HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1908-01-23, Page 3• January 23rd* 1908• The Clinton News*Re ord a The Foreign immigrant Must ,,be ImpresSed. With the Faot That it is CpOtirartil to the :14aNy'. to ,carru Mins in Canada. o Mr. E. N. Uwia, DIP-iatalas 44At 'record for bringing live questions bore the House It VeMMons. He seems te be nearer the people in hie Methods of thinking' than trtost ur Itie associates in ParliaMent. proposes an an:man:lent to the gration Act whie,h ir ..intendett ,to •check the, tendency *ainong foreigneri to carry deadly weapons for lhe set- tlement; of their differences of 'opinion,: He desires to balm_ immigrants, earehed onlantlIng, and the cases Of -Mir found 'With peapons referred to the Minister ol ,Ithe Iuterlor with a view to having thGatned deported if he 1)t) not hOivit714" le a -man of good character, eOuntry where -the Anliakbitants go. armed, Obviously, it would be no •mdre than fair, play, .ko • theirnini- grhnt to remove front his sight these 1 .signs .of• our "savagery,'„' , which. the police will ',subsequently ell till). are very 'WO exaggerated. `.Ii he tombs to the, -country unarmed, we ought not.' tg0 %gist in, this way thathe arm • himself, only to punisIl him\ later for 1 having. taken 'Mir. advice. • ' Mr. Lewis has another clause° in AilS bill` Which proVides for the search-' ing of any' person by a peace officer I who. has reason to believe that . be l may be ' armed; and, if arm S be . found- en at -person who has Mon/gra& ed into the country within two years, •the Mittister of the ,In,terior may, ord- er is deportation. This is apparent- ly to meet the case. oi the man who. i. has caught AO kinife-carrying custorn since landing in Canada. Bat. woulcl it.not be more just and .poesihly eion- oraical to enforce the law we haVe. against the exposure of Weapons Jor sale, and s6 avoid educating this new - coiner into bad habits,. The fact is that we probably have law enough now to reduce:the praetice to it harm- less minimum if jt - were rigidly , and universally eniereed, .1-loWever,. it .will• do no hirtu to impress upon the minds of fortrigners coining tothis country, by:a. special examinattiOn, the. faot that it is .• a crime to. carry urns into Canada. If that fat were once driven well home, a would' he easier for tne pop ice 'to enforce the law. afterwards. Then, , if it were made difficult . for . a foreigner to bhp a weapon', we .shoull have the evil' 'well in "hand, :Mee do not. carry . weapons. foramusement Undeebtedly the. great •majority al tbose iviiii do :. are 'tinder the rnpres- ' ston that they would- not he safe in this "..country‘withont them ; and once we eari- nun)* this feeling in one 'way by disarming their fellow ii.,iiii- grents they. .W.11 not' be likely 'to keep their money looked :up in *useless art- leles.--,Montre al :' S tar. ' ' The trouble is, a course, that he trst things which the tnia,rmed immi- grant .will see when he gets ashcan in , Canada, are shbp windows full - of weapons for sale. From this if he'lie diseetning man, with ' a deductive mind, be will infer that he had bet- ter buy a knife or gun at once; for it is plain that he is in a• savage .6•••••••••••, " Local OptioniStS Should Consider From Their Own Standpoint That the. Three -Fifths Clause is the Very Best one in the Act , It was to in expected that the offi- in a great. 'number ° of plates, ii;it° .oprs. who-emiduet--the—local,.—option-Lheing—Sueeessfiri-in ek,-ces- 'campaigns from Toronto woeld v.. find' which adopt' it:- That Success can be fault with the three-fifths majority assured only by rigid enforcement, and now required and that they with ititir everything that contributes to that customary intemperance- of language is of advaritige.' ; would describe suab losses as -i.hose I ; • • pver a bare majority but. ander•three.