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The Signal, 1910-1-13, Page 44 Tin it t Ac, JANUARY 13, 1910 THE Mt(;MAl,' 1:111)1''1 1I '1f 1 1 ) GAMBLING. SUNDAY EVENING SERMON BY REV. DR. DOUOALL • murderer tries not to do so. The gambler differs from the pickpocket in that he 'exposes his own purse while he. seeks to empty the purse of an- other. No utensils t0 gamble without the desire and the purpose to win -- that is. to get his opponent's money without giving anything in return. Recollect always, says Charles Kin e - ley, "that the stock ,argumeo worthless.- it As -this: 'My mend would wiq from tie if he cooed, b*ve an equal right to win from' him.' Noowose. The saute argument would prove that I have the right to maim ot+ kill a ratan if only 1 give him the right to malar or kill rue if he can ur will." 13ut Saye some dainty lady who bets at races and at card ponies, some young fellow who puts up a turner to make it interesting, "I don't het for the sake o4 the money. I don't care for the rmot11ey I win. The tact that I take lily clfance of losing shows that the. money at Sake iii not the chief thing.' Bub _ why then .play for money? Why. not play floe buttons? That siould prove that you . do not want someone's looney fire nothing. Why ie it that you cannothave the interest, the, excitement, without the money element I' Why is it that the testees have tskenhorseracing out of New York State since lett inti has been outlawed:' \Vhy would then gamble its Mt elks if they did not hope and pre- mise to make y that they did not earn ? That is the canna of the inter- eMt. 1 tell you- it is the "ural" ele- ment which gives gembling in all its forms its fascist/0Mo:- -Money- wort through all putel4 speculative and chance etYurt i4money (Mimi tie,l ell holt au equivalent and is ditty encl. wicket money-. And no persun of tiltede- ceney and proper Minor will desire mnnry bu obtained. 1 and a friend of every clean and manly sport which giv *ulusemen, which crates bravery, cbit'rtlr'y. *u.11 spurt within reaesti*ble brands. keep it honest. and I ,ou with it. But to het on gsl.n' is the very reverse oFsport�11wn•11p. lfetting is the 1 of drat ,alhl•I i... , %Vhat has degraded ninny a pure sporL•cin0. profe.sion*l- ism.:" \\hat las passed many tike games over into t he handl of "NIHII0. ' It is the betting collided with it. the desire to get money not rattled. \\'hen :a matt i, interested i11 the' 'money be will gain or lyse, he is. not interested in the genie as such. It i t he .and of the pixy, the winning• -out the skill. the good play. the manly effort-- wshu•h intermit- hint. So tie-. Will )re• tempted to hectare the end by dist -tet means. NO read • friend of sp,rt will .tpk•,• a er111 The true .snorts. luau loves spurt for the sp ,rt'M sake. The Effects of Gambling. Gambling tend, to mak( a Iran int moral and dishonest. Naturally, for gatuhling in its essence is stealing. .i. A Visit to Monte Carlo, the World- famous Gambling Resort -A Defi- nition of Gambling --Not Far Re- moved from Stealing -Some Fam- iliar Forms to Evil. Nurh interest was taken in Bev. Dr. Dougull'a sermon in N seer street Methodist church last Sunday even - inn. "Gambling" was the subject - which he had announced, used a visit to Monte Carlo two summer* ago was the setting chereee for the' dlseolnse. The texCwas :-There tr a way which seeuteth right unto a than. but the end thereof' sue the ways of death" (Prov.,14:12). • - One of the meet' exquisite slots 110 Mother Earth, said ur. Dougall, is the principality of --Monaco. The little kingdom lies on 111• benith boder of Francs. It overlooks the Mediterran- ean stretching away to Africa, peer leerily blue at noonday. and in the glow of sunset glittering with irides- cent colors like a vast expanse of molten opals. . This - kingdoul coeere but eight miles *{tete ok territory, Nevertheless within this bitof ground the Prince is absolute monarch. He• . makes hie 1310 laws. hires his own soldiers, issues his own postage -�tta;nlHF-. 