The Huron Expositor, 1904-09-09, Page 3E10-1-1. kSALI': OR ItENT
4. te buy or eel! Wireipeg eel
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end full iefertnation ni,tett.
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-For sele, Let 12, Coneetealee
ip of Ilateeontaining lea lents
It is under.drained arid wet
od state at cultivation, /L.},
,zoodd orchard and 4 g00Cb110k
itorys high. There are 2 hen*
St milee front Rensall wed
r -A-pply to tuts. ALEX LN.
IIK anu B. IIOGGARTU, ge.
10 I2-12
_________________________
INTI1ROP FOR SALE,t_te
rifted in the village of Wee
act -1'111°p, on which la aped
and other out building&
den of largo aitd small fruit
- hard and soft eater, Tea
-petty for a retired farmer or
vornfortable borne with leee
le owner, Seaforth l'.0 . or to
n, Alchlllop. AIRS. J
131
be rented.
- I.E.-For sale, that dyer.
operty le Ilareurhey, tee
c _ There are two /scree et
te, ueses ereddre* •
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- house w i th ail modes%
.r of good hard and oh
eal.e. This is an excellent
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FOR SALE -For age, e
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hit the 3.'11:ace of Lesdbury.
ell ef which are :leered, ex.
1- It Le it, a goad stete of mil.
eta/ ar.d underdtained. and
4ing or eteek raising, aee
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int dwelling- beetle?, a Inv
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[ ail nccessary buildings in
re are terte orchercis and
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'All Beetled exclitpt abeet 10
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eetite Carlton St.
1314-13
SEPTEMBER 9 1904
The Nicest 'Girl of All.
- Do you not think that the.girl who is
poptdar with, other girls is about the nicest
girl pi all ?
It does not mean that she is not a manns
girl slam It means only that she is not too
antler taken up with men to have no time
lorThheetreorsmnesoexe.
thing womanly about; the
girl that other girls like. She is not eharpi
nor is she vain, even though she may 4ve
more attention from men than some of her
less attractive siiteie,
Men can always tell a nice girl by her.
manner wit h ot her
The girl who likes °ply men never takes
the trouble to make *HEM popular with
girls. She thinks it i not worth while.
In this she is vastly mistaken ; no girl
een afford to be without friends of her own
sex ; all the men friende in the world veill
not oompeneate for the lack of feminine
Irienhderseare Te always times in a Woman's life-
wben only another woman can understand
and, sympathize.
The nice girl does not treat other girls in
an off -hard manner and keep all her smiles
forntehre
mulaennri.er does not change the minute
a man cornea upnn the scene.
you muet, have seen girls who acted bor-
ed to death when with girls, but let a man
appear, and lo! they were all sparkle and
life.
There is no reaeon why a girl shculd not
be popular with her own sex and men also.
If atieis fair in her dealings with other
gteinand allows no petty jealousies to creep
in
'and does not alwaye make them feel
thEst she would much prefer the society of
men to theirs, ehe is pretty sure to have
lots of girl friends.
-Of course, there is no comparison between
e girl's friendship fen a man and for another
girl. It if porno:tiff natural that she should
at many times prefer to be with tbe form-
er; but all girls understand that and ex -
peat to be oceasionally left in the rear when
the right man cornea along.
The girls' girl is always sayinenioe little
things to other girls; she knows how she
likes to have these things said to her, and
she &elms she would be done by.
When she sees a pretty dress on another
girl she remarks on it; she takes che
trouble 'to say-" how sweet you look," or
"I heard such a nice thing about you."
Believe it, girls, it is a great thing to be
popular with your own sex.
But do not think that it is not a great
thing to be popular with men, for it ie.
But there is a happy medium, and if you
can strike it you will be loved by other
girls, and both loved and reepeoted by
men. -Weekly Welcome. •
Healthy Sentiment.
FRO41 THE CANADA PRESBYTERIAN.
The great convention of Friends which
clotted last week in Toronto served to im-
press the fact that there is a large and in-
fluential body of public opinion in Canada
and the United States that is strongly op-
posed to war as a meane of settling nation-
al cliaputes. They regard wet as directly
antagoniatie to the spirit of Chrntianity
and a survival from theold barbatic days
when force was the only court of appeal,
And in this position they have many warm
eympathizerte It is nou diffieult to kindle
the military patesion, but the great maesee
of the people have a deep-rooted conviction
that war among civilizel Christian nations
Rhouicl speedily become an anachronism.
The wonder is that in an age which is so
much permeated by Christian ideas, the
spirit of militarism should Survive so per:
intently, and that there are yet to be found
moulders of public opinion who are strerau-
may reeking to keep the old barbarie
epirit alive.
It may not be possible for no to endorse
the posit:on cif Count Tolstoy in hie reoent
etrong utterance that the law of brotherly
'love absolutely forbids the resort to force
under any circumstances. There are al-
waya lawless epirits to whom the only con-
vincing appeal is that of force. It is nec-
essary to use force in dealing with the in-
dividual oriminal who would attack life or
praperty. The right of eta -defence is in-
herent, and under anala.gons eiroumatances
it may be righe and neoemary to employ
force against a community dr a nation that
would rob no of life and liberty. But as
we review the great ware that have left
their red trail of desolation all along the
course of human history we are shocked to
find how few have been the absolutely
rightecut wars. For the moat 'mitt they
have been undertaken in the hitt of eon -
peat and territorial aggrandizement. Men
inspired by demoniac ambition, and hold-
ing human ;life as a light thing, have de-
vastated ccintinents and have left their
heritage of woe to after generation. The
story of unrighteous slaughter fills a large
space in the chequered page of history of
man.