• -In our hflmble ,judgment theofficer; fifths as having been "thefts" from of the local ;option movement are. them. These officers force the local quarrelling . with what they F•hf tad 'option Campaign in districts whi.ch consider .from their .own staakmint are not ready for it, but no: dne e,- tJ very bet ',..eMitseiln the ,i:•.:t....—Kin- pects them to shoulder themS217es eardine Review. with the blarne fee losses Sustained, ,• by poor selection of fighting zrounds. , It is nothing to them that 13, three- ' The Toronto News .a Strong support - fifths majority is required, ; to ,repeal, They • naturally want "to wire, eery - thing and if a onertentli, Vdte'wouicl • carry, so much the' better for.. them. All they have to is. • . to show vic- tories. They Wash their hancl.P... I the -rest. The government must look • at - ter the enlorcement of the law. Jr, r- • quires money- to do that . -and the municipalities- .whicii. carry ' loc.,' op- tion .contribute nothitig to the field: :to enforce the Act. • , er of .• the ;, I.Jecal,•Optioe movemeet maims the , following "'reference to the 'three Mille dense ; • . Had no.P been for the three-Nths. clause in. the ',Apt . the , victories Wonld have. been • inere.ASO41 to fifty-six. That Is to say, "-wen- . ty-seven nuinipipalitieg gave vote g.,.f 0 over-•50.:per. cent. in laver of ..,0 by- aw, -but :failed to roil up the n2cesr.,- arY GO per • cent. Extreme temper - ,,n4',' v, -fp .tha,t those An Act which makes a Jiree-tirths twenty-seven unimcipalltaes were vote carry and repeal is regarleiL by filched :from . them through the ba:ii le them as unfair. Their idea di .airness1. in question, luit We still. think' the is probably exemplified' ..• by 1/wen. Sound which under the oM lavv car- ried local option by over .300 rtejor- ity and is therefore able to 'reveal it. by, one of a majority. Knowing .'tlii,s, -the liquor. ;interests there have - set out to defy the law and niake :it so Obnoxious that repeal vviII follow/ On ity Under this regulatrOn, ,they • tte the other hand the floor dealers.. in a .pretty sure ° to have captured it for place which carried local option since good and all, The ant will alWays 'the three7fiftlis clause went in !..,,ner- find it mot difficult to obtain tire 00' ally give up the fight because they despair of repealing it by a nate. per cent. Vote necessary to repeal, • fifths; vote. The result is Zhat ;they go out of business or, if ahoy' stay, existence -of this provision to be capr able of defence on seine • grdunds. The clause' nierely call for that deo- iSive Majority which it has been' cori-. sidered mise, to have, behind every so: cial reform. Moreover, once ' the ooal optionists capture a niunigipal- in business, they Obey and respect llid law. In the final analysis the Value . the local option movement will (IC pend not so inueh upon 'its caroling • 'Coughs4 colds, bonrieness. noel ntAter throat 'ailments are quinbly relieved by oresolene etablets, ten dents per box. All druggists., . ,It is, Stated:that the closeIng (WWII ot the. Soo steel 'Plant i5 only ' for a Short „ time. . FiVelitittdrtd thonsatid feet 1.1 as exploded at , Montreal. John Walton, member for Lees in the British' House of Commons, dred at London.: , .0* ear oespiiiia44444.44114:040.....4- . Most people know thatlf. they have • been tick thiy need 'Scoff' ..r. Emal- si�n to bring back health' aral strength, But the strongest point *Iigiit :Scott's. Emutsion ia that you don't have to be sick to get residts frOni ft keeps up the athlete's strength, puts fat on thin people, makes a fretful.- baby happy, bring i color to a pale ,girl's Cheeks, and pre- vents coughs, coldand consumption, , Food in contentr. &tea form for sick and wfll, young and'old, irch and poor. , • And it contains no drugs and nolt'alcohol, ' ALL DRUGGISTS t 80o. ANti $1.00. 0 elt14010/10"0"0"0440/10"0"01444040.00. sa,N, • President Creeiman: "Irre!rming is no Longer 'a Rule, of Thumb Affair; it is a Science."' ° WOOdOtRek, Jan, 100—The 41st .con-; ' "flesh forniere fti. mUk add :are U.