Clinton New Era, 1910-04-14, Page 7April i4tb Igto
SEALED LEAD PACKETS ONLY
The native purity and garden freshness of
is preserved by the use of sealed lead packets.
11Eis
its h
1-p .
I
C
ou
1
I
By HELEN R. MARTIN.
&athor of "Tillie: A Mennonite eiloid."
CopyNpht, 1907. by McClure,Phelipa&Ca
.
(Continued from last week -y
But the girl did not reply. Mrs.
Morningstar sighed heavily.
"But look a -here!" suddenly cried
Mr. Morningstar. "It'll spite that there
aunt somepin turrible to have to give
up the money after her havin' . it all
this time and thinkin' it's tern!"
"I guess, too!" agreed his wife.
Eunice glanced an inquiry at Kin-
ross. "Will it leave my aunt poor?"
"Comparatively. Not what you have
been accustomed to call poor."
The girl looked thoughtful, but said
no more.
"'Under these circumstances, Mr.
Morningstar," Kinross continued. "you
understand you will of course have to
part with Eunice."
Mrs. 3lorningstar started as if ▪ dodg-
ing a blow.
Would this man never have done
tormenting and robbing them?
"You think you're a-goin' to take her
away, do you.?' she exclaimed fiercely.
"Why," he smiled; "even you -could
scarcely expect ber to remain here
now."
"I ain't leavin' her go!" she stoutly
maintained, evidently not yet realizing
of hat she had
all the significancew
Rt
heard.
Kinross drew a purse from his pock-
et and, taking'out some bills, laid them
before Eunice..'_"Your aunt gave me
•
this _money fo give to you for your
'expenses until you join her in New.
York."
•
The girl's eyes opened wide. "I am
to go to my aunt?" she breathlessly°
asked. "My aunt: It seems so
strange," she said, her face flushing;
a quiver in her voice that revealed piti-
fully her lifelong loneliness, "to feel
that there is some one in the world
belonging to me!"
"Your aunt expects to send her sec-
retary, Mrs. Kenyon, a widow. down
here for you next week to take you
back n•ilh her to New York. This
money, she instructed me to tell you,
you. can use in getting yourself -some,
clothing for your journey with the
help of Mrs. Kenyon. When you are
with your aunt she will do everything
in the world for your welfare, I kno#."
"Eun!ee," cried Abe, starting up,
"you ain't a-goin' away to stay away—
nin't not, you ain't?" he pleaded. "Och,
Eunice, if you'd say yes to me I'd
leave you hire the washin' with the
money wet your pop inherited to you,
end I'd leave you spend at the sloes all
ou wanted. and we'd go a good bit.
00. to circuses and county fairs and
iven to the rooft garden in town. We
>ould
afford to with your havin' such
I lot yet: Why, I guess we could af-
filyd 'most anything! Won't you say
yes to es'?"
F;uuiee slowly turned her eyes upon
him. "Say 'yes' to yen now with free-
dom—freedom just at my hand? Mar-
ry you and remain a bond slave, with
my heart still crying out as It has done
all my life, 'Who will deliver me from
the body of this death?' Tie myself to
you, when liberty and the wide world
lie before me? Oh. Abe." she exclaim.
taniume—
PAINS
Tbs Mato* Now * P
E4100 etlougb rat' you now, are *0,
since you're got go wonderful rieb all
of a suddent? I guess you wouldn't.
even send me a new dress from town
oneet In so often to pay fur all the old
ones I gev you a'ready!"
Again that little ripple of laughter
from Eunice. "Would you litre Me to
send you my clothes atter 1 leave no
More use for them, 011ie?" she In-
quired, a touchof gayety in her voice
and a bright color crowing luto her
pale ebeeks. ""\Vl1v. certainly, I will."
"If you can't send me at new one
now and again, 1 don't want your old
ones!!" 011ie retorted.
"Y.011 may draw on.• me, 011ie, for all
the silk dresses you eau wear," Eunice
said recklessly.
.° 011ie's eyes sparkled. "Look at here,
Eunice, do you mean that fur really?"
