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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1925-03-20, Page 6I 11 �, , � �� ''I . I :,:` 1.� " , " .1 I I , 1 7 � , illi " ] 1 ��, "', I :i."�,""", —` ­ .�i.,�T ��­ �� , ", Q, I I 1:��,­ I 11 " I 1-111. ..., �� . 1�:%,� 7� � , , ", ,� ' � :, :� UX V.4i IL' . ­ I L' �� 11 ­ ­ I ,� �� �­­ I j , 't�,­­',,,�!�,';,' ' - 'I �, �:, ,,, '' I � : , L N �� I I.. '. . -1 ,,, . � , , " -t � l�' � '­ � — L� 6'a . I 1: In - "p . I , I .U� *, Ur" N . I I � . I I 1. I'll, j,; , 9 , 11 I ,� � ,,, - : , . � ,,, � P � I I , . oiio � , A"14.: 'NApbm" Wv-004 Q9 40M . ­ . � I, , . � OT001T.T. � 1 4- " , I I 11 , "" , I 144%, 144MA4 2s " I . :,, ,14 '* . N, -Npw 6* amim, V - Ai Mr 1;1=1,� 11, I- � OA j*qpaij*t�ro�t ]Kos- �. I AW"m % . *�: �� - I , V +4ng At CoWrAordial 4019� Nha� i wonday .10 ,4��,,,�% " V 0wo I IICI , a,�n- to � p4m. �, sw 11 , , %��, Pov ­ �4'44 ,=- Wrt Mouth, Stmtford. MCI ,'0137,- Stratford, (Cc �;,,­�. . � ,,,'.' , , . �.,­��, �k 0 C,"Pa�." V.S. M-11.1 � ,,, � . I ��.­ .1 1. , . . ., -� I—- I I 1 4-1. . I ;f,.�61 , - ftate of GuUrIO . Veterinary dal ..... 11, : .1 U.ni r§ity of Toronto. .4111 gAv w ot domestic, animal$ treated � 11.,@q " As 11, '. " the most modern priuciLoleS. we ` . � . I I 0 � - I Vs ro�souable.' Day or nigbt fee ­ I � q. pro*,ptl)Vtt@o4ed to. Office on to , . ­ I'� I ,� I , opposite Town � . I gfj4it, onsall Wk , I 1. phone 116. 11 J.... I , I .. . - — cr � fe . . LEGAL du fhone No. 91 in � JOHN J. HUGGARD tio I Barrister, Solicitor� III � Notary Public, Etc. an ,Beattie Block - - Seeforth, Out. co . - : co 41 - R. S. BAYS be I �' Barrister, Solicitor, Co en � nveyancer . 1aid. Notary Public. Solicitor for the T ADomlnion-Bank. Office in rear of the " th Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Money to , I � a I loan. . -----� pr I 9EST & BEST ]a . Barristers, Solicitors, Conve7an- m bors and Notaries Public, Etc. Office p in the Edge Building, opposite The co Expositor Office. b — Vk . p JAMES L. KILLORAN b * s Barrister, Notary Public, etc. Money c to loan. In Seaforth on Monday Of , each week. office ,over Keating's c Drug Store. 9 . I . t VETERINARY t I I L . F. HARBURN, V. S. I . 1i Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- s ary College, and.honorary member of c the Medical Association of the Ontario w Veterinary. College. Treats diseases of 0 all domestic animals by the most mod- ') ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. AR orders left at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night calls P received at the office. I — I - JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. t o Honor gradu&te of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic t animals treated. Calls promptly at- t tended to and charges moderate. Vet- c erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich Street, one i . door east of Dr. Mackay's Office, Sea- a . forth. . a . MEDICAL t DR. J. W. PECK a . Graduate -of Faculty of Medicine c McGill University, Montreal; member' a 2�af College of Physicians and Surgeons f­of­Od6rio; Licentiate of Medical I Council of Canada; ilost-Graduate Member of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15. s Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hensall, Ontario. — � DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY 0 BayfieldL I I Graduate Dublin Tiniversity, Ire- land. Late Extern Assistant Master Rotunda Hospital for Women and Children, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 2'P.m. 2866-26 -I . DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence Goderich Street, east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. . DR. C. MACKAY I 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. r DR. H. HUGH ROSS . . Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of I . Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; .Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, I England-, University Hospital', Lon- doni, England. Office --Back of Do- . vainion Bank, Seafortl- Phone NO . r. Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Street, Seaforth. 6 AUCTIONEERS OSCAR W. REED Licensed auctioneer for the Coun- ties of Perth and Huron. Graduate of Jones' School of Auctioneering. Chicago. Charges moderate, and sat- isfaction guaranteed. Write or wire Oscar W. Reed, Staffa, Ont. Phone 11-2. 2965x52 - THOMASBROWN I Licensed auctioneer f67T the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence � arrangements for sale dates can be . made by 4iallivg up phone 97, Seaforth, . or The Expositor Office Charges mod- - .�,,,,,,,!,,,,,,,;�:,�LF,�;'."!��l�, ,"I Ili I I - 11 ,,�­!,�z . i � -­ . . i ,� , , "R111,N, ,� I � ­, - ,� .. -, " '� �. , � " I ..... - F 1," "" .. , . '�, ­,� " N 11 P -�;,�,,,,,00,�O!-"I, , , , ­�- 11=1 I',, � m l�, , , I . - . �t. , . . , � ­�,;.',,'��:�-,i,�, . , �� i , . . 4 . 1 �� 111111`01i� , it. , t i , i FOW4,41 ""I 11 i.1"44 I , I X , sxrcm�1000' 1,1- i ;; �,# , �"! "I . . '� , I -: I ". " , : -� I 1� ; IX � ­ ". , 1 W , � R I I:, W " , � Q,�, , 11 ", " '" .... I . , � , r , , .� 1 � I ­� q,0""mm, ', , ,,, 0 "IMIF r ij ., .. L I 11: .. " 11 ... -, ; 71 'Cona xppirform% 1004*10''p-atyi,1114- �` � . - P , , " - hwpaxti;s.4; wewsi�lf and fVQdUd'-0V �'11. ;� I ,� , .� I � Large, QuapUaes of ]Food Mutt gar - � 11 , I . , ;4a J14M= uww gme Must Ju � ,� , I I � 0 Wao , 1 4"Co &Wr . Dareid FQW am�g1ly- 'IN . . I , ... �", I ... 4 I . Is D I tir . almtea Ontario =rmoiat *2 � N� coufft CM- PS U , &4p=ur% Torou .) oW * I ­ RROWC N IT IS jo f There Is too much waste in many , � I - n ry atablea through owners not lbalowwwwwwo 114- u tag t*e cow a chance to do her M ----�� ��- -- 1 r1r. Tied up all winter long. allY COPPE . R KING C I LARK 4 d that she gets must be brought 0 her -O It Is the raw material with LOVER OF BEAUTIFUL .t t Ich she works. The cow can not visitor to 8 eate muk out of nothing, so if the- New Yoik who has taken a trip on e ed supplied is not sufficient for pro- the Fifth Avenue buses is Pointed , etion then she will be as an idle �to the Clark mansion as one of the b achine in the factory, no produc- Sights of the city. At one time It I was the most ornate private residence 8 n. Cows that are underfed never in the city, if it has not that dis- ade any money for their owners, tinction to -day. "Frozen ragtime" i's d d might better not exist. what one wit called it, having in mind The successful dairyman treats- his the saying that architecture is "froz- w in a way that will insure health, en music." It is generally i - d d a U mfort and production. Some fall as a monstrosity, and the natural aup- i cause they stop after providing Just position is that it was built by a man I ough to -give health and comfort. with plenty of money and no taste hey should go all the way and pro- whatever. That would be an erron- de for production. The overhead is eous presumi&ion. William Andrews e same. Work the cow machine to Clark who died the other day, was i pacity that she may give You a in the multi -millionaire class, but no oduction that will pay for feed, multi -millionaire of his Urne had I bor amd also give a good profit. more earnestly tried to understand A cow that yields 8,000 pounds of the best in art. None of theni, with Ilk in a year produces within that the exception of the senior Morgan, ertod miore food products than are had amassed -a finer collection ,. of ntained in the entire body of a tat really beautiful things. He was no ullock weighing 1,200 pounds. uncouth Western plutocrat, but a bile the cow is producing the 8,000 man of sound education who had the ounds of milk she maintains her Own advantage of many years' travel in ody and she also supplies the sub- Europe and association with people Ances for the giowth of her unborn who knew and loved the beautiful. alf. Quite a heavy task and all tI)e Senator Clark was eighty-six years nergy used In the life processes old when he died a few days ago, omes from the feeds that are suP- but so quiet had been his life in re- lied to her. she cannot create any- cent years that most people were hing, her function Is to convert vege- astonished to -learn that he h4d con - able feeds to flesh and milk. When Ainued to linger on, collecting and ood is not supplied in sufficient quan- enjoying to the last his pictures, ty the cow Is helpless. And so we statuary and other art treasures. ee so many poor emaciated, starved Once a power in politics, he took ows during the winter. All of which no interest in them after his retire- ould be willing workers if their ment from the Senate. Rarely did wners could see the point, and sup- he make any remarks about public ly feed in abundance that the ani- affairs. Neither he nor any member uals could do the work of producing of his family was in any fashionable ailk, butter tat and young. scandal. Altogether he was a curi- The successful dairy farmer