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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1909-12-09, Page 8eh - 'd iF4 -/ PI L L S . 4'ks KIONCV..‘"1:*4 • . se • 4a. Ok. iRePeatt —"Shiloh's Cure wilt al- ays core ray Coughs aed ihtlas." h A Mine of 1 num°, The thumb is It guide to a knowl- edge of the mental condition of the owner.- ffe Whit itt in full possesaion of *Bettis fecultiest makes use rtf the thank but whenever there is a ten- 11:4e0O7 to ansanity this generally use- ful mad iketiY11 member falls out et ion*e A Physician in charge ot Innatie esalunt states positively that if you see a parson whoae thumb re-• amine inactive—standing at right en - ales and taking no part hi the act of writiag. salutation or any other roan- mal*enereilera-1011, may be altre that he has a diseesed mind. He may talk intelligently and appear.ane in every respect, but undoubtedly a tinge of madness is lurking within his brain. 'Repeat it :—"Shiloh's Cure will al- ways cure my coughs and colds." A BY-LAW. Top-ohlblt the sale by retail of epirituOus, fer- mented or other manufactured liq lora In tho. ge Ot I3aythild, The Meniclpal Connell of the Village of Mayfield hereby easing as : 1. -That the eale by r ot flpiritunna; fee. a:seated, or other ins n ufaetu red liquors ia and .shall he prohibited In every tavern, inn or MAI. .er IMZo or piece of pablie entetta.in inept in the a aid in unieip airy, and the sale thweet ex- atept by wholeeale. 14 and shall be prohibited in every shop or place other th m a house of vubti entertaitun mt in the said intieleipalitY. 2.-Tkat the rote of thn eleetor • of theutd Vitt age of Bo -field will he taken on this by- law by the returning °Muer hereinafter nem-. wrlos Monday, the third -day of January, th.e Theeteed. Nin 11.inare Li au 1 .Ten, Oonimene ening at nine o'elock in tho morning and ion - d place at The Town Halt, 1.3 tydeld. . • THE MAN IN THE STAGE ag unleSvo o'r:I oak in the undermentiaee 3 -That on the 2/th day of Dace:Libor A. D. 1993, at hie office in the said Village of 13ayflold .at the hoar of eit) fell 0010 44C in 03 forenoon ,the reeve Omit appoint in writine, signed by lora ode two persons to attend 'at the final *lamming up of the votoe by tha rlerk, anti -.Gas pereon to attend at each polling Mace on be. half of the weeds intereete 1 in an i'deslroe of promoting the ;Ageing of this by-lew, and 1. like arta r on behalf of the maims interesteri in teed deeirous of oppoilite the passing of Oil . . . 4.- net the Clerk rif the said Mune:deal Council of the Village of 13 lyeeld shall attend at the Town El 4.1 at the hour of eleven .o'cintek An the foreason on the fourth day of January A. D. 1910, to stun upthe nurnbac of yam give* for and against this 13Y -Law. 3. -This ay -la w.thall eoinelnto force and•take ieflfeet.si from the drat day ot May next after .tb.e final pawing thereof. • • Counell Chamber, No/ember 6th, DU "e Reeve. Malt. 144,1401111k1 011.110$11. .•*. ilkw Pitt* Op t1i. Oa* tiheeele *Oda Has Wen H. “Ileiasies en* trerene-dadhie"— ill "at Ootose of Dr. Goaceia leyee'o gairOP44 yaw book, .iewstaxeic lieWixowoot of Ler d Soder o Otheo, lots." lie hoe eenneeted witing et the envy with tire potatimed one becery ;se ilvet7itO who reads leht hinewer Wept have a livelier hut.. preeszen the firandiag and entire ""ztt ot Inaniptg. De. orioa's Ogle ia PortiwolOrlY Ina**. and Ite has hem et Palos to make his history at - be We seerer taleKka`. Whittle ever poesible iron down the recol- 'onions of Mt 07.10-Witatiiia of any event contented with the history of the Selkirk setlieenent. At the pre - eat time he says no one it' Iiying who eaw Lord Selkirk, intt he hes eon. vereed with in whit remembered hira very well and from their descrip- tint he give, a emarineing Picture of the Soettielt noblemen who °could not see his coutdraneete sent awed' irent then ranive lend 'Wheat founding as new home far than where thee- would be al hemp, ate they' heel been in Scotland, and mere prosperous. "He was liall lat seaterti, this and refined la eynescarate. He had a benignant fen, hie manna was eaey and polite. T. the Irsidiens he was specially ire terenifion. Ting easeht the idea that Wine a meta et tette he, ware in. some ewe eleoela etionseeted with their Great, Iranian the Xing. Beettnee of hie penermety te tiom iat making a toileAV, titer tosaad