' upon Eunice reassuring her 011ie's
look of complacency proclaimed her
resignation to the turn events had tak-
en, since she herself was not alto-
gether slant out from a, share in them.
"Eunice, will you come with ane
now?" Kinross asked, again rising and
feeling• buoyant in the liberty which
the , new circumstances gave him to
r in and when
her•unrest a edl
talk with
y
and where they bot'i+i would, independ-
ently of the government which had
made her so inaccessible.. "1 have
ao
mathin3s to discuss with
you."
EuniCe rose at once the pensiveness
of her countenance momentarily lift-
ing as even his good news for her bad
not caused it to do,
"You 'haven't the dare to go; there's
supper to make!" • interposed Mrs.
Morningstar ;rota force of habit, not
realizing yet that her reign was over.
Eunice walked to the door w„hieh
Kinross was holding open for her.
"I am afraid you and 011ie will, have
to get on without me,” she said, turn-
ing at the threshold. "I have paid my
board, you know, for the rest of the
time I shall be here—$3,000 ' up 'to the
boarder,.of
next week. Asa
end ofnet
course you can't expect me to do any
work.: • •
"If you don't work you don't "
snapped Mr. Morningstar viciously,
family habit ef: browbeating the 1
getting the better of his prudence,
he knew, of. course, that it was un
to further offend one who had be
so rich. "This here $3,000 ain't p '
.fur your board, fur it ain't you
give—it was mine in_the first
place --
extorted out of me by force! So
just come on here and help mo t
supper or you don't eat!"
He emphasized his words by lifting
his hand which held the draft, an -
P paper s
stonily the valuable strip o p p r
drawn out. of - his fingers. . Kinross
passed it on to 'Eunice.
If . I may offer a word of advice,
don't pay your board in advance,
Eu-
nice. Wait .until 'you. are read o
ed, "If the thought of marrying you
was horrible to me while I was under
your mother's and father's tyranny
atIa
tow mast it look to me now Mit m
free—free to live, to be myself,, to
feed the hunger of my mind and soul
with all the beauty of the world?
Marry you, Abe A little rippling
laugh broke from he -r lips. Kinross felt
his brain beat with the shock of the
joy that suddenly surged up in his
heart at the revelation of her words
while he mentally pronounced himself
an ass for bis stupidity in not paving
realized the impossibility of her caring'
for Abe. ez
"Ty-rantry!" exclaimed Mr. Morning-
star, taking up her words, while A,be
looked dazed. "After. all me and mom
done fur you—and our son even Want -
in' to marry you and us urgin' it—and
givin' you back your $3,000"—
The draft for that money was in her
his
hand. She suddenly broke in upon
speech by holding it out to him.
""Take it back. I know bow' yon
have suffered in having at forced from
you. And I don't need it. Take it 'as
payment for my board during the re-
mainder of my stay here."
Mr. Morningstar almost pounced up-
on it, while his small eyes' gleamed:
""That ain't no more'n right, seein' you
don't need it, and me I couldn't rightly
spare:it" He glanced triumphantly at
. Kinross. "You thought you was won-
derful smart, ain't, gittin' this here'
money off of me? But I• got ahead of .•
you that there time."
• Kinross gave a short laugh. ""I'm
satisfied with my work," he said..
""Eunice, you ain't goin' to .act so on
grateful as to leave right in the mid-,
dee of cannin' season?" exclaimed Mrs.
Morningstar, with a momentary re-
turn to her habitual. asperity toward
the girl "You could put off goin'' to
your aunt till a couple weeks a'ready
anyhow. How is . me and `011ie goin'
without ou?
And
Ill!
it
t0. _ by
t ..tltlf9_.b'
mebbe if you stayed on a' couple of.
weeks you'd come to see it some dif-
ferent about Abe.too,"
"Just as soon as the lady whom my
aunt is .sending for me . can take me
away I shall go." • '•
"Well, if you , don't call that .actin'-
mean—right in the. middle of cannin'.
the tomats, too, yet!"