ous sort of millionaire. He wag 1. Uses cows of dairy type, tem- born in a Pennsylvania town of erament and breeding. Scotch -Irish parentage, and was 2. Treats his cows gently, keeps given a good education up to the hem contented, in comfortable quar- age of seventeen, when he went ers and follows a regular daily round west with his Darents to Iowa He f' feeding, cleaning and milking. farmed part of -the time to hel� the 3. Weighs and records the produc- comman exchequer, taught school ion of each individual, discards and studied law. But when he came hose that fail after having a fair of age he gave up the idea of be- hance. coming ,a lawyer and . went further 4. Feeds a clean, wholesome, well- west to Colorado, for at that time alanced ration during the winter stories of Colorado's vast mineral nd good grass and clover with grain wealth were beginning to .circulate s needed during the summer. in the east. His first job was in a 5. Gives the cow a six weeks' vaca- mine, and he continued to mine at ion period with liberal feed allow- odd intervals for some years after- nces between lactations. ward, at other times teaming in 6. Provides comfort at time of supplies to remote camps and selling alving, is prepared for milk fever, them at a handsome profit. nd mammitis. Feeds sparingly for few years he contrived to rat few days and gradually brings p to full feed in two weeks' time. put by a considerable sum of money 7. Provides light, ventilation, clean and while he was yet a young water and salt during period of man had amassed enough to retire tabling. I upon if that had been his object. 8. Protects his cows from the cold In the early '70's he fought a gold vinds of winter, the excess beat and , and silver mine at Butte, Montana, lies of summer- Provides a shelter and this worked for a time hope - f trees or sheds near at hand. fully. But the gold and silver con - 9. Uses the clovers, red, sweet and ten proving meagre, he was about Ifalfa with corn silage to form the to abandon it when - he discovered bulk of.the ration. that it contained another metal, only 10. Watches both ends of the ma- less valuable. He had a first-class chine, knows what goes in and what copper mine from which he extracted comes out. Values both and strikes in two years 30,000,000 pounds. He a trial balance frequently. Asks the was -now a millionaire, but still be question, "Who is at fau-lt?- Why the had no idea of laying off. Instea,d, oss?" or "Why the profit?" and has he found his keenest interest in mak- horse-seuse to admit his fault, if he ing investments in other enterpriset, is at fault --and credit the cow if she extracting a profit from them and is entitled to credit.—L. Stevenson, moving on to something else. In the Dept. of Extension, 0. A. College. course of his career he bought a beet sugar farm'and factory which What Dairymen Are Looking For. gave him a profit of $400,000 in a Dairy farmers producing milk for - . - —M�-- the city trade depend largely on the half and half type of farmer -breeder . - for their supply of cows. These spe- I. cialists in milk production are the wideawake business type of men. . They know feeds, cows and markets. M I A. � When. they go out to buy more cows up and down the -country side roads, .. I . this is what they look for: --Cows I . ... I kvith dairy temperament, feed capac- . ity, well developed miik organs, con- I stitution, vigor, freedom from tuber- 1. � . culosis, mastitis and abortion. I r111-.--, �.7.""i",---"Ifll-"'���l�,- . I , , " . - , , 11 " . 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J;, , : ,: ,� "�, - 0 ": - oil, I ", � ,,, ," �01 -I "�', "'' : I , I " , , 'A - , , Ties c . v 1000.V9 % � n ; : �� ­ 9.10" A"I i , 001 ... 44 VA, 14 hqr # R, .� I �! :, .; - 1 glueer Us , singg&t6d th j V*�14#*­o, ��, T. as "k 10,�,Abo field 11,011#00"IM-In ; �'. ;114-,11� , 11 - apeed 0 ,Of$ 'i, - I ,, � � I I.. I - I . LH . 1. '1-L ��­. '�, . -; � �­ � . . , . I 01a "I � �..." , 1", �;; ­; �J � I . - . 6 & Stat 'L . O., I ;P 11*1L .,,� I . I � I I . ... I -1 I it � - 000 � -; , , I` 1��t.�' -i,,,1,!, - I 1� i " , 1 889, wlkgjt . �Vontang was. 0Xi;Ar44Aa usir4 their cars In lilgh �� 'A r ,!!:.�� � I I : .1 ,,`�� � �,­, ." , , �, , � �i -P - ��, i"'. I � . IF 1� �; 11, � " iz---, ,"', ,, , e was made I" 100 copintry service be-ur . 1 -.,­�,#4!",� ­ I 1� , 1. . �... � .. � - . .�, I , �, I 1 - . , X , ,.� . . . . . . : " � I . f t 0, ,Iqum,#t,� , ­ 4, 4; �. I, "I � 111. I I I I ". � ,J 1. '73 " , Wonal Coiivoat�04',Aod their tires tA. 85 lbs. it 14 �, =­, �,' � ��, he pre4t104', delighted him so. Tavob 4re haVing shimmy. tro,01% reserving - - . I : :":�,- � "" ;L, �1'�­' � _ % � 1. . L. " '17 � _ . � -'��, �,,�i, :� �' ... I— ,,,��:,.,.. - ": +� ,,�­ .� . ... ... , . 1 4 i." I %..%, , . hit li�q ,;#qt�rmimed to b#0(;me`* the .1*0r pressures'for`�-Iower ft � ..1. . . I � ­,�,' , -,��,�,��,-'14i .. .. I I , . . � ;'. .. , IV I . . -=;:;,=;--�-� � '111 I — ­:,,;- ; � , . , . ...�:, " , , enqt6fio�j *e State. 00'*000.� &'xv'ing. . - % I., , 7m� , . ��,. ­ . . . . . . . I ,.��,i �%', . ". S� - I - �; 1, .., I : : ."� - � ,,,,-­,,� , �`,',.�­ 1'.1 ,,),�­'i, . I ,f- 1`1 - -� .." .; f',"L�'­,, I ­ � -03i�x�� , ­ -"-,-",L I I I �1,:'­;". . ..", . , d t*�Dq' ", ic nominatiOnIi 14610i non r y - ; ". � . -M ,i rope A I indat6d bql1QoA � , I ; w, .1 � , � " , , ,�, , , , , ­ �`� ., , , ,� , . ", ", �,�", , ,. �, . � 1. 3. 1,­�W",­,.W:x'; - ­ ,,, . pjid , p Ing v, , I - -' ' 4�,, I � ..�, , I . Cow- L �. �, ­, I onteited %j�-,�lection and cialmed-'it, tiios 41eagol 0 -i 1, "I , 4 , the, � axiiino 1* 0%?� , � ­ , I ' are givi Rat #on, not A. Vrofe,�il'Dl 1"Isk _a -11101'. , ,., �', �� I fa .,wi -64ytl.o�ng L . %4i"te"o- ,'�. .!A flWong of , ". ", � , I '-" " .VorL4�1)jy , th... that , , , " , " " , , ;, , I 1, -WO .1i. -ft - 7W "U, 40 4, * q�4190 AT . . 1. :��,W So- then p4re top ,unik 11 ut. tailed ,��,nn his seat. e 1�r elft � V . , I � , hiwli , , mp, Of * *00 -, I . 3 p. - ­ ", Vdth -1 , alru", "' ,W*iiii led *,ndrill ww-4 .W. 611, a I . aid hi '�;'191W�4th characteriiii�4%1`4,has been atw1iid i" .thel I 'j. VIT's- � , v3i . �X, X4 L; "i 'r - type. Th6j`ir I I ,b while.-, a llat,foote Aner, * . . . ,� '4 ,p Wing . remov . *,r .. .... e, , ble ,io' ql� winning iaeg y '"."". I -yl'a�spwallp , , Jghtedoe§%',,'9br the election.of '1898, ,sure " I - , .. fo:,� �� lx� � I -dij�q �, ­C91,�#yA IFOX %e eainpiiiOi was one of iinjr4e- pqncture as a A$i]i'objoO4',�(,40,4,4�',.--,"atk.",a , � ". I . � , .. ­­ 4'�, "j. , , " i, . I �a 1. V ,4W,.'*,q , I th , - *1 0- . I ,.:, diffi0VWt0',.0ht0; " . - � , 'J, ". L ,ftwy. e"i r, 43 .. . I , � -1 '�41xq-c4tlmi, Ime �,�, I Ay= . awl", io." ,'; ­ 4 , . ., . , ' ' . . 0 14.0tion is., , �, h 1, , (1*00y'*AV­ ented bit;teip .. ? . -1 . .. � -.e ,� I t , � ess, and reached 04:eli- nail finds it more I "' ' ` ' I ' ' : op � .- � �i�' I xd �-, . � 4. dash 041 . ... .. �. � , 4, . nax.wteii,k�Atate Senator rose 14 -his the. more. Ilexible wall. Of 66UA`6� 10. 111, 11 t, 7, 1; - 1.�. I I �- '00 7 - , -, , I * �V,rk#e'per,,*4Aa99L%­T# ,� I 'T , .. , 9 A I low . .. � Pa ; Z., . ,� )�R I , 13 IR . 'I,- " ,"V,� U11i _ Ing, -- ' 11 , -, 1. , - �� RX R , r P - , � "C', ....., Una waving thirty one-thous"d-, ter A nallhas entered the eas' i � "...M. ��,�, ,1 �.� � 4 , . - - �.. ,"LL '4 I" '. - I- It 1'�4 -xv .W1,V1*': 4, 'T)ills in his hand, declired- that penetrates the -thinner wall , m I ­­ � - - wk ar P WID UR410, -,R:"4,�, "Imq� ." 1p, , 4, . ". I - ,- ore b ,P'A I . , ,� 'i" ,,D � raise, ­ �;,." ,! � , ..'�,, qtw e %X I I � .4#04"'I'T, .. �, t*'Aafg.17. Joag Ai � $ ,.�14, - I , .- . , , .. � "n g" exlbilit* N 'a " . , "' - ,�T, ��r� hey,had h' i iven him by Clark tor readily. The, greater wall . , 0, ,! , 9 � �, W 4 � I " 'I "'", 0 � m I . , . ,, , , , ­ t 1XIL" ,�,,§. .',v 9 W, oA,ey,.Jiie0pr �� . ­ ­# � X, ­,�,,j" t " . 0t , , I- , .� . ,� 1. - I 4� 1 L , I $', � . , ,,� I "' is -vote 4iiil, the vote of four othere also makes- the. balloon tire 14s. sus-� ' . , . "� , , � ,�, . 4W, " t, , � �-,,ID. , A�* `* I miLxi . I ''I -, - VR "". .1 �, , . " ,.jR I# L,r ''. I ,� , � 7", '0 -,r ,� ,,,, k ,, .%, I , �� . 'I", , I ­tp I a, ­ I.. W .4 . 'i ... ..., .. �4 , " I ­ ItWv "I -1.1) t , , ,,p , . ­ 'i op. W , , _ ­ . 101 . . , . ,'lark h4ly-&nied the charge as -:a ceptible to stone braises. Some ob- ­ . ; - I 00, A 4 J.. 4 ? I I ef, ,� .... C ft � -s 019 - � bear out' e I ,,o-,,- 3aly I.Iftiine�u&l and ap,ParentlY bdi i6etidiis have been rdiO4.because of �. .. � I , - , ,� �. i., . y,-:1,:,- , ­ Q-L'1�6'W.' I 1,.� , " . t �in , - jis� I rn. ,,�, I `Ili , - a runner can g � , L Cros� . ea.wra. "I'll., . ;',',!�-� ­­­,,­,, Aras believpdi f;r he was elected. He uneven tread *ear, but -this trOuble , I �c 11 �X4. i2, ..