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The Huron Expositor, 1904-07-08, Page 3JULY 8. 19 JULY , 4 DR, GIUSEPPE L PPONL Trunk Ra System. RsalfWaa*Y Time Table. ave &forte as follows For Clinton, ilodesjctt Pirftoens For Clingy and tiederielt For Clinton, Wtrightm ace 'r.pee fv tui and Gederion. For: Stratford, Guelph,, 'F riiiia, North Bay and pais Belleville and Feterbe a east.. For Stratford, Guelph, I'orf .l`ts keit and points eset. For Stratford, Guelph and Te Tatou and Kincardine. « 1'f. Pass. 8.07 .EfLSO pan. lI.0 pare s. 8.17 L p aka 1.17 8.27 1.30 6.88 1.40 Psi. Mixed, . E • &Sa s.an 'Saxe. . s J7.¢08 q.17 FfeE . I' / .1V' 10.:ax .E..EE 7.26 1015 ...e E. SAO : 11.Se on, Huron and d� '-A�F•.Q r Es out - 8.15 El. . ,.omi-E+6,1rE 9.18 E►r..e'.. EE .s ss.s E. 00. 00 00 00 s.. 8.3 8.44 ��sslErs/.EE.E.. f. 9.60 ess•EE/E.., 89.68 �./�. -00. .. 0.0►! E, i..E 10.15 'so.a �i....",64,#..4• it 18,88 a J�EEx..s . WE 11..30 em , depa€t.. s .if s `e..s....s .y.-�v� �i -'^-00.0. E. ..r ... 13400 s.+Y#000010 q0.. EE .i«r "sEREE 0000 Y «../. E. fa. E.Ei EETTw....• We 4.0 duff ...040,0* s. 40..40. E... EE.. _ .s• lane heal li.I,p teb a.I o€►. 6.41 d.62 7,re lig r LaoAx," •• 7.01 1st - 7.14 $, 7.22 2.1 7.47 4013 8.06 4.28 8.16 47 8.22 4. 8.36 3 4.+ 5 4, It. nages, Go Carts. and Capers •tet up-to-date styles, and. a Urge assortment to choose. from. Window Shades. atire stook will be dosed out . -eduction in price. We have the in Window Screens --differ d varied assertment o Cotradi !or Suites, odd and fancy c lairs: sem; dining room and bedroom fund:, ertical feed Davit ie the only.SO/r- sine of its kind, and the best only, We have it. tandard it also a gem machiu „ one --chain and lock -.stitch. We Wei Lf McKenzie� Dealeraa, "Un aertaker* and Ent- ' baimer,, i�]�[s}e .F SE OR 4 H. cam for Undertaking answer hteYe residence on Janne street . rcock Nip LOOD i TERS Mock .0D IND TTFRS DY3PaP Pimples, Headache Constipation, Lass of Appej:, Salt Rheum Ery*ipear Serofnla and Midget arising from the - Stomach, Liver, Bower or Miee Mrs. itn,lite et _ Ballydnff, «rrlfea E "I beliesa woaid have bean my grave l , h net bels Murdock Blued tars. I was to such an that I could 17 MOTO abon4 how. I w0. to eeVere is back -ached a nods--; my was gone aann� ws unable t o d0 heuseworh. AM uaaina -two bole B.B.B. I found healthfully t ly etired worn One womet' GS ANTED. lined le prepared to pay the hid k fill uni o:i:ed quaetity of i1irenelleet Rock E?ni, Breewood, Ma Ash, He toe% and Oak ht bf afort�8aw and Stave 1l#ill. l ucrElength' exeei,t Soft Elm. 80fIE fend In -t . S4;ii awe buy •itaaai3W cm& `€raclitrg Bear, C.6 loner, at zis.:.o per cord, dellve 6irebe"r tjv maaeurefnent or by bulk il-atteeteen paid toouetoni sawing.. .or.tce�i. v1, AMENT. o Wanted. ----AT THE - forthH E-- --- ort h Weapon paid' for wool Rol larding the farming pablIe on Short notice. I CLASS WORK ITN .DICK, (LIMITED.) op Mutual e Corapauy. Alio ISOLATED TO - `Pr RTY ONLY INSURED tenants. iPar., president, Nippon F. 0, ; rreeident, B'rueetteld P. 0. ; TbvsII en . Sertfortb P. 0.. DZ UOrees.. Feeforth, John G. orieas, seaform ; , Jahn Bea *ems BFanj, Beachwood ; Jobe W hin ri.tas ereete Brrscefield ; Joh steee (our ally, Clinton. eaters. la, Barlook ; E. 1inchiey, sow* 4n8 Nernoo!v •e; J, w. ' , -.' 7 Hurdle end Job 0. er; ue ot'ecg lasus.•a will be promptly .tf" of the above sacra, need Soils de68ient in legume bacteria are quickly supplied with these important or. to the Pope Prate *seisms. .. Wilms' Piplk E single seed is surrounded with a ' covering of haeteria9 which, after germin- cu: t� of Anaeania a heir Effects as fen, penets�te into the root hairs, and bo- w to Sstisfstory Tilat He win Go gin their aetivit, in oolleetieg the free On Uig Them. nitrogen of the air and giving it op to the Dr, f&pponi, whose skill I reserved the life of the late Pope Leo XIII to the great plant; so that without nitrogenous manur- ing, and on sells poor in nitrogen, a fair or good Meld it armored. I leg bacteria, the soil dee richer in Through the aetivity of theinoinle fore • nit X„ is waded, has itiritten the re- assimilable nitrogen, which also eoes to the untmego letter. of which the following is a benefit of the succeeding crops. translation -:- is 1 certify that I have tried Dr. W es -we Pink Pills in four cases of the simple Anserata Of development. After _a few oaks of treatment the result came fully The Pioneers of Canada. I love to hear the pioneer tell of the dayil G. 