The Huron Expositor, 1920-08-27, Page 3-
a
2
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
AUGUST 27, 1920. 411
INSTAL A
Ft j"ECONOMY"
CE
,ase
PAYS FOR ITSELF
BY THE
COAL IT SAVES.
MORE HEAT
LESS COAL
MOST DURABLE
MOST ECONOMICAL,
COSTS LEAST FOR REPAIRS;
Extra large fire door for wood.
Easy Tacking grates, no 'stooping
to shake.. . Heaviest furnace on
the market.
PLUMBING
The convenience of a nice bathroom is
undisputed. We can furnish beautiful porcelain - tubs, oak
or enamelled closets, basins of all descriptions, complete
with or without pressure systems. Our workmen are the
best. Our experience makes nothing too difficult. We sat-
isfy the customer, •
G. A. Sills, Seaforth
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS
J. Connolly, Goderich, President
Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS -
Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar -
ninth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans,
Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
R. It. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4, Walto ; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Tlrains Leave Seaforth as follows:
11 a. in. - For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham. and. Kincardine.
6.53 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham,
and Kincardine.
11.03 p. rrm. - For Clinton, Go• derich,
6,51 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph,
. Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
3.12 p. m. -For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going North a.m. p.m.
London 9.05 445
Centralia 10.04 5.50
Exeter 10.18 6.02
Hensall • 10.33 6.14
Kippen 10.38
Brucefield 10.47
Clinton 11.03
Londesboro 11.34
Blyth 11.43
Beigrave 11.56
Wingham 12.11
Going' South a.m.
Wingham 7.30
Belgrave 7.44
Blyth 7.56
Lo a or o
rid sb o 8.04
Clinton 8.23
Brucefield 8.40
Kippen 8.46 -
Hensall 8.58
Exeter 9.13
Centralia 9.27
London 10.40
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH
TO TORONTO
Goderich, leave
Blyth
Walton
Guelph
a.m.
6.20
6.68
7.12
9.48
FROM TORONTO
•
Toronto, leave 8.10
Guelph, arrive • 9.30
Walton 12.03
1 Blyth 12.16
Auburn .. 12.28
Goderich 12.55
p.m.
1.80
2.07
2.20
4.53
5.10
6.30
9.04
9.18
9.30
9.55
Connections at Guelph Junction with
i Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon-
! don, Detroit, and Chicago, -and all in-
termediate points.
HOW YOU CAN TELL
GENUINE ASPIRIN
I
Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross"
are Aspirin -No others I
6.21 There is only one Aspirin, that marked
6.29 with the "Bayer Cross" -all other tab -
6.45 lets are only acid imitations.
7.03 Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
7.10 ha%e been prescribed by physicians for
7.23 nineteen years and proved. safe by mil -
7.40 lions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia,
p.m. , Colds,skRheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis.
3..20
Handytinboxes b yes of 12 tablets -also
3.361larger "Bayer" packages, ca -n be had
3 48 i at any drug store. Made in Canada.
3.56-' . Aspirin is the -trade, mark (registered
n Canlda.
of
Bayer r
4.15 � Canada), y Manufacture of
4.32 Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
4.40 While it is well known that Aspirin,
4.5U means Bayer manufacture, to assist the
5.05 Byer ic Company,ainst 1Ltd., imitations,
be stampedhe pof
5.15 with their general trade mark, he
6.15 "Bayer Cross."
WE ARE
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WE INVITE HOUSEHOLDERS
GENERALLY TO CALL AND SEE
SAMPLES OF THESE FINISHES.
EVERY PRODUCT GUARANTEED
FOR QUALITY AND SERVICE.
H. EDGE, SEAFORTH, ONT.
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int Ma01fon Have Always Bought
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Signatize of
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1IRIN
OUR
use Murine often.
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Safe for Infant or Adult.
Canada. Write for Free
Company. Chicago, U. S.A.
in
Eye Book. Murine
•
•
BY' CINCINNATUS
Dublin, August 11, 1920.
For some time past, I have been
trying to get a, good definition for
work. What is work? Hauling,
gravel, milking cows, pressing hay,
stooking oats, washing dishes, scrub-
bing the floor and even sweeping the
old man's cigar ashes off the stove -
all these are called work. But what
is this something known as work?
