Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1909-12-09, Page 6• 4 Repeat it :-"Shilob's Cure will al - atm cure my coughs aad toads." A Ruts of 1 numn. The thumb is a guide to a knowl- edge of the mentol condition of the owner. He who is in lull possession of all Avis faculties makes use of the thumb, but whenever there is a tea- ciency to inanity this generally use - Ifni and motive member falls out of work- A physieian in charge of a lunatic' aaylutu states positively that if you see a person whose thumb re- mains inactive -standing at right an- gles and taking no part in the act of writing. salutation or any other man - nal eaeociae-yoto may be sure that he has a diseased mind. Re may talk intelligently and appettr sane in every respect, but undoubtedly a tinge of madness is lurking within his brain. ' ' • 'Repeat it :-"ShiloWs Cure will al- ways cure my coughs and colds." - A BY - LAW. LIM StIONWS They Malls lip the Ossiy U400441 SOW* Has Over Had. "lheinia's one iltepases-00111Was"- le the Illerme Dr. Geo", Perree'll eperead new !week, "The Itemeastle Iteteliouassot sf Lord freesirit's Celan- Wee." fie ism emeesselosi ulliten8 ot te Mary with lies peepeeed as&. tettery ea, 11012. Everyone who resale lois history meet have a livelier int - premien ef the francliag and settle- ment of Wirelipee. Bryeets etrle in partievilarly rraphie, aad he hen been et pains 1e9 make hie history at- treetive to the average reader. When- ever poesible he sets down the recol- lection' of an eye-witneee of any event oonnected with the history of the Selkirk isettlement. At the pres. ent time he says eo one ie living who saw Lord Selkirk, but he has con- versed with men whe remembered him very well and from their descrip- tion he gives a convincing picture of the Secrettek nobleman W110 could not see his countrymen sent away from their native land without founding new home far them where they would be as happy as they had been in Sootland, and Store proaperous. was tall in Mature, *in and reflue,d ILt appearanee. He had a benignant fare, his nemater was maw and Petite. Te the Indiana he was specially in - Wresting. They caragitt the idea that being a mom el title he wes.in some way closely ecenteeted with their Groat FoOker tno biog. Because of his gesterseite to them in making a traisty, 'they ealied him the Sil-ver 1141 was Woe source of their treaty ieseney." The writer's pewees* of deaoription wre well-knewn. There is as well in the beak a great deal a vivid Celtic intaginatioa The Amiteibeine is lik- eeted te the Tiber aid the sufferings of the bend of Selkirk settlers. who were disireurseseed by the North-West fur traders, are add to be out of all earaparison greater than those en - dared either bY the Aoadians or the U. E, LoyalistWhen the historian writes of p, buffalo hunt, or the gathering of the fur traders in spring, of Seven Oaks, the grasshopper plague, the fbaods on the Red River, and the loag journey of the settlers from Hudson Bay to Winnipeg, he carries Iiia readers along with him as only a writer of iniegination and apt phraseology can. 7 He claims foffhi-Shlkirk settlement that it held the West for Canada and that ' no other American colony had such. a continuous distressing stenggle for exiatenee as these Scottish set- tlers. It is it heroic story of suffer- ing, conflict and rivalry, of slow adaptation to circu.mbtances which no one had yet learned to conquer, and it is a story which everyone should kriow.. , • vrohibit the sale by rrtail of spirituous, fer- mented or other IllAnektotored liq lore in the -Municipality of the Village of Hayfield. -The Municipal Coon Ai of the Village of Itlydeld hereby enacts :Li tcllow; ; • 1. -That the KAle by r stall oiptituous. ter- mente•i, or other menactu ufre.1 liquors N and shill he prohibited in eve...y tavern, inn or oth. er h 4o or plaeo of publie eutertainment 111 the s aid inanicie tlity,and the sale th ;reef ex- cept by wholegale. 13 awl shall be prohibitet in every slop or plAco other th o i. houee of - gubli,t entertnintn tut, in the ,ntld m Mei 'panty. 2.- ThAt the vote of the elector of the said Vifltgn ot Bartleld will be taken on this by- law by the returning officer hereinafter 'fianp ed. 071Monday, the third,daJantirk y OE a , th.o Tits ailed Nia 5 If 10 ire 1 ai 1 Tun eonerneu- clay; et Hine o'cineg in th n Inerniog anti con- tinuing until five o'olo,...1c in tho.undermentim- ed place at The ro an Hall. 13tyrield. 