The Wingham Advance, 1914-01-22, Page 3Y, JANUARY 2 21 1914
€' C ood Salesman
Wan 44th# e
STRATFORD. ONT. •�.,r'
Cana la's^ best t ra••tice' traiuirg
Rani)! ? Rani)!! 'Vhr«e d• p•.rte,e•UI- Com,
menial, Shorthand and Telegraphy.,
lout a., ere t► firms h nt d prs.•t -
e In. `iv•dna.. in rruo (et i•
giv n by a wrong, e•xp"ra•need
staff Our gall ti'&tee vuoes-ed.
WTI' e .ts m*v enter at env tire..
Get ore fr• a nralogue and bee what
W •cin•luiO vett.
D. A. 81oLA4ilsi.all - Principsl
BUSINESS AND
SHO RTHAND
Subjects taught by expert instructors
at the
t_eitzketile/e61
Y, 4. C. A. BLDG..
LONDON. ONT.
Students assisted to positions. College
in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue
free. Enter any time.
J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr.
Principal Chartered Accountant_
pl
MEI
FOR SALE
Good Apple Batter at Gc per
ib. in any quantity, while it
lasts. Call and gest a sample ;
will deliver to any part of town
FLOUR R•thin Hoc d, Milver-
ton, Maple L-'ar, Five X.
IAran, Shorts, Rolled. Oats, Chop
Grain and all kinds of Cereals.
1 Grain taken in exchange for
t flour, bran, shorts and weals.
9 When in need of an)thing in
this line call` or ph•rne 84.
Wingham Chopping Mill
EZRA MERKLEY.
For every town and district whir••
we are not represented.
Pratte are bringing high prices and
Nursery Brook is in demand.
Make big uaout,v this Fail and Wantet
by teki»g an all,-sioy.
Experience not ue•essary.
Free tgiliprnn'a,t, exclusive territory
highest oonatutselons paid.
Write for full particulars.
STONE & WELLINGTON
TORONTO ONTARIO
OVER ee YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DEe1GN8
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone sending a,ketch and description may
quickly zteortaln our opinion free whether an
Invention is probably patentable. Cominunioa.
Lions strictly confidential. HANUOON OD Patents
gent from Oldest agency for aeourtng_patoats.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special not les, without charge, inthe
Scientific Rmericane
A. handsomely illustrated weekly. Lamed ctn.
cnlatlonor any scientific journal. Terms for
Canada, $Z.7t a year. postage prepaid. Sold by
all newsdealer..
MUNN & Co3e1Brosdway, New Ynrk
Branch Omoe. 6'25 F 8t., Washington. D. .
1
�aa,oraosssasswt�rsasssr
HIGH CLASS LIVERY
GOOD HORSES
NEW RIGS
Quiet horses for lady
drivers.
Drivers supplied.
BEATTIE'S LIVERY
DIAGONAL STREET
Livery Phone 2.
Residence Phone 133
wammr,onsoti
40'
FEEBLE OLN REQS
Are Told How to Regain
Strength and Vigor.
As one grows old the waste of the
system becomes more rapid than re-
pair, the organs act more slowly and
less effectively than in youth, the cir-
culation is poor, the blood thin and
digestion weak,
Vinol, r delict u o
Vi roil o s cod liver and
iron tonic without oil is the ideal
strengthener and body-builder for old
folks, far it contains the very elements
needed to rebuild wasting tissues and
replace weakness with strength. Vinol
also fortifies the system against colds
and thus prevents pneumonia.
Mrs. Mary Ivey, of Columbus, Ga.,
says: "If people only knew the good
Vinol does old people, I am sure you
would be unable to supply the de-
mand. I never took anything before
that did me so much good ad Vinol.
•It is the finest tonic and strength
creator I ever used in my life."
If Vinol fails to build up the feeble,
old people, and create strength we
will return your money.
1. Walton McKibbon, Druggist, Wingham
'Kansas City Star.
A man once arrived at I{ansas City
with a terrible pain under his belt.
"Go for a doctor." said the sufferer,
"and go quickly."