'C. CnemeteN up to my elpectations. For that reason I shell not fail in the future to extend the of yore, use of this laudable preparation, not only And why he left his native land to seek a tee treatment of other morbid forms of foreign shore ; To brave the breeze, where forest trees dM ory of Anaemia or Chlorosis, but in cases of Neu -asthenia and the DR. GIUSEPPE LAPPONI. It would be impossible to exaggerate the inportence of this opinion. Dr. Lapponi's high official position places his professional orespetenoe above cineatiou,and it is certain that be did not write aa above without a full sense of the effect his opinion would have. The " simple anaemia of development," referred to by Dr. Lappin:1i, in of course, that tired, languid condition of young girle whose development to womenhood is terdy, andrwhose health, at the period of that divalipment, is often imperilled. A bright and merry enough in childhood, will ia her teens grow by degrees pale and ad Om, and a sense cannot under - just when it le time for her to leave off lug a girl and become a woman -s change which come* to different individuals st different ages -her development lingers -why ? Because she hat too little blood. That is what Dr, napponi means when be speaks, in the Monti& language natural to him, of " the anaemia of development." Dr. Williams' rink Pills for Pale People have the power of making new blood. They -cure auaamie jut as food cures hunger. That -is bow t they help growing girls, who. for want of this new blood, often_ drift into chronic meant eonsumption-and die. Dr. Pills could save them. The value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pilb as a nerve tonic, referred to by Dr. Lapponi, makes them valuable to men as well as women. 'Obey act on the nerves through the blood, and thus cure diseases like St. Vitus' dance, neuralgia, paralysis ad lommotor ataxia, When bnying these it, is important to gee that ' the , full natrie, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peoele, is printed on the wrapper around each bbx. Never take a substitute, as it is worse Orin If you cannot got the genuine pine from your dealer write the Dr. Williams' Medi - cies Co,, Brockville, Ont., and the will be sent you post paid at 50 cente a box or six boxes for $2.50. langsid, Frequent he so of uneasiness which she stand make her miserable. -Two very well known and popular young people of St. Marys neighborbitod were united in marriage on. June 16tht In the persons of Mies Amanda Jickling snd ceremony was performed ab the residenoe of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mie. John haling, Stratford road, by the Rev. T. Manning, Mr. Conway bets just been or- dained as a minister of the Methodist church, and has been stationed at -Port Safeguard the Children. Notwithstanding all that is done by boards of health and oharitsbly inclined persons ; the death rate among small chil- dren is very high during the het weather of the summer months in the large cities. There is not probably one case of bowel complaint in a hundred, however, that could not be cured by the timely use of te Chamberlain's Cone, Cholera and Diar- shoes Remedy. Sold by Aeux. WILSON, Druggist, Seaforth. STATEMENT REGARDING, SUFFIX OF CULTURES OF NODULE -FORMING BACTEal4 Foie THE GROWTH LOF neouseft. In profusion grow, , And there to build his cabin home some sixty years ago. While longing for a spot of earth that they - could call their own They left the land that gave 'them birth to try and get a home ; Where no evictions could be made, a land- lord's power to show, They ventured out to Canada here aixty years ago. It's wonderful the chenges made in those abort sixty years, Not only in the forest glade, but iu our pioneers ; Juse see them now with wrinkle& brow, their grey heads bending low, Who in their pride the storms defied here sixty yeais ago. No other landscape ever had a gest and grand As can be Jean in Canada, our Wive- land ; Her forests once so very great sure but slow. Just like Drir hardy pioneers of Igo. Oar pioneers for many years had dangers to go through As great se Wellington, who won his fame at Waterloo. Where could you read of braver deeds than pioneers could show, While trying to make a home for us some sixty years ago. When wolvee and bears in packs and pairs and othher beasts of prey, Prowled round their cabins every night, when Indians roamed by day ; Who risked their lives, their weans and sviveseas early records show, While clearing up OW wildernese here sixty -years age, Oh, what a debt of gratitude we owe our pioneers Then treat them,friends with due respect in their declining years ; But most of them have gone to rest, as many of you know, That ventured out to Canada here sixty _ years ago. change so own dear are going sixty years hare Canadian hikes and rivers are beautiful t view, Her flowering hills and &wing rills shine like the mountain due ; Her fertile fields abundance yield, her her scenery is grand • No wonder that Canadian b'oya do love their native land. ONE LIJOIKY TRIAL TRE HURON EXPOSITOR. milted suicide oit his home, about five miles uortn of Donahue Manitoba, on Mon- day morning, the 13th ult. He was troub- led with infistnntation of the 'brain. which °eased temporary insanity. A wife and six children survive him. He was in good circumstances, and the owner of a fine farm of 300 sores. Cured of Chrome Diarrhoea ter Ten Tears or Suffering. I wish' to say a few words in praise of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," says Mu. Mattie Burge,of