HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1910-02-03, Page 66
LANSEW1E IN. .OANAOit 04. 'MA. the Name.
• Ex-Maeor Payment of Ottawa ear.,
When He Was Governor-General
Showed Greet Promise.
Cenadiane wilt •remember Lord Laits-
downe, now eo prominently in the
public eye owing to the conteet be. :
tween. the British House of Comnione
anti the House of Lords, HS. governor-
general.
If he lackedthe warmth or the .
epentaneous brilliancy of a Defferin. '
: or the bluff heartiness of a Stanley,
he offerei it dignity, a weight, a lu.
I oidity of utterance, a :scrupulous ex• -
actimes, a foresight which marked
him out for leadership, in the large
•- place.
A certain •austerity was marked,
but it well became 'him.
One could not well_ think of hint as
greatly relaxing and yet he • lied
warmth and genialty. M the same
'time be was the representative of Her
1Viajesty; he was the copy of royalty;
be was in a position requiring dignity
and met sured relations. In all his
nubile functions he expressed thi5.
sense of responsibility. •
In all hie public epeeehes he offer-
ed grace and illunnnation. .He had
the eimeen *word, which fitted its
piece like a glove; .His diction was
polished like a cameo. Something of
Celtie fervor he missed,. hut there was
..always weight • and meaning, -med
value in his 'deliverance.
He showed a deep- interest in the
• progreee of a.rt and learning, and his
addresses at the convocations of the•
various universities were models of
eleainess, of weighty reflection..
.124,1th the abounding hie of this
aountry he was in full sympathy, and
kept in touch with all its nianifesta
tions.
Lady Lansdowne was stately and
queenlike, of a delmat., ?amid
-beatify, and. well fitted to give dis-
tinction to •young society, whoso.
growth- she encouraged hi allcharm-
ing ways.
The term. of. office of Lord Lans-
downe Was not marked by any. large
event; but it was contemporaneoua
with the..beginnings.„ it. May be said,
of the C.P.R., and all the deVelop-
anent which vntseontingent unen the
completion of that system.
It may be.reinembered, at the same.
time, thet a sensational epteode Mark-
ed the beginning of Lord Lansdowne'w-
. rule. at Ottawa. His lordship owned
and. still awns (if he has net recent-
ly sold under the Purchase- Act) ex-
tensive eetates in Ireland: ' At • that
-time.:(1883-4) the Land League was
very Olive, and boycotting Was in
full force; and the landlords had
rather a lively -time" .of it,A eertain
unpopularity attached to Lord 'Lans-
downe- as an •absentee landlord, who,
it was alleged; -insisted upon - his.
"pound of flesh" in the form of •rack.
rents •
Before Lord Lansdowne landed on
cur shores• the •press - of the world was
filled with the alleged details of *a
Land League plot to assassinate him
the moment. he landed in the
• • -
Although.. name were - mentioned.,
yet the.etory was plausibly •concocted,
-and many .in the 'Mother Country -ex-.
• pected• to hear of the "removal" .of
his lordship,- after the manner of 'the
Phoenix "Park Murders, • •
.• • NOthIng happened. The :goVernor-
general, With Lady -.Lansdowne and
suite, proceeded•to Rideau Halt tun.
harmed.- --The story was made Out of
whole. cloth,' A certain news'agency
in London was arHigned- before the
London courts. in -the corineetion; and
edmitted that beyond e -few .vague
Lines . of table from this side., •it,.•Intd
nothing. to support :the stork,. :which
was Written up in the office of the•
agency.: •. • -••• • .
• The •incident Was •'soon forgotten,
hut the • story, which filled pages. of
the public nrese, • gavethe whole.
veorld one of those shuddering the,
•which..while it dreatle, it at •the some
• tmeseems- to long for, •,.
Canada should gad her naval puttee
by giving a Dreadnought to Britain
'to settle overdue accounts." An optu.
ion like that comea naturally from a
pritleman ot the name of Payment.—
,11eldlton Herald.
A Cockney.
