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The Signal, 1909-3-4, Page 44 '1i u DAT, MAacu 4, 1909. LOCAL TOPICS. A Strong Popular School. "In union there is etreDgth." "In a multitude of counsellors there is wis- dom." These are tut of the many u• reasons why young pie eousid it best to attQna Can i s greatest chain of high-grade, moderu, actual business schools, Goderich Business College, whose advertisement appsate in this issue, is a worthy link. Do You Want These Books? Everyone thinking of going out West should, read the free booklets, "Settlers' Guide' and "Western ('an- ada." published by the C. P. R. They contain • mine of information regard- ing the Northwest, erop Hguree, lands for sale, farming mote., good maps, freight and passenger rates. and par- ticulars of settlers train service dur- ing March and April. Apply at once for copies, to local agent or 'direct to R. L. Thompson. District Passenger Agent, 0. P. R., Toronto. 35 -at ' No Bait Needed. lu a Hood at Port Hope yesterday floating ice Ailed a newspaper (Ace and the editor- °aught deli era-t•hm-prwh- rootp. ,The editor doesn't always gel the Moroi of it. A whole s:unwer's ice supply and a fish dinner un Ash Wednesday isn't such poor luck. - Hamilton Spectator. Wgcan do better than that in God- erich. Judging from the reports we get from the citizens, all that is neer.• sary here ie to turn on the -tap -and there is your Rob. Pleased Brussels People. In its report of an entertainment given by the Oddfellowe of Bri ssels on the 19th uit. The Itemises Post says : "The well-known Blackstone orchestra, of Goderidh, made their initial Appearance before a Brussels audience lin I. -rendered selections be- fore comwei,cement of program, and supplied music for • couple at hourf dancing. Every number by the or- chestra was tendered in excellent style and the Blackstouee will 1* heartily welcomed at any future time by the Brussels people." Mr. Egener's Success. The following reference to a further Goderich young wan is trop, The Brantford Courier of the 17th ult. : "The last of three organ recitals wee given in Zion church last night, b Mr. Frederick Egener, organist anti choirmaster of the church. He was very ably assisted by Miss Melita Ray - mood. soprano, and Mr. James Whit- taker, baritone, and the choir. Mr. Egener did exceedingly well and his playing was highly appreciated by all those present, especially the Hret num- ber, Pastoral Sonata, by Rheinberger, that famous German writer." No Summer School. A meeting of the executive at the Goderich district Epworth League was held in Blyth on tbe 211th nit. 1t ____ was decided .not ter hold a summer school this year, but to have a larger number from the district attend the missionary normal school at Sl. Thomas. Some members of the ex- ecutive will visit each League. at as early a date as possible, with that ob- ject in view. It was also decided to make an effort to organize leagues in all the churches in the district, The next convention will be held in Sep- tember or October, the place not yet being decided upon. The Lincoln Stamp. Postage stamp collectors will he interested in knowing that the specially designed Lincoln two -cent stamps which the United States is issuing to coruuteworate the lel/th birthday anniversary of the rail -split- ting- President have -come into - use. The 'tamp is the same color, size and shape as the regular two -cent stamp, but the subject is a profile of Lincoln, after a bust by Saint -Gaudette. A spray of laurel leaves appears either -end -of -an ellipse and above the prefile are the words "U. S. Postage." Below the ellipse is broken by a rib- bon bearing the date of Lincoln's birth, and of its centennial anniversary. Beneath the ribbon is the denomina- tion, "Two cents." THE SIGNAL : 001)I,RIC LI ONTARIO. Making Fun of the Farmer. 