"What kind of n doctor do you
want?" inquired the messenger, "We
have all kinds - allopath, homeopath:
hydropath, osteopath" -
"Oh." cried the traveler In his agony,
"any path will do! All paths lead to
the grave," -Kansas City Star.
A Mixed Quartet.
Among other curious things I have
heard was a quartet sung simulta-
neously in four languages, writes a
reminiscent contributor to the New
York Sun. it was Clara Louise Rel.
'egg's company in "diartha.., Miss
Kellogg sang in English, Brignoli in
!Gallen, a German woman in German
and a Frenchman 1n French. The au-
dience never noticed the confusion of
tongues.
• 'Just the Reverse.
"Beating the sword into a plow -
:hare?" inquired the tourist pleasantly
as he halted at the door.
"Beating a plowshare auto a sword,"
•ei-iponded the energetic blacksmith
'1 tintnufacture rear relies." - L-.ouls•
rille Courier .Journal.
H]3 WING'HAM ADV NO1E
RECESSION OF GLACIERS.
Northern Ice Field; That Once Met the
Sea Are Now inland.•
Some attention to being directed to
the fact that the :Mir glacier is disin-
tegrating along Its face, .and there It
some speculation as to bow long It will
coutinue to present a great attraction
to tourists. No one eau answer this,
of course, for the causes of the totem
til movement are nut known. Neither
Is it known with ally certainty for bow
tong u time this great ice mass has pre
seated his aUpearance, which made it
ruinous:
Assuming that the earliest charts of
the coast are correct -and there is
every reason to suppose they are-
there have been very remarkable re-
cessions of glacier's along the Atlantic
coast during the Inst century, so that
ice fields that formerly came down to
the sea are now a considerable dis-
tance from it. As, we understand, the
earlier charts do not indicate the posi•
tion of Mnir glacier, so there are no
cleans of telling if It has receded.
The cause of the recession of glaciers
is not fully understood, but it seems tc
Imply an average nmetloration of the
climate. Glaciers are fed from snow
Reids, and if they become smaller only
one or two explanations seems possi•
bre Either the snowfall in the higher
levels must have diminished or the
temperature In the lower levels has
grown higher. 'There are several reit•
sons for supposing that the climate of
the north I'aeine zone is becoming
.gradually warmer, although the change
is very gradual. Sir Charles Lyell, the
famous geologist. In one of his books
speaks of the breaking away of n great
ice barrier near Greenland, which oc-
curred, if we are not mistaken, in 1540,
and says 1t was one of the most sig•
r
niHcant events in the modern history
at ry
of the world. -Victoria CotonIst.
Fooling a Fasting Patient.
Macleod Yearsley in The London
Lancet gives an amusing instance of
the astuteness of the late Dr. Dabbs.
When in practice in the Isle of Wight
he was called into consultation over
a hysterical fasting girl, with whom
no one could do anything. Dabbs, to
the annoyance o all, won her confi-
dence by telling her that she was
quite right to refuse to eat. Then be
eiizited the fact that she suffered from
thirst and casually remarke : that
milk wan the best thirst quencher he
knew. He thus obtained her promise
to take whatever medicine he sent
her, and that medicine, consisting of'
strong brine, she improved in health
on about twenty-four glasses of milk
a. day! .
uy ' AGE WIRE FENCE Direct
From LTA Freight Paid and Save Money
END your next fence order to the nearest PAGE Branch. Buy for cash at the lowest prices ever
made on GOOD fence. Get the genuine well-known high-grade PAGE FENCE—the kind that lasts
a life-ti4-1e. You pay no more for this splendid fence than you'd pay for common fencing. Yet the
PAGE FENCE will outwear several ordinary fences. A PAGE FENCE, in the long run, saves you
several times its present low first cost. And never before has fence of this quality, been sold direct by
_the shakers at these low prices.
,r- •.t
Lowest Prices
For Good Fence
Study the prices quoted
below for genuine
PAGE WIRE FENCE.
Compare with them the
prices of other fences.