1201 coiu"gu, swoon N,•n 1411 Stmy4.1 onv hundred 111511 *rad a 'levy of one vessel --hip pri1.tr yacht. The 1nhahi1 ,urs •'1f M0111451 pay no takes, for the i'rincifi)1lity is really governed by a sy 0.licate which defrays all the exprtlses of_glvernuIent sod ilitpiruvehl5nt \im.1 pays the Prince a hands,.nne Hnou,11 allowance in retro laic tlie 'privilege 0f earrvingron the famous, or infauplias, gambling lestab- listunt•no .,t ?Innie 1',111.- The Casino where the gambling , dt I. 21111'1 r,U1ld,el, by • of she •ns iia 1 be world. The building itself is ell chat the lavish 'r2c- penditure of money can eeriest. The getubling glen cit Sunday heed every 1,hue day throughout the }•Pitt', twin noon 1111 midnight. The 1111) 445 ,tr,• Cl uw dell. And it I herr is ,a.p ° ull` the moo tel Klug• where sin is gilded, esi1 i se.inn1 rainpalu. ;tell tiod• fir -not, Monte cask! is that spot. In each of the .toms for gambling •are a'nullifier .4 tables hi the eel, e of which 18 a sunken bowl containing a r.'.oh•ing else I. l'his wheel Ines numbered divisions- on it correspond- ing with ,the numbers on the green brizr. el,th. Persons is•ttitig place ' their money. un these numbers om the yftrt1*. +4tae4 fv-a+a2 droi.l-('l lute the whirling wheel' derides who wins by twhere the hall stops. • Haggard Faces Around the Take 1 saw •these tables surissem pal by people two deep, mostly wonfen- u t- reses I was told. Art 1ne spoke, Mut the white.,dt•awuface.,the Munn lip., bespoke the suppressed eco iteme•nt. The bank of Monte Carlo is always the gaeubler's encu etlter, and idle* there is a peirentair in .1 he bank', 'favor it is sure of winning in the tong run. The profits are euort sous. Af- ter the 1'1 ince has - his subsidy arid all expenses paid, its annual points are reputed to be.alout BI,(OUX)1, ,. 1'�owitisnigti ,ncunt that the Print* rn Its n sub „ i et of •. u t Pu e t I t t lir pe 4 Casino. Ole kn it 's t the a tr all fx 1 eras• deadly tion and almost eerta►u ruin, 1 slaw shrubbery tinder which it wait said suicides took plan•. regularly. The average is skid to bit about twelve to fifteen a mouth. Hut t hese • n- hushed up. About t week is -flee I was there !i'. and Mrs. Brooks. tele Americans, had, paerde•rrd Ihetl•,.mteal. that they might secure her Money to continue their vicious pleasmrr of gambling. What is Gambling? ' But watt is ,p:rinblingr When we are agrrt•tl uplift whit* it is, we 111,1. find that tlfno is g.mlhling iia r.th.v form, than that of• .tyrants Carlo. liamhhng hay beet define,! by ('a mut potty of 1'u11,t1t. am "41 Cent Diet tt give or receive money al• good* 1t'it11l11t 11 just o',luiy*Irmt 111 exchange; and upon (Ondiiielrle that arr.fur the . et pert teeya.,Id t he (111 eight or rime sol of the parties eitgugeMl,in the. trall.