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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1908-09-10, Page 3tabor lOth, 1908 Clinton News -Record e••• amUing 00OflaS to 44eMerieladan tt Margaret .Gelild, the Feehion of Weilien'a. Herne ;COMeanten, the Septaniber number eume of k the ways ,Parisisn dressmaking es- tabNelments sell their goods to Amer - 100.11 women. Here is one rusti that alio, sow worked in one of the bigges eetabliehreente. in Paris : "There was a sadden and. evident COMmotion among the 0010440es. The rrineesal• The Prilteeen She has , arrived they cried. American, eye* began to bulge. • "Out trona a ,magnitteent equepage stepped a Molly gowned grand lady, Attended by tootmen and maid, and received by the whole bowing estad- lialtMent, to the neglect of all other ensterriers. She was in a gracious mood that &qr.) and easy to be pleas.- .'etis praising their past efforts and set - eating Several of their new creations , without regard .to !coat, Atter 'she hadmade thele. departure amid . like Ceremonies) there was no twee of the eelgeWenian bothering her head over i•Auggestions- ,Every American 'woman Present wanted a gown copied from putt tho FrIneesS had bought, and Ale get it after much pleading and t a price far beyond ,tbe, limit she h • eat.• "And the point of the fable is this 'The Prineess was no PrineeSe, but . an geePloyeti-Of the---houSe.. • f(tevene Vouch gownhas two prices. American price and a Freech prim. It is needless to say which is the greater price, • "Along about April tbe cry gose •,up,. "Fee Americans are coming r' and • -thee the pricesgo up, too. . "Along about November, when tbe 4reericane have left, you might -• el - moat sAY 'they 'are, giving away goWns only the •Frenchman never does give awaY anething. Then it is tho.t . the Frenclewoman in general and the Frenchlactress • in particular sleets 'her Wardrobe.". SYSTEM REQUIRES . 'FREQUENT CLEeNSINGs al • AFTER CANADA'S FORESTS, Temp of Quebec PuIp Weed tient Atte** the Border. Pelpwood to the amount of fitte thousand cords was bought in Que boo province in the summer of 1007 be Wieoonsin paper manufacturer. and asported fourteen bundrce Miles to the Whitt Of freenifeeture. This fact oonetiteet0e the most strik- ing evidence se far presented of the increasing scarcity of wood for pulp m the United States. The elite in price is another token of the increasing ecarcity of (such wood. In the 'past ten years the price of pulpwood has almost doubled. Ac- cording to the report of a committee: of the United 'States., Congress which 1448 recently been investigating an al- leged 00enlene *Meng the paper manu- facturers. the price, of pulpwood in the rough delivered at the mill was $5.83 per cord in 1898; in the first three months of 1908 the price Per cord had risen to ;10,14. A minority of thiel committee favor- ed passing the "Stevens bill," which• aimed to take the ditty off wood pulp and .Print paper imported into the United State. They concluded that he paper manufacturers had combin- ed to keep up .their prices, holding that the fact that Canadian manu- facturers: could pay the duty of $6 per aid still undersell the Araerie,an m facturene was a proof of this. T majority of the committee fav- ored no action being taken until fur- ther, ineestigatien. had_beensiPecle. The fact of the appointment of this committee and its work has drawn renewed attention to the ptilpwood forests of Canada and their treatment. A: strong suspicion exists north . of the International boundary that Am- ericans are Planning to exploit the Canadian spruee forests for the pur- pose bf conserving their own supplies of pulpwood. All grades: of opinion naturally exist as to the propereneds; urea to be taken in dealing with the export of pulpwood from Canada. -So, far as Ontario is eonearned. export of pulpwood in an unmanufactured state is Prohibited. In other provinces comparatively little hindrance- is Put in the way of the export of the wood. ' A spruce forest, properly managed, will last forever; and the sooner Can- ada and Cansedians introduce such management for their immense spruce ,areas, the wiser will they show thein - selves to be. The spruce 'forest can easily be made a permanent ,asset, and .by far the greatest part of the spreee forests are still in the hands of the crown. Pieced in the bends of experts who understand the treat- ment of such forests, they will con- tintie to yield forever a revenue far in advance of thc. amount spent on them for adrnieistration. • . Not only outside but inside as well, •'acnir body must be frequently, Cleaned. Otherwiee it beeosnas loaded • With , wastes that. clog Up the 'Wheels of. .liealth. Much better to -act in time. 