The Huron Expositor, 1915-10-15, Page 60
ur
'IL STRULK IT
Ri IIT AT LAS
Aft. Suffering Almost Two Years,
re1t-1st:Ives" Brought Relief.
MR. WHITMAN
882 St. Valier St.; Montreal.
"In 19i2 Z was taken suddenly ill
with Acute Stomach Trouble and
dropped in the street. I was treated.
by several physielars for nearly, two
years. was „in constant misery from
my stonatteh and ley weight -dropped
down from 225 pounds to 160 pounds*.
Several of my friends advised me to try
Trutt -a -fives' d I did so. That was
eight months ag 1 began to improve
almost with the first dose.. No Other
Med10/1111i everused mated so pleasantly
and euieldy as 'Fruit-a-tives', and. b
rising it I recoveredfrom thedistressing
Stoinach Trouhre, and all paintand
.Constipation and mifety were,..cured4, 1
completely recovered by the use of -
tFruit-a-tives' and. now I weigh 208
pounds.1 cauttot praise Truitsa-tiveal
enough". • H. WHITMAN.
50o. a box, 6 for $2.50, taial size, 250.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by
Wruit-a-tives Li -mite -41s Ottawa.
THICK, GLOSSY IR
PREZ FROlebANDRUIPT
Gide! Try it! Hairseta'spftefluffy and
beautiful—Get ca 25 cint bottle
of- Danderirto.
If you care.for heavy hair thatfills-
tens witb, beauty and is radiant Stith
life; has an incomparable softness and
Ie fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine.
Just one application doubles the
beauty of your hair, besides it IM111e-
diately dissolves every particle Of
dandruff. You, can not have nice
heavyhealthy hair if yen -have.
dandruff. This destructive surf robs
the hair- of tie lustre, its strength.and
its vetty. life, and if not „o-vercome it
produces a fenerisaness and itching of
the sealp: the hair roots famish,
loose*. and die; then the hair falls out
feet.- EitrelY get a 25 -cent bottle of
lornowitoa's Danderine from any drug
store add net try it.
1,000.00
REWARD
For information that will kad to
the discovery &whereabouts of the
person or persons suffering from
Nervous Debility, Diseases of the
Mouth and Throat, Blood Poison,
Skin Diseases, Bladder Troubles,
Special Ailments, and Chronic or
Complicated. Complaints who can-
not be cured at The Ontario Medi-,
cal Institute, 263-265 Yonge St.,
Tobonto. CorresponciTe invite&
(liZezegiee:.
A Cliristlan ciellege-ltome,
kealthful situation.
.Foar-prosptusndteros,write he Principal
LWrer, St.Thomas,0• %
SUFFERED FROM
Catarrh Of The Stomach
FOR 8 YEARS.
thinburn's Laxa-Liver Pills
Cttred Her.
1 Mrs.Agnrs Gallant, Reserve Mines,
writes: "I. take great pleasure in
writingyou. I have been a great sufferer.
for eight years, from catarrh of the
*to -notch and tried several, so called,
iatarrit remedies without relief until
ta, friend of mine advised me to try Mil-
, bern's taxa -Liver Pills, which I did-, and
tour vials completely cured me."
Be sure and get Milburn's Laza-Liver
when you ask for them as there are
a number ofimitations on the market.
The price is 2.5c. per vial, 5 vials for
ri1.00, at all dealers or mailed direct on
'receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
fabited, Tonto, Ont.
IF YOUR CHria, IS CROW
FEVERISH, qO8T1PATED
Look Mother! If tongue ia coa
cleanse little bowels with "Cali-
fornia Syrup of Figs."
Mothers an rest easy after giving
‘`California Syrup of Figs," because
a few hours all the clogged -up waste,
our bile and fermenting food gently,
moves out of the bowels, and you have
a well„ playful child again.
ck children needn't be coaxed to
take this harmless "fruit laxative."
Millions of mothers keep it handy be-
cause they know its action on the
stomach, liver and bowelIs prompt
and sure.