*etinn". Or, Stated in simpler langpage„two condi- tionsat eesMent ial l °gamlbling --chance, And the Al.en,+e of tut iquiV feint for whit mac b• ginned. '1hi,l.. ,. l t_ 1 al. least ' int too I.... iilrul � thing* nn the -very lettere of gatniilirig. and many thitigS-11i1neerous to distr- acter and society. --No 111a1n }lits a right to ivi►ste hiss own poi sett y more than he hasi n a sight t Luke his oWn hf5. \ mantes ihTiaT not he p a card front trill --to another except for .g. sod Teltsrm. tattle it dice it rant a gond r*1trani. he place where it hall lies when ie erhiel1dg wheel ctlis is not tt greed move. ()Ise horse running faster than another its test it gleed reason? is net . (� t A me I tt goouud for the pawing sit 'property. If' -yon cannot aee why --that fa ane -y ti--perh it Will h¢ve difficulty in tering why-etealtng, is wrong. The seennd ini poral thing is in the fact of there being no equivalent for v*Idelarecei've'tt. No ratan should live •in thin world upon vetoes whirl he ' has nut produce41- or h'onoral,ly oh- ined. No man should he a parasite (ciety. Every hour lived upon proper • or which to man has not given an eel ' lent in 22 dishonorable hour of iif.. T ly man c0 Ire ex- cepted it. the invalid, unfortunate and the lunatic, (;,d1 - de that. each mac it to make hie o We are to rat what we earn -•y what other* earn. Commerce and tradeare established upon the print. riplei of 'production and honest ex- change. In honorable buying and selling, whether of labor or of com- modity, there is for web' party mutual benefit. But In gambling there is no utuial benefit. Gala 10 one is loss to other. Society would goo to smash upon this method. The napier at Bottom a Thief. Every !nimbler is at. bottom a thief. Gambling has the acme relation to robbe that duelling hal to murder. The thief wants his neighhnra'preop<er•t.y witbehtt paying for it. This la suety the ohj*ct the gambler has in view, whether it be for Marbles or far dol. Iare. Duelling differs from murder in that the duel tat puts his own lila in danger, whereas the make vulgar which liod has set his Race, believ- ing elieving that gambling footers crime, it is not W he expected that 1 could look with favor upon the gembleri "tools," whether they he the roulette table, dice, book•inakere' lists, tr cards- It mutter* not whether they be foynd io the home where Innocent children first learn the gamblee'e infernal art rinii father or mother wbotne*n welt.. ur el fashionnhle circles where men told women play for largerur ew*Iter stakes to lend excitement. Anywhere. every*here, there things have always been the instruments of gaulbliog, and even to know how to use them is dangerous. My young brtthere, do hear um! Soule ammo/ you are strangers to gaming. t 0(1 have never throwu dice. taken a share in a lot -p tory, laid a last, or played a eard. beseech you still keep your hand. off every instrument of gewilg: I. caution ageinrt cauls, and dice, and wagers. in private houses. I Care Hot what may to the char•bter of the perso0s whn m*y wok you to play. whether they he respectable church members .or nu_ahte Mini/era-to *11 their' invitations lo• take a hmxf of card+,, •No. \\'coldsay y .0 care to die the gambler's death_? \Vhat word of hope would the tuan of (kid speak overour• grave? Ah. plantuotreetocast itsshlade over that grave, for the long. deep and eternal gleotu that settle•1 (o'erit there will be shade enough. I'lant'ni 'for. get menet.: there, for tlowei s were out made to grow in such s -blasted breath. Visit it not with suuehiie, tor that would he_ m,wekery,llut in the dismal night, when the eters are hid by the thick clouds and tlie mottle refuses to give her light--tbeu vibit We gave of the ga[utifer: • KIPPEN. WEoN6suty. Jan. 51h. 1'_ived too late tor last issue.) 1 feet.. %L.