'Usa De. . Pills ; they strengthen and regulate the bowel, . assist !digestion, enrich the blood and ehereby.fortily the nerves and , lay/ the foundation of lasting good ' ' , • Dr.. Hamilton's Fills bring' vim and Vitality so much solight for • today ; . they infuse a teeling of fteshiesS • and spirit in those who have been ailing. • -16e., years:. Really no medicine so. • potent: Price 25c at all dealers. • Wark.44 Son"a• safe at Belmont Was •bldesn open; het; the burglars only got 411 'In a quaIre1 aetween.two,IndiaeS at Cornwell' Lei IS Tigers was stabbedhy teeoveetherhcart. • • • .4-IarShaw.:-was killed by an ei-' e044, trainat Comber; wage trying• • to at; id an. ePpreeelang feaeht..' Grtiteuf_Trunk: express'. was -derail- - -.r.ed near Woodstock, and a euraber of s passengers, injured," but not seriously. ' John McAinsh of Guelph township, :a ed $3 years, .dieci from a dose of P is ;green, taken with suicidal itt- tenft • Mrs. Robert Armstrong of . Guelph 't6wnship was injured in a runaWay,ae .a funeral. Mr. Armstrong was else, thrown out, but, escaped with a ',few •• bruises. The Liberals norninated Dr. Giles of .lia.iiburton for Victoria and Halibut - ton, and Mr. P. R. McGibbon for Ar- genteuil for the Commons yesterday; and the Conservatives nominated Mr. Ja .eseele -Donnelly for :South; prUce. A eallettay, from Damascus to Med- lea, the holy city, was opened yea- terday. WILL KEEP HINDUS 'OUT. Each -Immigrant Must Have $200 - New Order In Council. With a view to restricting emigra- tion from India to Canada an order - in -council has been,paesed making. it compulsory that every Indian irnmni- grant eighteen years• or over shall have in his or her poeeession the sure. of at least $200 on landing in Canade., It is understood that the regulation is Made with the consent of the .Brit- ish Government.' Although as d re- sult of -the regulations passed' on the return of Mr. Mackenzie lairig .frein England 'tied the station of the Indian. authorities -in iliseoureging any ,furth- er emigration of Hindus to this coun- try theinflux -f the latterhas Ptac -steijiliedeethe‘Geverninene •••hstri WHERE HOGS CARRY MAIL Work in Arctic Circle Tells Hardly on Esquimau Canines. Until the caning of the Americans the leaders in Esquimau dog teams were unknown in the Arctic, The trail was g!merally brokenby an Ins clian or Esquimau woman running' ahead of the team, her ting mukluks -which are high boota made of the akin Of the hair seal or the reindeer - Pounding through the pow, while her liegelord snuggled in the sledge's fur -lined bed. Few pure malainutes (native dogs descended from the Siberian wolf) are now employed in the usail service. Their legs are tee short, their feet sink too readily through the snow. Preferenoe is given to a eines between the malamute or McKenzie husky, St. Bernard or Newfoundland with a lit - tie bound. , The Esquimau begins to train his dog for !sledge work, before it is a month old. One of the most iuterese ing features. of Esquimau Tillages are puppies tied to the pole of a tent. They pull on the rope with all their puppy strength in the effort to break away and jointhe frolics of their el - dere, Not until a dog bred for mail ser- vice is one year oldes it put in train- ing for the trail. It begins by run- ning ten miles with the team, then it is dropped out. Next day it runs the same distance. Graduelly the dis- tance is encreased until it reaches its fifteenth mouth of life, when it -becomes-part-of theeregular-eervi The life of a mail dog is from three to four years. No greater minishinent can be inflicted than to lay a dog off from service. When unruly they are often threatened with a Neale and with almost huinan intelligence they seem to uuderstabd the disgrace - it iinplies to the eyes of their fellow - workers on the trail. All fight to be leaders. Some dogs are better trail followers than others. 