The national conscience is educated more
slowly than the individual conscienoe. In
civilized oornmunities we have paesed the
stage when the resort to brute force Was
regarded as the only means of settling in-
dividual quarrele. It is only in lawless
frontier comtnunitiereand among the lowest
types of men, that the old barbaric idea
dill lingers. Duelling as a means of settl-
ing "affairs of honor" has practically dis-
appeared, but the old hereaty of war as the
only adequate means of "tattling national
quarrels dies hard, and we itdolently ac-
cept as a matter of course the situation of
two great nations engaged in a death strug-
gle the whole of Europe armed to •;the.
teeth, and limitless wealth and the latest
tcliscoveries of science devoted to the con-
struction of the most deadly engines of
deetruction. It is startling to think how
complacently we red day by day of the
fearful deetruction of life' and property in
the present war and regard it all as part of
the necessary order of things.
The view point must be radically chang-
ed. The broth must be pressed,home upon
the public conscience that friar between
civilized nations is a bEsrbario anachronism
and is no more necessary to the settlement
of national quarrels than the resort to the
revolver, the knife or the fists among indi-
viduals. The array of army againsb army,
animated by no personal querrel, and yet
armed, with the deadliest weapons of de-
struction, is nob only antenonistio to the
fundamental principles of Christianity, but
is the most prodigal economic; waste. The
Peace Conference at the Hague marks the
dawn of a better day But the old ideas
the hard, andthey are diligently fostered
by the few whose intone:Its lie in war. It
becomes the duty of all leaders of public
opinion to steadily create a new and health-
ier sentiment. The prcrposed arbitration
treaty between; Great -Britain and the
United States would not only be a means
of ensuring laeting peace between two nee
tionewhose sooial, religiona and commer-
cial intereats are interlaced at every pinto
but would also go far to guarantee tho
peace of the world. It is goud ,to know
that King Edward ,may be depended upon
to use his high position and influence for
the furtherance of the cause of peace.
Parents, teachere, mildsters, the press, and
edl who have any part in the making of the
public sentiment of tbe future,have a clear
duty in plaoing war where it belongs ,ae a
relic of the barbe.rio peat.
•
oat
N
te'tte • - ate...toe
nee, -teen,
teetted: atettg
de,
_ • - ••
q•S Ili CISS,i112, Buf!afo, N.' Y.,L,
cared of kidney troubl6b-,yLyJa.F.,
Pinkham's Vegetable CortIpl:nd.,
Of all the diseases known Wi w It i
the female Omani:int is afilicte.t. 1.:;(!tacy,
disease is. the most fatal. In itIct. un-
less prontPt and correct treatment is ap-
plied, the weary pati'entseldortesurvive: .
Being fully aware of this, Mrs. Pink -
ham, early _in her career, gave careful
study to the subject, and in prod nei
her reat remedy for wonrutu'!,[
Lydia E. Pinklitunt's • Vegetable
Compound - made sure that it con-
tained the eorrect combination ot
herbs which was certain to con trok
that dreaded disease, woman's kidney
-troubles.
Read What 'Vim Weisslitz Says.
DEAR MRS. PINE:HA : - For two
years my life was simply a burden, I
suffered so with female troubles, and
pains across my back and loins. The
doctor told nee that I had kidney
troubles and prescribed for met Fcir
three months I took his medicine. but
grew steadily worse. My husband then
advised me to try Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Compound, and
brought home a bottle. It is the great-
est blessing ever brought to our home.
Within three months I was a changed
woman. My pain had disappeared,my
complexion beeame clear, my eyes
bright, and my entire system in good
shape." - Mits. Peeux.A. WE1SSLITZ, 1 73
Seneca St., Buffalo, N.Y.- $5000 forfeit
If original of aboue letter prouing genuinene36 cannot
be produced, •
ample, a minister en the Sanday before his
marriage is said to have chosen as his text,
" And he went'onhle way rejoicing," and
on the Sunday after his honeymoon to have
eloquently discoureed on the words, " Re-
member my bonds."
It was a country ohnroh in the North of
England where oil lamps were used instead
of gas. One night in the late summer when
the lamps had not yet been resumed after
the long days, it got suddenly overcast and
before the sermon it was deemed necessary
to light the pulpit lamp. During the hymn
the old sexton repaired to the pulpit, and
having cleaned the glass chimnky with a
duster, lib it up, but only a feeble light
struggled through. And then the clergy-
man took his text, which was this :.
now we see through a glass darkly."
A few years ago a well•known biehop
married his second wife, and, returning
home after his boneymton, announoed a
series of serrnone, the title of the series be-
ing "Tho Penitent's Return." This was
obviously unintentional.
There is a Church in one of our large
cities which boasts of a very high pulpit.
A ehort time ago a etrange preaoher who
was of a nervous temperament) cccepied
th;s pulpit, but-, as the sequel will thew,
only for a very short time. Having taken
for his text and said about a dozen words,
he startled the -congregation by saying
-" As I am not used to pulpite as high as
this you will pardon me, I know, if 1 ctorne
down and preach my aermon, from the
lectern." He suited his action to the words
and preached a very good sermon from the
modest leotern. And this was his strange-
ly appropriate text : " He that exalteth
himself eball be abused, and he that hum-
bleth himself shall be exalted."