� - 11 , I ,� . . , . . I 3r of his 'l0gs*tA '14-�,4ime " �00 ,; . . I , ?I , W-i'll, ­ ; YA olk. "' a ,',q - t I mmedlatelk�' resigned on bribery is frequently attributable to under- 1 i 1 - , �q , � 3 I- - ''I �, ,,. * 1, . S" V , ... . , -or three: ca;ef Oilly,*61-, A'buorlug , .. 11, I -, '. .W- - ­.;­ Of two kbnorl)�,!. �, � . - ' ' t charges, but.was reappointed, and inflation. Mg � t1i a ficer. of ..... in- *s, ... fied ways., Netmi. - pwitiko- 114 � Axins. I . � ' rep*g, . ater was -A d for a full t". ­ - ��. I . I , .. - - -- in none of these ways, 10t,varel4sll�'vl' - von if the lexe, ss of d a dui '�6 * In 1892- Nigi Clark died, leaving him � I. I.. ,, . At� ­,.�., fr?m si&-iq- silde in -a -vaniner,'that iwlgi on o ­i�g,vough'and tfie , �,� I . . . . � pi �� with four-6ildren, and One adOPtled ns the old students of ' nin oompReations assoeiA - them child, a ebArming girl, the daughter BREAKS THE RULES, ALSO pai run g - ­ .r form. . ­ .. . were,, qlediicted; "It was L � difficult - to . findi L , t16 of,t . of a Caniediiin physician. This girl, . "The "MAning 411910� is another a satida6tory bxplana. 4 . he Anna E. LaCkapelle, he sent to Eur- - THE RECORDS . . I I . . - fine -spun theory of which he has never, continueA 4ixcessive rate of infantilt opp for an education, and later she I .- - §- �A , � Paavo Nurmi's legs haye put Fin- heard. This detail of fbl�m. lnsdits� -moiWity'in Aberde6n as c�,,�­V�0' a � became hii,Wife. it is supposed that land on its -,;in. attain greater Lwith., *i - dist cu Io, or illantile I t - � feet financially. Up to that the runner 4 1 � L . in y'' w i I it was hissecand wife who developed the present time these 'extraordinary speed with less effort if the body'is 'm I orta L lity 'figures, in, theAndustrial . in him the love of art, w1aich was to legs, in the, opinio I n of Leonard As- bent forward. N11irmi, , on I t6Vnid " of the -- W-p-st slic .,r become one of the passions of his life, the oon- ,,, li-'ai C eenOek, k 4 tr6m Minister to the United States trary, holds himself very- erec't'L 'As PiOfoi � afid G6994'*, v�hiirejn the en- . -, - Together the -y studied and travelled, from .) the Republic of Finland, have he flies over the track his body is al- vironmental . , , conditions' - v`ere, livpv�n . buying at first sparingly, but later on been worth $10,000�000 to his- country most' Perpendicular to the. irouind. to be of an inf e-riOr order, . but ­it, � ' or "he y L I - lavishly wh . and every time that Nurmi breaks It seeinisthat nature.bas been'so gen- not,6w6rth that after eliminatingex- ) , en the Senat felt t1i I at could depend upon his own judgment. another record, the financial value of e'r* ous - with .this extraordinary man in cessive - mortality due to interZbur- ' The gaudy *A ' nsion on Fifth Avenue, the feat to Finland is believed to be the I quality of his muscles, the circu- -ient- epidemics ,of whooping couth with its 121 rooms, 31 batlis and four at least a hundred thousand dollars. lation of his.blood and the power of and measles, the main causes of, the - I I picture galleries, became itself a vast Mr. Astrom. arrives at this reckoning his lungs a � nd his abillty:. to throw 6ff higher moitality in Aberdeen were - vrareb�ouse foil the storing of art ob- . . I as a result of the statement of Chas. the poisons of fatigue thiLt -he can af- developindn'tat'diseases. . � : - I jects. -96nator Clark did not buy for E.Mitchell, president of the National od to de�spise all the little tricks of Three farmers were kilteA in .. a I mere ostentation, nor because it *as City Bank of New York, that it was the game that experience has taught railwaysmash at ilie'Locliside cross I I 11 fashionable for a rich man to patron- because of the remarkable showing the professors of it. His youthful ing,'between, Rlairgowrie and Coupar . . . . � ize the arts. He was a real lover of of the Finnish team� captained by training wag not better calculated to Angus, Perthshire. They were Te- . the beautiful—his garish house to the ' Nurmi, at the Olympic gannies that make him a champion than the train- tuining home in a motor car when � I contrary n6tvviths,tanding—and event- he sponsored three loans to' Finland, ing of thousands of other Finnish the accident occurred.. A light pilot I ually became the owner among other He reasoned, iather obscurely .as it boys. What others do does not inter- engine, runnirw, between BI . airgowrie I treasures of it better Monticelli collec- seems to us, -that a "people stalwart est him; not even what they are doing and Dundee, crashed into the motor � I t, tion than that of the Louvre. His enough to produce a pair of legs like in a race against him. Nurm) is car as it was crossing the line.. The - . . aDrt collectiono,theretaoinshrd mlimb Nurmi's would make good use of the never racing others. He i racing engine struck the car with consider- � N ­ art collection has been valued at a money and be able to pay off the debt himself, or his best previouss record. able fored and it is believed that the i - million dollars ' and a half. Twenty a when it fell due." Undqubtedly the That is why in the many races he three occupants were killed instan- fiv� years ago -his entire fortune wa exploits oil Nurnii have given his has engaged ifi on this continent his taneously. The car went on fire im- estimated -at $5o,000,000, and it has country more advertising than ever op�onents have never been able to -mediately after thp impact, .an . d was 11 � I �.. . � A been growing ever since. it received before, and there can be iockey him into defeat. Instinct tells carried along for a distance of about I .", . . . no doubt that Nurmi's running has �his the pace he has to travel to win, 300 yards before the locomotive -was I --------,O- 11 been a valuable asset to his country. and this pace he travels- without re- pulled up. One of the bodies was 1. E The Finn has been hailed as the gard to the pace of those about him, thrown out of the,car beside the'gate �'I. ,e �i greatest distance runner of all time, or, rather, behind him. keeper's hou'se, another a little far- I , . TIRES and the ease and frequency with - th6r on, and the third was* still in the Balloon tires should be inspected which he breaks long4standing rec- 4. car when the locomotive was pulled � % more frequently for inflation presswe ords may be accepted as proof of IRELAND . Up- I . I I than the high pressure type. In fact, this fact. That his triumphs have , . one proniinep,t tire engineer recoin- been achieved in one of the most an- Prince- of Wales may visit Dublin . I . mends that they be tested at least clent spheres of athletic rivalry is on his return trip from South Africa I I I . ­ . weekly. I . another fact that is worth emphasiz- and South America, it is rumored in . , I I - The importance of maintaining the ing. Ten thousand years hence, if London. Inquiries regarding this re- - " , . balloon tire At specified inflation baseball, gol-f and tennis continue to port have elicited official information- , ,- : - be international sports and if chain- that no definite ' arrangements for . pressure has ,probably been some- . . - ose feats sur- such a visit have been made, but thatw 0 0 D. I what under-es4mated. Even with pions arise in them wh � � . . . I .1 �,,,,, - pass tbO feats of all who have gone it is regarded as extre I . the high pressure tY as difficult . mely probable .pe it w before them, their relative superior - to get the public to maintain infla- ity will be ,hardly as great as that the Prince will on some conveni- I have men cutting wood and will - 1. . tion pressures and many owners de- . ent occasion pay a visit to Ireland. - � liberately ran their tires under -in- Nurmi ' 's. Baseliall; tennis and golf als, a man accept orders to be delivered before . aated to get improved riding quali- are in their infancy. Foot racing bolted out of the Hibernian. Bank April 1st, if roads are fit. If not, will - . " ,.� ties. It is more difficult to ,interest is thousands of years old and.h-as branch in Thomas Street, Dublin, A be delivered �y truck when roadi are the public in balloon tire inflati.n produced thousands of champions. crowd took up the chase, but the man ry. All bard maple. Phone me your I pressures as the impression has be- There is also the rurious fact that. got away, "disappearing" in Capel wants and I will'give you the price, -- come general that, because this type Nurmi does not' run in the way Street. It was learnt that shortly payable when delivered. � � . . of tire is designed to operate at com- which experts have thought the after the bank ol�ened a man enterF� . I paratively low pressure, it does not most effective. He violates all the ae- and presented -a cheque drawn on the I make any difference whether or iiot cepted rules, and this has prompted account -of a local trader. The cash- ' it. is maintained properly Inflated. some old time trainers to say that ier was not satisfied that the matter .1 .Under -inflation does reduce bal- Nurmi would be indeed a-smart'run- W&9 in order, -and, accordingly, did W.M. Sprosit , . loon tire mileagewithout, in general, ner if 'he had been taught as a youth sh the -eheque, but asked the ". how to run properly. It is now too . , any commensurate movement in rid- man to step into the manager's of- ' � - ing comfort. Over -inflation of course late to train him. His babits have &e. The trader 'was sent f or but on - TILE MANUFACTURER I does not injure the, tire but it does become fixed. his arrival the "suspect" bolted out I Phone 2.136 - nullify the advantages of the low Nurmi eats and drinks, according of the building. ' " —,— . . I pressure type from the riding quality to an article in the Sprintfied Re- .