- Anion • -the betide ' ver to s •Ir o owing were no ce : Mrs. Re - tall and daughter. of 1h ighl. were visaing at the honie of Mrs. A. Mc.lurttite....t'lute Jones, ut Logsdon; smolt a few days with his gram - fat het•,: John Jl1.5e, and oche r Irienda;.....s Cudtttore. of Exeter. wits the guest of her son. E. Cull - more . Nov. W. H. and Mils. -11th aud-(*wily, of Centralia, epa+nt a few days with the fatuity of J. 13. Dinscale Miss Fetcher, of Londe's, is visiting - her cousin, MissAlbs Fisher . Mt•. and Mrs. '1'. Day lila u, of Whitew(Mri, Sask.. MI -S. Will. Ma•• Allister. of Lewisville, Altar. Mrs. Win. Kyle, of Strome. Alta.. and Hugh l'eu,eron,,of �loueejaw.,'trlask., $4e.visiting their wuriy mends Iher•e. foe a few 11u,nths Miss Muriel Huta, of Saskatoon, Sask.. now a- etudetat et the Macdonald Inl�tptute, Guelph, *pent u p!ear.ult two we. karat the It •,ill' Thos. ltathw:ell ...:.Mt. and 31is: .fi Fowler, of Fillmore. Sk:, are ,e ending-thewinterwith lhelady ♦ p;arsnts. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. McLes', Messrs: Alden \V hitem*. , et De- troit, and Herbert, of the School of Pliartuacy, '1 o1•onto. and Miss Mabel, of the Ceutral Holiness College, Strat- ford. spent the -vacation --ac the old t herr \Liss /dent n1 was Ills KTL iif? Fir r e tt ales LlufT 111 l •iintun for a few days Inst Wet John Jones it visiting his daughter, Jlr.. Johns, in Elimville this week,... Melville Brown and sister Minnie. of Calgary, Alta.. Ray Jersey, of Elutira, New Yut•k, and Mss H. Hawkins, of Exeter. visited at the home of %V. . 1. Johnston last week. HYMENEAL -0n Wednesday. the Alth ult., the home f John Moffatt. London road. "uckerst ith was the scene of a pretty 'wedding. when his •eCond (laughter, :Mas Bertie, and John McI3e*th, a prosperous us young homer of Stanley, were tniitrel in the bunds . of matrimony by Rev. E. 11. Sowers, of -Brur tletd. I'tnewt ly at the hour of It o'clock the bride en- tered the drawing-roout leaning on her father's aim. while Mites Vilna :tlutTett, of Lntodon, 51110011. of the bride, plas fe l the the iding search. The bride was attended' by her sister. Vine, While Peter Cameron looked - after the wants of the groom. The In isle li.oked charming in a gown `of white 'organdie over• white silk, Dila, lard with ribbons and tris. Atter the retemo1y the guests, numbering sixty-iiv••, slat down to it Mifflin miss re- live. The 1.0011 m were dee-mated with evergreen* and cut flowers. the cere- Molly being preformed - beneath a beautiful .arch. The numerous and costly* present 5attested to. the pop11- lirity of the bride. The young coupler will settle down tin the groom's Harm en Lite .flit Clneve-i thardey,-- a their- w . I n 1Pto- msnY- friends wish . them a happy *rad prosperous mar- ried life The same' evening James Millet -mei, of the 2nd trances. sion, Stanley. and :Miss. Emma Reed, of Vat•ns, the daughter of Samuel Reed. ,were married hy• Rev. E. H. Sewers. The guests in this cane were t(trgety retntives of the 2 0fl l act- itlg parties. The happy couple will reside on the groom's splendid farm on the 22n1 concession, Stanley, where all -wish then, it leg and pt•o'perous • mart ird life. 