Mar- tinsville, Va. " I suffered from chronic diarrhoea for ten years, and during that time tried various medicineo, without ob- taining any permanet relief. Last summer one of my children was taken with cholera morbuig and I procured a bottle of this remedy. Only twe doses were required to gene her entire relief. I then decided to trn the medicine myself, and did not use all of one bottle before I has well, and I have never since been troubled with that complaint. One cannot say too much in fayor ed that wonderful medicine." This reMedy is for sale by ALE.K. WILSON, Druggist, Seaforth. • -Wm. Gillerpie hasireturned to his home in blillbank after hexing spent the past three and a half years in Cuba. ' -A pretty home wedding was celebrated home of Mr, and Mrs. Win. Ireland, Strat- ford, when their eldest daughter, Mier Elizabeth lelejeecd, was married to Ernest Jarvis Smith'? secretarydreaourer of the Whyte Packing Company. of that city. The ceremony was performed by Rev. M. L. Leitch in the presence of about forty of the immediate telatives and friends, With Dodd's Sidney Pills made Richard Quirk a New Man. FORTUNE HARBOR, Nfld., July 4th- (Spepis1)-Among the -scores in this neigh- borhood who are living proofs that Dodd's Kidney Pills wiff cure Kidney Disease of any stage is Mg. Richard Quirkewho gives the following experience :- -- " After ten or twelve years of dootor's treatment I msde np my mind that my Lumbago and Kidney Disease was incur- able. Tnen I thought I would try once more with Dodd's Kidney Pills, and to my great surprise I bad not taken more than half a box when I found relief ; eight boXes made me a new man." By Professor FiC. Harrison, Baoteriologist, Some years ago a German scientist, Nobbe, conceived the idea of preparing cul- tures of the nodule-fonming bacterie for treatiug the seed of legumes, and under the commercial name of "Nitragin," cultures of the bacteria which take the free nitrogen from the air 8134 give it up to the plant were prepared and sent out by a firm of manufeeturieg chemists in Germany. It was found thee. the bacteria in these prepar- ations were not virulent. that is to say, they were unable to penetrate the roots ex the legumes and form nodule!. This lack of efficiency webs probably due to the artifi- cial cenditions under whioh they were grown. Later this subject was very hilly invest- igated gy the Division of Vegetable lintel°, lt.gy and Pathology of the United States Department of Agriculture. Dr. Moore, who bad this Work in charge, discovered that the bacteria quickly lost their virulen- ce when nitrogen was supplied to them in their food ; but if a food was prepared which contained no nitrogeu, the organisms remained virulent and infected the roots when brought in contact with them. After numerous trials, he was able to announce that the Department of Vegetable Physiol- ogy was able to supply ho farmers cultures or growths of the nitrogen-iliing bacteria for the inoculation of the seeds or legume.. This year, the United States Department of Agriculture are sending oat cultures of the various nodule.forming bacteria. Tile organisms are sent out in cardboard boxes containing three packages. Number one paekage contains oertain salts, and the fare viiit5r; then the seeend package is opened whble contains a piece of ootton wool upon which nitrogen -fixing lisoterie have been dried ; this is placed in the solution. The tub is covered and set aside in a warm place for en hours. After 24 hours, the contents of the third package are added.? and in an- nother 24 hours the potation ts ready for use and ier sprinkled upon the seeds to be treated, The teed is then dried in a shady place an planted in the usual way. This method was patented by the United litates Department of Agriculture in order to gaarantee the privifige of tuse by the The Bacteriological Department 6/ the Ontario Agricultdral College has been working on the problem for some time, and is how, &hint° announce that it can send ent cultures or growths of the nitroger fixing baeteria to those who apply. The cultareelwill be sent out in liquid form, similar to the pure cultures or starters that this department sends out to butter apd cheese makers for itiving good fitivor to butter and cheese. All the farmer has to do is to empty the culture into a half gal- lon of pure water stir well, and then sprin- kle it on the seed: Each seed should be touched by the solution. The seed is then dried in a shady place and planted' in the usual way. Culturee of the right kind of bacteria 'for treating tho following seeds :---Cloveri, ,(white, red), beans, soy beans, lucerne or sada, and vetches are ready for distribu- tion. The advantages likely to ensue from the use of these cultures are as follows Domes KrONICT Puma act on the kidneys, bladder and urinary organs only They cure backauhea, flainmation, gravel, Bright's diesel." sod AU other diseases arising from wrong action of the kidneys and bladder The Ladies' Favorite. Laxa-Liver Pills are ths ladies' favorite