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The Wingham Times, 1911-03-23, Page 744•4•414`••••H4•44••44“).4ts:4••••oii'a•+}i iiiii4 K Tr e 11 A 'Romance of Arizona Novelized Prom Edmund Day's Melodrama By JOHN MURRAY and MILLS MILLER copyright. WO$, by C. W. Dillin)tham Co. ♦oeq,.s•oe0e®s.coed*000.oeam®o'e4eo4o ®eeaoos bos4m4ease drew it across his shoulders. With his left arm about his waist, Jack led him 'to a seat upon a convenient rock. "I came by Clearwater yesterday," explained Jack. "It is nothing but mud and alkali." "My horse dropped three days ago. I had to shoot the pack mule. I"-+ Dick opened his eyes under the minis- . tratious of Jack. Gazing upward into his face, he shouted joyfully: "Why, it's Jack -Jack Payson!" "Didn't you know me, Dick?" asked Jack sympathetically. "Not at first. My eyes went to the - had out yonder in the glare." The effort bad been too much for Dick. He sank weakly over Jack's knees. Jack turned him partly on his back and let more water trickle down his throat. Dick clutched madly at the canteen, but Jack drew it back .out of his reach. With his handker- chief he moistened lips and neck. When Dick's strength returned Jack helped him to sit up. "I've been huntiug for you for months," he told him. ' "Hunting for me?" echoed Dick. "Yes," answered Jack. "I traced you through the Lost Cities, then to Cooney, then up in the Tularosas. At Fort Grant they put me on the right trail." As the clouds break, revealing the blue of the heavens, so Dick's memory came back to him. Ho shrank from the man at his side. "Well?" he asked as he stared at bis betrayer. Jack gazed fixedly ahead. He dared not look into the face of him he had wronged so bitterly. "She wants you," he said in a voice • void of all emotion. "Who wants me?" asked Dick after a pause. "Echo." "Your wife?" gritted Dick. He fin- gered his gun as he spoke. Huskily Jack replied, "Yes." Bitter thoughts filled the mind of one; the other had schooled himself to make atonement. For the wrong he had done Jack was ready to offer his life. He had endured the full measure - of his sufferings. The hour of his de- livery was at hand. Hard as it was to die in the mid -glory of manhood, it was easier to end it all here and new • than to live unloved by Echo, hated by Dick, despised by himself. • "She sent me to find you. 'Bring him back to me,' That's what she said," . Jack cried in his agony. "Your wife -she said that?" faltered Dick. Fiercely in hies torture Jack answer- • ed: "Yes, my wife -my wife said it. • 'Bring him back to me.' " "Back?" Dick paused. "Back to - what?" he asked himself. "She's your wife, isn't she?" he demanded. "That's what the law says," an- - swered Jack. With the thought of the evening in the garden when he heard Jack and Echo pronounced man and wife Burgs 'fng over him Dick murmured, "What :God hath joined together let no mani put asunder." t "That's what the book says," auu swered Jack. "But when handsalone are joined and hearts are asunder if Can't go on record as the work of God." Dick bowed his head in his hands., "I don't understand." Stubbornly Jack pursued his mesa sage to Dick. "She doesn't 1oveRnee. It thought I had won her, but she mare ried me with your image in her heart. ' She married me, yet all the while you ,were the man she loved -you -you - and in the end I found it out." Jack's voice sank almost into a Whist) per as he finished his revelation, td Dick, who raised his head and cried,' "And .yet she broke her faith with 3 Miserable TO Be Dyspeptic. nysaepsia is one of the most prevalent tr(u .1ca of civilized life, and tltousande -utl'er untold agony after evety,lneal. Nearly a cr}thing that enters a weak iyatieiaic s,e al:lah, nets as an irritant; renes ti:e 'want difficulty of effecting a ure. 1'h: son;t t•:,'•t or c.etresin symptoms, :hi it e.a ler li.^ tt 1 urde.i to the victim •ot &yet' a am, ;:.ay l c twerp/illy relieved by toe ra,e c; Il iu1ock shoed• ilitters. hers. .inial errett., Fortier, Writes "1 lens trod:,ied t;ith dyspepsia for .•c,e:. ,t ttr•nd of mine told ,mo ttl)otit prude, Piood litters SO 1 got. n Lottie to hr;, Mal be, ore I tram half finis; led 1 could eat anything without etlreiiee .�1,,1 when },lead Used two Lottie'= 1 v es sailfel nasi welt. Now -1 seal ir1 t r •e: irth•:'d 1 can't ray too tenet. i:, 1... or of your t• edicine." 