trial size 25e. At dealer's or v•"1 postpaid by Fruit -a -lives Limi.ed, Ottawa. MOTHER SAVES DAUGHTER'S HEALTH Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound Helped Both Mother and Daughter Lumsden, Saskatchewan—"My mother had taken Lydia E. Plnk- bam's Vegetable Compound and when I needed something for my periods I took it and got good results. I recom- mend it to women with any female troubles and I know other women who have been helped by ft and do the same."—MRS. MAX RETZER, Lums- den, Saekateltewaa. Many cases like this come to our notice, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compeund 1s often recommended by the mother and' the grandmother too, for bear in mind, it has been helping women for nearly fifty years. Women Tell Each Other In your own neighborhood are women who know the value of this wonderful medicine and they talk to ' one another about it, So if you afe ,troubled with 'mina and irregulari- ties, a tired feeling, nervous and sleepless spells, or have other annoy- ing symptoms caused by some female trouble, you have only to ask some neighbor what elle thinks of your taking Lydia 11. Pfnkbam's Vegetable Compound whelming strength at the points se- lected by them for attack. The British authorities soon became aware of the part Collins was play- ing and made desperate efforts to capture him. Rewards running up to £10,000 were offered for informa- tion; scores of people were arrested on the strength of some fancied re- semblance; on the rumour that he had been seen in a certain Dublin street; whole districts were hedged in by barbed wire and military cor- dons and their hundreds of tenement houses ransacked from attic to cel- lar. He was cornered on paper as often as De Wet; he was reported killed in an ambush near his native place; one day he had fled to America as a fugitive, the next he was sup- posed to have crossed to London to carry the war into the enemy's ter- ritory. Yet with the hunt in full cry Dubliners who knew him saw Collins strolling about the streets with as unconcerned an air as if the Auxil- iaries dashing past in motors were mere harmless joy-riders. To Irishmen outside the I.R.A. Col- lins was nearly as much of a mystery as he was to the British Cabinet. When at last Mr. Lloyd George pro- posed a truce in July, 1921, and mem- bers of Dail Eireann were free to speak in public again, Collins hurried down to his constituents in Armagh, and, to the amazement of those who had assumed from his record that he was the most irreconcilable of irre- concilables, instead of a waving flag of defiance he made an appeal for unity and goodwill between North and South, an appeal which staggered even the Orange press by its modera- tion. In the controversy that pre- ceded the Downing Street Conference Collins fought hard and successfully to keep Mr. De Valera from wrecking the hope of a settlement, and his se- lection as one of the plenipotentiaries was .8 guarantee that reason would not be sacrificed to passion or pree judice. But even his admirers were not prepared for the skill and re- sourcefulness shown by him in the complicated negotiations. British Ministers, who had accepted Dublin Castle's theory of Collins as the blood thirsty chief of a murder gang, found themselves confronted with a severely practical politician, tenacious in his demands, yet with a clear recognition of exactly how far it was possible to go. The strongest tribute to the Work of Collins as a negotiator camel from his bitterest opponents. Ac- cording to Mr. De Valera's followers, had he chosen to fight for Document No. 2, British Ministers must have conceded the principle of "'external association." When the Irregulars, by their con- tinued hold upon the Dublin Four Courts, and at last by their seizure of a Free State officer •of high rank, showed themselves determined to re- sist the authority of the State, Col- lins was not for a moment in doubt that the State must use all legitimate means to enforce obedience. It was unfortunate that • Mr, C'lfalichill e speech came at a moment when Col- lie and his colleagues bad already decided to deal with the Fenr Courts garrison. It gave a semblance of truth to the propaganda which was at once'put on saying that Collins was jinnping throng's the hoop on the English word Sf command. There can be no doubt that the decision to 1 the s a 4n,.11 GOld lia: th "As sokkais these';active Sure wer+,a -he',g there' was We, sprea4?.;feeling hi- Irelapll that liniVahould-peon:Moily'take control 0' operations / and it was with a seise of relief that Ireland: heard not malty wgeke ago that the country was, in effect, handed over to the army, with Collins afi Commaander-in-Chief, BATTLE OF.MARNE WAS JOFFRE'S TRIUMPH Field ,Marshal French in his book "1914", oat's that '!as regards the tactical aspect of the ;;Battle" of the Marna the name•tof Soffre~will descend to posterity with that battle as one of the greatest military commanders in history." For the British army, its commander maintains that "our rapid passages of the various river lines in face of great opposition and our unexpected appearance on the lines of retreat of the forces oppos- ing the Fifth and Sixth -(French) Armies were practically decisive of the result." The expression "tactical aspect of the battle" seems inade- quate, for the strategy was Joffre's, conceived during the advance of the enemy toward Paris. The glory of the victory has been awarded by well- meaning, but ill-informed critics to Foch or to Gallieni, the Governor of Paris. In an article in The Nine- teenth Century, condensed by the New York Times, Major-General Sir Fred- erick Maurice undertakes to show that Marshall, Joffre not only conceived the plan of throwing back the Ger- mans and breaking up their offensive, but himself executed it by personal direction of the French armies and the British Expeditionary Forces. General Maurice says: "For years the story of Foch's counter -stroke which hurled the Prussian Guard into the -marshes of St. Gond held the field, and was regarded as the explanation of the victory, while the important part played by the British Army was for years almost ignored * * * We now know that this counter-attack, which had been ordered by Foch, never took place at all, because the enemy was in retreat before it could begin." Foch's great service was his de- fence in the centre against heavy odds, "while victory was won on the left flank." The legend of Gallieni's attacking the exposed German flan): with the Sixth Army and forcing the hand of