One more instance. Not many months
ago a olergyman preached one Sunday
evening from the text : " My words shall
not pass away." Exactly a fortnight later
the same clergyman preached the same
sermon from the same text in the same
church, to the wonderment of practically
the same congregation. Rvidentally, ib
wae his determination that at any rate his
words ehould not pass away from the mem-
ory of his hearers.
Huraor in Texts.
Part of the humor -which One occasionally
meets with, even in the sedate "inolosure of
the pulpit, is due to the queer texts which,
are sometime - often unconsciously -
°lumen by preachers. No doubb there, are
many storiee tad under this head whioh
owe their origin not to actual feet so muCh
ae to the invention; of the wag. For ex -
Emergency Medicines. .
It is a great convenience to have at, hand
reliable remedies for use in such oases of
accident and for slight injuries and ail-
ments. A good liniment and one that is
fast becoming a favorite, if Dot a household
necessity, is Chamberlain's Pain Balm. By
apple/nig it promptly to a cut,- bruise or
burn it allays the pain and causes the in-
jury to heal in about one.third the time
usually required, and as it is an antiseptic
it prevents any danger of blood poisoning.
When Vain Balm is kept at hand a sprain
may be treseed before inflammation sets in,
which ineuree a quick recovery. For Sale by
ALEX. Wresolt, Druggist, Seittorth.
Start Potatoes in Boxes.
Writers on agricultural topics for British
newspapers oontinne to devote a good deal
of attention to potato culture and to the
prominence it has obtained owing to the
interest in and the high prices paid for oer-
tain new varieties. The_ agricultural Writ-
er ()fah() Birmingham Post bold some weeke
ago of the names of M. Wallace, of Dam-
frieshire, a farmer who uses the boxing eye -
tem of preparing potato seed. In a lecture
on the subject, Mr. Walla -0e gave it as hie
experience that the yield per sore of pota-
toes had been increased by two or three
tons, owing to the enceleration in maturity
of early potatoes, by sprouting them in
boxes in the winter or early spring. Mr.
Wallace is an advocate of frequent change
of seed, and of planting big good potatoes.
It is noteworbhy that the change he advo-
cator], and which his hearer] approved, was
from a high altitude or cold, wet climate
to a warmer looality. A very interesting
point was touched upon by the 'lecturer in
respect to the use of_ immature tubers for
med. He declared emphatically that the
-best and most robust crops nre obtained
from seed ef thie description, and cited in
support of his argument the popularity of
Scottieh seed, which is seldom matured.
TEM HURON E POSITOR.
1 the corning generation than there is for
, this. , .
1 A tufferer f, om repeated headaches, who
1 Ilse found a means of relief in " headache
powders," or °Mitr eken lees harmful drugs,
may d.spute thie aedertion, but the victim
of seine drug habit, or the 'fields of one
whoee hears, poisoned by aoetanilid or
Iantipyrin, hes tuddenly ceaeed to beat be-
fore its time, will look ab the matter from
another point of view entirely.
, During the Spanish war numbsrd of
would-be recruits were rejected because of
of -a weak heart; and 'in the epidemic of
pneutnonia, which ravaged the country last
winter, -an unusual: Lumber- of deaths oc-
curred from failure of the heart to meet
the added etrain.
Although vericus causes have doubtless
been at work to weaken the hearts of the
present generaticn, there can be no- ques-
tion that due potent influence has been
the i indiscriminate 1180 of headache pow -
deka.
In all cases of habitual headache recur-
ring periodically, a physician must, of
tiouree, be consulted, that h3 may find the
cause -eye strain, Cheese in the ears, nose",
stomach or oher more distant organs-
ar remove it if possible. But the eepar
a e attacks of headache have to be relieved,
if very severe; and in these cartes it is
better not to resort to drugs, unless. the
clings are aken under the upecial guidance
of the physician: In the congestive head •
ache, marked by throbbing, and made
worse by stooping or lying down, a cold
towel or an ice bag applied to the head, a
hot water bag to the eplue, a minitard
plaster to the back of the neck or to the
inner side of the thighs, or a hot mustard
foot hath -one or more -will often give re-
lierwkien many drugs fail.
In the anemia form of headache, marked
by pallor, in which the, pain is made lees
severe' by lying down, ilassage of the head,
or the application of warm cloths to tbe
head and faoe'will often be found grateful.
A threatened billious headache May some-
times be warded off by, a close of epaom
melte, as many other liesdaches due to
" auto -intoxication," And one due to over-
use of the eyes or eye -strain will usually,
if taken at the moment of the firet warning,
be arreeted or mitiga,ted by cloeing the book
and going for a walk.
In Praise of' Chamberlain's
Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy.
"Allow me to.give you a few words itt
praise of Chtnaberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy," says Mr. John Ham-
lett, of Eagle Pats, Texas. I suffered one
week with bowel trouble,and took all kinds
of medicine withbut getting any relief,
when my friend, Mr. 0. Johnson, a mere
ehant here, advised me to take this rem
edy. After takingeene dose I felt greatly
relieved, and when I hed taken the third
dose was entirely cured. I thank you
from the bottom of my heart for putting
thia great remedy in the hands of man-
kind." For sale by Alex. Wilson, Drug-
gist, Seaforth.
Lord Minto's Horseback Hobby.
Lord Minto and the Countese of Minto
are tr aking a tour of Canada before leaving.
The Governor's term expires in about two
months. Cheir excellenciee left last week
for the Pacific coast. A feature of the trip
will be a ride by Lord 'Minto on horstback
aerobe the prairie from Edmontun to Qu'.