1iur,!r;rl, lttreod Bitters is rnanu(iic. tared Only i,y The 'r.111ilburn Co., Limit. Toronto, 'Ofd;. lied to her." "She never knew?" asked Dick joy- fully. "The letter" -- "1 never gave It to her," answered Jack simply. Dick leaped to his feet, pulling his revolver from his holster. "And I thought her false to her trust!" Ho aimed his gun at Payson's heart. "I Taght to kill you for this!" Jack spread out his arms and calmly replied, "I'm ready." Dick dropped his gun and slipped it into the bolster, with a gesture of de- spair. "But it's too late now -too late!" In his eagerness to tell Dick the way he had solved the problem Jack spoke nervously and quickly. "No, it isn't too late. There's one way out of this - one way in which I can atone for the wrong I've done you both, and I stand ready to make that atonement. It is your right to kill me, but it is better that you go back to her without my blood on your hands." "Go -back -to her?" questioned Dick as the meaning of the phrase slowly dawned upon him. "Yes," 'said Jack, holding out his hands. "Go back with clean hands to Echo Allen. It is you she loves. There's my horse up yonder. Beyond there's the pack mule loaded with wa- ter and grub -plenty of water. We'll just change places, that's all. You take them and go back to her, and I'll stay here." Dick walked toward the spring, but a spell of weakness came over him, and he almost sank to the ground. Jack caught him and held him up. "It would be justice," muttered Dick, as if apologizing for his acceptance of Jack's renunciation. Leaning over his. shoulder, Jack said: "Sure, that's it, justice. Just tell her I tried to work it out according to my lights. Ask her to -forgive -to forgive, that's all." Jack took off his canteen and threw the strap about Dick's neck. As Lane weakly staggered toward the mouth of the canyon, where the horse had been staked out, Jack halted him with a re- quest: "There's another thing. I left home under a cloud. Buck McKee charged me with bolding up and killing 'Ole Man' Terrill for $3,000. Tell Slim Hoover how you paid me just that sum of money." " "I will, and Pll fix the thurder where it belongs and then fix the real murderer." Jack stepped to Lane's side and, "I ought to MU Uou for this!" bolding out his hand, staid: "Thank you. I don't allow you can forgive ine?" - "I don't know that I cotiid," coldly answered Dick. "You'd better be going." Again Dick started for the horse, but a new thought came to him. Pausing, he said, "She can't marry again until" "Well?" asked Jack. His yoke was full of sinister meaning, And he fin. gored his gun as he spoke. Dick reallzed at office that Jack's plan was to end his life in the desert with a revolver shot. "You mean to"-- He shuddered. Jack drew his gun. "Do you want tie to do it here and now?" lie cried. Staggering over to himthe weaken- ed man grappled with his old friend, trying to disarm him. "No, no! You shan't!" he shouted as Jack shook him free. "Why not?" demanded Jack, "Go! There's my horse -he's yours--gq! When you get to the bead of the can- yon you'll hear and know -know that slue is free and I have made atolle- ment.» Dick slowly moved toward the mouth of the canyon, stili. hesitating. From the 'hillside a rifle shot tang. out. the ball struck Dick in the leg. He fell and lay motionless. u131hg his••revOlver, Jack stooped and ran under the overhanging ledge, veering about to see where the shot TDB WING AM TIMES MA.RC11 23, bad come from. Ile raised his gun to fire when a volley of rifle shots rang through the canyon, the bullets kick- ing up little spurts of dust about him. and chipping edges off the rocks. Jack dropped on his knees and crept to his ride, clipping his revolver back into his holster. Crouching behind a rock, with his ride to his shoulder, be waited for the attackers to show themselves. Experience on the plains taught them that the fight would be a slow, one unless the Apaches sought only to divert attention for the time being to cover their flight southward. After the one shot which struck Dick and the volley directed at Jack not a rifle bad been fired. Peering over the bowlder, Jack could see nothing, Dick had fallen near the spring. He struggled back to consciousness to find his left leg numb and useless. When the ball struck him he felt only a sharp pinch. His fainting was caused by a shock to his weakened body, but not from fear or pain. With the re- turn to his senses came a horrible, burning thirst and a horrible sinking wirfr Go," Ito or.levet). • "Don't be a foot, Dilly one of us can escape -one of us Slone, Let It be you, Dick. Co back to her -hack to home and happiness." Dick' struggled to a sitting posture, )fferlug a fair target for the Indian hidden behind the ledge on the cliff trail, The Apaehe took full advantage Ind fired, but missed. Dick returned the shot with his