-Historic, Belfast landmark, the . . . . . . � � I standpoint. . publican, whatever he takes 'a towering tripod at the Abercorn Ba- .- . . . � . . . fancy to. ' He eats three good meals. . Tires are designed to operate at a a day and has two or three cups of sin—is being removed. This dock- ; I'll 11 " � I definite deflection or .distortion of the strong coffee with each of them. It side ci:ane---4better .known as the . 11 . " .. �.. .. . � carcass under load. - The inflation shear-legs—has served the port for i . pressure specified for a tire is the is also reported that be does, not more than half a'century, but the to lend on F-ArM% ]Pirst, Second I one which will limit its defleeVion shrink in dismay and confusion fl* . plortgages. CaR or VrIte me.ilf of oating cranes, as well as more up -to- I I ses a, drink date lifting apparatus, have almost aTrangedo . �Zll I " I J , 11!t` " , , , - , �t- � , � 11" I under load to not more than th e gre*ater alcoholic content. He says sent it into the � I . imbo of forgotten VACO and got your loan � amount for which it was designed. by return inaiL No OAvauc I If it is run under -inflated, the dis- himself that as a rule a milk and things.' For more thain a year the Charges. � ...- tortion of the carcass will be more vegetable diet and- a generally crane has not been used. The ' en- , R. it. REYNOLIM, - . than that for which the tire was de- healthy way of living are essentials gine-house is on;ly a mere shell, and 77 vict6ris AL, Toronto. ,:.7 -, I - signed and its life *ill be decreased. for success as a runner, but he is with its period of usefulness past, ... 11 .� . . . I- ­ , I -11- ­­ I � I Another point in, this connection is not a slave'to rules. In fact, there the crane has been si-rapped. Its re- . .. I � . I are no material secrets wh*h make moval is proving a ticklish job, and - -*' . I., � .11 that with the lower pressures carried I a­A­�- TTI. . I " A -4, V T- 7494+.,fi�il I 1; 1r, Dairy temperament is indicated by I AL top-notch'sale's- , � I 1. . ­�'­' . �;111 ,-111 I � . � � , '17' 1 0, '� � "' , ­—�­­­-'­,­-- - - - ­­­ -- - ­ � - , - ­­­­­ - ­ - - ­-�­,7"" --'—��7-----T--"-,IT�777,7--r-7FTZ- 777 1 . . . '­ o I ,--_,- , ­..Wp'g;­ . , , . , 1� I I I ­.�,,�­J,,, �, ­�­ v- ---- - 11 , c � , . . I 1. , ", " . , I T7 �:� ,: �, .1 . � . I � � . I I., � 7M ,.��, ,: " ", 1 : "? 1 � . I "§ , , t�l',Vy, , ��. '' ­ ;, , ,, � . , , - , ''' � I 1. . � I i: � 11, . . � '' I . . I , I I : I :1 . I I 11 ''I I I 11 ­ � , I . , ,, I , , , ; I I I I . . I., T" � I I I I I - . i : I � " , � . I � . "I I I . I . ,� I . � � . . I � . .1 � . � I I � � I I . . � , . . F I , ,?!..'�T�Ii*t,`, ­��­" � �­­ I I 4, I I 11 , , , ".. ,, ". ,­ 1, - 11 , I "' , , , , '' , " , , � "'' � " t1l"', ­­ 1z. , , I ­�,.-, � , :`,�,�' ill ," -�.";`,),:��­�,, ,,, � " , � ,I ��, � J�i ,.". . ."'. " ","; ...... � �,-,��, I I , � 111.1��"zi,.,;''Ill�li;�,��I'l� 111�;,i 11-1 � ��i� 4" ��.;,:��, ;;��,�,��,,, � �,� "' 11 �., I , �,' ,,,, .1 I � . , I - I . , - '�,­ , � �.�, I 1, � .,:":11., 1, ­J.� , r, ­�-,�,�, �% . . ­',�`�,�,:` i,�'l ,,,,, I i � ;,"', �11 - , � 111.1 I., li I � I �; '. . ,, , -, t �;' , ,- , ,�. " I . I I 11 . I .111: 1. , I , .11 . I . ,., , 1, �, "", 1, t I , I :, I -.1'.. . I . �,i;'�,�,�:'�,�4.'�,,,� , - �,, -,� ., : ,'� , , " " �, , ''.,: ,"", , " ,... , p, , I , 'E2=22M, � (" ,. , . . I I I I I �,Iil I I I I I I I "�, I I , . . A , I . - I . I �' ,:.. ,. ., , I � . , 4,08, po�,,, � " i , ,,i �:� , � - , . � ��� ! . i I I � I � I � �,� '' . 1 . . . � -� M M5 . .1 I I - . , , , ��I �.. I 1�1. 11, I �'�, 11 I . ,i " R � ,' '­ "," , - ". , 711i,ill"� , t I - - . ili�� , �' , � .1 � �, � i � j,'�;, 1: 11­:::��;,,] ", I" � "'I 11 I � � �'!, �` 1 � ! .. L - 'LL�f�:ILLLL�� , , , �,,� � �,,'., , �".'. I . I � ": : , w.%," ""' ,,, ". �1 � 11,�l',�.,�o��,.",�,,i,,��..'"':"!': `;�"; ."'I'l,"'I",�' .. I . ,� - ,-.�, ��.i,.�,�""",",-,.'"',,��;�,;�,, 11 I I � I, " �,.? i %,,�,"j",,",:Z� '. " .4� �,,v��, ��, , ,, ", " ,11 , ��Film, , . , I , , I ,V'' �, ,�� �-I '' � � �� �.',� " 1 ,�� j, � ,2 L��. � L �!­ . ,2'', I I �� , , , ", " �, I ,!�,l , ,. .,... - ,� � . ,�%, .1, 1, � ;zo ��!i, , . ,�, ,:,�' - � , ,,,�L� "�4�L 6--" � , � `� - � I , 4 -- - I �- ­­-011.�- i "' .11",��, M. I ,q , , - . I , , '� , �,�. �, . �--� � � �: .�, �i ��, ��,,:i � .11, � Ill";"', I 11 �, , � �� ''I . I :,:` 1.� " , " .1 I I , 1 7 � , illi " ] 1 ��, "', I :i."�,""", —` ­ .�i.,�T ��­ �� , ", Q, I I 1:��,­ I 11 " I 1-111. ..., �� . 1�:%,� 7� � , , ", ,� ' � :, :� UX V.4i IL' . ­ I L' �� 11 ­ ­ I ,� �� �­­ I j , 't�,­­',,,�!�,';,' ' - 'I �, �:, ,,, '' I � : , L N �� I I.. '. . -1 ,,, . � , , " -t � l�' � '­ � — L� 6'a . I 1: In - "p . I , I .U� *, Ur" N . I I � . I I 1. I'll, j,; , 9 , 11 I ,� � ,,, - : , . � ,,, � P � I I , . oiio � , A"14.: 'NApbm" Wv-004 Q9 40M . ­ . � I, , . � OT001T.T. � 1 4- " , I I 11 , "" , I 144%, 144MA4 2s " I . :,, ,14 '* . N, -Npw 6* amim, V - Ai Mr 1;1=1,� 11, I- � OA j*qpaij*t�ro�t ]Kos- �. I AW"m % . *�: �� - I , V +4ng At CoWrAordial 4019� Nha� i wonday .10 ,4��,,,�% " V 0wo I IICI , a,�n- to � p4m. �, sw 11 , , %��, Pov ­ �4'44 ,=- Wrt Mouth, Stmtford. MCI ,'0137,- Stratford, (Cc �;,,­�. . � ,,,'.' , , . �.,­��, �k 0 C,"Pa�." V.S. M-11.1 � ,,, � . I ��.­ .1 1. , . . ., -� I—- I I 1 4-1. . I ;f,.�61 , - ftate of GuUrIO . Veterinary dal ..... 11, : .1 U.ni r§ity of Toronto. .4111 gAv w ot domestic, animal$ treated � 11.,@q " As 11, '. " the most modern priuciLoleS. we ` . � . I I 0 � - I Vs ro�souable.' Day or nigbt fee ­ I � q. pro*,ptl)Vtt@o4ed to. Office on to , . ­ I'� I ,� I , opposite Town � . I gfj4it, onsall Wk , I 1. phone 116. 11 J.... I , I .. . - — cr � fe . . LEGAL du fhone No. 91 in � JOHN J. HUGGARD tio I Barrister, Solicitor� III � Notary Public, Etc. an ,Beattie Block - - Seeforth, Out. co . - : co 41 - R. S. BAYS be I �' Barrister, Solicitor, Co en � nveyancer . 1aid. Notary Public. Solicitor for the T ADomlnion-Bank. Office in rear of the " th Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Money to , I � a I loan. . -----� pr I 9EST & BEST ]a . Barristers, Solicitors, Conve7an- m bors and Notaries Public, Etc. Office p in the Edge Building, opposite The co Expositor Office. b — Vk . p JAMES L. KILLORAN b * s Barrister, Notary Public, etc. Money c to loan. In Seaforth on Monday Of , each week. office ,over Keating's c Drug Store. 9 . I . t VETERINARY t I I L . F. HARBURN, V. S. I . 1i Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- s ary College, and.honorary member of c the Medical Association of the Ontario w Veterinary. College. Treats diseases of 0 all domestic animals by the most mod- ') ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. AR orders left at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night calls P received at the office. I — I - JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. t o Honor gradu&te of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic t animals treated. Calls promptly at- t tended to and charges moderate. Vet- c erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich Street, one i . door east of Dr. Mackay's Office, Sea- a . forth. . a . MEDICAL t DR. J. W. PECK a . Graduate -of Faculty of Medicine c McGill University, Montreal; member' a 2�af College of Physicians and Surgeons f­of­Od6rio; Licentiate of Medical I Council of Canada; ilost-Graduate Member of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15. s Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hensall, Ontario. — � DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY 0 BayfieldL I I Graduate Dublin Tiniversity, Ire- land. Late Extern Assistant Master Rotunda Hospital for Women and Children, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 2'P.m. 2866-26 -I . DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence Goderich Street, east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. . DR. C. MACKAY I 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. r DR. H. HUGH ROSS . . Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of I . Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; .Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, I England-, University Hospital', Lon- doni, England. Office --Back of Do- . vainion Bank, Seafortl- Phone NO . r. Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Street, Seaforth. 6 AUCTIONEERS OSCAR W. REED Licensed auctioneer for the Coun- ties of Perth and Huron. Graduate of Jones' School of Auctioneering. Chicago. Charges moderate, and sat- isfaction guaranteed. Write or wire Oscar W. Reed, Staffa, Ont. Phone 11-2. 2965x52 - THOMASBROWN I Licensed auctioneer f67T the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence � arrangements for sale dates can be . made by 4iallivg up phone 97, Seaforth, . or The Expositor Office Charges mod- - .�,,,,,,,!,,,,,,,;�:,�LF,�;'."!��l�, ,"I Ili I I - 11 ,,�­!,�z . i � -­ . . i ,� , , "R111,N, ,� I � ­, - ,� .. -, " '� �. , � " I ..... - F 1," "" .. , . '�, ­,� " N 11 P -�;,�,,,,,00,�O!-"I, , , , ­�- 11=1 I',, � m l�, , , I . - . �t. , . . , � ­�,;.',,'��:�-,i,�, . , �� i , . . 4 . 1 �� 111111`01i� , it. , t i , i FOW4,41 ""I 11 i.1"44 I , I X , sxrcm�1000' 1,1- i ;; �,# , �"! "I . . '� , I -: I ". " , : -� I 1� ; IX � ­ ". , 1 W , � R I I:, W " , � Q,�, , 11 ", " '" .... I . , � , r , , .� 1 � I ­� q,0""mm, ', , ,,, 0 "IMIF r ij ., .. L I 11: .. " 11 ... -, ; 71 'Cona xppirform% 1004*10''p-atyi,1114- �` � . - P , , " - hwpaxti;s.4; wewsi�lf and fVQdUd'-0V �'11. ;� I ,� , .� I � Large, QuapUaes of ]Food Mutt gar - � 11 , I . , ;4a J14M= uww gme Must Ju � ,� , I I � 0 Wao , 1 4"Co &Wr . Dareid FQW am�g1ly- 'IN . . I , ... �", I ... 4 I . Is D I tir . almtea Ontario =rmoiat *2 � N� coufft CM- PS U , &4p=ur% Torou .) oW * I ­ RROWC N IT IS jo f There Is too much waste in many , � I - n ry atablea through owners not lbalowwwwwwo 114- u tag t*e cow a chance to do her M ----�� ��- -- 1 r1r. Tied up all winter long. allY COPPE . R KING C I LARK 4 d that she gets must be brought 0 her -O It Is the raw material with LOVER OF BEAUTIFUL .t t Ich she works. The cow can not visitor to 8 eate muk out of nothing, so if the- New Yoik who has taken a trip on e ed supplied is not sufficient for pro- the Fifth Avenue buses is Pointed , etion then she will be as an idle �to the Clark mansion as one of the b achine in the factory, no produc- Sights of the city. At one time It I was the most ornate private residence 8 n. Cows that are underfed never in the city, if it has not that dis- ade any money for their owners, tinction to -day. "Frozen ragtime" i's d d might better not exist. what one wit called it, having in mind The successful dairyman treats- his the saying that architecture is "froz- w in a way that will insure health, en music." It is generally i - d d a U mfort and production. Some fall as a monstrosity, and the natural aup- i cause they stop after providing Just position is that it was built by a man I ough to -give health and comfort. with plenty of money and no taste hey should go all the way and pro- whatever. That would be an erron- de for production. The overhead is eous presumi&ion. William Andrews e same. Work the cow machine to Clark who died the other day, was i pacity that she may give You a in the multi -millionaire class, but no oduction that will pay for feed, multi -millionaire of his Urne had I bor amd also give a good profit. more earnestly tried to understand A cow that yields 8,000 pounds of the best in art. None of theni, with Ilk in a year produces within that the exception of the senior Morgan, ertod miore food products than are had amassed -a finer collection ,. of ntained in the entire body of a tat really beautiful things. He was no ullock weighing 1,200 pounds. uncouth Western plutocrat, but a bile the cow is producing the 8,000 man of sound education who had the ounds of milk she maintains her Own advantage of many years' travel in ody and she also supplies the sub- Europe and association with people Ances for the giowth of her unborn who knew and loved the beautiful. alf. Quite a heavy task and all tI)e Senator Clark was eighty-six years nergy used In the life processes old when he died a few days ago, omes from the feeds that are suP- but so quiet had been his life in re- lied to her. she cannot create any- cent years that most people were hing, her function Is to convert vege- astonished to -learn that he h4d con - able feeds to flesh and milk. When Ainued to linger on, collecting and ood is not supplied in sufficient quan- enjoying to the last his pictures, ty the cow Is helpless. And so we statuary and other art treasures. ee so many poor emaciated, starved Once a power in politics, he took ows during the winter. All of which no interest in them after his retire- ould be willing workers if their ment from the Senate. Rarely did wners could see the point, and sup- he make any remarks about public ly feed in abundance that the ani- affairs. Neither he nor any member uals could do the work of producing of his family was in any fashionable ailk, butter tat and young. scandal. Altogether he was a curi- The successful dairy farmer ous sort of millionaire. He wag 1. Uses cows of dairy type, tem- born in a Pennsylvania town of erament and breeding. Scotch -Irish parentage, and was 2. Treats his cows gently, keeps given a good education up to the hem contented, in comfortable quar- age of seventeen, when he went ers and follows a regular daily round west with his Darents to Iowa He f' feeding, cleaning and milking. farmed part of -the time to hel� the 3. Weighs and records the produc- comman exchequer, taught school ion of each individual, discards and studied law. But when he came hose that fail after having a fair of age he gave up the idea of be- hance. coming ,a lawyer and . went further 4. Feeds a clean, wholesome, well- west to Colorado, for at that time alanced ration during the winter stories of Colorado's vast mineral nd good grass and clover with grain wealth were beginning to .circulate s needed during the summer. in the east. His first job was in a 5. Gives the cow a six weeks' vaca- mine, and he continued to mine at ion period with liberal feed allow- odd intervals for some years after- nces between lactations. ward, at other times teaming in 6. Provides comfort at time of supplies to remote camps and selling alving, is prepared for milk fever, them at a handsome profit. nd mammitis. Feeds sparingly for few years he contrived to rat few days and gradually brings p to full feed in two weeks' time. put by a considerable sum of money 7. Provides light, ventilation, clean and while he was yet a young water and salt during period of man had amassed enough to retire tabling. I upon if that had been his object. 8. Protects his cows from the cold In the early '70's he fought a gold vinds of winter, the excess beat and , and silver mine at Butte, Montana, lies of summer- Provides a shelter and this worked for a time hope - f trees or sheds near at hand. fully. But the gold and silver con - 9. Uses the clovers, red, sweet and ten proving meagre, he was about Ifalfa with corn silage to form the to abandon it when - he discovered bulk of.the ration. that it contained another metal, only 10. Watches both ends of the ma- less valuable. He had a first-class chine, knows what goes in and what copper mine from which he extracted comes out. Values both and strikes in two years 30,000,000 pounds. He a trial balance frequently. Asks the was -now a millionaire, but still be question, "Who is at fau-lt?- Why the had no idea of laying off. Instea,d, oss?" or "Why the profit?" and has he found his keenest interest in mak- horse-seuse to admit his fault, if he ing investments in other enterpriset, is at fault --and credit the cow if she extracting a profit from them and is entitled to credit.—L. Stevenson, moving on to something else. In the Dept. of Extension, 0. A. College. course of his career he bought a beet sugar farm'and factory which What Dairymen Are Looking For. gave him a profit of $400,000 in a Dairy farmers producing milk for - . - —M�-- the city trade depend largely on the half and half type of farmer -breeder . - for their supply of cows. These spe- I. cialists in milk production are the wideawake business type of men. . They know feeds, cows and markets. M I A. � When. they go out to buy more cows up and down the -country side roads, .. I . this is what they look for: --Cows I . ... I kvith dairy temperament, feed capac- . ity, well developed miik organs, con- I stitution, vigor, freedom from tuber- 1. � . culosis, mastitis and abortion. I r111-.--, �.7.""i",---"Ifll-"'���l�,- . I , , " . - , , 11 " . 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W, 11 ,q�l,,�.�,,`,V! ...... , ` � W:, "" � �, 1 47 ,�,% , 'A 0,.*M:1'1Z%.i1;t ,A1AW,,WMhtA1h4. , �� �. 1,�. ,; . . , I -N i -7I - f d wItA, WAA% 44410r. ,"; � ,, . , , � I .l -,`,,k',, , , r. , , ,a , . � '0 1! , '114 ,0= a I 11 � ;.: !§ � I �Q��:,��' , , , ��', , , � "" - - ,. , I �,,�,�.�.�",;, .,'�� �, � � 4., -.4 I ­ ­ . I � . "I'llilz, � � , ,-, ".A , V. -, M. �!�i � , li­ 11 , "",­." ­yt,�"'­� ­. � �, " , V �,.