I know when I am working. , It is
such a rare thing for me to do any-
thing that I know right well when I
am doing something, A good many
fellows (so they` say), siterk so much
that they never notice themselves
doing anything. But I am not in
their class; hence, I am making an
endeavor to get a definition for work.
Usually, you know, when a person
wishes to make a thing easier, he
gets a definition for it. When I went
to school, we were all the time "hunt-
ing" definitions, in order to make our
studies easier. So, going on the same
principle, it should follow that work
would become easier if, the word were
only defined.
Now, I arrived at a conclusion after
much thought and also by keen ob-
servation of what I was doing while
I was working. One day the boss put
me sle. ':ling gravel from a pit; into
a wagon. I used a complicated piece
of machinery known as a shovel for
this purpose. Being very observant
that day, I saw that I simply moved
the gravel (part of it) from the pit
into the wagon. Then I -drove the
team and load to the barn, with the
observation that here too, was move-
ment. Then I moved the gravel from
the• load, to the ground -one more
move. Before I got a cement floor
built, I noticed that - I made several
moves.
Another time, I washed the dishes,
and by keeping my eyes wide open I
saw that I moved the dirt (part of it)
from the plates, etc. Here, too, was
movement. Then also, every job I
did for some time after that, seemed
to have in it that element of motion.
So I have come to the conclusion that
work may be defined as follows:
"Work is the movement of substances
-from place to place by means of some
agent." The agent may be a person,
an animal, a machine or any natural
force,
Now, dear reader, you may test out
that definition by observation of your
.o'w i doings. I hope that knowing
what work is, the thing will be much
easier for you. In moving that
thought from my mind to this paper,
I- have done something, but as I know
what I have done (by virtue of the
definition), the doing of it is a pleas-
ure. "
GOLF IS THE GAME FOR
CONSUMPTIVES
Dr. Noel Dean 'Bardswell, until re-
cently Medical Superintendent of the
King Edward VII: Sanatorium, Lon-
don, kept notes of all the questions
his consumptive patients asked and- of
the answers he gave them. These he
has compiled in book form. The
Lancet (London) says of them:
"With regard to rest and exercise
the author seems, on -the whole, to
belong to the 'active . rather -than to
the passive school, and.. he believes
golf to be the best game' the -con-
sumptive can take up When he is
completely convalescent. 'He also
considers bathing, especially sea bath-
ing, as beneficial to most patients .
Cycling, too, he regards as permissible
for the majority, of patients, provided
it is made a means to- an end, not an
end in itself. But cricket, tensis,
skiing and tobogganing are tabooed.
Breathing exercises are also recom-
mended, and smokers will be pleased
to read that three pipes a day of good
mild tobacco may be indulged in, pro-
vided there is no weakness of the
throat. The managers of sanatoriums,
catering rather for the amusement
than for the health of their patients,
might' well study the author's remark
that:
" `To go to a health resort and sit
all day in a - smoking room, playing
cards, is • not a good programme for
the consumptive in search of health."
"The author's views as to risk of
infection show much- common sense,
and- the following lines are typical of
his own attitude toward this problem:
'For some years I shared a sleeping
chalet with a friend who was suffer-
ing from somewhat advanced con-
sumption. The chalet, open on -three
sides, was "placed in the garden; our
beds were about a yard apart. My
day was spent for the most part in
the_ open air, .and my life generally
was a healthy one. I never felt the
leas fearof
t
becominginfected under
these conditions of close contact. At
the same eime I should have absolute-
ly declined to work day by day at the
same
with
desk this t s
ti
a
Acrit in a stuffy
city office."" -
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
The women of far off Zanzibar are
leaining to play tennis.
French shoe manufacturers claim
that American women have the pret-
tiest feet of any women in the world.
The oldest member of the new Ger
man reichstag is Frau Clara Zetkin.
who is now past 73 years of age.
A Goanese woman at Dar-es-
Salaam, East Africa, recently gave
birth to seven children, six male and
one female. i
One of the largest machinery and
factory plants in Columbus, .0., has a
woman vice president, Mrs. W. 0.
Wood. ,
The woman's division of the Demo-
cratic national campaign committee
will be headed by Mrs. George Bass,
of Chicago,
Never before in the history of Po-
land have the women taken a more
vigorous .interest in politics than
they are at the present time.