revolver before the warrior could silk back behind the tock, The Apache lurched forward In Elis death blindness with the last con- vulsive obedience of the muscles ere the will flees, Then his legs crumpled ap beneath him, and he toppled for- ward off the ledge. His breecheiout :aught in a rocky projection, causing the body to hang headlong against the side of the cliff. His rifle fell from his nerveless hands, clattering and break- ing on the rocks below. The sight served as a tonic to Dick. Ws success braced his strength and will. The old battle spirit surged over Wu. Only with an effort did he sup- press the desire to laugh and shout. He would -have left Jack to fight it out lion but a minute before, but the one shot drove all such ideas from his mind, "No, I'll be hanged if I'll go!" he Shouted. "I'll stay and fight with you," and, seizing his rifle, he joined jack in stopping a rush of the Apaches. "We stopped them that time," Jack :reed, with satisfaction. In the lull he again urged his comrade to escape to the horse and return to Echo. "Take Me' horse," he insisted. "Go while there's a chance." "No!" shouted Dick determinedly. It was as much his fight as Jack's now. Jack thought more for Echo in that moment than he did for himself. Here (To be ocntinued.) SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH- A" who is the sole head of n family •or any male over ld years old, may home- „ stead a quarter section of available Dominion land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. The applicant must appear in person at the Dominion Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for the district. Entry by proxy may be made at any agency, on certain conditions, by father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of intending homesteader. Duties. -Six months' residence upon and cultivation of, the land in each of three years. A homesteader may live within nine miles of his homestead on a farm of at least 80 acres solely owned and occupied by him or by his father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister. In certain districts a homesteader in good standing may pre-empt a quarter -section alongbide his homestead. Price $300 per acre. Duties. -Must reticle upon the homestead or pre-emption six mouths in each of lis years from the date of homestead entry (including the'time required to earn homestead patent) and cultivate fity acres extra. A homesteader who has exhausted his home- stead right and cannot obtain a pre-emption may enter fora purchased homestead in certain districts. Price $3.00 per acre. Duties. -Must reside six months in each of throe years, culti- vate fifty acres and era et a house worth $800.00. W. W. CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. N. B. -Unauthorized publication of this ad- vertisement will hot be paid for. WEST LAND REGULATIONS. Crouching behind a rock, rtflc to shoulder. sensation in the pit of his stomach. He lay breathing heavily until he got a grin on himself. Then he tore the bandanna handkerchief from his neck and bound up the wound, winding the bandage as tightly as his strength per- mitted to check the blood flow. "What is it?" asked Jack over his shoulder. "Indians. The Apaches are out. I'm bit!" gasped Dick. He crawled pain- fully and slowly to Jack's side, drag- ging his leg after him. He pulled with him his rifle, which he picked up as he passed from the spot where it had fallen in his first wild rush for water. "The soldiers told me at Fort Grant about the Apaches being out," Jack whispered hoarsely. "I thought they'd cross the border into Mexico." Seeing a spasm of pain over Dick's face, he asked, "Are you hurt bad?" "I don't know. My left leg is numb." Both men spoke scarcely above a whisper, fearing to betray their posi- tions by the sound of their voices.. Dick lay on his back,gathereng strength to ward off with rifle and revolver the rush which would come sooner or later. Jack caught the sound of a falling atone. Peering cautiously over the rock, he saw an Indian creeping up a draw toward them. Throwing his rifle to his shoulder, he took quick aim and Bred. The Apache jumped to his feet, ran a few steps forward and fell sprawling. A convulsive shudder shook him, and he lay still. "I got him!" cried Jack exultantly as he saw the result of the shot. But the exposure of his head and Shoulders . above their barricade bad drawn forth more shots from other members of the band. The bullets struck near the two men, showing that the Apaches had the range. Dick's wound was bleeding freely, but the shock of the blow had passed away; and his