Mote the Silver Chief. Is we ittet sewn of then teeny —•The writech tweets of desoription tree well-kaewn. There is as well in the took a great deal of vivid Celtic meaminedien The Assisibeine is lik- ened te the Tiber wad the sufferings of the baud of Selkirk settlers, who were dispositeseed,be the North-West fur traders, are said te be out of ell eneapareson greater than those en- dured either bv the Acediaits or the II E. Loyadiste. *When the hietorian writes of a buffalo hunt; or the gathering of. the fur trader* in spring, of Seen • Oaks,' the grasshopper plague, the floods, on• the Red River, and the long journey of the settlers from • Iltidson to Winehneg, he carries his readers "long with him as only a Nil -1+4r of imagmation and .apt phraaeology can. He chants for the Selkirk settleraent that it lield the West for Canada and that no other American colony had such a continuomedistressing struggle for existence asi these Scottish set- tlers. It is a heroic story of suffer- ing, conflict and rivalry, of .slow adaptation to . circumstances which no one had yet learned to conquer, and it is a story Which everyone al should know, NOTICE. Take notice that the above is a trite copy ear A. prop -mai Ry -law wh ch hae been taken in- to nensideratimi by the Munimpal Oouneil of Vl.lege of ErayfIeld and vrhieh will bo finally ;mite 1 by the said commit (in the event of the .aestet of the electore being obtained thereto. as provided by the "The Liquor fiteense Ael." airs )ti men te thereto,1 ater 0013 ntenth from .tho grit pub i attot thereof in the Minton we -Record the date of which first Ptiplieetion 11,44 hare lay the 9th d y of Decemoer A., tr, 'Maud that at the hone, d ay and places there - 5n axed for takinK the y�te4 of thaelectere the wails will be held. •EL W. ERWIN CLERIC, The Chid Viewpaint. !Ten- pre Iwo Sundayschool stories; -"a/City did Let's wife look back?", a. litwisier ticr.keil one day in. the ;td - dr • atthe- children's service. • 'Op : evsie ti little girl's hand, "Please, she Saet bee 'at." .Excel lent was the reply of another little girl when the class was beteg ,r)uestioned on the story of the pro, li- ,gal son. "Now were they very glad o see , birn? What did they do to ehow how glad they were?". "They inel a natty." CURED Of CONSTIPATH illifro Andrews .pralses Dr. lillorseda Indian Rant PM& Mr. sirreorg'e Andrews cif Halifax, N. S,, writes: "For manyytars 1 have bees troubled -whit chronic Conatipaticet. This ail- ment never ceatIllit single-handed; lhaere been *victim to the many illnesses itbat constipation brine ix its train. Medicine rafter medicate 1 hare taken ia order to find relief, but oste and all left me in the same hopeless cotelitio*. It seemed that uothing would expel from ,ote the one ailment thet mowed so much trouble, yet sa Ian I read *bout dime 'Indian Root Fills. That was badeecl a lucky day foe me, for I was to iastpreseed with the state- ments made that I determined to -give them st fair ttial. They have regained nay tateteuta mid newels. / a* owed ef noetipaliest, and X chitin tau* love no toed ss amode- rine." gre For over half a cesttuey Dr, Moat's Indian Root Pills have been cueing MIK'. ntipaiion sad clogged, inactive kidaeys, -with all the eihneate vrhielt moult from them. They demise the whole system mai purify the blood. Staid everywhere at 256. a. boor. 2 s A 'Tragedy of the Olden Days In' New York.City, A good 'many years ago; long before skysthapers and rapid transit were thought ot and, New Yore woe just a big growieg town. `they ueed to tell a Kerry' that evae gisestiy•etiough to cur-. .dle tee bleed It( the most. skeptieal ami te keep people...of "amebae teuiper-, amen awake .0 rights. • Ilte .tale went thee of ta summer eight a heshaud Auld, wife. morning borne frees the 'teenier, etatereO a hint) aeosue stage tar . dowatown: and for mitay bloeks were 'the only oceupants. A little•abeive Vomit street, how- ever, tite mane mune to an abrupt atop, tie 4e9r,*ee opeeed.. and three yoong item. eate,redi,. One .of the three .1.ad evidently 'line drinking heavily, for 'his conatsomioint . wereobliged hi help bite to hit met.. •The door wits .elosert behind them,. tad the MOO von: tinned its joirrisey Northward. About ten Meek* fartheron one ef ethe young meta rose and. .bidding tee - friends geed !Ogee stopped the stage Ind alighted. A fete whittles later the • sieporni off the three said, W 11; plod night, Milled the. strap,- . sitepped to the sidewalk /anti winked - on through one • of lb4 side i4reent. l'here Vents hied IX the 'al age on ty the • blialotad and wife and the youeg /nun ':Who was obviously ' Muter •. t he . lolin- IIt liquor mad who sat hi a . (Touching attitude itt i corner ot 3 he Otage. utatet t he dint tliekeri 171 nip After e: time 'the husband hined. thar the yoting 'mines head seemed 10 be droonliig as If in aleett, a tot, tea rine; t hitt he inight• be borne her otai Itis • deaf 'nation, he rose , Is pi 4e(1 0111, 01)-10,4 ghouldier. 