Appelle'a dietauce of between 400 and 500
miles. This task would be an arduous one
for any but an expert horseman, but to
LordMinto it is quite an ordinary affair;
nevertheless he is looking forward to it
with zest. Two mounts will be provided
for his excellency; and guns will be brought
for the purpose of duck and partridge shoot- -
ing. Lord Minto's escort will camp out on
the prairie.
At the Governor-Generalti request there
will be as little ceremony as possible about
the ride. Each ;night he and his escort)
will camp out on the prairie.
A Useful Hint.
Governor. Bachelder. ofiNew Hampshire,
dislikes tramps, though it times ;he will
hand a quarter to one of the traveling fra-
teretty. Nob long ago he found a young
hobo lying under a, tree at a lonely place in
the country. TheGovernor listened to the
old hard -luck atoryeand gave the tramp
some small change. Then he said, encour•
agingly. "Down there on the left, my
friend, there is a farmer who wants men to
help him threeh wheat." " Thankee, sir,"
said the tramp, turning to the right.
" Thankee. I might have gone down that
way accidental like."
Pointed Paragraphs.
A short man always likes to stand on his
dignity.
When a man is unable to do anything
'else he can worry.
It is beet to settle b quarrel without any
outeide interference. ,
Health may be wealth for some, but ib
,is poverty for the doctor.
Lucky is he who marries a widow whoee
first -husband was mean to her.
If e woman knows she it pretty it isn't
because any other woman ever told her.
A poster artist's curves are enough to ex-
cite the envy of a baseball pitcher.
When a fellow boasts that he can't be
bought it's a sign that he hasn't been offer-
ed enough.
It usually pays muCh better to put riches
in trusts than to put trust in riches.
- Too many people waste their time sitting
on the political fence waiting for the band
avagon to come along.
Of course you have been unable to dodge
the fool man wno insists on talking aboub
himself when you want to talk about' your-
self.
Has Sold a Pile of Chamberlain
Cough Remedy.
I have sold Chamberlain's Cough Renaedn
for more than twenty years and it has.
given entire satisfaction. I have sold -AS
pile of it, and mut recommend it highly-
JOSLTH MCELHINNY, Linton, Iowa. You
will find this remedy a good friend when
croubled with a cough or cold. It always
affords quick relief and is pleasant to take.
For sale by AJAX. WILSON, Druggien° Sea.
forth.
•
Use of Drugs 'for Headache.
It may be said, with little fear of con-
tradiction from those who know the faits,
that if a cast-iron law, forbidding the use
of any drug whatever in the treatment of
headache, could be enacted and enforced,
there would be mach less misery for
leges, and a considerable and growing num--
ber of affiliated institutions of different
torte. It has teaching faculties of flirts,
medicine and applied science and engineer-
ing. Among itu affiliated inetitutione are
the Agrioaltural College at, Guelph, the
Veterinary College in Tomlin-, and tw4 in-
stitution, in Toronto for the teachin of
mimic. The adininittratitn of this g eat
and complicated organizttion is a Berr1etta
undertaking, in which the people of „Da-
ted° ehould ake a deep and abiding injter-
est. The Uo veraity itaelf belongs to tl em 1
in iis entirety, though most of the nil ted I
institutionare on private foundations nd !
:
willtout publi4 suppott.
Not a gre4 many yeare ago the Unhinr- I
Wier univereities sow Weat-
i
eity of Toronto had only an arta faculty, I
and the two °
ed wfih it -Victoria and Trinity-wr re its
1
But it dose not seem fietteriug to th- com-
mon-sense of our people that they th field
eacape an unjust and hersh dieetimmetiee
on the part of a highly protected urt r st.
only by the action of a foreign G uvel um. nt
in butdening its own induetriei -Nev
York Times.
SCHOOL REPORT -The following is the
I report of the panne of School Section No.
4, MeKill% p f..r I he. mon h of Augtose, It I
is besed oo regulari:y, punctuality, good
conduct aid general proficn ecy tietnor
40 -1 ----Eva Lockhart. 435; Roy Dorrance,
430; Alex. Dickson, 395; Acta Habkirk,
85 ; Ivy Hendereon, absent. Sealer 3icl-
Mary Riley, 440; Minnie liabkirk, ab-
sent ; Maggie McClay. absent. [ Junior
3td-Archie Dickson, 56. Senior 2nd -
Emma Loekhart, 470.; °neater 4endereon,
410 ; john Flenderson, 340 ; Jean Cars-
well, 65. Stinior lst-Winnie McIntosh,
390 ; Charles Riley, 315 ; George Lock.
hart, 58.
oomptt!tors for publict patronage in
matter of academic degrees ; now eat
the federating univereities has- its coil
orgainz stion fler the teaching of oert
eubjecte, while its students obtain tuition
free in the others that go to complete the
scope of the arts faculty. As the final
outcome of the federation 'movement, the
vs hole of the work in the physical acienees,
mathematics, philosophy, political Rejoice
and two languages, is done by the Univ:er-
eity free-bf coat to the students Who regia.
ter in the different collegee.
• Some idea ref the extent of the w4rk
done in the University may be obtained
from the statistics of attendance and ex-
penditure. In the Uoiversity of Toronto,
Univereity College and Viotoria College,
there are in all 83 teachers in the facullty
of arts, 58 in the faculty of medicine, aid
'21 in the faculty of applied ecience.