In Stockholm, Sweden, there is an
old servants' home, where servants
too old to work are given shelter and
care" in their last days.
The wives of many English fisher-
men keep a black cat in the house in
the belief that doing so assures their
husband's safety at sea.
Miss Sylvia Boyden, the only fe-
male parachute jumper of England,
recently made a daring drop of 1,500
feet during an exhibition • for King
George. -
Miss Elizabeth Remington, secre-
ANOTHER VIcTiM
OF RHEUMATISM
Entirely Well After Six Weeks'
Treatment With "FRUIT-A-TIVESS"
MR. AMEDEE GARCEAU
32 Hickory St., Ottawa, Ont.
"I wns for many years a aictim of
that terrible disease, Rheumatism. In
1913, I.was laid up for- four months
with Rheumatism in the joints of the
knees, hips and shoulders and was
prevented from following my work,
'that of Electrician.
I tried many remedies and was
under the care of a physician; but
nothing did me any good. Then I
began to take 'Fruit-a-tives' and in a
week I was easier, and in six weeks I
was so well I went to work again.
I look upon this fruit medicine,
`Fruit-a-tives , as simply marvellous in the
cure of Rheumatism, and strongly
advise everyone suffering with Rheu-
matism to give `Fruit -a -Lives' a trial."
AMEDEE GARCEAU.
• 50e. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size,25e.'
At all dealers or sent postpaid by
Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Out.
tary of the Reptile Study Society of
America, spends her spare time in
hunting snakes in New York and
New Jersey.
Mrs. Frances Brady, the newly ap-
pointed assistant district attorney of
Middlesex County, Mass., is the first
woman in that state selected for the
office.
SPAIN ►MOURNS HER MOST
POPULAR SON
How are the mightly fallen and
the weapons of war perished! Weep,
for the uncrowned, king of Spain is
dead. In fact, lie has been dead some
time, and came with squalor to his
fate in some little, unimportant bull
ring on the horns of a bull, that
surely would have dropped dead from
fright had he known that he was
about ' td charge and gore Joselito.
Had Joselito perished in the great
bull ring of Madrid, with the King
'a.nd Queen looking on, with the
plaudits of thousands of his most
distinguished countrymen .in his
ears, I edict with Spanish beauty
showering him with roses and gold
pieces, teh -end would have been
more fitting. To have died as he did
die would be like Barney Oldfield
being - run over by a milk wagon.
He had so long and so brilliantly
killed the leading bulls of Andalusia
that the idea got abroad that he bore
a charmed life that he would never
be killed in the bull ring, but would
probably pass away from gout or
hardening of the arteries at the age
of eighty or more.
Joselito = came of a well known
family of bull fighters, his father be-
ing "Eli Gallo,"- a veteran of the ring.
He and 'his brother, Gallito, took up •
the business when they were mere
children, having watched their father
slay scores of bulls and having been
carefully trained to pit their skill and
speed against the fury' of a dying
bull. It was at the age of fourteen
that Joselito made his first profes-
sional appearance as a matador. He
worked in what would be called the
bush leagues for three years and then
graduated to the Madrid ring. From
the time of his metropolitan pre-
miere until his death it is estimated
YOUNG WOMEN
AVPAIN
This One Tells Ho (w She
Was Benefited by Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound.
Regina, Sask. - "For two years I suf-
fered from periodic pains and nausea
so I was unable to get around: My
mother.had me take Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, and I am much
better and able to go about all the time,
which I could not do before. I recom-
mend Vegetable Compound to my friends
if I know they suffer the same way, and
you may publish my letter if it will help
any one, as I hope it will. "-Miss Z. G.
BLACKWELL, 2073 Oster Place, Regina,
Sisk.
If everygirl who suffers as Miss Black-
well did, or from irregularities, painful
periods, backache, sideache, dragging
down pains, inflammation or ulceration
would only give this famous root and ;
herb remedy a trial they would soon
find relief from such suffering.
It hardly seems possible that there is
a woman in this country who will con-
tinue to suffer without giving Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial
after all the evidence that is continually
being published, proving beyond contra-
diction that this grand old medicine has
relieved more suffering among women
than any other medicine in the world.