3 -Th tt on the 9703 day of Darseintior .4.. ISA at hls office in the Said Village of Hayti lld at the hear ot ele reit o'olo 3k in th 3 forenoon ,the reeve shall'appoint in writing. signed by him ;elf, two plrsons to attend at the 1111711 summing up of the vote.; by tha (lurk, and . one person to at'.end at each polling plane on be. half of 1111 personi intere,,te 1 in pm i_desiroll of promoting the pasiing of this • by-law, and ;- like number on behalf of the persons interester in and dedroui of oppo4in; the passing ot this by -la w. 4.- rhea; the Clerk of the 513.1(1 14100leipa1 Council at the Vi1la4e el 13 veleta shall attend, tbe Towo Hallat the hmr.of el)wen• o!elook. in the tire:loon on the totirth daY of January A. ft. 1910.10 $an up the n71mb31'. of votes given for and aegaieet thie Br -Law. 5. By -la wshglicome into force and take • wfrezt G4 from; 1h3 lirst Iay of May .next after ' the final pasting thereof.. Cou lel Chamber, No rember nth, DD. NOTICE. • •• Reeve. •Clark. • 'Take notice that the above isi a trim .copy, 'ref 3. prep Ilse 1 fly -law wh eh 11.1.4 boon to.ltott in- to drlurntion by thr. Mtinic.pal Council of Vidage of 131411141 and which vfill be ..finallY -pa lie 1 by the said council (in the event ot the 31:1 it of the electors being obtained thereto, as provided by the "The Liquor Moons() Act" . ant 11 ltn in te therete,1 itfter Ono month teem the dolt pub 1 .atioe themof in the News•Itecord the date of which gretpuplieation was Thars lay the 9th d iyof Deeemour A.' 11. ISO and th 11 at the hour, d tYttod places there-. in fixed tier ttlting th�. votei of the electors the • e3o1.1..3 will bo held. , • • a w3, aftwast ' aLafta, tiNt &INT 444111111kgr. eir Moefig4bialis Ifes4v1N 1404 leen at Werk PIK Sevessty-Plve Y•411rio Ths 144.14 •14247kiag )1"555011114 Oamado. is Mir Meekerease Sewell, et The B,eHe,illeUMW . Away book in 18.14 he wslke int, that et- fiee and asked. ler a joie He got it. Ile wee then only *weave years- told. For iserventy-five yeses Sir Mackenzie leas been actively identified. with 'The Intellieenear, and to -day, when Par - Bement ia not in session, you can al- ways find him at hie (leak in his home city. He is never idle end eau pert ae able and argumentative ma edi- torial to -day as he could halt a cen- tury ago'. From "devil" he climbed not only to the editorship and owner- ship of The lntelligencer, but also to the Preraierehip of Canada. The vet - mem 'knight even yet, sets type 000a- s/on:illy by way of diversion. When on a weeterfl. trip in ION, darME the time that he was Premier, he (sailed at the office oi The Calgary Herald to set the pleat and observe the working of the Mergetuthalor type- casting machines, The Herald being tbie firot office on the prairie"' to in- stall them. He got talking of the hesprovements la minting trade as compared with half e, ossAwri. In answer to a baneering inquiry as te whether he could stioir type as well ae he did when a bey, he Pelted op a etiek end est several lines of kowrier. The ineident was ramrod to at eanniestable long* in the columns ef The Iteralei that evening --under the heaeling "The Presoier of Ounsda eels tsrpe es The Herald raise." An- other good story, which Sir Macken- zie loves to tell, is thee, when Minis ter of 000011211 is the administration of Sir John A. Masdonald, he was ea a horseback tour through the West Tithing the Crow's rret ram coun- try. Roughly Mitered for the long journey, when he got to Revelstoke lie swanteced leisurely into a printing office and asked for a job, telling the proprietor, who did not recognize him, that he was a tramp printer and wanted to get a little money to go ewes The hose sisedi him up and said rather regretfully that he had no pest. tion vacant, The Cabinet Minister thanked him and left. It was only a few hours after that the newspaper man learned of the identity of his caller. He hunted him up, and the two had a hearty laugh over the epi- sode. Saskatchewan's Premier. .s.. Insuppilloori -iimimmoolireirk, • IMINIOONS IF THE IMBATOOK THE MAN IN THE STAGE. • A Tragedy of the Olden Days In New. York City. A good memo years ago, long before skyscropers and rapid transit, were thought et and New York was just a big growing town, they used to tell vary that •Waltil gisaNtly enough to eur-• dle tile .blemel of atm' most skeptietil and to keep people .of :nervous .t etuper- ormetit awake of eights, . • . Tire tale went that of n summer night a' husband and wife,returning. • home from the theater. entered a Kiftb. avenue stage tar' downtown and .for outstay Waren* were She only. .ocetiOntits. sa Htfle above Isetiorteesath street, tow- erer, (be Mace (saute to nu • abrupt stop,. the 'doer Was opened, and three' young ntroioesiteasol. • Otte of -She tare° lead evidently -been drinking for his oistepriiiioss Were obliged. 