1 But What Would the World Do Without Him ? tt row Thu C (tome on, let'. wake fun of the farmer. Let's repeat sows tooth -eaten jukes about the "rube." Let's call tris sun a "Iwyeeed" and his daughter a "jay,' Let's is sneer at his wife. For we are city folks. t' Let's make the farmer ashamed of his job and drive his chit leen to the stuffy tenement and the grituy twill with our citified cease sax. And then when we all get to be city folks we will be a "email," nation. We will all Le up•to-drte. And then we will all starve to death. isn't the farmer a joke? Haven't all the "funny" papers said an for twenty --+.Qt fifty-or-•fieC years? Do we realize that there are only two classes of people in the world: people who live on farms and people who live on farmers Do we realize that ever in the world's history there have been more tanners than them have been of all other people combined? Think then that not a utill, mine, [atu,sy. atp, theatre or raUwa could exert were -it not i The Tanner. He furnishes the raw material trout which our food and ut.r clothes are made. All our luxuries represent the pn.tiLith (he'farr.tee'spr. slime. There is just t. en and the earth in all this great 1' oblem of life. The earth yields a livi Ig to man and ex - tails his labor as hi r price. The garner applire his labor to the •li h and Brings firth gear atilt-ttm- ber and wool and leather and meat. Then the -rest of us take what the _farmer has wrested from- nature's storehouse and, giving him as little as possible in return, proceed to juggle with the fruit of the farmer's toil in order that we Play each have an ex- cuse for eating three meals, wearing clothes and sleeping sheltered. The mines are needed to furnish .uaterials for utachiuery to work up the farm product : for railways and .hips to haul it ; for coin 10 measure it with ; fur wires with which to fence the land or upon which to telegraph market quotations. The brokers gamble in it ; rho bank- ers loan on it ; the lawyers argue about it ; the judges split hairs over it ; the doctors cam for the txxlies of the fanners and the rest of the world which is working over farm produce. The preachers are paid out of, the crops to care for our souls. Stop and think if you can conceive of a single human being -including hobos -whose very life does not de- pend. daily. upon the Akin and in. dustry of the farmer. There is no one. Oh, yes! Let's Iaugb at the farther and his family -but most of all at his slats',? Newa.l {"hared man" and his "hired girl." -AM eVely mothers son and daugh- ter of us is either a farmer) or a mem- . ber of his Neatly, or else his "hired help." But none the leas our miserable ' little jest* have shaken the farmer's • pride in his vocation and made his children discontented with country life. President Roosevelt did a totally big thing for the United States when he appointed his country -life couuniseion ' -ad all the funny men half solved a lot of old jokes about it. The commission has reported that Hurn are really only three grave needs of the average farmer : • First -Co-operation or organization. -Second-Knew kind of schools for country children. Schools that will prepare the pipits for country life rather than city lite, and Thins -Better means of communica- tion ; especially good roads and par- cels pmt. Organic 1tion will come when the farmer's children take at their real �vrrort,�h-or worthlessness- -our jokes abe,utTat in life. ' Wben they see that we are only jealous. When the garner realizes his dignity and his independence. oots bran he Improved so that they fit a boy to judge rotation of crops as well as to keep a conductor's cash slip on a trolley car. Nobody but the expresscompaniea can deny the farmer's right to a parcels poet -so tong -al the farmer is wilting and able to pay postage. Canada will bloom. prosper and flourish in the exact ratio that its people become tillers of the soil. When we can furnish t he necessaries Of life to half the world we can have all the more luxuries at home. When the fresh air of the fields is the breath of life to our children instead of the sickly vapor of the tenements, the health of the nation will beanhusL When the hamlet's boy and girl realize that in the city &emitsthemthe crush of industrial competition, the meeker•y of artifleisl pleasure and the loss of human fellowship and neigh- borly love, then the "jay" juke will lose its power. But