�:�,;­11 I I., , ." , �, W'�,,N�,,"�jt�,,,,, �,�, I I �4, X 411ionaire and, ' ' this #401o.d6v4ops..'�k,,10 i A, , ` ... ,,���,,� .` � , , , �:, " � -, " -, , � .�' " I I .... , ­ ;,'�;,-­ .1. I , �,) 4­41.11111-�i " k i.. - v.l � I : I !, ," - -�. - - " �' 1,":',�"X�`,7'V' 11�111'�­,--�,,,; ill � ,3.�, .", ­�­V��;� 11 �;,,'�'. � � .1 ' "' e X V #10.1horg * no �1 ls� - " " ", ,, �� ": � ,�,� , 'I'll -,"."", " LW , _h# ,q%inbitions, TU y ��,, O.,,,,,. #T ,. , �,;r , - �, ­...' , , "I th ## ig;" . , ..Q. . 40; 4, W, , ,� , �. ,11 :, ,,�,' -j�.! : 1, � , , i , , . 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J;, , : ,: ,� "�, - 0 ": - oil, I ", � ,,, ," �01 -I "�', "'' : I , I " , , 'A - , , Ties c . v 1000.V9 % � n ; : �� ­ 9.10" A"I i , 001 ... 44 VA, 14 hqr # R, .� I �! :, .; - 1 glueer Us , singg&t6d th j V*�14#*­o, ��, T. as "k 10,�,Abo field 11,011#00"IM-In ; �'. ;114-,11� , 11 - apeed 0 ,Of$ 'i, - I ,, � � I I.. I - I . LH . 1. '1-L ��­. '�, . -; � �­ � . . , . I 01a "I � �..." , 1", �;; ­; �J � I . - . 6 & Stat 'L . O., I ;P 11*1L .,,� I . I � I I . ... I -1 I it � - 000 � -; , , I` 1��t.�' -i,,,1,!, - I 1� i " , 1 889, wlkgjt . �Vontang was. 0Xi;Ar44Aa usir4 their cars In lilgh �� 'A r ,!!:.�� � I I : .1 ,,`�� � �,­, ." , , �, , � �i -P - ��, i"'. I � . IF 1� �; 11, � " iz---, ,"', ,, , e was made I" 100 copintry service be-ur . 1 -.,­�,#4!",� ­ I 1� , 1. . �... � .. � - . .�, I , �, I 1 - . , X , ,.� . . . . . . : " � I . f t 0, ,Iqum,#t,� , ­ 4, 4; �. I, "I � 111. I I I I ". � ,J 1. '73 " , Wonal Coiivoat�04',Aod their tires tA. 85 lbs. it 14 �, =­, �,' � ��, he pre4t104', delighted him so. Tavob 4re haVing shimmy. tro,01% reserving - - . I : :":�,- � "" ;L, �1'�­' � _ % � 1. . L. " '17 � _ . � -'��, �,,�i, :� �' ... I— ,,,��:,.,.. - ": +� ,,�­ .� . ... ... , . 1 4 i." I %..%, , . hit li�q ,;#qt�rmimed to b#0(;me`* the .1*0r pressures'for`�-Iower ft � ..1. . . I � ­,�,' , -,��,�,��,-'14i .. .. I I , . . � ;'. .. , IV I . . -=;:;,=;--�-� � '111 I — ­:,,;- ; � , . , . ...�:, " , , enqt6fio�j *e State. 00'*000.� &'xv'ing. . - % I., , 7m� , . ��,. ­ . . . . . . . I ,.��,i �%', . ". S� - I - �; 1, .., I : : ."� - � ,,,,-­,,� , �`,',.�­ 1'.1 ,,),�­'i, . I ,f- 1`1 - -� .." .; f',"L�'­,, I ­ � -03i�x�� , ­ -"-,-",L I I I �1,:'­;". . ..", . , d t*�Dq' ", ic nominatiOnIi 14610i non r y - ; ". � . -M ,i rope A I indat6d bql1QoA � , I ; w, .1 � , � " , , ,�, , , , , ­ �`� ., , , ,� , . ", ", �,�", , ,. �, . � 1. 3. 1,­�W",­,.W:x'; - ­ ,,, . pjid , p Ing v, , I - -' ' 4�,, I � ..�, , I . Cow- L �. �, ­, I onteited %j�-,�lection and cialmed-'it, tiios 41eagol 0 -i 1, "I , 4 , the, � axiiino 1* 0%?� , � ­ , I ' are givi Rat #on, not A. Vrofe,�il'Dl 1"Isk _a -11101'. , ,., �', �� I fa .,wi -64ytl.o�ng L . %4i"te"o- ,'�. .!A flWong of , ". ", � , I '-" " .VorL4�1)jy , th... that , , , " , " " , , ;, , I 1, -WO .1i. -ft - 7W "U, 40 4, * q�4190 AT . . 1. :��,W So- then p4re top ,unik 11 ut. tailed ,��,nn his seat. e 1�r elft � V . , I � , hiwli , , mp, Of * *00 -, I . 3 p. - ­ ", Vdth -1 , alru", "' ,W*iiii led *,ndrill ww-4 .W. 611, a I . aid hi '�;'191W�4th characteriiii�4%1`4,has been atw1iid i" .thel I 'j. VIT's- � , v3i . �X, X4 L; "i 'r - type. Th6j`ir I I ,b while.-, a llat,foote Aner, * . . . ,� '4 ,p Wing . remov . *,r .. .... e, , ble ,io' ql� winning iaeg y '"."". I -yl'a�spwallp , , Jghtedoe§%',,'9br the election.of '1898, ,sure " I - , .. fo:,� �� lx� � I -dij�q �, ­C91,�#yA IFOX %e eainpiiiOi was one of iinjr4e- pqncture as a A$i]i'objoO4',�(,40,4,4�',.--,"atk.",a , � ". I . � , .. ­­ 4'�, "j. , , " i, . I �a 1. V ,4W,.'*,q , I th , - *1 0- . I ,.:, diffi0VWt0',.0ht0; " . - � , 'J, ". L ,ftwy. e"i r, 43 .. . I , � -1 '�41xq-c4tlmi, Ime �,�, I Ay= . awl", io." ,'; ­ 4 , . ., . , ' ' . . 0 14.0tion is., , �, h 1, , (1*00y'*AV­ ented bit;teip .. ? . -1 . .. � -.e ,� I t , � ess, and reached 04:eli- nail finds it more I "' ' ` ' I ' ' : op � .- � �i�' I xd �-, . � 4. dash 041 . ... .. �. � , 4, . nax.wteii,k�Atate Senator rose 14 -his the. more. Ilexible wall. Of 66UA`6� 10. 111, 11 t, 7, 1; - 1.�. I I �- '00 7 - , -, , I * �V,rk#e'per,,*4Aa99L%­T# ,� I 'T , .. , 9 A I low . .. � Pa ; Z., . ,� )�R I , 13 IR . 'I,- " ,"V,� U11i _ Ing, -- ' 11 , -, 1. , - �� RX R , r P - , � "C', ....., Una waving thirty one-thous"d-, ter A nallhas entered the eas' i � "...M. ��,�, ,1 �.� � 4 , . - - �.. ,"LL '4 I" '. - I- It 1'�4 -xv .W1,V1*': 4, 'T)ills in his hand, declired- that penetrates the -thinner wall , m I ­­ � - - wk ar P WID UR410, -,R:"4,�, "Imq� ." 1p, , 4, . ". I - ,- ore b ,P'A I . , ,� 'i" ,,D � raise, ­ �;,." ,! � , ..'�,, qtw e %X I I � .4#04"'I'T, .. �, t*'Aafg.17. Joag Ai � $ ,.�14, - I , .- . , , .. � "n g" exlbilit* N 'a " . , "' - ,�T, ��r� hey,had h' i iven him by Clark tor readily. The, greater wall . , 0, ,! , 9 � �, W 4 � I " 'I "'", 0 � m I . , . ,, , , , ­ t 1XIL" ,�,,§. .',v 9 W, oA,ey,.Jiie0pr �� . ­ ­# � X, ­,�,,j" t " . 0t , , I- , .� . ,� 1. - I 4� 1 L , I $', � . , ,,� I "' is -vote 4iiil, the vote of four othere also makes- the. balloon tire 14s. sus-� ' . , . "� , , � ,�, . 4W, " t, , � �-,,ID. , A�* `* I miLxi . I ''I -, - VR "". .1 �, , . " ,.jR I# L,r ''. I ,� , � 7", '0 -,r ,� ,,,, k ,, .%, I , �� . 'I", , I ­tp I a, ­ I.. W .4 . 'i ... ..., .. �4 , " I ­ ItWv "I -1.1) t , , ,,p , . ­ 'i op. W , , _ ­ . 101 . . , . ,'lark h4ly-&nied the charge as -:a ceptible to stone braises. Some ob- ­ . ; - I 00, A 4 J.. 4 ? I I ef, ,� .... C ft � -s 019 - � bear out' e I ,,o-,,- 3aly I.Iftiine�u&l and ap,ParentlY bdi i6etidiis have been rdiO4.because of �. .. � I , - , ,� �. i., . y,-:1,:,- , ­ Q-L'1�6'W.' I 1,.� , " . t �in , - jis� I rn. ,,�, I `Ili , - a runner can g � , L Cros� . ea.wra. "I'll., . ;',',!�-� ­­­,,­,, Aras believpdi f;r he was elected. He uneven tread *ear, but -this trOuble , I �c 11 �X4. i2, ..� - 11 , I ,� . . , . . I 3r of his 'l0gs*tA '14-�,4ime " �00 ,; . . I , ?I , W-i'll, ­ ; YA olk. "' a ,',q - t I mmedlatelk�' resigned on bribery is frequently attributable to under- 1 i 1 - , �q , � 3 I- - ''I �, ,,. * 1, . S" V , ... . , -or three: ca;ef Oilly,*61-, A'buorlug , .. 11, I -, '. .W- - ­.;­ Of two kbnorl)�,!. �, � . - ' ' t charges, but.was reappointed, and inflation. Mg � t1i a ficer. of ..... in- *s, ... fied ways., Netmi. - pwitiko- 114 � Axins. I . � ' rep*g, . ater was -A d for a full t". ­ - ��. I . I , .. - - -- in none of these ways, 10t,varel4sll�'vl' - von if the lexe, ss of d a dui '�6 * In 1892- Nigi Clark died, leaving him � I. I.. ,, . At� ­,.�., fr?m si&-iq- silde in -a -vaniner,'that iwlgi on o ­i�g,vough'and tfie , �,� I . . . . � pi �� with four-6ildren, and One adOPtled ns the old students of ' nin oompReations assoeiA - them child, a ebArming girl, the daughter BREAKS THE RULES, ALSO pai run g - ­ .r form. . ­ .. . were,, qlediicted; "It was L � difficult - to . findi L , t16 of,t . of a Caniediiin physician. This girl, . "The "MAning 411910� is another a satida6tory bxplana. 4 . he Anna E. LaCkapelle, he sent to Eur- - THE RECORDS . . I I . . - fine -spun theory of which he has never, continueA 4ixcessive rate of infantilt opp for an education, and later she I .- - §- �A , � Paavo Nurmi's legs haye put Fin- heard. This detail of fbl�m. lnsdits� -moiWity'in Aberde6n as c�,,�­V�0' a � became hii,Wife. it is supposed that land on its -,;in. attain greater Lwith., *i - dist cu Io, or illantile I t - � feet financially. Up to that the runner 4 1 � L . in y'' w i I it was hissecand wife who developed the present time these 'extraordinary speed with less effort if the body'is 'm I orta L lity 'figures, in, theAndustrial . in him the love of art, w1aich was to legs, in the, opinio I n of Leonard As- bent forward. N11irmi, , on I t6Vnid " of the -- W-p-st slic .,r become one of the passions of his life, the oon- ,,, li-'ai C eenOek, k 4 tr6m Minister to the United States trary, holds himself very- erec't'L 'As PiOfoi � afid G6994'*, v�hiirejn the en- . -, - Together the -y studied and travelled, from .) the Republic of Finland, have he flies over the track his body is al- vironmental . , , conditions' - v`ere, livpv�n . buying at first sparingly, but later on been worth $10,000�000 to his- country most' Perpendicular to the. irouind. to be of an inf e-riOr order, . but ­it, � ' or "he y L I - lavishly wh . and every time that Nurmi breaks It seeinisthat nature.bas been'so gen- not,6w6rth that after eliminatingex- ) , en the Senat felt t1i I at could depend upon his own judgment. another record, the financial value of e'r* ous - with .this extraordinary man in cessive - mortality due to interZbur- ' The gaudy *A ' nsion on Fifth Avenue, the feat to Finland is believed to be the I quality of his muscles, the circu- -ient- epidemics ,of whooping couth with its 121 rooms, 31 batlis and four at least a hundred thousand dollars. lation of his.blood and the power of and measles, the main causes of, the - I I picture galleries, became itself a vast