° vention of. the %Venom Ontario Dairy nitrogenous. property of tlie• soil. • At. men's Aesociatioa concluded a Series of the new method of testing foe • this successful sessions this evening. Prof. element poves practicable for the Dean of the Guelph Dairy school:gave cileeSe factory; factorymen. could. thou an address, inwhich he pointed out pay the farmer accordMg to the per - several 'conditions in the Canadian eentage ,Of the clement in the • Milk, aairy industry which would tend and prevent adulteration. against it. sueeess. Mr.. E. H. Web," IVEr. E. H. Webster, chief Of the ser, head of the dairy department for dairy division M the United States the United • States, in an illustrated address, Pointed out the grave Nit,vgerst to ' consumers and producers. 1 in the lack of cleanlinesS in the hawlling of milk. Almost Criminal in, Places. "Cheesetna,king is almost /miming for certain parts of the Pi ince,' declared Professor 1:1, IL Dean,. Principal of the Guelph 'Dairy School, in addressing thiS afternoon's session of the Western Ontario Y - men's convention. "Some of you lio are fariners should never send •4,trumt of milk to tho cheese factory. Send it to the creamery; that is different, but for you who,se land may be ' a little Poorer than it should be every pOund of eheese jour faeciry, ships away is •robbing the soil 'of those elements most necessary • to the growth of , plant life.'" 'Entering into his reasonS for the sta.-ten-teats., the speaker said that the chief difference between cheese and ' butter was that in the .former` were eridiedied 'tile nitrogenous etc:: ments whiCh made for tissue building in the body of man, in butter there \Vas. not this tissue • building :iniality, the nitrogenousproperties of the milk being returned indireatly to the soil in the. 'buttermilk', and 'other WT. -pro- ducts', •Referring to the question ' be- ing a•--,ket1 by certain dairy journals, whether ' the dairy expdite, to the country.. Would in ..tinie.,beadme:,mil, Prof. .Dean Said that leaders of the industry flint :see • that the farmer" and , the manufacturer • be given a squata deal. "Why," asked' he, "are cheesT • and butter men leaving the business ? Can ' one comeare cheesetnakeri of to -day with the pion - ere 'Of fifteen yekrs ago ? You pardon rile if I say . there is a . great deteridration in tbe . qualitic•s c f the men who are handling our 1 cheeSe tortes in western Otitario: The young mencoining up lack Spirit and enter prise. They are not preparing them- selves to 'fill the. respeusible".paitiofti which are now 'filled .by mtn v ho Must soori pts out of active Work. , - Will Not Pay .Proper • Salaries.... ' • • - The -reason i.S.` this,: you factory - men will not pay a proper Salary.Fif- - . tY, sixty, even.. s6a with are .thberculoes."rrhis '.enty-fite dollars' • signifigant .stateinent was made by month, is not a fair renumeration fot ;Mr, E;.: H. Webster in an file:A:rated a good Maker, 'The work g wearin; address 'given at topight's session. I ft: is arduous and a man soon. grows too old.: Then, again, the strong fee- 141.6 subieet-of "dean: The • speaker ,stated tor in the °possible •decline of cheese- -that draughty .ot st:ablcs making is that there 19 t )0 much wer.2 the causes of Bauch of the tuber - 'every man for himself and the take the ,last one- in the trade. he present system puts a premium on dishonesty. The: .iverage, nide, i .my judgment; is dishone3t,. and would as leave milk the pump As not, Via fat- • . ...stated that buttermakers were waste- ful of butterfat, He thought many creameries Wasted $1.00 It month' through the ,irnproper methods of work adopted. • • Mr. George II. Barr, official referee on the 'cheese Market at litiontreal, in speaking befOre the Western Dairy - me' O Atsceiation this morning, Made an urgent plea. --against building any More' small 'facteVes in this district. The small cheese •factory, located. where it. had to meet competition could fiat, he said,' 'afford to cranloy men compennt to take, good cheese, He wished to correat a: statement pub. lished lin the press as hit'ing been made- by him, to the effect