For special advice women are asked to.
write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of forty
years experience is at your service.
that he took part in 600 fights and
killed. -2,000 bulls, For several years --
past he has been the most popular
of bull fighters, which is the same
as saying that he was the most popu-
lar man in Spain, the King himself
.not excepted.
Joselito was young, handsome and
rich -the very beau ideal of what a
great matador ought to be. - To say
that he was brave is to make a su-
perfluous remark. A bull fighter has
to be brave. But Joselito was more
than that. No one of his generation
had so thoroughly mastered the art
f killing a bull. When Joselito of-
ciated, the spectator, unused to the
ght, did not feel as though he were
watching a butcher at work. Joselito
made him realize that there was a
science 'and an art being practised.
To such an extent was this true of
him that old bull fighting fans are
asking themselves, has the art of bull
fighting forsaken Spain' with the
passing of Joselito? It is true that
there remains Belmonte, by many
considered a serious rival of Joseli-
to's, but while Belmonte is deserved-
ly popular and makes hair raising
passes, it is conceded that he has
not the art of Joselito. Moreover,
Belmonte and e another leading mata-
dor were severely wounded a short
time before the final catastrophe of
Joselito's death descended- on the
country. In fact, Spain is in a bad
way.
- Writing in the New York Evening
Post, Miss Phoebe B. Harndey, who
was in Spain - when the disaster oc-
curred, describes what a profound
sensation the news occasioned. She
was in attendance at a "serious mus-
ical evening" when a man -servant
of the house interrupted te exer-
cises to announce that a telegram
had been received to the effect that
Joselito had been seriously injured.
In fact, a second telegram, had said
that he had bedn killed. Another
servant was immediately dispatched
to find out the truth;3 but before he
could return and bid them prepare
for the worst, the streets had begun
td fill, and soon the main street was
blocked, by excited groups, dazed for
the most part and incredulous that
the splendid Joselito had fallen in
some hole and corner scuffle instead
of perishing properly in his high
places.; On the day of his funeral
tens of . thousands of people lined the
streets through which the -solemn
cortege passed, and there was as
great popular lamentation as though
the royal family had been suddenly
destroyed. -
Miss Harndey says that in no
other country in the world is there
to be fojsnd a counterpart for the
idolatry with which a great bull
fighter is regarded in Spain. A vet-
eran athlete, once world famous,
may die in Britain or in the United
States and a mere " handful of old
friends will follow him to the grave.
Business is not suspended and an
unofficial holiday proclaimed. The
explanation of the peculiar position
of .a matador is, according to a Span-
iard: "When we fear with a person
for his life, when we are glad with
him over his triumphs, -there comes
a feeling of personal intimacy hard
to explain. We feel more 'closely to
a person with whom we have suffered
than to one to whom wehave' laugh
ed, and we fear with `a matador
each time he fights." The `explana=
tion does credit to the Spanish heart;
among Anglo-Saxons, we doubt if
this feeling would exist. Among
our people who go to some hair-
raising spectacle, such as a daring
wire stunt or "human fly" exhibi-
tion, there is a feeling that some-
thing may happen to the hero -and
that it would be a great pity to miss
it.
WHEN VILLA WAS ON THE
WARPATH
As a representative of the Associat-
ed Press, for which institution Villa
had a profound respect, Mr. Tom
Steep came frequently in contact with
the bandit, and his impressions of
these meetings have been communi-
cated to the New York Tribune.' He
says that anyone who has seen Otis
Skinner in "Kisnet" will have a very
fair idea, of Villa. He is a scoundrel;
all right, but a laughing one, and Mr.
Steep's opinion is that Villa has sur-
vived because lie has a sense of
humor. We are free to admit that the
specimens of this sense that the writer
presents are not wholly satisfying.
For example, one evening before a
raid, he was with Villa when the
bandit began to laugh immoderately.
One of his staff asked: "What are
you laughing at, General?" When
Villa could recover himself sufficient-
ly to speak he replied: "I am laugh
ing to think how many toes will soon
be turned toward the stars." The
fact is also cited that the first uniform)
Villa ever had was one discarded by
a Pullmanporter,cap and all, and 1
that the general wore it with . great
pride. This is another kind of
humor.