* 'Ask your druggist for a 50 -cent bete
tle of "California Syrup of Figs," which
contains directions for babies, children,
a all agea and for/go:WA-ups,
'
nd 0 Notea.
-Iiiat the tro.ctss inow at &Well wl
be 3'n, winter uartars 0, lifinnipeg not
later than Octdhet 15th, -the expec-
le
ation. •Tb 4 weather has en wretch'.
ed In. tile extreme, and a troops will
be lgiad to get under, the roof of a
Permanent building. A
.. ..
-Henr ' Preisen, • grain buyer at
Hague, tasks, for ,the' 'Western Ele-
vator Ocermy, pleaded gi11ty before
Jeedge Atereors en ,f...t.tober 6Lh, of telt-
ing T1,800 of ;the Opany fuud. Ile
Als Aehteaced to( {eighteen the' in: ,
prisoltunienti
-. --Svaltelaneate. Legg, of tic O. P. R.
at Trenecona Vet with m accident
while At work tn. whteb - Iv this lege
were seeerely crushed. It was• found.
neeeasery to amputate iboth Ihrbs, the
left above and the other below the
knee. t,
-The thlody of a Mao, I1cnt1f1ed as
Chime Butterfield, aged 62, . of, Moos
Jaw, was found in the creek there on
October 8r,d. Frrirel its atipearaace it
was evident It ad been tothe water
for Peveral days. BUttergield left his
horre .ten 3day,s ago and hlid not .,peen
seen,
.-Clifforde Scott, 10 -year still of
i
Waltee Scott:Brandon, M ., fell front
a teldgranh pole on Tu • y, October
atli, Wei died .tti the hospi ' . The boy
elbsibed, the Stole staid' whe about half
way &am, slipped- and '..all about 15
feet, -Death eeeulted, from internal in -
Stirlen.
-John P. alcOdenell, CI 'el. i editor
3
of the Vancouver: Sun, al noubced 011
October us, that. .he t ° II° be ATI Ih-
depeOdent -Liberal candi te An Carl-
-b000tor the next federal eit tien, in Of.
`posittres to JOSOgit -Ilart1r4, K.C., who,
on Saturday, was claoseniat Ashcroft
by the Liberal con.venti ,
--Newof the first Yoiktoin calsual-
fy, as ae,esult lof the an at idriveon
the weistera front, reached Yorkten,
Sask., recently, when C. Ji MacFarlane
received- official notification -ea the
death of his Oda,. Sgrgt, °harks Mac-
Farlane, Of the ..Stratioona Horse.
Bent. MacFarlane was 4ne of York-
tost's mittat POpular young ere He was
33 •yeare elf lege sod; 11 i' dt there all
his life. I (
,
!I
6
FEW NOW DIE OF. ii)LD AGE.
.*hy This Is ,So and Why the Patri-
arch* Lived So L rtg.
Scientista who see- todJLy how few
people live to be 100 y ars old find
themselves at it loss to. explain how
elifethneelah managed to We 969 years,
while Noah reached the r pectable age
of 595 years. Recently o however, a
disceve.ti has beeu maderwhich helps
to explain this mystery.
Whoa the causes of short life now.
adays are counted 'till it ' found that
ntest or the deaths are d to disease.
Very few people die from told age. And
the reason why people tlie-from any
one" disease Is that they have been
weakened by other illneseeS which they
have had or which havetheen handed
down to them by their arlicestors. For
example, one widespreadtkociaI scourge
srltich weakens the c , 'tution of
many men and women t ay was prob-
ably- unknown in primitt' e times.
To some of these diseeses the hu-
man race has become Sh accustotned
that it is imratme. Meas
a whole Indian tribe, 13:
white races it is only,
s will kill off
•t among the
an annoying
childhood "teelady. But „he variations
of disease increase far '• more rapidly
than the immunity. °
Noah- and the patriar4 =at have
nearly ah many different kinds of dis-
eases to face becauie t4y hadn't had
enough ancestors to hand them down
a variety. Consequentlet their consti-
tutions were not tcontaantly being
weakened as are ours Way.. For ex-
ample, there 'is no refetence in very
ancient literatures to 34..cold in the
head. The Greeks and el -Ionians seem
to have been the first Peoples to suf-
fer from it.