medicine, They cure Constipation, Sick Headache, Billounese and Dyepepels, without griping, pinging or sicken- ing Many wept* tay they are "all nerves," enmity etartied or upeet, easily worried end irritated kill- bern'e Heed and Nerve Pills are just the remedy mob people require They restore petted brawn/3y of the nerve centres and give new nerve foroe SO) shattered nervous system Perth Notes. -A branch of the Retail Merchants' As- sociation of Canada has been established in St, Marys. i -Wm, Eizdeman's planing mill at Mitch. ell was destroyed by fire about noon Friday. The loss will be heavy. There was no ins- -There died in Downie, on Tumidity morning of last week, after SD illness, the symphoms of which puzzled the doctors, Eliza Luta*, the beloved wife of Mregl'hilip Mitchell. Demised was 38 years of nee, -The other night, the nigbt port& at the Albion hotel, Stratford, vanished taking with him about $40, which he abstracted from the till in the bar and from the pock- ets of the manager. -Mr, Duncan McKellar, se, of Cromarby, -is'in Torooto, undergoing an operation on his eyes. The wish of his many friends is that it may be successful and that his sight will be restored again. -Mrs, James Itussell,the oldest residents of Russeldale, died on Tuesday last. aged 93 years, Over sixty years ago Mr, an Mrs. Russell settled on the earm on which they since lived and on which they both died. -John Wallace, of Downie. died on 'Sat- urday morning, June 19th. at his home. lot 23, concession 6, after an illness of over a year, He was aged 51 years and bad liv- ed Downie nearly all his life, his father, the late Thomas Wallace. being one of the early settlers. Mrs. Wallace and a family of eight survive. - -George Lockheed has sold his splendid 100 sere farm, on the gravel road north, Elms, to John House, of Atwood, and has taken as part pay Mr. House's lot, next Roger and Ratcliffe's hardware ttareeri the village, He will erect a fine new residence this summer. We understand that • the prioe received for the farm was $6,500. -Rev. , Dr. Hamilton, lete of Mother- well. was reeently.preeented with s cheque by the congregation of the First Presbyter. Ian church, Bt. Marys, as an acknowledg- ment of his services as moderator during the vactincy in that church. Although 80 years of age, the doctor is still healthy and active. -On Monday evening,- June 20th, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Switzer, of Kirkton, cele- brated their golden wedding. Having spent some forty-six teem on the farm, on the 3rd conceesion of Blamibard, which Mr. Switzer clearednind made into one of the beet farms in tis township, they I oturned aboutiour years ago to the village to enjoy the fruits of long years of toil. We wish them many gears yet to enjoy life together. • Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. This remedy is certain to be needed in almost every home before the summer io over. It can &Jitneys be depended upon, even in the most severe and dangerous eases. It is especially valuable for eum- mer disordere in children. It is pleasant to take and never tails to give prompt re- lief. Why ot buy it now ? It may save life. For sale -by tax. Wn,soty, Druggist, Sea. for-thW. tu, G. eight, a former resident of Mitchell, who %Tried Bessie, daughter of Mr. Benjam Timms, of that town, coin - Suddenly Attacked. Children are often attacked suddenly by peluted and dangerous cone, Crampe,Diarrhoes Dygentorye Cholera .Motleue, Cholera Infantum, etii Dr Fowl; er's Extract of Wild Strawberry Is a prompt and sure cure, which should always be kept in the houee Spring Medicine. no equal It tones up tbe system and removes all iropuritiee from the Mood, and takes away that tir- ed, weary feeling so prevalent in the spring eta • site The mortise long -healing principal of the pine tree has finally been suocosefully separated awl re fined into a perfect cough medicine -Dr Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Sold by all dealers on a guar. antee of satiseietion Pelee 26 cents THE ROAD TO SUCCESS, 'Pr, TANTALIZING FISH. The *aye of the Salmon Are Beyond Finding out. Wh knows the Way of the eagle in the a r or of the it4lmon in the sea? Of al fish the most Itantalining, he has been the life stude!' of thousands of men. Yet how little any one really knows about him, and how condic g is th . testimony as !to what is kno ni If ye want to get !the idea that there Is DO such thing as 'abstract truth, yeti can orm that opinion quickly by sit- ting n front of the' fireplace in a fifth- ing lub some evening when the meet expe lenced members are present and feel like talking, There is scarcely, any ropositdon connected with the life hist ry of this fish upon which anx two men of forty or fifty years' experi- ence in salmon fishing will agree. The biography of the fish is filled with pnfr still blanks, You' catch a glimpie of him in his infanci. He mysterloissly disa )pears, returns during adolescence and then is gone again until, on his thir 'appearance, the