1 0c1.tnIled attention to the anniber of the atrret 'espy hod eta; passed. There wee no ret,potise. a tut the Inuit* nal repeal led his swords, hist it, Aug.avar at be did so. Then Ile hue deuly etreighteeed up. eurhen • In 014 Wife mud said .gulately', 'nye will get out btoa," • elm-.begsfel prOf"tel. btit he Sittlely repeated the worths., palled the strap mad helped her to alight- As they stood ander tire emitter lamppost she tweed queettise hotly a tad *shed • him • wiry It. isetsteit as their getting oat of the Iona se lier leoleve tkedir atemioa•• tam. .• • • "Noinmeei" be replied, "Pee 1.: yuweg Ma a throat was est from eau. le " Pat Was a Skielsemel. An Iriehanto west to a foundre in Lanottsiiire after wm.k. 'Wien lee er- rived lie found soother mau there es the tissue errand. The foresaari nate,.• and Pet, being werreounonted to eek - Mg for work, siood back,with the in, ng tention of hearihow the other fel- low went about it. Aftet the man had asked the fore- man said, 'What trade are you?" "I'm a dre.seer," replied the maa. "Come to -morrow," said the fere- men. "I'll start you." Turning to the Irishman, the fore. man asked him what he was.' "the jabers, torr," replied Pat, "Oihn a rudely:weir—London Stand. tad. sessamensseninmeetenintennimenamseate11 The Ideal Beverage ASK PO4 LONO'ON1 A PALE A at, palatable, full of the Virtue* of Malt end hops, and in spaekliog condi- Oen, le the ideal beverage. Now when chemists announce its purity, and . judges its merit, one need look no further. mom Allowoirt • • ileterthenesie *ewe* Wes Sons at Work Per Seveaeg-folve Yea% Tits atalost wasitiug ifetwookililut Canada ie lir blitationene Bowel!. Of The Bellereille latelbgestear. AwOr book itt 104 he weliriod. habs that oh Nos sia mow for A Joh. He gee He vette then only tetrolel Years- told. For iteveaty-five yens Oit Meekensie has been actively ideatithef with Tim lueelligetwone and to -dee, when Par - Bement is not in af.04041, 70t1 ou al- ways ined hire at his detik in hie home eity, He is never idle and COIL Pen as Ole and ergumeettetive an edi- torial to -day as he weld held I cen- tury ego. From "devil" he limbed net only to the editorship and owner- ship of The Intelligeneer, but also to the Prentierehip of Canada. The vet- eran knight evert yet, ins tope one, sionally by way a diversioa. Wheat on • a weetern trip uiledh, during the time that he was Therein, he oalled at the °ghee of The Calgary Herald to see the plant and eleterve the working of the Mereeettlealer type - meting rasehinee, The Herald hang the nen on the Wedeln to the obeli them. He sot talking of the improventeatie in poiating *tete as ocolaPOred with half & oneipary age. serevrer to a bentonite intatiri as te whether be mould Wok type as well as he did wheat a bey, he piebed up a Miek asti set several limn of latervier. The ineident was reaerred to at sensitienable length ia the ciehmato ef The limeld that evening -under the hestiliag The Premier of Ganseho otdo trPs1. Tke Ileratil ales." An-. oehat good story,.. whioh Sir Maekett- Me levee to tell, is that, when Minis- ter of Oesewas in the adrainistretion of Sir Sohn A. Meedonali, he was on a horseback tour through the West ',letting the Crow's Neat Pass onto - tory. Roughly *Allred for the long ionrney, whoa he got to Pearelstoke he sanntered ietsurely into a• printing (Mee and asked for a job, telling the proprietor, who did not ovegnize him, that he was a tramp printer and want -ed to get a little Money to go east. The lams raised him up and said rather regretfully thatehe had no posi- tion vacant. The Cabinet Minister thanked him and lett. It was only a few- hours after that the newspaper man learned of the identity of his caller. .1Ie hunted him