Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1909-09-09, Page 6Making Money • On the farm V.—Oat 6rowino 8rO V GRE6ORY. •41010c,Of Corsolo Moho]. Agriculture" CeexriObt. 1999, by American Pone " Amealstion EXT. to wheat, oats are the most widely grown small grain crop. it is a crop thesis eeed- ed on eery farm fiar feed, es- •pecielly , for young stoelt and horses. „In tine corn belt oats go ie a place in •'the rtitP:tion that cannet web be taken •by nay other crop. The Work of seed. • leg And harvesting tits In well with the • ;work Of grOWIlIg a nom Stein hence eata are and probably always will be an imeortant crop to the core belt. in spite of tbese reasons for growing oats they are pot usually conskiered to .•be g profitable crop. The price is less than that ot corn and the yield uhual- • nth '911-000.1> AND POOR STACKS. •ly considerably lower. Most farmers raise oats more because they have to than because they think there is . any. * money in it. If handled rightly, how- ever, oats can be made a money crop. • One of the most important points in oat growing is the selection of seed Cough Caution Never. positively never poison yourlungs. Ilion Cough—even from a simple cold only—you should Aunty's heal, soothe, and ease the irritated brott. alai tubes. Don't blindly suppress it with a stupefying poison. it's strange how mamthings finally come about. For twenty Years Dr. Shoop has Constantly warned people not to tato courts mixtures or prescriptions containing Opium. •Chloroform, on similar poisons. And now—a little late though—Congress says "Put It on the label. if vole are in your Coug,1 Mixture." Good! Verygood It liereafterforthlaveryreasonmothers, and others. should insist on having Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. No poison marks on Dr. Shoop's labels—and none in the medicin& else it must 57 law be on the label. And it's not only safe. but it • is Bald to be by those that know it best. a truly re. markable cough remedy. Take no chance then, particularly with your children. Insist on haiing Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. Compare carefully the Dr. Shoop package with others and note the difference. No poison marks there! You can always be on the safe side by demanding Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure Sold by "ALL DRUGGISTS" We Want to Land. yourafirst order, because we know that the satisfaction you will -derive from that will open your eyesto the fact shat you cannot do better anywhere else that yoil can with us. You will find that we are not "all at sea" in our business, but thoroughly•'up- to- the m minute" and watchful of the interests If our customers, knowing that. by so loing, we are really acting for our own ultimate benefit. R., A. DOWNS, Merchant Tailor, Clinton, W.H.Watts & Son ,haaie everything needed in the shoe repairing line to execute all their work well and promptly. A trial will con- • vince you that our material andWork- rnatiship is of the best procurable any- where. We also repair Suit Caties, Satchels and Pocket 'Books, also clean and dye SiLttlel. ear old stand is opposite the Postoffiee ••••••••=o Nada° to our Customers in and around Londesboro that we intend keeping our shoe -re- pairing Stand on as usual and all re- ' repairs will have our best and most careful attention. Will be there Wed- neddays and Saturdays and arrange- ments have beet inatle with Mr, Adel= tc take in work and give out same at any time the days we are not there, still solisiting your Patronage. Material and Workmanship Giutranteed to be the nest .. • MPH Watts St. Son t 11.11CIIINE FOR 161All seeky and West have just bought a machine fop attaehing Rubber *.fireit to bug. gled. and are prepared to do all work of this kind promptly and 'at reatiable tatiees. • • AIM all kinds of lathe Work, . grinding. anti maeltitie repairing, • We have installed .1t, imttchin4; �r argadiun Merle ellOperS and Ate prepared to do sucit work in first clase inanter. SEELEY 4: WEST kOBMITliS The beneficial effect of iron upon the system weakened through -illness overwork or anemia, is well 'known. IPer. rovint is a preparation which supplies the valuable element in the most efficient way, com- bining with it the nourishing qualities of beef and. the mild- ly stimulative effect of sherry wine. VerroVim costs $1.00 a, bottle at druggists. JAENTHQL PLASTER • IgOR liAcKACHE, • SCIATICA, rumor. STITCHES,CRICKS, • NEVRALPIA,, RHEUMATISM gc, in air -tight stin box; yard PAIS-$I.Off, can be cat to any else, 4 • Beware of worthless imitations. •1,47X1 & rotwnuRte co., nfontrott cunt rs atlaptett to