that only 2 per cent. of. cheese from ° Canada was of first° grade. The informatioa he had 'Wished to convey was that 98, per cent. of cheese examined by him, and eonsisted of the greater part in 'small fd,e Dry ship - Meats, had heen of second and third grade,- He °'spoke highly of • the • im- provements made by the Dominion Government in appointing cargo in- spectors and in keoping a record; of how che,e9e- was. looked after by trans- portation companies. While in .1405 only ten steamers /sailing between 1VIontreal and the .old epuntry were lipped with cold -Storage plants,. at present :time 45' out of. 60 veSsols in that , trade were so furnished, ' as well as 25 „having. cold air comPart- mehts.. The chief diffiCulty in hand- ling .cheesb lay, he said, in transpor- .. . tation frorn ;the , factory to Montreal. While not advocating that the 'fac- tory man receive less for his. cheese, still ,b0 thought the, industry, •would be benefited if 'the buyer, cOuld afford: to use lea cars •in the shipping to Montreal. of Tubereol Cause s • . , , . "I fully , hell:eve ;that the tubereulos- is Of the bovine race the .same .4 as the tuberculosis° of the human race. The' serum is to be, found in the milk bf diseaSed animals, and it is certain that contagion may, come. to the milk uSer through such milk; and . yet it is known that... between fifty and sixty' per cent. of the cows. supply some American -cities, supplying babies, Culosis . among cows. I -Ie• impressed upon his hearers that clean, :dr.Y. floors and' clean ceilings. Were absolutely ece nssity to proper dairying. He ...pointed out • that improved stable torynien ' ea; Dv uuantity,. ILdus., conditions need eoSt the farmer very little money,. and that if improve - you' to pay by the ebe2se: VaItie of the milk and ',make it il'ord to be -e.if lion - et. • I.owever, ..f let me say that eur home market should .reeeive xdore• attention.' CheeTe is 'food, strong and Muscle- liakiag, merits Could. . not be afferded . in, Milking would cost ftothing, but a little thought AO 'extra ttme. . President., G. C. Creelinari of.: the Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph, spoke...on the work of. the college and and so finds: ° market among the working menour pepuion the improved conditions of present ,‘ AP ,tioe grow and then cheese-eatisg for- day farming.- "I could' sum up," he said:, "all My advice to. you : s '• eigners .coine in, We will need • r tot that what we need not bigger faxms. of; that product: at home; besideS this, but better:firming ; not. better brands you are making your- cheese toe hard and 'dry, : simply to satisfy the whim: of sheep or swine, but 'better care and of the buyer;•who buys for the old . feeding .; not bigger bans and stables • ountr" -, but bett3 ventila,ted . and 'better .ar- ey.. : • ranged. In a • word, •the farmer Must TOuching ,. the sub[ect of butter ex..7.- h . e educated. Farming is no longer a . port,' Prof. Dean . advised that butter • rule 0/ thumb affair •;° it Is a science." 1Vq. George A. Putnam of the Pro- vincial Agrieultural Department Stat- ed that ' the ' GOvernment . had: • been much satisfied with the progyess of deity edireation during :the PaSt year.' He . thought, however, that farmers should organfte local meetings' ' ta diseuss their. own , local conditions.: The department was, he said, anxious to help the. fanner, but could not DO eXpOctOd to do -much :until it knew alves the use of chloroform and ite- in his desire for' improvementhelp . to • that .the farmer ' was 'earflap t enough v . . etie . acid, 'Casein and albumen are himself: . • ' • .. 