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The Clinton News-Record, 1910-01-06, Page 6Clinton News -Record ci/,\ -.5KIDNEY'P; (///, - i� ; ,5� .,•:, N E 1�f-`cap.FSK' 154" „Ike. S o, tib►ABE.T:SpIyt ,i. . 3 TIM Pr. A THOUSAND PER DAY Huge Number of Meetings Marks `• the Eritish Campaign. During the Coming Week the Peers Will Be Especially t3usy and To- day Twenty -Four Will Be on the Hustings - Hamar Greenwood Is Warmly Endorsed by Winston Churchill -Hard Fight Expected. Loudon. Jan. 9.-(C.&P. Cuble)- 'The'election battle is entering on its final and fiercest stage. Over a thous- nud political meeting: daily will be held in 13ritaiu during this week. Mil- lions of election adelresses will b:: issued. N,.b•xly can compute the num- ber of leaflets that will br distributed or the area of wall since that will he coverall by 1)0bte1•a. All the party leaders will be actively engaged. M1. lisltuur spanks at Han- ley to day, and Mi. Asquith last night ill Mr. Haldane .6 ill iaion. Lloyd- i*Jeorge is staking a round of the lue- -iropulis, with a Hyil.g visit to Ply- auouth, 1\ iu:.tun l ut,ruhill is visiting .1Julicle1•. 19. A Positiue Cure for Indi �stion 9 If you have indigestion, your food garments in the stontach and bowels. IS does more : It decays and the nut-� ttetious matter which should go to snake new blood decays with it, and this leads to an impoverished con- dition of the blood, to nervousness, billiousness, constipation, sick head- ache, bad breath which disgusts your friends, and other elisagi eabl;,e and unpleasant condition. And all this trouble is caused by • the food that doesn't digest, but fer- ments and oftires rots in the -stomach. And fermentation is caused by the mach not being strong enough and etic enough to thoroughly mix od with the digestive 'juices. N -A is responsible for tens of nds of cures. In fact, it is such tivc cure for indigestion and all ach troubles that it is• guarante- by W. S. R. Holmes to ::ore or oney back. The price of a large 'box of Mi-o-na tablets is 50 cents, and they are sure to promptly re- eve he worst case of indigestion or astritis. Try them. i• (piw00NG'fz HI N -O -ME ) CURES CATARRH, ASTHMA, Br�nchitis, Croup, Coughs and Colds, cr money back. Sold and guaranteed- by Repeat it :-"Shiloh's Cure will sl- ays cure my coughs ;Ltd colds." rvtarrti' meetings to' be ad(JI(55ed tilts ar'cel( by peers and candivates tor the Commons have been arrar ed by the 4.1.onservat central .)ftic•. , to-uay Thursday awent s •-t our td 1'hu da ' twcni5 •-fi • v will speak The editor of\ The Cork Accent, a .now daily, stating the mission of the journal, says: "It,is only the knave ;who .will stake. or. 5c„]jr,,.,5t_.•-.hrlurve. .lie :alislert'foh «.lilt 11. ,i'ee• r " ia'fu ye i)as'dt'a wbell the 1.urtta' vete was abuJ- .s,ied." The eleetion at York promisee tet he a leen eonteet. The result is cliiiic•utt to predict. 'l.bere are .live hummed military voter,, the lith- Lancers be- ing ,t:etioned there. elle ,Ltttiu.iinta 'lupe for their support. Winston Churcuill, writing of Ha - mar Greenwood-, Says: "As a Cana- dian. well known and well lilted throughout Canada,. he has a special reepoueibility at this juncture." The etatenamts: of tree lances on ac.z ride are growing More reckless In reading Radical papers to -day, one• would really imagine that the Ger. mans, in their dire poverty, have no other food than horseflesh, tiog sltu- ot:ges and bitter black bread, to whim =art Unionists .speakers reply: "Ger. mans who eat horseticede and rye bread de so because they prefer it. The arerma'ir people gencritkiy do net live an _either. They live on the deluded British workn)alt. ,. • WATER IN YOUR BLOOD ? Lots of people have thin watery blood -they eat plenty but don't di- vest. When digestion ispoor, food is not converted into nourishment-ia. consequence the body rapidly loses strength, To positively renew health, nothing equals• Ferrozone. It excites. sharp appetite, makes the stomach digest, forms life sustaining blood. Abundant strength is sure to follow. If you need more vitality, extra en- ergy, better naves, then use Ferroz- one the medical triumph of the ' age. Fifty cents buys a box of fifty choco- late coated Ferrozone tablets. ' 6 Repeat it :-"Shiloh's cure will al ways care my coughs and colds." «e. Hasn't Recognized Him. Bluefielels, Nicaragua, Jan. 3. -Hope that the war would be brought to an end through the recognition of the Provincial Government by the :United - States has been abandonecd,. Many be Heart: that two More battle must be fought; one in• the State of .Chontales and the ether near ,Handgun, There is some disappointment that the United States .has not formally Government the Govertent of Estrada. If another battle is fought itis like- ly that no less than 12,000 Men will be engaged. Repeat it : ."Shiloh's'Cure.