8s some aro beater lead- ers. In a blizzard the best of them lope the 'trail, but invariably find it. When on elle trail they eat but once a day, then at the end of the journey. • After feeding like weary children. they fall asleep and a.reeever quarrelsome; it fakes on an average 20 ponnds of food a day for a team of eleven; dogs .on a hard mete. The dogs of the mail teains Consum- ed last year thee toes of bacon and. one ton of rice. The rice and bacon. are cooked together with frozen fish 'and eaten hot. • The dogs are permit- ted to eat all they want: ' • . When toe hot they pool it in the snow: If near the sea ores river they will cunningly pull the vessel out on the iee and test the temperature of the contents- with- their long tongues until the iness can be eaten without burning the mouth.Frozen Ash is the staple food of the native dog. . AMID HOINIXID Woodmen's Skill Saved Troop Dr Fro.. Lingering lesath. the isiinsaYpPele rifen5isaerneePolfe7)ue(rie 1.4) thin. that the contrary is aometinies • caee was recently proved to the real. dente of Weonga, a Canadian frontlet eillage of the silent north, when the:, were called upon to go to Big Ca° lake and bring out Eugene Hanle. 't trapper, who for nearly three week, had been slowly starving because bedridden with a severe attack et risheroumnsaitdieentred. reThmaatrkthaeblem." irtIrVIVeri Hardy. who, in spite of his name, is anything but robust, was found by a fellow trawl'. through the merest chance, and was then in such a wast- ed condition that it was linPossible to take him out of the woods for six days. By administering coarse broths Made hem venison and partridge bones, he finally strengthened hie charge enough to move him over 29 miles of trails en a litter. From that point the trip to civilization was inardeatebrYrsoc"Evorc;Ybg. Teethe temstlfis.man who fortunately came upon Reedy, was prospecting for a new camp when be discevered traps with dead animate in them. His experienced eye -tele him that the animals had been dead from one to two weeka and. they had probably been caught some days be- fore death occurred. The latter lad was pretty conclusively established by the wasted condition of the bodies. Lovejoy erfenthediately -deduced- that the owner of the traps had met with a mishap and he set out to and him. At the end of a two days' search he heard a couple of wolves howling in a sheltered ravine ane a little later he came upon a small cabin built against a ledw of _rock. "There was no indication of human life 'about the Plaee. Snow, untracked save by wolves and other marauders. covered the ground, but a /mil turned upside down, showed that someone had plaeed it by the door long after the first SnOW had fallen. When Lovejoy opened the door, which had been securely caught with a drop latch. Hardy was. seen lying on his bunk apparently dead. ale Was whites ema'ciated and still. Tito cabin itself was in disorder. Most of the rough furniture had been used for fuel. and broken tables and chairs ley strewn neer the fireplace. Some Potato skies and strips of deer hide , were soalcing insa rusty pail of snow water and a few grains of wheat lay on hollow stonee where an attempt had been made to grind them. A. beat' akin, three blankets and an old coat covered .Hardy while another skin lay within easy reach. Lovejogefirseedeterrnined :that his fellow trapper was Olive, and then be- set about to care for him. First he built a rousing fire and when -this had begun to warm the cabin he went td a grove Of spruce nearby and shot a eouple of partridges. A rabbit was also knocked over. With this supply of provisions and some coffee and jerked venisot from his own seek he prepared 4' substantial meal. The principal dish. was a ricli but eweo. stele; and when a cupful had been forced down Handy's throat he opened his eyes' and looked . about. 'Rheumatism." he said feebly, and then kelaissed into a stupor from which he did not arenas!! • for several hours. On- awakening he Was fed • more soup, but. it was not until the following morning that he espied give an account of, himself. In the night wolves appeared. but, they made , no ehaseAsine. •:. . HarcleS story when finally told was that he had begun experienchig twinges of. rheumatism in one arm eerie. in the fall, but es. they did. net increase' be paid little attention to them. Three Weeks before he was found he got soaked in a chilling iain and next niornin.g :wee hi a high fever. When he.. tried to arise he was attaelied by . shooting penis in legs and arms and it was with great difficulty that be iiyia.ptepare his breakfast. He .gat through with the ordeal after intense suffering and managed to gather a little wocxl. ' • Welt- wee out of the question and .Eatde remained in his bunk forthree days, getting out only to feed himself and keep the fire burning. All this time the fever kept up and the supply of wood and previsions diminished. To make. matters worse , wolves put in an appearance and howled about the cabin both day and night, making it dangerous •for Hardy ' to creep out for wood. found.. thetateneelifseetat or two by wheat Hiedus, attracted by Stories of high wages in. British . Co- ' lumlate, might still get into Caniela. In. order to forestall any, possible: in - flue this summer the new regulatioe has beee passed. * .