Ninetieth a dictionary maker Of Lan-
don. In 1617 Issned a WOES Which gave
the following amusing account ot the
origin et the word "eocknee't" "A
• cockney, or cockny, applied only to
rlfate born within the sound of the Bow
• bells—that is, within the City ot non.
ldon—whiebe terme came tirst out of
'the following tale: •
"A cittzeu•s Keine, riding with his
fattier out ot London into the country
and being a novice and merely igno-
rant or now come and catel do In.
crease, asked when he heard a horse
neigh wbat the florae tilde. Li IS father
answered. 'The tiorse clothe utiigh.'
• Riding further. he heard a cock erow
and said. 'Dottie the eocti ueigh too?
And therefore eoekney. or eocknetge„, •
by Inversion I bits: 1 nefiefllk—i. 0..
or unripe in cobul rey • InetiS arta 'res."
• . -
Established 1879
FOR WHOOPING COUGH. CROUP.
ASTHMA, COUGHS. BRONCHITIS, SORE
1HROAT, CATARRH. DIPHTHERIA
Vaporized Cresolcne stops the paroxysms of
Whooping Cough. Ever dreaded Croup can-
not exist where Cresolene is •used. It acts
directly on nose Lud throat. making breathing
easy in the case of cold,, soothes the core
throat and stops the cough. It is a been to
sufferers of Asthma.
Cresolene is a powerful germicide, acting both
as a curative and n preventive in contagious
diseases. Cresolene's best recornmendatirto is
its thirty years ot successful use.
For Bale ty .A.11 Druggists
Send Postal for De-
scriptive Booklet
Cresolene Antiseptic
Throat Tablets*simple
and soothing for the '
irritated -throat, 10c.
Leeming, Miles Co.,
Ltimited, Agents, Mon-
treal, Canada. 3o8
Go to Eiacti
. Monthly Horse Markets'
Public- Horse Markets will be held in
GODER ICH
Friday, Feb, 18th
/Friday, March llth
1
THE NES-RECHO'S
CLUBBING LIST
F011 1009-10
Much good reading
for little ruprney.
WEEICLIEA
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Letter and address.
W. J. 1 itc0e11
News -Record - CLINTON
•
•
•
Canada I a" Only • Beginning.
• The United 'Stales is .cutting down
flier y expentlitnre by e38,000,000 and•
navy expenulture by $45,000,000, This
shows a wise appreciation .of a •for.
innate position. .Our neighbors are
too stroug to fear • aggression, and
shoule be -too just.. to .practice
.1.o.tOntp• : '
. ,
. .
ma•Datawmatierai.
What Is a Briton.
Wherever born, a child is considered
it Dritieh subjeet if its paternal geand-
tattier wee a natural-born Britisher.
j he nationality of a remoter ancestor
• hen no such effect,
A Positive Cure .
• for Indigestion
_—,....... .
ii you have indigestion, your food
ferments in the stomach and bowels.
It does more: It decays and the nut-
retfous matter which should go to
make new blood decays with it, and
It
this leads to an impoverishi ' con-
dition of the blood, to ner ousness,
billiousness, constipation, sick head-
ache, bad breath /which disgusts your
friends, and othete disagreeable and
unpleasant condition.
And all this trouble is caused by
the food that doesn't digest, but ter -
mots and oftimes rots in the
stomach,
And fermentation is caused by the
stotna.ch not being strong enough and
energetic enough to thoroughly mot
the food with the digestive uices.
M -I -O -N -A is responsible for tens of
thousands of cures. - In fact, it IS such
a positive cure for indigestion and all
stomach troubles that it is guarante-
ed by W. S. R. ,Holmes to eure or
Money back. •' The price of a large
box' of Mi-o-na tablets is 50 cents,
ond they are sure to promptly' re-
teve the Worst case of indigestion or
gastritis. Try them.
(Pirmaocto
CURES CATARRH, ASTHMA,
13rencliitis, Croup, Coughs and Colds, or
• money back. Sold and guaranteed by
. CONQUERED HER. RIVA.L. .
Pretty , and Pathetic 'Story of Jenny
Lind.and Geisi.