Remember that PAGE
WIRE FENCE is the
finest farm fence ever
made. That it will out-
last several ordinary
fences. The more thor-
ough your price corn-
parisons are, the more
strongly you realize that
PA QE .prices are the
lowest at which GOOD
wire fence has ever
been sold.
Page Guarantee
With Every Rod
With every rod of Page
Fence goes this guaran-
tee:
"If PAGE Fence proves
defective, return it and
get your money back".
No quibble—no strings
•--no red tape—to this
.. iron -clad guarantee.
We can give It with
absolute confidence,
because PAGE Pence
is the best fence made.
Big carbon -steel wires,
wven under uniform
tension --with evenly
spaced uprights—non-
sipping knots ----and the
b ,st galvanizing money
cal insure; these make
PAGE Pence good for
a lifs-time, while or-
dinary fences may gleed
replacing every five or
ten years.
PAGE CATALOG
104 pages, illustrating and
rlesaribing a hundred use -
1 11 things for the farm.
Many of them arE4t't
carried l±: year dealer, All
listi said at remsfkahis low
prices for cash. Write
to *day for this catalog.
STYLE
eco al .r,+
Odie
These prices subject to advance without notice.
PAGE HEAVY FENCE
No, a Page Wire Throughout In :0, 80 and 40
Rod Rolf, Freight PC.iU
Spacing of Horizontals it. Inches
PRICES
4
5
6
7
7
8
8
88
9
9
9
9
10
10
10
10
11
51
6
67
8
9
9
10
30
37
40
40
48
42
42
47
47
48
48
51
51
48
48
51
51
55
22
22
22
22
22
22
161/2
22
161/2
22
162
22
161%2
22
191/2
161/2
22
161/2
10, 10, 10
8, 9, 10, 10.........
61/2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9
5, 51/2, 7, 7,7,8
55,61/G 6,961 10, 10
6, 6, 6, 6, 66, 6,6
4,5,51/2,7,81/2,9,9
4, 5, 51/2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9
6, 6, 6, 6,6,6, 6, 6
6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6....
4, 4, 5, 51/2i7, 81/2, 9,9
4, 4, 5, 51/2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9
3,3,3,4,51/2,7,7,71/2,8
3,3,3,4,51/2,7,7,71/2,8
3, 3, 3, 4,4 1x2,7,1/2' 9
,81/2, 9,
33, 3,3,3, 1/24,51/2,7,81/2,9,9
MEDIUM WEIGHT FENCE
84•
1.
oa x it
$0.161$08 $0.19
.20
.21
.23 .24
.25 .26
.25 .26
.28 .29
.30 .31
.28� .29
.31 .82
.33
.31
(Maritime Province prices of Medium Weight, also
Special Poultry Fences. include painting.)
No. 9 Top and Bottom, and No. 12 High Carbon
Horizontals between; No. 12 Uprights; No. 11 Locke.
36 161/28, 8, 10, 10
36 161/26,7,7,8,8
42 161/2 7, 7, 8, 10, 10
42 161/2 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 8
26 .8 3, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6
48 161/2 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 9
36 12 3, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 6, 6
50 161/2 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 9
54 161/23,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,9
SPECIAL POULTRY FENCING
No. 9 Top and Bottom. Tnt,..'tnedlates, No, 111.
Uprights 8 inches apart.
Close bars
Close bars
181 481 88
20 60 8
.18
21
.23
23
.26
.28
.26
.29
.29
.31
.29
.31
.31
.33
.33
.31
,36
.18
.20
.20
.22
.23
.26
.27
.28
.30
.33
.33
.19
.21
.21
.24
.25
.28
.29
.30
.32
•••
.•
,1.•
• :1 • •
e , •
.22
.24
.24
.27
.28
.31
.32
.33
.35
Page Fence
Reaches You
Quickly
When you order PAGE
FENCE direct you get
'it without delay. Be-
cause we ship it from
fully -stocked PAGE
Warehouse near you—
not from a factory hun-
dreds of miles away.