�.ill_ a1 ways cure niy coughs and .:olds." MORSE INDIGNANT. Says Fifteen -Year Sentence Is •Piece of . Brutality. - • - : • New York, Jan, 3, -With a suprorne eff'e't to be cheerful,. but with.'emotian occasionally getting the better ofhini, Charles W. Morse deft Ne.w York yes- terday to serve 15 years in the federal prison at Atlanta, -Gn.';' for ,violation: of the national banking laws. Before leaving the'Tornbc, where he has been confined.for thegreater part of the lest year, Morse received itis. wife and two sons, and then the news- papc'rn,en_ H' was.too afltated to say anything, but he handed out a care- fully prepared statement of eminent. at his. ease. "1 ant going to Atlanta to• b gin• l) IIi'1 servitude under the mot brutal sentence ever pronounced against. a• citizen in a civilized. country," he lie - glen. . "1 hew._ honed,". the s'tatelnent tom 'in ties, "with• that hope which comes front a..conaci.ousness of',lny inttoe:Me: that 1 will'not have to close out for. ev •r the light end •liberty of this -world. •iuid;•r :inch an inhuman anittence, 'L had felt that the filet that I have paid a lino of $7,000,0110 and .tiei•ved a year in prison would .satisfy the cry for a victim, ctl' ! 1 have steadily b lie v:.i that the. e .:Ir::t. would .b!" comp.'11et1 to give nz • a •hely trial. , • - "lt scums, however, that 'the courts intend to establish the plasties wine,! wake rune -drinking a part Of jury ::c . , and privet: detectives , as the .•us:(riient; of a jury, a p. riucrnent. iti- ,titutio:t. By this s('ntene:' and judg- ment 1 may b.'_ brought, lo ruin; hat the damage done to me' ia•not 1151± _as 11111)00 alit 11 the injury le the. ndntiu- istratiott of justice.- I ani now up in,- yen; llyt :rs end must with _the passing of.• time, pass also; but. tilt: record of my conviction and the wdy.it was brought about will remain n lasting and dun- g 'nous exist c , ' of a Government gong, orad in search of, a victim." ' HISTORIC LACROSSE. t)anadian National Game Is Spread- ing. All Over the World. Lacrosse is probably the most ex- eitiri;; game known to the athletic world. Although only 45 years of ago as a white man's pastime, it lute nevertheless been played by the I- dinsfor many years. In its old form Tunny Indians took part, and with two curious looking sticks earri.ed by eaeh player the gazne moved fast over the red Allan's playground. For many years it was entirely unknown to the white man. The late Dr. W. George Beers, of Montreal, who is known as the father of lacrosse in Canada, took hold of the game some 45 years ago and reduced it to the middle stages of perfection, which stamped it as the premier of • outdoor games, Clube. bean to swing up in Montreal, Caughnawaga, Cornwall, St. Regis and Ottawa,. and these places were pioneers in establishing the popular- ity of the game. Then the city of 'Toronto fell into lire. Itt those days the Indian was the team, if not the superior, of the white mule. Upon the visit of the Prince of 'Gales, now King Edwerd, to Canada, • a lacrosse game was one fif the principal sport - ink events on the program in hie honor, ,And 1:e thoroughly enjoyed witnessing the combat bt':ween the redskins and the ptelc-faces, es the whites ere called by the real men. Soon rafter this the game 'began to spread end become one 'of science, instead -of one of speed and endur- ance. and to -day, when played by members of the hig leagues, it- is one of the headiest and most scientific games known to . atl)let•'s, Passing and combination work luta taken the place of endurance, and where there was may one ,zsociation throughout all Canada, there