Jenny Lind nue Orbit were both •ri-
vals tor• popular favor 111 Limdmi. Roth
were invited to sing the tot Inc night at
• a emirt euneert before themiteen. Jen-
ny Lind, belng the you tiger.. song' then
and was . so . dist e rbeci 1„ty the
seurtant:took of tirisi that she was at
the peinrof failure when stuitiethy140
. insidration ratite to tier. , •
•• The •aceompattlst was striking, the
tinal chords... Site -milted blin .to rise
and took the:vneetit seat. Her 'lingers
Wandered over the keys in .a. Hiving
prelude.. and • then she sang a ;line
prayer whieb she find loved as a child.
She 1)041 Sling it tor years. As site
Sang she was no longer In the ores-
etWe or royalty, •hat singing to toying,'
friends In her tatherland.
Softly at tirst the plaintive notes
1100 ted 011 the a Ir. swelling tender mei
rlehor every moment. Tile singer
seemed to throw her whole .soui ,into.
that weird. thrilling. pinintive "prey-.
Gradtially the' -song died tawny
and ended in a soh. There. was it si
lence—the.sitence 411 11(111611Ig W0i1(101'
'.11).-e audience, s'ai Jenny.
'.1.11.1d lifted Der t 1 ,;yes 10, 10,ik 110 „
the seornfin tae that 11:1I1 511 11tSt•111.1.
(*ilea ner. '1'itere was tiff deem-
• pression new. • Instead titea rnhop •giis.
,.,tened va. the long. nitwit .iiisties, nue
• after a-. moment, w.itn toe 11111111151 '1'
-nests et it Mild or tile “rtsl
' erossied to Jenny !mar,: suit.. potemt
her arm til ii her' irid I issetl tier..
- uttering relit ttiless 01 Op notitettee,
"For three long
months I was
not able to at-
tend to my own
needs; and for.
three weeks the
eczema on my
hands was so bad
—that- rw as-unablt— -
to feed myself. I
had to be fed as
one feeds a baby,
because I could not L:
hold hOlfe. fork. (Photo 6f Art*.es MoSorley) was rici ti e
spoon or &sp."• A mput ation was
at one time thought necessari,
but the timely introductien of
Zam-Buk prevznted this fearful
• ending.
"Zam-Etslc was recommended
by a friend and wc bought
supply. The first few applica-
tions gave me a little ease, but it
was not until I had continued
with it for some time that 1 felt
a detided improvement. After
that my cure went on quickly.
Zam-Buk did what everything
else had failed to do. Now my
hands and arms are quite freed
••••
were s00114 in a
foul con dition, and
my finger nails,
all except two, fell
• off. During the
different stages of
my trouble. I
sought the advice
of thrce different
doctors and receiv.
edtreatment,but
although ge t
ting slight relief
at first, there
So says Miss Violet McSorleY.
of 75 Gore Street, Sault Ste.
Marie, in telling hoiv Zam-Btsk
cured her of eczema, She adds:
"Fiandse wrists and arms tip to
the elbows were covered with
CCZCLI11.. The itching and the
soreness were nigh unbearable.
As the disease deveoped, the
skin actually peeled off, leaving
raw sores. The paints, fingers,
backs d my hands and wrists
were all in this shocking state.
and Ilvas forced to sit id
all the the while. The raw sores from the terrible eczema,"
HOW ZAM.BUlt IS suPenioR
28.11141111C is entirely different to oeher balms, and as superior :is it is differ-
ent. Meet salves are Mne•tenths animal oil or fat. Z.:n.130( hasn't h. trace of
animal fat in it. Most sa ves contein tai oral colorit g matter. Zarn.liuk is
ebsolm o y without! Many salve* eontai nisonnusasti ingents. ZarfeBuk doesn't.
2tam 'Ink is actual,more 9 nireni1I aotiseptio titan crude carbolic acid.
Yet it, stops, instead of Causing NI. luting n put on a wound.
ZAM-IttiltiS MANY USES
Zeitt,Tialt heals MONS quioltly than a ,y other known preparation: eekente,
ulcers, piles, lad leg, rael,es, iingivetta, fostering Fibres, cuts, bruises, bumf,,
scalcht, stittlesse, poisoned wo rids, fareati t Up sores, dumped bands, cold Rorett,oLO.