You know what it
means to be held up
for fence in your busy
season. PAGE Ware-
houses cover Canada
from St. John to Van-
couver. No matter
where you live, there's
an immense stock of
PAGE Fence near you,
ready to ship at a
moment's•notice.
Send Your Order
To The Nearest
Page Branch
Mail your order—with
"' check or money—to the
PAGE "RAILROAD" GATES
48 10 -ft. opening 3.80
....,_...•,..,_ j X1.00
48 12 -ft. opening iii iiidf. l�iita; a 4.25
48 13 -ft. opening 1 _ ,o,Milla,s"Mil,sart" ;
P � '�v�,'iaasar.,::amara: wsasi, .
48 14 -ft. opening ..-- _.....-.- d,fi0
STAPLES, 25.1b. box, freight paid et .75
BRACE WIRE, 25 -lb rolls, freight paid .70
STRETCHING TOOLS, Complete. labor-saving outfit, ft. pd 8.00
.42 .44 .48
nearest PAGE Branch.
Tear out this price list,
47 .49 And mark on it what
you want to avoid mis-
takes. Get R Ic. per
rod discount for car lot
orders. Get immediate
shipment to your rail-
way station—freight
paid on 20 rode, 2001bs.
or over. If you want
4.00
4.20
4,45
4.75
.80 .85
.75 .80
8.50 9.00
MONTREAL
ST. J0RH
to order through your
dealer, we'll allow him
Ic. per rod for handling
your order. Best order
r to-day—before these
!J. low prices go up. Send
King N WINNITItt6 your order to the near -
1240 St. West TORONTO !LKERVBG est PAGE Brunch, 2
"PAGE FEN ES WEAR BES
IS
•104444414.44
THE
DUELISTS
tfow They Were Punished
For Fighting
chafed, and when they (laved the
hour of noun he groaned He .knew
his betrothed bud locket! hint Int. but
did not know that she bed intended to
tight in hie place. huff he even salvos
ed this he would have well nigh gout'
mud.
Presently, hearing a step in the ball,
he Iisteued tutently. hoping for a re-
lease and that he would net be too late
to keep his appointment. The dour was
unlocked. sod he was about to push
out into the corridor when he was
stopped by a wan, who said:
"The cardinal desires Your presence
BY F. A. MITCHEL at the ;mince,"
Durant quelled, He could face death
.kf..pt..t, like a gentleman and a soldier, but to
Cardinal Richelieu was sitting at hitt be executed In cold blood was not to
desk 1n his palace In Paris attending his liking, and he did not doubt that
to official business when an attendant i
entered and. said:
"Please, your eminence, a Woman
bas been arreated for masquerading In
tnan's' apparel. She desires to be
brought before your eminence."
"Why should I be troubled by a mat-
ter that pertains t9 the watch?" asked
the cardinal, looking up from bis pa-
pers.
"Tse young lady says, your emi-
nence, that she has information to give
which you would value."
"Of what uature?i',
"Dueling. She will give you the
names of two officers of the army who
are to fight today."
The cardinal'a manner changed at
once. "Another of these affairs, eh.
despite my orders but just published!
11 I don't put a stop to this practice I
Shall in time lose every officer in the
service. I will stop It if I have to
bang the whole army. 'Admit the
girl."
She came in, blushing for her ap-
parel, tall for a woman and well form-
ed, She stood before tile cardinal with
bent bead.
"Why are you so attired?" he asked.
"Because I intended to take the place
Of a man in a duel today."
"You tight a duel!" snarled his emi-
nence. "Shall I have to bring the wo-
men of the kingdom no the block as
•„
well as the men !
"Hear me, your eminence. One of
the best swordsmen in Prance is to
meet on the Held of honor one of the
worst. I )earned of the meeting in
time, sent -for the latter and succeeded
In locking him in a room from which
he cannot escape. I intended to fight
In his stead."
"Their names!" -
"I will die, your eminence, rather
tban reveal them without your promise
that their lives shall be spared."
The cardinal hesitated for a moment,
then gave the required promise.
"Captain de In Tour, the famous
swordsman, and Iieutenant Durant,"
Said the girl.