Joffre, who had medi- tated retiring behind the Seine, even if Paris had to be abandoned to its fate, is shattered by Sir Frederick Maurice. The "new groupe" men- tioned in Joffre's order of Aug. 26, to "be formed in the neighborhood of Amiens between August 27 and September 2," was Manoury's Sixth Army. General Maurice says that it was "to serve the double purpose of covering the exposed flank of the British Army and of taking part in a general offensive against the German centre and right." The swiftness of the enemy's ad- vance compelled Joffre to postpone his counter, -offensive. Barely had the Sixth Army assembled about Montdidier when it was called upon to hold up Von Kluek's onset. The following day it was in retreat with the other French armies. At this time Joffre quickly formed a new command on the right of Lanrezac's Fifth Army. This force, designated as the Ninth Army and taken from the left of the Fourth Army, was turned over to the ever -ready Foch. During the general retreat the Brit- ish commander was urged to fill a gap between the Fifth and Sixth Armies, but French, who had lost faith in the tactics of his ally, con- tinued to fall back in the direction of the Marne, where he believed the stand should be made. "French writers," says General Maurice, "comment in none too Mee terms on this stage of the British retreat, but make no mention of the antece- dent circumstances and little of the events which followed immediately." At Mons, he says, "we saved the French left from annihilation, and had ourselves been put in a posi- tion of the utmost peril." Within a few days after the British com- mander acted upon his own initi- ative, Von Kluck threw the whole of his cavalry upon Lanrezac's flank and rear. French then came to his relief, repulsed the Fourth German Cavalry Division, which lost all its guns and stopped in their tracks the enemy Second and Fifth Divisions. "He (Lanrezac)," says General Mau- hice, "was saved a seeond time by the British Army." Joffre still had to bide his time until the Fifth Army could be fought and manoeuvred out of danger. That did not happen un- til the Marne was put between it and the enemy. Then Lanrezac was relieved of his command, d'Esperey succeeding him. "Joffre," declares the British ob- server, "had received information before Gallieni of Von Kluck'a march south-eastward and was wait- ing his chance to profit by it." The day Von Kluck's army crossed the front. of Von Bulow's right, checking his advance, "Eh bien, Messieurs!" said the Marshal to his staff "nous nous battrons sur la' -Marne." In the evening he made his disposi- tiops and issued his famous general order. "Gallieni," we are told, "played his part as an important subordinate commander ably and manfully, but he knew clothing of the situation of the Fifth Army or of the position on the front as a whole." In conclusion Gen. Maurice. nays: "Joffre's conduct of the campaign from August 28rd, when the long pre- pared - French plan of campaign came tumbling down in ruins, to September 10th,, when -the "miracle of the Marne was conaurantated, is as fine an huniple of courageous and far-sighted leadership as is, •to be found In hietery." 041. tr Qr ,t,, Mee, , ,Y - Stagy ��ig doth ,clPt. ? OWN, Buda', Wedpehda+, gild l altuMay, from elle 'tot 881442 DR. F.'3.. K. FORSTER .Eye, Ear. Noae`,atld.Throat Graduate in fl'edteinit, Unireraity of - Toronto. . Late' asaistant New York •Ophthal- mei and Aural Institute, bloornileld'e. Eye and Golden Square Throat Rim, Intel's, London, Eng. At CommerelaI. Hotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday each: ,mouth from 11 a.m, to 8m. 58 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford:. Phone 287, Stratford. . CONSULTING ENGINEERS I James, Proctor & Redfern Limited. e6 Toronto St. Toronto, Can, Bridges: Paa+ements, Watorworke, Sewer- age Systems, incinerators, Potteries. Arbitration, Litigation. Phone Adel. 1094. Cable: "JPROO" Toronto OUR FEES—Ueoelly cold sat of rho money we save oar clients. MERCHANTS CASULTY 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., 1778-50 Toronto, Ont. LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and. rotary Public. Solicitor for the Do- tdnion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- ainion Bank, Seaforth. Money to can. BEST & BEST Barristers, • Solicitors, Convey- ancers and Notaries Public, Etc.. Office in the Edge Building, opposite l'he'Expositor Office. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND , HOLMES Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub - etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth •n Monday of each week. Office in. Odd Block. W. Proudfoot, H.0., J. L Killoran, B. E. Holmen. VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of " ill• Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of an domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk fever a specialty. Office opposite - Dick's Hotel, Main Street. Seaforth. Ul orders left at the hotel will re calve prompt attention. Night calls waived at the offide JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at - ended to and charges moderate, Vet- trfnary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich atreet, one loor east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea- "rth. MEDICAL C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., 'r;tecialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases of men and women. DR. 3, W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, idcGill University, Montreal; member if College of Pbysicians andSurgeon* tI Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General. Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15. Office, 21 doors east of Post Office. Phone 55. Hensall, Ontario. DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist churok,SeaforA ?bone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. 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 .01 University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate coarses be 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 cguatlsa of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates esn bo made by calling up phone 97, Seeiforth or The Expositor Office. Chargesraod- ,rate and satisfaction 'guaranteed. • R.' T. LUKER ` Licensed auctioneer for the Coolly. ex Huron. Sales attended to it all Parts of the ednnty:.Sevimi ars' ex - parlance in Manitoba and kaiaks. el -Te arweo fraatlale.Plt 0,, 1. t o. r: 1." ifs Tett at The Herm Rspi»itor omen, Seaforbh, promptly •