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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1909-11-18, Page 7rif t;litin.fon News -Record Nevessber.lath 1/4.• 11111111.010000.1111.1.1111.11•111111.11.111101111.111111 ways cure PeoPle Oi Hazelton, R. C., are aetis tioning Prentice McIlride fOr Constab- les to protect thou against possible trouble with the Indians. Repeat it ..--"Shiloh's Cure will a1 way Ore rny. coughs and cold." Mei John Aitken ot London, 'Fore- man Thomas Aitken an Firernan Robert Robinson were inured Ity th collapse ef the roof of the Spring 13%11 1VIattress Company'actory daring fire, 110W TO KILL A. COLD. :—"Shilola's Cure will al- No easier or more pleasant than to my coughs and inhale "Catarrhozone"—it stops the .,!cold instantly, clears the nostrils and Fort William has been billed for $3- 345.50 for costs of the services oi the militie in connection with the reeent strike riots. 'cots out the phlegm. Try eatarrhoe zone yourself. Will James, a awe, was lynched by a mob at Cairo;111. The cable companies have failed te establish communications. with Jam aica. capes. . Ethel and John Arnell lost thei lives hi a lire that destroyed th Revere House at Innisfail, Alberta Some children were thrown from th window and caught by 'firemen, an most of the guests had narrow es 1 its An Absolute Necessity For Good Health. You might as well expect to find a man or woman healthy with constipated bowels as to fin4 a city healthy when its sewers arelplcicked with refuse. Nature demands that the indigestible food and .waste matter which collects in :the lower bowels shall be got rid of at least once in twenty-four hours. If this is not done it decomposes, filling the bowels with poison, which is taken up into the blood and carried all through the body. Natufally,"this poisbn affects the work of every organ. The liver is deranged, digestion is upset, and biliousness, headaches, lassitude and dizzy spells follow. Literally millions of people suffer these results of constipation withclut realizing the cease, or doing 'anything to remove it. Yet it can be removed, easily . and with certainty, by using Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills. Take, for example, the case of. Mr. George Andrews, Halifax, N.S., as he himself describes it: "For many years I have been troubled with chronic constipation. This ailment never comes single handed, and I have been a victim to the many iflnesses that con- stipation brings in its train. Medicine after medicine I have taken in order to find relief, but one and all left Me in the same hopeless condition. At last I read about these Indian Root Pills. That was indeed a lucky day for Me, for I was so impressed by the statements contained. therein that I determined to give them a fair trial. They have regulated my stomach and bowels. I am cured of constipation and claim they have no equal aS a medicine." Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills were 'first .taken to cure constipation nearly a hundred years ago, and . • during the last half century they have been very extensively and very successfully used throughout the world. They are entirely vegetable in composition and do not sicken, weaken or gripe like mineral purgatives. DR-AtiORSIE'S For Conslipation For Sale Everywhere at 25e. per Box. 21 Siberian Umlauts. The smelt) gi "aromas" or "tarps" are vast woods Of pine, larch and cedar tit least 3,000 miles front east to west and 1.000 miles from north to south. They are so thick and gloomy that the natives call thein "plaCes where the mead Is lotst." a• as • , G. P.'s Start in Lite. It is interesting to note how Hon. G. P. Graham, one of the shrewdest and moet eflicient members of the Laurier Cabinet, first got his start to life. At school he was a diligent pupil and excelled in English composition. He was a rural pedagogue for a year, but finding the life too slow„ gave it up and entered a general store in the village of Iroquois. There he spent some months behind the . counter parcelling sugar, butter, cotton, shirts and overalls. One day his father, the late Rev. W. II. Graham, who was then Methodist minister stationed in the neighboring town of Morrisburg, drove to Iroquois and called his son to the front of the shop. "George," he said, "do you know what I have done? I have bought out The Morrisburg Herald for you and I•want you to take hold and run it." "Thank yoto father," answered the • youth, "I will do my best to make a success of the paper." • The plant was out of date and the place generally hors de oombat. His tether had made. only a small pay- ment down, but the young man set to work with determination and ener- gy, and things began to move. In a few years, the debt was cleared off and the property greatly 'improved. The juvenile proprietor has a taste for public life and first entered upon his successful career as a public man by becoming a nember of the village council. He