up, and the two had a hearty laugh over the epi- sode. . . • Saskatchewan's Premier, The Prernier of Saskatchewan, Hon. Walter Scott, began life as a printer's "devil" in the early days of Regina when it was,s: smell town and its only claim to note ley in being ' the head- quarters of the Territorial Govern- znent. Young Scott applied for a job one day and got it. He swept the floor, pulled proofs, needled rollers and lighted fires in the °Mee of a country weekly. He did the work faithfully. and had ambition. No one in that early period, however, dream- ed that one day he would be the chief adviser of His Majesty in a great Canadian provintie. To findthe secret Of his emcees me mien' knew the men: If asked to name • the qualitiee that have led. te" his adyancement, his friends would my that ,courage and stick-to- iteiveness, along With an affable dis- position, are his • twedorninant char-. aeteristies. He is a vigorous cam- paign speaker, and never hits below the belt. He is not .a man to trifle with on the platform a* many an in- terrupter knows to his sorrow: During the last provincial oarapaign he was speaking at Lumeden, where soiree opposition was in evidence'. As Mr. Scott was talking a heckler yell- ed, "Rats." Quick as a Nosh came the retort; "Has my young friend over there got them in hie p.oasket or in his head?" - No farther interjections were heard after the laughter had subsided, and the meeting went on peeoefully until • 1Me hour. • Father Lacombe. . • On September 8, Rev, Father La, eornhe for the twenty thousandth time celebrated High Masa in the cathedral of St. Albert, near Edmonton, Alber- to. The occasion was els° the fiftieth anniversary of the catabliehmerit of the Gray nunsin the place. The town, the oonvent, schools, cathedral, and the palace of Bishop. Legal were MI beautifully decorated. The cathe- dra' was crowded at the services, and Father Lacombe took charge. Atter the celebration of the Mat36, Rev. Father Ledne, himself a pioneer priest of the west, preached, and in the haurse of his remarks referred to the. work Of Father Lacombe in his early pioneer days. At the lanehoin which followed the services', Bishop •Legal presided, and on his left were Lieu- tenant -Governor Bulree, on his right Ron. C. W. Croft, Attorney -General of the province. Among the other gueete were Rey. Father .Ineornbe, Senator Roy, several Members of the lecal Le.girslitture, and others. ' ROY. Father Lacombe, who is now cvor eighty Putts of are, was ordain- ed oredene 13, t84e, br the then Mell- o* of Montrea-1, nod almost immedi- etely .thermanor he went to the west, where he has labored' ever since. He imaffitored the Ciee bringeoge and pub - a dietioaary end grammar of ante 'anytime, as well at teaveling thereon& el miles Mon year, and es- kW/eking several new eharshee. Neeetsel ea Engineer, A good 'natty yeses age 'a 'proMinent railway coiffeur:tor wets in Sir William Olen torne's oftlee at the C.P.R. head- quarters at Montreal talking over Same workthet war, in progrees. • The eorwactor and Mir William had a pretty lively diesel/mime and the fornier maidenly said: • "Who it; your ehief eregineer?" "I am the chief engineer," said Sir Will . "Veil," Said the etnitrector, "you heel better get another. You are go- ing to have a had aeoident, and the first thing yott know you'll be sent to Sir William punched a bell, and Mr. P. A. Peterson responded. "Peterson," odd Sir William, "yen have served as long and faithfully, and you Are hereby appointed chief eralineer of the C.P.R."—Menersed fame. • WATER IN YOUR BLOOD? Lots of People have thin watery 14°0d. -they eat plenty but don't dis vest. When digeetion is poor, food is not COnVerted into nourishinent-in eonacquence the body rapidly lasts strength. To positively renew health, nothing equals Perrozone. It excites harp appetitc,—Inalces the stomach digest, forms life sustaining blood. Abundant strength is sure to follow. '1 you need more vitality, extra en- ergy, better nerVeS, then USD Perroz- nue the medical triumph of the age, Fifty Cents buys a box of fifty choco- late coated Perrozone tablets. (I OW** itssoN1100•44 iniamismoupri!i-fis, - IMMO OF TOW AILAAATIVIN. A Ore* Whisolt le Working Mesh Herm le Cur Oohs - "Wive I* 11t to ma a Mtatedltait?" $erietursall * aewepaper tuseddirett that I imow IhOostalT. erritee Johe telethon * Mmeseyht. Th4; SalaWalr ill: "NOWAY." No ho- t** item% Mat be trebled to a eon- ditien that will permit its owner te ram 2tt lades at eep speed without ex- posing him be the danger of eolleptie and sudden (loath, or without bring- ing oboist eenditiorts which favor the development ot disease io later life. Fromtto moment when we draw an: first breath at birth until we drew (tor lest breath at death, the heart hies to punap the blood through. - out the body. It mud do 00 411/' and night, yeer na and year out. Sundays and holideys, with never it let-up. I know et nothing else in the world that works without ever getting n day off, * few hours off. or a few aelettate off, except the heart; and yet, with the poesible exception of the itomesh, no °man ite the body its ee badly Wooled. A Germaine proverb says' thet horse ie driven the hardest; this is menialv true of the heart. Every time we get angry, laugh inordinate- ly, *he stimulating food or drink, rue to meek a ear, get deeply in love, MA do pew se many other thief's, it all lands on the poor old heart. Thai indiepeusable organ ful- fils St. Paith's definition of clutrity— it salters long end is. kind; but there is one thing that it cannot stand—a Marathon rase. " The law would not pernot any on1. to drive a horse 26 miles at top speed; or, if it did, the horn would collapse tong before the fluitsh. Now, in the matter of food, drink, end other things, a horse hada the aim- •pho We It Milo has another great advantage over man, in the tact that its body is horizontal while main's body is perpendicular. It is much metier for a heart to pump all the *blood horizontally than to force half of it directly upward, as is the can in man. A distinguished colleague recently remarked that any one who, for the sake of a few donate, a cup, or a day 's newspaper notoriety, expose hitnself to the dangers of a Marathon rice; deserve, .no sympathy, what- ever ipay happen to him. Doubtless many will share this sentiment; tut the trouble . does not eed with those who actually enter the races, The Marathon craze has spread all over the country. It has taken possession of our boys end young men, and minty are injuring their health in efforts to train for future Marathon glory. No Longer Popular. "The padded out aboulders 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 - tion for the eornice. In the same way The man with thick muscles and bi- eeps is no longer in demand among the men who make the pictures for the young girl's books. He's a back number of the most decided type. "The popular eigure is slimall the • way up. It is not narrow shouldered, but of the measurement that the tail- ors call natural, which means that the shoulders seem little breeder than they really are. There is no padding • in a.eoat, but the least bit of. lining that carries the, shoulder a •Iittle out. Such is the alto/ader style of the present year. • The hulk that looked like a oharapayee bottle turned Upside • down is a thing of the paet. Even on the beaches this summer the new medium. shouldered men is the real thing in tushouline beauty. "The bro.td-shouldered 'idol of for met years !teems to realize this, for he attempts to' make himself look, narrower • by the cut: of his bathing suit, letting the jersey run out to the arum" • . Another Devitt. BefoteaDayiti 'Behan° hail reached . tne .tap rting* in the theatrical ladder' —in feet, *when his foot was on 1. the first: etep and•he was a sine') nnd °tenure play airodneer in Sara Vran- elect,- he. was. age 'time -rehearsing a rneloilra nt'n • nt the. old AICS Stir theatre. The 'play contai4ied " a few Biblical s, tin i hie* 1est was stirring west- ern drama. 'The cerepany. rehearsing hene tro•intelhnent and bone too (miller' with Abe great Ilterary works h ietai y M el ed ran la was' about 'all Some of thern understood. When the hero .otinte to the Ouotation from. the 13101e loo:teda little puzzled and •turned to e cot/wen-ion to , ask who erete flier pea with the quotation neelto 'ironed if: • • -Ole • David!" replied the • other actin , "Well. Bela‘eo always swas ft rot- . ten writer," excle hued the here, w:th disirust. " Somebody ought to 'stop hi tn." ' "Who'll Buy kleSetvender?" When lavender Minnie are put in a sunny • opera/tete they, are chaintiog., and the more they ere ratakeit up the more 'regnant they becurne.. Lavender was