are now seven with 'i club nz ucbt reship rnnr iag up into the hundreds, and c.ctive members )umbering into the tens of thousands. - Not only has the mune progressed in Canada, hut :also in the United States,' . w ht•re the colleges and city clubs are taking it ul) and employing Canadian coaches. England is talciul hold of the :ante in a most ron)arkabie'.ntan- nor. In Australia and New Zealand, Canada's ''national game is ,going ahead by- leaps and- bounds. • Strange as .it may went, while the whitea.zizen have 'mastered the red- skiizs fit playing the game, no- pale-. faeet has yet become proficient in the art of making a leerosse stick. - The Indian is naturally a horn ' Whittler, and ae soon as he is 'able to handle a knife is. found at work whittling- a: piece of hickory. The making of a lacrosse stick is far more difficult' than a look at -'it would indicate, From the time the trees are felled' until the 'lacrosse is strung ul) ready for shipment requires generallyabout 'four months. Only the butt, or• first six feet, of . ..'1 hickory tree is used - in- manufao-, taring- the lacro •sc -sticks, the ba1- i ;Awe being too brittle to • take the sharp•eurvee. 'i hr 'wood is split . ur.. alto strips • 11 ; ;;:ehes wide asci t;lznped up with a f;ruo' r: zife• ready Ana the bending. forma.- They •are driedforr t two •.to throe ktc,r, exit• f on 5 a;Ci.s so that the,steam will ana- .l:)::t.;): 'When -the sais. eonsicieaal t:• %:e all out -.of •t.he' wood it is placed• in a steamer, end when soft, bent over nfur and wired: The -stick ck iy . allowed to start for six.: weeks, so that it will keel% 'ea• shape -when. the wires are .removes. After th°• wiree are removed, the Sticks are taken to• the' gougers and a •portion removed about the inid.dle of the stick, • so that the ,backs ctt)i. be •steamed and bent. 'They are : again .:allowed to season In„ this manner .for ,some weeks. The stick is• then rounded: about. the- ]taxi- die .-sufficiently ..to, allow it • to •be _Awaited,.Wizen doailed they -are. ROWS' T1 -11S ',+ • %Ve affer One hundred Thollars .. Re - yard for aoy ` case of Catarrh that annot be cured by Hall's Catarrh lure. F. J. CFIEN_EY dc'Co , . .•Poledo, O . e, 'the 'undersigned, nave Icnown 'Cheney • for the: last 15 years, and elieve him' perfectly honorable in all tisiness transactions, and .financially ble to carry . out •any . o11ligations lade by his firm;., Wilding, I<iunan Si Marvin, • Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. r': dM•ti i:loilg''o '%e ea.s1liip^;, triter Mhic'lt the inside is t;eken out by a irtirr-knif•' and the stiek is passed along to the Hien who whittle the mord important part of 'ate lacrosse.,. which is at the different ends. This is really where the fine points of lacrosse -making come in. At this particular part there ere nzuny differ- ent curves incl thicknesses and a email sl•iavinr niln,t be whittled oft here and then* to get theim to the proper proportion and weight. Only men of long experience are employed at this particular work. When this portion of the stick is completed it is heated and bent up at the crook and passed on to a boring machine, where the holes are bared to receive the strings: The stick is then sand- papered and. a coat of filling is ap. plied, and the etringfng takes place.. This latter part of the work is done by both squaws and Indians, the former being equally as expert at this branch as the latter. ,The string of the higher grade lacrosse sticks etre generally clock cord or catgut, which is manufactured in Englund. The leaders or guardis male from rawhide. It oftens happens that' every member of the fixedly is em- ployed in the nranufacturing of la. crosse sticks. The Root of Neuralgia Headache. Is an irritable condition of the ner- ves caused by cold. .Relief comes quickly from Nerviline, the great pain reliever of to -day. "I consider Ner- viline a magical remedy for neural- gia," writes Mrs. E. G. Harris of Baltimore. But I never worry if Ner- viline is in the house. A few applica- tions never yet failed to cure the pain. I can also recommend Nerviline for stiffness, rheumatism and muscular.. pains." In use nearly fifty years ; try Nerviline yourself. Repeat it :-"$hil eh's Cure will