1903 tinere were 907 students in arta, 494
in nu dicing, and 341 in applied science -ea
, total attendance of 1,742, of whom all bnb
181 were taking kill regular ceurees. The
expenditure on the faculty of arts amount-
ed to $176 480 a on the faculty of medicine
to $40 614, and on the faculty of applied
sbienoe and engineering -to $42,774. Fehr-
rnerly all the expense of the arts faculty
watt mit by the revenue from fees and in-
vestments, but new the omit of three
scientific departments -chemistry, phyeins,
and mineralniy -and geology -is met hyi a
yearly legleiabive appropriation. In ad i -
tion to this provision, the Legislature had
to meet in 1903 a deficit of over $14. O.
When the amount of capital expendit re
on additional accommodation is taken into
account, it cannot in fairness be oontended
that the Legislature is dealing with higher
education in any niggardly spirit):
Doee's Kuntee Plus act on the kidneye, bladLier
•
and urinary organs only They euro backaches,
weak back, rheutuatiem diabetes, congestion, in-
flammation, gravel, Bright's dieeate and all other
diseases liaising from wrong action of the kidneys
and bladder
The Ladies' Favorite.
Laxa-Liver P lis are the ladies' favorite medioloo,
They cure Constipation, Sick Headache, Biliousness
and Dyspepsia, without griping, purging or sicken-
ing
-he
of
ge
in
+I. • 'OW
Many people say they are "alt nerves," eatily
etartled or upset, eueily werrsed or irritated
bones Heart and Nerve Pills are just the remedy
such people require They restore perfect harmOny
of the nerve centres and give new eery° force to
shattered nervous systems
, •
Suddenly Attacked.
Children are often attacked suddenly by paleful
and dangerous colic, Crarnps,Diarrhoea, Dyscotetry,
Cholera Morbus, Cholera Intanture, eta Dr Fewl-
erei Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt and
mire cure, which should always be kept in the house
•
Spring Medicine.
As a Flaring medioine Burdock Blood Bitters has
no equal It tones un the system and removes all
impurities frone the blood, and takes away that tir-
ed, weary feelieg ao prevalent in the epring
-et • at
The resent:it Itnighealing principal of the ;dne
tree has finally been suoaessfully. separated anc re.
fined into a perfect cough medicine -Dr Weed'
Norway Pine Syrup Sold by all dealers on a gharf
N
antee of satis'action Price 25 cents
•
One of the World's Greatest
Battles.
hibiotryw• at er'ioo
ing for several days, near aaicheng, wilt
the colossal conflict which has been rag -
take the ,rank with the great battles of
If the number of men engaged connt,
72,000 Frenchmen were
opposed by 117,000 English and Gentian
At and near Haiehag, 250,000 Jape. lege
are engaged in a deadly struggle with 1 5,•
000 Russians, a tote' of 425,000 men, ;
More soldiers are engaged in the Lirso-
yang-Haicheng Mukden opsrations than
were at Sedan, where the Germans had
250,000 and the French 140,000, a hital of
390,000.
- According to late estimates, 425 000
men are on the firing line between Ff ai-
°hang and Mukden. •
In the battle of Geltyebtirg the Fe eral
forces numbered 92,000, as againtt 78 000
Corifederater, a toeal of 170,000 men,
Taking, intto consideraeion the nume ioal
atrength of the opposing forces, the on -
flit which has been raging for several ays
in Southern Manchuria is one of the wo ld'a
greatest battles.
5 • •
Of Use Every Day.
Once you become acquainted with the merits of
Dr. Chase's Ointment and the scores ef ways in
whieh it le useful in every hotne, you wouIdL not
think of being without it. . Eczema, salt rh um,
scald head, tatter, chaffing, chilolains, burns, e aide
and every form of ekiu irritation and eruption soon
youlecled to its extraordinary eoothing, healing influ-
• ,
Sending a Man by Mail.
Many persons will be eurprised, d ubt.
less, to know that in England a perso can
be sent from one part of the kingdo to
another by mail, just as if he was no: ing
more than a mere letter.
One -4y a man called at St. Martin's le
d ' 'th the object of consulting et di. reotory, and finding the address of a cus-
tomer who lived in a r mote part of Ban
ham. He was not cquainted with the
locality, and was most • anxious to se his
customer at once-. These fade he nen
6ioned to an obliging elerk behind the
counter.How
a
s at once informed that he ould
be sent to the required address by regi ter.
ed mail at a fee of six cents a mile. The
man gladly aierepted the offer, and in less
than a minute found himself in °barge of a
smart messenger boy, who very soon uid-
ed him by the thortest route to his des-
tination.
The boy carried in his hand a pr nted
-slip, with the description of his "nailed
parcel" under' the heading, "Article re-
quired to be delivered," and this he req_uir-
ed the man and cuetomer to sign before he
left the latter's house.
One On the Judge. .
A certain judge has a five-year-old niece
of whom he is very proud. A few days a-
go she cattle to him and said, with a serious
air:
"Uncle, there is a question about law I
Want to ask you."
" Well, dear, whattie it ?" patiently in-
quired the judge.
" Uncle, if a man had a peacock, and it
went into another man's yard and laid an
egg, to whom would the egg belong."
The judge smiled indulgently and replied:
" Why, the egg would belong, to the man
who owned the peacock; but he could be
presented for trespassing if he went on to
the other's property to %et it."
The child seemed very much ititereated
in the explanation, and then observed in-
nocently:
" Uncle, °did you never think that a pea-
cock ceuldn't lay an egg?"
Not Taking His Own Medicine.