"'Och, • mom, you talk dumm!"said,
d turning
with a dis uste
her husband,w g
of his baon her and flinging -his
words behind him at • her: "With a
fortune waitin' fur her at New .York
over, what would she do with stopRin'
to help with our 'eannin'. the, tomats?
She kin afford to ,buy: canned tomats
stores •'and won't
t.
out of the grocery
have to bother no more with puttin'
up. I know what abig fortune means"
to a person if you d`on't • I. knowed .a
man out west was -worth worsen. $50,-
000 yet.". '
Again Mrs. Morningstar. sighed
heavily. "Eunice," she said,. changing'
her tone to motherly , persuasiveness,
"you'll come to see us now and again,
ain't? You would like to come' home
where you was raised, still, ain't you
Would?" • ' -
Eunice looked at her and -shook :her
head .almost shuddering1y.
""Never!"
"Ain't; you ..got . no gratefulness?"
Mrs. Morningstar , exclaimed• in de-
sauir. •
""But what," the girl asked gently,
""have I to be grateful to yOu for? It
seems to me I have much -very much!,
more—to forgive.. With $4,000 left to
In Neck, Shoulders, Arms,
Joints, Muscles
•
This means Rheumatism,
the disease that next to Tu-
berculosis plays -greatest
havoc in the nation. But
there is a cure—Ferrozone--
a concentrated vegetable'
!remedy- that has the power
to neutralize _Uric Acid, and
• therefore it curet perma-
i
nently.
FERROZONE CURES
"For years T land been rheumntie,
I tried vnrlous forms of relief with;
out success. The disease increased,
settled in my joints and muscles;
these swelled, caused excruelating
pains, and kept me from stooping.
My ltnihs and arms stiffened, my
shouiders wore lame, and prevented me
from working. Week by week T was
losing strength, and despaired of find'
ing a cure, it was a happy day 1
heard of i•'errozone. T.very day I
took T`',rrnzone 1 f' It hotter; it eased
the painful joints, gave mo energy, and
a feeling of new life. Perroaone
cured my rheumatism, cured it so that
not an ache has ever returned. .I':veh
damp weather no longer affects• hies"
( vers.) Edw.
Kent Snot, N.B.
You will bo cured for all time te,
come bit using 1'errozone; try its -novw
—500 pelf box, or six b0Xe+o for $2,50
at all ;dealers.
f � +
eat!
;the
girl
for
wise
come
ayin
yours( to
you
m gi
ftin
d in-
stantly
lams
vice
Eu
Y•t
leave.". -• •. .
Eunice; smiling, tucked the paper in-
to the 'bosom. of her ealice gown; and
face o h blankn
in the f• t o and utter con-
sternation of the family, the two Valk -
ed away, Kinross :calling back ever his
shoulder,."Give•us a goodsupper when
we come in" and we willpity according-
ly. Poor grub. small • pay! • We'll be
back in an hour probably."' .
CIdA1;'TE11 XXIV,
TH,
st oilcci 'about toget er .
the 'nearby wIDTa
a u r' aftoodlandon nherthee
i to si alae ei a
was so much .still that had to
be gone over and explained; yet Iin-
roes found himself rialto neglecting the
:prosaic details which ought. to have
been discussed and, dwelling Upon the
far more absorbing themeof the girl
herself; leading her skillfully to those
:fascinating self revelations which she
made with such childlike openness and .
wbieh; because Of 'her refreshing. and
'unique genuineness, Set 'hei ,apart in
his •:fancy from all the rest' of - her
"false, artificial sex." '
Yet just now' as she walked, at his
side there ' was a vague sense of disap-
pointment in his heart. .Ills explana-
tion; given to her while they walked,
'of 'her aunt's noble courage in at once
giving up the .fortune ' to her without
hesitation or protest and her readiness
to return to . comparative poverty, did
not bring the response he had hoped
for—an offer to share with the elder
Woman here quite superfluous thou-
sands. Ile tried not to blame her in
hie heart for this, but to attribute it
to her' ignorance both of money and of
what the tie of blood meant, All would
come right, he was sure, when she had
had a•little experience of life if (and it
was a large if) the sadden reaction
from a life of self abnegation to one of
power. and luxury, did not make her.
selfish. •• ' •
Ile was puzzled at the indifference.
she manifested when he tried to draw
�-a
r
J
"I couldn't 7'ifihtiv spare 12,"
me, why was it not permitted to mei
to have even the little educittion that
the district school might • have, given
Me? nut -there," she added, "you.
didn't realize the wrong you did me.