al- ways cure my coughs and colds." • Is Cook . in Detroit? Detroit, Jan. 3. -It was rumored on Saturday that Mrs. Cool:, wife of Dr,. Fred A, Cook,. was here, The report had its origin in Windsor, where, it is said a thickly -veiled woman called for mail addressed to "Mrs. Dr. Fred. A, Cook.' After. reeeiviug lu'r mail, she, hastened tD o etroit. Postal authorities at . Windsor say the woman . first appeared about the time Dr, .Cook was reported. toin. be i London, Ont. • EN. iN THE. FLARE, Y STU fire lyburns urns warns and bright, Ano brooding there I pit to -night, And see the pictures in the .flare, But, best of all the pie. tures there, Is Molly, going milking. The brown thrush chants an evening hymn, In woodland chancel, arched ,and dim, The sky Itlt sunset tints, ag Sends ood-by benisons bo w, When Molly goes, s• - mil ng. I: was a boy In Cro rain brown, And she a girl in gingham. gown. And when I met her at the bars, I thought no sight • beneath the stars, So fair as Molly milking. Perhaps I'd twist her apron -string, (My wooing knew no bolder thing). And there we'd bide till Charles's Wair Came out and bade her home again. - For late was Molly, milking. Cuisine Queries. What is, or was, a Franklin stove? The name is now generally applied to, any, open stove -that is, a stove wherein outside air is applied directly to the fire.. The first stove of such a description was introduced by Benja• min Franklin. What is a fricandeau? The French name for a fancy dish of boned fowl served as an entree or side dish. What is a dossil? A plug orspigot attached to cask or barrel. What is empyreuma? The expres- sion, "A taste of empyreuma" is only another' way of saying that the thing, vegetable or meat, has a buret flavor. For many people, a slight' taste of the fire •is, if anything, an improvement, and • a "hint of empyreuma" does not dean that the dinner is burnt, An Entertainment Suggestion. In place of a bazar, which is rather overdone, and which has come `to be rather dreaded by its victims, why not give an entertainment in the form' of a masque or pageant? The cos- tumes are always 'simple, as for in- stance, a masque of flowers and trees. These, simply arranged, can be found at any place where plays or dramatic sketches are sold. Extra money may be made by selling flowers and fruits by the girls after the show. Open-air pageants are especially attractive, but can be given in any large hall or pub- lic building. ' Ballads or madrigals' suitable could be ad'ded at will 1f the text be limited. Established 1879 FOR•WHOOPING COUGH; CROUP. ASTHMA. COUGHS, BRONCHITIS. SORE TIIROAT, CATARRH. JMPSTHERZA Vaporized Cresolene stops the peroxysm of Whooping Cough. Ever dreaded Croup can- not cast where Cresolene is used. It sets directly on nose and throat. making breathing easy -Ja the case of colds, soothes the sore throat and stops the cough. It is a boos to sufferers of Asthma. . . Cresolene is a powerful germicide. acting both as a curative and n preventive in contagious diseases, Creselene's best recommendation ;is its thirty years of successful use. roe sats by au breams Send Postal for De- • scriptive Booklet Cresolene Antiseptic Throat Tablets. simple and soothing for the • irritated throat; 10e. • Leeming, Miles Co;;: Limited; Agents, Mon- treal, Canada.. 3q8 f417'` IEN ?111k J ABINET THE...MARKET-PRICE.. IIEN country -folk buy stuff In town, The dealer's price they can't gainsay. But . when they've. eggs or chicks to sell, They tike -just what he wants to pay. • Earl ' ray's. Last Levee. Ottawa, J•an. 3. -Earl Greylield his last levee Saturday .as. Governor -Gen= eral of 'Canada. Seven htindred and . fifty gentlemen paid their respects to His Excellency.' The reception took• place at the Governor -General's of- fices, and he was accompanied by the Earl of Lansborough, Lord Lascelles and. others .from Government' House. The guests included the judges'of the '.various court, . Cabinet Ministers, the consuls -from foreign countries, Gov- ernment officials and leading citizens of, (Atuwa. ' • Hall's Catarrh, Cure is taken _ inter-.. ally acting directly upon:the blood. nil mucous surfaces of •the system. 