'to help', hint to his seat. • The door was. (lofted. bateau( them. sad the stage.con- throat its jottrney northward. About tea blocks, fs:rther on one: of the voting men rose sod. bidding Ilk friend's good night, Stopped the .stage • and aligated: A tow. 'minute,. later' the. second. of 'the three :said. "Wen, , good night, pIllitql• theslr;ip, stepped -to the sidewalk Ind wa I ktid, off through one of the side streets.' A Orem Whieti Is Working Muth Herm es Our Soya, "Who ill It to ran a Marathon?" impend a aewapaper head -lust that I ri).1"sati srrip: Jolia kl. Oirdsier, vier Th; *newer is: "Nobody." No ho- stas heart gall be trained to a con- dition that will permit its owuer te rum Ott Inlea at tem opeoa without ex- ponag him be the danger of collapse and sodden death, or without bring- ing about Cenclition$ wiliell !aver tile development of disease in later life. From the moment when we draw elin first breath st birth until w* firew our lase breath at death, the heart has to pump the blood througO- out the body. It must do so clay und night, year 171 and year out, Sundaya axed holidays, with never a let-up. I knovr of nothing elee in the world that works without ever getting a ciee. of(, s few hours off, or a few nainiittoo off, except Om heart; and Yet, witi the possible exception of the bstelimtr tilh,turomedorgon in the body )S 710 A Geolitatt proverb sayes that a wal- let horse is driven the hardest; this is certainly ITU* of the heart. Every time we get angry, laugh inordinate - 1Y, take Stfaulating food or drink, ram te catch a oar, get deeply in love, and do ever se many other things, it all lands on the poor old home Thee indispensable organ ful- 141s Paul's definition of charity - it suffers long and ig kiud; but there its one thing that it cannot stand -a Marathon ram The law would not permit any one to drive a horse 26 mike at top speed; or, if it did, the horse would collapse long before the finieh. Now, in the matter of food, drink, and other things, a home loads the elm - pia life. It also has another great adtantage oyer man, in the fact that its body is horizontal while man's body is perpendicular. It is much cameo for a heart to pump all the blood horizontally than to force half of it directly upward, its is the case in man. A distinguished colleagoe recently remarked that any one who, for the sake of 71 fevr dollars, a cup, or a day's newepapet notoriety, exposes himself to the dangers of Marathon roe, desorveo no sympathy, what- eyer may happen to him. Doubtless many will ehare this sentiment; aut the trouble cloea not pal with those oglorya. ctually entor the laces. The Marna -am craze has spread all over the country. It has taken possession of our boyo and .young men, awl ninny tire injuring their health in efforts to train for future 1Vlarathon The Premier of Saskatchewan, Hon. Walter Scotts began life as a printer's "devil" in the early days of Regina when it was a small town and its only claim to note lay in being the head- quarters of the Territorial Govern- ment. 'Young Scott applied for a job one clay and got it. He swept the floor, pulled proofs, weehed rollers • and lighted fires in the office of a country -weekly. lie did the work faithfully and had ambition. No .one in that early period, howeyer, dream- ed that one day he 'would be the chief adviser of I-115' Majesty in a great Canadian provinee. To find. the secret of his SUCCOSFS one must • know the man. If asked to name the qualities that have led • to bis advancement, his friends would say that courage and stick-to- it-iveneart, along with an affable dis- position, are his predominant char- aotoristice. He is a vigorous Cam- paign speaker, and never hits below the belt. He id not a man to trifle with on the platform ao niany an in- terrupter knows to his sorrow. Dearing the last provincial oanipoign he was opeatking at Lumoden, where some opposition was in evidence. As Mr. Scott was talking a heckler yell- • ed, "Rats." Quick as a flesh. ca.rni