the farmer Ts -entitled to- op- portunity, to recreation. to comfort. All of, these• he will have, and he must aleo force an end to the speculative holding of land ; to the stealing of water poWe\r ; to the westing of the forests. \ In the meantime city people will come to know t at they have ss much license to poke- rate thee farwteres has that other pa ite, the Hen, to jest at the good -n red mastiff :on whose warm, nutritio body he is a trespasser without title. \ `i W*i3 company c,.nnot build wily--'+ out assistance. According to The Tele.eope, Walkerton got the C. P. connection without a bonus. On the other 'head, Goderi_u and other muni- cipalities in this section were called upon for substantial payments, for "right of way," when the C. P. It. branch was built from Guelph. It looks as if it were the railway game to get as touch "encouragement" as possible, and if the Government will not help, and the municipalities re- fuse to be squeezed, then the line will be built without assistance. A banes probably helps to hurry up matters where the railway company can afford to wait. on A,Volce from Virginia. We are indebted to W. G. Coutts, of Big Stone Gap, Virginia is former Goderich toy I, for copies of The Big Stone Gap Post, from which we learn that the Virginia town is making an energetic- effort to cultivate a Big Stone Gap •room." The Board of Trade of the town is taking an active part in the campaign, and Mr. Coutts, who seems never to lose hie interext in the old home town, writes to ask why Godetich Inc. not increase its ef• forts in the same direction. Ile wants to know if there are not some energetic citizens to tisk. the place of the Citizens' Committee of ten years ago in keeping Goderich to the front. "Did Goderich ever need a live board of trade as it does new ? " he asks. "Wake up there. Goderich ; Sarnia will eat you up. The eyes of the Goderich old bays are watching you thrcugh The Signal." Want Their Money back. The council of the village of Tees - water have made a demand on the Huron -Ontario Railway Co, for a re- fund of the [Honey contributed by Tceswater to the original scheme, and they will likely get it. The Company has been to organized and is apply- ing t the (iuvernment for a change in the charter, leaving out this part of the country altogether. 1f we are not to receive any benefit from the new road, we ought to get our money hack. The Walkerton council ought to take similar action. Walkerton has $cidt in that project. --Walkerton Telescope. Goderich bas a similar amount stowed away in the Huron -Ontario scheme, but we are not 'tutoring under any de- lusion ore to the chances of getting it buck. Railway promoters etre not built that way. New C. P. R. branch. Another railway extension which, it is reported from Guelph, is likely noon to iwe nlsde in connection with tbe 1'. P. B. system is to join the ('?edit Valley line with the Guelph & Goderich line. rhe new "connection would run seven miles, from \i eisen- burg on the G. & G. branch to Elora. The route, it is understood, has al - bean survaged.bb-tale- 4*aa Pari c Railway and it is supposed that the building operations will not he long deferred. This section of road would give the C. 1', N. a loop system complete from Toronto to Guelph Junt'tion by Orangeville, Elora, Fergus and other points on the Credit Valley system. And it is aline which could be easily constructed with few grades or other difticultiee. With the aid of this sevenanile sec- tion the C. P. R. would have a freight line much shorter to Elora, Fergus and othet•,peinta, and would he in it tetter position. t., compete with the Grand Trunk, Over such a line the coal required for several towns could 1,e hauled by a much shorter route from the Suspension Bridge. and in addition it evades the big horseshoe grade at l'aledon. mountain. Should bulld Without Assistance. The Walkerton Telescope says : 'The town of Owen Sound is trying to get the Ontario Government to guarantee the bonds of a proposed railway between Owen Hound and Meaford. it is to be hoped that the Government will do nothing of the kind. When the C. P. H. wanted