discharged those duties so well that afterwards advancement was easyand rapid. easeenasamsaan am a z 1 • India P. Ale • Prejudiced and unscrupulous vendors may smigest others. but compere it aav way you will—purity, freedom from acidity, palatableness—Labatt's Ale is surpass- ed by none, equalled by few—at about half the pride of best imported brands. ...A...., avEngs How much of your salary are you leaving at our Savings Department each pay- day? Couldn't you easily spend less and leave a dollar or two, perhaps five or more? Remember, your futUre success depends on what you. • save—nbt on the amount you earn. We pay 3 per cent.' on deposits and 4 per cent. on Debentures of $100 or more. Assets over $11,000,000 Ineomorated 1864 Huron .ge Lie Loan and Savings Co. LONDON, CANADA As Told by Col. Clarke. . Col. Hugh Clarke, the humorist of the Ontario Legisleture and editor of The Kincardine Review, relates an amusing incident, brought to his memory by the recent big fire at the Parliament Buildings in Toronto. lie recalls the fact that the handsome pile in Queens Park was erected while the Hon. C. F. Fraser was Min- ister, of Public Works in the Liberal Government then in power. Col. Clarke, being a Conservative, takes some pleasure in noting- that • while the work 'was cheaply enough done, the building has proved ithelf to be a sveritable fire -trap. Mr. Freser, observes the colonel, was extreme- ly jealous of his authority, and per- mitted no one to interfere with him in the administration of his depart- ment When it came to erecting the new home of the Legislature, he in- sisted on seeing the job through with- • out any advice from his colleagues. Indeed, he resented hints even from the ,Premier himself.It chanced that Mre Fraser. died in the building. Next morning, according to Col. Clarke, • when the late Hon. A. S. Hardy was apprised of the fact, he said ; "He's dead, -is he? 'Well—now we cao drive a nail wherever we like." „ea eneese. e, ete oeeesee DENT A DEVICE TO RAISE LOGS illuotratIon and Plans for Making Horne -Made 1-og Jack, Useful on the Farm. The accOMnanying aketch shows a device to raise logs to be cut in stove wood or post length. Two boards ar9 bolted together at each end With A 2 - • • Art Museum ,For Toronto. .. An announcement of intention •to organize a .series of exhibitions of paintings during the coming winter is =de by the Art 1Vinseum of Toron- • to, of which institution Byron E: Welkor is chairnian. The exhibitions will be open to the public and will be entirely free to visitors on Satur- .deys and .at other times to be deter- . mined . . a The first will be held in ,Novendser • and will consist of a loan collection of neentings from private colleeiont in Toronto. The setonil will probably correst of one •buttered best 'avail- able rseemelee of the art of Canadian minters: the third will probably be ehat of the Ontario Socisty, ertists, arid the fourth will probably bo that of the Canadian. Art Club. Customs Revenue Crews. ,Tbe reiOtores rorenue of the Dom- inion for the month . of Septernber • &Iowa an .increas1 of thirty-five per • ennt. over Soptembor of east year. •The total eollectiens were • $5,437,458, an •inereo.se of $1.,400,531. For the six moiiths of the fiseel year the custom* revenue totals $23,781,063, an increase 'of $5,01S,350. • •• He-itie-NelacIc Log Jack. by 4-ineh piece between them, says Popular Mechanism. This forms an open1na0Sto which a• lever is fitted 'and worked on pins thrust through holes bored at intervals in tho two beards shown.- A chain is fastened to the lever With an eye -bolt, the end passed under the log and the laree link at the opposite end hooked over %Se Drab of a crotched stick. • ) HORSE AND MULE PRODUCTION 11.1.1,11.W•••••A :Growing Demand for These Animal, Places Them Among Profitable Enterprises on Farm. The growing demand for high -clan homers and 'Attlee of any of the recog- nized market types has placedthe production of these azimals among the Mt of profitable enterprises on the American farm. Present rices, regu- lated by supply and demand, do not nem to indicate a decreasing pro:It from this business. The relative profit accruing from this eiass of animals, as •compared with cattle or other live stock on the farm, is a good argument for its im- portance. The percentage of gooit horsealn thie country to -day is greater than ever before, yet there is consider- able room for Improvement. There are many common errors made in the care of various classes a horses with the idea of economy in view. It is, however, poor econoMY to starve a growing horse to save feed, for there is no class of animas on tbe farm tnat will return b;t,g6r profits, if properly fed and developed, than good horses. Fame work is not so bard but that itcan be performed by either brood innres or horses •and mules that are too young to sell to the best advan tage. For this reason the farm should be the place of production and devel- opment of even more high class horses and Mules in the future than it is at the present, AN •OLD-FASHIONED EV.135F.1. APertlel Lest of the Flowerc Grand - ••teethe: Planted Ir. 1.