calledhy theellonuttee Itenanclulte At cutting -little people travel from In diet:Inver to inhale the fragrance ut tbe tiel4S. in the eighteenth eeittury lavender - water to..s the 'principal perfume of the ladies of Mint potied, Then tete fizehion eharieed...Chteuieally-preptiOed perfumes :Imported teems the cereal - tint b••cettle the whit-. and "sweet" Ilt te r ben%ine atantat un- knoWnexcept 311 cautery eotteges. A Italy non rein eitiliveted the plant and mittluieetured thn scent wrote to Genteel Vietorie meking Her Majesty to use hor gteat inthienee tv restore thio red retgash perfunuo to popularity, and 'lir Hen aie•peed. Valuaili Nagged Clothes. It often happehe that the parts taken by -actors on the *Mee oblige them te wear ragged clothee. To ob- tain such clothes, of the requisite de- gree of decrepitude, ie likely to be very difficult. They cannot be Made to order; it is 'necessary that they shall have arrived at the desired con- dition of prolonged wear; The re. mark applies as much to a coat or a phsto. iresof pantaloone as to a pair of ot Many a pie:4851one' comedian has spent anxious days in marching the Sterns of a city for some accidental "bummer" Whose coat or ttoneere pos- sessed the requisite attributes of rag. gednetis and obvious antiquity. ' The sante idea applies, of course, to the shabby and ragged clothing often worn by women on the stage. TO look right, it must be the. 'reel thing— which is by DO means SO e3253r tO get 86 One might imagine. A "fincl" 01 the hind, c. -nee Made, it Anxiously treasured—the first thing done with it 'cle of apparel for theatrical ward - thorough furnigetien. Atiti dermal }Mee furnished many a precioqe artii ward- robes, beitig to :subject it to. a •*WO NOMA 11**slins Oereer el the leee Fir 'Moen IOW* Is Otienani. tkit Ion* Aland.** tonna pee * ann. fro* **An *diver* _Ph* taPrai bete keel att, Marna ithe worn. 00 diet tint litinetew who moist, ell ht making it a reptilian11 Beliver had beim writtug *out j541t Seath Axtteriesek history ter long.tine before that date, heWe'rer, mama( for himself the tit% ot tba "Waahittgtort ot South Ameries." 5i- /00.0 Bolivar Wee born in Carat**. VOS011Setain ITO e an* end tretelthe 4.11tilyfie setailed, haw ia Blettio, treveied am& in EuroPe, mar- ried end returned to his native coun- *Y. fa 18Q* he visited the United fits*e ea his return bone another journey fe Europe. It WU at this time *heti Int betame an enthusiastic admirer a repubuels owl Inexte UP his wind to fette Teneauela from Owlish deepotina, From that time on war Was hie portion. It BRA he entered Careen la con - **OW', Was hailed as the liberator of hie oniony by the peel* and made aletellate dietator itt cavil and military affitize. He met with reverse'. how. ever, at the hese& of the Spaniard, and it was duties a period of defeat Olt the eontinent that he convoked a rionferee in Ffsiti, instituted & ghvern men* and abolished slavery there. That wae in 1616. Thereafter he was snowiest"' spinet the Speed:tote in South Aurearum. *led in 1819 at Angos- tern, Yenesteela, be was anion presi- dent with the power of dictator. When New Granada united with Venezuela he wall made the Bret President. By 18211 the new republic was completely cleared a royelist troops. Beliver was ezmunesed the same year he help the Peruvians and in 184 was maned dictator of Feria By 1825 the Spaniards were driven out of Peva also, and Bolivar, salting a congress at Lima, formally resigned the dietatorshipe. Soon after that the southern part of Peru was erected in' - to separate "tate and named Bolivia, and he could have been dictator for life, However, troubles in Colombia kept 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. Th. Gift of Prowling. Prowling, according tO a magazine writer, ia not exactly strolling, for strolling practically assumes art abso- lute and utter lack bf purpose. On the other hand, prowling differs from any- thing that implies sightseeing; for while it has a subconscious purpose, there ie nothing brisk or businesslike or suggestive of duty about it. To prowl, in fact, is to go forth into the highwaye and byways of any in- teresting place, either in the city or in the country, in a perfectly irre- sponeible fashion, with one's mind in a istate of genial receptivity, but not of acute acquisitiveness; with a readi- nese to enjoy every