e line to run into Walkerton it went to work and built It asking no favors from anybody. That ix tbe proper policy, and if the railway companies are not willing to build their own connecting linen in the older parts of the Province they should go without theta." The Telescope Is tight. The Prty- Inn• is under no ohligati,•i to encour- age the building of a little stab line &Inflecting the two Georgian Bay 1 towns, 1! Owen bound and Meaford Must have the ronnection, they isuM pay Inc it themselves. if the NO PRAISE TOO HIGH. l'loyne, Ont.. March let. -(Special.) That Dodd'et Kidney Pills will cure diabetes as well as all other forme of kidney trouble Is a well- known fact, but the statement male below by Mr. Waddington, of this plat*, goer§ further and proves that these cures are lasting. He says :- "i was cured of diabetes and other kidney troubles by Dodd's Kidney Pills three years ago and I am pleased to say the cure was lasting for I have been well ever since. Previous to taking Dodd's Kidney Pills 1 suffered ldt6ra.� lot_bfisan._ alis watt though 1`tried many remedies 1 got nn relief. i *AR subject to neuralgia and pains in the head and hack. I thought nothing would ever cure me till i tried Dodd's Kidney Pills. 1 took abut It boxes and they, completelycured the. i cannot praise Dodd's idney Pills too highly." EMERGENCY DANGER. When a Harsh Catarrhal Cold Fastens on the Breathing Organs a Life 1s Threatened. There are times when s 11701,e1 outfit is worth a life and hoeing it at hand will save alife. No safer precau- tion ran Its suggested than calling at Jae. Wilson's drum store and getting s supply for use in the following canes. When a Child shows the firstsign of crown a breath of Hyomei through the inhaler will check the trouble permanently. When through catching eoII you seem to be choking up, difficulty to breathe, pain or soreness over the lungs and other symptoms rff pneu- monia, the Instant relief from Hyo - Mei air is marvelous. it penetrates quickly to the inner I-peew e e of the hro nehlal intim and 'tinge where no liquid or millet medl- eine ran reach. When an nethmatie condition pre- sents unusual wheezing and oppressed breathing. II' umei will bring rest. Complete mutat Men. Repeat It :--"Shlloh'a Cute will al- ways •nt• % my cnntghe and (Tilde." Another form of tact Iles in the ability to arrive at conclusions with- out expressing them.-Pnek. School Libraries. Mail and umpire. T. S., Port Albert. - Qu. -- Our school section refuses to hive a lib- rary. The school inspector refuses to recommend the Government grant. Has the inspector authority to with- hold the grant, or can he compel us to put a library in the school ? Ans.-Sec. 87 of the P„blic Schools Act says it shall be the duty of the inspector to withhold his order for the amount apportioned from the Legisla- tive or. municipal grant where the trustees fait to comply with the Public Schools Act or the teguletions hf the Education Department, etc. But 1 see nothing iu this section giving the inspectoreautbority to withhold his Abel* grants where trustees have neglected or retuned to procure a school library. In section 63. sub -section 4, I find it stated that it shall be the duty of the trustees, "if they deem it expedient,' to establish and maintain school libraries, Nut these words do not make it eonnpul- snry. I am not aware that this sub- section has been repealed car amended. But there has been so h tinkering et the Public Schools Act during the past few years that, one can scarcely say what the law now is on many pointe. The probabilities are that many cif the amendments will prove useless. and some of them positively injurious to our public school system. This is one of the laws that should be simplified as much as possible, and then let alone for a number of years. e WORSE THAN ONLUNS. Bad Breath from Indigestion Cannot Be Overcome with Perfumes. Nine -tenths of the offensive breath is a result of stomach trouble. It. can- not 1* overcome by breath perfumes or any other palliative measures. if you have a bad breath ; if there is heartburn, flatulence and gulpings of undigested