Mr. Astrom. arrives at this reckoning his lungs a � nd his abillty:. to throw 6ff higher moitality in Aberdeen were - vrareb�ouse foil the storing of art ob- . . I as a result of the statement of Chas. the poisons of fatigue thiLt -he can af- developindn'tat'diseases. . � : - I jects. -96nator Clark did not buy for E.Mitchell, president of the National od to de�spise all the little tricks of Three farmers were kilteA in .. a I mere ostentation, nor because it *as City Bank of New York, that it was the game that experience has taught railwaysmash at ilie'Locliside cross I I 11 fashionable for a rich man to patron- because of the remarkable showing the professors of it. His youthful ing,'between, Rlairgowrie and Coupar . . . . � ize the arts. He was a real lover of of the Finnish team� captained by training wag not better calculated to Angus, Perthshire. They were Te- . the beautiful—his garish house to the ' Nurmi, at the Olympic gannies that make him a champion than the train- tuining home in a motor car when � I contrary n6tvviths,tanding—and event- he sponsored three loans to' Finland, ing of thousands of other Finnish the accident occurred.. A light pilot I ually became the owner among other He reasoned, iather obscurely .as it boys. What others do does not inter- engine, runnirw, between BI . airgowrie I treasures of it better Monticelli collec- seems to us, -that a "people stalwart est him; not even what they are doing and Dundee, crashed into the motor � I t, tion than that of the Louvre. His enough to produce a pair of legs like in a race against him. Nurm) is car as it was crossing the line.. The - . . aDrt collectiono,theretaoinshrd mlimb Nurmi's would make good use of the never racing others. He i racing engine struck the car with consider- � N ­ art collection has been valued at a money and be able to pay off the debt himself, or his best previouss record. able fored and it is believed that the i - million dollars ' and a half. Twenty a when it fell due." Undqubtedly the That is why in the many races he three occupants were killed instan- fiv� years ago -his entire fortune wa exploits oil Nurnii have given his has engaged ifi on this continent his taneously. The car went on fire im- estimated -at $5o,000,000, and it has country more advertising than ever op�onents have never been able to -mediately after thp impact, .an . d was 11 � I �.. . � A been growing ever since. it received before, and there can be iockey him into defeat. Instinct tells carried along for a distance of about I .", . . . no doubt that Nurmi's running has �his the pace he has to travel to win, 300 yards before the locomotive -was I --------,O- 11 been a valuable asset to his country. and this pace he travels- without re- pulled up. One of the bodies was 1. E The Finn has been hailed as the gard to the pace of those about him, thrown out of the,car beside the'gate �'I. ,e �i greatest distance runner of all time, or, rather, behind him. keeper's hou'se, another a little far- I , . TIRES and the ease and frequency with - th6r on, and the third was* still in the Balloon tires should be inspected which he breaks long4standing rec- 4. car when the locomotive was pulled � % more frequently for inflation presswe ords may be accepted as proof of IRELAND . Up- I . I I than the high pressure type. In fact, this fact. That his triumphs have , . one proniinep,t tire engineer recoin- been achieved in one of the most an- Prince- of Wales may visit Dublin . I . mends that they be tested at least clent spheres of athletic rivalry is on his return trip from South Africa I I I . ­ . weekly. I . another fact that is worth emphasiz- and South America, it is rumored in . , I I - The importance of maintaining the ing. Ten thousand years hence, if London. Inquiries regarding this re- - " , . balloon tire At specified inflation baseball, gol-f and tennis continue to port have elicited official information- , ,- : - be international sports and if chain- that no definite ' arrangements for . pressure has ,probably been some- . . - ose feats sur- such a visit have been made, but thatw 0 0 D. I what under-es4mated. Even with pions arise in them wh � � . . . I .1 �,,,,, - pass tbO feats of all who have gone it is regarded as extre I . the high pressure tY as difficult . mely probable .pe it w before them, their relative superior - to get the public to maintain infla- ity will be ,hardly as great as that the Prince will on some conveni- I have men cutting wood and will - 1. . tion pressures and many owners de- . ent occasion pay a visit to Ireland. - � liberately ran their tires under -in- Nurmi ' 's. Baseliall; tennis and golf als, a man accept orders to be delivered before . aated to get improved riding quali- are in their infancy. Foot racing bolted out of the Hibernian. Bank April 1st, if roads are fit. If not, will - . " ,.� ties. It is more difficult to ,interest is thousands of years old and.h-as branch in Thomas Street, Dublin, A be delivered �y truck when roadi are the public in balloon tire inflati.n produced thousands of champions. crowd took up the chase, but the man ry. All bard maple. Phone me your I pressures as the impression has be- There is also the rurious fact that. got away, "disappearing" in Capel wants and I will'give you the price, -- come general that, because this type Nurmi does not' run in the way Street. It was learnt that shortly payable when delivered. � � . . of tire is designed to operate at com- which experts have thought the after the bank ol�ened a man enterF� . I paratively low pressure, it does not most effective. He violates all the ae- and presented -a cheque drawn on the I make any difference whether or iiot cepted rules, and this has prompted account -of a local trader. The cash- ' it. is maintained properly Inflated. some old time trainers to say that ier was not satisfied that the matter .1 .Under -inflation does reduce bal- Nurmi would be indeed a-smart'run- W&9 in order, -and, accordingly, did W.M. Sprosit , . loon tire mileagewithout, in general, ner if 'he had been taught as a youth sh the -eheque, but asked the ". how to run properly. It is now too . , any commensurate movement in rid- man to step into the manager's of- ' � - ing comfort. Over -inflation of course late to train him. His babits have &e. The trader 'was sent f or but on - TILE MANUFACTURER I does not injure the, tire but it does become fixed. his arrival the "suspect" bolted out I Phone 2.136 - nullify the advantages of the low Nurmi eats and drinks, according of the building. ' " —,— . . I pressure type from the riding quality to an article in the Sprintfied Re- .-Historic, Belfast landmark, the . . . . . . � � I standpoint. . publican, whatever he takes 'a towering tripod at the Abercorn Ba- .- . . . � . . . fancy to. ' He eats three good meals. . Tires are designed to operate at a a day and has two or three cups of sin—is being removed. This dock- ; I'll 11 " � I definite deflection or .distortion of the strong coffee with each of them. It side ci:ane---4better .known as the . 11 . " .. �.. .. . � carcass under load. - The inflation shear-legs—has served the port for i . pressure specified for a tire is the is also reported that be does, not more than half a'century, but the to lend on F-ArM% ]Pirst, Second I one which will limit its defleeVion shrink in dismay and confusion fl* . plortgages. CaR or VrIte me.ilf of oating cranes, as well as more up -to- I I ses a, drink date lifting apparatus, have almost aTrangedo . �Zll I " I J , 11!t` " , , , - , �t- � , � 11" I under load to not more than th e gre*ater alcoholic content. He says sent it into the � I . imbo of forgotten VACO and got your loan � amount for which it was designed. by return inaiL No OAvauc I If it is run under -inflated, the dis- himself that as a rule a milk and things.' For more thain a year the Charges. � ...- tortion of the carcass will be more vegetable diet and- a generally crane has not been used. The ' en- , R. it. REYNOLIM, - . than that for which the tire was de- healthy way of living are essentials gine-house is on;ly a mere shell, and 77 vict6ris AL, Toronto. ,:.7 -, I - signed and its life *ill be decreased. for success as a runner, but he is with its period of usefulness past, ... 11 .