'This was a busy day for the Rev. E. H. Bawer*, as in addl- tIon to these two couples Already men- tioned he married John McBride and Mimi Fee near Blake at 2'n. ru. - LOTHIAN. man who has a passion for gambling is al t surely a lost arum. It is a hotter passion' than the -appetite the drink: A p:(#ier Court judge rat wide experience told Da. Torrey, "i have seen many drunkardt hot never a *milder saved. The gambler's pats. cion iaana te- ttermartrliuir than the drunkerd'a Session." . Tne •h••ttine limn is 0115 of t he least respectable 111 1uH•iety. He is Int nuteitet in litany caws Who would employ a Haan or woman or boy who continually heti? 1. it not known that be tins turned his face downwerd, and his hack t0 thing* honorable and tr.:th- ful? Is the ••sport"'not to be found eemend poolrooms, hotel hers, him*. , entre and prize ringsThe beetle 1K spirit * r rhles'ca for the 11 a e= t tar t h r• fel., I low, for pure, honest and noble things. Gambling ie :oiie parent of crime. It gees with lust, runt+ler, '•ernlwzzle- 1111.111 and roble•t•y.. 541114 haye slolelr h•oui 1 beirt at hers, etpt•k, from their` employees, bank prebidents fermi' theii baulks. Gambling in Canada. In Canada gambling is outlawed ,x - 21I4 ,pea ital.., in two things. l eras is the lace-tiliek betting, the other is in- 'idiil1te 14I11'41111*t ion, particularly in. reel estate and mining stocks. Thslrleticnlly' l can see no mere Mom in 'two horsrr rllnllityg a tare than in the men running a veep. (file leer -tree k peopl".do not follow The 1414.s for i0.•sake ofth, same. but eq. tits ,i.ke-.lf the utoftey.. The 1'oeonl, Telegram of June :eh, 1141111, est ',gaal ed l hat i$'S,fk* 10111.1p*d been Let and lout dul•irlg 1115 111, 51, of ttie Jockey ('huh INat befe'is at the Woodbine, •Think in that! 'Think of the i, , n lemma( - mined -4 , -ih*r*Ctrl• and 11T 1 / arae e , In Ihitlk f tlr �rire r r - ► t 11 n n detect ! Think et 1 hat Hggr/la/Weft /f hlerklegm, Mcolndt On and 11t'1ltitllles freer all over America 1 Think of On- tario, our beloved 1111115 l'rnvitiep, l,* in the dumping 1 l 1, ground for5 s r n l the cum KK I of w'ickedne ce•tinil Toronto the (lo,,d ire headgear :Pt-* ! Thr stints• of New Mhermirt 2'alifornia and Louise - an*, nnee,tll raring Suites, lister all outlawed p)t•l maki,ilg, luuric-ranking 1 hotting degitrs. Shall .v.' lie the last to gilarol 1'11' honer, 1111r newels, ern • memo n p1 p 1 t y, the charm -ter of our y g men ? I mak that many of you write personal lettere to our member when this (natter comes up this ses- tib In in the Commutes. ' ' 111 ) h .sperm*tion the twq ele- ments (if-Kiunbling---ehnnel, and the absence of an equivitletlt for that which is gained -ratty he found. The enl•nce of gatnlling ill in very„ nitieh of the real estat5 and mining 'stock buying and selling. 1 stn *ware 1 stn tonrhing tender plata* in a lot of you. hot you San afford to tie erRile think- ing on th'lnatter. It is the absence of thought which permits many per ems to gamble in reel .'state an stock*. They do not know they a gambling. ,When a man buysa Northwest for on dation-that ia, to sell' fo more t e paid for it, the gain no being for it vement-does he no stake his money in the hope or th *Mee .of . winning Y - And .for mon which he may win what ego v *lent does he intend to hand over Nothing. Ha takes advantage of improvements made by others, or of ate-•awgtesa or *menace WIT buyer. Ile stands to win or lose, hu he hopes to Win. Ile would not pia his money in tinier -he hoped to ge more from the .nther'f1*llow. it is ei re m r t. e the the t t • Dodd'sc41/7nudiecine Kidney will curs Das- cease are Owlish; 111s. - bolesLike Bright's Dis- t � i c7arsedd 'cs RuKriadnbelePltlds Doctors themselves confess that without i odd's Kidney Pilo they are powerless against Dia. betes. Dodd. Kidney Pills are the first medicine that ever cured Diabetes. Imitations- box, name and pill, are advertised to do so, but the nletliciw WWM elms cure Diabotos MEM is 1)odd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's Kidney Pills are fifty cents a box at all druggists. • rw prints and inghams,, =3 N IL • wit and 15c, -for. £'zingrhams _... Regular 12 I -2C )Oo This is a, special -hit-we going fast at I04, as well they might. They are today wortit s tc wholesale. . Look in our windows for than. Fast colors. 