The reat reason why ,:the patriarchs
lived longer than we dt now Was be-
cause in those days th fount of hu-
manity was fresher While immunity
to certain diseases ha ii been handed
down to us by our pareets, we have
ateo received the weakened vitality
which was theirs as a tesult of tbeir
fight against disease. Sooner or later
the race will become iminuee to tuber-
culosis, but with that Immunity will
come the'diminished power as a result
of nhankind's long fight against the
white plague. -Washington Post.
NATIONAL OFFICO‘L BOOKS.
l
They Ars Named by Cc
ol rs and Cover
a Wide Range of Hues.
British government Pablications are
celled "blue books," bepause they -are
usually bound in blue peper covers and
because blue is the offietelly recognized
color in parliament andgaw. In a few
departments, however, , "blue" books
are printed in yellow cOyers to distin-
guish Use department. Piplomatic cor-
respondence withforego eountries and
short acts, of parliament are often left
unbound, or "white," because there is
no strict rule for binding any docu-
ments less than an inchiin thickness..
In addition to the "bine book" there
is the "red book." ' Thincontains a list
of persons who hold , appointments.
The only other color need by England
Is bleck. A. black book eontains an ex-
posuire of some abuse, the name "back
book" originating frorie). the ' famous
• "black book" compiled fa the reign of
Idenry VIIL to expose, the abuses in
monasteries
In France the chief' color for govern-
meni-publication is yellow. Although
the latest French goy rnment report
has been called a "ack boot," in, real-
ity it is published in yepw covers. It
forms, in fact, one of .a long • Set of
"yellow books" which Ftance has been
issuing annually ever .ince .the year
1861 upon the affairs of t,he country for
the use of politietane and historians.
The chief color of Ittessian govern-
ment Publications is oringe. BeIghtm
uses gray, Italy green, the ethsited
States blue and red, Spain and Anstria
ted and Germany atsd. portugai white
or drab -New York Pre* ' .e -
grarias of tit*
Brusesituated at bi of Mount
Olystspeat tn. Asiatic Toithoyetal,ellaral
of the ;tali east,
tripsgUe and public btdlltog
sweat house.stands in its own
14PapePs blapepsle makes Sick, Sour,
Gassy Stomachs surely eel ,fine
In flye- minute*.
If what ydu jest ate 1 ouring on
your stomach or lies like a lump of
lead, refusing to digest, or you belch
gas, and eructate, sour, undigested
food, or have a feeling of dizziness,
.heartburn, .fullness, nausea, bad taste
in mouth and stomaclobeadache, you
can get blessed relief in five minutest.
Put an end to stproacit trouble forever
by getting a large fifty cent ,case of
-Pape's Diapepsin from any drug etore.
You realize in five minutes how need-
less it is to suffer from indigestion,
-dyspepsia or any °stomach disorder.
It's the quickest, surest stomach doc-
tor 'efn the world. It's wonderful.
sums.
oren* 'tireeSt the liotenfif surround-
ing district is so rich and varied that
it has been the happy hotaing ground.
of bothnists for centuries, and some
authooides regard It as the cradle land
of many of our -.sweetest spring flOw-
eosetthe liyaeintla the tulip. .the snow-
drop and the jonquil -Loudon Spec.:
tater.
•• The Feminine Financier.
"Sb she has broke» the 'engagement!
-Did she give you beck the diamond
ring?" - • -
"No. We are deadlocked.. She says
she will give me back the price I paid
for it, but diamonds have doubled in
value and that she Is entitled to the
profit."-Philadelpftia Ledger.
Rada Her a. Fright;
"Mrs. Jones has a new lief."
"Well, you look mightily pleased
about it." •
:Tots just ought to see how it looks
on her "-Houston Post.
In Distress.
"Wby are you flying your flag up.
side down, Suburbs?"
"To let the neighbors know that the
cook's gone and all invitations are off."
-Philadelphia Ledger.