Bent:balm or Int4'S Otitt so. en Used n , embreenti011, it Cities rlteuMitfistni.
iatica, et. A II thuggiate end were.) r,o,, or 4.m:rink Co., Toroeto, for price.
EER Y HOME NEEDS IT
Clinton News -Record
February 3rd, 1910
Parole System a Sucrose.
That the t reeults of the prisoner
parole system continue meet gratify-
ing is the statement made by W. P.
Archibald, Dominion parole officer.
Mr. Archibald is on a tour of western
Ontario in connection with his duties.
During the year 468 misoners were
so releitsed, and since the method was
adopte1 ten years ago, there haye
been 0,154,5 prisoners Partired. Old of
the entire number, there have been
enly 54 licenses revoked for eubse-
Intent Convictions and 99 for non-
:tomplianee with Conditions which de -
Mand a monthly report. The number
of completed sentences of parole is
1,487, and there are 879 men now re.
porting;
Mr. Archibald said that while jail
prisoners should be taken proper care
of, he was opposed to the "mawkish
sentiment" which sought to snake
such confinement as comfortable as
possible, thus encouraging men to re-
turn to the hospitable walls. •
The low percentage of paroled pris-
oners who •violate the conditions of
release is attributed by Mr. Archibuld
to the care taken to allow freedom
onlyto men who are not genuine
criminals. Experience has abown
that the reform of the habitual crunire
al was little to be expected.
• • .
Within and Without,
The death of one of the last remain-
ing Fenian raiders reminds us that
Canada f$ interested in having peace
maintained within and without the
Empire as much as in its military
etrength.—Deily Phoenix, Saskatoon.
Praise.
Poet—Did she -think° my sonnet
good? Friend—She must have. She
didn't believe you wrote it.
Repeat it ;—"Shiloh's Cure will al-
ways cure my coughs. and. colds."
WATER IN YOUR BLOOD?
'Lots of people . have thin watery
blood—they eat plenty but don't- 4•1 -
when digestion is poor, food is
aot converted into nourishment—ie
consequence( . the body rapidly loses
strength. To positively renew health,
nothing equals Ferrozone. It excites
;harp appetite,—makes the stomach
• digest, forms life sustaining blood.
• Abundant strength is sure to follow.
-If you need more vitality, extra en-
ergy, better nerves, then use Ferroz-
one the medical triumph of the age.
Fifty cents buys a box of fifty choco-
late coated Ferrozone tablets. 6
• " rrinorgo AW5A13.
Unionists:Are Steadily gaining In.the
• Counties.- • • -
London, Tan, .22.—The political' tide
continue s' to drift towards • Conserva-
tism, Forty-eight constituencies de -
dared their choice yesterday, and the
positions- of the opposing armies last
night werepractically where they were
the night before, With the Tories slOw- •
iy .forcing the Radicals backwaid.• .
. There is hardly a question that tlte
Irish will hold the whip over Pre-
: rider . Asquith. in the coming Persia-
ment, and that . it will be a crie.cei.
and excitieg session. .. • ; .
The Unionists have • made •eneely,
piing on' the popular vote .
throughout England, and to a ninon
lesser extent in Scotland Auld Wales,.
but all the parties: and factions et
parties claim the results are a vindi-
• cation of their policies.
• ".13.readly speaking," says The Na -
Lion; "the.'force-..and direction of the
'two- great 'eleCtoral Currents is clear.
The north stands out against•the' south
—Scotland and 'Wales and Yorkshire,.
Lancashire and the portheakeen cor-
• ner of. England against tlie Midlands
home. edunties find the nearly soiid
:southern coast."
The Unionists claim that the result
isa victory for tariff. reforni. The
Lihn.ala deny It stubbornly. They de -
Clare that tIM feudal _status. of 'the
'counties is responsible for- the Con-
iterviitive gains, • and charge the
amvirate—the landlords, the church
and the .pdbliCa.ns — with' overataing
their dependents and followers by
prectieing -widespread intimidation,
and threatening them „with' loss -of
work,
From the opposition point of view,•
the conservatism of the counties
due to the . loyalty of the people to*
the Rouse of Lords, their fear of so-
cialism, and a desire for peotection:
Mr. Asquith, speaking in Pifeshire,•
twice used the qualifying phrasee, "it
you send. us . back to . Westminster
with an adequate majority," in, that
case, he observed the Government in-
tended that ,Scotland should share as
targelk at England in entail holdings, '
. .