infant has grown to b fully, mature, Who would think the hildish smolt of a few ounces that slip quietly down river in the early spri g could come back the same sum- mer, in the pride of youth as a three or fowl pound grilse? And the next time he oes upon what meat cloth he feed tba be jumps to maturity and fen pou de weight? What ports does he vial while he is off on his deep sea crui e? Where does he keep the chart by hieb, after 'els far away -wander- there, he unerringly returns to hie birthplace? And why do many grilse co e to some rivers and comparatively or none to others?. In Idlramichi wa ers there are in Angust ten grilse to very full _grown salmon. In the To ique there are scarcely any grilse at IL-Frone "The Trout of the No- pistguit," by Frederic Wand, ID Scrib. Weak Men Magnify While Strong Men Overcome All 0130'020.ex, The yoUng man who, after making up his mind what he wants to do. In the world, begins to hunt up °Wades in his path, to magnify them, to brood over them until they become moun- tains atel then to wait for new ones to develop, is not f_sk man to take hold of great enterprises. The man who stops to weigh and consider .every possible danger or objection never amounts to anything, lie IS a small man, made for little things. He walks around an obstacle and goes 29 far as he can easily, but when the going gets hard be The -strong Man; the positive, deci- sive soul who has a programme and who is determined to carry it out, cuts his way to his goal regardless of dif- ficulties. It is the wabbler, the weak kneed man, the discouraged man, who turns aside, who takes a crooked path TO his goal. Men who achieve things, who get things done, do not spend time haggling over perplexities or won- :dering whether they can overcome them, A *penny held close to the eye will shut out the sun. When a man lies down on the ground to see -what ls nbead of him, a rock may hide a mouse thin. A small man holds petty diffi- eulties so closely in view that great objects beyond are entirely shut out of sight. Great minds keep their eyes on the goal, They bold the end. so persistently in view and it looks SO grand and desirable that the interme- diate steps, no matter how perplex- ing, are of comparatively little impose tame. The great man asks but ene question, "Can the thing be done?" not "Ilott many difficulties Will I run across?" If it Ifs within the reach. of possibility all hindrances must be push- ed aside.e-O. S. !harden in Success. OARTER SUPERSTITIONS. EOre are a few garter superstition tbat still survive: Glold garter buckles are "lucky" and oilier ones the reverse. - Ithe girl who wears her garters below To put on the left garter before the rig* on dressing in the morning will briing bad luck all day, marriage Of a bride who wears a0 but white glirters on her wedding du ik will have an 'unhappy ending. he luckiest cOlors for garters are ite, blue and 13Iack. The wearer of low garters will lose a friend within ear. f a garter breaks in chureh the wearer's marriage will be happy, but if the accident happens at a dance it is a sign that the. wearer's sweetheart is faithless to her, What Gold Beaters Can Dot t:oid beaters, by , hammering, eau re - elm! gold leaves so thin that 282,000 ;mist be ,laid upon 'each other to pro - ewe) the thickoess of an inch; yet each ! et( is so perfeet and free 'from boles I hat one of them laid upon any surface, in gilding, gives the appearance of eelld gold, They are so thin that if forthed into a book . 1,500 Would ,only oteupy the space of a single leaf of rontinon paper, and an octavo volume of au inch thick would haVe as many pages as the books of a Well stocked library of 1,500 volltrneff with 200 pages is it Our own fault that men now smoke all over the house, in close car- riag,es with ladies and between the dances at a ball? Men of the old sehool -there are a few left -of the fine old type that observes the rules of cour- tesy where women are concerned, would not dream Of asking a girl to dunce while shedding around them odors of whisky and tobacco, But the young men of the day, with a few de- lightful exeeptions, make it their con etant practice. -London Truth. ye is Water Clocks, Among the curious features of an- eient Toledo which unfortunately re- neen no longer were water cloeks. de- - :A by a Moorish genius named Az- val. who pheed them on the banks 4,1" be Tagus so that the people could 1, the time, Thoy were run by power and so ff1111011r1 that Didn't Need Washing - e Aino, an uncivilized tribe on the and of Yesso, ttret not at all fond of thing, Indeed, they share the Chi - e idea that it is only dirty people o need continnal washing. They do t -regard tberbselves as dirty and erefore dispenie with the uncleanly 'You white people must- be very di y," said an Aino to a traveler as t e latter was preparing to take a plunge into a limpid river, "as you teli me you bathe in. the river every day." rAnd what about yourself ?" was the q estion in turn, 40h," 'replied he, with an air- of cen- t mpt, "I am very clean and have nev- e needed washing!" W hen von !airy animosity do not set up a liefohione over its grave. -"-Dick- • • 4.1 Miss Mice Eallny, c Atlanta, Ca., escaped the expre gratitude for 0.P ri.:4/ rt =1 health and happineniiLy0.