Doctor (after feeling pulse, looking at
tongue, eto.)-There _ is nothing constitu-
tionally wrnng with you, madam, - and I
should advise you to marry again.
Youthful Widqw-Are you single, doc-
tor.
/Doctor -I ,am, but dooters never pre-
scribe for themselves, you know.
6
The _Provincial University.
The annual report of the President of the
University of Toronto, for the year ending
June, 1903, has just been issued., Although
almost ancient history, being over a year
old, ib contains a good deal that is inter-
esting to the taxpayer as well as to the
educationist. It has grown of late year's
into an immense institution, The central
organization has gathered about it tvfo
federated universities, three federated col-
.
112
OP INION OF A J. F.
Calixte Richard finds a, new lease
of life in Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Acadie Siding, Kent Co, N.B., Sept. 5th
-(Special.)-Calixte Richard, J. p., well.
known and highly reepeoted here, hat; given
to the public his rem ons for his faith in
Dodd's Kidney Pills as a remedy ler kidney
disease. Mr. Richard says:
"1 was troubled with kidney disease for
forty years and fuund myself a worn oub
man at seventy-two. But after using two
boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills I find all my
paint gone and I can employ all my days
wiih the beet results,"
Dodd'a Kidney Pille are the friend of the
again.
How
They make them feel young
gin.
How Fruit Growers Lose Money.
(Written for THE Expostron.)
IMMO AMIN. e•T•
A strongly worded warning te fruit
growers and farmers will appear in the Sep-
tember issue of The Canadian Rortieultnr-
iet, which is tile official organ of the On
tario Fruit Growers' Aatociation, againsii
selling their fruit crops to irresponsible
buyers. These buyere are those who do
not live or own any property or seotiona
where they buy their crepe. The Hera:nil-
tutiet claims that tens of thousands of dol-
lara are boat annually throughout Canada
through the fraudulent methode practised
by the buyers.
The first year they buy a iew thousand
barrels in one section, aod pay cash for
them, thereby establishing their reputation
with many growers, as responsible buyers.
The following year they take advantage of
this reputation to contract for large quan-
tities of fruit, but not paying for it, put,
ting the growers off wtth one excuNe or an-
other. When tome growers are suapicious,
and demand payment, they pay immediate -
Ay, but in the majority of classes they man -
rage to ship the fruit out of the section
without paying for it. Leter they tell the
growers tales of losses, and ciay they are un-
able to pay the full value of their fruit, and
oter to settle at 20 to 30 cents on the
dealer,
Growerd are advised by The Horticultur-
ist when dealing with buyers they aro not
thotoughly acquainted wieh to demand se-
curity for their fruit, or only deal with
local buyers who have property or stake fa
the community. One of the best methods
of avoiding danger uf this kind hatnbeen for
growers to co-operate and deal directly
with large n holesale buyer& The Ceee of
the Ontario buyer, who two yeara ago de-
frauded the fruit erowere of the Annapolis
Valley, in Nova Sr'cotia, out if $30,000 to
$40,000 worth of.frutt is mentioned.
THE EARLY VEGETABLE INDUSTRY.
The fruit growers in Kent county, who
have this year forced• vegetables for the
early summer markets have had a very
proeperout season, as will be "announced to
the September issue of the Canadian Horti-
culturist. The shipmente, this year have
been the largest on record, aud have not
been equal to the demand. These veget-
ables are started under glass in the late
winter, are later traneplanted under cotton
frames and finally grown in the open. This
met hod enables the growers to place their
products on the market much earlier than
the regular crop. These vegetables are
superior to the imported ouee from the
United States, which hese in the past
practiaally supplied all the demand. Ow-
ing -to the satisfactory prices realized this
year, ib is prebable there will be a marked
increase in this line of work next season,
and that ultimately Canadian vegetables
mit'y largely displace the United States itn-
portatione.
•
- Humorous.
A.rny-" My brother, the explorer, was
-telling ale that in some parte of Afrioa you
can buy a wife for a few old sardine cane
and beads."
letr. Crustymugg-" Well, a good wife's
worth that,"
A. farmer wrote to his lawyer as follows ;
" Will you please tell me wh you learn-
ed to write? I have a boy ih to send
to school, and I am afraid I r. y hit upon
the same scho.ol that you went to."
••••••• IMMO
Inventor-" I should like to get you in-
terested in my improved fly paper."
Capaliste-" What makes you think ill
will be etweepsfull ?"
Inventor -Because each sheet is got up
to imitate a bald head."
Never say again that a newspaper writer
is nob a master of diplomacy. One of the
fraternity Wa8 to write up the history of
an old lady of ninety-eight. fie was told
that she had never so much as learned her
letters. Did he blurt it out in print? Not
a bit of It. He merely abated in his finely
written article that "she can read the
finett print as well as she ever could."
Putting up the Bars.
On Saturday a prokamation was desued
by the Dominion Government impos ng
day of $7 a ton on imported steel rails.
This was in accordance with an Act of 1903
directing the Government to enfor e the
duty when it was shown that good rails
were being made in Canada in qua tities
sufficient to supply the usual dema cis in
the country. The Government is sa iefied
that this condition is fulfilled by the new
malls at Sault Ste. Marie and others previ-
ously establiehed.
From the point of view of . the r ilway
managers of Canada this cannot be r gard-
ed as favorable to their share in the ndus-
trial progress of Canada, but tbe re lways
of that country are so far favored b the
Government that little complaint is likely
to ensue. For ourselves we may efleot
that the new rule will ab lest pub an end
to the sale of American rails on the Oorth-
ern aide of the boarder at $8 per ton less
than American roa`ds are compelled to pay
for them on the eouthern side of the border.