10c Ginghams 10c Scotch and Entlish Ginghanls, - in stripe!, • checks and plain chaln�l)rcvs,- good width and fast' ce,lori. Regular 15c and I2 jc Cloth, fir......t t . 10c Prints 10c English Prints imported direct to us from the initis in England, fast colors, regulation width, sold everywhere for 12 1-2c. l)ur:price for this week •......•..... _......_. • 100 'I`txsDA Y, Jan. Ilth. Lon*u AN • Lo1 .%114, -Dr.. J. A. Mc- K.nzie and his son. Kenneth, of be- trott,' Mich., visited friends around here lest week Miss Ada McKen- zie ha* returned to Stratford Normal. Allan `McIntyre., of -• Lake Lin Hien, Mich., celled here on a business trip \lies Nellie Oilmen. is home front l'hatham, where she has ben n nurse in training at St, Joseph hoe• pital Miss Mary Swan is visiting around Acton and vicinity. She in- tenita staving rine trine Misses Mary and'Nor* Hogan have returned to Toronto after spending the vtaea- tion at their home here firs. Campbell is very 111, Are -hope to hear of her recovery soon ..Frank Btevenson, of Laurier, spent two weeks at Wm. Hughes' Mise dohnetone has •.r* ,sc peened her. hool vilth f) a large attendance, notwith- standing the stormy weathet. "The D. R 1.." Emulsion, taken in legitimatized gamble in which ulcer is corsets of general debility and loss of ive the heet of re - neither production nor proper intim-int or. itis sure to restores health and gives re- tri*1 operation. viewed vitality. Relieving ea 1 do that the letting habit, the gambling pas*ion• rub like a hellish vitriol into the snot, believ- ing that it is a sin against Oarlyle. The situation that hue not Be duty sem never yet occupied by mac.- •- +ar.,... AN J - Cold -S ores Are your hands chapped. cracked or sole? Have you "cold cracks" which open :.nd bleed when the skin is drawn tight? Have you s told sore, frost bite, chilblains, or a "raw" place, which in ifiines makes it agony for - yeu'to go aboa t yc;:r hou:.eitold duties ? 1f' so. Zam-Buk wilt give you rel:ei, and will heal the frost-lana;ed skin...Anoint the sore places at night. Zane -auk's rich healing-esse_ncsa Sill sink into the wounds, end the smart- iao, and will heal quickly. Mrs. Telles, of Portland, says: "My hands were so sore and crc•ktolithatat was &gutty to put -thou •ucar water. When I did so they 4.0441•44.0441•4smart and burn as if Thad raided them. I seemed uiseunable to get relief fr..'m anything I put on -them until 1 tried Zam-Buk, and- -f4 succeeded- where *H -e -ha lsed failed. It closed the big tracks, gave me case, soothed the intlatnmation, anti in • very short time healed my bands." Zam•Bolt ales sures dieting, rasher, tinter ee:ema, )u . ulcers, /warring terve, sore heals and backs, abecaues, maples, ei p-mena• etc. etas, bunt, Somme, .calls (proms. Of all ,prug_r(ets and Nares, er port (proms.res from the lam, Bak Co., Tor,ndo. Prue Sur a box.. anZ_I-L3uk J. 11. COLBORNE vwwve. wvvw. COMFORTAE j r: D WELLING AND LOTS FOR S.4LE e. HESIOENCt OF J. E. JORDAN, GODERICH. Thi- heentifill property, situate(' on south et reel. with n two Mc.ek. of the 14 luar•. is offers for n e, h5. 1• use has 611 wu *irr heating and all .sl••rr1 lingoov• ne ote 1; e n 1, 1 - 1 , v' &1i 1. e.,n• ' ear , 011'' , n• r only n' 'n o Whole. Soils.. t e u ae Id u * shin t t t Ira the e h Ir h 1 w.ea rat 1 - t.hora to t r. - The r ►M Her e. a g t t e a K o Ind R P1 Y tR �Pm e •tai-,• ewe town lots, and in addition to the i eeutaid teem end h:er.. 1 •5.