the retort: • • "Has illy young friend over there got, them in his pocket or in his head?" No farther' interjections were heard after the laughter had subsided, and the meeting went on peooefully until a late hour. f here remained hi the SI CV' only the Mialiand and wife and the young. man. The Child Viewpoint. .. whir 'Wag obviously under the hain. alert- en.1 wo S.fmlity school SIOrieg e4I4T 3% 177, 8171 in • • ...II. did 1,•• -it's wife look hack?" ii . erbitching *75110(11 in a .eortier of 1131' olw day in the ad. cage 1 he dim fliekei•inir lamp ,t the chil.trim's: sPrvice. Op • . .A.ft Pr time thesteustottel mowed asos girl's hand, "Please, she lam toe soon.,11.g .1tont .4 • • 1 t 1115 . eit 4 0 •1 Il'3. 'at ." be. drooping a" -if III eleep. mei. testing t Wild, the reply of plotter, a:he might.' hp hom r. girl when the class was beilig • azioni'54404)11• . , • si on te story of 1110 j- u4", . "Pl'ed !rim oil 711" zeal 1 -•-on, Now aere they very .giad 1641.11(1" "1"(1 4.51.1e11 Iffirn IL)" 0.' 1111 u him? What did they do to• window of hlle .Olsoaf hil es' alet. how glad they were?" . They 4>65011(1.Tflo4'o wits no rt,t,polise. Id a aarty." ' the litiebetal repeat led his Words, 0110. iU UY1f ne Ije i.d so: Then 114.. goal. • deuty utrafghtoileti up. turoat to Ps • " ‘ -.• II . 'CURED OF CONSTIPATON "14'3117 ‘", slits begun ti pretest.' but he simply Sir. Andrews prn.iseS Dr. repented t ho worths, .pulleti the strap. and helped liter Is allgist. As :tin.); striini under the eorver 'Kimonos& she turumol griestiselogly• and ahlserl tiltuu wity • he leaflet eel se Osls? getting out of (Lug tow stk ter Isaiew I Meet rleut•ifea• • tieu, • •"ttesasee." tu, replird. "leitet y•tes.at: tbroit was est frees ear.ie Ogee " iheorsn'a Indian Reit Pins. Mr. George Andrews of Halifax, N, S,, =rites: 'Tor many years I have been troubled vith chronic Constipation. This ail- ment never comes single-handed, and I have been a victim te the many illnesses that constipation briags in its train. 'Medicine after medicitte I have taken in order to find relief, but oste and all left me in the same hopeless condition. .It seorned that nothing would eopel from me the one ailment thot anneal se much trouble, yet,at loot I marl about Orme Indian Root Pills. That was iodeed lucky day for me, for I woo so tiomemed wait the state- ments made that I determined to give thon n fair trial. They have rogalatod toy stomack and liwels. 1 au. cam& of ensielpatleat, and I claim they have as equal as a meth - Tine." For over half a ceatury Dr. Morse's Incliom Root Pills have been during' con- stipation stud clogged, inactive kidlieys, with ail te ailmento whith result from them. They demise the whole system sind purify the blood. Sold everywhere at 25e. a. bort. 2 Pat Was a Sideboard. - An Irishman west to a Icitmdry in. Lunges -hire alter work. 'Weeu he err- -hived he found ;smother men thee* on the strine errann. 'The .foreonan came, and Put, being anueoutatomed to 'wk. ng fot work, stood book, with the ia- iention of hearing how the other fe s low went kbout 11. . After the roan had tasked the. fors- - titan said, "What trade are a dresser," replied the mast. . "007110 to -morrow, loud the ste- rnum. "I'll start you." Turning to the Irishman, the fore - mon asked hint' what he Wag. "Be jabers, sorr," replied Poet, a sideboard l" -London Stand - end, The Ideal I3everage A Potts A at, polotable, full of the virtues of malt and hops, and in sparkliflg. condi- tion, is the ideal beverage. Now Mire chemists annotated its purity, and judges its merit, ono need look, no. further. 04.1 "C'Iltr...:Ttt.OI=SIgtfal; $OW BOLIVAR. Wr4/11,0,1.11.••••• Obasoevoy %yew ef the Man Fer Wheal Is Named. tint Petah Ausetimue mune ire, psis Its name item h>is&Wil rtal1Y3L4 non land lane had 14 *wag a bat- h:ma Pe did ala liberetee wileassist,- sal is making it a repstilis Li 1825. Deliver had been writing. his mime large.