On the cold visage of the cardinal
appeared a trace Of admiration for this
woman who was going to meet death
In place of another.
"You are Mlle. Remercier, I believe,
one of the queen's maids of honor.
This nefarious dueling pest that Is kill-
ing off every year hundreds of the
king's best officers seems to be more in
vogue among persons of quality than
the lower orders. 1 wish you were a
mac. 1 would behead De la Tour and
give you his commission. Why were
you about to give your life for that of
Lieutenant Durant?"
"Because 1 would rather die than
lose ttitn.
The cardinnl paused a moment in
thought. "Singular," he said, half to
himself and half to the girl, "this thing
called love! I can conceive of all tither
passions. but not this one, and a love
that will sacrifice a life fotr the object
loved is to me as great a mystery as
life itself." Then. looking; up. he ask-
ed, "Where is this duel ti'. take place?"
"in n wood on the outskirts of the
city, on the bank of the Seine."
"When?"
"At noon."
"1t is now near noon."
"Yes, your eminence. I was going to
the ground when a gendarme of keen-
er eye than others suspected my sex
and arrested me."
"I presume Captain de la Tour Is
now waiting for his victim"
"Doubtless be is. and wondering why
he does not appear."
Something was running with elee-
tris rapidity through the cardinal's
brain. Whatever it was. it came to a
head at once. Summoning an attend-
ant, he directed him to proceed to the
dueling ground and bring Captain de
la 'four to the palace. T -hen. turtling
to Mile. Remercier, he asked if she
had the key to' the room where her
lover was conflned. She gave it to him,
and he sent nnother attendant for Du-
rant. .Then he sent the girl to another
apartment to await the coming of the
would be duelists.
The messenger who went for De la
Tourfcuud him pacing bark and forth
Impatiently wafting for his enemy. his
seconds standing together chatting tc
pass the time. When the captain saw
a man coming wearing the cardinal's
livery be turned pale.
"Mon Dieu!" he exclnitlied. "The
cardinal has got wind of the affair. I
am lost!"
"Isis eminence desires your presence
at the palace," said the messenger.
1)e In Tour bade his comrades good -
by, he and they believing that they
would never meet again. Only a few
days before two men had been behead-
ed for n like affair. and with every
case the cardinnl bnd grown more de-
termined !laving pressed the band of
each of there, he Pet out for the Palate
inetnelhu, afterward called the Pala)s
itoynln nun tndne occupied by shops.
�ftatnrrhtin Lieutenant Durant was a
riennrr, bewailing his fate. Proud
tt8 .trrtsattvr. els 'Mind dwelt on the
eiliemitt with which his brother om-
'i' would revolve hint when he met
tt•nt 1,eoain for nal keeptng an engage -
.oto to tlrht. lie heard the• cioeka
etthout strike 11. FOr an hour be
he would suffer the execution of a
felon. As he accompanied the messen-
ger to the pnlace be wondered if the
girl he loved could have given away
the secret of the meeting. No; she had
locked hien up to prevent his being
killed by De la Tour. She surely would
not turn him over to another fate far
more terrible. Ile was wondering bow
the secret could have got out and
whether there was any hope for him
when he and the messenger entered
the palace. He was taken to a cham-
ber, where he was placed in charge of
a guard and notice of his arrival pent
to the cardinal.
Presently an attendant came for him
and led him to another apartment, and
as he entered by one door be saw De
la Tour ushered in by another. The
cardinal sat in an armchair at one side,
and near him stood Mlie,.Remercier in.
man's apparel. The two duelists ad-
vanced and bowed to the cards nal. But
what was most astonishing were a
beadsman's) block and ax at one end of
the room. There was no execritioner
present,: but the' culprits expected to
see him enter at any moment. ,
"Gentlemen," said the minister, "you
are doubtless aware of the recent edict
against dueling, and, having conspired
to disobey it, your lives are forfeited."
Both men bowed low.
"I have decided, however, to permit
this meeting and to witness it myself.