fond; if the stomach burns or smarts ; if there ie sleeplessness, nervousness, headaches or any other symptoms of indigestion, use lire -nor stomach tablets and get well. A 50 -cent box of Mi-o-na stomach tablets baste for a couple of weeks and will ward off a dozen mild attacks of tom -Virile -Iter ennttnnett- Vee will give an absolute and complete [lure. Jan. Wilson Ilea seen so many cures anade by Mi-o-na stomach tablets that he gives a guarantee with every box to refund the money if it fails. Too Slow for Safety. A chauffeur found himself in court the other day charged with injuring a pedestrian. ' "You ran into this man at thirty mile. an hour, and knocked him forty feet," said the magistrate. "That. or a little better, I suppose," answered the chauffeur. "Why didn't you slow down ?" "Mere precaution, your Honor. Once I shut off speed and hit a man so gently that he was able to climb into the machine and give me a Belt- ing." It in cotnmendab'e to correct the faults of ethers if we are free of them ourselves. A very shy young man ha, been calling on "the sweeter, girl in the world" for many moons, Int, being bashful, his suit peogresaevl slowly. she c er was tim• o Finally aid i it a rm t start something, so the next time he called she ptinted to the rose in the buttonhole of his coat and said : "I'll give you a kiss for that rose." A crimson flush spread over hie rein tenanrr, but the exchange wits male after some hesitation on his part. Then he gr'ebbed his hat and started to leave the room. "Why, where are you going?" she *eked in surprise. "To the-er-flnriat Inc more rewuee," be nailed hack 1,' it th. fr int door. - Aketehy Bits. RURAL TELEPHONE LINES. Invention of Ellice Farmer to Tell When Anyone u Spying. One of the features of rural tele- phone lines is that there is no indi- vidual line ; the customers all being Qnthttune line heat' when every other number than their own is rung add if they like to play the spy they can, though it bas to be done very moue.- I like to prevent the person', conversing from learning that another is "on." Experience shows, however, that this curiosity soon wears off, as people sal. dons retail anything of a very private or spicy nature over such a line. But a correspondent of The Stratford Herald wakes the subject a text for a joke which is not so bad. in the following : "Farmers in the vicinity of Sebring- ville have lately installed a telephone system which is provldk a peat con- venience. 1t has one drawback, how- everis rivate all the • it not P n wire. There are 'phones beingon one u h ine phonesonthe line. 1t is said that one otherwise estimable lady has invented a head•piece which will hold the receiver to her ear while she goes on with ber knitting. In this way she keeps in touch with the private stairs of her neighbors. This ind of butting in has resulted in the inven- tion by an Ellice farmer of an indi- cator to be attached to every 'phone, which will register the number of any other 'phone where the receiver is taken down when .a call is made, It Pi not known if this will be adopted on the line." Hon. Mr. Fielding. and the Combines. Toroatu Star. Hon. Mr. Fieldingdid not, in his re- ply to The anticoinTiine deputatletl which waited on him Friday; coniwtt himself to any definite statement of his own views. At the ean,e time the general tenor of his remarks seems to indicate that he is indisposed to ask 1.1. colleague. T t go huffier than they have als•eady gone in waking pro- vision for the protection of tbe eon - sinner against the elactiupn pf trade combinations. He appears to believe that a sufficient means o1 relief may be found either in that part of the Criminal Code which provides for the punishment of these forming con - bines, or in action such as was taken Ny newspapers in the case of the paper emulsifies same years Ago. In ass uuniug this position Mr. Field- ing overlooks some of the most im- portant m- �o ,rtant facts bearing on the sit nation. Such relief as the newspapers obtained in the ease of the pater combine was due to the fact that they were organ- j ized ; this was a case of an organized body