t ne mutiny. :nits are a cool ,weather crop. The bot aniclsommer weenier air, the cern belt irone 'settle cbief 'factors causing low oat yields. When the hot weather strikes the oats they blight and- suet badly; • Many times they crinkle down and ao pot fill well. ' Advantage of Early Varieties, The only Way this can be avoided in the corn belt is to sow early varieties. • Tbese ripen before the Widest Weather comes aed escape many of !the trou- bles thatsaftect later .oats. Early va- rieties are much less susceptible to rust than late ones are. The selection of rust proof varieties is the only way of combating thisdisease, since. un- like smut, it 'cannot be prevented -by treating the seed. Experimeuts at the Iowa experiment station show eine bushels morale the ORM in favor dr early varieties. Tho. average of twelve years experiments at the Nebraska station gave the early oats fourteen bushels to the acre ad- ventage.- in geed eat years—that is. those with a cool sustainer—the differ-. nee is not so marked. In. such sea- sons the late.oats yielded seven bush- els to the acre less than the early, while the medium oats yielded a little more. In bad oat years—and In the corn belt folk years out of five are bad from the oats standpoint—the early vs. tidies yielded twenty-one bushels to the acre more than the late andtines teeu bushels more than the medium. The medium varieties aremore con- venient, as they do notcrowd inon - haying and corn plowing like theearly ones do. The use Ot Unproved' haying machinery. is Shortening the time re- quired for putting up the hey crop, however. The advantageof early oats in yield, will in roost cases .more than make up- for the disadvantnee of hey- ing work crow•ded during the first half of July.. . • • • Early oats have another advantage in that they give the stover a bet- ter -chance. Where, the pate are not. got off the ground until- the, last of July and dry weather follows, as it so often (lees, theSelOver makes little growth and is often killed Out einire- ly. With the adoption of a eysternatie rotation dieser *Ili 'nearly always be seeded with oats, so that this is np.ohti that cannot be ignored. . ' It is not advisable to ship in . oats from a distance to peed the . entire Odd. Often you tan get ,good early seed from a neighbor at little more than market price. If there are no early oats in your col-roe:unity you can send away for a few bushels' of a .new variety and plant there in a corner of the field by -themselves, If they -ere good satisfaction enough seed can be saved from them to seed the entire. field the next season. In tbe -northern , part of the United States and in Can- ada, where the stompers are tool, late vaineues dui yroutsioly grow iliteti localitisa tbe Y /Ova i Pater yiehl and a larger, plumper ast Preparing the Seed. After the seed bast been prod/red the neat step Is, to get it into sieve to sow. This inetzus a liberal Use of the farming mill. A large 1$er cent of the oats gown are shoveled from the bin direetly into the Seeder. Moet fann- ers who do fan their oats simpla run them through ence to blow Out the 'sticks and dirt and Sieve out the Weed seed. It pays welt tc run tbe oate through the mill two or three thaes to blow out nil eheI1t eed. The work can be done in winter when there Is little else to do. The light nuts that are blowu out are just as good for feed as the others, and the %eery ones that ere left are worth sae. -rid Minns as much tor eeed. In ex - set imente curried on to show the cons re naive sidue of light and heavy oats 'lett seed yielded forty-sesen bush - 411 to the acre, the medium tifts-four and the heavy sixty-two. The differ- ence Ina not be this greatevery time, but it will alviely$ be great enough to pay well for tbe labor of fanning. There is an objection to using the heavy oats for seed in that they tend to become a little later each year. Th14 can be avoided by introaucing some new seed of an early variety every few years. Directions for breeding seed oats will be given in article 7. After the oats are cleaned Jand grad- ed they should be treated -for smut Smut is a black fungus that grows from a tiny spore that lodges beneath the hull wben the oat is ib bloom afid. the kernel open. When the hull closes, the spore is held, inside until. the next season, when it prouts and sends a abroad up through the stem to the • head. There tbe smut grows, ,proclue- Mg a • black miss where the head -should be. Often as many as 15 per cent of the beads will be erected in this way. Tnese black beads are not easily noticed. se that the damage is nsually underestimated. ' The