Repeat it Cure will al-
ayscure niy coughs and colds."
WHY BRONCHITIS—IS SERIOUS. -
Because it becomes a chronic Con-
dition that vergei closely on cote.
sumption. ".Catarrhozone" is ' thel
most pleasant, simple and certain
cure. Try Catarrhozone. •
• ample et.reaea egt
nt• pttn imetS emu) etp sp.tom again
paluadaa Siompautui tanqsiii,i 'Jo;
.sdoismoosa Mew ttqo
.o3u0 'utuusulzusiq• 'sag
e,Jaltraolitag '04b4tUbt11911144
-mop .tpulignunns .lson-aunainto,vtaki
'aeudosotiud 'us01.16cuy
.uenagyf %met on 'smuggle 'neuronic)
• *al tld 10Pollt1 rt Ilan IWO 'Idd lastest
'unineoinseid istWopoielm 'miaow-etichos •sn000mde.Os 4prosiagis, 'Ms
-want 'nottisuid •dfall$fitti OM fit 'illflalfu)
- pad !stillstflottuillny ispJoes IijMOI
- 10S Ittetti ine parlaid moneitimi
o spanstpspriiontaJ '.1(11 pita ifilSJOA
ititt 3.0 nutnIllan ,lesselos,t
'vette Spin gift) 0) 0110.1 OCI -01 Stidfl
-amass adi 'ad suspii tato tuna on dal
1001 au *Iiii).10M d'ism) Anioutom
billaUeldiall moot.; ut Sop 000 peeejjo
Heetto mit 'kimono •e; Ifeeine
• .a.tottiow Inpopttom 1,Amcistita
ritovrim TNT MOUN'T P011.F.S.P.
Every doctor in this town tried his
best to telieVe Mrs. J. Without 01
Asthma; none succeeded. "Pot years
she states, "I was a dreadful sufferer;,
nothing gave relief, At times 1 found
It necessary to have all the doors
and windows open to get my breath.
When ,in despair I heard or "Catarrh -
ozone." 1 used it and now am per.
teeny cutied."... This proves beyond
doubt that any case of /Whine is
curable vvith ,ratarrhozorie. No rem-
edy so Ploasant none so absolutely
arrhozorte'yoturselt ; it's guaranteed.
HAS:LOST Hit 4011.
The Professional Juryman Passes
Away by Recent Order.
The average titan is notorionsly so
411X1Ous to escape jury duty that a
character who made it his chief busi-
ness in life to obtain selection as a
Meinher_of_coroners* juries_ would
seem to many the creation of a Dick-
en,sonian imegination. That such
characters exIst, however, the authori-
ties know full well, and many a cor-
oner whose duties call bim to the
morgue to hold incinest on the death
of some unfertunate, recognizes old,
familiar faces when the jury is sworn.
The reason for this is that the mode
of assembling coroners' juries is at-
tended by no solemnity or buggery-
inuggery. An officer of nurnber one
police division is assigned to the duty
of digging up a jury for an inquest to
be held that night. He is supposed
to go out on the street and impress
such citizens as can give no excuse
for evading the mandate of the crown.
As many persons do not like this
press gang system of rendering ser-
vice to their country the professional
juryman who eagerly, welcomes the
task is a boon. He packs up an odd
dollar or so that way and the task
of sitting in judgment with the issues
of life and death before him adds
greatly to his self-esteem. After he
has figured at half a dozen inquests
he becomes in his own eyes a part of
the great fabric of law and order
• which covers us all and takes his
duties as seriously as though he were
the presiding justice of the Court of
APPeal. In short he is apt to become
a nuisance; he thinks that the cor-
oner and the representatives of the
Frost Gate Frames Are Welded—.
crown are rather lax in the perform-
ance of their duties. He sees that
they let points "tonally.' on and tip.