1.........0.a....;$•10.01.1.41•WiliNIMMO' . \ ‘4111=MMINIMMMftimminIMM , • Solving the Farm Labor Problem,: . .. • Reports ' made by farmers in diff- ' There •is ho doubt.the farnelands of be •Made saltless; it intended for ex- port to ".Grea,t-Eiritain. "I am • told that buyers there 4wou1d, pay two shillings per hundred -weight more tor saltless butter.". • ' , • Would. Prevent Adulteration A ,.new method of °determining the percentage of casein teheese-producing element) in milk was outlined by Mr, T. Ilerbert Lund Of ;Wisconsin , Un- iversity. The crAnical reaction in- erent parts of Ontario, published in bulletin 00 of the Department of Ag- riculture, Militate that the farni lab- or problem is being gradually .solved, and ih a most satisfactory manner, In Moore and DoSanqUet townships, pp in Lampton county, farmers are, Wt' are told, buying improved machin- ery and exchanging work on the co-. operative plan. M Nassagawcya, Halton county, 'the same thing is. being done. In I3 ertie, Welland, it is 'proposed that this eo-operative 'idea he applied amonget ' other things "to , the purchase Of a thirty -acre a day steam plow, which wilt do the work in this line on a dozen farina. Ontario would he •better cultivated, and at less, cost, If there. Was a gen- eral adoption of schemes • such .as those which are underconsideration, or being worked out. One cern. har- vester, one wide -cut binder, (me Man- ure spf(lader, and one steam`plow can be made to seri& a number of farms, while by exchanging help work Wo til not only be carried out more satisfa•e- torily, but the social, • features., of farm Ilk would bc Unproved at • the santetime, It is 'along this line, rather than • by itiereaeing 'the urea. in unprofitable pasture erops, that the proper S'olution of the farm labor problein Will be found.—Weekly Sun. er,st -vv,,,,vAnt,sh • Chester Martin, a Rhodes seLolar, {)1 at,. John, N B, has won tit? Belt Miss Phoebe DenSitlore visited Wing- bchdla,rship nt Oxfqrd. ham friends, recently, . We are sorry to hear . that 'Mrs. D.. Scottis still very poorly. Mrs. John McDOvvel, • who has been suffering' since Cirristna. , Walla had attack Of grippe, N Jo h tte'. Mr. Birdman is ngatted, with -Mr. IT. Densmore for th6 wint:r and ha-- h1s fainily to Mr. .1. :NUM it. ton's, Sr., house whae they will re- side. We are pleaso& to see Will. Snell 'able • to hou. again - • akter a two; weeks' Miss Mary lient'ey, an estimablo young lady of Ws township, was married recently to Thomas Kerniek ef the same neighborhood. ' 1 Shiloh'rs4 Shikth's Cure s for the worst cold, • thesharpest cough .r—try it on it guar- agatee of your money back if it doesn't actually CURE auieker Coughs thail anyt jug you ever tried. Safe to • and Colds ,take,—nothing in atto hurt even a Cure. Cures A '011.71111W Is 3 )1Vhitechurch oWiliiam. Phillips Of, Blyth has., 'been, renewing old aeoliaIntlanees around Whitedhurch. •'Tlionies Ford has been very ill witli the 'doctor in attendance. One day ricently Willie 'Moore • '• of the village 'Went out to a farm some iliStallee away to buy some hay,. The fanner and hie hired man abused the boy and sent him home in a 'damaged condition. Mr. J. Patterson, while mit with an empty pair of bobsleighs. .he. other evening,met with a painful accident. The horse stopped suddenly and Kenlost his balance and fell forward striking his knee and ininring it to such an extent- as to confine him 44 hisroom„ • Last TnesdaY afternoon as a 5013. ot IVIr. John Norman drove up to tile hardware store and WAS about ,to. tic his horse, it took fright' and broke 'away. The bit brokela its mouth, letting it air free and it ran some distance beyond the village. Mr. John Moine of North Dakota .home On a Visit to his parents and brought his bride with him. He Ilan been in the West' • for a number of years and has done well. It will soon be ueCessary to organ- ize a vigilance committee in this vil- lage eo watch the good wives linen While out . On the line. One night last week Mrs. liolnies' was relleVed of a linen tabliieloth: We presume it is gone to adorn the table of .he gentle- man who is wektinlv Mr, Finla..y's white shirts. iVliss Mabel Morrison alsd rePorte the loss of some wearing apparrel. Chronic Coughs Cured Mrs. Joseph Epelos of D;emore, -says; 'I took 4 or .5 bdttles of Psychlne, and a cough I had continually for nine mI onths disappeared. It is the best remedy f or chronin Coughs that I ever • Thousands of living witnesses pro- nounce'Ilichine the greatest medicine in the world. It is not a patent rned4.2. eine, but a preseription of a great Sielen.' 