---"Fttn-nnteetw-
Egg nim, m ii17. h
We are now located in
our new store in the
BONG. II CK
Opposite A. Young's grocery.
•
We will be pleased to have all our old customers and many
new ones call on us in our new quarters.
BRIGHT BROS
FETI,X1811,ER8, 8E1/1FO.RTII
11
[111111111 t,oniiinllit
WOMEN'S AILMENTS.
Eighty per cent. of the Ms of
womankind are due to Kidney
derangement. Backache, pain
in the side, headache, depression,
pimples and eruptions, swelling
of the feet, bad taste in the mouth,
• all come from disordered kidneys
allowing poisons which should
be carried off to remain in the
system.
Dr. Piteher.s Backache -Kidney
Tablets pAsitively cure all kidney
trouble,etand free women from
aches and ailments.
Mrs. Richard Meyrs, Preston, Ont
says: bad a severe pain in my
hack that -gave me no release in the
day time and disturbed me nights.
DraPitcherle Backache Kidney Tab- I
lets cured me of the vain, and I have
no longer that depressing weakness
itt the morning as formerly."
D r. Pitcher's B Tablets are soc.
a bottle, at druggists or bymaila The
Dr. Zina Pitcher Co., Toronto, Ont.
For sale by J.S. Roberts. druggist,Seaforth
Notice.
Tendons will be reeeived for the conabruetion of a
drain in MeRillop on September 18, at Council
'Meeting, Leadbury. Estimated work 33,610, part
of mirk to be done this fall. Plane and epecifteat-
ions oho be seen at Clerk's office, near Winthrop.-
, 1914-4 JOHNS,. MORRISOlt °tette.
BURDOC
BLOOD
BITTERS
Is a purely vegetable System
Renovator, Blood Purifier and
Tonic.
A medicine that acts directly at
the same tirne on the Stomach,
Liver, Bbwels and Blood.
It cures Dyspepsia, Biliousness,
Constipation, Pimples, Boils, Head-
ache, Salt Rheuin, Running Sores,
I n dig esti on, Erysipelas, ' Cancer,
Shingles, Ringworm or any disease
arising from an impoverished or
impure condition of the blood.
For Salo by all Draggles.
Burning Money in War.
Leslie's Weekly says: Some !cies of the
cost of modern warfare can be arrived at
by taking a Japanese vrarehip like the
Kasuga or Nyeshin and calculating the
number of shots she would discharge, The
flret•uamed ship ererries four cannon which
cost $30,000 each. One of these guns can
fire two shots per minute, and every ishot
costs $400 ; thus in five minutes thee° four
cannon can discharge forty bombs at ineost
of $16,000. The smaller canrone cost each
$18,000, and every slept they fire means an
expenditure of $70. They are very rapid,
and it is estimated that in five rkinutes the
twelve cannon could diecharge shot to the
value of nearly $235,000
• • 1
-Mr. Laing, a former St. Marys boy,
who was in business ill Lyleton, Manitoba.,
wae burned out during a serious fire, which
recently visited that place.
-The late Mr. Hertry Hillebrecht, who
died on the 16th, tat,' was one of the oldest
and moat respected residents of Broadhagen
and had resided therefor over fifty years,
having emigrated from Germany with his
parents in the year 1853. He leaves a
family of eight children. Dropsy was the
cause of death.
-A Pretty weddiug was solomnized at
the reeidence of Mr. Pringle, jr„Base Line,
Blanehard, on Wedneeday, August) 17th,
when Miss Margaret, daughter of Mr.
Robert Bruce, was limited in marriage to
MreOliver D. Adams, of Woodburn. The
ceremony was performed by the Rev. C. C.
Conzens, pastor of Woodham Methodiet
church,
Voter's List Court.
Township of Tuckerstrith.
Notice le hereby given that a Court will be held,
pursuant to the" Voters* List Act," by His Honor
the Judge of the County Court of the County of
Huron, at Dixon's Hall, Brucefield, on the thir-
teenth day of September, 1904, at the hour of ten
o'clock a. nt., to hear and determine the several
complainte of and omissions in the Voters'
List of tbe Munioipelity of the Township of Tucker -
smith for 1904. Ali persons having business at the
Court are required to attend at the said time and
place.
A. G. SMILLIE,
Clerk of said Municipality.
Dated the 20th day of August, 1904 1016-2
73rand Trunk Rad
System.
Fiseliway Time Tablb
Mains leave seaman as follows
ay
9.60 a. t. For Clinton, C-oderIch Wingbilm an
Kincardine.
12.4r p. tn. For Clinton itid Goderich
p.„ m. For Olhaton, Wing/tam and Kinear
dine.
10.18 p. m. For Clinton and Otdericle.
7.08 a. m For Stratford. Guelph, Toronto,
Orillia, North Bay and pointe west;
Belleville and Peterboro and points
eset,
3.87 p. tn. For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Mon-
treal and points east.
5.38 p. m. For Stratford, Guelph and Toronto.
Pal-nerston and Kincardine.
Goma Noma. Pass. Pao. Mixed
Palmereton.....-, 7.30 pan . 12.20 p.m 8.30 Len
Ethel. . 8.07 1.07 9.30
Brussels.. ... 8.17 1.17 10.00
Bluevale 8.27 1.80
Winghara.. 8.88 1.40
GeMe Sown. PUN. Mixed.