• Icing of the Penguins.
Many of the Falkland islands are in-
habited only by penguins, whence the
title "King of the Penguins," whleh is
sometimes bestowed on the governor
of the Falklands.
It does no good sto advertise for your
lost self respeet- YputiOs Companion.
SECRET ENQUIRY ABOUT
ZA.M-BUK "; •
1 .—.— (
SOMO SENSATIONAL REVELA.TIOUS.
, 3 • 1.
A garty, both _interested and curietes,
recently pet afoot a secret inquiry
train a number of persons who had
been repotted as giving testhoonials
to the value of ZeureBuk. '
The: Itev. A. 03. IltitoLeeicl, of Harcourt
Nj3 ; was leaked Ais candid .opinion ot
the PreParakon. This is what he 'said;
".As Iticim,y gersiOnal opinion Of ZitrC-
Bole I think it is ehoply wonderful!
Sanotiv eof nothing like it. Having
diverge olf an extensive triasion- and
travelling amongst recr people, I have
late of opportunity for obserVaf103
atud\ !find that for old sores, ulom,
eczema, abscense.s, akin, &ceases and
the like -not telly pccuing in young
and, traddie-aged ;people, but in the
aged-Zata-Buk is really roarvellou.s.It
'wertis curets at a trivial octet, and if
ZanspnOr were in every home, I know
it would save many a dootor's bill."
1.1. -E. Arsenault, the well-knewn
fallen blaster at Wellington,
( ;magistrate, for the dietrict too),
wha was heard Ito have espoken highly
of Zare-Buk, was also -approached lead
at -Sited his OpittliOn. "Certainly I will
tell yote" beAloplied. "Solite years agh
I began IttO safer frons eczenta an Amy
1(40. 1 wont lo,a dottor, but the dis-
ewes') pergiateda Another doctor failed
to bure /retrains], then turned by varl-
ets advertised remedies.. I got no re-
lief, '80,114 the disease persisted for
years, admetinces. Niery bad, Won -times
a little better: Then Zan-Bult wan- re-
commended, it ailed it. I 'persevered
with, lt, and 'the =atilt is that to -day
am{ ir,ee from every trace of eczema.
Believe me, 2arci-Bult does what Is
claimed for it, sod I, for one, have
proved it,' 4. 3
Several Other pens were Inter-
vie-vved. On,e lady iseld Zero -auk had
mired her of oulcer.s erarich had ,troue
bled her tor flour years. Another Iad.y
-the cotter Of -a Istrge. famtly-aaid
11;on 11441dae3n. had ski of3ten proved the
value of ZareeBuk Wet whenever th,ey
got a cut or a bruise they never both-
ered, her, butt wont and go;f the ?Jame,
Bilk; Oisixt c'ee I ; - '
-MEASURED BY 1NCHE'S.
Tiny Things Sway Calamity or Success
In Human Affairs.
Everybody knows what a little thing
an inch is, but few realize what a big
thing it is. Few stop to contemplate
what the difference in an inch really
means. A tailor knows when an inch
too much or too little has cost hini.
anywhere from $18 to $80. A dress-
maker lincitvs when an inch too little
of the goods on hand may cause her,
after an arduous day of planning, to
abandon a chosen pattern for another. •
engineer knows when his train„
with its carload of human freight, has ,
gone one inch kf the track over a
precipice.
Some men have minds one inch off
the judginent tratk, and that causes
all their schemes, giga.ntic and brilliant
as they may be, to run amuck..
Every calamity and every success in
life is controlled by inches.
Men rarely go to their doom in an
hour. It is inch by inch.
All succP.ska'are won, inch by inch.
As inch by inch the waters of life
creep in to engulf us, so inch by inch
the obstacles that impede our Mag.
ress move aside.
The man who attempts to leap owl
the inches to reitch .hio goal gets
with a broken leg.
The ,wertA! iL bas a
c sound, If It hada
*beg. * :
ik-atiaL4omer
• V'
iltdirridtaile 'thing is perfertn-
ed by ,man, an the saying goes, "with-
in an inch of his life."