4Put ' to the test in any :ease "of throat, lung or stojnaeli trouble or any run down or weak condition. At all druggists, 50e and .$1,00, or Dy. 'T. A.' Sloeum, Limited, Toronto. THE JANUARY ROD ANIOUN. . -It is 'often Said that a good begin:, ning is half „the battle and the Oanad- Ian Sportsman's Magazine, `Jim'. and Gun -and Motor Sports in Canada, published: by. W. 3. Taylor at W,00& stock, Ont., ntakes a. splendid ning for .the New Year. Itis crovvd- with stories of •interest to sportsmen incleding notes on •.• the last :Season's'. speri . in • several Provinces, Which must eause hunters to go over their oWa eXperiene,s once . More and see if they agree . with those The' most iniportant subject of: the Inter-' national. Control 'the G . nat Lake' Fisheries is dealt -with in an address given by Mr. A. Kelly Evans' at conference: •of the American s Fisherie Society: Stories of deer litintiag . in Quebec and: Ontalrb, ininting in Manitoba and Gaskat,;11.., mg trips in. the northern country, with lisberman'S, •yarns and mountain climbing renainigeenes are but sannples of the budget of good alliegs awaiting the :readers of this ekeellent magazine. Every lover of outdoor life must find something . to appeal to his particular and la.vorite recreation, and to tha' whole of • them must Come home the well written and • efi!ettive story „"Na-., ture'e Elixir—and .it net work!" This is the spirit pervading the whole 7 -the spirit of freedom and strenuous exertion which, , brings with it health and happiness, ,though in the conven- tions of modern •eivilizatioti;%it is not elassed as "work.'! Often indeed, a',every sportsman knows, it is work of the hardest possible character, but, ,when it is a change from ordinary occupatiOns, let lahor be what it May so long as it is perftirmed.,in the open air and. without •restraint, it is " iiot, .in the Ordioary. •aeceptanee. Of the word, "work." With such , promis- ing hegilming 'the! New Year holds the: 'strongest . possibilities for the further sitceets of this; favorite ° Canadian Map, azine., Whose s,peeial 'work it has ben to make the advantages: of the Dom- ieion. in the region of sport known to our' people and. through them Ito the *hole Wertd. Huron County Council. The County conned' el.. Huron for 1998 will be compOsed of. the follOw-• ing reeves and deputies from the var.,-, lousr Municipalities ". Ashfield—'l homas• Stothers and William Hunter. -- Colborne—J, II, Metwen. doderich Township- :Salkeld. Sta,n1ey7-Jemes, gbaeyp—hrn--. l'Stem:holltni Webb, • Jaeoh Kellerman. . Uslierne—Joseph Hawkins Tuckersmitb—Robert McKay, O f I tillett&-Thainas McMillan. Govenlock.:( Grey—Williarri Prager. Morris—George,Taylor. West WaVvanoth—W, Bailie, East Wawanosli-,-Win. J. Patks. • IIowiek—Photna G.. Shearer, Jos- eph Hainstoek. . Turnberry—John Mosgroe, GoderiehaRobert, McLean, M. Elliott, Clinton—B. 3. Gibbings. Seaforth—janies Watson. Winghatn—Dr. A. J. Irwin. tketer--A. Q. obier. ' Brussels—Jobe LAIiie, Illyth—Dr. W. J. Milne, tiayfleld—Dr. Hensali—G„ C. Petty. Wroxeter—R, IL Ilarris. ' There will be nine new members ln the Council this\ year. George baby. 34 years of Q UICKL Y success commend Branches of the Sovereign Batik Sh 11 0 II'S Cure— throughout Ontario Met been taken *111.101.6811"."."1". 