There is an unfairness about these
duels which In this one I hope to coun-
teract. You, Captain de la Tour, are
accounted the best swordsman in
France. You, Lieutenant Durant, I`
learn, are oue of the poorest. To enable
you to tight equitably 1 have decided
that you shall continue the contest till
one kills the other. He who remains
alive will be dispatched by the heads-
man."
"But, your eminence," interposed the
informant, deathly pale, "you promised
me that their lives should be spared."
"And my promise is not broken by
this disposition. But for you both of
them would be ordered to execution at
once. I cannot conceive a more noble
part than. that you have acted. Since
in this realm a practice exists by which
an expert swordsman may kiil one wbo
is practically defenseless you were
about to suffer death to save the un-
skilled combatant. railing in this.
knowing that 1 alone had power to
prevent this injustice, you informed
the of it, but not till you had received
my promise that the combatants should
not he punished by dead►. It is not my
intention to punish either of them for
disobeying the edict, but to render tbe•
affair between them perfectly equita•
ble. Gentlemen, there is ample room
for you on the floor of this apartment.
'fake your positions and au attendant
will hand you your• weapons."
As the cardinal spoke the last words
the men were given rapiers. and at the
same time a door opened. and n masked
man in tight fitting garments entered,
went to the block, took up the as nod
stood ready for duty; , The duelists.
who understood that this was n there
subterfuge of the crafty cardinal to
keep his promise to Mlle. Remercier in
the letter and break it in the spirit
and that one was to execute the other
and the headsman the victor, stood
Pacing each other, awaiting a signal to
begin the combat. They bad been
friends, and their quarrel had been in
their 'cups. Neither had the falutest
remembrance of its cause. Realizing
that they were about to die, they step
ped forward and'euibraced each other.
Meanwhile Mile. Remercier ' had
thrown herself at the feet of the card! -
.nal to beg for their lives. 13er hack
being turned to the combatants and
her bead bowed, she did not see the
embrace. The cardinal raised her and
turned her toward them.
"Look!" be said. "The affair Is end-
ed the way 1 would have alt such af-
fairs ended -in a reconciliation. Gen-
tiemen, put away your swords. If you
supposed Richelieu to be so crafty as
thus to break his word to one whose
life is demanded by the king's wel-
fare perhaps you are right,' but you
wrong him if you think be could act
such a part toward this noble girl.
You, Captain de la Tour, go to your
quarters and be assured that if you
offend again that masked person yon-
der will see that you do not offend a
third time. Lieutenant Durant, 1 give
yon to Mlle. Remercier."
The Indy seized the minister's hand
and kissed it rapturously, while the
two Men, kneeling before bin, begged
that lie would add his blessing to their
pardon. He gare it, and be in Tour
deported alone. Uuratit and 11111e.
Remercier were driven away In the
cardinal's carriage.
The practice that tilchelien strove so
hard to eradicate still exists in Prance
to n greater extent than in tiny other
Country. White the Anglo-Saxon had
-Abandoned it, the Latin and Teutonic
races still retain it. But nowhere Is, It
t3o deadly as it Was 10 Prance when
• Cardinal Riebelleu tried to break it
up. Today there are several hundred
duels fought nnnl1n113' In Prance, but
rarely does one rcrmit fntnlly, the ob-
lect of each of the eombntanta being
to "pink" the other, and at the letting
et a feat drops of blood the affair IS
usually called off.
6 ---Sale of Shorthorn Bulls -6
Broadview Shorthorns—Hera Headed by
"Favorite Character." (imp.)
For bale are Pix bulla, eight to twelve
months old. These are choice ynung
wane with the hest of Needing and will
ler sold reasonably. 1f you need any.
thing write the or glee ue a call.
J G. rYFE, Wingbana, Ont.
(Perm 1} miles south of CFinghton.)
Farlti For Sale.
HE DOMi
NA EDMUND 9.981.1:9 M.P, Pru,R1121N'r.
Q. A. B0GERT4 0.
'Frust Funds Should Be
In a Savings .Account in The Dominion Eladifo •.!
safely protected, and earn Interest at highest soar
When payments are made, partiolAtra of
be noted on the cheque issued, which in torp
or voucher when cancelled by the bank.