• • ' The orderen-in does" not spepi- &ally .mentiori India'.as the country particularly .affected. by it, but . is cOUChq. in general .language. India, however ; is the only country to whiee it will apply. . • , The order recites that:. -"Whereas Canada is looking primarily' for im- migrants of an agricultural class to; :occupy vacant lands, ane -as.: tame grante froth : Asia belong, as enle, to the laboring 'classes, and their .lan- ..geage and mode. rif" life render them unsuited for settlerrient in Caneda, where there are no colonies of their own' people to insure their mainten- ance in ease of their inability to se - Wilbur Wriglit flew six miles in. tee cute..employinent, it is necessere t a prOVISIOn:he Made so that such tenni-. isu s with hisenereplaitera. . , •-•::----ssraisseesse-peseesseeesess, of au , e ans. money to Make them temporarily in- ' Baron Sackville; who we's British dependent of unfavorable industrial - Minietei to the tinited States . from conditions when 'coming into .Caelada. 1881 to 18e8, is dead: . . , "Therefore, his Excellency the Gov - Abd -el -Aziz, the defeated Moroccan' ernor-General-in-Couneil is pleased to order that the amount of money re- Stdtan, has • definitely resolved to quirecl to be in possession Of each im- withdraw from the contest. ' migrant as a condition to his being' W. 'I'. R. Prestonlrophesies 'that in ,permitted to enter 'Canada shall be fifty years Japan will have a piniula- and the same is hereby increased to tion of ;70,000,900. $200 hi the ease of all Asiatic immi- „ The pettish Minjater to Venezuela • grants, other than those with Whose has gone unexpectedly to Trinidad to countries, the Government of Canada teinnienicate with the Foreign he.s speeial arrangements: 'or those °ific6. concerting whose coentries sPeciel Lieut -General F. W. •Kitchener, statutory:regulations exist on the Part , brother of Lord Kitehener, will sec-. of Canada. .The conditions as to tick- •' teed General eVodeliouse as, Governor ets to destination to remain •ELS at f Perri-10de. preseet." • ' A 'NEW. EMPIRE. .citeadien, feci-thwest ,Unustrally ..Flich and Fertile. Country: • • The new world of the isventie century is Canada's fertile riorthland on the Arctic slope, The Centidiari prairie ; provinces of elenitpba; Sas- katchewan end Alberta have nearly reached .the 100,000,000 bushel rna.ris of .annual wheat. production; and there are oleo being produced: nearly a mil- lion liushels a other grains annitellys The treet of country from which -this --enormous yield of vein is being pro- duced is preeticell confined to what •'he bee •kiie it ' eseeesats. „._ • in this teat ton Area, ee. Tri the country north of this is a great clay belt estiinated contain at least 10.000 square miles, where all , the. ordieary vegetaltles and hardier grains. can be grown:. ere are other sources ef • wealth here' : About 11 yeare ago there , was bored seir the Athabaska, 170 miles north . of -Ed- monton, a prospect ,hole- looking for natural gas.. The 'gas come in limb force as, to Feet) sthe operations, and this gas well. the largest:: known itt the world, has been buTerng continu- ously ever since.. Up and. down the Athabaska, . above. and -below this • peints ere rernerkable ,deposits of. tax sands, ns they are called, whieh, if utilized,. would - paving mater- ial in abrindance. Moreover, there is indiestfitable evidence of enormous. wealth in petroleum, which in oozing out as it has done through centuries, has eaused these •strange deposits. In the vieinity ;of the tar sands, aleng e t • • The village of Sayaheo, ittinottsid county, Quebec, :Wee almost wiped out by fire. Pref. Shoat ot Kingston and Mr. M. Q. Larochelle have been appointed Commissioners of the civil service, and the new act came into force on Tilesda,y. Two yeeneFenelen Palls men were stabbed by a couple of youths from the United States in a (Owe' arieing from the hrisitors' walking with Fen- elon Falls gide. The great ell fire near Tampico, Mexico, which burned for two months, and 0Onsunied three xenon dollars worth of coal oil, has been extinginsh- ed at