** breath Auterican taster's, tor a longtime before that date, however, ceizume for himeelf the title ot the "Washington of South America.' Si- mon Bayer W31I bora ie Cieraoes. Venezuela, la 1783 of a noble and wealthy family. He etradied law in SWAP, teaseled much in Europe, mar- ried end returned to his native noun - try. I* 1800 he visited the 'United Seabee os hie return from -another journey to Europe. It was et this time that he beeame an enthousiastic *choker of republics and made up his mind to free Venezuela from Spanish despotism. Front that time on war Wil his portion. Is 1813 he entered Caracas as core emerge, was bailed as the liberator of his emslitry by the people and matte aheolute dictator in elvil and military affairs, lie met with reverse*, how- ever, at the heads of the Spaniards, and it was during a period of defeat O n the metinent that he convoked a centimes in Haig, instituted a peers* ment and abolished slavery there, That was in 1816. Thereafter lie was suceessful against the Spaniard's in Scrath America. and in 1819 at Angos- tura, Veneassala, he was chosen presi- dent with the power of dictator, When New Granada united with Venezuela he was made the first President. By 1826 the new,republic was completely cleared of royalkst troops. Bolivar was summoned the same -year be help the Peruvians and in 1824 was named dictator of Peru. DO IMO tke Spaniards were driven out of Pero also, and Bolivar, calling a congress at Lima, formally resigned the dieteterships. Soon after that the southern part of Peru was erected in- to a 'separate state and named Bolivia, and he could have been dictator for life. However, troubles in Colombia kepe him busy. Venezuela broke away from the rest of Colombia in 1829. Bolivar was denounced for his ambi- tion, and he was virtually forced to retire to Cartagena. He died in 1830. No Longer' PoUular. "The ,pacid.ed. out. shoulders that have been characteristic. of the ready- to-wear clothing," says an illustrator, "went into the discard weeks ago and now they are .supplying the inspire - flan .for. the PorfileS, In the same way the man -with thick iauseleo and bi- ceps is no longer in demand among the men who hitake the nicturees for the.yourig girl's books,' Ile's, a back number of the most decided type.; "The popular. figure is,olirn all the WHY hp. It is not narrow -shouldered, but of the aieliaureinent that the tail. 'ors •call naturaL•which Means that the • shoulders •seem little . broader than they really are.. .There is no padding Ana coot, but the least bit of lining that Carries' the shoulder a little .out. s'Such is ale shoulder style of the present year... The bulk thut looked like a them/sager bottle turned upsiao down Is a thing of the past. Even on . the beachati this summer the new merlitim shouldered mon is- the 'reel thing in toasouline beauty... • • '"The broad-SitOthlered idol' of for-. mer years seems to realize this, for ottempas to makeallimoell look narrower by the eut Of bit bathing snit.. letting the jersey run out to the arms." Septembea 8, Rev. EeSlisse. ins combe for the twenty thousandth time oelebtated High ;lass in the ea.theilral of .St. Albert, near Editiontota Alber- to, The occasion wasalso the fiftieth Anniversary of the establishment of the Gray 3111110 in the place: The town, the Convent, schools, cathedral, and the palace 01 Bishop Legal. were all beautifully decorated. The cathe- dral was crowded it the setviees, and Father Lacombe took charge. After the eelobration Of the Aass, Rev. Father Leduc, :himself a pioneer priest of the weet, preached, and .in the course of his remarks referred to the work of Father Lacombe in his early pioneer.dayo. .41 the laneheon which. followed the- sorticeo, Bishop Legal • presided, end on his loft. were Lieu- tenant -Governor Bulyee, on his right Hon. C. Wi Grams, Attorney -General of the proyinee. Among the others guestos were Rey. Father Laeonabe, Senator Roy, eeveral mernbers of the local Legislature, and other's, . • Rev'. Father Lacembe, who is now over: eighty years of age, was ordain- ed on juee 13, tatra, tor the then Bishs op of Montreali sood almost immedi- otoly the/TR/tor he went to the west, telreere he has tabooed ever ranee. He resitotexeri the (tree layagane and Pub- lished it dictionary rszed giannritir of alert lernOtorige, as well ea traveling themeands of milee eaelt year, and. es- tealteliolaing several new churches. . The Gift of Prowling. Prowling, according to a magazine writer, is not exactly strolling, for •otrolling practically ossumes on absos lute and utter lock Of purpose. On th' other hand, prowling differs fromany- thin that implies sightseeing; for while it has a subconscious purpose, there is tiothing brisk or businesslike or suggestive of duty about it, To prowl, in fact, is to go forth into the highways and byways of any in- teresting place, either in the, city or in the country', in;a perfectly