-in E. terrible pat ns at the ,-.t tion, and did not know wh-, t was until the doctor pronounted ; t. its- flanintatioa of -WO proposed an operati4)11, SUM that I could lila burr i ye the ord..: I and so I told him thee I would not vo. deigo it. The following week I re: d an advertisement in the riper (if :end Vegetable Componil (1 in- ,in was my joy to find tha t itetnally 11.1 moved after taking two bottles, so I kept taking it for ten remits. e :tett the end of that time I was ewe i in s` gained eighteen neuron.; and it cxcellivnt health, and am . and you have my very heel tee. :we of oboes War proving yerliffi:#1m4R 0-1-0 ' be well. A shrewd. Preacher. o -a charitable object prefaced the cir- lation df the b xes with this address; "From -the gt at sympathy I have ltnessed in yo r countenances there only one thing I am afraid of -that e me of yon m y feel inclined to give t rm you that justice should always f re I wish to ave it thoroughly Un- rstood'that p person will think of !titting anythis into the box who can- tly - A.ecording to the Code. The cemmanding officer had surprised e youlng lieutenant and his daughter ing to occupi the same chair, The ip1 eutenant sprang to his feet and sa- ort an engagement at close quarters, which I have been entirely victori- us, It now merely remains for you to lye your sanction to the terms of our - ender." A Waste of Money. "But," expostulated Jones, "If you'd nly pay me what you owe me I could ay Smith what I owe him." p. "I know it," said Robinson, "But mith 'wouldn't pay me what he owes e, You and .1 would merely impov- )sle ourselvee to enrich Smith." - t'Is the boss! going to give yon the .ise you asked for?" "Well-er-e4a afraid to say, I told hint I thought my pay should be com- ensurate wit!li the amount of work I do, and he promptly agreed with THE CURE'S DINNER. Cushion Shoes. The Easiest Shoe on Earth, The sole or the foot, like the palm of the hand, differs in every individual, no two being alike. With the Melia- ary shoo the friction of the foot on the hard insole is the came of many foot ailmento, corns, bunions, . enlarged joint*, etc, In summer the heat pen- etrates the sole, anti in winter, lamp - nese and cold result in rheumatism, neuralgia etc. The Dr. A. iteid's Cushion Sole prevents and cures all these afflictions, This cushion is entirely unlike any inner sole," and is built into and becomes a part of the shoe. The lambs -wool cushion is pliable and a non-conductor of either heat or cold ; all animal oil having been extracted. The feet are kept at a natural temperature, The One Ilion conforms to and fills every curve of the fooedistributes the weight evenly and admits of perfect blind cir- culation, giving to the wearer a de- lightful sensation of buoyancy and en- ables them to oover greater distance. without fatigue than would be possible with any other shoe. Cushion Shoes are the greatest invention kr own for a comfortable and stylith shot , Made in all Styles. Sole Agents, - Seaforth, For the Just Wright Shoe for men. It Marked New Era In the Lite of an Appreciative Mar4nixe. How few there are like the charinrug lady in one of Brillat-Savarin's anec- dotes! How few there are who know what a good dinner is! But she did, although she had been brought up in an artificial school., She bad called on a simple cure to offer alms for his poor, and she did not know that cures dine in the middle of the day. Dinner had just bee* announced, and the cure aeked her to dine with him. She con- eented. It was a uew era in her life. After that culinary complications be- came vulgar in her eyes, pate- de foie gras and cream laden sauces disgusted her, and even Nesselrode pudding, un- less made by an artist, made her un- happy. As for liqueurs, she learned to regard a liking for them as a symptom of advancing age. It was a fast day, and this made perfection all the more di is cult to at- tain on the part of the cure's old serv- ant, Juliette. The tablecloth glistened, the porcelain was exquisitely white, and the plates were kept hot over boil- ing water, The soup was bisque of crabs, followed by a salmon trout, with a sauce admirably proportioned, and then came an omelet of fieh roe, so round, so odorous, so redolent of parte ley and chives, that for a moiatent all conversation stopped. A salad, on the leaves of which light, dewlike drops quivered, preceded the dessert of three luscious pears, a cheese resembling Camembert and a pot of conserves. The cure did not gay grace until ho and his guest had sipped from fragile, but not coatly, cups the limpid and hot Mocha. "No liqueurs," the cure said. "For my friencls, yes, But no strong drinks for me, They are the resources of age." It is recorded that the lady was af- fected almost to tears by this combi- nation