possibleimpres- sion' of life in all ita phases; not ex- actly an alertness, but with a bland and friendlyopenmindedness that never loans sighnot anything. The person who is capable of prowl-. inan nt this special and technical SellSe of the word, must have a touch of the Bohemian in him. Hemust be able to take. things as they come, te exteent Abe. last drop of humor front every poetsible ooeurrence, to have no large ideas of his own ifie Porton*, to be tolerant and wholly free front priggishness, and to see the ansiesing and interesting side of even the insignifieant, • The gift of prowling is perhaps most truly malnable to the traveler in tor - :erg* larele. Any one can go about and see the ordinary sights. Any one can read his Baedeker . and • absorb front other sources the second-hand •emotions of those who have gone' be- fore him. But it is only the excep- tional person who can adequately and intelligently prowl.. • Mitresares Expensive Paint. Silas Morgan, a farmerliving on Whidby Island, Wash., recently dug up over a score quart cans, each .con- taining'• a red, 'sticky substance, pos- sessing a sweet smell. Thinking the find was paint, the old man decor- ated his three-room cottage. That night tt •shower washed away every trace of the (mph paint and Morgan took what remained in one can to his druggist. The pharnuecist dis- covered the substaace to be pure opium worth clole to e300 per can. The old farmer nearly collapsed when .he thought ot the .29 cans of this opium he Lad daubed upon the rough boaels ef his shanty. Through his ignorance nf the drug he had wasted nearly e9,000 worth. The opium was probably cached in years gone by by smugglers operating between Puget Sound pointa and Vic- toria, B.C. The smugglers often • packed opium in quart cans, and many a ismaggler's lighter passed ex- amination by officers on the growed that the cans 000tained fruit. Witere Inegiration Site. Mai. ()million Game tiptoeing soft- ie. into her heshand's study, rested a band lightly on his shoulder, and peered over at the Sheaf of half -write tee eheets on his desk. ' "What are you working on now, &nen?" she asked gently. 'On Mary's mittens," he answered, elflike:luny, but without looking up. Mrs, thwilluter studied a mordent, as if planning. "Dearest. Willie needs a pair of shoos room than Mary .does the mittens. 1 have already prontised there to the poor boy. Hadn't you better work on Willie's shoes fire* dear?" "All right, Nellie, all right," he re-, kindly, turning his eyes up into Nellieh great patient ones. The* be pushed baek. "An Ode te the Doming Leaves,"• and eheerfully began to Write a Sunday sreial on "A New Substitute- for Coal. His Trouble. "What brought you here, my poot man?" inquired the prieon visitor. "Well, lady," replied the prisonet. "T guess my trouble started from ate tenclin' too many weddin's," " All I You learned to drink there, or Meal perhaps?" "No, lady, I. was always the britle4 groom." The Itoot of Neuralgic Headache, Is an irritable Condition of the ner- ves caused by cold. Mid comes quickly from Nervilint, the great pain reliever of to -day. "/ consider Ner- viline a magical remedy for neural- gia," writes Mrs. t. G. Harris of rialtiraore. But 1 never worry if Ner. viline is in the house. A fetv applica- tions Meyer yet failed to euro the, pain. I can also recommend Nervilints for stiffness, rheumatism arid muscular pains," In use nearly fifty years try Nerviline younig, When invested ix Hama& Brie Debente woe, L shoolutely oscura way to wake your wine earn a higher rite of interest. Each Debenture issued for OM Mei Upward**. Yoe can aurangs te hers your money returned at end of front one te gait years, Intereat ie paid half-yearla. Our Free Booklet tette all about our Debentures and why they excel os as inveetment. Ask for it. Huron & Erie Lean anal Seeing. Co. LONDON, CANADA. IStP•st Po* • Teen 1864 Mawr Ov 11 000.000 Nike Each Animal Worth 25% Over Its Cost On of Cent a Day Robed, ever Woof rd "stock food" curing the hate or collo, making ...lay to winter, increasing the yield of seek flee pounds poo crew a day, or metering run•dowe. anisette to plumpness and edger. "TERIron ere ;aortas feeding thesis whet you ire growing on your own farm. Wham you feed 'stock rood " to Your me, hem, swim. er wear, gee"byour eattetes do need net more feed, hut something to help their odies