simplest teethed et treatment is to spread the oafs out on alight door and sprinkle them with a solution of one pound of fortnalin to forty gallons of water. This amount is sufficient for forty bushels of oats. Shovel the .oats over two or three times until they are thoroughly wet, and then pile them up aud"cover thein. with blankets or sacks, The fumes from the formalin will penetrate beneath the hull and kill the smut spores. In the morning the oats -should be. spread out again and shoveled o'er occasionally •non dry. They can be sowed atets but in that casesthe seeder should be. Set to sow about a bushel to the acre more, as they (16 not run through as readily. This work should be done on a warm • day, as freezing while the oats are wet Will injure the germination. This treat• s- ment,costs only about a cent a buebel and is very effectiv& •• Preparing the 'Seed Bed. • One of the Most neglected points in oat culture is the ,preparation of the •seed. bed. Oats d6 'better on a rather firm Seedbed. •If the field was in corn. the year previous it will not be neces- sary to plow unless the ground Is very hard, it should be disked thoroughlY, however, ft" cut up the stalks and pub- verize the upper two or tbree inches. It will usually be profitable to let the , disk slap hate" as thill dties away with ridges and leaves the -land in better shape. One tairrossing after the • disking leaves the ground in splendid shape to receive the seed. • •s Methods of Seeding. . . • • . There are .several methods of seed- ing, of which ithe end, gate ,seeder Is the worst and The disk drill the best The two 'main objects in seeding' are to get the iieed in evenly and at ap- proximately tbesame depth: The end -gate seeder fulfills neither of these re- quirementa. • The broadcast seeder scat- ters the seedevenly, but it is covered no better than svitb, the end gate seed- er Since both depend upon the disk . for - covering. ' The disk drill is More 'ex- • pensive and does —.not getover the ground as rapidly, but it distribus stbe deed evenly and puts it at the same depth. 'The seed is dropped in furrows made by the -disks and thor- mighty covered, so that one harrowing Is all that is necessary after drilling. Experiments fibber a conelderable ad- • vantage in yield In favor of the diet .drill. • , At the Iowa station the averige Of four years experiments shoved nine Imaheni to the acre in favor of drilling over broadcasting. aVoin half a bush- el to e bushel. less peed to theater°. Ss required when a 'drill „is . used, as•all Cured by Lydia E. Pink* bain'sVegetableComPound Baltimore; "]?or four yinirs• my life was a misery to me. 1 suffered from irregulari- ties. terrible drag- ging sensations, extreMe nervous- ness, and that all gone feeling in my stoniach. I had given up hope of ever being well when I began to take Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound. Then I fen 'as` though . new life had. ,been given Me, and X am reconiniending it to all my friends."—Mrs. W. S. Pon% 1.038 trallSdOWbe St., Baltimore, Md, • • The most successful remedy in this country for the cure of all forms of female tomplainta is Lydia rink: Vegetable Compound; It has stOoa the test of years arid today IS Morevidely and suceesSfunrised than any other female remedy. It has cured thousands Of Wettien. who have been troubled With displacements, Warn. molten, ulceration,fibroid tumors, it. regularities, lietiodie 'pain% backache, that bearing -down he ling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means had failed. If you are suffering from any of these ailments, don't Oft up hope until you have giventydia B. Mikhail's ?age. 'table compound a trial. If you would like special advice writ* to mit,. Pinkhanak Lynn o She, ba* Stubled Monate& to bestltb.1 freo of rick vrit—tuvra Galax watt, SiloOltEb the Seed IS put where it can grow to the best advantage. Clover has a bet- ter chanee In`drilled grain. The &III should be nit north and *Muth. ;So that the Sun can shine tn between the tenni on the little clover plaints. Harvesting the Crepe , veneration for fisietetit ShOulti hr WOOd.1111511.05110614; Great 1/Juglith Remedth once and inviaOratenthe whole ttervotte SYstein. Maketi now kiddie isdveliesseSerea 2rere4 ortsikbility llfentri and P'rni n.vvOrrli.19ca. poncterov, —mom; weekarte, lorafictons. adpera gratorrhcea, and freed* of Abuse Or Enema. Fri Meer bee, sixfarts. One WiliPlease six Sold b II dintt :trotapaaltvoil OU • Moit cases of bakIness are due solely to neglect, The hair often becomes dry and dandruff forms because the hair glands do not supply enough