strength returned. Drawing his revolver, he crept closer to Jack, crying, "I can shoot some!" "I reckon you haven't more than a flesh wound," encouraged Jack. "Can you crawl to the,horse?' "I think I can," answered Dick. "Then go. Take the trail home. I'll keep these fellows busy while you get away." An Apache bad crawled to the head of a draw and crossed the butte into a second ravine, winch led to the trail down the elite side. On his belly he had wormed his way up the pathway until he overlooked the rear of the de- fensive position the two men occupied. Screened by a ledge, he waited a fa• vorable shot. Jack again cautiously raised his bead and peered over the barricade. Still not an enemy was in sight. As the Apaches had ceased to fire, be knew they were gathering for another simul- taneous rash. In the breathing space which the Apaches had given them Jack, who had resigned himself to die, took a now grip on life. His dream of atonement had worked out better than be had 1911 � *.SETTL RS' TRAINS= -. 'fp — MANITOBA, ALBERTA :SASKATCHEWAN - The only through Pinel LOW COLONIST RATES For settlers trerelllai with livestock and Weds S j;rrial Trains W ll laate Toronto Each TUESDAY HAKE( and Ai'71IL 10.10 P.M. Settlers and fealties %hltout I)reoios4 r should use Regular Trains Leaving Toronto 10,10 P,m, Daily Through Colonist aid Tourist Sleepers Colonist Cars on all Trains No charge for berths Through Tains TCran.t3 to Whit e; and West Asfs oor C.P.D. Ada I for cosy st "Settlers' Guide" J. IL BE1 iIER, Agent, Wiagham When you have rhenmatiem in your foot or instep apply Chamberlain's Lin. iment and yon will get quick relief. It coats but a quarter. Why suffer? For sale by all dealers. Haney sandwiohes are mnoh relished. The homy is biet)ded with butter before it is spread on slioes of Boston brown bread. The most common canoe of insom- nia is disorders of the stomach. Chamb- erlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets cor- rect these disorders and enable yon to sleep, For sale by all dealers. Dry, grate and bottle all your lemon and orange rinds, and they will be ready for use in dishes and sauces that call for the grated rind of a lemon or orange. ni Pity Tho Babies. All b'.zbies whale mothers do not k now about Dr. Chase's Ointment are truly to pitied. They are mare to have skin troubles of one kind or another such as chafing, skin irritation, scald head, milk rash or baby eczema and nothing oan bring them comfort so quickly as Dr. Olaase's Ointment. It stops itching promptly and heals the akin beautifully. Senate Failed to Gobble Us. "The United States Senate has not only adj.aurned, but it has adjourned without passing the reciprocity measure. It has, in other words, aotually refused to put into effeot a measure whioh the imperialist howlers of Canada tell us would surely result in annexation to the States. No greater nestle e has ever been shade by any legislative body in the world, than this refusal to annex a land of 8,000,000 sones, inestimably 1 t ,Uww imionewauansrmsaae'gansnornsuawma ran STORIA* For Infants and Children. o Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of L am ; -rarer AVegetublePreparalionforAs- slmilatir,7 tlieToodandReguta- ting the 5ionlnchs antiBowe of �1 • Promotes'Digestion,Cheerful- •Hess and Rest.Contai ns neither Nwln',Morphine nor Mlnerai. OT NAB C OTIC. l4.4earoraIdr5AMl7L'LrrIt 7t lianpkin Sud .41x:Jurrra /coo .fls Sub - 4niee Jesd • Appennot •81Cardwrattal • I jl'am Sced - fiorrhsd Ji ar giutorrer num Aperfect Remedy forCanstipa- tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms ,Co nvulsions ,Fevel'ish- ness and Loss OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of 4 NEW YO K. in use For Over Thirty Years EXACT COPYCF WRAPPER. TORIA rioh in its resources and riober still in its possibilities ani its future. What the Senate mill have been thinking of is beyond ns, for according to authorities like Sir Wi11i'tm Van Horne and Sir Ed mend Walker, and that they are antho. rities even these gentlemen themselves with all their modesty must admit—ao- oordiug to them the Senate had but to pass the measure and presto, Canada was annexed. Foolish Senators, foolish Americans, thus by their legislative failare to lose a kingdom i Their short, sightedness is the blunder of the age -a Waterloo whioh they have administered onto themselves and for which we as Oanadiens, safe from the noose for the moment at least, must thauk them upon bended knees. Nevertheless their meg- RIM YOaa CITY. nanimity is to say the least astonishing, for ordinarily the American people are not so