get ell the aced out of the feed you give them MP, they can get fat 1.41;:liWs.umor 0. things. ROYAL PURPLE SToCK SPECIFIC Gan and does. it le and stet, fat all year round; afoot° prevent disease, cure disease and keep there up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these sY lacer es Greed Ci/chid Net a"Stock Food"Buta "Conditioner" uie ROYAL PUItPLZ STOCK SPECIFIC containe 00 grain, nor farm products. It increases yield of milk front three to five polindl$ Per cow per day before the Specific has been used two weeks. It make* the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any other preparation known." Young calves feci with ROYAL PURPLE are as large at six weeks old as they would be when - fed with ordinary materials at ten week. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them to plumpness almost megically. Cures hots, colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanently. Dan fAcEwan, the horseman, sayst "I have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.02k, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters,' 3.099, brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $36,0e0.in trotting stakes in 1908. The horses have never been off their feed since I commenced using Royal Purple Specific almost* year aeo, and 1 will always have it in my stables." • a. . STOCK ARO POULTRY SPECIFICS One 50e. package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seventy dilys, which is si little OVer two-thirds of a cent a day Most stock foods in fifty cent packages last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL, PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC 14 given but once a dey, and lasts half again as long, A 91,50 pail containing four times the Amount of the fifty cent package will lase days, ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 23%.It is an astonishingly quick 'fattener, stimulating the 'appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh. Asa hog fattener it is a leader. It will save many times its cost in veterinary hills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECIe PIC is our other Specific for poultry, not for stock. One 50 cent package will last twenty.five -hens 70 days, ore pall costing Size will last twenty-five hens 280 days, which is four times more material for only three times the cost. It makes a " laying machine "out of your hens seminer and winter, prevents fowl.; losing flesh t meuiting time, and cures poultry diseases. Every package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or •POULTIVar SPECIFIC is gaunainirasinitienheedt.u44 use' ROYAL PURPLE Ott one of your animals and any other preparation on another' e eo'ndition: after comparing results you will ROYAL purept.awrock and POUL., FRER_AssaityROTAL PURPLE has them ell heat to deeth, Or else back COPICS your mance'. your morclulot or write us for our valuable 32•page booklet on cattle and poultrydine/tees. eontaining also cooking receines and full psrticulars about ' WRY SPECIFICS. s If you cannot -get Rarti Purple • apecifIce from merchentri or agents, we will supply you direct, express prepaid, on receipt 0.31.50 a pail for either PeultrY or. Steck SP•clfics• Mahe matey a^tirig as Sur agentin your distriet. Write for terms. x • Foe sale by all up-to-date merchants. • W. I. Jenkins Nig, Co. London, Can, . . Royal Purple Stock and Poultry Speelan and free hoi;klet are kept in stock by TY.8 it. Roane Give It To Your Cititidt.iera "CROWN SlItIND SYRUP" is a food not only for children hut for irlayset—olod it is need by everyone. It is a table &linnet which should be in every home. It hi the one thing that astinfres that longing forsweets which healthy Aflame and most adults have. Ural la the home, it saves trouble in the making up of delicions dee:serfs and ether gegid•thinges to eat. "CIROWN RRAND SYRXTP" stands for the lighten possible , parity he table serer, Itis prepared itt a clean Wholesome manner nom tite ver7. linen ingredteitts, .vrilleb develop a delicious Neer as of See teensy end tick main, then are atoms reasons 'thy yen Amid insist on having "c)..owx BILANitt Slelet/P", %nastier Makin en 612, 5, le mot 26 16 nisi& ties with Mt..* lids. ' Works t CARDINAL, 0*1, °Mem t MONTRNAL,ToRoNto&SRANTSORD The Ne*s-ttecord to the erid of 1910 for $1,00. Advertising in The News -Record Brings Good Results.