irre- s.ponsible fashion, With Pleas mind in a state of genial receptivity, but not of acute acquisitiveness; with a readi- ness :to enjoy every possible impres- sion of life in all its phases.; not ex- actly an alertness, but with bland and friendly openmindedness that never loses ,sight of anything. • The person 'who is capable of prowl- ing, in this special and technical SlYage the word, Banat hare a touch of the Bohemian in him. He must be able to take things aa they come, to extraot .the hoot drop of Manor from every passible Caeurrence; to have ria large ideas of 'his. own im- portance, , to .bo tolerant Rad. wholly free front priggishness: and to see, the amusing and 'interesting side a even the ifesignificant. The gift a prowling is perhaps most truly vidnalile to the traveler in for- eign 'arida.. Any one can go about arid see the ordinary sights. Any one n Scaread hits Baedeker and absorb front other aitirces the second-barnd emotions of those who have gone be- fore him. But it is only the eiCep. tional persbn who can adequatelyamd intelligently prowl. • --- • ftilsrgen's Expensive Paint. - armther . Tlefare •Davisi Belasco IMO reached :the toptuosoin the taeatrical ladder feet, when hio feet was On the. first .otepanti he.' was a snuill and 'Obscare : i.rothteer in 'Salt Fran- - elso0a he -.Wita one i 71. meloaranm at the old A 1133 ',,r t hoot re. 1 he play . cotitai•ned • a ' teiv •Ilililical s. an 1 -111- itot was stirring ern drama...11u. company rClititti•sing 1‘.114 11')110 1('0 1111141';ge111. a,nd inane too ..caniiliar With 11a.tirttt hterary Walla of history, •111e1i.l'orio waS ithout. all . shine .af 'them r eaoo.I When the hell) t'01,011 10 I he quotation' frOnt t he Bible 'lie. 11 Iltde 10741(01 /11111 ' turned- to 0 cowrie mon 10 tISIt who o rote Oat ;aft with the quotation -talk , ,nroilori it., , . David': replied 'the athor aetor. • • • . • -holt, Sioiasoo elwoys was .11 rot- ten wriltsr,.“ V ittit,6.1.1e,..,lerei, with (1;esaist. Somebody oagla to stop him,- ' • ' Buy tslo Levender'?" DoloOmir ?lit, WOC9 .VTlasfe. whets hayested Heron* Brie Debent- ures. Ai absolutely secure way to make your 'eying' earn a kiglior rate of interest. Haat Del:mature issued for ;100 and upwards. You coo arrange to have your money returned at end of frent one tilt fire years. Interest is paid hall -yearly. Our Pre* Booklet tells all about our Debentures and why they excel as a* investment. Ask for it. Iscoarosa231D 11104 Needed an Engineor. A Need loamy yearn 5Igo it prorninent rail -any coretractor woe in Sir William Van Horne's case at the C.P.R. head- quarters at Montreal tsdking over zeme work that wan, in progress. The rent/gator anal Sir William had rerotty lively ditsoaosion, and the former anddanly said: "Who is your chief engineer?" "I am the chief engineer," said Sir wed the contractor, "you had better got another. You are go- ing to have a bad accident, and the first thirg yon know you'll be sent to aril," Sir William punched a bell, and Mr. P. A. Peterson responded. "Peterson," mad Sir William, "you have served las loeg and faithfully, and you ere hereby appointed chief eneineer of the C.P.R."-Menereel Seer. , WATER IN YOUR, BLOOD '? LOIO of people have thin watery flood -they eat plenty but don't di- . at. When digestion ie poor, food IS conve;rted into nourishment. -in ronsequence the body rapidly loses strength. To positively renew health, nothing equals Ferrozone.' It 'Mites sharp appetite,00makes the stomach digest, forms life sustaining blood. Abundant strength is sure to folloW, 1 you need more vitality, (tetra en- ergy, better nerves, then use Verne- ene the Medical triumph of the, age. Fifty rents buys a box of fifty choco- late coated Perrozone tablets, 11 • Wiwi) lavendor. pilloWs are pia in o satiny oportment they stre charaungo nod the monothey. Pe sitaken up the. Moro frhgrant they • ft. -come. Lruvt>de'r was ealleti by the Romano layandula, entaitgainte people troVel front- distanera to inhale the f rep a net,. of the • • I n the 4.1g htemith•.eentury itivender- water Orethe principal perfume of . the lodoa of that pet ash. alien tee leehion ("lionized. 'Citiquieully-propitted perfomoo Imperial 'Irmo the eoliths. ent iheaaw the. irode, and "oiveet". Venderavutet . 