And it is all in` the. past, and I have
already' turned • my back upon my
past."
"You're -Lublin' your back on tis tnowY,
are .y'ou?" said O11le 'darkly. "We ain't
x.
.1
pemeeemeerearaar
SELEssMEN
FOOD FOR A YEAR
Melt a, ......,....•...390flu
Milk • , . , 240 pts.
Butter..................100 lbs.
Ego."... ft • • • . 27 dor,
Vegetables 50011*.
This represents a fair ra-
tion for a man for a year.
But some people eat and.
eat and grow thinner. This
means a defective digestion.
and unsuitable food.. Alarge
size bottle of.
Scoffs Emulsion
equals in nourishing proper.
ties ten pounds of meat..
Your physician can tell you
how it does it.' •
POE sALEB
ALL DRUGGISTS
tills '
Send IOo., Homo of paper and th ad. for r oe R
beautiful Savtnss Bank Lind Cbnd'a Sketob-Book.
I•;aoII bank contains a Good Luck Penny,
SCOTT & BOWNE
126 Wellington Street, West Tomato. Oat,
•
ner •into any talk of her prospective
new life. Not indifference only; it
seemed actually to make her sad, One
would suppose she would delight in
dwelling upon the glories that awaited
her; ' Had, she not extolled in her out-
burst to Abe her freedom to roa m at
{,"
1 thisscene of man
large "o'er all 2
"What is it?" he suddenly questioned
her. "Does your heart fail you at the
strangeness of it all? But a girl that
can brave a ghost ought to have cour-
age to cope with mere mortals."
She did not reply.
"Think of it" he .urged, "the world
is before you, with youth, wealth,
freedom,. and" (sheuld he put the idea
into her unspoiled mind?) --"and you're
not bad looking, either, Eunice, and
that means a lot to a woman."
She lifted her drooping head and
scanned him from head to foot. E1e,
too, was not bad looking;
"Does it mean more to a woman than
to a Iran?" '
"It's everythingto a woman. A
man—only so he hasn't a hump," he
shrugged.
"Do you mean that Is' your opinion,
or only the opinion of the world?"
He smiled, "The mere , world -as'
over against me? I fear you exiigger-
ate •the importance of my opinions.
Well; :I never . seriously asked myself'
The question before; but, now that it's
put to me, Yes, I do ,think good looks'
essential to a woman. Why, -natural-
lyr'.
"Essential? Essential, to what?"
"To her being interesting.und attrac
spects he was floe Kuninest or even nw
stupld sear, and be did not realize the
emotion her words and tone expressed.
"And if 1 liked you," he tried to en,
courage her, "you'll get on with other
people. I'm not considered a .lamb.
So don't you faney you're golug to be
lonely."
"But—shall I—ever see y.7011?"
"Surely" He felt totalled by her
belpless, childlike turning to hilt, her
first and only friend. "I often go t0
New York and Washington, where
your aunt spends her winters .usually.
But," be added, a touch of pathos in
his tone, "you will soon learn to get
on without mo, though 1 seezu so neces-
sary to you now,"
She made no comment, not even
polite protest.
"You afford me many pleasant sur-
prises, Eunice," he'suddenly remarked,
knocking some brambles from . her
pathwtly with. his cane. The gallantry,
instinctive and untlkipking with him,
but understandable toter only through
books, thrilled he in a way that
would. have endued him If he bad
dreamed of it. •
"Pleasant surprises?" she repeated
With timid questioning,
"You know I thought all along that
you were in love with Abe;!"
She 'did not answer at once as she
walked with her eyes on the path be-
fore her, '
.r
I was aware that you paid me that
compliment," she presently spoke in a
low voice.
"For which _I owe you an apology.