-s here' Is • 1 roe- e • dee se •11. supplied With large end small frailrte. This I-le.•ety easy d for tent by m deeiral.le ten..ut. if toot Mold. Terme on rtpplie•tt' " to J. E JORDAN, lio,b•r'rh, tint , eseeeseseseSeeesoweekowen We Now Make and Galvanize Our Own Wire Fe, sea*, year. see 211.1.0111 where th,, quality of Wire could he improved. Se we have .et a new. standard for the Wire in Frost Fence. But. to Ret this hitter Wire. we muse Make and Ealy anise it ourselves. Heretofore, we, like all other Pence, - Makers. had to buy our Wire ready -mad* , and ready.galvaniged. • The Wire formerly used in the Pro,t Pence 1a. made under our own instnktions. 1 [ave better satisfactiem than meet Wire, bu we knew that we could make far better. S o now we have erected special Mill. In these MITI we have installed the most piodern Wire Drawing and Galvanizing equipment in existence. Se we err 1111111 equipped to make better w,re ,! an has ever been used in Canada. Andwe are the ooh' country Slaking ani Galyamiiag �\`iru cn..iu.iveq fur 1•'cer.s. Fence -makers in she. Nearly every Win," Pewee is Galvanized A.. thinly tow Canadian purposes. That's w•hy w on many ryat &bd twelve M fifteen'' "years..nner than teff-, sbmial, -'--- _ Frost sai.nfifltooc eal.nnlifnq Is :divot I -- -- per cent. thiaer era's• N•N.tlur man therms-'" env ether t en,•e ensue in Canada. vet it sift as ehfp, wale nnJ tail ee. No matter where you look. or Mw severe - 1 you teal. n,n, dimply eapn.•t find another ler permanency y� Galvanised Fence [wile aim! G r I`r Ile the Frost. tirnJ tor tete Ituuklet. The Frost Wire Fence Co., Ltd., Hamilton. Ontario at Agents Wanted in Open Districts 05Ir Fence he, - Hnxh Hass. Goderlch: R. A. McKenzie, Dungannon. amiss l `i11 rNIGHT7') i Ni • '•'�►'-'• Don't use sit marl "Black Knight" r you have -been using of other stole polishes. Von don't need as mneh, to bring a brilliant, - glittering, lasting polish to the iron -work. A little of "Black Knight" fres a long way. And you get bigger box of "Black Knight" than of any other stove polish that sells fpr toe. 11, few say reason, you teal get "Black Ka bt" stove Palish et our dealer'* sea Kart" for lar[ Dam a ran postpaid. '1111.F. DALL1T b. Il111To, - IA1MILTMI, test ratters se the faw•eus "2 1. t' Shoe PMMA. 20 McGaw Chopping, ;Fleur ltd Feed,Mill This mill to now ripen foe eit.t(nl u111.k.-Off 2 i- in aie..itu o 1 o set wee 1 belts 'g"Ct. 1l11111111 l y - by *lino, to ,rre:in ter 'hippo. g. slid v ' he1.N .I••' -1f FLOUR AND REED Thr troll '11 run by a wt. engine ,i :e) l ill.erirw r., pte•1. sled with 1rwhieet g..r., st-d is furtiish.•l ,ith Is,tit mill/doves22nd pl*fes, �� . N. B. --All :-kind. 'of mauls" grain- hatttt1IT a 1 .shit.♦ • The !milts a»t 5 •f 1 b.• fa. on, - . i h Of the 1rI e g HIIh 1 INrI I- ,ort 'fully invited. J. W. PRIDDLE, Prcpri(tor. GROCERIES • We clo.ir• t„ ..,11 y.lip 't1••t li,•1• ,,, , n. excell. lit lin* f Shap 1 • s. st hal cy till r.r•M. V. III S. t:11t.. few L -s.." t, lel me. I1a(1,5. ser, ser. 1»7:1 t,X'd•, low pellet O. 1, pot pi 401.0 sery te. A ti ial . *seer ,ceieitess. li me No I 1 i. Ili s.i'ton Bt. STOCK FOODS I nternatiOtal The" food that Dan Patch, t horse, is fed onl. regularly-' Th for one cent. Packages, 25c up Rex famous e feeds $3.75• This food is prepared from roots, barks, preparations are made to stitlntitate and make the best of -2-ordinary-foods.- -Every-package it guar - THE liowell Hardware Ce., LIMITED.