nat- ural oil. Nothing overcomes • this decieuck 50 effectively as that delicately perfumed, re- freshing hair pomade, Bearine. Avoid baldness; apply *arine to your hair occasionally. All druggists, 50 cts. a jar. 4,20.exi meat, Alfigtfall A thick adhesive ointment, etimblued with japsnese Menthol and Vaseline. two of the most wonderful healing drugs known. whose ffer from limes. /Earache. It soothes, heels and tends to restore those Reu- g, irritated end other Skin troublr The word 'Salve" literally means be welt or in good neelth. Try Davis' blelnitkel Sabre sail sou will be relieved, All Dealers. DAVIS Zt LAWRANCE. CO., Mont cal. t_e 4 • auntie PY UaVihg ttiO Witter in perteec running ortleS beforehand,. If eats. are not cut as wain an ripe, they. will al- most' urely go down and • be ' lost, • Great eine should bo takett in'ehockIng to see that this bundles stand up firm- ly. If the straw is not too gfeen the shocks should be capped, as a capped shock will shed rain better. A shock that steeds lap straight and is well gapped wid shed- a great deal of rain withoin wettlug itt inueh. It is much • better 'to stack than to thrash out of the sheds. The oats will Sweat -some- • where, and they will be 'of better qual- Sty if they do it in tbe stack instead of in the bins It has been proved naany times over that there is nothing to be gained by thrashing oats trona , the - shock. Oats that have, been permitted., to 'go through tbe sweating process, tif a well' protected stack are always of better quality tban those which have 'seen nurried 'auto the thrasher. NOW•IS'TH1S? Sassafras andliurclock for the blciod, Dandelion and Rhubarb fer stomach. Mandrake and Juniper for liver and kidneys, Cascarra tend Senna for the bowels,Oapeicum and Aloin to pre- vent griping. U -Need -a Barb Tablets tiontain these valuable ingredientse po tablets for 25c; 250 tablets for 51.00. A doctor for half.a.cent a day. VIVI, samples at all druestoressissOinton, March 2.9 -yr -11. • • .1 ICED .TEA, How to Make and Serve Thie Refresh, • 'leg:Summer Drink. However the doctors and heitlth •fearful May reVile iced-. tea, it is bound to stay as long as thermometers are ee unruly in sunimer; It is sur- prising, conildering the amount of ieed tea Americans °onetime, how • rarely it is good. . •The most scientific and supposedly healthful war to prepare it Is to pour: freshly brewed het tea over a large lamp of ice, then .pour into glasses half filled with shaved ice. • More economical is it to maim a small quantity of rather strong tea several hour's before it is to be used, let It cool' in the refrigerator and weaken to the desired consistency • with "iced water fast before* needed, It is * mistake -to think iced tea can be cooled byrew lumps in the pitcher. There mustbe either • erack- • ed or, shaved ice. it glasses to make it palatable. • Lemon is also better added before the meal than at, The usual way • is to pass a section of lemon to each guest; • Far better IS the both lemonand sugar are•Inixed with the fee when the iced water • is added. Better yet is it:to adopt the Russian -planof grating the rind of a lemon and pouringhot tea •over it. i If lernon s passed, as it May have be.when scrim of the farnitriftliknot like it, cut into lengthwise sections rather 'than thin rounds and pais in addition a small glees pitcher filled .with extra lemon mice. Mint leaves or lemon verbena add- ed to iced tett, besides the •leinon, gives a delicious flavor. It is also good with a little ginger syrup or a few drops of rum. • One hostess on gala occasions serves 'Iter iced tea poured cold over lemon, orange or pineapple stierbet.' This is served in punch -bowl, and each guest fills her tall gl -4 with the mix- ture... In this case crate ice is not used. The Winner ad more slexi• der feed tea, glass is the more refreshing it 'tastes. It ^shoulti be stood on a - glass saucer or tumbler _coaster. If possible Use tong pandled spoons i . Blemishes,. On theFace'. 