It was stupid of me.' And very untlat-
tering 'to your taste, I admit"
The fact was be realized that his be.
lief in her infatuation for Abe bad
been the only thing in his knowledge
of her that bad seemed to put her on
,a lower plane than the. one on which
'is "Miss Wolcott" she would henee
forth move. The discovery of her aver-
sion to the farmer's son had )laced her
at a bound at his side, as bis equal In
every sense, no tenger an i o ant
eonntry dnnt?el-•to be Intlnlgently pat-
ronized• by lieu anti her aunt.
"Why'clidn't you tell me yot'l despised
the fellow?" -
"It dill not seem - worth '.while ex -
pin inines" .
a
"There .was George Elipt,, you knoiv.
At least I suppose you'kpow.'." •
"Oh,_ Of -cout* *hen "a woman is a,-
genius."
.
13 0
""The'G,reeks thought manly beiiuty-4
not the feuiinine—the highest type."
s.
She',was such' a coitibination, he. ,in
wardly smiled, of ignorance and learn.
..ing •. ..: •- .
"Oh, ' but the Greeks! That .vas
.awhile back a'iady as Po ' 1Tor
ain
g
stiliVQuld'say."
' "Mere 'prettiness seems'to me of; lit -
tee mordent:" ,.
• :"It; is, That isn't what I Mean.. i3 it '
a• *mama must.be interc5tfnn•, lonkinr,.
wnot ii guy. ,She:`mustbe pleasing.
+�-"You mean. in order to attract the
'male?o., '.:-• ` •
ITe couldn't help it,- He bent. back
• his hoad':klid;naughed. ""You think that
•of. lirtle,nnoin.ent, too?" he asked, quick
lyt• li•bering 'as he Met her astonish-
ment: "But," he shrugged again, "it,
'seats ;tel be what they're „alb oueupied
in ito`ing:,,
"Are they?" she asl:e'd iu the ,wistful'.
way; she had or ailpealing to htrit
'tlt .iy rjti able,. I s npose..But, then,"'
he'lifted- hitseytehrows, "what would
you have theta he at?" •
"ro* Georgiana : would. prefer, she
told me, the eneeer;•of a student and a
• teacher rather than a domestle Mee:
"My Georgians?" he, re,peiite&h1 con..
stern:ttion. ."Now,. why, unity I inquire,..,
do you call her ranine?"
"You said you loved • her," she lin
swerod faintly; her eyes on the ground.
,'9h!" lee entitled,. enlightened. That
fiivelous remark of his Lind evidently•
given her much food for speculation:
Would he better • tell • her he'd only been
fooling? •lint she' wouldn't understand
or see the,polnt (what was the point,'
anyway?), and 'somehow. he:, felt an,
awkwardness in explaining to her than
he had lied to her,. A more pointless
joke he had sorely never perpetrated
"Georgiana deceives herself," he
Balli. "Georgitlnti would like to be
fallen in love with, just like 011ie or
any other girl. 'You'll like it yourself
some day, Eunice. See if you don't."
"You think Miss iliery is all those
things you admire -=interesting look-
ing,' 'not a guy,' 'pleasing'?" •
"Don't you think she is?"
"I think her beautiful and graceful."
: "Of course she is."
Her head went a little lower as she
walked at his side for a moment with-
out speaking.
"Are you afraid of your future, Eu-
nice?" he persistttd.
A faint, color came into her face.
"One thing I ala afraid of," she softly
answered. "Of a loneliness worse than
I have ever known."
"That may be for a little while. But
sit will pass, You will flare a commit -
lain in ,your aunt. You will make
frietitl>s too. And after awhile, inevlte-
hly, there will be a lover, or, rather,.
l nwerN."
"Yon think 1113' mint will like me?"
she •shed uncertninly.
o "llnw can she help it?"
"You think 1 em, then, likeable?"
. "I like you,"
"Oil," she caught her breath, "do
you?"
lie felt himself stirred by the soft
thrill in her "Mee. , ut in some re -
"Now. you are eompliinentary!: You
dk'l not care it' I did think poorly of
your taste?"