'estinioni tis sent free. ' Price, 75c, per ottle.. SQId by all druggists.. Take Ilall's Family fills for consti- ation.. • • Repeat it.:-"Shiloh's Cine willal- ways cure my coughs and, colds." • Mr. Fbrget's Prediction. • Montreal, Jan. 3. -Rodolphe Forget., M.P•.,'the king of :the Montreal Stock Exchange, :is •of the opinion that 1910 will be the greatest •yeer. financially and • corinercially the .Dominion has ever seen, and.. he also- believes that this unprecedented prosperity will ex -- tend an over the continent. We want every person who is suffering from any skin inju y or disease to personally prove the merits of Zara. Buk. Real the experience of these three persons -possibly one of them may be well known to you--andthen I make it a personal matter. f you out out this advertisement, write across it the name of this paper and mail it to us with a to stamp (to pay return postage) we will send you a trial box of Za,m-Buk free I . 2411143uk 1!y a proved cure for eczema ulcers ebscesees, poisoned tierce. chapped handy, only Mores, eruptions, outs, brti'ses, tetra, aeale gores, babies' chafed or chappei ptao •a, and all akin i ur1eO and dleeagpR. It nTh m euros piles, All druggists and ster.!8 for 50o, or post free from' Zan). Buk Co„ Toronto, for price. What rollowed a Scratch. Mrs. Sewn `7 Calumet Ave,, Monti eel, Rays : -" While busy in the kitchen one day the oven deer fell off; strtiking my right leg and balloting anasty semi eh. While this was painful, I never thou.,,, it would become a serious wennd, but to toy surprise it became very much iallant- eel std very painful. I found that too dye from my stocking had got into it and pniKaned it. The pain and infla rt• malion got w'or•a0 a d the wound charged freely. At this stage someone advised me to try Zara-lluk and I obtained a supply. This balm kennel Ali dra •, W out tato s0r0n(sd at o. c, ), reduced the inflammation and soothed the wound., I naturally pereeve'ed with Zatn•13uk arid within a few weeks the wound was quite in pled." [czema Banished. To be fevered with sores which some- times itch and burn and then, e% hen tabbed, Dative acute agony -sores which look repulsive as well as tense pain - soros which have ticAed all remedied that, have been Implied to them ---what (0111,1 be worse? Yet tit a is the lot of scores of people to -day who edict. troth that terrible' disease, Femme. To all stall auferors we will send trial box of %ata-lluk free! Write us, sending le stamp to pay return postage, Mr. Wm. Dangerfieid, 9,58 Lipton St., Winnipeg,. gays : --" Last winter I suf- fered from I:(tema. After trying lotions,ra,lves end pnwflers given me by the doctor, which failed to do tee any good, I tried Cam-l1uk. This moved tenet to my case and cured )tie." • Use as a Household Balm. • bt hips. W. Blair, 9.1 it. Catharine S.t., Ilantiltou, spe,ike of the value of Zon. Buk as a he ,.ts of 1 1 a m. Ike says ce- " 1 one day slipped raid fell ito an at a Morris 'rocker, knocking nn 1• nee ver badly, The knee turned my r•n 1 blue and was very painful. X Mid ed. Zant•liuk well into the injured methi,er arid it was indeed tut priBeing how quickly I found relief. The sweLing was soon reduced and pain and discoloration ban Jelled. Ily perseverance with Zane lluk my injured knee was well again in a couple of days. " X have since proved 11 to he t' 0_ handiest and beet halm for Ito aehnld i tllrotti . A. few applications of Zoe. Ibik gave me eaee front rheumatism also:" • The town .store keeper .. says: "Look' here, Expense ' is big, where aremy savin's?" But does he think we get our stuff From Heaven -like Bit- jah's ravens? No, sir; we farmers have expense, And• eggs are :;high, for fancy. breedin', And we' must furnish shelter, care, ' And plenty wateriri' and feedin':. Commission inen-must live, of course, • Ekpress concerns "have need' of wealth, The dealer and the farmer, none of. us .Are In the business, just for health But the consumer'? What of him, • Who wants the stllft while. fresh and nice And cheap? No; that will never be, Until the farmer sets the price, • The Holiday .Habit. This, with the Anglo-Saxon, at least, has been recently acquired. Our.. friends, the Parisians, started it to. ward the middle of the eighteenth cent tury, but to do them justice, let us re member that