Pertainin' to" the death of the de-
ceased slip by them. So he takes to
asking questions bimself and eneour-
ages the less sophisticated jurors
around him to do likewise provided
they do not show an ambition for
leadership. And if the coroner dares
to advise the jury as to what verdict
it should bring in, that personage is
snubbed for his pains by a finding
contrary to his instructions.
For such reasons the order went out
recently in Ontario that the most in-
dustrious of coroner's jurors was to
• be debarred from his chief pleasure
in life. Under no circumstances is
he to be accepted for 'jury service
agaiii,—and •thereby hangs a• tale.
Tim reader of the daily newspapers
must have noticed that of late coron-
ers' juries have been loading their
verdicts with . condemnations of al-
most every existing institution. This
particular juryman is one who figures
atinost political meetings as the man
in the audience. who. asks questions of
candidates he is opposed to, and leads
the cheering for the idols of his heart.
He used to write letters to the papers,
• until the indifference of editors show-
ed him that the press of the commun-
ity was in . the rut ,and hopelessly
blind to the public_ weal. Then he
conceived the idea that the inquest
verdict could be made the vehicle of
Itis ,opinione. • On a recent occasion
there was a death which gave scope
for wholesele condemnation, and after
the first sitting of inquest be walked
down street •with a newspapei. man
with whom he discussed the great
possibilities of • the case. in, the way
• 01 11 good, lengthy high sounding ver-
dict. With the reporter's Assist:timed
a finding was learned for use. at the
.concluding sitting which condemned
the administration of the affairs of the
city of Toronto from garret to cellar.
When the jury retired to consider the
evidence he sprang his prepared ver -
diet on the others and kept them out
for over two hours while inducing
•them to adopt at ',least. a portion of
its contents., The coroner had to kick •
hie heels for this 'period while the
Jury talked over a matter that seem-
ed to call for only five minutes' de-
liberation. The • culprit respensible
for the delay was discovered. It was,
the last straw. The "Kibosh" etas
ptit upon him et headquarters and
Othello's occupation is gone. He has
• sat upon his last corpse, •
• • By Any Other Name!
During 1909,• 650 new postoffices
were .established in Canada. Sas.
katcliewan .g ,Ang 154, Ontario • 101,
Alberta ed., Quebec 82,, Manitoba 24,
'Neva Seetia 22, p.E.I. 6, and Yukon
• Territory 1.. • • •
. • An immense number of new railw-ay
stations have been opened lip during
the same period ,and a difticulty ot
some moment has arisen over the
confusion of names due to the lapk•of
9o -operation between the railway -com-
panies and the geographie board which
acts for the Government in this mat-
ter,
The Canadian •Offielai• •Railway
Guide Calla attention'te some of these
cases. In Alberta the Postoffice' De-
-nartinent opened twe effices .and
ed them Junkins and Jarrow. Jun -
kine is 100 miles east of Edmonton. -
Jarrmy is 60 miles west . pf it. The.
(-learnt Trunk station at ,Junkins P.0„
"which is to be called Jarrow:, and
intends to .imen . another station at
Jaw o w
kits. • Surely the Government and the
railway authorities might get, together
on t matter of this kind. . • .
It ,is probably useless to ask why
sneli euphonious titles as Simkins are
• used, but we must be grateful that it
was not converted into Junkinsville'
or Sunkinsburg, :It, Will be a perpe-
, tual regret that more is not done to
preserve the line native Indian names
which give Otinadiengeography such
distinction in foreign 'settee' books,
Canada, Onte.rier. Toronto, Junkins,
Sinithvillej. IVIechanicavillel The sub -
to tini ridiculous truly! The geo-
graphic board 'must be supported in
the duty et improving our. nomencla-
ture.—loronto World. •
Welcome Women to West.
The Canadian Pacific scheme to
Snpply ready-made farms for 13ritish
settlt‘rs east of Calgary, was expound.
ed by C. W. Petersen, at the B.03ral
Ole Sante period, and a diffic.ulty of
Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, wile presid-
ed, in response 40 it question, said that
women settlers would be welcomed.