All diseases Move bleb by inch. Be-
fore the Scarlet fever breaks out In a
child it has been developing inch by
inch for nine daye.
The overstepping of an inch in the
proprieties of life brands us. If a
girl in a theater laughs an inch too
loud the audience looks .around and
puts upon her the stamp of "not a
lady."
Deportment ismeasured by inches,
and woe unto the man who fails to
observe its dictates. Even in the deep -
eat grief If one goes too far in his
wailinge the grief is questioned, if not
ridiculed, and sympathy turned aside.
An Inch too 41-3.r in the poet's flight tn
imaginatioifs .realms and the world
laughs at his best efforts.
A singlet inch in any direction May
throw away a man's chances for the
world's approval, and yet, some men
do not even consider' the yards,
It is the Man who 'considers life
within alt inch of every'detall present-
ed who succeeds. -New York Ameri-
can. • •
' F:iseord Gales.
- There have been terrific gales in var
'kens places all over the world. In
many instances it is, of course, Ampos.
sible to-obtalo ant exact record of the
velocity of the wind, but the highest
ever recorded was reported from Cape
Mendocino, Cal., in --January, 1886,
when tbe ahemoneeter registeeed 144
•Milea an hour
At. Cape Lookout, on the Atlantic
coast there is no telling what the rec-
ord force of the wind might have been
had not the anemometer blown away
=a,ftdr registering 138 miles an hour.
This fearful hurricane hit the middle
Atlantic.coest on Aug 17, 1870.
In Arne, .1881; a Wind o -f 112 miles
-
wits recorded on top of Pike's Peak,.
Colorado. --Chicago .Ererald-
• Magazines on Warships. -
If there I,s one' danger that sailors
dread ,rnore thaelfitrother it is an ex -
_plosion io the powder magazine, To
prevent such an occurrence a device
for flooding that compgrtment in the
least possible time is fitted to most big
battleships. A. pipe below the surface
connects the magazine with the sea.
Thia pipe is closed by two tape, which
are connected with the deck. In case
of danger it is only the work of a min-
ute to open the taps, let the sea rush
in through:the pipes and hood the mag-
azine. The water is afterward drained
off by means of a gutter. -London
Nor So Often.
With hungry people the table is not
of so much consequence as the spread.
A very- fat man who had just retired
from the grocery bushiest; was one day -
thus mischievously greeted by a
friend:- "I "say, old man, yOu are fail-
ing since you retired! Yon have got
so thin I 'scarcely knew youl" "Per-
haps so," replied the grocer. "I cer-
tainly don't weigh so ruuth at I did
When I was in the grocery tradel"--St..
Paui'Ploneer Press.
thavee to Success.
Rebellion anditubberrmesEi-how they
,
hinder and, hinder and spoil our work!
If a girl is going to master music she
must first behome its slave, surrender-
ing her whole being to the prtnciples
and the ideals Of music.' If a boy is
to master a trade or a profession he
must give himself up to it. If a man
is to be a great leader of the people
he must surrender himself to the wel-
fare of the people.--Ohrlstla.n
Addison and "Clio." 1
Joseph Addison, the English essayist
used the pseudonym "Clio." When he
wrote a manuscript itt the city he an-
notated it with a "Cn" when in London.
"L;" when in Islington, where he lived,
"I," and when in his office, "0," the
whole spelling mo. -London Express.
• Lopsided Flight.
Aid (riding furiously up) --General,
the eneMy has captured our left wing.
What shall we do? t General -Fly with
the °then -Boston Transcript
Shear the sheep, but don't flay them,
-Spanish Proverb.
Easily Seen.
"I don't believe that Jack's new
automobile has been any pleasure to
"Why do you think that?"
"Well, he hasn't been arrested once
since he's been running it." -Baltimore
American.
Cause of the Effect.
The table groaned.
It was no wonder.
For the food upon it was not only
heavy, but indigestible as well.- Phila
delphia Ledger,
_
'
as"
'el
7411
, •
,
A .‘
NI1*.