last. GREA.TEST FEMA.LE STRENGTH-. BNER ON EARTH. Thousands of women are wan; pal- lid, rundown and dispirited. What they need is that nourishing, tonic Ferrozone. Soon they regain those • laughing gee,, ,bright spirits, end. ropy cheeks, Ferrozone does this and more as Mrs.. le F. Adrianson of Whitney Pier, testifies ; aely daughter was very much run down and had considerable troubles „at times. Often was at a loss teknow Whet to do. I War advised tp give her rerrozone and I did so, Feriozone cleared up all the trouble, made my daughter healthy _Fereeteope gives good appetite, -regulates, strengthons:1 I. eonsider it a medicine every woman should use gegularly if she wants to feel :her best'? Rebuild w th Ferro - zone, it e; tbe° King of all cures. Price 50e pa box at all dealers, Elght trellee ears loaded with •ex- cursionists wete 'stalled by potato bugs on the rails near Bristol, Conn. lYlajor-General Charlei J. Moorsom, who limed in Canada as a captain at tho time of the Fenian raid, is dead in South Atrica. Tbe British hark Amazon Was wrecked Off the Welsh West and e1 of her crew were drowned. Four seamen on the British bark Puritan. were suffocated, in the hold of the vessel' near Boston. The Shales troops have been, defeat- ed by the insurgents. at Tabrie and 800 killed ea• wounded. WRY BURN YOUR TOES? Stop using Acid Corn Selves, use rutnam's Painless Extractor ; it costs a little more, but it's far the best. Use only . "Putnara's"-25c at ell dealers, A severe lightning and hail eterre mused much damage in :Kent county, Dr. -Mitten L, Hersey of Montreal has given ele,000 to • the Kingston Minine,Schoel. Willip J, Crow, a cattle bilyer Cheney, committed suicide by shoot- ing himself. The Railway Commission is con- sidering regulations for careyieg ex- plosives on railways, The -1/Eiernete Iron Cdtaliiihrs' smelting works were struck ity light- ning and burned. Wm. Wilkon, constable of Erin, is suing William Hull, J. P,,• foe dalnag- es for having him locked up,. 4,44.••••••••••••,, CLECTROeCAMICA.L, Are gueranteed to cure Rhenmetisni and Neuralgia: -- The ElearteChenifeal Rings is not eivignoi tint charm or faith eure, 110t, a *teem ifie median' for the lion aerie aid from the blood, The sechet, the pOWeii, the inerit in this ring flee in the combination of the various motels of which ihs ring is made. Nit matter what the; trutible is, if it is caused by exeese of uric! acid, The Electro -Chemical king will effect care. Looks jest like any other nijijeg. Can he WOini day and night. We guarantee these Rings td do all we deka, Cali and Exitinine These Rings. W. R. • Jeweler And Engraver. 9 issuer of Marriage Licenses aeeitatesedeeeWeeteseeseesseeke eseeees;ases teseeesseeiget4eAretir deposits'of salt, wherelt can be taken from the surface in great massee.s,nure white. Along the hanks of the lower Mackenzie for many miles are .great areas of burning coal. Truthful and Ingenious. Among earns) stories nt Easter -time, Says... the Austrelaiian, was one brought finite London by an :Change" officer, and it concerned a Canadian colonel of militia, who went to England after distinguished service in the South 'African war. He and other officers dined at a Guards' mess, and naturally the talk turned for a while on the value of a militia in countries with little or no perman- ent soldiery. How could officers spare the time -Was one question. The Canadian named their professions; re, lilted bow they stole certaiii after- noons from business, merchants leev- ing. their ''Counting-nouses, - teachers thele scheols, and so on.. A element cattle when everybody looked at ,Col, Blank, ;What did he do in business home, and how did ae manage to get 'away? Now. have I mentioned that Blank was net only a good Soldier, but also a thriving undertaker? Well, he was. You see his dilemma. The undertaker is a useful and gen- erally sympathetic member of so- biety, but for all his pride in his calling, he would never be 'able to eornmend it to the Grenadier Guards. So the colonel (weakly, if you like) hesitated, boggled .a little. Suddenly inspiration came. tonnes' the medical proles store" he said truthfully. 