� . . . I- ­ , I -11- ­­ I � I Another point in, this connection is not a slave'to rules. In fact, there the crane has been si-rapped. Its re- . .. I � . I are no material secrets wh*h make moval is proving a ticklish job, and - -*' . I., � .11 that with the lower pressures carried I a­A­�- TTI. . I " A -4, V T- 7494+.,fi�il I 1; 1r, Dairy temperament is indicated by I AL top-notch'sale's- in balloon tires a difference of a k' . "' idea is that . what makes him ironically enough a floating cranej the -J -A . .: ,;, , . , I 11 a wedge�shaped conformation, free- dom from marked coarseness, alert- 4, . liotior Graduate Carey Jones' Na- ..,. I I, . �'­� ti6val School of Auctioneering, Chi- few pounds in' inflation pressure , , , makes a bigger difference than it s�iperior is not his legs, but his mind. "Muscles? A piedie of rub- assisting at obsequies. . For cruelty to a cow., a young man from the - � � 7 SCOTLAND I . ness, activity and bright eye. , man at office -boy does with high pressure tires. For ber!" he cried scornfully. "Muscles received a severe reprimand Behch in the Belfast Summons Court. DO NOT'READ,THIS I I Plunging into the river Cart near Carlile Quay, Paisley,- Ati�en- Feed capacity is Indicated by a long deep roomy middle, broad muzzle, wages! example, take a high pressure tire for which 6o tbs. is� fhe proper pres- are nothing. Mind is everything. An Evidence was given -that defendant . . . Onless you can jet Goo . dyes I r Zmr . a . n - . 11 ". - . I ! I . � strong jaw, and well-developed sali- I I 0 ALA& � I #A JohnRctakilit sure and, if it -is Tun at 55 Tbs., the athlete is the product of the crystal- and another youth were in charge of teed Waterproof. Rain6a�6 heaving �� vary glands. I This salesman, who per ization of him mind and his muscle is the visualized form his -will a number of cattle on the Ormeau - - Goodyear Label for less tbah.$6.90, I Well-developed milk organs are reaches the ear of the . cent. for the r) Tb,. difference in of power and intelligence. All I have Road. On, of the animals raii. a a for $19.00. We can furniab.'You . � I � 11 W, � � � indicated by an udder of good size and quality, well attached forward public quickest, and' pressure. If a b#11odn tire which should carry 25 Ibis. is operated at achieved is due to my spiritual not little ahead, but as it pulled up,a- I gainst a wall and was almost stand- ivith same for men,,women or � iren in any size. Money refunded if ".. I � I and high up between the thighs, . adds the largest num- - 20 lbs. the five potind difference a- my physical faculties. Body is merely the instrument on the ing still, defendant struck it a violent not satisfied. � � . I � � I .11 .. I � , 11 ... , , . ,' . I , , I !arge well-placed teats, and large, ber of new business mounts to 20 per eent. In each case which mind plays." But' the mina must blow over the head, bui%ting the eye. AGE14TS WANTED . " veins running forward on the abdomen. I prospects — costs you the over -deflection of the tire carcass resulting from. under -inflation will lie have a perfect instrument if records are to be broken, doubt if ball. The judge said his only difficul- tY Was to find some reason for not ' � Address � . . .1 The Goodyea!,Waterproof Coats Co., - Constitution and vigor are Indicat- much ( less than the roughly in proporden to the tper- and we I even Nurmils mind would h . im sending the defendant to prison. He . U0 Albert St,, Ottawa. Ont el If ed by a good heart girth and a good cheapest office -boy. Fentage differences in pressude. it get far in racing should his body have was a boy of 18 . and the only evi- dence in his favbr his . . I width through the region of the is evident that it �s of greater im- . the ntisfo,ittine to th,qw a splint. *as eofiduct 11 . I I ­— heart, a healthy condition of the skin Add him to your sales portance to maintain the balloon tire Nurmi runs flatfooted, - whereas was not preconceived cruelty, but was . . I and hair. Freedom from disease is best In- force! at very close to its,�pecified inflation than it i� in the, case Of trainers for a long time have insisted the outburst of a ino-ment. Such 6c- currenees were'liappening every day, ,�. - JUNK DEALER i dicated by the application of the As an investment that pressure the high pressure type. that the proper way to run -is on the ball of the foot. This d inetho an d the amount of torture' and un- , I I will buy all kinds of Sunk, Hides, tuberculin test and also the contag- lous abortion agglutination test.— can bring large returns, Unfortunately there is no agree- ment, hl the industry'as to what the was thought to insure the highest ,I;peed and the s -r . atest conserva- necessary suffering that I was being defendant Wool an4-Fowl. Will pay good pric-, es Ari"Jv to � r, I - ,, erate. and satisfaction guaranteed. r', . — . � L. Stevenson, Dept. of Extension, 0. A. College. Dairy Notes. encourage your best salesmen to use Lbng ' Distance freely. Each proper inflation pressure for each size is. However, each tire nianufac- turer makes some recommendation covering proper pressures -for his tion of energy. But, like the an- cient Greeks, the North American Indiaris 'and all the Finns, Nurm' flatfooted., He Defend- ant was fined ;9,5 and costs. I . - *.% . L � . MAX WOLSH, 28484f . Seaforth, Out. , I , . Phone 178. � I r,i . . I - ., .� � . OSCAR KLOPP ,�� . . 4, . liotior Graduate Carey Jones' Na- ..,. I I, . �'­� ti6val School of Auctioneering, Chi- Raw milk as delivpred to da4ries year more than 50,000 product and, pending ,the adoption of runs -says that his run- ning with them is a. nation SCOTLAND I . � -1 I . - � � I " — ,i,,� , �;,� .... . . , C490. Special course taken in Pare �ifi� Brod Liv.9 Stock, Real Estate, Mer- Is not likely to remain sweet lo.11ger tban 12 to 24 hours, whereas when new telephones are_. standard, the dealer must depend, on that. . - � I . I �. I Plunging into the river Cart near Carlile Quay, Paisley,- Ati�en- . y . . -:1 � I I I I , . —­ -- �11 � ��.,i�;,,,��.'­ehdndig,p and Farm Sales. Rates in "' �,��',; ? ­ i. 'with markdt. Sat- pasteurized and cooled It will be good and sweet for two or flirpe days. This added in Ontario and . to the list I . The Wief ' that balloon, tires lose pressure more rapidly than do high . 11 ". - . I ! I . � at ei year old girl millwdaer,$warn to the� rescue -of three boy 'fiad I I 0 ALA& � I #A JohnRctakilit )Ct6ping prevailing �,� ! ; ., , Ig a decided advantage for the milk Quebec of - a -old who , ,*6- ti., wire, ,,;��;� o on assured. Write or " , '�,A,:, Mopp, Zurich, Ont. Phone dAmler and also for the housewife, those they can do bu'si- pressure tires Is nbt.f6u1ido,d in fact acco iding to -testi made by, one of �. . � 0 " ,,, . A fallen in -to the stream a'd broughi n I . '. .� . . ' �111V'1. 1.0'', ,;�, 1. 10 115.ti�-�,, ''.. I . . 11 9. . 2866-52 who is frequently troubled with sour ness, with. the larger tire Gen- � I � 11 W, � � � him back safely t6 land. The, Prd- vost of Paisley has communicated . . Agency 1�, , ­.- , , �,;, " I 'f;1 .,.4�' milk when the produce is handled in ,marhifactueers. erally speaking, .thej lose pressure 'of ".. I � I -with the Royal Itumhfw Safety and - I I I . . %,�� '':. ,-- 4,11, , , ?�,,',,, ��-. .. , . IL T. LtMER jl$i,� I," ��,�,'; " " : '1�111%� �, Licenged vivo-tioneer for tba County , . a raw condition. -­,!�— There are only a few Canadiam : . . I I . less rapidly but thea loss is greater importance for thi-I reaso"s pointed n the foregot'' bs In out i 49 1%rakraly - � . I � � I .11 .. I � , 11 ... , , . ,' . I , , I I the Carnegie -Rero-,Trtist, di Ateution to the gallaut� co rect"Ag iiauet of the girl, and it is uwdei4tobdAW her . ...i— I I I . I I � D, r I . ' ' I , lnmurnwreo nVAVIL �' ''­�L" �,�­­,�, � . . I p. sing, it is of interest to tote that 1, ' ­ 7 , , I 11, ,"I"j"J, f HtIkft; gal i%ttd2ded to In &Ill who have the grand manne'r, and thd'# I 11 � � jj�l 11"V� �� ':��'14`0':, epiploypts fiRend to delnbwsUato their "I t,,J�­��, , I the pressure loss 49,-moto rapid when I Me 0 6 4.' - - ��, 'i , I ,aii,,�;� ,,��,,� 0 1147i 96vanj�OA"' '11�- use it as subseitute for brains.—King- . - unicipal .'' ,�L'i�, , 0 appreefittlon, of her brAva,dee& , ­,�tts of fh& 9 k , . fttj " "��a �'-V'�',,� I , I I.. 1 "";;��"�4i�',�"'�"'���.�','�',""I",4?1�"�' 4' 1 1 , Glasgovf Cainivat-t1tited` , , I � � ii , 14 ji(fo in, ' W'&M and , arjUtdhp- ston Whig. I - I the eat ig runnibi'd than whefi it is , 0 A' �1*� .11 I I aftep a " , � . a I .1 � . * j IN - ,�� V, � ; Ithoofigila , I I , . I �L - �"�,��'j""q'��,"� '1221. � I a o :. , ��,,��,�.j�ii, ".",,:T, OrM , & n6ft X& standing still, CofWO-4uently, I -ar ,full of �Mk' *deks. at the, ' , - I 11 ��L �'i��;;'�,��:i�;��'�"�"�,'j���'� ' -, `4 "Alla P� I I I 11 Aik �' . � � verY su6cegiI I I rpbra ion - , ;�,,�k�(,�i�,I:j�� .1 .'' -Ift , : . .a, dc I " �L:�:j�� ,:.,�, ��,�,!�, . 0, g Perhaps the greatest lesson vvhieh . . rolls u bi mil -wtekly, 11 11 I L, 'Somo &Xcit'ament * o U 9070 g 66� ."��111:iov .- -0 �� ;Noft "' siik, ,I X61vilft Hat .1, ­14'111�11t:�­,'iF'11' I I�W'L ,:.,I �10 - ;�-, "; ra tit W 1 066ta Wit 2% efft - tires. 26'ld It , I'll � ­'� , :�. .. �'­ I'll.'' , � �Wj,41- 6� U." , ' tla,e lives of lita ry men ach is a te�w flot ordhoure &$ :�f ' eaftg7�d afte'r. �ffi6 lh4�11ha4 bt'ft L elfate`4'� . , I I �"�,�i*�`," �L,'­L' I.,; 1, �* . f4may k0a a I ' I , , , . 1. I I 1 , ,of�tje ptlb& tlnd1*1J,dj%,_4TkKn,t# � I " I �.. , , , ", , ME or * 44�"l 64�k � xb4lueiitli, ." o,,, - , iew, � . 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