Very interesting is the picture
given of Villa living in Chihuahua
between raids. His was the only law
through the length and breadth of
this tremendous state, and the law,
he ithposed wasthe resultof his per,'
sonal whims. He establihed himself
in the governor's palace, a building
said to be about five times as large
as the New York City Hall, and held
daily levees to administer what he
called justice. Amid beautiful drap-
eries, cushions and fine furniture,
Villa,' as black as a Senegambian,
lolled, his revolver available at his
belt and his armed guards at the
door. Hither came to him every
native who had a grievance to be re-
medied. A dispute between neighbors
about chickens would be brought
before Villa for adjudication, and he
would give it as much attention as
he would the trial of a murderer. He
had a curious method of arriving at
the truth. He would stare steadily
into the eyes of the accused person,
and then would seem hardly to lis-
ten to the evidence. At the end` he
would bang his fist on the table
and order the man either liberated
or shot. There was no appeal, and
once Villa had taken a certain course
he was not to be changed.
Incorporated 1855
The Molsons Bank
Capital and Reserve $9,000,000
Over 130 Branches
The importance of a Bank Balance is not only
its purchasing value, but the independence which
its possession gives.
Deposits of One Dollar or more are welcomed
at any of THE MOLSONS BANK Branches-
.. Interest allowed.
BRAATCHES IN THIS DISTRICT
Brucefield St. Marys Kirktoir
Exeter Clinton Hensel' Zurich
he Western Fair
LONDON
September 11 to 18
THE GREAT • AGRICULTURAL AND LIVE
E STOCK EXHIBITION OF WESTERN ONTARIO
OMR
ISM
▪ $35,000.00 IN PRIZES AND ATTRACTIONS"
OEM
MEM
Mal
Johnny J. Jones Exposition on the Midway
FULL PROGRAMME TWICE BAIT
•
Auto Polo, Music, Fireworks, Two Special Events
Daily. Exhibits of all kinds.
SOMETHING DOING EVERY MINUTE
F. General Admission 50c. Children 15c. Auto and Driver SLOG
All information front the Secretary
Lt, -Col. W. M. Gartshore, President. A. M. Hunt, Secretary.
AMP
...
AMOR
'a
AIM
a-
a
1
a
4104
Villa had a source of steady in-
come in the fabulously .wealthy Ter-
razas family, the chief of which had
a ranch so great that he could
travel all day is a railway train
and never leave his own estate. Ter-
razas lived in Chihuahua City, and
when - Villa moved -in he swiftly
moved out. One of his sons remained
however, and Villa • kept him a pris-
oner in ' the house where he was
born, the general charge against him
being that he was a sympathizer
' with the old Diaz regime. Villa at
once pronourfed a death sentence
on the young man, but notified his
father that if he would pay 100,000
pestos, execution would be suspended. .
The money was paid. Then after
aIl interval Villa would announce
that the stay of proceedings was a%
an end and that another contribution
was necessary if the boy's life was to
be spared. Again and again he cans-
• ed Terrazas to pay his blackmail, but
eventually the boy was shot. Mr.
Steep says that in dealing with his
enemies, Villa was absolutely witho at
mercy and justice. He rtes the
aristocrats as desperately as Trotzky
hates them, and would cold-bloodedly
shoot any of them who fell into his
hands.
Villa is not a man of great bran
power, n Z o of ecourse ne is utterly
without education, it being with the
greatest difficulty that he was taught
to put his signature to state „docu-
ments. But he has what has served
him better than brain power -he
has unusual force of character.
While he professed unbounded love
for his country, the sentiment . was
probably feigned, since he 'took it or
granted that everyone with whom he
came in contact was actuated by
base, selfish motives. He believed
that there was only one way to deal
with an opponent and that was by
terrifying him. In. debate his last
resource was to fly into a rage. He
was impervious to reason, but was
sometimes unexpectedly justified
since by luck and force -of charaeter
he more than once succeeded 'rn -
jects that wisdom would have 'dis-
suaded him from. ' If there 'is a
streak of sense iii Villa, -it is a rec-
ognition of his own limitations. He
does not want to be president of
Mexico because he knows that in
Mexico city he would be brought in
contact with better brains than his
own and would speedily be worsted
unless he reverted to the revolver as
an argument.