of simplicity and elegance, It was a revelation, and to this apprecia- tive marquise the introduction of the fameus omelet au thon, the secret of which was almost lost in the revolu- • time into Parlelan society is due,-Mam rice F. Egon in Smart Set, They Lored Tench Other So, Ethel (to lloSe. who huts just told her a funny storyetelInt. my tittle times au ,nwfully eld joke, Poem -le it really, dear? Well, of conr.;e you ov.glit to • • snet 4e a the I'm ,sorry youl th• ink so -my E!ster wrote them; tle-E!r- of course. I don't mean the wotds-they re rippinf. I mean the music-• poor stuff -spoils words7com- poser ought to be kicked -who wrote USES FOR LEMONS. Two or three slices of lemon in e cup of strong tea will 'cure a nervous head- ache. Lemon juice (outward application) will allay the irritation caused by the bites of insect% A teaspoonful et lemon juice in a small cup of black coffee will relieve bilious headache. A dash of lemon In plain water Is an excellent tooth wash, It not only re- moves tartar, but sweetens the breath. Lemon juice is better than any drug or complexion powder for giving per- manent clearness and beauty to the skin. The juice of a lemon taken in bet water on awakening in the morning la an excellent liver correcti4 and for stout women is better than any an* fat medicine ever invented. Buying Watches /MPORTAN NOTICES. ITIEACITER WANTED. -In School Section No.18, .I„ Howick, for tall teem. Apply to JOHN NAGUIRE, Seeretary, Gerrie P. 0., Ontario. 1007-4 NAP TO Til 11.1313Eas.- New n Ch sangen Separator, at snout half price. Jost run one sson. Apply to JOHN G. GRIEVE, Win throp. 19054 DEACHER WANTED. -School teacher wanted holding first, s4.:?ond or third 40.3,4* etenfiesee. dut- to JOHN SHORTREED, Waiten P. 0., Ontario. Inn 4 You must rely largely on the honesty and judgment of the jeweller. Com- mon sense, therefore, commends you to go to a reputable store where watches are bought and sold by experts and where no advantage will he taken of you. That's here, and you will find a good stook to choose from. JOHN BULGER, ,it is dangerous to make a confession unless one really MtP411111 it, and we may add that it fs sometime, dangerous to take a confession as honestly meant. A husband and wife between whom a little unpleasant passage had occurred bad made the matter up, and the wife said, as if to clear her conscience; "Oh, well, I suppose that I have rny "Yes, my dear," said the husband. "That I have my faults!" exclaimed the wife indignantly. "Whet are they, I should like to know ?" "Well, to begin with" - "No; I don't want to haar."-London Tit -Bits. B• FOR SERVICE -The undeteigeel e p for service on Lot 3, Conceseon • Hui. t, the thoroughbred Pellet Angus gull. ”tier.1" fall I:trine reasonable. Slosil':riAEL. ceived by the underaiened up to uly Ottenel4 or tbe position of teacher fir Scbeel ..eetion Ne. 9, ay in euguet. Personal epplicatic us prefereed. Apply stating gaiety for balance of 1004. to JOIN ELLIOTT, Secretare -Treasurer, Box 182, Wig); h;1= JEWELLER, POPULAR STALLIONS ABE AND COLT LOST. -Strayed from the hoteleeeeicrtb, tbout the 10th of June, a blood mate, dark hey, ith tar all white Oar on ferebeed end A Mali lump on her rose and Alio IS bread on right shoulder r.nd DO shorten -bind feet. bbe accompanied by a bone foal. Any information eta fehly rewarded. FRANK ALLEN, Segforth. FOR SALE. driving horse, also three Jersey heifers. Apply DULLS FOR SAM -The undersigned have for AO gale two thorouehbred Durhane cne 14 months rend the other 16 months old, one red, the other roan, both eligible tor registration. Can be SC= On Lot 21, Ccncerelon e, 8.. Tuckeremith. A. aod J. BROADFOOT, Sealcirtb P. O. 1888 -ti FOR SALE. -The uridersigned has for gale -sev- eral thoroughbred Leicester Sheep and Durham Cattle of both MM. AddrreeEgmondville P. 0.1 - apply at fans, Mill Read, Tackeramith. Boaz?? CHARTERS At SONS. 13724 "tiatOULLS FOR SALE. -The undersigned has for gible for regiseration, aged 18 and 12 months. Coe red ar d the other white. Apply to JOHN Me- NEVIN, Kipper). ARM FOR BALE. -Being north half of Lot 17, Concession 4, L. R. B., Tuckersmitb, no:staffi- ng 100 acres, 44 scree %ceded to grass and the bal- ance in bush. Gravel boure, good well stdoer and a mall orchard, It fa sitnatbd six tidies from SCA- orth god 21 miles from Kippen wad one mile from school house and store, For further particeelere apply on the premlees or eddress Kippen P. 0, CSHOItTKORN DURHAM BULLS FOR SAI - -ce, The underelgned Ono for sale 6 pure bred ham bulls with pedigrees or eligible for registration. My aged bull, which le :hegira of the *there, is in- cluded le the offering and bee proved himself *sure dock getter. He wag aired by Rivereide Statrip which did truch good serviae le the herd of J. and W B. Waat, of Salem, and is a Ulf brother to Star liotnine, recently owned by Janie. Seell, of Hula lett, which took ant peize at London lair and gold at his diepergion gale for 8400, Apply on let 16. Committer' 2, Hay, or JOHN ELDER, Henna P. O. 