She hesitated. "it -is not that I did
telt care," -she faltered. "BM. wilnt you
ennldn't Fee for yourself it didn't seem
nroful to tell yon,"
it occurred to him to- wonder whet!I:
et her. siightly iliinsual use of words.
which was 11 •c'011stilnt Bodice of pleas•.
are and aninaenient to bin1, .would an-
noy her .tent.• -In Mitt opinion when
She lost it she 'could have lost one of
her ebarnis. •
• "Thi+,i ,you did rule?" he asked.
she said simply,'
"'ally?„ -
She turned. to him with a•lnttle depre--
eatin ; smile an<t,gestnre , "You dissect
tldQYu!k..Ag thnitgb- ylere aictedVst.
uud. i t1 :Speciiur'u,' Sometimes it Seems
to iue:cold blooded!' '
"And you don't iil:.i;' it2"
"It is rather„liltorestlug to Bear what.
you will be asking nett: -.and' what.the •
things are'Whicii yt; ivitib' to •fiigi oUt." '
"It 'flatters the• egotism, of ..lost wee
men if .-man, asks;•fhelni to•talk -about"
. themstOes„,r
(P6e: continued neit Week,
,
''''Are* being . fast , driven off
the. market by the overpower-
ing
verpowering merit of NNerviline, which
has more strength in one 'drop
than- is found in a quart of or-
dinary remedies. Full of pain,
subduing properties, healing
and soothing, its influence on
rheumatism, sciatica, and num,
bago is unsurpassed. Nervilint
is • without question the best
household liniment made. For
nearly fifty years a staple in
every drug store in America. •
DROP ALL 'OTHERS,
"I dropped an liniments but Ner-
• 'aildne because I found Nerviline the
oulakest to relieve pain," writes E.
S. Denton of St. Sohn's. "If my
, children are croupy or sick, Nor
vilino curesthem. If a case of
cramps or stomach-ache turns up,
Nerviline is ever ready. We use
Nerviline for neuralgia, rheumatism,
end a'; 'kinds of aches and pains;
it's isood as any do^tor,"
Use ;Only " Nerviline"
Good to rub on any part of the
body. -soothing, antiseptic, and lust
full
lgood for Interna pins, like
cramps, toothache, dyspepsia, etc.
You cant beat Nerviline as tz
general household panacea. for the
aehets and pains of the whole family,
a Tryit
go «Go bottles, at all dealers.
USE
-
'ALLEN'S
5
LUG L
N � S ..
A•
a .
At once: when attacked by a Gengh and
;utas avert . da,ngerons bronchial and
,pulmonary ailments . '. .• . .
25o,, 50c, and'$I. l0 Bottles.'.
Sold everywhere. ,
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Make■Each Anmmal Worth
tcr ,Its
'Cost '
025%
On of C Cent a Day
,,,l ' Nobody yever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, .making,
,v,'
I To• hens lay in winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per Cow a day,
or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and vigor.
!y ,wWhen you feed "stock food-" to your cofv,•horse, swine or poultry,
you are merely feeding them what you are grot wing on your own far.
"'TEE , �; 'ani Your animals do need not morefeed, bu something
g to
help
t fat
EEL bodies get all the good out of theiced you g m Y g
• 2:02} '',.v and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cafe disease and keep
Winner ofthem up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these
Lerest_
fi things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does: It
ani' pacer an•
av >>
Grand Cif tui4,'o8- Not "a "Stock FoOd'",But a -6l Contlitiorier •
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains.no griin, nor firm products.. It lncreascs
yield of milk from,three to five pounds per•' cow pp clay b,,tdre the Specific has been used two
wzeks. It makes' the :milkricher and adds flesh fa,ter tr-an any other preparation known.
Young calves fed with ROYAL PURPLE are as large at ail; '.veelts.ol 1, as GNI, would be whin
fed with ordinary materials at ten 1e ,ells• $, -' ' • • , ' .
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them 48' •'
plumpness almost inagically. Cures bots, colic; worsos, stein diseases and debility�perthanentiy.