WINGHAM BRANCH: N, EVANS.,
SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH
WEST LAND REGULATIONS
rflHE sole head of a family, or any male over
IL 18 years old,may homestead a quarter.
section of availabe Dominion land in Mani-
i.oba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. The appli-
,;ant must Appear in person at the. Dominion
Linda Agency or Sub -Agency for the district.
':ntry by proxy may be made at the office of
any Local Agent of Dominion Lando (not sub-
agent) on certain conditions,
Duties.—six months' residence upon and cul-
tivation of the land in each of three yearn. A
homesteader may live within nine miles of his
homestead on a farm of at least 80 acres on
certain conditions. 'A habitable house is re.
as r h residence
(lulled in every case, ex.epl 'whoa res don e
is performed in the vicinity.
In certain districts a homesteader in good
standing may pre-empt a quarter -section along-
side his hontertead. Price $3 per acre. Duties
—Six months residence in each of six years
from date of homestead entry (inoluding the
time requ'red to earn hem stead patent) and
50 ocr%a extra cultivation. The area of culti-
vation is subject to reduction in case of rough,
scrubs or stony land after report by H
ome•
stead Inspector on application for patent.
A homesteader who has exhausted his home-
stead right and cannot obtain a pre-emption
may take a purchased homeated in certain
districts. Price $3 00 per pore. Duties.—Moat
reside six months in each of three yeas*, culti-
vate fifty acres and erect a house worth $300.
• W. W. CORY,
Deputy of the Minister of the Interior.
N.B.—Unauthorized publication of this ad-
vertieement will not be paid for.
BELL'S
4A
Veget
F
Prompt
BELL'&
Successor to W.
milagingagogammissessommuml*
Tae undaraigned off.•ra for sale his
farm, lot 8, eon. 1, Turnberrd, con.
ta)ning 107 acres of land. Oh the
premi.ee are a good been, with et•rneet .
stabling, gond house, drilled well end
wfndn►ill. Porses'ion let of March
next, Get, full particulars ft ono -
O. 3. RINTOTT,
18 90 Rtitil route No. 4, Wiuughlens, Out.
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Worms,Convulsions.Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
FacSimile Signature of
TMI CENTAUR COMPANY:
MONTREAL&NEW YORK
-At6monnths.old. '
DOSEs ..:35CEP(TS
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
C A ST!
For Infants ail
Thil tad
Always
Bears the
Signature:
of
Thi"rty
CAS'
THC CENTAV,1 COMPANY. NC
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•
Hanover Place, Winnipeg
• Past, Present and Future. •
• PAST
Previous to the year 1911, the north end of Winni
. -was practically cut off from the main portion of the city by
C. P. R. Terminal Yards. In 191.1 and 1913 this obstacle t
overcome by the Alc-Phillip Street sub -way and the over -h.
bridge on Arlington St. Immediately development began
t. this part of Winnipeg.
PRESENT '..- ` se.
-
The north end of Winnipeg, West of Main, part`
between Mountain and Lansdowne A.vennes, is the most r.
g owing residential portion of Winnipeg. Between then+
noes and Hearn and Main St, h person might pick at raga.
Lot or more and make a profitable investment. The best ht
ever, is lots along the Sharp Boulevard and the Avenues
each Bide.
FUTURE .1 �•. a - ,er
Tbo profit making possibilities are brightest aloe
Boulevard and the Avenues on each side, as prices i'.
to show a steady advance for many years to comp. t
• the Boulevard that two years ego sold at $22.110 a foot t.
selling at $60 00 a foot. Two more years will show equal if
better conditions on Hanover place as by that time the SW
' Car line will doubtless be along the Boulevard. The 'tithe
• invest is now. Prices of lots, $325.00 each and up according
• • location. Write the---
Iieiiance Investment and Developing Company, Lt
Head Office --Hanover, Ont.
Branch Office—
John Haffner, 273i Portage Ave., Winnipe
Agents wanted in lInaraapresenbeil distriete.
W. 3. MIMIC Local . ► 8 e int.