slow to take advantage of a good bargain. Can it be -and we ask the question more in a spirit of isle onrfo- sity-oan it be that these politicians at Washington are more astute than we suppose and have refused to put this tariff bill through because of the numer- ous protests against it, not on the part of the Canadian people, but on the part of the American people, who feel they have the worst of the deal? We ask the question, as we say, only in idle cariosity, and yet the answer might not be without significance. It is barely possible, just barely possible, that it has not been for nothing that the Ameri- cans have refused to 'eat us alive.' " Free to Stock and Pou!try Raisers m We will send, absolutely free, for the asking, postpaid, one of our large thirty -two-page booklets on the common diseases of stock and poultry. Tells you how to feed all kinds of heavy and light horses, colts and mares, milch cows, calves and fattening steers, also how to keep and feed poultry so that they will lay just as well in winter as in summer. No farmer should be without it. At a cost of only two-thirds of c cent a day per Animal, Royal Purple Stock Specific makes each P-nimal worth 25 per cent, more. You never heard of any other 1pecific, or "Stock Food," doing likewise. Royal Purple will permanently cure the Dots, Colic, worms, Skin Diseases and Debility, and restore run - down Animals to plumpness and vigor. It will increase the milk -yield three to five, pounds per cow it day inside of from two to three weeks. It innkes the milk richer than ever before. MR. ANDREW Wi'GRICII, of Wainaett, Ont., says : "Tills is to certify that I have tries} your Royal Purple Stock Specific for two weeks, on one cow. On the 16th I weighed her milk as 17 pounds. I noticed a change after 5 or ti days, as there was an extra weight of milk. On the 29th, I carefully weighed the milk, and she gave 22 pounds. I nm gi:ung en order for 5 hones, 00 1 consider it the beet I have eve^ used." "Steck Focal" wi'I net 8o tact. P,econso "Stock Ford" is malting more or lees than a mixture of tilt. very things which you, yourself, grew on year own tarot. It is not more leets your Animals need. They must have something to help their bodies get a'l the nourishment from the food they are getting. So that they will fatten, and stay fat, all the year 'round. They need something to prevent disease, to cure db ease, and to keep them in the best of health, all the time. Not a Stock Food Royal Purple is not a "Stock rood," nor a "medicine." It is a Conditioner. It does not contain Grain, nor farm products. Nor does it contain "Dope," or any ,Other injurious ingredient. Royal I'urp'e does not merely temporarily bloat or inspire the Animal. It fattens and strengthens it, permnhently. y.-....�, _.0 ..,, .. ,.�to-J_ ile waited a favorable shot. planned, Selling his life by brayer fighting hi a good ehilse was far, far better then eliding it by his own hand. It was a anan's death. Fate had be- triended him in the end needling his hand out to Dick, he touched his shoulder, rousing him trent stupor Into Which he Was sinking. +'C)triek. tick. They're coiling closer, No other Specific known adds flesh so quickly asRoyal Purple. It makes G -weeks -old Calves as large as ordi- nary -ted Calves are at 10 weeks. Royal Purple makes naturally- thir Animals tat and heavy. And it builds up the health and restores the former plumpness andvigor of run-down stock, in little or no time. Tho very best time. to use this Con- ditioner is NOW. It digests the hard food properly and prevents the animals get- ting indigestion or losing flesh. 50 per cent. Cheaper One 50 -cent Package of Royal Purple will last one Animal 70 days. This figures a little over two-thirds of a cent pet day. Most "Stock Foods" in 50 -cent Pack- ages last but 50 days, and aro given three times a day. Ilut Royal Pu, to .Specific is given only once a day, and lusts 50 per cent. longer. (A $1.50 Pail, containing taur titnes the amount of the r0 -cont Package, lasts 230 days.) So, you see, it is only necessary to give Mayas Puri to taeiecaic once each day. Just think r.f mel ing Inch Animal worth 25 r' cent. over its cost l What wi.l that mean to you, llir. Stock Owner 1 It makes the Hens lay Eggs in Winter as well as in the Summer. MRS. Waf. DiJRN11AM, Sanford, Ont., soya : "Dear Sirs, -This is to certify that I have used two boos of your Poultry Specific for my hens. They laid so. well while feeding it to them, I won- dered if you would mind sending Inc word how or where I could get some this winter. I bouylrt it from your agent last winter. I