-Ier • Flora Yard.. 14. garden like • our grandmothers' will have in it good-sized clumps of anemone, acquilegia, ferns of vo.riour kinds, all hardy; foxglove, larksprz.,, monies hood, adonis, allyssum, cam- panulas, asters, staisies, earysanthe- mums, coreopsis, dicentra, dianthus, gaillardia, grasses and bamboo's, gyp- oophlla, helenium, helianthus, hibis- ous, hollyhecks, iris, liatris, lilium, hiphaus, lychnis, lobelias, monarda, my- osotis, peonies, poppies, phlox, pinks,1 primula, pyrethrum, ranunculus, seed: e:ags., sedum, sweetwilliam, veronica, vinca, wall -flowers. The obove is not a complete list of the plants 'which may be included in a hardy garden, but covers those which have been grown as successes for many years past, sand ofwCich • there • are modern forras whiateelare many timers finer than the types which were known •to our grandmothers in the olden time.. As the garden is • intended to be permanent, use great .care th he plants which are near one a. , her o. not clash as to colors, says tee House- keeper. Dimes and reds, ds and purples, and pine and reds should not be planted La juxapositien if you desire to keep a rept:Melon fur good AN ENGLISH AUTHOR WROTE. '-'No shade, no shine, no fruit, no flowers, no leaves—Noverulbpr.". Manyj Americans would add no freedom from catarrh, which is so aggravated dining this month that it becomes constantly, ;troublesome. There is ab- undant proof that catarrh IS a con- stitutional disease. It is related to scrofula 'and consumption, • being one of the wasting diseases. Hood's Sae- Saparilla has shown that what is cape able of eradicating scrofula.; complet- ely cures catarrh, and taken in time prevents consumption. We. %ilea see how any sufferer can put off taking this medicine in view of :the widely published record of its radical and • permanent cures. It is undoubtedly America's Greatest Medicine- for Am- erica's Greatest Disease—Catarrh. GRINDING CORN FOR THE Hal Some Breeders Claim It Does Not Pay, While Others Think It Good • Investment. Authorities disagree as to the advis- ability of grinding the corn, some feed- ers claiming that it does not pay for the cost and trouble of grinding, while others' think that it does pay well, says A. J. Legg in Farm Magazine. .My experience is that some boon will chew corn well, while others will not break half the grains. Usually a young hog will ehew its food better than an old one. 1 fattened a, hog • last year on dry corn, but not one-half of the grains were broken. Where a hog will not chew its food well, I think it will pay to .grind its feed. ,• • Hogs will not chew wheat well, and no hog will chew bucklyheat well, so these grains should always be ground before feeding .to hogs. 1! corn is shelled, and 'scattered on a floor or on the ground so that the hogs will have to pick it up ono. grain at a. time, they will chew it better than when the whole ears are thrown to them. NOTES' OF THE BARNYARD. The blating calf makes little iiio• • Ywouth.•ean get. more railk. out df a tame, Wet cow. than one that is afraid of you. . • It is not the best plan to use alfalfa as .the sole roughage for feeding cat- tle. Replace part of the alfalfa with Sorghum or kafir corn stover. Crushed corn and oil meal, along with good silage, alfalfa or clover hay, will just make the young calves t'burrip" themselves this time of year. Muddy • fields and fodder far' from the barn make • us resolved to haul tin a supply to last through the next wet spell. •The next wet spell et -amity finds most of us in the same condition as the last one. •• ' . Corn bran, although possessing a good • percentage of fat and of protein, is greatly inferior to whole corn in its conthnt of starch, and has a high per cent. of fiber, which is of little or no net feeding value. .• Any pasture where cattle are kept will grow More grass if. five or six head of sheep to every. ten cattle .are allowed to run with ammo to do their best, sheep should not be al- lowed to run oh the same field in the fallthat they have occuple.d the • spring and summer before. . • . After the garden has been in suc- cessful cultivation for two or three years, and'' all necessary. ie planting doe& you should plant the Under- growth, or "jungle." This is composed of such flowers as the wild violet, for get-memot, arabis, cypripediums and other low -growing, moisture and shade' loving plants, which do best under and between the stalks of larger farnis... They are shallow -rooted plants and will not rob their neighbers, the. taller, plants. .This will acid assondeefully• to the effectiveness of the garden in mid- • eummer. • •.• • A bandit who attempted co rob • a bank at New. Albany, Ind., killed the cashier and seriously wOuivied• 'the Hoine-prown Corn is the nest. President ahd another man. In tests matte at the Indiana station it was concluded that imported varie. 