The emigration of 100,000 English agri.
culturista would not deplete the agra
vulture). population, as their placee
would aeon be Aitken. The scheme is
attracting reat interest.
he Poet of Neuralgia headache.
Is an irritable eondition of the ner-
ves caused by old. ,lteliet comes
quickly from Nerviline, the great pain
rdiever of to -day. "I consider Ner-
viline it magical remedy for noural-
gia," writes Mrs. E. 0. Harris of
Baltimore. But / never worry if Ner-
viline Is In the house. A few appliea-
tions never yet failed to mire Out Pain.
ean also recommend Nerviline for
stiffness, rhetimatiern, and muscular
pains." In Use neatly flity Tears ;
try Nervilino yourself. 0°
Not ouped
Frost Oates are made of Steel
Tubing, In every other Gate this •• • are put through this same Galvanizing.
;Tubing is connected by threaded process.
lotnts.--Thcse-threadir-cut-ilialf-wroy (1.terdattow.fight:#1, rust
t very inch—hinges, latches, Ana all—
into the Tube.
This deep
thread -co tt in g
deprives it ot
one•halt of its
formerstrength.
3aeAndcwtaeydwothooe ttrhsuaie
threaded joints.
But the Frost Gate
has no couplings. It is
Welded together. The
severest *train will not
Because theents. trePwaearakteesithpaisrtWsoeflodtinhge;
"Gates, are t *strongest parts of the Frost.
Alt Frest tation tespaint.haeta Galvaitised finish
animi
The Frame, when bent or shaped, is
scoured clean of grease and scale.
The Zinc Galvaeising will now adhere per.
manently to this thoroughly cleaned Gate
Frame. And the Zinc not only spreads over
othferthscurpfaifme kir:ern s into it, becomng a pert
or many, manY •
years, and last
longer than any
other Gate we
know of,
The finish of
the Frost Gate
is beautiful. It
is smooth and
silvery, and make* the
Prost ornamental aitwit
art useful.
When ordering, don't
merely ask for a metal
Gate, Say you want a Frost Galvanized
•Gate.
•
The Wire used in the Frost Gate i* No. 9.
This Wire is made and Galvanized by, our-
selves. 11 1, the strongest Wire of its *me to
use.
Drop us a card to -day for free Booklet,
The Frost Wire FeoceCo. Ltd
• Hamilton, Ontsclo - 28
• Agents Wanted 1 Open Districts
OS Wives
Local Dealers—
W. Stodgill, Varna; Wm, Stanley, Holtnesville:Wal. Adifson, Lomleshoro
Protect Trade Routes.
In undertaking to build cruisers
Canada is not only planning with a
view to her own future;.but is pro-
viding for the protection ef the trade
routes left unguarded by. the Dread-
noughts, so that Great Britain mal
not be taken by tontine in time ot
stress. Could there be a service of
more vital importance to the Empire?
—Daily Phoenix. Saskatoon,
Repeat it :—"Shiloh's Cure will al-
ways cure my poughe and rolls."
, HOW'S THIS
We affer One Hundred Dollars Re -
Yard for aoy case of Catarrh that
annot be,cured by Hall's Catarrh
lure. F, J. CHENEY Bs Co.,
••.roledo, O.
We, the undersigned, nave known
. Cheney for the last .15 years, and
elieve hint perfectly honorable in all
• usiness transa;etions, and finanetally
ble -to carry out any oteligations
• lade by his firm.
Welding, Kinnan 84. Marvin,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0,
Hall's Catarrh Cumin taken Inter -
ally acting directly upon the blood
led mucous surfaces of •the • system.
'estimonials sent free. Price, 15c. per
• ottle. Sold by all druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
ation.
1
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
puiity and Imerit of which
has been, attested by
chemists, . physicians and
experts at the great exhib-
bitions.'•
ASH FOR -
(guying.)
Whatever amount of money one
• puts by in an investment—whether
it is $10,000 or $100—the first •
consideration is the security of •
• the investment:
. If added t� the security there is
a profitable dividend, the invest-
ment becomes an ideal one—
exactly the kind that, the saving
people of Ontario most desire: -
\‘‘
•
The Pebenturee of this Company
• are such an investment, safe
beyond question. Assets totalling
over 510,000,000 are pledged to
their redemption. Thus their
security Is absolutely safeguarded.