4.7.140.,P
s,
b:
-4
2 for 25-fis
New Fall &Winter_
" 'Collate
WILLIAMS. GREENE & ROME -CO..
A
•.
nenten
tettte
lifAGNIFICENT: soldiers and sail
1711- . British rnpire are laying do
yours. RerhapS soffie.of your own
rAn urgent appeal has gone forth from th
dentof the British Red. Cross, for funds to
.comfortsi and hospital equipment of all k'
from wounds and. sickness of sailors and so
pin. This appeal is endorsed by their -Ma
every British possession is setting a
4 99 For
and
as a day of public giving to aid
which stands in severe need of
the tremendous- demands upo
ritario's Quota 18
for
rs from every part of the
their lives for you and
blood are amongst them.,
r
Marquis of Lansdowne, Presi7
provi.de megicines, appliances,
ds to alleviate the sufferings
diers from all parts of the Em --
&ties, the King and -Queen, and.
ide, by official proclamation
Sailors
°tilers
n this splendid cause, -
assistance owing to
Red Cross work
et at $
We can and will raise this amount as a ioken that Ontario feels for our -
wounded heroes and will not see them languish in their pain and suffer-
ing for the want of Medical and other co (nits. Do your part and. make
"Our Day for Sailors and Soldiers" a trena ndous. success in your locality.
"We shall be truly grateful to
you for assistance in relieving the
,sufferings of our- wounded soldiers
and sailors from dl parts of the
Dominions."
Lansdowne,
President British Red Cross Society.
"This'is the first appcd of the
otherland to Canadians in this
esent war. it calls upon our
manity as well as our loyalty."
John S. Hendrie,
° Lieut. -Governor of Ontario
Give to the Red Cioss
Every cent collected goes to British Red Crosi s head-
quarters, where it is officially and wisely spent. No
money is wasted in expenoes, even this adVertising
space is donated by the publishers.
Give a day's pay. Do your part. Give libe ally and
loyally. Give your money, because these brave ones
—our Eallors and reldiers, are giving their !lives for
us. Collectors on October 21 w1 solicit v ur sub-
scription—or make it through your Mayor o -Reeve.
PLANETS- AND OUR WEATHER.
• Despite Popular Belief There Is No
Connention Between Them.
That the planets and the moon bave
an effect upon the weather on the
earth le a common belief. This belief
is baseless, for all changes of weather
depend upon differences in tempera-
ture.
Rainfall is due to the accumulation
of water in the atmosphere. This wa-
ter can accumulate only by being evap-
orated from the surface of the earth.
And evaporation requires heat. Winds
also are due to heat -greater warmth
in one place than in another Causing
• the air te rush toward where the warm
air is rising.
If the moon and the planets could
furnish heat they might affect the
weather. But the heat they furnish is
so inapitesimally small that it is not
enough to change the temperature an
appreciable fraction of a degree. The
amount of heat they send us has actu-
ally been measured, but it needed the
most delicately sensitive or instru-
ments to perceive it.
Another proof that neither the plan-
ets nor the moon have any effect upon
our weather is that careful compart.
sons of the weather with the positions
of the planets and the moon show that
there is no relation between them. If
there were we should have the same
Weather when the planets were in the
same position, which is not the ease.
New York World.
Japan'. Good Roads.
Japan is peculiarly -well off in re-
speet of good highways. The Tokaido,
Which 'runs from Moto to Tokyo, is
oyer. 300 miles in :length and, as the
v .vriter can testify, is admirably ton-
structed. There is also the Nakasendo,
which is' even longe and Osseo,:
througb some of the nReitiKon0,itt
-
wprida The realon-otitapants
ex-
ellence matter kif kit& is that'
tifilis_94.4timmt_so.:Ye.misaut owk.-
-
tee daimios, or territorl nobles, had
to journey to Tokyo one a year in dr -
der‘ to pay their respec to the sov-
er,eigla They traveled •y road, with
great retinues, and if the highways
were not in perfect co diUon, feudal
justice was meted out to the delin-
quents. -London Spectat r.
Good Compatly.