1.w4',.t71e /0,10.8t un- known, exeept sit eautiloy cothates. -A holy ulto. still eel:Foaled the plent end ineutualetured • the oeent. wrote to Queen Victoiis asking Iler Majesty to 34, r great ifithienee tos restore this tad Eligash pet anus tO populasay. • and she acquitaceer. • Silas Morgan, t armer living on 'Whidby Island, Wash., recently dug ua over it score quart cans,each con- taining .g red, Sticky substance, pos-. sessing & sweet smell. Thinking the find was paint; the old man, decor- ated his 'three-room cottage: That . night a glower washed away every trace of tha fresh paint and Morgan took what remained in one can to his druggist. The phartnitoist •diso covered the substance to be pure opium worth close to $300 per can. • The cal' farmer nearly collapsed .when he thought of the 29 cens of the; 'opium he had daubed upon the rough boards of his shanty. Through his ignotance of the drug he had wasted nearly $9,000 Worth. The opium Yam probably cached in years gone by by smugglers operating between Puget Sound points and Vic- toria, , The smugglers piton' packed opium in quart cans, and many a: smuggler's lighter passed ex, amination by officers on the around that the cans eontained fruit. Eike Each Animal Worth 2 5 To Over Its Cost • On Y3 of a Cent a Day No.0 ever heard of "stock food" curing the bete or colic, staking Yens lay he winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per cow a day, eir restoring run-down animals to plumpness and vigor. Whoa you feed "stock sood " to your cow. horse, wino or poultry, Yea ars gaerelY feeding them what you are growing on your own farts. Your animals do need net intro feed, but eomething to help their 'Indies get all the good out of 'the teed you give them so they can get fat and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keep therm up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these things. ROYAL PURPLE bToCK SPECIFIC san and does, It is Nat a "Stock Food" But a "Conditioner" EEL" 2:03i 1.arrest Primmer of any paeer on greed Ciecuit, ROYAL PURPLY/ STOCK SPECIFIC contains ne grain. nor farm products. It increases 5,ield of milk from three to five pounds per COW per day 'before the Specific has been used tWo weeks. It makes the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any other preparation known. Young calves fed with ROYAL PURPLE. areas large at six weeks old as they would be when fed with ordinary materials at ten weeks. • ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run.down animals and restores them to plumpness almost magically. cures hots, colic. worms, skin diseases and debility permanently. Dan Mcliwan, the horseman, says: "I hare used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.021, largest winner of any pacer OD Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters.' 2•091, brother of 'Allen Vinters.' winner of S36,000 in trotting stakes in 1908. These horses have never 11(130 0(1 their feed since I commenced using Royal Purple Specific alrrtost a year ago, and I will always have it in my stables." 1 - Valuable Nagged Clothes. It often happens that the parts taken by Actors on the stage oblige them te wear ragged clothes. To ob- tain such clothes, of the requisite de- gree of decrepitude, is likely to be vety difficult. They cannot be made to order; it is necessary that they shall have arrived at the desired eon- ditiot of prolonged 'wear. The re- mark applies ill much to a coat or a pv.ir of pantaloons as to a pair of shoes. Many a professitenel comedian hes spent anxious days in eearching the slums of a city for some accidental "bummer" whose coat or trousers poss oessed the requisite attribates of rag- geclness and obvious antiquity. The same idee applies, of course, to the shabby and ragged clothing often worn by women on the stage. To look right, it must be the real thing -- which is by no meana so easy to get as one might imagine, A "find" of the kind, once made, is anxiously treasured -the first thing done with it naturally, being to subject it to a thorough fumigation. Ash dumps have furnished many a pre.eious arti. ele of apparel for theatrical ward- robes. Whore inapiration Sits. Mrs. atrailInser came tiptoeing soft- ly into her tritoband's study, rested hand ligetly on his shoulder, and peered over at the 'sheaf of half -writ- ten sheets on his desk. "What are you working on now, deametP" she asked gently. "On Mary's mittens," he antswered, pleasantly, but withoet looking up. Mre, Qwillueer atudied a moment, as' if planning. "Dearest, Willie needs g pair ot shoes Snore than Mary (Meg the mittens. I