25e., 50c.4 $1. Mt over bh the other ham Your improvised morgues at Boyer - town, Pa., now contain 103 bodies from the disastrous. theatre fire there. It is °reported th4 Secretary Cartel - you will resign from the -United Stiat- es Cabinet. The. Weekly Mail and Empire and The News -Record will be sent to any address for one year for only, $1.25. This is 'the biggest bargain 44 the season id good newspapers. An Ohio' man has offered. to g.vbsti- tate hit/welt, for ,Thaw and be, exec*. ed if ,necessary on Condition* Oat only $3,000,000 is paid his family. FranCe Complains that Japan is not treating her fairly in the distribution' of her fpreign orders for war mater- ial. THE ELEMENTS OF Atiallii$» The eloodetets or stems in ingress*. tile life ileeni to be these 1 First, have sometlebig +that people waht Soroud, stand ready to sell ins; goods at reasonable prices. Third, and. roost important pit all, let the general Public 'know what yen have for sale at • the .price. A morenant may' have the .beat goods in. the + world and stand ready to sell at prim" actually below cost but if 11.0;' one knows about it his goods may grow fast t,o the counters. NowsPalk. er adVertising is the best method or communication „between nierchant and customeL—Business Success. ,fe.weiftallte•leemleoewobentrestsweeneimenonanatoweoweiV u I RE • A few more dollars "to satigly outstanding claim's and to raise same we wine cut prices still deeper than advertised last week; The following will give you an idea what to exyeck E. only Sapanese (Thine. Irinclrella golder reitilar $8 00 for $4 35 konly Cruet old style, good quality; plate reg $5 00 fen. $1 10 1 only Cake li4Olitet good quality plate reg $7,,'0.0 for 0 15 . 1 only Chocolate Pot good, quality plate reg $0. 00 for $3 25 • 1 nnly 7 -piece Tea Set good quality Plate reg $35-90 for $17 1) • Only • alt Basket good quality plate reg s5 00 for $2,25 : counter. JeWeler and•Engiiieer, Issuer Of Marriage [..konses.. oallokoift4owNow144..aou'ov4VWW • Very often the reason Why rine accountant gets through more work in less time than another, thereby earning an enviable reputation for quickness and cleverness, is simply tecatiSe heitakes advantage of every ehort, method possible.. ' • Simply•amazing how few know the many arithmetical short cuts—how simple-ar-ithmetit-ques tions rapidly and accurately. • "I'3.apid Calculation" is net only pra.ctice, there is a;." method " as well. The method we; teach, but :the. praCtice remains with you. ' Our large, illustrated catalogue. is free, .Write for it. It explains in detail the various subjects weleaeb, . and shows the advantage. of. a Business Educators': -Association ' - Diplorria,.. • Demand -for -Our -graduates excee • the supply. • FOREST CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE - J. W. WESTERVELT• • • Association. Principal.Londoa. Members of Businernt Educatorn'', • FA 4tig ambits • • MI itas VA' '1_'.471 Mir 'I p377, 4:41111 4141 4 ofi 1 ,..C4,\20111. Alb 0111111i r,: T IS. a very simple operation to bake on , the SOUVENIR 'RANGE, The aerated principleof#. the SOUVENIR provides a constant flow a pure air, heated to the temperature of the' oven before it enters it. This. . ensures a baking of bread or cake'frprn."falline. -11 bread, cakes or oldies are to be light and whole- Some,they must be, surrounded by pure airwhile baking. In no range is, this supplied so ,soieUtifioally •as. in the SOUVENIR . • • . . The aerated oven of thei SOUVENIR places it. away ahead cf all other kitchen ranges. '. Every Souvenir ig Slasolutely guaranteed by the makers, , THE GERIIEY;TILDEN 'COMPANY LlIvirru) • •• • Hamilton Monireal Winnipeg Vancouver 1 Davis & Rowland Clinton esesessmensonsms•r• Put By a Nest Egg for. Emergencies 7 hree Hundred Dollars in a Loan Company an tinassaltakle Assel., In the Statute respecting Loan Companies there is a provision • which absolutely protects a deposit ° o $360 r under. If you hate a deposit of that Amount ;vith this Company, it datinot .be taken froth you by any legal process or for any moo. whatev'br. The Company is sped. fleetly forbidden to pay out that money to any other person except0 lag upon the depositor's order. It would be a wise provision for you to deposit $300 with this Company:. It Would form a nest - egg for the futtire• which could „ never be secured by any one else unless yen so ordered. mio and many other interesting points regarding banking by mail . and the purchase of Debenturegif WM be gladly explained to Ott upon reatte,st. Loan & Savings Co, London, Ont. 4.