1 The opening of' the Doteinion Par- ties of.eorn do not prove as satisfae- Dement yesterday Was attended , with tory es home-grown varieties. Many the uitial ceremonies. • farmers are growing strafes or varie- • I 1 itank tpi:Tyaitot of the highest producing has The Reading Railway 200• cars engaged in hauling watet to • towns and Collieries in the enthracito A Dumper Crop of Corn. • . Fi.nvi SHOE HANDY ARM! .F. In Moving Share from One Fleet to Another Blade is Seved by avel Device. In taking the plowto and from the fled or from one field to another, a • plow slee is a handy artiele te have. Pere is see which • is easily Made and will de the work nicely, says a *Titer le Farm and Home. • Take a piece of plank 2 inches thiek, or it.inehet will be better if you have it, 2inebes rode and 2.feet long. Nail a strip on one side near the middle and bole a biocic on in a slanting position, haVing ere rounded the lower corner Of, so the plow-sbare will slip under It. Round me the nose on the sides an.d bottcm, and the ehoe is ready or coal region of Pennsylvania. HOW'S THIS ? - --11,,,,..Atch of ground last eeor, POoio„ 'wet We atter One Ilendred Dollars Re ward for aoy case of Catarrh that ..i'ke..(1, yielded 7bushela, 50 ee t re ei oannot .j2e cured. by Hall's Catarrh !osa.t to 125 bitshels psi° acre. (ure. la J. CHENEY es Co, i roledoi 0. I We, the'undersigned, have 101,0W/I Ifl 4 I, . Cheney for the last 15 years, 'alt I !lave him perfectly honorable in all Never allows hie horse to'sutler pain, siness transactions, and financially Ile always uses Nerviline which is t.lade by his firm. noted for curing stillness, rheumatism, I•ble to carry out any obligalions Walding, Xinnan es Martin, . swellings and strains. Nerviline is Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0., just as good instde as outside. 'For Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken., inter- cranulls, colic, and internal pain it's e ally acting directly noon tha blood ported marvel. In the good racing lid mucons surfaces of the system. stables Nerviline is always used,—be- resi imonials sent free. Price, 75c. per cause it makeS better horses and bottle. Sold by 01 druggists. smaller veterinary bills, Twenty-five Take Hall's Family Pills tor cotisti- cents buys a large bottle of Nerviline; ation.• trx it. .• Anton Michelschmidt of Cato, Wis., is said to have raised 1,500 bushels of cora ort the ear on a little six --sere A SUCCESSFCL HORSEMAN. ays for.:Its in fitel save Don't allow a few extra dollars to pre- vent you from taking the perfect -conk. ing, sure -baking, easily -regulated Pan- dora in place of a cheaper stove. in a season or two Pandora will pay the difference in the fuel it will save—and it will keep.on,saving Until it has paid for itself. 20 r enders, apeclal flue construction madthe fuel do dout—Tfr-dulTr7 Wide lire box is an- other fuel•-re-ariomizer. 1.57ert heats quicker than a cast oven, thVs—sr—Ning still more fuel Further economizingfeatures %Tar be explained by the McClary Agent. Maary's Harland Bros. Clinton, 0 fel .• Have Some Early Chicks. After the cold spell is over, the hens will begin laying for keeps. Then will be ee good time to set your incu- bator and have some early chicks. • The earlier hatches produce the hardiest and strongest chicks. Of course severe Weather may 1E111 some of the weaker ones, but those that do 'live will be worth haring when the fall fairs and winter shows are in see- eion. They will be of full standard weight and their plumage will be ma- ture enough to withstand any ordinary cut that the judges at the show may make. Get your chicks out early and • push there from the tart till they are fully grown. • ' Keep the Oil Meal. Large etiantitiee of oil meal are shipped from this country te Germany, t Jagless& Deranark and 'Holland, to be fed' by the farmers of tliose countries to their dairy cows. If the farmers of America, dairymen espeeially, appre- • ciated the value of oil meal and oil meal ealce as a concentrated food with Which to balaTice the home-grown ra- tion for dairy colas and other stock, there would be a veal deal less of this Product shipped away -L --none at all, in feet. • Make Each Animal Wort 25070 Over Its Cost EEL" 2:021 • Largest Winner of ,any Pacer on -Grand Ci) cuzt, 'a8 Ort .2/3.of a Cent a Day Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, mak hens lay in winter,. incrPasing the yield of milk five pounds per cowed or restoring rundown animals to plumpness and vigor. When you feed 'stock wadi' to your cow, horse, swine or poult you are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm Your animals do need not more feed, but something to help th bodies get all the good out of the feed you give them so they can get and stay fat all year round; also to prevent dipease, cure disease and ke them up to the best possible condition. No .tock food" can do all th things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. It Not a "Stook Food" But a "Conditioner ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain. nor farm products. It increas yield of milk from three to five pounds per cow per day before the Specific has been Used t weeks. It makes the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any ottre,r preparation Imo% • Young.celves fed withROYAL ni.112PLV. are as large at six weeks old as they would be wk fed with ordinary materials at ten weeks. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them ' plumpness almost magically. Cures hots, colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanent • Dan IVIcEwan, the horseman, says: "I have used ROYAL. PURPLESTOcK SPECIF Persistently in the feeding of The Eel,' , 2.021 largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit 1908, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.091, brother of 'Allen Winters,' winner of $36,000 in trotting sta in 1908. ,These horses have -never been off their feed since I commenced using Royal Pu 'Specific almost a year ago. and I will always have it in my stables." ' . Care of the Horse. • ' Never.put a rusty or feed -soar bit in a liorse's mouth. Clean it, end svarne it on a frosty morning .unless you want a horse with a sore mouth. When re- turning from a long, cold or wet drive, see that your horse is well 'ble,nketed In the stable, the stones taken ant of its hetes and a good warm (not hot) bran mash given it, then you 0311 rest easy, read the day's Wail and lot it storm if it wants to. CRANIIRUSIVIVI-AM AY CALIFORNIA MEXICO STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFI One 50c, package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seven days. which is a little over two-thirds of a cent a day Most stock foods in fifty cent oacIag Last but fifty days and are given three times a day.. Ftlevea. PURPLE STOCK SPECIFI is given but once a day and lasts half again as long: A $1.50 pail containing four' times t amount of the fifty, cenrpackage will left 280 days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the va of your stock 250. It is an astonishingly Quick fattener, stimulating the appetite and t relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into Resh. As a'hog fattener it is a leade It willsave many times its cost in veterinary.hills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPE thC FIC is our other specific for poultry, not forsfoCk. One 60 cent package Will last tWenty.fi .hens 70 days, or a pail costing $150 will lest twenty live hens Dso days. which is four times mo material' for only three times the cost. It makes a' ' laying machine" out of your he summer and wInterdirevents fowls losing flesh at moulting time, and cures poultry disease • Every package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC guaranteed. • • • Just use ROYAL PIMPLE on onsfof your epithets and any other Preparation on•anoth animal in the same condition: after coMparing results you will •sayR!GYAL PURPLE h them all • beat to death, or else back comes your money., .FREE—Ask • your merchant or write us for our valuabie.32•page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases. containing also cloaking receines and full rmrticulars ahOut ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POUL- TRY SPECIFICS.• If• you 'cannot get •Royal Purple Specifics from inerchents or agents; we will supply You .direct. express prepaid, • on receipt of 51.50 a pail for either Poultry Of Stock Specifics. ' • • • lidoke money a^ting as our agent In your district. Write for terms. . Por sale by all .up.to-date merchants. 0o., London, Can. Royal Purple Stook and Poultry Speoific and free booklet are kept in stock by W, S..11, lie seameme.„ ‘......aamossesomena=amesememmor wirsomisamsormoow VLORI,D A The Land of Flowers, Fruit and SUis- Shine. Excellent SerVice via ChicagO, • • "Low Tourist Wes" ?or full information see JOIN ItANSFOR,D, Town Agent. A. 0, PATTISON, Depot Agent. RANT) CORN MOT yon order Syrup, emphasize the name "CROWN BRAND" for this name means that you want the best—the pureot— the most wholesome and relieble tattles syrup it is possible to produce. • ' So perfect and genuinely deli- clous is "Crown Brand Syrup" that you'll enjoy its flavor about ten times more than that of any other make..• . It eosts you no more than ordi- nary syrup and yet it is purer, tetter, and more wholesome in every way. It is the greatest food for geosvifig children, and I can be given in any quantity "Crown Breed Syrup" is put li&s,w11135,liritobtiondlidzos.lb. air -tight • Wheti you buy "Crowe Brawl" you obtain a Syrup as cjear as (crirctstahwl oainedsonn.oifegixa emarnteed purity i The Edwardsburg Starch Co. 1,tearrun ESTABLISHED 1858. Works Offices: 4 CARDINAL, Ont. MONTREALITORONTO end BRANVORD The News -Record to the en 1010 for $1,00.