had 32 hens, and some days I got two dozen eggs a day in February and March, while feeding them the Specific." Royal Purple Poultry Specific prevents Fowls losing flesh at moulting time, and permanently cures every poultry disease. It makes their plumage bright and keeps them always in prime condition. It makes your Poultry worth more than they could ever bo without it. Yet one 50 -cent Package will last 25 hens 70 drys. Or a ;'1.50 Peril will do 25 Dens :S0 days. Th's is four times more material at only three times the cast. 1 STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS Royal Purple creates en appetite for food, and helps nature to digest and turn it into flesh and muscle. As a Ilog fattener, Royal Purple has no equal. Never Off Feed Dan iifcnwen, the horseman, says : "1 have used Royal Purple Stock Specific persistently in feeding 'The Eel,' 2.021-, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908 and 1909, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.1.0i, brother of 'Allen Winters,' winner of $38,000 in trotting stakes in 1908. "'these horses have never beck off their toed since I started using Royal Purple Specific. I wilt always have it in my stables. Your Cough Powder works like magic." For Poultry Royal Purple Poultry .Specific id our other Specific. It is for Poultry not for stock. Make This Test Every ounce of Royal Purple Stock and Poultry Specific is guaranteed. To prove that Royal Purple has no equal, wo want you to make this test : reed Royal Purple to any one of your Animals for four weeks. And at the same time feed any other preparation to any other Animal in the same condition. It Royal Purple does not prove to you, by actual results, that it is the best you ever used, we'll return your money. And We'll ask no questions -make no excuses. You Will be the judge -- not us. This is an honest test, isn't it ? Wo ask you to make it because We know that Royal Purple is the best Conditioner on the market. If you are not satisfied, after testing it, you don't lose anything, do you ? Centralia, Ont., Feb. 7, 'iii The W. A. Jenkins Mfg. Co., London, Ont.: gentlemen, -We have been using Royal Purple Poultry and Stock Specific for tho last three weeks, and must say that re- sults are remarkable. Am feeding the Stock Specific to two milking cows, and they have increased 30 per cent. in their. milk, The Poultry results aro even more marked than this. Wo have about 60 hens, laying age. When wo commenced leafing, we were getting five and sin: eggs a day, and in the last five days the same flock of hens laid 150 eggs, almost an average of 31 each day, and those five days have been the coldest this winter. 'S"ou can see results plainly in two or three days after the use of "Royal Pur- ple," and the poultry have the same hustle and appearance now as in the sum- mer time. With cows and poultry, ant using exactly the same feed and care ea before starting to feed "'loyal Purple." When farmers and stockmen got ac- quainted with Royal Purple, it will have a greater demand than all other tonics and stock foods en the market combined. Yours truly, A NDP.EW TIIC7z5. Aug. 28, 1910. W. A. Jenkins Mtg. Co., London, Ont.: Gentlemen, -Last Fall we had in our stables a young mare belonging to Miss Clouston, of Montreal. Wo could not teed her any bran on account of causing violent scouring, consequently causing hen to become weak and thin, l%c com- menced using your Royal Purple Stock Specific, and the results were wonderful. After using it three weeks, we found we could feed the animal bran or any other soft feed without scouring her, and she actually took on in this time twenty-five pounds of flesh, wo working her at the same time through the hunt. I can heartily recommend your Stock Specific. TOIL S3i.I7'FI, Trainer for the Icon. Adam Dock. Wo also manufacture : Royal Purple Lice I{iller 255c. Royal Purple Gull Cure 25c. Royal Purple Sweat Liniment..,,,, 500. Royal Purple Cough Cm -e a.. 50c. Our Cough Cure will cure any ordinary cough in four days, and will break up and cure distemper in ten to twelve days. If your dealer cannot supply you With our neral Purple Matilda, wo will supply you upon receipt of $1.:10 a pail, pro- pnid, for hither poultry or stork, or if you Want any Liniment, Gall Cure or Cough Powder, we will send it by matte postpaid, upon receipt of price. W. A. jritaVIIINIS L%LIa`G. COM '.'AN t, LONDON. OIVIVAIREICO RO'YAL PURPLE STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS AND FREE BOOKLET CAN BE OBTAINED FROM A. MILLS, GENERAL STORE, J. WALTON McKIBBON DRUGS, AND SAMWAYS PAUL, BLUEVALE.