Whighamt, .. - .. 6 63 am 9 a.m.
3luevale. .... . .. - 7.02 9.17
Brussels-. . .... .. 7,16 10.00
Ethel.. .......... 7.25 10.15
Paimerelon... . 8.10 11.80
• London, Iiurop
qise Noma -
London? depart.. -
AN. . • e.
....
Henault
Ir .. O.
Brae ell01Q ow. 11 I, I •••• ••••Clin• * •
tOn • .•••• •••• •
Londesboro
Belgra.ve_
Wlugham arrive,... .„
9,omo Sorra-
Wing-ham, depart.._
s 4 • a
Blyth - -.4
Clinton_
Kippen-
Exeter.. t._. _
'
London, (si rri vet_
10.20
11.10
Pass.
3.05 p.m
3.13
8.25
3.85 *
4.20
and Bruce.
Passenger.
8.16 A.m. 4.60
9.18 5.48
9.80 6.54
9,44 BM
9.00 fell
9,68 6.19
10.15 6,85
10.80 1.52
10.88 740
10.50 7.1.3
1.1.00 7.85
Peeeenger.
6.50 A.M, SAO r,
7.01 8,28
7.14 3.85
7.22 8.45
7.47 4.15
8.05 4.88
8.15 4.47
8.22 442
8.35 4.65
13.46 4.10
9.44 A. it. 6.29
_LOGS WANTED.
The undersigued is prepared to pay the highee
Cash price for an unlimited quantity of drat -class
Soft Elm, Rock Elin, Bamswood, Maple,
Beech, Aeh, Hemlock and Oak Logs
Delivered at the Seaferth Saw and Stave Mill. Logs
to be cut an even length, except Soft Elm. Soft Eliot
to be out 11, 13 and 16_feea Will also buy
. Basswood Heading Boltz,
40 inches long, at 33;60 per eord, delivered.
Will also buy timber by niteturement or by bulk Is
bush. Speeded attention paid to elisions sawing, and
satisfaction guaranteed.
THE CANADA BUSINESS COLLEGE,
, CHATHAM. ONT.,
la unquestionably Castacia'a grastesb business echool
No other school gete such reunite. It is now current
talk throughout the country that the student who
wants the best trs.ining and a good position when
graduated, must attend this school.
260 studente placed in year 1900
804 it it 41 it 1901
360 ti it 1002
376 al it ti 1903
-If these were placed in picayune positions worth
$13 or $4 per week, the howing would not be worth
the epace in this paper that It takes to tell It. But
when the @elutes average over $600 per annum, a
few of them over $1,000, the public ehoulel know
thst us other business school in Canada publishes
such Bete and gag such resulte. Many of our for-
mer graduates are new commanding salaries from
ate,100 to ot,oce annually. Why ehould it not be
you'? We pay your railway fare up to 38. Good
beard in Chatham $2 60 to $2.76. For the hand-
somest catalogue published by any businese,,school
iniCanada, writ*
D. McLACH LAN &
Chatham, t• Ont
1878
WM. AMENT.
Vhe McKillop Mutual Firs
Insurance Company,
FARM AND ISOLATED TOWN
PROPERTY ONLY INSURED
Olmasts.
.1. B. McLean, Preeldent, Rippen P. 0.; Thorium
Fraser vice-president, Brueelleld P. 0.; Thomas E.
Itecy.Treas, Seeforth le 0..
VIR1010)11.
William Chesney fleafortis ; John Grieve, Win.
tarop ; George Dale, Seaforth ; John Bennewele,
Dublin, Jamey Evans, Beechwocd ; John Watt,
Oarlock; Thome, Fraser, Ilruaefleid ; John B. Ma
Lean, Hippert ; James Connolly, Clinton.
16311111%
Robt. Smith. Harlot*; E. Hinebley, Seatorth
anise Cumming Egmondiv ; J. W. Yee, Hohnee
ville P. 0.; George Murdie and John 0. Morriteon
anditOrt
Paridea desirous to effect imaraneee 01 1/4111
tot othet' bust/ten will be pronaptly attended ta
ppli00410/1 to Any of the above efficient addreesed te
Ate reepeetiee.mea$ ofitoett
'
BLACKSMITH SHOP STAND
FOR SALE CHEAP 11.4
SEAFORTH.
For sale (sheep, that blisy stand on Goderich St,
Welt, stook, tools, *e. There are two fires, foot;
drill and emery stone and all conveniences for fev,
first class ehoeing and jobbing shop. Any amount
of -work for tWo inen. LI health is the reason for
selling,. For further particulars epply to JOHN
MoiNTOBtf, Seaforth. 1012-tf
MONEY TO LOAN
Money to lban at /owed rites of interest on good
farm iseautity. Apply to 34.8 L,
Banister, Hastert& 171241
One Grade Only,
and That the Best.
I still have a few McLaughlan Buggies on
hand and any person thinking of ptre-
cheeing; would do well to make their
selection now, as Ieteed the room folt
my fall stock,
These Buggiea may not be the cheapest on
the market, bun I do claim that they are
THE BEST.
First -Class Harness may be purchased
here cheaper than elsewhere
Our brande of GILT EDGE and MAIME-
LEAF Binder Twine gives perfeet sat-
isfaction. Try IL
PLOWS, PLOW POINTS, WASHING -
MACHINES, WRINGERS, eto, al-
ways on hand.
A. M. Campbell
SEA FORTH.
1910