000 AVir. •• Don't go about with a fa.ce full of blotches or tither skin eruptions, , Clear off these disfiguretnents in a ' *short time at little expense. These unsightly blemishes tome from im- pure blood and a disordered sys. tem but will all disappear after a" •few doses of which do the. wat quickly.. and thoroughly. Salves, ointments and ' washes never cure a pint* ince, 'YOU Mug get the poison outof the system. This is what. Beecham's Pills do. They move the bowels, start the bile, carryoff the impurities, cleanse and Vitalize the blood and Beautify the Complexion. Farm an9 Geaden ARCHITECTURE IN GATES. Ornamental Poste of Oement—Advera . taigas of a icieubli. Entrance. The approach to thelartu Is like the !ace at the open door of the house. iThe first cut in this artiele represents ;he gatepests rather than the gate it - Wit However, an iron gate maile as Mown from gas or water pipe would aot look out of place on almost any !erns -It may be hunt by' your 'swat alacksmith and should not be Over- A.Xpensive. But any iron or substan- lei gate may ef course be used and desired one of the self opening gates merated by tbe wbeel of the wane or suggy. Now as to the cement posts. For mall gates they should be from tea to .wetre inches square, for large gates from sixteen to twenty inches square Ind possibly in some cases even larger, Phey are built of beliow blocks set in• :tement mortar, and the hollow space s fftIed withsconcrete. To, make the ?locks build two bottomless wooden saxes. To illustrate we will say .we . Ciii:TEPOSTS OF OEMBNT. are building an eighteen inch post. • Build one box eighteen inches square • sn the inside and eight inehes deep. • Por, a larger post have the box deeper, ter a smaller post not so deep, Build a second box the same depth ten inches square on the outside. Place the email box bald° of the larger one and as sear the center as possible. Nail stout' strips across the opposite corners to hold the boxes square end in place. Set the moldor boxes on any level' floor or board and. you are ready to make the blocks. • The mixture for filling the niold is es Mewls: One part 'cement and our parts sand if you" desire a smooth block. ID the tough surfase is, pre- ferred use some cearse gravel or crush- ed stoee in place of all sand.. Mix the two together dry and 'add water until the consistency is jelly-like and a hand- ful when squeezed will hold its shape. Pill the mold. tamp lightly, let set for verk short time, tap the outside box lightly with & hanamer and lift straight •-ap. Small .cleathShould beautified on the sutside of the large box for hand holds. Tile surfaces of the boxes touched by the cement meat be smooth, kept clean and web ,oiled with any oil or soft. soap. , The operation is repeated until the required number of blocks • have been made. When dry, wbish • will, be in about ten day's, excavate' not less than three, feet deep and have • the excavation eight inches larger on all sideslhan the post Lay the blocks' up as shown, placing the hinges. latch, .•At' ,r;•,,,,%. ';e.,\I",%. ....0. „,... 0:* . "00 ''e -'N% 1 VI le .t 0(Lek::', / / l,er * The Most Interesting DallY The "Toronto Daily Star" is strong in special features • for147Th:teen; re the daily Home Pages—the daily instalment of a good story—the Social and personal columns—the illustrated daily Position ilints. But the "tar's" strongest appeal to the wide-awake woman is the unusually interesting way in which it presents the news of all the world, day by day. There is not a dry line in it—yet it is not sensational or in any way "yellow.", just good, clean, WheleSolue, wel/-written accounts of everything that is going on that's worth reading about. Subscribe now and take advantage of our present rate of ' • $1.50 A Year This paper and "Toronto Daily Star" together for one year—$2.20. Guaranteed Fountain PIM given for 50c. added to above subscription prices. Toronto Daily Star ************************** * . * * * Correct e4N* * iS the ,A ,nly * * Kind Our * * edditt 'Customers *. * * * - * Want. 0 f Stationery * * * * * We make a study of prevailing . type faces * * . and styles for wedding and society -printing. * *• * * Your order entrusted to our care *ill be * *• correctly -executed. • • * * • * * , * * The elinton New Era * * . w * - Jog. 'DErT. .* * * *' * *****4*•************ ******* • • DOODLE men BRIPrIng 'MAN SIRGLE. etc.,. In the joints as the work goes up, and in about twenty4dt hours' time fill* the Pest with the following env ture: One part. cement, 'three .patis sand and five sm. six . parts coarse gravel -et broken etoile. Stone eglarge as hens' eggs may be ussxd. tleke this concrete rather wet and fin to the top, when the caps may. be set in place. • The double gate: slusein in the sec- ond eat has advantages over the sin- • gle gate. It will not sag; it requires no hinges; it niay be easily fastened with hooks or latches. It looks' neat and When•cattle are kept there is lesS dan- ger to the Steck In passliag through., Square titan:leis er heavy poles May be toted. The gate is twenty feet Wide and stiteen or eighteen high..,The two outside Masi should be Set web id the grimed and braced • at the top, as shown. The center post CO which the gate is made fast; turns at the tip, le the cross Umber, and the lower eud. sets on •a large stong, Iron pine are pliteed in both the top and lower end for Divas,' and it POSt IRTI# be set abOut ten feet 'trona the center post and in line with same, to • which the gate is heoked when necessary :to have at open for any length of time. . • The ;Country's Farm Animals. The crop reporting botirci ot the bu- reau of statistics ot tbe•Enited States department • of agriculture estimates the nunibers and sallies; of farm • ani- • mals on farms and ranges la the Unit- ed States on Jan, 1 lett as -follows; Compared With Ian: 1, 1008, 'the fol. lorlesgitges are1ndlea:0T I16r. heineroedc48,000,n10184ot eeVre. 