1441eus California Blackbirds. According to a California newspaper thousands of savage blackbirds infest the city of Los Angeles. in some of the suburbs they are So bold arid vi- .eidtal that dogs are kept on the pimp avoiding them, men on bicycles 'roe sometimes chased for bloi•ks nod tn.. destriatis pecked on the hoe& ifthey happen under trees whore there rio nests. The birds usually fight in pairs. it a Marl With it very white hat comet along they sw,Nop down. beat it with their wings and claw et it with the rage of wounded tingles. *Fre- quently they alm their tiberp berets' at the victim's eyes and he has oulty in defending himself. The painful yelping of eoenered canines attracts floeks ot the birds and then the fur flies, ow e 'me week he scarcely remerribered. He said that when the wood gave Out en- tirely he managed to break up some of the furniture by Tolling a heavy, rock up an inclined board and letting it fall on tables and chairs. With the food gone he resorted to ungromid grain, tallow candles and strips of deer hide • boiled in snow water. , Lovejoy saw he could not take the, man out alone, so after getting sup- plies tram his own camp, nine miles distant. he went. to W °ono, for help: Volunteers Went into, the woods axle Hardy was carried out. . a. Canada's Garden Spot. • Canada is all the tiMe'discovering fertile districts of limited extent which it calls garden spots. The Cana- dian school geographies of 20 years age gave that name to the Annapolis valley in Nova Scotia where the ale ales grow. . The Okanagan is a • depression in the mountains, running north and 'south formore than 40 miles. It holds a lake of the same name which is 80 miles long and of an leverage width of three miles. ,The area from the shores of this lake to the•foothills La fast fining up with orchards. Of course there are apples, as there are everywhere almost in Canada, but poaches, apricots, nectarines, grapes and even figs flourish in the southern part of the valley The rainfall is less than 10 inches year, so irrigation has to be resorted to. The soil is amazingly fertile, tin orchard earning its keep In a few sea - eons. It is a prosperous community. The nexnes of the taw= have a proepereus sound. 'There is Summer - land and a Peachland. Presumably it is all Happyland. A. madman caused a panic on the, London Stock Exchange yesterday by firing three shots from his revolver in • the building. , The two-year old child of Pelican McLean Of Rodney was drowned in a cistern. Great damage' has boleti done in Eng- land and along the coast by terrific storms during the ladt two days. The Japanese stoanier Bankoku Monk was %rank off Clubs. Frotecture with a • loss of twenty-eight livers. Charles Jones, a well-known acron-i ant,' fell a distance of 500 feet at Waterville, Mee and was killed. JUST WHERE THE DANdell LIE'S. In many catarrh. snuffs, cocaine is the largely. used ingredient ; in COD.- seipience the drug habit may be •tor,- med. To be really cured of catarrh, to do so quickly safely and pleasant- ly, doctors say Catarrhozone is super- ior to atny other remedy, ' It heals sore Places, stops :discharge, prevents haw- king, spitting and bad breath --does this by first destroying the cause of the disease. Catarrhozono no ex- periment, it iS teed and proven cure that is guaranteed for bronchial, , throat nose and lung catarrh Two sizes, 25e and $1,Q0 at all dealers, • Swift trt CO, of. 'Chicago aee said to be interested in an extensive stuck- yaed and abattoir 'scheme at Winnie, peg. 111011611111111=11111, epilogs sc::::OL BIts7, F4IT ;77-t iuin dr II ,,,01 A.4711 140 's <//' - SaTO TviE. .7.• • 0 TEAcHuit—jolannie, what does this represent? JOHNNIE--Rerrin's . School. BisCuits. , TEAcHER-7What do you know. about them? joHNiTIE—They are good to eat Mother says they are the best biscuits • . . . made for hungry •boys and girls. , , • ,,, . TEAcHER-7;correct . colannie, :_., your Mother is right. I also use them , . and find them exceedingly. good. . se. 4 44L • Deeper Veit. Towner -1 suppose , he's Amp its love's young dream. Browne -No; he's pan that Amiga. He's troubled with insomnia new.' Ambiguour. , "Arc you looking for troubler *.rim looking for tny wife." • The Boling Paision, Shipwrecked Mariner -A sail! A eail at lade Fair One in Distress (weakiy)- What are they advertising? • • Acaing •The Family Herald and, Weekly Star of Montreal is noted for its excellence and has the largest circulation o evirspaper-L, published in America. The News -Record, on the oth- er hand, works the local field in which it has no superior. The two cover the whole field well. •, • .In order tliaithese-two papers mayreach still' more 'homes we • will send them both to any ad- dress in Canada until :Jan. 1909; for $5. cents. Send. your .orders to -2 W.. 4:41. :ewsoRecord.,... Clinton,.... Opt osotattwtotoiao,amatwotawt +1,