They pay 4 per tent. per annum.
. Put your savings into this Bah
• and profitable form of investment.
. Write asking for full particulars.
551
Loan & Savings Co., London, Ont.
skk
‘4, Make Each. Animal Worth
hens
. 25% Over its Cbst
ittE.. .. i
..... ,
i ,, .
• :
,,.1
or rewsthoernmygoruuni;deodw.n, satoncirnit raolsodt9,ptIoumyopnuerscsoavin.dhvoirgsoer:swin
you are merely feeding them what ybu are growing on your own farm,
bedies get all the good out of the teed you give them so they can get fat
,
Your animals de need not, more fed, but something to help their
•
0 ri " % of a C.ent a. Day
Nivnywevinetrehr!ianredreitors'isrlotchkefsocitdid' ocru mr i not tiihvee bpootusn4osr p:fclic. c0y irrnaa:k day,tng
-----,
is or poultry.
..
pnd stay fat all year round; also to prevent dipease, cure disease and keep
2;0
them up to the best•possible condition. No ' ‘tock food" can do all these
LaPtg'est Winnee "f things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. 11 40
any pacer on
Grand ircuit, f f t "Conditioner .
C• P
Nota"Stock Food Bu a .
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain. nor farm products. It increases
yield 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 are au large at six weeks old as they would be when '
fed %RviothypArtinpauryRrnpaLtnersiarlsoact KsptenwEeeckrp.
IC builds up run.down animals and restores them to
plumpnesti almost magicaily. Cures bob), colic, worms, skin diseaseg and debility_ciermanentlY. ;
t)an hicEwan, the horseman, says: I have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC
persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.02, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in
1908. and 'Henry Winters,' 2.09*, brother of 'Allen Winters,' winner of 838.000 in fretting stakes
in 1908. These horses have never been off their feed since I conamenced using Royal Purple
Specific almost a year ago. and I will always have it in my stables."
al parse
STOCK AND POULTRY -SPECIFICS
• One Me. package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC veiniest one animal seventy
days, which is a little over two,thirds of a cent a day Nloat stock foods in fifty cent packages
last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCKSPBCIFIC '
is given but once a dal', and lasts half again as long A $1.50 pail containing four tienes the
amount of the ilftY cent package will last 9.80daY%. ROV,AL PURPLE will increase the value
of your Stock 290. ft is an astonishingly quick fattener, stimulating the appetite and the '
relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn ieed into ficsh. Asa hog fattener it is a leader.
It willsave many times itg cost in veterinary billa, ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECI-
F'IC is our other Specific for poultry, not for stoic. One 50 cent package will last twepty.five ,
hens 70 days, Or 5 pail Osting 51.50 wittiest twenty.five hens 280 days. which in four times more
material for only three times the cost. It Makes a "laying MaChine" Out Of your hens
summer and winter, prevents fowl4 losing fleali at moulting time, and eures poultry diseases.
glItiviterrayntpeaecdk.ag_r& .R_O_YAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is
animal in the game condition: after comparing results you will 8:1
dust use ROYAL PURPLEWar
on One of r animals tuld any othyerRporyeltratpinunRaneta thhae;
them rdi heat to death, Or else back comes you to money. PREP.—Ask
your Merchant or write us for oue valuable 32.page booklet on cattle
and poultry diseases, containing also
booking reeeines and full particulars about
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK grid POUL-
TRY SPECIFICS.
If yew efinnet get Royal Purple
Specifics from merchants or agents, we
win supply you (Weft, express prepaid,
on receipt of $1.80 a pail tor either Poultry
Or Stock Setecificg.
yourMdailsttilriMet*WY rnit'etlfno4ratVeri7. tgefit
10
Pot sale by up•to.date melee:tete,
W.LJenkins illfg.,Co„ London, Cani
• Itoyal Panne Stock and Poultry Specific ana 1roo booklet are kept in stook by W. 8, fl,. toile
see.