the holiday habit began as a movement toward the Simple Life, Encouraged by <such masters in painting as Watteau with' his simple shepherdesses, and aping royalty with its Trianon and Fontainebleau, the whole of Paris flocked on every ecee sion, to the country. Eve • thing in the fashion of the time tenaed to the rustic, the bucolic. • Later, in 1800 or so, England began to follow suit, and from the king, who took .princesses to ride in an Irish Jaunting -car, to the private who parad• ed on Sunday with the "beefy 'anded's F, girls of •the Strand, all England went a -merry -making. flnt, up to this time, "week -ends" were unknown, and that which we now consider a real hygienio need, the "change of air," was accounted hypo chordria or a bad case of "nerves." With the usual pendulum swing we are, perhaps, overdoing the holiday idea, but let time we may get back tc its original purpge--Dot a will pur suit nP gores, not a chance to epend money and same oft fine clnfl;es, but s natural lon ing for codliar tL,fttge- for a simple life, . "lar teem the n.addir..g Crowd's named( st rife." 7�• • 'fined to t`t'Iotc7 Up' Bt'idge, Baltimore, Jan, 3. -Following an at- tempt Friday evening to blow up the Gay street bridge of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, three men, William B. Shipley, Hamilton W. Lightner and Wm. 11 Zimmerman, all machinists, were arrested on a charge of conspir- ing to dyn Amite the bridge and also the Mount Claire machine shops of the railroad company. Detective ('apt. 1•-luniphrey is of the opinion that the Meir are Connected with a committee of striking 13alti- More and ();do Railroad machinists, formed for the purpose of injuring the ruihracl property, AT THIS TIME OF THE YEAR Everyone needs something to create and maintain strength for. the daily round of duties. There is nothing better than an Ale or Porter, the purity and merit of which has been attested by chemists, physicians and experts at the great exhib- bitions. We FOR f`.onloom) .atl�aa Repeat it ;-"Shiloh's Cure will al- ways cure my coughs and colds." Suicides In "Prison. Paterson, N.J., Jan. 3. -By com- plaining that his beard was so strong that it hurt to have the county jail barber shave bine, Julius Mortleg in- duced the barber to hand the razor over to hint yesterday. The prisoner, who was in custody for shooting his mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Morgan, promptly cut his. throat. He diedat the hospital. PROVED '= IN MOUNT FOREST. Every doctor in this town tried his best to relieve Mrs. J, Without.; of Asthma ; none succeeded. "For years she states, "I was, a dreadful sufferer; nothing gave reliefs At times I found it necessary to have all the doors and windows open to get my breath.. When in despair I heard of "Catarrh- ozone." I used • it and now am .per- fectly cured.",.; This proves .beyond doubt that any case of • Asthma is curable with • Catarrhozono. No rem- edy so pleasant none so absolutely. certain to thoroughly Cure ; try "Cat arrhozone" 'yourself ; it's' guaranteed. January 6th, 1910 THE NEWS -RECORD'S giUBllINg LIST FOR 1000-10 Much good reading for little money. WEEKLIES News -Record and Mail -and Empire..... . ... , $1.50 News -Record and Globe . , . 1.75 News -Record and Family Herald and. Star with Premium News -Record and Witness. News -Record. and Sun. - News -Record and Free Press News -Record and Adver- tiser News -Record and Toronto Saturday Night News -Record and Farmer's Advocate News -Record and Farm and Dairy News -Record and Cana- dian Farm 1.75 1.75, 1.75 1.75 1.75 2.30 2.25 1.75 1,75 • DAILIES News-Reeord and Mail and Empire 4.25 News -Record and ()lobe.... 4.25 News -Record and News . 2.30 News -Record and Star . • 2,30 News -Record and World 3.25 dews-Beeord and Morning Free Press • • 3,25 News -Record and Evening Free Press •....... , . , 2,75 News -,Record and Adver- tise.'i..........• 3,00 MONTHLY News -Record and Ltppin- eott's Magizine. 3.25 111111111111111111111111 l f what yoiit want is not in this list let as know about it. We cat' supply you at less than it would cost you to send direct. In remitting please do so by Post -office Order, Postal Note, Express Order or Registered Letter and address. W: J. Mitchell News -Record - CLINTON' i Repeat it :-"Shiloh's Cure wall al- ways cure 'my .coughs and .eol is:" avings How.