1120,e400; other cattle eies Creased 094,008, sheep inereasect 1,453,- DOff, sWieedeereased 1,037,000. Itt aver-, age value per heed hersee Jfiereased $2,23, males 8 cente,, milk cows $1.00, other cattle GO cents; sheep decreased • 411 cents, swine ineretieed 50 eeets. The total value of all nnitials emitter. ated above on an. 1, 1000, was S4.525,-, 250,000 as cempared with 0,331,230,- 000 on Zan. 1, 1008, an Increase of $134,020,0000 or 4,5 per cent. cAsiit)Fli A For bafaate and Matte% The Mud You late Always Bought Beari the tfigne.ture'Of —Put there by the makers—found • there in the service these 514 Pure, Paints alone can dive. •, it is no. harcl•thing to • mike, a paint :oat looks good in the can —or sounds good in t h e, advertising—and YOU couldn't tell the • difference beforehand. But it is not so easy to put together the purest materials in' the most expert way—and then to add one special. ingredient .greatly lengthen the paint's life • —and that's what you, ' get when you buy ' y PURE. °LI PAINT • Forty colors, for every paintieg purpose, snide by Imperial Varnish & Color Co,, Limited, of Toronto. Always in full stockat R. Adams toNDEsnoito • Can Do Her Own Work Now, Doctor Said She Had ' Heart Trouble. ' • Weighed 125 Pounds. New Weight 185. • Ws: M. McGann, Debec Jonetion, writes:---"[ wish to tell you what Heart and Nerve Pills have done for me. Three years ago I was co run de*o 1 could.not do my own work. I went to a doctor, and he told m0 I had least trouble and thni. iny nerves were sal Mottling, I took his medieine, as he ordered me to do, but it did me no good. I then started to take Milburn's /lead and Nerve Pills, and had only taken one box before I started to feel better eo I con- tinued their use until 1 had taken several boxesand X am now strong and well, and eine to do my own work'When I .conusteneed taking your pills X weighed 125 pounds, and now weigh 185 and have oven birth to a lovely daughter, which was a happy thing in the family. When X eoraraerteed taking Milburn's newt and Nerve Pills, X could not go up. Maim without resting before I got to the ttroopu.biol.,,can, now go up without any Milburn's Heart and Neve Pills are 80 cents per box,or t boxes for $1.2Vat all dealers, or mailed direct on eteipt of rice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, . Apples, Wanted. 1 • I will be in the market for both Fall, Winter and Evaporating.Apples, IBefore selling, see me or my agents. C. CANTELON CLINTON W. , CUTLER, . :Painf.er end Paper Banger.; 7. : AllfWork guatinteed.. ' Prices reasonable. . , Resbierice nearly oPPOsitethe Collegiate Institute. ' .Ford &..McLeiid WI:laving secared a, conamodieue Grain Storehouse, we are now buying all kinds of grain, for which the.!. highest prices will be paid. Bran,horts, Cora ll& and all kiof grain, Seeds and other feeds kept -on hand at thestorehmises - Ford &fittLeod G. T. 11. STATION, CLINTON. • LOOK 11E.REI. LINE FOR SALE. At .TEE • . ' ..ftelgrave Lirne Works t Manufacturers Of :Plait:clads Lime. OUR waits Co., 010140, Ont. ailbstrAtt lissbuteti Owes 1)11/411$ tala •t • • JAL...AL ri• ' LIMO sold, and •. Pripes within reach of al/. 20e. -Per bushel at kilns, . or 25e for 5i/ - bushel lads, delivered at Graham's I Rotel, Clinton. • E. Ceders filled pronipily. m . A. cnoisox &SoN', Prows.* , lielgrave, Ont. LET 11.8 11.EA81111E: • your figure for a suit and the , figure we will ask vol. piiiase you • as well as the perfeet fit, we wilt- guarantee guarantee you. We are Sawn. careful to fit all our patrons to petfention, As every garment • that leaves our eatablishment be. . comes an adiertisemebt for Us. We Will give you your ehoice of the finestand newest fabrics. We do thrived, .. CIM , W. BAROE; . nue Merchant Tailoring. Vied &Aeon's Old Stand. • Agent for British-Americen Cleaning & Dying co, montresd. --"" - 010140, Ont. ailbstrAtt lissbuteti Owes 1)11/411$ tala •t • • JAL...AL ri• '