'DAWN FOR SAUL -For sale, the thaw 150 sere U farm, being Lot 28, and north half of Lot 22, Concession 4, L.P. 5., Tuckerstoith. The land is in the Very bed oondition. On the 100 r4reS there is about 20 5.Crett of good bush and 10 acres on the 00 ecre lot. Theic Is a good teems hmise arid good barn x 40 feet, aud steble tO x 75 on the 100 acre lot, end it good barn 60 x 40 on the 60 scree. An well fenced end plenty of -water. Good ercherd on ch lot. They are six miles from Seaforth, four milts from Brucefield and four rulleS from R4 a. pply on the premises or to GEORGE BROWN ees.ortb. 1908x LIA.R1IS FOR SALE, -For solo. Lot 0, Coneelern 8, Le It. S., Tuakerenalth, 100 acme, eleared but 16 emcee 10 scree of berdwood and S stree et ceder, There is a large new frame hones. two good barns and other outbuildinge. plenty of water and a good orchard. It is within 21- mile. of Hen - WI. Also the lieLaren homestead on the Ieth Con - (melon of Hibbeet, containing 160 Acres, nearly all seeded to grew. A good bidck hones and Oro good bank barns end driving shed. Thies farm le so well known that a further derectibtion fa unriecitaitery. It is one of the best ?grans in Iliblyen. Sitter or both of these farms will be sold cheap as tbe pre tieter is not able to work thorn both, Apply on Hibbert farm or addrege Croroarty P. et. W. L. lteLARFaN. 1901 -it The following well known stallions will SIGN travel during the season of 1904 es followe Fashionable Clydesdale, , OF THE Pure Bred CLIMA X, Geiger & MeNevin, proprietors. Monday -Will lesve his own stable, Hen - sail, and proceed east to Harry Jacobi's, Chiseiburst, for noon ; then to the tenth concession of Tuckersmith, then west and north, to Stroeg's hotel for the night. Tuesday -To James Dick's hotel, Seaforth, for noon, arid remain there over night. Wednesday -By way of the 2ad Tuckerernith, to Chas. Coleman's for noon ; then west to the Commercial hotel, Clie- ton, for the night. Thursday -South by way of the London Road to Chas. Wilsoa s hotel, Brucefield, for noon ; then south to Henry Shaffer's hotel, Kippen for night,: Friday -West to Robert ape's, Hills Green, for noon ; then west to Goshen line and smith to Johueton's hotel, Zurich, for night, Saturday -Eget to Jollies Haggerni, jr., where he will remain one hour, then to hie own etable where he will remain until the tollowing Monday morning. To insur a -foal $15, 1900 bIONTRAVE LAWRENCE. Monday -Will leave his own stable, lot 21, concession 12, Hay. and go hy way of for noun ; then south KO west, by way of the Bronson line, to his own stable for the night. Tueeday-West to °animation 14, and south to George Edighoffer's for noon then couth and west fo Henry Schatley's Lake Shore Road, for the night, Wedneee day -North to Regis Denomy'r, for noon ; then north and mut to Chriatophee Ging- debit, Stsnley, for night. Thursday - North and east to Nelson Key's, Babylon line, for noon ; then to Cook's hotel, Varna, for night. Friday -South and emit to James Roes', concession 3, Stanley, for noon hen east to eonceesion 2, L. R. S., Tuckersmith, to James W. McLean's for the night, Saturday -West along the town line to John Cochrane's, Hills Green. for noon ; then west to Nicholson's hotel, Blake, for one hour ; then to his own stable, where he will remsin until the fol. lowing Monday morning. 1901 ELECTRIC B. Berry & Blair, proprietors. Monday, May 2nd -Will leave his own stable, It milei south of Brumfield, and go south by way of the London Road, to Cud- more's corner, thou east to Frank Upsinill's for noon ; then east to Staffs. at Carlin's hotel for night. Tueaday-North to Dub- lin, at Boehler Brothers' hotel for noon ; then west along the Huron Poe& te Dickhi hotel, Seaforth, for night. Wedneeday- By way of the Hilton ROA, to Clinton, at the Cernmercial hotel for noon, Bed remain uotil Thursday morning. Thursday -By way of the Londes Rossi to his own stable for noon, and remain until Friday morning. Fridity-Westeby way of the Bayfielcl road, to John Johustoles, one mile west of Varna for reit° ; then by way of the Goehen Line to Zurich, at the Commercial hotel for Some people have an idea that they night, Saws day -Sy -way of Zurich read comfort the afflicted wbeti they groan to Hensel!, at the Commereiai hotel for I le. en ; then by way of the London road to over them, Don't • drive ' a hearse , his own Etable, where he will remain until thrpugh a man's soul, • . 1 the following Monday inoroine. 189941 SAW for on 01016 Prize Wire Stretchers ten one lent set see die CD ti .14 ee CP wog -CD tit e 404 MEM 100 Winning Short Horns for Sale. • Eight young Seetch Snort Horn Buil from leo. ported and home nred mse, got by imported hull, also young enow. win' tall a loot or In (nil to im- ported boil, also s nunAer of hedere r,f breeding lege and youriger. Also A la 01 teed ppm es the s• own from eyed got near North Bey lett year. They yielded over 37 bueheis por acre and ;30t a bag in tiLeer. Prices very moth:tate. DAVID MILNE a. SON, Ethel Ont. 1E:0