have already promised then* to the poor. boy. Hadn't you better work on Willie's shoes first, dear?" "All right, Nellie, all right," he ms plied, kindly, turning his eyes up into Nellie's greet patient ones. Then he psi -shed beck 'An Ode te the Dancing Leaves," and cheerfully began to write a Sunday special on "A New Substitute for Coal. STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS One 50e, package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seventy days, which is a littleover two-thirds of a cent n day Most stock foods in fifty cent packages ",.. last hut fifty days and are even three times A day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC '4 given but once a day. and lasts half again as 10Pg. A $1.50 pail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent package will last 2(0 days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 25l. it is an astonishingly cuticle fattener,' stimulating the appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn teett_lnto flesh. Asa hop fattener it is a leader. It will avemany times itscost in veterinary hills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECI- FIC is our other specific for poultry, not for stock. One 50 cent package will last twenty-five . hens 70 days, or a pail costing 31.50 wittiest twenty -live hens= days. which is four timesmore , material for only three times the cost. It makes a "laying machine" out 'of your hens sumnienaridwinterrevents fowls losing firsh at mnulting time, and cures poultry diseases. • PtOYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is • gEavaerraYnreaeedk.ag_. 01 Just Use ROYAL PtillOPLIS on 0510of your animals and any other Preparation on another . animal in the same condition: offer comparing results you will sayROYAL PURPLE has them all heat to death, or else back comes your money. FREE -Ask your !Walesa or wit e tis for our valuable 32.page booklet, on cattle ' ''''',•. / ,04i1!..4.9v.' and poultry di.smt eva. containing also cooking receines and full perticulars about ROYAL:PURa , PLE STOCK and POUL- Nit TRY SPECIFICS.' • If you cannot get Revd Purple y Specifics from merchants or sigents, we will supply you direct. express prepaid. OK receipt of $1.50 a pail for either'Poultry O r Stock Specifics. • . flake meetly si-ting as our agent in your distriet. Write foe terms. For sale by Kil up-to-date merchants. W. LJenkins rg. co.I.Lendon, Can. Royal Purple Stock and Poultry Specific and froobooklot are kept in stook by VF. 8, R, Rolm° • • . . • . seeeseemeseersommemeeewissorwoomowo""emeamossir sesimsessiiemese His Trouble. "What brought you here, my poor Man?" inquired the prison visitor. "Well, lady," replied the prisoner, "I guess my trouble started from at- tendin* too many weddinsta" "Atli You loomed to drink there, Or st-Cal perhaps?" -No, lady. 1 wee alvrays the bride. kroom." The Root of Neuralgic IIeadache, Is an irritable. condition of the•ner- ves caused by cold. Relief comes quickly from N'erviline, the great pain reliever of to -day. "I consider Ner- viline a magical remedy for neural - gift," writes Mrs. t. O. Harris 1a1timoro. Ilut I never worry if Nere tithe!, is in the bouse. A few applica- tions never yet failed to cure the pain. can also reeemenend Nerviline for stiffness, rheumatism, and museulat pains." In 1780 nearly fifty yoars ; try Novilino yours411. , • • levee se , ' l't* • a' 174 Giveit 170;(ur Children SY-'--4RU.P" is a food not only for children but fee everyone -and it is used by everyone. It it a table delleney whielt should be in every home. It is the one thing that eatiefies that longing for sweets which sal healthy children aa and Most adults have. treed in the home, it saves trouble in the making up of delicious desserts and ether good things to eat., . "CROWN, etRAND ISVIXTP" stands for the highest possible purity ha table syrup. It is prepared in a clean witolesotne manner from the very fineeat ingredients, which develop a delicious *lever as of Atte homy mid rick cream, • Those are ennui reasons why you should hisist on having "Ch.OWN BRAND SYRUP". Y•Orriaalet look ha yes 1.2,5,16 amil 26 le Ons with The rdwardsbarg Starch Co., Limited ESTABLISHED 1858. s•bg Vertu' CARDINAL, Oat. Offiees MONTREAL.TORONTO & BRANTFORD -.111KIKIAKNKKKKINKIKKKiramiikwarlolialimariciliaribmi el•IfIJIIMMO11115 The News -Record to the end of, 1910 for $1.00 Advertising in The News -Record Brings Good Results.