of consumers fighting a bine of manufacturers, which had unduly enhanced' prices. It was by organ- ized effort the new'pepers were able to collect evidence sufficient 1. satisfy the Government's eomruis sioner that a combine'did exist, and to secure a reduction in the tariff on paper as a consequence. No single rnnsnmer, or body of trnnr•ganized-enn- sumers, could have Lorne an expendi- ture sirnilar to that ineorr•ed by the newspaper publishers on the occasion referred to. To ask. ea Mr. Fielding in effect does ask, an individual buyer of cottons or of enameled ware to as- sume an outlay of $2,0M1) in order to satisfy a court of enquiry that a•cot- ton or enameled ware combine exhale ie to ask the impossible. ' Nor does the Criminal Code otter any readier means of redress. The enforcement of the Code is in the hands of Provincial authorities, and cases may arise in which these author- ities are wholly out of sympathy with the polies, behind the lode to so far as combines In testraint of trade are con- cerned. Indeed, we have in this Prov- ince at the present Gme the must practical demonstration of this lack of sympathy. The' prosecutions in .the courts of Toronto' against combines, begun by Mr. Curry three yearn since, have been called oft ; • prosecution men the same time has not yet reached a con - clition it is simple mockery. under such conditions, to tell consumers to look to the anti•comhine clause of the Criminal Code for relief. If the Dominion Government dr*. not, of its own emotion, at its own est pence. undertake . to break up trade combinations which have developed under the tariff framed by itself, con- sumers are very likely to attempt more drastic measures than were sug- gested by their reltreaentatives at Friday's interview. They are likely to accept the suggestion thrown nut by Sir Hichatel Cartwright, and or- ganize with a view of securing the entire eliminstian of the protective principle from tariff legislation. 1111111111111111111111111111411111111.11111111111/ 41111111111111111111 • 11111111.111111. 41111.1111111111. NEW SPR/NG GOODS We have large shipments of SPRING GOODS in stock already, and some lines are better value at the same price than last year. Just note what we have to say about the following items : Ginghams - Oei.tn.. Dress Goods Flannelettes Laces Embroideries Our prints this year are better cloth, better lterns than last year, and the • endure are absolutely �ast.._Tha-aLLIEYaw aU--LSnft1(1_ DA.1:...- Tite. ilk: blues ars just as good as those at 126c, and the cloth extra value. We are handling Scotch Ginghams, 121E and 1&:. They are much better than other makes, and surer colors. Striper and checks. The finest range we ever I offered, Don't fail to see those, in black. blue and cram grouuds. Spot and stripe patterns. The first two shipments of our imported Ureas goods are here. We have some of the very latcet and 'tubbiest things a.. Io found anywhere, and we know our prices are tight, lat. o!Flsunelettes, 31 to 3.1 incite, with•, Irk, Some of them value foe 124-. THIS WEEK weave shuwidg NEW Rngl;.-i. French and German Valenciunn.-s frgto tine cent a yard up. ins •i tions for'dices trimmings. in white, black ari l creat,. Allover laces in the situ c Colors. - borne special pieces, very flue and extra veto-. I• I more in a few days. Patterns We carry Stared ins Pattern., and sell t..' 1u •signer and Farhion Book. Yearly subscription fur the Designer, fro;. J. E. COLBORNE •1111111111111111111 • •11111111•1111111 OMB CASCARA BROMIDE QUININE. A chocolate -coated tablet that breaks up a •— cold in the head, 25c. WHITE PINE TAR WITH WILD CHERRY the guaranteed cough syrup, 25c. DUNLOP New Line to Exeter. St. Marys Feb. 27. -The extension of the St. Mary'. & Western Ontario Railway through to Exeter may be en accomplished fact before long. The company is caking for • loan of tnenty thousand dollars each from the munlcipatttlee of Blanshard, Us - borne and Exeter. Meetings have already been held at Kirktonand Exe- ter. and petitions are being circulated in the township of Blanshard asking Die council to manna a bylaw. The township