As friends and comptuAons, as teach.
ers and consolers, as iecreators and
amuse.rs, POPICS are alwa s with us and
always ready to respondl to our wants.
We can take them with as its our wan.
derings or gather themj around us at
our firesides. In the loiely wilderness
and the crowded city t eir. spirit will
be, with us, giving a i4eaulng to the
seemingly contused mo ements of hu-
TrtaT1ttY and peopling tJ4e desert with
their own bright cre...aUpns.-Joins Air
fred Langford.
Reciprocity
"Dear Harold," with sadneLs ale
wrote th her former finnan, "as you are
probably aware, 1 am to be married
to Mr. Anthony the con1ng month,
shall therefore apprect te it if you
will burn all the little n tes 1 sent you,
ansuriehg you of redpro tty in regard
to those you sent me."
She Immediately recei
"Dear Dorothy -I sit
ea that reply:
ertainly com.
• w4h your request 4t once. And,
iraddentally, as your ne fiance holds
a few notes of mine / siah1 deem it a
great favor. If you will Lnduce him to
burn there -with the t..."-Natkinal
Ifood* ktegasitse.
-
"';'"i;f•ei;
Education.
Iilducation is net,ierelythe writing
Of fads' on the Mintras ene- writes on
4-mankitisite. It resembleg rather the
Weftng bf-:, fresh color �n Alms on
IOtI
Iligni:41-8:fliels' Withdttl'in:thei Olaf •441"1:119.1
eatyCircoorit not - The
Wins n fun
po you ^want to earn
-$10 a week or more.:
rin your bwn*-home
Reliable Persons will be itunishedwitIt
I mofitable., all-yesx-round einoiovntent
on Atito-Knittins
Machines, $10 Der
week readily earn-
ed. We teach yea
at home. distance
is no hindrance.
Write for oarticti.
/ars, rates of paY,
send ac. stitarnp.
HOSIERY 00.
iept i85 257College8t. -• Toronto
Casa a Lekeeter, Ervtaind)
Residence
S
••••••••••••••sin....t
The undersigned offers for saleids
very desirable residence, situated a
mile.west of Seaforth, on the Huron
Road. The use contains Bevan rooms,
beeides kitchen and pantries, bath-
room and lumber room. There Lei • &
furnace In the !blouse, and also electric
itg-ht throughout, and in the out.
buildings there are two cisterns and
two wells. There are about two and A
half acres of land with the house',
fenced, and pktnted with fruit and
ornamental trees and shrubs; there la
also a stable for two horses and
cbw, and vehiniee, harness and tool
room and ehicken house. In coniwtIon
with the above, Mr. Holtnested 6ffers
for sale a mantel mirror, electric light
fixtures, carpetscartataa, fleorckah.,
'sideboard, extension table, bed room
salts, Ate, The property. 11 very coba
verdent to nehools &d churches.
*SAN. For''4farlher partieniara and
photograph of house applyeto
.r. IIOLIEXTED
1100 I _._,BILAYOBLeg%
e bb
attack seems rao
Us invaded the who
To arrest rheuma
im9rove
your IA
's Bei
r, Nolan
t strengtheis th
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mulsion
every could
Refuse the alcoho
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�olleltoi
lc. Solk
la Office t
•k, &afore.,
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110• Oft)
iakee$ furniture •
4110CDASIt 0071110
lor Oak. Offl
4root, for
elm"
GRIN
aliteo• pathic rhy
irtiediatst 18mom
diteases, ettiI
Sid tervone di•
wri
sad throat, coma
Voonerciai gaol,
slid Fri4ay14, 8 1344
• Dr. 3. NV,
o Graduate of race
Gill University, Mc
College of Physic's..
Ontario; Licentiate
of canesla; Post -
Resident Medical Si
vital, Montreal, 19:
doors east of Pos
-Benson, Ontario.
Offi
DB.F. dt
and reside
he tItod
45. Cort
' DRS. SCOT
J. G. Ooritt,
Wiese of Physic.
Art -gr, and sm
*toner for tbe Oc
C Kay, hceao
y, and
College_
!clam