Dan Mchwan, the horseman, srtys: . 'I have used ROYAL g1)l2PLE STOCK InPEClF IG
persistently in the feeding of The Eel, 2.021, largest winner of any pacer. on Grand Circuit in
' 1935, and 'Henry winters,' 2.051, brother of Allen Winters;' winner of 838.500 jo trotting,stnites'
in 1908. These horses, have never becn off their feed since' 1 commenced using Royal 'Purple
Specific almost a year age, and`I will always have It in my, tttables." : - ,
i
ar e
'STOCK AND POULTRY SRECIFI:C$
One50c. package o ROYAL' PIMPLE STOCK SPECIFIC wariest one animal seventy
days, which is a little over two:thirds of a Fent a day. •.Most•stocii foods in fifty cent ;packages .: ,
•^Iiis1.but fifty days•and are given: three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPCIFIC
is given but once a day, and lasts half •alain as Icing: ,A 51.50 pail containing • $ops: tines the '
amount of the fifty cent:packagewilt last 280 days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value
of your stock 25%, It is an astonishingly quick fattener,' 'stimulating the appetite and the.
relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh.. As whoa fattener itis a lender.
many -times ifs cost in veterinary bills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPEC 1-
gIC as our other Specific for poultry,not for stock.' One '50 cent package will last twenty-five
hens 70.days, or.a.paileosting 81.50 will last twenty-five hens 280 days, which is four tloves more
material for onlythreetimes the cost,It makes a laying
machine' out of your hens
summer and -whiter, n er
raventsfons losing n
flesh at
mouitinfi tittle, lc.
a
n
d ru-s4 poultrytry diseases.
es.
Every package of ROYAL' PURPLE STOCK SPEC?FFC or POULTRY
SPECIFIC is _ guaranteed,
Just use ROYAL PURPLES: one of your animalsarid any other preparation on another
antmel m the sante condition: aftdr comparing results you will sayROY-AL PURPLE has
them all beat to death, or else back comes ynt�x hianey. FRE n cattle your merchant or write its for oar. valuable 3.. pagg'booklet o a le
l
o.
yes containing a 50 •�
andpoultry.diseases, c g
Lid full articula
rs about
0 old. zni es a p
ROYAgLrPURPLE STOCK and FOUL.''
TRY' SPECIFICS.r
•
If you .cannot get Royal 'Purple
.S.uecifiCs from therchants or agents we tf ,i ilii '
w,11 supply you :direct, express prepaid, ,, •,11.4Li
'on receipt of $1.50 a pail for either Poultry
or Stock Specifics. '
Make money g 'actin : ns nor agent *In -
,your district.' -'Write for terms.' 2.
' For sate by all Lip-to;date'merchants.
• W. L tlankinsfg,Co,; London; Can.
•
i,e �� las. and Free: Booklets, .are, . ,
•
o a.t Phu Il llc$t'ock and PonitrySl
" -kept i>!1 Stock a3rZw. s liti.: IIIoLnes. • . • .. .
(IRDINARY°paints' very`°soun dis"
ool'ar M L 'Pure.
. ; and fade
APaints .withstand sun
,, an'd- weather
and -stailirigh't, because :ML Pure
Paints, besides pure head, pure, zinc
and pure oil, 'contain '•- a special
ingredient that makes them last
about twice as long e e it and better
protect . any 'surface they cover,
indoors or out. Othermakers
haven't found out yet just 'how, to
use that ingredient in the right
quantity and the right way. If you
buy. paint for real service .. real
economy ... real money's worth
then buy
L
Pure Paints
THE KIND IT PAYS TO USE
• MADE Mt
The Itoperiall Varnish el Color Co:,
Limited, of Toronto
sot >rLs1'ABLI$IHED'20 "it BAILS AGO
R. Adams, Londesboro
1
mi. Pure
Paints
Made in every desirable
color and for every use
paint can serve, are guar•
anteed to Cover as well and'
satisfy as wholly as any
paint sold in the world. The
reliable store named here
sells these paints in any
standard quantity, and, will
repdily inform yor upon any
painting question. See them
m
before you buyuch or little
paint for any p'arpose.
Get glee. at
Dealers named
hereunder
R. Rowland, Clinton
O