of Colborne has not yet been approaehed. Three distinct surveys of the western extension were made last year by the company's engineer- ing staff. Itis probable that one of these surveys will hr used, but it is nart.a certainty by any. awls., q ord- ing to the officials of the company. in case the municipalities fall in line at once, the ufHciels say the construc- tion nt the road may be commenced as early as June. The average married man wastes a lot of sympathy on itis wife's husband. Woman's eakness A woman's reproductive organs are in the most in- tense and continuous sym- pathy with her kidneys. The slight est disorder in the kidneys brings about a corresponding disease in the reproductive organs. Dodd's Kidney Pills, by re- storing the kidneys to their perfect condition, prevent and cure thosefearful dis- orders peculiar to women. Pale young girls, worn-out mother., suffering wires and women enteringupon the Change of Life, your heat friend is Dodd's Kidney Pills .01. Eek .' 4e� Exiv (a B omAN 25 ets.laidk in LINIMENT - LIIIITSD . n.:+. ro C C tsaases s THE DRUGUIST. ry Necessaries for The Nn Traveller WHEN IN NEED OF TRUNKS, SUIT CASES, BAGS OR TELESCOPES REMEMBER we carry a full line at Season- able prices. Sq are G. M. ELLIOTT,Goderieh. u 1 1 1 1 1 1 IMMO Don't you think that NOW would be a good time to think about WHAT FURNITURE YOU WILL NEED WHEN HOUSE-CLEANING TIME COMES, and not leave it off until you are so busy that you will not be able to make a good choice? I have already many of myRING GOODS in, and 1 am sure they will pl.ase you. Call ani see if I have not something that would make yi,- home look more cheery. My Mattress one is the best cv^r, 1nrluding the MARSH ' ' OSTERMUOR. DOMINION FELT. WOOD FIBRE and SEP.'. IRON and BRASS BEDS, DRESSERS and STANDS. Good up -lo -date Furniture `Is all Lincs. 1 1 1 ,t i 1 1 J TILE ORIGINAL ONLY GENUINE ~- BEWARE OF IMITATIONS SOLD ON TiE MERITS Of IINARD'S LINIMENT -Never marry a widower;" said the old lady, "a re.uly•wade family is like a plate of cold potatoes." '•Ob, I'll soon warts thew "' replied the dames •I. Groceries TO THE LADY OF THE HOUSE : When you are coming down town make a list of your wrote in the (troy -err line. and bring it to he tilled promptly with the best and most reliable goods to be had. Or call up Telephone No. 91, and your or .1.• will be attended with aphid care and promptness. our .t.., is 1 1 Teas and Coffees is complete. .111 the Leat ,Inal- itie-at the titin• pi, e, fry ;. maniple ordr Johnston's Military Bread • Ewen. t I..• beaten. We : 1 it. Sturdy & Co. The Grocors. - On th e Square Geo. Johnston, Store 89. Residence 178. FURNITURE UNDER- TAKING. 1rT SIDE SQUARE. - - -- VMS HOW 70 GET WELL HOW TO KEEP WELL Without one drop of medicine. Not ('ht ialinn Science, not. Faith (tore, nor laying on of hands. no parent fools nor gymnast is devices. but an entirely new System learned and practised by yourself. NO ONE CAN BE SICK WHO WILL LEARN AND PRACTISE IT. 03 YOoo WANT TO PUT ON GOOD HARD FLESH? Ito you s,,., t to reduce flesh ? it never fails to cure all nerve tronhles and nervous dvspepnia, conetipetinn and functinnai derange- ments of the I,Iver and Kidneys. Parents *tumid learn it so ea to develop their children into gond healthy, etrong men ami women. You will not have a cold or sore throat all winter if you practise this method. Invaluable Inclergymen, public speaker., singers, .1' For detailed instructions mail $t.00 to DK. GEO. F. CLARKE, P. O. Box tn. London, Oat. G. JOHNSTON EMBALMER AND FUNERAL DIREOTOR Ymnitere sod Undertaking warerooms. West aids Square. 'I'IION E : Store P41. Galeria) Reissen. 175 Night call.; At to.ddcnte, 31 tailllam NI reel. �1. BKOPBEY & SON w --THE LEADING — Funeral Directors and Embalmers Orders annuity atl.need le at all be..., nlebt .e day 'PHONE 15 °R 24 Warrhnn.e1 ( er. Weil Wbnensfpoaa wa,�l. (end Y.rlr 1(Meat an•1) *1 1Gt'I' at. 10 COAL ALL KINDS OF COAL AALWAYB ON HAND /IAil cowl weighed nn the market .reale. where yon .os. s.lan tbs. fora tea. WM. LEE. Orden left. et C. C. 1.1x'ri Hardware store cart tilde Menem. ernmellr attended to'