• much of :your salary are you leaving at our Savings Department, each .pay day ? Couldn't you. easily spend less and leave a •. dollar or two, perhaps five or .more ? Remember, your future ,success depends.• on what you. save -not on the amount you .earn. We pay 3 'per cent. on deposits and 4 per cent. on Debentures of $1.00 or more. Assets over $11,000400 ' Incorporated 1864 Huron St Erie Loan and Savings Co. LONDON, CANADA Make Each Animal. Worth • Overt 25bIts Cost Oni ofaCent a Day Nobody ever heard of "stockfood" curing the bots or colic, malting hens lay in winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per cow a day, or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and Vigor. When you feed "stocfc rood" to your cow, horse, swine or poultry, YOU are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm. EEL ' . bodies' get alt r the good do out of the tnot eed yoe u give themd, hat e so theycang t fatheit 2:021 • ' • and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keep large3l Wisner of them up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these any i a c n r othings. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. it is errand C:rcrne,'oS Nota "Stock Food" Buta "Conditioner" ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain, nor farm products. It increases `yield of milk from three to five pounds per cow' pee 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 are as large at six weeks old as they would be when fed with ordinary Materials at ten weeks. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up rundown animals and restores them to plumpness almost magically. Cures botst colic, worms, skin diseases and debility�perrnanently. Dan McEwan, the horseman, says: I have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC persistently in the feeding of 'The Eet,' 2,021, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.09i, brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $30.000 in trotting stakes in 1908. These horses have never been off their feed since 1 commenced using .Royal Purple Specific almost a year ago, and I will always have it in my stables." offal Purple STgCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS One SOc. package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seventy days, which is a little over two.thirds of a cent a day Most stock foods in fifty centackagges last but fifty days and are givenxhrce times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC it given but once a day, and lasts half again as lett A $1.50_pail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent package will 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 ieod into flesh. Asa hog fattener it is a leader. It wil1sav many times its cost in veterinary hills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECI- PIC Is our other Specific for poultry, not for stock, One 50 cent package will last twenty.five hens 70 days, or a pail costing $t.50 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 summer and winter, prevents fowls losingflesh at moulein time, and cures poultry� diseases. Every package, of OYAL PURPLE TOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPIECIFIC is guaranteed. Just use ROYAL PURPLE on ens of your animals and any other preparation nn another animal in the same condition: after comparing results you will sayROXAL PURPLE has them all heat to death, or eise back cornea your money. PREE-Ask your merchant or write us for our valuable 32•page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases. containing also nonking reccines and full o•rrticulars about ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POUL- TRY SPECIFICS, If you cannot get Reytl Purple Specifics front merchants or agents, wo will supply you direct. c:Ipress prepaid, on receipt of $1.50 a nail for either Poultry or Stock Specifics, Make money a -tine as nue agent in Senn' district. Write for terms. Potsale by all up•to•date merchants. W. I. Jenkins Co.,London, Mfg, Can. pipet Purple Stock nand Poultry Speain() and free e e booklet are ItOpB In stork by W. 5, 11,.21;otmti