Yet this is the bandit that the in-
effable Bryan once thought was the
man to lead Mexico out of its chaos.
Mr. Bryan had an idea that Villa
should be president, and when he
was Secretary of State, his foreign
policy was based on this desire. Mr.
Steep says that receiving a hint
from Washington, he queried Villa
as to his ambition and the bandit
disclaimed any notion of ousting
Carranza, saying theatrically that
Villa's heart and Carranza's were
one, despite the notorious fact
that two things were never known
to be more at variance. Another cor-
respondent asked Villa the same
question the next day, and the Gen-
eral flew into a fury, threatening to
have the reporter chased out of the
country if ever again' he dared to
raise the question of Villa's ambition.
The actual breach between Carranza
and Villa was caused when the presi-
dent telegraphed Villa an order which
he - refused to obey. Carranza had
been trying a bluff, for he feared
Villa and knew -that he could do little
to (subdue him. Carranza's successor
has hit upon the plan of buying Villa
off. It cannot have less success than
the other methods that have been at-
tempted in dealing with this pictur-
esque villain.
Rheumatism
Now is the time
to get rid of iti
Nature is pulling for you -
The warm weather's here -
This is your chance -
grasp it -take
Templeton's
Rheu static
Capsules,
Get it out of your system the •
easiest_ way !
Sold by reliable druggists for t.
dollar. Ask our agent or iwri#,a_
us for a free sample. Temple -
ton's, 142 King St. W., Toronto. siz
Sold by E. Umbach, Seaforth.
If You Have High Blood
Pressure You Must
Be Careful
-0-
When the Blood Pressure is muck.:
above normal there is always the'
dagger of rupture of, a blood vessel,
most frequently in the Brain mitt:
producing a stroke, or its the Kid-
neys, producing Bright's Disease --
One should girarcl against over-exer-
tion or excitement and take
HACKING'S
HEART AND NERVE REMEDY'
to dissolve the Uric Acid depos-
that form in the Veins and Ant-eries,.-
making them hard and brittle. This
remedy is a wonder; it ;builds up they
entire system by Purifying the -
Blood, Strengthening the Heart az►aI.
'by producing a normal. and healthy
condition of the Nerves,
Mrs. Wm. Morley, of Pahnerstoz
: used quite a number of boxes .
Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy'
and they thenesfit'ted her so mueh and
' she was so pleased with them 'Nit-
she
hatshe recommends them -to all her- "
friend -s 'who -have this trouble or who,
are all run down and Nervous, ae.
0
says "you must be sure to get Hastk--
i ng's." ,
Constipation is one of the agerav-,
ating causes of High Blood -Pressure -
and it is advisable to use Hacking's-
Kidney and Liver Pills to drive- out
the Poisons that generate hi the syn-•
tern. These two preparations go' s
well toae'Llrer and you should bury
few Ibexes from your dealer to -day.
Hacking's Limited, Listowel, Ont.
Hacking's Remedies are sold
Seaforth by E. UMBACH, Phin., B.
WILSON
Kill them all, and the
germs too. 10c a packet
at Druggists, - Grocers
and General Stores.
KEEP
Every
riot star
dren.
lysentr,
-are rife
cious lit
lours ii
Baby's
safe. 1
lets pri
troubles
denly
lets wry
They al
'by mail
Dr, Wil
Ont.
b3IG
The
-world I
special
lumber
in diewl
pounds.
latter a
.be rep
ingots,
were t
the gre
will be
lengths
shingle
PEN
At a
Nation
interes
the pos
eggs.
this co
.a ball
screw
that co
If th
4stl ov�e:
will s
oseillat
clock, i
a roost
in spa
that of
M.
many
sueces
eggs.
hens a
fills -
'manta
two et
not hi
WI
The
oesopl
swall.o
-early
has bf
a rep
Sheehi
Recon
Ar
at the
month
inabili
few r
lowed
and i
deseril
nesopi
and r
verteb
in tin
down
with I
up the
But
the B
dad b
ing f
poison
sort ti
tion
plicat
tient
forh
ST
fangs
guilty
the I
Poeta
heavy
Leave
year
with
was c:
ing t
Lieut;
was
of ki?
duty
Germ
At
was
that
i n D
army
On
know
for e
keep
tion
ba